The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 30, 1971, Image 4

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    Page 4
College Station, Texas
Tuesday, March 30, 1971
THE BATTALION
Campus briefs
Marriage Forum to be Wednesday
Dr. Gaston Foote, pastor of the
Fort Worth First United Meth
odist Church, will present the
second “Marriage Forum” pro
gram at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in
the Memorial Student Center As
sembly Room.
Dr. Foote will speak on “Moral
and Spiritual Implication of
Marriage.”
The forum is sponsored by the
Student “Y” Association.
★ ★ ★
Profs participating
in education meeting
Professors Dr. Charles A. Ro-
denberger and Robert H. Fletch
er are participating this week in
a sectional conference of the
American Society of Engineering
Education.
The Gulf Southwest Region
meeting in Ruston, La., continues
through Saturday.
★ ★ ★
Architect society
head to speak here
Tom Bullock, president of the
Texas Society of Architects, will
speak Monday at a joint meeting
sponsored by the Brazos Chapter
of the American Institute of
Architects and Texas A&M Uni
versity’s College of Architecture
and Environmental Design.
Bullock will discuss “The Busi
ness of the Profession as it Re
lates to the Texas Society of
Architects” at 1:30 p.m. in the
Architecture Building.
He is president of Caudill Row
lett Scott, Inc., a Houston-based
architectural firm with offices in
New York, Hartford and Los An
geles and projects in 39 states
and nine foreign countries.
★ ★ ★
Cricket tournament
begins Saturday
A cricket tournament featur
ing Arlington, Dallas, Houston
and A&M clubs will begin here
Saturday.
An 11 a.m. Saturday match be
tween Arlington and Houston
will be followed by a Sunday
game between Dallas and A&M,
announced club president John
F. Griffiths.
Winners of the two games will
play for the championship April
17. All three matches will be on
the Memorial Student Center
drill field.
Griffiths said several persons
will be on hand during the course
of the matches to explain the
game. Handouts describing maj
or features of cricket also will
be available.
★ ★ ★
Political Science profs
to present papers
Two political science professors
will present papers during the
Rocky Mountain Social Science
Association meeting May 7 and
8 in Fort Collins, Colo.
Dr. Elias S. Thermos’ paper
is entitled “Conflicts and Pros
pects in Greek Politics.” He will
make the presentation on the
Comparative Politics Panel.
Dr. Kwang H. Ro will report
on “North Korea: Between Mos
cow and Peking” at the Asian
Studies Section. He also will par
ticipate in a discussion of what
can be done to improve Asian
studies in this part of the Unit
ed States.
★ ★ ★
Plant domestication
lecture subject
Dr. Jack R. Harlan, plant ge
netics professor who heads the
University of Illinois’ Crop Evo
lution Laboratory, will present a
graduate lecture Thursday.
The 3:30 p.m. presentation in
the library conference room is
entitled “Process of Plant Do
mestication.”
★ ★ ★
Aerospace senior
wins $50 prize
Richard J. Rynearson, senior
aerospace engineering major, has
been awarded a $50 prize by Es
tes Industries for his design of
a model rocket.
The senior from Decatur has
been in model rocketry 12 years.
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
One day otf per word
4^ per word each additional day
er word each add
Minimum charge
Classified Disp
$1.00
Display
per column inch
ach insertion
DEADLINE
p.m. day before publication
FOR SALE
1966 Chevy Malibu. . IMMACULATE
W/W, factory air, power steering, auto
matic-console. After 5:30 p. m. 846-5748.
10214
1965 Impala, 2-door, hard top: $450.
1969 Yamaha 80CC: $175. 846-3337. 102t4
Tapes 8 track, hundreds of them. $2.95
each. Don’t miss this ! Aggie Den. 102tfn
1969, 12* X 50’ mobile home. Two bed
room front & rear ; kitchen ; dinin
front & rear; kitchen ; dining area ;
large bath. Furnished. Central heat with
large bath, furnished. Central heat with
with window air conditioner. 846-4676 after
5 :30 p. m. 10212
INVENTORY
LIQUIDATION
7-Day Furniture Reductions
before pre-inventory.
