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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 25, 1968)
- • .''vljKS y.'.. .. , .v ■ y.-^v. lary 25,136j Grant ■om the Bay. ne. i of the pet. fund will \ orial to Dt unary met )m 1916 un5 wment stipj ds will 1( i enrolled t irriculum j with prefti its who als r varsit] ,ive in boll hile at AM > 1919 Soutl ihampionski i was unt s oppositis ague tion Teague :nsion font e served its Crnmitt* nsation nti d widows ai gue has be er of soil# i prograa one yeani 0ss, the rest as completi been unt 1 at Nava: . Major s shed proje furnis sing catti ,e has devi office stil .ndling iat serviceaiE irity recip laving pul •ograms. ue has is ncorporate ut the Sill g Farms: i loans water sjs sting int ! new was he Farmsj announcemei Congressmi eel that® of experiem ilaced me in iffective sen id I will « ivilege if tl i District s office forai -Ad' 0 Students Trying To Beat Rap Must Face Female Psychologist Auburn-haired, blue-eyed San dra Guillet looks like a college coed, but she’s a traffic court judge at Texas A&M University. Cheerful but businesslike, Mrs. Guillet hears scores of complaints every day, forty hours a week. Students, faculty members and campus visitors alike bring their problems to her desk. “It’s fantastic—the number of people who run out of gas in forbidden parking areas,” she smiled. “And the number of rela tives and wives who were driving the cars at the time they were ticketed is pretty high, too.” “Anyone who gets a ticket on campus and feels there are ex tenuating circumstances is wel come to voice his problem in this office,” the pert 1964 psychology graduate of the University of Southwestern Louisiana com mented. “Students like to be able to come in and talk even if they have to pay the ticket.” Mrs. Guillet explains to un happy ticket holders that they have the option to appeal her decision to a student appeals panel which meets weekly. It’s also her duty to prepare the docket for appeal panel sessions. But no member of the Campus Security Office is present at hearings. Naturally, Mrs. Guillet has to know the campus traffic regula tions backwards, forwards and sideways. With the 11-man campus se- CIVILIAN SENIORS and GRADUATE STUDENTS Will have their portrait made for the 1968 Aggie- land Now thru Jan. 31. Portraits will be made at University Studio. (Coats & Ties) PARDNER You’ll Always Win The Showdown When You Get Your Duds Done At CAMPUS CLEANERS f GREAT ^ SOUND /\/ore/co® CARRY-CORDER '150’ 9 TAPE RECORDER The Portable Fun Machinel Up to IVz hours record playback per cassette. Cordless. Dynamic microphone. Patch cord. Weighs 3 lbs. Carrying case. Versatile. WHITE’S AUTO Bryan & College Station 822-3867 — 846-5626 «L Jff curity staff writing traffic cita tions, she often hears 100 objec tions a day. “I try to treat each person as I would want to be treated,” she remarked. “And I try to give the feeling that they have a chance . . . they are not battering against a brick wall. When they huff, I try not to huff back. If you stay calm, they usually settle down again quickly.” But there are bad times, too. Not every violator maintains a cool head about traffic citations. “Some are very antagonistic,” she winced. “They grab the tickets out of your hand and stomp out when they don’t get satisfaction. If they would wait a day or two before coming in, they would cool off.” Peak periods for dissension by ticket-getters come at the begin ning and near the end of each semester, Mrs. Guillet feels. “It’s a problem getting accus tomed to all the rules at the be ginning of school,” she offered. “And a sort of desperation sets in toward the end. With exami nations and financial pressures mounting, getting a parking tick et sometimes seems to be the last straw.” Campus Security Chief Ed Powell beams when he talks about the personable Mrs. Guillet, an employe since June. “She’s outstanding,” he empha sized. “That girl knows how to work with people. Students don’t pull many tricks on her. She does a good job.” Shortly after enrolling as a graduate student in urban plan ning at A&M, Cliff, Mrs. Guillet’s husband, brought home a campus parking ticket. Naturally, he ask ed his wife for an out-of-court judgment. “Pay your $2 at the fiscal of fice,” she suggested. He did. THE BATTALION Thursday, January 25, 1968 College Station, Texas Page 5 Visual Aids Produces ID’s