“nstrain said 1st Heir lli ob Sai vhodi f estrainii 'op tie, "blediij iurt." 1 a mi news ’y Tim ors. V tank I le: Idni 1.5 xni info » To« fer. Joii SALE >ry. garf Assyi 15 Pi in iatl Pleas Seae!« I0« THE BATTALION Page 5 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1978 Campus Names Scholarship awarded Patrick W. Kingsbury has been selected as recipient of a scholarship by the Common Car rier Conference-Irregular Route Carriers for the second consecu tive year. Kingsbury is a graduate student in the College of Business Administration. Five scholarships, each total ing $1,500 per academic year, were awarded nationally on a competitive basis this fall by the ICC-IK, an affiliate of the Ameri can Trucking Association. Kings bury is concentrating his studies in logistics management. Ag economics major bound for Australia Timothy Burt, a graduate stu dent of agricultural economics, has been awarded a Graduate Fellowship from the Rotary Foundation of Rotary Interna tional for the 1979-80 academic year. The award will underwrite the bill cost of study abroad, paying for intensive language instruc tion, travel, lodging and food, in addition to tuition, books, and laboratory fees. Applicants for awards are evaluated on their ambassadorial as well as scholarly potential. Burt plans to study agricultural economics at University of New England, Armidale, Australia. O’Connor to be recognized Dr. Rod O’Connor, director of First Year Chemistry Programs, will receive an Alumni Achieve ment Award from Southeast Mis souri State University at cere monies to be held on their cam pus Oct. 13. O’Connor completed his bachelor of science degrees in chemistry, mathematics and physics at Southeast Missouri State in three years, graduating in 1955 with an all-A record, the only alumnus to do so in the 100- year history of the school. He completed his work for a docto rate in physical-organic chemis try two and one-half years later at the University of California at Berkeley. He is the author of sev eral books and technical papers and has received four teaching awards, including a 1978 national award from the Manufacturing Chemists Association. Carter appointed Dr. Neville L. Carter has been named head of geophysics at Texas A&M, announced Geosci ences Dean Earl F. Cook. Carter was formerly an earth and space science professor at State University of New York- Stony Brook. He has also taught at Yale University and was a re search geologist with Shell Oil Co. Carter replaces Professor An thony F. Gangi, who has been the acting head of the Geophysics Department since 1976. Carter replaces Professor An thony F. Gangi, who has been the acting head of the Geophysics Department since 1976. Carter earned a doctorate from the University of California-Los Angeles in 1962. He completed undergraduate work at Pomona (Calif.) College and master’s de gree work at UCLA. His research includes studies of the flow in the earth’s upper mantle, geothermal energy, crystalline rock behavior as it applies to earthquakes and radioactive waste isolation. Woodcock resigns to teach Professor David Woodcock has resigned, effective Jan. 1, 1979, as head of the department of Ar chitecture at Texas A&M to return to full-time teaching. The announcement was made by Architecture and Environmental Design Dean Raymond D. Reed. Woodcock has led the depart ment for the past five years. A search committee has been ap pointed by Reed to recommend a successor for Woodcock. President’s Scholars include high school seniors Forty Texas high school seniors have been named President s Scholars at Texas A&M. The honor is bestowed annually to students with outstanding scholastic, civic and leadership abilities. President’s Scholars re ceive a $6,000, four-year scholar ship upon enrollment at Texas A&M. Recipients are elected by Texas A&M’s Scholarships Committee from nominations by Texas high school principals. Robert M. Logan, director of student aid, said recipients rank in the top of their high school classes and rank high nationally in their National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test and Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) scores. The President’s Scholar prog ram was begun in 1967 to keep Texas’s brightest high school graduates in the state for their university educations. The 1978 President’s Scholars are James Laymance, John San ders, Gary Roden, Denise Lott, Adam Luckenback and John Taylor, all