The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 20, 1977, Image 5

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    THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY. APRIL 20, 1977
/hich aecommoi
jntains special
nent to aid inset
ss said it was esp
would be closed
loney was spenj
ess said there
>r office space and,
>od location, St
i are plans to
for office space
;n’t a big dorm,
se a large numl
t it’s very importt
who do live tie
) live there,"
e Soil & CropSj
slogy Building
ipus will cost ap|
million. The sir
six large classn
Liditoriums, 66tei
iculty offices, Inse
jerature can be
plant and genet
ourtyard occupiei
building,
ice from the Acai
he Soil & Crop Sis
10 farther than tbi
G. Rollie White
■hry, McCandless
Denice Harrell, j
economics major,
clings on west cat
vay.
1 for having the
side of campus stai
is under consider
ntes inbetweencle
uld be able to
ass on time, Mcfi
e construction pa;
through the Fi
n Funding Ara
les money for a!
campus.
11 Industry Builditi
) the Soil & Crop
g will be ready i
8. The five-storyh
$10 million.
iitheaters, togethei
g up to 500
for lectures. Then
ooms, five teaehir,
rch labs. Thisbui
a central courtyard
iraries.
ension to the 1
1980.
ilry uni
itains
ig troo
ms Mounted Car
was formed at li
eekend to provii
ncial support i
among troopers,
iation offers meif
et Corps seniors 1
with the troops
well as ROTCs
: M between the 11
nas R. Parsons,!
whom the troop
Dean John H. Fa
'ickinson Univer
J., were made if*
itz supported the 1
mative period
ons has helped it
ugh spots, and
• the ‘cav’ troopc«
re,” said Jeff
the associations
' ’76 is vice presf
heek ’43 is secrd
d Col. Parsons is
historian,
ounted Cavalry
rse cavalry traini
:s and is comp 1
nior cadets.
Page 5
Direction of the 300-member Texas Aggie Band will be fur
nished on the gridiron, in reviews and parades in 1977-78
by Drum Majors Bruce Hamilton (center) of Dallas, James
Earl (right) of San Antonio and Lynn Balinas of Houston. They
will have key responsibility for the football halftime drills
next year.
Aggie marching band
names drum majors
Marching direction of the
Texas Aggie Band in 1977-78 will
be provided by Drum Majors
Bruce Hamilton of Dallas, James
Earl of San Antonio and Lynn
Balinas of Houston.
Hamilton will be the head
drum major. Earl will be Artil
lery Band drum major; Balinas,
Infantry Band drum major.
Hamilton, Earl and Balinas
will lead the Aggie Band for the
first time Saturday during the
Maroon-White spring football
game. Seniors turn the organiza
tion over to juniors for the con
test.
The new drum majors offi
cially move into the posts next
fall, after guiding the band
around the drill field for the sec
ond time at Final Review.
Hamilton will be a cadet lieuten
ant colonel on the Aggie Band
staff. Balinas and Earl will be
cadet majors.
A mechanical engineering
major, Hamilton, who plays
trumpet, is Drum and Bugle
Corps sergeant in the band this
year. He was Cadet Corps
bugler as a sophomore. The
Navy ROTC cadet is on four-year
military scholarship, is a Distin
guished Student, member of the
Ross Volunteers and recipient of
the American Legion Award for
academic excellence.
Earl majors in environmental
design. The Infantry Band
scholastic sergeant, also a trum
pet player, is a member of the
Society of American Military
Engineers and played rugby for
Texas A&M this year.
Balinas, agricultural eco
nomics major, serves this year as
personnel sergeant of “A” Bat
tery, Artillery Band. The trom
bone player is a member of the
Aggie Stage Band and the Ag
ricultural Economics Club.
Aggie Band drum majors are
selected by a committee com
posed of the director and
bandmen. Candidates lead the
band in the rehearsal hall and on
the drill field during tryouts.
ingle parents organize
to share common problems
Single parents in Bryan-College
Station may soon share their prob
lems through an organization called
Parents Without Partners, Inc.
The international, non-profit,
non-sectarian, educational organiza
tion is devoted to the welfare and
interests of single parents and their
children.
There is interest in developing a
chapter in the Bryan-College Station
area. With a minimum of 25 mem
bers, the group may obtain a charter
from the organization’s Washington,
D.C. headquarters.
Having custody of children is not a
requirement for membership, and
parents may be widowed, divorced,
il 30th
enry
Orchestt
I Bryan-College Station Jaycees |
BUII BlyMpies
Sat. April 23
at
Tabor
Community
Center
1 '/i miles from East
By-pass on Tabor Rd.
