The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 23, 1963, Image 3

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    College Station, Texas
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New Campus Organization
Made For Foreign Students
An organization to promote
greater understanding among for
eign students and Americans has
been created on the A&M Univer
sity campus.
The group’s official title is the
Institute of International Educa
tion, Hospitality Committee, Mrs.
Fred Smith and Mrs. William E.
Eckles, co-chairmen, announced.
The A&M chapter is a member
of the Institute of International
Education, the oldest and largest
non-profit organization in the field
of international exchanges of stu
dents, scholars and professional
people.
Several other chapters are lo
cated at schools and colleges in the
Southwest. A regional office, one
of five in the United States- is
stationed in Houston.
Fresh Coffee 16 Times
Each Day
We
Accept
Phone Orders
We’re sorry that we have been running out of
donuts but they have been selling faster than we ex
pected. It won’t happen again, we are doubling our
efforts to give you what you want.
Sincerely,
Ralph Stevens ’61
A&M DONUT SHOP
North Gate
Across from the Post Office VI 6-7023
The activities of the A&M Hos
pitality Committee are varied, Mrs.
Smith explained.
The groups, for example, will
provide transportation for foreign
students to visit nearby historical
sites, industry, supermarkets, ro
deos and other points of interest.
And the committee will provide
tickets for musicals, lectures and
other cultural activities, or perhaps
arrange student visits into Amer
ican homes as guests of the fami
lies.
Arrangements will be made by
the local committee to use foreign
students as speakers at various
group meetings in the Bryan-Col-
lege Station area.
Programs also are planned for
wives of foreign students on the
campus, Mrs. Smith added.
The Hospitality Committee’s
headquarters are in Room 206 of
the Counseling and Testing Center,
across from Sbisa Dining Hall.
Committee membership is com
posed of individuals and groups in
the A&M area interested in the
program, Mrs. Smith noted. Ad
visers include Robert L. Melcher,
foreign student adviser, and Dr.
Jack D. Gray, foreign program co
ordinator, both on the A&M staff.
Chairmen of various subcommit
tees will be announced at a later
date, Mrs. Eckles said.
An informal open house will be
held from 4 to 6 p.m. Nov. 11 at
the Counseling and Teesting Cen
ter. Miss Martha Mewhiter, assis
tant director of the regional office
in Houston, will be present.
“It is impossible to mentally or
socially enslave a Bible reading
people.
PRO -eiecr*.
fWITTS BEFo/?£
*00*
No dripping, no spilling! Covers completely!
Old Spice Pro-Electric protects sensitive
skin areas from razor pull, burn. Sets up
your beard for the cleanest, closest,
most comfortable shave ever! 1.00
THAr
SHU LTO N
r
Student Costodion
Jobs Available
Twenty-three additional jobs
as custodians were created for
students Monday as the Depart
ment of University Services
stepped up its program for stu
dent workers.
The student program now has
45 jobs available in the various
dorms with about 10 jobs still
to be filled.
Most of the students work
about 10 hours per week.
Jobs for students custodians
were begun last year with a
limited number of students. Set
up by Walter H. Parsons, sup
erintendent of B&U, the pro
gram is under the direction of
M. A. Bell, custodian foreman.
Lecture Series
Opens As Nagy
Speaks To 150
Special To The Battalion
The Western nations should
exert continual, peaceful tactics to
maintain strong pressure aimed at
eventually freeing the Central and
Eastern European nations from
Communists.
This was the message of Ferenc
Nagy, former prime minister of
Hungary, who spoke Friday night
to inaugurate the University Lec
tures series.
“At the very time,’’ Dr. Nagy
said, “when the Western powers
had begun the liberation of 600
million people from colonial rule
in far-off Asia, 100 million people
were forced under Soviet colonial
rule. The free world tolerated a
situation where a less civilized,
less cultured power should colonize
nations having a much higher de
gree of civilization and culture.”
Nagy spoke to more than 150
persons, mainly faculty and staff
members, in the Chemistry Build
ing Lecture Room.
“The significance of Central and
Eastern Europe in Present World
Politics” was his topic.
ASCS Conference
To Open Thursday
The USDA’s Agricultural Stabi
lization and Conservation Service
will hold an orientation meeting
in the Memorial Student Center
Thursday for county committee
men from 44 counties.
W. Lewis David, state executive
director of the ASCS, said the
session is held to acquaint newly
elected county members with the
agency’s programs, such as mar
keting quotas, loans and the Agri
cultural Conservation Program.
