The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 02, 1967, Image 3

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    . .
Job Calls
LIT
FRIDAY
Anaconda Wire & Cable Com
pany: Chemical Engineering (B),
Civil Engineering (B), Electrical
Engineering (B), Industrial En
gineering (B), Mechanical Engi
neering (B)
Brown Engineering Company:
Aerospace Engineering (B,M),
Civil Engineering (B,M), Electri
cal Engineering (B,M), Mechani
cal Engineering (B,M).
Burroughs Corporation: Ac
counting, Marketing
Burroughs Wellcome & Com
pany, Inc.: Biology (B), Chem
istry (B), Marketing (B), Zoolo
gy (B), Agricultural Economics
(B), Animal Science (B).
Chrysler Corporation, Space
Division: Aerospace Engineering,
(B,M), Mathematics (B,M),
Physics (B,M).
Douglas United Nuclear, Inc.:
Chemical Engineering (B,M),
Electrical Engineering (B,M),
Mechanical Engineering (B,M),
Nuclear Engineering (B,M,)
Physics (B,M)
Olin: Chemical Engineering
(B,M), Industrial Engineering
(B,M), Accounting (B,M), Civil
Engineering (B), Mechanical En
gineering (B) Marketing (B,M),
Finance (B,M).
Naval Electronics Laboratory
Center: Electrical Engineering
(B,M,D), Computer Science (B,
M), Mathematics (B,M), Physics
(B,M,D).
Vets Commissioned
Three 1967 veterinary medicine
graduates of Texas A&M have
completed the medical service of
ficer course at Brooke Army
Medical Center at Fort Sam
Houston.
The newly commissioned Med
ical, Dental and Veterinary Corps
officers include Capt. Daniel W.
Salas of Pledger, Capt. Richard J.
Habbinga of Lubbock and Capt.
Joel G. Dye of Amarillo.
THE BATTALION
Thursday, November 2, 1967 College Station, Texas Page 3
Business Trends Show Change
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.
HOUSES TUMBLED BY NORWEGIAN LANDSLIDE
Aerial view shows damage caused by a landslide at Troegstad in eastern Norway. Four
persons were reported missing and 10 houses damaged or destroyed in the slide following
torrential rains in the region. (AP Wire- photo by cable from Oslo)
GRASSHOPPER ABOVE
FANEUIL HALL
MOSTON (A>>—Faneuil Hall in
Boston was the scene of many Co
lonial protest meetings before the
Revolutionary War. The hall was
designed by John Smilbert in 1742
and Charles Bulfinch added to it
in 1805.
Its weather vane, a grasshop
per, is the city’s most famous
steeple decoration.
A&M Staff Members Named
Houston Livestock Officials
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
er wo;
Minii
rd each addition
it p<
ional
im charge—50£
Classified Dis
•r word
day
play
90^ per column inch
each ins
each insertion
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publication
HELP WANTED
Wear and sell Sarah Coventry Jewelr;
Call 846-2481.
Iry.
5t3
Servicemen wanted for T. V., radio and
bi-fidelity repair. Call Bryan Radio and
r. V. 822-4862. 475tfn
FOR SALE
Stereo Eico amplifier, AM
[tuner, Dual turntable. $95.00 ; 9
[malic pistol, 200 rounds ammunition,
55.00. Must sell. 846-3079. 496t2
and FM
mm auto-
B Dressy semi-formal, size 7. Call 846-5694.
49314
FOR SALE BY OWNER! Lot 70 x 100
feet on 26th Street in Bryan near schools.
Phone 846-6669. 489tfn
OWNER LEAVING TOWN MUST
SELL! Three bedroom home central air
and heat. One of the most beautifully land
scaped lots in Brazos County. Phone 846-
6669. 489tfn
65 Honda 305 Dream. Low mileage A-l
condition, 846-5694 after 5:30 p. m. $325.
486tfn
NU-WAY BEAUTY SHOP
announces
BRENDA EARDLY
formerly employed by
Edna's Beauty Shop
Call for appointment
822-4407
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES:
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
3400 S. College 823-8051
OLYMPIA
Portable Typewriters
GUARANTEE
As long as you’re in school—
This Includes cleaning.
