CONTACT DELTA ZETA SORORITY FOR TICKETS AND INFORMATION' 764-3928 or 764-8660 TICKETS $5.00 Advance $6.00 at door When: Friday, October 5, 8 p.m.-Midnight Yell Where: Brazos Co. Pavilion featuring PIRANHA Proceeds to Benefit Gallaudet College for the Deaf & Sheltering Arms Center in C. S. for Abused Children MSC Cafeteria Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. Each Daily Special Only $2.59 Plus Tax. “Open Daily” Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M.—4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M. MONDAY EVENING SPECIAL Salisbury Steak with Mushroom Gravy Whipped Potatoes Your Choice of One Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Coffee or Tea TUESDAY EVENING SPECIAL Mexican Fiesta Dinner Two Cheese and Onion Enchiladas w/ Chili Mexican Rice Patio Style Pinto Beans Tostadas Coffee or Tea One Corn Bread and Butter WEDNESDAY EVENING SPECIAL Chicken Fried Steak w/Cream Gravy Whipped Potatoes and Choice of one other Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL Italian Candle Light Spaghetti Dinner SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE Parmesan Cheese- Tossed Green Salad Choice of Salad Dressing—Hot Garlic Bread Tea or Coffee FOR YOUR PROTECTION OUR PERSONNEL HAVE HEALTH CARDS FRIDAY EVENING SPECIAL Fried Catfish Filet w/Tartar Sauce Cole Slaw Hush Puppies Choice of One Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee SATURDAY NOON and EVENING SPECIAL Yankee Pot Roast Texas Style (Tossed Salad) Mashed Potatoes w/Gravy Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee “Quality First” SUNDAY SPECIAL NOON and EVENING Roast Turkey Dinner Served with Cranberry Sauce Cornbread Dressing Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Coffee or Tea Giblet Gravy And Your Choice of any One Vegetable LORDS AND LADIES: Experience the 10th Annual Texas Renaissance Festival. Held from OiOOAM 'til dark on its site in the beautiful wooded area north of Houston, and west of Conroe, Texas, the Festival will transport you back to the 16th Century for a day of fun and frolic. See jousting knights, buxom wenches, the Royal Falconer, wander ing minstrels, comic and Shake spearean players, Robin Hood's Merry Men and much more.... Try your luck at one of the From Houston: Take 1-45 Tiorth, turn left on 105, turn left on 1774 at Plantersville and drive 6 miles to Site NO PETS PLEASE. games: Skittles, Bocce Ball, Jacob's Ladder, Fencing, Archery and more... Gorge yourself with a Giant Turkey Leg and a tankard of beer, A Gyro Sandwich, Empanada, Fryed Cheese, Pizza Napoli, Appyle Dumpling and more ... Examine the best wares created by fine craftsmen and artists from throughout the land.. .Take in the races at the Newmarket Race Track and watch as glassblowers and blacksmiths demonstrate their skills... Tickets are $10 (adults) and $5 (children 5-12) at the gate. Children under 5 admitted free. Prices include entertainment, free parking, plus all events at Newmarket Race Track and Arena. Celebrate the 10th Anniversary at the new Import Beer Gardens! And indulge dining and entertainment fantasies by joining in the RING'S FEAST. (Call (713) 356-3002 for Feast details Sr reservations. Texas Renaissance Festival, Route 2, Box 650, Plantersville, TX 77363. Or call (713) 356-2178 for more information. (JDticketrqn* Canon L Page 6/The BattalionTThursday, October 4, 1984 Sully (continued from page 1) One cadet said, “1 feel like I’m a better person. We’re here because we want to be here.” Another cadet said that adversity pulls them together. “Believe it or not, a lot of fresh men in the Corps think we re too easy on them,” Rollins said. “People are doing it because they want to or because they feel like they should. “A lot of the pressure has all of a sudden disappeared and a lot of re spect has gone with it. You have pressure pushing down on you and it’s let up. You all of a sudden feel you’re f ree.” The Corps is superior to any other similar program, Rollins said. “It seems like our attitude is much better,” he said. Although there are approxi mately 2,050 cadets at A&M com pared to more than 36,000 civilian students, Rollins said that the Corps still has a lot of say in the University and a lot of pull. Rollins said the Corps is looking at systems to evaluate such things as grades and leadership potential. “The Corps is not more interested in quantity than quality," he said. “We’re not trying to make the Corps selective.” He said that the Corps should be open to anyone who needs what the Corps has to offer: discipline, re spect and a chance to learn. Rollins also said that a (J? physical Fitness test will be initi J “Those who can’t pass the pb t will be allowed into the CorpS certain stipulations,” Rollins J This would mean that theyrJ participate in some activities. | “It only takes one bad insiaiiJ put away everything we’vedone'L said. Rollins gave the example J March of tfie Brazos in whidiji Corps raised $30,000 for the.w of Dimes. “1 think the Corps realh 1 something to offer," he said.