..Vjswr * r ’ -.T -. -- - v--'* •**.“••* r." - * at “Texas (fel main the staJ mail to Eijl n or WTAtl PaidJ [MONO THE PROFS rts Car Ci Dealers for enault-Peugw & Four Study Data Of TIROS Project ai Four men from A&M will join Hi a conference this week on x- i n?. „ [weather data gained through or- tish Motor Ci H... . , ..Siting satellites. They are study- i Parts-.-- j l L , the uses of TIROS satellite ice All F°re» a ta about weather. isAve. 11 â– Dr. A. H. Thompson will head taj the Department of Oceanography and Meteorology delegation to the conference on the Florida State University campus. The National Weather Satellites Center and the Department of Meteorology at Flo rida State sponsor the meeting. J “Uses of Satellite Data in Tro- .m Hical Meteorology†is the confer- 1/ Al.1 *^ nce k°P’ c - Going with Thompson, ^ rwXyitffijrho heads the TIROS satellite data >> “n Htudies, will be Darryl Anderson, J’ete) ^ h 111 * ns ^ ruc t° r » nnd two graduate students, Air Force Capt. Paul is. Soon I me the newspi t wear thisspnl joro Cigarety white filter, i; ten. 11 ways been is cjpd being i gaily spur-ofl rls try weaiirtl ador pants nil breastplates! f indmost! i cape withsfi strait jacket c ourist attraefe GOOD! They’re the Goodest! STUBBLEFIELDS DO-BOY DO-NUTS Highway 6 at Highway 21 Bryan TA 2-9319 PARDNER You’ll Always Win The Showdown When You Get Your Duds Done At CAMPUS CLEANERS Mohler and Argentine Naval Comdr. Jose Alvarez. ★ ★ ★ Dr. James G. Potter, professor of physics, attended the National Re search Council and National Aca demy of Sciences in Washington, D. G, Feb. 12-14. He was a panel member of the council which selected the Nation al Science Foundation Fellows for 1963-64 and graduate teaching as sistants who are to receive Summer Fellowship Awards. ★ ★ ★ An instructor in the Department of Wildlife Management has been appointed a Research Participant at the Oak Ridge National Labor atory. He is Jack M. Inglis, who teaches courses in ecology and ornithology. Inglis will be assigned to the Health Physics Division of Oak Ridge for the coming summer months. Inglis’ appointment will be his second stay at Oak Ridge. ★ ★ ★ Dr. C. D. Laverty, professor of English, has received notice of the publication of his article, “Poe in His Place — in His Time,†in the current issue of “The Emerson Society Quarterly.†Laverty’s special field of inter est is the interrelationship of crea tive writing and the sciences, and the article is a survey of Poe’s uses of then-known science in his writings. ★ ★ ★ Robert 0. Reid, professor in the Department of Oceanography and Meteorology Department, will pre sent a research paper during the Dallas Geophysical Society’s meet ing March 11 in Dallas. Reid’s special field of study is physical oceanography. The scientist will discuss circula tion in oceans by wind and thermal effects. He also will outline vari ous theories in this research area. ITSPE President Slated To Speak At Meeting Here Joseph M. Parish, president of the Texas Society of Professional Engineers, will speak at the Tues day night meeting of the A&M student chapter of TSPE at 7:30 p.m. in Room 2C and 2D of the Memorial Student Center. Parish is manager of design engineering and the construction services division of Dow Chemical Co. He is a registered professional engineer in Louisiana, as well as in Texas, and is a member of the Louisiana Engineering Society and the American Academy of Science. Also sponsoring the meeting are the student chapters of ASME and SAE. All engineering faculty members and students have been invited to attend. ‘Too Much’ Feared In Books Of Today (By The Intercollegiate Press) MADISON, Wis. - - There may be too many books produced, too much criticism and too much speciali zation today in the field of litera ture, according to Helen C. White, a University of Wisconsin professor and new president of the Modem Humanities Research Association. Miss White, in her presidential address, recently told her American MHRA members: “The study of literature is al ways unfinished business and that business just now is proceeding apace. Indeed, some of us who have been more concerned about the opening of opportunities for young scholars to publish are be ginning to wonder if perhaps there is not too much of the making of books.†There is need for self-restraint and for discrimination in writing and publishing, Miss White warned. Hoffman Slated As Speaker For Newspaper Conference Representatives from Texas newspapers will hear a keynote message by John H. Hoffman at the 14th annual Newspaper Me chanical Conference and Photo Workshop here Friday and Sat urday. Hoffman, director of production engineering for the American Newspaper Publishers Association Research Institute, will discuss techniques for improving news paper production methods. Other speakers will be Art Uhlmann, Houston Chronicle chief photographer: Phil McMullan, Gar land News publisher; and Willard Barr, operator of a job printing firm in Fort Worth. The conference, sponsored by the Texas Press Association and the Department of Journalism, will start with a photo session Friday. The mechanical phase will begin with a dinner in the Memorial Student