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About The Daily Bulletin/Reveille. (College Station, Tex.) 1916-1938 | View Entire Issue (May 19, 1920)
Mess Smith bears down on a few of the latest in jazz. paralytic cures will be administered by his duskies, who will produce the desired incentive for gliding feet un- til they are black in the face and three o’clock—that is from nightfall ; tll day breaks. THE DAILY BULLETIN Vol 3. College Station, Texas, Wednesday, May 19, 1920. Number 196 THE FINAL BALL OF THIS SEASON MONDAY EVENING Juniors Urge the Cadets to Bring Their Best Girls Here for This Last Excitement A Junior pleads as follows: Attention cadets quaintances! May we, by the meager means of the printed word, strive to portray to your minds one of the most gala of occasions where the ecareworn cadet may find surcease from study and an ample supply of God’s great- est gift to man? Monday, May 24, 1920, has been designated the day that will usher in, as old Sol sinks behind the Experi- ment Station, the last great social function of the present collegiate year. The Final Ball is given by the present Junior Class as a token of esteem and appreciation for the de- parting Seniors who shall soon bil farewell to the scenes they hold so dear. Remember, this will be the last op- portunity of watching her gracefully detrain amid the admiring gaze of sack and breath-holders. Let your mind accompany me down the Military Walk as you gently whisper sweet love-nothings into her absorbent ears while aspir- ing individuals, along the way, stand on their heads; hang on trees with the agility of squirrels; and dash water: or madly around in a vain attempt to deprive you momen- tarily of coincidence with those two Thedobarish eyes. This, fellow ca- dets and first year men, is the sea- son of the year when your vest can’t acommodate you, and your chest closely resembles the side elevation of a bay-window. Your home may be in Bugtussle or Reagan, but if there is as many and casual ac- as only one girl—I mean one only | either get her by telephonics or let ~ Cy Perkins deliver the letter. The big idea is not to be stretching the Hall windows when Singie Singie’s well-known All dances will be break-ins after i intermission—if the old stags get a couple of bucks and give the ladies a chance. There will be Al waived in with the hop—not alcohol, but Al Frazer, Al Adkisson and other notable ex- ponents ~~ ‘made the Tight fantastic toe a thing ~~ not to be made light of. : ~~ For the tired and careworn en- ~ gineer, who has consistently rumin- ated over volumes of jumbled fig- ures for the past nine months, the 3 figures will ‘be of pleasing contrast ‘of terpischore, who have —as i Seen torough ‘eyeuiatses prominent man, “Now, fellows, lets CORPS ELECT ION WILL BE HELD TO SELECT OFFICERS Bill King is the Only Man Nominat- ed for the Office of Business Manager of Battalion The annual corps election will be held this morning for the purpose of electing a yell leader, editor-in-chief of the Battalion, business manager of the Battalion, senior election committee, and athletic council. The election will be held in the rotunda of the Main or Academic building from 8 to 12 o’clock and Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors are eligible to vote. Freshmen are not entitled to vote. No matter what their classification may be a student must have been in College more than one year. Following is a list of the nomina-] tions for the respective offices: For yell leader, Red Thompson; editor- in-chief of the Battalion, “Rabbi” Bertschler, C. C. B. Warden, W. T. Strange, and Aubrey Legg; business manager of the Battalion, Bill King; senior election committee, A. B. Knickerbocker, J. ‘E. Bloodworth, J. L. Farrell, A. S. Legg, Jack Mahan, C. M. Walker, C. C. B. Warden, and S. C. Evans; athletic council, A. B. Knickerbocker, A. L. Forbes, C. F. Scudder, John Pierce, Jack Mahan, Judd Lewis, Roswell Higginbotham. Ballots will be furnished at the polls. To vote, place a check mark after the name of the man you wish to vote for. The man getting the highest num- ber of votes will be named chairman of the senior election committee. BE AL, M AAA A rA ML A GOEL ook oe Bol oR RR eee ee eek # NOTICE TO ATHLETES. FA * » All men having athletic ~% % goods in their possession be- % longing to Athletic Depart- * * ment please check same in to- * # day before 5 o'clock. Ld * ~D. X. BIBLE, Coach. * oo oe of of oe ole oe ode ole oe ode of ole fe Fp PICTURE SHOW The picture show tonight will be “The Garter Girl,” featuring Cor- inne Griffith. This will be the last show of this session and should bz | well attended. The College jazz will be on hand. Admission 15 cents. ve cvelasses because they will be spec- { tacular. The ever vigilent horticulturist may, if he obeys that better