Page 6/The Battalion/Wednesday, September 26, 1984 INTERNATIONAL HOUSE •"*** us RESTAURANT Golden Rotisserie Chicken Dinner $ 2.99 Offer expires September 30,1984 Includes Soup or Salad, Vegetable, Potato, Roll and Butter Good Everyday After 11 A.M. Warped by Scott McCulla THIS STUFF IIV iR THE WyLBU 5V5TE./A DOESN'T /^AKE ANT SENSF- AT ALL f SOMEBODY!? TAKEN OVER THE SYSTEM WITH ALL HESE WEIRD l itti e X WONDER. IF THESE NAMES AT THE END op each ONE ARE THE PEOPLE THIS ONE'S KINDA familiar THOUGH... LIKE I'VE SEEN IT SOMEWHERE... X. WONDER IF THEY'RE SUPPOSED TO DO ANYTHING ML WPItf SHE YlMi Aggies... You say there isn’t a convenient, indoor, on-campus exercise program designed to keep you in shape this fall? ...Well, I guess you haven’t heard about the... AEROBICS CLUB This program is sponsored by the Health and Physical Education Department These classes are taught by H&PE Department faculty and student exercise technology ma jors. The following classes began on Wednesday, September 19, and will conclude Friday, December 7, 1984: (1) NOON STRENGTH AND ENDGRANCE-promoting flexibility, muscle tonus, and cardiovascular conditioning through indoor exercise programming and choreographed aerobic movement (moderate to fast-paced program)... MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY, 12:00 noon-12:45 p.m.; $20.00/session (EAST KYLE 263) (2) EVENING BODY DYNAMICS-a vigorous exercise program to modern music consisting of dancercise and strenuous body toning floor/wail exercises, (fast-paced program)... MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, 5:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m.; $20.00/session (EAST KYLE 263) (3) EVENING DYNAMIC CALISTHENICS-this class will include stretching, progressively-introduced fast-paced calisthenics, with pre-and post-class field testing (and improvement profile) to determine overall fitness (moderate class graduating to fast-paced program)... MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, 6:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m.; $20.00/session (EAST KYLE 263) (4) EVENING WATER EXERCISES-moderate depth (4 feet) water-oriented exercise class designed to increase flexibility and muscle tous. A concluding class introduction to proper stroke mechanics will be offered to those interested, (moderate to fast-paced program)... WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, 6:00 p.m. - 6:45 p.m.; $20.00/session (P.L. DOWNS INDOOR SWIMMING POOL) For furthur information, please notify the Texas A&M University Health and Physical Education Departmental secretary: East Kyle - Room 158K, or call 845-3109. Domino’s Pizza Delivers... Tonight! and every other night of the week But on every Wednesday night we re bringing you a special offer Domino's Pizza is the number one pizza delivery company in the world. For over 20 years we've been bringing fast, free 30 minute pizza delivery to your door. Why not order a hot. delicious pizza from Domino's Pizza tonight. Fast, Free Delivery 4407 Texas Ave.-Bryan 260-9020 1504 Holleman-C.S. 693-2335 Townshire Shopping Ctr. 822-7373 We use only 100% real dairy cheese' Limited delivery area Drivers carry under $20 C 1982 Domino's Pizza.lnc o o EVERY WEDNESDAY 12” Pepperoni Pizza with 2 Pepsi’s for only $5.95 16” Pepperoni Pizza with 2 Pepsi’s for only $7.95 no coupon needed not valid with any other offer m * • o 2 < HOURS 11 a.m. -1 a.m. Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m. - 2 a.m. Fri.-Sat. SHOE Jeff MacNelly MBS. feemo APRS SPARKLE, WIT, CHARM, INTELLIGENCE AMP EXCITEMENT TO TUB TICKET "SHE HAS GORGEOUS PEEPERS., L/ffit'i mil. ■ IWrlV^Vl tJj.fftr.o* Comm* U1LILZ. 1 _ Ottmbu'od by Trl CommwrMc •non v SHOE Jeff MacNelly v IM OPfbSEP TO THE 0-1 KW0ER. SBCAUSE IT IS AN VNPKWEaT 1 T: WEAfLNS SYSTEM WAT WILL- 0E MUCH TOO EXPENSIVE-. 7~ ’064AUS6 rr WON'T ee 0UILT IN MYSTATBT S'Jefferson Communication*. Inc^tgS^ i ^Pi«f"t>ute4 by Tribune Media Servicee. Inc. ^ Honors Administrators named vice chancellors University News Service Two long-time Texas A&M University System administrators, W. Clifton Lancaster and William Wasson, have been named vice chancellors. Lancaster, formerly an asso ciate vice chancellor, is now vice chancellor for budgets and hu man resources, and Wasson, for merly associate vice chancellor and system comptroller, assumes the title of vice chancellor and system comptroller. In recommending the title changes. Chancellor Arthur Han sen said he was eliminating the position of executive vice chan cellor for administration which was left vacant with the retire ment of W.C. Freeman. “It was my intent to determine whether it was absolutely nec essary to have these areas report to one individual who wouki re port to me or have these area ad ministrators work together but report to me separately, ” Hansen said, adding tnat the latter ar rangement had worked well since Freeman’s retirement. Lancaster, 53, joined the Sys tem 23 years ago as personnel of ficer. In 1967 he was named bud get director, seven years later lie became assistant vice president for budgets and was