The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 15, 1961, Image 2

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    THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas
Wednesday, November 15, 1961
CADET SLOUCH
BATTALION EDITORIALS
Perpetua [Progress
by Jim Earle
Progress has a way of being perpetually planned at Tex
as A&M, but the full significance of this planning is only
brought into focus occasionally, and then it is often for
gotten.
Dmroti \ J tMttAS
NE€£> W&
.. i ■
t-.-.-T, v.
But due to the blossoming forth of A&M’s entire physical
plant during the past two years, or one might say, “since
the start of the sixties,” no-one can ever again ignore this
fact for a minute while on the campus.
& f- T to SEDAUA
jp I-
I i
Students are already reaping the benefits of new facili
ties like the W. T. Doherty Petroleum Engineering Building,
the data processing center, nuclear research center, and the
new wing of the Military Sciences Building. Within a short
time the new Physics Building wing will be open and the new
multi-million dollar Plant Sciences Building is progressing
rapidly.
Also in the realm of building improvements has been
the complete air conditioning of the Academic Building, a
mammouth task that took a thorough remodeling of the
building’s interior, spread out over a year’s time.
The new building facilities of the Office of Physical
Plants, which includes the Building and College Utilities, and
the Grounds and Maintenence subunits, has‘added a look of
prosperity to the North Gate approach to the campus.
Job Calls
j; j
rtzgjSC’
The following firms will inter
view seniors at the Placement
Office in the YMCA Building:
Thursday
Atlas Chemical Industries Inc.
—Chemical engineering (B.S.,
M.S.).
Henke and Pillot, Division of
the Kroger Co.—Business ad
ministration (B.B.A., M.B.A.),
accounting and agricultural eco
nomics.
Pittsburgh Plate Class Co.,
Chemical Division at Corpus
Christi — Chemical engineering
(B.S., M.S., Ph.D.), petroleum
engineering (B.S., M.S.).
Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line
Corp.—Chemical, civil, electrical
and mechanical engineering
(B.S.), economics (M.A.) and
business administration
(M.B.A.).
New Light
On Lumumba
Anyone who has ever driven or walked the soggy,
bumpy auto traps that were the streets running from the
Exchange Store to North Gate, past the college laundry,
and from the next corner to North Gate by the college power
plant, appreciate their having been paved in the past year.
“This guy has three riders already signed up to go to Se-
dalia, Missouri—Gil Favor, Rowdy Yates and Wishbone!
Somehow those names sound familiar, Squirt!”
Sound Off
Any cadet who ever marched the hole-filled, deteriorated
paths from Dormitories 14, 15, 16 and 17 to Sbisa Dining
Hall appreciate their being paved into wide, smooth concrete
walkways blocked off by steel poles preventing cars from
entering them.
Suggestions
Civilian Status
These have already been planned, completed, and are
now in use; but the list hasn’t ended for any length of time
by any extent! Yesterday,* The Battalion carried a story
about plans to build a new $900,000 home for the Division of
Architecture. Today, the lead is new handball courts to be
built as a new level to DeWare Field House.
From the forecast during the start of the sixties, it
looks like A&M is in for a decade of full and complete im
provement; any college that has as much planned progress
become reality as quickly as A&M has, need not worry about
gaining the confidence of those associated with it.
Texas A&M has earned this confidence; the ways can be
seen every day, in every part of the campus. And better yet’
the classes to come can look forward to even more of the
college’s rare qualities: perpetual progress.
We Ain’t Got
(To be sung to the tune of “We Ain’t Got Dames” from
“South Pacific.”) ' *
We got building, we got streets
We got everything that’s neat,
We got nuclear reactors.
Editor,
The Battalion:
The, Student Senate of Texas
A&M College, in order to better
reflect the opinions and ideas
of the student body, would wel
come helpful and constructive
suggestions and criticisms on
any matter of student policy
from any and all students.
