The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 11, 1958, Image 2

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    T
7ie Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas
^GE 2 Tuesday, March 11, 1958
CADET SLOUCH
by Jim Earle
Man to Man
By JOE TINDEL
Today is the big day when we know who’ll be filling
this chair during 1958-59.
Only 25 more issues remain before I will be cleaning out
the old desk and letting the new editor move in.
All three of the men running for the job are good men
and each would be an asset to the student publications
program.
Texas A&M is at a crossroads. The man who is selected
must be one who can help guide our institution down the
right road. Good luck to the man selected!
★ ★ ★
“The Mole” has progressed into more than just a news
paper expressing thoughts formerly suppressed.
Students calling themselves “mole men” have done
more to harm their cause for independence from the mili
tary by the mob demonstration and effigy-burning of Thurs
day night than they have to help it.
Such enthusiasm and desire to be independent from
the military departments should be put to constructive
means rather than such action.
★ ★ ★
Corps re-organization can be done by constructive
means rather than through such violence.
Social Whirl
Members of the newly organ
ized Physical Education Wives
Club met Thursday evening to
elect spring semester officers.
They are Mrs. Jerry Rhea,
president; Mrs. Jim Stanley, sec
retary-treasurer, and Mrs. Bobby
Marks, reporter. Sponsors of the
group are Mrs. Carl Landiss and
Mrs. Les Palmer.
Hostess for the evening was
Mrs. Jim Stanley.
Any wives of physical education
majors who have not been con
tacted about the club are asked
to contact Mrs. Rhea, 318 First
St., College Station.
H* -l 1 •{'
Architect Wives Society will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in
the Aggie Wives Lounge of the
YMCA. Prof. Melvin Rotsch of
the Architecture Division will be
the guest speaker.
* ❖ ❖
A called meeting of Civil En
gineering Wives will be held at
8 p.m. Wednesday in the Brooks
room of the YMCA.
Aggies -
Try Youngblood’s
Fried Chicken
Yz Chicken - Trimmings $1.00
Barbecue
Rock Building
South College
Steaks — Seafoods
Midway Between
Bryan & College
Heavy Regulation
Khaki Shirts $5.95
We Form Fit Shirts And Sew On Patches For Your
Convenience
Khaki Slacks $5.95
HIGH BACK - FLAPS - ZIPPER FLY
Khaki Overseas Caps — Lined Or Unlined
-ALTERATIONS-
Bring Us Your Personal Clothes
For Perfect Alterations
ZUBIK'S
UNIFORM TAILORS
North Gate
Read" " Classifieds
Good Goley, Miss Moley . . .
★ ★ ★
Overheard in the MSC:
“Now hear this, now hear this.
The annual Water and Sewage
Banquet will begin in 10 minutes
in the Assembly Room . . .”
Some things are better left un
said.
★ ★ ★
Too late for “Job Interviews”:
Applicants for summer editor
of The Mole wall be interviewed
in the steam tunnels between
j 2330 and 2400 hours. No degree
J required.
ITS COMING!
“Sir, would you mind if my friends an’ me look on while
you grade my quiz?”
Job Interviews
Wednesday
Aluminum Company of
America Rockdale, interviews
chemical, civil, electrical, indus
trial, mechanioal engineering and
chemistry and accounting majors.
Firestone Tire and Rubber
Company interviews business ad
ministration, industrial distribu
tion, industrial technology, agri
cultural economics and account
ing majors.
W. R. Grace and Co., Polymer
Chemicals Division, Baton Rouge,
La., interviews chemical engi
neering and chemistry majors.
Leeds and Northrup Company
of Philadelphia, Pa., interviews
electrical, mechanical, industrial,
chemical engineering, physics and
chemistry majors.
Administrative Office, U. S.
Dept, of the Navy, Washington,
D. C., interviews aeronautical,
civil, electrical and mechanical
engineering majors.
Sun Pipe Line Company inter
views civil, electrical and me
chanical engineering majors.
Chicago Bridge and Iron Com
pany interviews architectural,
civil and mechanical engineering
majors and juniors in these maj
or’s for summer work.
TUESDAY
“Operation Mad Ball”
With Jack Lemmon
Plus
“Spoilers Of The Forest”
With Rod Cameron
What’s Cooking
7:30
The Accounting Society meets
in the MSC Social Room.
The Agricultural Economics
Club meets in room 2-B of the
MSC.
Il/U 4
Bryan 2'$879
LAST DAY
Alan Ladd In
“Deep Six”
STARTS TOMORROW
DAVID O.
SELZNICK presents his production of
EMFSI HtMIHRWH’S
THE BATTALION
Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu
dent writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax-supported,!
non-profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited and
operated by students as a community newspaper and is gov-!
erned by the student-faculty Student Publications Board at
Texas A. & M. College.
The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A & M , Is published in College
station. Texas, daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods. I
September through May. and once a week during summer school.
Faculty members of the Student Publications Board are Dr. Carroll D. Laverty,
Chairman: Prof, Donald D. Burchard: Prof. Robert M. Stevenson; and Mr. Bennie j
Zmn. Student members are W. T. WiiMams, John Avant, and Biily W. Libby. Ex- |
officio members are Mr. Charles A. Roeber; and Ross Strader. Secretary and Dlrec- |
tor of Student Publications.
Entered as second-class
matter at the Post Office
In College Station. Texas,
under the Act of Con
gress of March 8, 1870.
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for repubileation of all news
dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of
spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of repubiication of all other matter here
in are also reserved.
MEMBER:
The Associated Press
Texas Press Ass’n
I Associated Collegiate Press
Represented nationally by
X a 11 o n a 1 Advertising
Services. Inc.. Xew York
City, Chicago. Los An
geles, and San Francisco.
