The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 30, 1953, Image 4

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    Page 4
THE BATTALION Wednesday, September SO, 1953
CHS Home Rooms
Choose Officers
Home rooms at A&M Consolidat
ed high school chose officers yes
terday.
The senior class, under the lead
ership of Mrs. T. E. Ryan, chose
David Bonnen, president; Mary
Lou Lloyd, vice-president; Jimmy
Bond, secretary; and Dorothy Huff,
treasurer.
Mrs. Sidney Sorenson’s junior
class chose Jerry Oden, president;
Elsie Richards, vice - president;
Helen Ros^, secretary, and Bill Lit
tle, reporter.
The other junior class, led by
Mrs. Mildred Byrd elected Bonnie
OurrtrWyv: .pre'sidunti • ••rfem.ith,-
vice t pi v eSi'dent ; ! Marie Lewis,' 'secre
tary;! : and Jan Whiting, . treasuier.
! Anna' Beaty was chosen business
Swimming
(Continued from Page 3)
11; Love, Squadron 2; Hoffman, B
Ipfantry;, Seth, ASA.;, Rial, A
Chemical; Moser, Squadron 8;
Moriarty, A Engineers 1; Andrew,
Squadron 7; and Crowley, A Ar
mor.
The freshmen who qualified
were Kasper (103:2), Fish Band;
Smith, Squadron 17; Watt, Com
pany I; Lewis, Company C; Bacon,
Company F; Parsons, Company D;
Morton, Squadron 20; Hogan, Com
pany D; and Dailey, Squadron 24.
200 Foot Breaststroke
manager for the entire class. She
will be in charge of raising money
for the junior-senior banquet.
Sophomores Elect
The two sophomore classes are
under the direction of Mrs. A. R.
Orr and R. Jj. Boone.
Mrs. Orr’s class elected Faye
Simms, president; Jark McMeeley,
vice-president; Ann Fleming, secre
tary; and Shirley Brown, treasurer.
Elected in the other sophomore
cj^assi were Jeab Ann Smith, presi
dent^ J: B^’Carroll, vice-president;
Margaret Berry, secretary; and
Marilvn Davis, reporter.
M ! N a cmt i of
: ohe' fresfpVjiih' ‘ claksl' Her* 1 bffitei^
are "Major' ’ Atterbury,, ■ rprfesj(len(|;
Dan Davis,' yice-pre|i<lehl£ arid J|>
Ann Walker, secretary. |
Another freshman class chosje
Maurice j Oliah, president;: . Nejl
Ross, vipe - president; Bill Hite,
secretary; Frank Benavidez, treas
urer; and Dale McCannen, report
er. This class is led by Mrs. David
Darter.
J. S. Forsyth’s freshman class
chose Jimmy Simpson, president;
Charles Delaplane, vice-president;
Marcia Smith, secretary and treas
urer; and Margaret Manthei, ser
geant-at-arms.
Extension Service
Plans Musical Tea
The upperclassmen who qualified
were Batat (50:8), AAA; Kerns,
B Field Artillery; Billingsley, B
Armor; Goldstone, A Chemical;
Minter, ASA; Shaw, A Engineers;
Landers, Maroon Band; Winburn,
A Chemical; and Dietrich, A Field
Artillery.
The freshmen who qualified Were
Marchbanks (50:0), Company F;
Pope, Company D; Pickett, Squad
ron 24; Burke, Company A; Voss,
Squadron 19; Kessler, Squadron
20; and Hilgrartner, Squadron 25;
O’Connell, Company K; and Gib
son, Squadron 24.
The officials for the meet in
cluded Art Adamson, A&M’s swim
ming coach, head referee; Richard
Weich, head judge; Cord Maynard
and Toni Devenport, assistant ref
erees; Mickey Ponthieux, clerk of
starter; Paul Wallin, starter; Hugh
West, first place judge; Lee Pep
ping, Franklin Jewsky, and Wynne
Snoots, timers and second place
judges; Don Horne, John Spiech,
and Johnny Beutelshies, timers and
third place juug Ho
The Extension Service club will
have a musical tea at the Memorial
Student Center at 3 p.m. Thursday
as its opening affair for the year.
