The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 24, 1997, Image 4

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    MAY GQAD6
If you ordered a 1997 Aggieland and will not be on campus this fall to
pick it up, you can have it mailed. You should stop by the Student Pub
lications advertising office, room 015 Peed McDonald building, between
8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, and pay a $6.50 mailing
and handling fee. Pefunds will not be made on Aggieland yearbooks not
picked up within one semester of the publication date.
FINALS AT
,
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Located at 700 East Univ. Dr. Suite # 108
FINALS! FINALS! FINALS!*
I Acct 209
Part I
Sat May 3
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Part I
Sun May 4
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1 Acct 229
Part 1
Mon Apr 28
9pm-12am
Part II
Tue Apr 29
3pm-5pm
or
9pm-l 1pm
Part III
Wed Apr 30
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or
9pm-l 1pm
Part IV
Thu May 1
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or
9pm-l 1 pm
I Acct 229
ICash Flows
Mon Apr 28
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Thu May 1
9am-12pm
Sat May 3
12pm-3pm
Mon May 5
6pm-9pm
I Acct 229
I Mock Fina!
Wed Apr 30
9am-12pm
Sun May 4
12pm-3pm
Mon May 5
9pm-12am
Tue May 6
9pm-12am
Acct 230
Part 1
Mon Apr 28
5pm-7pm
or
7pm-9pm
Part II
Tue Apr 29
5pm-7pm
or
7pm-9pm
Part III
Wed Apr 30
5pm-7pm
or
7pm-9pm
Part IV
T hu May 1
5pm-7pm
or
7pm-9pm
I Acct 230
1 Mock Final
Wed Apr 30
12pm-3pm
Thu May 1
12pm-3pm
1 Bana 303
Part I
Mon Apr 28
9pm-l 1pm
Part II
Tue Apr 29
9pm-l 1 pm
Part III
Wed Apr 30
9pm-l 1 pm
Part IV
Thu May I
9pm-l 1 pm
I Bana 305
Part I
Sat May 3
3pm-6pm
Part II
Sun May 4
3pm-6pm
Part I
Mon May 5
6pm-9pm
Biol 113
Part I
Mon Apr 28
11 pm-1 am
Part II
Tue Apr 29
1 Ipm-lam
Part III
Wed Apr 30
1 Ipm-lam
Part IV
Thu May 1
11 pm-1 am
Biol 113
Part I
Fri May 2
6pin-9pm
Part II Sat
May 3
3pm-6pm
Part III
Sun May 4
3pm-6pm
Biol 114
Part I
Mon Apr 28
8pm-l 1pm
Part II
Tue Apr 29
8pm-l 1 pm
Part III
Wed Apr 30
8pm-l 1 pm
I Econ 202
I Hossain
Part I
Part II
Sat May 3
3pm-6pm
Sun May 4
3pm-6pm
BEAT THE
I Econ 202
Allen
Part I
Mon May 5
6pm-9pm
Part 11
Tue May 6
6pm-9pm
HELL
nilTTA
I Econ 203
Ulmer
Part I
Sat May 3
6pm-9pm
Part II
Sun May 4
6pm-9pm
FINALS!
