The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 05, 1956, Image 2

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

    The Bulla lion .... College Slut ion (Brazos County), Texas
PAGE 2 Friday, October 5, 1956
Sam Zukero Elected
President of CSC
■
Sam B. Zukero, senior civil en
gineering major from Simonton,
was elected president of the 1956-
57 Civilian Student Council last
night.
Other officers elected at the in
itial meeting of the Council includ
ed Freddy Ryan, vice-president;
Dick Crawford, secretary; Ray
mond Greene, treasurer and James
(Cotton) Carnes as parliamentar
ian.
Civilian Chaplain is Bob Bacher,
who was elected at the spring elec
tion last semester.
In other business at the meeting
in the Press Club Library the
Council voted to have their meet
ing scheduled for the second and
fourth Thursday nights at 7:30 in
the Senate Chamber of the MSC.
Bennie Zinn, Veterans* Ad
visor, will serve as sponsor for the
civilian representatives this year.
All positions to the Council are
filed with the exception of a rep
resentative from the Day Students.
Yesterday’s election resulted in a
tie between Robert W. Hamilton,
Jr. and Billy R. Bates. This vac
ancy will be decided in a run-off
election to be held Wednesday in
the Office of the Veteran’s Ad
visor.
IE Club Chooses
Newman President
The Industrial Education Club
Tuesday elected officers to serve
with president James G. Newman,
elected last spring.
The officers are Byron King, |
vice-president; Alex Lord, secre-
tary-treasurer; Harry Green, so
cial chairman; Carl Livesay, pro-
gra mchairman; A. J. Kucera Jr.,
reporter; Pat Keer, parliamentar
ian; M. R. Morgan and Altn Oeh-
ler, membership chairmen; Charles
Bradshaw and Ray Reid, financial
chairmen.
Two TV Antennas Hit
In Lightning Storm
He Cures Home Ills
ONE CALL
SERVICE
When You Coll
DOCTOR FIXIT
For Home Repairs
Contracting a carpenter here, a paper hanger there, a
brick layer elsewhere is the hard way . . . and generally
more costly. One call to Doctor Fixit does it all.
He is a qualified specialist in house repair. He is courteous
and competent and offers easy monthly payments. Free
estimates—no job too small or too large.
Marion Pugh Lumber Co.
Old Wellborn Road
VI 6-5711
Lightning struck two television
antennas on Kyle Street at 3:30
yesterday when the rainstorm hit
College Station.
The TV antenna on the home of
Mrs. W. B. Bradley, 201 Kyle St.,
was bent over the roof of her
house. There was no damage to
the roof and no estimate of replace
ment cost to the antenna has been
made.
Mrs. C. L. Turner, 319 Kyle St.,
also had her TV antenna doubled
over the roof of her home. Also
attributed to the wind storm was
the uprooting of a steel clothes line
pole embedded in concrete.
r * * ^ V r
(mutwiN wNotsi? viaps rKFl
—FRIDAY—
“Three Bad Sisters”
with MARLA ENGLISH
— Plus —
‘There’s Always Tomorrow’
with BARBARA STANWYCK
—SATURDAY—
- FOUR THRILL HITS -
“CASH ON DELIVERY”
“HELL’S HALF ACRE”
“MAKE HASTE TO LIVE”
“99 RIVER STREET”
STILL WINNING—A Athletics and Squadron 24 are still winning the weekly sign con
test. They came through this week with another first place sign.'
Produce More With Less
Feed Study Pools Data
,o*
football tu N
c^JZaLL
By LELAND BOYD
Battalion News Editor
The Nutrition Conference closed
this afternoon and about 250 men
from the fields of animal feeding
and feed manfacturing left with a
“store-house” full of information
compiled from colleges and experi
ment stations over the United
States.
The program for today got under
way at 7 a. m. with a press break
fast in the Memorial Student Cen
ter.
Newsmen from publications from
all over Texas and several from
other states were on hand to catch
the latest in feeding practices,
experiments and manufacture.
Topics covered today with quick
once-over speeches included “More
Efficient Meat Production from
Feed Research” by Dr. J. C. Miller,
School of Agriculture Dean; “Com
petition for the Consumer Meat
Dollar” by Jerry Sotola with
Armour and Company public re
lation department; “Nutrition of
the Brood Sow.and the Baby Pig”
by L. E. Hanson of the University
of Minnesota Animal Husbandry
Department.
Others were ‘“Veterinary Aspects
of the Feed Industry” by Norris
Erdheim of Dawe’s Laboratories in
Chicago, Ill.; “Systemic Animal
Insectides” by G. L. Crenshaw of
Midland, Michigan; and “The Ef
fect of Milk Products on Broiler
Eating Quality” by S. M. Weis-
berg of the National Dairl Re
search Laboratories in New York.
