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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 23, 1982)
1982 local/state Battalion/Page 7 September 23, 1982 storage J tank is the cool ! green- •tg too nhouse r vend- can be len and cles, he ge, van >n diox- I to the '• Plans ath the 'xide,he model ased to dth the d. One is using )ble for i- Plasdt d easier th and ouse is kgricul- ion, the I Miner- part of nt from )f Ener- artmera about i r folks be- Re, lowing it s into tin This w ;rats bad er. ent to ;d State ly cityra televisk rid. ers to sfi ts itself® ives then ■ticipatf ie teleca.i ms aboc /ere scht mly dek send di 1 iticCitj: ery end ,theyeii' >k d. »g ie »9 '1 T I J J British arms dealer arrested in Dallas United Press International DALLAS — A British arms dealer, who was supposedly deared by the U.S. govern ment to sell arms to its f riends, and who had planned to sell sophisticated arms to Iran and Iraq, has been charged with a minor firearms violation. lam Smalley, 41, described by U.S. Customs Service sources as an arms merchant with wide international con tacts, was freed on $100,000 bond Tuesday on a charge that he lied on an application to purchase a shotgun Sept. 1 at a Dallas store. Smalley was arrested Mon day at his suite in a North Dal las hotel by agents of the fed eral Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. The agents who said they found a box in Smalley’s room con taining nine guns including revolvers, a pistol and a shotgun. The agents also said that in the past, Smalley had regis tered with the State Depart ment to negotiate arms sales to countries friendly to the United States. Smalley denied being in volvement in any illegal arms activity. A U.S. Customs service source was quoted by a Dallas newspaper as saying, “Basical ly, he (Smalley) is a rather large international (arms) dealer. How large, it’s hard to tell.” ATF agent Joe Shaw said Smalley was the target of a firearms investigation in Dal las 14 months, ago but that investigation was later closed with no charges being filed. Television reports said Smalley had been negotiating to sell 8,300 missiles to Iraq and several hundred tanks to Iran, the two Persian Gulf countries which have been at war along their borders the past year. Smalley denied the reports. The federal complaint that led to Smalley’s arrest accused him of lying Sept. 1 about the length of his residence in Texas on an application to buy a 20-gauge shotgun from a store. At Smalley’s bond hearing, U.S. Attorney James Rolfe said Smalley has virtually been around the world and has been very mobile. “All he needs to leave the country is proof of British citizenship other than his passport,” Rolfe said. SG reapportions senators by Beverly Hamilton Battalion Staff A nevy Senate position was created Wednesday when the Student Senate approved a reapportionment plan, and another was left vacant when a senator was elected to one of the vice presidential posts. The Senate elected Mike Wolff vice president for exter nal affairs; he replaces Jay Hol land, who resigned his office at the beginning of the semester. Wolffs position as agricul ture at-large senator will be re placed by an engineering at- large senator due to the Senate reapportionment. The reapportionment cre ated an extra seat in the College of Science, increasing the col lege’s representation to three senators. The College of Veter inary Medicine and the College of Medicine will be represented together by two senators. Other changes include the addition of the civilian male stu dents in Spence Hall to the Aston/Dunn constituency. In addition, the civilian women of Briggs, Krueger, Mosher and Underwood will be represented by two senators. Senate positions also are vacant for the representative for Moses/Moore/Crocker/Davis- Gary dorms, the College of Architecture at-large represen tative, two representatives for off-campus graduates and the Ward IV representative. Applications for Senate posi tions can be picked up in the Student Government office to day and will be accepted through Wednesday. Six new Senate appointments were approved including Mary Kay Clinton, Ward I representa tive; Scott Cummings, Jimmy Gilbreath and John Roach, Ward II representatives; Fred Billings, College of Agriculture junior representative and Arny Kardeli, Krueger/Mosher rep resentative. Senators also approved the appointment of the following students to the Judicial Board: Tracey Quigly, Jeff Bissey, Lindsey Dingmore, Joe Meyer, Cindy Black, John Wright and Nancy Nelson. Jeff Anthony, coordinator of freshmen programs, said 75 Student Government