The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 28, 1940, Image 6

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    PAGE 6
Official Notices
All notices should be sent to
The Battalion Office, 122 Admin
istration Building. They should be
typed and double-spaced. The dead
line for them is 3:30 p. m. the
day prior to the date of issue.
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
March 28—Faculty Dance, Banquet
room, Sbisa Hall, 9 p. m. to 12 midnight.
March 29—Junior Collegiate F. F. A.
benefit show.
March 29—Soil Conservation show in
Guion Hall, 7:30 p. m.
March 29—Composite Regimental Ball,
Sbisa Hall, 9 p. m. to 1 a. m.
March 30—Corps dance.
FELLOWSHIP LUNCHEON
The Fellowship Luncheon is every Thurs
day in Sbisa Hall, from 12:10 to 12:40
noon.
PERSONNEL LEAFLETS
The personnel leaflets are ready for the
seniors listed below. Please call for these
at room 133, Administration Building,
IMMEDIATELY.
Bennett, P. B.; Brown, W. W.; Bullock,
Q. S.; Butler, W. J.; Carmichael, W. H.;
Coffey, L. C.; Cullers, E. W., Jr.; Daniel,
P. R.; Dinsmore, J. H. ; Duke, F. R.;
Edens, L. L.; Emmons, C. H.; Finch,
R. D.
Finley, D. S., Jr.; Ford, J. A.; Fouts,
J. F. ; Fugate, J. L. ; Fulton, G. W. ;
Garrison, C. E. ; Griesenbeck, C. A.; Hall,
R. C. ; Hanway, J. P., Jr. ; Harris, J. J.;
Hill, Carl, Jr.; Holt, B. B.; Huebel, John,
Jr. ; Hilton, C. S., Jr.
Keeter, J. J.; Kuehne, W. A.; Lawder,
W. H. ; Lemm, P. J., Jr. ; Lomax, E. B. ;
Loomis, R. W. ; Lyons, J. F. ; McCann, J.
R. ; McNeil, M. E. ; Moore, W. T., Jr. ;
Murray, R. J., Jr.; Osborn, M. L.
Parks, S. J. ; Patton, J. D. ; Petersen,
D. W.; Richards, W. C.; Russell, E. C.;
Sanders, J. J.; Sharp, J. M. ; Sharp, T.
F. ; Shepherd, M. F.; Shepherd, P. B.;
Sparks, R. E.; Spruiell, L. L.; Steurer,
G. E.; Stambaugh, C. K.; Thompson, S.
N. ; Thomson, F. C.
Todd, J. A. D.; Trew, E. M., Jr.;
Williams, C. E.; Zeiss, L. M.
LUCIAN M. MORGAN, Director
Placement and Personnel Division
FACULTY DANCE
The next Faculty Dance will occur
from 9 to 12 p. m.' Thursday night,
March 28, in the Sbisa Hall banquet
room. All college staff members are
cordially invited to come and bring
their friends.
OPEN HOUSE AT CONSOLIDATED
SCHOOL
The Consolidated School P. T. A. is
having Open House and serving cafe
teria supper, March 29 at 6 p. m. Every
one welcome.
STATISTICS REVIEW
Statistics Review for those taking the
Civil Service Examination Thursday, March
28, at 7:3 p. m. in room 412, Agricul
tural Building.
T. R. HAMILTON
SPECIAL LECTURE OF GENERAL
INTEREST
“Soil Erosion and Civilization”, a fasci
nating picture-story of man's battle a-
gainst soil erosion since before the dawn
of history, will be presented in an ad
dress in Guion Hall, College Station, Tex
as, at 7:30 p. m., Friday, March 29, by
Dr. W. C. Lowdermilk, Washington, D. C.,
assistant chief of the Soil Conservation
Service. The discussion and the 100 col
ored slides will be based upon Dr. Low-
dermilk’s recent survey, for the U. S. De
partment of Agriculture, of land use in
Europe, North Africa, and the Near East.
He will tell how man’s misuse of the
land has destroyed civilizations and how,
taking a lesson from the tragedies of
older civilizations, citizens of the United
States are protecting their resources of
soil, water, timber, and wildlife. The ad
dress, open to the public, will be present
ed in Guion Hall. Dr. Lowdermilk’s ap
pearance will be sponsored by the School
of Agriculture, and it is requested that
this announcement be repeated to :
classes concerned.
SPEAKER FOR PLANT SCIENCE
SEMINAR
Dr. Edgar Anderson, professor of bo
tany at Washington University and gene
ticist for the Missouri Botanical Garden,
It’s Sportswear
For Spring
will meet with the Plant Sciencee Semi
nar tonight and will lead an informal dis
cussion on “The Place of Measurement in
Biological Problems”. The meeting will
be held in the Experiment Station con
ference room at 7:30 p. m.
Dr. Anderson is one of the outstand
ing botanists of this country and has
an international botanical reputation, par
ticularly for his pioneer work in plant
genecology. He is a graduate of Michi
gan State College, and received his Sc.D.
degere from Harvard University. Later
he did post-doctorate research work in
genetics, statistics, and cytology at the
John Innes Horticultural Institution, Mer
ton, England. In more recent years he
has explored for plants in eastern Europe,
especially in the Balkan Peninsula, in
addition to collecting plants in all parts
of our own country. From 1931 to 1935,
Dr. Anderson was Arborist of the Ar
nold Arboretum, Harvard University. His
training, experience, and extensive re
search work in approaching the solution
of biological problems from many differ
ent angles insure his being an able and
authoritative leader for the discussion
topic, and the seminar is fortunate to
have Dr. Anderson meet with it.
STUDENT EMPLOYMENT
The Texas State Highway Department
has requested the Office of Student Em
ployment to submit the names of 20
studentjs desiring summer employment
with the Highway Department as Cour
tesy Station Attendants. Applicants will
be interviewed in this office beginning
Friday, March 29. The application list will
be closed at 5 p. m., Tuesday, April 2.
Freshmen are not eligible for this list.
The Highway Department has directed
that preference be given to those stu
dents who are working all or part of
their way through school.
ORMOND R. SIMPSON, Chairman
Student Labor Committee
VACCINATION AND INOCULATION
1. All advanced-course students of the
R.O.T.C. due to attend the R.O.T.C. camp
this summer are required to take the
smallpox vaccination and typhoid-para
typhoid inoculation prior to arrival at
camp.
2. Smallpox vaccinations will be taken
at the College Hospital on Tuesday, April
9, according to the schedule below:
Infantry, 4:50 p. m.; Field Artillery,
5 :05 p. m.; Chemical Warfare, 5:20 p.m. ;
Signal Corps, 5 :25 p. m.; Engineers, 5 :30
p. m.; Cavalry, 5:40 p. m.; Coast Artil
lery, 5:50 p. m.
The reaction to the smallpox vaccina
tion must be checked at the same place
and hour on Tuesday, April 16.
3. Typhoid-paratyphoid inoculation will
be taken at the College Hospital accord
ing to the schedule above on successive
Tuesdays as follows:
First Dose, Tuesday, April 16.
Second Dose, Tuesday, April 23
Third Dose, Tuesday, April 3.
4. All students due to attend R.O.T.C.
Camp this summer are directed to report
at the Cadet Hospital as provided herein.
COL. GEO. F. MOORE, Commandant
COMPOSITE REGIMENT BALL
In compliance with the request of the
committee in charge of the Composite
Regiment Ball, approved by the organi
zation commanders concerned, dormitory 4
wil be vacated by cadets Friday and
Saturday nights, March 29 and 30, in
order to provide accommodations 1 for
visiting girls attending the Composite
Regiment Ball and the corps dance on these
nights.
Cadets having guests wil be assessed
a charge of 60c per guest to cover cost
of matrons, maid service, and other in
cidental expenses.
The organization commanders are charg
ed with the responsibility for seeing that
rooms and corridors are left in a neat,
orderly condition for the reception of
guests.
Cadets concerned will vacate dormitory
March 29; guests will be
Cadets will be re-
e nail at 12 noon, March
21, by which time guests must be out
of the dormitory.
Guests staying in the dormitory must
be in not later than
t.
Hauers concerneu
4 by 1 p. m.. Mar
admitted at 3 p. i
admitted to the ha
3 a. m. Friday night,
and not later than 2 a. m. Saturday nighl
Guests must check in with the matr
upon their return to the dormitory after
the dance, and they must check out with
the matron on their departure from the
college to their respective homes. Escorts
will be held strictly accountable for com
pliance with these instructions.
