Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 11, 1960)
Some. seemed “We came of the make, o take it also win.” bout a Junior Rifle Club Instructor Plans Start Of Sixth Session National Rifle Assn, counselor i announced the beginning of the and Twin City Junior Rifle Club sixth Instructor Training School to Instructor, Sidney L. Loveless, has! begin Oct. 16 at 2:00 p.m., 206 Lee / ^ C a J s *abl Ss ' Ian ism ess 5 *' NOT A SIGN OF A SLIP-UP! Typing errors disappear like magic when you use Eaton’s Corrasable Bond. Never a trace of the word that was erased; errors can be flicked off Corrasable’s special surface with an ordinary pencil eraser. Saves re-typing, time and money. And the sparkling new whiteness gives all typing a new brilliance. You can’t make a mistake getting Eaton’s Corrasable. (Rhymes with erasable.) Eaton s Corrasable Bond is available in light, medium, heavy and onion skin weights. In convenient 100-sheet packets and 5(X)-sheet ream boxes. A Berkshire Typewriter Paper, backed by the famous Eaton name. » ' life ? Made only by Eaton EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND Typewriter Paper EATON PAPER CORPORATION c J7J °o PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS Avenue South in College Station. This instruction is offered free of charge and is available to any adult over twenty-one years of age and who would like to become a certified National Rifle Assn. In structor, and to any graduate of the Twin City Junior Rifle Club Basic Small Arms Training Course, who has passed the age of fifteen and would like to become an ap prentice instructor for the National Rifle Assn. All equipment and textbooks are furnished free of charge to the participants in this school. Upon completion of the requirements and practical experience in a Basic Small Arms Training School of In struction successful candidates may be certified as NRA Instructors, or Apprentice Instructors. Purchase Your EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND Typewriter Paper from The Exchange store “Serving Texas Aggies” Columbus Day Talk By Hart To Be Aired Thomas 0. Lake, Jr., Grand Knight of College Station Council No. 3205, Knights of Columbus, has announced that a Columbus Day address by Supreme Knight Luke E. Hart, head of the million-mem ber fraternal benefit society of Catholic men, will be broadcast at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow, over WTAW. Hart, who has been a member of the Supreme Board of Directors of the organization since 1918 and has held the office of Supreme Knight since 1953, initiated many of the society’s major projects. He was a leading figure in the inauguration, in 1948, of a pro gram, still in operation, by which advertisements of Catholic doctrine and practice are placed in news papers and periodicals of large general circulation. He was the prime mover, too, in the project which has resulted in the micro filming of 11 million pages of Vatican Library manuscripts. The film library is located at St. Louis University and is available to all scholars. It was also under his leadership that the Knights of Columbus erected the Campanile, known as the Knights’ Tower, at the National Shrine of the Im maculate Conception in Washing ton, D. C. The theme of Hart’s Columbus Day address is “Christopher Co lumbus, Man of Yesterday—Man of Today.” It will be heard over radio stations in all countries where the Knights have councils—the United States, Canada, Mexico, Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines. INDUSTRY PRAISED (Continued From Page 1) in, the rural and semi-rural areas of our state where in agriculture we see an increased application of machinery and a smaller applica tion of human labor. 7 ’ The executive director of the Texas Municipal League, Steve Matthews, told the attendants that “industry is meaningful to a com munity only if industry’s products bring into that community money from other places. Cities die and populations suffer a declining standard when the people begin to live off each other only.” “The real value of industry,” Matthews said, “is the bringing in from the outside of fresh capital and fresh finances to bolster the local economy with resources be yond its own capacity. “New plants mean gain to Texas, to Texas cities and to Texas resi dents if, and only if, those plants are able to sell in markets beyond the local community, beyond the state and beyond the nation. “Thus at all levels, the speaker declared, “it is the urgent respon sibility of Texas public policy to keep our Texas industry competi tive in the marketplaces of the world.” Continued Shift Likely