Begins 11 a.m.; Chili
Cooking about 9 a.m.
Trophies awarded for all
events. Admission free.
EVENTS INCLUDE:
*>•
Chili Cook Off ($10.00 entry fee)
* Cow Chip Throwing
* Fiddling Contest
Watermelon Seed Spitting
v ★ Jalepeno Eating
| ★ Pie Cooking
Skillet Throwing,
z'
A
'°0{j
For more information call 822-2811.
Sponsored by B-CS Jaycees & KORA radio.
■■■■OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK—
NAME
ADDRESS
TELEPHONE
EVENTS ENTERED
Corps of Cadets names
company-level commanders
Company-level commanders in
Texas A&M University’s 1977-78
Corps of Cadets have been named.
The 41 cadets, juniors this year
and in most cases first sergeants of
their outfits, will be cadet majors.
The new COs by unit in the Air
Force ROTC wing^ are: Squadron
I, Charles K. Shepard, Graham; 2,
Dale E. Laine, Texas City; 3, Paul
A. Pausky, Houston; 4, Michael De
La Cruz, Ingleside; 5, Thomas S.
Menefee, Alvin; 6, Michael T.
Macmanus, Harlingen; 7, Michael
J. Precella, Nacogdoches; 8,
Thomas L. Earwood, Denton; 9,
Gary K. Saathoff, Hondo; 10,
Tommie D. Benefield, Lancaster,
Calif.; 11, David W. Eisenlohr,
Dallas; 12, Glenn M Rogers,
Graham, and 15, Wilkes L.
Kothmann, San Antonio.
COs in the Navy-Marine Corps
regiment are: Company D-l,
James L. Schulze, Dickinson; S-2,
Steven M. Keim, Corpus Christi;
K-2, E. C. “Ned” Hertberg, Eu
less; E-2, Terry P. Ekeland,
Greenville; H-2, Gary A. Seffel,
New Braunfels; N-l, Jehri E. Law-
son, El Paso; C-2, William B.
Shelby, La Crescenta, Calif.; M-2,
James E. Dixon, Bartlesville,
Okla.; and P-2, Robert M. Som
mers, San Antonio.
COs in the Army ROTC brigade
are: Company A-l, James C.
Snyder, Bowie, Md; C-l, Robert
M. Stone, Seabrook; 1-1, Thomas
E. Botard, Kingsville; L-l, Roger
D. Schulze, Fayetteville; B-l, Gene
E. Kubecka, Palacios; M-l, Keith
R. Williams, Wichita Falls; F-l,
John D. Shoemaker, Austin; K-l,
Randall P. Birdwell, Houston; V-l,
Johnny D. Lyles, Bryan; E-l,
Stephen T. Spencer, San Antonio;
W-l, Roxie Pranglin, Laurel,
Miss.; B-2, Ernest J. Hugo, Max
well AFB, Ala.; D-2, Douglas E.
Horsman, Fort Worth; F-2, Joseph
K. Marshall, Weslaco, and L-2,
Ross W. Hinton, Mt. Pleasant.
COs for the Texas Aggie Band
are: A Battery, Artillery Band,
Laurence E. Boyd, Angleton; B
Battery, Michael J. Close, Abilene;
A Company, Infantry Band, Dana
R. Foy, Pasadena; and B Company,
John D. Dodson, Irving.
Units they will command will in
clude two changes from the 1976-77
Corps. Day student outfits. Com
pany R-l and Squadron 13, are
being combined into Company V-l
next fall. A new unit, Company P-2,
is being added to the Navy-Marine
regiment.
Company, squadron and battery
commands are at the fourth level in
the Cadet Corps chain of com
mand. They are under the cadet
colonel of the corps, brigade, wing
or regiment, and battalion or group
command. Company-level com
mands involve the most direct
leadership with underclassmen. In
general, the 41 cadets will head
units they were in during their first
three years in the Corps.
Top of the News
Local
ACCOMPANIED BY cheers
of “Go Bra-a-zos Valley” and
“Come on Texas,” Dr. James W.
Bassett, the Brazos Valley Jog
gers Club’s standard-bearer in
the Boston Marathon, crossed
the finish line with a time of three
hours and 32 minutes in a run of
26 miles and 385 yards.
A MEETING of the College
Station Planning and Zoning
Commission will be held tomor
row at 7 p.m.
Texas
OFFICIALS SAY more than
half of those tenants at the Cen
tral Hotel in Galveston may have
died in a fire that flashed through
the 60-year-old hotel yesterday.
Eight bodies were recovered and
authorities said the death toll
could reach 25.
