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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1959)
i THE Friday, October 9,1959 BATTALION PAGE S PET. E. AWARDS Yell Leaders Discuss Game Aggie Yell Leaders gathered last night and day night on Kyle Field. Left to right are held a discussion of the yelling procedures Sonny Todd, Ken Moore, Joe Leeper and Ken for the A&M-Houston football game Satur- Cox. Club Activities Highlight News at Consolidated High By RUSSELL BROWN CHS Corespondent The A&M Consolidated High School Chapter of the Future Homemakers of America held their first meeting late in September in the high school auditorium. Mrs. Irene Southern, homemak ing teacher and sponsor of the group, announced at the time that the' 1959-60 chapter would be split into two groups, one consisting of juniors and seniors and the other of freshmen and sophomores. The lowerclassmen chapter’s president is Janell Yeager. Other officers are First Vice President Virginia McAfee; Second vice president Linda McGuire; Third vice president Patsy Smith; Sec retary Louise Robinson, treasurer Peggy Ames; Historian-Reporter Ann Loupot; and Pianist Jeannie Sperry. Officers in the junior and senior chapter follows: President Char lene Matejka; First Vice President Anita Hamner; Second Vice Presi dent Ann Elkins; Third Vice Pres ident Anne Rudder, Secretary Ja net Darrow; Treasurer Patsy Beck ham; Historian-Reporter Susan Schember; and Pianist Anita Mow- ery. Calvin Schehin, president of the A&M Consolidate Chapter of the Future Farmers of America, re ported the happenings of the State FFA Convention in Austin that he and Chapter Secretary, Ray mond Huff had attended in July during the first meeting of the local chapter of the FFA. This year’s chapter has 42 mem bers, sixteen being first year stu dents. Thirty-eight are enrolled in Vocational Agriculture while four have completed their class work in agriculture. In addition to Shehin and Huff, Byron Bostick is vice-president; Oran Jones is treasurer; Kenneth Greer is reporter, and Morris •Stone is sentinel. Jim Tom House is the sponsor. The clubs of A&M Consolidated High School got off to a fine start in their first rheetings with most clubs electing their officers and conducting original business. Results of the elections are as follows: Annual Staff: Mary Frances Badgett, editor; Judy Rasmussen, senior business manager; Shirley Rogers, junior business manager; and Jim Tom House, sponsor. Knights of the Square Talole (Chess): John Calhoun, president; Nils Ekfelt, vice president; Dan Bates, secretary-treasuer; and Art Bright, sponsor. Dance Band: Jay Pruitt, stu dent director; Larry Godfrey, pub lic relations officer; and Jim At kins, sponsor. Motor Mechanic: President is Mark Lindsay and Tim Moore is vice president. Sponsor is Jack Chaney. Science Club: Pam Spery, presi dent; Lyman Hardeman, vice pres ident; and Frank Hagler, secre tary-treasurer. K. C. Morgan is sponsor. Future Nurses: President is Nancy Ray, vice pesident is Lynn Oakes, and secretary-treasurer is Susan Wormeli. The group is sponsored by Mrs. Lane. Latin Club: Charlene Matejka, president; Molly Martin, vice pres ident; and Mrs. A. R. Orr, spon sor. (Continued from Page 1) fees, tuition and equipment. He was also selected by faculty. Charles Bowman of College Sta tion received Gulf Research and Development Co. Fellowship in pe troleum engineering: $2,000 plus fees, plus $500 unrestricted grant Badgett Writes Feature Article For Magazine W. H. Badgett, Manager of Physical Plants, has authored a feature article in “College and University Business” magazine for October. The magazine, which is publish ed for college and university ad- ministratoi’s all over the United States, entitled the article “Cost Formula for Plant Budgeting.” Badgett, a member of the Physi cal Plants Operation Committee on the Texas Commission on High er Education, did research on the article while serving on the com mittee. He is chairman of the Building Maintenance Sub-Com mittee of that group. The article deals with alloca tions for building maintenance and custodial services. The base form ulas for these two budget items, which are being applied in the 18 state supported colleges who are members of the Commission on Higher Education, was developed by a committee composed of busi ness managers and physical plant administrators from these schools. The committee repesented pro fessional, technical and business management personnel who were were charged with determining the specific areas of physical plant op erations for which legislative ap- propi’iations