<<#*.. . ... -iss THE BATTALION Wednesday, December 13, 1967 College Station, Texas Page 3 Rayburn, Howell Return From SCUSA XIX Two A&M juniors have re turned from the U. S. Military Academy’s 19th Student Confer ence on U. S. Affairs held last week at West Point, N. Y. They are Ralph Rayburn of IngTeside and William Howell Jr. of Brenham. Students from more than 120 colleges and universities attended the conference, organized by the Cadet Debate Council and Forum with the assistance of the Depart ment of Social Sciences at the academy. “The Sputnik Decade” was this year’s topic. Major speakers in cluded Deputy Secretary of De fense, and Joseph E. Johnson, president of the Carnegie Endow ment for International Peace. Howell, who is sergeant major of the Combined Bands, is vice- chairman of A&M’s Student Con ference on National Affairs com mittee. Rayburn, a member of Third Battalion Staff, is SCONA’s Secretary Committee vice-chair man. BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES 0n« day per word 3c per word each additional day Minimum charge—50c Classified Display 90c Per column inch each insertion DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publication FOR RENT Furnished bedroom, private entrance and tile bath. Central air, heat. 415 College Main. S40, 840-4544. 516t3 FOR SALE Horse for sale Lineback Dun gielding. Very gentle. Call 822-3980. Used c hardtop, trade or 846-2957. ar, Plymouth I960 Satellite 2-door 383 engine, radio and heater, cash for equity. Owe $1350.00. Furnished three room apt. for two male students to paint and repair, Northgate, us is $45. 840-5444. Motorcycles for sale. 1967 Kawasaki 175-F2 S375.00 ; 1906 Honda S90 $195; 1904 j Honda 50 $75 ; 1967 Hodaka 90 $320; New | Kawasaki 85 $275. M.G. Sales Co., N. Highway 6, Hearne; Phone LI 6-3232. 51515 agate 5 Hit STATE MOTEL, rooms and kitchen, day y, 846- 2G2tfn md weekly rate, near the Universit 1110. THE BRYAN ARMS APARTMENTS “Congenial Living” Separate Adult & Family Areas “Children Welcome’’ Model Apts. Open For Inspection f-oni $120 - All Utilities Paid 1602 S. College Avenue Jiesiilont Manager - Apt. 55 Phone 823-4250 Make Your Deposit Now 3051fn is ; Coldspot air conditioner ; Kenmore 8-cycle washer ; 8x12 carpet and curtains for Hensel living room. Call 846-8236. 515t3 1906 Filter-flo G.E. washer. Excellent condition. Owner moving. 8110. 311 First Apt. D 846-5902. 515t4 1966 Simon. Still under warranty. Good condition. Financing available. Call 589- 2202 or 589-2525. 513t6 1965 Mustang V-8, Tach and guages, brand new tires, very clean. 840-8081. 508tfn FOR SALE HY OWNER! Lot 70 x 100 feet on 20th Street in Bryan near schools. Phone 846-0669. 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- 009. 489tfn OFFICIAL NOTICE V 1 C T O R 1 A N A P A It T M E N T S Midway between Bryan & A&M University STUDENTS!! Need A Home 1 & 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur. Pool and Private Courtyard 3 MONTHS LEASE 822-2035 401 Lake St. Apt. 1 SPECIAL NOTICE SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300 A.F. & A.M. “ Stated communication Thurs day, Dec. 14 at 7:00 p. m. Also F.C. & M.M. examination after the business session. Tom Chandler, W.M. Joe Woolket, Sec’y 5UU2 Anyone interested in the formation of a .'roup to discuss the philosophy presented •n Rand’s Atlas Shlupfvred, please contact Karen Dukes 823-0241). 515t4 Coin operated electric typewriters avail able for use in Memorial Student Center. Cost 10c for 20 minutes, 25< for 1 hour. Located in Room H of sound proof piano practice rooms on Iwer level of MSC. Check out key at main desk. 4(>0tfn CHILD CARE Chilu care all ages. 840-8151. 3411fd HUMPTY DU.MPTY CHILDREN CEN TER. 3400 South College, State I.icensed. I23-S62G, Virginia D. Jones, R. N. 99tfn HELP WANTED Wanted, two registered nurses for su pervisor on 3 to 11 shift at Madison County Hospital. Madison vil le, Texas. Kxeellent Hilary. Call collect, DI S-2(>31. Miss (loria 'ice or Mr. K. (1. Clark. 4(i5tfn LOST Pair of Km pi re 7X50 Binoculars at SWT Basketball p;amo. Contact Joe Clep- pcr. Dorm 10-130. REWARD 516t2 GM Lowest Priced Cars 349.79 per mo. With Normal Down Payment OPEL KADETT Sellstrom Pontiac - Ruick 2700 Texas Ave. 26th & Parker 822-1336 822-1307 SOSOLIK'S TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV All Makes - TV - Repaired 713 S. Main 822-1941 — WE RENT TYPEWRITERS Electric, Manual, & Portable OTIS MCDONALD’S 429 S. Main — Phone 822-1328 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 All Cars - Save 25 - 40% Brake Shoes $2.98 ex. 2 Wheels — many cars Auto trans. oil 25 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 Official notices must arrive in the Office of Student Publications before deadline of l p. m. of the day preceding publication. THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree Name; Douglas, Charles Ray Degree; Doctor of Philosophy in Genetics Dissertation : A Study of Triploid and 3x- 1 Aneuploid Plants In the Genus Gos- sypium. Time; Tuesday, December 19, 1967 at 9:00 a. m. Place: Room 303, Plant Sciences Building Wayne C. Hall Dean of Graduate Studies 516t3 THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree Name: Cooke, William Peyton, Jr. Degree: Doctor of Philosophy in Statistics Dissertation : Convex programming Applied to the Estimation of the Parameters of Definite Quadratic Forms and TO Related Tests of Hypotheses. Time: Monday, December 18, 1967 at 2:15 p. m. Place: Room 102 Conference Room, DPC Addition-West Wing Space Research Cen to r. Wayne C. Hall Dean of Graduate Studies 51514 THE GRADUATE COLLEGE F inal Flxamination for the Doctoral Degree Name: Vogel, Richard Frank Degree: Doctor of Education in Industrial Education Dissertation : An Analysis of the Compara tive Effectiveness of Common Methods Used in Teaching Electricity on the Junior High School Level. Time: Monday, December 18, 1967 at 3 :00 p'. m. Place: Room 104 A, M.E. Shops Building Wayne C. Hall Dean of Graduate Studies 515t4 TRANSMISSIONS I REPAIRED & EXCHANGED ■ Completely Guaranteed LOWEST PRICES 1 HAM ILL’S TRANSMISSION 1 118 S. Brynn —Bryan— 822-6874 AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. Collegre 823-8051 LUEDECKE ROCK SHOP Findings, Stones & Equipment Jones Bridge Road Next to West Runway Easterwood Airport — 846-7474 FREIGHT SALVAGE • Brand Name Furniture • Household Appliances • Bedding ^ Office Furniture • Plumbing Fixtures All damaged items restored to full utility by our repairs department. C & D SALVAGE CO. 32nd & S. Tabor Streets — Bryan NEED CASH For The Holidays See UNIVERSITY LOAN COMPANY 317 PATRICIA (North Gate) College Station, Texas Tel.: 846-8319 AUTO REPAIRS All Makes •Just Say: “Charge It” Cade Motor Co c Ford Dealer OFFICIAL NOTICE THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree Name: Fite, Lloyd Emery Degree: Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering Dissertation : A Study of the Design Para meters for the Measurements of Carbon by Neutron Inelastic Scattering. Time: Tuesday, December 19, 1937 at 1:39 p. m. Place: Room 116, Bolton Hall Wayne C. Hall Dean of Graduate Studies 516t3 THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree Name: Layman, Andrew Hodnett Degree: Doctor of Philosophy in Civil Engineering Dissertation : “A Study of the Flexural Properties of a Black Base.” Time: Monday, December 18, 1967 at 1 :00 p. m. Place: Room 15, TTI Building Wayne C. Hall Dean of Graduate Studies 515t4 Regalia for the January 1968 Commencement Exercise All students who are candidates for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy or Doctor of Education are required to order hoods as well as the Doctor’s caps and gowns. The hoods are to lie left at the Registrar's Office no later than 1 :00 p. m.. Tuesday. January 16 (this will be accomplished by a representative of the University Exchange Storei. The Ph.D. or D.Ed. hoods will not be worn in the procession since all such candidates will he hooded on the stage as part of the ceremony. Candidates for the Master's Degree will wear the cap and gown ; all civilian students who are candi dates for the Bachelor’s Degree will wear the cap and gown : ROTC students who are candidates for the Bachelor’s Degree will wear the appropriate uniform. All military personnel who are candidates for the degrees, graduate or undergraduate, will wear the uniform only. Rental of caps and gowns may he arranged with the Ex change Store. Orders may he placed be tween 8:00 a. m., Monday, December 11, and 5 :l)0 p. m., Friday, December 22. The rental is as follows: Doctor’s cap and gown, $5.25: Master’s cap and gown, $4.75; Bachelor's cap and gown, S4.25. Hood rental is the same as that for the cap and gown. A 2'/f sales tax is required in addition to these rentals. Payment is required at the time of placing order. 