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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1969)
Page 4 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Friday, October 24, 1969 GOT A DATE FOR THE FOOTBALL GAME (OR WANT A DATE) BUT NO DOUGH Then see us for a personal loan Build your credit for future use UNIVERSITY LOAN COMPANY 317 Patricia (North Gate) College Station, Texas Tel: 846-8319 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 Welcome To The First Baptist Church of College Station 3 Worship Services Planned for the Next 5 Sundays October 26 through November 23 Early Services 8:30 a. m. Bible Study 9:30 a. m. Regular Services 10:45 a. m. Evening Worship Service 7:20 p. m. Located 2 Blocks North of the main Post Office on College Main Campus Security (Continued from page 1) efficient executive’s best friend Hensel Apartment area, Hase said. The woman driving the car that struck Miss O’Malley's ve hicle readily admitted to Campus Security officers investigating the accident that she was at fault. Other witnesses also backed up her statement. Despite this, said Miss O’Mal ley, no tickets were given and the report made by the officers said that they could not determine who was at fault. Since no tickets were given and the report said the police could not place blame, Miss O’Malley has had difficulties in collecting insurance, Hase said. In a letter from the insurance company from which she is trying to collect was the statement, “We were told that the Campus Police investigated and could determine no responsibility for the acci dent.” In reply, Maddox said that the investigators use their own judge ment in determining who is at fault. Most of the men, he said, have been trained in accident in vestigation. Also criticized by Hase at the meeting was the way intersec tions are marked or not marked, as the case may be. Hase said that an absence of signs often seems to cause difficulties for pedestrians and drivers. Maddox agreed that, in some places, especially on Houston Street between the Memorial Stu dent Center and North Gate, there are hazards to pedestrians; However, he said, the danger lies with the drivers ignoring signs and crosswalk markings, not with the design or placement of signs. Chief Powell said that the signs are erected following plans developed for the university by the Texas Transportation Insti tute. He also said that a student- faculty traffic committee makes suggestions on the placement of signs and the disposition of park ing spaces. These suggestions are then analyzed by Campus Secur ity and put into effect if they have merit, he said. Another question Hase asked was why some thefts in the Hen sel and College View areas went uninvestigated last year. In the interview, Powell said that these areas were patrolled at least three times a shift by one of the 14 men on the force. An investigator also has been added to the force since the be ginning of last year, Powell said, explaining that his job primarily covers investigation of thefts. Two Named to Key Positions On 1969-70 Fish Drill Team the fi/ore/co 84 dictating machine Automatic and Easy to Use Remote Controlled Reusable Magnetic Tape Easy Transcription The Norelco 84 is the modern efficient way to handle daily correspondence. Its simplicity oi operation assures perfect dictating results every time. You’ll like the Norelco 84's low price and many features like the exclusive magnetic tape cassette that threads itself automat ically. Find out how the Norelco 84 can be your best friend. Call today for a demonstration. OTIS MCDONALD’S 429 S. Mnin — Phone 822-1328 Bryan, Texaa A&M’s Fish Drill Team has named Leonardo G. Hernandez of San Antonio and David A. Mc- Clung of Shreveport to key po sitions in the unit for 1969-70. Serving with Commander Bev erly S. Kennedy of Austin on the defending national champion drill team, Hernandez has been named None Injured In Accident No one was injured in a two- car accident Thursday afternoon in parking lot 49 near Kyle Field, according to Campus Security of ficer Ray Rosier. Rosier, who investigated the ac cident, said the car driven by Marion Crips of Law Hall collid ed with the car driven by Scott Petty, a sophomore in Company E-l. Rosier estimated the damage would total $600. executive officer and guidon bearer and McClung right guide. Senior advisor Richard Gon zalez of San Antonio said the assignments carry additional marching responsibilities requir ing ability which both freshmen possess. Hernandez, a modern languages major, served as executive officer and commander of Central Catho lic High's Loyd Rifles, of which he was a four-year member. Mc Clung marched with the Shreve port Fair Park High team three years and was its commander during 1968-69. The two Army ROTC cadets’ dexterity with the guidon and rifle will be demonstrated Nov. 8 when the 31-member Freshman Drill Team will make its first public appearance for the A&M- SMU football game march-in. Hernandez is in Company D-2 in the Corps of Cadets, McClung in Company L-l. Both planned to participate in the Fish Drill Team before they enrolled at A&M. We’re a diversified company. A big one. Our sales will run more than half a billion dollars this year. They’ll come from computer service, education systems, heli copters, farm equipment, space systems, all kinds of technical services. And airplanes. Airplanes turn us on. We’ve built them for going on sixty years. Our planes scored the nation’s top kill ratios against Zeros and again against MiGs. We’ve won the Thompson Tro phy, the Collier Trophy, and the Doolittle Award. Our chief exec is a recon structed test pilot. We've got more fighter jockeys in manage ment than any other company in the country. Besides our attack airplanes, we’re involved in the 747, S-3 and the DC-10 and the SST pro grams to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars. Our