2 THE BATTALION THE EATTAEICN Student weekly publication of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas. Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at College Station, Texas, under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879. Subscription by the year, $1.75. EDITORIAL STAFF ROBT. L. HERBERT C. V. ELLIS FRED L. PORTER J. A. BARNES M. J. BLOCK G. M. WRENN W. G. CARNAHAN J. L. KEITH R. S. COLLEY RUSTY SMITH T. S. ROOTS FRANK W. THOMAS JR. W. J. FAULK.. J. C. POSGATE A. C. MOSER JR D. B. McNERNEY G. M. EVANS P. J. JOHN A. J. MILLER H. G. SEELIGSON II L. A. LELAURIN Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor Feature Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Art Editor Associate Art Editor Associate Art Editor .... Associate Art Editor Sports Editor .Associate Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor News Editor ..Associate News Editor ..Associate News Editor ... Associate News Editor ...Associate News Editor Reporter Reporter BUSINESS R. N. WINDERS Business Manager W. F. FRANKLIN Assistant Business Manager W. J. NEUMAN Circulation Manager SULLY Since the announcement two years ago of the resignation of Dana X. Bible as head of the department of physical education at A & M, probably no one bit of news has been so keenly felt by A & M students and, we believe, by a majority of the A & M ex students as that which last week brought information that James Sullivan, for twelve years business manager of athletics at A & M, had resigned. Taking over the reins as athletic business manager at A & M in 1919, Sully, as he is known to students and associates at the college, guided the development of the Aggie athletic plant from a property probably worth $10,000, with an equal indebtedness, to one of the most complete physical education laboratories in the South, the latest addition to which is a concrete stadium construct ed at a cost of approximately $350,000. In 1919 Kyle Field was smaller than it is now and was sur rounded by a dilapidated board fence. Not only was there no concrete stadium, but the steel stadium which students who were here in 1927 can remember had not been erected. There was no gymnasium building, no baseball grandstand, no tennis court accommodation, none of the many things which now compose the impressive athletic plant of the college. All these things, and probably many others which he has not had time to develop, were merely plans in Sully’ mind, plans which have absorbed his unflagging interest and constant attention for the past twelve years. And, perhaps most remarkable of all, this development came without state appropriation and without a drive among former students such as those usually carried out when colleges need stadiums and gymnasiums. The entire development followed the introduction of a process of putting into the athletic plant the revenues of college sports, a self-sustaining, self-building process, in itself an example of the business ability of Mr. Sullivan. Today the A & M College of Texas boasts an athletic plant which last year enabled 1444 students, more than half of the student body, to take part in intramural athletics, indicating that at A & M a plan has been worked out which does not exclude stu dents who cannot participate in varsity sports. In addition to this unusual feature is the fact that facilities for giving every freshman student in the college courses in physical education are available, and a course which will allow students who expect to coach to major in physical education is conducted. Truly Sully has been “an untiring worker in the cause of Aggieland.” ETIQUETTE OF SPITTING In an old etiquette book one may see a paragraph which says that one should not spit tobacco juice on the floor; spit in the corners. In modern American public buildings it is quite custom ary to design round corners so that they may be easily cleaned of the droolings of spit spouting bravos. But even an old fash ioned etiquette book nor modern architects would consider a woman’s hat the correct place for sputum! In the show the other night a cadet, we are sorry to say, very carelessly let his mouth leak right on top of a visitor’s hat. A feminine visitor! Now if you must spit, like a cow slobbering in the summer breezes, please, Please, do it like a gentleman and land in the corners, or near there! A woman’s hat is no place for tobacco juice. A man who has any desire to dampen someone’s clothes with brown saliva, ought to pick on a man capable of remonstrating with him and not on a defenseless woman in the dark. It just isn’t mannerly, judged even by the lax standards that tobacco chewers are accus tomed to. It just isn’s done! A S M E Inspector To Visit A & M College Roy V. Wright, president of the American Society of Mechanical En gineers, a writer and publisher of note and an engineer, will visit the A & M College Tuesday, January 27, on his national tour of inspection of sections and student branches of the ASMS. Mr. Wright recently completed thir ty-two years in the field of railroad mechanical engineering, before and during which time he also gained con siderable recognition in editorial work as editor and managing editor of sev eral well known i - ailway engineering journals, the most prominent of which is his present editorship of “Railway Mechanical Engineering.” His other activities at present in clude director and secretary of two prominent eastern publishing compan ies and director of the Ampere Bank and Trust Company of East Orange, New Jersey. While on the campus Mr. Wright will address the faculty at a luncheon and will speak to the students of engi neering in the afternoon, according to word received from the mechanical en gineering department. The vulgar cannot love anything different to themselves.—Jeffery Far- nol. LA SALLE HOTEL BRYAN, TEXAS RESTAURANT AND COFFEE SHOP BRYAN’S FINEST EATING PLACE ATTENDING MEETING Professor Dan Scoates of the agri cultural engineering department left last Friday for the annual conven tion of the Texas Hardware and Im plement Association, of which he is secretary. The convention will be held in Dallas January 20-23. TEXAS AGGIE ZIPPER FRONT WORK SUITS $4.98 OFFICERS DRESS SHOES Excellent Value $2.98 J.C. PENNEY GQ STEPP! MG INTO A MODERN WORLD Clipping a second would save 25,000 hours A second saved here — an unnecessary step cut out there — on such close atten tion to detail rests the success of modern industry. Nowhere is this more strikingly shown than in the telephone business. In accounting work for instance, an improved method that clips just one second from the time required to handle one toll ticket would have great results. Applied throughout the System—hand ling an average of more than 90,000,000 toll tickets each month—it would effect a monthly saving of 25,000 hours! Such “little” things often are tremen dously important in so vast an industry. That is one reason why men find Bell System work so fascinating. The opportunity is there! BELL SYSTEM A NATION-WIDE SYSTEM OF I N T E R - C O N N E C T I N G TELEPHONES