The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 08, 1957, Image 2

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    The
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The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas
PAGE 2 Wednesday, May 8, 1957
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McAdams Wins
Slide Rule Contest
Harley H. McAdams Jr., physics
major from Liberty, won first place
in the annual Freshman Slide Rule
Contest held recently. As winner
he received the top award plaque.
Wiley W. Dover, industrial engi
neering major from San Angelo,
Eleven Winners
In E. D. Contest
Eleven winners in the an
nual engineering drawing con
test were announced ‘Tuesday
morning, by the E.D. Depart
ment.
Dennis M. Ryan, Dallas, won
fii-st prize in the Class A contest
which includes a working drawing
using instruments. He is a fresh
man, mechanical engineering stu
dent.
Second prize in the Class A
contest went to Frederick B.
Delafield, an architecture student,
and Dale R. Hamilton, a mechanical
engineering student. Both are
from Dallas.
Winners in the Class B contest,
which is solution of problems using
principles of descriptive geometry,
were Byron C. Blaschke, civil engi
neering student from New Branun-
fels, first place; Joe W. Woodward,
Nederland, chemical engineering
student second, and third place
went to Weldon A. Lee, Houston,
basic engineering student.
Freehand lettering, Class C con
test, winners were Herbert W.
Bafnhouse, aeronautical student
from Newton, Iowa, first place;
Arthur E. Pinson, Houston,
geology-petroleum engineering stu
dent, second place; and Arthur D.
Chase, Houston, mechanical engi
neering student, third place.
Second place in the Class D con
test went to Robert A. Bertrand,
chemical engineering student from
Beaumont.
won second place; Walter C. Miller
from Panhandle, third; William B.
Heye Jr., electrical engineering
major from San Antonio, fourth;
fifth was Fred A. Pendleton of Dal
las and sixth was Wayland Quisen-
berry, Quanah, an electrical engi
neering major.
Each of the top six winners re
ceived slide rules.
Winning Exchange Store gift
certificates were: Jerry E. Rey
nolds, Houston; Tommy R. Ellison,
Dallas; George Uppercamp, Eagle
Pass; Jim F. Bellomy, Tyler; Joe
W. Woodward, Nederland and
Ramon Mireles of San Antonio.
Charles A. Benson, Sour Lake,
and Moss L. Anthony, College Sta
tion, won pocket slide rules.
Departmental winners receiving
plaques were: aeronautical engi-
neering-Daniel E. Milton, Houston,
first and Gene Almy, Omaha,
Nebr., second; ai’chitecture-Geoi'ge
Uppercamp, Eagle Pass, first and
Danny D. Murdock, Wichita Falls,
second; chemical engineering—
Walter C. Miller, Panhandle, first
and Tommy R. Ellison, second.
Civil engineering-Hubert Oxford
III, Beaumont, first: electrical
engineering-William B. Heye Jr.,
San Antonio, first and wayland
Quisenberry, Quanah, second:
mechanical engineering-Fred A.
Pendleton, Dallas, first and Jerry
E. Reynolds, Houston, second;
petroleum engineering - Edmundo
G. Saenz Jr., Hebbronville, first
and J. C. Burton, Tyler, second:
physics-Harley H. McAdams Jr.,
Liberty, first; industrial engineer
ing-Wiley W. Dover, San Angelo,
first; ma,thematics-Ramon Mireles,
San Antonio, second place.
What’s Cooking
The following clubs and organi
zations will meet tonight.
7:30
Brazos Aviation Association in
the City Hall. Vistors welcome.
to help you
HONOR MOM
on her day
with a
CORSAGE
see your dorm
representative
or come by
STUDENT
FLORAL
CONCESSIONS
Across from main entrance to New Area
The Battalion
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, la 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.
Caverty, Chairman: Prof. Donald D. Burchard, Prof. Tom Leland and Mr. Bennie
SSinn. Student members are W. T. Williams, 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 througu Friday for the regular school year and on Thursday
during the summer terms and during examination and vacation periods. Subscription
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.
Kntered as second-class
natter at Post Office at
College Station, Texas,
■under the Act of Con
gress of March S, 1870.
