Page 6 THE BATTALION FRESHMAN AG SOCIETY SPRING PARTY April 20 Thursday 6:00 p.m. HENSEL PARK BAR-B-QUE MUST BRING MEMBERSHIP CARO FOR ADMITTANCE CALL FOR RESERVATIONS 845- 2071 846- 1686 845-3711 BONNIE HELWIG KENT SHEFFIELD COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE BUILDING I i AUNT FRANNIE’S LAUNDRY APRIL SPECIAL WASH, DRY & FOLD ^ \ SERVICE CHARGE Va PRICE Good on weekdays only 1-DAY DRY CLEANING SERVICE Attendant on duty • Color TV • Comfortable Furniture ‘SELF SERVICE OR LET AUNT FRANNIE DO IT FOR YOU” 1502 HOLLEMAN (Across from Sevilla Apts.) 693-3806 r i i ♦ I i i i GRADS H — Need a Really Good Job? — A legal career without law school can be yours as a Legall Assistant. Job opportunities are excellent in this exciting new field. Legal Assistants do much work traditionally done only by lawyers. Three months of intensive training in courses taught by lawyers can give you the skills to interview witnesses, do legal research, prepare pleadings, draft transaction docu ments, and prepare cases for trial under the supervision of an attorney. The Basic Legal Assistant Course begins June 5. Call or write for further information: THE SOUTHWESTERN PARALEGAL INSTITUTE 999 ONE MAIN PLAZA HOUSTON, TEXAS 77002 (713) 664-4273 Approved by the Texas Education Agency ! Mon.-Frl. 11 til 2 5 til 10 Sat. & Sun. 11:30 til 2:30 5 til 10 STEAKHOUSE SPECIAL OF THE MONTH Weekday Noon SALAD BAR $1.75 OR CHOPPED SIRLOIN $2.95 Includes Trip to Salad Bar 2508 TEXAS AVE. S. 693-1164 ‘Briarwootf tlftpartHMats -./■ — Exercise Rooms (Men i Women) 2 Swimming Pools * Sauna Baths Tennis A Volleyball Courts Recreation Center ). 2. 3 Bedrooms Furnished and Unfurnished NOW PRE-LEASING FOR FALL AND SPRING. SPECIAL PRICES NOW UNTIL MAY 1ST. SPECIAL DISCOUNTED SUMMER RATES. Call Now For Information 693-3014 1202 Hiq» 693.2933 Hifltsvilh Hn)- -k * -k * * * * * * * * -k -k -k -k -k * -k * * * -k -k * * * * * * * * * * * -k * -k * -k Live Entertainment! Gambling! and Gee Golly Good Times at RHA Casino Night, Friday, April 14 7:30 P.M. 2nd Floor MSG Advance tickets - $2.25 at MSC, Commons, Sbisa At the door - $2.50 { GET A PIECE OF THE ACTION! One runner among the crowd The adage about the loneliness ol the long-distance runner is a lot ol bunk, Texas A&M University graduate student Bob Fennessy will tell you. Especially when you re running next to 799 other people. The 43-year-old doctoral student will be running his first marathon with some 800 entrants in the sec- SHOP 04 CULPEPPER PLAZA MONDAY THURSDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHTS TIL 8:30 P.M. ond annual Aggie Marathon here April 29. “I’ve been working up to this thing for about the last three months,’ said Fennessy, a Califor nia native. I’ve never run a full 26-mile marathon in my life. People just don’t run out on the West Coast like they do around here. “There are students at Texas A&M up and running on this cam pus at 2 a.m. If you tried that in Southern California, you’d probably get mugged.” Fennessy, a former trainer for Los Angeles State College, Univer sity of Southern California and California State University, was once drinking an average of 25 cups of coffee and smoking up to four packs of cigarettes a day, he said. “When I came here, I quit smok ing and drinking all that coffee and took up running,” he added. “When you’re at Texas A&M University, I learned, running is just what you do. It’s a very social thing.” Another reason Fennessy began running is a personal one. His health. “There’s a high incidence of heart disease in my family,” he explained. “And since stress is one contrijiiitm I decided I’d find a way to relievei that