Page 6 THE BATTALION FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1978 ‘Robbery’at Last National Bank By BETH CALHOUN When the Last National Bank of College Station was robbed, the cul prits didn’t have to dynamite a vault. The loot was “lifted” off the wall. The restaurant-bar opened last Novemeber in the Bank of A&M’s old facilities at411 Texas Ave. South. The management wanted to pre serve the atmosphere of a bank, so they arranged with the U.S. De partment of the Treasury to be sent $1,260 in one-dollar bills. These were mounted with two-way tape on a wall in the old vault room and cov ered with plexiglas. The result was expensive wallpaper. The bills are all new, all in serial number order and to be used as a display only. They aren’t for circula tion. Two of the one-dollar bills were taken sometime between 11 a.m. and 5 p.m. last Friday. “Around five o’clock, one of our employees noticed the bills were missing,” said manager Gary Cooper. The side of the plexiglas where the bills were taken is covered by five- foot high plants. "They pulled the plexiglas back and took only two of the bills,” Cooper said. “It had to be hard to do. “They could’ve taken 25 or 30 — the whole row, but they were proba bly too scared.” He and his staff watch the money, Cooper said, but “not always that closely. We didn’t think anything like this would ever happen.” If the bills are circulated, they would be hard to trace, Cooper said, because even though the serial numbers are on file, only two are missing and they aren’t in large de nominations. A $250 reward is offered for return of the bills. “No questions asked,” Cooper said. He added that the collection is de valued because of the missing bills. T feel they were taken as a souvenir,’ he said. “I hope we ’ll get them back.“ Teachers learn writing Loupot’s Bookstore Your TI Calculator Headquarters Check Our Complete Line Of Calculators & Accessories Loupot’s Bookstore To teach good writing to students, one must teach good writing to teachers. One solution in recent years has been the workshop for composition teachers, but such a measure has sometimes been unavailable to schools in rural areas and smaller towns around Texas. Now, there could be an answer at Texas A&M University, where offi cials have received $20,000 from the Sid W. Bichardson Foundation of Fort Worth to plan and conduct such programs later this year for the 59 school districts in Region VI Educational Service Center. Region VI, which covers a large portion of East Texas, has its head quarters at Huntsville, and organiz ers say the workshop, specifically keyed to smaller school districts, will be held there. Observers of three urban school districts — Houston, Corpus Christi and Fort Worth — will be par ticipating in the workshop and will also carry news of its outcome to other service centers which might consider similar seminars for smaller schools in their area. The Richardson Foundation is dedicated to supporting such pro grams, said Val Wilkie Jr., executive vice president. The objective of the workshop is to give, the compostition teacher more skills to impart to students be cause of continued criticism about today’s students. NORTHGATE - ACROSS FROM THE POST OFFICE Sun Theatres PIPES — CUSTOM BLENDED TOBACCO CIGARS — DOMESTIC & IMPORTED Imported Cigarettes SNUFF AND SPITTOONS 333 University 84t The only movie in town Double-Feature Every Week Open 10 a.m.-2 a.m. Mon.-Sat. 12 Noon - 12 Midnight Sun No one under 18 Escorted Ladies Free BOOK STORE & 25c PEEP SHOWS 846-9808 Dr. James Dixon confidently holds a Mexican king snake, knowing that his squirmy friend is like the majority of snakes in Texas — non- poisonous. Helpful snakes like this one eat ro dents and other pests but still prompt gasps and shivering spines when the snakes enter crowded rooms. Battalion photo by Lurry Chandler Snakes deserve respect — for killing pests, not peoph Town & Country Center Battalion Classified Call 845-2611 Jf»S Men’s Wrangler’s $12.99 Men’s Western Shirts $10.50 to $13.00 Select Group Lady Wranglers & Ditto Pants & Tops for Ladies 111 Boyett St. (Next to Campus Theatre) H DELIVERS FAST DELIVERS HOT DELIVERS We accept checks. (Two ID’s required, please) Hours: 4 p.m.-1 a.m. Sunday-Thursday 4 p.m.-2 a.m. Friday-Saturday 846-7785 T M M TUNNEL THROUGH TIME AT THE ALL NIGHT FAIR. By TRICIA BRUNHART Have you ever wondered if the snake you were about to kill is poisonous or not? Well, if you live in Texas it probably isn’t, because says Dr. James R. Dixon, approximately 99 percent of Texas snakes are non- poisonous. Dixon, a professor of wildlife and fisheries sciences at Texas A&M University said Wednesday that snakes are useful to man because they help maintain the balance of na ture, by preying on rodents. Certain varieties of snakes, like Decay’s snake, Dixon said, feed on slugs, which are pests of cultivated plants, he said. Snakes thrive during warm periods, Dixon said, and therefore are seen most frequently in the spring and fall. In the spring, snakes come out during the day to feed and breed, and in the fall they come out to feed before