Phi Delta Theta Fall Rush ‘86 Party Schedule Casin Date: Wedne Ti PI lacks Place: Rudder Tower Dress: Coat and Tie No Dates Please Outrageousness!! Pavilion, 5 Miles? Students waited for as long as three hours Monday in a registration line that stretched to the Aca- driiiu Building, but tlu long, i\<-t v\.in u.iv who found sections thev wanted cl< | v 'e for those Hobby, Lewis foresee second special session AUSTIN (AP) — The Legis lature’s two top officials, acknowl edging that lawmakers have been unable to balance the budget in this special session, said Monday they ex pect Gov. Mark \Vhite to call them back for another try. “I don’t know whether it will be on Friday or the following Monday or some other date,” Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby said. “But he will call one very soon.” House Speaker Gib Lewis said he “thought 30 days would be sufficient time, but apparently it has not been.” White, who opened this special session on Aug. 6 with a call for a one-year sales tax increase, did not announce a date for the next session. Lewis, who heads a House that has opposed new taxes since the be ginning of the special session, said he still isn’t convinced that taxes should be raised at this time. “I want to make sure (the taxpay ers) are getting the best value for their tax dollar,” he said. “I’m not about to be run over and buffaloed by a bunch of selfish individuals who want it for their own self interest.” essence, over, Hobby replied: “Yes it is.” Lewis sounded less pessimistic about the spending cut plan. “I’d like to conclude work on the appropriations bill so we could find a bottom line,” he said. Hobby said he hopes a permanent solution could be made on the bud get in the next session. If not, the state will be damaging its future credit, he said. “Unless something is done fairly promptly in the third the state’s checks are goingtoitr bounce,” Hobbv said BALL A jev Marvi rrand jut hrough ai ederal dr he Non Ik Collins, ng was i nost seri< ook his |)( liedsw he Some lawmakers havecompk that the special session is d« w ith mans topics unrelated tots nancial crisis, including hors; ing. a lottery, and bills to perm tei state and brain h banking. , • , Asked il he shared that M ahl S h ™ lion. Hobby replied, "Yes I tirelv." ling deah mg the ca five grand He has rand jin mostly wit ished in 0 "We we caseload is cial grand Hobby, who also urged a sales tax hike to help balance the books, said chances are gone that a tax bill can be passed before this session ends at midnight Thursday. “That’s my best judgment . . .” he said. “(A tax bill) has been precluded for some time.” Amid talk of another special ses sion, Hobby said the House and Sen ate might not reach a compromise on spending cuts. Senators approved a $418 million spending cut plan, while House members voted to chop $740 mil lion. A conference committee seeking a middle ground has been working slowly. Asked if the session was, in First AIDS hospital will Aust open in Houston toda| new HOUSTON (AP) — Officials at the nation’s first AIDS hospital don't know when the first patient will be admitted, but about 50 outpatients will be taking part in a continuing study when the insti tute opens today. Joseph Stanley will be one of those outpatients with appoint ments at the Institute for Immu nological Disorders. He will go through a routine monitoring just as he has every few weeks since joining the study in May. Stanley, 29, doesn’t have ac quired immune deficiency syn drome and has not shown any symptoms of the disease, but has tested positive for carrying the AIDS virus. He’s part of an ex perimental study of the anti-viral drug ribavirin. "I do not have the disease,” Stanley said. “I am symptom-free. I he virus is in my body, but it’s not active ... I his was my contri bution to the AIDS crisis.” About 100 people, all outpa- J AUSTIN tients, are in the ribavirin stilt Sdcpendent which began in April at the MPldcred 50 ne Anderson Hospital and Turn» equippe Institute. It’s the first studybcitfRgh-backed transferred to the new insdtinB OftheSli from M.D. Anderson. Dr. Peter Mansell, the hosp tabs medical director, said, "Wh I hope people realize, the obitt live of this hospital is to try to Ik answers. It’s a research institute The 137-member staff hasut- dergone special training to heif patients with AIDS, as well * their families and friends. II* hospital will be able to accomi® date 150 patients. Mansell, who has headed iIk| AIDS research program atMt Anderson, said the institute is ll* first hospital in the country total devoted to research and treat ment of the disease. |sed in Au< ildren, th ■Its are tlu iucadon sti Acting tr jtn Roberts delivered 1 replace t jlecision has routes or age buses. 1 Besides t! The institute is housed : north Houston in the building 11 the now-closed Citizens Gentr| Hospital. ROTHER’S gnninninmimninniiiiniinnnnniiii^ | BOOKSTORES Open Late to Serve You 340 Jersey (across from Univ. Police) 901 Harvey (Woodstone Center) GeV ose^ 0 ^ 5 Loupot’s Means a Maximum Trade-In Deal Ole’ Army Lou is paying cash for used books, Aggies! Bring your summer school books back and get cashi Keep the cash, but reserve your fall semester books before September 1 and get a free Aggie t-shirt. Then just drop by Northgate when you get back in town and pick up your books without waiting in line or digging through class lists and piles of books. Loupot’s means more cash for used books, □ □ □ □ "We care about Aggies • just as we have (or over 50 years. Thank you lor your business. " Northgate 335 University SixFk AAMCO Specializing in | STANDARD and | AUTOMATIC trans | missions, CLUTCH | adjustments,and replacements = (Both foreign and domes! 11 1215 Tx. Ave. (at the bend in Tx.Ave Bryan 779-2626 Under New OwnersM iiuiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiuiiiiuiuiiiuiiiimii# Call Battalion Classify 845-2611