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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 5, 1984)
»c n te 10 atucb; ni just not nore,” Hart am tor “an toes in fact re and the can leap tall i bound and bing," add- the battle is mlest couldi mention," hej to be a long; I feel ver)! ng well, but he gavel, i ennsylvania, s message to; adelphia, to| itown, to all! tale," its cheering! ig his strong 1 “We are a, oned with in; and that's rk City pot ; same.” rt by 100,Oil n some pre- districts, the; ircent higher 1 Tuesday, April 3, 1984/The Battalion/Page 9 •t ng r equired reflect the and caucus dozen slates already have ;dged dele- perdelegates 'sen. they will be legates who rrimaries or! reflect the rank and file late in three tl committee! gates. Mon-' g among the Democratic expect to do :s. And that err he gets to iy. hose factors, ten delegates mcommitted d to a panic- spending on e next stages ere are some started the season with holds its see on this week] arses left un ate would be re than half legates. Thai d this week- ity ernational O', Mass. - officers were Wednesday oi turns raping oerior Conti the ownero! ed the satrii .ted rape un t venture la# osecutors at d not partict s of cleliber ys, the seven ury found of- <son and Un id pub ownet innocent ill 3, incidental in a workini d of Lynn, niles north ol ckson showed u rt clerkJad verdicts, but ars from hi Around town Cotton pageant tickets available Tickets are now available for the 50th Annual Cotton Pageant sponsored by the Student Agronomy Society. The pageant will be April 7 at 7 p.m. in Rudder Auditorium. Tickets are $1.50 for students and $3 for non-students and are available from any Agronomy Society member or at the MSG Box Office. Following the pageant will be the Cotton Dance at the Hall of Fame. Tickets for the dance cost $2.50 and are available from only Agronomy Society members. For more information, call 260-5760. Hillel Center hosts Passover meal The Hillel Center, located on Jersey Street, will have a Passover celebration April 16 at 7 p.m. Reservations must be made by today. Prices are $6 for Hillel members and $8 for non-members. Tournament deadline is today The TAMU Badminton Club will host its annual bad minton tournament this weekend. The tournament will consist of men’s singles and doubles, women’s singles and doubles and mixed doubles. Deadline to enter is toclay. Col lege division play will be Friday beginning at 5 p.m. and open play will be Saturday at 10 a.m. Both tournaments will be in 303 East Kyle. High school and college students are eligible in the college tournament and all players are wel come in the open tournament. Entry fees are $5 per person for each event in the college tournament and $7 per person for each event in the open tournament. Battalion hiring summer, fall staff The Battalion is now accepting applications for summer and fall staff. All staff positions are open. Anyone inter ested in a staff position should come by 216 Reed McDon ald for a application and interview appointment. Deadline for applications is April 11 at 5 p.m. Chemistry students win awards Three Texas A&M students received $50 cash awards for their papers presented at the Third Annual Texas A&M Undergraduate Chemical Research Conference and High School Conference of Chemistry March 30. Senior under graduate chemistry majors Michael T. Blanda, Dana L. Wil liamson and Frank McDonald were presented their awards at the awards ceremony following the conference. Paper named best in country A paper, titled “Determination of Cloud Heights Using Landsat Imagery,” written by Barry P. Hill, a range sci ence major at Texas A&M, was selected by the awards com- mitttee of the American Society of Photogrammmetry as the best student paper submitted in 1983. This is the fourth year in a row that Texas A&M has had a student win first place for the undergraduate student paper award on pho- togrammetry. White’s aide named state head f or Fritz United Press International AUSTIN — Dwyane Hol man, an expert on caucus poli tics and the engineer behind Gov. Mark White’s 1982 elec tion, was named director of Walter Mondale’s presidential campaign in Texas Wednesday. Holman, who took an imme diate unpaid leave of absence from White’s staff, said Mon dale’s Texas campaign will cen ter on courting those Demo crats most likely to participate in Texas’ confusing delegate se lection process. Holman said Mondale’s Texas campaign will feature a minimum of television advertis ing, bumper stickers and other paraphernalia normally asso ciated with political campaigns. “You concentrate on working the folks who take part in party functions — that attend party caucuses,” Holman said. Under Texas Democratic Party rules, precinct conven tions — the first of three steps in selecting delegates to the na tional convention — begin 15 minutes after the polls close on May 5. Democratic candidates for president are not listed on the primary ballot in Texas. Holman said Texas’ caucus system, which has come under fire recently by those who feel it discourages participation, will work to Mondale’s benefit be cause much of the state party organization already supported the former vice president. Holman’s appointment was announced bv Jim Quacken- bush, Mondales deputy cam paign director for southern states. Quackenbush said he ex pects Gary Hart to spend two or three times as much money in Texas as Mondale. Much of the funds spent by both candidates, he said, will go tor telephone banks used to contact active Democrats. Holman, who also directed- White’s election as attorney! general in 1978, said his partici pation in Mondale’s campaign- should not be construed as an! endorsement by While, who has yet to state any preference among the three leading con tenders. “Basically, the governor is going to have to decide that,’' Holman said. “You’ll have to ask him.” d i ■n 1 1 i Jk 1 bv | er I ■ Student-by-mail named National Merit Scholar /ears for M United Press International LINCOLN, Neb. — Reuben Worley, who has spent only one year in a conventional class room since he entered high school in 1979, has been named a National Merit Scholar. Worley does his lessons by ail from Spain, where he has lived most of his life with his Southern Baptist missionary parents. He is a student with the Uni versity of Nebraska-Lincoln’s Independent Study High School, the largest of its type in the world. Principal Robert W. Abel said Worley is the school’s only stu dent in recent years to have been chosen a National Merit Scholar. Worley’s older brother Rob ert is a graduate of the school, and his younger brother Randy enrolled last fall as a freshman. Worley spent the 1982-83 school year as a junior at Jeffer son Moore High School in Waco, then re-entered the UNL program when he returned to Spain last year. His independent study schedule includes a computer basics course, English, a com bined analytical geometry-cal culus course, American govern ment and Spanish. Witnesses of the Resurrection (fourth in a series of paid advertisements by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saint Student Association.) As Easter approaches this year many of us will reflect on the perfect example of the Savior Jesus Christ. We reread with awe and wonder the New Testament ac counts of the closing events which led to our Easter celebration of today. Yet for others, the course of time and distance since then may seem to have altered the significance and timelessness of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. In the 13th chapter of 2nd Corinthians the Apostle Paul reminds those that in the mouth of two or three witnesses shall every word be established. In light of this scripture, we rejoice in the remarkable discovery and translation, by the gift and power of God, of a sec ond witness testifying of the mission of Christ. This other Scripture, known to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints as the Book of Mor mon describes the religious history of Holy Land in habitants who migrated to the Americas centuries ago. Of most significance in this record is the discription of the visitation of Jesus Christ to these people shortly after His Resurrectionwhere He revealed to them the Gospel He had taught in the Old World. 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