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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 1, 1963)
ion hei moving? Implete Moving Service Packing—Transportation- Storage lines, arc ®i conomic m|j ard Transfer & Storage IcDonald Cte: at A&M. .ns ler( learch informi Agent For [JNITED VAN LINES TA 2-2835 707 S. Tabor, Bryan AMONG THE PROFS Two Military Science Men Promoted At Summer Camp Two Army officers of the Re serve Officer Training Corps staff at A&M have received promotions recently. It now is Lt. Col. Frank S. Hert- 1'liE SURREY INN CALDWELL, TEXAS ALENDAR ias done funfe yarding the et ral shapes eBIURSDAY, AUG. 1 atural ventilJ SEA FOOD BUFFET ;r environjneiit | $2.00 FOR THE MONTH OF AUG 6:30 to 9:00 p.m. sh an architeW^’DAY, Al r G. 4- laboratoryail NOON BUFFET ons into «■ ruction withoa use of liraitd |1URSDAY, AUG. 8— 1 education, or of numeral) larch in arch of several on secretary an! [INDAY, AUG. 11 e Brazos Chap »9 !3< 47 73 49 ' Lb '%> i Pkg. not Lb. s\n Box 5 IURSDAY, AUG. 15— HAWAIIAN LUAA BUFFET UNDAY, 18- NOON BUFFET 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. $2.00 LA PARISIENNE GOURMET BUFFET 6:30 to 9:00 p.m. .$2.50 NOON BUFFET 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. $2.00 6:30 to 9:00 p.m. $2.00 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. $2.00 UURSDAY, AUG. 22— SWEDISH SMORGASBORD V $2.00 6:30 to 9:00 p.m. r.YDAY, AUG. 25— NOpN BUFFET 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. $2.00 UURSDAY, AUG. 29— CARIBBEAN COOLER BUFFET 6:30 to 9:00 p.m. $2.00 SURREY RIDES ON SUNDAY SPKND A COUNTRY WEEK END AT THE SURREY. CHILDREN FREE CLIP and SAVE zog and Maj. John R. Vilas. The colonel has been at A&M since 1962 and holds the B.S. de gree from Colorado State and the M.B.A. degree from the University of Denver. Major Vilas graduated fro m Texas A&M in 1953 and returned to the campus in 1962 as a mem ber of the ROTC staff. ★★★ Dr. R. J. Baldauf will partici pate in the 16th International Con gress of Zoology, the first meeting held in the United States* since 1907. More than 1,500 zoologists from over 60 countries will attend the Aug. 20-27 meeting in Washing ton, D.C. Baldauf is an associate professor of wildlife management. The meeting will provide Ameri can zoologists a chance to meet colleagues from all parts of the world for exchange of scientific information. Official host for the Congress is the National Academy of Scien ces in cooperation with the Ameri can Institute of Biological Scien tists. ★★★ Professor Vance E. Moyer of the Department of Oceanography and Meteorology will participate in a national conference on “Arti ficial Satellites” to be held in Vir ginia, Aug. 11-17. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the Na tional Science Foundation sponsor the conference at the Virginia Polytechnic Institute. This is the third year that Moy er has been invited to the Blacks burg conferences. Other A&M pro fessors also have attended earlier conferences. ★★★ The appointment of John F. Car- son of El Paso as an instructor in the Department of English of A&M has been announced by Dr. John Q. Anderson, department head. Carson will co^ch the A&M De bate Team in addition to classroom duties, Anderson said. The new A&M faculty member comes here Sept. 1 from a faculty position at Texas Western College. He holds both B.A. and M.A. de grees from Texas Western. ★★★ Dr. Michael J. Francis has joined the A&M Department of History and Government as an instructor in government, Dr. J. M. Nance, department head, announced. Francis received the doctorate at the University of Virginia, where he wrote his doctoral dissertation on “United States Government At titudes Toward Collective Security Arrangements with Latin America Since World War II.” In his ad vanced studies, he spent the sum mer of 1960 at the National Uni versity of Mexico. 