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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 22, 1963)
Page 6 College Station, Texas Thursday, August 22, 1963 THE BATTALION Highway Study Grant Awarded ATTENTION FRESHMEN Any freshman can reserve his books at no charge at Lou’s and be assured of used books at quite a savings. We will take your order and hold your books till September. This is at no charge to you. You cannot be over-sold or over charged because we allow a full TWO WEEKS RETURN PRIVILEGE to take care of any errors or changes in sched ules. Your FULL MONEY WILL BE REFUNDED during this period of adjustment. You Can’t Go Wrong At LOU’S—He Treats You Right. A research contract to develop a method of determining value of travel time, comfort, convenience and uniform driving- speed to com mercial vehicle owners has been as signed to A&M. The g-rant come from the High way Board of the National Aca demy of Sciences-National Re search Council. THE PROJECT IS one of 34 being awarded by the Board in a stepped-up drive to find solutions to many traffic and highway prob lems. The National Co-operative Highway Research Program, spon sored by the American Association of State Highway Officials and ad ministered by the Board, has mark ed $1.6 million for such projects during the fiscal year 1962-63. The Church.. For a Fuller Life.. For You.. CALENDAR OF CHURCH SERVICES A&M CHRISTIAN «;«• AJL—Coffee Tima 9 :00 A.M.—Church Service* 10:16 A.M.—Church School ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC Sunday Masses—7:80, 9:00 and 11:00 FAITH CHURCH UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST OUR SAVIOUR’S LUTHERAN eat * 10:41 A.M.—The Church at Worship • :8« AAL—BThii Classes For AH Holy Ooeniwnalop—Firs* Sunday Each Month CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE fl :46 A.M.—Sunday School 10 :45A.M.—Morning Worship 6:80 P.M.—Young People’s Service 7:00 P.M.—Preaching Service 9 :16 A.M.—Sunday School 10:80 A.M.—Morning Worship 7 :80 P.M.—Evening Service ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL COLLEGE HEIGHTS ASSEMBLY OF GOD S :46 A.M.—Sunday School CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY 9:30 A-M.—Sunday School ays A.I II :00 A.M.—Sunday Service 10:00 - 11:30 A.M.—Friday Reading Room 7:80-8:00 P.M.—•'Wed.. Reading Room 8:00 P-M.—Wed. Evening Worship .M. & 9:15 A.M. Morning Prayer 9:15 A.M. Church School & Nurs 8:4o A.JYI.—Sunday school 11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship 6 :30 P.M.—Young People’s Service 7:80 P.M.—Evening Worship FIRST BAPTIST 0 :80 A.M.—Sunday School 10:46 A.M.—Morning Worship A&M METHODIST 9:45 A.M.—Sunday School 8:00 A.M.—Worship 9:00 A.M.—Bible Study 10:45 A.M.—Morning Worshi 6:10 P.M —Training Union 7 :20 P.M.—Evening Worshi 8:45 A.JKL.—ounday school 10 :66 A.M.—Morning Worship 6:80 & 6:00 P.M.—MYF Meeting* 7:00 P-M.—Evening Worship y:uo a.m.—moie btv 10:00 A.M.—Worship 5 :15 P.M.—Young People’s Class 6:00 P.M.—Worship 7:15 P.M.—Aggie Class 9:30 A.M.—Tuesday - Ladies Class 7:15 P.M.—Wednesday - Bible Study 7:15 P.M.- -Wednesday Choir al & Bible Study Rehears. 8:00 P.M.—Wednesday Prayer Meeting SECOND BAPTIST UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP 4:00-6:30 P.M.—Friday School, YMCA say ! 8 :00 P.M.—First four Sundays of each ^ Cal] yi ^ Bible 710 Eisenhower 9:45 A.M.—Sunday School 11:00 A.M.—Church Service nth—Fellowship Meeting. 8 for further information. A&M LUTHERAN 6:30 P.M.—Training Unic -Church Servic 7:30 P.M.- (Missouri Synod) 10 :00 A.M.—Aggie Bible Class [.—Morning Worship Wednesday 7:16 P.M.—Gamma Delta 11:00 A&M PRESBYTERIAN 9:45 A.M.—Church School, 11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS 26th East and Coulter, Bryan 8:80 A.M.—Priesthood meeting 10:00 A.M.—Sunday School 6 :30 P.M.