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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 24, 1976)
I ’age 6 THE BATTALION * FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1976 I' 1 !, < I i 1 it ■ 13 i h 'J ; 'V r 11, , WEST LOOP Petite LADIES CLINIC ^Academy of 2909 West Loop Jt South Affw Houston, Texas 713-622-2170 c/JK • Termination of Pregnancy Jan Jones Hammond • Free Pregnancy 3406 South College Ave. Testing Bryan, Texas 77801 713/823-8626 Get into some great pants! TOP DRAWER Culpepper Plaza PEPE LOPEZ TEQUILA The Spirit al Mexico. Available in White and Gold. Repe Lopez Tequila—80 Proof—Brown Forman Distillers Import Co . N Y. N Y ©1976 BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES WANTED HELP WANTED ' One day I l 10c per word Minimum charge — $1.00 Classified Display $1.65 per column inch each insertion ALL classified ads must be pre-paid. DEADLINE 3 p. m. day before publication OFFICIAL NOTICE AGCIEIjAND refund poucy “Yearbook fees are refundable in full during the semester in which payment is made. Thereafter no refunds will be made on cancel led orders. Yearbooks must be picked up dur ing the academic year in which they are pub lished. “Students who will not be on campus when the yearbooks are published,usually by Sep tember 1, must pay a mailing and handling fee. Yearbooks will not be held, nor will they be mailed without the necessary fees having been paid. “Refunds will not be made on books not picked up within one semester of the publica tion date (December 17, 1976 for the 1976 Aggieland).’’ This policy takes effect with the delivery of the 1976 edition of the Aggieland. ~ <m *.•***! Ill ■HI. mi WANTED: People who love a fantastic Sunday Brunch! $2.95. Eggs Benedict, Monte Cristo Sandwiches and Baked Apple. First Champagne Cocktail on the house! The Station in Aggie Hall tits FOB RENT MR. GATTI’S — the best pizza in town . . . honest! Mr. Gatti’s is presently accept ing applications for full and part time help. Starting im mediately. Above minimum wage, 15-40 hours a week. Call Greg or Ron 846-4809 for ap pointment. i2t4 SPECIAL NOTICE* WANTED: People who love a fantastic Sunday Brunch! $2.95. Eggs Benedict, Monte Cristo Sandwiches and Baked Apple. First Champagne Cocktail on the house! The Station in AgSie Hall llt5 THE LA SALLE a resident hotel Faculty, Staff, Post-Grads, Stu dents. A quiet, dignified place to live & study. Rooms and Rooms With Board Monthly Basis La Salle Hotel 120 SOUTH MAIN BRYAN 713/822-1501 fv’ Vj- SPECIAL NOTICE Service For All Chrysler Corp. Cars Body Work — Painting HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY- INC. Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922 1411 Texas Ave. —823-8111 GOOD MORNING AMERICA! Need help waking up? Try Tel-A-Alarm Service Will call at whatever time you wish. $5.00 monthly charge. For more info, call 846-1202 or 272- 8315. i5t5 ALANI PROPERTIES For lease — Large new duplexes in Southwood Valley, College Sta tion, including three bedrooms, two baths, living room with paneling and beamed cathedral ceiling, paneled dining room, built-in kitchen, washer and dryer connection, large patio. $325 per month plus utilities. One bedroom duplex, bath, living room with wood burning fireplace, dining room, built-in kitchen, patio. $220 per month plus utilities. All duplexes are sound proofed, car peted, draped, fenced and cross fenced. Call 693-8534; 693-849^ 14t7 HELP WANTED: Campus representative for the South’s hottest selling Custom Tee Shirts. Earn TOP DOLLAR while wearing