Page 8 THE BATTALION TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1977 General will give commission oath Gen. Donn A. Starry, U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command commander, will be the commissioning official at Texas A&M University’s mid term ceremony in which new of ficers take the oath for service in the armed forces. Abut 75 new armed forces offi cers will be commissioned at the 1:30 p.m. program Saturday. It follows graduation commence ment in G. Rollie White Col- Campus Names The occasion will also include presentation by President Miller of the W.T. Doherty Award. A 28-year military veteran with World War II service in Germany, Starry has been the Training and Doctrine Com mand commanding general at Fort Monroe, Va., since com pleting a tour as commanding general of the 5th Army Corps in Europe last July. The four-star general com manded the Armor Center and Army Training Center at Fort Knox, Ky., during 1973-76. He also was commandant of the LhS. Army Armor School there. Along with a variety of jobs in the Pentagon in the last 10 years. Starry headed the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment in Vietnam in 1969-70. Former student receives award Air Force Lt. Col. Emmett W. Muenker of Lovelady has been decorated with the Legion of Merit, one of the nation’s highest military awards. The 1959 Texas A&M graduate was honored at Andrews AFB, Md. Muenker serves there as an assistant operations officer with a Military Airlift Command unit. A mechanical engineering major at A&M, he was awarded the medal for work as a staff en gineer planner. The cited service was in the Directorate of Engi neering and Services, Deputy Chief of Staff for Programs and Resources, at U.S. Air Force headquarters. Commissioned through the AFROTC program here, Muenker was a member of Squadron 4 in the Corps of Cadets and operations officer on the First Wing staff as a senior. TOKYO STCJIK KOUSC AGGIE SPECIAL $060 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 5-10 Tues.-Sun. Closed Mondays 2025 Texas Avenue Towns hire Shopping Center 822-1301 (UNIVERSITY SO. NEXT TO SKAGGS) SUN. - CLOSED: OPEN FOR PRIVATE PARTIES (CALL 846-2415) MON. - $1.00 COVER 25c BEER TUES. - NO COVER FREE DANCE LESSONS WED. - LADIES NIGHT GUYS-1.00 GIRLS-FREE & GIRLS RECEIVE 3 FREE BAR DRINKS. THURS. - DRINK & DROWN GUYS-3.50 GIRLS-2.50 FREE BEER, WINE & COKES 25c BAR 50c CALL FRI. & SAT. - BOOGIE TIME “THE MUNCHIES” THURS., FRI. & SAT.: 4:30-7:30 FREE SNACKS, .50c BEER, V2 PRICE DRINKS SOMETHING NEW! STAY AFTER HOURS EVERY & SAT. TILL 3.00 AM. FOR I ING ( NO LIQUOR) 0-000000 -0-000000*O’O0O*©’O0OO<>O*< BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION'S LEADING AUDIO DEALER CUSTOM SOUNDS SX-550 RECEIVER Stereo AM/FM Receiver with continuous power output of 20 watts per channel, min. RMS at 8 ohms with no more than 0.3% total harmonic distortion. Reg. $275 SALE *189 9S CrDmorveere hpm-4o speakers Enclosure: Bass-reflex type Speakers: 10-inch carbon fiber blended cone woofer, 125/32-inch carbon fiber blended cone tweeter. High polymer molecular film super tweeter Frequency Range: 35-25,000Hz Sensitivity: 91dB/W/M Nominal Input Power: 20W Amplifier Power Range: 20 to 100W (recommended) Reg. $150 ea. SALE $ 89 95 ea. Office schedulei help for housini About 50 students responded Thursday to a help session on off- campus housing, and Texas A&M of ficials have scheduled another for Jan. 11 to coincide with transfer and new student orientation. The sessions are designed to an swer questions and give suggestions on leasing, subletting or better pair ing of roommates in off-campus housing for the spring semester. The target has been to handle as many of the spring semester prob lems as possible before the start of the Christmas-New Year’s break. The'student off-campus referral center of the Student Affairs Office is conducting the sessions. Morej formation is available from the®, ter in Room 106, YMCA Bui They are trying to help i campus students with as manyoj tions as possible. The easiest, ti; most overlooked, is roomnuti swapping. “Swapping is good