i but that doesn't mean your car's air conditioning is through working until next summer! Did you know that your car's A/C helps remove the fog from your car's windshield when it's cold outside? Have it checked out by our A.S.E. certified technicians, today! 111 Royal Street • Bryan • 846-5344 STUDY ABROAD Be an Exchange Student Study in Mexico, England, Scotland or Germany for TAMU Credit!!! Find out how YOU can be chosen Informational Meeting Tuesday, October 3, 2:30 - 3:30 251 West Bizzell Hall mm NOW OPEN books OPEN 6:00 P.M. bbfaINNbtts VvtLtoMbl Speed (Ex Fri) 0:30 1st Session 7:18 2nd Session 9:00 DAYS A WEEK TCIES: Silver Dollar Night! 8 Games + Speed •BONGS Dollars •Dollar Food & Drink Specials WEDS: $2 Double Fun, 12 & 18 Face Specials THURS: 1/2 Price Option FRI: 5x5 Night, 10 BIG Games SAT: SGPER SPECIAL, 18 Face (or less) $ 10/session Extras - .50 per front face MAXIMUM NIGHTLY PAYOUTS TOWNSraRE 2015 TEXAS AVE. S. BRYAN 822-9087 BOYS CLUB OF BRAZOS COUNTY CHILD PLACEMENT CENTER B.V.C.A.S.A- UCH3000S721273 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $!2o IRRITABLE BOWEL STUDY $100 Symptamatic patients with recent physician diagnosed, irri- linn ta b* e bowel syndrome to participate in a short study. $100 $100 Incentive for those chosen to P artic P ate - $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 PAINFUL MUSCULAR INJURIES Individual with recent lower back or neck pain, sprain, strains, muscle spasms, or painful muscular sport injury to participate in a one week research study. $50 incentive for those chosen to participate. $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE STUDY Individuals with high blood pressure medication daily to participate in a high blood pressure study. $300 incentive for those chosen to participate. $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 US FEVER STUDY ||“ $50 Individuals 17 years and older who have a fever 100° f. $50. $50 $50 incentive for those chosen to participate. After office hours $ 50 |gQ and weekends call 361-1500. $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 Cold Study $50 $50 $50 $50 Individual 18 years & older who suffers from recent onset of g 50 the common cold. $50 incentive for those chosen to partici- | 5 o P ate $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 CALL PAULL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL 776-0400 Page 4 The Battalion CFPS provides students help finding funding By Andrea Warrenburg Of The Battalion Staff As the cost of college tuition con tinues to skyrocket, students are Finding that financial aid is becom ing more necessary than optional. The College Financial Planning Service hopes to help students Fill their Financial needs. CFPS is a private company that provides students with listings of available grants, scholarships and loans that goes beyond what the col lege financial aid offices have to of fer. “Our services do not overlap with the financial aid offices,” Larry Or gan, president of CFPS said. “We are a supplemental source to what they offer.” The planning service has a na tional database of more than 180,000 awards. Unlike federal and state awards available through the fi nancial aid offices, the awards listed in CFPS come from donations from corporations, philanthropic organi zations, religious groups and indi viduals. The awards are 90 percent schol arships and grants and 10 percent loans, Organ said. The awards are non-need awards based on academic interests, career plans, family heritage and place of residence. “It frustrates me that people say they don’t have any money to go to school because there is so much money out there to be awarded based on so many different things,” Organ said. A student can enter the program by calling 1-800-346-6401 and re questing a student data form. It must be completed and sent to CFPS with a $45 fee. In about two weeks, the student will receive a printout of financial aid resources matching their back ground. If the student uses the service, ap plies, and does not receive an award, the $45 fee will be refunded. “There is no such thing as a stu dent with too much money — so ev ery little bit counts,” Organ said. “If a student is diligent and makes an effort to apply, he will be success ful,” he said. WJRRD 6A0! TURNED INTO A HUGE FROG BY ONE OF MY 0W/V STATION'S ALIEN DEVICES. a HON DETKESSING! WALDO SUDDENLY, AN LSU FAN AWAKENS AFTER PASSING OUT FROM DRINKING CAJUN KOOL-AID DURING THE AGGIE-TIGER GAME... ''&O0D GOO, MY HEAD HURTS! HEY, BOY.' HOW BAD DID THEM k TIGERS WHUP THEM AGGIES Adventures In Cartooning The 7TOWIN6 >SCMINAR