The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 20, 1964, Image 3

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226
Student Leadership Conference Set
More than 150 students from
eight colleges and universities in
the Southwest will attend the Stu
dent Leadership Conference near
Palestine Sept. 4-6.
Among the speakers will be
Kennett Hobbs, Lubbock attorney;
Dr. John D. Lawson, associate dean
of students at California State
Polytechnic College, and Preston
M. Bolton, Houston architect.
The three-day Lakeview meeting,
sponsored by A$;M University, is
designed to train students for
leadership roles, David Fox of
Mart, conference chairman, re
ported.
Members of the A&M faculty
and administration, including Pres
ident Earl Rudder, also are on the
program.
Registration will begin at 9:30
a.m., followed by Dr. Lawson’s
talk on conducting meetings and
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
One day 3* per word
>r word each additional day
Minin
• * • • • •
24 per word each additional
imum charge—40c
DEADLINE
4 n.m. day before publica
Classified Display
804 per column inch
each insertion
FOR SALE
Latex Spi
$2.68
eight
ecial, $2.68 per gallon,
tolors and white^ Nelson Paint Co., former
ly Mary Carter Paint.
(172.
gal
t C
306 E. Dodge, TA 2-
63t4
Frigidaire deep freeze, chest type, 10
tubic feet. Call VI 6-8042 afternoons. 63tl
FOR SALE OR RENT WITH PUR
CHASE AGREEMENT — three bedroom
house close to campus, call Sparks Realty,
VI 6-4831. 63t2
Couch and refrigerator VI 6-6861, if no
inswer try later. 63tl
1956 Chevrolet hardtop, air conditioned,
new interior, excellent condition. Contact
E. K. Lamb, 3801 Cavitt, VI 6-8994. 63tl
For sale to settle an estate—Large two
itory colonial type home. Upstairs now
completely furnished as two bedrooms,
living room, kitchen and bath—easily con
verted back to all bedrooms. See at 307
S. Haswell, Bryan, Texas. Phone Mrs.
Noah Dansby TA 2-1784. 62t4
Small gas stove. Call VI 6-6636. 61tfn
FOR SALE BY OWNER, nice three
bedroom, one bath home near A&M Uni
versity. Large family room and fenced
back yard. TA 2-0161, VI 6-6007 after
6:00 p. m. 61tfn
HELP WANTED
Student to work 30-35 hours per week ;
must be able to work through school year.
Apply in person. Little Pig’s Barbecue,
Villa Maria Rd, prefer married student.
62t3
Aggie, as part-time waiter. Early even
ing and night work. Good working con
ditions. Call Mr. Mullins at The Dutch
Kettle, VI 6-9968 or VI 6-6146 for appoint-
“nt. 59tfn
Beautician, white, man or woman, ex
perience necessary, call VI 6-4280. 57tfn
FOR RENT
For single men, three bedroom apart
ment, furnished, 1V6 blocks from campus
Mouth side, large rooms. $50.00, VI 6-
66AO after 5 :00 p. m. 63tfn
un J nn e * y furnished one bedroom house,
", water fan, no pets. KE 7-6241
»r TA 2-4582. 63tfn
Available Sept. 10, two bedroom fur
nished garage apartment. VI 6-4005. 63tfn
. room furnished apartment avail-
pam„ hept ' 1 > air conditioner, convient to
campus, couples only, $50.00. VI 6-6528.
63tfn
furnished bedroom for students,
ttj&^on t trvrei66 n0r ^ltf°n f
bedroom furnished apartment, all
ilnn ^ooorated, 106-C Waverly Drive,
^•00 monthly, plus utilities. TA 2-6340.
_ 68tfn
GIL’S RADIO & TV
Sales: Curtis Mathis,
„ . Westinghouse
ervice: All makes and models,
including color T. V.
!Mno o mu ltiplex F M
^°3 S. College TA 2-0826
kindergarten
ABC KINDERGARTEN
Open for Inspection 303A Dexter
5 year Olds Only.
Limited Enrollment. Reading,
^ umber Readiness, Preparation
or First Grade, Music, Danc-
ng ’ Art . Speech and Spanish.
For Information Call
ll fs. W. B. Lancaster, VI 6-5286
WE
BUTCHER
livestock
WE PROCESS
Pnu E x EF and p ORK
;° R your lockers
and HOME freezers
we freeze to
PLEASE
HANSON’S
60%
aggies
Do you change your own oil—?
work on your car—?
