The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 08, 1972, Image 8

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    BUSIER - JONES AGENCY
HOME MORTGAGES
INSURANCE
FARM & HOME SAVINGS ASSOCIATION
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Our new manufacturing facilities are located at
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Bryan
822-7316
PALACl
STARTS TODAY — 2:30 - 5:45 - 9:00 P. M.
After one of the longest,
most successful reserved seat engagements
in our city’s history
TTddleron the Roof
will be shown at
CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES
REDUCED PRICES
CAMPUS
TODAY — 1:30 - 3:30 - 5:30 - 7:30 - 9:30
MGM Presents
RAQUEL
WELCH as
THE HOTTEST
THING
ON WHEELS
*.5-, kevin McCarthy
Screenplay by THOMAS RICKMAN and CALVIN CLEMENTS • Story by BARRY SANDLER
Executive Producers JULES LEVY and ARTHUR GARDNER • Prodired byMARTY ELFAND
Directed by JERROLD FREEDMAN • mjsc-don elks ■ metrocoor \?9L
I PUINTAl VJKlUXI iuc«sn0 -32-
Skyway Twin
:r.° ;4Vo".
WEST SCREEN AT 6:30 P. M.
“SUMMER OF ’42” (R)
With Jennifer O’Neal
At 8:30 p. m.
Jane Fonda In
“KLUTE”
EAST SCREEN AT 6:30 P. M.
“MAGNIFICENT 7 RIDES
AGAIN” (PG)
8:15 p. m.
“HANG EM HIGH” (PG)
With Clint Eastwood
QUEEN
LAST NITE—ADULT ART
“BABETTE”
TONITE AT 6:30 P. M.
George C. Scott In
“HOSPITAL” (R)
Page 8
College Station, Texas Wednesday, November 8, 1972
THE BATTALIC:
New Businessman To Be Technology Minded
A new breed of businessman is
in the offing.
He — or she — will be better
versed in translating scientific
discoveries and technological in
novations into products and in
using technology to enhance the
environment which business
serves and in which it operates.
These new type leaders will he
just as likely to have had their
basic formal education in science
or engineering as in business ad
ministration.
The first of these new leaders
may come from A&M’s College
of Business Administration, which
for the past decade has empha
sized innovation in its approach
to helping students prepare
themselves for the business
world.
It is now offering a new inter
disciplinary graduate program
focusing on “entrepreneurial sci
ence.” A nationwide summer
search for the best students to
start the program indicated this
was the first of its type in the
nation — and perhaps the start
of a trend.
“W e apparently formalized
something that is on the minds
of many other educators in the
business field,” noted Dr. John
E. Pearson, dean of the College
of Business Administration.
“While all we asked of our col
leagues was that they post our
announcement of the new pro
gram, many of them wrote to
express their enthusiasm and re
quested additional information
for possibly establishing pro
grams of their own.”
Funds for establishing the en
trepreneurial science program
were provided in part through a
stock grant of approximately
$50,000 awarded by the Perot
Foundation to help in planning
an outstanding graduate school
of business administration.
“Through this program,” Dean
Pearson explained, “there will
develop a type of business leader
who can work in a deliberative
way to bring resources together
for business enterprising while
protecting and rehabilitating the
total business environment.”
He said this new thrust in
graduate business education re
quires breaking from traditional
descriptive courses of business
operations and moving toward
courses emphasizing the ability
to engage in multi-faceted, an
alytical planning.
“The environment in which
business enterprise operates is
an everchanging one,” the dean
added. “The social, legal and
ethical ground rules for business
shift in unexpected ways. Busi
ness leaders must be prepared to
cope effectively with new laws,
social values and ecological de
mands — not by compromising
personal principles or sound
judgment, but by being able to
choose between realistic alterna
tives, both as good citizens and
good businessmen.”
First year of the entrepre
neurial science program includes
pre-professional courses and in
troduction to professional busi
ness administration courses in
legal and social control systems,
personnel, organization theory,
distribution systems and motiva
tion and leadership.
Students with undergraduate
science or technical backgrounds
do pre-professional course work
in the functional fields of busi
ness. Students entering with
undergraduate backgrounds take
their pre-professional work in
the sciences.
During their second and final
year, the students will form
teams to create new products or
services, improve existing prod
ucts or find profitable new uses
for them.
