ought oi le Of(iti id FIoo! 1-5, dai]; *lore thi precedini Publici. for Sti- otogy ency, n- ollegc of d to itii' ation or December i. m eacb ente mar id should t Implt- 81t2j foreign ). degree 10, (rom Academic ake this Qraduete tion not n sheets in the Graduate 79112 ordering ig Octo •om 9-i, Student 76U9 TV 519 CK ■imp, talad T ge es i 4510 ' Prices Good Thurs., Fri., Sat., October 22, 23, 24. Texas Ave. at Rosemary Bryan-College Station FREE 100 S&S Red Stamps With Purchase of $10.00 or More Excluding Cigarettes or Beer Coupon Expires Oct. 24, 1964 ^[ SPECIAL COUPON VALUE R WE GIVE VALUABLE S&S RED STAMPS DOUBLE STAMPS EVERY TUESDAY WITH $2.50 OR MORE PURCHASE Swift’s Premium gij# FREE 5x7 PHOTO OF YOUR CHILD (Under 6 Years) Thurs. - Fri. . Sat. Oct. 22, 23, 24th 10:00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m. Limit one per family. See proof on selected day. 50^ for handling & mail change only. ^rSPECIALCOUPON VALUE MAXWELL HOUSE LIMIT ONE WITH OTHER PURCHASE 1-LB. CAN i jl - STORE HOURS 8 A M. 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LIMIT ONE WITH OTHER PURCHASE GIANT BOX GOLDEN RIPE Bananas U. S. No. 1 NORTHWEST RED DELICIOUS 4-LB. BAG APPLES GERBER STRAINED BABY FOOD 10 FRIHT COCKTAIL TOMATO CATSUP DEL MONTE LIMIT 4 PLEASE NO. 303 CAN DEL MONTE LIMIT 4 PLEASE 14-OZ. BOTTLE Lotion SHAVING CREME JERGENS Reg. Extra Nice To Your Hands 59£ Areo Giant Shave Can 39' Ice Cream 49 c Tomatoes Polar King ‘/z Gal. Assorted Carton Rotel Canned 303 Limit 6 Can BERNGEN Aggie Had “Hot” Work In Egypt Some like it hot. One of those is Frank Berngen, 20-year-old A&M student who worked in 127-degree temperatures last summer in Egypt. Berngen, junior physics major from Chillicothe, helped plant cedar trees and dig irrigation ditches in the Sahara desert as part of a soil conservation program. The thermometer climbed to 127 de grees in the sun and 107 in the shade. Young people from all over the world, including Russia, toiled for four weeks in an international work camp about 100 miles west of Cairo in the dester’s north part. “They called the place Waidel- natroun. It is the dried up bed of the Natroun River,” Berngen ex plained. “We worked from 7:30 a. m. to 1 p. m.,” he said. “I wore a big western hat—the others wore mili tary caps. Their heads nearly burned up, but I made it fine.” Berngen said the students ate mess hall style, with beans, tea and a piece of tortilla-like bread smeared with jam for breakfast. Lunch featured water, cucumbers, watermelons, tomatoes, rice or noodles, carrot stew, bread and a small piece of beef, Supper in cluded salted cheese, dates, mangos and cucumbers. All of Berngen’s summer wasn’t devoted to wprk. He spent several weeks teaching swimming to be ginners in Cairo. In addition, he worked out daily with several mem bers of Egypt’s Olympic swimming team. “We visited all the sporting clubs in the area,” Berngen recalled. “At night we would go to the National Club where the boys in my group were used to demonstrate swim ming techniques. Later we played water polo.” Berngen is a member of the A&M swimming team. Visits were also made by the group to the pyramids, the Valley of the Kings, Aswan Dam, Port Said and the Suez Canal. “I was amazed by the pyramids of ancient Egypt, but I was sur prised that Cairo is such a modern city. It’s thriving with 3.5 million people and they have some fine buildings,” Berngen said. Air-conditioning is seldom avail able in Cairo, he pointed out. He remembers seeing a huge river rat on the eleventh floor of the Nile- Hilton. Cockroaches three inches long were not unusual, he said. “If you could get used to their ways of living, you could stay in Cairo very economically,” Berngen explained. “Things are cheap. You can get a government apartment for a pound or two a month. And you can eat off the street (not in the best restaurants) for about $10 a month. “The friendliness of the people impressed me. They were helpful and honest. I could leave my ca mera in my room and expect to find it there when I returned. And if you buy something there and for some reason decide to take it back, they will refund your money with out question.” Berngen made the trip through Operations Crossroads Africa. He had scholarships totaling $1,150 to make the visit. Travel is not new to the West Texas resident. Hes been to Europe Thailand, Hong Kong, Alaska and Mexico in earlier travels. And he hopes to work next summer in Europe as an engineer. Berngen is a member of the Travel Committee, SCONA X, and is vice president of the Baptist Student Union. The Braille stystem of print for the blind was evolved by L( Braille, a frail young Frenchn He died at the age of 43 and not see his system fully accep Today it is used everywhere.