The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 23, 1956, Image 2

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    Tk Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas
PAGE 2 Friday, November 23, 1956
Job Interviews
The followi;ig Job Interviews
will be held in the Placement Office
next week:
Monday
PARKERSBURG RIG & REEL
CO.—will interview majors in
geology, geological, mechanical and
petroleum engineering and business
administration majors.
CHEVRON OIL —will interview
majors in geology and geophysics.
UNITED STATES BUREAU
OF INTERNAL REVENUE—will
interview majors in accounting.
BUFFALO FORGE—will inter
view majors in mechanical, electri
cal and industrial engineering.
STANDARD VACUUM CO.—
Nehru Is Out
As Possible
SCONA Head
Nehru is definitely not coming
to A&M for the Student Conference
on National Affairs in December,
according to the four man delega
tion who extended the invitation to
him.
They were told by G. L. Mehta,
Indian Ambassador to the U. S.,
that Nehru’s schedule was already
completed and he will not be
coming to the United States until
Dec. 16, one day after the con
ference ends.
However, the Washington trip
made by the SCONA members was
successful in that Victor Andrade,
Bolivian ambassador to the U. S.,
consented to come to A&M for the
conference and be the main speak
er! Andrade is considered by many
Washington sources to be one of
the most capable diplomats in the
District of Columbia.
One of the high points of the
delegations trip to the nation’s
capitol was a visit with Justice
Tom Clark to make arrangements
with him to give a talk at A&M as
a Great Issues speaker. A tenta
tive date in the spring was set.
will hold a group meeting room 3D
of the MSC at 7:30 Monday night
for students interested in inter
viewing with their organization.
Tuesday
ARKANSAS—LOUISIANA GAS
—will interview majors in electri
cal, mechanical and petroleum engi
neering for opportunities with their
organization.
DE SOTO PAINT CO.—will in
terview students in all degrees of
chemistry.
STANDARD VACUUM OIL—
will interview mechanical and
petroleum engineering and geology
majors for them organization.
Wednesday
OKLAHOMA NATURAL GAS
CO.—will interview majors in civil,
mechanical, electrical, industrial
and petroleum engineering.
W. L Kleb Chosen
For Borden Award
Wallace L. Kleb, senior veter
inary student from Houston was
named to receive the 11th annual
Borden Award for the sixth year
vet student with the highest schol
astic average at a recent meeting
of the A&M chapter of the Amer
ican Veterinary Association,' ac
cording to Dr. W. W. Armistead,
head of the School.
Kleb, a former Aggie track star
who now has a 2.97 grade point
ratio, will have his name engraved
on a permanent bronze plaque in
the Veterinary library as well as
receiving $300 and a certificate.
CS Police Report
A total of nine traffic and park
ing violations were reported by
College Station police this past
week, according* to Lee Norwood,
chief of police. One minor wregk
also was reported.
One ticket was given for speed
ing, one for improper turn, one
for parking on the wrong side of
street, two in fire zones and four
in no parking zones.
Seniors and graduate students in
ENGINEERING!
PHYSICS!
MATHEMATICS!
TDcrvut cu dtyak
You can enjoy the kind of work, salary
and living conditions you’re training
for in the Douglas Tulsa plant... one of
the most modern, best air-conditioned
plants in
the country.
It’s particularly good for Douglas engineers,
physicists and mathematicians working on big new Air Force,
contracts. In challenge, in living conditions and
in opportunities for quick advancement, Douglas in
Tulsa offers the utmost. Investigate today.
► ► ► Write Mr. E. F. Brown, Douglas Aircraft Company
P.O. Box 763F, Tulsa, Oklahoma
The Battalion
Little Man on Campus by Dick Bibier
• '"rfcwfii
Htmttn• • • ROPE BURN— SURGERY
Safety Man Speaks
To I. ED. Group
J. U. Parker, assistant safety
engineer for Humble Oil and Re
fining, company explained the na
ture and scope of a safety engi
neer’s work to the Industrial Edu
cation Club at its meeting Tuesday
night.
Club President Jim Newman
later led discussions on how the
club could raise money and what
to do about the Club’s picture in
the Aggieland.
CATERING i-ns
■wm ,
SPECIAL
^ OCCASIONS
Leave the Details
to me.
LUNCHEONS
BANQUETS
WEDDING PARTIES
Let Us Do the Work—You Be A
Guest At Your Own Party
Maggie Parker Dining Hall
W. 26th & Bryan TA 2-5069
FRI. & SAT.
“JOHNNY
STOOLPIDGEON”
Howard Duff
What’s Cooking
Monday
7:30
Brazos County Aquarium Socie
ty — Room 107—Biological Scien
ces Bldg.
Your...
AGGIE
PIC|URES
Color or Black & White
Ellison’s Drugs
Bryan and North Gate Stores
‘WM9«S-T»i*-Mr?U>VTV«$
^ THEATRl
iN*uN0f Rl? VfAlJV- fRfi
— FRIDAY —
‘RUN FOR THE SUN”
with RICHARD WIDMARK
— Plus —
‘FLAME OF THE ISLANDS’
with YVONNE DE CARLO
— S A T U R D A Y —
— 3 HORROR HITS —
“The Beast With 1,000,000
Eyes”
“Cult of the Cobra”
“Tarantula”
— ALSO
LI’L ABNER
Good Excuse
PINEVILLE, Ky. CP) — Debbie
Lynn Colson had a good excuse for
not answering a summons for jury
duty mailed her by Sheriff J. I.
West. She wrote: “Dear Mr. West:
I appreciate your confidence in me.