Center Saturday. JOHN H. HOFFMAN “But that is a problem of our more abundant age all along the line,†she said. “When we come to grips with it in our own field, we may begin to make our contri bution to the larger solution. “The modern emphasis on crit icism has certainly furnished the young literary student with val uable tools of analysis and ex ploration,†she continued. “But there are certain risks that we run, not inevitable if we are aware of them, but certainly to be reck oned with. It is quite true that wide reading can often be aimless without critical direction and re flection, but it is no less true that critical reflection without wide reading can be a very sterile thing and even perverse. “Contemplating the enthusiasm of certain students, I have won dered if the close study of a text of poetry were not the new refuge for the literary student gifted with liveliness of fancy and glibness of tongue but small reading and less history.†Specialization is both the way of our modern technical and scientific civilization and the in evitable consequence of our very achievements, according to Miss White, who also delivered the same talk recently in London to British members of the humanities re search group. Frosji Ag Society To Host How Man A Dow Chemical Company of ficial will address the Freshmen Agricultural Society at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. He is Hillard Smith, assistant manager of bioproduct sales at Dow in Houston. His subject, “Op portunities in the Chemical Indus try for Agriculture Graduates,†will be heard in the Animal In dustries Lecture Room. Smith has been with Dow since 1944. He makes regular visits to about 20 agricultural schools to talk and recruit graduates for his company. THE BATTALION Tuesday, February 26, 1963 College Station, Texas Page 3 Edmondson To Be Fellowship Speaker Dr. Vance Edmondson of the Department of Agricultural Eco nomics and Sociology will speak at 7 a.m. Wednesday at another of the Faculty Christian Fel lowship programs in the All Faiths Chapel. His topic is “A Fair Analysis of Why Protestants are Divided.†‘Career Day’ Program Set For March 16 Career Day for high school boys in Texas has been set here for Saturday, March 16. President Earl Rudder issued an invitation Saturday to all high school sophomore, junior and senior boys to attend Career Day. Em phasis of the program will be opportunities on the college campus and will be of interest to prospec tive college students regardless of their choice of school, Rudder said in the announcement. Program for the one-day event will begin at 9:45 a.m. with a general meeting for a welcome by Rudder. David Coleman, junior veterinary medicine major from Vernon and president of the stu dent Inter-council, will chair the general- meeting. After lunch in a college dining hall, students will tour classrooms and laboratories in a department of their choice and have an op portunity to view housing and recreational facilities. Detailed information about regis tration and lodging has been mailed to high school principals and coun selors and presidents of Former Students Association clubs through out the state. Top Economist Miss Louise Mason, nutri tion specialist with the Tex as - Agricultural Extension Service, displays the plaque she received when named Texas Home Economist of the Year. The Texas Home Economics Association pre sented the award to Miss Mason during its meeting at Texas Tech in, Lubbock. Airline Reservations and Tickets For Your Business And Pleasure Trips Call TA 2-3784 Robert Halsell Travel Service 1411 Texas Ave. i 5 this spring. 1 ime backwaidi of the powtm :ted, has aMl On hundreds 1 ! he minuet, d . ;h tea intot!i i| not sit well'’ ,: :ports, haste, , ; to reproduce! ' our ownpeoff ae talkabouttii ice of Englant an, how can® 'pendent on It s, taper snuffea i us for turkeys f Molly Fitcte ) down, and! iy yet findu not our Brits! >r weakness. I ; is saddled lip )TC is ar®: f : > i| Cigarettes-^! ; ), pristine pi® * ,:: 0, flip top to 1 ros and talk®! ; new feature- i its makeevei? ill be whenyoc vever, witW md Sigafoos.1 out of a P rs to his pne® i lie struck tkf g—his seven® ,arvc to dealt © 1963 Max ShaW 1 tear Marlbori u the tastid boro soon. harles M. ft* imx * Now a clean-filling, smooth-writing/ money-saving Parker cartridge pen...only ^ New PARKER ARR©W BATTALION CLASSIFIED One day 2 WANT AD RATES . . . 3<^ per word ch additional day FOR SALE C per word Minimum charge DEADLINE -40(S “FOR SALE CHEAP: An attractive 4 p.m. day before publication Classified Display 80^ per column inch each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR SALE Baljy bed, good condition, $15.00 B-10-B College View. 71t3 soul is £ of you ? CHILD CARE ig widow and two small children. Her jand, who adequately provided for his wife, left his widow destitute.†; your wife wouldn’t actually run this ad in event of your death, but why force her into the marriage market, for lack of economic independence, when her still burdened with rich memories Life insurance, by the stroke of pen, can create an estate, which only ears of hard work and saving can other- build—Put Eugene Rush on your ahead of the undertaker. Office eep children m my home day by the week. Convenient to Will ke( light or Dy tne weeK. convenient, to Bryan and College Station. Ill William son Drive, TA 3-6092. 