illel Foundation Schedules Annual all, Banquet This Saturday Night The B’Nai B’rith Hillel Founda tion will have its annual ball and lanquet Saturday night tO' honor raduating seniors. Frank Hubert, dean of the chool of Arts and Sciences, will e the main speaker at the ban- quet at Clayton’s Restaurant at 6:30. The ball will follow at the Hillel Foundation Building. Awards will be given to the graduating seniors and the senior- class will present a gift to the Hillel Building. What Are You m Having For Dinner Tonight? HANSON’S MEMBERS are most likely having T-Bone or Sirloin Steaks. And the best part is that it is not costing them anymore than they were spending before they joined. HANSON’S FOOD SERVICE. What they are doing is buying in quantity and getting more for their money. Let HANSON’S fill your freezer and keep it full. If you do not have a freezer, HANSON’S has all sizes of the best freezers that money can buy. THE AVERAGE COST OF FOOD AND FREEZER IS ONLY — $14.00 PER WEEK So why don’t you call now or better still, drop by HANSON’S and let one of our representatives show you through our beef processing plant. Your membership with HANSON’S entitles you to continued food service should you move any place in the United States. Hanson Food Service TA 2-1316 2701 Texas Ave. Bryan, Texas TA 2-1317 PALACE STARTS TODAY Adult Entertainment No Children Tickets Will Be Sold "The big between people is not between the rich an* the poor. The big difference is .. between those who have ecstasy in love • those who haven’t." B Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer presents PAUL NEWMAN GERALDINE PAGE Based on the Play ^TENNESSEE WILLIAMS Cp-STAR R , NQ SH I RLEY KNIGHT 1 ED BEGLEY'RI P TORN QUEEN FIESTA NITE 6 P. M. TONIGHT Nuclear Reactor Pool Floy Smith, (right) Nuclear Science Center America the reactor pool at the facility, in operations chief, shows R. R. Sugg (left) which 191,000 gallons of water act as a and Ralph Nichol of Aluminum Company of shield for the reactor core. Report Says A verage Student Financed Mostly By Parents Special to THE BATTALION The $2,500 the average college student spends each year is ac- cumlated from many sources, ac cording to an article in College and University Business, the magazine of business administration in high er education. Reporting on a recent survey conducted at Bates College (Lewis ton, Maine), the article states that parents provide funds for 64 per cent of the annual bill. Students ob tain the other 36 per cent from loans, scholarships and their own earnings. DOUBLE FEATURE << BATTLEGROUND ,, & “GO FOR BROKE” VwHUu-THt^sTpicmivPUwTyd VMUVE'IN TcHILOREN UNDER 12 YEARS" FR£E WEDNESDAY “SUMMER AND SMOKE’ with Lawrence Harvey Plus “G. I. BLUES” with Elvis Presley and Cartoon—“Mouse Trapeze’ CAMPUS STARTS SUNDAY BEST ACTRESS 1961 SOPHIA LOREN In “TWO WOMEN” From their own savings, 198 students drew an average of $485, while 207 reported financial sup port averaging $623 in the form of scholarship aid. Loans taken by 109 students averaged $760. The statistical average natural ly encompass all extremes. For example, of the 658 students re sponding to the survey, 36 stated that they received no assistance TOURS (Continued from Page 1) made by the reactor is in the field of cotton growing., Systemic in secticides, introduced into the plant itself, were enthusiastically hailed a few years ago by cotton growers. Designed to prevent boll weevil damage, they have not done the job expected. To determine the movements of insecticides in cotton plants and the amounts reaching the squares and other vital areds, the insecti cides are “labeled” with radioac tive phosphorous. Dr. Joe Hacskayol and his as sociate in the Plant Physiology and Pathology Department have used these isotopes to tell just how much of a systemic insecticide actually reaches the cotton square, where it is needed. The Nuclear Science Center was built at a cost of over one mil lion dollars. Most of this was paid for by the state. In addition, the U. S. Atomic Energy Com mission furnished $29,000 for the purchase of the fuel elements and the start-up procedure. CIRCLE “TO HELL AND BACK” & “PORK CHOP HILL” NOW AT GUION HALL M-G-M BEN - HUR With Charlton Heston Thursday, Friday Saturday & Sunday April 12, 13, 14 & 15 Adults 60c Students 25c GUION HALL THEATER from their parents, while on the other hand a slightly greater num ber reported full parental sup port. The bulk of the individual stu dent’s annual expenses goes to the college. At Bates, the combined costs of tuition, room and board, and fees amounted to $2,015. On the average, the students spent $117 for clothes, $70 for text books, and $115 for recreation. Seniors, as might be expected, spent somewhat more than the un derclassmen, with freshmen, soph omores, and juniors showing high er expense totals with each, year’s advance. Women, surprisingly enough, re ported spending more than mem by just a shade over two dollars. Again, this is an average figure. Both the highest and lowest a- mounts spent were reported by THE BATTALION Wednesday, April 11, 1962 College Station, Texas Page 3 Hange Conference To Open Thursday Current problems in range and livestock management and their solutions will be discussed by ranchers, technicians, bankers and ndustry representatives at the second annual Range Management Conference at the Memorial Stu dent Center Thursday and Friday. Featured speakers on the two- session program, which starts at 1:30 p.m. Thursday, include Ray mond Price, director, Rocky Moun tain Forest and Range Experiment Station, Fort Collins, Colo, “Range and Watershed Management Re search in the Southwest;” Norvel McCauley, Victoria Bank and Trust Co., Victoria, “The Banker’s Role in Range and Livestock Manage ment;” and Urban Farrow, presi dent, Citizens State Bank, Carrizo Springs, “The Banker’s Role in Soil and Water Conservation in Texas.” ATTENTION AGGIE SENIORS COLLEGE MASTER THE COLLEGE PLAN FOR THE COLLEGE MAN: • FOR COLLEGE MEN ONLY • EXCLUSIVE BENEFITS— PREFERRED RATES • DEPOSITS CAN BE DEFERRED UNTIL YOU ARE OUT OF SCHOOL FIDELITY UNION LIFE INSURANCE CO. North Gate VI 6-4988 (Above A&M Photo Shop) WONDERFUL... the sense of SECURITY you get with a BEDROOM EXTENSION You-sleep better knowing it's there. That alone makes a bedroom extension phone well worth its very small cost. And when you take a minute to relax and enjoy a friendly chat, a bedside phone is so convenient. There's a wide choice of color—call our business office today for yours. The Southwestern States Telephone Company