Thursday, March 15, 1956 THE BATTALION Page 5 Vacancies Remain On Spanish Trip /*; #Vj> Wnr>h JVsif A II Miiat'lo Three vacancies still remain on and Saltillo, Mexico, March 29 and B B BB r r B BB T B -Z A B B J. T-B. BBs & Bs B J Oceanography Uses Brains Three vacancies still remain on the 9-man bus for the Spanish Club field trip during the Easter holidays. Students of Latin American his tory and economics and members of the Spanish Club will leave for a sight-seeing tour to Monterrey and Saltillo, Mexico, March 29 and return April 2, according to Dr. J. A. Dabbs, associate professor of the Modern Languages Depart ment. A $25 deposit is required to cover travel and room expenses, he said. Meals will be extra. By appointment purveyors of soap to the late King George VI, Yardley & Co., Ltd., London By MARK SMITH Last Nov. 23, while thousands of college students and friends were dreamily watching the annual Tex as Aggie bonfire consume itself in multi-colored waves of burning gases, several men were busy at work near it. The men, headed by an alert young scientist, were making a very important scientific discovery. While the bonfire roared up ward, sending waves of smoke and heat into the air, the men drove a panel truck onto the drill field where the blaze was located. At tached to the back of the truck was an odd-looking trailer, consisting of a frame of small pipes. When the hinged mast was raised into the air it towered 20 feet above the nearby curious spectators. Con nected to the weird contraption were small half - spheres which whirled around so fast they were a blur. The scientist in charge was Dr. Arnold H. Glaser, Assistant Pro fessor of Oceanography at A&M. Dr. Glaser and his men were test- Yardley After Shaving Lotion tops off any shave, electric or lather! • soothes, refreshes the skin • helps heal razor nicks • counteracts dryness • gives brisk, masculine, non-lingering scent Starts you off with your best face forward! At your campus store, $1.10 and $1.50, plus tax Yardley products for America are created in England and finished in the UiS.A. from the original English formulae, combining imported and domestic ingredients. Yardley of London, Inc., 620 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C. Well, Mr. Smarty, who knows a good way to clean clothes with gasoline. . . . Maybe next time you’ll send them to — CAMPUS CLEANERS ing the various temperatures and wind currents coming from the raging bonfire. Their studies are carried on under the Department of Oceam- ography, which in turn receives aid for certain projects from the Air Force Cambridge Research Center of the Air Research and Development Command. The mobile micrometeorological v unit travels throughout the South west in search of wind and temperature data, but usually stays within Brazos County. Dr. Glasier and his associates collect data about wind velocity and temperature for use by agri cultural agents, the U. S. Air Force, and various other groups. The information obtained dur ing the burning of the bonfire was of importance to tornado research experts who want to know more about the conditions that produce whirls like the dust devils that spring from the bonfire. Working on airport runways, where hot air will lengthen the takeoff run of a plane, Dr. Glaser has made tens of thousands of temperature measurements with the mobile unit. He finds that, contrary to expectation, air temp erature above a runway is usually cooler than that over surrounding terrain. “The air doesn’t know its own temperature,” he said. The traveling lab also gathers information important to agricul ture, and has conducted experi ments with irrigation research. Evaporation and transpiration pro blems can often be solved by the use of data obtained with the small-scale laboratory. E. R. Lem on, a soil physicist, works with Dr. Glaser in most agricultural experi ments. Singing Cadets The Singing Cadets, under the direction Of Bill Turner, will pre sent a concert in Guion Hall Sun day afternoon. The concert will start at 2:30 p. m. and will be open to the public with no admission charge. The Aerojet-General Corporation Is America’s Leading Industrial Organization devoted to research