Center" for ugeot t Cars Service Foreign Call TA 24il B 1 II ■lillllllll it KASA Official To Speak JETS Meet Friday An orientation to the Data Proc essing Center, contests, talks and tie presentation of prizes and “scholarships are scheduled during tie JETS Southwest Regional Con ference to be held Friday in the Memorial Student Center. The conference is planned especially for high school students. JETS stands for Junior Engi- neeiing Technical Society, a na tional organization. Pur-pose of the extracurricular organization is to stimulate the interest of high school students in engineering and science careers. Students are expected from 11 towns and cities And registration should total 150 persons, students and adult leaders, according to J. G. McGuire, assistant dean of en gineering and conference chair man. McGUIRE SAID students are expected from Bellville, Bryan- College Station, Caldwell, Houston, BESIDES MEXICAN FOOD ZARAPE RESTAURANT will serve from March 2 on Mrs. Andert’s Wiener Schnitzel, Chicken Fried Steaks and Austrian Style Fried Chicken. TO EUROPE IN A LIGHT TWIN THIS SUMMER A TWO MONTH EXPEDITION ON WHICH YOU VWll • PARTICIPATE AS AN ACTIVE CREW MEMBER • CROSS THE NORTH ATlAfTHC V*A IABMDOK, GREENLAND AND ICELAND • FLY THROUGH GREAT BRITAIN. EUROPE. AFMCA. AMO THE MEDITERRANEAN AREA THIS VENTURE IS NOT FOR TOURISTS.« IS AH OPPORTUNTTY FOR THE EXPERIENCE OF A LIFETIME FOR THE YOUNG MAN. FOR YOU? WRITE NOW FOR INFORMATION. Texas Aviation Engineering Co. fort worth texas LPranmrfj Huntsville, Longview, M u n d a y , Needville, Pittsburg and San Be nito. They will hear such speakers as Norman G. Foster of the Mercury Project Office at NASA’s Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston. Foster will discuss “The Technolo gy of the Manned Spacecraft Pro grams,” and relate it to the role of the engineer. He is an aero space technologist. Richard T. Fallon, executive di rector of JETS, Inc., will present a report from national headquar ters. Others on the program include Dean of Engineering Fred J. Ben son; Dr. John C. Calhoun Jr., vice chancellor for development of the A&M System and vice president of JETS, Inc.; Dan Drew of the Data Processing Center, Air Force Capt. Keith P. Watts; W. R. Horsley, di rector of the placement office, and McGuire. PROFESSIONAL engineers from this area will assist with the program, McGuire said. Benson will present prizes to contest winners and the two schol arships. The JETS scholarship in petro leum engineering, valued at $200, also can be renewed each year of the student’s undergraduate career here. Three students now are attend ing A&M under scholarships won through the JETS program. BATTALION CLASSIFIED word WANT AD RATES ay 3<( per 2c per word each additional da; Minimum charge—40d DEADLINE 1 p.m. day before publication Classified Display 80<* per column inch each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR RENT [room apartment, ?40.00 with utili- , S25.00 furnished without utilities and MO unfurnished. 409-B Boyett. fl 1-1331. es ! Phone 79t2 Furnished apartment with phone connec- lonth, endow 79t3 apa: j». Rent 812.50 week or $60.00 month, ’•ilities paid. Phone VI 6-5559. 200 Meadow i», corner Brooks Lane. Five room unfurnished apartment, tile in Wien and bath, close to town. 404 East Sth. 79t3 Unfurnished roomy two bedroom apart- tent. Near Crockett School. VI 6-6660. 76tfn to 5 P' 1,1 avails lRACT^ Clean, neat, private, bachelor house, litable for graduate student. $40.00 per tath. Call VI 6-6311. 70tfn CHILD CARE tore Will keep children, one year old or old Wi 8 to 5. VI 6-8404. 8 ler, 0t3 Will keep children in my home 8-5. VI 6- tt. 79tfn 8 by Text IBdren of all ages. Virginia D. Jones, lettered Nurse, 3404 South College Ave., Ii 24803. 61tfn Will keep children, all ages, will pick up Hi deliver, VI 6-8151. llltfn WORK WANTED Student wife wants ironing. VI 6-6306. 41tfn — - I ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS I BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SC0ATES INDUSTRIES BRYAN ir Springs ,TEXAS SOSOLIKS t V., Radio, Phono., Car Radio Transistor Radio Service 713 S. Main TA 2-1941 TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines C ATES TYPEWRITER CO. ^9 S. Main TA 2-6000. irade with cade and save on kepaiks hained Mechanics All Make Autos Automatic Transmissions Satisfaction Guaranteed Say: “Charge It” CADE MOTOR CO: 47 Years with Ford 1309 Texas Ave. FEMALE HELP WANTED Waitress wanted, experience not neces sary, must be over 18. Apply College Ave., TA 2-1362. must be over 18. Apply at 3606 S. 79tfn LOST Ladies tured w: arli atch “Cyma” gold with 4 cul- svard! VI 6-8686 after 5. 79t4 FOR SALE Western Holly apartment size gas range. Call VI 6-7838 after 5. 