The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 10, 1949, Image 4

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student
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thel student senate Kleth Allsup;
that body shortly after his election. The
ite’s first meeting; of the scholastic year was:
ifrfrr
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held in the YMCA chap
where officers ‘ and
named.
ish, Game Members
[old Barbeque, Gance
Fish and Game Glut} members
ened their semester's} activities
esday night whejn 90 students,
ieir dates and wijres attended a
combination barbecue juid dance
it the American Li gion Hall.
Navy Patrol
Long FU.
Dean Led
AtflearneQub
in Arndr*
lonal rdati
Thursday hy
Chief wi
ican inte)
were disc
Dr. Ide P, Trotter, dean
the Graduate School. |
Dr. Trotter gave a tallk on
ternational > J Relations" before j a
Iraduate scnooi.
Trotter gave a tallk on “jn-
;ional Relations" before «
joint Meeting of the Hearne Shaki
peare Club and Hearne Stii
ay night
j committees were
I" i ," i
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•olhsr Forscosi
SAN DIE^tjO, Calif., Qct.
of'carrying th^iatobiic bomb
12:58 p.m. (C$}T) yesterday
the Aircraft Carrier
The flight; was
after launcjhini
air! 25 hours
; Cotndr. Fred
squadron five, 'Moffett Field,
a seven-man (jrew. i ' IJ i L >
The epochal flight was made from the
gihia, across the Caribbean tb the Panar
across the tip of the Yucata:
El Paso, Texas, Tuscon and Y
li' |lf
*omber Makes
vm Carrier
-idPVA Navy patrol bomber capable
titjd at the Naval Air Station here at
(ter a 4,863-}n!ile non-stop flight froip
th* Atlantic,
The plane carried
Midway, off Norfolk, Vlr-
Pananja Canal, back northwest
;an Peninsula, and over San Antonio and
iylwna, Arizonh to San Diego.
•It YOtft f MAKT
KtllGATOR
tAINCOAT '
Today!
Texarkana Club
Elects Officers
i
and elected oft
year, Bob M<
Leon B. Weiss
Boyette Street
College Station
The Texarkank Club met in t
Academic Building September
clers for the school
^lure, social phajr-
man and repotiter,' said todi
Jimmie Rqgqijs was elected pn
ident; J. L. Oytirstjreet, vice-presi
dent; Truit Thompson, secretaiy*
treasurer; and »tames A. ReCd, Sgt|4|
at-arms. r ; . | ii
A report from the newly acti
vated Texarkana A&M Mothers
Club was read; Plans fo
giving .and Christmas
Texarkana were discussed.
Thahksi
rt
A
Insure Tomorrow Today,
' American National Insurance Co. 1
i i
EUGENE RUSH, U.T. ’SSj G.W.U., ’42
Nor .h'Gate Above Aggieland Pharmacy
Insurance Is Big
Job for ’04 Grad
Weldon L. Maples, ’43 has
amassed a total of 1,250,000 worth
of insurance in force during his
three years with thy Texas agency
of the American General Insur
ance Company, Sidney Loveless
agency manager, said today. J
Maples Was a guard on the 1941-
42 football team.
He has achieved other things in
the life insurance business such as
a membership ip the Million Dollar
Club, the President’s Cabinet, and
has attended the Institute of Life
Insurance; Marketing at SMU.
Club. The meeting was held in ^he
home of Mrs. George Chatmas of
Hearne with 45 women attending.
Key points of weakness in Am
erican international relations, as
described by Dr. Trotter, was that
the United States has been unwill
ing or unable to encourage the
development of a healthy opposi
tion party even in countries where
the existing government is known
to be a dictatorship with many
limitations in efficiency and dem
ocratic proceedings.
“The absence of opposition par
ties have caused, difficulty in the
Orient, Europe and South America,
and many patriotic individuals who
opposed the existing government
have been branded as disloyal and
forced into the so-called commun
ist camp,’’ said Dr. Trotter. :
“Furthermore, whenever a dic
tatorship is terminated by reVo-
ution or otherwise and no strong
opposition party is in existence, a
political vacuum is created which
solca)led communists take advjan-
tage of." f . Ji
Mrs. Jud Collier of Mumfbrd
was program chairman for the
meeting. Mrs. Trottftr accompanied
Dr. Trotter and showed some; of
the souvenirs which Djh Trotter
brought back from a trip to the
Far East.
