PAGE 4 — •—• Date Of Easter, Pushed Around by Sun And Moon, Still Follows a Set Law Easter, step-child of the calendar- 1 pushed around each year by the arbitrary behavior of the sun and moon, in 1940 will give the Chris tian world the second of three March appointments scheduled for the twentieth century. The festival this year is March 24, just three days later than the earliest possible date it can be set and one day later than the earliest observance in this century. Easter in 1913 occurred March 23, and the only other March celebration be fore the coming of the year 2,000 will occur March 25, 1951. As the spring equinox is the basis for computing the date, the earliest day that can be fixed is March 21 and the latest April 25. The spring, or vernal, equinox is the day the center of the sun is over the equator and day and night everywhere are of equal length. Many times since the turn of the century Easter has fallen near April 25, but will occur on April 25 but once in the twentieth cen tury—in 1943. The irregularity of the Easter date and how it is determined has been the puzzle of the ages, even to many well-informed persons, TOUGH DAY? When you’ve had a tough day in class or have a bad one ahead, when you’ve finished a tough grind of study or have one ahead - drop in and visit our fountain. A bite to eat or drink, along with a visit with the crowd you’ll always find around will send you away feeling refreshed and light hearted and much better fitted to turn that tough day into an easy and pleasant one! See you soon? GEORGE’S “■but the process is according to fixed laws. First, Easter must fall on Sun day—the Sunday nearest the four teenth day of the full moon of the spring equinox which occurs regu- Tarly on March 21.—Hence, the Easter date can not be before March 21 or after April 25. This year the new moon appeared be fore the vernal equinox and that explains why Easter comes at the extreme inner side of the possible cycle of dates. Of several reasons for the proc ess of determination, churchmen place first the sacred tradition of Christianity. The foremost prac tical reason is that the time of year chosen for Easter approx imates the season designated by history of the Resurrection Day. In the early days of the Chris tian church, Jewish converts used their calendar and others the Ju lian, the discrepancies bringing the issue to a head in 325 A.' , l). The eastern portion of the church had celebrated on the day after Pass- over, the fourteen days after the vernal equinox, regardless of whether the day was Sunday. On the other hand, the western por tion of the church observed the Sunday after the fourteenth day of the spring moon. Pope Leo the Great convoked a general council at Nicaea, which settled the matter in favor of the western church, and the practice has been observed since. Should sporadic movements to reform the Gregorian calendar (arranged by Pope Gregory XII) succeed, division of the year’s 12 months into four equal parts would make immovable such movable days as Easter. Most objections to a new calendar are based on re ligious grounds. A new calendar could not be adopted, however, except with a year beginning on Sunday, and the next Sunday, January 1, does not roll around until 1950. Therefore, most folks for the next 10 years will depend on calendars and early arriving greeting cards to know Easter Day unless they take a tip from this, scan the moon track about March 8 and do a little ex ercise in mental arithmetic. The N. Y. A. college program is reaching 18.8 per cent more youths this year than last year. Confectionery Students of Connecticut College for Women annually conduct their own flower show. GREATER PALACE Wed. - Thurs. - Fri. - Sat. Prevue -11 p. m. - Sat. Night Shirley Temple —in— “BLUEBIRD” Shown Sunday - Monday - Tuesday GO HOME EASTER HOLIDAYS in comfort, safety, at low cost - by train! Rest and relax in AIR-CONDITIONED cars while the engineer drives you over smooth steel rails. Southern Pacific offers you outstanding service TO HOUSTON TO DALLAS and intermediate stations . . . connections at Houston and Dallas for points beyond. Ask the agent how cheap it is with our LOW ROUND-TRIP FARES! Southern Pacific T. A. BLACK, Agent PHONE NO. 9 THE BATTALION Last Aggie Conference Champs -- Till 1939 if! nil .... j s-:\ Above, the last Southwest Conference champions of Aggieland until the 1939 season—the 1927 title-holders, who won their crown by defeating Texas University on Kyle Field, 28 to 7. The 1927 Aggies were tied once, by T. C. U., and won the other eight games. Front row: Mortellra, Rektorik, Mills, Dorsey, Ish, Snead, Burgess, Holmes, Cody, Ewell. Second