The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 12, 1960, Image 3

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THE BATTALION
Friday, February 12, 1960 College Station, Texas Page 3
Churches Release
Week’s Schedule
A&M Christian Church
Church school will be held at
9:45 followed at 11 by Morning
Worship. Rev. Tom Shepherd’s
sermon topic is “Of One Blood.”
“The Christian Deals with Race
Prejudice” is the topic for Chi
Rho, CYF at 5 p.m.
The junior choir will meet Mon
day afternoon at 3:45. Wednesday
evening the Disciples Student Fel
lowship will have recreation and
conversation at 5 followed by sup
per at 5:45 and a program. Choir
practice is at 7:30. Citizen’s Fel
lowship meeting will be held Thurs
day at 8 p.m.
A&M Presbyterian Church
“Once to Every Man and Nation”
FREE
Movies
by
Air France
★ ★ ★
“Paris of the Painters”
“Club Mediterranee”
To Be Shown
TUESDAY
Feb. 23, at 2 p. m.
In Room 3 B-C of the MSC
AH Students Invited
is the sermon topic for the Morn
ing Worship at 11 proceeded by
Sunday School at 9:45. Junior
Choir rehearsal is at 4 p.m. fol
lowed by Leagues at 5.
The church will hold a covered
dish supper at 6:30 Sunday even
ing. Mrs. H. B. Haberyan of
Shreveport, La., member of the
General Assembly of the Board of
Mission, will speak on the mission
ary program.
A&M Church of Christ
Bible School will be held at 9:45
a.m. followed by Morning Worship
at 10:45. The sermon topic this
Sunday is “Faith to the Saving of
the Soul.”
The Evening Worship service is
at 7:15 and the topic wil be “The
Bible, Lamp of Life Immortal.”
Bethel Lutheran Church
“What Do They Say?” is the
sermon topic for both Morning-
Worship services at 8:15 and 10:45.
Sunday School and Bible classes
are at 9:45.
The Aggie Walther Club will
meet in the Memorial Student Cen
ter Wednesday at 7 p.m.
First Baptist Church
Rev. W. Leroy Fowler will be
the evangelist for revival services
at the First Baptist Church of Col
lege Station next week.
The Rev. Fowler is pastor of the
First Baptist Church, Sweetwater,
Tex. He is a graduate of Baylor
University, and Southwestern Bap
tist Theological Seminary. He was
the recipient of an honorary doc-
tor-’s degree from Howard Payne
College in 1955.
Weekday services are scheduled
for 9:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m., Mon
day through Friday, with a service
next Saturday at 7 p.m.
St. Thomas’ Chapel
Holy Communion is at 8 a.m.
followed by Family Service at 9:15,
Church School at 9:45 and Morn
ing Prayer at 11.
The YPSL will have a Valen
tine’s Dance Sunday evening at 6.
IF IT IS SEA FOOD
TIME FOR YOU
TRY
The Texan
We Specialize In Sea Food
Tax Official I $1,000 Award
Warns Of
Negigence
Failure to type or print your
information on that Federal in
come tax return for 1959 could
cost you a lot of money.
This word came today from
Clarence E. Carlson, administra
tive officer of Internal Revenue
Service at Bryan.
Right here in this area hun
dreds of taxpayers had to be lo
cated last year so Uncle Sam
could pay them refunds amount
ing to several thousand dollars.
This happens every year be
cause people either don’t write
legibly, or they move to new ad
dresses and neglect to leave for
warding addresses with their
postmasters.
The Revenue Service is using
more electronic devices than ever
this year to speed work, but hur
riedly scrawled numbers such 1
and 7 are carelessly closed loops
in letters e, 1, and f, often short
circut the entire IRS production
line.
BSU Banquet Set
For Tonight at 7
“Love Is A Tender Trap” will
be the theme of the Baptist Stu
dent Union’s sweetheart banquet
to be held in the Educational
Building of First Baptist Church
in College Station Friday at 7
p.m.
Featured speaker will be Jack
Greever, B.S.U. Director at South
ern Methodist University. He is
a graduate of Baylor University
and Southwestern Baptist Theo
logical Seminary.
