WE RENT TYPEWRITERS Electric, Manual, & Portable OTIS MCDONALD’S 429 S. Main — Phone 822-1328 Bryan, Texas Varsity Town Suits at ^un Stnrnca mtnii wear Storm Hits Ark. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. _ A degree of calm settled over Ar kansas late Tuesday after two days of turbulent weather that left northwest Arkansas realing under the worst snowstorm in recent memory. The snowstorm which dumped up to 14 inches of snow in Benton, Washington, Baxter and Stone counties, was accompanied by se- 317 Patricia Signature Loans $10 to $100 Prompt Confidential Service UNIVERSITY LOAN COMPANY North Gate Tel: 846-8319 COLLEGE TEACHING A Cooperative College Registry representative will interview candidates March 15 for faculty and admin istrative posts in 250 church-related liberal arts colleges throughout the United States. Salaries — $6,000 to $19,000, plus fringe benefits. Ph.D preferred. Master’s required' A free service. Appointment through Placement Office. vere thunderstorms and 55 miles per hour wind gusts, disrupting electrical service and paralyzing traffic, industry and commerce. The community of Prairie Creek Benton County was virtually blocked off from communication Tuesday. Some 2,000 families in the area have been without elec trical service since 11 p.m. Mon day and power company officials said it would be Wednesday be fore power could be restored. Temperatures in the area were expected to drop into the teens overnight. A spokesman said all available crews are working to restore service, but he said they were hampered by four to five- foot snow drifts. Thousands of students from the University of Arkansas, John Brown University and public schools enjoyed a holiday as class es were canceled. This was the first time in this century, that the UA had shut down classes. Living deep in the ocean, the giant squid is almost never seen alive. An occasional dead speci men is cast up on a beach or remains are found in stomachs of deep-diving sperm whale. THE BATTALION Wednesday, March 13, 1968 College Station Texas Page 3 New BA College Plans For Future Political Announcements Subject to action of the Dem ocratic Primary May 4, 1968. For Congressman, Sixth Con gressional District: OLIN E. TEAGUE (Re-Election) BA TTALION CLASSIFIED AGGIE-EX SWORN Cynthia Smith of College Station set a first with her enlistment into the Air Force February 16. She graduated from A&M in January and is the first “Maggie” to re ceive an Air Force commission. WANT AD RATES 0n« day per 3« per word each additional d Minimum chargre—60< Claasified Display 90# per column inch each insertion word day FOR SALE I.AND IN CITY OF BRYAN Scaled proposals, in duplicate, addressed to County A&M Club, Box 4, Col- lece Station, Texas, will be received at College Station, Txas, on the 15th day of March, 1968, for the followinsr described three tracts of land : 1. Lot Number One ill in Block "D’’ in the Country Club Estate No. 2, and addition to City of Bryan, Brazos County, Texas occordinsr to plat of said addition recorded in Vol. 150 pa«e 121, DRBCT, and being the same land conveyed by Joe Sos- olik by deed dated March 13, 1963, and recorded in Vol. 226 page 468 of the Deed Records of Brazos County, Texas. 2. One Acre, more or less, in Zeno Phillips longue, Abst. 45. City of Bryai Villag 2. Une z\cre, more or hillips I-eogue. Abst. 45. Texas, adjacent to Munnerlyn Village, being descril>ed in deed dated 6-30-48 and recorded in Vol. 136 page 58 of the Deed Records of Brazos County, Texas. 3. 180' x 100', containing 0.41 acres of land, in Zeno Phillips League, in City of liryan, Brazos County, Texas dated 7-26-48 and recorded in Vol. 136 page 59 of the Deed Records of Brazos County, Texas. rm.i erty is South of Bryan Munici- Ihis property is South pal Golf Course, facing Street and Ehlinger Stre this property, known ik Street. Tee i. A building on the clubhouse of this property, known as the clubhouse of the Brazos County A&M Club. The seller reserves the right to select the bid which best suits its needs, whether the price is the highest or not, and also reserves the right to reject all bids or waive info ties. 1953 Dodge Station Wagon. 5903 for nites or weekends. *50 846- 549t4 Real Bargains—Only two left, new 1967 itomatic_ ars, 802 S. Main, Calvert, Texas, Phone EM 4-2884. 549tfn „nly twe Mustangs, loaded, V-8, air, automatic, and etc. Save S700. Authorized Ford Dealer. Calvert Motors, 802 S. Main, Calvert, Te: 12 Ping Pong tabl only $11.00 each (46-9897. able tops. $16.00 value Burke Hargrove, Phone 637tfn 20 case electric Coca Cola box. Originally S550 now only $95. Burke Hargrove. Phone *40-9897. 537tfn 200 metal inly $4 each in Phone 846-9897. folding in 6 1< chairs. $7.98 value ts. Burke Hargrove. 687tfn 2 Roping Saddles. Call 822-8980 after 5. Party records, Golf-Game, Bud Fletcher albums, Ken Idaho albums. Play-boy maga zines, all kinds Texas Aggie Champion stickers—many other novelty and gag ie Den, North Gate (next to items—Aggii Loupot’s) open 8 a. m. till T seven days a week—come see us ! 525tfn FOUND Man’s wedding band. Contact Kichard Klapper. 106 Park Place. 549t2 SOSOUKS TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV A Makes - TV - Repairs 713 S. Main 822-1941 FOR RENT Lartfe furnished house. $126 per month. Call 846-6311. 549tfn Recently renovated apartments for rent. Unfurnished. Space for animals. 1814 Fin Feather Road. Water and Butane fur nished. Contact W. F. Davis. 822-3618. 548t5 STATK MOTEL, rooms and kitchen, day and weekly rate, near the University, 846- 1410. y, oso- 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. 55 Phone 823-4250 Make Your Deposit Now 365tfn VICTORIAN APARTMENTS 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 WORK WANTED ng—standard electric typewriter will ibols. Experienced at typing mathe Typi 24 symbols. Experienced at typing mi matics and statistics, thesis and digs' tions. Anita Fickey 823-8377. erta- 550t4 THESIS DISSERTATION TYPING WANTED Accui meet your deadline! Call 846-6160. 550t3 Experienced typist wishes to do typing of all kinds. 822-4018. 550t2 Dei pers ependable hostess—waitress. Apply in ton at College Station Chicken Shack. 649tfn OFFICIAL NOTICE Official notices must arrive in the Office of Student Publications before deadline of * P- ot the day preceding publication. All International Persons ■es of the United Sti ce ring of your 1967 Income nited States In fill be on the dates to assist Representatives of the ternal Revenue Servic campus on the follov you in the preparation Tax Return. If you have any questions or problems in connection with your return, please see these gentlemen on either of these dates. Dates: Monday, 18 March, from 1:30 — Ti a. m. — Plac ium, YMCA. Bring with 9 :00 to 11:00 Tuesday. 19 March, from your W-2 form, of yast year’s In. :e: South Solar- copy of you your passport, and a copy :ome Tax statement. 54915 English Proficiency Examination ‘‘The English Proficiency Examination re quired to be taken before the end of the junior year by persons majoring in History and in Political Science (Government) will be given on March 19 and 20 from 3:00- 5:00 p. m.. in Room 204, Nagle Hall. Stu dents are to register for this examination at the departmental offices in History and in Political Science (Government) prior to 5:00 p. m., Monday, March 18.’’ 549t4 SPECIAL NOTICE ATTENTION JOB APPLICANTS The BATTALION does not knowingly accept Help-Wanted ads from employers covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act if they offer less than the legal minimum wage or fail to pay at least time and one- half for overtime hours. The minimum wage for employment covered by the FLSA prior to the 1966 Amendments is *1.60 an with hour with overtime pay required after 40 hours a week. Jobs covered as a result of the 1966 Amendments require $1.15 an hour minimum with overtime pay required after 42 hours a week. For specific in formation, contact the Wage and Hour Office of the: U. S. Department of Labor Wage & Hour & Public Contracts Divs. 912 Professional Bid. 5th & Franklin St. Waco. Texas 76701. 538tfn Those undergraduate students who have may passi reliminary Grade ergr 95 semester hou the A&M ring, time of the P April 1, 1968 may the 95 hour requi qualifying under their name with studei rs of credit may purchase The hours passed at the Report, be used in satisfying equirement. The students r this regulation may leave tneir name with the Ring Clerk in the Registrar’s Office in order that she may check the records to determine their eligibility to order the ring. Ord< rings will be tak tne rings will be taken and May 31, 1968. All turned to this office on for further delivery. The 8:00 to 12:00 noon. very. Th. duty from 8:00 to 12 Friday. through ers for between April 16, rings will be r about July ] Ring Clerk is Me re- July 10 •k londay 549134 Students wishing to place a 1967 AGGIE- LAND in their high school may pick them up in the office of Student Publications. Services Building. 548tfn ATTENTION ! Personnel and students of A&M University. See us before you buy your furniture and appliance needs. Ask about the student plan. The store of distinctive furniture—Wood Furniture Com pany. 501 North Texas. Telephone 822- 1227 537tfn ’’SPRING AWARD SCHOLARSHIPS" Application forms for Spring Award Scholarships may tie obtained from ths Student Financial Aid Office, Room 308, YMCA Building during the period February - March 31, 1968. All applications be_ filed with the Student Financial by not lati I2th - Man fil« :e by not later than 5:00 p. m. April 1, 1968. Late applications will not be must Aid Offie, accepted. 