} ;■ t: m\ v-: [xM [> it’ vi.ft" AWARDS r /*■ (Continued from Page 1) - ing Joundation, Cleveland l, Ohio. The contest closes May 15, i 1950. The purpose of thi* series of an nual programs is to encourage the ilf the science, ology and application of arc welding, ac-1 cording to Dr. E. E. Dreesej chair man of the Board of Trustees of the Foundation. / * The rules Committee which for mulated the rules for this year’s contest consisted of the dfans of! engineering from the eleven lead ing technical colleges In the coun try. H. W. Barlow, Dean of Engin eering at A&M, was a . member of this committee. ’ List year’s first prize was won by Robert K. Allen and Alvin H. Kasberg of the University of Wis- - cousin’s department of Mining and Metnlurgy. Their report Was en- titlefl “A study of the (Velding Characteristics ' of, lAlpminum Bronze Electrodes.” Leiwis F. Cheek of Texas A&M was awarded $50: for hjs submis sion on the "Design of Anj Weld ing Fixtures for War Prodtictioh"- Chenlc, who lives In Abilene, wrote his ! entire paper from research! rather than actual experience. - CHECK LIST - (Cbntlhued from Page: 3) kanias Traveler sent its North Texas ballot in with last week's naiqM. : \ 1 • 4;. Hix Still Stats JNjrker Sports EditoV Vjc and another trio of| Bruins, ck nominees were jsnd Bib Holtr . impressed with (he per formances of three of His own Playert a Razorbai ly iHix/^up for his third! award, tackle Dave Hanner, and fullback Geno Mazzanti. ') Bears James Parker, halfback, J. If>. Ison, end, and Adrian Burk, quarterback, won Holthoff’a nod for? their fine play in the 35-13 victory Of the Wacoans. For the North Texas fray that opened the season for the’Kawgs, John Ferguson, end Billy Hix, and guard Theron Roberts were named. \ \ \ Qav. Allan Hhlvers (i rands tuff, Ten shown abovej aa t Spring nuently. oh an habltial cHmlj Texas convl autograph was n ti nd I ’rank pWr, are es at pig a life term furlough to VM 51 Wives Club Mejets in YMCA The second meeting' of the VM 51 Wives Club was held last Wed nesday, in the! YMCA 1 Solarium] attend Big Spring’s centennial celebration, lie wrote a cantata, “Big spring" on his prison cell wall, later transferred It to paper and it wan sung vm a feature of the celebration. Other per sons In the picture are unidentified. (AP PHOTO) Mrs. FaulkCnberry, the club president, conducted the business session.» Following the business meeting", the itiembers: played card ganjres. - i : \ L The hostesses, Mrs. Faulkenber- ry and Mrs. Ryan, served refresh ments. YMCA Solaribm. All wives of the Junior iVeteriniftry Medicine class are invited, Mrs; Faulkenbjer- ry said. What’s Cooking Haines Attending Soil Short Course P. G. Hallies, extension soil and witer conservation specialist of A' ^ ct , 0 1 ber Roo f m ^ Aca 1 the announcement, said the meeting ^ em,c Pl an s for club par- is being called by the Federal Ex-! $ and Christmas dance will be t^ihsion Service for the piuTiose 0 f j discussep. d ijscussing with the specialists pro- LTL ABNER P^fooVEear SOO0OOOO 4 LftTCfUCATURKS WHO LIKE TO BE K1CKED- dohY h BACK f Fifty Million U a Crtwd | AHSOOMS TW' pioSJSHUH, AH'- ’our au- 'tWEiFURry on “ m 1RING PEACE, TO ALL MANKIND.^j lo-i» 1 tJ !■ : Doctor Explains Why Beer Gushes " I i ] j , Los Angeles, —Ever wonder why your beer gushes over when you open thp can or bottle? Dr. Philip Gray, here for the Master Brewers’ Association of America convention, today gave this explanation: Laboratory studies indicate that wildness is primarily physical in character. Colloidal particles, act ing as nuclei, are responsible folr the liberation of carbon dioxide gas from the unstable, super-saturated Solution of carbon dioxide existing when the container is opened." Now you know why your beer gushes over when you open the can or bottle. AGGIE SQUARES, Friday, 8 to 10 p. ml, Episcopal Parish House. A&M GARDEN CLUB, Friday,: October |14, 3 p. m., YMCA chapel. ABILENE CLUB, Thursday^ October,! 13, after yell practical YMCA. ! | , : , ! AMARILLO jCLUB, 1 Thursday relating ito the operation of rvation districts. F ' BRAZORIA COUNTY CLUB; Thursday, October 13, 7:30 p. m., Room 2B4, Academic Building. BEAUMONT CLUB, Thursday, October 13, 7 p. m„ Room 107, Academjc Building, [ BELL COUNTY CLUB will not meet' because of the Freshman football game. CAMERA CLUB, Monday, Oct* ober 17 i] < M : ■ j r COO Re COUNTY CLUB, Thurp- day, 7330,, Room 125, Academic Building. ENLISTED MEN’S WIVES CLUB, [Thursday, October 13, 7:80 p.m., heime of Mrs. F. B. Gardinie, 422 Milder Drive. October social will be j held. Mrs. Steve Morgan will be jeo-hostegs. FAYETTE COUNTY CLUB, Thursday, October 13, 7:30 p. m. Room 129 Academic Building. Dance i plans will be discussed. LUFKIN CLUB, Thursday, Oct ober 18, 7:30 p. m., R(oom 22‘(, • L L :' ; LU- ' f :l f r W>TH WHO Ktip^Uiri j Ves, Cameis are SO M/iO f/iaf in a coari-to-coadtest | | J of hundreds <>f men and women who smoked Camels• - and NISHflgA. ill only Camels • - for 30 consecutive days, noted jhroat sf edial* i Yes, Came s ore SO MILD that in a coapt-to-coad test ’ Camels - and hroat special of hundreds of men and women who smoked Camels - only Camels - for 30 consecutive days, noted ists, making Weekly examinations, repo^^ ■ -i* . jr ■ ” ONI UNO DUE TO SMOKING CAMlLf! i; IRRITAflON d I. -f-rl K sit. ; Honjigreen Tells Of Goc^dn Proble^ifi jt E, N. Homgreen. hehid of tjhjo F’Ood Agricultural division of tho United j Nations, gpoke j MondniV night tp the A&M Collof(i|to Chitp- ter of the Future Funmjim of Ant- erica <>h agriculture in : iho Brilitih Isles, i j- .' ■ ! | Homgreen, who spent three yoftfs in Europe with the Amy and oil*' year li| Greece with the E, C, A., stated that the lilg problem ortho American farmer is to ght Britain to buy as many d6liarS[worth of goods from us ns we do [from her. Homgreen is the former business manager of this college and h|is two sons attending A&M. ■ i i'- ■' I— - SOVIET - (Continued from Page 1) Thajt Soviet press agency said on Sept. 25 that the Russians have atomic weapons at their disposal- The agency statement followed disclotisre by President Truman that jan atomic explosion tbpk place j recently in Russia: Malik’s^ statements yesterday In the Security Council took on added interest because it was the iflrst Russian . statement of policy since Mr. flTfo- disdosure. Malik returned United States from Mos- emv after the news broke. His resolution demanding !the over-all tally was the first time that Russia has put its demand in to a formal resolution. But the Russians have always opposed moves for an arms census unless 4t includes atomic weapons and have always said they should be outlajwed. A few minutes before Malik made his proposal, he cast Russia’s 39th veto in the Security Council to kill a French proposal for con ventional arms-counting — exclud ing the A-bomb—and the estab- lishrtient of confidence among the It did not include atomic IliiM^MNraWINaiM 1 Mi ¥ 4 If A1 mn jcooEfryooNfe £ COGNIZED Hit , ALBEACN AS ‘FLASH' ®U0Lm* THE 'WORLD'S rEST PROMOTER. I'VE MILLIONS 6EUINC l WHO* THE* DON'T I'LL MAKE. ^ ftlLUONSJf/ I Committee To Hear bo Students Want ir Force Reply i! 1 1 \ nations. weapons, Malik complained. Academic Building. Charter con struction, officer election, and a discussion of the Thanksgiving Dance and the organizational bf the Aggie-Exes in Lufkin will be made. : ; N , MANAGEMENT ENGINEERS’ WIVES CLUB, Thursday, Octo ber 13,7:30 p. m., South Solarium, YMCA. Demonstrations on hair- styling and make-up by Merle Ndr- rtian representative. PANHANDLE CLUB, Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Lounge, Dorm I. : P. E. CjLUB, Thursday, Oct. 13; 7:30 p. m.j, DeWare Field House, RIFLE TEAM, Thursday, Oct. 13, 7:30, |loom 301, Goodwin Hall. Turkey shoot match. Hearst Tro phy plans will be discussed. i SAN ANTONIO CLUB, Thurs day, Oct. 13, after yell practice, Room 203, Academic Building. Of ficers to be elected. SAN ANGELO CLUB, Thurs day, 7:15, Room 203, Agriculture Bldg. Xmas dance to be discussed. Will adjourn in time for Fish gaihe. VETERANS WIVES BRIDGE CLUB, Thursday, Oct. 13, 7:30 p. m., YMCA. Sweetheart Salute By Band Saturday Featuring a salute to Jeanine Holland, 1949 Aggie Sweetheart, the A&M band will perform at its third out of town football game in Fort Worth, Saturday. At the presentation of Miss Holland to the corps on the TCU field, the band will play "Let Me Call You Sweetheart” while form ing the word JEAN. Other special letter formations are to he executed by the band In honor of TCU, TSCW, and A (KM, including the playing of the TSCW alma mater. Precision movements will fill out (he drill. New saxophones and drums Will be used for the first time In Fort Worth. These Instruments \Vero recently secured from the Quarter master Corp by the school. WASHINGTON, Oct. .13 UP>— The jHouse Armed Services Com mittee agreed today to hear the Air [Force next week in reply to the Navy's bitter criticism of its B-36 bomber program. Secretary of Dsfense Johpson plso will testi fy then. I i ] Chairman Vinson: (D-Ga) [and Secretary Johnson held a long con ference this morning. Afterwards, Vinson announced the schedule for the next , phase of the committee's inquiry into military policy. Vinson said that beginning next week the committee Iwill hear Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Gen. Omar Bradley,; Secretary of Air Syming ton and Air Force officers. Then, he added, "Secretary John son will give the committee find the country” his vieiws. Johnson, as civilian boss of all the armed services, is caught squarely in the cross-fire of the angry controversy over military policy. Hp also has comb in fori harsh wor^ls from some congress mem bers because, by executive order, he has cut back appropriations that the lawmakers made for the Navy. ! Vinson publicly accused Johnson yesterday of making “a grandstand play” by economizing on Navy funds. He said the! committee “is to have a lot to say about this.” Rep. Bates (R-Mtiss), a commit tee member, expressed strong hope that the hearings into defense poli cy will cause the jdnking of John son’s bitterly-disputed decision to halt construction on a Navy super carrier. As these storm warnings were raised on Capitol Hill, the Navy arrayed the last of its top' brass before the committee (9 a.m. CST) to wind up its case against what it terms an “unbalanced” defense policy too heavily weighted in favor of strategic bombing and tli? B-36. ( X9PPing the Navy witness list were Fleet Arm. Chester W. Ni- TOitz, Wartime Pacific Commander in Chief; Adm. R. A. Spruance, Pacific Tusk Fonje! Commander; Adm. Louis E. Denfeld, Chief of Naval Operations; arid Adm. Louis de Florez, top Navy researcher. First, however, Vinson ordered Vice Adm. Robert B. Carney to tell the committee who!signed the Pen tagon order that directed an $800,- 000,000 (M) slash: in defense ap propriation* for the fiscal yearj ending next June 30—before Con-' gross hud oven approved them. Carney is a deputy chief of naval operations, and also chair man of the joint Chiefs ofHtaff Budget Advisory Committee. The approprint'iijm In which the cuts wore made Is still awaiting [a House-Senate decision over the '?i id p size of the air force. Apparently, : Vinson declared, Johnson decided, “without any no tice to tjhe committee,”! ihat thie armed services needed 'less than i they said! they needed. Vinson has promised Johnson, as well as members of the joint chiefs of staff, k hearing beforfe the com mittee. Most committee members expect it: to be a warnr session. I I But it may be a week or so be fore Johnson gets his say. The committee hoped to conclude the naval phase of its defense study today, Thereafter it will take a short recess before hearing from officials of the defense depart ment and the other services. sryi Teaching Papei F II One hum ire -seekin^ Hughs teach It Ross, prof education, saitl today. and [thirty Aggies get' their Smith- certificates, Hep* sor of agricultural tiflcatc*! of agrl Some have already begun pracj tice teaching for one week In for* ty-five Texas High Schools. Twi> or three students are b ijtig sent to each high school Ron said; jand the Aggies will teocl one class for a week and will aij the school's Vocational agriculture teacher in hls program. • To obtain A Smitli-Hug|ts ferti ficate, atudiuits muist hive two Weeks of practice teaching. The custom is for students to teach on (veck : each sepiesteb Iduring til senior year, Ross concluded. ■H—H 1 1 ■ ! ' ' ' '"T-T'' Bottqlton CLASSIFIED ADS Page THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1949 SBIX WITTg A BATTALION CLASSIFIED AD. Ratal . . . 3« a word par InutrUon with a zSe minimum. Spac* rataa in Classified Section . . . ttOc per column inch. Sand all classifieds with remit- tance to th« Student AoUvitlM Office. All ada Should be turned In by 10:00 a.m. of the day before publication. COMFORTABLE furnished bedroom. Ad joining bath, Unehs furnished, near cam pus, Professor or graduate student preferred. Telephone 4-6724. • FOR SALE FOUR ROOM furnished house. Located r .. .... on Jane Street, College Station, Lot; 'gaUhtD- • 75 ,ft. by 60 ft. See ;owner, Project;' Y - ’ House 14-D. portable typewriters, from Royal dealer, that youi; ROYAL exclusive authorized , . gives you the factory guarantee. Conn In, try, and buy. from a typewriter; speclaliat—easy terms. Bryan Business Machine Company, 209 North Main, Bry an. Late model rentals, all maices. ;{ i i —..—;. , i 4 PERSONAL: Introducing Mr. Harley an hls ; four-way 'hair .shaping method, u 'lovelier hair-do, call Mr. Harley day, Pruitt’s Beauty and Fabric jCal) 4-1169. Tw; if* BOOT 'isjrth. Dav ' PANTS J12-33 waist, to ey Jones, .portn IQ-326,' BOX FOUND A nniie of satisfaction or. tile of everyione who eats Turtles from the Cave or (lampus Corner. ! SUL ROSS LODGK NO, ISM A.FJbA.M. Stated meeting Thursday Oct. 13th pt 7:00 p.m.‘Kx- omlnattoni^ilh E.A. degree. f Simulated Air Raid Set for New York City Washington L'Pt—In the first maneuver of its kind since the war, unita of the Royal Canadian Air Force and the U. S. Air National Guard will take part in a simulated air-raid and intercept exercise over the New York City area Oct ober 22. Officials said one chief purpose !is to demonstrate the ability of the two outfits to. integrate for ces in event of an emergency. -YANK- (Continued from Page 3) - FISH - ;U (Continued from Page 3) stalwarts will be the forward edge of the A&M attack. All saw’ ac tion in the Weatherford game and it would be difficult to single put any one outstanding linesman. The raw edges that were notice able the first game will have been smoothed to some extent. It is felt that there will be fewer fumb les than marked the first game, and it is likely that the down field blocking and defensive line play will be sharper. Football weather and two good teams should combine to make an interesting evening for all those spectators who plan to be on hand at the opening kickoff. iii.; ■ I .808 for four games, getting four hits, one of theijn a triple, and drove home two tuns. That made them the standouts in their res pective sections bf real estate. In center field you have to go for the ailing Dimaggio although Duke Snider was brilliant defen sively. The Dfuke made several breathtaking catches—but so did Dimaggio playing on nerve alone. Snider outhit Dimaggio, .143 to .111, but Joe hi d an edge with his two RBI’s and one homer.' The Clipper struck out five times but Snider fanned eight times, tying a record set by Rogers Hornsby. But the deciding factor in Di maggio’s selection was the spark which his presence ignited in the Yankees. That i was the one thing the Dodgers lacked—along with hitting and pitching. j 1ST SOTS.... t Save Your Outfit Money BUY SIGN CANVAS CHEAP! Bee STOKES, Dorm 4, Km. ItZ j "Services rendered ; j always remembered” McDonald Funeral Home L To be located nt i , 406 SOUTH BRYAN AVK. Bryan, Taxai l " i, ri ,M - i - l-I “ - ■ ■ H ll : ‘ ! 1 •' I • ——4 iA ! 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