The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 12, 1963, Image 3

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Cars
ervice
eign Cars
TA 2-4517
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★
•t Golf
1. Nov.
at the
Center
k
Schulz
Teacher’s Group
Plans Meet Here
More than 1,200 teachers from
Southeast and Central Texas are
due on the A&M University cam
pus Saturday for a regional con
ference of the Texas Classroom
Teachers’ Association.
The conference is one of four
scheduled in Texas to acquaint
classrooms teachers with new pro
posals concerning the preparation
of teachers.
The Texas Education Agency
recently received these proposals
from 12 commissions named about
a year ago.
“THE PRINCIPAL OBJECT of
the meeting here is to get the
Drillers Need
New Technique
Meet Reveals
Men associated with the drilling
industry called for additional re
search to develop new techniques
and better equipment at the ninth
Advanced Drilling Engineering
course at A&M University Friday.
F. M. Stephenson, president of
the American Association of Oil-
well Drilling Contractors, was one
of five speakers who indicated a
need for more research in order
to reduce drilling costs.
STEPHENSON ALSO noted the
cost of drilling has dropped 54
cents per foot over the last six-
year period, although the depth of
the wells is seven feet more. The
number of drilling units has de
clined 33 per cent over the same
period.
The speaker said he was con
vinced improvements will be made
with techniques and equipment.
“But in the meantime,” Stephen
son added, “we have got to im
prove on the techniques currently
being used.”
FRANK J. WHITLEY of Hous
ton, president of BBM Drilling Co.
and a former AAODC official,
agreed with Stephenson and called
for greater cooperation between
the contractors and operators.
“Often,” Whitley said, “changes
in the contracts, for example, carl
be made to benefit both parties in
getting that barrel of oil to the top
in a cheaper way.”
T. O. Allen of Tulsa, Jersey Pro
duction Research Co. representa
tive, outlined current research
projects. He said additional study
is needed with bits, drilling fluids,
air drilling techniques, slim hole
drilling and rig instrumentation.
M. L. TALBERT of Dallas, vice
president of engineering with Se
curity Engineering Division, pre
sented the supplier’s viewpoint to
reduce drilling costs.
The 21 students attending the
school represented oil producing
companies, drilling contractors and
supply companies whose products
are sold to the oil industry.
classroom teachers to react to
these proposed programs,” Dr.
Paul Hensarling said. He heads
the Department of Education and
Psychology and serves with Mrs.
Mary Frances Ross, president of
the Bryan Classroom Teachers As
sociation, as a conference coordina
tor.
A&M has the role of host for the
meeting. The Texas Education
Agency, and especially Dr. Wau-
rine Walker^ assistant director,
works closely with the classroom
teachers association.
Dean of Arts and Sciences
Frank W. R. Hubert will welcome
the visitors at the general as
sembly Saturday morning in Guion
Hall.
Mrs. Nettie Shaw of Carthage,
state vice president, will preside.
“Demands on Today’s Teachers
and Some Implications” will be
Dr. Charles Dent’s topic for the
major address. He is a faculty
member in the College of Educa
tion, the University of Texas.
The teachers will attend two
workshop sessions before leaving
the A&M campus in midafternoon.
Assisting with the conference
will be A&M students who are
members of the Student Educa-
ton Association and Graduate Edu
cation Club.
The 22 workshop sessions will be
mainly by subject area. “Em
phasis will be upon preparation of
teachers for teaching a specific
subject such as business, English,
modern languages and Latin,
mathematics, the fine arts, history
and social studies,” Hensarling
said.
Elementary school teachers will
attend workshops on such topics
as modern mathematics in the
elementary grades. There also
will be workshops on such matters
as programs to meet the needs of
potential drop-outs.
A&M faculty member Coleman
Loyd will serve as chairman of the
general sciences section and Dr.
William Stokes of the Department
of Education and Psychology will
chair the history and social stu
dies workshop.
Tocquigny Plans
High School Talk
Joe Tocquigny of the A&M Uni
versity Department of Animal
Husbandry will speak to district
high school vocational agricultural
teachers Wednesday at Moody.
Tocquigny will talk on “Select
ing and Feeding Swine.” Program
time is 3:30 p.m.
A. B. Childers of Waco, Area 8
vocational agriculture supervisor,
said the meeting is part of an in-
service educational program
planned by teachers in the district.
He said 26 Waco district teach
ers will attend.
P.H.T. DEGREE MAKES FT’S DEBUT
Awarded to wives who “put hubby through.”
