Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 4, 1970)
i ■ THE BATTALION Friday, December 4, 1970 College Station, Texas Page 3 »er 4, f Campus briefs CATV school dedicated VN The Texas Engineering Exten sion Service’s Cable Antenna Tel evision Technicians Training School was dedicated Thursday afternoon, with leaders from the National Cable Television Asso ciation and Texas CATV Associa tion attending. H. D. Bearden, TEES director, conducted the dedication. He was assisted by Ed Kerlick, chief in structor for the Electrical and Telephone Technicians Training Division of TEES, and Tom Straw, CATV instructor. ★ ★ ★ Environmental force o see ship channel Thirteen members of the Gov ernor’s Environmental Health Task Force will observe A&M’s environmental engineering oper ations on the Houston Ship Chan nel Tuesday. Dr. Roy W. Hann Jr., associate professor in the Environmental Engineering Division of the Civil Engineering Department, said the group will board the R/V Excel lence to view water and bottom sampling operations in the chan nel. The Excellence is the uni versity’s water pollution research vessel. ★ ★ ★ Gulf awards A&M petroleum grant Gulf Oil Foundation has award ed A&M a $5,000 grant for petro leum engineering research. Norman D. Coggeshall of Pitts burgh, Pa., director of Gulf Re search & Development Company’s Exploration & Production De partment, formally presented the award Thursday to Executive Vice President A. R. Luedecke. Coggeshall was joined in the presentation by J. H. Henderson of Houston, director of the com pany’s Production Development Division. Range grasses lecture planned for Wednesday Dr. D. N. Hyder, range scien tist for the U. S. Department of Agriculture at Fort Collins, Colo., will lecture on “Growth and De velopment in Range Grasses” Wednesday at A&M. The lecture, sponsored by the Range Science Department, will be held at 7:30 p.m. in Room 113 of the Plant Sciences Building. ★ ★ ★ Accounting seminar to be held Friday Dr. Ned Allen Ford Jr. of Washington State University will conduct an accounting seminar Friday at A&M. “Fully-Dilated Earnings per Share” will be the topic of Dr. Ford’s 3 p.m. seminar in 352 Francis Hall, announced Account ing Department head Dr. Kenneth Most. BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES One day per word Uinimum charge—76tf Classified Display $1.00 per column inch each insertion DEADLINE 4 p.m. dny before publication OFFICIAL NOTICE Official notices must arrive in the Office it Student Publications before deadline of | p.m. of the day proceeding publication. m; THE GRADUATE COLLEGE S Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree | Ksme: Brown. Alpha Otis. Ill Degree: Ph.D. in Industrial Education Diesertation: THE DEVELOPMENT AND TESTING OF AUDIO-TUTORING MA TERIALS FOR TEACHING SELECTED UNITS IN SEMICONDUCTOR ELEC TRONICS. Time: December 17, 1970 at 1 :30 p. m. Place: Room 8-E in the M.E. Shops Bldg. George W. Kunze Dean of the Graduate College ill students who are interested in making ipplication for admission to the profes- ponal curriculum in veterinary medicine 1971 are urged to attend a meeting on Audi- l 1S71 are urged to attend a hesday, December 8, 1970 in th ■inary . m. d the epresen ill e A: prlum, 201 Veterinary Medical Scle Hat 7:30 p. m. Applicatic nil be available and the application proce- hres explained. Representatives from the lures exp Election Committee tnswer questions. be present to At 8:00 a. m., Thursday. December 10, there will be posted in the foyer of the Ichard Coke Building, a list of those mid year candidates who have completed all academic requirements for degrees to be iferred Decmeber 12. 1970. Each candi- late is urged to consult the list to deter- Iurine his status. R. A. Lacey, Registrar 60t8 LOST ■ Woodville High School ring. Silver with stone. Call 846-2234. 62t6 FOR SALE 1962 Thunderbird. Air conditioned, full power, must sell. $460. 846-4601, ask for Tony. 63t3 Army dress blues, only worn once, size 38, $80, 846-0262 after 6 :00. 6St5 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. 610 FIRST ST. NO. 4. 62t4 1968 Chevy Carryall. Air conditioned, 307 V-8, radio, carriage rack, good condi tion. $1196. After 6, call 846-0626. 