A fellowship will be held follow
ing the program in the Baptist
Student Center.
Leland, Stevenson
Attend Conference
T. W. Leland, head of the Divis
ion of Business Administration,
and R. M. Stevenson, professor in
the Division of Business Adminis-
Entries Now
Being Accepted
Entries are now being accepted
for the third annual Alfred A.
Raymond Award of $1,000, to be
presented to the practicing engi
neer, engineering faculty member,
or undergraduate student who sub
mits the best manuscript relating
to the “Foundation of Structures.”
Manuscripts should be written
so as to add to engineering knowl
edge in this category. Entry of
manuscripts will not prevent pos
sible future publication.
The award is sponsored by the
Raymond Concrete Pile Co., a di
vision of Raymond International,
Inc.
Entrants should write to Alfred
A. Raymond Award, Dept. F,
Room 1214, 140 Cedar Street, New
York 6, N. Y., in order to obtain
information on rules and regula
tions for the award.
Catholic Chaplain
At Dinner Meeting
Of Bryan-CS NSA
Father Charles Elmer, chaplain
of Catholic students at A&M, will
speak on “Decadence in American
Moral Life” at a Tuesday dinner
meeting of the Bryan-College Sta
tion chapter of the National Sec
retaries Assn.
Father Elmer attended the Uni
versity of Wisconsin and received
his B.A. degree from St. Frances
Seminary in Milwaukee. He later
studied at the Pontifical Gregorian
University in Rome, where he re
ceived his Licentiate in Theology.
Since coming to Texas in 1954,
Fateher Elmer has received his M.S.
degree at A&M.
Father Elmer spent three years
in the armed services as an en
listed man during World War II
and has been a chaplain in the
Army Reserve for five years. He
is presently the senior Catholic
chaplain of the 90th Infantry Di
vision.
A GROWING COMMUNITY NEEDS
GROWING TELEPHONE SERVICE
To meet the needs of our community’s growth, we have been
and will continue expanding telephone service. But this expansion
takes money borrowed from investors since there is no allowance
in our regulated rates to cover expansion costs.
To attract these investors . . . men and women like you . . . we
must show a fair return. And with today’s rising operating costs
this return is impossible to achieve without a rate adjustment.
We’re sure you’ll agree that what we’re asking is only fair.
We want only enough to continue to grow ... to continue to serve
you efficiently . . . this and no more.
The Southwestern States
\TelephonejCompany
tration, are attehding a conference
on higher education for business.
The meeting is being held at Okla
homa State University, Stillwater,
Thursday through Saturday.
t.- \ ■
]REiPRE SErSTTATIVES OF/
’INT5RTII ^yAI i: ILIC’AIV#lYA:i:vr.lOy7!l>jC.j
The conference is sponsored by
the Ford Foundation.
<WILI^CQNPECT OX-CAMUUS INTERVIEWS* February 18 - 19
SOCIAL MATHEMATICS 488-489
Making After-Hours Count
Prof. Tangent
Principles of Accounting. Accounting for time
not spent on dates by males using ordinary
hair tonics. Accounting for time well spent on
dates by males using 'Vaseline’ Hair Tonic.
Dr. Frightwig’s Theorem (water + hair = dust-
mop hair). Proof that 'Vaseline’ Hair Tonic
replaces oil that water removes, makes men’s
hair irresistible to women. Application of proof
by application of 'Vaseline’ Hair Tonic. For
students who have taken Applied Magnetism
405-406 but do not intend to spend weekends
studying.
Materials: one 4 oz. bottle 'Vaseline’Hair Tonic
HA! R
TON 1C
it’s clear,
it’s clean,
it’s
Vaseline'
HAIR TONIC
•Vaseline' is a registered trademark
of Chesebrough-Pond's Inc.
diison
AGGIELAND
MAIN
RIDGECREST
HOSPITAL i
jf^hcirmcLcu
Visit your’placement office now^
/for all the lacts about a future with North American^Aviatiori/ Inc^
i ——
Nuclear
power
/ at the Atomics :
: International
Division
ICanoga Park, CallfornlalT,
Atomics International, located in the San ^Graphite Reactor for the Consumers Public/
Fernando Valley of Southern California, is a Power District of Nebraska and an Organic!
