The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 05, 1974, Image 4

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    Pagre 4
Dean Rives
forms group
THE BATTALION
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1974
A council has been formed by
Dean of Women Toby Rives to
increase the awareness of wom
en’s activities on campus.
Representatives from organiza
tions with a significant number
of women will meet with Dean
Rives Wednesday at 4 p.m. in
Room 502 of the Rudder Tower.
They will report on the activities
and opportunities their groups
offer.
The council meets monthly,
said Dean Rives, and organiza
tions not on it now are welcome
to send a representative.
WANT AD RATES
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
One day
5* per word
«e per word each additional day
Minimum charge—75c
Classified Displa
$1.00 per colun
FOR RENT
FOR SALE OR RENT
FOR SALE
HELP WANTED
lay
inch
per column
ich insertion
DEADLINE
3 p.m. day before publication
Two bedroom furnished apartm
Two blocks from Univen
CA.
College Main.
$125 to $135.
rent. CH-
sity. 415
846-5444.
340t3
WORK WANTED
R
new
be
oommate wanted for two bedroom brand
i duplex, two blocks from campus. Must
liberal, but studious. Your share, $70
plus i/, of bills. Come by and talk to
Simon Gerbert, 701 Nimitz, C.S. 339t5
Furniture
Stripping
Antiques
AMITY, Inc. of Bryan
1103 W. 25th
10% Discount To Aggies
on Stripping
Marc D. Luther
713/822-7717
Bryan, Texas 77801
315tfn
Special rates for college students. Two
fully carpeted. $110 month com-
bedroom
pletely fi
8 and 5.
lly car]
lished.
BEUA1R
PABK
2201 Leonard Rd.
822-2326 or 822-2421
Rentals or purchases
Large Lots From $29.50
334tfn
1969 Ambassador. Good condition,
gas mileage, air conditioned, power
ing, power brakes, automatic transmi
810
846-8104.
ssion.
342t4
Call 822-7426 between
333tlO
LOST
VO
mil
bedroom furnished mobile
Six miles Irom cam
only. Call 846-1865.
from campus Hwy. 30. Co
home.
luples
333tfn
Lost male great dane, black mask, fawn.
Vicinity of Booneville Rd. and east byp
Reward. 823-0894.
USED CARS
Not The Largest Stock
But The Best For Less
Low Overhead
See Us Before You Buy
NEWMAN MOTORS
505 S. Texas Bryan
822-4824
342tfn
ypass.
342t4
Cornet $125, excellent condition. Adias
track shoes, size O 1 /^. 846-0030. 342t3
TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
For employment information
at Texas A&M University
rs a
loyment Opporl
through Affirmative Action.
my
Call 845-4444 24 hours a day
rrtunity
Equal Employment Opp
CAT LOST just before Christmas. Vicin
ity—Lutheran Church and 2nd St., C.S.
Typing done, reasonable rates,
theses and dissertations.
Can do
Mrs. Whitmore.
291tfn
Typing - fast, expert - proposals, theses.
846-6196 after 5:30 and week-ends. 281tfn
BROADMOOR APTS.
2 Bedroom, 1 bath, central air &
heat, panelled, carpeted & draped,
close to school, University Shop
ping Center, & Medical Center.
$145. unfurnished. $165 furnish
ed. All bills paid including cable.
1503 Broadmoor
846-1297 or 846-2737
317tfn
Typing. Experienced, fast, accurate,
kinds. 822-0544.
All
233tfn
Five string banjo excellent condition. $60.
Buddy Brown, 846-6997. 342t3
long
Call
822-4641.
Lost Montique watch metal, silver, and
black band. REWARD 845-7679. 340t4
watch metal, silver, and
1969 Dodge Dart Swinger. 340 engine,
4 speed, positraction, cages, clean, one
owner. Call 846-3312. 341t5
REWARD for return of eyeglasses and
case. Lost near Physics Bldg
or 845-6336
near
Kirch:
Physics B
ner.
Let White’s Auto Store, College Station,
;rve you with your hardware and plumb-
822-1480
339t7
serve you with your hardware and plumb
ing needs. North Gate. 338tfn
MEN! — WOMEN!
JOBS ON SHIPS! No experience re
quired. Excellent pay. Worldwide travel.
Perfect summer job or career. Send
$3.00 for information. SEAFAX, Dept.
13-M P.O. Box 2049, Port Angeles,
Washington 98362. 338tl0
CHILD CARE
Lost black labrador cross male. Vicinity
of Booneville Rd. and east bypass. Reward.
