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Page 2 THE BATTALI-ON Thursday, March 18,1954 The Battalion Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Traditions Soldier, Statesman, Knightly' GeritlemanThe Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechan- ical College of Texas, is published by students four times a week, during the regular school year. During the summer terms, and examination and vacation periods, The Battalion is published twice a week. Days of publications are Tuesday through Friday for the regular school year, and Tuesday and Thursday during examination and vacation periods and the summer terms. Subscription rates $9.00 per year pr $ .75 per month. Advertising rates furnished on request, ' Hntered as second-class matter at Post Office at College Station, Texas under the Act of Con- gress of March 3, 1870. Member of The Associated Press Represented nationally by National Advertising Services, Inc., at New York City, Chicago, E,o* Angeles, and San i Fran- cisco. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republi- cation of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rightfi of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. News contributions may be made by telephone (4-5444 or 4-7604) ol at the editorial office room, 202 Goodwin Hall. Classified ads may be placed by telephone (4-5324) or at the Student Activities Office, Room 209 Goodwin Hall. n*u; ............................. ................................ -.................v-....... : -------- v ~ _______ ............... Acting Editor Whats Cooking THURSDAY 7 p.m.Runnels county home- town club meeting, room 106, Aca- demic building. 7:15 p.m. Falls county A&M club meeting, room 126, Academic building. Pasadena hometown club meet- ing, room 305, Goodwin hall. Bosque county club meeting, room 3B, MSC. ....... San Antonio club meeting, room 301, Goodwin hall. Final plans for Easter party and club picture. El Paso A&M club meeting, Aca- demic building. Corpus Christ! hometown meet- ing, MSC (not Academic building). All members a^sked to attend. Pecan Valley hometown club meeting, bulletin board in Academ- ic building. Plans for consolidation with Coleman county club. Tyler-Smith county hometown club meeting, room 2C, MSC. Cof- fee and cookies will be served. 7:30-Brazoria county club meet- ing, room 208, Academic building. Business meeting concerning the date for picture to be made for the annual. Milam county hometown club meeting, cabinet room YMCA. Palestine chib meeting, 4th floor, Academic building. To dis- cuss Easter party. East Texas A&M club meeting, room 227, Academic building. Preparation for high school d;^y. Orange hometown club meeting, room 301, Goodwin hall. Texarkaifa FohiSStat'cs "c l u b meeting, r o o m 224, Acadeniic building. Picture: for the Aggie- land will be discussed. Caldwell county club meeting, room 3D, MSC. Beaumont A&M club meeting, room 104, Academic building. Se- lection for representative to Cotton Ball. FRIDAY 7:15 p.m.Brazos Flyers Flying club meeting, projection room of New Engineering building. Movie Will be Shown. Everyone inter- ested in flying is invited to attend. 