The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 15, 1970, Image 2

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    Page 2
THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas Thursday, October 15, 1970
CADET SLOUCH
by Jim Earle
From other campuses
By James R. Jackson
Journalism will offer course
in science, technical writing
Bulletin Board
TONIGHT
Rio Grande Valley Hometown
Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in
room 3D of the MSC.
Amateur Radio Club will meet
at 7:30 p.m. in room 3B of the
MSC. Dr. Huebner of the Meteor
ology Department will give a talk
'of W5AC.
'ans for Freedom
p.m. in the old
y hall, 101 N.
L tees will be
s presented.
'U meet at
4a
KSgiVlUg !
^own Club
in room
Alpha k
pledge mee
. will hold a
7:30 p.m. in
the Art Room of the MSC.
Alpha Phi Omega will meet at
8 p.m. in room 3D of the MSC.
MONDAY
Industrial Engineering Wives
Club will meet at 8 p.m. in the
ME Shops Building. Dr. Leslie
Hawkins will present a film about
automobile safety. Engineering
Technology Wives Club members
will be guests.
Flying Kadets will meet at 8
p.m. in the Art Room of the MSC.
TUESDAY
Cepheid Variable Sc
tion Club will meet at '
in the Birch Room of th
Semper Fidelis will
7:30 p.m. in room 145 of ^h"?
sics Building. Capt. Tuttle i 'i
the Naval Flight School in Bee-
ville will be the speaker.
Ag Education Wives Club will
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Henry Ross, 906 E. 32 St.
in Bryan. All members are urged
to attend.
Fic-
m.
The women’s liberation organ
ization at TU, otherwise known
as the Guerrilla Theatre Troupe,
put themselves on trial for al
legedly defacing public property.
The mock trial resulted mainly
from the controversy over a
“male chauvinist” spirit sign
erected by a local frat organiza
tion. The fighting feminists
used this opportunity to spot
light what they feel to be “the
oppressed state of women to
day.”
What resulted on the West
Mall was not exactly a trial, but
a crowd of about 400 to 500 de
bating the legitimacy of the
women’s guerrilla group.
The women’s lib group was ac
cused of inflating the incident of
the spirit sign way out of pro
portion.
Commenting on the attitude of
college men, one Liberator said,
“They’re very uptight about mas
culinity, and they can’t view
women as anything other than an
object.”
* * *
Students at the University of
Florida marched down University
on the tube
Numbers in () denote channels
on the cable.
2:30 3 (5) Edge of Night
15 (12) Sesame Street
(NET) (Repeat of
Wednesday)
3:00 3 (5) Corner Pyle
3:30 3 (5) Town Talk
15 (12) Kukla, Fran and
Ollie (NET)
4:00 3 (5) Dark Shadows
15 (12) Folk Guitar
(ETS)
4:30 3 (5) Bewitched
15 (12) What’s New
\(NET)
5:00 3 (5) General Hospital
15 (12) Misterogers’
Neighborhood
(NET)
5:30 3 (5) CBS News
15 (12) Sesame Street
(NET)
6:00 3 (5) Evening News
6:30 3 (5) Family Affair
15 (12) Campus and
Community Today
7:00 3 (5p>Jim Nabors
15 (12) French Chef
(PBS)
r /:30 15 (12) San Francisco Mix
(PBS)
8:00 3 (5) Movie
8:30 15 (12) Feminine Touch
9:00 15 (12) NET Fanfare
10:00 3 (5) Final News
10:30 3 (5) The Immortal
11:30 3 (5) The Detective
Cbe Battalion
The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A&M, is
published in Collefre Station, Texas, daily except Saturday,
Sunday, Monday, and holiday periods, September through
May, and once a week during summer school.
Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of
the student writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax-
supported, non-profit, self-supporting educational enter
prise edited and operated by students as a university and
community neivspaper.
LETTERS POLICY
Letters to the editor must be typed, double-spaced,
and no more than 300 words in length. They must be
signed, although the writer’s name ivill be withheld by
arrangement with the editor. Address correspondence to
Listen Up, The Battalion, Room 217, Services Btiilding,
College Station, Texas 77S13.
1969 TPA Award Winner
MEMBER
The Associated Press, Texas Press Association
The Associated Collegiate Press
Mail subscriptions
year; $6.50 per full y
sales tax.
The Battalion,
Texas 77843.
are $3.50
per semester; $6 pel
per full year. All subscriptions subject to 4 , / 4'?
Advertising rate furnished on request. Address
on. Room 217, Services Building, College Station
school
4(4%
orig
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for
■production of all news dispatches credited to it or not
herwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous
in published herein. Rights of republication of all other
Members of
Lindsey, chairman ;
:oll
the Student Publicati
ge
Dr. A
are: Jim
F. S. White. ColJegi
College of Veterinary Medicine:
of Agriculture; and Roger Mill
ions
H. F. Filers, College of Liberal Arts ;
of En- - ~
Board
-f Lit
B. Childers, Jr.,
gineering ; ......
licine; Dr. Z. L. Carpenter, College
er, student.
Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising
Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago,, Los Angeles and San
icisci
es cri
redited in the paper and local
puDl
matter herein are also reserved.
Second-Class postage paid at College Station, Texas.
