HEALTH CONSCIOUS MEN NEEDED FOR SEMEN DONORS!! IF YOU ARE BETWEEN 18 AND 35 AND WOULD LIKE TO EARN EXTRA MONEY WHILE HELPING INFERTILE COUPLES, GIVE US A CALL FAIRFAX CRYOBANK 7764453 WHO’S WHO AMONG STUDENTS IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES 1995 96 TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY Fraternity wins national award at conference Who’s Who applications are now available for both undergraduate and graduate students in the following locations: The Texas A&M chapter of Pi Kap pa Phi received the Champion Master Chapter Award at the fraternity's na tional biennial leadership conference. The A&M chapter was one of three chapters in the nation to win the award. The chapter won nine awards overall. Commandant’s Office (Military Sciences Building) Student Programs Office (2nd Floor MSC) Student Activities Office (12 S John J. Koldus Building) Sterling C. Evans Library Office of the Dean of each College Office of the Vice President for Student Affairs Hall receives TEES Senior Fellow title, $5,000 grant Completed applications must be received by the Student Activities Office no later than 5:00 p.m. on Friday, September 29, 1995. They may be hand-car ried to the Student Activities Office, sent through Campus Mail, or sent through U.S. Mail. (See the application for the addresses.) Dr, Ken Hall, a Texas A&M chemi cal engineering professor, received the title of Texas Engineering Experiment Station Senior Fellow at the Texas A&M University Engineering Program fall faculty and staff meeting Sept. 21. Faculty members must earn the designation of TEES Fellow three years in a row to earn the title of Senior Fel low. Hall received $5,000 to support his research and a commemorative plaque. [one September iContinuec s! Ktr ^jlj^ Memorial Student Center Presents The Role of Religion on Campus A panel discussion with questions from the audience. Wednesday, September 27 8:30 PM Rudder 301 Presented by: FILM and SOCIETY OF THXAS A&M Persons with disabilities please notify us in advance at 845-1515 so that we may serve you to the best of our ability. Nation's largest cable- span bridge set to open BAYTOWN, Texas (AP) It's three years late and millions of dollars over oudget, but Baytown residents couldn't be happier about 2 miles of concrete and steel finally linking their town to the rest of Texas. The Fred Hartman Bridge — the largest cable-span bridge in the United States — will open to traffic this week end, offering eight lanes of relief to frustrated motorists. Until now, ferry boats and a con gested, leaky, two-lane tunnel were al that linked Baytown with La Porte and the rest of greater Houston. "It will finally open up our part of the county to the rest of the world," said Baytown Mayor Pete Alfaro. "We've been fairly isolated." / r DON’T CARE zr YOUR i.(TTt.c\ /wCt-t., PADDY A L WAYS TOLP "Deposit" xs in A Quart jap, j /me to save it untm. j MR. JONES, WE DON’T OPERATE / WAS MARRIED... Fl&UPCO THAT WAT AROUND HERE.'.' y [ JT’D BE SAFER Here V] ^ ~ rspiRo-aW n*, In The Buff By VfiLERIE Israel, PLO reach West Bank autonomy pact TABA, Egypt (AP) After all-night talks, a shouting match and an angry walkout by Yasser Arafat, Israel and the PLO agreed Sunday to sign a pact at the White House ending nearly three decades of Israeli occupation of West Bank cities. The agreement, the,second phase of the 1993 Israel-PLO peace treaty, was hailed by Palestinian leaders as a major step toward their own state. Other Palestinians said it gave them too little, and militant Jewish settlers vowed to do anything necessary to scuttle it. The 460-page pact allows for Pales tinian self-rule in 30 percent of the West Bank — containing most of its Arab population — after a step-by-step Israeli pullout. Israel has occupied the lands since the 1967 Mideast War. j_ ca-n'-L beLevti X L4fLED fftsj pK%/sics -tes-hl I” 5orru 7 Bf£r\3a -X 960'^- Njou ‘The iA>YDKUj -bes-F. Tiii's one's VXXZ' Ewe Hall X cao'-b Y>EUEV£T X -foL\ led ? by Sic 5 W/ ienior cor ms charg md to blc oal atter Althoi [score on tl hey app Jeven bigg< [left the gi ,or crucif Hessl* here D hrowing les and h; sophomo Troutmai [in the gar Icarries. Senior (said he with He given tl orado p( skill pos “Color tented pec [backup r needed h [plays at 1 The 1c to ninth poll, whi to fourth losses fre includinj State, A< pionship Desp [team’s be all Slocum have pi for this “You Slocum a majoi first g champi someth lenge t from he The week, a Oct. 7 f( final So son. Th the AP this ses at No. 2 MONDAY NIGHT i ~i rtfri-i tflP ■! ■ Each Monday, come watch your favorite football teams and enjoy 99<£ pints of our handcrafted beer. Happy Hour: 2-7 P.M. & 9-11 P.M. Daily Hours: Sun.-Thurs. 11 A.M. - 11 P.M. Fri. - Sat. 11 A.M. - Midnight 201 Dominik (Just off Texas) 693-4148 College Station, Texas 4.0 & Go Tutoring Located at 700 E. University Drive, next to Sidepockets, behind the Golden Corral. Mon Sep-25 Tue Sep-26 Wed Sep-27 Thur Sep-28 5-7 pm BANA 303 Part I BANA 303 Part II BANA 303 Part III BANA 303 Review 6-8 pm BOON 202 Part II ECON 202 Part III ECON 202 Review 7-9 pm MATH 152 Part II MATH 152 Part III MATH 152 Review 8-10 pm ACCT 327 Part I ACCT 327 Part II ACCT 327 Part III ACCT 327 Review 9-11 pm MATH 151 Part II MATH 151 Part III MATH 151 ; Review 10pm- 12am ACCT 328 Part I ACCT 328 Part II ACCT 328 Part III ACCT 328 Review Monday thru Thursday tickets go on sale at 4:30 For any Questions call 846-TUTOR (846-8886) Located on the Centerpole Bus Route. Look for our schedules in the Battalion on Mondays and Thursdays. □ The back 26 pc C1N Chandl falling while compk too, an i process Cha four tc first hr tion sh as he 1 So at □ A* Han in tl Staffs Th recon 1995 New UMai Th A&M “T form; coupl cer C pleas came effort Sc BlaU