The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 29, 1969, Image 5

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    LIMIT 1 WITH $5.00 OR MORE
PURCHASE — EXCLUDING
CIGARETTES & BEER
PRICES
GOOD
THURS.
FRI.
SAT.
OCT.
30-31
NOV. 1
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PINTOS 2 19
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FLOUR
5 BAG 3 5 C
Christmas is only a
few S&H books awa
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LIMIT 3 WITH $5.00 OR MORE PURCHASE — EXCLUDING CIGARETTES & BEER.
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DRESSING «39c
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BUTTERMILK
's 1 45c
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PORK & BEANS 8 s 88c
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Roll
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5 Can. 89C
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iff
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m
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Lb.
Family Pack
Full l /i Loin — Lb.
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ty\
2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
200 E. 24th STREET DOWNTOWN
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Excluding Cigarettes or Beer.
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THE BATTALION
Page 4 College Station, Texas Wednesday, October 29,1
Oncken: 4 Conform
For Non-conformit
“If you want to be a non-con
formist, get a reputation for be
ing a conformist,” a New York
City management consultant told
35 business executives here Tues
day.
William Oncken Jr., president
of the William Oncken Co., ex
plained that employes who want
to be “innovated and highly indi
vidual get a reputation for com
plying.” He spoke to the men
attending the 17th semi-annual
management seminar, sponsored
by the College of Business Ad
ministration.
“Once you get a reputation for
being a ‘yes’ man, you can do
what you want,” Oncken smiled,
describing it as a paradox.
He said the employe who waits
to be told what to do has no com
plaint coming if he doesn’t like
the timing or assignment
employe also has no complaiE
he “asks the boss,” the seiti
speaker maintained.
Oncken added if a man»i
more elbow room—and thtti
risk in testing—he canct
one of three other plans to
what he wants.
He identified these as "ad,
tell boss,” “tell boss, thea
and “act on own.”
During the six-day semk
the Ramada Inn, the busin®
will study current trends ini
agement. Included are group
cussions, case problems, i
shops, computerized busines
mulations, individual studp
signments and study of con q U j r
cation and its use for betto
ders Landing.
Hospital Repair
(Continued from Page 1)
bands, and other employees paint
ed it, a nurse said.
“Dr. Nelson got the money for
us somewhere, we bought the
paint, and painted it before school
started this fall,” she said.
Whenever it rains a lot the
sewage drain in the old kitchen
in the basement backs up and
floods the room and hall, Nelson
said.
“It took a couple of the stu
dent employes who live here four
hours to clean it out,” he said.
“Originally the old kitchen was
filled with trash and old boxes,”
Nelson said, “and there were
thousands of roaches in here.”
“When I came here in 1957 we
would put out poison and the next
day we would sweep up three or
four bushel baskets of dead
roaches,” he added.
“We’ve been using a new poi
son and we haven’t seen many
roaches, but since winter is com
ing they’ll come inside the build
ing,” Nelson said.
There is a need for a garbage
disposal, Nelson added.
“Uneaten food is thrown in
trash cans and then taken out to
the Dempster Dumpster,” he
said, “and it sits there until the
truck picks it up.”
“When you walk by the hospi
tal the smell is sickening,” he
added.
J:
fog
nea
seei
soo1
wer
ofte
the
vail
T
the
ing
farr
houi
writ
felt
on :
Eng
wer<
63 i
resu
U
days
of A
jndu
One
pital is another problem, Dr
son said.
“In the west wing the In
unbearable and the east h
is always cold.”
The hospital has the bolU
original telephone system, Xi
said. “The telephone con
was going to put in a new
tern but it was decided to
the old one so we could ks ^
private line.” ws Th
“The only repair job dw
the hospital has been the ta:
of the roof to stop the leahl ^ ]
it didn’t work,” Nelson mlhw'asi
The funds for operatingy an £
repairing the hospital, and
said, come from student
Army contracts, and woi
compensation physicals.
