The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 09, 1970, Image 3

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Schilhab
(Continued from page 1)
program brought about by the
Memorial Student Center Council
to allow present and potential
csmpus leaders to become ac
quainted with student govern
ment and campus problems.
Schilhab asked each residence
tall president to submit three or
four names to him as delegates
to the conference.
Also discussed was the design
of a brochure to be sent to pros
pective students of A&M telling
of civilian life, and a freshman
assistance program that would be
used to better orient incoming
freshmen. The executive commit
tee was reported to be working
on the program.
Last on the agenda was a criti
cal letter to be mailed to the
Humble Oil Company, sponsor of
the Humble Radio Network foot
ball broadcasts.
Schilhab had said at the last
CSC meeting that Humble an
nouncers covering Aggie football
games “have a bad habit” of re
ferring to all the A&M students
as “cadets.”
“There are quite a few of us
who believe that this is an injus
tice to our sector, and we share
the feeling that we ought to let
them (the announcers) know that
there is a body of civilian stu
dents at A&M,” he said then.
Schilhab said that the letter
had been drafted and that it was
politely written. He added that
it would be sent as soon as pos
sible.
On Radio, That Is
Max Adams: Real ‘Ham’
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
Max Adams puts in a full day
on campus among diodes, transis
tors and rectifiers, then goes
home to more of the same.
The Research and Instrumenta
tion Lab electronics technician is
a ham radio operator.
“Sometimes, Mrs. Adams has
the radio on and warmed up when
I get home from work,” the ham
who goes by W5PFG on the air
grinned.
Twice a week Adams, 47, checks
into an Intercontinental Traffic
Net for various types of public
service transmitting that he says
“makes the hobby very rewarding
for thousands and thousands of
hams.”
Along with numerous other lo-
operators including Linton
Jones, Ed Hary and Jim Hunt,
he finds the capability of helping
others who might be in distress,
danger, trouble or just want to
talk to a distance relative reward
enough for the long hours and
expense involved. They are or
ganizing the Brazos Amateur Ra
dio Club for emergency proce
dure.
Dr. Charles A. Rodenberger
says Adams’ work in the Hyper
velocity Lab is outstanding.
“He does a tremendous job
working with students in the lab,”
the aerospace engineering profes
sor said. “Max has a splendid
personality for it. He develops
the electronic instrumentation for
the lab, including new concepts
for applications of transistors to
our work.”
Known to many hams through
out the Western Hemisphere as
“poor fat guy” (the phonetics for
the last three letters of his call
sign), Adams has helped Domini
can Republic students at A&M
talk with their parents back
home, parents talked to midship
men during the annual cruise of
“The Texas Clipper,” A&M’s
Texas Maritime Academy train
ing ship, and others.
He modestly disclaims doing
anything out of the ordinary.
“Hams have been doing this
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
>:30 P.M.
3NITE
Shows
m.
VCE”
m.
DY OF
toe - Mrs. Miller - 82:
m.
ION”
CHILD CARE
m.
Child care, Call for information. 846-8151.
598tfn
r in
Gregory's Day Nursery, 504
IM005.
Boyett
593tf r
SPECIAL m
>lor
m.
y In
0”
.HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN-
F.R. 3400 South College, State Licensed.
1626. Virginia D. Jones, R. N. 99tfn
m.
ELS GO,
LLOWS
m.
n In
:30 P. M.
aesday
iov
LX”
m.
THE
w
If mmnK helpful. Must have public r
i„ tag talent and superior capaibility
I nth written and oral comtnuniCatii
LE
:30 P. M,
FED”
m.
LOW”
itchum
! BIG 3
lor
n.
TIN”
Fman
n.
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SA”
m.
m a
WANT AD RATES
Oit day 4t per word
l( per word each additional day
Minimum charge—60c
Classified Display
90( per column
each insertic
inch
WORK WANTED
Hiids work, five mornings, 846-4891.
66t5
Vill do typing. Call 823-4679 after 6
end all day Saturday and Sunday.
55t4
Housecleaning, child care wanted, five
iys a week. 846-6686. 66t4
Typing, full time, Notary Public, Bank-
iiericard accepted. 823-6410 or 823-3838.
lOtfn
■ ex peri
3-1088.
2tfn
WING, electric. Close to campus. Expe
dited. Reasonable. 846-2934. Itfn
ping.
1165.
