The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 08, 1963, Image 3

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Conference, Seminars
Add To Campus History
The person may be a, farmer,
business executive, beekeeper or an
engineer. He may fig'ht fires, raise
turkeys or chase crooks.
People from all walks of life
register at A&M annually for addi
tional study through conferences,
seminars and symposiums.
Arrangements for the courses,
for the most part, are the respon
sibility of F. W. Hensel, a 1941
Aggie graduate who now is label
ed coordinator of continuing edu
cation facilities.
Veterinary College
Granted $22,950
In Research Aid
The College of Veterinary Medi
cine has received grants totaling
$22,950 to support research work.
Two of the grants are to the
Department of Veterinary Micro
biology. The Morris Animal Foun
dation in Denver, Colo., has pro
vided $11,000 to support research
on equine infectious anemia and
related diseases.
Dr. A. A. Price, dean of the
college, said primary objectives
are to develop serologic tests, new
diagnostic techniques and to grow
the virus in a tissue culture sys
tem. Dr. R. W. Moore, Dr. C. W.
Livingston and Dr. L. H. Russell
are directing the project.
The other microbiology depart-
mie have t- ment £ ran t * s from Merck and Co.
rmany, Gra at Rahwa y> N - J -> a $7,000 renewal
ai ^ for research on bovine pink eye.
ordin to Jnf ^ un ^ s continue to support
“ efforts to develop serologic tests
and evaluate possible immunizing
procedures.
-e havings:
lating hot
Dr. J. W. Huff and Dr. L. C.
Grumbles are supervising the work.
William Cooper and Nephews,
Inc., has granted $4,950 for Project
H-697, “The Efficiency and Tox
icity of Various Chemicals and
Formulations Used as Anthel
mintics in Farm Animals.”
[DEMEB
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LOVERS'
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URSDAli
Office of Continuing Education
is a new name. Previously, it
was called Short Course Office.
The headquarters are now in the
Memorial Student Center, where
most of the conferences are held.
But there’s nothing new about
the program. It dates back to
1944, although Texans have at
tended training programs at A&M
since the early 1900’s.
SEVERAL of the current confer
ences, in fact, date back to the
early 1920’s, and some — includ
ing the Farmers Short Course —
was known to exist years earlier.
Some of today’s offerings in
clude such programs as the Inter
national Conference on Activation
Analysis, Executive Development
Conference, Feed Microscopy and
Instrumentation Symposium.
The space age offerings have
pushed aside such choice schools
as the Horse, Jack and Mule short
course of the early 1930’s, which
incidentally, attracted several hun
dred persons.
INSTRUCTION on aircondition
ing was presented delegates until
the late 1940’s, along with a milk
sanitarians’ school, one for cotton
ginners and others.
Hensel and his staff conduct the
registration, which consists of
making name tags, collecting fees,
writing receipts, selling tickets to
dinners, providing information and
assisting with housing.
Registration fees may reach sev
eral thousand dollars in such cases
as the Texas Firemen’s Training
School, which attracts almost 2,-
000 persons to the campus annual
ly-
Or the conference fees may be
slight with schools where the en
rollment is limited to small groups.
NOT ALL COURSES are handl
ed by the Continuing Education
Office, Hensel said. Both agricul
ture and engineering extension
services, in some instances, organ
ize and operate their own pro
grams.
Just how many people are reg
istered by Hensel’s staff each year
depends upon the number of cours
es held on the campus. Generally
AGGIES ... DON’T DELAY!
Order Your Boots Now For Future
Delivery - Small Payment Will Do
YOUR BOOTS MADE TO ORDER
Convenient Lay-Away Plan
ONLY $55.00 A PAIR
Economy Shoe Repair & Boot Co.
509 W. Commerce, San Antonio
CA 3-0047
Ferreri’s Triangle Restaurant
Try Our New SECRETARY SPECIAL
Monday Thru Friday
The SECRETARY SPECIAL is a quick, low calorie
meal which gives you time to shop during your noon
hour.
