The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 06, 1971, Image 6
Page 6 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Wednesday, October 6, 1971 OF CALIFORNIA SPORTSWEAR Color - Coordinated Blouses (Extra Long) Shells, Sweaters, Bermuda Shorts, Skirts, 2 & 3 Piece Pantsuits. NO ITEM OVER $4.00 Top Quality Sportswear — An Unusual Store Located In RIDGECREST SHOPPING CENTER 3527 Texas Ave. Phone 846-0123 CASA CHAPULTEPEC OPEN 11:00 A. M. CLOSE 10:00 P. M. 1315 COLLEGE AVENUE — PHONE 822-9872 SPECIALS GOOD WED., THURS. & FRI. BEEF TACOS, BEANS - RICE CHEESE TACOS, BEANS - RICE CHALUPAS WITH GUACAMODE CHALUPAS WITH CHEESE - BEANS HOME MADE TAMALES WITH FRIED BEA BEEF ENCHILADAS, BEANS - RICE CHEESE ENCHILADAS, BEANS - RICE CHILES RELLENOUS WITH SPANISH RICE AND CHEESE SAUCE GUACAMOLE SALAD - 2 CRISPY TACOS MEXICAN DINNER COMPLETE FIESTA DINNER Combination Salad, Beef Taco, Three Enchiladas, Beans, Rice Tortillas and Hot Sauce and Tortilla Chips. $1.39 TACO DINNER Two Beef Tacos, One Chili Con Q u e s o, Combination Salad, Tortillas and Hot Sauce and Tortilla Chips. $09 Make the meet ef the Football Weekend By all means, come to the game. And while you’re here, take in the other big game: a beautiful day at SIX FLAGS. You and your date (or your buddy) can groove on more than 85 different rides, live.shows and other kinds of fun — including The Big Bend, fastest ride in the USA. SIX FLAGS is the number one tourist attraction in Texas. If you’ve made the trip before, you know why. If not, this is a great time to find out. Other adults pay $5.75 per, or $11.50 for two. But you and your friend can do SIX FLAGS for only $8.00. Discount tickets available at SIX FLAGS main gate. You must have this coupon and Student I.D. Card. Count Me In on SIX FLAGS’ 2 for $8.00 Date Rate Name- City/State_ SIX FLAGS OVER TEXAS- DALLAS / FORT WORTH, TEXAS Campus briefs 6 Yankee’ to be featured in The seventh world voyage of the Brigantine “Yankee” will be discussed and depicted in a slide show by Gordon Richardson of Caldwell at a meeting of the A&M Sailing Club tonight. Richardson was a crew member of the voyage, which has been the subject of three “National Geographic Magazine” features and a television special. Sailing Club President Richard Briscoe said the public is invited to hear Richardson’s account of the Yankee’s voyage. The 7:30 p.m. meeting will be in Room 105 of the Geology Building. Highlight of the Yankee cruise was the finding of the anchor and other parts of the “HMS Bounty” off Pitcairn Island in the South Pacific. Richardson will display part of the anchor and copper nails used to hold copper plating to the bottom of the Bounty. ★ ★ ★ Cole to conduct seminar Oct. 21 Dr. Frederick M. Cole of North Florida Junior College, Madison, will conduct a seminar on ac counting instructional techniques Oct. 21 at A&M. The business professor’s topic, “The Use of Rate-Controlled Speech in Accounting Instruc tion,” is scheduled in Library Room 226 at 3:30 p.m. Dr. Cole is a graduate of Stet son (Fla.) University and the University of Florida. ★ ★ ★ Robert Howes to speak Oct. 21 Robert M. Howes will speak at Texas A&M University Oct. 21 about the Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area he directs for the Tennessee Val ley Authority. The Recreation and Parks De partment lecturer will present a graduate seminar and an 8 p.m. public-free address, announced Dr. L. M. Reid. Howes’ 8 p.m. talk will be heard in Room 110 of the Architecture Building. Reid noted Howes is appearing at Texas A&M through the Rec reation and Parks Department’s visiting lecturer series. ★ ★ ★ Yilmaz appointed Vet College instructor Dr. Salih M. Yilmaz, native of Turkey with backgrounds in both human and animal medicine, has been appointed veterinary para sitology instructor at A&M’s College of Veterinary Medicine. Dean Alvin A. Price noted Dr. Yilmaz’s specialties include med icine, tropical medicine and ani mal parasitology. ★ ★ ★ Jack Smith to give physics colloquium University of Texas at Austin physics Prof. Jack Swift will give the 4 