•jll
ym?’ W ^ y not save more on
bio * >arts ^ JOE FAULK’S
d iscount AUTO PARTS
2 Gai' 8 / r ' alde Paint
Swt Belts ......
Llters-S ave 4q
118 Spark Pl u ~ a _
Wh*, R 29 *
Plaat ear,n ‘ 18 80 10 60% disc °oot
* 18 -95 vs/ug \A r * m 8 ® a t covers
»‘ue now only
Sio( * absorbers »» i
* a as l°w as $3.88
Not off-brand
batteries fiv i
V at dealer pri ce V only *12.95
Chev-pj ,
0f 2 wW.® 8hoe8 36 -S8 List $6.86
C^k o
^ Kelly Springfield
boride.
Gal. $2.98
$4.98
8.96
$13.88
Havoline, Pennzoil .. Qt. 374
Enco, Amalie, Mobil-
Qt. 334
!° Ul ehoic,
Uenoco
R ”°"- Q*. is*
, 'atic Tr
h ansmission Fluid _ Qt. 264
Deal ^ &V p e rfce % o r °l^. e ParU ne ed at
J0E EAlJ LK AUTO ’32
h and Washington
CHILD CARE
Will keep children in my home, air
conditioned and fenced back yard. VI 6-
79 60. 63tfn
Will care for child 18 to 24 months who
needs a playmate, VI 6-7908. 63t3
Beginning Sept. 1, will care for children
of walking age. Serve hot noon meal. Live
in College View. VI 6-6600. 61tfn
Will care for children. Call for informa
tion. VI 6-4841. 6H4
C-13-D, CV, VI 6-7985.
Experienced child care in my home,
call Mrs. Robert Wenck, VI 6-4982, College
View. 60tfn
Will care for little girl who needs play
mate. VI 6-6351, 302 N. Ave.
ay-
tfn
informat
care
-ion,
VI 6-8151.
Call for
54tfn
Keep children in my home from 8 to 6.
Experienced. VI 6-6636. 36tfn
MALE HELP WANTED
Checker. Mostly night
hours, Mr. Ellis. U-Pac-M
TA 2-4386, VI 6-6225.
night an
Pac-M Fi
ood Stores.
62t2
FEMALE HELP WANTED
Artist with commercial experience, drav
ut publications
desirable
lesirable.
graduate preferred.
Texas Forest Service, College Station, VI-
SPECIAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE OF HORSES
J:
e Man
(I) Or
Je and
unresgistered Appaloosa Mare with foal at
side and rebred, (3)
Quarter Horse Filli
(3) Three Registered Quarter Hors
with foals at side and rebred,
re wi
Three Registered
>rse Fillies, (1) One unregistered
Filly, (4) Registered Quarter Horse Geld
ings. Horses may be inspected at Animal
Husbandry Horse Center. Bid forms are
available at Horse Center and Room 225
Animal Industries Building. Sealed bids
will be received by L. D. Wythe, Jr.
Animal Husbandry Department, Texas
A&M University, College Station, Texas,
until 5:00 p. m. August 22, 1964. Horses
will be sold “as they stand”. The right
is reserved to reject any and all bids
and to waive any and all technicalities.
For information call VI 6-4711, College
Station, Texas. 62t2
Fast efficient servic
n cataloges, magazin
reasonable prices
bro-
TYPING SERVICE-MULTILITH PRINT-
appnca
TION:
s-job resume
REPRODUC-
Copy negatives and prints-lantern
slides - paper masters - metal plates-custom
photo finishing. Camera and movie pro
jectors repair service. PHOTOGRAPHY.
J. C. Glidewell’s PHOTO LAB. TA 3-1693,
2007 S. College Ave., Bryan. 12tfn
FISHER NURSERY
Contientious, State Licensed
Child Care, Hot Lunch, Snacks,
Diaper Service.
Open 6 a. m. - 6:30 p. m. Daily
906 S. College
For Reservation Call TA 2-0597
Friday and Saturday Nights Ohly
SOSOLIKS
T. V., Radio. Phono., Car Radio
Transistor Radio Service
713 S. Main
TA 2-1941
• Watch Repair 1
• Jewelry Repair
• Diamond Senior
Rings
• Senior Rings
Refinished
C. W. Varner & Sons
Jewelers
North Gate VI 6-5816
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
WORK WANTED
Will
rate. C
sew for chldren or adults at low
all VI 6-6600. 61tfn
Will paint oil portraits at special low
rates. 14’ x 16’—$10.00. VI 6-6600. 59tfn
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Official notices must be brought or
mailed so as to arrive in the Office
of Student Publications (Ground Floor
YMC A. VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-6, daily
Monday through Friday) at or before the
deadline of 1 p. m. of the day preceding
publication—Director of Student Publica
tions.
