OCT. 16, 7:30pm PUDDTP AUDITORIUW $10 STUOEKT $15 HOH STUOEKT GEKEkA£ AOHCISSIOK TICKETS OK S/LCE Persons with disabilities plea^ special needs. We request noiSti »to tlie event to enable os to assis 515 to inform us K 010 HI us of your days prior l . U iu ’ * 4 AU * STILL ONLY $4/HR. Visit our web site: http://www.howdyags.com MONDAY SEP 29TH CHEM 101 6-10 PM CRAM SESSION / DR. SUN SCIENCE MON Sep 29 TUB Sep 30 WED Oct 1 THU Oct 2 RHYS 6-8 CH CH CH 202 PM 29 30 31 RHYS 8-10 CH CH CH 201 PM 6 7 8 MATH 9-12 PART PART PART 151 PM 1 2 3 BUSINESS MON Sep 29 TUE Sep 30 WED Oct 1 THU Oct 2 BANA 303 4-6 PART PART PART (Dr. Buffa) PM ^ 1 2 3 ACCT 6-8 GH 3*6 CH 3-6 CH CH 7 209/229 PM EXAM PROBS EXAM PROBS 7 CONT. ACCT 8-10 TIGER TIGER TIGER TIGER 230 PM PART 1 PART 2 PART 1 PART 2 ACCT 229 - BILLY'S VIDEO - 5-8 PM. SUN, SEP 28TH CHECK THE WEB SITE FOR THE MOST UP TO DATE INFORMATION!! Now You Can Drive To Europe In Less Than 10 Minutes Welcome To The Vintage House Trattoria at Messina Hof. You’re sitting in a small, family-owned eatery on a small family-owned Estate. A soft breeze gendy caresses the sea of grapevines... swaying in natural harmony. Authentic European food so good you’ll want to go home and paint your ceiling. The pastel sunlight streams in through tall, stained-glass windows. The green clear lake mirrors the perfect sky. The large white cranes seem to shimmer in the reflected light. Fresh. Gourmet. Handmade. Homemade. Casual. You sip a superb glass of wine, made close by. Your spirits soar. Your taste buds rejoice. You’ve found palate nirvana and you can drive here in less than ten minutes. Open for lunch 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., Wednesdays - Saturdays, Sunday Lunch: Noon to 2:30, no reservations required. Dinner: Thursday Friday and Saturday evenings by reservation. This is how it should be. This is how it is. The Vintage House Trattoria at Messina Hof. (409) 778-9463 L The Battalion IFESTYLES vServe some up Dining on campus provides culinary alternative By Stephen Wells Stajf writer S ome Aggies hold the stereotype that fresh men do not know anything. They do not know how to study, what classes they can skip or the notion that the weekends begin on Thursdays. But like freshmen, all Ag gies must decide where to eat no matter how long they have been here. The first choice Aggies have for eating is the “dining on campus is fun” option. Many Aggies have gone this route and found the meal plan worth their while. Todd Macek, a fresh man history major, has his own ideas about the good and the bad of dining on campus. “The best thing about eating on campus is the buf fet style,” Macek said. “You just keep going back. “I would say the worst thing is that you’ve got to go walk to the dining hall. You can’t just sit in your room and watch the game.” Jill Jeffries, a freshman English major, and her roommate Missy Burch field, a freshman animal science major, are ambiva lent about eating at the din ing halls. “You have a lot of choic es,” Jeffries said. “But you don’t necessarily want to eat them all. The turkey is good, though.” Her roommate is more neutral in her assessment. “Considering they’re preparing food for the mass es, it’s not that bad,” Burch field said. The urban myths about campus food have been cir culating for years. “No, no scare stories (to share),” Jeffries said. “We haven’t had anything that tastes really bad, but they should do something about that rubbery chick en stuff.” “We go for the food that’s not cooked,” Burchfield said. “It’s salad and baked potatoes for us eveiy day.” Sometimes, students will walk out of the dining halls with a chicken sand wich or two stuffed into a pocket for later, but some of this year’s freshman class are a little more honest than their predecessors. “I don’t steal,” Macek said. “I’ve got enough food in the dorm room — snack stuff. I do walk out drink ing a soda sometimes. Is that stealing?” Other than the dining halls, students generally have two other options. They can order food out or suck it up and attempt to cook at home. “Eating out