The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 24, 1965, Image 3

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    in Earle
I sat down
aven’t been
rd
[leering Wives
30 p.m. in the
YMCA Build-
tend
dline
he Junior Ball,
and Banquet
hrough Thurs-
junior class
i to purchase
ly as possible,
it the cashier's
udent Finance
r level of the
lenter.
nded that the
irmal. Civilians
nd tie. Cadets
summer.
TTEE
ORD
'oods
=-il 6.
mily.
EjO To
—uses.
[. Schulz
WU Names
ol Cater
Redbud Queen
DENTON — Miss Carol Lynne
pater, pretty blonde occupational
therapy major from Waller, was
named Queen of the Redbud Festi
val at the Texas Woman’s Uni
versity Saturday night as the final
event in a series of activities held
(hiring the annual Self-Develop-
nent Week on the campus.
Miss Cater, a junior, was
(crowned by Dr. John A. Guinn,
rWU president. She was elected
from a group of sixty princesses
yho were presented in the tradi
tional pageant that climaxes the
dbud Festival.
Miss Cater also was a Redbud
Princess both her freshman and
Sophomore years, and an Aggie
Sweetheart finalist her sophomore
year.
She is president of her dormi-
tor at TWU this year and was
president of her senior class at
Waller High School.
The annual Self-Development
^eek at TWU is devoted to pro-
ams emphasizing self-improve-
nent, grooming, and personality
nalysis.
The week’s activities were con
cluded with a Coronation Ball in
the Student Union Building, over
vhich the new Queen reigned.
Jusic for dancing was furnished
by Joe Reichman and his Orches-
Itra.
THE BATTALION
Wednesday, March 24, 1965
College Station, Texas
Page 3
Late Summer Construction
Set For Biology Building
Construction of a $2% million
addition to the Biological Sciences
Building is expected to start late
this summer.
The addition, to be located
at the junction of Coke and Hub
bard Streets, will contain 95,337
Carol Cater
will reign as Rosebud Festival Queen.
It's Coming March 27th
NSF Renews
Co-Op Grant
The National Science Foundation
has notified President Earl Rudder
of a one-year renewal and ad
ditional grant of $25,000 for an
A&M-Argentine cooperative proj
ect in oceanography. The new
grant raises the total to more than
$72,000 for the study entering its
third year.
Dr. Dale F. Leipper of the
oceanography faculty and Argen
tine Capt. Luis Capurro of that
nation’s hydrographic office are
the principal investigators.
The study of “Surface and Deep
Current Measurements in the
Drake Passage’ now has been ex
tended to include waters of the
southern ocean around Antarctica
beyond Argentina.
Direct current measurements are
taken through the use of buoys
and floats, Leipper said. Captain
Capurro directs the cruises.
A biological study of the same
waters also is underway with A&M
and Argentine scientists coopera-
thing. The NSF also sponsors
this research.
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
On* da? ....... p«r word
14 per word Mich additional day
Minin
charre—50d
IDL.INE
jmnm i
DEAI
4 p.m. day before pabUcatlon
FOR SALE
A Chambers Gaa Rang-e. $26.00, 846-6689,
1311 Walton. 156t3
FOR SALE
’64 Volkswagen Sedan
’64 Malibu Super Sport
’63 Studebaker Cruiser
Financing availbale to
Qualified Purchasers.
BANK OF COMMERCE
(Across from the Ramada Inn)
College Station
TOP SOIL
Good rich top soil, (no grass burs). Call
TA 2-3980. tfn
1960 Triumph, sports car, good condition,
801 Fairview, 846-6604.
JltlOIl,
152t7
1959 Austin Healey 100-6. Red -with hard
top. See B. E. Fullerton at Y-l-F Hensel.
Store wide sale, eve:
Three stores of values.
corator
rnit
nel’s Corn'
Antiques. KOOKE1
1NGS, Navasota, Texas.
-mshings.
Furniture and Appliances.
1's Corner
KOOKEN
ire and Appliances
Corner, Old, Odd, Retired,
HOME FURNISH-
MALE HELP WANTED
Grocery checker. Part-time. Most!
weekends. For interview call 846-6216.
SOSOMK'S
T. V., Radio, Phono., Car Radio
Transistor Radio Service
713 S. Main
TA 2-1941
CHILD CARE
Experienced Child Care, 8 to 5, 846-6536.
149tfn
Equipped and experienced in large home
with big back yard fenced, 846-8608. 147tfn
HUMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY, 3404
South College, State Licensed. TA 2-4803,
Virginia D. Jones, R. N. 99tfn
Child care, experienced. VI 6-7960. 80tfn
Child care with experience. Call for
information, VI 6-8151. 64tfn
SPECIAL NOTICE
Any student wishing to place a 1964
Aggieland in his high school library may
do so by contacting the Student Publica
tions Office, Room 4, Y.M.C.A. basement.
Only a limited supply available. Will be
given in order requested. 155tfn
Buy your toys and gifts from WHITE
AUTO SUPPLY, College Station. CASH
OR LAY-A-WAY. 846-5626.
Working lady wants to share apartment
with same. 846-6304. ISltfn
Bi-City, Ink—Complete typing and print
ing service. 1001 S. College. TA 2-1921.
85t20
TYPING SERVICE-MULTILITH PRINT
ING, thesis-dissertations-yearbook-brochures
-term papers-business letters-job resume
applications-blank forms, etc. REPRODUC
TION : Copy negatives and prints-lantern
slides - paper masters - metal plates-custom
pho^o finishing. Camera and movie pro
jectors repair service. PHOTOGRAPHY.
J. C. Glidewell’s PHOTO LAB. TA 3-1693.
2007 S. College Ave., Bryan. 12tfn
GIL’S RADIO & T V
Sales: Curtis Mathis,
Westinghouse
Service: All makes and models,
including color T. V.
& multiplex F M
2403 S. College TA 2-0826
DAMAGED and UNCLAIMED
FREIGHT
(New Merchandise)
Tables, etc. A little of everything.
C & D SALVAGE
E. 32nd & S. Tabor TA 2-0C05
Furniture, Appliances, Bedding,
LOOK! LOOK!
Make your old sewing machine equal to the new,
latest, automattic sewing machine on the market today,
with the Sew Magic Kit. Complete with easy to use
instructions for only $1.29.
1. Sews on Buttons and Snaps
2. Makes Buttonholes
3. Sews in Zippers
4. Overcasts
5. Embroiders
6. Appliques
7. Plain and Fancy Sewing Quilting
8. Zig Zags
9. Patches and Darns
Sir, I wish to order the SEAMSTRESS SEWMAGIC AID.
I understand there is a 10 day money back guarantee. Please
find enclosed $1.29 cash, check or money order.
Name of my machine is
Name
Name
Address
City and State
TRI-STATE ADVERTISERS
Ardmore, Oklahoma
FOR RENT
Furnished garage apartment, couple only
or student, 822-2869. 155t3
VICTORIAN
APARTMENTS
Midway between Bryan &
A&M University
# All G. E. electric built-ins
# 1 & 2 bedrooms with 1 or 1% baths
9 Central heat & air
9 Large walk-in closets
# Beautiful courtyard with swimming
jool
P'
0 Carpets & Drapes
• carports & laundry faci
A Furnished or unfurnished
ilities
lent
401 Lake
Phone 822-2035
154tfn
Furnished one bedroom apartment near
University, $76.00 month. Call
lith
Co. TA 2-0557.
James C.
126tfn
HELP WANTED
Need Aggie for counter work at Dutch
Kettle. Either part time or full time.
Prefer married student who needs to
supplement his income. No experience
necessary, good starting salary. Call Bert
Mullins 846-9968 or 846-6146. 156tfn
Aggie; nights.
Ralph’s Pizza, 846-4112.
152t5
THE CHICKEN SHACK
features old fashioned Chicken
and Dumplings on Thursdays.
We also have Charcoal Broiled
Steaks every day at popular
prices. (Never a doubt about
quality).
“In The Middle Of The Most”
Half Way Between Bryan & College
Station—Phone TA 2-3464
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th TA 2-2819
• Watch Repair-
• Jewelry Repair
• Diamond Senior
Rings
• Senior Rings
Refinished
C. W. Varner & Sons
Jewelers
North Gate VI 6-5816
AUTO REPAIRS
All Makes
Just Say:
“Charge It”
Cade Motor Co.
Ford Dealer
WORK WANTED
Typing - Thesis experience.
823-8459.
145tfn
Typing—reasonable rates, Thesis experi
ence, VI 6-4493. llOtfn
OFFICIAL NOTICE
mailed
of
Official notices must be brought or
ailed so as to arrive in the Offic.