79t2 ’61 Volkswagen. Must sell to stay in college. C-13-X College View Apts. 76t7 S ECURITY FOR YOUR FAMILY: E UGENE is my moniker, or R USH is Quite okay: V erily I say to you, I nsure tomorrow today! C orn you may call this advice: E pitaph is better, I say. 74tfn Tuxedo, size 42, like new, $30.00. Call Baker, VI 6-5701 or VI 6-6504. 66tfn SPECIAL NOTICE INSURE TOMORROW TODAY! ice, by buying Burance to meet your family’s needs . . . Eugene Rush at the North Gate will try to fit a plan to your individual budget-—no matter how broke you may be. 76t2 p. m. 72tfn Hill Top Lake for fishing, picnicing, shade, tables, oven. Children under 12 free. 9% miles from College on Highway 6 South. VI 6-8491. 66tfn HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th TA 2-2819 Used Car Headquarters for Central Texas AH Makes & Models Quick Credit—Bank Rates CADE MOTOR CO: 47 Years with Ford 1700 Texas Are. 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. College Ave. MALE HELP WANTED Retail sales clerk and checker. Saturdays and Sundays. Mostly Must be here this um age 21. Phone before 4 p. m., VI 6-6216. 79t4 PERSONAL I. Q. istered TESTS, srofi ! Accurate, home-admin- nally scored. Research istered, professionally scored. Kesearcn data needed. University Testing Institute, R-39, Box 6744, Stanford, Calif. 79t5 OFFICIAL NOTICES Official notices must be brought, mailed or telephoned so as to arrive in the Office of Student Publications (Ground Floor YMCA, VI 6-6416, hours 8-12. 1-5, daily Monday through Friday) at or before the deadline of I p. m. of the day preceding mblication — Director of Student I tion Publica- An English proficiency exam for physics Juniors will be held on Monday 18 March 'B in room 145 between 2 PM and 4 PM. ed writing permitted. 79t4 An English Proficiency Examination will be held for Department of Journalism stu dents on Friday, March 15, at 3 p. m. in m 79t5 Nagle Hall. TV-Radio-Hi-Fi Service & Repair GELS RADIO & TV TA 2-0826 2403 S. College, AGGIES NOTICE To Rent Brazos County A&M Club For Mixed Parties,—See Joe Faulk SAE 30 Motor Oils 15* Qt. Major Brands Oils 27-31* 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 ADDING MACHINES RENTALS ASK ABOUT OUR RENTAL OWNERSHIP PLAN OTIS MCDONALD’S 429 South Main St. Bryan, Texas SHIPLEY DONUT & COFFEE SHOP For The Beat Coffee & Freshest Donats ANYWHERE Hambargers — Short Orders — Fountain Service Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules & Etc. 5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG LOUPOTS Aggie Players Plan Moliere Play In Gnion Students, faculty and area resi dents will have an opportunity to attend a production of JHoliere’s “The Imaginary Invalid,” March 25-30 at Guion Hall. The 16th century comedy farce is being presented by the Aggie Players. Curtain time will be 8 p.m. and tickets will be 75 cents at the door. The play is’to be done with real istic sets and brightly colored cos tumes. The action takes place in France and is centered around Ar- gan, a hypochondriac, who is be set upon from all sides by every other character in the cast. The Players have been in re hearsal since early in February. Vic Wiening is directing the play and his staff includes Selma Clack, costumes; Carita Lyles, choreogra phy; David Woodcock and Charles Hearn, sets; and Corky Couvillon, lights. THE BATTALION Wednesday, March 13, 1963 Reeves To Leave For Pakistan Soon Dr. Robert G. Reeves, a profes sor of genetics in the Department of Plant Sciences, will leave early in April for East Pakistan where he will be a agricultural consultant to the I/. S. AID program. To prepare for his stay in Pak istan, Reeves and his wife are studying Bengali four hours a day. The 90-fyour course will end this month and the Reeves will go by plane, via Europe and Egypt. Dr. Jack Autrey Dabbs, a pro fessor in the Department of Mod ern Languages, and Mrs. Sumitra Bannerjee, language consultant from India, are instructing Reeves in Bengali. Reeves is using an English-Ben- gali dictionary prepared by* Dabbs and a series of lesson plans pre pared by Dabbs and Mrs. Banner jee. “I’ve had good teachers,” said Reeves. He added that teaching methods are far superior to when he was a student, and laboratory equipment is a great help. College Station, Texas Mhodes Joins Ag Extension ' Headquarters The addition of Lynwood M. Rhodes to the headquarters staff of the Texas Agricultural Exten sion Service, effective Friday, as a rural civil defense specialist has been announced by Director John E. Hutchison. The director said that Rhodes had served since 1953 in the State Executive Department, Division of Defense and Disaster Relief, as training and education and public information officer. In his former position, he worked closely with extension personnel on programs of mutual interest in the field of civil defense. The new staff member is a na tive of Gonzales but has lived in Austin most of his life. He is a graduate of Austin High School and holds B.A. and M.A, degrees from the University of Texa^. Grrrrrr! Miss Sandra Powell of Huntsville does an Oriential “twist for her escort Rufus Lyne at the Combat Ball Friday night. Miss Powell was a finalist in the Combat Cutie contest. Lyne looks on with obvious approval. 