i pn 6 T !lK BATTALJON Thursdny, February 1, 19ni Operation High School Pushed By Aggie Exes If such organizations as the Beaumont A&M Club keep pushing so vigorously, the campus will be crowded with outstanding students from all over the state on Hi«;h Sch >ol Day, according' to C. ( : “.Spike” White, assistant clean of men for actr'ities. The hometown club boasting a membership of approximately 108 students has already made arrange ments for six presidents of high school student bodies and three president of high school senior clashes to attend the day's, activ ities. The project, High School Day, as a combined effort of hometown or ganizations, various former stu dent clubs, the Office of Student Activities, and the College, in gen eral, is a urogram encouraging outstanding; high school seniors to visit the campus and see what A&M has to offer. White acquainted hometown club presidents of the event and the part they could play in its success a few weeks ago. Members of a steering committee, chosen that night, are Howard Karen, 0. C. “Putter” Jarvis, Olin Brashear, John F. Ireland, and A. W. Siter. The Beaumont A&M club has al ready turned in the nine names of the outstanding students from their hometown and from two near by small towns who will be present March 3, according to Glenn Beadle, president. Charles Babcock, Class of '20 and an insurance man in Beaumont, is handling transportation for the boys to the campus and back. Officials of Texas colleges and universities meet on the campus to plan the National Registrars and Admissions Schools Convention to be held in Houston, April 15-19. It will be the first time the national association will have met in Texas. They met in the office of H. L. Heaton, regis trar at A&M and convention chairman. They are, left to right, Dorothy Young, secretary to Heaton; Terrel Spencer, vice-president, Univer sity of Houston and ofrmer registrar; K. A. Vitulli, registrar, University of Houston; J. C. Sowers, registrar, Sam Houston State Teachers College, Huntsville; standing, Ray Perryman, as sociate and J. Y. Alexander, assistant, registrars' A&M. Club Reservations Campus organizations are re minded that Feb. 6 is the last day to make club reservatiions for the Aggieland '61 according to Bibb Underwood, club editor. Reserva tions for pictures should be placed in Student Activities office, Good win Hall. Club Publicity Co-Ordination Planned by Student Activities A, club publicity co-ordination program is being set up by The Battalion, the co-editors announced this morning. The move will be taken under full cooperation with C. G. “Spike” White, assistant dean of men for Activities, under whose office all clubs are now handled. The program is aimed at im proving publicity arrangements for meetings and special events spon sored by various clubs on the cam pus. To help in setting up the pro gram, White says, all clubs on the USE BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO (ILLY, SELL, KENT OR TRADE. Rates ... 3c a word per insertion with a iftc minimum Space rale in classified section .... BOc per column-inch. Send U classified to STUDENT ACTIYmi:; office. All ads mast be received in Stu dent Activities office bj 1 10 a.m. on the lay before publication. VOO' T ' HOUSE TRAILER. Completely ■ ' Bnih n-i refrlrerator. Fully •e: ' oliA Esf.le Pass ./.VROLET Club Coupe 140 HP En- • V-ien E s on 2118A Cavitt, ■i ;n; 'oileae Station. $1150. ,J1 EUICX SPECIAL, excellent condition, ■.o'.y ml.ea'ge, extras. Coll 6*14-12. 109 J.KE NEW, red Western Flyer bicycle, mans full size, $20.00. Also brown .western boots, size. 10 J ,.,D, good condi- lon. Call 4-5939. EXPERIENCED young lady to take com plete charge of phonograph record de partment. Must hays knowledge of both popular and classical music. Write Box El o/o The Battalion. I ’i NO reasonable rates Phone 3-1776 VL ARE NOW accepting orders for Senior Fa. ors for delivery prior to the ring nee $3 75 with chain, $2.50 without <:>:■ in. Office of Student Activities. Deadline March 20, 1951. '3 047 CHEVROLET Sedan delivery, bids wiil be received in the Office c Conptrol ei until 10 a.m., Sat- .. . 10, 1951. The right is it ic.cc- any and all bids and o w .i e any and ail technicalities. Ad- i. cas Comptroller, A. and M. College of Tcx-s, no lege Station, Texas, for further information. “FOR SALE, CHEAP: An at tractive young widow and two small children. Her husband, who adequately provided for his wife, left his widow destitute.” Maybe your wife wouldn’t ac tually run this ad in event of your death, but—Why force her into the marriage market, for lack of economic independence, when her soul is still burdened with rich memories of you ? Life insurance, by the stroke of a pen, can create an estate, which only years of hard work and saving can otherwise build. . . Put Eugene Rush on your cal endar ahead of the undertaker. e WANTED TO BUY • ALLEN’S New and Used Furniture, 703 North College, wants to buy or trade for your furniture. Phone 3-3430. Hilt REM HOUSE FOR RENT, 5 room. Very con venient to Bryan or College Station. 