March 31 Class Elections Filing Still Under Way Students have until Wednesday, March 23, at 5 p.m. to file for election in the class elections to be held Thursday, March 31, accord ing to W. D. (Pete) Hardesty, or ganizations adviser. The filings must be made at the Cashier’s Window in the ground level of the Memorial Student Center. Head Yell Leader Contrary to the report in Tues day’s Battalion, the Head Yell Leader will be determined by a majority vote of the Yell Leaders from the Class of ’61. The Bat talion erroneously reported Tues day that the Head Yell Leader would be appointed by the' Yell The 1960 School Board Work shop Series area meeting will be held at 10 a.m. April 11 in the Memorial Student Center. Dr. Paul Hensarling of the De partment of Education and Psy chology and local workshop co ordinator, said the meeting is de signed to help school boards and superintendents and other inter ested citizens study school board responsibility and effectiveness. The workshops also will be of interest to local P-TA leaders, he said, and are open to the public. Keynote speaker will be Dr. Frank W. R. Hubert, dean of the School of Arts and Sciences. His subject will be “The Role of the Leader Committee. All candidates for Yell Leader (two to be selected from the Class of ’61 and two from the Class of ’62) must be approved by the Yell Leader Committee. Runoffs Slated Runoffs in the class elections will be held Wednesday, April 6. All applications will be checked by the Registrar’s Office for grade point ratios, total hours and classi fication. All candidates filing for class office must be academically classi fied with their class, Hardesty said. Classified With Classes Students are classified with their Local Board in Texas Public Edu cation.” Subjects to be discussed in the overall workshop include introduc tion to boardmanship, the board and school program, school finance, boar d-superintendent relations, board procedures and functions and the board and the community. Donald G. Nugent of Austin, executive director of the Texas Association of School Boards, the sponsoring agency, said the A&M workshop is expected to service boards in Lee, Brazos, Robertson, Leon, Madison, Grimes, ^Walker, Montgomery, San Jacinto, Waller, Washington, Burleson, Milam, Falls, Limestone and Freestone counties. respective classes as follows: a freshman must have not more than 30 hours, a sophomore must have have 30 to 59 hours and a junior must have 60 to 94 hours. The Class of ’61 will elect a president, vice president, secre tary, social secretary, historian, student entertainment manager, MSC Council delegate and two yell leaders. The Class of ’62 will elect a president, vice president, secre tary-treasurer, social secretary, MSC Council delegate and two yell leaders. The Class of ’63 will elect a president, vice presidertt, secre- tary-treasurer, MSC Council dele gate and social secretary. Officer Requirements Class officer candidates must be academically classified with their classes both at this time and at the beginning of the school year. They must also have a minimum grade point ratio of 1.0. Student Entertainment Manager candidates must be of junior classification and have a minimum grade point ratio of 1.25. They must also have the consent of the Music Coordinator and at least one year’s experience on the Stu dent Entertainment Staff. The manager will be responsible to the Music Coordinator. Other Requirements Yell Leader candidates, in addi tion to the approval by the Yell Leader Committee, must have min imum grade point ratios of 1.25. Requirements for the MSC Coun cil include academic classification with the student’s class and a min imum grade point ratio of 1.0 School Board Workshop Set In Memorial Student Center The 1 out of 20 that didn’t get smoked HP here’s a lot of satisfaction in pointing out something good to a friend. That’s why 1 it often happens that one cigarette out of a pack of Dual Filter Tareytons never does get smoked. People break it open to demonstrate its unique Dual Filter containing Activated Charcoal. They may not know why it works so well, but they do know this: It delivers far more than high filtration ... it brings out the best taste of the best tobaccos-05 no single filter can! Try a pack of Tareytons. We believe the extra pleasure they bring will soon have you passing the good word to your friends. NEW DUAL FILTER Product of ij’/mt HERE’S HOW THE DUAL FILTER DOES IT: 1. It combines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL ... definitely proved to make the smoke of a cigarette mild and smooth ... 2. with an efficient pure white outer filter. Together they bring you the real thing in mildness and fine tobacco taste! Tareyton J/u jfmzlwan Jii$i£ccr£crnfianu Jcdaear is our middle name © 4. T. c* ‘Miss Photogenic of I960’ Melva Jo Cox, 17-year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Cox of 607 Esther Blvd. in Bryan, was named “Miss Photogenic of 1960” at the recent 11th annual A&M Me chanical Conference and Photo Workshop, sponsored by the Department of Journalism and the Texas Press Assn. The Stephen F. Austin High School senior was the third annual winner of the title. As a prize, she was awarded her choice of one of four costumes from Sears Roebuck and Co. and a dozen roses from TPA President Tom Whitehead and Donald D. Burchard, head of the Department of Journalism. Three girls from Stephen F. Austin High School and two from A&M Consolidated High School were entered in this year’s contest. West Should Follow Ike, Adenauer At Agreement On Basic Policies WASHINGTON (A») — President Eisenhower and Chancellor Kon rad Adenauer were reported in basic agreement today on the ma jor policy lines which the West should follow in negotiating Ger man isues with the Soviet Union. The negotiations are being pre pared as part of the Big Four summit meeting in Paris next May. Cash Scholarship Made Available * By Ralston Purina The Ralston Purina Scholarship, a $500 cash stipend, will be avail able for the 1960-61 school year, according to Dr. T. E. McAfee, professor in the Department of Agronomy and chairman of the scholarship committee for the School of Agriculture. According to McAfee, the schol arship is awarded by the Ralston Purina Co. of St. Louis, Mo., and is open to any junior majoring in agriculture. It is designed to give recogni tion and assistance to undergrad uate students in agriculture, and also to further activity and re search in this field. Selection for the award will be made in the spring, and will be based on scholastic) standing, lead ership, character, extra-curricular activities, sincerity of purpose and financial need, McAfee said. Application for the scholarship should be made through the office of the Dean of Agriculture, with the application forms completed and returned by April 15, he added. The scholarship is one of several made available annually in each of the 50 land-grant colleges and state universities in the U. S., and in Puerto Rico and Canada. ASME Members Attent Gas Meet Six members of the student chapter of the A&M American So ciety of Mechanical Engineers at tended the annual meeting of the Gas Turbine and Hydraulic Divi sion of the ASME, held in Houston last week. They acted as student aides for the meeting. They were accompanied by their faculty advisor, P. D. Weiner, as sistant professor in the Depart ment of Mechanical Engineering. Students attending were C. A. Bollfrass, C. E. Carter, A. D. Branum, O. V. Hoernig, R. L. Max well and V. E. Malanax, Eisenhower scheduled a morn ing news conference at which he was certain to be questioned about his 1%-hour meeting with Ade nauer Tuesday. The chancellor was guest of honor at a National Press Club luncheon where he was due to speak and respond to questions. Prior to the Press Club session Adenauer arranged to meet with labor leaders and with Dean Ache- son, secretary of state under for mer President Truman. Adenauer’s foreign minister, Heinrich von Brantano, said fol lowing the discussions at the