The afternoon session today in
cluded the study of antioxidants
and vitamin E in animal nutrition,
reducing poultry feed costs by the
use of separate ration for males
and females, phosphorus supple
ments for cattle and sheep, Cornell
University’s study of unidentified
growth factors in chicks and poults.
The speeches were liberally illu
strated with film slides and were
given in highly technical lingo such
as “O, 0 1 - 2, 4, 5 - Trichlorophenyl
phosphorothioate has been demon
strated to have marked activity
against the larval stages of the
cattle grubs, Hypoderma species.”
Ole Army, Listen Hear . . .
If Lou has a BOOK you need . . .
Leave him your 1.0.U.
LOLPOT’S TRADING POST
CATERING for
SPECIAL
OCCASIONS
Leave the Details
to me.
LUNCHEONS
BANQUETS
WEDDING PARTIES
Let Us Do the Work—You Be A
Guest At Your Own Party
Maggie Parker Dining Hall
W. 26th & Bryan TA 2-5069
DAVIS
UNDERWOOD
Sunstrand
Adding Machines
Your Choice of —
• ELECTRIC or
• MANUAL
OPERATION
★ The Original Quality 10-Key
Machine—Since 1914.
★ Almost a Million Sold and
MOST STILL IN USE. •
See ROBERT L. DAVIS ’50
OFFICE EQUIPMENT
North Gate
F R I D A Y
r'hen The Most Dangerous
(yuns in The West
wmg.
AIMED
AT J^\
OME X,
THIS WEEK CONTINENTAL SPOTLIGHTS
TEXAS A & M
vs.
TEXAS TECH
SATURDAY, OCT. 6
iii DALLAS
Game time 8:00 p.m.
i t •%.
You’re on your way to more football fun. when
you fly Continental to the game. And. you'll have
more time for pre-game and post-game activities,
too!
Take to the air...fly Continental’s Football Flights
direct to the game and avoid highway scrimmace.
Call Continental at VI 6-5789.
uontmental
JLJFNFJES ''
The Battalion
The Editorial Policy of The Battalion
Represents the Views of the Student Editors
IN BY COLOR CORP Of AMIRICA
Released thru United Artists
The Battalion, daily newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of
Texas and the City of College Station. i« published by students in the Office of student
Publications as a non-profit educational service. The Director of Student Publications
is Ross Strader. The governing body of all student publications of the A.&M. College
of Texas is the Student Publications Board. Faculty members are Dr. Carroll D.
Laverty, Chairman; Prof. Donald D. Burchard, Prof. Tom Leland and Mr. Bennie
Zinn. Student members are John W. Gossett. Murray Milner, Jr., and Leighlus E.
Sheppard. Jr., Ex-officio members are Mr. Charles Roeber, and Ross Strader. Sec
retary. The Battalion is published four times a week during the regular school year
and once a week during the summer and vacation and examination periods. Days of
publication are Tuesday through Friday for the regular school year and on Thursday
during the summer terms and during examination and vacation periods. The Battalion
is not published on the Wednesday immediately preceeding Easter or Thanksgiving. Sub
scription rates are $3.50 per semester. §6.00 per school year, §6.50 per full year,
pr §1.00 per month. Advertising rates furnished on request.
Entered as aecond-cl&ss
matter at Post Office at
College Station, Texas,
under the Act of Con
gress of March 3, 1870.
Member of:
The Associated Press
Texas Piass Association
Represented nationally by
t i o n a 1 Advertising
Services, Inc., a t New
York City. Chicago, Los
Angeles, and San Fran
cisco.
SATURDAY
Passionate Violence!
THE
- . '-DC; •••.Vc vr
GOOD
DIE
YOUNG
A ROMULUS PRESENTATION
Released thru UNITED ARTISTS
— Also —
“DIAL RED O”
— With —
Bill Elliott
and
Keith Larsen
SATURDAY NITE PREVUE
Sunday and Monday
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republi
cation of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in j
the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights
of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved.
JIM BOWER Editor
ELLA FITZGERALD
THE GENE KRUPA QUARTET
MODERN JAZZ QUARTET
OSCAR PETERSON TRIO
STAN GETZ • DIZZY GILLESPIE
ROY ELDRIDGE • SONNY STITT
FLIP PHILLIPS • ILLINOIS JACQUET
JO JONES • EDDIE SHU
HOUSTON MUSIC
HALL
“TONIGHT”
Two Performances:
8 P.M. & 11 P.M.
Tickets on sale at Disc Deu,
1104 Capitol
ALL SEATS RESERVED
$2.75 - $3.75 - $4.75 INC. TAX
, v _
PRE-ELECTRIC
SHAVE LOTION
to get a better shave!
Quicker . . . closer . . . smoother . , .
no matter what machine you use. LOO
plus tax
SHULTON New York • Toronto
LFL ABNER
By Walt Kelly