The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 26, 1970, Image 2

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    Page 2 College Station, Texas Wednesday, August 26, 1970
THE
BATT ^ LIQN Agg 1 ' 6 Players set
fall term tryouts
Tryouts for the Aggie Players
Fall semester production of
Shakespeare’s “Much Ado About
Nothing” will be conducted Sept.
1 and 2.
University slates
industry program
The 7:30 p.m. tryouts in the
Fallout Theater of Guion Hall
will include readings of parts for
four women and 17 men, noted
C. K. Esten, Aggie Player di
rector.
“Anybody who comes out will
be guaranteed a place in the cast
or crews,” the English Depart
ment theater arts section director
emphasized.
Rehearsals will start Thursday,
Sept. 3, and the Shakespeare
classic will be staged at Guion
Hall Nov. 16-20. The Aggie Play
ers production also will go on the
road, for presentation Nov. 21
in the Schulenberg civic theater.
“Much Ado” will be the Texas
A&M players’ only production of
the Fall semester and probably
the last in Guion Hall. Removal
of the 53-year-old structure to
make way for the Memorial Stu
dent Center expansion and audi
torium construction is expected to
begin during the 1970-71 school
Applications of remote sensing
techniques to the petroleum in
dustry will be explained during a
one - day university - sponsored
workshop Oct. 12 in Houston.
Dr. J. W. Rouse Jr., director
of the Remote Sensing Center, re
ports five distinguished men
knowledgeable in both remote
sensing and petroleum explora
tion techniques will discuss spe
cific examples of remote sensor
data obtained for petroleum in
dustry applications.
Remote sensing includes aerial
photography, mechanical infrared
scanning, radar and microwave
radiometry.
The program is a pilot project
by Texas A&M to determine the
need for further expanding the
university’s remote sensing serv
ices to the petroleum industry.
Workshop speakers are F. F.
Sabins, Chevron Oil Field |
search Co., La Habra, Calif,;E
Wermund, Remote Sensing, lm
Houston; R. L. Kite, Esso Pn
duction Research Co., Housta
Donald W. Rockwell and Fr(i
erick Romberg, both of Geopki
sical Service, Inc., Dallas
Dr. Rouse.
The workshop is schedoli
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in H
Coastal Suite, Petroleum Cluk
Houston, 800 Bell Ave. Advaiw
registration is required by Sq
18 with attendance limited t«|
Registration and other inform
tion is available from Sidney!
Sers, workshop coordinator^
mote Sensing Center, Texas All
The Board of Directors esta
lished the Remote Sensing Cent!
as a consortium of the Colleji
of Agriculture, Engineering,C«
sciences and Science.
year.
fge-—Officer Bernie Frydman of the Long
Beach, Cal. police department displays his badge alongside
a small tie tac shaped like a pig. In police parlance, PIG
stands for Pride-Integrity-Guts, and officers by the hun
dreds are wearing miniature pigs as uniform tie tacs.
Frydman and his partner, Robert A. Fowks, originated the
idea last March and have sold nearly 1,200 pig tie tacs
all over the country. (AP Wirephoto)
Clark given post
as research dean
Campus calendar distributed
Dr. Donald L. Clark has been
promoted to associate dean of re
search in the College of Educa
tion, Dean Frank W. R. Hubert
announced.
Dr. Clark also will continue as
associate professor of industrial
education. The appointment is
effective Sept. 1.
Dean Hubert said Dr. Clark will
coordinate research and training
activities in the college.
Dr. Clark, 38, joined the fac
ulty in 1967, the year he received
a Ph.D. in education from Ohio
State.
He received a B.S. degree with
distinction in industrial educa
tion from Stout State University,
Menomonie, Wis., in 1961 and an
M.S. in industrial education from
Stout State in 1962.
Dr. Clark began his teaching
career as a teaching assistant in
the Electricity and Electronics
Department at Stout State in
1962. From 1962 until 1965 he
was a teacher of industrial arts
and driver education and audio
visual building coordinator for the
Janesville (Wis.) Public Schools.
While working toward his doc
torate, he was a research and
teaching associate at Ohio State.
Dr. Clark worked for a build
ing supply company, paper mill
and as a farm operator prior to
entering teaching. He served in
the Wisconsin National Guard
from 1946 to 1965.
