» -% - .‘V’V ■- • - - aifcv,w. -r«v ?! vw.v ;•;* ".v.v,-.w • - '■ • E D S Phi Delta Sigma ‘Rush Week’ Begins Monday 'in Phi Delta Sigma, the only off- campus fraternity at A&M, has announced next week as rush week for prospective new pledges to the social organization. Tom Stanley, president of the chapter and a senior architect major from Dallas, said, “We want to benefit students who choose not to be in the Corps and provide them with a similar fraternal organization.” “Just as it is an honor to be in the Corps, we feel that it is an honor to belong to an organ ization that stresses the student’s social development.” The fraternity is now in its fifth year of existence and is on the verge of national affiliation, pending campus recognition, Stanley said. He added that during the year PDS holds parties at the Shiloh Club after football games for the student body and also works closely with the Bryan Rotary Club providing the “muscle” for service functions. Members comprise a wide cross- section of academic majors, and the only restriction placed on membership is a minimum 2.0 grade average. Dues for member ship are not prohibitive, according to Stanley. The fraternity also has ties with several sororities at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, from where the fra ternity sweetheart is chosen. Stanley said any student in terested in joining the organiza tion should attend the smoker at 8 p.m. Monday at the Shiloh Club. Dress for the meeting will be coat and tie. BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES One day per word 3«f per word each additional day Minimum charge—60(* ified Display olumn inch isertion LI] _ arge- Classified DispI 90d transmission, radio, •4676 after 6:30 p. m. nza, 2' radio. dte, 4- new tires. Call 10t4 E ? SUZUKI X-6, HUSTLER 8,000 miles. IDOD SHAPE. 846-4407. 8t5 prn 100 cc Yamaha motorcycle. 1300 miles, months old. Excellent condition. Will ftide. |245. 823-4064. 7tfn 4 and 8 track guaranteed tapes, 5 for 15.00 — Aggie Den. 2tfn Reconditioned refrigerators and ranges. unpainted furniture. Charlie’s Furni- |re, 318 N. Bryan St., Bryan, Tx. 822- I S3. ATTENTION: SOPHOMORE OR JUN- pR, we need a part time helper during hool year. If you need a job (prefer- AIR CONDITIONING SERVICEMAN peed a man with two or more years 'leed a man with two or more years ixperience, good character and work mbits. Permanent or part time job. pat ixcellent wages with established Carrier lealer. HELP WANTED Experienced Florist designer. Apply in’s Blossom Shop. 1106 Texas. Bryan, phone calls please. 6tfn school ye r in the morning), and you’re taking less, rep ting any experien rking in a retail store. hours or less, reply to Box 542, Bryan, erience you may have had Room mate South Colle ege. *70 per furnished. All bills paid, phone, and lightbulbs. tmei nth. Semi- ings, 5-1 5t8 DIAMONDS Add distinction to your class ring with the touch of a diamond ! 1/5 Carat Price Range: $45 - $65 For further information Call: 845-4600 NOW LEASING FOR SEPTEMBER THERE ARE APARTMENTS. AND THEN THERE IS TANGLEWOOD SOUTH College Station’s Newest and Finest Apartment Complex ! Gracio dus Apartment Living For Those Who the Demand the Finest 1-2-3 Bedroom Apartments FLATS AND STUDIOS! PRICED FROM $145 to $250 FURNISHED SLIGHTLY HIGHER Furnished or Unfurnished l-l'/i -2-2Yj Baths. All Utilities Paid! Decorator Design — Several Decors ?sign From Which To Choose. Separate Adults Only and Family Liv ing Areas. Recreational Areas — 2 Pools. And A Special Swimming Pool For Children. Convenient to Redmond Shopping Cen ter And A&M College. All Electric Westinghouse Kitchens — Dishwashers—Frost Free Refrigeration. Pin Up Posters galore at our store! Aggie Den. 2tfn Come see our new bumper stickers — Aggie Den. 2tfn Billiards, pen ball, Aggie Theatre, pocket books, magazines, record albums, stereo tape decks, bumper stickers, decals, pin ups, posters. — Aggie Den. 2tfn We cash Aggie checks — Aggie Den. 2tfn We buy almost anything — Aggie Den. 2tfn Open 7 days weekly 8 a. m. till midnite— Aggie Den. 2tfn Troubles? Come tell the Aggie Den all about it — We can help ! 2tfn Lonesome? Come to the Aggie Den! 2tfn Homesick and heartbroken ? Come on over to the Aggie Den ! 