The director of research of the Federal Reserve Bank in Dallas, Philip E. Coldwell, added, in the coming 10 years it is likely that the . structure of the southwestern economy will continue to shift with greater emphasis upon services and especially the recreational and tourist services, than at any time in the past. “Moreover,” he declared, “the shift will probably include greater emphasis upon nondurable goods as the size of the southwestern population continues to grow de manding these nondurables on a continuous replacement basis.” “Among the major segments of industrial activity in the southwest, Coldwell said, “the chances for continued expansion are best in the chemical, apparel, electronics and stone, clay and glass industries and in those durable goods indus tries whose products are princi pally tied to recreation, such as the boat building industry.” Pattern of ’60’s The pattern of the 1960’s in the southwest, Coldwell declared, “is, we hope, a pattern for diversifica tion and growth away from its tra ditional sources of income and from its closely tied natural resource orientation into an area of con sumer market orientation. This does not mean,” he said, “that raw material industries, either extrac tive, refining or processing, will cease to operate or will even diminish in their rates of produc tion. It does mean that there will be a proportionately smaller share of southwestern personal income which will stem from these extrac tive industries as the other indus tries of the southwest. continue to grow. BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES day per word FOR RENT Z( per word each additional day Minimum charge—40^ DEADLINES 5 p.m. day before publication Classified Display 80(1 per column inch each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 Nice 2 bedroom furnished house, ideal for student and working wife. Reasonable. VI 6-7037 after 5 and weekends. 135tfn Furnished three room apartment. Con venient to campus. 403 Boyett, Call VI 6- 6528. 135tfn FOR RENT Two bedroom furnished apartment, re decorated, hardwood floors, ample closet apace, window fan, tile drainboard. 304 East 22nd. TA 2-7430. 134tfn One bedroom furnished house with utili ties, $38.00 ; three bedroom furnished house. $50.00. VI 6-7334. 13t3 Small room in brick garage. Also room in home. One block South of Drill Field. VI 6-5638. 134tfn Four bedroom house. Two bathrooms, one refrigerator, stove, dinette, $48.00 per month. Three bedroom furnished house, $52.00 per month, 908 Fairview. Ont sedroom house, 804 Fairview, $25.00 per month. Phone VI 6-7334. 13t2 One bedroom brick duplex unfurnished apartment.. Central heating, 220 wiring, carport, 312 Second St. Phone VI 6-6468. 134tfn Furnished one or two bedroom duplex’s. Extra nice, reasonable price. On East Gate bus line, at 900 East 30th. TA 2-1552 or TA 2-3739. 133tfn Furnished duplex apartment. Near North Gate. Joe Speck, Dorm 16, Room 219. 1H8 Nice, clean furnished apartment. Screened porch and garage. Near Southside Shop ping Center. Call VI 6-6884 days or VI 6- 4452 after 5 or anytime weekends. 9tfn Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric Shop. 98tfn Two bedroom unfurnished three year old apartment. Stove and refrigerator furnished. 609 First Street. VI 6-8150. 130tfn Clean, one bedroom furnished apartment, 1018 Foster, College Hills, walk-in closets, roll-away bed, garage, call VI 6-6266 or Redmond Real Estate Co. Itfn Student apartments North Gate. Newly refurnished. $35.00 & $40.00. VI 6-6165 128tfn. Small furnished apartment. Near North Gate. Ideal for two boys who want to study and get by cheap. Phone VI 6-7248. 135tfn Apartment two blocks from campus. New building, nicely furnished, walk-in closets, hardwood floors, formica drain- board, Venetian blinds, 220 wiring. VI 6- 7248. 117tfn FOUND Man’s watch at final review last spring. Pay for ad and identify at South Station Post Office. 12t6 MALE HELP WANTED Audio-Visual Aids Specialist. Permanent position. Experience in still and movie production required. Radio and television experience helpful. If qualified, call Texas Forest Service, College Station, VI 6-4771 for information. 