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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 15, 1961)
to see till the part Hate Arab Leader Speaks fo Group Here Tomorrow *ierre WilsmA discussion and social hour will 9 1 6 \ ermoii held after the talk, according I ouston, Dr. Vance Edmondson, associate ' 'ofessor in the Department of jricultural Economics and So- logy and the club’s faculty ad- Born a Christian Arab in Pales- e, Eadawi spent 30 years in the •vice of the Palestine govern- nt. From 1937 until the Brit- i withdrawal in 1948, he was ief of the Land Taxation Sec- m of the Department of Land ttlement. He later joined the Sami Hedawi, director of the rablInformation Bureau at Dal is, will be the main speaker at Corps Juniors & Sophomores Year book Portrait Schedule JUNIORS & SOPHOMORES in ®\ f the corps will have their por traits made for the “AGGIE- LAND ’61” according to the fol lowing schedule. Portraits will be made in CLASS A WINTER UNIFORM at the Aggieland Studio, between the hours of i8:00 AM and 5:00 PM on the ays scheduled. iFeb. 13-14 | 14-15 1 15-U> I 16-17 W 20-21 ■ 21-22, 22-23 I 23-24 I 27-28 A-l, B-l C-l, D-l E-l, F-l G-l, H-l A-2, B-2 B-2, C-2 E-2, F-2 G-2, G-3 H-2,1, K, L, M, (-2) IjhFeb, 28-March 1 Maroon Band ■ 1-2 White Band II 2-3 Squadron 1-3 1 6-7 Squadron 5-6 K 7-8 Squadron 7-9 § 8-9 Squadron 10-12 fe 9-10 Squadron 13-17 the meeting tomorrow night of the A&M Arab Students Club. The speaker’s talk, “Current Problems of the Middle East and Their Relationship to U. S. For eign Policy,” will be heard at 7:30 p.m. in the Assembly Room of the Memorial Student Center. Fathi M. Salama, club president and graduate student in biochem istry, said the public is invited to hear Hedawi. service of the Jordon government, first as Director of Land Tax As sessments and then as Chief of the Inland Land Revenue Depart ment of the Finance Ministry of Amman. He resigned his post in 1952 to take up the appointment of Land Specialist with the United Na tions in New York. The speaker resigned from the United Nations, and together with a fellow Palestine Arab refugee, established the Palestine Arab Ref- i ugee Office in New York in 1955. I He also acted as Advisor on Pales- j tine Arab Refugee Affairs to the Permanent Mission of Iraq to the J United Nations. In 1959, he was transferred to the Arab States Delegations Of fice as Chief of the Public Liaison Section, and Advisor on Palestine Arab Refugee Affairs to the Per manent Mission of Yemen to the United States. Salama said Hadawi is recog nized as an expert on matters af fecting land in Palestine. His du ties as official valuer and inspect or of tax assessments in the Pales tine government brought him into intimate contact with the land, the people and their problems. He also is considered an authority on Arab affairs in general. REPAIRS ON ALL MAKES & MODELS T.V.s-RADIOS-RECORD PLAYERS RECORDERS - CAR RADIOS and TOASTERS - IRONS - ROASTERS - MIXERS PERCOLATORS - VACUUM CLEANERS - WAFFLERS - FANS - LAMPS - ELECTRIC RAZORS DOERGE RADIO & T.V. SERVICE 3212 Doerge St. TA 2-0223 Midway Bryan & College Off Sulpher Springs ltd. THE BATTALION Wednesday, February 15, 1961 College Station,'Texas Page 3 denounce hammarskjold Soviets Demand Removal Of UN Troops In Congo m For The Best Banquet Service Anywhere Plan Your Banquet At The TRIANGLE RESTAURANT FOR WEDDINGS AND WEDDING RECEPTIONS Midway Plan Now At The Triangle — CALL MRS. FERRERI TA 2-1352 3606 S. College - Addresses Foundrymen Warren C. Jeffery addresses the annual state meeting of the American Foundryman’s Society held on campus over the weekend. Jeffrey spoke on ductile iron and its uses in the industry. A smorgasbord was held after the addresses in the Memorial Student Center. $20,000 Grant Presented Vet Microbiology Department The National Institutes of Health have approved a research grant of $20,000, to the Texas