The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 20, 1962, Image 3

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Washing Machine Churn
couldn’t reach their finished product. When plows broke through
she had many pounds of butter ready for
the creamery. Steensma said he threw away
about 50 gallons of milk per day—after the
cream had been skimmed — during the
weather blockade. (AP Wirephoto)
[Vhen dairy trucks
snowbound farm for several days, Mrs.
■Peter Steensma of rural Sibley, Iowa, used
her washing machine to turn the surplus
cream into butter. She is shown, left, pour-
Ing in the raw material, then removing the
A Memo {wm... Mr. 4 /o
“Life insurance is largely a matter
of dollars and sense.”
Albert W. Seiter Jr.
2601 Texas Ave. Bryan, Texas
TA 2-0018
Representing
riES
*TS
paper
f the
Plans
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Jefferson Standard
Lift INSURANCt COMPANY Mo-.. OR.<* Gr.i N.C
QnCmos
with
Afecfihulman
(Author of “Rally Round The Flag, Boys”, “The
Many Loves of Dobie Gillis”, etc.)
SHAKESPEARE DOESN’T LIVE HERE
ANY MORE
A recent and most heartening development in American college
life has been the emergence of the artist-in-residence. In fact,
the artist-in-residence has become as familiar a sight on campus
as Latin ponies, leather elbow patches, Rorschach tests, hula
hoops, and Marlboro cigarettes.
And we all know how familiar that is—I mean Marlboro ciga
rettes. And why should it not be familiar? Why, where learning
is king, where taste is sovereign, where brain power rules
supreme, should not Marlboro be everyone’s favorite? The same
good sense that gets you through an exam in Restoration Poetry
or solid-state physics certainly does not desert you when you
come to pick a cigarette. You look for a flavor that is flavorful,
a filter pure and white, a choice of pack or box, a lot to like. You
look, in short, for Marlboro—and happily you don’t have to look
far. Marlboro is available at your friendly tobacconist’s or vend
ing machine, wherever cigarettes are sold in all fifty states and
Las Yegas.
But I digress. We were speaking of the new campus phenome
non—the artist-in-residence—a man or woman who writes,
paints, or composes right on your very own campus and who is
also available for occasional consultations with superior students.
Take, for example, William Cullen Sigafoos, artist-in-residence
at tire Toledo College of Belles Lettres and Fingerprint Identifi
cation.
As we all know, Mr. Sigafoos has been working for many years
on an epic poem in rhymed couplets about the opening of the
Youngstown-Akron highway. Until, however, lie went into
residence at the Toledo College of Belles Lettres and Finger
print Identification, his progress was not what you would call
rapid. He started well enough with the immortal couplet we all
know: They speed along on [wheels of rubber, rushing home in
time for subber . ..
Then Mr. Sigafoos got stuck. It is not that his muse deserted
him; it is that he became involved in a series of time-consuming
episodes—a prefrontal lobotomy for Irwin, his faithful sled
dog; fourteen consecutive months of jury duty on a very com
plicated case of overtime parking; getting his coattail caught in
the door of a jet bound for Brisbane, Australia; stuff like that.
He was engaged in a very arduous job in Sandusky—posing
for a sculptor of hydrants—when an offer came from the Toledo
College of Belles Lettres and Fingerprint Identification to take
up residence there, finish his magnum opus and, from time to
time, see a few gifted students.
Mr. Sigafoos accepted with pleasure and in three short years
completed the second couplet of his Youngstown-Akron Turnpike
epic: The highway is made of solid concrete and at the toll station you
get a receipt.
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Then a few gifted students came to visit him. They were a
prepossessing lot—the boys with corduroy jackets and long,
shaggy beards; the girls also with corduroy jackets but with
beards neatly braided.
“What is truth?” said one. “What is beauty?” said another.
“Should a writer live first and write later or should he write
and do a little living in his spare time?” said another.
“How do you find happiness—and having found it, how do
you get rid of it?” said another.
, “Whither arc we drifting?” said another. \
“I don’t know whither you are drifting,” said Mr. Sigafoos,
“but as for me, I am drifting back to Sandusky to pose for the
hydrant sculptor.”
And back he went, alas, leaving only a fragment of his Youngs
town-Akron Turnpike epic to rank with other such uncom
pleted masterpieces as Schubert’s Unfinished Symphony, the
Venus de Milo, and Singer’s Midgets. © 1902 Max shutmau
* * *
Take cheer, good friends, from one masterpiece that is com
plete. We, refer, of course, to Marlboro cigarettes. Filter
end and tobacco end are both as good as tobacco artistry
and science can make them.
Fish Drillers
Place First
In LSU Meet
The Fish Drill Team, command
ed by Jack Schmid, ’65, traveled
by bus to LSU last weekend where
they won first place in all three
phases of the intercollegiate drill
competition held there.
Trophies were received for first
place in both Basic and Precision
Phases, as well as “Best Overall.”
Entered against the Aggies were
11 teams from all over the South
west including LSU and Tulane.
The Pershing Rifle Company of
LSU provided the main competi
tion for the Aggies. They took
second place in each of the 3
phases.
In the precision phase the Per
shing Rifles tied the Aggies in
points and a 5-minute overtime
drill was held. The Aggies repeated
their “ripple” movement and the
competition was theirs.
Protests were entered against
the Aggies by several teams on the
grounds that the pivofs made by
the Fish were not according to the
Army drill manual FM 22-5 during
the Basic Phase. The protests
were rejected by the judges, who
found no fault on the pivots.
THE BATTALION
Tuesday, March 20, 1962
College Station, Texas
Page 3
AUTHOR AND EDITOR
Professor From Nottingham
To Speak Here Wednesday
A faculty member from the Uni
versity of Nottingham in England
will give a graduate lecture here
Wednesday on “Protein and En
ergy Balance in Nutrition.”
