r i SWensen^ S i IMEAL If II I ITS ALMOST I MORE THAN YOU CAN EATI I I I 1/3 LB. HAMBURGER WITH FRIES LARGE SOFT DRINK SUPER SUNDAE ONLY $3.99 WITH COUPON I Good for 4 per coupon! 1 I OFFER VALID AT THE FOLLOWING SWENSEN’S Culpepper Plaza Expires: 11/2/87 I PUASC PRESENT WHEN ORDERING GOOD ONIY WITH COUPON DURING SPECIFIED DATES NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER DISCOUNT SPECIAL OR PROMOTION ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER VISIT UNI ESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED VOID WHERE PROHIBITED BY LAW » PLEASE PRESENT WHEN ORDERING SPECIAL OR PROMOTION ONE COU ZEN BUDDHISM A Lecture By : American Zen Priest Shim Wol ’’Just Watch Your Mind” Thursday, October 22 Rudder Tower Rm. 301 7:00 RM. Free Admission gRYAN DRIVE TRAIN, INC GENERAL AUTO REPAIR • TRANSMISSION • CLUTCH • DRIVE SHAR' * DIFFERENTIAL • FRONT WHEEL * 4 WHEEL DRIVE DRIVE SPECIALISTS INTERSTA TE BATTER Y DEALER FOREIGN & DOMESTIC FREE ESTIMATES OPEN • MON-FRI 7:30-5:00 - SAT 8:00- 2:00 268-2386 3605 C COLLEGE AV % ACROSS FROM CHICKEN 0»L CO. Page 6/The Battalion/Wednesday,October 21,1987 Comptroller says crash won’t hurt banking industry "L cials stressed Tuesday that the na tion’s commercial banks remained sound despite the stock market’s re cord crash and said there were no signs of a run on deposits as had been the case in the 1929 collapse. “There should be no concern over the safety of. . . deposits,” Robert L. Clarke, comptroller of the currency, told a news conference at the Ameri can Bankers Association annual con vention here. “I think the banking industry is in general very safe,” Clarke said. L. William Seidman, chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., added that his agency was monitoring closely the banking sys tem and found no immediate dan ger of massive deposit withdrawals. “There also have been no prob lems with banks’ assets,” Seidman told reporters at the convention. The stock market slid a whopping 508 points, or about 22.6 percent. The drop far exceeded the 12.8 percent decline on Oct. 28, 1929, a market crash that ushered in the Great Depression and further eroded confidence in the banking system. But unlike 1929, Clarke noted, deposit insurance today covers bank accounts of up to $ 100,000. Laws in the 1930s also sharply re duced financial risk by limiting how much investors can borrow to buy stocks and separating commercial banks and brokers. “Banks ... do not invest in equity securities,” Clarke said. “(The crash) should not affect in vestment portfolios of banks,” he said. Raymond Van Houtte, president of the New York State Bankers Asso ciation whose membership includes many of the nation’s major banks, said today’s bankers are far more frugal in the way they do business than 58 years ago. “The banks that failed (in 1929) were involved in speculative ventu res,” Van Houtte said. “They also bought stocks. A lot of people in those days put their money under their pillows." Clarke said while the market plunge “is not going to affect the banking industry broadly ... it will affect the banks on an individual ba- What’s up For instance, he said, credit rat ings may change among banks’ cus tomers whose loans are collater alized by securities. On the positive side, some banks could experience an increase in de posits by investors who have pulled their money out of the stock market. ABA President Charles H. Pistor Jr. said,“I think . . . (investors) will seek any safe haven.” Pistor is also chairman of First Republic Bank in Dallas. Van Houtte, who is chairman of Tompkins County Trust Co. in Ithaca, N.Y., said he expects his bank “to see a large influx of depos its” at least temporarily. Clarke added, “It remains to be seen whether it (Monday’s crash) will undermine consumer confidence in the economy." A key concern among banking of ficials attending the ABA conven tion was that the crash would erode consumer confidence in the econ omy and ultimately cause a reces sion. That, in turn, would affect the way individuals and businesses save or borrow money. Pistor said, “I don’t see this as a beginning of a depression.” Most major bankers at the ABA convention said they were puzzled by the market’s collapse given the current economic conditions, which include low unemployment, modest growth and inflation. Others at the conference, though, weren’t so sure about the health of the economy. Wednesday RUSSIAN CLUB: will meet at 8 p.m. at the Flying Tomato STUDENTS AGAINST APARTHEID: will meet at Sj| p.m. in 604A-B Rudder. YOUTH FUN DAY III: Tf tere will be a meeting for prod live coaches and counselors at 5 p.m. in 501 Rudder CLASS OF ’89: Applications for Class Ball Committee: available througn Oct. 28 in the Student Programs0! in the MSC. GAY STUDENT SERVICES: will meet at 8:30 p.m.in B Rudder. T STAFF: applic ations are available until Nov. 13 inf MSC. UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRIES: will have an Aggie, per at 6 p.m. at the A&M Presbyterian Church. ALVIN HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. at Rita’s. ECONOMICS SOCIETY: Oct. 22 is the last day to fees for the field trip. TENNIS CLUB: will introduce the tennis team at 1 164 Read. GREEN EARTH SOCIETY: will meet at 8:30 p.m. ini Rudder. EUROPE CLUB: will meet at 9:30 p.m. at the Flyinj! mato. RESIDENCE HALL ASSOCIATION: will meet at8:3C« in 601 Rudder. TEXAS A&M SPORTS CAR CLUB: will meet at / p* 501 Rudder. DATA PROCESSING MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATE Chevron will present career information indataproc: at 7 p.m. at the Ramada Inn penthouse. COMMITTEE FOR THE AWARENESS OF MEXK AMERICAN CULTURE: will meet at 7 p.m. inolOIf der. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: will meet at noon, C 5826 for the location of the meeting. ADULT CHILDREN OF ALCOHOLICS: will meet at‘I in 145 MSC. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS: will meet at 8:30 p.m, MSC. Jl; CIRCLE K INTERNATIONAL: will meet at 7 pm Rudder. PI SIGMA EPSILON: will have a pledge and geneni ing at 6 p.m. and 7:15 p.m. in 114 Blocker. Stud The I ate wil Wednes vote on A&M Bi student Board. If pas presente meeting, consistin of whom islative S and lobfc the Boan Jay Ha ate, said \ easily. The Se resol utior ■TLA NT.' Mnithern p imillion wor nine South ■cate the i ■live, the 1 esi forest la I B. Jack president c est Farmer vev of star data collet Service sho ■easing sh hardest hit ■ The beet of rice, att. ing into the cambium bark. This Pun ■ w I |ajc WIGHT] ajor pur piev pay fc Items for What's Up should be submitted to TheBml S 0 " 1 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three workingifcl jpht othei fore desired publication date. ■> 0llman s $18.50 will I William T g'esident c Gas Associt Committee says fraternities contim hazing at UT despite pledge’s dea AUSTIN (AP) — Hazing with paddles, cattle prods and alcohol continues in University of Texas fra ternities and student organizations despite a pledge’s drinking death last year, a special commission re ported Tuesday. John Ratliff, a UT law professor and commission chairman, said the school’s reputation for hazing and excessive drinking at fraternity func tions is known nationwide as “the Texas mentality.” “It’s like prostitution or pornogra phy,” Ratliff said. “It’s a consensual activity. That’s one of the things that makes it extremely difficult to deal with because normally it doesn’t come to light until somebody gets badly hurt.” He said a “disgusting” devel opment in hazing is a two-handed paddle, which he said is used by the Texas Cowboys and Silver Spurs, two respected student organizations. said initiates are told by fraternity officials to seek care at out-of-town hospitals because Austin hospitals report suspected hazing injuries. Chanse McLeod, president of the Texas Cowboys, said the commission report is based on “past events.” He said the Cowboys and Spurs have “taken big steps in trying to elimi nate hazing.” But McLeod said, “It would be na ive to say it didn’t go on. “There’s not group hazing. There Texas Cowboys and Silver Spurs, identified as the “oldest honorary and spirit organizations,” both “con tinue to permit hazing in some of its most blatant and of fensive forms in cluding rides, paddling and use of electrical shocking devices such as cattle prods.” Ratliff said, “I think we were very upset about the fact that the Cow boys and Spurs appear to have been continually representing to Presi dent Cunningnam that they were “It’s like prostitution or pornography. It’s a consensual activity. That’s one of the things that makes.it ex tremely difficult to deal with because normally it doesn't come to light until somebody gets badly hurt. ” —John Ratliff, commission chairman The commission also] UT sororities, which fa] have chosen not to be t] cam pus organizations. B> ’] off campus, they do noth] standard non-discricl statements. “There is a perceptior R status is becauseofapofc] sion based on race,” Rati® Evelyn Bennett, direc I Panhellenic Council, said li ties became off-campus9 lions in 1968 because oi ;-l things on the registration]! didn’t f eel they could ads f °y . , over and then are paddled with it by- somebody who takes about four or five running steps and then swings it as hard as he can,” Ratliff said. “The report is that that can lift somebody off his feet. One of the results of this is swollen and bleeding testicles.” Ratliff added that victims cannot sleep on their backs for weeks and skip classes because of bleeding. He said one victim was hospital ized last year after a paddling that caused bleeding testicles. Ratliff also might be individual hazing. If some thing happened to you. It’s that word ‘tradition,’ no matter how silly or stupid that tradition may be.” Dwayne House, an Abilene senior and Spurs president, said hazing has l his stopped in his organization. The 26-member commission was appointed last year by UT President William Cunningham after the Sep tember 1986 death of Mark See- berger, a freshman from Richardson who died after drinking up to 20 ounces of rum in one to two hours at a fraternity function. The commission’s report said the not hazing and, in fact, they were continuing and, in fact, even inten sifying it.” In its recommendations, the com mission said the two groups should be barred from representing UT at football games if they continue hazing. The Cowboys are in charge of the cannon that is fired after Longhorn scores at football games. The Spurs handle Bevo, the Long horn mascot. The report said Cowboy and Spur officials disclaim responsibility for the hazing because it occurs at “places that are not official func tions” of the organizations. She said the sororities non-discrimination staW lar to the one requiredf®l tration, but see no tea® I their status. “They have been oil4 long in a self-governing?I have done so well they* 1 ] to register,” she said, i- blacks in the sororities® time but there are otto 5 resented.” There are two black* UT, but they are not® the PanhellenicCouncS'j The commission’s 21] dations include theestsl closer ties betweenthelj tration and fraternitisj school-appointed fra® I tor. The Interfraterniti I now headed by a fra®j official. ANNOUNCING A $2.00 SAVINGS TO STUDENTS & FACULTY OFF ANY FRONT OR BACK PREFERRED SEAT Tickets on Sale at MSC Box Office I.D. required October 27-29 Brazos County Rodeo Arena Tues., Oct 27 Wed., Oct 28 Thurs., Oct. 29 L For more information 7:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. & 7:30 p.m. 4:30 & 7:30 p.m. 764-1062 845-1234 ♦ Snow Ski Club meeting October 26. 1987 • Ski exercises by Aerofit (wear loose clott Steep and Deep" Warren Miller's latest • Mount Aggie T-Shirts Trip sign-up ® UNBELIEVABLE door prizes Rudder 701 7 p.m. / It out in The Battalion Classi