Bill Altman ’65 College Master Representative Fidelity Union Life 846-8228 Expecting? Everything for the expect ing: mother- dresses-sports- wear lingerie— All moderately priced. Joyce's 608 S. College TA 2-2864 Page 4 College Station, Texas Wednesday, October 27, 1965 HEAR, HERE! ALL NEW FROM sop*"y; Model 102 Tape Recorders BRYAN RADIO & TV SERVICE, INC. 1301 S. College Ave. SUPERSCOPE SCANDIA $500 ALSO $250 TO 1975 WEDDING RING 24.75 OR PlRFORMAHCf Df/f ^ Good Housekeeping"'* ^ GUARANTEES ^ CfM tNT OR REFUND TO ^ Rings enlarged to show detail. Trade-Mark Reg. Choose the matchless radiance of a Keepsake diamond, set in an exclusive ring style. SANKEY PARK Jewelers 111 N. Main Bryan ALAS rood Y&WCIC HE CODUO Have made IT -With CLIFF'S Notes Cliffs Holes HAMLET isn’t hard when you let Cliff’s Notes be your guide. Cliff’s Notes expertly summarize and explain the plot and characters of more than 125 major plays and novels- including Shakespeare’s works. Improve your understanding —and your grades. Call on Cliff’s Notes for help in any literature course. 125 Titles in all —among them these favorites: Hamlet • Macbeth • Scarlet Letter • Tale of Two Cities • Moby Dick • Return of the Native • The Odyssey • Julius Caesar • Crime and Punishment • The Iliad • Great Expectations • Huckleberry Finn • King Henry IV Part I • Wuthering Heights • King Lear • Pride and Prejudice • Lord Jim • Othello • Gulliver's Travels • Lord of $1 at your bookseller or write: THE BATTALION Aggie Jokes—Again And Again A Few Words Of Kindness For The Aggies By ED KIDD The Mexia Daily News (EDITOR’S NOTE: Mr. Kidd is a former employe of Texas A&M’s Agricultural Information service and once served as stu dent publications director here. The following article appeared in his column "The Village Idiot” in the Mexia Daily News as well as several other newspapers where his column is printed.) With autumn comes delights of the season: cooler weather; property tax notices from city, county, and school district; more clothes on girls; runny noses; football games; migrating geese- and the piece - de - resistance, new Aggie Jokes! Sometimes it seems the young men who are denizens of that cultural center in the Brazos bot toms don’t quite get the press they deserve. Sports writers seem to break out their sharpest knives after an Aggie defeat — and heaven knows that’s almost a constant condition! And those Aggie Jokes — no matter where, or who, or when, they crop up! We remember sitting up one night by the body of a late de parted Aggie, who for fifty-odd years had been the number one target of those jokes in his home town. Sure enough, before 11 p.m., some character had already broken out several Aggie Jokes, and the rest of the night was about as successful as such an occasion can ever be. Actually, Texans owe a great deal to Aggieland. If you took the Aggie out of Texas humor, about forty percent of the jokes in barber shops, drug stores, hardware emporiums, and dusty street corners would be gone. The jokes are usually short enough for any Texas-Ex to re member, which means they’re brief, man, brief! They’re simple enough for a Baylor or SMU or Rice or TCU man to master. They’re clean enough, generally, for most audi ences. And, in some instances, they’re pretty good. And Aggies, since they’re no toriously toucheous about their Alma Mater, always respond with such anguish and pain, that it’s more fun to needle one of them than it is to sass your wife, or snap back at the boss. It may not be safer, but it’s more fun. And the damage is usually not as lasting. One newspaperman several years ago pointed out that the intense feeling of Aggies is due to the fact, said he, that A&M is the only school in Texas that gives a four - year course in school spirit. No one appreciates Aggie Jokes any more than you do — unless it’s us. But, once in a while somebody, somewhere, sometime — who wasn’t an Aggie in any way ought to say a few kind words for the Aggies. So here they are: Many a very poor Texas boy went to A&M because it was the school that for many years was inexpensive enough—and offered enough work opportunities—for that young man to attend. May be that’s one reason that a lot of now successful Aggies look hack with nostalgia and fond ness, to the college that gave them their chance for a better deal in life. And no one tells Aggie Jokes at the entrance to the Memorial Student Center. All you have to do is start reading the names on the bronze plaque at the entrance — the long, long, long, tragic list of those young men who left A&M filled with the joy and excite ment of life, only to lose that life later on in Europe, or the Pacific Theater of war. And no one who knows the war record of A&M graduates, and who reflects on this tough, mean world — and the price that each generation of Americans pays