508tl3 Those undergraduate students who have 95 semester hours of credit may purchase the A&M ring. The hours passed at the time of the preliminary grade report on November 13, 1967, may be used in satis- fying the 95 hours requirement. Those students qualifying under this regulation may leave their names with the Ring Clerk in the Registrar’s Office, in order that she may check their records to determine their eligibility to order the ring. Orders for the rings will he taken between November 27, 1967 and January 5, 1968. These rings will be returned for delivery on or February 15. 1968. THE RING CLFIRK IS ON DUTY FROM 8:00 a. m. TO 12:00 NOON. MON DAY THROUGH FRIDAY, OF EACH WEEK. 498tfn WANTED Need 20 people for Charter bus trip to Cotton Bowl $7.50 per person round trip. Leave Bryan 8:00 a. m., Jan. 1st return after game. Bus takes you to gates of Cotton Bowl. “Anything Goes Bus Line.” Call 846-8701 before 5, 822-4500 after 5 P- m. 515t4 HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th 822-2819 ATTENTION GRADUATING SENIORS You may pick up your invita tions at the Accounting Division, Lower Level Room in the Me morial Student Center starting Tuesday Dec. 12, 8-12, 1-5. SPECIAL NOTICE TO THOSE GRADUATING SENIORS WHO DID NOT ORDER THEIR GRADUATION INVITATIONS. The EXTRA INVITATIONS will go on sale Thursday Dec. 14, 8-12, 1-4, at the Cashier’s Window, Memorial Student Cen ter. These invitations are sold on a first come, first serve basis only. • Watch Repair • Jewelry Repair • Diamond Senior Rings » Senior Rings Refinished C. W. Varner & Sons Jewelers North Gate 846-5810 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. TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main 822-6000 Fake Doctor Feels Relief, Exposed After Three Years Last Word Spoken By Gen. Hershey WASHINGTON <^> — Draft director Lewis B. Hershey said Tuesday night he has spoken his last word on the hotly debated issue of who should enforce what in the selective service law—and that word is: “The joint state ment has got to speak for itself from now on.” He referred to a statement he and Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark issued Saturday, spelling out what appeared to be clearly di vided responsibilities of the Jus tice Department and the Selective Service System in dealing with violations of the draft law and regulations. Absent from Hershey’s re sponse to questions in a telephone interview Tuesday night was the strong reaffirmation, that has market previous comments, of his Oct. 26 letter to local draft boards urging them to induct anyone who interferes with the draft or mili tary recruiting. 1 loliday Party Set For Faculty-Staff The Texas A&M Faculty-Staff Dinner Dance Club will sponsor a Christmas holiday party Dec. 28 for all faculty-staff personnel and guests, announced Mrs. Anne Elmquist, committee chairman. Mrs. Elmquist said the dinner dance is scheduled for 7 p.m. at the Ramada Inn. She emphasized the party is in addition to the club’s regularly scheduled events and is open to non-members and their g’uests. Tickets, costing $3 per person, may be purchased at the Memor ial Student Center’s main desk or at Ramada Inn, beginning Fri day. By PEGGY SIMPSON DALLAS, Tex. (AP) — Fred die Brant, the ex-convict who successfully posed as a physician and phychiatric intern at a state mental hospital and as an East Texas town’s only doctor for more than three years, said Tuesday he feels “a great deal of relief” at being unmasked. “It just all sort of skyrocket ed,” the