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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 2, 1988)
.A&M Page 4 The Battalion Wednesday, November2, jSteakhousel 'Delivers 846-5273 If you vote a straight ticket, you lose the ability to choose among candidates in local races. Take an extra minute. What’s Up i8d TIME FOR A RESUME Kinko’s can help you prepare for your future. We have a wide range of papers and envelopes to give your resume the professional look it deserves. kinko's Great copies. Great people. 201 College Main 846-8721 Vote qualifications. Vote for the candidate you choose. Wednesday Elect an Attorney Jim Lockers for Justice of the Peace Political ad paid tor by Jim Locke Campaign, 8108 Bunker Hill, College Slation, TX CHIMNEY HILL BOWLING CENTER “A FAMILY RECREATION CENTER” 40 LANES-AUTOMATIC SCORING OPEN BOWLING EVERY DAY HAPPY HOUR ALL THE TIME PITCHER OR BEER $3.00 PITCHER FROZEN MARGARITA $8.00 WINE COOLER $1.50 DRAFT WINE COOLER $1.00 WITH THIS COUPON BOWL 2 GAMES AT 1.85 EACH AND GET 3RD FREE. TAX NOT INCLUDED, SHOES EXTRA. OPEN EVERY DAY FROM 10 A.M. TO MIDNIGHT BAR-SNACK BAR-POOL TABLES- VIDEO GAMES-TV 701 UNIVERSITY DR. E. 260-9189 MSG GREAT ISSUES PRESENTS STA TRAVEL 100 OFFICES WORLDWIDE Special Student and Youth Fares WORLD WIDE MSC GREAT ISSUES: will meet at 7 p.m. in 404 Rudder. AGGIE DEMOCRATS: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 502 Rudder. UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRIES: will have an Aggie supper at 6 p.m. alAS|| Presbyterian Church. UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS COUNCIL: will meet at 7 p.m. in the councilroorrI STUDY ABROAD OFFICE: will have an informational meeting about loansfo| studying abroad at 10 a.m. in 302 Rudder. MEXICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 308 Rudder. STUDENTS AGAINST APARTHEID: will meet at 7 p.m. in 402 Rudder. TAMU VICTORY ‘88 COMMITTEE: will have a Bush/Quayle campaign meeij| at 7 p.m. in 308 Rudder. WOMEN’S BONFIRE COMMITTEE: will meet with bonfire chairmen at 7p.m.i 229 MSC. TAMU TRAP AND SKEET CLUB: will meet at 8 p.m. in 305 Rudder. MSC CAMAC: will have a general committee meeting at 7 p.m. at RuddeJ Tower. Check the monitor screen for the room number. CATHOLICS ON THE QUAD: will discuss forgiveness at 9 p.m. in Lounge Bor| the quad. NEWMAN: will have a mid-week study break at 7:30 p.m. at the St. Marys! dent Center. flo By Ron I Report Thursday DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY/JUNGIAN SOCIETY: Jerele Neeld wi speak about “The Structure of the Psyche" at 7:30 p.m. in 501 Rudder. HISTORY CLUB: Dr. Krammer will discuss "German Prisoners of War” aw show slides at 7 p.m. in 305 Rudder. COLLEGIATE FFA: will have Fall Fair Fun Fest at 6 p.m. at the Pearce Pavilioo CHI ALPHA CHRISTIAN ORGANIZATION: will meet for fellowship and worship at 7 p.m. at the Oceanography and Meteorology Building. ALPHA EPSILON DELTA PREMEDICAL HONOR SOCIETY: will meet all p.m. in 502 Rudder. STUDENT ACTIVITIES: applications for the 1989 Speakers Seminar are avail able in the Student Activities Office. INTRAMURALS: will meet with residence hall representatives at 6 p.m. in 164 Read. GAY STUDENT SERVICES: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 510 Rudder. SOCIETY OF WOMEN ENGINEERS: will meet at 6 p.m. in 203 Zachry. MSC HOSPITALITY: will have a fall fashion show at 10 p.m. at The Edge. AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS SOCIETY: will have a chili cookout from 7-10 p.m. at K.C. Hall. ADMAN CR0NAUER obert Boenig is a ie true spirit of t -old assistant profi as A&M would f mg the poets, mu: knights of the Mid< lowever, if he wer period, he would is purple plaid sh pants and tennis shi •e medieval. ut would a real ose Arnold Schwar te actor? He’s my hero,” B a throwback to tf had to make a n warzenegger is th Id cast in that role.’ oenig has been e 1974, concentn literature of