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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 28, 1969)
U. ationffi P- m. at Bi] - Mary 8 Norman « loore To Keynote t i fin a| w V&M Short School eering ffi 30 p.m,iii; the Bant satured are invite; will mett erly Brai ly Braleyi )w. Alll Sl1 ' federal Water Pollution Con- tnl Commissioner Joe G. Moore Ji will be keynote speaker at tli! 51st Texas Water Utilities tv, „ Association’s Short School, open- ’ !to ' ,, i, r here Sunday. emonsWh. H . Hayes, Tyler city man ager and association president, said Moore will present his ad- mnistration’s plans in assisting wth water pollution control man power shortage. I Moore will speak Monday at ie general session starting at JHO a.m. in the Memorial Student lenter. lOpening general sessions will ( r Glenn R. Hitchkiss, sergeant- ■^^■-arms, Texas Water Utilities EflBflssociation, Corpus Christi, who r T lill deliver the invocation. Hugh C. Yantis, executive di- ctor, Texas Water Quality oard, Austin, will deliver a Progress Report of Water Pol- ition Control at the State Level.” of Tk( Umbrdk Four waste water conferences, with delegates selecting their choice, will conclude the morning session. AFTERNOON sessions will be highlighted by a special manage ment program conducted by the Supervisory Development Section. Afternoon sessions also include a return to the waste water con ferences. Hayes said he anticipates “a minimum of 900 persons” for the short school which ends March 7. A symposium covering research in the areas of water supply and water pollution control at the Texas universities is a part of this year’s school, Hayes said. Graduate student research com pleted in universities during the past 15 months will be presented. The annual banquet will be held at 7 p.m., March 5, in the Ra- mada Inn. Guest speaker will be Newt Hielscher of Shreveport, La. THE Friday, February 28, 1969 BATTALION College Station, Texas Page 3 AP PHOTOGRAPHER WOUNDED TWo South Vietnamese Rangers assist Associated Press Photographer Dan Van Phuoc, center, after an enemy grenade exploded near his face during a firefight six miles south west of Da Nang. The 26-year-old Vietnamese remains in critical condition after losing his right eye. This is his fourth wound of the war. BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES Cafeterii« One day 44 per word per word each additional day Minimum charge—50tf [inimum Charge- Classified DispU lay 904 Per column inch each insertion PEC OFFICIAL NOTICE m. April 16 (Tuesday), 1969, and again 4 to 6 p. m. the same day. Students take the examination at either time porting to Room 308 Nagle. Exam- should bring pen, pencil, dictionary, composition paper. 76tfn ?. M. : 822-9M! SUN, SPRING AWARD SCHOLARSHIPS” blicstion forms for Spring Awards lolarships may be obtained from the |dent Financial Aid Office, Room 303, ■LA Building during the period Jr eb- Iry 17th - March 31, 1969. All appli- lons must be filed with the Student lancial Aid Office by not later than WANTED Roommate wanted. Female. 846-4212, after 6. 72tfn Roommate, male student. Share expenses. $40 month. 823-6026. 67tfn WORK WANTED TYPING—IBM SELECTRIC. Disserta tion experience. Fast, accurate, reasonable. Guaranteed. Call anytime. 846-8628. 76tl Typing wanted by professional typist on IBM Selectric. Call Mrs. E. D. Max son after 6 p. m. 846-3192. 76tfn Typing. Dissertation experience. 846- 4628. 73t5 TYPING — Electric. Very Mrs. David R. Miller. 822-2048. Reasonable. 66tfn Typing. 823-6410 or 822-5053. STUDENTS ! SERVICES UNLIMITED |0 p. m. April 1, 1969. Late applica- i will not be accepted. 66t26 fre-veterinary !Ct to qualif: medicine m , One ® ole Sa& it Sautt ilia Chip to qualify as applicants ional College of Veteri ^September 19i Bthe informati students who to the — lege of Veterinary Medicine [September 1969 may obtain ’’ 99c nformation desk in the Regi April 1, 1969 is the deadli ng: applications and transcripts Registrar. L. Heaton, Dean of applications Regist: Regis Admissions and Records ;rar’s ne for ipts with 65t29 SOSOLIKS TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV All Makes B&W TV Repairs 713 S. MAIN 822-1941 WE RENT TYPEWRITERS Electric, Manual, & Portable otis McDonald’s 429 S. Main — Phone 822-1328 Bryan, Texas is ready to help you with your typing, xerox copywork printing needs, and multi- liting. LET “SU WORK FOR YOU.’ mg 1907 S. College, Bryan, Texas. 823-5362. 605tfn Typing. Thesis and Dissertation ex perience. 846-8335. 