This first tea will honor the new
officers for this year. They are
Mrs. W. J. Moore, president; Mrs.
J. E. Poore, vice-president; Mrs.
Ben Cook, recording secretary;
Mrs. C. H. Doerge, corresponding
secretary; Mrs. Vel D. Thompson,
treasurer; Mrs. Curtis Holland, re
porter; Mrs. Jack T. Sloan, parli
amentarian; and Mrs. R. R. Lan
caster, historian.
The fine arts committee of the
club is in charge of the program.
Hostesses for the tea which will
follow the program are Mrs. W. S.
Allen, Mrs. Ide P. Trotter, Mrs.
W. L. Ulich, Mrs. Ted Trew, Mrs.
Lee C. Coffey, Mrs. Eula J. New
man, Mrs. G. G. Gibson, Mrs. T. O.
Walton, Mrs. S. D. Hughes and
Miss Gladys Martin.
The Extension Service club is
made up of the wives of the head
quarters staff and the ladies on the
.'staff of the extension service.
BUY, RENT OR TRADE. Rates
. ... 3c a work per Insertion with a
25c minimum. Space rate In classified
section .... 60e oer 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 •
FOR SAFE
1— green shirt. 14 ^ -32.
2— winter blouses, 38.
1—Sam Brown belt.
7-pe. Dining room suite, large table, buf
fet server, dark finish. W. T. Berry
Jr. 1032 Walton Dr., 6-5667.
1948 CHEVROLET 4-door sedan, new bat
tery and seat covers, excellent condition.
Priced to sell. Phone 4-4594 or 4-7554.
BY OWNER: 3 room house. Can be
seen at 112 Waverley Drive, Bryan.
TWO TYPEWRITERS and two adding
machines. The equipment may be in
spected at Room 302. System administra
tion building, A&M College. Sealed bids
will be received in the office of the Tex
as Forest Service, Txas A&M College
System, until 10 a.m., Friday, October 2,
1953, on forms available upon request.
Address the Director, Texas Forest Serv
ice, College Station for further informa
tion.
GREY COLLAPSIBLE carriage stroller,
good condition. $10.00. 425 Old Sulphur
Springs Rd., Bryan.
UNIVERSAL gas range. Cooks and bakes
well. $30.00. Phone 8516-F-I2. After
5 p.m.
FOR SALE cheap! Summer serge uniform
(2 shirts 15x321 (pants 31x32) Call
6-1392. After 5 p.m.
FOR SALE—TRAILER, 1952, 29 foot trav-
ellte. Can be seen at Sunset Trailer
lodge. L. ft. Bewley.
• HELP WANTED •
PART TIME student butcher. Experienced.
South Side Food Market.
STUDENT part time, radio service man,
must have previous experience. No be
ginners. Sosolik’s Radio and T. V. Serv
ice, 713 South Main, across from rail
road tower, Bryan, Texas.
Photographic and Visual Aids has an
opening for a qualified artist capable
of reproducing charts, graphs and other
types of visual aids. Duties will include
spot retouching of lithographic nega
tives. Contact Howard Berry at Photo
graphic and Visual Aids.
• FOR RENT •
NICE furnished apartment in College Hills,
convenient to College. Phone 6-2082.
(tEWING machines, Pruitt’s Fabric Shop.
• LOST •
LOST: Ladies brown, oval, leather purse
at Kyle field Saturday. Contact Clar
ence Ketch, Minister A&M Christian
Church. Reward.
LOST: One ring of office keys. Please call
Dr. R. R. Bill. 4-5404 or 6-3943.
LOST, 29-year-old Parker fountain pen,
red with black trim. Reward, steak din
ner. Charles LaMotte, Room 219. Biol
ogical science building or phone 6-2422.
