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409/823-3759
110 E. Villa Maria Rd. Ste. B
Bryan, TX 77801
Subject to local availability and qualifications.
© 1994 Allstate County Mutual Insurance Company, Irving, Texas
$600 A WEEK POTENTIAL
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Summer is the busy season in the
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help to handle the load. North
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for training the end of April or early
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Call 1-800-348-2147, Dept. U-79.
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AUDITIONS!
For the ‘95 - ‘96 Texas A8JVI
UNIVERSITY SYMPHONIC BAND
are now in session.
If interested, contact
Lt. Tim Rhea for an appointment
at 845-3529
The Big
"Eating"
Event
What:
All you can eat buffet (barbecue, brisket,
sausage, chili, catfish, potatoes, gravy, etc.)
to get you pumped up for the Big Event.
When:
Friday, March 31, 1995 6-10 p.m.
Where:
Corner of Old College Main & Spruce
What to
expect:
FUN!!! Live band, lots & lots of food,
BYO. tea & soda will be available. $5 ticket.
For^nfo.
Sanjay @ 694-2850
Chuck @ 846-2223
Sponsored by Phi Beta Lambda,
Professional Business Fraternity
STUDY ABROAD PROGRAMS:
GENERAL INFORMATIONAL MEETINGS
WANT TO BECOME MORE COMPETITIVE AND
MARKETABLE...STUDY ABROAD
Come by one of our
weekly meetings held
every Priday at 11:00
(room number will be posted
outside of 161 Bizzell Hall
West) where we will answer
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How do I plan a Study Abroad?
When should I Study Abroad?
What about Pinancial Aid?
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Study Abroad Programs • 161 Bizzell Hall West • 845-0544
Rule #1 Live
$1.75 32 oz. Chuggers - .750 Bar Drinks 8-10 p.m.
CRAWFISH
Red Beans & Rice, Cornbread and Potatoes
$1.75 32 oz. Chuggers - .750 Bar Drinks 8-10 p.m.
Peeping Tom Live @ 10:00
Page 10 • Tin: Battalion
STATE &T LOCAL
T hursday • March 30,
Ex-mistress ready to settle lawsuit against Cisnero
â–¡ She offered to settle for
$200,000, but she heard
no answer from the U.S.
Housing Secretary.
LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) — An
attorney says Henry Cisneros’
former mistress offered to settle
her lawsuit for $200,000 but
heard no answer from the U.S.
Housing Secretary.
Linda Medlar alleges Cis
neros owes her $256,000 for com
mitting fraud and breaking a
contract after their extramarital
affair made headlines during his
tenure as San Antonio’s mayor.
“From day one we’ve been
ready to settle,” Medlar attorney
Floyd Holder said Wednesday.
“The suit’s about money.”
Cisneros denies he ever agreed
to pay Ms. Medlar $4,000 a
month until her teen-age daugh
ter graduated from college.
Ms. Medlar’s lawsuit — filed
July 29 in Lubbock, where she
now lives — says Cisneros ad
mitted he damaged her marriage
and career as a political fund
raiser. She got divorced; he re
mained married.
Per their verbal agreement in
1990, she says, he began making
payments to her. But the money
stopped without explanation and
in violation of their contract in
1993, the lawsuit says.
Cisneros has explained the
payments as compassion rather
than legal obligation.
And in a deposition Oct. 17,
he said he continued the pay
ments partly to avoid public
embarrassment.
“We’re not out to fillet Henry.
The point was not to beat up on
him,” Holder said. “At the same
time, I’m not afraid of the court
house. And I think this would be
a fun case to try.”
Holder said the $200,000 set
tlement offer was made two
months ago. He said he hasn’t
talked since then to Cisneros
attorney Seagal Wheatley of
San Antonio.
Wheatley did not immediate
ly return an Associated Press
telephone call Wednesday. But
Wheatley told
San Antonio
radio station
WOAI that he
considered
the offer an
interesting
development.
“She’s had
her fun, her
lawyer’s had
his fun with
the publicity.
Now they
want to get
some more money and walk away
from it, and I have to tell you
frankly that this doesn’t have
much appeal to me,” he said.
Cisneros
Wheatley said a settlemer,:
proposal should havecomeii|
“long before any suit was "
and before Medlar sought public
ty and sold her story” for Sl5,0(K
to the TV show “Inside Edition."
The lawsuit prompted a Jus
tice Department investigatioc
that concluded that Cisnerosliej
about the amount of money!
