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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (May 1, 1978)
Page 4 THE BATTALION MONDAY, MAY 1, 1978 Campus Names The Battalion Classified Miller receives F. C. Bolton award SPECIAL NOTICE ATTENTION MAY GRADUATES! You may begin picking up your Graduation An nouncement Orders April 12th in the Student Pro gram’s Office, Room 216 A&B, MSC, Monday thru Friday, from 8:00 to 5:00. Extra Announcements will go on sale April 17th in Student Finance Cen ter, Room 217, MSC at 8:00 a.m. on a first come, first serve basis. Our hours are from 8:00 to 4:00, Monday thru Fri day. 134118 FOUND Found. Goinpurse noar fishpond. Call 845- 1270. I27tl FOR RENT 1 lor so Pasture - 22 acres - tack room - Harvey - 30 miles sandy, back road to ride. $20 month. 693-3190, 822-4029. 143tS Duplex, for sublet, fenced backyard, 2-bedrooms, summer only. Kail 693- 9920. 143(5 SERVICES HEY AGS! Are you moving to Houston and need a place to live? Call Bob Addy Apt. Locators, 827 Frostwood (713) 464-7457 for FREE apt. locating service. i 4 7ti •J Service For All Chrysler Corp. Cars Body Work — Painting HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY INC. , Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922 1411 Texas Ave. — 823-8111 FOR RENT NOW LEASING FOR FALL Pine Ridge Duplexes • New - August move-in • Two bedroom - one bath • Central air conditioning • Gas central heating • Gas range & water heater • Dishwasher and re frigerator • Fenced yards • Washer-Dryer connections • Yards maintained • But route - Anderson at Pine Bidge • Only 56 units • $250.00 plus bills SPEARMAN, SEARS & MURPHY, INC. 779-8853 Room for rent. Quiet, nicely furnished, air and heat included. $87.50 month, summer, fall. Call 846-0454. I43t5 TRAVIS HOUSE APTS. Now leasing for summer and fall. Come by and check our great summer rates! (From $160) All bills paid. 693- . 7 1 84.14718 UNIVERSITY ACRE'S APARTMENTS Located off Wellborn Road, V2 mile past 2818 on FM 2154. Many new im provements. All bills paid except electricity. Rates begin at $135.00. Get country atmosphere close to campus. 1 bedroom apts. now available. CALL TOM CLEMENTS at 846- 5796 or 846-6189 weekends and after 5 p.m. Joe Courtney, Inc 145113 FOR RENT 2-bedroom 1 bath apartment in cluding dishwasher, disposal, walk in closets, and patio. Cable tv and utilities except electric paid. Next to Bee Creek Park. Summer rates. Bob Holdar 693- 2670, 845-4732. 14715 Luxury furnished duplex. Very large bed room. Living room with woodburning fire place. Built-in kitchen with all appliances. Refrigerator with icemaker. Country at mosphere. Located off Dowling Road across from Bohanan Stables. $215 per/ mo. & utilities. No pets. 693-8534. Summer only. I33t2? Available For Summer 1 bdr. furnished or unfurnished 2 bdr. studio furnished or unfurnished THE MARK XII APARTMENTS 401 Lincoln College Station, Tx. 846-7380 Experienced tutoring in mathematics. All levels. Call Jacqile 846-4224. 127t8 Luxury duplex, unfurnished. Very large bedroom. Living room with fire place. Built-in kitchen. 17 cubic ft. re frigerator with ice maker. Separate utility room. Wood fence. South wood Valley on shuttle bus. No pets. $215 per/mo. & utilities. 693-8534. 133122 In walking distance of university. Now leasing for summer and fall. Very large 2 bedroom, 1 bath un furnished 4-plex apartments. Manager on premises. Washer and dryer connections $150/mo. summer, $ 1 65 fall plus utilities. Hurry and reserve for summer and fall. 846-5292 or 693- 0482. 138115 For summer sublease. Two bedroom house near campus. Must be quiet and willing to take care of cat and yard. No dogs. $90/month plus bills. 846-6125. 14612 Cheyenne Apts. Summer Leases SAVE! Beautiful, new, 825 sq. ft., re frigerator, dishwasher, fully carpeted. 2 BR, 1 Bath, fur nished or unfurnished, on shuttle bus. FOR RENT HELP WANTED HELP WANTED NEW APARTMENTS. Efficiency $135 month. One bedroom from $150 month, two bedroom from $175 month. All hills paid except electric ity. Villa West Apartments, south of Villa Maria. Lorraine Peterson, Manager. 822- 7772. ' 75tfn Furnished apt. to sublease for summer. Au gust rent free. Sundance Apts. 693-2127. 145t3 Rent my two bedroom one bath brick house this summer. It’s three blocks from campus. It has central air and is partially furnished. The cost is $180/mo plus bills and deposit. Available June 1st. Brian Morlock 846-3950. i47ts FAIRWAY APARTMENTS 3300 S. College Summer Rates $149 large 2 bedroom unfur nished $169 large 2 bedroom furnsihed Now leasing for fall. (860 sq. ft.) Swimming pool, washateria, near university and on shuttle bus route. 