The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 02, 1962, Image 4

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Connally To Visit Here
As part of his “Campaignathon
by Air,” John Connally, Demo
cratic candidate for governor, will
make a brief stop at Easterwood
Airport at 3:35 p.m. Saturday.
Brazos County Democratic
chairman Glynn A. (Buddy) Wil
liams said that he is very pleased
that the Bry?an_College Station)
area has been chosen by Connally
as one of the 30 stops during his
three-day “campaignathon.”
^Jricincjle l^edtaurcint
3606 So. College
Bryan, Texas
LUNCHES
from 75^ on . . .
That can’t be beat!
AGGIE SPECIAL
Hamburger Steak
Chicken Fried Steak
95tf
POOR BOY SANDWICH
95^ — A Real Treat!
PIZZA PIE
I Plain 50tf & $1.00
Congress Allots
Maritime Funds
I
A?
v
Charcoal Broiled —'Heavy Be*# "’ 7
SUNDAY DINNEKS:| : m ...
<4, Famius FOTeigp Dishes ^
tei
m
MARITIME ACADEMY DISPLAY
. . shown in Memorial Student Center
MEETINGS BEGIN MONDAY
Oilmen Join Lecture Staff
For Annual Drilling Course
tlx ' j pm tne- petroi
Ja cu liyf^o%eg|nt
Ityncdl 4 r4l ¥4 E
the oil
troleum
the
Engi-
Mon-
■ij&ljthe pe-
infk&stty-'
jgir
neerir
troleum .industry throijighbut the
•-nrctiohy Sau'di Arabia, Peni, Vene-
zueJa , and theare to
a&tei&i the twp-Mjeek course.
Gpyspbaisor pf the' coursp is the
Artnefican Association of j Oilwell
Drilling Contractors, R. L. Whit-
%'•••/ A w, K
A
: if«
get Lots
Moie from
,■ r:~ more Both*
111 tUe ,)iencl
more flavor
in the smoke
cucD more taste
through the filter
TH E' (VII R AGLE* TIP ■'
F= 1 L.T E R 3
tfOOETT l M V £RS TOBACCO CO.
And I£M’s filter is the modem filter—all white,
inside and outside —so only pure white touches your lips.
Enter the MI GRAND PRIX 50
Jf or co I lege students on! y 1 50 Pohtlac Tem pes^s I
ing, head of the Department of
Petroleum Engihfeei’ihg',' said.
“The industry .speakers to pre
sent particular^ subjects have been
chosen because of their..recognized
ability and knowledge dn •’ specific-
areas of interest, to .the drilling
engineer,” WhitingMSaJd. <
The lecturer^ include Jack P.
Johnson of Ppnr'Qd Drilling : Co.,
Dallas; R. W. l^iuhe 4r. and K. A.
Pfleger, Magnet 5 Gove Barium
Corp., Houston; WalibY,. E ; , filjo- ;
strand, Mission Manufacturing Co.,
Houston; William M. Koch, Reed
Roller Bit Co., Houston; Harold
G. Bentson and Elmer Kunneman,
Smith Tool Co., Compton, Calif.;
Leonard Leon, Halliburton Oil
Well Cementing Co., Houston; and
H. M. Rollins, Drilco Oil Tools Co.,
Midland.
Also lecturing will be Whiting,
John R. Pedigo and J. W. Amyx
of the petroleum engineering fac
ulty.
Subjects the first week include
a review of rocks and rock prop
erties, circulating fluids in the
bore hole, a study of dialling
strings, rotary drilling bits and a
study of maintenance of the de
sired direction of the drilled bore
■hole, including crooked hole prob
lems and controlled directional
drilling.
Tan Beta Fi Prexy
Attends Convention
dtiidh■■; *’(■... . ■.. - ;.f 11 . o■
Keith P. Watts, president of the
A&M chapter of Tau Beta Pi, re
cently returned from the 57th na
tional Tau Beta Pi convention in
Long Beach, Calif.
Watts, accompanied by his wife,
attended several business meet
ings, panel discussions and ban
quets featuring West Coast engi
neering speakers.
All 109 undergraduate chapters
of the national engineering honor
society and many of the 29 alum
nus chapters were represented at
the convention.
The Texas Maritime Academy
has received word of congressional
action in which 'federal funds
matching State of Texas appropri
ations have been provided, Capt.
Bennett M. Dodson, superintendent
of the Academy, said Thursday.
The legislative bill signed by the
President provides $75,000 to the
academy for the forthcoming year
effective July 1, 1962. An addi
tional $30,000 has been appropri
ated to provide $50 per month sub
sistence payments to each student
of the academy.
“This congressional action sig
nifies full recognition on the part
of the U.S. Congress and the Fed
eral Maritime Administration to
the Texas Maritime Academy as
one of the only six such educational
institutions in the nation,” Dod
son commented.
It also provides the student with
NSF Makes Ocean
Research Grant
A $30,000 grant has been made
by the National Science Founda
tion to support research by a phys
ical oceanographer at A&M.
The NSF grant will finance a
preliminary study of the exchange
of momentum and heat between the
air and the sea by Dr. Robert O.
Reid, professor of oceanography
and meteorology, Dr. Archie M.
Kahan, director of the A&M Re
search Foundation, announced.
sufficient funds to com;
four-year college course, «i
eludes three ocean training,
at approximately the same
it would cost him to atoi
ular nine-month college ;■
he added.
The academy affords si
tunity for students to cni
officers in the U.S, Merck
rine and the huge" maritim
try of the Gulf Coast,!
added.
CONNALLY for G01I
“Texas needs BIG JOE
Stickers, buttons and to
available at Campus Hcs;
ters . . . North Gate (ups
across from Post Office
(Paid m
BLACK LEATIE
GLOVES
Unlined, Lind
& Fur Lined
From $2.45 to $Ui
WOOL OVERSEii
CAPS
$2.45 and up
LOUPOTS
North Gate
BE SURE TO VOTE NOVEMBER
And
<RsL-£kcL
gfe/ Jerry Sadie
To A SECOND TERM As
Land Commission
HIS RECORD: $218 Millions Volume
80,000 Veterans Served
Pol. Adv.—Paid for by Jerri W
We’re
looking
to
Well be on the campus on the dates listed below, ready to
give engineering and science seniors information on space-
age careers in a dynamic industry.
If you are looking for a company offering assignments on
programs of unique interest and career potential, you’ll be
interested in the advantages Boeing can offer you.
Boeing, for instance, is a major contractor on such ad
vanced programs as the Saturn S-IC first-stage rocket
booster, the X-20 Dyna-Soar manned space glider, the
solid-fuel Minuteman ICBM, and the Bomarc defense mis
sile system. Boeing is also the world’s foremost designer
and builder of multi-jet aircraft, including the eight-jet
B-52H missile bomber, the KC-135 tanker-transport, the
C-135 cargo-jet, and the famous Boeing 707, 720 and 727
jetliners* In addition, Boeing’s Vertol Division is one of
America’s leading designers and builders of helicopter*
Research projects at Boeing are under way in such advanced
fields as celestial mechanics, solid state physics, nuclear and
plasma physics, flight sciences, space flight and propulsion.
Expanding Boeing programs offer exceptional opportune
ties to holders of B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in aeronauti
cal, mechanical, civil, electrical-electronic and industrial
engineering, and in engineering mechanics, engineering
physics as well as in mathematics and physics. At Boein?
you’ll work in a small group where individual ability and
initiative get plenty of visibility. You’ll enjoy many other
advantages, including an opportunity to take graduate
studies at company expense to help you get ahead faster-
Drop in to your Placement Office and arrange for
interview. We’re looking forward to meeting you!
Monday and Tuesday — November 5 and 6
An equal opportunity employer
Divisions: Aero-Space • Military Aircraft Systems • Transport • Virtd
Industrial Products • also Boeing Scientific Research Laboratoriei