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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 12, 1963)
... ' ^ act morel !n on such«. k e high sditj Kohlen Jr,'| indents Plan eform School andscaping O” to life ii. 1(1 things »ij le ater and pay i -ause he will k and his fan^ ’ Pay for it a long, and finl uy life insurua >day ... if y, isurance 10 yaa ’52 today ot 5800. he Many VHAT is was a brilliant, iy Grim- re curve, thirteen -mentor, :ed, out- sigafoos, plan submitted by five A&M jldentsfor landscaping- the Gates- Mountain View School for ys has been accepted by officials the detention school, itudents of a fourth-year design in landscape architecture rked on the project for six eks. They were Philip L. yant, Ross B. Calhoun, Hubert Nelson, George H. Pickels and mes 0. Smith. irt F. White, professor of ikitecture, said the students met tk representatives of the correc- iostitiution and studied the lool’s grounds. The students re asked to submit plans which mid allow the school to redesign grounds using available labor i incurring- only nominal cost. After studying the grounds, the idents Worked from photographs Iblueprints of the school. They w working plans for the location trees, flowers beds, scenic walls i driveway improvements. A booklet of the plans which fluded suggested improvements id rules for plants maintenance s sent to the Gatesville school, lite said that the Division of thitecture has recently received report from school officials say- rwork on the project has started 1 that the school is pleased with (student’s plans. l&M Sociology Professor leported Safe In Syria tudymg nscott’s 1 of one answers but the ded, so Choate iver his a, while y class, pasty, vaste!” ined to ing and ead we Hhoate. hen we ‘A’ on ;wer to e? Mr. me an- ie class said had a , for if en the xvelled a your nt and re, this ft and /boute Hhbate He’s a Marl- E ON t time -t give • gave ay on off his of the nshaft / find ter in M. Sc^ Roses For The Sweetheart Lynn Parks, the ’62-’63 Aggie Sweetheart, receives a bouquet of flowers from Arthur R. Richardson, deputy corps commander, at the Military Ball Saturday night. Miss Parks was an honored guest of the ball, representing Texas Woman’s University. College Station and Bryan resi- »is in Syria are safe, according releases from the American uliassy in Damascus, although (country is in turmoil. Dr, Bardin Nelson, professor of cultural Economics and Rural dology, has been on leave from (college since February and is (sently working for the Ford niation in setting up a land college system in Syria. His wife became worried when is came Friday of the events in ria and, being unable to contact i husband by phone, she reach- Congressman Olin E. Teague, i contacted the State Depart- fflt, The State Department said »as receiving two communiques lily from the American Embassy Demascus. 10 DATE the embassy reports it no blood has been shed and it no United States citizens have H injured. The Syrian govern- dt has started a censor ban on 1 outgoing mail and outgoing i i incoming telephone calls. Nelson presently lives across the M from the governor’s man sion and, since it would be a sen sitive area, Mrs. Nelson became alarmed. She and her youngest son Howard, a ninth grade student at A&M Consolidated High School plan to join Nelson in Syria in May. Her oldest son, Bardin Jr., $5 Prize Offered To Pan-Americans In Essay Contest The Pan American Round Table of Bryan-College Station is spon- scoring an essay contest for Latin American students. The essay subject is, “What Has Meant Most to Me During The Time I Have Been in the U.S.A.” The writer of the prize-winning es say will receive $5. The essays are not to be over 500 words. Entries should be sub mitted at the YMCA main desk before March 31. The award will be made during- Pan American Week. a junior architecture student, plans to fly down after his summer ROTC camp. Mrs. Nelson said that her plans are unaltered unless further de velopments arise that should keep her from going. She feels assur ed of her husband’s safety because he would have been flown out if any real trouble had occured. ALSO WITH Nelson are Dr. and Mrs. R. D. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Oliver and Mrs. Anna Beaty, all from College Station and Bryan. Lewis Ms a retired director of the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, Oliver is an assistant pro fessor of animal husbandry and Mrs. Beaty is the administrative secretary at the office of the Texas Agriculture Experiment Station. The college system which they are trying to establish is one with an agriculture slant, and its pur pose is to get the people of Syria to help themselves in farming re search. Mrs. Nelson says her hus band’s work is a challenge to him, and he believes ‘-his work will be rewarding. The Brute Mermen Spray Deodorant is rugged. Hard working. Long fasting. Delivers 3 times the anti-perspirant power of any other leading men’s deodorant. That’s right. 