The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 05, 1966, Image 7

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    Biochemistry Prof
Wins Award
Dr. C. C. Litchfield, assistant
professor of biochemistry and nu
trition, is winner of the Bond
Award of the American Oil
Chemists Society.
The award, which includes a
gold medal and certificate, is
given annually for the best pa
per delivered at the previous
spring and fall national meetings
of the society.
Litchfield also won the Bond
Award in 1962. It recognizes the
speaker with highest combined
scores for both meetings. He has
been among the top 10 scorers
since 1960, when he joined A&M
SDX Awards
Scholarships
Five journalism scholarships to
Texas A&M were announced Mon
day by President Glenn Drom-
goole of the sponsoring A&M
Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, pro
fessional journalism society.
Winners of $250 scholarships
are:
Paul Hemphill, son of Mr. and
Mrs. D. L. Hemphill, 175 Robins
Lane, Brownsville. He is a
Brownsville High School senior.
Ted Karpf, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William Karpf, 3536 Granada,
Fort Worth. Karpf is a Richland
High School senior.
Charles Stagg, son of Mr. and
Mrs. C. S. Stagg, 171 Deer Lake,
Huffman. He is a Humble High
School senior.
Jerry Wagner, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Carroll E. Wagner, 5402 An
drews Highway, Odessa. He is a
Permian High School senior.
A special $150 scholarship was
awarded to Joan Gorzycki, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Gorzy
cki, 4309 Aspen, Bryan. Miss
Gorzycki is a Stephen F. Austin
High School senior.
No junior college scholarship
was awarded for the second year
of the chapter’s program.
Vote For
FRANK J. BORISKIE
for
COUNTY CLERK
Brazos County
The Honest
Sincere and
Capable Candidate.
Subject to action of the
Democratic Primary
May 7, 1966
(Pd. Pol. Adv.)
JOBS
AVAILABLE
Manpower Inc. the world’s
largest temporary help organiza
tion has summer openings for
thousands of college men. You’ll
be doing healthy and interesting
general labor work at good pay.
Call or visit the Manpower office
in your home city. We’re listed
in the white pages of the tele
phone directory.
MANPOWER
OVER 400 OFFICES THROUGHOUT THE WORLD
to perform research in fats and
oils.
Prof To Present
Lectures This Week
Professor A. R. Burgess of the
Department of Industrial Engi
neering will present a session on
“Inventory Models” at the Sec
ond Annual Joint Seminar on In
ventory Management in Houston
Thursday through Friday.
Burgess will present an over
view of the traditional and newer
mathematical models used to
establish inventory control poli
cies and a discussion of each. He
will also discuss the role of the
computer in inventory modeling.
5 Veterinarians
Attend Conferences
Five doctors of veterinary med
icine are participating in confer
ences throughout the country this
week.
Dean A. A. Price and Dr. A. I.
Flowers are attending the Vet
erinary Public Health Conference
in Atlanta, Ga.
Dr. R. H. Davis is at South
eastern Louisiana College, Dr.
Martin McBride is in Austin and
Dr. R. W. Moore is in New York
City.
Sigma Delta Chi
Elects Officers
Sigma Delta Chi, the profes
sional journalist society, elected
officers for the 1966-67 year
Wednesday.
Chosen president was Tommy
DeFrank, a junior; president,
Dani Presswood, a sophomore;
secretary, Leroy Shafer, a junior;
and treasurer, Elias Moreno, a
junior.
Ag Economics Club
Holds Picnic
The Agricultural Economics
Club will hold its annual spring
picnic at 5 p.m. Thursday.
Gene Berger, club president,
said the picnic will be held at area
3 in Hensel Park.
Tickets are $1 per person. Chil
dren under six are free. Berger
said the tickets are available in
th£ library of the Agriculture
Building.
Reynolds To Present
Technical Paper
Dr. Tom D. Reynolds, assist
ant professor of civil engineer
ing, will present a technical pa
per, “Model of the Completely
Mixed Activated Sludge Process,”
at the Purdue Industrial Waste
Conference Thursday at Lafay
ette, Ind.
