AGGIE CINEMA Popular Film Series presents The Odd Couple starring Matthau and Lemmon (G) "funniest domestic battle of the century’ Nov. 14 Rudder Theater Midnite Showing $1.00 Advance Tickets Available at Box Office AGGIE CINEMA Popular Film Series presents Allbucn 'Or Class On 11 i \m si Ci i vi s i si i vi v (PG) . . one of the most satisfying and well crafted movies of the year.” Charles Champlin, LOS ANGELES TIMES Nov. 14 & 15 Rudder Theater Academy Award Winner, Best Actress Glenda Jackson. 8 p.m. $1.00 Advance Tickets Available at Box Office ENJOY AN EVENING OF Comedy and Music When STAGECENTER T3 Presents The AN* iOBOUSEU^, November 13, 14, 15 & 20, 21, 22 8:00 P.M. 3100 S. College ADULTS $2.50 STUDENTS $1.50 Marilyn Home, Soprano Rudder Center Auditorium 8:00 P.M. Thurs. Nov. 20 Tickets - Regular 6.75, Tickets & information avail- 5.70, 4.60 able at MSC Box Office A&M Student 5.00, 4.50, 845-2916. 3.70 /tep into the m/c circle Presented by OP AS Energy options needed by US Rv FRTC TJNDOUIST inti Friday. THE BATTALION TUESDAY, NOV. 11, 1975 Page 3 By ERIC LINDQUIST Battalion Staff Writer The United States must have energy options open for it can no longer depend on a narrow base of dwindling resources, reported Dr. Robert C. Seamans. Seamans, Administrator of the Energy Research and Development Administration, said that the nation will have to increase its reliance on coal, “including lignite that is around here.” The coal industry, which today furnishes less than a fifth of our energy requirements, said Sea mans, should be able to double its 600 million tons per year production by 1985. He spoke at the annual A&M Research Foundation meet- i: 11 a ^^^46-6714 & 846-1151 4 UNWtRSm SQUARt SHOPPING CENTtRM CINEMA twjHoLyOH^iLi FROM CINEMA 5 .'Ere] 6:35, 8:10 « 9:45 BETTER ASK HER OUT - QUICK. CINEMA WINNER! ACADEMY > AWARDS JOSEPH e.LEVINe AN AVCO EMBASSY FILM PeieR KATHARIN6 010016 H6PBURN LAST 3 DAYS! 6:45 A 9:10 m * MARTIN POLL Prvuction [SB] TH€ LION IN WINT6R ing Friday. “VHe must look beyond coal to meet our future energy needs,” he said. “Some will be met ... by ex tracting oil from shale and tar sands, others by expanding geothermal and possibly wind systems.” Until the development of com mercially feasible solar electric, fu sion power and breeder reactor sys tems, the nation will have to rely heavily on nuclear power, he said. Seamans stressed the important energy role that universities play. The universities undertake basic re search and develop future scientific manpower, he said. The need for scientific manpower in energy- related fields is enormous, he ad ded. Increase noted in 3 diseases in October The Brazos County Health De partment reported that cases of in fluenza, strep throat and mononuc leosis took big jumps over last month s number of reported cases. One hundred cases of strep throat were reported in the county by health authorities during October, up from 52 cases in September. In fluenza cases numbered 74, an in crease of 61 cases from the previous month, and mononucleosis cases jumped from nine to 46. The health department reported 83 cases of gonorrhea, an increase of seven cases. Only two cases of syphilis were reported, the same number as last month. Other cases reported by the county include chicken pox, four; infectious hepatitis, four; menin gitis, one; mumps, one; and scarlet fever, two. Greg Martin (left), representing Black Awareness, and Roice Murcherson (right). representing the Arts Committee, talk with John Riggers. Staff photo by David McCarrol Africa’s relevance Rigger’s topic PEANUT GALLERY ORIGINAL EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT IS GIRLS’ NIGHT OUT ALL BAR DRINKS & BEER “A people do not lose in 300 years what they accomplished in 5000,” said black artist John Rig gers here Monday. Riggers was speaking on the relevance of Afri ca’s culture to America’s blacks. Riggers, head of the art de partment at Texas Southern Uni versity is currently exhibiting his works in the Rudder Center. He told a handful of students and fa culty that his six-month trip to Africa had been the most impor tant period in his life. Riggers is the author of Ananse, a book chronicling his trip to Africa. “Ananse means spider-web and represents the ordering of life. People don’t realize the great subtlety and deep meaning of Af rican life,” Riggers said. Riggers, born in Gastonia, North Carolina, also spoke of America’s contemporary sociological predicaments. He declared that the South was the birthplace of a new humanism and said that the South was also the cradle of American culture. “Whatever the strengths of the nation, it is here, in the South.” Throughout his talk, which was accompanied by slides, the idea of sense of place was pervasive. Riggers decried the fact that •ghetto children had no feel of the land and said that part of his job was to try to instill that feeling into his students. “Probably the most important form of art is pottery. It comes from the land. It is the land.” Movie spins yarn, angers Texas DPS Tuesday Nov. 18, 1975 8:00 p.m. Rudder Theater Tickets (no reserved seats) A&M Student free w/activity card Student Date 1 00 General Public 2.50 Tickets and information available at the MSC Box Office, first floor of Rudder Tower. Open 9-4 Monday-Friday. 