The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 24, 1940, Image 6

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    Page 6-
Official Notices
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS:
October 26—Round Table Club—Show—
Assembly Hall—3 :15 and 6:30 P. M.
October 31 to November 2—Texas Nur
seryman’s Short Course (Mr. J. F. Ros-
borough).
November 1—Poultry Science Club Bene
fit Show—3:16 and 6:30 P. M. (Assembly
Hall).
November 4—Town Hall—Fisk Jubilee
Singers—Guion Hall—7:30 P. M.
ATTENTION JUNIORS
Any Junior interested in working on
Advertising Staff of the Battalion come
to Student Publications Office as soon
as possible.
AGRONOMY SOCIETY INITIATION
The Agronomy Society will initiate
new members in the animal husbandry
pavillion Tuesday night at 7:30. Any stu
dent who plans to take several courses in
Agronomy and who has off one semester
hour of college work may join. Dues are
$1.00.
Students who wish to order keys may
do so Tuesday night.
MAINTENANCE DUE
The fees for board, room rent, laundry
for November in the amount of $27.60 are
now due and may be paid at the Fiscal
Office from 8 a. m. to 1:30 p. m. Fees
for remainder of semester totaling $73.25
may be paid at this time.
C. C. Edge, Cashier
STAFF MEETING
There will be a meeting of all artists
and writers of the magazine staff next
Wednesday night at 7:30 in the Battalion
office.
FELLOWSHIP LUNCHEON
There will be a Fellowship Luncheon
for employees of A. & M. from 12:10
to 12:40, Thursday noon.
SWIFT ESSAYS
All students who are writing essays for
the Swift College Essay Contest must sub
mit their essays to the Animal Husband
ry office by November 1. That is the
closing date for the contest and no essays
will be accepted after that date.
B. R. DANA
OFFICE OF THE COMMANDANT
October 21, 1940
CIRCULAR:
NO. 12:
1. By authority of the faculty, juniors
and seniors attending the Baylor- A.
& M. game in Waco Saturday, Oc
tober 26, 1940, will be given author
ized absence from classes provided they
obtain a pass from the Commandant’s
Office before their departure.
2. No passes for this trip will be author
ized that are not in the Commandant’s
Office by 12:00 noon, Thursday, Oc
tober 24, 1940.
JAMES A. WATSON
Lt. Colonel, U. S. Army
Commandant
SWIMMERS
All members of last year’s freshman and
varsity swimming squads, and all students
who wish to try out for this year’s var
sity team must report at the swimming
pool Thursday at 8 p. m.
A. D. ADAMSON
Swimming Coach
ATTENTION - SENIORS
Please turn in your personnel record
blanks at Room 133, Administration Build
ing, as soon as possible.
LUCIAN M. MORGAN, Director
Placement Bureau
JUNIOR F. F. A.
The Junior Collegiate Chapter of the
Future Farmers of America will meet on
Thursday night in the Ag. Engineering
Lecture Room. Colonel Ike Ashburn will
be the principal speaker.
SAN ANTONIO
There will be a meeting of the San
Antonio A. & M. club Thursday night in
the YMCA chapel immediately after yell
practice. Old and new members are urged
to be there in order to constitute a quorom
so that officers may be elected.
PLANT SCIENCE SEMINAR
There will be a meeting of the Plant
Science Seminar Thursday night at 7:30
in the conference room of the Agricul
tural Experiment Station Building. All
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persons interested in plant breeding are
invited to attend.
A. I. Ch. E. MEETING
There will be a meeting of the Student
Chapter of the A. I. Ch. E. tonight in
the Petroleum Lecture Room at 7:30 p.
m. The program will be made up of talks
that should be of particular interest to
freshmen and sophomore Chemical En
gineers and these classes are urged to
attend.
A. I. E. E. MEETING
There will be a A. I. E. E. meeting
tonight immediately after yell practice in
the lecture room of the E. E. Bldg.
PRE-MED CLUB MEETING
There will be a business meeting of the
Pre-Medical Society Thursday night at 7:30
in the Biology lecture room. There will
also be a speaker. All pre-med students
are requested to be present as important
business matters will be discussed.
