The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 10, 1963, Image 4

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    Page 4
College Station, Texas
Thursday, January 10, 1963
■ ■■■—■ —Ml...
THE BATTALION
FOR RESEARCH ENGINEERS
■Big Cameras Aid Roads
As Well As Hunt Spys
Three Researchers
Plan New Stage
Of Study Of Bats
A three-man A&M research
team will begin another phase of
a detailed study of free-tailed bats
in early February.
Dr. Dilford Carter, a member of
the wildlife management faculty,
and two students — Robert W.
Adams of College Station and Du
ane C. Gall of McAllen — will
visit Central America February
through May for additional data
on the bats.
For more than a year now,
several members of the wildlife
management faculty have studied
habits and collected speciments
throughout Mexico and part of
Central America.
Dr. W. B. Davis, head of the
department, recently has returned
from a month-long search for bats
in parts of Central America.
Carter and his group will begin
Avork in Nicaragua and later move
to Costa Rica and Panama.
Sharp-eyed cameras not too
different from those used on U-2
aircraft are helping to design
safer highways in Texas.
Research engineers in the
Texas Transportation Institute
here and in the Texas Highway
Department are using continu
ous aerial strip photography to
study the level-of-service for a
six-mile section of the Gulf
Freeway in Houston which serv
es motorists in that metropoli
tan area.
Richai’d McCasland, A&M as
sociate professor of civil engi
neering and associate research
engineer for the institute, said
the study will have far reaching
effects on future freeway de
sign.
The study is being conducted
as a part of the cooperative re
search program of the Texas
Highway Department, Bureau of
Public Roads and Texas Trans
portation Institute. Previously
traffic engineers were able to
A-iew and photograph a relative
ly small segment of a highway
from a fixed toAver.
Now, because of airplanes
equipped with 70 mm cameras
capable of taking continuous
strip stereoscopic photographs,
they can accomplish a practical
ly instantaneous inspection of a
..long stretch of highway.
“We are interested in seeing
— and thereby knowing — more
about operational characteristics
of freeways that effect the level
of service a freeAvay can offer
the motorists,” McCasland said.
Instead of limiting their in
terest in the “capacity” of a free
way at a given time, the A&M
and Highway Department engi
neers are looking for the same
factors that motorists use to
evaluate a traffic way: travel
time, traffic interruptions, driv
er ease (or tensiohs) experienc
ed and safety.
“We are developing means to
incorporate all these factors in
an evaluation of the roadway,”
McCasland said.
A strip photograph provides
an overall view that helps engi
neers analyze both the cause and
the effect of traffic stoppages.
35 Put On Faculty
For Annual Course
Thirty-five men in various fields
and from cities coast-to-coast have
been named to the faculty of the
eleventh annual Executive Develop
ment Course scheduled here Jan.
27-Feb. 15.
The nationally recognized au
thorities from business and in
dustry will join seven faculty
members in the instruction, W. E.
Eckles, course director, said. Most
faculty members will make one
speech upon topics under study by
course enrollees.
The Executive Development
Course’s primary purpose is to
help middle and top management
echelons become more effective in
their work and prepare for ad
vancement.
Many companies send manage
ment personnel to the course each
year. Firms represented since the
first class met in 1952 cover a
wide range of industries. Admis
sion is by nomination of the man’s
employer and the approval of the
steering committee.
Three Big Reasons Why You Can't Lose at VVEN^I S
1. WINN’S MONEY SAVING SPECIALS Are Always On Items That Cut The Total of Your Grocery Bill Each Day.
2. WINN’S Sells The Tenderest & Freshest of Fine Meats In Brazos Valley.
3. Buy At WINN’S Where You See Both Sides of Your Purchase.
See WINN'S Large Complete Selection of Fresh Fancy Produce This Weekend
Rushed To Our Store From The Farmer's Market, Houston.
IMPERIAL
SUGAR 5 Lb. Bag 45*
AURORA BATHROOM
TISSUE 10c
BEST
CAN MILK 2 Tall Cans 25c
Swift Premium
iBp FRYERS
Whole Lb. ^5 C
ARMOUR'S STAR
SMOKED HAM SPECIAL
SHANK END Lb. 37c
BUTT END Lb. 49c
CENTER SLICE Lb. 89c
ARMOUR’S STAR SLICED BACON i*. 49c
SPECIAL
LEAN PORK BUTT ROAST
SMALL LEAN PORK RIBS
BUY ON FRESH LEAN PORK
Lb. 45c
Lb. 39c
GRAIN FED LEAN PORK CHOPS
CENTER CUTS Lb. 69c LOIN END CUTS Lb. 49c
Nabisco Oreo Creme Sandwiches
Nabisco Chocolate Chip Cookies
Hunt’s Tomato Sauce
Kobey Shoe String Potatoes
Northern Cleansing Tissues
Alma Fresh Blackeye or Cream Peas
Renown Cut Beans
Le Grande Golden Cream Style Corn
Bama Peach Preserves
Bama Peanut Butter
Wonder Rice
Jello Assorted
Stokley Pie Cherries
Texsun Grapefruit Juice
Cut Rite Wax Paper
Borden Biscuits
Best Bleach
Bayers Aspirin
Colgate Tooth Paste
Purina Grade A Large Eggs
Rosedale Bartlett Pears
16-Oz. Pkg.
14-Oz. Pkg.
