The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 11, 1977, Image 5

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    Riddle:You’ll hate reading it
more than a telephone book
The Texas A&M University Lib
raries’ heavily-used current tele
phone directories have been con
verted to microfiche.
Found at the reference desk in
the newly combined humanities-
social sciences area on the first floor
of Evans Library, the service in-
Euthanasia
talk planned
PHI!
Iliam
la., and;
trom a
is inside
clog.
cited ow:
-C Yealdei
"gc Hoist
he child
‘ptic seia
king a
named
ter, Jan
Pa
igh
sum
Banner weather
Recent winds have kept the flag flying near the System Ad
ministration Building on the east side of campus.
Battalion photo by Joan White
A Wednesday seminar on medical
aspects of euthanasia will be pres
ented by Great Issues at Texas
A&M University.
The Memorial Student Center
committee program is booked for 12
noon in Room 601 of the Rudder
Tower. Admission is free.
Great Issues chairman Larry
Briggs said the seminar will feature
Dr. Michael Jamail, Dr. Phil Davis
and Dr. Larry McCullough.
Tower controllers busy
(Continued from page I)
s l u ,p| ll A CONTROLLER must prove
jj m \\ij imself when assigned to a tower.
saved* 6 enters with a GS-5, GS-7 or
The■’S-9 rating, depending on past ex-
wners Jerience.
I He must spend one year at his in-
(j na Jiul rating and one year at each sub-
ce Hulil*' ( l uent rating until he completes a
gh dej ear at GS-9, when he becomes a
burni
owned
L.
wmeyman controller. For exam-
ile, a controller who begins at a
S-5 rating must work three years
efore he has attained enough ex-
i diteln
nved R( terience to be considered a jour-
eyman.
Holcomb, Smith and Rexer are all
gear,win Junieymen controllers.
FE 72tito
Since Easterwood Airport is a
ieneral aviation (unscheduled
Bights) airport except for Davis Air-
nnil'l nes ’ Holcomb says he never knows
MtUa,|h ( . M ai,. tra |fi c vvi] l heavy.
We are usually busiest between
ry twice j) a.m. and noon, and again from
othert |:30p.m. to5p.ni.,’ Holcomb said.
In the summer when it doesn’t get
lark until later, we usually have
Hither busy period from 6:30 p. m.
i dark.
However, since the air traffic is
rregular, sometimes those peak
hues mean nothing, Holcomb em-
/ *)hasized. He said he has often seen
fll leayy air traffic between 7 and 8
but on other days he* has not
vorked a single plane in that same
ime period.
TRAFFIC ranges from zero to
iver 100 planes per hour,” he said.
It has peaked at 125 planes per
lour before.”
Because of the irregular traffic,
he tower must he adequately staf-
k 46-II5I
t’ING CENli
playing
IP.I
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lgj»SOUNT gEMTg*l
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eef
and
ter
p OP SHOPPE
$059
^ CASE
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iing
INNEP
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utter-
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14 20 TEXAS AVENUE
college STATION
Embrey’s Jewelry
Specialize In
Aggie Rings.
Diamonds Set
Sizing —
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Repair
Aggie Charge Accounts
846-5816
departure procedures at Easter
wood, Holcomb said.
If pilots can clearly see other
planes, they fly under VFR (visual
flight rules),” Holcomb said. In this
case the controller must sight each
plane and sequence it.
If a pilot can not see other aircraft
because of bad weather, he must fly
under IFR (instrument flight rules),
he added. Planes are sequenced by
radio using each pilot’s position re
port. Since these positions may be
slightly inaccurate, the controller is
required to space the planes farther
apart than if he was operating under
VFR.
“There is a funnel-like approach
to each airport,” Holcomb said.
“Planes get closer to each other as
they approach the airport. The
white haze we have today blends
with aircraft and hinder visual sight
ing.”
Reduced visibility along with the
variety of planes (and approach
speeds) makes a radar desirable,
Holcomb said, but that is not pres
ently an FAA consideration.
EASTER WOOD’S tower is a
level-two non-radar approach con
trol facility, Holcomb said. The FAA
rates towers on a scale of one to five,
one being the lowest and five the
highest-activity tower.
“When we begin to run enough
traffic to he a level two facility we
begin to need a radar,” Holcomb
said. In a radar facility, he said, con
trollers can begin to separate aircraft
20 to 30 miles away. A pilot can ad
just his airspeed and altitude to fol
low the traffic flow.
At Easterwood, however, the
controller must sight an aircraft or
obtain a fairly accurate position re
port (in bad weather) before placing
it in sequence. Although the radar
method is not necessarily safer than
the visual method, Holcomb ex
plained, planes can be sequenced
farther from the airport and thus
airport efficiency can be increased.
Easterwood Airport has handled
over 104,000 arrivals, departures
and practice approaches in the last
.year, of which over 18,000 were in
strument operations. On the aver
age, the tower provides about 3(X)
services every day. About 55 of
these are instrument operations.