Classified
LOST—Tan and white, 25 to 30 pound
mixed terrier. Wide, studded collar. Ans
wers to “Neb”. Reward. No questions
asked.
Sgt. M. E. Thomas
Coast Artillery Armory
LOST—Ladies’ black leather purse. Re
ward for returning to Mrs. Dudley M.
Glenn, Room 318 Administration Bldg.
REWARD—Elgin Wrist Watch lost
last Saturday. Owners name engraved on
back. Contact P. O. Box 2148 or Room
56 Mitchell Hall for reward. No ques
tions asked.
Houston Post—
(Continued from Page 1)
though. Sugar is "saw-dust,” salt
and pepper are disguised by the
obvious “sand and dirt,” coffee is
appropriately dubbed “dope,” des
sert is “cush,” and “shoot the sky”
would get the water passed your
way.
Peas are labeled “shot,” “cackle”
is the word that gets the eggs,
“Shoot the gunwaddin’ ” is neces
sary if you want bread, breakfast
food rides the not too compliment
ary title “scabs,” and “rabbit” is
applied to a salad.
Many Interesting Tales
Tales concerning these Aggie
food terms are as many as there are
Aggies to tell them but the best
ones are usually based on the sum
mer R. 0. T. C. camps. In all cases
these camps are majority-populated
by Texas Aggies and, as a result,
students from the nation’s other
land grant colleges are more or less
subject to close adherence to what
ever Aggie traditions the cadets
may decide to carry over at camp.
The result being: During the
first few days of each camp session
the out-of-staters are hard-put to
learning the Aggie food terms and
sometimes it’s as long as a week
before one of them gets a full meal.
The rule is that unless the food is
asked for by its correct moniker it
isn’t passed and many’s the time
that a non-Aggie has left his place
at the table, walked a few feet, got
the food he wanted, returned to his
place, and then helped himself.
Naturally, the rule doesn’t hold in
either of the two mess halls—
guests are accorded all courtesies
that a military training makes for.
Some More Statistics
Four hundred and sixty-six per
sons are employed in the two mess
halls; 246 of them being part-time
student employees who are thus en
abled to earn part of their college
expenses. The waiters are all stu
dents and they are so timed and
coordinated that they reach the
tables with hot food a few seconds
before the cadets. Only three min
utes is required to set the food on
the stable for the entire student
body and each waiter serves 24 stu
dents family style.
Wherever possible college grown
and college produced food com
modities are used. During the nine
months of the past long session
$116,000 was spent for dairy pro
ducts produced at A. & M.
Whatever your kitchen bill is for
a nine-month period, it probably
isn’t $766,269.05, but that’s what it
cost to feed the corps last year.
The cost of the food is amazingly
low and the quality is good enough
to satisfy the corps the year round
—and that’s saying plenty. Aggies
pay 23 cents a meal, which amounts
to 69 cents a day for food.
Here’s the menu for Friday, Oc
tober 18:
Breakfast: orange, dry cereal,
link sausage and fried eggs, hot
biscuits and butter, coffee, and
milk.
Dinner: roast beef, mashed pota
toes, candied carrots, clover club
salad, bread and butter, chocolate
pie, and iced tea.
Supper: fried fillet of sole, oven
lyonnaise potatoes, green peas, cel
ery and olives, hot rolls and butter,
tropical gold cake, coffee and milk.
The two chefs, one at each mess
hall, are experts in their field and
both are European trained. With
their corps of assistants, they are
Charles Greissen, trained in the re
sorts of Switzerland and chef of the
historic and legendary Sbisa Hall,
and Gaston Flaune, chef of the new
half-million-dollar Duncan Hall.
The cooking takes about 12 hours
a day—it’s eaten in 60 minutes!
The corps marches into the mess
hall, eats and is gone in 20 minutes.
Y Cabinet—
(Continued from Page 1)
Lesell, J. F. Blanton, J. L. Carson,
Eugene Copeland, Carlton Homan,
R. H. Inglefield and E. L. Wehner.
Vincent Hagen, Charles Brown,
Clayton Collins, Robert Nisbet, R.
