The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 02, 1940, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE 4
Official Notices
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
April 4 & 5—Economics Club benefit
show. Assembly Hall, 6:45 p. m.
April 4 & 5—Geophysical Conference
for geologists, petroleum engineering oil
production men and others.
April 6—Infantry Ball, Sbisa Hall, 9 p.
m. to 1 a. m.
April 6—Hillel Club dance. Mess hall
banquet room, 9 p. m. to 12 midnight.
April 6—Corps dance, Sbisa hall.
April 9, 10, and ll—Annual Highway
Short Course.
April 11 & 12—Petroleum Engineering
Club Benefit Show, Assembly hall, 7 p. m.
April 12 & 13—Wildlife Short Course.
April 12—Cavalry Ball, Sbisa Hall, 9
p. m. to 1 a. m.
April 12 & 13—Water Carnival, 7:30
p. m.
April 13—Corps dance, Sbisa Hall.
SPECIAL EXAMINATIONS
Under College Regulations, a senior who,
on April 1, lacks only one subject for
graduation may petition for a special ex
amination in that subject, provided:
(a) The subject was taken in the sum
mer of 1939 or in the first semester of
this session.
(b) The student passing all work of
his current schedule on the April 1 re
port with grades which will give him a
mathematical chance to graduate at the
end of the semester.
Petitions from those affected by the
above regulation should be submitted im
mediately, and in no case later than
April 6.
Those special examinations which are
authorized will be set for the after
noon of April 13.
F. C. BOLTON, Dean
MOUNTED REVIEW HONORING
POSTMASTER-GENERAL FARLEY
1. The Honorable James A. Farley,
Postmaster-General of the United States,
will review the R.O.T.C. April 4, 1940.
2. Uniform
a. Dismounted and motorized units:
Number 1 with white shirts. (Cadet offi
cers may wear breeches and boots.)
b. Mounted units: Number 1 with white
shirts, breeches and boots.
c. Cadets not in proper uniform will
not be permitted to participate in the
review and will be reported as absent.
3. First call, 4 p. m. ; Assembly, 4:05 p.
m.; Adjutant’s Call, 4:15 p. m.
4. Troop D., Cavalry Regiment, will
attend mounted and will constitute the
escort.
5. Battery D., Field Artillery Regiment,
will attend motorized and will fire pre
scribed salute.
6. Battery F, Field Artillery Regiment,
will attend mounted.
7: Formation: Line of regiments in
line of battalions in column of masses.
Infant:
ment
Order of units in line:
a. North side of review field: Band,
'—try Regiment, Field Artillery Regi-
(less Batteries D and F), Composite
Regiment, Cavalry Regiment (less Troop
D), Engineer Regiment, Coast Artillery
Regiment.
b. East end of review field: Battery D,
F. A., and Battery F, F.A., Troop D.,
Cavalry.
M-TIIL
ASSKaVVKLY
HALL
moLunzeu anu mounvea units win ue at
the review field in time to take post on
the stake designating the right of their
respective units at Adjutant’s Call.
9. Battalion adjutants and a cadet
officer designated to guide each of the
motorized and mounted units will be at
th ’— —
ti
respective
10. All R.O.T.C. students except mem
bers of Troop D Cavalry, and Batteries
D and F, Field Artillery Regiments, will
be dismissed from classes at 3:30 p. m.,
April 4, 1940, to permit their partici
pation in this review. Classes for members
of Troop D, Cavalry, and Batteries D
and F, Field Artillery, wil be suspended
at 3 p. m., April 4, 1940.
COL. GEO. F. MOORE, Commandant
OFFICIAL
lew in honor or the Postmaster Gen
eral, all classes will be suspended at 3 :30
To permit the corps of cadets to give
a review in honor of the F
be suspe;
p. m. on Thursday, April 4, and classes
for members of Troop D Cavalry and
Batteries D and F, Field Artillery which
are to be mounted, are to be excused from
classes at 3 p. m.
F. C. BOLTON, Dean
COTTON SHIRTS
Effective Tuesday, April 2, 1940, all
students attending practical instruction
from 1 to 3 p. m. on Tuesdays, Wednesdays
or Thursdays will wear the uniform cot
ton shirt, except when coveralls are pre
scribed by the senior instructor concern
ed.
COL. GEO. F. MOORE, Commandant
O. D.’S INSPECT HALLS
General Order No. 1, current series,
is amended to include the following ad
ditional instructions for Cadet Officers
of the Day:
“Between 1 and 4 p. m. he will in
spect the hallways of each dormitory in
the area to which he is assigned and
will report to the Commandant’s Office
the designation of any organization in
which the hallways are not properly po
liced.”
