The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 10, 1967, Image 3

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    Page 2
THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas Tuesday, January 10, lOOT
Bulletin Board
....The Business Administration
Library has announced new hours:
8:00 to 5:00 and 7:00 to 10:00,
Monday thru Friday. 8:00 to
12:00 a.m. on Saturday, and 2:00
to 10:00 p.m. on Sunday.
TONIGHT
The Ag-Eco Wives Club will
meet at 7:30 in room 3-B of the
MSC. Election of officers will
be held and the club picture will
be taken.
The BA Wives Club will meet
at 7:30 in the Brooks Room of
the YMCA. Officers for the
spring semester will be elected.
The Pre-Med and Pre-Dent So
ciety will meet at 7:30 p.m. in
room 113 of the Biological Sci
ence Building. The program will
be given by a representative of
the University of Texas Dental
School.
The Recreation and Parks Club
will meet from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
in the Ballroom of the MSC.
ZA/t-ceJA/O & -7
“It was th, most distinctive outfit design of all, but just
too far ahead of its time!”
“Historical Development of Pro
fessional Education for Outdoor
Recreation”, by Alfred B. La-
Gasse and Walter L. Cook will be
narrated by Dr. L. M. Reid.
WEDNESDAY
The Aggie Wives Bridge Club
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the
MSC. Bridge-O will be played.
Mop Hairstyles
Bring New Image
THURSDAY
The Houston Hometown Club
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Main
Lounge of the MSC. Picture for
the Aggieland will be taken —
Class A or coat and tie, please.
Band Association
Those who decry the moptop hair styles of today’s youth
fail to consider some underlying implications of the luxuri- F/1 P(*.tS OxilCCFS
ant coiffures.
In the 1950’s those who looked with distaste upon the
greasy duck-tail fad possibly had some reason for alarm.
A tough kid in duck-tails looked like he could do damage,
because he looked distasteful.
But consider a young man of 1967. He walks down the
street with his locks blowing in the wind, bangs hanging
coquettishly down to his eyebrows, purple shirts with char
treuse polka dots, checked skin-tight pants, and shoes with
high heels. Brigitte Bardot should look so tough.
He may not look like John Wayne, but then he doesn’t
look like Jack the Ripper either. The only drawback is
twenty years in the future. How will he explain the hair
curlers in the attic to his son?
IE Department Receives Gauges
Precision measuring equipment
used in critical manufacturing
operations has been presented to
the Industrial Engineering De
partment at Texas A&M by Fred
B. McKimball, president-,of- South
western Gauge Company^of Dal
las.
Valued at $4,500, the equip
ment includes micrometers of var
ious types, electronic, lens and
‘go-no go” type gauges. The
equipment, installed in the de
partment’s quality control labora
tory, will be used in quality con
trol courses and any instruction
involving physical measurements,
noted D. A. W. Wortham, depart
ment head.
“This equipment is adequate
for illustrating almost all pre
cision measurements of manufac
turing operations, even in very
precise military parts and sur
face finishes,” Wortham said.
“It gives us probably the best
equipped quality control lab in
the Southwest,” he added.
Former Texas A&M band mem
bers have elected officers and rat
ified bylaws of a newly formed
Texas Aggie Band Association.
Tom Murrah of San Antonio,
president of the Jefferson State
Bank and a 1928 A&)M graduate,
was elected president of the 1,200
members association, an organiza
tional committee announced today.
Other officers elected in the
mail ballot are vice president W.
T. Riedel, superintendent of A&M
Consolidated Schools; secretary
Joe Buser, Former Students As
sociation, and treasurer Dr. Mar
tin McBride, veterinary public
health instructor at the university.
All reside in College Station.
Association members include
any former student of A&M who
was a bandsman. The association
was formed to assist the Aggie
Band, Lt. Col. E. V. Adams, band
master, and band objectives. Gen
eral membership meetings will be
held every two years at time and
place fixed by the executive com
mittee.
CORPS SENIORS
STAFF JUNIORS
FIRST SGTS.
Get your yearbook pic
tures taken for the Aggie
land ’67 before 20th of Jan
uary at the University Stu
dio, North Gate.
CIVILIAN
SENIORS
and
GRADUATE
STUDENTS
Will have their portrait
made for the Aggieland
’67
THRU 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.
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 neivspaper.
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for
republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not
otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous
origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other
matter herein are also reserved.
Second-Class postage paid at College Station, Texas.
News contributions may be madi
or 846-4910 or at the editorial offi
For advertising or delivery call 84
lade by telephoning 846-6618
ce, Room 4, YMCA Building.
16-6416.
Members of the Student Publications Board are: Jim
Lindsey, chairman ; Dr. David Bowers, College of Liberal
Arts ; John D. Cochrane, College of Geosciences ; Dr. Frank
A McDonald, College of Science; Charles A. Rodenbe
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.
Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester; $6 per school
year; $6.60 per full year. All subscriptions subject to 2%
sales tax. Advertising rate
sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address:
The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA Building, College Station, Texas
77843.
The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A&M la
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 E
vices, Inc., New York City, Chicago,
Services
Francisco.
Educational Advertising
Los Angeles and San
Publisher Texas A&M University
Student Editor . Winston Green Jr.
Managing Editor . John Fuller
News Editor . Elias Moreno, Jr.
Staff Writers . Patricia Hill, Mike Plake,
Robert Borders, Jerry Grisham
Sports Editor Gary Sherer
Staff Photographer Russell Autrey
Thanks to all of you Aggies
for your continued support
throughout my absence.