leader in the development and manufacture i p owe r Reactor at Piqua, Ohio. AI also is
of nuclear reactors for power research, and } d in exte nsive research activities to\ •
mobile systems. Two proven AI power reac- ^ 1
tor concepts are now under construction^ jdevelop improved materials for fuel_ele-J
Atomics International is building a Sodium, ,ments and reactor components
(AS/M Electronics
& electro
mechanics at the
Autonetics Division
(Downey, California)
■ Autonetics, a leader in the field of electronics, matic landing system for supersonic missiles J
is engaged in research, development, and and aircraft; the first, general purpose, all-r
manufacture of Computers, Inertial Quid- transistor, digital computer. It is now at work)
ance, Armament Control and Flight Control on the inertial navigation system for the first;
Systems. Autonetics designed and built the nuclear-powered Polaris-carrying subma-^
inertial navigation system for the USS Nau- I rines and the guidance and control systems/
tilus and Skate; the first, completely auto- for the Minuteman and GAM-77_missiles
!
' Naval
„ N[ < aircraft>
& missiles at the
Columhus Division
(Columbus, Ohio) *
The Columbus Division, designed and built 'design studies now underway "at the Colum- j
the Navy’s T2J Buckeye, America’s most ver-, bus Division include undersea, land, and air
satile jet trainer which will train today’s! weapons systems for all Military ServicesJ
jet cadets to command tomorrow’s manned; Current studies include ASW, missiles, ECM,\ ,4
| weapons systems, and the Navy’s supersonic,! (intercept aircraft, electronics systems,VTOL-] =4
j all-weather A3J Vigilante, today’s most ver-- ;STOL, ground support equipment, and other^ 1
! satile manned weapons system. Advanced still confidential programs.
Design &
j ^ jf development
of manned weapon
systems at the C
Los Angeles Division'
/ (Los Angeles, Californio)
The Los Angeles Division is the home of the’ production^ of complete manned weapon’
next-generation manned weapon system— systems. Work encompasses the fields of
the Mach 3 B-70 Valkyrie multi-purpose Electronics, Metallurgy, Structures, Aero-j
j i bomber—and America’s first manned space dynamics. Thermodynamics, Dynamics,]
i vehicle, the X-15. Engineers in this division , Mathematics, Physics, Human Factors and
> are engaged in research, development, and : t Industrial Engineering./^*
A
7a«'a Missile
* ^ weapon
system management
& space research at j
the Missile Division
(Downey, California)
The Missile Division is the home of the GAM- 1 ' missiles and space exploration vehicles of a
77 “Hound Dog,” an air-to-surface missile .wide variety of range, speed and propulsion]
for the Air Force’s B-52 bomber. The Mis- methods. Scientists at the Aero-Space Labo-j
i sile Division has within its ranks some of the ratories, an organization within the Missile'
j nation’s most experienced engineers and sci- Division, are conducting creative research!
lentists in the fields of missiles and weapon well in advance of existing technology in the-
Uystems. They are performing research on space sciences.
!
■*j^ =' -—
■f flpy Propulsion
■ilWkk. systems
and concepts
at the Rocketdyne’
Division
, (Canoga Park, California),
, (McGregor, Texas)
_ J'
Rocketdyne is engaged in ideas-to-hardw r are systems, the division is under contract for? j
development of propulsion systems. Hi- b’gh energy solid propellant motors and ;
thrust liquid propellant engines, built by unique accessory equipment. Solid propel-j 4
Rocketdyne, have powered most of the mis- i j an j- operations are located at McGregor,] v
( siles used for military and civilian space Texas . other propulsion system concepts are! 1
projects including Atlas, Jupiter, Thor, Red- J i
stone, Explorer, Discoverer, Pioneer, Juno, actively under development employing the .
and others. Under development at present principles of ion energy, nuclear energy,!
are two super performance liquid systems.) plasma jets, arc-thermodynamic and mag-* ;
tWhile leading the nation in liquid propellant. L netohydrodynamic systems
"AT WORK IN THE FIELDS OF THE FUTURE