The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 30, 1958, Image 2

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    The Battalion College Station (Brasfos County), Texas
PAGE 2 Wednesday, April 30, 1958
Editorials
New Men Today
Today some of the finest and most capable men who
have ever worked on The Battalion take over the biggest job
on the campus—trjdng to please everybody and still do their
jobs as responsible newspapermen.
Leaving them to experience for themselves the feeling
of being of service to their fellow students and other readers
of their newspaper, are some tired but proud seniors.
In the minds of these men who will soon take their
place in the world, there are thoughts of the good things
they have been able to accomplish throughout the year.
They have made mistakes, surely, but these are only
a part of the rocky road of life and have been lessons which
will influence their future reactions.
Of course, its like final review for the old Battalion
staffers who will leave the jobs they’ve devoted their hearts,
minds and souls to since early in their college years.
But none can be too sorry to leave when they realize
that devoted newspapermen with the true best interests
of their alma mater at heart are there capable of taking
over where the seniors left off in building a better Aggie-
land.
Good luck to you, Joe Buser. You have a big job ahead
of you. Remember always the principles of good journalism
and the welfare of Aggieland—“the school we love so
well.”—JT
Was It Worth It?
Today ends the jobs of the senior editors of The Bat
talion. Most people don’t realize the amount of time that
goes into publishing one issue of a newspaper, let alone
four every week. i
After working long hours, losing sleep, weight and
grade points, the consensus among these senior editors is
that the time was well spent. ,
Not only have the editors provided their readers with
the news, but they have also increased their own knowledge
through that invaluable asset called experience.
Since the day we walked into The Battalion’s news office
until yesterday when we cleaned our desks out we have been
learning. The man who said “experience is the best teacher”
knew exactly what he was talking about. The four years or
less spent on the newspaper staff have been years to be re
membered for the rest of our lives.
To many people on this campus, being identified with
The Battalion is tantamount to being termed radical. If radi
cal means to try and increase one’s knowledge through learn
ing then the members of the newspaper staff are certainly
radicals.
The editor of The Battalion this year has shown the
courage that newspapermen throughout the history of our
great nation have shown. For having the courage of his
convictions, he has been harassed both mentally and physical
ly by people who have yet to learn what the word maturity
means. y
Our only hope is that his work has not been done in
vain. Perhaps some of our readers have been able to see a
' little more clearly what is going on in the wcsrld around them.
If they can, then the efforts put into publishing this news
paper have been worthwhile. '
But if the readers of this newspaper can only breathe
a sigh of relief now that the “reign of terror” is over then
we can only ask ourselves if it was worth it.
We think so.—JN
EVERYONE
LOVES
And Yon Will
Find S)
The Music You Love
At
SllCl jj^er J - THE PLACE TO BUY RECORDS
North Gate 8 a. m. 6 p. m.—6 Days A Week
THE BATTALION
Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu
dent writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax-supported,
non-p7'ofit, 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 Sta
tion, Texas, daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods, Septem
ber 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 W. E. Kidd, Secretary and Director
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
National Advertising
Services, Inc., New York
City, Chicag®, 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 ef all other matter here
in are also reserved.
Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester,$6 per school year, $6.50 per full year.
Advertising rat efsurnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA, Col
lege Station, Texas.
Nev.'s contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or VI 6-49-10 or at the
editorial office. Room 4, YMCA. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415.
JOE TINDEL Editor
Jim Neighbors t 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 Ronal
Easley, Lewis Reddell Reporters
Raoul Roth News Photographer
George Wise Circulation Manager
tITTH MAR ON CAMPOS
by Dlclt Btbler
System Jobs Approved
1,1 X UNPefcSTANt? WCS UP FOR. RETIREMENT N6XT YEAR.''
Too Much Credit Buying,
Says College Students
A favorite subject of cartoon
ists is the woman who has just
charged some new article to her
husband’s account, but /a recent
survey conducted by Associated
Collegiate Press of Student Opin
ion should throw a slightly dif
ferent light on this time honored
joke.
A substantial proportion of the
college coeds interviewed feel
there is too much credit buying
done today. More than fifty per
cent of the college men feel the
same way, but the coeds have a
strong lead over the men.
The most vigorous protest of
too much credit buying comes
from the junior coeds interviewed.
Eighty-nine per cent of them
agree with the statement which
was put to them none disagree,
and eleven per cent haven’t made
up their minds. Seniors rostered
LETTERS
Editor,
The Battalion
The Board of Directors of the
Brazos County Tuberculosis As
sociation joins with me in thank
ing you for the fine space you
gave on the chest X-ray survey.
It is always a pleasure to work
with newspapers when we have
such fine co-operation. . . .
Mrs. Otis Miller,
i Executive Director
Brazos County TB Assn.
yttw:
uYAJYj,*
DfilVl IN
f. THf A! K»
.Warm
WEDNESDAY
“I Was A Teenage Werewolf”
With Michael Landon
Plus
“Invasion Of The Saucer Men”
With Steve Terrell
WEDNESDAY
2cx - i n— m ,
the Enemy
BEU.OW
I® the wonderof Stereophonic Sound
pm
THRU THURSDAY
' ^ —the top-secret
story of our salt
water supermen!
' n Cinemascope
v ¥ DAN DAILEY
M-G-M RELEASE
the greatest number of “agree”
answers among the men inter
viewed. Seventy-one per cent of
them think there is too much
credit buying, twenty-one per
cent would disagree with that
statement, and seven per cent
haven’t made up their minds.
Sophomore coeds martialed the
greatest number of “disagrees”
among the college women inter
viewed, but the lowest percentage
of coeds who agree there is too
much credit buying comes from
the seniors. This fact can be ex
plained by nothing that a fourth
of the seniors are undecided, as
opposed to only seventeen per
cent of the sophomores who are
still in doubt.
Sophomores also accounted for
the greatest proportion of the
men in any class who do not think
there is an excess of credit buying
today. Thirty-nine per cent of
them disagreed with the state
ment made in the question, but
again, as was the case with the
coeds, the greatest number- of
“disagrees” does not mean the
smallest number of “agrees.”
Junior men captured that cate
gory, with barely over half of
them saying they think there is
too much credit buying.
The A&M Board of Directors,
meeting in regular session here
Saturday approved appointments
for the following parts of the Sys
tem:
System Architect’s Office, Ken
neth M. Garrett, draftsman (III).
A&M COLLEGE
School of Agriculture: Agricul
tural Education, Herman H. Ston
er, graduate teaching assistant;
Agricultural Engineering, Cisero
B. Edwards, assistant professor
and farm mechanics specialist;
Animal Husbandry, Bobby J. Bland,
Marion Luther Jones and Frank
A. Orts, graduate teaching assist
ants; Dairy Science, Joel M. Hil-
lin, graduate teaching assistant;
Floriculture and Landscape Arch
itecture, Morris A. Pegues, farm
worker; Genetics, Murray L. Kin-
man, professor.
Plant Physiology and Pathology,
Joseph Hacskaylo, assistant pro
fessor; Range and Forestry, Henry
A. Pearson, graduate teaching as
sistant; Mrs. Gayle Thompson,
clerical.
School of Arts and Sciences:
Biology, Howard Neil Anderson
and Walter Clarke Biggs, both
graduate teaching assistants; Busi
ness Administration, Thomas Owen
Kirkpatrick, instructor; Chemis
try, Ottokar H. Basedow, post doc
toral research fellow; Mathemat
ics, Louis H. Hampton and Walter
Roland Lumpkin, teaching fellows;
Modern Languages, Mrs. Lela
Jeanette Dockery, clerical.
Oceanography and Meteorology,
Albert W. Collier Jr., chief scien
tist, Galveston laboratory; Dr.
Basil W. Wilson, associate profes
sor (part time); Jacobs VanLuik,
laboratory mechanic (I); Physics,
Donald E. Edens, graduate teach
ing assistant; Basic Division, Mrs.
Jane Ellen Tidwell, clerical.
School of Engineering: Chem
ical Engineering, Mrs. Barbara
Ann Guidry, clerical; Civil Engi
neering, Thomas David Behne,
graduate teaching assistant; Elec
trical Engineering, Simon W. Nich
ols Jr., laboratory mechanic (part
time); Daniel M. Stalmach, grad
uate teaching assistant; Geology
and Geophysics, Bobby Rex Am-
mer, David Edward Frazier and
Don Hamilton Peterson, graduate
teaching assistants; Mechanical
Engineering, John Dell Randall,
assistant professor.