p.m. physics colloquium Thursday at A&M. “Liquid Crystals” will be ex plained in Physics Room 146. The program is open to the public. ★ ★ ★ Engineers participate in A&M program Twenty-seven practicing engi neers, including company execu tives and plant managers from 10 Texas cities, will participate in the visiting engineers program at A&M which began Monday. The engineers will participate in eight programs lasting through Friday, Oct. 8. James H. Earle, head of the engineering design graphics department of the Col lege of Engineering, said: “We are proud of the high caliber of practicing engineers who will he participating and working on a man-to-man basis with our classes.” He noted with this se mester, 342 engineers will have participated in this program since it was started in 1960. ★ ★ ★ EES employes are promoted Two long-time employes of the Engineering Extension Service at Texas A&M University have been promoted to assistant directors, announced EES Director H. D. Bearden. Dr. W. B. Mansfield, chief in structor for the Supervisory De velopment Division, has been named assistant director for pro grams. Ernest A. Wentrcek, for mer administrative services of ficer, becomes assistant director for business affairs. Bearden noted both men have broad backgrounds with the Ex tension Service and they each have strong leadership qualities. ★ ★ ★ Ramanna to present colloquium Oct. 14 Dr. R. Ramanna of the Bhabha Atomic Research Center in Bom bay, India, will present a physics colloquium Oct. 14 at A&M. Dr. Ramanna will discuss the Indian facility’s neutron physics program at the 4 p.m. presenta tion in room 146 of the Physics Building. ment, will he in Room 317 of the Animal Industries Building. Dr. Selander has been a mem ber of the University of Texas faculty since receiving his Ph.D. from the University of California in 1956. slide show tonight ★ ★ ★ Math colloquium to be conducted A mathematics colloquium by Prof. R. H. Bing of the Univer sity of Wisconsin will be con ducted Thursday at A&M. Bing will speak on mapJ of E to the third power at] 4 p.m. event in Room 207 ofL, . Academic Building. A&M Mat ta f |° matics Department head Dr,[ et ° r R. Blakley said the colloquy open to all interested individu, member r’s ^ ery A member of the Nation h on Academy of Sciences, Bing« ;M st visiting professor of mathenmjMnged at the University of Texas Jl st Austin. ty. [be J0H ttalio NASA director praises Apollo 15 SPACE CENTER, Houston UP) —Dr. James C. Fletcher, adminis trator of the National Aeronau tics and Space Administration, said here Tuesday Apollo 15’s voyage to the moon “produced material and data beyond our wildest speculations” and that the two remaining moon missions may be even more successful. He said after Apollo 16 , ur Apollo 17, the last two landings, “the focus will ^ manned spaceflight not ontlftfter moon, but rather for mankiji Sa here on earth.” The administrator preset m - Dr. Fletcher, speaking at a NASA awards ceremony, said that Apollo 15 “reaffirms our primacy in space, thereby strengthening our leadership in the world community.” medals and awards to more tb 200 scientists and engineers I lt their work in connection xi My. Apollo 15. The Apollo 15 astronauts, Dsn Scott, Alfred Worden and Jat, Irwin, spoke briefly, thankingtj space engineers and scientists! their work Selander to speak at Thursday seminar Dr. Robert Selander, Univer sity of Texas zoologist, will dis cuss “Biochemical Population Ge netics” at an A&M seminar Thursday. The 4 p.m. session, sponsored by A&M’s Plant Sciences Depart- Agnew accuses ‘radical liberal’ critics of supporting politics of ‘negative division’ EL PASO (A*)—Vice President Spiro T. Agnew said Tuesday night the politicians who accuse him of polarizing and dividing the nation are themselves “the chief peddlers” of “a politics of negative division.” “They do not see individual Americans,” he said. “They see voting units. They perceive the people of our country as bloc constituencies each with its own special interests, and even its own special culture.” Agnew did not name the