The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 20, 1953, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page '4
THE BATTALION
Tuesday, January 20, 1953
Internationalism Is Ike’s Policy
” (Continued from Page 1)
“3. Knowing that only a United
States that is strong and immense
ly productive can help defend free
dom in our world, we view our
nation’s strength and security as
a trust upon which rests the hope
of free men everywhere. . . .
“4. Honoring the identity and
heritage of each nation of the
world, we .shall never use out-
strength to try to impress upon
another people our own cherished
political and economic institutions.
“5. Assessing realistically the
needs and capacities of proven
friends of freedom, we shall strive
to help them to achieve their own
security and well-being. Likewise
we shall count on them to assume,
within the limits of their resources,
their full and just burdens in the
common defense of freedom.
“6. Recognizing economic health
as an indispensable basis of mili
tary strength and the free world’s
peace, we shall strive to foster
everywhere, and to practice our-
BA TTALION CLASSIFIED
HITS, SEI.Ii, RENT OR TRADE. Ratos
. ... He a word per Insertion with a
JBc minimum. Space rate In classified
kectton .... (10c per column-inch. Send
>11 classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES
UFFICE. All ads must be received in
student Activities office by 10 a.m. on the
4ay before publication.
• FOR SALE •
WRINGER TYPE washing machine. S25
cash. See after 5 p.m. 20-B Vet. Vil
lage.
1948 Crosley Station Wagon with 1951
motor. In good running condition. .See
104 Park Place, College Station. Phone
6-1283.
LOST
WAI.I/ET in vicinity of Guion Hall, Jan.
13th. Please return to John Kleinman,
J-10 Walton. Reward.
ONE SHIDE RULE—Dietzgen No. 560706,
black case. Contact Paul Pepper, Hous
ing Office.
SENIOR RING on sink at first floor
rest room in A&I Building. John Pat
Richmon, Dorm 17, Room 213. $10 re
ward.
• HELP WANTED •
TWO STUDENTS to work one hour before
each home basketball game. Contact Ro
land Bing, 211 Goodwin Hall.
REGISTERED nurse for office work. Call
4-9882,
WANTED: Car hops, waitress, and cash
ier. Triangle Drive-In.
WORK WANTED
TYPING—-reasonable rates. Phone 3-1776
after 5.
Directory of
Business Services
INSURANCE of all kinds. Homer Adams,
North Gate. Call 4-1217.
Dr. Carlton R. Le*
OPTOMETRIST
B03A East 26th
(Across from Court House)
Cal] 2-1662 for Appointment
FOR KENT
ONE NICE comfortable room in my home.
Phone 4-7054, 401 Dexter S.
ONE WAY trailer. Rent it here, leave it
where you - are going. Baker Tire Co.
Night phone—2-2115, day phone—2-8159.
SPECIAL NOTICE •
STUDENTS (and other Aggies):
A school-wide bowling tournament will
be held in the Memorial Student Center
Bowling Alley beginning the first week of
the spring semester. Get ready for it. Tell
your friends about it. Read the sports
page of The Battalion published next
semester for complete details.
LEARN A HOBBY That Is An Art. New
classes in WEAVING will begin Tues
day afternoon Feb. 3 and Thursday eve
ning, Feb. 5 meeting every week. Looms
furnished. To reserve yours ENROLL
NOW calling 2-1929, 4-4431 or by mail
ing a card to
DORIS COULTER handweavers
203 N. Munnerlyn
Official Notice
Probation Students
All students who are on scholastic pro
bation for the fall semester, 1952, and all
students passing less than 12 hours or
making less than 12 grade points at the
end of the fall semester must secure ap
proval of their respective deans to reg
ister for the spring semester 1953. The
several deans or their representatives will
Interview suc;h students in their offices on
Friday, Jan. 30, 1953.
H. L. ITenton
Registrar
Dr. M. W. Deason
Optometrist
NORTH GATE
S13 COLLEGE MAIN
8:00 to 5:00
Phone 4-1106
selves, policies that encourage pro
ductivity and profitable trade. For
the impoverishment of any i'.ingle
people in/the world means danger
to the well-being of all other peo
ples.
“7. Appreciating that economic
need, military security and politi
cal wisdom combine to suggest re
gional groupings of free peoples,
we hope, within the framework of
the United Nations, to help
strengthen such special bonds the
world over. The nature of these
ties must vary with the different
problems of different areas.
“6 Conceiving the defense of
freedom, like freedom itself, to he
one and indivisible, we hold all
continents and peoples in equal
regard and honor. We reject any
insinuation that one race or anoth
er one people or another, is in
any sense inferior or expendable.
“9. Respecting the United Na
tions as the living sign of all peo
ple’s hope for peace, we shall hope
for peace, we shall strive to make
it not merely an eloquent symbol
but an elective force. And in our
quest of honorable peace, we shall
neither compromise, nor tire, nor
$ver cease.”
Spiritual Strength Laws
Eisenhower called his nine “rules
of conduct” basic precepts, “not
lofty abstractions, far removed
from the matters of daily living.”
He added:
“They are the laws of spiritual
strength that generate and define
our material strength.
“Patriotism means equipped
forces and a prepared citizenry.
Moral stamina means more energy
and more productivity, on the farm
and in the factory.
“Love of liberty means the
guarding of every resource that
makes freedom possible—from the
sanctity of our families and the
wealth of our soil to the genius of
scientists.”
As he did so often during the
campaign, Eisenhower said the
peace the world seeks is “nothing
less than the practice and fulfill
ment of our whole faith, among
ourselves and in our dealings with
others.” Then he said:
“It signifies more than stilling
the guns, easing the sorrow of war.
