Tryouts Continue or Aggie Players Tryouts for the Aggie Players’ first two presentations of the year will be held at 7:3Q p.m. Thursday in the Music Hall. The two plays are “The Male 's, rere|Animal” by James Thurber and ‘The Lady’s Not For Burning” by Christopher Fry. Those interested are requested to contact C. K. Esten in the Music Hall of Bob Hipp, J-16 Hart Hall. ess of 4 i to pC man if i coamif travel t e eta ie that ithoriiei mds oil) ssessi* be km g Emii ■o pay"; cli PlVi hired * itified, aneit( all i st hey ntd next for a ,000 fir - neariij 1 NG ISM ESS Mir /?M» f Harvard has had winning foot- jall teams the last three seasons. GARZA’S Restaurant GENUINE MEXICAN & AMERICAN FOODS 803 S. Main Bryan Two Groups Unite Program The Presbyterian Student As sociation and the Wesley Founda tion will begin their joint seminar program Wednesday at 7:15 p.m. at the Presbyterian Student •Cen ter. The programs are designed to meet the interest of today’s stu dent, according to the Rev. Arlen Fowler, Presbyterian chaplain. Seminars being offered during the next six weeks are “The Un folding Drama of the Bible,” “Be lieving in God” and “The Protes tant and Politics.” Each group will have a student leader and a qualified resource person for the subject being discussed. Opportunities for worship and study are provided by Presbyter- ian-Methodist joint efforts, pointed out the Rev. John Combs, Method ist chaplain. The order of evening prayer is read each Tuesday at 5:20 p.m. and Holy Communion is Thursday at 5:20 p.m. Fish Fellowship is presented on first and third Fri days at 7:15 p.m. ATTENTION BOWLERS MIXED LEAGUES Being Formed at M.S.C. Lanes Starting Wednesday Night at 7:00 P. M. September 26. All Interested Couples Call or Come By M.S.C. BOWLING GAMES DESK. THE BATTALION Wednesday, September 26, 1962 College Station, Texas Page 3 THER’LL TRANSFER 1 1-2 MILLION Computer Asked To Unravel $200 Million Power System ... New Band Uniforms Received Mrs. Marvin Butler, this year’s band calendar chairman, watches approvingly as David Maddox and Phil Butler model their new uniforms for Willard Johnson, A&M Con solidated High School Band director. Century Council Report Sent To Area Businesses, Clubs Approximately 5,000 copies of the Century Council report are being sent to various groups, organizations and businesses, ac cording to R. L. Hunt Jr., director of the Century Study. Those receiving copies of the report include the faculty and staff, members of the Association of Former Students, college and public school officials, members of * BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES Ons day 3^ per - it per word each additional day Minimum charges—40^ DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publication Classified Display 80« per column inch each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR SALE ’49 Buick, straight 8. will run. ! VI 6-7334. fies by pMO; study tables, 2 Vz ft. by 3 ft, Bhairs, $1.00; 900 Hereford, VI 6-7334. H Two boy’s 26” bicycles, newly r iitioned. $20.00 each. Call VI 6-7032. SG ors. erks, coffee table dso table (eight. Se to., 4 block lighway 6. Phone VI 6-5711. of for ! We have received a shipment lao doors. All sizes. Ideal i coffee tables, or new construct able legs from 12” to 29”, < Marion Pugh Lun Kyle Field, legs fi See at the JV cks south Rubber base toller and pan, JlO West 26th, erjwe!: pa 98?, Ch; owntown Bryan. aint, $3.89 per gal.; pa * apman’s Paint Sto next to the Post WORK WANTED I Typing - electric typewriter. Expe lecretary, business teacher. VI 6-851 TV - Radio - Hi-Fi Service & Repair GILS RADIO & TV TA 2-0826 2403 S. C Now from MARY CARTER priced STELLAR QUALITY PAINT ecoi 5 per gal. MARY CARTER’S finest nel plus a top quality trim brush 1 pric $2.66 amel plus a top qn; regular $2.09 value NOW 49?. MARY CARTER PAINTS 305 Dodge Bryan AGGIES NOTICE Major Brands Oils 27-31? Q For your parts and accessorit AT a DISCOUNT See us— Plenty free parking op posit the courthouse. DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS Brake shoes, Fuel pumps. Watt pumps. Generators, Starter Solenoids, etc. Save 30 to 50' Filters 40% discount AT JOE FAULK’S 25th and Washington FOR RENT Clean furnished large apartment. Bed room, private bath and entrance. 2 boys preferred. 917 South College. 3t2 Furnished house, TA 2-3669. 3t3 Two large comfortable bedrooms, 401 itexter, VI 6-4233. 128tfn CHILD CARE Babysitting from 8 to 5, experienced. C-8-B College View. Itfn I will keep child in my home. Close to campus. 