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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1959)
:: page 2 BATTALION Thursday, November 5, 1959 CADET SLOUCH Job Interviews Thf faith son one c even on th He pounj three gie I from last fensi! field at F “V week the “Wit tins com< ence The following companies will interview job applicants Friday in the Placement Office on the second floor of the YMCA: Boeing- Airplane Co. will inter view aeronautical, civil, electrical and. mechanical engineering ma jors and majors in. mathematics and physics for positions Jh re search, development, design and test production and service. U. S. citizenship is a requirement. Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Co. Will interview, chemical, me chanical and petroleum engineei'- ing B.S. degree candidates; elec trical engineering M.S. degree candidates and candidates for M.S. or Ph.D. degree in chemis try. Candidates must be citizens of the United States. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co. will interview accounting, buisness administration and pe- troleurii engineering majors for their on-the-job training pro gram. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co. will interview accounting majors for positions as staff accountants for a C.P.A. firm. U. S. Naval Missile Center will interview aeronautical, electrical and mechanical engineering ma jors and physics majors for posi tions in research, development and testing. Candidites , for B.S. or M.S. degrees are wanted. Air Force Flight Test Center, U. S. A*r Force, will interview aeronautical, chemical, civil, elec trical and mechanical engineering and mathematics candidates for B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. degree for positions in research and develop ment in the aeronautical and mis sile fields. Argonne National Laboratory will interview chemical engineei’- ing B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. dgree candidates; electrical and mech anical engineering B.S. and M.S. degree candidiates; chemistry and physics M.A. and Ph.D. degree candidates and mathematics B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. degree candidates for work in scientific and engi neering approaches to the peace time uses of nuclear energy. Celanese Corporation of Amer ica will interview B.S. degree can didates in civil engineering and chemistry majors in all degree levels for work in their Texas and eastern seaboard plants. L T . S. Navy Electronics Labor- atory will interview B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. degree candidates in electrical engineering, mathemat ics and physics and mechanical engineering B.S. and M.S. degree candidates. Jim Earle Architect Wives Slate Reunion The Architectural Wives Soci ety, the first chartered student wives club on the A&M campus, will celebrate its 10th anniversary Saturday by holding a reunion of all its past members. There wil be a morning icoffee with a display of work by archi tecture students, time out for the A&M-SMU football game in the afternoon and a banquet in the evening at thb Triangle Banquet Room. SIMPLER THAN SIMPLE PHEONIX, Ariz. (AP) What can be simpler than “yes” or “no?” “For” and “against,” says Ariz ona Secretary of State Wesley Bolin. From now on, said Bolin, Arizona voters will designate their preferences , on proposed using “for” or “against.” “That seems a lot clearer than ‘yes’ or ‘ho’,” said Bolin. More than half the world’s popu lation lives in Asia and the Far East, a region with one-sixth of the earth’s land surface. “We’ll continue with the iesson as soon as the g-entleman with the spurs gets past!” Letters To The Editor The Battalion welcomes letters to the editor hut reserves the right to edit letters for brevity, clearness and accuracy. Short letters stand a better chance for publication since space is at a premium. Unsigned letters will not be published. .. What’s Cooking It 40i Editor, The Battalion: In regard to your editorial, “Where to Park?”, your pro posed solution to the problem is the typical way in which plan- »ing problems on this campus seem to be solved. This absurd policy seems to be that of mere ly filling in spaces between buil dings. This is hardly a profes sional approach to campus plan ning! One of the reasons for the ob vious lack of planning is the fact that to date there has been no published master plan of the pro posed development of the A&M campus. Why hasn’t such docu ment been prepared? , ; What kind of Organization and forethought is this? With this type of thinking in our higher administrative offices, it is easy to see why we are plagued with problems such as parking, stu dent housing, etc. Do you, Mr. Editor, realize the far-reaching consequences of your proposed parking scheme? Why must the only thing of beauty on the A&M campus be sacri ficed to solve our neglected plan ning problems? I am sure many students do not realize the value of our green areas, and you, Mr. Editor, are one of them. Take away the green areas of the A&M campus and you remove the only physical amenity that the campus possesses! Students of the Fourth and Fifth Year Design and Planning Classes 2 j • IN AUSTIN ONLY • The Greatest Jazz Concert On Earth iMBm -rkr DAVE IBRU6ECK QUARTET f^PAUL DESMOND i ppsi^ | LA1IE1I S | comorI 1 ®®®* 5 1 8 a ross CHICO HAIIILTOH QUINTET LEONARD FEATHER MAYNARD FERSUSON ORCHESTRA MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM AUSTIN, TEXAS SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8 1 P. M.