ALL MAKES
Electric & Manuel
EASY TERMS
OTIS MCDONALD’S
429 S. Main — Phone 822-1328
Bryan, Texas
Wanted, two registered nurses for su-
War
pervisor on 3 to 11 shift at Madison County
Hospital, Madisonville, Texas. Excellent
alary. Call collect, DI 8-2631, Miss Gloria
[or
Cou
Rice or Mr. E. G. Clark.
WANTED
Typewriter wanted, used, elite-type, por
table. Phone 846-5410, Ext. 20, weekday
nights or address Box 2415. 49413
CHILD CARE
Chilu care all ages. 846-8151.
HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN
TER. 340C South College. State Licensed.
123-8626, Virginia D. Jones. R. N. 99tfn
SPECIAL NOTICE
Coin operated electric typewriters avail
able for use in Memorial Student Center.
able for use in Memorial Student Center.
Cost 10c for 20 minutes, 25c for 1 hour.
Located in Room B of sound proof piano
practice rooms on lower level of MSC.
Check out key at main desk.
WORK WANTED
Typing C-17-B College View. 846-5416.
491tfn
LUEDECKE ROCK SHOP
Findings, Stones & Equipment
Jones Bridge Road
Next to West Runway
Easterwood Airport — 846-7474
COME FLY WITH US
• FLIGHT INSTRUCTION
• RENTALS
• FREE TIE DOWNS
• CHARTER SERVICE
• MAINTENANCE
CESSNA 150’s 172
J-3 CUB TWIN APACHE
See Us About Special Summer Rates
For Learning To Fly
BRYAN AERO, INC.
Highway 21 E. Coulter Field
Phone 823-8640
Bryan, Tex.
Enco, Amalie,
Conoco 31c qt.
We stock all local major brands.
Where low oil prices originate.
Quantity Rights Reserved
Wheel Bearings
50% Off
Parts Wholesale Too
Filters, Oil, Air - Fuel
10,000 Parts - We Fit
96% of All Cars - Save
25 - 40%
Brake Shoes $2.98 ex.
2 Wheels — many cars
Auto trans. oil 25tf
AG - Champion - Autolite plugs
Starters - Generators
All 6 Volt — $10.95 Each
Most 12 Volt — $11.95 Each
Tires—Low price every day —
Just check our price with any
other of equal quality.
Your Friedrich Dealer
Joe Faulk Auto Parts
220 E. 25th Bryan, Texas
JOE FAULK ’32
21 years in Bryan
GM Lowest Priced Cars
$49.79 per mo.
With Normal Down Payment
OPEL KADETT
Sellstrom Pontiac - Buick
2700 Texas Ave.
822-1336
26th & Parker
822-1307
SOSOLIKS
TV & RADIO SERVICE
Zenith - Color & B&W - TV
All Makes - TV - Repaired
713 S. Main 822-1941
Personal Loans
Build Your Credit For
Future Use From
$10 to $100
On Your Signature
UNIVERSITY
LOAN CO.
317 Patricia — North Gate
College Station, Texas
Tel: 846-8319
FREIGHT SALVAGE
Brand Name Furniture
Household Appliances
Bedding
Office Furniture
Plumbing Fixtures
All damage
utility by
ed items
our repai
stored to full
i department.
C & D SALVAGE CO.
32nd & S. Tabor Streets — Bryan
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals-Sales-Service
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main 822-6000
FOR RENT
Two bedrooms for students.
823-3576. Call after 4 :00 p. i
Reasonable,
i. 496tfn
Three room apartment, bus, excellent
neighborhood, bills not paid. Call early or
late. 822-6888. 491tfn
Comfortable room, air-conditioned, out
side door, adjoining bath shared with one.
Reasonable. Near bus line. Call early or
late 822-6888. 486tfn
STATE MOTEL, rooms and kitchen, day
the University, 846-
and weekly rate, near
6410.
