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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 23, 1950)
Aggie 4-II Clubber Win Chicago Trip Bruce Gibson, sophomore land scape architecture major, has won hig'h honors in the 4-H Club and a trip to the National 4-H Club Congress in Chicago Nov. 26-30. Gibson and 32 other Texas 4-H delegates will meet in Fort Worth Friday where Sears Roebuck & Co. will honor the group with a luncheon. Accompanying the group is Floyd Lynch, State 4-H Club lead-r er; Erma Wines, assistant State 4-H Club leader; W. B. Wooser, county agent, Hall County; and Jewell Strasner, home demonstra tion agent, Garza County. The delegation will leave Fort Worth Saturday and return to Texas Dec. 3. Bulla liv n CLASSIFIED ADS Pago 6 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1950 Co-ads Have Studied Here (Continued from Page 1) USED CARS T>0 NASH Statesman black tudor with white sidewall tires, low mileage, like new. ’49 NASH Statesman fordor, radio, heater, white sidewall tires, overdrive, very clean. ’49 FORI) V-8 custom tudor, R&K, white sidewall tires, new paint job. ’48 CHEV. club coppe, R & IT, chrome wheels and spotlight. ‘48 NASH Am. fordor, R & H, overdrive, white side- wall tires, just like new. ’48 NASH 600 fordor, R <£ H, motor iust recondi tioned. ’46 NASH Am. fordor, R & PI, overdrive, rebuilt mo tor. ’46 HUDSON fordor, R & PI, new motor job. ’42 PACKARD convertible, R & H, new top, new crankshaft, white sidewall tires. See this one! OTHER BARGAINS ’39 OLDSMOBILE 6 tudor. ’39 NASH Am. tudor. ’37 PLYMOUTH tudor. ’37 DE SOTO fordor, new motor, radio. ’37 FORD 85 tudor, new paint. ’36 CHEVROLET coupe. ’38 HARLEY DAVIDSON motorcycle. 25 MORE CARS FROM ’35 TO ’ll MODELS THAT CAN BE BOUGHT FOR LESS THAN $100.00. CASH or TERMS FOR THE BEST DEAL IN TOWN COME BY Lee’s Used Car Lot At 29th St. and South Main SJSLL WITH A BATTALION CLASSIFIED AD. Kates ... 3c a word per Insertion witn a Z5.: minimum. Space rate in Classified Section . . . 00c per column InoO. 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 befoie publication. * t-Oft sAAJhj • I1HO -Z-Door Ford. Phone 4-4S08 afler ft. FRIO I DA! RK, good condition, $45.00. A-14 X, 1 College View, after 5:00 p.m. FOUR-ROOM house and garage, completely redecorated—priced for quick sale. Roy M. Carr, across from A.AM. Horticul ture farm. OARKFULLY USRD maternity dresses sizes 14 and' Hi, bargain priced. Mrs. Inglis, 111-A Project Houses. FOK EF.NT NKW CNFIJRNISHF.D apartment, 2 bed rooms, living room, kitchen, dinette, hath, good location. Also new furnished apartment with leal nice furniture, 2 lied room, kitchen and dinette combined, • bath. Call daytime, 3-6015; after 6 p.m., call 2-7859. BEAUTIFUL five-room brick unfurnished apartment. Two bedrooms and bath with plenty closet space. Large glassed- in front porch, living room, large kit chen with double sink and tile drain- board. Hardwood floors, Venetian blinds throughout. Carport. Conveniently lo cated to grocery market, and laundro mat. Sulphur Springs Road. Call 2-1419 or 3-2655. * MISOELl-ANEOHS * FOR ESTIMATES on building, general re pairs and concrete work, call D. R. Dale Oeneral Contractor, Ph. 4-8272. PERMA-STONE DISTRIBUTOR. LOST! REWARD. Monday at 5 p.m., one Parker 51 Pencil between Petroleum Building and Exchange Store, engraved "Sdcony-Vacutim Oil Co., DeVenezuela- Prefnio De Seguridad”. F. A. Garb, Box 1075, Milner 74. Prompt Radio Service —Call— Sosolik’s Radio Service 712 S. Main St. Ph. 2-1941 Bryan ONLY AT SHAFFER’S Handicraft Sets—The Unusual Gift! Copporcraft Sets . . . $3.95 Model Airplane Sets from 75c Model Old Time Automobile Sets $2.95 Shaffer’s Book Store Across from the F.O. N. Gate IRONING, 60c per hour. Work teed. A-3-A, College View. • LOST! T;in billfold at Gym 9:00 class Wednesday, Return billfold, keep mon ey. Vic Howell. I form 1-222. No questions asked. Ojf icia l Nolicv A chung" will he [nude In the regular cUiss schedule on AVeilncMln.v. Dceeiuber 6ih, to equalize the ati.i,auces which have uccurreil during fhe full. ’i'hlir.si1a,y cl.a su es, sche/fuli-il. to meet from 8 a.m. o, 5 p m.. Will meet Wednesday, December (Rh, .1 :liiur usual periods. All emsses nor- Minlly seheduied In meet, oh Wednesday, December 6lh, from ,S n.iu. lo !