The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 02, 1955, Image 2

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Page 2
THE BATTALION
Wednesday, November 2, 1955
AGGIELAND
Aggies Careful; Want
Two New History
Professors Added
What’s Cooking
(Continued from Page 1)
an entire unit, which includes divi
sion (inside title) pages. Under the
package deal for the Corps, an ad
ditional 37 pages would have to be
paid for at the reduced rate, mak
ing 87 pages in all (if the Corps
took the same number as in last
year’s annual) and making the cost
even higher than the $50 per page
cost now required by the Board’s
summer action.
Strader reported that the Aggie-
land ’54 showed a profit of around
$5,000, and also said that last
year’s book was expected to bring
in nearly that much also. This
money, he said, is to be used to
build up the reserve for Student
Publications. This reserve is nec
essary for such an operation, he
explained, for some years different
publications in the program show
a loss. The reserve can be used
to fill in this loss, if the other pub
lications showing a profit do not
completely take up the lack.
PROFITS ALSO are used for
additional pages, more color, more
pictures—anything to provide bet
ter publications, said Strader. Ag-
gieland editor Kurt Nauck empha
sized this point, also, telling of a
17-page index for the coming an
nual and the hope for more color
pages in this year’s book.
Kennedy brought up the point
of the furniture being bought for
the new publications offices in the
YMCA. He objected to having to
pay for this out of profits from
publications, asking whether such
funds should not properly come
from another source. It was then
explained that Student Publications
is an auxiliary department of the
college, and that it must pay its
own way. Karl Elmquist, chair
man of the Board, said that the
furniture in the present offices was
worn-out and not worth the money
to repair. He added that the new
furniture was a long-term invest
ment which was needed. The funds
for the furniture, and for hoped-
for air conditioning in the Battal
ion Office and in the Publications
Business Office, are all coming out
of the reserve fund held by Stu
dent Publications. No funds can
be gotten for the project from any
state source.
Another reason for asking for
the charge was that printing costs
for this year’s Aggieland have gone
(See AGGIELAND, Page 4)
To Keep Their Money
By JOE TINDEL
Battalion Staff Writer
Aggies’ pocketbooks seem to be
affecting where they park their
cars this year.
The new traffic regulations, ini
tiated this y^ar, which provide for
the paying of a fine for traffic
violations, apparently have caused
students to watch where they park
their cars.
The number of tickets given this
year is roughly the same as was
given for the same time last year,
but they seem to be on the de
crease, according to the Campus
Recital Series
Thursday Has
Bach Society
OPEN PT)R ALL BANQUETS, DINNERS
RECEPTIONS, WEDDINGS AND LUNCHEONS
ALL by RESERVATION ONLY
MAGGIE PARKER DINING HALL
2-5089
“The Oaks” — 3-4375
BRYAN
The Battalion
The Editorial Policy of The Battalion
Represents the Views of the Student Editors
The Battalion, newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical
College of Texas and the City of College Station, is published by stu
dents four times a week during the regular school year. During the
summer terms The Battalion is published once a week, and during
examination and vacation periods, once a week. Days of publication
are Tuesday through Friday for the regular school year, Thursday
during the summer terms, and Thursday during examination and va
cation periods. The Battalion is not published on the Wednesday im
mediately preceding Easter or Thanksgiving. Subscription rates are
$3.50 per semester, $6.00 per school year, $6.50 per full year, or $1.00
per month. Advertising rates furnished on request.
Entered as second-class I
matter at Post Office at }
College Station, Texas,
under the Act of Con
gress of March 3, 1870. I
Member of
The Associated Press
Represented nationally by
National Advertising
Services, Inc., a t New
York City, Chicago, Los
Angeles, and San Fran
cisco.
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republi
cation of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in
the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights
of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved.
News contributions may be made by telephone (4-5444 or 4-7604)
or at the editorial office room, 202 Goodwin Hall. Classified ads may
be placed by telephone (4-5324) or at the Student Publication Office,
Room 207 Goodwin Hall.
BILL FULLERTON Editor
Ralph Cole Managing Editor
Ronnie Greathouse ..Sports Editor
Don Shepard, Jim Bower News Editor
Welton Jones .. City Editor
Barbara Paiere Woman’s Editor
Jim Neighbors, David McReynolds, Gene Davis.. Staff Writers
Barry Hart ... ... Sports Staff
Maurice Olian CHS Sports Correspondent
Tom Syler Circulation Manager
The Recital Series, sponsor
ed by the Memorial Student
Center, will present the J. S.
Bach Society of Houston as
its second program of the sea
son.
The Society will perform Thurs
day evening in the Assembly Room
of the Center, starting at 8. Ad
mission is by season ticket which
came with the student activities
fee. Season tickets also can be
purchased at the main desk of the
Center for $3. Individual admis
sion to the Series is $1.
Organized in Houston two years
ago by a group of musicians, ar
dently devoted to the piusic of Bach
and feeling that an avid public de
mand .existed in that city for the
music of that great composer, the
Society is now on a series of con
certs under the sponsorship of the
Emerson Club of the First Unitar
ian Church of Houston.
Thursday’s program will be a re
peat at the MSC, for the group
performed there last year.
