The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 25, 1972, Image 6

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    THE BATTALION
Page 6
College Station, Texas
Wednesday, October 25, 1972
■Janet Landers
— information
The Student YMCA Association will present a program on Drug
Abuse at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Memorial Student Center
Ballroom. The speaker will be Ray Martinez. His program will outline
case histories and point out the danger of drug abuse. All students are
urged to attend Mrs. Patricia Self, counselor for women,
reports that Kappa Delta Pi, the honor society for the college of
Education will meet tonight in the Memorial Student Center. The
speaker will be Dean of the College of Education, Dr. Frank R. Hubert.
Initiation will be held on Nov. 15 All coeds belonging to the
‘W are invited to attend a meeting at 6:30 tonight in the Memorial
Student Center Assembly Room. This meeting will begin work on the
plans for Bonfire. Student ‘W coeds interested in working on the coffee
wagon are invited to attend The Women’s Sports Association
will meet at 5 p.m. Tuesday, in Room 230 of G. Rollie White Coliseum.
All members and interested persons are invited to attend.
TAMU’s Women’s Bowling Team will travel to Texas Southern
University for a District Bowling Tournament this weekend. Texas
Southern University, A&M and Lee Junior College will be in
competition.
n*;’' -■’f
BEAUTY AND BRAINS—Miss Rebecca Allison, left, and Mrs. Sandra Caldwell are
the only two girls studying petroleum engineering at Texas A&M University. Both are
honor students and plan careers in oil production.
READ BATTALION CLASSIFIEDS
Meet a new friend
with an old problem
Give a hoot!
Don’t pollute.
Join Woodsy.
Give a hoot. Don’t pollute.
Work out ways to
make wastes useful.
he st
JOINT’
I, —
the d
2 B
ind aPP
luring 1
i outeid
$2,000 Set As Campus Chest Goal
A&M Coeds Seek Occupations
In Petroleum Engineering
By KAREN BANKS
After every home game there
will be barrels outside the gates
of Kyle Field so that money may
be collected for the Campus
Chest.
The purpose of this fund is to
aid Aggies who are in a financial
crisis, perhaps because of a death
in the family or an accident.
Through this fund, students in
need can obtain money to contin
ue their education or make the
trip back home.
The fund also supplies money
for the purchase of flowers,
which are sent to Aggies who are
ill or to the families of deceased
Aggies.
This year the Campus Chest
has set a goal of $2,000, but only
$150 has been collected thus far
and only two home games remain.
ROBERT HALSELL
TRAVEL SERVICE
AIRLINE SCHEDULE INFORMATION
FARES AND TICKETS
DOMESTIC AND INTERNATIONAL
CALL 822-3737
1016 Texas Avemie — Bryan
ABK fjlL
I
World Champions ‘Drive Friendly*
Dallas Cowboy teammates Bob Hayes and Bob Lilly have come
across with a pair of TDs for the Governor’s Committee on
Traffic Safety. Hayes, the fleet wide receiver around whom the
entire Cowboy receiving corps is built, and Lilly, the six-time
All-Pro who’s been with Dallas for all of his pro career, scored
with public service announcements for the “Drive Friendly” pro
gram. The recorded messages were recently released to all
radio stations in Texas.
Two Texas A&M coeds study
ing petroleum engineering feel
being a woman offers many ad
vantages in today’s job market.
Miss Rebecca Allison of Pasa
dena and Mrs. Sandra Caldwell
of Houston are the only girls in
the 156-student Petroleum Engi
neering Department. Both came
to TAMU because of its academic
reputation. Both are honor stu
dents.
“About the only disadvantage,”
Miss Allison noted, “is we stick
out in classes and at the office”
during summer employment.
Mrs. Caldwell, wife of TAMU
junior aerospace engineering ma
jor Geary Caldwell, said she is
the only girl in many engineering
classes. She is called on many
times because its easy for the
professor to know one girl’s
name.
“Other students treat us as
equals,” Mrs. Caldwell added.
Both girls worked for oil com
panies last summer. Miss Alli
son, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N.
B. Allison of 706 West Ave., Pas
adena, was an engineering trainee
at the Getty Oil Co. Research
Laboratory in Houston.
The TAMU junior found the
work interesting.
“There is a lot of competition
to recruit women in industry,”
she related.
Mrs. Caldwell, a sophomore, is
attending TAMU on a Amoco
scholarship and worked in the
firm’s division office in Houston
during the summer. She is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. N.
Bundy of 10215 Kittrell, Houston.
FOR
BEST
RESULTS
TRY
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
ALLEN
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Cadillac
SALES - SERVICE
“Where satisfaction is
standard equipment”
2401 Texas Ave.
823-8002
/, ' l / ?
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Her great uncle channeled hef*
towards petroleum engineering
“and the scholarship swayed
me,” she related. Attending
TAMU was a childhood dream,
Mrs. Caldwell reported.
Miss Allison’s brother, Bert, is
a senior civil engineering major
here. Her father, a graduate of
another Southwest Conference
school, suggested she study at
Aggieland because of its reputa
tion in industry.
Both girls say they expect to
receive about $12,000 a year
starting salary upon graduation
and report companies already
have made employment contacts.
Recent equal employment legisla
tion has made the better job of
fers possible, the girls agree.
Miss Allison said she plans to
enter petroleum production, while
Mrs. Caldwell wants to work in
offshore exploration, something
no woman has yet done.
“The oldtimers may not like it,
but offshore is where I’ll be,”
Mrs. Caldwell contends.
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Small Animals Mice & Guinnea Pigs
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BRING THIS AD & GET THE 10'/ STUDENT DISCOUNT FOR THIS SEMESTER
Briscoe’s Position on Urban Transportation:
“We want cities built of
boldness and Imagination
W
•••
S'
c
Si
S'
T
s
—
“We want cities built of boldness and imagination, but we don’t want highways and freeways that are
so dangerously crowded with traffic that we move about no faster in 20th Century automobiles than
our forefathers did in 19th Century buggies.” That’s Dolph Briscoe’s point of view, and most Texans
now share it. The crying need for rapid mass transit systems in our urban areas will be one of the first
needs Dolph Briscoe will tackle as governor. He proposes legislation to allow cities and counties to
issue bonds for the development of modern transit systems for a modern Texas.
csksct
DOLPH BRISCOE
governor
Let’s work together for Texas!
Pd. Pol. Ad/Brazos County Briscoe Committee/Buzz Syptak