The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 12, 1965, Image 2

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    THE BATTALION
Page 2 College Station, Texas Friday, March 12, 1965
BATTALION EDITORIALS
High School Seniors
Face Big Decision
Welcome High School Career Day guests!
A&M sets this weekend aside each year in your honor
to aid you in making one of the most important decisions
of your lifetime—the choice of a university.
Saturday you will be exposed to numerous speeches
and tours, all designed to show off our university’s facilities.
But much of what A&M has to offer cannot be covered by
a boastful lecture or an extensive tour, for our most valuable
attribute can only be found in the minds of our students.
This, of course, is the famous Aggie Spirit—that unequaled,
intangible devotion to the institution of A&M.
Before you decide where to spend the next four years
of your life it might be well to decide if temporary pleasures
can compensate for long term goals. The pleasure seekers
are wasting their time at A&M. If college life represents
to you four years of entertainment. College Station has little
to offer.
On the other hand, if you are the serious student whc
puts the value of an education above social pleasures—
observe closely.
Academic excellence in all fields is rapidly becoming
a reality at A&M. The internationally known Corps of
Cadets is one of the finest military organizations in the
nation—rivaling the federal service academies in the pro
duction of elite military personnel.
In short, Aggies play the game of life for keeps, and
they play it hard. There might be a place for you on our
greatest winning team.
That Was
CADET SLOUCH by Ji m Earle
“I know your intentions were good, but you may have
defeated your purpose!”
Bulletin Board
MONDAY
Electrical Engineers Wives Club
will meet at 8 p.m. in the YMCA
Building. A Tupperware party
will be held and friends are in
vited.
The Physics Wives Club will
meet at 7:30 p.m. in the home of
Mrs. Nuttall at 1109 Aushburn,
College Station. “Southeast Asia”
will be the program topic.
Range and Wildlife Manage
ment Wives Club will meet at
7:30 p.m. in the home of Mrs.
J. D. Dobb at 1307 Leacret, Col
lege Station.
Civil Engineers Wives Club
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the
Merle Norman Studio at 104
South College.
HALL HURDLES
LOUISVILLE (AP) — There
were some unusual obstacles
in the hall of Trinity High
School’s third floor this winter.
Hurdles were setup as a training
ground for a school trackman.
Trinity has no gym and the track
man was pointing for an indoor
meet.
CORRECTION
SAFEWAY GROCERY
THURSDAY, MARCH II, 1965
Should Have Read
Sugar With $5.00 Purchase 10-Lhs 30C
Flour 5 Lb. Bag 39c
Where The
PALACE
Brtjan Z'StiW
NOW SHOWING
QUEEN
DOUBLE FEATURE
Beatties
In
“HARD DAYS
NIGHTS’’
&
Elvis Presley
In
“FOLLOW THAT
DREAM”
CUSTOMER IS
KING
W
Sts
One of the
grams inter:
University is
Cl
SPECIA1
Cinem
The Sheep
That Was
Job
Long ago in a remote and far
away land there lived a shepherd
who faithfully watched over his
flock of sheep. Every morning
the shepherd called his lead sheep
to guide the rest of the flock out
to pasture. The lead sheep could
be identified easily because he
wore a bell.
Whenever one of the sheep was
bad, the shepherd always met
with the lead sheep to decide what
should be done. If a sheep was
very bad, the decision was always
the same — the bad sheep was
thrown to the wolves as an ex
ample to the others.
It was generally a good herd.
However, there was one sheep in
the group that had an annoying
habit. He liked to butt heads
with the others while they grazed.
FOR FUN & RECREATION
TURF GREEN
MINIATURE GOLF
COURSE
will be open for play
March 12
3 p. m. till 11 p. m. daily
Located at 120 Highway 6 So.
College Station
For party rates phone 846-8097
This habit annoyed a few of the
group but most of them looked
upon it as harmless tomfoolery.
It didn’t please the shepherd
at all, though. He liked to re
lax while the flock was grazing
but the sight of the mischievous
sheep cavorting around while the
others were trying to eat brother-
ed him.
Then one day this sheep went
too far. He butted another sheep
too hard and hurt him. This
angered the rest of the flock
very much. It angered them so
much that when the shepherd
seized the misbehaving sheep and
threw him to the wolves, nobody
objected. They didn’t even ob
ject to the shepherd’s failure to
consult the lead sheep before he
did it.
Not long afterwards, another
sheep began to bother the shep
herd.? This sheep was always
getting in the shepherd’s way and
the shepherd kept tripping over
him. This aggravated the shep
herd so much that one day in a
fit of rage he suddenly threw
this sheep to the wolves too.
The rest of the flock had a
hard time going to sleep that
night. —Presswood and Elmore
Ladies FREE
Bowling- Instructions
for the beginning bowler.
Free coffee & nursery
while bowling.
Next Class Starts
Tuesday, March 16
9:30 A. M.
Celebrity Lanes
Palasota at Groesbeck
Bryan 822-1135
Open Daily at 1:00 P. M.
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 ; Robert
Knight, College of Arts and Sciences; J. G. McGuire, College of Engineering; Dr.
Page Morgan, College of Agriculture; and Dr. R. S. Titus, 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. Bights of republication of all other matter here
in are also reserved.
Second-Class postage paid
at College Station, Texas.
MEMBER:
The Associated Press
Texas Press Assn.
Represented nationally by
National Advertising
Service, Inc., New York
City, Chicago, Los An
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 m
editorial office. Room 4,
ay be made by telephoning: VI 6_6618 or VI 6-4910 or at the
YMCA Building. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415.