13t2 The Levites are a sacred caste in ancient Israel, the guardians of the temple service at Jerusalem. EGGS GUARANTEED FRESH Delivered Weekly Call TA 2-6850 JERRY SHELTON JIM M. PYE ’58 REPRESENTING Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. VI 6-5055 TA 2-6232 401 Cross St. C. S. TV ■ Radio - HiFi Service & Repair GILS RADIO & TV TA 2-0826 101 Highland • KNtHAEEKLNG AND ARCHITECTL RAL sCPPIJM • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLEX PRINTS • PHOTOSTAT? SCOATES INDUSTRIES Ml Obi Sulphur Spring* R*tt4 BRIAN,TEXAS OFFICIAL NOTICES Official notices must be brought, mailed pr telephoned so as to arrive in the Off pf Student Publications (Ground Fl< iTMCA, VI 6-641B, hours 8-12, 1-5, dailj llonday through Friday) at or before the deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceeding publication — Director of Student Public*" tions. Identification cards which were made ir connection with registration of Septembei 16, 17, for the current semester are now ready for distribution in the EXCHANGE STORE. They should be claimed in person immediately. H. L. Heaton, Director of Admissions and Registrar 13t4 najor be i dness Administra- Students who plan to take this examinatio should register in the main office of th Division of Business Administration nc later than 5 p. m. Monday, October 2' 1960. I3t iy deb gree a should normally expei :qui rements for ects Any student who complete all of the requiremei t the end of the current semester call by the Registrar’s Office ] and make formal application for a d to be conferred at the end of the cu semester. This deadline applies to graduate and undergraduate students. H. L. Heaton, Director of Admissions and Registrar All Dep town Clu officers a Cashier’s the Center, Club Advi per isor Southside Coin Operated Launderette —Open 24 Hours— 326 Jersey St. Early Bird Shoppe, Inc Curtains — Fabrics — Toy> Ridgecrest Villag* WORK WANTED TYPING Typing done electrically. Near Campus. Very reasonable. VI 6-8400.^ 1HS2 Our nursery for children all ages. Pick up and deliver. VI 6-8151. No answer Call back. Htl4 Will keep 3 children weekdays. Play room, balanced noon meal, snack and milk. Convenient to College. Mrs. Beth Andrews, 906A Inlow, VI 6-8666. 10t7 Children kept daily by Mrs, Lloyd Little, Aggie wife, at 109 Moss St., College Sta tion, VI 6-4430. 6tfn Would like to keep children ages 1-8 in my home. Am Aggie wife and have son 18 months old. 606 A Milam, College Sta tion, VI 6-4996. 133tfn Why wait until last minute to get your Theses reports, etc. to Bi-City Secretarial service? Electric typewriters, offset printing, negatives and metal plates made. 3408 Texas Ave. VI 6-5786. 87tfn SPECIAL NOTICE Hilltop Lake. Clean place to fish and picnic. Ovens, sand boxes for tots, 9(4 miles from College, South Hwy. 6 5tfn TOM THUMB NURSERY SCHOOL Ages 2*4-5 years. Storytelling, Singing, Drawing, Playing. Operated by Mrs. Jo anne Miller. Close to College. VI 6-4841. Reference when requested. IflOtfn Electrolux Sales and Service. G. C. Williams. TA 3-6600 90tfn DAY NURSERY by the week, day or hour. Call Mrs. Gregory, 502 Boyett. VI 6-4005. 120tfn BRYAN AQUARIUM CO. TROPICAL FISH Aquariums - Plants - Supplies Tanks Repaired Open Weekdays 5 :30 P.M. - 9 P.M. Saturday 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. Sundays 2 P.M. - 9 P.M. 518 Yf. Carson Phone TA 2-6385 SOSOLIKS TV ■ RADIO - PHONO SERVICE 713 S Main TA 2-1941 I Molar A Caf'l'rUcT™ ^ ^ looking It Not Lott “One of the principal hopes,” Coldwell declared, “of the south western economy is that there will be a continuing research effort into ways and means of utilizing the the products of the southwest so that petrochemical, petroleum and agricultural industries in this area will continue to expand and find a larger market not only in the southwest but throughout the world. “Southwestern employment will be shaped by the economic format to which the southwest adapts it self in the coming years. There will probably be fewer farms with a larger average size. We can ex pect a larger number of people to be employed in manufacturing establishments, but the proportion of southwestern employment in factory work will probably be re duced as the emphasis upon ser vice industries and other categories expand employment in those areas even more rapidly.” Signs of Overcapacity ^‘There are, of course, signs of great) overcapacity throughout the industry at today’s demand condi tions, but this does not mean that there will not be further growth in demand both at home and abroad which will erase this excess of capacity. Such an increase in de mand will likely come at a slow pace, but there are signs that it is developing. “The greater use of petroleum as a raw material for the petro chemical industry is the main hope for a sizable increase in demand through the need for petroleum for other uses, including industrial and utility power requirements, may also enlarge, especially if prices of competing fuels continue to rise or if their availability is reduced.” G. W. Cox, assistant to the presi dent, The AtcAiison, Topeka and Santa