Confronted with a similar chal
lenge, TAMU students in an ear
lier and more conventional mas
ter’s degree program explored
the design and marketing pos
sibilities for a more effective ma
ternity girdle — an endeavor
dubbed the “Prenatal Cradle
Company.”
Dean Pearson said the entre
preneurial science students will
participate in a unique summer
executive intern progran
which they will workintlitj
ow of top management
for major firms.
The College of Busin
ministration carefully chost
students to launch the prog ent tours
Included were a Harvard| trs After
neering graduate, a sotij s i ^
graduate from Northis
University, an Abilene Ckij ’he materi
'he J. Gei
1 rollers fr
foey are be
use.” may
vious albu
s recorded
isiastic aui
inyone wh
College graduate with
ground in communications
education and two TAM1]
uates, one an engineer ani
other a marketing major, jin concert ki
More than 250 inquiries» general
received from throughout tW es mixtur
tion. Dean Pearson noteiUp* 1 '' 6 voca ^ s
faculty members personallj
ited several of the
their home ground for thoi
screening
A&M Rugby Team Defeats
$98,603 NSF Grant Helps Create Specialists
In Junior High School Science Curriculums
Preparation of junior high
school science curriculum special
ists will be carried out at A&M
during 1973-74 under a $98,603
National Science Foundation
grant.
Announced by Sen. John Tower
and Cong. Olin E. Teague, the
grant funds a Leadership Devel
opment Project (LDP) award to
Dr. Delmar L. Janke in the Edu
cational Curriculum and Instruc
tion Department.
The project is designed to im
prove science instruction, primar
ily through training to implement
activity - oriented science pro
grams. Participating science
teachers afterwards will conduct
in-service workshops in their dis
tricts for the benefit of other
teachers.
Comparable to earlier Academic
Year Institutes (AYI) at TAMU,
the project will bring 10 qualified
teachers to the campus for a year
of study.
Dr. Janke, assistant professor
in the College of Education, said
participants will come from with
in 250 miles of College Station,
including most of Texas’ major
cities and school districts.
Their course work will include
education, philosophy, geology,
physics and biology. The LDP
also includes an eight - day be-
tween-semesters field trip and in-
service workshop practicum in
cooperation with the Harris
County Board of Education.
Janke will instruct a final se
mester problems course in which
participants will identify, produce
and catalog activities appropriate
to the junior high science cur
ricula.
Texas Education Agency con
sultants will cooperate and use
activities generated by the LDP
for future revision of science cur
ricula guides.
Managerial responsibilities of
the project will be shared by
Janke as director; C. M. Loyd,
Physics Department, associate di
rector, and Dr. Melvin C. Schroe-
der, Geology Department, assist
ant director. Loyd has coordinat
ed NSF programs at A&M a
number of years. Schroeder di
rected earth science institutes
here for the last decade.
Janke said a mailing to ac
quaint teachers with the project
opportunities will go out this se
mester. Teacher applications
must be made by Jan. 20. Sti
pends and dependents allowances
will be paid.
Cast Set For
‘Lion In Winter’
A&M Rugby Team I met the
Dallas Rugby Football Club Sat
urday and defeated them 22-0.
Superb place kicking by wing
er John Gunn and constant pres
sure by the forwards made it dif
ficult for Dallas to get untracked.
Although the field was muddy,
the Aggie first 15 moved the ball
with surprising precision.
The Aggie back line consisting
of Randy Harju, Don Robertson,
Gene Anderson, Judd Quicksal,
and John Gunn put together one
of the best performances of the
season.
Despite Dallas’ tough scrum
and fast backs, the Aggies con
tained everything they tried all
afternoon, keeping them out of
the scoring column.
John Gunn scored two penalty
kicks and two conversions for 10
points for A&M.
Also scoring were Gene Ander
son, Judd Quicksal and Don Barr
with four points each.
Saturday A&M I meets Galves
ton I in Galveston. It will be a
rematch of last year’s state
championship game, won by the
Aggies 20-0.
Galveston I, made up oi
versity of Texas Medical
and Texas A&M Maritime
emy students, is very W
A&M II defeated the
formed Houston Page Cl
Saturday.
Muddy conditions on the
made cutting and scram
sloppy at best.
