*rp« Carle, fen invited Miller will “nivercity ’“•I' Schoj. id to bring 'eras A(t\| Stance in Ijency for ®sni must ™ United un ms libran dinator dl raced the be made wding to ! to bister THE BATTALION TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1978 Page 3 what’s up? rt ruling unday is of subur- that the ing from r federal lopment which uding El ie Texas md Sun- ed vestigate ; the set- x spokes- o “get to :ck coed, :s, said it ents and ct Attor- ike srs new eases in and the :e Com- ase coal help the ationaty ?m coal etter to omein embers is were linated ily had lowing arently nda ill be jugb Tuesday PENTAGON AREA HOMETOWN CLUB: The last meeting of the fall semester will be at 8 p.m. in Room 302, Rudder Tower. Rides and carpools for the Christmas holidays will be discussed. For more information, call Darrel Westbrook (845-7103) or Scott Beach (845-2502). TAMU INTERNATIONAL FOLKDANCERS: A meeting will be held in Room 201 of the MSC at 7:30 p.m. ENGLISH SOCIETY: Will have a Christmas party at 8 p.m. in Room 145, MSC. Dress is semi-formal. HUMAN FACTORS CLUB: George Mann of the Environmental Design Department will speak on “Health Facility Design and Architecture From the Human Factors Standpoint” at 8 p.m. in Room 342, Zachry. PLANT SCIENCE CLUB: Dr. Joham will speak at 7:30 p.m. in Room 103, Plant Sciences Building. A&M WHEELMEN: A meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. in Room 141 of the MSC. AGGIE CINEMA: “The Bishop’s Wife,” starring David Niven, Cary Grant and Lorreta Young, in which Dudley the Angel comes mas querading as the bishop’s assistant during the Christmas season and performs a series of miracles with humerous, romantic touches, will be shown at 8 p.m. in Rudder Theater. Wednesday AGGIE CHOIR: The second annual Aggie Choir Christmas party will be at 7 p.m. in the Activities Center of the First Baptist church of College Station, 200 College Main. The program will consist of a variety of Christmas music. A brass ensemble of Aggie instrumentalists and a sing-along of Chirstmas caroling will be featured. There is no charge and a special invitation is being ex tended to Texas A&M’s student body and the community. TAMU SURF CLUB: There will be a club meeting at 7:30 p.m. in Room 301, Rudder, followed by a hot surf flick, “Playgrounds in Paradise." AMERICAN NUCLEAR SOCIETY: Will have its 2nd Annual Waste-fest Christmas Party at 7:30 p.m. in the Quonset Hut B. TSEA AND SES: There will be a Student-Faculty Christmas Tea from 1-3 p.m. in Room 367, HECT. BASKETBALL: The women’s team will play Sam Houston State University at 5:15 p.m. in G. Rollie White Coliseum. BASKETBALL: The men’s team will play Sam Houston State Uni versity at 7:30 p.m. in G. Rollie White Coliseum. VOLLEYBALL: The women’s team will play in the AIAW National Tournament in Tuscaloosa, Alabama today through Saturday. SMITH COUNTY HOMETOWN CLUB: Will elect spring officers at 7:30 p.m. in the Willowick I Party Room. Thursday TAMU WATER SKI CLUB: Will have officer elections and a meet ing at 7 p.m. in Room 308, Rudder Tower. GRADUATING SENIORS: Today is the last day for meeting all requirements for graduation. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST: Will meet at 7 p.m. in Room 510, Rudder Tower. MOVIE: “Comedy of Terrors,” starring Boris Karloff, Vincent Price and Peter Lorre will be shown at 8 and 10 p.m. in Room 601, Rudder Tower. Admission for this slapstick horror film is 50 cents. chizophrenic bund innocent United Press International COLUMBUS, Ohio — A man whom psychologists said had 10 separate personalities Monday was found innocent by reason of insan ity of rape, kidnapping and robbery charges. Franklin County Common Pleas Court Judge Jay Flowers found William Milligan, 23, Lancaster, Ohio, innocent on three counts of rape, three of kidnapping and three of robbery. One rape count was dismissed. Flowers, who heard the case after Milligan’s attorney waived a jury trial, had received a supplemental report from the South West Com munity Mental Health Center that upheld the judge’s earlier ruling that Milligan was competent to stand trial. “He is competent to stand trial and he can understand the charges and assist in his defense,” said Flowers. Milligan has been undergo ing therapy at the Central Ohio Psychiatric Hospital, where doctors say his personalities have been “fused, enabling him to stand trial. Dr. Cornelia Wilbur, Lexington, Ky., an authority on personality disorders and the psychiatrist who