Friday, April 6, 1984/The Battalion/Page 7 af eked reMi k Lebanei ndered ill banon W ^aged in ill uic atteni| there lade to oi lublicasH thiscani ronsts an icr attach )e de proof e is alio* ven has ai gie footlj On Jones fi andjimi ■gimenti is a groupi ms. o come oi fiese guvs Corps h live of er here is ving lo p« are allow . A draw game lose get to sen fleers of ill ing. Corj Elephai be 15 06 six yell leaf get at to sentativti ficer of li he said, ic Day, d ed to dra niorandse and ami n that tlm nedals, ro y can fit suit often! I began ire andi this vffl the Clu onafti "it de Fiel re S2pf iface'Benlia* ilden lano Leon HiggintioW W. Wookt»S Deotte Thomas iner iter wkins renek berts oast aac d Ewing 39 lehan ikiaEkelnw yLenvn anie Wheal dre Mcgehee y Redding ne Travis ise Hanin iy Arizmendi Hammalei hele Britton ;e Gomez hy Collins la Sulir i Treunde ra Hume Bristol tty Gaines kyHamon therRust iry Donning aetTpera lie Hlavinka Williams t Phillips Howells iach lark Cooper mie RosenleH jnley Hlavinka ithSull. Harriott Wilson Rudd Tice iurket ley dnarz Jtafford ischer Iowan Pickard Howell ’atchett aime Williams Beazley Bortnem ot Her nie Morris doroney Wilson layken 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 MSC 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 only from Agronomy Society members. For more information, call 260-5760. 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 1 1 at 5 p.m. Students hold conference in Austin The Fourth Annual Student Conference on Latin Amer ica sponsored by the Institute for Latin American Students will be this weekend in Austin at the University of Texas. The conference will be from 8:30 a.m. lo 5 p.m. today and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday at the Thompson Confer ence Center rooms 2.110 and 2.120 on the UT campus. For more information contact 322-3270. Underclassmen compete in math The annual Freshman and Sophomore Mathematics Contest will be April 17 from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. First place winners will receive $100, second place winners will receive $60 and third place winners will receive $40. No calculators will be allowed. Test material will be provided. The prereq- uiste for the freshman contest is knowtledge of calculus through Math 151 or the equivalent and for the sophomore contest, knowledge of calculus through math 253 or the equivalent. The freshmen contest will be in 216 Milner Hall and the sophomore contest will be in 201 Milner. Art League hosts spring market The Brazos Valley Art League is sponsoring its annual Spring Art Market today and Saturday at Post Oak Mall from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mot e than sixty exhibitors have been confirmed for the market. Alpha Phi Omega helps at festival Alpha Phi Omega will be assisiting at the Senior Citizens’ Festival Saturday at Central Park. The event will be from 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. and will involve students playing check ers, dominos and other activities with senior citizens. After Hours offers driving course TheTAMU After Hours Program v^ill sponsor a Driver Safety Course April 13-14 and April- 20-21. The course maybe used to have certain traffic viofatiohs dismissed and to receive a 10 percent discount on automobile insurance. Registration is 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday in 216 MSC. For more information, call 845-9352. Police beat The following incidents were reported to the University Police Department through Thursday. MISDEMEANOR THEFT’: • A blue Huffy ten-speecj bicycle was stolen from the Haas Hall bike rack. • A white and red Raleigh ten-speed bicycle was stolen from the Academic Building bike rack. • A student’s Stellar wrist watch and his wallet were stolen from the third floor of G. Rollie White Coliseum. The wallet con tained his driver’s license, student I.D. card and $5 in cash. HARASSMENT: 1 • A student in Krueger Hall reported she has been receiving harassing telephone calls from an unidentified male. Borneo and Mul tl 9 Ulitlism 5JiaIsi.sp«,a*-4 By TAHITI Ttiftaira Aeis April 10 - M Barker is Slaver tt Ashmore )h Emge Lehrmann kSmrth /alerio s McFaddefl n DeWalle Tkeaira aoo pm n LaubaucW tidwt Info: 8i5-iW Aquaculture Research shows value of salt water rainbow trout United Press International GULF SHORES, Ala. — Rainbow trout and shrimp raised in salt water ponds may one day become cash crops in coastal Alabama if commercial ventures are as successful as a recent research project, a ma rine biologist said Thursday. John Hawke, a marine bi ologist at the State Department of Conservation and Natural Resources’ Peteet Mariculture Center, said commercial aqua- cuUure projects already exist in Texas and Florida. He said rainbow trout mostly are grown in the fresh water mountain streams of Tennessee or states farther north, but re search at Peteet indicates the fish can survive in salt water and can endure Alabama’s warmer temperatures. The Peteet project involved 13 dirt-bottom ponds filled with salt water. A record harvest of about 3,200 pounds of rainbow trout was completed Wednes day. The fish, which were fed commercial trout pellets, aver aged a half-pound and 10 to 12 inches in size. “That’s well-accepted by the restaurants in this area,” Hawke said. “I personally don’t think there’s any difference in the taste of these fish and those those from fresh water.” A South American variety of shrimp was raised at Peteet from May through October. Then six-inch rainbow trout fingerlings were placed in the man-made ponds in December. Hawke said the experiment generated about 1,000 pounds- per-acre of shrimp and 1,300 pounds-per-acre of rainbow trout. The shrimp sell for $2.50 to $3.50 a pound dockside. A pound can be anywhere from 21 to 30 shrimp. The trout sell for $1.90 a pound dressed and $1.40 a pound if they haven’t been cleaned. “We feel the shrimp alone would show a profit and the trout will be icing on the cake,” Hawke said. He said it was no surprise that the trout were able to thrive in salt water. “Up north and in Ganada, trout may stay at sea a year or make a spawn run similar to salmon,” he said. “What some people call a steelhead trout is a rainbow that’s gone to sea and come back heavier and grayer in color.” The Peteet biologists have been experimenting with four different strains of rainbow trout to see which has the best survival rate in warm water. Hawke said one strain is said to thrive in water temperatures as warm as 80 degrees. 1 . b P» d ilk , bvf: er Hawke said he didn’t know' when commercial trout farming in Alabama would become a reality. ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ r-y-M-p ■ ■ ■ ■ B - w . w m MUSIC EXPRESS Invites Ton To Save During Their STORE-WIDE SAEE GEFFEN RECORDS ngjQJEaH t'- -TC/S / MEG. EIST ■m -AEEAEBUMS -AEE CASSETTES V'R- QA S' X mm COME •lOix THE i vx , LAST BIG BAT / OI»EA\ / TIL \ MIDATGHT Sale Items & Imports Excluded Hi -FREE SHINER BOCK BEER- DONT MISS THE STREET DANCE AT MUSIC EXPRESS SATURDAY AFTERNOON - AJ a 725-B UNIVERSITY DRIVE OPEN 10-10 BEHIND SKAGGS NEXT TO TOMMY’S BAR & GRILL 846-1741 ■ ■■■ a*. ■■■■■■■».■ ■ i a-MJL a a a a a » * a a « a a a am aaaaaaaa a a aaaaa.-aaa»aaaaaaaa«.a«aaaaaai..aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa3