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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 22, 1960)
Friday, April 22, 1960 College Station, Texas Page 3 THE BATTALION Stag Barbecue To Welcome Seniors Into Association of Former Students LOOKING for a You’ll find it faster by looking in the classified pages Whether you are looking or buying, you’ll save time and steps by using the Classified pages. Here at your finger tips, alphabetically listed, are all the businesses and products you’ll need. So remember, shop fast, shop first through the Classified pages. The Southwestern States Telephone Company The seventh annual stag barbe cue honoring the class of 1960 will be held May 5 at the Grove. The barbecue is sponsored annually by the Association of Former Students for members of the senior class who will graduate in June, August or January, 1961. Several beef steers, barbecued by Roy Snyder, will be served with all the trimmings. The senior class will be welcomed officially as members of the As sociation. Tickets for the function may be obtained as follows: Corps seniors in 1st Wing, Allen Burns; 2nd Wing, Stanley Wied; 1st Brigade, Ray Murski, 2nd Brigade, Wayne Schneider and Band, Sam Langley. Civilian seniors may obtain tick ets from their dormitory presi dents and apartment seniors from any of their co-presidents. Tickets may also be picked up at the main desk in the MSC. Former Students Association offices in the MSC or the office of W. G. Brea- zeale, 1-H Puryear. Argentine Navy Officer Gives Antartic Talk The Antarctic Continent is about 21 times the size of Texas and generally round in shape, Capt. Luis R. A. Capuixo of the Argen tine Navy, told attendants at the 13th annual conference for Pro tective Relay Engineers held re cently at A&M. The land area of Texas is 263,- 513 square miles, according to the Texas Almanac of 1958-59. The Argentine Navy captain is a research scientist in the Depart ment of Oceanography and Me teorology. He received his M.S. degree from the University of Cali fornia, Scripps Institute of Ocean ography, in 1949. Capt. Copurro was the banquet speaker and he said that the Ant arctic Continent is the only place in the world where the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian oceans meet. He pointed out that a continuous study is going on to determine the thick ness of the ice in that region. He showed color slides of pic tures taken during the cruise of the Argentine icebreaker General San Martin in December, 1957 — March, 1958, to the Antarctic re gion. BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES fce day 3^ per word 2d per word ea<>b additional day Minimum charge—tOd DKAD1XNES S p.m. day beldre publication Classified Display column Inch 80d per each Insertii FHO on NE VI 6-0415 FOR SALE 4000 CFM Evaporative Cooler, two years old, excellent condition, $75.00. Call VI 6- 8693 or see at 110 Gilchrist after 5:00 p. m. 100t4 Ford Fairlane, Radio, heater, by ner. Extremely clean. Will con sider trade. TA 2-1806. lOOtfn 1957 only owner, Air Force uniforms, summer, winter dress, serge, coat 38, pants 31-31. Excellent condition. Reasonable. VI 6-6660. 100t3 CORDLESS ELECTRIC SHAVER—Per fect Shaving anywhere, anytime. Perfect for traveling, camping, etc. $14.95. Bexar Electronics, Box 1091, San Antonio 6, Tex- as 74t30 Bryan. 62tfn FOUND Found: a pair of women’s prescription sun glasses,.Thursday, April 14. Vicinity College tennft courts. Phone VI 6-4832. Dr. George W. Buchanan Chiropractor 304 E 27th Bryan, Texas Phone: Bus. TA 2-4988 Res. TA 2-4981 Auto Air Conditioners For All Make Cars. Installed With Clutch $285.00 With Terms CADE MOTOR COMPANY FOR RENT Large two bedroom unfurnished apart- ent. Close to schools and campus. Very reasonable. Call VI 6-5149. 102tl ment. Close to s Two bedroom unfurnished apartment. Living room down stairs. Antenna with rotor, washer connections, lines, fenced back yard with trees. 202 Academy, TA 2- 4053. 