2tfn No friends? Come at once to the friendly Aggie Den — We need you ! 2tfn Wanta’ go home!! Come on over to the Aggie Den and enjoy yourself—you’ll want to stay ! 2tfn Welcome to the ‘ Home of the Aggies” — Aggie Den. 2tfn All Aggie football games broadcast on our P.A. system inside the Aggie Den. 2tfn LOST LOST : gold pocket watch. Initials M. D. and inscription. REWARD. 845-2649. Ilt3 OFFICIAL NOTICE Official notices must arrive in the Office of Student Publications before deadline ol 1 p.m. of the day proceeding publication. ATTENTION ALL University sponsored Departmental & Professional Clubs, and Sports Clubs. There will be a meeting concerning Club Aid Funds made available from Exchange Store Profits in the Social Room, MSC on October 7, 1969, at 5:15 p. m. teirigei Located at Puryear Drive and Highway 30 A luxuriously furnished model apart- dw available to shov It is now time for all Corps Accounts, Civilian, Government Organizations, De partmental and Professional Clubs, Ho xjwn eties, ment, now available to show. For Rental Information Call Profession: ational Clt M.S.C. Advised Accounts, Sport! partmental and Professional Clubs, Home town and International Clubs, Honor Soci- Mrs. Dorothy Shipper Youngblood 846-2026 or 846-2509 Itfn xrujico, vi v i o vvx iT. v-v-vru ii ij yjv/i > \ Clubs, Student Body Governing Organiza tions, and Service Organizations, to be of ficially recognized at the Student Financf Center, M.S.C. Each club must file a list heir officers with the Student Financi Center. DEADLINE OCTOBER 15, 1969 of the VICTORIAN APARTMENTS Midway between Bryan & A&M University FOR BEST RESULTS TRY BATTALION CLASSIFIED STUDENTS ! ! Need A Home 1 & 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur. Pool and Private Courtyard 3 MONTHS LEASE 822-5041 401 Lake St. Apt. 1 TROPHIES PLAQUES Engraving Service Ask About Discounts Texas Coin Exchange, Inc. 1018 S. Texas 822-5121 Bob Boriskie ’55 COINS SUPPLIES WHITE AUTO STORES Bryan and College Station can save you up to 40% on auto parts, oil, filters, etc. 846-5626. TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED & EXCHANGED Completely Guaranteed Lowest Prices HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION 33rd. & Texas Ave. Bryan 822-6874 RADIO AND TV REPAIRS MOTOROLA TELEVISIONS ZENITH RADIOS & PHONOS KEN’S RADIO AND TV 303 W. 26th 822-5023 STERLING ELECTRONICS sound equipment Ampex Roberts Fisher Sony Scott Panasonic tape decks Harmon-Kardop 903 South Main, Bryan 822-1589 SOSOLIKS TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV All Makes B&W TV Repairs 713 S. MAIN 822-1941 Rentals-Sales-Service TYPEWRITERS Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding- Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO 909 S. Main 822-6000 Watch Repairs Jewelry Repair Diamond Senior Rings Senior Rings Refinished C. W. Varner & Sons Jewelers North Gate 846-5816 Joe Faulk Auto Parts 220 E. 25th Bryan, Texas JOE FAULK ’32 22 years in Bryan ENGINEERING & OFFICE SUPPLY CORP. REPRODUCTION & MEDIA — ARCH. & ENGR. SUPPLIES SURVEYING SUPPLIES & EQUIPMENT — OF FICE SUPPLIES • MULTILITH SERVICE & SUPPLIES 402 West 25th St. Ph. 823-0939 Bryan, Texas Prof Proposes System For Evaluation THE BATTALION Wednesday, October 1, 1969 College Station, Texas Page 3 House Reception Cool A teacher evaluating-reward- ing system utilizing students, alumni and other teachers is pro posed by an A&M professor in the “Colorado School Journal.” To Laird’s Lottery The article by Dr. Manuel M. Davenport, “Evaluating and Re warding Good Teaching,” was adapted for the recent edition of the Colorado Education Associa tion publication from an earlier paper. Along with the system, Daven port suggests an education-ori ented structure “more appropri ate to the task of education.” The proposed method would employ students’ ratings to de termine teacher enthusiasm, alumni ratings to serve as a bal ance and measure long-term ben efits and ratings by the teach er’s contemporaries on mastery of subject matter. By Jim Adams Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON Lff>> — Secre tary of Defense Melvin R. Laird got a cool reception Tuesday when he tried