The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 11, 1982, Image 7

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    Battalion/Paf
state
Battalion/Page 7
March 11, 1982
What’s
Thursday
at Texas A&M
,' 0 CIRCLE K: Regular meeting at 7 p.m. in 137A MSC. All students
Rjare welcome.
^CCEPHEID VARIABLE: “House ol Dark Shadows” will be
jRhowu at 7:30 p.m. and 9:45 p.m.
SIERRA CLUB: Johnny Smith, city manager of Brenham, will
Hspeak on problems of oil and gas waste disposal at 7:30 p.m. in
Kthe Eagle Community Room, 1729 Briarcrest.
TEXAS A&M SPORT PARACHUTE CLUB: Safety and
Twhere to go will be the summary of the meeting at 7:30 p.m. in
^■502 Rudder.
AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERS: A speaker from the place-
Htnent center will be present and officer elections will be held at
■7:30 p.m. in 209 Scontes.
ftAM CAPTAINS MEETING: Captains from innertube wa-
Hter polo and water polo (one person from each team) will have a
■meeting at 5:15 p.m. in 167 G. Rollie White. Schedules will be
■distributed and new rules will be discussed.
TEXAS A&M EMERGENCY CARE TEAM: Will meet at
■7:30 p.m. in 302 Rudder.
UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRY: Women’s bible study will be
■at 7:30 p.m. at 1002 Pershing St.
CATHOLIC STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: Inquiry Class 11
jtf will meet at 6 p.m. in the student center. Night prayer wall be at
■ 10 p.m. in St. Mary’s Church. A dorm mass will be held at All
■ Faith’s Chapel for Puryear, Spence, Briggs, Hart, and Law
■ dormitories at 10 p.m.
PERU AGRICULTURAL SUMMER STUDY ABROAD:
■ Organizational and informational meeting will be at 7 p.m. in
f l
101 Scoates Hall.
TAMU HISTORICAL SOCIETY: Meeting will be at 7 p.m. in
575 Harrington Tower. Any student wishing to nominate a
history faculty for a teaching award may come.
ANTHROPOLOGY CLUB: Excavation at Nan Ranch ruin
slide show by Jean Christensen will be at 7:30 p.m. in 301
Bolton.
TAU KAPPA, THE A&M JUNIOR HONOR SOCIETY:
Mandatory meeting for those interested in joining will be at 7
p.m. 701 Rudder.
STUDY ABROAD/COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS: Orga
nizational meeting for incoming freshmen on fish camp in Italy
this summer at 7:30 p.m. in 145 MSC.
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST: Leadership training
class at 7:30 p.m. in 110 Harrington. Everyone is welcome.
A&M TURF CLUB: Steve Barley and Tom Werner will speak
on Greens Renovation at Colonial C.C. will be at 7 p.m. in 103
Scoates.
TITLE XII STRENGTHENING GRANT (INTERNA
TIONAL PROGRAMS): Brown Bag Workshop, “Faculty
and Study Abroad” will be from 12 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. in 251
Bizzell Hall west.
CARP: Meeting to discuss world affairs will be at 8 p.m. 201
Harrington Annex.
MICROCOMPUTER CLUB: Dr. Johnson of the Geology
Dept, will speak on “An Elementary Introduction to the Finite
Element” at 7:30 p.m. in 104B Zachry.
TAMU INTERNATIONAL FOLKDANCERS: Meeting will
be at 8 p.m. in 266 G. Rollie White.
uff photo by Cotu'
‘Grease’ too slick, committee
says; students act out ‘Oz’
United Press International
RICHARDSON — When
high school actors have to stay
away from sex, religion and poli
tics, the best they can do is “The
Wizard of Oz.”
Students at J.J. Pearce High
School in this upper-middle-
class suburb of Dallas earned
$1,200 on the production of
“Oz” last weekend, but senior
class sponsor Homer Alexander
said the group’s original choice,
“Grease,” would have earned
even more money.
However, plans to present
the musical, set in 1959, were
stymied by a decision of a five-
member dramatic review com
mittee at the school that deter
mined the plot involving “a girl
of high moral standards accept
ing peer pressure to lower her
standards” was not acceptable
for a school production.
“Personally, I think it would
have been a huge moneymak
er,” Alexander said Tuesday. “I
didn’t see anything objection
able in the play, although I can
see that from a community Pearce Principal Bob Stamp
standpoint, (the committee) backed the decision of the corn-
might have.” mittee •
Acffiie.
Mo*tCHyUi*H’ S'peci&l
having an
ers
an
Mayors seem hopeful
about nuclear project
tiered Nebrai
lahoma, Cokm
xico tocomeup
idationsbythii:
the expected*!
e aquifer lift
square miles o
*s showed all®
lion acres no»i
)gallala will p
on by the year?
to the Texas lot
lose 1.6 mill**
i 1.5 mil!ion,OI
Colorado 2C
xico 224,000
port predicts^
illy gain in
reage as deep
nes more eo
a Is to aid fai
ernes to upgra«]
and crop
id — the repoii'l
sial issue—loH
vest from t
as, Missouria
band!
: United Press International
BAY CITY — 1 he mayors of
Austin and San Antonio in
spected the South Texas Nuc
lear Project on Tuesday and
were optimistic the new con
struction team can get the trou
bled project back on the track.
■T feel like we are beginning
tcj get a hold on the future of the
project,” San Antonio Mayor
Henry Cisneros said.
■Austin Mayor Carole McClel
lan said she feels “a sense of
optimism” since the Bechtel
Power Corp. and Ebasco Service
Inc. have been hired to complete
the project, which is millions of
dollars over its budget and sev
eral years past its deadline.
“They are certainly experi
enced in the nuclear world, and
the transition seems to be going
very orderly and efficiently,”
McClellan said.
The two mayors have been
sharply critical in recent months
of the project’s soaring cost and
slow progress and tried to sell
their cities’ shares.
Houston Lighting & Power
Co. is the managing partner of
the project. The fourth partner
is the Central Power and Light
Co. in Corpus Christi.
Cisneros said San Antonio is
sticking with the project until at
least July, when Bechtel is due to
report on how much money and
how much longer it will be be
fore the nuclear project is com
pleted.
“We feel our best course now
is to stay in there and look at the
new information,” he said. “Of
course, if they report it will cost
$2 billion more than expected,
well, that’s a whole new ball
game.”
McClellan said although Au
stin residents have voted to get
out of the project, she feels there
is no realistic chance of selling
Austin’s shares until the project
begins moving again.
“By September, we may have
a different situation where we
can have meaningful negotia
tions for a sale,” she said.
ATTENTION
SOPHOMORES
TAU KAPPA
1982-83
Junior Honor Society
MANDATORY INFORMATION
MEETING
March 10 or 11
7:00 p.m. Room 701 Rudder
REQUIREMENTS:
Minimum GPR 3.25
Jr. Classification: Min. 60 hrs.-Max. 94 hrs. Attended
1982 Spring Semester at TAMU.
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at rscjufar firiae. $4.00 . . . &}zt tfie second monoqratn
at tiaCf fjtiae s g co !
($ Letter initial motwqxant. uji to l" ilzeJ
MO colon to chooie from
'lionoy ram tfie first sweater at regular price *?>••'. ■ ■
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^Xonocjxa/n ljoux ^ehioz 1/3 oot 1/3 at j wi tfi 5 Lhii-
tiai’s, C’omfjany jVanie and tdass ^Ijear .... -'/O' /
(LliitiJi to f" iirt)
dbjseciaf ^Prices with 'De KOI cdt&J\ ri'Jy.
^Harch 1-31 <Otdi]
fy/lnivevsity <§^ast ko'p'pincj ^3^iUacje
(behind ter urban (gating (gdtvuse)
505 ts>. fy/lniversity, (^uite 603 846-0211
e Milwaukee)
lout the case
>out two moDil
a I of the depaf
lie pregnant' 5
cl the benefils
The Magic
of
There is a feeling in the air. . . it says
Change, it says Excitement, it says Capezio
Our new Capezio shoes are arriving
daily and it looks like we have the
stars for spring. Why just change
with the seasons when you can
get better? Get
in Capezios
at Lewis’.
A. Show off in “Giro”. See-through crosswork design
Colors of white or sable. 6Vi to 9N, 5 to 9M. 39.99.
Lapis
B. Banded in smooth leather, adorned with gold
stitchery and nailhead gems. Choose white or
navy. 7 to 10N, 5 to 10M. 38.99.
C. Flattery will get you everywhere in
“Corky”. Done with tiny leaf cut
outs on smooth leather, on a scooped
heel. Colors of golddust,
white or orchid. 7 to 9N, 6
to 10M, 38.99.
D. Enter the prima donna of spring fashion:
Capezio’s classic leather slipper. Bronze
or khaki. Soon in white, red or navy. 6
to 10N, 5 to 10M. 34.99.
E. The classic ballerina pump, in either black, 5 to 9, or ivory
lustre, 5 to 7. 32.99.
F. “Lookout” for our open-toe espadrille, in summery mesh and canvas. In navy, khaki
or tan. 7 to 9N, 6 to 10M. 27.99.
Shoe, StosieA.
Culpepper Plaza
College Station