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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 18, 1966)
THE BATTALION Tuesday, October 18, 1966 Page 6 College Station, Texas MtnkoAr) Supplu fCdu/UL flf f»C*n«9«Af«*5(3NDO«i»c drive a’67 .. datsun then decide THE COMPLETE SPORTS CAR! 96 h.p. All-synchro 4-speed. Ready to go —all you add is tuni £2546 j DEL. SPORTS COUPE Stubblefield’s Imported Cars 3219 Texas Ave. Phone 823-3428 — Ni«rht 846-3605 1 1 DON’T DON’T DON'T MIND MIND MIND EITHER : ■■ ;V', ; , WENDELL HOUSLEY ON SHORT GAINER Housley drives through TCU defenders for more Aggie yardage Saturday. PARDNER You’ll Always Win The Showdown When You Get Your Duds Done At CAMPUS CLEANERS JaI meeting of the don’t minds If you don’t mind having all the details of planning a banquet or convention taken care of for you, call Ramada Inn. We’ll make sure your meeting is trouble-free . . . no matter what size your group! Try our fast, friendly breakfast and luncheon service. RAMADA INN Wrestling Club To Organize Wednesday In G. Rollie White Bryan-College Station 846-8811 EGA PRESIDENT KEN LAMKIN Invites all A&M athletes to meeting. Aggie FCA Huddle To Meet Tonight The Texas A&M Huddle of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes will host a special meeting tonight in the A&M All-Faiths Chapel at 8:30 p.m. Texas A&M’s intercollegiate wrestling team will hold its first meeting of the year Wednesday afternoon at 5 p.m. in the wrestl ing room on the second floor of G. Rollie White Coliseum. The meeting will be primarily for organizing the club for this year. Work-out schedules and plans for future matches will also be discussed. Last year the club was unde feated in four matches. Club president Tommy Ward said that if enough interested persons are present for the meet ing, this season’s schedule will be expanded to more schools, in cluding Southwest Conference teams and tournaments. Team membership is voluntary, but members receive no Univer sity assistance, since wrestling is not a varsity sport. The team is organized as a club and is part of the Memorial Student Center Club program. Texas A&M University is the largest of the nation’s seven mili tary colleges and produces more reserve officers for the Army and Air Force than any other insti tution. A&M Huddle President Ken Lamkin said that the meeting is open to all area high school athletes, coaches and anybody else interested in the fellowship. Aggie Huddle members are all urged to attend the meeting — this includes members of all sports. The meet ing is being sponsored by the Aggie Huddle with hopes of helping area high schools start their own huddles. Mike Mistovich of Bryan Radio Station KORA will be the speaker for the meeting. Aggie Football Coach Gene Stallings and Barney Welch will also give short talks. SHAKESPEARE IS EASIER ...when you let Cliff’s Notes beyourguidt Cliff’s Notes explain all the frequently assigned Shakespearean plays and ovs 125 other major novels and classics,Ft each work you get an expert scene-by-scen or chapter-by-chapter summary and chai acter analysis. In minutes your understand ing will increase. Use Cliff’s Notes to eat? better grades in all your literature courses HERE’S EXAM HELP! Cliffs Notes "How To Take An Essay & amination" will prepare you for coming rjrj college examinations. ONLY $ 1 GET 'EM HERE SHAFFER’S UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE “The FCA helps us to be better Christians,” Lamkin explained. Lamkin added the FCA helps “strengthen our athletic life.” A&M’s Huddle has been active since its origin last January, with as many as 72 members present for one meeting. The huddle now meets once a week and is open to members and participants of all sports. Jack Pyburn and Jerry Campbell are the vice-presidents, Dan Wester- field is secretary and Joe Weiss is treasurer. This is Russ Kennedy of Balboa Island, California, on an in-port field trip as a student aboard Chapman College’s floating campus. The note he paused to make as fellow students went ahead to inspect Hatshepsut’s Tomb in the Valley of the Kings near Luxor, he used to complete an assignment for his Comparative World Cultures professor. Russ transferred the 12 units earned during the study-travel semester at sea to his record at the University of California at Irvine where he continues studies toward a teaching career in life sciences. As you read this, 450 other students have begun the fall semester voyage of discovery with Chapman aboard the s.s. RYNDAM, for which Holland-America Line acts as General Passenger Agents. In February still another 450 will embark from Los Angeles for the spring 1967 semester, this time bound for the Panama Canal, Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina, Nigeria, Senegal, Morocco, Spain, Portugal, The Netherlands, Denmark, Great Britain and New York. For a catalog describing how you can include a semester at sea in your educational plans, fill in the information below and mail. Does water pollution bug you? Or smog? Does it concern you that some places in the country never have enough teachers? Or nurses? And when you read about the growing pains of a developing na tion, do you wish you could do something? You can. Thousands of General Electric people are helping to solve the problems of a growing, changing world. Generating more (and cheaper) electricity with nuclear reactors. Controlling smog in our cities and pollution in our streams. Using electronics to bring the teaching skills of an expert into many classrooms at once, the trained eyes of a nurse into many hospital rooms at once. If you’re not content with the world as it is . . . and if you have the brains, imagination and drive to help build a better one, we’d like to talk to you. See the man from G.E. during his next campus visit. Come to General Electric, where the young men are important men. Tfygress fs Our Most Important T^ocfuct GENERAL^ ELECTRIC S F Th Aggi Sel week point Presi over ical s Se< set S Univ comn candi offici Fr will < ists. for a 28-30 by th Cher Fii Towr Four Yell and will honoi day. Arka night ward Centi Su servi lowec girls. T A Ja: lege Texa ferer Tuesi Ot are < Colle Coop Ford treas Wha parli Th was winn Ot Net Pre pre; Cisi mei A ii T othe men stuc 0 zati cam pre: the spri dire pris IV assi tha 1 the to stu< han eve: Mis the use 1 HALLMARK GREETING CARDS and FLOWERS for ALL OCCASIONS We Specialize In All Types Of MUMS & CORSAGES Send Flowers FTD For Out Of Town Orders at —'^gaieiancl ^’lower Six ower North Gate - 846-5825 op I 5% tifi