W!u; hl ' OflbofN "'■“flhedjp, SRsirT ean of ECORDs '“MAW*. al feutOUfi, '•''■iHoSi,. "“difullst Icrms). 11,^ ^I»rt poWn yi'iK undni^' 1 t,le ringdtii, ^“uldbeinj 'fd'lobfd^ ,nl1 alr»i) 1, r «ordmj^. 'wbleioirt., 1 for pjilut,, oobytlie^j 'll contiiiiit h st pail i»i "ill save t B ji bon ri-Jii; . xsinadviK,^ cs for renijji Iw at Ihtl^ s ordered, liK'dlolKrH riogdeiiini '5p m tffiR, ioordfrfcrm xd prior to(j ope ihi-H 'Kralulafai •1.1.ECE lin.ll Dtim iLISM IN • jhies ora JldiON pm. rington Bldj QV - 1 dittopa/it% Nationally Known Brands for All Makes iNAPAr Drums & Rotors Turned Bearings Pressed ^COMPLETE VW, DATSUN, TOYOTA, OPEL PARTS “A-1 Quality of Parts bahiomericaho and Service” B8BBI Texas at Cooner 846-4791 im\ Exaiw.m »i non and Son who hive noil «», will bf ;mi 00 p.m. -Room l OB' rlcoli- U*\ Room 206 AQl R km M H the rutufct t mental secirtr a requirenwita for reydntfl n’TED i do theseiaiM 0. 3!f ^curate. Alibi vfain laetMWiFd ,EST ; Park MOBILE NITY” &M i,h Tiedow atios 9 to live THE BATTALION Page 5 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1974 ENGINEERING GRADUATES Fall, Spring and Summer OVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT in MECHANICAL-CHEMICAL-ELECTRICAL and PETROLEUM Our ARAMCO Services Company representative will be on campus for interviews on Thurs. Nov. 14th, 1974 VISIT US ... . We Know About Budgets So Check Our Prices and Our Quality! • Foliage Plants • Dutch Bulbs • Dried Flowers • Terrarium Supplies • Macrame Hangers • Decorative Pottery • Shrubs • Do-it-yourself Holiday Supplies • Sunset-Potpouri Books bobs ^ | grec^n ^huThb^nursery “top qualiry^wjthV/Frof*i*iono?S»*r»ic*' o n d dy $=^io^[rd a y 822 - 6613 pent bouse 1 Located at Plantation Oaks Apts, above the leasing office on Highway 30 NEW SPECIALS ^ gH V VXoo'mvt ^ LLI r; TTnTESOT J* r — zzz — 'bo -t Monday— Bourbon ... .75c Tuesday— Vodka ....75c Wednesday— Collins ....75c Thursday— Scotch ... .75c And Starting November 1st From 7-9 Buy Two Drinks Get one FREE. All unescorted women Vz price all of the time. f Campus briefs | Foreign students plan dinner The International Students Association plans a dinner to be held Nov. 10 at 7:30 p.m. in the A&M Presbyterian Church. Anyone interested is invited to attend the dinner, which will cost 50 cents per person. Tickets are available from the Foreign Student Advisor Office in the Academic Building and from the international student section of the Old Exchange Store Lounge. Teaching conference begins The 21st annual Conference for the Advancement of Science Teaching (CAST) gets underway Thursday. Two Nobel Laureates and a program of sessions and workshops high light the conclave. Nobel Prize winner Willard Libby, 1960 honoree in chemistry, speaks at 9 a.m. Friday on radiocarbon dating and 1961 Nobel physics winner Robert Hofstadter will report at 10:30 a.m. Saturday on his recent tour of China and observations ol teaching, the first such public report since his return. The addresses will be in the Rudder Auditorium. All interested persons are invited to attend. Video tape programs shown Video tape program will be presented the next two weeks as a pilot program for the new Video Tape Committee. The programs will be shown at the concourse on the first floor of the MSC. The programs will start each even hour, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. “Earl Scruggs: His Family and Friends” will be shown Nov. 11 through Nov. 15. “TV Madness” will be presented the following week. Liberal Arts select emblem A contest to select a permanent emblem to represent the College ol Liberal Arts for centennial purposes is being sponsored by the Liberal Arts Student Council. The contest is open to any A&M student, faculty member or employe. Deadline for entries is Dec. 13. For more information contact Karen Arrington at 845-5998, or P. O. Box 2096. Campus directory available The 1974-75 campus directory will he ready for distribution next week, said Information and Publications Director Jim Lindsey. Individual copies may be purchased at the Student Publications Office, Texas A&M Book Store, University Book Store and local banks. Copies for campus offices will he available at Student Publications, Lindsey said. Largest veteran group forming Veterans at Texas A&M will meet Wednesday to organize what they think will be the largest campus veterans group in the nation. “A group of 20 veterans met last Wednesday to discuss the formation of the organization,” said Guy Andrews, a sophomore business management major. “The veterans in attendance are among 1,010 former servicemen cur rently enrolled at A&M,” Andrews said. “Much optimism was displayed by those present concerning the prospects of such an organization on campus, since TAMU has one of the largest groups of veterans in the nation from which to draw new members for the club.’ The meeting Wednesday will he at 5 p.m. in room 216N of the MSC. Fraternity sponsors conference The Department of Accounting and the national professional fraternity of honor students in accounting (Beta Alpha Psi) is sponsoring a Graduate Accounting Conference Nov. 15-16 at Texas A&M. The theme of the conference is “Continuing Education: Your Firm and Your University” and will be held in the J. Earl Rudder Conference Center, beginning at 1 p.m. Panel discussions will center on the roles and relationships of firms and the university in continuing education programs, said a Beta Alpha Psi spokesman. These programs offer continuing professional development to accountants and to individuals with related occupations. Program to control animals Texas A&M will host the first “Animal Control Officers Training Prog ram Nov. 17 for six days. A 1974 survey of complaints shows dog and pet control is the No. 1 problem of city officials. It won hands down over traffic, taxes, crime, housing and drugs. Aggies.. SKATE Bring a Date . . . to POOH’S PARK SKATING RING :etball ?T eysau ii vMDUAL r lNG A ntioning iUR Rin c . jTILITIES RED |NG nir lectric iances We know a lot about a little thing at Richard Barton Volkswagen At Richard Barton Volkswagen in Bryan, College Station, the only cars we work °" Volkswagens Anc) when we re not working on them, we re learning about working on them S'"ce VW 5 Ion t change much every year, we don't have to learn new things 6 ° re we ve gotten good at the old things. Not only do w e know a lot abo, • a little thing we also know it's only a short ° nve . with little traffic . . from where you live to Richard Barton Volkswagen in College Station. RICHARD BARTON VOLKSWAGEN - AUDI I 70 I South College Avenue Bryan, Texas 77801 M author zid D £ A i ( W-l women to march in Cotton Bowl By KANAYA MAHENDRA Staff Writer “Girls will be in the March-in in the Cotton Bowl,” Lt. Theresa Holzmann, instructor and adviser to the women corps outfit, said in an address to the Women s Awareness Group, Thursday night in the Ar chitecture auditorium. Lt. Holzmann says the women in the corps will have their uniforms by January. Presently there are 42 women in the unit including 2 juniors, 10 sophomores and 30 freshmen. About 70 per cent of the women live off-campus. Lt. Holzmann said the women will have a dorm by next year. She projects that in six years there will be as many women as men in the corps. But Lt. Lotzmann commented “Women will not be al lowed in the band.” When asked how the men feel about women in the corps, Lt. Holzmann said, “The men have a good attitude, they are for it.” Lt. Holzmann added that 20 per cent of the men do not understand why women are in the corps. Lt. Holzmann explained the program the women in the corps follow. She said basically there is no difference, “Girls do everything the men do. ” In the first two years there is no commitment to be in the milit ary. In the sophomore year the women, if they wish, sign a con tract. The benefits of signing the con tract are: they receive uniforms at no cost and one hundred dollars every month after they start their junior year. Also, in summer camp they receive $400 plus travel ex penses and insurance benefits. ^ Sel&cltP A Decoupagt. SpfOJ^ pxciftts poslzfc fagaeDy Ami U-H-Le Rep itoh^Lhouse 3737 £. bu.ti one al rmJar , ess ei (W&htf u&lue^otr TCU Chi Omegas send greetings to the Dog Company juniors. Hello to Kathy G. .SAiaiaim CLIP & SAVE Mlllll'./ DEPARTMENT STORE IN MANOR EAST MALL TEXAS AT VILLA MARIA SIMULATED DIAMOND RINGS 7.99 to 8.99 THRU SATURDAY ONLY Limit2 with this ad. Written Guarantees If set in genuine diamonds these rings may cost $100 to $200. Come in, compare with your genuine. See if you can tell the difference. You’ll be surprised, delighted and amazed. Many wealthy people keep their real diamonds in the vault and wear these and their friends don’t know the difference. wmmmmmmmffimt (Hwy. 6 across from water tower) Sixteen 2-hour Sessions each week. Open Thursday - Sunday WHOLESOME & HEALTHFUL ENTERTAINMENT 846-5737 846-57361 r . & is a coijjpj ^ selerte auo^^nVowu--' a ‘ ireSU ..„ ,a, 9 e . _ ,. e , h *ere toOaV * at ‘ m ues* YOU 9® .| e D> '» o8 . p :«rt\ the cru*' ^ ch \cKeo ' every Bo* 0,0 0 aKe<‘*'«'V e a a '^. "»«• P UI V 9 . incWded’" ® , e cipe- oo»a' oesS x a v P' us 3 r* e ? ea JL n ed»' on ' e ' n ... U in IQPQ. » * CLOSE TO YOU