Vv Interested In A Fraternity? The CHI PHI Fraternity would like to welcome all Aggies back to the 1992 school year. If you are interested in joining a fraternity, come by our house on 3600 E. Old College and visit with us. A few benefits of joining CHI PHI Include: * Unique two week initiation program. ♦Commitment to educational excellence. * Nine bedroom mansion with 4.038 acres of luxurious landscaping on upper westlake address with northern campus exposure. ♦Active social calender including: tailgate parties, "Bedsheet Bash" toga party, Elvira Fright Night Halloween party, Lakehouse Retreat, Mardi Gras Road Trip, many mixers, and a variety of other events. * Active Intramural participation. * Large alumni support. Sure, there are still a few fraternities that are willing to make your life miserable during pledgeship, but CHI PHI is not one. CHI PHI RUSH SCHEDULE September 2 Weds IFC Seminar MSC Rm. 225 7 p.m. 3 Thur Chi Phi Fish Fry House 7-10p.m. 4 Fri Press Box Party Kyle Field 7-9 p.m. 5 Sat Beat the Hell- House 1-5 p.m. Outta LSU 8 Tues Monty Python & Pasta House 7-10 p.m. 10 Thurs Date Party Invitation Only CHI PHI - The oldest social fraternity established in 1824. The CHI PHI House 409-846-3462 aTm ^r*:r.4V .*^2 ^r>. Commerce National Bank INTRODUCES A NO HASSLE Student Account No minimum balance requirement Unlimited ATM transactions* No monthly ATM fee $5 discount on duplicate check order We also offer a choice of Student Loans GSL: SLS: Plus: Available to students based on financial need Supplemental loan Loan for parents to supplement tuition Come to Commerce National today! Open your new Student Account. And, register for a Trek 850 Off-Road Full Mountain Bike to be given away. Absolutely FREE! 00 Commerce National Bank The only bank that can call College Station home. 2405 Texas Avenue South • P. O. Box 10089 • College Station, Texas 77842 (409) 69.3-6930 • Member FDIC *At Commerce National Bank location only. '•Officers, directors and employees of Commerce National Bank and their immediate families an* not eligible to participate in the bicycle drawing. No purchase necessary. Page 12 The Battalion Wednesday, September 2,11 The Food Chain by fieorg 0+ Jl/ST AWc AtoisiSb... dsrShi !A Lo'A-Kl'S the b*? in W aucceu- - _— 'S just tfKT most Pom® use Zec-i'iee monev- You mi# Supphcr, <£ tbm/EUK senses a or scNtmws EMTIffP mt ‘Sav'ToNE/tWlNS WHICH FbSKSeS A ftW£« «• CANNor EWM 0E6IU ib fatviom- - he He- most coNFecur las) BE'WS- 1 (the story so far...) WKaT it WHAf 0O& Vlp vJG0 AMfjV Vo I/ 4U* Yew Ckhf Hone for two weexs? by thomas deen A»/P WHfW HfWSB- **r7 \ UF TooR tcHnm -rm CllCDS.. \ President Bush views hurricane aftermath THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HOMESTEAD — People still awaiting help more than a week after Hurricane Andrew shattered their lives greeted President Bush with cheers and jeers Tuesday as officials spoke cautiously about aid efforts taking hold. "I think we've turned the corner as far as getting food and clothing to the people/' Barbara Gothard, a spokeswoman for Homestead city officials, said. "Now we'll address shelter and new housing." Meanwhile, state officials sharply lowered their estimate of the number of homes destroyed, from 85,000 down to about 10,000 or less. Bush flew to southern Florida for the second time in a week with a pledge that the federal government would pay 100 percent of most recovery costs and rebuild Homestead Air Force Base, which contributes $190 million annually to the local economy. "This has nothing to do with partisanship. It has everything to do with helping the families," Bush said outside Homestead City Hall. State leaders welcomed the news. "We're delighted," Gov. Lawton Chiles said. Republican Sen. Connie Mack called it "the greatest news this community could have." But Bush got mixed reviews from hurricane victims. A half- dozen young women heckled him as he left. "I have no lights, cold water, it's disgusting," said Lizzie Hawkins, 28, who lost her apartment to the storm. "He didn't do nothing." But Gerardo Paz of Homestead shouted: "We appreciate what you're doing, Mr. President. Keep it up." Bush left without acknowledging either boos or cheers. Frustration has run high among residents who feel the government was sluggish and inefficient in the days after the hurricane swept across the region on Aug. 24, in what could be the nation's costliest natural disaster. Although military personnel worked through Monday night and Tuesday morning erecting three tent cities, officials said it could be Wednesday before people would be allowed to move in. Mud and rock slowed efforts to drive tent stakes. The Army's chief of