The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 02, 1955, Image 4

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    Papre 4
THE BATTALJON
Friday, December 2, 1955
Mobley Places First
B-Engineers Win
Cross Country
By JOE DAN BOYD
James Mobley became the In
tramural cross country champion
yesterday and led B-Engineers to
the upperclassmen championship.
* 1
* 'W&M >
START I ait of the 200 cross country entrants in yesterday’s intramural highlight
jam tie staiting line before the starters gun. The thinly-clad representatives from
each outfit braved a near-freezing wind to cover the rugged distance. B-Engineers won
the team championship, while A Engineers took second place honors. D-Field Artillery
copped fourth place and A-Transportation finished fifth. Leggett Hall won the civ
ilian cross country.
- i ^ % ■ x.
Wmm
MM
SWC Teams
(Continued from Page 3)
Led by 6-10 Temple Tucker, who
hit for 19 points, the Rice Owls
downed St. Mary’s, 83-53, in San
Antonio.
Southeast Oklahoma State spoil
ed the opening of Arkansas’ new
fieldhouse with a 65-64 victory be
fore 13,500 in a game that saw the
score change six times before
Southeast pulled ahead in the last
seven minutes.
Hialeah’s racing strip has been
covered with hay and planted in
vegetables for the off-season. This
prevents erosion and puts miner
als back into the soil.
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
r Jne day 2^ per word
per word each additional day
Minimum charge—400
DEADLINES
5 p.m. day before publication
Classified Display
800 per column inch
each insertion
PHONE 4-5324
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.rh. lOOtf
Lost
Two. spiral lecture notebooks.
Agronomy 418 and Agriculture Ed
ucation 431, Wednesday, November
23, S. D. Hervey, Puryear 3-A.
57t2
Pets
Students: Board your dogs at
special low monthly rates. The Ba
yard Kennels, on Highway 6 south
d College. 6-4121. 75tf
Special Notice
DOGS BOARDED: Clean com
fortable quarters. Caucasian
Boarding Kennels. Special rate to
“Aggies”. 49tf
ATTENTION WORKING
MOTHERS
We guarantee that your child
will be happy in our nursery school.
Ages through 4. Music, art, games,
meals. 24 hour service. Phone
4-9761. 9tf
RED BLUSH
GRAPEFRUIT
For an unusual and wel
come Christmas gift, give
a box of Texas Red Blush
Grapefruit. Wrapped indi
vidually in Diphenyl paper
wrappers and packed in
pasteboard cartons ready
for shipment. Size 80 fruit
—40 fruit per box, $3.25.
Come by and pick up your
box at the Horticulture
Show, Main Lobby, Agri
culture Building, Wednes
day, Dec. 7. 57t2
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
For Rent
The
4-4934.
Furnished apartment with gar
age—1024 Foster. Mrs. O. F. Al
len, phone SUnset 9960, Ft. Worth.
54tf
For Sale
Slightly used ’54 model Reming
ton typewriter. Call 4-8778 before
5:30 p.m. 57t5
1950 Buick Special $650. Victor
adding machine with subtraction,
$85. Good condition, phone 4-7021,
204 College View St., Bryan. 57t2
Christmas joy for your little boy
—used model Railroad equipment,
call 4-8166, 614 Welsh, College.
57t5
North Oakwood, well constructed
three bedroom home, wall and ceil
ing insulation, attic fan, double
garag - e, screened breezeway and
porch, large wooded lot, conven
ient to bus, school and shopping
center. E. R. Wagoner, 6-1512.
65A57
Stacked all channel TV antenna
mast lead in guy wire, $17.50—
4-7979, 413 Montclair, College 56t4
1951 Oldsmobile “98” 4-door. Al
most new motor with good Royal
Master tires. Good condition. $650.
Dorm 12, Room 405. 55t4
Two gas radiant space heaters,
25000 BTU Rating, one Dearborn.
Call 4-8359. 54t4
OFFICIAL NOTICES
Official notices must be brought, mailed,
>r telephoned so as to arrive m the Office
»f Student Publications (207 Goodwin,
4-5324, hours 8 - 12, 1 - 5, daily Monday
through Friday) at or before the deadline
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.
