MOKE variety ih youh mcmi «* • Folgers COFFEE Folgers Instant Gladiola FLOUR Gladiola BISCUITS Mayfields’s Grade “A” Medium EGGS Golden Brown Breaded SHRIMP Hills Dale Sliced PINEAPPLE Gerber’s Strained Reg. BABY FOOD With $2.50 Dollar Purchase or More 5 10-Oz. Size Lb. Bag Limit 6 3 Doz. 10-Oz Pkg. Flat Cans 12 ' ! f ffW Reg. Cans 49< $|39 29« 5' sloo 35' 9f' . Lb. Ctn. 25c . 3 Lb. Ctn. 49c . . 3 Lbs. 40c 6 - 6-Oz. Cans 99c Carnation Cottage Cheese .... Armour’s Vegetole Shortening , . Banner Oleo Southern Sun Orange Juice . . . Banquet Fruit Pies (Apple, Peach, Cherry) . Lg. 8-In. 29c Rosedale Bartlett Pears 5 - 303 Cans 99c Hi-C Orange Drink 4 - 46-Oz. Cans 99c Rosedale English Peas . 2-303 Cans 25c Uncle Williams Pork and Beans . . . 3-300 Cans 25c Rosedale Cream Style Corn .... 2-303 Cans 25c Bits of Sea Tuna 5 Flat Cans 99c Scott Paper Towels 2 Reg. Rolls 35c Armour Star Fancy FRYERS Whole Lb. mJUsi Armour’s Star Hams Lb. 45c Shank Ends Lb. 39c Baby Beef Round Steak Lb. 79c Baby Beef Rump or Pikes Peak Roast Lb. 79c Rath Pure Pork Sausage 3 Lbs. $1.00 Hormel All Meat Franks 2 Lbs. 89c Hormel Dairy Sliced Bacon 2 Lbs. 89c Range Brand Thick Sliced Bacon 2 Lbs. 69c Armour’s Matchless Bacon 3 Lbs. $1.00 ARMOUR'S GIANT HOOP CHEESE TRY YOUR LUCK - GUESS THE WEIGHT GET YOUR /TO CHEESE FREE—IF YOU MISS—YOU PAY ONLY lb. 07C PRODUCE \ Red POTATOES TO & 28c King of Salad AVOCADOS ea. 5c Fresh Jumbo LETTUCE hd. 10c SPECIALS GOOD MARCH 3-4-5, 1960 MILLER'S 3800 TEXAS AVENUE SUPER MARKET VI 6-6613 THE BATTALION Page 4 College Station, Texas Thursday, March 3, 1960 14 Students Flan One-Day River Tour Fourteen wildlife management students, under the direction of Dr. R. J. Baldauf, assistant pro fessor of Wildlife Management, are planning a one-day survey tour of the lower parts of the Trinity River and its estuary. The trip, one of a series to be held in conjunction with the study of fresh water ichthyology, is de signed to take a survey of the fishes and other types of aquatic life in the river, Baldauf said. Working in co-operation with the local game wardens, the class plans to collect fish by seining, take samples of plankton and make representative tests of the river’s temperature, salinity, dissolved oxygen content, and pH. Similarly, the group hopes to catch some of the fish that use the river’s estuary as a breeding place, and by comparison with catches of different tours deter mine growth rates and reproduc tive methods. The first of the tours will be held on a Saturday, and will be made as soon as the weather is favorable, Baldauf stated. The tour is unique in that the lower part of the Trinity has never been studied extensively for this type of information, he noted. Mothers’ Clubs Dedicate Yearbook To MSC Director The Federation of A&M Moth ers’ Clubs has dedicated its 1959- 60 yearbook to J. Wayne Stark, director of the Memorial Student Center. Mrs. Ellsworth S. Lorms of San Antonio is president of the Fed eration. “The Federation of Texas A&M College Mothers’ Clubs proudly dedicates this book to J. Wayne Stark, director, Memorial Student Center,” the citation reads, “for his untiring efforts to provide the relaxation of ‘the campus living room,’ the uplift and inspiration of cultural activities and the leav en of wholesome recreation for our sons.” Bell To Conduct Workshop in March Dr. R. R. Bell, associate profes sor in the Department of Veteri nary Parasitology, will conduct an in-service educational workshop March 15 for vocational agricul tural teachers. The workshop will be held at Tivy High School in Kerrville for teachers in Area 7. Discussion emphasis will be on parasites and parasitic diseases of livestock, their prevention and con trol. Gen. G. A. Custer .. . part of photo display Photographs Go On Display Monday Eve A display of enlarged photo graphs made from the original Mathew Brady glass plates will be on display at the meeting of the Memorial Student Center Cam era Committee from 7:30 to 10:30 Monday night in the MSC. The pictures, part of a travel ing gallery prepared by the Ansco Camera Services Department, in clude portraits of such famous men as Presidents Abraham Lin coln and U. S. Grant and Gen. George A. Custer and Phil Sheri dan. Also on display will be a rare group of Civil War pictures. These on-the-spot scenes, made by Brady and his associates, provide an in timate view of actual war-time conditions in: the' trenches, on the battlefields and in the camp. The display will be open to the public. Intercollegiate