Wednesday, March 7, 1984/The Battalion/Page 7 p Forty Texas A&M ... students to visit s women at work 'UL [\ II P'in. iii! % wiBi 'ill be stu llo re infon 'ION: i II I a.m By RENEE HARRELL Reporter Forty Texas A&M women will get a glimpse of the “real world” when they travel to Houston March 30 to meet former students at work. (I to plj. 1:1 lie Student Activities Of- i (Colic fire is hosting the trip, which 045-i's will include: • Registration in and de- |0rti ( palturc from tfie Pavilion. l/SO 1 * ^ or ^ s ^ 0 P s 0,1 hanking, accounting, marketing and l ' management. • Lunch with former fe male Texas A&M students 11 p in! f roin the Houston area, ntrsitr t A style show at Sakowitz. 'iberofiij t A reception to let the utact k women make contacts. KThe students also will visit : held fi aniiccounting firm, a bank, a hursdav. mI law firm and a retail com pany. Applications are available in 208 Pavilion and are due by Friday, March 9. Partici pants will be accepted on a first come, first served basis. “This is the first time we have tried this off campus and I think it’s good because it might spark some interest in a few different career areas for the girls,” Charlotte Tay lor, student activities adviser, said. “This has been done at other universities and worked out very well. The major pu- pose of this event is to give our students an insight to life after college’ as well as to in troduce them to former women students that are pur suing careers in various fields.” hion sbo berry at xls. an e >artheid deposed increases explained to RHA ill (icka ByKARI FLUEGEL .() p.m. It:® Reporter c Call Dit)(kmitory residents can ex- ctaGpeiceiit increase in dor- Alunch* f ees an( J a 11b percent i (| ie \y :rease in parking fees for the ch or 1 1 semester, pending approval w8l becoPf Board of Regents. Je|rv Smith, associate direc- Bf Business Services, ex- JNv kjintd to the Residence Hall in. in socuiion at a meeting Tues- n New y t) iat ihe increase in dormi- iwlopp- ry fates was mainly because ol rCarrav (jng utilities costs. Utility costs tke up for 4b.3 percent of the ii>. feat venue generated from the nith, * sidence halls. Smith said. All areiB^ or mor the increase, dormitory ices will range from $313 to 32 for the lowest priced ID: Then r staff (le® dorms and from $778 to $825 for the highest priced dorms. RHA members also received a report from Jim Ferguson, as sociate vice president for opera tions, concerning the new park ing fees and regulations. Ferguson said students can expect a 116 percent increase in the price of a red parking per mit for the 1985 fiscal year. Stu dents who have been paying $36 for parking stickers will be required to pay $78 for the fall semester, the same rate to be charged for comparable re served faculty parking slickers, Ferguson said. In other business, Ron Gar rett reported that Operation Mop-Up, the fund drive to help students defer costs caused by broken water pipes, raised $3,400. “faction leaders invited " o talks by Gemayel United Press International mation. c 4(i*f)86(i BEIRUT — President Amin :mavel Tuesday formally hi ed Lebanon's factional lead- i to meet in Switzerland next ek for new peace talks aimed ilev, ^ .reunifying a country split by will ditfVlears of civil strife, nation.ieg e j, ut ra( |j 0 sa j ( i presidential /nations went to leaders of An ibwion’s fractured political p.m'in WI religious communities, c infoiwing them to meet Monday in Usaime, a Swiss resort. But scattered clashes in Bei- tand the nearby hills tlireal- hc held i e( J a truce that took effect >iudenil sie |bemayel gave in to Syrian welcoiisT rebel Moslem demands m anday and scrapped the May ace accord with Israel. Military sources told Chris- ln Phalange radio two govern- :nt soldiers were wounded p) army units in the Shouf nil tains came under mortar from tli e £ from suspected Druze Mos- Biologion gunners. lit Bern, the Swiss Foreign £D Binistry said the second round Lebanon’s national reconcil- *mptedt [ l n talks would begin Mon- )f the buiflin Lausanne’s Beau Rivage, j^PACT luxury hotel in a park