hibernating, he said. When it is very hot in the summer, snakes become nocturnal and mainly can be seen at night. There are four basic types of poisonous snakes in Texas: the rattlesnake, of which there are at least eight varieties; the cotton- mouth; the coral snake; and the cop perhead, which is locally the most common poisonous snake. Dixon said it is almost impossible to give a description of the poisonous snakes for identification, because the non-poisonous snakes share similar patterns with the poisonous ones. Snakes will sometimes not inject any venom when they bite, Dixon, said. He suggested putting a tourniquet on the wounded limb and wrapping the bite with ice to slow down blood circulation. He advised against an extremely tight tourniquets and cut ting the wound. Most deaths occur, Dixon said, when people are bitten directly in the vein. If a person has been drink ing alcohol, the spread of venom and blood circulation is increased, he said. In the United States, Dixon con tinued, there are more deaths from bee stings than from snakebites. A person will usually know if he was bitten by a poisonous snake be cause he will experience severe pain, like 50 bees hitting you at one time and in one place,” Dixon said. He said the treatment which doc tors in San Antonio are recommend ing for snakebite involves cutting a four-inch flap of tissue on three sA of the bite. Then the doctor pullslli tissue back. If hemorrhaging ism oceuring, the snake was not pois# ous. However, if it is hemorrhagw the doctor would scrape tbemateii out and tries to get all the poisonw! Dixon said. Snake venom consists of twoel ments: the hemotoxic element 4 affects the circulatory systemand4 neurotoxic element that affedstl | nervous system. The coral snake for example,li only five to thirty percent oftl hemotoxic element, while rattlesnake has only five to 30 pi cent of the neurotoxic element. There are problems with ant snakebite serum, Dixon said, l) cause venom can vary among snail from different countries. Ant snakebite serums are specifically 1 ! Ad signed for each country, he adde to 1 Dixon said the best precaution ^ for people always to look before tk step. He also recoin mends carryinj M.4 staff when hiking, especially ift U. area is known to be snake infest! , The staff can be used to tap alongtl ground while climbing, andtoaleit sleeping snake so it has plenty , time to leave. ^ ! Thought it was cold? You’re righj Let Our Musical Figurines Say “I Love You” Feb. 14 The most wonderful thing about Love — Plays Theme from “Love Story". You're my kind of’ people — Plays . “We've Only Justl Begun." January, 1978, goes into the rec ords as the coldest in Texas in more than 50 years. It occurred, said state climatologist John Griffiths, without any record low temperatures, or lows even approaching records. “The official low temperature for the month at Easterwood Airport was 21 degrees, which is not all that low for a January here, the Texas A&M University meterology profes- You've Captured My Heart — Plays 'The Shadow Of Your Smile" We Also Have A Large Selection of Music Boxes Happy Cottage We Pick Up & Deliver (Across from Luby’s) BUD WARD VOLKSWAGEN INC. 693-3311 sor remarked. Januarys of 1976 and 1977 had lows in the mid-teens. Last month included 18 days with freezing temperatures, normally a winter total for the area. The Na tional Weather Service recorded 92 straight hours of freezing tempera tures. It went from 1 a.m. Jan. 19 through 9 p.m. Jan. 22. As far as we are aware, that is a record, Griffiths added. He noted that the nature of records for some periods rule out certainty. We do have records for an 84- hour span of below-32 tempera tures,” he said. Last month s 40.5-degree average was colder than January 1930, the previous record, by a tenth of a de gree. It normally hits a mean tem perature about 10 degrees warmer, near 51, Griffiths said. January 1976 averaged nearly 50, and last year 41.2 degrees. Lack of daytime warming overt T whole month explains the newrf ord low monthly average. Dai ^ maximum averaged 48 degrees,! J lipsing the previous low in thatal )► gory by two degrees for anothern ^ ord. But January 1978 contain] another peculiarity, in viewed records, Griffiths said. The Ja» high was 82 degrees. For the lint days of the month, that was onl) degree short of the record, 83on)i 17, 1917. Griffiths observed that thi records coupled with recent unusually cool winters, donotm sarily indicate the onset of an ice “It could be just a two or year thing,” he said. “We ve that way before.” The NWS outlook for Febi he added, is for cooler than noi here. * Handy Burger OPEN HEARING 1 FOR ANY INTERESTED STUDENT INPUT INTO REVISION OF THE 10:30 A.M. to 10:30 P.M. EVERYDAY Jumbo Burger French Fries 99c \ & STUDENT BODY CONSTITUTION with this coupon Coupon Expires Feb. 13 MONDAY, 6, 1978 Hours 9 a.m.-11 p.m. Call in your order 846-7466 203 University 7:30 p.m. We make you look. t good! Make your selection early for the Sophomore Ball Feb. 11. Freshman Ball Feb. 18. Junior Ball Feb. 25. A\b FOR/H4L H/E4R available at Aggie Cleaners 111 College Main Northgate