The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 17, 1961, Image 5

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    Two Girls Will Combine
Medicine and Marriage
By MARY CAMPBELL
AP Newsfeature Writer
I NEW YORK—This summer bru
net JoAnne Schwartz, Joan Aron-
ion, a fair-skinned beauty, and
■ed-haired Janet Coleman are mov-
ng away from an ordinary past
!§;■ Howard an unusual future.
Joan and Janet also will navi
gate toward a future which—hope
fully—combines marriage and fam-
ly with career.
Two have decided to do medical
§ 'esearch. One will become a doc-
or.
Sometime around the age of 10
dAnne read a medical journal in
er doctor’s office (“It was very
ifficult to understand.”); Joan
:ame across a magazine article on
leart surgery; Janet read a sci-
itific volume that a World Trade
7 air book stall proprietor gave to
t
fust 24 in
Massaclm-
ology, BS
ng, major
igineering,
degree in
Jniversity,
holder of
ay traffic
way Traf-
M in 1®
search as-
way TrJ-
50-51;®-
Engiiw
., 1951-52;
nant), of-
ion, Wash-
traffic en-
' engineer,
New York,
ciate, Bu-
ffic, Yale
lany scien-
organiza-
numerous
anie
'lace
r
same date
torn?
[g to Ma 11,
r-old
her. (“He gave it to me, so I felt
like I had to read it.”)
In the years since, JoAnne, Joan
and Janet filled their lives with
girlhood’s expected piano lessons,
pets, school, work, play, friends,
family and hobbies. They’ve also
done further reading in medical
and scientific journals, articles and
books.
Getting in the Swim
But this summer, as 3 of the
22 New York area high school
juniors accepted into the Summer
Training Institute in Bio-Medical
Science, they actually have dipped
their teen-age toes into the main
stream of working medical science.
And all three have decided to go
on in; the water’s fine.
The annual summer institute is
sponsored by Yeshiva University
and the National Science Founda
tion. Students attend classes and
lectures in the morning and in the
afternoon scatter to eight Man
hattan laboratories where they
work with that lab’s personnel on
research projects.
Not a Summer Romance
JoAnne is testing the effects of
a newly developed product—now
called a stain, it may prove to be
a drug—on cell growth and repro
duction. She says this “could be”
cancer research.
JoAnne wants to become a doc
tor.
“I’m thinking of specializing in
pediatrics. I’d like to be a sur
geon but it takes six or eight years
residency after internship to be a
surgeon.
“And I think I will marry. But
I think I will practice medicine at
the same time.”
THE BATTALION
Thursday, August 17, 1961 College Station, Texas Page 5
Dr. Potter Named
Physics Counselor
Dr. J. G. Potter
Regional physics counselor
Dr. J. G. Potter, head, Physics
Department, Texas A&M, has been
named as regional counselor in
physics in Texas during the com
ing year.
“The American Association of
Physics Teachers and the Amer
ican Institute are pleased that Dr.
Potter will be one of the charter
group of regional counselors and
that the direction of efforts in
this program in Texas is in such
good hands,” Elmer Hutchisson,
director of the AIP, said in making
the announcement.
“Educational problems in phys
ics in every part of the United
States are many and complex,”
Hutchisson says. “Progress in
solving them in each state will
Ihe Church.. For a Fuller Life. For You..
CALENDAR OF CHURCH SERVICES
ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC
CHAPEL
7:30 & 9:00 A.M.—Sunday Masses
ASM CHRISTIAN CHURCH
8:30 A.M.—Coffee Time
1:48 A.M.—Sunday School
U:M A.M.—Momln* gorvleea
BETHEL LUTHERAN
CHURCH
(Missouri Synod)
8:15 A.M.—Morning Worship
8:30 AJM.—Church School
10:48 A.M.—Morning Worship
UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP
4:00-5 :30 P.M.—Friday School, YMCA
8:00 P.M.—Ffrat four Shindays of each
nonth—Fellowship Meeting, Call VI 6-
1888 for further information.
CRURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
OF LATTER DAY SAINTS
26th 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
B:1B 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 School
Ll:0t A.M.—Morning Worship
0:30 P.M.—Voting People’s Service
7:30 P.M.—Preaching Service
ST. THOMAS
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
8:00 A.M.-
9 :16 A.M.-
11:00 A.M.—Sermon
7:00 P.M.—Evening Prayer
-Holy Communion
-Family Service
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
SOCIETY
f:30 a.m.—Sunday School
11:00 a.m.—Sunday Service
8 :00 P.M.—Wed. Evening Service
1:00-4:00 p. m. TuesdayiK—Reading
Room
7:00-8:00 P.M.—Wed., - Reading Room
A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST
9:45 A.M.—Bible Classes
10:45 A.M.—Morning Worship
6:15 P.M.—Bible Class
7:15 P.M.—Evening Service
COLLEGE HEIGHTS
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
9:46 A.M.—Sunday School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
6:30 P.M.—Voting 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
8:16 St, 10:46 A.M.—The Church at
Worship
9:30 A.M.—Bible Classes For All
Hbly Communion—First Sunday Each
Month
A&M PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
9.45 A.M.—Church School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Warship
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
9:40 A.M.—Church School
11:00 A.M.—Worship
6:15 P.M.—Training Union
7:16 P.M.—Worship
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The Church U 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 civilization can sur
vive. There are four sound reasons wh^
are tour sound reasons why
should attend servi
lurch. T.
For his i
f his cc
ke of the Church
needs his moral and materia!
support. Plan to go to church regularly
and read your Bible daily.
attend services regu-
Ch, ’ ~
) f
sake. (3) tor the sake of his community
and nation. (4) For the sake of the Church
itself, which ne
every person
larly and
(l)ror his owi
sake. (3) For the saki
larly and support the Church. They are;
(l)ror his own sake. (2) For his children’i
ke of his community
Day
Book v
Chap.
Verse*
Sunday
Psalm*
23
1-6
Monday
Acts
8
30-38
Tuesday
Genesis
9
8-17
Wednesday
I Peter
5
4-11
Thursday
Deuteronomy
31
6-3
Friday
Isaiah
26
1-4
Saturday
Roman*
14
16-19
wmm
Those stirring words of the Twenty-Third Psaimt ^
He maketh me to He down in gr9«n pattuns . • • He leadetb
we beside the still waters ... He restereth my soall
The psalmist must have known the turmoil
of life, even though he lived three thousand years
ago. At least he had experienced the peace which
comes upon a man when he escapes the bustling
world and rests in the quiet stillness of nature’s
scene. And he caught its spiritual meaning!
A man’s soul, like his body, needs to be
restored. Just as sleep and recreation rebuild our
physical strength, prayer and worship re-vitalize
our spiritual being.
Thoughtfully, our forefathers taught us to
spend part of each day in spiritual pursuits.
Wisely, they set aside one day of the week for
worship.
The Church provides opportunity for Sunday
worship, and guidance in every-day devotion to
God.
Co fry right 1961, Keister Adv. Service, Inc., Strasburg, Va.
~Jlil£ier funeral
BRYAN, TEXAS
602 West 26th St.
PHONE TA 2-1672
Campus
and
Circle
Theatres
College Station
College Station’s Own
Banking Service
College Station
State Bank
NORTH GATE
Central Texas
Hardware Co.
BRYAN
• HARDWARE
• CHIN A WARE
• CRYSTAL
• GIFTS
STUDENT
PUBLICATIONS
Sure Sign of Flavor
The
Exchange
Store
“Serving Texas Aggiea”
Bryan Building
& Loan
Association
x v ' f'*•
B RYAN
Gty National
Bank
Member
FEDERAL DEPOSIT
INSURANCE CORPORATION
Bryan
ICE CREAM
A
"A Nutritious Food'
Navy Lady Will
Get Sea Duty
By WARREN LERUDE
Associated Press
SAN DIEGO, Calif. — Pretty
Charlene Suneson joined the Navy
for the usual reason: to see the
world.
“I didn’t think I wouldn’t be al
lowed to go to sea. The Navy
was the first place I met any re
striction because I was a woman.
At home (in Chicago) and at the
University of Chicago, I never was
told I couldn’t do some kinds of
work because I was a woman.”
Now, seven years later, Charlene
finds she was right all along. At
27 she is going to sea, the Navy’s
first woman line officer assigned
to serve aboard a ship.
There have been nurses and
other staff specialists assingned
to sea duty, but Lt. Suneson will
be the first to go aboard as regular
Navy officer.
It’s part of a Navy experiment
—to ease the officer shortage and
to learn what shipboard jobs wo
men can fill as well as men.
She’ll be going to sea early next
year, and probably will remain on
ship for 18 months. The ship,
incidentally, is the USS Mann.
Asked about shipboard romances,
petite, dark-haired and dark-eyed
Charlene says: “It’s better to
stay away from that subject. “It’s
not likely that anything would
happen.”
What about moonlit nights on
the high seas? “It’s not that type
of cruise.”