Fun •
Alleys for Open Play
—Monday thru Friday—
11:00 a. m. to 6:30 p. m.
and after 11:00
—Saturday—
12:00 Noon ’til
—Sunday—
12:30 p. m. ’til
Your Game is FRpjE if you
STRIKE when the head pin
is Red Monday thru Friday
’til 6:00 P. M.
Bryan K. C.
Bowling Center
Palasota Dr. and Groesbeck
TA 3-1399
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
20th Century-Fox presents
tLHRfiZ/l'
Cinemascope
tr.
.:bi
AIR
PLANES
Everything For The
Flying Model Builder
For We Also Build And
Fly.
Featuring
• OS MAX
• FOX
• TORPEDO
• THIMBLE-DROME
• RADIO CONTROL
EQUIPMENT
• AIR PLANE KITS
FOR ANY TYPE
OF FLYING
Everyone Is Invited to
COULTER FIELD
Every Sunday For Informal
Model Flying
Courtesy
J. D. Trissel, Mgr.
John and Charlie’s
Flying Models
109 E 26th TA2-4200
Bryan, Texas
Winner of 1st Prize in
U. S. Bootmakers Contest
“Biltrite” Boots and Shoes
Made By
Economy Shoe Repair and
Boot Co.
Large Stock of Handmade Boots
Convenient Budget & Lay-Away Plan
$55.00 a pair Made To Order
Main Office: 509 W. Commerce, San Antonio
CA 3-0047
On Campue
with
MaxShuiman
{By the Author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys! “and,
“Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
The first thought that comes into our minds upon entering
college is, of course, marriage. But how many of us go about
seeking mates, as I like to call them, in a truly scientific manner?
Not many, you may be sure.
So let us today make a scientific survey of the two principal
causes of marriage—personality need and propinquity.
Personality need means that we choose mates because they
possess certain qualities that complete and fulfill our own per
sonalities. Take, for example, the case of Alanson Duck.
As a freshman Alanson made a fine scholastic record, played
varsity scrabble, and was president of his class. One would
think that Alanson was a totally fulfilled man. But he was not.
There was something lacking in his life, something vague and
indefinable that was needed to make his personality complete.
Then one day Alanson discovered what it was. As he was
walking out of his class in Flemish pottery, a fetching coed
named Grace Ek offered him a handsome red and white pack
and said, “Marlboro?”
“Yes!” he cried, for all at once he knew what he had been
needing to round out his personality—the hearty fulfillment of
Marlboro Cigarettes, the soul-repairing mildness of their fine
tobacco, the easy draw of their unparalleled filter, the ease and
convenience of their crushproof flip-top box. “Yes, I will take a
Marlboro!” cried Alanson. “And I will also take you to wife
if you will have me!”
“La!” she exclaimed, throwing her apron over her face. But
after a while she removed it and they were married. Today
they live happily in Baffin Land where Alanson is with an
otter-glazing firm and Grace is a bookie.
Propinquity, the second principal cause of marriage, simply
means closeness. Put a boy and a girl close together for a sus
tained period of time and their proximity will certainly ripen
into love and their love into marriage. A perfect example is
the case of Fafnir Sigafoos.
While a freshman at Louisiana State University, Fafnir was
required to crawl through the Big Inch pipeline part of his
fraternity initiation. He entered the pipe at Baton Rouge and,
alone and joyless, he proceeded to crawl north.
As he passed Lafayette, Indiana, he was agreeably surprised
to be joined by a comely girl named Mary Alice Isinglass, a
Purdue freshman, who, oddly enough, had to crawl through
the Big Inch as part of her sorority initiation.
Chatting amiably as they crawled through Ohio, Pennsyl
vania, and New York State, Fafnir and Mary Alice discovered
they had much in common—like a mutual affection for licorice,
bobsledding, and the nonsense verse of Arnold Toynbee. When
they reached the Vennont border they were going steady, and
when they emerged from the pipe at Boothbay Harbor, Maine,
they were engaged.
After a good hot bath they were married and today they live
in Klamath Falls, Oregon, where Fafnir is in the weights and
measures department and Mary Alice is in the roofing game.
They have three children, all named Norman. © 1958. Max Shulmaa
* * *
Propinquity is sure to mean lore when you put yourself
close to a pack of Marlboros, made for your pleasure by the
sponsors of this column.
LFL ABNER
Pssr?r-THE
PRETTV
'OME/SNT
interested
jnANV I
of us rr-
By A1 Capp
ROCK ' JENNIFER VITTORIO
HUDSON-JONES-DE SICA
News contribution
the editorial office. Rr
CCKMtwDE lUXf
may be made by telephoning VI 6-6818 or VI 6-4910 or at
m 4, YMCA. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415.
Mail subscriptions are 53 50 per semester. 56 per school year. 56 50 per full
year. Advertising rates furnished on request Address: The Battalion. Room 4. YMCA.
College Station, Texas.
JOE TINDEL Editor
Jim Neighbors Managing Editor
Gary Rollins Sports Editor
Joy Roper Society Editor
Gayle McNutt ... City Editor
Joe Buser, Fred Meurer News Editors
Robert Weekley Assistant Sports Editor
David Stoker, Johnny Johnson, John Warner, Ronald Easley,
Lewis Reddell Reporters
Raoul Roth ...News Photographer
George Wise Circulation Manager I
QUEEN
TODAY & WEDNESDAY
Academy Award Nominee
Deborah Kerr
&
Robert Mitchum
In
“Heaven Knows
Mr. Alii .son"
PEANUTS
Bv Charles M. Schulz