I Page 6 THE BATTALION TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 28. 1978 TUESDAY LADIES NITE U VELVETS tt 1700 Fe©f From The Villa Maria Exchange On Farm Road 2818 ■BEST IN UVE COUNTRY WESTERN ENTERTAINMENT" PITCHER OF BEER LADIES FREE GUYS $2.00 Stakes ride in the billions French Airbus vs. Boeing United Press International PARIS — When three Americans landed on French soil in August to complete the first trans-Atlantic bal loon crossing in history, the French went wild. Ben Abruzzo, Maxie Anderson and Larry Newman drew crowds Open 10am-9pm Closed Sunday 693-2899 Culpepper Plaza 1605 Texas Ave. South c MOTHER C NATURE HOME OF NUTRITION JUICE BAR smoothies frozen yogurt sandwiches-juices Natural Vitamins*Foods*Cosmetics wherever they went during their brief stay in France. Pictures of them and their balloon were spl ashed on front pages and magazine covers. The French awarded each of them the Aeronautics Medal, the Youth and Sports medal and the Grand Medal of the City of Paris. Now however, it is back to avi ation business as usual between On Dasher, on Prancer, on ‘Oops!’ cMyuuidcfo NOON-SEVEN 75c bar drinks 40c beer O ^ X NORTHGATE (Next to the Dixie Chicken) XK" H*' -■XW'- '-"MW- Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. Each Daily Special Only $1.69 Plus Tax. MONDAY EVENING SPECIAL Salisbury Steak with Mushroom Gravy Whipped Potatoes Your Choice of One Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea “Open Daily” Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M . — 4:00P.M. to7:00P.M. TUESDAY EVENING WEDNESDAY SPECIAL EVENING SPECIAL Mexican Fiesta Chicken Fried Steak Dinner Two Cheese and w/cream Gravy Onion Enchiladas Whipped Potatoes and w/chili Choice of one other Mexican Rice Vegetable Patio Style Pinto Beans Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Tostadas Coffee or Tea Coffee or Tea One Corn Bread and Butter 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 i i SATURDAY NOON and EVENING SPECIAL Chicken & Dumplings Tossed Salad Choice of one vegetable Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee 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 United Press International BIGLERVILLE, Pa. — Ed Got- walt, true showman that he is, wanted to make a lot of children happy this year by arriving as Santa Claus in an unconventional way — in a hot air balloon. Instead he ended up stuck in a tree about 50 feet above the ground in full costume and beard. Gotwalt was stranded for more than two hours Sunday on top of the trees after the balloon got snagged on branches and deflated. Gotwalt, 42, had hired balloonist Jeff Dull, 23, and took off shortly before noon from rural Walnut Bot tom, about 18 miles west of Carlisle. “We were flying over the mountain range toward my store and hit a downdraft (that) sucked the balloon down, actually, and we crashed into the trees,” Gotwalt said. A plane passing overhead saw the deflated balloon and notified au thorities. Using a complicated system of ropes, ladders and pulleys, a state police rescue crew secured Gotwalt and Dull and lowered them to the ground. "I ho, ho, hoed all the way down. I really did,” Gotwalt said. fupfnamba Eddie Dominguez 66 Joe Arciniega 74 If you want the real thing, not frozen or canned . . . We call It "Mexican Food Supreme.” Dallas location-. 3071 Northwest Hwy 352-8570 INTERESTED IN POETRY? PROSE? ARTWORK? PHOTOGRAPHY? LAYOUT? P.R.? THEN COME JOIN MOEBIUS THE TEXAS A&M STUDENT LITERARY MAGAZINE 1ST MEETING: WEDNESDAY — NOV. 29 7:30 P.M. RMS. 305 A&B RUDDER TOWER SPONSORED BY MSC ARTS COMMITTEE France and the United States — which means back to yet another bitter competition with billions of dollars at stake, this time in the short-range passenger jet market with the Franco-German A310 Air bus pitted against the Boeing 757 and 767. Four years ago, it was the Gen eral Dynamics F16 vs. the Dassault Mirage FI for the sale of 348 jet fighters to Norway, Denmark, Bel gium and the Netherlands for $2 bil lion. With potential orders antici pated up to as much as $10 billion, it was the “arms deal of the century. ” The Americans won, flaps down. Last year, it was the Concorde and French efforts to win landing rights for the supersonic jetliner in New York. The British, co-builders of the Concorde, fidgeted nervously while the French all but accused the Americans of trying to torpedo the Concorde, not because it was noisy, but because the United States had nothing to match it, the U.S. Con gress having scuttled plans for an SST (supersonic transport) years be fore. The French won the battle, al though they may have lost the war. For the Concorde has proved to be a financial albatross for the French and their British partners. The new battle involves the A310 Airbus and the Boeing 757 plus its latter and smaller version, the Boe ing 767. The A310 Airbus is to be man