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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1933)
THI BATTALION iff ‘ ZAPP, SMITH, AMD I COCHRAN ELECTED BV HOUSTON CLUB ( lub To Hare Annual Christ mas Dance At University Club On December 29 With Music bv Richard Shannon. COMPILES GUIDE L. O. Zapp elected president of the Houston club at its first nteciing Other offirera elerUxi ssere C, N. Smith, vice-president, and W. B. Cochran, secretary- traMurer. At the third meeting of the Houston Club, plans were made to have a Christmas dance at the Uni versity Club in Houston on Friday night. December M, musk for the dance being furnished rhy Richard Shannon and his orchestra. H. T. Hall was appointed chairman of the dance committee. Refresh ments for the dance will be fur nished by the Houston Mother's Club. Plans were made to secure two pages of the Longhorn for the Houston chib members pktur- es. ; » The club meets every other Thursday in each month and at the present time has a total mem bership of 131 students. GftANTLANO RICK GRANTLAND RICE COMPILES A NEW FOOTBALL GUIDE GABBY GERTIE "The fir! who looks stunning gen erally has a dad who looks rtunned.” Cities Service Stations and Dealers j To Give These Hcoklets Away Free of ('barge. Cridiron fans who have been meking a compart football guide embodying schedules, rules, past records, play diagrams and offi- l .dal*' signals nssy now obtain the new C rant land Rice booklet free jf charge. ' A complete schedule of games for the 1033 sduson is convenient ly arranged so followers of foot ball can he fam liar with outstand- ,ng games whenl they are commenl- 3d on during the Grantland Rke radio broadcast on Friday even- lags. - ; i £ The <» <>« icontains an article on 'ootbali s rategies illustrated with liagrams df famous plays; simple •xplanatind* of the new rules and heir evoHt|on since 1&6H. duties ind sigiuli of the game officials, tnd a complete record of 1932 foot ball scores. “In this booklet.’' writes (Irani and Rice, “I have endeavored to five football fans something for vhieh I have long felt there was a cal need. We have gathered those i lungs which our experience mak- ** us believe are the most helpful o the average per-on when watch- ; .ng a football game, or discussing i t afterward*". These booklets art being given i cw«y free of all obligations at all | ftks Service stations and deal- IfinL 4 Rife Biologist Is Speaker At Meeting of Science Seminar Di. A. C. Chandler, professor of biokry, Rke Institute, addressed Science Seminar on the sub- Sotne Aspects of Pablic Health in India", Monday evening at eifht o’clock in the lecture room tlie Physics Building. Sinking with the knowledge gained from three years experi- in India, Dr. Chandler ably the attention of the audience, talk dealt chiefly with the i ary conditions new prevalent in n gioru around Calcutta. "Ip the sverage Indian villiage, 'Dr. Chandler said, “conditions are not too bad." Water supplied ir. most towns is fairly safe to drink, and newersge disposal systems are found in the European quarters of mo*^ cities, the speaker added. The chief problem. Dr. Chandler winded out. lies in forcing sani tary' conditions upon the natives who habitually live in extremely i-ongipsted districts. 1 He professor stressed the fact (hat the handling of foods is “car ried on without any semblance ot cleanliness.” Only One Co-ed At 1T , * vT* , Engineering School of 3000 Enrollmen: PHI BETTA KAPPA | KEY PREFERRED TO | FOOTBALL LETTER Columbia Finh Sava lit Peace*' In Greatest bition After Four Years In Columbia. New York—(IF)—The frfih- men men at Columbia College dpn't go so strong for “great big f^ot ’‘ball men.” As a matter of (act 236 out of 326 expressed their opinions in a questions ire sent out by the Spectator. ' student news paper. said they would much pr.» fer to have a Phi Beta Kappa key to a football letter. Thirtjr-thh-ee admitted they would like to hgve both. While 216 said they did not drfnk hard liquor, most of the men ex pressed a liking for 31. There were only 128 who smoked, whom three smoked only cigala Asked what they intended to after leaving Columbia. 