Page 4 ’ THE BATTALION Wednesday, August 15, 1951 The Last Word Miss Elinor Walker • Miss Walker, Jack Simpson Set Wedding Miss Elinor Walker of Grand Junction, Colo., daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Walker, is the bride-to-be of John A. Simpson. Nuptials will be read on Sept. 4 with Jack Rice, business admin istration major from Dallas, acting as best man. The bride-to-be attended South ern Methodist University, where she was working toward a degree in education. She also attended the University of Colorado. Simpson was captain of the 1951 SWC Track Champions and was also the Southwest’s top pole vault- er. The A & M student is also a resident of Grand Junction. The couple intends to spend a few days in Glenwood Springs, Colo, before returning to College Station where they will reside un til Jack graduates in January. He is majoring in business adminis tration. Ray Holbrook, T. K. Burk, both of A&M, and Jack’s brother, Ned Simpson, will act as ushers at the wedding. Businessmen Hear OPS Price Clinic A price clinic was held at the Chamber of Commerce offices in the Varisco Building, Bryan from 9 a. m. until noon today in an effort to aid businessmen of South west Texas in complying with price regulations. Price Specialists L. L. S. Sims and Edwin Phillips conducted the clinic and answered questions from businessmen about OPS regula tions. For intellectual fun—Post Grad uation Studies. You Can t Miss The ‘Shipwreck’ Spectacle Friday By PAT MORLEY Battalion Women’s Editor D O YOU have eight arms? If so, you’ll be a sensation at the “Shipwreck” Dance Friday night! We haven’t heard of anyone else planning to dress like an octopus! You say you don’t have eight arms? Well, don’t be discouraged; get into an over-sized box, and masquerade as Davey Jones’ Lock er! Five lusty pirates, jazz men of “The Cutthroat Combo,” will keep the star-lit evening filled with music until eleven. “Peg Leg” Pete Carson will set the stage; Frank “Black Jack” Manitzas will be Master of Ceremonies, and five dis tinguished judges will perambulate through the audience, looking for the most unique costumes. “Spike” White, as- activities insists that any brib ery of the judges will not be tolerated! Ladies of the Court are Mrs. Donald Burchard and Mrs. Ann Hilliard. Tom Rountree.will help judge, and has been asked to keep an eye on the remaining judges, President “Crossbones” Harrington, and Dean “Ferocious” French, to see that justice is done. • The Veteran’s Wives Bridge Club wishes to enlarge its Thursday night attendance, and Club President Jewell Marshall urges any vet erans’ wives interested in the game to join the weekly meetings at the first of the next semester. Non-brndge players are invited, as local bridge experts have graciously consented to teach the game to classes of interested beginners. The meetings will be held at 7:30 each Thurs day evening at the MSC. Seven happy children had a high wind blow ice cream in their faces at a July 21st birthday party at College View. It seems that they did not mind the wind at all, but we cannot vouch for the happiness of seven mothers, when the party was over! The mint green cake with yellow camels, lions, and elephants was undisturbed by the wind, but suffered complete destruction by little Bonnie and Susie Rober, Joeleen Maddux, Tommy Horton, Chris Cook, Jim Hurst, and the. guest of honor, Robbie Robbins. Robbie was celebrating his sixth birthday. • Frances and Frank Stuart are leaving Aggieland next Tuesday with a degree in Electrical Engineering. Frances has worked in the Office of Campus Security since Sep tember, 1949, and her husband spent three years overseas in the Air Corns before coming to A&M. They will go to Dallas, where Frank will work with the Dallas Power and Light Company. Though they have enjoyed living here, both Frances and Frank are “ready to leave”, and are look ing forward with pleasure to living in Dallas, again. Curt Castleberry. June Ag. Ed. graduate, has moved his family to Burkville (close to the Louisiana border) where Curt will teach agriculture. His wife, Vivian, former Battalion Women’s Editor, is already looking over the newspaper situation in Newton county, as might be expected. Young daughter, Carol, is as thrilled as her parents, as they are going to live in a “real house, with a yard.” (‘Bye, bye, College Views). Popular bride-to-be Betty Pot ter was guest of honor at a tea from 5 till 7 yesterday afternoon in the home of Mrs. Gibb Gilchrist. Mrs. Frank Anderson was co-hos tess with Mrs. Gilchrist. Betty will marry Errol D. Fi’y at the First Baptist Church of Bryan, Sept. 8. Richard N. Clark, Aggie senior student, made Frances Robinson of Fort Worth his bride at the Poly- •' JISE BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO #Uir, SELL, BENT OB TBADE. Bates .... 