G. Powell, P. J. Stach and Albert
White compose the Cosmopolitan
Club committee. In charge of the
Freshman discussion groups are:
T. L. Power, William Adkisson, W.
W. Cardwell, Thomas Duce, Jack
Miller, Ray Mulhollen, E. T. Raf
ferty and E. T. Rogers.
Those on the publication com
mittee are Clarence Colgin, Sam
uel Ellsberry, P. O. Egner, J. G.
Goppert, Guss Link, William Stan
ford and R. F. Worth. The project
house council is: Terry Thrift, Paul
Brandon, R. G. Powell, Albert
Smith, N. W. Solether and Nelson
Womack.
A & M vs TU—
(Continued from Page 1)
more resolutely attacked the prob
lem of an equitable adjustment
and not until 1930 did they suc
ceed.
President Walton, who had made
an extensive research into the ques
tion was able to throw much light
on the hotly debated subject and
with the splendid cooperation of all
concerned a final, equitable ad
justment was agreed upon by the
two Boards.
The two Boards requested the
Texas State Legislature to amend
the constitution, Article 7, section
13 to read as follows. “Quote: The
Board of Regents of the University
of Texas and The Board of Dir
ectors of the Agricultural and
Mechanical College of Texas shall
expend the Available University
Fund for the construction of build
ings on the campuses of the re
spective institutions, and for ex
tensions of their campuses and the
equipment of buildings thereof.”
This in itself should be sufficient
proof to those contradicting the
fact that A. & M. is not a branch
of the University. In this same
amendment the State Legislature
specifies that A. & M. shall expend
one-third of the permanent Uni
versity fund, except income from
surface leases of the land granted
them by this state.
It is quite apparent that A. & M.
is not a branch of the University
and the only connections. whatso
ever we have with them is to share
in the expenditure on a one-third
basis of the financial recipients re
ceived from their land grant en
dowment.
THE BATTALION
•THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1940
Over 400 Attend
Newcomers Party
Tuesday Night
The Singing Cadets presented a
group of numbers to approximately
four hundred members and guests
of the Brazos County Chamber of
Commerce party at the Bryan
Country club Tuesday night at the
annual “Newcomers’ Party.”
Colonel Ike Ashburn was master
of ceremonies and presided over
the meeting. Walter Jenkins, Hous
ton, presented a group of Houston
artists who sang old favorite and
patriotic songs. The meeting was
held to initiate new citizens who
have moved into Brazos county in
the last six months. Light refresh
ments were served to the group.
Kerr Will Represent
A & M At Inaugural
Of Ohio State Prexy
Prizes Offered
For Best Speech
Of Science Academy
Prizes of $25, $15 and $10 are
being offered to members of the
Junior division of the Texas Acad
emy of Science for the best scien
tific talks presented at the meeting
in San Antonio on November 8-9.
Dr. C. C. Doak, head of the biology
department, has received rules and
information of the contest from
Willis Floyd, professor in the
chemistry department of Sam
Houston State Teachers College.
Students may enter papers in
any of three divisions. Preference
will be given first class papers;
that is, those in which the student
has carried out individual experi
mentation. Second class papers are
those in which the student has help
ed another person or gathered first
hand information on the experi
ment. Third class papers are those
written on authority from some
book or journal.
Eugene J. Kerr of Columbus,
Ohio, will represent A. & M. at
the formal inauguration of Dr.
Howard Landis Bevis as president
of Ohio State University, Colum
bus, on Thursday and Friday. Kerr
received his B. S. in the School
of Engineering and is at present
fuel engineer for the Lorain Coal
and Dock Company of Columbus.
He was formerly of Havana, Cuba,
and is the grandson of Bernard
Sbisa for whom Sbisa hall was
named.
Experiment Station
Party Tomorrow Night
All employees of the Experiment
Station including graduate stu
dents working in the Station and
wives or husbands of employees
are invited to attend the Experi
ment Station party to be held in
Maggie Parker’s Club Room in
Bryan Friday evening, October 23,
at 8 o’clock.
A social hour, a special program,
and light refreshments will take
up the early part of the evening.
Later, music will start for those
who enjoy dancing. A fee of 25
cents will be charged each person.
Papers must be sent in before
October 30 in order to receive con
sideration. Dr. Doak may be seen
for further information.