61t3 1966 Oldsmobile Cutlass. Automatic, air, heater, radio. Call 846-277S8, 8 a. m. thru 6 p. m. Call 846-8421 after 6 p. m. 61t5 10’ x 57’ CASA MANANA mobile home. Two bedroom, carpet, furnished, excellent condition. Must sell! Going into service. Will sell equity. 846-3421. 49tfn Xmas gifts for him? Jointed cue pool sticks from $12.95 to $65.00. Aggie Di Jen. Dtfn Duplex, two bedroom, near University. One apartment furnished, excellent in vestment. $14,600. 846-5231. 28tfn SPECIAL NOTICE SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300 A.F. £ A.M. THE MASTER MASON’S DE GREE will be confirmed on Tuesday, December 8 at 7 p. m. Visitors welcomed. Signed: William B. Shank, W.M. Joe Woolket, Secretary Baha’i’ Discussion every Thursday, Chap el Reading Room, 8-10 p. m. 846-9793 47tl "See what beauty by MARY KAY can lo for you.” For a beauty show or jrivate facial call: JONNIE PATRA- private NELL./ cal ..A, 822-4896 (after 6 p. m.) Sat. & Sun. anytime. “YOUR MARY KAY BEAUTY CONSULTANT” For Christmas think of MARY KAY— Free Gift Wrap & Delivery. 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. 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. chul z 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 AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 TROPHIES PLAQUES Engraving Service Ask About Discounts Texas Corn Exchange, Inc. 1018 S. Texas 822-5121 Bob Boriskie ’65 COINS SUPPLIES • Watch Repairs • Jewelry Repair • Diamond Senior Rings • Senior Rings Refinished C. W. Varner & Sons Jewelers North Gate 846-5816 Rentals-Sales-Service TYPEWRITERS Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines Smith-Corona Portables CATES TYPEWRITER CO 909 S. Main 822-6000 CHILD CARE Experienced child care, from 8 to 6. Call 846-6636 17tfn HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN- ”” * T ’-msed. 99tfn TER, 3400 South College, State Licensed. 823-8626. Virginia D. Jones, R. N FOR RENT VICTORIAN APARTMENTS Midway between Bryan & A&M University STUDENTS ! 1 Need A Home l & 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur. Pool and Private Courtyard 3 MONTHS LEASE 822-5041 401 Lake St. Apt. 1 40tfn Two bedroom furnished and unfurnished apartments. $105 to $116. Central air and heat. Married couples only. 823-0934 University Acres. 131 HELP WANTED SECRETARY several positions available iatu secretaries. Excellent typing and short hand required. Applj TAMU has immediately for mature, experienced Excellent typing and required. Apply Personnel Office, Room 13, System Administration Build- AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER 5217 MEN 1 $80 Pius Part-time j ■ 2 Call 846-0501 4 p.m. - 6 p.m. Today DOMESTIC COOK AND HOUSEKEEPER Excellent working conditions and fringe benefits. Personal interview and refer ences necessary. Personnel Office, A&M University, Room 18, System Adminis tration Building. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER 37tfn WORK WANTED Will do typing. Call 823-4579 after 6 p. m. or all day Saturday and Sunday 50t4 Tennis racket restringing and supplies nylon and gut. Call 846-4477. 123tfn fringing and supplies Typing, full time. Notary Public, Americard accepted, 823-6410 or 82 Public, Bank- 3-3838. lOtfn TYPING. Close to campus. 846-2934 21tfn yping. 8165. 132tfn SOSOLIK'S TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV AH Makes B&W TV Repairs 713 S. MAIN 822-2133 TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED & EXCHANGED Completely Guaranteed Lowest Prices HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION 33rd. & Texas Ave. Bryan 822-6874 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 Payed 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 Colleges face problems in financial ‘depression 9 NEW YORK <A>) — American colleges and universities tom be tween racing costs and jogging incomes, face financial problems ‘serious enough to be called a de pression,’ the Carnegie Commis sion on Higher Education said Thursday Putting a national focus on a situation that worries many ed ucators more than student re bellion, a commission report gave this estimate derived from a weighted sample of 41 closely- studied institutions: Some 450 colleges and univer sities, enrolling 21 per cent of America’s student population, are in such financial difficulty that they have had to