The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 17, 1978, Image 3

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Friday
AGGIE PLAYERS: “J- IL >” a Pulitzer Prize-winning play based on Job
in the Bible, will be presented in Rudder Forum at 8 p.m. The play,
which will run through Saturday, is co-produced by Aggie Players
and the Theater Arts Section. Tickets, available at Rudder Box
Office, are $3 general admission and $2 for TAMU students.
OCSA KISSING BOOTH: The Off-Campus Student Association will
have a kissing booth to raise money for Bonfire from 11-2 p.m.
Kisses are 25 cents each.
BASEMENT COFFEEHOUSE: Nanci Griffith will perform from 8
p.m. to midnight tonight and Saturday. Advance tickets are 2/$1.50
at the MSC Box Office and $1 at the door.
CHRISTMAS PARADE: Applications for club participation in the
annual Christmas Parade for Bryan-College Station and surround
ing areas on Dec. 5 can be picked up in room 221, MSC.
SAN ANTONIO HOMETOWN CLUB: Will have a party at 7:30 p. m.
in the Plantation Oaks party room. Members with membership
cards will be admitted free. Admission for guests is $2.50.
BASKETBALL: The women’s team will play at Southwest Texas at
7:30 p.m.
GYMNASTICS: The women’s team will host Tarleton State.
NEIL SIMON FESTIVAL: “Murder By Death,” in which the world’s
greatest fictional detectives are called together by an eccentric
millionaire to solve a bizarre murder, will be shown at 8 p.m. in
Rudder Auditorium. “Barefoot In the Park,’’ starring Robert Bed
ford and Jane Fonda as newlyweds who face the trials of apartment
life in New York, will be shown at 10 p.m. in Rudder Auditorium.
MIDNIGHT MOVIE: “American Graffiti, about four teenagers in
the 50s who try to cope with friends, police, baby-sitters, drag
races, and the future, will be shown in Rudder Theater.
Saturday
FOOTBALL: The Texas Aggies will play Arkansas in Little Rock. The
game will start at 11:50 a.m. and will be shown on ABC-TV with the
pre-gar,le at 11:30 p.m.
AGGIE PLAYERS: “J.B will be performed at 8 p.m. in Rudder
Forum.
BASEMENT COFFEEHOUSE: Nanci Griffith will perform from 8
p.m. to midnight. Advance tickets are 2/$1.50, or $1 at the door.
SOCIETY OF WOMEN ENGINEERS: Will have a partv at 7:30 p. m.
in tl e Plantation Oaks party room. All members and their dates are
inv ted.
CR05 S COUNTRY: The women’s team will run in the AIAW Na
tionals in Denver, Colo.
BASKETBALL: The women’s team will play at Texas A&I in Poteet at
730 p. m.
INDIA ASSOCIATION: There will be a social get-together on the
occasion of “Bakri-Id at 8 p.m. in room 206, MSC. Abdul Qadar
will talk and refrehments will be served.
BANESE STUDENT SOCIETY: Will meet at 11 a.m. in the
Architecture Building.
EIL SIMON.FESTIVAL: “The Odd Couple, in which Jack Lem
mon and Walter Mathau team up in this hysterical comedy about
two incompatible divorcee’s living together, will be shown at 8p.m.
in Rudder Theater. “The Prisoner of Second Avenue, a comedy-
drama about a couple’s struggle to escape the urban ills of the city,
will be shown at 10 p.m. in Rudder Theater.
[IDNIGHT MOVIE: “American Graffiti, will be shown in Rudder
Theater.
Sunday
kSEMENT COFFEHOUSE: Will have disco dancing from 8:30
p.m. to midnight. Admission is 50 cents.
?GIE CINEMA: “The Sunshine Boys, starring Walter Matthau,
iGeorge Burns, and Richard Benjamin, in which a biting and hyster
ical feud develops between the two partners in a Vaudeville com-
pdy team and endangers their planned comeback, will be shown at
2 p.m. in Rudder Theater.
Monday
MOVIE: “Every Man for Himself and God Against All will be shown
in the Basement Coffeehouse at 8 p.m.
OFF CAMPUS STUDENT ASSOCIATION: Aggieland pictures will
be taken at 7:15 p.m. in room 216, MSC.
ALPHA PI MU: Thomas Urban will speak on “Should an Engineer Get
a Masters in Business Administration?” at noon in room 342, Zac-
hrv.
BETA ALPHA PSI: Will have a mandatory meeting at 7 p.m. in room
601, Rudder Tower. Pledge initiation and elections will be held.
CROSS COUNTRY: The men’s team will run in the NCAA Meet in
Madison, Wis. at 11 a.m.
Did Hoover authorize surveillance?
THE BATTALION
FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 17, 1978
Page 3
Ex-FBI chief has wire-tap evidence
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The FBI im
plemented parts of the Nixon admin
istration’s discredited Huston plan
for illegal break-ins, mail openings
and wire taps to uncover fugitive rad
icals in the early 1970s, defense
lawyers for a former top FBI official
are charging.
