The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 26, 1956, Image 4

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    The Battalion
PAGE 4
College Station (Brazos County), Texas
Thursday, July 26, 1956
US Teachers
Complete
Physics Course
Thirty Texas high school
teachers, from schools in 24
counties, have completed a
six - weeks training institute
for Texas High School Physics
Teachers sponsored jointly by in
dustry and A&M.
The institute was operated by
the Department of Physics of the
college and expenses of enrollees
were paid by 16 industrial organi
zations. A cash fellowship of $250
was given each student at the be
ginning of the course, covering fees
of $46.50 and allowing a margin
of compensation for loss of earn
ings during the training period.
Directed by Dr. J. G. Potter,
head of the Department of Phy
sics, the institute was designed to
increase the number of qualified
high school physics teachers in
Texas. Admission to the course
was dependent on the teacher’s
having a strong background of
training in mathematics and sci
ence.
Training was given through lec
ture and laboratory sessions total
ing 21 hours per week with special
classes conducted by guest lectur
ers from other colleges and from
Texas industrial firms.
Completion of the coui’se allows
the teacher-students six hours of
graduate credit applicable to ad
vanced college degx-ees.
Bridge Meets
The Aggie Wives Bridge Club
will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Me
morial Student Center at the reg
ular meeting room. Hostesses will
be Ann Kinney and Jan Maxwell.
Prizes were awarded last week
to Nancy Hungerford, high, Janie
Perkins, low, and Anna Boyd, trav
eling duece. Hostesses were Joyce
Hanna and Barbara Peterson.
Couple’s Bridge
Aggie Couples Bridge Club will
meet at 7:30 p. m. Friday in the
YMCA.
Host and hostess will be Walter
and Faye Speai’s. High px-ize last
week was awarded to Joe Prioiv
Fatal Fallacies
by Ted Key
WIGW SCHOOL
vT7—Y=7 W >7~
^-7
the Travelers Safety Service
"Who’s driving?”
M.E. Wives
Plan Spaghetti
Supper, Aug. 11
Tickets are now available
for the Spaghetti Supper
sponsored by the Mechanical
Engineering Wives Club, ac
cording to Jo Ann Waggoner,
president.
The supper will be held Aug. 11
at the Fii’st Baptist Church, Col
lege Station, from 5:30 to 7:30 on
a “come when you’re ready” basis.
The menu has been planned to
include spaghetti with meat sauce,
Parmesan cheese, cole slaw, French
bi’ead, and ice tea.
Tickets, which are 75 cents fox-
adults, 25 cents for children, may
be pux-chased from the secretary at
the Mechanical Engineex-ing build
ing, or from any M.E. Wives Club
member.
“The spaghetti supper is open to
the public,” accroding to Mi's. Wag
goner.
B.A. Wives Meet
The Business Wives Club held a
social meeting at the home of Mx-s.
Robext Woods, sponsor of the club,
720 S. Rosemary at 8 p.m. last
Monday. Lila Haning, assistant
hostess, helped with the refresh
ments.
The members played scrabble,
checkers, cards.
Center News
FRIDAY—Summer Film Society
will present “It Happened in Flat-
bush” with Carole Landis and
Lloyd Nolan.
SUNDAY—Summer Music Series
will px-esent Wax-ner Dahlberg giv
ing dx-amatic x-eadings; Camille
Kennedy, sopx-ano and Lane Lynch,
tenor. Fannie Lou Mainer will
accompany, and Nox-ma Jacobson
will be in chax-ge. The program,
which is free, will begin at 3:30
p.m. in the Main Lounge.
MONDAY—Another Hide-a-way
dance will be held in the Ballroom
of the MSC. Johnny Loggins and
Jean Penbex-thy will be in chax-ge.
FRIDAY — August 3, Summer
Film Society presenting “Another
Part of the Fox-est” with Fx-edrick
March, Dan Duryea, Ann Blythe
and Edmund O’Brien.
MSC Music
Mas Local
Series
rwi •
Imo
The Memorial Student Centex*
Summer Music Sei’ies will px-esent
a program of music and dx-amatic
x-eadings this Sunday at 3:30. p. m.
in j^e Main Lounge.
Pei-forming are Camille Ken
nedy, sopx-ano; Lane Lynch tenox-
and Wax-ner Dahlbex-g, dx-amatic
readings.
Lane, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Lynch, 711 Inwood Didve,
has been soloist with the Fii*st
Baptist Church in Bx-yan and also
with the a Cappella Choir for the
past thx-ee years. He sang one of
the tenor solos in the annual pre
sentation of “The Messiah” and
in “Song of Easter”. He was grad-
She came to
see her husband-
stayed to
charge the cannon!
JNJ"either battlefield nor housework
defeated Molly Pitcher.
Her real name was Mary Ludwig Hays.
And on June 28, 1778, she came to Mon
mouth County, New Jersey, to visit her hus
band, an artilleryman serving in the Revo
lutionary War. When the battle of Mon
mouth began, Mary saw so much to be done
that she just stayed.
She carried countless pitchers of water
to the exhausted and wounded soldiers.
And when her husband fell wounded, she
took his place at a cannon. Before the
battle ended, Mary Ludwig Hays became
famous as Molly Pitcher, one of this
country’s first heroines.
Today’s battles are being fought on the
economic front. And there’s much that
any woman can do to help in this field.
A family’s sound financial standing de
pends as much upon a woman’s ability
to manage money as it does her husband’s
ability to make it.
