« ' YVONNE CHOUTEAU—one of the leading- dancers in the Ballet Russe De Monte Carlo coming here for Town Hall Wednesday. Among the numbers to be offered is the famous duet “Black Swan” to the music of Tschaikowsky. Official Commissioning Set For Local Marine Reserves Official commissioning cere monies for the new Rryan-College Station Marine Reserve unit will he held at 2 p. m. Sunday. The unit, a satellite rifle platoon, was organized and held its first meeting during the first week in October. Brig. Gen. William W. Stickney, director of Marine Corps Reserves, Washington, D. C., will he the principal speaker. The ceremonies will be held on the lawn in front of the U: S. De partment of Agriculture Building here Sunday at 2 p. m. Other speakers at the cere monies will be Brig. Gen. Vic Barraco, Col. Melvin Smith, ’32, Lt. Col. W. H. Bunger, ’42, and Travis B. Bryan Sr. Guests attending the commission ing will be Lt. Col. John Lines, Lt. Col. W. H. Glass, Maj. R. B. Riley and Capt. H. G. Dudman, all from the 6th Infantry Bat talion staff of Houston. The new unit will be a part of the 6th Infantry Battalion from CITIZENS LOOK AHEAD (Continued from page 1.) “We are planning 15 million dol lars worth of expansion in addition to dormitory expansion,” Chancel lor Harrington said. “But one of our most pressing problems at present is the railroad grade cross- 103 MAIN NORTH GATE AGGIE OWNED ing on Farm Road 60, going from the campus to the Veterinary Med icine Department.” Harrington said the crossing had been called the “worst in the state” by highway officials. He said that the State Highway Commis sion had set some funds aside to improve it, but that action must be taken by the City of College Sta tion and Brazos County before March 16. “Due to its location, the cross ing is a city and county problem,” he said. NEED A BOOK? But no ready cash .... Just leave an I. O. U. . . . . For any book on my shelf .... Ole Army Lou engineers / physicists here are the world’s largest semiconductor single crystals Produced by Texas Instruments — another notable 5 “first” for this 26-year-old electronics and geophysics firm whose products and services now total $44 million annually. The many pioneering projects now under way at TI offer engineers and physicists wide and interesting choices of work ... in the design and development of: SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES AND OTHER COMPONENTS transistors transistor circuits diodes rectifiers transformers resistors panel meters ^ test equipment ELECTRONIC AND ELECTRO MECHANICAL APPARATUS radar sonar infrared navigation magnetics telemetering communications computers / You are-invited to join one of these expanding pro grams at Texas Instruments — where recognition of in dividual achievement has contributed to its fifteenfold growth in the last ten years. Advanced personnel policies include company-sponsored educational assist ance, profit sharing, insurance and pension plans. The TI plant is within Dallas, yet away from down town traffic . . . within 5 minutes of fine residential areas, chinches, and public and private schools. Your home will be within 15 minutes of year-around recreational, amusement, and cultural facilities. Contact Placement Office for Interview February 26 Texas Instruments INCORPORATED LEMMON AVCMtfe O A CL A 5 Sk T E X AS S. R. Wright, head of the Civil Engineering Department, brought out technical problems that would be faced by the proposed survey He said that one answer would be a comprehensive origin-destination survey of all vehicles on the streets. “The overall plan should be de veloped by a trained outsider and then carried out by local officials,” he said. “We must get what is best for the most people because we can’t do right for everyone.” Commission Should Cooperate Bryan City Manager Casey Fan nin pointed out that a commission would probably work if it were set up like the present Brazos County Health Unit, which is a cooperative enterprise. Bryan Councilman J. M. Daniel echoed Fannin's state ment and added that the State might possibly help the progi’am. “We are a planning commission without a plan, now,” said T. R. Holliman, speaking of his College Station planning committee. “We shouldn’t worry about the cost of improvements until later.” Holliman also outlined a similar program, planned and carried out by the city of Corpus Christi. County Judge A. S. Ware, who has lived in Brazos County for 50 years, was “not enthused” about outside planners being hired. He pointed out that the. master plan for highways set in 1939 had been followed to completion and that present plans for improvement in cluded woik on the Welborn road, Turkey Creek road and 29th St. in Bryan. “We have done some long-range planning of our