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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1977)
Ilfs r students ak; ulialforlessij pate, lie sail > stay at I# u their studies ts are in this orga;. do notbl e, Gibson eetive ist(iin.j *n the foreit; rican, he sail Campus Names THE BATTALION Page T‘ THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1977 ► help enefits national — Calvii n the Navyj 2 and partis nal and Saili the Pacific is Terri F. Jones of Grand Prairie and Bruce B. Monroe of San Antonio are the 1977 C. K. Esten Theater Arts Award win ners at Texas A&M University. Awards of $100 each were presented by Esten Tuesday at an Aggie Players meeting pre ceding rehearsal of “The House ofBernarda Alba.’ The award honors the theater arts chairman of 1950-74. First given in 1975, one award is do nated by former students and others. Esten funds the second. Jones is a senior business management and theater arts major. She has performed in and worked on a large number of Aggie Players productions, in cluding “Man of La Mancha,’ “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” “Aesop’s Falables” and “The Apple Tree,’ summer dinner theater staging, among others. She is the 1977-78 Aggie Players president. Monroe, current vice presi dent, majors in zoology and thea ter arts. He transferred to Texas A&M as a sophomore. He is working as assistant director and stage manager of “House of Ber- narda Alba.’’ He has similar backstage responsibilities and was a chorus member in “Apple Tree.” Monroe was assistant de signer on the other 1977 summer dinner theater, “Luv.” C. K. Esten Award recipients are nominated by theater arts students and chosen by the English Department section fac ulty. They must be upper divi sion students and plan to con tinue theater arts studies at Texas A&M. Texas A&M graduates Col. Leo L. Craig Jr. of Pine Knot, Ky., and Lt. Col. Clifford J. Trimble have retired from the U. S. Air Force. A 1960 Aggie exe, Col. Craig was awarded the Legion of Merit on completing 26 years of serv ice. He was deputy commander for maintenance of the 375th Aeromedical Airlife Wing at Scott AFB, Ill. Col. Trimble, who earned graduate degrees in computer science here in 1966 and 1968, retired at the U.S. Air Force Academy. He had 29 years serv ice. Col. Trimble was deputy chief for computer science at the academy. 13, when I® his birth Departi*. A&M prof blames law for crisis I WELCOME BACK AGGIES Come visit us at our new location, 3810 Texas Ave. (across from Burger King) and learn how to make your own stained glass window and tiffany-style lampshade. Classes last for 6 weeks, 3 hours every week. The class fee is $20.00. Classes Begin Sept. 12 ed from tli D-Tex.,si| seek an ha- baham, wk :h.| House ml reviews (led he coni charged k idulently ited in tli ived iwk- that braiA H "The nation’s energy crisis started 1954 and can be attributed to an nproperly worded law passed by ie U.S. Congress, said a Texas &M University professor in a reech this morning in Denison. Dr. Paul B. Crawford, assistant irector of the Texas Petroleum Re- arch Committee and professor of etroleum engineering at Texas &M, was addressing the Denison otary lub. “In 1954 the U.S. Supreme Court anded down its decision that Con- ess had apparently unknowingly assed a law which obliged the Federal Power Commission to regu- ite the price of natural gas sold to lipelines which transported gas Mross state boundaries, ” Dr. Craw- ■rd explained. “Two members of ie court reported that in their pinion Congress had no intention passing such a law because Con- ess held no hearings on the effect price regulation on the natural is producers. “This law had a very chilling ef- cton the oil and gas finders of our