“More than an escape from
death, it is a way of life.
“More than a haven for the
weary, it is a hope for the brave.
“This is the hope that beckons
us onward in this century of trial.
This is the work that awaits us
all, to be done with bravery, with
charity—and with prayer to Al
mighty God.”
SALE
LEON 15. WEISS
/
100%—Value $16.50 ' ON SALE FOR
All Wool Slacks $7.95
Interwoven Soeks 49e
Van Huesen—Values to $5.95
Sport Shirts . 2.49
Sleeveless
All Wool Sweater $1.79
MEN'S ALL WOOL SUITS HALF PRICE
A&M- UT
Box Score
■mk
Texas—(42)
FG
FT
PF
TP
Black .
1
3
5
5
Minor 0
1
1
1
1
Gage
... 1
0
0
2
Morgan
.. 3
4
4
10
Scaling
... 1
8
1
10
Powell
Saunders
.. 1
2
2
4
.. 3
4
5
10
Totals
10
22
18
42
A&M—(51)
FG
FT
PF
TP
Johnson
.. 3
4
2
10
Pirtle
.. 2
3
4
7
Heft
.. 2
0
4
4
Binford
.. 3
6
5
12
Miksch
.. 5
o
0
13
Addison
.. 0
3
5
3
Martin
.. 0
2
1
2
—
—
—
—
Totals
..15
21
21
51
Half-time score-
-A&M 24, Tex-
as 16.
Shorthorns—(53)
FG..FT.
.PF..TP
Buchanan
.. 5
3
3
13
Howard
.. 2
2
1
6
Schmid
.. 2
6
4
10
Browning
.. 2
4
3
8
Wilkes
.. 0
3
0
3
Kuhn
.. 1
.1
2
3
Warrick
.. 1
1
1
2
Fox
.. 0
2
0
2
Tucker
.. 0
3
0
3
Cutbirth
.. 0
2
0
2
Totals
.13
27
14
53
Fish—(34)— .. ..
..FG.
.FT.
.PF..TP
Fortenberry
.. 7
5
5
19
Bredthauer
.. 3
2
2
8
Heame
.. 0
1
5
1
Kennedy 0 13 1
Wood 2 14 5
Jenkins 0 0 4 0
Vines 0 0 10
Outright 0 0 1 0
Totals 12 10 25 24
Half-time score—Shorthorns 2(1,
Fish 18.
Students May Pay
Semester Fees Now
Students who will bo enrolled
next semester may now pay fees
and reserve rooms announced Har
ry Boyer, chief of housing.
Fees may be paid at the Fiscal
Office and upon presentation of
fee slips, rooms may be reserved
at the Housing Office in Goodwin
Hall. Boyer said students who wish
to reserve rooms they now occupy
should register today.
After today students may re
serve rooms on a basis of first
come first served, Boyer said.
liiliii
Piitii
, 1*11
I||^
Sg*-- s
Ippifetpa
iilllli
i-Mfi
\I
can speak for 1, ^ Clgars «e I
'em for 22 tL e ° T ause Ive smoked
try > eni IT years ' J recommend you
\ y em ' Then you’ll say, as I do .
much milder
CHESTERFIELD
K BESF FOR AfEJ"
M
NOW...Scientific Evidence on Effects
i*C
of Smoking!
ifefe a medical specialist is making regular bi
A i
monthly examinations of a group of people
from various walks of life. 45 percent of this
group have smoked Chesterfield for an average
of over ten years. 4
After ten months, the medical specialist reports
that he observed,.. , gr
no adverse effects on the nosey throat and
sinuses of the group from smoking Chesterfield.
MUCH Ml IDE ft '«4
CHESTERFIELD
IS BEST FOR YOU
Ch ea ting Promotes
(Continued from Page 2)
ones to bemoan the fact that com
radeship or friendship—the real
school spirit—prove to be stronger
than a more or less mythical and
artificial “school spirit” and a
prefabricated “honor.”
The problem of cribbing can be
approached—approached, not solved
ed—in two ways.
© The realistic appoach: proper
organization and presentation of
the subject matter; strict and alert
supervision of the exam; frequent
tests, preferably essay tests; em
phases on work in class, rather
than on results produced by one
final test.
• The idealistic or untopian. ap
proach: to give education in gen
eral and exams in particular a
deeper, more satisfying meaning,
to improve the relationship be
tween teacher and students, to
Glasgow Returns
From Film Project
Leslie L. Glasgow, graduate stu
dent in the department of wildlife
management, recently returned
from Baton Rouge, La., where he
spent several days assisting the
United States Fish and Wildlife
Service in making an educational
film on the life history of the
woodcock.
Glasgow, a candidate for his
Ph.D., has been engaged in re
search on these wintering grounds
since 1948.
transform exams from hurdles in
to fulfillments, to degrade grad
ing.
In the end, there is only one
answer to “cheating”: teaching.
The two have the same sounds, but
a different sound. Teaching has
the opposition direction, it is di
rection in the light direction; it is
direction, pure and simple. Good
teaching, instead of breeding and
punishing cribbing, smothers it in
the crib.
Have your clothes .
CLEANED AND
PRESSED
? at
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
January
Coals
Suits
Skirts Blouses
1 tresses
2 Price
Copyright 1953, JjGoirrr & Myem Tobacco Ox
Lingerie
Off
Special Cannon Hose
51 gauge - 15 denier
Reduced from $1.95 to -
99c
La Bella
Style Shoppe
105 North Main
Phone 3-6015