The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 20, 1963, Image 3

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    and Friday
Co., Inc. - Ei
ig, mechanical i
hemistry,
Store
A
•I®
ys
offers
)w and lead
eal response
rmance and
metable fof
rial salaries
ind often are
lly than the
for personal
es in
e responsiBIe
il leadership,
levelop and
management
dures for the
plans,
•ect the flow
e to the cus-
administering
the physical
supplies and
;ing manage-
ertising, per-,
and talents.
ampus
»UR
lainerdi, DuBeau Author
Science Magazine Article
Two A&M men, Dv. Richard E.
fainerdi, head of the Activation
Inalysis Research Laboratory, and
(ormand DuBeau, director of in-
ormation and publications for the
iMI System, are co-authors of
te lead cover article in the cur-
ent issue of Science Magazine
thich was distributed internation-
illy Tuesday.
“Science” is the official publica-
ion of the American Association
or the Advancement of Science,
When a man says "no” to life in
surance, one of three things will
happen . . .
1. He will buy it later and pay a
higher rate for it because he will be
older.
2. He will never buy, and his family
(or his old age) may pay for it in
aacrifices.
3. He will wait too long, and find
alone will not buy life insurance
Would you
had bought
be sorry tod;
outfit more life insi
Don't delay, see
. if you
insurance 10 years
BERNIE LEMMONS ’52 today
phone VI 6-5800.
which publishes weekly important
articles in all branches of science.
It is one of the leading scientific
publications in the world.
The Wainerdi-DuBeau article,
which covers eight pages, is titled,
“Nuclear Activation Analysis,”
and, its subtitle reads: “Recent
developments in the technique, and
its inherent attributes give promise
of wide applicability.”
The authors cite 48 technical
references in spelling out just
where this relatively new science
of nuclear activation analysis
stands today.
GEN. RAYMOND MURRAY
Garrison Appoints CS Woman
To State Civil Defense Post
Col. Homer Garrison Jr., director
of the Texas Department of Public
Safety, has announced the re-ap
pointment, effective March 12, of
Mrs. Grace M. Martin of College
BESIDES MEXICAN FOOD
ZARAPE RESTAURANT
Serves Mrs. Andert’s Wiener Schnitzel,
Chicken Fried Steaks and Austrian Style
Fried Chicken.
Telephone VI 6-5235
Station as state consultant for
women’s activities in Civil Defense
and Disaster Relief.
Garrison, who is also state coor
dinator of Defense and Disaster Re
lief, said, “Mrs. Martin has served
in a civil defense capacity in state
government for the past 12 years.
Her work in this field is one of
outstanding achievement and talent
and she is recognized nationally as
an authority on the role of women
in civil defense planning. We are
indeed fortunate to have her on
our staff.”
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
it day 3(- per word
It per word each additional day
Minimum charge—40d
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publication
Classified Display
SOd per column inch
each insertion
PHONE VI 6-6415
CHILD CARE
till keep children in my home. VI 6-
83t4
Sill keep children in my home 8-5. VI 6-
n. ' T 7«tfn
FOR SALE
Maternity clothes, size 16, all in good
condition, some never worn ; one three
drawer chest, $4.00 ; occasional chair, $2.00.
VI 6-7850. 84t3
1950 4-dr Oldsmobile, one owner, 72,000
miles, (guaranteed), uses no oil, new tires,
excellent radio, other extras, safety in
spected, $250.00, from Major Drake, 203
Walton Dr., VI 6-7575. 83t3
HUMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY. Licens-
: ty Texas State Dept, of Public Welfare.
Siren of all ages. Virginia D. Jones,
tttered Nurse, 3404 South College Ave.,
li 24803. 61tf n
Hi keep children, all ages, will pick up
sideliver. VI 6-8151. llltfn
FOR RENT
Wanted roommate on Boyett St., pay %
820.00. Five room apartment. Call
i#9-B Boyett between 5:30 and 7:00
83t2
tixim for weekends, adjoining
tft nice. For summer students,
Utortable room with adjoining
nibble last of May. TA 2-6888.
Urge furnished one bedroom apartment.
U block from North Gate. $60.00 per
j T r. c,_ jthj
Wh, utilities furnished. James C. Sm
total Agent, TA 2-0557. 81tfn
Unfurnished
noshed roomy two bedroom apart-
Near Crockett School. VI 6-6660.
75tfn
TV-Radio-Hi-Fi
Service & Repair
GILS RADIO & TV
U 2-0826 2403 S. College
• engineering and
architectural supplies
• BLUE LINE PRINTS
• BUIE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SC0ATES INDUSTRIES
•08 Old Sulphur Springs Road
BRYAN, TEXAS
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
HEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th TA 2-2819
TYPEWRITERS
Kentals-Sales-Service
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO.
^ S. Main TA 2-6000
les M. Sch^
Ieade with cade
and
S WE on repairs
framed Mechanics
All Make Autos
Automatic Transmissions
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Say: “Charge It”
cade motor co:
47 Years with Ford
1309 Texas Ave.
1959 Triump TR 3, soft top and toneau
coyer, 23,090 actual miles, extra clean,
never raced, priced to sell, individually
owned. Mrs. D. R. Sanders DI 8-9903,
Hilltop Cafe, Madisonville. 83t4
S ECURITY FOK 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, lik
Baker, VI 6-5701 (
ke new, $
VI 6-6504.
