The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 28, 1958, Image 3

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LSU Coeds Claim
Joanne Woodward
BATON ROUGE, La. —OP> —
“Joanne Woodward slept here,”
boasted a lai-ge sign across the
front of a girls’ dormitory at Loui
siana State University yesterday.
Miss Woodward, who won the
Academy Award for best actress
Wednesday night, left LSU in 1949
to try her luck on the New York
stage.
CIRCLE
THRU FRIDAY
JACK
©Deration I iemmon
i|AD@AU. J
ERNIE
kovacs
Kathryn
grant
Also
“HelTs Canyon Outlaws”
Dale Robertson
SATURDAY ONLY
dan
duryea
jayne
mansfield
Also
“Something Of Value ,
Rock Hudson
And
“3:10 To Yuma”
Glenn Ford
!Lr theatre V
FRIDAY
Walt Disney’s
66 Westward Ho
The Wagons”
With Fess Parker
SATURDAY
A SKY-HORROR 200 MILLION
. \ YEARS OLD
\ hurtles /' /'
\ \ dow » / . V
. \ \ f to , /J
\ ;%uVi th « /
N A N A world l ^
Most Horrifying Hell-Creature
That Tver Menaced Ail Mankind!
mm
m
i
THE FLYING MONSTER
print by TECHNICOLOR
Also
A HORROR BEYOND BELIEF!
TERROR
BEYOND
COMPARE!
, ... .. , •
NASSOUR STUDIOS INCi-Presents ,! ;■
GUY MADISON
PATRICIA MEDINA ii
HOLLOW MOUNTAIN
And Introducing the New CTjHljTRilllT Proces
ONEMaScOPE-COLOR by OC LUXE
Released thru UNITED ARTISTS
Saturday Nite Preview
10:30 p. m.
Also Sunday & Monday
RIOTOUS FUN!
MARION GLENN
BRANDO FORD
chat rascal Sakini... as eager beaver Capt. Fishy ...
MACHIKQ
KYO
M geisha girl Locus Blossom-m-m
' The Teahouse
o£ the
August M&cm"
k) CINEMASCOPE and METROCOLOR Metro-
to iwunt (jMJU'lllk
EDDIE ALBERT ^
Bill Offers Texans 18 Servicemen
46,000 New Jobs
WASHINGTON —hT)— The new
highway construction bill passed
by the senate yesterday would pro
vide 4G,000 jobs in Texas, Senate
Democratic Leader Lyndon John
son of Texas estimated.
He said Texas is entitled to 24
million dollars under the measure
for federal primary and secondary
highway systems during- the year
starting- July 1.
ATTENTION
AGGIES
Have You Tried The
TEXAN SPECIAL
STEAK
Sirloin Or T-Bone
At
THE TEXAN
3204 College Rd.
SPECIAL!
Sophomore
Nylon Belts
Only 25c Each
LOUPOT’S
PALACE
Bryan 2-$$T9
TODAY & SATURDAY
“No Down Payment”
With Sheree North
The authentic Western
that heads all the
others off at the pass!
/5 THE EPIC OF THE REAL AMERICAN
Ill HI-J
SUNDAY THRU TUESDAY
JOSEPH LMAHKIEK
'jniinjpeMl
RelMStd lhiu[!0UKiT£D ARTISTS
QUEEN
DOUBLE FEATURE
TODAY & SATURDAY
“Hell Ship Mutiny”
&
“Crooked Circle”
Die in Collision
Of Two Planes
BRIDGEPORT, Tex. (JP) —
Two military planes collided in
the air over this North Texas
town yesterday and Air Force
reports showed 18 servicemen
died when the planes crashed into
the ground.
No one survived.
The crash of a C124 Globemaster
took 15 lives. A Cl 19 cai-go plane
crashed on a fa?-m and killed the
three aboard. The Cl24 had a
crew of 10 and picked up five pas
sengers in San Antonio, Kelly Air
Force Base reported.