Graduate Student Receives
NDEA Language Fellowship
Thursday, May 5, 1966
THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas
Page 7
Read Battalion Classifieds
DR. R. S. WICK
Aero Professor
To Join Faculty
Dr. Robert Senters Wick of the
Westinghouse Electric Corpora
tion will join the faculty June 1
as Professor of Nuclear and Aero
space Engineering.
Since January Wick has been
an assistant to the manager at
the Naval Operating Plant under
Bettis Atomic Power Laboratory
of Westinghouse. He has held
management and technical posi
tions for Westinghouse since 1957
in the areas of nuclear design,
thermal and hydraulic design and
various component programs of
nuclear ship design.
Alois C. (Al) Mladenka, a
graduate student from Shiner,
has been awarded a three-year
$12,000 National Defense Educa
tion Association Language Grad
uate Fellowship.
Mladenka, an honor graduate in
January, has been pursuing ad
ditional studies and working as
an assistant in the Department of
Modern Language this spring.
He will enroll this fall at the
University of Colorado, where he
will major in Slavanic languages,
primarily Russian and Czech.
Both have been declared “criti
cal” languages by U. S. govern
ment officials.
The 29-year-old scholar com
pleted undergraduate work in two
and one-half years after trans
ferring 18 hours of night work
from Victoria Junior College. He
worked several years as a pipe
welder in the Victorian-Houston
area.
He was chosen to Phi Kappa
Phi, a society for students aca
demically ranked in the top tenth
of the senior class, and also re
ceived the Howard E. Duff
Award as an outstanding senior.
TUNNCLL
RAILROAD COMMISSIONER
Pd. Pol. Adv.
dial
98.3
kora|fm
ELECT
A. P. (Sonny) Boyett, Jr.
A College Station Resident
As JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
Precinct 7
“I Will Serve Your Needs’’
Pd. Pol. Adv.
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.
NIGGER by Dick Gregory
now at
THE WORLD OF BOOKS SHOPPE
207 S. Main — 823-8366
By CAROLYN PATRICK
Austin Bureau of The News
NAVASOTA, Texas — Sen.
Neveille Colson, the only
woman in the Texas Senate,
faces her strongest opposition
in 28 years in public office
this year in her race with
Sen. Bill Moore of Bryan, a
strong campaigner with equal
ly long service in the Texas
Legislature.
Legislative redistricting for
the fifth Senatorial District
pitted the two veterans in the
May 7 Democratic primary.
Senators gave Mrs. Colson
an advantage when designing
the picture - puzzle district
which extends from near
Houston northward to just two
counties below Dallas County.
Mrs. Colson kept 10 counties
with 154,457 population from
her old district while Moore
kept five counties and 93,703
constituents. Some 30,763 per
sons in the district are from
new counties, Fayette and
Chambers, tacked on to the
bottom of the district.
A TOUGH RACE against a
seasoned campaigner has not
daunted the lady from Nava-
sota. And if determination,
hard work and the neighborly
approach mean success for an
East Texas politician, voters
will return Sen. Colson to the
Texas Senate.
She continues to do “the
things I do all year,” including
attending every county fair,
auction, rodeo and public gath
ering in her district.
The disappearing art of per
son-to-person, door - to - door
campaigning is much alive in
this Fifth Senatorial District.
Traveling wtih Sen. Colson
on the campaign is like at
tending a never-ending succes
sion of family home-comings.
Constituents greet Mrs. Col
son like a favorite aunt.
“She’s so friendly,” one wo
man remarked, “we sometimes
forget she is our senator. I’ll
never forget that when we had
a death in the family, Mrs.
Colson sent over a cake she’d
baked and came to visit.”
A Huntsville prison guard
remarked: “Mrs. Colson, you
don’t have to waste one of
your cards on me. You know
you have my vote.”
DURING A 4-HOUR string
of door-to-door calls in one
community, Mrs. Colson met
only one “undecided” voter.
Her reception at times took
on “testimonial” fervor.
“I call her the mother of
farm - to - market roads,” a
newspaper editor commented.
“People are not going- to for
get that Mrs. Colson brought
us out of the mud. At least,
those of us who remember the
muddy roads.”