White House and State Depart ment: “I am leaving the State Department convinced there afe no differences between Bonn and Washington as regards all decisive questions.” -Adenauer, on his way to Tokyo, came here to seek assurance that the President was dead set against negotiating any summit agreement with the Soviet Union at the ex pense of the position of the West ern powers in West Berlin. The 84-year-old chancellor is known to feel that the present ar rangement whereby U. S., British and French forces on the scene guarantee the independence of West Berlin cannot be improved upon by any negotiated agree ment. U. S. officials said the Presi dent gave assurance that there would be no compromise on basic protection for the position of West Berlin as a Western city sur rounded by East Germany. A joint statement issued follow ing the White House meeting said that Eiesenhower and Adenauer reasserted their determination to try to achieve “the reunification of Germany in peace and free dom.” “They further agreed,” the state ment said, “that the preservation of the freedom of the people of West Berlin, and their right of self-determination, must underline any future agreement affecting the city.” SEE THE OLYMPIA Typewriter Before You Buy A Otis McDonald’s Bryan Business Machines THE BATTALION Wednesday, Mai’ch 16, 1960 College Station, Texas Page 3 Federal Aviation Agency Reveals New Title, Program In its accelerated program to greatly improve air safety, the Federal Aviation Agency has an nounced a new name and impor tant new and stepped-up pilot services at Bryan College Station’s FAA Air Traffic Communication Station. It will now be called FAA Flight Service Station and will still be located on Easterwood Field. William S. Hall, station chief, said today, “There are more than 250,000 individual flights a day over the nation. Over 90 per cent of these flights are made under FAA’s Visual Flight rules, and only 10 per cent of these flights are made on instruments. Most of our work here at BryamCollege Station’s FAA Flight Service Sta tion aid this large group of visual flying pilots.” Last year more than 13,000 pi lots responded to the radio call “College Station Radio” and were helped to make their flight safer. Hall Explains Flight Plans Hall explained that flight plans, filed by pilots under Visual Flight Rules, now are being teletyped to each FAA Facility along the planned flight route, instead of only to the destination station. Each FAA Flight Service Sta tion which receives a flight plan computes the time at which the airplane is due over each station’s area. The FAA specialist on duty is able to immediately relay to the pilot any last minute weather changes or other flight hazards ahead. Weather Reporting System “The new system,” FAA Station Chief Hall said, “also makes pos sible the maximum u^e of the new pilot weather reporting system re cently established between the FAA, the military and civilian pilots. “This is a voluntary general weather reporting plan tlndbr which each pilot aloft reports any weather he is flying in or can see that might cause a hazard to fly- A&M Chamber (Continued from Page 1) tin and Joe Belue. Division of Business Administration — Harold L. Boedeker, Ernest G. Gregg, Wilbur F. Gloor, Anthony J. Heg- er, Homer J. Gibbs, James E. Stubbs, Weldon J. Ginzel, George W. Worth, Jr., Raymond A. Mur- ski, Phillip H. Harrison, Jr., Ken neth W. King, Louis F. Burchers, Thomas E. Wisdom and Thomas B. Goodrich. Department of Chem istry—Glenn N. Di’essen and Mi chael J. Carlo. Department of Chemical Engineering—Ronald. D. Burnett and Denton W.