The Daily Bulletin/Reveille. (College Station, Tex.) 1916-1938, October 02, 1920, Image 3
THE DAILY BULLETIN, 5S ATURDAY, OCT. 2, 1920 | @ffirial Notices FEDUCTION AND APPOINTMENT IN CAVALRY ARE ANNOUNCED, : 2 Headquarters Agricultural and Me-| chanical College of Texas Units of | the Senior Division of The United | States Reserve Officers Training | Cerps (Department of Military | Science and Tactics), College Sta- | tion, Texas. Orders No. 10. { October 1, 1920. | Owing to his College Classifi- | cation and agreement with the Presi- | aent, Cadet Corporal ¥. P. Jaggi Troop A, Cavalry, is hereby reduced, | without prejudice, to the grade of) private. 2. After consultation and agree- ment with the President Cadet Pri- vate Patrick A. Dwyer, Troop A, Cavalry, is hereby appointed Cadet Sergeant. By order of Major DCUGHERTY:: Robert W. Wilson, Ist Lieut., Field Artillery, Adjutant. rele IDENTIFICATION CARDS WILL BE ISSUED TO ALL CASUALS (Official) Memorandum: All students who are not members of the Cadet Corps will report to the | Commandant’s office for the pur- pose of getting their identification | cards. In calling for these cards be! sure and bring your cashier’s receipt. Each non-military student will be! required to have his identification card by noon, Saturday, October 9, 1920. IKE ASHBURN, Commandant. ABSENT STUDENTS. (Official) The following students who were | absent on the date specified below | come under the following paragraphs of the absence rule: October 1, 1920. (a) Colyer, O. M. Gaston, T. L. McCullough, C. ( Mahan, Harry. Marsh, H. J. Patton, W. M. Pearson, E. P. Phillips, C." C. Rowland, W. G. Scurlock, Shirley. Francis, Geo. D. Stovall, Jno. O. Willis, W. S. IKE ASHBURN, Commandant. ———————————— SUPPER WILL BE DELAYED ON DAYS OF BALL GAMES (Official) Memorandum 1. On Friday, October 1st and on | succeeding days on which regularly | scheduled football games are played | supper will be delayed until 6: 30 | o'clock. This will be in effect Oct, ! 15, October 22, and November 15. IKE ASHBURN, Commandant. | MAJOR ASHBURN GOES TO | DALLAS FOR CONFERENCE | (Official) th) Bulletin. [I will be in Dallas Saturday tending a meeting of the Southwest | thletic Conference. Sergeant Smart | will be in charge during my absence. IKE ASHBURN, Commandant. | ba 11 for at- | | five to ten letter men as a nucleus COMMANDANT WILL ASSIST IN SEARCH FOR FURNITURE (Official) On Saturday afternoon, October all students who have lost dressers, | | or other articles of furniture will re- | port to the office of the Commandant. | A personally conducted inspection] tour of all quarters will be made and | Particles misplaced or lost will be re- turned to rightful owners. IKIE. ASHBURN, Commandant. y EPISCOPALEAN AND CATHOLIC | STUDENTS TO GET PERMITS | (Official) Bulletin. Episcopalean and Catholic students | will be permitted to attend church | in Bryan, Sunday, October 3. Indi-]| ndual permits stating object of visit | will be filed in. Commandant’s office. | IKE ASHBURN, | ————————————— AUTHORITY MUST BE HAD TO TRANSFER COUPON BOOKS (Official) Transfer of athletic Coupon Boks will not be permitted unless such! transfer is approved by the athletic | council. Note contract on cover of | | bcok. JAMES SULLIVAN, | Business Manager Athletics. | Tr ion ON THE SICK LIST. The following men are now in the | hospital: J. T. Clark, O. M. Colyer, | R. 0. Cox, O. J. Fay, T. L. Gaston, C C. McCullough, C. C. Phillips, Shir- ley- Scurlock, Eldon Willis. —————————— STAG CORPS DANCE IN THE | GYMNASIUM TONIGHT | The student body is invited to at-. | lend the stag dance in the gymnasi- | um tonight at 8:45. This is for the | purpose of training the feet and de- | veloping a sense of harmonics to make a good exhibition on Thanks- giving. ———————————— COLLEGE FOOTBALL THIS YEAR WILL NOT BE UP TO STANDARD SET IN 1920 t and joined the forces with the great- | est team the United States or | other nation ever seit into the