THE BATTALION Pag J4i((ier ^J^uneraf ^J4o BRYAN,TEXAS 502 West 26th St. PHONE TA 2-1572 Campus and Circle Theatres College Station College Station’s Own Banking Service University National Bank NORTH GATE Sure Sign of Flavor SANITARY Farm Dairies Central Texas Hardware Co. BRYAN • HARDWARE • CHINA WARE • CRYSTAL • GIFTS The Exchange Store “Serving Texas Aggies” Bryan Building & Loan Association BRYAN ■nr 1 JStft. ICE CREAM AND MILK Campus Briefs People-to-People Sets Foreign Student Trip The Student Affairs Office is accepting applications from for eign students who wish to stay with families in San Antonio Feb. 19-20. Don Dietz, senior from Corpus Christi and chairman of the Peo ple-to-People program, said 25 students can participate in this program, which is sponsored by the A&M Club and the A&M Mother’s Club of San Antonio. He added that students must sign up and pay $2 for transportation at the Student Affairs Office by Tuesday. Activities will include a Satur day evening meal and Sunday breakfast at the families’ homes. Dietz said the group will visit the Alamo, San Jose Mission, the San Antonio Zoo, La Villita, the Spanish Governor’s Palace, the Sunken Gardens and the Job Corps Center at Camp Gary. Students will meet in front of the YMCA at 8 a.m. Saturday and will return Sunday after noon. Cars for the trip will be provided by U. S. students. 12 To Complete Training School Twelve participants in a pio neer specialty contractors project training school will receive cer tificates Feb. 25. R. L. Patrick, coordinator for the Engineering Extension Serv ice-sponsored school, said the graduates will work as job super intendents or project managers at salaries up to $12,000 annually. Most of the men have com pleted apprentice training in mechanical construction jobs. They spent 21 weeks taking in struction in mathematics, busi ness and job management, engi neering graphics, counseling and other subjects. They also heard lectures by 45 representatives of Texas industry. A second session of the school begins March 14. It lasts 20 weeks, ending July 29, Patrick announced. Enrollment will be limited to 20 men. A&M Home Manual Translated To French A Texas A&M University self- build manual for adobe, rammed earth, and soil block homes has been translated into French for further use in underdeveloped countries of the world, according to Prof. Bob M. Gallaway, head of the materials department of the Texas Transportation Insti tute. The publication, entitled “Handbook for Building Homes of Earth,” was written by Lyle A. Wolfskin, Wayne A. Dunlap and Bob M. Gallaway after re search by the Texas Transporta tion Institute for the Office of International Housing, Housing and Home Finance Agency, to de velop and adapt construction methods for practical application by unskilled natives in countries faced with housing problems. The work was conducted under a contract of the Texas A&M Re search Foundation. The teachings of the manual were applied extensively in for eign countries through guidence of the U. S. Agency for Interna tional Development. Greatest emphasis has been in building homes of soil blocks pressed in Cinva ram presses which TTI proved out in experiments for successful AID use, Gallaway said. The translation is announced in AID’s Techniques Ameri- caines, No. 88, and is entitled “Bater en terre.” It will be used in countries where French is the official language. HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CENTER Now taking applications for en rollment in Bryan’s only facility built for children. State Licensed 3406 So. College 823-8626 Mrs. Larry Jones Registered Nurse ACCOUNTANTS, CHEMISTS, ChE’s, MB’s, PHYSICISTS (m&f) Yon only know the half of it. Our business no longer hangs by a fiber— cellulosic or otherwise. Far from it. We’re researching, producing and marketing a rich range of products —chemicals, plastics, paints and coatings, forest products, petroleum and natural gas products, as well as a full family of man-made fibers —all over the world. “Celanese’ sales growth, its hefty interests in chemicals and its hugely expanded foreign operations have already moved it into a big new class,” said a CHEMICAL WEEK* special report. During the 10 years prior to 1964, sales more than quadrupled, chalking up a growth rate more than six times that of all U. S. manufacturing industries. And the trend is stronger than ever, with corporate sales for 1965 estimated at 23% higher than last year’s record of $701 million. What does this mean to you? Since our future expansion depends on our continued ability to develop top-notch people, it is, after all, in our best interest to bring you along as fast as you can take it, and give you all the support you need — in your technical specialty or in management. LET’S MAKE A DATE. Give our college representative a chance to fill you in on more of the specifics. He will be on your campus within the next week or two —arrange through your Placement Office to see him. If you miss our visit, drop a card indicating your major and work interest to: Supervisor of University Recruitment, Celanese Corporation, 522 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10036. CELANESE CHEMICALS FIBERS PLASTICS COATINGS PETROLEUM FOREST PRODUCTS An Equal Opportunity Employer * August 22, 1964, Special Report on Celanese Corporation of America. Reprints available.