I We d like to take you for a ride Hey, Mr. suave and sophisticated . . try this on for size. It's the Raleigh Sports. Think bikes are for kids? Think again! This one's spe cially made (or the guy who’s a mover. Three speeds, safety- quick brakes, genuine leather saddle, touring bag . . . every thing you need to travel in style. See your Raleigh dealer, he's got a set of wheels waiting for you. Come on along! CENTRAL CYCLE & SUPPLY Sales • Service • Accessories 3505 E. 29th St. — 822-2228 — Closed Monday Take East University to 29th St. (Tarrow Street) Know your 1976-77 student senators Charles Albright TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY STUDENT SENATE 1976-77 Soph. Col. Engr. 433 Dunn 845-4483 Joe Beall Parliamentarian 228 Crocker 845-3901 Vicki Benton Soph. Col. Agri. P.O. Box 5138 845-4000 Leesa Chido OCU 1108 Treehouse 846-4575 Sam P. Copeland III Sr. Col. Science 205 W. Jersey P.O. Box 8693 845-7367 Bruce Cummings Aston-Dunn-Utay Aston 368 845-7891 Richard David Moses- M oore- Crocker 4248 Moore 845-4248 Fred Dupriest Davis-Gray At-large Col. Engr. 1601 Holleman 693-9420 Cyndi Edwards Soph. Col. Sci. #100 CS #018 Mosher 845-8063 Karen Ellerson Jr. Col. Engr. P.O. Box 8636 845-7467 Scott Farthing Jr. Col. Science P.O. Box 7000 845-4084 Phillip Fleer At large Col. 104 Mclnnis 845-6798 Mike Flores Arch Ed Soph. Col. Agri. P.O. Box 7930 C.S. 845-2339 Pat Flores Sr. Col. Agri. P.O. Box 5555 AG 845-5240 Patsy Galindo Jr. Col. Education P.O. Box 7746 AG 845-2263 Michael Gerst Grad. Col. Ag. 511 A Duncan 823-8936 Keith L. Glazener Sr. Col. Educ. Bryan P.O. Box 7786 AG 845-1830 Timothy E. Hall OCU 2104 Maloney 779-9070 Brett Hamilton Sr. Corps Bryan P.O. Box 4226 AG 845-5668 Robert Harvey Sr. Col. Engr. P.O. Box 7576 CS 845-2750 Paul W. Heard Cain-Hotard-Walton P.O. Box 1892 CS 845-3089 Jeb Hensarling Mclnnis- Schumacher OCU 309A Boyett CS 846-3669 Doug Hess OC Grad 211 Fairview 846-6949 Tim Hlavinka OCU 1006 Miner 846-2651 Mike Holcomb Grad. Col. Ag. 3528C Midwest Dr. 846-0850 Joy Johnson F owler- Keathley Bryan P.O. Box 5810 AG 845-1550 Eric Johnston Hughes-Spence Sr. Col. Agri. P.O. Box 4982 AG 845-4649 Jeff Joyce OCU 2405 Kent Bryan 822-1171 Kathy Kiel Sr. Co. Engr. #227 Mosher Hall 845-4156 Allison King OCU 1601 Holleman 179 693-5686 Randy Levine Kirk Marchand Mary Ellen Martin Jose Martinez Melanie Mohney David Nelson David Nelson Nancy Novak John Oeffinger Kathy Oeffinger Jim Peoples Charles Pipes Rebel Rice Gary Saathoff Ben Schrader W. Scott Sherman Mark Sicilio Charles Snyder III Judy Stearman Ann Stone Phillip Mark Sutton James A. Teeter Reagan Tower Dawn Wakefield Brad Wakeman Mike Wilson Lisa Winget Betty Wolfskill Tommy Yantis Beverly Yendrey Vicki Young Grad. Col. Science Corps Sr. Col. LA. Jr. Col. LA. OCU OC Grad Col. Vet. Medicine OCU Grad. Col. LA OC Grad Hart-Leggett-Milner Law-Puryear Col. Vet Medicine Krueger-Mosher Corps Jr. Col. Engr. OCU At large Col. Sci. Grad. Col. Business Married Stud. Housing Jr. Col. Agr. Sr. Col. Business At large Moody College At large Col. Arch. Ed. OCU OCU Jr. Col. Agr. OCU Soph. Col. Business OCU Col. Geosci. OCU P.O. Box 8938 AG P.O. Box 7414 AG 244 Mosher Hall 234 Dunn Hall 502 Southwest Pkwy #307 CS Rt. 4 Box 14 Bryan 1301 Rochester Bryan 311 Stasney #1409 CS Student Programs Off. 501A Milam P.O. Box 8193 AG P.O. Box 7294 200A Highland 424 Mosher Hall P.O. Box 4584 AG Dorm #7, #316 P.O. Box 8131 #26 Briarwood 1201 Hwy. 30 1112 Ashburn CS 2012 Rock wood Bryan Southside Apts. 7-A Russel Street CS Box 