The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 01, 1994, Image 12
BIG SWEDEN'S MEAL ^ ° i Ideal i | IT'S ALMOST ■ MORE THAN j YOU CAN EAT! ■ GOOD FOR GP TO 4 PER COUPON Culpepper Plaza College Station, Texas EXP. 12-30-94 1/3 LB. HAMBURGER WITH FRIES + LARGE SOFT DRINK + SUPER SUNDAE ONLY $4.99 WITH COUPON EXTRA CHARGE FOR BACON & CHEESE “| Page 12 • The Battalion I I Thursday • December 1, Fund raiser for veterinary students Have your pet's photo taken with jolly old St. Nick! FREE bandanas and treats for pets! Cost: $5. per pet Date: December 3rd & 4th (Sat.&Sun.) Time: 1 :00 pm - 4:00 pm Location: A&M Veterinary School (Raymond Stotzer Pkwy.) Sponsored by: IAMS For more information, call Erin at 731-8011 Great for greeting cards! ■Sponsored by THE IAMS •■ COMPANY January 27-28,1995 8:00 p.m. Rudder Auditorium "Carmina Burana" January 2T. IDOS ” The Four Seasons" T “ January 2S, he Ballet Theatre de Bordeaux continues to fulfill its reputation as a world-class dance company with its unique background and artistic ideology. Now, YOU can see the company's stunning interpretations of Carmina Burana on Friday or The Four Seasons on Saturday with these special TEXAS EXCLUSIVE performances. Tickets are on sale at the MSC Box Office-TAMU, or charge by phone at 845-1234 Persons with disabilities please call 845-1515 to inform us of your Join us for a special French buffet before Saturday's performance of “The Four Seasons.” Call 845-1118 for reservations. Also on Saturday, be sure to attend the Patricia S. Peters Lagniappe Lecture at 7 p.m. in Room 206 of the Memorial Student Center - Admission is free. MSC FILM SOCIETY PRESENTS. THURS. & FRI. @ 7 & 9:30 i wMk dlubUltles pie MSC8PO: 845-1515 Admission *>2.75 w/I.D. 83 w/ont I.D. s call 845-1515 to Inform ns of jonr special needs. We reqnest notification 3 working days prior to the ercnt to enable ns to assist yon to the best of our ability. Aggie Cinema Hotline: 847-8478 Rodder Box Office: 845-1234 All films are presented In the Rodder Theater Complex ^11: films.dec@msc.tarnu -du. I^Imkehgtjse N. ZNF«BZ!EE3ESZCZ9» Hastings WtoTn Ent«rtalnm«r* mb■ . B AI1 Al IOK warn GATT agreement brings smiles to some... U.S. prune juice, beer to be benefited WASHINGTON (AP) — For get the grand words about how GATT would set loose a “power ful wind of economic freedom.” Imagine instead that it could usher in the golden age of Amer ican prune juice. Beneath the glowing princi ples of GATT is a mountain of minutia, a collection of exotic and ordinary things that trading nations say should become cheaper for nearly everyone. Consider: Beer drinkers abroad should be able to load up on Bud without losing their shirts. And after all these years, American swine livers should fi nally be within reach of the av erage European shopper. Americans should get a bit of a break on imported garlic, tulip bulbs, refrigerators, bamboo lug gage and pig fat. and agreement brings frowns to others SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) — Larry Tar- leton sold his sewing factory this week rather than face the foreign competition that GATT is expected to bring. Adobe Apparel Inc. made T-shirts, sweat shirts and dresses for companies like Russell Corp., maker of the Russell Athletics brand. Tarleton said he was lucky to have found a buyer for his Greenwood company in an indus try he called “a dying breed.” “I have spent the last five years trying to build a company, and in my opinion the govern ment has destroyed the sewing machine indus tries by approving two things: NAFTA and GAIT,” he said Wednesday. He was referring to the global General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and the North American Free Trade Agreement signed this year between the United States, Mexico and Canada. Most textile and apparel shops aren’t expect ed to close their doors if the Senate approves the GATT on Thursday. The House of Represen tatives passed the measure Tuesday. There are good times ahead for bicyclists needing inner tubes. And U.S. duties on bull dozers, bayonets, buttons and bras will come down. Legislation implementing the expanded General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade passed Tues day in the