WANTED
Closet curtain, bamboo, vinyl, or cloth
lew
P-
p. m. after 6:30 p. m. call 846-7779 66t3
, vl
to fit cloaet in College View apartment.
Call 846-6419 from 12:00 p. m. to 6:30
Female roommate wanted. Monaco II
Apartments. 846-7318. 66tfn
FOR RENT
HELP WANTED
EMPLOYMENT SUPERVISOR
icellent opportunity available for mature,
emiancnt resident to join staff of Texas
1M University Personnel Department,
squires Bachelor’s degree, PREFERABLY
Personnel Management, and minimum
I one year related working experience,
toployment interveiwing background or
hilling helpful. Must have public rela-
for
ions.
ipus experience and wide acquantance
i University personnel desirable. Re-
ponsibiiities include recruiting, interview-
ng and referring applicants for campus
mployment. Current starting salary $478
lith range to $640. Apply in person:
(Diversity Personnel Department, Room
i, System Administration Building, Col-
ige Station, Texas.
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
55t6
THERE ARE APARTMENTS.
AND THEN THERE IS
TANGLEWOOD
SOUTH
College Station's Newest an
Finest Apartment Complex
Gracious Apartment Livin
For Those Who
Demand the Finest
1-2-3 Bedroom
Apartments
FLATS AND STUDIO!
PRICED FROM $145 to $250
FURNISHED SLIGHTLY
HIGHER
Furnished or Unfurnished 1-1 Ms—2-2Ms
Baths.
All Utilities Paid!
Decorator Design — Several Decors
From Which To Choose.
Separate Adults Only and Family
Living Areas.
Recreational Areas — 2 Pools.
Convenient to Redmond Shopping
Center and A&M University.
All Electric Westinghouse Kitchens—
Dishwashers—Frost Free Refrigeration.
Located at Puryear Drive
and Highway 30
For Rental Information
Call
846-2026
FOR SALE
maiuon. win tinance
'iplkin Muller. 846-9211.
68t3
1955 Chevrolet Bel-Air. 2-door sedi
w»d condition. Good tires. New pa
4 846-7170 after 6 :00 p. m. 67t4
an.
lint
12 by 60 mobile home, two bedrooms,
baths. Central heat and air, cost
WOO, sell for $6000. Available January 19.
' US-6161. 66tfn
fa, excellent condition, $36. Large roll
desk, without top portion, $60. 822-
after 6:30 p. m. 846-3861 daytim"”
for Kay.
822-
imes.
66t4
1963 Corvair Monza, call 846-4676 after
“ p. m. 56t4
Horse For Sale — Gentle Call 822-3980.
. Scholi
I!
PRESTONE $1.59 Gal.
Havoline, Amalie,
Enco, Conoco.
32c qt.
-EVERYDAY—
We stock all local major brands.
Where low oil prices originate.
Quantity Rights Reserved
Wheel Bearings - Exhausts
System Parts, Filters,
Water and Fuel Pumps.
Almost Any Part Needed
25-40% Off List
Brake Shoes $3.60 ex.
2 Wheels — many cars
We Stock
EELCO
EDELBROCK
HURST
MR GASKET
CAL CUSTOM
Other Speed Equipment
Starters - Generators
All 6 Volt - $12.95 Each
Most 12 Volt - $13.95 Each
Your Friedrich Dealer
Joe Faulk Auto Parts
220 E. 25th Bryan, Texas
JOE FAULK ’32
24 years in Bryan
VILLAGE PARK
NORTH
"Mobile Living In Luxuary”
4413 HWY. 6 NORTH
Paved & guttered street, concrete off-
street parking, concrete leveling pads,
fenced playground, city utilities, cable
TV, large concrete patio, swimming
pool, gas grills.
Telephone
DAY NIGHT
822-0803 822-5234
46tfn
Two bedroom apartment, unfurnished,
$96, furnished $100. Central air, married
couples only. University Acres. 846-6120.
34tfn
Move in today, TRAVIS HOUSE APART
MENTS, 505 HWY. 30. Reserve now for
second semester,
furnished and
draped, all electric kitchen, indivi
conditioning and heat. AH utilities
swimming
846-6111.
One and two bedroom,
and unfurnished, carpeted,
electric kitchen, individual air
paid,
From $140 to $215.
pools.