52 a they intended to go to work, 51J to ‘ study medicine, 34 to enter kw school and 24 to pursue other grad uate study. One frosh said he felt he would have accomplished •his most cher ished desire if, after four years of college, he could be allowed to “sleep in peace." Of the lot. 121 AT THE PALACE— J Thumdary, Friday, aqd Saturday: ■' hn-topher Bean” Preview, Saturday Bight, 14 p. m.: “Kootlight Parade? Sunday and Mondfcy: “Night Flight" Tuesday and male” Wednesday: “Fe- die that somehow gets lost in the skirmish that clouds up when Ab- by is being cheated of her juat deserts. Lionel Barrymore makes the udd doctor seem so forgivably human that hia crime seems more like one of the flesh than a mark against his personal character. Ac tion rather slow. Probably more forceful on the legal stage. Cast; Mann Dressier, Lionel Barrymore, Helen Mack, Beulah Bondi. H. B. Warner, and Jean Hersholt. AT THE ASSEMBLY {HALL— Wednesday Night: ?Hold Your Man" Knda$ Night: Bentfit of Rifle Team; “Sweetheart of’Sigmi Chi" Saturday Matinee: ‘Three Little Pigs,” “Color Scales," and “Over the Amfes." Kiddie igatinne; ten cents admiaaion. Saturday .Night: “Ebst of Fifth Avenue" of AT TH* QUERN— ; 1 • || Friday and Saturdav: “Captur ed!" Saturday Night Preview at the Palace. “Footlight Parade.” Your favorites are teamed in this show. Cagney, your rough and ready young metropolitan, Joan BlondeU. the favorite “Blondi< of Uie populus today, Ruby Keeler, her sweetness, “Sugar Daddy" Guy Kibbee, and Dick Powell, the ten der crooner, are drawn within fir ing distance of one another. At in tervals splashes of beautiful wo men in all states of exposure are showered upon the audience. Par ticularly interesting is a water fall siNme m whkh the chorus is not alt-ms wat as looks. Breesy. Thursday, Friday, aid Saturday at the Phiace. “Christcfcher Bean." Another play revisefi to fit in to the dlttmn’s requirements, this time with notable sunless. “Chris topher Bean is a show;whose prin ciple siai seem- to be b> tear down said they wpre the waB ot hyprocro^r so prevn m. York(IP)—Miss Isabel C. bears the distinction of being lly e»-ed in a student body of i at the New York University College of Engineering. r graduate of Adolphia Cejlege the Massachusetts Institute of nology. Miss Ebel is now ring for a degree in Aero nautical Engineering. According to Dean Collins P. Bliss of the College of Engineer- j ing,, the . young woman is now de signing a new kind »f passenger tranhport plane to travel at a cruising rate of more than 200 mileh an hour. Republkans, 67 Democrats. 24 Socialists, twelve Communiats and 70 were undecided on politics. lent in the characters: of Puritan- iatk New Englanderki A typical New Kagland family is taken for the main characters, ind portray ed as tie gi eed-hatbig, goodly tieople. Then by a singular circum stance g fortune is let at their JAIL SENTENCES , GIVEN TO STUDENTS ON ARSON CHARGE tinger-tips^ They need tmly to dupe * their faithful and long-serving V.«: hington, D. C.A-Bvntaaces of maid. Abbey, to obUm the for- froni two to nine months in priwm tune. Tbeir reactions jare natural this week had been meted out |to and amusing. It gives jan interest- Edward J. Purl ton and H. Albert mg croal-seetion on the character Smith. George Washington Uni-. of a man tempted by firhea. He is versity students, who were charged a little too human aiyi succumbs, with arson in connection with a Marie Dressier doe* a regular fire at the Signs Chi fraternity Dressier : job in her roll of “Abby”, house last July. They plan to.a|>- and Helen Mack plads an inter- peal. esting «lopement with Russel Har story. It is hast against bant, with the Harlow-Gable team’s love dreary .... even approaching mor- scenes. The results of that? Juat hast! j • j ,i Cast: Jean Harlow, Clark Gable. v j • Saturday Night at the Assembly Hall: “East ot Fifth Avenue" 1 Trials and tribulations of those forced to live in a boarding house. Mary Carlisle carrying on an af fair with a poet, Walter Byron, in spite