Fantastic Saving on Furniture,
Rugs, and Appliances.
Stock on hand only.
KRAFT FURNITURE CO.
Downtown Bryan.
Cadillac Fleetwood Sedan. 1964 Immacu
late, full power, auto pilot, all-weather
control, tilt wheel, $1450. 846-8684. 19tfn
FOUND
Tennis racket. A&M Courts on Saturday.
846-8307 102t2
HELP WANTED
Drive-In Grocery relief manager. Satur-
day-Sunday shift. Minimum age: 21. 822-
4386. 101t4
Male - Jobs—-Part - time. Call 846-0501
between 4:30 & 5:30 p. m. Today and To
morrow. 83tfn
WORK WANTED
Typing — electric —- experienced. 40<f a
page. 846-7675. 102tl0
TYPING. Near campus. 846-2934. 92tfn
Typing, experienced, full time, IBM
Selectric symbols. Call 846-7848. 69tfn
Typing, full time, Notary Public, Bank-
Americard accepted, 823-6410 or 823-3838.
lOtfn
Typing. Electric, symbols, experienced.
846.8165. 132tfn
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
Drake 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
SPECIAL NOTICE
or buy
Sell the shirt off your back
new Widjet at THE FLEA MARKET.
Every Sunday, lime: 1-5. Circle Drive-ln.
For sale information, call 846-5637, 846-
5401. 98tfn
Guitar
trings fo
strings. Sets or individual.
Strings for most any instrument. Repair
service. Lange Music Co. 2504 South
College. 822-2334. 91tfn
Hoover’s Tennis Service. One block south
of tennis courts. Open 1:30 to 6:30 p. m.
3. 82tfn
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 67tfn
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Official notices must arrive in the Office
of Student Publications before deadline of
1 p.m. of the day proceeding publication.
y proceeding pu
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Mustafa, Gholam
Degree: Ph.D. in Agricultural Economics
Dissertation: AN IMPUT-OUTPUT MOD
EL FOR THE TEXAS ECONOMY WITH
EMPHASIS ON AGRICULTURE.
Time: April 1, 1971 at 2:00 p. m.
Place: Room 310 in the Agriculture Bldg.
George W. Kunze
Dean of the Graduate College
The English Proficiency Examination for
majors in Botany, Microbiology and Zoolo
gy will be given Tuesday, April 6 at 4 :00
p. m. in Room 113 in the Biological Science
Building East. Examinees should bring
pen, pencil and dictionary. 102t4
Third installment board payment for
the Spring Semester is due on or before
April 1, 1971. The amount is $85.00 for
the 7-day Board Plan and $76.00 for the
5-day Board Plan. Please pay now at the
Fiscal Office, Richard Coke Building, to
Ity. 99tfn
avoid penalty.
To be eligible to purchase the Texas
A&M University ring, an undergraduate
student must have at least one academic
year in residence and credit for ninety-five
(95) semester hours. The hours passed at
the prelim
preliminary grade report period on
March 15, 1971, may be used in satisfying
'-five hour requirement. Students
this ninety-five hour requirement. Students
qualifying under this regulation may now
leave their names with the ring clerk.
Room
in tu
rin
ng eligibility. Orders for these rings
ill be taken by the ring clerk starting
April 1, 1971, and continuing through
and continuing
May 7, 1971. The rings will be returned
ay 7, 1971. The rings
to the Registrar’s Office to be delivered
on or about June 23, 1971. The ring
clerk is on duty from 8:00 a. m. to 12:00
noon, Monday through Friday, of each
week.
H. L. Heaton, Dean
Admissions and Records
SPRING AWARDS SCHOLARSHIPS.
Application forms for Spring Awards Pro
gram may be obtained from the Student
inancial Aid Office, Room 303, YMCA
Building until March 31, 1971. All appli
^ wit" "■
iy
m., April 1, 1971.
api
cations must be filed with the Student
Financial Aid Office by not
le
lat
5:00 p. m., April 1, 1971. Late ap]
tions will not be accepted. R. M. L
Director.
than
plica-
ogan,
90tl4
WHITE AUTO STORES Bryan
and College Station can save you
up to 40% on auto parts, oil,
filters, etc. 846-5626.
