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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1969)
crease ? Slacks turn tn’siE igregation project under way nTnii 1* E °f The Umbreli «T *hool Superintendents To Attend )esegregation Project Workshop The final workshop session will held Saturday in a school de- Participants are attempting to nd concrete solutions to desegre- ation problems in the Depart- ent of Health, Education and Welfare-funded project. Discussion and consideration by superintendents, teachers, rincipals and board members of le 19 state school districts in our previous sessions have at- acked the problem through chool-community relations, staff iteg-ration, student achievement nd curriculum content. Dr. Les Richardson, project di- ector, said the final session will iclude talks on student activities y Dr. J. H. Lawter, director of le Southwest Center for Human telations Studies at Oklahoma tate University, and Dr. Wen- ell Hubbard, Sherman schools uperintendent. Possible problem- wlving avenues introduced by peakers will be investigated in Saturday afternoon group dis- ussions. “Improved insight into the problems of desegregation and development of hard-rock solu tions was the project’s initial aim,” commented Frank Vollert of Galveston, education doctoral student and associate director. “But the more we get into the underlying causes, the more it becomes evident that specific so lutions will have to be worked out in each school district,” he added. “There are factors common to each district, such as myths about student achievement and objections to integration based on emotion and misinformation.” Investigation during the past month has been based on infor mation presented by speakers such as Dr. Earl Jones, Programa de Eucacion Interamericana di rector and sociologist Dr. Jim Preston of A&M; Lee Hicks, Tex as State Teachers Association field representative; Columbia, Mo., Superintendent Kenneth Welsch; Robert Sunderland, di rector of planning and develop ment at Waco’s Paul Quinn Col lege, and E. A. (Buddy) Savage, special services director of Beau mont schools. BLIND SKI JUMPER Tom Rudy, Jr., a high school junior at Minneapolis, shows his style as he makes a jump from ski slide. Rudy, who is blind, competes in formal skiing and gymnastic competi tion. He is passing up the state ski championship meets to participate in a gymnastic meet at the University of Minne sota. (AP Wirephoto) BATTALION CLASSIFIED DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publication FOR RENT .arge four room, bath furnished ga- ;e apartment. Fully carpeted. Near carpet jphen F. Austin High School. No pets i per month. 822-4044 daytime snings. No pet 823-5319 73t5 o bedroom unfurnished house with central heating, fenced backyard and o-car garage. 110 Gilchrist, College ition. 846-6610. 73tfn i'umished garage apartment for rent, ro or three students. 846-2260. 70t4 Furnished apartment for rent. Married iple. University Acres. 846-5120 70t4 WANTED Roommate wanted. Female. 846-4212, after 5. 72tfn Roommate, male student. Share expenses. $40 month. 823-5025. 67tfn FOR SALE 1955 Ford Fairlane, runs well. $75. 846-2275 after 5 p. m. 73t4 1965 Mustang, excellent condition, V-8, air, radio, and accessories. Day 845-4333, night 846-2285. 73t5 for further information Size . 823 )ne bedroom, living room, kitchen and h, furnished. Air conditioner, roomy, ^ paid, $75 per month. 201-B Mont- ir, at south gate, couples only. 822- 71tfn imall furnished house, also bedroom th private bath. 822-5276. 61tfn for rent. 1, 2. and 3 bedroom apartments, w with central air. Some carpeted. Call 6-4717 or 846-8285. 596tfn VICTORIAN APARTMENTS Midway between Bryan & A&M University STUDENTS I ! Need A Home 1 & 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur. Pool and Private Courtyard 3 MONTHS LEASE 822-203 5 4 01 Lake St. Apt. 1 1962 Studebaker, Hawk G 2. $475. Call after 6 p. m. 846-5962. 