The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 08, 1952, Image 6

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THE BATTALION
Wednesday, October 8, 1952
Bakery Chooses Rooms In MSC
The MSC bakery is in the pro
cess of moving to the lower level
of the Center to the place former
ly occupied by the receiving room.
Miss Gladys Black, Center food
director, gave the reason for the
move as, “too cramped quarters Black.
in the main kitchen for both the
bakery and other food depart
ments.”
The bakery should be ready for
use by Monday, according to Miss
10
11
C^ci ten cla r of? (L*uen td
Ocioler
(Clip This for Future Reference)
9 Quarterback Club, Ballroom, MSC
Student Senate Meeting, Senate Chamber, MSC
10 Baylor Fish Football Game, Waco (Night)
10- 12 Texas Bar Assoc. Board of Directors, Assembly
Room, MSC
Texas G*un Collectors Assoc., Ballroom, MSC
Group McDonald Luncheon, 2A & 2B, MSC
Beta Sigma Sorority, 2C & 2D, MSC
Beta Sigma Sorority, 2C & 2D, MSC
Michigan State Football Game—Lansing
11- 12 386 Amid. Engr. Battalion, 2C & 2D, MSC
13-14 North Texas Producers Assoc., Assembly Room,
MSC »
13 MSC Council Meeting
North Texas Producers Assoc. Luncheon, Ballroom,
MSC
North Texas Producers Assoc. Dinner, Assembly
Room, MSC
Lions Club Luncheon, 2C & 2D, MSC
Air Force Reserve, 2A & 2B, MSC
14 Kiwanis Club Luncheon, Ballroom, MSC
Knife & Fork Club Banquet, Ballroom, MSC
15 Texas Dehydrators Short Course, Assembly Room,
MSC
Texas Dehydrators Short Course Dinner, Assembly
Room, MSC
Texas Seed Mfg. Board of Directors, 2A, MSC
Brazos County TSCW Ex-Students, 3D, MSC
16 Student Senate Meeting, Senate Chamber, MSC
Quarterback Club, Assembly Room, MSC
A & M Employee’s Dinner - Dance Club, Ballroom,
MSC, 7:30 p.m.
Extension Eervice Club, 2C & 2D, MSC
17 T C U Fish Football Game—Ft. Worth (Night)
Local Joint Apprenticeship Committee of Plumbing
& Pipe Fitting, 2A MSC
18 All College Dance—Franke Carle and His Orchestra,
Sbisa, 9:00 p.m.
Frankie Carle and His Orchestra Concert, 7:15 p.m.
Guion Hall
T C U Football Game—Here
20 Student Life Committee Meeting, Senate Chamber,
MSC
Lion’s Club Luncheon, 2C & 2D, MSC
Air Force Reserve; 2A & 2B, MSC
20-24 Extension Service Conference, Asscm., 3D, 3C,
2A, 3B, MSC
21 Kiwanis Club Luncheon
Lucille Cummings—Town Hall Concert, 8:00 p.m.,
Guion Hall
22 Bricol Stamp Societv Dinner, Assembly Room, MSC
Advisory Council of Accounting Conference, 2A &
2P», MSC
23-25 Local Supervisors & Directors of Trade & In
dustrial Education, SB & 3C, MSC
23 Quarterback Club, Ballroom, MSC
24 Research Foundation Conference, 2A & 2B, MSC
Research Foundation Luncheon, 2C & 2D, MSC
A & M College Women’s Social Club, Ballroom,
MSC
Texas Rural Health Executive Committee, 2C & 2D,
MSC
Executive Council on Rural Health, Senate Cham
ber, MSC
25-26 Texas Gun Collectors Association, Ballroom,
MSC
25 Executive Council on Rural Health, Assembly Room,
MSC
Baylor Football Game, Waco
27-28 Air Conditioning Poultry Breeding Project, 2A
& 2B, MSC
27 Lion’s Club Luncheon, 2C & 2D. MSC
Air Force Reserve, 2A & 2B, MSC
28 Kiwanis Club Luncheon, Ballroom, MSC
30 Quarterback Club, Ballroom, MSC
Teague Sees
More Drought
Aid In Texas
WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 —
(IP)—Rep. Olin Teague of Col
lege Station predicted yester-
d a y that drought - plagued
counties in his state which
have not already received aid
would get early relief.
Teague said Raymond Foley,
head of the Housing and Home
Finance Agency and director of
the emergency relief program,
told him he has asked President
Truman to make more money
aavilable to get hay delivered to
livestock growers.
The federal govemment already
has shipped 20,371 tons of drought
aid hay into Texas, according to
the State Agriculture Mobilization
Committee.
