The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 16, 1970, Image 3

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THE
Friday, October 16, 1970
BATTALION
College Station, Texas
Page 3
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REPAIR
A PAIR.
Main
161
Wife ofAg POW
to bring petitions
Senate
Mrs. R. Nolan Daughtrey, wife
of North Vietnam POW Maj. R.
N. Daughtrey, will be among the
honored guests this weekend dur
ing the 15th anniversary reunion
of the class of 1955.
Major Daughtrey is a member
of the class. He was captured
Aug. 2, 1965, when his Air Force
F105 Thunderchief was shot down
Fish election
filing to begin
Filing for FYeshman Class elec
tions opens Monday, Election
Commission Mike Wiebe has an
nounced.
Filing ends at 5 p. m. Oct. 28,
Wiebe said.
Offices to be decided are class
president, vice president, social
secretary, and secretary-treasur
er. In addition, five first-year
students will be elected at-large
representatives to the Student
Senate.
Wiebe said applications may be
picked up at the Student Program
Office in the Memorial Student
Center and must be returned
there by the filing deadline. Elec
tion day is Nov. 12.
over North Vietnam.
Mrs. Daughtrey, who spent last
Christmas in Paris with 58 wives
attempting to see the North Viet
namese delegation to the Paris
Peace Talks, is bringing petitions
to the reunion. She will have a
table at the registration desk.
A press conference with Mrs.
Daughtrey is scheduled for 2 p.m.
Saturday at the Ramada Inn.
Photographs of her husband
in capture and interviews in North
Vietnam have been widely circu
lated by the world press.
Major Daughtrey is one of four
confirmed Aggie POWs. There
are 11 former students listed as
missing in action.
Aggie Cinema
head sought
FOR
BEST
RESULTS
TRY
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
Applications are being accepted
for chairman of the Memorial
Student Center Directorate’s Ag
gie Cinema Committee, public re
lations officer Paul Scopel an
nounced Thursday.
Scopel said applications may be
obtained at the Student Program
Office in the MSC, and must be
returned by 5 p.m. Oct. 23. Inter
views will be conducted Oct. 27,
Scopel said.
Applicants must have a 2.400
overall grade point ratio, and a
2.400 g.p.r. for last semester.
Also, they must not be on any
kind of probation.
The former committee chair
man resigned for academic rea
sons.
(Continued from page 1)
Gate merchants because it would
be unfair competition. The rea
son, he said, is the store does not
have to pay tax as other mer
chants must do.
Bob Thompson, member of the
Student Life Committee’s land
scape subcommittee, told the
Senate the committee "has met
with Robert Rucker, university
landscape architect, and taken a
tour of the campus. One result
of the tour, he said, is the
planned installation of bike racks
around the library and more
benches in the area.
Thompson said Rucker is pre
paring for A&M’s 1976 centen
nial celebration and has shown
subcommittee members some of
the plans. Most of the $60 mil
lion in construction either under
way or planned will be completed
by then, Thompson said, and
Rucker will have about two years
to get the campus growing again.
Rucker keeps a close eye on
the campus, Thompson said, and
if even one branch of a tree
must be cut to allow a con
struction project to proceed,
Rucker must be consulted.
Plans are being made, Thomp
son said, for a promenade area
in the gully behind the presi
dent’s home. It will have a
fountain and several pools, he
said.
Senators were told the legal
rights commission, in its second
year, exists to help students be
come aware of their rights.
Chairman David Reynolds hopes
to have the committee work in
three areas — misdemeanors,
traffic and university discipline.
Reynolds is preparing a ques
tionnaire to send to the head of
the Brazos County Bar Associa
tion seeking answers to ques
tions commonly asked by stu
dents.
R. B. McGowen, junior class
president and chairman of the
Senate end of Campus Chest, re
ported $600 was collected through
the Ugliest Senior contest. Right
now, he said, the fund is about
one-third of the way to its $3,000
goal. He reported also that 278
pints of blood were collected dur
ing Wednesday’s blood drive.
