The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 10, 1961, Image 3

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Hillbilly Singers, ‘Tramps’
Part Of Aggie Follies, 1961
“Pickin’ and grinnin” their time
away on the Guion Hall Stage Fri
day'will be the Sacred Heart G'old-
en Jubilee Gospel Singing Five, one
of many featured attractions in the
Aggie Follies, 1961 beginning th^£
night at 8 p.m.
This group of “authentic” hill
billy singers will feature Jim Hud
son, Butch Edwards, Olin Brown
and Hugh Magers, playing banjo,
guitar and wash-tub bass. Fifth
member of the group, “Luke”, will
be missing; he’s always intoxicat
ed, according to another member
of the “Five.”
Numbers included on the itine
rary of the singers are “She’ll Be
Coming Round The Mountain,’
“Quit Kicking My Dog,” and other
popular mountaineer songs.
This is only one of many extra
acts centered around the melodra
ma, “She Was Only A Farmer’s
Daughter,” a three-act play to be
performed by the Aggie Players.
BUY
BACK
BOOKS
^Jhe Exchange
ore
“SERVING TEXAS AGGIES’
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
he day Si per word
2d per word each additional day
Minimum charge—40*
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publicatim*
Classified Display
80* per column inch
each insertion
PHONE VI 6-6415
FOR RENT
One bedroom house with enclosed garage,
H?e rooms, furnished $39.00, with air
laditioning $59.00, with stove and rc-
rigerator only, $35.00. Phone VI 6-7334.
110t4
508 Fairview, $39.00, call VI 6-7334.
11014
Two bedroom duplex apartment. East
Gate of A&M College, call VI 6-6328. llOtfn
Trailers for rent. Rent a trailer here,
St e it where you are going, or local
niiers. You can save money by renting
[trailer. Tow bars for rent. Baker tire
w. TA 2-8159. llOtlO
j Air conditioned furnished two bedroom
'jsse for summer months. Very reason-
Me. Has automatic washer. Near Cam-
hs. Phone VI 6-7498. 108t6
Two bedroom house, large fenced yard,
“aar campus, VI 6-8357 or VI 6-5392 106tfn
Ore bedroom furnished house, frost free
Jrigerator, $60.00 monthly, 810 Fairview
'T 6-5036 or VI 6-5634. 105tfn
Unfurnished two bedroom apartment, 220
r ; ing, attic fan, panel ray heat, near
"dtctt School. Phone VI 6-6660 after 5
l tn. 61tfn
A one and two bedroom modern fur-
“aed apartment. Air conditioner if de-
’«i Call after 4 p. m., TA 2-3627. 1300
‘atone Street. 68tfn
WANTED TO BUY
.Clean late model wagon. No dealers,
'■'•cash. VI 6-6173. U0t4
Will pay cash for clean used furniture
ifJ l appliances, also baby furniture. Must
treasonable. TA 2-4826. 108tfn
TV - Radio - Hi-Fi
Service & Repair
GILS RADIO & TV
U 2-0826 2403 S. College
1 24 Hour Wrecker Service •
Whitley’s Auto Parts
WE BUY BURNED & WRECKED
CARS & TRUCKS
j S Miles West of Courthouse on
Highway 21
BRYAN, TEXAS
H. L. WHITLEY, JR., OWNER y
Phone TA 2-6840
r
JIM M. PYE ’58
REPRESENTING
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.
VI 6-5055 TA 2-6232
401 Cross St. C. S.
1
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
tors RADIO & TV
303 w. 26th TA 2-2819
FOR SALE
By owner, new auto air conditioner.
Tecumseh compressor, Warner electric
clutch, mobile air under dash unit. Price
$125.00. Call VI 6-8614. llltS
Allstate scooter, reasonable prio
rey
my
phone VI 6-5291.
er, reasonable price, con
tact Clinton Petrey, two miles south of
College Highway 6 on Miller Lane or
llltl
1950 Mercury, 4 door, radio, heater, good
good condition. I need the
tires,
money
Anders, Walton G-10.
ery
for summer school. Denny M.
Illt2
1953 Ford, V-R, Radio, heater, good tires,
mechancally good, $275. Contact at D-4-D
College View. 110t4
Very, very clean sofa plus matching
platform rocker and coffee table. Also
sofa pillows, lamp, two small throw rugs.
