Page 10/The Battalion/Friday, September 19, 1986
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311 S. College
College Station
(Skaggs Shopping Center)
846-8663
M-Th 10-10 • F-S10-11 • Sun 1-9
Valuable Coupon
Save $1 . 00 on each
movie rental. No Mem
bership necessary!
$1. 00
Good thru 9/30/86
Feel At Home With Moody's
New Bible NIV.
reg. $29. 95
Sale $24. 95
SCRIPTURE HAVEN. Inc/
CHRISTIAN
SUPPLY
4301 Carter Creek, Bryan
846-0788
Post Oak Mall, College Station
764-1069
if* ac
by Dawn Butz
A&M graduate chosen head of art board
Albert H. Coldewey, Class of’63, has been elected president of the
Amarillo Art Center Board of Trustees for 1986-87.
A managing partner of the Amarillo-Lubbock offices of the ac
counting firm of Peat, Marwick, Mitchell 8c Co., Coldewey serves as
the college relations partner for Texas A&M.
He also serves on the Accounting Advisory Council for A&M’s
College of Business Administration.
Along w'ith continuing programs, Coldewey says he would like to
bring an exhibit of 10 guest artists of different media to Amarillo.
Coldewey says he also plans to emphasize an education program
with the Amarillo school district. This program introduces children to
art when they’re in the sixth grade.
Coldewey says he feels it’s important to get young people intro
duced to art early because it broadens cultural horizons.
“If you wait until they’re 18, 19, 20, they have the feeling that it’s
kind of snobbish — not real,” he says. “If we start early they may find
something they appreciate or like — they may even develop an inter
est.”
Byrd retires, ends 36-year career at A&M
Louise Byrd saw lots of changes in Texas A&M over the course of
her 36-year career here in the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.
Byrd, who retired Aug. 29, said one of the major changes was the
transition to include women in the University.
“I think maybe for the majority of the male students it was kind of
nice to have women around,” she said. “I don’t think there was quite
the competition when they first came in as there is now."
Byrd came to Bryan in 1949 with her husband, a teacher in the
Bryan public schools. In 1950 she started as a secretary with the De
partment of Wildlife and Fisheries and retired as an accounting assis
tant with the department.
In 1982 Byrd received the Outstanding Staff Award from the de
partment.
But her greatest honor came the following year with the Distin
guished Performance Award, given by the Texas Agricultural Experi
ment Station for administrative support.
“The Distinguished Performance Award really means so much
now because it was presented by Perry Adkisson,” Byrd said.
Adkisson is A&M’s new chancellor.
Byrd, who is retiring in Bryan, said now she just wants to relax
and enjoy her family life.
A&M vet student honored at convention
Texas A&M veterinary student Greg Hawkins was honored for
his achievements in the veterinary school at a reception during the an
nual American Veterinary Medical Association convention.
Representing the University at the four-day convention in At
lanta, Hawkins was honored by the Princeton, N.j., firm Solvay Veter
inary, Inc., one of the top suppliers of animal health products.
Each year 26 students representing veterinary universities
throughout the United States are honored for their achievements at
the Solvay-sponsored receptions.
The haircut
you want
is the haircut
you get.
has helped make us America's
most popular haircutters.
Which only goes to prove that
when you give people exactly
what they want, they just keep
coming back for more. .
And a Supercut is always S8. *
i nai siaiemeni of comiaence
jupercutr
We’re changing the way America cuts its hair.
Skagg’s Shopping Center
846-0084
‘Shampoo *nd b*ow drv at additKXiai cosf ©19®3 EMRA COhPO^ATtON
At Supercuts, wdve been
trained to cut hair perfectly So
no matter how you like your hair
cut, you're going to get tr;e cut
you like. Every tirne.
We guarantee it, or your
money back.
•A HUNTING & FISHING PRESERVE-
proudly announces the addition of
Bill Mueller, Jr*
(formerly of Landrum Creek Hunting Resort)
to our staff.
♦
Fees for the 1986-1987 Hunting Season:
Upland Game Birds: (October 1—March 31)
Limit
Hunts
Cost per Vi Day Hunt
12
Quail
$
85.
6
Pheasant
$
95.
Mixed Bag (for 2 Hunters)
12 Quail-6 Pheasant
Birds over Hunters’s Limit:
$
170.
Quail (ea.)
$
6.
Pheasant (ea.)
$
12.
Miorratorv Game Birds: fSeasonal)
‘Limit
Hunts
Cost per Hunt
Duck (1/2 day Hunt, a.m. or p.m.)
$
95.
Dove (weekends)
$
25.
Dove (weekdays)
$
15.
*A11 Migratory Limits set by Texas Parks 6l Wildlife Department
Combination Duck & Upland Game Bird Special:
During Duck Season
*Limit Hunts Cost per Hunt
Vi Day Duck/Vi Day Quail Hunt $ 165.
Vi Day Duck/Vi Day Pheasant Hunt $ 175.
*A11 Migratory Limits set by Texas Parks 6c Wildlife Department
Fishing Trips: fYear-round)
Limit Fish Cost/Angler/Day
None Bass, Crappie, Catfish $ 25.
Whitetail Deer Bow Hunts
(October 4—November 2)
Fee per Day Kill Fee Cleaning Fee
$50. $200. (Doe) $350. (Buck) $ 50.
Lodge Accommodations & Extras
• Guides and Bird Cleaning available at Extra Charge •
• R.V. hookups available # Group Rate Discounts available for all hunting trips #
• Meals $7.50 per person • 50% (non-refundable) Deposit required with Reservations •
• Please make reservations 3 days prior to Hunt •
For more information, please call or write:
Bill Mueller, Jr., Manager at (409) 825-8098
or Clement-Tumlinson Properties/P.O. Box 1088/Navasota, Texas 77868
NAACP: Rebel flag
bad school symbol
FORT WORTH (AP) — Officials
of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People are
protesting the use by two schools of
Confederate symbols such as the
song “Dixie” and the Rebel flag.
“We’ve had complaints from par
ents and students at both schools,”
local NAACP chapter president Ray
Bell said Wednesday. “It it offensi
ve.” Bell said that the NAACP wants
the two Fort Worth-area schools to
do away with the Rebel flag and any
thing that would go along with the
Rebel theme.
Both Southwest and Richland
high schools use Rebel mascots in
athletic events, sing “Dixie” as their
fight songs and display the Stars and
Bars on football helmets.
Bell said letters demanding a
change would be mailed to school
board members and superinten
dents in the Fort Worth and Bird-
ville school districts.
“I’m for keeping the Rebel
theme,” said Dr. Richard O’Neal,
president of the Fort Worth school
board. “No one here has ever looked
at the Rebel symbol as being racist or
discriminatory.”
NACCP members have waged a
running battle with Grand Prairie
school officials for the past year over
South Grand Prairie High School’s
use of the Confederate flag at ath
letic events.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
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Celebrate Aggies
Home Season
Opener
with
fSzerfa
Inside Special only
$1. 50 Pitcher
with purchase of a large or ex-large PIZZA
OPEN LATE!
846-0379
*
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Northgate T
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DELIVERY SPECIAL
Order any size pizza
and get two toppings
FREE
expires 9/21/86
TICKET MART
Hey Ags
We’ll sell your football tickets for you
you can buy tickets from us three hourbe
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Yours Truly 1
Sponsored byAPL
:onl
TRUCK
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AluminunTops $299
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Many Other Accessoriii co | le <uU ()1
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