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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (May 4, 1995)
The Best Pizza in town, ‘Xonest! End of School Special Mr. Gatti’s FastFeast Buffet Specially Priced Just For You! All You Care To Pizza (lots of different kinds!) SpaGatti (with Mr. Gatti’s rich 'n meaty sauce!) Fresh ‘n Healthy Salad! Desserts (including Mr. Gatti’s Dutch Apple Treat and Very Cherry Dessert Pizzas!) Lunch Dinner $099 Plus Tax $099 served every day 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. Plus Tax served every day 4 - 9:30 p.m. 107 South College • 268-8888 •1 4 ft 4 : J =M fit TO H KA NEW! FAST FREE DELIVERY! Call for campus area delivery 268-8888 | Fresh, hot pizza delivered Mon-Thurs, 5-10 pm; * Sat, 11 am - 11 pm; Sun, 11 am - 10 pm. 1 medium Meat Market™ Pizza $"799 # 1 plus tax Fresh provolone Cheese plus pepperoni.mild sausage, burger, Canadian bacon, and spicy Italian sausage. Delicious! 2nd Medium 2-topping pizza for just $5 more! Not valid in combination with other discount offers or coupons. One coupon per order, please. Good at participating Mr. Gatti’s. HURRY! Expires May 13, 1995 Silver Dollars For Those First Salutes!! Morgan and Peace Dollars 1878 - 1935, circulated: $6.50 - $10.00 each. Eisenhower Dollars 1971 - 1978: $3.00 each. 1995 1 ounce, .999 Silver Eagles, U.S. Mint issue: $11.00 each. Susan B. Anthony Dollars: $2.00 each. Ask about quantity prices. Diamonds for Aggie Rings .05 ct $ 45.00 .10 ct 80.00 .15 ct 125.00 .20 ct 195.00 Citizen Watches with Official A&M Seal Plus $20.00 to mount Gold-Tone $179.95 Two-Tone $159.95 Quartz Movement, 3yr. Warranty. Water Resistant. Men’s and Ladies’ Sizes Available 14K Gold Aggie Pendant $24.95 John Huntley, Animal-A, “79 (409) 846-8916 John D. Huntley, Inc. Very Personal Investments 313 B South College Ave. Next to Hurricane Harry’s Page 6 • The Battalion Thursday • May 4, 1995 Thursday Th© Navigators; Join us for Christian fellowship at 8:80 p.m. in 111 Koldus. For more informa tion call Kisa at 776-4229 or the guys at 693-9573. open to all students including un dergraduates who are not gradu ating hut are interested in infor mation, For more information call 845-0544. InterVarsity Christian Fel lowship, Graduate Division: Graduate and senior level Bible study every Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Call Pat at 846-7907 for the loca tion and more information. Baha’i Club: Discussion on the Unity of Mankind at 6:30 p.m. Dinner will be served. Call Kipper at 847-7466 for more information. at 1 p.m. at Mr. Gatti’s. All mem bers who wear A.R.M.Y shirts re ceive free lunch. We will also be honoring point getters. For more information call Aaron Metcalf at 847-7584. Sunday Student Counseling Ser vice: Walk-in counseling service available for all culturally diverse students every Thursday from 1- 4:30 p.m. in Henderson Hall. No appointment necessary. For more information call Dr. Brian Williams at 845-4427. Aggie Food Roundup: Spon sored by Baptist Student Union. Food drop-off boxes will be located in Residence Halls and at Rudder Fountain through Wednesday, May 10. FYoceeds benefit Brazos Food Bank and Brazos Church Pantry. Non perishable food items only. For more information call Cody Ftogers at 696-3306. Grads and More: Gay, Les bian, bisexual students and staff and faculty ar invited to discuss articles in the latest issue of the Advocate. Meeting at Sweet Eu gene’s at 4 p.m. woi to ten Monday Campus Crusade for Christ: BBQ at 5 p.m. at Hensel Park (across from Albertson’s). Bring $3 to cover food costs. For more information call the CCC office at 696-8289. Saturday Friday Study Abroad Programs Of fice: An informational meeting concerning Junior Fulbright at 10 a.m. in 251 Bizzell West. Junior Fulbright helps graduate students and graduating seniors conduct research abroad. This meeting is Rio Brazos Audubon Field Trip: Blue Heron Flookery, Oys ter Reefs. A forester