The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 02, 1980, Image 5

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    THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1980
Page 5
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Miller
commended
by food board
Texas A&M University Presi
dent Jarvis E. Miller has re
ceived a letter of commendation
from the Board for International
Food and Agricultural Develop
ment for his contributions in re
ducing world hunger.
Miller has served on the
board’s Joint Research Commit
tee since 1977 and steps down
from the organization next
month. The board is an agency of
the U.S. State Department’s
Agency for International De
velopment.
The Texas A&M president was
cited for his service in making
available the science and technol
ogy of the university for the pre-
it continued,']
erica, forim
id the shah
i also annou
than 1,000
ccused of
ahlavi regii
idler Khom
dani-Sadr’s
vention of famine and estab
lishing freedom from hunger in
the developing countries of the
world.
“Dr. Miller’s dedicated ser
vices and competent professional
contributions to the work of the
Joint Research Committee en
hanced the effectiveness of the
committee in advising and parti
cipating ... on collaborative, in
ternational agricultural research
programs,” according to the cita
tion signed by Elmer Kiehl, ex
ecutive director, and Frederick
Hutchinson, committee
chairman.
Keese receives
ITE award
Jack Keese, MacDonald Pro
fessor of Transportation at Texas
A&M University, has received
the past president’s award of the
Texas section of the Institute of
Transportation Engineers.
The Texas Transportation In
stitute official was one of seven
persons honored. Eugene Maier,
transportation consultant and
chairman of TTI’s advisory com
mittee, also received the award.
The award is given for signifi
cant contributions to transporta
tion engineering over an ex
tended period of time. The reci
pients, recognized for helping
found the Texas section of ITE,
received the awards at a golden
anniversary banquet of the
society.
Dr. Neilon J. Rowan, ITT re
search engineer and civil en
gineering professor, presented
the past presidents awards.
Rowan is president-elect of the
institute of Transportation En
gineers.
Richards to head
Finance Dept.
Dr. R. Malcolm Richards,
associate professor of finance at
Texas A&M University, has been
named head of the Department of
Finance, effective July 1.
Richards joined the Texas
A&M faculty in 1974 after receiv
ing his Ph.D. at the University of
Michigan. He had earlier earned
B.A. and MBA degrees from the
University of Utah.
Richards had business experi
ence as an investment analyst
with Pryor and Co. of Ann Arbor,
Mich., and as a travel agent with
Continental Trailways Tours,
Inc., of Salt Lake City, Utah.
Richards has published widely
in financial journals with primary
research emphasis in the areas of
portfolio management and earn
ings performance.
Two Turks killed; 17 dead
after two days of violence
United Press International
ANKARA, Turkey — Gunmen Tuesday killed two
people in a drug store owned by a local political party
leader, bringing the deaths from sporadic violence
throughout Turkey over the last 48 hours to 17, police
reports said.
Selahattin Arikan, the Republican Party leader of Icel
province who owns the drug store, escaped uninjured.
Reports from Adana province said a doctor was shot
and killed in the street and four people were killed in
separate incidents in the cities of Siirt, Konya and
Kutahya.
In Istanbul Monday, three people were shot to death
by terrorists, police said, and seven other people were
reported killed in the provinces of Konya, Siverek, Sil
van, Sivas and Suluova.
A curfew was imposed in Sivas after clashes between
rival groups ended with one dead and seven injured, the
governor of the city announced.
Suleyman Demirel, Justice Party leader, whose
minority government has failed to put an end to the
mounting political violence in Turkey, faces a vote of
confidence in the Turkish parliament today.
Since martial law was proclaimed in most Turkish
cities in December 1977, a total of 4,000 have died in
political violence.
Pontiff conducts second outdoor mass
Brazilians cheer John Paul
United Press International
BELO HORIZONTE, Brazil — A crowd estimated at
I 1 i (■ more ^ an 500,000 people chanted “John Paul is our
oo sowy cfljyng” anl j cheered the pontiff Tuesday at the second
S t 1 ’ Boutdoor mass of his 12-day Brazilian tour.
, r s Pennants bearing the yellow and white colors of the
mi Vatican were spread across a hilltop and valley as Pope
2 'j ^i 5 °™Bjohn Paul II warned youth against being subverted or
“ 1 a > ^1 manipulated by systems seeking to build a just society
auctions mi through injustice :
nTtion’s ^ ie to ^ t ^ ie throng that it was natural for
young people to build a “free, just and prosperous socie-
1 ty. In my youth, I lived those same convictions.”