$3(5.00. Call
66tfn
SPECIAL NOTICE
Contrar
try to an earl
opular demand, I will
Yis fall.
popular
old agai:
Her decision and by
take the four years
again this fall. Mrs. B. A. Hardaway,
die’s Kiddie Kollege, 605 Highland,
Tru<
College Station.
$2.00 TV service calls for students and
Radio repair, too. EE student
experience. Call VI 6-6611, 2-5 p. m.
72tfn
faculty
with ei
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
WORK WANTED
Student wife wants ironing.
VI 6-6306.
41tfn
SOSOLIKS
T. V., Radio, Phono, Car Radio
Transistor Radio Service
713 S. Main TA 2-1941
AGGIES NOTICE
To Rent Brazos County A&M Cluh For
Mixed Parties,—See Joe Faulk
SAE 30 Motor Oils 150 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
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.
FEMALE HELP WANTED
id wanted, 5 days a week, must have
transportation. Call VI 6-5280 after
83t2
Maid wanted
own
5.
Waitress wanted, experienc
sary, must be over 18. Appl;
CoUege Ave, TA 2-1352.
not neces-
18. Apply at 3606 S.
79tfn
OFFICIAL NOTICES
Official notices must be brought, mailea
or telephoned so as to arrive in the Office
of Student Publications (Ground Floor
YMCA, VI 6-6416, ho-urs 8-12. 1-6, daily
Monc)ay through Friday) at or before the
deadline of 1 p. m. of the day preceding
ation — Director of Studen
pul
tioi
blication
ns.
lirector of Student Publica-
Those undergraduate students who have
95 semester hours of credit may purchase
may be used in satislying
the 95 hour requirement. Those students
qualifying under this requirement n
leave their names with the ring clerk
the Registrar’s Office in order that she
may check their records
•equirem*
der this requirement may
ith the ring clerk in
may check their records to determine
eligibility to order the ring. Transfer-
Students must complete two (2) semesters
at A. & M. to be eligible to order the
ring. Orders for these rings will be taken
between April 9 and May 31, for delivery
on or about July 1st.
THE RING CLERK IS ON DUTY FROM
8:00 to 12 NOON ONLY MONDAY
THROUGH FRIDAY.
H. L. Heaton, Director of
Admission and Registrar 84tl2
The Seniors graduating on May 25, wil
gister March 19-25, inclusive, for th
GRI
registi
Gradu
raduate Record Examination (GRE).
Registration will be in the Counseling
and Testing Center, Room 204, from 8:00
a. m. to 5:00 p. m. daily and from 8:00
m. to. 12 :00 noon on Saturday.
Examinations will be held all day Friday,
pril 19, at places to be designated by the
April 19, at places to be designs
Counseling and Testing Center. Absence
from classes will be authorized for those
Seniors registering for taking the tests.
W. J. Graff
Dean of Instruction 8
DR G A SMITH
•#»«OLAUZIH«
!»•«• «XAMM4
eOMTACT IBKSe
1RYAN OPTICAL CLI
Used Car Headquarters
for
Central Texas
AH Makes & Models
Quick Credit—Bank Rates
CADE MOTOR CO:
47 Years with Ford
1700 Texas Ave.
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 Best Coffee & Freshest Donuta
ANYWHERE
Hamburgers — Short Orders — Fountain Service
Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules & Etc.
5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG
LOUPOTS
Gen. Murray Talks
To Marine PLC’s
Twenty-seven years ago, a young-
second lieutenant left A&M with a
Marine commission in one hand
and an Aggie ring on the other.
Saturday he returned to Aggie-
land—he still had both.
Maj. Gen. Raymond L. Murray,
’35, is one of the three highest
ranking former Aggies in the his
tory of the college. Murray visit
ed the campus this weekend to see
some colleagues and to take a look
at future Aggie Marine officers.
While on campus, Gen. Murray
spent two hours visiting with Ag
gie PLC’s and answering ques
tions.
When asked about the American
fighting man of today, G'en. Mur
ray answered that the American
of today is a much better fighter.
When a young man of today first
enters the service he has a hard
time accepting the discipline re
quired, but in the long run he is a
much better fighting man, he said.
The reason he is a better fighter
is that he is smarter—“he knows
how to think,” the general said.
“An Aggie and a Marine are
very much alike,” Gen. Murray
said. He claims that in both cases
the spirit and tradition of each
Corps makes the man prouder and
more devoted.
“Don’t sit around worrying
about promotions in the service,”
he said, “just do your job to the
best of your ability, and the pro
motions will take care of them
selves.”
Agriculture Group
Begins Conference
Agricultural Extension Service
staff members at A&M and dis
trict agriculture agents began their
bimonthly staff conference here
Monday. It will continue through
Friday.
Distcrict agents exchange prob
lems, new ideas and techniques,
which they pass on to county agents
in their home districts. They will
also schedule agricultural special
ists for their home districts.