The senior division of the Tex
as Academy of Science will feature
three A. & M. faculty members.
Dr. Ide P. Trotter, head of the Ag
ronomy department, Dr. L. J.
Jones, professor in the Agronomy
department, hnd Dr. E. R. Alexan-
Aggies!
We thank you for your
cooperation in making
this our best year in
business.
See You In Waco
Saturday
Lipscomb
Pharmacy
Inc.
North Gate
DYERS _ HATTEtt*
AMERICAN- STEAM
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PHONE 585 BRYAN
Patronize Your Agent in Your Organization
der, head of the Agricultural Edu
cation department are the three
who will deliver talks on the pro
gram.
The society is the affiliation of
the various scientific clubs in Tex
as and was organized to foster co
operation and parallel develop
ment among the various societies.
Bates Elected Fort
Worth Club President
The first meeting of the Fort
Worth club was held in the Aca
demic building Tuesday night and
Gus Bates was elected president.
Other officers elected were: Kieth
(Kay) Pumphrey, vice-president;
Tom Gillis, secretary-treasurer;
Pat Childs, reporter; and D. R. Ha-
good, reporter.
Plans for the dance to be held
in Fort Worth during the Christ
mas holidays were discussed and
other plans were made to have a
social function within the near fu
ture. A definite date for future
meetings of the club was set for
the first and third Mondays of
each month.
W illkie-Roose velt
Campaign Discussed
At Round Table Meet
A discussion of the Willkie-
Roosevelt campaign was discussed
at a meeting of the Round Table
Club last Thursday night. The
meeting was in the form of a gener
al group discussion with every
one participating.
The club discussed the following
points in addition to many others:
(1) If Roosevelt is elected, will he
not continue to run every election
year and so become a virtual dicta
tor? (2) Will Willkie do anything
about the national debt if he is
elected? (3) Was not Roosevelt’s
attempt to pack the supreme court
an indication that he may attempt
to assume a dictatorship. (4) Is
big business not backing Willkie
because it expects monetary re
wards.
The next meeting of the Round
Table Club will take the form of
a panel-type discussion with five
or six interested members sitting
in front of the room and discussing
the issue.
TAKE A TIP FROM
THOSE WHO KNOW ...
Be prepared for the
rainy and cold weather
that will be here soon.
Be regulation and comfortable in
a trench coat.
UTMOST PROTECTION!
SMART STYLE!
Don’t miss those football games because
of the weather.
THE EXCHANGE STORE
Bom Asrsm? Rsmte
... from the cigarette that gives you extra smoking pleasure
AL PEARCE...
brings you a hilarious 30 minutes
of merriment and music featuring
Carl Hoff and his orchestra — and
that famous low-pressure salesman,
ElmerBlurt("Ihope—I hope”). Every
Friday night—CBS.
SLOWER-BURNING CAMELS GIVE YOU
EXTRA MILDNESS
EXTRA COOLNESS
EXTRA FLAVOR
In recent laboratory tests, CAMELS burned 25% slower than the aver
age 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
5
EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK!
CAMELS
THE CIGARETTE
OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS
BOB CROSBY...
A hot half-hour of "solid sending”
featuring Bob Crosby, with "the best
Dixieland Band in the land” and the
famous Crosby "Bobcats.” Every Thurs
day night—NBC.
J8i#
UNCLE EZRA...
Thirty minutes chock-full of
chuckles with that lovable,
laughable cracker-barrel phi
losopher of Rosedale. You’ll
laugh with him—you’ll love
him. Every Saturday night—
NBC.
Copyright, 1940, B. 7. Beynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.
“BLONDIE”...
America’s favorite young marrieds, straight from
the funnies and films, give you a grand half-hour
of howls and thrills. Featuring screen stars Penny
Singleton and Arthur Lake as "Blondie” and
Dagwood Bumstead. Every Monday night—CBS.
ILKA CHASE...
Join sophisticated Ilka Chase for "Luncheon at the Waldorf.”
You’ll meet the personalities of the day. You’ll hear the
latest gossip on fads and fashions. You’ll get the inside on
who’s who and what’s doing. Saturday—NBC.