The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 01, 1982, Image 13

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

    etc
Battalion/Page 13
November 1, 1982
/Page 1?
r 1,198
Election
national
m. -
r >ce doesn'i]
OP chalb
rrot will*
rt GaffneJ
I as Illinois
igressfroul
ed Price i
burned him
;ed Price's
ition to de-
Friday. “1
‘ thatmiglii
up on i
Gaffnetl
inion, Mr
his role lo I
esponseto|
; from Mr,
t evidently
ole to his
lat thecon-
do, I’d be |
parrot.
1 probably I
responses
problems [
t than any-
from Mr.
;r said,
ible to dis-1
3d. Musi I
amission I
$3.50 a |
ssion.
izza
INEY!
(continued from page 1)
Lieutenant
Governor
George Strake, Rep.
Strake, a Houston resident, has
| a degree in economics from
Notre Dame and an MBA from
: the Harvard Graduate School of
Business. He has been an active
I supporter of both Clements and
John Tower.
In his campaign, Strake has
i stressed the need for a complete
! review of the criminal justice sys-
[ tem. He says he will fight for
mandatory prison sentences for
repeat offenders, for making
j surejuries know the parole laws
I before they sentence convicted
criminals and for mandatory
j punishment for people con
victed of driving while intoxi-
I cated.
Bill Hobby, Dem.
Hobby, a resident of Houston, is
the incumbent. He has held his
present position for nine years.
He is a former parliamentarian
of the state Senate and a mem
ber of the Presidential Task
Force on Suburban Problems.
Hobby’s basic campaign
theme has been that, with a high
turnover expected in the Senate,
Texas will need a lieutenant gov
ernor with experience. He also
has said there is a need for im
proved services in education
and criminal justice.
Laurel Kay Freeman (Liberta
rian) also is running for lieute-
; pant governor.
Attorney General
Bill Meier, Rep.
Meier is a resident of Fort
j Worth. He was a practicing
-attorney for 16 years specializ
ing in civil law and is a senator
for Tarrant County (Fort
Worth). He is the vice-chairman
of the Senate Jurisprudence
Committee.
Meier says the attorney gen
eral’s office needs to have a ma
jor litigation section to stop fed
eral courts from playing too big
of a part in the setting of Texas
public policy.
Jim Mattox, Dem.
Mattox is a resident of Dallas.
He has been state representative
from 1973-77 and a U.S. Con
gressman since 1977. Mattox
says that the office of the attor
ney general needs to be reorga
nized and that local prosecuters
need help in dealing with family
violence and child abuse cases.
Katherine Youngblood (Liber
tarian) also is running for attor
ney general.
Comptroller of
Public Accounts
Mike Richards, Rep.
Richards is a resident of Sugar-
land. He is the founder of
Richards, White and Odem,
financial consultants and a for
mer board chairman of Indust
rial Bank and Northwest Bank
and Trust. He has been a state
senator since 1981 and ran for
Congress in 1978.
Janet Tlapek (Libertarian) is
also for comptroller of public
accounts.
State Treasurer
Allen Clark, Rep.
Clark, an Austin resident, has
been the special assistant for
administration to Clements.
Clark is a former bank vice pres
ident and has eight years experi
ence in fixed income invest
ments, economics and interest
rate analysis. He has an MBA
from SMU.
Ann Richards, Dem.
Richards is a resident of Austin
and a Baylor graduate. She is a
former Travis county commis
sioner and has managed two
successful campaigns for the
Texas legislature. Richards was
named the Oustanding Woman
in Government by the American
Association of University
Women in 1978.
Also running for state treasurer
is Alma Kucymbala (Liberta-
rain)
Commissioner of
General Land
Office
Woody Glasscock, Rep.
Glasscock, a resident of Hondo,
is a member of the National Cat
tleman’s Association. He was a
Hondo city councilman for
three years and the mayor of
Hondo for six years. He ran in
the Democratic primary for the
21st Congressional District in
1978.
Garry Mauro, Dem.
Mauro is a native of Bryan and a
resident of Austin. He has a
business degree from Texas
A&M and a law degree from the
University of Texas. He is the
former executive director of the
Texas Democratic Party. He also
has been the assitant state com
ptroller for field operations and
the deputy comptroller for tax
administrations.
Charels Fuller (Libertarian)
also is running for commission
er of the general land office.
Commissioner of
Agriculture
Fred Thornberry, Rep.
