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About The Daily Bulletin/Reveille. (College Station, Tex.) 1916-1938 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 1920)
eR Sa Wednesday, January 7, 1920 | A COUNCIL HOLDS EE 4 = = Ei OFFICIAL NOTICES = = - {FIRST MEETING | ; a foofoafoafoctoeloofoulsefocecfoofoafoaforfoct = C rr O % = i$ MEMORANDUM TO FEDERAL OF THIS YEAR © ® STUDENTS 3 Stein-Bloch Clothes : : J. M. Jones Tells of Plans of the Wool = Styleplus Clothes The following instructions relative Scouring Plant to be Installed |= Edwin Clapp Shoes ow discharge of duties, and to fur-| - Soon. |= Bostonian Shoes . lou hs, etc., are given for the bene- £ “BE fit y Federal Students: The Animal Industry Council held = BR CY - 4A. NN T BE XX AS | : its regular meeting in Room 20 of yuu 1. Absences from classes are auth- - orized only for sickness or on ac- count of absence from the campus on > j furlough. Students will be reported "absent by the instructor to the Com- mandant’ office. In the case of sickness, if the student lives on the 2 ~ campus his name must be on the sick . report as submitted by the surgeon. Sick call is held at the College Hospital at 7:20 a. m. In case of sickness on the part of students liv- ing off the campus, excuses properly ' 8 ~ endorsed by attending surgeon must be submitted to the Commandant’s office immediately after the student > returns to duty status. Students will receive notification of demerits assessed through Mr. Nash’s office. Explanations must be filed with the ~ Commandant within 48 hours after ~ receipt of notification. 2. Students can net drop courses ~ without first obtaining permission ~ from the Registrar. Classes must be _ attended until such consent is given. 3. Furloughs at such times as in- ~ terfere with college duties will not be allowed except in case of emer- ~ gencies. Application showing length of absence, place to be visited and ‘purpose of visit must be filed in the ~ Commandant’s o Students who absent themselveSh without permis- sion from the Commandant will be dropped from the institution. 4. First year students are allowed “ 125 demerits for each term. The © first term ends January 24th. Stu- dents receiving more than their ~ limit of demerits will be dismissed. | 5. Beginning with the second bs geterm, January 24th, students of this college not members of the R. 0.T.C. will discontinue the wearing 3 of the uniform. 6. The Commandant’s office is in he 100, Main or Academic Build- § 3 ing. He will be glad to advise with students over their problems. IKE ASHBURN, Commandant. —— ete eee ABSENT STUDENTS < ~ {Official Notice from the Office of [ke &£ Ashburn, Cogimandant). ~The following students who were absent on the date specified below. ~ come under the following paragraphs of the absence rule: January 5, 1920. (a) Bate, I.; Dunn, H. January 6, 1920. (a) Bate, I.; Cox, W. H. be “Herd, H. G. (b) ~ Paris—Austria must have help § from the allies at once in order to ~ save her from famine and bank- _ tuptcy, Dr. Karl Renner, Austrian | Chancellor, told the Associated Press. ~ Children were dying of hunger in | Vienna, when he left, he said, and % Le per cent of those between 9 e 3 months and ‘3 years of age are suf- from rickets. the Agricultural Building yesterday | evening. J. M. Jones Head of the Division] of Animal Industry made the chief | Fifteen thousand dollars” was appro- priated at the last legisiature for this plant. ment Station building. Wool the work will be demonstrated. Mr. Jones discussed the work thor- this country. John C. Burns head a paper on Livestock. He reviewed | today and presented the past few years. W. L. Stangel, Associate Professor ing the horse. Animal Husbandry discussed the very current topic of hogs, dwelling con- siderably on the future of hog prices. There was a majority attendance of members of the council and Secretary Stangel expressed himself as very much gratified because of the increas- ing number of students that are at- tending. a ~— CITIZENSHIP EDUCATION AN IMPORTANT FUNCTION ga lly Princeton, N. J.—In an address prepared to be delivered before 50,- 000 school heads in the United States, Professor R. M. McElroy, who has just returned from China, where he held an exchange professorship for the purpose of explaining our constitution to the world’s largest republic, says: “We are privileged to live in the day of the masses, and the educators must be the new trib- une: of the people.” “Of all the great problems which confront free nations, the greatest is the problem of devising a system of education which will keep us free asd yet make us efficient,” says Professor McElroy. “I do not hesi- 5 i kA % x d x kX KX yf - < for | scouring will be received from the | sheep raisers of this country and thus | E. M. Regenbrecht, Instructor in| talk of the evening on the Wool Scour- | ling Plant to be installed here soon. Machinery has been . ordered | and as soon as it arrives will be in- stalled in the basement of the Experi- | | PHOTOGRAPHY Ask me to make Enlargements from your Kodak Films. CHAS. SOSOLIK Research Administration Building. Phone 70 | tate to say that in the hands of oi] oughly making lengthy reference to| caters of America ultimately resis the need and value of such a plant 10 | t,o fate of that process to which we ‘have reverently and unselfishly de- | | | of the De-| ited ourselves, the process of mak- partment of Animal Husbandry read | ing the world safe for democracy. | If we are bold, wise. and faithfui, | % conditions of the livestock market | America and her symbol, free gov- comparisons | | ernment, will hold their: ‘place in the | sun’; but we must. look forward and not backward. We must think in of Animal Husbandry talked on the .,ms of the masses and not of the | current topic of Horses, covering the | .1jcces. topic in general as relating to types, | day.” prices and the many conditions affect- | The classes have had their “The experiences of the last four years have convinced most of us that the most important function of ed- ucation is to fit the common man for the common duties of citizenship. The patriotic duty of educators in | this country is to see that every child in the next generation is possessed of certain simple fundamental prin- ciples of justice and honesty, the rights of man and the rights of na- tions, which shall constitute a new background for this polyglot nation. "“The chords of memory connect | our people with every race and every land. America is the one which seems to have been designed by Providence to construct a plat- form of patriotism world-wide is its scope. We must summon the Saxon, but we must also summon the equally important Russian and Pole, Span- iard Italian, Greek and Slovak, Czech and Magyar, Frenchman and Briton, Teuton and Celt. The plat- form which we build for our nation- al ideals must be large enough for all these and a dozen races to stand upon, face to face, eye to eye, equal, free and enthusiastic.” —_—— Cuba is repairing many of the old military roads, as well as construct- ing new highways, Ba I a a a a a a DAVID REID Solicits Your Trade nation | | El | | % | THE WALLACE PRINTING CO. Printing . Stationery PHONE 340 BRYAN ecfrodosonfoat orfonfosocteafe eee fosfeofo oes cfooafo oboe i { fettedbeldelidoelededob doled dedebeldod * When in Bryan -, EAT At the New York Restaurant BE a a i i a A A GT SE RENE A AAO SS SE A EE SS 2 3 H TEXAS BLUE GRASS I Green chicken feed all year and yields 4 to 6 tons hay per acre annually. Sets and seed. for sale. CYRUS HOGAN Bryan, Texas. SR ”. 0 * - oefoctuefortosfortosfortociadonieedortosfoctscfococirefoctsefefrefoceciacfociiforiodiods i : | we 3 si Eh JAA 3 + ML. EX. TAMBS 3 THE REXALL STORE & ¥ BRYAN Campus Residents and Codels . i are invited to trade with EA us. oe 558 . 3: ; JAS. W. JAMES 1 i Real Estate I i PHONES 45 & 498 + + ER 2 2 a a a a a a 0 a 0 ia 3 a I . Ld oe x A BUSY SPOT oP : ches | hs 4 # A BUSY TOWN Gunter Hotel San Antonio | Internationally Rn RI 2 a I 1 HJ a a Ha a a a A