The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 30, 1951, Image 4

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THE BATTALION " Thursday, August 30,195* "Hi
Shown receiving a copy of Pioneer Airlines’ new schedule are Chan-
celor Gibb Gilchrist and President M. T. Harrington. Pioneer hos
tesses Audrey Flanagan of Houston, Ann Wylie of Beaumont and
Beth Brogdon of Dallas (in the usual order) are presenting the sche
dules. The ceremony took place this week in Chancellor Gilchrist’s
office, and marked the beginning of g morning flight from College
Station to Houston.
Legislature Raises
High Cost Of Driving
Austin, Tex., Aug. 30—kP)—The
high cost of driving your automo
bile is going even higher.
Beginning Sept. 7 you’ll have to
pay double the old 50-cent rate
for your driver’s license.
Before you can get your next
year’s license plates, you’ll have to
have your car inspected. That’ll be
$1 plus whatever it costs to fix
the old buggy up to pass the in
spection.
Beginning Jan. 1 you’ll have to
prove you can pay accident claims
and damagds after you have, an
accident. That may never cost you
anything, but it also might cost
you between $25 and $35 a year.
All those new requirements were
written into the law by the 52nd
Legislature.
sAnwmr
£com*sn{
IfCOHOMfl
SAFE-T-WAY TAXI
Phone 2-1400
This is the way they work:
The driver’s license fee was
doubled to meet increased state
costs. If your license fee expires
anytime soon, however, you can
get the jump on the double fee by
renewing early. Texas Department
of Public Safety Director Homer
Garrison says all license renewal
stubs mailed with 50 cents before
midnight Sept. 6 will be renewed
at the old rate, regardless of the
present expiration date.
The driver responsibility law
that becomes effective Jan, 1 is a
bit more complicated.
You don’t really need to worry
about it unless you have an acci
dent—or think you might. If you
do—no matter whose fault it might
be—The Department of Public
Safety will figure up how much
property damage and personal in
jury claims might be involved.
If you can show that you have
enough ready cash—or can get it
quick from a bank account, secur
ities, or the like—you still have
no worries.
But if you can’t prove you can
pay the bill, you’ll probably have
to buy liability insurance to cover
property damage up to $5,000, bod
ily injury for one person up to
$5,000 and bodily injury for two
persons up to $10,000.
New Law Will
End Deferment
Of 300,000
Short Course In
Fly Control Ends
rm
GROCERY SPECIALS
LARGE SPANISH QUEEN
01 ives <|t. jar 77c
2—NO. 21/2 CANS HAPPY HOST
Freestone Peaches . . . 61c
46-OZ. CAN TEA GARDEN
Apple Juice 32c
2—NO. 2 CANS DOLES
Pineapple Juice 27c
2—PINTS TEA GARDEN
Grape Juice 39c
MRS. TUCKER’S—3 LB. CTN.
Shortening 83c
TALL CAN PINK BEAUTY
Alaska Salmon 59c
2—303 CANS KIMBELL’S
Fresh Green Limas . . . 43c
2—NO. 2 CANS KIMBELL’S
Whole Green Beans . . 43c
2—f2-OZ. CANS NIBLETS
Mexicorn 35c
REGOE’S PINE OIL
Deodorant .
. . pint 39c
• MARKET SPECIALS
DECKER’S TALL KORN
Sliced Bacon . .
... lb. 47c
ARMOUR’S READY TO EAT
Cooked Picnics ... lb. 55c
SHORT CUT—NO BONE
Ham Slices . . .
. . lb. 79c
—FAT PEN FED CALVES—
Porter House Steak, lb. 83c
T-Bone Steak .
. . . lb. 93c
Calves Liver . .
