The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 21, 1980, Image 5

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    THE BATTALION Page 5
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1980
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TUESDAY
What's Up
MSC BLACK AWARENESS; WiU meet at 8 p.m. in 510 Rudder.
CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION; WiU meet for Bible study
at 9 p.m. in Corps area Lounge C.
TAMU INTERNATIONAL FOLKDANCERS: WiU meet at 7:45
p.m. in 230 MSC.
CLASS OF ’82; WiU be selling class T-shirts from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m, in
the main hall of the MSC.
RECREATION & PARKS CLUB: WiU have an international dinner at
7 p.m. in the basement of Goodwin Hall.
RUSSIAN CLUB: WiU meet at 7:30 p.m. in 110 Military Sciences.
ASME: WiU meet at 7 p.m. in 102 Zachry.
MANAGEMENT SOCIETY; Will meet at 7 p.m. in 308 Rudder.
ASSOCIATION OF BIOENGINEERS; WiU meet at 7:30 p.m. in 302
Rudder.
PHI THETA KAPPA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION: WU1 have a manda
tory meeting at 7 p.m. in 305 Physics.
AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS: WiU meet at 7:30 p.m. in 108
Harrington.
A&M JUGGLER’S ASSOCIATION: WiU meet at 8 p.m. in 350 MSC.
ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA: WiU meet at 7:30 p.m. in 607 Rudder.
AMERICAN HUMANICS: Will have a seminar on “Scouting for the
Handicapped” at 6 p.m. in 302 Rudder,
MSC AGGIE CINEMA: Will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 206 MSC.
"THE HOBBIT”: The Hutsah Puppet Theater wiU perform the The
Hobbit at 8 p.m. in Rudder Theater. Tickets are available at the
MSC Box
WEDNESDAY
Professor Warren Wal-
‘James Fenimore
204C Sterling C.
DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LECTURE: Profe
ker from Texas Tech University will speak on
Cooper and the Jefferson Ideal” at 7:30 p.m. in
Evans Library.
MSC POLITICAL FORUM: WiU hold a mock election with poUs at
the Academic Building, Sbisa Dining Hall, the Commons and the
MSC. The polls will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
HUJLEL CLUB: Will meet at 8 p.m. at the Hillel Jewish Student
Center.
SOCIOLOGY CLUB: WiU meet at 6:30 p.m. in 104 Bolton.
CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION: The Newman club will
meet at 7:30 p.m. at St. Mary's Student Center.
RENEWABLE NATURAL RESOURCE ASSOCIATION: WiU meet
at 6 p.m. at the Alamo.
AGGIE SCOUTS: WiU meet at 9 p.m. in 301 Rudder.
Bahamas
cruise set
for break
If you’re one of those students who
likes to cruise, the MSC Travel Com
mittee can help you plan your spring
break vacation.
The committee is sponsoring a
cruise to the Bahamas, March 16-21.
Students may sign up for the trip in
the Student Programs Office, 216
Memorial Student Center, begin
ning Wednesday. A $150 deposit is
required.
Total cost of the cruise on the SS
Dolphin is $595. That price includes:
airfare from Houston to Miami, four
nights’ accommodation on the ship,
all meals, port tax, gratuities, and
transportation to and from the ports
of Freeport and Nassau. Each room
on board the ship holds three or four
people and includes a private bath.
dates
UT students in 80s ‘boring’
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United Press International
AUSTIN — She was the small-town girl come
to the big university. She was aware of the world
around her, knowledgeable about history and
oer And Brenda Bell, 18, arrived at the University
; oflexas with all the confidence and enthusiasm a
freshman from Colorado City could visibly con
tain.
The year was 1964. She graduated in 1968. She
I I i worked for a local newspaper and covered the UT
^ fj I Am heat in the early 1970s. Now she’s back as an
'A-M11 instructor. But somehow the university is not
quite the same.
nternattani ft "frankly,” she says, “I find it boring. There are
endance J n0 stron 8 personalities, no causes. There’s not
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even an outstanding ass to despise.”
Janet Wilson, a recent graduate of the universi
ty, agreed.
“It used to be that students would grasp any
thing to jump on a bench and get a rally going,”
she said. “People now are more concerned with
how they dress and look. It’s a social status thing.
They don’t care about politics anymore. ”
An early morning stroll through Guadalupe
Street, the campus’ main drag, confirms Wilson’s
assessment. Throngs of students — some chatter
ing away — scurry to make that business or en
gineering class.
The sorority women wear Izod shirts (the ones
with alligators on them) and designer jeans or
.shirts.
I wouldn’t think of going to class without full
$2.501
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Women dig
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United Press International
GROSSE POINTE PARK, Mich.
— A police station in a posh Detroit
suburb was not the likely place for
what looked like a rummage sale.
But neither were the “customers”
likely rummage sale shoppers.
The well-to-do women rummag
ing through a pile for their undergar
ments were all victims of the “ling-
ie looter.”