Ag ricultural Experiment Station and the Department of Veterinary Mi crobiology, Dr. L. C. Grumbles, Head of the Department, announc ed today. The annual grant for three years will be used to support research on swine diseases. The research will be under the supervision of Dr. R. W. Moore, assistant profes sor in the Department of Veteri nary Microbiology. “This research has public health importance as well as being of great-potential importance to the swine industry of Texas,” Grum bles says. The research will be directed mainly toward finding the causes of infectious enteritis in testinal diseases of the swine. Grumbles says that “there is evidence that some of the viruses associated with swine diseases may also affect man. Through the luse of newer methods such as tissue culture and recently devel oped special staining techniques, Moore hopes to clarify the role of viruses, bacteria and parasites in causing enteritis of swine.” By The Associated Press MOSCOW—In fiery reaction to Patrice Lumumba’s death, the So viet Union demanded Tuesday that all foreign troops quit the Congo and asserted it will no longer rec ognize Dag Hammarskjold as U.N. secretary-general. The Soviets called for recogni tion of Antoine Gizenga, Lumum ba’s fanatic lieutenant who heads a Stanleyville regime, as the Con go premier and offered him every help. Obviously referring to the U.N. Command—now totaling about 18,- 000 men—and a few score white mercenaries in the armed forces of secessionist Katanga Province, the Soviet government demanded that they clear out within a month. The broadside followed a five- hour mob attack on the Belgian Embassy, led by foreign students of the expenses-paid People’s Friendship University who called Lumumba a martyr of imperial ism. Hammarskjold, Belgium and two Congolese leaders—Katanga’s President Moise Tshombe and the Congo national army chief, Maj. Gen. Joseph Mobutu—were de nounced in a government state ment issued through the govern ment paper Izvestia and Soviet news agency Tass. The statement called for - dis missal of Hammarskjold “as an accessory to and organizer of the murder of the leading statesman of the Congo,” U.N. BAXTER HOUSE MOTOR HOTEL Dallas’ Most Luxurious Motor Hotel • Each room is sound proof for your conven- ience and fire proof for your safety • Large and spacious bedrooms . . . Longboy beds in every room .... • Complete food service, including Terrace Room Restaurant, Coffee Shop open 24 hours; and outdoor patio service • Individual penumatic temperature control for • Olympic-size heated swimming pool • Texas hero suites • Your own coffee maker in each room • Carpeted sidewalks • Plenty of parking space • Beauty Shop . . . Barber Shop . . . Gift Shop • Laundromat for convenience of guests • 21-inch television, hi-fi-music and radio in each room, including message light indicator. — WE INVITE YOU— For The Corps Trip Weekend or Any Other Time Telephone BILL S. ADKINS Write BL 4-0151 Managing Director P. O. Box 10736—Dallas BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES One day 3<* per word 2«! per word each additional day Minimum charge—40<! DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publication Classified Display 80<* per column inch each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR RENT Three bedroom, two baths, air-condition- ic heat, brick, fenced. .utomatii Redmond Realty Co. Colle 66 j i m life, / Room with private entrance and private f/U ath in College Park, call VI 6-7268. 66t8 M One two bedroom furnished apartment, 5.00, phone VI 6-8606 after 5. 66tfn ' Two bedroom duplex furnished with v TBftilities. $32.00, Mrs. Cole, VI 6-7334. 66t4 207 Fidelity Street, $45.00 furnished, lay be inspected, VI 6-7334. 66t4 ily! Nice furnished apartment, near Colle all TA 2-3055. 6 Large room, private bath and entrance, ear campus, VI 6-4251. 61tfn ragi ;ies paid, couple only or working girl, issmet are tri 6-4657. 