Page 8 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1977 WfWr ^ VS,\iiT, Sund ?,?; ORIENTAL FOOD Phone Reservations 822-7727 Open 7 Days A Week Monday-Saturday A.M. — 2:00 P.M. P.M. — 10:00 P.M, 00 P.M. — 10:00 P.M. 1313 S. College Ave. Bryan, Texas United Press International The “Pledge of Allegiance to the flag didn’t appear on the American scene until 1892 when Francis Bel lamy, staff member of a boys' magazine, “Youth’s Companion,’’ wrote it for a Columbus Day promo tion. Fish doctor makes house call: Lunch Specials — Many *1 Dishes Combination Plates $2.10 - $2.80 (3 Kinds of Foods) Family Dinner $3.75 - $4.20 (5 Kinds of Dishes) ”Jupfnaml>a Eddie Dominguez ’66 Joe Arciniega ’74 TIP TOP AND TAPES RECORDS 1000 S. COULTER — BRYAN — 823-5745 Member Student Purchase Program &TDK Blank Tape Quantity Prices STEREO: SALES & SERVICE • MUSIC BOOKS a NEEDLES & ACCESSORIES COMPLETE SERVICE DEPARTMENT STORE HOURS: 9:00-6:30 MON.-SAT. TAMU TEXAS AVE. UNIV. DR. (/> (J) COULTER 4 TIP TOP Big Results! CLASSIFIED ADS! United Press International LOS ANGELES — Alan Beck fishes through his little green medicine kit looking for the right concoction to cure a convulsing koi or a vitamin to perk up a tired tetra. Beck, owner of Coral Reef Enterprises sells and stocks aquariums and ponds and runs a 24-hour hotline for owners of sick fish. His staff of 17 employes even makes house calls. Beck has designed aquariums — he calls them “living furniture — for such stars as Elizabeth Taylor, Sammy Davis Jr. and Barbra Streisand and even rents out fish and tanks. “Sometimes a studio will want to rent an aquarium or some fish for a special scene,” he said. But Beck spends much of his time on the phone, helping customers nurse ailing fish hack to health. “People get attached to their fish,’’ Beck said at his showroom in the Pacific Design Center. “If any thing happens to them, people get veiy depressed. You don’t only treat the fish, you treat the people, too. They are so into their animals. “People who name fish are in trouble. It seems those fish always go first.” Beck said his firm sometimes gets up to 100 calls a night — many long distance. One frantic call came from a fish owner in Great Neck, N.Y. Pony ‘slippers’ cut If you want the real thing, not frozen or canned ... We call It "Mexican Food Supreme." Dallas location: 3071 Northwest Hwy 352-8570 AGGIE, don’t be a NURD! Stay informed with the only daily in Brazos County which gives you all these features: • What & when it’s on the Boob Tube and the Big Screen. • Where to go for specials, be it food, clothes or those special wheels. All the news — world, nation, state, city and A&M. Doonesbury and Peanuts. The best Jock coverage in the area. United Press International DURHAM, N.H. — Finally freed of his 15-inch “Turkish slipper” hooves. King the Shetland pony frolicked in a pasture yesterday, “as happy as a lark. King was found last week in a dung-filled stall in Plaistow. SPCA officials estimated the 10- ’’year-old pony had been in the stall for years and had existed almost ex clusively on a diet of hay. The owner of the horse, Barbara Reed, faces animal cruelty charges in Plaistow District Court Sept. 13. It took Dr. Walter Hilton of the University of New Hampshire about two and a half hours to trim the hooves, which had curved upward to resemble what one SPCA member called/“Turkish slippers.” He found no damage to the blood vessels. “He’s as happy as a lark and has been running around, said Jeanette Tureotte, who works in the university’s Veterinarian Diagnostic Laboratory. “They were very sur prised he was able to stand right. And he wasn’t frisky at all when they were trimming.’ “He’s as good as gold and is feel ing just perfect, said one of the stable hands in charge of King’s care. “He was just perfect through out the whole thing." Hilton has said the next few weeks will be crucial for the pony. He said if the horse is a fast healer, he could be back to normal within six months. A fund has been set up at the University of New Hampshire to re ceive contributions from citizens willing to help pay King’s medical costs. She threw a party and a guest spil led liquor in her fish pond. What should she do? Those fish survived. But one woman — caring for her son’s fish while he was away — thought they were moping. She poured chicken soup into the pond and killed the lot, then frantically sought to replace them before her son returned. “The crux of curing a fish is proper diagnosis, then you have to give the proper medication, said Beck, whose firm researches cures and maintenance