The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 15, 1957, Image 3

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    Four Faculty Men
Attend Ag Meeting
Four A&M faculty members at
tended the East Texas Agricultural
Conferences in Nacogdoches Wed
nesday and Thursday to participate
in discussions. East Texas Chamber
of Commerce sponsored the meet
ing.
Those attending were Dr. R. E.
Leighton of the Dairy Science De
partment, Dr. T. R. Timm, John
McNeely, Vance Edmundson and
First ‘Star’
Will Feature
Eighty Pages
First edition of the forth
coming Twin City Star will
have 80 pages and probably a
four-color front page, said
Paschal Price, publisher of the
Star, at a dinner at Wehrman’s
Cafe last night sponsored by the
A&M chapter of Sigma Delta Chi,
professional journalism fraternity.
Speaking before about 30 mem
bers, guests and pledges, Price out
lined the policies for the Star.
“There is enough room in Brazos
County for the existing news me
dia and ours as well, but if one
has to go it won’t be us ... I
hope,” he said.
Price said that about $250,000
worth of new equipment has been
purchased for the new Bryan pub
lication which is slated to go to
press sometime in March. He also
said that a large number of the
staff had already been chosen.
“Our staff will be well payed,
but they will earn it. Any man
who doesn’t turn out what we ex
pect of him had better start look
ing elsewhere for a job,” the Star
publisher said.
<
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DRIVE IN
THE ATRI
w - w —
< MM Oil N UNO*ft I? VI AUS fRM
FRIDAY
“THE BURNING HILLS’’
with TAB HUNTER
-—Plus—
“ALCATRAZ ISLAND”
with ANN SHERIDAN
SATURDAY
‘Twilight Women”
“Betrayed Women’
‘Wicked Women”
I
FRIDAY
TINGLING SUSPENSE!
SATURDAY
A UNIVERSAI-INTERNATIONAL PICTURE
— Plus
■" ^ ATIiousanil
Men Died For it!
A Thousand
Women Loved
and Lied For It!
A Titanus S.A. presentation in association
with Raymond Stress • Released thru UNITED ARTISTS
PREYUE SAT. — 10:30 P.M.
Also Sunday & Monday
The Love Story
of A Princess
M-G-M presents J ^
GRACE
KELLY
ALEC
GUINNESS
LOUIS
JOURDAN
" “THE
SWAN” ”
in Cinemascope
and COLOR
Dr. Bardin Nelson of the Depart
ments of Agricultural Economics
and Rural Sociology.
Dr. Timm talked to a general as
sembly on “Where Does East Texas
Agriculture Stand Today?” Dr.
Nelson addressed the group on
“Attitudes of Rural Youth Toward
Farming and Other Occupational
Opportunities in East Texas.”
Reports of the conference ask
legislation to remedy several prob
lems facing milk producers.
The dairy workshop recommend
ed a uniform milk inspection law
for the state, instead of leaving it
up to cities’ individual whims, as
is presently done. Also recommend
ed is a system allowing quick ap
peal for the dairy man who feels
he is unfairly treated. Inspectors
practically have dictatorial power
under existing law. The workshop
asked for a state labeling law- to
let a housewife know what per cent
butterfat she buys in milk.
Local Architects
Hold Centennial
Next week will be Architects’
Week in Brazos County and the
cities of Bryan and College Station,
following a proclamation of County
Judge A. S. Ware, College Station
Mayor Ernest Langford and Bryan
Mayor H. C. Dishman.
The proclamation says, in part,:
“The profession of architecture is
dedicated to the planning and bet
terment of human environment, and
the role of the architect in our
modern society is more vital today
than at any time in the past.”
See our
SHORT SLEEVE
SHIRTS
Today!
Lmipot’s
A PAIR OF WINNERS—Jack Winzer of Reagan, left, and George Winn of. Tyler
congratulate each other on having the top two papers at the Southern Cojlegiate Hor
ticulture meeting in Birmingham, Ala.
Student Senate’s Retreat
Features SWC Delegates’
Speakers for the Student Sen
ate’s first annual Retreat have
been selected from leaders at A&M
and other Southwest Conference
schools.
The retreat will be held Satur
day afternoon in Hensel Park from
1 until 6:30. Talks and discussions
will be held until 5:30 when a steak
supper will climax the event.
Dean Robert B. Kamm will
Doak Tells UN Club
Of World Religions
The United Nations Club will
hold its first meeting of the Spring
Semester Friday night at 7:30 in
the YMCA. The major religions of
the world will be discussed in a
series of talks by students. Dr.
