The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 07, 1952, Image 6

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THE BATTALION
Thuradny, February 7,1052
Fun in French Manner Is
Theme of MSC Project
A&M’s version of Parisian night
life will unfold when the MSC
opens its newest series of week
end dances, Cafe Rue Pinalle.
Cafe Rue Pinalle will open on
Friday, Feb. 15, at 8:30 p.m. and
have all the atmosphere of the
typical French left bank night
club . . . sans .vino. Sponsored by
the MSC Dance committee, the
night club is designed to offer the
student and his date good enter
tainment, dancing, and food at a
reasonable cost, Boyce Holmes,
dance director, said. Admission is
50 cents per person.
Gent Has Idea
The project was conceived by
Chris Gent, MSC business manag
er, after hearing complaints that
School Debate
(Continued from Page 1)
Stand and “wave madly” for the
newsreel picture. Policemen were
scattesed through the crowd that
sat in chilling breeze in the Mc
Allen High School stadium. The
McAllen High School band played
"The Star Spangled Banner” be
fore the debate began.
Orville Cox, chairman of the
McAllen Citizens’ League, sponsor
of the debate, told the crowd that
“a, great deal of sentiment may be
on one side or the other but we ask
you to conduct yourselves with re
straint and dignity.
Since Hoiles purchased the three
newspapers recently they have
adopted an editorial policy in op
position to tax supported schools.
This policy has been the sub
ject of several protest meetings
hold recently in McAllen. Hofhemz
also has challenged it over his
radio.
A question and answer discus
sion between the two men on the
Same subject is set for tomorrow
night.
there was no place to take a date
when she arrived on Friday. The
idea was turned over to the dance
committee and placed wider the
direction of Holmes, junior busi
ness student from Corpus Christi.
Proper Atmosphere
To aid in creating the proper
atmosphere, murals 10x12 feet
portraying scenes from a French
night club, will be hung around
the room. The only illumination
in the area will be lighted candles
on the tables. A cigarette girl,
waiters in French dress, a photog
rapher, and a menu in French will
complete the decorations.
Music for dancing and listening
will be supplied by a 9-12 piece
orchestra. There will be a lloor
show consisting of local talent and
talent from other schools within
the state.
The floor show will be based on
a French theme with accent on
torch singers and singing waiters.
Arrangements are being made to
also include the traditional can
can chorus line.
French Menus
Menus printed in French will
contain all the sandwiches and
drinks served in the MSC. The
patron will give his order to the
waiter and the food will be served
direct fsom the commissary to the
table.
Since the Cafe will only accom
modate approximately 75 couples,
•reservations in advance will be
taken by Miss Betty Bolander, pro-
Vet Wives Bridge
Club Meets Tonight
The Aggie Wives Bridge Club
will meet at 7:30 tonight in the
Assembly Room of the MSC in
stead of 8 p. m. as stated in The
Battalion yesterday.
BEY, SELL, RENT OR TRADE. Rates
.... 3c a word per Insertion with a
|Sc minimum. Space rate In classified
xjetion .... 60c per column-inch. Send
111 classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES
OFFICE. All ads must be received In
Student Activities office by 10 a.m. on the
iay before publication.
• FOR RENT •
ONE NICE large bedroom in my home.
Call 4-7054.
ROOM, for dates, friends, or parents. Make
your reservations now for various spring
activities. Two blocks from the campus.
Phone 4-4764.
• FOR SALE
FOR SALE By Owner—7 room home in
Garden Acres. Shade trees, attic fan,
heating system. Venetian blinds, large
back lawn—fenced. Have to sec this
one to appreciate it. 710 Inwood Drive.
Phone 4-4547
ONE GOOD used M.W. refrigerator. See
Elmo Vinas, D-S-A College View, or
Frank Koenig, 2-A Puryear.
STANDARD underwood typewriter, No. 3.
In good condition. Ideal for themes and
reports. Can be seen at 302 Aryshire
(Southside) after five. $20.