Charlotte Gay (pre-vet) told
the Senate plans were being made
to have boys from Faith Home in
Houston on campus for the Rice
weekend.
Near the end of the meeting,
Michael J. Barrett (sr-sci.) told
the Senate he believe* the. Col
lege of Science has been slighted
in representation. He cited fig
ures showing colleges with simi
lar enrollments as the College of
Science had twice as many sena
tors.
Senators attempted to explain
to Barrett present senate repre
sentation is based on enrollment
figures of two years ago, and the
Senate constitution requires the
Senate to reapportion itself be
fore this year’s spring elections.
Barrett persisted in presenting
a constitutional amendment al
lowing three additional repre
sentatives for the College of Sci
ence, one from each class, to be
elected during freshman class
elections Nov. 12.
He cited the case of the Col
lege of Education being formed
from the College of Liberal Arts,
then each college being given the
same number of senators the one
had had before.
Senators said the point should
have been brought up last year,
when that action was taken.
When a vote finally was called
on whether or not the Senate
should even vote on the matter,
Barrett failed to obtain the re
quired three-fourths of those at
the meeting.
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
One day 5d per word
per word each additional day
Minimum charge—75C
Classified Display
$1.00 per column inch
ach insertion
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publication
OWING
7:15 - 9:15 P.)l
OWER”
ia Loren
FOR RENT
>:30 - 8:45 P.M.
roN”
e C. Scott
.OR FROLIC
FE—12:15 A.M.
S3
RTAINMENT
[ITE 7-9 P.M.
[ MADAM”
AT 7:10 P. M.
NT”
es Dean
) p. m.
OF THE
VGI”
One bedroom apartment for rent
per month. Furnished, utilities p
Fairview St., College Station. Call 846-6521
.... $60.00
aid. 806
Unfurnished one bedroom duplexes. $60.00
monthly. 822-3988. 22tfn
Two bedroom furnished and unfurnished
ipartments. $105 to $116. Central air
Married couples only. 846-3408.
University Acres.
r ai
-340
13tfn
FOR SALE
1970 Maverick Ford, Tudor, air-condi
tioned, automatic transmission, big V-6,
radio, heater, 10,000 miles. Good condi
tion. $1700. 845-2134. 28t5
Duplex, two bedroom, near Univcrsit:
One apartment furnished,
vestment. $14,600. 846-6321.
rtment furn
ity.
excellent in-
28tfn
’67 GTX 440 cubic inch. All power
nth black vinyl top. Call 846-5325. 26t5
Like new, 1946 model Taylorcraft air
plane, new fabric, fresh zero time engine,
ane, new fabric, fresh zero time engine,
tensive major, new glass and upholstery,
metal prop. E. E. Pipes 823-8456. 26t4
1965 Karmann Ghia, new motor with less
than 26,000 miles. 2-tone, excellent
ne, ex:
dition. Phone 822-6125, Monday - Friday
titer 6 p. m. or anytime on weekends. 25t4
nt con-
Friday
'63 Mercedes 190 Diesel. Air, AM/FM,
dealer serviced, perfect condition, great
economy, $1200. 822-2295, 5 p.m. 25t8
Used, Zenith 21-inch console color TV.
822-2133.
28tfn
1968 Honda DB 350. Windshield, lu;
rack. 846-5416 after 5.
ggage
16tfn
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
AT 7:20 P. M.
ASTERS”
Palance
p. m.
cQueen
CROWN
HR”
CLE
7:10 P. M.
HEROES”
Eastwood
p. m.
LAMO”
i Wayne
SUNDAY
IVAGO”
M. Schulz
READY?'
Havoline, Amalie,
Conoco.
34c qt.
Prestone — $1.69 Gal.
—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
Alternators
$19.95 Exchange
Starters - Generators
Many $13.95 exch.
Your Friedrich Dealer
Joe Faulk Auto Parts
220 E. 25th Bryan, Texas
JOE FAULK ’32
Our 25th year in Bryan
SPECIAL NOTICE
Ask a Baha’i. Fireside every Thursday
liar. 846-979
8:00 p. m., 1204 Marste!