The committee said 107 counties
designated as disaster areas have
ordered 90,488 bales of hay. Under
the emergency program, the gov
ernment buys hay in areas where
its plentiful and sells it below cost
to. farmers and ranchers in drought
State Fair Has Guffaws
Over Political Movement
, Sill
Pill!
Newcomers
Hold Tea
Mrs. M. T. Harrington enter
tained the Newcomers Club of the
College Women’s Social Club with
a tea at the president’s home Mon
day afteimoon.
In the receiving line with Mrs.
Harrington were Mrs. Gibb Gil
christ, Mrs. Ray George, president
of the Newcomers Club, and Mrs.
H. W. Bai-low, sponsor for the cur
rent year.
Mrs. Joe Davis and Mrs. M. M.
Rotsch, out-going president, pre
sided at the silver services at each
end of the tea table. The center-
piece was maroon and white chry
santhemums and gladioli.
The same motif was repeated in
floral arrangements in the living
room and den where the following
officei-s of tthe club served in the
houseparty: Mesdames L. A. Gim-
brede, Paul McMurtry, Dale Hon
eycutt, L. E. Davids, W. A. Kamm-
lade, R. J. Vernon, James W. Grif
fith, W. H. Hedener, Roland Bing,
W. L. Tidwell and W. J. Morris.
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Big grins and slight chuckles
took over usually serious Texas
politics Tuesday, at a giggle-a-
minute pace.
But it was still politics. . .
Take the scene at the State Fair
of Texas. A pretty blonde in the
Stevenson - Sparkman Democratic
booth, busy sorting literature to
hand out, had time to say a cheery
“good morning” to passersby. She
apparently didn’t know what was
about to happen across the boule
vard.
When the fair opened Saturday,
the Democi’ats had a fair-sized
white booth with large placax - ds
and a neon sign telling Texans
to vote for Adlai Stevenson and
his running mate, John Sparkman.
GOP Turquoise
Across the wide street, the Re
publicans—or Democrats helping
them—had a turquoise-painted Ei-
senhower-Nixon booth, a bit small
er.
That was too much for the GOP.
Tuesday morning they finished
work on a new booth with windows
on all sides and painted red, white
and blue. Big billboards went up,
and Republicans launched a huge
silver balloon with “Ike” printed
on it. But still no blonde. . .
In Houston, Eisenhower-Sup-
porter John Blaffer had let his en
thusiasm for the Republican can
didate get him in a slight jam.
Blaffer, an oil man, ordered
some confetti to throw on a pa
rade planned for Eisenhower next
Tuesday when he is in Houston for
a speech. But because of a tight
schedule, the parade has been can
celled.
Now Oilman Blaffer has his con
fetti—a whole truckload—and no
place to throw it.
On a downtown Dallas street, a
Stevenson backer was telling an
“undecided” voter why he should
“stay with the Democrats.”
“Remember those 35-cent steaks
you didn’t have the money to
buy?” asked the Stevenson man.
“Look what the Democrats have
done for you?”
Highlights
(Continued from Page 5)
Sixth game: Vic Raschi and Al-
lie Reynolds, Yankees’ two big
siege guns, double team Dodgers,
3-2 . . . Two more home mns by
Duke Snider, bracketing him with
Ruth and Gehring as only players
to hit four.home run in one sei--
ies . . . “Good, gosh, is that true?”
asks the Duke, unbelieving.
•
Seventh game: Mickey Mantle’s
towering home run in the sixth and
his single in the seventh, scoring
another run . . . “Those Yankees
didn’t miss DiMaggio a bit—that
Mantle killed us,” says a morose
Jackie Robinson in the Brooklyn
Dressing room.
Junior College
Conference Ends
The Junior College Conference,
which was held on the campus for
two days, ended Tuesday. The
ninth annual conference was at
tended by 52 administrators from
junior colleges in Texas, Okla
homa, and Louisiana.
Most of the work done in the
conference was handled by discus
sion groups, who reported on such
topics as academic, vocational and
pei’sonal counseling, and prob
lems in agricultui-e, engineex-ing
and semi-pi'ofessional engineeidng
pxo grams.
Today’s woi’k stax-ted at 9 a. m.
with a symposium on “How Can
the Junior College Help the In
dustries of Our State.” Dx*. Ralph
R. Fields, consultant to the con-
ference px-esided. The symposium
consisted of Lee E. Cook, vice
pi-esident of Texas Power and
Light Company; E. J. Fox, super
intendent of industrial relations,
South Texas Division, Texas Com
pany; G. T. Orgelman, supexvisor,
engineex-ing pex-sonnel, Chance
Vought Aircx-aft; and H. F. Dodge,
assistant supex-visor of technical
sex-vices, Texas Employment Com-
xxxission.