71tfn HUMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY. Licens- perated tape recorder, prac tically new, ideal for student. Phone TA 3-1865 after 5:30 p. m. 71t3 Senior boots, size 10%-A, excellent con dition, $25.00. R. P. Bechler, 7209 Winnell Way, Fort Worth 18. Phone BUTLER 1-1866. 61t43 Tuxedo, size 42, like new, $33.00. Bakei, VI 6-5701 or VI 6-6504. Call 66tfn use bt Eilendar ahead of the underl at North Gate, College Station. Must sacrifice. Sell or trade 1962 Ford Falcon club wagon, similar to VW bus, 15,000 miles, metallic blue, R&H, white tires. Ideal for camping, vacationing, com muting. 1960 bli base, 29,000 Used to o 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 and deliver. VI 6-8151. llltfn lue Studebaker pick-up, long wheel miles. 21 miles per g comr Jr. VI 6-5776 or VI 6-7690. I miles. 21 miles per gallon, mute to work. Call R. L. Hunt, HELP WANTED Class Pennants and Trays Excellent Souvenirs and Gifts Orders to be taken soon Sponsored by the SENIOR CLASS TV-Radio-Hi-Fi Service & Repair GILS RADIO & TV < TA 2-0826 2403 S. College WORK WANTED Practical nurse will work in homes, hos pital or will take care of small children in my home. 1106 North Bryan, TA 2-0221. 71t4 Beauty operator. Experience helpful. Lady Fair Beauty Salon. TA 2-1711. 68t4 SPECIAL NOTICE Student wife wants ironing or sitting. VI 6-6306. bay- 41tfn Top Lake for fishing, picnicing, tables, oven. Children under 12 niles from College on Highway 66tfn Hill shade, free. 9 VS 6 South. VI 6-8491. • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES 608 Old Sulphur Springs Road BRYAN, TEXAS DR. G. A. SMITH OPTOMETRIST •PSOLALIZIN9 to *Va CXAMMATtOMO CONTACT L1NSIB, BRYAN OPTICAL CLINK. -1 n'ii.-iSb;, MA in • B r V A n .' t f x a â– ||dl TYPEWRITERS ADDING MACHINES RENTALS ASK ABOUT OUR RENTAL OWNERSHIP PLAN OTIS MCDONALD’S 429 South Main St. Bryan, Texas SOSOLIKS T. V„ Radio, Phono., Car Radio Transistor Radio Service 713 S. Main TA 2-1941 HANGING ' VeAR! F This pen can save you money on cartriclges. Parker Super Quink cartriclges are BIGGER and last longer (each is good for 8 or 9 thousand words). But, even • if you didn't save a dime, this pen would be worth the extra price. It's a Parker. And only Parker gives you a solid 14K gold point tipped with plathenium—one of the hardest, smoothest alloys ever developed. It should last you for years no matter how much you use it. The pen won't leak the way cheap ones do. It has a built-in safety reservoir, and meets most of the tough specifications we set for our $10 pens. If you have trouble saying it, say it with a Parker. If you're a little shy and have difficulty saying “I love you†or even -'I like you very muchâ€â€”say it with a Parker. The new Parker Arrow makes a beautifully ex pressive gift and looks as if you paid a small fortune for it. The new Parker Arrow comes in black, <Jark blue, light blue, light gray, and bright red, with a choice of four instantly replaceable solid 14K gold points, Includes five free Super Quink cartridges with’ pen-protecting Solv-X (492 valued ^ PARKER- of the world's most wanted pens. TRADE WITH CADE and SAVE ON REPAIRS Trained Mechanics AH Make Autos Automatic Transmissions Satisfaction Guaranteed Say: “Charge It†CADE MOTOR CO: 47 Years with Ford 1309 Texas Ave. AGGIES NOTICE To Rent Brazos County- Mixed Parties,—See Joe Faulk SAE 30 Motor Oils 15£ 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 TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main TA 2-6000 FOR RENT OFFICIAL NOTICES Official or tel of S ficial notices must be brought, mailed lephoned so as to arrive in the Office Jtudent Publications (Ground Floor YMCA, VI 6-6416, hours 8-12. 1-5, daily Monday through Friday) at or before the deadline of 1 p. m. of the day preceding publication — Director of Student Publica tions. DEGREE FILING DEADLINE SET FOR FEBRUARY 28, 1963 m ali students mplete their requirements for grad- by May 25, 1963. _ ifet uation by May 25, candidates must fi the Registrar’s Office. Advanced deg lie application with both nd the Graduate Dean’s H. L. Heaton Director of Admissions and Registrar May graduates may begin ordering their graduation invitations starting Febru 1st thru February 28th, from 9-4, Monc at the Cashier’s Window, Memo- lent Center. 66tl7 Friday, rial Sti ruary day- HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th TA 2-2819 Used Car Headquarters for Central Texas All Makes & Models Quick Credit—Bank Rates CADE MOTOR CO: 47 Years with Ford 1700 Texas Ave. MASTER’S TRANSMISSION SERVICE Complete Transmission Service TA 2-6116 27th St. and Bryan Bryan, Tex. YOUR DISTRIBUTOR FOR • EICO KITS • Garrard Changers • HI-FI Components • Tape Recorders Use Our Time Payment Plan BRYAN RADIO & TV TA 2-4862 1301 S. CoUege Ave. SHIPLEY DONUT & COFFEE SHOP For The Best Coffee & Freshest Donuta ANYWHERE Hamburgers — Short Orders — Fountain Service Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules & Etc. 5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG LOUPOT'S B