The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 23, 1951, Image 6

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The Battalion Is 6 Put To Bed
C, of C. Sets
Membership
Drive Date
Letters explaining the aims and
purposes of the College Station
Chamber of Commerce will be sent
to all prospective members to
launch the drive for membership in
the organization, Joe Sorrels, pres
ident, said Monday after meeting
with committeemen,
Ray Oden, Marion PugTi and J.
E. Roberts comprise the member
ship committee.
The drive, staged annually, will
seek to contact all local business
men and residents who may be in
terested in joining the group.
Membership is open to any resi
dent or businessman who is inter
ested in the improvement or social
and civic conditions in the city,
Sorrels said.
The Chamber of/'om
Kremlin May Be Preparing
Russian People For War
Ry J. M. RORERTS, JR.
Photo by Battalion Chief Photographer Sam Molinary
And it’s no easy job. Shown above are two steps in the production
of a newspaper. Above, George Shearer translates typewritten
copy at the keyboard of his Intertype. At right above, Leonard
Draper, foreman of the A&M Press composing room, looks on as
Halt staffers Ralph Gorman (center) and “Andy” Anderson check
page proofs. Checking of page proofs is the final step before the
Battalion goes to press.
Battalion
CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 6
TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1951
I SK battalion classified ads to
UL'Y, SELL, KENT OK TRADE. ItatCN
.... He a word per insertion with a
Z. r >e minimum. Space rale in classified
section .... 60c per column-inch. Send
all classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES
offiee. All ads must be received In Stu
dent Activities office by 10 a.m. on the
day before publication.
• FOR SALE •
KODAK MONITOR F-ii. Flash Kodamatic
.Shutter and Flash Cun with Ever Ready
case. Gadget bag. Wratten Filters A
& K2, Kodak Pola-screen, Filter adapter
and lens hood. Weston II Meter and
Case, Tripod and pan head. Dozens of
flash bulbs. Over S150 value for $10(1.
Call 4-4517 or see at 312 Highlane, Col
lege.
WHIZZER motor bike recently overhauled
and repainted. Excellent transportation
for $75.00. Call 4-4517 or see at 312
Highland, College.
r-r-:'r=v ■-...
n FOR RENT
ATTRACTIVE furnished 5-room house,
College Hills. Phone 4-8183.
FURNISHED room with adult couple, short
distance from campus. Gentleman pre
ferred—call 3-3593.
BETWEEN Bryan and College, small one
bedroom furnished house including Easy
Spin-dry washer. Also small furnished
apartment in Bryan. Phone 2-1495.
ONE FURNISHED four-room apartment
available immediately. Phone 4-4364.
FURNISHED garage apartment, 914 South
College, Bryan, Phone 2-8905.
NICELY furnished room, private bath.
Home of adult couple. Walking distance
of Campus. Call 4-8659.
UNFURNISHED large garage apartment,
J/, way Bryan, College. Phone available
% block. Bus—use of washing machine
and garage furnished. Phone 2-1957.
WANTED TO RENT
TW 7 0-ROOM furnished apartment, near
college. Contact Thomas Carpenter, 1014
Woodlawn, Dallas, Texas.
STORAGE SPACE needed for automobile
near new area. Contact Harrison, Dorm
2, 328, Box 6499.
• HELP WANTED •
TWO MEN for part-time sales work in
Bryan, College Station, five afternoons
a week, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.; $10.00 per
week guaranteed, can make more. Per
manent. Write W. C. Hudson, P. O.
Box 1193, Bryan, Texas.
CAPABLE accompanist for dancing school,
part time. Contact Miss Hollander at,
4-5124, or write Clara Howard School of
Dance, Box 1706, College Station.
EXPERIENCED young lady to take com
plete charge of phonograph record de
partment. Must have knowledge of both
popular and classical music. Write Box
H, c/o The Battalion.
« MISCELLANEOUS
TYPING—reasonable rates. Phone 3-1776.
ANYONE knowing the whereabouts of R.
O. Johnson, Jr. Please call 4-5124.
LOST AND FOUND
LOST! The opportunity to buy a life
insurance policy without a War Risk and
Aviation Exclusion Rider. Sometime dur
ing my last days on the A. & M. Cam
pus, when I thought the insurance agents
were just trying to scare me into buying
a policy. No reward is offered, for the
opportunity is gone forever
Don’t mail this ad back to the Batt a
few months hence, but see Eugene Rush
today.
