The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 21, 1961, Image 3

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8 todaj,
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n terms
2 speed”
i sphere
7,900
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can one
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is one
rth as a
a space
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ay
Apr. 1 has been set for the dead-
for filing applications for stu-
leet publication editorships for the
thool year 1961-62. The Director
if Student Publications, Lee Due-
rail, made the announcement yes-
ierday.
The six positions to be filled
jre: editor of The Battalion, edi-
ior The Agriculturist, editor of
Die Engineer, editor of the Texas
A&M Review, editor of The South-
Mstern Veterinarian and editor of
Re Aggieland.
The applications will be re
newed by the Student Publications
loard and their recommendations
rill be sent to the deans of the
to degree granting schools and
President Earl Rudder for their
ipproval.
Minimum requirements for the
ditorships are:
Applicants must be either of
junior or senior classification.
They must be free from aca-
itmic and disciplinary probation.
Each must have clearly demon-
itrated above average achievement
ud ability.
Applicants must have had a
MX JOBS OPEN
Deadline Nearing
For Editor Filings
Engineer Meet
Guests Named
L. M. Haupt of the Department
([Electrical Engineering today an-
loimced that Arthur M. Smith and
ID.Chenoweth, will be the speak
er and toastmaster at the Apr. 18
inner of the 14th annual Con-
ltrence for Protective Relay En-
(ineers, to be held at the College
ipr, 17-19. .
Haupt is conference chairman.
Smith is professor, Baptist Chair
if Bible, A&M, and Chenoweth is
the School of Mines, Uni-
ursity of Missouri. Smith will
j pite an illustrated lecture on “The
land of Three Religions.”
Dr. Wayne C. Hall, Dean of the
Craduate School, will give the wel-
:oir.e address to the more than
1 due to attend the conference.
minimum of one year’s experience
working on the named publication.
Each must have proven ability
to carry on the work of publica
tions in a manner creditable by the
Student Publications Board.
Distributors
Set Dinner
Here Tonight
The Department of Industrial
Education will serve as hosts to
the Houston and Dallas-Ft. Worth
Chapters of the Southern Indus
trial Distributors Assn, at a din
ner meeting here tonight.
The speaker for the occasion
will be H. C. Moses Jr., vice pres
ident of the western division of
Thomas and Betts Corp. of Eliza
beth, N. J. This company markets
over 30,000 items pertaining to
residential, commercial and indus
trial electronics and nuclear ma
chinery. Moses will talk on the
possibilities of industrial distribu
tion for a college graduate.
There will be a panel of five
prominent Houston and Dallas in
dustrial distributors to discuss
topics of general interest to stu
dents majoring in industrial dis
tribution.
Moses has been associated with
the Thomas and Betts Corp. for
17 years and is imminently quali
fied because of his national lead
ership in the field of industrial
distribution, C. H. Groneman, Head
of the Department of Industrial
Education, said today.
Miss Lorraine Smith from Mc
Graw-Hill Publishing Co. of New
York will cover the meeting for
releases to the monthly magazine
“Industrial Distribution.”
This combined meeting of the
Houston and North Texas associ
ations is an annual conference con
ducted here for A&M students.
Honorary Life
Awards Given
ByTWSWA
Honorary life memberships in
the Texas Water and Sewage
Works Assn, have been awarded to
Noble Black of El Paso and B. A.
Crocker of Longview. The awards
were for distinguished service.
The awards were announced at
the close of the TWSWA short
course held here last week.
Crocker is director of public
works, Longview, and is chairman
of the safety committee within the
Southwest Section of the Ameri
can Water Works Assn. He has
been an active member of the
TWSWA for 25 years.
Black is distribution superinten
dent and assistant director of the
El Paso Water Utilities Co. He
joined the El Paso company in
1957. He began his water works
service record in 1935 in Jackson
ville with that water department.
From 1954 to 1957 he was a field
instructor for the Texas Engineer
ing Extension Service at A&M.
The Deep East Texas Water and
Sewage Works Assn, was awarded
the Mission Award. Panhandle
WSWA was runner-up. A. H.
Cole, water superintendent, city
of Jasper, accepted the plaque for
the East Texas Assn.
The Mission Award is presented
annually to the district associa
tion which is found to be the most
active during the past year. The!
winner is selected by a scoring sys
tem which considers activities car
ried out within the district associa
tion, such as per cent of eligible
members certified, increase in;
membership, per cent of members
attending regional and short
schools.
Attendance Award
The District Association At
tendance Award went to the Gulf
Coast Area Water Works and Sew
age Assn. It had a 91 per cent
attendance record. The runner-up
was the Guadalupe Valley Water
and Sewage Assn, with a 71 per
cent record. Lind B. Nelson, wa
ter superintendent of the City of
Galveston, accepted the award for
the winner.
JACK TAR British knit cardigan with %
length sleeves and stand-up collar. Knit of
100% fine cotton. Square rig fitted trunks
Of cotton and rubber. Combinations of
gold, olive and navy with white. Cardigan
$8,95 Trunks $5.95
MALOLO® ADMIRALTY wind-worthy 100%
cotton gabardine jacket with bos'n pocket
and British collar. Matching tailored
Hawaiian trunks. In white, gold, natural,
olive and blue with contrast braid striping.
Jacket $7.95 Trunks $5.95
MALOLO® PICCADILLY LANE foulard
stripe, terry lined jacket with terry trim
on front. Teamed with standard Hawaiian j
action trunks, both of 100% cotton. Ii»|
color combinations of spice, olive and blu%,
ground. Jacket $8.95 Trunks $6.95 J
The seAFaRiNg mbn is a
Cafofc
• (with a British accent) ^
Modrlng ydUr traft 6f funning on a raft, Catalina combines the sun and sea of
California with the British style influence to brighten your seaworthyidftHnanfo
STORM WARNING 100% cotton knit. Car
digan with % length sleeves. Contrast tone
trim on jacket and matching front zip
Hawaiian trunks. ‘Storm God’ embroidered
on jacket pockets and trunks. Colors in
white, gold or spice. Cardigan $9.95
Trunks $7.95 -
MALOLO® LIGHT BRIGADE regimental
stripe jacket with British accented collar
and over-size pocket. Shell head buttons.
Shown with tailored front zip trunks. Of
100% woven cotton in color combinations
of gold/red or grey/green. Jacket $6.95 .
Trunks $4.95
COLOR GUARD blazer knit cardigan with
front,
inks. I
I available in colors ot g
or navy/red with white. Cardig
Trunks $5.95 ~
full sleeve and button
medium length boxer
cotton and available i
Shown over,
trunks. Finest 100% l
colors of gold/black
- ' $7.95],
® 6afafina, Inc., Los Angeles, California. Another fine Kayser-ftoth ?r6duct>^
i#
YOUR CATALINA DEALER—
A&M MEN S S HOP
ONLY STUDENT OWNED AND STUDENT OPERATED BUSINESS AT THE
NORTH GATE
THE BATTALION
MarcB 21, 1961
College Station, Texas
Page 3
IN LOUISIANA
Integration Delay Refused
By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON—The Supreme
Court Monday rejected all efforts
to balk or delay public school in
tegration in Louisiana.
It agreed also to hear the ap
peals of 17 Negro students con
victed in connection with sit-in
demonstrations at lunch counters
in Baton Rouge, La. Arguments
will not be heard until next fall.
These will be the first appeals
to be heard by the high court
growing out of a wave of demon
strations and arrests during lunch
counter sit-ins in the South.
The court’s present actions in
Louisiana school cases actually
were foretold Dec. 12. At that time
the court said, in effect, that all
Louisiana devices designed to fore
stall integration in public schools
were legally worthless.
The court made the December
comment in refusing to delay ef
fectiveness of a ruling by a special
three-judge federal court in New
Orleans striking down a spate of
anti-integration laws passed by the
Louisiana Legislature.
In unanimously affirming this
and another decision the Supreme
Court Monday merely listed the
cases by number and said the
lower court was affirmed.
