Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 13, 1953)
Friday, March 13, 1953 THE BATTALION Page 5 o 1) ary Etiquette Panel fold Program Tuesday etiquette will be ex- 7:S0|p. m. Tuesday by officers, their wives by the MSC Council, itizeii Croup .hat s »<h,First Meeting ted forit/ fontK'd citizens group icholastiu schools will hold its f becausing Monday, said Dr. ’ school, Motte, president, hat SEX:,ve liembers of the •hievemer make a tour of the i can mahlidated plant and meet an, andvhool board, is restrit;,.ose iwhose names we sex. make the tour,” La- , ,. “We can’t take too do not ■ damati^ ly feel right to md thei: If AM Texas iving tki he is eii! the etiquette program is the sec ond in a series. Carroll Phillips is chairman. A panel type discussion will be included on the program, Phil lips said. Capt. E. J. Scheffel will give a talk on duties and obligations of a young officer regarding mili tary etiquette. Mrs. Cecil MacGregor w i 1 1 briefly survey the role of an of ficer’s wife in assisting her hus band. Following these talks, questions will be received from the floor and answered by Lt. Col. C. R. Stapp, Col. Cecil MacGregor, Capt. and Mrs. A. J. Armstrong and Capt. Scheffel, Phillips said. 9:15 lAMCHEi ■SATURDAY ,. . nature St arts— r birtb 7 . 5,2;; - 7:19| 3te th: _ »££ opi enough. •h a A 'arring ee to A CRAWFORD ,,e ' nd iara HALE ps napf ■UM0IA PICT 1 ""•Hue TONIGHT le may ill P.M. coedusir thru Tuesday rw- VS — CARTOON „7E SATURDAY 111 P.M. DANGER-SPOT OF THE > S 2% ORIENT! ClIICLi 4-1250 TONIGHT EAST NIGHT Children Under 12 Admitted FREE When Accompanied By An Adult. Bing CROSBY • Bob HOPE | ^ A. Dorothy y -y- LAMOUR —ALSO— “TO HAVE OR HAVE NOT Starring HUMPHREY LAUREN BOGART BACALL SATURDAY ONLY I ig ■‘Mmtmjimr co*ttarring LOUIS CALHLRN M-G-M PICTURE —ALSO— “KEEP ’EM FLYING” Starring Bud Abbott Costello LACE ■; now S H O W 1 N O I fgltSK Ssos: lOBIURT NEW PNSOIlCTIOt! OF ESfflffiBliH 9? I “ FROM | er Tod; NNY PEGGY WW f MIC ?.U ^ iMAS^LEEl ^s^^ CK sA^R»SoNCyRiiZ' i/0-| e^ FRANK DAVIS & LEONARD STERN and LEWIS MELTZER • musical oirechon sr ray HE».oo*fj RIDAY PREVUE 11 P. M. -F • r| o & ® @ O k SYn, THE WOMEN’S STORY Japanese Floral Sliown to Garden Club By PEGGY MADDOX Women’s News Editor Mrs. Koji Hadaka of Japan, whose husband is in the oceano graphy department, made floral arrangements in Japanese style be fore the members of the A&M Garden Club this afternoon. She also had on display some arran gements that she made before the meeting began. Mrs. Hadaka wore Japanese gar ments and spoke in the Japanese language. Her daughter, senior at Stephen F. Austin High School in Bryan, interpreted for her mother and danced in a Japanese cosutme. Mrs. Koji has written two books on flower arrangement. Gardeners’ Forum Planned The landscape art and flori culture departments in coopera tion with the A&M Garden Club, will hold a Home Gardeners’ For um March 18-19 in the MSC. The forum will be under the di rection of Dr. A. F. DeWerth and is open to all home gardeners whether or not they are members of the garden club. Sessions will be held from 9:30 to 11:30 and from 1:30 to 3:30 p. m. on both days. There will be a charge of $2 for instructions and materials used. The forum is designed to give practical and helpful informa tion to home gardners in this vi cinity. FRIDAY ONB Y Double Feature with t Universal MemitNnal tain -Plus- A Most Extraordinary nSm! In Magnificent ^ EASTMAN COLOR! „ Mmm { MmsEmm- The Full Length, Official Record j of the Visit of Queen ELIZABETH of England and the kA 7 DUKE of EDINBURGH w to Canada and Washington Released thru United Artists SATURDAY ONLY M-G-M'* happy Leap Year •’tg&jaf /i romance I '"<3 LARPY PARKS ELIZABETH TAYLOR PREY. SAT. 10:30 P. M. Also Sunday & Monday The Newcomers Club iff planning a luncheon and style show to be given at The Oaks March 25. Mod els for the style show will be mem bers of the club who will show late spring and early Rummer fashions particularly for sports. The show will be under the direc tion of Miss Wandabelle Wise of Lester’s Smart Shop which will furnish the garments. Mrs. John A. Way, assisted by a committee of Newcomers, will be hostess for the occasion . . . A travelogue on South Ameri ca will be presented by Mr. and Mrs. Roy Snyder when ihey show pictures and tell of their exper iences in Paraguay to the Exten sion Service Club at 7:30 Monday night in the YMCA Chapel. The Extension Service Club is sponsor ing the program but the public may attend, said Mrs. B. G. Han cock, club reporter . . . The Veterinary Wives of ’56 held a business and social meeting last night. Mrs. Mary Jo Tolbert ■was hostess . . . The Dames Club will have its monthly bvisiness meeting and card party in the South Solarium of the YMCA at 8 p. m. Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. William Dudley Griffin of Magnolia, Ark., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Fredene, to Robert George Scofield of Dallas. The fu ture groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Arthur Scofield. He attended A&M and received his law degree from the University of Texas Law School. Miss Jo Ann Boyle, daughter of Jack Boyle of McDonald, Kan., and Lt. William Gerald Caughlin, son of Mi-, and Mrs. William L. Caughlin of College Station were married recently in the Chapel of Lowry Air Force Base in Denver, Colo. Methodist Church Miss Helen Louise Pollard be came the bride of Arthur Acigust Giese Jr. in the sanctuary of the First Methodist Church in Bryan Saturday. The bride is the daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Krack ox Bryan and the groom is the son of Arthur August Giese Sr. of Galveston and Mrs. Elizabeth Jen kins of Beaumont. He is a former Student of A&M and is presently enrolled at Lamar School of Tech nology in Beaumont. Parents of new babies in Col lege Station or college employees are the following: parents of twins —Mr. and Mrs. James R. Couch, a boy and a girl; parents of boys— Mr. and Mrs. T. D. McKim, Mr. and Mrs. Percy R. Turner, Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Scoates and Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Wall; parents of girls —Mi-, and Mrs. Ray B. Nesbitt, Mr. and Mrs. Everett D. Besch, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. McClure, Mr. and Mrs. Milton C. Edge, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Taylor and Mr. and Mrs. HaiTy S. Johnson. Kennel Club Starts Dog Training Class Dogs and their owners will at tend a dog obedience training pro gram beginning Sunday, March 15, said Albert Sparks, instructor. The program is sponsored by the Brazos Valley Kennel Club. Class es will begin each Sunday at 4 p. m. The classes will meet at the Bayard Kennels. In case of rain, a class will be postponed one week, Sparks said. ‘Inferno ^ Is ASABAB Dance Theme Dante’s “Inferno”, which deals with the author’s journey through Hell, will be the theme of ASA BAB the annual architecture mas querade ball, said David Wicks, executive committee member of the local American Institute of Architecture. Sponsored by the junior chapter AIA here, the dance will be held March 21 in the American Legion Hall, with the Prairie View Ramb lers furnishing the music. Those invited include all archi tecture majors and faculty mem bers of the department, who may bring one guest couple each, Wicks said. Tickets will cost two dollars for all AIA members and three dol lars for all non-members and guest couples. Costumes will be judged on their accordance with the theme, con test winners will receive prizes, Wicks said. Over 60 Hams Entered More than 60 hams have been entered in the ham show and auc tion of the Little Southwestern Livestock Show, said Jimmy Eller, chairman of the ham sale com mittee. That’s right! In the U. S. Air Force, it’s not the size of the man in the fight—it’s the size of the fight in the man! And Aviation Cadets must have plenty of it. For Cadet training is rugged. If you’re good enough . . . tough enough . . . smart enough . . . if you can take it while you’re learning to dish it out, you can have one of the most fascinating careers in the world. You’ll be equipped to fly the latest, hottest planes. You’ll be prepared to take your position as an executive, both in military and com mercial, aviation as well as in industry. And while you’ re helping yourself you’ll be he! ping your country. WIN YOUR WINGS! It takes little over a year to win your wings as a Pilot or Aircraft Observer (Navigator,Bombardier,RadarOperator or Aircraft Performance Engineer). But at the end of your training you graduate as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Air Force, with pay of $5,300.00 a year. ARE YOU ELIGIBLE? To qualify as an Aviation Cadet, you must have completed at least two years of college. This is a minimum requirement—- it’s best if you stay in school and graduate. I addition, you must be between 19 and 26 Y years, unmarried, and in good physical condition. New Aviation Cadet Training Clauses Begin Every Few Weeks! HE8?E’S WHAT TO DO: 1. Take a transcript of your college credits and a copy of •your birth certificate to your nearest Air Force Base or Recruiting Station. Fill out the application they give you. 2. If application is accepted, the Air Force will give you a physical examination. 3« Next, you take a written and manual aptitude test. 4. If you pass your physical and other tests, you will be scheduled for an Aviation Cadet training class. The Selective Service Act alloMfs you a four-month deferment while waiting cl as:: assignment. WHERE TO GET h C?.A DETAILS: Visit your nearest Air Force Base, Air Force Recruiting Officer, or your nearest Air Force EQTC unit. Or write to: Aviation Cadet, Headquarters, U. S. Air Force, Washington 25, D. C.