THE-GRADUATE COLLEGE
Announcement of Final Examination for
the Doctoral Degree
(Defense of the Dissertation)
Full Name of Candidate: Sun, Pu Ning
Candidate for Degree of: Doctor of Philos
ophy in Mechanical Engineering
Title of Dissertation: Investigation
Stresses in a Plate Containing Giro
of
ining Circular
Holes
Time of Examination : August 21, 1964 at
2 :00 p. m.
Place of Examination:
Fermier Hail
Wayne C. Hall
Dean of Graduate Studies
Room 104 in
63tl
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Announcement of Final Examination for
the Doctoral Degree
(Defense of the Dissertation)
Full Name of Candidate: Lawrence, James
Harold Jr.
indidt
late for Degree of: Doctor of Philos
ophy in Mechanical Engineering
Title of Dissertation : Radiant Heat Trans
fer Between Gray Surfaces Forming an
Enclosure
Time of Examination: August 22, 1964 at
9^00 a. m.
Place of Examination: Room 202 in
Fermier Hall
Wayne C. Hall
Dean of Graduate Studies 63tl
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Announcement of Final Examination for
the Doctoral Degree
(Defense of the Dissertation)
Full Name of Candidate: Bello, Thomas
Ramon
Doctor of Philos-
tle of Dissertation : Anthelmintic Effects
on Equine Strongyle Species in Axenic
Culture
Time of Examination: Thursday, August
20, 1964 at 2:00 p. m.
Place of Examination : Room 107 in Biolog
ical Sciences Building
Wayne C. Hall
Dean of Graduate Studies 63tl
Ph. D. Language Examination
Examinations for meetini
guage requ
will be gi'
ons for meeting the foreign lan-
uirement for the Ph. D. degree
given Saturday, August 22nd at
8:00 a. m. in Room 129, Academic Build-
wishii
)ly
for a letter of authorization not later than
ing. Students
nation should appl;
ing
' to
to take this exami
the Graduate office
August 7th. Instruction sheets are avail
able from the secretary in the office of
the Department of Modern Languages.
Department of Modern Languages
J. J. Woolket, Head 59t5
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th TA 2-2819
DR. J. R. PARKER
Chiropractor
College Station. Texas
Phone: VI 6-4603 118 E. Walton
SAVE ON
Air-Conditioners
Water Coolers
Garden Supplies & Lawn
Mowers
Tires, Batteries, Seat
Covers
New & Used Bicycles
40% Discount on auto parts
WHITE AUTO
North Gate College Station
Import Motors
Authorized Triumph
Dealers
100% Financing
To Graduating Seniors
Sports and Economy Cars
New and Used
Complete Service Dept.
2807 Texas Ave. TA 3-5175
OPPORTUNITY FOR AN
“oI’ po’ boy”
ON HIS WAY UP.
Animal Husbandry Majors or
other students with suitable
Agricultural background wanted
by local firm to work directly
with local farmers and ranchers
with RANGE-MASTER. Adjust
able hours, good pay. Pick-up
or car necessary. Call TA 2-
4988.
Bluebonnet Appliance Center
MASTER’S TRANSMISSION SERVICE
Complete Transmission Service
TA 2-6116
1309 S. College
Bryan, Tex.
conferences. Terry Oddson of Dal
las, an A&M senior, will welcome
the delegates.
The students will face a panel
of university administrators from
A&M, including President Rudder,
Dean of Students James P. Han-
nigan, Dorsey McCrory, director of
A&M’s Development Fund, and a
member of the Board of Directors,
to be announced later.
The prospective student leaders
also will hear from a panel of
former college students during a
session entitled, “If I Were in
College Again.”
The four-member panel includes
John Lindsay of Houston, president
of A&M’s Former Students Asso
ciation; John Watson, Dallas archi
tect; Reagan Burch, Houston law
yer, and Dr. Richard Wainerdi,
associate dean of engineering at
A&M.
W. E. Eckles, director of A&M’s
executive development school, will
discuss “Attitudes and Skills of
Leadership,” and Architect Bolton
will talk on the community leader’s
responsibility toward the develop
ment of the performing arts.
Dr. H. O. Kunkel, associate di
rector of the Texas Agricultural
Experiment Station, will serve as
the “wrap-up” speaker. Devotion-
als will be given by the Rev. N.