One ruling by the three-judge
court was given last Nov. 30. It
threw out a package of integra
tion laws.
The other one, handed down last
Aug. 29, ordered control of the
schools taken out of the hands of
Gov. Jimmie H. Davis and given
back to the New Orleans Parish
School Board. It also directed the
board to comply with an order last
May 16 by U. S. Dist. Judge J.
Skelly Wright to integrate the first
grade last fall. That ruling also
struck down a dozen Louisiana
laws as unconstitutional on their
face.
In addition to upholding the two
orders of the three-judge court,
the Supreme Court turned down a
40 Students List
GPR’s Of Over 3.0
James P. Hannigan, Dean of
Students, today offered his con
gratulations to those students post
ing a 3.0 or better GPR for the
first semester.
“I would like to congratulate
these students on the extremely
fine record they are making here
at the A&M College of Texas.
Grades of this type are never made
by the student who wastes his
time, who leaves the campus at
every opportunity or who spends
his time indulging in foolish
pranks.
“All of us are delighted to have
students of this caliber at the col
lege and find it most gratifying
to assist really good students to
obtain the goals which they have
set for themselves.
“To post a 3.0 at Texas A&M
is indeed an accomplishment to be
ELECTION
(Continued From Page 1)
Council member and two yell
leaders.
Class of ’63: president, vice
president, secretary-treasurer, so
cial secretary, one MSG Council
member and two yell leaders.
Class of ’64: president, vice
president, secretary-treasurer, so
cial secretary and one MSC Coun
cil member.
Requirements for the class of
fices (president, vice president,
secretary-treasurer, social secre
tary and historian), are academic
Faculty Dinner,
Dance Slated
The third dinner dance this
school year by the College Faculty-
Staff Dinner Club will be held
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the As
sembly Room of the Memorial Stu
dent Center.
Music will be furnished by the
Aggieland Combo and dress is for
mal or informal.
Admission is by season ticket—
however, individual tickets may
be purchased until 2 p.m. Wednes
day at the Main Desk of the MSC,
Bennie Zinn, club chairman, has
announced.
Patranella’s Beauty Shop
Shampoo and Set
Low, Low Price $1.50
“Here’s a special value — You’ll get
$2.50 off our regular price when you
trade in your present hairdo for a
specially designed custom coiffure in
spring’s newest trend. Let our stylist
show you what a new coiffure can do
for you. You’ll get a fashion “do” and
a lovely, soft permanent wave—both
for only $10.00. Call for an appoint
ment today 1”
Sidney Weaver Wynne
EDNA PATRANELLA
TA 2-4583
Look your best at
formal affairs
Look your best on gala occa
sions in formal clothes cleaned
to perfection by us. Your
“audience” will applaud! Try
Campus
Cleaners
qualifications in their respective
classes and over-all grade point
ratios at the beginning of the year
and at the time of filing of 1.0.
For the MSC Council positions,
juniors must have completed at
least four semesters, sophomores
no more than four semesters and
freshmen no more than two
semesters at the tjime of filing.
In addition an over-all grade
point ratio of 1.0 is required.
The yell leader candidates must
have over-all grade point ratios
of 1.25 and academic classification
in their respective classes.
There are no requirements for
the senior position of class agent.
proud of and these students have
every right to be.”
Those students who have posted
a 3.0 or better GPR for the first
semester are:
James R. Adams
3.00
William Berkley
3.00
Charles Blaschke
3.00
Gene Brossman
3.17
David Collins
3.00
Victor Donnell
3.00
James Dotson
3.00
Thomas Ferguson
Dan Fleckman
3.10
3.00
Warren Frost
3.00
Culver Gidden
3.00
Doyle Graham
3.11
Harold Hartel
3.00
Howard Head
3.17
Kermit Heiman
3.00
Roderick Hobbs
3.06
Ben Houston
3.00
Peter Humber
3.00
Ben Johnston
3.00
John Kuykendall
3.15
Larry Leighton
3.00
Bobby Limmer
3.11
Jerry Lincecum
3.11
William Lipe
3.00
C. Y. McSwain
3.11
Russell Martin
3.00
Ralph Mitchell
3.15
Arthur Moore
3.00
Martin Morales
3.00
James Nelson
3.00
Kenneth Radde
3.11
William Rogers
3.00
Manning Smith
3.00
John Striegler
3.00
James Sullivan
3.00
Paul Unger
3.00
Marion Walton
3.00
George Wiederaenders
3.06
Dean Woodward
3.00
Paul York
3.00
request by the New Orleans school
system that it be allowed to ope
rate on a segregated basis until
the legal controversy between the
federal and state governments was
finally settled.
In still another action Monday
involving race, the. court agreed
to review a decision by the Vir
ginia Supreme Court that the
National Association for the Ad
vancement of Colored People un
lawfully solicited legal business
for its attorneys in Virginia.
The law was passed at an extra
session of the Virginia General
Assembly in 1956 at a time Vir
ginia was committed to “massive
resistance” to public school inte
gration.
Only two weeks ago, the Su
preme Court refused to hear a sit-
in case appeal filed by eight
Negroes and four white persons
arrested during sit-in demonstra
tion in Tallahassee, Fla. The
court gave no explanation but
some observers speculated it may
have been because the 12 had not
carried their case to Florida’s
highest courts before appealing to
the Supreme Court.
COTTON BALL
(Continued From Page 1)
the Queen Cotton at the 27th an
nual Ball Apr. 7.
Miss Sinz, a judge in the 1958-
59-60 national finals of the Mrs.
America contest held at Fort Lau-
derale, Fla., is food editor of the
Dallas Times Herald.
Mrs. Dawson is a professional
model and is fashion director of
the American Fashion Association,
a professional organization of peo
ple 1 interested in fashion.
Dawson is a widely known Dal
las fashion photographer.
Proceeds of the affair are used
by the Agronomy Society to spon
sor an annual field trip for junior
and senior agronomy majors.
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
One day per word
2t per word each additional day
Minimum charge—40^
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publicativd
Classified Display
per column
ach insertioi
jlay
804 per column inch
each insertion
PHONE VI 6-6415
FOR RENT
Two over sized rooms, double bed and
twins, outside doors, adjoining baths, fan
week-end or permanent. Excellent
graduates. TA 2-6888.
ms,
for
86t3
One furnished apartment. One block of
North Gate, Campus. TA 3-6524 85t4
Unfurnished three bedroom house, re
cently redecorated near Ridgecrest, VI
6-4488 or VI 6-4248. 80tfn
Two blocks from College Station Post
Office, completely furnished apartments,
four walk-in closets, good refrigerators
»nd stoves. VT 6-7248. 61tfn
Furnished duplex apartment. Near North
Gate. Joe Speck, Walton Hall. Room H-8,
Box 873. 52tfn
i p. m.
sin
An
Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric Shi
Shop.
98tfn
Small well furnished apartment, ideal
.or student who wants quiet place to study.
VI 6-7248. 61tfn
WANTED TO BUY
Used motor scooter. Must be in good
condition and reasonable. Call VI 6-8153.
86tl
OFFICIAL NOTICES
SPECIAL NOTICE
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
deadline of 1 p.m. of
publication — Director
tions.
Those undergraduate students who have
hours of credit may purchase
i 1
le c '
March 27, 1961
95 semester hours of credit may pur
A. and M. Ring. The hours passing
time of the preliminary grade report
an
the time of the preliminary grade report on
March 27, 1961, may be used in satisfying
the 95 hour requirement. Those students
qualifying under this regulation may leave
their names with the ring clerk in the
registrar’s office in order that she may
check their records to determine eligibility
to order the ring. Orders for the rings
will be taken between April 17 and May 31
for delivery July 1, 1961. The ring clerk
for delivery July 1, 1961. The ring
is on duty from 8:00 a. m. to 2:00
Monday through Friday of each
noo
ik.
