Monday, March 27,1989 The Battalion Page? alion SOI- 0!8O Warped HLTOVA1 WE'KE TALKING TO ACTOR WILLIAM S/MT//ER- by Scott McCullar WELL, )T^ OKAV, 5UT IT'S WOT THE REAL STAK TREK, WOT WITHOUT ME AHV LEOMRP MP DEFOKEST AAlT>-~ HAVE YOU SHOWN HUM OUR PILOT SCRIPT FOR T.X HOOKER-THE NEXT GENERATION 1ET? I!:30 ale o, ieat failh 5I0 I280 Waldo by Kevin Thomas "EL BRUJO" BEGINS HIS CEREMONY TO SUMMON THE EVIL SPIRITS FROM THE “PIT OF FIRE../' NED, DRUGGED INTO A STATE OF SUBMISSION, STARTS TO LOWER WALDO TO HIS DOOM... THEIR PLANS TO IMPLANT THE FUHRERS BRAIN IN ELVIS' BODY COULD DESTROY THE WORLD.' DON'T BE CRUEL... ^ to ARYAN RULE... \ igwai >il was deter-1 houlj oren- agents ak up r had ut tit d tht to 25 Coast Tail do- :on- ;t on the -ary real do- en- ent >ale ire. 66 Airline fares expected to rise during summer, officials say HOUSTON (AP) — With the approach of summer — typically one of the busiest flying seasons of the year — and Eastern Airlines on the brink of collapse, airline travelers can expect t all the other passengers, said David Swie- renga, assistant vice president for the Air Transport As sociation, which represents the country’s largest air lines. Air c.Triers now reserve a few seats for the last-min ute flie' at a higher price and reward passengers who buy tiotets in advance with lower fares. Tlv result has been discount fares never before dreaded possible and skyrocketing standard fares. To day about 90 percent of the nation’s air travelers are flyhg on a discounted fare. The losers in this game of supply and demand are cffporate and emergency travelers who don’t have the lixury of planning their trips weeks in advance or the lexibility to comply with fare restrictions, industry ob servers say. “The business traveler is in an T gotcha,’ ” Ruffeno said. “They’re frustrated because they don’t have a lot of choice. The airlines know that and take advantage of it by jacking up the price.” A traveling salesman at Houston Intercontinental Airport last week lamented the price of his $860 round- trip ticket from Washington. “I try to plan in advance to keep the fares low,” Willie Brown of Reston, Va, said. “Yet sometimes a customer says, ‘Be here tomorrow,’ and you have got to go. It’s cheaper to fly to Hong Kong. I flew there, round trip, for $729.” Airline officials, however, insist they care about cor porate travelers, who fill up at least 50 percent of their flights. “The business traveler has to have a seat available at the last minute because they can’t always plan ahead,” David Messing, a Continental Airlines spokesman, said. nty ov- ter rea rns ic’s ha •et, 78 Six ire as er- rn- nd rut id- r Elf ‘Quick Response’ advocates claim system will save money for retailers DALLAS (AP) — Advocates of a concept dubbed “Quick Response” claim the system could save retailers $9.6 billion a year, and at the same time help the nation’s apparel and textile industries battle foreign com petition. But analysts are divided on whether retailers will sign on in high enough numbers to reach the levels needed to reap those savings. Two studies released in Dallas this month tout the advantages of Quick Response, a concept generally cred ited to Roger Milliken, chairman of textile manufacturer Milliken & Co., as an offshoot if his Crafted With Pride campaign to bolster the do mestic textile and apparel industry. Milliken conceived of textile and apparel manufacturers and retailers sharing product and sales informa tion across the board in an effort to “play the competitive advantage (of U.S. manufacturers) — time,” according to Doug Smith, a partner in the Dallas office of Andersen Consulting, which opened a perma nent exhibit on the concept at Dallas’ Infomart trade center. Andersen Consulting, a unit of Arthur Anderson Sc Co., and Kurt Salmon Associates, presented results of separate studies to about 100 top executives of apparel, textile and re tailing companies in Dallas recently. The studies were done for the Voluntary Industry Communica tions Standards Commttee, which is seeking to develop uniform methods of gathering and sharing sale and in ventory data among the industries. Advocates concede that despite the technological demands of the system, the key is a willingness for all parties to share information, for ex ample, of competing retailers telling a common supplier how sales are going. / “Quick Response is, first and fore most, a new and different way of doing business,” Andersen’s study says. Companies/must “create new partnerships across the pipeline, with the manufacturers and textile mills, and . . . share sales information through the entire pipeline.” Monroe H. Greenstein, a retail analyst with Bear, Stearns 8c Co. in New York said he doubted fashion retailers would be willing to partici pate, althoqgh he said retailers who sell basic apparel, which makes up the bulk of the tnarket, probably will go along. But Kay Norwood, who follows retailing, apparel and textiles for In- terstate-Johnson Lane in Charlotte, N.C., said the competitive advan tages offered by Quick Response will force competitors to go along. “If your competitor is doing this, and has a better apparel assortment than you, and getting sales because of it, for you not to be involved is cutting off your nose to spite your face,” she said by phone. Under the VICS system, retailers would daily gather sales information generated from using Universal Product Scanning, point-of-sale ter minals. That information would be used to reorder needed products immedi ately, all using computer tie-ups with apparel suppliers. The apparel in dustry, in turn, would be tied simi larly to textile manufacturers who supply the material to make the clothes. The system can significantly re duce the lead time needed to order and restock items, with some studies indicating the time from making fabric to shelf can be reduced from 66 weeks to 30 weeks or even fur ther. Andersen Consulting’s study says department stores could save $3.7 billion a year, after an initial invest ment of $1.6 billion and annual maintenance of $139 million. Mass merchants would save $3.9 billion, after $ 1.3 billion in startup and $ 159 million annual costs. Speciality stores could reap $2 billion in annual sav ings, with startup costs of $684 mil lion. /T ‘Tuesday, March 28 7:30pm 3{pom 201 MSC nid^ets are on sa(e at the tRudcCer Office for $2.30 T* 5k Girl From HUNAN \AGGIE INEMA/ -l' Co-sponsorech By 90S C Jordan Institute for IntemationaC Jtzvareness JJ