The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 20, 1971, Image 3

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    THE BATTALION
Wednesday, October 20, 1971 College Station, Texas Page 3
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North Gate
846-5816
Campus briefs
Original graphic
An exhibition of original graph
ic art by contemporary and old
master artists will be held Oct.
26 in the College of Architecture
and Environmental Design at
A&M.
The exhibition will include more
than 1,000 original etchings, litho
graphs and woodcuts by artists
such as Picasso, Chagall, Miro,
Goya, Renoir, Rouault and Koll-
witz.
Arranged by Ferdinand Roten
Galleries of Baltimore, Md., the
exhibition will be displayed from
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Architec
ture Building.
Works by contemporary U. S.,
European and Japanese print-
makers also will be included in
the exhibition and sale. A Roten
AGGIE WIVES’ SPECIAL!
Just What You Need
To Solve Your
Xmas Gift Giving!
n:
-F*!*
I'll
Buy Two Portraits and Get
A Third One Free!
Color or Black & White
Offer Good Through October Only
UNIVERSITY
115 N. Main
STUDIO
North Gate
For Appointments Call: 846-8019
^ PiZZA
FREE DORM DELIVERY
Phone: 846-5777
RALPH’S No. 1 at NORTH GATE
Cold Beer On Tap
SMORGASBORD
ALL YOU CAN EAT
MONDAY THRU THURSDAY
5 - 7 P. M. —$1.50
RALPH’S No. 2 at EAST GATE
Cold Beer On Tap
Open: 3 p. m. - Midnight, Saturday ‘til 1 a. m.
3 SEASONS in N. Y.I
DAVID MERRICK
in association with
Theatre Now
-WITTIEST MUSICAL IN YEARS”
_ Clive Barnes, N.Y. TIMES f
M
Music by
NEIL SIMON
Based on the screenplay THE APARTMENT by
BILLY WILDER and I. A. L DIAMOND
BURT BACHARACH HAL DAVID
Starring
-5H
WILL MACKENZIE SYDNEE BALABER
with
ALAN NORTH MACE BARRETT CHANNING CHASE
0r,fl Cho?e7ar Y a O n r h k ed r b O v dUC ' i0n Re-Staged by D.r.cted by
MICHAEL BENNETT baayorklee ROBERT MOORE
TAMU SPECIAL A'rTRACliON _
BRYAN CIVIC AUDITORIUM — SUNDAY, OCT. 31 . P. M.
A&M Students and Date $3.50 La. •
All Seats Reserved
rru ii u Community Series Production at 8:30 p. m.
Tick,* Id MSC Student IToeram Office 845-4G71
art exhibition planned for Oct. 26
Galleries representative will be
available to answer questions
about graphic art and printmak
ing.
Gallaway will speak
at conference
Prof. Bob M. Gallaway, head
of the highway materials research
program of the Texas Transpor
tation Institute at A&M, will
speak on “Design and Construc
tion of Bituminous Surface Treat
ments” at the annual bituminous
paving conference today in Ur-
baba, 111.
The conference is sponsored by
the Illinois Highway Department
and the Civil Engineering De
partment of the University of
Illinois.
Dr. W. B. Mansfield, chief in
structor, said the course will cover
techniques and problems in super
vising company personnel. Class
es will be held Monday through
Friday at the Ramada Inn here.
Course instructors are J. O.
Musick, E. J. Mitchan, T. J. Bole
and A. A. Middleton Jr.
Aggies’ first home daytime game.
Cadet Col. of the Corps Thomas
M. Stanley of Mt. Pleasant will
lead the 2,590-man corps into
Kyle Field at 12:20 p.m., an
nounced Co. Thomas R. Parsons,
commandant.
Ladwig elected
EE Council chairman
Roger Ladwig, electrical en
gineering senior from Houston,
is chairman of the Electrical En
gineering Student Council for the
1971-72 year.
Other members elected recent
ly are seniors Gary Wilhelmi of
Storm Lake, Iowa, and Frank
Wilem of Huntsville, juniors Bill
Darkock of Allentown, Pa., and
Jerry Zemanek of Palacios, and
sophomore Jeff Pollicoff of Bry
an. A freshman representative
will be named later in the year.
The EE Student Council was
organized in 1969 to help channel
communications between students
and the administration. The coun
cil meets regularly with Dr. W.
B. Jones, Electrical Engineering
department head.
Michaels featured
at Coffee House
Balladeer Lerry Michaels will
be featured by the Basement Cof
fee House as a special attraction
for the A&M-Baylor football
weekend.
Located in the Memorial Stu
dent Center, the Basement will
present Michaels in Friday and
Saturday performances, announc
ed Chairman Bob Lackey.
He said the Aggie coffee house
will be open from 8 p.m. to mid
night and admission will be 50
cents per person.
Michaels sings folk and pop
tunes, some of his own compo
sitions. He also has recorded and
has been listed with the Texas
Coffeehouse Circuit. Michaels has
performed in Houston’s Columns
and Derrick Clubs and at the
Playboy Club in Atlanta.
Pipeline project
tested at A&M
A $20,000 model test project
is being conducted at A&M to
assist the $2 billion pipeline pro
gram in Alaska’s oil industry.
The Department of Mechanical
Engineering in the College of
Engineering has received the con
tract from the Alyeska Pipeline
Service Co. of Houston and Se
attle. The project is entitled “A
Study of the Effects of Differ
entiated Temperatures, Internal
Pressure and Friction on the
Aboveground Zig-Zag Pipeline.”