because itj less work for the students, andn% agers are usually happy since! doesn’t involve someone beingle{ behind to pay all the rent.’ssij Debe McCandless, student direct of the center. Roommate swap cards canl* filled out at the center. Joe Car’ hits skids United Press International OVERLAND PARK, Kan. — Last spring a smiling young car salesman calling himself Joe Car put everything he had into printing a "How Ifound 36 extra days last,, year” "I used to be too uncomfortable to do much of anything when I had my menstrual period. It was like losing at least three days every month. Then, last year, I switched to Tampax tampons. Now I'm always on the go." Making every day count is what Tampax tampons are all about. They eliminate chafing, bulk and bulges. In fact, once the tampon is prop erly in place, you can't even feel it's there. And Tampax tampons are uniquely designed to conform to individual vaginal con tours. Which means there's less chance of leakage or bypass. With Tampax tampons you get a lot more days out of the year. And a lot more fun out of life. The internal protection more women trust TAMPAX ■tasrifaoad MADE ONLY BY TAMPAX INCORPORATED. PALMER. MASS manual to inform consumers how evade unscrupulous practicesby&’ salesmen — methods he i could save people up to SI each transaction. Eight months later, JoeCirlu no job, no confidence he can git another one and no money. JoeGi; actually Denny Armstrong of Ove- land P ark, says he still has a fas his 60-page manuals—entitled'^ a Legal I foldup Man. I’m a Ca Salesman — hut he’s askingonlyfl rather than $10. He admits he k his idealistic battle. 1 “It cost me thousands ofdoln,j my confidence and my Armstrong, 28, said in,a receill interview. “I went from riches tel rags. I need a job, any job. I’mjifj about to give up.” Armstrong sighed with resign] tion and agreed to release his name, saying “there’s nothing Ik can happen to me now. Whenst) first advertised his manual, U Press International wrote anarticltl about “Joe Car” that caused among car salesmen and (leak] The accusations printed in the tionally publicized story —JoeCd said dealers regularly made Sll profit on cars — sparked ] from many car dealers. Joe- Car was deluged with cal from individuals and media repi sentatives from New Jersey. Canai and Texas, seeking more infora tion about his manual. Butattem to have his manual published about 40 publishing houses r with failure. He had 100 issen printed at his own expense a few by private request. Two days after the story was tf leased May 11, Armstrong wasii from his job at Van Chevrolet Mission, Kan., allegedly forappe; ing only sporadically for work. Ms a chuckle he went home withal cheek in his pocket, amused at jobless future. He was sure his hoi would make money. He was wrong, and it wonS him. He said if he hadittodooi again, he either would have hire manager to handle his business fairs or not have written the bool A& pas Armstrong said he drew ployment benefits for a short whi to support his wife and two ch dren, but said it rankled after bei a car salesman for almost six ya and making hundreds, sometin* thousands, of dollars each wi He’s had to sell his new car, and uncertainty of his life has robbedl confidence. He said he has contacted seva dealerships, hut has been i because they contacted his prew employer, who also rejected hisi! plication to he rehired. Armstrong claims it was his boo — a hook he can’t even get lished — that caused him I “blackballed. “Let the car buyers beware,k cause Joe Car may sell cars cwr»ioi\ieen pl-hzd turntable Drive System: Belt-drive system Motor: 4-pole synchronous motor Speeds: 331/3 and 45 rpm Wow and Flutter: 0.07% (WRMS) Signal-to-Noise Ratio: 63dB (DIN B). Includes Walnut Base and Dust Cover. SPECIAL SALE PRICE $7900 SALE PRICES GOOD THROUGH SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10 Layaways and Financing Available. ^ liiiiiaGUSTQM The Woofer says: Come in and put a Pioneer system to gether for Christ mas now! 3806-A OLD COLLEGE ROAD Next to Triangle Bowling Alley o-o-oooo-oo-ooooooo-ooooo-oo-ooooooo 846-5803 Open 10-6 Mon.-Sat.