own,” Dr. Les Richardson, Consolidated Schools superintendent said. “We find that our enrollment will double in the next ten years.” Fiction Writer James Provard Leaves School Writer James Provard, whose story L’Affair Unique in the Commentator prompted an anonymous critic to de nounce sex stories being pub lished in student publications, has left A&M for the remainder of the semester. Provard said he was leaving school because he couldn’t get his mind on studying. He plans to tour the nation or will make an extended visit either to California or the New England states. He will return to A&M June 1, to start summer school, and hopes to finish by the summer of ’58. Provard plans to write more fiction during his vacation. Provard, after going to school for 30 straight months, said, “Go ing to college is like working. One must have a break or else he’ll go crazy.” TENNIS RACKET RESTRINGING AT THE STUDENT CO-OP Houston. It now has one officer and 30 enlisted men. The unit is designed for non veterans, veterans and for men who still have obligated reserve time left to serve, according to Lt. R. L. Wilson, unit officer. A platoon leaders pi'ogram, whereby a person can receive a commission, is being offered by the unit, Wilson said. To receive the commission, students must pass a qualiying test, have a one point grade point ratio during their four years of college and attend two six - week summer camps at Quantico, Va. Anyone interested in joining the unit can visit the unit any Monday night from 7-9 in the USDA Build ing or can contact either Lt. Wilson of C-ll-W, College View, or M/Sgt. E. D. McMurry of 905 Taurus, Col lege Station. Hong Kong Prof Speaks Here Tues. Brian Harrison, University of Hong Kong professor, follows up Sen. Paul Douglas’ talk on the Mideast crisis with a discussion of “Far Eastern Problems of Today” in the second Great Issues program Tuesday at 8 p. m. in the Memorial Student Center Ballroom. Harrison’s appearance is an extra attraction to other such pro grams to come to the campus. The Hong Kong history professor has first-hand knowledge of the Asiatic problems. He has publish ed several articles in the Journal of Royal Asiatic Society and such publications as “Southeast Asia, a Short History” and “Problems, of Political Integration in Southeast Asia,” a paper for the Southeast Asian Conference. Before becoming history pro fessor at Hong Kong, Harrison was senior lecturer at the Univer sity of Malaya. He spent the re cent fall term at Cornell Univer sity as visiting professor in the Southeast Asia Program of the Department of Far Eastern Studies. Tickets will be $1 at the door or may be purchased at the main desk in the MSC. Season tickets will be honored. REFUSAL (Continued from Page 1) with a U. N. guarantee of free passage in the Gulf of Aqaba. The 70-year-old Israeli Prime Minister told Parliament: “We hope the door is not closed to further discussion. The govern ment has decided to make a fur ther effort to reach an understand ing with the United States.” He said of the Aqaba Gulf coast: “Israel dare not unconditionally abandon the defense of her rights and her security in the straits.” The Battalion College Station (Brazo* County}, Texas Friday, February 22, 1957 PAGE 3 USAF Doctor Discusses High Attitude Life Tues. Dr. Robert T. Clark will speak on “The Man of the Andes” Tues day at 8 p. m. in the Lecture room of the Biological Sciences Build ing. Clark, chief of the Department of Physiology and Biophysics in the School of Aviation Medicine, USAF, Randolph Air Force Base, Tex., will discuss the native residents of high altitudes which are said to be able medically to live and to perform tasks better than the best sea level athletes. Clark will cover the general life of the native plus quantitative data on research findings related to the ancient native. His lecture will be illustrated with color slides and Clings to the road like a stripe of paint! The ’57 Chevy can give lessons on taking curves and holding the road to just about any car going. Few cars at any price are so beautifully balanced and so smooth, sure and solid in action. A car has to have a special kind of build and balance to keep curves under control. And nobody outdoes Chevrolet in that department! It “corners” with all the solid assur ance of an honest-to-goodness sports car. Chevy doesn’t throw its weight around on turns because it carries its pounds in the right places. And if the road should turn up ward, Chevy can take care of that nicely, too—with up to 245 h.p.* Come on in and take a turn at the wheel of a new Chevrolet. *270-h.p. high-performance V8 engine also available at extra cost Sweet, smooth and sassy—that’s Chevrolet all over. 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