PAGE 4 THE BATTALION -TUESDAY, NOV. 21, 1939 Official Notices All notices should be sent to The Battalion Office, typewritten and double-spaced. The deadline for them is 4 p. nt. prior to the day of issue. SCHEDULE OP EVENTS November 23—Meats Judging Team be nefit show—Assembly Hall—7 :30 p. m. November 24—Faculty dance—Mess Hs —9 p. m. to 12 midnight November 24—Meats Judging Team be nefit show—Assembly Hall—7 :30 p. m. November 29—Bonfire Dance—Sbisa Hall, 9 p. m. to 12 midnight. November 30—Thanksgiving Day foot ball game—A. & M. vs. Texas —Kyle Field. Day foot- University BATTALION STAFF MEMBERS All students desiring to become mem bers of The Battalion staff as well as all old staff, members are requested to attend a short business meeting in The Battalion office, 122 Administration Build- ice, ing Friday night immediately after yell practice. Any A. for membership. & M. student is eligible PUBLIC HEARING BY CITY COUNCIL A public hearing will be held by the City Council of College Station, Monday, Decembep 8, at 7 p. m. in the Physics lecture room concerning the report of the zoning commission to the City Coun cil. This meeting is to provide an op portunity for the citizens of College Sta tion and others interested to be heard relative to the zoning ordinance recom mended by the commission, prior to the adoption of a zoning ordinance by the City Council. DR. J. H. BINNEY, MAYOR NEWS STAND Starting with the next issue, the New- will receive thre ' nes will be able to supply the demand. stand will receive three times the num ber of Life Magazines than before and LONGHORN SOPHOMORE PICTURES Sophomores of the Field Artillery Regi ment must have their class' section pic tures for the Longhorn made before Thursday, November 23, in order to get their pictures in their section. No pic tures will be accepted after that date. LONGHORN CLUB PICTURES Space for club pictures in the 1940 Longhorn may now be reserved. See Wat son in room 203, dormitory 12. of 18 and 35 who are physically fit and who desire to enlist in the United States Army, come to room 207, hall 6, at any time. Organizations FISH AND GAME CLUB All freshmen majoring or minoring in Wild Game are extended a cordial in vitation to join the Fish and Game Club which meets every Monday night in room 112, Animal Industries Building. Eligi ble students may join the club by attend ing the meetings and by paying the club ble students may join the club attend- dues, which amount to 50c per semester. MARKETING AND FINANCE CLUB The Marketing and Finance Club will meet Wednesday night at 6:45 in the Y. M. C. A. parlor. All members are asked to be present and bring their club dues. D. B. VARNER, CLUB PRESIDENT ACCOUNTING SOCIETY The Accounting Society will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Chemistry Lecture Room. The speaker will be Dr. J. V. Pen nington, works manager and vice-president of the Reed Roller Bit Company of Hous ton. Dr. Pennington is president of the Houston Chapter of the American Statis tical Association. His subject will be “the use or statistics in .Business. ne win be accompanied by Mr. J. L. Block, certi- countant of Houston, is open to all students in- ipa fied public accountant of Houston. The meeting is open to all studeni terested in hearing Dr. Pennington. PRE-MEDICAL SOCIETY Dr. C. C. Doak will address the Pre- Medical Society Tuesday in the Biology lecture room at 7:30. It is important that all members be there. GRADUATE CLUB The second meeting of the Graduate Club will be held Wednesday night at 7 p. m. in the lounge of the old mess hall. Dr. S. R. Gammon, professor of his tory, will be the guest speaker and has chosen the topic “The European Situation”. Refreshments will be served, and all graduate students are urged to attend. ABILENE CLUB There will be a meeting of the Abilene Only Texas University Steers Stand In The Way Now; Aggies Strength Lies In Capable Reserves And Punting a i Wd< :adem to b men from surrounding territory are interested in the Christmas dance. A. & M. Club Wdenesday at 7:30 p. m. in room 308, Academic Building. All members are urged to be present as well m from surrounding territory who resent as well Definite announcements will be made. FINAL EXAMINATIONS Final examinations for the first semes ter will be held from February 2nd to 8th, inclusive. The week will be divided into ten examination periods as outlined on page six of the “Schedule of Classes.” As provided in Paragraph 24 - 2, College Regulations, candidates for baccalaureate degrees at the end of the first semester are exempted from final examinations. Their daily grades through February 1 are to count as their final grades. REGISTRAR E. J. HOWELL IN CHARGE OF FUSES The following men are in charge of fuses in the dormitories. Milner, Legett, Walton, and P. G.