The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 03, 1970, Image 3

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    THE BATTALION
Thursday, December 3, 1970 College Station, Texas Page 3
Read Battalion Classifieds
FLOWERS ^
Complete Store
Baby Albums - Party Goods
Unusual Gifts
Aggieland Fldwer & Gift Shoppe
209 University Drive
College Station 846-5825
THE SUPER BURGER HAS HIT TOWN
and challenges you to a dining delight duel at
the MSC Snack Bar.
“Quality First"
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT!!
After December 1, 1970, the TRI-COUNTY TEACHERS
CREDIT UNION will not have a permanent representa
tive in Brazos County. Brazos County school employees
interested doing credit union business should contact
the Credit Unions home office direct.
TRI COUNTY TEACHERS CREDIT UNION
5925 Highway Boulevard
Katy, Texas 77450
Phone: (713) 852-7555
Campus briefs
UH hecklers send
Oceanography gains $5,000 Smith an apology
Csso Production Research Co. the U. S. Department of Aeri- commanding officer of the Army A CI7 J
Esso Production Research Co
has awarded a $5,000 unrestrict
ed grant to the Oceanography
Department.
Dr. Richard A. Geyer, depart
ment head, was notified of the
award by C. R. Hocott of Hous
ton, vice president of the explor
ation and production research
affiliate of Humble Oil & Refin
ing Co. and the worldwide af
filiates of Standard Oil Co. (New
Jersey).
The Esso official said the
funds should be used to “fill some
urgent need which might not
otherwise be met by other avail
able support.”
★ ★ ★
Rangeland books
given to library
Early scientific literature on
U. S. rangelands and timberlands
has been presented to the library
by Professor Emeritus and Mrs.
E. J. Dyksterhuis.
The collection includes scien
tific books, bulletins and articles
on American forestry, range sci
ence, ecology and botany assem
bled by the retired range science
professor during careers with the
U. S. Forest Service and U. S.
Soil Conservation Service and at
A&M.
The Dyksterhuis collection was
valued by independent appraisal
at over $3,000. It contains the
earliest scientific reports on
Western U. S. botany and zool
ogy, the first national yearbooks
on agriculture, first volumes of
the U. S. Department of Agri
culture Experiment Station Rec
ord and the Forestry Quarterly,
the initial technical forestry
journal, among others.
★ ★ ★
Two seniors nominated
for Wilson fellowship
A&M seniors Dale P. Gravett
of Corpus Christi, Joachim F.
Wernicke of the Virgin Islands
and Turner F. Williamson of Abi
lene have been nominated for the
annual Woodrow Wilson National
Fellowship Foundation competi
tion.
Gravett, Wernicke and Wil
liamson were nominated by A&M
faculty members among 372
graduating seniors in Region XII
consisting of Texas and Louisi
ana.
Woodrow Wilson Fellowships
for 1971-72 will be awarded in
February to 250 American and
50 Canadian students of out
standing ability who are consid
ering careers as college teachers.
Also, 700 candidates will be
designated finalists and recom
mended to graduate schools of
their choice for financial aid.
★ ★ ★
B-CS will host
ROA convention
Bryan-College Station will host
the state convention of the Re
serve Officers Association April
23-24.
Brig. Gen. Joe G. Hanover,
J. C. (Jim) Harris
THE BUG SHOP, Inc.
1911 Sa College Ava
Bryan,Texas 77801
Phone 822-5383
Bryan's Leading Independent Volkswagen Service
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
One day
64 per word
FOR SALE
Minimum charg-e—764
Classified Display
$1.00 per column inch
each insertion
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publication
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Official notices must arrive in the Office
(I Student Publications before deadline of
1 p.m. of the day proceeding publicati
ill students who are interested in making
ipplication for admission to the profes-
lional curriculum in veterinary medicine
i 1871 are urged to attend a meeting on
Tuesday, December 8, 1970 in the Audi-
lorium, 201 Veterinary Medical Science
Building at 7 :30 p. m. Application forms
uill be available and the application proce-
hres explained. Representatives from the
Selection Committee will be present to
mwer questions.
Sony 600 Tape Recorder. Call 846-1702.
