The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 25, 1979, Image 9

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United Press International
■ FORT WORTH — A different
Kind of sound is coming out over
.Texas Christian University’s radio
Ration KTCU-FM each weekend.
It’s like an earlier day disco, but in-
Read of the snake and hustle the lis-
Rners are doing the big apple and
the jitterbug.
Dr. Jerry Stubblefield, a dentist,
and Bill Roe, regional merchandis
ing manager for a refrigerator man-
facturer, host a program that is very
ipular with its audience.
I And Stubblefield and Roe play
Jhat the audience requests: the Big
land sounds of Glenn Miller and
lommy Dorsey that dominated
Imerican music in the ’30s and ’40s.
Student legal office
seeks law graduate
By CARSON WEST
Battalion Reporter
Students seeking legal help through Texas A&M University are in
for a wait, says Jim Locke, the new student legal adviser.
The legal adviser’s office is currently operating at half strength and
Locke’s schedule is full until Feb. 2.
Locke is looking for a December or February graduate to fill the spot
vacated when Gaines West, the former student legal adviser, moved to
the systems attorney’s office.
He said it should take about a month to find a replacement. This is
because recent graduates of law school cannot take their bar exams
until the end of February.
Until then, Locke is handling the job by himself. He said he sees
between six and nine students a day on Tuesday through Friday.
Monday is walk-in day, when students are seen on a first-come first-
served basis. Locke said he saw 22 students on Monday alone.
Locke said the new adviser will be responsible for most of the
student load. This will leave Locke free to take care of the administra
tive side of the job.
Locke has called five law schools trying to find a replacement. He
said he has already had one reply and expects several others.
League to hold public forum
By JUDIE PORTER
Battalion Reporter
The League of Women Voters of
Brazos County are sponsoring a pub
lic forum Saturday concerned with
campaigning effectively for local
elective offices.
The league hopes to provide
people with an overview of cam
paigning and a place to go for refer
ence information. Beaumont said the
league hopes to get more people in
volved by informing them about city
and county offices before they make
the decision to run.
The public forum will consist of a
four-member panel which will cover
four different subject matters. The
first subject will be presented by
Penny Beaumont and deals with or
ganizing a campaign from the ground
up.
The second deals with using the
media effectively in a campaign and
will be given by Joe Buser of Buser &
Associated of Bryan.
The third subject will be given by
Ramon Dasch from the secretary of
state’s office in Austin. Dasch will
discuss the financial laws involved in
campaigns.
The fourth subject will cover the
actual election day and the ballot
counting procedures. Fumi Sugih-
ara, state voting rights chairman for
the league, will give the presenta
tion.
“We have no ax to grind, we’ie just
providing information in hopes that
more people will become involved,’’
Beaumont said. The public forum is
strictly a public service provided by
the LWV of Brazos County, she said.
The forum is Saturday, Jan. 27 at
11:15 a.m. in Wyatt’s Cafeteria.
Tickets are $4.25. Reservations can
be made by calling Judy Seed at
693-5506 or Penny Beaumont at
845-4618.
Most of the songs come from rec
ord collections of the two volunteer
h from collections of
^pteners. Some requests, such as
luckleberry Duck” and “720 in the
poks,” have been dug up to satisfy
Iteners. “Standards’ such as “Be
gin the Beguine” and “In the Mood”
'e easy.
I Since its beginning last March, the
pi (gram has quickly generated a de
lated and growing audience. As
|any as 50 request calls have been
Iken during the two-hour program
lat airs 8-10 p.m. Saturdays.
■ Roe said the response has been
Beyond anything he thought they
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dren in the
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High schoolers too free?
BOULDER, Colo. — Colorado
University official Jim Schafer says
times have changed a lot since he
went to high school.
Schafer, director of the University
Memorial Center, said Tuesday the
center made hundreds of dollars a
day during the three weeks Fairview
High School used the school’s
facilities while the college students
were on vacation.
“We made about $400 per day
from our pinball machines, Foosball,
pool tables and bowling alleys,” said
Schafer. “The games area was jam
med from 8 in the morning until 3:30
every afternoon. ”
About 2,100 Fairview students at
tended classes at the university be
ginning Jan. 3 while repairs were
made to the high school roof, which
collapsed Dec. 9. The high school
students returned to their own
school Tuesday and CU opened its
spring semester.
Schafer said cold weather kept the
students inside most of the time, and
he was surprised to see how much
1 hell-holes i
aten, starved
his subcoma
iman develop!
anel '‘stories ■
<is a great interest and quite a few
listeners.
