LAKE VIEW CLUB 3 Miles N. On Tabor Road Saturday Night: Moe Bandy & The Mavericks Prom 9 - 1 p. m. STAMPEDE Every Thursday Nite (ALL BRANDS BEER 3r><0 Janet Landers Page 6 College Station, Texas Wednesday December 13, 1972 — ^Qnfarma lion THE BATTAUOl Barcelona RESERVE A GREAT APARTMENT FOR FALL RENTAL OFFICE NOW OPEN FOR SELECTION 700 Domlnik - Call 846-1709 for Information Freshmen coeds in the Krueger-Dunn complex opened their mailboxes Monday to find, not the usual spider’s web, but a candy cane with a note attached. The message read, “Lick those exams.” Cwens, a campus service organization, planted the sugar coated inspiration in hopes of lifting the spirits of freshmen experiencing their first college exams. Members of Cwens lend a helping hand in various ways, from assembling printer programs, licking envelopes, to acting as hostesses for campus affairs Wives of A&M international students will spread a Christmas feast today at the First Baptist Church of College Station. About 90 wives are expected to attend. They will prepare and serve native dishes wearing clothes from their home country. About 34 different countries will be represented and many of the world’s cultures. This is a part of the Discovery Program conducted by the Baptist women which works on a one-to-one basis for non-English speaking student wives. In addition to helping the visitors gain confidence in English, the program provides training in cooking, sewing, art and choral singing. Pre-school children attend with the mothers. This program helps create greater understanding and easier acceptance of the American culture for the wives and participating Baptist women gain insight into the different cultures of the world. A&M Student Seeks To Aid East Texas Indian Economy Taylor Gets Admissions Position and Student Section, Tennis Courts, Basketball Courts, T.V. Lounge, Pool Table, Club Rooms. Student Rates. Efficient, Discreet Professional Security Guard. The Newest in Apartments in College Station/Bryan Area. Student Plan $62.50 per month. We have separate Girls' Dorm. Volleyball Management. Loyd Taylor has been, named associate director of admissions, announced TAMU Dean of Ad missions and Records Edwin H. Cooper. Taylor resigned as head foot ball coach and athletic director at Tarleton State College after formally accepting the TAMU position. He w;as an assistant football coach at TAMU from 1965 until 1970, when he moved to Tarleton. Dean Cooper said Taylor will coordinate foreign student appli cations, as well as review fresh man applications and make coun seling visits to high schools and junior colleges. Football Rough! The flying wedge was out lawed in football when President Theodore Roosevelt threatened to ban the game by executive edict unless players quit being rough. so An ad is what you do when you can’t call in person. It’s as simple as that. When your potential customers are numbered in millions, you can’t send a salesman to tell each one about your product. So you send an ad. And, like the salesman it’s filling in for, an ad has to understand the person it’s talking to — as an intelligent, sensitive human being. It has to show how the product fits into that individual’s life and provides something he or she wants. Clearly, quickly, interestingly. If it doesn’t, the page gets turned just as emphatically as the door was once slammed on the salesman. New elegance from an old friend. * 4 f i *_r. -» q Ads like this one have been delivering personal messages to women about all the new forms of Kleenex* tissues.They’ve been telling them about the Jewel Boxes, the colorful Boutique* and handsome Kleenex Americana” tissue boxes. And millions of women have responded by buying the product. Again and again. Maybe it was because the people at Kimberly-Clark Corporation and their agency, Foote, Cone & Belding, spent a lot of time talking to consumers — listening to what they were saying about the changes in their life-styles — understanding them. Maybe it was because they interpreted that understanding into vibrant new product colors, innovative packages and designs that women were ready for. Maybe it was the human, personal kind of messages they created to tell women about this new form of a well-known old product. More likely it was all of these things, working together to produce a marketing success. Kimberly- Clark profited. The facial tissue industry grew. More new products developed. Additional jobs were created. American bathrooms and kitchens and bedrooms became a little more colorful. And instead of taking years, as it would with personal calls, it all happened in a matter of months. So, while advertising is just a substitute for a personal sales call, you could hardly call it a poor substitute. Advertising about Advertising. One of a series sponsored by Time, Life, Fortune. Sports Illustrated. This ad prepared by Foote, Cone & fielding Advertising. Recommendations to help the Alabama-Coushatta Indians be come economically self-sufficient have come from an A&M stu dent’s research. Environmental design senior David H. Russell’s ideas incor porate current efforts and plans of the Indians and far-reaching proposals such as a motel-hotel- convention center. The Alabama-Coushatta reside on a 4,351-acre reservation in East Texas, between Livingston and Woodville. The tract encom passes part of the Big Thicket and. the only remaining virgin hardwood forest in Texas. The reservation is one of few in the U. S. exclusively under state and Indian control. The Texas Legislature in 1965 created the Texas Indian Affairs Commission. The Commission and the Alabama-Coushatta Trib al Council manage and adminis ter reservation affairs. Development of tourist attrac tions has given the Indians a glimmer of hope of sustaining themselves. To attract tourists, they built the Living Indian Village and Dance Square. Vehicles were pur chased for Big Thicket and his torical-nature tours. Various sources were used to obtain cap ital, which also led to creation of 28-acre Lake Tombigbee and camp sites. New facilities for tour depar ture, the Living Indian Village and indoor dance square have since been constructed, along with a Reptile Garden and Inn of the Twelve Clan Restaurant and oth er improvements. Touidsm jumped from 50,000 visitors in 1966 to 130,000 in 1970. Russell, a Corpus Christi Ray High School graduate, believes the Alabama-Coushatta can func tion independent of state support. His study, which considered so cial, financial and planning aspects, in cooperation with reser vation officials Emmett Battise and Carson Watt, is based on the Indians remaining on the reser vation “where social and racial groupings help develop identity concepts within the individuals which adds to the stability and security of the individual and com munity.” Russell also noted that ethnic neighborhoods “can add much to America’s heritage and cultural character. Maintaining the reser vation system can also provide a I living museum” on America’s cultural past and insight into her ; cultural future. Russell divided development j recommendations into three; phases, with the third a long- i range proposal depending on ; creation of the Big Thicket Na- 1 tional Park. Among Russell’s | ideas are land acquisition along j U. S. 190 and location of the park entrance in relation to the reser- I vation. General suggestions include in- | corporation of the reservation as a city and research of federal ! acts for financial support in con struction of new housing, fresh water sources and a sewage dis posal plant. Russell’s more specific ideas in volve steps for immediate and future economic growth and resi dential development, which he en visages in the western half of the reservation, separate from tourist facilities. Residential requirements in clude upgrading sub-standard homes and development of a resi dential community and sei complex including a meeting^ administrative offices, a clinic, athletic facilities school with day care-nui area. The A&M student believes various efforts can be cooi nated to make the resem^^j p e pi self-sufficient, contribute toi nomic security of the Polk Coj .Notre Da: ty area and presen e the phjs beauty of the region. •Alabama Tech-No) m-Colora 'jri- Aiia Franci AN AG FINDS TIME to take a little snooze in a desertei ^ hollow of the library during the last day before exams The library will be open around-the-clock through Friday CHAR0LAIS BULLS RANGE BRED AND RAISED SIRED BY FAMOUS IMPORTED FRENCH BULLS CAMP COOLEY RANCH IS FAMED AS A PRODUCER OF OUTSTANDING BULLS Ask Your Neighbor Select Yours NOW Call Write Wire Integrity in Breeding Dealing Br Recording CAMP COOLEY MA ranch area COOf 7 I 3 8203968 O R 8283981 •A f». dry Cross,;.. EASTERLY, TEXAS NOW BETTER THAN EVER BEFORE. Y0( WILL BE PLEASED WITH THESE CARE FULLY PREPARED AND TASTE TEMPTIM FOODS. EACH DAILY SPECIAL ONLY $U PLUS TAX. MONDAY EVENING SPECIAL BROILED BACON WRAPPED MOCK FILET STEAK GERMAN STYLE POTATOES Choice of one vegetable Rolls & Butter Tea or Coffee TUESDAY EVENING SPECIAL FRESH CORN FED CATFISH FILET w/TARTAR SAUCE Cole Slaw Grandma’s Cornbread Choice of one vegetable Rolls & Butter Tea or Coffee WEDNESDAY EVENINI SPECIAL CHICKEN FRIED BEEF STEAK w/CREAM GRAVY Choice of two vegetables Rolls & Butter Tea or Coffee THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL ITALIAN CANDLELIGHT DINNER — ITALIAN SPAGHETTI ^ SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE ^ * Parmesan Cheese - Tossed Green Salad rot ^ erS ^ Choice of Salad Dressing - Hot Garlic Bread way. Tea or Coffee ty/ You cannot believe you get, “The Whole Thing,” for $1.09 FRIDAY EVENING SPECIAL MEXICAN FIESTA DINNER TWO CHEESE AND ONION ENCHILADAS w/CHILI Spanish Rice Patio Style Beans Rolls & Butter Tea or Coffee SATURDAY SPECIAL NOON AND EVENING OLD FASHIONED YANKEE POT ROAST Potato Pancake Choice of one vegetable Rolls & Butter Tea or Coffee SUNDAY SPECIAL NOON AND EVENING ROAST TURKEY DINNER They Served with Cranberry Sauce & Crabapple Cornbread Dressing n v. Rolls - Butter - Coffee or Tea P nig tfiJ Giblet Gravy And your choice of any One vegetable. “QUALITY FIRST” poii The tra< Beautify Excelled holiday c GIV# 1127 V Und e iven Ei* 1 while. Van ' rp So, U 3 on’t kno' You < fficer. 1 idle yotf You < i>le and 1 conta c «Gt Ike O 1971 TIM K INC.