/ THE BATTALION Page 13 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1979 Girl, 16, impaled on fence; spikes removed surgically 97! What’s up at Texas A&M IMi; |!>' ; have 1 ms for trying! es. Environos the Bonfire i destruction , ; chemicals m fr,. 1 nursuay mted pollutit eel thattheli THE SEVEN FACES OF DR. LAO”: A story of an unusual circus fire hazard fc which changes the lives of all who see it, starring Tony Randall as a site. ■ mysterious Chinese ringmaster. Will be shown at 8 and 10:30 p.m. DonalddariA j n Room 601 of Rudder Tower. Admission — 75 (G) ! e r?e m ?» BRARY REFERENCE DIVISION: A representative from Pre- c e o owipT n tice Hall Loose Leaf Services will discuss the effective use of their canceled, rge areas oil annually burning o ask theSti te a clean-up the Bonfire sing battle. Hifire const iliday. Classen st Monday attempt to jn compleiit;| ersity adraiii rat many sit-: ig on theirs! king an e i, didawaywi) nators world acquire a sir Tax Service materials in Room 204C of the Library from 10:30 a.m. to 12 p.m., and from 2:30-4 p.m. jEXAS A&M FENCING CLUB: Will meet at 7 p.m. in Room 261 of G. Rollie White. (EAF AND HEARING IMPAIRED: Will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Brethren Church of Bryan-College Station to elect a vice president and have a business meeting. ILASS OF ’80 DANCE: Featuring Dale McBride’s Magic Valley Band at Cell Block Five, from 8 p. m. to midnight. Admission — $2 per person, with SObeer. Everyone is invited. $UMAN FACTORS SOCIETY: Dr. Earl Lafevers will discuss elec tromyographic research in NASA manned space flights at 7 p.m. in Room 342, Zachry. ,RT EXHIBIT: Trilogy Part I — THE EIGHT, from the collection of J.W. Runyon ’35, will be on exhibit until Dec. 9 on the first floor of the Library. Docents are available 12:30-1:30 p.m. Monday I through Friday for guided tours. TAMU EMERGENCY CARE TEAM: Mary Arnold will discuss crisis |»l intervention at 7:30 p.m. in Room 308, Rudder, hich to cM tt GGIE CHRISTMAS CARD SALES: The Class of’80 will be selling and lumberlt | . Thelandisi vners whoa have their reasonable Christmas cards in the MSC and at the MSC Box Office in Rudder Tower through Dec. 14. A package of ten is $2.50, and there are two designs to choose from. HI ALPHA THETA: The History honor society will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room 502, Rudder. Gordon Daniels, diplomat-in- residence at A&M, will discuss “Strategic Implications of the Mid dle East Peace.” SC POLITICAL FORUM: Aggieland pictures will be taken at 8:30 p.m. in the MSC Main Lounge. ial Pow(r j40RIENTEERING CLUB: Will meet at 7:3j0 p.m. in Room 315, >een for the0 Military Sciences Bldg. The Dec. 8 and spring meets will be discussed. irlpawavW RADIO: Group pictures will be taken for the Aggieland at 9 p.m. in Lounge B-l. 4ETHODIST STUDENT MOVEMENT: Will hold a marriage semi nar discussing the spiritual aspects of marriage. ENTECOSTAL UPPER ROOM: A Bible study will be held at 7:45 p.m. in the Meditation Room of All Faiths Chapel. Everyone is welcome. ting area t kling a cookj a proposed >n the Friday ideaway I ildlife. ;s wassf curricular cii [M-Ricega® King Owl ! as the MOB irmance to Texas A&Mt ;gies was not® ; the MOBi ' AGGIE BO NFIRE: Will be lighted at 7:30 p.m. on the Duncan 1 f ? r 11 sever ^ i Intramural Field. e following* 5? , , louston andc PRAIRIE LEAGUE: Will have a concert in :G. Rollie' White . •aclitional 'p t ' Coliseum at 9 p.m,,.aft@jn the Bonfire. coach AlCoii ffHLLELFOUNDATION: Services will be held at 6p.m. at the Hillel is pre-game Foundation. Refreshments will be served after the bonfire. . .. ELEPHANT SHIRT SALES: Today is the last day to buy Class of’80 •vas brought s h} r t s in the MSC. The T-shirts are $4, and the Jerseys are $6.50. SOCIOLOGY CLUB: Will meet at 7 p.m. in the library on the 10th floor of Rudder. Ron Winns from the Placement Office will speak. All Sociology and Liberal Arts students are welcome. fire went in VICTORY CONCERT: With Terry Clark at 9 p.m. at the Middle m theirsw School Auditorium (Jersey & Holick streets). Sponsored by Alders- rom the It 5 gate United Methodist Church. ^ ‘"ulI ^AINT ANDREW’S DAY: Peanut Butter Fellowship and Junk Food would bev Party from 11:30 p.m. to 12:45 a.m. at Rudder Tower Fountain, to the Bow sponsored by UCM. og, for ® , ca> fire wentinti their s the Texas Galveston pc their firstco? re, a40-foo!J >, Norway, leant to bea: s and its to kecp*> -e has soniefe disappoint# n of Presit in 1963 nfire. Onl; cn erected •ationbystid , it was deed not be held id byafatali was killed James Ed* rownsville, J Old High"* HowAggieoC 1 shingcar. inksgiving -■ 1 to the stud- f a fellow GROMETS: Gaming sessions at 7 p.m. in Room 140 of the MSC. Saturday MSC BASEMENT COMMITTEE: Woody Woodruff, Jim Dawkins, and Baylis and Schulte will perform at 7:30 p.m. in the Basement Coffeehouse. “THE FIFTH MUSKETEER”: Beau Bridges, Sylvia Kristel and Ursula Andress star in this ongoing saga of the classic novel. Will be shown at 8 p.m. in Rudder Theater. (PG) NDIA ASSOCIATION: Will show the Hindi movie “Priyatama” at 7 p.m. in Room 112, O&M. ALL-GIRLS-FREE PARTY: Will be held at 8 p.m. in Brazos Center. Presented by Moses, Moore, Schumacher and Walton Halls. FORCE 10 FROM NAVARONE”: Robert Shaw and Barbara Bach are on a World War II mission to destroy a bridge linking the German forces with their Italian allies. Will be shown at midnight in Rudder Theater. (PG) FOOTBALL: The Aggies will play the University ofTexas at 1:30 p. m. in Kyle Field. CLEARANCE Fall and Winter Fabrics — a large selection from our regu lar stocks — in time for holiday sewing. Woolens and Woolen blends 50% off Vogue, Butterick, McCall patterns 50% off Dark prints and solids reg. $3.98 NOW $ 1 99 Polyester and cotton blends Ultrasuede® reg. $50.00 NOW $ 35 00 With each purchase register for a $100 gift certificate to be given away each month. War life revealed from WWI letters A packet of letters found in the Texas A&M University Archives, written by a soldier during World War I reveals how life was for the men who fought with the Allies in France and Germany. “I got a great long gun with a sharp thing on the end of it, he wrote his folks. “I am sure I could kill a squir rel with it. I wouldn’t trade it for nothing, unless some dogs. ” With his great long gun, the late Felix J. Stalls of Deport shot a per fect score on the Camp Travis rifle range, a feat that astounded his su periors. The best shot in the regi ment learned on the creeks and river bottoms of the Red River Valley. The 70 letters of the stoical North east Texas farmer were obtained by history professor Dr. Henry De- thloff through Texas A&M senior Dean Murray, great-nephew of Stalls and a member of the Corps of Cadets from Houston. “His letters show him to have been a man of simple values and sim ple tastes,” said Murray, who will be commissioned in the Army upon gra duation. “It’s refreshing to read them.” Rarely using periods and often misspelling words, Stalls often asked about the crops back home and more than once in letters from overseas mentioned his desire to get home, “maybe in time to thin the corn. ” Though he grew up near Paris he never saw the sights of the same- named city in France during a year in Europe with Company E of the 359th Infantry, a regiment of “Texas’ Own” 90th Infantry Division. Com pany E was formed of men from Lamar, Fannin and Delta counties. Stoicism of the soldier, first in his company to make corporal at Camp Travis, is revealed in an Oct. 17, 1918, letter to his parents. “It’s looking like winter but why should I worry. I have a good bed for tonight and I let each day look out for itself,” Stalls wrote less than a month before the war-ending Armistice was signed. The Armistice was accepted by the Allies 61 years ago. Sergeant Stalls wrote little of the action he and two other Lamar County soldiers, Clarence Nobles and Edgar Hood, experienced. He explained, “You get as much news about the war as I do and quicker (in the newspaper), so I will not try to write it.” His letters, censored to prevent disclosing Allied troop locations, in dicated he was given command re sponsibility. “My lieutenant is not with us right now and I am in charge of the pla toon. I am hardly capable of taking charge, but I guess I am or they would not give me the place. I sure will be glad when the lieutenant comes back.” Unscathed by enemy weapons fire. Stalls was hospitalized once. “We went over the top yesterday morning. I never got wounded but I got some gas. Not very much, just enough to send me off for three to four days,” he wrote, trying to keep his mother from worrying. “A few got killed in the drive but we went on after the Huns. The worst of all they shot my lieutenant and killed him right by my side. It is the lieutenant I thought so much of. So when they killed him I takened the men and went right on with the fighting. A Jan. 19, 1919, letter, after fight ing ended, revealed, “I saw lots of things that I do not want to see any more. You cannot imagine what hap pens in war. Anybody that has saw what I have does not want to see any more war.” Stalls never complained about food, but dietary variety crept into his thinking as time neared to ship home in mid-1919. “Be sure to save me some eggs, for I am egg hungry,” he wrote. About Christmas time, 1918, when he sent home a coupon for a three-pound Christmas box each sol dier was allowed (he asked for coco nut and peppermint stick candy and a fountain pen), Stalls commented on his condition, “I’m not sick, just sore and I sure do need the rest.” United Press International NEW YORK — A teenage girl who fell five floors down an airshaft was impaled Wednesday on a spiked iron fence for several hours before rescuers cut her loose with portions of the fence still in her, police said. A Bellevue Hospital spokesman said Lori Morgan, 16, of Old Bridge, N. J., was in critical condition follow ing surgery to remove the iron fence spikes in her body and to repair broken bones. Rescue teams freed Miss Morgan from the 12-foot-high fence in the alley next to the building only by sawing through the spikes. “Miraculously there were no vital organs hit,” the hospital spokesman said. “That’s what saved her.” Police said they did not know if anyone was on the roof with the girl when she fell about 5 a.m. Wednesday. FORT 1 J STEAKHOUSE i i i A UNIQUE EXPERIENCE IN GOOD FOOD, FUN AND FRIENDS. 2528 S. Texas College Station Texas Legislator John Sharp discussing “Permanent Uni versity Fund — What it Means to T.A.M.U. and to YOU.” December 3, 1979 Noon, 226 MSC Free v\c i> UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 315 N. College Main 846-6687 Hubert Beck, Pastor AND „ BEHOLD DON’T LET CHRISTMAS CATCH YOU BY SURPRISE! PREPARE FOR IT NOW . . . NOT ONLY BY SHOPPING EARLY AND SENDING CHRISTMAS CARDS IN TIME, BUT BY WORSHIPING. WE’D BE GLAD TO HAVE YOU SHARE OUR PREPARATIONS SUNDAY. WORSHIP SERVICES AT 9:15 A.M. AND 10:45 A.M. WORSHIP CELEBRATION AT 6 P.M. Midweek Service of Meditation and Contemplation with Holy Commun ion every Wednesday at 10 p.m. XZHvs/cZv SWEATER LEGS Academy Award Winning THE SEVEN PACES OF DR. LAO starring Tony Randall Barbara Eden Thurs., Nov. 29 8 & 10:30 p.m. 601 Rudder 75# w/TAMU ID presented by MSC Cepheid Variable MEAT, FISH and LIQUOR CO. SERVING LUNCH MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 11-2. Now featuring a large assortment of salads, sandwiches and burgers. SERVING DINNER MONDAY THRU SATURDAY AT 5 P.M. Prime Rib, Steaks, Lobster, Stuffed Flounder and many spectacular desserts. NEW — WONDERFULLY ORIGINAL MAD MIN UTES. From 4:30-6:30 — All drinks poured double with a variety of hot and cold hors d’oeuvres. 771K Culpepper Plaza Open 10-6 Mon.-Sat. LUNCHEON PARTIES SPECIAL DINNER OCCASIONS REHEARSAL DINNERS 815 Harvey Rd. College Station 693-1991