531t30 Preveterina All students w] pre-veterinary medicine 968 must h Medicine Students expect to register in icine for the Spring must have their courses A Semester 1968 must have their cours approved by their Academic Advisor, form signed by the Academic Advisor listing aonroved courses must lie and listing approved presented at regis stration. must 521tfn CHILD CARE Typing. 846-3290. 522tfn GM Lowest Priced Cars $49.79 per mo. W ith Normal Down Payment OPEL KADETT Sellstrom Pontiac - Buick 2700 Texas Ave. 822-1336 26th & Parker 822-1307 Classic Wax Cal Custom Accessories Hurst Floor Shifts Enco & Conoco 31^ qt. Amalie & Havoline .. 35ff 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 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 TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED & EXCHANGED Completely Guaranteed LOWEST PRICES HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION 118 S Bryan —Bryan— 822-6874 HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN TER, 3400 South College, State Licensed. $23-8626, Virginia D. Jones, R. N. 99tfn • Watch Repair • Jewelry Repair • Diamond Senior Rings • Senior Rings Refinished C. W. Varner & Sons Jewelers Noth Gate 846-5816 LOOKING FOR A NEW CAR FOR ONLY $1767.00 COME TO Hickman Garrett Volkswagen AUTHORIZED DEALER 1701 So. College Ave. 822-0146 M Now Leasing The New Luxurious Trinity Gardens tivK r/SnKi *. E A r E r fjK xfsi §£!£ *. MtJS New • Children and Pets Welcome. for information call: 846-2614 or 846 - 5070 Trinity Place & S. W. Parkway College Station ATTENTION Research Professors Graduate Research Assistants You may be eligible for special income tax benefits. For this and other tax problems contact. Blocker Trant 4015 S. Texas Ave. Phone 846-7842 HELP WANTED Vanted. two registered nurses for su pervisor on 3 to 11 shift at Madison County Hospital, Madisonville, Texas. Excellent Hospital, Madisonville, Texas. Excel Salary. Call collect, DI 8-2631, Miss G1 Rice or Mr. E. G. Clark. 46! loria 465tfn AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th 822-2819 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 AUTO REPAIRS All Makes Just Say: “Charge It” Cade Motor Co. Ford Dealer TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main 822-6000 Senior Engineers Hear Bovay Speech H. E. Bovay, Jr., president of the Texas Society of Professional Engineers, will speak to engineer ing seniors at 4 p.m. Thursday, in the Architecture Library on the pros and cons of taking the EIT exam. All senior will be dismissed from engineering classes at 4 p.m. on Thursday to hear Bovay. The talk is sponsored by the A&M student Engineers’ Council. Boh Stiles, senior aerospace engineer from San Antonio who is vice- president of the council, was re sponsible for making arrange ments. In seeking to excel in training those who will translate the space age technology into the economy of the future, Texas A&M is establishing a College of Business Administration this fall. The dean o*f the college will be Dr. John E. Pearson, present head of A&M’s School of Business Ad ministration, who is an enthusi astic proponent of the concept that creativity and innovation— not staid business formalism— are the keys of future enterprise. “Most people think of business education as following practices already successful,” he said. “This is a pretty limited view. The real purpose of business education is to translate technological devel opment and change in terms of a market economy.” EVEN ON CAMPUS, Pearson added, professors and students constantly come by with inven tions or products and ask how can they be marketed. “And this is the most exciting thing these students can do—get together with people in the sci ences and say, ‘How can we enter prise?’” he said. “The types of things they’ll be dealing with 20 to 30 years from now are from Buck Rogers. Some one has to put these into the economy. Things like the laser, for instance. Only 20 years ago they were first playing around with semiconductors,” Pearson noted. Today, A&M’s School of Busi ness has 1,400 undergraduate students and 80 working on mas ter’s degrees. In addition, the school conducts executive devel opment programs the year round on campus. PLANS FOR the future Col lege of Business include increases Powell Advises Day Students Of Available Parking Places Texas A&M day students riving on campus after 9 a.m. are advised by Campus Security Chief Ed Powell to park in. west-side lots along Highway 2154. Chief Powell also issued a warn ing for both students and faculty- staff personnel who are delin quent with parking and traffic tickets. The chief said the parking lot behind the new Services Building is now filled by 8 a.m. daily and the lot near the Cyclotron Insti tute by shortly after 9. Students waste