—V. W. Laney, 85 Milner. Mitchell, Law, Puryear, and Ross— Price Hubbard, 14 Ross. Hart, Goodwin, and Bizzell—Fred John son, 154 Bizzell. Halls 1, 2, 3, and 4—H. R. Lanford, 103 Bizzell. Halls 5, 6, 7, and 8—J. N. Wallace, 327 hall 5. Halls 9, 10, 11, and 12—F. R. Higgin botham, 103 hall 9. CAMPUS STUDY CLUB The art handicraft hobby group of the Campus Study Club will meet each Tues day and Thursday from now until the beginning of Christmas vacation, with the exception of days on which regular (meetings are held and Thanksgiving Day. Until Christmas all meetings will be held at the home of Mrs. A. L. Schipper at 2106 South Echols Street in Bryan, from 2 to 5 p. m. Lost and Found The freshman or sophomore who ex changed his cap for a junior cap at the pie Saturday night can get same by coming to room 227, dormitory 3. Houston on Shepard ton Aven ARMY APPLICANTS All unmarried citizens between the ages >— W. J. Douglas Insurance Agency General Insurance Rms. 18 & 19 Commerce Bldg. Phone 160 Bryan, Texas We Invite You To Meet The STORRS- SCHAEFFER STYLIST Mr. Bob Griffin At Our Bryan Store WEDNESDAY November 22nd Showing the very latest in over 400 new fabrics for winter wear, from the world’s foremost looms . . . Every garment hand tailored and made to your individual meas urements. Your Inspection Is In vited . . . Personal At tention To Your Require ments. f llaldrop & (S College Station Bryan ngt iba Araban Tern; LOST: A campaign hat in the As sembly Hall last Friday night. If found return to room 111, dorm 6. Reward 1 LOST: A tan leather jacket, left, in >pard Drive and Washing- Sunday afternoon. Will the ton Avenue Sunday afternoon. Will the Aggie who brought it back to college please return it to room 211, dorm 4? Pay Increase— (Continued from page 1 science to receive a reserve offi cer’s commission. The association further requested the War Depart ment that in case it does not ap prove the recommendations made, to make a clear-cut statement of its plans and policies for the future development of the R.O.T.C. units in land grant colleges. It petition ed the War Department to increase the daily commutation for advanc ed R.O.T.C. students from 25 to 40 cents a day, and instructed its executive committee, in coopera tion with its committee on mili tary affairs, to press the War De partment for an early decision on these questions. President Walton was re-elected chairman of the executive com mittee for the third consecutive year. He is also a member of the committee on military affairs. The Association of Land Grant Colleges and Universities, which brings together the greatest agri cultural and engineering scientists in the nation, is said to be the larg est and most influential education al organization in the United States. By Jimmie Cokinos With only the University of Texas standing in the path of the “unaccustomed-to-it-all Aggies,” the Cadets started a ten-day prac tice period Monday that will be packed with work, work, and more work. They know that the Univer sity of Texas team will be no pushover as they present one of the conference’s outstanding backs in Jack “Cowboy” Crain. The Aggie players in their “fin al” practice grid will not only concentrate on how to stop Crain, but on stopping a Texas team that rises to incredible heights on such occasions. This game should be a battle between the “rabbit-back” Crain and the “plugingest” full back in the nation, “Big John” Kimbrough. The Texas Aggies are rated by the Associated Press sports writ ers’ poll as the No. 1 team of the nation on defense. Let’s take this powerful grid machine apart and see why they rate this spot, and also why the Aggies have allowed their opponents just 742 yards in nine games. In Joe Boyd and Ernie Pannell you have two of the best tackles in the South. They are backed by “Poppa” Wesson, Martin Ruby, capable sophs, and “Chip Routt, junior letterman. At the guards you can find all that a coach could wish for in Mar shall Robnett and Charley Henke. This pair is making the Aggie rail- birds forget about Routt and Jones.-f-the former Aggie greats. They are closely followed by Leon Rahn, Roy Bucek, and Bubba Reeves. Rahn, by the way, is the most improved player on the Aggie squad. For the- ends, it would be hard to name the two best players for that position, since there are six candidates to choose from. But leading the list would be “Herb” Smith, the best pound-for-pound player in the nation, according to end coach Dough Rollins. Bill Buchanan, James Sterling, Bill Duncan, Joe White, and Harold Cowley are the other wingmen who are giving Norton the best end play he has ever received while at Aggieland. Tommy Vaughn is playing a heads-up game at center and has several times come up with some nice playing to put the Cadets in a scoring position. Odell Herman and Henry Hauser are the other boys pushing Vaughn for his start ing job. In the backfield we find that team is spilling over with good talent. For the quarterback job, Norton has “Cotton” Price, Mar- land Jeffrey, and Marion Pugh. Any one of these three is capable of holding down the signal-calling position. At the halves we find two of the sweetest running backs in the conference in Derace Moser and Bill Conatser. James Thoma son is holding down the blocking back