simulators are the finest in industry. So is our schedule per formance. And our titanium capa bility. And our record of coming up with growth designs. This is where you ought to be if you’re an AE, EE, ME, or IE with a thing about airplanes. Talk with our campus rep when he comes to your school. He’ll be the guy with the long white scarf. Or sit down and write us to night. Address: College Relations Office, LTV Aerospace Corpora tion, P.O. Box 5907, Dallas, Texas 75222. We’re an equal opportuni ty employer. Campus Interviews: TUES. & WED., OCT. 28 & 29, ,1969 Airplanes turn you on? Join the club. jy A quality company of Lmg TemCo-Vought, Inc. SAN ] rcher i ontgor ■eak frc Di< al< mes 1 But mbit LION-TIGER CUBS Princess, a 500-pound lioness at Ceader Point, Ohio, amusement park, shows off her net litter of three rare tiglon cubs bom four weeks ago. The cubs are striped like their % pound Bengal tiger father, Rajah. Normally lions and tigers are natural enemies. Wirephoto) (AP 5 Former Corps Chiefs Here for Baylor Game Five former commanders of the Corps of Cadets will be among university visitors in connection with Saturday’s home football opener. They will be on campus for the fourth M.B.A. luncheon for current A&M students interested in broadening their educational horizons. Room 146 of the Physics Build ing. ★ ★ ★ The men who once wore the four-diamond insignia of cadet colonel of the corps are Jon L. Hagler, 1958 corps commander; Donald R. Cloud, 1959; William B. (Bill) Heye, 1960; Paul A. Dresser, 1964, and Neil Keltner, 1965. Charles Lummus of Denison and Dennis Flannigan of Bryan, luncheon co-chairmen, said the object of the event is to interest current outstanding students in giaduate study leading to a mas ter’s of business administration. Also present to provide insight into M.B.A. programs will be John W. Jenkins, 1956 deputy corps commander now with In formation Management Associ ates Inc., Austin; Harry G. Aus tin, 1938 graduate who is group senior vice-president and direc tor; Brown and Root, Houston, and Weldon A. Lee, assistant to the president of Dallas’ Dahlstron Corp. and 1960 grad. ★ ★ ★ Marine Corps Team Here Next Week The Marine Corps’ officer se lection team will return to the campus next week to interview and test students interested in one of the Corps’ commissioning programs. Headed by Lt. R. E. Crane, the team will operate an information booth 'Monday through Wednes day in the Memorial Student Cen ter. 11 B-CS Residents To Join ’39 Champs Eleven Bryan-College Station residents will attend the 30th an niversary reunion of A&M’s 1939 national champion football team this weekend in College Station. Forty of the 51 living players and coaches and about 10 survi vors of team members are expect ed to attend the three-day re union. Forty of the 51 living players and coaches and about 10 survi vors of team members are ex pected to attend the three-day reunion. Attending from Bryan-College Station will be team nurse Mrs. Irene Claghorn, P. G. Haines, Dr. R. II. Harrison Jr., H. B. McEl- roy, Col. Eugene Oates, Marion C. Pugh, Dr. Les Richardson, Joe H. Rothe, Bama Smith, Manning Smith and Col. Joe R. White. Houston Chronicle columnist Morris Frank will serve as mas ter of ceremonies at a team lunch eon Saturday. Tyler industrialist A. G. (Bert) Pfaff will be hon ored at the luncheon as the “fa ther” of the team. Pfaff was a member of Coach Homer Norton’s coaching staff when the Aggies posted an 11-0-0 record and won the No. 1 rating in 1939. The group will attend the Tex as A&M-Baylor football game Saturday night. A&M set a national defense record in 1939 that still stands to day. Three team members won All-America honors and 10 were All-Southwest Conference play ers. ★ ★ ★ can yp Lt. Crane also will participate in a 7:30 p.m. meeting Tuesday of the A&M chapter of the Sem per Fidelis Society, the Corps’ national collegiate organization. The meeting will be conducted in Baptist Church Sets 3 Worship Services The First Baptist Church of College Station will hold three Sunday worship services for the next five Sundays, the Rev. Mal colm Bane, pastor, announced Thursday. Morning services will be con ducted at 8:30 and 11:30 o’clock with evening worship at then ular time of 7:20 p.m. “Two services will strengti our Sunday School, allow nx to participate in our music istry and alleviate our part problem,” Dr. Bane said. “Ma over, it will provide a wonl opportunity for those who need prefer an early service." ★ ★ ★ A&M Receives Rene For Waste Filtratioi The university has received second-year $20,894 renewal pi from the Department of Inter for research into a new filtration technique to make ventionally treated waste wi usable by industry. A $19,316 Federal Water lution Control Administn grant was awarded last year Dr. Thomas D. Reynolds, ns ciate professor of civil engi» ing and associate research e: neer, is the principal investigi for the project. He explained the research incorporate a new “counter-t rent carbon filtration system" which the carbon particles ffl upward as the water moves do' “The system right now is pensive,” he noted, “but the} pose of this project is to carbon filtration more effecd and cut down on the cost of tre ment.” ★ ★ ★ Grad Students Win Top Award for PajK Graduate students Michael Proctor and James W. McFarl won a top award in the anni student paper competition spt sored by the Institute of Mi agement Sciences. The paper, which earned of three $100 prizes, was entitl “An Optimal Borrowing, Inve ment, Production and Mi Distribution Program for a Ml plant, Multi-market Firm.” Proctor, who is studying foi Ph.D. in economics, is from lumbia, Mo. A former Wills Point reside McFarland is studying for a torate at A&M’s Institute of tistics. [orse For il Ridinp ericard a Vpintr. 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