field. | By John A. Ward. Especially for Service). York, Oct. 1 —College foot- 1920 will not be up to the | standard of 1919. The reason is simple enough. There | are not as many experienced players available as there were last year. Furthermore, football in the years to some probably will fali below the un- | ; usual heights reached in 1919. The superiority of 1919 football! was the direct outcome of the war. | The stars of 1916 and 1917 seasons | returned to the gridiron after a year {Written Universal | New | or two in Uncle Sam’s army—a year | or two which meant iuch maturing of athletic ability. Then the war ended and the 1919 season saw the return of the old stars | to finish their college careers. They came back two years older than the | ordinary college senior who is just | rounding out his period of activity on | the gridiron, “And, of course, they came back from war studier, strong- or and more fit than ever. Last year the team that did have from 10 to 22 letter men to drow’ fromeas@ss the exception. This vear the big schools will have from in the | not Naughty shoulders rising and —and a ‘“‘grand” ning of With the screen's youth. 5 delight that | old players for Rodgers | “back-to-normal” program which | sincec the conclusion of the war. tradition at the Century that Thack- eray was very fond of the club and Queen Tonight A Road Show with a bunch of of them who danced the Shimmy like the very Dickens— sitting in the front Row—Hypnotized by the Girl with the Shimmy Shake—That’s A CHORUS GIRLS ROMANCE Now a favorite the world over VIOLA DIANA Also a two reel comedy Knock-out BUSTER KEATING IN ONE WEEK REGULAR ADMISSION—SPECIAL MUSIC TODAY--D | X | E--TODAY A Master Double Feature OLIVE THOMAS In a delightful comedy-drama DARLING MINE Also two reel comedy with Hank Mann MONDAY, BUCK JONES SPECIAL Pretty Girls—Peaches—One falling—Yale boys shouting only the begin- sparkle with the zes t of for the 1920 campaign. Many Stars Now Missing. a Then, again, there is paucity of this season—that is, imen who had been picked for all- | | America or all-sectional elevens be- | fore they answered the call to arms any | The season is here again. Gone is | | “Chick” Harley of Ohio State and] | Eddie Casey of Harvard, the two won- | d2r backs of last season. Gone is ,the sensaticnal West Vir- | ginia fullback. Gone, also, are aj great many others. But this situation does not mean | the season of 1920 will be mediocre | in any way. It simply means the’ is sifecting the strata of American life The 1920 football teams will not have as many seasoned stars in then line-ups as in 1919, but the games will be just as hotly contested. hs as--.---- THACKERAY AT THE CENTURY. Mr. Holt in the “Garrulities of an Octogenarian Editor” in the July- September number of the Unpartizan Review tells fin amusing anecdote of Thackeray: “It is a part of the pronounced it the most delightful in | oyster. | Then they the world. Part of the American education administered to him there was that he was never to eat a raw | After the boys thought him duly in octrinated with this princi- 'vle they caused a colossal oyster to | be inserted among a batch set before He was game and got it down. asked him how he felt, him. and he said: “Devoutly thankful, 'and as if I had swallowed a little baby’.” BURDENED. I met an old man on the road, And bent he was beneath a load Greater than he could bear. | I might have eased him with a lift, ‘or I was young, and strong, and swift, But did not stop or care. "hen on a fair and sunny day I learned that on his lonesome way They found the old man there, Dead ’neath his burden, by the road And now mine is life’s heaviest load— The load I failed to bear. —John P. Sjolander. ———————— FHPEEPEEEERPEEEREERE 0] = O} MISS LOLA WILSON Of = 0] ® Social and Fancy Dancing and © 0 Expression E @ E Class and Private Lessons 0} 0] 0] 0] Phone Bryan 227 0) & 38 @ NUP EEEEEEEEAEEEREE —_————— — Support the Y—Boost the Y.