THE BATTALION
Wednesday, Mar -h 20, 1963 College Station, Texas
Page 3
READ BATTALBON CLASSIFIEDS
GREAT DATE SHOW
Gaylord & Holiday (ITS emcees)
Variety Show
with
LARRY HOVIS as Emcee
(recording singing star)
BLUE BONNET BELLES
25 lovely singing girls
and
an ORCHESTRA from Houston
FRIDAY, MARCH 22 at 8 P. M.
G. Rollie White Coliseum
ALL SEATS $1.00—No reserved seats
—WELCOME AGGIES—
Fourth Year Architects
To Recieve Design Awards
Awards of $150, $100 and $50
will go to three fourth-year archi
tectural design students Monday
for the best entries in a design
contest sponsored by Fox & Jacobs
building contractors.
The Dallas construction firm in
cooperation with the Division of
Architecture is sponsoring the
awards to top off a design prob
lem involving a modern multi-story
apartment building for a site ac
tually owned by the firm.
The five-week problem was a
project for the entire 35-student
architectural design class under
the direction of Division of Archi
tecture Assistant Professors Wil
liam G. Wagner and Cecil W.
Steward.
“We feel that having ‘real cli
ents’ — people with an actual
problem and actual site conditions
—gives our students actual criti
cism about what the ‘client’ wants
and prepares the students for what
they will have to face when they
graduate,” said Steward.
Fox & Jacobs already has a fi
nalized design for the apartment
to be built on its Dallas site, but
is sponsoring the problem mainly
to attract design students to the
housing development industry by
“showing that there is a real place
for design in the mass production
of housing developments,” Steward
said.
Dine Out Tonight
Large T-Bone or Sirloin—Char-Glo Broiled
Salad—Baked Potato—Hot Rolls—$1.90
Special Top Sirloin Strip
Salad—Baked Potato—Hot Rolls—$2.00
Delicious V2 Fried Chicken
Salad and French Fries—$1.25
Thursday Nights—Tasty Spaghetti—$1.25
Sea Food Platter
Shrimp—Oysters—Stuffed Crabs—Scollops—Fillet—Trout
Salad—French Fries—$2.00
Large Golden Fried Shrimp
Salad—French Fries
Large Broiled Flounder
Salad—Baked Potato—$1.50
TRY OUR SUNDAY DINNER—$1.00
The TEXAN
Dining Room 3204 College Avenue
36 DAYS THAT CHANGED THE
PERFORMANCE PICTURE IN AMERICA
In 36 days, starting with the Monte Carlo Rally©
in January of this year, our products have posted a
series of competition wins that have made perform
ance history. Here’s what has happened:
Three V-8 Falcon Sprints were entered in the
Monte Carlo Rallye. This is not a race. It is a trial
of a car’s total capabilities. We did it (nervously) for
the experience and with practically no sense of expec
tation, because we had not entered an event like this
before. One Sprint ended the experiment in a snow
bank. But the others finished 1-2 in their class with
such authority that they moved the good, grey Lon
don Times to say: “The Falcons are part of a power
and performance plan that will shake up motoring in
every country in the world.” That was Number One.
Number Two was a double win in the Pure Oil
Performance Trials. Fords captured Class 1 and Class
2 (for high performance and large V-8’s). Both of
these trials were for over-all points rolled up in
economy, acceleration and braking tests.
Then, at Riverside in California, in America's only
long-distance stock car event that is run on a road
course (as opposed to closed circuit, banked tracks
such as the track at Daytona), Dan Gurney pushed
a Ford to first place.
The latest news comes north from Daytona. There
in the open test that tears cars apart—the Daytona
500—Ford durability conquered the field. Fords
swept the first 5 places ... something no one else had
equaled in the history of the event. In a competition
—which anyone can enter—designed to prove how
well a car hangs together, 9 Fords finished out of 12
entered ... a truly remarkable record considering
that over 50% of all cars entered failed to finish.
Why do we keep such an interested eye on compe- '
titions such as these? Is speed important to us?
Frankly, no. The speed capabilities of the leading
American cars are now grouped so closely together
that the differences have no real meaning. To us, who
are building cars, success in this kind of competition
means just one thing: the car is strong. This kind of
performance capability means that the car is so well
built that it can stand up to normal driving—the
kind of day-in, day-out demands you put your own
car through—for thousands of miles longer than less
capable cars.
In tests like the Daytona 500 and Riverside, we
find out in an afternoon what might take us 100,000
test-track miles to discover. We learn how to build
superior strength into suspension systems, steering
systems, drive train, body, tires. Anyone can build
a fast car. What we’re interested in is the concept of
“total” performance.
We believe in this kind of total performance
because the search for performance made the automo
bile the wonderfully efficient and pleasurable instru
ment it is today—and will make it better tomorrow.
America's liveliest, most care-free caret
FORD
EAJ.COM * EAtKL ANt • EOfiO * TMUMOERftJCO
EOR 60 YtARS THt SYMBOL Of
DEPENDABLE PRODUCTS
MOTOR COMPANT