3c a word per Insertion with a (Sc minimum. Space rate in classified lection .... 60c per column-inch. Send 111 classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE. Ail ads must be received In Stu- tent Activities office by 10 a.m. on the lay before publication. • FOR SALE • t)NE LOTT “ROTO” photographic print dryer. Sealed Bids wil Ibe received until 9:00 A. M. Monday, Aug. 20, 1951. Inspection of the equipment and bid forms may be obtained at the Texas Forest Service. Room 345, Administra tion Building. LATE MODEL Phone 6-2512. Wringer-type Maytag. 100 BY 142 FT. lot on knoll. College Station. Cheap. Phone 4-8124. • WANTED TO BUY • USED CLOTHES and shoes, men’s — women’s — and children’s. Curtains, spreads, dishes, cheap furniture. 502 N. Main. Bryan, Texas. • WANTED • LADY or gentleman bookkeeper — half day—beginning Sept. 1. Must have working knowledge of double-entry book keeping and typing. Reply backgrund and how long will be here. Box 542, Bryan. • HOME REPAIR • ALL TYPES home repair work—additions, roofing, siding, painting, concrete work, and redecorating. Low down payment and 30 months to pay. For free esti mates call 4-9589 or 4-4236. Directory of Business Services ALL LINES of Life Insurance. Homer Adams, North Gate. Call 4-1217. FREE termite inspection and estimate. International Exterminators Corporation Power spraying for flies, mosquitoes, and other pests. Phone 2-1937. • MISCELLANEOUS • SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300 A.F. & A.M. Stated meeting August 16, 7 p.m. J H. Sorrels, W. M. K. M. McGinnis, Sec. EXPERIENCED, capable bookkeeper. Good salary, permanent position. Good hours. Call 4-1149 for appointment Dr. Carlton R. Lee OPTOMETRIST 203 S. Main Street Call 2-1662 for Appointment RADIOS & REPAIRING Call For and Delivery STUDENT CO-OP EXPERT WATCH, JEWELRY, and OPTICAL REPAIR CALDWELL’S JEWELRY STORE 112 N. Main, Bryan Ph. 2-2435 technic Church of Christ in Fort Worth, last Friday evening; The Clarks will be at home in Bryan, while Dick finishes the require ments for his degre next June. The Newcomers Club will have a Bridge and Canasta party this af ternoon at 2:15 in the home of Mrs. W. H. LeRoy, 603 Highland South. Husbands of members of the Campus Study Club will be guests at the club’s third Summer party at 8 Aug. 21. Bridge, forty-two, and canasta is to be the tntertain- ment, with prizes for high score winners. Refreshments of pie and coffee will be served. Phone 4-7977 or 4-9449 for reservations. Erskine Hightower urges all stu dents, faculty and staff members interested in square dancing to at tend the last square dance of the Season Saturday night at 8. If you can’t “square”, Ersnine will be glad for you to come to the Grove at 7:30, and he promises that by 8, you’ll be keeping up with the best of the dancers. Geologists (Continued from Page 3) sweat drenched faces. Ah, when again shall we see such courage and determination under such ad verse conditions. Two runs came across. Oh, happy day. Kent and Odom, the Goliaths who made the runs, were the heroes of the hour. From then on, it was a pitcher’s duel all the way. The Mullets got one run in the fourth, the Rock- crashers picked up four. The fifth saw the Mullets bouncing back with two more rans, but again the fighting blood of the Rockcrashers told as they got seven. With renewed vigor the Mullets pressed the attack in the sixth and scored six rans. The Rockcrashers though tiring fast, made five rans. Then the fatal seventh inning came. The Mullets came from be hind and made seven rans to gain a two ran lead. A gallant, never say die Rockcrasher team then came to bats and by sheer grit and determination drag three rans across to win the game. What jub ilation. What rapture was in their hearts we can never know. After the broken bodies of the heroes were removed from the field, game statistics were com piled and Mullets garnered 11 hits, 20 runs, nine errors and Rock- crushers 11 hits, 21 runs and eight errors. Phone 4-4114 First American Life Insurance Co. in Texas At Houston Brj^an-College Agency JOE DILLARD, Mgr. REPRESENTATIVES L. E. (Skeeter) Winder, ’50 John T. Knight Charles H. Sledge, ’50 H. E. Winder, ’52 306 VARISCO BLDG. PHONE 3-3700 The new college Administration Building gets fin