I beg of you to reltease me from
jury duty. . . as I am only seven
years old and am attending third
grade.”
MSC Dance Group
Sponsored by the MSC Dance
Group, a bonfire dance will be
held in the Ballroom following the
bonfire ceremonies Tuesday night
and lasting until 11.
Bob Arevaloz and his quintet are
schedided to play for the dance and
tickets are 75 cents a couple. Dave
Brothers is chairman of the Dance
Group.
GuG&aims
with
MaxShuIman
(Azithor of "Barefoot Boy with Cheek," etc.)
LITTLE STORIES WITH BIG MORALS
First Little Story
Once upon a time when the inventors of the airplane
were very small boys, the roof on their house developed
a terrible leak. A repairman was called to fix it. He set
his ladder against the side of the house, but it was a
very tall house and his ladder was not quite long enough
to reach the roof.
“Sir, we have an idea,” said the boys who even at that
tender age were resourceful little chaps. “We will get
up on top of the ladder and boost you up on the roof.”
So the boys climbed.to the top of the ladder, and the
repairman came after them, and they tried to boost him
up on the roof. But, alas, the plan did not work and they
all came tumbling down in a heap.
MORAL: Ttut Wrights don’t make a rung.
Second Little Story
Once upon a time a German exchange student came
from Old-Heidelberg to an American university. One
night there was a bull session going on in the room next
to his. “Ach, excuse me,” he said timidly to the group of
young men assembled thei'e, u aber what is that heavenly
smell I smell?”
“Why, that is the fragrant aroma of our Philip Morris
cigarettes,” said one of the men.
“Himmel, such natural tobacco goodness!”
“It comes in regular size in the handy Snap-Open pack,
or in long size in the new crushproof box... . Won’t you
try one?”
“Dankesch'dn” said the German exchange student
happily, and from that night forward, whenever the men
lit up Philip Morris Cigarettes, he never failed to be
present.
MORAL: Where there’s smoke, there’s Meyer.
Third Little Story
Once upon a time Penelope, the wife of Ulysses, had
herself a mess of trouble in Ithaca. With her husband
away at the Trojan War, all the local blades were wooing
Penelope like crazy. She stalled them by saying she
wouldn’t make her choice until she finished weaving a
rug. Each night when her suitors had gone home, Penel
ope, that sly minx, would unravel all the weaving she
had done during the day.
Well sir, one night she left her rug lying outside. It
rained buckets, and the rug got all matted and shrunken,
and Penelope couldn’t unwind it. When the suitors came
back in the morning, the poor frantic woman started
running all over the house looking for a place to hide.
Well sir, it happened that Sappho, the poetess, had
come over the night before to write an ode about Penel
ope’s Grecian urn. So she said, “Hey, Penelope, why
don’t you hide in this urn ? I think it’s big enough if you’ll
kind of squinch down.”
So Penelope hopped in the urn, and it concealed her
perfectly except for her hair-do which was worn upswept
in the Greek manner.
Well sir, with the suitors pounding on the door, Sap
pho had to move fast. She whipped out a razor and cut
off Penelope’s hair. The suitors looked high and low but
they couldn’t find Penelope.
MORAL: A Penny shaved is a Penny urned.
©Max Shulman, 1956
Are you still with us? If so, settle your shattered nerves with
a mild and tasty Philip Morris, natural tobacco goodness all
the way through, made by the sponsors of this column.
Horton Wins Contest
Phil Horton, junior in the White
Band majoring in electrical engin
eering, won the Student Co-op’s
weekly football contest. His prize
was $60 and six cartons of Lucky
Strike cigarettes, announced Ed
Garner. The prize for this week
will be $10 and one carton of
Lucky Strike cigarettes.
SATURDAY
tEVUE SAT. — 10:30 P.M.
Also Sun. & Mon.
Warner Bros, present —■
theC.V.WHITNEY picture
VISTaViSION and technicolor .
CO-STARRING
JEFFREY HUNTER VERA MILES
WARD BOND • NATALIE WOOD
JOHN FORD
PRESENTED BY WARNER BROS.
By A1 Capp
The Editorial Policy of The Battalion
Represents the Views of the Student Editors
The Battalion, daily newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of
Texas and the City of College Station, 1b published by students in the Offioe 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,
or $1.00 per month. Advertising rates furnished on request.
Entered as second-class
matter at Post Office at
College Station, Texas,
under the Act of Con
gress of March 8, 1870.
Member of:
The Associated Press
Texas Press Association
Represent^ nationally by
National Advertising
Services, Inc., a t New
York City, Chicago, Loo
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
YMCA. Classified ads may be placed by telephone (VI 6-6415) or at
the Student Publications Office, ground floor of the YMCA.
“KISS THE BLOOD
OFF MY HANDS”
Burt Lancaster
CIRCLE
FRIDAY
“Meet Me In
Las Vegas”
Dan Dailey
— A L S O —
“Ulysses”
Kirk Douglas
SATURDAY ONLY
JIM BOWER Editor
Dave McReynolds Managing Editor
Barry Hart Sports Editor
Welton Jones .City Editor
Joy Roper — — Society Editor
Leland Boyd, Jim Neighbors, Joe Tindel News Editors
Don Bisett, J. B. McLeroy Staff Photographers
C. R. McCain, D. G. McNutt, John West, Val Polk,
Fred Meurer Reporters
Jamo Powell, Tom Montgomery Staff Cartoonists
Kenneth George Circulation Manager
Maurice Olian CHS Sports Correspondent
“Last Command”
Sterling Hayden
— A L S O —
“3 Bad Sisters”
Marla English
P O G O
By Walt Kelly