The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 17, 1970, Image 4

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    THE BATTALION
Page 4 College Station, Texas Tuesday, November 17, 1970
BUSIER AGENCY
REAL ESTATE • INSURANCE
F.H.A.—Veterans and Conventional Loans
ARM A HOME SAVINGS ASSOCIATION
Home Office: Nevada, Mo.
35JS Texas Ave. (in Ridgecrest) 846*3708
R OS E S
We Specialize In Them—
Red, yellow, pink tropicana
We have them.
AGGIELAND FLOWER &
GIFT SHOPPE
Member F.T.D. for out of town orders.
209 University Dr. 846-5825
J. C. (Jim) Harris
Air Force aid
reaches new high
THE BUG SHOP, Inc.
1911 So. College Ave
Bryan, Texas 77801
Phone 822-5383
U. S. Air Force financial as
sistance to students totals almost
half a million dollars for the
1970-71 school year.
Col. Keith C. Hanna revealed
the figure in an inventory of
scholarships and fellowships for
the Faculty Scholarships Com
mittee.
The professor of aerospace
studies indicated 328 students re
ceive assistance totalling $479,-
800 through Air Force financial
assistance grants and subsistence
allowance.
“The Air Force plays quite an
active role in providing financial
assistance to A&M students, both
in number of grants and mone
tary value,” Colonel Hanna said.
“Even so, there are still even
more opportunities available to
qualified applicants, to include a
certain amount of graduate edu
cation.”
He said that scholarship-type
assistance and commissions are
available even to graduate stu
dents, provided applicants have
at least two years academic work
remaining at time of entry into
the two-year AFROTC program,
A&M has 219 students receiv
ing subsistence allowance, which
amounts to $600 per year for the
two-year Professional Officer
Course (the last two years of the
four-year program). Under the
two-year program, similar sub
sistence is paid after the student
has qualified for the program.
Air Force scholarships, total
ling $1,004 per year for from one
to four years, are held by 109
cadets who will be commissioned
Air Force second lieutenants up
on graduation.
Air Force scholarship cadets
are enrolled in eight colleges,
Sixty-two are in engineering; 13
each in business administration
and science; seven each in agri
culture and liberal arts; four,
geosciences; two, architecture
and environmental design, and
one, education.
Bryan's Leading Independent Volkswagen Service
“MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING,” the only major Aggie Players’ production of 1970-71,
will appear through Friday evenings at Guion Hall. See story page 1. (Photo by Bob
Cox)
Highway 6 Runs Both Ways ... Around The World
SKI THE ALPS '71
find out how
general information meeting
tonight
MSC BALLROOM - 8:00 P. M.
travel opportunity week Nov. 15-21
Appelt elected head
A&M wins praise of Former Students
of doctoral grads
A&M has earned high marks
from its doctoral degree recipi
ents responding to a request to
rate the institution’s highest level
graduate programs.
The project was initiated as
part of a Ph.D. dissertation re
quirement undertaken by Curtis
E. Schatte, assistant professor of
English, in cooperation with the
Graduate College.
Schatte said responses were re
ceived from 573 of 833 A&M
doctoral degree recipients mailed
15-page questionnaires.
The questionnaires were sent to
persons earning their doctorates
between 1940, when the first such
degree was conferred, and 1968.
DO YOU HAVE A DIMENSIONAL
BLACKOUT IN YOUR LIFE?....
IF SO.... BE A PART
OF THE PRESENTATION
THE SEARCH FOR HAPPINESS
By Dr. Bill Tolar
With Special Guest
DEBBIE PATTON
Miss Teenage America
ALL FAITHS CHAPEL
THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 19. 1970
12:00 - 1:00 P.M
The degree total has since risen
to 1,505.
More than 90 percent of the
doctoral graduates said that if
they had it to do over, they would
again earn the doctorate. Ap
proximately 70 percent said they
would study in the same or a
closely related discipline.
Majority of the responders —
many of whom earned their un
dergraduate and master’s degrees
at other institutions — stated
they would again seek their doc
torates at A&M.
Results of the study have been
published in booklet form by the
Graduate College and are being
distributed to various interested
groups on and off campus.
Officials of the Coordinating
Board, Texas College and Uni
versity System, have requested
copies to send as examples to
all institutions of higher learning
in the state, as well as to co
ordinating agencies throughout
the nation.
Copies of the booklet also have
been furnished by the university
to institutions belonging to the
Council of Graduate Schools of
the United States, said Dr.
George W. Kunze, graduate
dean.
In addition to learning the
views of the school’s doctoral de
gree recipients, Dean Kunze not
ed the study also has provided a
wealth of information about the
individuals. Such information in
cludes types of positions cur
rently held, rate of advancement
and salaries.
A&M, which has the state’s
highest ratio of graduate stu
dents in proportion to total stu
dent body, now offers Ph.D. de
grees in more than 60 different
fields, the dean said.
FOR
BEST
RESULTS
TRY
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
Leslie L. (Les) Appelt, a Hous
ton realtor, Saturday was elected
1971 president of A&M’s 55,000-
member Association of Former
Students.
The 51-year-old president of
Appelt, Robeau, Balch, Inc., a
Houston-based industrial and
commercial real estate firm, will
assume the Board of Directors
office Jan. 1.
Members of the association’s
350-member Council voted on the
14-member board during the an
nual Fall Board of Directors and
Council Meeting Saturday morn
ing.
President-elect is J. R. (Bob)
Latimer Jr. of Dallas, president
of Permeator Corp.
Program vice presidents are
Melvin (Mel) Maltz of Houston,
activities; Charlie Kirkham of
Dallas, community affairs; Don
Garrett of San Antonio, fund
raising; John D. Janak of Dal
las, high school program; Ben
Lednicky of Houston, member
ship; and John E. Whitmore III
of Houston, public relations.
Appelt was president-elect of
the association during 1970. He
served as the association’s public
relations vice president in 1968
and 1969.
Appelt moved to Houston in
1945. He has served the Houston
Chamber of Commerce as chair
man of the Market Development
Committee and member of the
Gulf Coast Industrial Develop
ment and Ports and Waterways
Committees.
He is a past president of the
Houston Board of Realtors and
the Houston Chapter, Society of
Industrial Realtors. In addition,
he was a national director for the
Society of Industrial Realtors.
He was selected Houston Realtor
of the Year in 1970.
He is a President’s Endowed
Scholarship donor, a $25,000 in
vestment for Texas A&M stu
dents.
Appelt and his wife, Wilma,
have three sons and one daugh
ter.
Latimer, 47, received his bach
elor’s degree in mechanical engi
neering in 1944 from Texas A&M.
He was a unit commander and
editor of The Engineer.
He planned and directed the
association’s high school rela
tions program the past three
years, with responsibility of re
cruiting talented, qualified stu
dents to the university.
COURT’S
SADDLERY ...
FOR WESTERN WEAR
OR FOR YOUR MARE.
FOR SHOE REPAIR
BRING IN A PAIR.
403 N. Main
822-0161
1970
TOYOTA
$1830.00
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We Service All Foreign
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Cavitt at Coulter
Phone 822-2828
FREE FLIGHTS IN T-34
for any male student qualifying on the
NAVY FLIGHT APTITUDE TEST
—SOPHOMORES thru GRADUATES—
16-20 NOVEMBER 1970
8:00-4:00
Student Union Building
Navy Information loam
BE SOMETHING SPECIAL
FLY NAVY
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