The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 02, 1974, Image 6

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    Page 6
THE BATTALION
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1974
CANTERBURY ASSOCIATION
Each Tuesday, 5:30 p.m.—Holy Eucharist and Supper
Thursdays, 6:30 a.m.—Holy Eucharist and Breakfast
Daily 5:30 p.m.—Evening Prayer
EPISCOPAL STUDENT CENTER
904 - 906 Jersey Street
(Southern Boundary of Campus)
846-1726 Father James T. Moore Chaplain
\
Voting held today
City and school board elections
and final registration for the May
primaries take place this week.
City elections are today from
8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Voting places
include South Knolls School, A&M
Consolidated Middle School Music
Room, College Station Fire Sta
tion, the first floor of the Memo
rial Student Center and the Old
City Hall.
Art film committee
Voters must register by Thurs
day to be eligible to vote in the
state primaries May 4.
Present registrations are valid
if a ballot was cast within the
last three years.
TIRE The
iMmESMBL tot ’em!
The Tiger Unloaded
ED PILGER'S
[EJgONI
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Corner Hwy. (i & 30—College Station
846-8386
CLOSE OUT
PLYCRON
F78-14 black $1:5.86 Plus Fed. Tax $2.42
G78-15 black $15.77 Plus Fed. Tax $2.60
G78-15 w/w $18.66 Plus Fed. Tax $2.60
1178-15 w/w $21.14 Plus Fed. Tax $2.81
H-P
F70-14 w/w $22.39 Plus Fed. Tax $2.61
BLEMISHED TIRES
PACESETTER BELTED
F78-14 black $22.01 Plus Fed. Tax $2.50
G78-14 black $24.05 Plus Fed. Tax $2.67
G78-15 w/w $27.14 Plus Fed. Tax $2.74
H78-15 w/w $28.69 Plus Fed. Tax $2.97
CUSHIOAIRE
E78-14 black $18.67 Plus Fed. Tax $2.24
F78-14 black ' $19.70 Plus Fed. Tax $2.41
G78-14 black $19.72 Plus F'ed. Tax $2.55
F78-14 w/w $21.23 Plus Fed. Tax $2.41
G78-14 w/w $22.78 Plus Fed. Tax $2.55
G78-15 w/w $23.29 Plus Fed. Tax $2.63
We Also Are A State Inspection Station
Electronic Tune Up — Wheel Balance
Occasionally We Have Gas
COME BY AND SEE US
(Continued from page 1)
The Arts Film sub-committee
made the mistake of over-spend
ing their allotted rotating budget
of $3,000. They also did not re
quest additional budget allotments
from the Council or consult the
staff on film orders.
The old MSC structures was
partially to blame. There was at
least three student overseers be
tween Hal Gaines, student pro
grams adviser, and sub-commit
tee heads. A constitutional re
vision took care of this problem.
A complex finance system deal
ing with rotating budgets (where
programs must pay for them
selves) and a confusing division
of responsibility between the Fis
cal Office and the Student Fi
nance Office didn’t help matters
for the Arts, Film sub-committee.
In addition. Manning and the
MSC staff didn’t work well to
gether because of basic idea con
flicts.
Next year may bring a separate
Arts Film Committee, said Davis,
Aggie Cinema has a plan to incor
porate the program into its struc
ture by organizing a special elec
tion board for the director’s films
and midnight films.
THREE FILMS have been can
celed which were part of the ori
ginal series. “The Sunday films,
‘The King of Hearts’ and “The
Beauty and the Beast’ were can
celed because Sunday showings
don’t turn the necessary profit,”
said James Randolph, assistant to
Gaines.
“Tillicut’s Follies” has also
been canceled because of a con
flict with AggieCon, Cepheid Var
iable’s annual science fiction con
ference.
“The film was not ordered be
cause no information was avail
able to Gaines,” said Manning.
“He would not order the film and
it had to be appealed to the Coun
cil. By the time the appeal came
through, it was too late to place
a confirmation for the film with
the film company. Randolph was
asked to place the confirmation
two to three weeks ago, but fail
ed to do so. Now the film’s un
available,” Manning said.
“Follies” is considered an im
portant film as it deals with life
in an insane asylum.
“It’s a really good study in a
certain aspect of human behav
ior, said Manning.
“PINK FLAMINGOS” the film
which caused the most contro
versy for the series, may yet be
shown on campus. After the MSC
decided it couldn’t show the film,
the American Civil Liberties Un
ion became interested in doing so.
Whether or not they will be al
lowed to show the film in the Uni
versity Center is in question, and
has been since Friday when the
ACLU went to pick up a permis
sion letter from Dr. John Koldus
and were told there were “com
plications.”
The ACLU meets with Koldus,
vice-president of student services,
today.
Voters new to the area should
register with the county tax
assessor-collector or a deputized
person. Those who have changed
addresses within the county must
notify the tax assessor-collector.
School Board elections will be
April 6, with polls open from 8
a.m. to 7 p.m. The polling place
is the A&M Consolidated Middle
School Music Room. Running for
Position 3 are Andrew W. Ray,
Charles Marie Smith Peterson
and Jon S. Botsford.
By KE
Sports
^ The
tape-nn
bat of
shoe o;
Town &. Country Owlet g p ea k
3731 E. 29th the TC
Bryan, Texas 77801 j-jjg fjt.
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Candidates for Position 4 are
O. C. Cooper Jr., Neil Nutall, Jr.,
and Joseph Natowitz, Position 5
candidates are William B. Lan
caster, Walter J. Dorsey, Willy
H. Leighton and Lynn C. Glasen.
Absentee voting for the pri
maries begins at the county
clerk’s office April 14 and closes
April 30. Applications for absen
tee voting must be in the clerk’s
office no later than April 30 at
5 p.m. and notarized ballots must
be mailed and postmarked no
later than midnight May 3.
Campus Briefs
Editor applications
Applications for 1974-75 editor
of The Battalion and the Aggie-
land, as well as summer editor
of The Battalion, will be accepted
in Room 221 of the Reed McDon
ald Services Building through
April 22.
Applicants must have a year of
experience in student publications
and be free of scholastic or con
duct probations. The positions
are salaried.
The editors will be chosen by
the Student Publications Board
later in the year; the selections
must be approved by Jack Wil
liams, TAMU System president.
Houston columnist
Houston Post columnist Lynn
Ashby will be on campus Wednes
day.
At noon, Ashby will speak in
Rooms 225-26 of the Memorial
Student Center on “Secrecy in
Government.” The Political Fo
rum presentation is free to all.
A native of Dallas, Ashby has
been an assistant editor and a
general assignment reporter for
the Post. He also worked for the
New York Times for 6y 2 years.
les,
les
Dick Kutches is back in town and
invites you to
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The
3705 E. 29th Bryan
Gentleman's Quarter
846-1706