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THE BATTALION Page 2 College Station, Texas Wednesday, November 16,1960 CADET SLOUCH by Jim Earle] BATTALION EDITORIALS Sanction, Backing Every year over 900 Texas A&M students participate in some minor sports activity. These students are active members of the pistol team, the wrestling team, the badminton team, the water polo team, or any of the six other organized lesser sport teams and clubs on the Texas A&M campus. Each year these clubs and teams travel hundreds of miles throughout the state to participate in meets with similar organizations from other colleges. And the Aggies usually make an accreditable showing on these trips. Up until now, they have received neither money nor sanc- tion from Texas A&M. At present, aid is obtained from the Memorial Student Center and amounts to less than $1 per student per year. The Exchange Store Advisory Board alloted $1,500 for lesser sports at its November meeting, but even this added money doesnt come close to meeting the needs of trips, equipment, uniforms and supplies. Sanction and backing from Texas A&M is very much needed if these teams are to continue to represent the school in the manner they have in the past. Job Interviews do you guys haftawalk in the street after Yell Practice?Arrest ofLouisana interpreting Judge Called For Soviet Money Effort Gets Worlds Deaf Ear Treatment The following firms will inter- view seniors Thursday: ir ir ir The Columbia-Southern Chem- ical Corp. will interview seniors majoring in electrical engineer- ing, mechanical engineering and chemistry in the Placement Office for positions on firms engineering staff. The Esso Research and Engi- neering Co. will talk to interested seniors majoring in chemical en- gineering for research positions in the petroleum products field. The Jersey Production Re search Corp. will hold interviews for seniors majoring in chemical engineering, petroleum engineer- ing and physical chemistry for research positions. The Sun Oil Co. will interview seniors majoring in chemical en- gineering, mechanical engineer- ing and petroleum engineering for placement in field* posts in the southwest. ^In addition, inter- ested graduate students may ap- ply for summer work in the pro- duction research laboratory in Dallas. The Transcontinental Pipeline Corp. will talk to seniors major- ing in chemical engineering, civil engineering, electrical engineer- ing and mechanical engineering interested in field pipeline work. The Pittsburgh-Des Moines Steel Co. will interview seniors with majors in architectural en- gineering and civil engineering. As engineer trainees each man will be given training in field construction, shop and sales work. UTTIE APS By The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS—The Louisi- ana Legislature and a Citizens Want To Be Mrs. A&M? Entries in the Mrs. Texas A&MContest being sponsored by the Aggie Wives Council are still being accepted. Mrs. Jean VaUght, chairman of the event, said that all wives of students currently enrolled at A&M are eligible to enter. Any Aggies wife wishing to enter the contest should send her name and address, along with a $2 entry fee to Mrs. Vaught at 801 Fairview Ave. in College Sta- tion. (Thanksgiving Day is the deadlfhe for entries. Mrs. Texas A&M will be named at a dance to be given by the council on Dec. 3. The dance will feature the music of the Aggie- land Combo. It will start at 8 p. m. It will be held in the Ball- room of the MSC. Tickets are $2 per couple. All entrants in the contest are asked to be at the Battalion office, in the basement of the YMCA Building, at 7:30 p. m. tonight to have their pictures made. Council rally Tuesday night call- ed for the impeachment and ar- rest of a federal judge who or- dered integration in New Orleans. At an angry Citizen Council meeting in New Orleans, a peti- tion was circled calling for the impeachment of U. S. Dist. Judge J. Skelly Wright. The council is a staunt segre- gationist groups A group of white mothers with children in one of the two schools integrated by four Negro first graders told the rally a march would be staged Wednesday morning on the New Orleans School Board office. The board, acting under federal order, au- thorized integration. Meanwhile, in the capital at Ba- ton Rmige, Rep. W. K. Brown told a special legislative session, Judge Wright should be jailed. The Senate adjourned, and in a sudden surprise the House clear- ed out scores of sectators and the galleryand the entire pressas is acted to adjourn the 12-day special session and start a new 30-day session