ERRORITE BOOKSTORE llaraee PAWN LOANS PEANUT GALLERY

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THEay, September 22, 1972

BATTALIONCollege Station, Texas Page 3

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ERRORITE AT YOUR BOOKSTORE

e?), part n traffic 'list barely i less bii. don't mist

■ bite are i tation, aid

control. |ome by and let us show you our selection of fine liquors limits, arc lid wines. Weekend specials every Friday and Saturday, d miae, (Vis appreciate your business, itionsotln: Ipeople,* STUDENT DISCOUNT

Open: 10:00 a. m. to 9:00 p. m. Monday Thru Saturday

JAY S SABER INNPackage Store

llaraeeGraduate

701 Texas Ave. at Saber Inn 846-7755

Campus BriefsAgs Fight Alcoholism With Research Grant

A&M has joined the fight on alcoholism through a x-esearch gi’ant to Dr. William H. Klemm, associate professor of biology, j The $7,000 fund came from Licensed Beverage Industries, a national organization with head- quai-tei-s in New York.

"The primary objective is to determine the target sights of alcoholism in the brain,” Dr. Klemm said. “We have good reason to believe that alcoholism acts on certain pax-ts of the brain.”

The year-long study entitled “Alcohol Effects on the Nerve Impulse Activity of the Brain”

seeks a better way to cure alco­holism or at least modify the effects on the brain.

By determining the targets of alcohol, chances improve to cure the disease with specific treat­ment of the primary centers of attack, in the brain, Dr. Klemm believes.

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“IT’S SOMETHING DIFFERENT”

PEANUT GALLERYNow An Open Bar

ServingMixed Drinks, Beer & Wine

No Membership Necessary

OpenMon. - Fri. — 2 p. m.Sat. - Sun. — 7 p. m.

COMING SOONCollege Station’s First

Discotheque

613 Old College Rd. College Station — 846-9978

Photo Exhibits Feature Former Student, Profs

Photographic exhibits featuring the work of two A&M pi-ofessors and a former student are on dis­play at the College of Architec­ture and Envix-onmental Design.

An exhibit entitled “Two Ger­man Settlements of Texas” was a summer pi-ojeet conducted by Melvin M. Rotsch, professor of ax-chitecture, for the Historic American Buildings Survey of the National Park Service. Photo- gx’aphs for the exhibit were taken by Roy C. Pledgex*, associate pro­fessor of envix-onmental design.

The second exhibit, “Ghost Towns of Montana,” includes 20 photogx-aphs taken by John De- Haas, 1948 TAMU graduate who is history at Montana State Uni­versity.

Both exhibits will remain on display through Oct. 12, noted Assoc. Prof. Larry L. Priesmeyer, chaix-man of the college’s Archi- tectux-al Exhibit Committee.

A&M Engineers Help Cure Laredo’s Smog

Research engineers at A&M will x-epoxt to approximately 40 government agency officials next week on how to alleviate the serious air pollution problem at the Lax-edo U. S. Customs Station.

The Sept. 28-29 px-ogx-am in­cludes showing video tapes of various proposed ventilation sys­tems tested at TAMU’s envix-on- mental wind tunnels, noted Dr. M. P. Boyce of the Mechanical Engineex-ing Department. Also, x-ecommendations will be made for Laredo station modifications.

Dx\ Boyce said the General Sex-vices Administration (GSA) contx-act with the Texas Engineer­ing Expex-iment Station hexe calls for an evaluation of the air pol­lution caused by tx-affic exhaust.

BATTALION CLASSIFIEDW \^T RATES

III": 4&V................................. oc per v,-ord■ it vst word each a.d'UVdd'rttU dav

WvcuTnvmv charge—~bc C\a&W\V\ed \X\ap\av

VV.W pet coYumn inch each insertion

YOU SALE. YOU BUNTVjTi Vatnaha 250.

, Ca\\ *40-0522.\.im mUeasce. $500.

\5XtS

WORK WANTEDperienced typist would like iK at home. 846-7680.

o do 15014

it and expert typing. Julie. 846-0222143tfn

I near campus. Electric. Ex- nced. Symbols. 846-8065 or 846-0571.

