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About The Daily Bulletin/Reveille. (College Station, Tex.) 1916-1938 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1919)
red by those CA movement te see the number increas- NAA A i FY A CAN AN A I \ wind | THEDAILYBULLETIN Vol 3. College Station, Sunday, December 7, 1919 No. 70 PLAN CLUB FOR GOOD SCHOLARS Plans are under way for the or- ganization of a Scholarship Club in A. and M. College, President W. B. Bizzell announced yesterday, has issued the following statement regarding the project: “It has been customary heretofore to take all students whose grades at the end of each session are “B” or higher as “Distinguished Students.” For the purpose of encouraging stu- dents to attain this rank it is contem- plated that a Scholarship Club wiil be organized and all students who have made no grade below “B” for the first term will be eligible for membership in the Club. New mem- bers will be admitted at the begin- ning of every new term and reorgani- . zation will be effected on the basis of this standard.” There has been a steady increase in the number of students who have been “Distinguished” in recent years at A. and M. College and it is de- interested in the ed further through this club. ———————————— WOMAN LECTURER MONDAY EVENING Miss Dorothy M. Sells of Austin, Texas, who is in charge of The De- partment of Industrial Education un- der the Smith-Hughes Act will lee- ture on the subject of “Women in Industry,” in the Y.M.C.A. Chapel Monday evening at 7 o’clock. Miss Selis is an expert in this line of work and possesses quite a fund of information about Texas industry, especially as concerns women. Prof. M. L. Hayes, head of the Depart- ment of Vocational Education has invited Miss Sells here as an especial benefit for the students of Voca- tional Education, but he extends an invitation to the campus people, the Bryan people and the students of the College in general to hear Miss Sells on this subject. who HOLIDAYS OPEN ON DECEMBER 20 Christmas holidays at A. and M. College will start at noon on Satux- day, December 20, President W. B. Bizzell “announced yesterday, and recitations will be resumed Monday morning, January 5 at 8 o’clock. Efforts are being made by College authorities to obtain special traine to ke operated on Saturday afternoocn, Dec. 20, as follows: northbound leav- ing college at 12:15; southbound leav- ing College at 1 o'clock. Definite announcement regarding the special trains will be made in the near fu- Lure. Dr. Bizzell stated that it was the expectation of the College author- ities that every student continue his work right up to the hour of dismis- sal. “The faculty has been very gener- ous with students in the matter of holidays this year and considerab'e time has been lost thereby,” Presi- dent Bizzell said, “and it is naturally supposed that students will cooper- ate with the faculty in making the best of every hour from now un- til the holiday season actually be- gins.” SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR MEETING The Social Sicence Seminar will meet in Y.M.C.A. Chapel Monday evening at 7:30, at which meeting Prof. E. R. Alexander will discuss the subject, “The Growth of the Ex- ecutive Power at the Expense of the Legislature.” All Campus residents and others of the College staff who are interested are invited to be present. Secbecfecdeadradrafuafunducdrchicfecdeodesdocdesdsadeafrafraindundunducdects ENROLLMENT AT A. AND M. COLLEGE UP TO NOON YESTERDAY B70 docdordecdodonfontosdecochoadofeodorfordesdafodordergecfocdedesfeforde AGGIE-OWL, GAME SET FOR NOV. 15 Much interest was manifested at College yesterday when it was officially announced that atnletic relations between A. and M. College and Rice Institute had been resumed, and that the Aggies and Owls would meet at Kyle Field on November 15, 1920, which is just ten days before the next contest between the Farm- ers and Longhorns. Agreement to this effect was reached at a conference at the Rice Hotel in Houston Thursday night be- tween officials of the two schools. Drs. J. O. Morgan, A. C. Love and W. J. Young represented A. and M. According to Dr.® Morgan, who gave out the announcement, the agreement reached was perfectly sat- isfactory to all parties concerned, and proves a happy solution to the slight misunderstanding last year which resulted in severance of rela- tions between the two schools. —_— RESERVES CLAIM SCORE ON AGGIES Here’s a story which is calculated to bring joy to the hearts of stu- dents and admirers of the University of Texas and the several other schools whose football teams met de- feat at the hands of the Texas Ag- gies this year: The Aggie goal-line WAS crossed during the last season. This is how it happened: While the Farmer fans were still celebrat- ing their un-scored on, Southwest Conference-State Championship rec- ord, John C. Moore of Matador, Texas, stepped up and reminded them that the Aggies had been scored on. It was the first scrimmage of the season; Moore who was a member of the Aggie Reserves intercepted a forward pass from the speedy Hig- ginbotham and raced sixty yards down the field for a touchdown. The feat passed unnoticed at the time, but proved to be the only time dur-