STUDENT TRAVEL 1800777 0112 271 THE WORLD'S LARGEST STUDENTS YOUTH TRAVEL ORGANIZATION STA TRAVEL TCA CABLE CHANNEL 31 Single Vision $ 28 95 Bifocals $ 44 95 line Free Bifocals $ 114 50 Includes Clear Lenses and Your Choice of Frames Over 400 styles and colors including designer frames by Elizabeth Arden, Rodenstock, Oleg Cassini, Liz Claiborne plus many more at these prices. No extra charge for prescription light weight plastic lenses, oversize lenses or strong prescriptions up to ± 8.D sphere and 2 cyl. Regular bifocals including 1)28 & Round. Also special savings on ultra-violet protection, tints and scratch resistant treatments. Doctor’s prescription required or duplicate your prescription. * Ask about our guaranteed fil on Line Free lenses. COLLEGE STATION 900 Harvey Road (2 blks, W. of Post Oak Mall) 693-5358 Hours: M-W-F 9-6 T-Th 9-7 Sa 9-5 ATTENTION GRADUATING SENIORS: GENERAL MANAGEMENT /flh W HOUSTON TACO BF.LL CORPORATION, a 2.5 billion wholly owned subsidiary of the prestigious Fortune 50 PEPSICO, owns an impressive 70% markelshare in the Quick Service Mexican Restaurant Industry. Backed by the strength of PepsiCo, an $18 billion company, your future with Taco Bell is limited only by your desire. We ranked as one of America’s most admired companies because of the quality of people we employ. They arc success driven, goal-oriented individuals with upwardly mobile futures. GENERAL MANAGERS We are currently recruiting self-sufficient Business Generalist who can manage a million dollar plus business with eventual multi-unit responsibility. Areas of accountability include day-to-day operations, human resources, marketing, public relations, food science and profit and loss management. Requirements: •Leadership Skills •Management/Supervisory Ability •P&l. Knowledge & Budgetary Accountability •4 Year College Degree Opportunities: •Recruiting, Selecting, and managing work force •Make cost control/P&L decisions •Performance Management counseling, development In addition to an excellent work environment that encourages personal and professional growth. Taco Bell provides a starting salary base of $25-$35K with bonus potential of $I0-$30K per year for Business Managers.We.also.offer an excellent benefit plan including medical, dental, eye care, hearing, tuition reimbursement, and annual PepsiCo stock options. If you'd like to back your career with the company that has your growth in mind please...attend reception to meet with company representatives on Thursday. October 14, 6:30 p.m. in Room 401 Rudder Tower. If unable to attend, send resume to: Houston Recruiter Taco Bell Corp. 19703 B. Eastex Freeway Ste. 839 Humble, TX 77338 TACO'SELL. A JVytjCo Company From tk creator o( “Cats” and “Phntom ol tk Opera” Don't miss this unforgettable presentation of Andrew Lloyd Webber's “Requiem,” featuring the musical brilliance of national singing sensations Tracy Dahl and Walter MacNeil and the local talents of the Brazos Valley Symphony Orchestra, the Brazos Valley Chorale, Texas A&M's Century Singers and the boys of the Houston Children's Chorus. Octokr 16,1993 • 8:00 p,m, • Rudder Auditorium vfTickets are on sale at the MSC Box Office - TAMU, ^Mt>AQ or charge by phone at 845-1234 Come of age with MSC OPAS... and see the world in a new light Persons with disabilities please call 845-1515 to inform us of your special needs. We request notification three (3) working days prior to the event to enable us to assist you to the best of our ability. 51% INC. Presents An Evening On the Lawn Featuring AT “X-3E3C3B with Special Guests: MONTE WARDEN BAND (formerly the Wagoneers) FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1993 at Wolf Pen Creek Amphitheater Show at 7:00 p.m., Gates open at 6:00 p.m. RAIN OR SHINE $10.00 in advance $13.00 at the door tickets are available at: MSC Box office. Courts Western Wear, Marooned CD’s, Tapes & Records tickets by phone: 845-1234 Rome, Athens, Budapest—and College Station? Vote today at Freebirds World Burrito for the C.S. Bikeway Master Plan By KEVIN COCHRAN Paid Advertisement Motor vehicle pollution is so catastrophic in cities such as Rome, Athens, Mexico City, Sao Paulo, Budapest and others, that bans on operating motor vehicles are commonplace. While College Station is years away from even considering banning the operation of motor vehicles, unfortunately we are headed down that road with nearly every other city in the country. Thirteen-trillion cubic yards of motor vehicle exhaust is annually thrust into the air we breathe, ultimately poisoning our crops, destroying our forests, and harm ing uf> humans. For every gallon of gasoline our automobiles burn, twenty pounds of carbon dioxide is spewed into the air, in addition to nitrogen oxide, carbon monox ide, hydrocarbons and others. In fact, driving motor vehicles creates more air pollution than any other human activity. Here in Texas, we have our own problems: the highest emissions of nitrogen oxides in the country at over two times the California levels (the next highest state). Further, Houston, Dallas/Fort Worth, Beaumont/Port Arthur, and El Paso have seriously harmful motor vehicle ozone emission levels, and San Antonio, Austin and Corpus Christi are in danger of being added to the list. We must look beyond the entrenched modes of trans portation and endorse alternative transport systems, like bikeways, that provide for easy and safe mobility, while not harming our environment or sapping our economy. City engineers have to design for shared roadways, and motorists have to learn to share them. Bicyclists then must learn to ride responsibly. But first we must overcome the problem of a nonexistant bikeway master plan. Now you can change that. October 28 the College Station City Council will vote on the Bikeway Master Plan immediately following a public hearing at City Hall Council Chambers beginning at 7 p.m. Freebirds World Burrito and the Texas Bicycle Coalition will make statements and present lists of names of those who supp ort bikeways in C.S. Our goal is twofold: to provide the City Council with at least 2,000 or more signatures and to have at least 50 supporters attend the hearing. By adopting the Bikeway Master Plan designed by city transpor tation officials. College Station will be entitled to apply for more than $1 million dollars in federal funding for bikeways. Upon funding the city will develop a continuous loop of bike lanes, routes, and paths linking the university with residential, PAID ADVERTISEMENT commercial, and entertainment areas. Wolf Pen Creek ampitheater complex, and local schools. Why is Freebirds taking such an active stance on this particular issue? In addition to the need for business environmental and social resposibility, and the chance to enhance life for A&M students, the two-restaurant chain was founded in Isla Vista, California (adjacent to U.C. Santa Barbara), where 80% of students use bicycles as their primary means of transportation. In fact, a bike-thru window will be introduced soon at Freebirds in California. Besides the positive environ mental effects of bicycle riding, Freebirds. is concerned about safety. Each year in this country approximately one-half million people are .admitted to a hospital emergency room and over 1,000 people die due to bicycle-related accidents. In Texas, there are at least 50 bicycle fatalities per year. The health and fitness benefits speak for themselves. Once bicycle travel is made safer and more efficient with the develop ment of planned bikeways, we can all breathe a little easier. So vote today at Freebirds World Burrito for the C.S. Bikeway Master Plan. FaWsIM BURRITO 31 9 UNIVERSITY DRIVE. NORTHGATE FREEB RDS Page 6 Tm Battalion Wednesday, October 13,] Blue Jays take AL Championship in 6-3 win over Sox Lady Aggies Continued from Page 5 The Associated Press TORONTO - The cold, the Chicago batters, the pressure of a big game. None of it bothered Dave Stewart. Stewart, simply the best play off pitcher ever, won the fourth clincher of his career Tuesday night by leading Toronto past the White Sox 6-3 in Game 6. Pat Borders, MVP of last year's World Series, drove in his first three runs of this series. His RBI grounder put the Blue Jays ahead 3-2 in the fourth inning against Alex Fernandez. Devon White homered in the ninth and Paul Molitor, the Blue Jays' other offseason free agent signing, hit a two-run triple in the ninth, and that proved to be enough. The victory was Stewart's sec ond in the series and made him a perfect 8-0 with a 2.03 ERA in the