Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 2, 1932)
. -X . THE BATTALION s L' 1 m i? —nmri* rouvr— AM Your Kyeo or Your GUmmu, Sm I. W. PAYNE. OpMetriat Muoonk Bldg Bryan To*. Phono SS r m Bullock & Jones BARBER SHOP Free Shoe Shines on Monday ' HAIRCUTS 25c Bryan, Texad--" V* Fountain Drinks OF DISTINCTION /'CANADY’S PHARMACY Bryan, Thom College Students In East Prefer Hoover For U. S. President New York—(IP)—Eastern Dem ocrat* ar« buay trying to figure Hit why so many eastern college straw vote* are revealing majo rities for Herbert Hoover and Nor- nan Thomas instead of Franklin Roosevelt. Educators are coming to the con clusion that the principal cause is he disbelief of college students as i group in the Democratic theory that a political party can make or break depression . At any rate, it developed last week that the great majority of the eastern student bodies are not very strongly Democratic. Possibly the outstanding defeat suffered by the Roosevelt support ers on a college cam pun was at Show Talk H By Lawk Graaa Intramural Results At the Palace - . Thursday, Friday and Saturday — Red Dust. Preview Saturday night, Sunday, •nd Monday - Blessed Event. ^ Tuesday ami Wednesday—Blonde Venus. At the Assembly Hull Friday night. November 4th lY- card* good) —That’s My Boy. Saturday night—Forbidden. Wednesday night —Washington Masquerade. A woman-hater in Indo-Oiina. Clark Gabl4. finds his hands full «hen a young engineer brings his Oberlin College, where a straw vote wife to the plantation ami an over gave Hoover 844. Thomas 274. and «.« r smuggles another woman up Roosevelt 102. die river to his hut. Jean Harlow At Columbia University an in- in "Red Dust” acting the role of completed straw vote had recorded i hardened plantation girl, will Thomas 237 Hoover 187, and Roos- b** able to settle the debate as to evelt 123. At Amherst the poll was whether she is an actress or not Hoover 358, Thomas 85, and Rooae- as she is given her really first velt 71. At Wesleyan 65 per cent of 1 dramatic part in this picture. Gene the votes were cast for Hoover. At Raymond is the young engineer and Williams Hoover received 411 of Mary Astor is his wife. An inter- the 568 votes cast. At Haverford tsting fact regarding this picture College the vote was Hoover 209, i* 1 that the tropical stream shown in most of the scenes was artifi- Roosevelt 54^ Thomas 49. Members of the Harvard Univer sity faculty, on the otherhand, in a poll conducted by the Harvard Crimson, voted Roosevelt 18, Hoov er 6, Thomas 1. Meanwhile Fielding H. (Hurry Up) Yost, director of Athletics at Cially constructed and flows through the center of the Metro- Goldwyn studios. Formerly unassailable, the scan dal mongenng columnists of big Cities have been getting It on the the University of Michigan and for dhin from Hollywood lately. "Bless- years one of the outsanding Ameri can football coaches, came out for Hoover, with the ’fry, !“Don’t change quarterbacks when the team is within scoring distance.” MRS. PARKHILL’S CAFE OFFERS k ' ’ *, . - r j An Aggie A FREE TRIP To Dallas November 5th. L ASK FOR THE DETAILS A Pomibility In Every Purchase THE- GREATER PALACE THURSDAY — FRIDAY — SATU1 «d Event” has been selected by •tost critics as the best picture of this type filmed during the year. Lee Trary. a young reporter, is •elected to fill the place of the •ewspaper’s columnist who is on a vacation. By printing all (he scandal he hears he suqpeeds in getting the paper in a series of li bel suits but the column so builds • p the circulation that he keeps His job and is made permanent col- ■mnist. He then proceeds to get bitn trouble publishing too much •ews on the wrong people. Mary Brian is his girl before and after be goes high hat. This is a good picture. \ Football pictures with new plots ijfre unusual and 'That’s My Boy” I is a thrilling picture from that yaadBoiat Richard Cromwell, as t) c cocky, young football sensation, Porothy Jordan, his sweetheart, and Mae Marsh, his mother, com prise the cast. The story was writ ten by 'Francis Wallace, author of •Touchdown" and “Huddle” and was directed by Roy William Neill. The picture has Ernie Pinckert. Jim Musick, Gaius Shaver, and the University of Southern California's t931 national champions, acting in the football scenes The standing for iatrat* ketball for the first fouf play ia as flolows: CLASS “A" League “A" Company B. Inf - Company C Inf Battery E. Field Art. Troop C. Cav- Company A. Fig. Battery B. Coaat Art- .. League ‘B” • MM Battery A. Field Art. 4 Battery B. Field Art. J Battery - C Field Art. | t) Company B, Eng. 2 Band . ..L. —J.B Leagae “C B an Company A Inf... Company H. Inf. . Battery’ D. Field Art. Troop C. Cavalry Company B. Sig league “D" Company D. Inf. ,.., Company G. Inf..^.j Troop D. Cavalry Company A Eng. Battery A. Coaat Art. league ”E” Company E. Inf | Company F Inf...i Battery F. Field Art. Troop B. Cavalry .4 Company C. Eng. 4 CLASS “B” League “A” 1 Company A. Inf Battery A. Field Art. Battery E. Filed Art. ... Troop C. Cavalry Company A Eng. ■ Band ural bas ks of Waa b. «4- _ * MH. Inf* * „ S 0 Field Art. 0 B. Eng. . 2 A Coast (ArC 1 ' ! Wo - CaaqMnlL Iwf-l 0 fkijrtBr. Inf. i. 1 Bhttary? f, 4 Troop ^{Cavmlryl a Companf JC. Eng l 2 !