3 Maroon & White Game Sat. THE TEXAN Drive-Iu and Dining Area PIZZA ORDERS TO GO Ph. 822-3588 DISC O THEQUE—The Newest in Modern Dance Entertainment. All New Living Stereo With Big Seeburg Speakers! Fine Steaks — Large Varieties of Seafood — Fried Chicken COME OUT AND ENJOY DINING & DANCING The Texan 3204 So. College Ave. ARMED FORCES DAY Bryan-College Station residents will observe Armed Forces Day May 8 to honor U. S. servicemen stationed all over the free world. Residents and visitors are invited to visit dis plays, watch parachute jumps and inspect static displays of aircraft and other military hardware during the ob servance at Easterwood Field between 10 a. m. and 5:30 p. m. BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES 0n» ur school after each grade report is arrange you issued. conference you are requ with the Di ean of Ps; re- and iniors sychology curricula, will be offered from 3 :(K) to 5:00 p. m. on April 30 (Friday) and again from 6:00 to 7:00 p. m. the th« bring dictionary. er, 16 Regalia For The May Commencement Exercise All students who are candidates for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy are re quired to order hoods as well as doctor’s cap and gown. The hoods are to be left at the Registrar’s Office no later than 1:00 p. m., Tuesday, May 18 (this will be accomplished by a representative of the College Exchange Store). The Ph.D. hoods will not be worn in the procession since all such candidates will be hooded on the of the ceremonies. Candi- Ma an are candidates for the Degree will wear the bachelor’s e; stage as a part of the ceremonies, dates for the Master’s Degree will i Master’s cap and gown. All civilian stu dents who are candidates for the Bachelor’s Degree will wear the bachelor’s cap and gown. ROTC students who are candidates for the Bachelor’s Degree will wear the Class “A” cadet uniform in lieu of ac ademic regalia. Senior boots are optional with the uniform. Rental of caps and gowns may be arranged with the Exchange Store. Orders may be placed between 8 :00 a. m. Monday, May 3 and 12:00 noon Sat urday, May 15. The rental is as foil Doctor’s and $4.2, dates for the Master’s Degree will wear the niviliai cap and gown. A 2% Texas State Tax is required in addition to these ri ows: cap iwn for Sales these rentals. C. E. Tishler, Chairman Convocations Committee 171tl2 Those undergraduate students who have 95 hours passed may purchase the A&M ring. The hours passing at the time of the pre liminary grade report on March 29, 1965, may be used in satisfying the 95 hour re quirement. Those students qualifying under this regulation may leave their name with the Ring Clerk in the Registrar’s Office in order that she may check their records to determine their eligibility to order the ring. Orders for the rings will be taken between 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, 1965. Transfer students must complete two full semesters at A&M University before they 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, Director of Admissions and Registrar 154t22 INSTANT SILENCE For information write Academic Aids, Box 969 Berkeley, California 94701 COIN COLLECTORS and INVESTORS Come visit our Coin Shop and join the BID BOARD. (If you aren’t familiar with the Bid Board idea, ask us, we will be happy to explain.) We can supply you with BU singl rolls, and proof Way Plan. rolls, and proof sets under our Lay- es, A- (Terms available on request.) SUPPLIES—NATION WIDE TELETYPE SERVICE Estes Marshal Parker-Astin 822-1541 Bryan & 25th AUTO REPAIRS All Makes Just Say: “Charge It” Cade Motor Co. Ford Dealer THE BATTALION Friday, April 30, 1965 College Station, Texas Page 3 CAMPUS BRIEFS 8 # # I | Marketing Society Names | 2 Scholarship Winners The announcement of two schol arship winners and election of the A&M Marketing Society president for 1965-66 highlighted a banquet here Wednesday night. The event climaxed the sixteenth annual Sales Clinic, a day-long event which attracted 500 persons, mostly students. James H. Kauffman, a junior from Georgetown, was elected Marketing Society president. He also was announced as one of two winners of a Houston Sales Executives Club H. W. Peters Memorial Scholarship Award. The other winner of a scholar ship was William C. Atkinson, a junior from Dallas. Each scholarship is for $250. The Sales Clinic featured five sessions. Sales executives from Houston and one from Dallas were the speakers. The clinic is sponsored by the Department of Marketing of the Texas A&M School of Business Administration, the Houston Sales Executives Club and the Marketing Society. Judging Contest The Saddle and Sirloin Club is sponsoring the annual Freshman- Sophomore Judging Contest Sat urday. All scholastic freshmen and sophomores are eligible to par ticipate in judging classes of live stock, meats and wools. Regis tration for the events will begin at 1 p.m. in the Lecture Room of the Animal Industries Build ing. Freshmen will answer written questions on the classes to be judged while sophomores will give oral reasons for judging on three classes of livestock, one set of written reasons on a meat class and answer questions on wool classes. The members of the senior judging team will judge the contest. Plaques will be awarded to the Students Needed For European Trip The MSC European Charter Flight Group of Texas A&M is having its final drive for mem bership. The program includes a flight from Houston to London on June 7 and a return flight in the latter part of August or first of Sept ember. “The flight will cost us just $300 if we can pick up another five or ten members,” George Long, a participant in the pro gram said. The group has al ready signed 25 