_L
Daughter is Born
To D. B. Beazleys
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ray Beaz-
ley are the parents! of aj biaby
girl, Betty Glenn, who was bom
October 6. V ;
Betty Glenn weighed six pounds,
seven ounces^ She was born in the
St. Joseph hospital in Bryan.
Breazley is a junior business
major.
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NK HOLIDAY
The banks of Bryan and College (Station will
I J I j . . I J| .j J. jh J
be closec Wednesday, October 12, 1949 in
0 ■ i 1 1 ' ! I i !* 11 | J j J
observance of Columbus Day, a legal holiday
• , : . ! j I I ||jl • i ] III
. COLLEGE STATION STATE BANK
j £: k IT' I
FIR^T NATIONAL (BANK
; CITY NATIONAL BANI? | i
FIRST STATE BANK & TRUST C(
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EXPERT REPAIRS
Cleaning, oiling and.repairs
done quickly by experts us
ing only genuine replacement
materials. Bring your watch
in for free inspection.
SPECIAL FOR
ELGIN OWN E RS
\ \
11 ^
Here Someljhing; of Special
Interest to You!
1 l n
YOlTR EXCHANGE STORE now offers
' a complete as sortment of White and Wyckoff $tation-
ery, which is adaptable for personalizing. Your name,|
j ( or any name or phrase cap be printed on your station
Get the amazing
Jy new DuraPower
Mainspring* that holds its
springiness- Available for
most Elgins*
•UmMU •TltUw* b*UL fkUat ptodioc
| . '
McCarty Jewelers
North Gate
or any name or phrase can be printed on your station
ery in rich itiaroon, blue, or brown. ; See the White
and Wyckofb stationery today. It ul just the thing
for personal Use, and ideal as a giff. • \|; j
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Main Campus
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Exchang
“Serving Texas
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A. &
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Announcing the Establishment
McDonald funeral home
To be located at
406 SOUTH BRYAN AVENUE
in Bryan soon
1
Services rendered, always remembered”
i oc
A
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j-
-YANKS-
(Continued from Page 3)
of the third game, the Bronx slug
gers) finally came to life in the last
two struggles and laid it on the
Brooks with a heavy club.
Hit Barney Eearly
They ripped into Red Barney for
two runs in the first inning, 1
knocked him out with a 3-run as
sault in the third, and continued to
rake Jack Banta, Carl Erskine and
Joe Hatten until they had run up
their apparently safe 10-2 margin
going into the seventh inning.
During their big spree, Bobby
Brown,/the hitting hero of Satur
days fourth game, slammed his
second triple in two days. No play
er Over had belted more than; two
in a 5-game world series,
DiMaggio, weak and wan from
his recent bout with a virus infec-
tiorj, finally got the range in the
fourth and poled his homer near
the! left field foul line with the
basbs empty. He was giveh aj fine
ovation by the Brooklyn fains;
Raschi, who had. pitched a fine
game on the second day of the ser
ies but wqs victimized by Roe’s
shutout, looked safe as a bank go
ing into the seventh. The Dodgers
had pecked away at him for ^even
hits and a pair-of scattered bins,
but} nothing spectacular, and it
seemed a cinch the righthander
would carry on with his big bulge.
Raschi Tired
But he suddenly found himself
tir^d. He said later it wajs tough
out there under the hot sun. He
got Pee Wee Reese, the first Brook
to face hint jn the seventh, on a
line drive" to left, then iWplked
Spider Jorgensen on four pitches.
Duke Snider, who was to tie an
unenviable world series njiatk by
striking out for the eighth time
later on, .chose that point to bang
a Single pait second and ihto cen
ter ' field, sending Jorgensen to
third., j :
Jackie Robinson lofted a long,
high one to Gene Woodling in leftj
on which Jorgensen trotted home.
When Hermanski worked the
seating Raschi for a walk, Page
began warming up hi;S flipper at a
fast pace, but he wasn’t quite soon
enough.
Hodges found one to hjis liking
arid laid a hot smash into the seats
in left-center field to score Snider
and Hermanski ahead of him and
make the count too close for Casey
Stengel’s comfort.
Thus inere were two Dodgers
down wljen Page took over and
faced Luis Olmo, a right-handed
pinch-hitter, with, the stands yell
ing for mbre. Joe fanned him on
three fast balls, as he was to fan
there more before his sting was
ended. His pitching hand was sore,
he disclosed, and he threw only
one ebrve to the nine men he
tackled.
