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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 27, 1983)
! ' I national Battalion/Page 11 January 27, 1983 What’s Up Thursday DANCE ARTS SOCIETY:A general meeting announce dance class Limes will be held at 7:30 p.m. 207 G. Rollie White Coliseum. AGRICULTURE ECONOMICS CLUB: A Chili cook- out and dance will be held at 7 p.m. at the Quonset Huts. Also, a brieT meeting discussing Ag.Eco 400 - California Business Tour will be held. jto by Dini ving in iter lout ; Discovt TAMU FENCING CLUB:Upcoming tournaments will be discussed in a meeting at 7 p.m. in 207 East Kyle. Fencing will follow. Everyone is welcome. CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCI ATI ON: Anyone liv- ingin Arbor Square area is invited for mass at 7:30 p.m. at the Arbor Square Party Rooms. TAMU ROADRUNNERS:Spring activities will be dis cussed in a meeting at 7 pan. in 404 Rudder. ENTOMOLOGY CLUBrDr. Bob Wharton will speak in a meeting at 7 p.m. in 103 SCSI STUDENT GOVT — \<MKR REGISTRA- TION:Get registered for lo. at the first floor MSC. the lot •' street corner of Nagle and 1 :• fels) from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. .md Hall from 1 1 a.m. to 2 p.m. n< I absentee voting ballots for Feb i BRYAN HOSPI I AL: Bryan Hospital is sponsoring a Car- dio Pulminary Resucitation (CPR) course, certified by the American Heart Association, today from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. at the Bryan Hospital Conference Room. 1 he course is taught by Naomi Giroux and costs 50 cents per person. I POLI FICAL FORUM:Sign up now for the annual trip to Washington D.C. A $200 deposit is due by Feb. 9. For more information, call 845-1515. TEXAS A&M EMERGENCY CARE TEAM The first meeting of the semester will be held at 7 p.m. in 502 Rudder. All persons interested in Emergency Medical Services are welcome. A&M BICYCLE CLUB .Plans for the spring semester will be discussed in a meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 402 Rudder. New members are welcome. TEXAS A&M RAC^UETBALL CLUB:A general meet ing will be held at 7 p.m. between raquetbali courts 7 and 8 in East Kyle to plan activit ies, sign new and old members and distribute tournament shirts. ng elections! Register i he A&A building, the k (in f ront of Helden- Iront ofSbisa Dining until Saturday. Some will be available. MARKETING SOCIETY:Spring Membership Party will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the “Blue room” of the Briarwood Apartments. All members, prospective members and fa culty are invited and encouraged to attend. COSA (THE COMMUNITY OF SINGLE ADULT- S):Karl Putnam, Assistant Professor of Accounting at Texas A&M, will present a tax and financial seminar for single adults at 7:30 p.m. at the “Eagle” meeting room (front entrance), 1729 Briarcrest in Bryan. Refreshments will be served. Admission is $1 for members and $2 for non-members. MSC CEPHE1D VARIABLE.Bladerunner, with Harri son Ford, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. in Rudder Theater. Admission is $1.50. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPELT he group will leave at 6:30 p.rn. f rom the University Lutheran Chapel, 315 N. College Main, College Station to visit and sing at the Sherwood Nursing Home. Share/Growth Group for mutual growth will meet at 9 p.m. at the University Lutheran Chapel. AGGIELAND YEARBOOK PICTURESThis is your last chance to have your picture in the Aggieland. Today through Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. pictures will be taken at 1700 Puryear Drive, 696-6756. No individual pictures will be taken after Friday for the ’83 Aggieland. TAMU SOCIETY FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND NEW VFNTUREST he All Night Fair, Business Week and the semester’s agenda will he finalized in a meeting at 7 p.m. in 155 A&A Building. A&M RUGBY' CLUB:Practice and training is held every Monday through Thursday at 5 p.m. on the Main Drill Field. MSC VARIETY SHOW:Applications to perform in the 1983 MSC Variety Show are available now at the secret ary’s isle in 216 MSC. Deadline for applications is 5 p.m., Feb. 4. Auditions will be Feb. 22 and 23. trial ‘Algiers 7’ police postponed until March United Press International NEW ORLEANS — A federal judge has postponed until March 7 the trial in Dallas of seven New Orleans policemen charged with beating up blacks during a tense investigation of a young officer’s slaying. Attorneys for the policemen asked for a six-month delay in the trial, originally set for Feb. 7, because a segment of the Jan. 16 “60 Minutes” reported on the case. But U.S. District Judge Adrian Duplantier, who earlier this month agreed to move the trial to Dallas, postponed the proceedings only 30 days. The policemen, who came to be known as the “Algiers 7,” were charged with violating the civil rights of blacks whom they had questioned about the 1980 slaying of patrolman Gregory Neupert. Within five days of Neupert’s death in the city’s Algiers sec tion, police investigators had kil led four blacks. Two of the vic tims were described as suspects in the case. LEARN TO FLY with the Texas A&M Flying Club Club offers: Late