crw ^ r+ ti-IW -s' O a ^ i ▼ Page 4 ' THE BATTALION Tuesday, September 25, 1951 :] The Last Word Dancing Class Planned For College Couples By PAT MORLEY Battalion Woman’s Editor Would you like your husband to be able to “trip” the light fantastic, without “tripping” everyone else on the dance floor? * r* »* A beginner’s dancing class for couples has been sche duled by Miss Betty Bolander, Program consultant for the MSC, for such cases. The class is scheduled to meet every Tuesday from 8:45 p. m. until 9:30 p. m. for ten weeks. The course will be taught by Mrs. Clara Howard, dance instructor. Duringjltlhe football season, the class will meet p. m. to enable couples to attend yell practice on Tuesday night. ■ . Interested couples are requested to. .plione- vMlaS; go- lander at 4-5124. Unless greater interest is shown : u\ stilts program, the bliss will have; to be er said. ';:;ji; ;!i,jM-1 fli.s&ilj.j ► Mrs. S. S. Sorenson, language and history teacher at Consolidated High School, was entertained by a group of senior girls with a surprise “Pot Luck” party last week in her home in College Park. The students doing the “Surprising” were Sara Puddy, Judy Oden, Celeste Curran, Janice Hildebrand, Glenda Brown, Barbara Sims, Wanda Goodwin, Martha Arnold, Dorothy Holick, Maxie Wilson, and Adeline Clark. The girls furnished the food for the party, and pre sented Mrs. Sorenson with two demitasse cups and sau cers as a “housewarming” gift. • Mrs. 0. G. Helvey and Mrs. Lawrence Brown, wives of the Clergy of St. Thomas Episcopal Church, 906 Jersey St., left Monday for Houston. They were all smiles in anticipa tion of the annual houseparty held in the home of Mrs. C. S ; Quinn, wife of the Rt. Rev. C. S. Quinn, D. D., who is the bishop of the Texas Dioces of the Episcopalian Church. The Rev. Helvey and the Rev. Brown, and the rest of the clergy of this dioces, will be attending a three day con ference set by the Bishop each fall. Aggie Romario S. Martinez, recently a surgical patient in St. Joseph Hospital of Bryan, was released last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Insall, 503 Tauber St., be came the parents of a 7-pound boy Sept. 15. Robert is a junior Animal Husbandry major. A son, who also weighed 7 pounds, was born Sept. 19, to Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Chohee Jr., of College Station. • ... , - - • - '■ Little Howard Nedderman, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Nedder- man of College Station, has been released from St. Joseph Hospital, after he was entered as an emergency patient following a fall which injured his head. Last Saturday a baby boy, weighing 6 pounds, 10 ounces, was born .to Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Goats, of B-13-C, College View. Law rence is a senior EE major from Orange, Texas. Parents of a new 7-pound daughter are Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Skrabanek of 4405 College Main. The little girl’s father is an assistant professor in the Agricultural Economics and Sociology Department. “Queen” Ann Loupot reigned supreme over the MSC Fountain Room Thursday morning at 10, when the other 56 children in Mrs. R. R. Lyle’s Kindegarten helped Ann cele brate her sixth birthday. The Queen’s Court included the King, Hub Baker; lady- in-waiting, Sally Jane Sorenson; and king’s man, Jim Mills. There were silver crowns for the royal couple, and ice cream cones for all! I'SE BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO MJY, SELL, BENT OR TRADE. Rates .... 3c a word per Insertion with a I5c minimum. Space rate in classified toctlon .... 60c per column-inch. Send 111 classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE. All,ads must he received in Stu- lent Activities office by 10 a.m. on the lay before publication. FOR SALE • E-FLAT ALTO “King” Saxophone for sale, 1000 Harrington—6-2253. BABY Carriage. View. See at A-7-C, College TURTLES, TROPICAL FISH, GOLD FISH, BIRDS, DOG AND CAT SUPPLIES Gilkey’s Pet Cottage 301 E. 28th St. • FOR RENT • FURNISHED BEDROOM with private bath, near campus. Phone 4-9724. • WANTED TO BUY • USED CLOTHES and shoes, men’s — women’s — and children’s. Curtains, spreads, dishes, cheap furniture. 