The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 25, 1951, Image 3

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    Thursday, October 25, 1951
THE BATTALION
Page 3
Groneman to Aid Pan-Americans
The Pan-American Union in
Washiington, D. C., has invited Dr.
Chris H. Groneman, head of the
industrial education department,
to assist them in the preparation
of a manual on vocation education
to be used in the South American
countries.
Groneman’s contribution to the
manual is the preparation of a
chapter on pre-vocational guidance.
NOW ¥4 OFF!
Creepers and Two-Piece Suits
Cotton — Boucle — Nylon
6 mo. — 3 yrs.
REG. PRICE $1.46 — $3.49
IMMIE’S TOY & TOT SHOP
1001 S. College Ave. Ph. 2-1618
FREE PARKING SPACE
GET
SET...
A Large
Football
Order!
GET
4 READY!
•
Stock of
“MUMS”
Today!
J. COULTER SMITH, Florist
1800 So. Coulter Road
2 IN 1 STEAM IRON!
Have You Always
Wanted One?
TRADE YOUR OLD ONE IN!
Regardless of the Condition
C. E. Greisser Electric Co.
South Gate
WILL GIVE YOU A $2 TRADE-IN!
If it’s comfort you want
m
Arrow
Shorts
are your best choice!
Boxer and Gripper Shorts
T-Shirts Athletic Shirts
Nothing like Arrow shorts for real, deep-seated
comfort! Made with pleated crotch, contoured
seat panel . .. and no binding, sawing, irritating
center seam. Fine, “Sanforized” fabrics. Extra
comfortable when teamed with Arrow’s absorb
ent T-shirts and athletic shirts. Stock up now!
WSD
CLOTHIERS
,f©R ARROW UNlVfRSITY STYLIS
Dallas
2 Flights Daily
One Way $11.70 (Plus Tax)
PIONEER
—A I R LINES
PAone 4-5054 for information and reservations-or call your travel agent
Allen Speaks
To Accounting
SocietyMeeting
Robert Allen, accountant
and recent graduate of A&M,
was guest speaker TTiesday
night at a meeting of the Ac
counting Society.
Allen gave an informal talk on
“The Trials and Tribulations of a
Junior Accountant.”
Having been associated with a
Houston accounting firm since his
graduation in August of this year,
Allen told of his first few month’s
experience in public accounting. He
mentioned the benefits of the as
sociation of a junior accountant
with a small accounting firm. A
few of his points were:
• The junior accountant asso
ciated with a small firm has the
advantage of working over the en
tire accounting field rather than
specializing in one particular
phase of accounting, thus getting
a general experience in account
ing.
• There is a better opportunity
for advancement in a small firm
where your work can easily be
recognized than in a larger firm
where an accountant is not so like
ly to be noticed.
Following Allen’s talk, president
of the society Jack Egloff, told of
plans for a banquet to be held
Dec. 12.
What’s Cooking
BEAUMONT CLUB: Thursday
after yell practice, Room 2-D
MSG, Important regular meeting;
please make an effort to attend.
BELL COUNTY CLUB: Thurs
day after yell practice, Room 123
Acd. Bldg.
CORYELL COUNTY CLUB:
Thursday, 7:30 p. m., 2nd floor
lobby MSC. Discuss reorganization.
EAST TEXAS CLUB: Thursday
Thursday after yell practice,
Room rfjbl Goodwin. Plans for
Thanksgiving party; all Fish and
old members urged to attend.
ENGLISH CLUB: Thursday,
7:40 p. m., South Solarium YMCA.
Program by Jody Damron.
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS:
Thursday, 7:30'p. m., basement of
St. Mary’s Chapel. Installation of
officers.
LUTHERAN WALTHER
CLUB: Thursday, 7:30 p. m., MSC.
MARSHALL CLUB: Thursday
after yell practice, YMCA Lobby.
Will have a picture taken for
hometown paper; discuss plans
for Thanksgiving party; be there!
MILBY CLUB: Thursday after
yell practice, Room 307 Goodwin.
Plans for Shamrock dance.
PINEY WOODS CLUB: Thurs
day after yell practice, Room 207
Acd. Bldg.
PLANT SCIENCE COLLOQUI
UM: Thursday, 8:30 p. m., Room
3-C MSC. Discussion concerns Tex
as pines; meeting open to all in
terested graduate students and
staff members.