Official Notice
INSTALLMENT FAYING, SECOND
SEMESTER 1950-51
Fees payable to the College Fiscal Depart
ment may be paid in installments as fol
lows:
Second Semester
1. First installment payable
on entrance January 29-30
To February 20
Matriculation Fee (required $ 25.00
Medical Service Fee (required). . 5.00
Student Activities Fee (required) 10,00
Board 31.70
Room Rent 8.00
Laundry 2.55
Room Key Deposit, returnable
Total payable to Fiscal
Department $ 82.25
2. Second installment February 1-20
payable To March 20
Board $ 36.95
Room Rent 9.35
Laundry 3.00
Total payable to
Fiscal Department $ 49.30
3 Third installment payable March 1-20
(Spring recess excluded) To April 20
Board $ 35.65
Room Rent 10.30
Laundry 3.30
Total payable to
B’iscal Department $ 49.25
4. Fourth installment payable April 1-20
To June 2
Board $56.75
Room Rent 14.35
Laundry 4.65
Total payable to
Fiscal Department $ 75.75
TOTAL SPRING SEMESTER. .$256.55
HAZELWOOD ACT EXEMPTIONS
Resident students of Texas who expect
to register for the Spring Semester, and
claim an exemption from the matriculation
fee under the Hazelwood Act should call
by the Registrar’s Office immediately to
secure notice of exemption. Eligible stu
dents should claim these exemptions prior
to registration on Monday, January 29 if
at all possible.
H. L. HEATON . .
Registrar
Worst ()r o ug i
May Yetnrie
/rNARD SHAW
By ASSOCIATED PRESS wh (
(-•n harve
Drought has swung - an econojhe nat
haymaker at half a dozen soutern rd
western states. Government ovej*
pert.s say the worst may be f foi.
to come. jbi’S^
Extreme lack of rain threater.
disrupt agriculture in Texas, K-.
zona and New Mexico. The dry
also extends across roughly the
southern halves of Colorado, Utah
and Nevada.
There’s even talk of another dust
bowl, similar to that in which winds.'
ravaged topsoil of the great plai” i,> *
in the 19:30s. Conjecture 1^> s
dwelt on such conditions recu
in 20-year cycles. people
Periods in Which no rali?j'. ca t neKS
has fallen range up to fof g^ aw > s
across much of this so s ga y ^hat
region. In some area^ nc ; w the
uary storms have ha( th reverence,
drought. .ntury’s French
Stockmen * (! 'Uj.oust and Anier-
Many were fore p ros t
their cattle t<jg rs? Mohandas K.
states or to "' non _violent liberator
and other td{^j ons w ho was shot
result has f, assassin's bullet in
m costs destined to live as one
ious depletR mart y rs 0 f history,
meat. . -en. a half-century of
Concern is , + jfj c an d industrial
\by scores—if not
whose names
\£s' long as rec-
. II, i m J ■' I q
In Blues-singing,
^Mammy’ Style
MAHATMA GANDHI
Library Fi
Exam PerioSJT
Library hours for the b« ma he
terms period have been set, A^hie
ant Librarian M. V. Krenitsky\ e j_
today. The new schedule will taX e
effect Friday, and will last through
next Tuesday.
The library will be open from 8
a. m. till 5 p. m. Friday, and from
8 a. m. till noon Saturday. Sunday
is will be closed. Monday and Tues
day it will be open from 8 a. m.
until 5 p. m. Wednesday the regu
lar schedule goes back into effect.
incandescent lamp, the motion pic
ture, ami hundreds of others.
Nor will tomorrow forget Henry
Ford, who developed the assembly
line of production which put Amer
ica in the forefront of the world’s
powers. Nor Wilbur and Orville
Wright, who in 1903 sent a plane
into the air at Kitty Hawk, N. C.,
for 59 seconds and began the era
of flight. Nor the Polish chemist
Casimir Funk, who isolated the
first vitamins, nor the Canadian
doctors, Banting and Best, who
isolated the fist hormones which
already have saved the lives of
millions.