for me — you get to pick what you eat,” Macek said. “There’s more variety. “It’s more expensive than a meal plan and cuts into the cigarette fund. But at least you can be lazy and eat pizza rolls in your room.” Jeffries said she and her roommate have not ordered out yet. Thursday • September 25,1951 DEREK DEMERE/TheBi\, Ramsey Parr, a sophomore kinesiology major, dines at Sts “We go to Northgate,” she said. “We also go to Under ground every Friday,” Burchfield said. Mel Bartlett, a junior agricultural economics ma jor, said eating out is the most efficient way to eat for a student on the go. “When you go to school full time and live off campus and have to work a full week, you don’t have the time to cook,” Bartlett said. “I usually just eat at work since I’m there until late at night anyway.” On-campus and off- campus students alsolu different motivations i cooking their own food. “We just made are meal on Sunday,” Burchfie said. “We cooked pastan chicken and bought oaei those premixed salads." Todd Macek has a mm defeatist attitude. “All I have in my refrf• ator is Kool-Aid andij cubes," Macek said. “Ineiei go shopping. When I ill cook in my dorm roonu ramen noodles.” So, when their tumit are rumbling, Aggies caul ways to satisfy their hunger Dorms act as nursing homes for the } oim Chris Martin columnist I distinctly remember the ersatz aroma of the nursing home, an eclectic cor nucopia of floor wax, uri nal soaps and aging flesh that pasted it self thick about my nose and throat. Visiting the nursing home may be a gallant service to the sagging, but closer inspection reveals an ora cle to die able. Frequent visits to the nursing home have taught me that every cold-fish handshake and oatmeal- encrusted lip quiver is like a voice from the wilderness, shouting, “For the love of God, my boy, don’t ever grow old!” Childhood memories fade into a scene from the present day. The setting is College Campus, USA, where the rusting colors of sum mer signal the return of new life to the dormitories. When I lived in grand old Aston Hall (motto: 91 percent crab free!) my freshman year, I tasted the spry zing of freedom and youth for the first couple of days. But as the days rolled by, a familiar old flavor crept into my mouth. It was the pungent bouquet of institutional living. I was no longer an unfettered visitor, singing Christ mas carols and passing out wa tered-down Kool-Aid. I was an in mate, locked away in a colossal concrete cage. I had seen the truth, but it didn’t set me free. Living on cam pus is nothing more than a clev erly disguised nursing home de signed for the peace of mind of parents everywhere. Think about it for a minute. The physical similarities are obvious. You go from the comfort and luxury of home life, where the water is always hot and the towels are al ways snuggly soft, to being carted off by supposed loved ones to exile in a sterile, concrete block box. The room is shared by two roommates. One is usually smarmy and dangerously attractive, like my self, and the other typically possess es a virtual Chex mix of psychotic personalities. Limited mobility is one of the trademar ks of on-campus and nursing home life. There’s always a big locked door at the entrance that keeps the bad people out of the dorms and the good people in the nursing home. Nursing home travel is usually limited to the strength of two bony arms propelling a wheelchair. This gives residents the freedom to slow ly creep down to the dining hall, un til they either fall asleep, forget they are hungry or miss the last call for creamed corn. Dormitory travel is usually limit ed to the strength of two bony legs propelling a body forward from parking one’s car in Fish Lot. Another odd similarity between living in the dorm and the nursing home is the abundance of unneces sarily exposed flesh. It seems people in the nursin' home honestly could careless about their naked bodies. I gues being bathed, dipped anddippai twice a day by overweight order lies just sucks the dignity rightoc: of you. Years of my life have been stripped away by accidental