B, Crawford, Lakeview pastor.
THE BATTALION
Thursday, August 20, 1964
College Station, Texas
Page 3
FOOTBALL TOP NEWS
Archives Receives File
Of 1914-15 Battalions
Football training was hard but
informal back in 1914 when Texas
Aggies hunted alligators, fished
and swam while at a training
campus near Houston. The 20
players later won six of their eight
games in the Southern Intercol
legiate Athletic Association.
“The football squad reports a
glorious time (at camp) . . . The
fellows reported two alligators be
ing caught,” a reporter wrote for
the first issue of The Battalion,
the campus newspaper, after classes
began in September.
Details of the football camp and
the assumption of duties by Presi
dent W. B. Bizzell were major
stories for the first issue.
A complete file of the student
newspaper for 1914-15 has been
given the A&M University Ar
chives by Austin E. Burgess of
3221 Milton Avenue, Dallas. He
edited the newspaper that year
while completing studies in agron
omy. Burgess now is retired.
“We have a lot of copies of The
Battalion’s special issues, but no
other complete file for an academic
year,” Archivist Ernest Langford
said. He noted the file contains a
history of A&M written by Bur
gess and appearing serially.
“This is generally accepted as
the second history written of Texas
A&M,” Langford said.
Burgess also sent other materials
pertaining to campus life of 50
years ago.
Sports occupy much of the space
in the weekly, six-page issues of
The Battalion of 50 years ago
but there was other news.
Completion of the electric inter-
urban linking the campus and near
by Bryan was a major event.
“A number of the Bryan cadets
are taking advantage of the bet
tered service by living in their
homes,” the newspaper reported.
Plans for a Corps of Cadets trip
to the Panama-Pacific Interna
tional Exposition finally fizzled.
In one issue The Battalion brag
ged about recent campus improve
ments including three dormitories
and six other buildings.
“We are even beginning to ac
quire a few luxuries; before com-
CASH AVAILABLE FOR BOOKS, SLIDE RULES & ETC.
5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG
LOUPOTS
New Store Hour* — 8 a. m. 'til 5:30 p. m. — ( Day* A Week.
mencement we shall be able to
desert the muddy road and take to
concrete sidewalks,” the paper
editoralized.
But it was football news that
drew much of the space during the
fall.
The team coached by fabled
Charlie Moran and captained by
Tyree Bell defeated such teams
as Austin College, Texas Christian
University, Rice Institute and
Oklahoma A&M. The Haskell
Braves scalped the Aggies while
a game with Trinity University
ended in a tie.
“Real football playing was out
of the question. It was all the
players could do to keep from
getting stalled in the mud,” The
Battalion reported after the final
game. The Aggies did overcome the
mud enough to defeat “Ole Miss”
14-7 in a game played at Beau
mont.
“Mississippi was out-classed, and
on a dry field the Farmers would
have piled up a large score,” the
newspaper claimed.
MORE PEOPLE SHOP & SAVE EVERY WEEK/
at
• WE KFEf> DOWN!
PRICES GOOD THRU SAT. AUGUST. 22. IN BRYAN ONLY. RIGHT RESERVED TO LIMIT.
COCA COLA
With $2.50 or More
Purchase Behind if A
Turnstiles. 1
H Btl. Ctn.
Plus Deposit
L I ■ ■ 1 I MM Food Club
c u,.
'STjgf jjll Bp Vitamin Enriched
'M Bag
Breast-O-Chicken
No. 14
HI H^H mJBk Chunk Style
Can
I H I I Chef’s Blend or Food
24-Oz.
jfl§ H Club—Your Choice
Btl.
Food Club
SALAD DRE<
iSING
qt.
ICE CREAM
Family
Delight
V 2 Gal.
Ctn.
49
29
25
29'
39
59'
POTATOES
U. S. NO. 1 ROUND WHITE
10
Lb.
Bag
35
Carrots
Top
Fresh
1-Lb.
Pkgs.
BOLOGNA
PICNICS =
Swift
Premium
Piece
Lb.
3-Lb.
Can
29
$159
Swift or Neuhoff Smoked
Full Shank Portion
HAMS
11 TURKEY ROAST
FREE 100
BIG BONUS STAMPS
WITH THIS COUPON WHEN YOU PUR
CHASE 10.00 OR MORE BEHIND GRO
CERY TURNSTILES AT WEINGAR-
TEN’S, EXCLUDING BEER, WINE AND
CIGARETTES. COUPON EXPIRES AUG.
22, 1964.
Farmer
Brown
29
29