COL. GEO. F. MOORE, Commandant
PUBLICATIONS STAFF PICTURES
The Longhorn pictures of The Batta
lion, the Longhorn, and the Scientific
Review staffs and the A. & M. Press Club
will be taken today at 5 p. m. on the east
steps of the Administration Building.
No. 2 uniforms will be worn. It is im
portant that all members be present and
on time.
APPLICATION-SIZE PHOTOGRAPHS
Alexander, J. Y.; Anderson, H. M. ;
Armstrong, G. B.; Ball, W. A. ; Beachum,
J. H. ; Bolin, S. H. ; Borders, W. E. ;
Bownds, W. A.; Boyd, H. F.; Brands, J.
T. ; Braswell, D. E.
Bridges, P.; Brooks, H. W.; Brown,
W. W.; Buster, W. B.; Buttrill, H. B. ;
Carter, J. H. ; Cassin, William; Cawthon,
W. A. ; Chamberlain, C. H. ; Clary, S.
R., ; Clepp, J. H. ; Cokinos, J. P.; Conley,
J. S.; Conly, P. T. ; Connor, J. M.
Crawford, J. H. ; Cullers, E. W. ; Curlei
; Cullers, E. W.;
H. L. ; Daniel, P.
.; Curlee,
J.; Dal-
C. J. : Cullers, E. W. ; Curlee, C. J. ;
ton, H. L.; Daniel, P. R. ; Davis, G. R. ;
Dean, H. A. ; DeBerry, S. G.; Dexter, J. F.;
Dillon, P. C. ; Dinsmore, J. H. ; Dismukes,
I. B.
Dominy, C. B. ; Doran, J. K. ; Downer,
W. W. ; Draper, J. C. ; Drew, D. L. ; Duke,
F. R. ; Edwards, W. T.; Eiland, J. D. ; El-
S. ;
per
; Edwards, W. T. ; Eiland, J. D. ;
der, G. P.; Erck, A. W. ; Ezell, B. P. ;
Foster, E. L. ; Fouts, J. F.; Friedline,
Fugate, J. L.
Fullwood, E. F.; Furry, H.; Gallant,
J. A.; Gandy, D. C.; Garrett, E. G. ; Gar
rison, C. E. ; Garrison, R. W. ; Gattis, J.
. : Uarrison, R. W. ; Ge
O. F. ; Gibbons, S.,
Given,
NON-STOP >£££>)
MU,
' s HARD!'
FLYIN' FUN-ATICS
in
^Jean PARKER
. Reginald
\ GARDINER
A BORIS MORROS
Production
RKO RADIO Picture. Directed by A. EDWARD
SUTHERLAND. Orisinal Story and Screen Play
by Ralph Spence, Alfred Schiller, Charlea
Roaers, Harry Langdon.
TUESDAY, APRIL 2
3:30 - 6:45
L. ; Gent,
S. B.
Gleason. B. A. ; Gourley, J.; Graham,
O. B. ; Gregory, P. R. ; Griesenbeck, C.
A. ; Grote, J. F. ; Hall, H. L. ; Hamblin,
J. F. ; Hamlett, E. H. ; Hammonds, J. M.;
Hanby, J. L. ; Hanover, J. G.; Hanway,
J. P.; Hart, J. R.
Hart, W. M. ; Hass, R. R. ; Harvill, V. A.
Hay, H. N. ; Hearn, R. L.; Hendricks, W.
W. ; Hendrix, E. E. ; Herren, C. H. ; Her-
zing, D. J. ; Holland, J. W. ; Holt, B.
B. ; Hussey, C. P. ; Jacoby, P. W. ; Jones,
H. A.
Jordan, R. F. ; Kirk, P. A. ; Knight, J.
C. ; Kreager, K. G. ; Kroll, C. A. ; Kuehne,
W. A.: Kyle, C. R. ; Leckey, J. P.; Law-
l. ; Kyle, C. It. ;
W. H. ; Ledbett.
ng(
J. A.
der,
E. ; Lehmberg, W.
Lilly, Bob; Lingold, «
L. ; Lyons, J.
; Sledge, W. L.; Tu
UCIAN M. MOR
Lippard,
W. T.
.; J
er, W. R. ; Lee,
R. ; Lemm, P.
J. C.
L.; Turner,
MORGAN,
Moore,
F.