Nicely furnished, two bedroom apart
ment. In the country on ranch. About
15 minutes drive from College. Ideal for
three or four students. Central heat and
air. All utilities paid. $140. 823-3733
from 10 a. m. until 9 p. m. except Sunday.
13tfn
VICTORIAN
APARTMENTS
Midway between Bryan &
A&M University
STUDENTS ! 1
Need A Home
1 & 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur.
Pool and Private Courtyard
3 MONTHS LEASE
822-5041 401 Lake St. Apt. 1
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Official
of Student
1 p.m. of
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Painter, Carl Franklin
Degree: Ph.D. in Education
DisserUtion: AN ENGINEERING RE
SPONSE TO A NEEDS ANALYSIS OF
THAT DISCIPLINE IN SELECTED,
COMPREHENSIVE PUBLIC JUNIOR
COLLEGES OF TEXAS.
Time: February 5, 1970 at 3:00 p. m.
Place: Room 406 in the Academic Bldg.
George W. Kunze
Dean of the Graduate College
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Beals, Robert P.
Degree: Ph.D. in Industrial Engineering
Dissertation : DETERMINATION OF COR
PORATE OBJECTIVES AND EVALUA
TION OF ALTERNATIVE STRATEGIES
THROUGH USE OF SIMULATION
MODELS.
Time: January 10, 1970 at 10:00 a. m.
Place: Room 201-H in the Engineering
Bldg.
George W. Kunze
Dean of the Graduate College
At 8:00 a. m., Thursday, January 16,
there will be posted in the foyer of the
Richard Coke Bldg., a list of those mid-
ho hi
year candidates who have completed all
academic requirements for degrees to be
Each can-
ic requirements for degr
nferred on January 17, 1970.
rgei
s s
R. A. Lacey, Registrar
con
didate is ur]
determine his status.
Iso,
Deadline January 16, 1970.
Regalia for the January 1970
Commencement Exercise
>ry
xci;
didates for the
degree of Doctor of Philosophy or Doctor
of Education are required to order hoods
as well as the Doctor’s caps and gowns.
The hoods are to be left at the University
Exchange Store for delivery by a repre
sentative of the Exchange Store to the
Registrar’s Office no later than 1:00 p. m.,
Tuesday, January 13. The Ph.D. or D.Ed.
hoods will not be worn in
since all such can
worn in the procession
didates will be h
on the stage as part of the ceremony.
Candidates for the Master’s Degree will
:e all such candidates win be nooded
the stage as part of the ceremony,
didates for the Master’s Degree will
wear the cap and gown; all civilian stu
dents who are candidates for the Bache
lor’s Degree will wear the cap and gown ;
ROTC studnets who are candidates for the
;es wil
of th
,st<
gown ;
didates for the Bache-
> candidates for the
ill wear the cap and
KUTC studnets who are candidates
Bachelor’s Degree will wear the appropriate
uniform. All military personnel wb
;s for the degrees, graduate or
undergraduate, wil wear the uniform only.
Rental of cap. gown, and hood for the
Ph.D. candidate should be arranged with
the Exchange Store between 8:00 a. m.,
Monday, December 15, and 6:00 p. m.,
Friday, December 19. Only Doctor’s caps,
gowns, and hoods will be available on a
rental basis. The Master
gowns, and hoods will be available on a
rental basis. The Master’s and Bachelor’s
caps and gowns may be purchased at The
Exchange Store after January 6, 1970.
ge
Rental fe<
i Cap and Gown
Doctor’s Hood (rental) $7.54
TMTr* o n *1 si dry
re an
:ees and sale prices are as follows:
Doctor’s Cap and Gown (rental) $7.54
Masters Cap and Cown (sale) i.U4
Bachelor’s Cap and Gown (sale) 6.34
II prices include sales tax. Payment is
ired at the time of placing the order.
All
requ
C. W. Landiss, Chairman
Convocation Committee
Registration Procedures for the Depart
ment of Wildlife Science
All students with less than 60 hours will
report to their freshman advisor (excep
tions are transfers from another school or
from another department). Students with
more than 60 hours or transfers froi
another school or another del
consult either Dr. Strawn
tion) or Dr. Arnold (Wildlife Option).
Graduate students will consult their ap
propriate advisor. ALL FINAL CLASS
REQUESTS MUST BE SIGNED BY EI
THER DR. STRAWN OR DR. ARNOLD.
