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AAA House of Curtis Mathes 779-3939 Downtown Bryan 25th St. & Main “The most expensive set in America and darn well worth it.” THE MARINE PLC PROGRAM Ws. .A-,. — MARINE OFFICER TRAINING — For full time college students — Freshmen, sophomores, juniors, seniors and graduate students are eligible — No on — campus military requirements — All officer training conducted during summer — No interruption of academic or social activities — Non - obligatory program — Positions in both aviation and ground fields available — Eligible for $100 per month Financial Assistance The Marine Officer Selection Team will be available to discuss the Marine PLC Program on the 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, and 8th of September in the Memorial Student Center. You may also contact the Team at 707 University Drive (next to University National Bank). Call Collect in Houston In College Station 226-5465 846-3138 MARINE OFFICER ONE OF THE FEW ONE OF THE FINEST United Press International WASHINGTON — Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., wants to call a halt to federal financing of the Na tional Aeronautics and Space Ad ministration’s studies of the moon rocks. NASA already has spent more than $41.2 million studying the rocks, said Proxmire in a statement Sunday. He said he opposes a re quest for another $5.7 million. Proxmire is chairman of the ap propriations subcommittee on NASA. Lunar sample research should be done by the National Science Foun dation rather than NASA, Proxmire said, calling the additional federal funds “inappropriate , unjustified.” Proxmire said he had been told much of the funding was being used to train young scientists and provide equipment for laboratories, and said: “I do not in any way mean to show disrespect for these motives. How ever, we have programs for training graduate students. We have pro grams for providing research equip ment to universities. NASA’s moon rock program should not be used for these purposes.” Go to jail—blub, blub Divers ‘play’ for MD United Press International DENVER — Go to Jail, go di rectly to Jail — blub, blub, blub — do not pass Go, do not collect $200 — blub, blub, blub. Seven divers were playing a laminated version of Monopoly today at the bottom of a 10-foot deep pool trying to break what they believe to be the world’s re cord — 22 hours — for playing Monopoly while submerged. Twelve divers, raising money to combat muscular dystrophy, eased into an indoor pool at Col orado Divers World in Denver at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, planning to stay under until 2:30 p.m. Mon day. Another diver checks their vital signs every three hours, motioning players up if their temperatures dip to 94 degrees. Two divers. Bob Dickerson and his son, Scott, both of De nver, surfaced at 7:15 p.m. Sun day. Bemie Mathewson of De nver came up at 12:55 a.m. Monday, and two other Denver men — Mike Litzo and Dennis Cleary — hit the surface at 2:47 a.m. Their temperatures were raised with a sauna and warm tea and food. The divers periodically spell each other at weighted tables around the weighted four-player table, and when not playing, they read laminated books or write messages to each other on special pads. The dice are thrown again and again and again — the contes tants go to Jail, directly to Jail, without collecting $200; they visit Marvin Gardens, walk the Boardwalk, take a ride on the Reading, and wait for the unfor tunate to land on a Park Place crowded w'ith hotels and tiny green houses. Organizer and Divers World Owner Dan Smith said the last of the Guinness editions to record underwater Monopoly were printed in 1975, but the entry was dropped from later editions. Craig Hessler, one of the divers. has a letter from theGuinnea ficials "authorizing us to go the record,” Smith said. David Buongiorne, am— dinator of the dive, saidHn came up with the ideatmt ago. Smith said pledgesfe® dealers and diving equips manufacturers have read $3, OCX). Old songs never die re just redone they Buongiorne said the decc fin the divers to stay subir — for 24 hours also came fromm sler. ‘‘It’s Craig’s understaefei that someone did 22 ho