curtail impor tant services. Another 1,000, with 56 per cent of students, are head ed for such troubles in the near future. The report, compiled by Earl F. Cheit, former vice chancellor of the University of California at Berkeley, named some of the country’s wealthiest and most prestigious institutions from its test sample—including Stanford and Harvard Universities, Berk eley and the Universities of Chi cago, Michigan, Minnesota, Mis souri and Oregon. It said the sit uation was fast becoming worse as cost increases continue to out pace income increases. Releasing the report at a news conference, the commission chair man, Clark Kerr, said he did not “foresee any of the major insti tutions in the United States clos ing their doors.” But Cheit said that “several of them will have to change profoundly unless solu tions are found,” and more gov ernmental aid will be a necessity. Cheit said the most optimistic administrators see the crisis last ing into the middle 1970s. Trouble was more likely for private institutions than public, urban than rural schools, uni versities than liberal arts col leges, the report said. Northern schools were said to be in gener ally worse shape than those of other regions. The term “in financial diffi culty” does not reflect on a school’s academic worth, the re port said, and might indicate that the school is doing more than others to bring income and ex penditures into line. Some public institutions, pro hibited by law from going into the red might have balanced budgets but be suffering a quality deficit, the Cheit report said. It said a study of 555 private insti tutions being completed by the Association of American Colleges, is expected to find as many as one-fourth of them dipping into capital. Remedying the situation, the Cheit report said, will involve not only general economic recov ery but winning back public con fidence by stability, efficiency and redefinition of purposes and pri orities. Besides increased income from tuition and private giving, it said, there would have to be “ma jor new public policies.” The report, to be published next year, made no specific pre dictions about what would hap pen if things do not change. But some individual educators have recently put it quite bluntly. “The day of judgment is upon us,” Knox College President Sharvy G. Umbeck said last sum mer. “You will note I did not forecast its arrival at a future time. It is here—now.” Kingman Brewster, president of Yale, has said one more year’s “shrinkage of funds” would force Yale—expecting a $2 million de ficit this academic year—to sac rifice either quality, “great dis cernible areas of acitivity” or accessibility to those who are not rich. BROWN - ALLEN MOTOR CO. OLDSMOBILE SALES - SERVICE “Where satisfaction is standard equipment” 2400 Texas Ave. COURT’S SADDLERY . . . FOR WESTERN WEAR OR FOR YOUR MARE. FOR SHOE REPAIR BRING IN A PAIR. 403 N. Main 822-0161 Join the Cassette Revolution! ...study for exams with cassettes now! You’ll never want to study any other way! Each cassette is a full one-hour recording of all the impor tant content material taught in college courses, based on the most widely-used textbooks. Friendswood to meet Georgetown here in high school playoff games The Friendswood Mustangs and Georgetown will meet on Kyle Field tonight at 8 in the first of two Texas high school playoff games this weekend. The Mustangs led by All-State quarterback Kent Ballard, are undefeated in 12 starts, while Georgetown will be out to better last year’s record. They lost to Lufkin Dunbar on penetrations last year in this same playoff, the state quarterfinals. Tickets will go on sale for the A A encounter at 6:30 p.m. at the ticket window at G. Rollie White Coliseum and booths at Gates 5 and 7 for $2.50 each, according to A&M Business Manager Wally Groff. The second game will be 24 hours later, at 8' p.m. Saturday, when the Ennis Lions will meet Jasper in a Class AAA quarter final battle. It will be the second week in a row that Ennis has played on the Astroturf of Kyle Field. Last week they defeated Brenham, 33-17, in the regionals by scoring 27 points in the second half. Ticket sales for that game will begin at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, with $2.50 for rserved seats and $2 for