Press Colleges Note Preparation Of High School Students With college enrollment growing by leaps and bounds every year colleges all over the country are beginning to pay more attention to the jobs high schools are doing to prepare their seniors for col- ege careers, according to the In tercollegiate Press. Kent State University A college freshman’s greatest weakness, according to Dr. Edgar L. McCormick, chairman of the freshman English program at Kent State University, is his lack of pre-college writing. “Studies at Kent indicate that marks drop at least one-half a let ter in college and that students earning less than a “B” in high school English do not have skills needed for success in college Eng lish,” McCormick said. A five-man committee at Kent plans and administers the fresh man English program. In addition it evaluates and follows up results of a test which entering freshmen must take in vocabulary, reading, and spelling. Reports are sent to high schools whose graduates at tain superior ratings on these tests as well as to high schools whose graduates have been assigned to remedial classes, he added. Iowa State Teachers College Iowa State Teachers College is tightening its admission require ments as a result of excess appli cations. President J. W. Maucker said that students in the upper half of their high school graduat ing class who appeear to meet all other qualifications are usually admitted without question. “Students near the fiftieth per centile and below may be admitted only if their performance On tests and other evidence, : such as per sonal interviews, indicate they have a reasonable chance of suc cess in college in spite of a relar Mechanical, Photo Conference Opens Friday at noon in MSC The 11th annual Mechanical Conference and Photo Workshop, sponsored by the Texas Press As sociation and the Department of Journalism, will get under way at noon Friday in the Memorial Stu dent Center. The conference, slated for Fri day and Saturday, is held here each year for the purpose of fui’- nishing Texas newspapermen with an opportunity to exchange ideas on mechanical aspects of the busi ness. Over 100 persons from weekly and small daily newspapers in Texas are expected to attend the conference. Registration for the event will be at noon Friday in the Serpen tine Lounge of the MSC. Friday afternoon’s activities consist of a Photo Workshop program, begin ning at 1:15 p.m. The selection of “Miss Photogenic of 1960” at 4:30 p.m. will highlight the phot ography program. Models and costumes for the contest will be furnished by Sears Roebuck and Co. Winning pictures of the 16th an nual News Pictures of the Year photo competition will be on dis play in the Serpentine Lounge during the conference. Suppliers for the printing in dustry will sponsor a Suppliers’ Barbeque for delegates to the con ference at 6:30 p.m. Friday in Nagle Hall. The mechanical sessions of the meet will begin at 8:30 a.m. in the Assembly Room. A luncheon will be held in the Ballroom at 12:15 p.m. ■ Special sessions for weekly and small daily publishers and printers will be held at 2:45 p.m. in the Assembly Room. Guided tours to the A&M Press, the Office of Stu dent Publications and other spots of interest will be conducted for visitors at 3:45 p.m'. after every shave Splash on Old Spice After Shave Lotion. Feel your face wake up and live! So good for your skin... so good for your ego. Brisk as an ocean breeze. Old Spice makes you feel like a new man. Confident. Assured. Relaxed. You know you’re at your best when you top off your shave with Old Spice! JOO AFTER SHAVE LOTION by SHULTON tively poor standing in high school,” Maucker said. Maucker said emphasis is placed on rank in class because evidenc indicated that rank in class in tin best single index of probable sue cess in college. “However, the problem of pre dieting success is so complex that we cannot rely on any single in dex, so we also use other indica tions of the students’ ability. Our chief' concern in admision of stu dents is to make sure the prospec tive student has a reasonable chance for success in college,” said Maucker. North Carolina State College A new School of Physical Sci ences ' and Applied Mathematics which will embrace the present de partments of physics, mathemat ics, chemistry and experimental statistics is to be established at North Carolina State College, ac cording to Dr. John T. Caldwell, chancellor of the college. The new school will be respons ible for both instruction and re search