of marital ties. Intricacies and complications brought on by the closeness in whkh these board ers live. - Boarding house life typi fied to a “T” and a plot that seems more drgmatk than natural in its unfolding. I Cast: Wallace Ford. Dorothy Tree. Mary Carlisle, Walter Con nolly. and Walter Byron. j J-j. ’ Frida/ Night at the Assembly Hall: "Sweetheart of Sigma CM" “And the gold of her hair with the blue of her eyes .. . j. . " That’s Mary Carlisle, all right. This trim (Continued on Page 5) Wednesday Night at the Assem bly Hall: “Bold Your Man.” And she held him! Jean Harlow is demurely operating a perfectly respectable little trim game W)M9 the dashing hero, Clark Gable, pops into her bathroom and (.weeps her eff her feet .... or rather out of her tub. He is a crook oa a large scale, and manages to get Jean into a play that results in her being sent to a girls' reforma tory. Clark breaks down and de cides to do right by the little gal he has wronged, which action is necessitated by a distinct and un looked-for twist in the plot. From then on it is all action and speed as Clark and Jean 'pit their wits a'gainst those of the reformatory officiate. The settings ■re exceedingly bidness .... but that .is the price of realism. The situations are what some people would call “tripe,” b,ut nevertheless they furniah frame work for a powerfully convincing f;.im ASNLAVHLY II HALL “East of Fifth Avenue” wMb ' WALLACE FORD AND DOROTHY TREE The “Grand Hotel" of New York board house life. taturdgy,6 :!0 and 8:30 “Hell Below” wMl . I ROBERT MONTGOMERY WALTER HISYON . MADGE EVANS AND JIMMY DURANTE Wednesday, Ndv. 29 Also Nursery Rhyme# a musical renew IT TAKES TO BREAK RECORDS IN THE AIR! ^ - - 4 . mi m i ,‘:C m mmM V •: ; . u. HERE’S ' > | ? FOR YOU S HREDDED WHEAT helps you gojilaces and do things. And that’s easily explained. Shred- detf Wheat is whole wheat. And whole wheat is man's greatest energy food, blessed by Nature with all the vital ele ments .. . proteins, vita mins, minerals, carbohy drates, and bran. All of these come to you in Shredded Wheat. Noth ing has been added, nothing taken away. The next time you draw up a chair in yottr favorite campus eating place* order Shredded Wheat When the crisp- baked* golden brown bis cuits are placed in front of you. just pour on plen- V ty of milk or cream and top with your favorite fruit. And t n joy the best-tasting bowlful of energy that ever brightened your»day. m ^ «NU /UK! Wlkr M huT: ? 1 d “ th « whole woHd ? ^urancT 1 m *»velous Camel* - I Po «’ “ l m BMP : U m ■ ■■■* i v f 7 ^ ^ 0 ■ * ife .. ■£ f / 1. , mm RVM8 dorr MVS mo marrs without a Stop, Frances Wt»r*«li» anc ) Louise Tbaden act the world’s endurance fligh* record for women. Mias Tbaden says, “ For some T** r * I’ve smoked Camels. They taste better." Also a Camd fan, Mks Marsalis says, ‘Tve never changed be- cm*** 1 can't afford to take chances with my nerves." .\ : : • - MCMC ACROSS AMERICA in 10 hours and 5H minutes, Col. Roscoe Turner recently added a new West-East transcontinental speed record to the Eaat-Weet record be . earlier this' : pilots lot," says CoL Turner. “I Camels for the , and l enjoy i • -v' of healthy MATCNL| ts 9 11Mb Si*€e>4eM 7u*H m ta Gme&i Wbmym tm S*- sgsr* Pslh se tA« p+cksgt, tLNOWwskmr THE VITALLY DIFFERENt FOOD SHREDDED WHEAT A product of NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY “Unoodo Mokora" is iaore nm ^ "to KHOW ^otooH wo mode from W, KOtt JX.FWSW1 c o* M\an any etHei ^opulor hrond. Men and women who are famous » for their brilliant flying agree about smoking and healthy nerves. “I never worry about healthy nerves,” they say, “be cause I smoke Camels. ” They cannot afford to make a mistake in choosing their ciga rette. They have to know. And it is more fun to know, because of the greater smoking pleasure they find in Camels. Camels are milder.,. better in taste. They leave no “cigaretty” aftertaste. OOP Change to Camels... and see for yourself that they do not get on your nerves or tire your taste! I* CAMELS CMTLIER TOBACCOS NEVER GET ON YOUR NERVES... NEVER TIRE YOURTASTE