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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 28, 1982)
local Battalion/Page 7 January 28, 1982 Warped By Scott McCullar 100 honored by Board OF RTS ' Paul A. any Chi ° Kofcsn anthi 'ronberg, <V. Smiti as A. Gri :e D. Crtsi ond, polajf F. Davis, B. *th R. Mli: ce; andi hology. K The Texas A&M University )F MEDKjjKystem Board of Regents Hilton HBrranted tenure Tuesday to 100 ologyanci*! Texas A&M faculty members. ^EThe action is effective Sept. 1. fate MB Tenure is granted to faculty Murray, urenembers who have passed nd immuiBhrough a two-to-seven year Quarles, probationary period and who nd inimiiBfcyiiave been judged by their su it ProfesiiiMberiors and peers to be acade- I, medialt^tnically sound and worthwhile mmunok'Ipreducators. laboratonp’i Tenure does not guarantee that the faculty member holding iiHhis rank will never lose his or OF SOD. her appointment. But faculty v G. Bite,f..members with tenure are usual- . Kemp,My the last to be eliminated if staff .•t, biologi». numbers are laid off. hematic; Recommendation for tenure matia;RoMomes first from the faculty :s; andRolMnember’s academic depart- cs. Bnent, then from the dean of his 1 Professor or her college. The academic igy; GonkB'ice president is the next in line [tistry; Isial to either grant or deny approval, stry; Stepfcfeltimately the Board of Regents matics; Ssdpdecides whether to grant tenure, lematicsiifp Usually, if a faculty member is nathematiaafconsidered for tenure and does hrly, sta® not receive it, he or she is dis missed. VETERISV- By college and department, ICINE Bonnie V.; natomv; inary an; lartsfield, and sin Now You Know United Press International Residents of the Soviet Union sent more than 492 million tele grams in 1978. GET OFF ON THE RIGHT Join us at Central Baptist Church as we kick-off the Spring Semester! WHAT: "Almost anything Goes" party to welcome back our college bunch! WHEN: Thursday, January 6:T0-9:00 p.m. WHERE: Centra! Baptist CLC Lots of FREE PIZZA and Far-out games 6:30 PM Central Baptist 600 S Coulter Bryan nts grant tenure those granted tenure are: COLLEGE OF AGRICUL- I TURE John W. Bickham, wildlife & ies sciences; J. Artie iross, velfliMBrowning, plant sciences; James pharmacoif R. Conner, agricultural econo- are frofl- nhcs; E. A. Funkhouser, plant on, small Jj| sc ’ enc es; and William E. Grant, n-gerylDa'jfflW'ldlife & fisheries sciences, terinary [f*- J- Martyn Gunn, biochemistry & biophysics; Kerry F. Harris, Profasorlfentomology; Jack L. Krieder, "gcaninial|' ! ' an ‘ ma l sciences; John B. Pen- v k; -son, agricultural economics; and Gerald T. Schelling, animal sci ences. A. Ian Scott, biochemistry; Novaj. Silvy, wildlife 8c Fisheries ProlesiW sciences; Ed J. Sokes, forest sci- Susan Lo; e nce; Winfield Sterling, en- ■tomology; Bill A. Stout, agricul- ®tural engineering; and Donald M. Victor, soil & crop sciences. COLLEGE OF ARCHITEC TURE James W. Craig, building con- 'Y LIBRii olesson struction; James E. Deininger, environmental design; Terry R. Larsen, environmental design; Vivian L. Paul, environmental design/architecture; and Charles W. White, environmen tal design. COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Richard L. Daft, management; Norman Gaither, business analysis; Richard L. Haney, finance; A. Parasuraman, mar keting; Dan H. Robertson, mar keting; and Lyle F. Schoenfeldt, management. COLLEGE OF EDUCATION Donna E. Norton, educational curriculum and instruction; Robert H. Pehder, health and physical education; William H. Peters, educational curriculum and instruction; John C. Stan- sell, educational curriculum and instruction; and Victor L. Will- son, educational psychology. COLLEGE OF EN GINEERING B. Batchelor, chemical