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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 19, 1975)
bbbSHUGART coupon Gibson Discount Center 1420 Texas Avenue FRIDAY & SATURDAY MARCH 21 & 22 9 WALLET SIZE COLOR PORTRAITS .♦**»*» 994 ASK % f Abcxji Our + I IFIliSIE 1 Extra charge \Q x 10/ Bob Rogers THE BATTALION Page 7 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1975 New department head named for journalism ^ OFFER V for GROUPS Take a few minutes to bring your bicycle in for service. WE SERVICE ALL MAKES OF BICYCLES Also Sales Center For: PEUGEOT • RALEIGH • BICYCLES Bicycle parts & accessories CENTRAL CYCLE & SUPPLY Sales • Service • Accessories 3505 E. 29th St. — 822-2228 — Closed Monday Take East University to 29th St. (Tarrow Street) ANNOUNCEMENT ' WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY 1 COLLEGE OF LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST LAW SCHOOL FULLY ACCREDITED BY THE COMMITTEE OF BAR EXAMINERS OF THE STATE BAR OF CALIFORNIA OFFERS A CHOICE OF FOUR PROGRAMS OF LAW STUDY: • IN EITHER 21/2 or 3 YEARS of FULL-TIME law study (15-16 classroom hours per week), or • IN EITHER 31/2 or 4 YEARS of PART-TIME day, evening, or weekend law study (3 classes per week, 3-4 hours per class), • You can earn your JURIS DOCTOR (J.D.) degree and become eligible to fake the CALIFORNIA BAR EXAMINA TION. WRITE FOR CATALOGUE Dept. 106 1111 North State College Blvd. Fullerton, CA 92631 (Coordinate Campus, Provisionally Accredited, at 1333 Front St. San Diego, CA 92101) FALL SEMESTER BEGINS AUGUST 28, 1975 ALL PROGRAMS ALSO START IN JANUARY 1976 STUDENTS ELIGIBLE FOR FEDERALLY INSURED STUDENT LOANS I APPROVED FOR VETERANS I Assoc. Prof. Bob G. Rogers has been named the new head of the journalism department and chair man of the Student Publications Board. Rogers, who rejoined the TAMU journalism faculty last fall, will be come department head Sept. 1, the start of the new school year. He will assume his new responsibilities as chairman of the seven-member pol icy board for the student newspaper and yearbook April 1. He succeeds C. J. “Skip” Leabo as departmenthead. Leabo announced last month plans to devote full time to Aggie Band will march three times Texas Aggie Bands don’t march much more this spring, but there are gtill many chances to see them per form. The Texas Aggie Band has three marchingengagementsleft. Itwillbe in the April 20 Parents’ Day review, marches in the Battle of Flowers Parade in San Antonio April 25 and leads the May 10 Final Review. Theconcert andstage bands willgo onstage in AustinApril 4, foran A&M Mothers Club-sponsored show. Thepace will remain lively the rest of the semester, for the three bands and Maj. Joe Haney, Aggie band director. He will be in Edinburg April 15-16 to judge UIL Class AAA and AAAA concert band contests. The director has similar respon sibilities April 22-24 in Woodville. In between, he will take the stage band to the Bryan Civic Auditorium for a Bryan Library Association- sponsored concert. It is planned for April 18. Also on the April 20 Parents’ Day, the concert band will present a public-free show at the Rudder Center. The Aggie Band performs as a group in the April 21 Aggie Muster. Along with the April 25 San- Antonio parade and May 10 wrap-up of the 1974-75 school year, the stage band will play for a Corps of Cadets dance planned in April and a spring athletic social event. teaching and research within the de partment. Jim Lindsey, University News Service director, currently s erves as chair man ofth e publications board. “We are contemplating a proposal to seek eventual expansion MONDAY GRADUATE LECTURE will be presented by Dr. Martin Gibbs, head of the biology department at Brandeis University in Massachusetts at 4 p. m. in room 207 of the Harrington Education Center. STUDENTS CONCERNED FOR THE HAND ICAPPED meets at 7:30 p.m. in room 231 of the MSC. DR. GEORGE KNOX of the University of Caterhury in New Zealand will speak at a seminar in room 112ofthe O&M Building at 3:30 p.m. His topic is “The Distribution of the Benthic Fauna of the New Zealand Region.” TUESDAY AGGIE CINEMA meeting will be in the conference room of the MSC at 7 p.m. NURSING SOCIETY