262tfn
THE BRYAN ARMS
APARTMENTS
“Congenial Living”
Separate Adult & Family Areas
‘‘Children Welcome”
Model Apts. Open For Inspection
From $120 - All Utilities Paid
1602 S. College Avenue
Resident Manager - Apt. 65
Phone 823-4250
Make Your Deposit Now
365tfn
VICTORIAN
APARTMENTS
Midway between Bryan &
vay between Bry
A&M University
STUDENTS!!
Need A Summer Home
& 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur.
Pool and Private Courtyard
3 MONTHS LEASE
822-2035 401 Lake St. Apt. 1
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th 822-2819
TRANSMISSIONS
REPAIRED & EXCHANGED
Completely Guaranteed
LOWEST PRICES
HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION
118 S. Bryan —Bryan— 822-6874
DANCE
Lakeview Club
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER
8 - 12
Sponsored by
EL CLUB SOCIAL
Music by:
Rudy & Reno Bob’s
of San Antonio
Admission:
Ladies $1.50 - Gents $2.50
Watch Repair
Jewelry Repair
Diamond Sei*
Rings
Fifteen staff members in the
Texas A&M College of Agricul
ture have been selected as super
intendents for the 1968 Houston
Livestock Show and Rodeo Feb.
21-March 3.
Their divisions and names are
junior breeding beef. Dr. O. M.
Holt, Agricultural Education De
partment; open and junior show
fat steers, U. D. Thompson, Ex
tension animal husbandman, and
Frank C. Litterst Animal Science
Department, and Frank A. Orts,
Extension meat specialist.
Others are open dairy, J. W.
Davis, Extension dairy specialist;
open show sheep and goats, Dr.
James Bassett, Animal Science
Department; commercial steers,
Harold Franke, Animal Science
Department; open class and
junior fat lambs, L. D. Wythe,
Animal Science Department, and
Bill Tomlinson, Agricultural Edu
cation Department.
Livestock and poultry exhibi
tors will compete for a total of
$200,000 in premiums and tro
phies.
The 1968 show will have classes
for eight breeds of breeding beef,
11 breeds of sheep, seven breeds
of swine, and four breeds of
horses, as well as poultry and
rabbits. All-breed range bulls
and all-breed commercial heifers
are two new classes.
Equipment School
Opens This Week
A six-week school for heavy
equipment operators opened this
week at Texas A&M University
under direction of Texas A&M’s
Engineering Extension Service.
Alvin Jones, chief instructor,
said 12 men will receive 240 hours
of instruction in the operation
and maintenance of crawler trac
tors, motor graders and scrapers,
and boom equipment.
Most of the instruction, Jones
noted, emphasizes proper use of
equipment in training field activ
ities. Instructors include George
Berry, Jesse Ladd, Bill Lofgren
and Terry McCarthy.
By JOHN CUNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK <A>>—As the eco
nomic boom enters its 81st
month, it has about the same
physical resemblance to its early
years than an adult has to its
youth. It’s the same person all
right, but an awful lot has
changed.
Imbalances and disruptions
protrude everywhere, and the
very economic diet of taxes and
spending that takes credit for
the expansion is, itself, being
questioned.
THIS IS NOT to say the boom
will bust, for there are indica
tions that it will soar along for
many months more. But it is far
from the finely toned, noninfla
tionary early years of the 1960s.
As the expansion approaches
a record length, disruptions in
clude labor disputes, automotive
troubles, rising interest rates,
falling profits and administra
tion-congressional discord.
IT IS ALSO now an expansion
sustained more and more by gov
ernment spending rather than ci
vilian spending. It has become
more of a war economy, and some
of the disruptions exist because
of a belief that a war can be
without economic problems.
Through all problems runs the
cancer of inflation, the biggest
threat to further growth. It un
derlines, as a cause of effect,
labor’s wage demands, business’
protectionist sentiment, govern
ment spending and the prices of
goods.
AT THE SAME TIME, the
concept of the New Economics is
seriously endangered, if not on
theoretical grounds then on the
practical grounds that it is too
dependent on political considera
tions.
can work again if given a chance.