CAMERA—Standard Rolleifiex coated Tes-
car 3.5 Holland Solenoid flash, splendid
condition. C. B. Campbell, G-6574.
• WORK WANTED •
WILL KEEP child for working mother.
Apt. C-5-A College View,
• SPECIAL NOTICE •
Doris Coulter announces the open
ing of HANDWEAVING CLASSES.
The first meeting will be held tonight
at 7 to discuss needed equipment and
schedules. Instruction will be on a
4-week basis so new students may be
gin work around the first of any month.
Come to COULTER'S! at 506 S. Col
lege tonight to learn more details.
SEL ROSS LODGE NO. E’OO A.F. & A.M.
Called meeting Thursday
Feb. 7, 7 p.m. Instructions
V \ in floor work.
'V uv
/••/■ J. IT. Sorrels, W. M.
N. M. McGinnis, Sec,
Directory of
Business Services
INSURANCE of all lines. Homer Adams.
North Gate. Call 4-1217.
ELECTROLUX
Bonded Factory Representatives
NEW MACHINES, SERVICE
SUPPLIES
Phone 3-2193
Prompt Radio Service
—Call—-
Sosoiik’s Radio Service
712 S. Main St
Ph. 2-1041 Bryan
« KELP WANTED •
HALF DAY bookkeeper, man preferred.
Must know double entry system and typ
ing. Reply Box 542, Bryan, experience
and how long you will be here.
MARRIED girl, no children, to work in
concession stand at Campus Theatre.
Apply between 1 and 2 or 7 and 9 p.m.
SOPHOMORE with photographic experience
to learn photo-engraving. Must have at
least two hours off mornings. See John
Whitmore, Battalion Office, Goodwin
Hall.
THE ENGINEERING Drawing Department
needs a senior or graduate student to
take a teaching assistantship, Monday,
Wednesday, and Friday from 3 to 5
p.m. Apply Room C, Anchor Hall.
Official Notice
AU students of the School of Engineering
who distinguished last semester please drop
by Dean Barlow's office and pick up cards.
gram consultant, in the directorate
office, and at the main desk in the
bowling alley by Mrs. Elaine Les
ter.
“This is not an absolute neces
sity,” said Miss Bolander, “now-
ever it should be done to avoid
disappointment.”
Audition
Any person or group interested
in appearing on the floor show
can arrange an appointment for
an audition with Holmes.
“We will need all types of enter
tainers and since this project is
operated for the students, 1 feel
they should have a chance to help
with the entertainment. It will
be strictly till for fun and fun for
all.”
The colored murals, some of
torch singers, bar room scenes,
and typical “bar-flys,” were all
hand painted by Mrs. Betty Little
and Mrs. Merle Cobb, both of the
MSC advertising department. The
posters appearing on the campus
were drawn by members of the
Dance Committee under the direc
tion of the two ladies and John
Reeves, publicity chairman for the
cafe.'
New Queen
(Continued from Page 2)
ed her everywhere she went.
In remarking Windlesharn Moor,
a country house in Surrey, into a
home for herself and Phince Philip,
Elizabeth buried one of her girl
hood’s most grievous disappoint
ments.
Her father had granted her
Sunninghill Park, a beautiful
Georgian estate near Ascot, as a
bridal home. Rebuilding was un
derway when one night, about
three months before her wedding,
it caught fire and burned to a shell.
Homemaking gave her joy. She
set great store by the home, both
as an institution and as a center
for her own living. Once she ob
served that “the strength of our
country—or of any great country
—lies in the home and the family.”
Knew How to Cook
The Princess knew about home
making early. She could turn a
bed properly and, cook a meal—
she preferred plain cooking to
fancy, and quick light meals to
heavy ceremonious ones.
Elizabeth was bom April 21,
1926, in the Bruton street home
of her maternal grandfather, the
Earl of Strathmore. A few yards
away lay the quiet shade of Berk
eley Square. The other way lay
fashionable, busy Bond Street. To
gether they offered a token of
the calm privacy and the public
bustle of life for a premier public
figure.
