Cngin* Ptrfermaitcft ^Precision High-Tech Service Without The High Price! Tune We do more than fix your car. We GUARANTEE itT Home of The 12 mo.712,000 ml. $4090 Dogs Your Cgri □ Miss or run rough? □ Stall Out? □ Hesitate? □ Diesel; or Try to Keep Running? □ Not Start Easily? □ Make Strange Noises Under The Hood? □ Guzzle Gas? □ Need An Oil Change? Precision Tune of Bryan • College Station 601 Harvey Rd. College Station 693-6189 (2 Blks East of Texas Ave.) Page 4/The Battalion/Tuesday, September 13, 1988 WALT DISNEY WORLD COLLEGE PROGRAM Walt Disney World representatives will present an information session on the Walt Disney World College Program on September 15, 1988 in the Harrington Classroom Building at 7:00 p.m. Attendance at this presentation is required to interview for the SPRING ’89 College Program on September 16, 1988 at 9:00 a.m. in the Cooperative Education Office. Majors considered: Recreation/P.E., Business, Communication, Liberal Arts. Contact: Walter Odom Cooperative Education Office (409) 845-7725 alt|*D*|isneg World AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER ©1988 The Walt Disney Company JJL" ~vr HOT TOWN HALL Presents with Special Guest Gene Watson TICKETS — ON SALE NOW Tickets available at the MSC Box Office S Dillards In the Post Oak Mall for more Information call 845-1214 Tickets are SI 5.00 International Professional Business Fraternity of Delta Sigma Pi RUSH CALENDAR Tuesday, September 13: Meet the chapter night. Informational reception for all interested students. 7:30 p.m. Clayton W. Williams Alumni Center- Lecture Room A. Business attire is requested. Thursday, September 15: Happy Hour! Come as you are. 5:00 p.m. Bombay Bicycle Club. Friday, September 16: Lunch Party. Come and have lunch with us, if your schedule permits. 12:00-2:00. Flying Tomato. Tuesday, September 20: Professional Speaker. 7:00 p.m. Rudder Tower, room 701. Business attire is re quested. Thursday, September 22: Lunch Party. Come and have lunch with us, if your schedule permits. 12:30-2:30. Dixie Chicken. Friday, September 23: “Gilligan’s island” Party. Get marooned with us in your favorite island attire. 8:30 p.m. Parkway Circle Apartments Party Room. If you have questions or need more information stop by our table in Blocker Building or call: Mark Martin 696-7676 Debra Norcross 693-5052 Christine Tesdall 693-4015 Cisneros decides to withdraw name in mayor election SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Mayor Henry Cisneros, one of the country’s leading Hispanic politicians, said Monday he has decided against run ning for a fifth term in order to en ter private life. The 41-year-old mayor, whose term will expire next spring, said he made his final decision only shortly before addressing a news conference Monday afternoon about his future plans. Cisneros, who was interviewed by Walter Mondale for a vice presi dential running mate role in 1984 and who has been mentioned fre quently as a possible Cabinet-level appointee, said he thinks 14 years serving the city is enough and that it is time to move on. “It’s been work and it’s been fun, but mostly, it’s been the most engros sing and fulfilling thing I’ve ever done,” Cisneros said. “Basically, I’ve been at it for 14 years — eight years as mayor and six as council member. That’s a long time to go at full throttle,” he said. “Our country believes that eight years in a high office should be enough to get a job done. “Presidents serve eight years. Governors serve eight years. And eight years is a good round number for a mayor, especially this one,” he said. Last year, Cisneros said he would not be running for statewide office because he wanted to devote time to San Antonio projects and to his son, John Paul Anthony, who was born with a congenital heart defect and with stomach abnormalities. Earlier this year, Cisneros, a for mer president of the National League of Cities, turned down an of fer to make a keynote address to the Democratic National Convention, saying he wanted to devote time to the city projects, including a contro versial domed stadium proposal and a regional water plan. Cisneros, who has met Pope John Paul II and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, was approached earlier this year by several San Antonio businessmen about the prospect of forming a business to handle busi ness investments. The mayor’s salary is less than $5,000 and the mayor, with two ado lescent daughters and an ill infant, had supplemented that income with lectures, columns and speaking en gagements, but had to cut back be cause of the health of his son and the time-consuming city projects. Cisneros said he needs to find a good-paying job because his two daughters