Alpha Phi Burger • Teriyaki Burger • MexiBurger • Alpha Phi Burger • > WOW The Best Burgers in Town Just Got Better Every night from 6-11 p.m. We’ll highlight a different burger off our menu CD o Only $2.75 WOW! o including iced tea or soft drink co does not include tax not good with any other coupon or special KISAIV 846-8741 o egd|y • jaSjngjxe^j > je6jng i^eAuei »ja6jng igd egdiy • je6jng gouey GOTTA DANCE? P SOCIETY Classes Begin This Week For more information call: Karen 693-3490 Cindy 260-3563 EVERYONE WELCOME!! THE BOOT BARN Largest Selection Lowest Prices in The Brazos Valley HOURS: M-SAT. 9:30-6 2.5 Miles east of the Brazos Center on FM1179 (Briarcrest Dr.) In Bryan, Tx. 822-0247 Page 8AThe Battalion/Tuesday, September 17,1985 U.S. in debtor status for first time since 1914 Associated Press WASHINGTON — The nation’s broadest measure of foreign trade soared to a near-record $31.8 billion deficit from April through June, pushing the United States into the status of a net debtor for the first time in 71 years, the government said Monday. Simply put, that means Americans now owe more to foreigners than foreigners owe to Americans, a posi tion the country has not been in since 1914. The Commerce Department re port said the $31.8 billion deficit in the current account during the sec ond quarter was 4.9 percent higher than the $30.3 billion current ac count deficit incurred during the first three months of the year. The current account measures not only trade in merchandise but also in services, mainly investments flowing between the United States and other countries. The report showed that foreign assets in the United States grew by $39.5 billion during the first six months of the year while U.S. invest ment abroad was growing by only $3.2 billion. That would mean a deterioration in the country’s investment position of $36.3 billion during the first six months of the year — enough to wipe out the $28.2 billion investment surplus held by the United States as the year began. By the end of the 1985, econo mists predict the country could be in debt to foreigners by as much as $100 billion, making the United States the world’s largest debtor country, substantially ahead of the previous leaders, Brazil and Mexico. However, economists are split on how serious a threat this situation poses for the United States. Some economists say there is no parallel with debt-plagued devel oping countries because the Ameri can debt represents a smaller per centage of the overall U.S. economy, the biggest in the world. But other economists warn that, now that the United States has slipped into the status of net debtor, the debt is likely to grow at astro nomical levels in the coming years. Practicality Waldo by Kevin Thomas OH wade! You're swh A GREAT DANC(R! MSC committees bringing musical, political programs to A&M campus By MEG CADIGAN Staff Writer Many Memorial Student Center committees will begin their fall se mester programming next week. On Sept. 24, MSC Political Forum will begin its gubernatorial series with Rep. Tom Loeffler speaking. Kent Hance will be speaking in the series later in the semester. Political Forum will introduce a new program in mid-October called Insights. It will be a program for stu dents and faculty to discuss impor tant topics. “Insight is designed to make greater contact with the faculty and to educate the students involved,” says Erica Bondy, special event and trip coordinator for Political Forum. Another Political Forum program being developed is the E.L. Miller Lecture Series. Miller is a former head of Cooper Industries, and upon his retirement, Texas A&M re ceived an endowment for a lecture series. This year’s series, “The Future in Space,” will be held Nov. 20-21. Political Forum is planning a trip to Austin Nov. 7-8. The focus of the trip will be “the future of Texas fea turing the 1986 gubernatorial cam paign,” Bondy says. MSC Great Issues will host Dr. Timothy Leary, co-founder and di rector of FUTIQUE, a computer software company. Sept. 25. Leary will speak on the effects of new tech nology and how this technology, combined with the energy of today’s youth, can help solve world prob lems, Jim Shicker, Great Issues chairman, says. Great Issues also will present Marc Berkowitz, an Auschwitz survi vor, on Oct. 23. The Texas A&M Sport Parachute club will jump onto campus Sept. 25. When asked where the jumpers would be landing, Committee Chair man Jill Hickok said, “On the Drill Field, we hope.” MSC Town Hall season tickets are available now through Oct. 3, when “Side by Side by Sondheim” will be performed by the Missouri Reper tory Theater Tour. Stephen Sondheim, an American