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at “Texas (fel
main the staJ
mail to Eijl
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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;
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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 *
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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-
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Trained Mechanics
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Automatic Transmissions
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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
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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
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• 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
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Hamburgers — Short Orders — Fountain Service
Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules & Etc.
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