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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 27, 1969)
WOlf Institute Electronics DIVISION OF WOLF INDUSTRIES P.O. DRAWER BM COLLEGE STATION TEXAS 77840 Medical • Nuclear General Instrumentation Design • Fabrication • Repair BILL MAERTENS, President 708 Hereford St. 713^846-3462 College Station TO MY UNIVERSITY FRIENDS WHO LIVE IN BRYAN .O' ,v JEROME (Jack) ZUBIK “The CITIZENS Candidate” Bryan City Commissioner —On April 1st— (Paid For By Jerome (Jack) Zubik) CASA CHAPULTEPEC OPEN 11:00 A. M. CLOSE 10:00 P. M. 1315 COLLEGE AVENUE — PHONE 822-0872 SPECIALS GOOD THURS., FRL, SAT^* SUN. BEEF TACOS. BEANS - RICE CHEESE TACOS, BEANS - RICE CHALUPAS WITH GUACAMODE CHALUPAS WITH CHEESE - BEANS HOME MADE TAMALES WITH FRIED BEANS BEEF ENCHILARAS, BEANS - RICE CHEESE ENCHILADAS, BEANS - RICE CHILES REDLENOUS WITH SPANISH RICE AND CHEESE SAUCE GUACAMOLE SALAD - 2 CRISPY TACOS MEXICAN DINNER COMPLETE TQ TAKE OUT FIESTA DINNER Guacamole Salad, Beef Taco, Three Endhiladas, Beans, Rice Tortillas and Hot Cheese Dip and Tortilla Chips. Regu,ar $1.09 $1.50 OR DINE IN TACO DINNER Two Beef Tacos, One Chili Con Queso, Guacamole Salad, Tortillas and Hot Sauce, Cheese Dip and Tortilla Chips. Regular $1.25 ■ 1 1 NEW MECHANIC A polar bear props himself up to lick the tasty fish oil smeared on the propeller of a taxiplane in Norway. The picture was taken by the plane’s pilot, Karl O. Pettersen, just before he shooed the bear away. (AP Wirephoto) GOP Picks 3 A&M Students Randall Ihms, Rick Gerlach, and Ella Harris of Texas A&M have been elected state officials of the Texas Young Republican Federation, announced State Chairman Gary Bruner. Bruner stated, ‘We are fortu nate to have someone of their abilities to assist the Republican effort in this area.” Ihms, of Lake Buchanan Dam, Read Battalion Classifieds SAVE on ALL YOU BUY - ' *P£Cf*L S POR : THUZ* - P/tt + S*T. MARCH l*)' ft)6r All GuANnTy rights xsro. GL4 OtOLG flour-49 C0FFEF39 GttftMAGElFF Page 4 College Station, Texas Thursday, March 27, 1969 THE BATTALIO Transport Conference Hear Talk On Emergency Plans Concern for the validity of ex isting transportation plans in national emergencies was voiced here today at the 11th annual Transportation Conference. Gen. John P. Doyle (USAF- Ret.) of A&M’s MacDonald Chair of Transportation questioned the overall National Plan for Emer gency Preparedness. He charged the plan minimizes the possi bility of all-out nuclear attack and fails to consider non-defense emergencies such as nationwide strikes. J. M. Budd, president of St. Paul-based Great Northern Rail road, called for refinements in techniques for determining re sources and requirements. THE TWO-DAY meeting on “Emergency Control of Trans portation” is jointly sponsored by the U. S. Department of Transportation and the Texas Transportation Institute and MacDonald Chair of Transpor tation. Some of the topics mentioned by the two opening - session speakers may be covered in a later address by Assistant Trans portation Secretary Alan Dean. Also on the agenda is John L. McGruder, director of DOT’S Of fice of Emergency Transporta tion. General Doyle, whose 1961 Transportation report played a major role in formation of DOT, doesn’t think the conditions of emergency described in the na tional plan meet the require ments of transportation. The general emphasized, however, his opinions should not be construed as those of anyone in DOT. THE PLAN, he pointed out, lists three conditions of emer gency: international tension, lim ited war (which Doyle interprets to mean anything from Korea and Vietnam to a World War II) and general war. “The tration Gradi and vet ever - increasing cos&g corl | of our people in ] nounced density centers, and their p ^ k U b The ing dependence for survival an unbroken supply line, ref sponsor that we be more specific,” ft p ro f. I noted, “that we admit therf possibilities of transporuftead of emergency not related to acs plied St of a foreign foe.” He pointed out a national: or truckers strike, or both, a quickly cause emergency w tions requiring establishment movement priorities, possill; quiring military resources move essential supplies. “Planning for this contings is, of course, complicated political implications,” Gea Doyle admitted. He said, li ever, it is necessary and el be done. 700 School Personnel Will Gather For Enlarged Conference In June DOYLE ALSO charged plan generates a “false sens complacency” by stressing! improbability of nuclear an “It seems to me the ti realistic assumption we canu is that, if and when the Sn leadership concludes that Ea science. a former District Committeeman, is currently serving as Treasurer of the A&M club. He will be d;he new Area VII Chairman. This area includes 33 counties. Miss Harris of Bryan and Ger lach of Abilene will be the new District Committeewoman and Committeeman for District 11, which includes the nine counties. An enlarged version of the annual School Administrators and Supervisors Conference here will convene June 9-11, an nounced Liberal Arts Dean Frank Hubert. Members of three state asso ciations of administrators, coun ty superintendents and instruc tional supervisors will be joined this year at the June conference by principals, school business managers and tax assessor col lectors. An expected record attendance of over 700 will take stock through addresses and discussion on “The Challenge and the Chance,” a theme paralleling the report of the Governor’s Com mittee on Education. FEATURED speaker will be Arnold W. Salisbury, recently elected president of the Ameri can Association of School Admin istrators. The June conference will be the AASA official’s first speaking appearance in Texas, noted Dr. Paul R. Hensarling, general chairman. Teacher and administrator in Iowa and Illinois schools since 1935, Salisbury will speak on “Quality, the Imperative of Edu cation” in conference general as sembly. In a superintendents’ session he will discuss “The Ad ministrator, The Man, His Job and His Challenge.” SALISBURY, 55, chairs the Educational Administration De partment at Western Illinois University in Macomb. He has held numerous elective and ap pointed posts in Iowa education, including president of the Iowa associations of school adminis trators and secondary school principals. The Iowa Wesleyan College trustees board member served on the Illinois Council on Economic Education and the state’s commission on teacher education and professional stand ards. He toured Soviet schools in 1959 with other selected ad ministrators. He has degrees in history, English and secondary school ad ministration from Iowa Wes leyan and State University of Iowa. ■" V * 7 . • •' ■■ » (<*' Wesleyan awarded Salisbury an honorary doctor of letters in 1962. He completed Ph.D. work at State University in 1963. can absorb our counterstrih still advance Russian intai we can expect a deliberate and che clear attack,” the general! soned. In such a situation, he erf sized, our national decision'll ing process would undoii be disrupted. He said then try needs to prepare for skI possibility and the people: to be informed that opentii would be conducted in an ati phere bordering on martial k “BECAUSE of its psycM cal effect on potential enenie realistic planning base ail culated implementation tie could be as important to ability to deter as the ati arsenal itself,” General I' concluded. 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