20 Schoolmen Are Attending Management, Finance Course Twenty students including su perintendents and teachers from a wide area are at A&M for a spe cial workshop in the growing - field of school finance and business management. Teaching the three-week work shop as a visiting professor is Frank D. Austin of Amarillo. He is a veteran of nearly 20 years service as school business manager and past president of two state professional associations. He has taught in summer sessions in vari ous colleges and universities. The workshop which continues through Friday is designed to as sist superintendents and business managers and to help others pre pare to assume the business of school district official. Austin said “the business duties in the schools have multiplied man ifold in recent years.” “Even many of the medium-size school districts now have business managers,” he noted. School business managers “more and more” relieve superintendents of many of the business aspects of district operations, so the superin tendent may devote more time to curriculum and instruction matters, Austin said. “We are studying specific prob lems, as they relate to the busi ness operations of public schools,’ he continued. ie Church... For a Fuller Life.., For You... Wier 3unerJ Mo BRYAN, TEXAS 502 West 26th St. PHONE TA 2-1572 F i $]oo 35= $|79 STUDENT MlICATION Campus and Circle Theatres College Station CALENDAR OF CHURCH SERVICES A&M CHRISTIAN 8 :30 A.M,—Coffee Time 9:00 A.M.—Church Services 10:15 A.M.—Church School FIRST BAPTIST 9 :30 A.M.—Sunday School 10 :45 A.M.—Morning Worship 6 :10 P.M —Training Union 7 :20 P.M.—Evening Worship 7 :15 P.M.—Wednesday Choir Rehears al & Bible Study 8:00 P.M.—Wednesday Prayer Meeting ST. MARY'S CATHOLIC Sunday Masses—7:30, 9:00 and 11:00 UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP for further p Meeting, information SECOND BAPTIST 710 Eisenhower 9 :45 A.M.—Sunday Schcx Sunday 11:00 A.M.—-Church Se: 6:30 P.M.^—Training Union 7 :30 P.M.—Church Service hool servic Unio CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School 10 :45A.M.—Morning Worship 6:30 P.M-—Young People’s Service 7 :b0 P.M.—Preaching Service OUR SAVIOUR’S LUTHERAN 8:15 & 10:45 A.M.—The Church at Worship 9:30 A.M.—Bible Classes For All Holy Communion—First Sunday Each Month FAITH CHURCH UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 9 :15 A.M.—Sunday School 10 :30 A.M.—Morning Worship 7 :30 P.M.—Evening Service CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY 9:30 A.M.—Sunday School 11:00 A.M.—Sunday Service 10:00 - 11:30 A.M.—Friday Reading Room 7:00-8:00 P.M.—Wed.. Reading Room 8:00 P.M.—Wed. Evening Worship CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS 26th East and Coulter. Bryan 8 :30 A.M.—Priesthood Meeting 10:00 A.M.Sunday School 6:30 P.M.—Sacrament Meeting A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST 9:45 A.M.—Bible Classes 10 :45 A.M.—Morning Worship 6:45 P.M.—Bible Class 7:16 P.M.—Evening Service COLLEGE HEIGHTS ASSEMBLY OF GOD 9 :45 A.M.—Sunday Sch 11:00 A.M.—Morning W 6 :30 P.M.—Young People's : 7 :30 P.M.—Evening Worship orship pie’s Se: rvice A&M LUTHERAN (Missouri Synod) 10 :00 A.M.—Aggie Bible Class Wednesdays 7:15 rung P.M, ,—Gamma Delta A&M METHODIST 9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School 10 :55 A.M.—Morning Worship 6 :30 & 6:00 P.M.—MYF Meeting* 7 :15 P.M.—Evening Worship A&M PRESBYTERIAN 9 :45 A.M.—Church School 11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL Sundays 8:00 A.M. & 9:15 A.M. Morning Prayer 9:15 A.M. Church School & Nurs College Station's Own Banking Service College Station State Bank NORTH GATE Central Texas Hardware Co. BRYAN • HARDWARE • CHINAWARE • CRYSTAL • GIFTS Sure Sign of Flavor SANITARY Farm Dairies The Exchange Store “Serving Texas Aggies” Bryan Building & Loan Association BRYAN ygr-1—' ICE CREAM MELLORINE SHERBET THE BATTALION Thursday, August 1, 1963 College Station, Texas Page 5 Texas Gals In Hollywood Four Texas Beauties, who’ll be featured in Kay Coleman of San Antonio; Janet Keith a sequence in a movie called “4 For Texas,” of Dallas and Gayle Baker of