THE BATTALION THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1977 ^TJovernment energy exhibit o appear at Texas A&M 5S INCOti? Energy,” a free exhibit that will at Texas A&M University March 2, will deal with the energy situ- ion and what is being done to sure that the nation has adequate re energy supplies. *The exhibit comes to A&M from U. S. Energy Research and De velopment Administration and is being sponsored by the Center for Energy and Mineral Resources here. “Energy” will be located im mediately west of the Kyle Field stadium in parking lot 62. It will be open to all interested persons ay n, ir Iter j districts 1 lehadfiW zen is iber from! 'audillojr, yce ‘ nayor. U Place 1,1: 3 and Gy 5. Smitki ts. OLYMPIC AUTOMOTIVE I it 6 awrvrtre {reffttay ^ MODERN SHOP QUALIFIED PERSONNEL Tune-Up Accuracy-AUTOSCAN Electronic Analyzer Electrical System Diagnosis & Repair Front End Repairs and Precision Alignment Complete Brake Service Air Conditioning System Check and Repairs Official State Inspection Station SPECIAL THRU FEBRUARY TUNE-UP V-8 $32.95 ALIGN FRONT END $10.95 3510 EAST 29th ST. NEAR BRYAN HIGH SCHOOL 779-8685 Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Two 50-foot trailers will house animated exhibits, films and visitor-operated consoles. Two sci ence instructors will be available to answer questions. All types of energy currently in use will be covered by the exhibit, along with possible future energy sources, giving visitors an overall picture of the nation’s energy prob lems and their effect on America’s standard of living. Several exhibits will depict how synthetic natural gas can be ob tained from the nation’s huge coal reserves. Another exhibit will show how petroleum may be obtained from the processing of oil shale. Still other exhibits will deal with solar heat collection, geothermal electric power generation and nuclear power reactors. Besides exhibits, there will be several question-and- answer consoles where visitors can measure their “energy quotients.” The exhibit is operated for ERDA by Oak Ridge Associated Universi ties, a nonprofit education and re search organization of colleges and universities, which includes A&M. Fight cancer with a checkup and a check. American Cancer Society ^ THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY ThE PUBLISHER Page 3. Top of the News Campus THE STUDENT Publications Board is accepting applications for summer and fall editorships of The Battalion and for 1977-78 editor ships of the Aggieland. Applications may be obtained at the Student Publications office, 216 Reed McDonald Building. Application deadline is 5 p.m. Tuesday, March 22, and forms should be returned to 301 Reed McDonald. Qualifications for The Battalion and Aggieland editors are 2.0 overall and major GPR. The Battalion editor must have at least one year of experience in a responsible editorial position on The Battalion or comparable news paper, or at least 12 hours of jour nalism. The Aggieland editor must have been in a responsible staff pos ition on the Aggieland or equivalent yearbook for at least one year. Texas WINDS calmed enough last night to allow firefighters to contain a range fire which has burned hun dreds of thousands of acres of ranch land in the Southwest Texas county of Schliecher, south of San Angelo. There were no reports of injuries and no homes had been destroyed, said the county’s sheriffs deputy. High winds pushed the fire across the northeast part of the county and into some neighboring counties. More than 100 persons were fight ing the blaze. OFFICIALS in Port Aransas today are awaiting information about a Robert Johnson being held in the Virgin Islands, but held little hope that the Johnson in custody was the same one being sought for grain theft in Texas. The arrest was learned from a police inspector in the Latin American country of Be lize, where Johnson once had busi ness dealings. Johnson, 43, of Iowa Park disappeared Jan. 3 during a fishing trip in the Gulf of Mexico. Since his disappearance, authorities have investigated Johnson’s grain businesses and determined at least a half million bushels of grain were missing. THE RIO Grande Valley is being affected by the nation’s weird winter, with one section of the area suffering an overabundance of water at the same time another part is fac ing a severe shortage. Because of inadequate snowpack in the mountains which feed the Rio Grande, El Paso