5 System Overseas Service Teams Complete Study Friday <***£.'m-- Five couples preparing for over seas service as members of A&M System teams in Tunisia and East Pakistan will complete orientation here Friday. They have been on campus six weeks for specialized training in overseas work for the government. ‘ The four couples going to Tu : nisia will be the first from the college being sent to the North African nation, and will help esf tablish the Chott Maria Agriculj- tural College. Dr. Randall Stellyi, associate professor in the Depart ment of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology, is party chief. The Tunisia group will arrive March 28 at the city of Tunis. Later they will go to Sousse, their headquarters. Going to Tunisia will be the Gabriel S. Dartez Ji\, Gray T. Hu- val, Arlan B. McSwain and Stelly families. Mrs. Stelly and children will not go until June. Dai'tez and Huval are veteran teachers of vo cational agriculture in Louisiana and McSwain, ’50, has been man aging a large farm operation at Pecos. Lecture Series Hosts Historian “The Last Gentleman’s Wqr; oi% Fraternizing and Chivalry in the Civil War” is the topic of a gradu ate lecture Wednesday by c|ne of the outstanding historians df the South. Interested persons have been in vited "to hear DA T. Harry Wil liams, Boyd Professor of History at Louisiana State University, lec ture at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Biological Sciences Lecture Room. Williams is the author of many books including a 1952 Book-of-the- Month Club selection and has achieved various professional hon- He is described as an entertain ing, humorous, but scholarly lec turer with the ability to combine wit and fact. “Challenging” is the description by fellow historians of Williams’ interpretations of the history of the South. He is currently engaged in the preparation of a biography of the late Huey P. Long of Louisiana. Get Lucky Flay "Cra^ Questions” 50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE’S HOW: First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up with a nutty, surprising question for it, and you’ve done a “Crazy Question.” It’s the easy new way for students to make loot. Study the examples below; then do your own. Send them', with your name, address, college and class, to GET LUCKY, Box 64F, Mt. Vernon 10, N. Y. Winning entries will be awarded $25.00. Winning entries sub mitted on the inside of a Lucky Strike wrapper will get a $25.00 bonus. Enter as often as you like. Start right now! (Based on the hilarious book "The Question Man."') RULES: The Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. will judge entries on the basis of humor (up to V3), clarity and freshness (up to V 3 ), and appropriateness (up to V3), and their decisions will be final. Duplicate prizes will be awarded in the event of ties. Entries must be the original works of the entrants and must be submitted in the entrant’s own name. There will be 50 awards every month, October through April. Entries received during each month will be considered for that month's awards. Any entry received after April 30, 1963, will not be eligible, and all become the property of The American Tobacco Company. Any college student may enter the contest, except em ployees of The American Tobacco Company, its advertising agencies and Reuben H. Donnelley, and relatives of the said employees. Winners will be notified by mail. Contest subject to all federal, state', and local regulations. I THE ANSWER: ! SIKH PMS I I \ Sexai jo -n 'pjeMOH -w ut|or J £iUJ0jiun uosud e jo jieq tuoiioq aqj j aquosap noA op moh :NOIlS3n£) 3H1 I THE ANSWER: LATIN QUARTER IjJO/, MSN 1° sSailOO 'Jsppnimps uesns isjuao qz lieo suEiuoy juapue aqj PIP jeijM :NOIlS3nC) 3H1 THE ANSWER: | Cl\ick^i\ | Shkiyaki ’ sjeis asof ues ’ueAjnns.O uasjnew ao|id-aze>jiuje>j §u|A!i jsapio s.uedef | jo aoiBU aqj si jeqM :NOIlS3n& 3H1 j THE ANSWER: 110% DOWN I I I I .uoiauiijseM JO 'H 'X4SU!in3ps ’J qjsuuaM ^Monid dBaip b u| puij oj pad -xa noA pjnoM jeijm :NOilS3nt> 3H1 THE ANSWER: HDangoes fjnfisSiW JO -n Mauuoj *a “J ueunON £Sao3 UBIUO/W ajaqM suaddBq jbmm :NOIlS3nQ 3H1 THE ANSWER: Ba+2Na f'fj sjejs emeAi/isuusd ’uiiea-AJeE) iBUEueq b jo uopisoduioo |B0|iuaip aqj s.ieijM :NOIJLS3n& 3HI I 1 I 1 1 I I I I I I I i 1 ] l 1 1 1 .-! THE ANSWER IS:. Get Lucky the taste to start with.. .me taste to stay with THE QUESTION IS: HOW DO YOU HIT THE BULL’S-EYE FOR GREAT SMOKING TASTE? Let the big red bull’s-eye on the Lucky Strike pack be your target. It’s a sign of fine-tobacco taste you’ll want to settle down and stay with. And the sign of the most popular regular-size cigarette among college students, to boot!. Product of c/& J&nsMca'n is our middle name