considerable time driving through these two lots after they are full, Powell observed, while approximately 700 spaces are available on the two west lots. HE SAID there are never over 300 cars in Lot 49 at the end of Main Drive and usually fewer than 100 cars on Lot 48 near Kyle Field. “These parking areas are with in easy walking distance of the majority of the academic areas of the campus,” Powell noted. Turning on the subject of tick ets, the chief said his office is sending out one letter to each person who has failed to pay the required fine at the fiscal office. He emphasized that if the fine is not paid within a specified peri od of time after receipt of the letter, the case will be filed in Justice of the Peace Court, where the minimum fine is $15. PERSONS SETTLING fines within 72 hours after being tick eted are required to pay $2 for parking violations and $3 for traffic citations. A $5 surcharg-e is added to the fine when the case becomes de linquent and notice must be made through a letter. Chief Powell pointed out. Even then, the chief said it is far better to pay the original tick et and surcharge than face a min. imum $15 JP fine. in research and graduate work. There will be new programs at the master’s level, Dr. Pearson said. “Within the next two or three years, we will have to be relocated because of growth and size,” he predicted. A&M has a long history of business education. “One of the things that I think is unusual about Texas A&M is thatthat its ‘Commercial Depart ment’ is one of the oldest. A&M’s first president, Thomas Gath- right, was head of it in 1877 a year after the college was found ed,” Pearson recalled. The first commercial depart ment taught three subjects, single and double-entry bookkeeping, laws governing commercial trans actions and philosophy and mor als of business. AS TO FACULTY, the busi ness school today has a broad spectrum of disciplines. Dr. Pear son’s education makes him com petent in the field of behavioral sciences. Other faculty includes lawyers, mathematicians, physi cists and psychologists. “Industry problems are of such a wide range, you do have to have a wide range of disciplines in faculty,” Pearson emphasized. This concept represents an im portant trend in business schools, he noted. What about the future business man ? Will he he only an auto mated cog in the corporate ma chine ? “I’m optimistic although there are writings on the other side today,” Pearson said. “I’m opti mistic on the place and dignity of man to function not only as a sophisticated machine but as a human being. “I THINK that as firms move to optimum efficiency only to see that efficiency become stagnant, clearly they hack off and re discover their personnel. Some are frankly in for rough sledding. The government is in for rough sledding in this respect,” he de clared. There are big flaps on campus es across the country today—the bright students are rejecting business; Pearson claims, and they feel they cannot fully utilize their resources. “I think this serves as a warn ing light for enlightened man agement,” he pointed out. “If you put people more in charge of their destiny, you’ll .have them upgrade any company.” Arts Group Seeks Student Leaders The Contemporary Arts Com mittee of the MSC is looking for student leaders interested, in bringing a diversity of art to Texas A&M. Students may contact Tom Ellis, Box 5191 or submit an ap plication describing their inter ests, address and scholastic stand ing to the Contemporary Arts Box in the Student Programs Of fice of the MSC. Staffer Elected Society President Dr. W. C. Banks of the College of Veterinary Medicine has been named president - elect of the Southwest Chapter of the Society of Nuclear Medicine. The professor of veterinary vet erinary medicine and surgery will become president during the or ganization’s annual meeting in the spring of 1969 in San An tonio. He is a charter member and the only veterinarian on the soci ety’s board of trustees. Dr. Banks is a radiologist in veterinary medicine. He uses ra dioactive isotopes, such as Cohalt- 60, in animal therapy. AGGIES and MAGGIES BAHAMAS frin and adventure Party Tour ^ 6 Exciting Days—5 Thrilling Night Join Your Friends From T.C.U. - T.W.U. & North Texas U. INCULDES: Jet-Powered Flight, Resort Hotel, Ground Transportation Airport- Hotel-Airport, Bag Handling, Music, FUN & SUN . . . Plus Much More . . . Surprises Galore! CONTACT YOUR CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE TODAY! For Information, Brochure & Reserva tions MR. DANI PRESSWOOD, Call 846-2436 Official Travel King Representative For Texas A&M. COMPLETE TOUR LEAVE APRIL 10 $184 RETURN APRIL 15 TRAVEL KING OF TEXAS 5718 E. Mockingbird In. Dallas, Taxas 75206 Phono: (214) TA 3-1520 LIMITED SPACE AVAILABLE — $25 DEPOSIT CONFIRMS TOUR—ACT NOW’