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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 3, 1961)
UT Males Go ‘Ape" Over Panties THE BATTALION Fi’iday, November 3, 1961 College Station, Texas Page 3 AUSTIN—(^P)—About 300 male students at the University of Texas shouted “panties” at giggling co eds in dormitories and wrestled campus policemen Thursday night. It was the university’s first Caldwell CivicClub To Hear IED Prof Dr. Leslie V. Hawkins, professor j of industrial education, will be the guest speaker at the Caldwell Rotary Club’s noon luncheon Tues day. The program will consist of a talk on “Tools, Man’s Industrial Heritage” and an exhibit of early colonial tools. Dr. Hawkins started collecting wooden colonial tools in 1950 while working toward his doctorate at Pennsylvania State University. His collection now numbers several hundred specimens, including stone, wood and early hand-made metal tools. large pantie raid in years. Campus officers struggled with out success to break up the demonstration, occasionally being- knocked to the ground as surging students waved their arms and yelled outside dormitory windows. A number of lingerie items flut tered down into the crowd. This caused shouts of “more, more.” The raid began, according to a number of participants, after a false fire alarm caused the evacu ation of a men’s dormitory across the campus from the women’s dormitories. The excitement caused men’s dormitory residents to move across campus, picking up reinforcements as they approached the women’s residence halls at the northwest corner of the campus. The false alarm was sounded at Moore-Hill dormitory, where most single male athletes live. Targets for the raids were Blanton and Kinsolving halls, occupied by women students. Dress Rehearsal Virginia Me Afee and Lane Coulter practice for tonight’s production of “The Importance of Being Earnest” at Con solidated High School. Performance starts at 8 p. m. in the C.H.S auditorium. Tickets are 50 cents for adults. Chil dren under six will be admitted free. s The Big Bad Wolf Arkansas’ piggy is about to be pounced upon rains, this is the week’s winning football iy01’Sarge dressed up in wolf’s clothing for sign. It’s on Dorm 12, and is the work of the Aggie-Porker grid tilt Saturday at Squadron 9 and 10 fish. (Photo by Johnny Fayetteville. Knocked abit askew by the Herrin) Thurber’s Pen Stilled; Noted Humorist, 66, Dies NEW YORK <A*>—Janies Thur- ier,whose writings and drawings tept a generation of Americans iighing, died Thursday. He was if. Hie writer and cartoon artist W of pneumonia and respiratory imiplications which followed a bin operation he underwent after lblood clot caused his collapse in ilotelroom Oct. 4. He had attended the opening of lioel Cowards musical, “Sail Iny," the night before and had Messed the cast at a party af ter- nri Although he showed some im- pvement following the operation. It remained in serious condition till he died. Thurber’s writings included ugarine short stories, fables, and Imorous personal essays, and he b countless cartoons. Although Thurber’s humor often tended on imagination, he wrote in a precise, careful style and las known to rewrite a book as my as 25 times. Each word ttned to fit snugly into his sen- luces. Hospital .ppoints MD’s o Health Staff Hie College Hospital has ap- fiinted two new doctors to its iaff, Dr. C. R. Lyons, director (tbe Student Health Service, an- »nced. They are Dr. J. D. Fuselier, Ittmerly of Port Arthur, and Dr. fcmas T. Walton of Bryan. Hr. Fuselier was graduated hmTulane University. He prac- iiced for a short while in Louisiana fee moving to Port Arthur, fee he has been for the past 33 Stars. He and his wife have one laughter, Juliee, a sophomore at k University of Colorado. Hr. Walton has been appointed u a part-time physician at the tal in conjunction with his iWlar practice of internal medi- ®e in Bryan. Hr. Walton took his pre-medical lining at Rice University and 'as graduated in 1951; medical feee, Baylor University College •IMedicine, 1955; internship, Cin- ®nati General Hospital, 1965-56; feain, U. S. Army Medical Corps, W-58; internal medicine resi- fey, Henry Ford Hospittal, De- Mt, Mich., 1958-61. The New Yorker magazine which he joined in its infancy, was his main vehicle, but his humorous ideas got wider circulation when two of his works were made into motion pictures. They were “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty,” the wild day-dreaming of a mousy man, and “The Male Animal,” a | study of campus Life on which he collaborated with Elliott Nugent, ! a classmate at Ohio State Univer sity. One of Thurber’s best-known i books was “My Life and Hard | Times,” a collection of New Yorker pieces dealing with Thurber’s youth j in Columbus, Ohio, his birthplace. | Included in that book were such ! classics as “The Night the Ghost Got In” and “The Day the Dam i Broke." Thurber and others who worked for the New Yorker in its early ! days wrote mainly personal es- | says, reminiscences which were at least partly true. E. B. White once wrote that although Thurber’s pieces were based on fact, he was ! sure most of the happenings exist ed in the fertile mind of the author. White and Thurber together for some years wrote “The Talk of I the Town,” a eolumn-like preface to the New Yorker and it was White who persuaded Thurber to make his drawings public. Thurber started them as a form of doodling, a “form of nervous relaxation,” and remarked that it I was “years before I learned to my astonishment they could be sold.” Then when he decided to draw J slowly and carefully, White told j him: “If you ever became good, j you’d be mediocre” and Thurber | recalled that he “went back to rapidity.” Many of his cartoons dealt with lop-eared dogs, irate women and small, mousy men. One of his favorite subjects portrayed the domination of American men by they women. He and White wrote a famous satire, when psychoanalysis was in its younger days, called “Is Sex Necessary.” In that book they ad vanced, among other things, the “smallhousen theory.” In brief, that is that houses are too small to hold both men and women. Thurber was a newspaperman in Columbus, Paris and New York be fore joining the magazine. He was blinded by a child’s ar row while still a boy and lost the sight of the other eye in a series of cataract operations during the past few years. He and his first wife, the moth er of his daughter Rosemary, were divorced and in 1935 Thurber re married, to Helen Wismer. His first wife had been Althea Adams. Among Thurber’s other works were “If Grant Had Been Drink ing at Appomattox,” and “The Years With Ross,” the latter a review of his memories of the late Harold Ross, New Yorker editor. The humorist appeared as him self in “A Thurber Carnival,” a Broadway play, in 1960. fmrm “Sports Car Center” Dealers for Renault-Peugeot & British Motor Cars Sales—Parts—Service “We Service All Foreign Cars 1416 Texas Ave. TA 2-451 A. & R. TEXACO SERVICE STATION • Road Service • Goodrich Tires & Tubes • Wash • Lubrication • Motor Tune-Up • Brake Service • Waxing • Polishing • Batteries Recharged • Electronic Wheel Balancing School Menu Consolidated School System cafeteria menu for the week of Nov. 6-10. Monday—Meat balls in brown gravy, rice, buttered spinach, carrot sticks, bread and mixed fruit cup. Tuesday—Smoked pork links, mashed potatoes, buttered Eng lish peas, cabbage-green pepper salad, bread and apple cobbler. Wednesday—Hamburgers, po tato chips, buttered corn, lettuce and onions, buns and' ice box cookies. Thursday—Turkey noodle cas serole, peanut butter crackers, buttered green beans, caiTot- pineapple salad, bread and quick coffee cake. Friday—Fish sticks and cat sup, sliced buttered potatoes, buttered carrots, celery - apple salad, bread and peach cobbler. Milk is served with all meals. THAT’S HIS...WHAT’S YOURS? State Farm has increased its divi dend rate in Texas, making the actual net cost of State Farm car The Church.. For a Fuller Life. For You.. CALENDAR OF CHURCH SERVICES Rosary and ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC CHAPEL Sunday—Masses 7 :80, 9 :00 and XX :0<J A.M. Weekday—Musses 6 :30 A.M., Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. Confessions—Saturday. 6 :30 to 7 :30 P.M. and before all masses Benediction—Wednesday, 7:20 I\M. " 5:20 P.M. Tuesday and Thursday A&M LjmuoxLAN CHURCH 8 :30 A.M.—Coffee Time 9 :46 A.M.—Sunday School XX :00 A.M.—Morning Services UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP 4:00-6:30 P.M.—Friday School. YMCA 8 :00 P.M.—First four Sundays of each month—Fellowship Meeting, Call VI 6- 6888 for further information. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY 9 :30 A.M.—Sunday School 11 :00 A.M.—Sunday Service 8:00 P.M.