row: Wylie, Bartlett, Varnell, Alsobrook, Captain Joel Hunt, Sikes, Petty, Davis, Richter. Top; Coach Dana X. Bible, Deffenbach, Mosher, Brown, Pister, Sproutt, Holleron. Aggie Instructor Has Met AH Types Of People on His Recording Journeys Dr. Kemp To Give Series of Lectures On Practical Geophysics Here In April By Bob Nisbet Having made numberless trips to and from all parts of Texas, Louisiana, and the Southwest, mak ing recordings of native songs and music, naturally A. & M. English instructor Bill Owens has had deal ings with all types of people. The stories he can tell about his trips would run far into the night, and they would leave the listener beg ging for more. That his forth coming lecture tour over the Unit ed States and Canada will be suc cessful is a surety. He is a real enthusiast in his field, and he is a most interesting speaker. His records tell the story of the de velopment of folk music of this section of the country. One of his more humorous stor ies is about “chasing the devil” on a trip into south Louisiana mak ing records of “Cajun” music. He was in Bayou Blue on Friday where he had just made a record of a Cajun girl singing “O oui Helene”. After she had finished the re cord, she very seriously told Mr. Owens that the “devil” had visit ed a dance hall a few nights be fore and had danced with one of i the women. In Lafayette the devil had visited a “honky-tonk” known | as the Blue Goose and had been shot at by a white policeman. Sto ries of visits by the devil followed Owens until he got back to Texas; he lost him at the border. The pe culiar twist to the tales was that the places were so bad that the “devil” himself had come to clean them up. Always the devil had been there a few days before; he Dr. Chandler Is Added to Summer School Staff Here Dr. Robert F. Chandler Jr., now Assistant Professor of Forest soils at Cornell University, will join the summer school staff of the Texas A. & M. College for the first term, June 10-July 20, according to an announcement by Dr. Ide P. Trotter, head of the Department of Agronomy. Dr. Chandler will offer advanced undergraduate and graduate courses which Dr. Trotter be lieves will be of especial interest to professional agricultural work ers in the fields of soil conserva tion, agricultural extension service, farm security administration, for estry, land use planning, agronomy and agricultural education. Dr. Chandler has had a funda mental and varied type of train ing and experience in soils and re lated subjects which will enable him to offer courses of particular value to those interested directly or indirectly in the agronomic and particularly the soils problems of areas like the East Texas timbered region. His background includes thorough training in the general plant sciences with later special training in soils and the soil prob lems of forest regions. Dr. Chandler holds the only en dowed chair of forest soils in the United States, and if there are six or more students who are especial ly interested in the problems of forest soils a special course of this type can be taught. could never be caught. One of his many records was made of an old man who insisted on making the record in a saloon. During the recording one of the audience, bored with the proceed ings, started playing the slot ma chine. That, too, was recorded. However, Mr. Owens’ lectures are by no means intended to be only presentations of funny sto ries. They are to tell the story of Southwestern folk music, and cer tainly they do that. Records have been made of cowboy music, ne gro music, Mexican, Cajun French, German, Czech, and Italian music, all of which have contributed to the growth of music in the South west. Mr. Owens’ records coptain Mex ican fiestas, Cajun renditions of popular music, negro spirituals, the German music of Fredericks burg, Schulenburg, and New Braunfels. There are a few Italian recordings in the group, one being the “Rosary” as sung at St. Jo seph’s altar by two Italian women. A “Hot Mamma” A “Pretty Baby” ’Way Back in 1906 They used to ^ay “skiddoo” and “twenty-three” when they meant “scram” or “beat it.” A “pretty baby” meant what we call a “hot mamma” or “qookie” today. The crazy house was the “booby hatch” in the good old days of 1906. These and many other vagaries of slang of thirty years or so ago have been compiled. Many of those people who used that slang can not remember it. Slang has gradually changed in the past thirty years until it is another language. As one learns the new terms he forgets the old ones. Many expressions of the period came from popular vaudeville acts with people like Bert Leslie, billed as “King of Slang,” creating new and laughable words. “Says you,” for instance, was created by Harry and Emma Shar- rock and has been popular slang to this day. “Joy ride” first saw the light as a slang phrase with James J. Morton. STUDENT PEACE GROUP HOLDS DEMONSTRATION ON FRIDAY, APRIL 19 NEW YORK CITY.