The Battalion College Static*' (Brazos County) y Texas^ PAGE 6 Thursday, October 31, 195 < Rescue Teams Search Wreckage For 16 Crash Victims FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. C 7 ?)—Grim faced Air Force rescue teams today poked through charred wreckage for the bodies of 16 airmen killed when a big tanker plane crashed and burned on a northeim Arizona mountainside. The four-motored KC97, on a rou tine flight of a classified nature, burned a 1,700-foot scar on the side of ragged Gray Mountain on the southeastern edge of Grand Canyon Tuesday. Col. C. F. Macomber, command ing officer of the 509th A & E Squadron at Walker Air Force Base, N. M., said it appeared the right wing hit first, then the plane came apart. He said there was no evidence of malfunction of the en gines and apparently no fire be- SAVINGS GALORE during BET TER FOOD ii.ES. Sill Top of the NEW Croi FOOD CLUB SALE! FOOD CLUB Sliced or Halves Style PEACHES O No. 30.3 ** jf* Cans jf , 9 c FOOD CLUB Fragrant, Full-Bodied COFFEE Lb. A Can >9 C FOOD CLUB Fine Light, Enriched FLOUR ET Lb. Zj Bag ^ !9 C A Complete Line of FOOD CLUB Values! POTATO U. S. No. 1 Ideal for Boiling, Baking, Mashing or Frying! Lb. Bog MOHAWK SHORT SHANK PICNICS PORK ROAST Lean, Fat Removed Boston Butt . . . 2S* lb. I* Don't Forget This Week's Volume ENCYCLOPEDIA with $5.00 or more purchase 99c SWIFT’S PREMIUM BOLOGNA By the Piece Per Pound 33 Sliced Only Per Pound 39 VISIT OUR CANDY DEPT. You’ll find a complete selection of Halloween Trick-or-treat specials plus fine chocolates and party favors .... something for every sweet-tooth! FRESH From OUR BAKERY DEVIL'S FOOD CAKE 49‘ SAVE in EACH DEPARTMENT! Two rich, moist devil’s food layers iced with creamy chocolate fudge icing, delicious for dessert or with coffee! In a scene from the Affgie Players’ production of the play opening Monday night, Ward Boyce lectures a group in a British jungle field hospital during- World War II. Left to right are Boyce, Alice Gene Butler, Don Demming, Jim Best, Henry Lyle, David Dannenbaum and Bob Dunn. ‘Hasty Heart 9 Opens Monday As Players First Production The 1957 version of The Aggie Players will tread the boards of the Memorial Student Center Ballroom next week with their first produc- tiion of the year, a comedy-drama by John Patrick entitled “The Has ty Heart.” The play will be on view for three consecutive nights opening Monday at 8. “Heart” involves itself with a familiar plot device under original circumstances; that of setting up an unusual situation, then detail ing the reactions of several differ ent types of people. . In this case, playwright Patrick, who won a Pulitzer Prize with his “Teahouse of the August Moon”, has drawn on his experiences in World War II and pictured a Brit ish field hospital in the Burmese jungle. Therein contained are rep resentatives of most of the British ’.empire and, for good measure, an American, fittingly called “Yank”. David Dannenbaum plays Yank, who teams up with Nurse Margaret (Alice Gene Butler) and other members'*of the ward at the re quest of the Colonel (Ward Boyce) in charge, to make happy the last days of an independent-minded Scot (Don Reynolds) who does not bV"E FIS " Fim STO R.AGE HA.TT EPS ROLAND DANSBY ’31 For Your Convenience—Pick Up Station AT TAYLOR’S VARIETY STORE know his wound will eventually be fatal. Lachie, the Scot, resists at first the attempts of the! other patients to gain his friendship and. for a time the atmosphere in the room is strained, but eventually he recants and, to complicate matters, falls in love with the Nurse. An inexperienced but enthusiastic cast is headed by Reynolds, sopho more ■floriculture student from Spi'inghilJ, La.,- Mrs. Butler of Bryan .and Dannenbaum, sqphomore English njajor from Sugarland. Others include Don Damming, Jim Best, Henry Lyle, Bob Dnn, Boyce and Bob Wenck. C. K. Esten of the English de partment will direct the play