NEW Motorola * Activation and Airtime Purchase Required Activate Your Motorol T64-59QO • ca > in in L—i ayAiwao- Dr. S.A. LeSage 'S6, '88 Dr. W.S. Haley '89 Emergencies • Cleanings Teeth Bleaching $250 We Accept & Bill Insurance 846-5817 601 Mary Lake QSS ffi© THE YOGA INSTITUTE AND BOOKSTORES EST.1974 725 E. VILLA MARIA BRYAN FOR CLASS INFO 822-2246 CHARITY BINGO AT ITS BEST! 1805 Briarcrest Bryan, Tx. 776-0999 CURRENT SCHEDULE Doors Open 1st Session 2nd Session benefiting Tuesday 5:00pm 6:45pm None Elks Wednesday 5:00pm 6:45pm 9:00pm BVCASA-LVA Thursday 5:00pm 6:45pm 9:00pm Elks-BVCASA Friday 5:00pm 7:15pm 9:00pm LVA-Elks Saturday 5:00pm 6:45pm 9:00pm BVCASA-LVA Sunday 4:00pm 6:00pm 8:00pm St. Jospeh School Church LOW LOW MROCES ° MIAXDMdJJflHD LAYOUT MOOMTLY PRICES LOW AS $10 PER SESSION CLOSED MONDAY BV.C.S.A. LVA BRAZOS VALLEY LIC » 30006721273 LIC • 17424313017 ST JOSEPH CATHOLIC SCHOOUCHURCH ELK S LODGE S2006 LIC S 30007613679 UC S 17413246013 The Battalion Classified Advertising • Easy • Affordable • Effective For information, call 845-0569 Ho H EEi 1 o.a.o B o.l.a 1 oloj oBri I T A L ENGINEER 1 „. Sp^th^unimcr Session 1 at Santa Chiara, the Spid'. Center in the small town of Casti^Hq^Ti joca;cd tn the central region of Italy. All classes ca crcditi to^raglisSb^^jl^M face COURSES IeNGR 204: Conservation Principles of Continuou ENGR 482: Engineering Ethics / ENGR 489: Mechanics of Italian Structures MEEN 212: Engineering Mechanics 1 (Statics) CVEN 205: Engineering Mechanics of Materials (Strength of Materials) PHIL 489: Professional Ethics in the International and Cultural Context LBAR 333: Italian Civilization and Culture THE NEXT INFORMATIONAL MEETING WILL BE HELD ON TUESDAY tOCTOBER 29 AT 5:30PM IN H.R. BRIGHT RM 131. / Applications Still Hcin^ Accepted f] Care Plus Roc, The Good Doc “Fell asleep at a tailgate party, did you ? ” Make tracks to CarePlus Medical Center for all your minor emergencies. Our on-site x-ray facility allows us to treat your accidents and injuries quickly. And no appointment is necessary, so you can come in immediately after an accident. A&M stu dents even receive a 10% discount at CarePlus Medical Center. At CarePlus, you get quality care plus value and convenience. Care Plus 2411 Texas Ave. and Southwest Pkwy • College Station, TX 77840 696-0683 PROFITABLE NUMBER! 845-0569 THE BATTALION CLASSIFIEDS Bryan 408 S. Texas Ave. 775-0188 (Comer ot 30th St.) EXHAUST • BRAKES • SHOCKS STRUTS • SPRINGS C.V. JOINTS - TRAILER HITCHES FREE Urtdercar Inspection & Estimate OPEN MON- SAT 8 AM TO 6 PM meineke Discount fVtufflers $10 OR All Parts j I I ± Does not apply to labor. One Coupon Per Vehicle Expires 1-16-97 • Meineke* Bryan wmm Why Pay For | Inspections I & Estimates I At Meineke® They're FREE! J ONot vaM IhKxoh 1-15-97 •( Mcinafca* Bryan location Not vaftd wth ary other o0ar or wenanty work. Musi peeart ocxjxki d time of •aHmcla. O Meineke* 1006 TODAY ONLY a limited number of tickets will be available in select zones, to TAMU students. The best dates have plenty of strings attached. The St. Paul Chamber Orchestra with Gil Shaham In its 38th season, The Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra inhabits the highest echelon of America’s major chamber orchestras. In his 18 years of studying the violin, 25 year-old Gil Shaham has become a virtuoso of exceptional talent and artistic maturity. Be prepared to be moved when they unite for works by Vivaldi and Beethoven. http://opas.tamu.edu Friday / November 1, 1996 / 8:00 p.m. / Rudder Auditorium For tickets call the MSC Box Office at 845-1234. 6- Reduced rates for student tickets. Now accepting AggieBucks.™ Persons with disabilities please call 845-8903 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. G Politics Monday • October28 ( Survey predicts sharp congressional division WASHINGTON (AP) — Repub licans and Democrats running for Congress sharply differ on the government’s role but together want to cut taxes for the poor, im prove health care by measured steps and avoid attacking legal immigration. Those are among the findings in a broad survey of the opinions of congressional candidates across the country on specific issues. The results in the Project Vote Smart survey indicate ideological passions that characterized the rambunctious last Congress have not vanished in House and Sen ate races. If anything, Republican chal lengers are more likely than the party’s incumbents to want to strip gun controls, limit abortion rights and hold the line or cut spending on a variety of social programs. Democratic challengers, too, are a bit more restrained than the party’s incumbents on money is sues, but overall more likely than their GOP counterparts to toe the party line, the survey indicates. The survey, dubbed the Virtual 105th Congress, contains answers on scores of questions asked of the candidates over the last six months and breaks them down by party, sex, and status as in cumbent or challenger. Because it does not measure strength of opinion or distinguish between realistic and hopeless campaigns, its ability to predict how issues will play in the next Congress is limited. Instead, it stands as a nuanced proft titudes in the nationalpaitt About 60 percentofDeii ic and Republican candife the I louse and Senate jib the questions, asdidahijfe cent age of independents third-party candidates. The survey indicates