after midnight. During the day in New Orleans, teen-agersrunning in packs of 100 to 200broke the peaceful mixing of the races in public schools. mis Wednesday - Thursday - Friday THE RAT RACEwith Tony Curtis Plus THE STORY ON PAGE ONEwith Rita Hayworth CORPS SENIORS and MILITARY STAFFS Aggieland Portrait Schedule CORPS SENIORS AND OUTFIT FIRST SERGEANTS will have their portrait made for the Aggie- land 61according to the fol- lowing schedule. Portraits will be made in Class A winter uni- form at the AGGIELAND STU- DIO between the hours of 8 A. M. and 5 P. M. Executive officers and 1st ser- geants will have portrait made in GH cap. Commanding officers will have boots. PLEASE MAKE AP- POINTMENT FOR THESE FULL LENGTH PORTRAITS, AT THE STUDIO. All men in the corps on any staff, BOTH JUNIORS AND SENIORS, will have their por- trait made for the Aggieland 61according to the following schedule. Nov. 14 - 15 2nd Brigade, 3rd, 4th, and 5th Battle Group Staffs Nov. 16 - 17 1st Wing, 1st, 2nd Group Staffs Nov. 16 - 17 2nd Wing, 3rd and 4th Group Staffs By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst The Soviet Unions effort to make her money appear as good or even better than that of the United States has fallen on the worlds deaf ear. Insofar as financial circles are concerned, Soviet rubles arent worth anything, and as a curren- cy they are merely a curiosity outside the U. S. S. R. There is no trade in them, and no commer- cial attempt to evaluate them. Countries which buy from the Soviets evaluate the goods against world prices, except in the satellites which are forced to pay Soviet prices, and pay in barter. Soviet loans to underde- veloped countries are on the same basis. In the U. S. S. R., the rubles Sound Off Editor, The Battalion: I would like to see editorial comment appear in The Battal- ion on the practical nature of the Bonfire. I know that this is indeed a grand Aggie tradition and that it makes woodsmen out of all those participating. But would it be too much to suggest that if even a portion of the wood burn- ed to ashes each year was cut into size for firewood, many needy families in our own backyard, the Bryan-College Station area, could be supplied with wood for the winter which they normally cant afford? If all this effort has to be spent on building a Bonfire, why not put some of it to good use? Jim CoVan, 62 Social Calendar Be perspicacious! Not this: a student who Studies drowsily no matter how much sleep he gets. This! Perspicacious... Sharp! NoDoz keeps you awake and alertsafely! The following organizations will meet on campus: Tonight The Civil Engineering Wives Club will meet at 8 p. m. in the South Solarium of the YMCA. Mrs. J. Gordon Gay, religious co- ordinator for Texas A&M, will present slides and a talk based on her recent visit to the Holy Land. All members and faculty wives from the Civil Engineering De- partment are invited. The Aggie Wives Bridge Club will meet at 7:30 p. m. in the Assembly Room of the Memorial Student Center. Thursday The Texas Society of Profes- sional Engineers will meet at 7:30 p. m. in the Assembly Room of the Texas Highway Department. On the agenda this week is a tour of the International Shoe Co. Plant in Bryan. The California Hometown Club will hold a meeting in the Mem- orial Student Center at 7:30 p. m. The Ft. Bend County Home- town Club will meet in Room 223 of the Academic Building at 7:30 p. m. value is fixed by decree. In 1950 there was an announced gold val- ue, in an effort to make it appear that the Soviet Union was going on the gold standard, but nobody, in or out of the Soviet Union, can convert rubles into gold. She pays her international bills in gold, not in rubles, and no banker outside the Iron Curtain where they cannot help itwould carry a Soviet balance in rubles. Incidentally, New York finan- cial experts estimate that the U. S. S. R., in the last half de- cade, has been paying out be- tween 150 and 250 million dollars worth of gold annually to meet her trade deficits outside the Iron Curtain. Inside the Soviet Union, Mon- days -effort to peg the ruble as better than equal to the dollar, making one new ruble worth about 10 old ones, may have more effect. France discovered several years ago that a similar opera- tion tended to increase respect for the franc and so enhanced its value at home. Experts believe there is a psy- chological result from giving peo- ple fewer monetary units which will buy as much as 10 times more than the old unit. If you find studying sometimes soporific (and who doesnt?) the word to remember is NoDoz®. NoDoz alerts you with a safe and accurate amount of caffeine—the same refreshing stimulant . , in coffee and tea. Yet non-habit-forming ^ NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. So to keep perspicacious during study and L s ' ^ examsand while driving, too( X always keep NoDoz in proximity. ^ Tbe safe stay awake tablet - available everywhere. Another fine product of Grove Laboratories: THE BATTALION Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu- lent writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax-supported, non- profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited and op- erated by students as a community newspaper and is under the supervision of the director of Student Publications at rexas A&M College. Members of the Student Publicatio blications Board are L. A. Duewall, director of Student Publications, chairman; Allen Schrader, School of Arts and Sciences; Willard I. Truettner, School of Engineering: Otto R. Kunze, School of Agriculture; and Dr. E. D. McMurry, School of Veterinary Medicine. Subscribe Nov at Halt Price* You con read this world-famous daily newspaper for the next six months for $5, just half the ■regular subscription rate. Get top news coverage. Enjoy special features. Clip for refer- ence work. Send your order today. Enclose check or money order. Use cou- pon below. The Christian Science Monitor p-CN One Norway St., Boston 15, Mass. Send your newspaper for the time checked. 6 months $5 1 year $10 College Student Faculty Member Name Address *This special offer available ONLY to college students, faculty members, and college libraries. City Zone 1 State pecial offer available ONLY to collegi PALACE NOW SHOWING NOW, FEAR POSSESSED HER...AS LOVE ONCE MAPI fip M DORIS DAYREX HARRISONj JOHN GAVIN M ii in Eastman COLOR SMYRNA LOYRODDYMcDOWALL AficfagAt | j^ce. No-One Will Be Admitted The Last 10 Minutes Of This Feature. FEATURE TIMES: 1:15 - 3:16 - 5:17 - 7:18 - 9:25 QUEEN Burt Lancaster, Frank Sinatra, Deborah Kerr In FROM HERE TO ETERNITYTwo Action Pack Terrific Thrillers Kirk Douglas, Anthony Quinn, Earl Holliman In LAST TRAIN TO GUN HILLThe 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 once a week during summer onday, s school. Entered as matter at the second-class the Po In College Statioi Post Office on, Texas, under the Act of Con- gress of March 8, 1870. MEMBER: The Associated Press Texas Press Assn. Represented nationally by National Advertising Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los An- geles and San Francisco. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news otherwise credited in the paper and local ne Rights of republication of all other matter the Associated Press lispatches credited to it ipo; In i ntaneous origin published herein are also reserved. paper and local ews of r here- News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 editorial office. Room 4, YMCA. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415. VI 6-4910 or at the Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester; $6 per school Advertising rate furnished on rei College Station, Texas. ister; $6 per school yeai Address: The Battaii $6.50 per full year, ion, Room 4, YMCA, BILL HICKLIN Joe Callicoatte .. ........ EDITOR Sports Editor TRIANGLES LUNCHEON MENUS Wednesday Deep Fried Devilled Crab w/tartar sauce............ 75 Veal Steak w/mushroom gravy..............................85 Chicken Fried Steak.................................................... 95 Roast Beef w/brown gravy....................................... 95 (Served w/two vegetables, salad, hot rolls, coffee or tea) Thursday Deep Fried Gulf Trout............... v:.............................75 Smothered Swiss Steak w/creole sauce................ ,85 Baked Ham w/raisin gravy....................................... 95 y Chicken Fried Steak.................................................... 95 (Served w/two vegetables, salad, hot rolls, coffee or Tea) SERVING HOURS 12:00 to 1:00 5:00 to 8:00 F. M. Have you looked at your calendar lately? The holidays are just around the corner. If you are planning a banquet or party, now is the time to make your reservations. We still have a few vacancies for parties. We can accomodate from 10 to 250 people. The TRIANGLE 3606 S. College TA 2-1352 Bryan TOWN HALL PRESENTS RAY CONNIFFS CONCERT IN STEREOFEATURING THE RAY CONNIFF ORCHESTRA AND CHORUS IN A LIVE 2 HOUR STEfcEO CONCERT White Coliseum NOVEMBER 17 B PM PEANUTS •pFANUTS- By Charles M. Schulz THAT5 A 6000 IDfA..llL 6ET VGU A BOTTLE OF "EAU OB JUMPROPE"! / I IdONDER OWAT IT > 16 THAT MAKES MUSICIANS, x 50 SARCASTIC/? > A
1

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Page 1: interpreting UTTIE APS mis PALACETHE BATTALION Page 2 College Station, Texas Wednesday, November 16,1960 CADET SLOUCH by Jim Earle] BATTALION EDITORIALS Sanction, Backing Every year

THE BATTALIONPage 2 College Station, Texas Wednesday, November 16,1960

CADET SLOUCH by Jim Earle]

BATTALION EDITORIALS

Sanction, BackingEvery year over 900 Texas A&M students participate in

some minor sports activity.These students are active members of the pistol team,

the wrestling team, the badminton team, the water polo team, or any of the six other organized lesser sport teams and clubs on the Texas A&M campus.

Each year these clubs and teams travel hundreds of miles throughout the state to participate in meets with similar organizations from other colleges. And the Aggies usually make an accreditable showing on these trips.

Up until now, they have received neither money nor sanc­tion from Texas A&M.

At present, aid is obtained from the Memorial Student Center and amounts to less than $1 per student per year. The Exchange Store Advisory Board alloted $1,500 for lesser sports at its November meeting, but even this added money doesn’t come close to meeting the needs of trips, equipment, uniforms and supplies.

Sanction and backing from Texas A&M is very much needed if these teams are to continue to represent the school in the manner they have in the past.

Job Interviews

do you guys hafta’ walk in the street after Yell Practice?”

Arrest ofLouisana interpreting

Judge Called For Soviet Money Effort GetsWorld’s Deaf Ear Treatment

The following firms will inter­view seniors Thursday:

ir ir irThe Columbia-Southern Chem­

ical Corp. will interview seniors majoring in electrical engineer­ing, mechanical engineering and chemistry in the Placement Office for positions on firms engineering staff.

★ ★ ★The Esso Research and Engi­

neering Co. will talk to interested seniors majoring in chemical en­gineering for research positions in the petroleum products field.

★ ★ ★The Jersey Production Re

search Corp. will hold interviews for seniors majoring in chemical engineering, petroleum engineer­ing and physical chemistry for research positions.

★ ★ ★The Sun Oil Co. will interview

seniors majoring in chemical en­gineering, mechanical engineer­ing and petroleum engineering for placement in field* posts in the southwest. ^In addition, inter­

ested graduate students may ap­ply for summer work in the pro­duction research laboratory in Dallas.

★ ★ ★The Transcontinental Pipeline

Corp. will talk to seniors major­ing in chemical engineering, civil engineering, electrical engineer­ing and mechanical engineering interested in field pipeline work.

★ ★ ★The Pittsburgh-Des Moines

Steel Co. will interview seniors with majors in architectural en­gineering and civil engineering. As engineer trainees each man will be given training in field construction, shop and sales work.

UTTIE APS

By The Associated PressNEW ORLEANS—The Louisi­

ana Legislature and a Citizens

Want To Be‘Mrs. A&M’?

Entries in the “Mrs. Texas A&M” Contest being sponsored by the Aggie Wives Council are still being accepted.

Mrs. Jean VaUght, chairman of the event, said that all wives of students currently enrolled at A&M are eligible to enter.

Any Aggies wife wishing to enter the contest should send her name and address, along with a $2 entry fee to Mrs. Vaught at 801 Fairview Ave. in College Sta­tion. (Thanksgiving Day is the deadlfhe for entries.

Mrs. Texas A&M will be named at a dance to be given by the council on Dec. 3. The dance will feature the music of the Aggie- land Combo. It will start at 8 p. m. It will be held in the Ball­room of the MSC. Tickets are $2 per couple.

All entrants in the contest are asked to be at the Battalion office, in the basement of the YMCA Building, at 7:30 p. m. tonight to have their pictures made.

Council rally Tuesday night call­ed for the impeachment and ar­rest of a federal judge who or­dered integration in New Orleans.

At an angry Citizen Council meeting in New Orleans, a peti­tion was circled calling for the impeachment of U. S. Dist. Judge J. Skelly Wright.

The council is a staunt segre­gationist groups

A group of white mothers with children in one of the two schools integrated by four Negro first graders told the rally a march would be staged Wednesday morning on the New Orleans School Board office. The board, acting under federal order, au­thorized integration.

Meanwhile, in the capital at Ba­ton Rmige, Rep. W. K. Brown told a special legislative session, Judge Wright should be jailed.

The Senate adjourned, and in a sudden surprise the House clear­ed out scores of sectators and the gallery—and the entire press— as is acted to adjourn the 12-day special session and start a new 30-day session after midnight.