62tl
MUST SELL 1967 PONTIAC EXECU
TIVE. 428 CID, 4-SPEED, AM/FM STE
REO, ALL EXTRAS, BRAND NEW
TIRES. SACRIFICE. $1400. 846-4207.
olO FIRST ST. NO. 4. 52t4
1968 Chevy Carryall. Air conditioned,
!07 V-8, radio, carriage rack, good condi-
;ion, $1196. After 6, call 846-0626. 61t3
1966 Oldsmcftjile Cutlass. Automatic, air,
heater, radio. Call 846-27'63, 8 a. m. thru
5 p. m. Call 846-8421 after 6 p. m. 51t6
SPORTS CAR, SUNBEAM ALPINE,
•62 MODEL. MAKE OFFER. ALSO 14’
3LASTRON SKIBOAT, 60 HP, MERCURY
TILT TRAILER. $996. 822-4340. 51t2
At 8:00 a. m., Thursday, December 10,
tkere will be posted in the foyer of the
lichard Coke Building, a list of those mid
rear candidates who have completed all
itademic requirements for degrees to be
tonferred Decmeber 12, 1970. Each candi-
iite is urged to consult the list to deter-
irred Uecmet
is urged to
tine his status.
R. A. Lacey, Registrar
FOR RENT
VICTORIAN
APARTMENTS
Midway between Bryan &
A&M University
STUDENTS t 1
Need A Home
1 & 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur.
Pool and Private Courtyard
3 MONTHS LEASE
401 Lake St.
Apt. 1
40tfn
Two bedroom furnished and unfurnished
ipartments. $106 to $116. Central air and
jeat. Married couples only. 823-0934
diversity Acres. 13tfn
Havoline, Amalie,
Conoco. 35c 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
HOLLEY CARBURETORS
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
Yellow 1969 Triumph GT6+.
935 after 5 p. m.
Call 846-
49t4
HELP WANTED
SECRETARY
TAMU has several positions available
immediately for mature, experienced
secretaries. Excellent typing and short
hand required. Apply Personnel Office,
Room 13, System Administration Build
ing.
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER 52t7
10’ x 67’ CASA MANANA mobile home.
Two bedroom, carpet, furnished, excellent
lell ! Going into service.
346-3421. 49tfn
conditioi
Will sel
>n. Must
11 equity.
Xmas gifts for him? Jointed cue pool
fgie Den.
49tfn
sticks from $12.95 to $65.00. Aggii
Duplex, two bedroom, near University.
One apartment furnished, excellent in
vestment. $14,600. 846-5231. 28tfn
MEN I
$80 Plus
Part-time
Call 846-0501
4 p.m. - 6 p.m. Today
42tfn
CHILD CARE
Experienced child care,
from 8 to 6.
Call 846-6536
17tfn
HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN
TER, 8400 South College, State Licensed.
823-8626. Virginia D. Jones, R. N. 99tfn
DOMESTIC COOK AND
HOUSEKEEPER
fringe
refer-
ice, A&M
ity, Room 13, System Adminis
tration Building.
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER 37tfn
ences nec<
Universit:
WORK WANTED
Will do typing. Call 823-4579 after 5
p. m. or all day Saturday and Sunday 60t4
Tennis racket restringing and supplies
nylon and gut. Call 846-4477. 123tfn
Typing, full time. Notary Public, Bank-
Americard accepted, 823-6410 or 823-3838.
lOtfn
TYPING. Close to campus. 846-2934 2Itfn
Typing. Electric, symbols, experienced.
846-8165. 132tfn
SPECIAL NOTICE
Baha’i’ Discussion every Thursday, Chap
el Reading Room, 8-10 p. m. 846-9793 47tl
NOTICE TO BIDDERS: Desks, Dinette
LOST
Woodville High School ring. Silver with
blue stone. Call 846-2234. 52t6
TRY
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
INSTRUCTOR
Figure Salon
No experience necessary. We will train you. You will
have beautiful surroundings, direct public relations, and
bonus opportunities. Job hours are 1 p. m. to 9 p. m.,
Monday through Friday. Apply in person now between
hours of 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. Job to start Jan. 4.
3710 East 29th, Bryan.
TROPHIES PLAQUES
Engraving Service
Ask About Discounts
Texas Com Exchange, Inc.