It is under supervision of Dr. P.
D. Weiner, assisted by Dr. J. E.
Martinez.
EES to conduct
supervision course
Twenty department heads,
supervisors and superintendents
from Texas industries will attend
a one-week course in general su
pervision next week conducted
by the Engineering Extension
Service’s Supervisory Develop
ment Division.
Alldredge to give
physics colloquium
Dr. G. P. Alldredge of the
University of Texas at Austin
Physics Department will give the
Texas A&M physics colloquium
lecture at 4 p.m. Thursday in
Physics Room 146.
Topic for the public program
is “Electronic Energy Levels and
Charge Distribution in Thin
Films.”
Skaggs-Albertson’s
awards scholarship
Skaggs-Albertson’s has present
ed a $1,000 scholarship to a 1970
graduate of A&M Consolidated
High School, Robert Logan.
Logan, who attends Blinn Jun
ior College night classes at Allen
Academy, won the scholarship in
a drawing. The chain awarded 17
such scholarships.
Pakistan students
elect officers
M. Saeed Ismail, chemical en
gineering major, was elected
president of the A&M chapter
of the Pakistan Students Asso
ciation.
Also elected were Mussarrat
Hussein, vice president; Qamar
Saeed Siddiqui, general secretary;
Shahid Iqbtal, joint secretary; and
Mohammed Naseem, treasurer.
Hemmerle to present
seminar Monday
Prof. W. J. Hemmerle of A&M’s
Institute of Statistics will present
a seminar Monday on “Maximum
Likelihood Estimation in Factor
Analysis.”
The 4 p.m. program in Plant
Sciences Room 103 is open to the
public.
Blood to review
Corps march-in
Air Force Maj. Gen. Gordon F.
Blood, commander of the 12th
Air Force headquartered at Berg
strom AFB, will review the Corps
of Cadets in a Saturday march-in
to the Aggie-Baylor football
game.
Kickoff is at 1:30 p.m. for the
Economic Society
to organize
The Economics Society will hold
an organizational meeting Thurs
day at 7:30 p.m. in Nagle. This
undergraduate club plans to have
guest speakers and social gather
ings at future meetings.
Membership is not limited to
economics majors.
Article by Costa
reprinted in book
An article by Dr. Richard H.
Costa of A&M’s English Depart
ment will be printed in a new
textbook.
Costa’s “College Classrooms:
The Mute Rebellion,” first ap-
Representatives visit A&M
to discuss training program
Representatives from the U. S.
Agency for International Devel
opment (AID), Michigan State
and Pennsylvania State will visit
A&M this week to discuss a new
training program in South
America.
A consortium between A&M,
Michigan State and Penn State
received $582,496 first year fund
ing for the two-year regional con
tract from AID. E. Paul Creech,
assistant director of the Interna
tional Programs Office at A&M,
said the contract calls for techni
cal assistance and advice to the
Graduate Schools of Agricultural
Sciences at Casterlar, Argentina.
The four-day program includes
visits to the College of Veterinary
Medicine, Agricultural Education
Department, Animal Science De
partment, Range Science Depart
ment, Soil and Crop Sciences De
partment, International Programs
Office and a meeting with Agri
culture Dean Dr. H. O. Kunkel.
Creech, who serves as consor
tium director, noted A&M is
prime contractor in the program
to assist in the training of animal
science students from several
South America countries enrolled
at the Argentina College.
ATTENTION
All Seniors and Graduate Students!
MAKE SURE YOUR PICTURE WILL BE
IN THE
1972
AGGIELAND
YEARBOOK PICTURE SCHEDULE
J - K - L Oct. 18 - 22
M - N - O Oct. 25 - 29
P - Q - R Nov. 1-5
S - T - U Nov. 8 - 12
V - W - X - Y - Z Nov. 15 - 19
Make-Up Week — Nov. 22 - Dec. 10
NOTE:
Students needing pictures for job-applications or any
personal use may come ahead of schedule.
CORPS SENIORS:’ Uniform: Class A Winter - Blouse
or Midnight Shirt.
CIVILIANS: Coat and Tie.
PICTURES WILL BE TAKEN FROM 8: A.M. to 5: P.M.
NOTE: BRING FEE SLIPS
to
UNIVERSITY STUDIO
115 No. Main — North Gate
Phone: 846-8019
peared in the April, 1970, “College
English.” It was selected by Prof.
Gary Tate of Texas Christian
University for his forthcoming
text, “Freshman English.”
An associate professor of Eng
lish, Costa joined the A&M facul
ty last year. He received the
Ph.D. at Purdue in 1969.
Landscape school
held through Friday
Approximately 60 garden club
members from five states are
expected for a three-day land
scape design school today through
Friday at A&M.
A&M Landscape Architect Rob
ert H. Rucker said the course is
designed to train community lead
ers in the appreciation of good
landscape design and to help them
create a pleasant community en
vironment.
The program is sponsored by
Texas Garden Clubs, Inc., as part
of a national continuing education
program by the National Council
of State Garden Clubs, Inc., of
St. Louis, Mo.
BUSIER - JONES AGENCY
REAL ESTATE • INSURANCE
F.H.A.—Veterans and Conventional Loans
ARM & HOME SAVINGS ASSOCIATION
Home Office: Nevada, Mo.
3523 Texas Ave. (in Ridgecrest) 846-3708