The Total Environment
Gifts, Novelties, Posters
10-6 daily
1-9 Thursday
29th and Stillmeadow
846-0324 23tl8
Service For All
Chrysler Corp. Cars
Body Work — Painting
Free Estimates
HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY, INC.
Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922
1411 Texas Ave. — 823-8111
seme
limit
iirs :
□eric
: .j * 1 .. lit
will check all records to determine
their eligibility. Orders for these rin
will be taken by the Ring Clerk startii
day through Friday, of each week.
;atoi
H. L. Heaton, Dean
Admissions and Records.
TRY
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WELCOME
NELSON MOBILE HOME
SHOPPING CENTER
811 South Texas C.S.—846-9135
Special: Save On 1971 Models
Buyer’s Choice While They Last
1 - 60 x 12 IVj Bath
3
60 x 12 Front Kitchen
$4995.00
DR. G. A. SMITH
Optometrist
Specializing in eye
examination & contact lenses
DIAL 822-3557
DOWNTOWN BRYAN
Watch Repairs
Jewelry Repair
Diamond Senior
Rings
Senior Rings
Refinished
C. VV. Varner & Sons
Jewelers
North Gate 846-5816
WORK WANTED
Would like to babysit, also for football
games. 846-9727. 28tl we
Babysitting for football games. My Gr
home, call 846-8405. 27t2 sor
31
Typing, experienced. 846-5416 after 5.
16tfn
Tennis racket restringing and supplies
nylon and gut. Call 846-4477. 123tfn
Typing, full time. Notary Public, Bank-
Americard accepted, 823-6416 or 823-3838.
lOtfn
TYPING. Close to campus. 846-2934 21tfn p.l
Typing. Electric, symbols, experienced.
846-8165. 132tfn
. Ad
OFFICIAL NOTICE id
ta
Ca
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Moore, Walter Richard
Degree: Ph.D. in Geology
Dissertation: SEDIMENTARY HISTORY
OF THE CASPER FORMATION
(WOLFCAMPIAN), POWDER RIVER
BASIN, WYOMING.
Time: October 27, 1970 at 3:00 p. m.
Place: Room 105 in the Geology Bldg.
George W. Kunze
Dean of the Graduate College
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
, Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Chrysam, Michael Marion 111 fe
Degree: Ph.D. in Chemistry 82
Dissertation : -FLUORO-3, 3, 5, 5,-TETRA-
SUBSTITUTED CYCLOHEXANONES:
SYNTHESIS, NMR STUDIES. AND at
CONFORMATIONAL ANALYSIS. -
Time: October 16. 1970 at 1:00 p. m.
Place: Room 208 in the Chemistry Bldg.
George W. Kunze
Dean of the Graduate College
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE co
Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Mahmoud, Tariq Ahmad 84
Degree: Ph.D. in Civil Engineering
Dissertation: THE EFFECT OF SALIN-
ITY ON THE REMOVAL OF SOME fr
ALIPHATIC KETONES.
Time: October 29, 1970 at 3:00 p. m.
Place: Room 201-A in Petroleum Engineer- f
ing Bldg. sj
George W. Kunze
Dean of the Graduate College —
’’The English Proficiency Examination to
be taken before the end of the Junior year
by students majoring in History will be
given on October 20 and 21, 1970, from
3:00 - 4 :00 p. m., in Room 204 Nagle Hall.
Students are to register for this examina
tion at the office of the Department of
History prior to 5:00 p. m., Monday,
October 19, 1970.”
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
WHITE AUTO STORES Bryan
and College Station can save you
up to 40% on auto parts, oil,
filters, etc. 846-5626.
HELP WANTED
tervisor for 11-7 shif
weekly, good pay. Call collect or see:
June Winkelmann, RN. Director of Nurses.
Grimes Memorial Hospital, 210 South Jud-
, Navasota. 713/825-6585
18.
713/825-
28t4
S, excellent salary,
outstanding employee benefits. Group hos-
Hospital. 822-3776.
$60 plus
10 South
per week—part-time.