the latest in Rock Groups, Cars, Motorcycles, X-rated, etc. in Tee Shirts. Write for com plete details to: Shirt Shack, 20225 South Dixie Highway, Miami, Florida 33157. High school or college student part :if time. Evening and nights until 10 p.m. and weekends. Housewives or men: day shift, full or part time. Can work from 20-46 hours per week, above minimum wage. Apply in per son only. 9:30-11:00 a. m. if possible. Whataburger, Bryan or College Sta tion. 138tfn FOR SALE 1976 HONDA 550-F. 1,900 miles, luggage rack, backrest, and safety bar. Must sell. $1,500 (negotiable). Call 846-1483. 13t3 HOUSE. 3 bedroom, I bath, CH/CA. $210 month, no utilities. Deposit and lease re quired. No pets. Quiet neighborhood. 823-5332. 14t7 IF YOU’RE INTERESTED in the men’s and boy’s apparel business — Check this position — Guarantee sal ary of $2.40 per hour with total pay based on total store sales. Opportu nity to learn all phases of the busi ness. 20-40 hours per week. Can ad just hours to your schedule. Contact Heritage Men’s Wear, 117 N. Main, Downtown Bryan. 822-6575. 15t3 PART TIME key punchers needed. 20 hours per week. $2.26 per hour. Inquire Rm. 318 or Map Room TAMU library. Must be U.S. citizen or have PRY. 15t5 ATTENTION MARRIED COUPLES. One and 2 bed room, furnished or unfurnished, apartments. Ready for occupancy. 1V4 miles south of campus. Lake for fishing. Washateria on grounds. Country atmosphere. Call D R Cain Co. 693-8850, or after 5, 846-8145 or 822- 6135. 124tfo Food waiters and waitresses, cocktail waitres ses, and cook needed. We will train. Apply in person at Aggie Hall (formerly Aggieland Inn). 13t3 12 gauge over and under shotgun. Brand new. Phone 693-2839. 14t2 Rooms available for students at Aggie Hall. Texas. ROOMMATE WANTED 1502 S. 5 tin 1952 Chevrolet Deluxe 4-door, radio, beater, rebuilt motor. $600. For more information call 845-3097. 14t3 PERSONALS 74 Chev. Caprice convertible. Full power and air, good condition. $3,700. Call 846-1557 after 5. I3t3 INTERESTED IN NO-FRILLS LOW COST JET TRAVEL to Europe, Africa, the Middle East, the Far East? EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS has been helping people travel on a budget with maximum flexibility and minimum hassle for six years. For more info call 800-223- 5569. 6812 GRADUATE STUDENT in need of roommate; $95/month plus bills. Call 845-7441 and leave phone number (for Mike Edwards) or come by Rm. 213C in Zachry Eng. 14t7 CHILD CARE Must sell 1974 Mazda. Air, auto, and FM, 22,000 miles. 822-4894. Ut5 WORK WANTED AKC golden retriever puppies for sale. $50.00. Call after 6:00. 822-5853. 918 Boys only. Furnished apartment. $50. 846- 5132 after 6. 12t4 1974 Kawasaki KS-125 Enduro, 4500 miles, $495. 693-9498. 10t6 Typing. Experienced, fast, accurate. All kinds. 822- 0544 • I 34 ' 5 tol, Bryan. 822-5264 Must sell 1969 Pontiac FIREBIRD. Excellent condition. Make offer. Call 845-7983 after 6 p.m. J2t4 Full time typing SymbolsTTTatHl2ft-7723. Typing. 823-4579. ELEMENTARY TEACHER now has creative playschool and daycare in home. Very reasonable rates. 2317 Bris- 14t5 No use driving and hunting — just see Cowan’s White Auto Store, North Gate. We have it: auto parts, home appliances, bikes and repair, home needs and lawn mowers. HELP WANTED Battalion Classified Call 845-2611 ALLEN Oldsmobile Cadillac SALES - SERVICE W here satisfaction is standard ct/nipnicnt 2401 Texas Ave, 823-8002 m* Pizza Inn WAITRESS ,5^ WANTED PART TIME, FULL TIME NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY APPLY IN PERSON 413 S. Texas Ave. College Station WANTED: People who love a fantastic Sunday Brunch! $2.95. Eggs Benedict, Monte Cristo Sandwiches and Baked Apple. First Champagne Cocktail on the house! The Station in Aggie Hall Ut5 ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands on file. Send $1.00 for your 192-page, mail order catalog. 