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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1970)
« • • » , - *,» \V/lV*VVV. . ■ * •* ’*»*» — FLOWERS ^ Complete J^gMamxv^, Store Baby Albums - Party Goods Unusual Gifts Aggieland Flower & Gift Shoppe 209 University Drive College Station 846-5825 REGISTRATION AND TEXT BOOKS BREAK YOU? Then see us, for a personal loan. Take advantage of our prompty, confidential loan service now. UNIVERSITY LOAN COMPANY me r*i ■r 1 iers *4 317 Patricia (North Gate) College Station, Texas Telephone: 846-8319 apeeflf nsad speed read speed read speed read speed pjMff JSJSfMM# f wiffli mUmmU MmSSMU g&mgsjptil ppstS smeeri mffbmm f mmmm mfrnmmm classes now forming Dr. Wade E. Cutler’s Widely Acclaimed AcceleREAD* Method Guaranteed to quadruple your reading speed and improve your retention. Read the average book in 45 minutes. Get all the details without cost or obligation at the meeting most conve nient to you. free orientation meetings FRIDAY, February 6; 6:30 & 8:00 p.m. MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER — ROOM 2B COLLEGE STATION aDeeicrarcD Bouoamn 3722 BOWSER. DALLAS. TEXAS QQjfQQLS THE BATTALION Friday, February 6, 1970 College Station, Texas Page 3 Former Students Convene Saturday 526-6151 INSIDE A PHONE—Chief instructor Charles Whitaker, center, points out the wiring of a household telephone to Bobby Miller, left, of Round Rock, Ariz., and Bobby Jones, of Chinle, Ariz., both bull-blooded Navajo Indians attending a telephone technicians train ing school at A&M. 10 Navajo Indians Here For Telephone Training Ten Navajo Indians have begun an eight-week basic telephone training program that for the first time guarantees the gradu ates a job on their Arizona reser vation. Chief instructor Charles Whit aker of the Telephone Techni cians Training Department of the Texas Engineering Extension Service points out “it is our first attempt at pre-employment train ing. In the past, our courses have been for men who are sent by a company for upgrading or special technical training after several years employment.” The Navajo Nation, 28,000 square miles in Arizona, New Mexico and Utah, was serviced by 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 the Bureau of Indian Affairs un til growth in the area showed operation of a telephone company could be profitable to a private company. Whitaker explained growth on the reservation has been about 40 per cent each year, with major companies building plants on the reservation to use Indian talent in the production of their prod ucts. C. J. Wimer of Grandview, president of the Texas-Midland Telephone Co., purchased the tele phone system from the Bureau of Indian Affairs and will begin op erations under the Navajo Com munications Co. in April. Twenty per cent of the new company is owned by the Navajo Nation. Government telephone techni cians will transfer to other fed eral systems, leaving an urgent need for trained employes, Whit aker reports. Wimer and the Tribal Council at Window Rock, Ariz., decided BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES 4c per word r word each additional day Minimum chan One day 3f per um charge- Classified Display 90C per column inch each insertion DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publication Political Announcements Subject to action of the Dem ocratic Primary May 2, 1970. For U. S. Representative of the Sixth Congressional District of Texas. OLIN E. TEAGUE (Re-Election) WORK WANTED Day work: Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays. 846-4891. 61tl0 FOR RENT Two bedroom house. Stove and refrigera- jr furnished. 846-6896 or 846-7140. 66tl VILLAGE PARK NORTH "Mobile Living In Luxuary” 4413 HWY. 6 NORTH street pa: fenced playgrouuu, i TV, large concrete pool, gas grills. ng, concrete ind, city Paved & guttered street, concrete off irking, concrete levelin ity utilitie patio, swimming ing pads, itilities, cable swimm Telephone DAY 822-0803 NIGHT 822-5234 46tfn Two bedroom apartment, unfurnished, $95, furnished $100. Central air, married couples only. University Acres. 846-5120. Typing, full time. Notary F Amrricard accepted, 823-6410 ic, 823-3838. lOtfn TYPING, electric. Close to campus. Expe rienced. Reasonable. 846-2934. Itfn Typing. 116-8165. Electric, symbols, experienced. 132tfn WHITE AUTO STORES Bryan and College Station can save you up to 40% on auto parts, oil, filters, etc. 846-5626. Move in today, MENTS, 505 HWY. 30. Reserve now second furnish TRAVIS HOUSE APART- for semester. One and two bedrooi une rnished and unfurnished, carpeted, aped, all electric kitchen, individual air nditioning and heat. All utilities paid, oom, eted, swimming pool 846-6111. Specii elusive co-ei pan From $140 to $215. rates for students. Ex section. 