playoffs. Toronto will play Game 1 Sat urday night at SkyDome against either Philadelphia or Atlanta. With the win, the Phillies' and Braves' NL playoff schedule was changed; now. Game 6 in Philadelphia will start at 7:12 p.m. CDT, rather than 2:07. holes and use our strengths be cause we are a good hitting team." Wente countered: "I'm just putting it up in the air, and they're putting it away. You just have to be deceptive and try to give our hitters the best op portunities to take the hardest and the best swing every time. "That's what I need to do." Morgan may be out for the Houston game because of a sprained ankle suffered in A&M's last game - a three-game sweep of South Carolina. Morgan said that Houston, which boasts a 10-game winning streak against A&M, is just like everybody else who plays the Lady Aggies: Hungry to beat A&M. "Every time we've played Houston, they've been tough," Morgan said. " They're a good team, a quick team, and they're going to be running a fast of fense." Corbelli said the team has been playing tough enough to beat ranked opponents, but has come up short with a 1-3 record against those teams. A&M beat a 21st- ranked Florida State team, but has fallen to Texas, then-15th-ranked Florida, and this past weekend to 15th-ranked Georgia. The Georgia game snapped A&M's eight-game winning streak, and Corbelli said it was major disappointment. "I really thought the team was ready to compete against a ranked opponent because we had been playing so well - and it didn't happen," Corbelli said. “We just know that we've still got a lot work to do in the mental area Getting ourselves ready and being beat before we even start to play. "We've tried to identify some ways to help the team to get over being psyched-out and that type of thing.' r As for psyching other teams out, Corbelli said that women 1 volleyball is moving toward being less restrictive regarding courtbe- havior and vocal expression. "It can get really ugly andusu ally volleyball players aren't used to that, because it's supposed be a real little, neat sport I girls," Corbelli said wryly. "I'm fine with it, 1 think they need to let us be competitive, be mean and really compete because 1 can't really ever imagine a refer ee asking a male player to not say (anything) ter an opponent." And for the record on compcti tion in women's athletics, Morgan added: "Just because we're females, we're not any less competitive than the football team is," Morgan said smiling. "We have a lotof heart and a lot erf fight. Believe" me." VVednes |ULI PF DAVE 1 BELINC MACK Baylor Continued from Page 5 pounds per person, they will continue to rely on their stable of running backs. Jackson, a sophomore from Brenham, averages 82.5 yards per game, and other Baylor running backs John Henry and Bradford Lewis av erage 73.8 and 49.5 yards, respectively. /V We're going to run the ball; we do that every week," Jackson said. "We're going to take whatever A&M gives us. Their de fense is very pliysical and their defensive line is one or the best in the country." Jackson said Baylor approaches every game as important, but Saturday's game is crucial to the Bears. "We go into every game thinking it's a championship game," Jackson said. "We have to play every game like it is for the national championship." Reedy also said that Saturday's game is an im portant game for the Bears. "This game is much bigger for us," Reedy said. "Each conference game is a must-win for us if we want to have a chanyj^ at going to the Cotton Bowl. "We already have a conference loss and they (A&M) don't, so they are in the driver's seat." Reedy said that Baylor's defense, not their of fense, will be the main focus for Saturday's contest. "Defensively, we have to stop the run first/’ Reedy said. "We also must make sure that we! don't give up the long pass." Reedy said that A&M running backs Rodney Thomas, Greg Hill and Leeland McElroy will be hard to contain, but that his team is capa ble of the task. "All three of those guys could start any where," Reedy said. "You can't really con , tain them. Texas A&M head coach R.C. Slocum said that Baylor's offense is very capable of giving defenses a tough assignment. "We've not faced this style of offense this year," Slocum said. "It will be a great challenge for our defense. Baylor has an experienced quarterback and great run- J y oing backs." Slocum said that the Aggies will get the bulk of their defensive worries from Baylor's quar terback, who makes the Bears' big plays. "He (Joe) keeps their offense rolling, rolling, rolling and then he strikes/" Slocum said. "He's dangerous, no doubt about i(."