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About The Daily Bulletin/Reveille. (College Station, Tex.) 1916-1938 | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1919)
X RS He fe le fe de ae Bl se ole de ale dle fe of Se oh He she \7 pt il i J OFFICIAL NOTICES wad Ye We Ye We de Ye Ye Ht BE RE PE ve RE ne ne We ote ale de Se ole Sh He ale He x | The following students who were | absent on the date specified below | come under the following paragraphs | of the class absence rule: Wednesday, April 9, 1919. A—T. A. Cheeves, M. W. Merchant, Geo. Millard, R. R. Steger. B—C. C. ‘Clark. C. H. MULLER, Colonel Inf. U.*S. A. 07 ¥, He He Pe DR. FOUNTAIN WILL DIRECT LIBERTY LOAN CAMPAIGN ON CAMPUS i | At a meeting of the executive com- mittee of Brazos county for the fifth | or Liberty Loan drive, which will be | launched April 21,, Dr. C. P. Fountain was named chairman for the College. Another meeting will be held Friday when the quota for the various com- munities in Brazos coanuy will be de- termined. A meeting of the Commun- ity Council will be held Sunday after- noon, April 20, as a preliminary to the campaign at College, and it is ex- pected the quota’ here will be sub- scribed as promptly as were the quotas in the four previous drives. AANA EE DANCES WILL BE GIVEN APRIL 24, 25 AND 26 . Campus residents are informed that the dances which are expected to draw a number of visitors to College, and whom the Campus residents are re- quested to entertain, will be given on Thursday, Friday and Saturday eve- nings, April 24, 25 and 26. Dr. Mor- gan is very anxious that any family that can care for one or more young women on those days, inform him at once, phone No. 60, so that the Com- mittee on Student Activities, can make necessary arrangements. He says it is very important that the College people co-operate in the matter. Sr ~r— SE Southwestern University will ob- serve May day this year with an elab- orate victory pageant. The May day celebration is an annual affair at Southwestern, being mainly a day of reunion for all friends and former stu- dents of the institution. The celebra- tion this year will be on an especially large scale. Me ‘A new church building for Texas Christian "University and the people of the community is virtually assured. As the name indicates the school is suported by the Christian churches of the state. : 1 CALENDAR FOR THE WEEK FRIDAY, APRIL 11. Monthly Meeting, Campus Wo- ens’ Social Club, Y.M.C.A., 1:00 p.m. Concert, Baylor College Glee €lub, Airdome, 8:30 p. m. SATURDAY, APRIL 12. Intra-mural Troek Meet, Kyle Field, 3:00 p Motion Plooaris, Airdome, 8:00 p. m. Corps Dance, New Mess Hall, 8:30 D.T. SUNDAY APRIL 13. | Campus Bible School, Airdome, 10:30 a. m. Mass, 28 C. E. Building, 9:30 a.m...’ Chapel Services, Airdome, 11:45 a. m, Y.M.C.A. Service, Y Chapel, 7:30 p. m. MONDAY, APRIL 14. Economies Seminar, “The Russian | Problem’, Prof. J. F. McDonald, | Economics Office, 8:30 p. m. TUESDAY, APRIL 15. Students Forum, Y Chapel 7:30 p. m. CLARKSON RETURNS WOUND AND SERVICE STRIPES W.F . Clarkson, a student of the Col- lege in Joe just discharged from the army following more than a year’s service in France when he saw some of the fiercest fighting and was himself twice wounded, was on the Campus yesterday visiting friends. ‘Clarkson was with the signal corps of the 5th division. He volunteered in December 1917 when the call came for 50 men from College to enter the signal corps for immediate overseas duty. He spent a very short time in training at Fort Sam Houston and reached France in the early part of 1918. He was in the Chateau Thierry engage- ment and the St. Mihiel drive, and later in the Argonne offensive. first wound was from shrapnel slash- ing the side of his neck and cutting into the jugular vein. Fortunately medical corps men got to him immed- lately and put a clamp on the vein in such a way as to prevent loss of biood. Later in the year he-was se- verely gassed. He bears two wound strives and two gold service stripes. . Mr. Clakson stopped off on his way from Fort Worth, where he was dis- charged, to his home near Corpus Christi. He may return: here to take up his school work in a short while. rey " WANTED-—Boy to wash Apply at residence of Dr. rancis. WITH Mark i ~im— Get Seratch Pads at the Print Shop JEWISH RELIEF DRIVE IS UNDER WAY i: ¢ Organization of the forces for the Jewish Relief Drive at College have been perfected and the campaign is now under way, Dr. C. P. Fountain, chairman, announced yesterday. Pres- ident Bizzell authorized the statement that he hoped the College would meet this drive as generously and promptly as it has done every other patriotic drive that has been made at College during the past two years. The Math- ematics Department yesterday over- subseribed its quota in 20 minutes. DIRECTORS ATTEND BALL GAME AND RECEPTION Five members of the board of di- rectors of the College remained over from the business session held here | Tuesday for the baseball game in the | afternoon with T.C.U., and for an in-. His |! windows. | formal reception which was given in their honor in the evening by Presi- dent and Mrs. Bizzell, the members of the Faculty being invited to meet the directors on this occasion. SHORT ORDER SERVICE AT THE SHIRLEY Eat as Much or as Little as You Like... We Also Serve a CLUB SPECIAL LUNCH AT 40 Cents Rooms Furnished Complete, With Bath $14 per Month— Without Bath $12 9..9..9.9.0 0.6.9.0.9.0.0.0.90.0.9.9 099.9 9.00 00.0 0.0 0.0 0 DD 6 0 6 0 0 0G 08 000 SOE eee 60 6c oes oo 9.9 9 90 0 2.0 0.0.9.0 .0.9.99.9.9.9.0.9.9 9.9.0 .0.0.¢.9 0.0.0 0 @ D6 6 00 0G 6 6 6 eee Los 006 be ees ee aes 0 0 of 2. 0) CJ © oie. oYe D0. 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