603tfn SPECIAL NOTICE WE BUY MOST ANYTHING — AGGIE DEN. 51tfn FOR SALE 1968 Honda, 125cc, 4,000 excellent condi tion. $326. 846-2329. 77t4 18,600 BTU Coldspot air conditioner. Used only 4 months. $200. Couch with hide-away-bed $30. Bamboo cu ^ ! ~ *— Hensell closet and kitchen $6.00. curtains for 846-8388. 77tl 3-year-old Sorrel Mare. Good rein spirited Ice good barrel racer, five. 3-year-old Sorrel Mare but gentle, would make Call 822-3980 after five 1960 Chevrolet Biscayne. 6 cylinder, four door, radio. Must sell. 846-63"“ after 6. 846-6300 noon or 76t3 1961 Austin Healy - 3000. Good sha $445. 845-5901 76 1964 Corvair Convertible, p. m. 846-9036. Call after 7 75t7 Final clearance on new 1968 Ford Galaxie 600 4 Door Sedans. Fully loaded. Brittany Blue Was $4116.65 Now — $3125.00 Authorized Ford Dealer Calvert Motors — Calvert, Texas EM 4-2884 ' 74t4 Mosrite, electric guitar. Call 846-2997. 74t4 AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College Use Your BANKAMERICARD L i 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 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 22 years in Bryan 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. m STERLING ELECTRONICS sound equipment Ampex Roberts Fisher Sony Scott Panasonic tape decks Harmon-Kardop 903 South Main, Bryan 822-1589 Cade Motor Co. 1309 & 1700 Texas Ave. FORD LINCOLN MERCURY SALES & SERVICE See us for all your needs in quality furnishings, carpet and appliances. 10% discount offered to all students and home ngs, carpet and applia offered to all students college personnel. Wood’s Furniture Cen ter, 800 Texas Avenue and Wood Furnitur rniture Company, 501 N. Texas Avenue. Call 823- 0947. 74t8 1967 Volkswagen Station wagon, excel lent condition, radio and air. $1595. 846- 5318 after 6 p. m. 74t4 1965 Mustang, excellent condition, V-8, air, radio, and accessories. Day 845-4333, night 846-2285. 73t5 .ir Force uniform. Size 38 reg. further information. 823-1179. HELP WANTED Agrsrie needed Wednesday 8 a. m. to 12 noon. Prefer electronics interest. 846- 3462. Wolf Institute Electronics. 76t2 Aggie wife to care for children and do light housework. March through May. 8 a. m. till 4:30 p. m. $22 week plus lunch. 823-5761. 74t4 CHILD CARE Child care. Call for information. 846-8151. 598tfn Gregory’s Day Nursery, 604 Boyett, 846-4005. 593tfn HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN- TER, 3400 South College, State Licensed. 123-8626, Virginia D. Jones, R. N. Mtf* FOR RENT Two bedroom house, 846-8151, if no answer call back. 77tl One bedroom apartment, living room, kitchen and bath, furnished. Air condi tioned, roomy, bills paid. $75 per month. Near South Gate. Couples only. 822-1669. 76tfn Nicely furnished one bedroom duplex. Pine paneling throughout. No pets, no children. $55 per month. 846-8327. 75tfn Two bedroom furnished garage apartment. Hiway 6 South. Utilities paid., air con ditioned. Graduate or couple. $80. 846- 4669. 75tfn New furnished two bedroom apartment. Central air and heat. 512 First St., College Station. Call after 7 p. m. 825-2761 Nava- sota, Texas. Married students or University women. 74t4 For rent. 1, 2, and 3 bedroom apartments. New with central air. Some carpeted. Call 846-4717 or 846-8285. 596tfn Two bedroom brick. Near school. Air conditioned, garage, fenced yard. Equit; conditioned, garage, fenced yard. Equity and assume 6% FHA loan. 846-3439. 70tfn Economical, 1962, 4 cyclinder, Pontiac Tempest. 31,000 miles. Driven by little ipest. old lady to church, NO JOKE! $450. 846- 6311. 71tfn 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 are all fantastic bargains. Aggie Den 307 University Drive. 61tfn VICTORIAN APARTMENTS Midway between Bryan A&M University STUDENTS ! ! Need A Home 1 & 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur. Pool and Private Courtyard 3 MONTHS LEASE 401 Lake St. Apt. 1 TRY BATTALION CLASSIFIED GM Lowest Priced Cars $49.79 per mo. With Normal Down Payment OPEL KADETT Sellstrom Pontiac - Buick 2700 Texas Ave. 26th & Parker 822-1336 822-1307 Shop your one-stop store and save on hardware, auto parts, bicycles, and major appliances. WHITE AUTO STORE, Bryan and College Station. 