7:30 p.m.Loving county A&M club meeting, telephone booth-MSC. Picture for annual. Lyall Visits a/ Consolidated Music Classes Dr«, Jack Lyall, professor of music education at Teachers College, Columbia University and consultant for Silver Burdett company is spending Wednesday and Thursday working with teachers of music at* the' A&M Consolidated school. He is., accompanied by Yates Dickinson, a Solver Burdett re- presentative. Wednesday, Dr. Lyall gave demonstrations of teaching mu£ic in the elementary grades, and dis- cussed in elementary, faculty meet- ing the public school music pro- gram. Thursday he directed the 600 elementary pupils briefly singing at Guion hall, where they spent the morning seeing Peter Panand the Bear Countyand hearing organ imisic by Mrs. J. B- Baty and J>;ivi,d Mitchell, i luitei' of CHS Sportlight alter he Jemonikratecl te;^'bi4ig^ A - a ,! .. .. a sixth "grade 'Tftttisic <• laKa^yancP dii cea tir .■Icmentitryghdrus :mu J •?* d the hi git"'school chords at Lincoln (Continued iaknaiTage I) school. New Mexico Shivers Under New Cold Wave ALBUQUERQUE, March 18 t: Gales, of cold air, snow flurries and icy r&ins blew into New Mexico late behind a savage dust storm. Temperatures tumbled 15 to 20 degrees .■ ers End Week By Defeating Allen By CLIFTON BATES CHS Sports Writer The A&M Consolidated Tigers completed the first week of the 1954 baseball season last Friday by downing Allen high school, 2-0. Consolidated edged the Sealy Tigers 4-3 in their season opener earlier in the week. The Tigers clash with Sealy today in Sealy while playing host to Huntsville Hornets tomorrow. In the contest with Sealy, both clubs got four hits as J. B. Carroll, Bobby Carter, Manuel Garcia and William Arnold collected one each for CHS. Pete Hickman started on the mound for the winners, to be relieved by Pinky Cooner in the fourth inning. The visitors picked up a single run jm the first half of the second inning. Consolidated came back quickly in the last half of the inning to pick up four runs. Sealy closed the.gap to 4-3 in the third inning as they pushed across two, runs on a double, a single, and'two Tiger errors. Hickman pitched the first five innings against Allen, being re- lieved by Cooner. Each team picked up five hits. Melvin Free, the Tiger catcher, was the big gun for CHS at the plate as he hit for two sipgles and scored the only two runs. Arnold tapped two singles while Bonnen picked up the other one. .< Tennis Starts Workouts Coach Horace Schafers tennis hopefuls began working out re- cently. Boys reporting in the senior high division were Fred Ander- son, Bobby Jackson, Roland Beasley, Bubba Engelbrecht, and Robert Cleland. Girls reporting were Betsy Burchard, Penny Laverty, Janice Latimer, Sandra Couch, Helen Holmes, Eugenia Rush, and Jo Anne Walker. Junior high school boys reporting were Don Avera, Richard Allen, and Jerry Mills. Tlfe tennis team corqpeted in the Alvin Tournament last week. In the boys singles, Beasley lost to E. M. Huitt of Alvin in the quarter finals aifd Englebrecht was defeated by Jerry Dolmick of Lamar-Rosenberg in the quarter finals. In boys doubles, Anderson and Jackson downed Graylee and Bob Traylor of Lamar-Rosenberg in the semi-finals. In Jhc finals;, they lost to Billy Rpye and Roy Powell of Alvin. Sandra Couch defeated Judy Cox of Bay City in the first round play of the girls singles. In the semi-finals, she lost to Charlotte Landott of Webster. Betsy Burchard was downed by Jarrett Vogan of Alvin in the first round play. Vogan won the girls singles cham- pionship. Penny Laverty and Janice Latimer were defeated by tour- nament champions Lynda Ryan Jnd Fayrene Wilson in the first round. In the girls singles junior division, Helen Holmes won over Sue Brimer of Alvin in the fitst found. In the finals Holmes lost to Barbara Woodard of Alvin! Schools competing in the tournament were Alvin, CHS, Lamar- Rosenberg, El Campo, Bay City, Webster, and Sugarland The Consolidated tennis team took a meet with Navasota last weekend in College Station, 7-0. In boys singles, Anderson downed Ivon Lee, 6-2, 