I The Ik PAGE 1 A&I whc Sati FOl slushy as a f the s Natio with vorit( &/ One 10 V R; wee: ciati tion Ji imn tion kyP' S. F tier 1 pus por VI< 1 sto inc off 27< Te fir A-\ po Le W 25 ti< &’ fi e: P a P e i: F t c < I T^e Battalion .... College Station (Brazos County), Texas PAGE 6 Thursday, May 3, 1956 What's Cooking The schedule for tonight is as follows: 7:15 Guadalupe Valley Hometown Club will meet in room 207 of the Civil Engineering Building to elect officers. 7:30 Winters Hometown Club will meet in room 3C of the MSC to elect new officers. Houston Hometown Club will meet in the Biological Sciences Building. Galveston Hometown Club will meet in the Senate Chamber of the MSC to elect officers. Abilene Hometown Club will meet in room 126 of the Academic- Building to plan a function. Wichita Falls Hometown Club will meet hi room 3D of the MSC for their last meeting of the year. Football film will be shown and election of next years officers is scheduled. Austin Hometown Club will meet in the Academic Building. IOU. Tyler-Smith County Hometown Club will meet in room 224 of the Academic Building to elect offi cers. East Texas Hometown Club will meet in room 2D of the MSC. Williamson Hometown Club will meet in room 328 of the Academic Building to elect officers. Fayette-Colorado Hometown Club will meet in room 207 of the Academic Building to elect offi cers. Panhandle Club will meet in the Academic Building. i Red River Valley Hometown Club will meet in room 3D of the MSC. Consultants To Study A&M Salaries, Wages Chancellor M. T. Harring ton of the A&M College Sys tem was authorized to make a contract with a firm of Chi cago consultants for a study of salary and wage schedules, job specifications and work loads of all non-professional employees of parts of the statewide system head quartered at College Station by the System Board of Directors, here, Friday. The study would include 1,691 positions in the A&M College, Tex as Engineering Experiment Sta tion, Texas Engineering Extension Service, Texas Agricultural Exper iment Station, Texas Agricultural Extension Service and Texas For est Service. Positions ranging from officers and heads of non-instructional de partments through unskilled labor will be included in the study, to be made by the Public Administra tion Seiwice of Chicago. Studies will be made of each job involved, including work load, specified re sponsibilities, salary or wages in relation to the job being done and a comparison of salaries and* wages with those for similar work within other parts of the System and in other institutions and industry. Results of the study will form the basis for future budget recom mendations. Vet-Med. Croup Initiates Students Seven veterinary medicine ma jors and two professors were ini tiated into Phi Zeta, honorary vet erinary medicine fraternity, at a banquet held at the Bryan Wo man’s Club last Thursday. The professors were Di - . Harold Redman and Dr. L. C. Grumbles, both of the School of Veterinary Medicine. Students initiated were Wayne Kyle and C. J. Shepler, sen iors; Delmer Cassidy, James For- gason, William Kirksey, Wallace Kleb and Kenneth Pierce, all jun iors. Requirements for the fraternity include a 2.5 over-all grade point ratio. Twenty-five per cent of the senior class and 10 per cent of the junior class may be admitted at one initiation. Library Group Sets Meeting For Saturday Special Libraries Associa tion, Texas Chapter, will meet Saturday at 9:30 in the Me morial Student Center. Robert E. Betts, librarian for the Texas Engineers Library, A&M, will give a resume of his last year’s European trip. Duinng this trip he visited many technical associations and libraries in Great Britain and on the continent, ob taining exchange and information relationships which should benefit the engineers in Texas. Dr. John C. Calhoun, dean of en gineering at A&M, will speak on the use of reference materials by engineers. Such use, which can save dollars and hours for industry, has inci-eased in the past few years. John R. Tusson, project technol ogist for Pan Am Southern Cor poration of New Orleans, has as his subject the New Orleans In formation Center. This center of technical information and seai’ching is now being developed. A luncheon for the group will be held in the MSC. That afternoon a business meeting and a tour of the Texas Engineers Libi’ai’y will conclude the meeting. Dr. Gould H. Cloud, Houston Re search Library of Humble Oil and Refining Company, is president of the Texas Chapter. Other officers are John P. Eben, librarian of Tex as Division of Dow Chemical Com pany, Freeport, vice-president and president-elect; Miss Helen J. Mc Kenzie, librarian for Atlantic Re fining Company, Dallas, secretary; and Miss Jane Burton, M.D. Ander son Hospital Library, Medical Cen ter, Houston, treasurer. AAUP Meeting On Monday Night The college entrance require ments committee of the A&M chapter of the American Associa tion of University Professors will act as a panel at the meeting of the AAUP Monday night in the Biological Sciences Building. Committee members will present facts and trends of present poli cies of college enti*ance require ments and what changes can be made. Di\ Robert Kamm, dean of student personnel services and the basic division, will be a member of the panel. The basic division is presently under study by the committee. J. P. Abbott, dean of the col lege, is expected to attend the monthly meeting of the AAUP and will piobably comment on the dis cussion. He is a member of the re cently appointed Advisory Com mittee to the State Board of Edu cation. Other members of the panel will be W. F. Adams, L. B. Keel, D. R. Lee, J. W. Overall, M. E. Tittle, and R. H, Fletcher, panel leader. The meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Draft Boards Give New Classification State draft boards are receiving many telephone calls these days from men who want to know’ w’hat “IV-A” means. Because of a recent amendment in Selective Service regulations, more than 100,000 Texans are eli gible for a change in classification. Nearly all of them are exempt from further military service un less Congress and the President change the law’ in the future. “This means that, under pi’esent law’, individuals receiving it have completed service and are exempt from further service.” Individuals receiving the IV-A classification w r ere formerly classified in Class I-C (Discharge) and Class I-C (Re serve). These two draft classifica tions are now abolished. 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