Page '4 ^ THE BATTALION Tuesday, December 9, 1952 <* Tidelands Issue • (Continued from Page 2) tions at our state school in Aus tin, it might pay us to think a little more about matters closer to home. It’s about time for Gov. Shivers to fill three vacancies which will exist on the A&M System Boai - d of Directors in January. Directors whose terms expire are Tyree Bell of Dallas, C. C. Krueger of San Antonio and Rufus Peeples of Tehuacana. There has been much specula tion about whether or not any or all three will be reappointed. The governor’s present policy for mak ing such appointments calls for new men rather than reappoint ments. Arts and Darts (Continued from Page 2) The film vividly portrays the downfall of a man through an adulterous love affair. Under the expert direction of William Wyler, the story’s sordid theme is han dled with a sensitivity that de stroys all dangers of sensational ism. Intimate Photography In addition to artistic direc tion, “Carrie” becomes forceful through the acting of its stars and its detailed intimate photography. Laurence Olivier moves through his difficult role with ease and understanding that few actors ev er attain. Jennifer Jones portrays Carrie in a way that makes the character come alive and there fore believeable. The film’s photography captures the tragic mood of the story and the realistic costumes and settings of the film’s turn-of-the-centruy background. The accurate detail sometimes makes the movie appear it was actually photographed in the period represented. “Carrie” fills the screen as a model example of technical and dramatic cinema artistry. Politically it would be to his advantage to pass around these appointive assignments to other people in the state. Word has drifted back that the general feeling of some directors at their last meeting in Austin was reappointments may be in or der for the three whose terms ex pire. However one of the directors whose time elapses this Januai’y said he did not expect to be re named to the board. The group will suffer a great loss if these three directors do not receive reappointments. Each has turned in an outstanding job to the A&M System, far more than some people i-ealize. Members of the board whose terms do not expire this year are G. R. White, president of Brady; E. W. Harrison of South Bend; A. E. Cudlipp of Lufkin; H. L. Winfield of Fort Stockton; J. W. Witherspoon of Hereford; and Robert alien of Raymondville. One other appointive position in the A&M System adminisrative set up must be filled in the near future. Chancellor Gibb Gilchrist will retire at the end of this school year. There has been no indication from anyone as to who will suc ceed him. He first took over the system when it was organized in 1948. USDA Chief Speaks To Credit School Oris Wells, chief of the Bureau of Agricultural Economics, USDA, Washington, D. C., spoke yester day to the second annual Texas Farm and Ranch Credit School in the MSC. Following Wells, speeches were given by A&M agricultural staff members, state agricultural .au thorities, and bankers attending the conference. Members toured the campus yesterday afternoon. BUY, SEIX, RENT OR TRADE. Rates .... 3c a word per Insertion with a ?5c minimum. Space rate in classified section .... 60c per column-inch. Send all classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE. All ads must be received in Student Activities office by 10 a.m. on the day before publication,,. _ ..... , „ • FOR SALE • OH j BROTHER, if it’s for little brother, it would be a holster and gun set from HOLICK’S, North Gate. AT YOUR own price—choose from the wide variety of gifts at HOUCK’S, North Gate. GIVE A puppy for Christmas! Clean, com fortable boarding facilities (thermosta tically gas-heated quarters for house dogs). Trimming, bathing, nail clip ping, whelping, stud dogs. Dog food, supplies, crate rental. Open Sundays. Friendly economleal. THE BAYARD KENNELS, On Highway 6 south of College. WASHING MACHINE. One ear old apartment size Monitor Airator washer, with 6 pound capacity (dry-wgt.). Drain pump included. See any time after 1 p. m., B-7-W College View. • LOST • ONE TAN suitcase at Bryan. Return to Billy Percival, Dorm 14—Room 119. ONE SUITCASE with an Aggie T. Laun dry mark on shirts inside is WI-97, electric razor, fishing