6-0; and Beasley won over Eddie Martin, 6-1,; 6-0. In boys doubles, Englebrecht and Jackson defeated Fred Lplimeycr and Billy Webb, 6-1, 6-2. Bets^ Burchard downed Ja|vie Mitchell 6-3, 6-0, in girls singles Also in_girls singles, Helen Holipes defeated Carol Jo Bindley 6-1, 6-0 In girls doubles, Penny Laverty and Sandra Couch defeated Janie Mit- chell and Harris 8-6, 7-5. j •■'The Consolidated boys will compete in the Central Texas Tour- namept jn Austin tomorrow and Saturday. Dont Miss Our Special Treat FRIDAY, MARCH 19th Thick Malts & Shakes .... only 15c OR TWO FOR 25ca, Try our delicious . . . HAMBURGERS with a thick Malt or Shake for a really fine meal ' DAIRY KREAM Hiway G So. Skyway Corner suits of name-calling so they can get ahead with something good for the country. He said he, believed with all his being that its serious when things occur to upset Con- gress1 and Separate it from the ex- ecutive branch. As for believing Stevens, the President said and repeatedthat of Course he does. - And as for all these embroil- ments,as a newsman put it, hurt- ing armed service morale, Ei- senhower said that while he hasnt made a specific check he would suspect that inside their hearts a lot of people are hurt. Now justified criticism, said the President, is another thing. He said hed read in the paper about a geneial presumably he meant reports abput Maj. Gen. Roderick Allen then at Ft. f)ix., N. J. who built a dog house with federal funds. Well, snapped Ei- senhower amid laughter, he ought to live in it. A House Appropriations sub- goniuliftee reported last week Al- len had a dog run, fence and ken- nel built at a cost of $1,200. Officers Get Four Of Five Escap ees MIDLAND, March 17GP)--Of- ficers counted four down and one to go yesterday in their roundup of five who broke out of the How- ard County jail at Big Spring. Still at liberty was David Leach, serving five years for forgery. Thomas Taylor, who said he led the way out rof the jail Tuesday, was nabbed here today at home with his bride. Captured earlier were John Springer, Randall Hendricks and Jack Thompson. LWV To Continue Possible Revision WACO, March 18(A5) The Texas League of Women Voters will consider possible improve- ments in state election laws and changes in the state Constitution at its convention in Galveston March 30 - April 1. Mrs. L. K. Richards of Waco, president, said yesterday about 300 delegates will vote on a pro- posed two-year work program on those subjects. Duval Auditor Resigns Yesterday SAN DIEGO, March 18(TP)Duval County Auditor C. T. Stan- sell quit his job yesterday but gave no reason. County commissioners had pre- pared to meet to consider a re- quest for an independent audit of refords in all county offices. The Duval County Clean Gov- ernment League had made the re- quest in a petition March 8. County and school district re- cords have been under investiga- tion by federal and state authori- ties for more than a year. Ease bail n at A&M Consolidated High School began practice for the 1954 Base- ball season as eighteen hopefuls turned out to gain themselves a position on the Tiger baseball team. Pinkey Cooner, Pete Hickman, Manuel Garcia, Bobby Potts, and Michael McGuire are reporting for the position of pitcher, Catchers are Melvin Free, Jack McNeely, and Jimmy Simpson. The infielders who turned out are Norman Floeck, David Bonnen, William Arnold, J. B. Carroll, and David Smyth. Outfielders are Bob- by Carter, Dick Hickman, Jay Page, Roy Courim, and Jimmy Bond. The Tigers will compete in Dis- trict 50-A. The district is compris- ed of Tomball, Cypress-Fairbanks, and CHS. The Tigers will