rats strongly suppon spending on publicedm student loans, theenvim family support, publicw training for the homelessl more. Cigarette taxes werediij taxes Democrats would at wanting to raise to 1 that. But they opposed a need budget constitin amendment favoredby!l| cent of Republicans. Clinton supports OSHA fine snior tailback (AP) — The following are re sponses of the major presidential candidates to the question: “Do ON THE ISSUES ■■ CAMPAIGN you favor eliminating fines for pa perwork violations of Occupational Safety and Health Administration Standards that have no direct effect on workplace safety and health?" Bill Clinton “OSHA does not favor total elimination of fines for paperwork violations because the agency needs to retain discretion to penal ize employers who under report in juries and illnesses. Without accu rate data, OSHA would be unable to determine the nature of work place problems, would not know where to target inspections, and would be unable to evaluate the ef fectiveness of its interventions.’’ Bob Dole “Regulatory agencies like OSHA need to conduct cost-ben efit analyses of their reguk and pursue alternativesti dated regulatoryapproit Common-sense reform store fairness andpredicii! to government rules aid a us to achievb equalorsii| levels of protection for workers at a lower cost.” if , , Amt: R eld Ross Perot “Yes. We must makecoi ance with OSHAstandaii simple as possible nesses are already overbm with federal regulations ant perwork. We can continutti sure our workplaces are healthy without creating regulations and' businesses, particularly small businesses." Newspapers Continued from Page 1 The Boston Globe said that under Clinton’s leadership, “the country is better off than it was four years ago.” The Globe credited Clinton for cutting the budget deficit by half, trimming the federal roster of employ ees and promoting education and the environment. The newspaper also applauded the president for attacking “the growing disparity between the rich and the poor” by raising the minimum wage and the earned-income tax credit. The Globe said its endorsement might take a differ ent line, however, “if the race were to be judged on moral and ethical grounds alone.” The Detroit News said Dole may not be able to de liver all he promises. “He will have to deal with reality as he finds it, as every president does. But at least Mr. Dole and Mr. Kemp are pointed in the right direction,” the newspa per said in backing Dole and Jack Kemp. In its endorsement of Dole, the Milwaukee news paper criticized the Clinton administration for being dogged by scandal. Americans, the Journal Sentinel said, “deserve a president who offers honor, achievement and vision. '5- By T( The By ike pouring wound, the iball Team’s to worse ! Like Cole late before the d Raiders shi |r the Aggies t d gathering $, pulling out a selloui Tech quar thridge’s 81 - rike to freshn orris with 6:2( me stunned tl int the Red Ra 12 Soutl D " to f ic Boh Dole meets this test.” The Hartford Courant’s endorsement of Cl rated the president’s achievements in officeo« administration’s ethical lapses. The Courant noted his administration to the annual budget deficit 60 percent 10 million jobs. "Hill Clinton deserves re-election because^ es of the past four years outnumber the mini®' Courant concluded. Sunday’s endorsement marks only the secoiil in 228 years the Courant has endorsed a Di president. The last time it endorsed a Dei when it chose Clinton in 1992. Similarly, The Oregonian endorsed Clinton did four years ago. In its previous 142-yearlii the Portland paper had never endorsed a Dot rat for president. Clinton also received the endorsementofTb tie Times and The Denver Post. Despite its location next to Dole’s The Kansas City Star said its choiceofDolt' not automatic. The Missouri paper said it hit] approved of many of Dole’s actions, endorsed Clinton in 1992, the paper said Ciitj responses to ethical questions have been,in “T don’t recall,’ ‘We made a clumsy mistake' not my fault; blame someone else.’” Tibetan Song and Dance Ensemble • Wednesday, November 6,1996 • 8:00 p.m. • Rudder Auditorium Two hours of nirvana, without the moshing. Like nothing you’ve heard or se Opera Petfitrinit# Arts Society http://opas.tamu.edu For tickets, call the MSC box office at 845-1234. Originating in the ancient city of Lhasa, Tibet, this extraordinary ensemble will pert Tibetan music, dance and theater. Accompanied by deep monotone chants, the other-world] and separate prayer ceremonies conducted by Buddhist monks, it’s like nothing you’ve 6- Persons with disabilities please call 845-8903 to inform us of your SfDecial needsnA/e requ^friouffc Jnior lineback uarterback Zel By 1 The Kansa Rollie White ( upset the lOti ball Team, bu 15-10,19-17,: The Lady P overall and 9- while improvii They mov< the Big 12 aft( Saturday, givii first loss of th< Kansas cr game, grabb A&M, but c To learn more about the Tibetan Song and Dance Ensemble before their performance, attend the Patricia S. Peters Lecture Series. Patricia S. Peters Lagniappe Lecture Series • November 6,1996 • 7:00 p.m. • The Koldus Buildma, ^oont' ‘Admission to the lecture is free...sponsored by UPAS Guild. more points 15-10 win. It seemed hawk upset t! two Kansas ju The Aggi mentum hi Kansas’ favo middle of a outside hitte ing dig. The play score, but it ble us to assist you to the best of oof