just to live in it — can find much to joke about in that area. And the way the flag is car ried at A&M beats the way plac ards are waved at some institu tions. And one thing, at A&M, those cadets at least look bathed and shaved. Some of the weirdies one sees at other intellectual mills these days look very much like something left over. But one wonders why! And it’s right pleasant to hear: "Yes, Sir,” instead of "Well, Yo! Daddio” No, friend you’re wrong! We didn’t graduate from A&M. We finished up at a college where nobody particularly seemed to care. And you hear very few jokes about THAT institution! Reprinted With Special Permission From The San Angelo Standard-Times There was this fellow who wanted to buy a new brain. Why, the story doesn’t say, but he went to this cold storage vault where brains were sold. All the brains were displayed in small compartments. There were Harvard University brains, $250 per pound; University of California brains, $250 per pound; MIT brains, $250 per pound and Texas A&M brains, $5,000 per pound. The man was startled. He couldn’t understand why Texas A&M brains cost so much, so he asked the man who sold the brains. The seller replied: "Did you ever think how many Aggies it takes to get a pound of brains? Then there was this Aggie who went into a restaurant and ordered a pizza. "You want it cut in six or four pieces?” the shopkeeper asked. “I don’t know?” said the Ag gie, “Better make it four pieces I don’t think I could get six.” Those are just two ways to win University of Texas friends and make Aggie enemies fast. But for some reason jokesters just can’t resist the temptation to poke fun at the Aggies. A San Angelo advertising firm would like to change all this. The way to do this, says San- Tex Advertising is: “Tell a joke! About the University of Texas ... a public service to Texas Ag gies.” The billboard went up about a week ago, just for fun, says Bob Miller, manager of the firm and incidentally, a Texas Tech man. “We felt that Aggies always get the worst of the jokes,” Mill er said. “We’re trying to make a counter movement by urging people to tell a joke about the University of Texas.” Miller, however, admitted that he knows only one University of Texas joke. “And that’s not go ing to go in the paper.” And Miller’s found out that few people know University of Texas jokes. “Every time I ask someone if they have heard a good UT joke,” Miller said, “they say, 'No but have you heard the one about the Aggie . . This seems to be the way it is with most jokesters, even Ag gie humorists Glenn Warren and Glenn W. Lewis who seem to have a million of ’em. Neither knew a printable UT joke, but like attorney Lewis said, “I know a good Aggie one,” Lewis’ favorite is about an Aggie and a monkey who were sent up together in a rocket. “About every five or 10 min utes the monkey would call down to mission control and ask for instruction,” teasipper Lewis said. “Mission control would give it instruction to do this or that. “This went on four or five hours. Finally, the Aggies picked up the mike and called mission control, asking for instructions. There was a long pause on the other end, then a voice replied, ‘Feed the Monkey.’ ” Warren’s favorite takes place in a big company. “Everybody got 15-minute cof fee breaks, except the Aggies,” Warren said. “The Aggies pro tested about it, but the manage ment said, ‘We can’t let you have more than five minutes. If we do, it takes us the rest of the day to get you retrained.’ ” Johnny Bonner, president of the Tom Green County Aggie exes, claimed this sort of jok ing hurts A&M. “We talk to high school gradu ates every year,” said Bonner, “and the biggest thing they’re concerned about are the jokes.” But Miller’s campaign may go unappreciated by some Aggies. It seems some like the jokes. “They don’t shame me about their Aggie jokes,” said San An- geloan Alton McEver. “I think it’s wonderful. I think they'rt putting A&M in the spotlight I: doesn’t insult me at all. There's more prestige to it than any. thing else.” But whenever a UT man tells McEver an Aggie joke, doesn’t let him go away laughing at his own humorism. “I get back at them,” McEvet said. "I ask what those two fingers stand for. They say, ‘Hook ’em horns.’ I say, ‘No, that means number two in the confer, ence.’ ” And then some Aggies have another way of getting back at the “Teasippers.” “There’s two kinds of sorry outfits,” they say. “One that goes to the University of Texas and the other that tells Aggie jokes.” Ags Drink About 4,400 Gallon OfMilk Weekly AtDining Hall By ROBERT SOLOVEY Battalion Special Writer Ever wonder how many bottles of fresh milk it takes to supply 9.000 thirsty Aggies each week? The Aggie Creamery supplies the cafeteria and the mess halls with over 4,400 gallons of milk which includes approximately 54.000 half-pint bottles, said Thomas Arrington, head of pro cessing. “That’s about 18,000 bottles a day, because all of this milk is processed in only three days each week. Even at this rate the dairy is only operating at half of its 370 gallon-per-hour capaci ty,” Arrington said. The one part-time and five full-time men are responsible for seeing that the 650 gallons milk that comes in from Texas A&M’s own dairy farm each day standards of cleanliness quality. The milk that is served goes through five separate processes before it reaches your table. CUFrs MOTES. INC Betfcaiy Sutiei. Liacd*. Nebr 68505 BATTALION CLASSIFIED On* d *4 WANT AD RATES mj 44 per w per word each additional day Minimum charge—50* DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publication Claaaified Display 904 per column inch word each insertion FOR RENT venient Ideal for two student after 6 :00 p. m., 846-8433. con center. -6711: 221tfn Room for rent—day, week or month. 107 Sulphur Springs, C.S. 846-4417. 220t4 Room for rent—with or without meals. 406 E. 27th. 206tfn Call TA 3-8338 for beds, baby equipment, party goods, invalid needs, tools, garden A yard supplies. UNITED RENT-ALLS, 724 Villa Maria Rd. delivery service. 7 :30 a. m. to 6 :00 p. m., Mon. - Sat. I96tfn VICTORIAN APARTMENTS Midway between Bryan & A&M University 9 All General Electric built-ins 1 & 2 bedrooms with 1 or 1 Vi baths • Central heat & air • Large walk-in closets • Beautiful courtyard with swimming pool 9 Carpets & Drapes 0 carports & laundry facilities 0 Furnished or unfurnished 0 Resident manager. Apt. 1 401 Lake Phone 82S-203S 164tfn WORK WANTED Typing—Thesis experience. 823-8459. 218tfn Typing, 823-6410. LOST A Gold Charm Bracelet, Saturday Oct. 9 at the U of H Football game. 826.00 reward. A. P. Gandy, 3621 S. West Loop Fort Worth, Texas 76133. 220t4 Studies piling up? Pause. Have a Coke. Coca-Cola — with a lively lift and never too sweet, refreshes best. things PT) better,^ ^with CoKe Bottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company by: Bryan Coca-Cola Bottling Co. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE~TO~BIDDERS~ Sealed proposals addressed to the Honor able Mayor and City Council of College Station. Texas, will be received at the office of Ran Boswell, City Manager, until 3 p.m. November 6, 1966 for furnish! the following “addressing equipmen complete on training One new model 6341 Graphotype machi with light, to emboss Style BB and plates, type style 28, as specified or equal. FOR SALE HONDA 306 motorcycle late 1966. Call VI 6-8473 after 6:00 p. m. 221t4 NOTE TO GRADUATE STUDENTS >t, call us for details of the individual American familj ;red company propose; you accept or reject . . . C RUSH at VI 6-6800 daytime, or VI 6-6121 at night. 220tfn an individual American family can buy. Offered by Texas’ largest life insurance > high pressure: We merely Call for gh pressure: We NOTICE OF BID SALE Dump trucks, pick-up truck, stake bed truck, garbage truck, school bus - use as a camp, chairs, fire extinguishers, audi torium chairs, display cases, electric tools, student desk, minature locomotive, assorted brass plumbing fitting, lounge chairs, fans and many more items. aled bids ed tor of Purchasing and stores, fci<£ U Build ing, Asbury Street, until 10:00 A. M. October 29, 1966. This equipment may be inspected by contacting the Inventory Su pervisor at the above address. For in formation call VI 6-6122. The right is reserved to reject any and all bids and to waive any and all technicalities. 219t5 e Direc- and Stores, B&U Build- Gas range, good condition, $35.00. 846- 4798. 219t6 Almost new racing bike, 10 speeds, gold color. Call Joe Franklin after 3:30 p. m., 846-5694. 214tfn FOR SALE BY OWNER EXCELLENT INVESTMENT PROP ERTY—2 story, both apartments now rented, upstairs apt. is furnished. Buyer could reside upstairs and rent from down- J rs doIi le upstairs stairs would pay off note. Convenient to schools & A&M, 2 bedrooms, dining room, kitchen & living room (Upstairs & Down stairs), double garage with laundry room & space for storage. Comer lot & a half. Could add another apartment. 846-4814. INSTRUCTIONS LEARN TO READ FASTER—now form ing a class, call TA 2-4726 between 7 & 9 p. m. for a discussion of details. 218t3 mg ''addressing equip! site, including instruction and ining of designated personnel: One new model 1957 Addressograph machine, basic machine to include 60 position selector, last plate stop, five figure counter fifteen yard ribbon. In addition to basic machine to include three column lister set to write tax roll complete, six figure numbering attachment with date rra above, to be arranged for Style BB. and G plates, as specified or equal. > wi beri be arrange plates, as specific One new SB-30 cabinet complete with base top and drawers. Proposals will be publicly opened and read aloud in the Council Room of the City Hall at 3:16 p.m. on the same date. Any bid received after the above closing time will be returned unopened. City of College Station S/Ernest Langford, Mayor Attest: • S/K. A. Manning, City Secretary AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 ATTENTION January Graduates! Deadline For Ordering: Graduation Invitations Oct. 29 Orders Taken From 9-4 Monday - Friday, At the Cashiers Window Memorial Student Center HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN'S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th 822-2819 CHILD CARE Experienced child care, references avail able. 846-4798. 219tl8 Gregory’s Day Nursery—846-4005. 218tfn Child Care with experience. Call for information, 846-8161. 197tfn Child care experienced, 846-7960. 192tfn HUMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY. 3404 South College, State Licensed. Will be for football games. TA 2-4803, 99tfn open for football gan Virginia D. Jones. R. N. EMPLOYMENT NOTICE Designations as to sex in our Help Wanted and Employment Agency columns are made only (1) to indicate bona fide occupa tional qualifications for employment which an employer regards as reasonably neces sary to the normal operation of his business or enterprise, or (2) as a convenience to our readers to let them know which posi tions the advertiser believes would be of more interest to one sex than the other because of the work involved. Such desig nations shall not be taken to indicate that any advertiser intends or practices any un lawful preference, limitation, specification or discrimination in employment practices. HELP WANTED Assistant kitchen supervisor, cooks, waiters and waitresses. Full or part time work. Apply in person. Coach Norton's 219tfn Pancake House. Waitress Wanted: Apply in person at The Ramada Inn. 208tfn Part time help needed at Henry Brewer's Gulf Service Station across from court house in Bryan. 201tfn R.N. to work 3-11 p.m. and 11-7 a.m. and relief shift at Madison County Hos pital. Starting salary $350.00 and np. Meals provided; uniforms laundered. Con tact B. Tugger, R.N. at VI 6-6498 after 6 p.m. I87tfn For a pleasant glaze for ham, iilute canned whole cranberry- sauce with sherry. TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED & EXCHANGED Completely Guaranteed LOWEST PRICES 118 S. Bryan —Bryan— 822-6874 SPECIAL, Truck Load Prestone $1.49 A GALLON Limit Two BRYAN OIL WHSE. 805 N. College (Highway 6, N.) at 19th AUTO REPAIRS All Makes Just Say: “Charge It" Cade Motor Co. Ford Dealer DAMAGED and UNCLAIMED FREIGHT (New Merchandise) Furniture, Appliances, Bedding, Tables, etc. A little of everything. C & D SALVAGE E. 32nd & S. Tabor 822-0605 GIL'S RADIO & TV Sales: Curtis Mathis, Westinghouse Service: All makes and models, including color T. V. & multiplex F M 2403 S. College 822-0826 • Watch Repair • Jewelry Repair • Diamond Senior Rings • Senior Rings Refinished C. W. Varner & Sons Jewelers North Gate 846-5816 SPECIAL NOTICE SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300 A.F. & A.M. Called meeting Thursday. October 28, at 7:00 p. m. The Entered Apprentice Degree will be conferred. W. W. (Tex) Spurlock W.M Joe Woolket Secy. 222(2 WHITE Buy your toys and gifts from ...... AUTO SUPPLY, College Station. CASH OR LAY-A-WAY. 846-6626. Now Open—Belle'. Dining Hall—far style meal, served daily—noon 11:00 a. to 1:30 p. m., evening 6:00 p. m. - 1 m. Sunday dinner 12:00 - 2:00 p. p. m. Sunday Formerly Mis. 27th. BaJl’s Dining Room, Bi-City. Ink—Complete typing and print ing .ervie.. 1001 S. Collage. TA 2-1121. THE FACULTY & STAFF of Texas A&M University is invited to a DANCE Saturday, October 30 9:00 p. m. - 1:00 a. m. at the RAMADA INN BALLROOM $5.00 a Couple Sponsored by the ACADEMIC ROUNDTABLE Call 846-5573 after 4:00 p. m. for Reservations DEER LEASES Day deer hunting-—$10.00 and $15.00. ith Highway 6. H. S. 221U Fifteen miles south Smith Jr., 826-2406. SOSOLIKS T. V., Radio, Phono., Car Radio Transistor Radio Service 713 S. Main 822-1941 TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main 822-6000 Shock Absorbers Installed Most Cars $4.79 Outside house paint gal. _ $1.98 Latex interior paint gal — $2.59 Mufflers—Chevy, others many models $5.98 50 ft. plastic hose 99< Seat covers low as $3.98 full set. Original equip, seat belts _ $3.98 Brake shoes—most cars exchange $2.90 Oils — Quaker State, Pennzoil, Amalie, Valvoline, RPM, Royal Triton, Havoline. Enco, Uniflow, Mobil, Gulf, Sinclair, Conoco, Shell and others. All at real low prices. Rerefined oil Kty qt Auto trans. oil 29< Filters AC-Lee save 40% AC - Champion - Autolite plugs Tires — Low price every day — Just check our price with any other of equal quality. Your Friedrich Dealer Joe Faulk Auto Parts 220 E. 25th Bryan, Texas Joe Faulk ’32