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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1984)
Page 4AThe Battalion/Monday, October 8, 1984 LAWRENCE J. CHASE, M.D. Announces the opening of his office for the practice of PLASTIC & RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY and SURGERY OF THE HAND 1121 Briarcrest Suite 101 Office Hours By Appointment EUROPEAN FUN CHARTER Brazos Transit System now has transportation available to the 10th An nual Texas Renaissance Festival. For only $25.00 you can purchase round trip transportation plus entrance to the most magical enchanted kingdom in the state of Texas. Relax in the comfort of our air conditioned buses as we transport you back to the 16th century near Magnolia, Texas. Call us now at 779-9156 and make your reservation for the Saturday you wish to attend. kinko's by Scott McCi fa< to I fin< 201 College Main 846-8721 October 6,13,20,& 27 November 3 & 10 31 HERB’S ARCADE “Cheapest Arcade in the City!” 48 Tokens for $5 00 8 Tokens for $1 00 We leave when you leave. 2 Blocks down from Loupot’s 303 College Main 846-0479 r — — sr - v RESTAURANT 801 Wellborn Hwy College Station 696-4118 TRY OUR LUNCH SPECIAL! $3.95 prices from $1.95 Gallery is pleased to extend atsun the 10% JSE % Student ■fist* A* Discount w/current Aggie I.D 1214 Texas Ave. 775-1500 $ 5.59 10 Pieces of Chicken. 8 rolls. Regularly $777 No limit on number of purchases per coupon. Offer expires 10/11/84 1905 Texas Ave. 693-1669 705 N. Texas Ave. 822-2819 512 Villa Maria 822-5277 Chicken ’n rolls PANNING FOR GOLD? '•"ftopr, The Corps of Cadets gets its news from the Batt. Try our Battalion Classified!!! 845-2611 MSC Cafeteria Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. Each Daily Special Only $2.59 Plus Tax. “Open Daily” Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M.—4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M. MONDAY EVENING TUESDAY EVENING SPECIAL SPECIAL Salisbury Steak Mexican Fiesta with Dinner Mushroom Gravy Two Cheese and Whipped Potatoes Onion Enchiladas w/ Chili Mexican Rice Your Choice of One Vegetable Patio Style Pinto Beans Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tos^adas Coffee or Tea Coffee or Tea One Corn Bread and Butter WEDNESDAY EVENING SPECIAL Chicken Fried Steak w/Cream Gravy Whipped Potatoes and Choice of one other Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea 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 FOR YOUR PROTECTION OUR PERSONNEL HAVE HEALTH CARDS Alcohol Aggies Against Drunk Drivers helps By KATHI COOK Reporter Friends don’t let friends drive drunk. This is one message Aggies Against Drunk Drivers, a student group started last year to work clo sely with the Brazos County chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Drivers, hopes to spread on campus. AADD receives information and support from the local MADD chap ter in return for their cooperation in MADD’s community functions. “We share the same goals as MADD,” Roy Hogan, sponsor of AADD and a member of MADD, said. “I think this is a great opportu nity for students to increase the awareness of the average college stu dent of drinking and driving. It is a common thing — it goes along with college life.” Some members have lost friends or family members because of drunk • drivers. “It is a problem, and people don’t realize it until it happens near them,” Lee Ann Snodgrass, vice president of AADD, said. Snodgrass, who lost her sister to a drunk driver last year, said members have joined just to increase aware ness about what they consider a se rious problem. AADD has formed committees to increase their visibility and has been finding members to speak at various student group meetings such as Off- Campus Aggies. “We’re also talking to barsuj town to get signs posted fon home for people who aniifc Darren Martin,/president of said. Most alcohol-related deailii between midnight and 2 at the driver 18 to 22-years-old, said. The meet t< derTo The dress I demic the prc suppor dents. \ Eato sjty p«] -radu; ommer also adi The “The award ii nancial tional g dent approp levels n of the a in TA!