POULTRY SCIENCE CLUB:
Thursday, 7:30 p. m., Room 310
Ag. Bldg. Special meeting.
SOUTHWEST TEXAS CLUB:
Thursday after yell practice, Room
2-C MSC. Refreshments will be
served
" TYLER - SMITH COUNTY
CLUB: Thursday, after yell prac
tice, room 3B, MSC. Discussion of
party plans,
sh
VET’S WIVES BRIDGE CLUB:
Thursday, 7:30 p. m., Room 2-A
and 2-B MSC.
The Last Word
Floor Retiling Gives
Housewives Headache
By Pat Morley ..
Because we live on A Row, Col
lege View, we at present must
squeeze around the stove (which
was thoughtfully set in the bed
room door) in oi’der to. get to the
cannister of sugar for our morn
ing coffee.
(Let’s see—the cannister is eith
er on the clothes hamper which is
on the desk, which is on the ward
robe, else it‘s under the bed
in back of the magazine rack—
or is it?
In the midst of the confusion our
weary eye falls upon couples liv
ing in the front rows of College
View, as they sit in their tile-
floored living rooms. Since misery
Building Ready
By New Term
Says Official
The $111,000 building pro
gram of the A&M Consolidat
ed School District will provide
badly needed classroom space
in Consolidated High School
and in the Lincoln School.
The building program is approx
imately 25 percent complete ac
cording to Les Richardson, super
intendent of schools. The contract
calls for construction to be com
pleted by Jan. 28.
A&M Consolidated School Dis
trict is short two classrooms at the
present time and the new construc
tion is expected to relieve the
crowded conditions. Five class
rooms a,nd a cafeteria are being
constructed at A&M Consolidated
High School.
Additions at the Lincoln School
include a shop and a science labor
atory.
Richardson said that plans call
for the building’s use beginning
with the new semester-.
Mahan Receives
Nicholson Award
James L. Mahan has been award
ed the Robert Nicholson Memorial
Fellowship for 1951-52. The Fel-
lewship honors the late R. N.
Nicholson of Dallas.
It is awarded annually to a grad
uate student in plant and seed
breeding and was established in
1948.
Mahan has just spent eight
months in the Texas Extension
Service as assistant county agent
stationed at Pampa and Grapevine.
He is a graduate of Oklahoma
A&M, and a native of Indiahoma,
Okla.
Early Morning Fire
Damages Car Interior
An automobile fire early Wed
nesday morning resulted in exten
sive damage to the interior of
the car. The College Station Fire
Department answered the call to
101 Ashburn at 12:25 a. m., accord
ing to Curtis E. Bullock.
The auto was the property of a
sergeant at Bryan Air Force Base.
position is everything
in life—and , /a in
<1 .
any
you’re per
position
■fectly
at ease in yfrrOW
shorts
X
$1.45
up
Arrow Athletic Shirts . $1.00 up
Arrow T-Shirts $1.25 up
ARROW
SHIRTS • TIES • SPORTS SHIRTS • UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS
loves company, we wish to inform
those lofty residents that they, too,
will again have to go through the
experience of getting floors tiled,
since College View bedrooms are
next on the agenda for “fixing up.”
9
Atom bombs are tested, leaders
are assassinated, Southwest Con
ference football “upsets” right and
left—but the Veterans’ Wives
Bridge Club goes on and on.
Winners with high score last
Thursday evening were Doris
Crossland and Sybil Deeper. Mrs.
D. W. Williams and Mrs. E. E.
McQuillan coached the beginners.
Meeting tonight at 7:30 in
Room 2A and 2B of the MSC,
the hostesses, Yvonne Vaughn and
Ella Frances Spears, expect the
usual ten tables of players.
•
Some of the student couples at
tending last Saturday’s game in
Fort Worth were Ben and Ella
Frances Spears, Marian and John
Nance, Margie and Leon Trench-
man, and Jerry and Flora Mae
Nickerson.
The Spears also visited Aggie-ex
Robert E. Willson (’45) and fam
ily, of Dallas.
The Trenchmans and Nickersons,
double-dating, spent the night in
Waco before going to the game in
Fort Worth.