FBI agents who were cheeky
the background of President
Clinton’s. Housing nominee.At
torney General Janet Renohai
recommended that a special
prosecutor investigate the p
ments.
Wheatley contended
WOAI that Ms. Medlar alreac;
has “caused a lot of damage'u
Cisneros.
“What caused him the dan
age was his behavior,” Hold:
retorted.
No date has been set fortr
in the lawsuit. A hearing
scheduled April 14.
Discussion: Male panelists talk about the Womens Movement
Continued from Page 1
the Temple Veterans Administration, said men do not usually go
to therapy or counseling by choice. They usually attend because
someone in their life is complaining about them.
“Men are taught that they need to be tough and control their emo
tions,” Brooks said. “They are doing hard work and put in long
hours. They should be able to support and protect their families.
“But now the wife says, ‘You’re not sensitive enough, you don’t
talk enough, all you do is sit in front of the TV.’ Then when he
tells her what he’s feeling, she says, ‘Don’t get so angry.’”
Brooks said men are often upset about being confronted and
facing change. The problem is that nothing will be resolved until
men begin to talk about their anger toward women, he said.
Williams said many men feel angry and resentful toward women.
“If I say to him, ‘What do you want to get out of therapy?’,” Brooks
said, “he says, ‘Are you kidding? I want to get out of this place. I
want to get this woman off my back and get on with my life.’”
Michael Osterburh, area coordinator for Residence Life and
blousing, said there are many shades in the women’s movement
Not all women, he said, are strictly feminists or traditionalists.
“There are many women who would like to stay home and raise
their children, but if they get a job, they want and expect equal
pay for equal work,” Osterburh said.
Brooks said men can gain much from women and their ideas.
“Don’t look at this as a battle between the sexes,” Brooks said
“There’s a lot to be gained when we look beyond the stereotypes
that we are taught.”
Williams agreed that it is not an “us against them” issue.
“Change can be threatening, but I encourage you to use the
change to grow,” Williams said. “This should be looked at as an
opportunity, not a threat.”
All panelists encouraged males to talk about their problems,
whatever they are.
“Take care of yourself and don’t use your frustration as an ex
cuse to act upon anger,” Osterburh said. “Find someone to sit
down with and talk about it.”
GSC: Stephenson Moore to serve as new president
Continued from Page 1
ernment that was started by student body
president Brooke Leslie.
“There is a graduate student representa
tive who is allowed to sit on the executive
committee for student government in a non
voting position,” Moore said. “I’d like to en
courage a representative from student govern
ment to sit in on our executive committee.
“I think that would improve quite a few
things and allow for more cohesiveness,”
Moore said. She believes the GSC has a
different focus from the undergraduate
student government.
“The Graduate Student Council is primar
ily geared toward addressing graduate stu
dents’ issues,” she said, “while the student
government addresses issues pertaining to
all students.”
Graduate student issues range from acad
emics to on-campus child care, Moore said.
One of the new issues is the health center
fee referendum.
“We want to make sure the graduate stu-'
dents continue to have a say in how the
money is spent,” she said.
Tuition wavers have also become a recent
concern with graduate students.
Moore said the Legislature is considering
requiring students with 120 hours or more
in a graduate degree to pay nonresident tu
ition, whether or not they are residents.
“Generally a graduate student who re
ceives a scholarship or a stipend pays in
state tuition,” she said. “If graduate stu
dents have to pay out-of-state tuition, more
of them may not be able to continue their
graduate educations.”
Encouraging graduate students to partici
pate in campus activities is another of
Moore’s goals.
“I think graduate students come to Texas
A&M and they don’t experience the Af
gieland spirit,” she said. “Many of their
have never been to Yell FYactice and don'tjt
to football games.
“I would like to see anything thatcanbe
done for graduate students to enhance their
time spent here at A&M.”
Moore is seeking a Ph.D. in meteorolop
and hopes to work for NASA, where she hi
done research work in past summers.
She was selected for GSC president la :
week along with the other officers.
The new officers are Jack Mills, vice pre
ident; Yuan Cui, finance; Eddy Woodfir
academic affairs; Paul Grover, externals
fairs; Greg Lackey, graduate life; and Dor
na Lindenmeier, internal affairs.
The positions of secretary and communi
cations have not yet been filled.
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'Mame* ’ by Jerry Herman
AUDITIONS
Everyone Welcome
Mon., April 3 7 p.m.
Texas A&M University
Rudder Exhibit Hall
Tues. - Thur., April 4-6 7 p.m,.
Stage Center Theater
701 N. Main, Bryan
For information cadi 862-1351
Aggie
Players
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