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES:
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
3400 S. College 823-8051
Watch Repairs
Jewelry Repair
Diamond Senior
Rings
Senior Rings
Refinished
C. W. Varner & Sons
Jewelers
North Gate 846-5816
FOR RENT
Furnished rooi
cable. Call 822-5492.
m, private bath, carpet,
■492. 102t4
Two bedroom, unfurnished home. $70
month. Married students with children, but
no pets. 846-8020. 99t8
ATTENTION STUDENTS
Now completing new apar
& 2 bedrooms, designed for students.
partments 1
A beautiful place to live. Lots of
grounds for outside activities. Lake
for fishing. Washateria located on
grounds. You will find all of this
at beautiful University Acres. An area
developed for married students. A
truly country atmosphere, yet located
two miles from center campus. For
further information, call 8?3-0934.
After 5 call 846-3408 or 846-5509.
D. R. CAIN Company,
3508 E. 29th Street, Bryan.
Convenient, new furnished, one bedroom
partment. Large closet. Central heat and
bills paid. $130. 846-0333 or
apartment
air. All
823-6678.
Casa Del Sol Apartments
One Bedroom
Furnished & Unfurnished
Bills Paid $135-$145
67tfn
VICTORIAN
APARTMENTS
Midway between Bryan &
A&M University
STUDENTS 1 !
Need A Home
. & 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur.
Pool and Private Courtyard
$ MONTHS LEASE
401 Lake St.
Apt. 1
40tfil
LOST
left in Sbisa.
Shankle.
p cai
845-1609. Glenn
102t2
CHILD CARE
Wynken, Blyken, Nod Nursery has opi
for a limited number of childr
ings
This nurse
a limited number of children,
jry is operated by a registered
it is state licensed. Saturday
90tl6
nurse and
care by appointment. 846-3928.
HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN
TER, 3400 South College, State Licensed.
823-8626. Virginia D. Jones, R. N. 99tfn
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
STUDENT EMPLOYMENT
In Yellowstone and all U. S. National
Parks. Booklet tells where and how
to apply. Send $2.00.
Arnold Agency, 206 East Main,
Rexburg, Idaho 83440.
Money back guarantee.
101t5
TROPHIES PLAQUES
Engraving Service
Ask About Discounts
Texas Coin Exchange, Inc.
1018 S- Texas 822-5121
Bob Boriskie ’55
COINS SUPPLIES
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
Rynear’s “Effort III” is a
three-tenths ounce snout-nosed
model he designed employing
techniques studied in aero engi
neering.
The model that will attain
about 2,000 - feet altitude on a
standard engine was adjudged a
first place tie in Estes’ Septem
ber Design of the Month compe
tition.
★ ★ ★
Marketing executives
to address clinic
Five marketing executives
from Houston will address the
annual Sales Clinic for students
Wednesday at the Memorial Stu
dent Center.
The program is sponsored
jointly by the A&M Chapter of
the American Marketing Associ
ation and Houston Sales and
Marketing Executives.
Herbert G. Thompson, associ
ate professor of marketing, is a
member of the Houston Sales
and Marketing Executives’ Edu
cation Committee. Thompson is
assisting chapter president Ed
win Clark with the Sales Clinic
program.
Activities begin at 9 a.m. and
continue through the afternoon.
★ ★ ★
Physics colloquium
here Wednesday
Dr. D. H. Youngblood, assist
ant professor of physics at A&M,
will be the university’s physics
colloquium speaker Wednesday.
Dr. Youngblood will lecture on
“Stripping Reactions to Unbound
Levels.” The 4 p.m. Physics Room
146 lecture is open to the public.
★ ★ ★
Fire instructors
attend conference
Three Engineering Extension
Service fire training instructors
will attend the 43rd annual Inter
national Fire Instructors Confer
ence in Kansas City, Mo., Sun
day through Saturday.
Chief Instructor Henry D.