helped my body. Running i now my stress reliever. I don’t eve watch TV much anymore.” Fennessy, currently on a leave i absence from California State t complete his doctorate in healthsci ence and safety, will return then this fall. He said that runningarac t like the Aggie Marathon can in crease a person’s life span by s j years. “Doctors have found that when person runs a marathon race, hi chances of living a longer life in crease markedly, he said, "itsnoi so much the running of t|) ( marathon itsell, it’s the months d preparation a person goes ( that adds years to his life. “That’s one of the things 11 about Texas A&M, not only isnJ ning the ‘in’ thing to do sociallyitlj also good for you. It has tobeasof cial thing or people won’t p: pate. “I guess that’s why the i Marathon is so successful. Peoy around here just love to run, is they enjoy doing it with thti friends.” Politi Ifeven tin' Elei Grea UFO E 8 p.m-. Aggii pin. H Travi Been 1 ditoriun Baliin p.m. II Aggie p.m.. •' Captured solar energ may offer future pow Houston, Dallas or New York could be powered with solar energy captured from 12-mile-long, super satellites by the mid-1990s, a top space agency official said here. Clark Covington, deputy chief of systems design for the spacecraft di vision at Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, told a Texas A&M audience that one of the 40-square-mile satel lites could be in orbit and functional, suypplying the power equivalent of 10 nuclear plants, by 1995 if the program moved ahead at the same pace as the Apollo moon shot project. Youi your with MUFFLERS CUSTOM EXHAUST SHOCK ABSORBERS AMERICAN OR FOREIGN CARS TRAILER HITCHES BRYAN MUFFLER SHOP 1309 S. COLLEGE 822-2612 CHARLES S. KINARD (OWNER) - CLASS OF 57 (SUPPORTING A&M) ASK ABOUT OUR CONDITIONAL LIFETIME GUARANTEE! WHO IS HOUSE OF BOOTS? The smallest boot store with the largest selection and th& lowest overhead so you get the lowest prices! Located at Northgate • 112 Nagle • Inside the Greyhound Bus Station. NOCONA • CHRIS ROMERO • SHEYENNE Despite the estimate that the satellite would cost about $18 lion to build, Covington explain that it would pay for itself in than 18 months because of power savings supplied and the 1 ^^^ upkeep required. By 2010, he said, solar enerj from these satellites 22,000 mil from Earth, would be cheaper tin oil, coal or gas, and 45 satellili could supply all the energy nee4 today in the United States. It will be an expensive project Covington said. Research andiii velopment will run $60 billioi Shuttle flights of equipment ail personnel to build the satellite orbit will run about $8 inilli apiece, but the attraction is stilli ' He 9 l the long-run cost reeovtr ' wh& Covington said. The satellites in orbit far enonj out to he in sunlight 99 percent the time, would transmit the to Earth where it would be caufi by “rectennas” more than si across. Construction of the satellite planned for outer space because can’t he done on the grounil Covington said. Two people, usit automatic beam builders, couldM together a structure the size of w Seattle Space Needle in about tw hours, he said. xk«i It would take from three montl f> to a year to finish one of the supei satellites in orbit, he said. We Buy Books EVERY DAY! Loupot’s Bookstore | Northgate - Across from the Post Offici mu- , * -k * * -k * * * * * * * * -k * -k * * * -k -k -k -k * * * * * -k * -k * * * * * * * * * * -k -k ARBOR SQUARE Does it again! We will send two summer residents to Cozumel for 4 days. Call Now! For summer lease info. The Place to Be! 693-3701 ttok^deco^ 6 M; '= 0 ° V ;,'o' .■rAJ* A .. US* Culpepper Plaza t sjo'Y . VC- 9 VxO° e . $0*