The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 16, 1962, Image 3

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    YOUR DISTRIBUTOR FOR
C EICO KITS
9 Garrard Changers
9 HI-FI Components
€& Tape Recorders
Use Our Time Payment Plan
BRYAN RADIO & TV
TA 2-4862 1301 S. College Ave.
DR. G. A. SMITH
O P T O M E T H ! S T
SPECIALIZING I
Kl KYI EXAMINATIONS
and CONTACT LENSES
'ms P
MONEY BUNNY
THE BATTALION
Thursday, August 16, 1962 College Station, Texas
Page 3
x»“
Catherine Whitten
Nice ‘Loan Shark’
BRYAN OPTICAL CLINIC
10,&. No , M A IN '• B R VAN.- TEXAS
SOSOLIK'S
T. V., Radio, Phono., Car Radio
Transistor Radio Service
In New Positions
Dr. Richard E. Wainerdi, left, is the new associate dean of
engineering. He has been assistant to the engineering dean
since 1959. Dr. John Q. Anderson, right, has been named
head of the Department of English. He joined the A&M
faculty in 1953.
713 S. Main
TA 2-1941
• ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
(ft BLUE LINE PRINTS
• BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
608 Old Sulphur Springs Road
BRYAN. TEXAS
Rev. Rostvold To Be Installed
As Second Lutheran Pastor
home & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th TA 2-2819
The Rev. Luther Rostvold will
be installed as the Assistant to
the Pastor at Our Saviour’s Lu
theran Church, Sunday.
Pastor Carlton Ruch will install
the new pastor at the early serv
ice. The new pastor will handle
the liturgy at the late service. A
congregational picnic is planned
to welcome Pastor Rostvold in the
air conditioned student center fol
lowing the late service.
Rev. Rostvold, 31, is a native of
Nashwauk, Minnesota. After high
school he attended Ribbing Junior
College until he entered the U. S.
Army. In the Army he served as
tank driver and clerk-typist. He
also worked with the Army Serv
ice Club, planning all types of pro
grams for servicemen.
During his military career he
continued his education with the
Army Educational Program and
the University of Louisville. After
his military service he entered St.
Olaf College and graduated in
1958.
By T. S. HARROVER
Battalion Managing Editor
The keeper of the loan fund goes
by many names during the course
of the school year.
At Easter she becomes the
“Bunny with the Money”, at
Christmas she is known alternate
ly as “Mrs. Scrooge” and “Mrs.
Santa” (depending on whether she
is collecting or lending), at Hal
loween she becomes the “Great
Pumpkin”, and at other times she
is referred to as “Dear Old Moth
er” or “Mrs. Simon Legree”.
Call her what you will, the Ag
gies’ favorite “loan shark” will
loan you up to twenty dollars if
you present your fee slip and ID
card to her.
Mrs. Catherine Whitten man
aged to turn the $14,600 in her
loan fund into $98,000 during the
last fiscal year.
“This is not as difficult as it
may sound,” she said. “All I did
was loan our money out during
the year, as usual. As it turned
out, each dollar in the fund was
loaned an average of seven times.”
All Loaned Out
The fund was completely loaned
several times last year, she said.
“Especially just before Corps
trips.”
“Our loans are supposed to
serve strictly for emergency
needs, although our definition of
‘emergency’ runs pretty broad,
sometimes,” she said.
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*3 IS 1
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I
WHILE STOCKS LAST-
SUPER DISCOUNTS
on one-or-two-of-a-kind
TIRE SPECIALS
. >
U Adires with recently discontinued tread design
f % tires taken off new cars with virtually no wea
* wide selection of used tires . • - save m se s
I LOW PRICES
I
X -Chari*
,1 take
It months
1 to PAY
Whatevery 0ur
tire needs
might be . . .
os
/VOIV/
We have the
t' r e for yo u
mmSmmEE
Of 12 to 36 MONTHS
Honored in all
E-ry n,u, Fire*°£‘f “
life of the orig ^ hazards
2 Against norm rmnctures)
2 ' '(except repairable punct
encountered {or the
passenger ca h specified,
number o montn* ' h
GEO SHELTON
INC
COLLEGE AVE. AT 33rd.
FREE PARKING
TA 2-0139 - TA 2-0130
She went on to tell about one
‘emergency’, an Aggie who came
by and wanted to borrow $1.25.
“He said he had to get a hair
cut. He didn’t want money for
anything else, though he didn’t
have a penny in his pockets.”
She has heard as many differ
ent reasons for loans as she has
made loans, she said.
“I don’t ask why the student
wants the money, because it is not
a requirement for .the loan, but
students usually tell why they
need it just in the course of con
versation.”
She has financed everything
from corsages and dates to grocer
ies and auto repairs.
Over 6,700 Loans
In the course of last year, over
6,700 loans were made to Aggies
in need. Average loan was $14.69.
“Our average contribution was
46c,” she said. “We don’t charge
any interest or fees for loans and
the only way the fund increases
is through contributions and do
nations.”
Mrs. Whitten and her fund hold
dear places in many Aggies’
hearts as the following statement
by one graduate student indicates:
“If I ever give any money to this
place, it’ll be right here,” indicat
ing the loan office.
The “Loan Ranger’ has a won
derful sense of humor and proudly
displays a small “caricature” giv
en to her by Charles D. Johnson,
a junior engineering student from
San Antonio. She is depicted as a
shark with pen and checkbook in
hand—er, flipper— wearing a gold
crown crested with a dollar sign,
with bags and barrels of money
strewn roundabout.
Poetry Is Hobby
She is well known to her pa
trons for her way with verse, also.
Displayed in and around her of
fice are small signs with witti
cisms and poems, mostly original.
One reads:
“Some students drink at the
fountain of knowledge — others
just gargle.”
Another:
“How did the fool and his mon
ey get together in the first
place?”
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- o a n
The Loan Shark
Pictured above is Mrs. Catherine Whitten, manager of the
loan fund, as seen by her customers, several thousand Ag
gies. The drawing was made for her by one of her ‘cus
tomers’.
W5AC
(Continued From Page 1)
ing operators to “Check in”. Each
operator who is listening to the
network checks in- by identifying
himself by call number and loca
tion of his station.
The netwoi’k control operator
then announces the destination of
that day’s messages and asks the
listening operators with stations
at those destinations to stand by.
He then, contacts the ham who
signed in for Dallas, say,. and
gives him the messages for that!
city. He does the same for each
city or area for which he has a
message and a listening operator.
Frequently, the network opera
tor has a message to be trans-j
mitted to a point for which nd
operator signed in. In such a case,
he asks the aid of those who have
contacted him by signing in and
are nearer the destination than
the control station. In this way,
a message may possibly be re
layed through 3, 4, or even 5 radio
operators before finally reaching
its: destination.
We Reserve The Right To Limit All Sales
- GROCERIES -
Hunts—300 Cans
Fruit Cocktail 3 For 59c
Hunts—46-Oz. Cans
Tomato Juice Can 25c
Hunts—14-Oz. Bottles
CATSUP 2 For 39c
Folgers
COFFEE 1-Lb. 59c
Folgers—Instant
COFFEE 10-Oz. Jar 99c
Nabisco—12-Oz.
Vanilla Wafers Carton 29c
Gold Medal—5-Lb. Bags
FLOUR Bag 39c
Snowdrift
SHORTENING 3-Lb. Can 59c
Hersheys—16-Oz. Cans
Chocolate Syrup 2 For 39c
Pet Brand—Tall Cans
MILK 7 For $1.00
Libbys—300 Cans
Fresh Blackeye Peas .... 2 For 29c
Libbys—No. */2 Cans
Vienna Sausage 3 For 59c
Libbys—No. 2Yz Cans
Peach Halves Can 25c
Libbys—12-Oz.
Pineapple Juice 3 For 29c
Pink Beauty—No. 1 Tall Cans
SALMON Can 69c
-FROZEN FOODS-
Morton—22-Oz. Apple, Cherry or Peach
PIES 29c
Sunshine State—6-Oz.
Orange Juice 6 For 89c
Tennessee—10-Oz.
Sliced Strawberries 2 For 39c
Taste-0-Sea—8-Oz.
Fish Sticks 29c
- MARKET -
Deckers—Tall Korn
Sliced Bacon 1-Lb. 57c
Wisconsin—Medium Aged
Cheddar Cheese 1-Lb. 59c
Hormels—Dairy Brand
FRANKS 1-Lb. 53c
Hormels—3-Lb.
Canned Hams Each $2.69
Swifts—Premium
Sliced Bacon 1-Lb. 67c
Bordens Biscuits 2 For 15c
Bordens—Santa Maria
Milk Gallon Plus Deposit 68c
Loin Steak 1-Lb. 79c
T-Bone Steak 1-Lb. ^c
Meaty Short Ribs 1-Lb. 39c
- PRODUCE -
Jumbo Lettuce 2 For 25c
Celery Stalk 15c
Carrots Cello Bag 10c
Porter Tomatoes 2-Lbs. 25c
SPECIALS GOOD THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FRIDAY, AND SATURDAY, AUGUST 16 - 17 - 18
FOOD
MARKET
NORTH GATE —WE DELIVER— COLLEGE STATION
CHARLIES