Book Your Banquets and Special Parties Early.
Accomodations From 10 to 200 Persons
speaking, about 50 conferences and
12,000 to 15,000 sign for additional
education each year.
This figure does not include
other short courses and meetings
that are not processed by the Con
tinuing Education Office.
WITH A NEW office and new
name — continuing education —
Hensel feels the new environment
will offer several advantages. No
longer will registration materials
be packed a couple of blocks to
register several thousand people
in another building.
The bookkeeping and registra
tion can be conducted in the same
building — the MSC. Arrange
ments for facilities may be handled
in the same office.
So an A&M faculty memoer in
charge of a conference can have
the delegates housed, fed, register
ed, and lectured in the same build
ing.
Such an arrangement was the
dream of the A&M Century Study,
a long-range study of future needs
of the university by faculty and
staff and 100 Texas laymen.
College Bowl Quiz
Elimination Trials
To Begin Tonight
Thirty - three candidates for
A&M’s College Bowl team begin
elimination trials Tuesday.
The oral quizzes will choose
four students to represent A&M
on the national television show at
7:30 p.m. Tuesday in 113 Nagle
Hall.
Eliminatinons will be held each
Tuesday and Thursday for the
next three weeks. Dr. Harry P.
Kroitor, assistant professor of
English and director, said.
“We invite all students and
faculty members to these pan
els,” Dr. Kroitor said.
The candidates have taken six
written examinations over mater
ials received during the summer.
The panel sessions on Tues
days will be the first trials under
conditions similar to the tele
vision show.
The elimination tria's will con
sist of 20-minute quiz contests
for eight students. Students will
be scored on the ability to re
call facts quickly.
The Aggies are scheduled to
appear the afternoon of Nov. 10,
before NBC network cameras in
New York City.
JETS Announces
Advisor Selections
Appointment of 23 prominent
Texans to the Texas Advisory Com
mittee for JETS — Junior Engi
neer’s Technical Society— has been
announced by Assistant Dean J.
G. McGuire, Texas JETS head
quarters, of the College of Engi
neering.
Officers named to the statewide
committee, whose duties will in-
University Given
3 Research Grants
Rudder Announces
The National Science Foundation
Monday notified President Earl
Rudder of three grants totaling
$30,650 for undergraduate research
projects open to 23 students. The
programs are renewals of projects
last summer.
The research grants are for bio
chemistry and nutrition, oceanog
raphy and physics.
A similar program in soil physics
and involving seven students
earlier received NSF approval for
next summer.
The proposals for new programs
next summer involving under
graduate research participation
may be filed until Jan. 15, Coleman
Loyd, NSF coordinator on campus,
said.
The undergraduate research pro
grams, which may be offered either
in the summer, or the academic
year, or both, involve a minimum
of 10 weeks participation. Some
are primarily f or A&M under
graduates, some involve under
graduates from other campuses.
The physics program to be di
rected by associate professor Joe
S. Ham will involve three students
this academic year and eight dur
ing the summer.
The oceanography program is for
six students next summer. The
director is Richard M. Adams, an
administrative scientist.
The program in biochemistry
and nutrition will involve five stu
dents next summer and five the
following academic year. Profes
sor H. O. Kunkel is director.
The program in soil physics in
volves seven students during the
summer and three this academic
year.. Professor Morris E. Blood-
worth is program director.
elude working with and advising
the JETS movement in Texas, in
clude: chairman, John S. Bell,
manager, Houston area, Humble
Oil and Refining Company, Hous
ton; vice chairman, E. L. Mise-
gades, manager of supporting engi
neering operations at General Elec
tric’s Tyler plant, and McGuire,
interim secretary.
With the strong support of the
Texas Society of Professional En
gineers, JETS operates as an or
ganization of the National Society
of Professional Engineers designed
to acquaint high school students
with engineering and science. As
a result, they can make better
preparation in high school for the
study of these subjects in college.
