V , ^"4 ; ! * i THE BATTALION ' •«. •ruPUT p«Duoinoa or *4« COUI0I Of HAAS COU.141 fTlTTOV .TtlAi I' L‘ Entered m moon'd class matter at the Post Office ftt College Station, Texas, under the Act of Congress. March S. 1879. Subscription rate fl.75 per ymk. Adrertising rates upon request, j EDITORIAL STAFF Wade M. Watson. H. G. Seeligson. E. C. Roberts Jack Sloan. C. A. Toech Editor Editor Sports Editor D. L. Ttsin^er P. G. Post Shepherd i JUNIOR EDITORS W. E. Tardy T. W. Pbrter Ray Murray REPORTERS H. Hanna T. M. Brown A. S. Queen BUSINESS STAFF -Associate Kditor Associate Editor 9 F. C. Schleicher W. U Garrard L. C. Smith R. S. Etsns Asbury Room Is Widely Used By College Intellectual Societies;. Named In Honor of Samuel Asbury Dr. Anbury Han Willed Hi* Collection of Books, Paint iitfs, and Music to The Coi- lejfc Library. V F. W. Brendle - E. L. If ears. W. D. P-~y X i C. B. Hussey - Tom Mats. ._._4 W. E. FHsfferald. J D. M. Emery— Assistant Circulation S. R. Greer Assistant Circulation -v. ^ , ■ . „ si L.t i« t A Adtsrtiain* Manager Assistant Advertising Manager Assistant Advertiainc Manager Circulation Manager Assistant Circulation Manager Assistant Circulation Manager 4U Perhaps there is no room on the campus which is so widely used as the Asbury Room in the Li brary. The room is in uee prac tically every night by those clubs which meet for intellectual pur poses. No social clubs are allow* ed to hold their meetings .fewk The Asbury Room has equipment for the making of coffee and lunches for the members of the which meet there. T. V. , Librarian stated he wished more of the chibs would make cof fee while their meetings were be- I Prepare Now t : ! r I THE PASSING GODWIN .... Just a little more praise to the “FLYIN’ If ARE” oa kickin’ that field goal Met Thurs day—the only one the seniors have seen kicked for A and M in their four football season’s at dear old Aggieland .... Now We can all turn our eyes to basketball—JOE MERE A, elongated captain of the team this year, should he the eut- standiag center In the Southwest . . . . let’s hope the same for the entire team, because we’re a few years late on the basketball crown we have been waiting for .... And AVIILY HALL LAst-minute touchdowns in football games this year should prove to students the value of last-minute studying. Though all the grades haven’t been tabulated, early reports turned in to the Registrar’s Of fice indicate that a large number of students are not passing the work required in their courses. During the football season most professors make allowances for corps trips and week-end games that detract the atudents' attention from their studies; but until January SO. no such excuses will be accepted for unprepared assignments. If freshmen haven’t learned college tricks, they may take a hint ing held. Those clubs and societies j those two FIGHTING IRISHMEN which hold their meetings In the we have overlooked to date . . . . Asb"-y Ro^m ere the Prr*s Chib. SHRO CR55NBTRG a-il “SLOT the C-ad-ate Club, Marketirg and 2IA CHINE” JOE EDELllAN .A. Finance Club, Scholarship Honor wince when did the cadet colonel Society, A and M' Co! eg* Little ?e t the monicker ’ PRETTY BOY” Theater Chib. Accounting Society. HCLMES .... ask “GANDER" The Junto. The Round Table, the HARDING for the details . . .i. Scribblers and the Hillel Club. 3l d from the crowd from Cuero As Asbury Room was named af- •omes the news about "PIP” Me ter Mr. Samue! Asbury, chemist LEOD playing second fiddle to the in the Experiment Station, who home-town lad ... . another crack has willed his large collection of at another BALDY .... have you munic, paintings, books, one of the heard about "CORPS DANCE*’ best phenog-arhic collection in HILDEBRANDT havirg his photo the State of Texas, four Steinway made with the flags of the unit on pianos, a collection of the histon- the right hand side .... who made cal background of Texas, a radio the remark that JOHNNY WEAV- and an eleetric phonograph. / ER was mixing business with plea- For the last fifteen years. Dr. sure .... better watch ZILCH. CAROLE LOMBARD AND JACK O’BRIEN Saturday. 12:45 Admission 2Se Y Card ef December 2 “The Wrecker” with JACK HOLT Saturday, 6:30 and 8:30 “Turn Back The Clock” With LEE TRACY Saturday, 10:45 “Storm At Daybreak” with KAY FRANCIS AND ' NILS A8THBR Wednesday, December «3 - ■ * I 11- iNi Asbury has been working on a musical drams bused on early his- sure . . Johnny .... what causes all of the mechani al engineers, assist ants, juniors, and even one senior from upperclassmen: increased interest and hard work iA the few re- tory of Texas from the Alamo to mainfng weeks of this term will have more weight than the December 11tbs battle of San Jacinto. Dr. As- electrical engineer to hang around report in determining the final grade. uwJ • *• What Price Victory? j bury hope* to finish his composi- ! tion by 1936. The music drama will be divided into five parts; Mek part of which will represent dif ferent historical developments of Texas. the main office in the M E Build ing .... the magatines? And for once in the history of A and M’s corps dances there wasn't enough stags .... an insert for Ripley's “Believe it or Not”. BLUE GOOSE .... the Royal Assembly Hall PRIDAY NIGHT Benefit Architectural Club PRICE 25* ? f. f is* SsKpLi ( i ? I 4 * i • £ America’s favorite SHORT CUT, LONG DISTANCE ir I . jlf ? Jrt FT f .. i i Miles shrink when you turn to Long Distance telephone service. You can get “there and bade’* in record time. ’ » ’ 4 * Improvements are constantly