B£ WOR Mr IOOD &E THREE BIG DAYS - THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SEPT. 1-2-3 FRYERS U. S. D. A. GRADE “A” Whole Only Lb. Cut and Boxed FRYER S- 33c BREASTS Lb . 65c THIGHS AND DRUMSTICKS L b 55c BEEF STEAKS CANNED HAMS RED-T-CUT Package of 10 $1*00 n $2.99 RATH LITTLE SIZZLERS HORMEL ^ 59c BOLOGNA 55 c I WIENERS 12-Oz. Pkgr. rjpg^ SHURFINE OLIVES y 4 -ub. Box FOOD 10-oz. KING Jar SAUSAGE LIBBV ’ S VIENNA. 5 4-oz. Cans MUSTARD FRENCH Cl 6-oz. ** jars AFFILIATED FILLER PAPER 57c 500 Count Package Briquets ENERGY CHARCOAL LB. BAG Rath Blackhawk BACON 79c SLICED 1-Lb. Pkg. LARGE EGGS CACKLEBERRY GRADE “A” Per Doz. PAPER PLATES COLD CUPS BONDWARE .ccou-u Package 69c | NAPKINS SOFLIN Tkf 25c 19 02 $1.00 SHURFINE TOMATO BONDWARE 9-oz. size 25-count package 33c CAKE MIXES SHUBF1NE 4 Boxes PORK & BEANS SHURFINE 300 Can CATSUP STRAWBERRIES r“ in * . 4 ATa $1.00 ORANGE JUICE DINNERS Minute Maid Frozen 3 Cana 69c PATIO FROZEN BEEF ENCHILADA. 2 "r 69c Chunk Tuna ^ No. »/ 2 ^ Cans ■ STAR-KIST 14-Oz. Bottles ICE CREAM HUNT’S FRUIT A. F. BRAND jm V2 ctn.' 49' DENTAL CREAM... CuCKTM. COLGATE HAIR SPRAY ... 59c Size STYLE REG. or SUPER 75c Size PRUNES WASH1NGT0N 2 DELICIOUS APPLES 2 SWEET POTATOES 2 Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. FRESH CORN CELERY FULL EARS Full Ears FRESH, CRISP PASCAL Stalk 300 CAN EMONS CALIFORNIA “SUNKIST” FRESH, CRISP — ICEBERG LETTUCE Head DRINK REFRESHING —COUPON— 100 FREE S&H GREEN STAMPS With This Coupon And The Purchase Of COCA COLA $10.00 or More (LIMIT ONE PER PERSON) MUST BE ONE PURCHASE (Cigrarettes Excluded) LIMIT 1 WITH $2.50 PURCHASE or MORE (Excluding Cigarettes) BOTTLE CARTON ORRS Coupon Expires Sept. 3, 1966 QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED ORR’S SUPER MARKETS WILL BE CLOSED LABOR DAY - - MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5TH We Give Jbfti Green Stamps 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS Downtown Ridgecrest 200 E 24 Street % 3516 Texas Ave THE BATTALION 'Page 6 College Station, Texas Thursday, September 1, 1966 Briefs... THE £ (Continued from page 5) pected for the event, announced Dr. Lee J. Martin, associate dean of liberal arts. Arkansas, Ari. zona, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas will send representatives, though attend, ance from national centers is anticipated. An interdisciplinary function, the conference will serve scholars working with computers in litera ture, political science, music, archaeology and other humani. ties, indicated Milton A. Huggett, A&M humanities research center director. The Ramada Inn-headquartered program will include sections on stylistic, content and structural analysis and information re- trieval, among other topics. Tke Data Processing Center will demonstrate computer problems, “We are delighted IBM chose A&M for the first conference in the Southwest,” Martin com mented. “People in the Southwest are doing computer research in the humanities,” added Huggett, “They want guidance that will be offered by this conference." Chile Conference Hosts Oceanographers ticipate in a Symposium on Ant arctic Oceanography in Santiago, Chile, Sept. 13-16. Drs. Dale Leipper and Luis Capurro will attend business meetings of Scientific Committees on Antarctic Research (SCAR) and Oceanographic Research (SCOR), sponsoring agencies of the symposium. Dr. Sayed Z. El-Sayed will present an invited paper, “Pros pects of Productivity Investiga tion in Antarctic Waters." A treatise titled “Measurement of Ocean Currents” will be given by Capt. Capurro, who will be on cruise at the time. He will attend a SCOR meeting following the symposium. Leipper, head of the A&M dele gation, is the U. S. member of an oceanographic committee of SCAR. ‘The symposium will involve itself with planning and what we hope to do in the Antarctic in the next 10 years,” El-Sayed said, Uggy, Dowell Joins PE Faculty Dr. Linus J. Dowell, formerly of Arkansas State College, has joined the Texas A&M faculty as associate professor of Health and Physical Education. Dowell, chairman of the De partment of Health, Physical Education and Recreation at Ar kansas State since 1959, taught at the University of Missouri, U. S. Naval Preparatory School and was education officer aboard the USS Navasota. Dowell earned Ed.D. and M.Ed. degrees from Missouri and a bachelor’s degree from Northeast Missouri State Teachers College. A veteran, he served five years as an officer in the U. S. Navy. Dowell is married and the father of two boys and a girl. The new staffer has published in the “Scholastic Coach,” “Phy sical Educator,” “Arkansas Jour nal for Health, Physical Educa tion and Recreation,” and “Re search Quarterly.” Active in professional organi zations, Dowell is 1966 president of the Arkansas Association for Health, Physical Education and Recreation. WILD TURKEY CHARGE WILLOW SPRINGS, Mo.W- Bob White had no more than sounded his turkey call when a big tim headed toward him over the hill about 100 feet away, coming lickety split. White said the bird's onrush caught him unprepared. The wild gobbler thundered by so fast and so close the hunter’s turkey call went one way and his gun the other. “I was five minutes finding WJ turkey call in the brush,” White said. “That doggine tom must've expectei How t doesn’t [count is luring o That's trum of eign Sti Melcher sists mo 55 coun- fess, ho and reli The f ho takes hanistar sloped i°b, am includin Melch heard some hen, and he was going to beat all the other birds there.” BATTLE OF BULGING FILE CABINET PITTSBURGH GP) — Compan ies have a tough problem shall they retain or destroy their mountains of records? Executives of Rockwell Manu facturing Company here found that the only way to control the storage of paperwork — of more than 350 different forms — waste issue more forms. The new forms systematize the transfer, reten tion and destruction of company records. Today, the company keeps only 6 per cent of its records. Fifteen years ago it kept 68 per cent. with er tional s The s Peakin A&M’s from 1 rumpus growth “A&J | grams 1 the woi hty, va are ke; cultural farming growinj r anchin her in an are. to any “We these s