Must see to appreciate. VI 6-8442. 109t3
Two adjoining lots, each 80 by 145,
orner Timber and Anna, College. Call
T 6-5694 noon or evening. lOOtfn
WORK WANTED
Experienced typist. 25c per page. Bring
, Dairy Kream, 10 a. m. to 5 p. m.
to Carrie,
lllt4
Term
accurate
papers, reports, letters typed. Fast
service. Mrs. Smith, TA 2-0536.
105tl5
DAY NURSERY by the week, day or
hour. Call Mrs. Gregory, 502 Boyett
VI 6-4005. 120tfn
Our nursery foi children all ages. Pick
up and deliver. VI 6-8151. No answer call
back. 42tfn
Why wait until last minute to get yout
Theses reports, etc. to Bi-City Secretarial
service? Electric typewriters, offset print
ing, negatives and metal plates made.
3408 Texas A-
metal
VI 6-5786.
87tfn
HELP WANTED
GET YOUR SUMMER JOB EARLY,
JUNIORS AND SENIORS IF YOU CAN
MEET OUR QUALIFICATIONS. WE
HAVE A SUMMER JOB FOR YOU PAY
ING $1,080.00 FOR THREE MONTHS.
MUST BE ABLE TO START BY JUNE
1. CAR FURNISHED. YOU MAY QUAL
IFY FOR WEST COAST OR HAWAII.
CALL MR. LEWIS, MADISON 3-4401
FOR INTERVIEWS, HOUSTON, 106tfn
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals - Sales - Service - Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators & Adding Matchinee
CATES TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main TA 2-6000
• ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
• BLUE LINE PRINTS
• BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
603 Old Sulphur Springs Road
BRYAN, TEXAS
OFFICIAL NOTICES
round FIoo:
YMCA, VI 6-6416. hours 8-12, 1-6, daily
Monday through Friday) at or before the
deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceding
publication — Director of Student Publica
tions.
Regalia For The May Commencement
Exercise
All students who are candidates for the
degree of Doctor of Philosophy are re
quired to order hoods as well as the doc
tor’s cap and gown. The hoods are to be
left at the Registrar’s Office no later than
1:00 p. m., Tuesday, May 23 (this will be
accomplished by a representative of the
ilege Exchange Store). The Ph.D. hoods
will not be worn in the procession since
all such candidates will
wear tfte cap
dents who . i
lor’s Degree
ROTO students
will
gown ; all civilian stu-
e candidates for the Bache-
vill wear the cap and gown ;
ho are candidates for
the
ents who an
Bachelor’s Degree will wear the appropri
ate uniform. All military personnel who
are candidates for degrees, graduate or un
dergraduate, will wear the uniform only.
Rental of caps and gowns may be ar-
;he itxcnange
be placed between 8 :00 a. m. Monday,
ranged with the Exchange Store. Orders
may be place
May 8 and 12 :UU noon Saturday,
The rental is as follows: Doctor’s
May 20.
cap and
gown $5.25, Master’s cap and gown $4.75,
Bachelor’s cap and gown $4.25. Hood rental
is the same as that for cap and gown.
C. E. Tishler, Chairman
Convocations Committee
106tl2
SPECIAL NOTICE
SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300, A.F. &
A.M.
Stated meeting Thursday,
May 11, at 7 p. m.
C. W. Trosson, WM
Joe Woolket, Sec’y
lllt2
Electrolux Sales and Service.
Williams. TA 3-6600.
G. C.
90tfn
WANTED
to rent two adjoining apart-
each
VI 6-
>ys to rer
ments, will furnish both. $25.00
apartment. Near Southside Grocery.
6630. lOltfn
THE BATTALION
Wednesday, May 10, 1961
College Station, Texas
Page 3
Under the direction of C. K. Esten,
the Players have been rehearsing
actively for over a month, getting
the play ready for Friday and Sat
urday nights.
The Follies will be based on a
medicine show theme, with the en-
tra acts supplementing the sales
pitches and drama, patterned much
after shows of this calibre which
were extremely prevalent in the
Southwest many years ago.
Salesmen will emerge from vari
ous entrances, peddling bottles of
“snake oil”; local “dignitaries”
will be introduced on stage, and
the Follies will contain all the
glamor and festivity of an authen
tic medicine show.
The cast of over 30 entertainers
will hold three rehearsals this
week, with the dress rehearsal to
morrow night, and the Follies Fri
day and Saturday.
Another entra act guaranteed to
thrill spectators is the “Flying
Tramps,” trampoline experts who
have become popular as halftime
performers during sports events in
G. Rollie White Coliseum and else
where.
Presenting a 15-minute program
of comedy action, the Tramps will
exercise precision movements in
the air from off their trampoline
on the Guion Stage.
