■ Navy To Build Ships Page 4 College Station, Teexas Tuesday, November 19, 1968 THE BATTALION A&M’s Oceanography Depart ment is tentatively scheduled to receive two new research vessels as part of a ship-building pro gram proposed by the Navy’s oceanographic division, an nounced Dr. Richard A. Geyer, department head. Dr. Geyer said Rear Adm. O. D. Waters, oceanographer of the Navy, notified him the Navy ten tatively plans to build six ocean ographic ships for lease to priv ate and university oceanographic research laboratories in the early 1970’s. A&M is scheduled to receive the program’s first ship in June, 1971, and a second in October, 1972. Geyer said the two ships will cost approximately $2 mil lion, including equipment. Other institutions scheduled to receive one vessel each are SOSOLIK'S TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV All Makes B&W TV Repairs 713 S. MAIN 822-1941 Scripps Institution of Oceanogra phy, Lamont Geological Observa tory, University of Hawaii and Woods Hole Oceanographic In stitution. GEYER SAID the ships will be approximately 165 feet long, have 950-ton displacement for 300 gross tons, cruise at 14 knots and have a range of ap proximately 5,000 miles. A&M, the state’s only institu tion with sea-going capabilities, currently operates the R/V Ala- minos, a 180-foot vessel laden with research equipment. Geyer said the Alaminos will be retired following delivery of the new ships. A&M also operates the 15,000- ton Texas Clipper, a converted oceanliner primarily used for training by the university’s Tex as Maritime Academy. Geyer said addition of the two new ships will enable A&M to intensify its research work in the Gulf of Mexico and Carib bean. for everyone to get adequate re search time at sea with only one ship.” A&M’s Oceanography Depart ment, organized in 1949, is the nation's fourth-oldest academic department pf oceanography. It has devoted more than $13 mil lion to research and awarded 160 advanced degrees. Earlier this year, A&M was one of six institutions in the na tion selected by the National Sci ence Foundation for Sea Grant Institutional Support. The uni versity received a $475,000 grant for first-year operations to de velop a marine resources pro gram along the Gulf of Mexico. LAST MONTH A&M dedicat ed its Mitchell Campus at Gal veston, a 100-acre site which will house the Texas Maritime Acad emy, Marine Laboratory and other oceanographic installa tions. All A&M ships will be berthed at the new facility. At The Movies by Mike Plake “NOW THAT we have 18 fac ulty members and 74 graduate students,” he observed, “it’s hard The worldwide printing indus try turns out 2,000 pages of books, newspapers, periodicals and reports every 60 seconds. “Anyone Can Play” Starring Ursula Andress, Vir- na Lisi, and Claudine Auger, this film had too little talent, acting, direction, production, dubbing and sex appeal. The type of pro duction that uses outdated film to save money spent on getting Andress and Lisi. Ties “The Stranger Returns” for “Lousiest Movie Ever Made.” “The Boston Strangler” Herein lies the strange, ter rifying story of Albert DeSalvo, self-confessed murderer of at least 13 women, notoriously call ed the Boston Strangler. Tony Curtis plays DeSalvo, a quiet, ordinary furnace-repair ing family man, whose ego crept out into consciousness, took hold, and sadistically raped and mur dered. Curtis plays the most dramatic role of his career. His perform ance surpasses Rod Steiger’s in “No Way to Treat A Lady” and he (Curtis) will, I predict, win an Academy Award for his trou- BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES On* day per word 3( per word each additional day Minim im charge—50^ Classified Displa FOR SALE SPECIAL NOTICE isplay 90S per column inch ch insertii each insertion DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publication Dinette set and t. v. tray set, and othi items. 846-8048 after 6:00. her 8t4 We buy pocket books. Magazines, radios, TV’s watches, stereos, most anything— Aggie Den— 601tfn FOR RENT Two bedroom furnished house. 806 W. 27th. 822-1413. 38tl Decals, Bumper Stickers, all kinds at Aggie Den, next to Loupot’s. 601tfn New quiet studio type apartment. 846-1726 or after 6 :00, 846-3096. 38tfn Available Dec. 1. Nicely furnished ranch- bri lustin Three bedrooms, separate dining roon den, large kitchen, utility room wif dryer. Two tile baths, lari rge ashi f pool, .beautiful lawn with, under- irinkler system. Lots of trees in front and back yard. 3,000 sq. ft. of central heat and air. Lawn maintained. No water hills to pay. On school bus route. $300 per month. 