techniques for fish. He even has a special sling he uses to give fish shots. The problem with fish, he said, is you can’t always tell they’re ill until it’s too late. “If a dog is sick, he will let you know. Fish don’t always do that. Sure symptoms of illness, he said, include fish lying on the bottom of the tank, floating at the top gasping for air, having faded colors or rag ged fins, or scratching themselves along the sides of a tank. Parasites and bacterial n are the most common plaj noted. And most proklei caused by stress. Though aquariums arej biggest sellers, he said pot with koi, or Japanese carp, coming very popular. And when one dies, Bfj “You can bury them-tin, great fertilizer.” Prisoners in Mm apply for release United Press Internatioii LAREDO, Tex. — Hiel 1 ! sulate said yesterday all 15 can inmates in the Nuew| Prison who are eligibletoli in the prisoner release have applied for returns United States. A spokesman for theft; said there was no tmthto; printed in a Mexican nei that none of the Americanri to take part in the excb» Barnes alters su United Press International BROWNWOOD — An amended petition filed Tuesday in the $22 million libel suit by former Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes claims the Dallas Morn ing News circulated a libelous arti cle about Barnes in his home county hut not in Dallas County. The 19-page amended petition charges the newspaper, which is a defendant along with publisher A.H. Belt) Corp., circulated in Brown Countv an Oct. 5, 1976 re- Phone exec "crude talker’ United Press International SAN ANTONIO — A former sub ordinate of fired Southwestern Bell Telephone executive James H. Ashley testified yesterday Ashley was a crude talker who put little im portance on telling the truth. Antonio office to view a series of pornographic movies on a video tape player during office hours. Joe Cochran, 46, a $39,200-a-year commercial supervisor, stud he fal sified expense vouchers and bor rowed $12,000 from a bank on Ashley’s orders, helped send Bell printing to a franchise run by Ashley’s brother, and joined his boss and other men in Ashley’s San “I’d say in general the employes were afraid of him (Ashley), ” Coch ran said. “His basic motivation was by fear. His method of controlling people was making them afraid of embarrasment. ” To help keep you from becoming the subject of another Aggie joke we have a Super Special Deal for you. For particulars on our half price offer Fall Semester $7.00 School Year $14.00 Call: Circulation Department 822-3707 The Eagle Serving Bryan and College Station CAMERA COMMITTEE FALL PHOTO CONTEST ENTRY DEADLINE OCT. 4, 1977 ANY SIZE PHOTO ON AN 11 X 14 MAT. Ashley has joined the survivors of the late T.O. Gravitt in a $29- million libel and slander suit against Bell. He says he was fired and Gravitt, former vice president for Texas, committed suicide because they attempted to disclose illegal wiretaps and campaign contribu tions by the company. Cochran testified that Ashley, a San Antonio Commercial manager until his suspension on Oct. 9, 1974, used “frequent profanity and sexu ally oriented innuendoes,” includ ing one profane statement in Spanish which other witnesses have quoted Ashley as using in the pres ence of female employes. ordered him to make political con tributions, then recover the money by false expense vouchers. He said Ashley was regarded as being “very aggressive in obtaining higher telephone rates, also in contrast to Ashley’s testimony. Cochran said Ashley was told he was “overextended on credit and needed help and asked his subor dinate to borrow $3,000 on short term from a hank. Ashley paid back such loans three times but still owed Cochran $1,300 when he was sus pended, Cochran said. Earlier in the trial. Bell attorneys called 15 female employes and three male employes to testify that Ashley and Gravitt were "lechers” and “ladies men” who stole money from the company, on false expense vouchers and handed out promo tions in exchange for sexual favors from women workers. port Barnes was im hanking scandal. The petition claims tk paper and publisher were attempting to damage Baro tation. The original suit was Barnes in September, 19' series of articles (lie nionil connecting him withalu vestigation. Barnes alleged the seriesi eles detailing a govemmenli gation of alleged bank fad libelous. He said thepu stories was to connect pi sinuation and necessary tion to other persons d named in the articles. Belo answered the orijj tion by saying it printed Ik and “in good faith disdn duty to convey informatioi public