general admission ducats. READY NOW: Introductory Psychology Educational Psychology Abnormal Psychology AVAILABLE SOON: Atro-American History Introductory Physics. I Introductory Economics Introductory Philosophy American Government English Composition Basic Statistics Introductory Sociology Introductory Anthropology Social Psychology Personal Adjustment and Mental Hygiene Child Development Available at your local bookstore. CASSETTE PACKAGE*: $6.95 *each package contains: one-hour cassette, an outline of the contents, a bibliography of the standard textbooks for the course, and a detailed glossary with definitions for self-testing. COLLEGE CASSETTE OUTLINE SERIES Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc. 383 Madison Avenue, New York 10017 c • orfi u ■lU&ih The Church..For a Fuller Life..For You.. BRYAN, TEXAS 502 Wert 26th St. PHONE TA 2-1572 Campus and Circle Theatres College Station The Exchange Store “Serving Texas Aggies” STUDENT PUBIICATION CALENDAR OF CHURCH SERVICES ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL Saturday Mass—7 :00 P.M. Sunday Masses—9:00 and 11 :00 A.M. OUR SAMOUR’S LUTHERAN 8:30 & 10:45 A.M.—The Church at Worship 9:30 A.M.—Bible Classes For All Holy , Communion—1st Sun. Ea. Month CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY 9 :30 A.M.—Sunday School 11:00 A.M.—-Sunday Service 11:00 A.M.-2 P.M.—Tues. Reading Rm. 7 :00-8 :00 P.M.—Wed., Reading Room 8:00 P.M.—Wed. Evening Worship A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST 8:00 & 10:00 A.M. Worship 9:00 A.M.—Bible Study 5:15 P.M.—Young People's Class 6:00 P.M.-—Worship 7:15 P.M.—Aggie Class 9 :30 A.M.—Tues. - Ladies Bible Class 7:15 P.M.—Wednesday - Bible Study UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN (Missouri Synod) Pres. Clinton Phillips No meetings until next September CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School 10 :45 A.M.—Morning Worship 6 :30 P.M.—Young People’s Service 7 :00 P.M.—Preaching Service FIRST BAPTIST 9 :30 AM—Sunday School 10:45 AM Morning Worship 6:10 PM—Training Union 7 :20 PM—Evening Worship 6:45 PM—Choir Practice & Teachers meetings (Wednesday) 7 :45 PM—Midweek Services (Wed.) 906 Jersey Street, So. Side of Campus Rector: William R. Oxley Asst.—Rev. Wesley Seeliger 8 :00 A.M. & 9 :15 A.M. Sunday Services SECOND BAPTIST 710 Eisenhower 9:45 A.M.—Sunday School 11 :00 A.M.—Church Service 6 :30 P.M.—Training Union 7 :30 P.M.—Church Service A&M PRESBYTERIAN 7-9 A.M.—Sun. Breakfast - Stu. Ctr. 9 :45 A.M.—Church School 11 :00 A.M.—Morning Worship 6 :00 P.M.—Sun. Single Stu. Fellowship 7 :15 P.M.—Wed. Student Fellowship 6 :45 A.M.—Fri. Communion Service Wesley Foundation FAITH CHURCH UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 9 :15 A.M.—Sunday School 10 :30 A.M.—Morning Worship 7 :30 P.M.—Evening Service COLLEGE HEIGHTS ASSEMBLY OF GOD 9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School 11 :00 A.M.—Morning Worship 6 :30 P.M.—Young People’s Service 7 :30 P.M.—Evening Worship A&M METHODIST 9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School 10 :55 A.M.—Morning Worship 5 :30 P.M.—Campus & Career Class 5:30 & 6:00 P.M.—MYF Meetings UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP 305 Old College Road South 10 :00 A.M.—Sunday Service 7 :00 P.M.—Adult Service FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Homestead & Ennis 9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School 10 :50 A.M.—Morning Worship 5 :30 P.M.—Young People CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS 26th East and Coulter, Bryan 8 :30 A.M.—Priesthood meeting 10 :00 A.M.—Sunday School 6 :30 P.M.—Sacrament Meeting GRACE BAPTIST CHURCH 2505 S. College Ave., Bryan An Independent Bible Church 9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School 10 :50 A.M.—Morning Worship 7 :00 P.M.—Prayer and Bible Study CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 3205 Lakeview 9:45 A.M.—Bible School 10:45 A.M.—-Morning Worship 6:00 P.M.—Youth Hour 7 :00 P.M.—Evening Worship College Station’s Own Banking Service University National Bank NORTH GATE Central Texas Hardware Co. BRYAN • HARDWARE • CHINA WARE • CRYSTAL • GIFTS Sure Sign of Flavor SANITARY Farm Dairies BB&L BRYAN BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION