The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 25, 1962, Image 3

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Aggies To Attend
Medical Schools
Former students at A&M have
been accepted for dental and med
ical studies at nine institutions
throughout the United States for
the 1962-63 school year.
Among the 25 admitted to the
schools are three scholarship win
ners.
Luis A. Bernhardi Jr. of Fort
Worth is cashing in on a $1,500
grant at the School of Osteopathy
at Kirksville, Mo.
Other Aggies awarded grants
were David Carter, $300 to study
at the University of Texas Med
ical Branch at Galveston; and Wil
liam M. Pederson of Lufkin, $1,500
to study at the University of Tex
as Southwestern Medical School
at Dallas.
A&M students and their new
schools are:
Charles Burg and Clifton Smith
—University of Texas Medical
Branch at Galveston.
Charles G. Briseno, John Hall,
William L. Hutton, George E.
Lowke and Charles F. Skripa—
Ag Fish Plan
First Meeting
The Freshman Agricultural So
ciety will hold its first meeting
in the Animal Industries lecture
room Tuesday at 7:30 p.m., ac
cording to Dr. Richard C. Potts,
assistant director of agricultural
instruction. He said all freshman
agricultural students are automat
ically members of the organiza
tion.
Potts said purposes of the so-
city are to inform its members of
the many occupations in agricul
ture, to aid them in choosing an
agricultural major and profession,
to promote better relationships
unong freshman students in the
School of Agriculture and to give
freshman students an opportunity
to become acquainted, with mem
bers of the teaching staff in the
School of Agriculture.
PARDNER
You’ll Always Win
The Showdown
When You Get
Your Duds Done
At
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
Univer-
at New
University of Texas Southwestern
Medical College at Dallas.
Ogden Baur, John N. Harring
ton and Harry H. Pendery—^Uni
versity of Tennessee Medical
School at Memphis.
Doyle G. Graham—Duke Univer
sity College of Medicine at Dur
ham, N.C.
Robert T. Solis—Yale
sity College of Medicine
Haven, Conn.
Edward L. Bowden—School of
Osteopathy at Kirksville, Mo.
Tommy J. Davidson and Carlton
Lee Sage—Baylor University Den
tal College at Dallas.
Richard A. Box, David C. Chapa,
Robert L. Donahue, Bernard J.
Haegelin, Robert P. Korth and
Gerald L. Ray—University of Tex
as Dental Branch at Houston.
James E. McGregor—University
of Tennessee Dental Branch at
Memphis, Tenn.
Conservative Club
Calls First Meeting
The A&M Conservative Club
will hold its first meeting of the
year in Rooms 2-A and 2-B of the
Memorial Student Center at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday.
“The Red Myth,” a documentary
film on Communism, will be shown.
All students interested in joining
should attend this meeting.
MSC Dances
Feature Girls
Registration for the annual
MSC dance classes will begin
Tuesday night in the Ballroom of
the Memorial Student Center.
Interested pupils may enroll be
tween 7:30 and 10:30 for three
consecutive Tuesday nights. Ad
mission -wall be $5 per person for
the semester, with classes to be
instructed by Manning Smith, a
dance instructor in Bryan.
A dance party will be held at
the end of the semester.
SHSTC Offers
Night Classes
To Residents
The Women’s Auxiliary to the
Texas Student Chapter of the
American Veterinary Medical As
sociation is promoting extension
classes from Sam Houston State
Teachers College as a service to
its members.
A representative from SHSTC,
W. C. Perkins, will meet with those
interested Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
in the auditorium of the A&M
Consolidated Junior High School.
Perkins will discuss courses which
can be offered and make final
arrangements for the courses.
The classes will meet one night
a week for sixteen weeks in the
Bryan area. The courses will be
for either undergraduate or grad
uate credit.
Classes will start the week after
the discussion meeting. The fee
is usually $30.00 for a three hour
course. In the past, history, govern
ment, education, art and library
service courses have been offered
by extension here.
Retired General Appointed
To Transportation Institute
Appointment of Maj. Gen. John
P. Doyle, USAF, retired, as pro
fessor of the Thomas H. MacDon
ald Chair of Transportation has
been announced by Dean Fred Ben
son of the School of Engineering.
The chair is the senior position
in the Texas Transportation Insti
tute. It was established in tribute
to the memory of the late Thomas
H. MacDonald by his friends and
admirers.
“GEN. DOYLE is a nationally
recognized authority in the field
of transportation,” Benson said.
“He will provide outstanding lead
ership in broadening the scope of
our studies of transportation.”
Gen. Doyle retired in 1956 after
30 years of service with the U.S.
Air Force. He was recalled to
active duty in 1959 at the request
of the Senate commerce committee
and spent 18 months directing a
study of national transportation
policy.
Now -with the Transportation
Consultants, Inc., in Washington,
D.C., Doyle will assume the Mac
Donald Chair next March or April
after completing a seven-month
assignment in Africa for the con
sulting firm.
