The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 24, 1964, Image 3

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    H. Dewey Jr., Bryan attorney
nd former member of the Texas
egislature, told departing dele-
ates to the Justice of Peace and
castable’s Institute Friday to be
ert to possible legislation that
ojild abolish the two elected of-
IC.
or
ies.
awyer Warns Delegates
fices.
Dewey, at an awards luncheon,
reminded the law enforcement of
ficers that any such move would
require a majority vote of the
people since the measure would
,be a constitutional amendment.
MCT HOBBY CENTER
Slot Racers - Model Airplanes - Accessories
Kits FF, UC, RC
1311 Texas Ave. Bryan, Texas TA 3-5200
“It also would require approval
from 150 representatives and 21
senators before consideration could
be given by the people,” he added.
His remarks came during a dis
cussion of how bills become laws.
A representative from 1953 to
1962, Dewey briefly outlined steps
the Legislature takes to enact new
laws.
Wallace D. Beasley, coordinator
of Police Training Division of the
Engineering Extension Service,
awarded certificates to those who
completed the week-long school.
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANf AD RATES
iu day . . 3<f per word
U per word each additional day
Minimum charge—40^
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publication
Classified Display
80d per column inch
each insertion
SUPERIORITY COMPLEX
NOW SELLING FOR .50
So you’re not a football hero, a big Brain, or a hot
Hot-rodder. You can still be tdp man in the Girl
Department!... if you let SHORT CUT
take control of your top! It’ll shape up
the toughest crew cut, brush cut, any
cut; give it life, body, manageability.
Give you the best-looking hair around
—and a feeling of natural superiority.
So get with it! Get Old Spice
SHORT CUT Hair Groom by
Shulton . . .
tube or jar, on/y .50 plus tax.
CHILD CARE
UMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY, Li
ed by Texas State Dept, of Public
fare. Children of all ages. Virginia
Jones, Registered Nurse, 3404 South
ege Ave., TA 2-4803. 61tfn
ill keep children, all ages, will pick up
deliver. VI 6-8151. llltfn
jping, experienced, VI 6-5900 156tfn
SPECIAL NOTICE
ROSS LODGE NO. 1300, A.F. & A.M.
, Called meeting Tuesday, March
A 24 at 7 p. m. The Entered
Apprentice Degree will be con-
\ Apprei
r? ferred.
J. H. Reese W.M.
Joe Woolket, Secy. 21tl
•ozen food lockers—only 20
e. Check our meat specials,
ters, Hearne, Texas.
minute
Hearne
19tfn
PING SERVICE-MULTILITH PRINT-
thesis-dissertationp-' , '“ o ’' K ~' 1 '- K ’''''’ v "”'“
■N: Copy negatives and prints-lantern
dcs - paper masters - metal plates-custom
finishing. Camera and movie pro-
_ _ repair service. PHOTOGRAPHY.
|. Glidewell’s PHOTO LAB. TA 3-1693,
12tfn
I'• uiiuevveii & jrxxwiw xj-Hl
■' S. College Ave., Bryan.
UT0 INSURANCE—place your auto
I ranee with Farmers Insurance Group
|dends increased 50% over last year.
accept persons, single and under age
I Call today FARMERS INSURANCE
hUP, 3510 South College Road, Bryan,
ieTA 2-4461. 146tl07
GUITARS,
PIANOS and ORGANS
Shop with us for the best buy in
Gibson Guitars, Wurlitzer
Pianos and Organs.
B & M MUSIC CO.
213 W. 26th TA 2-5226
Bryan
TV-Radio-Hi-Fi
Service & Repair
lill/S RADIO & TV
|A 2-0826 2403 S. College
MALE HELP WANTED
Counselors wanted for Eastern boys
ranch camp. Over 19 years of age. Must
be competent horseman. Write—Director,
THUNDER MOUNTAIN RANCH FOR
BOYS, Bevans, N. J. 13tl
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Official notices must be brought or
mailed so as to arrive in the Office
of Student Publications (Ground Floo
YMCA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5, dail;
the
tio
SECOND NOTICE — To all students in
the College of Arts and Sciences who
“Distinguished” Fall Semester, 1963: Your
DS cards are now ready and may be
picked up at the office of the Dean, 208
Nagle Hall. 20t2
Application Forms for National Defense
Student Loans for the Summer terms—
1964 and the Academic year 1964-65, may
be obtained from the Student Aid Office,
Room 8, Y.M.C.A. Building, during the
period March 16—April 10, 1964. Applica
tions must be filed with this office by not
later than 5 :00 p. m., April 15, 1964. 16tl5
Those undergraduate students who have
95 hours of credit may purchase the A&M
ring. The hours passing at the time of
the preliminary grade report on March
23, 1964, may be used in satisfying the
95 hour requirement. Those tudents quali
fying under this regulation may leave
their names with the ring clerk in the
Registrar’s Office in order that she may
eck their records to determine their
for
the rings will be taken between April 13
and May 29, from 8:00 a. m. to 12:00
noon. Delivery for these rings will be
made on or about July 1, 1964. Transfer
students must complete two full semesters
at A&M University before they are eligibile
to order the A&M ring. The ring clerk
is on duty from 8:00 a. m. to 12:00 noon
Monday through Friday of each week.
