WANTED—SERIOUS PEOPLE Who desire extra $50,000-$100,000 per year • Herbal Health Products of the 80’s • Over $40 Million in sales last month • Involvement with exciting company Thousands are improving their health, losing weight, in creasing energy, and finding a new way of life financially. More information call Bob Lammerts 846-1142. WHAT A DEAL! Scrambled Egg Breakfast 2 eggs, sausage Texas Toast 99<: 6:30 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. WHATABURGER 105 Dominik 1101 Texas Ave. Offer good thru Nov. 14, 1984 A Science Fiction Double Feature from 4r MSC Cepheid Variable The Fantastic Monster Flesh-Eating Animals and Plants! ROGER GORMAN presents FANTASTIC PLANET AND The Flight of Apollo 11 Thurs., Nov. 1 7:30 & 9:45 201 MSC $1.00 Sun. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thurs. Fri. Sat. 1401 FM Rd. 2818 College Station 693-2818 NIGHTLY SCHEDULE^ Country Nite I Bar Drinks Country Nite & Swimsuit & 5 ®^ r Contest I an Nite Let’s Make a Deal Night La Bare Women only ’til 10p.m. Four for One at 7p.m. Free Champagne for Ladies at 10p.m. Comedy Workshop Professional comedian from around the country 2 great shows 9:30p.m. & 11 p.m. 4 for 1 drinks 7p.m.-8p.m. 4 for 1 @ 4 p.m., 3 for 1 @5 p.m., 2 for 1 @ 6 p.m., Open Bar frOm 7-9 p.m." No Cover for Ladies Open Bar from 7-9 p.m.- no covert Ladies Double size drinks every night after specials NO COVER w/this coupon on any night except Wed. & during open bar "1 I I I I I I Page 14/The Battalion/Wednesday, October 31,1984 What’s up Wednesday TRADITIONS COUNCIL: will be selling long-sleeve Howdy T-shirts for $6 in the MSC through Friday. MSC BASEMENT: the U.S. Air Force Band will play at 8 p.m. in Rudder Auditorium. KANM RADIO: will debut nude radio at A&M. DJs will broadcast nude and encourage nude listenership. MICROBIOLOGY SOCIETY: is meeting at 6:30 p.m. in 113 BSBE. ABC: David Balser will speak on “Construction Devel opment” at 7 p.m. in 105 Harrington. UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRY: is having an Aggie Suoper, Halloween party and trick or treating for canned gooas for Twin City Missions at 6 p.m. at A&M Presbyterian Church. TAMU CHESS CLUB: is meeting at 8:30 p.m. in 410 Rud der. Players of all strengths are welcome. MARANATHA CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: is meeting in the Viking Apartments Clubhouse at 7:30 p.m. for a Bible study. APOLLO CLUB: all interested students should sign up for this dinner club by Nov. 13 in 213 Pavilion. The cost is $ 11. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battal ion, 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three days prior to desired publication date. Capsized ferry kills 14 50 others are missing United Press International CATANAUAN, Philippines — Survivors of a ferry that sank in tropical storm Warren said Tuesday a huge wave smashed into the over crowded ship and sank it in three minutes, leaving at least 14 people dead and 50 others missing. Rescuers searched for the missing E eople after the vessel Venus was altered by huge waves and sank Monday in Tayabas Bay off the coastal town of Catanauan, 120 miles southeast of Manila. The U.S. Air Force assisted the Philippine Air Force and Coast Guam in the search with a heli copter and a C-130 transport air craft. Of the vessel’s 242 passengers and crew, 178 had been rescued, said Capt. Feliciano Caliboso, coast guard operations officer. Most of them were sent to Catanauan hospital af ter they were picked up by a passing domestic ferry boat. Caliboso said 14 people were con firmed dead in the accident. The 745-ton Venus was traveling from Laoang in the central island of Sa mar to Manila. Lourdes Lobereta, a Samar mer chant, said she was holding her two children when a wave struck the ves sel. She said the ferry was over crowded with people and cargo. “My children disappeared, the boat swayed twice and then it went down,” she said, tears streaming down her face. Another passenger, Luciano Lis- tejo said: “The boat was crowded and packed with cargo. In three minutes the water swallowed the ship.” Samson Adamero was traveling with her sister-in-law and her 3- month-old baby when the ferry’s bow went up on a crest and its stern went under. He said he lost his sister-in-law but saved the baby using a life jacket he took from a dead man floating in the water. National police officials said 42 people also aied in floods and land slides spawned by Warren's peak winds of 62 mph. Frigate rejected by Navy officials United Press International WASH INGTON — The Navy has refused to accept a guided-missile frigate from its builder because of suspected faulty microchips in its in struments and the rejection could be the first of many, officials said Tues day. With 185 officers and men wait ing to