HOT PIZZA Thursday, January 28,1 SBS/The Battalion/Page 5 846-8268 Lunch Special $4 99 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Daily \ ■ 12 " 3 to PP in 9 P^a FREE DELIVERY milio’s Pizza ■ Emilio’s Pizza Dinner Delight 846-8268 12” two topping pizza $5" 16" two topping pizza $7" FREE DELIVERY Pi Sigma Epsilon National Professional Business Fraternity in Marketing / Sales Management, and Selling Rush Party - "Win, Lose, or Draw" Thurs., Jan. 28 7 p.m. MSC Rm. 206 Irientation - Mon., Feb. i 7 p.m. MSC Rm. 206 Majors Welcome For more info call: Lori Finfer 776-0577 esmm KETTLE Restaurants $1 OFF BREAKFAST SPECIAL ur2Eggs Your Style, 3 Golden Brown Pancakes, b Crispy Strips of Bacon (Regularly $2.99 NOW $1.99) with coupon expires Feb. 29, 1988 1403 Universtiy 2712 Texas Ave.. Bryan 2502 Texas Ave., C.S. Now Offering European Body Wraps etcoine B« ck Ags ieS Special Student Memberships Available ; ree Child Care at Fit for (ids while you Tan Official ~ . „ . Tanning Center „ Fh « Original. „ °fthe Perfect Tan Miss Texas A&M Pageant Pott Oak Square. Harvey Road 764-2771 len Is Your Renta! No Secret At Ail? READ ST m fell The Battalion Get into circulation! Let our classified section display your rental services . . . it’s a fast, efficient y pi way to do business! MEXICAN AMERICAN PRE-HEALTH AGGIES: Demetrius Pearson will speak about the University of Texas Health Science Center of Houston and the Baylor College of Medicine summer enrichment program for minority students at 7:30 p.m. in 026 MSC. TAMU EMERGENCY CARE TEAM: will have a general meeting at 7 p.m. in 225 MSC. STUDENTS AGAINST APARTHEID: will have a general meeting at 7 p.m. in 352 MSC. INTRAMURALS: will have a basketbaif captain’s meeting at 5 p.m. in 224 MSC. GRAPEVINE/COLLEYVILLE HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet at 6:30 p.m. in 027 MSC. PI SIGMA EPSILON: will have a “Win, Lose or Draw” rush party at 7 p.m. in 206 MSC. ECONOMICS SOCIETY: will have a happy hour at 5 p.m. at Rocco’s. New members are welcome. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: will have a general assembly meeting to discuss International Week at 7 p.m. in 212 MSC. DATA PROCESSING MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION: will present information on careers in data processing at 7 p.m. at the Ramada Inn penthouse suite. INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT FORUM: A graduate student will discuss his experience in rural development in Argentina at 8:30 p.m. in 510 Rudder. ASIAN AMERICAN ASSOCIATION: will have a general meeting at 8:30 p.m. in 308 Rudder. MEXICAN AMERICAN ENGINEERING SOCIETY: will have a brief meeting at 7 p.m. in 525 Rudder. ALPHA EPSILON DELTA PRE-MED/DENT HONOR SOCIETY: will have an orientation at 7 p.m. in 308 Rudder for interested students with 45 hours and a 3.0 grade-point ratio. PI KAPPA ALPHA: will have a rush party at 9 p.m. at the Pike house. TAMU CYCLING TEAM: will have a team meeting at 8:30 p.m. in 410 Rudder. Friday DELTA SIGMA PI PROFESSIONAL BUSINESS FRATERNITY: will have a “Mexican Fiesta” rush party at 8:30 p.m. at Walden Pond clubhouse. All busi ness students are welcome. MSC ALL-NIGHT FAIR: Organization applications are available in 216 MSC and are due by Feb. 10. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST: will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 108 Harrington. AFRICAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will meet at 7 p.m. in Rudder Tower. Check the monitor screen for the room number. NATIONAL AGRI-MARKETING ASSOCIATION: will have a Carl Stevens pro fessional seminar from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. in 113 Kleberg to help students prepare for interviews and enter the job market. TAMU BADMINTON CLUB: will meet and practice at 7 p.m. in 351 G. Rollie White. HILLEL JEWISH STUDENT FOUNDATION: will meet at 5:30 p.m. in the Hillel building to have dinner at a mystery restaurant. MSC LITERARY ARTS: is accepting submissions of poetry, prose and graphic art for the 1988 Litmus through Feb. 20. /terns for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no later than three business days before the desired run date. We only publish the name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so. What’s Up is a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissions are run on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will run. if you have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315. Koldus: Students must use abilities to solve problems By Jeff Pollard Staff Writer Dr. John J. Koldus, vice president for student services, told student Senators at their first meeting of the semester Wednesday night