15t26
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th TA 2-2819
AGGIES
o you change your own oil—?
—or work on your car—?
hen, why not save more on
Jour parts at JOE FAULK’S
DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS
bev-Fd brake shoes 36-58 List $5.85
* of 2 wheels $2.90
“Ifpride, Havoline, Pennzoil .. Qt. 37tf
•ur choice — Enco, Amalie, Mobil-
»noco Qt. 33tf
Saco, Gulflube-Opaline Qt. 30tf
AE 30-40 Recon. Oik Qt. 16(f
Belts 8.95
Uters-Save 40%
8 Spark Plugs Ea. 29tf
•aeel Bearings 30 to 60% discount
have 95% of the parts you need at
wer price or less.
*tex inside paint Gal. $2.98
Gals. $5.49
New 670-15 tires $36.00 plus tax
'•14 $44.00 plus tax
Kelly Springfield
$13.88
... $3.88
®*tic Vinyl trim seat covi
“•So value now only
^ck absorbers as low as _
Not off-brand
Wite batteries 6V only $12.95
I at dealer price.
I1 ty of Prestone at our usual lowest
ee.
JOE FAULK’S
25th and Washington
• 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
FEMALE HELP WANTED
THE BATTALION
Tuesday, March 24, 1964
College Station, Texas
Page 3
Am
Grand Champion Steer
Jim Welch is shown with his steer which Livestock Show being’ held in the Animal
was named the Grand Champion Monday Husbandry Pavilion,
morning at the annual Brazos County Youth
Johnson Ranch Hosts Art
Of A&M Press Employee
Lady with experience in bookkeeping
il firm, good working conditions,
r
P
own nanawritmg. Keplys kept c
dential. Our employees know of this ad
vertisement. 18tfn
salary open, £
and education
in
goo
bmit resume of experience
ation to Box 408, Bryan, Tex;
handwriting. Replys kept
as,
ifi-
FOR SALE
1955 Ford Business Coupe. Sealed bids
will be received in Room 225, Agricultural
Engineering Building, College Station, Tex
as until 10 a. m. Monday, March 30, 1964,
and then publicly opened and read. Vehicle
may be seen at Agricultural Engineering
Shop. Prospective bidders should
When visitors to President
Lyndon Johnson’s ranch at
Stonewall view his varied col
lection of paintings, one they
see is the work of Joe Russell.
Russell is artist and typographer
for the A&M Press and has been
drawing and sketching since he can
remember.
The painting in the President’s
collection is a soft, sleepy scene of
a barn and windmill in the Texas
Hill Country.
RUSSELL SAID the picture
found its way into Johnson’s house
through his sister, Mrs. H. L.
Dearing of Austin. The artist
painted the scene about five years
ago and gave it to Mrs. Dearing.
Later, while Johnson was still
vice president, she offered it to
the collection because of the long
standing friendship between John
son and the Russell family.
“My father — he died in 1960 —
knew Mr. Johnson quite well when
they both lived in the Johnson
City area,” Russell pointed out.
THE PAINTING was done on
the old Schornhorst place owned by
the President.
“But I didn’t know whose place
it was at that time,” the artist
recalled.
Russell was raised in the John
son City - Fredericksburg - Austin
area. He studied agriculture for
several years at Tarleton State
Research
contact Agr
ment or phone
formation.
Baby Stroller.
CV.
Good condition.
B-20-C.
21tfn
1957
steering, super
VI 6-7986.
Studebaker Golden Hawk, power
charger. $500 cash, phone
21t
Kenmore Programmer gas range,
new at sacrifice price. See at 2323
Creek Parkway, evenings or weekends. 20t2
Still
Carter
1. One 1955 Chevrolet car, V-8, two
door sedan, in very good condition,
reasonable price.
2. One 17 inch Silvertone T. V. in very
good working order.
3. One 20 inch Fan, used only for one
season.
4. Two children’s tricycles, in good
ro ch
condition.
Call VI 6-8552
X-3-G Hensel Apartments.
call personally at
20t2
Tap
4-trac
recorder. Concord 550 transistorized
stereo record and playback, re-
30-20,000 ; 40-16,000±2db. Six
$100. below pur-
iorm 10-309. 18t4
sponse 30-20,000; 40
months old, top shape,
chase price. Stovall, Do
’51 Chevrolet pick-up, excellent mechani
cal condition. VI 6-7985 aft
fter 6 p. m. 17tfn
1949 Hudson, 6 cyclinder sedan, over
drive, radio and heater, good mechanical
condition, have to sell before Easter, $99.
Call VI 6-7947, D-l-C, College View. 16tfn
—Is the life I am living worthy
of being perpetuated throughout
eternity.
