The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 02, 1953, Image 4

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    /'age 4
THE BATTALION
Tuesday, June 2, 1953
^Coed Issue Upsets Former
Students ’53 Budget Balance
The Former Students Association
las spent $1,079.09 more than its
pncome during the first f o u r
Cnonths of 1953, said L. B. (Lonnie)
Locke ’22 of College Station, as
sistant executive secretary of the
FSA.
“This amount is in excess of the
Approved
^Income:
Aggie Advertising
i^tnpus Cleaners
^Income from Investments
TTcxas Aggie Subscriptions of
£ Development Fund Donors
^Sundry Income
Totals
[^Expense:
^Salaries . .
Texas Aggie Costs
/Travel
rPostage
JPrlnttng. Stationery and Supplies .
^Telephone and Telegraph
tExpense of Meetings
.Insurance
Annual Audit
pSundry Expense
jPrinting Expense for A&M College
Development Fund
F.T.C A. Tax
Furniture and Equipment
Budget
1 3 of
1953
Budget
xperienee
§ 1,500
§ 500.00
§ 379.33
4,350
1,450.00
1,400.00
, 10,000
3.333.33
3,182.33
25,000
8,333.33
£,333.33
30.00
, §40,850
§13,616.66
§13,325.49
§22.700
§ 7,566.66
§ 7.699.20
. 9.000
3,000.00
2,836.72
1.2O0
400.00
299.80
3.000
1.000.00
1,549.40
. 2.000
666.66
836.89
350
116.66
334.10
750
250.00
296.22
250
83.33
275
91.66
350
116.66
101.69
500
166.66
168.00
260
86.66
302.40
1.000
333.33
180.76
§41,635
§13,878.28
§14,405.18
it;
BCY, SEIX, KENT OK TRADE. Kates
3c a word per Insertion with a
£0c minimum. Space rate In classified
section .... 60c per column-inch. Send
dll 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
(1) A. E. Dick Mimeograph 91 Duplicator.
Sealed bids will be received in the Of
fice of the Auditor. College Administra
tion Building, until 10:00 AM, Monday,
June .3, 1953. The right Is reserved to
reject any and all bids and to waive
any and all technicalities. Address Aud-
1 itor, A. and M. College of Texas. College
Station, Texas, for further information.
<1) 19-19 Chevrolet Station Wagon. Sealed
bids will be received in the Office of
the Auditor, College Administration
Building, until 2:00 PM, Monday, June
8, 1953. The right is reserved lo reject
any and all. bids and to waive any and
all technicalities. Address Auditor. A.
and M. College of Texas. College Station,
Texas, for further information.
BARGAIN—Three bedrooms, two baths,
home with large screened porch. Ex
cellent family residence, or easy rental as
Income property. Owner moved lo Cal
ifornia and unable to look after prop
erty. Sacrifice at §15,000, this is §5,000
under cost. Name your own terms. I,o-
cated in College Station. Call -1-9789 for
appointment with owner between June
1 and June 10.
THREE bedroom frame house, large lot.
G.I. loan. 4-8176.
A REA X. It U Y !
1951 NASH CUSTOM STATION WAG
ON; 22,000 miles. Radio and
heater. Top- shape. Will trade
for late model pick-up. Used
around school mostly. C-19-A.
College View.
§1,250
BUYING A NEW CAR? A trade - in
might save you money. See my 1941
Buick. 304 Gilchrist, College Hills,
4-7981 D. M. Vestal.
• HELP WANTED •
BEAUTY OPERATOR. Excellent oppor-
tbric
|{ tunity.
Shop.
fc==
Pruitt's Beauty and Fat
• FOR RENT •
ONE BEDROOM—500 N. Collge Main.
3 room furnished apartment. 302B N.
Main. Call 4-1819.
FURNISHED APARTMENTS. Aggie Cir-
„ . ,
cle. 4000 College Main. Apply apart
ment Number 8.
FURNISHED apartments, suitable for
couple or couple and small child. Ad
jacent Campus. Both available June
1st; one till September, one till mid
term. Oden. Southside Food Market.
SEWING machines. Pruitt’s Fabric Shop.
• PETS •
WANT A CUTE PUPPY? Have five fe
male all American puppies. Will make
nice pets for children. Free to those
promising to take care of them. Call
4-1149 monings.
Directory of
Business Services
1NSURANCH of all kinds. Homer Adame-
North Gate Gntl 4-121-7
• SPECIAL NOTICE •
BUIi ROSS LODGE NO. 1300 A.F. & A.M.
Called meetings Tuesday,
June 2. 7 P.M.. and Thurs
day. June 4. 6:30 P.M. Work
in M. M. Degree.
