• •' f r? s *: r T ? n U L z 3 zx % in 2jjm 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 ZT 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 /T A PLUS One Gal. Root Beer, Cola, ^*.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 “Where The Action Is” 4611 Texas Ave. 846-3333 Radios Connect Campus Points Page 4 College Station, Texas Thursday, January 12, 1967 THE BATTALION 1 ■ Through the use of modern electronics, a large amount of normal and emergency activity on the campus is handled through one central office, the Radio Com munication Center at the Texas A&M University Physical Plant. “The Center was established in 1963,” explains Wesley W. Wayland, communication center chief, “and uses three shortwave radio base stations in its opera tions.” KEO 365 is the base station BEVERLEY BRALEY... Tours-Travel offers to all students and members of the faculty and staff the following travel service: 1. Special Student Rate Airline Tickets Airline Reservations and ticketing Car rental and purchase, domestic and international Independent and group travel Steamship and group travel Charter Airline and Bus Quotations Available 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 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. used for communication with University maintenance person nel and with the Fire Depart ment. There are 26 battery- operated hand units and five mo bile units operating on its fre quency. The hand units operate on rechargable batteries and provide great mobility in normal and emergency situations. KEV 919 base station ties-in the Campus Security Office, the Bryan and College Station Police Department, the County Sheriff’s office, and the State police. For civil emergencies such as floods or tornadoes, the center operates KMT 1815 base station. The Chief Dispatcher at the Radio Communication Center, Mrs. Cherry Woodyard, is on duty Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. She is relieved by regular student employees who work Monday through Friday, 4 p.m. to 8 a.m. and weekends. In addition there are two student standby employees. ALL INCOMING calls to the center go to the dispatcher, who can then take a message and de liver it or even connect the tele phone caller with someone in a vehicle. If necessary, the dis patcher is the one who sets off the fire alarm. Insurance Men Discuss Salary At SAM Meet VIET CONG GUERRILLA QUESTIONED A Viet Cong guerrilla is asked to point out the hiding places of his commrades on a map of the region by a South Vietnamese interrogator in the village of Ben Sue located about 27 miles northeast of Saigon. He was captured early in the operation, named Cedar Falls, as the Americans launched their biggest military commitment of the Viet nam war. (AP Wirephoto by radio from Saigon) Two representatives of the Aetna Life Insurance Company recently told the Society for the Advancement of Management that $6,600 is the starting salary for college graduates with their company. The two speakers, Bob Riem and Jay Gardner, both 1961 col. lege graduates, Monday night gave a brief description of the company and the opportunities it has to offer. Gardner, an A&M graduate, received his degree in personnel management. A mem. ber of the Corps of Cadets, he was the commanding officer of Squadron 4. Riem received his business degree from Knox Col. lege. Aetna, with 19,000 employees, is the largest multiple line insur ance company in the world, ac cording to Gardner. Beginning employees go to school for four months and then receive a raise to $7,000 a year plus a company car. Most beginning positions are as insurance salesmen. "... Anc? TU&W i toco M<2. I WAMTeO A OOCwAC Yo«e MV fewacCt^W &«>£.” Accountant Group Offers Aid Grant The American Institute of Cer tified Public Accountants has an nounced it will award $400-$450- a-month grants-in-aid for doc toral dissertations in accounting. In order to be eligible for a grant, a student must be work ing for a doctorate at a school that is a member of the Ameri can Association of Collegiate Schools of Business, and he must express an intent to become a teacher of accounting. The grants will provide S400 a month for single persons and $450 a month for married persons for a maximum of 12 months. No application blank needs to be filled out to be eligible for a grant. An interested student, however, should submit “a plan that defines the scope of the dis sertation, specifies kinds of in formation upon which the disser tation is based and estimates time required to do research and write the dissertation.” A SUMMARY of the proposed research in 100 words or fewer, along with a recommendation from the faculty advisor who will supervise the dissertation, should be included in an application. Biographical information on the student and an official transcript of all college courses and grades should also be included. Interested persons should ad dress their applications to Chair man, Committee on Relations with Universities, American In stitute of Certified Public Ac countants, 666 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. The applications must be received by the Institute before March 1. Grants will be awarded April 1 or as soon there after as possible. Riem, who is with the casualty division, said that the sale of dis ability insurance provides most salesmen with 60 percent of their salary. Company benefits listed by Riem included continued schooling, with Aetna footing half the bill, the chance to work in other countries, and being able to draw seniority while in the armed forces. The shortage of qualified peo ple is so acute, Riem continued, that Aetna is not able to open another office this year. In other business David Mor gan, club president, handed out membership cards for this school year. The society was invited to enter a candidate for queen of the Agronomy Society Cotton Pag eant and Ball, which will be on April 1. Another invitation has been extended to the club by the Duncan Coffee Co. of Houston to visit and observe the operation of the company. 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