model Cessna training aircraft ial Satellite searches the stars \ I O tl 4 United Press International 1 I A [■ ANDENBERC. AIR ' PGRCE BASE, Calif. — A satel lite powered by the sun began a res threei(>two week test period in earth’s procedure orbit today. Scientists later will :tors at therblow the cover off’ its telescope oelieve tk and for the first time peer into ge in thejth'e Millty Way and beyond, in resultedA huge Delta rocket carried is "becawthe satellite into space Tuesday se transpknight in what project officials Dr. ClarUcafled “a flawless, beautiful edelivermi launch” that will allow humans rain’s bltwtrf see farther into space. The project is a joint missions of the heart tra©l)nited States, the Netherlands aeen ratkand the United Kingdom. •k wasniiitjH“All events occurred on time, s in thebratsepmation occurred as sche- :d to receiuduled and the satellite was seen md soraefeover the tracking station in Eng- into spasdand,” Frapk Bristow of the Jet langetneuPropulsion Laboratory said af- fashion." ter the launch. )therdocioi®“The spacecraft is now on its 1 in what own, drawing power from the t Dr. Clarls'un.” he said. “The next big ever beenievent comes in five days when diacoutpui we blow off the cover over the ypothesis,* telescope.” B^fter a two-week checkout in iharing out space, the satellite will begin its 1 they’re si seven-month survey of deepest space and transmit its data to Id (the data Rutherford and Appleton , how a bod Laboratories at Chilton , Eng- ;ick respooland. ;. This ma)H5cienlists say the satellite tele- 3 the seizuftcope will virtually open up the e transplaai entire universe to mapping, and iay be reWxpand man’s capability to iey are gets understand space, t of their piT The project manager of the ie period, r-old retire I Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif, said the satellite is in a polar orbit circling the earth every 103 minutes. The Infrared Astronomical Satellite is designed to search distant stars and galaxies from the heat they give off. Scientists say that when it reaches polar orbit (560 miles above the earth) it will be far beyond the infrared-absorbing molecules of water vapor and carbon dioxide in the atmos phere, and will be able to detect distant heat sources. “If it works the way we expect, we ought to be able to survey 95 percent of the sky in the in frared,” Gerry Neugebauer, the American science team leader for the project said. Scientists said some objects expected to be visible to the tele scope include the center of the Milky Way galaxy, which is hid den from view by dust clouds; the birth of stars from the col lapse of superheated clouds; the deaths of stars as they exhaust their nuclear fuel; dense mole cular clouds in space between stars and objects — including other galaxies — far beyond the Milky Way. The heart of IRAS is a tele scope designed to detect in frared energy as faint as 1 mil lion of a trillionth of a watt per square centimeter. Weighing 1,782 pounds, the satellite’s key detector unit will be cooled by 125 gallons of helium to minus 455 degrees Fahrenheit to minimize the effects of infrared emissions from the satellite itself. IRAS, which is 12-feet high and 7-feet wide will collect 900 million bits of information dur ing its 14 daily orbits. Twice a day, during passes over tracking stations in England, it will fire its information back to earth at the rate of 1 million bits per second. Officials said that some of the information it sends back will be examined immediately in Eng land and the full data will be sent by a communications satellite to JPL for extensive processing. FAA Certified Flight instructors very economical rates To learn more, please attend a meeting on Feb. 1, 7:30 p.m, Heldenfels 109 or call David Brown at 693-1184. GOING SHOPPING? Check the ads in The Battalion for the best buys! n xtc XXI XXI .Ji rently seizure s<i the Utah A' ding Clarkr anuary. suffered a p 1 two dap' ery was orced to off 3 to damp# ft cheek,cor g problem ted in serio- an Wedne ry being set s. Petersoi ever threa# >ut admim cant” delay PHI KAPPA TATI LET THE TRADITION BEGIN... SEVENTY-FIVE YEABS AGO, AN ENERGETIC GROUP OF MEN DECIDED TO DO SOMETHING SIGNIFICANT. . . TODAY, WE ARE OFFERING YOU THAT SAME OPPORTUNITY. PHI KAPPA TAU IS A NATIONAL FRATERNITY WITH A NATIONWIDE REPUTATION OF EXCELLENCE AND HIGHER V by redurinj intake, it ly andlessi| be tasteless Pro-K ' sugar, fat!' 1 rides. The" | solution of I ith water,*’ ipenings® main, the! banans, app IDEALS. WE ARE NOW IN THE PROCESS OF BRINGING THIS TRADITION TO TEXAS A£?M UNIVERSITY. • WE ARE SEEKING DYNAMIC INDIVIDUALS INTERESTED IN WORKING TOGETHER TO PIONEER A NEW PHI KAPPA TAU CHAPTER AT A<2?M. SUCH AN OPPORTUNITY OFFERS YOU LIFETIME FRIENDSHIPS, A MORE INFLUENTIAL POSITION ON CAMPUS, AND AN ALTERNATIVE TO EXISTING ORGANI ZATIONS. PLEASE FEEL FREE TO CONTACT OUR NATIONAL REPRE SENTATIVE, STEVE LILLY, AT BOX 4437, TEXAS A£?M UNI VERSITY, COLLEGE STATION, 77844 FOR A PERSONAL IN TERVIEW. . . . CREATE YOUR OWN HERITAGE AND BECOME A PERMANENT PART OF TEXAS AGPM HISTORY. DEMO SALE 20 to 50% OFF All Bang & Olufsen Bang &. 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