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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1963)
Earns ‘Bob Scout Award HI NGT() N (/P)—Presiden t k, -l{'^Rdy, who ignited the current in;.' fad, received from the Boy wts of America a special “50- ler award” Wednesday to pass to his younger brother, Robert. The delegation of 12 Scouts who if *? H on , * 10 c hief executive also t a batch of manuals on how to l hiking merit badges. ITC Will Begin On Campus Friday n ruerto Rico, the sun shines I flays a year. Temperatures j^dlSfeiiAge 7(j degrees Fahrenheit, lUfnBflonly a six-degree variation wintej- and summer. ■picture schedule f T ProJ AGGIELAND 1963 'f^ ^j 1 ®}' an an( ^ ^ r ’ s have et, anJi|® res ma{ ie to following Nuclear: ihedule: erospace si Feb. H - 12 KLMNO mandW. Feb. 13 - 14 PQRS " at fitS|Feb. 15 - 16 TUVWXYZ md Spatt C. Hi ir, Hunl More than 600 persons including several from both Oklahoma and Louisiana are expected on cam pus Feb. 22-23 for the fifteenth annual Industrial Teacher Confer ence. The Texas Industrial Arts As sociation will hold its meeting in conjunction with the conference. Industrial arts and vocational arts teachers, school superintend ents and college teachers attend the sessions. Dr. L. V. Hawkins of the A&M faculty is conference director. Featured speaker for the meet ing will be Dr. T. M. Stinnett of the National Education Association. Fie will be heard Friday night and at the Saturday luncheon. Stinnett is the assistant executive secre tary for professional development and welfare of the national associ ation. “The Search for Excellence in Industrial Arts” is the conference theme, with Paul Hopson of South west Texas State College as pro gram chairman. Venton L. Brockett of LaMarque heads the Texas Industrial Arts Association, which will hold its business meeting Friday morning and a general session in the after noon. Leading suppliers of industrial and technical educational materials will have displays at the confer ence. A&M faculty and staff members and others interested in industrial education have been invited to see the displays in the exhibition hall way of the Mechanical Engineer ing Shops Building. Conference headquarters will be at the Memorial Student Center. BATTALION CLASSIFIED learch im the ikiMVVANT AD RATES ' mB&T 3c pec ’ per word each additional da 5 empWH Minimum charges—40c p M DEADLINE l orporata* p.m. day before publicatioa re pub Classified Display inch ct Calk mbined Foul 80C per colum each insertion PHONE VI 6-64 FOR SALE . . shop made boots, 2 weeks old. edicine in bou bottoms. 12 inch tops with 5 rows Tj • n 1 himr- Chocolate brown. Size D. Will ■tter, VI 6-5003. 63t2 sseive IIn™ Pain' »iu m h, Robi ^ L957 2 door V-8 Plymouth, stick lessor of i'lfOod motor and tires. Good transpor- ■ $450.00. See Hardy Faulk, A-9 tHu 63tl0 ill be '■ For ds_ A ll models. Would like to ical ScW®' these automobiles also. Especially Ideals Cor seniors. See Charles Fischer, 1. n 1, Room 221 or write Box 5477, City. •edental SofflB 63t4 lecture. boots, size 10 bb-A, excellent con- ,,11, $25.00. R. P. Bechler, 7209 Winnell iventor Of tlf Port Worth 18. Phone BUTLER idget ane 5 t« . 61t4:i mscitator, i'-U ' a jet inject L unizing injapfc FOR RENT rivate, $50.00 per VI 6-5569, 200 64t3 bed apartment, pi • j^Ailities paid. Phoi ch six secoitiw Lane. ization. ia |i furnished house, sinfrle 01 raining at TA 2-1755 after 6 p. m. couple 64t2 ama and tl^edroom furnished house, $40.00 per -hool „,,|ii vl » K .. raw is ifessional fir'*— my 9tfn onorary nie r -[ WORK 2ties o\ WANTED ident wife wants g. VI 6-6306. ironing or by- tfi. ping - electric typewriter.-'E: Bury, business teacher. VI 6' ,xpi -85 ens enence 10. 