ufactured by Airbus Industrie, a predominantly French and West German consortium with Spanish minority participation. Forthcoming production of the 757 was an nounced by Boeing a few days after Airbus Industrie’s decision to launch the A310. According to industry analysts, the non-communist world will need 2,(XX) to 3,000 such 180 to 200-seat medium-range planes in the coming years, as domestic airlines keep ex panding. With each such jetliner costing approximately $25 million to $30 million, the stakes are in the tens of billions of dollars. France, the moving spirit behind Airbus Industrie, does not expect the European consortium to be able to win more than one third of the orders at best. Hotdogs could take unique turn-o-rouni United Press International DENVER — The man who brought the world perfumed bora manure and fiberglass burial vaults says he is now ready to bring America the round hot dog. Darwin Hiddleson, 61, said the inspiration for the circular hot dog came to him 10 years ago in a dream resulting from a bad experienw at a California drive-in movie with chili dog stains. “The kids were hollering for chili dogs. Then it just seemed there was chili over us, the kids, the upholstery. And it squirted allovermy new white Palm Beach suit," Hiddleson said. "There must be a better idea.” The better idea was the doughnut-shaped hot dog, known as the “Rock-O” in honor of Hiddleson’s nickname. It fits on a hamburger bun and has a hole in the middle for sauerkraut, chili, cheese or other trimmings. At the time of the dream, patent attorneys told Hiddleson and his wife, Sally, the time for round hot dogs had not yet come. “Think up a better hot dog and you’re immediately branded as some kind of nut,” he said. But last spring, Hiddleson resigned as chief embalmer at Olinger’s Mortuary to devote himself to promoting Rock-Os. He has designed an adaptor to convert vertical hot dogs into circu lar hot dogs and has begun negotiations for supermarket sales as well as franchise operations. “With good promotion, schoolkids’ contest for the best Rock-0 stuffing and so on, we could franchise this for $250,000 or $300,000in each and every state,” he said. Hiddleson’s other inventions — the perfumed horse manure and fiberglass burial vaults — had mixed reviews. He made 8100,000 from Thoroughbred Perfumed Horse Manure, but bombed out on the caskets. Singles like home-buying United Press International WASHINGTON - Young, unmar ried men and women increasingly are buying houses to prove to their employers they are stable and reli able, a mortgage insurance company president says. Singles have moved so decidedly into the housing market, said Jackson W. Goss, president of Tiger Investors Mortgage Insurance Co. of Boston, that he predicts they will make up 20 percent of all home pur chasers during the next two years. "We predict that approximately one out of every five homes sold in 1979 and 1980 will be purchased by sing les,” Goss said. “This is quite a de velopment when one remembers that 10 years ago singles repre sented less than 4 percent of the market and that five years ago the same group counted for one of every 18 buyers,” he added. A new survey of single persons! acket indicats the 24 to 29 age brae BILL elo< will for Rex non PLAN r Scic Boo HORS of I Sci< sess PRE-IV ver: in F and pro] GYM IN Uni Mai ARTS at £ dun crof late PLAN! ence leav OH Cl scht ROAD Rud BONF] the CONG Mat SENIO due TAMU Lam Hall CEPH] lette NO SC SHIRTS Woodstone Center 907 Harvey Rd. (Hwy. 30) 693-9308 'We Sell Shirts' Open 9-9 that purchasing a home was tbe)io| 1 priority on their must-have Goss said. Highlights of the survey: —Young singles said owning home indicated to their peers, ployers and business associates credible picture of stability, was particularly important in con vincing employers that singles stable people. —Young people are quite as of the tax saving and equity invi ment involved in owning a The survey found this was parties 1 larly true of young women, "showed a keen understanding off EGE-BRYAN. TEX. 77*01*(713)779-4*J3 Mexican Stew Meat in a Flour Tortilla —Singles favor buying a tow house over other structures becau* it provides privacy while allowiii for “as much social contact as tk owner desires.” They feel a to« house is more efficient, has mos conveniencies and is easier to maif tain. A town house also represent the best buy. The survey indicated that by 1$ as many young unmarried womei would be interested in buying home as young unmarried men. The survey was done by mortgf insurance offices throughout tk United States and the home-buyiii trends, Goss said, have been coi firmed by lenders in several citiei [ SC CHRISTMAS TREE COMMITTEE P CHRISTMAS \ 1 / AROUND THE WORLD NOV. 29, 1978 7:39 NSC LOU MCE RECEPTI9N F9LL9WIM8 For the Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony 291 NSC So T/r 405