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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1957)
The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas PAGE 2 Wednesday, February 13, 1957 Letters to the Editor J Editor, The Battalion: If possible will you please answer the following 1 questions in Wednes- ‘ day’s Battalion? k 1. The college medical fee amounts to $130,000 to $140,000 per year ($10 per student per se mester). If a student slips on the ar stairs in the Academic Building and W breaks a leg, will the college hos- en pital absorb the medical cost from •yc the medical fees or will the cost ca be paid by the insurance company? Pi If the cost is paid by the insur th ance company, why the $10 medical lii fee ? Just how will the college hos- fa pital benefit from this policy ? 2. If the rate is raised after the two year policy expires, will the policy still be compulsory or will f £ there be another student vote ? LEARN TO FLY H. — Call — P. MURRAY VI 6-7459 SPECIAL SHIRT SALE Corduroy’s $2 and $3 Others on sale, too- LOU’S 3. It has been stated that the policy will pay regardless of an other policy. True, but will other policies held by students pay re gardless of the school policy ? 4. Some specific situations: a. Does the policy cover students during bonfire week who are work ing away from the campus ? b. Will the policy cover students of College View and Bryan while at home and enroute to and from col lege ? c. Does the policy cover students participating in intramurals ? Don H. Davis ’56 Ronald G. Gardner ’56 (Ed. Note: Definite answers cannot be given since the actual policy has not been drafted.) Four Additional RE Week Dorm Group Leaders Named Read Battalion Classifieds Daily By JOE BUSER A&M’s 15th annual Religious Emphasis Week, which begins Feb. 18, will have 18 ministers living on the campus conducting forums and discussion groups for dormi- toxy students and faculty. INSURANCE (Continued From Page 1) don’t file claim with the student’s other policy”. Dr. Robert M. Stevenson, of the Business administration depart ment says there are three types of accidental insurance policies, Sen. Ross said. The three are: 1. The type that pays regardless if another company pays. 2. The type that pays in pro portion to the relative value of the two policies. 3. The type that will not pay if claim is filed with another policy So it is entirely dependent on the type of policy a person has as to whether a person will be paying for insurance that will not benefit him. SUMMER WORK Earn $100 per week CAR NECESSARY FOR INFORMATION Call TA 3-2254 between 5:00 — 6:30 P.M. Wednesday, Feb. 13 Thursday, Feb. 14 Rev. Warren W. Beale Leading the meetings in the lounge of Dormitory 9 will be Rev. Warren W. Beale, pastor, First Presbyterian Church, Eagle Lake, Texas. Beale was born in Atlanta, Ga. and attended the University of Georgia in 1940. He received his B. D. at Columbia Theological Seminary in Decatur in 1950. Rev. Beale has held the position of Di rector of Student Work at the University of Houston and at Rice. At present he is working on his Th. M. Degree in Pastoral Counseling at Columbia Seminary. from Perkins School of Theology. He is a member of the Texas Con ference of the Methodist Church and the former pastor and organizer of the Wesley Metho dist Church in Tyler. Forums for Dorms 1 and 3 willl be led by Rev. Russell Ware, Bap tist Student Director, East Texas State Teachers College, Commerce. Rev. Ware is the author of articles published in the Baptist Standard, The Baptist Training Union Magazine and The Baptist Student Magazine. He has served as Secretary of Training Union and Student Work for the South ern Baptist General Convention of Cal. and as Superintendent of Missions, Austin Baptist Assoc. Austin. Ware received his B. A. from Baylor in 1942 and his B. D. from Southwestern Baptist The ological Seminary in 1951. SENIORS AND GRADUATE STUDENTS IN ENGINEERING, PHYSICS AND MATHEMATICS The Douglas Aircraft Company invites you to ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS FEBRUARY 18, 19 Find out about the interesting positions, assistance in furthering your education and outstanding promo tion opportunities with the world’s largest manufac turer of aircraft and missiles. Get facts on living conditions, research facilities and opportunities to advance professionally at the various Douglas locations. Reserve your career decision until you have talked with the Douglas representative. It may he the most important interview of your life. SEE YOUR DIRECTOR OF PLACEMENT FOR YOUR INTERVIEW APPOINTMENT Rev. James Lee Riley Rev. James Lee Riley, First Methodist Church, Gilmer, will live in Dorm 2 and conduct group dis cussions in the lounge of the Music Hall for Dorms 2 and 4. Riley was born in Legget, Tex. and attended Lon Morris College in Jacksonville. He received his B. A. from S.M.U. and his B. D. Rev. Russell Ware R. H. Williams, minister, North- side Church of Christ, Austin, will conduct the meetings in the lounge of Dorm 15 for Dorm 15 and the top two floors of 17. 