composer, is known for his musicals, “Company,” “A Little Night Music," “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum” ana “Gypsy." “Side by Side by Sondheim” is a revue of some of the hits from these musicals. Other upcoming Town Hall pet formances are “Cyrano de Berge rac” and a British comedy, “Noises off!” Next semester, Town Hall will present “42nd Street,” “Brigadoon and the “Oldest Living Graduate." On Oct. 11, Cheap Trick will open for Night Ranger. George Strait svi perform at A&M on Nov. 14. The next performance sponsored by the Opera and Performing Arts Society is Chamber Music Interna tional, Oct. 8. Coperton to discuss role of students in government By JENS B. KOEPKE Staff Writer >erton will ape discuss the role of students in lo cal and state elections in a speech sponsored by the Young Demo crats at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in 510 Rudder. He was elected to the state Sen ate in 1980, winning “Rookie of the Year” honors from Texas Monthly after his first term. He has successfully sponsored over 150 bills, inclucling the Public Uti lities Commission reform legis lation. Caperton said he will raise im portant current issues and hopes afterward to engage in a ques- tion-and-answer session with the audience. Caperton, a ’71 graduate of Texas A&M University, served as student body president and Me morial Student Center vice presi dent. (continued from page 1) into the old traditional (art) pro grams of the 1920s and ’30s that it is impossible to change.” Dr. Joan Moore, an assistant pro fessor of industrial education who introduces A&M students to pottery, sculpture and jewelry making, said the problematic idea floating today is “just do anything — it’s art.” “Art requires a skill in whatever medium, whether its paint, ceramics or metal,” she said, adding that art takes “digging down within you and coming out with a feeling. I con stantly work to improve my skills.” Her beginning ceramics class at tracts students majoring in market ing, business, journalism, pre-med, landscape architecture and elemen tary education. She said this course clues a student as to whether he’s in terested in a craft, but a four-year curriculum would be necessary to train someone to be a potter or a painter, who could “develop a prod uct that’s salable.” Hutchinson said the College of Architecture tried in 1976 and in 1983 to acquire such an art program. “The last time we tried, we re ceived first priority ratings from the Board of Regents,” he said. “Ho wever, the state coordinating board would not look at the program.” The Coordinating Board is disen chanted with the state’s art pro grams, he said, because they’re ex pensive and they give people diplomas who later can’t find robs. “Many of them are mediocre,” Hutchinson said. He mentioned a cover story in Time magazine by renowned art critic Robert Hughes lambasting the prevalent trend toward art that shocks. Rennaissance artists could paint, write poetry, design architec ture or military equipment, Hut chinson said, but after World War II artists became independent and self- serving. “The artists today are trying to de stroy art,” he said, and a need is aris ing to re-examine the current idea of art. “We’re talking survival — for the arts, the industry, for an idea. “We hope that we will be on a verge of a new breakthrough.” Educators at universities such as Nebraska and Colorado State think Texas A&M “has a real chance ai creating a program no one else has, that’s undeniably needed and is uni que,” he said. Thirteen faculty members with degrees in art-related fields from tht Department of Environmental De sign have been targeted to teach in the visual studies area within the College of Architecture. They’ve got a budget, a secretary, and a proposal about to be com pleted for the Coordinating Board, Hutchinson said. DAVES KEGS KEGS KEGS KEGS B 4 U A fn- NATIONAL CO-ED SERVICE FRATERNITY BUY Your INFORMAL RUSH -l-PM SEPT 17 - MSC 1ZP * SEPT- 18 - MSC 206 *■ Next CALL SUSAN FOR FORE INFO 26<0-, Beer Stop and * 0 1 * n F J V'bur Prices Daves also has weekend specials on liquor and imported beer. j\j\^0 ^ZJfzomliion ofE clijii joins t(iE Ua ff of TV. MOP.’, hair design 524 University Dr. E. (Across from Interurhan) 696-4343 Ciisli or t lu-ik I’rdi-m-d On Salt- Iti-ins Drive-Up Window Dave Dean, Owner Chimney Hill T Retail .Plaza Sh w< no want* Dii Servi Stude the A trativ Th that ( ractio which user. He use, v for fa “T1 ching Mo SIMS sity sti forlat makin puter “SI says, ‘ menu veryg Din progr on tal worka dent a “Ai ing of (of tht where have t Din super- currer Ant numb “Ne it’s A n variety ning.. swer o Din partm he had