16tfn icholi 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 223 E. 25th Bryan, Texas JOE FAULK ’32 24 years in Bryan VICTORIAN APARTMENTS Midway between Bryan & A&M University STUDENTS ! : Need A Home 1 & 2 Bedroom F'ur. & Unfur. Pool and Private Courtyard 3 MONTHS LEASE 2-5041 401 Lake St. Apt. 1 HELP WANTED Aggie wives needed for church nursery attendant or child care during Sunday worship services. Call 823-1324, First United Methodist Church, Bryan. 63t4 AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 SOSOLIKS TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV All Makes B&W TV Repairs 713 S. MAIN 822-2133 CHILD CARE FAMILY CARE: plan your trip; let me take care of your children. Refined Christian lady. 846-6045. 63t4 KINDERGARTEN child can receive more pe: in CALVERY BAPTIST TEN. Maximum ratio 15-1. Cavitt, COME SEE. CROWDED ? Your rsonal attention KINDERGAR- 822-3579. 2009 62tfn Child Care Center of First Baptist Church has opening in Kindergarten and day care. State Licensed. 846-6632. 61t6 Child care. Call for information. 846-8151. 598tfn regorj 4006. Day Nursery, 504 Boyett 593tf» HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN TER, 3400 South College, State Licensed. 823-8626. Virginia D. Jones, R. N. 99tfn FOR SALE 1967 Cougar XR7. Power and air. 390- 4 Speed, stereo tape, vinyl top, new tires. $1890. 846-9186. 66t5 SCM Deci-Magic desk calculator, including Tiffany stand. Grady 1 845-3141 between 8 a. m. and 5 p. m. $125, 1969 Opel Kadett, take up payments. Orange-yellow with black vinyl top. Needs to sell for larger car. 846-4936. 66t4 AGGIE RING DIAMONDS! J /5 Carat Price: $38 Phone: 845-1609 62tfn 1961 Ford, unusually clean. May be seen t 703 Lee, College Station or 843-4465. 1966 Triumph motorcycle, $595. 846-2623. 63t4 WORLD BOOK — Complete Educational Plan - Easy Terms. Mrs. Kathryn Har grove, 846-3231. 62tfn WORLD BOOK — 1969 Edition Off, Easy Terms, 846-3231. $50.00 62tfn 1964 Ford Galaxie 500. 4 Door hardtop. Air, radio, power steering. Excellent con dition. $1000. 846-8029. 61tfn Rentals-Sales-Service TYPEWRITERS Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines Smith-Corona Portables CATES TYPEWRITER CO 909 S. Main 822-6000 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 Official noti of Student Pu 1 p.m. of the THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree Name: Sagan, Lawrence Stanley Degree: Ph.D. in Chemistry Diasertation: THE SYNTHESIS OF EST ERS, THIOESTERS AND SELENOEST- ERS OF DIALKYLARSINOUS ACIDS. Time: February 11, 1970 at 3:00 p. m. Place: Room 201 in the State Chemists Building George W. Kunze Dean of the Graduate College Civilian partmental and Professional Ulubs, Home town and International Clubs, Honor So- Ulu :ieties, M.S.C. Advised Accounts, Sports Clubs, Student Body Governing Orj tions, and Service Organizations, an® ice Organization, to be officially nized at tl ' Each club the Student Finance Center, M.S.C. ub must file a list of their officers the t Fdbr vary 15, 1970. ;ers Dead- 63t8 WANTED Roommates needed, Fairway Apartments. Apartment 8B. Call 822-2906 after 6:00 p. m. 66t2 FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED, MONACO II APARTMENTS, 846-2123 6314 Roommate needed, call 846-9139. Late. 62t5 TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED & EXCHANGED Completely Guaranteed Lowest Prices HAM ILL’S TRANSMISSION 33rd. & Texas Ave. Bryan 822-6874 TROPHIES PLAQUES Engraving Service Ask About Discounts Texas Coin Exchange, Inc. 1013 S. Texas 822-5121 Bob Boriskie ’55 COINS SUPPLIES ATTENTION MAY GRADUATES! You may order Graduation In vitations Beginning' Feb. 2, 1970 thru Feb. 27, 1970, Mon.-Fri., 9-12, 1-4, Cashier’s Window, MSC. • Watch Repairs • Jewelry Repair • Diamond Senior Rings • Senior Rings Refinished C. W. Varner & Sons Jewelers North Gate 846-5816 training young Navajo men was the best solution to filling the employe shortage. Texas A&M, which for many years conducted the only telephone technician school in the United States, agreed to train the Navajos in A&M’s multimillion dollar facili ties. Nine of the Navajos have high school educations or higher and six of the ten are Vietnam war veterans—several with Purple Hearts and Bronze Star Medals. Whitaker reported the young men receive $184 a month allow ance and travel expenses from the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The subsistence allowance pays for room, board and laundry while at the A&M school. They will return to the reser vation for three months on-the- job training, return to A&M for five weeks of schooling, back again to the reservation for three months OJT and return to A&M for five additional weeks of train ing. “We expect to be training about 30 young Navajo men by the end of 1970,” Whitaker pre dicted. “Each of the men selected by the tribal council for the first school come from a different part of the