Thornberry is a resident of Col
lege Station. He is a scientist,
educator and agricultural pro-
Americas favorite
old-fashioned ice cream parlor.
EET/BSCS/Marketing
MARK OF A LEADER
Caxton’s moveable type
completely changed
English society
In 1475, when William Caxton
printed the first English book, he
started a quiet revolution. A free flow
of ideas makes constant change
inevitable.
Northern Telecom started its own
quiet revolution, one that’s also
radically changing the way ideas are
communicated. We were the first
company to design and produce a full
line of digital switching systems, the
telecommunications technology that
transmits both voice and data with
digital signals.
Our success convinced many
skeptics that digital communications
was truly the wave of the future. As
private and public digital networks
grow, an international web of
integrated voice and data
communication is gradually being
created. Instantaneous access to
global data banks is becoming
a reality.
Today Northern Telecom is a
world leader in digital switching
systems, in related technologies —
fiber optics, large-scale integrated
circuits — and in electronic
office systems.
By merging computers
and telecommunications,
Northern Telecom is
changing the way
the world commun icates.
What we’ve accomplished so far is
only the beginning. We’re looking for
imaginative, talented people to be a
part of our growth. If you want a
career that combines stability,
creativity, and limitless opportunity,
we’d like to talk with you.
You can make your mark in the
Intelligent Universe.
See your placement office to
schedule an interview with our
Division Representative from
Business Communications/
Dallas, on campus
November 10th.
nurfhcm
fciccom
For more information, send a
resume or a letter indicating
geographic preference to
Northern Telecom Inc., College
Relations Coordinator, 259
Cumberland Bend,
Nashville, TN 37228.
An equal opportunity employer m/f/h
ATLANTA, GA • CHICAGO, IL • CONCORD. NH • DALLAS, TX • MOORESTOWN, NJ • MINNEAPOLIS, MN
• NASHVILLE. TN • RAI.EIGH, NC • SAN DIEGO. CA • SANTA CLARA. CA • WEST PALM BEACH. FI.
ducer. He recieved a BS, a MS
and a PhD from Texas A&M.
Jim Hightower, Dem.
Hightower, a native of Denison
is a journalist and farmer. He
ran for the Texas Railroad Com
mission in 1980 and was the
agricultural aide to former U.S.
Senator Ralph Yarborough, D-
Texas. He received a BA from
North Texas State University
and a graduate degree public
policy from the Columbia Uni
versity graduate school.
Stanley Keen (Libertarian) also
is running for commissioner of
agriculture.
Railroad
Commissioner
Jim Nugent, Dem.
Nugent, a resident of Kerrville,
is the incumbent. He has been a
member of the Texas Railroad
Commission since 1979 and its
chairman since 1981. He was
state representative from 1960
to 1978. He is a graduate of the
University of Texas Law School.
John Henderson, Rep.
Henderson, a resident of Au
stin, is a real estate broker. He
ran the for the Texas Railraod
Commission in 1978 and 1980.
Dick Bjornseth (Libertarian)
and Bob Russel (Citizens) also
are running for railroad com
missioner.
Supreme Court
Justice, Place 1
Ted Robertson, Dem.
is the incumbent. He has served
on t he 5th Court of Appeals and
the 95th District Court and has
been a probate court judge.
John Bates, Rep.
Bates, a resident of Waco, ran
for the U.S. Congress in 1950
and the state Legislature in
1972. He received a law degree
form Baylor Law School.
Court of Criminal
Appeals, Place 2
Ray Moses, Rep.
Moses is a resident of Houston.
He has a law degree from UT.
Chuck Miller, Dem.
Miller, a resident of Dallas, has
been a Crimminal District Court
judge since 1978. He received
an undergraduate degree and a
law degree from SMU.
State Senator,
District 5
Kent Caperton,
Dem.
Caperton, a resident of Bryan,
has been a state senator since
1981. He is a former Bryan
municipal judge and Democra
tic Party county chairman. He is
a cum laude graduate of Texas
A&M and has a law degree from
the UT.
Don Stallman, Libertarian
Stallman, a resident of Eagle I
Lake', is a rice farmer and a ran- I
cher. He attended UT.
Associate Justice,
Court of Appeals,
District 1, Place 4
Allen Stilley (Rep.) is running
against M.B. Cohen (Dem.). Stil
ley is resident of Houston and
the incumbent. He has held his
present position since 1981 and
is a former judge of the 228th
District Court. Cohen, a Hous
ton resident, is a graduate of UT
law school.
District 1, Place 5
Arthur Dyess (Rep.) is running
Freeman Bullock (Dem.). Dyess is the
incumbent. He lias held his present
position since 1981. Both candidates
are residents of Houston. Bullock
graduated with honors from the UT
law school.
District 1, Place 6
Frank Price (Rep.) is running
against Ben Levy (Dem.). Both
men are residents of Houston.
Price is the incumbent and also
has been a member of the 209th
Criminal District Court. Levy has
run for the 247th District Court
in 1978 and for the 22nd Con
gressional District in 1972. Levy
is a graduate of the South Texas
School of Law.
District 10
George Chase (Rep.) is the in
cumbent. He is a former Waco
mayor and has practiced law for
36 years. He is running against
Bob Thomas (Dem.). Thomas, a
resident of Waco, has been a
McLennan county judge since
1970 and is a former state repre
sentative.
District 14, Place 1
Robert Scott (Rep.) is running
against Bill Cannon (Dem.) f
Scott, a Katy resident, and Cam
non, a resident of Bellaire, both
received law degrees from U H j
District 14, Place 2 J
This race is between Charlie
Price (Rep.) and George Ellis
(Dem.). Price is the incumbent
and was a 125th District Court
judge for two years. Ellis is a graj-
duate of the UT law school. He
ran for the 263rd District Court
judgeship in 1978. Both candi
dates are residents of Houston.’
District 14, Place 4
Robert Morse Jr. (Rep.) is the
incumbent. Running against him
is Joe Draughn (Dem.). Morse
has held his present position
since 1981. He is a Houston resi
dent. Draughn, also a Houston
resident, is a former judge of the
municipal courts of Houston.
District 14, Place 5
Jimmy James (Rep.) is running
against Ross Sears (Dem.).
James, a resident of Houston, is
the incumbent. He also is a for
mer district court judge. Sears is
a former assistant district attor
ney for Harris County. He also is
a Houston resident.
DOUGLAS JEWELRY
Robertson, a resident of Dallas,
University of Maryland-College Park
SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS
MASTER OF PUBLIC MANAGEMENT
Professional Education for Careers in
• Federal, state and local government
• Public affairs units in private corporations
• Nonprofit organizations and associations
SCHOLARSHIP AND FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE
For further information and application materi
als, call or write:
Lyn Chasen
Director of Admiaaiona
School of Public Affairs
12X8 Social Sciences Building
University of Maryland
College Park, MD 20742
(301) 454-7238
The Univeraity of Maryland ia an equal opportunity Inatitu-
tion. Minorities and women are encouraged to apply.
15% STUDENT DISCOUNT
WITH CURRENT A&M ID
(REPAIRS HOT INCLUDED)
Keepsake
Registered Diamond Rings
PULSAR SEIKO,
BULOVA & CROTON
WATCHES
AQGIE JEWELRY
USE YOUR STUDENT DISCOUNT TO PURCHASE A
DIAMOND FOR YOUR CLASS RING (ANE LET US SET IT FOR
YOU)
212 N. Main
Downtown Bryan
822-3119
MC VISA
AND Culpepper Plaza
College Station
693-0677
DIMMERS CLUB AM EXPRESS
LAYAWAYS IMVITED
★ Now Associate Justice, 14th
Court of Appeals.
★ Served as Judge,
125th District Court, Harris
County. Practiced 23 years as
active trial lawyer.
★ Preferred by 91% of the
Houston Bar Association,
and 85% of the State Bar
of Texas.
★ Member, 1979-81, State
Criminal Justice Governor’s
Advisory Board.
★ Korean War Veteran.
Judge
Charlie Price
He’s right for
Texas
★ With the help of his wife,
Sara Jane, Judge Price
worked his way through
Baylor Law School. He
graduated cum laude, first in
his class, in 1956.
★ Married 30 years, the Prices
have three daughters —
Laura Lee, Ann, and Sue.
★ Deacon and charter member
of Tallowood Baptist
Church. Trustee, Mexican
Baptist Children’s Home.
★ Has been active in the United
Fund, Rotary Club, and
Y.M.C.A.
Keep Judge
CHARLIE PRICE
14th Court of Appeals
Place 2
Pol. ad paid by Keep Judge Charlie Price, 14235 Cindywood, Houston.
*
■f