He is on the Membership Com
mittee, American Council of In
dustrial Arts Teacher Education
and has memberships in numer
ous local, state and national in
dustrial arts associations, includ
ing Phi Delta Kappa, Epsilon Pi
Tau and Iota Lambda Sigma.
Dr. Clark has authored several
technical papers and given lec
tures.
He is an associate member of
the graduate faculty at Texas
A&M.
The 1970-71 all-university cal
endar went on faculty-staff dis
tribution Friday at the Continu
ing Education Office in the Me
morial Student Center.
The 20-by-25 inch light card
board calendar lists major recur
ring events in student govern
ment, student organization, ath
letic and MSC Directorate areas
through August, 1971.
Conferences, short courses and
Town Hall, Rotary Community,
Artist Showcase, TAMU special
attractions and film series are
also shown.
Revised dates of fall and spring
semesters are detailed, with first
semester finals slated Dec. 16-22.
Fall semester commissioning and
commencement are listed for Sat
urday, Dec. 12.
Continuing education coordina
tor F. W. Hensel said each de
partment should place requests
at the Continuing Education Of
fice near the MSC main desk.
“All student calendar distribu
tion will be handled through the
Commandant’s Office and the of
fices of the various civilian stu
dent counselors,” Hensel added.
“Day students may pick up the
calendar in Lounge A-2, at the
north end of Hughes Hall, start
ing August 24.”
COURT’S
SADDLERY
FOR WESTERN
OR FOR YOUR
WEAR
MARE.
FOR SHOE REPAIR
BRING IN A PAIR.
403 N. Main
822-0161
SBISA HALL
DAILY SPECIAL
$0.89
CHAR BROILED
CHOPPED STEAK
Choice of Any Vegetable
Slice Tomato on Lettuce
Hot Rolls and Oleo
Tea, Punch or Coffee
Kantfn man's cologni,
with the Spirit of Swlk
TOWNSHIRE / BRYAN. TEXAS 7*
Optometry has been practiced
since the 13th century. The first
legislation governing the profes
sion of optometry in North Amer
ica was enacted in the state of
Minnesota in 1901.
Cbe Battalion
Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of
the student writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax-
supporled, non-profit, self-supporting educational enter
prise edited and operated by students as a university and
community newspaper.
LETTERS POLICY
Letters to the editor should be typed, double-spaced,
and no more than 300 words in length. They must be
signed, although the writer’s name will be withheld by
arrangement ivith the editor. Address correspondence to
Listen Up, The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building,
College Station, Texas 77813.
The B attain
Ueve Station, Texas, daily
ept
May, and once a week during summer school.
ion.
published in Collei
Su
inday, Monday.
student newspaper at Texas A&M. is
Station, Texas, daily except Saturday,
and holiday periods, September through
MEMBER
The Associated Press, Texas Press Association
The Associated Collekiate Press
Mail subscriptions are ?3.50 per semester; $6 per school
sulwcriptions subject
ifir
The Battalion, Room 217, Services
year ; $6.50 per full year. All s
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Texas 77843.
to 4»4%
furnished on request. Address:
rvices Building, College Station,
1969 TPA Award Winner
Members of the
chai
e. College of Engineering ; E
College of Veterinary Medicine ; and
Student Publications Board are: Jim
Lindsey, chairman ; H. F. Eilers, College of Liberal Arts :
F. S. White, College of Engineering ; Dr. Asa B. Childers, Jr.,
rim
College of Agriculture.
Dr. Z. L* Carpenter.
The Associated I’ress is entitled exclusively to the
reproduction of all news dispatches credited to it
otherwise credited in the paper and local news of
origin published herein. Rights of republication
matter herein are also reserved.
Second-Class postage paid at College Station, Texas.
use for
or not
ontaneou
all othe
Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising
Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and San
Francisco.
EDITOR
FRANK GRIFFIS
We’d like to twist your arm
to convince you to switch
to our cable company.
But we know that’s an unacceptable way
to sell CATV service. So we spend our time
twisting bolts and dials
to provide the best service possible.
It may not
bring
results as quick
as high pressure salesmanship.
But in the end
we believe good service is what
most CATY customers really want.
MIDWEST VIDEO CORR
846-8876 The CATV Professionals
J. C. (Jim) Harris
THE BUG SHOP, Inc.
1911 So. College Ave
Bryan, Texas 77801
Phone 822-5383
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With Purchase of $10.00 or More
(Excluding Cigarettes) • One Per Fan*
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