Many women are helping their families
win financial independence by encourag
ing their husbands to invest regularly in
U. S. Series E Savings Bonds on the Pay
roll Savings Plan. It’s the easiest way to
save—one of the safest—and one of the
best ways to guarantee future prosperity*
For the big things in your life, be ready
with U. S. Savings Bonds
The U. S. Government does not pay for this advertising. The Treasury Department thanks,
jor their patriotic donation, the Advertising Council and
The^Battalion
uated from Stephen F. Austin
High School in June and plans to
eni-oll in A&M this fall. He is a
student of Mrs. Joe Bax-ron.
Lane will sing “The Wayward
Winds”, Newman; “Walk Hand in
Hand,” Cowell; “I’ll Walk With
God”, Brodszky; and “I Walked
Today Where Jesus Walked,”
O’Hax-a.
Camille, daug-hter of Mr. and
Mrs. Sam P. Kennedy, has studied
voice with Mx-s. Joe Barron fox-
two years. She will be a sophomore
at Southwestern University where
she is majoring in Music Edu
cation. She was graduated from
Austin High School in Bryan
where she was a member of the A
Cappella Choir for three yeax-s and
a soloist her senior year. At South
western she sang and danced in
their production of “Sing Out,
Sweet Land” and was chosen to re-
px-esent that Univex-sity at the Six
State Voice Contest held in Denton
this spring. Her most recent
undex-taking was the second
feminine lead of “The Mikado”
held hex-e this summer.
Camille plans to sing, “Arise,
O Lord”, “O, Savioux-, Hear Me,”
“When I axxr Laid on Eax-th”,
“Fiocca la Neve”, “Song of the
Open”, And So, Goodbye, “A
Memory”, and “If God Left Only
You”. Miss Fannie Lou Mainer
will accompany the singers.
Warner, son of Mi-, and Mrs. F.
I. Dahlbei*g of Bryan, will be a
junior at Southwestex-n University
this fall where he is studying
Drama. Before graduating from
Austin High School in Bryan he
was a member of the Footlights
Club and appeared in such shows
as “The Chocolate Soldier” and
“I Like it Here”. At Southwestern
he is a member of the Drama So
ciety and the A Capella Choir.
During the past school year he
had parts in “On Box-rowed Time”
and “The Velvet Glove”.
Warner will give two readings
on the progiam Sunday, “The Book
of Ruth” and “I am the Mob”, a
poem by Carl Sandburg.
That “new suit” I “bought”
for Dad is really an old one
I had rejuvenated at . . .
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
LOUISIANA HAYRIDE
Bryan Saddle Club Arena
TUESDAY NIGHT — 8 P.M. — JULY 31
Sponsored by Bryan Jaycees
Coupons Available At Our Store
FOLGER’S COFFEE . ... lb. 97c
IMPERIAL SUGAR . . 5 lb. bag 45c
Mayfield’s
GRADE AA’ LARGE EGGS, doz. 49c
Mayfield’s Grade “A”
BUDGET BUY EGGS .... doz. 29c
Vz Gal. Round Pkg.
LILLY MELLORINE 59c
Vi Gal. Square Pkg.
LILLY MELLORINE 49c
Frosty Acres
FROZEN STRAWBERRIES. . . 19c
46 Oz. Can
KRAFT ORANGEADE 25c
Carnation or Sanitary—Vz Gal.
HOMOGENIZED MILK 48c
29 Oz. Jar
BAMA APPLE BUTTER .... 21c
Kraft Salad Bowl
SALAD DRESSING .... quart 39c
PANTRY MAIDE OLEO . 2 lbs. 33c
8 Oz. Can
GLADIOLA BISCUITS . . 2 cans 19c
No. 2'/z Can
VAL VITA PEACHES 25c
300 Can
LIBBY TOMATO JUICE . 2 cans 23c
Uncle William — 300 Can
HOMINY 3 cans 23c
303 Can—Alma Gut—GREEN
BEANS & POTATOES . . 2 cans 29c
303 Can
TRAPPY YAMS 2 cans 33c
Snowdrift
SHORTENING .... 3 lb. can 83c
5 Lb. Box
AUNT JEMIMA FLOUR 35c
12 Oz. Can
LIBBY LUNCHEON MEAT ... 33c
Tall Can
PARD DOG FOOD .... 2 cans 25c
Frozen Foods
LIBBY’S
Orange Juice
6 Oz. Can
cans
29
GORTON’S
Ocean Perch
1 Lb. Pkg.
37^
LIBBY’S
Mixed Vegetables
Cut Corn
Chopped Broccoli
10 Oz. Pkg.
2 pkg 5 - 29 c
Produce
CRISP
Calif. Lettuce
Head *| 3 C
Elberta Peaches
3 Lbs 19°
COLORADO
Green Cabbage
Lb. 5 C
Calif. Avocados
^ Qc Each
lb. 43c
Nabisco Frosted Macaroons ....
Sanitary Mellorine—Square ....
Carnation Orange Drink - Big 64 oz. Half Gallon .... 29c
CARNATION BOTH FOR
Half Gallon Pure Ice Cream-Plus $1.00 Val. Spade . $1.15
half gallon 49c
MEATS
Vea! Pot Roast
Lb.
29c
Fresh Ground Meat 3
Lbs.
79c
Heart of Texas Fryers
Lb.
39c
Veal Round Steak
Lb.
63c
Armours Star Ham — shank End
Lb.
49c
Armours Star Sliced Bacon
Lb.
49c
MILLERS
SUPER MARKET
Sunday 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Thursday, Friday and Saturday—7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
SPECIALS FOR THUR. — FRI. — AND SAT. — JULY 26 - 27 - 28