“ill win I’m still here.” Proposition 2 A&M Senate supports PUF plans By SARAH OATES Staff Writer “If ever there was an issue that will benefit Texas A&M University, it’s Proposition 2,” Neeley Lewis, Democratic incumbent candidate for State Representative told the Stu dent Senate at its Wednesday meet- ing. ‘It’s a watershed issue,” he said. “Either we do it or we don’t.” On Nov. 6, Texas voters will de cide the fate of Proposition 2, a con stitutional amendment to restruc ture the Permanent University Fund. If it passes, Proposition 2 will open the PUF to all universities within the University of Texas and Texas A&rM Systems. It also will cre ate a constitutionally dedicated Higher Education Assistance Fund for the 26 state institutions outside the UT and A&M systems. Lewis urged the senators to tell people about Proposition 2. “This issue has been in the politi cal arena for 10 years," Lewis said. “We cannot allow it to fester in years to come. We must put this issue to rest.” The Senate voted unanimously to pass a resolution approving Proposi tion 2. In other business, the Senate heard a report from Mike Hacht- man. College Station City Council liaison, on the City’s recent consider ations about the Luther Street rail road crossing where two A&M stu dents were killed within 24 hours in separate accidents. more accidents or fatalities,”! man said. He said the city cannot compl hhx'k off the intersection I is an avenue of escape intheevenl a fire in the nearby apartmenittl plexes on Marion Pugh Drive. || Hachtman said the citviscoiil ei ing extending Holleman Dn« "We’re trying to get this intersec tion cleared up so we don’t have any mg exi whic h is a few hundred yards® of the- 1 ui hei Street crossing; stb ni city had negotiated with Souk ■*" Pacific to get a crossing and sip installed at Holleman Drive. Itk planned to close the Luther Set crossing af ter the Hollemancros: opened. However, the agreem has been delayed. The city also is considering routing the railroad tracks, hSi would cost about $65 million,| said. Hosts should take responsibility By MICHAEL CRAWFORD Reporter “We live in an age of liability. When you give a party, especially if given by a group, you assume re sponsibility,” Jan Winniford, Assis tant Director of Student Affairs, said Wednesday night at the Off-Campus Aggies’ meeting. Winniford said a successful party should de-emphasize alcohol. Hosts should provide foods which are high in protein, such as cheese, and non alcoholic drinks for those who are driving. “We are not trying to tell you that drinking is evil, but there is a re sponsible way to drink,” said Winni ford. Winniford said that unless an or ganization or person has a tempo rary liquor license, selling tickets to a parly serving alcohol is illegal. Winniford said that students should be aware of the following re cent changes in drinking and driving laws: • A refusal to take a breath test is admissible as evidence in court. It also results in automatic license sus pension. • It is a class “C’ misdemeanor to let a person whose license ha I* suspended for DWI borrow a d cle. v • A blood alcohol level of.Illgi I cent is considered proof of intoa lion. • A lower blood alcohol levdc still result in a DWI chargeifai ta! and physical faculties” art pared. • DWI suspects can be taped and the film submittal court. • DW’I may no longer be off the record. It is a criminal fense. *5 da * * * * * * * * YYTp 'F ^ * Hazardous waste task force: ‘Public lacks confidence Ml Beel Avg. Beel Beel Pork Smc (limi The I Camp pork, effect Mond United Press International AUSTIN — A government task force Wednesday issued a 71-page report encouraging a more stream lined approach to the management of waste facilities in Texas. The 30-member Governor’s Task Force on Hazardous Waste Manage ment, appointed seven months ago, recommended 70 improvements in the state’s handling of waste sites. The task force said the changes are necessary to correct the widespread belief that the state has mishandled hazardous waste. “The public in Texas lacks confi dence in the enforcement of laws and rules regulating the manage ment of hazardous waste,” the re- { >ort said. “There is a pervasive pub ic perception that government officials have not been sufficiently attentive to problems of improper disposal, processing, storage and transportation of hazardous wastes.” Despite the public’s wary view of waste site regulation, the report said there is no “imminent crisis.” More than 2,000 facilities produce ap proximately 23 million tons of haz ardous waste in Texas each year. The task force questioned the “business wisdom” of the state’s cur rent policy of allowing two state agencies — the Texas Department of Water Resources and tne Texas Department of Health — to share ju- riscliction over different aspects of hazardous waste management. It said the dual jurisdiction results in some administrative and enforce ment duplication by the agencies. The task force also said the Legis lature should curb efforts by local governments to block hazardous waste facilities from locating in their The development of a $1 mi state contingency fund to payfori cleanup of abandoned waste* also was recommended. Other recommendations task force: • a state tax on waste genera® a tax based on ultimate disptt methods or a “waste-end” tax as® posed to a “front-end” tax. • property tax breaks on tt# ment equipment and tax-exempt nancing for destruction and reds tion facilities. • more surprise inspection! the state, with the results of thostf spections more readily the public. • and increased funding fori agencies dealing with hazatfe waste management facilities, pait ularly for the attorney generalsft vironmental protection division. FANNING FOR GOLD? Try our Battalion Classified!!! •N 845-2611 ■Himimii Ticket Available at the Campus Box Office