en gineering; D. Childs, mechanic al engineering; C. A. Erdman, nuclear engineering; C. H. Gerhold, mechanical en gineering; R. R. Hart, nuclear engineering; and R. A. Hart man, engineering design graphics. G. L. Hogg, industrial en gineering; Shu Lin, electrical engineering; S. T. Noah, mechanical engineering; R. G. Parent, engineering technology; T. A. Parish, nuclear en gineering; E. Red, mechanical engineering; and T. E. Shoup, mechanical engineering. COLLEGE OF GEOSCIENCES Michele Caputo, geophysics; Gordon P. Eaton, geophysics; Andrew Hajash, geology; David W. McGrail, oceanography; John Morse, oceanography; and Kenneth L. White, geography. COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS Jon R. Bond, political science; Steve Chan, political science; Lawrence D. Cress, history; Richard Critchfield, modern languages; Dwight F. Davis, political science; and Jerry C. Gaston, sociology. Claude L. Gibson, English; Sylvia A. Grider, English; David B. Hill, political science; Charles A. Johnson, political science; Gary D. Libecap, economics; and Clinton J. Machann, En glish. Kenneth R. Mladenka, poli tical science; John R. Moroney, economics; Joseph A. Pratt, his tory; Charles W. Smithson, eco nomics; D. Gentry Steele, anthropology; Willard C. Tur ner, English; Frank E. Vandiv er, history; Glendon H. Weir, anthropology; and Charles W. Wiggins, political science. UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Colleen Cook and Katherine Jackson. COLLEGE OF MEDICINE David N. McMurray, medical microbiology and immunology; and John M. Quarles, medical microbiology and immunology. COLLEGE OF SCIENCE Gordon M. Crippen, chemistry; Stephen A. Fulling, mathema tics; Stephen M. Gagola, mathe matics; Daniel R. Lewis, mathe matics; Michael B. Marcus, mathematics; Peter M. McIn tyre, physics; Jon T. Pitts, mathematics; and Peter J. Rizzo, biology. Helmut W. Sauer, biology; Larry L. Schumaker, mathema tics; A. Ian Scott, chemistry; Steven D. Taliaferro, mathema tics; Isiah M. Warner, chemis try; Robert C. Webb, physics; Thomas E. Wehrly, statistics; and Joel Zinn, mathematics. COLLEGE OF VETERINARY MEDICINE Claudia L. Barton, small animal medicine and surgery; Harry W. Boothe, small animal medicine and surgery; Robert A. Green, veterinary pathology; David M. Hood, veterinary physiology and pharmacology; and William L. Jenkins, veterinary physiolo gy and pharmacology. Daniel H. Jones, veterinary physiology and pharmacology; W. Leon Scrutchfield, large animal medicine and surgery; Michael J. Shively, veterinary anatomy; and Franklin J. Stein, veterinary anatomy. oooooooooooooooooooooooooot CAMPUS THEATRE LAST NIGHT! All Tickets Tonight l 50 ! 7:40 Now Showing 9:50 jagCAPE ilEUI YK,RK cnNATlONAl- FILM ,NV ^ leaS e rA vco Starts tomorrow Sneak Preview Midnight Tonight! Tickets l 50 Ken’s Automotive 421 S. Main — Bryan 822-2823 “A Complete Automotive Service Center" • Tune-Ups • Brakes • Clutches • McPherson Struts • Front End Parts Replacement • Standard Transmission Repairs All American Cars VW-Datsun-Honda Toyota (Master Card & VISA Accepted) Radiate Happiness and Loveliness in a wedding gown from TVte 'Sridai Selected Gowns 20-50% OFF Selected Veils 50% OFF JOHN DAN BELUSHI AYKROYD A Comic-Nightmare FRIDAY & SATURDAY Midnight $ 2 fW MMM I W'WW'M I' M WWW'WM •§>. ■x \, V* . m3. 2305 Texas Ave. So. College Station, TX 713 693-9358 wA-vv-^V-a oooooooooooooooooooooooooooo - ,* .rf’-t f- ■ ;,c I Dorms, Corp Outfits, Fraternities And All Texas A&M * Students And Organizations are Invited to Enter Teams £ * To Compete In Boxing Competition. 5 Weight Classes L.Wt. • 130 to 150 lbs. L.H.Wt. - 166-185 lbs. $55 entry Fee per team M.Wt. -151-165 lbs. 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