Page 6 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1977 TOKYO STOK HOU&e AGGIE SPECIAL $060 The Fantastic Monster Flesh-Eating Animals and Plants! FANTASTIC PLANET METROCOLOR [POl DINNER Includes: Sweet and Sour Chicken Egg Roll Fried Won Ton Chop Suey Fried Rice Fortune Cookies Specials good for students Tues., Wed., Thurs. & Sun. Open 5-vH) Tues.-Sun. Closed Mondays 2025 t&xas Avenue Towns hire Shopping Center 822-1301 Cepheid Variable presents Thursday, Sept. 29 8 & 10 p.m. Rudder Theatre $ 1 with T.A.M.U. I.D, TEXAS A&M vs. m/c /tep into the m/c circle MICHIGAN IWatch the Aggies win in the corn-] fort of the MSC Saturday, Oct. 1 at 12:30 p.m. on the 25” colorl (Monitors of MSC VIDEO. Moni-f tors are located in the MSC lounges and snack bar. The game] may also be seen in the Browsing] Library. THANKS FOLKS... We deeply appreciate your terrific response to our biggestsaleever... TiToWall EVERY THIN G w MUST|ESOL^ EXCUJDfS CERTAIN tlllS sal® ^ / Store \ r Fixtures ^ AND EQUIPMENT FOR SALE Buy ALL or ANY PART AT BIG SAVINGS COME IN AND L LOOK AT THE i \ PRICE TAGS M EXCLUDES CERTAIN FRANCHISE ITEMS QUITTING BUSINESS Men's Long Sleeve Leisure Shirts Values to $35.00 Western Straw Hats Reduced Now 40% OFF REG. PRICE 50% O OFF REG. PRICE Group Men's Western Suits Plaids & Checks Values to $180.00 Group Men's Western Boots- 60% O OFF REG. PRICE Save $$ Up to $200>Q0 OFF REG. PRICE Ringtail Lizzard Full Ostrich Elephant Kangaroo Anteater . .T. „ .SL-EAR TH E SHELVES! CLEAR the Stockrooms! CLEJT'R out Everything! Strip the Store WE WANT ACTION . . . SELL OUR inventory . . . £v e n IF WE SUFFER A LOSS . . . : urget PROFITS and give the People of this community Real Bargain . . . We know they’ll respond to an ^Honest, Legitimate QUITTING BUSINESS SALE! WESTERN WEARH0USE 100 S. Main — Downtown Brjfon Store Hours 11 A.M.-9 P.M. Moif^Sat. We Honor Master Charge and BaifkAmericard Six (weekend) u>ays to keep from studying Going to the A&M-Michigan football game in Ann Arbor? Two recommended restaurants are The Gandy Dancer downtown and The Pretzel Bell near the campus. The Gandy Dancer, which is railroad slang for rail workers, is a renovated railroad depot. The Pretzel Bell is Ann Arbor’s oldest restaurant and probably fed former President Gerald Ford when he was a student there. If you can’t attend the game, you can watch it on local Channel 3 (ca ble Channel 5) at 12:30 p.m. Satur day. During halftime, notice the Michigan band’s quick marching cadence, which they claim is one of the fastest in the nation. If prowling around with lions, exotic birds and monkeys sounds fun, try Wild Animals International near Bryan. Take FM 2818 west, turn left on Leonard Road and fol low the signs to Gate 3, the public entrance. Wild Animals Interna tional, which is a 60-acre breeding compound, offers a visitors petting zoo, restaurant and hour-long walks through the facility. This world wide assortment of animals is open seven days a week, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., and costs $1.50 for A&M students with ID cards. General admission is $2, kids under 12 or over 65 pay $1. “Fashion Fantasia,” a women’s style show, is set for 1:30 p.m. Saturday in Rudder Theater. Inter nationally famous designer Les Wilk s creations will be shown by professional models. The show is sponsored by the MSC Hospitality Committee. Cost is $1 for A&M students and $2 for the general pub- lic. It’s not immoral or illegal, but A&M’s Creamery could be fatten ing and is delicious. Located be tween the Data Processing Center and the Plant Science Building on Spence Street, the Creamery r j meat, milk products, icecream! eggs. The fountain sells mi daes (both 50 cents) and sorted goodies. A half.g a |jJ homogenized milk from cont« Aggie cows costs 75 cents, Foa hours are from 8:15 a.m, (oj'y weekdays and from 8:15 a.m* noon Saturday. Non-fountain« nets may he still purchased lom utes af ter the fountain closes, The “Trial of Lee Harvey) wald,” a TV drama partially (j in Dallas and McKinney, espi what might have happened if Ruby had not killed JFK’s appi. assassin. John Pleshette hasl cast to play the role of Lee I_ Oswald and closely resemblesi in looks, height and weight, scheduled for 8 p.m. Friday] ABC, local Channel 3 (cable ( nel 5). Part II is set for ? day. Sellout saved 20 — plus Hero recalls fatal blaz C' United Press International DENVER—Peter L. Sabino still cringes when he thinks what might have happened if his wife had gotten the tickets she wanted to see singer John Davidson at a Kentucky sup per club last May. She asked for tickets to a 9:30 p.m. show at the Beverly Hills Sup per Club in Southgate, Ky. She