V.- state / national Battalion/Page 9 June 9, 1982 Warped IEY, I RUA/ A SALAD BAR, >A WOW? PEOPLE CO/^E INTO W PLACE FOR ALL KINDS OF moN5 y BUT HE, 1 WEVER [OUCH THE 6REEN STUFF. sm g since i da /' Rve ndtwootlitj ie Island, ss ' n g in k were two ' & Light ( 't damage j|. an ' e ls,acoit. i, said. °les suppof. volt line |( frey Enet|i mhattan k iv n ouncilGron awn, iiave dann|t here,”" Robert you, if to ost town,! the only sip and glass t d he new h business! nt winds* ilstones vn, knocij main strett SO/AE OF'E^ ro escape the GUILT, THE CALORIES, THE EXERC/S/V6; A LOT OF LOST CASES, ALL OF'EH CMIN6 IN THEIR CROUTONS. BUT, HEY, IT'S NONE OF H1 BUSINESS... BUT I HAFTA LISTEN TO ALL THEIR PROBLEMS. "SAM, X HATE H) DIET, SAM, I HATE /AY FAT, SAM, I HATE RICHARD SIMMONS...", I HEAR IT ALL. By Scott McCuiiar y exan accused of killing deputy in truck incident PLEASE, SAM, GIMME ANOTHER ROUND OF FRENCH DRESSING. I'M SORRY PAL/* YOU'VE HAD TOO MUCH ALL READY, I'VE GOTTA CUT YOU OFF 1 United Press International EL DORADO, Kan. — An A.ug. 16 trial has been ordered For a Texas truck driver accused of deliberately plowing his rig into a deputy sheriffs car and crushing the officer to death. Butler County Judge John Jaworski Monday rejected a re quest for a change of venue for Johnny Lee Huddleston, 30, of Decatur and scheduled the Au gust trial. Huddleston has been ordered to stand trial on first- degree murder charges in the April 19 death of Butler County Sheriffs Sgt. Thomas Wolf. Huddleston also faces charges of drug paraphernalia possession, reckless driving and attempting to elude a law en forcement officer. Nader group says AMA, others want to fix prices as madej® d his wife,S dlliam CCn ixico, Mo., ^ane, Mo,i Buffalo, Ha it available he has sail lat size w sell his (an an ally in lultural Mi eys arepre] the judgemi ,000 bushel! tankru say who hel cruptcy jm lave the pw h criminalc aking thebe other / recover loi tcy. Cryts ind kepti £140,000 ft aker said, secured rom the 0 irporationt leant the 8 ie beans. 0 epay the I® ae control* X has ref® /ouid be es ofthebJ and set* the trusted United Press International WASHINGTON — Three najor medical groups gave at east $10,000 each to 44 con- jressmen sponsoring a bill that vould strip a federal agency of ts authority to restrict profes- ionals, a Ralph Nader group ays. The proposed legislation ould take away the Federal Trade Commission’s power to )ar doctors, lawyers, dentists nd optometrists from setting prices and restricting adver- ising. Nader’s Public Citizen diarged Monday the legislation would let doctors and other pro fessionals “fix prices, boycott and engage in other unfair and deceptive practices with total im munity from ETC prosecution.” Public Citizen reported that the American Medical Associa tion, the American Dental Asso ciation and the American Optometric Association gave more than $1.1 million to bill sponsors between January 1979 and April 1982. Of the 192 House co sponsors, the study — an update of a report issued in March — said 97 percent received an aver age of $6,145. Of the 44 who received more than $10,000, Rep. Richard Shelby, D-Ala., led the list with $19,750. Shelby, a second-term mem ber from Tuscaloosa, said: “I have consistently voted against the authority of the ETC to in tervene in a lot of activities I thought have not been autho rized by Congress. “I feel Congress has never granted the FTC the authority to intervene in state-regulated professions, such as the state bar and the state medical associa tion. “As far as the money I’ve re ceived from PACs (political ac tion committees), it was given over a four-year period. I have not been lobbied on this bill -— to my knowledge — by the AMA,” he said, although he said he had received a letter from the Alaba ma bar association in support of the bill. Rep. Robert Whittaker, a Re publican from Augusta, Kan., who received $16,350, said he would worry if medical groups didn’t support him since he is an optometrist. “I don’t buy the argument that a Washington legislator has more expertise than state offi cials” regulating the professions, he said. 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Course Requirements •Degree, preferably technical - Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Computer Sci ence, etc. Mathematics •One year college calculus •One course in differential equations or equivalent Science - 16 semester hours •One year college physics •Chemistry, Biology Humanities/Social Sciences - 16 semester hours English, Economics, Sociology, History, etc. •Overall GPA must be 2.5 or better on 4.0 scale Personal Requirements •Be at least 20 and not more than 30 years of age •U.S. Citizen - physically qualified •Pass Qualifying Test - good moral character •Upon acceptance you would be required to attend Officer Training School (OTS) and graduate as a second lieutenant in the Air Force •Upon completion of OTS you would attend an Engineering School for 18-24 months and earn an Engineering Degree accredited by the Accreditation Board for Engi neering and Technology (ABET). 846-5521 Ron Hamilton United State Air Force 707 University Drive 846-6790 V. tefekhhl \ A great way of life.