The Globemaster’s home was Hill
Air Force Base, near Salt Lake
City, Utah. The C-119 was sta
tioned at Carswell Air Force Base,
at Fort Worth, 45 miles southeast
of here.
The Globemaster burned fiercely.
Pools of molten metal glimmered
around the wreckage.
Small shattered pieces of wreck
age lay over a wide area.
Some parachutes remained neat
ly folded. Other chutes burst open
and lent a garish touch to the
scene. But apparently none aboard
the C-124 bailed out.
A large section of the craft, bad
ly torn, lay about 150 yards from
the main C-124 wreckage.
Bill Carlton, Bridgeport, drove
along a road shortly after 4 p.m.
when the air collision occurred.
“It looked like great big flakes
of sheet iron falling,” he said.
The Defense Department in
Washington said the C-124 was en-
route from Kelly Air Force Base,
San Antonio, Tex., to Tinker Air
Force Base, Oklahoma City.
The C-119 was en route from
Sheppard Air Force Base, Wichita
Falls, to Carswell AFB.
DRIVE-W
*™CATBi
Atv-FRfl
FRIDAY
“The Young Don’t Cry’
With Sal Mineo
Also
“No Time To Be Young’
With Robert Young
SATURDAY
“War Drum”
“Outlaw’s Son”
‘The Wild Party’
Plus 4 Cartoons
W!W
SEVEfC
JOHN LUPTON • JANA DAVI
tt— IIIIT--Til rn A UNITED ARTISTS RELEASE n
the experts tell the whole dratnatic
-Yalallilest.™,:.
WERNHER VON BRAUN
KENNETH W. GATLAND
H. E. ROSS
A. V. CLEAVER
PROJECT SATELLITE
with photos, diagrams'
and charts $5.00
// . . . an excellent book”
— Fred Sparks, Scripps-
Howard columnist, re
porting from Cape
Canaveral.
^Jbe (^xcbcutcte
e < xcncutcje
Serving Texas Aggies
ore
.
Merrill Adamcik
Cotton King To Be
Crowned April 11
Merril Adamcik, senior agi-ono-
my major from El Campo, will pre
side as King Cotton at the annual
Cotton Pageant to be held in Guion
Hall on the night of April 11, ac
cording to Floyd A. Robertson,
publicity chairman of the Agi-ono-
my Society.
Immediately following the Cot
ton Pageant the Cotton Ball will
be held in Sbisa Hall.
The Cotton Queen is to be picked
from some 100 duchesses submitted
by various organizations. She will
be named at the pageant.
Adamcik will be crowned by A.
L. Ward, director of Education
Service, National Cottonseed Prod
ucts Association, Dallas.
Murry Cox, farm editor of
WFAA, Dallas, will be the master
of ceremonies for the event.
Tickets are on sale at the Stu
dent Activities Office and in Room
101 of the Agronomy Building, or
they may be purchased from any
member of the Agronomy Society.
Ducats sell for $1 per person for
the pageant and $2 per couple for
the ball or a couple may go to the
ball and pageant for $3.
Local TB Fighters
At Houston Meeting
Mrs. Otis Miller, R. H. Fletcher
and Joe Sorrels, local leaders of the
Brazos County Tubei-culosis Asso
ciation, are in Houston attending
the three-day annual meeting of
the state association.
The meeting, being- held at the
Rice Hotel, began yesterday and
continues through tomorrow. Doc
tors, nurses and lay health leaders
from Texas and neighboring states
are attending the meeting, which
marks the 50th anniversary of the
founding.
Mrs. Miller is executive director
and Fletcher is chairman of the
Brazos County association. Sor
rels is a member of the State Board
of Directors for the organization.
WESTERN WEAR
Levis and Levi Jackets
Western Shirts & Slacks
LEON B. WEISS
Next To Campus Theater
West Germany
Votes to Buy
U. S. Matadors
BONN, (TP) — The Defense
Committee of the West Ger
man Parliament voted yester
day to buy 24 U.S. Matador
missiles—capable of nuclear
warfare.