development and manu facture of rocket engines and related devices. With plants at Azusa and Sacramento, California, Aerojet offers unparalleled career opportunities in the following fields: MECHANICAL ENGINEERING CHEMICAL ENGINEERING ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING CIVIL ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS PHYSICS CHEMISTRY METALLURGY MR. W. D. CAVENDER, representative of the AEROJET-GENERAL CORPORATION will be ON CAMPUS to interview MARCH 20, 1956 for positions in the rewarding, challenging field of rocket propulsion • Solid and liquid propellant rockets for as sisted takeoff and in-flight thrust aug mentation of missiles and aircraft • Thrust reversers • Auxiliary power units and gas generators • Upper atmosphere-research rockets • Underwater propulsion devices • Electronics and guidance • Ordnance rockets • Explosive ordnance, warheads and armament • Flame throwers • Propellants and propellant chemicals • Primary batteries • Pressure vessels • Architect-Engineer Services • Rocket test facilities Aerojet-General Corporation A subsidiary of the General Tire & Rubber Company Azusa, California Sacramento, California Three men are' usually needed when the mobile micrometeoro- logical unit makes an outing in search of information. They re cord wind changes and keep the instruments working. Temperature changes are giaphed automatically by an instrument that measures and records the temperature once a second. Should a white panel truck with an odd-looking trailer approach the bonfire next year, it’s probably not a squad of University of Texas saboteurs; Dr. Glaser may have decided to return for more mete orological information. Before coming to A&M three years ago, Dr. Glaser worked for the Brazilian Air Force. He has done micrometeorological research with the University of Wisconsin. His B. S. and M. S. degrees were obtained at the University of Washington; his Sc. D. was acquir ed at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Kiwanis Club Host Three CHS Boys Three Houston Fat Stock Show winners and their instructor were guests of the local Kiwanis Club at their luncheon Tuesday noon. The students, Bill Kavanough, Mike Walton and Keith Kidwell, all attend A&M Consolidated High School and were the guests of Col. Ralph M. Davey. Kidwell placed first in the junior fat lamb show and won a blue ribbon plus $15. Kavanough placed fifth in the Holstein heifer Scramble contest. He was awarded a red ribbon and $5. Walton placed fourth with his Berkshire sow in the junior open breeding show. He was awarded a pink ribbon and $6. The students were accompanied at the Kiwanis luncheon by A. J. Jumper, vocational agriculture instructor at CHS. p-?kl0 Mrs. C. C. Doak Chosen Best Speaker Mrs. C. C. Doak, wife of Dr. C. C. Doak of the Biology Depart ment, was chosen best speaker at the third weekly meeting of the A&M Speechmasters Group last night in rooms 2A, 2B of the Me morial Student Center. Her speech, entitled “Social Protocc’”', presented information which future speakers need to know about etiquette at meetings and banquets. Toastmaster for the meeting was Eddie Thorpe and general evaluator of the meeting was Bill Yates. OPEN FOR ALL BANQUETS, DINNERS RECEPTIONS, WEDDINGS AND LUNCHEONS MAGGIE PARKER DINING HALL TA 2-5089 “The Oaks” — TA 3-4375 BRYAN SALE o BARGAINS . . . in SPORT SHIRTS Long & Short Sleeves MEN’S SOCKS—GREATLY REDUCED STUDENT CO-OP KNOX Furniture Co. WHIRLPOOL • CROSLEY • O’KEEFE & MERRITT 4.-.> « i if. “Furniture to suit any taste” COME IN AND LOOK AROUND 26th & Bryan Dial TA 2-3581 Mr. W. B. Knox ...You always ■for Food here! * GROCERIES ★ CRISCO .... (In Kitchen Canister! 46 Oz. Can—Nu-Zest ORANGE JUICE . . . 46 Oz. Can—Texsun GRAPEFRUIT JUICE . 46 Oz.—Libby’s PINEAPPLE JUICE . . 46 Oz.—Libby’s TOMATO JUICE . . . Nabisco Premium SAI.TINK CRACKERS . Van Camp’s—No. 2 Cans PORK & BEANS . .2 89c . . 33c . . 25c . . 29c . . 29c 1 lb. 25c cans 35c * FROZEN FOODS * PICTSWEET BROCCOLI CUTS CUT CORN GREEN PEAS PEAS & CARROTS MIXED VEGETABLES 6 Oz. 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AFTERNOON, FRI. & SAT. — MAR. 15-16-17 CHARLIE’S FOOT MARKET NORTH GATE — WE DELIVER — COLLEGE STATION