The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 17, 1961, Image 3

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WAD, SCHOOL PROJECTS
JFK Urges Governors
To Support Building
By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON—President Ken-
udy Thursday prodded the nation’s
[tvernors to act at once so a
dollars in federal funds can
le poured into road and school
pojects that would put more men
I work. ,
“Use of these funds is now
lively dependent on state and
ImI action,” Kennedy said in tele-
panis to the 50 state chiefs.
“1 will appreciate your coopera-
B® to speed these and other pub-
i programs to strengthen the
sonomy in your area and through-
sit the nation.”
Ibis was a follow-through on
pedy’s announcement at his
ps conference Wednesday night
that he has ordered quickened
spending of $734 million on the
federal highway program.
In addition, Kennedy told the
governors Thursday, he has freed
$350 million for construction grants
to be used mainly for schools in
regions whose classrooms are
crowded because they serve young
sters of federal employees, along
tvith their normal pupil population.
Some of these grants also would
go for constructing hospitals and
waste treatment plants.
The billion-plus in highway and
school funds normally would have
been distributed during the three
months starting in April, the White
House said.
knual Secretaries’ Seminar
loGet Underway Tomorrow
Hrs. Mary Beth Gandy, secre-
liiy to Mr. E. L. Angell, Vice
facellor for the A&M System
uJ Secretary to the Board of Di-
jttors, will act as Mistress of
(tremonies tomorrow when the
are than 150 secretaries from
hyan, College Station and sur-
Miiing towns will attend the
sminar, “Adventures in Vari-
fa,” sponsored by the Bryan-
e Station Chapter of The
htional Secretaries Assn. (Inter
national).
Mrs. Gandy is vice president of
the local chapter and will repre
sent Bryan-College Station Chap
ter as candidiate for Secretary of
the Year at the annual Division
meeting to be held in Corpus
Christi in May.
Registrations have been received
from secretaries from Fort Worth,
Corsicana, Waco, Austin and Hous
ton and many from the Bryan-
College Station area.
In his telegrams to the gover
nors, Kennedy appealed for
“prompt consideration of specific
action at every level of govern
ment in this country to invigorate
our economy, including accelera
tion of state and local projects
that are genuinely useful and will
provide immediate jobs and busi
ness help.”
Meanwhile, the Interior Depart
ment announced it is putting
Reclamation Bureau employees in
Denver on overtime to speed
award contracts for construction
and equipment. This, the depart
ment said, is in response to Ken
nedy’s orders to help in battling
'recession.
On Capitol Hill, Republican con
gressional leaders agreed to co
operate in what they deemed sound
measures.”
But Senate GOP Leader Everett
M. Dirksen of Illinois said, “We
do not believe this is the time to
push the panic button.”
Dirksen suggested that some ad
ministration officials — Secretary
of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg, for
one—“may talk this country into
a depression and we want the tag
to be placed where it belongs.”
Along this same line, House GOP
Leader Charles Halleck of Indiana
said some Kennedy administration
spokesmen have made statements
“downgrading our country so much
that it could lead to a real in
feriority complex.”
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
FLIGHT RESEARCH CENTER
EDWARDS, CALIFORNIA
Invites Applications from Students
majoring, or with advanced degrees in:
* PHYSICS
* AERONAUTICAL engineering
* ELECTRICAL engineering
* MECHANICAL engineering
' * MATHEMATICS
TO PARTICIPATE IN AERODYNAMICS AND SPACE-ORIENTED
FLIGHT RESEARCH, AND INSTRUMENTATION DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS
involving X-15, DYNA SOAR and other advanced vehicles,
MR., Thomas R. Sisk Will be ON CAMPUS, Feb. 22nd.
FOR INTERVIEWS
Positions above are m the Career Civil Service
Thermonuclear Expert
Delivers Lecture Tonight
Dr, Robert James Mackin Jr.,
will give a graduate lecture to
night in Room 211 of the W. T.
Doherty Building. He will talk
on “Property of High-Vacuum
Ai'ch.”
The lecturer is group leader,
Thermonuclear Experiment Divi
sion, Oak Ridge National Labora
tory. The public is invited to the
lecture.
“Most of the universe is highly
ionized plasma,” Dr. Wayne C.
Hall, Dean of the Graduate School,
said yesterday, in announcing the
lecture.
“The ionized plasma or thermo
nuclear process was first outlined
by the astrophysicists in the 1930’s
as the pi'ocess responsible for en
ergy generated in the stars. Be
cause of the obviously high tem
peratures required to make it
Internal Revenue
Expert To Give
Foreigners Help
Foreign’ Student Advisor Robert
L. Melcher has annonuced an of
ficial from the Internal Revenue
Service will be on campus next
Monday and Tuesday to assist any
foreign students in filling out their
income tax forms.
He will be available at Melcher’s
office in Room 27 of Milner Hall
from 1-3 p.m. both afternoons.
The advisor reminded federal
income tax problems frequently
occur among foreigners and any
one having any questions whatso
ever should be sure and come by.
He related many persons have
previously asked for just such a
service.
UNDERPASS
(Continued From Page 1)
plans for any underpass to be in
cluded in the project.
These agreements on the part
of the railroad companies are cus
tomary and in accordance with the
rules of the United States Bureau
of Public Roads.
What effect the construction of
a multi-million dollar project, such
as the proposed crossing, would
have on College Station—especially
the North Gate area—would re
main to be seen. The Highway
Commission, which began studying
the situation in 1954, foresees
“benefits ... to the railroad com
panies, and A&M College, and the
local governments” if the proposal
is accepted.
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
lot day
2d per word each addition;
Minimum charge—40c
WANT AD RATES
3<* per word
ional day
imum charge-
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publication
Classified Display
80^ per column inch
each insertion
PHONE VI 6-6415
FOR RENT
apartment,
clean, one block from Townshire, 2108
|iloney. Phone TA 2-4201 or see Wehr-
•ut Orr’s Ridgecrest. 6414
riree bedroom, two baths, air-condition-
t automatic heat, brick, fenced. College
Redmond Realty Co. 66t8
Hoorn with private entrance and private
in College Park, call VI 6-7258. 66t8
h’o bedroom duplex furnished with
«ies. $32.00, Mrs. Cole, VI 6-7334. 66t4
■ l, 1 Fidelity Street, $45.00 furnished,
^ be inspected, VI 6-7334. 6614
TV - Radio - Hi-Fi
Service & Repair
GILS RADIO & TV
U 2.0826 101 Highland
JIM’S BARBER SHOP
Made VI 6-7407
jj? YOUR BEST. LOOK YOUR BEST
;!TH ONE OF OUR GOOD FLAT-
TOPS. OR ANY STYLE.
TWO MASTER BARBERS
2
JIM M. PYE ’58
REPRESENTING
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.
VI 6-5055 TA 2-6232
401 Cross St. C. S.
FOR RENT
Dartre room, private bath and entrance,
near campus, VI 6-4251. 61tfn
Furnished apartment with garage, util
ities paid, couple only or working girl,
VI 6-4657. . 64tfn
Small well furnished apartment, ideal
for student who wants quiet place to study.
VI 6-7248. 61tfn
Two blocks from College Station Post
Office, completely furnished apartments,
four walk-in closets, good refrigerators
ond stoves, VI 6-7248. 61tfn
Unfurnished two bedroom apartment,
220 wiring, attic fan, panel ray heat, near
Crockett School. Phone VI 6-6660 after
5 p. m. 61tfn
A one and two bedroom modem fur
nished apartment. Air conditioner if de
sired. Call after 4 p. m., TA 2-3627. 1300
Antone Street. 58tfn
Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric Shop.
98tfn
Furnished duplex apartment. Near North
Gate. Joe Speck, Walton Hall, Room H-8,
Box 873. 52tfn
HELP WANTED
Part time radio and T.V. repairman.
Must have television experience. Gil’s
Radio and T.V., 101 Highland. 65tfn
Gulfpride,
Esso, Havoline,
Sinclair Oils
29c Quart
Discount Auto Parts
AT JOE FAULK’S
214 N. Bryan
• ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
• BLUE LINE PRINTS
• BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
603 Old Sulphur Springs Road
BRYAN, TEXAS
ii, r t) l . whc ™ 1
Jvotara 5 K^afetena Cooking
the Art of
is not Lost
Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules, & Etc.
5,000 AGGIES CANT BE WRONG
LOUPOTS
FOR SALE
TRIANGLE DRIVE-IN SPECIAL
Hamburgers
20<d or 6 for $1.00
Fried Chicken
35d - 50<d - 65d
French Fries 12<f
Open 11 A. M. till 12 P. M.
For No Waiting Call
Orders In — TA 2-0766 62tfi
1953 Pontiac, motor in excellent c<
tion. $200.00 or best offer. VI 6-
WORK WANTED
DAY NURSERY, two years
twelve years nursery experience, i
Gate, Mrs. C. H. Bates, 1010 Miln
4152.
