■■ 8 COACH NORTON \ 1 * * % 1' . N * | Welcome To A and M and Btyaa ‘ r BEST OF SUCCESS Drop by soon and let us say “beWo” ’ ■-' * ** - I BULLOCK & AKIN Popular Priced Cash Store for Men. Young Men and ‘-'fc Boys (Greetings and Best Wishes To COACH NORTON n i i ; McCULLOUGH-DANSBY FURNITURE COMPANY Bryan, Texas rtf A ROUSING CHEER TO OUR NEW COACH HOMER NORTON BRYAN - COLLEGE TRACTION CO. . i i ■ • », 1.11 l Schedule Service from 7:30 A.M. Until Bus leaves Bryan thirty minutes after the hour ex cept 10:30 A.M. and 8:30 P.M. Bus leaves College Station on the hour except 11:00 Aid. and 9:00 P.M. Sunday service same as above except 7:30 A.M. from Bryan and 8:00 A.M. from College. Saturdays all trips are made. Yoor Patronage Appreciated SAFETY COURTESY DEPENDABILITY YARD UBERAL CLUB WOULD OUST SOLON HUEY LONG Hanard Students Strongly Urge AO American Youth To Join Fight To Remove Louisiana Senator. CAMBRIDGE. Mau.—Member, of tbc reorganised Harvard Liber al Club this week announced • campaign among collage student* throughout the country to bring pbout the removal of Huey P. Long as United States senator from Louiiiisna Officers of the club declared that they had seat letters to student political organisations and other undergraduate groups in colleges and universities ia practically ev ery section of the country. They said they were seeking to unify student appeals for a complete in vestigation of the charges brought against Long by voters in Louisi ana. ‘This letter alms at drawing to gether American youth in the first united drive to participate in pub lic affairs,” the Liberal Club mis sive stated. “In the State of Louisiana there THE BATTALION ■ ■ A S M E Planning To Hold Dance in the Near Future Members of the American So ciety of Mechanical Knirineers de cided to sponsor a dance sometime in the future and to obtain the services of some outside orchestra. A further discusion at the plgns was carried on at the last meeting which was held in the Mechanical Enginering building last Thursday night at 7:80. Since the plans are tentative, no definite conclusion has been reached. Immediately following the busi ness meeting, a motion picture reel was shown which dealt with all the many different phases of boiler manufacture. Beginning with the plain sheet steel, the development of the finished product was traced through the various stages of con struction. College Change Athletics DR. LAMAR JON] Dentist X-Ray Mmcvmil floor CHf Mst’L Baa! Bryan, Texas “Your Mother” Give her the only thing she wants most - - - YOUR PHOTOGRAPH Aggieland Studio has ruled for several years a ruth less political demon. Huey Long. Efforts to laugh him out of exis tence have failed, and when his actions became unbearably tryan- nical the people of his State ap pealed to the Senate Committee on Elections and Privileges to in vestigate their chargns that Sen ator Long was incapable of rep resenting Louisiana. “Evidence of corrupt practices were laid before this committee in great piles; yet what we call ‘red tape and t*.litics’ has made this committee unwilling to aid the people of Louisiana, unwilling to ‘air Louisiana’s laundry in the Senate*' “We have been convinced of the legality of the anti- Long side; we have met Long and hate been dis gusted by him. His very character, guarded by a bodyguard, is re pulsive to our idea at a United States Senator. We have joined the Tight, therefore, and are now | asking all American youth to do likewise. The club officers alto disclosed that they had seat a petition to Senator David I. Walsh of Massa chusetts, askiag that he force the committee to take action agaiast W. LOUIS.—CoBegr sports have undergone a hoj»e-cl«wning. and while they still a^y not be entire ly pure, their improvement is very Commendable. j|juch was the tenor of a report read before the annual meeting of the Association of American Col leges in St. Ljuia. The report, pre pared by President Thomas S. Gat es of the Uatvareity of Pennsyl vania. who is hand of the associa tion’s committee on athletics, tras based on a •• ent survef of the college sports situation. “An increasing number of in stitutions have taken the financ ing of college sports out of the hands of committees and have turned it over to the treasurer, bur sar or other «mi valent officer,” the report stated. This, according to Dr. Gates, ia a step in the right direction and has done much to reduce the ten dency toward the commerctaliia- tion of college athletics. He also said that a decrease in athletic scholarahips had been