The objectives of the Student
Senate are to democratically rep
resent the various interests in
the student body of the college,
to promote the welfare of the
student body, and to act as the
official voice of the student
body. The Student Senate needs
the help of the student body in
performing these functions. The
Student Senate will take up for
consideration any letter mailed
to The Office of the Student
Senate, P.O. Box 5746, College
Station.
James W. Carter
Public, Relations Committee
Student Senate
Editor,
The Battalion:
Some discussion has recently
taken place regarding the status
of the civilian students at A&M.
We question the assertion that
the civilians have the standing
they should have at this college.
Isn’t it true that some Corps
students are living one to a room
while; many “non-regs” are liv
ing three to a room? Is the
civilian student still a second
class citizen in this academic
community ? The undersigned
believe the answer to this ques
tion is in the affirmative!
And a lot of other factors
We got a brand new physics building, /
And a lot of Army officers;
What ain’t we got?
We ain’t got pencil sharpeners.
So why don’t we get some—in most of the classrooms, no
less? The abrupt shortage of pencil sharpeners on the cam
pus is quite disheartening to say the least! Any future plans
for progress should include them.
Read Classifieds Daily
BONFIRE SPECIALS
• OLD ARMY BEAVER SHORT COATS
Reg. 39.95 ONLY $3.95
• INSUL-KNIT ARTIC UNDERWEAR
• SWEAT SHIRTS
• OLD FATIGUES
• BOOT SOCKS
loupots
THE BATTALION
Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu
dent writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax-supported, noro-
profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited and op
erated by students as a journalism laboratory and 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, d
Publications, chairman ; Allen Schrader, School of Arts and Sci
Truettner, School of Engineering ; Otto R. Kunze, School ol Agricultu
Veterinary Medicir
McMurry, School of Veterinary Medicine.
director of Student
ences; Willard I.
griculture; and Dr. E. D.
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.
The Associated Press is
dispatches credited to it oi
spontaneous origin published herein,
in are also reserved.
entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news
not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of
11 — — j ~«-—.
Rights of republication of all other matter here-
icond-class
Office
Entered as sei
matter at the Post
in College Station. Texas
under the Act of Con
of March 8, 1870.
gress
MEMBER:
The Associated Pres»
Texas Press Assn.
Represented nationally by
National Advertising
Services, Inc., New York
City, Chicago, Los An
il. D. Piper, ’62
and seven others
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. UP>
—A U.N. investigating commis
sion expressed belief Tuesday
Patrice Lumumba, the fiery
Congo leader, was murdered last
January in the presence of high
Katanga officials and his fate
kept secret for almost a month.
The commission declared lead
ers of the central Congo govern
ment must share responsibility,
since they turned Lumumba and
two associates over to the Ka
tanga authorities “knowing full
well that in doing so they were
throwing them into the hands of
their bitterest political enemies.”
There is a “great deal of sus
picion,” the commission added,
that the actual perpetrator of
Lumumba’s murder, in accord
with a prearranged plan, was a
Belgian colonel who served as a
mercenary in the Katanga armed
forces.
Eyewitnesses to the deaths
were probably Katanga Premier
Moise Tshombe and two chief
aides, Godefroid Munongo and
Jean-Baptiste Kibwe, the com-
piission said.
Ingersoll-Rand Co.—Chemical,
civil, electrical, industrial and
petroleum engineering; chemistry
and physics (B.S.), and mechan
ical engineering (B.S., M.S.,
Ph.D.).
Thursday and Friday
The Boeing Co.—Aeronautical,
civil, electrical, industrial and
mechanical engineering; mathe
matics and physics (B.S., M.S.,
Ph.D.).
Union Oil Co. of California—
Chemical, petroleum and geolog
ical engineering (B.S., M.S.),
geology, and mechanical engi
neering (M.S.), and chemistry
(Ph.D.).
Central Intelligence Agency—
Agricultural, aeronautical, chem
ical, electrical, industrial, me
chanical, nuclear and petroleum
engineering; entomology, ac
counting, chemistry, English, his
tory, mathematics, modern lan
guages, oceanography and me
teorology, physics, geology, geo
physics, and industrial technol
ogy (B.S., M.S., Ph.D.).
