The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 13, 1981, Image 6
Page 6 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1981 ■a- For the Campus Directory This year there’ll be 2!! FACULTY/STAFF VERSION — scheduled to be available for pickup Oct. 1. It will be sold for $3.50 over the counter from Student Publications Office, 216 Reed McDonald Building — and will include — u* Emergency numbers, dialing Instructions, calendars and ischedules, maps and other igeneral information similar to that iwhich has appeared in past ^Directory white pages, updated to Include the latest information on the new Texas A&M University telephone system. u* A revised general listing of all administrative, departmental, and staff offices and people, similiar to the lists which have appeared in past Directories, but integrated this year into a single alphabetical list. (Requests, with an initial draft of this list, already have gone out at all departments asking that ^corrections and updates on this information be returned no later than Sept. 1 to Geneva Brewer at iPhysical Plant Office to be included in this year’s Directory.) ■mv* The usual faculty/staff individual ^listings. These come from the ||University’s main computer pay roll iilists. A request already has gone ||to all departments, with a ^computer printout of what currently ^appears, asking that corrections, ||update and additions to this ^material be returned to Data ||Processing Center by requested ^deadlines to be included in the H1981-82 Directories. |f^ Student Government, Corps of |Cadets and Yell Leader lists, as Hwell as list of all Dorm Room || phone numbers, maintenance and II:; other service maps, a new list of || all Speed Numbers and other ^material which has appeared in the §| back pages of past Directories. All yellow pages and a full I schedule of advertising, which has ||been a feature of all past II Directories. STUDENT VERSION — scheduled to be available for pickup Oct. 30. Will be the Directory furnished to all students who have paid their $2.50 Directory checkoff fee and who present fee slip at 216 Reed McDonald Building, Also available for over-the-counter sale at $3.50 — — and will include — ALL OF THE FEATURES LISTED ABOVE, PLUS — ji^Student Government and Corps iof Cadets leaders’ phone numbers, iand listings of other material which iwas not available at press time of iearlier Directory. v 0 A full list of Student Organizations and leaders, unavailable at earlier press time, as it has appeared in past Directories. \u* A full list of all individual :students registered at the University as of the 12th Class Day, as furnished by University computers. Department Heads be sure complete, updated information for your operation is sent to the proper place to meet 1981-82 Campus Directory correction deadlines Students be sure to check off for the $2.50 fee during registration Bar association votes to accredit Baptist law schoi N Wl trolle mour feden Hi ment United Press International NEW ORLEANS — After an emotional debate, delegates loll American Bar Association convention narrowly agreed Wednesdi,; accredit the law school of fundamentalist Oral Roberts Universik The ABA’s policy-making House of Delegates approved, 147-11 an amendment to the group’s legal education standards granting"r visional accreditation” to the Oklahoma-based law school. The ABA had twice declined to certify the law school on groimi allegedly discriminates against applicants on the basis of relijjs beliefs. The delegates rejected pleas that the organization was endois religious discrimination, including a charge by former U.S. Sofe Natio General Erwin Griswold that ’’under this standard any univenj \ tion, could put up a sign that says, ‘No Jews need apply.’” New York University Law School Dean Norman Redlick saidj although he personally opposed the school’s entrance policy, “W'ei not approving religious discrimination — we are recognizing deeply felt religious beliefs of others.” An ABA committee — responding to a federal judge’s dec®; Chicago — had recommended to the House of Delegates thatj school be accredited The bar group was forced to take action because of a federal c« | ruling July 17 that concluded the organization had violated theuii | sity’s constitutional rights by refusing to accredit its law school grounds of alleged religious bias work* The judge postponed the effect of the order until after the deb | agenc U asked undei fora W1 strik it was Th thisw also i vice, acted on the matter. The ABA Accreditation Committee had twice declined tocertftj : Comr school because Oral Roberts students must sign an honor coderes jj Regul nizing Jesus Christ as their savior and “whole man,” and mustvJ T1 adopt his philosophy in their daily lives. | shouli The focus of the dispute was an ABA legal education standardt ) tier, v declared law schools “shall maintain equality of opportunity inIti | other education without discrimination or segregation on grounds ofta| color, religion, national origin or sex.” ABA accreditation is critical to any university because 43 statm | not allow graduates to take bar exams unless they have a < an A BA-approved law school. cept Officer fired afk shooting incident bombs , with tl Provin Am miles s base h United Press Internationa) NASHVILLE, Tenn. — A rookie policewoman who shot I I innocent persons fleeing from a market robbery was fired today Police Chief Joe Casey said he was dismissing Joyce Faye Aiks ^ because she had violated department policy on the use ofdeadlyk I in the wounding of two of the victims. j [ “Although Officer Allen has a superior training record anilfl 1 under the supervision of a senior officer at the scene, I havedisni 1 ^ j her from the department because she violated the departmentspoi! covering the use of deadly force,” Casey said. But Casey said that Allen, on the force only three months, violate the deadly force rule with the fatal shooting of Harry H'a 37, the market’s night manager, who was the first of the three Kl run from the market. The chief said Allen fired at Walden topi her partner Walden was killed and two other men were wounded by Allffi sa SAL shrouc tests fi •o daime would The Saturday night, Aug. 1, when they attempted to flee from an eso|i convict who was robbing Johnny’s SakFul Drive-In Market'd t sawed off shotgun. Allen shot down Walden and customers David B. Hayes, Anthony Seagraves, 21, one at a time as they bolted outtheimi door to escape from Billy Guy Anderson Police said Anderson had walked into the market with a sboliJ planning to rob the store. Officers had been called to that investigate another robbery-kidnap incident . The lei and Cc ceedw ing Wi The will be for per east of Mofrients earlier, James Thaxton, 26, had stumbled into theniB|L n ) S n x iU-i. i i i 1-jJ l Ll l 1 J F" 1, fi ‘releasi to report that he had been kidnapped, robbed and dumped outoln about six blocks away. So officers Allen and Terry Lee CoatStM the market to talk to Thaxton. When the officers arrived they saw the robbery in progressJl I took a position behind two news stands near the door while ft |^qj crouched beside the squad car, drew his pistol and radioed fork* _ Homicide Lt. Sherman Nickens, who gave reporters a minutw j minute rundown of the incident, said that Allen told him thatwbesS and Coats arrived she saw a man with long dark hair holdingashot? I on another man who was lying on the floor. She said that when the first man bolted out the door, sheshotri j because she thought he was the man armed with the shotgun. Coast Guard stops group from takeout' United Press International , t ® )ne ^ MIAMI — A Cuban exile group’s plan to establish a pea^ * ch beachhead at the Guantanamo Naval Base in Cuba ran afoul oil swimir Coast Guard boating safety regulations today. scream Coast Guardsmen, called to the Miami River by police invest®* I the su “two boats riding up and down making a lot of noise and shoo* I scream guns,” stopped two fishing boats loaded with fatigue-clad merab® again, the anti-Castro Cubans United, Coast Guard spokesman MikelU saw a said. j below The skippers were cited for too many people aboard and took ^ jackets, Ayers said. A .22 caliber weapon was found, hesaL'^^ Customs agent went aboard the boats to check for more wea P 0 ®* * compai reportedly found none. f ew m( The two boats, a 28-foot pleasure craft called La Esperanat* * p u | se 35-foot fishing boat called the Gold Star, carried 73 people all toget* Ayers said. A Coast Guard vessel escorted the boats back to theirs« on the river, he said. p ^ “If they go out and decide to do this again they’ll have togo‘ * Ua ™ either more boats or less people,” Ayers said, estimating that a® ^ Ues da craft should carry “about seven or eight people” and a 35-footer ih ? lars ki 10. ” P en( li The boats were to be part of a “peaceful invasion” of Cuba, sp* , Two men for the exiles group said. Five boats loaded with exiles fro® 1 * j^ucop United State and 10 from eight Latin American and Caribbean® 1 * "i J^nda tries were to land at Guantanamo to establish an exile governing 1 ^ ea ch the base to fight Fidel Castro’s government. Cubans Unitedr 0 rtsi Watergate burglar Frank Sturgis as its military advisor. kyfrie Cubans United leader Wilfredo Navarro said two boats left 'k Tuesday, but the Coast Guard could not confirm that. Ayers sail Coast Guard would know about such departures only if they ^ reported. Navarro has expressed fears the United States will give Guantafl back to the Castro government in exchange for an agreement to back undesirables sent during last year’s Mariel sealift. Daniel SPREADING THE NEWS H( Since 1878 The ■ if Battalion