BATTALION CLASSIFIED DEADLINE 4 p.n*. day before publication FOR RENT FOR SALE SPECIAL NOTICE WORK WANTED Typini? done, reasonable rates. Can do theses and dissertations. Mrs. Whitmore. 693-4483. 291tfn East, experienced typing. Electric, near campus. 846-9790 after 6. 288tfn Typing - fast, expert - proposals, theses. 846-6196 after 6:30 and week-ends. 281tfn Typing. Experienced, fast, accurate. All kinds. 822-0644. 233tfn Experienced typing, electric, near campus. 846-6551. 209tfn Typing. Call 845-2451. Ask for Kathy. Gig ’em. Bob. 62tfn Full time typing. Call 823-7723 or 823- 3838. 267tfn PERSONAL MEN! — WOMEN! JOBS ON SHIPS! No experience re quired. Excellent pay. Worldwide travel. Perfect summer job or career. Send $3.00 for information. SEAFAX, Dept. S-8 P. O. Box 2049, Port Angeles, Washington 98362. 291tl0 To the students and personnel of TAMU. —Do you need to buy quality furniture? Discj jnt Furniture sells and offers to you quality and national brand furniture at discount prices. You must . see us before you buy. Free delivery. Budget plan offered if desired. Location: 501 North Texas Ave., corner of East 22nd and North Texas Ave. Next door to Employ ment Commission. Phone 822-1227. If you need furniture, you cannot afford not to see us before you buy at Discount Furni ture Co. 136tfn WANTED NEED RIDE TO HUNTSVILLE ! ! Will help with expenses. I can leave after noon on Friday, anytime. Contact JAMES FLAGG in room 431 of the Economics Building or leave a message with the secretary. 293tl Housemate needed. Wellborn area, 22 acres with pond. 10 to 15 minutes by bike, S55 monthly, all bills paid. 846-2741. 291t8 Looking for student pre-professional folk rock composer/lyricist. Call Skip. 845- 2588, 291t4 —EVERYliAY— OPEN 7:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Mon. Thru Sat. PREMIUM DOUGLAS TIRES F60 x 15 Glasbelt $39.95 G60 x 15 Glasbelt $41.95 Includes Fed. Tax. Others at similar low prices. All tires mounted and high speed balanced at NO EXTRA CHARGE. Havoline, Amalie, Conoco, Phillips 66, Gulf lube — 37c qt. SPARK PLUGS A.Ci, Champion, Autolite 69^ Each Alternators 18.95 exchange Starters - Generators from 14.95 exchange Most any part Tor most American and some Foreign cars at dealer price Your Lawnboy and Friedrich Dealer “We accept BankAmericard - Mastercharge” Except on Prestone Joe Faulk Auto Parts 220 E. 25 822-1669 Giving Better Service For 27 Years In Bryan Furnished apartment, bedroom, kitchen, dining room and bath upstairs, and living room downstairs, fenced in backyard. Mar ried couple only. No pets. 822-1611 until 6 p. m. and 822-4053 after 6 p. m. 289t5 ATTENTION MARRIED COUPLES. One and 2 bedroom furnished apartments. Ready for occupancy. 1% miles south of campus. Lake for fishing. Washateria on grounds. Country atmosphere. Call D. R. Cain Co., 823-0934 or after 5, 846-3408 or 822-6135. 166tfn MOBILE TOWN PARK Mobile Homes & Spaces for Rent Natural Gas—Pool—Near A&M Stables — TV Cable Local Moving Service Air Conditioning Service 400 Ehlinger Dr. 822-5358 257t37 NEED STORAGE? U-STOW & GO At 2206 Pinfeather Rd. Bryan, Texas Hobbies—Antiques Housewares—Workshops— Commercial Many, Many More Six Sizes to Fit Your Needs 822-6618 I62tfn LOST Seako Bellomatic watch at midnight yell practice. White and yellow gold band ; date, alarm. 846-1418, Joe Walker. 293t4 Irish setter pup, male, vicinity of South Gate Village. 292t3 Lost at Aggie game silver pen shaped as Southern Cross, on each point a small pearl. Sentimental value. Reward. 846- 9178. 291t4 Lost Wellborn area, female silver toy poodle (Mimi). Reward and' no questions asked. Please help if you have seen her. 846-7668. 287t8 SOSOLIKS TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV All Makes B&W TV Repairs 713 S. MAIN 822-2133 SOUTHGATE VILLAGE APARTMENTS Family size apartments with lots of closet space. Individually controlled refrigerated air. Cable TV connections. Complete laundry facilities. ALL UTILITIES PAID One, two, three & four bedroom apart ments from $104.00. Some available now. Married students welcome. 