A high school principal com
mented on her 100 per cent
record for education.
There are few issues on
which an opponent could criti
cize Mrs. Colson. In 28 years
in the Texas Legislature, every
bill she sponsored became
law, an almost unprecedented
record.
One senator commented dur
ing the past session: “If it’s
Mrs. Colson’s bill, it’s all
right.”
She co-authored the Colson-
Briscoe Act of 1949 which
guaranteed financing for rural
roads in Texas and led to the
development of the massive
farm-to-market road system.
MRS. COLSON bills herself
as the state’s only full-time
senator and is the only senator
who is not otherwise em
ployed. She shuns all labels
conservative, moderate or
liberal.
“When I vote,” Mrs. Colson
told The Dallas News, “I
don’t think of whether it’s a
conservative, liberal or mod
erate issue. I look at the bill
and apply it to my district.
I vote according to how it is
going to affect my district.”
Mrs. Colson is a quiet-man
nered, petite, fashionable wo
man who favors conservative
suits. She keeps hats and sev
eral pairs of shoes in her car
at all times to be worn as the
occasion warrants.
A former teacher and school
principal, she says she is with
out “big money support” and
is financing her campaign
through “contributions and
volunteer work of the home
town folks.”
DURING THIS campaign
she lost a major campaigner—
her mother, Mrs. Ollie Mae
Higgs, who has been in Bryan
Hospital several weeks with
a broken pelvis.
“Mother loves politics and
has worked so hard in every
campaign,” Mrs. Colson said.
“She often made speeches at
meetings that I couldn’t at
tend and once made a door-to-
door campaign that covered an
entire county.
Mrs. Colson took time be
tween meetings last week for
a brief visit with her mother
whose first question was:
“How is the campaign go
ing?”
Mrs. Higgs is keeping a hos
pital headquarters going in
her room by handing out cards
to visitors, nurses, doctors and
other hospital personnel.
The Lady of the Senate is
quiet-spoken on the Senate
floor and might often defer to
male senators for orations and
flamboyant political maneuv
ers. But in this campaign, she
is fighting hard and expects
to win.
MOST OBSERVERS hesi
tate to predict the outcome.
Mrs. Colson’s supporters are
strongly loyal in the 10 coun
ties which she retained after
redistricting. Sen. Moore’s
partisans are equally confi
dent.
The race sparks interest
through this East Texas area.
At a recent barbecue in
Brookshire honoring retiring
Congressman Clark Thompson
of Galveston, both Sen. Colson
and Sen. Moore attended, sit
ting on the front row and sep
arated by one person.
The local master of cere
monies remarked: “I’m glad to
see that both Sen. Colson and
Sen. Moore are here and that
they are sitting so close to
gether.”
The area is now in the Tenth
Congressional District of Con
gressman J. Pickle, who com
mented :
“I’m so glad to see Sen. Col
son and Sen. Moore here.
Races such as this are an im
portant test of our Democratic
system.”
Mrs. Colson is concentrating
heavily on a person-to-person
campaign, meeting as many
people as possible.
SHE HAS NO hesitancy
about stopping strangers on
the street, visiting every mer
chant on the downtown busi
ness stretch, and stopping at
every crossroad gasoline sta
tion.
Her campaign card is a wal
let calendar.
She keeps a schedule which
often finds her traveling at 6
or 7 a.m. and returning home
at 2:30 and 3 a.m.
She is never too busy to
chat with an old friend to find
out how the family is doing,
and to discuss local activities.
With this type of long-time
neighborly association, Mrs.
Colson hopes she has made
enough friends in the past 27
years to return her to Austin.
Re-Elect The Full-Time State Senator!
Mrs. Neveille H. Colson
(Pol. Adv. Paid For By A&M Friends of Senator Colson)
'Testimonial Fervor'
Touring Newspaper Reporter Finds 5th District
People Believe in Senator Neveille H. Colson
The Following Story Appeared in The Dallas Morning News
on April 24, 1966. Carolyn Patrick, Member of The Austin
News Staff of The Dallas Morning News, Went into The 5th
District To Get This Story.