The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 20, 1961, Image 3

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Miller will be discussion leader.
Dr. Walker holds the Bachelor
oi Science, the Master of Business
Administration, and the Doctor of
Engineering degrees from Har-
[ yard, the latter being earned in
1935. He holds honorary Doctor
of Laws from Temple University,
•avel
, Texas
Lehigh University, Hofstra Col
lege, Lafayette College, and the
University of Pennsylvania; hon
orary doctor of human letters de
gree, Elizabethtown College; and
Litt. D., Jefferson Medical Col
lege.
Dr. Miller was appointed Provost
of Michigan State University in
1959 and is chief academic officer
of the school. He previously had
been director of the Michigan Co-
Operative Extension Service since
1955, and vice president for Off-
Campus Education since 1959.
Since f958 Dean Aldrich has
headed the University of Califor
nia’s Division of Agricultural
Sciences. He presides ov^r agri
cultural teaching programs on four
campuses, over the state-wide Ag
ricultural Experiment Station, and
over the. Agricultural Extension
Service.
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-GROCERIES-
'/z Size Cans—Libbys
Vienna Sausage 4 Cans 79c
IS'/z-Oz. Cans—Libbys
Corned Beef Hash 2 Cans 79c
IS'/z-Oz. Cans—Libbys
Spaghetti & Meat Balls 2 Cans 49c
12-Oz. Cans—Libbys
Chopped Beef Can 49c
3-lb. Cans—Spry
SHORTENING Can 79c
5- lb. Bag—Pillsburys Best
FLOUR Bag 39c
12-Oz. Cans—Doles
Pineapple Juice 3 Cans 29c
12-Oz. Cans—Niblets
Whole Kernel Corn 2 Cans 39c
12-Oz. Cans—Niblets
MEXICORN.. 2 Cans 39c
303 Cans—Green Giant
Big Tender Peas 2 Cans 39c
Folgers Coffee
1-Lb. Can 69c
Fclgers Coffee
6- Oz. Instant 79c
No. 2Vi Cans—Hunts
Whole Spiced Peaches 4 Cans $1.00
No. 2 ft Cans—Hunts
Whole Apricots 4 Cans $1.00
14-Oz. Bottles—Heinz
KETCHUP 3 Bottles 69c
-FROZEN FOODS-
10-Oz.—Stillwells
STRAWBERRIES 3 For 59c
6-Oz. Cans—Sunshine State
Orange Juice 5 Cans 99c
10-Oz—Golden Brown
Breaded Shrimp Pkg. 39c
B.B. Blue Bell—Fruit Flavor
SHERBERT y 2 Gallon 69c
BORDENS MILK
2— x /i Gallon Cartons 91c
1—1 Gallon Jug 87c
Borden—Morning Glory
BISCUITS 3 Cans 25c
-MARKET-
pen FED BABY BEEF CUTS
Loin Steak
1-lb. 79c
T-Bone Steak
. 1-lb. 79c
Pin Bone Loin Steak ...
... 1-lb. 69c
Meaty Short Ribs
... 1-lb. 39c
Hormels—Dairy Brand
Sliced Bacon
... 1-lb. 59c
Hormels—All Meat
FRANKS
... 1-lb. 49c
Deckers—Tall Korn
Sliced 'Bacon
1-lb. 53c
-PRODUCE-
Home Grown Cucumbers 2-lbs 15c
Home Grown Tomatoes.. 2-lbs. 25c
Home Grown Okra 2-lbs. 35c
Home Grown
Blackeye Peas 2-lbs. 29c
Home Grown Peaches 1-lb. 10c
Home Grown Cantaloupes —. lb. 7c
SPECIALS GOOD THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FRIDAY, AND SATURDAY, JULY 20 - 21 - 22
CHARLIE'S
NORTH GATE
-WE DELIVER—
FOOD
MARKET
COLLEGE STATION
A&M Research
Technologist
Writes Paper
Marion D. Arnold, research tech
nologist of the Texas Petroleum
Research Committee, Texas A&M,
is the coauthor of two papers to
be presented at the forthcoming
annual meeting of the Society of
Petroleum Engineers to be held in
Dallas, October 1961. More than
2,000 engineers are expected to at
tend the meeting.
The two papers presented by
Mr. Arnold are “Estimation of Res
ervoir Anisotropy from Production
Data” and “Laboratory Studies of
the Effect of Reservoir Fluid Prop
erties and Stage of Depletion on
Oil Recovery by Water Flooding.”
Presentation of a technical paper
at the annual fall meeting is con
sidered to be one of the high hon
ors accorded to a petroleum engi
neer. Arnold is the only student
who has been selected for present
ing two papers at any annual fall
meeting in the past 10 years.
:
ROUND AND ROUND
RICHMOND, Va. <A>)_School
officials are studying plans for a
school that looks round but isn’t
The building would have many-
sides, 400 in fact, each seven feet
long, to avoid having to install
curved glass.