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 Flail W. 26th & Bryan TA 2-5969 MimwiniiiTr'iirn rmisT rrnwni ffllffiii ^ DRIVE fW Bryan Z-SS79 NOW SHOWING “ROCK & ROLL” 'ST’S GOT THE HEAT AMD THE BEATS ATm eMN ONOm? VIARS fRtt WED. — THURS. & FRIDAY “THE BURNING HILLS’’ with TAB HUNTER —Plus— “ALCATRAZ ISLAND” with ANN SHERIDAN 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, Is 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 B. 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 throug. 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. WEDNESDAY “PROBABLY THE CLEVEREST AMP MOST HBLAKIOMS FREMCH COME0Y SINCE THE WARS Crowfher, N. Y. Times The Incomparable FERNANDEL in a delightful "tour de farce" 'THE SHEEP msi m Entered as second-class matter at Post Office at College Station, Texas, »nder the Act of Con gress of March 8, 1870. Member of: The Associated Press Texas Press Association Represented nationally by National Advertising Services, Inc., a t New York City, Chicago, hot 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 Jim Carrel 1 Assistant Sports Editor D. G. McNutt, Val Polk, Fred Meurer, Joe Buser Reporters John West, C. R. McCain Staff Photographers Don Collins *. Staff Cartoonist George Wise ....Circulation Manager Maurice OHan CHS Sports Correspondent I JULIE LONDON RAY ANTHONY 'oirSb", 1 ’ FRANK TASHLIN Screenplay by FRANK TASHLIN and HERBERT BAKER PEANUTS PEANUTS mi jitb LAST DAY ”Even funnier than the Pulitzer Prize play! Marlon BRANDO Glenn FORD Machiko KYO Tfie Teahouse OF THE AvgustMoon" CINEMASCOPE & METROCOIOR Eddie ALBERT SM0S3! i A SICK AN'TIRED OF SNOW! I TMINK IF I SEE ONE MORE SNOWFLAKE, 'LL LOSE MY MIND! Williams was born in Waco and in 1947, received one of the first Jesse Jones Scholarships to A&M. He completed his freshman year and, deciding to go into the min istry, transferred to Abilene Christ ian College. Here he received an athletic scholarship and lettered three years in football and track. He has worked with Boles Orphans Home in Quinlan, Tex. and served for one year as minister of the Southside. Church of Christ in Brownwood. R. H. Williams DINE OUT A Sure Way to Your Family’s Heart (The Wife You Save May Be Your Own) WEDNESDAY—DINNER MENU SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN (Served Family Style) $1.35 PER PERSON MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER DINING ROOM SERVING LUNCH — 11:30 A.M. - 2:00 P.M., 7 DAYS, A WEEK DINNER — 6:00 P.M. - 8:00 P.M., Mon. thru Fri. A Campus-to-Career Case History Manager Joseph S. Manning discusses a customer service request with Office Supervisor Catherine Hazleton. “Like having your own *3,000,000 business i f Joseph S. Manning graduated in 1950 from Wesleyan University with a B.A. de gree and a major in Bio-Chemistry. But chemistry, he decided, was not to be his career. He became intrigued, instead, by the opportunities in the telephone busi ness, and joined New York Telephone Company in 1951. Today Joe Manning is Business Office Manager in Parkchester, Bronx, New York. In this position he is responsible for about 27,000 telephone accounts which bill some $250,000 a month. 35 people work under him. “It’s like having your own $3,000,000 business,” Joe says. “And it’s pretty much an independent operation, which I enjoy. I’m in charge of all business office func tions, and of personnel training and de velopment. I also spend a lot of time out with my customers, making sure that they have the telephone service they want and need. It’s an absorbing job. “The phenomenal growth of the busi ness is one of the reasons why advance ment opportunities are so good in the telephone company. Since 1943, for ex ample, the number of telephones in our area has almost tripled. Growth suqh as this, going on all over the country, makes the telephone business especially attrac tive to anyone seeking a career with a future.” Bell Telephone Companies offer many interesting career opportunities, as do Bell Telephone Laboratories, Western Electric and Sandia Cor poration. Your placement officer has more in formation about all Bell System Companies. BELL. TELEPHONE SYSTEM By cartoonist-of-the-year Charles M. Schulz THAT5 FUNNY..! ALWAYS TM0U6HT HE LIKED POPCORN.. 2-!3 LFL ABNER By A1 Capp THIS QUIET PLACE VOU WAMTED TO STOP AX BABY— AIN'T WE NEAR IT VET 7= / WAL.YO'GOTTA U LEAVE this MAIN ROAD- BOUNCE OVERTHET DRV CRICK- THEN, AH'LL HELP VO'LIFT TH'CAR “ OVERTH' GULCH- AN'-NOW RELEASE TH' BRAKES" HOLD TIGHT.V-AN' LET HER ROLLH Hi (-/DfJEAMJED O SOMEnj/A/'/./KE v TH/S.f-TH'PO/FECr DOGPATCH.T J H/DEOUT W/TH TH’ PO/FECr OOL/LES-'J