8-Oz. Can
Can
200 Count Box 2 For
2 300 Cans
2 300 Cans
2 303 Cans
18-Oz. Jar
12-Oz. Jar
2-Lb. Box
3 Boxes
2 303 Cans
... Large 46-Oz. Can
125 Ft. Roll
3 Cans
y 2 Gal.
24 Count Bottle
Giant 53c Tube
Doz.
2 303 Cans
43c
43c
10c
10c
23c
29c
29c
29c
39c
35c
27c
25c
43c
25 c
25c
25c
29c
19c
39c
49c
39c
White
Potatoes III u. B.,, 28'
Jonathan
Cooking Apples 4 Lb. Bag 29c
Jumbo Crisp Celery Stalk 19c
Snow Ball Cauliflower Hd. 29c
Fresh Mustard Greens 2 Bun. 19c
Fresh Green Onions 2 Bun. 19c
Crisp Cello Radishes 2 Bun. 19c
WINN’S LOCATED BETWEEN UPTOWN BRYAN AND DOWNTOWN COLLEGE STATION
100 FREE BIG BONUS STAMPS COUPON WITH $10.00 PURCHASE OR MORE
BY FULL USE OF OUR EMPLOYEE’S PARKING LOT WE HAVE 20 MORE PARKING SPACES FOR OUR CUSTOMERS.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, JANUARY 12th.
Winn's
rrff
'YOU CAN'T LOSE AT WINN'S
SUPER MARKET
3800 TEXAS AVENUE
(FORMERLY MILLER’S)
BRYAN, TEXAS
I Save 1
BIG I
I BONUS I
I STAMPS 1
Beauty Back In Schoolhouse
Muguette Fabris went back to her schoolbooks wondering;:
if she would loose her job as a high school mathematics I
teacher in Luchon, France. The 22-year-old brunette
beauty was named Miss France of 1963 in a nationwide;
contest Jan. 1—entering without permission from the:
head of the school. (AP Wirephoto)
Famed Skyscraper
Damaged By Fin
L<
B;
NEW YORK 0T > >—A smoldering
fire crept up a towering pipe shaft
and mushroomed into offices high
above the street Wednesday in the
102-story Empire State Building,
the world’s tallest skyscraper. A
discarded cigarette tentatively was
blamed for the blaze, which caused
no injuries but vast confusion.
Choking curtains of smoke
forced night workers to flee of
fices as high as the 85th floor,
only one level below the observa-
Funeral Rites
For Engineer
Held Today
Funeral services were held at
at 10 a.m. Thursday for Robert
Earle Carleton, 66, a retired engi
neer at the A&M Power Plant.
Carleton died Tuesday in a Marlin
hospital.
He was born on March 21, 1896,
in San Saba County, Texas, and
moved to Bryan in 1924. He was
employed at the power plant from
Dec. 26, 1929, to May 31, 1961.
Carleton was a member of the
First Baptist Church of Bryan
and served with the 36th Infantry
Division during World War I.
Dr. Richard H. Poss, pastor of
the First Baptist Church of Bryan,
conducted the services at the Hill-
ier Funeral Home Chapel. Burial
was in the Bryan City Cemetery.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs.
Vera Carleton; two daugters, Mrs.
D. L. Richmond, Yuba City, Calif.,
and Mrs. Harry R. Cox, Childress;
three sisters, Mrs. Ethyl Hairgrove
and Mrs. Barley Booche, both of
Spur, and Mrs. Per Sampson, Junc
tion; thi-ee brothers, Vernon Carle
ton, Port Neches, Larry Carleton,
Kansas City, Mo., and S. H. Carle
ton, Hobbs, N. M., and six grand
children.
tory, where millions of touristilf
have marveled at the grandeur ol
a 40-mile view.
The entire building twice wal
evacuated, as nine floors betweei
the 24th and 68th were damagei!
by the flames.
A water main broke, adding til
the turmoil. Thousands of wort
ers, unable to get to their desks I
on time, milled behind police bar-|
ricades, craning their necks at
smoke plunging out of their ow
offices. Six of the building’s it
high speed elevators were knockedU
out of service.
D<
01
h-Xi
One of Manhattan’s main cross
town arteries, 34th Street, was
closed for a block and a rush how
traffic jam ensued.
A few television and rato
broadcasts beamed from atop the
majestic structure, were knocked ^
off the air for a time.
The fire marshal’s office offered
an “educated guess” that a work-|
man carelessly had discarded a
cigarette Tuesday beside the felt
like covering of a cold water pipe
that rise to the 85th floor of the
building through a utility shaft
All other conduits in the shaft
were covered with asbestos, which
does not buijn.
Q
Si
Ui
A:
I,
th
art
Sp
ring Automobile
Permits Here Soon
w
CO
ou
Students may purchase spring ;
semester automobile registratioi;
parking stickers beginning Mon- .
day, Jan. 21, Campus Security Of
ficer Clenn E. Bolton announced
Wednesday.
Some 4,500 cars were registered
for the fall semester but a de
crease in number is expected this ^
spring, due to dropouts and grad
uation, he added.
Bolton said the windshield stick
ers are ordered by the A&M Press
at the beginning of each school
year from the Weldon, Williams
and Lick Company of Fort Smith,
Ark.
NEW YEAR
SLACK SALE
Dress and Casual Slacks
Reg. 4.95 to 17.95
Now
20% OFF
Shop our stock for that
neat, trim pair of slacks
you’ve been wanting.
A&M MEN’S SHOP
‘Home Of Distinctive Men’s Wear”
North Gate
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