Fe Rai(way System, Chi cago, said at the opening session yesterday, “the rapidly changing transportation picture will see many innovations that will effect the industrial development pro grams of our railroads. “Piggyback, still in its infancy, already has wrought great changes,” Cox said. “The railroads must utilize large acreage of land normally available to industry for this relatively new; operation. In creasing length of cars will be a major factor in planning new in dustrial districts or parks, whether they be owned by a railroad or a private developer. “I feel safe in saying,” Cox said, “that during the sixties the rail roads will increase their advertis ing programs or at least allocate a greater portion of thier advertis ing to industrial development.” The industrial future of the United States in the 1960’s was discussed by Frank Stedman, Con way Publications Inc., Atlanta, Ga. Government regulations that will affect industrialization in the 1960’s were explained by Ed Gos sett, general attorney in Texas for the Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. of Dallas. The attendants were welcomed by Chancellor M. T. Harrington of the A&M College System. Leon M. Huff, Jr., Texas Bank and Trust Co., Dallas, chaired the Monday session. 4 Students Cover State Fair of Texas One graduate and three under graduate students of A&M have joined the Livestock Publicity Office at the State Fair to cover the livestock and horse shows through Saturday, Oct. 15. Morris W. Asbill, a graduate student in agricultural economics, now working on his journalism de gree at A&M 1 , is covering the shows for his second year. The three undergraduates are, Nelson Antosh, junior; Charles W. Teague, sophomore, and Robert E. Mitchell, sophomore. Asbill, 22, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Asbill of Quitman. Antosh, 20, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Antosh of Schulenburg. He is majoring- in agricultural journalism at Texas A&M. Teague, 19, is the son of Capt. and Mrs. Charles O. Teague of' Fort Hood. He is a major in jour nalism. Mitchell, 20, is the son of Lt. Col. and Mrs. R. E. Mitchell of Comfort. Mitchell is majoring in journalism. mg oJV ? ’use the WAN!ADS THE Tuesday, October U, 1960 . BATTALION College Station, Texas Page 3 \; luxury styling 'for the fe 1 v manvi V V<- PALACE GUARD Tru val> h rfiifj' $4.95 Li I This handsome Wash and Wear woven cotton check! is craft tailored, h^Truval with extra-long sleeves and J body for the 1 'tall man. Features of this specially 1 j fashioned sportshirt include edge-stitched collar with' stays and two. matched roomy pockets, l^peds little [or no ironing, Select yours.today! ^ THE EXCHANGE STORE “Serving Texas Aggies” mm lilliiiS v :- |(Jf I! WiMN.l.irilr* 1 wmiSiL ■ ■ ■ -' NAME: John Hulse AGE: 27 MAJOR: Bus. Adm. PRESENT JOB: Telephone Manager, Sioux City, Iowa When John Hulse was a senior at the U. of South Dakota, he had his own set of “do’s” and “don’ts.” Don't become a mere cipher on some body’s payroll. Don’t sit on the shelf waiting for your first taste of responsibility. Do get a job where you have a chance to show your stuff right from the start. Do the job. John knew his B.S. in Business Administra tion could lead him into almost any field. He chose the telephone business and joined North western Bell. One of his first assignments: streamlining oper ating procedures for the telephone offices of Iowa’s five largest cities. In this work John showed good judgment and sound organizing ability. Today he City, Iowa. is Telephone Manager of Sioux Besides managing day-to-day operations, helping plan tomorrow’s telephone growth is an important part of John’s job. A typical ex ample is the work he does with the Sioux City Industrial Development Association. In this role, he’s the answer man on projecting, planning and supplying the communications needs of new in dustry. He’s shown above with Bob Sweeney, manager of the Sioux City Chamber of Commerce. “You must always be thinking of the future in this business,” John says. “We have to stay ahead. I think a man who has something to offer this outfit won’t have a minute’s worry about what it can do for him.” If you’re a capable guy—looking for an action job with rapid rewards for the man who can handle it—you’ll want to visit your Placement Office fj literature and additional information* c ‘Our number one aim is to have in all management jobs the most vital, intel ligent, positive and imaginative men we can possibly find.” Frederick R. Kappel, President American Telephone & Telegraph Co. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES