The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 04, 1951, Image 3

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    Thursday, October 4, 1951
THE BATTALION
Page 3
In answer to the qestion, “Can a College View
apartment be made livable?” Mr. and Mrs. War
ren Goulas have proven that the apartment can
not only be made liable but attractive as well.
Goulas is a senior architecture student.
J8E BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO
SELL, RENT OR TRADE. Rates
«... 3c a word per insertion with a
}6c mlalmuin. Space rate In classified
Section .... 60c per column-inch. Send
111 classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES
♦FFICK. All ads must be received in Stu-
Jent Activities office by 10 a.m. on the
lay before publication.
• FOR SALE •
(1) V/, Ton International Harvester truck,
model 1931, with Mead-Morris Winch.
Sealed bids will be received in the Office
of the Auditor until 10:00 a.m., Wed
nesday, October 10, 1951. The right is
■ reserved to reject any and all bids and
to waive any and all technicalities. Ad
dress Auditor, Texas A. and M. College,
College Station, Texas, for further in
formation.
LATE MODEL 30-ft. house trailer, fully
equipped and in excellent condition. Also
two well-built frame rooms. Will sell
these three items together or individual
ly. Priced right to sell quickly. E.
B. Aman, Apt. A-ll-C, College View,
Texas A&M College.
WHIZZER Motor Bike, not new but good-
looking and runs well. Phone 2-533S.
(1) DESK LAMP, (31) floor lamps, and
(2G) table lamps. Sealed bids will be
received in the office of the Auditor
until 10 a.m. Thursday, October 11,
1951. The right is reserved to reject any
and all bids and to waive any and all
technicalities. Address Auditor, Texas
A&M College, College Station, Texas, for
further information.
• WORK WANTED •
WILL KEEP your children during the
games. Make your appointments. C-
20-C, College View.
BABY SITTER for O. U. Game. Mrs. F.
J. Koenig, Apartment C-12-Z, College
View.
Official Notice
' The Borden Award in Dairy Husbandry
Will be made to the newly classified Sen
ior student in Agriculture who has com
pleted 2 or more courses in Dairy Hus
bandry and who has the highest grade
f |'0int ratio among such students. Any
tenior student in Agriculture who has
a grade point ratio of 1.8 or higher is
requested to leave his name with the
secretary in the Dairy Husbandry office,
213 Ag. Bldg., by Oct. 10.
I. W. Rupel
Head of Department of
Dairy Husbandry.
The Physics Department invites appli
cations for Student laboratory assistant-
ships for the current semester. Men who
have completed sophomore physics courses
with superior records are wanted to as
sist with instruction, grading, and the
handling of apparatus in the laboratories.
The scale of compensation is .70 per hour
for new assistants and .75 per hour for
experienced assistants. The opportunity
for experience, as well as earnings, should
b considered.
Applicants should call at the office of
the department at their earliest conven
ience. There are openings at hours
throughout the entire week, and the de
partment is especially in need of addition
al assistants Tuesday morning, 8-11.
J. G. POTTER
Head, Physics Department
Second installment, Payable October 1-18:
Board to November 21 $44.90
Room Rent to November 21. . . . 11.35
Laundry to November 21 3.65
Total payable to fiscal dept $59.90
• FOR RENT •
NICE furnished south bedroom,
campus. Call 4-7054.
• WANTED TO RENT •
FACULTY member needs two or three-bed
room house. Phone 2-5338.
• HELP WANTED •
AVON Cosmetics have opening in College
View part time representative. Student
wife preferred. Write for appointment,
giving address, to Mrs. Laura Price.
Box 1049, Bryan, Texas.
LOST
GIRL’S identification bracelet, engraved
“Jeanneane” on front, “David” on
back. Reward. Notify Box holder Box
2576.
• WANTED TO BUY •
USED CLOTHES and shoes, men’s —
women’s — and children’s. Curtains,
spreads, dishes, cheap furniture. 602
N. Main. Bryan. Texas.
USED builder’s transit and tripod. Call
6-3444 after five p.m.
Directory of
Business Services
ALL LINES of Life Insurance. Homer
Adams, North Gate. Call 4-1217.
• SPECIAL NOTICE •
SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300 A.F. & A.M.
Called meeting. Thursday,
Oct. 4, 7 p.m. Work in
E-A and F-C degrees.
J_ H. Sorrels, W. M.
N. M. McGinnis, Sec.
A
Bragassa Elected
By Languages Club
Charlie Bragassa, junior zoology
major from Silver, was elected
president of the Modern Languages
Club Tuesday night in the MSC.