64tfn rch and desijjT Small well furnished apartment, ideal iet place to study. 6-7248. 61tfn istantly StriWpr student who wants qu convenient anil FOR RENT One large comfortable room in my home, 401 Dexter, VI 6-4233. 60tfn Room with private entrance, private bath, 1014 Walton Drive, $30.00. For men. 60tfn A one and two bedroom modern fur nished apartment. Air conditioner if de sired. Call after 4 p. m., TA 2-3627. 1300 Antone Street. 68tfn Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric Shop. 98tfn Furnished duplex apartment. Near North Gate. Joe Speck, Walton Hall, Room H-8, Box 873. 52tfn FOR SALE For sale cheap 741 Inwood Drive, $2,- 500.00 equity. $7,768, remaining balance Make an offer. Keys at Berger Realtors. Reply to O. J. James, Box 660, Roswell. New Mexico. 64t4 TRIANGLE DRIVE-IN SPECIAL Hambu 00 Hamburgers 20(‘ or 6 for $1.00 Fried Chicken 35«! - 50(1 - eStf French Fries 12<f Open 11 A. M. till 12 P. M. For No Waiting Call Orders In — TA 2-0766 62tfn Two blocks from College Station Post 'ffice, completely furnished apartments, Hind it a net 1 W walk-in closets, good refrigerators b d nd stoves, VI 6-7248. 61tfn standard des# ’OllimineSCeilt Unfrimished two bedroom apartment, 20 wiring, attic fan, panel ray heat, near ng, and can K tockett School. Phone VI 6-6660 after 1953 Pontiac, motor tion. $200.00 in ex< best offer. cellent condi- VI 6-7540. 66t4 jng anywhere- 0f a11 debts ’ men are Ieast wil1 ' ial and handset^ to pay taxes - What a satire is nd the conveii' hls on government!—Ralph Waldo Imerson the home were matic Electric, jy ment to Ameii' - Radio - Hi-Fi Service & Repair v General Tele GILS RADIO & TV we equipment ^ 2-0826 101 Highland the home, (of both here ani' ——————— 'TradsW TIM , S BARBEB SH0P Southside VI 6-7407 BE YOUR BEST, LOOK YOUR BEST WITH ONE OF OUR GOOD FLAT- TOPS. OR ANY STYLE. TWO MASTER BARBERS Baby bed, mattress, stroller, desk, chair chest. 2701 South College Avenue, TA 2' 0844. 66t; LOST & FOUND de Rule, green case, lost some- Academic Bldg. If found, call K&E Slide where in VI 6-6861 or contact Fred Brison, West Dexter, College Station. TYPEWRITERS Rentals - Sales - Service - Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Matchines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main TA 2-6000 Gulfpride, Esso, Havoline, Sinclair Oils 29c x... Quart Discount Auto Parts AT JOE FAULK’S 214 N. Bryan irles M. Sclii THE* MERE MENDS FEEL WM PROP IN \rniy III I’ () i • Where the \Jwotard A L^aJ cleria Cooking is the Art of not Lost Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules, & Etc. 5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG LOUPOTS WORK WANTED Will keep children in my home. Any age. 414 Mitchell St. TA 3-6578. 66t4 Experienced mother will keep baby in her home, 307 Live Oak, College Station, VI 6-7049. 66t3 DAY NURSERY by the week, day or hour. Call Mrs. Gregory, 602 Boyett. VI 6-4005. 120tfn Dependable child care for working mothers. Nice play room and fenced yard. References. VI 6-6007. 61tfn Would like to keep children for working mothers. Mrs. Richard Miller, D-7-Y Col lege View. 60tfn Will keep children in my home for working mothers. Mrs. P. Johnnie Cooper, D-5-Y College View. 63tfn Expert typist, electric typewriter, Mrs. Warren, Days, VI 6-4759, nights, week ends, VI 6-8416. 47tfn Our nursery for children all ages. Pick up and deliver. VI 6-8151. No answer call back. 42tfn Typing done. VI 6-7910. 21tfn Why wait until last minute to get your Theses reports, etc. to Bi-City Secretarial service? Electric typewriters, offset print ing, negatives and metal plates made. 3408 Texas Ave. VI 6-6786. 87tfn FEMALE HELP WANTED Secretary for permanent position with Texas Forest Service. Previous secretarial experience required. Must have minimum of high school education with standard business school course. One with college training preferred. Ability to take short hand, type with speed and accuracy, use dictaphone, and operate commonly used office machines essential. Prefer one who will be in residence at least 3 years. Call Texas Forest Service, phone VI 6-4771. 