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

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    The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas
Page 2 Wednesday, December 12, 1956
Consolidated
Wins Trophy
For the third year in a
row, A & M Consolidated
High School has been award
ed the District 23 AA sports
manship trophy, according to
J. J. Skrivanek, principal.
“We are ektremely proud of the
football team, the student body
and the patrons,” Skrivanek said
when he announced the award.
The trophy, donated by the
Navasota Lions Club, is awarded
annually to the school in the dis
trict which displays the best
sportsmanship during the football
season. The winner is chosen by
players and cheer leaders of each
school in the district with no one
voting for the school be attends.
“Since we have won it three
years in a row, we expect to be
allowed to keep it,” said Skrivanek.
“We are almost as proud as we
would have been to win the champ
ionship.”
Raymond Dolezel
FFA President
Raymond Dolezel of Eddy was
elected president of the Collegiate
FFA at a meeting in the Agricul
tural Engineering lecture room last
night.
Other officers elected were Tom
Davison, vice-president; Jim Bry
an, secretary; Gene Voelkel, treas
urer; Oscar Carpenter, reporter;
Marcus Crow, sentinel; Ford Pur
ser, student advisor; Don Mitch
am, parliamentarian; Marvin Koli-
nek, second vice-president, and
Charles Newcomer, third vice-pres
ident.
Rebellions Hungarians
Invoke General Strike
RUDAPEST, — CP) Rebellious
Hungarians invoked a general
strike yesterday and some fought
on with arms against Premier Ja-
nor Radar’s Russian-imposed gov
ernment. The strike, to last 48
hours, tied up nearly all Hungary’s
industry and commerce.
Informed Hungarian sources
A SPECIAL INVITATION
to
The Graduating Class of ’57
You are cordially invited to come and live
in Denver, Colorado. — “The Climate and
Health Capitol of the Nation.”
The Glenn L. Martin Company offers the
finest in location, facilities, professional
advancement and challenging occupations.
There are many exciting positions with a
future for graduates with a B.S., M.S., or
Ph.D. in any of the following fields:
Aeronautical Engineering
Mechanical Engineering Mathematics
Civil Engineering Physics
Electrical Engineering
Company representative
will be on the Campus
DECEMBER 17TH
THE MARTIN COMPANY
Box 179
DENVER, COLORADO
Th e Battalion
The Editorial Policy of The Battalion
Represents the Views of the Student Editors
said Russian troops encircled a
band of freedom fighters holding
out in the hills at Harmashatar-
hegy, about 20 miles northwest of
Budapest, and sought to wipe them
out with medium artillery and
heavy machine guns.
The rebels were last reported
fighting to avoid extinction. Com
munications from Budapest to that
area were cut and the informants
said the fate of the band was un
determined.
Several clashes between Hun
garian crowds and the government
forces—Hungarian police and Rus-
sion troops—marked the strike.
Though martial law has been
proclaimed and some labor leaders
arrested, men stayed away from
their jobs by the hundreds of
thousands to protest the dictatorial
attitude of Radar’s regime.
Budapest was hard hit' and some
sources said the strike was nearly
100 per cent effective in the pro
vinces.
Big factories of Budapest were
closed and the city’s transport sys
tems halted. Only its power plants
and food factories were working.
WEDNESDAY
first Texan
IBEL McCREA
FELICIA FARR • JEFF MORROW {
An ALL IE 6 ART 1ST S Picture
The Battalion, daily newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of
Texas and the City of College Station, is published by students in the Office of Student
Publications as a non-profit educational service. The Director of Student Publications
la 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 3, 1870.
Member of:
The Associated Press
Texas Press Association
Represented nationally bj
National Advertising
Services, Inc., a t New
York City, Chicago, Los
Angeles, and San Fran-
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.
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
CIRCLE
WED. THRU FRI.
“Safari”
Victor Mature
—Also—
’^Maverick Queen”
Barbara Stanwyck
unguarde
moment
I
ESTHER WILLIAMS
GEORGE NADER
A UNIVERSAL IMTItNATIONAt
Student Personnel Members
Four members of the Student
Personnel staff have received rec
ognition ranging from local to na
tional.
C. G. (Spike) White has been
named chairman of the College and
University Section of the National
Association of Concert Managers.
Robert O. Murray, civilian coun
selor, has been named president of
the Texas Association of Student
Personnel Administrators.
