lay, October 17, If rd BATTALION GENERAL COUTH ir Larry Knapp it; .rchitecture Auditoii SITY will see th ( Holy Land at 7:St Nagel Hall. HURSDAY IABLE SCIENCE TTEE will meet it:|i ( aj, 502 Of the MSC TbKOSLO, Norway UP) WEST TEXAS HI Secretary if State Henry A. Kissinger and Due Tho of North Vietnam s awarded the 1973 Nobel ;e Prize Tuesday for fash ping the cease-fire which offi- plly ended the Vietnam war. Aase Lionaes, chairwo- nan of the Nobel committee, an- lOunced the award would be shar- will meet at 7:S|J f the MSC. >US CHRISTIAN I II hold a non-denta meeting for peace .m. in All Faiths C A, National Mechi lonor Fraternity, invention at the 1 >ry Engineering I egina at 1 p.m, otS mvention lasting thy act Bill Rumbaugli 1 || Jonal information, L, engineering »ii|a equally by the architects of it Th^ Litti^Tedl the truce, who conducted 42 5. 29th St. A burJBjjjtjjg 0 f on-and-off, tough ne- follow at the homKl . . ’ , tiations in Pans before reach- agreement in January, jin a brief statement, Mrs. Li- aes said the prize winners “had ed in accord with Alfred No- J’s idea . . . that conflicts should solved through negotiations d not by war.” issinger, 50, and Tho, 62, Iworth, 1812 IGIATE HORS] I will hear A1 P>_ i 214 of the Aninn! ng at 7 p.m. Hkk ittend. Y OF PROFESSIO!, will meet at 6 pi in. 1503 S. Tern ji i. Dinner will begisj •rvations, call Rubi] p.m. Wednesday, L ECONOMICS OLOGY DEPA] i seminar at d p.i he Library. Dr. Cii will discuaa the and for U. S. agrii JUNIORS intensieg e Junior Class C«l one of the folic»| t _ 845-4740; J» -5872 : Dan Andenit| lie Maddox RODEO ASSOCUli g Monday night tt| g All Aggie Rodeo.li .’nilable at the Iding, The Hone ( iis Reed. Entry d ersian Gulf >il Producers [ike Prices ian Peai (A*)- ng: m. 1 l, with her husW ivist Tom Ha;] oke at the newatj if 25 they are 2 nation, ale are dying in KUWAIT >—The six largest v | oij-producing countries on the I |nilhti Pe!sian announced a 17 per ’ vw *'"Bnt price increase in their crude • 1 • o| early Wednesday, but said the I itv B )Ve nothing to do with the * ’ Middle East war. 1 ™A group of Arab oil exporting tions will meet here Wednes- y to decide how to use their Actn oi i as a wea P on i n the Arab cause news confer# the war a 8r ainst Israel, the United P r * ce increase—from $3.02 to fund wil ?3.65 a barrel for standard ■ht Arabian crude—is not ex ited to affect the U.S. consum- right away. The most direct ^mediate affect is likely to be I Europe and Japan which de- ■nd mostly on the Middle East lie are aymg J r their oil - *ast Asia todayUnited States depends up- ja S t ” Miss FiM the Middle East for about 6 con’s generatioEP* r cen t of its oil needs, about a week, , The six countries account for probable U.S, ftlbout 40 per cent of the oil pro- Vietnam will Action in the non-Communist . But their ecoK§)o rid. e threat to endt®The announcement said they e implementati«|ook their action in direct re- eement,” she sfcgponse to what one envoy called led the peace afthe “intransigence” of the West- f the worst Mn companies in negotiating a minds of peotprice increase. the United S^Those price talks that had been entire responssfjdgj. way in Vienna, Austria, tions of the a^were suspended last Friday. The I the torture oflompanies asked for two weeks jth Vietnamesei’to study the situation, art of the AmeriPrpj^ coun t r j es are i ran> which th Vietnam. | non-Arab; and Iraq, Kuwait, I | au( li Arabia, Abu Dhabi and 1 caches Qatar ’ a11 Arab - |All the major Western oil com- NL i lie | a nies are represented in the Per- |ian Gulf. They are over-all buy- ts have enrollfefs of crude and thus are forced ult Location' to accept the new conditions. Electrical and If Firemen Marvin Moss, ; le center, ani % he Engineering ce, a division 1 School • Eighteen volunteer firemen 11 be taught ttitfrom Rohm and Haas Chemical’s s and other effleer Park facility are participat- ;t and locate fs^g in a special industrial fire esistonce meaiAool conducted by A&M’s Texas ‘ underground Engineering Extension Service, 'cators, and the ■The program, directed by Tom )rs. ffiibinson, gives the students an ill be requireibpportunity to practice firefight- ds and instnin-fe on actual chemical and oil I in a real sitoitires, something they can’t do Its placed in ‘at their home