Member of:
The Associated Press
Texas Press Association
Represented nationally by
National Advertising
Services, Inc., a t New
York City. Chicago, Lo*
Angelee, and San Fran
cisco.
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republi-
eation 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 6-6518 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 ai
the Student Publications Office, ground floor of the YMCA.
J OE~TINl)EL I Editor
Jim Neighbors — Managing Editor
Jim Carrell Sports Editor
Gayle McNutt City Editor
Val Polk, Fred Meurer, Joe Buser News Editors
Jim Bower, Dave McReynolds, Barry Hart, Leland Boyd Has-beens
Joy Roper Society Editor
Jerry Haynes, Ronald Easley .' Reporters
John West, C. R. McCain Staff Photographers
Don Collins Staff Cartoonist
Editorials
Insurance for You
This year’s Student Senate made what is probably the
greatest contributioh in the history of the body Thursday
night when they chose the 12-month non-compulsory acci
dent insurance policy for A&M students.
Despite an earlier set-back in a referendum election on
a compulsory policy, the Senate bounced back to its feet and
through months of work and searching they found what
seems to be the best insurance policy available for students.
Now all that remains for students is to take advantage of
the policy.
Joe Ross, Civilian senator, has said that 2,250 students
are needed to make the plan go over. It’s now up to as many
students as possible to take advantage of the policy.
This policy can be of great aid to those students who
might have financial difficulty in case of an accident either
during the school year or while on vacation. Such students
would be sacrificing their own welfare by not being prepared
to meet any such emergencies.
The Senators have provided the policy for the students
in their interest for welfare of Aggies. Now it’s up to stu
dents themselves to look after their own welfare and sign
up for the policy next year.
Good Leadership
Filings are open now for officers and committee heads
for the Student Senate under the new organization approved
by the Executive Council Thursday and the May 13 deadline
is drawing near.
Under the new organization better representation than
ever will probably result and it will be the responsibility of
the better qualified students to file these positions.
Regardless of how good a plan the Senate operates under
next year, it will only be as good as the men who will lead it.
Heaton Named
Top Pre-Med
For ’56-’57
Charles Lloyd Heaton, sen
ior from College Station, was
designated as top outstanding
pre-med student for 1956-57,
and Clarence John Shumbera,
junior from Weimar, received the
same honor in pre-dent Saturday
night at the annual Pre-Med, Pre-
Dent Society Banquet.
Heaton has been a Distinguish
ed Student every semester, is a
member of Phi Eta Sigma and Phi
Kappa Phi, and has served as jun
ior and as senior representative
to the Arts and Sciences Council.
Shumbera has also distinguished
every semester, is a member of
the Phi Eta Sigma and Phi Kappa
Phi societies arid has received both
the Sears Roebuck Scholarship and
the Jesse Jones Scholarship.
Dr. H. E. Hoff, head of the De
partment of Physiology at Baylor
Medical School in Houston, ad
dressed the crowd which included
90 students and their guests. He
spoke on the “Role of Anesthesia
in Medical Science, Its History
and Development.”
Top a cup of hot chocolate bev
erage with a cinnamon-sprinkled
marshmallow.
Kiwanis Hear CHS Ag Teacher
A&M Consolidated High School
vocational agriculture teacher, Jim
T. House and one of his students,
Charles Gentry, spoke at the week
ly Kiwanis luncheon yesterday in
the Memorial Student Center.
Gentry, a first year senior ag
ricultural student at CHS, recent
ly won the district FFA speaking
contest and will soon participate
in the regional contest. He gave
his speech, “Farm Surpluses, Our
Enduring Paradox,” to the club.
House outlined the work of the
CHS FFA Chapter and vocational
agriculture work at the high school
TAKE
YOUR
DATE
FOll THE ALL COLLEGE
DANCE TO DINNER AT . . .
2)J nu.uA
Restaurant — Delicatessen — Catering
Phone TA 2-4749 2008-10 Texas Ave.