72t2 Two bedroom brick. Near school. Air conditioned, garage, fenced yard. Equity and assume 6% FHA loan. 846-3439. 70tfn 1959 Studebaker, good condition. $150. Call 846-2426 or 803 Montclair Ave. 71t3 OFFICIAL NOTICE Official notices must arrive in the Office of Student Publications before deadline of 1 p.m. of the day proceeding publication. THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree jn: FACTORS WHICH DETER MINE STEARIC AND OLEIC ACID CONCENTRATIONS IN ANIMAL FATS. Time: February 25, 1969 at 10:00 a. m. Place: Room 129 of Olin E. Teague Center Raymond Reiser Chairman of Committee “SPRING AWARD SCHOLARSHIPS” Application forms for Spring Awards Scholarships may be obtained from the Student Financial Aid Office, Room 303, YMCA Building during the period Feb ruary 17th - March 31, 1969. All appli cations must be filed with the Student Financial Aid Office by not later than 5:00 p. m. April 1, 1969. Late applica tions will not be accepted. 66t26 Economical, 1962, 4 cyclinder, Pontiac Tempest. 31,000 miles. Driven by little old lady to church, NO JOKE! $450. 846- 6311. 71tfn TLIUL* JLeSLtJJT, CJCCLIIC LLMT1 OCGS, Kodak cameras, 4 track & 8 track tape decks, cassette car and home players, portable phonographs, stereo record play ers, tennis racquets, like new 4 & 8 track tapes, metal folding chairs—these items “ rie Den 307 61tfn are all fantastic bargains. Aggi University Drive. 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 WE RENT TYPEWRITERS Electric, Manual, & Portable MCDONALD’S OTIS 429 S. Main — Phone 822-1328 Bryan, Texas 35c qt. Havoline, Amalie, Enco, Conoco. —EVERYDAY— 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 25tf 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 22 years in Bryan AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 Shop your one-stop store and save on hardware, auto parts, bicycles, and major appliances. WHITE AUTO STORE, Bryan and College Station. 846-5626. HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS ZENITH RADIOS & PHONOS KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th 822-2819 Cade Motor Co. 1309 & 1700 Texas Are. FORD LINCOLN MERCURY SALES & SERVICE ^cti^ Signature Loans $10 to $100 Prompt Confidential Service UNIVERSITY LOAN COMPANY 317 Patricia North Gate Tel: 846-8319 ENGINEERING & OFFICE SUPPLY CORP. REPRODUCTION & MEDIA — ARCH. & ENGR. SUPPLIES SURVEYING SUPPLIES & EQUIPMENT — OF FICE SUPPLIES • MULTILITH SERVICE & SUPPLIES 402 Weet 25th St. Ph. 823-0939 Bryan, Texas Pre-veterinary medicine students who expect to qualify as applicants to the Professional College of Veterinary Medicine in September 1969 may obtain applications at the information desk in the Registrar’s Office. April 1, 1969 is the deadline for filing applications and transcripts Regist: the ipts with jgistrar. H. L. Heaton, Dean of Admissions and Record; THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree Name: Cook, Leonard James Degree: Doctor of Philosophy in Bio chemistry Dissertation: FACTORS WHICH DETER MINE STEARIC AND OLEIC ACID CONCENTRATIONS IN ANIMAL FATS. Time: February 25, 1969 at 10:00 a. m. Place: Room 129, Olin E. Teague Space Research Center Raymond Reiser Chairman of Committee SOSOLIKS TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV All Makes B&W TV Repairs 713 S. MAIN 822-1941 TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED & EXCHANGED Completely Guaranteed Lowest Prices HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION 33rd. & Texas Ave. Bryan 822-6874 • Watch Repairs • Jewelry Repair • Diamond Senior Rings • Senior Rings Refinished C. W. Varner & Sons Jewelers North Gate 846-5816 SPECIAL NOTICE CHILD CARE Child care. Call for information. 848-8151. 598tfn Gregory’s Day Nursery, 504 Boyett, 593tfn egorj 005. HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN GEN- TER, 3400 South College, State Lieenxed, <23-8626, Virginia D. Jones, R. N. 99tfu HELP WANTED 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 WORK WANTED Typing. Dissertation experience. 846- 4528. 