Qualified students desiring to make ap
plication for an advanced Army ROTC
Contract for fall semester 1961 should re-
04 Trigon (Military Sci-
port to Room 304 Trigon (Military Sci
ence) Building before 31 March 1961.
Necessary prerequisites for an advanced
contract include: Be a citizen of the US:
Successful completion of two (2) years of
uctive cre-
therefor: A minimum score of 115 on
the RQ Test administered to applicants for
advanced contract: Have sixty (60) semes
ter credit hours toward a degree and
an A&M GPR of 1.0 or better: Meet phys
ical requirements for a reserve commis
sion : Have four (4) semesters remaining in
school and can qualify for appointment as
second lieutenant prior to reaching twen
ty-eight (28) years of age. Final selection
will be made by the professor of Military
Science within quota limitations established
and alloted by Department of the Army.
LOST
Khaki colored raincoat in Biochemistry
Lecture Room. Reward. Cliff Jackson,
Walton, A-l. Box 2798. 84t3
• 24 Hour Wrecker Service •
Whitley’s Auto Parts
WE BUY BURNED & WRECKED
CARS & TRUCKS
3 Miles West of Courthouse on
Highway 21
BRYAN, TEXAS
H. L. WHITLEY, JR„ OWNER
Phone TA 2-6840
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals - Sales - Service - Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators & Adding Matchines
CATES TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main TA 2-6000
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th TA 2-2819
Gulfpride, Esso, Havoline,
Sinclair Oils 29c Qt.
RC Champion Sparkplugs....29c
Discount Auto Parts
AT JOE FAULK’S
214 N. Bryan
SAE 30 Motor Oil 18c Qt.
J^otardd CafeL
ena
Where the Art of
Cooking is not Lost
Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules, & Etc
5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG
LOUPOT'S
Hilltop Lake, located on Hwy. 6 South,
914 miles from College. Sould be good
fishing soon. Clean picnic grounds. 76tfn
Ag Engineers
Schedule Tour
Of East Texas
Twenty-one A&M agricultural
engineering students will visit
steel production and fabrication
facilities Mar. 24-25 at Longview
and Daingerfield.
Accompanying the group will
be William H. Aldred, assistant
professor of agricultural engineer
ing.
Aldred said the inspection tour
will cover the following five major
points: iron and steel production
from iron ore; design and testing
facilities in developing farm and
earth moving machinery; fabrica
tion methods; cost procedures for
manufacturing equipment; safety
practices, and the new electric
wheel principle used for propulsion
of earth moving equipment.
Students making the trip will be
D. W. Adams, Marathon; C. W.
Albert, Hutto; G. R. Asbury,
Beaumont; A. C. Bennett, Rhome;
J. P. Gamble, LaFeria; D. W. Hen
ry and J. S. Potts, Bryan; D. V.
Holley, Hico; R. G. Hoza, Houston;
A. W. Hughlett, Amarillo; J. W.
Lourance, Waco; C. F. Miller,
Huntsville; D. N. Nelson, Katy;
A. D. Schneider, Weimar; J. Stra-
dinger, III, Bellaire; J. R. Wil
liams, Marlin; R. K. Crowe, Sau-
guoit, N.Y.; J. C. Diaz, Lima,
Peru, and L. A. Estrada, Chis,
Mexico.
Firms to be visited are the G. A.
Kelley Plow Co., R. G. Le Tour-
neau, Inc., and Lone Star Steel
Co.
“Sports Car Center”
Dealers for
Renault-Peugeot
&
British Motor Cars
Sales—Parts—Service
“We Service All Foreign Cars”!
1416 Texas Ave. TA 2-4517
Electrolux Sales and Service. G. C.
Williams. TA 3-6690. 90tfn
WORK WANTED
DAY NURSERY, two years and up,
twelve years nursery experience, near East
Gate, Mrs. C. H. Bates, i010 Milner, VI 6-
4152. 62tfn
Care for children hourly or $8.00 for
five day week. Tanglewood Addition,
fenced yard, VI 6-8061. 84t6
Additio
84
DAY NURSERY by the week, day or
Mrs. Gregory, 502 Boyett.
