HERE NEXT WEEK 79th Beekeepers Meeting Slated A wide variety of topics, from insecticides to beeswax rendering, will be discussed here during the 79th annual Texas Beekeepers Assn, meeting Nov. 14-15, The session, which will be held in the Memorial Student Center, is sponsored by the association in co-operation with A&M. Claud Burgin, association sec retary and an A&M entomologist, said the conference is held each year to keep members abreast of the latest developments and prob lems in the honey production busi ness. Initial Address Following registration at 8 a.m. the first day, talks will get under way with a welcoming address at 9:15 by Dr. J. C. Gaines, head of the Department of Entomology. Next is a response by R. Stanley Weaver of Navasota and an ad dress by TBA President Charles S. Engle of Wolfe City. Other speakers and their sub- LITTLE APS, 1 fes jects the first day are Gaines, “Safe Use of Insecticides”; Wal ter Barth, general manager, A. I. Root Co. in San Antonio, “Render ing Beeswax—from Bee to Mar ket”; John Thomas, Texas Agri cultural Extension Service ento mologist, “Short Distance Migra tory Beekeeping”; Carroll Spencer of Austin, agricultural statistician, “The Texas Crop and Livestock Reporting Service.” Also Also, Dr. Raymond D. Staten, associate professor in the Depart ment of Agronomy, “Problems in Sweet Clover Production”; Dr. Nevin Weaver, A&M entomologist, “Bee Research”; E. B. Ault of Weslaco, “Report on Royal Jelly Foundation,” and Lawrence Lange of Corpus Christi, “Report on American Honey Institute Activi ties.” The Nov. 15 session will be de voted mostly to various busipess meetings of the association. Burgin said the first day’s meet ing also will feature panel discus sions and a 7:30 banquet. The banquet toastmaster will be Ai B. Kennerly of the Agricultural In formation Office and the main speaker will be the Rev. Jim Ar gue, pastor of the A&M Methodist Church. Fake me to your Esterbrook dealer! 1 tP • • Attention earthlings! The word is getting around! Esterbrook Fountain Pens are out of this world! i With 32 custom-fitted pen points there’s an Ester brook to fit any writing personality-star-struck or earth-bound. The Esterbrook Classic is only $2.95 and great for class notes. It starts to write as soon as you do ... with that amazing new miracle discovery-ink! Feels just right in the hand, too-not fat, not thin, looks good, too! Colors? There’s*a veritable rain bow to choose from. Pick your favorite of six col ors. Why not today? No space ship needed. Just zero in on your Esterbrook dealer. ■" 4l $dtn£tco/i SIma *T.M. The Esterbrook Pen Co. THE CLASSIC FOUNTAIN PEN $2.95 Othar Esterbrook pens from $1.93 ESTERBROOK PENS May Be Purchased THE EXCHANGE STORE “Serving Texas Aggies” THE BATTALION Wednesday, November 9, 1960 College Station, Texas Page 3" OF GRAND CANYON Occupation Record Opening Horizons Milk Medalists Receive Awards James W. Bennett, a senior agriculture major from Bryan, (left to right) are Bonnie Sue Houghtaling, the American stands at the far left as one of the three top winners in the Dairy Princess; master of ceremonies Red Grange : Edgar milk division of the 26th Collegiate Students’ International S. Hoak, Oregon State, and John W. Hocking, University Contest in Judging Dairy Products at Chicago. Also shown of Illinois. Harte, Scientific Information Coordinator, To Speak Here “Documentation and Informa-1 logical Chemistry of the American tion Retrieval” will be discussed Chemical Society. He is presently tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the Lecture Room of the Biological Sciences Building. The public is invited to the speaking, Dr. Wayne C. Hall, Dean of the Graduate School, says: The speaker, Robert A. Harte, is coordinator, scientific informa tion, Merck, Sharp and Dohme, West Point, Pa. Previous to his present position as Coordinator of Scientific In formation for Merck, Sharp and Dohme, Harte has held the posi tions of research administrator and of executive assistant, admin istration, of the same firm. He is qualified to bridge admin istration and research, having worked for 10 years with Dr. Karl Ladsteiner