73t5 TYPING — Electric, Very Reasonable. Mrs. David R. Miller. 822-2048. 56tfn Typing. 822-2043 or 822-5053. 30tfn STUDENTS ! SERVICES UNLIMITED is ready to help you with your typing, xerox copywork printing needs, and multi- liting. LET “SU WORK FOR YOU.’ 1907 S. College, Bryan, Texas. 823-5362. 605tfn Typing. Thesis and Dissertation ex perience. 846-8335. 603tfn TRY BATTALION CLASSIFIED ATTENTION MAY GRADUATES! It is now time to order May Graduation Invitations. You may order Mon. - Fri., 9-12, 1-4, at the Building Cash ier’s Office, MSC. DEAD LINE FEB. 28, 1969. TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO 909 S. Main 822-6000 SPAamAec/c PERMANENT EMPLOYMENT Now there’s a professional employment service to help you in securing employment and pre paring a resume. 331 UNIVERSITY DRIVE North Gate 846-3737 TEMPORARY EMPLOYMENT ATTENTION STUDENTS AND STAFF MEMBERS ENGAGED IN RESEARCH! Did you know that your Research efforts may qualify you for tax benefits? FOR THIS AND OTHER TAX INFORMATION CONTACT: BLOCKER TRANT, Income Tax Consultant 4015 Texas Avenue — Bryan, Texas Phone 846-7842 THE BATTALION Friday, February 21, 1969 College Station, Texas Page 3 A&M Aerospace Senior Plans Foreign Studies WE BUY MOST ANYTHING — AGGIE DEN. 51tfn Senior John R. (Bob) Ramsey will continue his aerospace en gineering studies this summer be low sea level. A Distinguished Student, Ram sey will york at the Delft Uni versity of Technology, in the Netherlands. His location at Delft, between The Hague and Rotterdam, will be on land the Dutch have sal vaged from the sea. Ramsey’s work at the school’s aeronautical engineering depart ment will be in experimental and theoretical research in low speed aerodynamics. IT WAS arranged through the International Association for the Exchange of Students for Tech nical Experience (IAESTE), a one-for-one student exchange pri- gram that has placed Aggies in Norway, Spain, England, Scot land, Germany and other coun tries around the world. Memorial Student Center Trav el Committee Chairman Jeanna Fiske said student applications for 1969 IAESTE participation can still be made and processed in time for travel and foreign work expeTience this summer. Interested students should in quire for applications at the MSC Director’s office. “THIS IS not a money-making proposition,” observed Ramsey, a 22-year-old of San Antonio. ‘I’ll make 450 guilders a moth.” At an exchange rate of about 3.6 guilders to the dollar, his mothly pay will be $125, or about $300 for the time Ramsey will be in Holland. He leaves New York June 12 and will return Sept. 4, and hopes to travel some on the side, “at least to Germany and Belgium.” Ramsey must pay for his own transportation, lodging and inci dentals. A 2.21 overall gradue point ratio student, Ramsey says his A&M professors and Don Mc- Crory, fifth-year architecture student who worked for Dow Chemical in Europe last summer, indicate Delft is one of the better engineering schools in Europe, sort of a Dutch MIT. “The university was one of the primary developers of the flood control program that enabled the country to claim below sea level land,” the Squadron 4 Cadet Corps member noted. “MY WORK won’t be for aca demic credit at A&M, except pos sibly for a seminar report. De pending on the work in progress, I’ll be involved in boundary lay er research, low speed wind tun nel work on stability and control problems,” Ramsey said. The area is the same in which Ramsey hopes to specialize fol lowing graduation and a tour with the Air Force. “There’s been a renewed inter est in low speed aerodynamics in the last few years,” he observed. “I’m anxious to see what sort of facilities Delft has.” His super visor will be Prof. W. van Dijk. An Air Force ROTC scholar ship recipient, Ramsey works in the gas dynamics lab of the Space Technology Division. He does some general maintenance and data reduction for research conducted with the shock tube, facility for simulating spacecraft entry into planetary