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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 6, 1961)
» its un- num- lany a stand- dates, lals on mpared leclian- ethods, Jms as dle-and ie pro- Otto P, service Animal retired, of ap-1 vis, di- ultdral watch charge >< h ) 0 .00 .00 9c Ic u ic h t ■r- K fc h 9c PUCHESSES (Continued from Page 1) (loriculture & Landscape Society; isther Ruth Kasproyicz, Brenham liM Hometown Club; Karen Kirkpatrick, Falls County liM Club; Annell Lacy, Athen- pi Literary Social Club; Mary Sllen Landers, American Institute [[Industrial Engineers; Marsha langston, Freshman- Class, Texas Ionian’s University; Linda Jo he. University of Houston (Stu dent) Government; Shari Gale Lee, frofessional Business Women’s (lab, Texas Woman’s University; lonnie Lewis, Tarleton State Col- W Shirley Lewis, Coke County . Hometown Club; Prescilla Livings- jn, Big Lake A&M Club; Myrna Lynn Long, Delian Literary So- ial Club; Terry Lovejoy, Brazos jounty A&M Mothers Club; Bar- , ara Lucas, Del Rio Hometown | Jab; Jean Lynch, Extension Serv- ie Club; Donna Gail Machemehl, | leaumont A&M Club; Mary Jane 1 IcMfie, Texas Woman’s Univer- I Radio Guild; Joyce Ann McMillian, History 3nb, TWU; Peggy Nan McNair, iwestern University — Student ■ fovernment; Judy McNeil, A&M lothers Club of Corpus Christi; Jin Martin, Industrial Education Society; Carol Massengale, A&M lothers Club of Austin; Cynthia Say Matthys, Phi Upsilon Omi- mn; Rose Marie Mathis, Pasa- ma A&M Mothers Club; Norma k Means, Home Economics Club liTWU; Carlota Oralia Mejia, Laredo JIM Mothers Club; Shaaron Mer it Melcher, Bryan Reading Club; fatsy Mendoza, English Club of 1 1WU; Connie Miller, Wharton faty Junior College; Leah Shine Monticello, American Vet- f tinary Medical Association Aux- iary; Martha Morris, Arlington ■ State College; Agatha Lee Nance, Jiior Class, TWU; Margaret Nance, A&M Mothers Ci, Milam County; Betty Jean neighbors, Caperettes (Tap Dance (lib); Elizabeth Ann Newberry, tapational Therapy Club, TWU; Idith Lynn Oliver, Student dumber of Commerce; Bethany- »ieO’Quinn, Texas Tech; Ampa- tiOrtiz, La Junta (Spanish Club) ® ; Joan Gay Oualline, Tarpon M Mothers Club; Judy Palmer, Sam Houston State kkrs College; Mary K. Peder- a, Deep East Texas A&M Club; THE BATTALION Thursday, April 6, 1961 College Station, Texas Page 5 THOROUGH ‘GOING OVER’ School Problems To Be Aired At Regional Meet Joann Pedigo, A&M Womans So cial Club; Judy Perkins, William Scott Chapter of Daughters of the American Revolution; Tommy Lou Pitts, Tau Beta Sigma, TWU; Antoinette “Toni” Post, A&M Club of Baton Rouge, La.; Jo Ann Potter, Port Arthur A&M Club; Charlene Louise Prescott, Rice University; Ada Ramirez, Laredo Club of TWU; Nanci Beth Rath- jen, Sophomore Class, TWU; Delene Raymond, Abilene Home town Club; Rosemary Redmond, Bryan Saddle Club; Mary Jane Regan, Student Council of Our Lady of the Lake College; Karen Ann Roitsch, Texas Lutheran Col lege; Colleen Roach, Grayson County A&M Mothers Club; Lo retta Jean Rolfe, Allen Military Academy Womans Club; Benjalyn Rousser, Panhandle Hometown Club; Sandra Schwedler, Adelphian Literary-Social Club of TWU; Jan Seibert, Kilgore Junior College; Sharon Simmons, Huntsville A&M Club; Connie Smith, Music Club, TWU; Jill Smith, Port Arthur A&M Mothers Club; Nina Smith, Animal Husbandry Wives Club; Virginia Smith, Bryan-College Station Club at TWU; Elizabeth Ann Sonnen, The Round Table, TWU; Suzanne Sorenson, Brazos County A&M Club; Ann Spacek, Collegiate FFA; Sue Stapp, Dallas A&M Club; Monya Steed, Midland Hometown Club; Monu Stewart, A&M Mothers Club, San Antonio; Judy Swann, Rio Grande Valley Hometown Club; Jo Anna Swank, Guadalupe Valley Hometown Club; Janet Taylor, Corpus Christi A&M