The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 07, 1967, Image 4

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    Pag-e 4
THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas
Tuesday, November 7, 1967
Job Calls
TODAY
Ethyl Corporation: Chemical
Engineering (B,M,D), Electrical
Engineering (B,M), Industrial
Engineering (B,M), Mechanical
Engineering (B,M). Also sum
mer Employment for Juniors.
Pan American Petroleum Cor
poration: Chemical Engineering
(B,M), Mechanical Engineering
(B,M), Petroleum Engineering
(B,M). Also, Summer Employ
ment for JUNIORS, SENIORS,
GRADUATE STUDENTS.
Houston Lighting & Power
Company, Engineering Depart
ment: Electrical Engineering
(B,M,D). Also summer employ
ment for Juniors, Seniors, Grad
uate Students.
Houston Lighting & Power
Company, Power Department:
Chemical Engineering (B), Elec
trical Engineering (B), Indus
trial Engineering (B), Mechani
cal Engineering (B).
Houston Lighting & Power
Company, Industrial Sales Di
vision: Chemical Engineering (B),
Electrical Engineering (B) In
dustrial Engineering (B), Mech
anical Engineering (B)
Reynolds Metals Company:
Chemical Engineering ( B , M ) ,
Electrical Engineering (B,M), In
dustrial Engineering (B,M), Me
chanical Engineering (B,M)
Texas Eastern Transmission
Company: Accounting (B), Com
puter Science (B), Mathematics
(B), Chemical Engineering (B),
Civil Engineering (B), Electrical
Engineering (B), Industrial En
gineering (B), Mechanical En
gineering (B)
Freeport Sulphur Company:
Chemical Engineering (B,M), Me
chanical Engineering (B,M), Pet
roleum Engineering (B)(M).
Houston Lighting & Power
Company, Commercial & Residen
tial Sales: Agricultural Econo
mics, Agricultural Education,
Management, Marketing, Indus
trial Distribution.
Powers Regulator Company:
Architectural Construction, Chem
ical Engineering, Civil Engineer
ing, Electrical Engineering, In
dustrial Distribution, Industrial
Technology, Mechanical Engineer-
i n g , Marketing, Mathematics,
Physics. MBA with Technical Un
dergraduate Degree.
Defense Intelligence Agency:
Chemistry (B,M), Civil Engineer-
ing (B,M), Computer Science
(B,M), Economics (B,M), Fores
try (B,M), Geology (B,M), Geo
graphy (B,M), Mathematics (B,-
M), Meteoro^gy (B,M), Nuclear
Engineering (B,M), Phycics (B,-
M).
TODAY & WEDNESDAY
Arthur Anderson & Company:
Accounting, Industrial Engineer
ing, Computer Science.
Telescope To Study Muom
Cqi
‘ROCKING CHAIR’ TELESCOPE
Designer Gene Cantrell surveys the state of progress on a
91/2-ton spectrometer telescope under construction at Tex
as A&M University. The particle telescope will rock along
east-west oriented tracks to achieve any angle of elevation
to the zenith. The magnet and spark chamber assembly
carried inside the rockers will give clues to the deep-space
origin of radiation that forms muons (cq) particles in the
earth’s atmosphere.
Business Seminars Examine Harvard
An opportunity to discover
first-hand some of the advantag-
I won't
90 into business when
I graduate because:
□ a. I’d lose my individuality.
□ b. It’s graduate school for me.
□ c. My mother wants me to be a doctor.
Can’t argue with c), but before you check
a) or b)—pencils up! There have been some
changes. Drastic changes in the business
scene. But changes in the vox populi attitude
regarding business . . . especially on campus
. . . just haven’t kept pace.
Take the belabored point that business
turns you into a jellyfish. The men who run
most of the nation’s successful firms didn’t
arrive by nepotism, by trusting an Ouija
board, or by agreeing with their bosses. Along
the way, a well-modulated “No” was said.
And backed up with the savvy and guts to
day’s business demands.
In short, individuality is highly prized in
much of the business world—the successful
much. Even when the business is big. Like
Western Electric, the manufacturing and sup
ply unit of the Bell System.
We provide communications equipment for
our Bell System teammates, the Bell telephone
companies. This takes a lot of thought, deci
sions, strong stands for our convictions, (and
sometimes some mistakes ... we’re human,
every 160,000 of us).
