Page 6 THE BATTALION HE BAH (ESfAY, Jt TUESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1974 Bulletin Board TONIGHT SIGMA PHI EPSILON has begun its spring rush and will continue until Feb. 1. Interested people may call Jeff 15, or the fraternity Pollicoff, 822-4315 also visit house, 822-7882. the house at AGGIE PLAYERS will present "Rain” by Summerset Maugham at 7:30 p. m. 88Z. they may also ’ 2600 Todd St. in Brya ERS will present "Rj arty der Tower at 8:00 p. m. HORSEMEN’S ASSOCIATION will meet in the Animal Industries Building at 7 p. m. Lobbyists besiege revision conventwr in the Forum Theater. WEDNESDAY LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS will AQUA DOLLS, an organization of girls to time the swim team, will have a meeting for interested girls at 7 p. m. in the Letterman’s Lounge of G. Rollie White Coliseum. study the state constitutional revision at 7:30 p. m. at Bryan Building and Loan. The public is welcome. THURSDAY PANHANDLE HOMETOWN CLUB will AGGIE CINEMA will present two Eastwood movies, "A fistfull of Clint Dol lars” and "For a Few Dollars More” in the Univ« shows begi mission is $1. versity gin at lars Center Theater. 7 and 8:45 p. m. The Ad- Read Battalion Classifieds AUSTIN LP) — More than 80 lobbyists are sticking close to the Texas Constitutional Convention, ready to advocate causes ranging from sexual privacy to highway construction. Some of them might be break ing the Lobby Control Act passed in 1973 as part of Speaker — and Convention President — Price Daniel Jr.’s “reform” program. The law, backed up by a max imum penalty of a year in jail and a $2,000 fine, requires a lob byist to give on his registration form “a specific description of the The Opera and Performing Arts Society presents THE NATIONAL BALLET OF WASHINGTON Frederic Franklin & Ben Stevenson, Directors in “THE SLEEPING BEAUTY” January 31, 1974 8 p. m. Rudder Center Auditorium Tickets: Regular, $6, $5, $4 Students, $4.80, $4.00, $3.20 At Rudder Center Box Office Hours: Monday through Friday, 9 a. m. - 4:00 p. m. Tele. 845-2916 The National Ballet managed by Columbia Artists, Inc., New York OPAS is a functioning committee of the Town Hall Committee of Texas A&M University. Cinema shows seven flicks in festival The Aggie Cinema will present a four day Clint Eastwood festi val this week featuring seven films. Two movies will be shown each evening beginning Thursday. The first show will begin at 7 p.m. in the University Center Theater and the second at 8:45. Admission is one dollar. Eastwood plays the “man with no name” in the Italian westerns, “A Fistful of Dollars” and “For a Few Dollars More” on Thurs day. Friday’s movies are “The Be guiled” in which Eastwood plays a Union soldier captured by the girls of a small southern town and “Joe Kidd,” a tale of the Mexican border range wars. “Play Misty for Me,” Satur day’s first feature, is a suspens- ful film about a disc jockey and a beautiful basket case. This is fol lowed by “Two Mules for Sister Sara,” a tale of a cowboy and a nun running amuck during the Mexican Revolution. Sunday there will be a repeat of “Play Misty for Me” followed by “Kelly’s Heroes,” the story of an American tank that slips be hind German lines in World War II to rob a bank. JANUARY 24 & 25 8100 PM UNIVERSITY CENTER AUDITORIUM Sponsored by The Philosophy Club matters on which he expects to communicate directly” with legis lators or other officials. But many wrote on their reg istration forms such ambiguous phrases as “constitutional revi sion” or “revising the constitution in the interest of the people.” It sometimes is impossible to tell even if a lobbyist is working the convention or has merely reg istered to cover himself in case he decides to call on a legislator- delegate or member of the exec utive branch. Daniel asked A tty. Gen. John Hill for a legal opinion on wheth er such uninformative statements violated the “specific description” requirement. Lobby pressure in the conven tion has been minimal so far, largely because of uncertainty as to how far the lobby control law and the penal code will let them go in entertaining the legislator- delegates. But that does not mean there is a shortage of people to speak out for special interest viewpoints or for the public good as visual ized by certain organizations. Stakes are particularly high for two groups—organized labor and those who profit from highway construction. Individual unions and the Tex as AFL-CIO have 27 registered lobbyists, most of them officials who are doing double duty. Two organizations who oppose the use of gasoline and other mo tor fuel taxes for anything be sides highway construction have a total of 11 lobbyists — the Tex as Motor Transportation Associa tion with eight and the Texas Good Roads Association with three. Motor transport lobbyists, headed by veterans Terry Town send and Jack Bryan, said their goal was “retention of the high way trust fund and retention of Karate spotlights martial arts show Prospective students of the martial arts will have a chance for first-hand demonstrations and information on two styles of ka rate this week. The Texas A&M Tae Kwon Do Karate Club will offer demonstra tions by national competitors who serve as instructors in the club Monday through Thursday in Room 257 of G. Rollie White Col iseum. Scheduled for 6:30 p. m. daily, the demonstration sessions will feature Steve Powell, first degree black belt, and Jim Shiner and Charles Senning, both brown belts. Powell holds numerous state and national honors and offices, and Senning and Shiner have both Foreign delegates attend symposium More than a hundred livestock- men from South and Central America and Mexico registered Monday for the Latin-American Animal Agriculture Symposium, opening activity for Texas’ first Animal Agriculture Conference here. The Conference will continue through Wednesday afternoon at the J. Earl Rudder Center. Con cluding the educational session will be a livestock and grass tour for Latin American visitors to the Houston area Thursday. Delegates for the Latin Ameri can Symposium signed in from many points in Mexico, and from Guatemala, British Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Jamaica, San Salvaldor, Puerto Rico, Co lombia, Venezuela and Peru. Tuesday’s Conference program featured a general session at 9 a.m., when President Jack K. Williams welcomed conference participants, and a talk by Dr. L. S. “Bill” Pope, associate dean in the College of Agriculture, on “New Horizons for Texas Animal Agriculture.” Separate short courses will then convene in beef cattle, dairy production, horses, swine, and forages and pastures. Dr. John A. Hopkins, head of the Depart ment of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology, will address the Wednesday general session at 8:30 a.m. on “The World Agri culture Outlook.” Monday’s Latin-American Sym posium was sponsored by the Animal Science Department in cooperation with the Office for International Programs. Talks were presented in Spanish or simultaneously translated into Spanish. Six speakers were featured Monday morning, including Dr. G. E. Joandet, a visiting profes sor in the Animal Science De partment; Dr. T. C. Cartwright, The Emphasis is on at mi u UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK “Oh the side of Texas A&M” the railroad commission stitutionally elected office TGRA lobbyists Wek J- v ? ' Glenn Green and Eugene■h M>r