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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 17, 1966)
THE BATTALION Page 2 College Station, Texas Thursday, November 17, 1966 CADET SLOUCH ‘Of course it’s appropriate! It’s for John Heffner, th’ cross country champion!” - ■ I li; E GLASS COMPANY AUTO — HOME — COMMERCIAL “Our 20th Year” Downtown Bryan 28th & Main 822-1577 CASA CHAPULTEPEC BIG 4 DAY SALE—THURS., FRI., SAT. & SUN. Fiesta Dinner Guacamole Salad, Beef Taco, Two Enchiladas, Tamale and Chili, Beans, Rice, Tortillas and Hot Sauce, Candy. R ^r $i.o9 ENCHILADA DINNER THREE Cheese Enchiladas with Chili, Beans, Rice, Tortillas and Hot Sauce, Candy. Regular $1.25 99c OPEN 11:00 A. M. CLOSE 10:00 P. M. 1315 COLLEGE AVENUE PHONE 822-4217 WRESTLING LAKEVIEW CLUB Tabor Road THUR. NOV. 17 THREE OPENING MATCHES MAIN EVENT SIX MAN TAG TEAM MATCH El Tejano Jesse Alba Julian Salazar versus Richard Kuhrt El Hurracan Johnny Redd STUDENT PRICE: GENERAL ADMISSION — 90? Ringside $2.00 — General Admission $1.25 Conference On Chemistry Here Friday Educators from all over the nation are scheduled to attend a conference on trends in teaching general chemistry at Texas A&M University Friday and Saturday. The conference is jointly spon sored by the Advisory Council on College Chemistry and A&M. Among the outstanding chem istry teachers participating in the conference are Drs. William B. Cook, arts and science dean at Colorado State University; R. C. Brasted, University of Minne sota; Harry B. Gray, Cal Tech; R. J. Kokes, Johns Hopkins Uni versity; Professors A. E. Mar- tell, head of A&iM’s chemistry department, and R. M. Hedges, associate professor of chemistry at A&M. Dr. Cook is executive director of the council. A. F. Isbell is on a one-year leave of absence from the A&M department to serve as the coun cil’s senior staff associate. A&M Science Dean Clarence Zener will speak at a conference dinner Friday. The two-day conference will have seminars and discussion groups on general chemistry teaching aids, freshman chemis try laboratory, curriculum course content, honors programs and spe cial problems of large classes. SCONA (Continued From Page 1) “The Changing Satellites” at 8 p.m. Dec. 9. Wilson is head of the Washing ton Bureau of Cowles Publica tions, serving the Des Moines Register, the Minneapolis Tri bune, LOOK Magazine and other Cowles-owned publications. His nationally-syndicated newspaper column appears in the Washing ton Star and other large newspa pers, including the Dallas Morn ing News. Wilson has been awarded the Pulitzer Prize in journalism for distinguished reporting of na tional affairs; the distinguished service award for Washington correspondence by Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fra ternity; the award of the Head liners Club for o u t s t a n d i n g achievement in magazine news presentation; and was cited by the Raymond Clapper Memorial Association for “brilliant and re peatedly exclusive reporting.” Horner, a former U. S. diplo mat in Europe, will speak on Western Europe’s Soviet satellite countries. He has served with the State Department in Russia, Bulgaria, Turkey and France. He is presently assigned as a State Department Senior Fellow at Tu- lane University. Other sessions in the confer ence include round-table discus- cussions to be led by 12 co- chairmen, including British con sul-general Gerald Simpson, French consul-general Yves Rod rigues and Gen. Robert J. Smith of the U. S. Air Force Academy. THE BATTALION Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the student writers only. The Battalion is a non tax-supported non profit, self-supporting educational enter prise edited and operated by students as a university and community neiuspaper. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for lication of all news dispatches credited to it or ted in the d herein. lerein Second-Clasi repubiication or an news dispatches cr otherwise credited in the paper and local origin published herei latter herein are all reserved, postage pa paper and local news Rights of republicati er •id spontaneou of all othe at College Station, Texas. Members of the Student Publications Board are: Jim Undsey, chairman ; Dr. David Bowers, College of Liberal Arts ; John D. Cochrane, College of Geosciences ; Dr. Frank A McDonald. College of Science; Charles A. Rodenberger, College of Engineering; Dr. Robert S. Titus, College of Vet erinary Medicine ; and Dr. Page W. Morgan, College of Agricul ture. Battalion, News contributions may be made by telephoning 846-6618 or 846-4910 or at the editorial office. Room 4, YMCA Building. For advertising or delivery call 846-6415. Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester; $6 pei ar; $6.50 per full year. All subscriptions subject sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA Building, College Station, Texas yea sal school to 2% 77843. The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A&M is published in College Station, Texas daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods, September through May, and once a week during summer school. MEMBER The Associated Press, Texas Press Association Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Publisher Texas A&M University Student Editor Winston Green Jr. Managing Editor ' John Fuller Staff Writers Patricia Hill, Mike Plake, Robert Borders, Jerry Grisham Head Sports Writer — Gary Sherer Staff Photographer .... Russell Autrey The Ugly Russian by Victor Lasky is now available at The World Of Books Shoppe - Bryan 823-8266 BEVERLEY BRALEY...Tours-Travel 4 BEVERLEY B offers to all students and members of the faculty and staff the following- travel service: y ' ! f 1. Special Student Rate Airline Tickets tf! 2. Airline Reservations and ticketing 3. Car rental and purchase, domestic and international 3c 4. Independent and group travel c 5. Steamship and group travel 6. Charter Airline and Bus Quotations Available 7. Laboid Limousine Service-A Personalized Service to and From: Austin - $20.00, Houston - $20.00, Dallas - $30.00 Per Limousine Basis, One-Way “Need Airline Tickets? Call us and Charge it”. We offer a 30 day Open Charge Account to all members of the Faculty and Staff. BONDED ASTA AGENT Memorial Student Center 846-7744 Bonfire — Great Symbol Of Pride Of Aggieland By Patricia Anne Hill The Bonfire is more than a big roaring fire. It’s more than blisters on your hands and cal luses on your heels. It’s more than watching the big timbers fall from way up in the air and hit the ground with such a gust that it almost knocks you down. The Bonfire is the burning sym bol of the flame that comes to every Aggie’s eye when the let ters, T and U are mentioned. When the “T” house comes tumbling to the ground, bring ing fire and cinders with it, so shall the souls of Teasips every where burn when those mighty Ags run off the field on Turkey Day, with the score Aggies . . . “Victory,” Texas . . . “Defeat.” Tradition, and that’s part of its flame, is seeing the logs stand upright until after the stroke of midnight, for that means the sweet smell of victory in the air. As the logs turn to solid mass es of fire and the flame to a romantic glow, cars pull up to the Bonfire and Ags and their dates gaze at it until the wee hours of the morning. This is where you belong, you, who live the Aggie spirit; you, who stand straight and tall no matter what the scoreboard reads; you, who know that an Aggie never loses; you, the masculine symbol of a giant union of Aggies everywhere — far, near, on the battlefield, as leaders in America; you, — belong here, on the eve of Tur key Day. The day when the “sips” will know that the Bon fire burned all through the game, and all through the lives of the great men who built it. The Bonfire — Personified . . . ATA/OtV... DO YOU The College Career Plan is available evclusively to college students by spe cially trained American- Amicable agents. mier/can Imfcab/B&M LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY EXECUTIVE OFFICES, WACO,TEXAS Oakwood Professional Bldg. Bryan, Texas VI 6-7963 POWDER PUFF Football Game Head & Shoulders Batty Brats Sunday, Nov. 20 at 2 p. m. Bronco Field Admission: 75? — Adults 25? — Children Sponsored by St. Joseph’s Booster Club Despite fiendish torture dynamic BiC Duo writes first time, every time! mc’s rugged pair of stick pens wins again in unending war against ball-point skip, clog and smear. Despite horrible punishment by mad scientists, me still writes first time, every time. And no wonder, bic’s “Dyamite” Ball is the hardest metal made, , encased in a solid brass nose cone. Will not skip, clog or smear no matter what devilish abuse is j ; devised for them by sadistic students. Get the dynamic me Duo at your campus store now. WATERMAN-BIC PEN CORP. MILFORD, CONN. BiC Medium Point 190 BiC Fine Point 290 W WE KEEP PRICES DOWN) /2J7I23 s.v; ■ ' *!, CHECK YOUR WEINGARTEN STORE FOR THE LOWEST PRICES ON FINE POULTRY! FRANKS PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz v 1--- | Actually, the kindergarten TEACHER 5W5 HE'S ONE OF HER BE£T PUPILS'