staff, Gen. Gordon Sullivan, said at the Pentagon that he may put up to 25,000 federal and National Guard troops in the area. Sullivan said he'd ordered military personnel to help residents find relief supplies, substitute housing and meet basic needs of sewage, power and debris removal. There was disagreement among various agencies on the estimated number of houses destroyed. The Red Cross initially estimated 85,000 were damaged or destroyed; the governor at one point gave that as the number of houses destroyed. Tom Herndon, Chiles' chief of staff, said Tuesday that 6,000 to 10,000 homes are now estimated destroyed; an estimated 25,000 suffered major damage and not all of them may be repairable; and an additional 45,000 to 50,000 have damage that can be repaired. Dade County officials insisted Tuesday that an estimated 63,000 were destroyed. Herndon said the number of destroyed houses was going down as homeowners reassess damage and decide to make repairs. Ex-airlines chairman gets probatio The est :one" ove to protect Hussein is tempt by Britain an the role lough th id fortl- America w he natioi iloyed ev< ig to do v The offi ion indue epression in. By ti lave sent fter the fiananmen inuing tc vored-natic nore, it is :inued ch THE ASSOSCIATED PRESS HOUSTON - Former Coi nental Airlines Chairman Fra Internal Lorenzo was sentenced to ti years probation Tuesday ai , fined $750 after pleading no co ™'. test to a drunken driving charge ipT 13 / . 1 Lorenzo, 52, was sentenci ihey bring during a brief court appearan ind the Ai around noon before visiting Hi iomestica ris County-Court-at-Law Judj students dc Gerald Payte. With tht A patrol officer stopped Lore . ,, . zo on July 28 after he sawii driving the wrong way on Jc hvely rec Houston street, according to a 216 here be rest records. Lorenzo also dtf themselves have his driver's license with hit their foreigi Officer C.W. Jones said. They rr Lorenzo was given two BreaS di cu alyzer tests, blowing a .096 and o .10 level, respectively. A pers w with a .10 blood-alcohol leveli ^hversivt considered legally drunk they are g Texas. Jones has said Lorenzo their forei performance on motor skills tes ie a( jy j-q q] resulted in the driving whilei 1 culture to toxicated charge. Ca , • Lorenzo and his attorney, & ^ Moen, did not immediately reM telephone messages left at tin *— offices Tuesday evening. Lorenzo, who came to syniW ize a tumultuous decade of airli! deregulation in the 1980s, steppt Fore down as chief executive officer Continental Airlines Holding in 1990. He remains on Coni tal's board of directors. He built Continental intoWl was once the nation's largest line company by merging the ing Texas International Airl: with Continental and then buy! 1 Eastern Airlines and People f' press. Eastern Airlines has since ed. Continental is still flying bu 1 is in the midst of bankruptcy^ ganization. Compaq introduces printer THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK— Compaq Computer Corp. un veiled its first printers Monday, saying they are the fastest on the market. The laser printers are designed to be connected to networks of personal computers, allowing the PC users to share the same machine. "It's a major new business we're getting into," said Eckhard Pfeiffer, president of Compaq, which until now has made only personal computers and related gear. "Compaq is today no longer a one- product company." Compaq said one of its printers, the Pagemarq 20, produces 20 pages per minute. The machine is twice as fast on average as Hewlett-Packard Co.'s LaserJet IHSi printer when used in PostScript appli cations, Compaq said. ^ PostScript is the popular software from Adobe con» ; mi Systems Inc. that allows printers to reproduce pal of computerized, text. Pfeiffer said it could take many months fo| competitive response from Hewlett-Packard, ‘ leading maker of laser printers. He said Com also is working on other printers, including stain 1 alone models designed for single PCs. Compaq designed the circuit boards that the printers, while Fuji Xerox, a Japanese affiliate Xerox Corp., makes the printer "engine," or' heart of the device. The printers are assembled Compaq by Xerox. The Pagemarq 20 carries a list price of while the second model, the Pagemarq 15, rtht produces 15 pages a minute, lists for $3,999. Pfeiffer became president and chief executive Houston-based Compaq in October after the coi* pany's board pushed out co-founder Rod Canic who apparently opposed the low-price PC stratC the company has since pursued. $5,49 ^ Stude light i tk Hitting sign: ip' Ihiilding for ^ed how th t! tiisti ■ake th( 'Hall t :ome wait )e cause ider a < We th a bus J^provi 'illiam