Page 4 ^ r_ THE BATTALION Thursday, June 7, 1951 ft ^ Show Handicraft Work Members of the handicraft group' of the summer recreation program proudly show these pieces of craftmanship which they made from clay and aluminum, last year. The group will meet each Monday and Thursday at 7:30 p. m. Former Students Group to Meet Next year’s Development Fund projects and the complete pro gram for 1951-52 are subjects to be discussed at the Association of Former Students Executive Board meeting June 22-24. The Association’s officers will meet with the Executive Board members at the beach home of Pat Wheat, ’28, at Caplen, near Gal veston. HOMEMAKER'S GUIDE TO BEEF CUTS Mrs. America, this chart showsi you by name and shape each of the standard cuts of beef made to be sold at retail from the wholesale cuts in the center of the chart. Each of these beef cuts is subject to dollars-and-cents price ceilings at your re tail meat shop. Your butcher was required to start selling un der the new ceiling prices on May 14 and must have these ceiling prices posted in his store by June 4. MacArthur To Talk From Capital Steps Austin, June 7—(A 1 )—The House and Senate will be seated in front of General MacArthur when he ad dresses a joint session on the steps of the capitol June 13. The general will arrive in Aus tin at 12:30 p.m. for his first stop on his Texas tour. Rep. Jerry Steward of Fairfield, a retired Rear Admiral who heads the House group on arrangements, said he had been informed the General preferred to go to his ho tel suite for a rest. A luncheon at the Governor’s Mansion had been arranged but cancelled. MacArthur will speak at 4 p.m. The General's party will include Mrs. MacArthur; their son, Arthur; his Chinese nurse; Maj. Gen. Court ney Whitney; Col. Sydney Buff; the General’s pilot; and a civilian aide. The only arrangements still un decided today were decorations and the kind of procession will follow MacArthur from Austin’s Munici pal Airport after he lands. The resolution inviting MacAr thur to speak carried no appropria tion. Steward said many persons wanted to contribute. Camera Club Plans Meeting in MSC The MSC Camera Club will be gin its summer program tonight at 7:30 p. m. with the first in a series of discussions on picture printing. The discussions will be offered to all who are interested and will be.in simple terms and language easy to understand. Printing and developing instruc tions will be offered as a second feature of the program, the pur pose of which is to help everyone get better pictures and more en joyment from their picture tak ing. Club members will have access to the MSC darkroom and all its facilities. A regular meeting sche dule will be arranged. The officers of the club are Henry Cole, president; Alvin Aaronson, vice-president and Bob Alderice, treasurer. The Last Word June Weddings Crowd Calendar For Many Aggies By VIVIAN CASTLEBERRY Battalion Women’s Editor It’s all over now. And by the time you read this, the cycle will have begun again. Through the heat of the summer some 2000 students, their profs and most of the A&M staff will swelter in the business of keeping education moving. As for us, we’re headed vacationward—in fact, will be well on our way by the time this finds its way into The Bat talion. But we’ll be back! And while our husband is one of the Texas Aggies who completes summer camp this year, we’ll be hanging around for occasional visits with the many we’ve come to know through these pages. GOLD BAND, LEFT HAND. John W. Cronin, MS ’46, and Barbara Mary Hadfield of Altedena, Calif., were mar ried Saturday in Altadena. The bride was graduated from Academy of the Holy Names in Rome, N. Y. and from Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, N. Y. The couple will live in Lafayette, La. . . . A Tulsa, Oklahoma wedding recently joined Betty Jean Griffin and James T. Coleman, Aggie-ex. After a wedding trip to the Gulf Coast, Mr. and Mrs. Coleman are at home in Tulsa. . . . S/Sgt. Sidney M. Osborn, ’44 Aero, and Helen Far-r will be married on June 23 at the home of the bride-elect in Dallas. Sid is stationed with the Army Air Force at Hensley Field. His bride-elect attended TSCW and SMU. Lt. William, T. Rife, Jr., ’48 