impulse, | youthful find the flower of his dreams not listed in Dr. Ball’s con of Plant Life.” : Nothing can be said as regards the A. H. students other than, if present, they may judge for themselves. ~ Using the phraseology of a very “Lexi- all come out and make this occasion one not to Ber forgotten.” Negri : THE OUTLOOK IN ATHLETICS NEXT YEAR VERY GOOD Good Baseball Pitching Staff Has Been Developed, and No Track Men Will be Lost by Graduation All has may now be said of athletics at A. and M. for the present school year. Much has been said about’ football and Lasketbal’ champions, and cer- tainly too much has not been said, neither is it possible to overestimate the great good work done by the 1920 baseball and track squads. Bible’s squad finished with a record of fourteen games won and only six lost, and in the line of hon- ors tonk second place for both the State and Southwestern champion- ships, the first vlace going to State University. The team has been handicapped this year on account of an inexperienced pitching staff, the members of which did not know that they would be called upon until the training season was almost over, but it should be said for Henderson, Sprague, Olsen and Matthews that they have made good showings this year and have done even better than was expected of them, and because of the ability that they have dem- onstrated in the spring contests) much dependence is being placed in them to better the record of A. and ™M. next season. Only three men will be lost from the varsity squad this year, and the prospects are bright for the team finishing the next season with first nonors. Eleven men were awarded varsity letters in baseball by the Athletic council at a meeting held Monday af- ternoon. Those who received letters were: C. S. Lewis, V. T. Matthews, H. N. Glezen, S. Alexander, P. A. Dwyer, B. Henderson, T. P. Lackey, R. G. Higginbotham, J. M. Crawford, J. R. Guynes and C. T. Sprague. Following is a record .of the in- dividual standings of each member been done and the last| “hundred and sixteen students, of the baseball squad: Name a DON Lewis, C. S. i pay Matthews, V. T. AGNI SEE Glezen,H. N. - 5... .. PREIS Ao ABE Alexander, 8. ‘lL. uioUoly fli aire; © oh Dwyer, P. A. AR SIE LANE RIS | Henderson, B. __. i i i oa. 13 “Lackey, TP. iP. ooo sas idel 120 Higginbotham, R. G. _______ AZ 14 Ee ‘Crawford. J. M. Lis Cong iio Guynes, JR. «ool lol 16 Sprague,’ Coo, ll anni 5 Rothe oii ib dl ogniciagn Smith: 0 ils Wilson ooo 6 Took part in less than three games: Moore, Olsen, Farrell, Ame spiger. Track Letters. e ¥ Thirteen men were awarded Jet. ters in track by the Athletic Coun- cil at the same time the baseball men | received theirs. ‘Those ‘being honor- |. id * i ed with letters in & rack were: L. THE PRESIDENT AWARD DIPLOMAS AT PRAIRIEVIEW Says the Past Year Was the Best in {es the History of the Industrial School. President Bizzel Prairie View State Normal and In- dustrial College yesterday where he presented the diplomas to the graduat- ; 5 ing class after the exercises Monday evening. returned from The President said that he receiv-- % ed much encouragement from the word done at Prairie View this last year, the best year in the history of oS the Institution, having enrolled nine and having graduated two hundred and two. The industrial exhibits were Br. unusually good, he said and clearly indicated that the industrial courses are appealing more and more to the he 7) students of the school. Professors and Mrs. Martin Lo Hayes and son Edwin, Professor and Mrs. W. A. Broyles and ‘Mrs. Effie Burns mother of John C. Burns at- tended the song festival and pageant given by the Senior Normal Class of the school last week. The song fes- tival was on Wednesday night and was pronounced by those who heard it as outstanding among things of its kind, and showed Miss Wilhemina B. Patterson the musical director to be very skilful in training the students. The solos and quartets were the out- : standing numbers on the program. The pageant was an entirely new “and consisted affair at the school largely of a combination of severa x operettas. The four or five different parts were very skilfully ‘woven to gether. About two hundred boy and girls were in the pageant. The costumes were well planned and uni. que. The most prominent ‘and in- i teresting parts of the program were taken by Miss Blanche Evans of Bry- an and Miss Mary Brown of Eagle. Lake, Fa HT RH AB. RH BE BatAve Th 79 7 BGA | Te & ON o 0 HIE BE ES Xe 54 10. 5 15 Po hens Eek 47 7 13 En 58 8 168d 48.50 gl) ye Hr ered 3 82. WT 1.2% gay | 56 13 4 4140 SAR aA > B63 ¥F., 10 1420800 2 85 9 LAL Ee e00 a Le 12 4 5. ie 10s ls 11 2 A ER : i 8 a adr ie, PERS} Sh a) oun, Ww. Ci Weir, LR. Hazon fae 2 Sanders, R. C. Harris, 0. H. Fraz- po ier, C. N. Hailey, Ww. Ww. ‘Lynch, Bs Steele, Ww. c. Farmarer w. ¥ AES