Dr. Nelson had nothin'
praise for the A&M Mothers .
cerning what they havedonM Fin
the hospital. He said they]
been “very, very helpful t«|
The A&M Mothers haw
ypin :
erica
tributed air-conditioners, ti
sion sets, the waiting room,r
rypir
ns. 8
:ypii
>er e:
12.
IVpini
Dr. Nelson said he requested
a garbage disposal two years
ago, but he hasn’t gotten it yet.
The heating system in the hos-
and many other things, Ai
said. , ni
Nelson also said an unk£-8i65
person brings a box filled
magazines to the hospital
riodically, but they haven't
able to find out who.
When work begins on a
hospital, Dow Chemical Com
is to contribute $5,000, ands
dent said he will contribute
to $1,000, according to Nels
“I expect other people oi
higher income echelon will
tribute also when work be?
A&M’s Early History Told
(Continued from Page 1)
Academic Building dome, Lang
ford found a peculiarity to a wash
that runs by the new president’s
home. A 10-acre “bowl” of a
depth several feet below mean
ground level led him to suspect
this was where clay for the build
ing brick was taken.
“There is no other similar area
anywhere around the campus,”
commented Langford, former Col
lege Station mayor and School of
Architecture head. Nor is there
reason to believe that “a small
gully originating in the vicinity
of the Memorial Student Center
would within a distance of 2,000
feet cut such a ‘bowl’ and then
suddenly assume the shape of
other gullies in the neighbor
hood.”
the Texas State Grange by! 3 K ^ n D
Scott, member of A&M's
board of directors.
“Study rooms are overcn
ed,” Scott reported, “Sinb
miserably unhealthy coni
bath rooms unprovided
the very middle of the
Add
with
(Ve hi
Child
mJ Grepro
all i|6-4005
s
Dammed as a lake, the depres
sion was drained about 1910 and
generally smothed out to its pres
ent contour.
Convincing proof of the
“bowl’s” man-made nature was
found by Langford in an 1880
report on college conditions to
Moore Honored
the water gave out and
be supplied from a pond fffl
in the hollow where brick foi
building had been made.”
Langford’s historical work
suggests that the site for
Main was moved about 509
northward from where the 1
nal structure was abandon!
A&M’s system civil engk
C. K. Leighton, related to ^
ford that “several years a?
laying a sewer line across
parking lot at the rear of H
Hall, workmen ran into a
masonary wall that had is
broken through.”
Its location was such ths' 1
could not have been a pari
“any permanent building
erected in that general atf
Langford stated. “Our guess
that the obstruction might
have been the wall” of the
Main building that was a f
finished.
(Continued from Page 1)
Lev. Thomas, Negro civic lead
er and businessman, said the
senator has been a “friend of all
the people.”
Services Toda
For Hillhou
“This is one of the few oc
casions when I am at a loss for
words,” Senator Moore remarked
following the tributes and pre
sentation of a gift certificate
for a new color television set.
“It’s a sincere honor on our
part to represent the 5th District
of the State of Texas,” concluded
Moore, who was joined on the
stage by his wife.
The appreciation barbecue for
Moore, who represents 15 coun
ties in the Texas Senate and
ranks third in seniority, was or
ganized by a citizens committee
headed by Bryan Chamber of
Commerce President Ridley
Briggs. Harry Gillum served as
master of ceremonies.
Funeral services for
Hillhouse, former Texas
baseball star, were scheduled
3 p.m. today at the A&M Mi
odist Church. Burial was to I
low in College Station Cemefc
Hillhouse, 25, died Sunday
a Lawrence, Kan., hospital of
juries suffered in a one-car a
dent Oct. 20 near Lawrence.
Hillhouse was named to
All-Southwest Conference
each year of his three-year Al
career, 1964-66. In 1964 he <
voted player of the year as
Aggies won the SWC title.
A native of Colorado
Tex., Hillhouse is survived by 1
wife Sylvia, his parents
three brothers.
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