reservation. “They did not know each other until they met to come to classes here,” he mentioned. However, two of the young men are brothers. The trainees are Damon and Irving Toledo of Cuba, N. M.; Jerry Smiley of Window Rock, Ariz.; Leroy T. Sam of Gallup, N. M.; Larry House of Thoreau, N. M.; Jim Charley and Bobby E. Jones of Chinle, Ariz.; Howard E. Tsosie of Flagstaff, Ariz.; Bobby A. Miller of Round Rock, Ariz., and William Begay of Shiprock, Ariz. Leaders of the university's 50,000 - member Association of Former Students meet here this weekend to chart the course for the coming year. Executive Director Richard (Buck) Weirus estimated that 162 association officers and 100 wives will be at the Ramada Inn for the winter council meeting, class agents conference and club offi cers and councilmen conference. Association president James L. Sewell of Dallas heads his first official program after election to the post last fall. Sewell re places Ford D. Albritton Jr. of Bryan. Melvin Maltz of Houston, vice president for activities, will pre side at Saturday afternoon’s 24th annual Councilmen and Club offi cers’ Conference. A panel presen tation by association program vice presidents is scheduled at that time. A second panel discussion on programs will include members of the association board of direc tors and Texas A&M staff mem bers Oscar Dorsey, director of ad- Ag to Marry 1967-68 Aggie Sweetheart 2nd Lt. Harold (Bud) T. Welch III and 1967-68 Aggie Sweetheart Kathy Heldman will wed Satur day at Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church, College Station. Welch, a 1969 A&M graduate, was senior class vice president and executive officer of Squadron 10. He is now in pilot training at Williams AFB., Ariz. He is the son of Lt. Col. and Mrs. Harold T. Welch Jr. of Sheppard AFB. Miss Heldman is a senior at Texas Woman’s University and was 1968 Cotton Bowl Queen. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold W. Heldman of Bryan. Senate (Continued from page 1) spoke out, saying that they had seconded Fitzhugh’s motion, Geistweidt maintained that he did not hear a second. After another senator spoke, Bob Fried called for a vote on the amendment, and his motion was passed. Senators then defeated the amendment 34-26. Fitzhugh moved to table Jack son’s proposal which was still on the floor, but Geistweidt said the motion died for lack of a second. The senate then approved the new procedure. <3 A r\l - T S> I—I I TOWNSHIRE / BRYAN. TEXAS 77801 msthht printing 0DG(§o Reproduction Division of Newman Printing Company 505 Church Street 302 West 28th COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS BRYAN, TEXAS 77801 846-2157 822-1518 QUICK - SHARP -THRIFTY GOLF CLUB SNACK BAR OPEN DAILY FROM 10:30 A. M. to 4:30 P. M. missions; Auston Kerley, associ ate dean of admissions; Bob Lo gan, director of student aid; Maj. Ed Solymosy, assistant comman dant, and Howard Perry, director of civilian student activities. Also on the panel are students Jimmy Dunham, senior class president and coordinator of stu dent-alumni relations for the as sociation; Gerry Geistweidt, pres ident of the Student Senate, and Mark Olson, president of the Ci vilian Student Council. Aerial Photo Souvenir College Station including A&M campus. Taken late ’69 with superwide angle lens. 8% x 9 inches. Beautiful detail. A con versation piece. $3.00. Order From: H. C. Joel 8150 Gulf Fwy. No. 3 Houston, Texas 77017 Money back if not satisfied THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH Welcomes You St. Thomas Chapel 906 Jersey St. South Side of Campus Canterbury Association Meetings: Wednesdays 6:30 p.m. Kindergarten — Nursery, Monday - Friday (Enroll now for 71 - 72) Sunday Services 8:00 - 9:15 - 11:00 a.m. Wednesdays, Holy Communion 6:30 a.m. There are two choices, people who wear this button will tell you. You can run around clucking fearfully about disaster, or you can do some thing constructive to keep it from happening. Constructively, there’s life insur ance. It’s not just something for your beneficiaries. It’s for now, a solid foundation to any enduring financial structure—and at least one sturdy bulwark against disastet. Provident Mutual designs pro grams specifically for college men and women. So give us a call. Or stop by our office and visit with one of our trained professionals. You’ll find him pleasant, informative, and refreshingly low-key. Do it today. Don’t be a cluck. \ i u Check with Placement and GORDON RICHARDSON A P-M PRO (713) 567-3165 INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA Conte Fly With The FLYING KADETS and TEXAS A&M AERO CLUB. We offer free ground school for private, commercial, and instrument license. We also offer the lowest flying rates around. Come to the first meeting of a new semester, Monday Feb. 9, at 7:30 p. m. in the M.S.C.