At the age of five weeks, the
little girl was swathed in a his
toric royal christening robe and
baptized into the Church of Eng
land in the private chapel of Buck
ingham Palyace, then tenanted by
her grandfather, George V. She
was christened Elizabeth Alexan
dra Mary Windsor, after three
queens of her country.
(It was a token of the times in
which she grew up that the chapel
in which she was named was
smashed by a German bomb in the
London “blitz” of 1941. Her birth
place was similarly tom up.)
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THE EXCHANGE STORE
"Serving Texas Aggies”
WWW
WE FEATURE V0LLAND CARDS • THERE ARE NONE FINER
School Construction
Congress To Hear Newsman
Today On ‘Red'Massacre
Lincoln School students watch the progress of construction at
their school. Work is to be finished in March.
What’s Cooking
AGGIES WIVES B R 11) G E
CLUB: Thursday, 7:30 p. m., As
sembly Room MSC. New class for
beginners.
AIEE: Thursday, 7:30 p. m., EE
lecture room. Mr. Starbird will pre
sent a program of exhibits and
films.
ANDERSON COUNTY CLUB:
Thursday, 7:30 p. m., Room 402
Acad. Bldg.
BAYTOWN CLUB: Thursday,
7:30 p.m., Acad. Bldg. Discuss
High School Day.
BEAUMONT CLUB: Thursday,
7:39 p. m., Room 2-D MSC. Im
portant meeting.
COLEMAN COUNTY CLUB:
Thursday, 7:30 p. m., Room 125
Acad. Bldg.
EAST TEXAS CLUB: Thurs
day, 7:30 p. m., MSC Lounge. Club
picture for Aggieland ’52. Elec
tion of officeib for coming year.
FLAX COUNTRY CLUB:
Thursday, E:30 p. m., Room 303
Goodwin Hall. Choose duchess and
duke for Cotton Pageant.
GALVESTON COUNTY CLUB:
Thursday, 7:15 p. m., Room 307
Goodwin Hall. Discussion and
stockholders plot.
HILL COUNTY CLUB: Thurs
day, 7:00 p. m., YMCA Reading
Room. Picture for Aggieland will
be made.
HORTICULTURE SOCIETY:
Thursday, 7:00 p. m., Room 2-B
MSC.
HOUSTON CLUB SYSTEM:
Thursday, 7:15 p. m., Room 301
Goodwin. Scheduling of club pic
ture; membership drive; new Hous
ton Aggies should attend.
LAND OF THE LAKES CLUB:
Thursday, 7:30 p. m., Room 3-A
MSC. Election of officers.
PORT ARTHUR CLUB: Thurs
day, 7:30 p. m., Room 108 Acad.
Bldg. Club picture will be dis
cussed; music by Hank McAdams;
coffee and cake.
RUSK COUNTY CLUB: Thurs
day, 7:30 p. m., Boom 307 Good
win Hall.
SOUTHWEST TEXAS CLUB:
Thursday, 7:30 p. m., Boom 2-C
MSC. Aggieland picture will be
made, wear No. 1 uniform.
VISTORIA COUNTY CLUB:
Thursday, 7:30 p. m., Room 129
Acad. Bldg.
WEATHERFORD CLUB:
Thursday, 7:15 p. m., YMCA. All
students from Parker County are
invited.
THE WRESTLING CLUB: Fri
day, 5 p. m. in the Little Gym.
There will be no meeting Thurs
day night.
Washington, Feb. 7 — OP> — An
American newsman will tell con
gressmen today how Russian au
thorities tried to blame the Ger
man Nazis for the massacre of
10,000 Polish officers in World
War II.
Henry Cassidy, former chief of
the Associated Press bureau in
Moscow and now news editor of
NBC, has been called to testify
before a special house committee
investigating the massacre in Ka
tyn Forest.
Four witnesses have told the
committee already that the Rus
sians shot and strangled the Po
lish prisoners whose bodies were
found by the Germans.
