It leen “ rankedJ in rig| WesteJ wed. ; °> *y his wec| cord, asationsj s rorismij astantialj •nmentlj Uon toij m riglj les, accused! id wars a worseM| in sucluj a, unde! eofAf® testnen j loa 5St tional m thatu i million! t rates kj ring I s undo ie Capitol| s. . Bill Mdj ep. ille, woi cent i is to 12p igs andli 1 if mortpl ilable. i Texas! others 1 off' aimetl iders win | rd cheduled] ie .chamh commill anticip{ sident 1 f thei sriority o(| sion. ale, its it person« 140,(1 st whet] 427 a i ance. the Tesi-j rin morlJ rcent inlf] itionsind I pe ome buid feeling loans ah ntageo id. “Son! ns, but» With FoodS' OP.M tY CIAL Steak avy >s and other what’s up? Monday HASSLE-FREE: There will be a mandatory training session for all new reps at 7 p.m. in the Willowick party room. PLANT PATHOLOGY SEMINAR: “Texas Root Rot of Cotton” will be the topic of his seminar at 4 p.m. in Room 112/113, Plant Science Building. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: There will be a reception for all international students with coffee and doughnuts at 7 p.m. in Room 205, MSC. MSC ARTS COMMITTEE: “The Films of Gerald Malanga,” a spe cial film program consisting of films by Malanga, will be shown at 8 p.m. in Rudder Theater. (R) BASKETBALL: The women’s team will play the University of Texas at 5:15 p.m. in G. Rollie White Coliseum. The men’s team will play the University of Texas at 7:30 p.m. PLACEMENT OFFICE: Graduating seniors who wish to interview for the following companies may begin signing up today for inter views on Feb. 26: Aetna Insurance Co., Air Force, Baker Packers, Beech Aircraft Corp., Bell Helicopter, Crum & Forster Insur ance, Dames & Moore, Data General Corp., Dow Chemical, Electronic Data Systems, Fluor Engineering Constructors, Geosource Inc., General Atomic Co., Harris Corp., Mid-Valley Inc., Morrison-Knudson, Morse Chain, Div. of Borg Warner, Seidman & Seidman, Transco, Turner Construction, Union Elec tric, Veterans Administration. Tuesday PRE-MED, PRE-DENT SOCIETY: Members of the admissions committee from Baylor Medical School will be in Room 113, BSBE, at 7:30 p.m. There will be a reception and refreshments afterward. AMERICAN HUMANICS STUDENT ASSOCIATION: Joe Yoke, scout executive for Bay Area Council, will speak on “Time Man agement” at 6 p.m. COLLEGIATE FFA: Dean Dwayne Suter will speak at 7:30 p.m. in Room 110, HECC. TEXAS ENERGY EXTENSION SERVICE: Tom Borski will speak on “Energy Effecient Practice in New Home Construction” at 7 p.m. in Room 109, A&M Consolidated High School. MSC ARTS COMMITTEE: Presents “The Poetry of Gerard Malanga” at 8 p.m. in Rudder Forum. Admission is free and there will be a reception following in the MSC Gallery. MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY SOCIETY: There will be a program by Christine Thompsom, Director of Spohn School of Medical Technology, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 137A, MSC. ENGLISH SOCIETY: Lloyd Lyman, director ofTAMU University Press, will discuss publishing at 7 p.m. in Room 137,MSC. PANHANDLE HOMETOWN CLUB: Will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room 139, MSC. ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY SOCIETY: There will be an elec tion of officers and plans will be made for the All-Night Fair at 7:30 p.m. AGGIE CINEMA: “The Count of Monte Cristo,” the classic tale of riches and revenge as a young sailor, unjustly imprisoned in a dungeon, escapes to discover fabulous treasure and fortune, will be shown at 8 p.m. in Room 201, MSC. (G) PLACEMENT OFFICE: Graduating seniors who wish to interview for the following companies may begin signing up today for inter views on Feb. 27: Action-Peace Corp., Allen-Bradley Co., Allied Chemical, Amoco Production Co., Central Distributors Inc., Electronic Data Systems, ESD Co., Gulf States Utilities Co., Harris Corp., Hydril Co., Inspiration Consolidated Copper Co., Michigan-Wisconsin Pipeline, Morrison Knudson, J.C. Penney, Production Credit Association, RSD Co., Schlumberger, South west Life Insurance Co., Tom Brown Inc. Wednesday BASEMENT COFFEEHOUSE: There will be a general meeting and auditions at 7:30 p.m. in the Coffehouse. WRESTLING: The Texas A&M Wrestling Team will wrestle Rich land Junior College and Southwest Texas State University at 7 p.m. in DeWare Field House. BASKETBALL: The men’s team will play TCU in Fort Worth. The women’s team will play Panola Junior College at 7 p.m. in G Rollie White Coliseum. SAFETY EDUCATION: The Safety Education Program at Texas A&M will sponsor an Adult Driver Education course during March. For more information contact