TICKETS APLENTY Listening to problems of students, faculty members and visitors who receive traffic citations at Texas A&M Uni versity is the job of Sandra Guillet, “judge” in the Cam pus Security Office. She lends an attentive ear to each visitor, but is wary of worn excuses. Women Grab Highest Honors Guess who’s at the head of the class at Aggieland. Two young ladies. Mrs. Dolores Klussmann and Mrs. Barbara Williams, both of Bryan, are two of the four stu dents who graduated from Texas A&M University Saturday with high honors. Mrs. Klussmann, an education major, has maintained a perfect 3.0 grade point ratio since trans ferring to A&M from Blinn Junior College in 1965. She is the wife of Wallace G. Klussmann, a member of the university’s Wild life Science Department. Mrs. Williams, a psychology major, is the wife of James W. Williams, who also graduated Saturday. The two other students who completed four years of study with at least a 2.8 GPR are James E. Smallwood of San Antonio, a veterinary medicine student, and Jesse H. Stiles Jr., a petroleum engineering major from Fred erick, Okla. A&M’s record 709-member mid term class included 18 other stu dents graduating with honors, four of them girls. The university’s fall enrollment included 770 coeds. By CHARLES ROWTON Battalion Editor They are used for everything from cashing checks to picking up copies of the Aggieland. Mak ing them is an annual job for the Photo and Visual Aids Lab at Texas A&M University. But no one really appreciates his student identification card until he needs it and hasn’t got it. All other work at Photo and Visual Aids comes to a virtual stand-still during registration be cause of the scope of the job. Three photographers and six teen girls, hired to give instruc tions and help the students, were needed during the registration period last fall. “We’re the last people students see,” Photo and Visual Aids Lab Foreman Clifford D. Wallstein said about the final step in regis tration. The procedure is a simple one, according to Wallstein. The old identification card is presented to a young lady who inserts it into a machine that transfers all the information to a piece of paper. The student is then given a slate on which he prints his name and is directed to one of the cam eras to have his picture made. The name slate is placed on a stand in front of the student before the picture is taken. A quad camera is used so that four separate pictures can be exposed on each sheet of film. Polaroid film was used. “According to the Registrar, we took 10,800 pictures in two- and-one-half days in September,” Wallstein added. However, work has only begun for the staff of Photo and Visual Aids with the picture-taking pro cess. As soon as the pictures are taken, they are separated and placed all over the lab so that a preservative can be applied to the surface of each one. After the preservative is add ed, the pictures are pasted on the identification cards. The cards are now ready to be laminated in Addressograph lami nating machines. Plastic is placed on each side of the indentification card. After it is covered, it is inserted into the laminating ma chine. “It takes five or six minutes to laminate four cards, and two workers are all we need to keep the laminating machines busy.” The entire process takes ap proximately three weeks to com plete. Wallstein, who has a degree in graphic arts from Sam Houston State Teachers College, oversees a permanent staff that also does work in the photography and lithogx-aphy field for anyone as sociated with Texas A&M. The Registrar’s Office takes over at this point. “We have an embossing ma chine that prints the student’s permanent number, his name, and date of birth on the card,” Don ald D. Carter, associate director of admissions, said. The library also works on the identification cards before they can be distributed to students. Library workers punch the large rectangular hole and the ten rec tangular holes in the cards. These holes program each card for use in the computer in the library used for checking out books. Everyone who will be attend ing A&M for the first time in the spring semester will have ID cards made at registration. Re turning students’ identification cards are to be used the rest of the year. Preparing lor a Graduate School or Prolossional School Exam? 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