THE BATTALION MONDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1980 Page 3 local [ONDAY ), 1980 Register by filling out postcard tudent government to give irnii coupon booklet new name n By DENISE CRENWELGE Campus Reporter |J Texas A&M University’s student government is giving a new look to an old friend. This fall, the Student pPurchase Program — student gov- I and industrial basfL^rnment’s discount coupon book — ig a reexaminationtij.will become Aggie Bucks. iong business, labon&j Sue Vito, director of Aggie Bucks, ier to sustain ttiecon^; said the SPP books are undergoing j United States in | The name change for a number of treasons. K “We needed a new approach to the whole project,’’ Vito said. “We didn’t get a good response at first and we needed a name that students amid relate to and remember. | “Right now we re known as that other book’ or ‘the book that the stu dent government puts out,”’ she king about fundamr^; doing when hebegtj igo about the dangei! msively bureaucratl tand, seeing thehw| er 41 — that whatli* rn the figures they*; didity of their ownil | are ready to waitfc s — to vindii that takes a said. Most people are more familiar with student government’s competi tors, the People Book. Aggie Bucks will have a new cov er, new format and possibly an in dex. The coupons will look like dollar bills, Vito said. Aggie Bucks workers are now pre paring for the advertisement sales for the fall edition and merchants will be offered a chance to advertise by the semester or yearly, she said. The books will be similar to the SPP books. They will concentrate on fast food places, but will include res taurants, auto repair shops, figure salons, T-shirt shops, bookstores and stereo shop coupons, Vito said. Aggie Bucks wants to get busines ses that students use regularly, she said. Cheryl Swanzy, vice president for external affairs, said the books will be publisehd each semester as they have been for the past three years. She said 22,500 books were printed this semester. Vito said the Agggie Bucks will be distributed in survival kits. The kits contain information about campus facilities and campus traditions. One kit is geared to on-campus students and another is geared to the off- campus students. Each kit will con tain two books and each dormitory room will receive one kit. “This activity is one of the more noticed activities of the student gov ernment and a major public relations project for the campus,” Swanzy said, referring to the coupon books. Swanzy said distribution has been by trial and error so far, and through the survival kits they are hoping to solve the problem. “In print we have had students present fee slip and I.D., and other times we have just handed them out,” Swanzy said. “We are hoping the survival kits will enable eveyone to get a book and prevent others from getting several.” There are about 1,000 SPP books still available, Vito said. Anyone wanting one may pick it up by going by the student government office at 216 MSC, Monday through Friday from 8 a. m.-5 p.m. ition has not yet may never arriveli| hey don’t know ause they harbor«| By GAIL WEATHERLY heir parties a kindCampus Reporter * presence which hjff,■ Texas A&M University not only the political compe^t has great football, basketball and , very likely, willcoi^haseball players, it can also claim to to come. I§ ave best college chess and ■ WashingtonPost&n.'women’s billiards players in Texas, Brkansas and Louisiana. || Three Aggies won first place in the : annual oassociation of College Un- Hbns-International Region 12 games tournament Feb. 14-16 in Baton Rouge, La. || Thirty other Aggies placed high in flifferent events to enable Texas pi&M to keep possession of the tro- Bhy for the most points scored in the tournament. || A total of 337 students from 27 Eihools were at Louisiana State Uni- ■ersity to compete. K Gary Gray and Mark Hulsey won prst place in the team chess divi- |Sion, and Gray also won first place in the individual division. wins overall trophy Since there is no national competi tion in college chess, Ted Geoca, vice chairman of the MSC Recrea tion Committee, said Gray and Hulsey are “the best college chess team in the Southwest. ” Sandy Patterson won first place in women’s billiards and will go on to the national competition in April in Carbondale, Ill. She will compete against the winners of 14 other geog raphic regions in the United States. A national sponsor will pay all ex penses for Patterson, and the 14 othr regional billiards winners, to go to the national competition. Besides chess and billiards, there were backgammon, Frisbee, bowl ing, table tennis and table soccer competitions. All except backgam mon and chess have a national com petition and an all-expense paid trip to nationals for the regional winner. In a close competition with the University of Houston, Texas A&M won 11 more points to retain posses sion of the all-events school trophy. Last year Texs A&M won the trophy by 16 points over the University of Texas. Sanders Ledbetter, recreation coordinator for Region 12, said these games are “recreational activities that revolve around student unions on many college campuses which allow just about any college-age stu dent the opportunity to compete in things he or she enjoys on a national level. ” So, what can start out as a hobby can take a student who is good enough to national competition. To get involved in the school games competition, Geoca said the only prerequisite is to be a full-time stu dent. Students then participate in a series of tournaments sponsored by Fibrosis ride coming up V i;, Spring is in the air. The weather is great, and it’s time to get out the old two-wheeler and start gearing up for this year’s bicyling season. : The 1980 Cystic Fibrosis Bike-a- thon is being organized in the Bryan- College Station area and local resi dents, organizations and businesses are being asked to help, i j “We want to try to involve as many people and organizations in this pro ject as possible,” Mo Moser, chair man of the bike-a-thon, said. The date for the bike-a-thon is April 12, but the route has not been f arranged, Moser said. “It’s still in the planning stages,” he said. Definite plans for the route and arrangements for prizs and en trants will be made in the next two to three weeks. The funds raised through the bike- a-thon will help support research programs for cystic fibrosis and other lung-damaging diseases. Money raised will also provide medical care to lengthen the lives of lung-damaged children in over 120 cystic fibrosis centers in the United States. Cystic fibrosis centers specialize in the diagnosis and care of children with cystic fibrosis and other lung damaging diseases like chronic bron chitis, bronchiectasis, severe asthma and recurrent pneumonia. CLASSIFIED ADS sure to get results rtant cott Travis’80 . Tim Hi Richard!- cks catches a ) be congratulate e sports section ely. It is nice to Vow there are e>* ae sport. Good*® David"' oug Grttl MV HAT TOl 0 AUTHET-: S YOU V MSC Town Hall presents: Neil Simon’s chapter two March 6 8:15 p.m. Rudder Auditorium TICKETS: Students: Gen. Pub.: 111111 Ib i * t nine subcommittees of the MSC Re creation Committee. The tourna ments decide who will advance to regional competition, Geoca said, and those who win first place there go on to national competition. By DENISE CRENWLEGE Campus Reporter Registering to vote in the upcom ing local elections is as easy as filling out a postcard. Melissa Gosper, campus voter registration chairman, said Texas A&M University’s student govern ment is working to make it easier for students to register. She said that as of Thursday, post ers covered the campus containing pre-addressed and pre-paid post cards that have all the registration information on them. Students just need to fill one out and drop it in the mail, said Gosper. Buddy Winn, Brazos County tax assessor-collector, said the only re quirements for registration are that voters reside in Brazos County and that they register 30 days prior to election day. A voter is registered for two years before he needs to renew, said Winn. Winn said the upcoming elections include city and local elections on April 1, Democratic and Republican primaries May 3 and a run-off in June if necessary, and the general elec tions in November. Winn said if a voter is registered in another county and wishes to vote in Brazos County he must surrender his privileges in the other county. If a voter moves, Winn said he has 90 days to renew before his eligibility is void. Cheryl Swanzy, vice president of external affairs, said the student vo ter turnout needs to increase. “We don’t have the number necessary to show concern or have an impact on what is said in govern ment,” said Swanzy. “We need more voters so we will have that impact and people will lis ten to us.” Monday nite is COUNTRY NITE at the Studio All cowboy hats get in FREE 1401 FM 2818 — Doux Chene Complex Ya’ll Come!