TWO MONTHS AGO the rain
would have been perfect for
Amarillo wheat farmers, but now
they could only sit and watch
30,000 nonirrigated acres given
over to wind, dust, weeds and
insects. What once was a promis
ing dryland wheat crop has
turned into a $1.3 million loss.
BORDER PATROL official
Dale Swancutt whose agents
were attacked on U.S. territory
by 150 angry Mexicans, says an
international incident is inevita
ble if Congress does not act to
stop illegal aliens.
A RESEARCHER at Baylor
University says the potential is
“very great” of gonorrhea be
cause of a new penicillin resistant
strain.
National
A RATE INCREASE in the
postal service cannot be post
poned forever, but it can be put
off for at least a year, says Post
master General Benjamin Bailar.
The reason for the good news,
Bailar said yesterday, is that the
Postal Service has achieved an
unprecedented surplus for a full
year of operation.
VICE PRESIDENT Walter
Mondale, with an assist from
congressional Democrats, is tak
ing on Gerald Ford for “personal”
attacks against the Carter admin
istration. Mondale launched his
counter attack at a White House
meeting yesterday involving
leading congressmen.
ACTING MAYOR of Chicago
Michael A. Bilandic* protege of
the late Richard J. Daley, kept
alive an 11th Ward tradition by
defeating five opponents yester
day in the Democratic mayorial
primary — a victory considered
tantamount to election.
THE HEAD of the Gulf Oil
Corp., Jerry McAfee, has given
qualified support to President
Carter’s energy program, saying
the company is prepared to bend
its own corporate goals to thfc na
tional interest if necessary.
THE U.S. ECONOMY be
tween January and March grew at
the fastest rate in a year, despite
the setback in January, according
to the broadest measure — the
Gross National Product.
AN ESTIMATED 21,000 il
legal aliens are currently in Kan
sas and Missouri and the number
is unlikely to decline in the fu-
turfe, according to an Immigra
tion and Naturalization Service
agent. Although there are an es
timated six to eight million illegal
aliens in the United States,
enforcement is difficult, INS
agent George Gail said.
World
FOUR-FOOT PYGMIES
armed with bows and arrows have
helped Zairean nd Moroccan
troops win a major breakthough
against invading forces and sur
round the rebel held town of
Mushatsa, the government says.
AN EARTHQUAKE struck
the central Yugoslav town of
Banja Luka and surrounding vil
lages in the Bosnian Mountains
early today, damaging buildings
and causing frightened residents
to flee their homes, authoriites
said. There were no casualties,
according to preliminary reports
from the area.
separated or never married. There is
no age limit for members.
The organization sponsors
monthly educational programs with
professional speakers and panelists,
and organizes discussion groups,
recreational and social activities for
both adults and children.
Problems such as income tax, re
marriage, sex education for children
and parent-child relationships are
dealt with through this program.
The first meeting will be held in
the Bryan Building and Loan Texas
Room at 8 p.m. on Friday.
For more information call 822-
4245 or 822-0313 after 5 p.m.
HERE'S ONE ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITY
YOU WON'T GET IN PRIVATE INDUSTRY.
If you’re thinking about a
career in engineering, think
about this.
How many companies can
offer you a nuclear submarine
to operate? The answer is
none. Equipment like this is
available only in one place...
the Navy.
The Navy operates over
half the nuclear reactors
in America. So our training is
the broadest and most com
prehensive. We start by
giving you a year of advanced
engineering technology. In
graduate school, this would
cost you thousands, but in
the Navy, we pay you.
Once you’re commissioned
as a Nuclear Propulsion
Officer, you’ll earn a top
salary. Over $24,000 a year
after four years. And you’ll be
responsible for the most
advanced equipment
developed by man. All the
Navy asks in return is that
you serve for 3 years on active
duty upon completion of your
training.
You have only until May
15th to enroll in this year’s
Navy Nuclear Propulsion
Candidate Program. If you
are majoring in engineering,
math or physical sciences,
contact your placement office
to find out when a Navy
recruiter will be on campus.
Or call toll free, 800-841-8000
(in Georgia, 800-342-5855)
for more information. And if
you’re still a junior, ask about
the Navy’s NUPOC Collegi
ate Program, which pays you
up to $6,000 during your
senior year.
The Navy. When it comes
to nuclear training, no
one can give you the same
opportunities.
Mail to B-CS Jaycees/Box 3535/Bryan Texas 77801 • Or |
being to The Eagle.
NAVY OFFICER.
IT'S NOT JUST A JOB, IT'S AN ADVENTURE