846-5626. Watch Repairs Jewelry Repair Diamond Senior Rings Senior Rings Refinished C. W. Varner & Sons Jewelers North Gate 846-5816 TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED & EXCHANGED Completely Guaranteed Lowest Prices HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION 33rd. & Texas Ave. Bryan 822-6874 HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS ZENITH RADIOS & PHONOS KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th 822-2819 TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO 909 S. Main 822-6000 Si* 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 Signature Loans $10 to $100 Prompt Confidential Service UNIVERSITY LOAN COMPANY 317 Patricia North Gate Tel: 846-8319 ENGINEERING & OFFICE SUPPLY CORP. ARCH. & ENGR. REPRODUCTION & MEDIA SUPPLIES SURVEYING SUPPLIES & EQUIPMENT FICE SUPPLIES OF- • MULTILITH SERVICE & SUPPLIES 402 West 25th St. Ph. 823-0939 Bryan, Texas Agnew Pledges Opposition To Campus Riots Rang* ;ers To See Foreign Weapons Ingersoll To Speak At JETS Confab WASHINTON (A 5 )—Vice Pres ident Spiro T. Agnew said today the federal government will not permit campus demonstrations to interfere with the rights of stu dents who go to college to learn. Addressing a closed meeting of the National Governors Confer ence Agnew said President Nixon is not trying to dictate academic policy, but does not want the issue of academic freedom dis torted to fit the purpose of cam pus dissidents. No specific actions to avoid the campus disruptions were re ported. Agnew’s remarks paral leled a resolution stating that, “Lawless acts by a small seg ment of the student population must not be allowed to interfere with the vast number of stu dents who are seeking to exer cise their educational opportuni ties.” The resolution was recom mended to the full governors’ conference by its executive com mittee. It would extend full sup port to Nixon in preserving and advancing higher education. Nearly 1,000 high school stu dents, teachers, counselors and professional engineers will con verge here March 7 for the an nual state conference of the Jun ior Engineering Technical So ciety. Keynote speaker for the JETS meeting will be Dr. A. C. Inger soll, dean of engineering at the University of Southern Califor nia, who will discuss “Why A Career In Engineering?” Assistant Engineering Dean J. G. McGuire, who also serves as JETS state coordinator, said a highlight of the program for the students will be morning and afternoon competitive test ses sions, followed by a tour of Col lege of Engineering facilities. The students will compete in chemistry, engineering graphics, mathematics, physics and slide rule, with the winners announced at the close of the meeting. The final session also will . include presentation of JETS scholar ships and awards for technical papers. While the students are taking tests and tours, visiting teachers, counselors and engineers will participate in seminars. The morning seminar, entitled “The Interface of High School Math and Science With the Engi neering Curricula,” will he mod erated by Dr. C. H. Samson, head of the Civil Engineering Depart ment. A display of foreign military weapons will be discussed Tues day during a Ranger Company meeting. North Atlantic Treaty Organ ization and Soviet bloc nation’s weapons will be exhibited for Ranger Company members’ familiarization, announced Sher man D. Roberts of Bryan. The company commander said the 7:30 p.m. meeting will be at the Trigon. Peter Court of Steele Court and Army Capt. N. H. Robb, Military Science department in structor, will supply weapons in use in Vietnam and formerly em ployed by German, Belgian and Italian army soldiers, among others. Captain Robb, who has a semi -automatic rifle captured from the Vietcong, will give a talk on weapons employment. The Ranger Company is com posed of Army ROTC cadets who want to supplement their regu lar training. Meetings are de voted to presentations on various military subjects. Platoon prob lems are arranged for cadets to practice small unit tactics in the field. Foreign Students To Get Tax Help BUSIEK AGENCY REAL ESTATE • INSURANCE F.H.A.—Veterxna and Conventional Loans ARM & HOME SAVINGS ASSOCIATION Home Office: Nevada, Mo. 3523 Texaa Ave. (in Ridgecrest) 846*3708 ers, academic vice president, rep resenting the university at the closing session and presenting the awards. While noting that most of the participants will be members of some 100 JETS chapters in the state, Dean McGuire emphasized that all high school students and teachers are invited to attend the conference. Both the Colleges of Engineer ing and Agriculture will conduct open house in conjunction with the conference. The open house will continue the following day, Saturday, March 8. JETS, McGuire explained, was organized to inform high school students and their teachers and parents about the engineering profession. PANELISTS include Mrs. Thelma Hammerling, director of mathematics instruction for the Houston Independent School