[local Primary candidates list * for local and state races Fib State ilf-i te- yfc By LAURA CORTEZ City Staff The deadline to fde to run for pub lic office was 6 p.m. Monday. The following met that deadline and will be candidates in the May 3 Demo cratic or Republican primaries in Brazos County: nk United States Representative: Phil Gramm (Democrat, incum bent) Darla H. Mortenson (Republican) David Haskins (Republican) i State Senator: Kent Caperton (Democrat) Bill Moore (Democrat, incum bent) N.A. McNiel (Republican) itenl State Representative: “^r- Bill Presnal (Democrat) iR . •ecf? | It) 272nd District Judge: Ym; . Brooks Gofer (Democrat) J. Bradley Smith (Democrat, in- 3A encumbent) W ieh id fe ntie sM lent o Ic County Court at Law Judge: James A. Amis Jr. (Democrat) District Attorney: Travis B. Bryan III (Democrat) County Attorney: John Barron Jr. (Democrat, in cumbent) John E. Hawtrey (Democrat) Jeffery Brown (Republican) County Commissioner Pet. I: Bill J. Cooley (Democrat, incum bent) Dan Williams (Democrat) County Commissioner Pet. 3: Billy E. Beard (Republican) ILL. (Bud) Cargill (Democrat, in cumbent) Gerald Farrar (Democrat) Sheriff: Bobby H. Yeager (Democrat) Justice of the Peace Pet. 4, Place 1 B.H. Dewey Jr. (Democrat, in cumbent) James A. Peterson (Democrat) Justice of the Peace Pet. 7, Place 1: George H. Boyett (Democrat) Michael B. Calliham (Democrat, incumbent) Tax Assessor-Collector: Gerald (Buddy) Winn (Democrat) Constable Pet. 1: Raymond H. Day (Democrat) Constable Pet. 4: Arthur E. Dixon (Democrat) Richard Fronterhouse (Democrat) Frank Hudson (Democrat) John B. Miller (Democrat) Dick Munday (Democrat, incum bent) Paul Madison (Republican) Constable Pet. 5: Sam Fachom (Democrat) Constable Pet. 7: Larry Johnson (Democrat) E.W. Sayers (Democrat, incum bent) Winfred E. Pittman (Republican) impi'! lieffi inds mpa Shoot-out , era hi winners to sit on bench ringf ; By JANA SIMS City Reporter lyOl 1 This Saturday, the first-place win ners of the Bryan-College Station Basketball Shoot-out will join the Aggie bench at the A&M-Rice game. The Shoot-out — a fund raising event for the Brazos Valley Rehabili tation Center where kids were spon sored an amount of money for each ..‘basket made — was open to 4th through 12th graders in six Brazos 1^. Valley counties. ^ As part of their prize, these first- place winners will help warm the .V, Aggie bench: Bryan Phelps, Heather Malinak (elementary division); West Hansen, Neal Wellmann, Carrie Osmum (junior high division); and George Teetes and Patricia Carroll (high school division). Heather Malinak, a fifth-grader at Brenham Elementary made 27 bas kets and earned $437.41. She said she entered the Shoot-out to help the handicapped and she “thought it’d be fun.” ' West Hansen, an eighth-grader at Navasota Junior High, said he en tered the contest to help Easter Seals and because his coach wanted him to. West earned about $370 with the 78 baskets he made. About 285 kids participated and earned $18,702 for the rehabilitation center, and pledges are still being turned in. Dorothy Kinard, secret ary of the rehabilitation center, said the center is not federally funded and pays for patient care and other expenses with memorials and dona tions. Jim Thompson, executive director of the rehabilitation center, said, “The money raised through the efforts of these fine boys and girls ... will go a long way towards making lives more productive and happier. ” r .i.i.i.i.i. I.i.i.M.i.iji. I j.I.I.I J.!.!.!.LM.!.!.!. L ] MSC ARTS [ ACCEPTING ENTRIES FORTHE JURIED STUDENT ART [ COMPETITION - MONDAY FEB. 11 — WEDNESDAY FEB. 13. r CATAGORIES INCLUDE: r DRAWING, PAINTING & SCULPTING. r" RULES & ENTRY FORMS AVAILABLE IN ROOM216 MSC. L. LJLXi lTrmTI TI I ITI -1’ 1VI -1-1 r 1V1V1 *1’ IV1V1VITTTTTTTY GOOD-YEAR SPECIAL TIRE CLEARANCE COOPER RADIALS 5-13 J 39 00 5-14 $ 43 00 ' RETREADS C7&-14 to E78-14 4 for 5 79 95 F78-14 to H78-15 4 tor *89 95 SALE PRICES WALL-TO-WALL! In Stock S,ze rj. Price TyP ® FET Extra 3 FR78-14 custom ireaa Radial 49.00 5 GR78-14 Custom Polysteel (Black) 49.00 6 GR78-15 Viva Radial (Black) , 49.00 4 BR78-14 Custom Polysteel Radial (White) 49.00 3 J78-15 Cushion (Black) Bias Betted 49.00 Custom Power 4 H78-14 , Custom Power Cushion (Black) Bias Betted 49.00 6 DR78-14 Viva Radial White 49.00 Other sizes & types in stock at clearance prices. LUBE, OIL & FILTER CHANGE $*I2 88 10-40 wt. Oil. Most American & Foreign Cars FRONT END ALIGNMENT and 4-WHEEL ^ BALANCE $ Most American & Foreign Cars. 19 88 am' PRICES GOOD THROUGH FRIDAY, FEB. 15 STATE INSPECTIONS BRAKE SERVICE • TUNE-UPS • MUFFLERS & SHOCKS UNIVERSITY TIRE & SERVICE CENTER 509 University 846-5613 (Next to Wyatt’s Sporting Goods) WEAR Registration deadline set Anyone wishing to vote in the May 3 primaries must register by April 2. Buddy Winn, Brazos County tax assessor-collector, said registration applications are available in the tax office at the Brazos County Court house, from the League of Women Voters and from Texas A&M Univer sity campus political organizations. Persons who do not permanently reside in Brazos County can register to vote in their home counties or in Brazos County. There is a place on the front of the registration card to designate which county it is to be sent to, and Winn said that all one needs to do is to write in the name of the county in which he wants to vote. He said that students who wish to vote in Brazos County should put down where in the county they live, not a post office box number, in the space marked “permanent address. ” The reason for this, Winn said, is so that the tax office personnel can fi gure out which precinct the student must vote in. Winn cautions people not to regis ter more than once. If a person does not receive or loses his registration card, he should notify the county tax office. EXPERIENCE PERFECTION. SEE Henry Dunn At Guys Vi Gals Suite 208, 4103 Texas A ve.. South 846-5018 THE BATTALION Page 5 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1980 TAMU in Germany 1980 Did you like the Sound of Music? See the same country this summer: Travel & Study in Germany Earn 6 TAMU Credits Still some space available Contact Immediately: Dr. Richard Critchfield tel: 845-2124 Home 696-7162 Academic 201 A A world of careers in Aerospace for tomorrow-minded college graduates. See our representative on campus Feb. 25, 26 Our Denver Division has many new opportunities awaiting college graduates. Major facilities are located at Denver, CO.; New Orleans, LA.-; and Santa Maria, CA. Careers Begin Here If you’re considering a career in aerospace,you won’t find the challenge greater nor the work more rewarding than at Martin Marietta. Work in such exciting areas as Command and In formation Systems, Solar Systems, Space Satellites, and Payload integra tion. Overall, we have over 300 con tracts including 4 major contracts over 150 million dollars each extending into the 1980’s. They include the external fuel tanks for the Space Shuttle, Space Launch Systems, Titan, Space and De fense Systems including the new gen eration mobile Missile X. Opportunities Now Within these areas are many entry- level growth positions that offer practical experience in the ad vanced state of the engineering art. Such fields as • Software • Test • Propulsion • Thermophysics • Structures • Mechanisms • Dynamics • Stress • Materials • Mis sion Analysis • Product Develop ment • Industrial Engineering • Logistics • Integration • Systems • Guidance & Control • RF Systems • Communications • Data Handling • Power Systems • Payloads & Sen sors • Quality • Safety and Man ufacturing. In addition to job opportunity the company’s comprehensive program of employee benefits has a financial value equivalent to approximately forty per cent of the employee’s income, in cluded are: Company-paid insurance, performance sharing plan, retirement plan, vacation, education reimburse ment and long term disability plan. Interested graduates please contact Martin Marietta Aerospace. Attn: Col lege Relations, RO. Box 179 (#D6310) Denver, CO 80201. ivrx\m~ir>t rvtxxFtiET-M Martin Marietta is an Affirmative Action Employer actively seeking the Handi capped and Veterans. 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