the me ice periods. He beg: t at Rutgers Uni\ while working on s he has been inter rature for as long [‘When I was a kid 1 , I could see the E from my kitchen s. “I remember th; 1950’s when th FROM -DALLAS ON SCHEDULED AIRLINES SEAT SHORTAGE BOOK NOW FOR THE HOLIDAYS ST. THOMAS from CARACAS from LONDON from PARIS from RIO DE JANIERO from OW ROUNOTRIP 155 280 ROME ATHENS TOKYO MADRID SYDNEY CAIRO MOSCOW from from from from from from from 155 250 295 360 375 395 510 335 555 470 460 310 499 590 720 750 790 839 640 1085 939 919 ' FLIGHTS AVAILABLE FROM ALL MAJOR U.S. CITIES ■ CALL FOR FREE INFORMATION BOOKLET ■ ADVICE FROM THE EXPERTS THE STUDENT TRAVEL NETWORK 1-800-777-0112 2002 GUADALUPE ST. AUSTIN TX 98705 6609 HILCREST AVE. □ALLAS TX 75205 YOU DON’T KNOW WHERE TO EAT OUT? Check ttie Battalion ads! Items 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. IIyou have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315. SUNDAY NOV 6 4:00pm $2 ADMISSION RUDDER AUDITORIUM TICKETS ARE ON SALE NOW AT THE MSC BOX OFFICE In Advance Center presents furniture exhibition vie was showing ;hts in a row. 1 watc one night 1 rushei if King Kong was Empire State B n airplanes. That r |literature, the diffei and a story.” After teaching at l ars, Boenig spent f assistant professor ate University. Foil piitgers in 1983 as the of the writing progra: wife Loran and his un sphere to Texas A<S Tressha White, a The Langford Architecture Center Gallery will present “Furniture by Ar chitects” Nov. 3 through Dec. 1 from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays. ,ajor from Houstoi lorld literature class The exhibit will include furniture designed by architects Le Corbusier, Alvar Aalto, and Mario Botta. An opening reception will be held Nov. 3 at 4 p.m. The exhibit, to be shown in 120 Langford Architecture Center, willil lustrate design innovation of the 204 century. Sue Gorman regional manager for I f n»itrar»r Hiirnicmnoc ® 1 n \ • r jfay what we felt it we ■ “He didn’t try to will present a lecture on furniture de sign on Nov. 10 from 11 a.m.-noon in 124 Langford Architecture Build ing. The exhibit is free and open to the public. Nureyev will dance for MSC OPAS Rudolf Nureyev is perhaps one of the best-known ballet dancers in the world. Making headlines long before Mikhail Baryshnikov was even heard of, Nureyev has been dancing since he was seven years old. His “leap to freedom” at Le Bourget airport 25 years ago electrified the world, and his dancing career has been in the spotlight ever since. Nureyev continues to dance all over the world. MSC OPAS is bring ing Nureyev, with his magic and cha risma, to Rudder Auditorium at 8 p.m. Wednesday night. In this rare performance, Nureyev is joined by six principal dancers from the Paris Opera Ballet, who will perform many classic dances, including ones from “Don Quixote” and “Sleeping Beau ty.” Nureyev has appeared with more than 30 of the world’s major dance companies. He has choreographed many productions, including “The Nutcracker” for the Royal Ballet and the Australian Ballet. Most recently, he choreographed “The Tempest” for the Royal Ballet in 1983. In September 1983 Nureyev took the position of artistic director of the Paris Opera Ballet, and has created new stagings of several classic ballets as well as dancing in his own versions of “Swan Lake” and Square.” ite says. “I had a [class. He was always to get us involved.” That’s the way 1 fosses to be — entei if class participation. Boenig took a posith Irer in English at Pu |987,he taught a cour eEnglish language. “That can be a v |oenig says. “One of discuss was how tl Ingland and brought ords into the English ribed the invasions sions of Viking ving with leather /ords tatooed to thei f people laugh they ble. Learning can ou’re comfortable.” Boenig also strives lore than just English “I try to give my s Washington eoscopic view,” say ie strengths of Engl — (earn