—Wed., Evening Service 10 :00-12 :00 A.M. Tuesdays—Reading Room 7:00-8:00 P.M.—Wed.. Reading Room A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST 9:45 A.M.—Bible Classes 10 :45 A.M.—Morning Worship 6:45 P.M.—Bible Class 7 :16 P.M.—Evening Service BETHEL LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod} 8:15 A.M.—Morning Worship 9 :80 A.M.—Church School 10 :45 A.M.—Morning Worship CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 10 :00 A.M.—Sunday School 11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship 6 :80 P.M.—Young People’s Service 7 :30 P.M.—Preaching Service CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS 26th East and Coulter, Bryan 8 :30 A.M.—Priesthood Meeting 10.00 A.M.—Sunday School 6 :80 P.M.—Sacrament Meeting ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL CHURCH Sundays 8:00 A.M.—Holy Comm ervice & ly Comi doming 4th Sundays ; 7 :00 P.M. Evensong. FAITH CHURCH UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 9:15 A.M.—Sunday School 10:30 A.M.—Morning Worship 7 :30 P.M.—Evening Service COLLEGE HEIGHTS ASSEMBLY OF GOD 9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School g Worship People’s Service hii imunion ; A.M.—Family Service & Church School [oly < 3rd Sundays, Morn 9:15 Family Service & 11:00 A.M.—Holy Communion 1st _ j »» s Bj»g Prayer 2nd & Wed Vednesdays 6:30 & 10:00 A.M.—Holy Communion with Laying on of Hands Saints Days 10 :00 A.M.—Holy Communion Wednesday 7:10 P.M.—Can Adult Bible Class terbury ; 8 :30 P.M. ises -Sunday 11:00 A.M.—Morning W 6 :30 P.M.—Young Peo] 7 :80 P.M.—Evening Wors A&M METHODIST CHURCH 9 :46 A.M.—Sunday School 10 :66 A.M.—Morning Worship 6 :30 & 6 :00 P.M.—MYF Meetings 7 :00 P.M.—Evening Worship OUK SAVIOUR S LUTHERAN CHURCH 8:15 & 10:46 A.M.—The Church at , Worship 9:30 A.M.—Bible Classes For All Holy Communion—First Sunday I Month A&M PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 9 :46 A.M.—Church School 11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 9:40 A.M.—Church School 11:00 A.M.—Worship 6 :15 P.M.—Training Union 7:15 P.M.—Worship Each These are the products of man’s labor—and God’s. From the moment the seedlings were placed in the warm earth, they have been under constant care. First came the rain and the sun—and then the ceaseless work of fertilizing, cultivating, and spraying. Last, came harvest time, when the proud growers gathered the rewards of their labor. Only by such diligence can we hope for a truly bountiful crop. God has given the refreshing rain and warm sunshine, but He expects us to do our part. And so it is with the care and cultivation of our spiritual lives. Man is endowed with many talents and qualities, but unless he tends and nur tures these gifts, they will not increase and grow. Harvest time in the life of every person is at maturity, when men are at the peak of their use fulness and wisdom. By attending the services of the Church and by studying the Scriptures, we will realize greater happiness and contentment here on earth—and will be preparing ourselves for the RICH HARVEST of a life hereafter. THE CHURCH FOR ALL . . . ALL FOR THE CHURCH The Church is the greatest factor or» earth for the building of character and good citizenship. It is a storehouse of spiritual values. Without a strong Church, neither democracy nor civiliza tion can survive. There are four sound reasons why every person should at tend services regularly and support the Church. They ate: (1) For his own sake. (2) For his children's sake. 0) For the sake of his community and nation. (4) For the sake of^bm Church ivylf, which needs his apj maktrij suppdrti Plan co go to church regularly and read your Bible daily. i i...i. itg Copyright 1961 Keister A3v. Service, Ine., Strashnrg, Va. Sunday Matthew 13:1-12 Monday Matthew 13:18-23 Tuesday Mark 4:26-32 Wednesday Ecclesiastes 11:1-10 Thursday Ecclesiastes 3:1-9 Friday Psalms 126:1-6 Saturday Galatians 6:1-10 ^unt/ral ~J4o BRYAN, TEXAS 602 West 26th St. PHONE TA 2-1672 Campus and Circle Theatres College Station College Station’s Own Banking Service College Station State Bank NORTH GATE Central Texas Hardware Co. BRYAN • HARDWARE • CHINAWARE • CRYSTAL • GIFTS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Sure Sign of Flavor The Store Bryan Building & Loan Association BRYAN City National Bank Member FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION Bryan ICE CREAM "A Nutritious Food'