elevated in associate vice chancellor earlier this year. He holds bachelor's and master’s degrees in business ad ministration from the University of Texas at Austin. Wasson, 36, came to A&M in 1970 as an accountant in the com ptroller’s office. A certified public accountant, he left the system in 1973 to return to private practice but returned a year later as senior internal auditor and subsequently was named comptroller and asso ciate vice comptroller./ a Agriculture faculty members get awards v University News Service Three Texas A&M faculty members from the College of Ag riculture have been presented teaching excellence awards by the Association of Former Students. Receiving the awards were Dr. Earl H. Knebel, Dr. Morris G. Merkle and Dr. R.D. Slack. The awards, which include a $2,000 stipend and a framed certificate, are presented to encourage and recognize outstanding educators. Knebel was cited for his out standing leadership as professor and head of the Department of Agricultural Education. He has held the position for 23 years, earning degrees in education from A&M and a doctorate in ed ucation from Oklahoma State University. A professor of soil and crop sciences, Merkle’s teaching and research focus on principles of herbicide chemistry and chemical weed control. He is a recipientol distinguished teaching awards from the Weed Science Sodetyof America and the Southern Weed Science Society of America. Merkle is a graduate of Auburn University and earned his doctor ate from Cornell University. Slack, of the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Science, has been praised for his class room environment which makes learning enjoyable. P0 1 from the ie but drowi |the C< A 1 for tf an ut discos morn lip Co Officials sell large blocks of stock shortly before Tl prices plummet United Press International DALLAS — A Texas Instruments spokesman says there was no wrong doing by two company officials who sold large blocks of TI stock shortly before the Pentagon’s announce ment of faulty microchips sent the defense contractor’s stock prices plummeting. TI spokesman Norman Neureiter said Monday that both sales were ap propriate and within the law. A spokesman for the Securities and Exchange Commission in Wash ington said commission policy pre vented them from saying whether the two TI trades were being investi gated. ber Carl J. Thomsen, sold 1,18 shares — 5 percent of his TI stock- on Aug. 10. William N. Sick Jr., executive vice president in charge of semiconduc tor operations, sold his 3,166 shares of TI common stock on Aug. 15, just 27 days before TI stopped shipping certain microchips because of testing irregularities. Another TI official, board mem- Sick got between $138.75 am $140 per share for a total ol $440,000 and made a pre-tax profi of $100,000. Thomsen got$142pei share fora total of$167,500. Within two days of the Pentagon! announcement about the fault! chips, TI’s stock dropped $ 13.25H $128.25. Gas stations soon able to buy any brand United Press International PHILADELPHIA — More than 50,000 service station operators will be allowed to buy any brand of gaso line they choos,e under settlement terms of a 13-year-old lawsuit filed against the nation’s major oil compa nies. The settlement also calls for the 13 oil companies involved to pay $25 million in damages to operators who ran company-owned stations be tween 1967 and 1977, said the oper ators’ lawyer David Berger. Two other companies, Getty and Sun Co., settled out of court in 1982 and promised to pay $ 11 million in damages without admitting wrong doing, Berger said. The class-action antitrust lawsuit filed in 1971 charged the oil compa nies had engaged in restraint of trade in the sale of gasoline by re quiring dealers to purchase gas from their parent oil company. The oil firms involved in the law suit were Amoco, Atlantic Richfield, Amerada Hless, BP, Chevron, Cities Service, Exxon, Gulf, Mobil, Phillips, Shell, Texaco and Union. Berger said the settlement would allow service station dealers who lease their stations from one of the major oil companies to buy gasoline from any source, as long as they make clear that it has not come from their parent firm. The settlement affects 50,000 of the nation’s 140,000 conventional stations. Edwin Rothschild, assistant direc tor of the Citizen-Labor Energy Co alition, a consumer group in Wash ington, said it could redr prices by several cents a gallon. “The agreement could be ver) good for consumers because it albs dealers to shop around for lowff priced gasoline and to compeit more effectively,” Rothschild said. Vic Rasheed, president of tlif Service Station Dealers of America, agreed that prices should be re duced because dealers will be ableto buy lower-priced gasoline. But Dan Lundberg, publisher of the Los Angeles-based Lundberj Survey, which tracks gasoline prices and markets, said the effect would be minimal. 01 0 He said most stations do not have f the capacity for the extra pumps or | storage tanks that would be required to keep different kinds of gasoline | uce pump _ separate. Sun al forth or sii ( El