—The Unit ed Student Peace Committee has announced the date of the sev enth annual student peace demon stration against war—Friday, April 19. The first demonstration was held April 6,1934, at which time several thousand students participated in a strike against war, and demon strated their opposition to measures which lead to war. Each year, the demonstration is held in April as near to the sixth of the month as possible, as it was on April 6, 1917, that the United States entered the World War. It is estimated that a million stu dents will demonstrate this year that the “Yanks Are Not Coming” to aid in the present imperialist massacre in Europe. They will be joined from coast to coast by non student groups—youth of all oc cupations—who are determined to live, not die, for democracy. A three-day conference on prac tical geophysics will be held at Texas A. & M. April 4-6, with Dr. Garrett Kemp of Dallas, a distin guished geophysicist and engineer, as special lecturer. The conference will be one of a series of such meetings being held at A. & M. under direction of Dean Gibb Gilchrist of the En gineering School. Outstanding lecturers on various phases of engineering have been obtained for the conferences. The Kemp lectures have been planned especially for petroleum engineers, geologists and others who are strictly specialists in geophysics, and will give an insight into this important phase of the petroleum industry to all oil men. Dr. Kemp will deliver eight illu strated lectures, and round table discussions will follow each meet ing during the conference. Dr. Kemp, at present, a Dallas consulting ‘ engineer, formerly was supervisory geophysicist with the Atlantic Refining Company for 13 years, and for 20 years he was professor of physics at the Univer sity of Illinois and at Purdue Uni versity. Prof. Henry Emmett Gross of the A. & M. Petroleum Engineering Department who will be in charge of, Dr. Kemp’s conference, has ex tended a cordial invitation to engi neers, geologists and others direct ly or indirectly interested in the oil production industry to attend the conference. During the con ference visitors will be taken for an inspection of the entire A. & M. campus and buildings. John Held Jr., famed cartoonist is now an artist-in-residence at Harvard University. An apple originally meant any friut of a round nature. •TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 1940. A. & M. To Stage Wildlife Short Course April 12 Signalizing its first graduating class of students in the department of fish and game conservation, Texas A. & M. will sponsor its first annual wildlife short cdurse here on April 12 and 13 in coop eration with the Texas Wildlife Federation, Texas Nature Federa tion, Texas Game Fish and Oyster Commission. A handful of students will be graduated in June from the De partment of Fish and Game Con servation after four years of inten sive study. One transfer student received his degree last summer and is now employed by the state; but the June graduates will be the first who have taken the full four- year course at A. & M. The program for the wildlife short course will be as practical as is possible to make it, with representatives of all the coop erating agencies contributing their part. A feature of the short course will be a series of conferences help ful to county agents, game war dens, teachers of vocational agri culture, ranchmen, farmers, and sportsmen, in dealing with the problems of wildlife conservation. Special features in connection with the program will be exhibits of wildlife photographs, displays of game foods and exhibits of the bird, animal and fish life of Texas. The most important foods of the bobwhite quail which will be grow ing luxuriantly at the time of the short course, will be on display. Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., Harvard law student and son of the Ambas sador to Great Britain, will be a delegate to the Democratic nation al convention. C. A. A. pilot training students have flown 80,000 hours without a serious accident. Some 3,700 students have soloed. Creighton University medical students and faculty members last year treated free of charge 30,000 patients. DYERS MATTERS AM EM CAN- S TEAM LAUNDRY DMT - CLEANERS PHONE 58 5 BRYAN Patronize Your Agent in Your Organization ACCESSORIES Complete the Man r H SH The Exchange Store “An Aggie Institution”