A1 B. Nelson, W.M.
N. M. McGinnis, Sec.
Official Notice
NOTICE OF HEARING ON ZONING
Notice is hereby given that a hearing will
be held in the City Hall of the City of
College Station. Texas, at 7 p.m. on June
15, 1963 on the recommendations of the
Zoning Commission for zoning properties,
as provided in Ordinance No. 38, respec
tively as follows:
I. The following described property
shall be added to and made a part of
District 1 as defined in Section 6 of Ordi
nance No. 38, the zoning ordinance of the
City of College Station. Texas:
a. Blocks 9. 10. 11, 12, of the Oak
Terrace Addition
b. Lots A, B. C. and D ns shown on
city map 2-5-52 of the Tauber Addition
c. All lots not already zoned in S.E.
College Park Addition
d. All lots not already zoned in Breezy
Heights Addition
II. The following described property
shall be added to and made a part of
District 2 as defined in Section 6 of Ordi
nance No. 38. the zoning ordinance of the
City of College Station. Texas:
a. Blochs 2. 4. and Blocks 1, 3 and any
portion of these blocks which have been
heretofore zoned, and that portion of
Blocks 5. 6 not already zoned as No. 4 of
the Tauber Addition
b. All lots not already zoned of the
Cooner Addition
c. All lots of Blocks B. C. D. E. F.
and G except Lot 12 of Block B and Lots
3, 4 of Block F of the Ringhoffer Addition
d. All lots of Blocks A. B. C, D, E, F,
G. and H of the Kelley Addition
e. That area of land whose boundaries
begin at the S.W. corner of the intersec
tion of Fail-view and Luther Streets thence
S.E. along the S.W. side of Fairview Street
toa point opposite the property line be<-
tween lots 20. 21 in Block 3 of Breezy
Heights Addition, thence S.W. at right
angles to Fairview Street to the intersec
tion of the N.W. side of Montclair Avenue
extended, thence N.W. along the S.W. side
of Montclair Street extended to the inter
section of Luther Street, thence N.E. along
the S.E. side of Luther Street to the begin
ning. of the Hrdlicka Addition
III. The following described property
shall be added to and made a part of
District 3 as defined in Section 7 of Ordi
nance No. 38, the'zoning ordinance of tbe
City of College Station. Texas:
a. All lots of Blocks I, 2, 3, 4 and 5
except Lots 1, 2, 3, 4. 21.-22, 23, 24, of
Block I of the Putz Addition
b. All other property, N.E. of Cooner.
Ringhoffer and Kelley Addition and N.W.
of Lincoln Avenue to the city boundary
lines, except that parcel of land bounded
on the S.W. by Turner Street and on the
other three sides by unnamed streets. Frank
Thomas store presently located in this area.
c. All property described in City Ordi
nance No. 148 except, That area of land
whose boundaries begin at the intersection
of Luther Street and Old Highway 6 along
Luther Street a distance of 300’ thence
S.E. along a line parallel with Old High
way 6 to the N.W. side of Henry Moore
pronerty line extended, thence along the
N.W. side of the Henry Moore pronerty
to Old HighwayG. thence along Old High
way 6 to intersection of Luther Street, and
that area of. land whose boundaries begin
at the S.W. corner of the intersection of
Fairview an<l Luther Street thence S.E.
along the S.W. side of Fairview Street to
a point opposite the property line between
lots 20. 21 in Block 3 of Breezy Heights
Addition, thence S.W. at right angles to
Fairview Street to the intersection of the
N.W. side of Montclair Avenue extended,
thence N.W. along the S.W. side of Mont
clair Street extended to the intersection
of Luther Street, thence N.E. along the
S.E. side of Luther Street to the beginning,
of the Hrdlicka Addition
IV. The following described property
shall be added to and made a part of Dis
trict -1 as defined in Section 8 of Ordinance
No. 38. the zoning ordinance of the City
of College Station. Texas:
a. Area of land, hounded on S.W. by
Nagle Street, on N.W. by S.E. line by
Block 12 of Oak Terrace, on N.E. bv State
Highway 308 and on S.E. by F.M. Highway
60
b. Lots 3, 4 of Block F of the Rignhof-
fer Addition
V. The following described property
shall be added to and made a part of Dis
trict 5 as defined in Section 9 of Ordinance
No. 38. the zoning ordinance of the City
of College Station. Texas:
a. The area of land hounded on the
N.E. by State Highway 6. on the N.W.
by A&M College property line, on the
S.W. by a line 140 N.E. of the center line
of Meadowland Street and parallel to the
extension thereof, and on the S.E. by the
N.W. boundary line of the present No. 4
Business area, of the Gorzycki Addition.