SPECIAL NOTICE
Mobile home space for rent 6 miles from
rnipus. Couples
only. Call
Exp
846-65
irienced typing, electric, near campus.
51. 209tfn
846-1865.
315tfn
Reward for information leading to the
return of 10-speed yellow Continental with
return ot 10-speed yellow Continental with
gen set, bok rack, and chrome fenders.
Taken from old College Main Apts. Jan 26.
Full time typing.
3838.
Call 823-7723 or 823-
267tfn
ATTENTION MARRIED COUPLES. One
and 2 bedroom furnished apartments. Ready
for occupancy. 114 miles south of
n 2
Serial No. FJ598153. Call 693-3104, Apt.
218 (no questions asked). 340t2
:cupancy. iy 2 miles south
for fishing. Washateria i
Country atmosphere. Call D. E
823-0934 or after 6, 846-3408 c
Lak
Count]
FOR
ipus.
i grounds.
Cain Co.,
822-6135.
166tfn
BEST
RESULTS
TRY
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
Redmond Terrace Drugs
Phone 846-1113
1402 Hwy. 6-South
College Station, Texas
Prescriptions, Etc.
Charge Accounts Invited
Free Delivery
ATTENTION MAY GRADUATES
Orders for Graduation Announcements
will be taken beginning Jan. 21, 1974 —
February 22, 1974 at the Student Finance
Office, Room 217, MSC, 8:00 - 4:00 Mon -
Fri. 333U9
Service For All
Chrysler Corp. Cars
Body Work — Painting
Free Estimates
HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY, INC.
Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922
idge bales and Service Since 1922
1411 Texas Ave. — 823-8111 67tfn
CHILD CARE CENTER
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
C.S.
Have openings for children
in 4 yr. nursery school and
5 yr. kindergarten. 14 or
full day. Acepting applica
tions for Fall of 1974 which
will include a program for
3 yr. olds — 2 days a wk.
and 4 yr. olds — 3 days a
wk. Phone 846-6632 for in
formation.
340t5
Registered Nurses, LVN’s,
and Lap Technicians, X-ray
experience helpful, needed
at T. L. Goodnight Memo
rial Hospital in Caldwell,
Tex. Shift deferential plus
mileage. Contact G. F.
Clemmons Administrator or
Mrs. J. Mize, Director of
Nursing 502 N. Stone or
Call collect 713-567-3362.
ROOMMATE WANTED
Nice apartment overlooking swimming
pool. One block from campus. All utilities
paid. Need male roommate. Call Mike
693-3828 or 845-3735. 342t8
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES:
SOSOLIKS
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
3400 S. College
823-8051
TV & RADIO SERVICE INC.
Authorized Zenith Sales and
Services
713 S. MAIN 822-2133
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS, CHEMICAL
ENGINEERS, PHYSICS, CHEMISTRY,
MATERIALS SCIENCE —BS, MS, PhD.
MOS CIRCUIT DESIGN ENGINEERS
Design and develop MOS memories and multi-phase
MOS logic using advanced computer design techniques.
MOS PROCESSING ENGINEERS
Develop new MOS processes or adapt custom scale pro
cesses to volume production.
Help make Semiconductor history and a better future
for you.
Engineers from TI Houston will be interviewing on
campus February 6 and 7.
If unavailable for interview, send resume to:
Mr. Bill Sudlow
Texas Instruments, Inc.
12201 Southwest Freeway
Houston, Texas
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
1 mile from campus
Volleyball Court &
Swimming Pool
Recreation & Club Rooms
All Utilities & TV Cable
paid
Now Available
1 Bedroom, 1 baths
2 Bedrooms, IV2 baths
2 Bedrooms, 2 baths
FAMILY AND STUDENT
SECTIONS.
Need male roommate. $65 plus bills.
693-3167. 340t6
SOUTHGATE VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
Family size apartments with lots of
closet space. Individually controlled
refrigerated air. Cable TV connections.
Complete laundry facilities.
ALL UTILITIES PAID
One, two, three & four bedroom apart
ments from $104.00. Some available
now. Married students welcome.
134 Luther
(off old hwy. 6 so., C. S.)
Rental Office
RN needed full time on
11 to 7 shift. Shift dif
ferential plus mileage. Call
or come to Grimes Memo
rial Hospital 210 S. Judson
St. Navasota, Texas 77868
or 825-6585. Ask for Mrs.
Winkelmann Director of
Nurses or Mr. Fraley Ad
ministrator.
FOR
BEST
RESULTS
TRY
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
—EVERYDAY-
OPEN 7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Mon. Thru Sat.
