Dress up your apartment with Find baskets galore in every size and shape to fix up your apartment this spring! Pot your plants,store your books, collect you laundry or hang ‘em on hooks. Navasota Open Monday through Saturday 9—5 (409) 825-8030 The Texas A&M Chapter of Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity Spring Rush 1987 lanuary 22nd Fantasia ' lanuary 27th io" Revenge of the Pink Panther' CP* lanuary 29th "Break the Bank All Parties Start At 8 00pm From the makers of the Chernobyl Punch Party* House: 418 College Main North Rush Chairman: John Keene 846-1838 693-1762 Member IFC EM PLACE A FULLY LANDSCAPED PARKING FACILITY FOR AGGIE FOOTBALL FANS. A PRIVATE CLUB FACILITY FOR PARKING SPACE OWNERS AND FACULTY AND STAFF OF TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY. LOCATED ON THE CORNER SO JERSEY STREET AND WELLBORN WITHIN EASY WALKING DISTANCE OF KYLE FIELD. FINANCING AT 9% AND MONTHLY INVEST MENTS AS LOW AS $50. 63 . 1988 OWN YOUR OWN REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT NEXT TO TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY. 1 Please send me FREE INFORMATION about 1 the advantages of GIG-EM PLACE. Name: . Street: 1 C i t y : - State Zip ' 1 Phone: 1 Mai1 to: GIG-EM. PLACE P.O. BOX 3987 1 BRYAN, TEXAS 77805 Page 6/The Battalion/Thursday, December 22, 1987 LIMITED NUMBER OF SPACES AVAILABLE Warped by Scott McCu NW CHKI5TMA5 VACATION \ DON’T WAIT FIRST COME FIRST SERVED F0LK5 SOT A Go DP DEAL OH SOME _ CA/V-VED GOOpS WITHOUT THE LABELS... ...50 EACH NI6//T WE'P PLAY "SUPPERT(ME ROULETTE"ANP 0FEN ONE FOR SUPPER. MPE MY MOM'S RETIPE FOK 5A/VANA rvWlMG. Ooo HEED 3 ^tPARATEP EGSS...> AHP close to ON PECEMBER 31sf MADE SOME OU)J| RESOLUTIONS UN WOULP/V'T DO W 1% MORE- /L ATS 7n Texa . >ast nu '-"han las ^ verage 5T “The he ave TEC lal nam st tloymei Waldo X WANNA FEEL you A HEARTBEAT NEXT TO M/A/p/ / mo hugga NO KISSX, ►till T GET A ring! lost ev nd hig Kevin Thonflm, forst ai 'Bwor V?, atikil }<). T'MW/JZ 00P3. ilioun 'or 1) Caretakers of elderly, disabled take a break Respite Care program offers helpful servio thuik Bed * >in, wh supi>( mempl pnu-1 irban jitounce ’or Dec > enthcs Ansi B< .in 12.8) Bi i/ Bine 14.5) Brv.i Co I! DTI. El I 1 . Foi i Gal\ 11.0) Bou 1 c i n DALLAS (AP) — An elderly woman checked into Gaston Episco pal Hospital. She wasn’t in need of medical treatment; she just wanted to give her family a break. She was one of the first to partici pate in the hospital’s Respite Care program, an idea gaining popularity as hospitals around the country look to expand health-care services and make use of hospital beds that other wise would remain empty. “It’s designed to give the caregiv ers a break from the duties of taking care of their loved ones,” hospital administrator Charles Cooper said. “They need the relief.” For a fee of $175, the hospital takes in Respite Care “guests” for the weekend, from 6 p.m. Friday to 6 p.m. Sunday. The respite program combines a hospital’s watchful accommodations with the schedule of a get-away weekend. The “guest” — an elderly or disabled person — gets a private room with television and individual bathroom and is cared for by the nursing staff. The family members who other wise must stay home to provide their relative feeding, bathing anti medi cal care are f ree to travel away from the home — or to stay and enjoy it all to themselves, program organizers said. Cooper estimated that 60 percent of those dependent on others’ care San jp’ylc Vu h Wat “It’s designed to give the caregiver a break from the duties of taking care of their loved ones. They need the relief. ” — Hospital administrator Charles Cook live in the homes of relatives. Most common, he said, are elderly parents staying in the homes of sons and daughters. While families most often provide an elderly or disabled person with Plastics catch on fire; 10 families evacuated Lonj the most personal attention,itti Lubl ation can lx* draining for . \L/ members who f eel tied do 20.5 (2 i esponsihilities. I/Mitll "It can really wear you • Ode said Susan Early, who helped: San m/e the Respite Care plan TIb give the caretaker a break.arts! In Gaston Episcopal, a fe independent hospital tucktcs the Baylor University Media. Wit:I tei. administrators have setaq The of the hospital’s 100 beds!- e mbei program. Early said. pet' ( | i cent in The staff will care foram —-— dent person 16 or older, inif those who have chronic distil functional disabilities, hospiuil cials said. I hey are assistedf meals, bathing, dressingando ing any medication they netdB^ 1 # staff also takes caie o! smh'"® ^ procedures as changing bandaE- AT N' Early said officials at Castor ^ ^ copal decided to try the progfi f ter reading about similar hospitals elsewhere in the ri|j^ o j istricts “We ifferei LEAGUE CITY (AP) — A fire raged through a League City plastics warehouse on Wednesday, forcing the temporary evacuation of about 10 families. Firefighters contained the fire early Wednesday at the Reliance In ternational warehouse but were let ting the flames burn out, authorities said. “It’s under control,” Dickinson Eire Chief Jasper Liggio said. “But it will probably be a couple of days be fore it’s put out. We’re going to let it burn itself out.” Two types of non-toxic plastics, polystyrene and polyethylene, caught fire at the facility in this Gal veston County town about 30 miles southeast of Houston, said a League City police dispatcher who refused to give her name. Louis West, a firefighter from the Dickinson Fire Department, twisted an ankle while trying to contain the fire. Liggio said there were no other reports of injuries resulting from the fire, which was reported at about 5 a.m. A few nearby residents were evac uated from their homes as a precau tion. They were permitted back into their homes again several hours af ter the fire was contained, Liggio said. Flames shot up several hundred feet after a series of small explosions at the plant, he said. The fire produced acrid clouds of black smoke that brisk winds spread over the area. The company stores recycled plas tic pellets used in the manufacture of various plastic products. Man accusef'? I§Tha of threaten*, federal witfier d ° Aray sa Jim he 48 FORT WORTH (AP) tate h; man accused of causir£| 0 |j ars month’s downtown natuujbn.” explosion was being held»i lI | bond Wednesday after a pr^yj| as , tor accused him of threaten? Stau witness. omme Former restaurant ownArovidi McClelland, 25, threate: : ect on young woman after learnfeaid. “] she had talked to federal in'® gators after the explosion 1 Dr taut U.S. Attorney Fred %rsity tman said Tuesday. Xpert Schattman said federala^ented ities wanted to protect the'Tuesd; by keeping McClelland t*Wedm bars. Hoc McClelland is on parole 1 [ : T exas prison for robbery. [THE UNITED NATIONS purpose vs. politics M S C + SCON A XXXII MSC SCONA ROUND TABLE HOST INFORMATIONAL MEETING: Wednesday, Jan. 21 7p.m. Rudder APPLICATIONS: Available 216 MSC Due Friday, Jan. 23 Sp.m- For more info: 845-7625