or
9pm-12am
or
9pm-12am
I Econ 322
Part I
Mon Apr 28
9pm-l 1 pm
Part II
Tue Apr 29
9pm-llpm
Part III
Wed Apr 30
9pm-l 1 pm
Fine 341
ft rTSo |
Part I
Mon Apr 28
7pm-9pm
or
9pm-l 1 pm
Part II
Tue Apr 29
7pm-9pm
or
9pm-l 1pm
Part III
Wed Apr 30
7pm-9pm
or
9pm-l 1pm
Part IV
Thu May 1
7pm-9pm
or
9pm-l 1 pm
1 ll
Fine 341
Part I
Fri May 2
6pm-9pm
Part II
Sat May 3
6pm-9pm
Part III
Sun May 4
6pm-8pm
1 Math 141
Part I
Mon Apr 28
5pm-7pin
Part II
Tue Apr 29
5pm-7pm
Part III
Wed Apr 30
5pm-7pm
Part IV
Thu May 1
5pm-7pm
I Math 142
Part I
Sat Apr 26
3pm-6pm
Part II
Sun Apr 27
3pm-6pm
Part III
Thu May 1
3pm-5pm
l UK l
I Math 142
Part I
Mon Apr 28
3pm-5pm
Part II
Tue Apr 29
3pm-5pm
Part III
Wed Apr 30
3pm-5pm
Part IV
Thu May 1
3pm-5pm
1 Math 151
Part I
Mon Apr 28
7pm-9pm
Part II
Tue Apr 29
7pm-9pm
Part III
Wed Apr 30
7pm-9pm
Part IV
Thu May 1
7pm-9pm
I Math 152
I 1 DR 1
Part I
Sat Apr 26
6pm-9pm
Part II
Sun Apr 27
6pm-9pm
Part III
T hu May 1
11 pm-1 pm
i ' J
I Math 152
Part 1
Mon Apr 28
11 pm-lam
Part II
Tue Apr 29
11 pm-lam
Part III
Wed Apr 30
1 Ipm-lam
Part IV
Thu May 1
1 Ipm-lam
I Mgmt 211
Crunch
Thu May 1
10am-l pm
Sun May 4
6pm-9pm
Mon May 5
6pm-9pm
Tue May 6
6pm-9pm
I Mgmt 211
Detailed
Part 1
Thu May 1
1:30-3:30
Sun May 4
9:30-11:30
Mgmt 211
Detailed
Part 2
Sun May 4
3:30-5:30
Mon May 5
9:30-11:30
Tue May 6
9:30-11:30
'Schedule for Ticket Sales
Thu Apr 24
5:30-9:30
Fri Apr 25
4:00-9:00
Sat Apr 26
12:00-6:00
Sun Apr 27
1:00-9:00
Mgmt 211
All Acct
All Math
All Classes
All Fine
All Econ
4.0 & Go is located behind Golden Coral and next to Sidepockets, on
the Centerpole bus route.
Call 846-Tutor (8886) for more details.
Clark
Continued from Page 3
“My best interview, by far, was in
October with Tori Amos (for The Ea
gle),” Clark said. “She’s sort of other
worldly. For her to let me into her
world for 15 minutes was incredible.”
Clark became Aggielife editor in
the spring of 1995.
“Rob’s sort of the father of Ag
gielife,” Landauer said. “He made
that section. It would be nothing
without him.”
After his three-year stint at The
Battalion, Clark took a summer in
ternship at the Houston Chronicle,
and was hired in August for the
copy desk at The Eagle.
“I want Spotlight to be some
thing everyone from high school
students to college students to
grandparents can read,” Clark said.
“From what band to see to what
restaurant to eat at, I want it to be a
comprehensive weekend guide.”
Jim Butler, an Eagle staff writer
who covers theater, cinema and the
arts for Spotlight, said Clark’s dedi
cation to the newspaper paid off.
“Rob has put in a tremendous
amount of work,” Butler said. “This
is big league. It compares with
entertainment sections in any oth
er newspaper.”
The debut of Spotlight is a reac
tion to Bryan-College Station’s ex
panding entertainment scene,
Clark said.
“When I was in school, I didn’t
appreciate the full scope of the
entertainment scene,” he said. “It’s
just a matter of taking a look around.
We have a lot of opportunities.”
Spotlight is shooting for diversi
ty, he said.
“It’s not only going to be music
or movies or plays,” Clark said.
“We’ll be focusing on local musi
cians and actors. The local stage
productions here are amazing, the
fine arts too.”
Spotlight planned an album re
view of folk-rocker Robert Earl
Keen’s latest, Circus, for today’s issue.
“We’re also taking a national
approach to it,” Clark said, noting
that the weekly supplement fea
tures Billboard album charts and
national box office returns. “We
let people know what’s going on
nationally, but there’s still a
strong local concentration.”
Landauer said the end result of
Clark’s efforts is impressive.
“It’s incredible to see something
like that in The Eagle, but it’s not
surprising to see Rob accomplish
that,” Landauer said. “He’s a profes
sional journalist to the bone.”
Clark’s dream is to write for mu
sic magazine Rolling Stone, but he
is excited to be working for The Ea
gle and Spotlight, he said.
“It’s been great to watch this
come together,” Clark said. "The
Eagle gave me an incredible op
portunity, and I’m thankful for
that chance.”
Vallejo
Continued from Page 3
The Vallejo brothers have made a career of family bonding, and al
though their parents were skeptical at first, Alejandro Vallejo said their par
ents now are their biggest fans.
"At first, it’s kind of like a parent’s worst nightmare,” he said. “You’re around
a bad scene in bars with the drugs and crazy drunk people, but now they’re
behind us. My dad is always in the front row with his Vallejo shirt on.”