But he warned that certain systems “disrespect and
| destroy human freedom, denying the most fundamental
1 liberties.”
j “The only revolution that does not betray man is the
i one made by real love,” he said.
i,l The crowd, given a partial holiday to mark the second
^ ^Dfil sto P ^6 pope’s visit, chanted “Hey, hey, hey, John
S^pi'W Paul is our king!” At the end of the homily the pope,
K wearing a white mitre and white robes, was visibly
contributed til moved by the crowd ’s cheering response, and said “The
ittack.” 1 pope will never forget you.”
i said he kl A Brazilian television network covering the second of
3, to limit his* the pope’s 13 planned outdoor masses in the world’s
released froisl largest Catholic nation estimated the crowd at “more
t two, but pel than 500,000, ” but no official figures were immediately
1 available.
John Paul, arriving in the industrial city of 1.6 million
lifted to Hail people, Brazil’s third largest, made a snail’s pace 12-
ve care unit! I mile ride to the mass site in an open-air “Pope-mobile. ”
d Deputy Pi I Partial holidays allowing the public to attend the mas-
idin hewasntll sesorline procession routes were also granted in Rio de
Janeiro, where the pope was scheduled to visit a favela,
or hillside slum, Tuesday night and hear a samba written
in his honor.
John Paul went to the presidential palace after a two-
hour outdoor mass in the central mall of the modernis
tic, specially-built capital.
Government officials put the crowd at some 800,000,
but journalists who have covered former papal trips said
the reception was comparatively low-keyed and esti
mated attendance at no more than 500,000.
The pope’s many comments Monday were seen as
support for human rights activities of Brazil’s dynamic
bishops as well as criticism to leftist priests who want the
church to confront the government in the struggle
against repression.
The church, John Paul said, “can only look with satis
faction upon all the efforts that aim at safeguarding and
promoting the fundamental rights and freedoms of all
human persons and assure their responsible participa
tion in community and social life.”
Speaking in a careful Portuguese he has worked at
perfecting in recent weeks, the pope said, “The church
does not cease to urge the reforms indispensable to
safeguarding and promoting the values without which
no society worth that name can prosper.”
He said all people were entitled to “the right to live,
to security, to work, to housing, to health, to education,
to private and public religious expression.”
The pontiff spoke in French on the same theme when
he met later with the Brazilian diplomatic corps.
Addressing the diplomats at the bishops’ headquar
ters, John Paul said “The common good of a society
requires that it be just.”
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panda dies
in Tokyo Zoo
United Press International
TOKYO — Tokyo Zoo’s giant pan
da Kan Kan, who symbolized the
establishment of diplomatic relations
between Japan and China in 1972,
has died, zoo officials said Tuesday.
They said Kan Kan was found dead
after veterinarians heard the panda
cry out and rushed to its cage late
Monday.
The cause of death was not deter
mined immediately and an autopsy
was to be performed, the officials
said.
Kan Kan and his mate, Lan Lan,
were presented to Japan by China in
1972. Lan Lan died last September
from a kidney ailment, triggering na
tional mourning for the bear-like
mammal.
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Join thousands of Christian students
this (summer in New York City...
Christian
National
Convention
August 11—16, 1980
★ National speakers
★ Sensational musicians
★ See New York City
★ Giant rallies during the
Democra tic Con ven tion
I’d like to know more about the Christian National Convention being held
August 11-16, 1980 at New Brunswick, NJ. Please send me the free
informational brochure with registration form to the address below:
City
State
Zip
Accommodations are Hmitd so mail this now to Christian National Convention, P.O. Box
682, College Sta., Tx. 77843. Don’t miss this opportunity. Registration ends August 1,
IN THE
^prfl^7
Will There Be Blood If You Need It?
. . . only if there’s a volunteer donor
to provide it.
Like yourself.
Blood has to come from another
human being. It cannot be
manufactured.
You can be that volunteer donor on
July 1, 2.
That’s when the Texas A&M Blood
Club has its annual Summer blood drive.
Wadley Central Blood Bank is proud
to have been associated with this 12th
Man tradition of service to humanity
during the past 21 years. We look
forward to continuing to participate in
the Texas A&M Blood Club drives for
many years to come . . . and we join
with all Texans in saluting this
unparalleled gesture of generosity and
concern for one’s fellow man!