124tfn

Call 845-2451. thy.2tfn

PERSONALthe students and personnel of TAMU. you need to buy quality furniture?

unt Furniture sells and offers to you ty and national brand furniture at mnt prices. You must see us before

buy. Free delivery. Hudpret plan [red if desired. Location : SOX Northas Ave., corner of East 22nd and |th Texas Ave. Next door to Employ-

Commission. Phone 822-1227. If you furniture, you cannot afford not to

is before you buy at Discount Furni- Co. 136tfn

If you love blue, Fm with y< Mobile Castle. Come and tak from it all ! 846-3766.

\ Nice 3 \ south

fuvni

room house, modern. 1 of ColieKe Station, Hivhway 6.

ou. 12 x 70 me away

153tl

Used Fripridaire refrigerator-freezer com­bination in Rood running condition. 830. 846-5389. 153tl

1964 Corvair, $260. 846-4028.

2 new tires, runs good.152t2

Vacuum II attachments.

cleaner- Kirby complete with $50. 846-8965. 151tfn

miles Un-

rnished, $70 month. Shade and fruit trees. 825-2402 Navasota (exchange). Mr.or Mrs. A. C. Smith. Call -or appointment.

152tfn

tyLower one bedroom furnished apartment. Adults only. Ample closet space. Window air conditioned. 875. No bill paid. 846- 5031. 151tfn

Must sell 1971 Fleetwood mobile home, 14 x 64, two bedroom, unfurnished, central air and heat, no down payment, assume loan. Call 822-6649 after 5:30 p. m., anytime on weekends. 151t3

19714063.

Challenger 340-4bbl. Loaded. 845- 15014

10-speed Like new.

>icy<$85.

less 823-5285.

year old. 150t4

brakes, newtangtires.

air, disc 150t4

Gibson electric guitar ES-330 hard case, professional model like new, less than half

c gu riel 1

price. Also Martin item, perfect. Hal

guitar, a collector’s Harris 822-6133 after

DID YOU KNOW?Little John’s Catering Service

4613 Texas Ave.(Next to A&W Rootbeen

lives Daily: Mon.-Thur. 10 n.m.-8 p.m.Fri.-Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m.

BAR-H-Q & Fried Catfish Draft Deer

'70 Torino two-door hardtop V-8 loaded. See to appreciate. 846-2818. 14915

1967 Triumph Bonneville. Excellent. Best offer. 846-4574. 146tfn

'71 Yamaha 175 Enduro. Excellent con­dition. 1400 miles. See at V-l-G Hensel.

145tfn

FRENCH QUARTER APARTMENTS

2 blocks from A&M.1 bedroom furnished or unfurnished.

Pool and Laundry Facilities.

Call 846-8981144tfn

House, barn & corrals with 31 acres for rent on Bonneville road just off East By Pass. Call 822-1328 from 8 to 5:30, 822- 0367 after 5:30. 142tfn

1 bedroom nicely furnished house, 865 a lonth. Call 823-6045. 143tfn

1972 Honda SL-350, only cellent condition, 846-2998.

-EVERYDAY—iemiurn grade Douglas Tires

Jnounted and HIGH SPEED balanced for no extra charge. Priced below the so-called 1'Sale” prices on most tires. I lust check price with any bthers. We sell only Premium grade tires, and gladly invite | comparison.

Havoline, Amalie, Conoco, Phillips 66, Gulflube — 35c qt.

SPARK PLUGS A.C., Champion, Autolite

69^ EachAlternators 18.95 exchange

Starters - Generators from 13.95 exchangeMost any part for most

American and some Foreign cars at dealer price

Your Lawnboy and Friedrich Dealer

11)67 “Chevrolet :Y\ goose neck hitch, shape. Call 822-3980 after 5

ton pickup, V-S with brake control, in good

BROADMOOR ARMS APARTMENTS

2 Bedroom Furnished or Unfurnished. All utilities anti cable paid. All electric, central air & heat. From $135. Four Students S33.75 each. From Manor East Shopping Center take Villa Maria to first light, turn right on Carter Creek, go 3 blocks and turn left on Broad­moor. Office 1411 Broadmoor. 5 minutes to campus. 846-2737 138tfn

WANTEDHave horse need stall,

at stable in exchange for stall 846-9683.

