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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 24, 1970)
. > ’. V t - Page 6 College Station, Texas Tuesday, March 24, 1970 THE BATTALION Campus Briefs Library to Change Hours for Easter Library facilities will be avail able during most of the spring recess for students and faculty- staff members remaining on cam pus. Acting director John B. Smith said the library will be closed Personal Loans LOANS %$100 Confidential Loan Service University Loan Co. 317 Patricia (North Gate) Telephone 846 i 8319 only a day and a half of the five- day student holiday which starts at 5 p.m. Wednesday. The facility will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Friday. Regular services also will be available from 8 a.m. to noon on Saturday. Smith said the library will close Sunday, and resume its regular operating schedule March 30. ★ ★ ★ Saddle and Sirloin Sells Easter Hams Smoked hams for the Easter holidays are now available through the Saddle and Sirloin Club, according to Lee McMillian, sales committee chairman. Persons interested in buying hams may contact McMillian at 823-2976, Mike McCravey at 846- 8929, Dr. J. W. Bassett at 845- <3 /\ r\IT SI—I I TOWNSHIRE / BRYAN. TEXAS 77801 For all your insurance needs See U. M. Alexander, Jr. ’40 221 S. Main, Bryan 823-0742 State Farm Insurance Companies - Home Offices Bloomington, 111. ATTENTION — 8 TRACK TAPE OWNERS Custom Made Tapes Recorded From 8-Track Tapes or Records. Will Record Over Your Old Tapes or Blanks. Excellent Equip ment and Fine Selection of Tapes and Records to Choose From. Leave Tapes Before Holidays and Have Them When You Re turn — Price Low! For Information Call Sandy or Pryor At 845-4101 or Come To Crocker Hall — Rm. 232 — Hurry! 2824, Harold W. Franke at 845- 5328, or L. D. Wythe Jr. at 845- 5214. In order to make a reasonable profit to finance club projects, a sale donation of $20 or more is requested for each man, with the exception of special purchases, with all profits returning to the club. Purchased from the A&M meats laboratory, the 12- to-20-pound hams are delivered by club mem bers if possible. Profits from the sale will finance expenses of the club’s judging teams, student scholarships, and other worth while activities throughout the year. ★ ★ ★ Holiday Weather Will Vary, Good to Rain Weather for student’s holiday departure will be moderately good but the return trip could be slip pery. The weather assessment of Wednesday through Monday was issued Monday from the Meteor ology Department weather sta tion’s practicing meteorologist, Jim Lightfoot. Predicted frontal activity co incides with both the start and end of the Easter holidays, Light- foot said, but it should not begin this week until most students have reached their destinations. Rainshowers are forecast for late Wednesday or early Thurs day, to be followed by a two-day clearing trend. Thursday morning temperautres will be cool. In creasing Easter Sunday cloudi ness will probably result in rain- showers later that day which could carry through Monday. “Friday and S a t u r d a y we should have clearing and partly cloudy skies,” the meteorologist said. “Temperatures Friday and Saturday should range from 44 to 68 degrees. Sunday’s range will likely be 52 to 78 degrees.” Santa Fe \ms SANTA FE RAILWAY will interview students at TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 1970 to review CAREER OPPORTUNITIES Santa Fe is a transportation company serving the southwest by rail, truck and pipeline. We have substantial interests in oil, lumber, uranium, coal, real estate and other enterprises, too. If you would like more information about a career with Santa Fe where the only limit to your future is your desire, ability and effort, arrange for an on-campus interview. We want to talk with you. Santa Fe offers career opportunities in these departments: Accounting, Finance, Cost Analysis, Railway Operations, Market Research, Real Estate and Industrial Development, Communications, also Civil, Electrical, Industrial and Mechanical Engineering. We are looking for individuals with Masters degrees in Accounting, Quantitative Methods, Business Administration, Transportation, and Marketing or Bachelors degrees in Transportation, Real Estate, Statistics, Engineering (Mechanical, Electrical, Civil, Industrial Engineers or Technologists). Schedule your interview with the University Placement Office and ask for brochure featuring Santa Fe career opportunities. Blood Drive Dedicated To Rudder CSC May Sell Caps and Gowns This year’s Aggie Blood Drive, with its goal of 500 pints, is to be dedicated