Club; Vicki Taylor, Texas Aggie Rodeo Association; Betty Joyce Upchurch, Entomology Club; Angi Volpe, Laredo A&M Home town Club; Charlotte Walker, Beaumont Hometown Club; Susan Taylor Webb, Tyler-Smith County Hometown Club; Ann Wells, Vil lagers Club—TWU; Emily Vir ginia Wert, East Harris County A&M Mothers Club; Beverly Wheeler, Lamar Tech Student Government; Bonnie De- lores Wheeler, Marshall Hometown Club; Vauna Wheeler, San Angelo A&M Mothers Club; Jo Carole Williams, Omega Rho Alpha; Sandra Williams, Fort Bend Coun ty Hometown Club; Carmen Aline Williamson, Beaumont A&M Moth ers Club; Patsy Winkler, William son County A&M Mothers Club; Ila Fern Woods, Wheeler County Hometown Club. Issues and problems in Texas public school education, will be given a thorough going over at the Regional School Boards Work shop to be held here April 17. Dr. Donald G. Nugent, execu tive director, Texas Association of School Boards, will deliver an ad dress at the dinner session Mon day night. He will discuss “New Frontiers in Education.” The Sing ing Cadets, under the direction of Robert L. Boone, will give several numbers. The workshop, with Dr. Paul Hensarling of the Department of Education and Psychology, as co ordinator, will get under way at 3 p.m. and following a welcome ad dress by Dr. Wayne C. Hall, Dean of the Graduate School, will hold group discussions on a panel basis. David B. Bunting, superintendent, Brazo's County schools, will give the invocation. Dr. George Wentz, superintend ent, Hays County schools, will be the moderator of a panel on “Identification of Issues and Prob lems in Texas Public Education.” This panel will consist of Don B. Slocomb, superintendent, Giddings schools; Dr. Grady P. Parker, Head of the Department of Education and Psychology; J. B. Hervey, President of the A&M Consolidated school board, College Station, and Dr. Leon Graham, assistant com missioner of education, Texas Edu cation Agency. A “Problem Forum” will be moderated by Dr. Leon Graham, following the dinner session. Local School Problems, with George B. Wilcox, Brazos county school board, chairman, will be discussed by panel members W. C. Wiese, Calvert school board; Robert Walker, North Zulch school board; Dr. H. R. Willard, Giddings school board, and Odis Lewis, superintendent, Madisonville Inde pendent School District. Dr. Dwain Estes, Department of Education and Psychology, will chair a panel discussion on “The Board and the School Program,” with members B. G. Caesar, super intendent, Hempstead Independent School Disrict; L. P. Dyer, Nava- sota, and Marvin C. Perry, Rock dale, school board members and 0. M. Holt, Department of Agri cultural Education. School - Community Relations, with P. J. Jolly,. Magnolia school board, as chairman, will be dis cussed by Arthur Mitschke, Gid dings; Fred Evans, Madisonville, and George B. Hensarling, A&M Consolidated school boards, and Lewis Zschech, superintendent, Dime Box public schools. School Finance, with Leon Hayes, business manager of the Bryan Independent School District, Registrants at the fourth Ad vanced Petroleum Reservoir Engi neering Course to be held April 17-28 will learn the latest methods of evaluating performance of petroleum reservoirs. This in formation may be used as a basis of selecting field operating pro cedures to achieve optimum re covery. R. L. Whiting, Professor and Head of the Department of Petroleum Engineering, said the two-week-long session includes 17 hours of lecture on rock proper ties, fluid properties and basic reservoir mechanics. Sixteen hours of lecture and computations will cover well performance and 50 hours of lecture and computation will be devoted to reservoir per formance. He said the current offering is an outgrowth of summer courses