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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1972)
n- 7:30.!;| HOOD ATTENTION — WORKING MOTHERS ! ! I D<i you want your child to have a jimelike atmosphere while you work ? Play land Nursery School H«S just that — plus a qualified staff to meet your child’s educational needs | Monthly, Weekly, or Daily Rates. 1801 South College 822-2520 7:30 a. m. to 6:15 p. m. FOR SALE ii&hogany console piano. In in. $500. Phone TA2-4887. perl 64 FOR Mr «tan*... Firestone wide oval tire. FTO-14 white letters. Brand new, $25. 1-6681. 64tl Bony reel to reel tape recorder. Ex- Jnsion speakers, tapes, and headphones, focellent condition. 846-9244. 64t2 ,968 Chevrolet Impala, custom two door lL FR0UtP d * <1, exce 'l ent condition. Must sell. (1660. Call 846-6557. xer pups for sale. Brindle male, AKC ITVlir champion. Sire and dame. Crick, Kennels. 846-6326. et Wood 64t2 :ord Player, good condition, 2 years Chair, 8-track car tape deck, senior lamp, coffee -0516 after 5 p. m. 63t4 LT ART 822-14 4 9. 967 mobile home, 12’ x 50’ on country Nine miles east of College Station, silr-conditioned and with large carport. port. 6St2 P- m ’ ^Television, 21” Airline. $5fl! Call 846- ^ACK” 63t4 1967 Triumph Bonneville. 660cc. Excel- lent 846-9124. , 63t4 1968 Camero, 360 convertible, excellent Edition. 846-7962. 6: T P 111 1969 Pontiac Catalina, four door, new 1 D.4U1. tj res an d battery, all power, inspected, jiij ^CP) Calll 846-0476. Garner 1962 Volkswagen. Clean, $495. 846-4070. 61t4 ■ rape recorders, tape players, radios, cameras at give-away prices at AGGIE de; 1 m. in As Four track car tape players, $9.95 — 4 n c .on p 1 Beck home tape players, originally $85 — 1 o.our, n()w $17.50 — $3.96 record albums now 74” only 99f each. 8 track tapes now only $1.99 I'* etch. Brand new factory 8 track tapes tegular $6.95, now $3.99 each. 4 track tapes 99d each. Party record albums $6.95 KER" (f T *' ues ’ now $2.96 each. Double Geo Har rison 8 track tapes $17.95 list, only $8.96. Double Jesus Christ Superstar $11.95 value, now $6.96. Cue sticks $69.95 values, ly $36. Girlie pocketbooks and magazines i—North price—Aggie Den- Gate. 69tfn (0 P. M. HITS p. m. E DOLll p. m. ES” p. m. LEY Of Posters, Posters, Posters, Posters, Posters, the hottest posters in town—Aggie Den. 69tfn OFFICIAL NOTICE Official notices must arrive in the Offic of Student Publications before deadline o 1 p.m. of the day proceeding publicatior THE GRADUATE COLLEGE ion for the Doctoral Degree Final Examinaticm lor the I Name: Hyder, Kamaluddin Degree: Ph.D. in Food Technology (Marine \ Science and Process Engineering) lissertation: THE DEVELOPMENT OF A PROCESS FOR PREPARING A FISH PROTEIN CONCENTRATE WITH FUNCTIONAL PROPERTIES. Ime: January 27, 1972 at 3:00 p. m. lace: Room 112 in the Herman Keep Bldg. George W Kunze Dean of the Graduate College ie s, THE GRADUATE COLLEGE inal Examination for the Doctoral Degree ame: Wright, William Bailey egree: Ph.D. in Chemistry issertation: THE CRYSTAL STRUC TURES OF TWO SALTS WITH LARGE MULTI-ATOM IONS: DIPHENYLIO- DONIUM NITRATE AND ISOBUTYL- AMMONIUM MONOACIDBIS - (N, N’ - BIS (ISOBUTYL) - DIAMIDODISELE- NOPHOSPHATE]. ime: January 31, 1972 at 3:30 p. m. lace: Room 220 in the Chemistry Bldg. George W Kunze Dean of the Graduate College ATTENTION MAY GRADUATES! You lay order Graduation Announcements be- inning Jan. 17 — Feb. 16, Monday - Fri- 9-12—1-4, Cashier’s Window, MSC. 61tl7 Students wishing to place a 1970 Aggie- md in their high school, may pick them p in the Student Publications Office, 216 ervices Bldg, 33tfn LOST Mineola High School Senior ring. Re fard! Call 845-4170. 61t4 i ■?[/P -w : 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 $18.95 Exchange Starters - Generators Many $13.95 exch. Your Friedrick Dealer Joe Faulk Auto Parts 220 E. 25th Bryan, Texas JOE FAULK ’32 Our 25th year in Bryan me: couples with or without children—no pets 1 $70 and $75 rent per month, respectively. 846-8020. 60t6 Corner Foster & Francis across from new city hall, furnished one bedroom upper southeast apartment. Plenty of cioset space. Adults only. $75. No bills 60tfn space, paid. 846-5031. AGGIE SPECIAL: Two bedroom apart ment with one bath, kitchen, dining room and living room. Perfect for 4 Aggies. Great access to downtown Bryan and easy route to campus via 29th St. or Finfeather. For more information and tour, call 823- 0081. 59t6 ATTENTION MARRIED COUPLES: One and two bedroom furnished apartments ready for occupancy. miles south of Campus. Lake for fishing. Washateria on grounds. Country atmosphere. Call D. R. Cain Co., 823-0934, or after 5, 846-3408 or 822-6136. 68tfn VICTORIAN APARTMENTS Midway between Brya AAM University STUDENTS I ! Need A Home Pool and Private Courtyard Limited Number of Vacancies for Spring and Summer Semester Bryan A 401 Lake St. Apt. 24 40tfn SPECIAL NOTICE Hoover’s Tennis Service. One block south :30 p. m. 82tfn of tennis courts 846-9733. Open 1:30 to 6 TROPICAL FISH Salt Water Fish Brazos Valley Aquarium Supply Hours 2:30 - 10 p. m. Daily Closed Tues. — Open Sunday 4.2 Miles N. On Hwy. 30 (To Huntsville) THE AQUARIUM 1006 Windowmere 846-4697 Tropical fish and supplies Weekday afternoons from 6 to 9 p. m. Saturday and Sunday from 1 to T p. m. 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 57tfn WORK WANTED GRADUATES—SENIORS! I will type copies, address, and mail your university job applications for you. Call 822-0271. 64tl Typing. Call 845-2461. Ask for Kathy. 62tfn Typimg. Symbols. Notary Public. 822- 0626 or 823-3838. 132tfn | Typing near campus, perienced. 846-8965. Electric. Ex- 136tfn HELP WANTED Someone wanted to give oboe lessons to beginner. $3 per half hour. 846-3370. 64t4 AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 SOSOLIK'S TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV All Makes B&W TV Repairs 713 S. MAIN 822-2133 • 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 Sky marshal program not stopping hijackings WASHINGTON <A>) _ The sky marshal program has failed to provide the fullest protection pos sible from airline hijackers, say those closest to the program, in cluding the marshals themselves. Now, 18 months after the force was set up, both the Federal Avi ation Administration and the air line industry would like to replace most of the flying guards with improved ground screening of pas sengers and greater airport se curity. Reports persist that federal budget officials are considering an $ll-million cut this year in the $37-million program. Amid these reports, the Customs Bureau insists that the sky mar shal force is a powerful deterrent to hijackings, citing 539 arrests and seizure of thousands of weap ons in its first year of operation. Deterrence is an intangible which can neither be proved nor disproved, but there is no prov able case in which a sky marshal stopped a hijacking in progress, and three marshals were them selves hijacked on a flight Oct. 25. “The program has been a farce since its inception,” said an of ficial of a major domestic airline. “Farce, hell,” said former sky marshal Hugh Vandervoort of Baltimore. “The program is a menace to the people who ride the airlines.” The main reason, according to Vandervoort and other sky mar shals interviewed, is that the mar shals do not get enough pistol practice to maintain top marks manship. Proficiency aside, flight crews generally object to ferrying marshals, seeing any gun aboard an airplane as menace enough. An Associated Press study of the sky marshal program, includ ing interviews with marshals, pi lots, stewardesses, airline execu tives and FAA officials, turned up these specific complaints: —A full complement of 2,000 marshals was projected when President Nixon announced the program, but the force has nev er numbered more than 1,200. —Marshals are sometimes “bumped” from flights to make room for paying passengers. —Airlines frequently cancel screening of passengers and bag gage to prevent flight delays. The Aggie Sailing Club is plan ning a full program of sailing ac tivities for its members during the spring semester. The initial meeting of the Club will be on Wednesday, January 26 at 7:30 p.m. in Room 145 of the Physics Building. A description of the upcoming activities will be given, member ship applications will be accepted, and a sailing film shown. Seven additional bi-weekly on-campus meetings featuring adventure slide shows, educational lectures, and films, all pertaining to phases of sailing activities, will be held during the semester. Dr. Gary Halter, faculty advi sor, says that the club will repeat their popular series of on-the- water classes of sailing instruc tion beginning in mid-March. In past classes, instructors from the —Marshals lack confidence in the ability of stewardesses, their first link with a hijacker, to han dle the situation. Many steward esses, on the other hand, fear the marshals because they’re convinc ed the