Page 4/The Battalion/Monday, September 30, 1985 Rhodes Scholarship 1985 Are you a senior with a 3.50 + average? If so, you may be eligible for a Rhodes Scholar ship. You could spend the next 2 years at Oxford University honing your career skills, widening your educational base. Contact Professor J. F. Reading Room 211, Physics 845-5073 or 696-9190 Deadline: September 30, 19S5 TSO for contact lenses. Fifty years of experience is reflected in every pair we fit. After just one visit, it’s easy to see why a comfortable fit is synonymous with contact lenses from Texas State Optical. It starts with a wide selection.TSO offers one of the widest choices of hard and soft lenses available, so you not only get your prescription filled to the doctor's exact specifications, you also get the kind of fit and comfort 50 years of experience can offer. t,. ... .. rs. t ~. -..w. - r Texas State Optical: 216 N. Main Brvan - 779-2786 Post Oak Mall College Station-764-0010 RAMADA DAILY LUNCH BUFFET Bring a friend and enjoy a variety of delicious salads, entrees, vegetables, and desserts. Located at Texas and University Dr. across from TAMU Locally owned and operated FRIDAY -Ramada Special CATFISH SATURDAY NIGHT d a Plays & Spins Music of the 20’s, 30’s, and 40’s Dance to the music of Glen Miller, Tommy Dorsey and Harry Jones 8 p.m.-12 p.m. Rooms available for football games 409-696-4242 2UC 2UC 2U£ 3UC 2UC ..—a State and Local Warp > THAT; PA V Vow, Aircraft kept at Easterwood « ■££/ NO ft*TAT»< STM-10 iv/ fALP IA A&M uses state-owned planes By TRENT LEOPOLD Senior Staff Writer Aggies sometimes opt to fly to get where they’re going. And when they do, they might choose to fly on one of three “Aggie” planes based at Easterwood Air port. The state owns five airplanes, three of which are basen here. Texas A&M’s three planes and the one at the University of Texas are Beechcraft King Airs. The other plane, based at Texas Tech, is a Piper Navajo. Robert McCreight, chief pilot for the Texas A&M University System, says he flies two Beech- craft C-90s and one A-100 model. The older C-90s can carry the pi lot and seven passengers while the newer A-100 holds nine pas sengers. All three planes are kept in a hangar at Easterwood Airport. McCreight says the planes are available on a priority basis for all A&M employees. Many times the planes are used to travel to places where commer cial service is limited or nonexis- By JO jjpace is ^ng adu [ffin, dir iter in H iriffin’s ipace: C part of ies at Te: griffin sa One of three state-owned planes kept at Eas terwood Airport prepares for takeoff. The planes are available on a tent. “I’ve flown to places where you literally had to look for the run way in the middle of some field somewhere,” he says. An A&M plane flies one hour each way on an average trip, Mc Creight says. The average cruis ing speed is 370 mph at a height of about 12,000 feet. And, while the trips are paid for out of the A&M travel budget, a flat fee of $2.15 per statute mile is charged on each trip. “It really amounts to how much the people’s (those who fly in the planes) time is worth,” he says. “If several departments can get together and split the cost of a flight by sending more than one person on a trip, they can actually use the planes cheaper than fly ing commercially.” The aircraft probably spend more time in the air than they do on the ground, McCreight says. “We take the president to Aus tin .. . and carry department heads to various places across the state,” he says. “The regents have first priority (for use of the planes) followed by the chan cellor, president and officers of various schools.” McCreight says he stays espe- ' lai cially busy when the legislature is in session. When the planes aren’t in the air, they constantly are being checked and maintained to en sure that they are in tip-top shape. “About every 100 hours of flight time we have to change the turbine wheel inside the jet,” Mc Creight says. “We also do such things as greasing and checking lights every 40-50 hours.” The planes were painted Aggie maroon and white about two summers ago. “Before painting them 1 wanted to get some new identifi cation numbers on the planes — something to represent A&M.” McCreight says. “After looking through sheets and sheets of pa per to see what numbers had al ready been taken by other state aircraft across the country, I de cided on the numbers 92 AM, 94 AM and 96 AM." The University of Texas Sys tem flies a Beecncraft King Air Super 200-B. Charles Perrone, the adminis trative officer in charge of sched uling UT aircraft operations, says the plane is flown only within the state. Like A&M, UT uses its plane for of ficial school business such as flying members of the marine and engineering departments to places where commercial aircraft don’t fly, Perrone says. It costs $350 per hour to flv on the UT plane. Perrone says. And passengers are hilled the same Photo by TRENTilOPO; periods of d priorit\ basis for A&M employ- W P resent ’ farjrange fu Speaking amount whether or not thep tailed the pa is full. "Project Charges on the UT planullace in the based on actual flight lime n served only < than the statute mile. K-—— 1 he ■ plane flies about hours a yeat which. PerroneciM, * ^ is more than most stateHmS aircraft. “The benefits of flying on KAUF . ^ontinue* l I plane melude the timtat two inma l>\ those using it," he saw.tused of there is an advantage