The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 01, 1971, Image 4

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    Page 4
College Station, Texas
Friday, April 2, 1971
THE BATTALION
President’s students set fete
President’s Scholars of A&M
will convene Friday at Hensel
Park for a steak fry honoring
their achievements and recogni
tion of 1971-72 honorees who will
arrive next fall.
Fifty President’s Scholars are
now in studies at A&M. Another
22 will enroll in August. Eleven
of the new recipients of the
award plan to attend the steak
fry.
The Endowed President’s
Scholars program, initiated by
the late President Earl Rudder
in 1967, is designed to keep the
state’s most promising scholars
in Texas for university studies.
Two awards will be made at
the social function and President
Jack Williams will speak.
Value is at
FENNEYS
in Bryan
FLARE LEG
SLACKS
Penn - Prest Stripes
and Solids . . . Flap pockets
$7.98 pr.
They are David W. Gent and
Antonio F. (Tony) Pelletier of
San Antonio; Corbett D. Harkey,
Victoria; Randall L. James, Col
lege Station; Terry W. Myrick,
John D. Nash Jr., and John Ty
ler of Houston; Ruben E. Ochoa,
Laredo; John D. Shelton, League
City; Ike C. Thacker, Beaumont,
and Scott W. Woods, Richardson.
Selected annually from nomi
nees of the state’s high school
junior class, President’s Scholars
represent students whose aca
demic work has been near per
fect. The honor, which carries a
$1,000 for four years scholarship
for undergraduate study at A&M,
is announced before the recipient
begins his senior year of high
school.
Guests for the steak fry host
ed by Logan Weston and his
YMCA staff include Ford D. Al
britton, Texas A&M Board of Di
rectors member; Leslie L. Ap-
pelt, Association of Former Stu
dents president, Ed Mosher, board
chairman, Mosher Steel, Hous- I*'
ton; R. W. Baker Jr., board
chairman, Mercantile National ^ J*' t
Bank; C. E. Whitson, Sam Hous- » ~ ***
ton State professor; G. S. Ap- ^
pling, retired manufacturer of
Victorville, Calif., and Roy Red- Wmmmm
wine, manager of Appling Busi
ness Estates in El Campo.
- ^ # .
They are all Texas A&M grad
uates and except for one have
had President’s Scholarships.
1I& ^ J-SJilliLL* . <■*» *’*•
A CANADA GOOSE at Blackwater National Wildlife Ref- picked up a chic bonnet, the plastic strap from a six-pack
ug-e in Dorcester County on the Maryland eastern shore is of beer. Refuge personnel said it was the third bird found
ready for the Easter parade. The last goose in the trio snared in such a plastic gadget this year. (AP Wirephoto)
WHEN RE-ELECTED TO BRYAN CITY
COMMISSION JOE FAULK PROMISES
To continue to assist in the development of the In
dustrial growth we have achieved these last two years,
and thereby provide more and better paying jobs for
our citizens.
To continue public ownership of our utility system.
To keep my promise of 23 February 1971 to our
newly elected School Board to cooperate with them and
do all things necessary to promote the quality of educa
tion on as fair a basis as possible.
To continue to involve a greater cross-section of our
populace in City Government - something unheard of in
Bryan prior to 1969.
To continue to improve the efficiency of our city’s
operations to provide better government per dollar spent.
To keep street lighting, sewage and drainage pro
grams progressing at the accelerated rate we have de
veloped.
To continue working for additional low-cost housing
projects such as the ones we have already brought about.
To make full use of Federal and State funds for our
local projects to assure adequate sewage and drainage
in all parts of our city, and to avoid unnecessary ex
penditures.
To do all that I can for this City in an honest and
forthright manner. I never have and never will use
this office for financial or personal gain and I don’t
intend to start now.
RE-ELECT JOE FAULK YOUR BRYAN CITY
COMMISSIONER APRIL 6
Pd. Pol. Ad.
■
Dr. Horace R. Byers, chair
man, and other Scholarships
Committee members and deans
are also invited.