reel. Lost at Aggie line at East Gate. Dorm 7, Room 102. r----. ■ 1 - • SPECIAL NOTICE • dTT William Gottlieb will be in Bryan Wednesday, December 10 at the La Salle Hotel to treat foot ailments. Let Us Maike Your . . . CHRISTMAS CARDS the Photographic Way Scoates Industries Old Sulphur Springs Road & Illway 6 PHONE 3-6887 Directory of Business Services INSURANCE of all kinds. Homer Adams, North Gate. Call 4-1217. Dr. Carlton R. L©« OPTOMETRIST B03A East 26tk (Across from Court House) Call 2-1662 for Appointment Dr. M. W. Deason Optometrist NORTH GATE 813 COLLEGE MAIN 8:00 to 5:00 Phone 4-1106 fc: ••••••' • WORK WANTED • TYPING—reasonable rates. Phone 3-1776 after 5. • HELP WANTED • TECHNICIAN for office work. Call 4-9882. Official Notice A&M RINGS On the basis of fall semester grades some students will become eligible to order an A&M ring. Such studnts may now leave their names with the ring clerk in the Registrar’s Office. Their records will be checked and eligibility for the ring will be determined by Feb. 3, and 10, 1953 for March delivery. The ring clerk is on duty from S-12 noon each week day.. H. L. Heaton, Registrar December 9 is the deadline for ordering graduation announcements for .January graduates. Orders may be placed in the Office of Student Activities, second floor, Goodwin Hall. W. D. (Pete) Hardesty Business Manager of Student Activities ZARAPE Restaurant “Delicious Food” Lunch ... 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Dinner, 5 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. 4 Blocks Off Hiway G Sulphur Springs Rd. For a Perfectly Finished Shirt — Bring them to . . . | CAMPUS CLEANERS Garden Club Agg Makes Yule ie-Ex Gets Part Of Downed MIG Decorations The A&M Garden Club will have a workshop to make Christmas ar rangements in the MSC Social Room from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Friday, said Mrs. John Hugh Hill, adver tising oo-chairman. Table arrangements, door de signs and special arrangement or ders will be made of pine needles, magnolia leaves, cones and many dried materials and will be sold Saturday at Miller’s Super Market on Highway 6 and Southside Food Market in West Park addition. Special orders may be placed with Mrs. P. W. Burns, general chairman; Mrs. A1 B. Nelson, or Mrs. H. W. Barlow, said Mrs. Hill. ‘God of The Atom’ Movie Wednesday “God of the Atom,” a Moody Institute of Science full-color film, will be shown in the YMCA Chapel at the Aggie Christian Fellow ship Wednesday night at 7:15. Featured in this film are the actual technicolor pictures of the Nagasaki and Bikini explosions narrated by a physicist who was an eye-witness of all three war time atomic bomb explosions. Portrayed also in the film are demonstrations of the energies within every particle of matter which man has learned to release. The discovery of atomic energy is pointed out in the film, and it emphasizes man’s need of spirit ual rebirth. “God of the Atom” is brought to the campus by the Aggie Chris tian Fellowship, an inter-denom inational organization open to all Aggies and faculty members, which meets every Wednesday night at 7:15 p. m. in the YMCA. MELCHIOR (World’s Greatest Tenor) In Person Guion Hall 3 P. M. Sunday — Jan. 18 Lt. John Ludwig, Jan., 1951 aer onautical engineering graduate from Bryan, has been credited with destroying half a MIG-15 Sunday, in air action over northwest Ko rea. A pilot in one of the two large dogfights involving 24 American Sabrejets and 18 Communist war planes, Lt. Ludwig is the son of Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Ludwig of 1110 E. 26th St., Bryan. Although this was Lt. Ludwig’s first claim, six Red jets were shot down in Sunday’s battle. 12th Man (Continued from Page 3) me, and I am only glad to make my contribution on the coaching side of it.” Tickets are being sold for the game at various stores around the North Gate, East and South Gates, and Bryan. “Advanced sales point to a very good turn out,” said Gene Sparks, chairman of the tick et committee. Profits from the 12th Man Bowl will go into the Student Aid Fund from which students of A&M can borrow money to meet medical bills. They may pay the money back at any time in the future ■when they have graduated and are holding a steady job. This is the first Bowl game to be played on the campus, and branches from an idea originated in 1940 when the Aid Fund was begun. Bill Munnerlyn, chairman of the special committee for the game, said he hopes this will be the first in a series of such events, and will probably be played each year. What’s Cooking 7 p. m.