The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 12, 1956, Image 2

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The Battalion
PAGE 2
College Station (Brazos County), Texas
FridaOctober 12, 1956
At Other Schools
It’s great to see The Daily
Texan around the office this
year. Last year during all
the controversy between Edi-
to Willis Morris and the Board
of Regents it Avas conspicuously
absent from our files. This year’s
coed editor evidently hasn’t stirred
up the hornets nest yet.
Please stay out of trouble.
Miss Editor. We enjoy musing
through your paper in our
spare time.
Don Bott, writer for The Texan
has gotten the paper off to a bad
start already. In a letter to The
Texan a reader sharply criticezed
the writer on a story, “Student
Biochemists Study Schizophrenics”.
The letter accuses Bottof several
gross misstattements of facts in the
story besides misspelling the names
of tAvo men connected Avith the pro
ject. *
The writer in the future had
better remember some of the
basic rules of journalism. He
also might remember the card
inal journalistic sin, taking
things for granted.
Texas Tech
Our ncAvest member of the
Southwest Conference is having
trouble Avith its freshman program
this year. It seems that they can’t
get their freshman to wear slime
caps. Besides this they say that
the freshman think that they are
Thompson’s
SINCLAIR
Service Station
Remember
Power-X Gasoline
Is
AAA Endorsed
Texas at Nor lit Ave.
Between Miller’s and Orr’s
A'eteran upperclassmen. They can’t
get the freshmen to enter into the
annual shoe race at the homecom
ing game because they refuse to
act like freshman. A Toreodor
editorial says that Tech has a long
roAv to hoe before they ha\ r e fresh
man programs like A&M, TU and
Rice.
You have a longer roAv to hoe
than you think if you even
Avant to measure up to the pro
gram at A&M. Who could
blame the freshmen at Tech
for not wanting to wear those
kiddish slime caps? Is a boy
or girl going to college to re
turn to his or her childhood
days or to be made into mature
men and women ?
Baylor
Up Baylor Avay Joe Harrell
writes about the Aggies football
team in the Lariat. He says, “The
Aggies can be had. Sure they Avere
big, bold and bad Saturday night
as they mauled Texas Tech 40-7 at
the Cotton Bowl, but Bryant’s ’56
edition doesn’t have the polish and
precision of a great club.”
Later in the column he says
“Jack Pardee, senior fullback, who
Avas a defenswe demon in the first
half had three passes com
pleted in his zone on one series late
in the third period.” He feels that
any Conference club can keep the
Aggies honest Avith a few off tackle
punches and then pass us to death
This is typical of the propa
ganda our bare (ooops) Bear
friends put out from time to
time. One wonders to what ra
dio station he listened to the
game.
SMU
It seems that there has been a
foamy substance on the surface of
the Avater in the fountain at SMU.
Some upperclassmen attributed it
to the fact that some freshmen
haA-e taken dips in the fountain
during to week. Scientists say that
it is a frothy concentration of
Sodium Chloride caused by the
Avater supply.
The upperclassmen are pro
bably right. The situation
makes one wonder if the ‘slime’
ever left the water.
Job Interviews
Student Publications at A&M is
one of the most comprehenswe in
the nation, it includes five stydent
publications published free from
censorship by the student editors.
The folloAAnng job interviews will
be held next Aveek, according to
W. R. Horsley, director of the
Placement Office:
Monday
THE UPJOHN COMPANY will
interview men majoring in veteri-
nay medicine, biology, animal hus
bandry, dairy science, poultry
science, biochemistry and nutrition,
business administration and
economics for positions
Pharmaceutical salesmen.
THE TRANE COMPANY will
interview aeronautical engineers,
civil engineers, electrical engineers,
industrial engineers and mechani
cal engineers for technical sales;
electrical engineers and mechani
cal engineers for product engineer
ing and research; industrial engi
neers and mechanical engineers for
industrial engineering or produc
tion.
Trane interviews Avill continue
meeting Avith men in the above
majors Tuesday.
HUMBLE OIL AND REFINING
COMPANY Avill conduct a group
interview at 7:30 p. m. in the Me
morial Student Center, room 3-D.
Anyone interested in interviewing
this company should attend this
meeting.
Tuesday
GEOPHYSICAL SERVICE, INC.
will interview geological engineers,
geophysicists, mathematics, and
physicists for employment in
field exploration. Single men are
preferred; no objection to men hav
ing military obligation.
HUMBLE OIL AND REFINING
COMPANY Avill also conduct in-
teiwiews for geologists and geo
physicists.
KERR-McGEE OIL COMPANY
will conduct intervieAA^s for me
chanical engineers, petroleum engi
neers and Ireologists for positions
in the drilling and production and
geology departments.
Kerr-McGee will also hold in-
tetwiews Wednesday.