Appointments for Dr. Arnold may be made
at the desk of the Departmental Secretary
(Mrs. Karen Thom).
transfers from
lepartment will
(Fisheries Op-
SOSOLIKS
TV & RADIO SERVICE
Zenith - Color & B&W - TV
All Makes B&W TV Re^irs
713 S. MAIN 822-2133
WHITE AUTO STORES Bryan
and College Station can save you
up to 40% on auto parts, oil,
filters, etc. 846-5626.
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
OFFICIAL NOTICE
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Mayfield, Winifred Aubrey
Degree: Ph.D. in Industrial Education,
Curriculum and Administration.
Dissertation: HISTORY AND ANALYSIS
OF THE EDUCATIONAL CONTRIBU
TIONS OF INDUSTRIAL ARTS STU
DENT CLUBS
Time: January 9, 1970 at 2:00 p. m.
Place: Room 104-A in the M. E. Shop
Bid]
George W. Kunze
Dean of the Gradu
ate College
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Burdett, Joseph Walton
Degree: Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering
Dissertation: PREDICTION OF STEADY
STATE AND UNSTEADY STATE RE
SPONSE BEHAVIOR OF A MULTIPLE
EFFECT EVAPORATOR SYSTEM.
Time: January 19, 1970 at 1:00 p. m.
201-B in the Dohei
igin<
George W. Kunze
:e:
troleum Engineering Bldg.
George W. Kunze
Dean of the Graduate College
rty Pe-
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Beals, Robert Patterson
Degree: Ph.D. in Industrial Engineering
Dissertation: DETERMINATION O F
CORPORATE OBJECTIVES AND
EVALUATION OF ALTERNATIVE
STRATEGIES THROUGH THE USE
OF SIMULATION MODELS.
Time: January 9, 1970 at 3:00 p. m.
Place: Room 201-H in the Engineering
Bldg.
George W. Kunze
Dean of the Graduate College
SPECIAL NOTICE
Meal tickets are now available at
Swanzy’s Cafeteria. 2025 Texas Avenue.
TRY
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES:
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
3400 S. College 823-8051
TROPHIES PLAQUES
Engraving Service
Ask About Discounts
Texas Coin Exchange, Inc.
1018 S. Texas 822-5121
Bob Boriskie ’55
COINS SUPPLIES
TRANSMISSIONS
REPAIRED & EXCHANGED
Completely Guaranteed
Lowest Prices
HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION
33rd. & Texas Ave. Bryan 822-6874
GM Lowest Priced Cars
$49.79 per mo.
With Normal Down Payment
OPEL KADETT
Sellstrom Pontiac - Buick
2700 Texas Ave. 26th & Parker
822-1336 822-1307
• Watch Repairs
• Jewelry Repair
• Diamond Senior
Rings
• Senior Rings
Refinished
C. W. Varner & Sons
Jewelers
North Gate 846-5816
Rentals-Sales-Service
TYPEWRITERS
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
Smith-Corona Portables
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO
909 S. Main 822-6000
FOR
BEST
RESULTS
TRY
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
THE BATTALION
Friday, January 9, 1970 College Station, Texas
Page 3
sort of thing for a long time,” he
pointed out, “Linton Jones has
been phone patching to and from
the Dominican Republic many
years, for A&M President Earl
Rudder on to Dominican stu
dents.”
Most of the Caribbean radio
traffic provides quick communi
cation between A&M officials and
personnel with the A&M-Agency
for International Development
contract party in the Republic.
Adams said his biggest thrill
was being invited to make the
Texas Clipper jaunt last summer
from Port Arthur to Galveston.
It was the first visit on an ocean
going vessel for his wife Mary
and daughters Susan 16 and Kip
10. It was virtually old home day
for Adams, a former Navy radio
man.
“The Clipper is the former ‘Ex-
cambian,’ sister ship of the ‘Ex-
calibur’ on which I was radioman
in World War II,” he explained.
“I had a great time looking
around.”
“Pm still a card-carrying mem
ber of the canoe club,” the Navy
Reservist cracked.
The 34-year amateur radio
veteran said part of the fun of
being a ham is meeting people to
whom he’s talked. The Clipper
jaunt set up such a “reunion,”
with Bob Warner (W5TT) aboard
the ship.
Since joining the A&M staff in
1966 as Hypervelocity Lab elec
tronics technician, Adams said he
has met airway acquaintances
from Chile, the Canal Zone and
Dominican Republic. Another
from Honduras will be here next
month.