8Btf t r g s tins, rainei Anot^l nches-Termites-Fleas-Silver Fish Spiders-Ants & L PEST CONTROL Jerry Payne TA 2-0594 tRYAN—ROUTE 2, BOX 174 OUR WORK GUARANTEED re started no-fat diet | HOME & CAR m RADIO REPAIRS on the rat J g ALE g & SERVICE n the priwB a atm (.KIN’S RADIO & TV ds are W® W. 26th TA 2-2819 i rmal nun'll s have o also f° t5 | the hens 1 ither higl> 1! | evels. gone so " f l b non-fat ^1 high and i -| reduced. TYPEWRITERS lentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. IS.Main TA 2-6000 TOUR DISTRIBUTOR FOR f EICO KITS ■Garrard Changers I HI-FI Components I Tape Recorders Use Our Time Payment Plan ®YAN RADIO & TV 12-4862 1301 S. College Ave. DE WITH CADE and IVE ON REPAIRS trained Mechanics ll Make Autos Automatic Transmissions Satisfaction Guaranteed Say: “Charge It” iADE MOTOR CO: | 47 Years with Ford 1309 Texas Ave. WANTED Good used sidewalk bicycle. VI 6-7258. Immediately. 64tfn CHILD CARE Experienced child Maywood after 5.' care. Contact 4313 63t4 Would like to keep children, all C-14-B College View, VI 6-7850. HUMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY. Licens- egis A 2 Will keep 3-5 year old girls in my home. Four years teaching experience. VI 6-7500. Would like to babysit in my home 8-5. VI 6-6536. 59tfn Will keep children, all ages, will pick up md deliver. VI 6-8161. llltfn HELP WANTED Part time help split shift. 11 p. m. Rao Drh Drive In on i p. m., 6 ; the Circle. 8 hour 5 day, - 10 63t4 OFFICIAL NOTICES Official notices must be brought, mailed telephoned so as to arrive in the Office Floor daily Student XMCA, VI auc 6-6416, hours (Ground 8-12. 1-6, SPECIAL NOTICE SUL ROSS LODGE, NO. 1300, AF&AM. Stated meeting Thursday, February 14 at 7 p. m. A special program will be presented. Walter S. Manning, WM Joe Woolket, Secy. 66tl DEGREE FILING DEADLINE SET FOR FEBRUARY 28, 1963 Applications for degree ( baccalaureate and advanced) are now being accepted in the Registrar’s Office from all students who will complete their requirements for grad uation by May 25, 1963. Advanced degree candidates must file application with both the Registrar’s and the Graduate Dean’s Office. H. L. Heaton Director of Admissions and Registrar A CONSTRUCTIVE SUMMER in Europe. Begin or advance in German, French, Spanish, Italian by attending intensive ty associa- 4171 Uni versity Station, Minneapolis 14, Minnesota. 63t3 EXPERIMENT with Fascinating, educational. Us< er, phonograph. Details, free. Research Association, Olympia, Washington. Sleep-Learning! e your reco hu; ng! ord- catab luge catalog Box 24-CP, 63t5 SOSOLIKS T. V., Radio, Phono., Car Radio Transistor Radio Service 713 S. Main TA 2-1941 • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES 608 Old Sulphur Springs Road BRYAN, TEXAS Used Car Headquarters for Central Texas All Makes & Models Quick Credit—Bank Rates CADE MOTOR CO: 47 Years with Ford 1700 Texas Ave. AGGIES NOTICE To Rent Brazos County A&M Club Poi Mixed Parties,—See Joe Faulk SAE 30 Motor Oils 150 Qt. Major Brands Oils 27-310 Qt. For your parts and accessories AT a DISCOUNT See us— Plenty free parking opposite the courthouse. DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS Brake shoes, Fuel pumps. Water pumps. Generators, Starters, Solenoids, etc. Save 30 to 50% on just about any part for your car. Filters 40% discount AT JOE FAULK’S 25th and Washington NOTICE—PRE-VETERINARY MEDICINE STUDENTS Pre-veterinary medicine students wh< pect to qual iry medicine students who ex- lify as applicants for admission the professional curriculum of the School of Veterinary Medic-'" - Heine in Septem- rie n ire application forms in Office beginnh May 1, 1963 deadline for filing applications and tran- ing Mopday, 1963 is the ber 1963 may the Registrar’s February 25, 1963. line for filing appl scripts with the Registrar. H. L. Heaton, Director of Admissions and Registrar 63t8 May graduates may begin ordering their graduation invitations starting February 1st thru February 28th, from 9-4, Monday- Friday, at the Cashier’s Win' Student Center. rial dow, Memo- 56tl7 DR. G. A. SMITH O P T O k* e T R I S T \ »I»«01AUXIN* A—, V ta CY1 CXAMIMATHMte H* COMTAgT BRYAN OPTICAL CLINK. IDS No. MAiril • B R YA N:.