ber 25, nse suffered a mnati," SaiJ a f was nega- (concussion) J ssions with hack to his la y behind a fy Allen will s a position it left tackle slve line are k Stepnoski, to play, ly miss the a possibly i an two less ve five high dium vated Dallas Cow- y Jones is to expand 14,000 seats retractable he artificial d cost $130 lion, Jones cessful with will be the 1 of sports," XX) seats to would give er capacity 5. arena, ne as Tuesday • October 25, 1994 Restaurant owners feeling economic loss of smokers WASHINGTON (AP) — Restaurant patrons who can’t light up while sipping after-din ner coffee will stay home and hold back billions of dollars, restaurant owners said Monday. “Home cooking is still our major competition,” Los Angeles restaurateur Biff Naylor said in an interview before testifying at Labor Department hearing. “Those people will go home.” Labor Department officials said the restaurant industry was overreacting to proposed regulations that would virtually ban smoking in 6 million places where people work. ‘In communities where there have been restrictions, the indus try, in fact, does quite well,” said Mike Silverstein, director of poli cy for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. OSHA resumed protracted hearings Monday on its pro posed indoor air quality stan dards. New rules would affect a number of issues related to the quality of the air workers breathe at their job sites. The most emotion generated by the proposal has been a plan to seriously restrict smoking in schools, factories, office build ings, restaurants, bars and oth er work places. The proposal would require employers to pro vide separately ventilated rooms for smokers or ban smok ing altogether. “I’ve suffered all my life be cause of a reaction to cigarette smoke,” said John O’Hare, a government scientist who cru saded for smoking restrictions at his office and in stores and restaurants in Prince Georges County, Md. The National Restaurant As sociation said the proposal would mean reduced sales and fewer jobs for an industry that already exists on slim profit margins. The industry said it stood to lose as much as $18.2 billion a Jear, 6.5 percent of estimated food service sales for this year, based on a survey taken in May. Naylor said table service restau rants would suffer most because of fewer visits and dramatically shorter stays, which in turn would result in fewer drink pur chases drinks before dinner, wine with meals, coffee and other af ter-dinner drinks and dessert. "pHE gATTALION Stick TO DM STICK HAS TO URE5TLE CUFfORD FOR HIS KINESIOLO&V MIDTERM . THIS 16..^ The Battalion • Page 9 By Alvaro NAME: PAUL HEIGHT: 5'5" WEIGHT: 12S W NICKNAME: 5TICK name*. cuffo^D ‘Height: 12' n' 1 WEIGHT -U55 IW NICKNAME : MR.. KILL TOY ARE. YOU READY FOR YOUR MIDTERM? I DONT NEED TO BE READY. iVl MOVING TO COSTA RICA I Eisenhower Leadership Development Program If you are a person who • is active in the community • has 3.0 GPA or better • is majoring in Business or Liberal Arts, and • will be a junior in the Spring of 1995 the Eisenhower Leadership Development Program invites you to apply. The program is a combination of classroom and hands-on experience in leadership skills training that carries 3 hours of elective credit. For information call: The Center for Public Leadership Studies at 845-3038 or 862-1521. VlLlMtC rcoru. msf- TOMORROW-.THE BATTIC eeyN6. The Inkwell By Brad Tuesday, October 25, 7:30 pm Winner of the Naumberg Competition Theresa Santiago Lyric Soprano Adventures in Aggieland By Greg “We provide the music. You just sit back and enjoy!” .University ^chamber , Concerts TICKETS: Adults - $10.00, Students - $5.00 Senior Citizens (65+) - $7,001 Call the MSC Box Office today.' 845-1234 Credit card orders only, AS WE MAKE our way to ANDREW’S TRUCK, EVERYONE STARTS WONDERING WHO WH-L SlT AND THERE'S A MAD-STRINT H5R TVit FASSENOEB SEAT AS OUR A6ES TEMPORARILY DECREASE . BUT ITts ALU FUN AND GAMES TIL SOMEONE GETS WET. fer?WfHEY! ^ A ELROw/WHOEVER ' TEXAS AAM I \l \ KUSi'IY CHAMBER CONCERT SEASON 1994-95 Generation Y By Quatro 7uH... HI. QUATRO ASKED ME TO TCU. 4t-L THREE FANS! JOF THIS STRIP OUT THERE THAT THIS WEEK \S TOONS /will BE A BIT ON THE GROSS SIDE. THIS TS ONLY BE" 7CAOSE HIS FAVORITE HOLIDAY, HALLOWEEN, IS FAST AF- 'PROACHIN&, ANb THIS WEEK' IS ONE OF THE F£\y TIMES^ 'that he can actually be macabre in this strip, /come THE FIRST OF NOVEMBER, HOWEVER “GENERATION r”/ rwtLL RETURN TO ITS USUAL , UN FUNNY, A NC> RECYCLED- TTOKE FORMAT. SO, WITHOUT ANY FURTHER ADIEU HER rrs our first attempt to rrcrLe your funny reoNe (OR any other part of your anatomy}, thank , You... oh,and by the way... x'm scared stiff! if — %y)A) rpi w ; great scores GRE ■ ■ ■ Kaplan helps you focus your GRE studies and build your confidence so you can get a higher score. last chance to prepare for the December test Last class begins on: Sunday and Wednesday: 10/30 696-3196 get a higher score KAPLAN Elections Continued from Page 1 those who have little or no inter est, the margin for the Republi cans grows by about 6 percent.” Polls suggest an extraordi nary number of close races. Gary Jacobson of the University of California at San Diego, au thor of the standard college text book on congressional elections, is reminded of 1980, when a careful redistribution of 50,000 votes out of 80 million cast would have given the Democrats the Senate. Instead, it went Republican, 53-47. To control the new Congress, Republicans would have to take over seven Democratic seats in the Senate and 40 in the House. Normally, the party of a first- term president experiences a loss of 19 House seats and no Senate seats in midterm elections. “The trend is away from the Democrats,” said Charles Cook, publisher of a nonpartisan polit ical newsletter. Cook said he was “reasonably sure” the Senate will wind up in Republican hands. Another newsletter publisher, Stuart Rothenberg, expects Re publican gains of 30 to 35 in the House, five to seven in the Senate. “If I had to put money on it, I’d say the Democrats will hold on, but in a way that will make governance very difficult, and it’s already hard,” added a fourth independent observer, Catherine Rudder, executive di rector of the American Political Science Association. Jacobson is predicting a Re publican pickup of four Senate seats, but says it could go as high as 11. 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