Tuesday, April 9,1985/The Battalion/Page 7 Texas are avail- *> pre-law stl| tien!s r | Academic will be in or Spirn 1 must be tin lelay Run ill Ik col- ormadon - rn ak listen to tel public hei.| i that codl punsor, sil /ar. I ■ Dallas, aJ mg with8(1 Antonio. vI of thecosi to the pooBJ nit at the sail * and deli| >le at a ivould pres : dumpint’ Texans » it” for tho y care to ; to put as this practktj MAMi M.* — What s up Tuesday AGGIE RED CROSS: will hold the Brazos County Blood Drive, noon to 6 p.ra. at Our Saviors Lutheran Church. HISTORY CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in 507 Rudder. Offi cers will be elected. IU-REC SPORTS: will dose archery singles and doubles at 6 p.m. in 159 E. Kyle. MSG CEPHEID VARIABLE: will meet at 7:50 p.m. in 410 Rudder. MSC COLLEGE BOWL: will hold orientation for anyone in terested in membership at 7 p.m. in 704 Rudder, ON-CAMPUS CATHOLICS NORTHSIDE: will meet at 9:30 p.m. in A-l Lounge to discuss sidewalk evangelism. SCEC: will meet at 6:45 p.m. at MSC Pulse machines for the organizational meeting to be held in G. Rollie White. SIERRA CLUB: will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 502 Rudder to plan weekend outing to Big Slough Wilderness area. STUDENT AFFILIATE OF BRAZOS VALLEY SPCA: will meet at 6:30 p.m. in 113 Herman Heep Building for nomi nation of officers. STUDENT COUNSELING SERVICE: will hold a dual-ca reer relationship workshop on “Social Needs and Leisure Time.” Locations vary. Interested couples should call 845- 1651. SPECIAL OLYMPICS: will hold an organizational meeting at 6:30 p.m. in 274 E. Kyle. People who wish to participate as coaches or Held persons should attend. TAMU HORSEMEN’S ASSOCIATION: will meet at 7 p.m in 115 Kleberg for officer elections. TAMU ONE WHEELERS: will meet at 6 p.m. at the Grove. Wednesday DEL RIO HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m in 507A,B Rudder for officer elections. HURST-EULESS-BEDFORD HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in 510 Rudder to discuss officer elections and Spring party. PRE-VET SOCIETY: will meet at 7 p.m. in 230 Veterinary Medicine Complex for officer elections. SAN ANGELO HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 407 Rudder to discuss Special Olympics project. TEXAS A&M SPORTS CAR CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in 401 Rudder for officer nominations. Aggiecross details to be discussed. UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRY: will meet 6 p.m.-7:20 p.m. at A&M Presbyterian Church for an Aggie Supper. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three days prior to de sired publication date. IAZ0S VALLEY GROli roup’s publicity prompts chairman to resign position 9 )w. There canoeing, g, wewil ler Tower. Associated Press I FORT WORTH — John Allen, Ijeader of a group of intellectuals that deceives millions of dollars from Fort Worth millionaire Edward Bass, has fesigned as chairman of the com pany that oversees most of the Iroup’s business ventures. I Terrell Lamb, a Washington pub licist, said Allen resigned from Deci sions Team Ltd. after a March 30 story in The Dallas Morning News detailing the group’s worldwide business and cultural activities. ■ Former members of the group raold the News that Allen and the Hroup have implemented programs i they believe will equip them to sur vive the death of Western ciyiliza- Hion. H The group has used money pro vided by Bass, 39, to fund ranches, lidentific expeditions and research Hacilities in eight countries. The | group's holdings include the multi- [ Inillion-dollar Caravan of Dreams I restaurant-theater complex in down- I: town Fort Worth, underwritten by Bass. I In his resignation letter, dated hi: 8:30-^||rhursday and quoted in the News “He resigns regularly. Anytime they (the group) are threatened with any kind of exposure he re- signs. It doesn’t mean any thing. He can control in absentia.'’ Carol Cine, former member of Deci sions learn, Ltd. AND igton 2:30-1:30 ug. 9 ;eb ks j2:0» onday, Allen said: “I am resigning, Iffective immediately, as director of the venture capitalist management corporation Decisions Team Ltd., in order to free you from any embar- iassment connected with the mali- fious and reckless Dallas Morning ^ews story.” I Allen, 55, has been called perhaps the world’s last beatnik. He is still Cerouac-ing across the world in his Goodwill clothes, living, he says, on "65 a month and the kindness of friends, the Fort Worth Star-Tele ram reported Sunday. Some former members of Allen’s roup have gone into hiding be- ause, they say, they fear reprisals — ahysical assaults, the ruination of Iheir careers or bogus criminal barges. Both Bass and Allen deny the re ports of violence, or that Allen has ny particular control over Bass. In a telephone interview from Australia, where he has been for sev eral months, Bass called such allega tions regarding Allen a complete ‘fabrication,” the Star-Telegram said. “No one has anything else to say at this point,” Lamb said. “Everyone onsiders the matter closed.” Carol Line, a former group mem ber who has been charged with theft since leaving her job with Caravan — a charge she denies —^said Allen’s resignation is meaningless. “He resigns regularly,” she said. “Anytime they (the group) are threatened with any kind of expo sure he resigns. It doesn’t mean any- A'ftGstotte'I V In addition to our already famous Italian/vegetarian food and our low prices, We are proud to Introduce PHILLY STEAK SANDWICHES and STRONBOLIS. Come in with this coupon and we’ll treat you to some Italian Water Ice (our specialty)... We ARE from PHILADELPHIA. Located at Northgate Next to University Bookstore thing. He can control in absentia.” Bass hooked up with Allen’s group of self-proclaimed artists and scientists in Santa Fe in about 1973 after leaving Yale University. At that time the group was made up of as piring actors, including Bass. But the group, fertilized with Al len’s imagination and Bass’s money, blossomed rapidly into real estate holdings and projects on four conti nents and more than 40 different corporations and legal entities, the Star-Telegram said. There are two ranches in Austra lia, a forest preserve and research station in Puerto Rico, a conference center and farm in southern France, an art gallery in London, a hotel in Nepal, a conference center in Ari zona, several related theater troupes and a “ferro-cement Chinese junk” sailing the oceans. In addition, Allen reportedly is thinking of building a spaceship. About 11 people, including Allen and Bass, make up the boards and officers of most of those companies. Laurence Veysey, an historian from the University of California at Santa Cruz, wrote about the Santa Fe group in a book on American communes published in 1973 and revised in 1978. He wrote about the commune’s strict philosophies on work patterns, meals, personal relationships, even gardening. “(Allen)’s domination of the group is open and for the most part undisguised,” Veysey wrote. “One soon realizes that every small prac tice which makes up this complicated rhythm of daily life carries the stamp of his considered approval, and that the major outlines are wholly the product of his mind. ... Living here, one quickly falls into the pattern of unconsciously wishing for his appro val in everything one does.” Friends of Ed Bass say he is un comfortable with his own wealth and is psychologically influenced by Al len. AREYOUA COMPOSER??? If so, MSC OPAS would like to feature your musical compositions in its Texas, A&M Composers Spotlight, on April 28, as part of the J. Wayne Stark Concert Se ries. Student compositions in any perfor- mable medium are acceptable. For more information, call 845-1661, or go by the MSC OPAS cubicle in MSC 216. JJU nr /Concert Series 4L "nr GETTOTHE TREASURE FIRST! WIN A BIKE! WATCH FOR CLUES!