822-4964. 147111 HELP WANTED: Aggies wanted to sell subscriptions to the Brazos Val ley’s number one newspaper, The Eagle. Salary and commissions plus bonus arrangements. Flexible hours. Work dates - August 21 through September 26. Send letter detailing your experience and including summer address and phone number to Roy Nelson, The Eagle, P. O. Box 3000, Bryan, Texas 77801 . 139116 James Miller, Texas A&M graduate student from Marshall, Thursday was named the F.C. Bol ton Award winner in electrical engi neering. Miller received an engraved watch, $125 and the addition of his name to the Bolton Award plaque. Presentation was made by Dr. Robert D. Chenoweth, assistant head of the electrical engineering department. Miller, who completed under graduate studies last December, was chosen by the faculty on schol arship, leadership, service and po tential as an engineer. The award honors the late Dr. Frank C. Bolton, Texas A&M presi dent, engineering dean, electrical engineering professor and depart ment head. for outstanding doctoral canl performance. During the ceremonies, 0( nor was formally presenter medal and $1,000 accompa Manufacturing Chemists As tion teaching award given sis orees nationwide. John Files, chairman of Merichem Co. in ton and member of the MCAlt officially gave the prize anno® earlier this spring. Each of the three gradm seniors selected had maintain high grade point ratioatlexasi while achieving recognitioninj activities, officials said. Lacy, a physics major, was Texas A&M’s 1977 Rhodes S4 nominees. Atmar is a candidate It bachelor’s degree in biology Richardson, in chemistry. Summer Sublease Spacious 3 bedroom 2 bath studio duplex in Aurora Gardens. Furnished. Walking distance from campus. 2 covered parking spaces, access to Scandia facilities. $240 per month plus utilities. 693-5852, 693- 5861. 14415 HELP WANTED FULL OR PART TIME Day Shifts (10-3 p.m.) (11-3 p.m.) (10-5 p.m.) Night Shifts 5 p.m., 2 or 3 nights a week and weekends. Also have full time work. Ideal position for mothers with children in school or students, we will arrange hours to fit your needs. COUNTER AND CASHIER WORK $2.75/hour apply in person only Br y an WHATABURGER 1101 Texas An Equal Opportunity Employer. College Station 105 Dominik 75tfn Seniors honored for excellence Woodhams gets journalism hoi Robert Atmar of Corpus Christi, Loren Richardson of Houston and Robert Lacy of Lake Charles, La., were named outstanding graduating seniors in the College of Science at Texas A&M University. Two faculty members. Dr. Rod O’Connor of chemistry and Dr. Carlton Mason of mathematics, were selected by the College of Sci ence Student Council for plaques recognizing excellence in teaching and student relations. Paul Biemer, graduate student in statistics and former San Antonian, received the W.S. Connor Award Mary Alice Woodhams, dati of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Woodl of Houston, has been selectdl outstanding journalism gradJ senior tit Texas A&M Univeriil The honor, given annuallyt| Society of Professional JourralJ awarded to the student will demonstrated superior jourail ability, outstanding integrit)| character. Woodhams has served the year as managing editor oflle! talion and was an internatthe! las Times Herald. She will be joining the staffi Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentineli her graduation this spring Texas A&M University. Am fou Luxury 3 bedroom, DA bath unfur nished duplex in Southwood Valley, fenced yard. Shuttle bus. Ideal for 3 students. Available June 1 $300/mo. & utilities. No pets. 693-8534. Call after 5 & weekends 130125 “Ten-Hut!” Ladies! Need money? We are looking for a few nice, pleasant, smiling faces as waitresses. Day or night shifts. Flexi ble hours. Apply in person. 1701 S. Texas Avenue. Western Sizzlin Steakhouse. , “At Ease!’’ 145,3 FOR SALE 1969 Chevy 1 mpa/a 59,000 ini/e: owner. $275. 779-4429. original 14513 For Rent This Summer Available now. Extra large bedroom suitable for two. 5 min. from campus, all privileges, t.v., private phone, bills paid. $87.50 for one, $67.50 each for two (good friends). Call 846-3824 after 5:00. uets HELP WANTED Fall openings as camp leader with the Houston Independent School District Outdoor Education Center in Trinity Texas. Duties involve in struction and assignments typi cally associated with a camp counselor. Permanent and sea sonable jobs available. Interviews held May 3 at A&M Placement Service. uets “THINGS TO SELL” Used Furniture & Household Junque '“RESELL THRIFT SHOPPE” | Buses: answer to car problems J 917 S. Washington 779-60323516 | Dependable students for morning paper routes near the campus. Must be available now and during fall semester. Excellent income for part-time job. 822-4351 or 846-8648. ; MAINTENANCE MAN Experience in carpentry and major & minor repairs. Part time/full time $4.00 an hour. Apply at 309 University. Dixie Chicken Enterprises, 8:30- 10:30 am. i45t5 r 1977 Monte Carlo Landau.! ! Air, power, AM FM stereo,! (21,000 miles. Call 846-j (9249, after 5:00 846-j ( 9477. uztsj JOB OPPORTUNITIES '3Ta)¥ a66ountants Attractive cocktail waitresses needed. 