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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 23, 1954)
' }.- ■ |;(j ^ ' ' ' Second Calendar Drive Is Begun A picture of the A&M Con solidated high school band will head the 1955 College Station com munity birthday calendar as it did last year. One difference will be apparent, however, bandsters will be wear ing new uniforms. The uniforms will be purchased with proceeds from advertisements, calendar sales and birthday, anni versary and club announcements. Between $500 and $600 gained from the project last year pur chased three new French horns for the band. The Band Boosters, club for par ents of band members, have again been granted franchise for the cal endar. Mrs. W. A. Varvel heads the committee, and Mrs. W. N. Williamson, Mrs. J. W. Barger, Open House Held 'For Geology Wives Open hpuse was held Tuesday night at the home of Mrs. S. A. Lynch, 407 Crescent, for the Ge ology Wives club. A centerpiece of yellow chry santhemums carried out a fall dec orating theme. Lime sherbert punch and assort ed cookies were served to 21 wo men including geology professors’ wives, Mi's. Lynch, Mrs. William L. Russell, Mrs. Peter Dehinger, Mrs. Melvin C. Schroeder, Mrs. Horace R. Blank, Mrs. William J. Morris, Mrs. Fred E. Smith, and secretary to the department, Mrs. „Gayle Broom. The Aggie Flayers 'Cast Play Monday The Aggie Players will have try outs for parts in “Missalliance” by Gebrge Bernard Shaw which will be presented at the Memorial Student Center Nov. 15-17. C. K. Esten, sponsor of the Ag gie Players, will direct the play. The November presentation is one of three plays to be presented by the players this year. All local people are invited to try out for parts. Mrs. M. T. Harrington and Mrs. Roy Courim are working with her. Band members will be blowing their own horns some Saturday morning in the near future. They will board a truck and ride through town giving a fast-mov ing concert and stopping to solicit listings. Reservations for space on the calendar, which are 25 cents each, are being accepted by Mrs. Varvel and Mrs. Williams. Last date to place a listing is Oct. 26, according to Mrs. Varvel. The calendars will be delivered in College Station between Christ mas day and Jan. 1, 1955. They are 50 cents each. Annual Staff Party Slated for Tonight All new staff members who became employees of the A&M System since June 1 will be guests of the college tonight for the Employees’ dinner club’s first social event of the year. Dinner will be served in the Memorial Student Center ball room at 7:30 p.m. The in formal dance will follow. By Mrs. Reba Walker Reba Walker, wife of John K. Walker, head of the B&CU department, is noted in College Station for her fine cooking. She gives us some of her favorite recipes she uses when en tertaining at her home on North Oakwood. Shrimp Remoulade 2 hard-cooked egg yolks (sieved) IV2 tablespoons horseradish 2 buds garlic (crushed) 1 tablespoon Worchestershire sauce IV2 cups mayonnaise 2 tablespoons vinegar 1 tablespoon paprika 2 heaping tablespoons finely chop- Salt and pepper to taste ped parsely Combine everything in a bowl. Mix well, then put in a jar and keep in refrigerator 12 hours before serving. This makes a thick sauce which can be thinned with a little extra vinegar. Refrigerator Rolls 2 cakes yeast 1 tablespoon salt 2 beaten eggs cup lukewarm water 2 cups boiling water 8 cups of bread flour, sifted before measuring 2 tablespoons shortening V2 cup sugar Dash of Tabasco Sauce 1 tablespoons dark mustary Mix boiling water, % cup sugar, salt and shortening together, then coc^l until lukewarm. Soften yeast in lukewarm water, add 1 teaspoon sugar and stir into first mixture. Add beaten eggs and stir in 4 cups of flour, then beat very thoroughly. Stir in 4 more cups of flour add mix thoroughly, but it is not necessary to knead. Cover tightly and store in refrigerator until ready to use. Shape as described below and put in a warm place until double in bulk. Bake 15 to 20 minutes in a hot oven 425° F. Pecan Cherry Divinity -Nr What's Cooking THURSDAY 7:30 —The Amarillo Hometown club will meet on the first floor of the Academic building. The Falls County A<&M club will hold a business meeting in Room 126 Academic building. The Williamson County Home- Sport Shorts (Continued