11322 Idaho Ave., No. 206H, Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 (213) 477-8474 . 5t80 INSTRUCTION Part time help needed. Apply in person. Sonic Drive-In, 104 E. University. 9t7 Ambitious ladies, glamorous part time sales. Flexible hours. Phone 846-9700. 8t8 The Television Shop TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith Sales and Services TV Rental 713S. MAIN BRYAN 822-2133 AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 FRESHMEN AND SOPHOMORES! A-D E-H l-L M-S T-Z MAKEUPS WE WANT YOU — TO HAVE YOUR PHOTO TAKEN NOW FOR THE 1977 Aggieland Sept. 14-17 Sept. 20-24 Sept. 27 — Oct. 1 Oct. 4-8 Oct. 11-15 Oct. 18 — Nov. 5 DRESS: Civilians — Coat and Tie Coeds — Optional Corps (Fish and Soph.) — Class A Winter Corps (Juniors and Seniors) — Midnights ALL STUDENTS SHOULD BRING THEIR FALL SEMESTER FEE SLIPS Photos are taken on a drop-in basis, 8-5 weekdays and 8-12 Sat. ... university studio 115 College Main 846-8019 »»»» »•>:* »>n »>:$ »>•« »>r« >>:<»» »>:« »>:< •!?! W!5% »75% *!♦% *75% #75% #?5% #757# y M NOW COMES MILLER TIME ^ •IK n •IK >1K >1K M M >1K •IK For your party needs, Miller Kegs, Lite, Lowen- brau half barrels, and Miller Munchner (dark). Miller Ponies too. See your college rep. Bruce Wayne or call 822-3623 and reserve yours now for your party needs. We appreciate it. BRAZOS BEVERAGES •IK m 505 Hwy. 2818 Industrial Park 822-3623 $ *»>:< »>:< »;«>>;« »;« »>;< >:»-< >-»-« >>;« »-« »-« »;« >>;<»;« <J V *5% »T5T« ►?«?« »T»T* ,T5T» »T5T« *!5N >T5T« pT5“.» TODAY’S CROSSWORD PUZZLE UNITED Feature Syndicate Thursday's Puzzle Solved: ACROSS 1 Rousing agent: Var. 6 Easy and fluent 10 Geom. fig. 1 4 Positive electrode 15 Not any 16 Winglike 1 7 Meat concoction 19 The dishes available 20 III : Not relaxed 2 1 Diverts 23 Narrow cuts 25 Light refreshment 26 Infant 27 Female person 29 Pack neatly 3 1 Costume: Informal 33 Meadow 34 Pert, to tissue 36 Charge as a debt 40 and crafts 42 Angered 44 One: Prefix 45 Sat for a portrait 47 Take objection 49 Play division 50 Ball of something 52 Forefather 53 God: Prefix 54 French lick, for one 57 Legal matter 59 Give instruction to 6 1 Feeling remorse 64 Skin abrasion 67 Tijuana cheers 68 Results of dull razors: 2 words 70 Canvas structure 7 1 Irish lake 72 Experience 73 Hardens 74 Oboe 75 Causes to go P R O F B E A M S T R E w R E N A A L T A A W A K E I T E R A T I 0 N D 0 Z E N G A M I N 1 1 P I E a p E S T S P A N I S H ■ A R E A S A T 0 U T 1 S L I D E R H A T 1 A L L A N a A R E N A O L E O 1 E A T E R a S P 0 T W A R N S ■ S A T 0 N a 0 w E L I S T E R ■ R O S E u P A W E D 1 P E A N U T S S P A R 1 F O R a a P I L 0 T T U L I P L 0 N G S T A R E A L G A E 0 B 0 E E T T A G L A N D R E N T D E S K enlargement39 Lug 9 Higher in 4 1 Apply quality 10 Avatar of Vishnu 1 1 Pick out 12 Poem division 13 Have confidence DOWN 1 Musical notes or dog 2 Monogram: Abbr. 3 Settees 4 Standard of perfection 5 Hold firmly to a purpose 6 African antelope 7 Lady’s husband 8 Mercator 18 More moist 22 Sudden police invasion 24 Reliable 27 Hit 28 Novel character 30 UK principality 32 Precious stone 35 Cancel a penalty 37 Marina: 2 words 38 Length unit stitches 43 Constraint 46 Tapered seam 48 Arrives at 51 More Profound 54 Detects 55 