on immunochemistry at the Rockefeller Institute and conducted research on nutrition and the chemistry of allergens as Chief Research Chemist for the Arlington Chemical Co. of Yon kers, N. Y., for seven years, Hall says. Elected Positions Harte has been elected to a num ber of offices in several societies, including being twice chairman of Gordon Research Conferences, and treasurer of the Division of Bio serving , on committees of a num ber of national and international organizations concerned with doc umentation and retrieval of sci entific information. He will review the explosive growth of scientific literature in recent years and the efforts that are being-made to organize that literature in order to make it available to those who need it. He will develop techniques of in dexing by mechanized systems, and the philosophy, logic and op eration of the mechanized system of Merck, Sharp, and Dohme. i 4 The future of mechanized sys tems of scientific literature re trieval will be explored, it is pointed out. UT Staff Member Speaks To Group The Rev. Eddie Shaw, Wesley Foundation staff member from the University of Texas will be the speaker at tonight’s meeting of the A&M Wesley Foundation. His address will deal with the relationship of faith to interper sonal relationships. The program will begin at 7:15 p.m. Shaw was Director of the Wes ley Foundation at Rice prior to his assuming his present position at the University of Texas. He is an outstanding leader in the Texas Methodist Student Movement. ‘Nude’ Makes Senators Sad By The Associated Press [LEXINGTON, Ky.—A prehis- toidc record of human occupation in the Grand Canyon is opening new horizons of exploration for American archeologists. The record dates back nearly 3j,t>00 years, but only recently has alky methodical work been done to study the American Indians kdio first undertook to live in the canyon’s rugged environment. Back in 1929 some pictures were made of corn graneries in caves along the canyon walls, but it wasn’t until 20 years later that the real history of the canyon’s human past began to unfold. The man responsible for the work is Dr. Douglas W. Schwartz, director of the University of Ken tucky Museum of Anthropology. Started In 1949 Schwartz started surveying the area in 1949 and in 1954 discov ered in caves some animal figur ines made from soft twigs. Ritual spears were stuck through some of the figurines, indicating their Indian makers hoped to better their chances in hunting through magic. Radiocarbon tests showed the figurines were made about 1,500 B.C. This age test is based on the fact that all living things ab sorb carbon 14 during life and that the radioactive isotope deter iorates at a known rate after death. Sixth Trip This summer Schwartz made his sixth trip into the canyon and found more granaries, a boulder covered with stone carvings, thou sands of pottery fragments and remains of about 50 pueblos. Schwartz, 33, describes the can yon’s human past from the infor mation now available. The first Indians came to the Grand Canyon about 3,500 years ago and lived by hunting. After 1,500 B.C., the canyon records are blank, and the next date that enters the picture is about 500 A.D., when agricultural Indians arrived. They came in from different areas and were not related. This moving-in period lasted until about 900 A.D. Population Explosion Then came a population explo sion and the Indians began to move into the canyon from the rims. This migration was at its peak by 1,000 A.D., and a century later the rims were abandoned. The major Indian occupation of the Grand Canyon was from 1,000 A.D. to 1,200 A.D., when the en tire canyon again was abandoned except for a small area inhabited by the Havasupai Indians, who still live there. Evidence indicates the Havasu pai started moving into the tow ering cliffs by 1,100 A.D., per haps to escape raids, then moved back down into the valley when the others left. SAFETY By The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Congress gulped' at the colossal statue it had ordered. There sat the father of his coun try, half-nude and togged out as a Roman senator in toga and