I; - 1 ■' I I ..v t pp ■ Women — Third in a j - -i ^ ries T-- ■' n r \ 1. ■ ■. : - - ; j!. 1 : : .. S T ; College Males Wonderful Says Balt Survey Victim By ROGER COSLETT One of the attractive girls’ col- The lass had been outv. I * (Editor's note—-Today’s article concerns itself with the answer to the following questions: “Do you have ample opportunity i; while in college to make ac- : quaintances of the opposite sex? What is your opinion of college men? Do you have a date pref erence between college and non- college men?” Opportunity seems to knock for the lass in the co-ed college. Ac cording to 12 co-eds, they have am ple opportunity to make acquain tances of the opposite sex while in college. Three less fortunate ladies felt that they did not have ample op portunity. The three girls’ college veterans felt that they must make their own opportunity for meeting men. » ' \ If this latter case is true, I have seen several girls in bur sister school to whom I would gladly give a starting shove. But, then again, they might be sitting back and waiting for the men to make the move. Of course, there are a few wom en who had rather restrict the too fast movements of some of our more talented flock members. This brings us to what the col lege woman thinks of college men. Our friend from New Mexico, as frank as before, thought that college men were “dominating, carefree, and wonderful/’ Club Women Hear Talk on Children The Extension Service Club met last Thursday afternoon in the YMCA lounge on the campus. 'Rie Subject of a talk given by Mrs. E. T. Johnson was “The Child—A Human Being”. To illus trate her discussion, Mrs. John son used some effective charts. She-pointed out the needs of each humah being along with the basic ''diet. ' The business meeting was pre sided over by Mrs. Fred Elliot, president. Mrs. Elliott was elected as delegate of the club to attend the State Federation of Women’s Clubs convention in Austin on the 16, 17, and 18th. of this month. Program leader for the day was Mrs. Jack Sloan. Mrs. C. W. Sim mon was the chairman of the hostesses, assisted by Mrs, George E. Adams,,Mrs. Dora Barnes, Mrs. J. A. SScofield of Vernon, and Mrs. W. I. Glass of Denton. -i- tracti lege veterans said that college men were superior and more stimula ting, A bitter miss from Oak Park, Illinois, felt that some were not mature enough. She was all of 20-years of age. Al| 16-year old freshman, bewil dered by it all, thought that col lege men were very mature. The married selectee felt that college men (were serious minded and con scientious. ; Another of our girls’ college vet- erar s (the cocky one) felt that the majority of college men were too “Joe College." "Too ,Ra Ra” was the opinion expressed on col lege men by a shapely Chicago blor de. “College men are friendly and in need of companionship,” an swered a very companionable co ed from Chicago. After getting to know this dark-haired miss, I fidd it hard to believe that a . man’s best friend is his dog. j : | A 22-year-old Kansas kinder- garten teacher thought that col lege men were “overbearing, ag gressive, and conceited at times.” Thi i beautiful young blonde wore a stunning black strapless suit that woi ld base brought cat calls from even the 5‘year-olds. As for my self, all I can say is, “What is the age limit for, kindergarten?” t-b ew York is a far cry from Kan sas and a New York miss ex- pressed a quite different opinion thai had natives of the former sta e. She said, "College men are easy to get along with because they are so understanding.” i 'j., I ; ;' ’ • j lumping back across the coun try to a rather shy North Dako- tata got us back into the Kansas lirte of thought again. She said,, “f feel that some of the boys are wasting their father’s mon ey. I would not go- with non- college men—there’s no future to it.” ■ THE BATTALIi THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1949 , N — Page 3 DEPENDABLE! TAXI SWIff 1 ' 1 • i - I !! Banish parking prob lems. Use our eco nomical taxi service when you’re in a hurry DIAL 2-1400 . StfETKl)* TAX! Inspection Due December 6, 7 jrhe schedule for the- an nual informed inspection of all the Army ROTC units in the Stkte of Texas was announced tojlay by Col. Oscar B. Ab bott, executive of the Texas Mili tary District. ^The inspection is scheduled at AiM for December 6 and 7. Col. Alpert A. Horner; deputy executive of I Texas Military District, has be^p named officer in charge of th^se inspections!. He will be ac companied in the field by inspecting officer from the Texas Military District and assisted by the Or ganized Reserve Corps Instructors in their respective areas. in general, the informal inspec tion is to bring to the attention of the PMS&Ts of the ihspected sc iooIs the' deficiencies as tauhd, in order that they mpy be corrected arid more efficient ROTCi units mhy result. Student facilities, Gov- ednment property and functions of thje property custodian will be in spected along with the training and di scipline of the cadets. The relations between the Mili tary Science Department, and the sdhool will be investigated to in- siire that the best relations are existent and that public relations wjth civilian activities and organ izations adjacent, to the school are ujmeld. The first school to be inspected e Schreiner Institute, Kerrville id Allen Military Academy, Bry- on November 21. \ ■ en outwardly shy, her coyness had method be- i-itv Her statement concerning date preference was expressed in less explicit terms by eight othe|r of the selectees. Of the remaining ten, four preferred to date college men over non-college men, while three said that they would datje both. The other two were liberal! enough to say, “It depends upon the fel low in question.” Unfortunately, I did not have the money, time, .nor car to jgo into further research on thig point. Time being as precious sis it is, let us get on to question!number three on the survey, ^t read, hy are you going to cbllege?" ”e shall see in the next story of series just how the answers I received compare with the an swers appearing in a recent edi torial in the TSCW Daily Lasso. CE fill Grant Graduate Aids nr t ” ;• i * f •. • 1 The General Electric Com pany will give aid to college and university graduates who wish to undertake or Icontnv- ue research work in scientific Or industrial fields, W. ^.Trench, secretary of the company ajnd chair man of its Education Committee, announced today. I Applications for fellowships for the 1950- 51 academic yeaf are now being accepted uiyler provisions of foundations established to honor two former General Electric pres idents, Charles A. Coffin,, founder of the company, and Gerajd Swope, retired president. ! | Grants will be made frdm income On the one million dollar! G-E Ed ucational Fund. Since 1923, when the Coffin Foundation was estab lished, more than 200 awajrds, total ing .. .169,508 from both founda tions, have been made. ! The Charles A. Coffifi Fellow ships are awarded in the fields of electriciy, physics an(l physical chemistry, while the Genjud Swope Fellowships, first granted in 1946, Ore awarded in engineeding, in dustrial management, the physi cal sciences, and other! scientific and industrial fields. Applications for fellowships, which must be filed before January 1, 1950, have been distributed to deans, and professors of| engineer ing, science, chemistry, metallurgy, and mechanical and aeronautical engineering, and to placement of ficers. Applications, Trench said, may also be obtained fjom A. D. Marshall, secretary, General Elec tric Educational Fund, Schenectady, New York. Teacher’s Group Elects Officers Give It That Well Groomed Appearknce • • • CAMPUS CLEANERS i ■. i \ i j i (Over The Excl: ange Store) L. R. Richardson, superintendent of A&M Consolidated schools, was elected president of tjhe Brazos County unit of the State Teachers’ Association during their! first meet ing of the school year jat Stephen F. Austin high school Tuesday night. Richardson succee4es Leon Hayes, business manager of Ste phen F. Austin. The group also voted Unanimous ly to endprse George E; Adams of Bryan foij a post on the State Board of Education from the Sixth Con gressional District. Adams ad dressed the meeting arid was pre sent during most of the proceed ings. Other officers namjed at the meeting were A. R. Penny, prin cipal of Bpwie elementary school of Bryan, first vice president; Mrs. Herber Smith of Steelels Store, sec- fou are ini/i opening irJiallit ted to attend tin ' \ J of the l < ■j * 'aJwe //; aft 2)ate to l ' • m e announcei L’ l ; is) .. ; ‘ low 7 L-j I ond vice president} and Tanzer of A&M Conso retary-treasurer. G.S. Trevino Mrs. Pearl (dated, sec Wed To Miss Stallings j Miss Katrina Stallihgs, of Mi ami, Florida and Cadet) Gilberto S. Trevino, Veterinary Nfedicine ma jor from Laredo, Texas); were mar ried in Houston, October 24. The bride is former y from An dalusia, Alabama, wh«)re she was graduated from high school. Af ter graduation from high school she moved to Miami, Florida. Dick Hervey, secretary of the Former Student Association, takes a look at the new Directory of Former Students which lists all students who enrolled at A&M from 1876 through 1949. The direc tory is available through the Former Students Association office in the Administration Building. No price has been established for It is issued upon receipt of a donation to the A&M Develop ment Fund. Practice Teaching SchedulesX Announced for November 7 -19 m I ! By The Associated PVess Smashing T' M Democrat Power R After GOFs Reverses IH Henry Rdss, professor j of the agricultural education department, has announced practice teaching schedules fpr senior agricultural education majors for this and next week: Whenever possible, students are given practice teachirjg assignments in their respective home* towns, Ross said. They teach assigned sub jects to vocational agriculture stu dents in the high schools. Under the supervision of E. V. Walton, W.; B. Ownes and K. M. Shackelford will teach at Nocona Jersey - Brahma Cross Planned The development of a new dairy cow for the South is in progress at A&M according to Dr. R. R. Shrcxle, Animal Geneticist. The purpose of this new project is to deve|op a heat and external parisite-resistant animal that cap retain a high milk production dur ing the hjot sdmmdr months. The Brahman I cattle are known for their resistance to external para sites and h**. . A*. !.\ .... . Amimuii >, T MAGNOLIA GAS AND OILS PHONE 4-1188 Certified MOBIL LUBRICATION Aggieland Service Station —CALL FOR AND DELIVER East Gate i 1: ■i- : on soil conservation, winter feed ing beef cattle, and improving pas- tures. E. W. Robbins, A O’Neil, M. I. Fluitt, and C. H. Rock, Jr. will teach marketing of wool and mo hair, and turkeys and poultry pro ducts, breeds of sheep and types of goats at Mason. B. J. Pate and H. L. Storey will teach the students at Lott, swine production and marketing poultry products. *.Jack Gray will supervise the teaching of J. D. Hampton, and E. W. Behrens at Brady, where they will teach methods of improving poultry products in McCullough County. D. Ayers and C. E. Willis will teach at Marshall under Wallace Hawkins, Practically all phases of agricul ture will be covered during the week November 14, by 20 agri cultural education majors who will practice; teaching as follows: R. L. Cain and L. R. Tunnel at Grand Saline; E. C. Jones and R. E. Pat rick at Van; M. A. Cross and F. W. McDave at Somerville. L. M. Barber and C. M. Lester will teach at James; J. F. Spaf- ford jwid C. A. Geisecke at Mes quite; 6. W. Floyd, H. H. Stoner, and R. N. Pnerce at Mineral Wells; IR. A. Keown, G. B. Gil bert and J. L. Owens at Weather ford; R. 11. Dorsett, H. P. Spald ing, Ci D. Walker, and H. O. Spann at Caldwell. Morning Religious Services Planned The first Morning Watch Ser vice of this school year will be held at 7:30 Thursday morning in the Music Hall, King Egger, Corps Chaplain, announced today. Reverand Norman Anderson, pas tor of the College Station Presby terian Church, will lead the de votional. In announcing plans for the services, Egger said they will be over by 7:50, so that all students attending will have time to make 8 p. m. classes. Guest speakers will preside at some meetings, while students selves will be in charge of those at which no guest speaker is pre sent. ! Each service, said Egger, will consist of a short devotional and singing of hymns. Democratic victories in New York’s U. S. Senate race and in widespreading city elec tions set President Truman and the party high command chortling to day over the outlook for 1950. Republicans didn’t find much to crow about in yesterday’s elections. They held on to th? New Jersey governorship they already had and tossed out a Democratic nfayor here and there. But they took a mauling in the day’s feature political bout, in New York State. Democrat Herbert H. Lehman easily knocked Republican John Foster Dulles out of the U.S. Senate seat Dulles has held down since last July. There was one, big, clear-cut issue: Lehman campaigned hard for the Truman home-front pro gram; Dulles campaigned hard against it. The president himself, gleefully calling out returns at a dinner in his honor by the Women’s Demo cratic Club of Washington, inter preted the result as a vote of con fidence in his “fair deal.” Mr. Truman said it would have “a very decided effect on the elec tion |iki 1950” when control of Con gress is at stake. So did the Dem ocratic national chairman, Wiliam Boyle, Jr. Furthermore, Boyle said, Leh man’s Victory “was only the high light of a national trend” that won out again over Republican “gener alities” and “scare attacks.” Part of that “trend” was a repeat win for Democratic mayor William O’Dwyer of New York City. The G.O.P. national chairman, Guy George Gabrielson, said in a statemfent that “the principles which Senator Dulles expounded in his campaign are those which ultimately will prevail, because they are right.” In New Jersey, Gabrielson said, the reelection of Republican Gov. Alfred E. Driscoll was a blow at “bossism” and “hagueism.” Driscoll handed a direct defeat to his Democratic rival, State Sen ator Elmer H. Wene. And he gave an indirect drubbing to Frank Hague, the former Jersey City mayor and boss of the state Dem ocratic organization who backed Wene. Hague announced he is “stepping aside.” At 73, he said, he has reached an age when it is impos sible to “carry on the arduous du ties” of the Democratic leadership. Boston voters tossed out the last old-time boss still in power when they refused a fifth term to Dem-j ocratic mayor James M. CurleyJ They picked another Democrat, city clerk John B. Hynes. The Democrats got no big numer-j Morgan Announces New Short Course The third annual Job and Safety Training MR- E- A.) Conference will be held November 17-18, ac cording to Lucian Morgan, assis- tant director of the Placement Of- j The conference will be sponsored by the Industrial Extension Ser vice. E. L. Williams, chairman of the conference, expects approxi mately 100 to attend. The annual joint meeting of the Texas sections of the American In stitute of Mechanical Engineers will be held here December 8-9, Morgan said. Robert L. Whiting of the Petrol eum Engineering Department is chairman 6f the A. I. M. E. meet ing. In addition to the students on the campus, Whiting expects ap proximately 150 to attend. 