Thursday, October 11,1990 The Battalion Page? G e; issancejet; Iso duriiiji rt of an 4 •psUH-U(. iv niembfti Sea whiles adar conus are dawn, (j s assault tj. o sign of t|( ch for sun; ut the eiji: its nicknam e 48th Tatt. r Force Bait , includiM mb ear om lifeja^ red filled 1 '; tiffs, into 1 hangar, contained® clothing, (( one ofd* mercha^ aldez oil round in^ >und in)h : irly 11 ni xi the nai 18 l crews s one to d* to return s* survey. <1 they d® that could an-up, Idn't sa); lerchandi^ rly estitna 1 ' be low, rs had sig 1 loat plane* □ted on >•* ■u tindisd 1 ' ne would 1 al air-tac awd said, n sets sold ane fru# :h. Spade Phillips, P.l. hey! MY M/IME5 BeckyCoBB. I'lA HEKE TO C?t\/E YOU Tip *4; Learh To KMoW h The Truth IS BEiHGr Hiooeu oft, Basically, learn To see through the BS, J fop, Example-, the Corps n howally Toif ONE BlO FMr, THEREye lot MORE rwo PERCENTERS THAN Tos F 2% of THE STOPCNTS • ■ - ... and take the Albritton bell tower. jrr Doesn't Represent "T/ye eternal SPlRlT OF A (SblE LAND ”■ HECR^NO! THU IS 'WHAT FREUDIAN PSYCHOLOOISTS LIRE To Call H PHriLLIG SYMBOL. by Matt Kowalski Tubularman an uPcfNT message fioH his FELLOW SuYTf HetofS, Tw&uMNAN LEFT HIS tooHUME, FHESToU OLbHAN, IN CHARGF of CtlNCFKHTlNG Tot. THE &LYAN/1 College station fiPefi. getting | oct«y t)(e, Pyleston 'peat**. To fcfCoMf p SvfieFHtPo Known As- by Boomer Cardinale wy ctefiTED p Fotion A, J That uhu. enrbiF \ \ Me To OBTAIN Powers \ AgJ T?/ -TCTC-rryyFftf SCYoWD THAT of ) //\MY MotcfiN-WY sutetoeftfl / AnuTS.thf 10R0N6N Potion ANt> \T’s ) \ TNR.ee wencs tu_ / V E/nuotweeN. y _ "1' // //cAPtnau 5KL tV/LL COUF6F Sr/TT/oN FUZUIVF?’ F/NP out r>N FPiMY'... Nerd House by Tom A. Madison l~liR.BER!T FINOS JUATFVFR'i M0KN/N6 /S FULL OF SuKFFlStS. RHA co-sponsors casino before midnight yell Midnight yell practice will be Friday at Johnny B. Dalton’s Country-Western Club in Hous ton for the Texas A&M vs. Hous ton game. The Resident Housing Asso ciation and Aggie Professional Forum of Houston will sponsor a casino before yell practice from 7 to 11 p.m. A casino also will be at Johnny B. Dalton’s, 13101 Kuykendahl. A free outdoor buffet will be available from 7 to 9 p.m. Cover charge at Johnny B. Dal ton’s is $2 after 8 p.m. Casino Night tickets can be purchased today for $5 at the Rudder Box Office, Sbisa and the Quadrangle or at the door for $6. Brant Ince, head yell leader, says everyone needs to go to the game to increase crowd noise. “That is how we beat Houston last year, and that is how we count on beating them this year,” he says. For more information about Friday’s events, please contact the RHA office at 845-0689. Business Day to to provide MBA information MSC MBA/Law’s Business Day will feature 16 business schools from across the nation from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. today in the first floor of Blocker. Recruiters will have catalogs and information about their uni versities’ MBA programs. Stanford, Columbia, Carnegie Mellon, University of Pennsylva nia, University of Chicago and Pepperdine, as well as several Texas schools are among the uni versities scheduled for appear ances. Committee members will sell $5 tickets for an MBA/Law Sym posium on Nov. 10, which will nave panel presentations on ca reer opportunities in business and law. Director of Symposia Pro grams Paul Poirot says the com mittee is trying to appeal to non business majors unaware of grad uate business program opportu nities. Business day is the second part a three-part program. The program began with law day last week and will end with the Nov. 10 panel symposium. Texas oilmen debate incentives proposals MIDLAND (AP) — It is anyone’s guess what specifics will emerge in the next budget compromise pack age. However, if incentives proposed for the oil industry in the original package survive, many in the indus try agree that they would provide a double whammy for getting the oil industry moving again. “If all the incentives survive,” said Harry Spannaus, executive vice president of the Permian Basin Pe troleum Association, “they could at tract outside investors back into the industry.” Spannaus said that any tax incen tives for the oil industry would need to be sufficient to put oil on a level playing field with other investments. "If you can make 10 percent on a CD without any risk, you would be dumb to risk in a oil well to make 10 percent without a good tax incen tive,” he said. He said that the incentives pro vided in the proposed budget con tained most of what the oil