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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 3, 1983)
Page 4/The Battalion/Thursday, November 3, 1983 Battalion Classifieds CaU 845-2611 Student constitution studied by Stephanie M. Ross Battalion Staff The Student Senate passed a bill Wednesday that will create a temporary committee to study the Constitution for the Student Body. Five members from the rules and regulations committee and Five members from the judicial board of Student Government will be chosen to serve on the committee. At the end of the current legislative year the com mittee will be dissolved. to revise the constitution have to be approved by the student body through a vote. The Constitutional Commit tee Bill will create a 10-member committee to research the con stitution extensively and prop ose to the Senate any additions, deletions or revisions to update, reword or restructure the con stitution. The bill, authored by the rules and regulations commit tee, was passed unanimously without any question or debate. David Alders, the speaker of the Senate reminded the Sena tors that any recommendations In other business, Sean Royall, vice president for rules and regulations, reported that the Graduate Student Grade Re quirements Bill was killed in the rules and regulations commit tee. The bill, sent at a previous meeting to the committee for study, proposed that the grade requirements for graduate stu dent Senators be raised. Royall also said that graduate Senators are working on a bill designed for the same purpose. Grant Swartzwelder, vice president for academic affairs, reported in open session that the Faculty Senate currently is studying the senior examination exemption policy. Currently professors are given the option of giving graduating seniors Fin al exams. Swartzwelder reported what the committee studying the issue has done, and urged Senators to work with the academic affairs committee to study the situation and give some student input on the issue. l $ BONFIRE '83 KEEP THE TRADITION GOING LAST CUTTING WEEKEND NOV. 5th & 6th MEET TO CUT 8:30 SAT.& SUN. BEHIND DUNCAN DINING HALL STREET DANCE SAT. NITE NOV. 5 CULPEPPER PLAZA 8:00 TO 12:00 P.M. STACKSHIFTS 6to 12P.M. NIGHTLY BRING POTS & PLIERS AGS, WE NEED AS MUCH HELP AS POSSIBLE TO BUILD BONFIRE. PLEASE DO YOUR PART TO BEAT THE HELL OUTTA t.u. TOR MORE INFORMATION CALL MIKE GOLLADAY 696-0471 ALL AGGIES WELCOME Street dance discussed by Off Campus Aggies by Bonnie Langford Battalion Staff Off-Campus Aggies is plan ning a fence-building party for Friday night. OCA president Paul Roy said Wednesday that the chain-link fence is to be used for the street dance this weekend. Students who have trucks will be needed to help haul the fence and the bases that support it, Roy said. Diana Horton, who is in charge of the dance, said that flyers for the dance need to be distributed and that some of the work shifts were open. “We still needed people to help check I.D.s and sell drinks,” Horton said at the meeting. “Most of the early shifts are full, but we need more people for some of the late shifts.” The street dance, which is a fund raiser for the United Way MSC MBA - LAW DAY TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY Sponsored by MSC Development Becky Brown, Chairman MSC MBA LAW DAY COMMITTEE Saturday, Novembers, 1983 8:30 am - 5:00 pm PREREGISTER NOW! Room 216 MSC The MSC MBA/LAW Day format will provide two types of opportunities for students to visit with MBA and Law school representatives and A&M alumni of the students’ choice. There will be two sessions in the morning on the MBA sector and two sessions in the afternoon on the law part. Interaction during these times will center around the details of a particular school’s program, the advantages of attending graduate school in general, and the opportunities afforded after graduation. Late registration will be taken on Saturday, November 4, at 2nd floor Rudder. MBA LAW/Day has been changed to the 3rd and 7th floors of Rudder Tower. / MBA Schedule 8:30 A.M.-9:00 A.M. 9:00 A.M.-9:20 A.M. 9:30 A.M.-10:30 A.M. 10:45 A.M.-11:45 A.M. 12:00 noon-1:15 P.M. Coffee Keynote speaker, 701 Rudder, Dr. Mobley, Dean of Business. 1 st round of panel discussions (will later assign rooms.) 2nd round of panel discussions (will later assign rooms.) Lunch with representatives 230 and 231 MSC. 1:30 P.M.-1:50 P.M. 2:00 P.M.-2:50 P.M. 3:00 P.M.-3:50 P.M. 4:00 p.m.- LAW Schedule Keynote speaker, 701 Rudder, Judge Robert F. Pfeuffer. 1st round of panel discussions. 2nd round of panel discussions, closing remarks 701 Rudder. School representatives: MBA Mr. Richard L. Daerr, Jr. Texas A&M graduate, 1966. University of Texas at Austin, 1971 - Law. George Washington Univ., 1973 - International Business. Laomi Jane Logan, Texas A&M graduate, 1975 - Paramins/Exxon Chemical. Mr. Robert Harvey, Texas A&M graduate, 1978. Harvard Graduate School of Business, 1982 - McKinsay & Company, Inc. Mr. Scott Gregson, Texas A&M graduate, 1978. Harvard University Graduate School of Business, 1981 - Ruso Properties. •There will be other representatives from Rice University and the University of Texas at Austin speaking on other MBA programs. LAW Richard D. Cunningham, Texas A&M graduate, 1979. University of Chicago, 1982 - Vinson & Elkins, Inc. Joan Sprince - Jackson, Walker, Winstead, Cantwell & Miller. Bill Jones, Texas A&M graduate, 1981. Baylor