The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 23, 1963, Image 2

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    ' THE BATTALION
Page 2 College Station, Texas Wednesday, October 23, 1963
CADET SLOUCH by Jim Earle
“Are you th’ guy who wrote this letter to th’ editors that
disagrees with mine!”
BATTALION EDITORIALS
Good Job, College Station
Congratulations are in order for all the people who have
worked on the College Station United Chest drive, and
especially for Dr. Chris Groneman, campaign director. All
the workers and the people of College Station who con
tributed so freely to the drive have set a fine example for
all A&M students to eye as the A&M Campus Chest drive
starts.
In the past couple of years the Campus Chest collections
have fallen far short of the goals that have been set up
for the drives. We cannot think of a better year for Aggies
to show their concern for each other than this year. One
way we can do this is to set a new record for a Campus
Chest collection. ,
The “World Around Us” Series
Presents
YUGOSLAVIA
An all color film personally narrated by
GENE WIANCKO
Mr. Wiancko’s film is a first hand account of the some
times Communist nation ruled by President Tito. Tito is
currently in this country trying to obtain more foreign
aid and trade.
Students are admitted with activity cards. Patron’s
season tickets for this series are valid.
General public $ .75 Public School Students $ .50.
THURSDAY NIGHT OCTOBER 24th
8:00 P. M. MSC BALLROOM
A Great Issues—MSC Directorate Presentation On The
Texas A&M Campus.
THE BATTALION
Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the
student writers only. The Battalion is a non tax-supported,
non-profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited and
operated by students as a university and community news
paper and is under the supervision of the director of Stu
dent Publications at Texas A&M University.
Members of the Student Publications Board are James L. Lindsey, chairman ; Delbert
McGuire, College of Arts and Sciences; J. A. Orr, College of Engineering; J. M.
Holcomb, College of Agriculture; and Dr. E. D. McMurry, College of Veterinary Medicine.
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 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.
Second-Class postage paid
at College Station, Texas.
MEMBER:
Represented nationally by
National advertising
Service, Inc., New York
The Associated Press
Texas Press Assn.
geles and San Francisco.
Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester; $6 per school year, $6.50 per full year.
All subscriptions subject to 2% sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request.
Address: The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA Building; College Station, Texas.
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 6-6415.
DAN LOUIS JR.
Ronnie Fann
Glenn Dromg-oole
Jim Butler
John Wright
Marvin Schultz ...
Juan Tijerina .7....
EDITOR
... Managing Editor
-v... News Editor
Sports Editor
.. Asst. News Editor
Asst. Sports Editor
Photographer
— Sound Off
Bulletin Board
Editor,
The Battalion:
Apparently you need to be in
formed, as too many young
people need to be (on the inten
tions of Mr. Bob Rowland, Class
of ’57. I have never read an
editorial that disgusted me as
much as the one where you tried
to cover the truth by diverting
Mr. Rowland’s sincere letter
along a trail of utter foolishness.
In sympathy with Mr. Rowland,
I want you to know that a vast
majority of the exes go along
with him and will continue to
allow him to speak for them be
cause of their respect for him and
his unstoppable spirit and love of
—Job Calls—
THURSDAY
The Atlantic Refining Com
pany — Chemical engineering,
electrical engineering, mechani
cal engineering, petroleum engi
neering, geophysics, chemistry
and physics.
Celanese Corporation of Amer
ica — Chemical engineering,
electrical engineering, mechani
cal engineering and chemistry.
Chemicals Division of Union
Carbide Corp. — Chemical engi
neering, electrical engineering,
mechanical engineering and chem
istry.
Eastman Kodax Company —
Chemical engineering, electrical
engineering, industrial engineer
ing, mechanical engineering,
chemistry, mathematics, physics,
accounting, business administra
tion and finance.
General Dynamics — Aero
space engineering, mathematics,
civil engineering, physics, elec
trical engineering and mechani
cal engineering.
Texas Electric Service Com
pany — Electrical engineering,
mechanical engineering and ac
counting.
The Trane Company — Aero
space engineering, chemical en
gineering, civil engineering, in
dustrial engineering and mechan
ical engineering.
U. S. Naval Oceanographic
Office — Civil engineering, elec
trical engineering, mechanical
engineering, oceanography and
meteorology, chemistry, mathe
matics and physics.
6 Farm And Ranch 9
To Stop Publishing
NASHVILLE, — Tenn. Farm
and Ranch, with the largest
farm circulation in the South,
will fold after its November
issue.
Publisher and editor Thomas
J. Anderson, his wife said Mon
day decided to suspend the mag
azine of one million circulation
in order to devote .his time to
seven state farm magazines and
two others he will start in Jan
uary.
PALACE
2’8879
NOW SHOWING
Features
1:00 - 3:89 - 6:18 - 9:00
Admission
$1.00
MIRISCH COMPANY-..
EDWARD LALPERSON
PftCSCNT
cJaCK SHIRLEY
LEMMON MaeLSlNE
Texas A&M. Letters from
EVERY Aggie Club in the State
will offer proof that the exes are
behind Mr. Rowland and that he
is not the only one who is fight
ing to preserve something that
you apparently don’t believe in.
Granted, A&M is one of the
leading universities in the nation,
but do you really think that stu
dents will drive 526 miles, as I
did, just to attend just another
co-ed school? After all, what is
there to attract students to Col
lege Station after A&M has lost
all of its old color and attrac
tions ? A first-class education
will attract a few, but let’s face
it, there are other colleges in the
state with good educational facili
ties !
So, Mr. Editor, if you can find
a substitute for the things that
A&M has stood for for so long—
honor, pride, and tradition—con
tinue your fight (or is it a passive
I-don’t-care attitude?) to allow
“progress” to overcame every
thing that A&M stands for and
you attend Muster and Silver
Taps for an out of place woman,
and you wear your A&M ring
proudly, because I can’t.
Derrell N. Chandler, ’62
★ ★ ★
Editor,
The Battalion:
Mrs. Megan Tilghman’s letter
of Tuesday, Oct. 16, suggested
that co-education had a place at
A&M, and that the presence of
Outfit pictures for the AG-
GIELAND will be made accord
ing to the schedule below.
Uniform will be class A
Winter. Outfit C.O.’s will wear
sabers; seniors will wear boots.
Ike jackets may be worn if ALL
seniors in the outfit can obtain
them. Guidons and award flags
will be carried. ALL personnel
in the outfit will wear the billed
service cap issued by the college.
The type of cap worn by under
classmen to and from the pic
ture taking area is left to the
discretion of the outfit C.O.
Outfits should be in front-of
the Administration Building by
1230 hrs. on the appointed day.
Arrangements should be made
by first sergeants with the Mess
Hall supervisors to allow the
outfit to be admitted to the
Mess Hall early.
October 21 A-l, B-l
October 22 C-l, D-l
October 23 E-l, F-l
October 24 G-l, G-2
October 25 A-2, B-2
October 28 C-2, D-2
October 29 E-2, F-2
October 30 A-3, B-3
October 31 C-3, D-3
November 1 E-3, F-3
November 4 H-3, Sqd. 16
November 6 G-3, 1-3
November 6 Sqd. 1, Sqd. 2
November 7 Sqd. 3, Sqd. 4
November 8 Sqd. 5, Sqd. 6
November 11 Sqd. 7, Sqd. 8
November 12 Sqd. 9, Sqd. 10
November 13 .... Sqd. 11, Sqd. 12
November 14 .... Sqd. 13, Sqd. 14
November 18 .... Sqd. 16, Sqd. 17
November 19 M-Band, W-Band
Co-eds on campus had no effect
on the Spirit of Aggieland. We
feel that Mrs. Thilghman and the
rest of the female additions to
our campus have no conception
of the true meaning of this Spirit.
Let us ask you this—have you
ever read the plaque at the
entrance of the Memorial Student
Center 7 Do you know why there
are 52 trees around the main drill
field ? Have you ever been to
Silver Taps ? Have you ever been
to Muster? Do you attend Yell
Practice? Are you familiar with
the Aggie Spirit as exemplified |
by the men on Corregidor in
World War II? Have you ever
heard of James E. Saran? Capt.
Eli L. Whiteley? Sgt. William G.
Harrell?
We feel that if you were famil
iar with these and other Aggie
traditions you might be qualified
to comment on the effect of co
education on the Spirit of A&M.
We would also like to point out
that we still have a MSC and
not a Sub.
Don McGown, ’64
George Eeds, ’64
Tommy Ferguson, ’64
Frank Owen, ’65
Jim Mayo, ’65
NOW SHOWING
55 DAYS THAT STUNNED THE
WORLD....The Pinnacle of
Motion Picture Excitement!
CIRCLE
TONIGHT 1st Show 6:40 p.m.
“BYE BYE BIRDIE”
With Janet Leigh
&
Paul Newman
In
“YOUNG
PHILADELPHIANS”
all College
dance
Eli joy an evening with
“The Silvertones”
SATURDAY, OCT. 26
after the game 8-12 p. m.
MSC LOWER LEVEL
Tickets on sale at the door
Admission: $2.00 Per Couple—No Stags
THURSDAY
The Animal Husbandry Wives
Club will meet at Patranella’s
Beaudty Sshop at 1700 Cavitt St.
in Bryan at 7:30 p.m.
The Brazos County A&M Mo
thers’ Club "will meet at 7:30
p.m. in the Memorial Student
Center Social Room. This is an
organizational meeting honoring
all freshman mothers.
The Geology Wives Club will
meet in the Conference Room
of the Architecture Building at
8 p.m.
The Brazoria County Home
town Club will meet in Room
204 of the Academic Building at
7:30 p.m.
The Corpus Christi Hometown
Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in
Room 2-D of the Memorial Stu
dent Center.
The Rio Grande Valley Home-
town Club will meet in Room
106 of the Academic Building at
7:30 p.m.
The San Angelo-West Texas
Hometown Club will meet at 7:30
p.m. in Room 2-A of the Memor.
ial Student Center.
The Sanrebee Hometown Club
will meet in Room 203 in the
Academic Building at 7:30 p.m,
FACTS, MAN, FACTS!
CHAR-BROILED DUTCHBURGERS
Better than Ordinary Hamburgers
YOUR TASTE WILL TELL
DIAL VI 6-9968 FOR YOUR BAG FULL TO GO
Dutch Kettle Snack Shop
WHOLE PIES TO GO VI 6-9968
100 HIWAY 6, SOUTH
On Campos ^
(Author of Rally Round the Flag, Boys
and Barefoot Boy With Cheek)
HAPPINESS CAN’T BUY MONEY
With tuition costs steadily on the rise, more and more under
graduates are looking into the student loan plan. If you are
one such, you would do well to consider the case of Leonid
Sigafoos.
Leonid, the son of an unemployed bean gleaner in Straight
ened Circumstances, Montana, had his heart set on going to
college, but his father, alas, could not afford to send him.
Leonid applied for a Regents Scholarship, but his reading
speed, alas, was not very rapid-—three words an hour —and
before he could finish the first page of his exam, the Regents
had closed their briefcases crossly and gone home. Leonid then
applied for an athletic scholarship, but he had, alas, only a single
athletic skill—picking up beebees with his toes—and this, alas,,
aroused only fleeting enthusiasm among the coaches.
And then—happy day 1—Leonid learned of the student loan
plan: he could borrow money for his tuition and repay it in
easy installments after he left school!
Happily Leonid enrolled in the Southeastern Montana Col-
-W k hi, Ms, onh^Simk Athletic Ml
lege of Lanolin and Restoration Drama and happily began a
college career that grew happier year by year. Indeed, it be
came altogether ecstatic in his senior year because Leonid met
a coed named Anna Livia Plurabelle with hair like beaten gold
and eyes like two sockets full of Lake Louise. Love gripped
them in its big moist palm, and they were betrothed on St.
Crispin’s Day.
Happily they made plans to be married immediately after
commencement—plans, alas, that were never to come to fruition
because Leonid, alas, learned that Anna Livia, like himself,
was in college on a student loan, which meant that he not only
had to repay his own loan after graduation but also Anna
Livia’s and the job, alas, that was waiting for Leonid at the
Butte Otter Works simply did not pay enough, alas, to cover
both loans, plus rent and food and clothing and television
repairs.
Heavy hearted, Leonid and Anna Livia sat down and lit
Marlboro Cigarettes and tried to find an answer to their prob
lem—and, sure enough, they did! I do not know whether or
not Marlboro Cigarettes helped them find an answer; all I know
is that Marlboros taste good and look good and filter good, and
when the clouds gather and the world is black as the pit from
pole to pole, it is a heap of comfort and satisfaction to be sure
that Marlboros will always provide the same easy pleasure,
the same unstinting tobacco flavor, in all times and climes and
conditions. That’s all I know.
Leonid and Anna livia, I say, did find an answer—a very
simple one. If their student loans did not come due until they
left school, why then they just wouldn’t leave school 1 So after
receiving their bachelor’s degrees, they re-enrolled and took
master’s degrees. After that they took doctor’s degrees—loads
and loads of them—until today Leonid and Anna Livia, both
aged 87, both still in school, hold doctorates in Philosophy,
Humane Letters, Jurisprudence, Veterinary Medicine, Civil
Engineering, Optometry, Woodpulp, and Dewey Decimals.
Their student loans, at the end of the last fiscal year,
amounted to a combined total of nineteen million dollars—a
sum which they probably would have found some difficulty in
repaying had not the Department of the Interior recently de
clared them a National Park. © xgea Max stmimao
* stf *
BILLY WILDER’S
THIS
PICTURE
IS FOR
ADULTS
ONLY
mwa
DOUgE
TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION*
FIESTA NITE
TONIGHT 6 P. M.
“LA CUCARACHA”
You don’t need a student loan—just a little loose change—
to grab a pack of smoking pleasure: Marlboros, sold in all
fifty states in familiar soft pack and Flip-Top box.
PEANUTS
fUSTMMhyj think MV \
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\ QUITE IMPRESSED /
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