from Houston; Joe Gregg and Mary Mills of Lub bock; Timothy Hayden and Ellen Perkins of San Antonio; Mark Swain, Granbury; Michael Tra han, Baytown; Carolyn Stephen son, Edcouch; Thomas Roe, Fort Worth; James Reiter, Midland and Sharon Poynor, Liberty; Henry Poole, Corrigan; Robert Hartin, Vernon; Gerald Her rington, and David Lyons of Marshall; Deanna Hoelscher, Floresville; Jefferson Dutton, Jacksboro; Jill Bullard, Bel- laire, Carl Bargainer, Abilene; Kathy Bartholomew, Amarillo; Jonathan Smith, Corpus Christi; Johnita Davis, Lake Jackson and David Barnett, Groves. Also, Richard Hatley, Longview; Jerrold Miertschin, Arlington; David Carpman, Irv ing; Kathleen Leonard, Euless; Bobby Bishop, Farmersville; Charles Babers, Calvert; Theresa Adair, Lagotvista; Evan Harrel, Kingsville; Shelley Stof- fels, Lindsay; Kurt Nauck, El Paso; Regnald Boles, Winters, and Nancy Glazner, Canyon. French's Care-A-Lot OPEN FOR A&M FOOTBALL LOCATED BEHIND BEEF & BREW OFF HWY. 30. CALL 846-1037 FOR RESERVATIONS! Continental Pipeline Company Continental Pipeline Company will be on campus Octo ber 12, 1978 to interview for positions in a 12 month Management Development Program. Students in busi ness management, finance, economics will be placed at district locations throughout the U.S. for exposure & experience & the opportunity to develop as a future manager of the organization. FARMER'S MARKET SANDWICH SHOPPE — COUPON SPECIAL — 16 oz. Drink With The Purchase of Any Submarine or Sandwich. Patricia Hearst seeks clemency SAN FRANCISCO — Jailed heiress Patricia Hearst has sent a signed formal petition seeking cle mency to President Carter, the San Francisco Chronicle reported today. Hearst’s action followed a re quest by Rep. Leo Ryan, D-Calif., and47other House members Friday that Miss Hearst’s sentence he sub stituted for time already served and that she he released from prison. The Chronicle said Miss Hearst’s clemency petition should he deli vered to the Justice Department’s pardon attorney, John Stanish, Monday morning by Sen. S.L Hayakawa, R-Calif., and Ryan, who represents the district where the Hearst family lives. The pardon attorney’s office is the First step in any clemency action be- Ibre reaching Carter. The newspa per noted Carter has granted only three clemency requests out of 400,500 considered in the 21 months he has been in office. The congressional request was made to Attorney General Griffin in a letter noting Hearst has already spent 18 months behind bars. In an earlier letter to his col leagues, Ryan said he had made a personal investigation of the case after Hearst had written him to ask that he visit her. He said his own conclusion to seek her release had been “heavily influ enced” by the comments of retired FBI agent Charles Bates, who was Hearst’s “pursuer and captor.” “In the end, Hearst is a normal, stable and lively young woman of 24 who reminds me very much of my own daughter Patty, and who is almost exactly the same age, Ryan wrote. “I can tell you with certainty that her incarceration will produce no more ‘correction’ or ‘rehabilitation’,” he said. “She is as capable of living in a normal society as much as I am, or you are. The only consideration left is the amount of revenge which soci ety must extract from Miss Hearst,”he wrote. Ryan said both he and Bates be lieve that “justice is best served by her release.” professional hair designers FEATURING SEBRING MON.-SAT. 9-5:30 69 ?' 1 J7? 1510 HOLLEMAN (ACROSS FROM THE SEVILLA APTS.) 4imsc| NID ed} Ml The IN/ISC VIDEO TAPE GOIVIIVIITTEE is accepting applications for membership. Come by Room 216S in the IVISG and sign op. GENERAL MEETING TUesday, September SB, Room 352 IVISG, "7:30 PIVI. All new, old and prospective members PLEASE attend. OPEN 7 DAYS WES MOWERY, REPUBLICAN CANDI DATE FOR U.S. CONGRESS THINKS THAT POLITICIANS SHOULD LISTEN MORE THAN THEY TALK. COME AND TALK TO WES AND TELL HIM YOUR IDEAS AND PROBLEMS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 10:00 A.M.-2:00 P.M., IN THE MSC MAIN HALL. WES LISTENS, AND THAT’S NOT JUST TALK. WES MOWERY CANDIDATE FOR U.S. CONGRESS 6th DISTRICT Pol. Adv. paid by Wes Mowery for Congress Committee, P.O. Box 11487, Fort Worth, Texas 76109. J. L. Matthews and Lee Paulsel — Chairmen, R. J. Schumacher— Treasurer. A copy of our reports is filed with the Federal Election Commission and is available for purchase from the Federal Election Commission, Washington, D.C.