The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 15, 1950, Image 4

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    Flowers, Fruits, and Ferns .
Mrs. W. W. Armistead Wins
Top Honor At Flower Show
Mrs. W. W. Armistead was
sweepstakes winner in the Garden
Club sponsored Fall Flower Show
held yesterday in the MSC Ball
room. Mrs. Armistead’s arrange
ment of chrysanthemums in an
oil can placed first in arrangement
of flowers in a kitchen utility con
tainer.
Her fruits and vegetables dis
play in a cornucopia depicting the
Thanksgiving theme won second
place. These two wins gave her
the greatest number of points in
the Flower Show.
Mrs. H. W. Barlow was awarded
first prize in the arrangements
class and Mrs. J. H. Hill took first
place in the horticultural division.
Mrs. J. E. Roberts placed first
in the chrysanthemum horticul
tural division. Mrs. Ralph Lee was
second and Mrs. R. E. Snuggs, a
third place winner.
Rotted Plants
In the pot plant division Mrs.
M. K. Thornton took first place in
the flowering plants and Mrs.: Fred
Weick placed third.
In the foliage pot plants, first,
second, and third places, respective
ly, Were awarded to Mrs. J. II. Hill,
Mrs. A. B. Nelson and Misses Ethel
and Edith Cavitt. Mrs. George
Diaper won honorable mention in
this division.
In flower arrangement classes
Mrs. II. W. Barlow took first place
in the dried plant material. Mrs.
C. C. Doak was second and Mrs.
Marion Pugh third. Honorable men
tion went to Mrs. 0. K. Smith.
Mrs. R. R. Lyle with a fruit ar
rangement depicting the forthcom
ing A&M-Texas football game took >
first honors in the Thanksgiving
theme class. Second place went to
Mrs. Armistead and third to Mrs.
A. B. Stevens.
Outstanding arrangements in
Smith —
(Continued from Page 3)
games. Other SWC players besides
Smith appear among the nation’s
best, with the Mustangs’ Fred Ben
ners being listed as sixth in the
nation on forward passing,
Larry Isbell of Baylor is 17th
and Pat Brady of Nevada, who the
Cadets had such a hard time stop
ping is 13th with a total of 911
yards to his credit.
From the conference in pass re
ceiving is Harold Riley of the
Bears who is in the 13th spot while
Ray Graf of Nevada is eighth. Graf
was held to pratically nothing when
A&M dropped the Wolfpack, IS
IS.
Versatile Brady is also listed
among the top punters, holding a
46.9 average in second place, while
Isbell is tenth with a 41.1 aver
age.
Billy Cox of Duke is busiest
among the nation’s backs. He has
averaged almost 42 rushes and
passes per game and needs only 68
more in his remaining two games
to break the 13-year record of 400
offensive plays in a season set by
Davey O’Brien of Texas Christian.
—Based on AP Reports.
ANTED
Student to act as Campus Representative to help
develop student tours of a nationally known travel
organization. Remuneration in the form of com
missions and/or free travel to foreign countries.
Students, with successful record of campus activities
preferred. Please write, stating qualifications and
references to ... .
Harold Marlin, Director
Student Tours of the Pacific
105 Berkeley Square Berkeley, Calif.
lU iwoS'lwts
VMM Campus
Burt —oxford button-down collar with the soft roll
(the college man’s staple diet). A "Manhattan,” of course.
Ronge—fine white broadcloth with the wide-spread
collar. Made by "Manhattan,” which means perfect lit.
The Manhattan Shirt Company, makers of’'Manhattan" shirts, ties,
underwear, pajamas, sportshirts, beachwear and handkerchiefs.
kitchen utility containers besides
Mrs. Armistead’s first place win
ner were entered by Mrs. W. E.
Briles who took second place and
Mrs. Marion Pugh who won third.
In the fresh foliage arrangement,
Mrs. Edward Madeley won second
place and Mrs. A. B. Nelson third.
Fruit and vegetables arrange
ments were won by Mrs. D. W.
Williams, second place; Mrs. Fred
Hale, third place, and Mrs. H. W.
Barlow, honorable mention.
Mrs. R. E. Schiller took third
place in the chrysanthemum ar
rangement class.
Club Workers
Mrs. Edward Madeley and Mrs.
A1 B. Nelson were co-chairmen of
arrangements for the show. Mrs.
Cecil Wamble and Mrs. P. W.
Burns had charge of staging; Mrs. .
R. B. Hlckerson was responsible
for entries. Mrs. Fred Hale was 1
clerk and Mrs. Marion Pugh and
Mrs. John 11. Hill had charge of
publicity.