\t E xAv TV-Radio-Hi-Fi Service & Repair GILS RADIO & TV TA 2-0826 2403 S. College So you need a RUBBER STAMP Special sale on 3-line name and address stamps Mail this ad & $1.25 to FUGATE PRINTING CO. Box 384 College Station Offer Not Valid After March 1 TYPEWRITERS ADDING MACHINES RENTALS ASK ABOUT OUR RENTAL OWNERSHIP PLAN OTIS MCDONALD’S 429 South Main St. Bryan, Texas MASTER’S TRANSMISSION SERVICE Complete Transmission Service TA 2-6116 27th St. and Bryan Bryan, Tex. 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 T. M. STINNETT Man Displays ‘Bomb’ On Car, Panics Capitol WASHINGTON (A 5 ) — A man with a device of wires and five- gallon cans attached to his auto mobile drove over the sidewalk to an entrance to the Justice De partment building today and kept downtown Washington in pande monium for an hour and a half with a fake bomb threat. He was finally subdued with tear gas, and police reported they found nothing explosive. From shelter beneath the car the man, apparently about 38 oh 40 years old, kept demanding to see FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. Deputy Police Chief G. R. Wal- brodt, one of several who tried to talk the man out of his project, said Ke claimed to have “certain information about the operations of the government of this country and about certain rackets that he would divulge only to J. Edgar Hoover.” The Washington Star quoted him , further as saying he had “evidence” that would result in impeachment of President Ken nedy and the whole Cabinet. The FBI identified the license plates on the car, a 1956, Olds- mobile, as having been issued tto Nathan Wiskowsky, a business man connected with o Phoenix, Ariz., department store. In Phoenix, Mrs. Nathan Wise said, “I know that’s my husband. He’s sick. He needs help.” Puzzled Experts Search For Clues To Jet Disaster MIAMI, Fla. (A 5 )—Fragments of a Northwest Orient Airlines jet that plunged into the Florida Everglades carrying 43 persons to their deaths were examined Wednesday by puzzled experts. The 720B Boeing craft was stewn in pieces over a two- square-mile area. Only portions of the four-jet plane recognizable were jagged hunks of a wing, fuselage and tail. It came down with a roar that “sounded like five tons of dyna mite,” reported George Hunter, who heard the crash from a res taurant he operates 18 miles from the scene. The plane disappeared Tuesday after a routine radio message was received from the pilot, Capt. Roy W. Almquist, who asked clearance to climb from 17,000 to 25,000 feet during a heavy rain squall. THE BATTALION Thursday, February 14, 1963 College Station, Texas Page 5 AMONG THE PROFS Hensarling To Attend School Administrators Convention Dr. Paul R. Hensarling will attend the five-day American Association of School Administra tors convention which opens Satui’- day in Atlantic City, N. J. He heads the Department of Education and Psychology and long has been a member of the national association of school superintendents and college educa tion professors. Hensarling will join Alton Bowen, superintendent of Bryan schools, and Dr. Mortimer Brown of Brown and Associates, Inc., Bryan, for the trip. The outgoing president of the association is Supt. Irby B. Carruth of the Austin schools. ★ ★ ★ Dr. R. N. Traxler will present two technical papers at the na tional meeting of the Association of Asphalt Paving Technologists in San Francisco next week. He is research engineer in bituminous technology at the Texas Trans portation Institute. The papers are titled “Durability of Asphalt Cements” and “Pave ment Performance and Durability as Affected by Asphalt Pi-operties.” ★ ★ ★ Dr. J. R. Couch, professor in the Department of Poultry Science, traveled to Houston recently to dis cuss research support by the Robert A. Welch Foundation. ★ ★ ★ George H. Draper of the Depart ment of Poultry Science has been appointed to a