This above described area of land now
partially zoned as No. 2 (Residential) and
partially as No. 4 Business
b. Lot 12 of Block B of the Ringhoffer
Addition
c. Lots 1. 2. 3. 4, 21, 23, and 24 of
Block 4 of the Putz Addition
d. That area of land whose boundaries
begin at the intersection of Luther Street
and Old Highway 6 along Luther Street.a
distance of 300’ thence S.E. along a line
parallel with Old Highway 6 to the N.W.
side of Henry Moore property line extend
ed. thence along the N.W. side of the
Henry Moore property to Old Highway 6,
thence along Old Highway 6 to intersection
of Luther Street, of the Hrdlicka Addition
Attest:
S/N. M. McGinnis
City Secretary
Approved :
S/ Ernest Langford
Mayor
Dr. Carlton R. Lee
K&B DRIVING
OPTOMETRIST
RANGE
803A East 26th
Open Sunday March 1
Call 2-1662 for Appointment
On Fin Feather Road
(Across from Court House)
Bryan, Texas
$13,616.66, the one - third income
mark of the $40,850 budget, with
only $13,325.49 income shown this
year.
“Expenses this year are running
at $14,405.18 as compared to $13,-
878.28, the one-third mark of the
$41,635 approved 1953 budget,” he
said.
The budget however, should bal
ance out before the year is up, he
said. The notable increase of in
dividual expenses over those esti
mated was with telephone and tele
graph.
The $334.10 spent, as compared
to the estimated $116.66, was con
tributed to the Sen. Moore-Coed
Resolution which was introduced
this spring. An increase of $549.-
40 spent for postage also was
blamed on the coed issue.
Film Society
Postpones Movie
The A&M Film Society has
postponed their showing tonight of
the film “Hangover Square.”
Its next movie will be June 8
in the MSC Ballroom, said Ed
Holder, president of the society.
The film which will be shown at
that time will be “Foreign Corres
pondent.” ■" ***Hiig
Ag Experiment
Station Given
$3,790 Grants
Three grants-in-aid totaling
$3,700 have been received by the
Texas Agricultural Experiment
Station, Director R. D. Lewis has
announced.
The American Dehydrators As
sociation, Kansas City, M o.,
through Lloyd S. Larson, secretary,
has renewed a grant-in-aid of
$2,000 in support of research on
the nutritional value of dehydrated
alfalfa leaf meal as a source of un
identified factors in the ration of
mature laying turkey hens.
This work is being conducted un
der direction of Dr. J. R. Couch,
departments of poultry husbandry
and biochemistry and nutrition.
The Ethyl Corporation, through
Richard P. Porter, Product Devel
opment, New York City, has made
available $1,500 to extend studies
on cotton defoliation in the depart
ment plant physiology and path
ology under direction of Dr. W. C.
Hall.
The American Cynamid Com
pany, through Thomas R. Cox, Sr.,
agriculturist, New York City has
made available $200 to extend the
1953 studies on rice fertilization at
Substation No. 4, Beaumont under
direction of William C. Davis.
Water and Noise
(Continued from Page 2)
floor threw a bucket of water on
us, and soaked us wetter than a
kitten thrown in a duck pound.
I was madder than a rabid chi
huahua. T was shaking myself try
ing to get dry, when one of the
boys I was with kicked me for
gettin’ more water on him. I sunk
my teeth into the seat of his
britches and then ran like a grey
hound.
T’was Good Bull
When he quit chasing me, T went
over and lay down under a tree and
watched to see what happened. The
guys that threw the water on us
laughed and muttered somethin’
‘bout it being good bull. It seemed
the guys I was with were friends
Schedule
(Continued from Page 3)
previously, Nebraska winning, 13-
0, in 1930.
The complete Aggie grid slates
for 1953, 1954, and 1955 now have
been filled.
As in the past, A&M continues
to play the six SWC schools the
final six games each year with four
non-conference contests on tap be
fore the gruelling loop warfare.
UCLA gets back on the A & M
schedule in 1955, the two intersec
tional rivals meeting at Los An
geles Sept. 16 of that year. They
last met in 1951.
of theirs, and the thing to do with
a friend was to throw water on
him.
I imagine the only thing I ac
complished by writin’ this article
was breakin’ my to-nail on the
third typewriter key, but I’m glad
I writ it. You all need more
articles by a dog, even if he is a
mongrel like me. Like I say, I
guess we just think different from
you all humans.
Track
(Continued from Page 3)
University; 6) Max Cadena, Aus
tin. Time: 4:25.2.