845-2916. No cameras or recording equipment will be allowed. The Pennsylvania Ballet Associated Press AUSTIN — “Sugarland Ex-. press,” a critically acclaimed film, shown Saturday on NBC, is a good yarn but shouldn’t be taken as an accurate account of the events on which it was. .based. And the Texas Department of Public Safety is upset, to put it mildly, over the way in which it and its officers were portrayed in the movie. Evidently a number of Texans took the film as a factual account of the kidnaping of a state trooper in 1969. Col. Wilson Speir, DPS di rector, said his agency had been “flooded with phone calls.” The cal lers, he said, criticized the DPS for things that happened in the movie. “It is my belief that NBC did law enforcement in general, and the DPS in particular, a serious disser vice by broadcasting this film with out noting before and after that it was fiction,” Speir said in a state ment. The “Poplins” of the movie, shown by NBC stations Saturday night, were Robert Samuel Dent, 22, and his wife, Ila Faye, 21. They abducted Highway Patrolman J. Kenneth Crone on May 2, 1969, and used his car for a meandering six- hour, 300-mile drive through East Texas. According to newspaper stories and DPS records, Capt. Jerry Mil ler of Beaumont — the “Capt. Tan ner” of the movie — used patrol car radios to urge Dent to surrender. Dent refused, but at one point said he would free Crone unharmed if given a 15-minute head start so he could visit his children at his father- in-law’s house in Wheelock, near Bryan. Officers were waiting in the father-in-law’s house, into which Dent marched Crone with a shot gun at his back. As Crone passed a doorway, he saw someone, and ducked and rolled away. 3 Miles N.on Tabor Road n Saturday Night: Tommy Overstreet and the Nashville Express From 9-1 p.m. STAMPEDE Every Thursday Nile (ALL BRANDS BEER 35 cents) Every Tuesday Nite LADIES FREE All Brands Beer 35c 8-12 Music furnished by the Brazos Sounds. MEN $2.00 Robertson County Sheriff E. 3'. Elliott and FBI Agent Boh Wiatt ol Bryan opened fire. Eliott used a shotgun, and Wiatt used a pistol, the records show, and Dent was not wounded with a shot from a rifle with a telescopic sight from a dis tance of about 40 feet as depicted in the movie. Dent died in a Bryan hospital shortly after he was shot, not behind the wheel in a continuation of the chase. Records show the incident began when Dent fled from a Port Arthur police unit that had attempted to stop him for a traffic violation. Other officers joined the pursuit, but Dent’s car was lost near Winnie. Crone later answered a call from a ranch, saying two persons had been beaten by hitchhikers and needed help. When he arrived, Dent pulled a pistol and disarmed Crone. Miller located the car after it pas sed through Beaumont. With Crone driving, Dent fired three shots at Miller, DPS records show. The Dents and Crane, trailed by about 50 carloads of police and re porters wound through Beaumont, Houston, Dayton, Cleveland, Con roe, Navasota and Bryan before en ding their flight in Wheelock. A helicopter kept track of the fugitives position and radioed ahead that Dent was going to his father-in-law’s home. Nothing in the record supports the film version that Dent had es caped from Huntsville State Prison with help from his wife, that the couple spent a night of the chase in a motor home on a used car lot, where they were attacked by rifle-toting civilians, or that their whole object was to remove their baby from a foster home. A DPS spokesman said the film’s makers once showed the script to agency officials, who said it was in accurate. “They changed the script somewhat, but never came back,” he said. The DPS cars shown in the film were surplus “clunkers” that the producers of the movie obtained by bidding high when the vehicles were auctioned off, the spokesman said. Miller is now a major and regional commander of the highway patrol at Houston. Crone,27 at the time of his abduc tion, remains on the force as a high way patrolman stationed at Winnie, near Beaumont. Mrs. Dent was sent to prison Sept. 10, 1969, after being con victed on charges of forgery and armed robbery. Tickets Regular - 8.00, 6.75, 5.60 A&M Student - 6.40, 5.40, 4.40 Tickets and info available MSC BOX OMce 845-2910. /tep Into the m/c circle ' Presented by OPAS QJMiMMMMilMMMOOQMQQOQQQQQQ^l TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY ^ TOWN HALL PRESENTS Linda Ronstadt Bonfire Special Attraction Wednesday Nov. 26, 1975 G. Rollie White Coliseum Everyone must buy a ticket. Tickets Reserved seats $4.50 General Admission A&M Student/date $2.50 General Public $3.50 Tickets and informatton available at MSC Box Office, first floor of the Rudder Tower. Open 9-4 Monday-Friday. 845-2916. No cameras or recording equipment will be allowed.