Also elected to office at the
club’s first meeting of the year
were Gordon Carr, vice-president;
Bob Andrews, secretary-treasurer;
and Ed Holder, reporter. Sponsor
for the organization is Dr. Jack
Dabbs of the modem languages
department.
The members voted to meet on
the second Monday in each month,
and agreed to pay dues of fifty
cents for the purchase of refresh
ments served at each meeting.
Dr. Josef Stadelman, modem
languages department, provided en
tertainment for the group with
his accordion. Pamphlets were then
passed out which contained songs
from three different nations.
The club sang each of the songs
and were accompanied by Dr. and
Mrs. Stodelman. The first selection
was German, the second Spanish,
and the third French.
Membership of the club is ex
pected to reach about 50 after a
definite meeting place has been set.
Blutne, Shutt, Head
Fish & Game Club
The Fish and Game Club held
its first meeting of the year Tues
day, 7:30 p.m., in the Agr. Eng.
Building.
The following Wildlife Manage
ment majors were elected: Richard
Blume, president; Donald W. Shutt,
vice president; Walter Edward Fos-
berg, secretary; Carl Oscar Berg-
lund, treasurer, Richard H. Bittner,
representative to the Agricultural
Council; Freddie Earl Blackstock,
athletic officer; and William H.
Morley, reporter.
The oldest intercollegiate athle
tic rivalry in the United States is
the Yale-Harvard crew race. It
began 99 years ago.
PODAY thru SATURDAY
First Run Starts
15 - 3:00 -4:45 - 6:30 - 8:15 - 10:00
.m SUPER cineCOLOR
v THE
-.allXAS
George MONTGOMERY
COLUMBIA PICTURE Gale STORM ^
NEWS—CARTOON
% ftjlets/
Here's -HiaH'
fiabanaro
j spoils sWl
you head
TOlabou-h/"
Wear it open
for sports, or...
Gabanaro .. . with the
amazing new Arafold collar
with a tie for
stepping out.
>.50
ARROW
SHIRTS • TIES • SPORTS SHIRTS • UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS
Thirteen Dollars
Couple Devises Method
For Improving Apartment
By PAT MORELY
Battalion Woman’s Editor
An enthdsiastic couple in A-l-Y,
Warren and Dolores “Dodie” Gou
las, “have proved what so many
others long to prove”—that a Col
lege View apartment CAN be beau
tiful!
When fifty-odd barracks build
ings were moved from Houston to
A&M in 1946, skeptics cried that
no amount of ingenuity could
change drab barracks apartments
into anything but drab barracks
apartments.
Since that time, many stout
hearted couples have manned paint
brushes and sewing machines, try-
WhaVs Cooking
AAUW Dinner, Oct. 8, Monday,
8 p.m., at The Oaks. Reservations
can be made by all members until
Friday noon. For reservations,
call 6-2434 or 4-8589.
AMARILLO CLUB: Thursday,
after yell practice, Room 2D, MSC.
BRUSH COUNTY CLUB
Thursday, after yell practice, room
2C, MSC.
CAMPUS BEAUTIFICATION
COMMITTEE: Thursday, 7:30 p.
m. room 301, Goodwin Hall, initial
meeting.
DEL RIO CLUB: Thursday, 7:15
p. m., YMCA Reading Room, elec
tion of officers.
EAST TEXAS CLUB: Thursday,
after yell practice, room 301, Good
win Hall, open to freshmen, plans
to be made for party.
FT. WORTH CLUB: Thursday,
room 107 New Science Bldg., after
yell practice, plans for Corps trip
party.
HENDERSON COUNTY CLUB:
Thursday, room 305, Goodwin Hall,
7:30 p. m.
KAUFMAN COUNTY CLUB:
Thursday, after yell practice, room
301, Goodwin Hall.
LAND OF THE LAKES CLUB:
Thursday, after yell practice, room
3A MSC
MILBY CLUB: Thursday, after
yell practice, room 307, Goodwin
Hall, organizational meeting and
party to be planned.
ORANGE COUNTY CLUB:
Thursday, 7:30 p. m., room 303,
Goodwin Hall, election of club of-
ficers.
PANHANDLE CLUB, Thursday,
7:30 p. m., room 3D, MSC.
SOUTHWEST CLUB, Thursday,
after yell practice, MSC, election
of officers.
SOUTH TEXAS TRI-COUNTY
CLUB: Thursday, after yell prac
tice, room 301 Goodwin Hall, stu
dents from Wharton, Matagorda,
Calhoun, and Jackson counties
wanted for organizational meet
ing, election of officers.
TRANS-PECOS CLUB: Thurs
day, 7:30 p. m., YMCA Chapel, in
itial meeting.