1018 S. Texas 822-5121
Bob Boriskie ’55
COINS SUPPLIES
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES:
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
34AC S. College 823-8051
Rentals-Sales-Service
TYPEWRITERS
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
Smith-Corona Portables
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO
909 S. Main 822-6000
SOSOLIK S
TV & RADIO SERVICE
Zenith - Color & B&W - TV
All Makes B&W TV Repairs
713 S. MAIN 822-2133
;res:
Transfer Cases, Lounge Furniture, Mail
Boxes, many other items, total of 94 lots.
Bid forms will be available and sealed
bids received in the Office of the Inventory
Supervisor, Ross and Asbury Streets, Sur
plus Property Warehouse, College Station,
Texas until 8:00 a. m., December 11, 1970.
This property may be inspected between
the hours of 8:00 a. m. and 4:30 p. m.,
Monday thru Friday except holidays by
contacting the Office of the Inventory
Supervisor at the above address. For in
formation call 845-7419. The right is re
served to reject any and all bids and to
waive any
“See what beauty by
do for you.” For
you.”
ivate facial call: JONNIE PATRA
MARY KAY can
beauty show
private x:
NELLA,
822-4396 (after 6 p. m.) Sat.
& Sun. anytime.
"YOUR MARY KAY BEAUTY
CONSULTANT”
For Christmas think of MARY KAY—
Free Gift Wrap & Delivery.
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
Welcome to
NELSON
MOBILE HOME SALES
811 S. Texas Ave.
24th Annual Sale in Progress
“Where Price and Value Meet”
Open Daily—8-8 p.m.
Open Sunday 1-6 p.m.
TRANSMISSIONS
REPAIRED & EXCHANGED
Completely Guaranteed
Lowest Prices
HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION
33rd. & Texas Ave. Bryan 822-6874
• Watch Repairs
• Jewelry Repair
• Diamond Senior
Rings
• Senior Rings
Refinished
C. W. Varner & Sons
Jewelers
North Gate 846-5816
WHITE AUTO STORES Bryan
and College Station can save you
up to 40% on auto parts, oil,
filters, etc. 846-5626.
VILLAGE PARK NORTH
(Mobile Home Living
in Luxury)
4413 Hwy 6 North
Paved guttered street
Concrete off-street parking
Concrete leveling pads
Fenced playground
City utilities
Cable television
Large concrete patio
Swimming pool
Gas grill
Telephone—822-5234
commanding officer of the Army
Reserve’s Bryan-based 420th En
gineering Brigade, said the Ra-
mada Inn meeting will attract
approximately 350 persons, in
cluding wives.
Many of the wives, General
Hanover noted, belong to a relat
ed organization, Reserve Officers
Association Ladies, which also
will hold meetings here.
ROA includes reserve officers
in all branches of the armed
forces.
★ ★ ★
Systems engineering
seminar scheduled
A seminar on systems engi
neering will be held in Room 207
of the Engineering Building at 3
p.m. Thursday (December 3), Dr.
Richard B. Wadsworth, assistant
professor of industrial engineer
ing, has announced.
Participating in a panel discus
sion will be George C. Beason,
director of systems engineering,
Recognition Equipment, Inc. of
Dallas, and Joseph E. Lidiak,
project engineer with RCA De
fense Electronic Products, Burl
ington, Mass. Dr. William B.
Jones, head of the department of
electrical engineering, and Dr.
Charles A. Rodenberger, profes
sor of aerospace engineering, will
represent A&M.
HOUSTON <A>)_Gov. Preston
Smith received Wednesday an
apology containing an estimated
23,000 University of Houston stu
dent signatures.
State Sen. Chet Brooks of
Houston accepted the petition
containing an apology for an in
dent last Oct. 7 which prevented
the governor from speaking at a
student assembly.
Randall D. Chapman, 21, who
allegedly led a group of student
hecklers which prevented the
governor from speaking, also
apologized.
“I would like to cordially invite
Governor Smith to come back to
our campus at any time and I
would be perfectly willing to con
duct an open discussion with him
on any topic,” Chapman said.
Chapman made the apology
during an informal gathering of
students at the University Cen
ter. He said he did not feel his
apology represents a change in
his attitude toward the incident.
“I feel that I was not instru
mental in preventing the governor
from speaking and I was sorry
he did not speak,” he said.
Chapman was temporarily sus
pended by University of Houston
President Philip G. Hoffman af
ter the incident. He was later
convicted by a student court of
violating student life policies and
placed on disciplinary probation.
Environment group
formally endorsed
Susan Garrett, 22, a junior
psychology student, said she ini
tiated the gathering of names
for the apology in an effort to
open the line of communications
with the government.