Dave Woodard, drummer and
magician of large renown, will
perform two acts during the Fol
lies, once as a drummer and sec
ondly as mystifying magician.
Woodard played drums with a
jazz band at the World Fair in
Brussels, Belgium, and has also
become known as a popular enter
tainer with his magic as well.
Many other acts will provide an
evening of pure entertainment for
all attending the Aggie Follies,
1961.
Aggie Players
preping for follies
Campaigning Senate Hopefuls
Cover State With Rallies
Aggie Mothers
Flan Meeting,
Officer Vote
The Federation of A&M Moth
ers’ Clubs will hold its annual
meeting Saturday in the Ballroom
of the Memorial Student Center.
Mrs. Fred Cole" of Cdiftms Christi
will preside over the e rent, which
starts at 9:30 a.m.
Delegates from all j. .&M Moth
ers’ Clubs are expectei! to attend
the meeting.
The program inclu les special
music by the Singing Cadets; a/i
address by Dr. Charles R. Lyons
of the College Hospital; a report
from the Committee on Higher
Education from E. L. Angell, vice-
chancellor of the A&M College
System, and various reports from
officers of the federation.
Officers for the year 1961-62
will be elected and installed.
CENTURY
By The Associated Press
Senate candidates plugged for
votes Tuesday in widely-separated
sections of Texas and announced
intensive campaign schedules for
the rest of the week.
Sen. William Blakley conferred
in Houston with campaign leaders
and scheduled a night rally at in
dustrial Freeport on the Gulf
Coast. Thursday he goes to San
Antonio for a full day of vote
seeking.
John Tower followed his Mon
day night rally at Wichita Falls
with handshaking stops drt route
to Midland where he attended a
night testitnonial dinner.
Tower is the Republican hiid
Blakley the Democratic candidate
in the May 27 run-off election to
succeed Lyndon Johnson.
Blakley set up a West Texas
tour beginning at San Angelo Fri
day morning. He will be the guest
at a noon barbecue, then move
on to Colorado City, Sweetwater,
Roscoe, Merkel and Abilene by
plane and bus. A 13-county rally
and dinner at Abilene will cap the
day.
Tower will speak at a Dallas
Jaycee luncheon Wednesday fol
lowed in the evening with a re
ception and TV speech. Thursday
the GOP candidate will record TV
and radio speeches. Friday he will
campaign in the Midland-Odessa
area, and in the Abilene-El Paso
region Saturday.
Absentee voting in the election
began Monday. It conti hues,
through May 23. -At Austin,'^Coun
ty Clerk Emilie Lemberg reported
an unusually heavy turn-out for a
special election.
In Freeport Tuesday night Blak
ley said he was gratified by the
Senate Armed Services Committee
action which added $525 million
to military procurement authoriza
tion for purchase of manned air
craft for the Strategic Air Com
mand.
He said this would permit the
Air Force to buy either B52 or B58
bombers provided subsequent ap
propriations are made.
In Houston, he said, “I think
we should blockade Cuba — make
it a total blockade if necessary.
“We should furnish assistance to
all of our Latin American neigfi-?
hors to keep foseign ideologists
from penetrating the Western
world.”, |
He said he favors the adminis
tration’s proposal for $600 million
in foreign aid to Latin American
countries.
(Continued From Page 1)
pare to graduate during the next
15 years?
What shall be the mission of the
college and its components in the
world of tomorrow?
What reasonable aspirations to
academic excellence, scholarship
and professional prepartion shall
the faculty and staff be guided by
in the fulfillment of assignments in
research, instruction and extension
education ? i
What shall be the i anticipated
scope size of the college by its
100th birthday in 1976?
Hunt said the findings and rec-
omendations from these areas will
be known as A&M’s ^ “Blueprint
for Progress” Developnient Plan.
Another coion ul natural wonder:
The "Mittef> ,, 0 Monomer^ Valley, Utaft ■
You'Re a
NATURAL
■
/
Gulfpride, Esso, Havoline,
Sinclair Oils 29c Qt.
RC Champion Sparkplugs....29c
Discount Auto Parts
AT JOE FAULK’S
214 N. Bryan
SAE 30 Motor Oil 18c Qt.
SOSOLIKS
T. V., Radio, Phono., Car Radio
Transistor Radio Service
713 S. Main TA 2-1941
^JJ^otard5 (dapeL
eria
Where the Art of
Cooking is not Lost
Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules, & Etc
5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG
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