Members of the Society are Da
vid Colvig, Houston Symphony Or
chestra; Wayne Crouse, Houston
Symphony and a member of the
newly formed Lyric Art String
Quartette in Houston; Marion Da
vies, Houston Symphony and the
Quartette; Annette Dinwoodey, so
loist who has appeared with the
Houston Symphony and others;
Helen Furbay, Houston Symphony.
Stephen Gorisch, Houston Sym
phony; Fredell Lack, Lyric Quar
tette and will appear in the Beetho
ven Sonata Series with Albert
Hirsch on the Jewish Community
Concert Series this season; Betty
Ruth Tomfohrde, soloist and ac
companist throughout the United
States; and Lois Townsend, to ap
pear with Fort Worth Opera Com
pany in December.
The new U.S. aircraft carrier
Caratoga has as much power as
100 large passenger locomotives.
S52S
,DON’T FORGET!!!
Before the SMU Game ...
After the SMU Game .. .
Well be open — 7 A.M. until ? ? ?
COLD BEVERAGES
CRUSHED ICE
SANDWICH MEATS
PICNIC SUPPLIES
ETC.
-Plan Your Parties and “Busts” With Us
U-PAK-M
3800 So. College Ave.
Security Office. They said the
decrease was due to new traffic
regualtions.
So far this year, there had been
about 1,200 tickets paid to the fis
cal office for traffic violations.
Most students have paid fines
willingly, but six cars have been
suspended because their owners
didn’t want to pay the fines.
The use of AMC parking decals
has aided patrolmen in enforcing
parking regulations. Each park
ing area has a certain color decal.
If a patrolman finds a car in an
area which does not have the same
color decal, that person is given
a ticket.
Campus Security plans to do
away with the old license plates
sometime in the future and use
decals altogether.
The use of decals this year has
made it possible to catch parking
violators who take down their li
cense tags in an unauthorized
area.
Two men have been added to the
History Department, to assist in
caring for increased enrollment.
Dr. Earl T. Millen of Aberdeen,
Wash., is teaching courses in Amer
ican government. Dr. Millen holds
B.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the
University of Washington.
George A. Brubaker is teaching
courses in American history. Bru
baker holds B.A. and M.A. degrees
from the University of Arizona,
and has done graduate work at the
American University and at the
University of Texas.
7 p.m.
Newman Club meets in St.
Mary’s Student Center.
More than 14 million pints of
blood, 7!4 million for civilians and
6!4 million for military use have
been donated to the Red Cross
since 1948.
LAST DAY
LAST DAY
Randolph SCOTT
FROM THE GREAT NOVEL!
CIRCLE
THRU FRIDAY
“THE PRODIGAL”
Lana Turner
— ALSO —
“MOGAMBO”
Clark Gable
Warn erColor
VIRGINIA MAYO • PIER ANGELI
and introducing
JACK PALANCE • PAUL NEWMAN
Aeronautical
Civil
Electrical
Mechanical
Math/Physics
TEXAS A & M
ON CAMPUS NOVEMBER 3
ENGINEERING
GRADUATES
v 1 V"~
Us X ..... U...isifSill;
Lockheed
representatives
will be on campus
Thursday,
November 3, 1955
Activities at the California Division of Lockheed Aircraft
Corporation cover virtually every phase of aeronautical endeavor.
A total of 45 major projects is in progress.
to discuss how the
The expanding development and production program has
already resulted in 13 models of aircraft now on production
lines — huge airliners, commercial and military cargo
transports, extremely high-speed fighters, jet trainers, radar
search planes and patrol bombers.
company s
development
program can advance
your career.
Development projects are even more diversified, include
nuclear applications to aircraft, turbo-prop and jet transports,
advanced versions of vertical-rising aircraft and a number
of other significant classified projects.
For interview see
your Placement
Officer.
This capacity to develop and produce such a wide range of
aircraft is important to career-conscious engineers. It means more
scope for your ability, more opportunity for promotion with
so many projects constantly in motion, more job
Security — because your career is not restricted to one type of plane.
:
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Lockheed AIRCRAFT CORPORATION
CALIFORNIA DIVISION
burbank California
LI’L ABNER
By AI Capp
Houu Sadie Hawkins
Bedan ('ConOnueJ-)
WCHELORS.’.'- SINCE
O'VO'BIN MAN ‘ENUFF T'MARKY
MAH DOTTER, SADIE —AH
GOTTA TAKE FIRM
MEASURES'^
AH DECLARES THIS
’SADIE HAWKINS DAV’TT-
WHEN AH FIRES VO r
STARTS RUNNIN'T'WHEN
‘AH FIRES AGIN,SADIE
STARTSTf TH'ONE SHE
KETCHES'LL BE HER
HUSBIN'-LE'S GO'S
Coer. 1955 by Feotur* Syndicate, I
Well, Sadie did catch one. The
other Despatch spinsters
a Homed it mere such a pood
idea—Sadie Hauikins Day
mas made an annual affair <! -
NOVEMBER gSrH'LL BE
A WONDIFOL DAV FO'
EVERYONE BUT
-S% , -ME.r r
is Hopeful
so hopeless P
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MUMS for the GAM
AGGIELAND FLOWER SHOP
NORTH GATE
NEXT TO CAMPUS THEATRE
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College V
Solid cl
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room end
Phone 6-4
1947 Pa
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body, tire
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Students
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