(In The Plantation Shopping Center)
Freddie George
Selected Head
Of Alpha Zeta
Freddie George, junior ag
ricultural education m a j o r
from Jacksonville, was in
stalled as chancellor of the
Texas Chapter of the Alpha
Zeta Fraternity for the year 1957-
58.
Installation took place at the
Annual Alpha Zeta Banquet Mon
day night in the Ballroom of the
Memorial Student Center.
Other officers installed were Don
McGinty, censor; John Ochterbeck,
scribe; Walter Bryan, treasurer
and John Thomas, chronicler.
Fritz Landers, L. E. Sheppard
Jr., Freddie Lehman, Jim Renick
and Marcus Crow are the retiring
officers.
Murray Brown, instructor in the
Dairy Science Department, replaced
R. R. Shrode as faculty advisor.
Other faculty advisors are R. C.
Potts and I. W. Rupel.
Dr. Philip V. Garden was guest
speaker at the banquet. He is a
widely recognized agriculture au
thority and outstanding agricul
turist throughout the world. His
talk was about some of his jobs
and acquaintances in foreign coun
tries as Director General of the
Food and Agriculture Organiza
tion of the United Nations.
Richard Richardson and John
Thomas were cited as the outstand
ing freshman and sophomore in
agriculture.
GRADUATING SENIORS • • •
P. I. P.
AH Your Money Back* + $5 5 000.00
ILLUSTRATION**: AGE 22 Annual Deposit $182.45
(or $15.31 by monthly bank draft)
YOUR DREAM OF
TOMORROW
BECOMES A REALITY
TODAY
With this
PREFERRED
IF YOU LIVE
Cash to you, Age 42
J Cash to you, Age 55
I Cash to you, Age 60
Cash to you, Age 65
$.”,,802.00
7.113.85
8.113.85
9,183.30
INVESTMENT PLAN
GREAT SOUTHWEST LIFE INSURANCE CO.
DALLAS, TEXAS
An Old Line Legal Reserve Stock Co.
IF YOU DIE
YOUR FAMILY
WILL RECEIVE
(Before Deposits
arc completed —
for example, in
15th year)
1.
3.
Check for Estate Protection . . $7,736.75
(including return of all deposits)
Check for Coupon Accumulations 810.45
Check for Dividend Accumulations 481.40
Total $9,028.60
Total Deposits 2,736.75
Net Gain for Estate
$6,291.85
* lairing premium rlopo.sit period prior to Age 65
■“Values shown above .include dividends based on present scale and stated
amounts are dependent upon all dividends and coupons being left on deposit
to accumulate compound interest.
WAYNE SCHMIDT
TEXAS A&M REPRESENTATIVE
P.O. BOX 4824
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS
Please send me information on the P.I.P. Plan:
Name
Address
City
Dorm & Room No. ..... Phone
PEANUTS
By Charles M. Schulz
PFANtfTS
CAN YOU REALLY
GET SECURITY
FROM A BLANKET
LIKE THAT?/
Apparently SOME PEOPLE
CAN. OTHERS CAN'T..
V
OF COURSE, YOU HAVE TO
Realize that security does
NOT JUST COME TO A PERSON.
SOMETTMESIT HAS TO
BE PURSUED/
1
NAVIGATOR OR PILOT
The flying U. S. Air Force is a team of men who command the aircraft and men
who plan the attack. These are the pilots and navigators, both equally important to
the defense of America.
You, as a young man of intelligence and sound physical health, may join this
select group in the world’s most exciting and rewarding adventure. Your training
will stand you in good stead, whatever your future plans may be — and you’ll be
earning over $0,000 a year 1B months after training.*
If you are between 19 and 2QV2 years of age, investigate your opportunities as an
Aviation Cadet in the U. S. Air Force. Priority consideration is now being given to
college graduates. For details, write: Aviation Cadet information, P.O. Box 7608, 1
Washington 4, D. C. t , 1
•Based on pay of married 1st Lieutenant oa
flight status with 2‘years’ service or more.
_G rad uate — Then^piy. ■. XJ« B« AJH FOHCB AVIATIO!N_CADBT PROGRAME
GET ON
THE TEAM
THAT DEFENDS
AMERICA