from Cham pion International Corporation will guide us through East Texas forest in Trinity county. The rookery and reefs cover 415 acres of private land. Expect to see large numbers of nesting egrets and herons. For more informa tion call Bert Frenz at 846-9042 or 693-3214. Rio Brazos Audubon Field Trip: May 27 th, we’ll board a 65ft charter boat and head 50 nautical miles off the coast of Port O’Connor to get beyond the Conti nental Shelf. For additional infor mation call Bert Frenz at 846- 9042 (wk) or 693-3214 (hm). Dir : helj at nar Gre Ke Te> Arr; wh< the na i ; Ch Fis nur Rol oth A.R.M.Y: We are having an end of the year meetingdoanquet What’s Up is a Battalion service that lists non-profit student and faculty events and activities. Items should be submitted no later than three days in advance of the desired run date. Application deadlines and notices are not events and will not be run in What’s Up. If you have any questions, please call the newsroom at 845-3313. Pai Te: ball anc No Rai ■ of Mo wo res Clinton: Democrats, GOP swap challenges Continued from Page 1 suggest that Republicans want to raid Medicare to finance tax cuts rather than improve the pro gram’s financial standing. “I believe it is wrong simply to slash Medicare and Medicaid to pay for tax cuts for people who are well off,” the president declared to loud applause. “We must have a sense of what our obligations are.” Clinton is challenging Republicans to put out their fiscal 1990 budget proposal and specify how they would achieve their stated goal of saving $250 billion to $300 billion in projected Medicare spending over seven years. Some of the GOP changes would be designed to persuade people to move into forms of care other than the traditional fee-for-service program on which most Medicare recipients now rely. At a White House briefing, Donna Shalala, the secretary of health and human services, said the GOP reductions could result in a seven-year increase of $3,100 to $3,700 in out-of-pocket costs for beneficiaries. Without directly pointing at Republicans, Clin ton told the seniors he would fight any effort to "trade the long-term welfare and health of the American people for anybody’s short-term gain.” Gingrich called the president’s address “enor mously disappointing,” and accused him of "ex ploiting senior citizens for the narrowest of politi cal purposes.” The sparring between Capitol Hill and the White House continued unabated as House He< publicans embarked on a three-day private retreat in nearby Leesburg, Va., with Medicare high on the agenda. Clinton, for his part, sought to project an activist image in announcing a program to crack down on Medicaid and Medicare fraud, particularly in the ar eas of home health agencies, nursing homes and suppliers of durable medical equipment. “These initiatives are the right way to control health-care costs and protect Medicare for our se nior citizens,” Clinton said. HAVE YOU □ Picked up your ’94 Aggieland? I F YOU ORDERED a 1994 Aggielandyearbook and haven’t picked it up, stop by room 230 of the Reed McDonald Duilding between 3:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Please bring your Student ID. If you did not order a ‘94 book, you may purchase one for $30 plus tax in 230 Reed McDonald. The 1994 Aggieland is an 304-page record of the 1993-94 Texas A&M school year, □ Paid mailing fee for ’95 Aggieland? i F YOU ORDERED a 1995 Agg/e/and yearbook and will not be on campus next fall to pick it up, you can have it mailed. You should stop by the Student Publications business office, room 230 Reed McDonald Duilding, between 3:30 a m. and 4.30 p.m. Monday through Friday and pay a $5.50 mailing and han- a* 5 Wl " not held and refunds will not be made on books not picked up within one semester of the publication date. Cash, Check, VISA, MasterCard, Discover and American Express accepted. □ ir te r< b* Th tal el. te; ws rai 13 ye: De Wc SO] du “T a 1 rai op we by