- Sanders. Department of Economics—John M Brazell and James C. Smith. T)p-» partment of Electrical Engineer ing—Jack W. Pool and Paul K. York. Department of Entomology —Lewis Wilkinson and James Roach. Department of Floricul ture and Landscape Architecture— Kenneth Kaden and Samuel J. Cely. Department of Horticulture —Joe R. Gaither and M. E. Ar nold. Department of Journalism— Jack Hartsfield, Robbie D. God win, Horace McQueen, and Morris Asbill. Department of Mechanical Engineering—Marvin J. Schneider and Alvin W. Dunlap. Department of Modern Languages — Gary E. Todd and Ruben Carrera. Depart ment of Petroleum Engineering— Marcus R. Hudgins and Robert D. Schafroth. Department of Veter inary Medicine — Bruce Ueckert and Jerry Winkler. Department of Range and Forestry—Maynard E. Hill and Howard Barton. School of Military Science — Air Force ROTC) John Jacekle and Ed Har ris; (Army ROTC) Robert L. War- zecha. Department of Industrial Education—Ben Harris Jr., Andy Jackson, Rip Gorman, James Chap man, Casey Jones and Ronald Har vey. The Department of Animal Husbandry and the Department of Civil Engineering are in the pro cess of choosing delegates. ing; These helpful weather re ports are then relayed to other pilots in the area.” The Bryan-College Station FAA Flight Service Station, as do the 335 other such stations throughout the nation, also aids the pilots by accepting and closing flight plans, offering pre-flight briefing to pi lots, furnishing point-to-point communication, broadcasting reg ular weather information, giving expert assistance to aircraft in trouble, and, when necessary, in itiating search and rescue actions. At Bryan-College Station there are 8 people highly trained for this work. Giant Program Hall commented today, “This stepped-up service to private and executive pilots is a part of the Federal Aviation Agency’s giant program to modernize the federal airways, and to do all that it can to foster and develop civil avia tion.” Created by Congress in the fall of 1958, the authoritative Federal Aviation Agency, in addition to modernizing the airways and fos tering the development of civil aviation, has the task of directing air traffic control of both civil and military aircraft, allocating the di minishing airspace and both issu ing and enforcing air safety rules, said Hall. Civilian Grades (Continued from Page 1) Milner and Bizzell Hall tied for last place with a 1.21. Bizzell jun iors were also low with a 1'.14 GPR. Hart and Walton Hall seniors tied for last place, each group posting a 1.22. Fifth sixth and graduate students from Law and Mitchell Hall were low among their class with a 1.81 grade point ratio. 12.4 Per Cent Distinguished The list of distinguished stu dents for the fall semester shows that 12.4 per cent of the total civilian undergraduate enrollment distinguished last semester. The sophomores led the rest of the four classes, with 38, or 18.7 per cent of them making the dis tinguished student list. The per centages of the other classes mak ing the DS list in order is: Seniors, 208 or 16.3 per cent of the class; juniors, 85 or 10.5 per cent and freshmen, 12 or 2.5 per cent of the class. CLASSIFIID WANT AD RATES ^ie day 3^ per word 2* per word each additional day Minimum chaw:—40* DEADLINES S p.m. day before publication Classified Display 80* per column inch each Insertion PHONE VI 6-6418 FOR RENT COURT’S SHOE REPAIR North Gate Small nicely furnished apartment. Bills paid. Ideal: couple or, single. TA 2-7314 after 5:00 p. m 83t4 OFFICE BUILDING-Air Conditioned Abundant Whse. and outside storage space. U/2 block from North Gate of Campus at 311 Church St. Will rent or lease all or part. Call TA 2-3731 76tl2 Two nice three room apartments, near A&M Campus. Fully furnished, near stores, in good neighborhood. $37.50. One at 203 Kyle, other at 603 Montclair. Call VI 6- 1496 after 5. 74tfn Three bedroom house near Campus and ihopping Center. Large rooms, garage, in yice neighborhood. $67.60, VI 6-7496 after 1. 101 Grove St. 74tfn Two bedroom, unfurnished apartment, 120 wiring and attic fan. Near Crockett School. Phone VI 6-6660 after,5:00 p. m. 72tfn Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric Shop. 98tfn Apartment, 205 Montclair across the Itreet from Southside. Rent $30.00 with Itove and refrigerator. Would consider ■urnishing all of the apartment. VI 6- 1630 or VI 6-6644. 