Law School. Kyle R. Sears, Texas A&M graduate, 1980. University of Houston, 1983 - Reynolds, Allen and Cook. •There will be other representatives from: — Texas Tech — Baylor University — Loyola Law School — University of Texas, Austin — SMU School of Law — South Texas College of Law PREREGISTER IN RM. 216 MSC COST — $4.00 LUNCH (optional) — $3.00 ■■ campaign, will be Saturday at Culpepper Plaza from 8 p.m. to midnight. OCA’s bonfire participation also was discussed at the meet ing. The OCA bonfire stack shift started Nov. 1, bonfire chair man Mike Golladay said. OCA will have the night shift from 6 p.m. to midnight every other day until push week. Members were encouraged not to wait un til push week to go help with bonfire. “We need help now,” Golla day said. “Don’t wait until push week, get out there now and get some experience.” Ideas for fund raising also are needed, John McClay, the fund raising director, said. Plans for where to hold a money raising pool tournament were discussed at the meeting. A reception for apartment managers is scheduled for Nov. 9. It will be from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. in 206 MSC. The OCA group picture will be taken for the Aggieland year book at their next meeting on Nov. 16. Trend calls /(3Ty ‘more Bap tistjkp United Press International AMARILLO — People are returning to traditional moral values, but more Baptist chur ches need to be established to continue that trend, the new president of the Texas Baptist General Convention said Wednesday. The Rev. Winfred Moore said shortly after his election to a one-year term that he be lieved people were embracing the tradional priorities of attending church and concen trating on their families. Moore, pastor of the First Baptist Church in Amarillo, was the only candidate for the position of leader of the Bap tist General Convention of Texas. He succeeds the Rev. D.L. Lowrie of the First Bap tist Church of Lubbock. “We need to build strong local churches — many more of them,” Moore said. It has been estimated 7 mil lion Texas residents have no affiliation with any denomina tion. About 2,500 messengers from Baptist congregations across Texas attended the convention. They approved a $55.7 million budget for 1984, a $3 million increase over the 1983 outlay. Sexual discrimination and children in need were among a list of social concerns the Christian Life to; . . presented. Trici “Women haveti Battalion sponsibiliity as itFirst City f spond to the callo!;aks ground i commission repon llion bankin “Churches nediay. fully the enormoit F and gifts of min Chairman 1 women bring wild President Christ.” d the new Fit The report call« a six-floor ba lists to view men implex on th< as having equalworr of Briarcre port cited inequilie st loop, and Social Secun; . between men and The bank m< Moore said he! at facilities o role of women in t Bryan in 19’: should be left upti talld $27 m vidual congregatic s now outgrc He said lie had d assets are c conviction on tl 00 million by women as Baplis adquarters because the quest ivember of 1 come up in his cor; I exas Haul.- “W/p Have esc ordained any won demed gro pel ministry, bms< . st two deca< nave been electedi.| The report also Gov. Mark White expanding the ca| Aid to Families« dent Children in '£ J ' \ f £ \dop special legislatives I f called, thespeu « j • primarily would a / T \/ r d < .ition. Inn ihec(#V ii V * urged White to inj ;:, other issue. United p res DES MOINI ■'y General ed nesday tailed a tern a N e servi itself tc Man, 19, chargm™ for game shootii n United Fress International BEL FON — The Bell County grand jury Wednesday indicted V A. Shanmugam, M.D. DIPLOMATE OF THE AMERICAN BOARD OF INTER NAL MEDICINE ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF HIS OFFICE at Bryan Professional Building 1301 Memorial Drive Bryan, Texas 77802 SPECIALIST IN DIABETES, THYROID DISORDERS, CALCIUM, CHOLES TEROL, OBESITY, INTERNAL MEDICINE and HORMONE DISORDERS \ OFFICE HOURS BY APPOINTMENT TELEPHONE 775-1757 IF NO ANSWER 775-3133 iT The injur lor Iowa abert D. Fr a 19-year-old Tempted Kelly of charges of aggravan 5 * 6 Dinner stemming from the si Bryan M three people at ah: e . xas > c football game. adoptioi Prince Angelo charged with aggrava Miller said with a deadly weapon Becci Kel t ying a weapon on pees, Becci S jremises. Bond k ounseling >47,000. hoice Adop Three people wrdoption Re; gunfire Sept. 30inthti; The injui at the Wildcat Stadi dlowing a Temple was playinjhich the cou High School from Kil •The defe Victims in thesho >ecific Me> Dwayne Morrison, K ients upon i pie, who is in goodcot ousand dol Temple hospital; uses the chi Chestnut, 17, ol Ter'omised wa Byron Moore, 15, ofile for adoj; who was released from: •Kelly mi pital last week with a es which sh lodged in his spine. Ab^xican ado shot with a .22-calibei initially u merits her I Tien, in fac uch as $1,2 MSC Basement presents JAZZ at its best 4* The North Texas State One O’cli Grammy nominees for 1975 and 1976 Lab Ban “.. .one of the finest’ ’ Mundell Lowe In the past, guest artists have included Maynard Ferguson and Buddy De Franco jVV Will .! v i >■. i / 1 " 1 5 1 ' Thursday, November 8 p.m. Rudder AuditorW “...impossible to think of the progress of jazz in twenty to twenty-five years without thinking oftf^ Clark Terry, NBC “Tonight Show” Orchestra M A Tickets on sale at MSC Box Office and Dillards . General Admission $6.50