The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 26, 1958, Image 2

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The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas
PAGE 2 Wednesday, March 26, 1958
An Editorial
Fight for Truth
“Freedom of conscience, of education, of speech and of
assembly are among the very fundamentals of democracy
and all of them would be nullified should freedom of the
press ever be challenged.”—Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The Battalion has fought and shall continue to fight to
place A&M in its proper place as a respected educational
institution where free thought and expression are stressed.
As long as The Battalion is free to print the truth, A&M
has a chance to rise from the “dark ages” of education and
rapidly move toward new heights.
It will be able to fight for the rights of the students,
the faculty and the staff when administrative injustice is
rampant.
But, forces at A&M are at work that would completely
restrict freedom of thought and expression by taking away
The Battalion’s freedom.
Those behind this move, whether by intention or not,
have no better excuse for such a move than Hitler did dur
ing World War II.
Unless information is harmful to the security of the
country, they have no right, under the Constitution of the
United States and the State of Texas, to restrict freedom
of the press. #
In a free educational institution, there rpust be a free
flow of information to protect the students, faculty and
staff against any despotic administration.
As Gov. Price Daniel has said, “Everyone who believes
our American theory of people governing themselves
through elected representativesm must defend the right of
the people to know the truth. ...”
Job Interviews
Thursday
American Blower, Division of
American Standard, interviews
aeronautical, electrical and me
chanical engineering - majors.
Collins Construction Company,
Port Lavaca, interviews civil, me
chanical and petroleum engineer
ing majors.
W. T. Grant Company inter
views business administration, ag
ricultural economics and econom
ics majors.
Koppers Company Inc., Port
Arthur, interviews chemical en
gineering and chemistry majors.
National Carbon Company, Dal
las, interviews business admin
istration and mechanical engineer
ing majors.
Tandy Leather Company, Fort
Worth, interviews agricultural
economics, business administra
tion, economics, and industrial
distribution majors.
Thursday and Friday
Columbia - Southern Chemical
Corp. (Subsidiary of Pittsburgh
Plate Glass Company) interviews
chemical, electrical and mechani
cal engineering majors. Also in
terviewing juniors for summer
jobs in the above fields.
Ford Motor Company inter
views chemical and mechanical
engineering, accounting and fi
nance majors.
the
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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 neiuspaper and is gov
erned by the student-facuity Studeyit 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,
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
Zinn. Student members are W. T. Williams, John Avant, and Billy W. Libby. Ex-
officio members are Mr. Charles A. Roeber; and Ross Strader, Secretary and Direc
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.
MEMBER:
The Associated Press
Texas Press Ass’n
Associated Collegiate Press
Represented nationally by
N a t i o n a 1 Advertising
Services, Inc., New York
City, Chicago, Los An
geles, and San Francisco.
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication 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 here
in are also reserved.
Mall subscriptions are $3.50 per semester, $6 per school year, $6.50 per full
year. Advertising rates furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA,
College Station, Texas.
News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or VI 6-4910 or at
the editorial office, Room 4, YMCA. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415.
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
CADET SLOUCH by Jim Earle
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“It’s gettin’ to where a guy can’t smoke a cigar without
drawin’ a crowd!”
Now that the season of dances
is here, it seems most appropriate
to enumerate some of the high
lights of dances in the past so
the new students on the campus
will know what to look for—and
won’t miss out on the fun.
At every dance there’s always
this cool Ag who forgets his
date’s ticket and wants to dance
with yours.
Your date, not her ticket.
Or the ever present oaf who
leaps up during every dance,
grabs the microphone and shouts,
“Anybody seen a stray date tic
ket?”
★ ★ ★
And there’s invariably one who
will grind his highly polished log
ger type boots through the in
step of your date’s dancing slip
per as he lunges out in search of
a lost date. His.
Or the moon-eyed Aggie that
can’t keep from casting an eye
at your date. (This is usually
highly embarrassing—cyclops al
ways seem to frighten girls.)
Letters To The Editor
Editor
The Battalion:
I am not sure whose decision
let girls enter the “used to be”
Agricultural and Mechanical Col
lege of Texas. I do know, though,
that he must have been a sadist.
