atii by-riding at 4,500feet backseat of a T34 B THE BATTALION Page 7 WEDNESDAY, MAR. 31, 1976 four barf bag is in this pocket in the advrj'ent you get airsick during the hilariouslt Woods and Y- Theirai i the wiclal I) provided 'inents facial expai ief and coi — while i s face small »h and Dwi said the Navy pilot. I checked the straps and harnes- his passenger from A& M to be the Aggie was seated in the it properly. je pilot seated himself in the seat of the cockpit. Letters on ick of his yellow flight helmet out BOO. |flie plane took off from Easter- Airport and headed up to do atic stunts. plane was a 19-year old T34 B ing plane, the model the Navy :o train pilots. 4,500feet, the pilot said the fun hout to start. plane performed a Cuban Ballistic flight, inverted and a barrel roll. It rolled and dand went into an attack dive. Finally the plane landed at Eas- terwood and a mixture of relief and disappointment clouded the emo tions of the applicant. He was re lieved to be on the ground and dis appointed that the flight had ended in only 20 minutes. The plane was at Easterwood in conjunction with a Navy Aviation and recruiting team located behind the Memorial Student Center this past Monday through Thursday. The recruiters were Lts. Wally Brians and Steven Booher. They said the plane flight was to find if the applicant enjoys, tolerates or doesn’t like Navy aviation. They also said the Navy does not have enough ROTCs to provide all the manpower needed, so they go to four-year universities to recruit for the Navy and ROTC. — Carl Key Printer sued for ad AMERICA S FAVORITE PIZZA Share a Our regular Si .89 Spaghetti Dinner with meatsauce, served in true Italian style with garden fresh salad and garlic toast. today... INo. 2 Pizza Inn of Bryan Nextto Bryan High 1803 Greenfield Plaza No. 1 Pizza Inn of College Station 413 Texas Ave. . ■ |entennial professors visit, speak on campus this week isicagreei lich the opposed s hammf ction y’s effe viet pacts veapons teij ons. figure is« ; of dynai that (M d Press 4 — The.— w jU larvard sociologist Dr. Daniel indergiW terme( d a neo-conservative who changeforii isn t believe the system is work- ocrican Is i w 'llbeatTexas A&M University irsday and Friday as a visiting ini.stn.fai tennial professor { \iihii 1 ^ latest dook Cultural is meet! 'tradictions of Capitalism’ was iewed simultaneously by Time Newsweek magazines, will make appearance at 8 p.m. Thursday Great Issues address. 10a.m. Friday, he will conduct ture on modes of social forecast- in room 226 of Evans Library, sored by the College of Liberal Is and Sociology-Anthropology Ipartment. ell is the author of such other iks as “Toward the Year 2000” “Confrontation” (1961), larxian Socialism in the United Ites” (1960), “The End of Ideol- T (1960) and “The Radical Right” mathematics, he is a member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and has served on the faculty of Prince ton, Manchester and the Institute for Advanced Study. A local restaurant corporation has filed suit against the company which had originally contracted to publish this year’s A&M University direc tory. M&W Restaurants, Inc. filed the suit against B. P. Industries, Inc. (BPI) in Brazos County district court Stage bands prepare show Texas Aggie Concert and Stage Bands will present a spectrum of music Thursday in performances at the Rudder Auditorium. Sponsored by the Brazos County A&M Mothers Club, the 8 p.m. show will provide two hours of music. Tickets are $3 per family, $1.50 per adult and $1 a student. They are available at local banks and savings and loan institutions. ^lurquoise^Slipp MANOR EAST MALL PRICES FROM $6.00 — UP 10% AGGIE DISCOUNT WITH I.D. CARD OPEN 11:00 A.M. DAILY li t TYPIST.' RETARY." hr 16 0 ★★★ Dr, Paul Erdos will be back on the as A&M University campus be- ning Thursday for his second se- oflectures as a Visiting Centen- Professor of Mathematics, is first address will be to the an- meeting of the Texas section of Mathematical Association of - SATl# inenca on “Combinatorial Prob- sin Elementary Geometry” at 11 m. Friday (April 2) in room 701 of [dder Center. londay (April 5) he will present a itliematics colloquium on “Prob- s and Results In Set Theory” at 4 i. in room 206 of Francis Hall. Erdos’ final appearance will be an lository lecture to the university nmunity on “Child Prodigies In lathematics” at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday )ril 6) in room 100 of Harrington ucation Center. Dr. Erdos is currently a professor the University of Hamburg. The author of some 700 papers in ed ax. The Black Awareness Committee presents Black Experience VI April 4-10 Speakers, music, art, food, come experience it! /tep into the m/c circle 0AY >ECIAL d Be •earn oes and 3 othei le I and Bn 1 Tea Political Forum Presents Candidates for College Station School Board & City Council Thursday, April 1 6:45 p.m. Room 701 Rudder Tower ^ yesterday morning. In the suit, M&W Restaurants asked for return of the $1,120 the company says it paid BPI for advertising in the direc tory. BPI did not publish the directory because of financial difficulties. A&M student publications officials produced the book without advertis ing in March when BPI was unable to do so. A&M was not involved in any way with advertising for the book. The Battalion tried unsuccessfully several times over the last week to contact BPI president Harry Scaling on the suit. Scaling said in January he hoped to reimburse all advertisers if BPI would not be able to print the direc tory. BPI collected about $14,500 from local merchants for advertising in the directory. GQEQE10CTl7 G* o o 0D case GeraraoTOBu GREAT ISSUES presents 11 THE NATURE OF MAN: PART II” speaks on THURSDAY, APRIL 1 8:00 P.M. RUDDER THEATER /tep Into the m/c circle ADMISSION: FREE w/Activity Cards $1.00 Others 0