Page 8 THE BATTALION MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1978 Don’t Even Think of Buying Boots Until You’ve Compared Our Prices! HOUSE OF BOOTS 112 NAGLE NORTHGATE (IN THE GREYHOUND BUS STATION) We carry Nocona, Chris Romero, Ai Gutierrez (our personal brand) Skins available in mule, elephant, camel, calf, cow, turtle, bullhide, ostrick, elk. V> >7 ft |>IT I lias t' ( . |atm liiokii Just a little taste Corps of Cadets members relaxed their pace Saturday for an afternoon of fun. The noon to 4 p.m. bash was held at a park by East Gate. Above, Joel Rolling samples some chili and at right Rich Schrader and Denise Tanner from Fowler Hall enjoy the kissing booth. Fowler Hall president Wendy Clark said Fowler made $50.25 from kisses despite “freebies” given to Corps staffers and others. The cadets acted like gentle men, she said. “No mashers — no wandering hands,” she added. Battalion photos by Paige Beasley APPLICATIONS FOR LEADER SHIP POSITIONS IN THE MSC COUNCIL ARE NOW BEING ACCEPTED IN ROOM 216 OF THE MSC. POSITIONS AVAIL ABLE ARE: 81-year-old collects history, magic Ex-architect still gets punch out of lift DIRECTOR OF FUNDS COMPTROLLER United Press International ELGIN, III. — The old man walked down the street pushing his wheelchair in front of him. “Something to lean on,” he said. "Get tired, have something to sit in. Meet a friend, sit and chat. Meet a kid, do a trick. The black hand-lettered sign reading “ELMER GYLLEGK, Ar chitect” near the old cement steps leading to his basement workshop began fading long ago. But the magic one encounters inside upon meeting the spry 81-year-old is very much alive. Gylleck is surrounded by such things as antique maps and charts. (ACCOUNTING & FINANCE MAJORS MAYBE ESPECIALLY INTERESTED) Jupfnamba Eddie Dominguez '66 Joe Arciniega ’74 FOR MORE INFORMATION, COME BY THE STUDENT PRO GRAMS OFFICE OR CALL 845- 1515. punching bags, stained glass from one of Elgin’s two original churches and thousands of photographs. He has more stories to tell and theories about things than anyone has time to hear. Give him a ping-pong ball and he’ll make it disappear. Ask about the dozens of photo graphs on the walls and he will show you boxes where he is holding twice as many more. Ask him about children and he will dust off his vaudeville dummy, “Twinkletoes.” He performed with it as a ventriloquist on local televi sion several years ago. “Children still come to my door to watch me do this. It s much better for them than cutting out paper dolls and watching television. Ask about his town and he will recite a list and show you photo graphs of Elgin’s first settlers. He will unveil his 1-lOOth scale model of Elgin as it looked in 1855, com plete with outhouses. “You can’t forget those, he said. Ask about keeping fit and he ll offer you a cure for arthritis and hit a punching bag in time with a John Philip Sousa record pulled from a nearby shelf. “It’s a lost art, this punching, he repeated until the march was over. “Even Muhammed Ali doesn’t do it like I do. Asked for an example of his ar chitectural expertise, he said he de signed his workshop. He also dis played a book with at least 200 copies of miniaturized blueprints he had printed in a family homes col umn during the 1950s. He claims to have so many hob bies "if you took something away. I’d just get something else going to take its place. "I used to be a figure skater, too, until I got arthritis. But as long as my hands are working, I can do just about everything else. Gylleck has spent his life in Elgin, an industrial city of 56,000 popula tion northwest of Chicago. His pa rents, Swedish buttermakers, set tled there in 1892. In his youth, he was a professional ventriloquist and a magician. He at tended the Armour Institute and the Bo/.ar Institute of Design in Chicago, but went off to World War 1 and never graduated. After the war, he set up his own architectural firm. He is an honor- A ne ndicati fife’s ’ lie ami “Bar Ig CTO I nd all JlcCall McC arketi exas ary member of the Chicago® cal Society and a member Elgin Historical Society. Bierce. “And if I had it to do allu file" ir again. I’d become a