THE BATTALION 5 4,272 Graduates Of A & M Since Founding- Since the opening of its portals to students in the fall of 1876, fifty-five years ago, the A & M College of Tex as has sent out a total of 4,272 grad uates to join the ranks of those hold ing college degrees, figures compiled in the office of the college registrar show. This total does not take into consideration master’s degrees confer red on graduates from other institu tions by the graduate school at A & M. The first class to graduate was that of 1878, made up of two mem bers. The latest class to graduate, that of 1930, made the fifty-third. The total of 4,272 graduates gives an average of 81 graduates a year over the fifty-three year period. The preponderance of graduates has been from the schools of agricul ture and engineering, the school of engineering showing a total for the fifty-three years of 2,323 and the school of agriculture a total of 1,527. From the opening of the college in 1876 to its organization in 1880, the reorganization went into effect was 26. Of these, two graduated in 1878, nineteen in 1879 and five in 1880. Since 1920, the number of gradu ates each year has been in excess of 100. Three classes prior to that of 1920, the classes of 1913, 1916 and 1917, numbered more than 100 each also. Since 1922 the number of grad uates each year has been in excess of 200 with the exception of 1023 when the class numbered 198. The two most recent graduating classes, those of 1929 and 1930, numbered more than 300 each. The 1930 class of 367 was the largest in the history of the college. Discover Prehistoric Engraving-s In Spain NEW HAVEN, Conn.—(IP)—The story of the trip made to prehistoric regions in Europe duirng the past summer by Gen. Charles G. Dawes, ambassador to England, is related in detail by Professor George G. Mac- Curdy, of Yale University, in an nouncing the discovery of two pre historic engravings on bone excavat ed in Spain by the ambassador and others of the expedition. The engravings date from the Mag- delenian epoch of at least 20,000 years ago, according to Professor MacCur- dy, who is director of the American School of Prehistoric Research and also research associate in prehistoric archeology at Yale University. In describing the trip Professor MacCurdy, says: “General Dawes ask ed me, on the occasion of his visit to America last June if I could not take him with me on a prehistoric pil grimage in France and Spain. “Together we studied in museums and in the field, digging also in caves and rock shelters both in France and in Spain. “We had been fortunate, too, for in caves of El Pendo, in Northern Spain, where we dug as guests of the Abbe Carballo, we found two im portant engravings on bone.” Four of the sections of thick pal eolithic deposits and their contents. Professor MacCurdy relates, which were seen by the expedition, if super imposed so as to form a chronological sequence, would result in a composite section including every epoch of the stone age and covering a period con servatively estimated at a half mil lion years. Babyloniian Tablets Presented To College Original Babylonian tablets bearing innumerable legal records written in cuneiform characters and several statuettes of Ishtar, the ancient Bab ylonian goddess of love and beauty, have been presented to A & M by Dr. O. M. Ball, professor of biology. These pieces were among the findings of an archeological expedition spon sored by the University of Pennsyl vania and are known to be between three and five thousand years old. The subject matter of the different inscriptions is varied in nature, one lists the provisions stored in the tem ple, another a record of a bill for sheep and cattle slaughtered by a butcher, and still another a contract for grain. An extremely rare and un usually perfect tablet is one that was used by a school boy for his writing exercises. Tiny statuettes of gods and god desses were made by the priests in the temple and given to the people so that they might worship the same in their homes. It was the popular belief that these minute images kept evil from the household. So sacred were these objects that t6 steal one was a crime punishable by death in accordance with the code of Ham murabi, who was a contemporary of the biblical Abraham. This collection is the permanent possession of the school and is on display in the book delivery room on the second floor of the library. The cuneiform has been deciphered and an English translation is attached to each piece. CAMPUS SHOE SHOP Serving A & M Since “91” COATS COATS Leather Coats Suede Coats Sweaters Trench Coats Slicker Coats Top Coats Over Coats WALDROP & CO. BRYAN and COLLEGE CHIROPRACTIC DR. F. S. WILLETS, GRADUATE CHIROPRACTOR PALMER METHOD Over Gibbs’ Store, Bryan, Texas ANALYSIS FREE — RATES FOR STUDENTS OFFICE HOURS 1 TO 6 P. M. Frosh And Soph Co-Eds Stage Battle In Ohio DELAWARE, O.—(IP)—Delaware police were called upon recently to disperse a class fight between 400 freshman and sophomore women on the campus of Ohio Wesleyan Uni versity. Freshman girls for several days had refused to appear in their fresh man berets. Then one evening the sophomores organized and swooped down on the freshman cottages. The freshmen likewise were soon organized and a hot battle ensued. Hair was pulled, dresses torn and faces torn and faces scratched in the melee. Sophomores succeeded in ducking a few of the frosh co-eds under the showers. The first policeman on the scene mistook lipstick, smeared on the faces of the freshman girls, as blood marks, and sent in a general alarm. The cops soon separated the combatants, and no one was seriously hurt in the con flict. The unsubdued frosh co-eds later marched through downtown streets in snake dance formation, shouting to the world that they would not wear the prescribed freshman headgear. The Signoreni, a valuable water col or, has been stolen from the Uni versity of Utah art gallery. ROYALTY DEATHS ORDINARY LONDON, Eng.—(IP)—Dr. G. W. James, who has been diagnosing fa tal illnesses of kings of England, has made the discovery that Charles the Bold died of an ingrowing toe nail which infected his foot. Histories thus far have revealed only that Charles he declares, was a victim of the “flu.” died in 1477. Dr. James also has found that Kings Stephen, John, Henry V and Edward I died of typhoid. Mary I, Dr. Paul Douglas, of the economics department of the University of Chi cago, believes that the only answer to the unemployment situation in the United States is the dole system of Great Britain. STEPPING INTO A MODERN WO RED 6-ton reels of cable distributed with the speed of perishable food A carload of telephone poles laid down a thou sand miles away within 36 hours after getting the order! Rush calls of this sort must fre quently be handled by Western Electric, dis tributors for the Bell System. But even more remarkable is the regular day by day flow of telephone supplies. The Chicago warehouse—one of 32 in the national system— handles 1,400 orders a day. In 1929 more than $400,000,000 worth of equipment and materials was delivered to the telephone companies. Distribution on so vast a scale presents many interesting problems to Bell System men. The solutions they work out mean much in keep ing this industry in step with the times. The opportunity is there l BELL SYSTEM A NATION-WIDE SYSTEM OF INTER-CONNECTIN G TELEPHONES