. . lb. 65c
ARMOUR’S—RICHEDDAR
Cheese
. 2 lbs. 91c
PRODUCE •
LARGE CUBAN
Avocadoes 2 for 19c
LARGE CRISP CALIFORNIA
Lettuce head 10c
GREEN
Cabbage lb. 5c
SEEDLESS
Grapes 2 lbs. 25c
Specials for Friday & Saturday - Aug. 31 - Sept. 1
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
Charlie's Food Market
North Gate College Station
— WE DELIVER —
The Last Word
Weddings,
Vacations
Births
Main
Washington, Aug. 30—(A*)—Well
over 300,000 men will lose their
deferments when new draft regula
tions, now awaiting President Tru
man’s signature, are put into ef
fect.
The regulations will carry out
provisions of the new Universal
Military Training and Service
(UMTS) Act.
Selective Service said between
150,000 and 200,000 childless, mar
ried men will lose their deferments
under the new rules. An estimated
150,000 4-F’s are expected to be
drafted when the armed forces’
mental standards are lowered.
The Army said that since July
18, in accordance with the act,
it has been accepting draftees who
made only a score of 10 on the
preinduction mental exam, instead
of the 13 required previously.
The more than 250,000 who have
flunked the preinduction exam, or
armed forces qualification test
(AFQT), will be reexamined start-
in January at the latest, the Army
said.
Selective Service reported that
500,000 childless husbands were in
the defen-ed category on July 31,
but that about one third probably
will fail their preinduction mental
or physical examinations.
Aggie Events Now
By PAT MORLEY
Battalion Women’s Editor
While many of us sit under whirring fans, sipping iced
drinks, trying to keep as cool and relaxed as the man pictured
here, other Aggieland families have gone on vacation to for
get the heat. Fortunately, life continues, in spite of the
weather, and wedding bells have rung for some, and many
of the old-marrieds have received visits from the stork.
Week-end vacationers were Don and June Martin, who
drove to Corpus Christi to visit their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
G. D. Martin and Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Carlisle. Don is a jun
ior sociology major.
Edward P. Miles, Jr., IE graduate and ex-Ross Volunteer, will-f
make Norma Beth Cooke of Waxahachie his bride September 15. The
bride-to-be is a TSCW graduate, where she was a Redbud Princess,
Aggie Sweetheart nominee, and a Cotton Ball duchess, as well as the
secretary of her junior class. The wedding will be solemnized at the
Central Presbyterian Church in Waxahachie.
C-8-X College View will be the first home of Mr. and Mrs. John
W. Hudnall III. A senior Ag. Eng. student, Hudnall exchanged wed
ding vows with Vera Cantrell August 17, and the newlyweds will be
at home at Aggieland after they return from a trip to New Mexico.
Senior ME major Jack Banowsky served as usher at the Hudnall mar
riage ceremony.
Another Aggie senior, Samuel D. Amspoker, Jr., accounting ma
jor, brought his bride of less than a month to A&M last Sunday. On
Aug. 18 Sam married Betty Ann Barber of Corpus Christi, a former
student of Ward-Belmont, and Baylor University. They made a trip
to Mexico, and are now at home at 300 Ayrshire. They are both
working at the MSC between semesters
Daniel Rules
Against Money
Measure Rider
The short course on fly control
held Monday, Tuesday, and half
of Wednesday at the Memorial Stu
dent Center was “an unqualified
success,” according to Dr. H. G.
Johnson, head of the Entomology
Department.
The meeting was conducted to
study the health significance of
the fly. Dr. Johnson, representing
his department, Dr. Wade Bolton,
of the U. S. Health. Service, city
officials, and representatives of the
state health department saw films
on the biology of flies, basic san
itation, and methods of spraying
insecticides. Personnel of dairy
plants and other industries con
cerned with fly control were pre
sent. Field work included methods
of determining the fly population
and demonstration of different
types of spraying equipment.
Equipment for the course was fur
nished by the Entomology Depart
ment.
Three A&M families are spending the time between semes
ters making long, leisurely trips to visit some ex-Aggie
friends. ME major Eugene L. Seale, his attractive wife,
Hilda, and their two sons will spend their vacation with
Jim and Marie Park, who graduated with a degree in
dairy husbandry last January. The Parks now live in
Lakeland, Florida. After the Seale’s get back to Texas
they will visit their parents in Beaumont, Mr. and Mrs.