34tf
• ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
• BLUE LINE PRINTS
• BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
603 Old Sulphur Springs Road
BRYAN, TEXAS
Dr, Carlton R. Lee
OPTOMETRIST
803A East 26th
Call 2-1662 for Appointment
(Across from Court House)
PROMPT RADIO SERVICE
— Call —
SOSOLIK’S RADIO AND
TV SERVICE
713 S. Main St.
(Across from Railroad Tower)
PHONE 2-1941 BRYAN
CASH for your . . .
BOOKS
LOUPOT’S
Aggies
FINISH—Coming in all alone is B-Engineers’ James Mo
bley in the upperclassmen intramural cross country race
yesterday. Mobley had no official time as the timer’s
watch stopped during the race. The stop watch wasn’t
the only thing that stopped during the grueling, near
freezing run. Several winded cadets were seen applying
the brakes after their early all-out effort.
(Continued from Page 3)
The biggest Tulsa lead was seven
points, which it held frequently
during the contest.
Tulsa won the Missouri Valley
Conference cage championship last
year, and Coach Clarence Iba’s
crew appear to be headed for an
other this season.
News of the World
Box Score
Vezey home — furnished.
57t2
A&M (43)
fg
ft
Harvey
2
4
Connally
0
4
Brophy
0
2
Fortenberry ....
0
2
Mehaffey
.. ..... 2
4
Sutherlin
2
1
Love 7
1
0
Williams
0
1
Harrod
2.
3
Henry
2
0
TOTALS
11
21
Tulsa (48)
fg
ft
Evans
8
2
Duncan
3
0
Y'ates
0
3
Andress
0
2
Born
5
2
Stewart
0
0
Stob
2
0
Harrington
1
1
Jones
0
0
Buenzow
0
0
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BONN, Germany—Foreign Minis
ter Heim-ich von Brentano pledged
yesterday the Germans never will
sacrifice their freedom and friend
ship with the West in a deal with
Russia. He served notice, also,
that the Germans will not passively
accept the uncompromising Russian
pf tp “no” to German reunification. Von
11 43
pf tp
Gore 0
Johnston 0
18
6
3
2
12
0
4
3
0
0
0
. 0
TOTALS 19 10 23 48
Have that Portrait made be
fore Dec. 10 for Christmas
A&M Photo Shop
No. Gate 4-8844
Brentano’s speech was the govern
ment’s answer to Russian pressure
for the two parts of Germany to
get together as equals to create a
neutralized and communized re
united Germany.
★ ★ ★
JERUSALEM — Heavy shoot
ing developed on the Gaza fron
tier today. Egyptian and Isreal
troops exchanged fire in the Kis-
sufim area in a battle lasting
until nightfall., Israeli officials
said Egyptian troops within the
Gaza strip started it by opening
up on Israeli outposts.
★ ★ ★
WASHINGTON—Erasure of the
color line in public schools is in
evitable and school boards should
not “sit and do nothing until forced
by the courts,” the head of the
Texas delegation to the White
House Conference on Education
said yesterday. “I don’t believe
anything is going to stop it,” said
Dr. Edwin L. Rippy, Dallas physi
cian who heads his city’s school
district board.
WASHINGTON —T h e White
Cherry Attending
Credit Conference
Robert G. Cherry of the Depart
ment of Agricultural Economics
and Sociology is attending the Na
tional Farm Credit Conference at
Chicago, which opened yesterday
and lasts through Saturday.
He is one of 15 representatives
from the nation’s land-grant col
leges at the conference, which is
sponsored by the Agricultural Com
mission of the American Bankers’
Association. About 700 bankesr
are attending.
Cherry is attending the confer
ence as a result of efforts by bank
ers who have attended the annual
Farm and Ranch Credit School of
fered by the A&M School of Ag
riculture and the Department of
AgTicultural Economics and So
ciology.
More flioa 25£ oul of every $1 has been returned,
year after year, to Texas policyholders by State
Fane Mutual, the “Careful Driver Insurance Company.**
For top notch protection call
U. M. ALEXANDER ’40
215 S. Main Ph. 3-3616
BRYAN
“It pays to know your STATE FARM AGENT!”