—Sacrament Meeting Jim didn’t catch any fish today. Now, on the way home, he can’t help casting an envious eye at Tim’s haul. It isn’t that he begrudges Tim his fish. It’s just that, in his heart, he can’t help wish that he had been the lucky one. This is natural, and Jim is young. He’s just beginning to learn that you can’t always be a winner, but he still finds losing pretty hard to take in stride. Fortunatelyj Jim is being given the advantage of Christian training in church during this all-important period in a boy’s life when a sense of values is being formed. He is learning lessons which only the Church can give him. True, Jim is envying a very small item — a string of fish. But envy and greed come to all of us on a larger scale many times throughout life. To meet this challenge squarely, it takes years of self-discipline. That is why religious training can never begin too early. THE CHURCH FOR ALL • ALL FOR THE CHURCH The Church is the greatest factor on earth for the building of charac ter and good citizenship. It is a store house of spiritual values. Without a strong Church, neither democracy nor civilization can survive. There are four sound reasons why every person should attend services regu larly and support the Church. They are: (1) For his own sake. (2) For his children’s sake. (3) For the sake of his community and nation. (4) For the sake of the Church itself, which needs his moral and material support. Plan to go to church regu larly and read your Bible daily. Copyright 1963, Keister Advertising Service, Inc., Strasburg, Va. m r Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday | Genesis Proverbs Mark Luke I Corinthians Ephesians I Peter 1 37:5-11 23:12-18 7:14-23 12:13-21 3:1-9 5:1-5 2:1-5 Jliltier funeral JJo BRYAN, TEXAS 602 West 26th St. PHONE TA 2-1672 Campus and Circle Theatres College Station 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 JSIu. Association BRYAN ICE CREAM MELLORINE SHERBET E BA‘ Monday Wreck Car Two Brenham youths were hospitalized and landed several feet farther down FI a third escaped serious injury Monday near side-swiping another vehicle slightly, the railroad crossing at North Gate. Their rious damage was caused to the front car hurtled over the high railroad fill and and wheels when the car landed. Scientists Will Collect Da On Central American Rai Freshmen e 111 are enroll ijor parts ol |ucational, n m organizat |The A&M I ;ablished in organiza responsibi learch and the broad f engineerir las as the late of Tex Jom time to ' ■The Systen: Ti ,us A&M ptbliely-suppe ^gher learn: rairie View 1'airie View lllege at Ar p State Co |le. The five se |e the Agric ,ation, Texa Two A&M meteorologists leave Saturday to gather more Central American rainfall data which they hope will, among other things, give clues to the mechanics of trop ical rainfall. Data already gathered lead to such interesting questions as why there are extreme variations in rainfall within narrow — 10 to 30 mile — ranges in several areas of Central America. More than topo graphy, the lay of the land, ap pears to be behind these “inter esting patterns.” Gathering the data are Assistant Professor Walter K. Henry and Instructor L. Glen Cobb. They plan plan to return before the fall semester begins, and they hope this trip, their second, will complete the data gathering in Central America. Next year they will visit the northern countries of South America. THE STUDY offers both im mediate and long range benefits and “several” firms interested in possible operations in the tropics already have contacted Henry and Cobb. “I suspect,” Henry said, “we probably have more Central A- merican rainfall data gathered here than there is at any other place in the Northern Hemisphere—I know we have more than the Central American countries, except for Ni caragua which we’ll visit this trio, because we have all that their governmental agencies