Page 4/The Battalion/Friday, September 23, 1988 • We Deliver • 846-5273 • Dont miss '8&M LATE NITE Thursday. Friday." and Saturday Nights open til JElam fi&M Slsak Hauia Call about dallvary 108 Collaqa Main IW • We Deliver • 846-5273 • Problem Pregnancy' •We listen, We cure, We heCp •Free Preqnancy Tests •Concerned.’ Counselors Brazos VaJJey Crisis Pregnancy Service We’re Local! 3620 E. 29th Street (next to Medley's Gifts} 24 fir. Fiat Cine 623-CARE Sunday Special! Call us when the dining halls are closed. 12” 1 item pizza $4. 95 ! $6. 95 ! or 16” 1 item pizza No coupon necessary. Prices do not include tax. Limited Delivery Area 260-9020 4407 S. Texas 693-2335 1504 Holleman $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 goo URINARY TRACT INFECTION STUDY «oo $200 Do y ou ex P erience trequent urination, burning, stinging, | 2 00 $200 or P a ' n when you urinate? Pauli Research will per- $200 $200 form FREE Urinary Tract Infection Testing for those will- $ 2 00 $200 in 9 to Participate in a 2 week study. $200 incentive for $ 2 00 $200 ^ose who qualify. $ 20 o $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 *{““ IRRITABLE BOWEL SYNDROME STUDY $100 Wanted: Symptomatic patients with physician diagnosed j 10 q $100 Irritable Bowel Syndrome to participate in a short $i 0 0 $1 qq study. $100 incentive for those chosen to participate. $-| 0 o $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $100 $200 $100 $200 $100 $200 $100 $200 ALLERGY STUDY $100 $100 individuals with Fall weed Allergies to participate in one $ 200 $200 of our allergy studies. $100-$200 incentive for those cho- $100 $100 sen to participate. $200 $100 $200 $100 $200 $100 $200 $100 $200 $100 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 go® ULCER STUDY g“ $300 lndiv ' dual w 'th recently diagnosed duodenal ulcers to $300 $300 participate in a short research study. $300 incentive for $300 $300 those chosen to participate. $300 $3 0 0 $ 3 0 0 $3 0 0 $ 3 0 0 $ 3 0 0 $ 3 0 0 $ 3 0 0 $300 FREE WEED ALLERGY TESTING Children (6-12 years) to participate in short allergy study known allergic children welcome.Monetary incentive for those chosen to participate. Call Pauli Research International 776-6236 Driver education teaches avoidance By Jamie Conley Reporter Driver’s education is now being taken one step further through the Emergency Reaction Driver’s Train ing Course. Terry Kline, safety education lec turer and project organizer, said the course is being offered by the Texas A&M Safety Education Program. The course surpasses the basic skills learned in drivers education and teaches drivers proper accident avoidance skills, Kline said. “Most people in an accident situa tion react with a 3P-technique,” he said. “They panic, pray and pass out. “We want to teach drivers the ‘proper’ steps to follow when avoid ing an accident and how to react in a critical situation.” When educating the drivers it’s important that they are aware of their car’s full driving potential, Kline said. “People don’t fully understand the extent of their vehicle’s driving capability,” he said. “With control braking and proper steering techniques, cars can be safely maneuvered out of potential accidents.” One of the steering techniques that drivers learn in the course is a nine-and-three hand position style. They place their hands parallel to each other on the wheel and even when turning, they do not remove their hands from this position, Kline said. “The driver’s arms should literally cross each other,” he said. “By keep ing both hands on the wheel, the driver will have better steering con trol.” The drivers also learn to move with the steering wheel alone, with out using the brakes, Kline said. “When people slam on their brakes while driving, this causes them to go into a skid,” he said. “That could increase their risks of an accident.” The main group that attends the driver’s training course are chemical salesmen. Chemical companies receive re duced insurance rates if their drivers attend the course, Kline said. Cynamid, a large chemical com pany, sent 14 of its employees to take the course. Joseph Mascavage, sales manager at Cynamid, said the course is bene ficial for the company’s salesmen. “The course provides the drivers with a systematic approach for im proving their perceptual driving skills,” Mascavage said. “It will also help them choose the best response in critical situations.” Mark Tapio, a salesman at Cyna mid, said he took the course a little too late. “I was recently in an accident,” Tapio said, “and the accident avoi dance skills I learned in the course are exactly the things I didn’t do.” Army ROTC cadets march to training By Timothy J. Hammons Stuff Writer More than 400 Army ROTC cadets will march out to training sites near Easterwood Airport this weekend for their annual field training exercises. The exercises are designed to teach the cadets leadership and teamwork and to help them find and improve on weaknesses. The cadets will go through dif ferent exercises depending on their class. Army ROTC officer Capt. Mark Johnson said. Juniors will set up tents and stay out all weekend, while sophomores and freshmen will go out only on Sat urday. Seniors plantied and devel oped all of the exercises, Johnson said. They also will be in charge of training and instructing the other cadets. The junior cadets will leave Friday night and set up camp near the Brayton Fireman Train ing Field. They will learn how to map and get used to the field et viroment, Johnson said. Theii training will prepare them foi Camp Warrior '89, an Arm ROTC advanced camp held Fort Riley, Kansas. The sophomores and fresli men will road march to the train ing site Saturday morning. Tlit freshmen will march to the fire men’s training field and split two groups. One group will leam rappelling, and the other wi" to a lake and make rafts out o[ ponchos. The purpose of this exercise is to transport