100tl3 Available June 1st to Sept. 1st. Our three bedroom furnished home, air con ditioned, large porch, deep freeze, washing machine. Also three bedroom house, 611 Highland, 220 wiring, washing machine connections. $55.00. VI 6-4052. lOOtfn Three bedroom house, large living room, separate dining room, near Ridgecrest. Call VI 6-4248 after 5. lOOtfn Large one bedroom furnished apartment, near Ridgecrest. Call VI 6-4248 after 5. lOOtfn In College Hills across from A&M Golf Course. Very nicely furnished one bed room apartment. New stove and refrigera tor, garage. Adults only. $50.00 without utilities. VI 6-5031 after 6:00 p. m. 95tfn Nice clean three room apartment, fur- tished. One block from Campus. Garage meant. Call VI 6-7496 after 5. See any time, 203 Kyle. 95tfn Two bedroom, unfurnished apartment, 120 wiring and attic fan. Near Crockett tchool. Phone VI 6-6660 after, 5:00 p. m. 72tfn Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric Shop. 98tfn Apartment, 205 Montclair across the street from Southside. Rent $30.00 with stove and refrigerator. Would consider furnishing all of the apartment. VI 6- 6630 or VI 6-6544. 61tfn Early Bird Shoppe, Inc Curtains — Fabrics — Toys Ridgecrest Village SOSOLIKS TV - RADIO - PHONO SERVICE 713 S Main TA 2-1941 | ? y ! ’ /? Q Where the Art of I J4otara 6 feteria Cooking h Not Lost SPECIAL NOTICE WEE AGGIELAND KINDERGARTEN is now open for registration for the 16th term in September. Under experienced and qualified teachers. Music, art, and pre- first grades. Call VI 6-4062 or VI 6-8023. 102tfn TOM THUMB NURSERY SCHOOL Ages 2!/.-5 years. Storytelling, Singing, Drawing, Playing. Operated by Mrs. Jo anne Miller. Close to College. VI 6-4841. Reference when requested. lOOtfn Put your reservations in now for ban quets. Accomodate up to 250 people. TA 2- 1362; Triangle Restaurant. 12tfi Electrolux Sales and Seme* Q. c Williams. TA 3-6600. 90tfi DAY NURSERY by the week, day oi hour. Call Mrs. Gregory, 502 Boyett VI6-4005. 120tfi Miscellaneous For Sale La Rasuracion Electra Sin Cable Donde- quirea Que Sea. Independiente y Siempre Exacta $14.95 U. S. Bexar Electronics, Box 1091, San Antonio 6, Texas 74t30 WANTED A home to leave our three year old boy on weekdays. Prefer location south of college. Phone VI 6-7340. 101t2 Political Announcements Subject to action at the Democratic Primary May 7, 1960. Tor County Commissioner Precinct No. 1 CURTIS H. WILLIAMS FLETCHER L. POOL ' (Former Aggie) Your Bryan Dealer for FRIEDRICH Air Conditioners FAULK’S 214 N. Bryan 1300 Texas • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LC4E PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATf SCOATES INDUSTRIES M3 Old Sulphur Springs Hoad BRYAN, TEXAS OFFICIAL NOTICES Official notices must be brought, mailed 5r telephoned so as to arrive in the Office ■>f Student Publications (Ground Floor YMCA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5, daily Monday through Friday) at or before the deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceeding publication — Director of Student Publican tions. The army RQ Test (ROTC Qualifica tion Examination) will be administered in the basement, Sbisa Mess Hall, 0830 hours, 23 April 1960. This examination is open to all students who are enrolled in or have completed fourth semester of Basic ROTC, or have received credit for two years of Basic ROTC and will have sixty (60) semester hours passed by the fall semes ter 1960. Anyone having taken any RQ Test before will not be eligible for this test. 100t3 Ph.D. LANGUAGE EXAMINATION Examinations for meeting the foreign language requirement for the Ph.D. degree will be given Monday, May 2nd at 8:00 a. m. and 1:00 p. m. in Room 129, Academic Building. Students wishing to take this examination should leave the material over which they wish to be ex amined with the Secretary in the Depart ment of Modern Languages nbt later than 5:00 p. m. Thursday, April 28. J. J. Woolket, Head Department of Modern Languages 100t6 Sponsors of Student organizations and departments which present student awards, keys, or medals should order these items at □nee at the Cashier’s window at the MSC, Orders must be placed at once to insur« delivery before the end of this semester. Pete Hardesty Student Activities 87tfn WORK WANTED Why wait until last minute to get your Theses reports, etc. to Bi-City Secretarial service? Electric typewriters, offset nrinting, negatives and metal plates made. '408 Texas Ave. VI 6-5786. 