Be well groomed
for success
That “like new” look we give
your clothes is sure to make the
right impressions whether
you’re on the job or on the
town.
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
THE BATTALION
Thursday, July 20, 1961
College Station, Texas
Page 3
CADET SLOUCH
by Jim Earle
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‘. . . I’m sorry to hear that you’re displeased with last semester’s grade — as a matter
of fact, the grades did run a little low!”
Coaching School Time
Approaches For Texans
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF
Associated Press Sports Writer
Less than three weeks away is
the start of the football season.
No, it won’t be training or playing
but it will be the Texas coaching
school and that’s when they start
thinking about football and begin
preparations for it.
The twenty-ninth annual clinic
will be at San Antonio Aug. 7-10.
It’s returning to the place where
it first saw the light of , day—in
1933. Sixty-five coaches gathered
in the Alamo city for this new ven
ture. D. X. Bible, then coach of
Nebraska, was the first instructor.
In fact, he was the only one.
When this year’s coaching school
is held at San Antonio 3,100 coach
es are expected to enroll. That will
be seven more than the all-time
record set last year at Dallas.
The coaching school is sponsored
by the Texas High School Coaches
PRIORITY
TICKET
SALES
FOR: FACULTY, EMPLOYEES
AND GENERAL PUBLIC
Deadline
JULY 31
SEASON BOOKS ONLY $16.00
COVERING 4 HOME GAMES
AND 3 FRESHMAN GAMES
Sept. 23 — University of Houston
Oct. 28 — Baylor University
Nov. 11 — Southern Methodist Univ.
Nov. 23 — University of Texas
Season Books for Faculty and Employees good for
admission to all sports held under the auspices of the
Athletic Council. Books for the General Public good
for all events except basketball.
Single game tickets are $4.00 each for all
games—home and away.
Place Orders With The
ATHLETIC DEPT. BUSINESS OFFICE
Before July 31
Tickets Available To All Out of Town Games
Association, which was founded at
Houston in 1930, with the late
Johnnie Pierce of Corsicana as the
guiding light. It was three years
later that the coaches got up
enough nerve to put on a school.
Two years after that they started
the all-star football game. In 1946
the all-star basketball game was
inaugurated.
Today the Texas coaching school
is the largest in the world. It has
a “faculty” of top football, basket
ball and track coaches of the coun
try. And this year it returns base
ball to the curriculum, with Bobby
Bragan, the former big league
manager and now assistant to the
general manager of the Houston
Club in the National League, as
the lecturer.
Baseball was dropped for sev
eral years because of a lack of in
terest. It was embarrassing to
have a baseball expert show up to
lecture and nobody come out to
hear him. But the coaches decided
they had been missing something
that should be important to them,
and they returned the diamond
sport to the curriculum.
With more than 600 schools
playing baseball in Texas it is a
wonder that it was dropped from
the school’s courses in the first
place. It is hoped that with its re
turn thei'e will be sufficient inter
est to warrant an all-star game.
Golf had been put on the coach
ing school schedule but it will not
be this year because the clinic was
cut to four days. The reason for
this was that most of the high
schools start football practice on
Monday, Aug. 15, and by closihg
the clinic on Thursday instead of
Friday, as usual, the coaches will
get a chance to return home and
have Saturday and Sunday to pre
pare for the start of training.
Lecturing on football will he
John Bridgers of Baylor, Frank
Broyles of Arkansas, Blanton Col
lier of Kentucky and Claude Gil-
strap of Arlington State. Harold
Bradley of Texas and Frank Mc
Guire of North Carolina will han
dle basketball. Johnny Morriss of
University of Houston will lecture
on track and Weaver Jordan of
Baylor will discuss athletic train
ing.
The all-star squads will arrive
in San Antonio on Saturday, Aug.
5, and begin workouts on Monday.
The seventeenth annual basketball
Aug. 9, with O. W. Follis Lamesa
coaching the North and Hal Lam-
game will be on Wednesday night,
bert of Spring Branch handling the
South. The South won last year
at Dallas but still is well behind
in the Series. The North has ten
victories to six for the South.
The twenty-seventh all-star foot
ball game is scheduled Thursday,
Aug. 10, with Joe Golding of Wich
ita Falls coaching the North and
Pete Ragus of Corpus Christi Mil
ler the South. Here, too, the South
could use a victory. The series
now stands fourteen victories for
the North, nine for the South and
three ties. The South hasn’t won
one since 1953.
Get a ffyfng start on Continental!
WASHINGTON
CHICAGO
NEW YORK
Con-re rriant eonnectkxM at
4-engine non-slope east. For reservation^ sail ’
Ageat fir Continental at VI 6-47ML
COmTIUBUTAL AIRLIMES
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