Aboard ship she’ll have special
accommodations set aside for her,
nurses an*d other female personnel.
“I don’t know who is responsible
for my actually being assigned
to a ship,” she says. “I’ve re
quested sea duty before and sud
denly it came through.”
Now she’s looking forward to
visiting Fa,r Eastern ports and
buying silks In Japan.
She has been doing personnel
work at the San Diego base, and
thinks her seagoing duties prob
ably will be in personnel work too.
“But I could be assigned to nearly
anything.”
depend upon the cooperative ef
forts of leaders in public educa
tion, higher education, industry
and government. The efforts of
physicists themselves are an .in
dispensable ingredient in any pro
gram of action. It augers well
for the improvement of education
in physics throughout the country
that so many physicists of compe
tence and determination like Dr.
Potter, have agreed to serve as
regional counselors in this con
certed effort by the physics com
munity,” Hutchisson declared.
A Blood Donor
For Sick Dogs
Sam, a 5-year-old brown and
white dog, makes his home at the
Bryan Animal Hospital, where he
is employed full time as a blood
donor for other needy dogs.
Sam’s employment as a blood
donor began when he was brought
to the hospital for the sole pur
pose of being put to sleep. Since
he was a very large and healthy
dog with a mild temperament it
was decided that he would be used
as a donor for other dogs.
Sam supplies about a pint of
blood per month to the hospital
and in return is furnished with
the suite of the kennel, that being
the first cage at the head of the
row. He is fed a diet that is
very high in vitamins and proteins,
bathed and dipped regularly and
is rewarded daily for his services
with a Pet Tab. This is a blood
building vitamin in tablet form.
You might say that Sam lives
the “life of Riley” at the hospital
as he is fed and cared for in the
best way possible and- all that is
asked in return is a pint of blood
per month so that some other fel
low dog might enjoy life.
Henry Aaron of the Milwaukee
Braves led National League hitters
with a .328 mark in 1956 and again
with .355 in 1959.
-GROCERIES-
No. 2 Zi Cans—Libbys
PEACHES 3 Cans 79c
303 Cans—Libbys
Fruit Cocktail 4 Cans 85c
46-Oz. Cans—Libbys
Tomato Juice Can 29c
303 Cans—Libbys
Garden Sweet Peas 2 Cans 39c
CRISCO 3-lb. Can 79c
303 Cans—Oregon Trail, Blue Lake
Whole Green Beans .... 2 Cans 49c
303 Cans—Sunshine
Turnip Greens & Turnips 2 Cans 29c
4-Oz. Cans—Rigoes
Ground Black Pepper Can 33c
18-Oz. Jars—Krafts
Grape Jelly Jar 29c
Qt. Jars—Krafts
MAYONNAISE Jar 53c
303 Cans—Uncle Williams
Cut Green Beans 2 Cans 29c
Bath Size—Lux
Toilet Soap 4 Cakes 43c
Regular Size—Palmolive
Toilet Soap 4 Cakes 29c
Folgers
COFFEE 1-lb. Can 65c
Folgers—Instant
COFFEE 6-Oz. Jar 69c
-FROZEN FOODS-
10-Oz.—Golden Brown
Breaded Shrimp Pkg. 39c
10-Oz.—Stillwells
Sliced Strawberries .... 3 Pkgs. 59c
10-Oz. Pkgs.
Chopped Broccoli, Peas &
Carrots, Green Peas .... 3 For 59c
6-Oz. Cans—Minute Maid, Pink
LEMONADE Can 10c
6-Oz. Cans—Sunshine State
Orange Juice 5 Cans 99c
B-B Bluebell—Supreme
Ice Cream Vk Gal. Ctn. 89c
-MARKET-
PEN FED BABY BEEF CUTS
Round Steak 1
Loin Steak Lb.
T-Bone Steak 79c
Real Calves Liver 1-lb. 49c
Deckers—Tall Korn
Sliced Bacon 1-lb. 57c
Deckers—lowana Brand
WEINERS 1-lb. 45c
Krafts
Velveeta Cheese 2-lb. Ctn. 79c
-PRODUCE-
Large Calif. Lettuce .... 2 Hds. 25c
Green Cabbage 1-lb. 5c
Russet Potatoes 10 lbs. 39c
Home Grown Okra 2 lbs. 25c
SPECIALS GOOD THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FRIDAY, AND SATURDAY, AUGUST 17 - 18 - 19
CHARLIES r?K D =,
COLLEGE STATION
NORTH GATE
-WE DELIVER-