The action came amid a mount
ing threat of a general strike
against atomic weapons by the
nation’s six million trade union
ists.
The Trade Union Federation was
to meet today to decide whether
to call out the workers in a politi
cal strike against the Bundestag’s
decision two days ago to permit
West Germany to accept atomic
arms if offered by Germany’s al
lies.
A deputy of the opposition So
cialist party in a statement said
Chancellor Konrad Adenauer
would not stop until he had a
German - produced intercontinental
missile with a hydrogen warhead.
Socialist Chairman Erich Ollen-
hauer called on the Parliament to
vote Adenauer out of power in or
der to prevent “a national catas
trophe.”
His party introduced a bill call
ing for a national referendum on
the atomic arms issue. Adenauer’s
majority was certain to turn down
this proposal.
Ike Sees Tragedy
If Trade Not f ixed
WASHINGTON—(A 1 )—President
Eisenhower said last night Amer
ica faces “deadly peril” from com
munism abroad and possible loss
of jobs at home unless Congress
extends the administration’s for
eign trade program.
The President sounded those cau
tionary notes in a speech prepar
ed for a dinner to rally bipartisan
support for the program.
Eisenhower, whose talk was car
ried nationwide on television and
radio, hammered hard at both the
international and domestic as
pects of foreign trade. He has
asked Congress for a five-year ex
tension of the Reciprocal Trade
Act and for authority to cut tariffs
gradually up to 25 per cent under
present levels.
“We should make everyone
aware,” the President said, “of
the deadly peril impending if—
through blindness—America and
the free world are robbed of ade
quate economic defense against
Communist penetration.”
from \,
all X ~
corners
of the
world
Students, faculty
and administrators
come to the William Sioane House,
long famous for its comfortable, in
expensive accommodations and its
wide spread program of services.
Enjoy clean rooms, coffee .shop,
tailor, TV room, sports, forums
and tours. All age groups accom
modated.
RATES: $2.20 single;
$3-$3.40 double.
Membership included.
Write for Folder C.
WILLIAM SLOANE
HOUSE Y.M.C.A.
356 West 34th St. (nr Ninth Ave.)
New York, N.Y. Phone: Oxford 5-5133
(One Block From Penn Station)
The Battalion College Station (Brazos County)] Texas
Friday, March 28, 1958 PAGE 3
U.S. Rockets to Get
Good Look at Moon
WASHINGTON^—CP)—The Unit
ed States is going to send rocket
scouts to take a close look at the
moon.
Orders for the “lunar probes”
by unmanned space vehicles were
issued yesterday by President Ei
senhower and Seci’etary of Defense
Neil McEh’oy.
The decision to press forward,
with what only a little while ago
would have seemed a fantastic proj
ect, followed by one day the Presi
dent’s publication of an official
“Introduction to Outer Space.”
This was an outline by his science
advisory committee of the reasons
for space exploration and its pos
sibilities and problems.
In this first long step, the gov
ernment authorized the Air Force
and Army to proceed with pro
grams for launching four and per
haps five unmanned vehicles to
explore “in the vicinity of the
moon.” The Navy is directed to
begin preparing equipment for the
vehicles which will send back an
‘account of what is on the moon—
pi’obably including the still un
known far side.
An initial allocation of about
eight million dollars was ordered
to start work on the over-all pro
gram.
Neither the White House nor
Defense Department would spec
ulate on when the first moon shoot
would be made. Some important
parts of the equipment needed al
ready exist.
LETTERS
(Continued from Page 2)
ever let this happen.
I have enclosed my addi’ess in
case someone wants to write me
pei’sonally. I’ve tried to put
this down just exactly the way I
feel about it, and I wouldn’t want
any misinterpretation.
Larry Griffin ’56
2nd Lt. R. L. Griffin AO 3070605
Box 997
Perrin Air Force Base
Sherman, Texas
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DOROTHY'S
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3211 Texas Avenue
m
1
TA 2-1202
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41
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