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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1971)
test ie symptoms,’ is essential!) DISCOUNT MEAL COUPON BOOKS ARE ON SALE AT THE FOOD SERVICES MANAGERS OFFICE, MSC ted to Cauca nvariably an i ■ iional intel MONDAY EVENING SPECIAL ;es pancreatj and keeps t!< n functionitj alt, the ckil BROILED SALISBURY STEAK W/SAUTEED ONIONS often has of his respi produces pto id is the dis eatening co® Choice of two vegetables Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee $0.99 tivation ani srally is cot t and bes world. Undi it has tacklf TUESDAY EVENING SPECIAL is the asses rength of t! JASA’s luia the studyt hunks of tit i from thni ean floor. YANKEE T5EEF POT ROAST Potato Pancake Choice of One Vegetable Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee $0.99 WEDNESDAY EVENING SPECIAL CHICKEN FRIED STEAK WITH CREAM GRAVY Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee and Choice of any two vegetables $0.99 THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL ITALIAN CANDLELIGHT DINNER ITALIAN SPAGHETTI Served with Spiced Meat Balls & Sauce Parmesan Cheese Tossed Green Salad Choice of Salad Dressing Hot Garlic Bread Tea or Coffee $0.99 FRIDAY EVENING SPECIAL OCEAN CATFISH FILET Tarter Sauce Cole Slaw Grandma’s Cornbread Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee and Choice of any two vegetables $0.99 SATURDAY SPECIAL NOON AND EVENING TWO TENNESSEE SMOKED-CURED PORK CHOPS WITH SPICED CRAB APPLE Choice of Two Vegetables Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee $0.99 SUNDAY SPECIAL NOON AND EVENING ROAST TURKEY DINNER Served With Cranberry Sauce Cornbread Dressing Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee Giblet Gravy and your choice of any two vegetables $0.99 For your protection we purchase meats, fish and poultry from Government inspected plants. “Quality First’* Wednesday, June 23, 1971 College Station, Texas Page 3 THE BATTALION Campus briefs Marine acoustics A marine acoustics short course attracting scientists and engineers from throughout the nation opens Monday at Texas A&M. The five-day course emphasiz ing environmental aspects and civil uses of underwater sound is jointly sponsored by the Ocean ography Department and Sea Grant Program. Dr. Jerald Caruthers, oceanog raphy professor and course direc tor, said the session is especially designed for scientists working in related areas who desire a knowledge of marine acoustics and for engineers who design in strumentation for use in marine environment. Specific topics covered in the course include telemetry and signal processing, wave theory, acoustics in the sediments, ma rine bioacoustics, sonar equations, sound propagation in the sea, scattering and reverberation, seis mic profiling and arrays and sig nal processing. Reading Clinic offers testing, tutoring Applications for children to be tested and/or tutored in the Tex as A&M Reading Clinic during the summer sessions are now be ing taken. Under the direction of Dr. Joseph Ilika, a diagnostic pro gram of reading difficulties is offered for public-school age stu dents during June, with tutoring sessions scheduled during July and August. There is a charge for both the testing and tutoring service, al though partial or complete schol arships are also available based on financial need. For further detailed informa tion, contact the Reading Clinic, 845-1510. Tomato short course planned here The Eighth Annual Texas Greenhouse Tomato Production Short Course and Conference is scheduled for June 28-30 at the Memorial Student Center. The program is sponsored by the Texas Agricultural Extension Service, Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, and the Texas Greenhouse Vegetable Growers, Council. One purpose of the Short course June 28, is to acquaint po tential growers with methods and techniques used in producing greenhouse tomatoes. The course is also designed to help would-be growers decide whether they should attempt to start a green house tomato operation. The conference, June 28-29, is planned to bring up-to-date infor mation to all greenhouse tomato growers, whether just starting an operation or well established in one. Two History faculty teaching elsewhere Two faculty members of the Department of History have teaching jobs