people he described as “these far left spokesmen . . . these self-appoint ed elitist spokesmen ...” In a speech prepared for a din ner honoring Sen. John G. Tower R-Tex., Agnew said division is essential to the American system because that is what makes elec tions. “If division is caused by a forthright definition of positions on issues facing the American people, I think such division must occur before solutions to those points in dispute can be reached,” Agnew said. But he said that is not the kind of division encouraged by poli ticians who pursue “narrow, spe cial interest constituencies . . . “For there is indeed a politics of negative division prevalent in our country today, and its prac titioners are those radical liberals who consciously and overtly seek by their rhetoric to divide Ameri can from American along lines of racial, generational, economic and cultural difference. “And, oddly enough—or is it— the chief peddlers of this divisive rhetoric are the same people who charge that the Nixon adminis tration in general and its vice president in particular are polar izing and dividing the country,” Agnew said. . . For all their claims to the title liberal and progressive, the far-left exponents of the phi losophy of bloc politics do not represent the wave of the Ameri can future,” Agnew said. “To the contrary, their separatist doc trine constitutes only the ebb 'tide of our country’s political past,” Agnew said, “a throwback to the era of what Theodore Roosevelt once denounced as hyphenated Americanism.” Agnew said there have always been those in the United States and abroad “who have sought to exploit our differences for their own purposes. “These purveyors of negative division have never succeeded in the past,” he said. “They will not succeed now.” OPENING SOON THE PEANUT GALLERY Formerly The Southgate Lounge nder ekly ‘We’ we lined ibab x Ja ■xpei imm t he Bottle Beer & Beer On Tap Free Peanuts Always 813 Old Highway 6 Duld ch The six stai ■tsta ■me. Beve n sta lling and arter also ATTENTION, TROPICAL FISH HOBBYISTS! JOE’S HOBBY CORNER has recently been enlarged and completely re-stocked. We now have everything you might possibly need in the way of aquarium supplies. Come in and see our HUGE new inventory. New shipment of fish just in at low, low prices! SPECIALS FOR WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY ONLY: NEON I E IR A S 6 For $1.00 ZEBRA DANIOS 3 For 59c AQUARIUM SPECIAL: 10 Gal. Metaframe Tanks $5.95 While They Last! Located In The Rear of Redmond Terrace Drugs 1402 Hwy. 6 South College Station ATTENTION ALL FRESHMEN MAKE SURE YOUR PICTURE WILL BE IN THE 1972 AGGIELAND YEARBOOK PICTURE SCHEDULE OCTOBER 4 THRU 8 MAKE-UP Corps, Freshmen: Uniform: Class A Winter Bring Poplin Shirt and Black Tie and Citation Cords, if any, Studio Will Furnish Blouses. KL; ,vid 1 telep iate CAA n on ■xas ima b 0U ( y thi n teb >wl cl ct wi liege Hall Band Must Bring Own Blouses and Brass. Civilians': Coat and Tie. Picture^ Will Be Taken From 8:00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m. NOTE: Bring Fee Slips To UNIVERSITY STUDIO 115 North Main — North Gate Phone: 846-8019 Lets you make the grade up a copy Of Wilev’s Sinrlant Pic k up a copy of Wiley’s Student Study Guide with Programmed Prob lems for Halliday & Resnick. Suppose thermodynamics is your weak spot. In that chapter you’ll find all the essential ideas from the text including heat conduction, First and Second Law, reversible processes and entropy . . . detailed examples to illustrate each idea... and pro grammed solutions of problems on thermodynamics. And the same three aids—the essen tial ideas, detailed examples and programmed solutions of problems -are in every chapter. (There’s a chapter in the study guide for every chapter in the text.) Look for the Student Study Guide With Programmed Problems at your campus bookstore. It can make the difference. By StanfeJ wmiams^owTlia'l'p M Pr ° 9ram,ned P '° b " 3 ™ In your college bookstore in paperback. uiitay JOHN WILEY & SONS, Inc 605 Third Avenue, New York, N.Y. -,0016 .w.-.... ; wmwm mm