Fort Worth, pose in Hollywood during a filming break. (AP Wirephoto) Left to right: Dorothy Farrar of Houston; Oceanographer And Family Leave Aug. 16 For Britain Dr. Donald W. Hood, A&M oceanographer, and his family plan to leave Aug. 16 for a year’s resi dence in England. Hood as a chemical oceanogra pher will be doing research with Professor W. David Evans, head of the Department of Geology of the University of Nottingham. The A&M faculty member is among approximately 100 Ameri can scientists who hold National Science Foundation senior postdoc toral fellowships for 1963-64. A SECOND member of the A&M Department of Oceanography and Meteorology also plans to go to the University of Nottingham to work with Evans and Hood. Researcher Lela Mae Jeffrey, a chemical oceanography researcher, will transfer her NSF-sponsored research of organic matter in sea water. She plans to leave early in September and will be gone for about a year. Miss Jeffrey’s research concerns identification of organic matter found in sea water. The researchers plan to study the influence of organic matter on the processes by which sediment is consolidated into rock. “I believe that our work at Not tingham will open up new horizons for work in areas of interdiscipli nary nature that are important in understanding earth processes,” Hood said. HE RECENTLY received the Faculty Distinguished Achieve ment Award in recognition of his research activities in addition to his teaching. The A&M professor received the Ph.D. degi’ee here. Earlier, he com pleted undergraduate studies at Pennsylvania State College and re ceived the M.S. degree from Okla homa State University. Dr. and Mrs. Hood and their daughters, Becky, age 9, Barbie, 8, and Susie, 4, will sail from New York City aboard the SS America Aug. 24. The Hood family will tour brief ly in England before going to Not tingham to begin residence at a bungalow on the edge of the Uni versity of Nottingham campus. MISS JEFFREY, a native Tex an, has been a researcher on the A&M campus for almost a decade. She first came here in 1951. She also has served as a research as sistant at other institutions includ ing the Scripps Institute of Ocean ography. Her major research effort pres ently is financed by a two-year, $40,000 grant from the National Science Foundation. “The ultimate purpose of this research,” she said, “is to devise an analytic scheme for identifying the major organic compounds in large samples of sea water. Hood is consultant and associate investigator for this project. We Reserve The Right To Limit All Sales. - GROCERIES - - FROZEN FOOD - Libbys—303 Cans Swansons—8-Oz. Garden Sweet Peas... 5 For $1.00 Meat Pot Pies 5 For 85c Libbys—12-Oz. Cans ... 6 For Coastal—8-Oz. Pineapple Juice 59c Breaded Fish Sticks 2 For 39c Libbys—46-Oz. Cans Tennessee—10-Oz. Tomato Juice Can 25c Sliced Strawberries 2 For 39c Nabisco Whole Sun—6-Oz. Cans Premium Crackers 1-Lb. 29c Orange Juice 2 For 49e Maryland Club Instant Coffee .... 10-Oz. Jar $1.09 - MARKET — Hunts—300 Size Can Round Steak 1-Lb. 79c Half or Sliced Peaches 5 For $1.00 Loin Steak 1-Lb. 79c Hunts—14-Oz. Bottles CATSUP ... 6 For 89c Pin Bone Loin 1 Lb. 59c Star Kist—No. ‘/z Flat Cans Meaty Short Ribs 1-Lb. 39c Chunk Style Tuna 4 For $1.00 Deckers—Tall Korn Maryland Club Sliced Bacon 1-Lb. 57c COFFEE ... 1-Lb. 65c Hormels—Dairy Brand All Meat Franks 1-Lb. 49c Pink Beauty—Tall Cans Can 59c Krafts—8-Oz. SALMON Sliced American Cheese ... Pk. 29c Mazola—Quarts Corn Oil .. Bottle 59c Borden Biscuits 2 For 15c Krafts—Deluxe Corn Oil Oleo 1-Lb. 35c Towie—6*Oz. Stuffed Olives Jar 29c - PRODUCE Welch—24-Oz. Grape Juice .. Bottle 35c California Oranges .... Lb. 15c Uncle Williams—300 Size Cans Carrots Cello Bag 15c Pork & Beans ... 3 For 25c Avocados 2 For 25c Snowdrift SHORTENING .. 3-Lbs. 59c Yellow Onions 2-Lbs. 15c SPECIALS GOOD THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FRIDAY, AND SATURDAY, AUGUST 1-2-3. CHARLIE'S „ f a 0 , o k“ s , NORTH GATE —WE DELIVER— COLLEGE STATION