to the memory of the late President Rudder, accord ing to William Cronrath, public relations chairman of Alpha Phi Omega. The drive, which is run by APO, national service fraternity, and administered by the Student Senate Welfare Committee, is conducted for the purpose of col lecting blood for use in research. However any person who has do nated blood will be able, by con tacting the Student Senate Wel fare Committee, to receive blood for himself, or his immediate family, during the year. The quantity he needs will be given free. Proof of having donated will be a wallet sized card acknowl edging the donation and listing blood type. The Wadley Founda tion of Molecular Medicine issues the cards within two weeks of the donation. By Hayden Whitsett Battalion Staff Writer Sales of caps and gowns for spring graduation next year may be handled by the Civilian Stu dent Council if everything goes according to plan. Mark Olson, CSC president, told the Council Monday that the Exchange Store had found it too difficult to take care of the yearly sales and had asked the Council to take over the job. The reason it was offered to the council, Olson said, was be cause only the civilian students use caps and gowns at graduation. He added that a representative of the John Roberts Company had told him that robe cost for a Bachelor’s degree holder would be $4.95 to the council and would be retailed by the council at $6.10, for a Master’s, $5.95 to retail at $7.00, and a Doctorate to be rented at $9.00 to the coun cil and $12.00 to the degree holder. Olson told the council that the returns could go as high as $1,500 to $2,000 for a week of work by council members. A straw vote empowered the executive committee to negotiate further with the John Roberts Co. Appointments to the CSC Hon or Council must be in the week after the return from Easter Holi days, according to Olson. The council is a CSC-appointed committee of 4-7 members that rule on student reported viola tions of the Aggie Code of Honor. The council is empowered to rec ommend disciplinary action to the dean of students who then refers it to the dean of the college the student is in. Olson said that members of the council must be seniors, not on any type of probation, and of high moral integrity. He urged CSC members to remember when submitting nominations that the honor council has the potential of being a “powerfull weapon” and their choices should be made with the utmost care. Registration for this year’s Drive will be April 1 and 2 at a booth near the post office of the Memorial Student Center. Dona tions will be accepted April 8 and 9 in the basement of the MSC. The registration is to give the Wadley Foundation an idea of how many donors to expect and an opportunity to set up a sched ule to facilitate the taking of the blood. City Seeks Answer To Air Transport All civilian students under the age of 21 will need their parents written permission to give blood. A simple one line note will be enough. This year the dorm, outfit, or squadron donating the most blood on a per capita basis will be awarded a wooden plaque, simi lar to the ones given for the Cam pus Chest Drive, to be hung in the respective dorms. Roach to Discuss Computer Guidance Getting computer-based guid ance out of the lab and into the field will be discussed by Dr. Arthur J. Roach this week in New Orleans. College Station Mayor D. A. (Andy) Anderson Monday said the City Council of College Station would meet with other authorities of the county, the City of Bryan and officials of Texas A&M Uni versity to try to resolve a more practical solution to the air trans portation needs of the area. Mayor Anderson told the audi ence attending the council session that the city considered the need important, and would welcome a meeting with other governments about the question now that the proposed Airport Authority for Brazos County had been defeated Saturday. The City Council also turned down a request by Mrs. Beatrice Alani to override the Planning and Zoning Commission decision not to rezone her property on Fairview. Several residents of the The Education Psychology De partment head, an assistant pro fessor and several graduate stu dents are attending a five-day National Personnel and Guidance Association annual conference. Roach’s talk, “Systems Imple mentation In Computer-Based Guidance,” will be given Thurs day. Dr. Robert R. Reilley will supervise operation of a place ment center Tuesday. Graduate students participat ing in sessions are Mrs. Betty Cooper and Mrs. Anne Kelbly of Bryan, Jan Werner of Silver City, N. M., and Burns DuBose of Waco. Newcomers to Host