The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 06, 1981, Image 7

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    THE BATTALION
MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1981
Page 7
ocal / State
What’s Up
MONDAY
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CATHOLIC STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: Work Committee
meets at 7 p.m. in St. Marys Student Center. Bible Study begins
at 7:30 p.m. Night Prayer will be said at 10 p.m. in the church.
LIBERAL ARTS STUDENT COUNCIL: Meets at 7.30 p.m. in the
Dean’s Conference Room in Harrington Tower.
TAMU SPACE TOPICS AN D RESEARCH: Meets at 7 p. m. in 350
MSC.
CHEMISTRY CLUB: A speaker from Houston Crime Lab will
discuss "Forensic Chemistry” beginning at 7:30 p.m. in 231
Chemistry.
ACCOUNTING SOCIETY: Will elect officers at 7:30 p.m. in the
Qounset Huts.
TUESDAY
HOUSTON OILERS VS. AGGIELAND ALLSTARS: This basket
ball game will begin at 7:30 p.m. in G. Rollie White Coliseum.
MSC BASEMENT: Meets at 7 p.m. in the Basement.
SILVER TAPS: Will be held at 10:30 p.m. in front of the Academic
Building.
CLASS OF ’84: Meets at 8 p.m. in 105 Heldenfels.
AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS: William Fried-
rech, Assistant Public Works Director from Houston, will speak
on public works beginning at 7:30 p.m. in 121 Civil Engineering.
BIOCHEMISTRY SOCIETY: Meets to elects officers beginning at
7:30 p.m. in 113 Heep.
WEDNESDAY
ROOMMATE SESSION: The Off Campus Center sponsors this
meeting for all who need roommates and/or housing for the fell
semester.
OFF CAMPUS AGGIES: Meet at 6:30 p.m. in 137 MSC.
MSC GREAT ISSUES: Presents “Compromising Ethics in College
Sports,” a panel discussion of issues and problems in college
athletics. Dan Derme, former athletic director at Notre Dame;
Steve Morgan, NCAA representative; and Jack Gallagher, Hous
ton Post sportswriter, will speak beginning at 8 p.m. in Rudder
Auditorium.
“SOUTH PACIFIC”: The famous Rodgers and Hammerstein
Broadway musical will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in Rudder
Theatre.
‘S kg college to present convocation
take the fra
is any type;
By COLETTE HUTCHINGS
Battalion Reporter
The Texas A&M College of
closely «i Agriculture will present its annual
I basis, ai Student Agricultural Convocation
inistrator a t 8 tonight in Rudder Theater,
dentfinana The convocation, held since
J1956, is sponsored by the Student
ras differes Agriculture Council and the local
ing, shesa* chapter of Alpha Zeta, the agricul-
olarshipse tural honor society for outstanding
udent folio* students and faculty from the Col
lege of Agriculture.
Guest speaker for the convoca
tion is author and lecturer Charlie
lependinja Plumb, a former Vietnam prisoner
articular c: of war.
ling his
repayiM
r certain c«
Jeff Anthony, chairman of the
convocation, said Plumb will
speak on his experiences in Viet
nam and how he survived cap
tivity.
Anthony, who heard Plumb
ak at an agricultural conven-
tioninKansas, said, “He has areal
lersonal message on day-to-day
iving. He explains how you can
overcome anything. ”
Plumb is the author of two
books about the Vietnam war enti-
i, Tm No Hero” and “The Last
e has passs Domino.” He spent six years in a
Is, the tinj Vietnam prison camp after he was
shot down during his 75th combat
mission.
Several awards will be given to
selected students in the College of
Agriculture. Awards will be given
by both Alpha Zeta and the Col
lege of Agriculture.
Alpha Zeta is awarding five
0 scholarships to students in
the college and will choose one
person to compete for a $1,500
National Alpha Zeta Foundation
award. The recipient may com-
jlocked h®
roblem n®
is said. Mai
of payin?
y a booldwi
inga u
t returns t»
:d signature!
rious
dicatingtki
drawn, M«
;t frequenti
at midten
,1s, he.said-
thinking if
n go to Mi
feelings,
n understai
rnativestlfj
■ithdrawinj-
ry to taketk
1 counsclorj
try to 1
pete with as many as 60 students
chosen from other area Alpha Zeta
chapters.
A $500 Eva Simmons Potts
Memorial Scholarship will be
awarded to an outstanding junior
in the college. The scholarship is a
memorial to the former wife of
R.C. Potts, the former dean of the
College of Agriculture.
Ten senior merit awards will be
given to outstanding seniors, and
Alpha Zeta will give certificates
honoring one student from fresh
man, sophomore and junior clas
ses in the college.
Students in the College of Agri
culture will honor a faculty mem
ber with an outstanding professor
award. Nominations for this award
are made by the students,
Anthony said.
In comparing agriculture of to
day to the past, Anthony said he
believes there is a new agricultu
ral movement in the United
States.
For example, Anthony said he
thinks that in 20 to 30 years the
small family farmer will be obso
lete. However, food production
will become even more important
as population increases cause the
world hunger problem to become
a greater concern.
The new agricultural move
ment is also affecting Texas A&M’s
College of Agriculture, Anthony
said.
The College of Agriculture now
has more people majoring in the
business- and mechanical-related
fields, he said.
SPRING MINI
VI1IIT Il'iriTl'
IIAll I LJuAlilE
STARTS MON. APRIL 6
Mon. Nite: Doubles
Tues. Nite: 4-Man Team
Play begins at 7:30 p.m. each nite
YESTERDAYS
conserve it
“A tine entertainment establishment”
BILLIARDS—BACKGAMMON—DARTS
Next to Luby’s S4fB-2625
HOUSE DHESS CODE
Jury selection continues
in Brilab bribery trial
However, the College of Agri
culture, previously the second
largest college at Texas A&M, is
now the third largest. It follows
the colleges of engineering and
business administration.
The type of student enrolled in
agriculture is changing, Anthony
said. Although the majority of
agriculture students come from
rural towns, about 30 percent of
the students now in the college are
from cities.
United Press International
NEW ORLEANS—Jury selec
tion resumes today in the federal
Brilab case minus some of the
topics that sparked dispute during
the trial’s first week.
Only two jurors were seated in
five full days of work. Ten more
jury members and six alternates
are needed before testimony can
begin.
Prosecutors trying to put repu
ted organized crime leader Carlos
Marcello, former state Commis
sioner of Administration Charles
Roemer and three other defen
dants behind bars fought for and
won the right to ask prospective
jurors how they felt about wiretap
ping and other forms of secret sur
veillance.
Other questions leading to voc
al fireworks concerned extensive
pretrial publicity encouraged by
government leaks and Marcello’s
alleged involvement in the Ken
nedy assassination.
Joining Marcello and Roemer
as defendants in the case are long
time state official Aubrey Young,
Washington lobbyist I. Irving
Davidson and New Orleans attor
ney Vincent Marinello.
The five men are charged with
trying to use bribery to win lucra
tive state insurance contracts from
governments or trade unions.
During a year-long undercover
operation, FBI agents gathered
more than 1,400 reels of tape and
45,000 pages of transcript to sup
port its charges.
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