Breakfast at Wendy's 7:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Mon. - Sun. (your choice of mayonaise, catsup, pickle, onion, tomato, or lettuce) Ham and Cheese Omelet Platter Ham, Cheese & Mushroom Omelet Platter Ham, Cheese, Onion & Green Pepper Omelet Platter Mushroom, Onion & Green Pepper Omelet Platter Scrambled Egg Platter French Toast Breakfast Sandwich Home Fries Bacon Sausage O.J. Sunday Morning Specials This week: All you can eat "French Toast" 1,49 Available at both locations Drive thru open till 12:00 a.m. weekdays & 1 a.m. Fri./Sat. 10% discount w/ Aggie ID. Not valid with any other offer 1.89 1.89 1.89 1.89 1.29 1.49 .89 .49 .35 .49 .40 Petal Patch Florist 2 Locations 707 Shopping Village 696-6713 Post Oak Village-Hwy. 30 764-0091 Y'all come to see us! for Band Dance & Spring Formals Roses Orchids f\o^ e 10% off your with this cot expires ■■coupon' Now y that you can open a First City Even a small initial deposit can turn into a big investment. When you open a First City IRA. Start with just $100. Then you can make regular contributions in any amount you like. Up to $2,000 a year. The full amount is tax-deferrable. And, if you open your IRA before April 15, you can still save on your 1984 taxes. So why not get started now? At First City you can even open your IRA by mail. Saving now on taxes while you save for later on is probably the smartest investment you can make. And it’s never been easier. You can apply for a First City loan to get started. The loan interest is tax-deductible. Call our IRA specialists to find out more. Why wait any longer to open your IRA? When First City makes it easy for you to start enjoying die benefits today PirstCity Reaching further. Doing more. First City National Bank of Bryan 779-5402 MEMBER FDIC © 1984 FCBOT Page \ 4/The BattalionAVednesday, February 20, Bui.* m JfcwaAmJTiL 111 Woman nurse:a hurt black beafc Associated Press GOLDEN, Colo. — Lisa, an Alas kan black bear, is convalescing at the North American Wildlife Center on a diet of fish, grapes and vitamin- packed peanut butter and honey sandwiches. The cub, apparently born out of season, was found a year ago wan dering alone in Alaska’s Mount Mc Kinley National Park, bristling with quills from a porcupine attack. But thanks to the mothering of Vona Bates, director of the wildlife center — and plenty of wholesome food — Lisa has been transformed into a robust yearling that weighs about 180 pounds. Lisa soon will be released in Bear Country USA, a wildlife area near the Black Hills in South Dakota. For now, her home is a 30-by-S0- foot cage and her neighbors are a pair of bobcats named Clown and Bonnie. Lisa sleeps in an A-frame compartment she designed herself by smashing and rearranging a heavy wooden box Bates put in the cage for her to sleep in. Lisa is the 13th bear that Bates, 55, has nursed, fed and sheltered over the past 50 years. Bates alxnit 30 years ago began caring for ani mals at this site spread over several acres behind the small home she shares with her husband, an interior designer. She began playing mother to wild creatures as a chilcf when someone f jave her a 6-week-old coyote pup or a pet. She trained the coyote to herd sheep and remains convinced a properly trained coyote makes an. excellent sheep dog. Conversely, she found that sheep can be excellent teachers. About eight years ago, after rehabilitating two coyotes. Bates obtained a new born lamb and named it Chops. To day Chops is a mentor for coyotes, teaching them how to live with sheep. Chops, who shares his cpiarters with a coyote named Tawni and a red fox named Reddi, has adapted so well to his job that “unfortunately he thinks he is a coyote,” Bates says. 1 “He eats mice.” Then there is Beaner, the epilep tic bobcat. Bates got Beaner from Mexico, where the bobcat suffered at the hands of an abusive owner. When Beaner proved allergic to nor mal epilepsy medication. Bates moved him into a smaller cage and now Be.mci e;m tope belter seizures. While bears are her k-- mals, Bates does not turnaJ|| .mim.d in need. She u. Mp about six dozen otheraninui®® Ag wildlife cen ter. Dozens of volunteers fid; anti care for the animalsad watch for contributions. 1:1 about SI,500 per monthN food, veterinary care and] materials for tne Bates says. “I need funding andliSJ^ bad. she says. “EveryonedoiMT, the cl< In b . ihe lundiuppei!: rr, battered child, and them I’m all three.” It’s team the N iseun battle Rabbits; Yoi Guire that t and tl name nol» fc palatabl chant: “(A who It time . We’re and beat down “II Associated Press CORVALLIS, Ore.-Go •» null n| phi,ISC- 11... s "‘ielled backward. Panai _ _ Introduces 390 Flameburgers 490 French Fries 650 Onion Rings New this week: Fried mushrooms, Fried cheese. Chicken nuggets Open 11 a.m.-past midnight 846-0079 846-3824 509 University Drive Mental Awareness Programs is sponsoring a study/stress seminar for all students in the Aggieland area. The seminar will teach you to greatly increase youf learning potential and show you techni you can use the rest of your life. MAP show you how to: • control stress • increase test scores • activate your memory • have progressive study habits • speed study & speed reading • activate & use your memory banks When: Sun. Feb. 24 2-4 & 6-8 p.m Mon. Feb. 25 6-8 p.m. Tues. Feb. 26 6-8 p.m. Where: Aggieland Hotel at 1502 Texas Ave. Fee: $25 at the door $20 in advance For advance registration orinfi call Mental Awareness Progran 822-9465