san dals.' His right ' hand , was held aloft, finger pointing sternly to the sky. A broadsword rested on his knee. That was in 1841, and Congress and the nation have been wrang ling about memorials to presidents ever since. Now the big debate is over a Theodore Roosevelt memorial. A three-ringed celestial sphere mod el blew up in the Senate last ses sion after T. R.’s daughter, Alice Roosevelt Longworth, said it would desecrate the memory of anyone. Saddest of All Probably the saddest of all me morial rhubarbs boiled up over Horatio Greenough’s famous “nude” statue of George Washing ton. A Bostonian living in Florence, Italy, Greenough labored for eight years on his sculpture then con signed his finished work to a ship. In 1841, hauling a 20-ton marble Scholar dollars travel farther with SHERATON HOTELS STUDENT- FACULTY DISCOUNTS Save on the goingjprices of going places at Sheraton Hotels. Your Sheraton card gets you special save-money rates on singles and greater savings per person when you share a room with one, two or three friends. Generous group rates arranged for athletic teams, clubs and college clans on-the-go. Send for your Sheraton Student I.D. Card or Faculty Guest Card with credit privileges. Please tell us where you are a student or full-time faculty member when you write to: MR. PAT GREEN College Relations Dept. Sheraton Corporation 470 Atlantic Avenue Boston 10, Mass- Beverley Braley, Tours-Travel Mr. Julius Christian, P. O. Box 5778 College Station, Tex. Phone VI 6-7744 statue from Florence to Washing ton was no easy job. Congress had to shell out for damage to trees along the road from Florence to the port of Leghorn. Since no available Navy ship was big enough, a private vessel was chartered for $5,000. Finally the work arrived in the capital. Had Greenough titled his half- draped work “Julius Caesar,” a later critic said, the heroic, Tar- zan-torsoed figure might now be ranked with the great works of art. The drapery has been called wonderful, and the bared muscles almost seem to ripple. Washington’s Bath-Night? But to most observers the half- clad concept of the hero of Valley Forge was incongruous. It re minded them, as architect Charles Bulfinch said then, of somebody leaving a bath. Despite criticism, the statue stood in front of the Capitol for 66 years. Sixteen presidents gazed at it during inaugural ceremonies. But with the completion of the Washington Monument, Green ough’s work became less and less popular. Finally, in 1908, Congress ap propriated $5,000 and had it hauled off to the Smithsonian In stitution, where it was placed in an obscure chapel in the Graphic Arts Building behind a bank of antique printing presses. Teddy Again But to get back to Teddy Roose velt: Their futuristic sphere rejected, the memorial planners are casting about for a brand new, Congress pleasing design. But there’s a new hitch—Congress now says the selected plan must be okayed by Roosevelt’s living children. The site, however, is certain—a wood ed isle in the Potomac already called Theodore Roosevelt Island. Former Student ReceivesPromotion To USDA Position Dr. Charles J. Koerth, Jr., has recently been promoted to the po sition of Assistant Inspector in Charge of the Sioux Falls, S. Dak., station of the Meat Inspection Di vision of the United States De partment of Agriculture. He goes to Sioux Falls from Scottsbluff, Neb., where he had held the posi tion of Inspector in Charge since 1957. Koex-th entered the Meat Inspec tion Service at Ft. Worth in 1949. Subsequent assignments were at Yakima, Wash., and Portland, Ore. A native Texan, he received his degree of Doctor of Veterinary Medicine from A&M in 1946. He is married and the father of one daughter and two sons. (Continued from Page 1) and late in the evenings. Studies planned by the Commit tee for future action include: Considering the lessening of traffic hazards created by students in the streets before and after Yell Practice. Considering putting a coarse surface on the steps of the YMCA and the civilian dorms, which are dangerously slippery during rainy weather, and considering putting rubber stops on the sharp edges of the