and L. R. Killion will act as stage man ager. Assisting Lillion. will be John Cull and Jim Love. Bob Wenck is in charge of lighting and Zulen Pinero and Dorothy Ashworth are script girls. Admission is 75 cents per person and tickets will foe available at the MSC desk and the door of the per formance. BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES One day per word 2^ per word each additional day Minimum charjre—40^ DEADI.INKS 5 p.m. day before publication Classified Display 80^ per. column inch each Insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR SALE Solid maple suite, double bed, 4 drawer chest, bedside table. Very good condition. VI 6-6108. 41t2 One bathroom heater one year old. One space heater like new. C- 15-W College View, VI 6-5604. 4112 Good practice piano. VI 6-5104. 40t7 FOR RENT One three room furnished apart ment. For couple only. Bills paid, $50 month. Near college. Call VI 6-5427. 40tfn Four room furnished apartment, water and gas furinshed. See at 2108 Cavitt Drive, Bryan. 32tfn Four room apartment, furnish ed, in Bryan. Call VI 6-5638. 276tfn Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric Shop. 98ti SPECIAL NOTICE HELP WANTED Waitress wanted. Must be over 18. Experience not necessary. Ap ply in person between 10 and 5. Triangle Drive In. 284tfn Car hops wanted. Must be over 18. Apply in person between 10 and .5. Triangle Drive In. 284tfn LOST German shepherd pup, black, light markings. Perky, ears are turning backward. If found, please return 1016 Walton Drive in eve ning. Reward. 39t4 WORK WANTED 1953 Ford Fordomatic six or Ford V-8 with overdrive. Four- door, white wall tires, radio and heater. 603-A East 28th. 40t5 New Winchester 243 model 70. Light weight with bear cub 4-X scope, slick trigger, and case. Re tail value $235. This is the ideal combination for this area. Call TA 3-1886. 40t3 Two bedroom frame, wooded lot 70x135. $7400. 2201 Wilhelm, phone TA 2-4523. 40t5 Sealed bids will be received at the Farm Service Office, A&M College, until 10 a. m., Nov. 6, 1957, and then publicly opened and read for two IVz ton trucks and various pieces of farm machinery including combines, tractors, disk plows, disk harrows, hay baler, hamniermill, wagons, stalk cutters, et cetera. Items may be inspected and bid forms obtained at Farm Service Office. The right is re served to reject any or all bids_ and to waive any technicality. 39t3 IF YOU GOTTA GO, WHY NOT GO FIRST CLASS ? An insurance policy for any size halo. . . Eugene ‘ Rush, North Gate. 28tfn i ~ PETS - German shepherd pup, female, registered, 8 weeks, beautifully marked. 901 Fairview, College. 39t4 SEE ROSS EODGE NO. 1300, A.F. & A.M. College Station, Texas Called meeting Thursday, Oct. 31, at 7 p. m. P.C. de gree, also F.C. examinations. E. E. Mayhugh, W. M. Joe Woolket, Sec’y. Mr. Farmers: let DOCTOR FIX- IT complete your building and re pair jobs. He can do the complete job from planning to financing. Nothing down and five years to pay. For complete service from a new barn to a chicken house call DOCTOR FIXIT at MARION PUGH LUMBER COMPANY. Phone VI 6-5711. 39t4 MOVING—local and long dis tance. Packing and crating. Towne Services, TA 2-8824. 38 tfn Weavers Kiddie-Land Nursery, 225 Lynn Dr., Bryan, TA 2-6076. Open for Saturdays football game. 26tl7 G. T. BINFORD INSECT CON TROL. Having trouble with bugs ? Tired of the old spray gun? Now is the time to have your home cleared of roaches, ants, moths and other insects. VI 6-6649, 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. TA 2-7023 after 6 p.m. 408 Elm St., Bryan. 19t30 Will do typing in my home. 114 Ehlinger, TA 2-3161. , 39t3 Typing and Lithographing our specialty. Executive type gives re ports, thesis, lab manuals, etc., that professional look. ZOST THE PRINTER, 115 Walton Dr. (East Gate), Phone VI 6-6128 or VI 6-4874. 33tfn Typing (any size job), mimeo graphing, complete office facilities. B I - C I T Y SECRETARIAL AN SWERING SERVICE, 3408A Tex as Ave., Phone VI 6-5786. 