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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1966)
A F Pag-e 4 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Thursday, June 16, 1966 Better Movies Set At Grove Theater Movies at Texas A&M are better than ever. Such is the claim of Stan Stanaland of Lufkin, manager of the summer movie series at the Grove Theater and the Memorial Student Center. “The companies we order films from are giving us a better selec tion,” Stanaland said. “I took a type of straw poll this spring among students. The results is several repeats from other years, but I believe we should give the students what they want. Attendance for the first five movies of the summer average 442, with 466 the best turnout, 366 the lightest, Stanaland re ported. Movies are scheduled at 8 p.m. at the outdoor Grove Theater and at 9:30 a.m. Saturdays in the MSC Ballroom. All showings in clude cartoons. A&M students are admitted on identification cards. Children are admitted free to six years. Young sters 6 to 12 pay 15 cents. Patrons 12 years and up pay 35 cents. Stanaland had a busy opening week. Not only did he keep pace with registration, classes and the entanglements of movie manage ment, he also became a proud parent. His wife presented him with a son, David Scott, June 8, at St. Joseph’s Hospital. She is the former Audrey Williams of Lufkin. Upcoming movies are: Tonight—“The Fighting 69th.” Friday—“Damn the Defiant.” Saturday—A.M. — “Sorrowful Jones.” P.M.—“Beau Geste.” Sunday—“The Mountain Road.” Monday—“David & Goliath.” Tuesday—‘The Mouse That Roared.” Wednesday—“List of Adrian Messenger.” June 23—“Destry Rides Again.” June 24—“Lafayette.” June 25—A.M.—“Bowery Bombshell.” P.M.—“The Caine Mutiny.” June 26—“The Birds.” June 27—“Kill the Umpire.” June 28—“Cowboy.” June 29—“Dog of Flanders.” Petite Astronaut Balloonist Afraid Of Heights SUMMER HEADGEAR Ed Powell, Campus Security chief at Texas A&M, models a hat adopted by his staff for cooler heads this summer. Powell points out a new 500-car parking lot being con structed at Aggieland. BRIDGE CLUB The Brazos Duplicate Bridge Club will meet every Wednesday at 7:20 p.m. in the Social Room of the Memorial Student Center. The club is open to anyone and no dues are required. It will cost each player 50 cents to play each night. CLUB TO MEET The Industrial Education Wives Club will meet Mon day at 8 p. m. in the Brooks Room of the YMCA. Wives of all students in the De partment of Industrial Edu cation are invited to attend. The (liurch..lor a Fuller Life..For You.. CALENDAR OF CHURCH SERVICES ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL 906 Jersey Street, So. Side of Campos Rector: William R. Oxley Asst.—Rev. Wesley Seeligrer 8:00 A.M. & 9:16 A.M. Sunday Services A&ta CHURCH OF CHRIST 8:00 & 10:00 A.M. Worship 9 :00 A.M.—Bible Study 5:15 P.M.—Young People’s Class CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School 9 :45 A.M.—Sunday Schoc 10:46 A.M.—Morning Worship 6:30 P.M.—Young People's Service caching Service ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC Sunday Masses—7:30, 9:00 and 11:00 7 :00 P.M.—Preaching Ser CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY 9 :30 A.M.—Sunday School —Sunday Service 5:16 P.M.—Young . 6 :00 P.M.—Worship 7 :15 P.M.—Aggie Class 9:30 A.M.—Tues. - Ladies Bible Class 7 :15 P.M.—Wednesday - Bible Study 11 :00 A.M. 11:00 A.M.-2 P.M. FAITH CHURCH UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 9:16 A.M.—Sunday School 10 :30 A.M.—Morning Worship 7 :30 P.M.—Evening Service ice Tues. Reading Rm. 7 :00-8 :00 P.M.—Wed., Reading Room 8 :00 P.M.—Wed. Evening Worship UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN (Missouri Synod) 0 :00 A.M.—Bible Class 1 :00 A.M.—Morning Worship 7 :30 P.M.—Wednesday Vesper UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP 305 Old Hwy. 6 S. 10 :00 A.M.—Sunday School 7 :45 P.M.—First four Sundays of each month — Fellowship Meeting. FIRST BAPTIST 9 :30 AM—Sunday School 10:45 AM 6 :10 PM 7:20 PM—Evening worsnip 6 :30 PM—Choir Practice & meetings (Wednesday) 7 :30 P.M.—Midweek Services COLLEGE HEIGHTS ASSEMBLY OF GOD 9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School 11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship 6 :30 P.M.—Young People’s Ser 7 :30 P.M.—Evening Worship Teachers’ (Wed.) A&M METHODIST 8 :30 A.M.