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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 6, 1958)
Job Calls Friday Tandy Leather Co. will intei’- view BA, EDUCATION and I ED majors for positions in store management. Civil Aeronautics Administra tion will interview CE and EE majors at BS level for positions in location of airport sites and in ah'craft production and light ing systems. First Copy Issued Of Walton’s Paper Walton Hall has published the first issue of its newspaper, “The Walton What-Not,” according to Buddy Monaco, editor-in-chief. Monaco, sophomore biology ma jor from San Antonio, was chosen by the Walton Executive Council to head the publication, which will be published twice monthly. “The function of this paper is to keep everyone in the dorm in formed of its activities. This co- erage will also include items of in terest to the individuals and dorm as a whole,” said Monaco. Staff writers include Jim Bow en, Bill Ellis, Jack Bailey and Wynn Chapman. Mitchell Plans Dorm Newspaper The Mitchell Hall Dormitory Council has appointed Sammy Joe Ferguson to take steps toward publishing a dorm paper. The paper will be printed bi monthly and will cover dorm news and topics of interest to dorm resi dents. It will place emphasis on intramurals and activities of the dorm council. The first edition of the paper is scheduled for Nov. 13. It will feature a contest to select a name for the paper, a list of the dorm council members and a letter from Bill Thode, council president. According to Ferguson, the biggest problem at present is the selection of an editor. The names of several men have been submitt ed for the job and they will be voted on at the next council meet ing, Nov. 11. New Commander Brig. Gen. Clayton Kerr, has been named to succeed Maj. Gen. Albert Sidney Johnson as commanding of ficer of the 49th Armored Division of the National Guard. Kerr was also pro moted to major general. (AP Wirephoto) CADET SLOUCH by Jim Earle i Air Foi CC May TIT Moon Shot Friday “It’s always easy for me to get a blind date at TWU when I send this photo of myself with the date application.” TASPA Sets Meet Here Nov. 10 - 12 Ideas on various phases of stu dent personnel programs will be exchanged when representatives of 30 to 40 colleges and universities gather on the campus, Nov. 10-12, in the Memorial Student Center. Deans, counselors and guidance personnel will be here for the an nual conference of the Texas As sociation of Student Personnel Ad ministrators. B. A. Zinn, director of Student Personnel Services, is conference vice-president. W. L. Penberthy, director of Student Activities, will give the welcome address at the general session on the morning of Nov. 11. Dr. Arthur H. Moehlman, pro fessor of history and philosophy, University of Texas, will address the conferees at the general ses sion on the subject “Academic Trends in Higher Education.” E. T. Bowers, director of the Student Union, Sam Houston State College, will be the presiding chair man for a panel discussion on the relationships of the student un ion to the student personnel pro- Bizzell Hall Plans Wild Game Dinner A wild' game dinner for Bizzell Hall students will be held Jan. 8, 1959, Clarence Meeks, president of Bizzell Hall Dormitory Council said recently. Deer, dove and other wild game will be brought in by Bizzell stu dents and stored in Sbisa Dining Hall's freezer until the day of the feed. Meeks said that an act ual time and place for the feed has not been decided as yet. Money for the dinner and other activities is included in a $2 dorm itory fee. The two dollars covers cost of campus chest, dormitory picture, donation to the janitor, wild game dinner and second se mester party. “The purpose of the dinner is to get a better relationship be tween the students of Bizzell,” Meeks said. Five winners of the McLennan Handicap at Hialeah Park have gone on to win the $100,000 Widener at the Miami track. They are Many Stings, Armed, El Mono, Coaltown and Spartan Valor. Engineers, Physicists > Mathematicians NAA^ On-Campus Interviews INTERVIEW DATE 11-14 The NAA industrial family has a career for you: Atomics International Division puts the atom to work for power and research in America and abroad. Autonetics Division makes automatic control systems for manned aircraft and missiles. Pioneered in space navigation... built inertial guidance system for USS Nautilus and Skate. Columbus Division designed and is building the Navy’s most advanced carrier-borne weapon system, the A3J Vigilante, and the most versatile jet trainer, the T2J. Los Angeles Division is the home of next-generation manned weapon systems—the B-70 and F-108—and America’s first manned space ship, the X-15. Missile Division is at work on the GAM-77, jet-powered air-to-surface missile for the Air Force’s B-52. Rocketdyne Division builds liquid-propellant engines for Atlas, Thor, Jupiter, Redstone missiles, and for the Jupiter “G” that puts the Army’s Explorer satel lites into orbit. See Your Placement Office Tbday For Interview NORTH AMERICAN AVIATION, INC. ^ gram. Panelists will be J. Wayne Stark, director of the MSC; Fred Bryson, director of the Student Union, Southern Methodist Uni versity; and Calvin Cleve Nolen, director of the Student Union, Uni versity of Texas. Presiding at a panel discussion on modera concepts of student dis cipline, philosophy and practice will be W. C. Perry, dean of men, Baylor University. Panel members will be Jack Holland, dean of men, University of Texas; M. S. Kava- naugh, associate professor of psy chology, A&M; and Dr. Warren Bonney, clinical psychologist, Col lege Hospital. Robert O. Murray, Jr., director of Student Affairs, A&M, will pre side at a panel discussion on student housing and programs. Dr. John Paul Abbott, professor of English, A&M, will be the banquet speaker on the night of Nov. 11. Amo Nowotny, dean of Student Life, University of Texas, will be the toastmaster. W. T. Creager, dean of men at Sam Houston State College, is president of the Texas Association of Student Personnel Administra tors. Other officers are Dean Per ry of Baylor and Zinn of A&M and Carl V. Brett, associate dean of Student Life, University of Texas, secretary-treasurer. WASHINGTON UP> The Air Force may take its third potshot at the moon early Friday. Like its two predecessors, the new lunar probe is designed to: 1. Measure variations in radia tion along a 2%-day journey to ward the moon. 2. Provide data on the inten sity and extent of magnetic fields of the earth and the moon. 3. Report the number of im pacts with meteorites. 4. Scan the far side of the moon with a television type de vice and relay to earth impressions that would be converted into crude photographs. Also like those in the most re cently launched probe, the 25 pounds of instruments aboard the new space traveler will be thor oughly sterilized 24 hours before blastoff, against the extremently remote prospect that it might act ually hit the moon. Scientists have agreed to make every effort to avoid lunar con tamination until after earthmen have had a chance to explore the moon’s virgin surface. The launching site is Cape. Ca naveral, Fla. There, another Thor- Vanguard combination lunar probe rocket is on its firing pad and at the ready. And the calendar, inflexible guide for lunar firings, said the early morning hours of Friday would be the first period in this month suitable for a moon rocket launch. If for one reason or another there is no firing then, similar favorable periods occur in the ear ly morning hours of Saturday and Sunday. », Social Whirl Aggie Wives Bridge Club will hold its regular business meeting tonight at 7:30 in the MSC. Hos tesses will be Marge Blake and Alleene Groves for the regular group, Dorla Dittman and Jackie Dubois for the intermediates and Mona Jo Bice and Lela Porter for the beginners. ★ ★ ★ Chemistry Wives Club will meet Monday night at 8 at the home of Mrs. Isbell, 1106 Marsteller. ★ ★ ★ Journalism Wives Club will meet in the Anderson Room of the YM CA tonight at 7:30. EXCLUSIVE EMBROIDERED SPORT SHIRT by'Frmwmi' Here’s an elegant new sport shirt style, sure to please! Rich embroidered heraldic designs on luxurious, full bodied washable challis. Choose from handsome solid deep tone colors. Another great exclusive Truval shirt from our big Fall collection — see it now! The Exchange Store “SERVING TEXAS AGGIES” AFS Seniors to Get Brass Name Plates The American Foundryman So ciety is making brass name plates for their graduating seniors. The society presents the plac- ques in their last meeting in ap preciation of tine work by the sen iors for the society. The name plates are two inches high by 14 inches long. The Battalion -a- College Station (Brazos Countyj, Texas Thursday, November 6, 1958 PAGE 3 The kingdom of Jordan has a on about 5 per cent of the nation’s population of about 400,000/ living total geographical area. Bryan Academy of Cosmetology (Beauty School) Weekly Registration and Enrolling Day and Evening Classes Transportation and Financing Arranged Complete Beauty Service to the Public (At Student Prices) 706 South College Ave. Bryan, Texas. Phone TA 2-6273 to limit quantities. the right Maryland Club COFFEE TOP SPRED Oleo 1-lb. 59 10 Miracle Whip 49 COCA COLA FREESTONE PEACHES MELLO -FREEZE 12 Bottle Carton Plus Deposit 49c n°. v/ 2 23c .. Can «/ 2 Gal. 39c PUMPKIN F “ d Club N< S 19c Bonded Beef Round Steak 89 Lockwood Sliced Bacon 49 Agar or Dubuque Canned PICNICS CHEESE 3-lb. Can 1.99 Mild ^ Cheddar ^ 617 U. S. No. 1 Texas ORANGES 5 - 29 TOMATOES 23 BAKERY ORANGE COCONUT BUTTER - 49 CANDY Mel-O-Sweet CHOC CHERRIES ^ 54c DRUG SPECIAL 89c SIZE LISTERINE ^ 57c