SCHULMAN THEATRES 2.50 ADMISSION 1. Any Show Before 3 PM 2. Tuesday - All Seats 3. Mon-Wed - Local Students With Current ID's. 4. Thurs. - KORA “Over 30 Nite" “DENOTES DOLBY STEREO PLAZA 3 226 Southwest Pkwy 693-2457 •CROCODILE DUNDEE ps is 7:15 9:35 * COLOR OF MONEY r 7:25 9:45 •TOP GUN pg 7:10 9:50 MANOR EAST 3 SHORT ON CASH??? Sell your books at University Book Stores Northgate & Culpepper Plaza Manor East Mall 823-8300 SONG OF THE SOUTH g 7:10l 9:001 FIREWALKER pg 7:301 9:401 •STAR TREK IV ” 7:20l 9:501 SCHULMAN6 2002 E. 29th 775-2463 TOUCH AND GO r 7:10 9:50 AMERICAN JUSTICE r m KKYS 105 Presents $ DOLLAR DAYS $ This Week’s Features Are: STAND BY ME it 7:30 9:40 TOUGH GUYS pg 7:20 9:45 LETS GET HARRY r 7:15 9:35 CHILDREN OF A LESSER GOD r 7:15 9:55 School of Hair Design 693-7878 1406 Texas Ave. S. College Station, Tx. 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WALL CLOCK 19 95 Add $2.00 for postage and handling TRAY WITH FREE T-SHIRT 95 15 MasterCard - VISA ■ Money Orders Made in Texas by Texans. 1 800 442 4799 ext 831 Page 4AThe Battalion/Wednesday, December 10, 1986 Fort Worth blast victims to start over FORT WORTH (AP) — Mer chants who lost their businesses in an explosion that rocked the downtown district say rebuilding their liveli hoods from the piles of rubble will not be easy. “We just have to start over,” said Barbara Whalley, the owner and sole employee of Thompson’s Book Store. “But you can’t just start over,” she said. “All of our stock was in there.” Along with Whalley, five other Throckmorton Street merchants lost their businesses in a Sunday explo sion that sent businesses crashing into rubble and shattering panes of glass from others nearby. Damage was estimated at about $730,000. Whalley said she would wait until workers salvaged the remaining con tents of her store before deciding if she would reopen. “I’m kind of in a state of shock,” Whalley said. Around lunchtime Monday, James Woolsey pointed at a crowd of suit-clad businessmen staring at his leveled sandwich shop. “That’s some of my customers right there,” Woolsey said. Just last month, Woolsey made the last payment on his business loan. “We get it paid and boom — we have to start over,” Woolsey said. “But that’s the way life is.” A few doors down, E.M. Pack stared at the ruins of his optometry shop. For 15 years Pack had run the shop with his son. He said he plans to relocate. “It’s difficult when it’s where you make a living, as opposed to where you live,” Pack said. “If it’s your house, you can always have some where to sleep.” The merchants mingled in the rubble while investigators waited close at hand. “We were all pretty close,” said Omar Ochoa, an employee at Ca sey’s restaurant, a hamburger shop demolished by the blast. “We all knew each other.” Don Wackwitz, a December graduate in Engi neering Technology, spends time Tuesday playing the piano in the Memorial Student Center lounge to avoid the wet weather. Wackwitz, tween job interviews, enjoys playing must George Winston. A&M management class wins award for most innovative business course Entrepreneur's practical knowledge generates new/deof id. It al Marl Lan< plexes bus service ^People non are v says “Am s frorr |ie it wit] suffu By Jinks Gholson Reporter A Texas A&M management class has been presented with an award for being the most innovative busi ness course offered in the South west. The course, Management 489, Special Topics in Entrepreneurship, received the award Nov. 12 from the Southern Business Administration Association, a group of business schools in the Southwest primarily represented by deans. Van Fleet teaches the theoretical side, then Williams comes in and tea ches from the practical standpoint of someone who’s really out there, Hitt said. Williams flies in from Midland ev ery other week and talks about his personal experiences with the topics being discussed in the textbook, he the entrepreneurship class have been outstanding. Several of these student responses were submitted as part of the propo sal and he says he is sure they were instrumental in getting the award. One student said, “My enthusiasm is greater than ever. I am excited. I love it. I will be an entrepreneur — he off helps bi on can erthe syst Kr day ti tttnpus. jfrhere’.' «yone to i “'em, too,’ He add; “Entrepreneurship courses are taught in other places, so an entrepreneurship course in itself is not an innovation,” said Dr. Michael Hitt, head of the A&M Department of Management. “The innovation comes in what is done in this cour- “Entrepreneurship courses are taught in other places, so an entrepreneurship course in itself is not an inno vation. The innovation comes in what is done in this course. ” — Dr. Michael Hitt, management department head has inspired me, butlreafcib not a cakewalk. Youmigl or four times, as some have, tal can’t give up. Never thinkvo#< succeed.” Hitt said the course can beii mented in other schools,bnlh l>e easy. “The biggest problem with® I men ting this class will be finds! en J saves f people, a professor and a prtf I entrepreneur, who will mesh 1 1 as Dr. Van Fleet and Mr. I® j do,” Hitt said. He said a second problei getting someone like Will spend the time he does to mi class work. Hitt said the course was chosen for the award out of 40 entries. Judging criteria include innovation in curriculum, course benefits, and adaptability to other schools. Hitt said the course is innovative because it is team-taught by a mem ber of the faculty. Dr. Ella Van Fleet, and by a practicing entrepreneur, Clayton Williams. said. “He doesn’t always talk about his successes,” Hitt said. “He’s a very open person. He talks about his fail ures too. Everything relates to the material being covered in the book by Dr. Van Fleet. So students get the best of both worlds.” Hitt said as a department head, he usually hears the complaints stu dents have about their courses. But he said the course evaluations for no doubt about it.” Another aspiring entrepreneur said, “On the one hand, I have learned there is money waiting to be had, but on the other hand, it can only be had through dedication, dil igence and plain old hard work. ... I feel very enthusiastic because I see that the old adage, ‘Where there is a will, there is a way’ still remains true.” Another student said, “Hearing about all the young entrepreneurs Williams is a self-made aire, Hitt said. He is owners erator of a Midland ranch volved in several busi® including the oil andbantinj- tries, he said. Williams’ latest venture,^- telecommunications, gre* ideas sparked throufi entrepreneurship dass, Hitl^ But Williams takes time®; busy schedule each spring^ | and forth to A&M everyoT ; MISF Dead! Reached Tuesday, s Ubstance < -°s River. I Estima ave reac Comr Woodfin "ater hope the SF wate c beinicals whether t 111 the lak« BRAXTON ASSOCIATES Announces An IMMEDIATE JOB OPPORTUNITY IN HOUSTON Job Description 2-3 Year Internship With An Inter nationally Known Management Consulting Firm Qualifications Bachelors Degree or 'jubsidiar Srcourt I Vanovicl • Demonstrated Academic Excellence! /B+ GPA Minimum) Travel Involved Salary-Mid $20K • Highly Motivated • Keen Business Interest • Strong Interest In Attending Grad# School A more detailed description of Braxton and this position, as well as a Correspo 11 Con, dence Address are at the Career/Placement Center. | cia Earl C