Dr. Roger Lyons, college hos
pital superintendent, has been nam
ed vice-president of the South
west Section of the American Stu
dent Health Association.
Wendell R. Horsley, director of
the Placement Office, has been
named a member of the Adminis
trative Board of the College Place
ment Publications Council.
FOR THE HOLIDAYS
the College Man's
Choice is . .
The
Medal
Model
MAYFIELD FOUR STAR
To join the fraternity of well
dressed men you’ll need a sport
coat of distinguished BRIGHT
CURL fabric. It’s a soft, but
rugged go-anywhere cloth beau
tifully styled of finest 100%
wool and highlighted by rich
surface decoration of mohair
boucle. Available also in taste
fully tailored topcoats.
SPORTCOATS $29.50
$39.50
topcoats and
$45.00
f* Guaranteed by ^
l Good Housekeeping ,
212 NORTH MAIN
BRYAN
Students Lead Discussions
Four students of A&M Consoli
dated High School will lead dis
cussions at the annual Junior
Academy of Science meeting to be
at Howard Payne College in Brown-
wood Friday and Saturday in con
nection with the meeting of the
Texas Academy of Science.
Christy Kent, junior, will pre
sent a paper on “Meteors and
Their Observation” and sophomore
Bill Jones on “A Model of the So
lar Neighborhood.”
.Seniors going are Mike Luther,
speaking on “Auto-electronic Key
ing on Radio-telegraph Work’.’ and
Ernest Tanzer with “Rare Herpet-
ofauna of Brazos County.”
On Campus
with
Max^hulman
(Author of “Barefoot Boy With Cheek,” etc.)
EAT, DRINK, AND BE MARRIED
On a recent tour of seven million American colleges,
I was struck by two outstanding facts: first, the great
number of students who smoke Philip Morris; and second,
the great number of students who are married.
The first phenomenon — the vast multitude of Philip
Morris smokers — comes as no surprise, for what could
be more intelligent than to smoke Philip Morris? After
all, pleasure is what you smoke for, and pleasure is what
Philip Morris delivers. Try one. Light up and see for
yourself. ... Or, if you like, don’t light up. Just take
a Philip Morris, unlighted, and puff a couple of times.
Get that wonderful flavor? You bet you do! Even with
out lighting yoLi can taste Philip Morris’s fine natural
tobacco. Also, you can make your package of Philip
Morris last practically forever.
No, I say, it was not the great number of Philip
Morris smokers that astounded me; it was the gi’eat
number of married students. Latest statistics show that
at some coeducational colleges, the proportion of married
undergraduates runs as high as twenty per cent! And,
what is even more startling, fully one-quarter of these
marriages have been blessed with issue!
Now, to the young campus couple who are parents
for the first time, the baby is likely to be a source of con
siderable worry. Therefore, let me devote today’s column
to a few helpfLil hints on the care of babies.
First of all, we will take up the matter of diet. In
the past, babies were raised largely on table scraps. This,
however, was outlawed by the Smoot-Hawley Act, and
today babies are fed a scientific formula consisting of
dextrose, maltose, distilled water, evaporated milk, and
a twist of lemon peel.
After eating, the baby tends to grow sleepy. A lullaby
is very useful to help it fall asleep. In case you don’t
know any lullabies, make one up. For example:
Go to sleep, my little infant,
Goo-goo moo-moo poo-poo binfant.
A baby sleeps best on its stomach, so place it that way
in its crib. Then to make sure it will upfoturn itself over
during the night, lay a soft but fairly Ke^V^ object on its
back — another baby, for instance.
So, as you see, raising a baby is no great problem.
All you need is a little patience and a lot of love. Also
diapers, rompers, soakers, crib, mattress, sheets, bumpers,
blankets, high chair, diapers, talcum, baby oil, fish liver
oil, paregoric, diapers, safety pins, cotton, cotton covered
toothpicks, bottles, diapers, nipples, diapers, bottle
brushes, booties, diapers, nighties, wrappers, diapers,
rattles, teething rings, pacifiers, diapers, and unlimited
funds.
©Max Shulman, 1956
When Baby is fast asleep — the little angel! — why not relax
and give yourself a treat? With Philip Morris, of corrisl
Made in long size and regular hy the sponsors of this column.
LPL ABNER
By A1 Capp
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