in these four major scien tific fields, Caldwell stated. “Science has been remaking the world at a constantly accelerating pace. This new science has not only had an impact on man’s tech nology; it has influenced his total way of life, and particularly his mode of thinking. This is partic ularly true of colleges dedicated to bringing the impacts of science to the daily lives of all people,” said Caldwell. Barnard College Two elected undergraduate groups as well as the trustees of Barnard College have adopted a resolution opposing the National Defense Education Act with its loyalty and disclaimer oaths. The resolution, according to President Millicent O. McIntosh, reflects her own and the faculty’s opinion that the affidavit is “de signed to control students’ beliefs at a time in their lives when they should be encouraged to widen their intellectual horizons.” Congress Duties Undergo Changes WASHINGTON, Mar. 3, (A>)_ At one time a congressman’s prin cipal, and almost exclusive function was to pass laws. Rep. Joe Kil gore. (Dj of McAllen, says thijlgs have changed. “My responsibility to the people I represent does NOT end with the performance^ of legislative du ties,” Kilgore said in a report to constituents. ‘enormous in size . . “Our federal government has be come pnormous in size and vastly complicated. Too often the indi vidual feels lost and hopeless in his necessary contacts with this huge governmental machine. “At times a congressman can help to cut the red tape and expe dite action on a matter involving an individual citizen and one of the numerous government bureaus or agencies. When I can properly do so, I. never hesitate. “This does NOT involve exert ing pressure. It is a matter of ‘knowing the ropes’—an awareness of shortcuts that will help to keep one person’s problems from being lost in a bureaucratic maze.” ‘harder to study . . Years ago on the House Floor, the late Rep. Luther Patrick of Alabama said: “A Congressman has become an expanded messen ger boy, an employment agency... veterans’ affairs adjuster, watch dog for the under dog, sympathiz er with the upper dog.. .corner stone layer, but it is getting harder every day to properly study legis lation—the very busin'ess we are primarily here to discharge.” Kilgore, in similar remarks, said: “The people of the 15th District have a right to expect that I, as their Representative in Congress, will study proposed leg islation, attend carefully to debate in the House, and be present and Special low-cost HOOVER 7-POINT SERVICE • MOTOR cleaned, lubricated, new carbon brushes. • AGITATOR or BRUSH ROU cleaned, lubricated. • BEIT replaced. • BAG completely renovated. • CORD, SWITCH, WIRING checked, tested. • APPEARANCE improved. • CLEANING EFFICIENCY restored WORK GUARANTEED ONE FULL YEAR PMQHE KRAFT Furniture Coo Bryan vote when the time comes. That is what I try to do. This is a duty both to my constituents and to the people of the United States as a whole.” 1 Vote as they feel. . One. old timer in the Texas dele gation, asked whether a congress man should vote the way he per sonally feels on an issue even though it may be entirely opposite the known views of the vast ma jority of his constituents, said: “Of course. A congressman has the advantage of knowing, or at least being aware of facts in many instances which are NOT gener ally known to his constituents. He Should then vote as he thinks will be in their best interest.” Lifting Laws He then cited his vote and that of many others of the Texas dele gation in favor of lifting certain neutrality laws prior to World War II, when public sentiment in Texas was against such a vote, because of a more acute awareness here of Hitler’s growing menace. System Offices To Recognize ‘Day of Prayer’ The College and System offices housed on the A&M campus will join with the College Station Coun cil of Church Women in recogniz ing Friday, March 4, as “World Day of Prayer,” President Earl Rudder has announced. “It is requested that we halt our activities for one minute of silent prayer as we unite with the people throughout this country and around the world in observing World Day of Prayer,” Rudder said. To signal this occasion and also as a reminder, the college whistle will blow at 10 a.m. and again at one minute past 10. LITRE APS... m Aim FOR INSURANCE CAU. U. M. ALEXANDER, JR., ’40 215 S. Main Phone TA 3-3616 State farm Mutual Automoblirfnsuririee^ State Farm Life Insurance Co. State Farm Fire and Casualty Co. 4»ME OFFICE—BLOOMINGTON, (yjNOIfJ