are approaching college age and because the medical ex penses for his son are sure to in crease. “Today is a little sad for me — it has to be,” Cisneros said. “But I ex pect to wake up tomorrow morning, ready to make the most of the next eight months, same pace, same en ergy, same devotion to the city until midnight of the day before the next mayor takes office.” Church teacher: Pilot says God intervened GREENVILLE (AP) — The pilot of ill-fated Delta Air Lines Flight 1141 told his Sunday school teacher that God must have intervened to spare so many lives when the jet crashed at Dallas-Fort Worth Inter national Airport. Capt. Larry Davis’ Sunday school teacher said the pilot did not expect to survive the Aug. 31 crash that killed 14 of the 108 people on board. The pilot was eager to be inter viewed by the National Transporta tion Safety Board, which was trying Monday to schedule a time. “I think he thought he was going to die,” Ed Wichern, who talked with Davis, said at Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas about the crash. Wichern, a teacher at Aldersgate Church where Davis is a member, quoted Davis as saying when he real ized his plane wasn’t going to make it, “‘It’s all right with me, Lord.’ “I think he said something like, ‘You don’t get out of a cockpit in an airplane crash like that with fuel flooding over you,”’ Wichern said Sunday. Davis, 48, was piloting the Boeing 727 when it crashed seconds after takeoff and burst into flames. The three-man cockpit crew and some 91 passengers survived the crash. “We feel like God intervened,” Wichern said. “Otherwise, why would so many people live through a plane crash like that?” Davis was trapped in the cockpit for 30 minutes and was the last to be removed from the plane. “I told him it must have been a scary 30 minutes,” Wichern said. “He told me, ‘What 30 minutes?”’ What's Up A Tuesday Is E FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN ATHLETES: will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the U man's Lounge in G. Rollie White Coliseum. BIOMEDICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION: will meet to tour the College of V? : nary Medicine at 7 p.m. in 201 Veterinary Medicine Complex. AGGIES ABROAD: will have an organizational meeting at 7 p.m. in 402Rif ; TAMU SURF CLUB: will meet at 7:30 p.m. at 710 Swiss Court. AGGIES FOR BARTON: will meet at 7 p.m. in 704 Rudder. PRE-LAW SOCIETY: Angus McSwain, former dean of Baylor LawSchoc Win speak at 8:30 p.m. in 404 Rudder. v^W^Bize AGGIE TOASTERS: will meet at 8 p.m. in 102 Zachry iLj, ( DELTA SIGMA PI: will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Clayton Williams Alumni meet the chapter. Business attire is requested. u ., ,'' LIBERAL ARTS SOCIETY: will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 164 Blocker. u > ul1 ' DEER PARK HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in 302 Rudder n d ,na CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: will have a prayer meeting at 7pJ*f s the All Faiths Chapel. uest io OCA-ACP: will have an informational meeting at 7 p.m. in 301 Rudder, elpcd MSC CEPHEID VARIABLE: will have a new members' and generalmees jate p 8:30 p.m. in 301 Rudder. am i TAMU COLLEGIATE FFA: will meet and have an ice cream social at730[lw a [ in 208 Scoates Hall. ..i MANAGEMENT SOCIETY: will meet at 7 p.m. in 153 Blocker. * TAMU HORSEMAN S ASSOCIATION: will meet at 7 p.m. in 115 Kleberg auS( 1 HILLEL JEWISH STUDENT ORGANIZATION: will have a Rosh HaSr PD ot service at 10 a m. at the Hillel Building. ierl at TAMU SAILING TEAM: will meet at 7 p.m. in 206 Military Sciences. ire 1 ALL NIGHT FAIR: will have a committee meeting at 8:30 p.m. in 402Ruddf .n phi A&M METEROLOGY CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in the observatory dial .n Oceanography and Meteorology Building. thini CO-OP STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will discuss goals and electC0tm|H K chairman at 7 p.m. in 501 Rudder. 7 TAMU AMERICAN MARKETING ASSOCIATION: will meet at 7 p.m r u president of AAHPERD will speak hanje FOR INDUSTRIAL DISTRIBUTlOh .ttendi Blocker. AGGIE ALLIANCE: Dr. Jean Perry in 301 Rudder. PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION elect class representatives at 7:15 come. TAMU COMPUTER USERS GROUP: v Computing” at 3 p.m. in 308 Rudder. MULTICULTURAL SERVICES CENTER for minority graduate and undergraduate si INTRAMURALS: entries close for table tei flag football at 5:30 p.m. in 159 Read. in 203 All I.D. students a pre Introduction lo at ss internship oppo p.m. in 145 MSC. ,, triathlon, 16' softt Wednesday TAMU VICTORY '88 COMMITTEE: Sen. John Tc meeting at 7 p.m. in 601 Rudder. ASSOCIATION OF AMATEUR