Cassidy—One of Group
Cassidy was one of a group of
Moscow foreign correspondents
taken by the Soviets to view mass
graves at Katyn in mid-January,
1944. The forest is 33 miles west
of Smolensk.
The Nazis located the graves the
previous April when they overran
Smolensk. Berlin immediately
broadcast the news and said the
Soviets had done the killing.
HUGHES
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
LABORATORIES
CULVER CITY
LOS ANGELES COUNTY • CALIFORNIA
RADAR LABORATORIES
GUIDED MISSILE LABORATORIES
ADVANCED ELECTRONIC LABORATORIES
ELECTRON TUBE LABORATORIES
FIELD ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
AHN0UHU
OPINING! ON THUS STAFFS FOR THOSt
RICCIVING Ph.D., M.S. or B.S. DECRIES IN:
PHYSICS
ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING-MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING - AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING
For work in Research and Development:
ELECTRO MECHANICAL DESIGN
HEAT TRANSFER
HYDRAULICS-GYROS
TEST EQUIPMENT DESIGN
SUBMINIATURIZATION
MECHANICAL DESIGN
AERODYNAMICS
STRESS ANALYSIS
INSTRUMENTATION
STRUCTURES
TELEMETERING
RADAR SYSTEMS
SERVO MECHANISMS
COMPUTERS
SYSTEMS ANALYSIS
MICROWAVE TUBES
PULSE CIRCUITRY
SOLID-STATE PHYSICS
DIODES TRANSISTORS
PHYSICAL ANALYSIS
MINIATURIZATION
ANTENNAS-WAVEGUIDES
For work in Engineering:
RADAR FIELD ENGINEERING
MISSILE FIELD ENGINEERING
TECHNICAL WRITING
RADAR & MISSILE INSTRUCTION
ENGINEERING ADMINISTRATION
PATENT LAW
PERSONAL INTERVIEWS
See your placement office for appointment with
our engineering staff who will visit your campus
FEBRUARY 12
Moscow authorities answered the
charge within 48 hours with the
claim that the Nazis had killed
the prisoners after capturing the
area. Tadeusz Romer, former Po
lish ambassador to Moscow, testi
fied that Soviet authorities had
refused until then to answer offi
cial Polish inquiries as to the
whereabouts of 15,000 missing Po
lish officers.
‘Mask Man’ Testifies
A former Polish soldier, 'wear
ing a pillowslip mask to hide his
identity because he has relatives
behind the iron curtain, testified
yesterday that he witnessed the
shooting or burial alive of 200 Po
lish officers in Katyn Forest. The
date was early November, 1939.
Cassidy and several other for
eign correspondents, including
The 1920 basketball team at
A&M was the only one in the col
lege’s history to be undefeated.
Captained by E. E. McQuillan, cur
rent director of the A&M Develop
ment fund, the Aggie team won 19
consecutive games. Coach in those
days was Bill Driver.
Americans, were taken to Katyn
to view the massed graves after
Russia recaptured the area.
The party included the former
Kathleen Harriman, daughter of
W. Avcrell Harriman, then U. S.
ambassador to Moscow. Published
reports about the Katyn massacre
have claimed that she subsequently
wrote a secret report for the State
Department supporting the Soviet
claims.
Witness May Be Called
Now Mrs. Stanley C. Mortimer,
Jr., of New York City, her name
may enter today’s testimony. Com-^
mittee counsel John Mitchell told
a reporter he would call Mrs.
Mortimer as a witness later.
Arthur Bliss Lane, former U. Sf
ambassador to Warsaw, has de
scribed in a magazine article
(American Legion) what he tem-y-w
ed “official attempts in Washing/ ■
ton, beginning with Harriman’s in
Moscow, to cover up the Commu
nist crime” at Katyn.
Mitchell has said Lane’s charges
will be taken up during the present
investigation.
