Judge Vance selected to help retardation Brazos County Judge William R. Vance is one of 20 Texas coun ty judges selected to advise the state and federal government on the role and responsibility of the county judge in local programs for the mentally retarded. He will attend a two-day work shop to be held in Austin Wednes day through Friday. Vance will join with 19 other county judges and a group of key state and national authorities in this field. Also attending will be Dr. David Wade, Texas Commis sioner of Mental Health and Men tal Retardation, and Dr. Phil Roos, Executive Director, Nation al Association for Retarded Chil dren. ★ ★ ★ Bryan man elected state Easter Seal head Dan S. Chadbourne of Bryan, one of the founders of the Brazos Valley Rehabilitation Center lo cated in Bryan, was elected to serve on the Board of Directors WHATABURGER SPECIAL! Whataburger in Waco would like to welcome everyone to Waco. Be sure and stop by before or after the game with ticket stub or this ad and you will receive 1 big 16-Oz. soft drink of your choice with each cheese-burger. Good for Whataburger in Waco only! Open until 11:30 p. m. Please be sure and stop by and get your special. Whataburger is located on Lake Air Drive, 1 mile from Stadium just off Valley Mills Drive. GOOD LUCK AGGIES! THE BATTALION Page 4 College Station, Texas Thursday, October 22, 1970 Beloved Enemy Winner of the National Evangelical Film Foundation award as the best evangelistic film of the year, will be shown at: BAPTIST STUDENT CENTER Oct. 23, Friday — 8:00 p. m. Campus Briefs of the Easter Seal Society for Crippled Children and Adults of Texas for a three-year term at the Society’s annual convention in San Antonio Friday and Satur day. Chadbourne has served as a board member of the Brazos Val ley Easter Seal Society since 1956, and is a past director of the state Easter Seal Society. P. O. Settle Jr. of Fort Worth was reelected president of the State Easter Seal Society, and Harry Martin of San Antonio; Jack B. Dale, Houston; and Mrs. Reagan Jones of Tyler, were named vice presidents. Robert E. Kennedy, Abilene, was elected treasurer. R. A. Parker of Hous ton is the new chairman of the Texas House of Delegates and Charles W. Walker, Austin, is vice chairman. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Martin selected outstanding educator Dr. John L. Martin, A&M grad uate on the Metropolitan State College faculty in Denver, Colo., has been selected for the 1970 edition of “Outstanding Educators of America.” Dr. Martin is a professor of chemistry at the Denver, Colo., college. He received the Ph.D. at A&M in 1956. Nomination and selection for the select listing of 5,000 of America’s foremost educators is based on civic and professional achievements evaluated on the basis of local standards of excel lence. Nominations are made by presidents, deans, superintendents and other heads of schools and colleges. ★ ★ ★ Means to present drug program Dr. Richard K. Means’ presen tation on drug education in the Health Education Seminar at A&M will be Nov. 18. Considerable interest has been evidenced in the November semi nar of the Health and Physical Education Department series, noted Mrs. Melba Halford, semi nar coordinator. Dr. Means’ presentation on con tent organization and practical suggestions for drug education in schools will be given in the li brary conference room, she said. Because of public school per sonnel interest in the October seminar, the Wednesday (Oct. 21) talk by Dr. William C. Swan son on suicide prevention is scheduled in the 300-seat chemis try lecture room. ★ ★ ★ Marketing group to make trip to Dallas The A&M Student Chapter of the American Marketing Associ ation will take a field trip to Dallas Monday, announced pro grams chairman Jerry Crowder. Students will leave by bus early Monday morning, tour Sanger Harris and other Dallas firms and attend the Dallas Sales and Marketing Executives Club meet ing that night in the Dallas Ath letic Club. Crowder said the association’s first meeting last week included a talk by Jack Burke, sales and advertising manager for the Kroger Dallas Division- Burke spoke on “Making Eyes at Women Through Marketing.” He explained how Kroger uses advertising and marketing re search to interest the woman con sumer to shop at their stores. ★ ★ ★ Programming course offered to faculty A non-credit course in Common Business Oriented Language (COBOL) computer programming will be offered to A&M faculty and staff members beginning Nov. 2. Sponsored by the Data Process ing Center, the course is designed to acquaint the employes with the COBOL language to the ex tent they can use it in their course offerings, according to DPC Director Robert Bower Jr. Classes will meet from 3 to 5 p.m. each Monday and Wednesday for six weeks. Bower said there is no charge for enrolling. ★ ★ ★ Engineering service to attend meetings A&M’s Engineering Extension Service will have five employes attending the annual Texas Mu nicipal League meetings Sunday through Tuesday in Fort Worth. Director H. D. Bearden will head the delegation. Chief In structor Ed W. Kerlick and In structor Leroy C. Anderson, both of the Electric Linemen and Tele phone Technicians Training Di vision, will accompany Bearden to the Municipal Utilities Section meetings. Representing the Firemen Training School during Fire Chiefs Section meetings will be Chief Instructor Henry D. Smith and Instructor Tom Robinson. Smith wdll address the group on fire standards recommended by the new state fire commission. Robinson will present a program on future fire training programs conducted by A&M. ★ ★ ★ Wool judging team tops in contest The university’s Senior Wool Judging Team won top honors in an eight-team intercollegiate con test Sunday during the annual American Royal Livestock Show in Kansas City, Mo. Second place went to Kansas State University, third to the University of Nebraska, and fourth to Iowa State University. Texas A&M took third in the contest last year. Aggie team members are Billy Frank Craddock and Preston Faris of Medina, James Davis of Brownwood, and Morman Kohls of Boerne. ★ ★ ★ Hinojosa heads feasibility study A&M Urban Planning Prof. Jesus H. Hinojosa headed a feas ibility study judged best in its category at the VIII Congress of the Interamerican Planning So ciety in Brazil. Hinojosa was chief of study for a 16-member U. S.-Chile team which prepared the study, “Osor- no General Development Plan,” for Chile’s Ministry of Housing and Urbanism. The proposal won the first- place prize in competition among “practical” studies. The compe tition, held every other year, also includes demographic and theo retical categories. The Texas professor said the project’s primary objective was to undertake feasibility studies for investments in public and pri vate housing, community facili ties and utilities. The investiga tions were prepared within the context of a general development planning approach. “Rather than study the invest ment of public and private funds for community capital improve ments in an unrelated manner,” Professor Hinojosa explained, “we prepared a general plan for future development in the fore seeable short, medium and long range.” BROWN - ALLEN MOTOR CO. 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