k! i. i >' I iC J >f' ii . m 'i : iMiuiawli iim\ |[liMM^Ka Tr m v- Corps Wi — 1 W ! V Pv ^ V'S ] V ■ ) s-vK; J , At , ! *ii ^ ,i 1 •' f 1 *' t : ■ If fl M riL • m if ATION, TEXAS. FRIDAY A. AM.COLLEGE ! >N, NOVEMBER It, 1938 k If 'lx p TELEPHONE 8 *es • lol.S tied for Increase ederal Expenses BY H1I.L MUMtAl; “Hie Mxpcnsc for all the branches of our fiKleral fovomment totaled f4,0(K),(NK) for the fir*t year after it wa» established; as an example of the enormous increase in federal since that time, we a bill for $6,500,000 for yavalinf expenses during the last year for officials of the Resettle ment Administration alone -which U list one of the thousands o( ' branches of oar government exist ing today," declared United. States Senator Bennett Champ Clark of I Missouri ia a speech on current political affairs and problems de- )' Ihretwd Tuesday night at' Guion Halt course/’ continued Senator “an(y such comparison be- flpderal expenditures jof ear lier and later years of our history must take into account the great increase in the area, population, and rea>urres of the United States and We correspondingly greater demand for services made upon the government. Still, hundreds of big OCoatinued on page 4) i , ) ■Ti.j.;. -H OFFICIALS MAKE TRIP TO CHICAGO iR COHVERTIOR President T. O. Walton; Dean Gibb Gilchnst, Haad of the School of Engtanertng; A. & Conner, Di rector of the Agricultm|ri ment (Station; H. H. Williamson, Director of the Agricultural Ex tension Service; and Jack Shelton and Miss Mildred Horton, Vica- Rirectors of the Extension Service, comprise the six representatives of A. & fc. who are now attending the annual convention of the A*- M>ciation of land-Great Colleges and Universities of the United States, meeting «t the La Salle Hold m Chioago. Monday through Wednesday of this Pitsident Walton is Giiairraan ef the Executive Committee of the Association, and will preside iOV$r all the executive meetings?^ Gilchrist is attending as the fe- presentatiwe of the school of eV "Heavenly” Gates Welco rr DR. , SM MAKE TALE gineeriag. Every state of the Union is re presented at the Chicago conven tion by some five or six delegates. A number of prominent men of the nation are attending the meeting. One of the main problems being taken up before the convention is the accrediting of land-grant col leges anti universities. The Asto elation 1*1* ' hopes to set its own »tan- r or all the institutions of this hind in Ihe country. i By E. MkQUILLEN (but gets his mad at Stephenvilif r former Students' Aasa. j. . 1 Gone P. Blake,' recent- Itaynumd A. Higginbotham, ly attended the American Bottkrs’ ’38, is, teaching school at Slidell, Convention in New York City. He the Craters pf the rrington Kenneth “Heavenly" Gstea (right), $4-year the seclusion of the "Holy Ghost and Us" cult 1 on his return to Dartmouth College at Hanover, N \ also declared he was through M WHEN THE SENIORS WERE FISH With grid star, who quit the football team and at Amhurst, N. H., is welcomed by school- Gates, admitting “maybe I made a mistake,’’ football forevgr. RESIT EHGUSH TESTS GIVER BY SUMMEV Dr. George Summey, Jr.\head of the English Department announced that the grading English >fdview test recently taken N by 1083 sophomores has been com pleted. The (test, an objective one, covered thoroughly matters of Us v cal ( JUDGE ARTHUR H. JAMES- PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT VOTES- tpill be throwmup at the south end of the field to accommodate the overflow. * \ Nearly 6,000 seaU ha ve been set aside f*H the “Knothole Gang”— school children from aH over the state who secure Knothole card* through their superintendent and see Texas home games for 25 tynt*. BY L. E. THOMPSON r I For several years all writers, militory and otherwise, have paint ed horrible pictures of the war of the future as a war of machines. But military operations aince the World W^r should, by now, have convinced even the laymen that the war a now largely mechanbed R would be foolish acoprdhig to American Mil itary experts, to completely rtech- ■mse American -win-, tuk, country an cannot matt aero types of ttyrain wijh the ease *4 rapidity of horsemounted cavalry. American territory, especially ia ? r Southwest, would be ideal for » operations, of cavalry in ae* cordance with American principles In every militory operation of the A mm iran forces, and especially in the plains country against the In diana. the cavalry has been aA.fcn* portant factor in the success of operations. J* • / I , -•m ±- >' 1 I •4 #h ; is pictured at saw the Keystone State swing away from the New arrived to exercise his privilege aa an American citizen, ■korkers gave him a rousing celebration on his reflection itrV* ; h Pa., with one of his staunch Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas, 87, his ou tside the has good Hi Alvin i at Hyde Park, for the broad smile Uu i ■ : ; - •’I • ■ i • ( ( - 1 „, j j ,f i { h 1 |