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About The Daily Bulletin/Reveille. (College Station, Tex.) 1916-1938 | View Entire Issue (March 1, 1925)
OFFICIAL NOTICES ROOM ASSIGNMENT. (official) Room No. 28 and room No. 30 in the Bachelor Club will be assigned March 3 at 4:10 p. m. Those interest- ed are invited to appear at the Fac- ulty Room at that hour. CHARLES PURYEAR, Dean. aA STUDENTS—CAMPUS PEOPLE (official) Laundry due to be collected on Monday, March 2 will be collected on Tuesday, March 3 instead. This change is made due to the fact that Morday is a holiday. LAUNDRY. i A Ei a rtrhd ATTENTION A. H. SENIORS vofficial) The quiz in A. H. 412 scheduled for Thursday of this week will be given on Tuesday instead. W. L. STANGEL, prof., Animal Husbandry en err CATHOLIC CHRISTIANITY OF MEDIAEVAL TIMES SUBJECT Associate Professor V. K. Sugareff of the History Department will dis- cuss the Mediaeval Catholic Christian- ity before the Men’s Bible Class this morning at 9:45 o’clock in the Con- ference room of the Experiment sta- tion building. The discussion will cen - ter around the following outline: 1. Western Church—Origin uid vse 2. Evolution of the Papacy 3. Spiritual and Temporal Powers of the Pope. 4, Roman Catholic Dogma 5. Papacy and the Kings 6. Forces Against the Papacy. CLASS SECRETARY. —_——————————— FOOTBALL CANDIDATE AND CO-ED ARRIVE IN FAMILY o The A. & M. family is still main taining its weekly increase record The past week the addition came in the arrival of a coy co-ed at the home of Mr. and Mrs. G. R. Stro man, cotton breeder of the Experi ment Station. This week’s additio: called for an increase in the domes. tic budgeti of V. R. Glazener, poultry specialist of the Extension Service who resides on --the -Bryan-College ~ road. The latest addition was adn go from here to Tuscon, Ariz. Monday night and Mr. Glazener im- mediately applied to Coach Bible for a football training diet. I EEE aE Di - ABSENT STUDENTS. (official) The following students who were ab- ent on the date specified below come under the following paragraphs of the absence rule. : February 28, 1925. (a) Ashy, J. H. Barker, R. H. Black, C. V. Boynton, S. M, Cooper, M, R. Crews, J. E. Cunningham, T. C. Gohmert, S. R. Groves, C. B. Hegemann, O. H. Herwick, H. M. Howe, B., M. Jennings, R. N. Lovell, G. H. Lowe, A. E. Mayfield, P. B. Moers, B. A. Nichols, A. E. Pearson, F, Pearson, R. O. Pendleton, H. H. Pistole, L. L. Puryear, O. P. Robb, J. H. Simpson, T. M. Tibbals, L, M. Turney, J. G. Yeary, O. N. (b) Chile, W. E. Grace, J. F. Price, P. M. Trim, W. F. Ware, C. S. Wright, J. L. C. C. TODD, Commando ni I. LS METHODIST WOMEN WILL NOT MEET TOMORROW AFTERNOON The Methodist Women’s Missionary Society will not hold a meeting to- morrow afternoon, but will work in conrection with the revival. 6 i in’aii CAVALRY OFFICER IS INSPECTING UNIT HERE Lieutenant Colonel Lewis Brown, Jr., Cav., of the office of the Chief of Cavalry, arrived from Washington Thursday evening to observe the work of the Cavalry Unit. Colonel Brown to inspect the unit at the University of Arizona. Student Will Attend A. S. M: E. in Houston The Texas Section of the A, S. M. E., with headquarters at Houston, has invited Cadet H. F. Goodenou®h, President of the A. & M. Student Section, to attend the Houston meet- ng on Monday evening, March 2, as | the guest of the Society. Dr, Durand, who is President of the A. S. M. E, is to be present to ad- dress the Society. At the instance of Professor E. J. Fermier this address is to be radio- cast from Station W.E.A.Y., begin- ning about 7:30 p.m. Dean F. C. Bolton has planned to tune in with the receiving set of the Electrical Engineering Department to make it possible for everybody to hear the address, as this should be of espec- ial nterest to all engineering students. ti TEXAS A. & M. IS LEADING ALL COLLEGES IN PUTTING BUSINESS INTO AGRICULTURE Texas A. & M. has been selected as the most outstanding example of the modern agricultural college which recognizes the importance of business ‘n farming and Dean E, J. Kyle has been requested by the Country Gentle- man to - prepare an articles setting forth the organization, work and pol- icies of the School of Agriculture. In his letter of solicitation the edi- tor states that he has visited or cor- responded with all the agricultural colleges in the nation and finds that Texas is doing more than any other to educate in the business field that is related to agriculture and which is very large in most of the states. “For some reason—due I imagine to the fear that they would be accused of diverting young people from the farms—these fields have mot been openly acknowledged or sought after by the agricultural colleges,” he states. “Yet they must be served and why not openly and in the best possible way? Data shows they are being served by the agricultural col- leges, anyway, whether it be the most efficiently or not. Graduates of Wis- consin have gone into 146 different lines; those of Iowa State into over 120. Few of the colleges are send- ing back to the farm more than one- third of their graduates.”