87tfn TV-Radio-HiFi Service & Repair GILS RADIO & TV TA 2-0826 101 Highland TYPEWRITERS Rental - Sales - Service - Termi Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machine! CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 809 S. Main TA 2-6000 TRADE WITD LOU ... MOST AGGIES DO Area Churches Announce Programs For Weekend A&M Methodist Church “Freeing Christ Into Our World” will be the sermon topic for morn ing worship at 10:55 a.m. Sunday. Church school will be held at 9:45 a.m. and at 7 p.m. there will be evening worship. Wilder Voted A&M Wesley President Officers for the 1960-61 school year were elected at Wednesday night’s meeting of the A&M Wes ley Foundation. Barry Wilder, a junior chemical engineering major from Spring Branch, was elected president. Danny Loyd, a sophomore pre- vet major from Texarkana, was elected vice-president; Larry Curry, a freshman from Humble majoring in rural sociology, was elected secretary, and Joe Pep per, a freshman physics major from Marshall, was elected treas urer. Commission chairmen elected were: Evangelism, David Hutch eson, a freshman pre-vet major from Itasca; Worship, Gary Gib son, a junior electrical engineer ing major from New London; World Christian Community, Jim Ellisor, a sophomore agriculture major from San Gabriel, Calif.; Wesley Service, Don Deal, a sophomore pre-vet major from El Paso. Publicity, Mike Shively, a sophomore pre-vet major from Vivian, La.; Recreation, Spots- wood Davis, a freshman pre-vet major from Hillsboro, and Social Action, Don Brenner, a junior chemical engineering major from Houston. A planning retreat will be held April 30 for the new council and all other interested students. Any students interested in attending this retreat should contact Bob Cooper at the Wesley Founda tion Building before Wednesday, April 27. Church of Christ Bible School will be held at 9:45 a.m. and Worship Service will fol low at 10:45 a.m. Sunday. At 6:15 p.m. the Young People’s Classes will meet and at 6:30 the Aggie Class will meet. “All the World is Gone After Him” will be the ser mon topic at Worship Service at 7:15 p.m. On Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. the Ladies’ Bible Class will meet and there will be a Prayer Meeting at 7:15 p.m. Wednesday. Bethel Lutheran Church Sunday morning worship service will be held at 8:15 a.m. with the sermon topic to be “Service to Our Living Lord.” Sunday School and Bible Class will be held at 9:30 a.m. and Morning Worship will be held at 10:45 a.m. Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Sunday School Teachers will meet and Thursday at 7:30 p.m. the Mem bership lecture group will meet. A&M Presbyterian Church Sunday School will be held at 9:45 a.m. with Morning Worship to follow at 11 a.m. “A Man and His Problems” will be the sermon topic. Junior Choir Rehearsal will be held at 4 p.m. and at 5 p.m. the Junior, Pioneer and Senior High School Leagues will meet. Wednesday at 7 p.m. there will be Chancel Choir Rehearsal. St. Thomas’ Chapel Convocational Corporate Com munion will be held at the audi torium of A&M Consolidated High School, at 11 a.m. This Sunday only, there will not be a 9:15 serv ice. Holy Communion services will be held at 10 a.m. Monday morning and Tuesday at 8 p.m. Prayer Group will hold services. Wednesday morning at 6:30 Holy Communion services will be held with breakfast to follow and at 7:10 p.m. Evening Prayer and Cantebury program will be held. Rudder To Address Accounting Meet, Carr To Discuss Finances At Banquet President Earl Rudder will give the welcoming address at the 13th annual Accounting Conference to be held April 25-26. About 150 are due to attend, Bill Whittington of the Division of Business Adminis tration, general chairman, has an nounced. Waggoner Carr, speaker