tr 1 (B w i f^_o WHiO (Ti*Tl u fs sIW Sr'3' , c5^' Page 2 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Thursday, February 11, 1960 Worth Mentioning By Johnny Johnson Unlike most semesters, this one has started off with several important events that may have large effects upon the future of many semesters to come. The two changes in Corps of Cadets policy announced Monday by Dean of Students James P. Hannigan, 85th Dis trict Court’s Judge W. T. McDonald’s ruling against the ad mission of female students to Texas A&M and the announce ment of a decline in the number of first semester losses and an increase in the number of students for this semester over the enrollment last spring all were events of importance this week. If the semester continues at the pace set by the first part of the first week, then' , ' indeed the Spring Semester " "t f — \ "u’* "t •' ,'b-.. I - ‘*-X of 1960 will be a monu mental one for Texas A&M. ★ ★ ★ The reduction in the num-‘ ber of students transferring at the end of January and the in crease in enrollment for this se mester show that several changes instituted over the last two years are beginning to bear fruit. As we have mentioned earlier the cooperation between students, student leaders and college ad ministration people and faculty members is bearing fruit for Texas A&M. If this same spirit of coopera tion and progress continues, even What’s Cooking The following clubs and organ izations will meet tonight: 6:30 Midland Hometown Club will meet in the YMCA. 7:15 Brush Country Hometown Club will meet in Room 2-B of the Memorial Student Center. 7:30 Pasadena Hometown Club meets in Room 203 of the Aca demic Building. Bell County Hometown Club will meet in Room 207 of the Ac ademic Building. Jess Davis Hometown Club meets in Room 2-C of the MSC. The Angelina Home Town Club will hold an important meeting in the Coffee Shop of the MSC. All members are urged to attend. 8:30 San Angelo-West Texas Home town Club will meet in the main lobby of the MSC. Social Whirl The Animal Husbandry Wives Club will meet tonight at 7:30 at the home of Mrs. T. C. Cart wright, 211 Lee SL more advancements for Texas A&M will be shown in the future. ★ ★ ★ Tuesday while Dean of Stu dents James P. Hannigan, Direc tor of the Department of Student Affairs Bennie A. Zinn and Man ager of the College Physical Plants W. H. Badgett were checking damage done to barri cades on Spence Street by van dals Monday night, they wit nessed an amusing event. A golfer was practicing tee shots on the golf course driving range and after hitting a shot went down the course to retrieve his ball. After a frantic search for the ball, he finally discovered it—in the storm sewer whose cover had been taken off by the Monday night vandals. ★ ★ ★ Air France is offering free movies to students Tuesday, Feb. 23, at 2 p.m. in Rooms 3-B and 3-C of the Memorial Student Cen ter. The airline is offering a tour plan to students that in cludes three days in Paris, one day each in Naples, Rome and Capri and nine days in a Poly nesian student camp in Sicily. The plan costs $796.90 including round-trip air transporation from New York City to Sicily, includ ing stopovers at the four cities. ★ ★ ★ An Aggie father who is an in structor in the Department of Religious Education, Arthur M. Smith, needs help. Following commissioning exercises Jan. 23 at which his son was commis sioned, he left a movie camera case containing photographic equipment and papers belonging to Tom Puddy, manager of Guion Hall and a friend of Smith’s on the steps of Guion Hall and someone took it. Smith asks that anyone who knows anything of the case and its contents to please call him at either his office, VI 6-6411, or his home, VI 6-5051. Guion Hall THURSDAY AND FRIDAY AUDIE MURPHY • GIA SCALA * % RIDE A CROOKED TRAIL CiMemaScOPC COi-OFT WALTER MATTHAU-HENRY SILVA IOANNA MOORE-EDDIE LIHLE ®. Show Opens At 6 p. m. 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 a7id 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 t ti-oenig, McM ide K. J. Ko. E. D. rs Student Publicatio of the Student Publications Board are L. A. Duewall, director of ations, chairman ; Dr. A. L. Bennett,. School of Arts and Sciences ; Dr. School of Engineering. Otto R. Kunze, School of Agriculture; and Dr. ool urry. School of Veterinary Medicine. Stating 6 i a Studel ' t newspaper at Texas A.&M. is pubfished in College Sentembe^ ofron^f M excep L, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods. September through May, and once a week during summer school. “I think we’re going to like this non-compulsory morning chow!” Intercollegiate News Entered as second-class the Post Offic< matter in Collect under th ee Station, Texas, he Act of Con gress of March 8, 1870. MEMBER: The Associated Press Texas Press Ass’n. Represented N a t i o n a Services, Inc., JNew City, Chicago. Lot geles and San Francisco. The Associated Press is entitled dispatches credited to it spontaneous origin published in are also reserved. Mail subscriptions are $3.50 Advertising rate furnished on College Station, Texas. clusively to the use for republication of all news and local ne ntitled exclusively to the use for repul: not otherwise credited in the paper herein. Rights of republication of all r S‘ Th ion I local news other matter hi of lere- per semester. $6 per Vddrc request. school Bat year, $6.50 per full year, talion Room 4. YMCA, News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or VI 6-4910 editorial off.ce. Room 4. YMCA. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415. or at the Colleges Talk Idea Of Honor System CHANGE IN COMMAND FT. HUACHUCA, Ariz. ) —An Arizona National Guardsman was planning to be married the day after active duty training ended at Ft. Huachuca. “How does it feel to be on the brink of marriage?,” an officer asked. S4C James Westover of Yuma replied, “It’s merely a matter of changing commanding officers.” Political internships, an honor system federation, and proposed curriculum changes were several changes in some American col leges and universities last week, according to the Intercollegiate Press. Representatives from the United States Military Academy, the United State Naval Acad emy, the United States Merchant Marine Academy, Princeton Uni versity, the University of Vir ginia and Stevens Institute of Technology met on the campus of the Stevens Institute to work out the mechanics of getting up an advisory organization to help colleges set up honor systems. Twenty-seven colleges now have honor systems. ★ ★ ★ Bethany College, Bethany, W. Va., plans to initiate a new pr r >- gram in practical politics to sup plement traditional courses in po litical science, beginning with the second semester in February. All Bethany students will be re quired to take a one-hour course under ex-governor C. William O’Neill of Ohio. This will be supplemented by seminars for ad vanced students. A few select liberal arts and pre-professional students from Bethany College will have a chance for an eight-week prac tical politic internships with par ty headquarters, legislators, var ious administrative offices and legislative reference bureaus. ★ ★ ★ Alina College of Alma, Mich., has created a new curriculum plan, beginning with the Class of 1963, that will increase hour requirements to 124 and, accord ing to the Curriculum Committee report, “Will also serve to pre vent students from carefully plotting their way toward grad- KGDL ANSWER * ,0WE* 12 Vf ABS- f R£fc THURSDAY AND FRIDAY Walt Disney’s “THIRD MAN ON THE MOUNTAIN” Also “THE HANGING TREE” With Gary Cooper mpi JOHNSON — EDITOR wlw f r? m S1 £ an "A Assistant News Editors Jack Hartsfield, Ken Coppage, Tommy Holbein, Joe Jackson “ and A ‘ an Payne Start Writers M| .Photographer Russell Brown. .CHS Correspondent TODAY THRU SATURDAY “NIGHT PASSAGE” James Stewart Audie Murphy Dan Duryea Also “AWAY ALL BOATS” Jeff Chandler George Nader Julie Adams uation by the selection of only those courses which are in stu dent opinion the least demand ing.” The committee objective will be reached with new senior comprehensive examinations that will cover the sciences, humani ties and social sciences. ★ ★ ★ A proposed plan for gifted stu dents has been suggested at the University of New Hampshire by its Special Committee on the Gifted Student. The general plan is to identify gifted stu dents while they are still in New Hampshire high schools. Their expected mean is 140 I.Q. The committee expects about 40 stu dents. ★ ★ ★ A new structure of fees which relates college costs to family financial resources will soon go into effect at Mary Baldwin Col- leg'e. The women’s college in Staunton, Va., has set its base