Flowers were judged on the
basis of a perfect score. For this
reason several of the classes were
without first, second, or third place
winners.
Open to AH
Guidance Testing Program
Shows Students Aptitude
’Murals
(Continued from Page 3)
J. Dishman looped in 12 points
for the Beaumont Club as his team
swamped the Fish and Game Club,
30-14. Another Beaumont Club
eager, Smith, was second in the
scoring column with 10 digits to his
credit. Higgins and Franks each
hooked in four for the losers.
Bizzell, trailing 12-3 at the half,
came fighting back in the second
half but fell short of winning the
game by three points as the cagers
of Mitchell edged Bizzell, 18-16.
Joe Bennett and A. Johnson of
Mitchell and Stegemier and Couch
of Bizzell each dropped in six.
The Fish Band coasted to 23-9
victory over Company 9. Bledsoe of
the Band led the scorers with nine
counters.
Football
Leggett managed to gamer three
forty-yard penetrations to defeat
Milner 3-1 on penetrations as
neither team scored.
Company 4 waltzed to an easy
25-0 lop-sided victory over Com
pany 5.
•
Tennis.
In the only tennis contest of the
afternoon, G Squadron stopped B
Transport, 2-0. Storrie, Martin,
Bane, and Kahutek turned in the
necessary victories for the eventual
winners as the first match of the
afternoon ended in a deadlock.
Beat Rice
TODAY thru SATURDAY
FIRST RUN
—Features Start—
1:48 - 3:51 - 5:54 - 7:57 - 10:00
Bert Hardaway, freshman dairy husbandry major beams over a
check for $200 presented by Dr. I. W. Rupel, head of the dairy
husbandry department. The check is a scholarship award from
Herman F. Heap of Austin, who each year awards $650 in schol
arships to dairy husbandry students at A&M. Hardaway, who has
been active in FFA work for four years started with one dairy
heifer and has built his herd to six animals.
Rodent Eradication Begins
With Free Poison Hand-Out
Rat day began this morning at 8
a. m. with a meeting in Room 11 of
the Civil Engineering Building.
The meeting was held to instruct
individuals who had been designa
ted by the departments and busi
ness establishments of the College
area as being responsible for ro
dent eradication within their areas.
The rat eradication campaign is
a follow-up to the program initiat
ed May 11, 1950 by the sanitary
board. The campaign was initiat
ed because certain parts of the
campus were infested with rats
which were increasing and fast be
coming a menace to the community
Colonel Boatner said.
“Remedial steps, in order to be
effective, must be continuous, sys
tematic, and periodic, and will re
quire the effort and cooperation
of all departments and business
establishments in the City of Col
lege Station,” Col. Boatner said.
Fall-Spring Drives
According to Col. Boatner, the
best times for the eradication of
the rodents are in the fall when
they leave the field and move into
the houses for the winter and in
the spring when they migrate from
Poll
(Continued from Page 3)
are Texas, Princeton, Illinois,
Tennessee and Michigan State.
Oklahoma, which Saturday whip
ped Kansas, 33-13, entertains med
iocre Missouri this, weekend.
Army, sporting an undefeated
string of 27 games, goes to Palo
Alto for a tiff with twice-beaten
Stanford.
California, by blasting UCLA, 35
to 0, moved up from sixth to
fourth. It looks like Pappy Waldorf
will have another Rose Bowl crack
at the Big Ten on Jan. 1. Next for
the Golden Bears is San Francisco.
Kentucky dropped a peg to fifth,
despite it’s 48-21 romp over Miss
issippi State. North Dakota will
supply the bait Saturday for Babe
Parilli, Inc.
On the other hand, Princeton,
Illinois, Tennessee and Michigan
all moved up as Miami and SMU
dropped out of the top ten.
The leaders, including first place
votes, points and records: (Points
figured on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1
basis)
Where on earth can you find a
complete line of handsome
shirts, neckwear,
underwear, pajamas, sportshirts,
beachwear and handkerchiefs? Here.
the houses
duce.
to the field to repro-
Mixture 42
Poison used in the campaign will
be a mixture of Compound 42 and
pecan crumbs. Compound 42 was
developed by.the College and causes
a slow coagulation of the rodents
blood which, after seven or eight
feedings, stops the flow of blood
through the system and thereby
causes the death of the rodent.
100 pounds of rat poison will be
available at the City Hall free of
charge for people to use in their
homes according to Raymond Rog
ers, College Station city manager.
Application of the poison will bo
supervised by L. E. Winder, sani
tary inspector of the college.
Colonel Boatner urges the cam
paign be given careful and serious
attention by all responsible parties
and agencies in the community as
the success of the campaign will
be negligible if the rats are exter
minated in one area and are allow
ed to. inhabit other areas and thus
return later to their old haunts.
By WAYNE DAVIS
For many an Aggie, his eight
hours of tests in the Guidance and
Testing Clinic may be the most
important eight hours of his life.
The clinic, located in the old
Campus Corner Building just across
the street from Music Hall, has
as its purpose the enlightment
of the student as to his real in
terests, aptitudes, and abilities.
Interpretation of tests, and
counseling is done by A. E. Denton,
Jr., director of the clinic. The ac
tual tests are administered by Mrs.
Jo. M. McKenzie, Mrs. Helen Ann
Hardy, and Mrs. Felice Klien, psy-
chometrists.
Originally established in 1941,
the Clinic was taken over by the
Veterans Administration in 1945.
The program of testing and coun
seling is now open, at no cost,
to any student, veteran or non-
Whal’s Cookin’
AGGIE CHRISTIAN FELLOW
SHIP: Wednesday, 7:15 p. m.,
YMCA Cabinet Room.
BEAUMONT-PORT ARTHUR
CLUB: Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.,
Room 301 Goodwin. Christmas
dance details.
BOSQUE COUNTY CLUB,
Thursday, Nov. 16, after yell prac
tice, Room 225 Academic Building.
BRAZORIA COUNTY CLUB:
Wednesday, 7:15 p. m., MSC. Soc
ial meeting.
BRUSH COUNTRY CLUB,
Thursday, Nov. 1(1, after yell prac
tice. Room 304 Academic Building.
Party plans, bring picture money.
ECONOMICS SOCIETY: Thurs
day after yell practice, room 3C
MSC. All student forum on econo
mics courses. Freshmen and sopho
mores will be given advice. Plans
for a social will be discussed.
FT. WORTH CLUB, Thursday,
Nov. 16, after yell practice. Room
107 Biological Sciences Building.
HEART OF THE HILLS CLUB:
Wednesday 7:30, Room 203 Aca
demic Building.
HILLEL CLUB: Wednesday,
7:15, room 2B MSC. There will be
cl Sp6£t(£6I*
JOHNSON COUNTY CLUB:
Thursday after yell practice, Room
226 Academic Building.
PANHANDLE CLUB: Thursday
after yell practice. Room 103, Aca
demic Building. Set date for party.
ROBERTSON COUNTY CLUB:
Thursday, 7:30 p. m., Room 2A
MSC.
TYLER CLUB: Thursday after
yell practice. First floor Academic
Biiiiding. Plans for Thanksgiving
party.
Battalion
CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 4
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1950
SELL WITH A BATTALION CLASSIFIED
AD. Rates ... 3c a word per Insertion
with a 25c minimum. Space rate In
Classified Section ... 60c per column
incii. Send all classified with remit
tance to the Student Activities Office.
All ads should be turned in by 10:00
a.m. of the day before publication.
• FOR
SALE •
1940—2-Door Ford.
Phone 4-4808 after 5.
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE and Furniture.
217 East Dexter.
Phone 4-4808.
ONE “SELECTROSLIDE” automatic 2”
x 2” slide projector complete with cab
inet and one “flicker-flash” film strip
projector. Bids will be received until
10:00 A.M., Monday, November 22,
1950. The right is reserved to reject any
and all bids and to waive any and ail
technicalities. Address Director, Texas
Forest Service, College Station, Texas,
or telephone 6-6894 or 4-1276 for fur
ther information.
A CHILD’S large size roll top desk with
swivel chair. Call 4-4094 after 12 noon.
Official Notice
OFFICIAL NOTICE-GRADUATE
STUDENTS
Each graduate student is responsible for
seeing that his committee and course of
study forms are now properly filed in the
office of the Graduate School.
A student wishing to register for any
term after his first term of graduate work
must bring his copy of his official grad
uate course of study to registration with
notations on it to show he courses already
taken and the grades received.
IDE P. TROTTER, '
Dean, Graduate School
Classes will be Suspended at Noon
Thursday, November 23rd, to permit at
tendance at the football game between the
freshmen of A.&M. and the Univedsity of
Texas. The game will be staged for the
benefit of the Shriners’ Crippled Childrens
Fund.