■ Its been a landslide,
Stubblefield said, “all over Fort
Worth, as well as Arlington, Hurst
SHIRTS +
Dickens’sut Euless; we didn’t even know
Woodstone Center
907 Harvey Rd. (Hwy. 30)
of street un
(don slums,
ad evidence
s for handicap]
dinquent
iroviding
for children!
)f dollars in
rd reports ofi
g up by thei
ges, heldinsol
:g irons and la
d and placed
dormitories I
po
they were hear ing the program that
fai away.”
Stubblefield said the program is
pular for the same reasons that
pleated pants and calf-length skirts
have made a comeback.
■“A major portion of the people
who listen do so for nostalgic rea-
Bns. he said.
■The two men have a simple phi
losophy: play the songs that were big
Sellers during the Swing Era and,
wpevever possible, give them what
thev want. That last bit of philosophy
explains something like “Huckle-
693-9308
'We Sell Shirts'
Open 9-9
free time they had because of their
college-type schedules.
“When I was in high school, I had
classes all day,” he said.
Schafer said some of the UMC
furniture suffered minor damage and
the center’s elevator had to be re
paired several times.
“Some of the chairs broke down
from people climbing all over them,
and we locked up some of the good
furniture,” he said. “We had to call
the elevator repairman four or five
times because we found students had
been jumping up and down in it. ”
Schafer said schools trying to find
ways of increasing their faculties
should consider installing their own
game rooms.
“For $400 per day, you could hire
a lot of new teachers,” he said.
Introducing
The new Bose® Model 301
Probably today’s most popular
bookshelf speaker, the Bose Model
301 now has a new high-perform
ance tweeter, a unique Dual Fre
quency Crossover™ network, an
exclusive tweeter-protection circuit,
and a more elegant walnut-grain
vinyl enclosure. Add that to Bose
Direct/Reflecting® speaker design
and you get superior performance
in a small, economical package.
No other bookshelf speaker gives
you the spatial realism of the Bose
Model 301. Compare the Model 301
against any bookshelf speaker,
and even against larger speakers.
Come in for your personal demon
stration. You’ll be amazed at the
performance.
Exclusive Direct Energy Control
shapes the sound to fit the acous
tics of your listening room.
io sexuallyabtt rry Duck.”
said,
ntroduced
ittorney gene!
;half of
hts are being
Because of the poor quality sound
of early 78 rpm records and the fact
were made to be played with a
metal stylus, finding “good clean
Hcordings” of many older songs is a
allenge, Stubblefield said. Fortu-
llktely, He said, many of the songs
have been re-recorded in stereo by
jErrent bands or “cleaned” of the
inigional hisses and clicks through
Tkord technology.
■ Roe and Stubblefield include tid
bits about the songs’ recording dates
and the big bands that made them
jfamous. They will have Swing Era
enthusiasts as guests. They say they
pill continue the program as long as
the interest lasts.
MEXICAN
FOOD
107 DOMINIK COLLEGE STATION
3312 S. COLLEGE AVENUE BRYAN
Only in Bryan-College Station
FACTORY
OUTLET
Sheets and
Bathsets
Special Group
1st quality mats
50% off
Patents issued and pending.
707 Texas
846-6836.
Battalion Classifieds
CaD 845-2611 .
707 Texas Ave. in College Station
696-5719
Financing Available
wm
STILL CARRYING THE
HOLIDAYS WITH YOU?
A lot of folks are still carrying leftovers around from the holidays. ISOS Total
Fitness Center has the solution.
We can dissolve leftovers, trim tummies, and firm muscles. All this in only
minutes a day.
Our program (Isokinetics) is used by NASA Astronauts, Olympic swimmers,
professional football teams (including the Dallas Cowboys!) and 45 of 48
NCAA Basketball teams. It works. Not only for professional athletes, it
it works for housewives,
THE MARINE PLC PROGRAM
R
business men and women,
and students, too. You
won’t be sore. You don’t
have to change clothes.
You don’t diet. You
don’t lift weights. But
you will lose inches
(and weight) fast.
We’re new in town, so
the first 50 persons
(both men and women)
to enroll will receive
an additional $20.00
off our present low
price. Special dis
counts for all students.
rv
00
Pies, Cakes, Etc.
Baked Potatoes &
Sour Cream
-Alcoholic Beverages
Call Today
693-7823
Leftovers.
[day after]
■Cranberry Sauce
Turkey, Dressing
and Gravy
Turkey Casserole
Leftovers
[2nd day after]
-Turkey Sandwiches
— 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 22, 23, 24, 25
& 26 of January in the Memorial Student Center. You may also contact the Team at 707 University Drive (next to
University National Bank).
>-
Call Collect in Houston 226-5465
In College Station 846-3138
MARINE OFFICER
ONE OF THE FEW
ONE OF THE FINEST