70;000 to! gOiOOO gnd installed Dem- oct ate ih! their plhces. the only other leal reinforcements in Corigress. i They did win all the Corigressioni , al seats at stake, but those nunw Virginia rjin off bered only three. ! governdCship niicje outside New * Lehman’s victory gives them an Jersey according to form. Dem extra hand irt the Senate. But at ocratic State Senator John S.J Bat .. • ., n.,. ..T, jfo, ubl | tan ■;4a ■-■'ft.: . m tion: cans. 54 Democrats, 42 Republi- in the House, it Will be 262 r .„ocrats, 170 Republicans, one Democrat-Liberal, one American- Labor, one vacancy. That will be a gain of one seat for the Democrats. San Francisdo voters replaced the late Rep. Rich-, ard Welch, a Republican^ with Democrat John F. Shelley, presi dent of the California Federation of Labor. In Brooklyn, a Democrat, Mrs. Edna F. Kelly, was elected to fill a Democratic vacancy. ! In New York such' cities as Syr acuse, Binghamton, Rome,. Port Jervis—discarded Republican may ors for Democrats. Syifeuse pick ed a Democrat for th^ J first time ih. 24 years. ‘ .New York City itself gave May or O’Dwyer an easy win in his bid for a second term. He licked com munist-supported Rep, Vito Mar- cantonio, the American-Labor cen T didate who ran a poor third, and Newbold Morris, the Republican- Liberal-Fusion hopeful. Philadelphia threw opt four Re publican city officials won four years ago by margins; of around Steel Production Called ‘Rateable’ New York, Nov. 2 UP)—Steel production can be lifted o the pre strike level of around 85 per cent of rated capacity within a month after the walkout ends, the iron age, metalworking trade weekly said today. swawnped Johnson as expe r* ie But tjie old dominion state jected a! constitiftional amendr battle sbpoprted;. to ban payr of!g;fU50 poll itftx us a reqt mjent foj' voting jand leave it to t legislature to fix; new requiremer Tfexas jUso.turned down a poll J repealed • Ghiirch to Expam « ! j j :: I 4 j , || • 'Plans) for ani educational build ing for; the Aj&M Presbytejrian Church, were presented Tuesday night to the congregation, Norr Anderson, the pastor, said : The educational bui ckll for the structure. adjoining nlaftri fci -j 1 '/ g the present church :H. Thp plans Were presented by Marvin* J Fickbnrecht, a ! San Antonio arch itect. i J- : Mrs, L. S. Paine, building; com* | i mitteelchairmaji, preaided ovir the meeting. ' I, ; jj ! After the discussion, members pnjoyed an icq cream social, Ani- 4ersori: said. ’ Cqnitruction of the educational building is expected to get under way . ip the near future. .1, m it 4 i. ’ i/i Throwing Rics Show Me The Way A DreamerV Holiday j The Meadowi Of Heaven Dance of The Hours None Bui The Lonely Heart Jones VI Dry Bone* Summertime Room Pull of Rotes Ifs Summertime Again Someday And Still H Goes ' t f 'ii. Professor Begins Research at A&M, j; Dr. David W. Roseberg has been appointed? assistant professor jn plant pathology in the Department; of Plant Phyciology and Path ology. Having recently obtained his Ph. D| degree from Ohio State University, Dr. Rosberg will devote' full time to research in the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station; He will work on control of pe can diseases and the prevention of post-harvest decay in onions. Dr. Rosenberg was employed as a graduate assistant at A&M in 1942. Frojn 1932 to 1946 he was a member of the armed forces in the Army Medical Laboratory and Chemical Warfare Service. He is a member of the American Phyto- Phi Epsilon Phi, and Gamma Sig ma Delta societies. Mrs. Rosberg was formerly M Helen D. McDonald of Bryan; More new ones every week by the Stars Who Make the HITS! ■ f : ■! | J |j' As thf hits pile up on RCA Victor 45 rpnj, thousands ora swinging to the system of the future l. . for finer ton«, easier playing, lower cost I Only for Rpd Seal, 65t for all others (plus fa?)l Ask for the;RCA 45 rpm catalog listing IJ00 titles for you to choose from. ; Never was a fully automatic changer- player offered for »o little—the same as built into high-priced sets! Plugs right Into your present set...plays up to ten 45rpm records at one > s 8 touch of a button! RCA Victor 9JY. T ; IISKI) HOOKS WV |>:»\ tin- hiuhrsl |niro', Inr I m tl I’.uoKs— Wc maintain uItoltsalr and n-tai! 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