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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 27, 1984)
Page 6/The BattalionA"uesday, November 27,1984 ^^MSC GREAT ISSUES Presents Alistair Cooke J “America Revisited - The Year 2004” t a symposium $ Wednesday, Nov. 28 £ 4:00 p.m. J 601 Rudder Tike Bry<an. Rottary CItulII]) presents the TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY SYMPHONIC BAND IN CONCERT a Tuesday, November 27,1984 8:15 RM. Ruci4er Amtliforium TAMU Campus ALL STUDENTS $1.00 NON-STUDENTS $3.00 TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM NOTARY CLUB MEMBERS AND AT RUDDER BOX OFFICC Spectacular Pre Christmas Sale! 30-60 % off 30% off Cocktail rings and wedding Bands 30% on Watches and Pocket watches Pierre Cardin) 40 % off String Beads, semi of all kinds! Diamond pendants earrings. , • Loose diamonds and I4kt Gold chains and Bracelets - - ■■ 111 Twisties, Gold plate, Fossils, Synthetic Pearls, etc,' V #'• ” ^ ' Let Kay & Co. help you with your Christmas Shopping. (Parking in the rear and side available! 415 University Dr. 846-5816 nr* ■ Ww I IImI I : Tuesday STUOENT MEDIATION SERVICE: applications are avalk | able for volnmeer student mediators in 108 VMGA. HILLEL JEWISH STUDENT CENTER: is meeting at 7:20 •Slf; p.m^in the MSC main lounge. The picture will be taken for the Aggieland. AGCrlE COP: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 308 Rudder. A new vice • prestdetit will be elected and plans for next semester will be :$LE&tZ Afs|T. WAHlk» will begin at noon. Seniors sfcdtild meet . :. at the statue of Lawrence Sullivan Ross, There will be el ephant rides at the Grove and pictures will be taken. HISTORY SOCIETY: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 204 Library. New officers will be elected for the Spring. AGGIE ALLIANCE: is'meeting M-*? pm. 'm i62 E. Ryfe, AH those going to convention should attend. : •••' : TAMU SYMPHONIC BAND: will present a concert at 8:15 Hi p.m. in Rudder Auditorium. The concert is sponsored by the Bryan Rotary Club. Tickets will be available at the Box Office or at the door prior to the concert. STUDENT Y FISH CAMP: applications for chairman, sub* . chairman and recreation coordinator are available on the second floor of the Pavilion. Applications dpsc Dec. 6. CO-OP STUDENT ASSOCIATION: is meeting at 7 p.m. in ri 502 Rudder.: An assistant registrar will discuss degree checks and a pizza party will be planned. CLASS OF *87: is meeting at 8:30 p.m. in Rudder. VICTORIA AREA HOMETOWN CLUB: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 504 Rudder. THE SOCIETY FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND NEW VENTURES: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 501 Rudder. Dr, O'Connor will speak on “The Hatching of Entrepreneui-ship from the Cocoon of Academia.” MARANATHA CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: is meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the Viking Apartment Clubhouse. I STUDENT ENGINEERS COUNCIL: Dean Herbert Rich ardson will discuss pains for the College of Engineering at M noon in the lobby of Zachry. • •: ••• TAMU FRENCH CLUB; is meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 131 * Blocker to discuss plans for next semester and Saturday’s party. The handicap service project will be discussed. TEXAS A&M SPORTS CAR CLUB: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 501 Rudder. The Aggie Cross and the Champion Rally will be discussed. - - STUDENT AFFILIATE OF THE SPCA; will meet at 6 p m. in 704 Rudder. Topics will include the focus of the organi zation and its role with respect to the Brazos Valley SPCA. Hems for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battel* ion, 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three days prior to Marine service informs public By DALLAS MORRIS Reporter On the eighth floor of the O&M Building is an office that produces a variety of publications ranging from seafood recipe cards to brochures on how to cut fuel costs. The office is the Marine Informa tion Service and is part of the Sea Grant College Program. “The Sea Grant Act said that peo ple should be informed about the marine environment in order for them to enjoy it and to enjoy it in a safe way,” said Laura Colunga, head of the Marine Information Service. The Sea Grant College Program, created in 1966 by an act of Con gress, was established to encourage and provide money for research on marine topics, and to support the Marine Extension Service, which serves people who make their living in a marine environment, Colunga The information in the publica tions on marine subjects is unbiased, Colunga said. “We’re not here to take sides or anything, we just present the results of research, and we present it in a way that people can understand it,” she said. The Marine Information Service writes news releases about marine research that is supported by the Sea Grant Program, Colunga said. “Part of Sea Grant’s mandate was to inform the public about the im portance of the marine environment and marine issues and to make the results of the research the program supports well known to people,” she said. “We serve the researchers of our program,” Colunga said. “The advi sory part of Sea Grant is the one that is actually out serving the public di rectly. We provide the publications, slides, the stuff they need. They’re the ones that are out there one to one giving meeting in their local areas on certain subjects.” The researchers don’t work for the Marine Information Service. They are professors in various de partments at A&M and at other schools, Colunga said. Taquito A soft flour tortilla filled with fluffy scrambled eggs tangy pure pork sausage and cheese 89C 6:30 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. WHATABURGER 105 Dominik 1101 Texas Ave. Offer good Nov. 12- Dec. 12 ICB%V FILM DEVELOPING SPECIAL 5 Y r $ 49 Of the many marine oriented magazines and brochures the Ma rine Information Service publishes, the booklet on hurricanes has been the most requested, Colunga said. UTA student gets $33,000 phone bill United Press International ARLINGTON — A university student who received a $33,533 tele phone bill last month reached out and touched people all over the United States and at least seven other countries, according to tele phone company records. But Carol Kuhler, 19, a sopho more at the University of Texas-Ar- lington, denies she spent all semester on the telephone. “My mother is the only one I ever call and she lives in Dallas,” she said. Kuhler speculated that a tele phone calling card she had recently applied for was either taken from her apartment mailbox or mailed to the wrong person. The phantom caller, who appar ently shared the card with a number of friends, placed hours of calls the first week in October to Indonesia, Bangladesh, Italy, Sweden, Egypt, Kuwait, Jordan and other nations, Kuhler said. All the calls were made from pay phones, making them almost impos sible to trace, she said. About two weeks ago she received a 254-page bill from Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. totaling $33,533.52. " 11 II UX lnn ♦ A .....jfll.-' of;a Schwinn Varsity INC: k was stolen from * An IBM Model 5151 per- Memoriat Student sonal display computer, an IBM XT Model 5160 disc drive com- tyata 10-speed bicy- puter and an IBM keyboard vkre c$e. was stolen from outside a sfuk, stolen .from $40||3? t&cktyMngi* ■J -C-41 Color Print Film Only- Good on orders for one print each negative. 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Reynolds Brooks Hall The University of Georgia Athens, GA 30602 Please send me information on the Masters of Brand Management Program. Name. Address. School _ Graduation Date.