Page 4 College Station, Texas Thursday, February 11, 1965 THE BATTALION CAMPUS BRIEFS Let's talk about engineering, mathematics and science careers in a dynamic, diversified company Campus Interviews Thursday and Friday, February 18 and 19 Young men of ability can get to the top fast at Boeing. Today, Boeing’s business backlog is just under two billion dollars, of which some 60 per cent is in commercial jetliner and heli copter product areas. The remainder is in mili tary programs and government space flight contracts. This gives the company one of the most stable and diversified business bases in the aerospace industry. No matter where your career interests lie — in the commercial jet airliners of the future or in space-flight technology — you can find an opening of genuine opportunity at Boeing. The company’s world leadership in the jet transport field is an indication of the calibre of people you’d work with at Boeing. Boeing is now pioneering evolutionary ad vances in the research, design, development and manufacture of civilian and military air craft of the future, as well as space programs of such historic importance as America’s first moon landing. Gas turbine engines, transport helicopters, marine vehicles and basic re search are other areas of Boeing activity. Whether your career interests lie in basic or applied research, design, test, manufacturing or administration, there's a spot where your talents are needed at Boeing. Engineers, math ematicians and scientists at Boeing work in small groups, so initiative and ability get max imum exposure. Boeing encourages participa tion in the company-paid Graduate Study Program at leading colleges and universities near company installations. We’re looking forward to meeting engineering, mathematics and science seniors and graduate students during our visit to your campus. Make an appointment now at your placement office. (1) CX-HLS. Boeing is already at work on the next generation of giant cargo jets. (2) Var iable-sweep wing design for the nation's first supersonic commercial jet transport. (3) NASA’s Saturn V launch vehicle will power orbital and deep-space flights. (4) Model of lunar orbiter Boeing is building for NASA. (5) Boeing-Vertol 107 transport helicopter shown with Boeing 707 jetliner. Equal Opportunity Employer Chapter Of Aeronautics To Have Trip, Lecture The A&M chapter of the Amer ican Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics will begin the spring semester with a field trip and a guest lecturer, according to Ben Smith. Smith, Student Chairman of the AIAA, said that the group will go on a tour Friday of the Ling- Temco-Vought facilities near Dal las. They will travel by private transportation to and from Dallas, and will be the guests of LTV from 10:30 a.m. until 2 p.m. Mem bers of the AIAA going on the tour will be excused from Friday classes. The guest lecturer, E. W. Snow den, will speak at the next regular meeting of the AIAA on the F-lll variable-sweep wing fighter. He is the structural group engineer for that weapons system at Gen eral Dynamics-Fort Worth. The meeting will be March 2 at 7:30 p.m. in room 229 of the Chem istry building. It is open to the public. ETV Director The appointment of George H. Shearer Jr., of Bryan as television engineer for the educational tele vision facility being readied at A&M has been announced by Dr. Lee J. Martin as ETV director. Shearer will assume his duties Monday. The new staff member of A&M has served since 1962 as a broad cast engineer for Station KBTX- TV, Bryan. He attended A&M in the mid- 1950s as a journalism student and later studied electronics at the Texas Institute of Technology. Plans for the closed circuit tele vision system to be in operation when classes begin in September were announced earlier by Dean Frank W. R. Hubert of the Col lege of Arts and Sciences. The ETV operation is expected even tually to become an all-university program. FFA Sweetheart Miss Marjorie Gips of Nordheim has been elected sweetheart of the Collegiate Future Farmers of America Chapter at A&M. She will represent the chapter in the annual Cotton Pageant and Ball in April. The event is spon sored by the Student Agronomy Society. Miss Gips is a senior at South west Texas State College in Sa Marcos, where she is majorin?: home economics. She is presell practice-teaching in Gonzales, She was a nominee for AU-fe lege Beauty at STSC andrn selected for Who’s Who in Arne can Colleges and Universities. Defense Institute A&M has received prelimir* approval to conduct this sums a National Defense Institute English for high school tenets President Earl Rudder said iFs nesday. The notification csi from the U. S. Office of Edti tion with the final contract fc negotiated shortly. The Institute will be among: first such summer institutes ts: sponsored and subsidized uni the National Defense Educati Act, as amended in October, B Liquor By Drink Discussed W. Price Jr., Texas Restaurant Association executive vice-presi dent, spoke to an estimated 300 persons at Bryan-College Station’s chapter dinner meeting Wednes day night. Price spoke briefly on the liquor by the drink bill proposed by the association. He said this bill would provide for the sale of two ounces or less of liquor only at food serv ice establishments. He added that the bill would permit this only for establishments whose major w nue comes from food. The speaker also commeti The Battalion with the intern Feb. 4 of local ministers aboutii liquor bill. He said that hen glad that someone recognized" difference between a drink aid drunk. Morris Frank of The Ho® Chronicle was Master of Cerena ies. Mission Set For Hondurm Interested high school and col lege students will have an oppor tunity to hear about plans to inoc ulate more than two million na tives of Honduras at a special pro gram at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Baptist Student Union. Guy Bevil Jr., minister of youth at Houston’s River Oaks Baptist Church, will tell of plans for the project that have been formulated over the past several months. “I’ve seen the boundless enthusi asm of our youth and we want to Offer them a real challenge,” Bevil said. “Perhaps some of them go off to Florida and get drunk be cause we don't challenge them as we should. He emphasized that the project is not limited to members of the Houston church. Applicants will be screened and students accepted will be trained in Honduran customs, basic Span ish and the use of the mass inocu lation equipment. Volunteers will use disposable pressure buttons to inoculate against smallpox and the Hingson air pressure gun for diptheria, whooping cough and tetanus. Oral tablets will be given for worms. Backing the undertaking th far is the U. S. State Departma The Alliance for Progress, I Agency for International Reddi opment, the U. S. Public Hu: Service and The Honduran Gn ernment. Financed with private contri: tions, the project is expectei last 10 weeks. Under Bevil’s plan 15 doct and 100 high school and colli students from the United Sti will team up with a like mim of Hondurans to handle the iiw lations. Miss Texas! see you Sat. and Sun. at the grand opening of First Bank 6k. Trust! lllS ■ mm : > Slii - ' m Beautiful Sharon McCauley, YOUR MISS TEXAS will be on hand February 13 & 14 to welcome you to the Beautiful new facilities of YOUR FIRST BANK & TRUST! EVERYONE IS INVITED! h During the Opening Celebration you may win: a 1965 Zenith 23" Color Television or a real 3 HP “Tin Lizzie" Auto. Two beautiful Chatham blankets will be given away every hour of the opening for 5 consecutive days. Everyone will receive a souvenir (Don’t miss it it may be money!) -v f m ■ I . ■ i a ■ - wm&. s aaiMi A) FIRST BANK & TRUST