features Battalion/Page September 16, Now You Know United Press International • Almost 89 percent of all col- ► lege engineering students are I male. Pizzeria rare treat for Russian diners tr **¥¥*?¥¥*¥ l SCHULMAN J ♦ THEATRES J * i SCHULMAN6 { * » ^ 2000 E.29-775-2<83-775-2468 J t The Best Little 5 1. 7;15 : 9:40 + J Whorehouse in ♦ Texas 7:15-9:40 United Press International MOSCOW — The newest piz zeria in the land of borscht and potatoes has a strict policy. No orders “to go.” “The Italian chef definitely told us, ‘If you reheat it, it’s not pizza,’” said Ludmilla Stogova, manager of the restaurant at 37 Gorky street, a prime location on one of Moscow’s major shop ping streets. The no take-out policy and the placement of 16 tables in a room that could easily hold twice as many shows profit is less im portant at a state-run cafe than it would be in the West. So does its strictly socialist name: Frunzensky District Cafe No. 1. Mrs. Stogova said with pride that business doubled the day af ter her establishment was re viewed in the evening Moscow newspaper some weeks ago. Mrs. Stogova herself, like many Russians, was not familiar with pizza before the restaurant opened for business June 21. The management offers what it describes as genuine Neapoli- tan-style pizza, prepared according to the recipes of a chef brought in by an Italian firm that hopes to set up more pizzer ias across the country. In the course of recent visits prices varied remarkably. On one occasion three pizzas, a cheese turnover and three soft drinks cost $12.25. Another day three pizzas were only $3.75. Garp 7:15-10:00 Six Pack * * -* 7:20-9:25 X The Secret of 1 N-l-M-H | 7:10-9:25 Porky’s (R) 1 7:25-9:50 * Star Wars * * lilWM * * * * * MANOR EAST III* Manor E. Mall 823-8300 3 An Officer and a 3 J Gentleman J X— u 7;15-9:50 _> J Monty Python £ 3 7:25-9:35 3 7:25-9:35 ^Things are Tough} All Over hsvHmp * 2000 £20-822-3300 ■T EAST rA * * YoungOoctors In Lova Quest For Fire * > * * -* > -> Don’t Qo In The Woods Grim Reaper Campus, Rocky III * * * * ■* i > ********** ***.* MtUIMI courtesy of FIVE DIFFERENT STYLES AND PRICES Sbisa Commons A P O ON SALE EACH HOME GAME WEEK IN MSC: Tu-Thurs. 10-4; Fri. 10-1 Tu-Thurs. 11-1; 4-7; Fri. 11-1 * FREE DELIVERY ON CAMPUS and at three off campus dist. centers Your National Service Fraternity A P O MSC-TOWN-HALL W SPYRO 30 v 0 -- GYP A "Y1 £' An Encounter with Today’s Finest / JAZZ GROUP 7,// in Rudder Auditorium September 24 at 8 p.m Tickets: $ 6 50 MSC Box Office syso.sQoo 845-1234 General Admission / ( t / * j r. v, * f •■i, U / w Sept. 13 Woi terror caust, radial If pros pi pressii Me lieve would poisor would world life wc staff photo by Jane Hollingsworth September Snow Skier David Jarratt, a senior marketing 1° do a 360-degree turn in his major from Kingwood, learns how physical education skiing class. present ment. Rea [5-day w ment ir numbe On. of the ‘no nul civil dis nuclear Cobbling trade taking steps toward revival tounti \ Comm: and Mil in New shelters United Press International NEW YORK — After 40 years of steady decline, the cobbling trade is growing rapidly again because of the high price of new shoes. Back in 1940, there were 50,000 shoe repair shops in the United States. The number dwindled for various reasons to between 9,000 and 15,000 by 1977. Now it’s approaching 20,000 again according to Fred Trezise of AMMERICAN Bil- trite, Inc., of Chelsea, Mass., maker of Cat’s Paw and other lines of shoe repair products. The Shoe Service Industry Council in Chicago puts the fi gures a little lower, saying the number of shops fell to a low of 9,600 and now is something over 12,000. The cobbling trade’s long de cline had many causes. Trezise said he thinks the biggest was affluence and the growth of the “throwaway” psychology in American society. Another was a drop in immig ration from Italy, the country from which more cobblers came than any other. And as was the case with the immigrants who The Resale Gallery""! Furniture I New and Used at affordable prices I 2795 S. Texas 775-7300 across from Brazos Savings » manned New York’s garment industry, Trezise said, many of the cobblers who were successful wanted their children to move up to some more prestigious vocation. The Shoe Service Industry Council and Trezise agreed on three other reasons: rising rents for the shops, the mechanization of the trade requiring a substan tial investment in machinery and, above all, the rapid diver sifying of shoe manufacturing from leather into synthetic materials that are not easy to re pair or economically unfeasible to repair. It ceased to pay parents, for example, to repair children’s shoes was done routinely in the days of all-leather shoes. Whatever the causes, it be came kind of hard to find a shoe repair shop in many communi ties, particularly suburban com munities. But now inflation has raised the prices of new shoes 83 per cent in the last three years alone and 300 to 400 percent in a de cade — and leather shoes are enjoying a comeback. Inflation has driven the cost of repairing shoes up too and some of the shops in high rent locations are forced to demand payment in advance or substan tial deposits. Both Trezise and the Shoe In dustry Service Council said, however, repair costs have not gone up as much as the price of Ur In m; new shoes. The council saiditi virtually impossible to say jus how much repair costs hW gone up because cobbling still a highly individualistic tradt very few of the shops keep cart ful records and there is n; any uniformity in theit methoi has bee of calculating costs and price Hans be Trezise said he did not thinl: World prices had gone up more dial inflation of the dollar and proli ably less than that in manyareas The present high prices natu rally have caused Biltrite other makers of shoe Finding look for improved waystorepai shoes. One such by Biltrite is s tough, thin, textured plasticoul er sole that can be applied toatu new smooth-soled shoe to vent wear and to a worn so[c| extend wear. Available forabuui half the cost of a standard resol ing job, it is said to last Ion than the conventional sole has to be applied by a cobbler® a press and the precisely ri| adhesive must be used. Theoiit er sole has been used in Europt for some years but is new toll® United States, Trezise said. To stimulate interest in repair as a career, the Rubbei Manufacturers’ Association h® prepared, and the Shoe Servlet Institute in Chicago is distribul ing, a booklet describing shot repair service and offering ll® Institute’s assistance in locatin schools or work-study situations Pizza ixm u. U F But ited S threate tructioi when 1 atomic Like defensi fallen s Thi passed 1954,t leasing tributii lion th damag ger of Th menda set asic admin Buy one pizza, get the For pizza out, it’s Pizza Inn. T I i I I si 2D j next smaller size for 99C I Buy any Original Thin Crust or Sicilian I Topper pizza and get the next smaller same | stylepizza with eoual number of toppings. I for 99C. Present this coupon with guest $ I check. Not valid with any other offer. $2.00, $1.50, or $1.00 off. I Expiration: 9/22/82 BnalnalJ - Buy any Original Thin Crust or Sicilian I Topper pizza, and get $2.00 off a large, | $1.50 off a medium or $1.00 off a small ( size pizza. Present this coupon with guest check. Not valid with any other offer .1 Expiration: 9/22/82 Pizza inja\j 413 Texas College Station Tx 846-6164 We will soon have home delivery