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Thur - KORA "Over 30 Nite" ‘DENOTES DOLBY STEREO MANOR EAST 3 T Manor East Mall -' T 823-8300 'LIKE FATHER LIKE SON pg-i 3 £3 HEURAISER r is •SURRENDER pg £8 PLAZA 3 226 Southwest Pkwy . 693-2457 •FATAL ATTRACTION r im •PRINCESS BRIDE pg £3 •THE PICK-UP ARTIST pg-is SCHULMAN 6 2002 E. 29th M W 775-2463 STAKEOUT r £s NO WAY OUT r m $ DOLLAR DAYS $ 'ADVENTURES IN BABYSITTING pg-13 £2 WITCHES OF EASTWICK r m FULL METAL JACKETS r ia LABAMBA pg-is IS TAMU SUMMER ’88 STUDY ABROAD Come find out about exciting opportunities! MEETING OCTOBER 23 701 RUDDER 1:00-2:30 p.m. Page 47The Battalion/Wednesday,October 21,1987 A&M tests engine for replacements of shuttle buses By Jeffrey L. Jones Reporter Texas A&M bus operations had a temporary addition to its fleet last week. The unusual-looking bus on the Munson route was being tested to see if its engine would be suitable for future replacement buses, Doug Williams, manager of bus opera tions, said. Bus operations plans to purchase three new buses this fiscal year, Wil liams said. While students should expect to see new buses in the future, they should not expect any to look like the demonstration bus used last week, he said. Bus operations is satisfied with the body style of the buses already in use, he said. “The buses we get will be very similar to the ones we already have,” he said, “but hopefully they’ll have that particular engine and transmis sion in them.” He explained the Detroit Diesel engine in the demonstration bus is of a much higher quality than the en gines in the buses currently used. Williams said starting this year bus operations will probably be buying more buses each year. “Technically, these aren’t going to be additional buses,” he said. “They’re going to be replacement buses. “We plan to trade some in, but we’re going to make sure we have plenty of others on the routes ready to go.” He said this will prevent them from having to replace the entire fleet of 35 buses all at one time. Each bus will cost between $70,000 and $75,000. The majority of the money used to support bus operations comes from the purchase of bus passes by the students, he said. In addition, he said, a smaller amount of the money used comes from student services. Aggie Players’show will spoof problems on campus in satire By Sara Mitchell Reporter In an effort to broaden their ap peal to the student masses, Texas A&M’s Aggie Players have devel oped Sully’s Satire Theater, a com edy forum which debuts at noon to day in front of the Lawrence Sullivan Ross statue. Aggie Players President Matt Hunt said the troupe’s past perfor mances have been limited to major stage productions, but the satire the ater is a student-generated produc tion that will make fun of just about everything. Today’s performance features 11 sketches, said Hunt, a senior theater arts major from Lindale. One of the sketches will focus on a fictional “Faculty Camp,” where new instructors are taught how to make classes as difficult as possible for stu dents, he said. “We want to spoof campus prob lems, to have fun,” he said. “We want it to grow into something fun for the student body to go to and laugh at themselves and submit ideas. “I wanted to provide some fun theater with quick rehearsals as am extracurricular activity for people who did it in high school and loved it.” Vicki McWade, a junior sociology major from Houston, said the satire theater will spoof everything from campus issues to politics. “Everything is within the realm of laughter,” McWade said. “Every body is there to be made fun of.” Christy Claxton, a senior English major from Giddings, said Aggie Players wants students’ ideas. “If it goes over big with the stu dent body, we’ll continue it,” Clax ton said. “We want students to sub mit their ideas and talents.” Hunt said anyone with an idea for a sketch should take it to 144 Blocker. Besides getting more students to see their performances, Claxton said, members also are providing, an opportunity for students to perform with them. Claxton, co-chairman of student productions for Aggie Players, is planning an open-stage forum for students to perform in a relaxed at mosphere. “Anything goes,” she said. “So meone might be sitting in the audi ence watching a performance and say, ‘Hey, loan me your guitar. I’ve got something for you.’ It’s a chance to be seen.” Aggie Players also will perform “The Wind Dancers” from Oct. 30 through Nov. 7. Weather Watch DALLAS rnings for em of the doubled laq of two Denvf But the r operating p percent fort ]|Belo’s net llion, up $2.98 millioi re basis, Mnpared wi fcr earlier. ■The earr less ii 8n of! A m Thundentom ^ !k f ° D KOA-AM an panv said Me ^Earnings (tsj - F reeling hit Jj!