The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 23, 1971, Image 3

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DISCOUNT MEAL
COUPON BOOKS ARE ON
SALE AT THE FOOD
SERVICES MANAGERS
OFFICE, MSC
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MONDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
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BROILED SALISBURY
STEAK
W/SAUTEED ONIONS
often has
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produces pto
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Choice of two
vegetables
Rolls - Butter
Tea or Coffee
$0.99
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TUESDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
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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
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according to Best’s Life
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Dec. 31, 1970
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No War Exclusion clause on
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Full Aviation Coverage on
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