Dxxx-ing the afternoon the con
ference heaxd x-epox-ts of recoxd-
ers and the confex-ence was eval
uated.
“Yeah,” said the wavering Dem
ocrat, “but they ain’t done nothing
for me this year!
“The Dallas Morning News, sup-
portixxg Eisenhowex- in the present
campaign, joyfully announced that
Adlai Stevenson was backing Ike.
Of coux-se it was another man—
not the Democratic Party’s candi
date.
Adlai For Ike
The News quoted Caddo Mills
Druggist Adlai Stevenson, 59, as
saying “it was my name long be-
fox-e the Democi-atic nominee was
bora.”
Both men were named for the
same man—the nominee’s grand-
father—but are not kinsmen.
About the only serious news of
the day, politically speaking, came
from State Democi-atic Headquax-
ters.
The Democx*ats announced Sena
tor Tom Connally would intx-oduce
the presidential nominee when he
speaks iix Houston, Oct. 18. And
Speaker of the House Sam Ray
burn, the Democrats said, would
introduce Stevenson, Oct. 17, wheix
he’s in Dallas.
Speaker Rayburn also announced
that iix case of rain Stevenson
would speak at the Spox-tatoxium,
a wrestling ax-ena, instead of at
the State Fair grounds. . .
Which led a wag to remark that
any candidate that could get the
“blame” fox- a x-ain in Texas would
surely carry the state.
I,
Wives Bridge Club.
Meets Thursday
Tre Aggie Wives Bridge Club
will meet Thursday night in the
MSC Assembly Room at 7:30 p. m.,
said Mx-s. Anne Crosson, repox-ter.
Last Week 89 Aggie wives play-'
ed bridge. Mx-s. Gwen Collins and
Mx-s. Evelyn Hearn won high scox-e
and second high x-espectively fox-
the regulars. Mrs. Pat Morley won
high scox-e in the intei-mediate
group.
Teachers for the beginnex-s wei'e
Mesdames E. L. Angell, G. W. Ad-
riance and Jocco Roberts.
Mrs. Crosson and Mrs. Jean-
neane Cline were the hostesses.
' iplil
slim
m*i
ki'
■
WINNER IN WOOL —Jeanne
Davis, 22-year-old hazel-eyed
blonde from Opp, Ala., is the
“px-oud” winner of the title
“Miss Sweatex* Girl 1952.” The
judges said “the soft, all-wool
turtleneck sweater caught our
eyes.”
Cantebury Club
Holds Barbecue
The Canterbui-y Club of St.
Thomas Episcopal Church will
have a hot dog barbecue in Hen-
sel Park tonight at six.
All membex-s of the’ clixb are
asked to come and bx-ing their
friends, according to the Rev. R,
L. Dai-wal, minister at St. Thomas.
Uppex-classmen will meet at the
church for xides to the paxk and
fx-eshmen will xneet at the Campus
Theatre.
Also oxx the Cantex-bury Club’s
program for the fxxtux-e is a talk
by Bishop Kennedy of Honolulu
at a dinner in the MSC Friday,
Oct. 17.
What's Cooking
Wednesday
6 p. m.—Canterbury Club, Ilensel
Pax*k, Fish meet at Campus Thea-
ter, Upperclassmexx at St. Thomas
Church
7:15 p. m.—Hillel Cultural Meet
ing, Room 2A, MSC
7:15 p.m. — Land of The Lakes
Club, Room 3C, MSC.
7:30 p. m.—Architectural Wives
Society, YMCA.
7:30 p.m.—Club De Las Americas,
Room 128, Academic Bldg.
Architectux-al Wives Society,
YMCA South Solarium.
7:45 p.m. — Spanish Club, Senate
Chambex’, MSC, Ox-ganization.
8 p. m.—Students Wives Circle of
the A&M Presbyterioxx Church,
Residence of Mrs. M. L. Cushion.
Thursday
7:30 p.m. — Aggie Wives Bx*idge
Club, MSC Assembly Room.
Panhandle Club, Academic Bldg.
Pasadena Club, 2nd floox-, MSC.
!. i I i i
i M PORTANT
I-«#I
Battalion Classifieds
MJY, SELL,, RENT OR TRADE. Rates
... 3e a word per Insertion with a
t5e minimum. Space rate In classified
«ctlon .... 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
lay before publication.
• FOR SALE •
XIAVE JUST received new shipment of
life insurance! First come, first served.
. . . Eugene Rush, North Gate.