Dis trict; Howard Behrens, physics teacher at Lee High School in Houston; Dr. W. B. Ledbetter, associate professor of civil engi neering, and Dr. E. J. Dowdy, assistant professor of nuclear engineering. L. D. Webb of the Civil Engi neering Department will coordi nate the afternoon seminar, which will include separate ses sions on “Applications of Mathe matics and Science in Aero dynamics” and “Application of Mathematics and Science in Elec tronics.” A. E. Cronk, head of the uni versity’s Aerospace Engineering Department, will direct the aero dynamics presentation and Dr. W. B. Jones, head of the Electri cal Engineering Department, will direct the other. Featured speaker at the clos ing session will be J. Kelly El liott of Houston, president of Macco Oil Tool Co. and chairman of the Texas Advisory Commit tee for JETS. President Earl Rudder and Dean of Engineering Fred Ben son will present welcoming ad dresses, with Dr. Horace R. By- Assistance in preparing U. S. income tax returns will be avail able next week to foreign stu dents and staff members here, reminds Robert L. Melcher, for eign student advisor. Melcher said Internal Revenue Service personnel will provide help from 9 to 11:50 a.m. Tues day and Wednesday in the Me morial Student Center Social Room. Foreigners seeking assistance should bring their passports, W-2 forms and , if available, a copy of their 1967 income tax returns, Melcher added. Call 822-1441 Allow 20 Minutes Carry Out or Eat-In THE PIZZA HUT 2610 Texas Ave. ri'fumv'wcn EMPLOYMENT SERVICE • COLLEGE DIVISION • ENGINEERS saENT | STS Let us assist you in your search for career opportunities. ACCOUNTANTS and other ’69 graduates.* North Gate 331 University Dr. 846-3737 •Employers pay for our services. Officers Get Decorations From McCoy Decorations were awarded Thursday to Army Maj. Austin J. Christensen of Kingman, Ariz., and Capt. Donald R. Goates of Waxahachie here. The Commendation Medal was pinned on Major Christensen and the Purple Heart on Captain Goates by Col. Jim H. McCoy, commandant. Major Christensen, 39, was cited for service as operations and executive officer of the 538th Engineer Battalion (Construc tion) in Thailand. The engineer officer is studying for a master’s degree in mechanical engineer ing. A 1953 graduate of Oregon State, he has served in Germany, Fort Belvoir, Va.; Vietnam and Pittsburgh, Pa. The major and his wife Evelyn and six children re side at 2216 Truman. An assistant professor and jun ior military science instructor in the Military Science Department, Captain Goates was wounded while on a search and destroy mission on a canal in the Kein Giang Province of Vietnam. He was with a Military Advisory Command-Vietnam advance team. The 1965 East Texas State graduate served in the Air Force a year and transferred to the Army two years ago. Goates also wears the Cross of Gallantry with Bronze Star. The captain, his wife Patsy and daughter reside at 1201 Westover. A&M To Receive Magnetometers In the not too distant futurq A&M will possess the most sensi* tive field magnetometers in the world, physicist-designer Dr. Rob ert R. Unterberger disclosed. Possession of two optically pumped rubidium 87 vapor mag netometers, a gift to the Col lege of Geosciences from Chev ron Oil Field Research Company of La Habra, Calif., will already permit magnetic surveys on land in order to determine possible subsurface configurations, he said. Unterberger also plans to use the equipment in offshore opera tions in the Gulf of Mexico in cooperation with oceanographers here. Unterberger, who came here as a geophysics professor in August, 1968, designed the equip ment between 1958 and 1961 while a member of the La Habra Laboratory. Design changes an ticipated by Unterberger are ex pected to make the equipment “the most sensitive in the world.” He said possession gives A&M the capability of measuring the earth’s magnetic field and its changes to a “sensitivity of al most one hundred times the pres ent (proton precession) equip ment’s sensitivity.” The equipment, valued near $40,000 and already responsible for more than half million dol lars in research for Chevron, was donated through explorative vice president J. E. McCall of Chev ron, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Standard Oil Company of Cal ifornia. Each of the two magnetom eters consists of a sensing head, an air-conditioned Volkswagen van complete with electron^ equipment and a small trailer on which is built a 3,500-watt Onan power supply. The supply is a gasoline engine-driven electric generator.