metal doors of dormitories. The Accident Prevention Com- mitte also' looked into safety pre cautions for the coming Bonfire and may call a special meeting within the next week. The Stu dent Safety Society is already tak ing steps in this direction'and is going to show safety movies to the freshmen this week. Members of the Accident Pre vention Committee include: J. L. Boone, W. G. Breazeale, B. M. Cooley, C. J. Keese, W. B. Lancaster, V. B. Phipps, R. L. Rogers, Capt. P. J. Shepard, W. L. Ulich, L. A. Griggs, John Harring ton, R. J. Brown, Bill Hicklin and Segrest. -p 1; o £ tz uz .2 1 |; i ^ ^ . I ~- E W - a - ri! ^ m * “S -J .U >7 : milt? mmet O '•91 J. ? : r ;2^ 6 • 111 iT S aVC-ia — 1 u- o _s c LU 0£ ■ ? * «) Q£ > 0 g 5 x o iL ^ >- O LU U_ Q BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES FOR RENT 2( per word each additional day Minimum charge—40tf DEADLINES 4 p.m. day before publication Classified Display SOc* per column inch each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 Small furnished apartment. Near North Gate. Ideal for two boys who want to study and get by cheap. Phone VI 6-7248. 135tfn Two bedroom unfurnished three year old apartment. Stove and refrigerator funished. 509 First Street. VI 6-8150. 130tfn FOR RENT FOR SALE Three room furnished farm house for a couple of Aggies that care to rough it. $30.00 per month. Phone VI 6-4669. 25tfn 1959 Renault Dalphine, $850.00, good con dition, one owner, VI 6-6076. 28t4 One bedroom brick duplex unfurnished apartment. Central heating, 220 wiring, carport, 312 Second St. Phone VI 6-6468. 134tfn 1960 Renault Dauphine, turquoise with whita interior, only seven months old. Just like new. VI 6-7676. 27t4 Three bedroom house in Redmond Ter race, 106 Redmond Dr., College Station. Low down paymnt and assume $14,200 FHA Loan. VI 6-8383. 27t5 Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric Shop. 98tfn Furnished duplex apartment. Near North Gate. Joe Speck, Dorm 16, Room 219. 21U9 LOST Nice, clean one bedroom furnished house. One block off Campus. $55:00. Call VI 6- 6638 or VI 6-5711. 17tfn Serge shirt at Ellison’s Pharmacy. Name on collar. Contact at 14-213. 27t4 CHILD CARE 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 Desire a child up to the age of four years, have references, Mrs. Melba Hecox, 305 Foch, Bryan, VI e-tOeS. 30t3 TYPEWRITERS Rentals - Sales - Service - Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main TA 2-6000 Early Bird Shoppe, Inc Curtains — Fabrics — Toy* Ridgecrest Village if" SOSOLIK’S TY - RADIO - PHONO SERVICE 713 S Main TA 2-1941 • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATi SCOATESINDUSTRIES 603 Old Sulphur Springs Road BRYAN TEXAS WORK WANTED Our nursery for children all ages. Pick nd deliver. VI 6-8151. No answer call 28tl4 up a: back Typing done. VI 6-7910. TYPING Typing done electrically, r Very reasonable. VI 6-8400. Near Campus. Ht32 SPECIAL NOTICE SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300, A.F. & A.M. College Station, Texas Stated meeting, Thursday ) U. W. Trossen, 1 Joe Woolket, Sec’y I p. m Have cute kittens to give away. VI 6- 8630. 304 Live Oak. 29t4 and metal ] i. VI 6-5786. made. 87tfn WANTED TO BUY Motor scooter, reasonable. VI 6-6417. 27tfn FEMALE HELP WANTED 15 Girl Scouts need a 21 for 6095. Scouts need a young lady over leader. If interested, call VI 6- 28t4 BRYAN AQi ARU M CO. TROPICAL FISH Aquariums - Plants - Supplies ranks 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 W. Carson Phone TA 2-6385 Electrolux Sales and Service. Williams. TA 3-6600, G. C. 90tfn DAY NURSERY by the week, day , 602 Boye 120tfn hour. Call VI 6-4005. Mrs. Gregory Boyett. MALE HELP WANTED Excellent int< oppi sted man interested in a rewarding career. Reply giving sales experience. Box 7864, University Station, Austin 12, Texas. 28tR JIM M. PYE ’58 REPRESENTING Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. VI 6-5055 TA 2-6232 401 Cross St. C. S. PRESTONE ANTI-FREEZE GALLON $1.89 CHAMPION SPARK PLUGS EACH 69* JOE FAULK’S 214 N. Bryan TV - Radio - HiFi Service & Repair GILS RADIO & TV TA 2-0826 101 Highland | MotarJ A Caf$t*rla C^k^h Not U$t |