charge at $1,000 for room, board and services and plans to add a varying tuition charge ranging from zero to $1,000. The old system at $1,650 for boarding students will be abolished in fa vor of this new system. ★ ★ ★ Skidmore College at Saratoga Springs, N. Y., through it Stu dent Curriculum Committee, has eliminated its “days of review” prior to final examinations, re vamped the exam schedule, and has made it possible for students to have only one final a day dur ing the final exam period. Un der the new plan, students at this womens’ college will have the weekend to study and, in most cases, they will have one full free day during the exam period. ★ ★ ★ Amherst College is currently presenting a new course in sci ence taught jointly by a philo sopher and a physicist, dealing with the three great develop ments by which modern science, “has influenced the history of ideas and man’s view of his place in the universe.” These topics are relativity, the laws of ther modynamics, and the quantum concepts. The MSC Film Society Presents TYRONE POWER KIM NOVAK CO STARRING REX THOMPSON • JAMES WHITMORE witmSHEPPERD strudwick .~,. 0 ouc.~oV 1CTORIA SHAW OMErviASc:Of=£ . technicolor Plus Short “PABLO CAUSALS” World Renouned Cellist FRIDAY 7:30 P. M. MSC Ballroom Admission 25c KGDL KROSSWORD * * No. 4 ACROSS 1. The main event 5. Death and taxes, period! 9. Suboptical luggage 12. Kind of wolf 13. Opera version of “Camille” 15. Marilyn’s mouth is always 16. Gal who w^s meant for you 17. What kid brothers do 19. What Simple Simon hadn’t 20. Article 21. Abbreviated officers 25. Sister 27. High point of a mural 28. Daquiri ingredi ent reversed 29. Start over again 30. “Bell Song” opera 32. Quiz 33. Odd ball 34 Kaltenborn 35. Little George 37. Way out 40. What white side walls are 44. Vocal 45. High math 46. Italian wine town 47. Six pointses 48. Small child 49. Pour DOWN 1. Chinese theatri cal-property item? 2. It can keep you hanging 3. A third of the way out (2 words) 4. Kools’ secret ingredient (2 words) 5. Kind of crazy 6. Ash receptacle 7. Pro’s last name 8. Kind of money 9. Kind of guy in Westerns 10. Consumed 11. Play the field 14. Where you appreciate Kools (3 words) 18. 94 of a beer 22. It’s obviously by amateur poets (2 words) 23. Hula hoops, yoyos, etc. 24. Here’s where the money goes 25. Kind of ish 26. Tentmakpr 31. Make a make shift living (2 words) 36 Kools (rave 4 Down 37. I left Elsie 38. Satisfy 89. Gary Cooper-ish 40. Between Sept, and Nov. 41. Doodle equipment 42. Trade Lasts (abbr.) 43. Willie the Penguin’s cousin J i When your throat tells you its time for a change, you need a real change. MILO YOU NEED THE o^KODL^ ©LUGO, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. CIGAR ET-re S t t -GROCERIES- 46-Oz. Cans—Libbys Tomato Juice Can 27c 46-Oz. Cans—Libbys Pineapple Juice Can 29c 12-Oz. Cans—Libbys Pineapple Juice Can 10c Quart Cans—Libbys, 2 Quarts Pineapple Grapefruit Drink .... 49c 303 Cans—Libbys Pear Halves 2 Cans 49c 303 Cans—Libbys Fruit Cocktail 2 Cans 45c No. 2 Cans-:—Libbys Crushed Pineapple Can 29c No. 2 , /z Cans—Libbys Peach Halves Can 29c 303 Cans—Libbys, Golden Cream Style Corn 3 Cans 50c 14-Oz. Bottles—Libbys CATSUP 2 Bottles 39c 8-Oz. Cans—Libbys Tomato Sauce 4 Cans 39c Folgers COFFEE 69c 6-Oz. Jars—Folgers Instant Coffee ^ Jar 79c CRISCO Can 79c BORDENS MILK 2— x /z Gallon Cartons .: 93c Gallon Jug 89c Bordens Biscuits 3 Cans 25c -FROZEN FOODS- Pictsweet Orange Juice .... 2- 6-Oz. Cans 47c Baby Whole Okra Cauliflower Blaekeye Peas Cream Peas Baby Green Limas Ford Hook Limas Pkg. 27= -MARKET- Deckers—Tall Korn Sliced Bacon 1-lb. 39c Wisconsin—Medium Aged Ceddar Cheese 1-lb. 59c Loin Steak 1-lb. 85c Armours Star Luncheon Meat .... Sliced 1-lb. 39c Good Hope Oleomargarine . 1-Ib. 15c Meaty Short Ribs 1-lb. 43c Square Cut Shoulder Roast ... .. 1-lb. 55c Armours Star Sliced Bacon 1-lb. 49c -PRODUCE- Ruby Red Grapefruit .. 5c Carrots Cello Bags 2 for 15c Cabbage 2 lbs. 9c No. 2 Potatoes 10-lbs. 49c SPECIALS GOOD THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FRIDAY, & SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11-12-13 CHARLIES NORTH GATE —WE DELIVER— FOOD MARKET COLLEGE STATION * PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz I'VE HEARD THAT LOUD N0l£E£ WILL SOiUETiMES CAUSE AN ICICLE TO FALL., - - SI V \\ t THAT / 7 S) MrasHT?