During the day in New Orleans, teen-agers—running in packs of 100 to 200—broke the peaceful mixing of the races in public schools.

mis

Wednesday - Thursday - Friday“THE RAT RACE”

with Tony Curtis Plus

“THE STORY ON PAGE ONE”

with Rita Hayworth

CORPS SENIORS and

MILITARY STAFFS Aggieland

Portrait ScheduleCORPS SENIORS AND

OUTFIT FIRSTSERGEANTS will have their portrait made for the “Aggie- land ’61” according to the fol­lowing schedule. Portraits will be made in Class A winter uni­form at the AGGIELAND STU­DIO between the hours of 8 A. M. and 5 P. M.Executive officers and 1st ser­geants will have portrait made in GH cap.Commanding officers will have boots. PLEASE MAKE AP­POINTMENT FOR THESE FULL LENGTH PORTRAITS, AT THE STUDIO.All men in the corps on any staff, BOTH JUNIORS AND SENIORS, will have their por­trait made for the “Aggieland ’61” according to the following schedule.Nov. 14 - 15 2nd Brigade, 3rd,

4th, and 5th Battle Group Staffs

Nov. 16 - 17 1st Wing, 1st, 2nd Group Staffs

Nov. 16 - 17 2nd Wing, 3rd and 4th Group Staffs

By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst

The Soviet Union’s effort to make her money appear as good or even better than that of the United States has fallen on the world’s deaf ear.

Insofar as financial circles are concerned, Soviet rubles aren’t worth anything, and as a curren­cy they are merely a curiosity outside the U. S. S. R. There is no

trade in them, and no commer­cial attempt to evaluate them.

Countries which buy from the Soviets evaluate the goods against world prices, except in the satellites which are forced to pay Soviet prices, and pay in barter. Soviet loans to underde­veloped countries are on the same basis.

In the U. S. S. R., the ruble’s

Sound OffEditor,The Battalion:

I would like to see editorial comment appear in The Battal­ion on the practical nature of the Bonfire.

I know that this is indeed a grand Aggie tradition and that it makes woodsmen out of all those participating. But would it be too much to suggest that if even a portion of the wood burn­

ed to ashes each year was cut into size for firewood, many needy families in our own backyard, the Bryan-College Station area, could be supplied with wood for the winter which they normally can’t afford?

If all this effort has to be spent on building a Bonfire, why not put some of it to good use?

Jim Co Van, 62

Social Calendar

Be perspicacious!

Not this: a student who Studies drowsily no matter how much sleep he gets.

This! Perspicacious... Sharp! NoDoz keeps you awake and alert—safely!

The following organizations will meet on campus:

TonightThe Civil Engineering Wives

Club will meet at 8 p. m. in the South Solarium of the YMCA. Mrs. J. Gordon Gay, religious co­ordinator for Texas A&M, will present slides and a talk based on her recent visit to the Holy Land. All members and faculty wives from the Civil Engineering De­partment are invited.

The Aggie Wives Bridge Club will meet at 7:30 p. m. in the Assembly Room of the Memorial

Student Center.Thursday

The Texas Society of Profes­sional Engineers will meet at 7:30 p. m. in the Assembly Room of the Texas Highway Department. On the agenda this week is a tour of the International Shoe Co. Plant in Bryan.

The California Hometown Club will hold a meeting in the Mem­orial Student Center at 7:30 p. m.

The Ft. Bend County Home­town Club will meet in Room 223 of the Academic Building at 7:30 p. m.

value is fixed by decree. In 1950 there was an announced gold val­ue, in an effort to make it appear that the Soviet Union was going on the gold standard, but nobody, in or out of the Soviet Union, can convert rubles into gold. She pays her international bills in gold, not in rubles, and no banker outside the Iron Curtain — where they cannot help it—would carry a Soviet balance in rubles.

Incidentally, New York finan­cial experts estimate that the U. S. S. R., in the last half de­cade, has been paying out be­tween 150 and 250 million dollars worth of gold annually to meet her trade deficits outside ■ the Iron Curtain.

Inside the Soviet Union, Mon­day’s -effort to peg the ruble as better than equal to the dollar, making one new ruble worth about 10 old ones, may have more effect. France discovered several years ago that a similar opera­tion tended to increase respect for the franc and so enhanced its value at home.

Experts believe there is a psy­chological result from giving peo­ple fewer monetary units which will buy as much as 10 times more than the old unit.

If you find studying sometimes soporific (and who doesn’t?) the word to remember is NoDoz®. NoDoz alerts you with a safe and accurate amount of caffeine—the same refreshing stimulant . ,in coffee and tea. Yet non-habit-forming ^NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable.So to keep perspicacious during study and L s ' ^exams—and while driving, too— ( Xalways keep NoDoz in proximity. ^Tbe safe stay awake tablet - available everywhere. Another fine product of Grove Laboratories:

THE BATTALIONOpinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu-

lent writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax-supported, non­profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited and op­erated by students as a community newspaper and is under the supervision of the director of Student Publications at rexas A&M College.