Pole vault — Malcolm Marks,
Texas A&M, 13 feet 2 inches;
2-3-4) tie, John Blackwell, Texas,
Glenn Hoffman, Texas, Glenn Pea-
vy, San Marcos, 12 6; 5) Texas
A&M, 11 feet.
100-yd. dash—1) Ralph Aldredge,
Texas Southern Methodist; 2) Hen
ry Graffired, Texas Southern Uni
versity; 3) Kirby Jett, University
of Houston; 4) Jerry Beck, Austin
High oC Houston; 5) Theodius
Bush, Texas Southern University;
6) Charles Gary, University of
Houston. Time: 9.8.
440-yd. relay—1) Texas (Gerald
Scallorn, Glenn Prewitt, Alvin
Frieden, Charley Thomas); 2) Tex
as Southern University; 3) Univer
sity of Houston; 4) Baylor. Time:
41.6.
Batting
(Continued from Page 3)
A1 Rosen of Cleveland, who
heads the American League in
home runs with 10, is third in bat
ting with a .338 slate. A1 njbved
i Ni >
i>
up from fourth place with 11 for
30 last week.
Then come Pete Suder of Phila-[
delphia, .331; Mickey Mantle, New!
York, .327; Don Lund, Detroit,
.315; Bob Nieman, Detroit, antL
Gene Woodling, New York, with!
.308 each, and Jim Busby; Wash-[
ington, .306.
Clyde Vollmer of the Washing
ton Senators has driven in the j
most runs, 33. * -y'-'^iar;
Milwaukee’s Max Surkont main-f his
tained his National League piteh-eques
ing supremacy with a 6-0 record ■'as a
Four American League hurlenV. W
have won four games without sgrieu
defeat . They are Bob Hooper o! Dr.
Cleveland, Ed Lopat and Whitejhargc
Ford of the New York Yankefyearch
and Frank Shea of Washington. Syster
vledici
Abrams Best Ag. ProC!' d
'iervicc
Dr. M. N. Abrams of the agr)earch
cultural education department ha R e ti
been selected outstanding profesjes oi
sor in the field of agriculture hjnade
the Collegiate F. F. A. Chapter. } r ^
Selection was based on characferear a
classroom presentation and in
terest in welfare of students, sak
Charles Zeigler, chapter president “Wl
Abrams was presented agpiigh
honorary Collegiate F F A Men-mpoyf
bership pin at the Student-Pro! eSK s -
Banquet May 21 in the MSC A. l ervic(
sembly Room. ^ice-C
money for you!
NOW YOUR MATURING
SERIES E BONDS CAN EARN INTEREST
TEN YEARS LONGER-AT 3%!
Have you given any thought to what you’ll do with those
maturing Series E Savings Bonds you patriotically invested
in ten years ago? Well, here’s real good news for you. You
won’t have to do a thing with them and they’ll continue
to earn interest for ten years longer at 3% interest, com
pounded semiannually! Just hold on to your Bonds as you have been
doing and allow them to go on earning!
Of course, if the necessity arises, you may still redeem
any Series E Bond at any time after you’ve held it for
two months. But the wise thing to do is to hold your
Bonds, just as it’s wise to hold on to savings in any form.
And to go on saving with more!
If you want to be paid your interest as
current income, invest in 3% Series H
If you want a good, sound investment which pays you
your interest by check every six months, ask at your
bank about United States Government Series H Bonds.
Series H is a new current income Bond available in de
nominations of $500 to $10,000. Redeemable at par after
6 months and on 30 days’ notice. Matures in 9 years and
8 months and pays an average 3% interest per annum if
held to maturity. Interest paid semiannually by Treasury
check. Series H may be purchased at any bank, annual
limit $20,000.
NOW EVEN BETTER!
INVEST MORE IN SAVINGS BONDS!
Tlio V. S. Government docs not pay for this advertising. The Treasury
Department thanks, for their patriotic donation, the Advertising Council and
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So why not start now—join the millions of thrifty Ameri
cans who are investing in United States Savings Bonds
regularly through the Payroll Savings Plan. Millions who
say it’s the one sure way to save.
The sum you set aside each week may be as little as 25c—or as much
as $275. If you can save $3.75 a week regularly through the Plan, in
five years you will have $1,025.95! In 9 years and 8 months you’ll have
$2,137.30 . . . in 19 years and 8 months, $5,153.72!
No matter how small your income, you can’t afford not to put some
thing aside for yourself. So join the Payroll Savings Plan where you
work today. Strengthen your own future and that of your country by
saving your money through U. S. Savings Bonds.
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