The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 07, 1963, Image 3

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Impressionistic Dancer
liss Lynn Borochoff, a modem jazz dancer from Sophie
ewcomb College, will be one of the 11 acts scheduled for
riday night’s ITS. The acts were selected from Southern
.miversities and colleges. The performance begins at 6:30
m. in G. Rollie White.
it To Limit
Peace Corps Life
Found Interesting
I Letters from Aggies serving
overseas in the Peace Corps and
other youth groups give encour- J
^g'ing reports, according to Daniel
ussell, campus liaison officer for
he Peace Corps and its related
groups.
I Wayne La Pori, ’60, an agricul
tural engineering graduate, wrote
about “staying in the jungle with
a native man and living solely on
birds and small animals snared in
and-made traps.”
“Not only did we have sufficient
od,” La Pori said, “but we gave
large surplus to friends when we
eturned.”
La Pori, now in Cambodia, said
here are a lot of thrills in living
far back in an underdeveloped
country studying friendly people
whose customs and religions are
strange to him.
Another Aggie, Selwyn Hollings
worth, said his first job in Necoya,
Costa Rica, was “to brush Brah
man cattle in preparation for the
Country-Western
Performers Killed
In Private Plane
i CAMDEN, Tenn. (A 5 ) _ The
shattered bodies of Patsy Cline,
Hawkshaw Hawkins and Cowboy
Copas—all top country singers—
were found Wednesday in the
wreckage of a small plane which
crashed near the Tennessee River.
The “Grand Ole Opry” stars
along with their pilot and Miss
Cline’s manager, Randy Hughes,
35, were killed Tuesday night when
the plane plunged to earth on a
wooded hill, five miles northwest
of here and 85 miles west of Nash
ville.
They were returning to their
Nashville homes from Kansas City,
Kan., where they had given a
benefit performance for the family
of Cactus Jack Call, a radio disc
jockey killed in a recent traffic
accident.
Inquiries and expressions of sym
pathy came from virtually every
state to WSM, Nashville radio sta
tion which is the home of the 35-
year-old Opry country music pro
gram.
Central American Livestock Ex
position, which I hope to attend.”
Hollingsworth, ’62, a sociology
graduate, admitted the thought of
brushing Brahman bulls sounded
like a good reason to return to
the U. S., but actually found the
bulls “friendly.”
“I am convinced that our use of
Brahman cattle in rodeos is a
crime against this gentle breed,”
he wrote.
David M. Wallace, now with the
YMCA in Moshi Tanganyika,
East Africa, had words of advice
for current college students:
“Gain a broad understanding of
what is g^oing on in the world.”
Wallace, a history graduate, said
prospective Peace Corps members
should not come abroad with “any
hatred or animosity towai’d any
group in the country. Try to
share your host’s way of life, prob
lems, hopes and thoughts about
life.”
Nelson L. Jacobs, a wildlife man
agement student, is a 4-H spec
ialist in Serraria-Paraiba, Brazil.
Jacobs feels his work has helped
him to evaluate his future plans.
“After having worked here a
reasonable length of time,” he said
in a recent letter, “I am beginning
to see clearer the type of work I
plan to undertake upon completion
of my formal education.”
Freshmen Selected
To Polaris Council
Fifty-two freshmen have been
selected for membership in the
Polaris Council sponsored by the
YMCA. Students selected the mem
bers, generally the outstanding
freshmen in each Corps of Cadets
unit, upon the basis of high quali
ties of leadership.
Purpose of the Polaris Council
is to provide a common meeting
ground for the students, to present
ideas of relevance and to form a
nucleus of young men who are
aware of their responsibility to the
campus and to the world.
Joe E. Baggeett of Annandale,
Va., was elected president of the
council. The vice president is Jack
B. Holt of La Marque and the
secretary-treasurer is John R. Chil
ders of Mart.
PLAN YOUR BANQUETS
—NOW—
Try Our Luncheons . . .
• They Fit Your Budget
For Quick Courteous Service
Dine At
TRIANGLE RESTAURANT
3606 So. College
TA 2-1352
Water Pollution Creates
$2 Billion A Year Industry
The field of water quality man
agement has become a $2 billion
a year industry, the vice president
of the Water Pollution Control
Federation reported Wednesday.
Dr. Harris F. Seidel of Ames,
Iowa, said the engineering and
scientific problems associated with
the prevention of water pollution
are staggering.” Seidel is director
of water and pollution control for
the city of Ames.
He spoke at a session of the
week-long Texas Water and Sew
age Works Association’s short
school on campus. The association
stages the school in cooperation
with the Texas State Department
of Health, the Southwest Section
of the American Water Works As
sociation, Texas Association of the
Water Pollution Control Federa
tion and the Texas Engineering
Extension Service.
Approximately 600 persons from
170 Texas towns and cities are
registered for the school. Eight
other states also are represented.