PERSONNEL LEAFLETS
The personnel leaflets are ready for the
seniors listed below. Please call for these
at room 133, Administration Building,
IMMEDIATELY.
AT POPULAR PRICES
_ J
GREATEST OF AIL
CAPRA PICTURES!
FRANK CAPRA S
Ulr. Smith (Boes
U'o Washington
co-starring "
JeanARTHUR*JamesSTEWART
With CLAUDE RAINS - EDWARD ARNOLD • GUY
KIBBEE • THOMAS MITCHELL • BEULAH BONDI
Directed by FRANK CAPRA • Screen play by
SIDNEY BUCHMAN • A COLUMBIA PICTURE
1 ♦Creator of "It Happened One Night" A
"Mr Deeds Goes To Town", "lost
r\ HoriionV'You Can't Take It With You" r\
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3
3:30 - 6:45
A\][]f|MA\M
GUARANTEED NOT TO
SHRINK OUT OF FIT!
....Here is the Airman
Quality Secret: Rich new
fabrics, fine tailoring,
collars that set perfectly
on the neck and smooth
fitting shirt fronts.
A host of new patterns
and fabrics.
$1.65
f llaldrop ti (5
Two Convenient Stores
College Station - Bryan
General .Election—
(Continued from page 1)
in the election, provided he pre
sents in person at the ballot box
his yellow slip—his receipts for
payment of fees for the second
semester.
•
Following is a sample ballot,
the names arranged according to
the results of drawings for places
held Monday afternoon in The
Battalion Office:
SAMPLE BALLOT
General Election
For Editor of The Battalion:
Bob Nisbet
A. J. Robinson
For Chief Yell-Leader:
E. R. “Buster” Keeton
C. J. “Foots” Bland
For Junior Representative on the
Student Publications Board:
Tom Gillis
Roland Bing.
•
The Student Election Committee
with D. B. Varner as chairman,
E. L. Angell, Max McCullar, Tom
Gillis, Bill Guy and E. J. Howell,
met Monday afternoon to discuss
the elections which are to be held
this spring.
It was decided the polls for the
election of The Battalion editor,
chief yell-leader, and junior rep
resentative on the Publications
Board will open at 8 a. m. tomor
row and close at 5:30. The votes
will be counted by a representa
tive of the Student Election Com
mittee and a representative of the
Board of Publications with the
candidates or their representatives
present. Any appeal of the elec
tion must be made within forty-
eight hours after the counting of
the ballots, which will begin im
mediately after the closing of the
polls.
A committee consisting of Max
McCullar as chairman, Tom Gillis,
Bill Guy, and Tom Richey was ap
pointed to take action concerning
the elegibility of candidates for the
positions of Town Hall manager
and social secretary of the senior
class. The committee was also des
ignated to work on a more favor
able way of conducting elections
of class officers.
It was decided that the junior
yell-leader will be elected in the
same manner that was used last
year—by a meeting of the sopho
more class to select and eliminate
candidates. The valedictorian of
the senior class will also be elect
ed as previously. The Registrar’s
Office furnishes a list of the ten
highest seniors from which the val
edictorian is chosen by ballot of
members of the senior class.
A committee from the Student
Publications Board is now consider
ing and drawing up rules and re
quirements for candidates for edi
torship of the Longhorn and the
Scientific Review and for repre
sentatives on the Student Publica
tions Board. These rules when
adopted are to apply in future
elections.
Holt,
Moore, W. T.; Russell, E. C.; Sharp,
J. M. ; Sharp, T. F.; Shepperd, M. F. ;
Shepperd, P. B.; Sparks, R. E.; Trew,
E. M., Jr. ; Zeiss, L. M.
LUCIAN M. MORGAN.
STUDENT WELFARE COMMITTEE
The regular monthly meeting of the
Student Welfare Committee will be held
Wednesday, April 3, at 6:15 p. m., in
the banquet and reception rooms of Sbisa
Hall.
All member
ble if possible. Please call my
(telephone 4-5734) by 10 a. m. Wednesday
whether or not you can attend.
DEAN F. C. BOLTON, Chairman
lers please be present if possi-
sible. Please call my office
Organizations
PRE-MED SOCIETY
Dr. Charles S. Bacon will address the
Pre-Medical Society tonight and speak
“Some Doctors I Have Known”. Eve
member is requested to be there.
DAMES CLUB
s Club will hold
meeting Wednesday, April 3, at 8 o’clock
in the Y.M.C.A. parlor. There will be a
talk on budgetting and each member is
requested to bring her favorite recipe.