The Dodgers got a runner a-
board in the eighth when Bruce
Edwards, another pinch - hitter,
laced a single to left with one out,
but Reese hit back to the mound
and Page' started a swift double
play to Phil Rizzuto.
Eddis Miksis, pinch-hitting for
Jorgensen, led off the ninth with
a long double to the left wall, and
then Joe began spinning some
more of his magic. Snider went
down swinging for the third time
in the game. Jackie Robinson
missed a hard swipe at a third one.
Hermanski drew his second
straight walk to send some hope
welling in flatbush hearts, but
then it was Hodges’ turn to sam
ple the Page fire, and he too found
BOX SCORE
Sundmy Game
NEW YORK (A)—
AB. R.
Ruzuto, s. a 3 2
Henrich, 1 b. 4
Berra, e .6
DiMangio, c. f 4
R. Brown, 3 b 4
Woodling, 1. f. 4j
Coleman. 2 b. »
Raschi. p a
Rage, p
Total .
BROOKLYN
Reese, e. s
Jorgensen, S b.
Miksis
Snider, c. f. •
Robinson. 2 b. .
Hermanski, r. f.
Hodges, 1 b
Rackley. ). f. ....
Olmo, 1. f
Campanella, c. .
BiTrney, p.
Banta, p
T. Brown
Erskine, p
Hattenj. p
Cox
Falicu, p.
Edwards
Minncr, p
(N,-
36 10 11 27 6
ihto his mitt, Catcher Yogi Berra
dashed out to lead the happy as
sault on Page by the Yankee play
ers. They pounded his broad
shoulders all the way off the field.
With all the savage hitting by
both clubs, the final game abound
ed in brilliant fielding. Snider
luckless with his bat, tried to make
up for that with two wonderous
catches in center field. He came in
to make a shoetop catch of what
looked a certain hit by DiMaggio
in the third, and! in the eighth he
made a similar robbery on a.belt
by Tommy Henrich, somersalting
after the ball hit his glove.
Brown, the Tulane student who
played third base only off and on
during the Yanks flag drive, proved
the hitting hero of the final two
games. His 3-run triple broke Sat
urday’s game Wide open, and he
drove two more mates across with
his triple and two singles Sunday.
He wound up with a lofty .500
average for tl4 series, six hits in
twelve tries. 1 _
Hommy Henrich, whose ninth-in
ning homerun beat Newcombe in
the first game at the stadium, and
Jerry Coleman, the rookie second
baseman, each collected five hits
in the series. Coleman, as well,
fielded brilliantly all the way, as
did rock-like little Phil Rizzuto at
short. ! f i
BOX SCORE
Saturday Game
NEW YORK (A)-
AB. V. I
Rizzuto, g. s j_.4 0 t
Henrich. 1| b I...4 1 !
Berra, c. i *...5 1 1
DiMaggio, c. f J....3 1 (
R. Brown, 3 b 1...S 1 I
Woodling, 1. f L..3 1 (
Mapes, r. f. L..2 1 1
Bauer, r. t. 1...2 .0 (
Coleman, 2 b. . 4 0 (
Lopat, p. .. L S 0 1
(itbynolds, ip. ,...L..l 0 (
ECONOMICS CLUB, Tuesday,
7:80 p. m., Room 305, Acamedic
Bi}ildb)g; | organizational 'meet, i ;
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF
UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS,
Thursday; TiSO’p- m., YMCA. Cur-
riculm committee report! due.
GALLERY COMMITTEE, Mem*
orial Student Center, Monday, 5:15
p. m., Ropm 157,‘Bizzell Hall.
Ul
[DUSTRIAL EDUCA
ES, Tuesday 7:30
:in
CIV
ill | prad 1 ' 06 *
J outh
1CA, j
^DISCUSSION AND
SOCIETY, Wednesday, 7}30,|R
tademic B lilding.
RDS CLUB, Mondai*
m., Ex-Students Lounge,
m.
BILLI
7:80 p.
YMCA.
BOWLING CLUB, 7:30 p.
Reading Room, YMCA. '
BUSINESS SOCIETY, Tuesday;
7:80 p. m., YMCA, Horsley wil
speak
SPANISH CLUB, Tuesday, afi
yell practice, Room 123, Academi
Building.
theduled
GIATE
7:15 pj
„
W
night h Ag. Eng.