chiropractor losite food nutritionist because I drill roman in medicine and vitanrasi idejot unnecessary operations,’ he ail McC "1 in going to live untill ml ome tl course, unless a plane drops an lappier head. A&M becomes dove laboratory Loi IMiMlil mam If you want the real thing, not frozen or canned .. . We call It “Mexican Food Supreme.” DEADLINE MONDAY, OCT. 2 Dallas location: 3071 Northwest Hwy 352-8570 iHbMB ? AA AA AA AA AA ** ftA fUl AA AA AA RA »UI IUI IUI fU« flA AA «UI * At Last Year’s Price, You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. Each Daily Special Only $1.69 Plus Tax. “Open Daily” Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. — 4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M. MONDAY EVENING SPECIAL Salisbury Steak with Mushroom Gravy Whipped Potatoes Your Choice of One Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea TUESDAY EVENING SPECIAL Mexican Fiesta Dinner Two Cheese and Onion Enchiladas w/chili Mexican Rice Patio Style Pinto Beans Tostadas Coffee or Tea One Corn Bread and Butter WEDNESDAY EVENING SPECIAL Chicken Fried Steak w/cream Gravy Whipped Potatoes and Choice of one other Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea 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 Chicken & Dumplings 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 College of Business Careers Night Mock Interviews Departmental Speakers Monday, September 25 Rudder Theater 7:00-9:00 P.M. Using the main campus of Texas A&M University as a lalxiratorv wildlife scientist will soon begin testing the .survival strengtholTens most popular hunting bird, the mourning dove. Every year, 2 million mourning doves are shot by Texas hunters At the request of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Tens Parks and Wildlife Department, Bert Bivings, a doctoral candidiM Texas A&M, has been requested to study the survixal of the until ing dove’s nest chicks after one of the mates has been lost. The study, along with other dove nesting studies in the could cause the opening of the mourning dove hunting seaffl throughout the state to be moved to late September. Currently, the Texas dove open season is split between two zones. The season in the north zone starts on Sept. 1 while the sea® opening in the south zone is delayed until Sept. 23. Brazos Con#» along the northern border of the south zone. A number of questions have been raised on whether clove season should even he allowed to start in September,” Bivings® "That’s why I want to gather data on how many nests areadw during hunting season this year, and how many survive.” The Texas A&M campus is a good control area to study, lie said “There is no hunting and there is a year-long resident clovepopnl) tion. During the peak of the dove nesting period in June andJii| there may be as many as 1,000 nests on campus. We ll be usingabouj 60 nests in our study.” Bivings will be analyzing the survival rates of the young birds usiaj disturbed and undisturbed nests. To disturb a nest, Bivings will either trap or shoot one of the males from the 60 nests used in the study. Trapped birds will be released when the study is completed Birds which are killed will he donated to the Texas Cooperative Wildlife Collection at the University. Mourning doves are very attentive parents, Bivings said. Bothtle male and the female are involved in raising the fledglings. Theytak turns guarding the nest. One hunts for food while the other sits v/il the nest. “From egg to fledgling to leaving the nest is only about 30 daysjE during those 30 days the young birds are cared for almost constantly said Bivings. “Another study has shown that if one of the mates (Iip when the young birds are less than a week old, then they don’t be much chance of making it. ft is an area of wildlife science we needle examine much more closely.” Bivings dove study will be included with studies being conduct in other states. The Texas A&M study should be complete in lale wit mtsidc nippier "If si nore h of I pppy' lepho liink Ik he wile V EDM nming nrpiise jrenadi moved, i'ngtoj) %(• ' l moi ard ami wlice In Office ad bee ude, bi biev sa J Inquii Phi N