Kenny Hensley, Class of 1972
President’s Scholar of O’Donnell,
will give the invocation.
Campus briefs
Easter service scheduled for Monday
Agnew against
fullproseeution
for battle error
WASHINGTON 0P> — Vice presi
dent Spiro T. Agnew was quoted
Wednesday as deploring what he
said was a tendency to forgive
young men who desert from the
military, yet to prosecute to the
fullest extent a soldier who may
have made a mistake in combat.
Easter services sponsored by
the Student “Y” Association will
be held Monday in the All Faiths
Chapel at Texas A&M.
Dr. Malcolm Bane, pastor of
the First Baptist Church in Col
lege Station, will be the speaker,
announced Dan McQueen, Y pub
licity chairman.
Music for the 7:30 p.m. service
will be provided by the Singing
Cadets, directed by Robert L.
Boone and accompanied by Mrs.
June Biering.
“The university community as
well as students are invited to
participate,” McQueen said.
But Agnew said he believes the
American public should be made
aware of the processes completed
and the avenues of appeal remain
ing open to Galley and his law
yers, the Tribune reported in its
Thursday editions.
Health education
seminar Tuesday
FOR
BEST
RESULTS
TRY
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
Environmental effects on men
tal health will be examined Tues
day at A&M by Stuart Fisher,
public health specialist with the
Texas Department of Mental
Health and Mental Retardation.
Fisher will appear in the
Health Education Seminar series
of the Health and Physical Edu
cation Department.
His 4 p.m. talk will be in the
University Library conference
suite, Room 226, announced Mrs.
Melba Halford, seminars coordi
nator. The series lecture is a
public-free event, she noted.
Y01R CHILDREN DESERVE THE REST
AND SO DO YOU... CAST YOUR
BALLOT WITH DON DALE,
CITY COUNCILMAN
FOR COLLEGE STATION
DON R. DALE
Your Candidate
Don R. Dale Believes In and Supports
Resides at 1220 Orr Street, College Station, with
his wife, Elora, and Children.
Orderly growth within the relm of our city
budget, stressing fiscal responsibility.
Independent Businessman and Contractor
Graduate of Texas A&M University
Maximum concern for health of our environment
and our children.
Member of Board of Stewards, A&M Methodist
Church
High level of integrity
Station Government.
and conduct in College
Past President of College Station Chamber of
Commerce; Past Member of Jaycees; Past Mem
ber of Lion’s Club, Optimist Club, Elks Lodge and
Dedicated efforts toward growth of recreational
facilities for children and adults, as well as en
vironmental concern.
College Station Little League; Past Member of
College Station Board of Equilization and A&M
Consolidated Board of Equilization.
Continued improvement and training for city po
lice officers and firemen.
Recently appointed by Mayor Anderson as a Mem
ber of the Appeals and Adjustment Board of
Southern Building Code and current Chairman of
the College Station Business Development Com
mittee.
Utilization of business knowledge and practices in
operating College Station Government.
Representing all citizens of College Station, with
no obligations to any person or group.
VOTE TUESDAY, APRIL 6
Citizens supporting DON DALE for Councilman
Raymond L. Rodgers
Mrs. Jack Upham
Julie Smalley
Sandra Harris
Mrs. Lois Rogers
Joe Orr
E. E. Cochran
Mrs. E. B. Reynolds
Jack Upham
Charles H. Bridges
Frances B. Radeleff
H. E. Smalley
Mrs. Fred Brison
James L. Wallace
Allen E. Denton, Jr.
Alfred Linton
Mrs. J. D. Johnson
Mary Perry
J. D. Lindsay
Dr. George W. Kunze
Mrs. George W. Kunze
Erward Linton
Mrs. James L. Wallace
James Gentry
Mrs. R. J. Dunn
Mrs. Allen E. Denton, Jr.
Dr. E. C. Bashaw
Mrs. E. C. Bashaw
Dr. E. C. Holt
Mrs. E. C. Holt
E. S. Holdredge
Dr. R. H. Davis, Jr.
Mrs. R. H. Davis, Jr.
