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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1985)
817 University • College Station, TX 77840 TEXAS ORIGINAL DRIVE-THRU DAQUIRI FACTORY “LET US SUPPLY YOUR PRE GAME & POST GAME PARTY DRINKS” m Page 12AThe Battalion/Friday, November 15,1985 Small $2.25 (12 oz.) — 24 FLAVORS TO CHOOSE FROM — All drinks are made with real fruit or fruit juices Large $5.50 Medium $3.75 (20 oz.) 1/2 Gal. $12.00 (32 oz.) ENJOY IN MODERATION — PLEASE DON’T DRIVE WHILE INTOXICATED (Refillable Thermos) Refills $9.00. HOURS: Mon.-Thurs. 12 til 10 Fri.-Sat. 12 til 12 Sunday 1 til 10 :•>> Waldo by Kevin Thomas HE GRADES HIS CURVES. ft Reagan’s peace mission Bryan Civic Auditorium 800 South Coulter Drive, Bryan 7:30 pm Tuesday November 19 Tickets $8.50 available at BRAZOS VALLEY CHRISTIAN BOOK STORE • 3808 Texas Avenue SCRIPTURE HAVEN • Post Oak Mall • 4301 Carter Creek Pkwy. at 29th Street SUNRISE BOOK & GIFT SHOP •110411th Street • Huntsville Tickets may also be purchased at the door Razzle, dazzle and dancing feet! MSC OPAS XIII presents Hubbard Street One of the zippiest shows of the 1985 season! From jazz to ballet and modern dance to rhythmic tap. Hubbard Street s ensemble of 14 dancers exudes vitali ty, pulsating energy, and impressive flexibility. They step, spin and whirl through a magnificently set, staged, costumed and performed repertoire. "A pure joy for any lover of dance! ' November 17, 1985/8:00 p.m. Rudder Auditorium/Texas A&M University Tickets available at NSC Box Office/845-1234/NasterCard/VISA (continued from page 1) not to erupt into confrontation or conflict. “We do not threaten the Soviet people and never will,” Reagan said. . Making only brief mention of the problems that continue to separate the two sides at the arms control ne gotiating table, Reagan expressed some hope for progress. “If we both reduce the weapons of war, there would be no losers, only winners,” he said. And he defended _ his “Star Wars” research program the Soviets so strongly oppose by adding, “ The whole world would benefit if we could both abandon these weapons altogether and move to non-nuclear defensive systems that threaten no one.” Gorbachev contends the proposed defense space shield that Reagan calls his Strategic Defense Initiative would, if it can be developed, give the United States the capability to strike first against the Soviet Union while risking relatively slight dam age to its own people and weapons. “We go without illusion, but wit! hope,” Reagan said, calling it “nota! impossible dream that we can begin to reduce nuclear arsenals, redutt the risk of war and build a foundation for peace.” Earlier Secretary of State Georg: P. Shultz told reporters that "thert will l>e some things of a significaa but not major sort that w ill be agreed on” in Geneva. Drinking on campus (continued from page 1) “Some facilities have guidelines for a group to adhere to. Some say alcohol can’t exceed a certain amount, and food must be available along with non-alcoholic drinks. Some places require security. Others require a group to provide alternate transportation for its guests.” Buying alcohol with funds pro duced from a fund-raiser that are separate from membership dues or fees is a third option, she says. “Activities where funds are col lected outside the organization — like a car wash — are a legitimate way for a group to collect money for buying alcohol,” Winniford says. “The organization must set up a sep arate account at the Student Finance Center, one for the dues and an other for the money collected in fund-raisers, so there will be no questions in the University’s mind where the money for a party with al cohol is coming from.” Winniford says nearly every orga nization is anxious to comply with the law. “Right now if we found out that an organization wasn’t complying with the request, we would address them and try to deal with that,” she says. “I don’t know what it would mean at this point because there are no guidelines for the University It take action against an organizatiot under this circumstance.” White urges congress to keep oil deduction Associated Press AUSTIN — Gov. Mark White has asked Texas congressmen to see that efforts to overhaul taxes do not unduly penalize the oil and gas industry. “We in Texas are not going to sit idly by and watch the lifeblood of the Texas economy be leeched and our national defense be put in peril by a tax bill that seeks to eliminate deductions for intan gible drilling and development costs and percentage depletion allowances,” White told a news conference. In a letter to U.S. Rep. Dan Rostenkowsky, chairman of the - House Ways and Means Commit tee, White urged the committee to carefully consider proposed tax changes he said would “un duly penalize” the oil and gas in dustry. “Those negotiations in the House Ways and Means Commit tee over the next week will be ev ery bit as important to national security as any successful arms- control negotiations,” While said. “If we tail at home to provide support for our domestic oil and gas industry, we will destroy our dependence on foreign sources, and seriously endanger our na tional security,” he said. White added that he referred particularly to a proposal to re peal the “net income offset de duction.” He said current law “as sures that the intangible drilling costs deductions are used for their true purposes — encourag ing domestic energy production — and not f or tax avoidance.” FAST CASH 24 HOURS A DAY ANYWHERE. ANYTIME.WITH ANY BANK CARD, riRSTNer. / | ' c(S'V/rr^ i ! ri^epW-M LJL^Ty ' ■ ri VJ ttZZZZL FirstNet puts your money where you are. If you carry an MPact®, Pulse®, MasterCard®, VISA®, or FirstNet® card, you can get the convenience of automated banking where you need it, when you need it. There are eight FirstNet ATMs (including seven drive-throughs) located all across town: College Station: Dominik & Kyle; Memorial Student Center/ TAMU; K-Mart; Foley’s Post Oak Mall. Bryan: 28th & Houston; 3000 Briarcrest Drive. Member FDIC©1985 FCBOT riRsrOTY Bal BRANt Spoil In one cc takes on Cyn< I corner, Hulk I at Kermit the die of the rirq I the tag team 1 ger, Giarles 1 s and 11. Which one ! As the fou I contenders w I Cotton Bowl I audience will I Erich” Aggie I utive week, I “Schwarzhi oi I kansas. In other b | Hogan Hon I the vast Rayc I dience for th I when they he | Wacker-back Meanwhile I Rice, peissess I running gan 1 sixth-best SV 1 “Bear Ceum ■ while SMU I cord-setting I Texas Tech. 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