SAJI n}ieetin|g, |
ell practice, Tuesday,
^HApTpR
Mondaj
ecture room,
mediately
' Asst
ICA.
,
i, YM 1
RODEO CLUB |meeting, 8 p.m.,
Monday (tonight), A&I Library,
•A*I Building— l ,
S.A.Mj,; Tuesday, October 11, afr
''T(k
ter yell
In. Dr
lustrial
1?.
ractice, jroom 301, Good-..
Varvel |to speak on “Iiy \‘
sycholoRy.’’
Bait alio
cLAsmm
Page 4
Ads
» MONDAY
SBLL WITH A BATTALION CLAS8I
AD. R*Ua . . . 3c a word per
with a 125e minimum. Space rat
Classified Section . . . 60c per
inch. Send aU classified* with
tanc#|tp the Student Activities
All ads should be turned in by l!
a.m. of the day before publication,
FOR
COMFORTABLE furnished bedroom.
Joining bath, Unfng furnished,' near c/
pus. professor or graduate s
preferred. Telephone 4-8724.
FOR SALE •
range,
Johnso:
Total
11 27 51 2
Banta in fifth.
T. Brown struck out
Cox struck out for Hatton in sixth.
Edwards singled for Palica in eighth.
Miksis doubled for Jorgensen in ninth.
New York (A) 203 113 000-10
Brooklyn (Nl 001 001 400 -0
KBI DiMaggio 2. R. Brown 2, Coleman
8, Raschi, Berra. Reese. Hermanski, Rob
inson. Hodges 3. 2B -Campanella. Woodling
2. Snider. Coieman, Miksis. SB—R. Brown.
HR—DiMaggio, Hodges. S—Rizzuto Mapes.
DP—Page to Rizzuto to Henrich. ER—
New York (Ad 10 Brooklyn (N) 6. Left—
New York (At 9; Brooklyn (Nt 9. BB—
Off Barney 6 (Rizzuto, Henrich, Woodling,
Raschi, R. Brown, Mapes) ; Erskine 1
(Rizzuto) : Palica 1 (DiMaggio); Raschi 4
(Robinson. Campanella, Jorgensen, Her-
manskt) ; Page 1 (Hermanski). SO—By
Barney 2 (Berra. Mapes); Banta 2 (R.
Brown, Raschi); Palica 1 (Rizzuto) ;
Raschj 7 (Snider 2, Rackley 2, T. Brown,
Hodges, Cox ; Page 4 (Olmo, Snider, Rob
inson, Hodges). H&R—Off Barney 8 and
5 in 2 1-3 innings; Banta 3 and 2 in 2 1-3;
Erskine 2 and 3 in 2-9 ; Hatten 1 and none
in 1-3; Palica 1 and none in '2; Minner 1
and noife in 1 ; Raschi 9 and 6 in 6 2-3;
Page 2 and pone in 2 1-3. Winner—Raschi.
Loser—Barney. U—Hubbard (A) plate;
Reardon (N) first base; i’assarella (A)
second base; Jorda (N) third base; Barr
lN| left field foul line; Hurley (A) right
field foul line. A4~S3,7U (paid). T—8:04.
Receipts—f 167.165.45.
Total >...L..
BROOKLYN (i
Reese, s. S
Miksis. 3 ib
Cox. 3 b. L.
Snider, c. if
Robinson. 2 b.
Hodges, 1 b. ,1
Olmo, 1. fj f |
Campanella, c. .. .
Hermanski. r. f.
New6>mbe, p.
Hatten. p
T. Brown
Erskine. p
Jorgensen ,
Banta. p.
Whitman
6 10 27
i,. exceient /
ion,: 4jjq E.
■iLr!
iwner, Proji
TABLE TOP gas
tlon, ISO. Ned
St., Apt. 3.
FOUR ROOM furnished hoi
on Jade Street, College
75 ft, by 60 ft. Bee OWi
House 14-D.
■ r i t
f H —-ri ,— '<
WELL CONSTRUCTED one bedroom cot'
tage. Bath, com- and storage room
shrubs and lawn. Suitable for marrlei
student! or working couple. [ | Falrvlew;
College Park. Jones-Beurden Read
, Company, Phone 2-1982, LaBalle Hoti
Building, assoc. ■ Mrs. Mkrgahet H.
Payne, r Phone 4-9329.
H
Total
35
9 27
12 1
5th.
in 6th,
T. Brown filed Out for Hatten in
Jorgensen struck out for Erskine
Whitman struck out for Bantta in 9th.
