The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 14, 1979, Image 8

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    FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1979
R. Clyde Hargrove DDS, Inc.
COURTS UNIVERSITY 11
announces the association of
SHOE SERVICE
Dr. Gordon Walling
• |
[ “Expert boot and
I shoe repair” <!
for the practice of general dentistry.
I 104 College Main j!
Patients will be seen by appointment from 10 a.m. until 8:30 p.m.
Northgate j >
1313 Briarcrest Dr., Bryan
(in Cedar Creek Plaza)
i 846-6785 I
Office 779-1933 Home 779-7462
|
(formerly Holiks) J
AGGIE SPORTS TALK
with Jim Butler
MONDAYTHRU FRIDAY AT 5:15 P.M. ON
Jim Butler will bring you up close to the Aggie stars
and their coaches.
Get it all with KAGC and Jim Butler
Sponsored by
laco Bell
••
••
msc aggie ciNEMAmmmmm.%
John Olivia
Travolta Newton-John
is the word
V—^...BRONTE WOODARD ALLAN ( ARR ... .„JIM JACOBS.. \AARRE n CASE1
*~ M »V*~*** KENNETH WAKSMAN «*MAXINE FOX— PATRICIA BIRCH
.-^.►ROBERT STIGWOOD. ALLAN CARR RANDAL KLEISER id— - •
'PG ‘SS*
FRI. SEPT. 14
SAT. & SUN. SEPT. 15 & 16
$1.25 with TAMU I.D.
10 p.m.-Thea.
8 p.m.-Thea.
‘The funniest material Pryor's ever done . . Dallas Times Herald
FRI. & SAT. SEPT. 14 & 15
MIDNIGHT-THEA.
$1.25 with TAMU I.D.
Additional Showing 10 p.m. Sat., Sept. 15 Theater
TICKETS AVAILABLE 45 min. before showtime. ADVANCE
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT MSC Box Office Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
*••••••••••••
:s
:s
••
•••••••••••••••••••••••
»•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••*
»•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •
what’s up at A&M
EDITOR’S NOTE: Notices of meetings and events may be brought
to Room 216 of the Reed McDonald building for publication in
the What’s Up column.
A&M WHEELMEN: Will have the Steep Hollow Mad Dog Ramble,
a leisurely 23-mile bicycle ride in the country east of College
Station. Meet at 9 a.m. at Rudder Fountain.
Friday
Saturday
SAN ANTIONIO HOMETOWN CLUR: Will have a party with
music, food and drinks at 7:30 p.m. in the Quonset huts.
SENIOR PLACEMENT SEMINAR: Malon Southerland of the
TAMU placement office will speak on placement procedures, re
sume writing, interviewing techniques and job search techniques
at 7:30 p.m. in Room 701, Rudder.
‘SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY’: A play, sponsored by Alpha Psi
Omega, will be shown tonight and tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Rudder
Forum. Tickets are $2 at the door or at the Rudder box office, and
proceeds will benefit the Theater Scholarship Fund.
GRADUATING SENIORS: Deadline for applying for Under
graduate and Graduate Degrees to be awarded in December.
OPAS MEMBERSHIP DRIVE: Those interested in joining OPAS
for the ’79-’80 season, apply at the OPAS cubicle, Room 216,
MSC.
MOVIE: MSC Arts will present Jonah Who Will Be 25 in the Year
2000’ at 8 p.m. in Rudder Theater. (R)
AGGIE CINEMA: “Grease John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John
star in this energetic and exciting musical set in the fifties. 10 p.m.
Rudder Theater. Will also be shown at 8 p.m. Saturday and Sun
day. (PG). “Richard Pryor - Live in Concert.” A performance
recognizing of the absurdities of modern racial and sexual relation
ships as only Richard Pryor can perform. This picture contains
harsh and very vulgar language and may be considered shocking
and offensive by some. No explicit sex or violence is shown. Mid
night, Rudder Theater. Also shown Saturday at the same time and
place. (R).
INDIA ASSOCIATION: Will present the Hindi movie ‘Chitchor
with English subtitles at 8 p.m. in Room 701, Rudder.
UNIVERSITY APARTMENT COUNCIL: Anyone living in Univer
sity married student apartments interested in running for office
should contact Gus Wilson at 696-2604.
AGGIE CINEMA: “Grease” at 8 p.m. in Rudder Theater.
‘SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY’: A play, sponsored by Alpha Psi
Omega, will be shown at 8 p.m. in Rudder Forum. Tickets are $2
at the door or at Rudder box office, and proceeds benefit the
Theater Scholarship Fund.
Sunday
MSC BASEMENT COMMITTEE: St. Elmo’s Fire will perform an
open-air concert at 8 p. m. at the Grove. Tickets are $1 at the gate;
in case of rain, concert will be in the Basement Coffeehouse, and
tickets will be $2.50.
AGGIE CINEMA: “Grease” at 8 p.m. Rudder Theater.
ALPHA PHI OMEGA: Will have a meeting for new members at 6:30
p.m. in Room 401, Rudder. Everyone is welcome.
Unite
WASH IN
resume reg
^ a move
step toward
tary draft —
lurther stud
The decis
day-long de
ently signah
draft measi
session of C
| The issue
irvorked on t
|authorizatio
The pro]
Monday
SOFTBALL: Texas A&M Invitational Softball Tournament (W),
Travis Park, Bryan.
MSC CRAFTS & ARTS: Dulcimer concert of early instruments at 11
a.m. by Rudder Fountain.
ALPHA ZETA: Will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room 226, MSC. All
members and new initiates urged to attend.
BETA BETA BETA HONOR SOCIETY: Will meet for elections at
7:30 p.m. in Room 401, Rudder.
SIGMA IOTA EPSILON: Will meet at 7 p.m. in Rooms 350 and
350-A, MSC.
DANCE ARTS SOCIETY: Ballet dance classes will be held in Room
266, G. Rollie White. Beginners’ class at 7 p.m., intermediate
class at 8 p.m.
Rction Specks Louder
then UUords
4
REPS ON CAMPUS NEXT WEEK
WEDNESDAY — FRIDAY
SENIORS/GRADS: Sign up NOW for
Placement Office interviews — 10th
floor, Rudder Tower.
H€RITH
GRRDURT€S
INFORMATION BOOTH:
MEMORIAL STUDENT CNTR
P€flC€ CORPS/VISin
A&M research funds
reach record level
Texas A&M University received a
record $63.6 million in research
funds for the fiscal year ending Aug.
31, a $3.5 million increase over the
previous year.
Dr. Tobert R. Berg, director of the
Office of University Research, said
the money was provided by federal,
state and private sources.
Agriculture, engineering, geosci
ences and science headed the fields
in which the funds were utilize!
Funded projects ranged from
development of the new plant™
ieties to enhanced highway safe!)
Berg said.
National Science Foundation
tabulations ranked Texas A&M
in the nation last year in researcha
development expenditures by col
leges and universities.
Unite
WASHIi
heating sea:
i many parts
nate Select
Thursday (
array of pn
meet sharp!
“1 cautioi
comfortabl
Weicker R-
supporting
he has had
1977.
In many
heating se
Weicker sa:
sus, it will 1
hinds are m
make a diffe
Chairmar
said his coi
not handle
terested in
cause of the
fixed incomi
hard hit by
The Sen;
Committee
this month c
ing the po'
needs. The
mittee has
hold hearing
John Pal
secretary of
Welfare, to
that Preside
proposal for
Wednesday,
plan. The 1<
duced next ■
Payments
elderly and
Seating cost*
ferough the
Security I
Families wit
programs.
“We ar
because tl
the most t
they targ<
have
most need
The ad
calls for co
able since
» to p
than 25 p
poverty le
The adi
more extei
) intc
said,
Sen. C
and Sena
Howard I
similar “fu
Ae Agrici
itamp pro;
HOLY HYPERDOLICS!
HP mokes professional scientific calculators students con afford
Bet that bit of news really elevated your
equations! Hewlett-Packard, the people who
make some of the world’s most dynamic calcula
tors, now makes models just for your needs
and budget — Series E.
Wow! The first one is the HP-31E
Scientific, now available at a NEW LOW PRICE
— $50* It’s a real corker of a basic scientific
calculator. It has all the trigonometric, exponen
tial and math functions you need most. Not
only that, it handles metric conversions. And if
that’s not enough, it has both Fixed and Scientific
display modes and 4 separate user memories.
Want more? Then take the HP-32E
Advanced Scientific with Statistics, also at a
NEW LOW PRICE — $70* It’s everything the
HP-31E is — and more! More math and metric,
comprehensive statistics, decimal degree conver
sions, Engineering/Scientific/Fixed display
modes and 15 user memories to boot. Sufficient
to handle any “would-be” brain busters!
And now, for those who meet the
challenge of repetitious riddles, problems, and
scientific equations —the HP-33E Programmable
Scientific! Likewise available at a NEW LOW
PRICE —$90*
A multi-faceted scientific, math and
statistical calculator with the added punch of
programmability. It gives you at your command:
49 program lines of fully merged key codes; a
dazzling array of program control keys; and 8
user memories. Never again shy away from a
sinister calculation!
And listen to this: every Series E calcula
tor comes with a new larger, 10-digit display
with commas to separate thousands for easier
reading; diagnostic systems to help you catch and
correct errors; a low battery warning light;
rechargeable batteries and more.
Surely, there is a Series E calculator that
is right for you. Which one? I suggest that you
stop by your HP dealer for a “hands-on”
demonstration and a free copy of “A buyer’s guide
to HP professional calculators’.’ For your
dealer’s address, CALL TOLL-FREE 800-648-4711
except from Alaska or Hawaii. In Nevada, call
800-992-5710. Get your HP —and solve another
one for freedom, ingenuity and correct answers!
HEWLETT iflD, PACKARD
Dept. 658L, 1000 N. E. Circle Blvd , Corvallis, OR 97330 819/13
‘Suggested retail price excluding applicable state and local taxes —
Continental U S A., Alaska & Hawaii.