Former President Richard Nixon
has said he quickly halted the plan —
named for White House aide Tom
Charles Huston — in July 1970, be
cause it was strongly opposed by
former FBI Director J. Edgar
Hoover.
But a lawyer for W. Mark Felt,
former associate FBI director, says
“certain recommendations ’ of the
Huston report were implemented in
mid-August of 1970 following a tele-
New rabies
vaccine safe,
more potent
United Press International
NEW YORK — A safer, less pain
ful rabies vaccine will be distributed
soon on a limited basis by the Fed
eral Center for Disease Control in
Atlanta, says Medical World News.
An article ih the trade publication
says the new product, human diploid
cell strain, already is being used in
Europe.
The new vaccine is more potent
than the current duck-embryo vac
cine, the article says, and is injected
only five or six times in the arm. The
duck vaccine requires 14-21 injec
tions in the abdomen or lower back.
The McGraw-Hill publication said
the center is making the vaccine
available only to persons bitten by
proved rabid animals and those for
whom the duck-embryo product is
ineffective or unsafe.
Shown enlarged.
Three Initial
Stick-Pin
Stick-pins are all the rage and
when they’re personalized
with three elegant hand-cut
initials they become even more
appreciated. In sterling silver
or 14K gold by Leonore Doskow.
Three initial Stick-Pin
in Sterling $12.00
in14Kgold $25.00
2 week delivery
VISA - MC
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& 707 Icxas
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BACKING THE AGS!
phone conversation
Hoover and Nixon.
between
Felt, who is charged along with
former FBI Director L. Patrick Gray
and another top bureau official with
approving the illegal break-ins in a
search for fugitive members of the
terrorist Weatherman group, is argu
ing higher authorities ordered the
warrantless wire taps. In documents
filed this week at the federal court
house, Felt’s lawyer contended ap
proval of surreptitious entries in
Weatherman investigations ordered
by Gray in 1972 “did not reinstitute
the practice; it merely continued the
practice, under tighter controls, re
instituted by Mr. Hoover in 1970.”
“Mr. Felt will show this by over
whelming evidence at trial,” defense
lawyer Brian Gettings said in his
court motion seeking access to more
White House and FBI files.
Gettings is seeking to defend Felt
on the same theory of higher author
ity that led a federal appeals court to
overturn the convictions of
Watergate burglars Bernard Barker
and Eugenio Martinez.
Gettings refused to say in an inter
view Thursday how he knew what
transpired in the Nixon-Hoover
telephone conversation.
But he said, “I’ve got evidence of
the conversation and what followed.
It’s all inextricably tied up with the
Huston plan.”
Pre-Holiday Savings.
20% to
50% off
Suits and
sportcoats.
Sale 79.88
Orlg. $100. A great collec
tion of classic three-piece
suits. Polyester knits and
blends in solid colors and
subtle patterns. Regular,
short, long sizes.
Sale $ 60
Orlg. values to $125. Big
savings on this selection of
vested suits. Classic styling
in polyester blends. Solid
colors and patterns in a full
range of sizes.
Dress shirts.
Sale $ 7 and 7.88
Orig. $12 and $14. Choose comfortable
polyester/cotton or high cotton blends.
Or Qiana® knits. Short and long-sleeves
in darks, lights, classic prints.
Polyester knit ties. Stripes, patterns.
Orig. 5.50 & 6.50, Sale 2.25 & 3.25.
30% to 50% Off
Dress & casual slacks.
Sale 11.88
Orig. $18. Selected polyester knit slacks
in lots of great patterns. Waist sizes 30 to
40.
Sale 10.99
Orig. $23. A closeout buy on continental
slacks with slider waist. Polyester knits in
fall solids. Sizes 30 to 40.
25% off
Dress shoes by Rand .
Sale $ 24& 25.50
Orig. $32 & $34. Top quality dress shoes
in leathers, patent leathers. Lots of styles
and colors in a full range of sizes.
Sale $ 2 to $ 9
Orig. 3.99 to $18. Save a big 50% on
this shirt selection. Pullover and button-
front short sleeve styles. Comfortable,
easy-care fabrics. S, M, L, XL.
Sale 7.88
Orig. $12.From Italy — a soft acrylic gift
boxed turtleneck by Nino Borroni. Fashion
solids. One size fits all.
33% to 50%
Fashion jeans.
Sale 3.88 to 12.88
Orig. values to $22. A special collection
of prewashed denim jeans with fashion
detailing and fancy stitching. Cotton and
polyester/cotton. Limited size selections.
Prewashed denim fashion jeans. Special
buy 9.99.
Corduroy specials.
Cord blazer with center vent, leather
buttons. 1O0% cotton. 29.99.
Cord slacks with scallop pockets. Poly
ester/cotton. 9.99.
Sales do not include entire stock and selections
may ba limited.
Intermediate markdowns may have been taken.
Last two days to save...
This
is
dCPenney
MANOR EAST MALL 779-4710
SHOP TONIGHT TO 9 P.M., SATURDAY TO 7 P.M.