Page 6 THE BATTALION FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1980 - ’ : Visim l?»Tr\ A V * S f i ■ iiiwwiimwhiw i ■■ mum rim ■ i. . i in i. The feature will be shown at 7:30 and 9:45 p.m. in Rudder Au- FATTH BUILDERS AGGIE FELLOWSHIP: Will meet at 7 p.m. in 510 Rudder. STUDENT BOOK COLLECTORS' CONTEST: The deadline for entries is 5 p.m. in the Sterling C. Evans Library. BAPTIST STUDENT UNION INTERNATIONALS: Will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Baptist Student Center, 201 College Main. CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION: Will meet at 7 p.m. at St. Mary’s Student Center. MSC CAMAC: El Teatro de la Esperanza will perform a bilingual play at 8 p.m. in Rudder Theater. ISA ADMINISTRATIVE COUNCIL: Will meet at 6 p.m. in 607 Rudder. RUDDER’S RANGERS: Will leave for a run at 5:30 p.m. from the Military Sciences Building. MBA/LAW DAY: Ticket sales end today. Tickets are available at the MSC Box Office. “AND JUSTICE FOR ALL”: Al Pacino portrays an idealistic young lawyer who attempts to attack the criminal justice system. The climax of this dramatic film is a dynamic court room scene. Pacino won an Academy Award nomination for his moving performance. "GJLDA LIVE”: i some of Gilda’s favorite characters plus a few surprises. Special guest star is Father Guido Sarduchi. The feature will be shown at SATURDAY MSC MBA/LAW DAY: Will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Rudder Theater. in RIO GRANDE VALLEY HOMETOWN CLUB: Will have a party at 8 p.m. at the Plantation Oaks party room. WATER SKI CLUB: Will have an outing at Pecan Lake Park at Lake Somerville. Maps are available in 216 MSC. ACCOUNTING SOCIETY: Will have a dance at 8 p.m. at the Amer ican Legion Hall. Maps are available in 112 Special Services Building. SEA SERVICES BALL: The ceremony will begin at 7:30 p.m., with s the dance starting at 8 p.m., both at the Brazos Center. “AND JUSTICE FOR ALL”: The feature will begin at 7:30 and 9:45 p.m. in Rudder Theater. “GILDA LIVE”: The feature will be shown at midnight in Rudder Theater. MAKE FREE TIME Pay Off Help Supply Critically needed Plasma While You Earn Extra CASH At: Plasma Products, Inc. 313 College Main in College Station Relax or Study in Our Comfortable Beds While You Donate — Great Atmosphere^- $ 10^ Per Donation \ SUNDAY CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION: Will meet for a Bible study at 8:15 p.m. at St. Mary’s Student Center. “CABARET”: This musical was the winner of eight Academy Awards. The feature will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in Rudder Theater. ' MONDAY CHEMISTRY CLUB: Will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Zachry lobby for Aggieland pictures. A meeting will be held at 8 p.m. MSC RECREATION BILLIARD CLUB: Will meet at 8 p.m. in the bowling and games area of the MSC. CATHOUC STUDENT ASSOCIATION: Will meet for a Bible study at 7:30 p.m. at St. Mary’s Student Center and for a night prayer service at 10 p.m. at St. Mary’s Church. MINING ENGINEERING CLUB: Will meet at 7 p.m. in 309 Doh erty. CLASS OF ’81: Will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 137 MSC. & hours Mon.-Fri. 3-4 MXCi Call for more Information -v-. 846-4611 Dennis Ivey's Lake view Club The Very Best In Country-Western Music and Dancing' Thursday Night- Set LONE STAR DRAFT REER! Music By Dennis Ivey Cover $3.00 Men & The Waymen $1410 Ladies Saturday Night “Crossfire” $3.00 Cover Charge $3.00 Pitchers of Lone Star Draft Beer Come Get Acquainted With Of Amarillo, Our Mechanical Bucking Bull. 3 miles north on Tabor Road off the East Bypass In One Step ...you can set your feet on six paths to career advancement! When Burroughs recruiters come to your campus, you will be able to discuss career paths with six different divisions, all in Southern California: COMPUTER SYSTEMS GROUP in Santa Barbara, Mission Viejo and Pasadena COMPONENTS GROUP — in Carlsbad MICRO-COMPONENTS ORGANIZATION — in Rancho Bernardo PERIPHERAL PRODUCTS GROUP — in Westlake Village PROGRAM PRODUCTS DIVISION — in Irvine TERMINAL SYSTEMS GROUP — in San Diego By dividing our company into groups, we are able to offer the resources of a major corporation and the visibility of a small creative group. We are involved in every phase of information processing, from electronic calculators to large scale computer systems. And to maintain our place in this highly competitive field, we are looking for talented men and women who are interested in challenge. Our six Southern California groups have openings for graduates in: ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING MECHANICAL ENGINEERING CHEMICAL ENGINEERING METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING MECHANICS & MATERIALS ENGINEERING SYSTEMS ENGINEERING COMPUTING SCIENCE BUSINESS COMPUTING SCIENCE We offer you an excellent starting salary with merit increases based on performance Our recruiters will be visiting your campus on November 11,1980 To make an appointment, contact your Placement Office. Or, if you are unable to meet with us at that time, please send your resume to: Manager, Professional Employment, Western Region, Burroughs Corporation, 25725 Jeronimo Road, Suite 211, Mission Viejo, California 92691. An Equal Opportunity Employer... where people make the difference ERA ? s opponents a diverse group, psychologists report United Press International DALLAS — Opponents of the Equal Rights Amendment might be surprised to learn they have some thing in common with Communist Party, John Birch Society and Ku Klux Klan, according to a study co authored by a Dallas psychiatrist. “Opposition to the ERA: The Role of American Extremists, ” a paper au thored by Drs. Paula Johnson of the psychology department