5619 AG Dorm 8 #322 P.O. Box 1675 Galveston, TX 493 Mosher 1601 Holleman B-15 1014 E. 24th Bryan P.O. Box 6491 311 Stasney #101 #445 Krueger 3902 Coll. Main #1405 Bryan 401 Stasney #212 CS 505 Hwy. 30 #85 845-5139 845-3658 845-4454 845- 2773 693-0151 693-0179 846- 9685 822-3134 846-5359 846-6666 846-4381 ' / 845-6755 845-2694 845-4740 846-4029 822-4917 846-5441 845-1174 845-1176 744-9023 845- 8040 846- 3910 845-6367 845-3755 845- 7674 846- 9718 846-1131 693-7780 WE FEATURE USDA GRADE ‘A’ FRYERS DRUGS & FOODS HIGiaECJ GERE TYSON'S PRIDE USDA GRADE 'A' III GAME HENS 20 OZ. LB. MtOU LB. PKG. 12 OZ. PKG 138 78 c I 18 OWNE'S, COUNTRY STYll—2 IB. ROLL—$2.75 SAUSAGE FISHERB0Y, JUST HEAT AND SERVE aa FISH STICKS KRAFT'S, AMERICAN, SINGLE WRAPPED SLICED CHEESE.... DECKER'S, QUALITY « 1 O SLICED BACON ....il 1 18 USDA GRADE 'A', WHOLE CUT UP-LB.-47$ ^ FRYERS 39 c FRESH DRESSED, USDA GRADE A' FRYERS . ^ DRUMSTICKS 68 c FRESH DRESSED, USDA GRADE A' FRYER THIGHS... 68 c MORRELL'S, FULLY COOKED LEAN - 0 CANNED HAMS...i9 48 ( PRICES EFFECTIVE WED., THURS., FRL, ^ SAT., SEPT. 29,30. Oct.1,2, 1976 i BORDEN'S, INSTANT POTATOES JANET LEE "AA" LARGE EGGS 1 DOZEN PILLSBURY, LAYER CAKE MIX ALL VARIETIES, I8V2 OZ. PKG. (TEtHD FRESH DRESSED SPLIT WITH RIBS ALL FRYERS PARTS CUT FROM USDA GRADE 'A' FRYERS...LB. I LB. PKG. ATKIN'S PICKLES 22 OZ. JAR CHICKEN OF THE SEA TUNA LIGHT, 6Vj OZ. TIN WINDOW CLEANER WINDEX 20 OZ. BOTT. DELICATESSEN-SNACK BAR "HOT TAKE HOME FOODS — EXTRA SPECIAL" BBQ BRISKET .7:.°™:.... , b 2" BBQ BEANS .r.. „ 59 c POTATO SALAD 8 59 c INSTORE BAKERY! GERMAN CHOCOLATE CAKES SKAGGS-ALBERTSONS' ICE CREAM ALL FLAVORS, '/> GAL. SQ. FOLGER'S COFFEE .iHri.;.... ■ 1 89 MUSHROOMS 47 c VANILLA WAFERS .3;:...il49 c LARGE 8 INCH TWO LAYER EA. SWEET ROLLS 3o° 39 c POUND CAKES....r:” 2 o^ $ l COOKIES i™.::: 30 oZ $ 1 FRENCH BREAD 3 i r s$ 1 GLAZED DONUTS ...r.r:2r 98 c FROZEN FOODS LEMONADE 14 c FLAV-R-PAC PINK OR REGULAR 6 OZ. TIN MORTON'S GLAZED 9 OZ. PKG. DONUTS 59 LASAGNA 1 88 STOUFFEITS 21 OZ. PKG. SPINACH 5 JANET LEE J 1 LEAF OR CHOPPED T FARM FRESH PRODUCE WASHINGTON STATE APPLES -'W EXTRA FANCV RED AND GOLDEN DELICIOUS CALIFORNIA, SUNKIS1 JUICY AND SWEET oranges 5 i F rJ 00 CELERY „38 c HONEY DEW MELON.59 c okra i59 c MUSHROOMS «il 19 10 OZ. PKGS. MR. CLEAN £99 c |CAMAY ...—..i25 c UNIVERSITY DR. AT COLLEGE AVE. OPEN 24 HOURS 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE i nm d/-\ i i aaliwin i~ciyc / WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29. 1976 Indochina refugees adjusting Associated Press WASHINGTON — Most of the 138,000 Indochine&v, refugees who fled to the United States after Communist-led victories in South east Asia are adjusting to their new country but many suffer from mental depression, a new report to Con gress says. The congressional task force on refugees said that in the nearly 18 months since the fall of South Vietnam and Cambodia, most of the refugees have made “vast strides to ward assimilation into American life.” The percentage of refugees draw ing welfare has stabilized for the first time, the report said, and most have found jobs and left the homes of the r initial American sponsors. While many serious problems in ,j adjustment remain, the Vietnamese, i Laotians and Cambodians who fled to the United States when the Communists overran Saigon and .j! Phnom Penh in the spring of 1975,i “are progressing better than many j expected in the early days of reset tlement, and the overwhelming majority are moving toward eco-,; nomic