of the Texas house of Representatives, will give the address at the ban quet Monday at 7 p.m. in the Me morial Student Center. He will Hall Gives Papers At Two Meetings Dr. Wayne C. Hiil, head of the Department of Plant Physiology and Pathology, presented papers during two meetings held Monday on the campus. The professor discussed seed drying and desiccants at the Seeds men Short Course and talked on chemical residues to members at tending a meeting of the State Assn, of Young Farmers of Texas. talk on “Financial Affairs of the State of Texas.” Russell H. Kyse of San Antonio, is conference chairman. Baptist Church Schedules Weekend Youth Revival The College Station First Bap tist Church will hold a Youth Re vival Friday, Saturday and Sun day. ; Max Barnett and Jim Manley \vill be the speakers. Barnett is a senior animal hus bandry major from Littlefield and is the past president of the A&M, Baptist Student Union. Manley, who is majoring in fi nance, is also an A&M senior. For the past several months Manley has been preaching at Edge Bap tist Church, preparing himself for a church related vocation. He is Fellowship will be held after the service Saturday night. This airplane is actually a flying classroom. The course taught in it is Air Navigation, under real con-' ditions. The students are young men who have been selected as pos sible future leaders of the Aero space Team. Graduation after 32 weeks of training will win each of the students the honored silver wings of an Air Force Navigator and an Officer’s Commission. For certain young men, this* Training can open the way to a bright career of executive poten tial. Right now the Air Force is scoring impressive technological advances in the fields of naviga- ;tion, guidance and tracking, elec tronics and radar. And here is where its highly trained and expe rienced Navigators will be expected to take over command positions of jncreasing responsibility. To qualify for Navigator traih^ ing as an Aviation Cadet, you must be between 19 and 26/4—single, healthy and intelligent. And you must want to build an exciting, 1 interesting career in the Aerospace (Age. If you think you measure upj .we’d like to talk to you at the near-j est Air Force Recruiting OfficeJ Pr clip and mail this coupon. ■ There's a place for tomorrow's] leaders on the -y -«r ^ t [AerospaceTeam. I J Lj Air Force MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY Bviation CADET INFORMATION / DEPT. SCL04A v BOX 7608, WASHINGTON 4, D. C.\ I am between 19 and 26V2, a citizen' of the U.S. and a high school graduate with years of college. Please send me detailed information on the Aviation Cadet program. NAME_ STREET.. CITY COUNTY. .STATE See The Dinah Shore Chevy Show in color Sundays, NBC-TV—the Pat Boone Chevy Showroom weekly, ABC-TV CORVAIR BY CHEVROLET DRIVE IT! GET OUR DEAL!!!! A pair of Corvairs recently recorded 27.03 and 26.21 miles per gallon in the 2,061.4-mile Mobilgas Economy Run. That’s certified proof that Corvair skimps on gas costs. It saves other ways, too. Corvair is the only U. S. compact car that never needs antifreeze or costly radiator repairs. Come in and drive the compact car that outdoes them all. Things Corvair gives you that America’s other compact cars can’t: Practically flat floor ... real foot room for the man in the middle. Fold-down rear seat gives 17.6 cu. ft. of extra storage space. Four-wheel independent suspension for a smoother, flatter ride. Rear-engine traction ... that comes with the engine’s weight bearing down on the rear wheels. You probably realize already that the mile age figures Corvairs recorded in the Mobil gas Run are higher than the average driver can expect. But because the cars met every kind of driving condition—rugged mountain grades, long country straightaways, congest ed city traffic—those mileage figures prove Corvair’s inherent ability to save. Oper ating costs take a nose dive the day you take delivery of a Corvair. J° r economical Uansnortaium See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer for fast delivery, favorable deals