at the Uni versity of California at Los Angeles, and Ruth McGill of Dallas, contends the anti-ERA movement is com posed of a extremely diverse fac tions. “The Equal Rights Amendment is being deliberately strangled by American extremists in order to promote their own goals,” states the McGill-Johnson paper, which was presented at the 88th annual conven tion of the American Psychological Association in Montreal. The study examines what it terms the “deliberate, incendiary manipu lation by both the radical right and radical left to exploit non-conscious anxieties and the imminent dangers to the unaware American public.” Organized opposition to the ERA ithi comprehend how the ERA c viewed as a communist plot." I is nothing new. The women say their research shows that ERA opponents began lining up on the left in the 1920’s. Among the proposal’s early-day opponents was the Communist Par ty, a position it reiterated in the offi cial party journal as recently as 1976. “A major theme of right wing pub lications is that the ERA is the work of communists and-or that it would transform America into a society similar to that of Russia,” the women contend. Although research showsibij munists have remained relate lent on ERA in recent years women attribute it to the E growing support among the a trade unions and the party'sefc | recruit workers into its i However, the McGill-Johnson study contends that close examina tion of American Communist Party, New Left and Socialist literature as well as FBI files makes it “difficult to Elsewhere on the political lei women say they have foi opposition to ERA or a I terest in supporting the meil This includes such organizafol the Weatherman, the Revolulhl Union and the Freedom I Party. The Socialist WorkersPi^ the only group on record sip of the ERA, the paper says. “This supposed support is* cited in right wing literatures dence the ERA is a communist;! the doctors claimed. Son charged in $4,000 theft Dad robbed, must pay twic United Press International LUBBOCK — A businessman, who has demanded legal action be taken against his teen-age son for thefts of $4,000 in cash and property from his business, now may have to pay for his child’s defense attorney. “There’s no way I’m going to pay a thing. I’m the one who got ripped off,” said the outraged father, who police would not identify. Sgt. Aden Mason said he sym pathized with the man but said he may have no choice. Section 51.10, paragraph D, of the Texas Family Code states: Te o F^TICAI^ Prescriptions Filled Glasses Repaired 216 N. MAIN BRYAN 822-6105 Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat. 8 a.m.-l p.m. “The court shall order a child’s pa rent or other person responsible for support of the child to employ an attorney to represent the child.” Police reports indicate the 16- year-old is a suspect in the theft of up to $900 cash, a $2,700 gold stick pin and $450 in tools. office. He said it was droppedi however, because someone J| mined it was not illegal tostealb parent. Lloyd Watts, administratord office, disagreed. Cases areg The youth was first questioned by police after he allegedly took the cash and the stick pin from his father’s office in September. Following the teen-ager’s arrest, Mason said the case was turned over to the county juvenile probation ly dropped, he said, ifmisdetii thefts have occurred againsti i rent. But a case involving a lid K that size,” Watts said, would been pursued. Asked Thursday if he plans! Sculp residi than Joe K AsKea i nursaay u ne piansttax -r for his child’s attorney, themaiujv “I’m still in shock with this^ V/ tion, so I refuse to say anytkl this time." Dinosa ur skull found in N.M. sug : a, By l|y to ^ Council. iThe Col lining C< ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Fossil experts were preparingiscommend expedition to recover a rare dinosaur skull today in the San jiabresent G Basin of northwestern New Mexico. Ectclassii The skull, at least 65 million years old, is that of a Ceratopsian ing Thurst member of the Triceratops family. | In the It is “an incredibly important specimen, ” Keith Rigby, a BureaudRnmercii Land Management paleontologist, said Wednesday. classified i The Triceratops family was the last group of dinosaurs to develop, ltC-3, whicl said, and the family is noted for pronounced horn and head shieldsAccording The skull was to he recovered today in the Ah-shi-sle-pah wilderrcscrate study area, which could present a problem in transporting the reinaiffl] A C-l d to safety. By law, motorized vehicles are banned from wildernestraffic ger offices, di If the skull weighed 700 pounds or less, officials said it would ^financial ir hand-carried for a mile to get outside the wilderness area. Rigby said if it weighed up to 1,500 pounds “we may have to brings helicopter in, ” and “if it’s more than 1,500, we may have to go beggit!* f 1 „ to be able to bring a vehicle in.” X L C Rigby said some skulls have weighed up to 2,000 pounds. “We may be forced, because it is a wilderness study area, to bre% f the skull into pieces and carry the pieces out,” Rigby said. “I don’twasfyk T, to do that.” The skull was found during BLM surveys of the area where 2 biffioi A confer tons of coal is expected to be mined in the next decade. Rigby said tk^^ jn skull had to be removed quickly because it was exposed to the elfL en j^ on( meats. |fty “The brain case of the skull is very nearly completely exposed,™ The twi we’re concerned that within perhaps a winter or two, weathera:L )nsorec j effects would simply destroy it,” Rigby said. y’sOfficei Women ions will t nee. Sev ons and Put your stereo back-on-track and Shure will put a pack on your back. ics as e? 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