from Page 6) the Aggies win 100-0 in every game they play. Knock ’em down and drag ’em out. Be courteous at the reception after the game, and let character building take care of it self after one finishes college. “Then, it was in the early days of forward passing, and we always had trouble with the Haskell In dians. In the first place, some of those Indians would play four years with Carlisle and then come to Kansas and play four years. They would merely change their name from ‘Flying Cloud’ to ‘Bear Tracks’ and be eligible. “None of us had any numbers on our jerseys, and all of those Indians looked alike. When they made a pass, there would be 10 Indians whooping and all jumping at the ball. If one of them caught it, he would line up at end or in the backfield on the next play. Some of us knew damn well that he had been playing guard all the game, but to say so to an official —well, just save your breath. “Yep, those days were a little rugged, buff it sure was fun.” 3 cups sugar V2 cup light colored corn syrup V2 cup water 2 egg whites, beaten Mix sugar, syrup and water. 1 teaspoon vanilla V2 cup nuts, broken V2 cup candied cherries, sliced Boil gently and without stirring until ball forms when portion is tested in cold water. Slowly pour into egg whites, beating steadily. Beat until thick and cold. Add rest of ingredients. Pour into buttered dish and cut into bars. One pound of large dry lima beans measures 2V2 cups before town club Will meet in Room 108 cooking. After cooking count on 3f the Academic building. 1 having 5 to 6 cups. BATTALION CLASSIFIED BCV, SELL,, KENT OR TRADE. Rates ... 3c a word per Insertion witti a (5c minimum. Space rate in classified Section .... 60c per column-inch. Send ill 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 • Admiral 17 inch TV complete with antenna and console base $100. Phone 6-5803. CALVES for your deepfreeze. Make your own selection. Phone 6-5802. MANY reconditioned boys’ bicycles priced from $7.50. May be seen at 207 West 30th Street, Bryan, Texas. Phone 3-2421. FOUND A WONDERFUL, place to buy or sell. Battalion classified ads. Call 4-5324 or 4-1149 for prompt courteous service. Official Notice Laughlin (Continued from Page 2) Laughlin was supported in the race by Parr, who at first said he was going to be a candidate. Parr later withdrew in Laughlin’s favor. Laughlin, if elected in the Nov. 2 general election, would take over the Seventy-ninth bench again on Jan. 1. There was some doubt among at torneys whether disbarment would prevent Laughlin from taking of fice as judge. “It probably would take a law suit to find out,” was the comment of one attorney who declined to be identified. The Texas laws concerning the qualifications 1 of a district judge read that the judge must either be an attorney or have been a judge of a court-of-record for four years preceding election. Laughlin was county judge of Jim Wells County for eight years before election as district judge in 1952. Laughlin’s attorneys argued to the Supreme Court that lie was a victim of a bitter political Jeud in volving Parr on the one hand and opponents of Parr on the other. The Supreme Court based its re moval order—the first in the his tory of Texas^—on just one of the twelve charges against Laughlin. This was that he improperly dis charged a grand jury that had in dicted Laughlin on, two counts and was still investigating matters in volving his brother. Bur chard To Meet With Texas Editors Donald D. Burchard, head of the journalism department, will be one of the representatives invited to meet with the Managing editors seminar in Austin October 3-6. Sponsored by the Texas daily newspaper association, the semi nar is one of a series of semi annual meetings of daily newspaper executives. Jenkin Lloyd Jones, editor of the Tulsa (Okla) Trib une, will be the speaker at the only open session of the Seminar Monday night. Ike Begins:!;| o i r)n ‘i r , speech lour MISSOULA, Mont. —UP)— President Eisenhower, hunt ing- November congressional election votes for the Repub licans, arrived here late Wed nesday on the first leg of a three- day speechmaking tour of the Far West. The presidential plane Colum bine landed at Missoula County Airport at 5:29 p.m., after a three and one-half hour flight from the summer white house in Denver, Colo. Eisenhower got a ’warm welcome from a crowd which Supervisor Glenn M. Shultz of the Montana highway patrol estimated at 30,000 persons. The formal occasion for Eisen hower’s visit was the dedication of a new forest fire aerial control depot. In advance of the Presi dent’s talk, a band of “smoke jumpers” parachuted from planes and put on a demonstration of the latest techniques in bringing forest fires under control. But the President’s visit here— the first stop on a tour which also will take him into Washington, Oregon and California — actually signaled the opening of a, trip Re publicans hope will w r in votes for them in the campaign to maintain control of Congress. A waiting line of persons was introduced to the President, includ ing Republican and Democratic congressional candidates, Gov. J. Huga Aronson of Montana and Herb Jensen, Missoula hotel op erator. sday,F September 23,71954 jn THE "BATTALIGnT j Page: 7 1,: j| - ■ - HHw—i r, 7- • L -4- - lihiU sufUar.- rut h/f i . i» rU) 1 , '• A j , >■ , r F ' ; I & ' I 700 Student Tickets Sold Seven hundred student and date tickets were sold on the A&M campus for the Oklahoma A&M game to be played in Dallas Sat urday 8 p.m. About 2,000 tickets were sold locally, according to Pat Dial, bus iness manager of athletics. Student tickets went off sale yes terday at 5 p.m. By VIVIAN BROWN AP Newsfeatures Beauty Editor Schoolgirls bitten by the chum miness that comes of making new friends in a new class are likely to go overboard with their gener osity. Susie borrows a comb. Annie uses a loaned powder puff. Mary goes off with someone’s lipstick and rouge. Hats ai’e passed from one to another, and any gild’s new hat is tried on by every friend in class. The practice of borrowing per sonal things such as these is not good. Bacteria-growing organisms may be transferred from one to another. It is fine to lend perfectly clean items such as handkerchiefs or stockings or blouses, providing these things are returned clean or washed before worn by another. But transferring shoes (at the end of a gym game, for instance) may cause healthy feet to pick up a bug. Teen-agers more than any othek group need to be conscious of cleanliness. If everything is kept clean—combs and brushes as well as hair, face and hands, it will be easier to resist infection. Face blemishes which ordinarily would clear up in a short time are likely to become more prevalent and ir ritated if a dirty powder puff or grimy hands are constantly put to the face. A schedule put in an easy-to- spot place will be a reminder to take care of the little cleanliness chores that somehow are postponed from day to day. One student has three lists—one labeled month, an other labeled week and another every day. Under her every day list she even lists tooth brushing, because she says sometimes in a rush she is likely to forget. Other daily grooming reminders include: bath, shine shoes, wash underwear and stockings, brash hair, inspect nails. Weekly chores include closet in spection (removing all articles to be washed or cleaned), shoes to shoemaker, mending, shampoo, weight check (a pound or two may be lost quickly by giving up sodas or sundaes. Later it maj/ be more difficult to lose when it gets to the 10 or 20 pound stage.) Mani cure, pedicure and leg defuzzing are other grooming pointers to ob serve every week. Magazine Prints Burchard Article Donald D. Burchard, head of the journalism department recently had an article published in the Oc tober issue of the Progressive Farmer magazine. The article was entitled, “Rural Schools Can Match the Best.” nnrri ni ■ 11 ■ i ■ i arr¥»> r« nrmrrE » »im ■ ■ re Off the Press New Gun Digest HILLCREST HARDWARE DYERS- FUR STOP.AGE HATTERS 2-1584 m Students . . . Use Our Convenient Pick Up Station At Taylor's Variety Store—North Gate STUDENTS! Lucky Droodle your noodle? MAN’S BICYCLE,good paint, one new tire with basket. $15.00. D-4-A College View 250 c.c. Iowa motorcycle. Good mechani cal condition. Needs one tire and some rewiring. $75.00. Cash as is. Phone „ 6-5828 after 6 p.m. ■ • FOR RENT • PRIVATE ROOM and bath in guest jouse. 