Architects Tour Mexico Fifteen fourth-year design stu dents in the School of Architec ture are back in class this week after a 10-day field trip to Mex ico. Assistant Professor Cecil Ste ward said the student-financed tour afforded opportunities to study foreign culture and archi tecture. Students visited the University of Mexico, the pyramids, Chapul- tepec Park, Museum of Anthro pology, Museum of Modern Art, the Pedregal, Thieves’ Market, and attended a performance of Ballet Folklorico de Mexico in Mexico City. A side trip took them to Tax- co, a silver mining center with unique examples of colonial Mex ican architecture. JUST IN TIME!! SEE OUR WIDE SELECTION OF MATERNITY SWIM SUITS SIZES RANGE FROM 6 - 16. Knits & Cottons $10.98 — $14.98 JOYCE’S 608 S. College 822-2864 THE BATTALION Wednesday, April 20, 1966 College Station, Texas Page 6 Team To Compete In Marketing Meet A five-man team will compete in the Marketing Games at Mich igan State University Saturday at Lansing. The A&M Marketing Society team, composed of Mickey Bat- sell, Louis Sabayrac, Jim Kauff man, Billy Atkinson and Phil Abernathy, will be in Lansing Friday and Saturday. The computerized business game is conducted by Michigan State. Competing schools repre sent fictitious firms in fictitious industries. Each team conducts business transactions for a period o fthree years, compressed into Each “firm team” must solve problems of prices, material pur chases, plant capacities, invest ments and dividends among prob- schools, compete for the national championship. Teams will have to defend their decisions and a panel of business executives will judge. “Firms” will be attempting to return maximum profits, stress research and development or at tempt to make maximum divi dends. “We are enthusiastic over the financial support given us by private business, making this edu cational trip possible,” Kaufman, president of the society, said. Sears, Roebuck & Co. is paying the A&M students’ way by com mercial air to Chicago, from where they will travel to Lansing by auto. Advisor John Wynn, School of Business instructor, will STYLE SHOW THEME "Creative You" Featuring: Hand Knitted Fashions from Bernard Ulmann Presented by: Spinning Wheel Yarn Shop & Knitting Studio of Bryan, Texas M.S.C. Ballroom April 21, at 8 p. m. Admittance Free — All Are Welcome RETIREES PONDER FUTURE James E. Hurt, center, shows Fidel Alonzo, and assistant superintendent of roads and left, and Paul Castillo fishing gear given pavement, will work part-time. Alonzo, with him by friends and fellow employes of the 20 years’ service, and Castillo, with 21, re- Grounds Maintenance Department. All three ceived gift certificates, retired recently. Hurt, a 31-year employe lem areas. Decisions are fed to a com puter, results and new figures returned to provide basis to re peat the cycle. The top five teams, chosen from a field of 40 TTI Adventurer To Assist At National Parachute Meet 2 Scholarships Open In Physics Two scholarships to study physics are available to high school students, one in the name of F. E. Giesecke installed this year. Letter applications for the $1,- 000 and $800 per year scholar ships should be mailed by the end of the month, announced Dr. James G. Potter, Department of Physics head. The Giesecke Memorial Schol arship, gift of an alumnus, is for $800 a college year. The Mc Farland scholarship, donated by Mrs. Minette McFarland of Houston, allows $1,000 per year. Both are four-year scholarships. Call Harry Thompson an ad venturer. Call him an itchy- footed hitchhiker. But, please, call him when you have a para chute meet. Harry, no relation to Light- horse Harry, is an itinerant para chute jumper and classified 1-A with the Draft Board. He may do his jumping for Uncle Sam in the immediate future. At present, however, Harry is looking forward to the National Collegiate Parachute Meet this weekend at Hearne Municipal Airport. He will be an assistant to the meet director, Army 1st Lt. Ken Sisler of Fort Campbell, Ky. The jump-hungry youth won’t be leaping in competition. You might say he will be jumping un attached. He’s not academically affiliated with a university or college. Harry is an odd-job man for the Texas Transportation Institute’s Structural Research Division at the Texas A&M Re search Annex. You might call Harry a college dropout. He was ranked as a junior journalism student at the University of North Dakota when the lure of warmer climes led him breaking loose from something. I can’t say what. I really enjoy it. Parachuting gets to be a dis ease, an obsession to be fulfilled every weekend.” First jump for the 126-pound, five-foot, seven inch brown- thatched native Georgian was Sept. 27, 1964, at Grafton, N. D. It “fired him up.” Five months later Harry notched his first free-fall in 25 degrees below zero weather. Like a snowflake, he fell . . . into a 5-foot deep snow bank. “I enjoy free falling, hooking up and making baton passes,” he grinned. “We jumped with a frog BATTALION CLASSIFIED Political Announcements Subject to action of the Dem ocratic Primary May 7, 1966. For Congressman, Sixth Con gressional District: OLIN E TEAGUE (Re-Election) For County Clerk: FRANK J. BORISKIE I. N. (IRA) KELLEY WANT AD RATES 0n« day it P* 4« per \ r word each additional da; Minimum charge—50* DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publication Classified Display 90