CIRCLE
WEDNESDAY
“Man From
God’s Country”
With George Montgomery
Plus
PALACE
Bryan 2-«m
WEDNESDAY
tmASCOPE
AND
HUMOR
r.
M-G-M presents
, „ Glenn FORD
‘ Y/ShirleyMacLAINE1
“ THEY CALLED HIM
STRUMGERWITH
AGUH ^ lesKe
EDGAR BUCHANAN
- ' /- -
QUEEN
LAST DAY
The
Tarnished
Angels
Military Sciences: Military prop
erty maintenance, Mrs. Mabel
Kathryn Smith, clerical.
School of Veterinary Science:
Veterinary Physiology and Phar
macology, Allen Roy Albritton and
Otto Eugene Schroeder Jr., both
student assistans.
Athletic Department, John Jo
seph Michels and Elmer C. Smith,
assistant football coaches; Build
ings and College lltilities, James
G. Davidson, Forrest E. Haltom,
Marvin E. Hutchins and Woodrow
W. Pack, electricians; Develop
ment Fund, Mrs. Sidney Ruth
Morrow, clerical; Easterwood Air
port, Mrs. LaVonne Addlle Farris,
clerical; Fiscal Department, Mrs.
Barbara J. Forster and Mrs. Patsy
R. Moak, clerical.
Hospital, Mrs. Betty Jo Benedic
and Mrs. Faye Janet Thompson,
nurses; Library, Mrs. Maude O.
Clay, Mrs. Mary L. Dahlberg and
Mrs. Rebecca Ann McCullin, cler
ical; Memorial Student Center,
John Garcia and Mrs. Elsie Patra-
nella, clerical; Student Affairs, Ho
ward C. Kirkland, patrolman; Vice
President’s Office, Mrs. Edith M.
Rushing, clerical.
ARLINGTON STATE COLLEGE:
Maintenance Department, W. B.
Sibley, plumber.
TEXAS AGRICULTURAL EX
PERIMENT STATION:
Agricultural Economics and So
ciology, Dorena B. Adams, cleri
cal; Agronomy, Eddie H. McCul
loch Jr., farm foreman (I); Ruby-
etta Cain, clerical; Biochemistry
and Nutrition, Ben F. Ware, in
structor; Lars Lorcher, post doc
toral fellow; Thalia D. Blain, Mary
E. Hill and Cynthia D. Smith, tech
nicians (I); Entomology Robert
R. Cogburn, research assistant;
Feed Control Service, Shirley M.
Gill, clerical.
Poultry Science, Richard H.
Mitchell, research assistant; Helen
M. Pape, technical assistant *'fll);
Myrna M. Hendrick, clerical; Sub
station No. 4, Beaumont, Irby E.
Hebert, clerical; Substation No.
15, Weslaco, Juan L. Sanchez, farm
worker; Substation No. 16, Iowa
Park, Wilburn B. England, farm
worker; Substation No. 21, Gon
zales, Genelda T. Pruett, clerical;
Blackland Watershed, Riesel, Al
vin W. Haverkamp, farm worker.
TEXAS AGRICULTURAL EX
TENSION SERVICE:
Mrs. Otis B. Dugan, assistant
county home demonstration agent;
Harold W. Ellison and Clarence D.
Kerns Jr., assistant county agri
cultural agents; Rose MyCIamp-
bell, Mrs. Dorothy K. Diddle, Char
les D. Neal and Mrs. Margie H.
Williams, junior assistant exten
sion agents; Helen Boland, Gayle
Boykin, Murlene Jennings, Georgia
Jones and Veta E. Urbanosky,
clerical. '
(See SYSTEM, Page 4)
Look right at the rodeo
irs
LIVIS
GET YOURS AT
OL f^xchungc S)lore
“Serving Texas Aggies”
SPECIAL
From
FERRERI OIL CO.
Bring This Coupon
And You Get
One Quart DX DIAMOND Motor Oil
Willi Each 3.00 Purchase Of Gasoline
Triangle Service Station
3600 S. College Ave.
Anilico Service Station No. 2
1221 N. College Ave.
(Next To The Sugar N Spice)
Good Thurs.—Fri.—Sat.
LI’L ABNER
By A1 Capp
PEANUTS
By Charles M. Schulz
(MY DAD MAS A SON/J
\