1912 College Rd. Phone 3-1777. COMFORTABLE room with adjoining bath, near campus. Phone 4-9724. • ROOM & BOARD • TWO ROOMS for rent, with board if de sired. Also home-cooked meals served family-style. Hot rolls served twice a day. Telephone 4-4394. Block north of Campus Theater. Prompt Radio Service -Call— Sosolik’s Radio Service 712 S. Main St. Ph 2-1941 Bryan Offieial Notice INSTALLMENT CAVING, SECOND , SEMESTER 1950-51 i‘'eea payable to the College Fiscal Depon nent may be paid in installments' as fol rtws: * Second Semester First installmem payable in entrance January 29-30 To February^20 ; ■ nfillation Fee (required... S 25.00 edlcal Service Fee frequired). 5.00 uidem Activities Fee trequiredi 10 00 Boar! 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 Fiscal Department $ 49.25 t 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 Because there has been a change this vear in the Air Force ROTC summer camps, there naturally has been some doubt in the minds of some Army cadets whether or not there will be a camp for them this summer. The following informa tion has just been received from Head quarters Fourth Army: “Attendance at ROTC summer training camps for advanced course ROTC students scheduled to attend camps will take prior ity over any other army camp attendance.” The above proves that as of now the Army does contemplate a summer ROTC camp. H. L. Boatner Colonel, Infantry PMS&T Tuesday, February 6, is the last day for making changes in Registration. Courses dropped after this date will be dropped with grades of F. C. Clement French Dean of the College The Beaumont Farm and Ranch Club is offering a scholarship to a Junior or Senior in the School of Agriculture from Orange, Hardin, Jefferson, Chambers or Liberty counties. The scholarship is for $250 00 and will be awarded on the basis of scholastic ability and financial need. Applications are available in Dean Charles N. Shepardson’s office. They must be filled in and filed by Saturday, Feb. 3. Charles N. Shepardson, Dean of Agriculture | campus are being asked to turn in the name and address of the pres ident of the particular club to the receptionist in the Student Activ ities Office on the second floor of Goodwin Hall. Deadline for turn ing in names is Saturday at noon. Not in “What’s Cooking” Clubs failing to comply with this request will no longer be able to have meetings and events publi cized in The Battalion. All club news and meeting no tices will be handled by a club publicity co-ordinator who will maintain a desk in' the Student Ac tivities office. This includes items for the “What’s Cooking;” col umn. Plans call for the setting up of a system whereby clubs holding regular meetings may have an- Pfo Parade -- Still Stock Show Opens Houston, Feb. 1—(A 5 )—Minus an opening parade, the Houston Fat Stock Show started yesterday with new champions named in three de partments. The parade was cancelled be cause of the big fire that blocked the proposed parade route on sev eral downtown streets. The rodeo, with William (Hopa- long Cassidy) Boyd as the star, and judging got under way on schedule. The first champion was a Hereford of the boys’ steer show. The winner belongs to Louis Reyes, San Antonio. Livestock Judge John Burns picked a steer owned by Johnny Wigley, a 4-H boy from Goldth- waite, a Shorthorn champion of the boys’ steer classes. Champions .of the four breeds of boys’ steer class and similar win ners iij the open class, are to be “'••Ted.tomorrow. Klb'well Beggern, a future farm er of Elgon, showed up with the reserve champion boys’ Hereford today.' It was J. L. Stewardson, San Saba, a vice president of the StateuFFA, vvlio exhibited the re serve.steer in the boys’ Shorthorn competition. nouncement if such meetings made regularly ii**The Battalion, with out re-notification. All emergency .meetings will still be handled through the Dean of Men’s office. Requests for an nouncement of such meetings over mess hall P. A. systems will be re quested from the Dean of Men’s office. Fair Coverage The club publicity co-ordination program will be aimed at facilitat ing fair and adequate publicity to clubs and their sponsors. Additional aims are to prevent mistakes in future notification of meetings, to facilitate the estab lishment of a record of all organi zations thereby insuring prompt is suance of financial statements to clubs and to co-ordinate the activ ities of all organizations for smoother, more efficient operation with a minimum of time and ef fort for the officers of the clubs. The program will be handled by a club publicity coordinator who will be named later. US Asks Quick Verdict On Red China Charge Lake Success, Feb. 1—(A 5 )—The United States strove last night for a quick verdict by the United Na tions General Assembly on an Am erican-backed resolution calling Red China the aggressor in Ko~ What’s Cookin’ AGGIELAND ’51 STAFF MEETING, tonight, 7 p. m. Good win Hall. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE OR GANIZATION, Thursday, 7:30 p. m., YMCA Assembly Room. COLLIN COUNTY CLUB, Fri day, Room 3A MSC. Special Meet ing. ROBERTSON COUNTY CLUB, Thursday, 7:15 p. m., 30(5 Goodwin, special meeting. Once that approval is. obtained, diplomats said, the United States would press for a two-point course of action. One would be immediate efforts by a high-calibre three-man good offices committee to seek a settlement. The second would be intensive consultations among members of a 14-nation collective measures committee on what to do about meeting the Chinese aggres sion. Informed circles said the American position on sanctions, if any, would depend finally on these consultations. The assembly was called by President Nasrollah Entezam, Iran, to meet at 9:45 a. m. CST tomor row. Sir Genegal N. Rau, Indian dele gate who lost a stubborn campaign to put off the American proposal and make instead another cease fire appeal to Red China, was asked what India’s positiion would be after the American resolution is passed. “We shall continue to do our best for peace,” Rau replied. The Asian-Arao group was re ported undecided whether to renew in the assembly the fight it made in the political committee against the American resolution and for another approach to Peiping. Pick Up Votes The U. S. delegation hoped to pick up added votes in the general assembly for the resolution of the political committee, originally in troduced by U. S. Delegate Warren R. Austin. The seven votes against it were those of the 'five members of the Soviet bloc plus India and Burma. Now that assembly approval is^ certain, the United States was re ported shaping up plans for the two committees created under the resolution, the good offices group and the collective measures com mittee. Mi&m Proof Returns Juniors, Sophomores, and Fresh- « men who have not returned their picture proofs to the Aggieland Studios for The Aggieland 1951, ^ are requested to do so immediately! Any proofs not turned in by Sat urday, February 3, will be cause for the Studios to pick out the best _ proofs, said Editor Roy Nance. * A&M Grad Studies At Mather AFB Captain George H. Cun ningham, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. Y. Cunningham of 738 West 3rd Ave nue, Corsicana, Texas, has begun a course of training at the United States Air Force Bombardment School at Mather Air Force Base California. This school, the only one of its type in the entire world, will train Cunningham in the skills of navi gator, bombardier, and radar ob server, utilizing modern electronic, equipment. Entering the service in Septem ber .1941, three years after his graduation from A&M, Cunning- hani was commissioned, the follow ing year. During .the war, he served in the European theater, and flew missions in both Africa and Italy as a bombardier. Since the war he has served at Lake Charles AFB, Louisiana and Walker AFB, New Mexico, prior to his assignment to Mather. Come By and See Our Traditionally Fine VALENTINES THE EXCHANGE STORE “Serving Texas Aggies” Expanding; our services to those who must shop after they get off work. Whereas we have been closing at 6 o'clock, allowing the 5 o’clock shoppers an hour to complete their shopping, we will hereafter remain open until7 o’clock. We will open each weekday at 8 o’clock, except Friday and Saturday, opening at 7:30 a.m. on those days. • GROCERY Chase & Sanborn's*—f Oz. Instant Coffee each 49c Maxwell House—1 Lb. Vacuum Can Coffee lb. 83c Yt Lb. Prints Meadow Gold Butter 37c No. 2 Can KimbeU’s Chili . can 63c (We personally guarantee you will prefer this chili after you try it.) Giant Boxes SUPER SUDS, or Duz each 87c No. 2y> Cans Airmail Halves Apricots 2 cans 45c Country Gentleman—No. I Cans Little Kernel Cream Style Corn . .... 3 cans 25c No. Yi Cans Hostess Brand Vienna Sausage can 10c Keyko Colored Quarters Oleo 3 lbs. $1.00 No. Yt Cans Bits ’o Sea Grated Tuna can 27c SPECIALS • 24 Oz. Bottles Church's Grape Juice each 29c 12 Oz. Jar Welch’s Grape Jam or Jelly jar 19c Large Bars Ivory Soap each 15c (Limit) Crisco 3 Ihs. 89c Popular Brands Cigarettes carton $1.86 12 Oz. Bottle Vermont Maid Waffle Syrup each 25c Tall Pet or Carnation Milk 2 cans 25c FROZEN FOODS • 6 Oz. Cans Orange Juice 2 for 41c 12 Oz. Pkg. Ford Hook Limas 33c 12 Oz. Pkg. Broccoli 29c MARKET SPECIALS Armour’s Banner Brand Chili lb. 49c Highly Seasoned, Home Made Pure Pork Sausage Ih. 55c Grade AA Brisket Beef Ih. 39c Grade AA Beef Square Cut Shoulder Roast lb. 69c All Meat Hormel FRANKS lb. 49c GUARANTEE We unconditionally guarantee any purchase of meat from our market to give you complete satisfaction in every respect. No. 1 End of Loin or Boston Butt Pork Roast lb. 53c Fresh Maryland Oysters SELECTS — MEDIUMS Heart of Texas Dressed Fryers lb. 53c Fully Dressed Hens lb. 48c Kraft’s Velveeta CHEESE 2 lb. loaf 99c BACON Fancy Northern Midwest Brand lb. 49c , Armour’s Star Lb. cello 59c SPECIALS FOR FRIDAY & SATURDAY, FEB. 2 - 3 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES Southside Food Market ON AN ADVANCING MARKET: ECONOMIZE BY USING MORE CANNED GOODS