Through organized technical activi
ties and competition and guidance
from engineers, interest is keen,
McGuire said.
IN YOUTH activities, Chairman
Bell has served as district chair
man for the Boy Scouts of Ameri
ca in Los Angeles, on the execu
tive board of the Sam Houston
Area Council and as chairman of
its 1960 Scout circus. He received
the Silver Beaver Award from the
Los Angeles Council in 1960. In
Houston he served as chairman of
the 1960 Eagle Recognition Com
mittee and is currently chairman of
the Council Camping Committee.
He was elected to the board of the
San Jacinto Chapter, Girl Scouts
of America in 1962.
Bell has been active in the petro
leum engineering activities of the
American Institute of Mining,
Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engi
neers since 1939 and served as
president of the Society of Petro
leum Institute, the American of
AIME in 1859. He is a member
of the American Petroleum In
stitute, the American Association
of Petroleum Geologists, and the
San Jacinto Chapter, Texas Society
of Professional Engineers. Bell
joined Humble in 1933, and in
managerial positions he has been
active in petroleum engineering.
Vice chairman Misegades in Nat
ional Director No. 2 of the Texas
Society of Professional Engineers.
In 1961 he was president of the
East Texas chapter of TSPE, and
served the society on the state
level on the Junior Engineers Com
mittee.
w# 1
M. ^
HDD SECUR
Southwestern States Telephone
THE BATTALION Tuesday, October 8, 1963 College Station, Texas Page 3
Army, Air Force Cadets
Receive DMS Citations
Seventy-nine Army and Air
Force Reserve Officer Training
Corps cadets have been designated
as distinguished military students
by the heads of their respective
military science departments.
Persistent Disease
Control Saving
For Poultrymen
The U. S.) .poultry industry prob
ably could save in excess of $100
million a year if it would knock
out persistent diseases under the
heading of “pluro pneumonia-like
organisms.”
The S-6 strain of PPLO, as
poultrymen call it, causes poultry
losses through mortality, reduced
performance, medication costs, and
condemnation, Dr. C. F. Hall of the
College of Veterinary Medicine said
here Friday.
The veterinirian, a speaker at
A&M's 18th annual Texas Nutri
tion Conference, said PPLO is egg-
transmitted. Few commercial chick
en breeder flocks at the present
time are free of the infection.
“But most foundation breeders
are working diligently to establish
PPLO-free units in their opera
tions,” Dr. Hall added. “Proce
dures to do this are expensive and
time consuming. Since there is
little foundation stock free of
PPLO, it means that all breeders
must attempt to establish PPLO-
free foundation stock from infected
parent stock.”
He said several techniques are
employed to do this, all of which
reduce but do not completely elimi
nate the disease. However, with
reduction of egg - transmitted
PPLO, it is possible to brood and
rear small groups in isolation and
to expect some of the groups will
be PPLO-free.
Forty-five senior Army ROTC
cadets have been chosen from a
class of 223. In a special cere
mony, Col. D. L. Baker, professor
of military science and comman
dant of the Corps, said, “These
cadets are to be congratulated for
academic standing, military pro
ficiency and leadership.
If the designated cadets main
tain their record through this
academic year they may receive a
regular army instead of reserve
commission.
Twenty-nine senior Air Science
cadets were designated Distini-
guished Air Force ROTC cadets by
Col. James F. Starkey, professor
of Air Science, in a special cere
mony last Saturday.