Ch. E, and Merry Elizabeth Cadden were joined in matrimony recently in Victoria. Their attendants were Mrs. Archie D. Johnston, the bride’s sister as matron of honor, and Aggie Jim Beck as best man. The couple live at Fort Hood where Lt., Rife is stationed On July 14 a wedding in Queen of Peace Church, Houston, will unite Barbara Pluecker and Leo J. Dielmann, Jr., ’4G Arch. The bride-elect is a graduate of Incarnate World High School in Houston and attended Rice Institute and the University of Houston. Gayle L. Clemons, AH ’48, and Bobbie Janett Reynolds were mar ried on June 3 in Denton’s Little Chapel-in-the-Woods. Bobbie Janette has just graduated from TSCW where she was a member of Delta Phi Delta and the Alice Freeman Palmer social club. Neeta Ball attended the bride as maid of honor. . . . Thomas Ben Williams, Aggie pre-med student and Jo Ann Jones are to be married soon. Tom Ben is sche duled to graduate this summer. His fiancee is a sophomore general education major at TSCW. NURSERY NEWS. Aggie baseball pitcher Sam Blanton and his wife Nelda are parents of a future Aggie athlete. The youngster, weighing 7 lb. 5 oz. put in his appearance last Tuesday evening in Bryan’s St. Joseph Hospital. Young Blanton’s folks from Beaumont, live at 4501 College Main.,. . . Ed and Freida Aman have christened their new son Phillip Bruce., . . Martha Cadwalder was the surprised honoree at a shower re cently hosted by Darnell Beish and attended by twelve guests. Mar tha, the wife of vet student George Cadwalder, received an array of lovely presents from well-wishers. VISITORS TO AGGIELAND. Among the recent visitors on the campus was Peggy McClain from Waxahachie and Dallas. Peggy, a vivacious little brownette, comes down on weekends sometimes when her boy friend, Bob Blum of Dallas, can’t get up for the weekend. On Peggy’s recent visit, the couple was looking over College View apartments with an eye toward what they could do to make one into a home for themselves. . . . Eleanor York, another sometimes visitor to College Station, will arrive sometime today from Dallas where she will be among the audience when her fiance, Henry George Phillips, receives his degree Friday night. . . . Among the recent visitors in our home was Sue Patton from Houston, our college roommate with whom we reminisced about “the good old Hilltop days.” Sue’s opinion on the MSC, A&M’s living 1 room, was a summation of many remarks we’ve heard about the place. “It’s the most beautiful thing of its kind I’ve ever seen.” Pointers on pins. New styles have decreed that jewelry is fashion able in many places on women’s apparel. Earrings go to the feet as sparklers on plain shoes; a new chemical glue fastens pinless jewelry right onto the flesh; charm bracelets are worn watch-chain style from belts. Many pins and clips are used to fasten on flowers at the throat, to accent a pocket on the skirt and on the back of blouses. This is all very charming and pretty, when used correctly. But one work of warning, please: keep your sweetheart pins on the front of your blouses. These pins, like sorority and fraternity pins, should be worn over the heart. ADD THIS TO YOUR jewelry collection notes: Fasten both earrings to one ear for an unusual effect. This, note will be especially interesting to busy secretaries who like to wear earrings, but find them a nuisance when answering telephones. An oldie now that summer’s here again: For an especial cooling effect when summer heat swelters, dash on a breath of cologne just out of the refrigerator. Keep your favorite cologne in the refrigerator ■—the cap screwed on tightly, of course—and use it liberally to help beat the heat. WHERE HAVE I SEEN YOU BEFORE? Aggies may be asking that question soon of a student who enrolled in A&M this week. He may be Lonnie Holland, big (6 ft. 1 in., 185 lb.) brunette fellow, and you may have seen him when you were passing (or failing) the test for your driver’s license. Lonnie has been with the State Highway De partment as a Driver’s License Examiner for several years. He’s quit ting the job to complete his degree—lacks two years. He owns his home in Bryan and is married. His wife, Mary Jane, will be an at tractive addition to the college wife set, and his young daughter, Sherrie Lynn, will join the Cradle Club. DIRTY TRICKS DEPARTMENT. We’d like to know the end of this story: After an Aggie joyously left the campus Wednesday after noon headed Dentonward to see the girl friend, two of his buddies got together, sent the girl a wire: “Sorry, can’t make it. Letter of explanation follows.” Ridegway, Hope, DiMaggio Among Top American Pops ‘Ike’ Warns Reds In D-Day Speech USE BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO BUY, SELL, KENT OK TRADE. Rates .... 3c a word per Insertion with a tfic minimum. Space rate In classified lection .... 60c per column-inch. Send 111 classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES SFFICE. All ads must be received In Stu dent Activities office by 10 a.m. on the lay before publication. • HELP WANTED • STUDENT with sign painting and drafting experience needed in advertising Depart ment of Memorial Student Center. Should have some morning hours free. See Mrs. Nowlin, at M.S.C. Management Office. • FOR SALE • 1047—98 CONVERTIBLE Oldsmobile, per fect condition, White sidewall tires, ra dio and heater. Call 2-8879. • FOR RENT • Af’AjrtMENl 1 furnished or unfurnished, North Gate, College Station. Contact owner at 420 College Main. Phone 4-1197 or apply 407 Tauber after 5:00 p.m. SMALL FURNISHED apartment, private bath, bills paid. $35.00. Similar apart ment, share bath, $32.50. Garages $5.00. Near Campus Theater. Phone 4-1250. COOL BEDROOM, 2 closets, adjoining bath, garage. Rent reasonable. One or two. 200 W. Carson, Phone 2-7390. FURNISHED apartment, air conditioner, bills paid, garage. 2502 So. Hwy. 6. Phone 3-3641. 2 NICELY furnished apartments, private bath, electric refrigerator, garage, near Campus. Phone 4-9428. Prompt Radio Service —Call— Sosolik’s Radio Service 712 S. Main St. Ph. 2-1941 Bryan STUDENT WIFE wanted for work in Cof fee Shop Dining Room of M.S.C. Ap ply in person to Mrs. Nowlin u\ M.S.C. Management Office. • WANTED TO BUY • ONE COMPLETE nursery chair. Phone 6-2704. USED CLOTHES and shoes, men’s — women’s — and children’s. Curtains, spreads, dishes, cheap furniture. 602 N. Main, Bryan, Texas. • HOME REPAIR • ALL TYPES home repair work—additions, roofing, siding, painting, concrete work, and redecorating. Low down payment and 30 months to pay. For free esti mates call 4-9589 or 4-4236. • MISCELLANEOUS • Official Notice A student assistant is needed for soph omore physics laboratories Mondays, Wed nesdays and Fridays 2:00 to 5:00 P.M. Compensation is $.70 per hour. Men who have completed sophomore physics courses with superior records are invited to apply immediately at the office of the Physics Department. J. G. Potter Head, Dept, of Physics New York, June 7—b 2 ?)—Mem bers of the Boys’ Clubs of Ameri can yesterday announced selection of their “Favorite American Fath ers” in seven fields: Military—General Matthew B. Ridgeway. Radio—Bob Hope. Sports—Joe Di Maggio. Govemment—Vice President Al- ben W. Barkley. Television—Dan Seymour. Judiciary—Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson. Movies—Robert Young. The selections—exclusive of the Boys’ own dads, of course—were announced by the clubs in connec tion with Father’s Day, June 17. The announcement said the boys decided that “a dad who won’t go fishing or play ball with his son isn’t worth his weight in father hood.” “The boys,” the clubs said, “were overwhelmingly of the sentiment House Passes India Famine Relief Bill Washington, June 7 — )— A compromise bill to loan India $190,- 000,000 for famine relief was pass ed by the House yesterday and sent to the Senate. Passage was 255 to 82. that, for him to be a real dad, he must share activities with his boy. It’s not nearly enough for pop to supply junior with material com forts.” The boys said the seven fathers named met the major specifica tions for a “real dad”, as well as: • “Firmness. A steady hand to guide them on the right path. © “Understanding. An apprecia tion of the fact that boys think dif ferently than adults; that some times a boy would rather play with his friends than do chores. • “Sense of humor. An ability to laugh if the window is broken by a baseball. • “Companionship. Giving the boy a feeling that, come what may, he’s got a real friend in dad.” Bayeux, France, June 7 —— Gen. Eisenhower returned on D- Day plus seven years to Norman dy’s dearly bought beaches and hedgerows yesterday and bluntly warned the Communist world to remember the lesson taught Hit ler’s Nazis. “All the free world would rally here again” if western civilization is threatened by aggression, the supreme commander declared at Ste. Mere Eglise, where the first waves of U. S. parachute troopers paved the way for beach assaults on Hitler’s fortress Europe in 1944. “Today the western world is uni ted to defend freedom before it is lost,” he told a crowd of 8,000 in another short speech at the British cemetery in Bayeux. Bryan Business Machine Co. SALES — SERVICE — RENTALS SUPPLIES Royal Typewriters Victor Adding Machines 209 N. Main Bryan Dial 2-1328 Specials for Friday & Saturday — June 8th & 9th • SPECIALS • Pillsbury Flour 5 lbs. 45c Bits O Sea—Vi Grated Tuna 27c Dole—Flat Sliced Pineapple . 2 for 27c Imperial Pure Cane Sugar . 5 lbs. 45c Kraft’s Miracle Whip Salad Dressing . . . pt. 35c Crisco 3 lbs. 98c Fair Maid—All 39c Varieties LAYER CAKES .... each 35c Nabisco—7(4-Oz. Box VANILLA WAFERS .... 22c Cloverbloom “99” MARGARINE 35c Kimbell’s—No. 2 BLACKBERRIES 19c Kimbell’s—No. 2 WHOLE BEETS ... 2 for 29c Pillsbury—1 Vi PANCAKE MIX 17c Diamond MUSTARD or—No. 2 TURNIP GREENS . . 2 for 21c Pillsubury PIE CRUST MIX . . . . pkg. 17c Del Monte—303 FRUIT COCKTAIL 23c American—Flat SARDINES 2 for 17c 8-Oz. MY BAR B Q SAUCE .... 29c Gerber’s BABY FOOD can 9c 15-Oz. HORMEL TAMALES .... 24c Texsun—46-Oz. GRAPEFRUIT JUICE . .. .23c Bar None—300 DOG & CAT FOOD 9c 16 Count LIPTON’S TEA BAGS ... 19c With 10c Coupon Good on Next Purchase SUPER SUDS pkg. 31c Cashmere Bouquet—Bath Size SOAP . . . . . . . 2 for 27c Diamond Cut—No. 2 GREEN BEANS . . . 2 for 27c Diamond—303 GREEN & WHITE LIMAS .2-31c Zero DESERT MIX ... .2 pkgs. 25c Del Monte—8-Oz. TOMATO SAUCE ... 3 for 23c 7 Minute—With 10c Coffee Coupon PIE MIX pkg. 23c Gooch’s—12-Oz. EGG NOODLES . . . . . . 21c Lilly—Vi Gallon MELLOKREAM . . . ... 59c KimbelTs—No. 2'/ 2 SWEET POTATOES . . . . 19c Carton CIGARETTES .... . . $1.89 Hunt’s—No, 2/i SLICED PEACHES . . . . 29c Borden’s Assorted—5-Oz. Jar CHEESE SPREADS . . . . 24c Hormel—3-Oz. DEVILED TONGUE . 2 for 33c Dinty Moore—1 '/z Lb. BEEF STEW .... ... 45c Deer Park Club—Lb. Can ASSORTED COOKIES . . . 45c Swansdown CAKE FLOUR . . . . box 39c Pint WESSON OIL .... ... 39c JELLQ . pkg. 9c Kobey—2'^-Oz. SHOESTRING POTATOES . . 10c 7-UP — DR. PEPPER—Carton 6 R. C. COLA .... . . 23c Del Monte—12-Oz. VAC PAK CORN . . . . 2 for 35c Dole—211 PINEAPPLE JUICE . . 2 for 21c 5 Zi -Oz. RICE KRISPIES . . . .2 for 29c Peter Pan—12-Oz. PEANUT BUTTER 29c Kimbell’s—If'/^-Oz. Mug APPLE JELLY 23c /i Pound KAY CHEDDAR CHEESE ... 29c Meadow Gold SWEET CREAM BUTTER. lb. 79c Fresh White INFERTILE EGGS . . . iloz. 49c • FROZEN FOODS • Blue Water Ocean Perch .... lb. 45c Minute Maid—6-Oz.—Makes 6 Big Glasses Lemonade Mix . . 2 for 33c Honor Brand BROCCOLI pkg. 29c Honor Brand PEAS pkg. 25c Birdseye CUT CORN pkg. 23c Honor Brand—French Style BEANS pkg. 25c • MEATS • Heart O Texas Fryers lb. 55c Dixon or HORMEL WIENERS . . lb. 49c Large SLICED BOLOGNA ... lb. 59c Sliced CHOPPED HAM .... lb. 69c Armour’s DEXTER BRAND BACON, lb. 43c Rath’s BLACKHAWKBACON . .lb.59c K raf Ps LONGHORN CHEESE . . lb. 59c Pork Loin END ROAST lb. 49c Veal CHUCK ROAST lb. 79c Grade A VEAL CHOPS lb. 89c Veal STEW MEAT lb. 55c Boneless & Ready to Eat—6 Lb., 12-Oz. ARMOUR’S CANNED HAM. $7.89 Fresh JUMBO SHRIMP .... lb. 75c POTATO SALAD .... lb. 39c • PRODUCE • Central American BANANAS 2 lbs. 25c Fancy WINESAP APPLES ... lb. 9c California Imperial Valley CANTALOUPE . . . . each 19c Texas Valley WATERMELONS ... lb. 8c California PASCAL CELERY . 2 stalks 27c California SUNKIST LEMONS . . doz. 25c Home Grown GREEN ONIONS . . . bun. 9c California Long White POTATOES .... 10 lbs. 49c Large Slicing Home Grown TOMATOES lb. 15c Florida SEEDLES GRAPEFRUIT, 2 - 15c • SUNDRIES • Rubber Lined—Lace Trimmed—Snap on Type Blue or Pink RAYON BABY PANTIES, pr. 79c Johnson’s—50c Size BABY OIL 39c Johnson’s—50c Size BABY POWDER 39c Playtex Hand Saver RUBBER MITS pr. 69c