Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 28, 1994)
HANNA & ASSOCIATES 696-3818 Family Law • DW1 • Criminal Law Traffic Violations • Public Intoxication Annette K. Hanna Dana L. Zachary Attorneys-at-Law Not certified by Texas Board Legal Specialization 3559 Renee’s Nails, etc. Full Set Acrylic Nails $20.00 Refills $15.00 (Fast 30 min. service) 764-4500 Has moved to Concepts 900 Harvey Rd. Ste. 6 SPORTS CARD SHOW SATURDAY, JANUARY 29 1 Holiday Inn, 1503 Texas Ave. S Hours 10-5 p.m. Admission $1 GREAT DOOR PRIZES! I^HWAUEIIOVSE ^yJ^(«S35SS3ZiSu2EaS3» WE BUY USED CD'S FOR $4.00 or trade 2 for 1 USED CD'S $8.99 or LESS 268-0154 (Now located downstairs at Northgate) Coming Soon: Schindlers List SCHULMAN SIX 2000 E. 29th Street 775-2463 ‘intersection $5.00/$3.00 2:00 ‘Philadelphia $5.00/$3.00 1:50 ‘Mrs. Doubtfire $5.00/$3.00^:45 Cabin Boy $5.00/$3.00 2:00 Sister Act 2 $5.00/$3.00 2:05 ‘Pelican Brief $5.00/$3.00 1:30 •R 4:35 7:15 9:40 •PG13 4:20 7:00 9:35 •PG13 4:25 7:05 9:45 •PG13 4:35 7:15 9:40 •PG . 4:30 7:10 9:35 •PG13 4:15 7:00 9:50 MANOR EAST 3 MANOR EAST MALL 775-2463 ‘Jurassic Park • P G1 3 990 2:10 4:40 7:10 9:40 ■PG 7:05 9:35 •R 7:00 9:45 •G Beverly Hillbillies 990 Carlitos Way 990 Batman (Animated) 990 Sat & Sun: 2:00 3:40 5:10 Mon - Fri : 5:10 only We’re Back *G 990 Sat & Sun: 2:00 3:40 5:10 Mon - Fri : 5:10 only ‘Dolby Stero OPEN DAILY - LUNCH 11:30 AM 'BEST BIG BURGER IN TOWN” BOTTLE BEER 1.25 PITCHERS 4.50 TV'S - POOL TABLES - PATIO TEXAS TWISTERS Saturday • January 29 th WELLBORN ROAD 1/2 MILE SOUTH OF 2818 764-2933 ■; SM Stocking Spunge A Gentlemans Club Let Us Entertain You! • Stage Shows Nightly • • Beautiful Girls • Mixed Drinks • Cold Beer • Pool Open 7:30 P.M. - 1:00 A.M. Tel. (409) 690-1478 1 Mi. So. College Station, On Highway 6 South Driver’s license required - 21 or over *Need Waitresses and Dancers Dancers paid nightly heppsrd ^Studentteade^hi^Tomm The Forum gives attendees the opportunity to discuss current public affairs issues with today's leaders and together discover ways to initiate positive changes in both the public and private sectors. 216 M<3C 845-1515 $10 Registration Fee Space is limited February 5, 1994 4C Tr Persons with disabilities please call 845-1515 to Inform us of your special needs. We request notification three (3) working days prior to the event to enable us to assist you to the best of ou ability, Page 8 The Battalion Friday, January 28,1 What's Up Friday puting resources from 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. in the Rudder Tower Exhibit Hall. For more info call David at 845-9325. more info call Sandy at 268-1150. Vol. 93 Campus Crusade for Christ: meeting at 7:00 p.m. in 102 Zachry. For more info call Mike at 696-2884. Puerto Rican Student Association: Gener al meeting at 7:00 p.m. in 502 Rudder. For more info call Cinthya at 696-1364. Alpha Phi: donate used or new teddy bears to for local cardiac care patients. Dona tions taken at Chemistry fountain from 12- 5:00 p.m and at the Alpha Phi house located at 1401 Athens drive. For more info call Ge- neen at 693-8410. Recreation, Park, and Tourism Sciences! Club: trash bash at 10:00 a.m. ineetinga![ Block Buster's on University Drive. For more info call Terri at 696-8842. Audubon Field Trip: Twelve sparroiv species by noon. For more info call Berll Frenz at 846-9042 (wk) or 693-3214(hm.) Students Over Traditional Age: Supper Club meeting at 6:00 p.m. at Casa Tomas Mexican Restaurant, 4300 S. Texas Ave. For more info call Leslie at 693-0272. African Students Association: general meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 229 MSC. For more info call Millicent at 847-3807. TAMU Sports Car Club: Practice Au [ tocross at 12:00 p.m. at Riverside Annex. Foil more info call Chris at 764-7996. Alpha Phi Alpha: $1 charity basketball game. Pink Ice vs. Crimson & Cream, at 7:30 p.m. in Deware Fieldhouse. Special Health Services:free and anony mous HIV testing on campus. Call 775-3064. Sunday Catholic Students Association: Graduate student group meeting at 6:00 p.m. at the St. Mary's Student Center. For more info call Kelly or Sandra at 693-7974. Stage Center: Agatha Christie's "A Mur der is Announced" at 8:00 p.m. at the Stage Center Theater (701 N. Main). For info and reservations call 823-4297. FACES: Pool Tournament in MSC under; f round from 8-10 p.m. with awards given,I 1 per person. For more info call Elaineati 847-0978. Women's Lacrosse: practice from 4-6:00 p.m. at Keathley Beach. For more info call Gillian at 764-6176. International Students Group: an oppor tunity to meet other international students each friday from 3-4:30 p.m. Come to 104 Henderson, or call Gisela Lin at 845-4427 Ext 145 for more info. Lutheran Student Fellowship: Fellowship! supper at 6:30 p.m. in Lutheran Student! Chapel and Student Center. For more i call Rev. Richard Manus at 846-6687. Delta Sigma Pi: Rush events open to all business majors from 5-7 p.m. at Bullwinkles. For more info call Laura at 696-7562 or Lori at 776-5189. Saturday TAMU Sports Car Club : Autocross 1 9:00 a.m. at Riverside Annex. For more in call Chris at 764-7996. Aggie R.E.A.C.H.: general meeting at 6:00 p.m. in the 016 Beutel Health Care Center. Alpha Phi Alpha: Miss Black and Gold Scholarship Pageant at 7:00 p.m. in Rudder Theater with after-party in Deware. For more info call Brian Williams at 847-1588. Cost is $7.00. CIS Computing and Information Ser vices: Hands-on demonstration of CIS com- Chinese Student Assoc.: Chinese New Year's Celebration at 5:00 p.m. in MSC. For What's Up is a Battalion service that lists non-profit student and faculty events anJ activities. Items should be submittedni later than three days in advance of the 4 sired run date. Application deadlines ani notices are not events and will not berunii What's Up. If you have any questions, please call the newsroom at 845-3313. Earle Continued from Page 1 wrong every day. "Remorseless criminals have no conscience, which is one of the most important aspects of the community," Earle said. Ron Going, a senior philoso phy major, said people need to make a choice between ethics and morality. "Pretty much what we are at is a point where we need to de termine whether we enforce ethics or morality, or objectively look at the law," Going said. "As an idealist, I feel bending the law is breaking the law, and that should be prosecuted to the fullest extent." Earle said people need to be responsible for what they do and consider the consequences on the whole. Ethics is a rising tide of con cern that Earle said he would like to see taught in the home, which is not always possible. Society can't go backwards in time, he said, and if ethics can't be taught at home, then school is the next best place. "Ethical values and sex educa tion should be taught at home, but we can't take a chance that someone might slip through," Earle said. "We need to educate everyone. Sabrina Dompier, a senior English major, agreed. "I didn't think ethics really mattered, but I agree with him," Dompier said. "I didn't agree with hisidi: on the issue of teaching sexk: cation at school, but overall was a good speech." Chris Williams, programiml executive for MSC PoliticalFr rum, said Earle was asked!: speak because of an increased!! terest in the ethics of politicalfi!