, It does not necessarily follow,
of course, that the names of those
most noted today will live the long
est in the future. Among 20th
Century Greats may be a worker
in an obscure laboratory, a writer
of books unknown to the critics,
a preacher in little-traveled fields.
Some of the greatest figures of the
past were not recognized in their
own time on earth
But there is no doubt, as of
now, that when the half century
story
Whafs Cooking
A&M WOMEN’S SOCIAL CLUB,
MSC ballroom, 3 p. m. Jan. 2(5.
Harmony Choral Club will enter
tain.
BRAZORIA COUNTY CLUB
picture to be taken P’eb. 1, 7:30 p.m.
in MSC lounge.
ARCHITECT WIVES CLUB,
Room 3C MSC, 7:30 p. m. Wednes
day. Business session, to elect offi
cers for Spring term.
Hollywood, Jan. 23—(/P>—Blues
singing—one of the Negro’s prime
contributions to American culture
5 a minor art that seems to
elude white singers with but few
exceptions.
One of the exceptions is a lively
young lady named Kay Starr.
Devotees of the blues and jazz
houting school this year have
placed the five-foot-two and eyes-
of-green singer in the top eche
lon along with such great exhibi
tioners as Ethel'Waters, Ella Fitz
gerald, Billie Holliday and Mildred
Bailey.
Until Starr’s emergence, Miss
Bailey, Connee Boswell and Dinah
Shore (on occasion) have rated as
the only songbirds who have been
able to simulate the true blues
spirit.
But none of these—on records,
at least—ever managed the gutty
(there is no better word) quality
that Miss Starr gets into her
work.
Starr’s style of singing has put
her among the year’s top recording
artists. Capitol Records reports
more than 2,000,000 of her records
sold in 1950. Two of Jhem—“Bona
parte’s Retreat” and “I’ll Never
Be Free” (the latter a hill-billy
tinged duet with Tennessee Ernie)
—have passed the 500,000 mark.
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
It looks like the Kremlin is
beginning to prepare the Russian
people for war.
For several weeks newspapers
and speakers have been going be
yond the old warmongering talk
about ( the United States, playing
upon Russian fears of a revived
Germany.
Now,, the Russians are being told
that the United States has nur
tured territorial ambitions against
the Caucasus for 33 years.
Russian diplomacy, in notes to
France and Britain regarding Ger
man rearmament, takes the form of
Wp^ts.
of tax Kremlin, having broken the
communit agreement by rearmament
Anderson am Germany, now grows
to a corpysterical in the face of al-
was necesptions to do so in Western
units do m.
market va . J ±
it at its fPUghest note went to
son’s “adj’ 1 an 0 k v i° us effort to play
rate repre( countr y’s own fear of a
hill in v.ppermany. ”he French fear-
value of y only Preliminary to Rus-
dono in pPiciation of the anti-Ger-
the commo ty 1944- . Why F ™ ce
tv, i « i ear renunciation ox an
i 4 ae . t which is inoperative was
to diplomats accustomed
among the Nebuale.
pulsion tq consider Russian public
opinion. But, this is only partly
true. Like other peoples, the Rus
sians want no war. The love of
liberty smoulders among them just
as when they made their revolution
against the Czars—the revolution
which has been so turned against
them, by the communists. The
Kremlin probably knows that a war
outside Russia would not be popu
lar.
per $100 e
age at 42 5
ArKnstrrd ^rst objective is to in-
those rate-ri th the not-quite-jellied
$1.70, with Pact £ lans for rem-ma-
—nearly t^ y ^ropeans already
i the plan will precipitate
i break. Now that Rus-
( ommoiiagafida seems aimed at
ranged IrOjy at ^ j^ uss j an people,
nigh of $, wa y f 01 . a p 0SS i|ji e “pre-
95 cents. var by playing on fear of
Totalling ^is European fear is
rates on P, e enhanced. The Kremlin
port foun| a double-barreled gun.
cents to $ , . , , „
cipality ha /es terners think the Sta-
$1 (Portip rs UP is under no com-
WHS hic'hemanmiiraim^^
The adj
The Russian fear of a revived
Germany is not just pretended. Ger
many nearly brought Russia to her
knees. Had it not been for allied
assistance—the supply from abroad
of 20 per cent of the war materials
used for Russian defense—all
would have been over for Stalin &
Co. The Kremlin doesn’t forget
that.