elsewhere this sum- The Episcopal Church WELCOMES YOU ANY SUNDAY St. Andrews, Bryan 217 West 26th Services June: 8 a. m. and 10 a. m. July & August 7:15 a. m. and 10 a. m. St. Thomas, College Station 906 Jersey St. South Side of Campus Services 8:0q a. m. and 9:15 a. m. Adult Class 10:30 a. m. Try kindness toward your home planet and its residents, and smile, God believes in you. mer. Dr. Douglas F. McMillan, as sistant professor of history, and a specialist in Latin American his tory is teaching the first six weeks of the summer at Stephen F. Austin State. He is filling in for Dr. Dewitt S. Chandler, whose illness prevented him from re turning to teaching for the sum mer. Dr. David E. Schob, assistant professor of history, is teaching college-level American history to high school graduates making the tour to Europe this summer with Texas A&M Maritime Academy cadets as part of the university’s European “Summer School at Sea.” Former A&M Student leads law group A 1952 A&M graduate, Delmar S. (Shelley) Hilliard formerly from Newton, has been elected president of the Student Bar As sociation at South Texas College of Law. The 40-year-old law student is a former Air Force fighter pilot with service in Vietnam. He re ceived a medical discharge be cause of muscular dystrophy. At A&M, Hilliard studied in dustrial engineering and com manded Squadron 13 in the Corps of Cadets. Army grants A&M $150,000 The U. S. Army Research Of fice at Durham, N. C., has award ed Texas A&M a $150,000 grant to expand its research in sub-son ic aerodynamics. Harry Whitmore, director of the Space Technology Division, said the study will be a supple ment to the program initiated by the Army three years ago under the Department of Defense’s Proj ect Themis. Funds provided by the two- year grant will be used to con tinue development of a program involving theoretical, flight and wind tunnel work. Better understanding of clear- air turbulence is a major goal of the study. May graduate gets $1,000 scholarship Esker Earl Smith III of Jas per, Ark., recent horticulture graduate, has been named one of six students in the nation to re ceive a $1,000 scholarship from the National Council of State Gar den Clubs Inc. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Smith, Jr., of Jasper. In May, the student received a $500 scholarship from Texas Gar den Clubs Inc., an affiliate of the National Council. The council is composed of 49 member states. His sponsor was the A&M Garden Club of College Station. Smith was chosen on the basis of academic standing, student ac tivities and leadership. The student said he plans to enter graduate school this fall at Texas A&M. His specialty is greenhouse vegetable production. 4 graduates complete schools Texas A&M graduates headed by Maj. Michael M. Schneider of Watauga have completed special military school assignments. Schneider, Army officer pre viously in communications re search, graduated with a master’s degree from the Naval Postgrad uate School in Monterey, Calif. The 1962 A&M graduate is now in Vietnam. Capt. Dennis R. Blanton of Dayton, Capt. Roque C. Rodriguez Jr. of Laredo and 1st Lt. Robert A. Keesecker of Galveston com pleted courses at Fort Bliss. Blan ton, who finished history studies here in 1967, was in an air de fense artillery advanced course. Rodriguez and Keesecker were in the Chaparral/Vulcan officer qualification course of the Bliss air defense school. The Chapar ral/Vulcan is a new weapons sys tem for anti-aircraft defense. ROBERT HALSELL TRAVEL SERVICE AIRLINE SCHEDULE INFORMATION FARES AND TICKETS DOMESTIC AND INTERNATIONAL ■■■■>■ 1a *4rfl M CALL 822-3737 1016 Texas Avenue — Bryan i course will be held here next week A 1962 graduate, Rodriguez was in Company C-2. Keesecker studied accounting and was in Company F-l and graduated in 1968. Grad student elected SCOPE representative John S. Baen, graduate student in urban planning, has been elected regional representative for the South Central Region Student Council on Pollution and Envi ronment. Peter Dunsavage, graduate stu dent in biology-environmental en gineering, chaired the five-state meeting. Baen was one of nine students elected to the council, Dunsavage served as regional representative the past year. Library staff Promotion told Marjorie Peregoy will become senior serials cataloger