ARMY cadets are as follows:
Abbott, Craig Stephens; Anderson,
David Carl; Bolling, David Ran
dolph Jr.; Brame, Ronald Milton;
Burgoon, Robert L.; Byrd, Gary
Lee; Cameron, Donald Scott;
Caskey, Kindred P.; Cook, Glyn
McDonald; Doerre, Gary Lee;
Dresser, Paul Alton Jr.; Duke,
Wayne Michael; Durrenberger,
Cyril J.; Bowers, Edwin J.; Els-
bury, Billy Ray; Jerguson, Thomas
Lee; Fischer, Arthur Charles;
Forehand, Gilbert H.; Freeman,
Raymond Douglas; Galvin, Daniel
Linsbee; Goff, John Edward;
Holochwost, Gregory G.; Harwell,
Richard M.; Jackson, Benjamin
Ray; Jernigan, Herbert Gary;
Jones, David Spence; Lanning,
James Walter; Long, Martin
Duane.
LUYMES, Alan Herman; Mc
Adams, Thomas Arthur; McClure,
John Anthony; McGowen, Michael
Don; Marlow, Michael McLeron;
Melton, Jackson Dale Jr.; Metz,
Richard Henry; Nelson, George
Lowell; Newton, Dennis Elbert III;
Purcell, William W. R. Jr.; Pye,
Perry Gregory; Roberts, Harlan
Earl; Schaefer, Chester Chris;
Simpton, Jerry Eugene; Toole,
Irvin Jr.; Vaughan, Ronald Wayne;
Veselka, Shelburne Jay.
AIR FORCE cadets are: Beck
with, Scott W.; Biggs, Richard A.;
Brown, Harold C.; Buchanan,
James P.; Cates, Robert L.; Cur-
ington, Eldon B.; Dowling Jr.,
Dennis W.; Freeman, Charles H.;
Garrett Jr., Lawrence N.; Glover,
Joe E.; Haliasz Jr., Henry E.;
Keeling, Russell L.; Lutich, Michael
L.; McGrady, Michael S.; Miller,
Robert A.; Mitchell, Malcolm G.;
Morgan, James N.; Ntez, Roy L.;
Powell, Charles T.; Railston, Rich
ard L.; Siegelin, Gerald W.; Sku-
pin, Henry C.; Smith, Homer C.;
Smith, Manning D.; Smith III,
Robert D.; Spurger, James R.;
Sullivan, Richard G.; Upchurch,
John P.; Zatopek, Edward J.
FFA Club Begins
Officer Training
Schools For State
Aggie Collegiate Future Farmers
of America have begun a series
of officer training schools through
out the state for high school FFA
officers.
Training sessions have just been
completed at Fredericksburg for
the Hill Country District, and at
Jacksboro for the Oil Belt Dis
trict. Officers representing 15
high school chapters attended each
school.
Bill Irick, assistant professor in
the Department of Agricultural
Education, said the purpose of of
ficer training schools is to assist
vocational agriculture teachers in
their leadership training programs.
He said each high school FFA
officer receives special instruction
in duties and responsibilities of his
particular office.
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
WANT AD RATES
One day 3^ per word
24 per word each additional day
Minimum charsre—40e
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publication
Classified Display
80^ per column inch
each insertion
PHONE VI 6-6415
WORK WANTED
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Typing by experienced typist, VI 6-5347.
137tl6
Official notices must be brought or
mailed so as to arrive in the Office
of Student Publications (Ground Floor
YMCA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5, daily
Monday through Friday) at or before the
deadline of 1 p. m. of the day preceding
publication — Director of Student Publica
tions.
Typing, VI 6-8320. 133tfn
Wanted ironing in my home, reasonable
rates, pick-up and delivery, call TA 3-
5071 after 6 p. m. 133U9
CHILD CARE
DEGREE FILING DEADLINE SET FOR
OCTOBER 21, 1963. Applications for de
grees are now being accepted in the
Registrar’s Office from all students who
expect to complete their degree require
ments by January 18, 1964. Candidates
for advanced degrees must file their appli
cations with both the Registrar’s Office
and the Graduate Dean’s Office. The
deadline date for filing applications is
October 21, 1963. 143tl3
Will do baby sitting evenings, call Dian
Mercia, VI 6-8076, call after 5. 145tfn
FOR SALE
Keep children during football game,
VI 6-7917. 145t4
Full size gas range, excellent condition,
cheap, call VI 6-8660 144tfn
Child care on Foch, nice play area,
VI 6-7370. 140t8
Convenient One-Stop Service
WILLIAMS
REAL ESTATE INSURANCE
MORTGAGE LOANS
2909 Texas Ave. TA 2-3793
Completely renovated, new roof, re
painted inside and out, two bedroom,
with separate study. Located in College
Hills Addition convenient to the cam
pus. Can be purchased with a low down
payment.
If interested come by our office or
after office hours call.
Ed Scott VI 6-6186
P. E. “Pete” Newman VI 6-7006
John Wayne Todd VI 6-6772
L. E. Winder, Jr. VI 6-6296
Ernie Wentrcek TA 3-3475
144t3
HUMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY, open
for football games. Licensed by Texas State
Dept, of Public Welfare. Children of all
ages. Virginia D. Jones, Registered Nurse,
3404 South College Ave., TA 2-4803. 61tfn
January graduates may begin orderinj
their graduation invitations starting Octo.
ber 1 through the 31st, Monday thru Fri
day, 9 to 4 at the cashier’s window Memo
rial Student Center. 141tl8
C-13-C CV, VI 6-7985. 132tfn
Experience; reference, in my home, VI-
6-8608. 133tfn
Students interested in applying for a
Rhodes Scholarship should confer with
R. H. Ballinger, 302-C Academic Bldg.,
prior to October 9, 1963. 138t9
Fifteen years nursery experience, two
years up, near East Gate. Mrs. C. H.
Bates, VI 6-4152. 133tfn
Will keep children, all ages, will pick up
and deliver. VI 6-8161. llltfn
It is now time for all Student Organiza
tions to apply for Official Recognition at
the Student Finance Center, Memorial
Student Center. The DEADLINE is
October 15, 1963. 133tl6
HELP WANTED
White male or female help wanted at
the Tastee Freeze across from the Western
Motel. 129tfn
1961 Chevrolet Impala, 2-door, hardtop
standard transmission, radio, heater, excel
lent condition, VI 6-4559. 135tfv
TV - Radio - Hi-Fi
Service & Repair
GIL’S RADIO & TV
TA 2-0826 2403 S. College
FOR RENT
SPECIAL NOTICE
Nicely furnished bedroom for students,
private entrance, two blocks north of
Campus, by week or month, VI 6-5266.
144tfn
Fish and Picnic at original Hilltop lake.
Shades, tables ovens, price is right. Rain
checks given. 9Vi miles south of College
on Highway 6. 134tfn
Furnished apartment, near Ridgecrest,
$80, VI 6-6826 or VI 6-7463. 144t2
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th TA 2-2819
• ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
• BLUE LINE PRINTS
•BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
608 Old Sulphur Springs Road
BRYAN, TEXAS
SOSOLIK'S
T. V., Radio. Phono., Car Radio
Transistor Radio Service
713 S. Main TA 2-1941
MOVING?
Complete Moving Service
Packing—Transportation—
Storage
Beard Transfer & Storage
Agent For
UNITED VAN LINES
TA 2-2835
707 S. Tabor, Bryan
AGGIE NOTICE
To Rent Brazos County A&M Club For
Mixed Parties,—See Joe Faulk
SAE 30 Motor Oils 15? Qt.
Major Brands Oils .... 30-33? 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.
Filter 40% discount
AT JOE FAULK’S
25th and Washington
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals-Sales-Service
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main TA 2-6000
TYPEWRITERS
ADDING MACHINES
RENTALS
ASK ABOUT OUR
RENTAL OWNERSHIP
PLAN
OTIS MCDONALD’S
429 South Main St.
Bryan, Texas
MASTER’S TRANSMISSION SERVICE
Complete Transmission Service
TA 2-6116
27th St. and Bryan Bryan, Tex.
I Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules & Etc. 1
5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG
I LOUPOT’S |