The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 08, 1950, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Balia lion
CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 6
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1950
Senate Asks Uniform Return
SELL, WITH A BATTALION CLASSIFIED
AD. Rates ... 3c a word per Insertion
wltn a 2t)o minimum. Space rate In
Classified Section ... 60c per column
Incn. Send all classified with remit
tance to the Student Activities Office.
All aas should be turned In by 10:00
a.m. of the day before publication.
• FOR SALE *
ONE MONTflOMRRT WARD Refrigerator,
One oarland Das Range, both four years
old rin excellent condition. Phone 4-4S0S
; or see at 217 E. Iiexter.
MERLE NORMAN COSME'iTCS
merit as well ns a make-up.
formation, call 'MSSL
a treat-:
For in-
ONE 1947 BUICK Sedan, immaculately
clean, Call 4-1253 or 4-8211.
Duplex Apartment
Building for Sale
Each apartment has'two large
bedrooms, living room, dining
room, kitchen, bath, garages.
Pre-war brick veneer construc
tion, excellent condition* all
rented. Property large lot in
good residential, area, walking
distance to business district-
ideal for investment or for
owner tenant occupancy. Cash
transaction, no agent. Shown
by appointment only. Located
in Bryan, Texas. Reply Box
One, The Battalion, College Sta
tion, Texas.
FOUR-ROOM furnished house, bath and
garage, one block north of Campus The
atre. Immediate possession. Phone
NICE four-room unfurnished apartment,
201 Church Street, College, or phone
4-X709.
UNFURNISHED house, fi,rooms, bath, and
glassed sleeping porch, newly redeco
rated, tile drain hoard, attic fan, 302
North College Main, shown by appoint
ment : W. t). Lloyd, 500 College Main
phone .MSlil, Box 154.
College View Units' MSC Streeilighting Bid Approved .
To Get Tile Floors
Laying of asphalt tile on floors
of College View apartments will
be started soon, the .Student Apart
ments Office has announced.
Tile laying has been completed
in Student Manager Byn Wed
dell’s apartment so the college
could get art estimate of the over
all-cost.
Work on the remaining' 465 Col
lege View .apartments . will begin
as soon as materials arrive.
« WANTED *
SIDE for. Uvo broke Aggies i<> Now Void:
City or vicinity. Can leave any time'
after 15th. Byron E. Black, ph. 2-5871
afp'r fi p.m.
RIDE TO FT. WORTH for couple and
house-broken piipppy—can leave Friday
evening Dec. 22nd. Call 4-5324, Mrs.
McCullough, Gladly share expenses.'
« MSSOKLLA NEOTV *
FOR ESTIMATES on.building, general re-
p".jrs and concrete work, call D. R.
Dale General Contractor, Pb. 4-8272.
PI5RMA-STONE DISTRIBUTOR
: Living and dining room area,
I kitchen, and baths are to be cov-
j era! with brown asphalt tile. The
| floors will be rough-sanded and
1 the tile laid on a felt base.
Present plans call for completion
from one to two apartments daily,
Workers will begin with the front,
D Row, apartment houses and
work backward to A Row.
Tenants will be advised one or
two days prior to the time that
their apartment will bo tiled.
TRICYCLE, SCOOTER—both for *5. CockI
condition. Call 4-1)932 after 0 o’clock.
* LOST AND FOUND •
LOST: Black and white female fox ter-
, j'ier, answers to "Gertrude”. REWARD.
. Call 6-3521.
LOST: From open car trunk -one black
Redwing eight-inch bird hunter boot for
right foot. Believed lost somewhere in
College Park or South Oakwpod, Sun
day, November 20. REWARD. Ph.
4-7906.
CHRISTMAS TREES, aU; sixes, 50c. ‘ See
at Apartment 25B, Vet Village.
FOK RKNT
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.
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.
Official Notice
January Graduation , ,n noun cements must
be ordered prior to December 9, In Student
Activities Office, Room 209, Goodwin Hall.
Grady Elms, Assistant Director, Student
Activities.
RADIOS 5 REPAIRING
’! T,' • .<>-i * 'i*' '• •
• Call For and Delivery
STUDENT CO-OP *■
. Phone 4-4114
Students Senators voted almost
unanimously to send a letter to
the Dean of Men at Texas Univer
sity asking that articles of cloth
ing stolen from cadets during the
recent Corps Trip to Austin be re
turned.
At their regular meeting Thurs
day night, the Senators agreed the
Texas University student body
should be given a chance to re
turn the stolen articles before any
prosecution is attempted.
The letter, which'was prepared
and read by Bill Moss, contained
a price list of some of the. articles;
such as blouses, boots, trousers,
short coats, and caps.
The letter also reminded the
University students that much of
the loss suffered by Aggies was
government issued uniform, thus
making many of the thefts a fed-
Cadets in High Spirits
(Continued from Page 1)
cd. “Maybe our offense can fin
ally pick up and light out if the
defense isn’t too much, I’m not
worried about our defensive
line’s ability (o take care of it
self.’’
But the Cadets are not down
hearted. Although they have lost
I four games, two of these have been
to the No. 1 and No. 2 teams in
the nation-—Oklahoma and Texas.
In the final .‘14 seconds, the Soon-
ers won over the Cadets who had
led. up until the final moments,
Texas battered and held the Ca
dets to win with a 17 point mar
gin and were the only team to
hold the Farmers scoreless.
Smith, who leads the conference
in two departments -rushing with
l!i()2 yards in 199 carries for a (i.5
average, also the best in the con
ference, and scoring with 14 touch
downs for 84 points—will pace the
Dr. Carlton R. Lee
OPTOMETRIST
208 S. Main Street
Call 2-1662 for Appointment
ALL MAKES PORTABLE
TYPEWRITERS
EASY TEEMS
Guy IS. Deaton
Typewriter Co.
rn
CHEVR0
DAY!
CHEVROLET FOR 1951
On Display in Our Showroom
MEW BEAUTY FROM EVERY ANGLE!
Front and back, right and left—any way you look at it—the trim,
low lines of the superbly styled new Chevrolet will thrill you with
their distinctive smartness.
NEW LUXURIOUS INTERIORS!
The simple beauty of the functionally designed new Safety-Sight
instrument panel... the new richness of upholstery fabrics ...
the invitingly subdued new two-tone panels . . . combine in the
1951 Chevrolet to provide a strikingly different, wonderfully new
big-car luxury in the low-price field.
NEW THRILLING PERFORMANCE!
Chevrolet for 1951 performs as well as it looks! New, big, instant-
acting Jumbo-Drum Brakes—largest in the low-price field-
improved Center-Point steering (and Center-Point design) . . .
scores of other new mechanical advances—PLUS Time-Proved
Powerglide Automatic Transmission* —make Chevrolet more
than ever the easiest-riding, safest, thriftiest car in the low-price
field . . . America’s Largest and Finest Low-Priced Car!
•Optional on Dc Luxe models at extra cost.
GET THE FACTS FIRST HAND !
Come in TOMORROW- Look over the thrilling new
Chevrolets for 1951 personally. One inspection, one
ride, will convince you: Chevrolet is far and away
the value leader for 1951!
Corbusier Chevrolet Co,
20th and Main
Bryan
starting offensive quartet of the
Aggies.
Gardemal to Start
Dick Gardemal will start in the
man-under slot with Bill Tidwell
and Glenn Lippman filling the
halfback slots.
Both Tidwell and Lippman are
ranked among the top rushers in
the conference, and among the top
defensive stalwarts of the Maroon.
Starting in Hillhouse’s place will
be Jerry Crossman while either
Walter Hill or Charley Hodge will
represent the Aggies on the other
wing post. Hill, a sophomore, was
cited for his defensive and offen
sive work in the annual Turkey
Day fray.
Dwayne Tucker and Sam Moses
will be the offensive .tackles with
All-Conference Guards Max Grein
er and Carl Molberg flanking All-
Conference Center Hugh Meyer.
Double-Duty Men
Defensively, W. Hill, C. D. Gwin
or Dorbandt Barton will start at
end; Russell Hudeck and Jack Lit-
tie at tackle; arid both All-Confer
ence Guards Molberg and Greiner
will play also on defense.
Linebackers will be All-Confer
ence center Bob Bates and W. Hill
if Gwin starts at end or perhaps
Harrow Hooper, who owns the
Southwest Conference’s most edu
cated toe, having successfully boot
ed 34 PATs, will team with Bates
in backing up the line.
Defensive halfbacks will be
Charley McDonald and Billy Tid
well with Yale Lary in the safety
position.
eral offense. Any Aggie from
whom, articles were- stolen is fe-
! quested to make a report of his
1 loss. Xo Bennie ^inn, assistant to
| the Dean of Men, immediately.
Any student knowing the loca-
j tion . of any stolen equipment or
j any information concerning guilty-
1 parties should also-submit his in--
| formation to- Zinn as soon as, pos-
j sible.
Ferris Brown, Student .Senate
I representative to the: : MSC'Coun
cil, reported that a $6,00,0 coli-
I tract had been signed w:jth WosU
! inghquse Electric Corporation foi*
I the lighting of the area surround
ing the Memorial Student' Center.
Chairman of the Senate Traffic
Committee., Jimmy Onstott, rerid a
letter from President Harrington
and the College Traffic Committee
telling of proposed parking rind
traffic, changes. With approygl ot
the Board of, Dirdciorsf. Trail
What’s Cooking
AGGIE SQUARES,.Friday 7:30
ji. m:, St. Thomas- Episcopal Par
ish House. Instructions from 7:3(8
8:00. Newcomers welcome.
KREAM & KOW KLUB, Fri
day, 6:00 p. m. Picnic at Cash-
ions Cabin. Freshman especially in
vited.
TALENT SHOW AUDITIONS,
Friday, 7 p.m., MSC.
CAMERA CLUB, Friday, 7:30
p.m., Rooms «3B and 3C MSC. , ■
Street is to lie widened to permit
: diagonal parking on both sides.
It is to remain a one-way street,
; however, with .traffic moving
south. The placing of floodlights
on the top of dorms, illuminating
parking areas in an effort to stop
pilfering was discussed, but no
oefmite decision was reached.
' A motion 'by Joe Fuller, to go
ahead .with plans to bririg a for
eign student to A&M for one year
with financial help from the Cam
pus Chest was .passed Iffthe Sen
ate.-“Spider” Eubank made a re-,
port; of his Ptuclies concerning a
.foreign student at A&M, and stat
ed that the Senate' could specify
the nationality ’of the student they
were to . .sponsor, arid the Institute
of- International Education would.
furnish a deserving student from
that country.
The Exchange Store Committee
reported on the appropriation of
last year’s profits from the Ex
change Store, which amounted to
$50,000. The largest appropriation
was $27,500 to the MSC for operat
ing expenses. Other appropriations
went to the Aggie Band and the
Student Life Committee for stu
dent 'welfare and recreation.
Acting' on a motion by - Lloyd
Mrinjeot,; the Senate decided to
pay. Baylor for- -two megaphones
that were, stolen from Baylor
cheerleaders, the weekend of the
Baylor-A&M . game. The money is
to be taken from the Campus
Chest. Contingency Fund.
(Continued from Pago 2)
had orders to move to Pusan.
This was a march that I will
never forget. The road was rough,
narrow, dusty, and mountainous.
At the same time the 1st Cav.,
24th. and part, of the 25th Divisions
were going north. They had prior
ity. They moved in daylight and
we moved mostly at night.
After several columns had niov--
cd south, the “Reds” started their
tricks of ambushes and roadblocks.
Information which we obtained
from captured North Koreans re
vealed that they thought the Amer
icans were retreating south. There
had been several thousand bypass-
( d between Taegu and Seoul. They
tried to reorganize but without
results.
The Aggies seem to he pouring
it on this year. I don’t suppose
you have time for the games since
you lost Capt. Moran. . .
Sakamoto
Aggies Leave-
(Continued from Page 3)
the Texas group to sit in a block
of seats on the fifty yard lin§.
Official authorization for the
cadets to make the flight was
telegraphed to the AFROTC
headquarters from Washington.
It limited the men going to 20
Air Force DMS’ who made appli
cation for regular commissions.
The cadets making the flight
left from Bryan Field this morn
ing at 7:30 a. m. The first plane
was piloted by Colonel Napier and
Captain Burris.
Men making the flight are. Dare-
Keelan, Waymond Nutt, Burt,
Bailey, Robert Blanchard, Stanley
Southworth, Jackson Raley, Doug
las Hearne, Hubert Davis, Cor
don Edgar, Norman Braslau, Wil
liam Robertson, C. M. Davenport,
John F. Rhemann, Clayton Solph,
David Coslett, James Harrison,
Herman Thompson, Janies Pianta,
Donald Hooten, John Gossett, and
C. C. Taylor.
(Continued from Page 1) f j
. Sake, next went to work dig--!
ging ditches, repairing roads and.
fixing trucks', 'The^Russians con-;
trnued to guard him cjpsely. Then, i
in April qf this year, the 'Kus-j
sians -suddenly gave .him his free-!
dpm. ! They: gavd no explanation. |
His release had been none too
soon. The boat on which he re
turned to Japan was the last to
make the repatriation voyage.
Russia announced that all pris
oners had been returned to Jap
an. Over 350,060 Japanese, how
ever, are still unaccounted for.
Thus it was that, after five long
years, -Sake got his chance to tell
the story of life in Ribera. The
American Central Intelligence
Agency in Japan was among the
first to hear his past experiences.
A free, man once* more, Sako
went to work for the North Ameri
can Newspaper Alliance. His job
there was cut short when he de
cided to return to this country.
He arrived in San- Antonio Sept,
?4.'
Sakamoto’s recent visit, to
A&M was to see his two half-
brothers, Ken and Sow Kunihiro,
both graduate students here.
Ken is studying rural sociology
while Sow is a floriculture maj-
or. '
, Sako has no definite plans for
the future. Perhaps he’s, too busy
Enjoying his well-earned freedom.
He is .seriously considering work
as a linguist with the American
Intelligence Agency.
His experiences behind the in
famous Iron Curtain may well
help ‘ tiv destroy, that barrier to
freedom and (X ace.
A SANTA SPECIAL
© Do you need EXTRA money for
Christmas?? Sho, Man . . .
We GUARANTEE our o f 1 e r
for your good Used Books to
be bp; GREATER- than any
other book dealers’.
• AND TO GIVE YOUR “OLE LADY”
A VERY MERRY TEXAS XMAS
A SPECIAL GROUP OF AG “T” SHIRTS
Reduced to 59c
A RECORD—Latest Hits From 79c
LEATHER AGGIE BOOT KEY HOLDERS 25c
AN AGGIE CANNON BATH TOWEL $1.00
TERRY CLOTH RATH SCUFFS—From $1.95
FOUR COLOR PENCILS 75c
TOT STAPLER 98c
— YOU CAN AFFORD TO GIVE THE BEST AT —
Shaffer’s Book Store
Across from Post Office North Cate
' ’'y kij '5 r* ^ r? ^
- ... x'. -