The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 10, 1966, Image 7
THE BATTALION Page 6 College Station, Texas Thursday, November 10, 1966 Texas Indians Are Remains Of Once-Flourishing Culture History tells us that the first Indians arrived on this continent at least 12,000 years ago. This was ten thousand years before the Crucifixion of Christ and the beginning of Christian history— thousands of years before the great empires of Greece and Rome. Our own Nation is several years short of two hundred years old. When white men first came to America, Indians were divided into eight great Nations stretch ing the length and breadth of the land. These Nations were di- CIVILIAN SENIORS Will have their portrait made for the Ag-gieland ’67 November 16 - January 15 Portraits will be made at the University Studio (coat and tie). ATTENTION ALL CLUBS ! ! ! Athletic, Hometown, Pro fessional, and Campus Or ganizations. Pictures for the club sections of the Aggieland are now being scheduled at the Student Publi cations Office, Y.M.C.A. Build ing. OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT NOW! % 5 Per Annum Paid Quarterly on INSURED SAVINGS AT FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION 2913 Texas Ave. ■m AGGIELAND 1967 OUTFIT PICTURES Uniform will be Class A Winter. Outfit C.O.’s will wear sabers; seniors will wear boots and mid night shirts. Guidons and award flags will be carried. ALL per sonnel in the outfit will wear the billed service cap issued by the University. The type of cap worn by underclassmen to and from the picture - taking area is left up to the discretion of the outfit C. O. Outfits should be in front of the Administration Building by 1230 hours on the appointed day. Arrangements should be made by first sergeants with the Mess Hall supervisors to allow the outfit to be admitted to the Mess Hall early. November 7 E2 & F2 8 G2 & H2 9 A1 & BJ 10 Cl & Dl 14 El & FI 16 G1 & HI CORPS SENIORS & 1ST SERGEANTS YEARBOOK PORTRAIT SCHEDULE Corps seniors and outfit first sergeants will have their por trait made for the AGGIELAND ’67 according to the following schedule. Portraits will be made at the University Studio in Class A Winter uniform. Executive officers and first sergeants will also have por traits made in GH caps for the military section. Commanding officers will have full length portraits made in boots. PLEASE MAKE IN DIVIDUAL APPOINTMENTS WITH THE STUDIO FOR THESE FULL LENGTH POR TRAITS. CO’s full length pic ture unfirm is midnight shirt. Sqds. 10-14 3 & 7 Co. Al-Dl 7 & 8 El-Hl- 8 & 9 A2-D2 9 & 10 E2-H2 10 & 14 Make-ups — Nov. 15 - 23 OATSUNI "then decided THE COMPLETE SPORTS CAR! 96j h.p. All-synchro 4-speecJ. Ready tty go —all you add is fun/ . gtntzAC 1 $2546 del. Stubblefield’s Imported Cars 3219 Texas Am Phone 823-6428 — Ni*ht 846-3W5 vided into Tribes and Sub-Tribes. The Tribes and Sub-Tribes were divided into Villages. Our pres ent government of cities, coun ties, states, and union are based upon the very principles prac ticed by the Indians. The Alabama and Coushatta Tribes which reside on Texas’ only Indian Reservation are of Muskogean stock and they are from the Creek Nation. These only remaining Texas tribes trav eled through several southern states and settled at Peach Tree Village in Tyler County, just a few miles from their present lo cation, in the year 1816. The Texas Indian Reservation is nestled among the stately pines and Autumn clad hard woods of the Big Thicket. It is located 17 miles East of Living ston, Texas on U.S. Highway 190 and is open to the public on weekends through November with Historical Tours, Tribal Dances, Museum, Dining Room and many interesting activities. Horsemen Discuss Ethics At Annual Short Course who has a winning record and wht i- has cattle for the horse to wort with. If a horse has promise it should begin to look sharp after about 10 days of training. If not,; then get another horse. GEORGE R. HARTSOCK Hartsock Heads Laundry Service Rice (Continued From Page 1) and Cardon bleu. Trader Vic’s Shamrock Hilton Hotel, a world renowned restau rant with famed Polynesian foods. NIGHTSPOTS The nightspots in Houston shine with much live entertain ment and active, high-spirited crowds. Act III Au Go Go Club, 6663 Main. A live band and Go-Go girls make this public nightclub extremely popular with a modern dancing crowd. Van’s Ballroom, 2020 Kipling, one block off S. Shepherd, fea tures top local talent and big name performers, with a live band, driving beats and loud music. Other nightspots for the Go Go crowd include the Dome Sha dows, 9218 Buffalo Speedway, and the Green Dragon, 6219 Grand Blvd. Levee, 6050 Richmond, is one of Houston’s most frequented nightspots for folk music appreci ation. Esquire Ballroom, 11410 Hemp stead Highway. The place in Houston for big name country and western entertainment and dancing. George R. Hartsock has been appointed laundry manager at Texas A&M University, an nounced Howard L. Vestal, direc tor of auxiliary services. Hartsock, dry cleaning super intendent of Fabric Care Service in Bryan since 1955, will super vise a 70-person operation that launders clothes from A&M’s 10,- 500 students. He has been in the business 19 years. The Springfield, Mo., native replaces J. H. Kingcaid who re tired last month. Hartsock, 43, received a bache lor degree in business adminis tration at Southwest Missouri State in 1947 and managed dry cleaning and laundry plants in Louisiana the next eight years. He served in the Air Force in World War II, completing duty as a staff sergeant. Hartsock and his wife, Jean- nett, reside at 1603 Burt Street. Their daughter, Janet, is a ste nographer in the Memorial Stu dent Center director’s office. A panel of prominent horsemen discussed the delicate subject of ethics here this week and gen erally agreed that every effort should be made to please the cus tomer. About 100 persons