Individuality pays off. Not only in raises,
but in personal reward as well. Like an engi
neer who knew deep down that there was a
better way to make a certain wire connector
—and did. Or a WE gal who streamlined time-
consuming office procedures, and saved us
some $63,000 a year.
Rewards and accolades. For saying “No.”
For thinking creatively and individually. For
doing.
Not every hour is Fun Hour, but if you’ve
got imagination and individuality—you’ve got
it made. With a business like Western Electric.
We’ll even help you answer b) with our Tui
tion Refund program. Come on in and go
for President!
Western Electric
MANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM
es and disadvantages of attending
graduate business schools will be
afforded A&M students tonight
at 6 p.m. at Clayton’s Restaurant.
Four A&M-Harvard Business
^School graduates will begin a
dialogue concerning entrance re
quirements, expenses, living con
ditions, and the influence of the
Harvard Business School on then-
careers.
Wayne Prescott, coordinator of
the program, said business school
denotes management school and
students are drawn primarily
from engineering and liberal arts.
An insufficient supply of mana
gers who are also competent in
their chosen field of study exists.
The configuration of a telescope
under construction at Texas A&M
is almost complete.
The 914-ton spectrometer tele
scope will be one of the largest
in existence and will be maneuver-
able, a capability other particle
telescopes of similar size do not
have.
The spectrometer telescope will
be operational within the academ
ic year and serve as prototype of
a 12-ton model, according to Dr.
Nelson M. Duller of the Physics
Department.
THE LARGER telescope will be
installed on 17,000-foot Mt. Cha-
caltaya near La Paz, Bolivia, the
project head stated. Work on the
larger instrument will begin be
fore September, 1968.
Resembling an eight-foot tall
rocking chair, the telescope will
be used to study muons, a class
of particles born when powerful
cosmic rays strike the earth’s up
per atmosphere.
“These are high-energy parti
cles,” Duller described. “The mu
on is the only one among similar
ly charged particles that will
penetrate three feet of iron. Some
go hundreds of feet into the
ground.”
RESEARCH on the muon is
being conducted by A&M and the
Southwest Center for Advanced
Studies at Dallas under an Air
Force Office of Scientific Re
search grant. The Air Force oper
ates a scientific station on Chacal-
taya, where the muons will only
have to penetrate half the earth’s
atmosphere to reach a particle
telescope.
Optical telescopes gather and
reflect or refract light rays to a
focus for study at that point. The
spectrometer telescope designed
by Gene Cantrell, B. J. Bateman
and A1 V. Jelinek will study muon
particles in passing. The three
designers are A&M graduate stu
dents in physics. Cantrell, a doc
toral student, is an instructor.
Muon particles will show up as
tiny “lightning” trails in telescope
spark chambers oriented above,
between and below a pair of mag
nets weighing eight tons.
“PICTURES of the spark cham
ber flashes will show where the
particle went and how it was de
flected by the magnets,” Duller
said. “From this data, it will be
possible to calculate the particle’s
energy and where it came from in
relation to the earth’s atmos
phere.”
The physics professor noted
that muons originate in the upper
tenth of the atmosphere, a pro
duct of the decay of pion parti
cles. Pions are produced directly
by protons, or cosmic radiation,
which come from various parts
of the galaxy.
“We will be able to extrapolate
the particle’s path back to the
surface of the atmosphere and
determine its angle and point of
origin,” he went on.
DULLER SAID the muon’s
path is virtually straight with
the original angle of entry of
cosmic radiation. He said the
spectrometer telescope’s 2-by-2-
foot “aperture” will “see” two
muons per second.
Telescope spark chambers are
three feet by three feet by eight
inches. Each will contain a heilum-
isobutane mixture triggered by
electrical pulses of 80,000 volts at
1,000 amperes.
Spark chambers are being in
stalled at present by Jelinek, of
Houston. Power plant construc
tion in progress is the responsi
bility of Bateman, of Blounts-
town, Fla. Prof. Phillip Green has
charge of plastic scintillation de
tectors, which will sense muons
and “instruct” the telescope to
charge its chambers.
A SPECTROMETER telescope
observatory doesn’t have the im
posing slitted dome usually as
sociated with astronomical tele
scopes, because of the muon’s dis-
regard for material in its path.