Doris Crossland visited her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Keene,
in Mineral Wells, while Bob joined
his buddies in Amon Carter Stad
ium.
•
The feminine population has
scored a victory, with three girls
and one boy born to College Sta
tion families recently.
A daughter was born to Guy
and Billie Johnson is a business
in business administration.
A 5 lb. 12 oz. girl made her debut
into the H. H. Alford family Mon
day. Her father, Herbert, majors
in Bus. Ed.
Ann Louise is the name of the
new female member of the R. C.
Hart family, at 719 Fairview Ave.
The new male resident at A&M
is William Snowden, 111, who out
weighed the largest baby girl by
nearly a pound! The son of Vet
Med student Wm. S. Nichols, Jr.,
William III weighed in at 8 lb. 1
oz.
Mrs. M. M. Miller of College
View has been a medical patient
at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Bryan.
Meet at 7:15
Cub Scouts
Get Awards
Tonight
Sixty-six advancement awards
will be presented to College Sta
tion Cub Scouts at the Pack Ineet-
ing to be held in the A&M Consol
idated High School Gymnasium
this evening at 7:15. A skit will
be given at the meeting by mem
bers of Den 3 under the direction
of Mrs. W. W. Mills, Den Mother.
Den mothers this year are as
follows: Mrs. John H. Quisenberry,
Mrs. George Carroll, Mrs. W. W.
Mills, Mrs. Jack P. CoVan, Mrs.
Richard B. Da,vis, Mrs. Robt. A
Darrow, Mrs. John L. Floyd, Mrs.
John O. Webb, Mrs. J. Wheeler
Barger, Mrs. Luther G. Jones,
Mrs. Chester C. Shaefer, and Mrs.
Walker Jacobs.
The merit advancement badges
to be presented at this evening
meeting are as follows. Bobcat
pins: Jimmy Anderson, Robert
Baird, Kenneth Dewey, Wayne
Hawkins, Harlan Hill, Marcus
Curd, Travis Stringer, Arthur Wil
liams, Gerry Wayne Deen, Hal
Delaplane, Jay Pruitt, Russell
Brown, Kit Spencer, Donald Zobell,
Woody Hedrick, George Outlaw,
John Webb, John Brock, Delbert
Hovorak, Morris Stone.
Bear Badges: Bobby Jacobs,
James Johnston, Poel Mills and
Paul Hildebrand.
Wolf Badges: Jim Fowler and
Jack George.
Wolf Gold Arrows: Richard Dav
is, David Dulaney and Glenn
erman.
Wolf Gold Arrows: Richard Dav-
ick, Bill Jones, Alex Rush, Bobby
Jones and Britt Bell.
Wolf Silver Arrows: Richard
Daivs, Johnny Chaine, Glen Wild-
erman and Jack CoVan.
Bear Silver Arrows: Bruce
Thompson, Alfonse Holick, Bill
Jones, Howard Mitchell, Robert
Jacobs, and Britt Bell.
Denners Cloth: Kenneth Bailey.
Webelos Badges: David Mc-
Neely, Karl Wadehofer, Richard
Hickerson, William Breazeale, and
John Turner.
Service Stars: Alphonse Holick,
Bill Jones, Alex Rush, Kenneth
Bailey, Johnny Crain, Joel Mills,
Glenn Wilderman, Bruce Thomp-
(See CUBS, Page 5)
ft
ft
$
6*
»8E BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO
*CY, SELL, BENT OR TRADE. Rates
.... So a word per Insertion with a
18c Minimum. Space rate In classified
lection .... 60c per column-inch. Send
>11 classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES
OFFICE. All ads must be received In Stu-
tent Activities office by 10 a.m. on the
lay before publication.
• FOR SALE •
Prompt Radio Service
—Call—
Sosolik’s Radio Service
712 S. Main St.
Ph. 2-1041 Bryan
2 BEDROOM HOUSE. Detached garage.
Close to campus.
Close to campus. West Park Addition.
Inquire at 600 Maryem St.
USED G. E., Hotpoint, Norge, from $85
to $110, all in good condition. Several
good used gas ranges and washers, also.
Henry A. Miller Co,, North Gate.
Come Out and Enjoy . . .
CLUB AVALON’S
New Low Prices!
