The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 27, 1966, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Fish is a staple in the Portu
gese economy. Pish exports in
1964 netted more than $39 mil
lion m foreign exchange. One
jf every 50 Portuguese men
»ams his livelihood from the sea.
Vote For
CRAWFORD
MARTIN
for
Attorney General
Pol. Ad. Pd. for by friends of
Crawford Martin
m %
ig as
in SW;
Institute
I
ON'T
1IND
THER
I the
et or
you,
sure
oup!
st
ice.
inside the brightturbulent
world of todays youth...
Slttiilstnapptatt Eilli GRAHAM
NOW SHOWING
Through May 3
Queen Theatre
Bryan
For Reservations
Dial 822-8075
All Seats $1.00
NEW JOB FOR AGGIE SWEETHEART
Aggie Sweetheart Cheri Holland tests her
skill at mowing grass on Texas A&M’s
5,000-acre campus. The $1.5 million Space
Sciences Center climbs skyward in the back
ground. Miss Holland’s sweetheart duties
are many-fold, but grounds maintenance
is actually not among them.
Administrators Conference
To Discuss School Relations
School-community relations will
be dissected for school adminis
trators in Texas A&M confer
ences June 13-15.
The joint conference of three
associations will register more
than 600 in assemblies, lectures
and discussion groups in the
Memorial Student Center. The
Texas Association of County
Superintendents will be meeting
for the 41st time at A&M, jointly
with the Texas Association of In
structional Supervisors and Texas
School Administrators Associa
tion in cooperation with the Na-
Philosophies of Art & Beaty
from Plato to Heidegger
now at
The World Of Books Shoppe
207 S. Main Bryan 823-8366
GET A LOAD OF THIS
No Money Down - 12 Months To Pay Finance Your Entire Wardrobe
See Details Below
ATTENTION SENIORS! SPECIAL ATTENTION GRADUATING SENIORS!
INDIVIDUALLY TAILORED SUITS
Latest !96!i Men's Fashions! Mohair-Silk, English Woolens, Terylene and Wool,
Italian Silk, Dacron and Wool, Worsted and Silk. Over 1500 Exclusive Patterns.
$47.50 Up . . . Graduation Delivery If Ordered Before May 10th. “Come Browse
Through Our New Spring and Summer Styles. Register Free Suit Drawing
May 10th.
CHET'S HONG KONG CLdTHES
Bill Hughes Restaurant Bldg. - Next To Western Motel — Hwy. 6, South
LOUPOT'S
North Gate
Attention Seniors
See us for the best deal on a new Dodge
Darts - Coronets - Polaras
Drive the new Charger
A complete line of Hardtops
Join the Rebellion!
Halsell Motor Co., Inc.
Dodge - Chrysler
1411 Texas Ave. 823-8111
? — LUNCH TIME — ?
“Especially Designed For”
CAMPUS STAFF AND OFFICE PERSONNEL
• Quick Service
• Tasty Foods
• Old Fashioned Ice Cream Parlor
• Leisure Booths and Tables Available
• Pleasing Decor
• Soft Background Music
DUTCH TREAT
tional School Public Relations
Association.
The conferences, now in pre
registration through the Office
of Continuing Education, provides
the only meeting place of school
and county superintendents and
supervisors in the state.
“These men and women meet
together with educational im
provement their primary objec
tive,” said Dr. Paul Hensarling,
Department of Education and
Psychology head.
Mrs. Bernice McCullar, in
formation director for the Uni
versity of Georgia Department
of Education, is the first of sev
eral key speakers. The daughter
of a newspaper editor and Baptist
minister, Mrs. McCullar will
speak on “Today’s Biggest Story”
in the first general assembly,
June 13.
Conference participants will
spend most of the three-day
meeting together, providing a
school administrators’ meeting
ground. The three associations
will hold separate meetings and
business sessions in the early
afternoons.
Discussion groups Monday and
Tuesday will air problems and
cases on the conference theme,
school public relations through
communication, understanding,
cooperation and prograss.
Mrs. McCullar has lectured
throughout the nation, drawing
from experience as a newspaper
and magazine editor and con
tributor, a large number of books
and magazine articles on educa
tion, journalism and home life,
from law practice with her hus
band, the late Judge C. B. Mc
Cullar, and her specialization,
Georgia history.