have plus what we have gathered.” Dr. Dale F. Leipper who heads the Deaprtment of Oceanography and Meteorology is the research project supervisor. The study is being done for the Army Signal Corps under terms of a contract administered through the A&M Re search Foundation . DATA ALREADY GATHERED lead to speculation upon such facts as this: The maximum rainfall near the Panama-Costa Rica bord er is about 10 miles inland from the Pacific, while the maximum rainfall at a point in Honduras is at the Caribbean shoreline. The meterologists are doing mesoscale, detailed studies, of sev eral such “interesting patterns.” Cobb cited an area in northern Panama in which there is an ap proximately 100-inch difference in tl Jln terms o and Cobb M l ethar 'ograms foi :xas men ai The service msion Servic annual rainfall betweentwdlg Experimc oiily 30 miles apart. j fcgineering' “Barren deserts” exist in ft L the Texas pics, contrary to popular k: Henry year by varied means fc| oyees; its M visited banana plantations,! I 254 Texas fincas and other points in as L ks on pro) to governmental offices, ft l ntrol of ins , the more exotic portions t| j^ter traf trip was aboard a narrow. , , . ■ During the railroad handcar. I. .. WEATHER DATA tradiS * UV colle8 ' es are “open information,” and! and Cobb found almost ere most cooperative. “We visited one farm in Pi le C0 ^ e 8' es that had detailed records' l ^ on train! extensive period of time, l* lout ^5,000 when great-grandpa bepi 8 ing this data,” Henry said. Many Central American is and ranchers, just like ft West Texas, keep accuratesd records. A* ini The researchers make am ments to have the data photos ed or copied by other 1 Sometimes clerks are transcribe the records blit) graphic copying is done wk possible. curses rang ivil Defenst ith radiatio tional teacl - GROCERIES - O’Sage—No. 2 Vi Cans Elberta Peaches 4 For $1.00 Green Giant—Nihlets Golden Corn 2 Cans 33c Libbys—303 Cans Garden Sweet Peas ...2 For 35c Starkist Chunk Style Tuna 4 For $1.00 Austex—300 Size Cans Spaghetti & Meat Balls 2 For 49c Maryland Club Instant Coffee 6-Oz. Jar 79c Maryland Club COFFEE 1-Lb. Can 65c Pink Beauty SALMON Tall Can 55c Uncle Williams—300 Size Pork & Beans 3 For 25c Kama—18-Oz. Peanut Butter Jar 43c Hunts—No. 2>/2 Cans Peach Halves 4 For $1.00 Snowdrift SHORTENING 3-Lbs. 59c Libbys—300 Size Cans Corned Beef Hash 2 Cans 69c Mazola—I'/z Quarts Corn Oil 79c Libbys—Quart Decanters Tomato Juice 2 For 45c FROZEN FOOD- Mortons—22-Oz. Fruit Pies.. . Each 'Be Blue Bell—In Plastic Containers SHERBET Quart Libbys—10-Oz. Chopped Broccoli, Corn, Turnip Greens, Spinach, Squash 6 For $1.( - MARKET - Let tSM lice Unive ng Walters n, Monday a lectures f< undation Su: lants and c 11 be given Jlogical Sci< (Valters wil d Optical Pi He joined i ue as profe 53 he comp idies at Ri ived his Ph. )m Duke Ur itional Scier ctoral Fello 1 tttinued his iperties of ms at very In 1957 he tits, Inc., a: ter was pro list and th arch associa hem i si iovern] ^ The Deparl Round Steak 1-Lb, lit 8 received •. Loin Steak 1-Lb. 75c Phi Bone Loin 1-Lb. 5t! T-Bone Steak 1-Lb, 85c Health gra: er study of lids,” Presid onced. Dr. A. F. emistry am Deckers—Tall Korn Sliced Bacon 1-lb. » <"* . r™ am is in it: Swifts—Premium Vacuum Pack Franks.... 1-Lb. S Santa Maria MILK Gal. Plus Deposit 79( Borden Miscuits .. 2 Tins 15t pport. He said the forts to syn lorous-conta: iich do not tare. Amino acid; Fleischmans Corn Oil Oleo 1-Lb. 35« lied the - oteins. - PRODUCE - Lettuce 2 For 25f Carrots Cello Bag lit Avocados Each 15f California Oranges 2-Lbs. 25f SPECIALS GOOD THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FRIDAY, AND SATURDAY, AUGUST 22-2M* § FOOD MARKET COLLEGE STATION CHARLIE’S NORTH GATE —WE DELIVER— The Nations a division snt of He; elf are. COACH PANCA varieties iged heavy tod other fi Daily—IV 11