1 year contract desired. Form erly occupied by college professor. Phone Three bedroom furnished apt. 200 North Haswell Dr., Bryan. 846-3486. 37t2 For rent. 1, 2. and 3 bedroom apartments. New with central air. Some carpeted. Call 846-4717 or 846-8286. 596tfn VICTORIAN APARTMENTS Midway between Bryan & A&M University STUDENTS ! ! Need A Home 1 A 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur. . Pool and Private Courtyard 3 MONTHS LEASE 832-2035 401 Lake St. Apt. 1 Shop your one-stop store and save on hardware, auto parts, bicycles and major appliances. WHITE AUTO STORE, Bryan and College Station. 846-4910. Records, Records ! Albums, Albums ! Rock Roll, Popular, Comic, Party, Country & & Roll, Popular, Comic, Party, Country & Western, all artists-hundreds & hundreds of all artists - Best prices in Texas on 1st quality stereo album. The Aggie Den, next to Loupot’s. 6 Guitar, bowling ball, radios, tv’s watches, tape decks, typewriters, record players, ten nis racquets, movie camera—all at bargain prices. Aggie Den. 34tfn Eico Oscilloscope model 427, like new. Originally $139.60. Bargain. Aggie Den. . For sale at bargains—8mm movie camera, players, all kinds radi tches, tennis racquets, 3, tape players, tapes, pile at The Aggie Den. ters, 2tfn We sell portable washers and dryers. We sell and l-»ase Maytag washers. 822-1719. 601tfn TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED & EXCHANGED Completely Guaranteed LOWEST PRICES HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION 33rd. & Texas Ave. Bryan 822-6874 AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 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 TYPEWRITERS Ren tals-Sales-Ser vice Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main 822-6000 Beta Sigma Phi Pi Psi Chapter HOMEMADE BAKE SALE Wed., Nov. 20 9:00 a. m. - 12:00 College Station Post Office Hillel Foundation Cookies Cake Sweet Rolls • Watch Repair • Jewelry Repair • Diamond Senior Rings Senior Rings Refinished C. W. Varner & Sons Jewelers North Gate 846-5816 AUTO REPAIRS All Makes Just Say: ‘Charge It’ Cade Motor Co. Ford Dealer m STEFU-IIVIG ELECTRONICS sound equipment Ampex Roberts Fisher Sony Scott Panasonic tape decks Harmon-Kardon 903 South Main, Bryan 822-1589 We cash Aggie checks—Aggie Den. Next Loupot’s. North Gate. 19tfn OFFICIAL NOTICE THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree Name: Grant, Warren Ray egree: uoctor tural Economic 'issertation: Evaluating An Economic Model for Alternative Government Pro grams in Rice. Time: Nov. 22, 1968 at 3:00 p. m. Place: Room 310, Agriculture Bldg. George W. Kunze Dean of Graduate Studies THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree Name: Irick, Billy Frank Degree: Doctor of Philosophy in Education Dissertation: AN ANALYSIS OF FAC TORS RELATED TO THE LOSS AND RETENTION OF FRESHMEN STU DENTS AT TARLETON STATE COL LEGE FOR THE ACADEMIC YEARS 1964 THROUGH 1966. Time: Nov. 22, 1968 at 10:00 a. ) ling Libr Place: Room 226, Cushing George W. Kunze Dean of Graduate Studies "All Industrial Engineering and Compu ter Science students, who have not yet registered for the spring semester, may register any weekday from 4-6 p.m. through Nov. 22, in Room 201 H, Engineering Bldg Pre-veterinary medicine students will pre register for the Spring Semester 1969 dur ing the periods as indicated: Nov. 18-22 Last names beginning M, N, O. P, Q. R. Nov. 25-27 Last names beginning S, T, U, V. Dec. 2-6 Last names beginning W, X, Y, Z. The sequence of registration procedures are : 1. Make an appointment with your Aca demic Advisor. (Use the University Direc tory for phone number). 2. Secure complete information sheet showing courses and approval of your Academic Advisor. (This must be done before you can proceed). 3. Present in ;he Dean’s e informat Pick up 1 gnment cai Turn in t card) quarters,. First Floor (west entrance of o, esent information sheet and ID card to the Dean’s Office. Check and/or corn- cards in packet, completed and approvt (with yellow stripe). 6. Turn in all cards (including assign ment card)^ to the Registration Head- «r, Cushing Buildir Id library. e De plete information cards in packet. 4. Pick up the completed and approved assignment card (with yellow stripe) Turn in all cards (inch Biology Department. Undergraduate pre registration for the Spring Semester 1969. Pre-registration for the Spring Semester Department. Undergraduate pnng for undergraduate students majoring in the Department of Biology will be conducted during the month of November and early December. Registration cards 315 in the New in accordance with the following schedule: Nov. 18—all whose surnames begin with E thru Fe Nov. 19—all whose surnames begin with Fi thru Fr Nov. 20—all whose surnames begin with G Nov. 21 all whose surnames begin with Ha thru He Nov. 22—all whose surnames begin with Hi thru Hu Nov. 25—all whose surnames begin with I, J. thru Kh Nov. 26—all whose surnames begin with Ki thru Le Nov. 27—all whose surnames begin with Li thru Ma Dec. 2—all whose surnames begin with M< ' Me thru Mu Dec. 3—all whose surnames begin with N, O Those undergraduate students who have 95 semester hours of credit may purchasi the A&M ring. The hours passed at thi time of the preliminary grade report on Nov. 11, 1968, may be used^ in satisfying mti avi thi may their quail their ay be used in satisfying the 95 hour requirement. Those students ring under name with the ring clerk i -- ---• that shi uir this regulation may leave lerk in the igibility to order the ring. Orders for the rings will be taken between ov. 25, 1968 and Jan. 5, 1969. These rings Nov. 25, 1968 and Jan. 5, 1969. will be returned for delivery on or abo\ Feb. 18, 1969. The Ring Clerk is on duty from 8 a. m. to 12 noon, Monday through Friday, of each week. ENGINEERING & OFFICE SUPPLY CORP. % REPRODUCTION & MEDIA — ARCH. & ENGR. SUPPLIES • SURVEYING SUPPLIES & EQUIPMENT — OF FICE SUPPLIES • MULTILITH SERVICE & SUPPLIES 402 West 25th St. Ph. 823-0939 Bryan, Texas CHILD CARE Want baby-sitting in own home. College r iew. 846-4810. 607tfn Child care. Call for information. 846-8151. 598tfn Gregory’s Day Nursery, 504 Boyett, 846-4006. 593tfn HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN TER, 3400 South College, State Licensed. <23-8626, Virginia D. Jones, R. N. HELP WANTED Hospital, Madisonville, Texas. Excellent Salary. Call collect, DI 8-2631, Miss Gloria Rice or Mr. E. G. Clark. 465tfn WORK WANTED Typing. Problem, Thesis, Dissertation, Math, and Greek symbols. Experienced. 846-7689. Typing. 822-5053. Typing done on IBM Selectric. Thesis experience. 846-3471. 30tfn STUDENTS^! ^ SERVICES UNLIMITED YOU.’ 823-5362. 1907 S. College, Bryan, Tex* Typing. Thesis and Dissertation ex perience. 846-8335. 603tfn TRY BATTALION CLASSIFIED NOW BUYING BOOKS LOUPOT'S North HYING > K S OTS Gate HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS ZENITH RADIOS & PHONOS KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th 822-2819 WE RENT TYPEWRITERS Electric, Manual, & Portable OTIS MCDONALD’S 429 S. Main — Phone 822-1328 Bryan. Texas 35c qt. Havoline, Amalie, Enco, Conoco. $1.69 Gal. PRESTONE 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 90% of All Cars Save 25 - 40%. Brake Shoes $3.19 ex. 2 Wheels — many cars Auto trans. oil 25# AC - Champion - Autolite plugs Starters - Generators All 6 Volt - $11.95 Each Most 12 Volt - $12.95 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 AGGIES! NEED A CORSAGE FOR THE t. u. GAME? Corsages Will Be Delivered In Austin $2.50 and up Contact: Miss Georgia Lepley Room 101 Agriculture Bldg. Tom Wiley III Room 83 Mitchell Hall Howard Hicks Room 324 Dorm 14 Sponsored By A&M Agricultural Economics Club hie. George Kennedy, who played opposite Paul Newman in “Cool Hand Luke” and won an Acad emy Award, is a realistic-enough looking Boston police detective investigating the murders com mitted by DeSalvo. Henry Fon da plays the man who took the reins of the Strangler murder cases, and who eventually watched the withdrawal of De Salvo as the Boston Strangler was finally revealed. Fonda is as good in this role as he is in all; make your own choice. THERE IS no real plot or screenplay to this film, as it fol lows the events chronicled by Gerold Frank in his best-selling non-fiction work, “The Boston Strangler.” So there is no sur prise in the end, as we have come to expect from so many big-money sophistications. De Salvo is chased and caught as his passion for women finally is un leashed and what little control was in him vanishes. Two news magazines discredit this effort to record a bad piece of Boston homicidal history. And it would be easy enough to pan it, I guess, if all you considered was the way it strayed peri odically from the straight black- and-white of Frank, or the tools used to hold suspense during a non-fiction work, or even, yes, even the way it depicted the hackneyed newsman and nitty- picky newscasters. So be it, if they want to pan it. BUT THEY’VE either missed or disregarded the warning at the beginning of the film, which says it is based on fact. They apparently did not see or don’t acknowledge the extraordinary performance by Curtis as a real schizophrenic, a tender, pitiable, human being, ripping to thin mental shreds on the screen. As film and cameras are per fected through lens refinements and editing and developmental techniques, so are movies which include the improvements. So it is with the “Strangler.” Split screens provide multiple, separate images by which the viewer is made to concentrate on the hap pening. Split screens were used in “The Thomas Crown Affair” with Steve McQueen to show five different approaches to a bank robbery. In “The Strangler,” the technique uses a particular part of the screen to focus on one motion, then leads you to another at the proper time. Fan tastic. For Profs and Young Mar- rieds: it's worth the money for a babysitter and the ostracism of the campus to see it. “Coogan’s Bluff” Hot Doggies, it’s The Man With No Name back, this time in his second big American movie, after three Italian westerns that made him famous: “A Fistfull of Dollars,” “For a Few Dollars More,” and “The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.” While still waiting for his first major American western, “Hang ’Em High,” and after watching the DeSalvo epic, we caught this one in a sneak. Clint Eastwood is the biggest discovery since Hud and Tarzan. He’s the mythical, tall, hard, handsome stranger, Arizona-Tex- as deppity sherff, rolled into one. He walks brown-booted and mean into this movie, based on plainsman, dusty-type, Stetson- ned, deputy who is given the task of extraditing a prisoner from New Yark Citty. SAYS COOGAN, of the whole smoggy scene: “All this used to be woods and plains and rivers, until people came along and messed it up.” So, as a kind of primeval re venge, and in an attempt to save face and prisoner, Eastwood as the lanky Coogan starts messing the citty-types up. I mean, he raises Cain, Abel, and LSD with the hippies, shoot ing pool in the fashion needed to protect his handicap. His handi cap being that he’s the greatest thing since Cheerios and Paul Newman in the action-adventure flicks, and exudes so much sex appeal that women cut out his movie ads and paste them on their respective vanities. Italians have once again, after their 1492 landing, discovered the hottest property in the indus try. Sheer escape entertainment and great fun. You're t a k i n g the surest step to success when you enroll in McKenzie - Baldwin Business College day and evening classes starting Monday, Jan. Phone 823-0152 or drop by for free brochure. Greyhound Bus Lines 1300 Texas 823-8071 Inexpensive Charter Service for student groups or classes. Group accomodations arranged. ATTENTION ALL SENIORS AND GRADUATE STUDENTS! John I |ion in (right Wrigt Make Sure Your Picture Will Be In The 1969 AGGIELAND Yearbook Picture Schedule Ui G-H-I—Nov. 11 - Nov. 15 J-K-L—Nov. 18 - Nov. 22 M-N-O—Dec. 2 - Dec. 6 P-Q-R—Dec. 9 - Dec. 13 S-T-U—Jan. 6 - Jan. 10 V-W-X-Y-Z—Jan. 13 - Jan. 11 CORPS SENIORS: Uniform: Class A Winter—Blouse CIVILIANS: Coat and tie. PICTURES WILL BE TAKEN from 8:00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m. NOTE: Bring Fee Slips To UNIVERSITY STUDIO 115 No. Main — North Gate Phone: 846-8019 Five istriou ito the :of Fam |e Ric The i Iharles )tic di botball the 19C teams 1 is 191! ecord The r., cla: CDDfUIVI 105 S. COULTER AT E. 27 TH BRYAN, TEXAS 77 acn 823-8701 Typing . . . Mimeographing . . . Income Tax Quarterly Returns — Bookkeeping More than a Directory In addition to student, faculty and staff telephone num bers, campus and off-campus addresses, the 1968-69 Texas A&M University Directory includes the University Calendar, Campus Map, Board of Directors and Student Senate listings. 1968 TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY DIRECTORY Available at Shaffer’s University Book Store North Gate Student Publications Office 216 Services Bldg. MSC GIFT SHOP The Exchange Store Bryan - College Station Banks Got Your Copy Yet? 4 (523' Hous been Man) be sc the t or nv