Mabel’s Fried Chicken AA
Dinner
Joe Baker, Mgr.
• NOTICES •
SEALED BIDS will be received in the Of
fice of the President to 8 p.m. Novem
ber 2 for the grazing and farming rights
on the land of Wickson Lake Properties,
Inc., comprised of 1,405 acres with ap
proximately 300 acres tillable. For fur
ther information contact C. H. Doerge,
202 Brook Lane, Bryan, Tex. Phone
4-9734.
• LOST •
ONE GOLD Jewelled Ballerina ear clip.
In or on the grounds of Memorial Stu
dent Center. Generous reward. Contact
Mrs. A. G. McGill. Phone 2-1626.
CLASS ’46 SENIOR RING between Main
Post Office and Veterinary Hospital.
Name on inside. Liberal reward for
return to G. S. Trevino, Apt. A-l-X,
College View.
GRUEN wrist watch lost in Sayers Hall,
Denton, Texas. Finder please return to
Lost and Found. Reward.
GIRL’S blue billfold. Name: Marian
Kidd. Please return to Ray Shelton,
12—405.
LOOSELEAF notebook in Room 128 Aca
demic. Ray Hilton, Box 6942.
• HELP WANTED •
PART-TIME position open with local sup
ply concern in Bryan for man exper
ienced in business, wholesale or retail,
who can arrange schedule to work from
4:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.—Monday through
Friday. Must have good record and
bear investigation. Give qualifications
and reference,
ion.
Write Box 184, Battal-
• WORK WANTED •
WILL TAKE CARE children during foot
ball game. Phone 2-7495.
WILL KEEP your children during the'
games. $1.00 per child. B-5-A College
View.
WILL KEEP children at my home Satur
day during game. 50c per hour. 505
S. Sterling, Bryan.
• SPECIAL NOTICE
SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300 A.F. & A.M.
Called meeting Thursday,
Oct. 25, 6:30 p.m. Work
in M. M. Degrees — Also
examination.
J_ H. Sorrels, W. M.
N. M. McGinnis, Sec,
My company, the largest Texas Life In
surance company, pays the full amount of
your policy, if you are killed in service.
Eugene Rush,
American National
Insurance Company,
North Gate, College
• WANTED TO BUY •
USED CLOTHES and shoes, men’s —•
women’s — and children’s. Curtains,
spreads, dishes, cheap furniture. 602
N. Main. Bryan. Texas.
Directory of
Business Services
ALL LINES of Life Insurance. Homer
Adams, North Gate. Call 4-1217.
Official Notice
3000 Student Date tickets to the Baylor
game are now available. They will remain
on sale until 5 p.m. Friday, or until sup
ply is exhausted, in the Athletic Office.
Students will be required to present ID
cards at all football games.
Howard Nelson,
Ticket Manager
Mrs. Dell Bauer, who is in charge of
senior rings, said that rings which were due
in October 1 are now ready for distribu
tion. October 31 is the last day for plac
ing orders for rings for delivery before
Christmas.
The ring window in the registrar’s office
is open from 8 a.m. until 12 noon daily.
The crater of Mt. Katmai, Alas*
ka, is eight miles around.
Be Hapfy-GO LUCKY!
LUCKIES
TASTE BETTER 1
It takes fine tobacco to give you a better-,
tasting cigarette. And Lucky Strike
means fine tobacco. But it takes some
thing else, too—superior workmanship.
You get fine, light, mild tobacco in the
betteff-made cigarette. That’s why
Luckies taste better. So, Be Happy-Go
Lucky! Get a carton today!
y/Ah 0na . Sv ;,2t a^e,
Grace Ivry
Syracuse University ^
%
I' i v mo
ki n
'- v TV\&Ykoe. ^ -
"To*a\k o? wanij s<
rt better-AasUng Udcy Strv
The cigarette *for king?*
'j Andrew N. Vladimir
|| Yale University
-it,
STUDENTS!
Let’s go! We want your jin
gles! We’re ready and willing
and eager to pay you $25 for
every jingle we use. Send as
many jingles as you like to
Happy-Go-Lucky, P.O. Box
67, New York 46, N. Y.
smite
ft
V
C / G
-4 ft £
r r £
\ 7
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M. FT-Lucky Strike Means Rne Tobacco
iCCO COMP.