Russia may be having other
troubles. There is something in the
some new optimism about the
Lockheed Aircraft Corporation invites
you to join its long-range production program,
developing the aircraft of the future.
Lockheed will train you
-and pay you-to become an aircraft engineer.
Lockheed also offers you an
opportunity to live in Southern California
—in an area where living conditions are beyond
compare. You’ll enjoy life more-and do better
work-at Lockheed in California.
See your Placement
Officer today, find out
about the job and
training opportunitiee
Lockheed offers you.
Lockheed has a great
future—make it yoursl
LOCKHEED
Aircraft Corporation
Burbank, Califomiat
Adjust your speed to the traffic
and weather conditions.
levied in Ole Lou has the government contract to sew your patches on
29 s cents an( * ma ^ e yo« r alterations FREE of charge. He can make
for the < any alteration on blouses, shirts and trousers. It’s tough, but
College s ^0 j ias make a limit of five patches per person sewed on
city tax free.
an indep'
for the C
COME SEE OLE LOU AT
Czechs File Charge
Prague, Jan. 23—(A?)—Czechoslo
vakia charged Monday the United
States has been spying on her
territory from the air.
The Prague radio said the Czech
oslovak Foreign Ministry delivered
a note to the United States alleg
ing that military planes violated
the Czech frontier 58 times be
tween last October and Jan. 13.
NEW & USED BOOKS
Save 33V 3 to 50% On
Books r Instruments
And All Supplies
Bible Courses
For Accredited Bible Courses
During the Spring Semester,
See Your Official Schedule of
Classes Under Religious Edu-
c^tion.
FROM THE VARIETY FOUND
IN THE 14 BIBLE COURSES OF
FERED YOU MAY HAVE YOUR
CHOICES.
LOUPOT’S TRADING POST
North Gate
"rosiest m
'A-
OOK
Make the tobacco growers
MILDNESS TEST YOURSELF...
Y/iS.. .Compare Chesterfield with the brand you’ve
been smoking ,.. Open a pack .. • ^ n i°y t ^ iat milder
Chesterfield aroma.
And-tobaccos that smell milder smoke, milder. So
smoke Chesterfields—prove they do smoke milder, and they
leave NO UNPLEASANT a FTp^-TASTE.
Copyright 1951, Liggett & M-vas Tosacco Co,
UTERFIELD
UADING SCUIR
IN AMERICA'S
COLLEGES
Co:
Number 81
U. N. military position in Korea,
the new American frankness re
garding Formosa—which suggests s
that a flaw may have been found
in the Moscow-Peiping entente.
The sounds from deep in the
forest of international affairs sug- .
gests that the bear may coining to
bay.
The new Mie
Goodwin Hal
action. A bow
Tticker is re<
been printed
\plbcing pape
/From the pi
press by mea
curling allow
vacuum systi
■rinls 3.‘
Ne
Of
By JOH>
Old Ben Fra
y jump out
•ould see the
ligh-speed pre
n the A&M. C
Sold as the
md size in
sheet of pape
inches, it ser
progressive sp
Press.
Capable of
through in an
from the old h
press that wa
the print shop,
chanical side
advancement,
steady increasi
quality of pro!
work put out,
Among
Jud
For
By GEOR
Judgment d
architects of
day, Feb. 2 i:
go to Heaven
( The reason
the A&M A:
a reason for
dies in their f
Building sane
year for AS
fremes being
The dance w
j). m.
Admission
member m a;
his date. Cm
-nJo pay (he
members.
SI After the
Rets, their d
go to the I
where dancin
and coffee wi
; Concerning
to the affai
president of t
I can lie hea
look like hell
Staff
Pass I
Two instil
uating assist
the Departir
ministration
the Texas S
Accountancy
the Novemb
given by the
j sued eertifii
certificates.
These thn
E. C. Cass ai
the number
structors or
at Texas A&
There are
ors in the a
seven of whi
is the only
who has rec
Wood rece
gree from Si
lege and his
Cass receive
and master’;
Harrell rece
gree here
is working t
gree,