fitting the service more and more closely to the public's needs. Faster connections, higher quality transmission, “bargain . \ hours" after 8:30 P. M. Business today finds Long Distance a reliable and economical short cut to sales. You’ll find it a pleasant short cut back home. I SEY out th* car door and then threw his hat‘out after him but The Southwest Conference football season this year has furnished When H. C. Boyd, negro in- Order of the Blue Goose lost a gos- ended it all by swiping a large excellent material for conversation and editorials as well as being the •tractor in a vocational school in linq this week when JACK SLOAN, photo of the saste sed male? . . . . accustomed target for galleys of comment by sports writers throughout ®t. Lx>uis announced a special gosline of the First Battalion In- and WtLKlE ADSIT RAMBO this section. However, one very definite thing it briiqr* to mind is that in highball* and cocktaib fantry. was made a first lieuten came back after hairing a hilarious we as tesms, student bodies, alumni, and just fan* have been tumble f ® r negro butlers, the Board of a at on the Infantry Regiments! tjme during the holidays to find a to bear thought of losing s contest. Our one aim aad hope has been Education put its foot down and Sfoff .... Who was the damsel letter from his beat girl addressed said. No. that Kicked CLARENCE HUB-1 to his roommate. ! ? to emerge victorious from every engagement. It is’ impossible fot both teams to win a game and those who supported the losing team have not been hesitant in vindicating any pvrsoti or thing that happen* to be within reach. As for searching out the real cause of failure, little thought has been applied in that direction. ■ At 1 ’ ' ^ ^ - A !• Those who play the game with their moi/ths have succeeded in blam- < ing coaches and players alike without stopping long enough to analyse the situation a* it really exists. After all, is a victory the only thing that counts? It is great, all right enuogh. but is it the only thing that is really worth while? If that were the rase, t|M first tendencies would be towards poor sportsmanship since winning, at my cost, would be the goal. However, we must stop to realize that, in the cast of football and other athletic teams, the team that has tb< best material, the least number of injuries, and the best coach is fav ired to win for these reasons. Not any one of these things would be enough in itself to ranee a victory or defeat. Like a machine, a football team must be built of good parts and then carefully cared for if the maximum ef ficiency is expected. A team may meet these requirements and still fail to turn in victories. Why? Because of breaks, perhaps, but moi* often than not because the opposing team operates more smoothly and capably. ' J » An outstanding illustration of the wishy-washinrs* of speculators and supporters came to light as a result of the Baylor-S M U tilt in Dallas this year. Rumors, from fairly reliable sources, have it that Baylor backers were determiaed to oust Morley Jennings as the Bear coach if Baylor lost the game. Fortanately, for t'oach Jennings, Baylor won the game in the last few seconds of play. That night the Bear mentor was royally entertainod and praised at a banquet in his honor; all thoughts of criticism wore forgotten with the sweet tastes of victory. Is it sportsmanlike to always demand a.wftuier? Aren’t we big enough and open-minded enough to appreciate a well fought and fairly played gamef Shouldn’t we recognize real prowess where it -exists and give the opposing team, when vietbrious, credit for playing hard and fast? When beaten, let’s admit to ourselves and those around us that there eras a better team than our own. Believe it or not, most contests are not lost because of the inefficiency of one team but be cause of the super-efficiency of the winning team. i T j r * BELL SYSTEM , WHY NOT SAY “HBIXO” TO MOTHER AND DADP I _ RATES ARE LOWEST AFTER 8:30 P M. . I / * ot so long ago practically all cigarettes were made by hand ! , J ' 1 TJ Now, Chesterfields are made by highTpwd machines . that turn out 750 cigarettes a minute, and the cigarettes are practically not touched by hand. /* r ~ / •'-4* l if L We Are Offering: BETTER VALUES EVERY DAY Supply your wants at a big saving at Wards MONTGOMERY WARD Bryan St. Ph«ne 269 m/A COMPANY Br> .n. T«*m * ’ SUEDE LEATHER JACKETS Just what most fellows have been waiting for. Thoy’re here in a rich dark brows color—leather collar aad raff*. A leather jacket that will blead with your uniform. See them today. $4.95 OTHER FINE JACkETS. CALF OR SUEDfe SKINS (5.95 to 18.95 . A. M. WALDROP i COMPAQ Bryan aad College J i * u B Y the use of long steel oven* —drying machines of the most modern type—and by age ing the leaf tobacco for 30 months—like wine is aged— Chesterfield tobacco is milder and tastes better. Only pure cigarette paper— the best made — is used for Chesterfield. And to make sure that every thing that goes into Chesterfield is just right, expert chemists test all materials that axe used in any way in the manufacture. Chesterfields are made and packed in clean, up-to-date fac tories, where the air is changed every 4% minutes. The mois ture-proof package, wrapped in Du Font’s No. 300 Cellophane —the best made—reaches you just as if you went by the fac tory door. j* In a letter to lu, an emi nent scientist says: *j ! "Chesterfield [Cigarettes are just as pure as tht water you drink” TO 0ACCO CO. J • * esteriie. I • im. Lmott * Mmt Tomcbo Go. as pure as d.’ii