a lot about diffei uthors of different t The Association of Foi-mci- Students Full Senior Induction Banquet Bentsen: Dukakis their subject their ov bwn outlooks in histo music and this and tha Perhaps it was his supports defense Wednesday SL Thursday, November 9 & lO, 1988 6:30 p.m. MSC room 221 All December graduates are invited to attend. Complimentary tickets will be available as long as they last, November 1-3 in tbe lobby of the Clayton W. Williams, dr. Alumni Center This is your invitation to attend the formal induction of Class of ’88 graduates. TICKETS GIVEN ON FIRST COME—FIRST SERVED BASIS Student I.D. Required to Pick-up Ticket SHERMAN (AP) — Lloyd Bentsen pushed hard Tuesday to sell Michael Du kakis as someone who’ll support a strong defense, and he worked to deflect any harm to the ticket from Dukakis’ ac knowledgment that he was a liberal. The Texas senator hopped into the cockpit of an F-16C jet fighter at the General Dynamics plant in Fort Worth, and told workers there the Dukakis-Bent- sen team opposed the Reagan adminis tration plan to reduce purchases of those planes next year from 180 to 100. “Michael Dukakis and Lloyd Bentsen support a strong national defense,’’ he said. “The F-16 is an integral part of that,” he said, pointing to the Demo cratic proposal for more conventional weapons instead of more spending on Star Wars and nuclear weapons. Bentsen continued emphasizing de fense at a rally outside the courthouse in Sherman, were he told several hundred spectators that Republican commercials in Texas claiming that the Democrats were going to shut down defense plants were “absolutely untrue.” Bentsen, questioned by reporters, brushed aside suggestions by reporters that Dukakis hurt himself in Texas by calling himself a liberal. Most Texans, according to polls, consider themselves conservative. “He said (he was a liberal) ... in the terms of Jack Kennedy and a Harry Tru man and I don’t think anyone ever ques tioned their being for a strong national defense,” Bentsen said. “You know, what you have to look at and read is how he stated it,” he said. “He talked about it in the terms of Harry Truman, in the terms of Jack Kennedy, in the terms of balanced budgets, in the terms of paying your own way. ” Though the Republican administration talks about fiscal responsiblity, it hasn’t given the U.S. a balanced budget yet, he said. loeing so thorough ir Boenig attended R raduate from 1966 Ihubb Foundation Scholar for four ye; Bob Slagle, the state Democralu chairman who helped introduce Bentsen in Sherman, said he didn’t think Dukakis did much harm. “I don’t think it’s really hurtinj him,” he said. “They don’t really attad that much to a label,” he said, especial since Dukakis identified himself Franklin Roosevelt, Truman and Ken nedy. But Reggie Bashur, the spokesrnai for the Bush-Quayle campaign in Texas said by calling himself a liberal, he real hurt himself in Texas. Evidence of W damage was already showing up in track ing polls, he said. In Texas, he said, the term libertl stands for the George McGovern, Jimm) Carter and Walter Mondale school i Democrats. “I don’t know what his handlers werr thinking” when they let Dukakis sat that, he said. After Sherman, Bentsen was flyingH| Owensboro, Ky., St. Louis, Mo., Carbondale, Ill. Bentsen, a bomber pilot in World II, clearly enjoyed the stop at the General Dynamics plant. Workers chanted “Bentsen, Beal sen,” and several employees yelledoul in objection to George Bush’s runniaf mate, Dan Quayle, calling him a dodger. ig when he attended There were also Bush supporters ia evidence, but they did not heckle ordis turb the tour of the mile-long plant which manufactures about 300 jets • year. Bentsen squeezed into the single-seal cockpit of a new F-16C for the cameras and afterward declared it “fits like a wel suit.” He joked to reporters that he’d fly itl° the next campaign stop and meet his en tourage there.