—Morning Worship 9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School 10:55 A.M.—Morning Worship 5 :30 P.M.—-Campus & Career Class 5:30 & 6:00 P.M.—MYF Meetings A&M PRESBYTERIAN 7-9 A.M.—Sun. Breakfast - Stu. Ctr. 9 :45 A.M.—Church School 11:00 A.M.—Morning Worshii 6:00 P.M.- 7:15 P.M.- 6 :46 A.M.—Fri. Communion Service Wesley Foundation SECOND BAPTIST 710 Eisenhower 9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School 11:00 A.M.—Church Service 6 :30 P.M.—Training Union ch Service CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS 26th East and Coulter, Bryan 7 :30 P.M.—Church East ar 8 :30 A.M.—Priesthood m< 10 :00 A.M.—Sunday School r, iir eetin 6 :30 P.M.—Sacrament Meeting -Morning Worship -Sun. Single Stu. Fellowship -Wed. Student Fellowship OUR SAVIOUR’S LUTHERAN 8:16 & 10:45 A.M.—The Church at Worship 9:30 A.M.—Bible Classes For All Holy Communion—1st Sun. Ea. Mo. FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Homestead & Ennis 9:46 A.M.—Sunday School 10 :50 A.M.—Morning Worship 6:30 P.M.—Young People I’m missing from this picture. I belong right between the subjects. For the old gentleman on the right is my father . . . and the young gentleman on THE CHURCH FOR ALL. ALL FOR THE CHURCH the left is my son. But someone had to snap the picture. It was taken on a Sunday afternoon. Earlier the three of us had walked to church. And Grandpa — (you know how you come to call your own father “grandpa” after you have a son) — well. Grandpa put his hand on Jimmy’s shoulder. “You know, Jimmy,” he said, “I’ve been walking to church down this street ever since it was a cowpath. And I used to think real proud-like, when I walked your father to church, that the Lord never gave me a bigger job to do than raise my son a Christian. But I feel just as proud walkin’ by you — like all my important work isn’t done yet!" Understand why I wanted this picture? And why I call it “Unfinished Business?” The Church is the greatest factor on earth for the building of charac- on earth for the building of charac ter and good citizenship. It is a store house of spiritual values. Without a strong Church, neither democracy civilization nor civilization can survive. There are four sound reasons why every person should attend services regu larly and support the Church. They are: (1) For his own sake. (2) For nd support the Church. They his children’s sake. (3) For the sake of his community and nation. (4) For the sake of the Church itself, which needs his moral and material support. Plan to go to church regu larly ly and read your Bible daily. nfini Copyright 1966 Keister Advertising Service, Inc., Strasburg, Va. Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 • CRYSTAL Leviticus Deuteronomy Joshua 1 Kings Isaiah Ephesians Ephesians 1 18:1-5 8:5-10 22:1-6 9:1-9 2:1-4 2:1-10 5:3-10 • GIFTS <522? t <Xi2? t <232? t <22? + <322? + <512? t <xi2? + <112? + <312? + <322? t <322? t <322? | ^-uneraH ^JJo 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 The Exchange Store ‘Serving Texas Aggies” Bryan Building & Loan Association BRYAN JSZL ICE CREAM AND MILK A woman who won’t go near the rotunda railing of the fourth floor of the Academic Building at Texas A&M rode a strato spheric exploration balloon 57,- 559 feet above the earth’s sur face. Dr. Jeannette Piccard, the on ly American woman holding the Federation Aeronautique Interna tionale spherical balloon pilot’s license, admits the 50-foot aca demic building view unsettles her. The NASA consultant is visit ing A&M three weeks to instruct mentary schol teachers in the a physical science seminar for ele mentary school teachers in the Department of Education and Psychology. Course features include two- day trips to the NCAR Scienti fic Balloon Center in Palestine Monday and Tuesday and a tour of the Manned Spacecraft Center June 23-24. , “I don’t go near the railing in the rotunda,” declared the petite astronaut of 71 years. She rode the Piccard gondola with her late husband, Jean Pic card who co-signed the undersea research bathyscaph. A mascot and stowaway went also. The 150-foot long aerostat left Ford Field in Dearborn, Mich., Oct. 23, 1934, and soared through overcast skies to provide striking views of the Lake Erie cloud layer. “We saw life above 40,000 feet,” said Dr. Piccard. “A fly.” “It was inside the gondola,” smiled the energetic scientist. The other “passenger” was “Fleur de Lis,” a box turtle. The terrapin was named