Willing to work and pasture.

152t2

ATTENTION AGGIES. Permanent em­ployment. Evening work. Time can be arranged to meet schedule, 8125 per week guaranteed after one week training. Apply 201 Varisco Bldg, between 1 & 4 daily.This is a sales position. 136tfn

PETSFree! Weaned, trained, Siamese-Persian

male kittens. 846-6782 or 846-2728 after 5.15313

HHICKORY

HILLSMobile Home

Community Bryan’s Newest

& Finest Spacies & Mobile Homes for rent

Phone 822-6912—823-5701 2001 Beck Street

Also entrance on Hwy* 2818 at Industrial Park i22tfn

846-1817.

Teacher 6 years experience + M.S. Will tutor reading and math grades 1-6 reme­dial and enrichment. Call 846-9162. 152t3

BRIDGE LESSONS

Beginners and Intermediate

810 For 6 Lessons

846-5813 or 846-8996152t3

Graduation Invitations for December Graduates go on sale Sept. 11 - Oct. 13 at the Cashier’s Window — MSC from 8:00 - 5:00 - Mon. - Fri. 14U24

Service For All Chrysler Corp. Cars

Body Work — Painting Free Estimates

IIALSKLL MOTOR COMPANY. INC. Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922

1411 Texas Ave. — 823-8111 57tfn

HELP WANTED

Part-time church dietitian to act as kitchen hostess for church coffee hour and youth supper. Responsible for care of kitchen, operation of equipment and assist­ing volunteers with dinners, socials. Call 822-1324. 150t4

Need 4 Apply in

waitresses. Jay and evening, person at 807 Texas Ave., Oak-

ridge Smokehouse Restaurant. 138tfn

raduate student.Married student ing hours. Repre

HOME FOODS. Pleasant - good 823-0869. 1

pay. !6tf n

CHILD CARE

FORBEST

RESULTSTRY

BATTALION CLASSIFIED

From Rock & Country To Swing! Dance Music

THE BARONS AGENCY OF HOUSTON

H. H. “Bud” McDaniel ’42Box 1136, Bellaire. Texas 77401

<713) 666-0800

AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES:

Call: George WebbFarmers Insurance Group

3400 S. College 823-805

Redmond Terrace Drugs Phone 846-1113

1402 Hwy. 6-South College Station, Texas

Prescriptions, Etc. Charge Accounts Invited

Free Delivery

Experienced babysitting in my home near campus. All ages welcomed. 846-6340.

146t8

Texas iMiibile Home OutletSales and Service

AT HWY.' 6 & 21 BRYAN. TEXAS 77801

• Low down payment• Local Bank financing• Up to 12 years to pay• Free delivery and set up

Phone 822-9140

Faculty and students are in­vited to the symposium, sched­uled to begin at 9 a.m. Thursday in Zachry Engineering Center Room 103. Others interested in attending must be invited by GSA, Dr. Boyce pointed out.

Among federal officials expect­ed to come are representatives of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Immigra­tion Service, U. S. Customs Serv­ice and GSA.

SPECIAL NOTICE$100 reward for information leading to

the arrest of person or persons responsible for the theft of a yellow Swinn Paramount racing bicycle with chrome trim and tubu­lar sewed-up tires, serial number E730.

X53t8

McGovern-Shriver Campaign Starts Here

George McGovern’s Brazos County Coordinator Steve Dun- kelberg is holding an organiza­tional meeting for anyone inter­ested in working on the McGov­ern-Shriver ticket Tuesday at 8 p.m. at apartment 184, 1619Puryear.

“I’m trying to get the McGov- ern-Shriver campaign off the ground in Brazos County,” said Dunkelberg. “I’m very optimistic and I think that we are going to have the same dedication in Brazos County that took McGov­ern from the bottom of the polls to the top.”