A Lucky-Customer Each Day
EACH DAY, one of our customers may ge t DOUBLE-VALUE for her grocery
money spent here. And, if the winner of previous “pot” or “pots” has not claimed
her prize, then an extra $2.50 or $5.00 or more may in addition to the face-value of
the winning ticket also be won. Simply save all your cash register tickets, HOVV-
EVER SMALL, and bring them in WITHIN A WEEK, and compare their numbers with
the winning numbers uosted in the store. The game is lots of lun and costs
nothing to nlay. Since we started this game, nine customers have won an average
of $5.85 each, in goods. SOMEBODY WINS EVERY DAY—No blanks, No trouble,
No added, cost.
II
1 Lb. Pkg. Admiration
Coffee each 77c
• MARKET SPECIALS • • GROCERY SPECIALS •
I We are now cutting special cuts from —
CHOICE HEAVY BEEF
Jasmine Pure
PORK SAUSAGE . .2]b.roll79c
Decker’s Tall Korn—Sliced
BREAKFAST BACON . 2 lbs. 79c
Cello Bags—Fresh
FRYERS lb, 49c
Loin End Cut
PORK CHOPS ..... lb. 49c
Fresh Tender _
§j Choice Veal
1 Round Steak .
. lb. 99c I
Choice Veal
POT ROAST . . .
... lb. 69c
Fine for Stews—Choice
VEAL BRISKET .
. . .lb. 45c
• FRESH FRUITS & •
VEGETABLES
BUNCH CARROTS
. . . each 5c
Fresh
GEEEN ONIONS .
. . bunch 5c
Fresh
PARSLEY . .
. . bunch 5c
Fresh
RADISHES ....
. . bunch 5c
Fresh Green
CABBAGE . . . .
... lb. 5c
i " T "
i No. 4 (the largest) size
| Lettuce . . per
head 10c |
Medium Size—California
AVOCADOS . . .
. . 2 for 25c
California Red
ONIONS
, . 2 lbs. 25c
• FROZEN FOODS •
I
6-oz. Honor Brand
Orange Juice . 2 cans 31c
12-oz. Honor Brand _ ^
STRAWBERRIES . 3 pkgs. $1.00
Honor Brand
BROCCOLI . . . . . l>kg. 29c
I
Honor Brand—Ford Hook
Limas pkg. 28c
Frionor Fillets of
CATFISH Ib. 53c
Pets Go for Hill’s
HORSEMEAT ... lb. pkg. 20c
Unroasted Spanish
PEANUTS .
Our Premium Grade—Large
INFERTILE EGGS
. 1 lb. cello 29c
.doz. 49c
In Paper Bags—Yard
EGGS dozen 45c
Popular Brands
CIGARETTES
. carton $1.99
Truly Worth the Difference—Sanitary Deluxe
Grade . , ^
ICECREAM pint 28c
Made of Pure Sweet Cream—Meadowgold
BUTTER lb. 95c
I Crisco . . 31k can 79c |
1 Lb. Cans—Libby’s—An Economical Meal
CORNED BEEF HASH . can 39c
Fit for Guests—Moonrose No. 2 Cans
Small Size—Tasty Tender
WHOLE GREEN BEANS, 2—41c
No. 2 Cans Kimbell’s Grade A Texas
14-oz. Stokely’s
CATSUP .
INI), zi c ans IVIIllU’tril S VJIdUC
Grapefruit Juice. ea. 10c l
SCOTTISSUE ... 2 rolls 23c
1 Lb. Cans Diamond
PORK AND BEANS . 3 cans 25c
For Chocolate Chip Cookies
HERSHEY DAINTIES, 2 pkgs. 39c
No. 2 Cans Hawaiian—Stokely’s
Pineapple Juice, can 10c
2 bottles 37c
Low Everyday Price—Peter Pan
PEANUT BUTTER . . each 33c
Big Values on . . .
MORTON’S PRODUCTS
during their 20th Anniversary Sale
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
Specials for Thursday P.M., Friday & Saturday, Feb. 7-9
Southside Food Market
SAVE ALL OUR CASH REGISTER RECEIPTS, HOWEVER SMALL. You may win
FREE the full amount of your purchase or more.