134 Luther (off old hwy. 6 so., C. S.) Rental Office 846-3702 Barcelona 1 mile from campus Volleyball Court & Swimming Pool Recreation & Club Rooms All Utilities & TV Cable paid Now Available 1 Bedroom, 1 baths 2 Bedrooms, l 1 /^ baths 2 Bedrooms, 2 baths FAMILY AND STUDENT SECTIONS. BELAIRC mobile home Large Recreational Park • All City Utilities • Swimming Pool Ideal place for student couples BRYAN’S NEWEST AND FINEST 2201 Leonard Road 822-2421 — 822-2326 271tfn 1971 Honda CB-175, 60 m.p.g. Call George, 846-1143. 293t4 Sell your used air conditioner to White’s Auto Store or trade on new Catalina home appliances. 233tfn ’70 VW automatic. Engine just over hauled. Radio. New brakes, muffler, tires. Immaculate. $1,276 firm. 846-5874. 292tfn ’64 Jeep Wagoneer, 2 WD, 4-dr., body and engine good. 846-2741. 291t8 1967 Mustang convertible V-8, 289 auto matic, power steering, radio, new tires, everything works. $495. Call 822-7481 ext. 277. 291t4 Graduation announcements for Decem ber graduates go on sale Sept. 12-Oct. 12 at Student Finance Center, Room 217— New MSC—from 8:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Mon- lay-Fri,lay. 277t22 Service For All I Chrysler Corp. Cars I Body Work — Painting Free Estimates HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY, INC. | Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922 f 1411 Texas Ave. — 823-8111 57tfn * 'V ■ III f DIRECT SALES Water beds—All Sizes—$19.95 and up. Beanbag Chairs—In Color—$19.95 and up KRAFT FURNITURE WAREHOUSE 2008 College Ave. Bryan 291t3 Kawaskai “500”. 1400 miles. Equity, pick-up payments. See at B-4 College View or call after 11 :00 p. m. 846-5013. 291tfn ’69 Cimatti 100 cc helmet, extras for off road conversion. Excellent campus bike. $200 846-0372. After 5 p. m. 291t4 “TRADER’S BARGAINS” Cars, Trucks, Machinery, & Equipment We buy. Sell or Take Trade-Ins, Up or Down, Cash or Terms. ’66 Lincoln Continental, “460” engine, $850. ’66 Ford Galaxie 500, “390” engine, $625. ’65 Chev. El Camino, pick-up. $575. ’61 Lincoln Continental, "480” engine, $460. ’59 Ford pick-up, i/j ton, $375. ’55 Ford pick-up, */> ton, $250. ’55 Kenworth, Truck-Tractor, Turbo- Diesel, 10-speed main, P.T.O., $4,250. Garwood Winch & Headache Rack, $575. D-8 Caterpillar Bulldozer, $16,500. John Deere, “B” Tractor & equipment, $225. John Deere, “B” Tractor & equipment, $375. Tandem Trailer, Chassis, 20” Tires, $175. Brick Contractor’s Equipment, Mixer, Saw, Steel Scaffolds, Speed Leads, Brick Bussy, Mortar Box, etc. $1,450. 608 S- Bryan — 713-822-2098 291tfn Good used carpets, good condition, $15.00 each, 10 x 12, greens and golds. Call Houston 713/926-9026. 281tfn HELP WANTED Need people for telephone work in after noon. Lukemia Society $2.00 per hour. Contact Jerry at 693-3117 after 6. 292t3 Night man wanted from 10 to 7 at Don’s Mobil Service Station, 401 North Texas. 822-5836. • 288t6 PENTHOUSE I Cocktail Waitress Needed! 846-9384 288t7 RN Charge nurse needed full time for 11 to 7 shift. RN in service director, 7 to 3 shift. 2 LVN medication nurses. One LVN staff nurse, 3 to 11 shift. One LVN staff nurse 7 to 3 shift. Call or come to Grimes Memorial Hospital 210 S. Judson, Navasota, Texas. 825-6585. Ask for Mrs. Winkelmann, Director of Nurses or Mrs. Fraley, Administrator. 287tfn FULL OR PART-TIME WAITRESSES (Hours to be arranged) Oakridge Smokehouse 807 Texas 846-6290 287t6 FOUND 1972 Yamaha 100, mint condition, never ridden off road. Low mileage, excellent campus bike. $365. Phone 846-5981. 276tfn Water fan ; many technical college books. 846-5054. 