A NATIVE OF Washington,
D.C., Doyle graduated from the
United States Military Academy at
West Point and was commissioned
a second lieutenant in the cavalry
in 1926.
Transferred to the Army Air
Corps in 1932, the general has been
credited with a major role in the
growth of airpower as a powerful
weapon of the United States. In
World War II, he was commander
of the famed “Martin Marauders”
and saw service in the Pacific,
North African and European cam
paigns.
During the Korean conflict, he
commanded the Far East Air Ma
teriel Command, responsible for
logistical support of the air forces
of the United Nations.
Four years prior to his retire
ment, Doyle served as director of
transportation for the Air Force
with worldwide policy responsi-,
bility. While assigned to this post
in Washington, he was honorary
president of the National Defense
Transportation Association.
Gen. and Mrs. Doyle, the former
Catherine LaMon, have a son,
Capt. John P. Doyle Jr., assigned
to the U.S. Army Transportation
Corps.
1
men recommend it
to other men
ill
Cool, clean Old Spice After Shave Lotion always
gets you off to a fast, smooth start. Feels just as
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Rates A-OK with dates. 1.25 and 2.00 plus tax.
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S w u t_ T o Nl
AFTER SHAVE
LOTION
Activation Analysis L-ab Visitor
Dr. Robert A. Dudley (left), physicist with the Interna
tional Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, Austria, is shown
some of the equipment in the Activation Analysis Research
Laboratory by Dr. Edgar L. Steele, chief scientist at the
laboratory. Dudley, who is interested in medical isotope
procedures, visited the facility to learn about possible appli
cations of activation analysis techniques.
AMONG THE PROFS
Dairy Science Professor
Returns From World Trip
Dr. I. W. Rupel, head of the
Department of Dairy Science, and
Mrs. Rupel, have just returned
from an around-the-world trip that
took them to 15 countries and cap
ital cities.
The main purpose of the trip
was to attend the 16th Interna
tional Dairy Congress Sept. 2-7 at
Copenhagen, Denmark. Rupel was
appointed by the U.S. Department
of State as one of 10 official dele
gates to represent the United
States at the Congress. More than
3,000 dairy scientists, industry ex
ecutives and government officials
and wives ’ attended.
Denmark’s King and Queen op
ened the congress. The Rupels
were guests at a reception given
by King Frederick and Queen In
grid Sept. 7 at their summer castle
near Copenhagen. A group of 190
official delegates and wives were
there.
★ ★ ★
Dr. Alvin A. Price, dean of the
School of Veterinary Medicine,;
participated in the Tropical Medi
cine and Parasitology Study Sec
tion of the National Institutes of
Health last weekend at Bethesda,
Md. ' fV
As appointed member. Price re
viewed and made recommendations
to NIH regarding research pro
posals to be supported.
A ★ ★
Dr. W. C. Banks, professor of
veterinary medicine and surgery,
was guest speaker at the Dallas-
Fort Worth Radiological Safety
Meeting Sept. 17 at Fort Worth.
THE BATTALION
Tuesday, September 25, 1962 College Station, Texas Page 3
100 Journalists
Meet Here Soon
More than 100 journalists from
20 schools are expected to attend
the 10th annual Texas Junior Col
lege Press Association here Oct.
7-9.
Among the speakers will be Dr.
C. C. Colvert, acting dean of Col
lege of Education and consultant
in junior college education at the
University of Texas, and Jack
Mohler, city editor of the Houston
Press.
During the three-day meeting,
the junior college journalism stu
dents will hear various news me
dia speakers and attend yearbook
and newspaper workshops.
The annual conference will be
gin with registration at 5 p.m.
Oct. 7, Dr. John C. Merrill, jour
nalism professor and director of
the conference, announced.
Registration will be followed
with a sponsors’ meeting and get-
acquainted sessions for student
delegates, Merrill added.
Dr. Frank W. R. Hubert, dean
of the School of Arts and Sciences,
will officially welcome the group
to the campus at 8 a.m. the next
day.
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Reflections of Telstar
Remember the picture above? It flashed across your
television screen on a hot night last July. Perhaps
you remember that it originated from France. And
that it reached the U. S. via Telstar, the world’s first
private enterprise communications satellite.
Since that summer night, the Bell System’s Telstar
has relayed electronic signals of many types —tele
vision broadcasts, telephone calls, news photographs,
and others.
But there’s one Telstar reflection you might have
missed. Look into the faces of the Bell System people
below and you’ll see it. It is the reflection of Telstar’s
success that glowed brightly on the faces of all who
shared in the project.
Their engineering, administrative and operations
skills created Telstar and are bringing its benefits
down out of the clouds to your living room.
These Bell System people, through their talented,
dedicated efforts, make your phone service still better,
more economical, and more useful.
The reflections of Telstar are many.
Bell Telephone Companies
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