begin district play on Apidl 13 when they me»t the Tomball Cougars at home. District competition is set up on a triple-rqund basis Workouts r'TTQ with each team meeting the other teams three times each. CHS will meet the. Sealy Tigers Tuesday at home and Allen High School in Bryan, Friday. Coach Bevens gave possible starters as Melvin Free, catcher, Pinky Coon- er, Pete Hickman, or Manuel Garcia, pitcher, Bobby Carter, first baseman, David Bonnen, sec- ond baseman, William Arnold, third baseman, and, J. B. Carroll, short- stop. Outfielders are Jimmy Bond, Jack McNeely and Manuel Gai-cia. The Tigers finished second be- hind Round-Top-Carmine in the West Zone competition-'bf District 66-B last year. This saihe team Was defeated by St. Thomas of Houston in a two out of three series .for the Area Four Championship in Ameri- can Legion Baseball. In 1952 the United States pro- duced about 55 per cei^t .of the oil in the free world. j-; A -------------------------------------- j---------- ;^ Compared to the great cities of the ancient world, the cities of Europe in the Middle Ages were small. : . ■v«wvvi3&5yfS&vCv#}'« HOWD YOU LIKE TO... earn $5000 a year ANO be an t officer ' t. A in f'iie U.S. air fore©? Lt. John M. Gaskins ' Aviation C a cl c t Selection'.' Team No. 20d are, comingr'to Texas A&M to show you hpw. Theyll; be here 29, 30, 31 March and 1 April. Meet them at the MSC dur- ing their stay. ■amm V v * i*'S GROCERIES ^ N. B. C.CHOCOLATE Grahams.................. P^g;* 27c 303 CANSLIBBYS Pears..................... 2 cans 55c 303 CANS—LIBBYS Peach Halves . . 46 OZ.TEA GARDEN Apple Juice . . . NO. 2 CANS TEX SUN Grapefruit Juice Crisco.............. ... 2 cans 43c . . can 37c 2 CANS . . . . 25c . 3 lbs. 79c ^ FROZEN FOODS ^ PICTSWEET Orange Juice o I PICTSWEET 2 cans 25c Cut Corn ...... pk« PICTSWEET M ixed Vegetables PICTSWEET Ford Hook Limas Pk! 303 CANS—LIBBYSWHITE CREAM STYLE Corn...................... 2 cans 39c NO. 2 CANSDIAMOND—TURNIP or Mustard Greens . . can 10c 303 CANS—MOON ROSE Whole Beans . NO. 2 CANSDEL MONTE Crushed Pineapple 7/2 OZ. CANSHUNTS Tomato Sauce 2 cans 45c CANS 51c 2 cans 15c 2 cans 35c NO. 2 CANS—VAN CAMPS Pork & Beans . . 303 CANS HAPPY HOST 2 CANS Sweet Midget Peas . . . 33c STAR K 1STBLUE LABEL Solid Pack Tuna . can 41c ; ^ ; MARKET ^ ,, I) EC K EliSTA LL KORN Sliced Bacon .... Ih. 65c WISCONSIN DAISEY . Cheese................................ ,11k5|c HORMELSDAHiY BRAND Wieners . ,Ib,45e Loin Steak........................... Hr69c Porter House Steak, lb. 59c SQUARE CUT Shoulder Roast . . . lb. 55c ^ PRODUCE ^ . YELLOW SKIN Onions ...... 3 lbs. I-Oc RUBY RED Grapefruit.................. each 6c NO. 1IDAHO RUSSETT V Potatoes ..... 10 lbs. 39c CRISP, CALIFORNIA . Celery .... stalk 13c Specials for Thurs. Afternoon, Fri. & Sat. - March 18-19-20 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT ALL SALES Charlie's Food Market 1 - North Gate WE DELIVER College Station LIL ABNER About 200 recognized. breeds of dogs are AUSTIN \.. san mmmo / / AH NEEDS A DOLLAHi WORTH O'GAS, T'GIT T' DOGPATCH, T' SHOOT MAH PAPPY- e>LlT, AH IS BROKE. GOT ^ ANY* , THING < WORTH A DOLLAR? JUST -AND THEN, THE CAR IS MINE SOLD,7. HERE WE ARE ARE YOU R.E4LLY GONNA SHOOT YOUR PAPPY° line By A1 Capp Y-YASSUH.'-y BETTER ME. THAN SOMEONE WHO DOESN'T LOVE HIM m SHREVEPORT for infmwatim or r&servsgtims sell 4-1129 P O G O By Walt Kelly NOW, NOW, ftfo/ff VOU ISN'T eor A y MlSSlNPCC^STgf? mArts The way IT COES y&cs A/NTGOrAfO M/mN' rMg&tf \L NA? 60 f IT/ DOH Y m\ X? TOUCH NOTHIN'., PO<bO.../&£P PUPDOG /Mat'S ITS CLEAR? NOW. IT 1 At I'T tub ocoeeTgp what's I MY 0£AIN TUB AN5W&£*.*

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  • Page 2 THE BATTALI-ON Thursday, March 18,1954

    The BattalionLawrence Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Traditions

    “Soldier, Statesman, Knightly' Geritleman”

    The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, is published by students four times a week, during the regular school year. During the summer terms, and examination and vacation periods, The Battalion is published twice a week. Days of publications are Tuesday through Friday for the regular school year, and Tuesday and Thursday during examination and vacation periods and the summer terms. Subscription rates $9.00 per year pr $ .75 per month. Advertising rates furnished on request, '

    Hntered as second-class matter at Post Office at College Station, Texas under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1870.

    Member ofThe Associated Press

    Represented nationally by National Advertising Services, Inc., at New York City, Chicago, E,o* Angeles, and San i Francisco.

    The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rightfi of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved.

    News contributions may be made by telephone (4-5444 or 4-7604) ol at the editorial office room, 202 Goodwin Hall. Classified ads may be placed by telephone (4-5324) or at the Student Activities Office, Room 209 Goodwin Hall.n*u; ............................. ................................-.................v-....... : -------- v ~ _______ ............... Acting Editor

    What’s CookingTHURSDAY

    7 p.m.—Runnel’s county hometown club meeting, room 106, Academic building.

    7:15 p.m. — Falls county A&M club meeting, room 126, Academic building.

    Pasadena hometown club meeting, room 305, Goodwin hall.

    Bosque county club meeting, room 3B, MSC. .......

    San Antonio club meeting, room 301, Goodwin hall. Final plans for Easter party and club picture.

    El Paso A&M club meeting, Academic building.

    Corpus Christ! hometown meeting, MSC (not Academic building). All members a^sked to attend.

    Pecan Valley hometown club meeting, bulletin board in Academic building. Plans for consolidation with Coleman county club.

    Tyler-Smith county hometown club meeting, room 2C, MSC. Coffee and cookies will be served.

    7:30-—Brazoria county club meeting, room 208, Academic building. Business meeting concerning the date for picture to be made for the annual.

    Milam county hometown club meeting, cabinet room YMCA.

    Palestine chib meeting, 4th floor, Academic building. To discuss Easter party.

    East Texas A&M club meeting, room 227, Academic building. Preparation for high school d;^y.

    Orange hometown club meeting, room 301, Goodwin hall.

    Texarkaifa FohiSStat'cs "c l u b meeting, r o o m 224, Acadeniic building. Picture: for the Aggie- land will be discussed.

    Caldwell county club meeting, room 3D, MSC.

    Beaumont A&M club meeting, room 104, Academic building. Selection for representative to Cotton Ball.

    FRIDAY7:15 p.m.—Brazos Flyers Flying

    club meeting, projection room of New Engineering building. Movie

    Will be Shown. Everyone interested in flying is invited to attend.

    7:30 p.m.—Loving county A&M club meeting, telephone booth-— MSC. Picture for annual.

    Lyall Visitsa/

    Consolidated Music Classes

    Dr«, Jack Lyall, professor of music education at Teachers College, Columbia University and consultant for Silver Burdett company is spending Wednesday and Thursday working with teachers of music at* the' A&M Consolidated school.

    He is., accompanied by Yates Dickinson, a Solver Burdett representative.

    Wednesday, Dr. Lyall gave demonstrations of teaching mu£ic in the elementary grades, and discussed in elementary, faculty meeting the public school music program.

    Thursday he directed the 600 elementary pupils briefly singing at Guion hall, where they spent the morning seeing “Peter Pan” and the “Bear County” and hearing organ imisic by Mrs. J. B- Baty and J>;ivi,d Mitchell, i luitei' ■ ■ ■of

    CHS Sportlight

    alter he Jemonikratecl te;^'bi4ig^ A - a ,!.. .. a sixth "grade 'Tftttisic