A&M II trailed 6-4 at the
Ron Price made the onl]
for A&M in that period.
The second half was a
ent story, however. The J
exploded for 24 point!
blanking Houston.
Scoring for A&M II weni
Robertson and Art SaldaJ"Full Hou:
lahorating on one try for ■droll re vh
points. Saldana also scorehiBiey commu
points on his own.
Rick Hazelwood and Kt:
cek also collaborated for
piece. Bucek also score!
points on his own.
A&M II will travel to
ton, along with the first
play the Galveston ri
their stu
iw it, as
lally betw
House. 1
ie feeling
res acres
two reasi
iport, and
the album
ms with a
10k at t
iber the t
Ith each
iple time,
iues throu
lipping th
[positions
a break.
[Side two
in Lee H
;ht to Su
issic, theii
igic Dick,
;ing and
ill House’
rousing vei
40 hit tc
It just sex\
re
to
teams.
has an-
“Lion in
At 8:30 p. m.
‘PAPER LION”
Calhoun Placed On Group
To Study Legal Education
^ t a p_tv/T nrVirx orLriar»T'\7 rnmmittpe
Dr. John C. Calhoun Jr., A&M
vice president for academic af
fairs, has been named to an 11-
member task force which will
help in a legal education study
requested by the Coordinating
Board, Texas College and Univer
sity System.
The task force will assist the
Coordinating Board’s Advisory
Committee on Legal Education,
an eight-member group which
will make recommendations re
garding the needs of the state
and its citizens for legal educa
tion opportunities.
Coordinating Board Chairman
Wayne E. Thomas appointed the
eight-member advisory committee
in response to requests for new
legal education programs by
TAMU, North Texas State Uni
versity and the University of
Texas at Dallas.
Members of the advisory com
mittee and task force will meet
with the Coordinating Board’s
Program Development Committee
and key staff members Thursday.
Thomas indicated the advisory
committee might complete its
study and make recommendations
to the Coordinating Board by the
end of the year.
The advisory committee is
headed by Leon Jaworski of
Houston, former president of the
American Bar Association, and
includes prominent attorneys
from throughout the state.
Dr. Calhoun will be serving on
the task force with deans of Tex
as law schools and representa
tives of NTSU and UT-Dallas.
TAMU’s proposal to establish
a law college is based on the
state’s apparent need for addi
tional centers for legal education
in view of the number of students
applying for admission each year,
noted President Jack K. Williams
when the institution’s board of
directors approved the plan in
August.
“If it is determined that Texas
should enlarge its capabilities for
instruction in the law,” Dr. Wil
liams said, “Texas A&M Univer
sity proposes that the state would
be served best by a college of law
of the highest quality at College
Station.”
He emphasized a new teaching
facility for law in College Sta
tion “will cost little more, if any,
than comparable expansion at one
of the existing law schools.”
Stage Center, Inc.,
nounced the cast for
Winter.”
Henry II will be played by
Carl Childress. His wife, Elea
nor, will be played by Jayne
Lansford.
Playing their three sons are
Dana Roese, Danny Foster, and
Doug Matheny.
The Prince of France will be
Dan Jordan. Lori Godsey will
play Alice.
“Lion in Winter”, by James
Goldman, is a comedy in two
acts. It takes place in Henry
IPs castle at Chinon, France,
during Christmas, 1183.
Elizabeth Childress will direct
the play. Assisting her is Edgar
Guthrie. The producers are Har
riet Martin and Jack Evins.
“Lion in Winter” will be pre
sented in the Stage-Center Thea
tre on College Avenue. The play
will run Nov. 30-Dec. 2 and Dec.
2-Dec. 9. Curtain time is 8 p.m.
nightly.
Tickets are $2.50 for adults,
$1.50 for students, and $1 for
children.
Barcelona
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Choice of one
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TUESDAY EVENING
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FRESH CORN FED
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FILET w/TARTAR
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Cole Slaw
Grandma’s Cornbread
Choice of one
vegetable
Rolls & Butter
Tea or Coffee
“l £
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WEDNESDAY EVENIH
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CHICKEN FRIED BEI
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Choice of two
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Tea or Coffee
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THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL
ITALIAN CANDLELIGHT DINNER — ITALIAN SPAGHETTI
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Potato Pancake
Choice of one
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NOON AND EVENING is washin
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