The crowd converged on the Cros
se Pointe Park police detective
bureau late last week to reclaim their
lingerie, stolen from their clothes
lines during the summer by a bandit
on a bicycle, described by police as a
polite and courteous kid who has
one bad hangup.”
Its been a circus around here,”
said Detective Richard Wedding,
describing the atmosphere at the
bureau as the women tried to iden-
hfy their lingerie.
Numerous area women reported
seeing a young man ride into their
yards on a bicycle, grab the under-
garmets from clotheslines, stuff
in his shirt and ride away.
The thefts were first reported in
June and continued until a week ago,
police said, when officers on patrol
spotted the suspect in an alley in the
neighborhood.
He pleaded guilty to larceny.
What was once the state’s mecca for dissent and
protest is no more. Enhancing career goals is the
vogue.
“These kids today are more boring,” said Bell.
When I was a student I was more interested in
the things around me. These kids are pretty much
self contained.
“The amazing thing to me is that they want to
find out what’s expected of me and then they want
to do it. But they are not really concerned with
anything that requires thinking. They are a good
example of the television age.
“They are just uncaring people.”
Ten years ago Frank C. Erwin Jr., chairman of
the UT Board of Regents, ruled supreme. He was
a man so powerful the students loved to hate him,
and confrontations with him were frequent.
He tagged the radical and liberal students who
opposed him as “dirty nothings.” Erwin stepped
down from his “throne” five years ago, but re
mained a vociferous and fierce advocate of UT.
Erwin died of a heart attack on Oct. 1. He was
eulogized in the Special Events Center, a 15,000-
seat arena on the campus he was instrumental in
building. Former governors and big-time politi
cians came to pay homage.
Not one of Brenda Bell’s sophomore journalism
students had ever heard of him.
Six months ago Republican presidential candi
date Ronald Reagan appeared at a rally at the
Lyndon B. Johnson Auditorium. More than 2,000
showed up. About 1,200 were students in desig
ner jeans, short hair and heavily starched shirts
and blouses. They cheered Reagan when he said
America had failed in Vietnam.
“Never will we let our young men fight when
their leaders are afraid to let them win,” he
shouted as the students, waving American flags,
stood in adulation.
A bewildered professor who has taught at UT
for 20 years stood at the rear of the auditorium
watching the students, many of whom even wore
three-piece suits.
“It is funny how they’ve (university students)
come full circle,” said the professor. “It doesn’t
seem so long ago our students were protesting
against this same kind of attitude.”
Dr. David McClintock, associate dean of stu
dents, said the change in America’s economy in
the last 10 years and the absence of the Vietnam
war are largely responsible for the more subdued
and conservative attitude among UT students. He
said the changes have also given students an
opportunity to become more involved in personal
career goals.
“I think those changes,” he said, “have made it
possible for students to concentrate on other
things and not be so vocal about it.”
He said the students of the 80s are as serious
minded as the students of the 70s, but the focus
has changed.
Bell agreed with McClintock, but she said her
students are reluctant to consider the fact “they’ll
have to pay dues” before success is secure.
“My students are ambitious. They all want to
be Jessica Savitch and Dan Rather, but they don’t
have any conception of what it’s going to take to
get them there.”
Guys AND Gals Hair Design
ARE CHANGING THEIR NAME
TO
MANHATTEN SOUTH
MANHATTEN SOUTH
DESIGN CENTRE
STILL THE VERY BEST IN HAIR CARE!
AND NOW WE’VE ADDED SOMETHING NEW!
112 Nagle at University
846-5761
Attention Sophomore Women
ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA
WANTS TO RECOGNIZE YOUR ACHIEVEMENTS.
H you hove a cumulative GPR of 3.5 or better for 30 +
hours or made a 3.5 your 1st semester (w/15 hrs) please
come to the initiate's tea.
OCTOBER 21, TUESDAY AT 7:30 P.M.
IN 607 RUDDER
TO MEET EVERYONE AND
PAY INITIATION DUES
CONTACT TRICIA BARBER
RM. 221C-MSC
IF UNABLE TO ATTEND
Wildlife Arts Sale
On display through Oct. 25 in the
MSC across from the art gallery.
Paintings by Charles Beckendorf
Taxidermy by Joe Hibler
Sponsored by TAMU Poultry
Science Club
Order forms available at display.
No, Mr. Babcock. Yes, Mr. Burns. Never, Ms. Little. Never.
Five days of this and I bust loose with Cuervo & grapefruit.
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MSC VIDCO
ROBIN WILLIAMS
(MORK)
Oct. 22 & 23 7 & 8 p.m.
Rm. 350 MSC
This most famous of the Home Box Office specials features
Robin Williams in his wild, furiously speedy improvisational
comedy act before a celebrity crowd at Hollywood’s Roxy
Club (59 minutes)
Bust loose with Cuervo Gold
Dash it on the rocks and
add a splash of grapefruit.
\bur mouth’s been
waiting for it all week.
COUPON