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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 20, 1962)
k# Pag-e 4 College Station, Texas Thursday, September 20, 1962 THE BATTALION Cases Of Polio AUSTIN ' UP) — Texas polio cases, which account for almost half of the nation’s total this year, increased by 4 to 206 last week. Meeting flooms May Be Reserved Now Applications are now being ac cepted for student organization meeting rooms in the YMCA Building, J. Gordon Gay, general secretary of the YMCA, has an nounced. Rooms may be reserved at the front desk of the YMCA, Gay said. There is no deadline. r • - " Aggies Enter Med Schools Twenty-five students who pur sued premedical or pi’edental studies at A&M have been accepted for 1962-63 classes at eight med ical and dental colleges plus a school of osteopathy. Three of the students won scholarships ranging upward to $1,500 in value. The listing by the Premedical and Predental Committee shows REGISTER BETWEEN 1st and 15th for DAY or NIGHT classes STARTING SEPTEMBER 24 Our superior training can alter your future—within months. Dial TA 3-6655 McKinzie-Baldwin Business College 702 South Washington Avenue Bryan, Texas most of the students plan to study at professional schools and colleges in Texas. Others will attend pro fessional schools of Yale Uni versity, Duke University, the Uni versity of Tennessee and the School of Osteopathy at Kirksville, Mo. The committee also reported William F. Pederson of Lufkin won a $1,500 scholarship for the first year of studies at the South western Medical School of the University of Texas at Dallas. Houston Endowment, Inc., made the award. Pederson also received a tuition scholarship from the school and will serve as a laboratory assistant in anatomy. At A&M he was an undergraduate assistant in the De partment of Biology, held a Julia Ball Lee scholarship and was active in campus life. TAES Plans Annual Meeting Staff members of the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station will hold their annual conference here Oct. 10-12 in the Memorial Student Center, according to R. D. Lewis, director of the station. Registi’ation for the conference is scheduled the night of Oct. 9 and until 9 a.m. Oct. 10. Morning and afternoon sessions, plus some at night, will be held. In addition a banquet is on tap for the night of Oct. 10. Speakers, in addition to Lewis, will include Dean of Agriculture Dr. R. E. Patterson, Graduate School Dean Wayne C. Hall, H. C. Knoblauch, deputy administrator of cooperative station services in the United States Department of Agriculture; A. D. Suttle Jr., vice president for research here; Dr. T. R. Timm, head of the Department of Agri cultural Economics and Sociology; and Dr. A. A. Price, dean of the school of Veterinary Medicine. iri I:#- . 18 t X m ill A x X ] - Si®',-, Jgi : III I • ' -- '■ .'A ti|fis§ii ' Look Back On Travels Pointing out on the globe the area they Dr. John M. Skrivanek (Russian emigraii visited during the summer are five members colony), Martin Gottschalk (Germany), 1, of the Department of Modern Languages. Donald Deliz (France) and M. C. Quini From left are Dr. Jack A. Dabbs (Mexico), (Morocco). Winn's Welcome Sale % ; Grapes Tokay or I White Seedless L 1 • -At ‘t-y f X y - lb. 10c VMS 'v,y .^1 1 Hit# V-'H h 1 J U ** V' • n ^ ; % hM • ?! I ^ I’ V?V^- 15^ I*?*!*}*## *f' • • *%i. £ - V- Maryland Club Coffee lb. 59c X *' • ' ^' s ' >i K •j ru,;. !• :-A: S • ■ ! ) SALAD DRESSING J' Best Maid Quart 29c A&M College Fancy Pork Chops LOIN 1st Cutsib- 49c{Lean Center Cutsib.69c Tasty I Sliced—All Meat 1 RANCH BRAND BACON u, 59c | PRESSED HAM OR BIG BOLOGNA Lb 39c Baby Beef—Pin Bone Cuts | Baby Beef I Baby Beef SIRLOIN STEAK Lb 79c ROUND STEAK Lb 89c T-BONE STEAK Lb 99c COCA COLA OR SPRITE 3 c,„ a 25c Sunny Vale ORANGE JUICE FROZEN 4 6 c ^59c Coastal BREADED SHRIMP X 45c Rosedale PEACHES Sliced or Halves 2'/2 Can 1 arRe 19c Renown TOMATOES 2 303 25e ^Cans PORK AND BEANS 2c225c BORDEN S BISCUITS 3 C a„ s 25c Top Kick DOG FOOD : 3 c.ns 25c Bama RED PLUM JAM .! 2 ;^25c Sanitary or Bordens FRESH MILK ^73c Bordens ORANGE DRINK G ;„ , e 29c CHOPPED BROCCOLI, CUT CORN, GREEN PEAS 4 Pk8 ,59c Northern PAPER TOWELS 2 ,,,,37c Crisp Green Fresh Green CELERY Stalk^C CABBAGE Lb.7c Red Ripe California TOMATOES Larse ii, 19c WHITE POTATOES 10 L n b ae 39c Winn's YOU CAN’T LOOSE AT WINN’S SUPER MARKET SAVE BIG BONUS STAMPS WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY SERT. 22. Winn’s Super Market Would Like To Welcome You To Ou • Store This Week End. Big Bonus Stamps For Added Savings. Large Selections Of Fresh Fruits & Vegetables. The Center Of Fine Fresh Meats, Hot Specials & Low Everyday Prices. If It's Hot Outside, It’s Cool At Winn’s AMONG THE PROFS lloiize Attending Graduate Institut Library Director Robert A. Houze is attending an Institute on Information Retrieyal at the Uni versity of Minnesota under spon sorship of the graduate library school. The institute opened today and continues, through Saturday. Purpolse of the institute is to present i a concise ^ picture of tile present | status of information re trieval and the relation of current devices ; and techniques’ : to tradi tional library and' indexing pro- There also will be exhibits si demonstrations. E. M. (Ted) Trew, exteri pasture specialist, has been signed leadership responsibility coordinating an intensive stud; Hast Texas problems and resoura directed toward development oil action program to increase net i come of the area, Dr. R. E. Pate son, Dean of Agriculture, & ^ . ,. . *^.. lk , 1™ jidunced toddy. B cedures. Attention wilLbe gxven , Tl ., w wiU dik .p ss problems si to the probable lines of, future de- po , ssible ’ soIut]ons with apiciI i E1 velopment. i Papers will be presented by representatives from industry, the government and library world. PALACE Bryan 2'SS79 NOW SHOWING Rock Hudson In “SPIRAL ROAD” QUEEN _ NOW SHOWING Robert Preston In “MUSIC MAN and business leaders througk East Texas, tabulate research & of particular significance to t! area, and present the findings a broadly representative group! citizens, including heads of st£ and federal agencies, who »- chart the overall course of aetiuf ★ ★ ★ Dr. Everett R. Glazener, a V faculty member of the Departme of Industrial Education, is il author of a textbook “Basic Meti work.” This text is published the Steck Publishing Company! Austin. The book has been prepared!; use by students taking industri arts metalwork for the first tin' in the junior or senior high It includes introductory process experiences in sheet ornamental iron, art metal, ing, foundry and machine shop. NOW SHOWING JOSEF LEVIN! Bor S ' Nlaltr am MGM rciease CINEMASCOPE & METROCOLOR A MARTIN RANSOHOFF PRODUCTION CIRCLE u NOW SHOWING TONIGHT 1st Show 7:00 Doris Day In “THAT TOUCH OF MINK” & Audie Murphy In “NO NAME ON THE BULLET” REX ALLEX *boy” * KoKa Oct. 21 WIU.ra MAYS Baseb&J] Stw ALSO A- THRILLING V INMATE CONTESTS ^ FraSON ^nODffiG 0 1 ANITA BRYANT U ^ v- -• ^ Recording ^ m OcTm PkldUH DIHUiUM Write Rodeo Office - Oct. I« ANN MAESTOX Champion Archaf *2.40—S3 75—»4.W Vai ini PRISON STADIUM * 2M f.U. HuoUtfll*. T«* PLENTT OF SCATS AVAILABLE