House and will be vot ed on Thursday in the Senate. If it is approved, overall du ties would drop by about one- third in the United States and the other 123 countries that are signed on. Some cuts start Jan. 1; others are staged over 10 years. They’re all spelled out in tar iff schedules stacked at the U.S. Trade Representative’s Office. U.S. supporters talk of the op portunities it will bring to Amer ican exporters, especially fans ers who will be able to sell more to Japan and Europe and high tech companies poised for gains in long-protected markets. Japanese duties will drop to 14.4 percent from 22.5 percent on American prune juice, to zero from 15 percent on beer, and to zero from 24.5 percent on whiskey. WHAT INSPIRED THE MOUNTAIN MEN? George Washington: “Whereas it is the duty of all nations to acknowledge the providence of almighty God, to obey His will, to be grateful for His benefits, and humbly to implore His protection and favor.” Abraham Lincoln: “Intelligence, Patriotism, Christianity, and a firm reliance on Him who has never yet forsaken this favored land are still competent to adjust in the best way all our present difficulty. ...As was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said, ‘the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether’” Thomas Jefferson: “God who gave us life gave us liberty Can the liberties of a nation be secure when we have removed a conviction that these liberties are the gift of God? Indeed I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just, that His justice cannot sleep forever.” Teddy Roosevelt: “There are those who believe that a new modernity demands a new morality. What they fail to consider is the harsh reality that there is no such thing as a new morality. There is only one morality. All else is immorality There is only true Christian ethics over against which stands the whole of paganism. If we are to fulfill our great destiny as people, then we must return to the old morality, the sole morality.” FACULTY FRIENDS We are inspired by Jesus Christ who said: “For God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life.” We are a group of professors, instructors, lecturers, and administrators 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, faculty, and staff who might like to discuss such questions with us. If you would like to be a part of the FACULTY FRIENDS ad, please contact Murphy Smith 5-3108, Steve Crouse 5-3997, or Lee Lowery 5-4395. Natalie L. Allen Accounting Bill Cready Accounting Austin Daily Accounting Patsy Deere Accounting Steve Salter Accounting L. Murphy Smith Accounting Casper Wiggins Accounting Walter Haisler Aerospace Engineering Thomas U. McElmurry Aerospace Engineering John Whitcomb Aerospace Engineering Oral Capps, Jr. Agricultural Economics H. L. Goodwin Agricultural Economics Fred Ruppel Agricultural Economics Don R. Herring Agricultural Education Alvin Larke Jr. Agricultural Education L. Wayne Greene Animal Science Dan Hale Animal Science Paul Harms Animal Science Doug Householder Animal Science Jimmy T. Keeton Animal Science Theodore S. Maffitt Architecture David Kent Athletic Department George W. Bates Biochemistry James R. Wild Biochemistry & Genetics Connie Batten Center Teaching Excellence Liz Miller Center Teaching Excellence Nancy Simpson Center Teaching Excellence R. R. Davison Chemical Engineering Jack Lunsford Chemistry Harry Coyle Civil Engineering Charles Hix, Jr. Civil Engineering Dallas N. Little Civil Engineering Lee Lowery, Jr. Civil Engineering James S. Noel Patricia Harris Robert Field Roger Fay Civil Engineering English Language Institute Large Vet. Animal Clinic Oceanography/GERG Paul Roschke Terry Larsen O. E. (Ed) Elmore Joyce Davis Civil Engineering Environmental Design Management Pathology & Lab Med-Emeritus Hayes E. Ross Jr. Walter F. Juliff Frederick Larson John A. McIntyre Civil Engineering FSIS Project Management Management Physics Donald Saylak George Mcllhaney George Rice, Jr. Marian Scully Physics Civil Engineering Family & Community Medicine Management Hank Wigley Russell K. Biales Patrick M. Wright Patricia Griffin Political Science Civil Engineering Family & Community Medicine Management Ralph Wurbs Civil Engineering