■ ■ • THE BATTALION Wednesday, October 9, 1968 Page 4 College Station, Texas Greyhound Bus Lines 1300 Texas 823-8071 • Inexpensive Charter Service for student groups or classes. • Group accomodations arranged. GRE SHOES |itin grtnrncs umbersitp men’s toear 329 University Drive 713 /846-3706 College Station, Texas 77840 Ags Find ‘Gold’ In Summer Work Summer work is taken where it can be found by college stu dents. Several Texas A&M stu dents joined, an exodus to the nation’s newest frontier for lu crative jobs during the past year. Alaska’s gold shows in differ ent forms. Art Stites of Waco hauled it in while on a salmon boat and Charles R. (Chick) Glagola of Pensacola, Fla., found it on a pipeline barge. “It’s a great way to spend a vacation,” they concur, and cite other cases. A Rice football play er also worked in the land of the midnight sun and Stites noted another Aggie, Mike Hubbard of Dallas, spent the summer fight ing fires farther north. Several A&M gridders spent their 1967 vacation in the 49th of the 50 states. STITES SAYS the experience can be rewarding if a student goes with the proper attitude. “The idea is to have enough money along for return fare and Call 822-1441 Allow 20 Minutes Carry Out or Eat-In THE PIZZA HUT 2610 Texas Ave. WELCOME AGGIES TO THE AGGIE DEN- ‘The home of the Aggies’ Open 8 a. m. till midnight 7 Days A Week AGGIE DEN to see through to a job opening,” the senior sociology major re marked. “Then even if some work doesn’t pan out, the student can have a good time.” The Mertzon high graduate de layed his departure until af ter Army R O T C summer camp. Though Stites got in only three weeks fishing, he made enough to cover school year expenses. Previous experience aided him however. He fished out of an Indian village the summer of 1966 and located on a good boat in 1967, the best fishing season since 1936. Stites’ brother also fished out of Ketchikan and his father, a Baylor graduate, teach es in a Kenai community college. GLAGOLA, A senior civil en gineering major, anchored his job as a welder’s helper through Brown and Root. He worked in Anchorage a month, driving a truck all over the Kenai Penin sula, and spent the rest of the summer on a pipeline barge in the Cook Inlet. Work consisted of laying 13 miles of dual 10-inch oil lines to an offshore drilling platform in the Inlet. On the same barge was Bob Hickel, son of Alaska Governor Walter J. Hickel. “We slept on a separate barge anchored about a mile away. The only problem in the work was allowing for 30-foot tides,” he said. A former parachute club mem ber with 13 jumps, Glagola has worked in West Virginia, Michi gan, Kentucky and New Hamp shire. “The greatest thrill was flying up and back to Seattle,” Chick recalled. “The glaciers and snow- covered mountains are a beautiful sight, from the air.” “Alaska’s fine, but North Flor ida is about as far north as I ever want to go again,” he added. Legislators Agree On Firearms Bill WILD ROAD TO A BAND CONCERT Secretary of Interior Stewart Udall paddles raft through white water of Wolf River during a short tour of the Wis consin stream, one of many included in Science Wild Rivers preservation bill signed by President Johnson. Behind Udall is Herb Buettner, president of Wolf River Conservation Club. The duo was greeted at the end of the four-mile trip by a high school band. (AP Wirephoto) Texas U. Professor Caroline Rejected By Administration WrEcK TeCh! AUSTIN (dP) — Fellow faculty members opened the door to Larry Caroline Tuesday, but University of Texas administrators slammed it shut again. The philosophy department’s budget council, which voted last spring not to recommend an ex tension of Caroline’s contract, decided 7-4 Tuesday to recon sider the case, then voted 6-5 to recommend a one-year extension, beginning next September. The chairman of the philosophy department. Dr. Irwin C. Lieb, disagreed with the majority. Lieb told arts and sciences Dean John Silber he voted against the ex tension and would resign his chairmanship since he was un able to go with the majority. Silber said, in a letter, that would not be necessary, that he would accept Lieb’s recommenda tion not to extend Caroline’s con tract. Silber forwarded the letter to university President Norman Hackerman. He said Hackerman could overrule him and take the case to the board of regents, but he did not think Hackerman would do that. Hackerman said: “I see no reason to overrule him.” He de ferred making his decision of ficial until he got to read the ^ vw. • • v-.,,. , : : : I’ve got my interview set between computer lab and econ hurry up bus I’ll be late for class wonder if Alcoa’s doing anything about traffic jams I read somewhere they’re solving rapid transit problems and helping explore the seas and outer space and working with packaging and automotive applications So when I go in I’ll tell it like it is—for me and they’ll tell it like it is— for them Straight questions—straight answers and they won’t care if the bus is a little late Get together with Alcoa: OCTOBER 23 An Equal Opportunity Employer A Plans for Progress Company Change for the better with Alcoa GS ALCOA letter. Presumably, this ends the of ficial discussion on Caroline’s contract. The board of regents in June accepted the council’s original recommendation for no extension, saying the decision was “in all things ratified and made final.” Caroline called for a new American revolution at an anti war demonstration on the Capitol grounds last October. Since then, he has advocated pre-marital sex and a propertyless society. His original two-year contract expires next May. WASHINGTON ) _ Senate- House conferees agreed Tuesday on a bill to prohibit interstate mail order sale of all firearms and ammunition. The compromise measure also includes a general ban on over- the-counter sale of firearms to non-residents of a state and pro hibits sales of rifles and shot guns to persons under 18 years of age. Persons under 21 already are banned from buying hand guns. Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, D-Conn., chief Senate sponsor of the legis lation, hailed the compromise as “a milestone.” And Rep. Emanuel Celler, D- N.Y., chairman of the House con ferees, called it a thorough-going and comprehensive gun control measure. For the most part, the con ferees took the strongest pro visions of the separate bills pre viously passed by the Senate and the House. The measure supplements a section of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act passed earlier in the year ban. ning interstate mail order sales of handguns. It extends this ban to rifles and shotguns and also covers sales of all kinds of ammunition Besides the prohibition on in. terstate mail order sales, the bill regulates sales of firearms by mail within a state by pro. viding for a seven-day waiting period and the filing of an affi davit of eligibility by the pur chaser. Over-the-counter sales to non. residents would be prohibited! except that a person could buj a long gun in an adjoining stats if he qualified under the laws of both states. The measure would become ef fective on Dec. 16, the same dats as the section of the crime con trol bill curbing handgun sales. One exception is that a ban oi imports of all surplus military weapons would be effective inr mediately upon enactment. Senators Favor Stop Of Bombing But Disagree On Terms Of Halt Professor Named To Assist Dean Associate English Professor Harry L. Kidd, a member of the faculty the past 29 years, has been named assistant to Gradu ate Dean George W. Kunze. Dean Kunze said Kidd will de vote half his time to Graduate College activities while continu ing to teach English. Kidd, who received his bache lor’s and master’s degrees from the University of Texas, joined the A&M faculty in the fall of 1939 as an English instructor. In conjunction with his teach ing career, he has written several short stories which have been published in national magazines. WASHINGTON (A 5 )—Although their terms vary widely, at least half of the U. S. senators say they favor some plan to end all American bombing raids on North Vietnamese territory. Included in this group are 3 Republicans and 24 Democrats who say they want the bombing ended unconditionally, at least as an experiment to test the reaction and sincerity of the Ha noi regime. Eleven of these sena tors are seeking re-election this year. Their position is opposed strongly by 18 senators—10 Re publicans and 8 Democrats—who say they are against what one of their number terms “lifting the umbrella” of air support over U. S. combat troops in the field. Twenty-three of the 85 senators reached in an Associated Press survey said they favor a halt— but only if North Vietnam re sponded with reciprocal action that appeared to offer chances either for de-escalation of the war or compromise at the bar gaining table in Paris. This group includes 16 Democrats and 7 Re publicans. All of those reached were asked if, and under what terras the; could endorse a bombing halt- unconditionally or based on re ciprocal Hanoi response. Seventeen declined to comment The survey was conducted ii the days following Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey’s Sept. 21 campaign speech in which he sail that as president he would con sider a bombing halt “an accept able risk for peace” and would, in deciding whether to take thi action, “place key importance on evidence—direct or indirect, by deed or word—of Communist will ingness to restore the demilitar ized zone between North ani South Vietnam.” ORANGE JUICE FOR THE ROAD NEW DEHLI > _ Passen gers on Air India’s international flights are not heavy drinkers, an airline survey revealed. The re port, presented to Parliament, showed that as much orange juice was consumed as alcoholic bever ages during 1966-67. Wreck Tech! ATTENTION! All Freshmen! Make Sure YOUR Picture Will Be In The YEARBOOK! PICTURE SCHEDULE ’69 AGCIELAND N-S-Oct. 7-Oct. 11 T-Z - Oct. 14-Oct. 18 Corps Fish: Bring Brigade Or Wing Shields, Poplin Shirt, and Black Tie. Civilians: Wear Coat and Tie. BRING FEE SLIP! PICTURES WILL BE TAKEN AT University Studio 115 N. Main — North Gate S’! Serb Stad nesd ing Loui McL Wils Mi Tige the i er h< nesd rema drill mori St. ] be c Mi in n twici in th and try a corti shou At Tues Nara do tl Th refei STUI read xiimeog and mv YOU.” 0U.’ 823-536: Typir Typii Perienc Want View. Woul located Child „ Gregc 8<«-*00l HUM &2 One Jsdroon Jnrnily. Call an Mobil and h shaded Near V, 4c c all 823 v Por r New wi ’‘6-471; Ord taj S