Martinique volcano 56 Concerning 58 Saw logs in the night 60 Desire eagerly 62 Fanatics: Suffix 63 General effect 65 Remain undecided 66 Superlative endings 69 Communist Sportsfolio a it By paul McGrath >1K >JK n m Texas A&M and the University of Houston last met in 1965 at College Station. Both teams were success fully managing to dodge the top 20 that year without much effort, but a contest involving the two natural ri vals was bound to be a crowd pleaser. Making the defensive calls for the Cougars that day was a feisty man filled with as much competitive spirit as his 5-7 frame could hold. Melvin Robertson was in his first year under Bill Yeoman at Houston and has some recollection of the game, which A&M won 10-7. “I recall we were on about the five- or six yardline near the end of the game and had a chance to win it as time was running out. But we threw an interception or something like that and we lost the game,” he' said. Robertson was with Houston for 12 years before transferring to Texas A&M with Emory Bellard in 1972. During his stay at UH the Cougars were widely known for offenses that were strictly high-octane. However, Robertson wants it also known that the Cougars ranked I2th nationally in overall defense during his stay there. In 1967 the Cougars stole a spot on the national football scene by beat ing No. 2 ranked Michigan State 36-6. Certainly Robertson could take much of the credit for that victory as well as the manner his defense treated Ole Miss in the Archie Man ning era. The Coogs broke Man ning’s arm in successive seasons, proving its only rational to stick with a winning strategy. Houston took a great deal of criti cism for their 100-6 win over Tulsa. Robetson recalls that the the As trodome scoreboard was not equip ped to handle three digits and that some time following the game, Tulsa Coach Glen Dobbs fired his defen sive coaches. Yeoman and his offensive coaches received a lot of flack for running up the score. Robertson and his aides amusingly tried to avoid the protests by wearing tags indicating they were defensive coaches and not responsi ble for the mammoth score. Robertson still maintains friend ships with the Houston coaches, but he says these feelings will not be pre sent Saturday when he is on the side of the field opposite his former em ployer. “We may be good friends at the (coaching) clinics but this week its an all out war. None of them are my friends this week,” he said. “This is our first conference game. If we drop it, they’re 2-0 and have a big jump on everybody andwe’re(!| and in a lot of trouble said. He said he had no special feeling, about the game other than thefaciji Some is the Aggies’ first in Southwestern ference play this year. “I didn’t recruit any there now; they’re all new. any rivalry, its between between me and Bill Yeoman, Yeoman’s not going to play n| lacity neither am I,” he said. iich sm Robertson’s 4-3 defense mail) ibnu yweit A&M No. 1 in the nation in total®) rushing defense last fall. They only No. 2 the year before present, they are in the top spotofo again, but Robertson says 'his k fense will need one of its games to shackle the Cougaro "They’re a fine football teama* they’re always ranked high inf fense,” be said. “They’re an sive, big play football team.” The ‘big play’ attack is due loth personality of Yeoman Robertson. “That’s just thewayf is. It doesn’t matter ifYie sWkri on his own two-yardline, he’lltb the bomb.” Yeoman, by ibe calls all of the offensive playski self. Little matter, says Robertsoi, “We’re ready for ’em.” Pickinglt SWC: The Aggies, with either Davids (Shipman or Walker)at(jjj terback, should give the Coip more than they can handle. Ill A&M defense, virtually untestel against the pass, should again contnl the tempo. And then there’sagiij named Woodard. . . Lookforai overflow crowd in Rice Stadiunuml a lot of disappointed Cougar k after the game. A&M by 21. Arkansas versus Tulsa. Ik Razorbacks proved something kj beating Oklahoma State witkonl their starting quarterback. TheHoji by 28 Baylor plays Illinois (upset victe over Missouri)in one of the highly games this week. Baylor by 7. Hayden Fry’s North Tms'St* squad takes on SMU, thefeamft used to coach until he got the boot Too bad, Hayden. SMU by Nebraska hosts TCU. Ha, ha,k The Huskers by 35. Steve Sloan’s Texas Tech Raiders face New Mexico M Chalk up number two for the with the double T on their si Tech by 17. The passing arm of fonii) Kramer will not be enougifth'i* se quer the Bayou Bengals of Charlif Mac. The Owls should fall byatleasl 14 mevei aldriv tjubilt the f Women play on the road zorbai ist of l all I ire sti psas tc nmgn thles: rdesol atthe) Idowi arterb; midd the f isessio: smdsa for the t im, the top tc hav< evei iston. ari in ) t 1 long j k-off th int< uston. dium, Cong Hain fal one fii myone uston i lion fii re is nc lools. T one \ gies lea ike Agj last nsas Si ■ The defens lean n Women’s sports will be seeing a lot of competition this weekend. The women’s volleyball team will be traveling to Austin to compete in matches against Texas Lutheran Col lege and the University of Texas. Last Tuesday night in Beaumont the Aggies split matches, as they de feated Rice 15-12, 15-1 before losing to Lamar University (last year’s State Champion) 15-6, 10-15, 12-9, with the last game being called on time. Lamar, losing only one of its players from last year’s Cham pionship team, will probably be the Ags’ toughest foe in zone competi tion this year, along with the Univer sity of Houston. The Aggies will be taking a 2-2 record into this weekend’s competi tion. The women’s tennis team will head to Houston this Friday and Saturday to compete in matches against the University of Houston. Members of this year’s tennis 14 17 20 73 33 40 34 24 42~ 50 22 IT' 12 IT '--1 d ■ 26 54 55 56 V ; 61 6? 67 70 73 57 58 37 38 39 63 164 68 74 69 48 I 72 75 65 66 team include last year’s returner Dessie Samuels, Ginny vanHn develd, Gwen Thomas, M) Guerra, and Ellen Flake. Carol McAllister, Betty ShilM 1 Debbie Odum, Elise Richards® and Susan Schilling round ould* rest of the team. McAllisterplatf on last year’s women’s intered legiate basketball team. Shifc transferred to A&M from Tyler|i College while Odum transfern' from Baylor. Coach Ellen Buchanan says d year’s team has more depth tk ever before, and an improved s^ level over last year. The women’s softball team^ travel to Denton this weekend 11 compete in the Texas Woman’sW versity Tournament. The Aggies won last weekend* Sam Houston State Tournaniei 11 ' giving them a perfect 7-0 record!® the season. Carolyn EM 'attiV The Best Pizza in Town (Honest) COME HAVE LUNCH WITH US Fast lunch, intimate booths, party rooms, draft beer, cozy atmosphere and old movies. LUNCHEON SPECIAL MONDAY-FRIDAY Pizzas-Subs-Spaghetti with Salad and Coffee or Tea $1.89 plus tax Luncheon Special Also Available At Our Pizza-Mat HAPPY HOUR DRINKS 2-For-l Monday-Thursday LIVE ENTERTAINMENT WEDNESDAY-SUNDAY NIGHTS Call Ahead . . . We'll Have it Ready 846-4809 FOR ORDERS TO GO 5 P.M. TILL-? VISIT THE PIZZA-MAT 846-4890 IN UNIVERSITY SQUARE