3 times the anti-perspirant power. Mennen Spray...in the handy squeeze bottle. What a brute! House Okays Connally Study On Education AUSTIN GP> — The House tenta tively approved 129-10 today Gov. John Connally’s request to set up a committee to study higher edu cation needs in Texas. The bill gets a final vote Tues day. The senate has already approved such a measure. Early in the session, the legis lature gave Connally $50,000 emergency money to finance the education committee between now and Aug. 31. The bill would create a 25-mem ber committee to make a compre hensive study of Texas’ education needs beyond the high school level. It would be required to finish its work by Aug. 31, 1964. The major Senate action Mon day was refusal to debate the controversial question of making San Angelo Junior College a four- year state supported school. Sen. Dorsey Hardeman of San Angelo failed by an 18-11 vote to get the necessary two-thirds support to bring the hill up for consideration out of order. Three other measures to es tablish new state senior colleges in Odessa, Laredo and Edinburg also are on the Senate and House calendars. Both houses defeated proposed amendments to take away some of Connally’s power to appoint the entire 25 members of the com mittee. Tuesday, March 12, 1963 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Page 3 ilif f : m H * 1 LARRY A. MADDOX Area In Brazos ' County Voted Wet The Brazos County Commis sioners Court announced Monday it will canvass the votes of Satur days Voting Precinct 9 liquor elec tion this Thursday. The court will officially deter mine the results of the disputed election to either prohibit or lega lize the sale of all alcoholic bev erage in the Smetana area. Precinct 9 is loc'ated northwest of Bryan, beginning at Thompson Creek and extending north to the Robertson County line and south past FM Road 1688. Thompson Creek is on State 21 and is ap proximately five miles from Bryan. Larry Maddox Recognized Top Air Science Sophomore Larry A. Maddox, ’65 chemical engineer from College Station, was named the A&M’s outstanding Air Science II cadet for 1963. The re cognition was made Saturday at a Department of Air Science staff meeting by Col. James F. Starkey, professor of Air Science. Col. William C. Lindley, Com mandant of Air Force ROTC, Air University, Maxwell AFB, Ala., was present at the ceremony. ♦ Pre-Dental Aggie Accepted To Houston Dental School For the first time in 11 years, an A&M student has been accepted into dental school after only two years of pre-dental work. John Cassity, ’65 pre-dental stu dent from Livingston, has received unofficial acceptance into the Uni versity of Texas Dental School in Houston. This is the first time since 1952 that an A&M student has been ac cepted after his sophomore year. Cassity, who is a member of Phi Eta Sigma National Honor Society and a distinguished stu dent, received the $1,000 Opportuni ty Awards Scholarship before en tering A&M in September of 1961. He is a member of the Pre-Med, Pre-Dent Society and has better than a 2.2 overall grade point ratio. He took the Dental Aptitude Test during January in Houston and received a letter last week notifying him he had made a high percentile grade and could expect to hear favorable results in the near future. Cassity will enter the Houston school next fall and then plans to go into private practice upon grad uation. Read Battalion Classifieds Maddox was selected from a class of 357 sophomore air science cadets on the basis of scholastic achievement, character, leadership potential and military bearing. He was graduated from A&M Consolidated High School and has been a distinguished student every semester at A&M, accumulating an overall grade point ratio of 2.87. Last year*, Maddox was named to membership in Phi Eta Sigma, freshman honorary fraternity and the Freshman Engineering Society. Lindley and Starkey noted Mad dox’s achievements and congratu lated him for academic and leader ship qualities. If anyone called Nitro, W. Va., a “boom town,” the residents might frown at the pun.' But they really couldn’t complain. For the city got its name from the ex plosives manufactured at a large federal plant there during World War I. Saturday’s vote was 75 to 67 in favor of legalization, election judge W. F. Wallin announced at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. The vote brought to a climax a hotly debated issue that had raged in the small community six miles west of Bryan for nearly a month since the elec tion was called Feb. 11. Because of the eight vote mar gin a suit may possibly be filed contesting the election and request ing a restraining order for the sale of liquor and wine. Beer is present ly being sold at six establishments in the area. Should Thursdayjs canvass sup port Saturday’s outcome, liquor and wine sales could begin March 20. Precinct 9’s election was called after 49 voters signed a petition requesting it. At first residents thought the election would have no effect on the present beer sales, but several attorneys and a Liquor Control Board representative ruled that the election would either legal ize or prohibit the sale of all al coholic beverages. —A LEGEND— One night in ancient times, three horsemen were riding across an open desert. As they passed through a dry river bed, a voice called out of the night, “Halt!” The riders reined in their horses, and then the voice ordered, “Dismount—pick up a handful of peb- ’S and remount.” When the horsemen were again in have les and remount. 3 hi les, done as I ha' the horsemen were again their saddles, the voice said “Yoi commanded. Tomorrow at dawn you will be both glad and sorry.” M; inti ifystified, the three men rode off to the night As the sun night. climbed above the horizon the next morning, they reached into had happened, teir hands tne nex their pockets. A miracl for instead of the pebbles, their hands were filled with diamonds, rubies and other precious stones. they remembered the They were both glad and the hey i had taken, some, sorry ;her preen And thi strange omen, sorry—glad thy nac they had not taken more. LIFE INSURANCE IS LIKE THAT. EUGENE RUSH American National Insurance Co. North Gate College Station BESIDES MEXICAN FOOD ZARAPE RESTAURANT will serve from March 2 on - - - Mrs. Andert’s Wiener Schnitzel, Chicken Fried Steaks and Austrian Style Fried Chicken. Attention Sophomore: Your Sweetheart will be pret tier than ever wearing her AGGIE Corsage from the Student Floral Concession. See your dorm salesman or stop by the Floriculture Green houses, Thursday or Friday 8-5. Double Cymbidium and Cattleya Orchid and Carnation Corsages STUDENT FLORAL CONCESSION “Run by Aggies for Aggies’