200 Montclair. VI 6-7617. 136tfn Will keep children in my home. Con venient to Bryan and College. TA 2-3828. 134tfn Will keep infant child or children in my home. TA 3-5129. 130tfn HUMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY Children of all ages, weekly and hourly rates, 3404 South College Avenue, Bryan, Texas. Virginia Davis Jones. Registered Nurse. TA 2-4803. 124tfn Will keep children, all ages, will pick up and deliver. VI 6-8161. llltfn FEMALE HELP WANTED Waitress, experience not necessary, must oe 18 years of age. Ferreri’s Triangle Restaurant, TA 2-1362. 123tfn HELP WANTED Junior or Senior interested in part time night delivery work. Contact Rao Drive-In. 4tfn Lab Assistants for 218, 219, and 220. Any students who has taken one or more semesters of Physics and is interested in working as a Lab Assistant, please come by the Physics Office, Room 231. 3t4 ® ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES 608 Old Sulphur Springs Road BRYAN, TEXAS SOSOLIK'S T. V., Radio, Phono., Car Radio Transistor Radio Service 713 S. Main TA 2-1941 s3« TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES • TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main TA 2-6000 SPECIAL NOTICE SUL ROSS LODGE, NO. 1300, AF&AM. Called meeting, Thursday, Sept. 27 at 7 p. m. The Fellow- craft Degree will be conferred. 4* _ egree \ W. S. M Joe W anning, WM tket. Secy Save on auto insurance through div idends, call George Webb, Farmers In surance Group, 3510 South College, Bryan. TA 2-4461. We insure single men under 25 at standard rates. 136tfn tart your fall fishing and picnicing right at Hilltop Lake, if iil< back free, 9 % highway 6, mg an< rained out, come south of college on 136tfn Electrolux sale Williams, TA 3-53 and service. G. C. 90tfn OFFICIAL NOTICES Official notices must be brought, mailed or telephoned so as to arrive in the Office of Student Publications (Ground Floor YMCA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12. 1-5, daily Monday through Friday) at or 1 deadline of 1 p. m. of the day publication — Director of Studen tions. before the ie day preceding Student F Publxea- All Student Organizations should apply cognition for 1962-63 ; Stu- Center, Memorial Student for Official Rei dent Finance P by MSG Student Finance Center inance (Jenter, Center by October 15,. 3tll Ph. D. Language Examination Examinations for meeting the foreign language requirement for the Ph. D. de- ee will be given Monday, Oct 1st at 00 p. m. in Room 129, Academic Build- wishing to take th Id leave the gree will be given Monday, Oct 1st 6:00 p. m. in Room 129, Academii ing. Students wishing to take this amination should leave the material over which they wish to be examined with the Secretary in the Department of Modern Languages not later than 5:00 p. m. Fri day. Sept. 28th. Department of Modern Languages J. J. Woolket Head 139t7 HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th TA 2-2819 the legislature, government offi cials engaged in the education pro gram and friends of the college. Hunt said the Board of Directors is now preparing a list of goals and ideals for the college to follow in the coming years. These will be introduced during the A&M Convocation Nov. 16. The Century Study is trying to look ahead to meet world problems and crises by establishing certain goals and ideals. He added that this program began in May, 1961, and is composed of 100 outstanding laymen. Naval Program Seeks Applicants Lt. G. E, Bayliss, commanding officers of the Naval Security Group Division 8-19, has announced that students interested in apply ing for the Navy ROTC program leading to a commission in the Naval Reserve should report to Room 320, Nagle Hall, Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. or any Monday night at the same time. What does it take to exchange IV2 million kilowatts of electricity between two major regions in the United States ? Answers to this problem involv ing 11 southwestern power com panies and the Tennessee Valley Authority are being spelled out at A&M’s Data Procesing Center. Basically, the problem is this: TVA has heavy winter-load com mitments due to heating in its service region while the south western electrical companies need extra power during the summer because of air conditioning require ments by their consumers. Both “systems” have surplus power in their respective ‘off” seasons. A PROGRAM DEVELOPED by Robert E. Kilmer, A&M computer programmer at the $4% milion computing research facility, was selected to unravel the complex problem