DIAL-A-PRICE 846-8844 ? [S^VJ HE NEW, EASIER LOW-COST ^ AY OF SELLING, SWAPPING YD SHOPPING' « in ft ft"' ALA PRICE can tell you where is, how much it costs, or who wants it. ■ LAKEVIEW CLUB 3 Miles N. On Tabor Road Satturday Night: Billy Walker & The Tennessee Walkers From 9 - 1 p. m. STAMPEDE Every Thursday Nile (ALL BRANDS BEER 35f) Barcelona KIN I AL OFF K F NOW ()I»L\ f OU Sll I ( I ION 700 Dominik (!.0I S4(>-1 70‘) fot Inlonn.ition • A&M Shuttle Bus • 1 Mile to A&M • All Utilities & T.V. Cable Paid 4 Students in large 2 Br. - 2 Bath — $62.50 ea. Family & Adult Sections. 1 Br. - 2 Br. Senate Defies Republicans On Watergate Issue WASHINGTON (A 1 )—The Sen ate Wednesday rejected Republi can attempts to broaden the scope and revise the membership of a proposed special committee to in vestigate the Watergate bugging incident. The proposal stems from the bugging and break-in at the Dem ocratic party’s Watergate build ing offices last June. GOP senators said the Demo crats were seeking to cover up their own misdeeds by confining the probe to the 19i72 election, saying, without citing specifics, that the Democrats had bugged them in the 1964 and 1968 cam paigns. But the Senate rejected, 44 to 32, a proposal to broaden the proble to cover the last three presidential elections. On two separate tries, the Sen ate rejected amendments to add a third Republican to the proposed panel scheduled to have three Democrats and two Republicans. Then, the Senate agreed to a proposal to increase the size of the panel to seven members, with four Democrats and three Repub licans. Sen. Sam J. Ervin, Jr., D-N.C., is scheduled to head it. GOP Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania told reporters short ly before the Senate met that he has “wholesale evidence of wire tapping of the Republican party” in the 1968 campaign. And Sen. Barry Goldwater, R- English Professor Authors Book On Malcolm Lowry Dr. Richard H. Costa, associate professor of English at A&M, is the author of a new book which delves into the life and works of the late British-Canadian novelist Malcolm Lowry. The volume is part of the World Authors Series of Twayne Pub lishers, Inc., of New York, the same firm which published Cos ta’s study of H. G. Wells in 1967. Dr. Costa, a member of the TA- MU faculty since 1970, specializes in modern fiction. His new book includes a full reassessment of Lowry’s best known novel, “Under the Volca no,” as well as a balanced critique of his apprentice novel, “Ultrama rine.” The publication also cavers two novels published since Lowry’s death, along with his novellas, short stories, poems and corres pondence. Lowry, who died in 1957, was born in Liverpool and was gradu ated from Cambridge University. He spent most of his writing life, however, as an expatriate living in Mexico from 1936 until 1938 and British Columbia from 1939 to 1954. The new book contains a large but selected bibliography of the burgeoning secondary source ma terial on Lowry, much of it by such writers as Anthony Burgess, Stephen Spender, William G. Gass, Philip Toynbee, Walter Allen and Elizabeth Janeway, who are lead ing a rebirth of critical interest in the deceased novelist. Dr. Costa devotes chapters to the literary influence of James Joyce and Conrad Aiken and the Jungian-archetypal aspects of Lowry. BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES |:! day 5« per word