Guests will not permitted to occupy
rooms that are not equipped with shades.
Cadets making reservations should check
with the occupants of the room to as
certain whether or not the room is
equipped with shades and if not provide
COL. GEO. F. MOORE, Commandant
APPLICATION SIZE PHOTOGRAPHS
The application-size photographs are
ready for the seniors listed below. Please
call for these at room 133, Administration
Building, IMMEDIATELY.
Akard, W. H.; Aldridge, E. E.; Alex
ander, J. Y.; Alsobrook, A. D. ; Ander
son, M. C.; Anthony, W. G.; Ashworth,
J. B.; Ator, L. G.; Austin, M. E.; Bain,
B. T.; Anderson, H. M.
Baker, C. F.; Balfour, B. H. ; Ball,
W. A.; Banister, J. A.; Barnes, B. C.;
Barton, J. K.; Bay less, W. B.; Beachum,
J. H.; Bicknell, J. E.; Blaschke, L, F.;
Bolin, S. H.; Bonnette, I. T.; Billis, W.
M. ; Bird, G. T. ; Birdwell, E. E.
Borders, W. E.; Bownds, W. A.; Boyd,
H. F. ; Bracher, Clint; Brands, J. T.;
Braswell, D. E. ; Brentzel, R. J.; Bridges,
Philip; Brooks, H. W. ; Brown, W. W.;
Buie, W. C.; Bullock, Q. S.
Burk, D. G. ; Burkett, J. E. ; Bush, R.
E. ; Buster, W. B. ; Butler, W. J. ; But>
trill, H. B.; Caldwell, Roy ; Calvert, H. W.;
Carter, J. H.; Cassin, William, Cawthon,
W. A. ; Chamberlain, C. H.; Chapman,
E. G; .Clary, S. R.; Clepp, J. H.; Coffey,
L. C.
Cokinos, J. P.; Collinsworth, D. B.;
Conley, J. S.; Conly, P. T.; Conner, J.
M. ; Cowles, A. W.; Cox, G. B.; Craw
ford, J. H.; Crawley, H. D.; Critz, J. S.;
Dismukes, I. B.
Durham, B. A. ; Echols, W. H.; Ed
wards, W. T.; Eiland, J. D. ; Elder, G.
P.; Ferguson, M. H.; Finch, R. D.;
Formby, D. E.; Foster, E. L.; Fulton,
G. W.; Fullwood, E. F.; Gerlich, R. W.;
Goodlett, W. S.; Hagler, G. F.; Hall,
H. L.
Hamilton, O. W.; Hamner, C. H.; Har
ris, J. J.; Hart, J. R. ; Henderson, R, A.;
Hunt, C. G.; Keeter, J. J.; Kirven, P. E.;
Knippa, A. J. ; Kuehne, W. A. ; Lips
comb, G. M. ; Loomis, R. W.; Luther, F.
J.; Moore, W. T.
Nix, T. P.; Olsen, H. H.; Reid, L. D.;
Singleton, R. E. ; Sledge, W. L. ; Steurer,
G. E.; Synnott, W. H. ; Thompson, M. S. ;
Tilley, E. N.; Tinker, Thomas; Todd, J.
A. D.; Turner, W. F. and Watkins,
O. M.
LUCIAN M. MORGAN, Director
Placement and Personnel Division
Consolidated School Board Election
The A. & M. Consolidated School Board
has set the yearly school trustee election
for Saturday, April 6. The retiring mem
bers are E. J. Howell and Y. C. Watson.
We’ve assembled a fine
assortment of sportswear
that will please every
man. New sport shirts in
a host of smart fabrics
and colors. Slack Ensem
bles in matching or con
trasting shades that are
bound to please
Come in and look them
over.
r iTaldrop & (o
“Two Convenient Stores”
College Station - Bryan
UNIFORM COAT CHANGE
1. The specifications for the coat,
service, have been changed to call for
a “bi-swing” back and all tailors have
been furnished specifications for making
the coat accordingly.
2. Effective immediately new coats will
be made with the “bi-swing” back.
3. Existing coats may be worn by all
concerned until no longer serviceable or
may be modified if so desired.
COL. GEO. F. MOORE, Commandant
ENGLISH CONTEST
For the encouragement of superior work
in English, Dr. F. M. Law, President of
the Board of Directors, is again offer
ing two cash prizes ($20 and $5), to be
awarded on the basis of a competitive ex
amination to be given late in April or
early in May. Conditions of eligibility are
as follows: grade A in English 103 and
Distinguished Student rating, first semes
ter ; grade A or B in English 104 to
April 1, and satisfactory oral work in
the same course to April 15.
Mr. William Morriss of Dallas, an
I alumnus who knows the value of good
I English, is once more offering cash prizes
($20 and $5) for the purpose of encour-
I aging good work in our sophomore courses.
Conditions of eligibility are as follows:
grade A in English 203 or 231 and Dis
tinguished Student rating, first semester;
grade A or B in English 207, 210, or 232
to April 1 of the current semester, and
grade A on any course paper or book re
view that may be required in the Sopho
more course the student concerned is now
taking. If a student otherwise eligible
did not take an English course in the
first semester, the grade of the last pre
vious college course in English will count.
Students who were allowed to substitute
English 328 or other courses for the
work usually required may count the
elective course as an equivalent so far as
the English Contest is concerned. Students
who are so far eligible are asked to give
their names promptly to their teachers in
order that projects for required papers
may be promptly approved.
GEO. SUMMEY, JR.
WRITING PRIZES
1. Notice of the Amsel Menorah Essay
Prize has been posted on bulletin board 19
near the English Office. Each paper sub
mitted must deal with some phase of
Jewish history, literature, or culture, or
some present-day Jewish problem. The
contest is open to ALL students in the
College.
2. Notice of awards in dramatic writ
ing offered by the Dramatists’ Alliance,
Stanford University, is in the hands of
Professor C. O. Spriggs, 322 Academic
Building.
GEORGE SUMMEY JR.
Organizations
BOXING TEAM AND CLUB
The Boxing Club will meet in room
108, M. E. Shops, tomorrow night im
mediately after supper. All members are
urged to attend to vote on important mat>
ters and to plan for the coming meet
with Texas U.
The A. & M. Boxing Team will fight
the Texas U. team during the minor
sports program, April 5 and 6. The
fighters to represent our school will be
selected by taking the winners of the
upperclassman intramural tournament, now
in the semi-finals.
MATH CLUB
The Math Club will meet tonight in
room 212, Academic Building at seven
o’clock. All members and visitors are re
minder that a very interesting program
is planned. i
ECONOMICS CLUB
There will be a regular meeting of
the Economics Club Thursday evening at
7:30 in the Physics lecture room. Dr.
P. L. Gettys will speak on “How Pre
judice Controls Elections in the United
States”. The public is cordially invited
to attend. *
F. F. A.
Dean Bolton will speak at a meet
ing of the Junior Collegiate F. F. A.
which will be held in the Ag Engineer
ing lecture room, Thursday night at 7:30.
CADET PLAYERS
The regular meeting of the Cadet Players
will not be held tonight but has been
postponed to a date to be announced
later.
COLLEGE WOMEN’S SOCIAL CLUB
The College Women’s Social Club will
meet in Sbisa Hall annex Friday, March
29, at 3 o’clock, for an important busi
ness session at which election of officers
and organization of interest groups will
take place. All members are urged to
attend wearing name cards.
Classified
FOR SALE—A good car, for sale cheap.
Inquire at F-15 Hart.
LOST—Log log duplex sliderule, with
name engraved. Reward offered for re
turn to James Albert Taylor, Jr., room
409, dorm 12.
LOST—One pair of brown cowboy boots
Thursday afternoon in the new dormitory
area parking lot. Return to room 325,
hall 11 for reward.
FOUND—The Registrar’s Office has in
its possession a sweater lost by an Ag
gie who lives at Ardmore, Oklahoma. The
sweater was left in the car of M. Baker
of Pauls Valley, Oklahoma, when he took
the Aggie from Denton to Ardmore at
the beginning of the Easter holidays.
Owner may obtain sweater by calling at
Registrar’s Office and identifying it.
THE BATTALION
■THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1940
Noted Author—
(Continued from page 1)
general public, and begin at 7:15
o’clock.
While on the campus Dr. Eddy
will deliver other addresses. Sun
day afternoon he will speak be
fore the Cosmopolitan Club, and
he will also lecture in several of
the sociology classes.
Before arriving at A. & M. Dr.
Eddy will address the South Texas
Conference and the University of
Texas in Austin.
•
Graduated from Yale in 1891,
in 1896 Dr. Eddy went to India at
his. own expense. After fifteen
years’ work among the students
of India he was called to be Sec
retary for Asia for the Y.M.C.A.
and was for many years engaged
with Dr. John R. Mott in work
for students throughout that con
tinent. He was present at the cap
ture of Mukden in Manchuria by
the Japanese in 1931.
In Berlin in 1933 he challenged
the Nazis for their treatment of
the Jews, liberals and radicals. On
June 30, 1934 he saw Hitler and
heard him make his address to the
Reichstag after his “blood bath”.
He has come to know the leaders
in many nations, including the va
rious Prime Ministers of Great
Britain, the Premiers of France,
the Viceroys of India, and such
men as Mahatma Gandhi and
Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek.
The members of his European
Seminar of American educators
who visit the principal countries
of Europe each year were ad
dressed last year by Lord Halifax,
Lord Lothian, Lord Cecil, Lord
Cranborne, the Duchess of Atholl,
Sir Stafford Cripps, Nehru the
political leader of India, Haile Se
lassie, and the leaders of Britain’s
three political parties.
Southern Belle—
(Continued from page 1)
she couldn’t deny that A. & M.’s
national champion footballers were
just that. “Tulane and Sophie
Newcomb students feel that the
Sugar Bowl game was a fine
one and a fair one,” she said.
More than that, Sophie New
comb coeds vote “okeh” where
The Battalion Magazine is con
cerned. “The girls read them in
history classes,” she admitted.
Her parting seed of advice, aft
er declaring that she wasn’t .go
ing to miss the train going back,
was, “Why don’t the Aggies have
their freshmen polish the trophies
in that case?”
So back to New Orleans she
went—at least one girl who wasn’t
over-impressed with mighty Texas
A. & M.
W hat Is X??
That’s Math
Club’s Goal
What number if divided by ten
leaves a remainder of nine; if
divided by nine leaves a remain
der of eight; if divided by eight
leaves seven; and if divided by any
number between one and ten leaves
a remainder of one less than the
number ?
That’s what the Math Club will
try to find out in its meeting to
night at 7 o’clock in room 212,
Academic Building, and it will
also hear mathematics instructor
J. R. Hillman explain the oddities
of magic squares.
The members are sending out
an urgent plea for assistance in
solving this and countless other
interesting mathematical curiosi
ties. The club is designed for stu
dents of A. & M. who are inter
ested in mathematics and who
want to keep their minds alert
in its use. The amount or kind
of math the student has taken is
not important, for the club does
not work with material requiring
advanced knowledge, but rather
with problems that make one “use
the old bean.”
W. T. Guy, president, states
that all visitors and those wanting
to join will be welcome and are
cordially inivted to attend its
meeting tonight.
Cattle Specialist
To Address Students
W. B. Mitchell, widely known
cattle specialist from Marfa, Tex
as, will visit College Station to
hold a meeting of all those inter
ested in Animal Husbandry in
the Animal Industries Building
lecture room, tonight at 7:15. The
meeting is being sponsored by the
Saddle and Sirloin Club.
Mr. Mitchell comes here from
Houston where he judged fat
steers at the Houston Fat Stock
Show and Livestock Exposition.
And by the way, it almost
wasn’t mentioned, but the attrac
tive little double for Miss Davis
is Alice Kinabrew, a “swell gal”
in spite of .her charred opinion
which will probably take an about-
face if she ever returns when
the corps is in the saddle.
“Yes, I’ll be back,” she claimed.
“I want to see the Aggies march
in to mess and a hundred other
things people have been telling
me about in the past three days.”
West Point Loses
To Aggie Team
In Pistol Match
Army defeated Army!
It all came about as the Texas
Aggie Pistol Team once more on
their way to the top downed the
West Point Cadet team with a
margin of 49 points.