ASTRONOMERS: about Mars during the general membership meetmc LIBERAL ARTS STUDENT COUNCIL: will meet at OUTDOOR RECREATION CLUB: will have electic in 607 Rudder. A&M PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: will have an Ac Presbyterian Church. TAMU JAZZ BAND: will have a rehearsal at 7:3< piano room. tty i" isycl. ’ tudiis 1st n m Tim I n phi' rex;i v [TOU i i ind i < iefs. “Vi, ead ,i he i he M, oo rui “I: he < vorjes at6p.ni.ii4f t ej hbst ( eak at the chmude wi i in 507 Rudfle >03 Harringto leiny ;i Mrson TRAP AND SKEET CLUB: will elect officers at 6 p NAVIGATORS: will meet for Christian fellowship i quad. TAMU MOO DUK KWAN TAE KWAN DO: will w ber signup at 5:30 p.m. in 255 G. Rollie White. INTRAMURALS: will meet with corps flag football Read. STUDENTS AGAINST APARTHEID: will meet at AGGIE SPELEOLOGICAL SOCIETY: will have a ers at 8:30 p.m. in 502 Rudder. WOMEN’S BONFIRE COMMITTEE: will have a general meet bonfire chairmen and interested people at 7 p.m. in 502 Rudder. ungeB jryi pji pi mrn.m Bisi nedm dick m 5 WOrk In 1 ate 1 m exqjoc idmu The pilot does neat fully recall the time he lay injured in the plane, the Rev. Ralph Anderson, pastor of Aldersgate, said. However, Anderson said some passengers recalled Davis seemed to be directing them out of the aircraft even though he was unable to move. “His jaw is wired together, but you can understand him pretty well,’ Anderson told members of Wi- chern’s Sunday school class. ECONOMICS SOCIETY: All members are invited to "F September professors of the month at 6:30 p.m. at the B< TAU BETA PI ENGINEERING HONOR SOCIETY: wil meeting at 7:05 in 102 Zachry. CATHOLICS ON THE QUAD: will meet at 9 p.m. at St. M CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION, will meet a 7:3 student center. PLACEMENT CENTER: will have an orientation sessior and August graduates at 10 a m. in 504 Rudder through F THE AGGIELAND: Freshmen and sophomores may ta tos from Sept. 12 to Sept. 23 at Yearbook Associates b, Northgate. Night Out- ay Bicycle ( ive an infor i Church. leSt. Decembe their yearboc nd Campus Pt forkm obc r< H, , ausi I ifebf eived loWllK Di he ph lartiiH lickm ent. “I il ic con Items for What's Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 ReedMcOr-binV v no later than three business days before the desired run date We only p.:q be a the name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so Whats:., h u \ a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissionsar.^ | )( on a first-come, first-served basis There is no guarantee an entry wi//run. 1)^1 ( , have questions, call the newsroom at 645-3315. ..j‘ jhilpst Officials advise homeowners to test for radon aid. ake e iroos vould AUSTIN (AP) — The Environ mental Protection Agency and the Public Health Service advised all homeowners Monday to get their homes tested for deadly radon gas in light of new findings showing far more contaminated homes than ex pected in seven states and a newly discovered radon-prone soil forma tion in Minnesota and North Da kota. Nearly one in three homes tested in the seven states had radon con centrations exceeding the EPA guidelines of four picocuries per liter of air. But in Minnesota 45 percent of the homes tested exceeded the guidelines, and in North Dakota 60 percent exceeded guidelines. Radon is an odorless, colorless gas resulting from the radioactive decay und own of trace amounts of uranium f in all soil. The gas kills when its < radioactive decay products lodge in the lung and irradiate tissue. Previously, EPA has estimated that radon inhalation could account for 20,000 of the nation’s 130,000 annual lung cancer deaths, about 85 percent of which would he the result of smoking. In the past, based on smaller sur- vey: pro ;, EPA had estimated ill portion of homes naiiorw ling it’s guidelines probali between 8 percent ana 12 pc An Energy Department stud' mated the proportion at 7pen The agency also surveyed 1 on Indian reservations'in Mid innesota and Wisconsin,win mt of the homes in resen: exceeded the guidelines. :xpn i hing 1 King I ixplaii Hid 'gV ar hes. I Mil per >gy ai roliti,; if nu- ihilos, M< is King i Kar AM/PM Clinics Our New College Station location « ) h at t i offers va y s ° Birth Control Counseling hfe Women’s Services Female doctors on duty Kj Student 10% discount with ID 693-020. New Shipment Has Arrived DEADLINE CHANGE YOU MUST HAVE: 1- -personal interview 2- completed application 3— three references 4— all transcripts TO THE STUDY ABROAD OFFICE BEFORE OCTOBER 3. CALL THE STUDY ABROAD OFFICE TO MAKE AN APPOINTMENT FOR AN INTERVIEW. Interviews must be completed before Sept. 20th. fS 4? STUDY ABROAD OFFICE 161 W. Bizzell 845-0544 Post Oak Mall 764-819!