TOR THE DEPT OF /WRK1M&, TFtGUSIT AND TRAFFIC GCR- VICCS Cth£ Fine folks WHO (SNC STUDEHTS TtCV£TS! ) \NCiL, X £££ you HPNEN'T B££N H6EPIN6 UP NDU THE P&CHN5 ASSIGNMENTS/ ONCE AGAIN, SINCE OOP. DPTs NAME IS LANS AND HARD TO (SAV, ]NE PP6FER JO BE CALLED 'THE RARH1U6 GESTAPO/“ NON, EVERYONE FUSASE PECmE OUR MOTTO/ SPADE PHILLIPS -PL ^here she u>3S;fllze and The poor u>3s potty in my hands a (coays wfto.. WHAT HtfpftHrn? Residents of Ku Klux Klan birth placi struggle with white supremacist past PULASKI, Tenn. (AP) — Strip away the orange ribbons, and Pulaski’s courthouse square could be a movie set for an archetypal Southern town, where a Confederate hero stands on a ped estal and pickup trucks sport Dixie flags. But the orange “brotherhood color” affixed to storefronts, lampposts, car antennas and coat lapels is meant to make sure no one confuses Pu laski residents with the white supremacists who plan to march through town Saturday. “These people are outsiders and this county is a victim of rape by these groups,” said author Gregory Mcdonald, who owns a farm in the area and helped organize the anti-march campaign. Restaurants, stores and markets have agreed to close for the day throughout the town of about 8,000 people 90 miles south of Nashville. Resi dents have been asked to stay off the streets, and churches have planned activities to keep children and teen-agers away from downtown. The racists are attracted to Pulaski by the town’s role in the history of the Ku Klux Klan. The group was founded in Pulaski in 1865 as a reaction to what community leaders saw as a threat by carpetbaggers and former slaves after the Civil War. It was disbanded four years later after the Leg islature passed an anti-Klan law. The modern Klan was formed outside Atlanta in 1915 by a former minister who added Jews and Catholics to the group’s list of enemies. The Klan began marching in Pulaski annually in 1986 to protest the Martin Luther King na tional holiday. fifiT I hese people are outsiders and this county is a victim of rape by these groups.” — Gregory Mcdonald, Author The parades typically draw fewer than 100 marchers. Community leaders say as long as the racists obtain the proper permits and follow other rules they can’t be stopped. “It started out as 35 to 40 old boys putting on their bed sheets and marching around the square haranguing,” Mcdonald, author of the “Fletch” mystery novels, said. “These people considered the town’s silence tacit approval. Nothing could be further from the truth.” Town leaders decided it was time to act when the Aryan Nations of Hayden Lake, I( nounced plans to march here this year. The group advocates the formation! whites-only country. Ten members of an t Nations splinter group were convicted ofn teering in 1985 in a plot to overthrow tk government that involved murder, bankroll f and armed confrontations. “We’re just not going to let our town ben over by bigots and hate mongers,” Bettie' gins, director of the Chamber of Con® said. Both sides claim Pulaski’s Civil War hero,i Davis, a 21-year-old Confederate scoutvLw hanged after refusing to reveal the name of ij bel spy. Higgins helped wire an orangewreif the hands of a statue of Davis on the towns The white supremacists will lay a wreath also | “He’s our only hero, and they want lo j him,” Higgins said. The Rev. Richard G. Butler, pastor oil Church of Jesus Christ Christian-AryanM I said the march was set on the day after fj birthday to honor “white heroes.” “Sam Davis was a hero of our people; body has ever honored him," Butler said. Are you willing to accept a challenge? A dare to be the best? Panduit accepted that challenge more than 30 years ago when our company was founded. Our devotion to excellence in product quality and customer service has resulted in continued expansion and attainment of our present position as a leading manufacturer of electrical/electronic products for wiring and communications. Excellence driven people have helped Panduit expand from its corporate and manufacturing center in Tinley Park, IL., a suburb of Chicago, into a high growth, financially strong company that reaches around the world. Panduit needs . . . must have . . . people who are bright, creative, who aren’t afraid to try new things—and have the energy and dedication to do their absolute best. To these unique people, Panduit offers outstanding opportunities for achievement, self-fulfillment, income and creativity. Owi IVi/wu/g Team! We’re coming to your campus on October 17-18,1989 to interview Industrial Distribution majors for Technical Sales positions. Sign Up with Us!