C. C. Doak of the Biology Depart
ment is the coordinator for the
program.
speak at 1, followed at 1:30 by
Baylor Student Body President Bill
Scott. Scott will report on the Na
tional Student Association Con
vention. At 2, Southwest Confer-
ene Student Body Presidents will
hold a discussion on the subject.
Phil Campbell, civilian counselor
at A&M, will speak and at 3:30
the conference will break up into
individual groups for discussion. A
baseball game at 4:30 will serve
to whet appetites for the steak fry
at 5:30. At 6:15, Larry Piper, pres-
ident of the A&M Student Senate
will give the closing speech. Mem
bers of the conference will then be
invited to attend the A&M-Baylor
basketball game in White Coli
seum.
Texas Tech, newcomer to the
SWC plans to send three delegates
to the conference. Some of the Re
ligious Emphasis Week speakers
are expected to attend the meet
ing.
The meeting is open to the pub
lic. Supper will cost $1 per person.
Students interested in photogra
phy are invited to enter the In
tercollegiate Photography Compe
tition, sponsored by Kappa Alpha
Mu, national photography frater
nity, Encyclopedia Britannica and
the Association of Colleges and
Universities.
First place award will be an all
expense paid trip to New York
for a week as guest of Life Mag
azine and a set of Encyclopedia
Britannica. The first place winner
will be chosen for the best port
folio of pictures. Divisional win
ners will receive a free set of En
cyclopedia Britannica.
Seven divisions are open for em
tries. The seven divisions are news)
feature, sports, pictorial portra-]
ture, character, picture series oi
sequence and picture portfolio.
The contest closes April 15]
Rules and entry forms may be obJ
tained by contacting W. D. Call
vert at the Journalism Depart!
ment in Building J.
HERE IS THE THIRD TIE-BREAKER IN
OLD GOLD’S
PUZZLES
T1E.BREAKING PUZZLE NO. 3
CLUE: This West Coast state university,
chartered in 1868, has campuses at various
locations throughout the state. Degrees in
oceanography are among those conferred
by this institution.
CLUE: Named for its founder, who also
founded the Western Union Telegraph
Company, this eastern university has many
schools, among which is one for hotel
administration.
ANSWER 1
ANSWER 2
Name
A ddress
City
College
.State.
Note: Above puzzle requires 2 answers.
instructions.
Hold answers for mailing
All participants who completed
the initial set of twenty-four
puzzles correctly are required
to solve a series of eight tie
breakers, in order to compete
for the prizes in the tie.
Remember—first prize is a
tour for two around the world
and there are 85 other
valuable prizes.
NO OTHER CIGARETTE
CAN MATCH THE TASTE
OF TODAY'S
OLD GOLDS
Regulars—Kings—or Filters,
today’s Old Golds taste terrific . ..
thanks to an exclusive blend of the finest
nature-ripened tobaccos ... so rich ...
so light... so golden bright!
in Engineering... Physics... Mathematics
I
I
A ircraft Corporation
California Division • Georgia Division
Lockheed Representatives of the California
Division and the Georgia Division
will be on campus
Thurs. & Fri., February 21 & 22
You are invited to consult your
placement officer fbr an appointment.
Separate interviews will be
given for each division.
Both divisions of Lockheed are engaged in a long-range expansion program in their fields of endeavor.
§!
California Division activities in Burbank
cover virtually every phase of commercial
and military aircraft. Seventeen different
models of planes are in production, including
cargo and passenger transports, high Mach
performance fighters, jet trainers, radar
search planes, patrol bombers.
B. S. graduates who wish to attain a Master’s
Degree will be interested in the California
Division’s Masters-Degree Work-Study
Program. In the program, participants achieve
their M.S. while working concurrently
on Lockheed’s engineering staff.
^ .
At Lockheed in Marietta, Georgia, new
C-130A turbo-prop transports and B-47 jet
bombers are being manufactured in the
country’s largest aircraft plant under one
roof. The division is already one of the
South’s largest industries. Moreover, a new
engineering center is now in development as
part of the division’s expansion program.
In addition, advanced research and develop
ment are underway on nuclear energy and
its relationship to aircraft. A number of
other highly significant classified projects
augment the extensive production program-
II
This broad expansion program is creating new positions in each division.
Graduates in fields of: Aeronautical Engineering, Electrical
Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Mathematics and Physics
are invited to investigate their role in Lockheed’s expansion.
A ircraft Corporation
California Division, Burbank, California * Georgia Division, Marietta, Georgia
y