61tfn Apartment two blocks from north gate. Ucely furnished, freezing unit in refrigera- nrs. Several walk in closets. Clean as a fin. 401 Cross St.. VI 6-5064 6tfn FOR SALE New and used misses clothing. Winter and summer, sizes 9 to 11. Everything from pajamas to western wear to formal and semi-formal to sportwear. Everything in excellent condition. Also curtains and bedspread and vibrating pillow. VI 6-8442. 83t3 New Standard Encyclopedia plus extras and book case. Call Larry at VI 6-4791, Extension 60. 83t4 Dodge, 1953, Fordor V-8, radio, heater, overdrive, 1603 Armistead. VI 6-4437. $350. 79tfn Used clothing in excellent condition. Miss es semi-formal, suits, skirts, sweaters, blouses and dresses, sizes 10-14. Also mits and dresses, size 38. Children coats, sizes 2-4 Bargain priced. VI 6-6557 75tfn Refrigerator in good condition. Been well cared for. Price: $50.00 VI 6-6557 75tfn CORDLESS ELECTRIC SHAVER—Per fect Shaving anywhere, anytime. Perfect for traveling, camping, etc. $14.95. Bexar Electronics, Box 1091, San Antonio 6, Tex as f 74t30 AC and Champion spark plugs, 69c. Mufflers and tailpipes at wholesale prices, White Auto Store. 216 North Bryan Street, Bryan. 62tfn TV-Radio-HiFi Service & Repair GILS RADIO & TV TA 2-0826 101 Highland Dr. George W. Buchanan Chiropractor 304 E 27th Bryan, Texas Phone: Bus. TA 2-4988 Res. TA 2-4981 and dice, *«:<• at FAULK’S j FURNITURE -i speaker Hi Fi $129.95, ! 5 speaker Walm- - Stero with AM/FM | radio only $299.a5 Full 21” Console ' TV, Genuine all wood Mhg. cabinet J only $209.95. Many more values. Texas 1 Ave.-Cavitt and Dodge Sts. SOSOLIK’S TV - RADIO - PHONO SERVICE 713 S Main TA 2-1941 WORK WANTED Typing wanted, neat, accurate. Reason able rates. Mrs. Carlson VI 6-7936. 122tfn Your reports will be typed quickly and accurately on electric typewriters at th* Bi-City Secretarial Service, 8408A Texae Avenue, Phone VI 6-5786. 71tfa SPECIAL NOTICE lay, thj SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300, A.F. & A.M, College Station, Texas Called meeting 1 Match 17 at 7:00 p entered apprentice degree will be conferred. Visiting Bretheran are welcome. C. J. Keese WM Joe Woolket, Sec’y SPRING TERM STARTS MARCH 21* business subjects. MUK.LJNZiJii-.BALDWJ BUSINESS COLLEGE, 702 S. Washing ton, TA 3-6655. 76tl0 Put your reservations in now for ban quets. Accomodate up to 250 people. TA 2- 1352. Triangle Restaurant. 12tfl Williams. TA 3- les and 1-6600. DAY NURSERY by the week, day of hour. Call Mrs. Gregory, 602 Boyet\ 120tff hour. Ci VI6-4005. OFFICIAL NOTICES Official notices must be brought, mailed or telephoned so as to arrive in the Office of Student Publications (Ground Floor YMCA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-6, daily Monday through Friday) at or before the deadline pub tion deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceeding publication — Director of Student Publica- OFFICIAL NOTICE All currently enrolled pre-veterinary medicine students who expect to qualify as applicants for admission into the School of Veterinary Medicine in September 1960, should file their applications in the Regis trar’s Office not later than Aprfl 1. Forms to be used in making applications for admission to the School of Veterinary Medicine are available at the information desk in the Registrar’s Office. i Registrar H. L. Heaton Director of A and Registrar Admissions Political Announcements Subject to action at the Democratic Primary May 7, 1960. For County Commissioner Precinct No. 1 CURTIS H. WILLIAMS FLETCHER L. POOL (Former Aggie) Miscellaneous For Sale La Rasuracion Electra Sin Cable Donde- quirea Que Sea. Independiente y Siempre Exacta $14.95 U. S. Bexar Electronics, Box 1091, San Antonio 6, Texas 74t30 use the WAN!AOS Early Bird Shoppe, Inc Curtains — Fabrics — Toys Ridgecrest Village TYPEWRITERS Rental - Sales - Service - Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 809 S. Main TA 2-6000 I • KNGTNEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES M3 Old Sulphur Spring* Road BRYAN, TESLAS Motard 6 Cafeteria Cooking Is Not list |