Page 4 THE BATTALION FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1975 Elephants fight it out Elephant Bowl tickets go on sale Monday at TAMU. The football game matching Corps of Cadets elements gives the Air Force a shot at the Army-Navy-Marines and benefits the Brazos Valley Rehabilitation Center. The contest is scheduled at 4 p.m. March 1 in Kyle Field, after the Military Day review. Tickets at $1 each will be sold at a booth in the first floor Memorial Student Center Hall. They, will also be available through Corps unit rep resentatives. Photogs photo ferns Camera Committee members are readying lenses and lights for the annual Model Night meeting Monday. Four members of Mam’selles in the Host and Fashion Committee will be subjects for the photographic session of the Memorial Student Center committee. The 7:30 p.m. meeting will be in room 301 of the Rudder Tower. Non-member students and faculty-staff are invited. Three studio setups, including one for portraits, will be provided by the MSC committee. ARCO president coming The College of Business Administration is sponsoring a University Lecture Series presentation by Dr. Thornton F. Bradshaw Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the Rudder Theater. Bradshaw, president of Atlantic Richfield Co., is to speak on “The World in Change — A Crisis of Choice. His admission-free address will encompass population growth, energy shortages and the need for worldwide capital formation to meet social needs. No seeds for new plants A University of California plant scientist, whiHias developed a new seedless plant propagation method, will lecture Feb. 19 at TAMU. He is Dr. Toshio Munydiige, speaking on “Agricultural Significance of Plant and Organ Culture Methods at 3:30 p.m. in room 207 of the Harring ton Center. ASSE discusses safety Regional members of the American Society of Safety Engineers will gather at TAMU Monday for a three-day symposium on optimum design safety equipment and working environments. The areas the conference will cover range from preliminary hazard analysis to techniques for human error rate prediction. Friedman fuss at SCONA (Continued from p. 1) had a very limited role. Its role was to set the rules of the game. “Beginning in the 1930’s, we adopted the view that the govern ment was Big Brother, and that the solution to every problem that was to be found was passing the buck particularly in Washington,” con tinued Friedman. “A commonly held belief is that inflation is one of our greatest prob lems today,” he said. Tnfaltion, however, is not the problem, it is the outcome of hidden taxation. “Citizens say to the govenment, ‘Spend more money and tax less. This cannot be done, so government resorts to inflation, the hidden tax. It is simply taxation without rep resentation. “The trend of the last 40 years will not continue for another 40, I trust. There is a growing realization among citizens that government is not an effective instrument for achieving our fundamental objec tives. I feel there is also a growing disillusionment. It is almost impos sible to name any past government program which someone has some thing good to say about. But some seem to feel that all past laws are bad Embrey’s Jewelry We Specialize In Agfirie Rings. Diamonds Set— Sizing— Reoxidizing— AH types watch/jewelry Repair Aggie Charge Accounts 9-5:30 846-5816 and all future laws are good,” he said. Friedman concluded by warning the audience that government has an inherent tendency to grow, and that Americans are facing the be ginning of the end of all their free dom, in facing the end of free enter prise. Following a standing ovation, Friedman then spent 20 minutes in a question and answer session. If you have a refund coming and file a correct income tax return in January or early February, you should get the refund in four or five weeks. Internal Revenue Service SCONA XX Grant sees change James P. Grant, the president of the Overseas Development Coun cil, warned a SCONA XX audience here Thursday that Americans can expect a radical change in their lifes tyles resulting from inevitable economic change. He said that within the next 25 years economic policy will be geared to worldwide distribution of goods. This, he contended, will re sult in a major change in patterns of consumption for Americans. power will shift toward resource- rich countries, with developing na tions wanting to get into the world market on a more equal basis. "Of all die industrial countriei the world, the U.S. has beenp responsive to needs of other m tions,” he said. Rebates increase car sales but industry slump still present Photo by Douglas Winship James P. Grant, first on SCONA agenda Thursday. Grant has been president and chief executive officer for the Over seas Development Council since its conception in 1969. The Council is a non-profit center for study, re search, analysis and education. “In many ways we are at the point oi change, change resembling the in dustrial revolution. Grant told the Rudder Theater audience. The former assistant adminis trator for the Agency for Interna tional Development (AID) said DETROIT (AP) — New car sales strengthened in late January, as cash rebate plans and a strong show ing by General Motors spurred auto deliveries an estimated 42 percent above mid-January levels. But the unusual discounting moves apparently failed to lift the ailing industry out of its worst slump since World War II, sales figures from three of the four major auto makers indicated Tuesday. Total January sales were esti mated at 456,600, a 17 percent drop from a disappointing 550,907 during the fuel shortage-plagued month of January 1974. The latest monthly figures w the lowest for a January since 11 and marked the 16th consecutin month that deliveries have laggal beyond the year-ago levels. Total sales in the final 10 days) January for the Big Four of GU, Chrysler, American Motors ad Ford were put at 232,(XX), alOpe cent decline from 257,794 the ytu before. , The daily selling rate of23,OOOia the latest period compared nil 16,391 in midmonth, when salt! were up 41 percent from the eaili January pace. isn LAUMRKiA KIN© DRIVE I AVXCAD06 DETERGENT 1 5'T* &o?< 1 Snouidrifi -fUkevEeETABLe |lmff i, Wlffi pouhae • U/WIT1 WITH COUPON • one couroN rgR family) • Goop ONLY AT K-AVNRt/ 30 f of L^WI^-t-COKKXR / Wlth+fr'5 •EXPIRES z-iv-ns / coupon o^QKPFors 2 pm&nofer feWRTNES^KM 0 - 0 IZCmsES-nseuE B4& WhbSush yhllovvonions HN& downy Bufferiisj clf^PpirFRUIT ^iUh^TICKS “ PANKTOU F&VRS 29* Bp&ffizPSHRIMP && mFFS= BAKING -S42E U S #1 ( .^OFrCHIFTON ! 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