might be made on a formula basis rather than on the individual justifications presented by each institution. Badgett received a letter of com mendation from the editor for his contribution to the readers of the magazine. A column of incidental intelligence by Jocketi brand “Nope. .they just LOOK NEW! Mom has our best i clothes SANITONE Dry Cleaned!” :k. A She Knows Sanitone Service Keeps Best Clothes Looking “Best” Longer! Mothers . . . our Sanitone Soft-Set Dry Clean ing works wonders with children’s clothes. Gets out that ground-in dirt that causes wear. Spots disappear. Clothes come back sparkling like new. Call us today and see for yourself. jnerican "BITE THE HAND" Edmund Burke first noted that some men will bite "the hand that fed them". But Mark Twain, in "Pudd'nhead Wilson", refined the observation and made it biting: "If you pick up a starving dog and make him prosper ous, he will not bite you. This is the principal difference between a dog and a man.'* "PRAISE THE LORD AND ETC." Perhaps the most popular remark to come out of World War II is this exhortation made at . Pearl Harbor by Lt. Comm. Howell M. Forgy, a Navy chaplain: "Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition."' "IGNORANCE IS BLISS" ft was Thomas Gray who coined this comforting generalization in behalf of all ”D" students. See his "On a Distant Prospect of Eton College"; "...where ignorance is bliss, 'T/s folly to be wise." Jocketi SKANTS* striped brief BRAND "Merely sensational" — that’sthe judgment of college men who have seen the new Jockey Striped SKANTS. Jockey stylists have taken their own original 100% stretch nylon bikini-style brief (already a national favorite)...added candy stripes...and produced a garment you’ll really enjoy wearing. SKANTS is cut high on the sides with a low waistband and comes in a choice of red, black, green, rust or blue stripes. Look for SKANTS— in stripes, or solids—in the Jockey department at your campus store. fashioned by the house of to department. He was selected by faculty. Jack L. Goolsby of Fort Worth and Stephen O. Jennings of Alli son Park, Pa., A&M graduate teaching assistantship in petroleum engineering: $1,350 plus out of state tuition. They were recom mended by faculty. Three Share Awards Marion D. Arnold of Corsicana, Nathan T. Coman of Austin, Rob ert C. Schlaudt of College Station and A. W. Talash of Caldwell re ceived Texas Petroleum Research Assistantships. They were se lected on recommendation of fac ulty. Whiting also acknowledged a special grant of $2,500 to the de partment from the American Assn, of Oil-Well Drilling Contractors. D. V. Carter, chief petroleum en gineer of the Magnolia Petroleum Co. of Dallas, presented the Mag nolia and Mobil Scholarships. J. M. McMahan, drilling and pro duction supervisor, Standard Oil Co. of Texas, presented the Stand ard’s scholarship. Bass Hoyler, Mission Manufac turing Co. of Houston, presented the Mission scholarship. Joan Loveless announces the beginning of her autumn Horsemanship and Horsemaster- ship school open to those A. and M. College stu dents who are interested in the forward seat method of riding. For further information call VI 6-4836. DELICIOUS WITH CAJUN SAUCE The BARBECUE PIT Cafeteria BARBECUE Ridgecrest Shopping Center /ixpwn Aggie Owned & Operated Doyle E. Albright ’59 Watch The Classified For Free Barbecue Plate 11:00 A.M. - 2:00 P.M. 5:00 P.M. - 8:30 P.M. CLOSED MONDAYS TEXAS-SIZED BAPTIST CHURCH HOUSTON (A 1 )—Texas — and Baptists—do things in a big way. The first Baptist church here has dedicated its new building in down town Houston. It’s 10 stories tall, one of the highest in the country, with a roof garden covered with a wire canopy and complete with barbecue ovens, volleyball, badmin ton and tennis courts. HOLIDAY Monday, October 12, 1959 being a Holiday, in observance of Columbus day, the undersigned will observe that date as a Holiday and not be open for business. First National Bank City National Bank First State Bank! & Trust Co. College Station State Bank Bryan Building & Loan Ass’n Community Savings & Loan Ass’n DUAL FILTER DOES IT! It filters as no single filter can for mild, full flavor! :sll Ik. If# oww*"** i 1 Tareyton - . I F-! , * ; DUAL FILTER POPULAR FILTER PRICE HERE’S HOW THE DUAL FILTER DOES IT: 1. It combines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL...defi« nitelv proved to make the smoke of a cigarette mild and smooth ... 2. with an efficient pure white outer filter. Together they bring you the real thing in mildness and fine tobacco taste! 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