will meet in room 504 of the Rudder Tower at 7 p.m. Ann Hazen will speak on the Planned Parenthood program and the role oi the nurse practitioner. GREAT IS SU ES will present Louis Rukeyser at 8 p. m. in room 601 of the Rudder Tower. WEDNESDAY CONTINUING EDUCATION WORKSHOP will be presented at 3 p.m. in the Rudder Tower. MSC BRIDGE COMMITTEE meets for a tourna ment at 7 p.m. in room 228 of the MSC. Bob G. Rogers of our journalism department into a school of communications which would involve all the media,” said David Maxwell, dean of the College of Liberal Arts. “Professor Rogers, with his academic and newspaper back ground, is the ideal person to provide theleadershipforsuchan endeavor,” the dean added. Prior to returning to TAMU last fall, Rogers taught journalism for four years at the University of Wyoming and was department head the last three years. He taught here from 1968 until 1970 while studying for a master’s degree in political science. The 47-year-old native of Waco previously compiled 22 years as a working journalist, the last four as managing editor of the Austin American-Statesman. He joined the American-Statesman in 1952 after five full years and three summers on the Waco News-Tribune and Times-Herald. He received his undergraduate degree at the University of Texas at Austin. Pamittsiimi Drawing workshop A drawing workshop will feature Kirby Lockard of the University of Arizona next week. The presentation of the author, architect and professor is a part of the artist-in-residence program of the College of Architecture. Itwillbeheldin Architecture West (theolduniversity hospital) duringthe mornings and in the Architecture Building in the afternoon Monday through Friday. Lockard willpresentaspeciallectureMondayat4p.m. in the Architecture Auditorium. OPAS membership open Students may apply to be members of the student committee of OPAS in the Student Programs Office beginning Monday. After completing the application form, students must sign up for an interview. No applications will be taken after 5 p.m. April 4. Science fiction conference Aggie -Con VI is planned for March 28-30. The three-day science fiction convention at the Rudder Center is an annual offering of the Cepheid Variables committee of Memorial Student Center committee. Speakers will be Larry Niven, Howard Waldrop, Joe Pumilia, LisaTuttle and Steven Utley. ClassicSF movies willbeshown. They include” West World,’’Fahrenheit 451,” “Dr. Strangelove,” “Andromeda Strain,” “Forbidden Planet,” “Mys terious Island,” “First Men in the Moon” and “Colossus — The Forbin Project. Tickets to all three daysofAggie-Con events are$2perperson. They can be obtained at the Rudder Center box office. Rukeyser to speak Great Issues will present Louis Rukeyser, journalist and author, next week. Rukeyser, the host ofPBS’s Wall Street Week, will speak on “The World and your Money.” The presentation will be Tuesday in the Rudder Tower, room 601, at 8 p.m. fried A^ken 110 Dominik Drive, College Station, 693-2611 3320 Texas Avenue, Bryan, 846-3238 Join (he third biggest family in fhe world. Imagine an order of 22,000 priests and brothers in 73 countries around the world. (That’s a pretty big family.) But that’s what the Saiesians of St. John Bosco are all about — a large family of community-minded men dedicated to the service of* youth. (And no one gets lost.) In Italy in the 1800’s a chance meeting between a poor priest and a street urchin served to create a movement of such success that it is still^growing today. Don Bosco became the priest who brought youth back from the streets — and back to God. . . He reasoned that a program of play, learn and pray would make useful citizens of the world. He crowded out evil with reason, religion and kindness in a (what was then unheard of) atmosphere of family. The ideals of St.John Bosco are still with us today. His work goes on in boys clubs, technical and academic schools, guidance centers, summer camps and missions. And his very human approach is very evident in the family spirit of the Saiesians. This is the way he wanted it. This is the way it is. The Salesian experience isn’t learned — it’s lived. 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