equipmen across the lake without getting 1: wet. T he sophomores also will spt into two groups. One group wi go to the stamina course and run the obstacle course. The otliei group will go through a ership reaction course. This course is designed with specific problems in mind. The groups given limited equipment to soke the problem. MSC Town Hall arranges concerts MSC Town Hall has put to gether another semester of con certs, starting Oct. 14. Country music star Randy Tra vis performs that night, with Gene Watson opening the act. About 2000 tickets still are avail able at the Rudder Box Office and Dillard’s in Post Oak Mall. Robert Palmer will perform^ Oct. 25. T ickets go on sale Satin day at the same locations. Both concerts will begin at p.m. in G. Rollie White Coliseum Tickets are S14 apiece foreacl show. For more information on either show, contact theboxof lice at 845-1234.j Hunt brother refuses bankruptcy DALLAS (AP) — One of three Hunts facing a $134 million federal court judgment did not follow the lead of his brothers in filing personal bankruptcy petitions because he did not have as much potential exposure in the claim, a spokesman said Thursday. Heirs to one of the world’s great est fortunes, Nelson Bunker and William Herbert Hunt, two of the multimillionaire Dallas brothers, 01301702filed bankruptcy Wednes day. But attorneys say the filings won’t affect previous Chapter 11 bank ruptcy proceedings involving the brothers’ Placid Oil Co., owned by their trust estates. Jurors in a New York federal court decided Aug. 20 the two Hunts, their brother Lamar and three other defendants must pay damages for conspiring in the late 1970s to corner the world’s silver market, and ruining the investments of Minpeco SA, the Peruvian gov ernment’s mineral marketing com pany. “They are very upbeat,” said Tom Whitaker, executive vie president for the Hunt Energy Corp. “There is not anybody hanging their head over this.” He said Lamar Hunt did not file a personal bankruptcy petition be cause he does not have the exposure of the other two brothers, Whitaker said. But the spokesman did not rule out the possibility of a later filing. “It was his (Lamar’s) option not to file,” said Whitaker. “He does not have the involvement in the poten tial silver litigation that Bunker and Herbert have. He does have some exposure, but not nearly as much.” Whitaker declined to discuss why Lamar Hunt may be less involved in silver lawsuits than his brothers. The Hunts are optimistic about chances of getting a new trial or hav ing damages reduced in their legal fight with the Peruvian govern ment’s mining company, said Whi taker. “This (reorganization) was a busi ness decision, but they realized the decision would be painful to lb selves and their family,” the spoks man said. “They are absolutelyi termined to fight this, whatwea calling the outrageous Minpecow diet.” Meanwhile, the Chapter lira ganizations will avoid a ‘Tiresale'i the wake of a required $225 mil bond to appeal the court award! Minpeco, said Whitaker. U.S. District Judge Moral ! Lasker of New York allowed aw j porary stay against the bond. Herbert Hunt, in a statement,a the personal filing will give himlii “to continue the fight to correcti injustice of the jury verdict...11 thought of even a dime goingtoi government of Peru is repugnam , Report: Texas tax system needs repair AUSTIN (AP) — The state’s tax system is troubled with some antiquated levies, hard- pressed local governments and an inability to keep pace with a changing Texas economy, a spe cial committee reported Thursday. “The Texas tax system served the state well for two decades . . . But after 25 years, the system has developed serious problems,” the report, adopted unanimously by the Select Committee on Tax Equity, said. “The state economy has changed, but the tax system has not always kept pace,” the report said. The committee, which has worked for more than 16 months, won’t issue recommendations for improving the system until late November or early December, officials said. And although Thursday’s report on the prob lems lacked some of the strongest language con tained in a proposed version made public last month, committee chairman Dan W. Cook III of Dallas defended it. “We think the problems are serious or we wouldn’t have drafted this,” Cook, a partner in the investment banking firm of Goldman, Sachs 8c Co, said. “When we come up with the recommendations addressing these problems, I think it’ll under score where we think the serious problems are,” he said. In last month’s proposed version, the stain system was described as a building in needot: pair. “Some of the structure is still sound;* of it is not,” it said. That description was missing from the rept adopted. “I think the house does need repi: Badly? 1 don’t know,” Cook said. “I’m nottnii to develop an inflammatory statement. Theffl important thing we are trying to achieve is top a bright light on what we think the proble; are.” Also missing was a proposed conclusion tb had said, “The Texas tax system needs toi fixed, and the repairs should begin now." Special Edition Maroon MasterCard Now for a limited time, Texas A&M University faculty, staff and employees who qualify can get a SPECIAL Maroon MasterCard from the Texas Aggie Credit Union. Originally available only for members of the exclusive Directors' Club, this card carries lots of special features, including a 25 day grace period and a low 13.9% interest rate on credit balances. To qualify, you must be employed by Texas A&M University, meet min imum income requirements, and direct deposit your paycheck to your Texas Aggie Credit Union checking or savings account. That's all there is to it! Call or come in today to sign up toryour Special Edition Maroon MasterCard. ■ Low 13.9% Interest Rate ■ Up to $5000 Credit Limit (II qualilied) Maroon Beats Gold! 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