to persuade Con gress that a draft lottery is the fairest way to let young men know their callup prospects. Rep. F. Edward Hebert, D-La., chairman of a special House sub committee hearing President Nixon’s proposal, said the differ ence between the lottery and a plan the President could estab lish without congressional ap proval is “t w e e d 1 e dum and tweedle dee.” The lottery plan would still leave most young men guessing as to just when they might be called, Hebert said. And he said removal of the present congressional ban against a lottery which— is all Nixon asks — would give the President “a blank check” to abandon the lottery proposal and establish any system he likes. Laird said the lottery would be the fairest and simplest way to reduce the present seven-year draft-risk period to one year. He said its need is particularly urgent in view of administration hopes to significantly cut draft calls in the months ahead. “It would lead to side benefits such as closer ties between the alumni and the high school, data from which the administration could check its ability to attract and retain good teachers and a greater awareness and apprecia tion for teaching on the part of students,” wrote Davenport, head of the Philosophy and Humani ties Department. He previously was a philosophy professor at Colorado State University. With proper rewards, the sys tem would do much “to raise the status of teaching within the community and would encourage more young people to enter and remain within the teaching pro fession,” he said. “Teaching,” Davenport added, “is not a profession like prize fighting in which success is de termined by the ability to com pete and conquer others in the profession.” PianoRecital Set Oct. 12 Reduced draft calls as a result of scaling down Vietnam troop levels and seeking more volun teer soldiers would raise the probable callup age and thus ex tend the period of draft uncer tainty. Under the Nixon plan the 365 days of the coming year would be scrambled and drawn. Men whose 19th birthdays fall on the first dates drawn would be the first called, starting the follow ing January. Birth dates drawn last would likely escape the draft entirely. But committee members includ ing Hebert and Rep. Samuel S. Stratton, D-N.Y., said a man who drew a middle number, like 260, could only guess when he might be called or what his chances were of escaping the draft. An Oct. 12 piano recital will be presented by Mrs. June Stokes- Pantillon in the Memorial Stu dent Center Ballroom. Sister of A&M English profes sor Dr. E. E. Stokes, Mrs. Stokes- Pantillon is a teacher and per forming artist in Switzerland. She toured the country and made radio-TV appearances last season under auspices of Switzerland’s Lyceum Club. After taking music degrees at the University of Texas at Aus tin, the pianist studied in Austria on a Fulbright Scholarship. She was a soloist with the Houston Symphony in a subscription con cert directed by Leopold Stokow ski and has appeared to critical acclaim in European and U. S. concerts. Her husband, Georges-Henri Pantillon, is a pianist, organist and choir director. Mafia Finds Divorce Brings Trouble (Continued from page 1) smallest bill she had was $100. One important reason why dis plays of public wealth are con sidered bad form is the ever watchful Internal Revenue Serv ice. Sam DeCavalcante had the no tion he could outfox the IRS, but his tax consultant kept tell ing him to forget it. Instead, said the consultant, figure out a way to explain how you are able to spend $18,900 a year at the minimum although you claim an income in the range of $12,000. (Tomorrow: Part III — The Mafia credo.) Would You Believe? Fresh From The Gulf OYSTERS on the half-shell or fried to order Served Right Here on the Campus 5 to 7 each evening at the famous Oyster Room MSC Cafeteria Revolt Behind the Iron Curtain mm i H m.j \ , ;/v, /<•* > ipOZicMi ' ' °% R f\UU ’ Of ^ _ £ ’ * - v ;f as seen by HAYNES JOHNSON Recently returned from indepth study tour behind the Iron Curtain Pultizer Prize Winning Journalist Author of best seller, THE BAY OF PIGS After Yell Practice, 8:00 pm, Thursday MSC Ballroom — FREE ADMISSION A GREAT ISSUES PRESENTATION