The pistol team has recently de
feated Massachusetts Institute of
Technology and Cornell University.
Both of the Aggies’ scores in these
two matches were high and some
thing to be noted, and yet in the
match with the West Pointers they
again equaled the mark fired
against Cornell.
New Record Set
L. C. Kennemer set a new rec
ord for collegiate firing and boost
ed the hopes of the team to be
acclaimed the top of the nation.
Kennemere fired a 292 out of a
possible 300.
The freshman squad firing
twenty shots at slow fire and ten
at timed, rather than ten at each
of the two and ten at rapid, fell
to the West Point freshmen 1281
to 1179.
Individual records for the var
sity match are as follows:
Texas A. &
S
M.
T
R
Total
Lewis, C. A. 89
98
94
281
Kennemer, L. C. 83
94
95
272
Lewis, W. E. Jr. 91
97
96
284
Shields, E. F. 83
96
93
272
Burns, Bert 83
97
94
274
Total
1383
He is well known throughout Tex
as and in the corn belt states be
cause of his activities in helping
send Texas calves to the corn belt
for fattening. He developed the
livestock show and sale of feeder
cattle which is held at Marfa each
fall.
Various phases of the beef cattle
industry will be discussed at the
meeting to which all Animal Hus
bandry students and others in
terested are invited.
Dr. Andre Philip,
French Economist,
Talks at A. & M.
Dr. Andre Philip, member of the
French Chamber of Deputies and
a professor of Economics and
Finance in the University of
Lyons, Franch, spoke on “Agri
cultural Problems and Legisla
tion Affecting French Agricul
ture,” in the Animal Industries
Lecture room Wednesday at 3
o’clock.
Speaking on political lines he
used as his subject “Europe—A
Myth or a Reality” in a lecture
to the public at 7:30 Wednesday
night.
The International Institute of
Education is sponsoring Dr.
Philip’s lecture tour through the
United States. This is his eighth
trip to the United States on lec
ture tours. He is considered an
authority on economic relations be
tween the United States and
France.
You’ve Got 1
Something
Therel
Aggies like our service
because our barbers have
the modern young man’s
viewpoint. We make ev
ery effort to give you not
just another haircut but
a haircut that helps you
look your very best.
AGGIELAND
Barber Shop
Across from P. O.
North Gate
Make
Her
Happy!
Send your mother
the one gift that
will make her happy
• Your Photograph
AGGIELAND STUDIO
Photographs of Distinction
Joe Sosolik, Proprietor
Kodak Finishing - Amateur Supplies - Picture Frames
VIK-i 1*® j®
jnMtfiAjh
WEST COAST GIRLS PLAY A LOT OF POLO. Attractive Peggy
McManus of Santa Barbara is shown above about to mount. She often
breaks and trains her own horses. Above {at right), Peggy in "Western
style” costume sits on the corral fence as she enjoys a Camel cigarette.
SHE LIKES FAST HORSES but slow-burning cigarettes—"that means
Camels.” Peggy adds: "Camels are milder, cooler, and more fragrant.
By burning more slowly, Camels give me extra smokes. Penny for penny.
Camels are certainly the best cigarette buy!”
PEGGY SAYS SPEED’S SWELL IN A HORSE
...but the cigarette for
her is slower-burning Camels
because that means
■XTORTH —South—East—West—people
-L > like a cigarette that burns slowly, the
same as Peggy McManus does. Fast burn
ing cuts down on your cigarette pleasure.
Slow burning promotes real smoking enjoy
ment. In recent tests, no cigarette beat Camels
liifll
or even equalled Camels for slow burning.
Camels are extra mild, extra cool, with full,
rich flavor. Penny for penny your best
cigarette buy. Try a slow-burning cigarette
made from matchlessly blended costlier to
baccos ... try a Camel cigarette, and get—
MORE PLEASURE PER PUFF-MORE PUFFS PER PACK!
Camels
In recent laboratory tests,
CAMELS burned 25% slower
than the average of the 15
other of the largest-selling
brands tested—slower than
any of them. That means, on
the average, a smoking plus
equal to
C extra smokes
J PER PACK!
Copyright. 1940. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.. Winston-Salem. N. C.
f/e qgareffe ofJ/ong-2?ummg Cbsf/ier2olaca>s
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