on a subject whichtl has a right to be informed The publishing firm also: tacts or publications cited hr as libelous constitulrl “privileged exercise of lit under the 1st and 14thJ incuts of the Constitutii added that the articles wert| “without malice about a ure on a matter of public id It said the fact tire info: the articles came from a merit investigation of ban! tices, directors and shai meant the newspaper coi liable. Barnes won eight poll in Texas before his first loss, a 1972 hid for the Dei nomination for governor I wa; stu cla: .t jeci we i to < Ou act; trac ear a efi Fire safety question Cochran said two of Ashley’s fa vorite sayings were: “I can’t re member the last lie I told and “I never tell the same lie twice. ” Cochran and other Bell employes have testified they never knew of Ashley opposing any Southwestern Bell practices, as he has claimed in earlier testimony. He said Ashley Sun Theatres 333 University 84i The only movie in town Double-Feature Every Week 846-9808 Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. Each Daily Special Only $1.59 Plus Tax. “Open Daily” Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. — 4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M. Open 10 am - 2 am Mon-Sat 12 Noon - 12 Midnight Sun No one under 18 Escorted Ladies Free BOOK STORE & 25c PEEP SHOWS United Press International AUSTIN — An installer of fire protection equipment says state of ficials' proposal to change safety regulations for installations of fire extinguishers in restaurants would discourage owners from installing fire safety systems. Richard M. Davis of Marshall said Tuesday at a hearing before the State Insurance Board the proposal would not work because commercial kitchens already have stove hoods and duct vents before fire protec tion equipment is installed. “It (the proposed rule) is not going to accomplish anything but make the restaurants not want to in stall a fire extinguisher system at all,” he asserted. The proposal would prohibit the installation of automatic sprinklers and other fixed fire extinguisher sys tems in kitchens where stove hoods and duct vents are substandard. The three-man insuran agreed to delay any dedfl Sept. 19 to give interested time to submit briefs an(9 clarification on how natioul ment rating agencies inteiii standards. Border guards threaten slowdod United Press Intcrnatioiiill LAREDO — City employ! man the two bridges to] Laredo, Mexico, have infora city government unless I bigger paychecks they arej quit providing services oil* collecting tolls. The workers said they; would receive immigration! from Mexican citizens retul Mexico, nor would they! any information to tourist! MONDAY EVENING TUESDAY EVENING WEDNESDAY SPECIAL SPECIAL EVENING SPECIAL Salisbury Steak Mexican Fiesta Chicken Fried Beef with Dinner Steak w/cream Mushroom Gravy \ Two Cheese and Gravy H Whipped Potatoes Onion Enchiladas Whipped Potatoes and j| Your Choice of w/chili Choice of one other || One Vegetable Mexican Rice Vegetable 1 Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Patio Style Pinto Beans Roll or Corn Bread and Butter || Coffee or Tea Tostadas Coffee or Tea One Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea ^i/ni/ny 3loctn THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL Italian Candle Light Spaghetti Dinner SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE Parmesan Cheese - Tossed Green Salad Choice of Salad Dressing - Hot Garlic Bread Tea or Coffee FRIDAY EVENING SPECIAL BREADED FISH FILET w/TARTAR SAUCE Cole Slaw Hush Puppies Choice of one vegetable Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee SATURDAY NOON and EVENING SPECIAL “Yankee Pot Roast Texas Style” Tossed Salad Choice of one vegetable Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee “Quality First” SUNDAY SPECIAL NOON and EVENING ROAST TURKEY DINNER Served with Cranberry Sauce Cornbread Dressing Roll or Corn Bread - Butter - Coffee or Tea Giblet Gravy And your choice of any One vegetable Closer to A&M to serve you better. Bicycles & Accessories — TVs Electronics — Appliances — Tires Batteries — Sporting Goods Garden Supplies 3511 College Ave. 822-7707 “at the triangle" 4* 846-7785J Serving Luncheon Buffet Sunday through Fridav 11:00 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. $3.00 HOWDY DANC Everyone Invited Top Floor of Tower Dining Room Sandwich & Soup Mon. thru Fri. $1.50 plus drink extra Friday, September 2 at the Grove 8 p.m.-Mi 50c/p er 1 Open to the Public: “QUALITY FIRST" Class of ’80 abl vval stra nex wat see die’ 701 me; the T< lum con