The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 15, 1980, Image 3

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    THE BATTALION Page 3
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1980
,ocal
5AC has new chairman, plans membership drive
By ANN DUFFY
Battalion Reporter
rhe MSG Black Awareness Committee now has a
an, the first big step toward reorganizing for
: f980-81 school year.
rhe MSC Council approved the selection of Allen
y Milton for chairman of BAG last Wednesday.
‘The response has been good already,” Milton
d. “Several people have come by the MSC and
/en their names showing an interest in BAG.”
sara Morse, MSC Council vice president of prog-
ns, has been working to get the committee back on
its feet following the resignation last August of its
chairman, Reggie Trammel.
Morse works as a coordinator between the MSC
Council and the programming committee of the
MSC Directorate.
In the past, chairmen for BAG have been chosen
through an interview. Applicants are usually from
within the committee, but this year’s applicants were
recruited from outside the committee because BAG
had no interested members.
First on the agenda for the committee is a mem
bership drive to recruit students interested in prom
oting black awareness in the Bryan-College Station
community. BAG faculty advisor Dr. Huey Perry,
assistant professor of political science, is working
with Morse to organize the drive.
A barbecue on Sunday, Oct. 26, will allow those
interested in BAG to meet and exchange ideas for
upcoming events.
The MSC Council voted Sept. 15 to allocate $300
to BAG for the barbecue in support of its member
ship drive. The funds will come from the directorate
reserve so that students will not be charged, Morse
said.
‘The money from the directorate reserve is used
for unplanned programs deemed worthy for the func
tioning of the committee,” Morse said.”
Brenda Stubblefield, chairman of BAG last Fall,
said she became disillusioned with the committee.
“We were spinning our wheels,” Stubblefield
said. “A lack of funds and lack of interest disillusioned
most of the members.
BAG was organized in the summer of 1970, with
the three-fold purpose of providing a means for stu
dents, faculty and staff to learn about and share the
black experience; serving the black student popula
tion in academic, social and cultural areas and serv
ing as a liaison between the black community in the
Bryan-College Station area and Texas A&M Univer
sity, Morse said.
The organization is open to students of any race,
but the programs are primarily geared toward black
interests and those who seek more knowledge of the
black culture.
Sonia Ellis, assistant director of school relations, is
interested in promoting BAC and recruiting “top-
notch, top quality” students.
pleintkf
aking "iJ
s compare.
Campus Names
^arandtt BPlyde H. Wells, chairman of
ie Cartt the Texas A&M University Sys-
, tem Board of Regents, is the new
a , W ^chairman of the Committee of
Hm 1 Governing Boards of Texas State
Universities.
ation Hi W e ds, who has been a member
*t totheJ*! 16 T exas A&M board since
I 1961 and is serving his sixth two-
^ term as chairman, was for
ay in Dt mefly vice chairman of the Gov-
erning Boards Committee,
ecord, asi; 6
statene ^ senior law student at Baylor
i University, Frederick D.
U 3 0 MpClure, has been elected chair-
7” *° ! 'Tnan of the Texas Real Estate Re-
nng one search Center Advisory Com-
responstroilfr^
handed t McClure, who graduated from
in verYlfl 98 University in 1976
summa cum laude in agriculture
‘ ’ economics, was first appointed to
/nat I' jsix-vear term as a general public
hyP 0 ' member of the advisory commit
tee by Gov. Bill Clements in
1979. He will serve until Jan. 31,
1985.
Brior to entering law school,
McClure was an agricultural
BSistant to U.S. Senator John
Tower.
While at Texas A&M, he re-
| reived the Brown Foundation-
Earl Rudder Outstanding Stu-
^ lent Award and was president of
^ he student body and executive
lecretary of the Southwest Athle-
:ic Conference Sportsmanship
Committee.
McClure was a White House
ntem in 1975 and served as na
tional secretary and Texas presi
dent of the Future Farmers of
America. He was also a member
)fthe Advisory Council for Tech-
aical Vocation Education in Texas
? ind the National Agricultural
Education Advisory Council.
Dr. Floyd C. Watkins, a visit
ing professor in the Department
of English at Texas A&M Univer
sity, has been named a Charles
Howard Candler Professor at
Emory University.
He is one of 13 professors given
the appointments. The professor
ships were established in 1959 to
honor a former chairman of the
board of trustees at Emory.
Watkins, a scholar in the field
of modem American literature,
recently edited a book of inter
views featuring Robert Penn
Warren and is working on a leng
thy study of the past in Warren’s
poetry.
He has received awards for
teaching excellence as well as his
writing.
The children of Mr. and Mrs.
Horace G. Spiller of Austin have
endowed a petroleum engineer
ing scholarship at Texas A&M
University in honor of their pa
rents.
The $25,000 endowment will
provide a scholarship to be pre
sented annually to a sophomore
in petroleum engineering who
shows academic improvement
from the fall to spring semester of
his or her freshman year of study.
Spiller, 77, an independent oil
man who roughnecked in the oil
field when the industry was
young and tools were primitive,
sent four sons to Texas A&M.
Robert, a 1971 graduate, and
Joseph, who graduated in 1973,
studied petroleum engineering.
Guy, Class of’62, majored in his
tory and John, a 1975 graduate,
received his degree in
accounting.
OH
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Intermodulation distortion
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Dimensions
Net Weight
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289”
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