treated “Sybil”, the subject of a bestselling book, is convinced Milligan could never fake the compli cated memories and stories of his body-mates. ■MiiiiHikriaiiir- 1 HOTJLINKg COMING SOON! (V Cf £res5 Liz^ ndy"* >avid^ ramie* , ,Ste'^ ►bieP^ oge*; PendH Je SctdJ I3llg ^ University Bookstore 2nd LOCATION in WllC^' CULPEPPER PLAZA OPEN TO BUY YOUR BOOKS and IN FULL OPERATION THIS SPRING UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE NORTHGATE AND CULPEPPER PLAZA Skates replace her shoes She’s rollin’ ’round the town United Press International DENVER — Four years ago, Jil- lene Freed laced up her first pair of roller skates. Today, she owns no other shoes and whisks around the city drawing smiles and amazed looks. “A car totally blocks you off. On skates, life is not passing me by. When I go skating by it makes people smile. A lot want to talk about when they rollerskated,” said the 30-year-old Freed. She is a native of Los Angeles, where rolling has become an ac cepted, if uncommon, alternative method of transportation. Since then, she has barely taken her skates off and claims she has no other shoes. “I do have a pair of old boots,” she said, while listing the advantages of being roller-borne. “No one’s going to steal them. When I go down hills, I can practice my skiing. I hope I’ll still be skating when I’m 80,” she says. She claims other advantages of skating include not contributing to pollution, no gasoline payments, general physical conditioning and not being shut off inside a car. She rolls to business appoint ments, lunch, to and from work, shopping and friends’ homes, but the path in Denver is not always smooth. “Being a pioneer, you have to come up against a lot of criticism. But it makes you strong within yourself, ” she said of merchants who have barred her roller-outfitted-feet from entering. Your T-Shirt Store • Custom T-Shirts • Aggie T-Shirts • Group Prices NORTHGATE - Across from the Post Office MON. THRU SAT. 10-6 CUSTOM SOUNDS Prices are up starting Dec. 1 but my friends at Custom Sounds say while their current stock lasts, they will sell their merchandise at the old prices. T oday’s superior long-play and 45 rpm records offer vastly improved dynamic range, wider fre quency response, virtually no noise. Are you staying ahead of these signifi cant improvements in hi-fi software by up-dating your amps, speakers and other hi-fi system hardware? Pioneer’s PL-518 has all the up-to-the- minute advances you need to get your music’s worth, at a price that guarantees your money’s worth. Particular at tention has been paid to mak ing the PL-518 super accurate when it comes to platter speed — it has a DC servomotor to deliver rated speed performance all the time, with extremely low wow/flutter. And we’ve made the PL-518 super resistant to howling and unwanted resonance of all forms — it has a 40mm- thick solid particleboard base and SPC steel bottom plate to stop sound pressure howling, and other special devices to shut out floor howling. All this plus Auto-Return conve nience for the sensitive tone arm, and Quick-Start conve nience for the high-inertia platter. Here are the details that add up to superb tonal quality as judged by today’s — and tomorrow’s hi-fi music. | Reg- « 9 0 ° PIONEER PL-518 *139 95 Superb Tonal Quality Direct-Drive DC Servomotor for low Wow/Flutter • Time tested Auto Return • Quick Start Convenience PIONEER SX-780 STEREO RECEIVER WITH DC POWER AMPLIFICATION Reg. 375°° SALE *249 95 M aking a wise investment in stereo isn’t difficult when you choose Pioneer. We’ve become the world’s best-selling audio maker by continuing to deliver high fidelity equipment that not only performs up to the finest state-of-the-art standards but offers the best economy, too. This formula is expressed as a cost/per formance ratio, and the C/P in the SX-780 couldn’t be better: it is a stereo receiver like none you’ve ever seen (or heard) before in this price range. Power amplification circuitry is DC where it counts, so that TIM (Transient Intermodulation Distortion) and other forms of music- spoiling irregularities are minimized. The FM/AM tuner circuitry uses Pioneer-exclusive ICs to overcome hazards to clean reception and reproduction. Power output is continuous 45 watts per channel, both channels driven into 8 ohms, from 20 to 20,000Hz, with no more than 0.05% total harmonic distortion. Audition the SX-780 and find out why more people prefer Pioneer. CUSTOM SOUNDS 3806-A OLD COLLEGE ROAD 846-5803