freshman aides have been selected. He added that a freshmen leader ship program is being organized to involve freshmen in Student Government activities. The Senate approved the University Committees Bill, a re commendation that all Universi ty committees, with the excep tion of appeals committees, must meet at least once a semes ter. According to the bill, com mittees must meet at times con venient to faculty and students and committee members must be contacted prior to the meet- ings. A bill to increase the number of clocks in academic buildings on campus was killed in com mittee. Three bills, affecting student government use of the data pro cessor, parking on University Drive, and moving a trash dumpster from between the YMCA and Coke buildings, were held in committee. J Fort Worth’s museum to mark 10th ‘birthday’ United Press International i FORT WORTH — The Kim- ibell Art Museum, regarded as a masterpiece of architecture and one of the great buildings of our time, will be 10 years old in October. The building was the last pro ject of Philadelphia architect Louis I. Kahn and is heralded in two articles in the August 1982 American Institute of Architec ture Journal. Architect Romaldo Giurgola said “a classical strength is pro duced, in Khan’s design, isolat ing this building as a true mas terpiece. The Kimbell comes as close as any to the great architec ture in history.” The Kimbell Museum is a work of great beauty and charm, said University of Texas iarchiteaure professor Lawr- ence Speck. “It is powerful, awesome and Measles detected at Baylor United Press International WACO — Several students on the Baylor University campus have shown symptoms of a high ly contagious type of red measles. Health officials suspect the disease was contracted by a student returning from a medic al mission in Honduras. Campus Health Director Cecil Edwards said Tuesday only one case has so far been confirmed, but in 34 other cases health officials had detected red measles symptoms, including high fever and a red, splotchy rash on the face. Some 3,000 students have been vactinated against the dis ease. | ^ State health officials said they consider the outbreak very sig nificant because it involves a col lege population. Red measles lasts about 10 days. Symptoms include severe headaches, nausea and soreness of the throat and glands. inspiring,” he said. “It is sincere, warm and humane. It is truly one of the great buildings of our time.” Groundbreaking for the building was in June 1969. The Kimbell Museum was completed at a cost of $6.5 million and opened to the public Oct. 4, 1972. The praise from Giurgola and Speck in the journal are not the first for the prestigious museum. The Kimbell Museum has received the top honor award of the American Institute of Architects, awards for light ing and engineering and the AIA’s Bartlett Award given to outstanding buildings which are barrier-free to the handicapped. Kay Kimbell, a Fort Worth in dustrialist who died in 1964, left his entire fortune to the Kimbell Art Foundation. The only stipu lation in his bequest, later en hanced by his widow, required the foundation to build an ex emplary museum to house and expand his collection. Kahn designed a series of self- supporting vaults with no in terior supports to obstruct visi tors’ view of paintings, sculpture and ceramics from the prehis toric to 20th century. The collec tion includes works by Picasso, El Greco, Rembrandt and Rubens. Natural light enters the gal leries through breaks in the vaults shielded by specially de signed filters. “We donj P u t things in a building where theyjust happen to land the easiest,” Dr. Richard F. Brown, said the first director of the museum, “Everything is organized and installed to bring a total unity experience.” ADD-A-BEADS & CHAINS 14K Gold Beads 3 mm - 53C 4 mm- 83C 5 mm - $1.46 6 mm - $2.36 7 mm - $2.96 8 mm - $3.7) Add-A-Bead Chains Semi-Precious Beads •Pearls«Garnet*Lapis •Malachite # Many More Layaways M-F 9-5:30 Sat. 9-5 16”-$27.75 18”-$29.96 20”-$33.71 24”-$39.71 All Sizes Available PfinejeweLRyi 415 ^t s 7 fi si,y "'* l Formerly Cowarts Jewelry “We Now Accept American Express' Mos• C 0"1 I * $1 oil adult ticket' 1 5 SCHULMAHS ♦ v* 4. 2000 E.20-m-2463-m-2468 * * * > > The Best Little * £ Whorehouse in J Texas ? 2J5-9140; * —* ,* •> • * * i a Garp IdMfeoo. Six Pack lllMM ♦ * -4-. i The Secret of N-t-M-H 1 a 7:10-9:25 Inchon 7:28-9:90 J MM * * * * * 4 Star Wars ■LiL-adfl S Declares Every Thursday TACO THURSDAY 330 TACOS Limit 10 Per Coupon Good Only Thursdays. Post Oak Mall 3312 S. 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