G. W. Barclay and Mr and Mrs. E. L. Seale.
Accompanying Gene and Hilda to Lakeland are Curley
and Darla Holland. Marjorie and Robert Hood will travel
to Miami, and after the three couples have rejoined! they
will extend their trip to Bay City where they will visit,
Florence and Kelly Brownlow, who graduated with a
bachelor’s in CE last June. All in all, this will be a real
Aggie reunion!
FSB BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO
»UY, SELL, RENT OR TRADE. Rates
, . . . 3o a word per Insertion with a
t5c minimum. Space rate In classified
lection .... 60c per column-inch. Send
III classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES
IFFICE. All ads must be received In Stu-
lent Activities office by 10 a.m. on the
lay before publication.
• FOR SALE •
TWO VENETIAN blinds, one Taylor-Tot
Stroller. Reasonable. Apt_ C-3-D. Col
lege View.
1942 GLIDER House Trailer. Good cab
inets, closets. No furnishings. Fair
woodwork. Needs outside repair. Strong
chassis, good tires, wheels A real bar
gain at $90. Call 6-3444' after 5 on
week-days.
FOR RENT
NICELY furnished duplex, combination
living room and dinette. Bedroom, bath
and kitchen. 203 Bizzell St. Call
3-3562.
WANTED TO BUY
USED CLOTHES and shoes, men’s —
women's — and children’s. Curtains,
spreads, dishes, cheap furniture. 602
N. Main. Bryan, Texas.
• WANTED TO RENT •
AAM INSTRUCTOR desires two-bedroom
unfurnished house. Rhone 2-2146.
HELP WANTED •
• HOME REPAIR •
Directory of
Business Services
Official Notice
SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300 A.F. & A.M.
Called meeting Thursday, Aug.
30, 7 p.m. Work in 11.M. De
gree, also examination.
J H. Sorrels, W. M.
Nf. M. McGinnis, Sec.
Davis and his wife Margaret have
a new daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Mar
tin B. Pigott now have two boys.
The four of them live in Vet Vil
lage. Farm Management student
Henry E. Insall, Jr., and his wife
have a new daughter. They have
named her Jacqueline.
Churches
(Continued from Page 3)
A&M Church of Christ
Sam and Nell Johnston, No. 10
Project House, have a new son,
Daniel Park, who was born Sun
day, Aug. 12. Sam, a graduate
horticulture student, and he and
his wife have another little Aggie.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Earl
Burleson from Mart, Texas, now of
College Station, are parents of a
nine-pound boy, bom August 16.
Richard is a graduate student.
The A&M Church of Christ, cor
ner of Main and Church St., will
have Bible School at 9:45 and
Church service at 10:45, with
James F. Fowler preaching. Young
Peoples Discussion meeting will be
gin at 6:15, followed by the wor
ship service at 7:15. Midweek
services will be held at 7:15 Wed
nesday evening.
A&M Methodist Church
Sunday School will start at 9:30
a.m. at the A&M Methodist Church.
Sermon will be at 10:30.
Austin, Tex., Aug. 30—OP)—An
appropriation rider to knock ad
mitted past members of subversive
groups off the state payroll was
declared unconstitutional by At
torney General Price Daniel Wed
nesday.
The niling, which members of
Daniel’s staff privately described
as a “political hot potato” upheld
that portion of the new loyalty
oath requiring state employees to
swear they are not now members
of the Communist party or any^
other subversive organization.
Indirectly, the opinion was a
victory for five University of Tex
as regents who sought a ruling om
validity of the legislature’s action.
Four other regents had voted
against getting an opinion.
Daniel struck down the retro
active provision which would have
required employees to swear they
have not belonged to any subver
sive group within the past 10
years. The law would prevent pay
ment of salaries until such oath is
taken.