“A ham learns pretty quickly
to judge a contact’s mood by the
sound of his voice,” he said, “but
visual estimates usually are pret
ty far off.”
Asked by one OSLer to elab
orate on “poor fat guy,” Adams
said his was 5-foot-2 and weighed
225, about five inches short and
60 pounds heavy.
“I knew it,” the other ham ex
claimed when they met. Adams
said he was even more surprised.
“I had him figured at moderate
height and very distinguished
looking, but he was a 6-foot-4
stringbean,” he remarked.
Adams’ pastime has other com
pensations. He and Hary recently
took an amateur radio film to
Conroe to show a ham who has
been shut in more than 20 years.
“Several others were there and
we had a real ham fest,” the tech
nician said. “Buddy (W5ETA) is
the biggest Aggie fan I know.
He was planning to come to A&M
but was paralyzed from the neck
down during his high school sen
ior year. Amateur radio is truly
his ‘window to the world’.”
He frequently raises Max for a
phone patch connection with Ag
gie football coach Gene Stallings.
“I’ve caught the coach going
out the door several times,”
Adams said, “but he never fails
to pause—patient as an angel—
in his busy schedule and give
Buddy some nitty gritty details
about the Aggies that’s not in the
papers.”
« mm •»
TO HALT EROSION
A crane lowers a mat of old car tires, bound together, for
an experiment to stop soil erosion along Rum River near
Anoka, Minn. More than 2,500 old tires are anchored to the
bank in the Soil Conservation Service project. Next spring,
students and Boy Scouts who helped will plant a willow
in each tire. As the trees grow and the soil accumulates,
the tires will vanish from view. (AP Wirephoto)
LjT’s Erwin Says
He Won H Resign
AUSTIN (A 1 )—Chairman Frank
Erwin of the University of Texas
Board of Regents said Thursday
that despite a student referen
dum, he will not resign.
Some 86 per cent of the uni
versity students who voted Wed
nesday said they think Erwin
should quit. About a fifth of the
student body voted in the non
binding referendum, a turnout of
ficials called “moderate.”
“I have frequently stated that
I shall relinquish the chairman
ship in 1971 when the next three
regents are approved by the gov
ernor and confirmed by the Sen
ate. I have no intention of re
signing the chairmanship prior
to that time, and I shall continue
to serve as a member of the
board of regents throughout the
full six-year term to which I
was appointed and confirmed last
year,” Erwin said in a statement
released by the UT news and in
formation service.
Erwin said the number of stu
dents who voted against him
amounted to “substantially less
than 20 per cent of the students
at UT Austin.”
“In view of the bitter and per
sonal vendetta which the student
newspaper has been carrying on
against me daily for the past sev
eral months, I am surprised that
they were able to persuade only
17 per cent of the students to
cast a negative vote,” Erwin said.
He said he was “a great deal
more impressed” with a resolu
tion signed in October by the
chief executives of the 12 institu
tions of the UT System, called
the Academic and Medical Affairs
Councils.
Results of the vote were:
That Erwin should resign —
6,266 to 966.
That Erwin has interefefed
with the administration — 6,358
to 817.
The referendum was taken at
the same time as a student elec
tion on changes in the make-up
of the board that sets policy for
the student union.
Regents are appointed by the
governor and confirmed by the
state Senate. The chairman is
elected by the board members.
Erwin, former state Democratic
committeeman from Texas, has
repeatedly come under student
attack, including editorials in the
Daily Texan, student newspaper.
He has taken a hard line on
student demonstrations, most re
cently when he personally direct
ed the bulldozing of a number of
trees, over the protests of stu
dents, to make room for expan
sion of the football stadium. Sev
eral pupils who clung to branches
of the trees were arrested.
ATTENTION —All Seniors
and Graduate Students
Schedule for
Pictures for 1970 Aggieland
S-T-U—JAN. 5-JAN. 9
V-W-X-Y-Z—JAN. 12-JAN. 16
Make-Up Pictures at any time
CIVILIANS: Coat and Tie
CORPS SENIORS: Uniform - Class A Winter - Blouse or Midnights
Pictures will be taken from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m.
BRING FEE SLIPS
University Studio
115 North Main
North Gate
Phone: 846-8019
TRADE WITH LOU-MOST AGGIES