The lecture by Dr. D. Lewis is
sceduled at 8 p.m. in the Bio
logical Sciences Lecture Room and
the public is welcome to attend.
Lewis, a native of South Wales,
is a reader in animal nutrition,
Department of Agricultural Sci
ences, University of Nottingham,
School of Agriculture, at Sutton,
Bonington, Loughborough.
He teaches animal nutrition and
conducts a research program in
pig and poultry nutrition in Eng
land, Dr. Wayne C. Hall, dean of
graduate studies said in anounc-
ing the lecture. Lewis joined the
University of Nottingham staff in
1958.
Transporters
To Meet Here
Next Weekend
The fourth annual Transporta
tion Conference will be held here
March 30 under sponsorship of
the Texas Transportation Institute
Executives and management* per
sonnel from rail, truck, pipeline
and inland-waterways companies
throughout the southwest have
been invited to participate in the
conference dealing with national
problems in the industry.
Keynote speaker will be Dr.
George P. Baker of Harvard Uni
versity and president of the Trans
portation Association of America.
He will discuss “National Trans
portation Problems.”
C. V. Wootan, TTI economist and
conference chairman, said more
than 150 men are expected for the
conference that will open at 9
a.m. in the Memorial Student Cen
ter.
Luncheon speaker will be U. S.
Senator Ralph Yarborough, (D.
Tex.), who will discuss “The Gov
ernments’ Role in Transportation.”
He is a member of the Senate In
terstate and Fireign Commerce
Committee.
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It was in 1949 that Lewis join
ed the post-graduate school of
the University of Sheffield and in
1952 he received the Doctor of
Philosophy degree from that uni
versity. His research program was
on fatty acid production by rumen
bacteria. Lewis spent most of 1952
at the Institute Pasteur, Paris.
In 1952 he joined the staff of the
Agricultural Research Council, In
stitute of Animal Physiology-Bio
chemistry Department and. from
1952-58 was engaged in research
work on ruminant metabolism and
physiology.
Lewis is the author of the book
“Metabolism in the Rumen,” and
the editor of “Digestive Physiolo
gy and Nutrition of the Ruminant”
and “Nutrition of Pigs and Poul
try.” He also is the author of about
30 papers on several aspects of
animal nutrition.
He was awarded the Bachelor of
Science degree with first class
honors in Agricultural chemistry
in 1946 by the University of Wales.
A year later he received the Mast
er of Science degree. He then
entered St. John’s College, Cam
bridge, and gained first class hon
ors in biochemistry, was elected
senior scholar of St. John’s College
and received his Master of Arts
degree from that college.
Singing Cadets In
Brenham For Show
The Singing Cadets, under the
direction of Robert L. Boone, sing
at 8 tonight at the high school
auditorium in Brenham in a two-
hour show sponsored by the junior
class of Brenham High School.
According to Boone, the cadets
will leave the campus in the after
noon and return tonight, follow
ing a reception given in their
honor. They are traveling by auto
mobile.
When Roger Maris hit 61 home
runs and Mickey Mantle hit 54
for the New York Yankees in 1961,
it was the first time two players
on the same club had each hit
more than 50 homers in the same
WESTINGHOUSE
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World
Send Women’s News To THE BATTALION
Or Call VI 6-6618 From 8-5
The Agronomy-Horticulture-Floriculture Wives Society
had a “Get-Acquainted” party last Saturday evening in the
home of Dr. and Mrs. W. O. Trodgen.
'A' ’A'
Physical Education Wives Club will meet tonight at
8:00 in the home of Mrs. Betty Speed at C-10-Y College View.
★ ★ ★
Oceanography and Meteorology Wives Club meets to
night in the Brooks Room of the Y.M.C.A.
★ ★ ★
Chemical Engineering Wives Club will meet in the South
Solarium of the Y.M.C.A. this evening at 7:30.
★ ★ ★
Aggie Wives Bridge Club will hold their regular meeting
tomorrow night at 7:30 in the Memorial Student Center.
★ ★ ★
Education Wives Club meets Thursday evening at 8:00
in the home of Mrs. Judy Morrison, B-3-Y College View.
★ ★ ★
Next Monday evening at 8:00 the Civil Engineering
Wives Club will meet in the Y.M.C.A.
Washes and Dries
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110 or 220 Volt.
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Good Washer may be down
payment.
SEE
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FURNITURE CO.
218 S. Main St.
Bryan
MX
S M U U T O M
that holds the unsurpassed satisfactions that
come with service to country.
As a college student, how can you
become an Air Force Officer?
r lf you have not completed Air Force ROTC,
Officer Training School provides an opportu
nity to qualify for a variety of vitally needed jobs
in the Aerospace Age. A graduate of this three-
month course earns a commission as a second
lieutenant. Also open to college men is the
Navigator Training program.
For full information — including the chance to
obtain graduate degrees at Air Force expense —
see the Air Force Selection Team when it visits
your college. Or write: Officer Career Informa
tion, Dcpt.SC23, Box 805, New York 1, N. Y.
U.S. Air Force
FOB AMERICA'S FUTURE AND YOUR OWN... JOIN THE AEROSPACE TEAM. It M 4
How would
you forecast
your next
few years?
Today, the young man planning his life realizes
as never before that in today’s world his own
future is tied inevitably to America’s future.
How can he serve both?
Many college graduates, both men and women,
are finding a rewarding answer on the Aero
space Team — as officers in the U. S. Air Force.
Here is a career that is compelling in its chal
lenge and opportunity. And it is a way of life