The meeting also serves to in
form experienced committeemen on
latest developments in the pro
gram, he said.
y|-||u BATTALION! Wednesday, October 23, 1963
"AMONG THE PROFS
Page 3
A&M Fire Training Chief
Set For Memphis Meeting
Henry D. Smith of the Engineer
ing Extension Service at A&M
University will attend the annual
International Fire Chiefs Associa
tion meeting in Memphis, Tenn.,
Oct. 27-31.
Smith is chief of fire training
here. In Memphis, he will meet
with fire officials to coordinate
plans for the 1964 Texas Firemen’s
Traning School to be held here.
Smith earlier this week was the
guest speaker at a meeting of the
Sabine-Neches Chapter of the
American Society of Safety Engi
neers in Beaumont.
★ ★ ★
Two members of the A&M Col
lege of Veterinary Medicine will
participate in the Southern Veter
inary Medical Association’s annual
meeting Oct. 27-30 in Chattanooga,
Tenn.
They are Dr. E. W. Ellett of the
Department of Veterinary Medicine
and Surgery and Dr. R. D. Turk,
head of the Department of Veter
inary Parasitology.
After the conference, Dr. Ellett
will present papers to veterinary
association meetings Oct. 31 at
Roanoke, Va.; Nov. 1, Richmond,
V.; Nov. 3, Chattanooga, Tenn.,
and Nov. 4, Atlanta, Ga.
★ ★ ★
The newly published fifth edi
tion of the book “Diseases Trans
mitted from Animals to Man” has
two chapters written by Uni
versity personnel.
Chapter 18 on “Fungous Dis
eases” was contributed by Dr. C.
H. Bridges, head of the Depart-
Chronicle Official
Due Here Tonight
M. J. Butler, business manager
of the Houston Chronicle, will be
guest speaker Tuesday at 7:30
p. m., Room 3 Nagle Hall, as
Alpha Delta Sigma, professional
advertising fraternity, sponsors its
first major event of the year.
The visitors, a member of the
board of directors of “Newspaper
I, ” will be honored at 6:30 p. m.
with a dinner at the Memorial
Student Center.
“Newspaper 1” is an advertising
syndicate being formed by daily
newspapers across the nation to in
sure saturation coverage with one
bill.
Though the session is mainly
for advertising students, marketing
students, and advertising people
in the area, anyone is invited to
attend both the early dinner and
the lecture, said Delbert McGuire,
head of the journalism department,
head of the Department of Jour
nalism.
ment of Veterinary Pathology.
Chapter 14, “Contagious Ecth
yma of Sheep and Goats,” was pre
pared by Dr. W. T. Hardy, super
intendent of the Sonora station, a
sub-unit of the Texas Agricultural
Experiment Station.
The book contains 967 pages
and is a practical summary of the
zoonoses. Thirty-one authors from
the United States contributed to
the volume.
★ ★ ★
Mrs. Nan Cardwell, head of the
A&M College of Veterinary Medi
cine Library, was to attend the
annual meeting of the Southern
Regional Medical Library Associa
tion Wednesday in Little Rock,
Ark.
The session will be held in Little
Rock’s new medical center.
One of the highlights of the
meeting will be a tour of the
famed Winrock Farms, owned by
Winthrop Rockefeller.
★ ★ ★
Dr. M. A. Brown of the A&M
University Department of Dairy
Science will present a paper at the
Harvestore Research Forum Nov.
7-8 at Arlington Heights, 111.
His paper is titled “Texas Har
vestore Dairy Research Program.”
The forum is sponsored by the
A. 0. Smith Harvestore Products,
Inc., which manufactures the up
right, blue, glass-lined silos on
some of A&M’s farm research cen
ters.
Brown said colleges and uni
versities in 20 states will have re
presentatives at the forum.
igTnrrriwi m ■■■■■«!■■«■■« ■■■■¥■■•■■»
| “Sports Car Center”
Dealers for
! Renault-Peugeot
: &
British Motor Cars
« Sales—Parts—Service ;
j“We Service All Foreign Cars”!
(■1422 Texas Ave. TA 2-45171
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.
FDA
Food and Drug Administration
Representatives of the Food and Drug Administration,
U. S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,
will be on campus Tuesday, November 5 to interview
men and women with 30 semester hours or more in the
biological and physical sciences. Positions in research
and product analysis are in Washington, D. C., and in
18 District locations throughout the United States.
Excellent opportunities for personal and professional
development with an expanding Federal agency ded
icated to protection of the public health. U. S. citizen
ship required.
Contact placement office for further details.
