WlHlmT pWmwMaffllaBBi THE BATTALION Page 9 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31. 1974 W.h |,,J AGGIELAND , FLOWER & GIFT 209 University 846-5825 GIG 'EM AGGIES!!! The smell of cotton is in the air. Football Mums— Personalized and Custom-Designed a factor I conn ’lopnai NOW TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU NOON BUFFET 11-2 Mon.-Fri. $1.59 tw Store Oft E. 29 near Bryan High School 846-1784 413 Texas Ave. 846-6164 plan It oinputi ion li| ic voti ngofiil Overseas Employment Oilfield Career Opportunity THE OFFSHORE COMPANY offers a financially rewarding CAREER IN THE OILWELL DRILLING INDUSTRY to per sons with a MINIMUM of two years college training. Applicants should have a recent college background (within the past five to eight years), preferably with a MAJOR IN PE TROLEUM OR ENGINEERING STUDIES. Applicants chosen will enter a SUPER VISORY TRAINING PROGRAM leading to the positions of DRILLER and TOOL- PUSHER on an ACCELERATED BASIS. Applicant must be CAPABLE OF DOING HARD, PHYSICALLY DEMANDING, LABORING WORK UNDER EXTREMELY HOT WORKING CONDITIONS, as re quired. Preference will further be given to persons who can remain abroad, WITHOUT FAMILIES, IF ANY, for up to 12 months at a time. MINIMUM starting earnings begin at $14,100 (Free of USA taxes when qualified), rising within two years to approximately $19,800 - $24,900 per year, DEPENDING UPON THE SUCCESS OF THE INDIVIDUAL. Interested applicants send resumes to the Director, DRILLER TRAINEE PROGRAM. The Offshore Company P O Box 2765/Houston, Texas 77001 An Equal Opportunity Employer \Town Hall-Young Artist^eries Bait interview ‘SG is official voice of the students’ By TERESA COSLETT Staff Writer “Perhaps student government is a misleading name,” said Jeff Dunn, student vice president of academic affairs. “A completely independent stu dent government is nearly impossi ble to achieve. But we do claim to be an official voice of the students. That is essentially what we are,” he said. There are five committees under academic affairs: academic services and information, academic re search, minority affairs, study ab road and academic lecture series. There is also the Student Academic Council, a newly-created Student Senate agency to: —publish evaluations students can use in choosing professors. —provide the administration with student input to use in decid ing tenure and promotion. Dunn said he considered the Academic services and information committee most important in achieving more student input. The committee serves as a public relations liaison between the sente and student body, publicizing stu dent government issues and ser vices. The committee may print a news letter next week giving facts on grading criteria or ticket allocation. The academic research commit tee is drawing up a master plan showing TAMU’s progress and pro jected trends in curriculum. Next semester the plan may be sent to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. If the plan is approved by HEW the university will receive federal grants. Also, the committee is working to get more students on the University Academic Council. The 130 council members are mostly faculty and a few administrators. Student Body President Steve Eberhard is now the only student member of the council, said Dunn. Eberhard does not have voting privileges. 'Tm in favor of getting more stu dents on the councij. But there is a problem in having such a large and diverse student body. It’s hard to decide how many students should be on the council and how they should be picked,” he said. The minority affairs committee is a channel minority students can use to approach the administration for policy changes. It investigates dis crimination and is planning a one- day minority conference in Feb ruary. Dunn explained MSC minority committees handle programming but are restricted under the Directorate’s charter from handling administration policy changes. “Nobody has to have student government approval to seek change but they have a better chance by going through an or ganized body like the senate,” said Dunn. “People don’t realize the poten tial we have. They expect tangible results and we give students some. But they don’t realize most of our accomplishments are policy changes. “We don’t want change for change’s sake. We want change if there’s a need for it,” he said. The study abroad committee’s major objective is getting transfera ble credit for summer study over seas. Financial aid for the commit tee is also being investigated. Present MSC travel loans are geared towards vacation, not study, Dunn said. The fifth committee, academic lecture series, works with the Great Issues lectures series in arranging lectures specifically on academic re form at TAMU. One has already been held this year on academic appeals. Another on the future of theater arts at TAMU is scheduled for Dec. 4. Explaining the Student Academic Council’s (SAC) function, Dunn said, “We want it to work, to be good and we want it to be respecta ble.” He said the SAC will establish a uniform criteria for professor evalu ations, distribute and collect them and maintain a permanent file. Each senator on SAC will be re sponsible for contacting his college’s council for reactions on the evalua tions. Dunn said considerable research has already been done on other uni versities’ evaluation systems. “It’s a very sensitive and critical area. We’re getting professional help and have three professors from the College of Education investigat ing criteria for us,” he said. The senate’s failure to approve many sections of the National Stu dent Lobby’s (NSL) Title IX resolu tion concerning sex discrimination resulted from the NSL’s failure to send the resolution information in time. The information arrived a week before the Oct. 9 senate meeting. A response was requested by