I i. age 4/The Battalion/Tuesday, July 19,1983 Bryan family makes wine i! 1 y Anne McCauley Hedgcoxe Battalion Reporter The art of winemaking has )me to the Bryan-College Sta- on area under the name of tessina-Hof Wine Cellars — a imily owned and operated inery. Winemaster Paul Bonarrigo nd his wife Merrill are setting p a winery northeast of Bryan, t will be the fourteenth operat- ig winery in the state. The Bonarrigos began grow- ' ‘975 ing grapes in 1975 on a quarter of an acre of land. Today, the Bonarrigos are growing 17 acres of grapes and employ a full-time vineyard manager in addition to two other full-time employees. The Bonarrigos began with an experimental vineyard with the help of the Texas A&M Ex tension Horticulture Service. The service helped with choos ing the grapes and herbicides. The remaining work in the vineyard, however, was a family affair. “Paul is basically the wine maker,” Mrs. Bonarrigo says, “I do the scheduling and the pur chasing of equipment. “We pick by hand, we even crush and press our own grapes.” The Bonarrigos have been making wine for years, but the first commercial crush is sche duled for July through Septem ber. The first commercial re lease will be in November. The Bonarrigos will blend five different types of wine — a dry white, a sweet white, a dry red, a sweet red and an estate port. The wine will be produced and bottled under the name of Messina-Hbf Wine Cellars. “Messina” is the home of the Bonarrigo family, and “Hof’ for Hof, Bavaria, is the home of Mrs. Bonarrigo’s family. Local group opposes war by Gwendolyn Hattaway Battalion Reporter A local group opposing war id social injustice claim that ryan and College Station have sen left out of the peace move- icnt. “We feel it has been assumed tiat there is only one way to olve a conflict — war,” Marjorie ]oppock, a participant in the Irazos Valley Peace Action ;roup, said Sunday. The group wants a halt of mclear weapons production, ^hat Coppock called a “mutual- ifiable y verifiable freeze between Rus sia and the United States.” The group formed seven months ago after members of a Texas A&M Political Awareness Day booth, sponsored by a branch of the Quaker organiza tion, took names of people in terested in non-violent alterna tives to war. Later everyone who signed up was sent a list of the names. After calling each other, they decided to form a group, Coppock said. The group has no rigid struc ture with a president and mem bers. Instead there is a coordi nating committee of six people. About 95 names are on the mail ing list of the group which meets twice a month, Coppock said. The participants come from varied backgrounds. There are families, students, people from religious backgrounds opposing war and people claiming no reli gion at all, she said. “We are a diverse group — just people who have a concern,” she said. “Our purpose is to raise awareness of how to solve prob lems in a non-violent way. We are not just against nuclear weapons but also object to the death penalty, low pay of mig rant workers and other social in justices.” To raise local public aware ness, participants held an 18- hour candlelight vigil April 14 — the day before income taxes had to be mailed — in protest of tax money going toward nuclear weapons, Coppock said. “So much of our tax dollar is going toward projects to kill people, and that takes away from money that could go to ward education, health care and other human needs,” she said. “We realize people have diffe rent opinions,” she said. “We are not condemning people for that but we feel it is time we brought our concerns out into the open.” DeBakey resuming transplants United Press International HOUSTON — Dr. Michael )eBakey will soon resume per forming heart transplants at Houston’s Methodist Hospital, a procedure he abandoned in the early 1970s, a hospital official DID YOU KNOW? THEY AIN’T MAKIN’ NO MORE LAND? WHY WAIT? IF YOU ARE A VETERAN. . . YOU MAY BE ELIGIBLE TO PURCHASE A PIECE OF CHOICE LAND. VETERAN ADVANTAGES: 1. YOU GET CASH PRICE BECAUSE THE STATE OF TEXAS BUYS IT FOR YOU. YOU PAY ONLY $1200 DOWN (INCLUDING CLOSING COSTS). YOUR FINANCING IS AT 8V2%, 40 YEARS, SEMI-ANNUAL. WE PROCESS ALL YOUR PAPERWORK PROMPTLY AND ACCURATELY. THE VETERAN TRACTS ARE AVAILABLE NOW. . . OPEN OR WOODED. CALL ANYTIME FOR THE LOCATION. 2. 3. COUNTRY LAND COMPANY (713) 468-8501 said. DeBakey has said he stopped tranplants because of the enor mous financial and human costs and because techniques for warding off rejection were in adequate. In the 1970s, most re cipients lived for only a short while after transplant surgery. But with the development of an anti-rejection drug, other heart centers, such as the Texas Heart Institute with Dr. Denton Cooley and Stanford University in California, report great suc cess in transplants. The ex perimental drug is called Cyclos porine and is expected to be approved by the food and drug administration by the end of the summer. I by Ru Baltal Ipilege St; feltees he; Dill its budg Bight. Bill Wassc Klhairmai at ii would ur< es to of ms s “We are idget ” Wa: »all have t The budgt iard to c anges, Wa: let isn’t < staff photo by Eric Evinlf’‘ a ' lv t(,n * led progra Grapes at the Messina-Hof Winery near Bryan. Khe budg Htive is i St set prog en allow jrk within Student arrested for ‘flashing’ by Angel Stokes Battalion Staff A naked Texas A&M student was arrested in the Sterling C. Evans Library and charged with indecent exposure Wednesday. Jon A. Moore, 24, was arrested by undercover police woman Cabrina Tomlinson. University Police Chief Elmer E. Schneider said there had been several reports of a flasher in the library. Both male and female plainclothes officers had been placed in the library to attempt to catch the flasher, he said. Tomlinson was reading a book in a third floor study area in the Cushing Building, an old- COUPON 7Sy off any 2 entrees with this coupon. Good ’till July 31st. Eat Out In CLASS two potato... 102 Church St. College Station 846-0720 Each Bite an EDUCATION] in NUTRITION Hours: 7 days a week 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. iff" I TAMU er part of the library comp when someone approached^ from behind and tapped hot the shoulder, Schneider said I She turned around and% ’ United p suspect was standing to ELK CIT’ nude, Schneider said. >n of the BKge Fo When Tomlinson tokU n0uncec j flasher who she was, Schneik e ss confer said, the man ran towardtheliiokesman ] rary stacks. Tomlinson grabl* ||i a y him, placed him under aflt Aifim L and then allowed him to dK e nt for fun before taking him to theUni« Brotherf sity police station, he said, et^rans, sa Moore was taken to the£ 3u i ( [ Iq^ zos County Jail, where he^ Who say released on SI00 bond. 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