Texas Avenue. 3:30
day. Mr. Fallon. 26tfn
HOMEWORKERS BADLY NEEDED—
, envelopes in spare time. MIN-
of $14 per 1000, Send stamped
o.r..
25t5
SALESMAN NEEDED.
Must have experience.
Hickory Hills Mobile Homes,
1902 Texas Ave. 823-5701.
ilesman wanted. Married Aggie i
home food service to couples.
0869. 8 to 11 a. m.
□ of-
Call
24t8
CHILD CARE
all gai
Quail hunt!
lease reservations for this fall.
ng.
7all
27t4
xperienced child care. Call 846-6536
i 8 to 5. 17'tfn
HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN-
South College, State Licensed,
firginia D. Jones, R. N. 99tfn
ATTENTION MEN!
Shop
PENNEY’S
SUIT SALE
Through Saturday Only
Reg. $90
Now $76.50
silk and polyester-n-wool.
TRANSMISSIONS
REPAIRED & EXCHANGED
Completely Guaranteed
Lowest Prices
HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION
33rd. & Texas Ave. Bryan 822-6874
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
SOSOLIKS
TV & RADIO SERVICE
Zenith - Color & B&W - TV
All Makes B&W TV Repairs
713 S. MAIN 822-2133
Rentals-Sales-Service
TYPEWRITERS
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
Smith-Corona Portables
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO
909 S. Main 822-6000
.... r ■
. .-.w w;».~ ■
Crime fighting made easier
for Texas law enforcement
In an isolated Texas town a
safe is blown. Two persons
picked up a short time later have
no evidence in their possession.
But their stories do not jibe, and
local officers need some quick
answers. A teletype inquiry pro
duces within minutes the needed
information — criminal histories
which convince police that they
are holding prime suspects.
A flood of hot checks hits town,
but by the time complaints start
coming in, the person responsi
ble has evaporated. Not for
weeks is his identity known. Of
ficers feel there’s a good chance
he may have been picked up else
where in the meantime. They
make teletype inquiry, and from
the computerized subject-in-proc
ess files at the state center, they
quickly \ learn that the wanted
man has indeed been arrested in
another part of the state. He is
in jail awaiting grand jury ac
tion.
Crimes so easily solved? No,
not yet. But a major develop
ment is shaping up in Texas
which will make the lot of the
law enforcement officer easier,
that of the criminal harder. Key
links are being forged in a state
wide criminal justice information
and communications system de
signed to place data on criminals
virtually at the fingertips of
every police officer in the state.
The system, being created un
der the guidance and financial
aid of Gov. Preston Smith’s Crim
inal Justice Council, is aimed ul
timately at serving the needs of
law enforcement, judicial, cor
rectional and rehabilitative agen
cies at local, regional, state and
federal levels. It will be struc
tured around the Texas Crime
Information Center (TCIC),
which will have access to the FBI
JC conference
to be held here
A&M will host 150 junior and
senior college administrators Oct.
26-27 for the 27th Junior College
Conference.
The annual conference for ex
ploring ways of helping junior
college students in the transition
to senior college is sponsored by
A&M’s Junior College Relations
Committee.
“Student Centered Programs”
will be the conference theme, an
nounced C. H. Ransdell, commit
tee chairman.
Assisting the transfer and
adult student is the special aim
of sessions of the 1970 confer
ence. Topics to be covered in ses
sions headed by junior college of
ficials and A&M administrators
include academic placement for
adult students, summer confer
ences, personalizing admissions,
special needs for minority
groups, reading and study im
provement, assisting the unde
cided major academic placement
and vocational counseling.
Nov. 7 cinema,
“Zulu,” erased
“Zulu,” Aggie Cinema film for
Nov. 7, has been rescheduled for
the spring semester.
David Anschutz, the Saturday
movie committee chairman, raid
the adventure picture will be
shown March 27. It is not avail
able for the Nov. 7 screening.
No substitution will be made
for the cancellation, Anschutz
added.
All Aggie Cinema presentations
are at 8 p.m. Saturday in the
Memorial Student Center Ball
room. Admission is 40 cents per
person.