M.E. Wives Club Celebrates
10th Year of Study Promotion
The M.E. Wives Club recently
began its 10th year of promoting
study and recreation to wives of
students studying mechanical en
gineering. Organized Oct. 1954,
the club adopted as its objectives
the understanding of the field of
mechanical engineering through
open forums, talks and lectures,
bringing about a closer relation
ship between M.E. students, wives
and their husbands.
The organization was the first
Vet Dean Attends
Association Meet
Dr. A. A. Price, dean of the
A&M University College of Veteri
nary Medicine, is attending the an
nual meeting of the Association
of State Universities and Land-
Grant Colleges in Chicago.
The dean also will participate
in the semi-annual meeting of the
Association of American Veteri
nary Medical Colleges, which will
be held in Chicago during the
Land-Grant session.
Dr. Price is secretary of the
veterinary association.
★ ★ ★
Dr. P. W. Burns, head of the
Department of Veterinary Physio
logy and Pharmacology, will pre
sent a paper at the Public Health
Veterinarians Conference Nov. 14
in Kansas City, Mo.
His paper is titled “Toxicology
and Rural Health.”
★ ★ ★
Two members of the College
of Veterinary Medicine are parti
cipating in a Symposium on Ani
mal Nutrition in St. Louis, Mo.
They are Dr. C. F. Meinecke of
the Department of Veterinary
Microbiology and Dr. A. P. Scott
of the Department of Vetrinary
Medicine and Surgery.
20^o DISCOUNT
Off Our Regular Prices
TO: A&M STUDENTS—STAFF—EMPLOYEES
The Finest In
* Laundering
* Cleaning
To Obtain Discount You
Must Present This Card
With Your Clothing and
or Linens.
...SAVE.. .
If You Do Not Have a
Card Either Of Our 3
Locations Will Issue One
on Demand.
SAVE 20%
THE NEW . .
L0C A T ION
r^COLLEBE
LAUNDRY AN
O S T E N
HILLS
CLEANERS
V I e -4 I 12
SERVICE WITH A DISCOUNT.
<
902 FOSTER-EAST
This card sntitlss ths bsarsr
to a 20% discount off
our regular prices lor ser
vices rendtred on a CASH
AND CARRY basis.
EXPIRES ON OR BEFORE
AT OOMOR'S OPTION
SIGNATURE
AUTHORIZED BY
LAUNDRY-CLEANING-LINEN RENTALS
Main Plant
902 Foster, East
North Gate
Waldrop Building
South Gate
326 Jersey St
to present the P.H.T. (Pushing
Hubby Through) degree to wives
here. The degree is given to wives
of mechanical engineering stu
dents who are members of the
M.E. Student Wives Club and who
have attended at least four meet
ings during the semester in which
their husbands graduate.
THE DEGREE is presented by
Dr. C. M. Simmang, head of the
Department of Mechanical Engi
neering. This presentation is the
highlight of the P.H.T. Banquet
and Dance given in honor of the
graduating student wives in Jan.
and May of each year.
The club is offering their new
P.H.T. Degree for the first time
this semester. It is new in design,
wording and of course bears the
new name of A&M University.
CHARTER PRESIDENT is Ann
Perryman, and the charter spon
sor is Mrs. Warren Rice.
The club has enjoyed programs
on engineering history, parliamen
tary procedure, book reviews and
many other useful topics.
THE BATTALION
Tuesday, November 12, 1963
College Station, Texas Page 3
More Understanding Needed
To Insure Safety Of Bees
More understanding among bee
keepers, farmers and applicators
will be needed in the future to re
duce bee loss to insecticides, an
A&M University entomologist said
here Monday.
The plea came from John Thom
as of the Agricultural Extension
Service and a speaker at the 82nd
annual meeting of the Texas Bee
keepers Association.
Commercial apiarists lose many
bees annually, a situation especial
ly acute during crop-flowering
season when bees are attracted to
poisoned blooms.
“Much of the trouble could be
avoided if farmers and beekeepers
would get together and talk things
over,” Thomas pointed out. “The
two are often dependent on the
other. Many crops need bees for
pollination, and bees need many
crops to gather pollen and make
honey.”
THOMAS MADE these recom
mendations:
The beekeeper should learn toxi
city of compounds, council with the
farmer and urge him to use the
least toxic materials.
Ask the farmer to use sprays
instead of dusts. Sprays do not
drift as far as dusts.
Urge the farmer to apply in
secticides late in the afternoon or
early morning when bees are least
active.
Ask the farmer not to dump
unused insecticides in the fields.
IMPRESS UPON the farmer the
importance of applying insecti
cides according to directions on
the container.