offered in 1956 and 1957. It was first offered in the present form in the fall of 1959. Since 1956, 160 engineers have returned from industry to attend the course. The course starts at 8 a.m. the first day in the Industry Course as chairman, will be discussed by David Shapiro and J. D. Webber, Navasota school boards; W. T. Riedel, superintendent, A&M school district; Dr. Leslie Hawkins, De partment of Education and Psy chology. Dr. W. R. Carmichael, superin tendent, Bryan public schools, will chair a panel on “Legislation for Public Education,” with members Dr. John S. Rogers, A&M Con solidated and Raymond Dillard, Mexia school boards; Jack Faulds, superintendent, Burleson County schools, and Dr. Carl Landiss, De partment of Health and Physical Education. room of the recently completed W. T. Doherty Petroleum Engi neering Building, Whiting said. The instructor said students in attendance will include representa tives of 14 major and independent oil companies. One of the regis trants is from India, one from Indonesia, two from Venezuela, one from Brazil, two from Louisiana, two from Colorado, one from Wyoming and nine from Texas. Companies represented are the American Overseas Petroleum Limited, New York; Assam Oil Company Limited, India; The Brit ish American Oil Producing Com pany and Delhi-Taylor Oil Cor poration, Dallas; Champlin Oil and Refining Company, Fort Worth; Honolulu Oil Corporation, Midland; Lion Oil Company and The Ohio Oil Company, Shreveport, La.; Petrobras, Brazil; Richmond Ex ploration Company and Venezuelan Sun Oil Company, Maracaibo, Venezuela; Tennessee Gas Trans mission Company, Texas Gas Transmission Corporation and. Un ion Texas Natural Gas Corpora- tionj all of Houston. Petroleum Course Plans Announced ' w£te celebrating mr 3rd. . V with the FABULOUS BRUNSWICK FULLY AUTOMATIC PINSETTERS GIVING YOU TOP SCORING CONDITIONS -GROCERIES- -FROZEN FOODS- Lucky Leaf Libbys—10-Oz. Sliced Apple Juice ... Quart 25c STRAWBERRIES 2 For 49e No. 2 Cans—Libbys Tomato Juice ... 2 Cans 29c Ta Cf A Fish Sticks 2-8-Oz. Pkgs. 59c Patio—Beef Enchilada No. 2 Cans—Wolf Brand DINNERS Each 39c CHILI .. 2 Cans 99c Nabisco—Premium BORDENS MILK Saltine Crackers Mb. 25c 1—1 Gallon —ug 87c 14-Oz. Bottles—Heinz 2—Vs Gallon Cartons . .. 91c KETCHUP 2 Bottles 45c BISCUITS 3 For 25c Maryland Club -MARKET- Instant Coffee 6-Oz. 79c No. 2 , /2 Cans—Libbys Pen Fed Baby Beef Cuts Sliced or Halves Peaches Can 29c Loin Steak . Mb. 85c 303 Cans—Oregon Trail Whole Green Beans Can 25c Pin Bone Loin Steak.... Meaty Short Ribs 1-lb. 75c . Mb. 39c Maryland Club Mb. 59c D ecker s—low ana COFFEE Ranch Style Bacon 2-lbs. $1.19 Krafts—Salad Bowl Deckers—Tall Korn Salad Dressing Qt. 39c Sliced Bacon Mb. 49c Hormels—Dairy Brand Krafts—Velveeta CHEESE 2-lbs. 79c AH Meat Franks . 1-lb. 49c Krafts—Philadelphia -PRODUCE- Cream Cheese 8-Oz. 29c Texas Oranges 1-lb. 19c i Y V Bag 25,• Spry SHORTENING 3-lbs. 69c Grapefruit 5-lb 300 Size—Austex Spaghetti & Meat Balls .... Can 25c Yellow Squash ..Mb. 15c SPECIALS GOOD THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FRIDAY, AND SATURDAY, APRIL 6 - 7 - 8 CHARLIE'S NORTH GATE —WE DELIVER— — FOOD MARKET COLLEGE STATION Friday Midnight tii Saturday Midnight April 7 — April 8 24 FULL HOURS OF BOWLING Help Us Celebrate 12 A.M. - 1 A.M 1 A.M. - 2 A.M 2 A.M. - 3 A.M 3 A.M. - 4 A.M. _ 4 A.M. - 5 A.M 5 A.M. - 7 A.M. .* 7 A.M. - 8 A.M 8 A.M. - 12 A.M 12 A.M. - 1 P.M I P.M. - 7 P.M 7 P.M. - 11 P.M II P.M. - 12 P.M 25c per game 20c per game 15c per game 10c per game 5c per game Bowling Free 5c per game 10c per game 15c per game 20c per game 25c per game Bowling Free 3 GAME LIMIT if we have a waiting list STUDENT PRICES MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER BOWLING LANES