House Conference on Education
was recorded last night as favor
ing increased federal aid to
schools, and an administration,
spokesman predicted early ac
tion. Secretary of Welfare Fol
som said: “I am confident that
in the weeks ahead this admin
istration will present to the Con
gress a broadened and improved
program of federal assistance to
help erase the classroom deficit.”
Flag Pole Dream
Becomes Reality
After three years of work,
A&M’s sixth flag pole has .been
erected in the West Area quad
rangle.
The campaign for the new flag
pole began in 1954, when several
air force juniors living . in that
area wanted to get a flag for the
quadrangle. Their plans halted
when military authorities were un
decided as to whether the West
Area would continue to be used for
Corps students.
These juniors had acquired a
flag pole, which leaned against
Walton Hall last year. It was
not until this fall that the erection
of the pole was again brought be
fore the commandant’s Office. The
installation cost of $150 was paid
by that office.
The flag was donated by Robin
Ransone, senior aeronautical engi
neering major, and was used on his
father’s coffin.
Stan Musial of the St. Louis
Cardinals is 10th in lifetime home
run standings. A1 Simmons pre
viously held the No. 10 spot with
307 homers.
No official time was recorded for
Mobley since the timer’s watch
stopped during the race.
Second team was A-Engineers,
and third place honors went to the
Maroon Band. D-FA copped the
fourth place slot and A-TC fin
ished fifth. Leggett Hall won the
civilian cross country crown.
Joe Schiraldi sank five baskets
to spark A-Athletics to a 31-26 tri
umph over C-FA and wrap up their
Class A league title in basketball.
Henry Gonzalas of C-FA was the
game’s leading sedrer with 16
points. •
A-QMC and B-FA won the l ight
to vie for the Class B Horseshoe
championship yesterday.
A-QMC took a 2-1 decision froTn
C-Infantry with the standout ac
curacy of Joe Grubbs and James
Jones proving too much for C-
Infantry’s Leonard Porter and
Fred Weinzierl. D. T. Strickland
and Don Lewis won the deciding
game for A-QMC by defeating
Charlie Veach and John Brooks.
David Farrell and Jay Coleman
downed A-QMC’s Walter Carlton
and Angelo Moscarelli in the third
game.
Rod Stepp and Ron Stepp took
an easy victory from Lyle Gibson
and Don Dittman for B-FA’s first
win over Sqd. 24. Bob Middleton
and Charles Lively bundled the se
ries up for the army team by down-
ing Cliff Tuttle and Tom New-
mann. Rex Cockran and D i eje
Thomas were Sqd. 24’s best as they
defeated Doug Jinks and Charles
Hanovice.
Included in our Giganiic Book Hemainder Sale are many titles
wiitten especially for the Small Fry. They are attractively composed,
eye catching in format, and educational and instructive in content.
Here’s a small sample of the offering:
1. PICTURE WORD DICTIONARY.
Contains 4832 words with over
1200 illustrations. Helps the child
to read, spell and write. Originally-
published at $2.50.
Our Price 99c
3.
COME TO MY PARTY. Kids
invited were asked to wear a fancy
hat- and this fabulous book con
tains 8 cut out hats ready to make.
Originally published at $1.50.
Our Price 29c
2. s
SAM PATCH. The high, wide and
handsome jumper. This is just
about the tallest tale ever written
for boys and girls. Originally-
published at $2.00.*
Our Price 75c
4. THIS IS A SCOOP! Avon Pub
lishers, in 1952, published a series
of children’s books—20 titles in
all—called The Jolly Series. Orig
inally scheduled to be retailed
through news stands at 25c each,
but due to a misunderstanding
between publisher and distributor,
they have never before been
offered to the public. The entire
7,000,000 copies were remaindered
—and as a result—you can now
buy these at the remarkably low
price of
19c ea. or 6 for $1.00
Many other values in Juveniles will be offered during our Book Sale.
Remember the dates, December 7-17, and also read our December 6 ad
in The Battalion.
The Exchange Store
Serving Texas Aggies