VET WIVES BRIDGE CLUB:
Thursday, 7:30 p. m., rooms 2A,
2B, MSC.
Story of Texas Oil Fields
“BIG GUSHER”
ing to give that “decorator” look to
their college homes. Of that num
ber, all too 1 many have “given up”,
deciding that ingenuity works best
when supplemented with a chest
of family jewels with which to buy
the materials they needed.
Warren and Dodie, without ben
efit of previous decorating exper
ience OR family jewels, have made
their “four walls” into a charming,
cheeerful home for themselves and
their three-month-old son, Greg.
As in most homes, the heart is
the living room, and on it no pains
were spared in the Goulas’ apart
ment. Hard work and resourceful
ness turned the trick. Warren made
all the major pieces of furniture
in a course (ME 105) here at A&M.
Dolores worked with him to com
plete the stylish decorations.
While many people moan that
without money “we can’t make that
place look decent!” Warren made a
buffet, coffee table, couch, and
closed wall bookcase—for a $13 ex
pense to the family budget! Fur
thermore, he had never ^before
made a single piece of furniture!
When friends ask Warren how he
did such a splendid job on his first
attempt, he modestly says, “They
have mighty good tools over there
at the shop.”
The handsome buffet, which
holds all the family linens, dish
es, and silver, is natural walnut,
with sliding masonite panels paint
ed fuschia. The black lacquered
bookcase has chartruese sliding
panels. Large, dramatic designs
on the couch upholstery match
those in the drapes, which cover
the entire outside wall of the liv
ing room. A “grill” coffee table,
reminiscent of the grills found in
sidewalks, is made of natural wil
low, and serves both the couch and
the living room chairs.
Explaining the low cost of the
furniture, Warren says, “The Vet
erans Administration paid $20 for
materials to make it, like they do
for any veteran taking one of the
shop courses.” The $13 Warren
paid was in excess of the amount
paid by the Government.
The energetic, black-haired stu
dent will receive his Bachelor’s de
gree in Agriculture next January.
Dodie says when they were dating,
Warren drew houses on the menus
and tablecloths, and at dances, on
the programs!
“I did not know anything about
architecture, then, but I decided I
had to take an interest in it, or
TODAY & FRIDAY
VAN HEFLIN-YVONNE De CARLO
•ilk Mm FDSIEI-litk OAHEUn mil ui AlOI NICOl
A Universal-International Picture
/’ 1
enjoy amazing collar comfort in
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with sensational new ARAFOLD collar
Washable rayon gabardine sports shirt
in your choice of smart colors, in your
exact collar size and sleeve length
Extra comfort where comfort counts most . . .
right in the neck. Now that “Gabanaro” is
made with Arrow’s revolutionary new Arafold
collar, it’s actually the most comfortable
sports shirt in the world! Open or closed,
witli or without a tie . . . Arafold looks trim,
feels great. Start taking it easy in style and
comfort. Ask us for Arrow “Gabanaro” today.
CLOTHIERS
FOR ARROW UNIVERSITY STYLES
quit going with Warren!”
Now she helps him draw plans,
and advises him on some of his
drawings. “Usually, I tell him to
put more cabinet space in the kit
chens,” laughs Dodie,” and some
times he does—sometimes he does
n’t.”
Drawing plans is more than a
hobby with Warren, though. He
is designing a series of efficiency
apartments, some of which are
now already under construction in
Houston. He is also working as
a draftsman with a local firm of
architects.
Dodie studies with her husbajid,
and is becoming something of an
expert on architecture, too. She
likes to work together, and trys to
learn from Warren.
After observing Warren mix the
chartruese paint for the bookcase
he made, and the fuschia for the
buffet, she thought she had caught
the idea. One day, while Warren
was in class, Dodie mixed several
cans of paint together and was
rather proud of a lavender shade
she had achieved. With this, she
painted the bathroom.
When Warren came in from
class, all he said was, “OH, NO!”
Music Program
Presented At
Rotary Lunch
A musical program by mus
ic directors from the Bryan
public schools was presented
at the regular weekly lunch
eon of the Bryan-College Ro-
tory Club Monday.
W. R. Carmichael, superinten
dent of Bryan Public School Sys
tem, was in charge of the program
which featured vocal, piano, and
horn solos by three musical di
rectors.
Miss Jean Clark, in charge of
music at Travis Elementary School,
played two piano solos. Miss Clark
was followed by C. E. McGown Jr.,
director of the Stephen F. Austin
Band. McGown rendered a baritone
horn solo.
Several vocal solos were present
ed by Carl J. Best, director of vo
cal music at Stephen F. Austin
High School. Best was introduced
by Carmichael earlier in the pro
gram and took charge of the pro
gram after that.
Best’s first move after being in
troduced by Carmichael was to call
on the superintendent to give a
solo. Carmichael responded after
considerable persuasion.
Mrs. F. I. Dahlberg, in charge of
music at the Crockett Elementry
School assisted in the program.
Sulfur was discovered along the
Gulf Coast by oil drillers about
1900.
LOOK!
It’s the perfect gift! Every
one’s crazy about ’em. The Ex
change Store has ’em. Come in
and see our complete line of
stuffed miniature animals.
You’ll be delighted with these
little animals . . . they come in
maroon and white with MSC on
their sides. Just the thing for
Mother and Sweetheart.
COME IN NOW AND MAKE
YOUR SELECTION
The
Exchange Store
“Serving Texas Aggies”
FOR A BIG WEEKEND
• FRESH FRUITS & •
VEGETABLES
Large Size (No. 4) California
Iceberg Lettuce. 2 heads 27c
Flame Tokay
Grapes 2 lbs. 25c
No. 1 Select
Tomatoes . . per carton 15c
Fancy and Extra Fancy—125 Size—JONATHAN
Apples 2 lbs. 27c
Washington State Fancy and Extra Fancy
DELICIOUS—125 Size
Apples 2 lbs. 35c
Big No. 3 California Pascal
Celery bunch 15c
Today’s Best Buy—Extra Clean—No. 1 Calif.
Potatoes 5 lbs. 29c
HAVE YOU TRIED OUR ICE-PACKED
REFRIGERATED FRESH FRUITS AND
VEGETABLES?
• FROZEN FOODS •
Birdseye or Honor Brand
Broccoli Spears . . pkg. 28c
12-Oz. Pkg. Donna Dean
Strawberries . 3 pkgs. $1.00
6-Oz. Honor Brand
Orange Juice ... 2 cans 39c
15 Count Patio (25c Size)
Tortillas pkg. 17c
Sunkist or Snowcrop
Lemonade ... 2 cans 35c
Birdseye 2 PKGS.
Cut Green Beans .... 47c
• MARKET SPECIALS •
We Will Have for This Weekend:
• Choice Heavy Beef
• Fresh Catfish
• Jumbo Shrimp
Heart o’ Texas
Fryers
ib.
Choice Veal
Sirloin Steaks . . .
ib.
Choice Veal Square Cut
Shoulder Roast .
ib.
Kraft’s Philadelphia
Cream Cheese . . .
2
Decker’s Tall Korn
Sliced Bacon . . .
lb.
Pure Pork Pig
Link Sausage . . .
lb.
PKGS.
29c
SPECIAL PRICES
O N
ASSORTED HAMS
Bake a Ham for your weekend guests.
• GROCERY SPECIALS •
Light Crust
Flour 5 lb. box 49c
No. V 2 Cans Sunbeam
Grated Tuna ... 2 cans 55c
Toilet Tissue
Scottissue .... 2 rolls 25c
No. 2'/ 2 Cans Libby’s
Fruit Cocktail . . . can 35c
No. 2'A Cans Del Monte CAN
Bartlett Pears 43c
No. 2 Cans Kimbell’s Grade A Fancy
Texas CAN
Grapefruit Juice .... 10c
No. 2 Cans Comstock
Pie Apples ... 2 cans 37c
Carton Swift’s Jewel
Shortening .... 3 lbs. 79c
FREE—Kraft Dinner with purchase of each
quart. Kraft’s Salad Dressing.
Miracle Whip . . quart 67c
10-Oz. Can Makes 5 Quarts.—21c Value—TNT
Popcorn each 17c
Sunshine Krispy
Crackers . . . 1 lb. box 29c
Made of Pure Sweet Cream
Meadowgold Butter, lb. 79c
FREE—26c Can Armour’s Tamales with
purchase of 2 cans, either
Armour’s—Plain
Chili 1 lb. can 49c
Armour’s—With Beans
Chili .... 1 lb. can 39c
No. y 2 Cans Hostess
Vienna Sausage. 3 cans 28c
46-Oz. Cans Libby’s
Tomato Juice
2 cans 55c
No Waste—Just Heat and Serve
Derby—12-Oz. Can
Roast Beef can 53c
Del Monte’s Mission Brand—303 Cans
Garden Peas . . . 2 for 27c
6-Oz. Cans Madonna
Tomato Paste . . 2 cans 25c
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities.
Southside Food Market
Specials for Friday & Saturday « October 5th & 6th