“If anyone is actually prevent
ed from speaking on our campus,
we consider such an occurrance
reprehensible and destructive of a
free and open society,” the peti
tion read. “We therefore extend
an apology to the Governor of
Texas because he felt he could
not speak to the students who
had assembled to hear him.”
Chapman wore a dark business
suit and a dark western hat Wed
nesday. He was neatly shaven and
had a short haircut.
At the time of the incident and
during his trial before the stu
dent court, he had a moustache
and shoulder length hair.
Chapman, a senior economics
student, said Wednesday the fact
that he was carrying a broom
during the heckling was inci
dental.
“It is unfortunate that the
news media blew out of propor
tion the fact that I was carrying
a broom and walked out behind
the governor,” he said. “I was
simply carrying a broom and it
was removed from me by security
officers.”
Students also presented Brooks
with a petition containing 4,300
names opposing a recommended
hike in tuition for state colleges.
WASHINGTON <A>) — The En
vironmental Protection Agency
came into formal existence Wed
nesday while its first chief was
receiving Senate committee en
dorsement. It marked completion
of a year of restructuring of fed
eral environment functions—with
still more restructuring probably
lying ahead.
The Senate Public Works Com
mittee gave unanimous approval
to William D. Ruckelshaus as di
rector of EPA. Early Senate con
firmation is expected for Ruckel
shaus, an Indianan who now is
an assistant attorney general.
The administration is known to
be considering further changes—
particularly in the management
of federal land and of energy
resources.
And it recognizes, at least in
theory, that some environment
problems may eventually require
the development of entirely new
kinds of political institutions.
The reorganization began on
the first day of the year, when
President Nixon signed into law
the 1969 Environmental Policy
Act, setting up a three-member
Council on Environmental Qual
ity as advisers to the President.
On July 9, Nixon proposed ex
ecutive reorganization plans for
the creation of EPA and a Na
tional Oceanographic and Atmos
pheric Administration (NOAA).
EPA, the independent agency
established Wednesday, assem
bles from the Interior Depart
ment, Agriculture Department,
Department of Health, Education
and Welfare, and the Atomic En
ergy Commission the federal ef
forts to control air- and water-
pollution, pesticides, solid wastes
and radiation.
But even when he proposed
those changes Nixon said he had
received recommendations for ad
ditional reorganizations.
John Whittaker, a top White
House aide on environmental mat
ters, told a newsman, “The big
thing this reorganization leaves
out is land use.”
Control of federal land—one-
third of the nation—is now di
vided among the Departments of
Interior, Agriculture, and De
fense, and other agencies.
We
pay
half.
You pay
the other.
Special Half Price
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and Students
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The
Christian Science
Monitor^
Box 125, Astor Station
Boston, Massachusetts 02123
This is what
we have against
■ ■ ■
blades.
A shaver that shaves as close or closer than
the new platinum and chromium blades.
99 men tested our Norelco Tripleheader
35T against these new blades. Each shaved
one side of his face with a blade and the
other with the Tripleheader. Our three float
ing heads followed the curves of their faces.
And our eighteen rotary blades shaved in
every direction at once (that’s the way
beards grow).
Blades can’t do all this. They’re straight.
And that’s why seven out of ten men said
the Tripleheader shaved them as close or
closer than the new blades.
What’s more, the Tripleheader has a
pop-out trimmer. So you
can get your side
burns straight
and even for a
change.
Now what blade can
compete with that?
This is what
we have against
other rechargeables.
up to twice as
as any other re-
A rechargeable that gives
many shaves per charge
chargeable.
Our Rechargeable Tripleheader 45CT has
all the features of our regular Tripleheader.
It has three Microgroove™ floating heads.
And eighteen rotary blades that continu
ously sharpen themselves to cut down on
bothersome blade replacement. And a hid
den pop-up trimmer for neat sideburns and
mustaches.
It also has some special features all its
own. A Shave Counter that automatically
counts your shaves and tells you when to
recharge. A Charge Indicator that lights up
when it’s recharging. And, of course, the
Rechargeable can
shave with or
without a cord.
Now what re
chargeable can com
pete with that?
Norelco
The Norelco Tripleheaders
You can’t get any closer
© 1970 North American Philips Corporation, 100 East 42nd Street, New York, N.Y. 10017.