Ask the farmer to notify the
beekeeper when insecticides will be
applied.
Inform the farmer that one
treatment of a large area kills
more bees than successive treat
ment of small areas. Ask him
to use compounds with short resi
due periods.
BEEKEEPERS should establish
“holding yards” away from the
fields during insecticides danger
times. They should also familiarize
themselves with insecticides re
commendations so that suggestions
can be made to the farmer.
Another speaker, James Stroope
of Greenville, described check-off
plan results to the estimated 125
persons attending the conference.
The plan is a voluntary program
to raise money for promotion and
research of honey. Producers give
3 cents per 60-pound can. The
packer matches the amount per
60-pound can.
STROOPE SAID the program
has been beneficial to the indus
try, and more benefits can be ex
pected as participation increases.
In six years of operation the
plan has raised more than $100,000
and more than $51,000 in the past
21 months.
Stroope, a past president of the
Xmas Seal Appeal
Committee chairmen for the an
nual Christmas Seal appeal of the
Brazos County Tuberculosis Asso
ciation were announced today by
Mrs. A. V. Moore, campaign direc
tor. The drive will be conducted
from November 15 through Decem
ber 31.
Named to head the drive in the
rural communities of the county
are Mrs. W. T. Kelley, Kurten;
Mrs. D. C. Cowen, Millican; Mrs.
M. T. Crenshaw, Peach Creek;
Rev. Lewis McDonald, Reliance;
and Mrs. Guy Neeley, Wellborn.
Texas Beekeepers Association, said
the 1963 budget of $31,586 has
been spent like this: $12,000 for
the American Honey Institute for
indirect advertising programs;
$3,700 for research on honey as
a health food; $1,500 for a honey
booth at the National Home Eco
nomics Convention; $4,500 for the
National Honey Queen program;
$5,000 for a reserve; and $3,400
for public relations.
PARDNER
You’ll Always Win
The Showdown
When You Get
Your Duds Done
At
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
PLANNING AIR TRAVEL
FOR THE HOLIDAYS?
MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS
_NOW—
AVOID DISAPPOINTMENT
CALL TA 2-3784
Robert Halsell Travel Service
1411 Texas Avenue
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
. . . per word
ch additional day
charge—40^
2^ per wo
Minimum charge
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publication
PHONE VI 6-6415
CHILD CARE
Mother of little boy would like to keep
little boy, hot lunch, College View location,
references, $25 a month, VI 6-8268. 165t4
Will do baby sitting evenings
Merica, VI 6-8076, call after 5.
call Dian
145tfn
HUMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY, closed
ages. V irgi
3404 South
gist
College Ave., TA 2-4803. 6
urse,
oltfn
C-13-C CV, VI 6-7985.
Will keep children, all ages, will pick up
and deliver. VI 6-8151. llltfn
FOR RENT
Front bedroom adjoining bath, 910 East
30th, TA 2-7913. 165tl
Neatly furnished bedroom for
game, 910 East 30th, TA 2-7913.
Texas
165tl
FOP RENT
Room for gentleman, one block south of
drill field, VI 6-5665. 157tfn
WORK WANTED
Maid wants
hone TA 3-280
:xas.
ph<
Te:
part-time work
3, 1109
me work or ironing.
North Pierce, Bryan,
162t3
Typing - reports - thesis and manu
scripts. Carbon copies and offset reproduc
tion. Call VI 6-4059 or TA 3-5184. 162t4
Typing, experienced, VI 6-5900
Typing by experienced typist, VI 6-6347.
137t34
Typing, VI 6-8320.
WANTED TO BUY
AGGIELANDS (LONGHORNS) for 1934,
’33, ’39. ’45 and 1st edition of 1946 to com
plete library of small European Aggie
Museum. Pay $10 plus postage for whole,
clean issues. Write Air Mail, Jack Bell,
USA Finance Office, Paris APO 230, New
York. 165t5
Upright or spinet piano, VI 6-7671. 165t4
WANTED: STUDENT SALESMEN
Distributor firm wants limited number of student representa
tives in College Station and vicinity to sell special Christmas
merchandise and business gifts. NO INVESTMENT. Sample
furnished FREE. Fine opportunity for the right people. Hurry!
Write us NOW for full information.
John B. Howell Advertising Products Co.
607-11 County State Bank Bldg. Box 927
Coleman, Texas
163 t4
TV-Radio-Hi-Fi
Service & Repair
GIL’S RADIO & TV
TA 2-0826 2403 S. College
TYPEWRITERS
ADDING MACHINES
RENTALS
ASK ABOUT OUR
RENTAL OWNERSHIP
PLAN
OTIS MCDONALD’S
429 South Main St.
Bryan, Texas
• ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
• BLUE LINE PRINTS
#BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
608 Old Sulphur Springs Road
BRYAN, TEXAS
LET US SET A DIAMOND IN
YOUR SENIOR RING.
CAMPUS JEWELRY
North Gate
College Station
MASTER’S TRANSMISSION SERVICE
Complete Transmission Service
TA 2-6116
27th St. and Bryan
Bryan, Tex.
CASH AVAILABLE FOR BOOKS, SLIDE RULES & ETC.
5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG
LOUPOTS
New Store Hours — 8 a. m. ’til 5:30 p. m. — 6 Days A Week.
OFFICIAL NOTICE
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.
Those undergraduate students who have
95 semester hours of credit may purchase
urs passing at the
on
satis-
Those
95 semester hours of ere
the A&M ring. The hou
time of the preliminary grade report
11, 1963, may be used in
pas
rade
.November 11, lyba, may be us<
fying the 95 hour requirement,
students qualifying under this regulation
may leave their names with the ring clerk
in the registrar’s office in order that she
may check their records to determine their
eligibility to order the rings. Orders for
the rings will be taken between November
18 through November 27 and December
9 through January 7. These rings will be
returned for delivery on or about February
14, 1963. The ring clerk is on duty from
8 :00 a. m. to 12:00 noon, Monday through
Friday of each week.
H. L. Heaton Director of
Admission and Registrar 161t25
SPECIAL NOTICE
MOVING TO BEAUMONT AREA?
After January Graduation
If interested in sharing moving ex
penses. call VI 6-5586. 162t3
insurance with Farmers
Dividends increased 50% over
INSURANCE—place your auto
with Farmers Insurance Group
last year.
accept persons, single and under age
25. Call today FARMERS INSURANCE
GROUP, 3510 South College Road, B
phone TA 2-4461.
Bryan,
146U07
Fish and Picnic at original Hilltop lake.
Shades, tables ovens, price is right. Rain
checks given. 9% miles south of College
on Highwi
ay 6.
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th TA 2-2819
AUTO REPAIRS
All Makes
Just Say:
“Charge It”
Cade Motor Co.
Ford Dealer
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals-Sales-Service
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. xMain TA 2-6000
FOR SALE
Used Fedders air conditioner, good con
dition, one ton, $45, VI 6-7604 after 6 p.m.
165t2
1962 Monza, 4-speed white walls, radio,
heater, $1550, VI 6-8472. 165t4
Small green sofa, good condition, $22.50 ;
piano bench $3.00, VI 6-6695. 162t6
Male-Female Help Wanted
Man or Woman
OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS
A new item. First time offered.
Start in spare time, if satisfied
then work full time.
Refilling and collecting money from
bulk machines in this area. To qualify
you must have a car, reference, $500
to $1,000 cash to secure territory and
inventory. (Deposit secured by written
contract.) Devoting a few hours a
week to business your end on per
centages of collections should net above
average income with very good possi
bility of taking over full time. Income
increasing accordingly. If applicant
can qualify financial assistance will
be given by Co. for expansion to full
time position. Include phone in appli
cation. Box NMC 162t3
SOSOLIKS
T. V., Radio, Phono., Car Radio
Transistor Radio Service
713 S. Main
TA 2-1941
AGGIES
Do you change your own oil—?
—or work on your car—?
Then, why not save more on
your parts at JOE FAULK’S
DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS
Chev-Fd brake shoes 36-58 List $5.85
set of 2 wheels $2.90
Gulfpride and Havoline — Qt. 37?
Your choice — Enco, Amalie, Mobil-
Pennzoil, Conoco Qt. 33<*
Texaco, Gulflube-Opaline Qt. 30<*
SAE 30-40 Recon. Oil Qt. 15?
Seat Belts 3.95
Filters-Save 40%
RB Spark Plugs Ea. 29?
Mufflers-Tail Pipes 30-40% disc.
Installed for $1.00
Wheel Bearings 30 to 60% discount
We have 95% of the parts you need at
Dealer price or less.
atex ii
Gals.
4 New 670-15 tires
$5.49
$36.00 plus tax
?lus
plus
$44.00
Kelly .Springfield
Plastic Vinyl trim seat covers
$19.95 value now only $13.88
Shock absorbers as low as $3.88
Not off-brand
Autolite batteries 6V only $12.95
12V at dealer price.
Plenty of Prestone at our usual lowest
price.
JOE FAULK’S
25th and Washington