The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 19, 1979, Image 5

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CAMPUS NAMES
Regent accepts
consultant post
Dr. John B. Coleman, a physician
and member of the Texas A&M
University System Board of Re
gents, has accepted an invitation
from the Texas Medical Association
to serve as a consultant to the TMA
Council on Medical Education.
The invitation to help advise the
council was extended by Dr. Mario
E. Ramirez, TMA president.
A TMA official explained the
council is involved in activities rang
ing from studies regarding physician
education programs to evaluation of
licensure provisions.
Dr. Coleman, who has served as a
Texas A&M regent since 1977, is
chief of obstetricians and
gynecologist at Riverside General
Hospital in Houston and is presi
dent of Cullen Women’s Center,
also in Houston. He is former vice
president of the Houston Medical
Forum.
Muse to take
over BA college
Dr. William V. Muse, selected to
become the next dean of the College
of Business Administration, will
take that position July 1.
Muse has held two similar posi
tions during his career as an admin
istrator both as dean of the college of
Business Administration at Ap
palachian State University in North
Carolina and the University of
Nebrska.
In both positions. Muse was in
strumental in the organization of the
college’s curriculum and various
programs.
Muse will take the position va
cated after the resignation of Dr.
John Pearson on August 31, 1978.
During the interim period. Dr.
Clinton A. Phillips held the position
of acting dean of the college.
“I’m having fun doing this job,”
Phillips said in a recent interview.
“But I fully understand and ap
preciate the fact that it is not on a
permanent basis.”
Fry mire named
consultant
Thomas R. Frymire of Dallas has
been appointed to the board of con
sultants for the Center for Educa
tion and Research in Free
Enterprise, Clyde H. Wells, chair
man of the Texas A&M University
System Board of Regents, an
nounced last week.
Frymire, chairman of the board of
Frymire Engineering, will serve out
the five-year unexpired term of
Norman N. Moser of DeKalb.
Moser resigned from the board ear
lier this year when he was named to
the Texas A&M University System
Board of Regents.
“I recommend Thomas Frymire
for this post because he is commit
ted to the enterprise systme and has
an outstanding record in the busi
ness field,” Texas A&M President
Jarvis E. Miller told the regents.
“He is also a strong advocate of indi
vidual initiative and the work ethic
within his own organization.”
Frymire, a 1945 graduate of Texas
A&M, has endowed two major
scholars at the university and is an
active member of The Aggie Club,
the fund-raising organization assist
ing student athletes. He was also
chairman of the fund-raising effort
that sent the university choral
group, the Singing Cadets, on a
goodwill tour to Romania several
years ago.
The free enterprise center was
formed two years ago with a
$300,000 grant from Texas A&M’s
Association of Former Students and
Development Foundation, stipulat
ing at the outset that no public funds
would be used to operate the cen
ter.
Its objectives include educational
programs for precollege and college
students, and continuing education
programs. Research is geared to as
sist management, businessmen, the
press and the general public.
Gulf Oil gives
$4,420 award
The Gulf Oil Co. has presented
Texas A&M University $4,420
which includes a fellowship for pe
troleum engineering graduate
Bruce Damron of College Station.
The gift was presented by H.E.
Braunig Jr., environmental affairs
manager, Gulf Oil Exploration and
Producing Co.
It includes unrestricted funds for
use by the Petroleum Engineering
Department. Damron and the de
partment head. Dr. Douglas Von
Gonten, accepted the award.
Braunig received a degree in petro
leum engineering at Texas A&M in
1940.
Damron completed under
graduate studies in the department
in 1971. He worked in the oil indus
try several years before returning to
Texas A&M for graduate degree
work.
Two students get
economics awards
Daniel Ellwood and Edward Ol-
lington Price HI have been named
this year’s recipients of the Alfred F.
Chalk economics award at Texas
A&M University.
The $500 awards are presented
annually to the outstanding
graduate and undergraduate eco
nomics students at Texas A&M.
Ellwood, son of Mr. and Mrs.
C.B. Ellwood, Beeville, graduated
magna cum laude in economics in
May and will attend the University
of Texas Law School in the fall.
Price, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ol-
lington Price Jr. of Bryan, will re
ceive a doctorate this summer and
become an assistant professor at
Oklahoma State University in Sep
tember.
The award is named for Professor
Emeritus Alfred Chalk, a member
of the economics faculty at Texas
A&M for 41 years. The presenta
tions are made possible by dona
tions from students of A. F. Chalk
and the Center for Education and
Research in Free Enterprise.
CCCLASSIFIED ADS sure to get results))
Classifieds 845-2611
Wedding
reception
a real riot
United Press International
SAN LEANDRO, Calif. — Here
comes the bride — and there goes
the groom, tossing the wedding
cake in her face.
Before the ensuing fracas was
over, five wedding guests were ar
rested and three police officers had
been injured.
The wedding reception at the
Blue Dolphin Restaurant had just
begun Saturday when the uniden
tified newlyweds suddenly began
arguing loudly in front of 300 as
tonished guests.
The heated exchange climaxed
with the groom grabbing the wed
ding cake and tossing it at the bride.
An enraged relative of the young
man started throwing dishes, and
the fight was on.
Two policemen rushed to the
THE BATTALION Page
TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 1979
scene, but 30 more had to be call
in as the wedding guests beg
breaking chairs, smashing mirro
and wrestling with the officers.
When the fracas ended 30 mi
utes later, no one seemed to kno
the whereabouts of the bride ai
groom — or whether they had s<
tied their argument.
TEXAS
FAME
BUILT TO BE THE BEST; DESTIIVCD TO BE THE BIGGES
TUESDAY NITE:
7-12
PRESENTS
JERRY NAIL AND THE ARMADILLO
EXPRESS
$1.75 PITCHERS OF BEER $2 PERSON
WEDNESDAY NITE:
7-12
THURSDAY NITE:
7-12
SPECIAL ATTRACTION
EARNEST TUBE AND THE TEXAS
TROUBADORS $4 PERSON
COUNTRY EDITION
HAPPY HOUR NIGHT
BAR DRINKS 75c CALL DRINK $1 SPECIAL DRINKS $1.25
FRIDAY NITE:
SATURDAY NITE
STEVE DOUGLAS
$2 PER PERSON
STEVE DOUGLAS
$3 PER PERSON
NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED
\
OLmeCfi.
ree oeeD TeouiLo.
Their heads still stand. Nine feet high.
Eighteen tons strong. The Olmec civiliza
tion in Mexico that miraculously carved
them out of stone is now ancient his
tory. But, from this same land in Mexico;
an imposing Tequila is made. It’s made
in Gold and in Silver and it’s made to
taste sensually powerful, but mellow.
Olmeca is made as a monument for
all tequilas that follow.
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