Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 9, 1967)
imit, 116 Varii lra > will ' slr umeii| ha s ^ Unit, ^ars n ,i( le toi ; ol| eges ( that, es, •'aveths they j|j 'yed p],, 'Vould 1 i?l epubliti ■ t to tit 1 tnayl osely II ^ whtt stands 7:45 pt ffee Ld id dong: wing ft ! Si jk rT" 9 S@ ;i ulz PRICES GOOD THUR.-FRI.-SAT. NOV. 9-10-11 Quantity Rights Reserved SnW 8 ^ MONEY SAVER a IDEA BOOK! WITH THESE COUPONS IN OUR“MONEY SAVER AND IDEA BOOK” WE ARE PROUD TO OFFER 8 MATCHING PIECES OF BLUE FLORAL GLASBAKE OVENWARE AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS AND EXCITING OFFER ON WASHINGTON FORGE UTENSILS PLUS OVER $25.00 IN VALUABLE COUPON SAVINGS! Last Week To Complete Your Kitchen Sets! a sbake, Ovenware — 2 1 /> Quart MIXING BOWL Town & Country — 6 Piece UTENSIL SUSAN MEAT PIES Shurfresh — 1-Lb. Pkg-s. MARGARINE $1.49 Size — 10 Count Contact COLD CAPSULES $1.50 Size — 10-Oz. Sofskin Moisture Lotion With Coupon With Coupon Shurfrost — Frozen With Coupon With Coupon With Coupon With Coupon 88‘ M69 20 15 50 $|10 C Off 6 Pkgs. C Off 5 Pkgs. C Off Pur. Off Pur. EGGS Cackleberry Grade 'A' Large Doz. 39 7-UP 6 Bottle Carton BUTTERMILK 39 Porden’s Y> Gal. Ctn. A. F. — Low Fat HomoMilk Ctn. Gal. iirpt I’rem G y v E E LUNCHEON MEAT I2 £„49c Swift S BEEF STEW MW, 24-Oz. .. Can' I’ard 7 DOG FOOD /ill/r' Rcpular or Dry ■Mil VO-5 SHAMPOO /,160c Jl'Wll Kinp Size, ColKate ffl TOOTH PASTE Patio R * e 49c r>9c g ^ e e HAIR SPRAY M59c 36 Count EXCEDRIN MEXICAN DINNERS 1 49c Patio, Cheese — 12-Oz. ENCHILADA DINNERS 49c Patio, Beef ENCHILADAS 20 C65c Booth, Breaded 8-°z. jr PKr. cML All Sweet WE MARGARINE GIVE 4 - 1p L k B g. Pillsbury or Ballard Jgl] BISCUITS 8 Philadelphia WE CREAM CHEESE GIVE CHICKEN HENS 8-Oz. Cans Swift’s Premium WE ALL MEAT FRANKS GIVE [8|pssi^g--| Heavy Beef la SHOULDER ROAST Heavy Beef Seven Steak ib Heavy Beef, Boneless English Roast 79 4 to 6 Lb. Avg. — Lb. Grapefruit 5 ^49< Jonathan *> LB Q C Apples ^ bac ^ WE GIVE FRYERS 29 HEAVY BEEF CHUCK f AIMi RoastJS Washington State D’Anjou PEARS Yellow SQUASH Fresh CUCUMBERS Green PEPPERS 2 Convenient Locations * Downtown 200 E. 24th St. * Ridgecrest 3516 Texas Ave. THE BATTALION Thursday, November 9, 1967 College Station, Texas Page 3 Writers Club To Organize With Seminar Ji The Houston chapter , of the Society of Technical Writers and Publishers will conduct a seminar here next week for the organiza tion’s Texas A&M student chap ter. James M. Sizemore of Sher man, A&M chapter president, said the Thursday meeting in the Memorial Student Center will include several addresses, panel discussions and a noon luncheon. A&M students formed the first collegiate chapter of the society last year, according to Dr. John Guinn, English professor and fac ulty advisor. Houston professional chapter members will meet with four sec tions of English courses on tech nical writing Thursday morning. Joe Godfrey, with IBM at NASA, will speak at the noon luncheon in Room 2B. “Technical Communication-Cen ter of a Quiet Storm” will be the topic of a 1:30 p.m. speech by John Colby, with Esso Produc tion Research Co. of Houston. Panel discussions afterward will deal with types of technical pub lications in government and in dustry and academic program planning. Panel leaders will be David Holman, Houston chapter chairman in NASA publications, and Dr. Christine Brannan of the University of Houston. She is program chairman for the Hous ton chapter. Journalism Department head C. J. Leabo indicated beginning reporting classes will attend the seminar, along with English De partment technical writing course sections. A former A&M student who helped organize the chapter, Don Janicek, will attend as a Houston chapter member. The former KBTX-TV sports announcer is now with the Texas Eastern Transmission Co. of Houston. Sizemore is a senior journalism major. Secretary of the A&M chapter is Louis J. VanPelt of Bryan, graduate student in Eng lish. Greer To Speak At Road Study D. C. Greer, retiring state high way engineer, has been named keynote speaker for the 1st an nual Highway Short Course Nov. 28-30 at Texas A&M. “A Glance Back and a Long Look Down the. Road” will be the topic of Greer’s talk, an nounced general chairman Char les J. Keese, director of A&M’s Texas Transportation Institute. Course sponsors are TTI and the Texas Highway Department. Others slated to participate in opening ceremonies are A&M President Earl Rudder, incoming state highway engineer J. C. Dingwall, and members of the Texas Highway Commission Hal Woodward, Herbert C. Petry Jr. and J. H. Kultgen. Technical sessions are scheduled for traffic and design operations, materials and construction, pave ment design, structures, right of way and economics, maintenance, and management. Among other session leaders and participants are W. G. Ad kins, TTI Transport Operations Department head; W. O. Thread- gill, THD right of way research engineer; G. B. Cobb of Houston Natural Gas Company; A. H. Christian, THD right of way en gineer; W. C. Arnold, highway division chief for the Attorney General’s Office; W. E. Car michael, THD district engineer in Houston; T. K. Wood, THD district engineer in Austin; and R. W. Crook. THD district en gineer in Fort Worth. All sessions are set in A&M’s Memorial Student Center. Senior Engineer Authors Article Engineers’ problem - solving training should be applied to answering questions in civic, po litical and community affairs, according to a Texas A&M en gineering student. Views of senior petroleum en gineering major Jesse H. Stiles Jr. of Frederick, Okla., appeared in a “Texas Professional Engi neer” article. “Problems encountered in these areas may appear entirely differ ent from those in engineering, however, many of the problems are of such a nature that optim ization is required rather than a definite answer—an excellent area in which to use ‘engineering judgment’,” Stiles wrote. ■ -V-*