The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 16, 1966, Image 7

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    1, and
by Of.
5 Uni.
E Graduates
et Top Info
Building
luclear engineering graduate
I ients at Texas A&M are get-
; first-hand information on
struction of nuclear reactors,
ey observe the daily progress
struction of A&M’s $6 million
lotron and make inspection
■is to other installations.
| ,n A&M group headed by Dr.
H. Kohler inspected the South-
t Experimental Fast Oxide
ictor under construction near
retteville, Ark.
[ohler, assistant professor of
tear engineering, heads a re-
rch project sponsored by
M’s Engineering Experiment
tion and the Research Coun-
to investigate economics and
sty of the reactors,
e trip was arranged by W.
Brandon, industrial develop-
it counselor of the Southwes-
Electric Power Company of
etteville.
'r. Robert G. Cochran, A&M
srtment of Nuclear Engineer-
head, said SEFOR is a joint
5 million project of the South-
t Atomic Enerby Associates, a
up of 17 investor-owned uti
ls; General Electric Com-
y; and the Gesellschaft fur
irforschung, Karlsruhe, Ger-
ly, partially supported by
RATOM, the atomic energy
hoy of the common market
stries in Europe.
These most advanced reactors
iduled for operation today,”
hran commented, “will event-
y satisfy energy needs of
United States and the world
thousands of years. Within
tears, it will become more and
e apparent that available or-
ic fuel resources such as pe-
lum, natural gas and coal
much too valuable to the
mical industry to be burned
large electricity producing
ter plants.”
[ohler said the SEFOR Re-
)r will produce 20 million
its of thermal power,
iccompanying Kohler were K.
Ahmed, G. H. W. Behrendt,
W. Garrard Jr., M. C. Phim-
r, N. B. Poulsen and C. J.
ffley.
t faiccArl Supply
Wu/ie ptoMuet-
!3 So. College Avc- Bryan T«C*f
33c
37c
35c
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11.59
63c
37c
17c
39c
49c
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69c
49c
59c
89c
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I
PARDNKK
You’ll Always Win
The Showdown
When You Gel
Your Duds Done
At
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
la-de-da
snooty affairs
our specialty!
ladies love meeting at Ramada
Inn! Fancy banquets, Club get-
togethers and Luncheons are just
more fun! Hold your next femme
test at Ramada . .. whether lav
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strained. At Ramada it’s no secret:
we love ladies!
Try our fast, friendly
breakfast and luncheon
service.
RAMADA INN
Bryan - College Station
846-8811
Dream Comes True
For A&M ‘Fish’
USDA HONORS VETERINARIAN
Dr. Fred D. Maurer, left, associate dean of the Texas A&M
College of Veterinary Medicine, receives a certificate from
the U. S. Department of Agriculture in recognition of “Out
standing Contributions to the Training of Veterinarians
in the Diagnosis of Foreign Animal Diseases.” Dr. John L.
Wilbur of Austin, veterinarian in charge of animal disease
eradication and animal inspection and quarantine for the
USDA in Texas, makes the presentation. Maurer has
studied animal disease in foreign countries and now heads
A&M’s Institute of Tropical Veterinary Medicine.
A Bucket-Seat Brigade
Car-loving freshmen will ap
preciate a light-hearted education
plan outlined by a Texas A&M
official.
“Drive-in schooling may be the
answer for these youngsters,”
jokes Auston O. Kerley (cq),
A&M’s Counseling and Testing
Center director.
“A massive drive-in campus
would be ideal for the four-on-
the-floor set,” he suggested. Pro
fessors could make assignments
via radio: ‘Car 47, answer ques
tion number 5.’ ”
“For lunch, students could
order from the snack bar or
wheel down to Aunt Susie’s
Drive-In,” Kerley went on.
“Dormitories could be replaced
with motels,” he chortled. “And
football stadiums could be dug
deeper to accommodate multiple
tiers for drive-in seating.”
“These students might be called
the bucket-seat brigade,” Kerley
remarked.
A dream of many years is com
ing true for freshmen at Texas
A&M.
Freshmen entering A&M this
fall will have only to pick up
room keys to be bonafide stu
dents.
President Earl Rudder suggest
ed a streamlined counseling, test
ing and registration program
sure to bring genuine smiles to
faces of 2,500 entering freshmeh.
Upperclassmen reap dividends
from the freshmen’s good for
tune. Their registration prob
lems are lightened. Seventeen
two-day summer conferences will
host approximately 150 students
each. Placement tests, orienta
tion, measurements for Army or
Air Force ROTC uniforms, dorm
itory assignments, conferences
with deans and department heads,
and registration for classes are
facets of conference.
During the confabs, students
may pay registration fees or
make arrangements for lated pay
ment. Books may be purchased
or reserved.
All conferences are directed by
A&M’s Counseling and Testing
Center. Placement tests indicate
aptitude, achievement and per
sonal interest.
At the same time entering
freshmen are taking tests, their
parents receive informal orienta
tion about the university.
Questions are fired in gattling
gun rapidity by parents:
“What time are early classes?”
“Who’s going to get the boys
up as their mothers have for
years ?”
“What does GPR (grade point
ratio) mean?”
“When my 17-year-old son be
comes 18, does he have to make
special arrangements to register
with his draft board?”
“How many class cuts are
freshmen allowed?
“Does a freshman need a car?”
“Do boys in the Corps have to
wear their uniforms off cam
pus?”
The questions are seemingly
endless. Counseling and Testing
Center Director Auston Kerley
usually comes up with a suitable
answer. If he is stymied, he re
fers the query to a dean.
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Crowe
of San Augustine termed the
orientation and early registration
“wonderful”. Their 18-year-old
son, James, was a graduation
present for them when Crowe
was graduated from A&M in
1948. James plans to study
electrical engineering.
Wilbur Swanson, whose son
Delbur (cq) will pursue an agri
cultural economics major this fall,
said the orientation far exceeds
his in 1934.
“They dumped us off the train
like rats out of a sack,” he re
called. “I was here four nights
before I found out which dorm I
was to live in.” The El Campo
farmer-rancher’s remarks were
echoed by Mrs. Swanson. “These
boys get around,” she noted.
“They know where they are and
what’s going on.”
Byron Douglas Myer, only child
of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Meyer
of Houston, will study chemical
engineering.
“We’re real pleased that the
boys get a chance to get a feel
of the campus,” Mrs. Meyer com
mented. “Douglas is thrilled to
be an Aggie. His uncle, a 1949
graduate, has brainwashed him.
And my husband is an honorary
member of the Houston A&M
Club.”
Roy Masterson of Dallas,
a manufacturer’s representative
who travels six states, pointed
son Ronald toward pre-medical
study at Aggieland.
Dr. C. H. Ransdell, assistant
dean of engineering, sums up the
university’s attitude about A&M:
“The best thing we have here is
that boy.”
THE BATTALION
Thursday, June 16, 1966 College Station, Texas Page 7
HAPPY ‘FISH’
Reag-an George, center, who will be a freshman this fall at
Texas A&M, reviews orientation materials with his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. George, 5251 Poinciana
Houston. The Houston Waltrip High School graduate will
pursue pre-medical studies at Aggieland. Reagan completed
early registration this week. He needs only to pick up a
room key to be a full-fledged Aggie.
Sarge's
RECREATION
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next door to Campus Theatre
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