Page 4 THE BATTALION Tuesday, November 29, 1955 CROP JUDGERS—Members of the A&M crop judging team and the coach look over some cotton. Dr. R. C. Potts is at left. Team members are, left to right, Robert J. Buts- chek of Moulton, William E. Lyles of Ponder, John Beaty of Comanche, and Paul H. Mohle of Lockhart. The team took eighth place at Chicago last week. Crop Team Takes 8th Place The A&M Agronomy Society’s Crop Judging Team nosed out 19 other teams to take 8th place in 5 Seniors Leave To Visit West Point Five A&M students will attend West Point’s “Student Conference on United States Affairs” Wednes day through Saturday. They are John Jenkins, Jack Lunsford, Har old Sellers, Larry Kennedy and L. E. Sheppard. Jenkins and Lunsford will be A&M’s official delegates to the conference. Sellers will go on to New York City to try and make contacts for national publicity for A&M’s “Student Conference on Na tional Affairs,” and Kennedy and Sheppard will observe the Acad emy’s Corps and the conference. The group was to leave Bryan Air Force Base today and fly to Mitchell AFB, New York, on board an Air Force C-25 airplane. Re turn trip will bring them back to the Bryan base Dec. 4. the Intercollegiate Crop Judging Contest at Chicago last week. The A&M team, composed of Bob Butschek from Moulton, Bill Lyles from Bryan, Paul Mohle from Lockhart and John Beaty from Comanche, alternate, won 4th place in identification, 7th in judging, and 8th in commercial grading in competition with 27 teams from over the United States and Canada. Butschek scored 597 points out of a possible 600 to capture 7th place in individual identification in the contest. Lyles placed 17th and Mohle placed 21st. The team left College Station in company with the team coach, R. Junior Livestock Team Sees Ranches The A&M Junior Livestock Judg ing Team visited several Texas ranches last week. Among the ranches visited on the tour wei'e Straaus-Medina Hereford Ranch, Essar Angus, Luther Burbank Stu dent Farm in San Antonio and Schofield’s Shorthorn ranch. WANT AD RATES One day 2^ per word 1^ per word each additional day Minimum charge—40^ DEADLINES 5 p.m. day before publication Classified Display 800 per column inch each insertion PHONE 4-5324 For Sale Two gas radiant space heaters, 25000 BTU Rating, one Dearborn. Call 4-8359. 54t4 Stacked all channel TV antenna mast lead in guy wire, $20.00, 6-1713, 806 Welsh, College. 43tl3 Work Wanted Neat, accurate typist would like to type for you in my home near campus. Phone 4-4643. 54t5 Typing wanted to do in my home. Mrs. C. E. Carlson, Jr. Phone 3532. after 5 p.m. lOOtf For Rent Furnished apartment with gar age—1024 Foster. Mrs. O. F. Al len, phone SUnset 9960, Ft. Worth. 54tf Room for rent: Southeast bed room, private bath, meals, ph. 3-4375. Mrs. Maggie Parker. 28tf • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES 603 Old Sulphur Springs Road BRYAN, TEXAS PROMPT RADIO SERVICE — Call — SOSOLIK’S RADIO AND TV SERVICE 713 S. Main St. (Across from Railroad Tower) PHONE 2-1941 BRYAN Dr. Carlton R. Lee OPTOMETRIST 803A East 26th Call 2-1662 for Appointment (Across from Court House) Pets Students: Board your dogs at jpecial low monthly rates. The Ba~ /ard Kennels, on Highway 6 south of College. 6-4121. 75tf Lost Glasses in brown case. Return to 207 Goodwin Hall. Student Pub lications. 53t3 Special Notice DOGS BOARDED: Clean com fortable quarters. Caucasian Boarding Kennels. Special rate to “Aggies”. 49tf C. Potts of the Agronomy Depart ment, Nov. 18, and are due to re turn Thui’sday. The tour of the midwest taken by the team on their journey to Chi cago included stops at Oklahoma A&M, the Kansas City Board of Trade and their grain and hay laboratories, and the Chicago Board of Trade. “These visits, according to Potts, enabled the students to observe mai’ket exchange procedui’e while the market was in full swing.” Each team member and alternate will receive a medal for his partici pation in the contest. Gifts, Loans, Etc. Accepted By Board A total of $45,956.13 in gifts, grants-in-aid, loans, scholarships, fellowships and awai'ds, has been accepted by the Board of Direc tors of the A&M College System meeting at A&M last Wednesday. Texas Agricultural Experiment Station received $16,907.94 in grants-in-aid; $2,116.50 in gifts, $2,100 in loans and one charbray heifer and one 3-4 charbray heifer. A&M College received $995* val ue of hydrotardo to be used in the Mechanical Engineering Depart ment, 2,000 pounds of aluminum for the Industrial Education De partment and a pair, of facsimile receivers to be used by the Elec trical Engineei’ing Department. A&M also received $18,436.40 in scholarships, fellowships and awards and $4,440 in special gifts. Tarleton State College received a $1,000 gift. Mother’s Club Clears $112 For Award The Games Party, sponsor ed recently by the Brazos Co. A&M Mother’s Club, went $12 over their goal of $100 for the sellolarship fund. Held each year, the money col lected