The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 01, 1980, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    what’s up at
THURSDAY
MSC POLITICAL FORUM: Presidential candidate George Bush will
speak at 1:15 p.m. in Rudder Auditorium. Admission is free.
WOMEN’S CHORUS CONCERT: Will begin at 8 p.m. in Rudder
Auditorium.
sidenttliini
l0 V Cd
nts pea® s
‘ndiusiasij
'udienee
' church i,
whofyoc
dience I
)r e blacfci
^>ther preij
a niiniuu
■e progrij
NEWMAN ORGANIZTION: The Interstate Student Committee will
meet to discuss the program for next year at 7:30 p.m. at St. Mary’s
Student Center.
“DARBY O’GILL AND THE LITTLE PEOPLE”: A story of the
wonderful Irish world of leprechauns, magic, headless horsemen
and an evil creature called the Banshee. The feature will be shown
at 9 p.m. in the Grove or in 601 Rudder if it rains.
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST: Will meet at 7.30 p.m. in 204
Harrington.
FALL CALENDAR DEADLINE: The deadline for submitting activi
ties for the Fall Semester Calendar is June 30. Activities should be
turned in to the Student Activities Officer, 221 MSC.
MATH HELP SESSION: The Math Club will sponsor a help session
for all math students, especially those in calculus. The cost is $1.
ers to “vj
uty conis
'gain Sat
s nieetits
'ote is nj
FRIDAY
BAPTIST STUDENT UNION: Will sponsor a hamburger supper at
7:30 p.m. at the Baptist Student Center. Tickets are $1.50 when
bought in advance at the Baptist Student Center and $1.75 at the
door.
- delegafc
Texas A&M
“THANK JAZZ IT’S FRIDAY”: KAMU-FM, TAMU’s public radio
station, will present a special live broadcast at 12:15 p.m. at Rudder
Fountain.
PIRANHACON: This MSC Aggie Cinema bad film festival will run
from 9 p.m. to approximately 6 a.m. at the Grove. The festival will
include, in order, Piranha, Mothra, Muscle Beach Party, Sgt.
Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band and I Was a Teenage Werewolf.
COMMENCEMENT: The Graduate College, the College of Business
Administration and the College of Education will receive diplomas
at 2 p. m. in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Ceremonies for the Colleges
of Engineering, Architecture, Geosciences and Veterinary Medi
cine will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the coliseum.
SATURDAY
COMMUNITY SINGERS: Will perform in concert with The Sound
Arrangement, a barbershop quartet from Houston, at 8 p.m. in
Rudder Theater. Admission is $2 per person or $4 per family.
“DECEIVED”: This film on the Jonestown, Guyana tragedy will be
shown at 5 and 7:30 p.m. in 121 Civil Engineering Bldg. The
Endtime Evangelistic Pentecostal Church will also sponsor a dis
cussion of the tragedy from a Biblical point of view. Admission is $2.
COMMENCEMENT: Graduates from the Colleges of Agriculture,
Liberal Arts, Science and from the Galveston campus will receive
their diplomas at 9 a.m. in G. Rollie White Coliseum.
FINAL REVIEW: Will begin at 3:30 p.m. on the MSC Drill Field.
Local CLU
art auction,
sale Friday
The Brazos Civil Liberties Union
will hold its annual art auction and
book and craft sale Friday at the Un
itarian Fellowship Hall on Wellborn
Road.
The event, held in conjunction
with the Texas A&M Student Civil
Liberties Union, is to raise funds to
support activities of the non-profit
organization, whose purpose is to
protect civil liberties, as defined in
the First Amendment.
Activites will include a book and
craft sale that starts at 7 p.m., and an
art auction which begins at 8 p.m.
THE BATTALION Page 9
THURSDAY, MAY 1, 1980
T-SHIRT
OR
ItOOK-ISL\T>L\ T G
with every 400 pages of thesis or dis
sertation copies during April and May
at
FREE
KIVliO
“Your Thesis and Dissertation Pros”
201 College Main 846-9508
Ein:«mnd
rarer
14 KT. SOLID GOLD BEAD
The King’s English String band
will provide music throughout the
evening. Free popcorn will be avail
able and beer and chili will be on
sale.