Tricia Lynch at 845-3020 by Feb. 16. AGGIE CINEMA: “The Edge,” the ultimate sports adventure film which explores the thrills of man’s most exotic sports featuring skiing, reef-diving, surfing, mountain climbing, hang-gliding, kayaking and ice climbing, will be shown at 8 p.m. in Room 201, MSC. CO-OP FAIR: A “Co-op Fair” for Texas A&M students considering the university’s cooperative education will be from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Representatives from the various colleges will be located in the following areas: Science — MSC corridor, Archiecture and Environmental Design — Langford Center main hall. Agriculture — Ag Hall first floor and Langford Center first floor. Engineering — Zachry main hall. Liberal Arts — Harrington Center first floor. Biomedical Sciences — Veterinary Medicine Administration Building third floor. PLACEMENT OFFICE: Graduating seniors who wish to interview for the following companies may begin signing up today for inter views on Feb. 28: Action-Peace Corp., American Can Co., Amoco Production Co., Bank of the Southwest, Cessna Aircraft, Dow Chemical, First City National Bank, Fort Worth National Bank, Honeywell Inc., Hughes Tool Co., Inspiration Consolidated Cop per Co., Loyd Electric Co., Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Group, Production Credit Association, St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co., Schlumberger (Research and Development), Schlumberger Well Services, Seismograph Services Corp., Timberline Systems, Kurt Salmon. RECEPTION for Internationl Students LA agrees to host Olympics United Press International NEW YORK — The United States Olympic Committee and the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee jointly approved Satur day an agreement to hold the Games of the 23rd Olympiad in Los Angeles in 1984. After the agreement to hold the first games in Los Angeles since 1932 was approved by the USOC executive board, the announcement was made by Robert Kane, USOC president, and John Argue, tem porary chairman of the LAOOC. The accord was reached after five weeks of negotiations to draw up a contract based on the principals agreed to on Dec. 10. The agreement now goes before the International Olympic Com mittee, headquartered in Lausanne, Switzerland. THE BATTALION MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12. 1979 Page 7 Gamblers drop $1.8 billion in ’78 in Nevada halls United Press International CARSON CITY, Nev. — Gamblers dropped a record $1.8 bil lion at Nevada’s casinos in 1978. The Nevada Gaming Control Board reported Friday that the casinos paid $96.5 million in taxes to the State of Nevada for 1978. The gross revenues — casino winnings — were 21.5 percent higher than in 1977. Casinos’ profits are confidential. “Bernie” Catfish & “Clyde” Chicken Have A Monday Special For You ... Our Regular $4.95 “All You Can Eat” Catfish or Chicken $095 DINNERS SPECIALLY PRICED AT MONDAYS ONLY (with or without coupons) Mon.-Fri. 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m. and 5 p.m.-8:30 p.m. Sat.-Sun. 11 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Just 2.5 miles west on Hwy. 60 c Clips Hair Design Studio For Men and Women The only complete studio and hair design shop in Bryan-College Station. From our staff to you for the DAY OF LOVE - VALENTINES DAY. Texturizers & Permanents FACIALS BY LUCIA ADAMS Complete Line of Edips Makeup Hair Design and Precision Cutting 4343 Carter Creek 846-4709 Makeover and Makeup Consultation W/Debi Bavousett Aggieland Inn 693-1893 Stop missing your phone calls. m vMmmsmk* mm Stop wondering and worrying about missing phone calls and come see the most advanced telephone answering system at the GTE Phone Mart. The exciting Code-A-Phone 1600. Its a decorator telephone that also answers calls and takes messages for you when youVe not at home or just too busy. It even comes with a pocket coder that lets you play back your messages from ^ an y outside phone. And when you are at home, it has an exclusive feature called Call Control that lets you fast forward or rewind the tape and selectively play back or erase an individual message. Wha^s more, it's so easy to operate. So if you want to make your life simpler with f a new Code-A-Phone 1600, come to the GTE ff-£r" HP Phone Mart for a demonstration soon. Because, more than just a phone store, we're your phone company. ''wfc- Qjo-a-e-' \e>oo rxK: •CIAL ft :h iuce >ssing . BuW 33 of any lie Monday, 12th February 7:00 p.m. MSC 205 3tK=Z3C Coffee & Doughnuts Put a Code-A-Phone in your life. PHone marcr Culpepper Plaza PRESENTED BY THE ISA