Dr. Eli L. Whiteley
Mrs. Eli Whiteley
Robert Ondrasek
Dr. Leo Berner, Jr.
Dr. M. R. Calliham
Alfon O. Quitta
Mrs. Leo Berner, Jr.
Mrs. Robert Ondrasek
R. M. Logan
A1 Bormann, Jr.
Allen M. Madeley
Otto R. Kunze
J. H. Quisenberry
Robert C. Hansen
Lambert H. Wilkes
O. M. Holt
Robert R. Rhodes
Ed Cooper
Dan Williams
Ed E. Powell
Edwin W. Heir
J. Wayne Stark
Frank M. Ivey
Pd. Pol. Ad.
Graduate to manage
‘Atomic World’ tour
Orlan L. Ihms, A&M graduate
with several years teaching ex
perience, will manage a 1971-72
“This Atomic World” touring lec
ture program for A&M.
The Llano Junior High School
science teacher was named the
program lecturer-demonstrator by
Dr. Horace R. Byers, academic
vice president.
Ihms will take the program to
high schools in West and South
west Texas.
The traveling demonstration
lecture is cooperatively con
ducted by A&M with Oak Ridge
Associated Universities and the
Atomic Energy Commission. The
program explains atomic energy
and its uses in student terms.
Ihms, 29, will succeed Harold
L. Watson as the “This Atomic
World” manager and is the fifth
lecturer in A&M’s six years in
the program.
Ihms has taught five years at
Llano since completing his bache
lor degree in poultry science at
Texas A&M in 1965. He worked
summers on the master’s degree
in education, awarded last year.
Smith, chief instructor for the
fire school, will participate in a
demonstration of train derailment
problems to the Industrial Chem
icals Section.
Rauch will attend the Amer
ican Society of Safety Engineers
meetings.
Both men will participate in
the Veterans of Safety meetings,
an organization for long-time
safety experts who recommend
safety procedures.
English professor
awarded $1,500
Dr. Forrest D. Burt of the Eng
lish Department has been award
ed a $1,500 summer stipend from
the National Endowment for the
Humanities for 1971 research.
Burt, recently named chairman
of freshman English in the de
partment, was notified of the
award by Wallace B. Edgerton,
acting chairman of the Washing
ton, D. C., organization.
Edgerton said that the stipend,
one of 120 awarded in the U. S,
this year, is to further a recipi
ent’s “development as a scholar
and teacher.”
Burt will study John Henry
Newman’s 1864 autobiography,
“Apologia pro vita sua,” from the
point of view of Alfred Adler’s
psychology.
Singing Cadets, Franchi
together on new record
Firemen to attend
safety association
Henry D. Smith and John R.
Rauch of the Engineering Exten
sion Service’s Firemen Training
School will attend the Texas
Safety Association meetings Mon
day through Wednesday in Hous
ton.
A national release to be on
record sales racks next month
will include the sound of the
Singing Cadets.
The 45 r.p.m. single slated for
national release in late April will
be a Singing Cadet and orches
tra-backed rendition by Sergio
Franchi of “No Man Is An Is
land.”
Singing Cadets Director Rob
ert L. Boone said his group will
be recorded onto a master tape
in Houston studios during the
spring semester class break.
Franchi performed “No Man
Is An Island” with the Singing
Cadets on the Jan. 24 Ed Sulli
van Show. He arranged the
group’s participation in the sin
gle.
Boone said Franchi is giving
the Cadets a percentage of the
royalties.
“This occurred,” Boone added,
“as a result of Sergio’s associa
tion with the Singing Cadets at
the Miss Teenage America Pag
eant and on the Sullivan Show,
and because of the Sullivan mix-
up”
Another performing group
went overtime on the Sullivan
show and, with time running out,
a Singing Cadets’ solo was cut
in order to get the Franchi-Ca-
dets number on the air.
SAN
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BULLETI
SOPHOMORES & JUNIORS
PROOFS MUST BE
SELECTED AT THE UNIVERSITY
STUDIO BY
APRIL 5
FOR YOUR PICTURE TO
APPEAR IN THE AGGIELAND.