glances through those standard; sue muumuus. And by no surprise, guys ini dorm also share this affectionfor partial group nudity, stemming from the belief that passing fen^ will instinctively hurl themselves- their itty-bitty thigh pimples. Years of my life have been stripped away by accidental glante at a my roommate giving methe old “one-eyed stare” through tins' standard issue boxers. Now you know the truth. Yes', ginia, living on campus is a diabo: cal exercise in social engineering But perhaps there is a silverlinii| to that gray cloud. Perhaps an ex change system could be establish between Sourhside and our sister campus at the Fallen Arches Relit ment Castle. Pills, blackouts and drooling — they won’t be wastedta the young anymore. Chris Martin is asm 1 journalism nm CCML I’k “Come Join Us For Lunch” » FAST IN $099 George Bui h Dr. > FAST OUT LARGEST VARIETY OF FRESH PIZZA (Thin Crust and Sicilian Deep Dish), Garlic Cheese Bread, Baked Pasta, Pizza Rolls, Salad Bar, 4 Different Desserts, Free Drink Refills and ANY SPECIAL PIZZA REQUEST! 1713 S. Texas Ave. Every day 11 - 9:30pm 694-6939 We Accept Personal Checks w/Approved I.D.‘* University Dr Culpepper Plaza CiCi’s Harvey Rd. Howard Hughes Medical Institute Predoctoral Fellowships in Biological Sciences 1998 Competition 80 fellowships will be awarded for full-time study toward the Ph.D or Sc.D. degree in cell biology, genetics, immunology, neuroscience, structural biology, epidemiology, or mathematical biology. Fellowship terms ■ Three-year initial awards, ■ $15,000 annual stipend with two-year extension ■ $15,000 annual cost-of- possible education allowance Eligibility ■ Less than one year of post baccalaureate graduate study in biology: college seniors; first year graduate students; M.D., D.O., D.D.S., D.V.M., students or professionals Schedule ■ Application deadline: ■ Fellowships start: November 12, 1997 June 199B—January 1999 ■ Awards announced: early April 1998 For Program Announcements, Eligibility Guidelines, and Applications Hughes Predoctoral Fellowships National Research Council Fellowship Office 2101 Constitution Avenue Washington, DC 20418 Telephone (202)334-2872 Fax (202)334-3419 E-mail http://fellowships.nas.edu The Howard Hughes Medical Institute welcomes applications from all qualified candidates and encourages women and members of minority groups to apply. ■ If an M.D./Ph.D. student: not in a funded program ■ No citizenship requirements: U.S. citizens may study abroad; others must study in the United States Get in the swing For KAPPA KLASSIC Saturday, October 4, 1997 Bryan Municipal Golf Course Benefiting Still Creek Girls Ranch Sign up in the MSC from 11-2 Thurs 9/25 & Fri 9/2fi For more information, call Hope @ 696-6430 TEAMWORK “ As a young family with three children, we can relate to our patients. We’ve experienced the good and the bad, and know how health issues can affect everyone in the family. That’s why we like to treat the whole family concentrating on pregnancy, infants and pediatrics. We also enjoy meeting and treating Aggies of all ages. We are familiar with the Brazos Valley and its residents, having attended medical school in Houston and serving our residency just down the road in Conroe. Having also practiced abroad, we have developed a sensitivity to treating people from diverse cultural backgrouds. We try to treat each patient like family.” Anna Damian, MD and David Damian, MD Board Certified Family Practice Physician Family Practice Associates Anna Damian, M.D. David Damian, M.D. Stephen A. Braden, M.D. Robert A. Howard, M.D. 1301 Memorial Dr. Ste 100 Bryan, Texas (409) 776-7700 Richard E. Herron, M.D. George Mcllhaney, M.D. David R. Segrest, M.D. 1512 Holleman College Station, TX (409) 693-3313 Thursc p Hal By: w heads ar done int 3 to 4 me Saturt manity v done, bi teers. It Build” dt ty. The a two houi day, the 1 One v breaking ject, to b Joseph R Habil tional, st founded families nization 50,000th It is a it is not t pie of m voluntee gins will voluntee short pei Kate gie Uabi nior fin •Lear •Disc •Get i •Lear •Mas' •Find