that will eventually in volve expenditure of up to $200 million. It was up to the Data Processing Center to build a mathematical “model” of the entire projected sys tem and program it into A&M’s IBM 709 and 1401 computer com plex. Kilmer was able to develop a program that was both “sopisti- cated and flexible” to simulate the various complex electrical power sytems that will be involved in the IV2 million kilowatt interchange, acording to W. M. Brewer of Ar kansas Power & Light Co. “Because of Kilmer’s work, the Data Processing Center was select ed over several of the larger com puting facilities in the nation,” Brewer said. “KILMER APPROACHED the problem from the viewpoint of a power engineer, rather than trying to adapt a power system’s needs to computer system’s requirements. The result is a more flexible pro gramming technique that gives the answers we’re looking for,” he add ed. Kilmer’s computer program will tell the power engineers: (1) the amount of power each generation installations should produce for proper interchange; (2) a listing of power flow between the different coordinates, and (3) loss of power each individual company may ex pect (line transmission loss) and not be compensated for. Accuracy in gaining a solution for this size of problem is the unique aspect of the program de veloped by Kilmer, who worked on the project for a year. His program projects data that will reveal weak points in the pro posed plans, as well as what addi tional equipment — such as con densers and transformers — will be needed. A GROUP OF 18 engineers, re presenting the investor-owned com panies and the TVA, have arrived on campus to help feed data to the computers. The region their electric com- SCONA (Continued From Page One) United States and Mexico will have gobbled up the entire budget by the time the last speech is over and delegates are returned home. SCONA pays transportation jarid housing expenses of its delegates. KREBS HAS bQcome adept at raising funds fdf SCONA through working on its ancestors. He said: “Everyone who called on spon sors received a variety of experi ences. ' v • “I’ve been thrown out of the biggest and most plush offices in Dallas. “Actually though, I’ve found personally most civic-minded busi nessmen are quite surprised that we have such a thing as SCONA. “They are amazed at the size of the conference, the caliber of speakers and the interest shown by students who engineer the en tire thing.” panies and the TVA serves ex tends from Bristol, Va., to Wichi ta, Kan., and from Kentucky border to Beaumont. The private electrical companies generate of a collective total of about 15 mil lion kilowatts while the TVA re presents a total power generation capacity of another 15 million kilowatts. Both TVA and the 11 companies expect to spend $100 million each in the next six years to build a system of high-voltage power lines to complete the interchange net work. The analysis of the power engi neers shows that it is more econo mical to build this system than for each group to build separate generation facilities. In this way both can use the surplus of the other system. And, each system gets the benefit of deferring capi tal expenditures on more costly generation plants. SATELLITE 3; i MOTEL Highway 77 South Giddings, Texas “For The traveler Who Wishes The Best In Com- fort ahd Conve nience spends The Night At The SateRitg.” . - , v - ' 3 SPECIAL COMMERCIAL AND FAMILY RATES. Dave Brubeck I'm in a Dancing Mood Ray Conniff The Way You Look Tonight Miles Davis If I Were a Bell DR. G. A. SMITH O P T O M E T R I S T • PKCIAL.IZINO tm *Yi (XAMINATION •nd CONTACT LtNSES BRYAN OPTICAL CLINIC ’ "ioS'No. MAIN • B R YA N . T E X A S YOUR DISTRIBUTOR FOR • EICO KITS • Garrard Changers 0 HI-FI Components • Tape Recorders Use Our Time Payment Plan BRYAN RADIO & TV TA 2-4862 1301 S. College Ave. SHIPLEY DONUT & COFFEE SHOP For The Best Coffee & Freshest Donuts ANYWHERE Hamburgers — Short Orders — Fountain Service Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules & Etc. 5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG LOUPOTS Freezer Specials — Completely Processed For Your Freezer or Locker BABY VEAL HIND QUARTER 60 to 80 Lbs. — 59c Lb. CORN FED y 2 PORK 75 to 100 Lbs. — 35^ Lb. Processed While You Wait! HANSON MEAT CO. 2701 Texas Ave. TA 2-1316 TA 2-1317 The Brothers Four Andre Previn Duke Ellington Carmen McRae ParadJddie Joe Roy Hamilton Angel Eyes Gerry Mulligan What Is There To Say TheHi-Lo’s! 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