Che Battalion - newspaper.library.tamu.eduFuneral Home in San Benito, and mass will be held at 4...
Transcript of Che Battalion - newspaper.library.tamu.eduFuneral Home in San Benito, and mass will be held at 4...
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Susan Howes Kerry Lockwood• ;
Pat Pepe Judy Miller
For 1969-70
Sweetheart To Be Named SundayBy Janie Wallace
The Aggie Sweetheart for 1969- 70 chosen from 14 finalists will be named during the Baylor football weekend.
She will be officially introduced at the SMU game Nov. 8.
The Texas Women’s University students will be escorted to the Cowsills show at Town Hall Friday night on a tour of the campus, and to the Baylor game by the members of the Sweetheart Selection committee.
Candidates were screened by photo elimination and by interview committees before becoming finalists. All candidates are at least sophomores and have a grade point ratio of 1.2 or better.
“The girls are judged on everything: how they look and how they act during the weekend,” Ronald Adams, committee chairman said.
The escorts are able to judge
the finalists in circumstances ranging from a early morning breakfast to midnight yell practice.
“We usually present the Sweetheart at the Corps trip to Fort Worth or Dallas each year,” Adams said, “but this year the football schedule did not provide a home game before the trip to give the committee members a chance to get to know each girl.”
The girls’ schedule for the weekend is crammed with activities. On Friday, the group will eat at Duncan Dining Hall, attend Town Hall at G. Rollie White Coliseum, and go to midnight yell practice. Saturday, they will tour the campus on a hayride, tour Sbisa Dining Hall, attend a steak fry at Hensel Park, have a formal dinner, go to the game, and attend a formal dance afterward. They will attend special services Sunday morning at All Faiths
Chapel.The 1969-70 Sweetheart will be
announced Sunday afternoon in the Assembly Room of the Memorial Student Center.
Sue Binford, a sopohomore government major, has brown hair and blue eyes. She is from Tuscon, Arizona.
Blue-eyed Joyce Godwin has long light brown hair. The junior elementary education major is from Colorado City.
A junior medical technology major, Claudia Gordy, is a hazeleyed blonde. She is from Columbus.
A hazel-eyed brunette Susan Howes is a senior fashion-design major. She is from Tyler.
Kerry Lockwood, a junior from Hot Springs, Ark., has brown eyes and brown hair. She is a drama major.
Brown-eyed Judy iMiller is from Clarinda, Iowa. The senior Eng
lish major has brown hair.A dance major, Patricia Pepe,
is a sophomore from Hyattsville, Md. She has brown hair and brown eyes.
Ash-blonde Mary Raney is a social work major from Bellaire. She has blue-gray eyes.
Emilynn Shaw, a green-eyed blonde, is a junior occupational therapy major from Houston.
A senior from Orange, Rebel Stark, is a elementary education major. She has long blonde hair and brown eyes.
A blue-eyed blonde, Lynn Marie Stephan, is a radio-television major. She is from Dallas.
A junior home economics major from Linden, Carlotta Wells, has green eyes and brown hair.
Cindy Whitman, a sophomore physical therapy major, has green eyes and brown hair. She is from Larose, La.
A senior elementary education
Che BattalionVol. 65 No. 22 College Station, Texas Tuesday, October 21, 1969 Telephone 845-2226
Joyce Godwin
Career Day ScheduledBaylor Weekend
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High school students from all areas of Texas have been invited to participate in the activities of A&M’s Agricultural and Engineering Career Day Saturday.
Exhibits designed to present in
formation concerning careers and study programs in the various fields of agriculture and engineering will be open to the students, teachers, parents, and the public from 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. in De
Ware Field House, committee chairmen Agricultural Associate Dean R. C. Potts and Engineering Assistant Dean J. G. McGuire have announced.
Faculty and student representa-
For Pair Killed Saturday
Silver Taps Scheduled
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Election for Senate Posts Is Thursday
A special election to fill three Student Senate offices will be held Thursday, announced Mike Wiebe, Election Commission vice president for publicity, Monday.
Wiebe said that the offices of Senate vice president, sophomore
The polls committee of the Election Commission will meet in lounge A-2 tonight immediately after yell practice, Wiebe announced Monday night. He urged all committee members to be at the meeting.
College of Architecture representative and sophomore College of Liberal Arts representative will be voted on.
There will be three polling places, he noted: One in theguard room in dormitory 2, one in the basement of the Memorial Student Center, and one at the newsstand in front of Sbisa Dining Hall.
Polls, Wiebe said, will be open from 7:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. He stressed the fact that students must have both their identification cards and activity cards in order to be allowed to vote.
Silver Taps will be held Wednesday for two Aggies killed Saturday in a car-train collision in Bryan.
Justino D. Reza, Jr., 20, of San Benito, and Jesus H. Diaz, 21, of Navasota, were killed at 2:20 a.m. when Diaz’s car rammed the side of a freight train on Finfeather Road in Bryan’s westside industrial section.
Department of Public Safety officers said a Southern Pacific freight train was backing slowly across the road when the youth’s car, traveling at a high rate of speed, struck the train.
Both were dead at the scene, according to the DPS.
Rosary for Reza, a junior civil engineering student, was recited at 7:30 p.m. Monday at Thomae Funeral Home in San Benito, and mass will be held at 4 p.m. Tuesday at St. Teresa Catholic Church, with burial to follow in Mount Pleasant Cemetery in San Benito.
Reza, a graduate of San Benito High School, is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Reza Sr. of 683 Sombra, San Benito. He was a member of the student chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers at A&M.
Rosary for Diaz, a senior aero
space engineering major, will be recited at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Lindley-Robertson Chapel, with mass being held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church in Navasota.
Diaz, also a San Benito graduate, is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesus Diaz of Navasota, and one sister, Mrs. Rosa Rodriquez of San Benito. Diaz was a member of the student chapter of the American Institute of Astronomies and Aeronautics and the Newman Club.
Silver Taps for the two will be held at 10:30 p.m., according to the Student Affairs Office.
tives will be available to talk with the students, answer questions, and distribute printed materials about careers within each discipline. More than 30 exhibits are planned. The Cooperative Education program, in which students alternate periods of university attendance and employment in industry, will be explained, McGuirt said.
County agents and advisers in high school vocational agriculture departments are being asked to encourage attendance of interested students, and chapters of the Junior Engineering Technical So
ciety are invited to make field trips to A&M for the program.
A model of the A&M Engineering Center under construction is expected to draw wide interest. The $8.5 million, 5-story facility will house five engineering departments, research laboratories, and administrative offices.
Student tickets to the A&M - Baylor football game will be on sale for $1 during the showing.
Participating in the Career Day are the Colleges of Agriculture and Engineering, technical societies and student council groups of the two colleges, and the Cooperative Education Program.
Rebel Stark
major, Linda Wylie is from Kilgore. She has blue eyes and dark blonde hair.
The sweetheart selection committee consists of Gerald Geist- weidt, Student Senate president; Kent Caperton, Student Senate interim vice-president; Marcus Hill, student senator; Merrell Richardson, Senior class vice- president; Matt Carroll, Corps Commandant; David Reed, First Brigade commander; Dennis Gar- bis, Company K-l commander; Frank Montalbano, Squadron 1 commander; Howard Plagens, Ross Volunteers first sergeant; Tommy Henderson, Civilian Student Council second vice-president; Bill Scherle, Civilian Student Council secretary; Mark Olson, Moore Hall president; Alan Byrd, Schumacher Hall president; Gary Anderson, Civilian Student Council representative, and Adams.
Linda Wylie
Claudia Gordy
‘Dinny and Witches’ Opens Wednesday for Last Week
Subdivision Plan Approved By CS Zoning CommissionBy Jay F. Goode Battalion Staff Writer
A preliminary plan to develop a ten acre subdivision east of the new high school and north of the west by-pass was approved by the College Station Planning and Zoning Commission Monday night.
The commission adopted the recommendation of the Plat Committee calling for an additional 10 feet of utility easement on the northeast side. The commission also named the proposed street through the subdivision Guadalupe Drive.
Chairman Codie Wells asked William D. Fitch of Area Progress Corporation, the developer of the site, if there should be a temporary turn-around at the end
of Guadalupe, which ends 200 feet short of the west by-pass.
Fitch and City Planner Lee Roy George agreed that, since the
WEATHERWednesday — Cloudy, intermittent afternoon rainshowers, thunderstorms. Wind Easterly 10 to 15 m.p.h. High 81, low 68.
Thursday — Cloudy, intermittent afternoon rainshowers, thunderstorms. Wind Easterly 10 to 15 m.p.h. High 81, low 68.
University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.”
—Adv.
street would serve only seven homes, the turn-around would not be necessary.
Commissioner Jim Gardner requested that another roster of the city's personnel be printed. The latest roster does not include the names of the city planner, Gardner said.
“It would be nice to have a document showing that the city has a planner if any proposals are submitted to the (federal) government,” Gardner said.
Wells noted that since no new zoning requests have been submitted to the commission, none will be considered for the Nov. 3 meeting. Zoning requests must be submitted 20 days prior to the next meeting, according to a recent action of the commission.
By Bob Robinson Battalion Staff Writer
“Dinny and the Witches,” by William Gibson, opens again Wednesday for three more nights at Guion Hall.
A satire on the nuclear age, the Aggie Player production will be performed Wednesday, Thursday and Friday nights at 8 p.m.
“Dinny and the Witches” is the story of a musician who was able to stop time and take over the world. Throughout the play he attempts to achieve the perfection that was lacking in the world as he knew it. When he finally achieves this perfection in the girl he loves, the result is somewhat different than he expects.
The three witches, Zenobia, the chief witch, Ulga, the death witch, and Louella, the nit witch, are the ones from whom the power of the world is taken. Their job is to get their power back and carry out their assignment of decapitating Dinny.
Amy displays the seven mortal sins that make up all humanity, one of which is selling her baby for $1.98. She is the one Dinny attempts to and achieves in mak
ing perfect.In a play that is heavy in sat
ire and tragic overtones, Ben, a blind man, is the only one who holds a serious role. He is given sight, sees the world, and wants his blindness back. At a funeral oration, he says, “I mean, who wouldn’t sing a love song to the world, at its worst, on the day
it died?”In addition to humor and seri
ous thoughts, there are girls. Dawn, Chloe, and Bubbles are three ladies of the night who want the world back the way it was so they can start having a good time again.
Admission for “Dinny and the Witches” is $1.00.
CS United Chest Campaign Extended to End of Month
The College Station United Chest campaign to raise a record $28,050 will be extended until Nov. 1, announced United Chest President Wesley Donaldson. He noted current contributions total $18,206.
Donaldson said the organization’s board of directors voted Friday to continue the drive past the original Oct. 1-18 schedule.
Campaign Chairman Bob Evans pointed out the $18,206 collected through Friday represents 64.9 percent of the goal.
While still slightly less than two-thirds of the budget, Evans
observed that contributions have been coming in steadily in recent days. Earlier in the week, only 38.8 percent of the goal had been achieved.
“I am still confident the citizens of College Station will provide the necessary funds to support the 16 charitable and civic organizations to which we have pledged support,” Evans emphasized.
Bryan Building & LoanAssociation. Your Saving Center, since 1919.
—Adv.B B &L
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