The particle passes unaffected
through roofing and other materi
al, so the spectometer telescope
can be enclosed in a building.
The prototype telescope is ori
ented on steel tracks in an A&M
Research Annex building.
Tracks for the circular-shaiJ
rockers are oriented east-J
“though it could have beennonj
south,” Duller added.
One person can roll the nij
ton device along the tracks, J
orient magnets and spark diJ
bers on points from the zes|
to below the horizon. The tj
scope will roll through an asl
of 95 degrees.
Muon astronomy has advl
tages over optical astronomy.(1
tical astronomers close the dij|
and go to bed when seeing!
ditions are interrupted by doj
or bad weather. The muon does!
“notice” clouds, moisture oti
mospheric heating that pertnj
light rays and disrupt visual™
Duller said a muon passj
straight through a bolt of lijj
ning probably is not affected.
5a/
‘Aggie Revieni
Auditions Sell
Auditions for the Aggie Sj
dent Review in December will|
held during the first two w«
of November.
Michael T. Curd of FortWoitl
Memorial Student Center talJ
committee chairman, said l|
p.m. auditions Nov. 1-3 and
will be in the Singing Cadi
practice room in the left winj|
G. Rollie White Coliseum.
“The five audition dates
open to all students, coeds
graduate students included," Cc]
noted. In the past, from 15 toj
acts have auditioned.
He said he hopes the Deed
Review will be broader in scoJ
with more activities and eonti
uity. The Review will betheot|
opportunity for talent comped
on campus.
Ever
little I
buy ca
shoppii
and th
ing wl
fresh ]
This
Hats
Consul
vembe:
Eacl
to stre
safest
The w
as Ag
ice, ai
Suc<
gins ’v
especi
reflect
of livi
It is
for a
becaus
Exten
A&M
must
But
drudg
spent
a spe
best r
advise
Aft
spend
choose
purch
Sta
nessm
teach*
resea:
sumei
him n
AI'
GF
A serious sign in the progi
sion of alcoholism is the needfj
an “eye-opener” before begin
the day.
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
On« d»y
n« d
*4
44 Per word
per word each additional day
Minin:
[inimum charge—50tf
Classified Display
90f per column inch
each insertion
HELP WANTED
FOR RENT
Wanted, two registered nurses for su
pervisor on 3 to 11 shift at Madison County
Hospital, Madisonville, Texas. Excellent
salary. Call collect, DI 8-2631, Miss Gloria
Rice or Mr. E. G. Clark. 465tfn
FOR SALE
EXER-GENIE exerciser. Demonstration
every Tuesday at 7 :30 p. m. on Jersey
Southside Grocery. For in-
498U5
:ry
Street above
formation call 846-2817.
1967 Dodge 440 Wagon, 6 passenge
4,000 miles, fully equipped. 823-2385.
Complete line of art supplies ; Shiva oils,
jquitex arcrylics, water colors, pastels,
boards — just everything
brushes, canvas boards — just everything
for the artist. Chapman’s Paint Store, 2
blocks north of Weingartens at 81] S.
College Avenue.
eingartens
811
470U
FOR SALE BY OWNER! Ix>t 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
66 Honda 305 Dream, Low mileage A-l
condition, 846-5694 after 5:30 p. m. $325.
486tfn
For
BEST
RESULTS
TRY
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
SOSOLIK'S
TV & RADIO SERVICE
Zenith - Color & B&W - TV
All Makes - TV - Repaired
713 S, Main 822-1941
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES:
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
3400 S. College 823-805X
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.
FREIGHT SALVAGE
• Brand Name Furniture
• Household Appliances
• Bedding
^ Office Furniture
• Plumbing Fixtures
All damag.
utility by
ed items
our repai
stored to full
i department.
C & D SALVAGE CO.
32nd & S. Tabor Streets — Bryan
CHILD CARE
Child care all ages. 846-8151.
HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN
TER. 3406 South College, State Licensed.
123-8626, Virginia D. Jones, R. N. 99tfn
SPECIAL NOTICE
Coin operated electric typewriters avail
able for use in Memorial Sti
foi
tudent 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.
prt
Ch
eck out key at main desk.
460tfn
Two bedrooms for students. Reasonable.