602 N. Main, Bryan, Texas. • WORK WANTED • CARE FOR CHILDREN in my home while mother works. Phone 6-3496. • LOST • BLUE SHEAFFER fountain pen, engraved “Robert J. Blum.” (I have the top of the pen.) Lost Tuesday afternoon be tween Law Hall and East Gate. If found, please return to me at 4-F Law Hall. Bob Blum. FOX TERRIER, white with five brown spots. Two months old; identify by cut tongue. Children’s pet. Reward. Call 2-1419 or 3-2655. • SPECIAL NOTICE • Get Your . . .. LIABILITY INSURANCE Homer Adams North Gate Ph. 4-1217 Two Doors East of College Station State Bank • HELP WANTED • STUDENT Assistants needed to teach En gineering Drawing Laboratory classes. Contact Engineering Drawing Depart ment. Anchor Hall. SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300 A.F. & A.M. Called meeting Thursday 7 p.m. Work in E. A. Degree, also examination. J_ H. Sorrels, W. M. N. M. McGinnis, Sec. Directory of Business Services ALL LINES of Life Insurance. Homer Adams, North Gate. Call 4-1217. Official Notice There will be a meeting of all students who have speech disorders at 7 p. m. Tues. Sept. 25th, 208 Bagley hall (M Bldg.). Dr. Clark will conduct a prelim inary diagnosis at that time. Freshmen and sophomores must have passes. CHANGES IN STUDIES The present policy concerning changes in studies varies from that as published in the Seventy-Fifth Annual Catalogue, the official schedule of classes and my an nouncement quoted in The Battalion dated September 19 and 21, 1951. The present policy is as follows; a student may not register for a new course after Saturday, September 22. Courses dropped after Sat urday, September 29, will normally carry the grade of F. C. Clement French Dean of the College NOTICE TO STUDENTS OF AGRICULTURE The editorial staff of The SouthwesteA Veterinarian, the leading Veterinary jour nal of the Southwestern U. S., would like to invite all students of agriculture to join the ranks of our readers. The South western Veterinarian contains current in formation partaining to every field of agriculture and dealing with every breed of livestock, including poultry. It is pub lished four times during the school year by the Junior Chapter of the AVMA. A special subscription rate of only $1.00 per year has been provided for students of Texas A. & M. Now is the time to sub scribe. Address all correspondence to: The Southwestern Veterinarian Goodwin Hall Texas A. & M. College College Station, lexaa Mayor and Council Of r* ..'Vrf ir ,5 ip 3 ■ V £ * aF Pictured above are the student mayor and coun- cilmen who were elected by their fellow students at A&M Consolidated High School to serve in the top city positions during the National Kids Day Program sponsored by Kiwanis Internation al. Left to right, they are Clifton Bates, council man from Ward I; Roy Corim, Ward I; George Johnston, mayor elected from Senior Class; Mar tha Ann Williams, Ward II; and Carolyn Landiss, Ward II. Not pictured is Martha Ergle, Ward III. Free Movie Shown Local Youngsters The Palace Theater opened its doors to all kids in the Bryan-Col- lege Station area Saturday morn ing for a free show. A part of the Kiwanis Club In ternational’s National Kids Day program, the free show was spon sored by the Boys and Girls Com mittee of the College Station Ki wanis Club. Edward Ivy is chair man of the committee. The main picture was entitled “News Hound.” In addition to' the main feature, three other shows were presented. They were an “Our Gang” comedy, a “Popeye” ani mated cartoon, and another car toon. Stars of the main feature were the “Dead End Kids.” Admission was free, except kids had to wear buttons which were distributed in Bryan and College Station schools Friday. Dean of Brazil Veterinary School Visits A&M Campus Allied Peak on 'S Capture Front Dr. John Soares Viegas, Dean of the Veterinary College of the State of Sao Paulo, Brazil, was a recent visitor to the A&M cam pus. He stopped here while study ing the American experiments on heat tolerance of cattle and de sign of climatological chambers. Dr. Viegas