Brake Shoes 4.10
(2 Wheels) exchange
Alternators 18.95 exchange
Starters - Generators
from 14.95 exchange
Most any part for most
American and some
Foreign cars at dealer price
Your Lawnboy Dealer
“We accept
BankAmericard - Mastercharge”
Except on Prestone
Joe Faulk Auto Parts
220 E. 25 822-1669
Giving Better Service For
28 Years In Bryan
TRINITY GARDEN DUPLEXES
Like Home Living
2 bedroom - IV2 baths - carpet - drapes central heat and
air - electric kitchen - range, refrigerator - dishwasher -
disposal - washer dryer attachments in garage, fenced
back yard — pet accepted.
846-3988
1712 Trinity Place
College Station, Texas
This is Living^
A
\bu’re not one
of the crowd! „
"Vbu’re special, "\
and there is something special
for you in HOUSTON!
r
\ Tennis
Club,
Swimming
Men’s <£r Women’s
Sauna and
Exercise Room
1201 Hwy. 30
College Station (713) 816-8361
A dynamic engineering-construction firm.
Set your own limitations —don't have them imposed
Our work is expanding in all areas of heavy
industrial design. We need your talents if you have
a degree in Chemical, Electrical, Mechanical
or Nuclear Engineering.
We plan to interview on campus Feb. 14 and 15.
To arrange an interview. . .
See your Campus Placement Center. Now!
If you miss our representative, please send your resume to:
Mr. D. A. Zipps. Engineering Division
Brown Root Inc.
nd Associated Companies / Serving Progress the World Over
P. O. Box 3. Houston. Texas 77001/A HALLIBURTON Company
An Equal Opportunity Employer
COUNTRY STYLE
LIVING
AT—
NOW LEASING
The Oaks apartments were built for
people who insist on the very best. A
totally unique and exciting way of
Life is afforded by a completely new
concept in garden apartments—locat-
private wooded lake coun
try living at a convenient location.
HWY. 2818 at industrial Park (713) 822-7650.
Western art adds
new dimensions
HICKORY HILLS
MOBILE HOME PARK
sfclkklll
•Private club & pool for adults
300I 1
& B<
hing
—Paved streets, driveways & patios
& p
—Rec. hall & pool for families
fes &
—Ponds for fishin
-Picnic tables & Bar-B-Cue pits
-Underground utilities
nmunity
Rentals Available
Undergro
—Planned
community activities
2001 Beck Street
822-6912
By MARY RUSSO
Staff Writer
Works of Western Art are add
ing a new dimension to the A&M
campus as the Frederic Reming
ton and Charles M. Russel collec
tion remains on display in the
Theater complex of the Univer
sity Center.
The display consists of 71 can
vas works and four bronzes, on
loan, respectively, from the Sid
W. Richardson exhibition and the
Amon Carter Museum of Western
Art, both located in Fort Worth.
Students have remarked at the
vivid coloring and striking real
ism of the paintings. The works
are on display through the gener
osity of the Richardson Founda
tion and the President’s Special
Concession Fund, which comes
from the proceeds of vending
machines on campus. Total cost
of hosting the exhibit is about
$29,000, shared evenly by the
University and the Foundation.
A 24-hour guard for the exhibit
is provided by Campus police t p
a cost of $15,000. Half of ft
cost is coming from the polls HOUSTG
department, while the other hi* ^ gs0 ciation
is being covered by the befotv ighield” jot
mentioned Richardson grant. ^ com p e l
The display is open seven diji The AB ^
a week, from 8 a.m. to llpJi. . ,
through July. Ih r 1
The paintugs are shown j. j,
specially constructed partition^ 1 *
built by the Physical Plants Do I The dele
partment of A&M under tkij«mning cr«
design of senior environment on the basis
design student Bill Fore, Memo
rial Student Center staff coori
nator for the exhibit.
The reje<
a commi
Book fines asked
to be suspended
Equality for all was the cry of
some members on the Texas A&M
University Library Council Mon
day afternoon as library fines for
all students may be temporarily
suspended.
“Library fines are discrimina
tory to students,” said Larry
McRoberts, Student Government
Campus Projects chairman. “Fac
ulty-staff members may request
a library book for a maximum
of one semester without renewal
while students must renew their
books every two weeks.”
McRoberts said late notices are
sent to faculty-staff members,
but no fine is assessed. Students
must pay a 25 cent fine per day
for each book kept after the two-
week period. Upon return of the
book, the fine is cut in half.