crewcut, slender 44-year- old Brant said of his career as an imposter. He posted $10,000 bond at 2 a.m. Tuesday at the Kaufman County jail. Last Friday he was charged with perjury and forgery for his impersonation of Dr. Reid Brown, a Chattanooga, Tenn., physician for whom Brant had worked as lab and x-ray techni cian for four years. “I thought many times I’d like to get out of it,” Brant said of his dual role at Terrell State Fall Issues Ready For Ag Students Fall issues of the “Texas A&M Agriculturist” are now ready to be picked up, according to Man uel Pina, new editor of the stu dent magazine. The magazine, representing students in the Col lege of Agriculture, has been placed in the major agriculture buildings on the campus. “This magazine is the only one for the students in agriculture; it will hopefully give them infor mation that they otherwise can’t or won’t find elsewhere,” Pina said. No charge will be made for copies given to students, as they paid for their subscriptions dur ing registration. Hospital and in the East Texas lumber town of Groveton. “But it was difficult to leave when there was a thousand people who needed help. I was trying to get another physician to come in with me at Groveton so I would withdraw as I had at Terrell,” Brant said at a news conference in the office of his lawyer, Em mett Colvin. Brant said he had delivered four babies during his tenure as a physician, all of them within the last month. But he said he referred all critical or terminal cases to physicians in Lufkin, about 35 miles away, or to spe cialists in Galveston. “I feel I’ve done more good than harm,” the Louisiana native said. But he said he wouldn’t do it over again, especially because of the occasional brushes with his past which spelled near-ex posure. Astronomy Buffs To Meet Tonight A star party is planned at a meeting tonight of a proposed county-wide astronomical associa tion. The 7:30 p.m. meeting will be in Room 145 of the Texas A&M physics building, announced chair man Jim Thomas of Baytown. The star party will follow a brief business meeting. “Several telescopes have been arranged for the viewing session,” Thomas noted. “All interested persons — students, faculty-staff and area residents—are welcome. Those planning to attend who have telescopes are invited to bring them.” In Groveton, meanwhile, citi zens circulated petitions on be half of their only doctor and were pledging help to support him in efforts he might want to make to become a legitimate phy sician. “I’m amazed by these people, by their faith in me and their desire to help,” said Brant, who had been working 10-to-12-hour days at a clinic he opened there this summer. He said he’s like to return to Groveton, after his legal troubles are cleared, and practice—not as a physician—but as a laboratory and x-ray technician, which he is licensed to do on his own merits. He said he had told no one of his double life, not even his 23- year-old wife, Shai’on, his third spouse. “She learned the hard way. I called her from the courthouse,” Brant said. He said since their marriage three years ago, he had shielded her from his relatives in Louisiana and from other con tacts with his past who might let slip that he was not Dr. Reid Brown. Brant said he quit formal school in the fifth grade to help by pick ing berries and hoeing potatoes to feed his mother and four younger sisters and brother after his father abandoned them dur ing the depression. During his Air Force service he earned a high school equiva lency certificate at the age of 23. Off and on, between time in pri son for an armed robbery sen tence in Louisiana, he has studied medicine. He said he first got the yen to be a doctor when he was a prison scrub nurse and later read all the medical books he could find. He worked at Ochsner’s Clinic in New Orleans and at the Tu- lane University School of Medi cine, then as an x-ray technician at a Chattanooga, Tenn., hospital where he became friends with the real Dr. Reid L. Brown. Campus Briefs The $2.00 Hangup. TERIM We want everyone to fly. * *» «’ --V* * • •'«$ w.I .* • v. \ *• .-..w— . \V v * * v y'r