823-3576. Call after 4 :00 p. m. 496tfn
STATE MOTEL, rooms and kitchen, day
y. 846-
262tfn
ms
and weekly rate, near the Universit
5410.
WORK WANTED
Typing C-17-B College View.
846-5416.
491tfn
LOST
Pair of girl’s tortois-shell reading glasses.
Call 846-7543. 498t4
Lost in MSC. Green corduroy coat.
Reward. Call William Prather 846-2853.
498t2
Fraternity pin. Tau Epsilon Phi. Senti
mental value. Reward. Call 846-6814.
496t2
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
TRANSMISSIONS
REPAIRED & EXCHANGED
Completely Guaranteed
LOWEST PRICES
HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION
118 S. Bryan —Bryan— 822-6874
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
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals-Sales-Service
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main 822-6000
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. 55
Phone 823-4250
Make Your Deposit Now
VICTORIAN
APARTMENTS
Midway between Brya
A&M University
STUDENTS 11
Need A Summer Home
& 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur.
Pool and Private Courtyard
3 MONTHS LEASE
822-2035 401 Lake St. Apt. 1
LUEDECKE ROCK SHOP
Findings, Stones & Equipment
Jones Bridge Road
Next to West Runway
Easterwood Airport — 846-7474
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th 822-2819
Watch Repair
Jewelry Repair
Diamond Senior
Rings
Senior Rings
Refinished
C. W. Varner & Sons
Jewelers
North Gate 846-5810
AUTO REPAIRS
All Makes
Just Say:
“Charge It”
Cade Motor Co.
Ford Dealer
OFFICIAL NOTICE
DUP
Official notice* must arrive in the I
of Student Publications before deedin'l
eee must arrn
iblieatione bef
I p. m. of the day preceding publit
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Final Examination for the Doctoral P
Name: Fritsche, Herbert Ahart, Jr.
Degree: Doctor of Philosophy in Chernii
Dissertation: Electrochemical Invatii
mic
tiona in Aqueous and Nonaqueous SI
vents • Part 1 : Polarographic Diffwil
-apmc uiiiiki
ElcctrochemiJ
a;
Coefficients; Part II:
Investigation of Gadolinium.
Time: Saturday, November 11, 1!)61
10 :00 a. m.
Place
: Room 231, Chemistry Building
Wayne C. Hull
Dean of Graduate Studies
ENGLISH PROFICIENCY EXAMINATIO'i
The English proficiency examination.^
quired of all junior students majoring e
Education or in psychology will be offert
psy
from 3 :0U to 5 :00 p. m. on December 1
again at the same timeii
(Ihursdayl and again at the same trmi
December 8 (Friday!. Students may
the examination at either time by reporlml
to Academic 208. Examinees should brinl
pen, pencil, tdictionary and compositinl
paper. 4I!HI|
The English Proficiency Examinationfcl
students majoring in Business Adminiital
tion will he given Wednesday, NovemW|
02
15, at 4 :00 p. m., in Room 2C
Hall. Students who take this
Hall. Students who take this exammam
must register in the office of the Seho
of Business Administration not later thn]
6 :00 p. m. Tuesday, November 14, 1961.
Those undergraduate students who hinl
95 semester hours of credit may purchal
the A&M ring. The hours passed at tit|
me nours pass
time of the preliminary grade report t*|
November 13, 1967, may be use
fying the 95 hours requireme
students qualifying under this
may leave their na
in
ent. Tins
i regulatw
y leave their names with the Ring CW
the Registrar’s Office, in order that ih
may check their records to determine thrij
eligibility to order the ring. Orders for lt«|
ill be taken between No
igs will be taken between November I’
1967 and January 5, 1968. These rinp
elivery on or Februan
15, 1968. THE RING CLERK IS ON DUT!
FROM 8:00 a. m. TO 12:00 NOON. MON'
DAY THROUGH FRIDAY, OF EACH
WEEK.
WE KENT
TYPEWRITERS
Electric, Manual, &
Portable
OTIS MCDONALD’S
429 S. Main — Phone 822-I.')28
Bryan, Texas
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 AH Cars - Save
25 - 40%
Brake Shoes $2.98 ex.
2 Wheels — many cars
Auto trans. oil 25tf
AC - 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