11 keep children in my hoi
41»4 Mitchell St. TA 3-6578.
hour. Call
VI 6-4006.
Mrs. Gregory,
week,
. 602
Will keep children in my home
working mothers. Mrs. P. Johnnie Coc
D-5-Y College View. 5
Expert typist, electric typewriter,
Warren, Days, VI 6-4759, nights, '
ends, VI 6-8416.
Our nursery for children all ages,
up and deliver. VI 6-8161. No answe
back.
Typing done. VI 6-7910.
service: Elect)
ing, negatives
3408 Texas Av
;rs, offset
and metal plates
ve. VI 6-5786.
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals - Sales - Service - Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators & Adding Matchines
CATES TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main TA 2-6000
Early Bird Shoppe, Inc
Curtains — Fabrics — Toys
Ridgecrest Village
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
. 303 W. 26th
TA 2-2819
work, scientists did not even think
of reproducing such reactions for
energy purposes until the nuclear
weapon developments of the 1940’s.
Realizing the tremendous ener
gy potential of this process, sci
entists throughout the world have
been working energetically in this
area of science. So far, a useful
thermonuclear reaction has not
been achieved, but many scientists
expect a break-through in the next
20 years or so. In Mackin’s talk,
he will review many of the achieve
ments made in this area of sci
ence.”
Mackin received his BE degree
in 1949 from Yale University in
Electrical Engineering; his MS
degree in 1951 from the California
Institute of Technology in Physics
and his PhD degree in 1953 from
the same institution.
THE BATTALION
Friday, February 17, 1961
College Station, Texas
Page 3
Area Churches Announce
Weekend Service Schedules
The following church schedules
have been announced for this
weekend:
Universal Day of Prayer
The Rev. James Argue of the
A&M Methodist Church will speak
during the annual Universal Day
of Prayer at the student services
to be held in the All Faith’s Cha
pel, Sunday at 5:45 p.m. The
services are open to the public.
St. Thomas Episcopal Chapel
The services for Sunday are, in
the morning, Holy Communion at
8, 9:15 and 11 and Church School
9:45.
The afternoon services will be
YPSL at 6 and Evening Prayer
will be held at 7.
During the week there will be
a daily service of Evening Prayer
at 5:30. On Wednesday there will
be Holy Communion services at
6:30 and at 10 in the morning.
At 6 p.m. there will be the Parish
Lenten Supper, and at 7 there will
be Evening Prayer, Acolyte Study
and Junior Choir practice. At 10
a.m. Saturday there will be The
Children’s Confirmation Class.
Bethel Lutheran Church
Sunday services will be Morn
ing Worship at 8:15 and 10:45.
The topic of the sermon will be
“Moses, a Type of Christ.” Sun
day School and Bible Classes will
be at 9:30 a.m.
The Wednesday Lenten Service
will be held at 7:45 p.m. The
topic of the sermon will be “A
Savior for a Cemetery.”
The Wesley Foundation
George Fry, intern at Our Sa
viour’s Lutheran Church, will be
guest speaker at the Wesley Foun
dation Wednesday evening at 7:15.
His subject will be “Worship in
Historical Perspective.”
Other Wesley Foundation events
this week will delude a Commun
ion service on Friday morning at
6:30 in the Upper Room Chapel
of the A&M Methodist Church
and the regular Sunday evening
discussion at 6 p.m. in the Wesley
Foundation building.
The A&M Methodist Church
The Sunday services will be
Morning Worship at 10:55 and the
Evening Worship at 7.
Church School will meet at 9:45
MALE HELP WANTED
Salesmen wanted. Generous commissions.
Junior or senior classifications. Contact
Charles A. Leonard. Dorm 17, Room 114,
Intramural Office, 1-6. 67t3
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, 1-6, 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 ROTC 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 8-5 except on Sat-
urday. 62tll
SPECIAL NOTICE
Electrolux Sales and Service. G. C.
Williams. TA 3-6690. 90tfn
LOST
Dissecting kit. Call Charles L. Hall,
- VI 6-7129. 67t3
SOSOLIK’S
TV - RADIO - PHONO
SERVICE
713 S. Main TA 2-1941
Whirlpool - Kenmore
Washers
Completely Rebuilt
And
"Refinished”
At A Price \ ou
Can Afford To Pay
Easy Payments
WEDEL’S
“The House Service Built”
Cavitt At Carson
The Church.. For a Fuller life. For You..