} 54 mi n io 'from $15.02 Sunset Today: 6:47 p.m. Sunrise Thursday: 7:32 a.m. thjiee months Iff he conq pefformance Iposnive resu Himent eff Map Discussion rhe low pressm < system .md associatedfronnn pense, a low out of Montana will bring ligln sn< >u t< > the mu 1 hern plainsalongqHit's ouisni another surge of cold aii. 1 lie cold f ront in the eastern Unitedfcl Revenues will accelerate eastward. T emperatures much below normalwilfaH >n. into the eastern half of the nation. Ht from the for the 1986 Forecast: ^fcnues fro Today. Sunny and cool with a high temperatui <■ • >t M degrees ml ^rnut s Im winds northeasterly at 12 mph, gusting to 18 mph. Hnged. Rliiile ove: Toni^/if: Continued I.m w n Ii .i h m icmpci .mn c near 50degrees ^kihu s Ik r rose si o t . $53.3 easterly at 5 to 10 mph. Brcjadcasting percent to $3 Weather Fact: Instability: A property of the steads Hei ( .mm such that certain disturbances introduced into the steady state* mofuhs were increase in magnitude. It is often used by meteorologists in asn I^red with $ the potential for severe weather. I Revenues Prepared bv: Charlie: 3 uai ers eri) Staff Maw: Ef-7 niillic A&M Department of Meie from the $28! Official urges state to movl Very carefully' on tax refol ^ c AUST IN (AP) — Texans should move slowly on any major state tax reforms, in part because it was poorly planned federal tax changes that precipitated the stock market plunge, the House tax-writing com mittee chairman said Tuesday. “I don’t see major reform next session (in the Texas Legislature),” Rep. Stan Schlueter told the Texas Association of Taxpayers’ annual membership meeting. “T ax reform is something that you need to move very carefully on.” The recent drop in the stock mar ket “is a direct result of ill-conceived tax policy at the federal level,” the Killeen Democrat said. “You can’t shift gears with tax pol icy as quickly as they did end level and not expect sail percussions,” he said. Real estate investon 1 alls driven out of theequr Asymposii in real estate investment, unities: Eco in large industrialcompbe heAmericas’ pansion just because of liihidFriday in .11111 1 lies li.id no pi,nr m, f Sponsored eiilici die bond maike!' iraduate V if in.11 kci," he said Mists (A( .\\ Rr I > Dan Moiales. a V: jpJS on efto Democrat who n huo the Ways and Means ('-Bps. ‘"I 11 u:il be "'(■■' diflii. Six in in the 1989session. Irch relai the sort of comprehensive^ ■! divel modifications that mans in®^^ have been talking about.’ Thursday’s East Texas woman celebrates 106th birthdo^cC LUFKIN (AP) — Leora Jackson is watching the outside world give itself up to autumn. It’s a seasonal sight she’s seen before— 106 times now. Jackson celebrated her 106th birthday last week with a party at Lufkin’s center for the Re tired Senior Volunteer Program. Lufkin mer chants donated gifts and local public officials at tended the celebration. Having lived all her life in the Moscow area, Jackson is now a resident of Pineywood Acres Nursing Home in Corrigan. Nursing home offi cials say their records indicate that Jackson turned 106 Sept. 1. A blue shawl around her shoulders and a bright balloon bouquet tied to her wheelchair, Jackson talked recently about her long life. Her earliest memory, she said, is of her mother teaching her to recite “The Lord’s Prayer.” “That’s the first thing my mother taught me when 1 got big enough to talk,” she said, and be gan to recite it. She was poor growing up, and life was hard by today’s standards, but Jackson said she was not aware of any hardships at the time because it was all she knew. She and her family lived in a two-room cabin made of mud and pine logs that relatives and neighbors helped theih build. She had plenty of relatives and friends at one time, she said, but that has changed. She has outlived two husbands and her only daughter, as well as all her other relatives. “The world ain’t full of ’em now ... I ain’t got no folks now,” she said. “They’ve all done come and gone.” One of the rooms in their home was used fos cooking when it was too cold to cook outdoors. Cooking was done on a rack placed over a fire. Most of their cooking vessels were made of hard ened mud. “All we had to eat was what w D : KpPLANT said. “We raised sweet potatoes, Irish ftare Jessica corn, collard greens, hogs, chickensi-Bjwas not We got milk from the cows.” jpman who i To make cornmeal, Jackson saidlhfyestigators beat dried corn kernels with a ham#JdTuesday, were the days when her brotherswouU'Weanwhile cornmeal, water and butter anclletil®®j con hnue all morning in the embers ofacampbf'dle i s ngo they could have corn muffins whenthSwishes pc for lunch from their work in the fields Janiie Moc The other room in their hometf-P^ _f° r se ' sleeping. |e accident, “We slept on the floor, andadirtfl<» , rP artrnent ( she said. “We made our beds outof|®Bp r home, and leaves. When it was cold wetovfli c M1' ues< ^ a y/ the pine straw and kept the Fire going fcoorton sai What time was not spent learningfell iron and wash clothes in a hollowed-® h e was spent running, jumping, climbing 1 l0 ™ e , to care swimming. at 1 KAPPA SIGMA presents the 2nd Annual Thrash for Diabetes Bash 7 p.m. Thursday Oct. 22,1987 at the Parthenon with chances to win prizes from: BODY DESIGN POST OAK FLORIST NEIL’S DELI MAZZIO’S PIZZA TEXAS BODY ITS TOURS AND TRAVEL EL COMAL MEXICAN RESTAURANT MAMA’S PIZZA Tickets at MSC, from any Kappa Sig or at the door, $5 donation, all proceeds to benefiet A.D.A. our readeff curious peo teilt* th © about yoi clas: advell 845-1