in the Texas A&M Library Sept. 1, Di rector John B. Smith announced. Miss Peregoy, who holds fac ulty rank of instructor, came to Texas A&M in June after three years as serials librarian in the law library of the Bates College of Law, University of Houston. She will succeed Miss Roberta Moss, whose retirement this sum mer will close a library career spanning 41 years. New Easter wood manager named Truett B. Smith, retired Air Force officer and pilot, has been named the new manager of East- erwood Airport, announced Texas A&M President Dr. Jack K. Wil liams. Guy Smith, who has been man ager of the university-owned community airport since 1940, is retiring Aug. 31. The new airport manager, no relation to his predecessor, re cently completed more than 20 years of Air Force service with the rank of lieutenant colonel. He had command pilot rating, with more than 5,000 hours in reciprocating and jet aircraft, and currently holds a Federal Avia tion Administration commercial pilot’s license with single, multi- engine and instrument ratings. Biology professor gets NSF grant Behavior of fish exposed to insecticides will be studied by a Texas A&M biology professor un der a $58,000 grant from the Na tional Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. Dr. Herman Kleerekoper was awarded the one-year grant on the basis of results obtained from a $7,400 pilot experiment grant from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare agency. Concept of the study will be to expose fish to sub-lethal doses of insecticides and then place them in a monitoring tank to observe locomotor behavior. Vet College Dean attends national meet Dr. A. A. Price dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine, is attending the national meeting of the Council of the Federation of Associations of Schools of the Health Professions today and Thursday in Washington, D. C. 1958 graduate gets promotion Texaco Inc. today announced the appointment of Frank W. Miller as manager, salary admin istration. He will be located in Houston, and his appointment is effective July 1, 1971. Miller graduated from Texas A&M in 1958 with a bachelor of science degree in industrial tech nology. He joined Texaco’s Pro ducing Department — United States at Fort Worth that same year. He subsequently held ac counting and employe relations positions there and in Midland and Dallas. Former students named to group Harry Green Jr., field director, and Connie Eckard, director of publications of the Association of Former Students, have been ap pointed members of the Commis sion on Distributable Printed Communications for the annual conference of the American Alum ni Council, chairman Tony Gust- wick has announced. The commission is responsible for the distribution of all print ed communications and material for the A. A. C. Conference in Washington, D. C., July 18-22 at the Shoreham Hotel. Green and Eckard are two of ten ap pointed to the commission. The American Alumni Council is the professional organization of alumni administrators, educa tional fund raisers and commu nicators representing 1,534 col leges, universities, and indepen dent schools in the United States and Canada. The American Alum ni Council lists over 3,580 indi viduals among its members. the truth about drugs from people who know ... BAPTIST STUDENT UNION JUNE 25, 1971 7:30 P.M. EVERYBODY COME! -r COLLEGE PROTECTOR? (The Insured - Savings Plan designed for the College Man) It might be worth your time to take a look at it COMPANY FACTS . . . 64 years in business . . . Legal Reserve Company . . . Highest National Rating in the insurance industry according to Best’s Life Insurance Reports . . . Admitted Assets as of Dec. 31, 1970 $178,065,000 . . . Capital Surplus Funds as of Dec. 31, 1970 $36,865,000 PROTECTIVE LIFE® INSURANCE COMPANY POLICY FACTS Guaranteed by a Multi-Billion Dollar company No War Exclusion clause on Basic Policy Full Aviation Coverage on Basic Policy Can be Fully Paid Up at AGE 60 or AGE 65 Premium Deposits can be Deferred until Earnings increase For an Appointment to Investigate the COLLEGE PROTECTOR call one of our representatives PROTEGTIVE LIFE® COMPANY HOME OFFICE - BI R M I N O H A M. A l_ AB A M A LOCAL OFFICE: 707 University Dr. PHONE: 846-7714 (Next to the University National Bank) v. .. ...... v.: / "" vv. gshy