After due discussion, the Li
brary Council passed a recom
mendation, 10-3, that student
fines be suspended for the spring
1974 semester. This would be a
“The display system canbeusej!;
for a variety of purposes. Itisl
portable to some extent and cafe
be removed should the area
needed for other purposes,” sail!
Fore. By KATHTi
Clearing up a question aboutNSm-
the exhibit. Fore said, “Yes, theiijf < ^ 0 ^ 1
is a print in the collection, Zoning
it is signed by Remington in uPty Hall
unusual manner.” jlour memb
enough for
proved evei
on Dab
uncil liai
seated h
ry plat f
Is Avenue
KA plat ii
land drawr
trial period to determine there ierred to 1
sponse of students to the absent-;«ity officii
of such a force factor for assur ‘boundary
ing the return of library ms ;iaent for t
terials. This recommendatk fords,
must first be passed by tbi| Dale sta
Library administration befon money on
student fines are suspended. that the s:
“The Services Subcommittee 0! Ito facilitat
the Library Council will be study- Sjots, so tl
ing other force factors and thea ijbe area
suggest the most effective factor, ind will 1
in lieu of fines, that may be -that he tl
equitably administered to all U used fo
library users,” McRoberts said. Ige space.
1 period was pHe aske
f
The faculty loan
also recommended to be lowered jbe used
to 30 days by a 10-3 vote. It was
suggested that, if student fines
are suspended, people with over
due books be blocked from bor
rowing until their record was
clear. No action was taken on the
suggestion, however. Fining of
faculty-staff was also suggested
and will be discussed at a later
date.
46 p
over
PR]
Roloff pleads against rules
for church school licensing
AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) — The Rev. Leszer Roloff shouted to
Constitutional Convention delegates Monday that he shouldn’t need a
state license to run a child care facility any more than he needs one to
preach.
“Jesus said, ‘By their fruits ye shall know them,’ ” the Corpus
Christi evangelist said. “We never charged anybody. We have the finest
facility in America. We take nothing but troubled children.”
He held up a large color picture of his Rebekah Home for girls. A
year ago, he said, it had 300 “lovely girls.”
“Now we have no girls,” he said. Then he held up a large color
picture of a teen-age girl. “She made it four days, and she’s dead.” He
did not elaborate.
His voice began to break as he told of mothers and fathers that
want to send their children to his six homes. Many of those in the
audience, some holding Bibles, began to weep.
More than 100 of his supporters crowded into the small General
Provisions Committee hearing room. They lined the wall behind the
legislators.
Roloff s discourse was accompanied by a litany of amens. “That’s
right. That’s right,” others said.
He testified in support of a constitutional provision that would
exempt church schools from state licensing procedures or any control
by state agencies, except in matters of “health, safety and welfare.”
“I’ve been fined $5,400 and five days in jail for doing what Gold told
me to do,” he shouted. The jail sentence is to begin “on Abraham
Lincoln’s birthday—the man who wrote the Emancipation Proclama
tion, and I’m trying to write another one.”
Roloff asked State District Court Judge Walter Dunham for the
jail sentence Friday so he could challenge the state’s insistence that he
must be licensed.
“We have 500 empty beds tonight, and two million wanting to
get in,” he said. ‘... I’ve turned away 1,000 girls since last June 1. The
judges say, ‘ They have to go to prison if you don’t take them.’ I can’t
take them.”
“I’m a Texas boy,” he said. God called him to preach when he
was a farm boy, he said, and he took a cow to Baylor University and
milked his way through school, he said.
‘Tm considered a hero in Mississippi and a criminal in Texas,” he
said.
Rev. Earl Little of the Miller Road Christian School in Garland
said the State Department of Public Welfare kept telling him he had to
do this and that to get a “revalidated license.”
Then they began to ask him to do things he thought were radical,
he said, such as put a woman on the board of deacons.
“We feel we have a right to teach them anything we choose to,”
he said.
In answer to a question, he said: “I should have the freedom to
send my children to a school that doesn’t teach science.”
Rep. John Wilson, D-La Grange, said the proposed language was
so broad some people would “take advantage of it and bring up their
children like wilfl animals in the woods in a drug culture. You don’t
think the state should tolerate that, do you?”
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which m:
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“No, sir,” Little replied. “A church of atheism, a church of
Satan—I don’t know. I’m not trying to protect them.’
f^rk/vey
*
1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms (Studios)
10 Floor Plans
(650 to 1360 sq. ft.)
Washer - Dryer Connections
Shuttlebus
24 hour Security
1600 Southwest Parkway
Phone: S46-5767
GENERAL O! ELECTRIC
Thi
gin
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leg
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Ik
See
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gir
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