for markings on its France crest. The seven-foot diameter mag- back resembling the King of nesium alloy ball pressurized against cold and lack of oxygen on the 11-mile high flight was designed by the doctor’s hus band and brother, Auguste, and copied from the bathyscaph. The craft, crew, equipment, balloon, ballast, food, water and other es sentials weighed 7,139 pounds and rode a bag of 600,000 cubic feet capacity containing 100,000 cubic feet of hydrogen. “There is much less danger in ballooning than driving a car, even when the lifting gas is hy drogen,” remarked the silver- haired woman who said she mar ried into the adventure. “Professor Piccard said he chose his pilot in 1919,” laughed the personable scientist,” but I said he didn’t have anything to do with it.” She made an “A” in his course, and has since found the course book with the “very poor” notation. Piccard, trained at Bryn Mawr College and the Universities of Chicago and Minnesota, made six two-hour flights to acquire her FAI certificate, number 1082 dated July 24, 1934. She piloted the historic Piccard craft down in John Fulton’s farm near Cadiz, Ohio, about 300 miles from lift off point. “You’re part of the wind in a balloon,” the Harmon Trophy re cipient for the 1934, seven and three-quarter hour flight said, “It’s a very stable feeling. The sky became a deep purplish blue, The last sound we heard was a dog barking.” “Coming down, we opened the hatch at 10,000 feet. It was very quiet. Sounds fall away. We heard a train whistle first and agreed there are no trains on the ocean,” Piccard continued. In the cloud layer, the three- ply, rubberized cotton bag cooled and the aerostat dropped rapidly, the balloonist described. They unloaded 800 pounds of ballast- a battery by parachute, sand bags exploded free by blasting caps and lead shot — to check descent. The bag was torn by brittle autumn branches as the explorers rode into a wooded area. Craig Porter and Dan Ross were first on the site, Bill Heaford and Carl Zugh retrieved an American flag from rigging and the sheriff certified seals to their altitude recording barograph hadn’t been broken. BATTALION CLASSIFIED One day 3c pi WANT AD RATES 44 per word ional day r word eaeh additional Minimum charge—56c DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publicati Classified Display 904 per column inch each insertion FOR SALE AKC Bassett Puppies. Z 1 /-: months old, rmanent distemper shots and wormed. isse permanent d $35.00. George A1 on, after 5:00 823-1052. 323tl Registered blond Cocker pups, 846-3258. 322t4 1959 Chevrolet, 4-dr. sedan. Full power, air-conditioned, 1409 Skrivanek, 822-3572. rivanek, Electrolux Sales and Service. G. C. Wil- -iams, 1105 E. 28ih St. Bryan. Phon »23-5331. Phone 268tfn CHILD CARE Child care, all ages. Baby food fur nished. 846-8161. 257tfn Gregory’s Day Nursery—846-4006. 218tfn HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN TER, 3406 South College. State Licensed. 123-8626. Virginia D. Jones. R. N. 99tfn Opening Monday, June 6 WEE WIDDLE NURSERY 2801 2nd Street Bryan, Texas Call Marjorie E. Burkhalter, Practical 138. Will keep by day. Also open Saturday and 321tfn Nurse at 822-4138. hour or week. Sunday. FOR RENT Two bedroom brick apartment, completely furnished, central air and heat, tw from University, North Gate Ar per month. and heat, two blocks 4.-.«vth Gate Area, $110 Available June 1. 823-8181. 312tfn Large, cool bedroom, nicely furnished, ingle beds for 0 100 Main Street, C two occupants. L - L -’— Q 13-61 one College Station, 846-5544. 307tfn STATE MOTEL, rooms and kitchen, day and weekly rate, near the University, 846- 6410. 262tfn VICTORIAN APARTMENTS Midway between Bryan & A&M University • All General Electric built-ins • 1 & 2 bedrooms with 1 or 1% baths • Central heat & air • Large walk-in closets • Beautiful courtyard with swimming pool Carpets & Drape launi unf Resident manager. Apt. pes Carports & laundry facilities • Furnished or unfurnished 401 Lake Phone 822-2035 154tfn Miscellaneous For Sale TAKE soil away from carpets and upholster; shampooer $1. the Blue Lustn •y. ' Ben Franklin Variety. re way electric WORK WANTED Typing wanted. 822-0837. AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 REPORTS, THESES, DISSERTATIONS Miscellaneous Typing BARBARA ROBISON 332 Jersey Street, College Station, Tex. PHONE: 846-5832 TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED & EXCHANGED Completely Guaranteed LOWEST PRICES HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION 118 S. Bryan —Bryan— 822-6874 Typing wanted. Thesis Reasonable rates. Call 846-3320. experience. 