6 nights a week availa ble. Top salary. Position also available for experienced kitchen help. Call 693-2200, Joyce Di xon. 138110 Texas Data Center 1705 E. 29th 779-8008 Part time driving positions. Approximately 7 hrs. on Saturday. Possible hours during week. Must have valid Texas drivers license. Equal Opportunity Employer 14317 Bryan-College Station public ac counting firm is seeking account ants. Some public accounting ex perience preferred. Replies confi dential. Write Box 3854, Bryan, Texas 77801. OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer/year-round. Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, $500-$1200 monthly, expenses paid, sightseeing. Free information-Write: BMP Co., Box 4490, Dept. TC, Berkeley, CA 94704. 129120 WANTED AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: ( Lill (ioorgr \\ ebb I'iirnuTS InMiiame Group 823-8051 3400 S. College Automobiles in and around major cities will eventually strangle them selves, and a short-term people transportation answer must be found. In Texas, the alternative to cars will be rubber-tired busses, au thorities agree. Basic mass transit changes are suggested in order to get people to use busses, research has shown. “On the whole, the public in Texas is convinced buses are cheaper than cars,” said Dr. Patricia Knight Guseman. She is in a two-year study of the sociology of mas transit. The research aims include determining people-perceived transit needs and identifying population segments that will use buses. Guseman said part of the bus tran sit acceptance problem stems from inaccurate perception of mass transit by potential users, and part of the problem lies with transit operators. She believes eSorts in the latter will go far in correcting many people’s views, given that most con sider bus riding the less expensive choice. BE\ verly manstt But much Mohai $4 mil set Bt lifelike to stay w ith cars, where possible flower lowed by flexibility. Factors of convenience inch routes, bus frequency, busstopl tions, night and weekend sen dills transfers and fare change-mil P^inte among others. The socii tends some of these can beeb every within budget limitations Efforts to reduce waitingp« or cut the average distance stops would he highly expen “Simplified directions, how tog and where to get off to gettoi sired destination, wouldincreas ing tl Alth color i shock ing that g “Dt the m an int paintt statue Full time 7723. • typing. Symbols 823- 392tlii The Houston Chronicle has im mediate openings for route carriers. Salary ranges from $300-$550 per month. Applicants must have after noons free from 1-5 p.m. and de pendable transportation. Also taking applications for summer and fall semesters. Call Julian McMurray 693-2323 or 846-0763. i29tfn WANTED Typing 75c page. 846-7577. 135U7 Typing. Experienced, fast, accurate. All kinds. 822-0544. 119t8 Typing. 823-4579. FOR SALE ALLEN Olds.nobile Cadillac SALES - SERVICE "Where .satisfaction is standard et/uipnient 2401 Texas Aw . 823-8002 MANAGER TRAINEE ! $8000 j ?Ffapidly expanding statewide corpora- i jtion has immediate opening for the ! Iright person. $8000 first year, should | jdouble the second and increase j Jrapidly after that. Must be able to ! '73 WV Bus. 8137. Clean, excellent c mdition. 846- 14615 jmeet people, be willing to work hard "and be motivated by money. Educa- | 1974 Honda, great 846-1921, 845-7939. iditi 27,000 miles. 14614 I tion given preference. No experience . W A i • . .... A l\t*VV ill lll\ .4.11X1 l_.l. IIIIIIV.II. •necessary. Apply in person 712 Villa | hIueS w/hats $150 . 693-6409. ?Mana Rd. 1 id Lt. uniforn 42 It gre Yamaha TB-700 cassette deck good condition. $140. 822-1435. 143t5 THE NEW VILLAGE GREEN APTS. 401 University Oaks • College Station Now Leasing 10-speed ladies Raleigh Grand-Prix. Like new. 845-8036, 693-1155. 143t5 72 Triumph TR6. Real sharp. $2700. 846- 3026. i44t5 • Efficiencies - 1BR - 2BR, 1B - 2BR, 2B ►pool - tennis courts - club room •furnished or unfurnishedl • on shuttle bus route 693-5432 Sofa and 2 chairs. $50. 