The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 22, 1982, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ;ist phalaiii
nselves,
II never sun
'liciesinfat
has always
•r defender;
nan cause.
SalahEdi
401 Si
nparis
coniparisoi
Lebanon;
letter) isli
I’ll bet
someone
rackyardf
niddleofa
Ready to serve
staff photo by David Fisher
L Troop, 3rd Squadron, 163rd
Armored Calvary Regiment of the
National Guard returns from its
annual field training at Fort Bliss.
The troop comprises area residents
and students who train for two
weeks each summer. The National
Guard serves during emergencies.
told Cusn
itant
■arl
eward offered for printer,
computer stolen on campus
Crime Stoppers needs help this
veek in finding the persons re-
ponsible for the burglary of a
RS-80-III home computer, se-
ial number 0006568, from 304
Physics Building at Texas A&M
[Jniversity.
The computer, along with an
Epson MX 80 Printer, serial
lumber 375655, and floppy
liscs were stolen on the night of
June 16. The computer equip
ment has a total value of $3,000.
Since September 1981, the be
ginning of the Texas A&M fiscal
year, $33,000 in state property
has been stolen. This is the
second computer that has been
stolen this month.
Crime Stoppers is offering
$1,000 for any information
leading to the arrest and grand
jury indictment of those respon
sible for this crime. Anyone able
to help is asked to call Crime
Stoppers at 775-TIPS.
Crime Stoppers also pays
cash rewards to persons provid
ing information which leads to
an arrest and indictment in any
unsolved felony. Information in
all cases will be handled con
fidentially.
Campus Names
Dr. Ian Tazard, formerly of the
University of Guelph, Canada,
has been named head of the De-
lartment of Veterinary Micro-
liology and Parasitology at the
Texas A&M College of Veterin
ary Medicine.
Tizard, a native of Belfast,
Northern Ireland, held a similar
post at Guelph and is the author
of more than 70 research papers
and a textbook on veterinary im
munology.
He replaces Dr. Don Lewis,
who has served as interim de
partment head for the past year
and will return to full time
teaching and research.
Dr. J. Milton Nance, profes
sor emeritus of history at Texas
A&M, has been elected a knight
of San Jacinto in the Sons of the
Republic of Texas.
Nance, a former head of the
Department of History, can
trace his ancestry back to several
early Texas settlers including
John Rugeley, who served in the
seventh and eighth congresses
of the Republic of Texas.
Election to the Knights of San
Jacinto is the highest honor
ino
essional®
tnient he*
i intellect
not necess
ioint is
, eat lunc
olicy
s in po sh
ve privaif
-offices; 1 ^
-om h
parts
of"
• otherP4
hall see»
’s status s' 1
Jated af
gl eds t
ennedytf
unong^L
;ivil Servaf
kets.
aeinteres
■e from
residents'’
Ter io A
,readout
ne o
lerive s® 1
ie ones")
avy wl
See The Most Beautiful
Cowgirls In Texas!
TONIGHT!!!
<$§p'tmw<n
FM
Presents The
¥
|
a
MISS COWGIRL "10"
Contest!!!
A Western-Wear Oriented Beauty Competition
GRAHAM CENTRAL STATION
■ttrg ,orij
lecon'C; J
use the ft|
ridom
1600 B South College Ave.
* FREE DRAFT BEER! *
6:00-8:00 P.M.
oazxxxd
ship Conference at Texas A&M
University, said $750,000 to
$800,000 would be spent this
year on the program — recently
approved by the state board of
education — which is designed
to provide public schools with
top-notch, readily available, in
structional leadership.
“The service center is
charged by law as being the
planning center for the region,”
Bynum said. “I am convinced
you cannot have educational
leadership from 25 people who
are sitting in a building in Austin
and get out about once every
five years.”
Bymun wants to accomplish
one goal with the service center
— to increase the ability to hire
the instructional consultants in
different areas of the school cur
riculum.
Bynum said the Texas Educa
tion Agency currently employs
more than 15 home economics
consultants, about the same
number of consultants in agri
cultural production, one math
and no language arts consul
tants.
awarded in the Sons of the Re
public of Texas.
Texas A&M Professor
Charles D. Holland has written
his sixth book dealing with distil
lation in the chemical engineer
ing profession.
Due in bookstores in Decem
ber, the McGraw-Hill book is en
titled “Computer Methods for
Solving Dynamic Separation
Problems.” Holland has been
head of the chemical engineer
ing department at Texas A&M
since 1964. This is his second
book for McGraw-Hill.
“What I want is 20 math and
20 language arts consultants
who are top notch, available to
you and close to you,” he said. “I
want to get outside my pay struc
ture so that I can pay them a
decent salary.”
Bynum said other changes he
intends to propose to the state
board in September are to
change the textbook adoption
cycle from eight to six years and
^eel the luxury . . .
Warm water running through your hair.
Cleansing. Massaging.
Gentle suds rinsed out, leaving a soft,
sweet scent.
Now, the cut. Crisp. Precise. Fresh.
Perfect.
Feel the luxury at. . .
707 Texas Avenue
696-6933
Culpepper Plaza
693-0607
Highspeed
High Fidelity.
(Without the high price.)
If you want the best car audio
sound going, you want an Alpine. Our
sales people and installers are Alpine
specialists who know how to put
together the best Alpine system for
your car, your ear, and your budget.
69
95
The Alpine 3006 18W + 18W Power
Amplifier is a high-technology unit that
gives clean power and crisp sound to your
Alpine pre-amp or Bi-lever tuner/tape
deck. It features an Auto Remote Power-
On Switch; can be hidden in trunk or
compartment; activated on/off with your
radio power.
N86K3C1 P
299
00
The Alpine 7128 ETR/PLL FM/AM
Cassette, Bi-level™ combines Alpine’s
high technology in one small (5Vi")
chassis. An electronic tuning radio with
Digital Phase-Lock-Loop Frequency Syn
thesizer, 10-Station Preset, Feather-Touch
Controls, SCC Tape Head™, and Bi-level™
versatility.
119
95
The Alpine 6302, 6Vi" 3-Way Speaker
System provides the true test of your car
audio system. With a separate woofer and
tweeter, this compact speaker system will
fit any American or foreign subcompact
car on the road. And deliver the clean,
full range sound of your Alpine system.
AUDIO
707 Texas Ave., College Station
696-5719