They believe, for example, that
the economy can be spurred by
tax cuts and government spend
ing regardless of budget deficits,
and slowed by higher taxes and
less spending. In 1964 they
spurred the economy. Now they
feel a need to restrain it or lose
out to inflation.
THE RELENTLESSNESS of
administration pressure for a 10
per cent surcharge on income
taxes has, however, merely helped
to grind itself against an immov
able Congress. No matter how
much the New Economics de
mands a tax increase it is help
less before Congress, which alone
can translate theory into law.
Some administration critics
suggest that the discipline re
ferred to should have been ap
plied in 1966 when, they feel,
quick action to raise taxes would
have helped avoid the present
inflation.
They feel also that discipline
could be shown by less adminis
tration spending, a situation the
administration says cannot be
helped. If this explanation is to
be accepted, it is an admission
that the New Economies theory
may be impractical.
Kids To Get
B-CS Treats
If the concept is unworkable
because of political reasons—as
it is now—then it is an utopian
ideal held by naive idealists, a
source of frustration, and utterly
worthless as a practical guide
line.
WHAT NAGS THE New Econ
omists is the belief that their
theories have worked before and
Leftover goodies for trick-or-
treaters are being sought for chil
dren at the Austin State School.
Containers have been placed at
Sul Ross and Crockett Element
ary Schools in Bryan, at both
Orr’s locations, Gibsons and
Beard and Hardaway Kinder
gartens.
Families with too many left
over sweets are asked to place
them in one of the collection
boxes this week. Mr. and Mrs.
James Robinette, 3210 Green, will
deliver the candy to Austin
Saturday.
“Last year after Halloween we
collected enough leftover candy
for 500 children at the school,”
Mrs. Robinette said.
Read Battalion Classifieds
" IMDP made
the difference "
it' s
IMDP—that's short for Initial Management Development Program and
the one thing that made me select a career with Southwestern Bell.
When I graduated from Texas Tech, I didn't look for an easy job.
I had never had one before and didn't want one then.
IMDP is anything but easy. During the first year it'll tax every
talent, every ability you have and it'll force you to develop some new
talents along the way.
A week after reporting for work, I was supervising 11 men. There
was no waiting to find out what I would be doing—I knew what my job was
and who my boss was. I didn't get stuck in the company library or spend
days filling out reports in some staff training program.
With the responsibility, I got the authority to make my own
decisions and run the job.
There is no limit to the opportunities available in this company.
Those who successfully complete IMDP are expected to make "middle"
management within a few years. I don't see any reason to be satisfied with
that. There are many opportunities for advancement—they come around
as fast as you can prove you're ready to handle them.
There's also a great deal of pride and personal satisfaction in
working for Southwestern Bell. It's a big, responsible, respected company.
It's like Cadillac among automobiles—a standard setter.
If you're interested in going to work; going "first class" in the
□ He’ll have answers for you,
. won’t be vague generalities.
* S ® n ‘ 0rR ‘ n f : w you where LTV Aerospace
non is heading in the total en-
C* W ;nta ^ a( i ven t ure r an dhowyoufitin.
* Tpwplpr«s uld find y° urself g ettin g P rett y
out it. And that’s a darned good
about your first job.
Eitions Office, LTV Aerospace
i 5 . O. Box 5907, Dallas, Texas
■ world, write me, Clinton Tittsworth; Room 425; 2010 Avenue R;
Texas 79411.
North Gate
AUTO REP. °PP ortunit y employer.
All Maket ERV i E wS
Just Say^ 2, 1967
“Charge Iti Thursday
Clinton Tittsworth
BBA/Personnel Management '65
Texas Technological College
Philco Power Saver cuts op
Southwestern Bell
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Cade Motoi
Ford Deale-' R 3 OFt.A.T'/Otsi
- \S<=>LJQ t-1-r. DJKI-.L-A&
■ KENTRON HAWAII. LTD. • RANGE SYSTEMS DIVISION
FIRESTO