that it is up to them to use their resources to push for the solutions to problems faced by the student body. “Politics go outside of a meeting room,” Koldus said. “You, as Sen ators, must go out and let the stu dent body know that what you do is important to them.” Now that the spring semester is underway, the Senate leaders are looking for ways to prove this impor tance to their fellow students. According to Jay Hays, speaker of the Student Senate, this is a task that the student government is ready to take on. “We ran around beating our drums for so long that changes are slowly being made,” Hays said. “We spent the fall semester getting our research together. Now we are in po sition to do something.” Among the projects discussed were those dealing with the appoint ment of a student to the Board of Regents and the conversion of the Rudder Tower dining room into a faculty lounge. According to Mason Hogan, stu dent body president, there is a good chance to get a non-voting, student seat on the Board of Regents, even though many problems must be ironed out. “We, as students, are not here to carry out administrative duties,” Ho gan said. “I just think that students should be there to intervene when problems occur.” As far as the faculty lounge/tower dining room, Hogan said that this is sue will come down to a legal battle between school officials and former students who have taken up the bat tle against the lounge. “Petitions are being circulated that will show the school that the lounge is an issue among students,” Hays said. “The main complaint is that the dining room will only be open to paying members of the fac ulty club.” The relationship between the Fac ulty and Student senates is on the rise. Hays said that there is a new and unprecendented effort among the faculty to listen to the problems and ideas of students. A good example of that is the final exam schedule that was ironed out in a joint comittee of Faculty and Student Senators. The compromise schedule, which was presented to the Student Senate by lorn Black, chairman of aca demic affairs, and was unanimously passed by the 64 Senators present, calls for seniors to take finals on Monday and Tuesday of finals week and the rest of the undergraduates to Lake finals Monday through Fri day. “T his will allow seniors to grad uate while a few people are still on campus,” Black said. “It also means that teachers will not have to make up two different final exams.” The proposed schedule still must be approved by the Faculty Senate and then by school administrators. If approved in time, the schedule will go into effect this semester. Other items discussed include: • Project visibility, which will in form the student body of what the Student Government is doing and what they have planned. Senators will speak to organizations on cam pus, telling them about how they can get involved in student affairs. • The special events line is still in operation and looking for informa tion. The purpose of the events line is to inform people about what is going on around campus, especially events associated with Student Gov ernment. The number is 845-0845. • Sixteen positions are still open on Student Senate; anyone inter- sested can contact Garrett Leeson, speaker pro tempore of the Senate. Bomb experts disarm device after scare CANTON (AP) — An incendiary device that had prompted the evac uation of about 50 people from downtown was dismantled by bomb disposal experts Wednesday, au thorities said. The bomb disposal squad from Fort Hood dismantled the device by about 4:30 p.m., Van Zandt County Sheriff Travis Shafer said. It was not immediately clear whether the device w'as a bomb, he said. People in the business district of this East Texas town were evacuated at about 12:30 p.m. after the device was discovered next to a gas meter . Van Zandt County Sheriffs dis patcher Alice Martinez said. Gary Petre of Lone Star Gas Co. discovered the device at about noon when he was reading meters at a downtown business, about two blocks from the county courthouse. The small box was about 14 inches wide and contained a timer, wires and an explosive. erformetnee "Is our Business" j** We believe in Performance: In Your Car or Truck For any Repair-Import or Domestic Bryan Drive Train cal1 uo 268-AUTO AM/PM Clinics CLINICS Minor Emergencies 10% Student Discount with ID card 3820 Texas Ave. Bryan, Texas 846-4756 401 S. Texas Ave. Bryan, Texas 779-4756 7 , da £ s a week waiK-m Family Practice NEWS BULLETIN NEWS Ri ii i r-r BULLETIN NEWS BULLETIN N E NEWS BULLETIN NEWSB^^^ff^, ifONC K«JN(S Restaurant Tired of eating pizzas and ham- burgers? How about a change? 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