The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 31, 1976, Image 5

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    ling for positions for Graduate Student
juncil is now open. You may pick up an
plication in Room 216 of the MSC (see
ida, the Student Government secretary),
forms must be returned by 5:00 p.m.
Friday, April 2. Filing will close at 5:00
i., April 2. Elections will be held April 7
[id 8. If you have any questions, please
Sandy at 845-2646.
umber of Positions Open in each College:
Agriculture (4)
Science (2)
Liberal Arts (2)
Education (2)
Engineering (3)
Business (1)
Architecture (1)
Veterinary Medicine (1)
Geosciences (1)
Wallace confronted hy hecklers
THE BATTALION Page 5
WEDNESDAY, MAR. 31, 1976
(Continued from page 1)
“Free Artie Bremer.”
The incident prompted an apology from
Gov. Patrick J. Lucey, but Wallace said
that wasn’t necessary.
“The governor doesn’t owe me an apol
ogy because the people here have been
good to me for many years,” Wallace said
later in Janesville. He referred to heavy
votes he got in previous Wisconsin
primaries.
Later, as Jackson approached an airport
fence lined with spectators, moisture
struck him in the face and Secret Service
personnel hustled away a young man.
“Water. Junk,” Jackson remarked. His
news secretary Brian Corcoran, said it was
spit.
Jackson’s airport detractors shouted slo
gans critical of the military aircraft industry
in his home state of Washington.
In Milwaukee, Jackson said he expects to
make a good showing in Wisconsin, while
Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz., predicted he
would win the same day in New York.
Carter, in Bloomington, Minn., said it is
unlikely he will win New York’s primary.
But he said he will reach the Democratic
National Convention this summer with
1,000 or more delegates — of the 1,505
needed — and will win the nomination on
the first ballot.
There were these other developments
on the political front Tuesday:
— The House in Washington approved
and sent to the Senate a measure to allow
government employees to participate in
partisan political activities. The House
then took up a bill to restore the Federal
Ejection Commission’s power to disburse
public funds for presidential campaigns.
— A judge in Lincoln, Neb., ruled that
Sens. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachu
setts and Hubert H. Humphrey of Min
nesota, despite their disclaimers, will not
be able to remove their names from the
ballot for Nebraska’s May 11 Democratic
primary.
— Rep. F. Edward Hebert, D-La.,
former chairman of the House Armed Ser
vices Committee, said he will not run for
re-election this year. The 75-year-old
Hebert is the fourth-ranking House
member in seniority.
— Reagan apparently lost a bid to run a
statewide slate of delegate candidates for
the Republican convention delegates in
Ohio’s June 8 primary. Harold Holzworth,
chairman of the Franklin County Board of
Elections, said the board eliminated 263
signatures from Reagan’s delegate peti
tions, putting the number of eligible
signers under the required 1,000.
Twenty-eight delegates to next sum
mer’s GOP convention will be elected in
statewide voting in Ohio, with another 67
elected in congressional district races. Re
agan has slates entered in many of the con
gressional districts, and they apparently
were not affected.
■>&:
Women’s rights
discussed
Are you being discriminated
against because of your sex when you
look for a job? What can you do about
it if you are? (Besides changing your
sex?)
Women’s legal rights were dis
cussed by a six-member panel of
speakers yesterday at the Women’s
Career Conference. The conference
is being held this week in the Uni
versity Center.
Ken Livingston, Affirmative Ac
tion officer here at A&M, offered
some guidelines to be used in de
termining if there is sex discrimina
tion. A pamphlet by the United
States Equal Employment Oppor
tunity Commission was distributed
to illustrate those guidelines. They
were: )1 labeling a job as a man’s or a
woman’s, 2) discrimination against
hiring married women but not mar
ried men, 3) pre-employment in
quiries as to sex used for discrimina
tory purposes for women, 4) dis-
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crimination between men and
women with regard to fringe bene
fits, and 5) the benefits and
privileges, reinstatement, and pay
ment under any sick-leave plan
should also be true for pregnancy or
childbirth on the same terms as they
are applied to other temporary dis
abilities.
Livingston said that if a woman
feels she has been discriminated
against during a job interview she
may call or write the Equal Oppor
tunity Commission or contact her
own attorney.
Lou Van Pelt, director of A&M
career planning and placement, in
troduced the other four members of
the panel.
Most companies really do want to
be law abiding, said Shirley Ann
Smith, supervisor for employment
and placement for Transcontinental
Gas Pipeline Corporation out of
Houston.
Richard Morse, recruitment rep
resentative for Shell Companies out
of Houston, said Shell hired 52 per
cent women and minorities last year,
32 per cent being women.
Paula Smith, personnel services
administrator for Dresser Industries
in Houston, is recruiting women for
sales engineering.
6
West campus
Features Mall
By RANDY DUSEK
The Soil and Crop Sciences and
Entomology Center and the Animal,
Poultry and Food Sciences Center,
part of the West Campus addition,
are called the finest of any agricul
tural college in the United States by
Dr. L. S. Pope, associate dean of
Agriculture.
Neuhas and Taylor of Houston de
signed the Animal, Poultry and Food
Sciences Center which will be a
poured-in-place concrete structure
with a mall in the center. With
165,000 square feet, it will include
an auditorium seating 350 people,
more than a dozen class and seminar
rooms and offices for the staffs of the
Animal Science and the Poultry Sci
ence departments.
It will also contain 45 laboratories
for research into animal nutrition,
genetics and immunology, meat sci
ence and physiology. The Animal
Science and Poultry Science Exten
sion Specialists will use the building
as a base for their statewide pro
grams.
The Soil and Crop Sciences and
Entomology Center designed by
Harrell and Hamilton of Dallas, will
feature two parallel units which will
connect and form a mall with over
head walkways bridging them.
This 153,000 square foot building
will contain the Soil and Crop Sci
ences Department which researches
agronomy and soil conservation and
the Entomology Department which
researches insect control. Nearly 85
per cent of this building will be de
voted to laboratories for teaching and
research.
Extension specialists from the Ag
ronomy Department and the En
tomology Department will conduct
research and coordinate statewide
activities from this building.
The structures were designed to
conserve energy. The air condition
ing system will accommodate 100
per cent outside air when the
weather permits free cooling.
Pope said that placing the build
ings on the west side of the campus
closer to the vet school and other
centers will make it easier to coordi
nate research.
TRY
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
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