An equal opportunity employer
INTERVIEWS
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
ie day ....
2d per word t
One day 3d per word
per word each additional day
Minim
imum charge—40d
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publication
Classified Display
80d per column inch
each insertion
PHONE VI 6-6416
FOR SALE
For your Beauty Counselor Cosmetics
and gift items, Mrs. W. R. Robertson,
VI 6-4447. 152t4
’62 Monza, black, white walls, push but-
>n radio, heater, good condition, $1696.00,
I 6-8472 after 6 p. m. 152t4
PIANO—Baldwin make spinet, less than
four months old, at a great savings. For
information write credit manager. Nelson
Piano Co, 3208 Rosemary Lane, Tyler.
152t3
WANTED TO BUY
Would like to buy Falcon, Covair, or
any European, '69 or ’63, Please contact
Mr. Velz, B-16-A College View after 6.
TV-Radio-Hi-Fi
Service & Repair
GIL’S RADIO & TV
TA 2-0826 2403 S. College
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals-Sales-Service
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main TA 2-6000
HELP WANTED
OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES ... for
qualified people in Rural Development and
Education, Southeast Asia. International
Voluntary Services, 1903 N Street, Wash
ington, D. C. 152t8
WORK WANTED
Invisible reweaving burns, moth holes,
cuts and tears, Mary Carter Paint Store,
306 Dodge, TA 2-4172, Monday thru Friday.
149tll
Typing IBM Executive, 11 years ex-
erience, VI 6-6069. 148t9
Typing by experienced typist, VI 6-6847.
137t34
Typing, VI 6-8320.
ISStfn
SPECIAL NOTICE
AUTO INSURANCE—place your auto
insurance with Farmers Insurance Group
Dividends increased 60% over last year.
We accept persons, single and under age
26. Call today FARMERS INSURANCE
GROUP, 8610 South College Road, Bryan,
phone TA 2-4461. 146U07
Fish and Picnic at original Hilltop lake.
Shades, tables ovens, price is right. Rain
checks given. 9% miles south of College
on Highway 6. 134tfn
• ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
• BLUE LINE PRINTS
#BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
608 Old Sulphur Springs Road
BRYAN, TEXAS
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
FOR RENT
Neatly furnished bedroom for Baylor
game, 910 East 80th Street, TA 2-7913
Nice, clean, two bedroom furnished apart
ment. 304 East 22nd. Apply 601 North
Washington. 150t4
SPECIAL NOTICE
game
5602.
k your kids and car for Saturday’s
at 201 Montclair, Mrs. Inglis, VI 2-
158t8
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Two bedroom unfurnished duplex, stov«
and refrigerator optional. Panel ray heat
tile bath, 1408 East 27th. TA 2-1862 oi
VI 6-7339. 149tfi
CHILD CARE
ance t
6-6384
oesible,
162t4
Will do baby sitting evenings, call Dian
Mercia, VI 6-8076, call after 5. 145tfn
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
C-13-C CV, VI 6-7986.
Will keep children, all ages, will pick up
and deliver. VI 6-8151. llltfn
SOSOLIKS
T. V., Radio. Phono., Car Radio
Transistor Radio Service
713 S. Main
TA 2-1911
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th TA 2-2819
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, 1-6, dally
pul
tio
TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
ANNOUNCEMENT OF FINAL EXAMI
NATION FOR THE DOCTORAL DEGREE
(Defense of the Dissertation)
Full Name of Candidate: Robert, Clarence
Richard. Candidate for Degree of Doctor
of Philosophy In Horticulture
'itle of Dissertation: “Inter-relationshipf
of Carbon Dioxide Narcosis and Chilling
Title of Dissertation :
of Carbon Dioxide Narcosis and Chilling
Temperature on The Postharvest Physiol
ogy of The Sweet Potato, Ipomoea
batatas, Polr.”
Time of Examination: October 28, 1968 ;
1:80 p. m.
Place of Examination: Room 393 ; Plant
Science Building.
Wayne C. Hall,
Dean of Graduate Studies 163t3
January graduates may begin ordering
their graduation invitations starting Octo.
through the 81st, Monday thru
I to 4 at the cashier’s window M
ber 1
day, 9
day, 9 to 4 at the c
rial Student Center.
Memo-
141tl8
TYPEWRITERS
ADDING MACHINES
RENTALS
ASK ABOUT OUR
RENTAL OWNERSHIP
PLAN
OTIS MCDONALD’S
429 South Main St.
Bryan, Texas
Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules & Etc.
5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG
LOUPOT’S