846-5912. Pioneer receiver. Technics reel, Cerwin-Vega speakers. 693-9276. 145t5 THE CRUSE CORPORATION . . . SPRING SPECIAL . . . COLLEGE STATION —3 bedroom, 1 bath with carport, some with washers & dryers and fe/iced yards. Lawns are main tained for you. Rent now and save . . . $235 per month. Larry Cruse 693-3047 Reservations for fall accepted now Offices (8-5) 693-2800 Evenings & Weekends Thelma Costa 846-7318 Aggie senior boots size 9 VzD. Worn for one year by original owner. Will talk price. Call 317-582-2840. 11413 We're tooting our own horn . . BATTALION ADVERTISING GETS RESULTS! “So many transit systems are oriented toward efficient operations, rather than public use, commented the Texas Transportation Institute assistant research sociologist. Cost and safety were pluses given bus transit by people in a survey. Researchers made aboard transit ve hicle surveys in Waco and Beau mont. The 12-item comparison of buses to cars favored private vehicles for punctuality, simplicity, modernity, comfort, speed, enjoyability, reliability and, as might be expected, convenience and flexi bility. But the research team, working under State Department of High ways and Public Transportation funding, believes four of the 10 nega tives can be enhanced with feasible service developments and promo tion. “These are convenience, simplic ity, enjoyability and status,” Guse man said. Convenience was viewed by the majority as the biggest reason average person’s use,’ Gust said. Personal security is one re some people prefer a car ovel transit. “This is a perceived problem substantiated by facts,” sheadj Socioeconomics (lack of pen use of a ear), the nearness ofi route to home and a positive* busing compared to driving found to be key reasons for I use. Older people and blue females are prime adult market merits, Guseman said, “ male-female dichotomy is just* portant as the socioeconomic “One sociologically interes thing from the surveys is few segments of the Texas pof tion consider using bus transit it future,” she added. But rider levels are constant lowing an upward surge in to the energy crunch. Transit thorities are convinced couple of years, energy will bring ridership levels above of 1974.” In number of urban trips Houston leads in making the s« to bus transportation. Dallas is oriel and Lubbock had a recent percent increase. Theyareamoi Texas cities with transit operati Since 1950, 20 have discontin service. Increasing freeway congest! higher fuel prices and mas tra marketing devices, such assubsc tion and park-and-ride services, cause more people to park the and take the bus, the reports! pubic Probability of ‘clonk. Tl ture Pag< gam win tell aboi the you you the a person is unlikely By K. MACK SISK United Press International SAN ANTONIO, Texas — De spite all the discussion of the cloning of a human being, the actuality probably is a long, long way from happening, a researcher at the Uni versity of Texas Health Science Center says. “Cloning is nothing new — scien tists have been cloning bacteria and plants for years,” said Dr. Edward G. Rennels, chairman of the Anatomy Department. “The moral and legal , that would arise from suchan® would present even more of an™ than the technological " he said. w Big Results! CLASSIFIED ADS! ir “The term ’clone’ comes from the Greek word meaning ‘young shoot or twig’ and originally was used to refer to the part of a plant which was used to start a new plant. “A clone is a colony of cells de rived from a single parent cell. Clone also refers to groups or col onies of individual organizations which have arisen from a single in dividual by a sexual reproduction.” But Rennels maintains the technology, equipment and sophis ticated techniques necessary to clone an entire human being proba bly are not available yet. Rennels, who has been sw the anterior pituitary gland for eral years, recently receivtj three-year renewal of a grant “j the National Institute of Artb Metabolism and Digestive Disfi to continue his investigation in'l ing clones of prolaetin-produjj cells taken from the pituitary of the rat. The scientist began working' pituitary cell clones in an attend define the factors which regulald production of prolactin, a horn 1 1 stimulating milk production it| breast. “In order to study the ffmeti certain cells types, such astlid that secrete this hormone, we! to be able to separate a these cells from the other kinds* are present in the pituitary then grow them in a culture fori longed periods of time, lie said Th Me anc the sto: ph< 1 yot job W e sin yoi IM an< are Wo sio yoi