LOST: In day student lot or near post
office. Wallet-Cowhide, money, papers,
driver’s license. Reward. Contact C.
K. Smith, Apt. No. At-7-C, College View.
• INSTRUCTION COURSES •
ONA’S Ceramic studio, new greenware.
Gifts classes. Day or evening. 1 >4 mile
south on Houston Hiway. Phone 6-5787.
•DIRECTORY OF*
BUSINESS SERVICES
NSURANCH of all kinds. Homer Adame
North Gate. Call 4-1217
Official Notice
Student officers of clubs or organizations
on the campus are reminded that college
regulations require that their club or or
ganization must be registered at Office of
Student Activities and that a Constitution
and a list of club officers must be on file.
Students wishing to organize home town
blubs dr technical groups should do so as
soon as posible at the Student Activities
Office, Goodwin hall.
W. D. Hardesty
Chib Advisor
NOTICE TO BIDDERS:
The Board of Trustees of the A&M
Consolidated Independent School district
will accept bids through 5 p.m., Oct. 10,
1953, for the nine houses on a certain part
of the land immediately adjacent to the
present school site. Bidders may bid on
one or all adjacent to the present school
site. Bidders may bid on one or all houses.
Successful bidders must remove said houses
from the premises by 5 p.m., November 9,
1953. The Board of Trustees reserves the
right to accept or reject any bid in whole
or in part. Complete information and bid
forms may be obtained in the office of
the Superintendent of Schools.
Dr. Carlton R. Lee
OPTOMETRIST
803A East 26th
Call 2-1662 for Appointment
(Across from Court House)
HI, SCHOOL
Candidates for queen to reign at
the homecoming game with Waller,
Oct. 16, have been chosen.
The winner will receive a cor
sage and a football autographed by
all the team members. Runners-up
will be duchesses for her court.
The election is decided by which
girl collects .the most money in a
city-wide canvas, at a penny a vote.
All money will go toward the
junior-senior banquet.
Candidates who have been
chosen by the home rooms are An
na Beaty, Ann Hite, Shirley Brown,
Marcia Smith, Jean Puddy and
Janet Foweiler.
—-O—
The area and district officers of
the A&M Consolidated school Fu
ture Homemakers of America chap
ter took a trip to Waco Saturday,
Sept. 26 to find out about state
degrees.
Marilyn Floeck, president of
FHA at Consolidated; Marian Gad
dis, chairman of the area honorary
membership commission, and Elsie
Richards, district parliamentarian,
attended the meeting.
The FHA members have been
invited to the state fair in Dallas,
Oct. 17.
—O—
Four hundred Kids’ day buttons
have already been sold by the FHA
in their campaign to raise money
for the Polio foundation.
They will continue selling the
buttons at 25 cents each until they
reach their goal of 2,000 sold.
Aggie Wives
Bridge Club
Plays Thursday
The Aggie Wives Bridge club
will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in
rooms 2A and 2B of the Memorial
Student Center.
Hostesses for the evening will
be Lura Griffin and Gwen Collins
for the regulars, Kathryn Hart and
Ann Scott for the intermediates,
and Betty McClure and Shirley
Smith for the beginners.
High prize winners at last Thurs-
Webb and Mrs. Bobbry xz/.... vbgk
day’s meeting were Mrs. Myra
Webb and Mrs. Bobby Armstrong
for the regulars and Mrs. Mary
Proctor for the intermediates.
Sponsors for the evening were
Mrs. J. J. Woolket and Mrs. H.
Burgess.
Hostesses for the seven tables
of regulars were Mrs. Carol Pil
grim and Mrs. Jeneane Cline.
Mrs. Rachel Fowler and Mrs.
Mary Bradley were hostesses for
the five tables of intermediates.
There were eleven tables of be
ginners. The hostesses were Mrs.
Martha Thomas and Mrs. Shirley
Bean.
WhaCs Cooking
THURSDAY
7:30 p. m.—Rusk County club
meeting, room 307 Goodwin hall.