in bq from the able to reach places where c» men ial airlines don’t fly." I ex.is I < < h pilot RusselDott tharged \ flies a 1973 twin-engine tuiti ^ilhani 1 liaiged I’lpi-I \.iy.i|<) iliatBU ng held ' pahle ol art uising speedofalw escaped 260 mph. The flight-priority list is ski to that of A&M’s and ITi Tech’s flight-billing procedm are similar to those usedbyAi!! All state agencies must file Ik charges per flight hour withtk state aircraft }>oolingboard. Southland Corp. beset with problems Associated Press DALLAS — These are not easy times for Southland Corp., the par ent company of 7-Eleven, inventor of the Slurpee and the 30-second checkout. , The world’s largest operator of convenience stores has been beset with legal, economic and image problems, but company chairman John P. Thompson says calmly it isn’t “the end of the world.” A five-year federal bribery probe in New York led to a tax fraud con viction for Southland, a proxy fraud conviction for one of its top officers and a guilty plea to bribe conspiracy by another Southland official who resigned. Then Southland’s 2-year-old gas refining business, Citgo Petroleum Corp., suffered large losses, forcing big layoffs last year. More Citgo losses in the first quarter this year threatened the parent company’s fi nancial picture. The volatile refinery business made a turnaround and Citgo turned profitable in the second quarter, boosting Southland earn ings to a record $88.7 million. But at the same time, the 7-Eleven retail division was hard hit by in creasingly tough competition and a continued attack from right-wing re ligious goups who picket the stores for selling adult magazines. Thompson, however, remains op timistic even as the company contin ues to pursue new merchandizing techniques. He says Southland previously has had “tough years economically going way back.” “Obviously, the last two to three years have been difficult ones,” he said. Of the tax fraud and bribery case, Thompson said he was personally hurt to learn that former Southland official Eugene DeFalco had ar ranged a bribe scheme involving state tax officials in New York. But he continues to argue the in nocence of Clark J. Matthews II, the company’s chief financial officer who is appealing his conviction on proxy fraud. The Southland chairman said that even if Matthews does serve his two- month prison sentence, “I look for ward to him returning to Southland as quickly as he can.” Thompson doesn’t brood about the past. “We’ve got a fine company, and certainly over the years have been involved in outside activities — char itable activities, the Olympics, which offset the negative with the positive,” he-said. For years the company has spon sored the Jerry Lewis Muscular Dystrophy Association Telethon and the March of Dimes’ March Against Birth Defects. It also sponsored the 1984 Summer Olympics. However, the company came un der attack earlier this month by the Rev. Jerry Falwell and several thou sand anti-pornography protestors who gathered across the street f rom Southland headquarters. The groups have launched cam paigns targeting Southland for sell ing three adult magazines. “1 think it’s a tree country, and they’re free to believe whatever they want,” Thompson said. Marketing vice president Frank McKeown said research indicates “the vast majority (of customers) agree with our policy,” which has the magazines displayed behind the counter with false fronts. But 7-Eleven sales are being hurt this year by other factors, Thomp son said, including tougher competi tion and many price promotions of 7-Eleven merchandise. “7-Eleven is not going to have a great year,” he said. Company profits this year will jably con “1 think there’s no limitto«l can go into those stores,” Witt said. T he range of food offerinpi mushroomed from the slicedk gna and bread that Thompson calls workers buying fortheirfcB at the early dav stores. "What we’re really becon mot e and more as years gob source of near-premise an premise consumables," said eown. \i tin d with a new food it staff. Southland is testing salad in four markets along with stt tables: the company’s finelyw marketing data shows itscusn are getting older and more conscious. probably come from the cyclical gas refining segment, which Thompson joked can’t accurately be predicted for more than six weeks at a time. Despite such trials, Southland seems regarded by most analysts as the leader in the industry. They do not project failure. “T hey’re so far ahead of everyone else and probably the best run com pany in that business,” said Fred Wintzer of Alex Brown & Sons in Baltimore. Such items as hot dogsandnad are sold in 5,500 stores. Fresha wiclies are offered in 3,000, hea while sales of most standardgnw items have dropped about 13|i cent over the past decade. But food is not the only sep to t each for variety. Videotape cassettes are rented in 1,500 stores, and automatedid machines offer cash in nearly2J stores. Gasoline debit cards, ticket sales and the direct oi merchandise by computer arealli ing tested around the country eown said. TAMU Summer Study Abroad College of Liberal Arts Come and find out about all opportunities offered Summer 1986 October 1, 7:30 p.m. MSC RM. 228 Study Abroad Office 101 Academic Bldg. 845-0544 College of Liberal Arts Ms. Ann Todd Baum Rm. 802 Harrington 845-5143 xerose y of fence through, "Our j A SP (TAB IN 1 DISC LIAB IABC TEMP! PALS CHANi