New Placement Office Quarters Larry Shive, senior business administration major from Harlingen, left, is only one of the many graduating seniors taking advant ages of the facilities of the Placement Office and enjoying it in their new headquarters on the third floor of the YMCA. The Place ment Office was first located in a converted Army barracks near the new Dormitory Area and was moved to the second floor of the YMCA at the beginning of the 1959-60 school year. They moved into their new quarters on the third floor last week. As sisting Shive is Mrs. Gladys Bishop, secre tary in the office. . Complete with New Library Placement Office, Others Enjoy YMCA Quarters By ALAN PAYNE Assistant News' Editor The Placement Office, Office of Jtudent Employment and Loans and Short Course Office have been in their new location on the third floor of the YMCA Building since * early in March and are extremely proud of their new quarters, ac cording to Wendell R. Horsley, director of the Placement Office. * The offices include 10 interview ing and conference rooms for em ployment recruiters, the three sep arate offices and a new informa tion library. Horsley explained that the Placement Office personnel are es pecially proud of the new library. He said that the manner in which material is displayed, on a peg hoard with racks, is one of the most unique methods he has ever seen. Horsley also expressed the belief that this method might pos sibly be the only one in existence at the present time. Horsley also stated that the new furnishings, special equipment and a special communication system between the separate offices and the interviewing and conference rooms were a great help to both the recruiters and the students ap plying for interviews. The new offices will make it much easier for the approximately 450 company representatives who visit the campus in quest of grad uating seniors each year, he said. In addition to these personal representatives, another 1,000 com panies solicit students by mail. Horsley stated that these figures revealed that approximately 7,000 interviews are conducted every year, by mail or in person. Horsley concluded by saying, “We are especially grateful to the administration for our new quar ters. We are now proud to invite businessmen to our offices and no longer have to be apologetic for the condition of our quarters. The new offices also make it much easier for our boys to make a good impression and sell them selves to the recruiters.” As of yet, nothing has been de cided about what will become of the former Placement Office on the second floor of the YMCA Building, said Horsley. ©ft pwlaims il)? Han. Hamlet l.ifL Shakespeare’s wise words might well be kept in mind by young men today. To look your best longer, may we suggest our flattering British Tab collar. Under fastening holds collar neatly and comfortably’ in place. In fine oxford and broadcloth. $5.00. Silk tie, $2.50. -ARROW- Wherever you §o ... you look better in on Arrow shirt Look your best in Arrow’s Tabber A popular choice with the college man is this smart new collar style. Note the tab fastening',' under collar that guarantees lasting good / looks. See us soon for your choice of collar styles, fine fabrics. Arrow shirts, $5.00. All silk repp ties, $2.5C) MENS WEAR SINCS 1033 BRYAN iTiifliWHi.: TEXAS Improving Income Dependent on Work, Speaker Tells 155 Success of co-operatives in achieving the goal of improving member income is directly related to performance of the board of directors, members of the eighth annual Agricultural Co-Operative Managers School were told Mon day through today here. The speaker, Robert W. Cooper, Texas Agricultural Extension Ser vice economist in farm organiza tion, said the personnel the direc tors employ and the policies they formulate are direct indications of their effectiveness in co-op man agement. He said the major responsibility of hired management is to direct the actual operation of the co-op and advise and assist the board. Usually, the manager is the best informed individual regarding the needs of the organization. Makes Decisions The most important thing that a hoard does is to make sound judgment decisions on significant matters, Cooper told the group. The co-operative managers school, which this year reached a new attendance high — 155 — was sponsored by the Texas Agricul tural Extension Service, Houston Bank for Co-Operatives and the Texas Federation of Co-Operatives. Directors Included In the past, the school has been directed toward co-op managers. But this year, directors also Were invited and were the subject of Cooper’s talk. Reagan Brown, rural sociologist with the extension service, out lined self-help programs under way by 920 organized Texas com munities, which heretofore were threatened with economic oblivion. About 213 of these communities are participating in a state-wide improvement plan sponsored by electric companies and the exten sion service. He said the program has four main objectives — improved farm income, better homes and farms, better health and services and in creased social activity. Citing the industrialization trend in Texas, Brown said only about 10 per cent of the population now lives in the country and three out of five persons in rural areas do not farm. He predicted that around 400 small towns will “dry up” and fail to progress unless co-operatives and citizens forget their differences. “Co-ops need the community more than the community needs the co-ops,” he said. “If a town is asleep and its citizens wrangle among themselves, they will be left behind.” Church Holds Together The sociologist said that about the only thing holding some rural communities- together today is the rural church. Dr. A. B. Wooten, associate pro fessor in the Department of Agri cultural Economics, described con ditions if production controls were removed from the American farm scene. Carryover of surplus, govern ment-held stocks would be sig nificantly reduced, he said. Wooten said his talk was not an endorsement or an analysis of any proposed farm program. ‘Public Dog House’ The nation’s agriculture is in the “public dog house” as the re sult of bad public relations, Dr. R. D. Lewis, director of the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, told the group. President Earl Rudder gave a welcoming address at the school’s opening session, and John E. Hutchison, director of the Texas Agricultural Extension Service, presented certificates of course completion. ' V- . . ■ Touch system or hunt-and-peck— Results are perfect with EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND Typewriter Paper Whatever your typing talents, you can turn out neat, clean-looking work the first time, with Eaton’s Corrasable Bond Paper. Reason why: Corrasable has a special surface—it erases without a trace. Just the flick of an ordinary pencil eraser and typographical errors disappear. No smears, no smudges. Saves time, temper and money! Corrasable is available in several weights —from onion skin to heavy bond. In handy 100-sheet packets and 500- sheet ream boxes. A fine quality paper for all your typed assignments. Only Eaton makes erasable Corrasable. EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND A Berkshire Typewriter Paper EATON PAPER CORPORATION (E) PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUS'ETTS Purchase Your EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND Typewriter Paper from The Exchange store “Serving Texas Aggies” THE BATTALION Thursday, March 17, 19G0 College Station, Texas Page 3 Brazos County Engineers Meet Tonight at 7:30 in Bryan The Texas Society of Profes sional Engineers of the Brazos County Chapter will meet in the Assembly Room of the Texas Highway Department in Bryan to night at 7:30. Call for help from the Sulphur River Chapter concerning Board of Registration of Public Survey ors advising a registered profes sional engineer that he has violated the law in doing surveying work is one of the topics to be discussed. There will be a report from the president oh the Region 2 nomi nating committee meeting, a re port on action of the State Board concerning E.I.T. examinations, a report on T.S.P.E. annual meeting held in Harlingen in February and the acceptance of new member applications. J.W. COFFEE h 39c CHUNK TUNA H 23c LUCY LINDA thick sliced * 57«