first visited the Uni ted States in 1947 to study the Brahman cattle industry. This trip was sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation which is doing much to improve Latin American relations. He spent five months at the Belts- ville. Md. Experiment Station fol lowing their experiments. While at A&M, Dr. Viega visited the School of Veterinary Medicine and the Animal Husbandry De partment. He showed particular in terest in the experiments carried What’s Cooking A. S. C. E.: Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., Assembly room of MSC. Presi dent of Texas ASCE will speak; refreshments will be served. AGGIELAND MODEL RAIL ROAD CLUB: Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., Basement of Guion Hall. Meeting open for anyone interested in mod el railroads. AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS CLUB: Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., YMCA Cabinet room. A little business and lots of refreshments. AGGIE DISCUSSION AND DE BATE CLUB: Wednesday, 7:30, Room 2-c MSC. All students in terested in debate should attend this meeting. ART GALLERY COMMITTEE: Tuesday, 7:30, room 3-C MSC. Commercial artist will give demon strations. ARCHITECTURAL WIVES SOCIETY: Wednesday, 7:30, South Solarium YMCA. BUSINESS SOCIETY: Tuesday, 7:30, MSC Ballroom. Organization al meeting and officers will be Glcctsd. CUB’ SCOUT OFFICERS AND DEN LEADERS: Tuesday, 7:30, Music Room of Consolidated School. Plans for 1 the year will be discussed. ENTOMOLOGY SOCIETY: Tuesday, 7:30, Science Building room 106. Election of officers. GEOLOGY CLUB: Tuesday, 7:00 p. m., room 140 Geology Building. Plan a Barbecue and elect a club sponsor. HILL COUNTY A&M CLUB: Tuesday, 7:30, Reading room YMCA. HORTICULTURE SOCIETY: Tuesday, after yell practice, room 103 Agriculture Bldg. Refresh ments. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS: Tuesday, after yell practice, Ex- Students lounge YMCA. Meeting for officers and committee chair men. MODERN LANGUAGE CLUB: Tuesday, 7:45 p. m., Room 123 Acd. Mldg. Organizational meet ing. PERMIAN BASIN CLUB: Tues day, 7:30 p. m., MSC room 2-B. Election of officers and plan Christmas Dance. POULTRY SCIENCE CLUB: Tuesday, 7:30, MSC room 2-A. Election of officers. PRE-MEDICAL PRE-DENTAL SOCIETY: Tuesday, 7:15 p. m., MSC Lobby. Election of officers. S. A. E.: Tuesday, after yell practice, MSC room 3-A. Organi zational meeting and plans, for picnic. Y. M. C. A. ASSOCIATION: Tuesday, after yell practice, YMCA Chapel. Fellowship meeting; re freshments; Freshmen invited. PERSONALIZED ■ STATIONERY WITH YOUR NAM£ # ' OK MONOGRAM..*’ WHITE g WYCKOFF5 out by the Dairy and Genetics De partments. These experiments are aimed at developing a new dairy breed from Jersey bulls and Brah man cows and at the teaching of Surgery and Clinics at the Veter inary College. He returned to Brazil, via Mex ico, where he will visit Dr. R. Shrode formerly of the A&M Gen etics Department and now with the Inter-American Institute of Agricultural Science at Costa Rica. Dr. Viega left College Station Friday with the idea of obtaining the help of an American trained Veterinary Surgeon to teach at the Veterinary School in Brazil. U. S. Eighth Army Headquar ters, Korea, Sept. 25—OP)—United Nations troops today captured a commanding peak west of “Heart break. Ridge” on the rugged East ern Korea front. The mountain, like the ridge the Allies want so badly, looks down on a Communist supply and as- sehibly base. A U. N. unit battled to the mountain top, northwest of Yang- gu, through intense mortar and small arms fire. It kicked an esti mated two North Korean battal ions off the peak in nearly thi’ee hours of fierce fighting. Comparative Lull There was a comparative lull Tuesday around “Heartbreak Ridge,” twice lost to counterattack ing Reds in 14 days of bitter fight ing. G r e n a d e-tossing Communists drove U. S. troops off the highest peak in the ridge Monday for the second time in 10 days. Weary American soldiers holed up on the steep slopes and repulsed three small Red probing attacks before dawn Tuesday. They re ported that by Tuesday afternoon there had been no further contact with the Communists. Battleship Pounds Hills To the East, the 16-inch rifles of the Battleship New Jersey pounded Reds in the hills north of the Punchbowl, a one-time Com munist assembly point. The one and one-quarter ton shells arched miles through the air. Dozens hit the heart of the Com munist defenses on the northeast- em front, the Navy said. Observ ers called the results excellent. The South Korean Frigate Ap- nok was hit three times Monday in a duel with Red shore batteries on the East Korean coast. Three South Korean sailors were wound ed and two were sent aboard the New Jersey* for treatment. Allied offensives that had won up to 15 miles of rugged ground in sectors along the mountainous had Eastern front apparently ground to a halt. Only patrol action was reported from the Central and Western fronts. High Red Casualties Gen. James A. Van Fleet, com mander of the U. S. Eighth Army, said Monday that the Reds lost 58,000 killed and wounded and 2,800 captured in the five weeks from Aug. 18 through Sept. 22. Eighty per cent of the killed and woundpd fell in the bloody fighting along the Eastern front The hardest fighting was for bloody “Heartbreak Ridge.” American troops have been strik ing at the key peak in the ridge from two directions, north and southwest. Three men from the northern group fought to the top Monday, only to be killed by fiercely coun-, terattacking Communists. Red counterattacks stopped the southwestern front. Along the four-mile north-south ridge, the Korean Reds have used heavy and prolonged mortar, ma- chinegun and artillery fire to pin down the allies. From the bunkers of the main peak and its spurs, the Reds can pour gunfire on almost every yard of American positions. The ridge slopes are so steep that only a few men can attack at one time. Any allied advance must be carried out by small groups of men crawling and dodg ing among the paths of fire from the enemy bunkers. li * M See ALL th® Big Ones! Never before has this theatre scheduled such a parade of smash hits, many of them in Technicolor. Week after week, program after program, we have arranged for Hollywood’s outstanding pic tures to celebrate MOVIETIME IN TEXAS. SEE THIS GOOD MOVIi TONIGHT! RHONDA FLEMING & MARK STEVENS —in— “LITTLE EGYPT” PALACE ■S^rSBSWIIjlllljpp Will ' The EYES of TEXAS on the MOVIE SCREENSi M you in many pleasing styles and sizes at our Stationery Counter can crush you! "nO YOU WANT to make a big hit at home? Then write home with stationery which bears your Aggie outfit insignia. To make your letters more personal,' have your name put on each sheet. If the gift problem is bothering you, just come by and see our fine gift stationery. You can have it per sonalized also. You get your choice of colors and style of print. You will never go wrong giving per sonalized stationery. Come in and see our offerings. We have a wide and varied line to show you. THE EXCHANGE STORE “Serving Texas Aggies” ’hat is inflation, anyway? It’s a BIG danger bred by LITTLE tilings . .. things that in themselves seem penny ante. A few cents more for wages ... a few pennies added to prices ,». the cost of living creeping np another notch. Bit by hit, day by day, all scpieezing a little more life out of your dollar. Unless stopped, inflation can destroy you, your family, your country. We can fight inflation by facing this danger. This calls for strong government action—and solid support from everyone of us along the lines indicated at right. Let’s all pull together. what YOU CAN DO ABOUT IT! It will take all of us—America’s 150 million people to lick inflation. Here’s how you can help: ★ Buy only what you nsed-use credit carefully ★ Help turn out more goods ★ Help hold the line on prices and wages ★ Fight government extravagance ★ Support budget-balancing taxes ★ Save—Invest—Buy Defense Bonds IT Will TAKE ALL ISO MILLION OF US TO LICK Like many American firms, we believe that business has a responsibility to contribute to the public welfare. This advertisement is therefore published in the public interest by: The Battalion