> pm will not meet on that dale. O. Clement French Denn of the College January. Graduation Annouiieements must he ordered prioT lo Oreeinbor 9, in Sludent Ar.UvlUes Office, Room 209, Goodwin Hull. Grady Kims, Assistant Director, Student Ad Ivii ies. G..ndldaU‘s for degrees in Jamim-y must Lie .a. formal application not Inter than December l, in the Registrar’s Office. This applies to both undergraduate and grudisule sliufeiilH. H. L. Heaton, Registrar “NOTICE TO CANDIDATES FOR GRAD- PAT E DEGREES IN JANUARY, 1951” "Graduate students planning to grad uate uit the end of the current semester must submit formal application before December 1. Forms are available in the office of tlie Dean of the Graduate School.” (Signed) IDE P. TROTTER, Dean” "OFFICIAL NOTH’ E—G It A DU A TE STUDENTS Re: Committee and Course or Study Forms 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 bis first term of graduate work must bring his copy of Ids official grad uate course of study to registration with notations on it to show the courses already taken and the grades received. (Signed) IDE P. TROTTER, Dean” NOTICE An invitation to college marketing stu dents to compete in a national essay con test on problems of the grain trade lias been received by Charles N. Shepardson, Dean, School of Agriculture. Cash prizes totaling over five hundred dollars are available to the winners of the contest from the Uhlmann Awards Fund. Prizes are available for the best papers written by both undergraduate and grad uate students. Essays may be submitted until June 30, 1951. Anyone interested in the rviies of the contest may secure information at the office of Dean Shepardson. Chas. N. Shepardson Dean of Agriculture ASTRP Ex’s to Hold Luncheon in Austin Former members ASTRP at A&M during' 1945-46 will bold a luncheon at 10:30 a. m. on the 30th before the TU game at Youngblood’s, on South Lamar in Austin. girls at that time petitioned the college for admittance. A nega tive ruling' by the Board of Di rectors was upheld by'Judge W. C. Davis of the 85th Judicial District. He legally upheld the right of the college to refuse admission, on the grounds that the girls were not “biological adapted” to enrollment in the college or for work for which graduates were fitted. Apparently no positive restric tion of coeducation here has ever existed. The college is co-education- al at the present time throughout the. sum lie i-school semesters. Fe male attendance, however, is never very high. Few LxceplioiiS At earlier periods in A&M his tory, a few girls have attended the school. Most of them were daugh ters of faculty or staff members admitted as “special students.” Since the legislative council is oipy a recommending body, no ac tion on any of its findings can be taken until the legislature recon venes. Until that time the council will study the report and recom mendations of its research staff concerning all the aspects of the higher education question. Another of these aspects is brought out by Gharley Trimble of The' Daily Texan who is cur rently running a series of reports on the question. In a T'uesday arti cle he says: “Only 51 counties, all thinly populated, are in major part fur ther than 50 miles from a public college, either junior or senior. Neariy 95 per cent of the popula tion of the State lives within 50 miles of a college offering a gen eral curriculum for at least the first two years.” Possible Solution The Dallas News article by Morehead mentions a possible sol ution to this problem in the Dallas- Ft. Worth area where, oddly enough, a junior college (Arlington State) located in neither city serves as the “community college.” Morehead says the researchers offer two possible plans: • “Co-ordinating work of exist ing public and private colleges serving Dallas and Fort Worth. ® “Setting up a major state col lege at Arlington, combining it with North Texas State, now at Denton.” Were this latter solution adopt ed, the North Texas campus might he used for a state hospital. Other aspects of the research re port include duplication of degree offering, of governing boards, of specialization and of other costly features within the educational system. The original AP report on the legislative council’s consideration of the questions, the Thursday story by Byers, referred to a num ber of plans for coordinating high er education submitted by the re search staff. These included: • “Voluntary coordination be tween schools. • Coordination through creation of a division of higher education within the Texas education agency, which now is responsible for the public school system at the grade school and high school level. ® Organization under three ma jor systems—The University of Texas System, The A&M System and the teachers college system. t 1 A single integrated system with separate boards for individ ual insthutioins. Other subjects covered in the. ex haustive research report included special problems of Negro educa tion, regional education, and fi nancing of higher education, com munity colleges, enrollment trends and educational opportunities. Future articles in ’Fhe Battalion will discuss many of these sub jects. ; Your Gifts for Xmas and Save Your Money!! Flexcraft Kits Bead Kits Dek-all Kits Moulding Kits Xmas Story Kits Textile Paints Copper Paints Plane Dope Plastic Spray • Jig Saws • Model Planes Figurines Alum. Circles Copper Foil Basket Reed Leather Patterns Wishing Well Plantus Copper Tools Come By The HOBBY CENTER Next to the Bryan Eagle Office IS fisir PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN ON CAMPUS LOUISE SANFORD AUBURN ’51 f lif r m;: Make the tobacco growers’ MILIHESS TEST YOURSELF... “TOBACCOS THAT SMELL MILDER SMOKE MILDER" IES... Compare Chesterfield with the brand you’ve been smoking... Open a pack... smell that milder Chesterfield aroma. Vrove—tobaccos that smell milder smoke milder. Now smoke Chesterfields™ t/iry do smoke milder. and they leave NO UNPLEASANT AFTER-TASTK. iky / ; FADING SELLER IN AMERICA'S COLLEGES #1 im, gjanr l SUPER VALUES Specials for Friday & Saturday - Nov. 24th & 25th EXTRA SPECIALS Bakers Southern Style—4 oz. Can Coconut 10 c Snowdrift Shortening. 3 lb. 79 c Diamond—2 Tomatoes..2 for 19 c Powdered or Brown Sugar. lb. 10 c Ocean Spray—303 2 FOR Cranberry Sauce. 29 c Bewley’s Best Flour 5 lb. 35c Dixie-—in *4 Lb. Sticks Colored Margarine. 1 lb. 25c Sfrokeley’s—No. 2 Pie Cherries 21c Hunt’s—2 Vi Peaches Halves 27c Libby’s Golden—303 Cream Style Corn . 2 for 31 e Libby’s Garden Sweet—-303 Peas . 2 for 37c Libby’s—300 Deep Frown Beans, 2 - 21c Betty Crocker’s—Pkg. Crustquick .... pkg. 10c Libby’s—303 Custard Pumpkin, 2 for 23c Tall Carnation Milk . . 2 for 25c Miracle Whip Salad Dressing . . . Pt. 31c Kraft’s Salad Oil . Pt. 29c - Qt. 57c Betty Crocker—Pkg. Party Cake Mix 32c Softasilk (iake Flour .... Box 37c Popular Brands Cigarettes . . . Carton $1.86 Hershey—Box 24 Candy Bars 85c Del Monte Early Garden—No. 2 Asparagus 39c FROZEN FOODS • 2 for 43c Minute Maid—6 oz. Orange Juice . Snowcrop—12 oz. Strawberries 39c Birdseye Ford hook Limas . pkg. 29c Blue Water Ocean Perch . . . .lb. 39c. Libby’s Kosedale Green & White—303 Lima Beans .... 2 for Kraft s Dinner Pillsbury’s—Pkg. Hot Roll Mix ...... Blackburn’s—22 oz. Syrup Kim bell’s Matches Carton Quaker—Pkg. Hominy Grits 2 Pkg. With 1 Can Ajax Cleanser FREE FAB Charm in Toilet Tissue . 4 rolls Diamond—No. 2 Sweet Potatoes . . 2 for Lb. Pkg. Admiration Coffee . . . Hershey’s Dainties Dromedary Pitted Dates • MARKET • Medium Select Oysters pt. 69c Armour’s Dexter Bacon lb. 45c Choice Pork Chops lb. 49c Veal Crown Roast lb. 64c Armour’s Country Style Pure Pork Sausage . lb. 39c Armour’s—By the Piece Slab Bacon lb. 42c Pork Loin End Roast .... lb. 45c • PRODUCE Red Emperor Grapes . . . . . lb. 9c Pascal Celery .... . 2 bun. 25c California Potatoes . . . . 5 lb. 25c Eatmor Cranberries . . . . lb. 19c COULTER DRIVE AT HIWAY 6 The Shopping Center “FORMERLY RONEY’S” "TlVL' «>« Bight ■ s ■* ” Y •« Uuwt Quantities Closed Sundaj's 1 P. M. to 4 P, M. AIR CONDITIONED FOR YOUR SHOPPING COMFORT LARGE FREE PARKING AREA 23c 10c 19c 23c 33c 15c 55c 29c 27c 77c 19c 19c • SUNDRIES • 32 Piece—White China Set set $3.25 $12.95 Red Hawk Carpenter’s Overalls pp. $3.99 Hadaeol bottle 79c Vicks Vapo Rub - 40c , 29c Rubbing Alcohol . pt. 10c “Shop the Shopping Center and Save’’