lber 23,l5jj ; Registration >C. Prices are ^2 on the day lcs fegistration s at 8 a.m. on y Fair dwell, h'or more or 567-7979. >ept.22-25 • ibition, junior m, handwork, run try Queen r ts: :cr Galleries estures - 20tli •colors from of Art. 1. For mart c sculptures. For more in- lints of James n throughOc- brmotion, cull y .enter, BmUinf, \y Comer: 817- hs - Summer I reece/Turkey icpt. 26. Thursday, September 23,1993 The Battalion Page 5 Tossing more than salad Lauren Dcmohue/THL Battalion Two jugglers at the Ben & Jerry's Traveling anthropology major, in front of Sbisa Wednes- Show toss pins around Edgar Nunnelly, a junior day afternoon. Trip to romantic Venice soaks taxpayers Amtrak train jumps bridge into bayou; death toll at 43 The Associated Press SARALAND, Ala. - Am- trak's cross-country Sunset Lim ited hurtled off a bridge into an inky bayou early Wednesday, plunging its sleeping passengers into a nightmare of fire, water and death. Forty-three people were killed, some of them trapped in a submerged, silver passenger car and others in a burned en gine, and 10 were missing in the deadliest wreck in Amtrak's 23- year history, railroad spokesman Howard Robertson said. More than 150 people sur vived, some to help other pas sengers who clung to wreckage from a collapsed section of the bridge in a swamp populated by alligators, snakes and bears. The cause of the wreck wasn't immediately known. One possi bility officials were investigating was that a barge may have hit the bridge before the crash. Brian Logan of Fife, Scotland, was awakened when the train be gan banking steeply to one side. "It kind of threw a lot of people off their seats. I figured the train was going to tumble over. ... That was accompanied by a screeching sound followed by a pretty much lot of screaming.” All three engines and four of the eight cars on the Los Ange- les-to-Miami train went off the bridge, which was about 7 feet above the water. Two of the cars were passenger cars, and one of them was completely sub merged in water about 16 feet deep in Bayou Canot. The Associated Press WASHINGTON - When in Venice, the duties of the men and women assigned to protect a U.S. defense secretary do not stop at the water's edge. Les Aspin's security detail demonstrated as much by spend ing more than $1,000 for "water taxis" to patrol the famous canals of the romantic Italian city while Aspin and a female friend vacationed there for five days last May. Aspin paid his own way, but U.S. taxpayers picked up a $42,000 tab not only for the security crew's exotic water transportation but also the hotel and meal costs for them and the rest of the Aspin party, including staff members and a physician. Travel vouchers released by the Defense Department on Tuesday indicated that Aspin's security agents billed the government as much as $2,002 each for their rooms at the Danieli, the posh ho tel where Aspin and his friend stayed five nights. The voucher of John Khin, of Aspin's personal security detail, also reflected other costs: $1,706 for a "security control room" in Venice for five days, $66 for con trol room expenses ("maps and porterage"), and $1,411 to rent two cellular telephones there for six days. Khin billed $836 for the cost of water taxis and barges used to maintain security for Aspin in Venice. Other water taxi fares billed exceeded $200. / THIS WEEKEND AT THE Cantina 823-2368 201 W. 26th St.., Downtown Bryan THURSDAY 9/23 KARAOKE NIGHT Happy Hour Pitchers -all night Thursdays- No Cover FRIDAY 9/24 GUY CLARK and DEAN DILLON (Opening Act: Dru Wilson) See our ad on page 4 of todays Battalion! Learn to Fly! Varsity Men’s 5-way Tournament Sept. 24-26 at OMAR SMITH Tennis Center Come Support The Aggies! I COUPON SA On Routine Cleaning, X-Rays and Exam (Regularly $76, With Coupon $44) Payment must be made at time of service. I BRYAN COLLEGE STATION | I Jim Arcnts, DDS Dan Lawson, DDS Karen Arcnts, DDS Paul Haines, DDS 1103 Villa Maria Roxane Mlcak, DDS 268-1407 Texas Ave. at SW Pkwy. 696-9578 CarePlus { Dental Centers I— — — Exp. 09-30-93 J 2702 Texas Ave. S. College Station, Texas 77802 (409) 693-0054 Fax: 696-0901 For your convenience, ’Pewtesu'* offers private dining for parties, rehearsal dinners, and business meetings for lunch or dinner. We have private seating for up to 100. We serve steaks, seafood, chicken, and Italian food. Call us when planning your next party. REAL FREEDOM! Among the freedoms that you as a student will be exercising this year is the “right to choose”. You will be deciding what to study, how to spend your time, where to channel your energies, with whom to associate, and what set of values you will follow in life. All of these choices will have consequences, for bad or good. So choose carefully! As this school year begins, the Texas A&M University faculty listed below urge you to consider another type of freedom-one that we have found to be more precious than any other. It is offered by Jesus Christ, who said: If you abide by My word... you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you jree’ , (John 8:31-32). Therefore, if the Son makes you free, you shall be fee indeed” (John 8:36). We have found these promises are true and based on rational reasoning. If you would, like to know more about Christ and the freedom He gives, we would be happy to talk with you. Have a great year at Texas A&M. d on televi- md has sung i numerous Astrodome, •rite, singing eball games events, at 7:15, and 0. Forreser- tion, contact 845-1234. if Natalie L. Allen Accounting David Kent Athletic Department James M. Griffin Economics David Segrest Family & Community Medicine Jerome Congleton Industrial Engineering Warren Heffington Mechanical Engineering Patricia Griffin Political Science Bill C ready Accounting George W. Bates Biochemistry Tim Gronberg Economics James Kolari Finance Bryan Deuermeyer Industrial-Engineering Harry Hogan Mechanical Engineering M. M. Kothmann Rangeland Ecology & Mgmt.. Auatin Dally Accounting James R. Wild Biochemistry & Genetics Steven Wiggins Economics Lawrence Wolken Finance Richard Feldman Industrial Engineering C. L. Hough Mechanical Engineering Louis Hodges Recreation & Parks Patsy Daara Accounting R. R. Davison Chemical Engineering Maynard Bratlien Educational Administration Ed Soltes Forest Science Don Phillips Industrial Engineering Ken D. Kihm Mechanical Engineering Carson E. Watt Recreation & Parks Dana Forgione Accounting Jack Lunsford Chemistry David A. Erlandson Educational Administration Terry Spencer Geophysics Ricky Telg Journalism Alan Letton Mechanical Engineering Maurice Dennis Safety Education Joyce Holley Accounting Harry Coyle Civil Engineering Jack Campbell Educational Curriculum (Retired) Jan Baldwin Health and Kinesiology Rodger Lewis KAMU-TV-Jourmalism Murray Moore Mechanical Engineering E. Dean Gage Interim President Jeff Miller Accounting Russell Echols Civil Engineering Robert K. James Educational Curriculum Danny Ballard Health and Kinesiology Robert Field Large Vet. Animal Clinic Gerald Morrison Mechanical Engineering Michael Greenwald Speech Comm & Theatre Arts Steve Salter Accounting Charles Hix, Jr. Civil Engineering Delmar Janke Educational Curriculum Sue Beall Health and Kinesiology O. E. (Ed) Elmore Management Ozden Ochoa Mechanical Engineering Martin Medhurst Speech Comm & Theatre Arts L Murphy Smith Accounting Dallas N. Little Civil Engineering Patricia Larke Educational Curriculum Kirstin Brekken Health and Kinesiology George Rice, Jr. Management Dennis O'Neal Mechanical Engineering Roger Schultz Speech Comm & Theatre Arts Caaper Wiggins Accounting Lee Lowery, Jr. Civil Engineering Will Worley Electical Eng.-Emeritus Camille Bunting Health and Kinesiology Patrick M. Wright Management Robin Redfield Mechanical Engineering Kenneth R. Dirks Student Health Services Walter Haisler Aerospace Engineering James S. Noel Civil Engineering Andrew K. Chan Electrical Engineering G. Brian Colwell Health and Kinesiology Richard T. Hise Marketing David Rhode Mechanical Engineering Donald A. Sweeney Urban & Regional Planning Thomas U. McElmurry Aerospace Engineering Paul Roschke Civil Engineering Robert Nevels Electrical Engineering Stephen Crouse Health and Kinesiology Stephen McDaniel Marketing Dan Turner Mechanical Engineering Walter F. Juliff Veterinary Continuing Ed. John Whitcomb Aerospace Engineering Hayes E. Ross Jr. Civil Engineering Philip Noe Electrical Engineering Linus J. Dowell Health and Kinesiology James R. Boone Mathematics Wayne Sampson Medical Anatomy Ron Green Veterinary Medicine Oral Capps, Jr. Agricultural Economics Donald Saylak Civil Engineering John H. Painter Electrical Engineering Carl Gabbard Health and Kinesiology Timothy Goodman Mathematics Gerald Frye Medical Pharmacology Alvin A. Price Veterinary Medicine H. L. Goodwin Agricultural Economics Hank Wigley Civil Engineering A. D. Patton Electrical Engineering Emma Gibbons Health and Kinesiology Robert Gustafson Mathematics David Thomason Medical Pharmacology Loren Skow Veterinary Medicine Fred Ruppel Agricultural Economics Ralph Wurbs Civil Engineering Don Russell Electrical Engineering Vicki Markowsky Health and Kinesiology Marek J. Radzikowski Mathematic Michael Davis Medical Physiology Michael Willard Veterinary Medicine Don R. Herring Agricultural Education Dan Colunga Computer Science Joy Shetler Electrical Engineering Robert H. Pender Health and Kinesiology Richard M. Alexander Mechanical Engineering Steven Oberhelman Modern & Classical Languages John W. Huff Veterinary Microbiology Alvin Larke Jr. Agricultural Education Walter Daugherity Computer Science Karan Watson Electrical Engineering Leonard Ponder Health and Kinesiology Walter L. Bradley Mechanical Engineering James Brooks Oceanography Kenneth Pierce Veterinary Pathology L Wayne Greene Animal Science Mac Lively Computer Science Roy Hartman Engineering Technology Rose Schmitz Health and Kinesiology L. Roy Cornwell Mechanical Engineering Roger Fay Oceanography/GERG James E. Womack Veterinary Pathology Dan Hale Animal Science Dick Volz Computer Science Sally Dee Wade English Wayne Wylie Health and Kinesiology Robert DeOtte Mechanical Engineering Joyce Davis Pathology & Lab Med-Emeritus James G. Anderson Veterinary Physiology Paul Harms Animal Science James W. Craig Jr. Construction Science Patricia Harris English Language Institute Barry Nelson Heathy Science Center Louis Everett Mechanical Engineering John A. McIntyre Physics Larry D. Claborn Veterinary Physiology Jimmy T. Keeton Animal Science Richard K. Anderson Economics Terry Larsen Environmental Design Kathryn Newton Industrial Distribution Ramon Goforth Mechanical Engineering Marian Scully Physics Jim Jensen Veterinary Physiology Theodore S. Maffitt Architecture Bob Gillette Economics George Mcllhaney Family & Community Medicine Don Rice Industrial Distribution Richard Griffin Mechanical Engineering James C. Clingermayer Political Science J.D. McCrady Veterinary Physiology tFACULTY FRIENDSt We are a group of faculty who are United by their common experience that Jesus Christ provides intellectually and spiritually satisfying answers to life’s most important questions. We are available to students and faculty who might like to discuss such questions with us. Any faculty member interested in joining FACULTY FRIENDS please contact Murphy Smith 5-3108, Bob Gillette 5-7384, or Lee Lowery 5-4395. 4.