Sincerely,
J. E. Loupot
P.S. Drop by the store, I’ll be glad to see you!
Deep East Texas Hometown
Club will meet at 7:15 p.m. in
the MSC. Class A or coat and
tie, please.
El Paso Hometown Club will
meet at 7:30 p.m. in room 3-C of
the MSC. Bring pictures for
Sweetheart election. Date for
Club picture will be announced.
Rio Grande Valley Hometown
Club will meet on the steps of
the MSC to have their picture
taken for the Aggieland.
Waco-McLennan County Home
town Club will meet at 7:30 p.m.
In the Cashion Room of the
YMCA. An important business
problem will be discussed.
Education Group Read Battalion Classifieds
To Elect Delegates
In MSC Tonight
State convention delegates will
be elected at a Student Education
Club meeting tonight.
The 7 p.m. meeting will be in
Rooms 2C and D of the Memorial
Student Center, announced Presi
dent Don Houston.
Seven A&M delegates will at
tend the two-day Texas Student
Education Association convention
at Dallas March 2-4.
Education club guests tonight
will be members of the A&M
Consolidated High School Future
Teachers Club. Refreshments will
be served.
For all your insurance needs
See U. M. Alexander, Jr. ’40
221 S. Main, Bryan
823-3616
INtURANCI^
State Farm Insurance Companies - Home Offices Bloomington, 111.
Capurro To Visit
In Mediterranean
Dr. Luis R. A. Capurro of
Texas A&M, president of the
Scientific Committee on Ocean
ographic Research, will attend
meetings in the Mediterranean
area and assist in equipment tests
off the California coast during
the next month.
Dr. Capurro, a research scien
tist in A&M’s Oceanography De
partment, will be at Scripps
Institute at LaJolla, Calif., Jan.
16-21, for sea trials of equipment
to measure deep sea tides. The
instruments were designed by
Scripps and French scientists.
The A&M scientist will repre
sent SCOR at an Intergovern
mental Geographical Commission
bureau and consultative meeting
at Monaco Jan. 30-Feb. 2. Dr.
Capurro, as SCOR president and
advisor on scientific matters, will
sit in discussion of sea water
pollution, air-sea interaction and
problems connected with coopera
tive oceanographic expeditions
throughout the world.
The native of Buenos Aires and
Argentina Navy officer will pre
side at a SCOR meeting in
Jerusalem Feb. 6-11. Sponsored
by the Israeli Academy of Sci
ences, the meeting brings together
SCOR representatives for discus
sion of topics including calibra
tion of velocity measurements
and the physical equation of the
state of sea water.
PARDNER
You’ll Always Win
The Showdown
When You Get
Your Duds Done
At
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
la-de-da
snooty affairs
our specialty!
Ladies love meeting at Ramada
Inn! Fancy banquets, Club get-
togethers and Luncheons are just
more fun! Hold your next femme
fest at Ramada . . . whether lav
ishly formal or quaintly unre
strained. At Ramada it’s no secret:
we love ladies!
Try our fast, friendly
breakfast and luncheon
service.
RAMADA INN
Bryan - College Station
846-8811
Captain Capurro will speak on
“Oceanography from Space,” a
new research undertaking at
A&M, before the University of
Jerusalem faculty of humanities
and sciences.
Supply
'ptctu/te, plOAMjC^-
•923 SaColUgaAve*Bryan,
OPEN YOUR
ACCOUNT NOW!
%
5
t.-JB Per
Annum
Paid Quarterly on
INSURED SAVINGS
AT
FIRST FEDERAL
SAVINGS and LOAN
ASSOCIATION
2913 Texa* Ave.
a i$jk%
It
FREE ... A&W ROOT BEER
With Purchase of Following
No. 15 Chicken Dinner
15 Pieces of Chicken or 1 2/3 Birds
5 Pieces Texas Toast & Honey /rr
PLUS One Gal. A&W Root Beer Free
No. 21 Chicken Dinner
21 Pieces of Chicken or 2 1/3 Birds
7 Pieces Texas Toast & Honey /TO
PLUS One Gal. Root Beer, Cola, tjrl.UU
Orange, Free
Effective Only Jan. 10, 11, 12, 13.*
Call Your Order In — It Will Be
Ready When You Arrive. 846-3333.
A&W DRIVE IN
4611 Texas Ave.
‘Where The Action Is”
846-3333
AN OPEN LETTER
Hello Aggies,
For several weeks we have been running our adver
tisement in the Battalion telling you about Aggieland
Recreation Center located behind Betty’s Fashions in the
Redmond Terrace Center, College Station, Texas.
We’ve told you that we have two five by ten billiard
tables, two five by ten snooker tables, sixteen four by
eight billiard tables, seven pin ball machines and other
games. That we are open 7 days each week from 8 a. m.
till midnight. That no alcoholic beverages are sold or
allowed. That we sell billiard supplies, jointed cue sticks,
etc.
Hundreds of Aggies have visited our Recreation
Center, and we believe most of them were impressed. If
you have never visited the Aggieland Recreation Center,
we hope you will very soon. We believe you will like what
you see.
AGGIELAND RECREATION CENTER
Redmond Terrace Center
College Station, Texas
P. S. By the way, the girls play here!
one S(
TOWNSHIRE
SUITS & SPORT COATS
by Ciricketeer, Raewin,
Linett and Southwick
. . . reduced 15 to 50%
limited selection of name
brand SHIRTS & SWEATERS
v* off
DRESS SLACKS
reduced 20%
SALE
Des
Old Lou’s back in action
get cash for your used books, today!
LOUPOT’S North Gate
//r