Herman s Hermits
still performing
6 d at all times in case traffic gets
heavy. At 2 p.m. there was almost
ioactivity, but in less than 30 ruin
ates both controllers were chatter-
ng almost constantly into their
headsets.
We have to have the people here
when the traffic comes,” Holcomb
said We never know when traffic
be heavy; it s whenever people
decide to go flying, 1 guess.”
At this point Rexer began to se-
(Ucnce three planes for landing. He
OTered a plane approaching from
e west to circle counterclockwise
oallow two planes coining from the
S( >uth to land.
Circling is a standard procedure
'sequencing,’ Holcomb said.
1 °w he must space them far
n .p^b apart to land them safely. ”
ie first plane, a single-engined
^ r within a minute, and
was followed less than a minute later
a two-engined plane. The circl-
late ^ ane ^ an< ^ e( 1 a few minutes
United Press International
BALTIMORE—Herman’s Her
mits became the idols of millions of
teen-age girls in the 1960s with sim
ple, sticky-sweet love songs like
“Can’t You Hear My Heartbeat”
and, most famous of all, the non
sense tune, “I’m Henry VIII, I am.”
After selling more than 40 million
records during their heyday, the
short drippy songs of the British
group disappeared from radio for
the most part in the early 1970s.
But the Hermits have kept on
performing.
The Hermits have moved from
packed auditoriums to smaller clubs
or engagements such as a city-
sponsored free outdoor concert in
Baltimore’s Hopkins Plaza. A 10-
week summer tour included stops in
Canada, New York, Vermont, Ohio,
Indiana, Nevada, Colorado, and
Maryland.
The fall from pop music stardom
does not appear to bother the Her
mits. Lead singer Carl Green, who
started the band in the early ’60s
when the Hermits were aged about
16 to 18, said the group enjoys tour
ing.
Sun Theatres
333 University 84i
The only movie in town
846-9808
Double-Feature Every Week
Open 10 am - 2 am Mon-Sat
12 Noon - 12 Midnight Sun
12 Noon - 12 Midnight Sun
No one under 18
Escorted Ladies Free
BOOK STORE & 25c PEEP SHOWS
THERE ARE two approach and
You said
you’d never
give up
jeans!
But you might have to. You might not be able to
afford them. Right now new ones can run $15 to $50
a pair. Who knows how much they’ll be next month.
A part-time job as a Provident Mutual campus
insurance agent can make sure you always have the
money you need. While it lets you work
the hours you want.
Drop by our campus office and let’s discuss fitting
our program into your schedule.
Campus Supervisor:
Bob Phillips
707 University
Suite 28
846-7027
PROVIDENT
MUTUAL
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
OF PHILADELPHIA
Home Office: 4601 Market St.. Phila., Pa. 19101
Subsidiaries: Providor Management Company
Provider Sales Company
eludes 360 telephone directories
covering 245 metropolitan areas
plus selected federal directories.
Conversion carries several bene
fits to users. Considerable handling
of hardcopy directories and catalogs
caused them to fall apart, dog-ear
and often he unreadable at well-
thumbed corners. Additionally, di
rectories and catalogs will be more
up-to-date and cost less.
Most hardcopy directories were
discarded with phonefiehe installa
tion. Retained, however, were all
Texas directories and large met
ropolitan directories that are heavily
used, plus foreign directories not
included in the service.
THE BATTALION Page 5
TUESDAY. OCTOBER 11. 1977
Aggies & Rednecks
No place but LOU’S.
Specials through Wednesday:
$ 1 25 pitcher Beer
(60 oz. Old Milwaukee
and Lone Star)
ALL Longnecks 45c
LOU’S 19th HOLE
3606 S. College
DANCING
846-9889
PIZZA
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Since 1795 Cuervo Gold
has been made in only one way.
And in only one place.
In Tequila. Where the pampered Blue Maguey plant still
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as it has since 1795.
Where over 182 years of tradition is still a way of life.
This is ivhat makes Cuervo Gold special. Versatile and
adaptable. Neat, on the t'oeks, icith a splash of soda, in a
perfect Sunrise or Margarita, Cuervo Gold will bring you
back to a time when quality ruled the world.
Cuervo.The Gold standard since1795.
CUERVO ESPECIAL® TEQUILA. 80 PROOF IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY © 1977 HEUBLEIN, INC:, HARTFORD. CONN.
SOLID WOOD
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(Hardwood)
Reg. 49.88
ONLV
*33 88
CHILD ROCKERS
Reg. 34.88
(Hardwood)
ONLY
CHAIRS ANY STYLE
(Hardwood) Stock Limited
Reg. 39.88
ONLY
16 88
PARSON’S
TABLES
50% OFF
HI-CHAIRS
Reg. 36.88
ONLY
29 88
WILL BE OPEN MONDAY UNTIL 9 P.M.
THIS WEEK ONLY 1
TABLES NAVE ARRIVED
UNBELIEVABLE PRICES FROM *29.88 UP
UNFNSHED FURNITURE CENTER
314 N. Main
Downtown Bryan
822-7052
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