Dunkelberg is trying to get McGovern and Shriver to appear in College Station before the election in November.

“We’ve got to convince the people that McGovern and the democratic party has some sound policies,” said Dunkelberg.

The campaign will also empha­size voter registration.

Bulletin BoardSATURDAY

The Community Development Organization will meet at 9 a.m. at 605 Payson in College Station. It will be work day at the Com­munity Center to prepare for the upcoming open house. The or­ganization will hold its regular meeting Monday in Room 309 of the Architecture Bldg, at 6 p.m.

TUESDAYThe A&M Dairy Science Club

will meet in Room 112 of the Heep Building at 7:30 p.m.

The American Society of Agri­cultural Engineers will meet in the Agriculture-Engineering Bldg. Lecture Room at 7:30 p.m.

The A&M Wheelmen will hold their regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3C of the MSC. The movie “Tour of Kettering’’ will be shown and nominations for new officers will be held.

The Society of Automotive En­gineers will meet in Lecture Room 3 of the Engineering Cen­ter at 7:30 p.m. Dr. C. R. Ger- lock of the Southwest Research Institute will talk on fluid me­chanics as applied to internal combustion engines. Refresh­ments will be provided.

Athletic Department ushers who worked under Les Palmer last year and desire to work this season, can contact him at 845- 6448 or 845-2624 before noon Monday.

FORBEST

RESULTSTRY

BATTALION CLASSIFIED

Wanted: NiKht clerk—7 p. m. to 6:15a. m. 3-4 days each week. Share week­ends with other night clerk. Apply in person. Western Motel. 150t4

SOSOLIK'STV & RADIO SERVICE

Zenith - Color & B&W - TV All Makes B&W TV Repairs 713 S. MAIN 822-2133

Cadet Court Provides Corps With Exact Judicial LeadershipBy BRIAN POLK

All American military systems contain provisions and personnel that cope with legal problems or questions, and the Corps of Ca­dets is no exception.

The Cadet Court, not new to the Corps, has been somewhat neglected or overlooked in the past, but both cadets and military officer advisers want to utilize it this year.

Corps related matters are the only cases brought before the court and then only by recom­mendation of the Corps comman­dant. However, questions concern­ing University Blue Book Poli­cies are also heard by the court.

Rules set down in “The Stan­dard,” the Corps rules and regu­lations book, are the basis for court decisions. Cases brought to the court ai’e tried in the fashion of military courts with prose­cutors and defense attorneys who are cadets involved in the case or are cadets appointed by the court’s legal adviser to prosecute or defend.

Couxt decisions of guilt or in­nocence are fox-warded to the Commandant’s office for x-ecom- mendations of actions. The com­mandant may suggest specific penalties for guilty cadets but may leave that decision to the Corps Comixxander. Penalties are in the form of demexits, weekend restrictions and vei’bal or written reprimands.

The court is divided into two groups, A and B. Both perform equal tasks. In the past xxxost

‘Heroin Tax’A Failure

NEW YORK <2P> — Americans are paying $5 billion a year in “heroin tax” while the Nixon ad­ministration has failed to crack down on flow of the drug from Southeast Asia, George McGovern said Thursday.

McGovexn said he is px-epared to debate Nixon on the adminis­tration’s record in combating the flow of heroin into the United States or have a McGovern spokesman debate a Nixon spokesman on the issue.

court members were high ranking cadets, but this year cadets of all ranks will be participating in the court. This is done by random selection of Corps seniors to form the coux-t juries.

Officers for 1972-73 are as fol­lows: legal officer/adviser, Cal Ramage; president Court A, Ran­dy Vick, president Court B, Jake Betty. The permanent members are Ronald Janak, Duane Byrd, Tim Hill and Russell Braden. Re- coi-dei-s and assistant recorder are Tom Leopold, Melvin Noack and Jan Faber.