board the $398 million frigate Gary in Long Beach, Calif., the Na vy’s superintendent of shipbuilding at the facility decided not to accept delivery of the vessel. It is highly unusual for the Navy to reject a ship, a Navy official said. The action involving the frigate Gary arose from a Pentagon decision Sept. 10 to reject items containing any of 4,700 different kinds of mi crochips made by the Texas Instru ments Corp. at its Midland, Texas, plant because of improper testing of the electronic devices. By Wednesday, TI will have re tested and approved 3,375 of the 4,700 chips, a Defense Logistics Agency spokesman said. An estimated 15 million of the complex, miniaturized electronic cir cuits have been produced and inade quately tested during the past eight years, a logistics official said. “Equipment installed in the ship has not been properly tested in all respects,” the Navy said in a brief statement. Todd Shipyards Inc., which built the Gary in Seattle, Wash., and delivered it 27 weeks ahead of schedule, failed to satisfy Navy requirements that contractors either certify that equipment has been properly tested or request a waiver and provide an adequate war ranty for the affected equipment, the Navy said. The Navy’s rejection of the Gary contradicts assurances given Sept. 13 by the Pentagon’s chief of research and engineering. Undersecretary Richard DeLauer, that the problem with the microchips was more a pa per concern than a substantial one. Yet the Navy rejected the Gary six weeks later and a Navy official, who spoke on condition he not be identi fied, said similar action can be ex pected in the future. Len Thorell, vice president and general manager of Todd Shipyards in Los Angeles, said the firm has identified two systems aboard the Gary that contain TI microchips — the speed and course indicators on the bridge. “I’m sure there are submarines and other ships coming up where there will be similar problems,” he said. Todd purchased the systems from the Electrical Tachometer Co. of Philadelphia, Thorell said in a tele phone interview from his company’s New York headquarters. He said Todd was taking appropriate steps to arrange for replacement parts, if necessary, and that the problem should be resolved within a week. Thorell also said Todd is respon sible only for guaranteeing the qual ity of systems it bought for the ship and not those the Navy instructed the company to buy and install aboard the vessel. In some cases, Todd has to buy equipment from vendors the Navy identifies, he said. “Obviously, that’s going to be a point of negotiation — what the Navy thinks Todd is responsible for,” a Navy official said. “The Navy says it’s all the systems on board.” Gandhi (continued from page 1) said she was unafraid of assassina tion. “No, I’m not afraid,” she told United Press International in an in terview this month. “I am frequently attacked,” she said. ” Once a man poked a gun at me. Another time in Delhi someone threw a knife at me.” In 1967, she was hit by a rock which bloodied her face, but the in domitable Gandhi simply pulled up her sari to hide the blood and con tinued on the podium. Gandhi, the only child of India’s first prime minister Jawharlal Nehru, had become symbol of a strong, unified India to many of In dia’s 700 million people. She lost a re-election bid in 1977 ~ but regained the prime minister’s post in 1980. Gandhi was expected to seek yet another five-year term in elections due by January 1985. In Washington, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said Presi dent Reagan would be notified about the assassination, but officials were awaiting further details before commenting. COVENANT PLAYERS . • . CL. ivAXjcA. c*rrrvrrvu*\j&cdtiL til jGoxd CAsJLeJE NOV. 1, 1984 ** Beginning at 12 : 00noo[ IN FRONT OF THE ACADEMIC BLDG (By The Sull Ross Statue] Sponsored by: Living Word Christian Fellowship PHI D€ITR TH€Tfl COLONY ORGANIZATIONAL PARTV! CORl louncil of watei one of t ury, bin to ensui inure. I Thee landau limiting plants, ; velop ai ons of ground Almo: FR€€ R€€R AND PUNCH THURS. NOV. 1 '84 I TR66HOUS6 VlllflG€ PHflS€ III COMPial 8:00 till? ;itys nr ime fr< fore the as low as Tuesc bastal 1 [er from plocado Inrel ;ng plar Hayden rater ad jcity ab ATTENTION: Bowhunters & Arctas Join the Brazos Bowmen Archery Club Featuring • Outdoor Lighted Practice Range • Year Round Shooting Competitions Beginning September 9 (a> 2:00 • Films, Equipment and Shooting Help Next Meeting Nov. 5 Room 510 Rudder Tower-TAMU Dwain/Billy 846-2451 Tony 845-4935846-3400 Ken8M' Un IWALl levelopr lived a | but little ■T impi fttics. || No in; ; impute Hore, tin volumes ymnminnrmniimimnimnnmnmnmnimnimiimmiiimmnnTininmiiin!!! m ferr fJ 1 quickly a This is the last shot! 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