attending Texas A&M University’s sixth an nual Horse Short Course heard the stockmen talk on such rela tionships as stud manager and mare owner, owner and trainer, and buyer and seller. L. M. Pearce, president of the Houston Livestock Show, said that in a stud manager and mare own er transaction the mare should be veterinarian-checked to see if she is in suitable breeding con dition. Lester Goodson of Houston, past president of the American Quarter Horse Association, said it is the obligation of the stud manager to see that mares receive proper care and feed while on the stud owner’s place. JAY PUMPHREY, trustee and general manager of Burnett Estates of Fort Worth, cautioned stud managers against taking too many mares for facilities to han dle. The president of the American Quarter Horse Association, Dusty Rhoades of Odessa, said mare owners should have a goal in mind and to a stallion that is most likely to produce the desired type colt. In a buyer and seller relation ship, Pearce urged prospective buyers to ask questions and then have the seller ride the animal so that the buyer can observe the action. Then the buyer should ride the animal himself. NDEA Institute To Instruct 40 School Teachers Here An NDEA Institute in History will instruct 40 secondary school teachers at Texas A&M Univers ity next summer, announced Lib eral Arts Dean Frank W. R. Hubert. A $51,199 National Defense Education Act grant will support the graduate history program focusing on the United States in perspective since 1933, Dr. J. M. Nance, institute consultant and History Department head, said. The 40 secondary school history teachers will have a minimum of three years teaching experience in grades nine through 12. “Many of today’s history teach ers must instruct United States and world history,” Dr. Nance noted. “Since recent U. S. history cannot be taught out of world con text, the institute will concentrate on domestic and foreign aspects of the period.” Dr. Allan C. Ashcraft, associ ate professor of history, will direct the institute. The faculty will include Garland E. Bayliss, associate director; Dr. Claude H. Hall and Dr. Herbert H. Lang of the department. Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll BELL SYSTEM Recruiting Team On Campus November 16,17 &18 Wednesday, Thursday and Friday Representing Sou th western Bell ’ Technical and non-technical students, particularly those seeking management and administrative assignments — E.E.; M.E.; I.E.; C.E.; Math-Physics; Physics-Math; Bachelor’s or Master’s in Economics, Accounting, and General Business. Location: South Texas principally. Bell Laboratories Research and Development — B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. candidates. Emphasizing E.E.; M.E.; Physics; Engineer ing Mechanics and Mathematical Sciences. Locations: New York and New Jersey vicinity. Long Lines Bachelor’s and Master’s candidates — Electrical, Mechanical, Civil, Industrial Engineering candidates with broad interests in economic and management problems. Business Administration gradu ates who "have interests in’science and technology. Locations: Mid-West states initially. Sandia Corporation Master’s Degree in Mathematics, Electrical and Mechanical Engineering^ Bachelor’s candidates of out standing scholarship in Engineering considered for technical development program. Bachelor’s and Master’s in Business Administration and Accounting. Location: Albuquerque, New Mexico Western Electric All Engineering disciplines needed to fill Technical “Engineering positions in design, product, systems, military, research and mainagefSiift iMni&g. Positions for nontechnical graduates are in purchasing, accounting, manufacturing, merchandising, manage ment training. Locations: Southwest—Mid-West—Eastern and Northern states. s : . WtiCHE > EMPL0YER Goodson added that some trou ble stems from the buyer not knowing exactly what he wants in a horse. Pumphrey suggested that the seller always put a “rea listic” price on the animal. “IF AN ANIMAL turns up with a fault after the sale, the fault was probably there before the sale, then make a generous ad justment if you want return bus iness,” Pumphrey said. Marion Flynt of Midland, pres ident of the National Cutting Horse Association, said the buyer should never buy sight unseen. The seller should never misrepre sent a horse by failing to tell about its peculiarities or blem ishes. Other panel members were Jim Wales of Refugio, secretary, Texas Appaloosa Horse Club; Dr. Charles McDonalad of Rosenberg, equine veterinarian; Howard Mil ler with Harding and Harding Livestock Insurance of Fort Worth; Tom McNair of Spring, Glennlock Arabian Farm trainer; John Dublin, San Angelo Quarter Horse breeder; Buster Welch of Sweetwater, cutting horse train er and instructor; and Ted Wells, Fort Worth race horse trainer. DR. O. D. BUTLER, head of the A&M Animal Science Depart ment, predicted that the horse is certain to find increasing import ance in Texas and the nation. “Would you believe 10 percent annual increase in the Texas horse population for the next 10 years?” he asked. “This is predicted, based on continuing prosperity, shorter work week, and a stronger trend toward out door exercises for health as well as wholesome recreation pur poses.” Butler added that Texas horses average about $200 per head and the value of all horses in the state is now estimated at $100 million. MmlctArl Supply ‘PCoLu/te. piaMcfcd- 923 SaCol lag# Avt-Bryan,ToCas ^elch also gave a talk sprinkl ed with pointers on developing a good cutting horse. He said owners of prospective cutting horses should take the animal to a proven trainer — one TAXI Phone 846-6777 College Station Cab Co. WOOL OVERSEAS CAPS Now At LOUPOTS E GLASS COMPANY AUTO — HOME — COMMERCIAL “Our 20th Year” Downtown Bryan 28th & Main 822-1577 WHATABURGER 1101 S. 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