FREE DANCE
Hitchin Post
Tuesday, March 24
8:30 to 12
Music by
“THE AVANTIS”
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals-Sales-Service
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main TA 2-6000
AUTO REPAIRS
All Makes
Just Say:
“Charge It”
Cade Motor Co.
Ford Dealer
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
LOUPOT'S
New Store Hours
8 a. m. ’til 5:30 p. m. — 6 Days A Week.
★ Half fare for young
adults between the
age of 12 and 22.
★ Fly any day -
flight
★ Reservations can
be confirmed, upon
presentation of your
ticket at the TTA
ticket counter, no
"'-n earlier than 3 hrs. or
r; later than 10 minutes
\ before departure.
★ A Youth Fare
Identification Card,
costing only $5.00
permits unlimited
travel on TTA system.
Good for one year
from date of issuance.
Apply today!!
CLIP COUPON and mail with membership
fee to Vice President Traffic and Sales,
Trans-Texas Airways, P. O. Box 60188,
Houston, Texas, 77060.
APPLICATION FOR YOUTH FARE
IDENTIFICATION CARD
Applicant's name_
Address
City
Date of Birtlu
_Date of 22nd Birthday.
If student; name of school.
Application must be accompanied by $5.00 for membership fee.
Serving the Great
Southwest Region BEST
'Jf/tS sawi
►J'* /
College before yielding to his com
pulsion to draw. Next came a year
of art study at the University of
Texas.
Joe describes himself as a real
ist. His work accurately depicts
the actual scene. He says his
landscape subjects are similar to
those painted by Porfirio Salinas
of San Antonio, another artist with
pictures in the Johnson collection.
The Hill Country west of Austin
is the artist’s first love for land
scapes. He has a pickup truck
fitted with a camper unit, and when
time allows, he heads in that di
rection.
Highway Signs
Receive Study
Of Engineers
If highway engineers could uti
lize something like a “skyhook,”
at least one major problem could
be solved.
It’s a matter of hanging road
way signs to inform motorists.
Still more important, however, is
to keep out-of-control vehicles
from plowing into the signs, which
in some cases are supported with
10-inch steel beams.
The mythical “skyhook” is un
available. Sir Isaac Newton ruled
out such possibilities earlier with
his laws of gravitation.
So the research specialists at
A&M are looking into other pos
sibilities. Their goal is to design
a roadway sign with a support
that will snap off when struck
by an automobile.
The project was described during
a graduate lecture program by
Charles Samson, professor of civil
engineering and Texas Transporta
tion Institute research engineer.
Samson said a facility for de
signing a suitable sign structure is
under construction at the Research
and Development Annex.
A truck, with the aid of cables,
will pull an unmanned car into
proposed sign at speeds ranging
from about 1.5 to up 60 miles per
hour, in order to determine the
most feasible sign structure.
Several problems are involved,
Samson pointed out. One con
cerns the development of a sign
that will withstand hurricane force
winds but will snap at the demand
of an automobile. Signs tested
earlier in the A&M wind tunnel
facility ranged from those with a
solid background, like the ones in
current use, to signs of honey
comb and louver design.
The sign support project was
one of several mentioned by Sam
uel R. Wright, head of civil engi
neering; Charles Keese, executive
secretary of TTI, and Samson at
the seminar.
Civil Defense Meet
Slated In Beaumont
Approximately 50 civil defense
officials from the Beaumont area
will meet April 1 for a half-day
orientation on civil defense respon
sibilities of government officials,
Dr. W. R. Bodine of A&M Uni
versity announced.
Bodine, head of the Engineering
Extension Service’s civil defense
training program, will be one of
several speakers from Beaumont
and other Texas cities to address
the delegates.
James Garrard, Jefferson Coun
ty civil defense director, is in
charge of local arrangements for
the meeting, which will be held in
the American National Bank audi
torium.
REGISTRATION will begin at
1:30 p.m., followed by an invoca
tion by the Rev. Charles Wyatt-
Brown, pastor of St. Marks Epis
copal Church in Beaumont.
Welcome addresses will be given
by Mayor Jack M. Moore and
Chester Young, Jefferson County
judge.
Bodine will discuss the “why”
of civil defense and later talk on
the national scope of the civil de
fense program.
LEGAL AND MORAL aspects
of civil defense will be represented
by George E. Murphy, city attor
ney and chairman of the National
Institute of Municipal Law Of
ficers’ civil defense committee.
“Action Steps to Implement
Civil Defense Responsibilities” will
be discussed by C. O. Layne, dep
uty director of the Texas Depart
ment of Public Safety’s Office of
Defense and Disaster Relief.
A
NEW
KIND OF
FOLK
SOUND
Make a date with Elaine, Joyce, Leni, Babs
and Judy. They call themselves "The Women
folk.” They’re the most thrilling new folk
group on records and their sound is fresh
and different on songs like "Green Mountain
Boys,” "Old Maid’s Lament” and "Whistling
Gypsy Rover.” Keep your date at your record
dealer today. Don’t keep five ladies waiting!
RCA VICTOR A
(R^The most trusted name in sound