\ credit 1 mester during : ,i The item at I AADD cejntributed to I the banner, Aggies Don’tLeili Drive Drunk, flown overSaitj football game. Mont Membership in AADDisi For more information call or come by cubicle oneintlidj ion. propr Demc Socia Ji Photo by JOHN MAKE}} Bob Hope is welcomed to Aggieland by cadets at Easterwood Airport. Bob Hope's humour ogeles (cor By ROBIN BLACK and KARLA MARTIN Staff Writer “Age doesn’t mean a damn thing anyway,” Bob Hope told the audience at his concert here Friday night. “It’s how you feel — attitude.” The 81 -year-old comedian cer tainly lives up to his motto; he doesn’t act his age (on purpose) and he never stops smiling when he’s onstage. Hope made ’em laugh for about an hour and a half Friday night in a nearly full G. Rollie White Coliseum with a mix of sto ries, one-liners and songs. After struggling through a slightly less than mediocre open ing act, the audience was very re ceptive to Hope to the tune of about three standing ovations. Hope came onstage to a med- of ley of his songs ranging from “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes” to “Thanks for the Memories,” and then he plunged into a deluge of local humor. He was obviously well-briefed on current local events. He talked about Aggie quarterback Kevin Murray, mentioned the Dixie Chicken and poked fun at local burg North Zulch. Hope left no joke unturned as he quipped about golf, Miss America, football, old age and re ligion. He even brought up Mi chael Jackson and surprised the audience with a short moonwalk across the stage. A highlight of the concert was his USA medley where he sang about Chicago to Oklahoma to Carolina and closed it with a few bars of the Aggie War Hymn (to the obvious delight of the A&M crowd). Hope was fresh and funny and seemed to enjoy the shoitf more than the audience did. Hope arrived in town all terwood Airport a fewl fore the show and wasgi two Corps outfits. voyag has sp lookir Las about two n down g>ngf “They scared the hellouij me,” Hope said after here# the outfits. “I thought I tvasln drafted.” Hope also was member of the Con federate'' Force, Edwin H. Higgins. gins presented Hope withanti i °logisi cial Aggie Wing baseball cap made the comedian an member of the Aggie Wingof 1 Confederate Air Force. Hope held a short press ference at the airport In going to his hotel to rest the snow. Shuttle (continued from page 1) FRIDAY EVENING SPECIAL Fried Catfish Filet w/T artar Sauce Cole Slaw Hush Puppies Choice of One Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee SATURDAY NOON and EVENING SPECIAL Yankee Pot Roast Texas Style (Tossed Salad) Mashed Potatoes w/Gravy Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee “Quality First” 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 batches of radar information total ing an hour’s worth of observations before they turned in for the night. The radar covers 5-mile strips of Earth in one second. The radar results can only be transmitted by using the dish an tenna. Its ability to automatically seek out the relay satellite quit Friday night, about 12 hours after Chal lenger blasted away from Florida. “That was a pretty impressive op eration there,” said Ronald McNair, who radioed up instructions from engineers in mission control. “I think between this crack shot team of flight controllers and those ace crew members up there, we’ve got a real smooth operation going here.” “We’re working under duress but we’re getting there,” Crippen said, who earlier appeared annoyed about the various directions he was given. “We hope we get these SIR-B (shut tle imaging radar) folks some data.” Officials said, however, the jury rigged radar transmission system meant that only about half of the original 50 hours of radar data would be obtained. This is because the radar pictures cannot be beamed to the relay satellite as they are being taken, but must be recorded and transmitted later. The initial radar sent back Sunday contained images made Saturday of targets in the Sahara Desert in Egypt, in cloud-shrouded eastern Peru, in Europe and in a swath of the Indian Ocean off South Africa. Sunday’s radar targets included Australia, Europe, Asia, Africa, the United States and Canada. Leestma, meanwhile, opened some valves by remote control in sa tellite refueling equipment in Chal lenger’s cargo bay and transferred 128 pounds of hydrazine, sive and toxic rocket fuel, fi tank to another. It was a second successful Kf procedures future astronaut use to gas up a satellite. The astronauts earlier S« ! lowered the ship’s orbit by IS* to improve the radar observe This produced a spectacular i: for t he crew as the ship r 1 through the very thin fringes 1 * mosphere south of Australia. Oxvgen atoms hitting the outside skin glowed in thedi the Southern Lights. The spacewalk origii planned to practice satellite^ inp operations and that 0 ing op< still will be carried out. “W1 will b put oi posed “We’r place are.” To Jamaii which the ea man-n object: tions. netie pent was area Thi coven from depos that ; doesn “Es has tc treate if it Smith All out C< deter Sm the ci forts hecai but t scare “If we’ll ] resea thejj tory ( land, we’ll matte