The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 07, 1982, Image 3

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    Battalion/Page 3
May 7, 1982
years of teaching experience
represented by faculty retirees
jheremet, X J J
■
r
ve need
>ecause
Great.
by Beverly Hamilton
Battalion Staff
it had b F ourteen Texas A&M Uni-
uui 'versity faculty members were
n0W 'I honored Thursday night at the
somewtfjnnuai retirement banquet
10,000 nffited by the Association of For-
1 BOMBSmer Students.
; — saf; : * The retirees represent a total
king aboi 0 'f years of teaching and re-
e expensBf c ^ ex P ei "i ence -
IfMandatory retirement age is
’ currently 65 for faculty at Texas
jnalsecu^^^ Steve Hassel, employee
'titter. 1 benefits manager for Texas
she wontA&M, said. However, the retire-
;m thatlment age will change to 70 due
'eally milto the Age Discrimination Act
of pecp-pas*'' 1 in 1978 -
littae rlPThe age change for manda-
rence" torv ret i rement has not affected
the number of people retiring
am mh year, he said. About two-
mentalisr jbb^js Q f the retirees retire be-
of thatiif ore the age of 65.
minded:;. , About 35 to 40 people have
>us. Theiretired each year for the past 3
serieso[ y?ars, Hassel said.
ity i
idn
members and administrators a
choice for a pension plan, he
said.
Retirees for 1981-82 are:
— Dr. Robert Baird, visiting
professor of management, eight
years
— Dr. William Wallace Bay,
associate dean of academic
affairs, College of Veterinary
Medicine and professor of
veterinary pathology, 17 years
—John B. Beckham, dean of
the College of Science and pro
fessor of chemistry, 36 years
— Dr. Melvin R. Calliham,
professor of large animal medi
cine and surgery, 25 years
— Dr. Bob M. Callaway, pro
fessor of civil engineering, 40
years
— Dr. Arden G. Kemler, pro
fessor of veterinary anatomy, 23
years
— Dr. George M. Krise, pro
fessor of biology, 24 years
— Dr. Gilbert Mayeux, assis
tant professor of modern lan
guages, 18 years
— William E. McCune, pro
fessor of agricultural engineer
ing, 27 years
— Dr. Charles S. Miller, asso
ciate professor of plant physiol
ogy, 22 years
— Dr. David Rosberg, profes
sor of plant pathology, 32 years
— Dr. Gilbert S. Trevino,
professor of veterinary patholo
gy, 15 years
— H. Cleve Walkup, assistant
professor of agricultural educa
tion, 14 years
— Dr. A.B. Wooten, profes
sor of agricultural economics
and retired director of the
Texas Real Estate Research
Center, 32 years
Bryan police raid nets aliens;
most sent back to Mexico
by Hope E. Paasch
Battalion Staff
Almost all of the 121 sus
pected illegal aliens arrested in
Bryan during a raid Tuesday
have been returned to Mexico, a
U.S. Immigration and Naturali
zation Services investigator said.
INS officials, with the aid of
Brazos County sheriffs de
puties, arrested most of the
aliens at several construction
sites near Fed Mart Drive and E.
29th Street.
Only about six or eight aliens
were set free in Brazos County,
INS investigator Thomas For
rest said, while the rest were re
leased at Piedras Negras.
After their arrest, each alien
is asked if he is in the United
States legally. Most, Forrest said,
readily admit their illegal status;
and are immediately deported.
If an alien says he is legal, his
claim must be verified through
INS records before he is re
leased.
The INS raid was a routine
effort to control the illegal alien
population, but was the first in
Brazos County in at least five
years.
ic keep in : .
ess of Of:
^Traffic deaths hit
ge, sine,
nal
stop
new high in Texas
:bate.
. A reluoH United Press International
imstratioi' p AUSTIN — Traffic deaths in
otiations: Texas set a new record for the
at insteac fifth year in a row during 1981,
public r fi 16 Department of Public Safety
> p J reported Wednesday.
“ The number of traffic-
PTVP cpnflH
related fatalities last year in-
Heased 6 percent over the pre
vious year’s figures.
I “A total of 4,701 fatalities
were recorded on our state
Btreets and highways for 1981,”
DPS director Col. lim Adams
id.
Accidents inside Texas cities
Jccounted for 44.1 percent of
the 1981 traffic deaths.
Motorcycle deaths for 1981
totaled 442, up 17 percent from
the previous year. Adams said
75 percent of the motorcyclists
killed were not wearing helmets.
Adams said there were 1,082
deaths related to drunk driving,
an increase of eight over 1980.
“Fatalities attributed to drunk
driving made up 23 percent of
the total killed, according to in
vestigating officers. However,
we believe this figure would be
as high as 50 percent if Texas
law required blood alcohol mea
surements from all drivers in
volved in fatal accidents,”
Adams said.
Despite the increase in total
deaths, DPS officials said the
number of deaths per hundred
million miles traveled was down
slightly from 1980.
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