PAWN LOANSMoney Loaned On Anything

Of Value.Quick Cash For Any

Emergency.See Us For Ready Cash

Today.Texas State Credit

Pawn Shop 1014 Texas Ave., Bryan

Weingarten Center

AULENOldsmobile

CadillacSALES - SERVICE

“Where satisfaction is standard equipment”

2401 Texas Ave. 823-8002

Train in a different kind of aeroplane

'-N25N

TEXAS A&M AEROCLUHGround School Mondays at

7:30 p. m.Room 128-B Zachry Eng. Center

Non-members may attend.

Information Call 823-4798 or 846-1517

BarcelonaRESERVE A GREAT APARTMENT FOR FALL

RENTAL OFFICE NOW OPEN FOR SELECTION700 Dominik — Call 846-1709 for Information

Student Section, Tennis Courts, Basketball and Volleyball Courts, T.V. Loange, Pool Table, Club Rooms.Student Rates. Efficient, Discreet Professional Management. Security Guard.The Newest in Apartments in College Station/Bryan Area. Student Plan $62.50 per month. We have separate Girls’ Dorm.

ttarpeFs [i_ '®Qe£ xi, mrrnimm,. I-

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TERM

ZipStudies End

PRICE

nTr-r-r-Asl i I I i m

PLAYBOY1 yr. (12 iss.) $8.50 (1 yr. Reg. $10.00 1 yr. newsstand $12.00) NEW YORKER 1 yr. (52 iss. )$6.00 (1 yr. Reg. $12.001 yr. newsstand $26.00) APARTMENT IDEAS2 yrs. (8 iss.) $3.00 (2 yrs. Reg. $5.002 yrs. newsstand $8.00) VOGUE1 yr. (20 iss.) $6.50 (1 yr. Reg. $10.00 1 yr. newsstand $15.00)SPORT1 yr. (12 iss.) $3.50 (1 yr. Reg. $6.00 1 yr. newsstand $7.20) VILLAGE VOICE 1 yr. (52 iss.) $5.00 (1 yr. Reg. $7.00 1 yr. newsstand $13.00)

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PSYCHOLOGY TODAY1 yr. (12 iss.) $6.00 (1 yr. Reg. $12.00 1 yr. newsstand $12.00)JET6 mos. (26 iss.) $5.50 9 mos. (38 iss.) $7.50 1 yr. (52 iss.) $10.00 (1 yr. Reg. $12.00 1 yr. newsstand $18.20) BRIDE’S MAGAZINE 1 yr. (8 iss.) $3.97 (1 yr. Reg. $4.00 1 yr. newsstand $8.00) READER’S DIGEST 1 yr. (12 iss.) $2.50 (1 yr. Reg. $4.97 1 yr. newsstand $6.00 ) ESQUIRE 14 iss. $5.00 (1 yr. Reg. $8.50 1 yr. newsstand $14.00)

SATURDAY REVIEW OF: THE ARTS THE SOCIETY SCIENCE EDUCATION

Each title 1 yr. (13 iss.) $6.00 (Each title 1 yr. Reg. $8.00) NEW YORK MAGAZINE 1 yr. (52 iss.) $5.00 (1 yr. Reg. $8.00 1 yr. newsstand $26.00) HARPER’S MAGAZINE 1 yr. (12 iss.)8 iss. $2.84 (1 yr. Reg. $8.50 1 yr. newsstand $12.00) COUNTRY MUSIC 1 yr. (12 iss.) $6.00 (1 yr. newsstand $7.20 (Note: New subscribers get record album from publisher at no additional cost.)

HOUSE & GARDEN1 yr. (12 iss.) $4.00 (1 yr. Reg. $7.00 1 yr. newsstand $9.00)PENTHOUSE1 yr. $8.00 (1 yr. Reg. $10.00 1 yr. newsstand $12.00) TV GUIDE 28 iss. $2.94 56 iss. $5.88(1 yr. Reg. (52 iss.) $7.00 1 yr. newsstand $7.80) GLAMOUR 9 mos. $2.65 (1 yr. Reg. $6.00 1 yr. (12 iss.) $3.50 1 yr. newsstand $7.20) ATLANTIC MONTHLY 8 mos. (8 iss.) $3.50 1 yr. (12 iss) $5.25 (1 yr. Reg. $10.00 '1 yr. newsstand $12.00)

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