The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 01, 1978, Image 5

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If your lease says in bold print or an underlined paragraph that the
Rep. BobKnirj landlord shall have a contractual landlord’s lien for rentals due and
unpaid, then when some rent comes due and you cannot pay, he can
seize non-exempt property found in the apartment. Some leases say
this seizure must be in the tenant’s presence or a notice must he left.
Exempt property includes wearing apparel, tools and books of a pro
fession, school books, beds and bedding, one car and one truck, food,
medicine, and property of someone other than the tenant if the land
lord knows the tenant doesn’t own the property. Once the premises
are abandoned, however, the landlord may remove whatever is in the
apartment. Willful violation of this law. Article 5236 D, may let the
Tenant recover one month’s rent, plus actual damages and attorney’s
fees, less delinquent rentals or other sums due to the landlord.
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THE BATTALION Page 5
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1. 1978
Living with the law
I got a good job in another city, so I told may landlord I was leaving
before the lease was up. If he couldn’t sublease it, I would continue
to pay the rent. Now he wants to remove my stereo from my apart
ment as security for future rent. Can he?
Editor’s note: This column is provided by the students’ legal ad
visers as a service to Battalion readers. Answers are general and
should not replace the personal advice of an attorney. Questions for
this column can be addressed to the students’ legal advisers in Room
306, YMCA Building.
Cotton
of first
Bowl site
cadet trip
Diet causes illness
m captive animals
IS
I by Poageh
Burgess oflfi
Poage in 1SI i „ . . „ . . ,
United rress International
m ? c n JL NASHVILLE, Tenn.— Many of
i.to (r an ^illnesses of wild animals living
aptivity can be traced to diet, ac-
xirding to Dr. A. Everette James,
r., chairman of Vanderbilt Univer
ity’s department of radiology'.
James bases his conclusion on
IT researc h conducted at the
trano ougs j m jtJ, son j an institution’s National
a Ecological Park and Regents Park
in London as well as the Johns
Hopkins Laboratory and the Armed
Forces Institute.
If there are diet deficiencies
caused by the wrong kind of food,
i n H aB* 00 muc ^ ^ OCK ^ or to ° '‘Hie, the re-
‘ U1 T ' ™ suits show up on Xray studies,
nostly in the bones, James indi-
ated.
Captured animals sometimes ar-
ive at zoos malnourished. When
first caught they may refuse to eat or
drink. Later, if given a balanced
diet, they may not get it if fed in
groups. If feeding is excessive, they
may choose foods that do not
provide the nutrients they would be
forced to eat in the wild.
As an example, he cited a pair of
lion cubs that were fed almost
entirely on muscle meat and organs,
hut in the wild they would have
eaten bones. Thus, their diet lacked
calcium. X-ray studies showed the
results of this deficiency caused
multiple fractures in their legs.
Texas A&M University’s Corps of
Cadets repeats a century-old mili
tary maneuver Saturday' in Dallas.
The 2,000 Aggies march on Dallas
for the first Corps trip of 1978. A
9:30 a.m. parade highlights week
end activities.
The parade route is on Commerce
from Griffin and Young streets to
Harwood. Its focal point will be the
reviewing stand at the Baker Hotel.
Brig. Gen. Duane H. Stubbs,
deputy' commander of the Army and
Air Force Exchange Service
(AAFES) in Dallas, will take salutes
of corps units led by Cadet Col. Bob
Kamensky of San Angelo.
The Dallas A&M Club will host
officials at the Hilton Hotel with an
informal coffee before the parade.
Unit parties are also planned aroung
the 3:10 p.m. Saturday football
game with Southern Methodist
LJniversity in the Cotton Bowl.
Aggie Corps mass movements
trace to 1878 special train trips by
the Texas A&M student body. Early
outings were made to the San
Jacinto Battlefield where mock bat
tles were staged and a journey to
Dallas in 1888 was for the Texas
State Fair.
Such excursions evolved later
around football near the turn of the
century when a shopping trip from
College Station to Bryan was a
lengthy affair.
The Saturday parade, first of the
1978-79 school year in winter uni
form, will be graded and tabulated
in yearlong competition among
Corps units. The troops will also in
clude the Texas Aggie Band and
Parsons Mounted Cavalry.
Saturday’s is the first of two Corps
trips this fall; another is planned the
weekend of Dec. 2 to Austin. Corps
**★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
HATE DOING
LAUNDRY? £
Let Frannie's do it for you +
Aunt Frannies *
Laundromat Ac
Martin Fi Holleman at Anderson 693-658/*$"
rdintheDt *★★★★★★★★★★★★★★•★★
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do, serious’
Rep. Abnl
Jim Collin!
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things of Hi
We Service
Calculators
ROTHER’S BOOKSTORE
340 Jersey — At the Southgate
MANAGER TRAINEE
• NEAT IN APPEARANCE • SELF-MOTIVATED
• DESIRE TO ADVANCE IN FRANCHISED COMPANY
• MUST BE WILLING TO RELOCATE (WE HAVE TWO STORES IN
OPERATION & ONE UNDER CONSTRUCTION
• HOSPITALIZATION AVAILABLE
• SALARY COMMENSURARY WITH EXPERIENCE AND MATURITY
APPLY IN PERSON AT TACO VILLA, 614 VILLA MARIA.
CONTACT MIKE CAVETT.
>
:
-Y-P
As a lifetime resident of Brazos
County, Bobby Yeager has always
been concerned with the security
and safety of the area. On November
7th, you have the opportunity to
allow Bobby Yeager to continue
enforcing the law as your County
Sheriff.
■
Make Brazos County
a safer place to live.
Elect Bobby Yeager
County Sheriff.
>
V
:
COUNTY SHERIFF
Over 11 years law enforcement experience in Brazos County.
Pd. Pol. Ad - Bobby H. Yeager, P.O. Box 3627, Bryan, Tx.
headquarters in Dallas will be at the
Marriott Hotel.
Stubbs has over a quarter century
of military service. He was commis
sioned through the UCLA ROTC
program and had supply and sup
port commands in Europe and
Southeast Asia. Before coming to
Dallas, the one-star general was
commanding officer of the 4th Infan
try Division support command at
Fort Carson, Colo. His decorations
include the Legion of Merit, Bronze
Star Medal and Purple Heart.
Corps leadership this year is
provided by 10 cadets from the
Dallas-Fort Worth area. They are
1st Regiment Commander James E.
Nelson Jr., 2nd Battalion Comman
der Bryan Couch, Company E-l
Commander Robert Farrow and
Corps staff members Steve Green-
wade, adjutant, and Steve Manley,
public relations officer, all of Dallas.
Also, staffers David Buroker, in
spector general, and Kirk Mar-
chand, operations officer. Fort
Worth; Company C-l Commander
Jere Swatzell and F-l Commander
David Hyde, Cleburne; and K-l
Commander Luther Tankersley,
Grand Prairie.
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