Smith, David White and Charles
L. Page will represent the Fire
men’s Training School.
Smith said approximately 4,500
fire service instructors from
throughout the world participate.
He will address the first gen
eral session Thursday morning
on fire department certification
programs.
Merit seniors,
honor prof
named here
Four Merit Award winner sen
iors and an Honor Professor
were named here Wednesday
night during the annual Agricul
tural Convocation.
Dr. A. M. Sorensen of the Ani
mal Science Department was se
lected as Honor Professor in rec
ognition of his teaching ability
and student relations.
Merit Award winners were
Larry Glen Beerwinkle of Tem
ple, majoring in animal science;
Donald Mark Olson of Canyon,
agricultural economics; John
Brooks Porter of Terrell, agron
omy; and Randall Earl Betty of
Springtown, agricultural e c o-
nomics.
Main speaker for the convoca
tion was John C. White, State
Commissioner of Agriculture.
Sorensen is professor and head
of the Animal Science Depart
ment’s Physiology of Reproduc
tion Laboratory. He grew up at
Granger and attended Waco High
School. He holds a BS degree
from A&M and MS and PhD de
grees from Cornell University.
Among his many awards and
honors are the Distinguished
Teaching Award from the Amer
ican Society of Animal Science
in 1969, and the Association of
Former Students Faculty Distin
guished Achievement Award in
1968.
All the Merit Award winners
have been designated as “Distin
guished Students.”
NOT EVERYBODY HAS IT AS BAD AS THE AGGIES when it comes to going places
for the Easter holidays. The annual migrations of college students brought to soutl
Florida Auburn University co-eds Emily Caldwell (left) Lynn Turk and Rebbeca Tyson,
Buried is Bill Moehle of Western Illinois University. (AP Wirephoto)
Student thinking goes into
new 44-bed health center
Student thinking has gone into
a new 44-bed student health cen
ter now in the works.
The health center, to be con
structed on the site of Mitchell
Hall, is in preliminary design by
John R. Thompson and Associates,
architect of Dallas.
Semi-private rooms rather than
wards, separate in-patient and
out-patient areas and mental
health services are considered for
incorporation into the center.
Ground-breaking could be as
early as next spring, according
to J. O. Adams, facilities planning
and construction director.
The center will encompass med
ical and dental care to include
preventive, diagnostic and thera
peutic services for both physical
and emotional problems.
Planning is being coordinated
with Dr. Kenneth L. Nelson, uni
versity hospital director, and
Adams.
They said that the health cen
ter is not intended to duplicate
community hospitals, but rather
to furnish intermediate health
care for the student and comple
ment Bryan facilities.
Early planning involved stu
dents Blaine Purcell of Wichita
Falls, Charles T. Head of Goldth-
waite, Paul Ammons of Houston
and Allen Lockhart of Albuquer
que, N. M.
They served with faculty and
staff personel on an advisory
committee appointed June 19, 1970
by Dean of Students James P.
Hannigan for then Acting Presi
dent A. R. Luedecke.
General recommendations tin!
made for the center were esset
tially accepted by the universitj
and Board of Directors. The boini
then authorized a program of n.
quirements to be made, which wa;
approved last fall. At that time,
the board authorized $25,000 fu
planning.
Project coordinator Howati
Perry, civilian student activitid
director, and members of the re
quirements committee visited var
ious Southwest facilities for ideal
and features that might be in
corporated into the student heal
center.
“We think the health center
will be an addition to the carnpti
of which students and the univer
sity can be proud,” Perry said.
A&M’s present facilities w
built in 1916 and added to in 191'
SCONA execs named;
meeting to be tonight
The SCONA XVII executive
committee and a general organi
zational meeting tonight have
been announced by Ben Thurman,
chairman of the 1971-72 Student
Conference on National Affairs.
Thurman said all SCONA XVI
workers who will be back next fall
and anyone interested in working
with the Memorial Student Cen
ter committee are invited to the
7:30 p.m. meeting in the MSC
Assembly Room.