stations, and aerial caWpClyde Davis, fire marshal at training centerjthe plant and delegation leader, g program is %id environmental legislation has 'exas Telephone|»nned any fires for practice in the Texas SI|r vicinity, so he has been bring- le Cooperative fag members of his volunteer fire brigade to TAMU for five years for large fire experience. The training program offered ire is quite adequate and it ms to improve every year,” he ted. “The facilities can’t be tched anyyhere, and our stu- jnts get some good experience hting large fires.” Davis, who has served as an itructor for the past eight years Howard Huglif# TEES’s annual Industrial Fire l of presidtfjfh 00 !) said his company has s made by Dt;l ever had a major fire in the ry Gerald L 'Tlant in 27 years of operation, conferred witlW'The fact that we have had a questioned shAod fire safety record is a credit at a midday b) the working men in the plant,” p said. “They are all conscious of potential fire hazards and ow what to do when something ppens.” A 1 *1* *Jt company provides in-plant Amlltl$ ,assroom training for the stu- ents before sending them to Lucas of t 8 £ or thejj. “practical.” The fice in Austin y re brigade will attend train- ; this week w j |g seggion this year, according denies ^ nowledl "ON — The Monday Presi aware of the |1 gn contributionij n to his pei G. (Bebe) To Test' est students Davis, jrps’ Platoon^ 1«C) and iss (CC) ims. di Rohm and Haas is a member the Channel Industrial Mutual id program, an organization of iproximately 50 companies in be Houston Ship Channel area foich gives assistance to each other if a major disaster occurs. Wednesday, October 17, 1973 College Station, Texas Page 5 itiger, Tho Awarded Nobel Prize for Negotiations member of the North Vietnamese Politburo and the first ranking member of a Communist govern ment to win the prize, will each receive 255,000 Swedish crowns, or about $60,000, the Nobel medal and the peace prize diploma. The presentations will be made in a formal ceremony at the Uni versity of Oslo Dec. 10. Mrs. Lionaes said she hoped both win ners would attend. She said both had been notified immediately be fore the public announcement at the Nobel Institute. Kissinger was attending a White House meeting on the Mid dle East when he received the word. He was beaming, as he left to drive to the State Department, saying, “I’m very pleased.” No comment was available from Tho. President Nixon said, “By jointly citing Dr. Kissinger and Le Due Tho, the Nobel Committee has also given deserved recogni tion to the area of negotiation” which Nixon said “will be more essential than ever as we seek to build and maintain a structure of peace in the world.” Kissinger, who was Nixon’s chief national security adviser when he negotiated the cease fire, is the 16th American to win the peace prize. Tho is the first Asian to be so honored. A total of 47 candidates had been nominated for the 1973 prize, including Nixon and Yugo slav President Tito. Kissinger and Tho earned their prize the hard way—in hundreds of hours of tense and exhausting secret talks that often looked virtually hopeless. Their meetings began in 1969, in such secrecy that Kissinger sometimes traveled to them by subway to avoid attracting the attention of newsmen. When they ended in a blaze of news and television coverage in January, they were still nomi nally secret. But Kissinger and Tho found themselves followed wherever they went in Paris by scores of newsmen and photog raphers. Details of how Kissinger and Tho arrived at their breakthrough after dozens of months of bar gaining are likely to remain se cret for years. Kissinger has said Tho made the crucial concession at an Oct. 8, 1972 meeting, when he finally agreed to separate military and political issues. Tho has remained silent about the bargaining. □ai skaggs \ THE FOOD AND Albertsons) drug PEOPLE WHO DRUGS & FOODS CARE ABOUT YOU SPECIALS GOOD WED., THURS., FRI., SAT., OCT. 17, 18, 19, 20, 1973 YOUR MAN IN GOLD TALKS ABOUT.. (Dgjsgffiresk Albertsons bread is “daisy fresh" baked daily right in every store. Skaggs Albertsons has its own in store baking ovens to assure freshness...Compare! SWISS U.S.O.A. GRADE A THE MONEY STRETCHER JUST UKE GROUND BEEF ... IB. 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