EX 4-H CLUB MEMBERS
The Ex 4-H Club Members Association
will meet Thursday night at 7:15 in room
, Animal Industries Building. L. L.
Johnson, state 4-H Club agent of the
Extension Service, will show pictures per
taining to 4-H Club work. Plans for a
picnic will be discussed.
Classified
FOR SALE—620 Eastman Kodak fold
ing camera, series III. F:6.3 lens, speed
1|25 to 1(100 of a second, T. & B„ Pur
chased last month. Must sell for im
mediate cash. Write
College Station.
to P. 0. Box 67,
WANTED—Garage for car. Garage in
College Park or Oakwood addition pre
ferred. Write Box 5346, College Statioi
LOST—Brown leather handbag, tagged
L. Lord, left in hall 4. Urgent. Liberal
reward. Martin, 213, dorm 1. »
LOST—1 Log Log Duplex Decitrig
sliderule. The name, John Negri, Jr., is
printed in small letters on one side of
the case. If found, please return to C-15
Hart for reward.
LOST—Yellow-goid Waltham wristwatch
at free show Sunday. Finder please re
turn to Kay Cox, room 208, hall 8, for
reward.
The Hamilton Tailoring Company has
sent me by mistake one tweed coat and
vest to suit of clothes. Owner can have
same upon proper identification. Call
“Jocko” Roberts, College 87.
Wednesday evening before Easter I
picked up three Aggies in my car, letting
them out at Milford, Texas. One of them
left a tan raincoat in my car, which I
am anxious to return upon proper identi
fication. Mrs. Bate O’Reilly, 609 Fletcher
Street, Dallas, Texas.
THE BATTALION
Farley Banquet—
(Continued from page 1)
for bringing Daniel C. Roper, Sec
retary of Commerce, to A. & M.
sometime ago.
A cavalry escort will meet the
Farley automobile caravan at the
main entrance to the campus where
they will proceed to the drill field.
General Farley will then be greeted
by President T. O. Walton, Gover
nor W. Lee O’Daniel, and F. M.
Law, president of the A. & M.
Board of Directors.
Colonel George F. Moore and
General Farley will then take their
places in front of the reviewing
stand, and the cadet corps with
mounted units will pass in review.
After passing in review the corps
and regimental staffs will report
to the reviewing stand in order to
give General Farley an opportunity
to meet some of the student body.
Following the review, scheduled
for 5 P. M., General Farley will
retire to the parlors of the A. & M.
Board of Directors for a rest until
7 P. M. when he will be honored
at the banquet to be held in the
entire main room of Sbisa Hall.
Invitations to sit at the speaker’s
table with General Farley and
members of his party have been
sent to all former governors of
Texas, the A. & M. Board of Di
rectors and a few others. Invita
tions have also been sent to sev
eral hundred leaders in the bus
iness, professional, and political
life of Texas, to attend the review
and banquet.
Members of the senior class will
serve as dinner escorts to ladies of
those dignitaries oebupying the
speaker’s platform. Lieutenant Col
onel Richard Dunn will conduct an
orchestra selected from the A. &
M. band during the dinner hour.
Following the dinner a repre
sentative of the football team will
present General Farley with an
appropriate gift as a token of ap-
Mary Marshall To
Address Architects
The Architectural Society will
sponsor an illustrated lecture on
“Understanding Prints” by Miss
Mary Marshall, director of the
Department of Fine and Applied
Arts of T.S.C.W., on Thursday,
April 11, in the library of the
Architectural Department, on the
fourth floor of the Academic
Building. There will also be an
exhibit of the prints about which
Miss Marshall will speak in the
Architectural library for a week
beginning Friday, April 5.
preciation for his visit to the cam
pus.
Tickets for the banquet will be
$1.00 each for outsiders and must
accompany the reservations.
Colonel Ike Ashburn is in charge
of all banquet reservations for
Farley Day and all reservations
are handled through his office.
Other committee members for Far
ley Day are Colonel George F.
Moore, E. E. McQuillen, E. J.
Howell, J. C. Hotard, C. A. Roeber,
H. C. Burgett, O. R. Simpson, and
G. B. Winstead.
A 500-pound elephant skull has
been acquired by the University of
Texas.
Distinguished—
(Continued from page 1)
Billy Brundidge, junior in sci
ence; James Gillaspy, senior in
science; William Galloway, fresh
man in chemical engineering; Tho
mas S. Gillis, sophomore in liberal
arts; Ralph T. Green, freshman in
liberal arts; Robert L. Gulley, soph
omore in liberal arts; V. C. Isaacs,
junior in veterinary medicine; Fred
C. Keeney, freshman in chemical
engineering; H. H. Liebhofsky, se
nior in liberal arts; W. M. Murphy,
junior in agricultural administra
tion; Otto A. Nance, freshman in
petroleum engineering; Allen T.