*engne Won Compnifr|c. Inf. - 1 Compan£>t>. Inf. { 1 Battery Field Art....... .1 Battery tCj Field Art. 3 Battery jC Coast ^{rt.... 0 I eagae Won Company jfi. Eng- i ... o Troop Troop IlJ Company The mural s as folio League ^ Company Company Company GAB5Y GERTIE iV lout ivalrv •Sig. j. 2 2 three Weeks of intra hall plhy has resulted ••*•*»*? or# Samuels Announces Technoscope To Be Distributed Soon The first scope, quail by the sttld Engineerir issue of the Techno- erly journal published •nts of the School of will be off the press Battery Battery I. Inf-i-L. If. Inf- I . «. Inf-J Field Art. Field /Jrt. Troop C^Savalry . it League tfA t j Woi 2 Company JL Inf. f . ... 0 2 Battery j®'Field Art. 2 ,, Troop EbrCavalry 1 „ Compan^p. Eng- j . . 0 ^ Band 1 League Woi Companji^p. Inf i .. .. 2 it Battrey juField Art. 2 4 Troop H. Oavalry i 2 2 Compaiira. Eng. 4 2 j Battery iStoast A^- 0 CosnpanyFlL sig- ; Inf* ‘Girls generall> consider neckers nutty but nice.” Wahl-Henius College | For Brew Masters Is Re-opened In Chicago R Chicago— (IP) —After being closed for seventeen years, Chicg* go’s “beer college” has again open ed, with students at work over textbooks and in the laboratory. The Wahl-Henius Institute orf Fermentation started its first term since 1915 with 19 students in at tendance. In an opening address to his students. President Max Henius said: Battery A. Field Art 1 2 Troop A. Cavalry 0 2 Company A Eng. Company A. Sig. 3 Battery A. Coast Art 0 within the next ten days, according to the edkor, G. H. Samuels of San Antrim. The Technoscope is the youngest of student publica tions on thd A and M campus, it having been begun only three years ago. It is the pfan of the Technoscope staff this year to make each issue representative of a particular branch of U e Engineering School. The initial iisue will be made up largely #f co itributions by students ami faculty members of the Elec trical Engineering Department. The paper delivered at a recent convention nf the American Insti tute of Electrical .Engineers at Engineers a: Norman, Oklahoma, by G. C. Hatrheson of Denton will be published in the first issue along with articles by H. B. Yarbrough, E. Porter, J C. Barron, and others. The staff of the Teehnoscope : is: G. H. Samuels, editor; J. C. Bar ron, Business Manager; R. T. Nel son, Advertising Manager; C C. Johnson, Circulation* Manager, and J. B. Cornet' , NeWs Editor. A man without (Mission is only a latent force, only a possibility, like a stone waiting for the blow from the jror to give forth sparks. —Henri-Freckric Amiel. Professor 1|. L. Malcolm of Pom pano. Fla., recently climbed to the tops of sixteen mountains in the Adirondacks in one day. « /s ross J. ? aniy : \ “Forbidden” has received the ac- claim of some of the greatest cri tics. The picture has an excellent plot and cast, but the acting is res ponsible for the applause with prhich it has been greeted. Adolphe enjou, Barbara Stanwyck, and ph Bellamy are the leading layers and are three of the most ished actors cm the talking , Lionel Barrymore a small wn lawyer, is elected to the Se nate after he upsets the corrupt political machine of his state. Kar on Morley is used by crooked lob- bvists to render him jneffective af ter bribery fails. Barr><nore is his •sum) dramatic self in thk^picture and as usual, has the pictan^gll to mi F V lain it 's m V BARGAIN MATINEE 1-2 P. M. M. Preview 11 P. M. Saturday H SPENCER TRACY in “THE BLESSED EVENT” i Also Shown Sunday and Monday Tuesday and Wednesday DIETRICH in “Blonde Venus’ 1 Jt ! -“H • U 1 ’i t 1 ■ * « ! ♦ a *, i ; b i * id j 1 * .f-ii . 1 I • . L £ Oberlin Co-Eds Use Bicycles As Mode of Travel To Ball Game i — J Cleveland, Ohio—(IP)—It was t man who paid—after two Ober- College co-eds rode their bicy cles to Cleveland to cheer for the football team against Western Re serves and thereby won a bet from Donald Strong, a college junior. The girls were Marienne Stinson, a. junior, and Marjorie Thiessen, a -ophomore. Dining and dancing was the stake in the wager, and th« trio did this at a celebration at the Lotos Gar dens here after Oberlin had gone down to defeat, 22 ti 7. The co-eds traveled the 35 miles, lading two trips around the pub- square, which waa part of the in two hours and S3 minutes. We weren’t trying for any speed record and I know we could do it in less time than that," Miss Thies- sen said. "Let's say you're painting clooda. You've got your primary colon here on the palette. But wu haven't the cIntuit until you blend certain colon into the special tone )ou want. "This ia very much what happens in making a good cigarette. And I gather that what Chesterfield means by Cross-Blending is what an artist does with colors. Their Domestic and Turkish tobacroa— many varie ties of each—are the primary colon. Mend and crow-blend these tofincroM until they get the special 9 *Pue *hcy want—in other words, the I Ow#* r rficld flavor, i; » * Apd just «s each color you use i acts the ot others to change and ' Wtri* 5 ®* them, so each Chesterfield to- I bhgrii partakes of the fine qualities f r' er y other. *You 'weld' different kinds to get better kind. That's Croaa-Blend- * ^ id -S/ene/ed— t/iats that's l 5 1 X \; r MILDER why theu TASTE BETTER i"’. (f o’ / v i.