The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 14, 1963, Image 3

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Development Fund Director
To Speak At A&M Qub Meet
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Tabor, Bryan
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may be forgiven
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girl—supple as a
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Richard (Buck) Weirus, director
if the Development Fund of the
Scientific Method
lecture Is Tonight
Sir George Paget Thomson,
Nobei Laureate and Master
Emeritus of Cambridge Universi
ty’s Corpus Christi College, will
give his main lecture, “Some
Thoughts on Scientific Method,”
in Room 146 of the Physics
Building at 8 p.m. Tuesday.
Association of Former Students
will be guest speaker at 7 p.m.
Wednesday for the Brazos County
A&M Club.
The dinner meeting will be held
at the clubhouse on Ehlinger Drive
and all former students have been
invited, Joe Sorrels, club president,
said.
Weirus will outline the Develop
ment Fund and its contributions to
A&M over the year .
Sorrels said the meeting will
consider proposed changes to the
club’s bylaws and hear a report
of the building committee.
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would like very
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heartfelt wishes
alley. To juniors
:ome seniors. To
you will become
lies that you will
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the year I have
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Carter Selected
For Scholarship
James W. Carter of Harlington,
has been awarded a Scottish Rite
Foundation scholarship for $2,200
for. graduate study at George
Washington University in 1963-64,
Department of History head Dr.
J. M. Nance has announced.
A senior majoring in history,
Carter has been active in student
government posts since he enroll
ed in 1959. He has been an elected
member of the Student Senate for
four years and has served as parli
amentarian and as chairman of the
public relations committee.
During the past year Carter was
a delegate to SCONA VIII. He
has also served for three years on
CLASP Program
Nets $120,889
From State Exes
The results of the city cam
paigns completed thus far under
the Colleg'e Loyalty Alumni Sup
port Program has • shown that as
of Friday, 9,025 former students
of A&M gave $120,889 toward the
greatest Development Fund accom
plishment in the history of A&M,
according to Richard Weirus, fund
director.
CLASP is a cooperative effort by
the local alumni of colleges and
universities — private, denomina
tional and public •— joining forces
to strengthen higher education in
Texas and the Southwest and, at
the same time, assisting their re
spective alma maters. The heart
of the program is a simultaneous,
coordinated drive among these ex
students.
CLASP has as its purposes and
objectives to dramatize the values
and needs of higher education; to
increase the number of alumni do
nors and dollars for each of the
participating schools; to demon
strate that private and public in
stitutions can work together on a
common problem; to stimulate a
healthy spirit of competition a-
mong the local alumni of each in
stitution, and to spt an example
which the participating institu
tions might extend to other cities.
the student elections commission.
Carter was elected this year to
Who’s Who in American Colleges
and Universities and to the nation
al scholastic honor society Phi
Kappa Phi.
Long interested in diplomatic
affairs, Carter lived in Cairo,
Egypt, where his father was on
assignment from the State De
partment as an agricultural spec
ialist, and later for a year in
Asuncion, Paraguay.
Carter has passed the written
and oral examinations for assign
ment in the Foreign Service of the
United States, which he expects to
pursue as a career.
At George Washington Univer
sity Carter will pursue graduate
work in international affairs.
THE BATTALION
Tuesday, May 14, 1963 College Station, Texas Page 3
Groneman Honored
By Kansas State
Sigma Xi Society
Initiates 37 Here
At Annual Banquet
Thirty-seven A&M students were
initiated into Sigma Xi Society
Wednesday, a national organiza
tion for graduate students in sci
ence fields.
Aubrey W. Naylor, a Duke Uni
versity biologist, was featured
speaker at the 13th annual initia
tion and awards banquet held in
the Memorial Student Center Ball
room.
New associate members include
Lonnie Colvin, a graduate plant
sciences major; Don Taylor, a
graduate chemical engineering ma
jor; Bennett Hardy, also a gradu
ate chemical engineering major;
James Schreck, a graduate student
in chemistry, and George Doering,
a graduate entomology major.
Also initiated were Ronald Pine,
a graduate wildlife management
student; James Harding, a grad
uate oceanography student; Wil
liam DeFacio, a graduate physics
major; Stanley Wellso, a gradu
ate agronomy major, Douglas Ro
binson, also a graduate wildlife
management major, and Marion
Mayer, a graduate entomology ma
jor.
PROTECT YOUR
AGGIELAND!
PLASTIC COVERS ARE NOW
ON SALE IN THE STUDENT
PUBLICATIONS OFFICE
LOCATED IN THE BASEMENT
OF THE YMCA.
only 25 c
DR. CHRIS GRONEMAN
Y oung Republicans
First To Support
‘Draft Goldwater’
The A&M Young Republicans
Club became the first Young Re
publican Club in Texas to go on
record in full support of the “Draft
Goldwater” movement, in a meet
ing Monday night. ,
A resolution was presented to
support Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-
Ariz., for the Republican presi-
dental nomination in 1964.