273tfn Found black female puppy, about 6 months, on golf course. Call 846-0251 293t8 CHILD CARE Redmond Terrace Drugs Phone 846-1113 1402 Hwy. 6-South College Station, Texas Prescriptions, Etc. Charge Accounts Invited Free Delivery SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300 AF & FM Stated Communication Monday 8th of October at 7:00 p. m. Sandwiches at 6:00 p. m. All local and visiting masons invited. Signed: Tom Williams, W.M. J. J. Woolket, Secy. 292t3 Will keep one small baby in my home for working: mother. Expe rienced, references and personal care. 822-5674 292t3 AT— COUNTRY STYLE LIVING NOW LEASING The Oaks apartments were built for people who insist on the very best. A ^totally unique and exciting way of nLife is afforded by a completely new • concept in garden apartments—locat- ’ ed on a private wooded lake-coun try living at a convenient location. HWY. 2818 at industrial Pank <713) 822-7650. Travis House Apartments 505 Hwy. 30 C.S. — 846-6111 Adult - Student & Family Section Special Student Roommate Plan 4 Students — $57.40 Each Summer Lease 2 Pools - 2 Laundry Rooms HICKORY HILLS MOBH^HOME PARK —Private club & pool for adults —Rec. hall & pool for families —Picnic tables & Bar-B-Cue pits —Ponds for fishing —Paved streets, driveways & patios -Underground utilities -Planned community activities Rentals Available 2001 Beck Street 822-6912 • Large Living Areas — (650 to 1360 Sq. Ft.) • A&M Bus Service • W/D Connections • 10 Floor Plans • Shag Carpet • Car Ports • Door to Door Trash Pick-ups • 2 Recreation Rms. • Individual A/C and Heating • 2 Pools & Saunas • 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms • Studios • Utilities Paid • Near Schools, Shopping & Parks • Student Rates • Separate Singles & Family. More Of Those Extras For You— Rents Start At $137.50 up. GENERAL^ ELECTRIC Page 6 College Station, Texas Thursday, October 4, 1973 THE BAITALIOt Merrie Melodies, Looney Tunes By TED BORISKIE Memories can be a very profit able commodity, just ask anybody who has backed an oldies record. The first ones were called “Old ies but Goodies” and used enough hits from the fifties and early six ties to fill about 20 albums. These were noble enough collections but the genre has degenerated into an order - through - TV system with a come-on like “Hi! (giggle) I’m Mickey Dolenz! (giggle) Re member me?” If only he would let us forget. Few of these records really stand out as being different from all the rest. The “Cruisin’’ series released a few years ago are ahead and shoulders above all the rest with their blending of old songs, old DJ’s spattering their old fifties super-cool lingo and, most important, old commercials selling things like Studebakers. In effect, the series not only pre sented the songs popular in a cer tain year, it captured the entire atmosphere of the period. George Lucas, who directed the science fiction film, “THX 1138,” has a new movie out called “American Graffiti.” This new flick is about a bunch of guys leaving town and their girls for college in the summer of ’62. Lu cas obviously lived the part be cause he remembers how there was never a second without music. It came blaring from car radios, juke boxes, record stores, sock hops, proms, everywhere. Music plays an important part in “American Graffiti” and anyone planning to see the movie may profit from picking up the sound track album. Anyone who likes to label longhairs a “sub-culture” should be interested in seeing what a now dead sub-culture was like when it was thriving. The soundtrack features tunes popular in or before 1962, songs by Bill Haley and the Comets, Buddy Holly, the Diamonds, the Beach Boys, Chuck Berry, the Platters, Fats Domino, the Five Satins, the Big Bopper, Booker T and the M.G.’s and Joey Dee. Flash Cadillac and the Continen tal Kids have a couple of num bers on the discs as they play Herbie and the Heartbeats, the band that plays at the prom. Anyone uninitiated to the fif ties era may think that groups like the Platters are a bit lame but after seeing the movie I’m sure it will be easy to see how the group was one of the biggest sellers of all time. Besides, Tony Williams is one of the greatest singers ever to pick up a micro phone. Like the “Cruisin’ ” series, this too has a DJ, the howling, prowl ing Wolf man Jack, probably the most notable DJ to come out of the era. In 1965, while stationed in Ko rea with a good hit of the U.S. Army, Richard Nader would play these old songs on the Armed Forces Radio Network, He was interested in the response he got and decided that when he got back to the states he would look up these old rock ‘n’ roll