industry had been seeking, including help on the Alternative Minimum l ax. “These tax incentives could work to really stimulate activity hi the oil- patch,” Spannaus said. If incentives for natural gas sur vive, Robert Anderson, a natural gas consultant, said it will be very good for the industry. “The tax compromise would re store incentives for drilling and de veloping tight sands gas, and that would really get things moving in certain parts of the Permian Basin,” said Anderson. He said there exten sive tight sands in the Sonora and Ozona area. “It is evident that the incentives work. One only has to look at the rapid development of coal seam gas, which has been developed with in centives, to know that they work,” he said. Sen. Pete Dominici, R-N.M., in a press statement said his state was blessed with a abundance of coalbed methane and tight formation sand and stood to benefit significantly from reinstatement of the incen tives. Train collides with truck, man killed WALLER (AP) — The engineer of an Amtrak train was killed Wednesday and at least three other people aboard the train were injured when it collided with a tractor-tra iler, officials said. Thirty-one passengers were aboard the Houston-to-Dallas train when the accident occurred at mid morning on Farm Road 362 near Waller, about 40 miles northwest of Houston, Southern Pacific Railroad spokesman Jim Johnson said. The train had been traveling about 50 mph westbound on the tracks when the tractor trailer, which was traveling south on Farm Road 362, attempted to cross the tracks at a marked intersection and “turned into the path of the train,” said Wal ler Police Patrolman Tom Chavez. The train struck the rear of the trailer, breaking it away from the truck cab, Chavez said. “The train came to rest about 1,000 feet from the intersection,” he said. The engineer, whose name was withheld pending notification of rel atives, was dead on arrival at Cy-Fair Hospital, Chavez said. Court reaffirms conviction in Port case AUSTIN (AP) — David Port’s conviction in the 1984 slaying of a Houston postal carrier was affirmed Wednesday by an appeals court here. Harris County prosecutor Tim Taft hailed the ruling as “good news.” Jack Zimmermann of Houston, Port’s attorney, said he expected to appeal the decision to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. The 3rd Court of Appeals has considered Port’s case before. In 1987, the court reversed Port’s “We’re gratified that this will go on with the defendant in the penitentiary. ” — Tim Taft, Harris County Prosecutor murder conviction, saying his unre corded, oral confession didn’t lead police to new evidence and therefore couldn’t legally be used in his trial. Until this year, Port was free on $20,000 bond. Then, the Court of Criminal Appeals said his conviction should not have been overturned on those grounds. He now is in state prison. The high appeals court returned Port’s case to the 3rd Court for con sideration of other issues Port raised in appealing his murder conviction. The panel, after considering those issues, affirmed the trial court’s judgment, in which Port was sen tenced to 75 years in prison. He was 17 at the time of the murder. It could be eight months or longer before the Court of Criminal Ap- eals would rule on another appeal y Port, Assistant District Attorney Taft said. “We’re gratified that this will go on with the defendant in the peni tentiary,” he said. Port was convicted by a Comal County jury in the murder of Debra Sue Schatz, who was shot in June 1984 after she stopped at Port’s Houston home on her mail route. Her body was found two days af ter the killing in a remote area of northwest Harris County. She had been shot twice in the head with a .22-caliber pistol. *jn aJh *Jn aJh «jw aJm aJh aJh aJm' aJ/i aJh aJh aJh* aJh a|h a|m aJh' a]h aJh* aJh A_[n' ^7 Aggieland Pictures Freshmen: Oct. 1-19 Juniors: Oct. 22-Nov. 1 6 Sophomores: Nov. 19-21; Nov. 26- Dec. 12 Grads, Meds and Vets: Oct. 1- Dec. 12 AR Photography 707 Texas Ave. Suite 120B Moriday-Friday 9-12;1-5pm aJh' 57 57 57 57 57 57 57 aJm' 57 57 5* 57 57 57 57 aJji 57 57 57 57 ^ Ik & Ski IB BRECKENRIDGE until Oct. 19 1-800-232-2428 COLLEGIATE SPECIAL ONLY Normally $17.95 Colour Rich Enlargement -■ r* i o professionally l^Xlo enlarged PHOTOGRAPH From Your Favorite 35mm Negative 1-800-992-2115 Call For Mailer ^ Anytime Or ftl Additiona, ,nfo COLOURS 11819 Blanco Road Suite D San Antonio, TX 78216 Q/VoLf CAR WASH DETAIL. 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