1970
TOYOTA
$1830.00
BRAZOS
VALLEY
TOYOTA
INC.
We Service All Foreign
Make Cars
Cavitt at Coulter
Phone 822-2828
National Crime Information Cen
ter. According to Peter G. Kleck,
the council’s program director for
science and technology, TCIC is
expected to be functional within
a year, with full scale operation
projected two years from now.
To effect this ultimate system,
the Texas Criminal Justice Coun
cil has done extensive planning
and has funded a number of proj
ects for the design and imple
mentation of computerized area
information and communications
systems, and to establish teletype
networks.
With grants from the Criminal
Justice Council totaling $150,000,
the Texas Department of Public
Safety is updating its criminal
history records and converting
them to machine-readable form,
so that record processing may be
done by computer.
The Texas Youth Council is
using a Criminal Justice Council
grant of $35,000 for systems
analysis and design for record
ing, reporting, and retrieving in
formation on juvenile delin
quents. A Criminal Justice Coun
cil task force is using a $30,000
grant for establishment of uni
form procedures for recording
and reporting criminal justice in
formation.
'62 grad receives
minorities medal
Air Force Capt. James R.
Holley, 1962 A&M graduate of
Corpus Christi, was decorated
recently in Vietnam for signifi
cant contributions toward improv
ing living conditions of the coun
try’s Montagnard tribesmen.
He was one of two Air Force
personnel to receive the Ethnic
Minorities Service Medal, pre
sented for the first time in more
than a year to military person-,
nel.
Nominations are made by Viet
nam province chiefs, with final
approval given by the minister
of ethnic minorities, a position
similar to that held by a U. S.
cabinet member.
Captain Holley, civic action
section chief at Pleiku Air Base,
has worked with Montagnard
people in Pleiku Province on more
than 30 separate improvement
projects since assignment to the
post last April.
Descendants of the earliest
Southeast Asian men, the Mon-
tagnards live today primarily in
the remote mountains of west
central South Vietnam, including
the area covered by the Pleiku
Province. For the most part, the
aboriginal peoples who speak
Malayo, Indonesian and Poly
nesian languages still live much
as did their primitive ancestors.
A cadet lieutenant in Squadron
15, Holley was in the Ross Vol
unteers, math club president and
played freshman football. He
earned a master’s degree in nu
clear engineering through the Air
Force Institute of Technology at
Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio.
BUSIER AGENCY
REAL ESTATE • HfSURANCE
F.H.A.—Veterans and Conventional Loans
ARM & HOME SAVINGS ASSOCIATION
Home Office: Nevada, Mo.
3523 Texas Ave. (in Ridgecrest) 846-3708
J. C. (Jim) Harris
THE BUG SHOP, Inc.
1911 So. College Ave
Bryan, Texas 77801
Phone 822-5383
Bryan's Leading Independent Volkswagen Service
we
Gift
r $7Woi
loefj
you* INLOS^J &LVD
-fund'--..- ~~ •--- oitch-.----7|
Come ccrYj.
visit...
HEWSEl
Park
The Gift House of Originals
4401 Milam, Bryan
Open Mon. - Sat. 9:30 — 4:00 - Mon. and Thur. - Until 9:00
Tire’s a (jrand c Bit °f
(jreat‘Britain
in G Every* c Bite!
Eating Alfie’s Fish & Chips is like dining with King
Henry VIII or taking a stroll through Sherwood For
est. The Fish are tender, flaky filets, fried crackling
crisp in fresh hot oil. The Chips are golden bits of
fried potato. And, of course, there’s the zesty, tangy
flavoring of Alfie’s exclusive imported malt vinegar.
RESTAURANT OR TAKE OUT
Alfi&
AUTHENTIC ENGLISH
2700 TEXAS AVENUE
FREE!
2for1
BUY ANY SIZE ORDER OF ALFIE'S FISH & CHIPS
AND GET A "WEE BIT"
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:y ; :9 Alf ie’s Fish & Chips,
OFFER EXPI RES: Oct. 31
•’ - - -V..V >v.,-v;. ; ■ • ■ •.