Seale, senior in civil engineering;
Jack M. Simpson, junior in elec
trical engineering, and Paul Wolf,
junior in chemical engineering.
Shep Fields—
(Continued from page 1)
Shep Fields and his band are
playing in New York City at pres
ent, and are scheduled for a long
engagement on the Pacific Coast
beginning next month.
Fields’ band is the outstanding
swing band which Town Hall had
promised would appear at A. & M.
this spring. It will present a pro
gram, from 7:00 to 8:30, April 5,
in Guion Hall, just preceding the
Infantry Ball, which lasts from
9:00 to 1:00.
DYERS _ HATTERS
AMERICAN- STEAM
LAUNDRY
DRY♦ • C LEANERS
PHONE 58 5 BRYAK
Patronize Your Agent in Your Organization
-TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1940
Sherwood Eddy—
(Continued from page 1)
Europe time and again. He has
been in every important country of
the world on numerous occasions
and is familiar with all the import
ant leaders of the nations.
Among the recent projects
achieving national recognition is
his huge cooperative farm at Rock
dale, Mississippi, on which some
thirty families live.
Though 70 years of age, Dr.
Eddy looks and talks like a man
many years younger.
He is speaking at all the schools
of the Southwest Conference, and
during his lifetime has addressed
millions of people.
The Dartmouth College Outing
Club is this year celebrating the
30th anniversary of its founding.
There are 160 college coopera
tives doing an annual business of
$2,700,000.
Two-thirds of the Badger state’s
lawyers are graduates of the Uni
versity of Wisconsin law school.
—:
Exmt
BMASftl
Expert Radio
Repair
STUDENT CO-OP
Phone No. 139
North Gate
Brown, W. W.; Bullock, Q. S.: Cullers,
E. W., Jr. ; Dinsmore, J. H.; Duke, F.
R.; Edens, L. L.; Emmons, C. H.; Fotits,
J. F.; Fugate, J. L.; Fulton, C. E. ;
'ugate,
Griesenbeck, C. A.
Holt, B. B.; Huebel, John, Jr. ; Kuehne,
W. A.; Lawder, W. H. ; Lomax, E. B.;
►Was the Munich beer hall bomb engineered inside
Germany? To miss Hitler on purpose? Mr. Bess tells
you in this week’s Post about the sudden rise of “one
of the most sinister figures in the world today” and the
current struggle between Nazi party leaders and the
Reich army generals. A timely Post article.
CHINESE WOMEN DON) WEAR WEDDING RINGS
TOO BAD that Yu Hao, the dainty young Chinese girl, should
be given in marriage to Soong Y’in, the old gem dealer. All
Chinatown knew of her love for another. Then murder struck—
and Johnny" Hammond, Chinatown guide, found himself with
the only clue ... A dramatic short story in this week’s Post.
The Marriage Month by Sidney herschel small
THE MAN WHO IS KING
[in his spare time)
• See how John T. McCutcheon, famous Chicago Tribune car
toonist, rules his Treasure Island, near Nassau, flies his own flag,
makes his own laws. Illustrated with fourteen photos in color.
AND a new romance of the back
country by Vereen Bell, Listen to the
Whippoorwill; short stories by Doug
Welch and Harry Klingsberg; a mys
tery serial by Mignon G. Eberhart
(Hangman’s Whip); Raymond Moley
on Business in the Woodshed; and an
unusual memoir, I Saw Lee Surrender.
All in this week’s Post—now on sale.
1750 IN CASH PRIZES
for "Confucius” sayings!
For complete details, ask this newspaper
for the Contest Pamphlet. Your entry
may win the $100 first prize, or one of
the 116 other cash prizes in this Saturday
Evening Post contest for college students.
ACT NOW! CONTEST CLOSES APRIL 5!
A New Comedy of
Big Game Fishing
in Movieiand
This way to Hollywood, where wild
sea waves dash high (in the studio
tank) and fighting monsters of the
deep (rubber models) are artfully
reeled in by “one of the most beau
tiful women available today”! This
week’s Post brings you the rollick
ing, romantic, ridiculous adventures
of Crunch and Des. In four parts.
‘Salt Water Daffy ”by
PHIUP WYUE
THE SATURDAY EVENING POST