-! ures brought on by the prose® tion of U.S. Senator Kay Bate Hutchison. However, Earle declined! discuss the Hutchison cases any other pending case. Dead for 16 years, Elvis still reigns as king The Associated Press Men and women wave their hands in the air ecstatically, first spelling, then calling out the name of the man they have come together to praise. A Pentecostal revival? No, an Elvis festival. A father pacing before his son undergoes a serious operation feels someone touch his shoulder, gets a "lovely, warm feeling" in side and knows everything is going to be all right. Did he think it was an angel upon his shoulder? No, Elvis Presley. More than 16 years after his death, hun dreds of thousands of devoted Elvis fans still revere "The King," holding festivals in his name, decorating their homes with his pic tures, even praying to him. Now, a British television documentary making its U.S. premiere Friday night raises the question of whether Elvis worship has be come a religion. "The King and Me," produced by Tullstar Productions and part of the weekly series "The Human Factor," will be shown on The Faith and Values Channel. The cable net work, which reaches 20 million homes, will show the half-hour documentary again on Monday and next Thursday. How well the late rock 'n' roll superstar has stayed alive in the popular imagination is indicated in the alleged sightings of Elvis reg ularly reported in supermarket tabloids. "The Two Kings," a new book from Bantam Books, satirizes the phenomenon by comparing Elvis to Jesus. Several national polls in recent years have found from 6 percent to 16 percent of Ameri cans believe Elvis still may be alive. "The King and Me" producers estimate up to a million people worldwide are devoted followers of Elvis. Those interviewed make it clear they do not consider Elvis to be God, and some note Elvis himself would discour age such speculation. On the anniversaries of his Aug. 16 I B' death, thousands of Elvis pilgrims walk® gle file at his Graceland mansion, touchiu candles to torches fired from an eternal flam at the grave. One woman, wearing a bright-colori bowling shirt with the initials EP in larf script, said sometimes Elvis could lookal' person and make them feel special. "He could also look at you, flash hisey at you, and you know you'd done wronf she said. "He's been my life since 1 was lOyeai old. Nothing else ever mattered," saidanoll er woman interviewed in the documentary Wayne Rollins of Assumption Collei head of the psychology and biblical stti group of the Society of Biblical Literals said it is not unusual for people to trams "their own center" on to another promite figure who can make up for their perceim deficiencies. if* ‘95 & ‘96 Legends - A Night With The Stars’ FEBRUARY 4, 1994 Hilton Ballroom 9 p.m. - 1 a.m. Tickets on Sale Now in MSC $10 single/ $15 couple Wanted: Soccer Referees!!! The Brazos Valley Soccer Referee’s Association invites referees and prospective referees to our General Meeting Monday, January 31st, 7 p.m. Fuddrucker’s Patio 2206 Texas Ave. S., College Station For further information call Claude Cunningham at 764-2989 or Jere Smith at 846-1565 Extra Spending Money & Fun J The Battalion ac is looking for people to fill positions on the following desks: City Photo AggieLife Sports Applications are available in room 013 Reed McDonald and will be due back Jan. 31. All majors are welcome- apply. TEXAS RAM ATHLETIC EVENTS Home Games MEN’S WOMEN’S BASEBALL SOFTBALL BASKETBALL BASKETBALL Jan. 29 SMU Noon Feb. 2 Baylor 7pm Feb. 11 Pan Am 3pm Feb. 15 La. Tech 2 pm Feb. 9 O.Roberts 7pm Feb. 5 Tex. Tech 7pm Feb. 12 Pan Am(2) 1pm Feb. 22 S.F. Aus. 4 pm Feb. 16 Houston 7pm Feb. 23 TCU 7pm Feb. 15 S.E. La. 3pm Feb. 23 UTA 5 pm Feb. 19 Rice 2:30pm Feb. 26 SMU 7pm Feb. 16 McNeese 3pm Mar. 4-6 Aggie Invitational TICKETS: 845-2311 BASEBALL SEASON TICKETS NOW ON SALE ADVANCED xrs TUTORING SUN 1/30 TUE 2/1 WED 2/2 THU 2/3 ME 212 HW #1 & #2 PHYS 218 CH 3 - 4 PHYS 208 PHYS 219 CH 23 - 24 PHYS 218 CH 5 -6 ME 213 TEST REV A ME 212 l HW #3 ME 213 HW #2 & #3 EE 306 HW #2 10 p.m. -12 a.m. ME 213 ’ TEST REV 8 aTs TUTORING GROUP TUTORING FOR: PHYS: 208, 218, 219 EE: 306 MEEN: 212,213 MATH: 308 We also have private tutors for many classes! 846-2879