EDITOR DAVID MIDDLEBROOKE
Managing Editor Fran Haugen
News Editor Hayden Whitsett
Women’s Editor , Diane Griffin
Sports Editor Clifford Broyles
FOOTBALL
^ WEEKEND
SPECIAL!
20'i» OFF
BOTH IVA STARNES STORES HAVE REDUCED THEIR REGULAR
STOCKS OF SPORT COATS 20% FOR THIS FIRST “FOOTBALL WEEK
END SPECIAL.” WATCH THIS SPACE EACH WEEK FOR MORE
SPECIALS FROM BRYANS MOST FASHIONABLE MENS STORES.
100 N. Main
Reg.
$60.00
Now
$4800
75.00
$6000
120.00
$9600
3tm £j»tnrtt?0
mens menr
329 University Drive
Avenue to the Alachua County
Jail to protest the death of a
prisoner, a former student.
The student, William Baugher,
was being held on charges of
possessing Marijuana. He was
found hanged in his cell. Other
prisoners in the cell said they
were asleep when the hanging
took place.
The march was intended to be
a protest of William Baugher’s
death and conditions in the jail.
An enthused female protestor
shouted, “We shall overcome,”
with a clenched fist.
The reply from a prisoner was,
“I hope so.”
* * *
Austin Hippies defeated Cam
pus Cops 29-7 last Sunday in a
fierce game of softball.
The Cops, clad in T-shirts em
blazoned with the word “Pigs”
failed against the hitting Hip
pies.
After the game the fans en
joyed food served by the “Pigs”
and soft drinks served by the
Hippies.
* * *
A student at the University of
Southern Louisiana says that
“patriotic military men of yes
teryear” should volunteer their
services in the Vietnam conflict
and that if they do so, “the mili
tary government should accept
them.”
The student adds, “Fighting
in a previous war is no excuse
for not fighting in Vietnam, if
one truly believes it is righteous.
Why should anyone condemn the
other fellow for not wanting to
fight, when he himself is only
talking support and not acting
it?”
The Journalism Department
will offer a three-hour interdis
ciplinary course in science and
technical reporting for the spring
semester, announced Department
Head C. J. Leabo.
Journalism 408 is an under
graduate course aimed at students
and staff members who have an
interest in science journalism.
Two lecture classes will begin
at 5 p.m. and laboratory hours
will be arranged for the individual
students.
William C. Harrison, assistant
professor and former West Coast
science writer for the Associated
Press, will teach the course. Har
rison was a Sloan-Rockefeller Ad
vanced Science Writing Fellow at ■
Columbia University.
Emphasized are the evaluation
of science and technology as the)’
involve social processes and the
newly emerging surveillance or
watchdog role of the science writ
er.
There are no prerequisites for
the course, Leabo added.
PALACE
BrVwn 2*8879
STARTS TODAY
Sophia Loren
In
“SUNFLOWER”
tmmm
NOW SHOWING
Showtimes — 2:30 - 5:30 - 8:45
PATTON
POPULAR PRICES!
DIFtECT FROM ITS SENSATIONAL
RESERVED SEAT ENGAGEMENT
20«h Century-Foi preitnt*
(il-OKKH HAUL
C. SCOTT/MALDEN
A% G<' n C'Jl Gro'ge S PaHoo Ai Gcnc»al Om*r N B'Adicy
iirPATTON”
A FRANK HcCARTNY-FRANKUN J.SCHAFFNER PRODUCTION
fr“ank McCarthy-frankun j.schaffner hjj*"" - 'jij
COLOR BY DEIUXE*
A— * UIUM "Clvm
QUEEN
ADULT ART SERIES
“SEX SHUFFLE”
DRIVE-IN
^THEATRE
ABS-VRri
WEST SCREEN AT 7:10 P. M.
“GIANT”
At 10:30 p. m.
“VALLEY OF THE
GWANGI”
EAST SCREEN AT 7:20 P. M.
“MACMASTERS”
With Jack Palance
At 9:15 p. m.
‘THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR’
With Steve McQueen
CIRCLE
TONITE AT 7:15 P. M.
“KELLY’S HEROES”
With Clint Eastwood
At 9:40 p. m.
“THE ALAMO”
With John Wayne
TAMU Special Attraction Presents
THE GREATEST FEMALE VOCAL
GROUP IN HISTORY
THE SUPREMES
Friday, October 16, 1970 — 8:00 p.m.
Reserved Seats $4.00, $3.50 & $2.75
General Admission
A&M Students and Dates .... $2.25
Other Students $2.75
Patrons $3.25
A Rotary Series Presentation
BRYAN CIVIC AUDITORIUM
Monday, October 19, 1970, 8:00 p. m.
TICKETS ON SALE NOW!
A&M Students and Dates Only $2.00
There are only 200 available, so
HURRY!
Tickets and information at MSC Student Program Office 845-4671
PEANUTS
UlHAT WOULD MDU DO
IF YOU DIDN'T HAVE ME
to dme YOU YOUR
10A5TED ENGLISH
MUFFIN EVERY
MORNIN6 7
By Charles M. Schulz
THAT'S THE 50KT OF THIN6 I'P
RATHER NOT THINK ABOUT
^