over ling Lake Geneva. first found of national ciliation talks, held last made no progress in attempts to expand the Moslem majority’s role in government. An opposition spokesman said the Moslems had two chief goals in the Lausanne talks — negotiating a fair power-shar ing plan and assigning responsi bility for the army’s destruction of Druze villages and Shiite Moslem slums in February. onfernce that for “those re sponsible” should pay for the fighting that led to a Moslem re volt Feb. 6, saying “we hold the president of the republic re sponsible for the destruction.” Druze leader Walk! Jumblalt said from Amman that he would “consider” attending the Lausanne talks, but persisted in demanding that Gemayel stand trial for the army’s February as saults. The talks also are expected to include Suleiman Franjieh, a former president, and Rashid Karami, a former prime min ister — leaders with Jumblatt in the National Salvation Front formed last summer. The talks also could include Saeb Salam and Adel Osseiran pf the Sunni Moslem commu nity and Christian leaders Cam ille Chanioun, a former presi dent, and Pierre Gemayel, the Phalange party founder and fa ther of the president. Reagan says spiritual growth’s hit America during his administration United Press International COLUMBUS, Ohio — Presi dent Reagan told evangelical Christians Tuesday a “spiritual awakening” has begun across America during his administra tion and renewed his commit ment to the political agenda of the religious right. At the same time, he urged advocates of school prayer amendments and opponents of abortion to conduct themselves with “generosity, tolerance and openness toward all.” Invoking a central theme of his re-election campaign, Rea gan said America today “is see ing a rebirth of freedom and faith — a great national rene wal. “This renewal is more than material. America has begun a spiritual awakening. Faith and hope are being restored. Amer icans are turning hack to God.” But in Washington, House Speaker Thomas O’Neill com plained that Reagan does not even go to church and sug gested he may sponsor legis lation to build a chapel at Camp David, the president’s hideway in the mountains of Maryland. The tongue-in-check prom ise came in response to ques tions about whether Reagan could use the issue of school prayer against Democrats in the presidential campaign. “I never even gave that a thought,” O’Neill said. “There’s a man who doesn’t even go to church. I think I’ll pul up an amendment to put a chapel at Camp David.” They were a family torn apart by temptation... kept apart by pride... but brought tosether l>y a miracle! A WORLD WIDE PICTURES RELEASE March 9-15 Schulman 6 In a speech to the National Association of Evangelicals, Reagan called for passage of amendments to outlaw abortion and make prayer a part of the school day for public school stu dents. “Hasn’t something gone hay wire when this great Constitu tion of ours is invoked to allow Nazis and Ku Klux Klansmen to march on public property and urge the extermination of Jews and the subjugation of blacks, but it supposedly prevents our children from Bible study or ; the saying of a simple prayer in their schools?” Reagan said. But he urged fundamentalist conservatives who support him to temper their zeal for the anti abortion and school prayer leg islation with tolerance for peo ple who hold opposing views. ci/i&Kjds- a restaurant & club Appearing March 6-10 MCA RecorcUpg Artist Sam Neely Hits Include “Loving You Just dossed My Mind M * A * S * H The Party's Over" & New Release Old Photographs Daily Lunch Specials Happy Hour—11 a m.-7 p.m Sun -Tues—No Cover. $100 Bar Drinks Thuis —Ladies, No Cover. $1.00 Bar Drinks Excellent Food Live Shows Nightly. Open 11 a.m. daily Reservations Accepted. 707 Texas Ave. S. College Station LOOKING FOR A GOOD TIME THIS SPRING BREAK? March 11-17 12 4 pm Daily South Padre Island South Padre Chamber oi Commerce Stroll Welcome Center (next to Pavilion) T-Shirts, Can-buggers, posters, group pictures All for $1 donation to the South Padre Island Chamber of Commerce,