Faculty Teen Social An Easter holiday “Get Ac quainted” party is being planned for the 18-22 year-old sons and daughters of the A&M faculty and staff. The social will be held on Saturday at 1:30 p.m. in the Library Conference Room. Slides and a tour of the univer sity campus will be part of the entertainment. After the tour the group will return to the library for refreshments and a social hour. The party is being sponsored by the Texas A&M Newcomers Club. For reservations or further information, please call 846-3666 or 846-2015. area voiced displeasure with her plan to build an apartment house on the lot, though she pointed out several duplex houses around her lot. The council authorized Ander son to sign a note with the Uni versity National Bank for pay ment for the two new fire trucks the city recently purchased, and transferred funds from a re imbursement fund to pay for furnishings for the new City Hall and Fire and Police Station, the water line to Texas International Speedway, the extra costs of the new buildings not payable from the building fund, and the curbs and gutters on University Drive. In a year studded La with outstanding performances, his was our best it Mike Rei Issociated I NEW YO 6-foot-11 le importai spected, M lade him tl ie National ion’s colleg laravich su lird by At General I le Pistons 17-city te m must o lets of the issociation ire All-Am "I don’t ki fith,” said owing froi a injury si You’re looking at our Houston agency “Man of the Year.” His performance was unmatched last year- both for us and for his clients. Accolades are not new to Gordon Richardson. In the past he has garnered distinctions such as: Member of Provident Mutual Leaders Association in 1969 and Health Insurance Quality Award in 1969. Gordon Richardson is a dedi cated insurance counselor, working in his clients’ interests with unflagging energy, skill, and resource fulness. His success comes as no surprise. Family man, community servant, colleague-his agency and his Company congratulate him. It’s a pleasure to have him aboard. NT LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA BAKER TIRE COMPANY 1 BA I'HITE AU' id College i P to 40% iters, etc. BA r, Aimoi ibject to ratio Prim For U. £ e Sixth C Texas. 0LIN (R WAN! I>e day . . . !( per word Minim Clas 90v* p< D i P.m. ditj 0FFIC Tires — Ultra-Wide Treads SPECIAL PRICES Two Plyes Polyester — Two Plyes Fiberglass Call 822-6612 BELIEVE IT OR NOT You can have breakfast at the Golf Course Snack Bar beginning March 26, 1970 when our new open hours will be from 8:00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m. daily pplication fi ilarshipa ma lent FinancL JA Building ■ March 3 ; t>e^ filed w Office by n SI 1, 1970. ] iccepted. One look says a lot. One drive says it all regory’s Da 1005. New Camaro. We didn’t make it for just anybody. We did make it for people who like sleek new shapes. Long hoods. And fast fastbacks. We made it for people who like to drive on a road. Not just ride on it. That’s why Camaro has an improved road-hugging front and rear suspension. Camaro is made for people who like to choose their power. Four transmis sions are available. And six engines, up to the Turbo-Jet 396 V8 with the SS version. It’s for people who aren’t necessarily fond of large crowds. There are two buckets up front, two bucket cushions in back. And longer doors that make them easier to get to. We made the new Camaro for people who like the stopping power of front disc brakes. And protection of side-guard door beams. It takes a certain kind of person to drive a car like this. Because it says a lot about the way he thinks. What do you think? Putting you first, keeps us first. See it. At your Chevrolet Dealer’s Sports Dept* CHI UMPTY DU 8626. Virgin TRAI IEPAIRE] Complei Lo HAMILL’S 33nl. & Tex; R0PHIES Eng Ask . Texas to 1018 S. Tex Bo tOINS Havol Enc fe stock al fhere low -ev: Camaro Sport Coupe with Rally Sport package. Quantity tVheel Be. System Water a Almost 1 25-4 Brake S 2 Whe< MARK OF CXCEUENCE Enter the ’70 Chevy Sports Holiday Drawing. Now thru March 31. You could win a week-long trip for two to a famous sports event, any where in the world! Or a new Camaro or other Chevrolet sport model! 3,145 prizes in all. For full details and an entry form, visit your participating Chevrolet Dealer’s Sports Department. Residents of New Jersey, Iowa, Florida, Ohio, Georgia and Missouri may request an entry form by sending a stamped, self-addressed envelope to their Chevrolet dealer. This offer void in the states of Washington and Wisconsin or wherever prohibited by law. M CA Other ! Starter Mos Your Joe Fa !20 E. 25tl JOE 24 3