Student Publications (Ground Floor
VMCA, VI 6-6416, hours 8-12, 1-5, daily
Monday through Friday) at or before the
deadline of 1 p. m. of the day preceding
put
tioi
An English proficiency examination, re
quired for graduation of all majors in the
College of Arts and Sciences to be taken
before the end of their Junior year,
!1, „• J ors j n JJigtQry an< i
edn
t p,
Room 216, Nagle Hall. Students plan-
will be given to majors
Government on Tuesday
March 30 and 31, from 3:00-5:00
listory an<
and Wednesday,
in
ning to take this examination must regis
ter at the Departmental Office prior to
6:00 p.m., March 26. 166t4
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Announcement of Final Examination for
the Doctoral Degree
(Defense of the Dissertation)
Full Name of Candidate: Sharon, Hilbert
David
Candidate for Degree of: Ph.D in Food
Technology
Title of Dissertation: Organoleptic, Chem
ical, Biochemical and Physical Studies
or the Qcality of Spanish-Type Peanuts
Time of Examination: March 26, 1965 at
9 :00 a. m.
Place of Examination: Conference Room
112 in Heep Building
Wayne C. Hall
Dean of Graduate Stcdies 166t4
Those undergraduate students who have 96
lours passed may purchase the A&M ring.
The hours passing at the time of the pre-
nary grade report on March 29, 1965,
* satisfying
h'
The hours passing at the time of the pr
liminary grade report on March 29, 196
may be used in satisfying the 95 hour re
quirement. Those students qualifying under
this regulation may leave their name with
Ring Clerk in the Registrar’s Off!
Orders for the rings
April 21 and May 31,
ken 1
April 21 and May 31, 1965, from 8:00 a.m.
to 12:00 noon. Delivery for these rings
will be made on or about July 1, 1966.
Transfer students must complete two full
ernesters at A&M University before they
eligible to order the A&M ring. TH
dll be made on
'ransfer students
imesters at A&S
are eligible 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.
H. L. Heaton, Direct
Admissions and Regis
tor of
trar
154t22
NATIONAL DEFENSE STUDENT LOANS
Application forms for National Defense
Loans for the Summer 1965 and Academic
Year 1965-66, may be obtained from tht
trom the
Y.M.C.A.
ear 1966-66, may
Student Aid Office,
during tl
30, 1965
this of
P. M. May 3. 1965. LATE APPLH
TIONS WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED
udent
Building, during the period from March 15
to April 30, 1965. Applications must be
thai
Room 8,
■riod f:
1965. Applii
filed with this office no later than 5:00
3, 1965. LATE APPLICA-
148t27
JACK SHACKELFORD,
Inc.
Authorized
Lincoln-Mercury-Comet Dealer
Sales, Service, arid Parts
Graduating Seniors Financing
Complete Service Dept.
Body and Paint Dept.
Pat Quimby, Service Mgr.
1215 Texas Ave. TA 3-5476
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals-Sales-Service
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main TA 2-6000
CASH AVAILABLE FOR BOOKS, SLIDE RULES & ETC.
5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG
LOUPOT'S
New Store Hears — 8 a. m. ’til 5:30 p. m. — < Days A Week,
square feet housing graduate lev
el classrooms and laboratories
for the College of Arts and Sci
ences.
The facility will house parts
of the Zoology and Microbiology
divisions of the Department of
Biology, part of the Department
of Biochemistry and Nutrition,
the Departments of Wildlife Sci
ences and Electron Microscopy
and the office of Dr. Frank W. R.
Hubert, dean of the College of
Arts and Sciences.
Hubert said the four story
addition plus a basement area
will be built with university and
federal funds.
“The College of Arts and Sci
ences has outgrown the present
Biological Sciences Building,” he
said. “Without this four-story
addition, we would he forced to
place a quota on the number of
graduate students and to limit
research programs by faculty
members.”
The building will provide
specially equipped and environ
mentally controlled research and
laboratory training space; photo
processing laboratories, an Elec
tron Microscopy Laboratory,
specimen handling areas and oth
er related equipment.
“This building is designed with
an eye toward the future,”
Hubert said. “It contains pro
visions for closed circuit tele
vision from the Electron Micros
copy Laboratory to a classroom
located elsewhere in the build
ing.
“The closed circuit television
setup will not be installed when
the building is constructed but
provisions have been made for
future installations as they are
needed,” he noted.
Workment presently are mov
ing a greenhouse located on the
west side of the Biological Sci
ences Building so the area will be
ready for construction when the
contract is let later this year.
