>fthe tance 'ayed ^uest f the more of a been fge )leum i con- •-year lips a using lillips lying Iting at 70 ears, nun- lanta ty in srael :here to a nted sup- d on :ople 100 way was the d in supply from Texas: it in or out of state? THE BATTALION Page 3 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1977 Battalion photo by Jim Crawley Seat t.u. Georgia Burkhalter’s desk is decorated in the prominent ^ theme of the week: the drive to beat Texas. Burkhalter placed ■ the sign on her desk Monday after a co-worker in Agricultural Communications lettered the poster. tew facilities titled Two more facilities were named ently in honor of individuals on Texas A&M campus, lie 5,000-seat baseball stadium field now under construction be named in honor of C.E. if Olsen, a 1923 Aggie graduate member of the New York Yan- teams that included Babe Ruth Lou Gehrig. ,E. “Pat Olsen Field was for- lly chosen as the name of the new lity by the Texas A&M Univer- System Board of Regents. )lsen, who resides in Clifton, is sident and general manager of irench Manufacturing Co. He ned varsity baseball letters in his homore, junior and senior years Ireceived his degree in mechani- engineering with highest honors, er entering professional baseball owing graduation and working way up to the Yankees, he left sport to establish his own busi ness and begin his manufacturing career. The $1.5 million stadium will he ready for the 1978 season. On the same side of the campus, Texas A&M University’s new cotton research greenhouse complex will bear the name of the late Dr. J.O. Beasley, in whose memory earlier facilities of this type were named in 1949. Beasley, a World War II casualty, was a leading member of a Texas Agriculture research group involved in hybridization of cotton species. He is credited with initiating the work tliat formed the nucleus from which many of the present phases of cotton research has been formed. The new greenhouse complex, now officially named the “Beasley Cotton Research Laboratory,” was built on Texas A&M’s new West Campus in conjunction with the re location there of the Soil and Crop Sciences Department. Campus activities Wednesday Elephant Walk, 12 noon, in front of the leademic Building lega Phi Alpha, 6:30 p.m., 501 Rud- ler Thursday Thanksgiving Holiday Turkey Trot, 8 a.m., G. Rollie White loliseum Friday Thanksgiving Holiday Bonfire Yell Practice, 7:30 p.m., Dmir can Field Saturday SWC Football, Texas A&M vs. Texas, 1:30 p.m., Kyle Field with Cadet Corps March-In at 12:20 p.m. Sunday Chess Committee, 6 p.m., 302 Rudder United Press International AUSTIN—Attorney General John Hill said Tuesday the United States Supreme court has agreed to hear arguments in a case which will de termine if Texas natural gas pro ducers can be forced to sell their products to out-of-state consumers. Hill said the court has scheduled arguments on the case which in volves a suit by Southland Royalty Co. of Fort Worth against the Fed eral Power Commission on Dec. 7. Hill has joined the suit on the side of the power company, and Louisiana and New Mexico have filed briefs with the Supreme Court supporting Texas’ position in the case. The suit stems from an FPC order issued in 1975 when leases held by Gulf Oil Corp. on land in Crane and Ector Counties expired. Gulf had been selling gas from the land to El Paso Natural Gas Co., which put the fuel into interstate pipelines, and Distractions overshadow JFK service United Press International DALLAS — The 14th anniversary of John F. Kennedy’s assassination was remembered briefly at noon Tuesday with a memorial service which other groups took advantage of to push causes. The subdued service was held be fore a crowd of about 150 at the Kennedy Memorial on the western edge of doWntown Dallas. “It is fitting that we citizens of the city and county of Dallas pause in memory of this great American pres ident, ” said Ron Kessler, chairman of the Dallas County Democratic Party which sponsored the service. “President Kennedy has been put into perspective by historians. It may be not so much what he did, but what he was that was important. He had the kind of mind that could entertain vision, Kessler said. Although the memorial was in tended to pay respect to the past president, the service was easily overshadowed other occurrences. Attention was diverted by a minor accident at one minute until noon at Main and Market streets, two or ganizations publicizing a rally and protest parade against “police bru tality,” and a service that was held two blocks west at Dealey Plaza, the actual site of the gunfire which killed Kennedy, by an organization which does not believe that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone Nov. 22, 1963. Nicholas Blessick, a resident of North Olmsted, Ohio, a small town near Cleveland, put all of the gatherings in perspective. He stood near the fountains, east of the triple underpass, looking north a half block to the sixth-floor window in a building which by next year likely will no longer be called the Texas Schoolbook Depository. “We just got here, me and my family,” he said. “We ll go up there (to the memorial service) in just a minute. We wanted to see this first. This was where it happened. “Everything is so close together here. I thought it was a big, wide area. But it’s so little. You can cer tainly see all the possibilities.” Embrey’s Jewelry We Specialize In Aggie Rings. Diamonds Set — Sizing — Reoxidizing — All types watch/jewelry Repair Aggie Charge Accounts 5:30 846-5816 Jamie A^ ,r ce Woo*' 1 Lescllp< , l , . Pad ^ Carol MO" Rusty Cs*t' .. KimT)*’' Beth Ci^ puna WlitMt lark Pitted Ken He’f Doug CttM* rs, aii** 1 n IV. Hi*"* k. C/itilD"*; Puh/iral^ $2.50 BEFORE NOV. 25 $3.50 AFTER NOV. 25 PRE-BONFIRE SALES NOV. 17-23 11X14 $6.00 ' - 16X20 $12.00 the FPC ordered Southland to con tinue sales to El Paso. Southland officials preferred, however, to sell the gas to Intratex Gas Co., which serves industry and other customers in the Houston area. Southland filed suit challenging the FPC order, and the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans upheld Southland’s right to sell to intrastate customers if it preferred. “While this issue is being debated in Congress, we may wake up and find the courts have already settled it,” Hill said. “That is why I have entered this case to present the ar gument for continued freedom to choose between selling gas to out of state buyers or Texas buyers.” Hill said the case is more impor tant to most states because most of the natural gas produced in Texas is consumed within the state. “This strong intrastate market not only has kept gas flowing to our homes during winter while some Northern states have gone without, but it also has fueled our Gulf Coast petrochemical complex, which is a key contributor to our state’s healthy economy,” he said. Samson It PROFESSIONAL HAIR DESIGN 1510 Holleman College Station 693-1772 Sebring UniPerm PRECISION PERMING SVSIEM Judy Fondy, Vickie Matthews, George Ann Hoke, Jane Kroll, Kathy Grimes, Judy McCann. amily Itiyht 3 Combination Burritos B 3 Tacos at a fiawm Price/ If you want a super happy family, bring 'em to Taco Villa for some Wednesday night happiness — taco and combo burritos, three of each for just $2.44. They're the tasty treats you always find at Taco Villa — big, hearty portions chock full of goodness that's sure to make everybody's tummy say, "Thanks a lot!' subs m from th‘‘MIGRIeS* 614 Villa Maria • Bryan OcoeYRIGHT. TACO VILLA, INC.. 1»77