WHOLESALE MEATS: Now’s the time
to fill that locker or deep freeze with
some good Baby Beef. Contact Tom
Goodson, B-20-A, College View or call
John Cowsar, 6-1303 afl
Saturdays.
fter 5 p.m.
RESERVE your Christmas puppy now!
The friendly, economical BAYARD KEN
NELS has clean, comfortable boarding
facilities. Trimming, bothing, nail clip
ping, whelping, stud dogs, dog food,
crate rental. Open Sundays.
6 south of College.
supplies.
On Highway
1031 MODE!
and body. Pass
seen at Bub Mousner’s
way 6 C. S.
Coupe, good motor, tires,
sed inspection. Can be
i 66 station, High-
tor,
Ca
FENCE
IF IT’S FENCE I HAVE IT
—Also—
Flowerbed and Driveway Trim
NO DOWN PAYMENT
3 Years to Pay! Free Estimate!
Pex-manent and Portable
Lawn _Sprinkler Systems
HUDSON TRADING POST
W. C. (Bill) Hudson
Rt. 1, Box 355A Ph. 3-3840
Bryan, Texas
• FOR RENT •
SINGLE room in extremely quiet residen
tial liome. Linen and maid service.
Ample parking. Two blocks south of
the corps area. 401 S.. Dexter, phone
4-7054.
NICE, large room for 1 or 2. Twin beds.
Home of young couple. Call 3-3705.
HELP WANTED
PART TIME
grocery
Thursda
worker. Experience
ay and Friday after-
outh
noons and Saturday.
Food Market.
CASHIER, car hop, waitress wanted, ex
perience unnecessary. Must be over 18.
See Mr. Ferreri at Triangle.
t.
• WORK WANTED •
WI TjL CARE for children for working
mothers. Reasonable rates.. 104 Sul-
pher Springs Road (3 doors behind Mais
Grocery) or phone 4-8326.
LOST
RED WALLET in vicinity of stadium. Keep
money in wallet but return papers. Phone
4-9652 or 6-1643.
WAI^LET at Kentucky game Saturday
night. Miss Bea Shipp owner. Finder
see C. D. Gwin, Dorm 7-428. Reward.
TAN WALLET, between Friday and mid
night yell practice. Finder please re
turn to L. M. Briziel, Dorm 8-119. Re
ward.
Dr. Carlton R. Lee
OPTOMETRIST
SOSA East 26th
(Across from Court House)
Call 2-1662 for Appointment
Directory of
Business Services
North Gate. Call 4-1217.
• SPECIAL NOTICE
of fees are pay-
Department
The Second installment
able to the College Fiscal Depa
on or before October 17. Board tc
ember 21, $46.20; room rent to Novem
ber 21, $11.65; laundry to Nov
$3.75; total fees due is $61.60.
her 21, $11.65; laundry to November 21,
Meeting Thursday, October 9, 7:30 p.m.
at Brazos County A&M Club House. David
A. Witts will speak on “Americanism.”
fcUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300 A.F. Si A.M.
Stated meeting, Thursday,
October 9, 7 p.m.
A1 B. Nelson, W.M.
N. M. McGinnis, Sec.
Official Notice
gat
minded that Student Life Regulations re
quire that all student home town clubs,
technical societies, departmental societies
and honorary societies, hava e cur;
constitution and a list of their off!
All student organization officers are re-
gul
uire that all student home town clubs,
I societies
e current
leers
on file in the Office of Student Activities
2nd floor, Goodwin Hall. Officers or fac
ulty sponsors of these clubs and societies
should call by this office as soon as
possible and comply with this regulation.
W. D. Hardesty
Club Advisor
Student Activities
One ox - more favorites won every
day of Delaware Pai'k’s 33-day
meeting which ended recently.
ANNOUNCEMENT
Ifi. a'rtmFHTS PREFER EUCKIES
COLLEGE STOTTS f
Hi JSATIOB-'SIPE SURVEY.
' t::V ^ . - on actual student interview in .
Hation-wid® survey as^^ ^ prefer Lu0 *ie S
80 leading colleges ^ ^ fcy a wide margin. Eo. 1
reaa o„ - » >orc w «... o—- „
^ S "“ C 8 “ otMr
than the natron ^
STUDlSHTS 1 .
i Hurry’. Mail your
Hurry’. HurI ? \ We pay $25 for every
Strike 3inBl«- V,e as p m y any jingles
one we use. Happy-
|?o!°Box 67, New York 46, N.Y.
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pRODuei jy <jl& J&nsAi&evn iJ(J&ze.o-£&ryia*iy
LUCKIES TASTE BETTER!
FOR A CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER SMOKE
Be Happy-GO LUCKT. 1
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