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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 20, 1983)
; local Battalion/Page 3 January 20, 1983 man in ( you were he state i run a l G sponsors oter sign-ups what by Kelley Smith Battalion Reporter Student Government will s nsor a voter registration ve next week in which stu- U)W niam e nts can register to vote in Col- WStation elections. ^artmouf Registration tables will he set Wo: [Registration Only hirintjl at the Memorial Student enter, the Academic and eadingtar gency Building, Sbisa Dining iu need for a11 an(1 at lhe corner wt Lut) - gineerirw 3ck and Na S le streets - Re S is - 8 n ^’ ation will be from 9 a.m. to 4 m. Monday through Friday. ' a h' g 0lr f Student Government repre- oui roads. . n tatives will answer any ques- ay never ha 3 ns about registration forms or formation dealing with up- Hhing for iming city elections, advertisb] The goal of the drive is to get open, but ore students involved in the =* to La immunity, said Student Sena- evervl irPam Ereckson - ^.'■We are the largest part of ufcommunity, and some peo- 1 give itt0| e donor feel we are too active,” ie said. our quota | Voters who register during lave to hoic k drive will not be eligible to man.” >te in the Feb. 12 special elec- on for the 6th Congressional istrict representative because registration must be completed 30 days before an election. If there is a runoff in the election, students who regis tered during the drive will be eligible to vote. Students w'ho register during next week’s drive also will be able to vote in the city elections on April 2, which will involve issues such as road conditions, maintenance and city council elections. “These issues really affect the students, especially those off- campus, and they need to be bet ter represented,” said Mike Wolff, vice-president for the ex ternal affairs. “Now they do not really have a voice because not many students are registered,” he said. If a student is registered to vote in his hometown he can re gister to vote in College Station. This will not cause the loss of E ermanent residency in the ometown. When registering, identifica tion must be shown and both a residence and a mailing address must be listed on the registration form. Pavillion open noving begins by Bonn Friedman Battalion Reporter The Texas A&M Student 'inancial Aid Office wall switch itions next week from the bird floor of the YMCA Bulki ng to the second floor of the lew registration center in the lavilion. | During the move, the office vill to remain open and opera!- ng. but not all services may he tvailable during the move, dalon Southerland, acting dire- W>r of financial aid, said Tuesday. II Students should consider mancial aid closed next week, ie said. The old offices will be 3pen to assist those students needing immediate assistance. 'Southerland said the old offices should be vacated next Wednes- ay. By the financial aid’s offices be relocated on the second loor of the new registration fainter, he said. By Monday Jan. all facets of financial aid should be operating in the new iffices. The main entrance to the new |ffices will be on the side of the registration center that faces the Agriculture Building. At the top if the stairs will be an informa- ■lon desk. Southerland said the major reason lor the need to move was |he lack of work space. Souther- pad said. I he old office was in le same location and had the TOie amount of space as when it was dealing with only 12,GOO ... indents, he said. teie w! "Bjihe move could have been pa’ kia § I P ia °fl a few more weeks, South- oeverisinflerland said, but with office space jse somegoWuch a premium on the Texas itial wreckoi &M campus the office needed to be moved as soon as possible. After financial aid vacates its old offices, the third floor of the YMCA Building will be com pletely remodeled. The Student Counseling Service hopes to move in by late spring, Dr. Wade Birch, director, said. The move will allow the counseling service to consolidate its offices under one roof, he said. Presently his staff is split between basement offices in the YMCA Building and first floor Academic Build ing offices. Birch said that both the re modeling and moving plans for his offices are still in the plan ning stages. The Department of Student Activities also is planning a move, and an extension of its offices. Donnie Albrecht, assistant di rector of the student activities department, said that the four full-time staff members and their secretaries will move to the second floor of the registration center in late spring. Offices of some of the larger student organizations also will be relocated at the center, he said. Those included are Stu dent Government, Off-Campus Aggies, Student Y Association and the Residence Hall Associa tion, he said. Other student organizations, including those run by the Memorial Student Center, will remain in the MSC, Space also is available at the new location for about 20 cubi cles, and applications still are being taken for these, Albrecht said. Cubicles, small areas with partitions and desks, serve as offices for student organiza tions. service cuts Battalion delivery ^ by Pamela Haisler » Vf. i Reporter S . j 11 delivery of the Battalion e) [ as University facul- SE ^ J , ar| d stall members has been 1 feduced from 1,500 to 160 "Opres, the manager of the Uni- versuy Mail Service said. . • .J5 )hn Stanislaw, manager, Lt T ever ’. tklat despite cut- ■ s > the mail service will con- r,J le to deliver complimentary p'es of 1 he Battalion to vice Psidetits. deans, directors and r «7? i einbe r s on west campus, nm . mad service is simply ack on a service that was S n b l , Shed 15 to 20 years ago,” said. “This is the first to n k mail service has decided !L , on its services. In the as m' Ve a dded services such and ° re deliveries, bulk mailing, t for ' vot ks P ace within the office use by other people.” thp „ Utbac , ks are needed because fee m° Wt ^ op die University and crease services provided trihuc 11131 serv i ce has made dis- '"Khe n s :f d TheBaUilli, ' ndiffi - L>'r departments were (a Qr 60 to 70 copies of the RT' Stanis| aw added. ^ EOunti C SOon found ourselves ta krs 8 3nd sort i n g newspap- r sorted 8 the mail ” deliver campus mail, then first class mail we get from the U.S. Post Office, then flyers, and on down the list.” Because of the difficulty of distribution, Stanislaw said, he and Phillip Chessman, student circulation manager for The Battalion, also found flaws in their service. ■ Said ‘ O ur first priority is to Some departments were get ting The Battalion a day late and some department personnel re sorted to picking up a copy somewhere on campus, he said. Stanislow said the only draw back of reduced distribution is that, now', some department personnel will have to pick up their papers on campus. Chessman said the circulation department would increase the number of newspapers left at drop-off areas on campus to compensate for the termination of mail delivery of The Batta lion. Copies of The Battalion can be picked up in the Reed McDo nald Building, the Memorial Student Center, Sterling C. Evans Library, the Coke Build ing, Oceanography and Meteorology Building, Systems Administration Building, YMCA Building and at any shuttle bus stop on campus. The Store Worth Looking For CUSTOM SOUNDS OPEN 10-6 Mon.-Sat, Back-To-School Blowout! It’s time to begin another semester and you know wfiat that means? — ‘That’s right! IA Custom Sounds ‘BCowout. And this semester the good oCe’ boys are ready trying to make some grade points. So for your first assignment head on dozvn to Custom Sounds and save mega bucks on tremen dous stereo equipment! 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