^ ( The i fatal "Beavis her 5-v< Ithat kill One be ansv by thos tancelk Child's pened [this chi has bee pcism si Mor [they al Child's One pometh blames This fo grow at some nnknox of cl parents And aoint [teachii betwee ambigi and w' Artists, So, - Winder Continued from Page 5 "The Weather Is Here, Wish You Were Beautiful." Huh? I'm just as big a Jimmy Buffett fan as the next guy, but 1 don't think Jim meant that song to be a little ditty about lost yardage. I guess it was better than him saying "On that sack Aubrey Beavers told Shea Morenz, "Whoomp! Here 1 am!" So to help my broadcast brothers, here are some songs to use while still being ultra-hip. Baseball. Bob (using announcer's voice): The pitch to Thompson. Ball four, he walked him. Tom (using announcer's voice): That pitch was pretty close but first base coach Tim Samuleson gets to tell Thompson to "Walk This Way". He gets to "Walk down to Electric Avenue" for the 86th time this season. Bob: Next up is pitcher Sal Johnson wlio will no doubt be sacrificing. The pitch - lie puts down a beauty down tlie line. Third baseman Harrison grabs it, throws it and nails Johnson af first base. Tom (being ultra-cool): Man ager Robinson asked his pitcher to sacrifice and he got the job done. Last time he was swing ing for the fences, but this time he wanted him to "Lay Down Sally." A great job! Bob: That brings up Patterson with Thompson on second. The pitch - it's a long fly ball to left field; Simpson goes back but he'll never catch it. This ball is gone, the 44th homerun for Simpson this season. Tom (being extremely cool): Patterson got the pitch he want ed and sent it on a "Stairway to Heaven." Pitcher Hal Timpson must be "Dazed and Confused" after throwing what looked like a perfect pitch. Football Dick (using announcer's voice): Sanders fades back but Lender is there and sacks him in the end zone. Two points for the Rhinos! Jim (being almost as cool as Tom): You know Dick, Lender can do his "Safety Dance" now. Lender and Sanders love each other like brothers off the field, but we know that football is a battlefield - proving once and for all that "Love is a Battle field". Dick (big frown): The Bombers will now have to kick to the Rhinos. Punter Ron Luper booms one, and it's taken on the 13 yard line by Schroeder. Schroeder gets past the 22 before he is tackled. Jim (dying of coolness): Good run by Schroeder you know he "Do, Run-Run-Run, A Do, Run- Run." Dick (slapping Jim to the ground): Oxenberger hands oft to Jaeger wlio's hit at the line breaks out of the tackle. He's at the 30, he's at 40, he's at 50, Jaeger has to change direction again, the man is gone. Touch down Rhinos! Jim (cool squared): You know Dick, Jaeger had to take "The Long and Winding Road" to gel to that end zone. Dick (taking his gun ou (Bang) Whoomp! There It Is! (Bang) Whoomp! There It Is! (Bang, bang, bang...) hero, sc laccoirq [others i |of doin |parent; young [girls di ing the pe pin [ktical s [countr Tod [shirts \ Wastin [dent. I [the me | childre [vancec Eve [toons t ! super]- [and th [runnir [from I- [uientic JUST DEUX IT. HOT SHOTS! PART DEUX iwiNiim cumium HIM CJHPOBAIION »H BOISIIISIRVIII MSC FILM SOCIETY OF TEXAS A&M A Memorial Student Center Thursday @ 9:30, Friday & Saturday @ 9:30 & Midnight . _ . _ 1TT Questions? Call... Student Programs Committee \ All showings of Hot Shots! Part msc box office 845-1234 Deux' will be accompanied by a msc student Programs Warner Bros, cartoon ° fflce 845-1515 Thursday, Friday, & Saturday @ 7:00 ADMISSION: $2.50 Advance tickets available for all shows at MSC Box Office Persons with disabilities please call us 3 working days prior to the film to enable us to assist you to the best of our ability. CHARMINGLY ECCENTRIC with a tremendous sense of fun.” - Janet Maslln, THE NEW YORK TIMES HILARIOUSLY FUNNY! - I -an re Loud, DETAILS STRICTLY BALLROOM □OGssfi STfWtol I!L C1993 Filmt an » IQNDI II.M> iqms Mts«fv*o