Nance Distributing
Application Forms
For Foreign Study
Applications are now being
taken by the Committee on In
ternational Exchange of Persons
for U. S. Government grants under
the Fulbright-Hays Act for Uni
versity Lecturing and Advanced
Research. These grants cover stu
dy in Australia, New Zealand and
Latin America during 1966-67.
Information concerning the Ful-
bright grants may be obtained
from Dr. J. M. Nance, campus
Fulbright advisor. The application
forms are available from the Com
mittee on International Exchange
of Persons, Conference Board of
Associated Research Councils, 2101
Constitution Avenue, Washington,
D. C. 20418.
These grants are limited to U.
S. citizens.
For appointments as lecturers,
a teacher must have at least one
year of college or university
teaching experience at the level
for which application is made.
For research appointments, the
applicant must have a doctoral
degree at the time of application,
or recognized professional stand
ing.
Library Study
Shows Shelves
Tally 8 Miles
A&M librarians unable to find
a cross between a bookworm and
a tapeworm finally gave up and
did their own measuring.
The aim was to learn how mony
miles of bookshelving are in the
Cushing Memorial Library and
other libraries. This information
has proven vital as librarians and
architects develop plans for the
projected new library building.
“We measured enough miles of
bookshelves to cover a goodly share
of the distance between Dallas and
Fort Worth. Or vice versa, if
you are a Fort Worth resident,”
Library Director Robert A. Houze
reported.
The final tally was 46,000 feet
or more than eight miles of
shelves. And within three years
this total should be more than 11
miles, Houze said. He noted the
figures include neither the archi
tecture nor veterinary medicine
libraries.
The library collection contains
nearly 500,000 volumes and circu
lation or usage exceeds 250,000
volumes annually.
Much of one day and the efforts
of 20 library assistants armed with
tape measures and such went into
the bookshelving survey. Associate
Library Director Rupert C. Wood
ward tallied the measurements.
The summary is arranged so as
to show the number of feet of
shelving devoted to each of nine
broad subject fields or types of
publications.
“We have,’ Houze, “more than
two miles of shelving of the ap
plied sciences and almost that
amount of shelving for books and
publications in the pure sciences.
AMONG the profs—
Adams Invited To Judge
Holiday In Dixie Parade
Lt. Col. E. V. Adams, director
of the Texas Aggie Band, has
been invited to serve as judge
for a band contest April 30.
Adams will judge bands in
the Holiday in Dixie parade in
Shreveport, La. The parade will
highlight a week of festivities
and will feature 50 bands, 25
drill teams, floats, and a group
of Shriners riding on motor
cycles.
Esten Faces Busy Schedule
Join IBM’s
new computer
systems science
training program
Who: graduating engineers and scientists in
all disciplines.
Why: become a problem-solver and advisor
to users of IBM computer systems in areas
such as:
• real-time control of industrial processes
• communications-based information
systems
• time-shared computer systems
• graphic data processing
• computer-controlled manufacturing
systems
• management operating systems
• engineering design automation
When: as soon as you graduate, IBM will give
you comprehensive training, both in the
classroom and on the job.
Where: in all principal cities of the U.S.
How: see your placement director, visit the
nearest IBM branch office, or write to D. S.
Willis, IBM Corporation, 2911 Cedar Springs
Road, Dallas, Texas 75219.
IBM
DATA PROCESSING DIVISION
jx
I
C. K. Esten faces a busy sched
ule assisting with Interscholastic
League one-act play contests
from the district through the
state level.
Esten is producer-director of
the Aggie Players and teaches
theater arts courses in the De
partment of English. He also is
president of both the Texas Edu
cational Theater Association and
its related Secondary Schools
Conference.
The faculty member is on the
panel of judges for the state
meet culminating in the one-act
play competition. Preceding this
are four regional meets with one
to be held on campus under
Esten’s management. The meet
here April 22 will involve eight
schools from a wide area.
In the district meets just start
ing Esten will serve as a judge.
Friday he goes to Port Arthur
for a meet and March 30 he will
be in Navasota for the same
purpose. Esten does not have
to travel far March 31 to attend
a meet at Lincoln School in
Bryan.
Are You
Expecting ?
Complete
Maternity
Wear At
Joyce’s
608 S. College
TA 2-2864
GOODBUY
•••••••*
>
STATE FARM
INSURANCE
GOOD GUY
••••••<
FOR AUTO, LIFE & FIRE INSURANCE
U. M. ALEXANDER ’40
221 S. Main
TA 3-3616
STATE FARM
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Home Offices: Bloomington, Illinois