atmospheres. Ramsey is member of Phi Eta Sigma, Sigma Gamma Tau and the American Institute of Aero nautics, Squadron 4 scholastic of ficer and a 1965 graduate of Robert E. Lee High in San An tonio. Newsman Sees Price Increase In Farm Goods Widespread withholding actions by farmers within the next two years will send food prices soar ing but make farming an eco nomically feasible career, an agri cultural observer declared Wed nesday. “The farmer is going to update his marketing methods, and he’ll do it by use of collective bargain ing,” predicted Johnny Watkins, radio and television farm news director, at the Brazos County A&M Club meeting. With today’s farm produce marketing procedure the same as it was in 1800, the farmer is tak ing his product to market and asking “What will you give?” Watkins said. “At the same time he’s trying to buy a new tractor and asks ‘What’ll it take?” the farmer, auctioneer and veteran 20-year broadcaster continued. “Farmers have already started use of and will rely more on collective bargaining procedures to upgrade his economic position,” Watkins asserted. In discussing the nation’s food producers’ plight, the KWTX radio and TV farm reporter point ed out that truck drivers out number farmers five to one in the U. S. “I’m not against truck drivers,” he inserted. “But the farmer sees that the legislature is not the place for him to get his price. It takes numbers to lobby and the farmer is sadly outnumbered.” Instead, farmers will band to gether, store their produce and wait for a better market situa tion, at which two or three of their elected representatives will barter for better farm investment returns. EARN YOUR MASTER'S DEGREE OR PhD WHILE YOU WORK IN ©©aJMd PHOENIX Motorola offers the student at the BS or MS level an op portunity to advance his career and education concurrently. Work and achieve a Master’s or PhD Degree in an environ ment of constant challenge and tremendous growth. THE ENGINEERING TRAINING PROGRAM Open to BS or MS graduates in Electrical Engineering, Chemical Engineering or Physics with a B average or better. While pursuing an MS or PhD degree at Arizona State Uni versity each trainee is placed in a rotational program cov ering four engineering activities at Motorola. THE MARKETING TRAINING PROGRAM Open to BS graduates in Electrical Engineering or Physics with a B-average or better. Marketing trainees may work toward an MBA or an MS or PhD degree. Rotational assign ments are in the marketing area. Rick Y’ounts will be interviewing on campus February 24, 1969 Direct Placement at all Degree Levels for... Electrical Engineers ■ Organic & Physical Chemists Physicists ■ Chemical Engineers ■ Metallurgists in Research and Development, Quality Control, Marketing, and Production. If you are una time write direcl Motorola Inc., S 5005 East McD MOTOROLA Semiconductor UMC. Products Division AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYEP His mother, a public school librarian, resides at 6817 Roos, Houston. No. 1 In College Sales Fidelity Union Life Insurance Company 303 College Main 846-8228 r '• ’ NOW SHOWING Liz Taylor & Robert Mitchum In “SECRET CEREMONY” SNEAK PREVUE SUNDAY 9:15 P. M- PALACE Bruan Z'SSl* NOW SHOWING David Niven In “THE IMPOSSIBLE YEARS” STARTING SUNDAY “BOSTON STRANGLER” With Tony Curtis QUEEN TONITE & SATURDAY Double Feature Elke Sommers pjt oj In “BOY DID I GET A WRONG NUMBER” & “RHINO” STARTS SUNDAY “THE ROUNDERS” & Steve McQueen In “THE MAGNIFICENT” CIRCLE LAST NITE AT 6:30 P. M. “HEART IS A LUCKY HUNTER” At 8:50 p. m. “NOT WITH MY WIFE” With Tony Curtis OUR SAT. NITE BIG 3 (All 3 In Color) No. 1 At O^O p. m. “30 IS A DANGEROUS AGE” No. 2 At 8:40 p. m. “ARIZONA BUSHWACKERS” No. 3 At 10:45 p. m. Paul Newman In “WHAT A WAY TO GO” STARTS SUNDAY Bridgitte Bardot In “SHALAKO” S^n«ir W DfilVL IN E THI AIBI .1 Al\ \ U l \ LAST NITE AT 6:30 P. M. “PAPER LION” At 8:45 p. m. “DEVIL’S BRIGADE” OUR SAT. NITE SPECIAL No. 1 “TOM JONES’ No. 2 “FANNY HILL” No. 3 “WILL PENNY’