assignment. Not too much can be said about this back since he has already proved himself as the Aggies’ most valuable man. He has played more 60-minute games than any Aggie player this season. John Kimbrough is the spearhead of the Aggie running at tack. In nine games he has car ried the ball 125 times for 461 yards, giving him an average of 4.07 per try. In doing so he has lost only 14 yards so far. This, dear readers, is what the opposing team has had to face whenever it played the Texas Ag gies of 1939. The success of the Cadets lies in reserve strength. “The Jeep”-Born on the Trinity, He’s “Been Around” from Coast to Coast— HOMECOMING QUEEN OF BAYLOR ANNOUNCED Miss Betty Burkhart, brunette from Alamo, Texas, was selected Homecoming queen of Baylor uni versity in the annual ceremonies last week. She was a nominee of the senior class and rode that or ganization’s float in the home coming parade. Other nominees, all of whom rode in the parade, and their or ganization were Ladye Riter, Ter rell, Dap club; Bonnie Ruth Slaw- son, Corsicana, sophomore class; Jo Blair, Waldo, Ark., Peer club; Dorothy Shands, Cleveland, Miss. Beta Pi Theta; Gwen Allen, Dewey- ville, Southeast Texas club; Mar jory Knott, Dallas, Athenian club; Bernadet Breedlove, Houston. Varsity B club; Allene Coor, Mart. Delta Sigma Pi; Marjorie Pitt man, Tyler, Esquire club; Lois and Louise Bailey, Waco twins, Urban ite club; Dorothy Kelly, Newgulf Classical club; Johnnie Nelson. Winnsboro, freshman class; and Marilyn Reese, Floresville, junior class. Education Council Preparing Tests For Would-Be Educators Philadelphia, Pa.—For the first time in history, college graduates who anticipate entering the teach ing profession are facing a bat tery of comprehensive examinations that will test their fitness as edu cators. The American Council on Educa tion has a new teacher testing- project that leaders of the organ ization believe will be the next great step in the improvement of education in the U. S. First use of the new examinations will be next spring in certain cities in the East and Midwest. It is the purpose of the special committee devising the tests to develop a three-fold service. First, a battery of carefully constructed tests will be prepared and made available to the cities cooperating in the experiment. “Second, the committee will give all possible assistance to the co operating schools in the study and exchange of ideas directed toward the improvement of all other means of selecting candidates, including investigation of the so-called ‘im ponderables.’ “A third aspect of the service is that data will be made available for research in teacher education.” Cross-Country— (Continued from page 1 San Antonio to Dallas, came after fifteen minutes’ waiting. “And it was an interesting ride, too,” Keyes pointed out. “We talked politics for 200 miles and the driv er seemed to know the subject thoroughly.” Arriving in Dallas, Keyes was let out near the city limits where he caught a bus which took him to the opposite side of town. From a masculine point of view, his second ride proved to be even luckier than the first, three at tractive girls driving him fifty miles further toward his goal. Greenville was as far as the ride went, but succeeding rides pre sented an equally varying group of drivers. First an army doctor, then a salesman, and finally a ride (from the Texas border to Dayton. Ohio, with a miner. Texarkana at 4:30 in the after noon; Littlerock, Arkansas, at 8:45 that night; and so passed one of the luckiest rides of the trip—non stop, except for eating and refuel ing, from Texas to Ohio. “Almost without exception,” Keyes said, “the various drivers were wonder ful to me.” Arriving in Dayton, the miner invited Keyes to come to his home and clean up, which he did, after which the Ohioan took him to the edge of town where Keyes could once again continue his journey. From Dayton to New York Keyes’ good luck held true to form. His next ride was with an air plane test pilot; then with a truck driver to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; and finally a series of short rides into New York City. Texas to New York in less than two days! A record-breaking trip which still hasn’t been equalled by any hitch-hiker and which was made possible by Keyes’ reflecting town and city indicators and his reflecting suitcase sign which read. “Texas A. & M. College.” • Next time: New York to San Francisco in four days—after the usually correct New York Times declared that the trip couldn’t be made in two weeks via “thumb.” (Editor’s note: This is the first in a series of four articles con cerning The Battalion’s student columnists. The next three will include Hub Johnson, intramural columnist; Bob Nisbet, movie col umnist; and George Fuermann, Backwash columnist. In previous issues this year The Battalion pub lished articles on the newspaper’s three faculty columnists.) -major sports and intramurals. Since that time he has been sports editor, first under editor R. L. Doss and now in his second year working with