was told the show was sold out, so she settled for tickets to a performance two hours later. The supper club exploded in flames and 164 people were killed during the early show. Sabino, a Cincinnati fire captain who was waiting in line when the fire broke out, saved 20 to 30 persons. It s kind of a chilling thought,’ he said. We would have been in that room when the fire broke out if she had gotten those tickets.” Sabino reminisced about the fire I uesday while in Denver to receive the Benjamin Franklin Award for saving the diners. The 43-year-old officer was honored at a convention of the International Association of Fire Chiefs. It s a shame that something like this has to happen before people think about such dangers, said Sabino. "But it wasn t long after the fire that we cheeked out a Cincin nati nightclub and found an exit blocked. No one seemed to care.’’ Sabino, who has been a fireman for 21 years, was waiting in a cor ridor with his wife, Dorothy, their 20-year-old son, Peter, and his girlfriend, when the fire broke out. A hostess ushered them outside and told them about the blaze. “Being a fireman, I thought I could help,” said Sabino. “I though there might be a tablecloth, a rug or a drape burning, and I could contain it until the other firemen arrived.” Sabino then re-entered the club and discovered how had the fire was. The heat forced him and a wai ter to their knees and they crawled to safety. The fireman found another exit and crawled 15 or 20 feet to a set of doors. People were stacked on people, some unconscious, and most unable to get out. “All I could see was legs and arms, he said. “They were stacked. Kneeling on the floor, I reached up in the smoke and grabbed heads. ess nail iav< arms, belt buckles—any could grab hold of. I don’t knouln many people 1 got. It was 20^ possibly 30. Sabino said he grabbed woman by the arm, buttouldn’lDj ''p her. He said her leg eithem iC caught by the door or held byi mounds of bodies. "I stood up in the smoke a to dislodge her lx>dy, but I (Dili do it, he said. "I would likelolbi she lived, but I just don’t km. had to get out of there. I j® . couldn t breathe any more. 1 Campus activities usi '! in par; mg men The ipor I egoi Thursday TAEX — Profession Improvement, 1 p.m., 302 Rudder Rappelling Cline, 1-5 p.m., Fireman Training Center south of Easterwood Air port Administrative Seminar, 3:30 p.m., 607 Rudder Traffic Appeals, 3:30 p.m., MSC Con ference Room Alpha Pi Mu, 5:15 p.m., 104 Zachry Scona Interviews, 6 p.m., 216M, N, O, MSC Crafts, 7 p.m., 139 MSC Circle K, 7 p.m., 140A MSC Crafts — Hammocks, 7 p.m., 141 MSC Water Ski.Club, 7 p.m., 301 MSC Yell Practice, 7:30 p.m., Grove Arts Committee Chamber Orchestra Rehearsal, 7:30 p.m., 212 MSC TAMU Sailing Team, 7:30 p.m., 308 Rudder Outdoor Recreation Committee, 7:30 p.m., 410 Rudder Outdoor Recreation Committee, bicy cle touring seminar, 7:30 p.m., 504 Rud der Cepheid Variable, The Fantastic Planet, 8 p.m., Rudder Theater Cepheid Variable, The Fanlastk Planet, 10 p.m., Rudder Theater Galveston County Hometown Ckil, 8:30 p.m., 216 MSC Student “Y” Assoc., Steak Fry, 5;S p.m., Hensel Park Area 2 Alpha Pi Mu, 5:15 p.m., lO-lA Zach) Friday enee Rud le Tex lent AG EL) Teaching Seminar, 8a.m,30! MSC League of Women Voters of Braroi County, voter registration, 9 a.m., Ska® Albert sort Aerobics Club, 12 noon, 404 Rudder First Aid, 12 noon, 510 Rudder American Society of Traffic & Tram- portation, 1 p.m., 401 Rudder Intervarisity Christian Fellowship,"’ p.m., 301 Rudder Iranian Student Association, 7:30pu, 504 Rudder Aggie Cinema, All the President’sMffl, 8 p.m., Rudder Auditorium Aggie Players, Bernarda Alha, 8 p» Rudder Forum :im ame idet dp. StlH ip n ajor: te se sstb Ve Sun Theatres 333 University 84i The only movie in town Double-Feature Every Week Open 10 am - 2 am Mon-Sat 12 Noon - 12 Midnight Sun D»C 846-9808 I^Petal I .ildi COMPLETE FLORIST yr No one under 18 Escorted Ladies Free BOOK STORE & 25c PEEP SHOWS 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 MONDAY EVENING TUESDAY EVENING WEDNESDAY SPECIAL SPECIAL EVENING SPECIAL V Salisbury Steak Mexican Fiesta Chicken Fried Beef v with Dinner Steak w/cream Mushroom Gravy Two Cheese and Gravy Whipped Potatoes Onion Enchiladas Whipped Potatoes and 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 Butte' Coffee or Tea Tostadas Coffee or Tea One Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea .... ... . . JLIDV Boi Ta M< 31, xicTi 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 DINNEP Served with Cranberry Sauce Cornbread Dressing Roll or Corn Bread - Butler- Coffee or Tea Giblet Gravy And your choice of any One vegetable