Summer Jobs
Union Oil Co. of California—
Summer jobs in refining for jun
iors, seniors and graduates in
chemical engineering.
Bulletin Board
Wives’ Clubs
Aggie Wives Bridge Club wall
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Memo
rial Student Center.
Church Groups
Knights of Columbus No. 3205
will meet at 8 p.m. at St. Mary’s
Student Center.
EVERYBODY’S IN THE ACT
NEW YORK — “Everybody
from sponsor to cameraman is
writing television drama today,”
declares Pulitzer Prize playwright
Tad Mosel.
Addressing a theatrical sym
posium on current video trends,
Mosel urged less interference with
creative artists.
“You’ll get good writing when
and if you turn the writer loose
and let him alone,” he said.
—■
WESTINGHOUSE
16 Lb. Laundry
One of ^
lies upon
(aniP us
Lkestac’
side again
Some 1
lese stacl
ike a P riE
He camp'
Re
Washes and Dries
16 lbs. of clothes.
phere.
effect on
stacks of
an ir
activity'
The old
» 1918, i
air before
jn 1958.
partner v
stands at
These s
releasing
brought it
The plant
sponsible
ings on tl
tain amoi
loo much
flame.
The po
riistence
building
mately w
FULLY AUTOMATIC
25 Inches Wide
110 or 220 Volt.
PAY ONLY $15.00 PER
MONTH
Good Washer may be down
payment.
SEE
KRAFT
FURNITURE CO.
218 S. Main St.
Bryan
Econc
50
WEDNESDAY
‘COME SEPTEMBER’
with Rock Hudson
Plus
“MIDNIGHT LACE”
with Doris Day
PALACE
Bryan 2‘&f$79
NOW SHOWING
Orsen Wells
In
DAVID & GOLIATH”
(In Color)
QUEEN
“FIESTA NITE’
TONIGHT 6 P. M.
HELD OVER
ELIA KAZAN'S PRODUCTION OF
SPJFwOolP
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with PAT MINGLE
AUDREY CHRISTIE
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geles and San Francisco.
News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or VI 6-4910 or at the
editorial office, Room 4, YMCA Building. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6416.
BOB SLOAN EDITOR
Tommy Holbein Managing Editor
Larry Smith Sports Editor
Alan Payne, Ronnie Bookman News Editors
Sylvia Ann Bookman Society Editor
Ronnie Fann, Gerry Brown, Johnny Baughman Staff Writers
•Tnhnnv Herrin Photocfrnnbpr
Bob Roberts Assistant Sports Editor
CIRCLE
TONIGHT First Show 6:45
Tony Curtis
In
BLACK SHIELDS OF
FALS WORTH”
&
Fred MacMurry
In
“FOREST RANGER”
An:
‘'Tareytor^s Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!'
says veteran coach Romulus (Uncle) Remus. “We have a
saying over at the Coliseum—‘Tareyton separates the gladia
tors from the gladioli’. It’s a real magnus smoke. Take it
from me, Tarey ton delivers de gustibus—and the Dual Filter
does it!”
ACTIVATED CHARCOAL
INNER FILTER
PURE WHITE
OUTER FILTER
DUAL FILTER
Tareyton
Product of c/AZ Jt&us’iiectn cJvJacco-Corryiany — cJudaceo-is our middle name © t. c*
Genera
pany i
industr:
Person
ferefo
Genera
10 yea;
nextde
industr
managi
Forgr;
PEANUTS
By Charles M. Schulx
HA!THAT5 A LAUGH!VOU RE
JUST LIKE A LOT OF OTHERS
WHO SAV THE SAME THING! IT'S
AN EXCUSE,THAIS WHAT (T IS!
ITS AN EXCUSE FOR V’OUR
OWN LACK OF REAL TALENT
AND A3ILITV!.'!
T (WAS SUPPOSED TO MEET
CHARLIE BROWN HERE AT
TWO O'CLOCK, 3011 THINK
JM AHEAD OF MV TIME..
The
Con
mar
Port
trai:
you;
for