Planning, operations and fin-
nance sections of the executive
committee will be headed by
Tommy E. Potthoff of Euless,
Ron E. Schlabach and L. Rene
French, respectively, Thurman
announced.
Working with Potthoff in plan
ning will be steering chairman
Roberto J. Lozano of Jalisco,
Mexico; publications, Brian A.
Polk, Devine; personnel, Larry
Paterson, Fort Worth, and pro
grams, Ray Kopecky, Pasadena.
In operations with Schlabach
Aggie Players production
‘Ghosts’ begins in B-CS
A play treating the concept
that social pressure can cause
bizarre behavior in people has
begun a six-night run in Bryan
and College Station.
The play, Henrik Ibsen’s
“Ghosts,” is a production of the
Aggie Players, the A&M theater
company directed by C. K. Esten.
of the shocking nature of its sub
ject matter.
The “Ghosts” cast places Eva
Gramberg, senior English major
of Bryan, as Mrs. Alving, com
pelled by social pressure to re
main with her immoral husband.
are arrangements chairman Alei
Dade of Hopkinsville, Ky.; host,
Albert L. Haegelin, Hondo; publit
relations, Sidney C. Hughes, Aos
tin; housing, Larry J. Kant.
Houston, and transportation
Stephen J. Lazarro, Houston.
French is now organizing tki
Easter fund drive. Other Tues
day meeting topics will incM
discussion of proposed SCONA
XVII topics.
Thurman said areas of interesi
currently embrace “Election 'It
in the political area, “Plight of
Underdeveloped Nations” as i
social topic possibility; educational
“The Student’s Role in University
Policy,” and economic, “The Es-
tent of Federal Aid to Stall
Government.”
“Our need is a topic that is not
only controversial and stimulat
ing, but one that also will be
relevant in February, 1912,"
Thurman commented.
“Ghosts” will be staged at the
A&M Consolidated School’s audi
torium Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday. Thursday, Friday
and Saturday performances will
be at Stagecenter, in the recrea
tion building near Country Club
Lake in Bryan.
Curtain for each performance
will be at 8 p.m.
Aggie Players production for
merly were staged in Guion Hall.
The building was razed recently
to make way for a new convention
center and Memorial Student Cen
ter expansion.
Her son Oswald, victim of the
older Alving’s excesses, will be
played by Audie Beeson, sopho
more marketing major of Tripoli,
Libya. John Steele will portray
Pastor Mandors from whom the
social pressure becomes strongest.
Sandy Sheats, junior secondary
education major of Baytown, will
play the widow’s maid Regina.
Her carpenter father, Jacob
Engstrand, will be portrayed by
Russell Mclnturff, sophomore
secondary education major of
Lubbock.
It will also need to have "uni'
versality,” with appeal for dele
gates and round-table co-chair
men.
Thurman, vice chairman of
SCONA XVI, said response to
the conference on “Student Re
sponsibilities in the ’70s” was an
inspiration to all involved.
“We aim to make SCONA XVII
equally rewarding,” he added.
Admission to the play will be
$1 per person.
DIP AND DAB SHOP
206 South Gordon
Statuary and Wall Plaques
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 6 p. m.-9 p. m,
Saturday 9 a. m. - 9 p. m.
“Ghosts” forms an Ibsen sequel
to “The Doll’s House,” in which
a woman defied social convention
and left her husband. The latter
play was banned in 1880 because
seen™e COILEGE PROTECTOR?
(THE INSURED SAYINGS PLAN DESIGNED
FOR THE COLLEGE MAN)
It Might Be Worth Your Time To Take A Look At It.
LOCAL OFFICE:
707 University Dr.
(Next to Univ.
Nat’l Bankj
FOR AN APPOINTMENT
Call
Charles E. Thomas ’64
or
Danny M. Gordon ’66
At
846-7714
PROTECTIVE LIFE'
nMitance company
HOME OFFICE - BI R M I N 0+1 A M, A LAB AM A
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Poetry Editor Of The “Saturday Review”
TUESDA Y, MARCH 30
8:00 P.M. MSC BALLROOM
ADMISSION FREE!
Presented by the
Contemporary Arts Committee
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