disease control com mittee which will study the possi bility of a National Council Con trol Program. The control program would be directed toward pleuro-pneumonia- like organisms, typhoid testing and partial testing for pullorum- typhoid. The committee came out of a recent meeting of the National Poultry Improvement Plan and the National Turkey Improvement Plan held at Minneapolis, Minn. Recommendations were made by two plans for the poultry improve ment staff of the Agricultural Re search Service, U. S. Department of Agriculture, to appoint commit tees to study and develop sugges tions on disease control presented at the conference. Draper’s committee will meet Feb. 25-27 in Washington, D. C. Results of the study will be sub mitted at the National Turkey and Poultry Improvement Conference to be held next year. Representa tives from all states will partici pate. ★ ★ ★ Two A&M professors of poultry science participated in. recent High School Career Day programs. Dr. C. B. Ryan made a talk at Refugio High School and Dr. W. F. Krueger addressed students at Mineral Wells High School. ★ ★ ★ Dr. W. C. Banks of the Depart ment of Veterinary Medicine and Surgery participated in a radiology meeting this week at the Univers ity of Chicago. ★ ★ ★ Dr. F. P. Jaggi and Dr. L. W. Russell of the School of Veterinary Medicine are accompanying a group of veterinary students on a tour of the State Health Department Laboratories in Austin today. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Ferrel Robinson of the School of Veterinary Medicine is the author of an article appearing in the January issue of “Aerospace Medicine.” Title of the article is “Response of the Rhesus Monkey to Lateral Impact.” ★ ★ ★ Four members of the Depart ment of Poultry Science partici pated in the recent annual meet ing of the Southern Agricultural Workers Association in Memphis, Tenn. TUXEDO RENTAL SERVICE For WEDDINGS — PARTIES — SOCIALS In Stock For Immediate Delivery ZUBIK'S Uniform Tailors North Gate TO USE THE YELL0WPAGES Southwestern States Telephone #r COCA-COLA" AND "COKE" ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS WHICH IDENTIFY ONLYTHE PRODUCT OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY. botany... monotony notes...quotes...trig ...dig...review...stew fuss...discuss...cram exam.. .wow.. .whew pause take a break...things go better with Coke tradc-makkA Bottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company by; Bryan COCO Cola Bottling' Co. They were Dr. J. R. Couch, Dr. W. F. Krueger, Dr. J. H. Quisen- berry and B. C. Wormeli. Couch presented three papers: “Fish Meal as an Amino Acid Bal ance in Practical Feed Formula tions”; “The Phosphorus Require ment of Laying Hens”; and “Vitamin-A Requirements of Grow ing Turkeys.” Papers presented by Krueger were “Artificial Light and Number of Daily Feedings on Performance of Broilers” and “The Effect of Gamma Radiation on Egg Produc tion Characteristics of Leghorn Pullets.” Quisenberry’s papers were “En zymes in Chicken Laying Diets”; “Some Colony Cage Management Practices”; and “Unidentified Fac tors in Laying Diets.” ★ ★ ★ Three members of the Depart ment of Geology and Geophysics have just concluded a special course for the research staff of Jersey Production Research Company in Tulsa, Okla. The firm does special research for various companies of the world-wide Standard Oil Com pany of New Jersey. The three-week course ending last weekend was given by Shirley A. Lynch and Travis J. Parker, professors of geology, and Marvin C. Crocker Je., an advanced gradu ate student. The three A&M men now have 11 industry courses. LIMITED OFFER! The PROMPTER jlYBl “Flight Line’' Series : vAm.. BUY THIS rca Victor tape CARTRIDGE recorder FOR ONLY $99.95 ‘•iswsrarsvuci- PAY ONLY $ 5 00 more and get this famous ^LL & HOWELL Movie camera ^ MURKY! UNITED QUANTITY! 1m SOUneJ trusted name bryan radio & # T. V. SERVICE TA 2-4862 1301 So. College