Letters to the Editor
Editor,
The Battalion
Your uncontemplated idea which
was placed in The Battalion only
sho\A r s Avhat an incomplete person
you are. Apparently you haA 7 e let
your job become an obsession. Is
the military so important that no
man can be without it and be first
class ?
Being a good student and a good
Aggie' is my job right noAA r just as
being a good officer is yours.
AcknoAAdedging the fact that you
are a high-ranking officer I’d say
you don’t have much right to call
anyone second raters when you
don’t even keep the junior officers
squared away enough to present a
fitting example for the cadets in
this command.
Seldom Avill you see such a bunch
of sloppy leaders as these and
never have I seen NaA r y or Marine
officers Avith so little pride in their
outfit as to de-reate it the Avay you
have yours.
Will Chapman ’59
A non-reg, ex-Marine, ex-Sailor
with some first class aggie buddies.
DON’T DELAY
You may win $5,000
in The Reader’s Digest $41,000
College Contest. You eammatch
wits, too, with other students in
colleges across the country. Just
list, in order, the six articles in
October Reader’s Digest.yon think
readers will like best! That’s all
there is to it—and you can win a
big cash prize for yourself plus
scholarship money for your col
lege.
Better act fast, though . . . the
contest closes at midnight, Oct.
25.
Get an entry blank now at your
college bookstore.
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
(hors costly. One call to Doctor Fixit does it all.
Ha 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.
CIRCLE
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
“Strange Lady
• rjv ee
in lown
Dana Andrews
— A L S O —
“Timber jack”
Sterling Hayden
Old Wellborn Road
VI 6-5711
The Battalion
The Editorial Policy of The Battalion
Represents the Views of the Student Editors
The Battalion, dally 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
(s 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 fmmediately preceeding Easter or Thanksgiving. Sub
scription 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.
FRIDAY
— THURSDAY & FRIDAY —
“TALL MAN RIDING”
with RANDOLPH SCOTT
— Plus —
“CALAMITY JANE”
with DORIS DAY
— S A T U R D A Y —
LANCASTER NIGHT
HITS with BURT LANCASTER
“APACHE”
‘HIS MAJESTY O’KEEFE”
“SOUTH SEA WOMAN”
Take a
2-minute
preview of
your path
to RCA
engineering
Specialized training program
Earn a regular profcskiotiaJ engineering salary as you
work on carefully rotated assignments git big you a
comprehensive vie« of RCM engineering. Your indi
vidual interests are considered and you have every
chance for permanent assignment in the area you
prefer. Your work gets careful review under KCA’s
advancement plan and you benefit from guidance of
experienced engineers and interested management.
Following training, you will enter developmenl and de
sign engineering in such fields as Radar, Airborne Elec
tronics, Computers, Missile Electronics. For manu
facturing engineers, there are positions in quality,
material or production control, test equipment design,
methods. You may also enter development, design or
manufacture of electron tubes, semiconductor com
ponents or television.
If you ale qualified by’experience or ad vanned educa
tion, your interests may point to a direct assignment.
The RCA management representative will be glad to
help you. Many fields are open . . . from research, sys
tems, design and development to manufacturing engi
neering ... in aviation and missile electronics, as well
as radar, electron tubes,.computers, and many other
challenging fields.
... and you advance
.STARFUWS wtm
M mjpY if ri r y i''«» wrooucino HENR y wm wpi
NflltOI RtLLl-PAmMeCIlRMACK. EvnYi«vMO«\J^
Small engineering groups mean recognition for initi
ative and ability, leading on to advancement that's
professional as well as financial. RCA further helps
your development through reimbursement for gradu
ate study under a liberal tuition refund plan.
Now... for a longer look at RCA
See your placement director about an appointment
with an RCA engineering management representative
who will he on campus ...
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1956
Talk to your placement officer today . . . ask for liter
ature about your RCA engineering future! If you are
unable to see RCA’s representative, send your resume to:
Mr. Robert Haklisch, Manager
College Relations Dept. CR5-64
Radio Corporation of Angelica
Camden 2, New Jersey
RADIO CORPORATION of AMERICA
Entered m second-cle-s*
matter at Post Office at
Oollei* Station, Texan,
ander the Act of Con-
creei of March 3. 1870.
Member of:
The Associated Press
Texas Press Association
Represented nationally by
National Advertising
Serviceii, 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 (VI 6-6618 or VI-
6-4910) or at the editorial office room, on the ground floor of the
Y^MCA. Classified ads may be placed by telephone (VI 6-6415) or a’
the Student Publications Office, ground floor of the YMCA.
JIM BOMER Editor
Dave McReynoIds Managing Editor
Barry Hart Sports Editor
Welton Jones City Editoi
Leland Boyd, Jim Neighbors, Joe Tindel News Editors
Bernice Schnerr Society Editoi
Don Bisett, J. B. McLeroy Staff Photographers
Connie Eckard Reporter
Kenneth George Circulation Manager
Maurice Ohan CHS Sports Correspondent