C. Clement French
Dean of the College
A change will be made in the regular
class schedule on Wednesday, December
6th, to equalize the abssnees which have
occurred during the fall. Thursday class
es, scheduled to meet from 8 a.m. (o 5
p.m., will meet Wednesday, December 6th,
at their usual periods. All classes nor
mally scheduled to meet on Wednesday,
December 6th, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
will not meet on that date.
C. Clement French
Dean of the College
LOUPOTS
An Aggie Institution
Dr. Carlton R. Lee
OPTOMETRIST
203 S. Main Street
Call 2-1662 for Appointment
1947 NASH Super 600, Fordor 2/s air-ride
tires, radio, weather eye, tutone blue,
original windshield washers. Russell
A-14-Z.
FOR RENT
NEW UNFURNISHED apartment, 2 bed
rooms, living room, kitchen, dinette,
bath, good location. Also new furnished
apartment with real nice furniture, 2
bedroom, kitchen and dinette combined,
bath. Call daytime, 3-6015; after 6
p.m., call 2-7859.
3-BEDROOM HOUSE, newly decorated—
Venetian blinds—located 310 No. Has-
well.
COMPLETELY FURNISHED home with
4 y 2 acres, 114 miles south of College
Station, Highway 6. Turn left at Cau-
casion Dog Kennel Sign.
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR ESTIMATES on building, general re
pairs and concrete work, call D. R.
Dale General Contractor, Ph. 4-8272.
PERMA-STONE DISTRIBUTOR.
LOST AND FOUND
GOLD “BULOVA” watch during Dallas
parade. Contact Johnny Mack Smith,
Dorm 15, Room 122. REWARD.
• WANTED •
K1DDOS for my football game party.
$1 each. Mickey Roberts, B-25 Vet
Village.
RADIOS & REPAIRING
Call For and Delivery
STUDENT CO-OP
Phone 4-4114
Get Your . . .
CHRISTMAS
PORTRAIT
MADE NOW!
and avoid the
RUSH!
• No appointment needed
• No waiting lines
• Beautiful work
A&M Photo Shop
“Next to the Grill”
veteran, who applies for it.
There are eleven different types
of tests . given, among them tests
of manual dexterity, mechanical
ability, reading and vocabulary,
clerical aptitude, and intelligence.
Each classification has several sub-
classifications based on the appar
ent ability of the applicant.
Should a student make an abnor
mally high grade on one test, he
may be given a more difficult one
to better indicate his real ability
in that field. The entire series of
tests requires eight hours |for
completion, but they need not all
be taken the same day.
There is no loss in accuracy if
the tests are spread out over sev
eral days.
Almost every conceivable pre
caution is taken in the tests to
insure accuracy. In the Person
ality tests, there are carefully
hidden check questions to check
on how a student would really
react in a situation in which he
may not himself be certain of
how he would react. There are
comparable questions in the In
terest, and Clerical Aptitude tests.
Surprisingly, Denton says, few
students apply for the testing ser
vice until in trouble scholastically.
Frequently a dean will advise one
of his students to take advantage of
the tests, although it is not com
pulsory to do so and, whether he
takes it or not, it will not affect
the student’s scholastic record.
Not so surprising, in a very
high percentage of cases the tests
indicate that the student is not in
the field in which he has the great
est aptitude.
Fortunately, not only do the
tests show that a student has
chosen the wrong field. After
a personal consultation with the
Clinic’s, psychiatrists and a care
ful study by Denton of his test
results, an applicant can almost
invariably be directed into a
much more likely field.
Frequently, the indicated field
is one which he has previously
considered and discarded as a pro
fession,
“These tests are merely indica
tions,” Denton says, “and they are
not infallible. Even though a stu
dent shows a decided lack of
aptitude in his chosen field, if he
is really eager to succeed, he
stands an excellent chance of do
ing it by a great deal of study
and hard work.”
TODAY thru SATURDAY
LAST DAY
“HIRED WIFE”
TIIIJRS. thru SATURDAY
1 ft MV
i " emftXB sywx) ^
RANDOLPH
scon
GEORGE W HAYES 4.
.Tht ,/• £'■■■
ii
COLORS FOR YOUR HOME !
presented by
SPRED SATIN (A (Jlidden Product)
The original synthetic rubber emulsion base paint
for WALLPAPER, SHEETROCK & WOODWORK
Chapman’s Paint & Wallpaper Co.
“Next to the Postoffice”
Bryan Dial 2-1318
DAVIDSON
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% Wool Sox with soft glove leather
soles and felt inner soles. Full toe cap and
high cut heel for extra wear. Individual
Gift Box package. Assorted Colors.
The Exchange Store
“Serving Texas Aggies”
BEAT RICE