Election of officers.
Weatherford club meeting, YM
CA, all students from Weatherford
and Parker counties are invited.
Amarillo A&M club meeting,
room 2D, MSC. Organizational
meeting.
Red River Valley Hometown
club, 303 Goodwin Hall.
Waco - McLennan County club
meeting, 306 Goodwin Hall. Elec
tion of officers.
Orange Hometown club meet
ing, 305 Goodwin Hall. Organiza
tional meeting and election of of
ficers.
Robertson County club, 303
Goodwin hall. Election of officers.
San Angelo club meeting. Agri
culture building. Organizing and
election of officers.
Kiwanis Club Sends
130 Kids on Tour
One-hundred and thirty children
from College Station went Satur
day to Bryan air force base for
the Kiwanis club’s annual kids day.
They toured the base and were
served ice cream and cokes donat
ed by local businessmen.
Mexican Art Exhibit
Opens Sunday in MSC
An exhibit of modern paintings
by Mexican artists will begin Sun
day in the Memorial Student Cen
ter ballroom.
The paintings were borrowed
from public and private collections
throughout the nation, said Mis.
Emalita Newton Terry, advisor to
the MSC art gallery committee.
One of the most prominent art-
Free Represents
CHS Senior Class
Members of the student council
at A&M Consolidated high school
were chosen in school-wide elec
tions yesterday.
Representing the senior class
will be Melvin Free and Pat Owen.
From the two junior rooms Jay
Page, Barbara Mullins, Jean Ad
ams and Larry Glaze were chosen.
Sophomores chose Faye Simms,
Norman Floeck, Rita Hughes and
Bobby Witcher.
Representatives from the three
freshman rooms are Mary Lou
Ergle, John Harrington, Betty
Mead, Larry Leighton, Ernest
Tanzer and Jo Ann Walker.
Local Girl Scouts
To Meet Thursday
Girl Scout troop 21 of A&M Con
solidated school will meet at 3 p.
m. Thursday at the home of their
leader, Mrs. L. S. Burkhalter, 205
Timber.
At the last meeting plans for the
year were made and the following
officers were elected: Mary Ann
Kirkham, president; Donna Dale,
vice - president; Shirley Rogers,
treasurer; Susan Caudill, secre
tary; and Mary Ann Kirkham,
troop historian.
The troop meets every Thursday
at Mrs. Burkhalter’s home.
Three Freshmen
In 4-II Finals
Three A&M freshmen are in the
state finals of the 4-H club awards
program for this year.
Jerry Weatherby, Fort Worth, is
a finalist in the leadership contest;
Walter Miers, Rotan, a finalist in
both leadership and dairy achiev-
ment; and Murry Milner, Brown-
wood, a finalist in farm and home
electrification.
Winners will be announced soon,
according to state 4-H club leaders.
FRESHMEN...
No doubt you have been approached
by fast talking salesmen about buy
ing ... .
Freshman Green Slacks
INVESTIGATE . . .
These are only salesmen working on
a commission, and know nothing
about tailoring — So be careful or you
will be the loser*
★ ONE WEEK DELIVERY ★
Made right here at College Station in our
tailoring concern to your individual measure.
You try them on and see how they fit first
before you pay. Guaranteed to fit and please.
ZUBIK’S
Uniform Tailors
105 N. Main North Gate
ists represented will be Diego Ri
vera, famous for his huge murals
depicting Mexican progress and
mosaics he designed to decorate the
outside of the new University of
Mexico in Mexico City.
Francisco Zuniga, well known
in art circles for his individualistic
style in India ink work, will be
represented in the display.
Prints of lithographs and ink
drawings as well as oils and wa-
tercolors will be presented in Sun
day’s show.
Guillermo Meza will have some
of his oils displayed as well as Raul
Anguiano and David Alfaro Siq-
uieros.
Watercolors by Rufino Tamayo
will highlight that portion of the
exhibit.
Mrs. Terry said plans are under
way to have some Latin-American
students present at the opening of
the show Sunday.