65t3 MALE HELP WANTED Salesmen wanted. Generous commissions. Junior or senior classifications. Contact Charles A. Leonard, Dorm 17, Room 114, Intramural Office. 67t3 HELP WANTED Part time radio and T.V. repairman. Must have television experience. Gil’s Radio and T.V., 101 Highland. 65tfn Early Bird Shoppe, Inc Curtains — Fabrics — Toys Ridgecrest Village • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS » • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES 603 Old Sulphur Springs Road BRYAN. TEXAS SOSOLIK’S TV - RADIO - PHONO SERVICE 713 S. Main TA 2-1941 1 m OFFICIAL NOTICES Official notices must be brought, mailed or telephoned so as to arrive in the Office of 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 preceding publication — Director of Student Publica tions. All Military Science II students will re port to basement Sbisa mess hall Saturday 18 February 1961 at 0845 hours to take the ROTO qualifying examination. 67t3 CANDIDATES FOR DEGREE Any student (graduate or undergraduate) who expect to complete the requirements for a degree by the end of the Spring Semester 1961 should call by the Registrar’s Office immediately and make formal ap plication for the degree. March 1 is the deadline for filing applications for degrees to be conferred at the end of the current semester. This deadline applies to both graduate and undergraduate candidates. H. L. Heaton, Director of Admissions and Registrar 67t24 Attention: Spring Graduates You can now order your graduation an nouncements at the Cashier’s Window in the Memorial Student Center from Febru ary 7-28 everyday from 8-6 except on Sat urday. 62tll SPECIAL NOTICE SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300, A.F. & A.M. College Station, Texas a • Called meeting Thursday, /N\ Feb. 16 at 7 p. m. E. A. Examination and M. M. De- grec. C. W. Trossen, W.M. Joe Woolket, Sec. 67t2 Electrolux Sales and Service. G. C. Williams. TA 3-6600. 90tfn LOST Dissecting kit. Call Charles L. Hall, VI 6-7129. 67t3 HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th TA 2-2819 JIM M. PYE ’58 REPRESENTING Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. VI 6-5055 TA 2-6232 401 Cross St. C. S. Whirlpool - Kenmore Washers Completely Rebuilt And “Refinished” At A Price You Can Afford To Pay Easy Payments WEDEL’S “The House Service Built'” Cavitt At Carson *lt, eSe t, J elv f ® reat Stife! recordings-in one 12 LP alDum-for *122 and ten empty Lucky Strike packs! Custom-pressed by Columbia for Lucky Strike—an album of unforgettable hits! Look at this album. Imagine these 12 great artists, great hits together on one record! Here are the original record ings—magnificently reproduced by Columbia Record Pro ductions ($3.98 value). Never before have all these great artists been brought together in one album! Never be fore have you been able to buy these great hits at such a bargain price! To get your album, fill in and mail the shipping label at right with $1.00 and ten empty Lucky Strike packs to “Remember How Great,” P. 0. Box 3600, Spring Park, Minnesota. REMEMBER HOW GREAT CIGARETTES USED TO TASTE? LUCKIES STILL DO To get ‘‘Remember How Great” album, enclose and mail $1.00 and 10 empty Lucky Strike packs, together with filled-in shipping label. Please print clearly. Orders received after May 31, 1961, will not be honored. If sending check or money order, make payable to "Remember How Great.” ^veinn'erfoilwrap^tear !$ kS m ai| W wf $1-0° and shipping label. SHIPPING LABEL "Remember How Great” P. O. Box 3600 Spring Park, Minnesota TO YOUR NAME. (PRINT YOUR NAME HERE) STREET. CITY. -ZONE. -STATE. Offer good only in U. S. A. and Puerto Rico. ©THE AMERICAN TOBACCO CO.