SALE
IS meet®
wrters ft
ige motln
raveled
Dorm renovations planned
■stladysi
stand tl
for her
’’Mrs.Ci
ect ri[
understai
^1
D
w
Bryan I
Summer housing available
by CATHY SAATHOFF
Battalion Staff
Six dorms will be open to students
attending Texas A&M University
this summer.
Coordinator of Housing Services
Larry Pollock said the dorms, which
include Aston and Dorms 4, 5 and 8
for men, and Mosher and Dorm 3 for
women, will open on June 1, and
lose on Aug. 15.
The Commons cafeteria will also
be open during this time.
The cost for each six-week session
will be $160.50 for rooms in the
Commons and $104 for rooms on the
Quad.
Pollock said single occupancy
•rooms may be given based on availa
bility. Mosher and Aston single
occupancy rooms will be $214, and
luad rooms will be $138 per session.
Five-day board plans will cost
1153 per session, and seven-day
plans will be $169.
Students requesting a room for the
summer should fill out an application
at the Housing Office in the YMCA
Building. Specific room requests
may also be made there.
Ron Hilton, Corps area coordina
tor, said storage arrangements for
students who will go home between
spring and summer sessions is strict
ly between students now in the room
and those planning to move in for the
summer.
Storage items must be moved in
before the dorms close on May 9.
Interim housing for students now
on campus who will stay here be
tween sessions will be in Fowler and
Schumacher dorms.
A three-week stay will cost $75,
and the Memorial Student Center
cafeteria will be the only dining facil
ity open on campus.
Pollock said he expects a decrease
in on-campus students the second
session.
John White, coordinator of special
services, said dorms not used over
the summer will receive over $1 mil
lion worth of improvements.
Hotard will get the biggest house
cleaning.
Showers in the men’s dorm will be
renovated, White said, and the
rooms will be carpeted and painted.
Next summer, Hotard will be air-
conditioned.
Corps-type dorms will have the
shower windows bricked in. This
isn’t because of Peeping Toms, but
because water condenses on the out
side of the windows and runs down
the side of the building, corroding
the brick, White said.
Crocker dorm will be converted to
accommodate handicapped stu
dents.
'M
It’s magic you know...
? ?
<
and the artists
at our two
locations can
show you
the spell.
696-6933 693-0607
FOCIR-SEASONS
BARN
PARTIES CATERED
1808 BARAK LANE
846-9755 _
Now you can build a necklace of everlasting
beauty and increasing value — inexpensively —
one gold bead at a time:
‘O*
No. 25 One 4mm 14K bead on
15" It. drawn 14K chain
No. 29 Three 7mm & four 3mm
14K beads on 18" chain
No. 28 One 4mm 14K bead on
15" gold filled chain
No. 1 One 7mm 14K bead on
18" 14K gold rope chain
Reg.
Sale
8mm.
17.25
13.75
7mm.
9.30
7.40
6mm.
6.40
5.10
5mm.
4.50
3.60
4mm.
2.75
2.10
3mm.
1.50
.99
No. 41 One 7mm 14K bead on
18" It. drawn 14K gold chain
4k
No. 14 One 7mm 14K bead on
18" gold filled curb chain
vA
tiTxJf
o* VS'
Start yours now
at
'OJR J€MiLRY STOPE
415 University Drive
Northgate
846-5816
I Hr,; ) s.be
Kent Caperton believes in Texas A&M.
He has worked hard for this university. As student body president.
Assistant to the president. Visiting lecturer in the College of
Business.
Kent Caperton knows Texas A&M. He understands its changing
character.
Kent Caperton wants to work for Texas A&M in the State Senate. He
favors:
• Expanding A&M’s share of the Permanent University Fund.
• Increasing salaries for the faculty and staff.
• Retaining present tuition rates.
• Expanding classroom space.
Times are changing. To protect A&M in the 1980’s requires new
energies, new ideas and new solutions. Kent Caperton will be a new
kind of senator for a new decade.
Vote Saturday, May 3rd in the Democratic Primary.
perton
for Texas Senator.
Pd. Pol. Adv. by Kent Caperton Campaign Committee, Tony Jones, Treasurer, 3508 E. 29th, Bryan, Texas 77801.
mwwwwwwwwwwwwwnwmvwnv