“Our water resources are threat
ened by toxic chemicals, radio-ac
tive wastes, heat pollution and
‘modern’ contaminants along with
increasing loads of the old-fash
ioned domestic and industrial
wastes,” Seidel said.
Seidel said one of the brightest
spots in the picture of water pol
lution control in increasing public
awareness of how much it costs
not to control pollution.
These costs are registered in
terms of adverse public health,
in increased requirements for wa
ter treatment, the loss of recre
ational natural resource, he pointed
out.
THE BATTALION
Thursday, March 7, 1963 College Station, Texas
Page 3
Array ROTC Flight Program
Opens For 1963-64 Terms
ITS Female Vocalist
Miss Judi Hardy, from
Oklahoma State University,
will sing popular hit songs
for the 12th annual Inter
collegiate Talent Show Fri
day night.
Basil Rathbone To Appear At Guion
Students will have an oppor
tunity to hear actor Basil Rath-
bone give a program of read
ings as well as take part in dis
cussions at English seminars and
informal sessions.
Rathbone will appear March 14-
15 in Guion Hall as one of the
Town Hall presentations.
During his stay here, the actor
will make himself available to the
Department of English for semi
nar meetings and for ‘coffee”
sessions with students.
A compaign to contact all pros
pective students interested in the
Army ROTC Flight Training Pro
gram to be conducted on campus
in 1963-64 has been launched, with
interested students asked to com
plete preliminary application by
March 15.
Twenty-one students have been
engaged in the Army ROTC Flight
Program this year.
The voluntary .course, open to
students enrolled in Military
Science IV or those who have com
pleted the course but have not yet
graduated, consists of 61 y 2 hours
of instruction. The training is di
vided almost equally between
g-round school and flight instruc
tion.
The government pays all ex
penses of the program, which is
conducted at Easterwood Airport.
Students accepted for the pro
gram must agree to volunteer for
Army aviation training and as
signment, and to serve on active
duty between two and three years.
Additional flight training is taken
after the student is commissioned
as an officer.
Army aviators serve in all of
the combat arms and several of
the technical services. They re
ceive extra pay upon entering ac
tive service and attending the flight
training program.
“Sports Car Center”
Dealers for
Renault-Peugeot
&
British Motor Cars
Sales—Parts—Service
!;“We Service All Foreign Cars”;
• 1422 Texas Ave. TA 2-4517;
i *■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■ ?
SWIFT S . . . The Center Of Fine Meats . . .
PICNIC HAMS 25'
ARMOUR'S STAR
BACON
FRESH PORK SAUSAGE . . Lb. 39c
FRESH GROUND MEAT 3 Lbs. $1.00
FRESH BABY BEEF ROUND STEAK . . . . . Lb. 79c
FANCY SIRLOIN STEAK Lb. 75c
49
itl"*99l«»£“55'
Rosedale Butter Beans
Rosedale French Style Beans
Rosedale Ripple French Fry Potatoes
Rosedale Broccoli Spears
Rosedale Chopped Broccoli
Rosedale Mixed Vegetables
Rosedale Cut Corn
Rosedale Cauliflower
Rosedale Cut Okra
Rosedale Brussell Sprouts
Rosedale English Peas
Rosedale Baby Limas
Rosedale Peas and Carrots
Rosedale Black Eye Peas
ASSORTED 6 PICS.*! 00
ASSORTED S PKS. *1 00
Grade “A” Large jm
Purina EGGS n„, 49 c
Borden’s
BISCUITS .0- 25 c
PORK & BEANS c 3 !!
ALMA CREAM PEAS ^
ALMA BLACKEYE PEAS ct
RENOWN CUT BEANS
RANCH STYLE BEANS Z
CREAM STYLE CORN
WHOLE KERNEL CORN K ZZ
CUT BEETS l,w U « ! :
Assorted 7 ^ $ t 00
AURORA TISSUE
RENOWN TOMATOES
BEST CAN MILK . . . .
FRUIT COCKTAIL Roseda,e
No.
303
SWEET POTATOES Ir ry
No.
2Vz
TOMATO JUICE Hunt ’ s
Qts.
CATSUP Libby ’ s
14-Oz.
ENGLISH PEAS L bby 8
No.
303
Assorted 5 *
00
SWIFTS PREM ,2 U;39c
Fresh Kentucky Wonder Green
Beans 10
New, Red
POTATOES ,5
Sunkist
ORANGES. 15
Fine For Salads
• • • •
Roll
Assorted
• • • •
5i‘1
00
Avocados ~ 10
Fresh Green
ONIONS Bunch 5
Cello
RADISHES,, 5
Winn
'YOU CAN'T LOSE AT WINN'S"
Si
SUPER MARKET
3800 TEXAS AVENUE
(FORMERLY MILLER’S)
BRYAN, TEXAS
1 big 1
I BONUS I
| STAMPS |
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, MARCH 7-8-9 1963
I Save I