The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 04, 1981, Image 3

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    THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1981
Page 3
Local
—«University Press to be discussed
I98l
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lievea-vd
Senate meets tonight at 8:15
The Student Senate will eon-
sider a bill tonight that recom-
, inends finding an alternative loca
tion for the proposed University
^ Press building. Last semester, the
University Stystem Board of Re-
)mm ai4 gents proposed Duncan Field as
Ameniin the site of the building.
The Student Senate will meet
at 8:15 p.m. in 206 Harrington.
The Senate also is expected to
consider a bill that approves
buying a computer for Student
Government use.
Two new bills also will be intro
duced tonight.
The Zachry Parking Lot Bill
recommends that 60 spaces in
17 freshmen get
Ross scholarships
Parking Annex 51 be changed
from staff parking to student
parking.
The bill says more than 40 per
cent of the spaces in the parking
lot are not being used by the cars
for which they’ve been desig
nated. And parking area lots
should be distributed proportion
ally between faculty and students
in order to maximize parking, the
bill says.
The Campus Canvass Policy
Bill recommends a committee be
formed to review the manner in
which student senators are con
ducting campus canvasses. The
canvasses are student surveys on
several issues facing Student Gov
ernment.
Jeff Anthony, speaker of the
Student Senate, said the bill is in
tended to check the effectiveness
of senators when conducting the
surveys. This is to ensure student
opinions are being heard, he said.
Animal science major
killed in auto accident
An automobile accident that
killed Texas A&M student
David Wayne Badgett is still
being investigated, Chester
Smith, patrolman for Bryan
Police Department, said.
Badgett was thrown from the
1975 Chevy pickup in which he
and two friends were riding.
The pickup went into a ditch
and rolled several times on FM
2818 around 1 a.m. Sunday, as
the men returned home from a
dance. Badgett died at 6:47
p.m. from injuries received in
the accident.
Curtis William Crittendon of
White Oak is in St. Joseph’s
Hospital with a broken jaw and
other facial injuries.
The driver, Larry Andrew
Stewart, also a Texas A&M stu
dent, was treated and released.
According to the police re
port the men were south bound
on FM 2818 when they lost con
trol, and the pickup rolled over
several times before coming to a
stop in the north-bound lane.
Badgett, an animal science
major, had transferred this fall
to Texas A&M from Kilgore
College. Services were held at
10 a.m. today in Winters, and
Silver Taps will be held in De
cember.
iicasssj^N
'Pus of Jj
censorsli
PrnEurorL
lieve tlB Seventeen freshmen in the
exas A&M University Corps of
adets have been selected to re
jive Sul Ross Scholar-
that beii
ie commi
'elp mak
— The scholarships — available
'dandsffi nly to Corps members — are
fcepintd warded on the basis of financial
£ in auli eedand high school record. Each
indent awarded a scholarship will
sceive $500 each semester of his
eshman and sophomore years.
Receiving scholarships this
auroras
■medstui
of the pi
item.
net Klut
Tobey S. Elliott, a biomedical
lienee major from Carrollton;
John S. Green, a business ma-
irfrom Livingston;
Michael L. Hicks, a chemical
ngineering major from Garland;
Mark M. House, a civil en-
ineering major from Dallas;
Quinn A. Izard, a range science
lajor from Fredericksburg;
Jeffrey B. Jetton, a computer
cience major from Richardson;
John B. Jones, an aerospace
f the
d
ck marl: 1
ips.
engineering from Mineral Wells;
Robert J. Klein Jr., a computer
science major from Bedford;
Jesus E. Mariel, a general stu
dies major from Hidalgo;
Mitchell P. Martin, a mecha
nical engineering major from
Albuquerque, N.M.;
Russell O. McGee, an aeros
pace engineering major from
Olney;
Norita N. Miller, a general stu
dies major from Abingdon, Ill.;
Dennis S. O’Grady, an aeros
pace engineering major from Gal
veston;
David D. Smith Jr., a history
major from Travis;
Tracy M. Villareal, an electrical
engineering major from Corpus
Christi;
Phyllis R. Waddle, an account
ing major from Colorado City; and
David C. Waugh, an industrial
education major from Norfolk,
Mass.
Vandiver to speak
Class of 83
The Class of ’83 will meet
hursday to hear Texas A&M Uni-
ersity President Dr. Frank E.
'andiver discuss his views on Uni-
ersity policy.
Class President Mike Lawshe
aid the Class of ’83 is the first
tudent organization to invite
fandiver to speak.
Lawshe said the class also will
liscuss its class gift. He said a
lommittee has solicited sugges
tions for a gift from the class.
The committee will select five
suggestions, and class members
will vote on those suggestions.
The class has already received
some suggestions: a fountain
underneath the scoreboard in
Kyle Field, a large clock similar to
London’s Big Ben and various
ideas for statues.
The meeting will be held in 310
Rudder Tower at 7:30 p.m.
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