No one else would want to see
the suffering of thousands of Ag
gies and thousands of girls who
look forward for weeks to a trip
to A&M. Girls “used to be”
treated like queens and made to
feel their femininity and import
ance in the world while at Ag-
gieland. Now they will be just
another girl on the campus.
What do. men now have to call
their own? They certainly do
not have a man’s school to be
proud of. A&M was a man’s
school geared to men. Men will,
therefore, not even have a profes
sion to call their own since wo
men have been admitted to their
school. Women will be trained
—only if they can pass the strin
gent scholastic qualifications—to
do the same things. The man’s
classroom where he is free to
cuss or tell a foul joke will be
no more. This example is only a
small insignificant one showing
the things that will be changed.
The man’s world has simply been
torn down, demolished, never to
return.
Where was democracy shown
in taking away the man’s world?
If the Aggies do not get to
choose if they want women—or
if they choose and their choice is
not considered—why should the
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Every Sunday For Informal
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Courtesy
J. D. Trissel, Mgr.
John and Charlie’s
Flying Models
109 E 26th TA2-4200
Bryan, Texas
American people get a choice in
the decision of their own segre
gation? The whole principle of
democracy has been defeated by
ignoring the decision of the Ag
gies. A&M has been defeated as
the United States will be defeat
ed when the voice of the people
is not heard.
In sympathy with the Aggies,
Miss Laura Lindley
North Texas student
Editor
The Battalion:
After working for a few years
to finance my way at A&M I’ll
enter this fall. I’m pro-Corps
and anti-coed for I desire the
school and training as it exists
now. My reason for writing this
letter is to state my view as a
‘Fish to be’ and to answer two
letters which appeared in the
March 19 Batt.
First, Jack Heald, ’58, advo
cated faith and discipline for one
desirous of being a scholar, hon
orable gentleman, Aggie and an
officer. Jack’s picture appeared
in the ’57 Aggieland as presi
dent of the Pre-Vet Society when
a student by the name of Charles
Graham held that office. You
have made no mention of this in
your letter(s) Jack, is this hon
or, are you an Aggie example,
are you future officer material?
Maybe I’ve been told wrong, but
I would like an answer.
Secondly, I am acquainted with
Gene Dayhoff, ’55, who wrote
that Junction Manor for our ‘big
heroes’ was rot. I believe that
the athletes have made enough
money to build that dorm Gene,
I further believe that their head-
knocking, sweating, fighting Ag
gie football makes them eligible
for better surroundings in which
to rest and study. I’ve heard
your friends (?) say “here comes
‘verbal diarrhea’ Dayhoff, I’m
leaving.” My question to you is,
did you staid writing because all
stopped listening???
Sincerely,
Gene Wellborne
BASEBALL Season Is Here.
See Us For AH Your Needs.
Organizations Get Team Prices.
STUDENT CO-OP STOKE
AWvmtuv
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Jarman
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When you buy a pair of shoes, do you look first
for smart styling or for coddling comfort? As far as the
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continental-styled slip-on is made of “Cordovant” leather
which takes a wonderful shine. It has a special
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it fit extra well. It is, in short, a shoe that
should be in your wardrobe. Come try a pair.
Black Calf & Brown Calf
Conway & Co.
103 N. Main
Bryan
AUSTIN—State’s fiscal cup
board is bare at the moment. By
the end of the month it’ll prob
ably be about $20,000,000 short,
says State Treasurer Jesse James.
Texas’ treasury has been run
ning in the red during spring
months for several years. Situa
tion corrects itself sometime aft
er April when sizable state tax
payments come in. For more than
a decade the state has come out
We’re Tops
In
Shoe Repairs
COURT’S
Shoes — Shoe Repairs
North Gate
solidly in the black . by the end
of each fiscal period.
This year Treasurer James pre
dicts incoming revenue will wipe
out the deficit by May or June.
See Dr.
A. Smitli
For
Professional Visual Care
Dr. Smith and Staff
Optometrists
e Eyes examined
® Glasses prescribed
e Contact lens fitted
BRYAN OPTICAL
CLINIC
Convenient Terms
TA 2-3557 105 N. Main
PENNY PARKER says:
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Venetian mirrors $6.00 to $16.00
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