officers wouldn’t hesitate to shoot through them to stop a hijacker. —The government requires the marshals to work a five-day week, notwithstanding the fact that many will work 40 hours in sev eral days on an overseas flight that includes frequent time changes and irregular sleeping periods. Exhausted and bored, some marshals say they have club have taught over 200 local members the basics of small-boat sailing and water safety. Classes are conducted on Bryan Municipal Lake in the afternoons following school hours. Two series of inter-club sail boat races will be held this semes ter. A series of five Thursday afternoon races in small boats will be held on the Municipal Lake. Trophies will be given to each weeks winners and to the overall series winner. Two regattas on Sunday after noons off Welch Park at Lake Somerville will be held in April. These races will include small open sailboats, catamarans, and cruising sailboats. Trophies will also be given to the winners. Par ticipation in all of these inter club races will be limited to Club members. fallen asleep on flights. —Metal detectors used to search for weapons often mal function and are regarded by many marshals as “near useless.” Sky marshals have perhaps the most exacting mission of any federal officer — ultimately the decision whether to fire at a hi jacker aboard a crowded airplane. Regulations state that marshals must qualify with the pistol every three months or lose their jobs, yet all those interviewed said the only shooting they had done since basic training had been on their own time, unsupervised. Benjamin O. Davis, head of The Aggie Sailing Club will host the Intercollegiate Sailing Conference Western Regional Re gatta at the Fort Worth Yacht Club this spring. Members of the Aggies’ Conference Sailing Team will participate in this regatta as well as in other official Con ference meets at various member universities. Membership in the Aggie Sail ing Club is open to all A&M stu- Dr. Earl Stone, Professor of Forest Soils at Cornell Univer sity, will give two lectures on Tuesday, Jan. 25. The first will be held in room 106 of the Plant Science Building at 3:30 p.m. Stone’s presentation the sky marshal program, said he was unaware these regulations were not enforced. The program is administered over-all by the FAA. Training is provided by the Treasurey De partment. Funds come from the Office of Management and Budg et, answerable only to the White House. And participation by the airlines is on a voluntary basis. Davis insists the marshals have the ability and the security tech nology, to stop virtually all hi jackers. “But we are completely de pendent on the performance of the airlines,” he said, “and that performance goes up and down. Sailing Club schedules spring activities Dr. Earl Stone to give lectures dents, faculty, staff, former stu dents and local residents of the Bryan-College Station area who are interested in sailing. Boat ownership is not a requirement. The Club owns a small fleet of sailboats for rental to members. Annette Kersting, 104 Pleasant Street, Bryan, is membership sec retary and will provide additional information on joining the Club to anyone interested. will concern why soils differ in their capacity to sustain tree growth. Stone’s evening lecture will be gin at 7:30 in Library 226. It will deal with the changing interests in understanding and managing the soil-forest system. •<3 ..i- IVow there’s a course that pays $100 a month. ArmyROTC. In our Advanced Course the monthly sub sistence allowance has just been increased. From $50 to $100. One hundred dollars every month for 10 months of the school year. To spend on room and board, dates and ball games. To save for grad school. But Army ROTC means a lot more than more money. It means management and leadership experience that you just can’t get anywhere else. The kind of thing that can land you a better job, and move you along faster once you get it. It means a commission as an officer and everything that goes with it. The prestige, the pay, the chance to travel, the experience. Now ROTC looks even better. For the money you’ll earn today. For the person you’ll be tomorrow. See your Professor of Military Science, or send the coupon for information. Army ROTC. The more you look at it, the better it looks. Army ROTC Office of the Commandant TAMU Colilege Station. Texas 77843 Tell me more about this course that pays $100 a month. County. State College attending ON 17-2-72