4-7968. ft. VAIL ABLE Oct. 15. Unusually nice fur nished one bedroom upstairs apartment in College Hills—adults only. $65.00. Phone 4-7666. • SPECIAL NOTICE » Would like to buy one green shirt and one serge suit. Shirt size ISVC - 35, pants size 30-35. Dorm 2, room 220. Will keep children for working mother. College Station, 811 Fairview. WILL KEEP child for working mother. B-6-A, C. V. STUDENT WIFE wishes to keep small child for working mother. B-ll-C College View. EXPERIENCED CHILD CARE—2 yrs. and up. Apt. C-5-D. College View. IAVE OPENING for child, 3-5, in small nursery. Phone 6-1489. SEWING and alterations—Mrs. Earl Min- X er, 316 Kyle. Phone 6-2402. • WORK WANTED • TYPING — neat, accurate, reasonable rates. Phone 3532. The physics department invites applica tions for student laboratory assistantships. Men who have completed sophomore phy sics courses with superior records are wanted to assist with instruction, grading and the handling of apparatus in the laboratories. The scale of compensation is 80 cents per hour for new assistants and. 90 cents per hour for experienced assist ants. The opportunity for experience, as well as earnings, should be considered. Applicants should apply at the physics department, room 201, as soon as possible. J. G. Potter Head, physics department Changes In the list of courses for which any student is currently registered may be made only on the written recommendation of th head of each deparment concerned and with the approval of the dean of the student’s school. A student may not add a course after Saturday, Sept. 25, 1954. Any course dropped after Saturday, Oct. 2, shall normally carry a grade of F. J. P. Abbott Dean of the College In order that proper scholarship awards in Dairy Husbandry for this year may be made to the sophomores, any sophomore planning to major in dairy husbandry and who has not already made out a course plan with the head of the Dairy Husbandry department will please report to room 213 Agricultural Building prior to Oct. 1 and leave their names with the secretary. A. L. Darnell Dairy Husbandry Department All senior students in the School of Ag riculture who have completed two or more courses in,Dairy Husbandry are eligible for consideration for the Borden Award In Dairy Husbandry. Any senior student in agriculture who believes he might qualify for this award, and has a grade point ra tio of 1.5 or higher is requested to leave his name with the secretary in the Dairy Husbandry office, room number 213 Agri cultural Building, by Oct. 1. A. L. Darnell Dairy Department Social Whirl Thursday 9 a.m. Group leadership course for new leaders of Girl Scout and Brownie troops wil begin at the Girl Scout little house. New lead ers are needed for beginning troops at Ben Milam and Bowie schools.- Friday 3 p.m. College Women’s Social Club honors new members with a tea in the ball room of the Memo rial Student Center. SEND IT IN • Rlue hue priiuu Prompt Radio Service • Blue prints — CALL — • Photostats Sosolik’s Radio Service SCOATES INDUSTRIES 712 S. Main St. Phone 3-6887 PH. 2-1S41 BRYAN SAVE YOUR MONEY SAVE YOUR CLOTHES CAMPUS CLEANERS MAN PLAYING TROMBONE IN TELEPHONE BOOTH A Want to pick up $25? Make up a Lucky Droodle and send it in. It’s easy. If you want to find out just how easy it is, ask Roger Price, creator of Droodles. '‘Very!” Price says. Better yet, do a Droodle yourself, like the ones shown here. Droodle anything you like. And send in as many as you want. If we select yours, we’ll pay $25 for the right to use it, together with your name, in our advertising. We’re going to print plenty—and lots that we don’t print will earn $25 awards. Draw your Droodles any size, on any piece of paper, and send them with your descrip tive titles to Lucky Droodle, P. O. Box 67, New York 46, N. Y. Be sure your name, address, college and class are included. While you’re droodlirig, light up a Lucky —the cigarette that tastes better because it’s made of fine tobacco . . . and “//’.s Toasted” to taste better. DROODLES, Copyright, 1953, by Roger Price IT’S TOASTED” to taste better! SHIP ARRIVING TOO LATE TO SAVE DROWNING WITCH ©A. T. Co. PRODUCT OF AMERICA’S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES FLASH! LUCKIES LEAD AGAIN IN COLLEGES! Newest, biggest survey of smokers in colleges from coast to coast, based on 34,440 actual student interviews, shows that students prefer Luckies to all other brands. Once again, the No. 1 reason: Luckies taste better. **************»**te****ftt»*»***«»#**t»o##s#f : «»9*t««***0* • • * •• 9