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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1966)
THE BATTALION Thursday, September 22, 1966 College Station, Texas Page 5 Religion Educator To Address Meet Members of the 21st annual Town and Country Church Con ference here Oct. 13-14 will hear a widely known religion educator discuss “The Minister Looks at Himself.” The speaker is Dr. Carl A. Clark, professor of pastoral min istry at the Southwestern Bap tist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth. The conference is sponsored by the Texas Agricultural Extension Service and the Texas Agricul tural Experiment Station, and is conducted by the Department of Agricultural Economics and So ciology. DR. CARL CLARK OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT NOW! Per Annum Paid Quarterly on INSURED SAVINGS FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION 2913 Texas Ave. NOW SHOWING Gregory Peck - In “GUNS OF NAVARONE” QUEEN DOUBLE FEATURE “WHO’S MINDING THE STORE” & ^FATHER GOOSE” NOW SHOWING “THE 10 COMMANDMENTS” CIRCLE TONIGHT 7:00 P. M. Dean Martin In “THE SILENCERS” & Frank Sinatra In “COME BLOW YOUR HORN” Danforth Grant Applications Open Students interested in Dan forth Graduate Fellowships should make inquiries with Dr. Haskell Monroe, assistant dean of the Graduate College. The fellowships, offered by the Danforth Foundation of St. Lou is, Mo., will be awarded in March. They are available to seniors or recent graduates of accredited colleges in the United States. Applicants must have a serious interest in college teaching as a career and plan to study for a doctorate. They may be single or married and less than 30 years old, but may not have taken graduate or professional study beyond the baccalaureate. Danforth Graduate Fellows are eligible for four years of finan cial assistance, with a maximum annual living stipend of $2,400 for single persons and $2,950 for married fellows, plus tuition and fees. Dependency allowances are available. Financial need is not a condi tion for consideration. Primary aim of the foundation is to strengthen education through programs of fellowships and workshops, and via grants to educational institutions and agen cies. Approximately 120 fellowships will be awarded in March, 1967. Candidates must be nominated by liaison officers of their under graduate institutions by Nov. 1. No direct applications are ac cepted. Anna Chalet Sings In Guion Tonight Singing star Anna Chalet will present a night club act at 8 p.m. in Guion Hall. The show, sponsored by the Aggie Players, will be geared specially to the members of the Cadet Corps with numbers such as “Today I Love Every Aggie.” Tickets are on sale at the Pig- gly Wiggly Supermarket and at the door for $1 with ID cards and $1.50 without. * ilHUORIM UNDIP 12 VtABS VKtt DRIVE-IN THEATRl TONIGHT 7:00 P. M. “WILD ANGELS” & “GIRL GETTERS” NOW OPEN! Aggieland Recreation Center (Located Redmond Terrace Shopping Center) COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS • 16—Regulation Billiard Tables • 2—5x10 Snooker Tables • 2—5x10 Billiard Tables —Latest Pin Ball Games Open 7 Days a Week from 8 a.m. Till Midnite LADIES WELCOME! Positively No Alcoholic Beverages Sold or Allowed! REGISTER FOR FREE LIFETIME PASS! Aggieland Recreation Center Aggie Finds Gum A Russian Luxury Chewing gum is a major trad ing item in Russia, one Aggie discovered this summer. “Kids swap you ball point pens for chewing gum,” explained Pat Rehmet of Alice, a junior civil engineering major. “Americans think they’ve made some good deals, but the kids sell the gum for 50 cents a stick and $2 a package.” REHMET SPENT almost six weeks in Poland and 10 1 days in Russia as part of the Experiment in International Living, a pro gram in which students live with families in foreign countries. “The place where I lived might be called a poverty area here,” Rehmet noted. “But it was mid dle class there. I lived with a family of five in a two-room apartment with a bath and kitch en.” The blond youth resided with a taxi driver’s family in Gdansk on the Baltic Sea and with a boy and girl of the family made a 10- day excursion to Leningrad and Moscow. “We spent four days in each city, visiting museums, cathe drals, fortresses, palaces of wed dings, summer palaces of Czars and fine art collections,” Rehmet recalled. “But we saw only what the Russians wanted us to see. “We did not see the places where people live, but we saw Lenin’s Mausoleum, the Swan Lake Ballet, and all sorts of kremlins (forts).” POLITICAL discussions with Russian youths were the order of the day and night for Rehmet. “We agreed not to get mad,” he chuckled, “but it was hard to keep tempers in check sometimes. We talked all night on the train from Leningrad back to Poland.” Heavy traffic proved no prob lem in Poland. “Cars are scarce,” Rehmet said. “There are no congested high ways. Often you can travel for hours without meeting a car. Hay-loaded carts slow traffic sometimes. “Poland has no junk yards,” he went on. “Cars are so valuable it’s never a problem to sell a used car no matter what its condition. All of them are imitations of U. S. 1949 Fords.” FRIENDLINESS of the people in Socialist countries surprised Rehmet. “The family I stayed with opened its home to me,” he noted. “They took me sight unseen. I had written them a letter and en closed a picture. The boy, my brother in the family, told me I could break the TV if I like, just to make myself at home. “But the TV was already brok en,” Rehmet smiled. “So was the radio. “The Poles will do anything for you,” he exclaimed. “An Ameri can girl told a Polish girl she liked the black dress she wore to formal parties. When the Amer ican girl got ready to go home, the Polish girl gave her the dress. And I’m sure it was the only dress of that type she owned.” REHMET, a Distinguished Stu dent, is vice chairman of the Stu dent Conference on National Af fairs, a member of the Town Hall Committee and first sergeant of Company C-2. He plans to be come a consulting engineer after completing military service. Among Rehmet’s souvenirs are political posters from Poland and Russia. He paid only five or 10 cents each for a variety of posters which are invaluable conversation pieces for his dormitory room. TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED & EXCHANGED Completely Guaranteed LOWEST PRICES HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION 118 S. Bryan —Bryan— 822-6874 With $2.50 or More Purchase Gillette - SHAVE BOMBS Large Size 98^ Value DOUBLE STAMPS ON TUESDAY With $2.50 Purchase California, Flame Tokay rito ynr.M SPECIALS FOR: THURS., FRL, SAT. SEPT. 22, 23, 24. G rapes 2 5 c c M G A R 5 39 TURNIPS r,l K a Lb 9c CORN Fancy, Golden Bantum 4 Ears 29C Green Giant, Niblet CORN 2 - 12-Oz. 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