The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 12, 1961, Image 3

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ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE
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Touch-type, hunt-and-peck, type with one hand tied
behind your back—it’s easy to turn out perfect papers
on Corrasable. Because you can erase without a trace.
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an ordinary pencil eraser.There’s never a telltale erasure
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Corrasable is available in light,
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Skin. In convenient 100-sheet
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7 IP
boxes. Only Eaton makes 4$^***$ * ^
Corrasable.
A Berkshire Typewriter Paper
KATON PAPES CORPORATION ;’E^ PITTSFIELD. MASS.
Purchase Your
EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND
Typewriter Paper
from
The Exchange store
“Serving Texas Aggies”
Single Students
Can Apply
For Hensel
Unmarried students will be al
lowed to apply for housing facili
ties in Hensel Apartments, Bennie
A. Zinn, director of student af
fairs, announced today.
The move, to ease crowded
dormitory housing- conditions, is
designed to fill existing- vacancies
in the previously “for married stu
dents only” apartments.
Applications for Hensel accom
modations will be accepted begin
ning Monday in the Housing Of
fice, Zinn said.
PetE Staff Preps
For Advanced
Drilling Course
The Department of Petroleum
Engineering is preparing for the
fifth session of the Advanced
Drilling Engineering Shortcourse
for personnel of the petroleum
industry. When the session opens
Monday, the classes will be held
in the new W. T. Doherty Petro
leum Engineering Building in the
special “industry” classroom.
The two-week course consists
of eight hours lecture each day,
five days a week.
The lectures will be presented
by members of the faculty of the
Department of Petroleum Engi
neering. It will be supplemented
by lectures by outstanding men
of the oil industry, most of whom
have appeared before in sessions
here.
Men of recognized ability and
knowledge in specific areas of in
terest to the drilling engineer have
been chosen as speakers.
Most of the enrollment for this
session is made up of personnel
from companies in the United
States with the exception of sev
eral men from abroad.
I
RESERVE DISTRICT NO. 12 STATE NO. 1754
Report of Condition
COLLECE STATION STATE BANK
of College Station, Brazos County, Texas
at the close of business September 27, 1961, a state banking institution
organized and operating under the banking laws of this State and a member
of the Federal Reserve System. Published in accordance with a call made
by the State Banking Authorities and by the Federal Reserve Bank of this
District.
ASSETS
Cash, balances with other banks, and cash items in process
of collection $ 959,683.54
United States Government obligations, direct and guaranteed.. 776,991.35
Obligations of States and political subdivisions 166,903.84
Corporate stocks (including $9,150.00 stock of Federal
Reserve Bank) 9,150.00
Loans and discounts (including $40,636.78 overdrafts) 1,958,472.23
Bank premises owned $108,877.34, furniture and
fixtures $22,677.98 ! 131,555.32
Real estate owned other than bank premises 1.00
Other assets 596.00
TOTAL ASSETS $4,003,353.28
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations $2,270,178.65
Time and savings deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations 706,948.04
Deposits of United States Government (including
postal savings) 121,953.10
Deposits of States and political subdivisions 475,794.70
Other deposits (certified and officers’ checks, etc.) 13,621.85
TOTAL DEPOSITS $3,588,496.34
Total Demand Deposits 2,793,199.25
Total Time Deposits 795,297.09
TOTAL LIABILITIES $3,588,496.34
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Capital (Common stock, total par value) $ 200,000.00
Surplus 105,000.00
Undivided profits 109,856.94
Total Capital Accounts $ 414,856.94
Total Liabilities & Capital Accounts $4,003,353.28
I, Robert L. Ayres, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that
this report of condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and
belief.
ROBERT L. AYRES
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this report of condi
tion and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
R. B. Butler
L. G. Jones Directors
Harold Sullivan
State of Texas, County of Brazos ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 7th
day of October, 1961.
H. Leo Moon, Notary Public
Studies History
Shapely Gayle Southerland, of Harlengen, examines a
cypress post used as piling in a bridge by General Zachary
Taylor in 1846 to carry military supplies across Boca
Chica inlet near the mouth of the Rio Grande. Gayle has
been around only some seventeen years, but, she and the
post seem to be holding up well. (AP Photo)
THE
Thursday, October 12, 1901
BATTALION
College Station, Texas
Page 3
Trinity Offers Aggies Date, Dance-$1
Kappa Psi Omega social club at
Trinity University has invited all
A&M students to Friday night’s
Homecoming Queen selection dance
in the Student Union Building.
Club Vice President Drewcilla
Biown said today an attempt will
also be made to furnish dates for
those who desire them.
Ducats for the 8:30 p.m. dance
will sell for $1.
Nominees for homecoming queen
will be presented at the dance in
evening- dresses, suits and bathing-
suits.
Miss Brown’s address, for either
ticket or date information, is 330
Bushnell, Box 42, San Antonio.
COPYRIGHT <£) 1961, THE COCA COL* COMPANY COCA-COLA AND COKE ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS
In over 100 countries
people get that refreshing
new feeling with Coke!
Journalism Council Joined By
Ford Motor Co. Executive
Arthur W. Angrist, manager of
the Employee Information Depart
ment of Ford Motor Co. in Dear
born, Mich, has accepted an invita
tion to membership on the Texas
A&M College Journalism Advis
ory Council for 1901-62.
Other council members are Sta
ley McBrayer, chairman and pub
lisher of the Arlington Daily
News-Texan; Bill Barnard, Associ
ated Press bureau chief from Dal
las; J. Harve Washington, em
ployee relations, Continental Oi^,
Co., Houston;
Frank Fields, employee educa
tion director, Humble Oil Co.,
Houston; Bert Brandt, a commer
cial photographer of Houston;
John Murphy, executive director,
Texas Daily Newspaper Associa
tion;
William Berger, publisher of the
Hondo Anvil-Herald; Calvin Pigg,
farm editor, WBAP-TV in Fort
Worth; T. O. Tiedt, farm reporter,
KTRH-TV, Houston;
James A. Knight, Jr., public
relations director, Aluminum Com
pany of America, Point Comfort;
Glen E. Wilbur, advertising agen
cy representative, Houston, and
L. B. Smith, publisher, Brady
Standard.
Bottled under authority of Bryan Coca . Cola Bottling Co.
The Coca-Cola Company by
• •
PROJECTS OF THE BELL SYSTEM
range from the reaches of space
Unretouched time exposure shows Echo I communications satellite (long lino)
crossing the heavens right to left. Shorter lines are stars “in motion.”
Our job is providing communications
of all kinds, wherever needed—whether
in the northern snows to flash word of
possible enemy missile attack, or in your
home or college, or in serving the
nation’s business.
When we can’t fill a need off the shelf,
then we start fresh and create the answer
to the problem. We’ve done that hun
dreds of times.
We began transatlantic radiotelephone
service in 1927. Then we developed the
world’s first undersea telephone cables
to speed calls between continents.
We handled the world’s first telephone
conversation via satellite. And we have
started development of an important
world-wide communications system em
ploying satellites.
When industry and government needed
a way of gathering huge amounts of
coded information from distant points,
we were ready with our vast telephone
network and Data-Phone, which can
transmit mountains of data at extremely
high speeds.
And so it goes—Long Distance service,
Direct Distance Dialing, the Transistor,
the Solar Battery —a succession of firsts
which goes back to the invention of the
telephone itself.
Universal communications—the finest,
most dependable anywhere—are what we
deliver. Inside: for home, office, or plant.
Outside: on land, under the sea, through
the air.
BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM