c Page 4 THE BATTALION TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1981 Local / State Li OCA to discuss liquor policy, install officers By NANCY WEATHERLEY Battalion Staff The off-campus Aggies will in stall their new apartment council •presidents and discuss the new College Station policy regarding liquor in area parks in tonight’s "meeting at 6:30 in 212 Memorial Student Center. and apartment management. “Things seem to run better when the students and manage ment are on good terms,” Betten court said. OCA represents students living off campus. OCA members will . -discuss upcoming events such as .the OCA Square Dance, to be -.held Oct. 2, and will plan a street . dance and Christmas formal, said -Paul Bettencourt, president of Off-Campus Aggies. The apartment council presi dents will also form their own council, which is basically social, to plan parties and activities at each apartment, he said. The newly elected presidents are: Darryl Walton - Alamo apart ments; Derreck Westrich - Arbor Square; and Jane Marie Sandel - Briarwood. Bettencourt said that the coun cil presidents have three main functions. “They will represent their complex at all OCA meetings and will be a source of information to their fellow residents at each apartment,” he said. “The new representatives will also become a sort of go-between for students Also elected were: Lisa Webb and John Grimes - Casa Blanca; Kelly Lobb - Casa Del Sol; Trish Wiesepeppe - Cripple Creek; Mark Butler - Country Place; Ter ri Miller - Courtyard; and Robert Goodrich - Doux Chene; Frank Backman - Durango; Max Locher - Fairway; Anthony Saracco - Gar dena; Patricia Linck - Glade East; Annette Trosett - Hyde Park; James Polk - Monaco; Bill Met calfe - Old College Main; J.C. Brady - Oak Forest; Ed Golub - Oakwood; and Jodith Allen - Parkway. Margaret Lasek - Plantation Oaks; Barry Wilkinson and Chris Griesel - Redstone Apartments; Doug Adams - Scandia; Scott Elkins - Sevilla; Elva Rodriguez - Southwest Village; Marianne Har vey - Sundance; Liz Vanderbles - Tanglewood South; Kelly Kays - Taos; and Tom Inman - Triangle Bowl Duplex; Richard Glass - Tra vis House; Laurie Henney - Tree House; Tom Mongoven - Triangle Terrace; John Freeman and Terri Brinegar - Viking; Dan Reich - Vil la West; Mary Hezel - Village Green; Brent Brevard - Village Oaks; Ann Reilley - Wild Oak Circle; David Wilkins - Willowick; Susan Cowan - Woodstock Con dominiums; and David Webster - Woodsman apartments. Dog-tired pooch A heavy class load must be having its effects on Missy as she Carol Camp. Woods, a junior elementary education major, relaxes with her owner, Lindy Woods, and his girlfriend, said Missy doesn’t mind spending the day at school. We're Going to Be on Campus October 9th. Take a giant career leap right out of school with our ENGINEERING TRAINING PROGRAM % £ ¥ Of all your choices, Motorola’s Government Electronics Division (GED) offers you a way to move farther, faster and deeper into the heart of the nation’s most vital electronics. Our unique Engineering Training Program bridges the gap between theory and application to vastly shorten the time it would otherwise take you to move your career into high gear. You’ll be working in the research, development and production of state-of-the-art electronics for the Department of Defense, NASA, other government agencies and selected high technology commercial markets as well. You’ll enjoy the fresh, sunny Arizona lifestyle and almost every imaginable type of recreation, from the mountains to the deserts, from the forests to the lakes. If an advanced degree program is one of your objectives, Motorola offers a liberal educational assistance program; plus, Arizona State University is only fifteen minutes from our facility. Join us on campus to discuss the incomparable opportunities with Motorola GED. You can also refer to our brochures in the placement library for details on our COMMUNICATIONS, RADAR and TACTICAL ELECTRONICS hardware. We will be on campus on October 9, 1981. Sign up early. Your visiting recruiter will be Grade Abeyta. If you cannot see us while we’re on campus, send your resume and transcript to: MOTOROLA INC. Government Electronics Division Gracie Abeyta, Motorola, Inc. Government Electronics Division 8201 E. McDowell Road Scottsdale, Arizona 85252 Attention Department 1101 An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer Meeting set for Women a in Communications Inc. I Women in Communications Inc. will hold an organizational meeting at 7 p.m. today in 301C Reed McDonald. WICI is an international non profit professional organization open to women in journalism and communications. The organiza tion’s purpose is to further the advancement of women in 11 brunches of communu utions. ini eluding public relations and priil and broadcast journalism. Dr. Sandra Utt, associate pal lessor of journalism, svill scrvell adviser for the Texas AlcHl chapter. 5th Circuit Com divides into two United PreJi International NEW ORLEANS — The na tion’s largest federal appeals court, plagued in recent years by a continuing overload of cases, will be split into two sections Thursday. The division of the 26-member 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals marks the first time in more than half a century that a new federal Court has been carved from an ex isting one. Supporters and opponents of the proposal to divide the New Orleans-based court, have been battling over the plan for two de cades, but in 1980, President Car ter ended the fight by signing into law a bill dividing the huge court into smaller appellate bodies in New Orleans and Atlanta. The split will provide a more efficient system for administeri justice in the Deep South I enabling appeals to be process! more quickly. Circuit Executr Thomas Reese said. The court in New Orleans w Sea the bell A& CLASSIFIED ADS« - handle federal cases in Ixmisianll Mississippi, Texas and the Pana| ma Canal Zone. The new 11th Cus cuit in Atlanta will preside federal appeals in Alabama. Ceoi f gia and Florida. Under the plaij DAL the new 5th Circuit will have Ljlic c judges, while the 11th Circuit wflbe sme have 12. 1c coni The split originally was oppoAnploy by some judges on the panel, Aviatioi well as civil rights groups wftiys looked to the court as their bta Sped wark against state and fedeitunuay courts reluctant to accept desegrtynn H gation in the turbulent l%(fcnneri Legal historians attribute tkot bee overwhelming number of appeal Heir filed with the 5th Circuit to pop&i at t lation growth in the Sun Balontrol states. fullers Scores of legal dignitaries ffotrnter, across the nation were expected jinking be on hand Thursday and FridBonal for ceremonies marking the splillrganis U.S. Solicitor General Rex Ll was among those accepting inviUn tions to the ceremonies. Recs(J^^ said U.S. Supreme Court Just*} Warren E. Burger and AssoditJ _ Justice Lewis Powell were also it/L/C vited. Officials also plan to outline ^ brief history of the court, whfl KAN! dates to the late 1890 $. Iruman