The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 26, 1967, Image 5

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meet
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“WIN”
A Free Steak At Franklin’s
or Possibly $25, at
U-HIT-M
DRIVING RANGE
AND IMPROVE YOUR GOLF
GAME AT THE SAME TIME
Open: Weekdays 4-10
Sat. - Sun. 1-10
Located Between Franklin’s
and A&M University on
Farm Road 60
Jones To Head
CS Chest Drive
Dr. Luther Jones has been
named director of the solicitation
campaign among- retired persons
in the current College Station Un
ited Chest fund-raising drive, an
nounced Campaign Director Joe
Sawyer.
Dr. Jones, who resides at 900
S. Hereford, retired in 1952 as
professor of agronomy at Texas
A&M.
The United Chest campaign,
which has a goal of $22,500, con
tinues through Oct. 31.
fight it.
Get Eaton’s Corrasable Bond Typewriter Paper.
Mistakes don't show. A mis-key completely disappears
from the special surface. An ordinary pencil eraser lets
you erase without a trace. So why use ordinary paper?
Eaton's Corrasable is available in light, medium, heavy
weights and Onion Skin. In lOO-sheet packets and 500-
sheet ream boxes. At Stationery Departments.
* ****&*
i JEj
CATOfTS CORRASABLE
rrPEwmnn papsh
®
Only Eaton makes Corrasable.
EATON PAPER CORPORATION, PITTSFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS
Eaton’s Corrasable Bond Typewriter Paper Is Available
at The Exchange Store
“For Thinking Men”
Thursday, October 26, 1967
THE BATTAUON
College Station, Texas
Page 5
Propulsion Device
Passes First Test
VIETNAM PROTEST WEST BERLIN STYLE
Demonstrators carrying large portraits of Ernesto “Che” Guevara, the guerrilla leader
reported slain in Bolivia, move down the Kurfuerstendamm during anti-Vietnam war pro
test in West Berlin. An estimated 9,000 took part in protest. (AP Wirephoto)
Sweet Tooth Guardian Tag
Fits Duncan Head Baker
Guardian of the Texas Aggies’
sweet tooth is Vaughn Wilson,
head baker of 17 years experience
in A&M dining halls.
Palate-pleasing donuts, cream
puffs, cakes, fruit pies, sweet
rolls, Boston cream pie and baked
Alaska are whipped up in the
Duncan Dining Hall bake shop
he directs.
“Wilson is our ‘Johnny-on-the-
spot’,” Fred W. Dollar, A&M
food service director, said. “The
shop runs seven days a week vir
tually the year through. He
starts it up in the middle of the
night, runs a ranch and has never
been tardy. I don’t know when
he sleeps.”
Wilson started as a third baker
at Sbisa Hall in 1938. He moved
to Duncan in 1940 and entered
military service for 4% years in
1941. The Edge rancher worked
in Army finance, served at Attu
Island, Alaska, and came out a
technical sergeant.
He returned to A&M, baked
two years and turned entirely to
farming for eight years. Then
he began to miss flour on his
fingers.
Do you buy
a shirt
or a label?
You buy both. The shirt
because of what it looks like.
And the label because of
what it means. A good label
means the shirt is styled to
last. That it's tapered, pleated
and rolled in the right places.
Like this King Cotton
Perma-lron shirt. 100%
cotton that won’t wrinkle.
Labeled "Sanforized.” With a
softly flared button-down
collar, shoulder-to-waist
taper and box pleat. You can
get it in stripes, solids,
checks or plaids. $6.00 for
short sleeves, $7.00 for long.
But don’t buy a sport
shirt just for the plaid,
color, stripe or check. Get a
good sport shirt with a good
label. Our sports label is the
best. Look for Arrow.
•MY:;,.,.,, . xv-MMYiY
-ARROW- CUM LAUDE
KING COTTON
Just one of the 449 different Arrow
button-down sport shirts designed for the
college man. This handsome one is fash
ioned of 100% cotton . . .“Sanforized”
labeled, of course. With roll button-down
collar, shoulder to waist taper and back
pleat. But this is only one ... come see the
rest. $6.00
Conway & Co.
103 N. Main, Bryan
Wilson became first baker in
1955 and head baker in 1961.
Though the shop has a high per
sonal turnover rate, goodies
dished up are eagerly consumed.
Corps unit tables contest for
chocolate eclairs. A graduate’s
wife wrote asking for the shop’s
applesauce muffin recipe.
Wilson is one A&M dining hall
chief who rarely has leftovers,
though there is extra “cush” (as
Aggies call dessert) at times.
“We’ve got to beat Texas this
year,” declared Henry Willnitz,
Duncan supervisor and Wilson’s
superior. “Freshmen get to eat
pineapple in the event of a win
in that game.”