CALENDAR OF CHURCH SERVICES
ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC
CHAPEL
7 :30, 9:00 & 11:00 A.M.—Sun. Masses
6:30 A.M.—Daily Masses (Mon., Wed.,
Fri., & Sat.)
E :20 P.M.—Daily Masses (Tuesday &
Thursday)
6:30-7:30 P.M.—Confessions Saturday
& before all masses
7:20 P.M.—Rosary & Benediction Wed.
A&M CHRISTIAN CHURCH
8:30 A.M.—Coffee Time
9:45 A.M.—Sunday School
11:09 A.M.—Morning Service*
BETHEL LUTHERAN
CHURCH
4 Missouri Synod)
8:15 A.M.—Morning Worship
9:30 A.M.—Church School
10:45 A.M.—Morning Worship
UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP
4:00-5:30 P.M.—Friday School, YMCA
8:00 P.M.—First four Sundays of each
month—Fellowship Meeting, Call VI 6-
5888 for further information.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
OF LATTER DAY SAINTS
20th East and Coulter, Bryan
8 :30 A.M.—Priesthood Meeting
10:00 A.M.—Sunday School
6:30 P.M.—Sacrament Meeting
FAITH CHURCH
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
9:15 A.M.—Sunday School
10:30 A.M.—Morning Worship
7:30 P.M.—Evening Service
CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE
10:07 A.M.—Sunday Sehool
11:01 A.M.—Morning Worship
0:30 P.M.—Young People’s Servles
7:30 P.M.—Preaching Service
ST. THOMAS
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion
9:16 A.M.—Family Service
11:00 A.M.—Sermon
7:00 P.M.—Evening Prayer
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
SOCIETY
9:30 a.m.—Sunday School
II :00 a.m.—Sunday Service
8:00 P.M.—Wed. Evening Service
1:00-4:00 p. m. Tuesdays—Reading
Room
7:00-8:00 P.M.—Wed., Reading Room
A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST
9:45 A.M.—Bible Claasea
10:45 A.M.—Morning Worship
6:15 P.M.—Bible Class
7:15 P.M.—Evening Service
COLLEGE HEIGHTS
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
9:45 A.M.—Sunday School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
8:30 P.M.—Young People’s Service
7:30 P.M.—Evening Worship
A&M METHODIST CHURCH
9:45 A.M.—Sunday School
10:55 A.M.—Morning Worship
5:30 & 6:00 P.M.—MYF Meetings
7:00 P.M,—Evening Worship
OUR SAVIOUR’S
LUTHERAN CHURCH
8:15 & 10:45 A.M.—The Church at
Worship
9:30 A.M.—The Church at Study with
Special Bible Discussion
Classes for Aggies
Holy Communion—First Sunday Each
Month
A&M PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
9.45 A.M.—Church School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
9:40 A.M.—Church School
11:00 A.M.—Worship
6:15 P.M.—Training Union
7:15 P.M.—Worship
SR'S ~ > I _ -V, „
■ -LLi r--* 4. f> ? 11 $
pr i/rl£UlfY. W •
Somehow we don’t think of the baby’s bas
sinette as a “scientific development.” But it is.
It has been designed to protect a child from
exterior hazards—and from himself.
Religion isn’t what we would call “scien
tific.” But it, too, embraces this theory of dou
ble protection.
The man or woman who worships God faith
fully is prepared for the unexpected crises in
life. And his mature conscience is ready to cope
with temptation.
This isn’t to say that nothing ever goes
wrong for the ardent church-goer. But he meets
each outward or inward challenge with ade
quate spiritual resources.
There are impelling reasons why you need
the Church and its undergirding strength. And
for every one that is evident today, there are
others you’ll confront tomorrow.
Copyright 1961. Keister Ail. Sen-ice, Slrmburg, \’a.
The Church is the greatest factor on
earth for the building of character and
good citizenship. It is a storehouse of
spiritual values. Without a strong
Church, neither democracy nor civiliza-t
tion can survive. There ate four sound
reasons why every person should at
tend services regularly and support the
Church. They are: (1) For his own sake.
(2) For his children’s sake. (3) For the
sake of his community and nation. (4)
For the sake of the Church itself, which
needs his moral and material support.
Plan to go to church regularly and read
your Bible daily.
Day Book.
I Peter
Psalms
John
Chaplet Verses
Sunday
Monday
Tuesd;
*J4i(lier funeral ^JJo
BRYAN, TEXAS
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PHONE TA, 2-1572
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