3 5tl8 Neat, accurate typist desires typing to do in my home. Own electric typewriter. Call VI 6-5805. Day nursery for working moth ers. Call Mrs. Redding, VI 6-4892. 271tfn Kitchen remodeling, cupboard work, interior painting. ' VI 6-7265. 258tfn OFFICIAL NOTICES Official notices must Ik? Turought, mailed, or telephoned so as to arrive in the Office of .Student Publications (Ground Floor VMCA, VI 8-641 hours 8-12, 1-5, daily Monday through Friday) at or before the deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceedlnp publication — Director of Student Publica tions. [ If , p P? () , . Where the Art of otard A Cafeteria Cooking Is Not Lost Basic Division Readies Series For Freshmen Compu.slory freshmen as semblies will be held next Tuesday at 4 p. m. as the be ginning of a four-part fresh men lecture-discussion series. Students will meet according to their curriculum in four different meeting places on the campus. The first group, made up of ag riculture and pre-veterinary medi cine students, are to gather in the Biological Science lecture room. Arts and Sciences and business administration majors willl meet in the Chemistry lecture room. Architecture, aeronautical and chemical engineering and general curriculum 1 students will get' to gether in the Memorial Student Center Ballroom. All other engineering studer. ts will meet in Guion Hall. Four rotating programs are sche duled to meet with the groups. Each group will hear one presenta tion Tuesday. They will hear, the rest at three additional meetings scheduled for later dates. Programs include “Moral, Ethi cal and Spiritual Values for Every Day Living” by Carl Zietlow, asso ciate secretary of the YMCA; “Eti quette for Aggies” by Mrs. Odette Smith and a panel of helpers; “Qualities of the Educated Man” by Dr. J. P. Abbott, Distinguished Professor of English; and “Appre ciation of the Fine Arts” by a panel which includes Mrs. Emalita Terry, Bill Turner and E. K. Eaton. Students not in the Basic Divi sion are urged to attend the pro grams with the group in Guion Hall since the discussions are of high interest to all. Dates for the remaining meet ings are Dec. 3, March 4 and April 1. Each meeting will be held Tues« day at 4 p. m. Sputnik May Give Info When It Dies CAMBRIDGE, Mass.,—CP)—The! I death plunge of Russia’s moons may reveal secrets to the United States, but a ranking scientist said yesterday the nation may never catch up to the Soviet pio neering in outer space. Dr. Vannevar Bush, wartime head of the Office of Scientific Re search and Development, said in an interview that he was not opti mistic about the United States overtaking the Russian lead in outer space ■ scientific development. Dr. Bush s&id the launching of Sputnik on Oct. 4 by Russia was not as dramatic an event as Pearl Harbor but might serve to awaken the nation to step up the pace of scientific research. The rocket moon now circling the earth will probably plunge to its death in the first half of De cember, Dr. Fred L. Whipple, di rector of the Smithsonian Astro- physical Observatory, said today. Dr. Wipple said the interior of the rocket and its engine might survive the flaming dive through the earth’s atmosphere and provide “highly interesting” information if recovered by American scien tists. EARLY BIRD SHOPPE TOGS — GIFTS AND TOYS for Girls and Boys FABRICS — SHOES ItlrtKecrest Village 3601 Texas Ave. • ENGINEERING ANTI AKCHITECTCR AT, SUPPLIES * BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES 603 Old Sulphur Springs Road BRYAN, TEXAS Sp6 JOE FAULK for — ® Furniture • Auto Parts ® Hotpoint Appliances ® Dixie Range ® Mathes Air Conditioners ® Dearborn Heaters © GE Small Appliances 214 N. Bryan Cavitt at Coulter JOE FAULK "32 — Owne RADIO & TV SERVICE BY SOSOLIK 713 S. MAIN Across from Railroad Tower Our Policy—You must be Satisfied TA 2-1941 — BRYAN