Page 4/The Battalion/Thursday, July 11, 1985 : : BILLIARD S 32 Pool Tables ... 4 Shuffleboards ... Video Arcade ... Foosball Tables m##mm.mmmmmmmm »#• • HAPPY HOUR * HAPPY HOUR t :--lSATiP§: SUN. ; : ff ' MON.-FRI. : 11-8 f; ' 12*8 - I 4-8 • * * H * ♦ m m 702 University #110B College Station 846-0085 9 „1 Fast and Free Delivery p0l!¥F%y north Campus 260-9060 501 University Dr. (northgate) South College Station 693-9393 I 103 Anderson (at tlolleman) PIZZA HUT DELIVERS! NORTH/SOUTU 260-9060 693-9393 $2 OFF . sfgcjAi Any 15" Pizza 'pizza -Hut FREE DELIVERY! Sun.-Thur«. 11 a.m.-12a.m. Fit A Sat. 11 a.m.-12 ajn. Sun. I 2 n«H>n rniUniqm Limited Delivery area l>o« Valid with uth<-> Si><-< iaK July 28, 1985 c INORTII/SOUTH 260-9060 693-9393 $1 OFF Any 13" Pizza L V p;^ a FREE DELIVERY! Sun.-Thur*. 11 a.m.-12a.ni. Frl. & Sat. 11 a.m.-12 a.m. S.I.I I 1 mum miildiqhl Limited Delivery area not Valid «.ith utber Sp,-« July 28,1985 ^fr MSC GROVE ’85 and Arts Council of Brazos Valley Present Igars gfJoy l^Teatre July 13, 1985 3:00 pm Texas A&M Univ. Rudder Theater Admission $2.00 Performances Include: “Coyote and the Cedar Tree” “Onion Skin Soup” ‘ ‘ Jabberwocky ” This production has been funded in part by grants from National Endow ment for the Arts and Texas Commis sion on the arts. Tickets Avail. MSC Box Office and Dillard’s j0rj0^j0rj0rjir Battalion Classified 845-2611 Woman hit by baseball wins lawsuit Associated Press HOUSTON — An 18-year-old Houston woman injured by a base ball during a Houston Astros game received $ 180,000 in what attorneys say is the first such award ever granted by ajury in U.S. history. Karen Friedman was 1 1 when she was struck on the head by a foul line drive near the end of a National League game against Pittsburgh in the Astrodome on June 14, 1978. A lawsuit filed by her father said the girl was standing behind the As tros dugout trying to get autographs when the ball hit her. Ms. Friedman suffered a broken facial bone and an eye injury in the incident, according to the suit. Wild horses have $125 tag Theater group presents Thurber’s works The Premiere Players, area high school students under the direc tion of the TAMU Aggie Players, open their production of tbede S itful comedy, A Ttiurber Carnival, at 8 p.m. in Rudder Fona e play consists of an amusing and touching collection of the sta stories of one of America’s most beloved humorist, James Thurbe Admission is $2 for students and $3 for the general public. CS hosts weekend entertainment at part ! begins Bring bavin* Park. ... cessions will be available. On Sunday, July 14, they wilt present a countij & western con eert by New Sounds. The concert will begin at 7 p.m. at Ceim Park. Admission is free. Bring a lawn chair. Concessions will be avail able For more information call 764-3773. Mustangs up for adoptia Associated Press MULESHOE — Wild horses that might otherwise die of starvation are arriving in this small Panhandle town under a government protec tion program. The mustangs, brought from Ne vada, Wyoming and Oregon, are be ing placed in a holding pen and fed a nutritious diet of hay, oats and al falfa cubes while they wait for adop tive owners. The 2,000 mustangs that have ar rived so far come from herds that have been overpopulating western range lands in recent years, officials say. Randall and Paula Carr, two Ten nesseans who handle surplus horses and burros for the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, are in charge of the mustang holding pen. “The ranchers in several western states have been asking the govern ment to take the overpopulated horses off the land because there just isn’t enough grass to go around,” Mrs. Carr says. “This fa cility is just the first stop before the horses go to the adoption centers.” But Mrs. Carr warns that al though the $125 price tag attracts at tention, becoming a mustang owner through the program is not a cut and dried matter. The horses remain government property for one year after pur chase, and can be taken away if mis treated. “We try to tell people to wait a while before they get one,” she says. “If they wait a while, it’s not so much of a wnim because when they come back, you know that they’re serious. “It’s just not that easy to adopt a wild horse,” Mrs. Carr says. Though the Carrs have partici pated in the government adoption program at tneir ranch in Cross Plains, Tenn., the Muleshoe contract with the Department of Interior proved to be one of the biggest chal lenges. The Carrs were chosen last year from among 400 applicants who submitted bids for the holding fa cility. They were awarded the job with the stipulation that the 40-acre facility be ready to receive the wild horses within 52 days. “We finished it in 32 days,” Mrs. Carr says. The facility was put in Muleshoe, she says, because the government re quired that a holding pen be built west of the Mississippi. Muleshoe also was a conveoi location as a halfway point fon ing the animals to the threeadopi centers, and because of its ameni climate. The first large shiumentohi horses arrived May 10, anolhej June, and a third is expectedii; fall. Most of the wild horses from Nevada, Wyoming and gon and suf fer from severe m; trition. But on a diet of ground!; oats and high-nutrition alfalfac they lose the gaunt look soprem in tne newer arrivals, Mrs. Cai The Muleshoe facility "dll only mustangs, Mrs. Carr sajtj though wild burros are alsoi demand through the adoptionj gram. J “Burros are the craze,’’ she “Burros hate wild dogs, and tip (kk! at protecting cattle b^ 311 * .hat. They’ll stomp any wild a® that tries to attack the herd " Although each new shipme horses brings the curious around the Panhandle who like idea of being able to buy a horse a much lower price, the horsesi not be sold out of the Muleshoec ter. £ (r M'CflW CABLEVISION ill Ai’b- . G v V2-- 00 \0 CP will be in the MSC July 10,11,11 a.m.-5 p.m v O'? 0 ^ e \ e GO^ hO cP 00 % >1^ A© Ch Wefi T? BN -6/Ann (B -CS) foryourconviencein / 9 c^Ni^ne, Returning your cable TV//; Equipment from summer/// ffi K c ?£l$tf 0 u p° n> session 1 AND Signing-up for cable TV service summer session 2 Eel, Uc atit lo nal Ac 16 ?*°Headr '° n) 17 l h e Vovfe rT Ne *s S // H B % P ^ Chan ^(^T >/? i-nZ!^n mentr S3 ?"HSo a *, Tele »sion / S3 7h e 0 Sn, sh Indenenri 56 '^7 28 29 ^P C n B o^ CouJ 8/ PBs,H OLJS t°n) ana Go V e rnm 33 ,£? p A/ NB C(Hou«,„„ 'yoivL,... ~ touZyj$.