Daily high spot for the 1937
Bryan High graduate is when
“sinkers” begin coming out of
the donut glazer.
“I can’t wait for ’em,” Wilson
said, adding that donuts pass a
critical test: his experienced
sweet tooth.
The 1:30 to 10:30 a.m. work
day suits Wilson. He runs 50 cat
tle on 363 acres near Edge where
he lives. Bom and raised near
the North Brazos County com
munity, the head baker says he’ll
remain there and stay on with
the bake shop “until they run me
off or I retire.”
An underwater propulsion de
vice using an exotic sodium-po
tassium mixture as fuel was test
ed for the first time here this
week.
“It was a success,” smiled Dr.
Nicholas Gothard of Texas
A&M’s Electrical Engineering
Department. “It didn’t blow up.”
A five-second trial run of the
device was conducted at the
Texas A&M Research Annex
Tuesday by Dr. Gothard, Aero
space Engineering Prof. Stanley
H. Lowy and several students.
The prototype engine, similar
in many respects to a rocket, was
placed underwater in a large
tank for the initial test.
Gothard said the underwater
propulsion device may have sig
nificant application in small one
or two-place submersible craft.
Both sodium and potassium are
usually solids and react violently
with water. When mixed, the two
elements form a liquid which can
be stored in a tank and pumped
into the reaction chamber.
Undei-water propulsion in the
device is achieved by a jet of
water driven by the reaction with
the sodium-potassium.
The static test was conducted
under auspices of the Energy and
Propulsion Research Group at
A&M.
The group also is investigating
the possibility of using the mix
ture as a fuel for electrically-
driven spacecraft engines.
MSC To Host
Utility Course
A public utility short course
for electrical metermen opens
Monday for an estimated 150 par
ticipants at the Memorial Student
Center.
John Denison, director of the
Electric Power Institute within
the Electrical Engineering De
partment, said basic and ad
vanced courses will be taught.
Meter superintendents, install-
ei’s and testers are expected to
comprise most of the enrollment
for instruction in metering, math
ematics, trigonometry, vectors,
magnetism and other facets of
electricity.
Assistant To Rudder Named
Richard T. Bernard of Houston
has been named assistant to Tex
as A&M University President
Earl Rudder.
Bernard, 1957 business admin
istration graduate of Texas
A&M, has been associated with
Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co. in
personnel and sales capacities for
eight years.
He succeeds Edwin H. Cooper,
who was recently appointed di
rector of civilian student activi
ties.
While studying at A&M, Ber
nard won honors as both a Dis
tinguished Student and Distin
guished Military Student in the
Corps of Cadets. He also was a
yell leader and member of the
university’s student senate.
Following graduation, he
worked for the Burroughs Cor
poration a year before entering
the Army as a second lieutenant.
He is currently a major in the
National Guard.
Bernard, who formerly resided
in Pharr, is 32 years old, married
and has two children.
All Freshmen
Make-up Pictures
for 1968 Aggieland
October 23 - 27
at University Studio
North Gate
ATTENTION ! !
ALL CLUBS
Athletic, Hometown, Professional and Campus
Organizations.
Pictures for the club sections of the Aggieland are
now being scheduled at the Student Publications Office,
Y.M.C.A. Building.
Join a
Giant
on the
moire
Careers in Management ♦
♦
l
Investigate the unlimited opportunities now available with one
of the largest, most progressive and successful retailing or
ganizations—the worldwide "PX" Exchange Service,
A modern training program will prepare you for an initial
assignment at one of our many PX installation centers through
out the United States on the executive/management level.
Transfer to overseas location available after training period.
Career positions are available in the following fields for
qualified graduates:
★ Retailing • Buying • Accounting • Auditing • Architecture •
Mechanical Engineering • Personnel • Food Management •
Systems Analysis • Personal Services and Vending
Management • Warehousing and Transportation •
Management Engineering
We are seeking graduates with majors in:
★ Business Administration* Economics ★Psychology
★ Mathematics ★Liberal Arts ★Marketing ★Architectural
Design ★Mechanical Engi neering ★ Personnel
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Excellent starting salaries. Liberal company benefits
including: group insurance, paid vacations, retirement plan,
sick leaves, liberal travel allowances, relocation expenses,
tuition assistance,
(NO FEDERAL SERVICE
ENTRANCE EXAMINATION REQUIRED)
Campus Interviews Will Be Held On
Thursday, October 26, 1967
For further information write to
MR. CARL SALAMONE
MANAGER COLLEGE RELATIONS
HQ. ARMY & AIR FORCE EXCHANGE SERVICE
DALLAS, TEXAS 75222
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in a dormitory
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