FR£HpN improvisational comedy- 2 shows There’s no such thing as too much improv. Friday & Saturday, Oct. 13&14 Rudder Forum 9 p.m. Tickets: $3 and go on sale at 8 Doors open at 8:30, so get there early. (MalleHa Day 5pa Off, rs lime out for yourself __ with TTkeropeufic Atassope Relieves tension stress fatig ue A^c'ssage ccikv be used to maiutaiu & enhance the hen l+K and well being of the en+iVe body. $d0 oj-j' you^ T~e\eic\l or AAossoge By appointment only call (409) 774-4780 Oo zles. an extraordinary bookstore EVERY ITEM WHAT WILL $10 BUY YOU THESE DAYS? AT FOOZLES . . . EVERYTHING! rm FOOZLES is the multimodia suporstoro with tromondous savings on over 100,000 books for tho antiro family. FOOZLES has it all. Books, Music, Video, Software, Stationery and much moral ALL FOR LESS . . . $10 and lass! ,W< TVw l o( ' Wordsworth CLASSICS Post Oak Sq^uara 696-6566 Page 4 • The Battalion Aggie life Thursday • October 12,] Coffeehouse sheds light on student taler By Amy Protas The Battalion M SC Town Hall will con vert Rudder Fountain into a virtual coffee house with fiction readings and music Friday night. Stephen Sandlin, a vice chair man of Coffeehouse and a senior forestry major, said Coffeehouse offers amateur performers a place to display a variety of talents. "It’s basically a venue for po ets, dancers, musicians, bands, comedians or any other kind of act,” Sandlin said. “We offer them a place to showcase themselves free of charge.” Often times, Coffeehouse is the first large audience an artist dis plays their craft in front of. San dlin said when Lyle Lovett was a student at A&M, Coffeehouse was the first place he played. Friday, there will be two short fiction writers, an electric bass guitar player and a guitar duo called I’m Nate, That’s Casey. Chris Carpenter, an English graduate student who will be reading fiction he wrote, said this will be his first Coffeehouse. “I will be doing a semi-humor ous story called The Great Under belly,” Carpenter said. “It’s about a football player that gets buried with his trainers, like the way some societies used to bury their kings with all their servants.” Trent Masiki, an English graduate student, will also do a reading of his short fiction. He said he gets his ideas from a variety of events. Coffeehouse audiences usually average about 150-200 people. Masiki said he likes to perform at this venue because it builds his confidence in his writing. “1 really enjoy it,” Masiki said. “I get to see if my work moves the audience. I hope they get some value and are en tertained.” IT Sandlin said % Townhall tries to offer a variety of W programming with Coffeehouse. In addition to fiction readings, there will also be music. Rick Garza, a senior electronics engineering tech nology major, is playing the electric bass at JR Coffeehouse. || 1 He describes his style as be- j ing funky with a jazzy / new age mix. “I started off trying top guitar, hut it didn’t ] Garza said. “I moved ont| electric bass. 1 will beplai tune I wrote along with; sequence.” I'm Nate, That's other one of Coffeehouse’s^ sical acts. The duo consisi Nathan McFall, a juniort ness major, and Casey( dress. McFall said theirs a mix between The Vid Femmes and Jackopierce. Besides free enterta Townti mance, plains the Cheese” posters! can be seen on t Sandlin said house is an inti alternative toi entertainment! Bryan-Collegei tion area. “Coffeehouses lot of fun,” I said. “It's i than ar campus, meet neat] in the audience,!: a potpourri of thing' EOPLE IN THE NEWf For Cronkite, it's a long way from the Pup HOUSTON (AP) — Walter Cronkite has fond memories of his high school days as a Purple Pup reporter. The CBS anchorman walked the halls Tuesday of Lanier Mid dle School, where he worked for the school newspaper more than 65 years ago. “There’s nothing like this thrill of coming back today,” Cronkite, 79, told students. “I started my journalism career at Lanier. I was a contributing writer at the F*urple Pup.” Cronkite visited the school af ter receiving the Denton A. Coo ley Leadership Award. Former Gov. Ann Richards presented the award, named for the heart surgeon and founder of the Texas Heart Institute. “Without people like (Cronkite) our children would have no role models, no one to imitate as they grow to adult hood,” Richards said. Cup Uncut and he is coming back for more ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) —John Wayne Bobbitt wants another whack at marriage with Loras With flowers and cand; showed up Tuesday atthefe salon where his estrangedii works and tried to recoiti with her, but she refused speak to him, The Post reported Wednesday, “He came over here, andtk he came back. Can you imap the nerve?” the Post quoted oh Lorena’s co-workers as saying In 1993, Lorena Bobbitts off her husband’s penis, sajit] he had raped and emotional! tortured her. Doctors reattatk it, and he has since madeaa! rated video, John Wayne Ed:- ... Uncut. FOUNDATION SUPPORTING EDUCATION THROUGH ATHLETICS WANTS TO KNOW IF YOU WANT TO... BEAT THE HELL OUT OF SMUU! THEN COME JOIN THE 12TH MAN STUDENT FOUNDATION AS WE HELP THE AGGIES WHIP THE PONIES! COME OUT TO OUR TAILGATE PARTY BEFORE TLLE GAME WHERE: SPENCE PARK (BETWEEN KYLE FIELD AND THE CORPS CENTER) WHEN: 10:30 -12:30 SATURDAY, OCT. 14 WHY: FUN, KTEX106.1, FOOD, AND THE AGGIE SPIRIT EVERYONE IS WELCOME BRING A FRIEND ALSO WE NEED VOLUNTEERS SATURDAY MORNING TO HELP US SUPPORT THE FOOTBALL TEAM, IF INTERESTED