EDITOR - - RONALD L. FANN
Managing Editor Glenn Dromgoole
MONDAY
Cutler-Hammer — electrical
engineering, industrial engineer
ing, mechanical engineering.
Hallibuton Company — chemi
cal engineering, mechanical engi
neering, petroleum engineering,
electrical engineering, chemistry.
Haskins & Sells — accounting.
Radiation, Inc. — electrical
engineering, mechanical engineer
ing.
Rural Electrification Admini
stration, USD A — electrical engi
neering, mechanical engineering.
Lockheed-California Company
— aerospace engineering, civil
engineering, electrical engineer
ing, mathematics, mechanical en
gineering, physics.
TUESDAY
Allied Chemical Corporation —
The
COFFEE LOFT
Tonight
«
presents
NANCE
LIPSCOMB
American Folk
Songster
No Charge
North Gate
Tauber at Sulphur Springs
FRIDAY 7:15 P. M.
“EARTH vs. THE
FLYING SAUCERS”
and
“BALLAD OF A
SOLDIER”
SATURDAY 1:15 P. M.
and
“BALLAD OF A
SOLDIER”
SATURDAY MIDNIGHT &
SUNDAY 5:30 P. M.
a nmuc new roini ^ * maijottc tun
UTM0V0 WALftUH
Calls
Shaffer's University Bookstore
A SEVEN
chemical engineering, chemistry,
mechanical engineering.
Central Washington State Col
lege — biology, business admini
stration, chemistry, economics, ed
ucation & psychology, English,
geography, geology, history &
government, mathematics, phy
sics, political science, psychology,
Russian, sociology, Spanish,
The ONLY Place To Buy Your
Textbooks & School Supplies — Records
We Buy Books — Anytime!
Service Is Our Specialty
speech.
Fluor Corporation, Mid-Contin
ent Division — chemical engineer
ing, civil engineering.
Pratt & Whitney Aircraft —
aerospace engineering, chemistry,
chemical engineering, mathema
tics, electrical engineering, me
chanical engineering, nuclear en
gineering.
U. S. Dept, of Interior — civil
engineering, electrical engineer
ing, mechanical engineering.
All home town and profes
sional club representatives
must turn in all sweetheart
pictures, president pictures
and write-up to the Aggie-
land office by March 15 if
they are to go in the AG-
GIELAND.
DANCE
THE CONTINENTALS
At
SNOOK HALL
Snook, Texas
SATURDAY
MARCH 13
Mgrs. Mr. and Mrs.
Johnnie Grabarsch'ick
BUNGLED
A
BANQUET
LATELY?
You have Ramada’s sympathies.
That’s why we set up our Banquet
Planning Service ... to avoid the
hundred or so “disasters” possible
at any group’s important banquet
meeting. Ramada Inn banquets are
perfect simply because Ramada has.
the know-how. Never go through a
do-it-yourself “bungled banquet”
again. Let Ramada make your next
feast a fiesta ... not a fiasco!
RAMADA’
C__A«XSL«/tAf
INN
fan. Lpaa
FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION
Call Ramada’s Banquet Planning Divi
sion— Ramada Inn, 3801 E. Van Buren
— 275-4741 —Phoenix.
m CHEVROLET
These great performers are the lowest priced
models at oar One-Slop Shopping Center
Top to bottom: Chevy U 100, Corvair 500, Chevelle 300,
Chevrolet Biscayne. All 2-door models.
Each of these beauties is the lowest
priced in its line. But the ride doesn’t
show it. Or the interior. Or the
performance.
That luxurious Biscayne is as roomy
as many expensive cars, has color-keyed
interiors, plush vinyls, fine fabrics, full
deep-twist carpeting.
Chevelle, America’s favorite inter-
mediate-size car, has clean new styling,
wide doors, roomy, tasteful interiors
and Chevrolet easy-care features.
Chevy II got a lot smarter for ’65—
but stayed sensible! Still family-size,
easy to handle, economical, and the
lowest priced Chevrolet you can buy.
Or get a sporty rear-engine hardtop
in a Corvair Sport Coupe or Sport
Sedan for fun in the months ahead.
Chevrolet, Chevelle and Chevy II are
available with the Turbo-Thrift Six for
fuel economy, quick warmups, quiet
idling. It’s light, efficient, smooth and
spirited.
Corvair’s air-cooled rear-mounted
Turbo-Air Six delivers the best balance
and traction for
this size car.
So be practical.
Only you will
know. Because it
sure won’t show!
discover the
difference
Drive something really new —discover the difference at your Chevrolet dealer’s
Chevrolet • Chevelle • ChevyII• Corvair- Corvette
“PAJAfl
OUR i
1st Show
“PHAN']
OF TI
OPER.
WAN']
One day . .
3<; per wore
Minim
E
4 p.m. day
Clas
90? p
ea
F(
T
Good rich top
TA 2-3980.
NOTIC
For sale appro
sizes in frames,
able and sealed
office of the D
Stores, B&U bui
10 A. M. MONi
The pictures ma
ing the Inventoi
address. For ir
The right is resi
bids and waive
1962 Triumph
C.V. after 5 :00.
’64 Red Triu
12,000 actual mi
Must sell this
air conditioned,
dition. 504-B ih
Store wide s
Three stores of
Custom and De
gain Barn, Used
The Colonel's C
Antiques. KOC
INGS, Navasota
HC
RAI
SALE
KEN’S
303 W. 21
INSTA
For inform
Aids, E
Cal
JACK £
Lincoln-M<
Sales, i
Graduatin
Comple
Body-
Pat Qui
1215 Texas