found and that a-.general effort to de-emphasise competitive athletics, particularly football, was beiag made. The general houx- cleaning, in cluding the reorganization of many athletic departments in colleges and universities, can be dated from the publication of the fam ous Carnegie Foundation report on athletics in 1928. Dr. Gates College Clothes and the English Manner E. C. Anderson spoke to the Ac counting Society at its regular meeting in the Asfcury Room Tues day night. Mr. Anderson, a prac ticing attorney, talked on business law and its application to the ac- ,'ounting profession. a “Klngfish.' to edher coll the Louisiana The letter to edher colleges was signed by Alvin M. Joeephy, Jr, Harvard sophomore and chairman of the politkar fetion committee of the club. Aside from the adoption of garters as an accaasory to the college man's dress (popular fiction and cartoons to th, contrary) Esquire Magazine pictures the above trend as one towards an elaborately casual English countryside manner. Short, sleeveless sweaters and the bal- maccan topcoat are two keynotes, a direct follow-up on the lead of English university men, a recent report from London haring stated that they are now turning out for smart cocktail parties attired in these sleeveless sweaters and light weight tweed suits. As for color combinations, since men have definitely thrown off the feminine-fos tered taboo against the combination of grey and brown, many odd color schemes have won acceptance among men of the sporting type. Brown brogue shoes are getting a big play on the campus where there has been a prevalence of white buckskin for year round wear. Knitted ties are the dominant note as far as neckwear is concerned although the bat wing ii fast gaining favor. The hat is a snap brim. /I You hear a lot today about balanced did:— Ip i : 1 I i HA HHL L ' .. and there’s something too in the way tobaccos are bal anced that makes a cigarette milder and makes it taste better. • > ' ‘! I keep coming back to that statement on the back of the Chesterfield package— i. 1 Ii JK • # ! ©ESTERFIELD-’ •• Cigarettes ARE A BALANCED BLEND ' OF THE FINEST AROMATIC • TURKISH TOBACCO AND THE CHOICEST OF SEVERAL AMERICAN VARIETIES BLENDED IN THE CORRECT PROPORTION TO BRING OUT THE FINER QUALITIES OF EACH TOBACCO. • ns ■. s. rsr off. We believe you’ll enjoy Chesterfields and we ask you to try them. U. of Cat Regents Refuse To Abolish Military Training LOS ANGELES.—Re affirming its previous stand, the Board of Regents of the University of Cali fornia this week was on record denying the petition of student leaders from the Berkeley campus of the unfrersity, who asked that compulsory military training be abolished hs a policy of the insti tution. The petition was presented at the Los Angeles meeting of the board and: was signed by Wake field Taylor, president of the As sociated Students at the University of Califorhia at Berkeley; James McCollum, editor of the Daily Cal ifornian, and Bruce C. Yates, who was editor of the paper last year. They declared that sentiment a- gainst compulsory R 0 T C cour ses was widespread among student groups at Berkeley and asked that the rules which force freshmen and sophomore men students to enroll for military training be relaxed. After the petition had been pre sented to the board by Dr. Robert Gordon Sproul, president of the University, and the board refused to alter its previously expressed policy, the regents asked Dr. Sproul to determine whether or not the petitipn represented a pre ponderance of student sentiment at Berkeley. The president was in structed to make a report at the next monthly meeting. The regents sometime ago de clined to allow two students of the University of California at Loa Angeles to remain in school, al though they refused to enroll for R O T C. The students then ap pealed to the State Supreme Court, but tost the decision. M.M ASSBAVKLY HALL ■ V. BIRCH The Magician Friday, March 2, 7:4S “ONE MAN’S JOURNEY” with LIONEL BARRYMORE Saturday C:38 Only Owe Show “JOE PALOOKA” with JIMMY DURANTB Saturday. t:4S “MASTER OF MEN” with JACK HOLT ‘ Wednesday, March 7 •HOWDY”—COACH NORTON We Are Proud To Have You With Us vj[: .1 ’ ; THEDELUXECAFE Where Food and Service Are Unexcelled BRYAN I V TfcXAS —the cigarette that’s MILDER —the cigarette that TASTES better £» ffH Ijeevrr a Mm* Tosjkxo Co. 1 • .I\ \*t Us Relieve You of Your ( leaning Worries i SEND IT TO THE AMERICAN STEAM LAUNDRY 0K» CLEANERS-DYERS AND HATTERS C'&fc tak&out60 and Leave no C0~ PHONE 585and 600 l* L