artists and find out what they were do ing. None were having much success so it was not so hard to talk them into putting on a big nostalgia concert and in 1969 the first Rock ‘n’ Roll Revival show was presented. “Let the Good Times Roll” is the name of a documentary film of one of these concerts and the soundtrack album presents us with a different sort of oldies album, one recorded live. On the album are Chubby Checker, Bill Haley and the Com ets, the Five Satins, Fats Domi no, Danny and the Juniors, Bo Diddley, the Coasters, the Shi- relles and Little Richard. I don’t think this is a wholly successful album in any way. The studio versions of these songs fare much better than any of these live versions. It’s a long way from the fifties and Nader ob viously never read Thomas Wolfe because he tried to make it back home and this is a record of his failure. These are tired versions of songs that make them sound more dated than they really are. I saw the Shirelles on television a couple of hundred years ago when “Soldier Boy” was their present big hit. When the band broke into the opening strains the Shirelles snapped to a sloppy attention and saluted the cam era. Four years ago I saw them in one of these oldies concerts and at the beginning of “Soldier Boy” they snapped to a sloppy attention and saluted the and; ence. This year on the “Mid night Special” TV show wls the Shirelles sang “Soldier they snapped to a sloppy attet tion and saluted the camert Somewhere along the line tb must have gotten tired of tlj routine and it shows on record ■ However, to its credit, live tr i cordings of fifties artists m 1 rare, so if we can’t find any gov, ? live versions we will just han; to settle for fair to averajiR When son mee history lina, the similar 1 Both and botl versions. Noted rock critic Lenny % was too young in the fifties be affected much by these artisti His formative years were spei in the Beatle era. For those tv young to relate to the Shirelk Kaye has something just for yo; It’s called “Nuggets” and its’a; album subtitled “Original Art; facts from the First Psychedelil Era, 1965-1968.” That just akj says it all. While the Beatles, the Stowj and the Animals were big, then were hundreds of minor group that would record a couple n hits, build a small following is; then fade out. They had naras like the Electric Prunes (f»f tastic!), the Vagrants, the ThL'l tee nth Floor Elevators, the At! boy Dukes, the Magic Mml! rooms, Nazz, Sagittarius, Uous{ and the Blues Magoos. Some members of these gioupf are still recording today althoup with different bands with ib names. Mountain’s Leslie Wes; plays on this record with Hi Vagrants, Sly Stone with Mojo Men, Gary Usher wi Sagittarius, Todd Rundgren wi Nazz and A1 Kooper, BS&' Steve Katz and Seatrain’s Ai Kuhlberg with the Blues Projer. I really enjoy listening to tl: album although there are mayi a couple of songs I would likes have seen on the collection, noil bly “96 Tears” by ? and Mysterians and “Black is Bli by Los Bravos, but then I gua I can’t have everything. Ha A resi into effe universit courts, Landiss, Physical Landis system, ment’s n reational faculty i ed by tl ing from Availa handball House a 11:45 a.i 10 p.m.; and 4 to 10 p.m. Tennis reservati Resen CORRECTION Swift Proten CHUCK ROAST Heavy Beef Blade Cut Lb. 69 Ran in Wed., ad as Lb. 88 << For y< DISCOUNT LIQUOR DO YOU EVER NEED ADVICE OR EVEN JUST A FRIENDLY SUGGESTION ON HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR DRINKING PLEASURE? • We can give that advice because we’re more than just a liquor store— WE’RE A SPECIALTY STORE! • We’re not someplace to just “pick up” some liquor — we can aid you in your selection from our large selection of Beers, Wines (Domestic and Imported) and Liquors. • We can help you out with glassware and your favorite party items. • We can recommend recipes for drinks ranging from the very traditional to the extremely new. COME VISIT US— SEE WHAT A DIFFERENCE THERE IS BE TWEEN JUST A LIQUOR STORE AND A SPECIALTY STORE! 846-2521 1600 S. Texas College Station i 846-0990 315 S. Texas