ition. ’ he said. “Two-thirds of the drilling rigs were to stop searching for oil and gas. We had 3,000 drill ing rigs looking for oil and gas in 1954. By 1972 we were down to 1,000 rigs. We had 30,000 oil and gas explorers, producers and operators in 1954. By 1972 we had fewer than 5,000. “Eisenhower’s message to Con gress Feb. 17, 1956 called for a change in the law,” Dr. Crawford continued. “He said, ‘Legislation freeing the gas producer of price regulation is needed. Present law will discourage individual initiative and incentive to explore for and de velop new sources of supply. In the long run this will limit supplies of gas, which is contrary not only to the national interest, but especially to the interest of consumers.’” “Twenty years ago in President Eisenhower’s budget message to Congress Jan. 16, 1957, the Presi dent again requested the law be changed,” Crawford added. “A return to the free market sys tem is the best way to obtain energy conservation and assure adequate fuel supplies,” Dr. Crawford said. Morning Classes 9:30-12:30 Afternoon Classes 2:00-5:00 Evening Classes 6:30-9:30 STORE HOURS 9:30-5:30 M-F 9:30-1:30 Sat. For Reservations: 846-4156 Bolton Stained Glass Studios * 3810 Texas Ave. S. i Bryan, Texas 77801 ■ fjf | ;v : All glass and supplies are available. $ Commercial and private glass work done on request. Repair work also done. PLAY II C OOL THIS YEAR!/ You I ed sakfast /orstip Worship CAMERA COMMITTEE FALL PHOTO CONTEST ENTRY DEADLINE OCT. 4, 1977 ANY SIZE PHOTO ON AN 11 X 14 MAT. Contact- RENT THIS REFRIGERATOR STUDENT GOVERNMENT FOR MORE INFORMATION AT 345-3051 obc) INTERSTATE 'TZ&uteu UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER luan-u Q FRI,SAT $1.25(R) DPPING CENTER 846-671^^4yjS1 It’s the BIGGEST It’s the BEST.! It’S BOND. And B-E-Y-0-N-D. DAILY RATES: $20.00 PLUS TAX PER SEMESTER $10.00 DEPOSIT (REFUNDABLE! The HP-29C won't forget your programs. The new Hewlett-Packard 29C offers you more in a continuous memory calculator ... 98 program steps, label addressing, three levels' of subroutines and more. When other calculators forget, the 29C retains its 98 program steps and 16 ol its 30 data registers. And, coming soon, the HP-19C, identical to the 29C but a truly hand-held portable printing scientific. This is a unit you have to see to appreciate. LOUPOT'S BOOKSTORE YOUR CALCULATOR HEADQUARTERS Northgate — Across from the Post Office © 1977 Application Calculators Incorporated LTTTTJ T1 IllimiUil Til V MANOR EASY 3 THEATRES MANOR EAST MALL WELCOME BACK AGCIEl! VISIT THE MANOR EAST THEATRES AND EXPERIENCE THE FINEST IN SOUND AND SIGNT. ADMISSION ONLY $2.00 NOW THRO SEP- TEMBER 30,1977. WITH TAMU 1.0. Dolby 4- CHANNEL STEREO PG PARENTAL GUIDANCE SUGGESTED DOLBY SYSTEM © 1977 20TH CENTURY-FOX 4-TRACK MAGNETIC SOUND Is anything worth the terror of D£1P 6:55 9:20 EfJ ACCXUMBJA EM»F€AU)Rfc C: W* COLUMBIA WCTURES INDUSTRIES. IUC Picture* 6:10-8:10- 10:10 ONE , , I he story VPjMj of a one " in,Kr ' WEST SCREEN STARTS 8:30 Skyway Twinp 822-3300 iSSgaSigSSSSSSSSSBSSSSiSSiSSSSSBWSaJi EAST SCREEN STARTS 8:35 EXORCIST II THE HERETIC J Technicolor ® & A Warner Communications Company Q C 1977 Warner Bros . Inc. PLUS A THRILLER IT’S ALIVE AUCE DOESN7 UVE HERE /4NYMORE PLUS IN COLOR MUSTANG COUNTRY (G) Campus 846-6512 | COLLEGE STATION STARTS WEDNESDAY AT CAMPUS THEATRE What we have here is a total lack of respect for the Burt Reynolds ‘Smokey ANDTHE Bandit” Sally Field Jerry Reed Jackie Gleason [.I, jfgi.HBii'Pil ' AiSkT] Screenplay by JAMES LEE BARRETT jnfl CHARLES SHYER & ALAN MANDEL Story by HAL NEEDHAM & ROBERT L LEVY Musk, by RILL JtlSTIS and JERRY REED Direcled by HAL NEEDHAM -Produced by MORTENGELBERG A RASTAR Production • A UNIVERSAL Picture Technicolor*