Oct. 15 which did not give time for a second reading of the resolution. Dunn felt most of the senators didn’t have enough information to understand the provisions. “They gave their opinion in the best way they knew how considering the amount of information available,” •he said. In his freshman year, Dunn was elected as one of six freshman senators. The junior economics major served as a senator represent ing the Corps living area in his sophomore year and became in volved in academic affairs. The countdown for space pioneering is green and go HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) — An astronaut who walked on the moon said Wednesday that the initial exp loration phase of space is over and the pioneering phase is beginning. On the horizon is the civilization of space, said Dr. Harrison H. Schmitt, and he foresees the day when students of all ages and na tions will attend orbiting clas srooms, studying everything from nuclear physics to poetry. Schmitt, a geologist who flew on Apollo 17 two years ago, addressed a conference on scientific results of the Skylab space station program. He said the Apollo and Skylab projects had proved conclusively that man can live in space and play a useful role there, opening the way for routine flights to earth’s new frontier in the space shuttle starting in 1979. “Compressed into the last decade of space activity, history has seen the equivalent of two centuries of exploration of the great American West,” Schmitt said. “The first movements into space, which cul minated in Apollo, catalyzed our imagination. Skylab gave direction to our imagination. The space shut tle now gives license to our imagina tion. ” The shuttle will be a reusable | Bulletin Board | TODAY MSC DANCE COMMITTEE will sponsor a Hal loween dance at Deware Fieldhouse from 9 to 11:30 p.m. Skydog will perform. Costume con test with prizes. The film “Spirits of the Dead” will lx? shown at 11:30. CEPHE1D VARIABLE will meet at 7:30 p.m. in room 601 of the Rudder Center. CHESS CLUB will meet from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. in room 607 of the Rudder Tower. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING WIVES CLUB will meet in room 128B of the Zachry Engineer ing Center at 7 p.m. There will he a womens self defense demonstration. FREE U—Automotive Principles and Applications at 7 p.m. in room 101 of the M E. Shops. FREE U—Biblical Interpretations at 8 p.m. in room 108 of the Academic Building. FREE U—Comparative Religions at 7 p.m. in room 510 of the Rudder Tower. FREE U—Radio at 7 p.m. in room 230 of the MSC. FREE U—Yoga in room 231 of the MSC at 7 p.m. FREE U—Contract Bridge in room 229 of the MSC at 7 p.m. FREE U—Ballroom Dancing in room 225 of the MSC at 7:30 p.m. FRIDAY A CAR WASH will he sponsored by the Marketing Society at the Texaco service station on the corner of Hwy. 6 and Dominik from 12 to 6 p. m. HAMBURGER FRY AND BEER BUST sponsored by the Association for Computing Machinery at 1218 Lancelot Circle at 6:30 p.m. Tickets are $1.50 for members and their guests and can be bought from Mike Quick, 9-K Puryear. SATURDAY IRANIAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION will meet in room 402 of Rudder Tower at 7 p.m. SUNDAY GROMMETS will meet in room 228 of the MSC at 1 p.m. to play war games. rocket ship, capable of scores of round trips into space. It is expected to ferry hundreds of researchers from many lands into orbit in the 1980s. Because of Skylab, Schmitt said, “space observatories become possi ble from which research and ser vices in meteorology, oceanog raphy, geology and environment can be conducted and from which broadscale exploration for new earth resources can be carried out. ” “The greatest discoveries of the future probably lie in investigations of stellar and interstellar phenomena,” Schmitt said. “The nature of gravity, the origin of planets, the limits of our ability to manipulate matter, energy and time and our future as explorers of the universe are all issues at stake. ” Nature has a gift for you. . . A garden in your window. There where you will enjoy it the most, make an outdoor wonder of plants and flow ers! You’ll find plants, pots and supplies at HARDY GARDENS Hwy. 6, So. (2303 Texas) College Station 1127 Villa Maria. Bryan Jeffrey Solow cellist FREE Workshop Nov. 11 8:00 pm Forum Concert Nov. 12 8:00 pm Forum TICKETS TAMU Students FREE Non-TAMU Student Date $1.00 General Public $2.50 Town Hall Season Tickets Honored No Reserved Seats Tickets and Information MSC Box Office 845-2916 Another MSC Activity Auto insurance for safe drivers age 18-25 (married or single) at competitive rates checking with your parents. If you are like most college-age drivers, you buy auto insurance through the company that writes your parent’s policy. Most companies insist on the “supporting” business from your parents to offset the theoretically greater risk of insuring you. If you want to handle your own insurance business — without checking with your parents — the usual practice is to “rate you up” — to charge extra for the coverage. Now that’s all changed. We are exclusive representa tives for a company specializing in insurance for driver age 18-25. Male or female. Single or married. Occa sional operator or owner of a vehicle. Cost for this special 18-25 coverage is based on stan dard rates (the same cost to you as going through your parent’s company) — provided you have no more than three minor traffic violations in the past three years. Get the details — without cost or obligation — from Charles McDaniel or Lee Hensley. You’ll like doing busi ness with these guys before you write them a check. And you’ll like doing business with them even better — if they ever need to write you one. WESTERN INSURANCE ASSOCIATES 1848 Greenfield Plaza / P.O. Box 4065 / Bryan, Tx. 77801 / (713) 846 8743