Bill Murray. Jeep’s home is now at College Station but he formerly hailed from Houston where he graduated from John Reagan High School in the spring of 1935. A Civil Engi neering major, Jeep’s a Field Artil leryman in Second Headquarters Battery. Besides being Battalion sports editor. Jeep is also assistant South west Conference statistician, a former vice-president of the A. & M. Club, and sports editor of A. & M.’s first Summer Battalion last summer. “Jeep” Oates He was born on a boat tied to the banks of the Trinity River on the morning of August 29, 1915; has been everywhere and done a little of everything from coast to coast; and is now in his second consecutive year as Battalion sports editor—that’s E. C. “Jeep” Oates. But his list of distinctions don’t stop there. Jeep is also the old est member on The Battalion staff, having worked sports for A. & M.’s student publication for more than four and a half years. During his first year and a half on the staff, Jeep worked on in tramurals and minor sports. Then until the fall of 1938 he covered MEN’S FEET, TOO, ARE - “ON THE UP AND UP” Amherst, Mass.—Plenty of evi dence has been brought out to prove that the size of women’s feet has increased a full size in two generations. Now comes an indication that men’s feet are on the up and up. When the R.O.T.C. supply de partment at Massachusetts State College came to uniforming the freshmen, they found that all the larger sizes of shoes were quickly exhausted and 50 freshmen couldn’t be shod. This doesn’t mean, the supply department points out, that the freshmen have unusually large feet—merely that more of them wear the larger sizes than is usual. Shoes are furnished the military- department in a range of sizes presumed to outfit an average group of men. But these men aren’t average. Trailers and station wagons especially equipped to treat in juries and ailments cruise from camp to camp in the wake of California’s migratory farm work- DYERS HATTERS AM EM CAN- S TEAM DRY - - C LEANERS PHONE 585 BRYAN Patronize Your Agent in Your Organization WORLD'S RECORD I will attempt to break the WORLD’S RECORD For One Day’s Life Production Nov. 28th, 1939. Con tests will be staged in other schools later. I want to set a record for A. & M. that others can’t surpass. Help me do it fellows. S. J. (Joe) Marek Special Agent VICTORY LIFE INSURANCE CO. University Frats Won’t Have To Pay New Employment Tax Definite word that the Social Security Act passages which forc ed college fraternal organization to pay the special employment taxes had been cancelled by a spe cial act of Congress has been re ported to the executive committee Conference. The new amendment goes into effect on January 1, 1940, and pro vides that “domestic service in a private home, local college club, or local chapter of a college fra ternity or sorority” be excepted after that date. The measure also excepts from the jurisdiction of the Social Se curity Act any service that does not provide a renumeration that exceeds $45 and service that is “performed by a student who is enrolled and is regularly attend ing classes at a school, college, or university.” To clear up some points that are not specifically covered by the amending act, the law com mittee of the National Interfra ternity Conference has submitted an application to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue “requesting re gulations concerning the inter pretation of these amendments.” Specifically, advice is requested as to the status of “(1) a chapter treasurer who keeps books of a local chapter; (2) a student, either a member of the chapter or a non member, who serves as a writer in a fraternity house; (3) a stu dent, either a member of the fra ternity or a non-member, who per forms janitorial services. “Bat” Columnist Dr. A1 B. Nelson, of the A. & M. Department of History, is the writ er of the Saturday installment of the editorial news column “As the World Turns”. His is the unique distinction of having gone through college and gained three degrees, with never a day of high school attendance. Saxet “GOOD” Ice Cream BRYAN DAIRY STORE 109 E. 26th BRYAN MENU TEXAS A. &M. GRILL BAKED YOUNG TURKEY WITH SAGE DRESSING AND CRANBERRY SAUCE BUTTERED ENGLISH PEAS CORN O’BRIEN CANDIED YAMS AU GRATIN POTATOES COFFEE TEA SWEET MILK HOME MADE HOT DINNER ROLLS v CHOICE BRANDIED MINCE PIE OR HOT FRESH PUMPKIN PIE 0 FOR DESSERT 60^ North Gate College Station — PORTRAIT OF A DORM DOOR Storms may rage over the Greyhound for a trip home, best date for Thanksgiving, why not go Greyhound this but you can bet your last Thanksgiving? — it’s two to nickel there’s no controversy one you’ll be a Greyhound on the best way to make booster, too! Thanksgiving trips home. "By Greyhound” is the LOW FARE SAMPLES unanimous shout of college Round Trip men (co-eds, too, begorra!) Houston $3.25 who want plenty of travel Beaumont 6.25 class and comfort, plus the Warn 3 35 very minimum of travel HillsboroV. V.' 4.50 cost. If you ve never tried Ft Worth 6 00 Dallas 6.00 AGGIELAND INN Phone 4-6614