self-sufficiency, Congress, was told. An increasing incidence of mental depression among refugees has been observed, the task force said, “a | natural result of resettlement in a * new country. Treatment of the mental illness through conventional therapy, how-' || ever, is extremely difficult because modern psychiatry is virtually un known in Indochinese culture, and 1 t language and cultural barriers make j it almost impossible for psychiatric workers to assist refugee patients, the report said. The task force recommended that' Congress approve a Ford adminis tration bill to open the door for citi zenship for the refugees by declaring^ them to be resident aliens. Similar legislation was enacted to assist ref ugees from the Hungarian and Cuban revolutions. Unless the Indochinese are de clared resident aliens, the report said, it would take nearly 30 years_ before all the refugees could gain^ j» resident alien status, the first step toward citizenship, because the law | provides that no more than 5,100 persons from all countries in a given year can be admitted to the United States in that classification. The task, force said a July-August survey fmjnd that SO per cent of the retugee men are working or looking for work, slightly higher than the general American male rate of 75.6 per cent, and that 45 per cent of the j refugee women are in the labor force, about the same as the Ameri can rate for all women. The refugee men and women were experiencing a 13 per cent un employment rate, however, which is . higher than the 7.9 per cent unem ployment rate in August for the gen eral population but still an im provement over the 21 per cent job less rate for refugees in a December-January survey. Ecologists resign from front group’ (Zodiac News) — The U.S En- j vironmental Protection Agency, along with seven major ecology or ganizations, has resigned from the nation-wide anti-litter group known as Keep America Beautiful, Incorpo rated, charging that it has become a “front group for the manufacturers of throw-away bottles and cans. Keep America Beautiful, the or ganization responsible for a high- power, forty million dollar ad cam paign that proclaims, “People start pollution. People can stop it . gets many of its messages aired on the major television networks free of charge. One of these ads shows a noble American Indian surveying his once beautiful, but now trash-strewn na tive land, and weeping at the sight. But such sentimentality is not preventing the withdrawl of the EPA and various environmental groups from the ranks of Keep America Beautiful, whose board of directors is stocked with representatives of both the Coca Cola and Pepsi Cola Bottling Companies, the National Can Company, the U.S. Brewers Association, the Glass Blowers As sociation, and the Continental Can Company. The chairman of Keep America | Beautiful is William May, who also ' happens to he chairman of the board of the American Can Company. Oregon Senator Mark Hatfield says the group has stridently op- ! posed federal efforts to adopt a law similar to Oregon’s, which requires a minimum five-cent deposit and re fund value on all beverage contain ers, except those of standard man ufacture to be used interchangeably by bottlers. Hatfield adds that May recently encouraged his board members to “use every tool available” to combat efforts to establish an Oregon-type bill on a nationwide basis. Hatfield further quoted May as explaining that “communists or people with communist ideas are trying to get these states to go the way of Ore-