The resolution stated:
“Whereas, Senator Barry Gold-
water, of Arizona, is the strongest
conservative leader of the Repub
lican Party, and has shown the
greatest amount of leadership in
the fight for free enterprize and
individual liberties in the United
States,
And, whereas, Senator Goldwa
ter, is the only person capable of
leading this country forward to
a position of a true world leader,
and having its citizens feel confid
ent and self-respected to a degree
they have not known in a long
time,
And, whereas, Senator Goldwa
ter offers the most logical and
sensible political philosophy on na
tional and international affairs.
Be it hereby resolved that the
Texas A&M Young Republicans
Club go on record in full support
of the “Draft Goldwater” move
ment for the Republican president
ial nomination for 1964.”
Ag Wives Council
Selects New Staff
The Aggie Wives Council has an-
ounced the election of officers for
next year’s term.
The new president will be Mrs.
Bonnie Morgan of the Mechanical
Engineering Wives Club; the new
vice president will be Mrs. Muriel
Silcock of the Civil Engineering
Wives Club; secretary will be Mrs.
Cheryl Ahrens of 'the Oceanogra
phy and Meteorology Wives Club.
Treasurer will be Mrs. Glenda
Burke of the Civil Engineering
Wives Club and reporter will be
Mrs. Raymonda Almond of the En
tomology Wives Club.
The head of the Department of
Industrial Education, and co-ordi
nator of the teacher education
council, Dr. Chris Groneman, will
be one of three alumni cited for
meritorious achievement and dis
tinguished service at Kansas State
College’s 51st annual commence
ment.
The citation, the highest award
Kansas State can confer on its
graduates, will be made June 2.
Groneman received his BS and
MS degrees at Kansas State in
1931 and 1935. He holds a doctor
of education degree from Pennsyl
vania State University and has
been at A&M since 1940. He was
made head of the Department of
Industrial Education in 1949.
He is listed in Who’s Who in
Education, Leaders in Education,
International Who’s Who, Who’s
Who in Industrial Arts Education,
and Who’s Who in the Southwest.
Groneman is consulting editor
for McGraw-Hill Publications in
Industrial Arts; editorial chair
man, American Vocational Associ
ation bulletin “A Guide to Improv
ing Instruction in Industrial Arts,”
1953; guest editor, School Shop
Newsletter, National Safety Coun
cil, 1952-53; editorial committee,
“Lighting for Industrial Arts,”
Better Light, Better Sight Bureau,
Assistance Grant
Given By Gulf Oil
The Department of Petroleum
Engineering Monday received a
$1,000 unrestricted assistance grant
from the Gulf Oil Corporation.
The check was presented Presi
dent Eai'l Rudder and Robert
Whiting, petroleum engineering
head, by F. L. Carpenter, petro
leum engineering advisor of Gulf’s
domestic production department.
The grant is one of 50 that Gulf
distributes annually to selected de
partments in universities or col
leges. Together with other sec
tions of the Gulf program, this will
result in the distribution of more
than $1,400,000 to students and
institutions of higher education for
scholarships and other aid to edu
cation purposes in 1963.
New York City, 1954; editorial
board, School Shop Magazine, Ann
Arbor, Mich., 1954-59; and editor
ial board, Industrial Arts and Vo
cational Education Magazine, Mil
waukee, Wis., 1961-63.
The professor is the author of 20
books and publications, four bul
letins and reports, and 124 pro
fessional magazine articles pub
lished since 1934.
Mother’s Clubs
Hold Meet Here
The annual meeting of the Fed
eration of A&M Mother’s Clubs
was held Saturday in the Ball
room of the Memorial Student Cen
ter.
Guest speaker for the affair was
Dr. W. J. Graff, dean of instruc
tion, who spoke „ on excellence in
college work. Graff told the club
members they were ambassadors
for the goal of excellence at A&M,
and stressed their importance to
the institution.
The Singing Cadets furnished
entertainment for the meeting with
a barber shop quartet.
Vet Students Hear
Commission Talk
Col. Glen B. Wagnon of the 8th
U. S. Army Corps Headquarters in
Austin was on campus Tuesday to
meet with veterinary students.
The officer conferred with stu
dents who will qualify for a com
mission in the Veterinary Corps
by January, 1964.
COACH NORTON’S
PANCAKE HOUSE
35 varieties of finest pancakes,
aged heavy KC steaks, shrimp,
and other fine foods.
' Daily—Merchants lunch
11 to 2 p. m.
CONVENIENCE
M0 PHONES
Southwestern States Telephone
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