New York (A) .J 1 090 830 000—6
Brooklyn (N) ..,1 . 000 004 000-)4
RBI—Mapes 2. Lopat. R. Brown 3, Rob
inson. Olmo. Campanella. Hermanski. 2B—
Reese, R. Brown; Mapes. Lopat. 3B—R.
Brown. DP—Miksis to Campanella to Rob
inson ; Rizzuto to; Henrich. Earned runs—
New York (A) 6; Brooklyn (N) 4. Left-
New York (A) 7;; Brooklyn (N) 5. BB—
Off Newcombe 3 (DiMaggio. Bfown, Wood
ling) ; Lopat 1 (Rtibinson) ; Hatten 2 (Hen
rich. DiMaggio.) ; Banta 1 (Rizzuto), SO—
By Lopat 4 (Hermanski. Newcombe, Mik-
sis, Hodges); Reynolds 5 (Jorgensen,
Snider, Olmo. (Hermanski. ( Whitman} ;
Bantu 1 (DiMaggio). Hits and runs off
Newcombe 5 and 3 in 3 2-3 inn}ngs; Hatton'
3 and 3 in 1 l-*:; Erskine 1 (ind q in 1;
Banta 1 and 0 in 8; Lopat 9 and 4 in 5 2-|(;
Reynolds 0 and 0; in 3 1-i. Winner -Lopat,
Loser—Newcombe. U—Jorda (NL) plate ;
Hubbard (AL) first base; Reardop (NL)
second hate; Passarella (AL) third baab;
Hurley (AL) left field foul line; Barr (NL)
right . field foul j 1 line. Attendance! 33,934
(paid). Time—2 hours 42 minutes. Receipts
—8167,906.37.
SOSOLIK’S RADIO SERVICE
■ ' n Ji J! ^, ••
For Prompt Radio Service
CALL
j : 2-1941 j! • ■
713 South Main Street
Across from Railroad Tower
, ji Bryan, Texas ; i .
Owned and Operated by
i:
FRANK J. SOSOUK ,
I {• | I
I ' !
Formerly Chief Engineer and Manager of WTAW
i . H
Class of ’40
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1 ' ' '
ROYAL portable typewriters, from yoifl
| exclusive authorized Rqyal dealer, that
gives you the factory guarantee. Con|t
In, tnf, and buy, from a typewrttor
specialist—easy terms,'; Bryan Buslne4*
, Machine Company, 209 North Main, Bry
an. Late model rentals, all maker
1931 MODEL "A” COUPE, very clean a
tight. ’ New motor and seat covers. <30
tires, call 3-6629.
ELECTROLUX
month* old,
vaccum
850.00,
—
cleaner. Sever
Reel-tawny bed.
110.00.; 2001 Todd Ave., Bryan
WELL-BUILT. 4 room houa ~
view
224.
Ave.
Olbsop.j
e. 605
dQrm 15,
1949 DELUXE Station, Wagon with sen
covers, will trade or discount for cash
call 4{1109.
FOUR TICKETS for AAM r Texas game,
ticketa for AAW; - T.C;U.' game,
two tickets for AAM) t R)ce game. Ckli
4-7554 betwesln 8 and 6 pm.
'ji
block
*«75.
durii ii;
iratiohe
’k
Aggiis.- protect your id |-
| tailor njade covers. For jfi|r
nation see Geiger, Room
j ttdr
(pdrs.
Mi size floor type Mqn-
/ighine. Ideal for D a-
$S).95, now 836rd«.
i ; ill
3Y s|
ting
Bnpl „ ... .
)ST A^D FOUND
II child' fed jacket near Kyle
6. Finder please cointact A.
y. Mill war Dept.
hOTOBi
j W. Buchanan, D.O.
)LONlC X-EAY j
28th St. I
'U' 1
LAUNDER IN LEISURE
‘ 'Equipped
One Half Hour I
• f
■
!Uf
7:0C
ly 7:80
Received
m.
[onday
7:00 p.rn. -4 Sat. 3:30 p.m.
Dalys 5:30 p.m.
& torying Fac
A\j ailable.
i
DT.Ca
With
-
Lee
isual Problem*
2-1682°^
—
h—r
Your Le Jelpss. .
. 4 I
y
IF
When you
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-
^4#
It:'/
N.rth
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J
oughi..;
STORE
ther
BEST!
Taylor’s Campus Variety Star
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