is awarded to a worthy Brazos Co. junior each spring to ward expenses for his senior year. Forty-five tables of canasta, bridge and dominoes were set up for the ladies participating in the games party. Approximately 35 prizes were awarded by drawings to guests. Included in the prizes, were four water color paintings by Mrs. Joe Mogford. Mrs. Mogford donates paintings for the party every year. Other prizes awarded were pies, homemade pickles, potted plants were donated by members of the Mother’s club. Applicants for the scholarship will be received in the office of Ray Perryman, associate registrar, this spring. The applicant, who must be a junior Brazos Co. stu dent, is chosen on character, schol arship, and worthiness. National Speaker Set For Thursday A talk, based on observations of a recent extended tour of South and Central America, will give Col lege Station and Bryan residents a verbal look at the interests, activi ties and lives of the people of Latin America. John Scott, assistant to the pub- lishei 1 of Time Magazine, will speak at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the ball room of the Memorial Student Cen ter. Admission is free, and all A&M students, staff members and the public are invited. The A&M Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi is sponsoring the program. MSS 3 To Offer Prizes For Work Awards will again be made this year for the best short story, the best poem - and the best front cover design submitted for the MSS. 3, anthology of A&M student writ ing. The prizes are $5 each, editor John Kirkpatrick said. The issue is scheduled to come out some time in March next year. Good serious writing of all kinds will be Considered: featui’e articles, satire, light verse, poetry, fiction. Also this year, photography, draw ings and oil paintings will be con sidered for reproduction in the MSS. 3. Entries should be submitted by Jan. 1, and should be type-writ ten. CHS Cagers Open Season Against Bobcats Tonight A&M Consolidated will open its basketball season tonight at Tiger Gym with Cypress-Fairbanks’ Bob cats. Two games will be played; the B team at 7 and the A team at 8. Coach Larry Hayes, in his first year as basketball mentor, has 22 men out for the team. Only two lettermen, both of whom were all district last year, are back—Man uel Garcia and Norman Floeck. Starters for the Tiger A team tonight will be some combination of five out of the following six men: Floeck, Garcia, Dick Hick man, Jon Ray Terryman, Bobby Potts and Bill Hall. Other mem bers of the squad ai'e Maurice Ol- ian, Bill Dorrington, Bill Kava- naugh and Bill Breazeale. On the B team are Bradley Blan ton, John Caywood, Charles Gen try, Jerry Holland, Kirby Jackson, Jerry Mills, Gerry Morris, Lynn Morris, Jimmy Murphey, Joe Ran dolph and John Turner. Cypress-Fairbanks beat the Tig ers in the final game last year to win the district championship. The Tigers took second in distract play. Other games on the Tiger sche dule are Somerville here Dec. 2, A Team; Bellville here, Dec. 5, A: Bryan tournament, Dec. 9-10; Hearne there, Dec. 13, A & B; Bellville there, Dec. 20, A; Somer ville there, Dec. 23, A& B ; Cypress- Fairbanks there, Dec. 30, A; Hearne here, Jan. 3, A & B; Col lege Station tournament, Jan. 6-7; (all following district 25-A games; both A and B teams) Sealy there, Jan. 10; Huntsville tournament, Jan. 12-14 (non-district); Tomball here, Jan. 17; Waller there, Jan. 20; Katy here, Jan 24; Sealy here, Jan. 27; Tomball there, Feb. 3; Waller here, Feb. 7; and Katy there, Feh. 10. Well, Mr. Smarty, who knows a good way to clean clothes with gasoline. . . . Maybe next time you’ll send them to — CAMPUS CLEANERS Treating tobacco plant beds in the fall is usually more successful than in the spring, says the Uni versity of Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station. through Friday) at or before the deadltm of 1 p.m. of the day preceding publica tion.—Director. ALL DEPARTMENTS: The Official directory of offices, staff and students are ready for distribution now at 75c each. You may get your copy now at the Office of Student Publications, 207 Goodwin Hall. 84tf All types of T.V. Antennas Top Quality — Reasonably Priced — Complete Kits — $20.00 up . . . See — LARRY FRANCIS EE Dept or 806 Welch College —- 6-1713 WE’RE OUT FOR VOLUME — We’re Out to Double Any Previous Year’s Sales — In Order to do this we will sac rifice profits and that is your good fortune — SEE US NOW AT THE ROY HENRY PONTIAC CO. Hearne, Texas YOU’LL. BOTH GO FOR THIS CIGARETTE WINSTON ■ No wonder Winston changed America’s mind about filter smoking! King-size Winston tastes good — like a cigarette should! Its full, rich, tobacco flavor really comes through to you — because Winston’s exclusive filter works so effectively. Try a pack of Winstons for real flavor, real filtering, and real easy draw. R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. 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