has a shortage of water as the April 1 cotton planting season approaches. At the same time in the Brownsville-Harlingen- McAllen area, farmers have had to delay cotton planting because of too much rain. National PROJECT Viking scientists are beginning to think seriously about sending a roving robot to Mars in 1984, as a result of President Car ter’s encouraging request for more money for exploration. The Presi dent’s amended space agency budget proposal asked Congress to add $10 million to the $5 million al ready in the proposed 1978 spend ing plan. AFL-CIO President George Meany received private assurance from the President this week that labor will not be affected by the anti-inflation program which will monitor wage increases. However, administration economist Charles Schultze yesterday continued to de fend the need for the program. Car ter’s anti-inflation program has changed dramatically since his cam paign, when he promised to seek standby authority for wage-price controls and a mandatory system requiring advance notice of wage or price increases. LESS COFFEE will be drunk by Americans even if the price goes down. Ever since 1964, the last time there was a jump in coffee prices, consumption has declined in the United States on a per-person basis. Young people in particular are downing more soft drinks, perhaps even wine and beer, where their predecessors drank coffee. These thoughts about the future of coffee drinking were expressed by coffee sellers during two days of congressional hearings into why the price of coffee has tripled. BARGE operations carryng farm commodities down the Mississippi River system are back to normal fol lowing a winter freeze, said Jack Lambert, president of Twin City Barge and Towing, St. Paul, Minn. Icing problems which developed in January “have pretty well dissi pated” with the return of warmer weather, he said. DIPLOMATIC ties between the! United States and Cuba are contin gent on at least two things: Cuba must present “tangible evidence of the reestablishment of basic human rights,” and indicate it will not carry out any more “overseas adventures’’ such as sending troops to Angola, said President Carter in his news conference yesterday. World TWO SOVIET cosmonauts! finished their mission in space today and prepared to return to Earth after an unusually brief 17-day stay aboard the Salyet 5 space station. The cosmonauts were reported to be feeling well, according to the Tass news agency. UGANDA President Idi Amin says he has put down a military up rising backed by “Zionists and im perialists” and foiled a coup plan al legedly involving U.S., British or Israeli paratroopers. i'ue United States called the allegations “ab surd.” Amin’s comment on Uganda Radio yesterday was the first gov ernment acknowledgement of internal unrest following the mys terious death last week of the archbishop and two high-ranking of ficials. Amin said “some people” had been killed in the uprising fomented by rebel officers. Petal Patch TEXAS 707 846-6713 Across from A&M SWING INTO SPRING WITH FLOWERS Corsages and Boutonnieres Junior Ball 1 Flowers wired everywhere ice mil hostess : the link ns. I also* O'Rear. I Table T nows whok involved« ,t thesm on ts here tf ;reat event you can;i enior tobei vent. ; your best :ion. Bussell's ND Roon try Ce nfe ' an cem s«< CIA - WATERGATE - THE SYNDICATE - FBI MARTIN LUTHER' KING - OSWALD - JFK - RFK CARL OGLESBY JIM KOSTMAN MARCH 1,2,3 RUDDER COMPLEX LECTURES n* SEMINARS STUDENT: 50< $1 FOR ALL THREE DAYS NONSTUDENT: 75< $1.50 Tickets are available at the Box Office before each speech. POLITICAL FORUM PRESENTS: POLITICS OF CONSPIRACY TUESDAY, MARCH 1 TOPIC LOCATION 9:30 - 11:00 CIA and Covert Action 224 MSC 12:30- 2:00 FBI Counterintelligence Programs 224 MSC 4:00 - 6:00 Recent Record and Current / Domestic Intelligence THEATRE 6:00 - 7:00 Reception 205 MSC WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2 9:00 - 11:00 Lee Harvey Oswald 224 MSC 1:00- 3:00 Garrison Case in New Orleans 224 MSC 3:00 - 5:00 Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King 224 MSC 8:00 Who Killed JFK? AUDITORIUM 9:00 Reception 205 MSC THURSDAY, MARCH 3 9:30 - 11:00 Hughes, Rockefeller, and the Syndicate 701 Tower 12:30- 2:00 Yankee/Cowboy Conflict in the Kennedy Administration 701 Tower 3:30 - 5:00 James McCord and Dorothy Hunt 701 Tower 8:00 Yankee/Cowboy Theory of American Politics 601 Tower 9:00 Reception 205 MSC