—American Chemical Society, Room 106, Chemistry Bldg. 7:15 p. m.— Institute of Aero nautical Sciences, Room 207, new Engineering Bldg., Open House. Movies will be shown and refresh ments will be served. 7:30 p. m.—Building Products Marketing Club, Assembly Room, MSC, guest speaker and refresh ments. AIA Student Chapter, History Room, fourth floor, Academic Bldg. Business meeting and coffee. Aggie Players, Music Hall. Begin castings. Wednesday 6 p. m.—Hillel Foundation, YMCA Cabinet Room, Program is by Can tor George Wagner of Temple Beth Yeshurun, Houston. 7:15 p. m.—Aggie Christian Fel lowship, Chapel of YMCA, Film “God of the Atom” will be shown. Basketball (Continued from Page 3) All three will see plenty of action this season. Its hard to say just who should hold the favored slot Wednesday. Like the Aggies, Houston suffer ed heavily from graduation. Their most severe sacrifice was the loss of Royce Ray, All-Missouri Val ley center. The Cougars trounced A&M twice in the past season, leaving the Farmers with a particular de sire to get even. They know its bad enough to get beat in your own conference, much less by an outsider. Preceding the Aggie-Cougar tilt A&M’s freshman squad will meet the Allen Academy team in the freshmen’s first game of the year. Fly big, powerful Pioneer Pacemasters to DALLAS 2 Flights Daily • 87 Minutes JPIONEJEJt AIK LINtS Timed By Baylor J J Phone 4-5054 for reservations ’Mural Highlights (Continued from Page 3) 5. Sq. 19, 55. Four of the five intramural football games played yesterday resulted in shutouts, all of the losers failing to score a single penetration. A QMC rolled up the highest score of the day, a 39-0 walloping of Sq. 4. A FA scored ten penetra tions in grinding out a 26-0 win over Sq. 3 and A Inf. racked up six penetrations in downing A TC, 20-0. Sq. 9 blanked Sq. 11, 16-0, in the other whitewashing. In the only game in which both teams scored, A Comp, slid past A Arm., 12-7, in a stubborn der tensive battle. In yesterday’s basketball action A Ath. amassed 33 points in the first half to walk to a 39-4 scor ing marathon over Sq. 2 MacGow- an scored 11 points in the first half to lead the attack. Jerry Nel- Knox, Zak to Highlight AVMA Auxiliary Meet The AVMA Auxiliary will meet in the MSC Social Room at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday for a program meeting. Sam Knox and Albin Zak, ma rimba players, will present a mus ical program of Christmas carols and popular selections. use the New son was high scorer with 12 points. Five field goals dunked in by Buddy Smith sparked A Ord. to a 29-18 win over A TC. Specia scored ten points fflr fche losers. A QMC outpointed Sq. 3, 16-8, and A Cml. blasted Sq. 15, 20-6. A Arm., Sq. 4, and A FA scored 2-1 tennis victories. A Arm. felled Sq. 14- 6-2, 7-5, 0-6. Sq. 4 downed A Eng., 6-1, 6-1, and A FA blast ed Sq. 11, 61-0, 6-3. Horseshoes results are as fol lows : Co. C over Sq. 21, 2-1; AAA over Sq. 6, 2-1; A Ord. over Sq. 8, 2-1; Sq. 14 over Sq. 2, 3-0. In bowling results of Friday night A Sig. outscored A Inf., 403-343. Curtis Muncy was high for the winners with 140. A TC edged A Cml., 364-341. MICROTOMIC — the Absolutely Uniform DRAWING PENCIL ©Absolute uniformity means drawings without “weak spots’’ - clean, legible detail. Famous for smooth, long-wearing leads. Easily distin guished by bull’s-eye degree stamping on sides of pencil. At your campus store! EBERHARD . t * . . r, FABER see our unusual assortment of these cards today! G I F T S — T () Y S DE CORATIONS TAYLOR’S VARIETY North Gate STARTING GABARDINE RAINCOATS Special Stationery Offer A PERFECT GIFT AT A LOW PRICE; Dec. 10 NOW IS YOUR CHANCE.. To Buy Your CHRISTMAS GIFTS at Reduced Prices V! AGGIE BELT BUCKLE Without Enamel Selling for Vi Price COME. IN} AND S-ee.; OiUu CcnRjiCute i T} LApTLcu i CHRISTMAS CARDS BOX ASSORTMENTS IP BY \ INDIVIDUAL^ GREETINGS FOR EVERYPERSON ON L YOU R 1 LIST The Exchange Store “Serving Texas Aggies” NEW BOOT STITCH BELTS TexMn OF YOAKUM * * * » f r t A