He said the state constitution
prohibits inclusion of such general
legislation in a general appropria
tion bill.
That part of the rider dealing
with current membership is legal
because it is “a reasonable limita
tion, restriction and safeguard on
the expenditure of public funds,”
the opinion held.
Authors of the opinion were
Daniel and two assistant attorneys
general E. Jacobson and E. Wayne
Thode. *
*
AM
SATISFIED SHOPPERS
Specials for Friday & Saturday - Aug. 31 - Sept. 1
Before the ink had dried on his Bachelor of Electrical Engineering
degree, Kerry Dale Savage had signed another document—a wedding
certificate. On August 26, in Teague, Kerry married University of
Texas graduate Dorothy Leah McSpadden. Kerry was a member of
Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity at A&M before his
graduation last Saturday.
A tea and reception was held last night at 8 a’clock in the MSC
Ballroom for the Home Demonstration Association, with about 2500
guests present. Mrs R. N. Almarode, president, and all other members
of the organization, have been well received on the campus, and their
gracious charm has not been unnoticed in this masculine environement.
The three-day convention will end tomorrow, and the staff of the MSC
considers it a most orderly, successful, and pleasant meeting for all
concerned.
Ann Hilliard, social director at More MSC vacationers are C. L.
the MSC, rarely has time to catch Atmar, purchasing agent who pre-
her breath these days. In addition ferred to stay at home in Bryan
to her usual thousand-and-one dut- and loaf. Food director, Teresa
ies of keeping the social life of Tunnell, decided to make a vaca-
the “Center” running smoothly, tion to remember, flew to Washing-
she now has added typing and tori, D. C., last Saturday and is
phone-answering in her office, now sight-seeing. Mrs. Johnny
Ruby Nell Seale, Mrs. Hilliard’s Cummings, manager of the MSC
secretary, is on vacation. Ruby Gift Shop, is in Florida visiting her
Nell and her husband, Gene, have son who just went into military
gone to Beaumont for two weeks service. Assistant to the Director,
to visit their parents, the Geo. W. E. E. Thomas, and his wife are in
Barclay’s and the E. L. Seale’s. Alabama, to see his parents.
Ira, Mary, and Chuckle Vail, will cott apartment, 16-A Vet Village,
go to Austin this week-end to re- while his wife, Janie, _ and little
new acquaintance with some daughter. Bonnie, are in Ohio to
friends they haven’t seen for ten see Jane’s parents. They will re
years. Next week-end they will turn Monday, to their newly-paint-
visit John (Olie) Oleson, his wife, ed house, and a lonesome Don.
son and daughter. Olie, who grad- •
uated in June with a degree in Blessed events have been occur-
M. E., is now a draftsman for a ring in College Station with aston-
Houston firm. ishing rapidity lately. Some of the
Don Lippincott, senior Areo. new parents are:
Eng. major, is painting the Lippin- Basketball team member Buddy
• GROCERIES •
Mvc
SHORTENING . . 3 lb. ctn. 75c
GLADIOLA FLOUR ... 5 lbs. 45c
La Grande—303
CREAM CORN ...... 13c
Happy Host—2 l / 2
PEACHES 28c
WESSON OIL pt. 32c
Old Bill
VIENNA SAUSAGE can 9c
Starkist
TUNA—Chunk Style .... can 30c
Standard—No. 2
TOMATOES 2 cans 29c
Peter Pan—12-Oz.
PEANUT BUTTER 31c
White
KARO SYRUP pt. 21c
Kimbell’s—12-Oz
STRAWBERRY PRESERVES . . . 28c
Miracle Whip
SALAD DRESSING pt. 34c
Uncle William—303
PORK & BEANS 3 cans 23c
24s
TIDE 29c
J E L L O pkg. 8c
KIM DOG FOOD 2 cans 15c
COCA COLA ctn.23c
MELLO KREAM ‘/f gal. 59c
20c
REGISTERED nurse for general duty.
Bryan Hospital. Call 2-1340.
— DEL MONTE —
14-Oz.
CATSUP
No. 2
SPINACH 15c
No. 2
SAUERKRAUT 13c
No. 2
WHOLE GREEN BEANS ^ ... 29c
8-Oz.
TOMATO SAUCE 2 for 15c
303
EARLY GARDEN PEAS ... 2 for 37c
303
YELLOW CREAM CORN . . 2 for 33c
No. 2
ORANGE JUICE 2 for 25c
No. 2
EARLY GARDEN ASPARAGUS . . 45c
46-Oz.
PINEAPPLE JUICE 33c
46-Oz.
TOMATO JUICE 31c
303
FRUIT COCKTAIL 23c
No. 2
LIMA BEANS 27c
• FRESH PRODUCE
A.LL 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.
14c
59c
55c
ALL LINES of Life Insurance. Homer
Adams, North Gate. Call 4-1217.
Franco American
SPAGHETTI can
No. IT
PINK BEAUTY SALMON ....
Swanson’s
BONED TURKEY can
Charmin
BATHROOM TISSUE ... 4 rolls
Comstock—No. 2
PIE APPLES 18c
Kimbell’s—303
FRESH B. E. PEAS .... 2 cans 25c
35c
Drivers with commercial driver’s licenses
are needed. Anyone who has such a license
is reqyjjsted to contact the Housing Office
right away. Harry Boyer, Chief of Hous
ing
New Crop
JONATHAN APPLES .
2 lbs. 19c
Iceberg
LETTUCE
2 heads 23c
California
SLICING TOMATOES . .
. . lb. 17c
California
POTATOES . . . .
. 5 lbs., 25c
California
CARROTS
. bunch 9c
CORN
. 3 ears 19c
California Sunkist
JUICE ORANGES . . .
. . lb. 9c
BARTLETT PEARS . . .
. . lb. 19c
• MARKET SPECIALS •
VEAL ROUND STEAK
. . lb. 79c
ARMOUR’S STAR CURED HAMS
SHANK PORTION . . .
. Ih. 49c
BUTT PORTION . . . .
. lb. 55c
CENTER SLICES ....
. Ih. 98c
Armour’s Star
BACON
. . lb. 59c
Armour’s Dexter
BACON
. . lb. 46c
Dixon’s or Hormel
WIENERS
. . lb. 49c
Wisconsin
CHEDDAR CHEESE . . .
. . lb. 59c
Large Sliced
BOLOGNA
. . lb. 59c
Pickled
PIMENTO LOAF
. . lb. 49c
VEAL STEW MEAT . . .
. .lb. 49c
VEAL CHUCK ROAST . .
. . lb. 69c
Heart O’ Texas—Cut Up Ready for Pan
FRYERS . . . . . .
. . lb. 59c
POTATO SALAD ....
. . lb. 39c
• FROZEN FOODS •
Cal Grove—6-Oz.
LEMONADE MIX . .
2 for 29c
Minute Maid—6-Oz
ORANGE JUICE ....
. ... 23c
Honor Brand
BROCCOLI
. . lb. 29c
Skv Hy
HORSE MEAT FOR PETS .
. 2 for 29c
Birdseve
CUT CORN . . . .
. pkg. 23c
Swansdown
CAKE FLOUR
. . box 42c
Underwood
DEVILED HAM
. .can 17c
Kimbell’s—303
SPANISH RICE
. . .18c
Campbell’s
CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP .
. 2 cans 33c
Sunsweet
PRUNE JUICE
. . qt. 35c
4-Oz.
DROMEDARY PIMENTO .
. . .13c
Kimbell’s—300
SPICED HOMINY . . .
. ... 9c
Stokely’s—303
•
CUT WAX BEANS . . .
. ... 21c
Betty Crocker
CAKE MIX
. pkg. 35c
THE SHOPPING CENTER
A PERSONALIZED SUPER MARKET
COULTER DRIVE AT HIGHWAY 6