—MATINEE The following clubs and organi zations will meet tonight: 7:30 Brazoria County Hometown Club will meet in Room 103 of the Academic Building. Brush Country Hometown Club will meet in the Reading Room of the YMCA. Dallas Hometown Club meets in Room 105 of the Biological Sciences Building. Refreshments will be served. Deep East Texas Hometown Club will meet in Room 303 of the Academic Building. Del Ilio Hometown Club meets in the Bii'ch Room of the Memo rial Student Center. El Paso Hometown Club meets in Room 126 of the Academic Building. Fayette anjEf Colorado Counties Hometown Flub will meet in Room 2-A of the MSC. A film will be showm. Institute of Aeronautical Sci ences meets in Room 228 of the Chemistry Building. Jefferson Hometown Club will meet in Room 127 of the Aca demic Building. THE BATTALION Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu dent ivriters only. The Battalion is a non-tax-supported, non profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited ayid op erated by students as a community newspaper and is under the supervision of the director of Student Publications at Texas A&M College. .Members of the Student Publications Board are L. A. Duewall, director of : Student Publications, chairman ; J. W. Amyx, School of Engineering ; Otto R. Kunze, School of Agriculture; and Dr. E. D. McMurry, School of Veterinary Medicine. 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. 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. Represented nationally by N a t i o n a 1 Advertising Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los An geles and Sah Francisco. Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester; $6 l-er school year, $6.50 per full year. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: The Battalion Room 4, YMCA, College Station, Texas. 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. News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or VI 6-1910 or at the editorial office^ Room 4, YMCA. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415. JOHNNY JOHNSON EDITOR David Stoker Managing Editor Bob Weekley Sports Editor Sat. Nite Prev. 11 p. m. MOUND DOG MAN CIIM E N/1A S C O (=> E= COLOR by DE LUXE steering CAROL LVNIEY SIOART WHITMAN ARTHUR O'CONNai and introducing DOOIE STEVENS Directed by DON SIEGEl Screenplay by S I G queen DOUBLE FEATURE THRU SATURDAY “HERE COME THE SETS” & “PLUNDER ROAD” Marshall Hometown Club will meet in the lobby of the YMCA. Pasadena Hometown Club meets in Room 203 of the Aca demic Building. Port Arthur Hometown Club meets on the first floor of the Biological Sciences Building. Waco-McLennan County Home town Club will meet in Room 2-B of the MSC. Yankee Hometown Club will meet in Caslrion Room of the YMCA. South Louisiana Hometown Club meets in Room 306 of the Academic Building. Milby Hometown Club meets in the Serpentine Lounge of the MSC. Guadalupq Valley Hometown Club will meet in Room 2-C of the MSC. Southwest Texas Hometown Club meets in Room 208 of the Academic Building. 7:45 Guadalupe River Valley Home town Club meets in Room 305 of the Academic Building. Anyone living near Victoria, Cuero or Port Lavaca is invited to attend. 8 p.m. Eagle Pass Hometown Club will meet in the Academic Building. Wee Aggies We Aggiea like to read about Wee Ag gles. When a wee one arrives, call VI 6-4910 and ask for the Wee Aggie Edl- Jeffrey Lynn Weber, a future member of the Class of ’81, was born Oct. 29 at 11:22 a.m. to Mr. and Mrs. Larry Weber, ’60, of B-2-B, College View. The future Aggie was born at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Bryan. David Lynn Cunkle, a future member of the Class of ’81, was There will be a morning coffee Cunkle of A-8-Z, College View. The boy weighed in at 7 lbs., 14 oz. It takes two to fill the bill TWO BY TWO CLASS For Aggies and Aggie Wives First Baptist Church College Station vU* tm/iiM.'.im<■ YRM THURSDAY & FRIDAY “FACE OF A FUGITIVE’ With Fred MacMurray Plus “WATUSI” Wilh George Montgomery OL OL TYPEWRITERS Guaranteed As Long As You Are At A&M OTIS MCDONALD’S BRYAN BUSINESS MACHINES A New Policyholder Every 22 Seconds Let me show you why so many are insured so often by State Farm MutuaL You’ll be glad you did. A M. Alexander, Jr., ’10 210 8. Main Phone TA 3-3616 STATE FARM LIFE INSURANCE COMPANT 1 Home Office—Bloomington, Illinois J OLE ARMY It’s Not Too Late To Pass Chemistry 101, Math 120, or Physics 218. Check NOW With Your Scholastic Officer For FREE Tutoring. CIRCLE TONIGHT “HERCULES” Also “ENCHANTED ISLAND” Dana Andrews LAST DAY LOOK BACK IN ANGER” Richard Burton Guion Hall THURSDAY & FRIDAY M-G-M presents SAFARI INTO SUSPENSE! WATOSI GUARDIANS OF KING SOLOMON'S MINES! Techn/co/or« starring GEORGE MONTGOMERY TAINA ELG DAVID FARRAR Show opens at (i p. ni. (to/(ztybsUwe/g/. IN ARROW UNIVERSITY FASHION Whatever your interest—sports cars, football games, or just takin’ it easy —you’ll look as great as you feel in Arrow’s University Fashion sport shirt. . . Tailored in the smart Ivy tradition with the collar that buttondowns front and center back, hack box pleat and sleeves to fit. Wash and wear madder prints. $5.00. Arrow’s new boatneck sweaters. 7 .95 up. •ARROW- Saturday see the NCAA football "Game of the Week—NBC TV—sponsored by ARROW- ^ WEAR IT ALONE ... OR WITH ONE OF THE NEW BOATNECK SWEATERS Arrow University Fashions See our Arrow shirts and sweaters designed espe cially for the college man. Sport shirts in neat prints . . . 100% “Sanforized” cotton with wash and wear convenience. $5.00. 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