She teaches a television course,
is writing a textbook and mod
erates a weekly television show,
“The Georgia School Story.”
Mrs. McCullar has degrees from
Women’s College of Georgia,
Mercer University and worked at
Columbia University in New York
City. Named Woman of the Year
in Georgia Education, she has
won awards in journalism and
education fields.
Marketing Games
Draw Aggie Team
An “industrial opponent” of
Texas A&M won the National
Marketing Games at Michigan
State University last weekend.
Harding College of Searcy,
Ark., took the national champion
ship, presented by Michigan Gov
ernor George Romney.
A&M’s “firm,” competing in
the games for the third year, was
in the same industry with Hard
ing. The Marketing Society team
was composed of Mickey Batsell,
Louis Sabayrac, Jim Kauffman,
Billy Atkinson and Phil Aber
nathy.
The computerized games re
quired “firms” to solve problems
of prices, material purchases,
plant capacities, investments and
dividends. More than 40 uni
versity and college teams com
peted for the championship.
Mothers Clubs
To Choose Officers
Officers for 1966-67 will be
elected and installed May 6 and
7 at the annual meeting of Texas
A&M University Federated Moth
ers Clubs.
The meeting two days prior to
Parents Day Sunday, May 8, will
be conducted in the Memorial
Student Center.
About 250 mothers are expect
ed for the meeting, Mrs. Ann
Keel, MSC social director, said.
CLOSE OUT SALE
on
A&M Student-Staff Directories
50' Each
While They Last
The only complete roster of hometown
addresses. Available from Student
Publications Basement YMCA
A&M East Gate
“Conveniently Located”
Hwy. 6
1"|_|£ BATTALION Wednesday, April 27, 1966 College Station, Tex^g Page 5
Videotape Unit Supplements
Educational TV Facilities
POWER YOUR PLAY
The yellow van stationed out
side the Educational Television
studio in Bagley Hall is a mobile
unit completely outfitted for
video-taping programs from re
mote locations, in addition to
regular studio productions for
ETV.
“The van, purchased from the
Texas Surplus Property Agency,
was originally equipped as a van
for refueling missiles,” said Mel
Chastain, program director.
“It was modified by G'eorge
Shearer, engineer; Norman God
win, producer-director; Thomas
Jones, technician; three student
assistants and myself,’ Chastain
said, “and it was used for video
taping the Intercollegiate Talent
Show, currently being aired
throughout the state.”
The ETV studio in Bagley Hall,
formerly a classroom building,
was completed two weeks ago.
“The studio was completely in
sulated and soundproofed, and is
equipped with lighting fixtures
that can be moved along a grid
system to achieve an infinite
variety of lightning positions. A
transistorized dimmer system
permits unlimited variations of
light intensity,” Chastain ex
plained.
“Additionally, the studio has
two Marconi 4.5 inch image
Orthicon cameras and an Ampex
Vidicon camera. A special effects
generator enables the director to
use a variety of video effects in
his productions,” Chastain added.
The School of Business Admin
istration is currently the biggest
user of ETV in classroom presen
tations. The Department of Edu
cation and Psychology also uses
ETV extensively.
ETV programs, Chastain
claims, provide about 8,000 hours
of service per month. Last
semester 26,448 student-hours of
service were provided by ETV
facilities.
Monitors are scheduled to be
installed in the Department of
Journalism where they will be
used in the radio-television adver
tising course, radio - television
news, and a proposed television
productions course.
LASTS LONGER ■ STAYS LIVELIER
MOISTURE IMMUNE
ASHAWAY PRODUCTS. INC.. Ashaway. Rhode Island
Vote Your Own Mind!
Support A 100 Percent Record
For Higher Education
Help A Former A&M Student
Back A Brazos County Native
Re-Elect—
SENATOR
NEVEILLE COLSON
5th District’s
Full-Time Senator
(Pol. Adv. Paid For By A&M Friends Of Senator Colson)
Anything goes when you wear "IT'S CRICKET''™
Exceptional Men's Toiletries. Try it and see. (Girls, give it and find out!)
After-shave, 4 oz., $3.50. Cologne, 4 oz., $4.50.
Available in drug stores and cosmetic departments of department stores.
Another fine product of Kayser-Roth.