Lamar McNew Family & Community Medicine Richard T. Hlse Marketing M. M. Kothmann Rangeland Ecology & Mgmt. Dan Colunga David Segrest Ell Jones Computer Science Family & Community Medicine Marketing Louis Hodges Recreation & Parks Walter Daugherity James Kolarl Stephen McDaniel Computer Science Finance Marketing Carson E. Watt Recreation & Parks Mac Lively Lawrence Wolken James R. Boone Computer Science Dick Volz Finance Mathematics Maurice Dennis Safety Education Ed Soltes Robert Gustafson Computer Science James W. Craig Jr. Forest Science Mathematics Michael Greenwald Speech Comm & Theatre Arts Terry Spencer Marek J. Radzikowskl Construction Science Geophysics Mathematics Martin Medhurst Richard K. Anderson Jan Baldwin Richard M. Alexander Speech Comm & Theatre Arts Economics Health and Kinesiology Mechanical Engineering Rick Rigsby James M. Griffin Danny Ballard Walter L. Bradley Speech Comm & Theatre Arts Economics Health and Kinesiology Mechanical Engineering Roger Schultz Tim Gronberg Kirstln Brekken L. Roy Cornwell Speech Comm & Theatre Arts Economics Health and Kinesiology Mechanical Engineering Henrik Schmledlche Steven Wiggins Camille Bunting Robert DeOtte Statistics Economics Health and Kinesiology Mechanical Engineering Kenneth R. Dirks Maynard Bratlien G. Brian Colwell Louis Everett Student Health Services Educational Administration Health and Kinesiology Mechanical Engineering Stephen L. Hand David A. Erlandson Stephen Crouse Ramon Goforth Surgery Educational Administration Health and Kinesiology Mechanical Engineering Jack Campbell Sally Doe Wade Linus J. Dowell Richard Griffin TAMU Faculty Educational Curriculum (Retired) Health and Kinesiology Mechanical Engineering Robert K. James Donald A. Sweeney Carl Gabbard Warren Heffington Urban S Regional Planning Educational Curriculum Health and Kinesiology Mechanical Engineering Delmar Janke Educational Curriculum Emma Gibbons Health and Kinesiology Harry Hogan Mechanical Engineering E. Dean Gage Veterinary Medicine Patricia Larke Vicki Markowsky C. L. Hough Ron Green Educational Curriculum Health and Kinesiology Mechanical Engineering Veterinary Medicine Will Worley Robert H. Pender Ken D. Klhm Alvin A. Price Electrical Eng.-Emeritus Health and Kinesiology Mechanical Engineering Veterinary Medicine James Blake Leonard Ponder Gerald Morrison Loren Skow Electrical Engineering Health and Kinesiology Mechanical Engineering Veterinary Medicine Andrew K. Chan Rose Schmitz Dennis O'Neal Michael Willard Electrical Engineering Health and Kinesiology Mechanical Engineering Veterinary Medicine Robert Novels Wayne Wylie Ozden Ochoa John W. Huff Electrical Engineering Health and Kinesiology Mechanical Engineering Veterinary Microbiology Philip Noe Barry Nelson Robin Redfield Travis Small Electrical Engineering Health & Science Center Mechanical Engineering Veterinary Pathobiology John H. Painter Don Rice David Rhode Kenneth Pierce Electrical Engineering Industrial Distribution Mechanical Engineering Veterinary Pathology A. D. Patton Bryan Deuermeyer Dan Turner James E. Womack Electrical Engineering Industrial Engineering Mechanical Engineering Veterinary Pathology Don Russell Richard Feldman Wayne Sampson James G Anderson Electrical Engineering Industrial Engineering Medical Anatomy Veterinary Physiology Joy Shetler Don Phillips David Thompson Larry D. Claborn Veterinary Physiology Electrical Engineering Industrial Engineering Medical Pharmacology Karan Watson Electrical Engineering Ricky Telg Journalism Michael Davis Medical Physiology Jim Jensen Veterinary Physiology Roy Hartman Rodger Lewis' Steven Oberhelman Engineering Technology KAMU-TV-Journalism Modern & Classical Languages J.D. McCrady Veterinary Physiology Craig Kallendorf Terry Blanchard James Brooks English & Mod Languages Large Animal Med. Sci. Oceanography NOTE: This ad presents the personal convictions of the individuals listed herein; the ad does not represent or support any view or position of Texas A&M University or any academic department. The ad does represent and acknowledge the diversity of academic contributions to Texas A&M University by men and women of various race, ethnic group, and cultural background who share the Christian faith