321t5 REMODELING. REPAIR WORK AND GENERAL CONTRACTING, after 5:00 call 846-5918. DON MARABLE. 290tfn DONAHO SALES CO. 207 W. 28th 823-6666 Damaged & Unclaimed Freight, Quality Merchandise At Substantial Savings. SOSOUKS TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV All Makes - TV - Repaired 713 S. Main 822-1941 HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th 822-2819 AMALIE, ENCO, HAVOLINE, CONO CO 30c Qt. Quantity rights reserved. All filters V2 price. Every item discounted. BRYAN OIL WHSE. 805 N. College (Highway 6, N) at 19th AUTO REPAIRS All Makes Just Say: “Charge It’ Cade Motor Co. Ford Dealer Watch Repair- Jewelry Repair Diamond Senior Rings Senior Rings Refinished C. W. Varner & Sons Jewelers North Gate 846-5816 FREIGHT SALVAGE Brand Name Furniture Household Appliances Bedding Office Furniture Plumbing Fixtures damaged items restored ility by our repairs dec C & D SALVAGE CO. full 32nd & S. Tabor Streets — Bryan Owned and operated by Henry and Josephine Conaway, assisted by Birdwell. and Carl EMPLOYMENT NOTICE Designations as to sex in our Help WanM and Emploj tional an employi to the sary jyment made only (1) to indicate bona fide occu; qualifications for employment ployer regards nal icy colun bona fide :cup»' which as reasoni operation of his or enterprise, or (2) r readers to let th< ably nec» his busintsi as a convenience to our readers to let them know which poii- tions the advertiser believes would be ol more interest to on because of the work e sex than the othti involved. Such desip that cause of the work involved, buch o itions shall not be taken to indicate any advertiser intends or practices any un lawful preference, limitation, specification or discrimination in employment practice). HELP WANTED Wanted Part Time man over 21 to make in ry to complete the work, typing not required. The Battalion College credit and insurance reports Car necessary to complete the n your city, york, typing Station, Texas. Experienced T. V. and/or Radio-Phono repairman. For part or full time job. Permanent or temporary. Gil’s Radio and T. V. 2403 South College. 822-0826. 31915 Waitress Wanted: Apply in peraon al The Ramada Inn. 208tfn R.N. to work 3-11 p.m. and 11-7 am. and relief shift at Madison County Hoi- pital. Starting salary $360.00 and up. Meals provided; uniforms laundered. Con tact B. Tugger, R.N. at VI 6-6403 aft« 6 p.™. ISTtin 296tfn SPECIAL NOTICE Buy your toys and gifts from WHITE AUTO SUPPLY, College Station. CASH OR LAY-A-WAY. 846-6626. For BEST RESULTS TRY BATTALION CLASSIFIED ANN MILLER’S SALE ONE RACK Long and Short Formals Reduced to Clear ANN MILLER Bridal Shoppe 823-8405 214 Varisco Bldg. Bryan INSURE TOMORROW TODAY EUGENE RUSH earnestly solicits your call when you want to talk about life or health insurance for your family. Now in 18th year with same reliable company. PHONE: 846-5800 (Days) 846-6121 (Nights) TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main 822-6000 Havoline, Enco, Ama lie, Conoco 30c qt. Where low oil prices originate. Quantity Rights Reserved Parts Wholesale Too Filters, Oil, Air - Fuel 10,000 Parts - We Fit 96% of AH Cars - Save 25 - 40% Nylon Carpet Set $16.95 Brake Shoes $2.90 ex. (most cars) Auto trans. oil AC - Champion - Autolite plug* Tires—Low price every day — Just check our price with any other of equal quality. Your Friedrich Dealer Joe Faulk Auto Parts 220 E. 25th Bryan, Texu JOE FAULK ’32 20 years in Bryan w here Howai agricu A&M, of Dai Schola Shai Shafei journa in agr son oi Hicks. The univer man a Agrici The era! Youth Traini Mich. July i from . Compi the spi H Pa; Dr. A&M’s sented search in Yoi paper, was h group ery A; Todi lecturi nectict tion t« Thn have j lege o The; assists his Di Colora D. R. from 1 and Di with i versit; The’ the E Medici 2,: , H Co Dr. A&M on Ma terns i Spot eonferi ware tion s and de format and re is a formin ment i govern Hou the Sc ment with i and e< the co Tw Te Two are t Summi Worke versitj Rob< A&M instrut Develo Policy, Exte V. Br “Princ Ext( U. S., tries a by lam organi ] Fo: Ares sonnel for a Works Pers Collegi Allen others Collegi coord ii Robert of StUi The in the Buildi: financ Ray ] Princi] A $: pany Texas the ch