120tfn
hour. Call
VI 6-4006,
Expert _typist, electric typewriter, Mrs
ends, VI 6-8416.
Warren, Day
typewriter
VI 6-4759, nights, week-
47tft
Our nursery for children all ages. Pick
up and deliver. VI 6-8161. No answer call
back. 42tfr.
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 6-5786. 87tfn
HELP WANTED
Earn ?135 weekly during summer trav
eling overseas. Must Be US Citizen.
Complete details furnished. Send SI.00
Lansing Information Service, Dept. G-7,
Box 74, New York 61, New York. 72tfn
FOUND
COWBOY BOOTS
Boy who left boots in my car may claim
them at the A&M Press. 86tfn
TV - Radio - Hi-Fi
Service & Repair
GILS RADIO & TV
TA 2-0826 101 Highland
JIM M. PYE ’58
REPRESENTING
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.
YI 6-5055 TA 2-6232
401 Cross St. C. S.
• ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
• BLUE LINE PRINTS
• BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
603 Old Sulphur Springs Road
BRYAN. TEXAS
SOSOLIKS
TV - RADIO - PHONO
SERVICE
713 S. Main
TA 2-1941
FOR SALE
DISCOUNT PARTS
Our Everyday Low Prices
Be sure to shop our store—•
You’ll be glad you did!
NO LIMIT ON QUANTITIES
18c buys a qt. of SAE 30 motor oil.
24c buys a qt. of Gulf Lube, Supreme,
Sinclair Opaline.
29c buys a qt. of Gulfpride, Esso,
Havoline, or Conoco.
RC Champion Spark Plugs. Fully
guaranteed 29c each.
Filters—40% discount.
Mufflers — 3% minimum discount
on any car — We sell ’em all.
Chevrolet — ’54-’60. List $13.75 —
your cost $6.83. Ford V8 ’54-’60,
List $14.20—Your cost $7.86. Ply
mouth—’55-59, List $17.50 —• your
cost $9.29.
Shock absorbers—installed price $6.67
Brake shoes, water pumps, fuel pumps,
30% to 40% off list.
Brake Cylinder Kits 50% off.
Inside rubber base paint $2.98 gal.,
$5.39 for 2 gals., this week.
Outside white paint regular $2.98 gal,,
now $1.98 gal.
Tune up kits—40% discount.
Sealed Beam Headlamps — Everyday
discount price $1.79 each.
Brake fluid—12 oz. 70RI—39c.
Stereophonic Records—$2.98 each.
Monaural—$1.49 each.
Speed Queen automatic washers just
keep washing along—no troubles.
And they cost no more. Speed
Queen wringer washer — 10 lb.
Capacity, aluminum agitator, ex
tra large tub. A good buy at
$129.95. Compare anywhere. Our
discount price $89.95 and your old
washer.
Television and Stereo—best buys any
where—we rent—sell—trade. 23”
hand wired 23,000 volt chassis —
hardwood cabinet, now only $189.96
—playinf J -
with
g trade.
Combination Stereo. AM-FM Radio and
23-in hand wired Television with
6 speakers, oiled walnut hardwood
cabinet $570 Value for $439.95 or
$399.95 with trade. 3% state tax.
EXCEPTIONAL TIRE VALUES
Brand new All nylon cord.
ew
anteed against all road hazards for
the life of the tread on the tire.
Adjustment based on % of tread
wear. Opening special 6.70 x 15
black tube type $9.95 plus tax &
the 1
Adju
recappable tire. Only $12.95 plus
tax with no trade-in
ler i
count price
All other sizes at coi
count prices. We unde
Check us before you
BRING US YOUR IRONS. TOAST
ERS. MIXERS and OTHER SMALL
APPLIANCES FOR REPAIR
Parts for any Standard Brand
Small Appliance
DISCOUNT
AUTO PARTS
TA 2-1669
214 N. Bryan at Joe Faulk’s
Big Discounts to All