The Vallejo brothers’ younger sister attends the University of Alabama and,
although she is not a musician, Alejandro Vallejo said she, too, is aVallejo fan.
“She listens to the radio professionally,” he said.
The Vallejos saw a family affair become the dream of a lifetime, and Alejan
dro Vallejo said the band members will do all they can to keep the dream alive.
“We’re on the road supporting radio,” he said. “If they’re playing ‘Just
Another Day,’ we’re gonna be there.”
► People in the News
Flynt battles ban
on mag in Ohio
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — Larry Flynt
is bringing Hustler back to a city that
banned it.
The publisher says he is going to
sell the sexually explicit magazine in
Cincinnati, where he was prosecuted
and jailed in 1977.
“We’re going back to Cincinnati in
June and we’re going to sell Hustler,”
Flynt told the Dayton Daily News.
“They say if anybody sells it in Cincin
nati, they’re going to be arrested. Well,
we’re going to sell it on street corners
if we have to.”
Flynt, whose life story was told on
screen last year in The People vs. Larry
Flynt, was convicted of pandering ob
scenity and engaging in organized
crime for trying to sell the magazines.
The conviction was later overturned,
but it led stores in Hamilton County to
stop selling the magazine.
If Flynt does try to sell Hustler, Sher
iff Simon Leis Jr. said: “We’ll take appro
priate action as we deem necessary.”
Judge says actor
gets break to film
MALIBU, Calif. (AP) — Robert
Downey Jr. got a break from a judge
who changed the actor’s drug proba
tion so he could make a movie.
Municipal Judge Lawrence Mira
agreed Tuesday to postpone any jail
time Downey may receive if he vio
lates probation during the making of
the film.
“Rehabilitation is ineffective with
out employment,” Mira told Downey,
who was upbeat and smiling.
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Student Counseling
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fire you a aood listener?
Do you like to kelp others? fire you a
responsible and committed person?
(DVotunteen Heeded®
to begin service in the Summer '97 or Fall '97 Semester.
***INTERVIEWING NOW***
Summer training will be May 28-31. Fall training will be August 25-30.
Application DEADLINE for Summer Training is May 9.
ALL MAJORS are welcome to apply.
Applications available in Room 104 Henderson Hall.
For further information call Susan Vavra at 845-4427 ext. 133.
Texas A&M German Club is pre
senting The Broken Jug at Rudder
Forum at 7 p.m.
Bobby Hall & the Ice Cold
Blues, a blues band from Bryan-
College Station, is playing at the
Palace Theatre at noon.
MSC Film Society is showing
Dazed and Confused at Rudder
Theatre at 9:30 p.m.
Sneaky Pete, a sing-a-long
artist from Bryan-College Station,
is playing at Cow Hop at 9 p.m.
David Trout, a rock ’n’ roll co
median, is performing at Chelsea
Street Pub & Grill at 9 p.m.
Vallejo, a Latin funk rock band
from Austin, is playing with Cres-
ta, a rock band, at Dixie Theatre
at 10 p.m.
Brian Whitaker, a classic rock
musician from Bryan-College Sta
tion, is playing at Fitzwilly’s at 9 p.m.
Aggies can get a slice of
Cake tonight at 7 in Rudder Au
ditorium. The Sacramento rock
quintet is playing in support of
their second self-produced re
lease, Fashion Nugget.
The album spawned “The Dis
tance,” which received heavy ra- ,
dio and MTV airplay. The single
propelled Cake's mix of country,
jazz, hip-hop and pop into the
mainstream.
Cake guitarist Greg Brown
said in a press release that the
band’s music relies heavily on its
own brand of groove.
"It’s not necessarily the
trademark patented, what-you-
might-expect groove,” he said.
“There are so many artists that
groove, and we’re just trying to
do that, too.”
Cake
FRIDflV
Hpril 25
Texas A&M German Club is pre-
Jazz Three, a jazz band ■ j 1 1
ing at Sweet Eugene’s K'f
Java at 9 p.m.
Spencer’s Rocket, a roct*
from Bryan-College Statit'
playing with DNS, a three-:*!
acoustic band, at Cow Hof
9:30 p.m.
Texas A&M German Clubisi
senting The Broken JugatM
Forum at 7 p.m.
David Trout, a rock'n'roll
median, is performing atCliei
Street Pub & Grill at 9 p.m.
Drew Wilson & Blue Valenij
a jazz rock band from
lege Station, is playingatFirt]
at 9 p.m.
DON’T FREAK!
We’ve added classes for the June exam.
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