students. The final meeting of the group will be at 4 p.m. Monday in Room 3D of the Memorial Stu dent Center. Those interested should attend this meeting, Long said. If at tendance is imposible, students may contact Long in Room 228 of Dorm 5 or any member of the MSC Travel Committee. The flight is open to all A&M students, their wives, immediate family, faculty, staff and their families. There are no requirements made of participants once they arrive in Europe. The additional members are necessary to secure the best re turn date and the Jet-Prop tran- portation for the lowest price. The group from A&M is planning the trip in cooperation with the Charter Flight Association of Rice University. Beef Leaders To Meet Here During July Three noted economists will headline a speaking roster of more than 25 beef industry leaders at the special cattle and beef mar keting conference July 18-20 at Texas A&M. Dudley T. Campbell, secretary of the American National Cattlemen’s Association and conference ramrod, announced today that featured speakers for the “Coordinated Beef Improvement Conference” would be: George L. Mehren, assistant sec retary of agriculture an outstand ing agricultural economist from California before joining the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Raymond J. Doll, vice president and senior economist, Federal Re serve Bank of Kansas City. Paul L. Farris, project leader, meats and poultry, National Com- mision on Food Marketing, is an economist on leave from Purdue University. Brooks J. Koegh, Keene, N. Dak., president of the American National Cattlemen’s Association. Dean E. Patterson, college of agriculture, Texas A&M. Fred Wulff, Brady, Texas, pres ident of the Texas and Southwest ern Cattle Raisers Association. Campbell said Keogh, Patterson and Wulff would speak during opening sessions, Farris would speak at lunch and Secretary Mehren would adress a banquet on July 19. Doll will summarize the conference on Tuesday. Twenty-seven ranchers, feeders, marketmen, editors, packers, re tailers and economists will partici pate in workshops during the con ference. More than 400 persons are expected to attend. The conference, third in a series on beef industry topics inaugua- rated by the American National, will be jointly sponsored this year by the American National, the De partment of Animal Science and Agricultural Economics and Soci ology at Texas A&M, and the Tex as and Southwestern Cattle Rais ers Association. The meeting will wind up Tues day evening, July 20, following concurrent sessions on cattle and beef futures and on feeding beef breeding cattle conducted by Col lege personnel. All sessions will be at the Mem orial Student Center on the cam pus, although housing is also be ing arranged at nearby motor hotels. Room reservations may be made through Campbell at 801 E. 17th Ave., Denver, Colo. top three freshmen and sopho mores at the Saddle and Sirloin Banquet May 7. The T. D. Tanksley Award will also be given to the high individual in swine judging. Wildlifers Attend Meet Five Texas A&M wildlife man agement students are attending the 12th annual meeting of the Southwestern Association of Na turalists (SWAN) Thursday- Sunday in New Orleans, La. The students are John R. Meyer of Indianapolis, Ind.; Van Conner of College Station; Pat O’Brien of Lubbock; L. S. Ford, Jr., of Andrews; and Les Bugai of Seguin. Meyer and O’Brien will present a paper, “An Activity Study of Radioisotope - Tagged Lizard, Sceloporus Undulatus Hyacinthi- nus.” They conducted the study with Hanley K. Smith, wildlife student from Saratosa, Fla., last fall. Bugai is attending the meeting as a delegate of the A&M Fish and Game Club. SWAN is an organization com posed of biologists from the southern and southwestern U. S. According to Meyer, several members of the A&iM Department of Wildlife Management are active members of the association. Student Publishes Ben E. Dial of Dallas, a sopho more wildlife management major at Texas A&M, is the author of an article in the current issue of the Southwestern Naturalist. Dial’s article gives his accounts on the range of reptiles and am phibians in Northeastern Texas. Askew To Speak For Unitarian Fellowship Meet Rev. C. Eugene Askew, minister of All Souls Congregation Church in Houston, will address the Unit arian Fellowship in College Sta tion Sunday night at 8 o’clock. Rev. Askew has chosen for his topic “Yes, I Would Want My Daughter to Marry a Negro.” Among the honors conferred up on Rev. Askew are a National Methodist Scholarship for the high est scholastic standing at the Chandler School of Theology of Emory University in Georgia; an award at the Yale Divinity School for special knowledge of the Bible, and for three years from 1951 to 1954 he was awarded a scholarship from Emory University for gradu ate study at Union Theological Seminary and Columbia Univer sity. He was first licensed to preach as a Methodist lay preacher in 1940 and was ordained in 1948. In 1953 he became a Congregation al minister and has served church es in New York, Illinois, Wiscon- son and Texas, including one year as minister of Emerson Unitarian Church in Houston. The Askews are the parents of one boy and four girls and have interests in many areas in cluding scouting, sports, theatre and other art forms. IF SHES N/or 6ETTING IN VOUR HAIR .. .GET THIS Those dainty fingers aren’t about to play games in a messy, mousy mane! So, get with it! . . . get your hair shaped-up with SHORT CUT. Disciplines crew cut, brush cut, any cut; gives it life! Helps conc//f/on—puts more body, more manageability, more girls in your hair! Get it today. Old Spice SHORT CUT Hair Groom by Shulton.. .tube or jar,on/y .50 plus tax.