Members of the Student Publicatioblications Board are L. A. Duewall, director of Student Publications, chairman; Allen Schrader, School of Arts and Sciences; Willard I. Truettner, School of Engineering: Otto R. Kunze, School of Agriculture; and Dr. E. D. McMurry, School of Veterinary Medicine.

Subscribe Nov at Halt Price*

You con read this world-famous daily newspaper for the next six months for $5, just half the ■regular subscription rate.Get top news coverage. Enjoy special features. Clip for refer­ence work.Send your order today. Enclose check or money order. Use cou­pon below.

The Christian Science Monitor p-CN One Norway St., Boston 15, Mass.

Send your newspaper for the time checked.

□ 6 months $5 □ 1 year $10 □ College Student □ Faculty Member

Name

Address

*This special offer available ONLY to college students, faculty members, and college libraries.

City Zone 1 State

pecial offer available ONLY to collegi

PALACENOW SHOWING

NOW, FEAR POSSESSED HER...AS LOVE ONCE MAPI

fipM

DORIS DAYREX HARRISON j JOHN GAVIN ■ M

ii in Eastman COLORSMYRNA LOY’RODDYMcDOWALL

AficfagAt |j^ce.

No-One Will Be Admitted The Last 10 Minutes Of This Feature.

FEATURE TIMES: 1:15 - 3:16 - 5:17 - 7:18 - 9:25

QUEENBurt Lancaster, Frank Sinatra, Deborah Kerr

In“FROM HERE

TO ETERNITY”

Two Action Pack

Terrific Thrillers

Kirk Douglas, Anthony Quinn, Earl Holliman

In“LAST TRAIN TO

GUN HILL”

The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A.&M. is published in College Sta­tion, Texas, daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods, Septem­ber through May, and once a weekonce a week during summer

onday, s school.

Entered as matter at the

second-class the Po

In College StatioiPost Office

on, Texas, under the Act of Con­gress of March 8, 1870.

MEMBER:The Associated Press

Texas Press Assn.

Represented nationally by National Advertising Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los An­geles and San Francisco.

The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news otherwise credited in the paper and local ne

Rights of republication of all other matter

the Associated Press lispatches credited to it ipo;In i

ntaneous origin published herein are also reserved.

paper and local ews of r here-

News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 editorial office. Room 4, YMCA. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415.

VI 6-4910 or at the

Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester; $6 per school Advertising rate furnished on rei College Station, Texas.

ister; $6 per school yeaiAddress: The Battaii

$6.50 per full year, ion, Room 4, YMCA,

BILL HICKLINJoe Callicoatte ..

........EDITORSports Editor

TRIANGLE’S LUNCHEON MENUS

WednesdayDeep Fried Devilled Crab w/tartar sauce............ 75Veal Steak w/mushroom gravy..............................85Chicken Fried Steak....................................................95Roast Beef w/brown gravy....................................... 95

(Served w/two vegetables, salad, hot rolls, coffee or tea)

ThursdayDeep Fried Gulf Trout...............v:.............................75Smothered Swiss Steak w/creole sauce................,85Baked Ham w/raisin gravy....................................... 95

y Chicken Fried Steak....................................................95(Served w/two vegetables, salad, hot rolls,

coffee or Tea)

SERVING HOURS 12:00 to 1:00 — 5:00 to 8:00 F. M.

Have you looked at your calendar lately? The holidays are just around the corner. If you are planning a banquet or party, now is the time to make your reservations. We still have a few vacancies for parties. We can accomodate from 10 to 250 people.

The TRIANGLE3606 S. College

TA 2-1352 Bryan

TOWN HALLPRESENTS

RAY CONNIFF’S“CONCERT

IN STEREO”FEATURING THE

RAY CONNIFF

ORCHESTRA

AND CHORUS

IN A LIVE

2 HOUR

STEfcEO

CONCERT

White ColiseumNOVEMBER 17 B PM

PEANUTS•pFANUTS-

By Charles M. Schulz

THAT5 A 6000 IDfA..llL 6ET VGU A BOTTLE OF "EAU OB JUMPROPE"!

/ I IdONDER OWAT IT > 16 THAT MAKES MUSICIANS,

x 50 SARCASTIC/? >

A