Appointments
(Continued from Page 2)
Wiese, assistant agronomist and
Katherine W. Dean, secretary-
bookkeeper, replacements.
Pan tech field laboratory, Pan
handle: Barbara S. Cox, technician,
replacement.
Promotions: agricultural econo
mics and sociology, Stephanie M.
Vineyard to department secretary;
agricultural information office,
Margaret J. McCall to secretary;
entomology, Jo Ann Moss to de
partment secretary; feed control
service, Lois J. Thames to tag
order clerk and Eunice H. Brock-
smith to secretary.
Reduction in Rank
(Continued from Page 1)
The excuse did not cover the
drill period.
Soon after leaving Fort, the
Army officer went to the Military
Science building and searched the
rosters of both H Company, the
freshman chemical corps unit, and
A company, the upperclassmen
unit, trying to find a cadet first
lieutenant with the name he had
been given.
The officer could find none and
thereupon supposed the name he
received was false.
He then notified the senior
Chemical Corps instructor that he
would like to observe a class and
see if he could spot the cadet under
suspicion.
While entering Friday morning
the building where Chemical Corps
military science classes are held,
the Army officer saw Fort, the ca
det in question, approaching.
He stopped Fort and asked him
why he was late to class. Fort
said he could not find the military
in his room and had been to the
hospital to get a new one.
Thereupon the officer asked to
see Fort’s identification card.
The name Fort had given the of
ficer did not agree with the one
on the ID cai’d.
When the officer asked Fort
why he had lied, Fort said, I just
panicked.”
When asked by a Battalion re
porter why he had lied, Fort said,
“When the officer stopped me
Thursday afternoon, I just said the
Four-Lane Boulevard
Opened to Traffic
A four-lane boulevard drive
connecting the System Administ
ration building with Jersey St. and
the circle on Sulphur Spring Road
has been completed and is now
open to traffic.
first thing that came to my mind.”
“I was pretty excited and I just
lost my head,” he said.
Fort has had a good record at
A&M, Myers said.
He has had no more military de
ficiencies than the average cadet.
He had a better than average sum
mer camp record and has not pre
viously been in any major diffi
culty with the military, Myers
said.
Sepulveda told investigating of
ficers that he tried tp get Fprt not
to skip drill, but th^t Fort asked
him to not report him absent.
Sepulveda’s record ie also with
out a major flaw, said Myers.
A new commander and executive
officer for A Chemical Corps have
not yet been selected, said Col.
Myers, but the tactical officer for
the company has be en asked to
submit recommendations.
It is not a crime or a breach of
regulations to cut drill, Myers said.
Fort was reduced because he lied
and Sepulveda was reduced for
submitting a false report.
It is, he emphasized, the com
pany commander’s responsibility to
report all absentees, including
those men who are excused from
drill.
Unless an advanced student has
too many cuts in drill, the only
punishment he receives is a $1.80
reduction in pay for every absence.
Otherwise, said Col. Myers, cut
ting drill is just like cutting any
other class.
CARDWELL
Flight Academy
• Flight Training
'fa Airplane Rental
• Airplane Sales
On Highway 21 East
DYERS'FUR STORAGE HATTER4
210 S. Main
Bryan
Pho. 2-1584
Telephone
CaJJs
are
Important
Calls
No matter when you need to make a telephone
call, at any time of the day or night, you expect
your telephone to work. And the chances are,
you’ll find it hard to remember when it didn't
give you the service you expected!
What is the magic that has so much to
do with your telephone’s dependability? Tele
phone people call it “preventive mainte
nance.” Actually, it’s finding and eliminating
troubles before they happen.
Of course, occasionally it may be neces
sary to report trouble on your line. When you
do, you’ll find the repairman courteous, effi
cient and neat in his work. And you’ll also
find him tremendously interested in keeping
your telephone the dependable servant it is.
j
THE SOUTHWESTERN
STATES TELEPHONE CO.
W