ishing touches on the outside as workmen hurry to complete the interior by late October or early November. Offcies of the deans and president, as well as the Fiscal and Registrar’s Offices will occupy the new structure. A recent bricklayer’s strike has held up masonry work for over two weeks, however the men returned to their jobs Monday. A Few Facts State Entomologist Talks To Kiwanis “One cannot look at a bee col ony without forgetting the troubles of life,” Dr. F. L. Thomas, pro fessor of entomology at A&M told members and guests of the College Station Kiwanis Club yesterday at their weekly luncheon in the MSC. Speaking on the topic “Little Known Facts About the Honey- Bee,” Dr. Thomas told the group that the honey bee knew about air conditioning long before man, that strikes in a bee colony are unknown, and that the honey bee has a system of communication which approaches human intelli gence. A bee colony like human society is broken down into groups which perform specific functions. With in the colony there are, the archi tects which make bees wax, bio chemists which produce the honey, nurses which care for the young, sanitarians which keep the hive free of refuse, and engineers which regulate the air by flapping their wings. The honey bee, like an army patrol, finds directions by observ ing its position in relationship to other objects. The directional marker for the bee is the sun, ac cording to Dr. Thomas. A bee hive is constructed vertically, and when a worker bee locates a fertile source of nectar, he returns to the hive and through a “wagtail dance similar to that performed by a hula dancer, communicates to the other bees the position of the field. Communication is in this man ner: if the bee “dances” upward in the vertical hive, the nectar is in the direction of the ran; the dis tance depends upon the length and pace of the dance. Conversely if- the bee moves downward in the. hive, the source is away from the sun. To the right is East and to the left is West, and even com-! pass degrees are relayed in this fashion. The honey bee, which came to the United States from Europe, with the Pilgrims, is necessary for the pollination of 50 crops, accord ing to Dr. Thomas. There are 300,000 bee colonies in Texas, the entomologist said. Since agricul tural practices^ have destroyed the native bee, the honey bee which can be controlled is as important to agriculture today as the native bee has been to the plant world for centuries. Seniors, get a Bachelor of Phil osophy degree via Post Graduation Studies. A 175 years ago our forefathers risked meir necks ana an their earthly goods to put together history’s greatest dec laration of a free people... Since then we’ve enjoyed a big package offreedom * for free”... And now Freedom needs us, lest in time to come she become no more than a worn-out word in a dog-eared dictionary ... How would you like to roll out of bed some dark morning and have a big palooka tell you where you’re going to work that week, what your wife’s going to wear, and what your kids have to do? Don’t shrug it off, sink it in— it can happen here! The point is, we’re more likely to toss Freedom away ourselves— unthinking as with an old ciga rette butt—than lose it in a fight. Over the years we have tended to become a nation of spectators of the things that keep us free, just as we are at baseball games, movies, or our TV sets. In govern ment, we have tended to become a nation of Monday morning quarterbacks, grandstand umpires and sideline sophisticates. Haven’t we? We watch a few others vote, then gripe because the wrong man gets in, and moral standards suffer. We look on while the commu nity discusses a project, then kick like steers because the new school didn’t get built. We view with alarm prices going up but don’t stop to think of put ting some of our excess change into Defense Bonds and other savings. Here are four short words to think about: WORK •SAVE' VOTE • PRAY It takes doing things like that to keep Freedom solvent—and America needs 150 million people in the act. Doesn’t it? Now-Freedom needs YOU! The Declaration of Independence was signed at Independence Hall, Philadelphia, in 1776. Here will gather the Delegates of Freedom on July 1, 2, 3 and 4. They will come from all over America and from freedom-loving countries. This is the year of re-dedication throughout America. Take a new look at Freedom, think how it works for you in your community, and help it along today as it has helped you in the past. > * Coniribuiod io the public interest bf The Battalion