The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 13, 1941, Image 6

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    Page 6-
Official Notices
Deadline for Official Notices is 3:80
p.m. on days before publication, that is,
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Notices
should be concise, typewritten, double
spaced, and signed.
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
Feb. 14—Pan American Ball—Architec
tural Club—Sbisa Hall—9:00 p. m. until
1 a. m.
Feb. 14—Accounting Society Benefit
Show—Assembly Hall—S :16 p. m. and
«:80 p. m.
Feb. 17 to 21 inc.—Waterworks and
Sewerage Short Course.
Feb. 21-—Sophomore Dance—Sbisa Hall
—9 :00 p. m.
Feb. 21—-C. E. Society Benefit Show—
Assembly Hall.
Feb. 28—Field Artillery Ball—Sbisa
Hall—10 p. m. to 2 a. m.
Feb. 28—A.LE.E. Benefit Show—Assem
bly Hall.
INCOME TAX
The Deputy of Internal Revenue will be
in College Station on March 6, 7, and 8
to assist the taxpayers of College Station
in filing their income tax returns for the
current year. He will be located at the
main post office.
ANNA V. SMITH, Postmaster
SENIORS
Those seniors who desire to have the
printed personnel leaflets prepared and
who have not done so, must pay for these
before 12 noon, February 16, as orders
for these leaflets will not be accepted
after that date.
PLACEMENT BUREAU
Association of Former Students
NOTICE
A Board of Officers will visit the College
Monday, February 17, for the purpose of
You will get a Square
Deal on Books at
LOUPOT’S
Trading Post
CAMPUS
15c to 5 p.m. — 20c after
LAST DAY
“Kid Nightingale”
with John Payne
and Jane Wyman
—Also—
Cartoon and Short
Tomorrow and Saturday
PAUL MUNI
HUDSON'S m
A 20th Centurv-Fox Picture
—Also—
World News and Short
We wish to announce
the addition of Mr. Mar
tin H. Jones to our per
sonnel ... as manager of
the shoe department in
our Bryan store. Mr.
Jones has had twenty-
two years of correct shoe
fitting. His fine training
assures properly fitted
shoes. He is a graduate
of Dr. Scholl’s School
of foot corrective ap
pliances and proper fit
ting shoes.
See our up-to-the-minute
stock of Nunn-Bush . . .
Edgerton and Fortune
Shoes . . . Justin Cowboy
and Military Boots.
fllaldrop6(8
‘Two Convenient Stores”
College Station - Bryan
interviewing Honor Graduates who have
applied for Regular Army Commissions.
Honor Graduates will report to Room 17,
Ross Hall by noon Friday and indicate
their off periods when they will be avail
able for interview and physical examina
tion.
R. P. LIVELY, Captain, F.A..
Adjutant
Review Sections for Student Aid Exam
inations
Wednesday 7:80, Room 200 Ag. Engi
neering Building, Donald Christy.
Thursday 7:30, Room 200 Ag. Engi
neering Building, L. G. Jones.
Friday 7:80, Room 200 Ag Engineer
ing Building, L. M. Thompson.
Application Photographs
Application size photographs which ac
company personnel leaflets are ready for
the following seniors. Please call for
these at room 133, Administration Build
ing, at your earliest convenience: Geo. W.
DeArmond, Jr., Robe. E. Elliott, Peck
Hardee, Jr., L. F. Jaggi, Abie S. Kahn,
G. H. Michalk, J. G. Murray, E. L.
Streb, Alex G. Warren.
Placement Bureau
CHANGE IN SCHEDULE
I. Eng. 406, Industrial Case Analysis,
will be held Fridays at 4 p. m. in room
104, Petroleum Building.
JUDSON NEFF, Head
I. Eng. Dept.
BATTALION CARRIERS
All Battalion Carriers who did not at
tend the meeting of the staff Tuesday
night please report to Tommy Henderson
in room 217, No. 6 Thursday night after
supper. Failure to appear will mean a
new carrier will be assigned to your hall.
M. E. STUDENTS
All M. E. students who want their
pictures in the M. E. section of the Long
horn must pay Miss Liles, Secretary for
Mr. Crawford, 76 cents before Friday.
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
Ch. E. 806, Stoichiometry is being of
fered this semester. Inquire Room 818, Pe
troleum Building, regarding time of meet
ing.
J. D. LINDSAY, Acting Head
Dept, of Chemical Engineering
VETERINARY MEDICINE FACULTY
There will be a regular meeting of the
Faculty of the School of Veterinary
Medicine in the Faculty Room, 210 Admin
istration Bldg, at 6 p. m., Friday, Feb
ruary 14.
P. W. BURNS, Secretary
INDUSTRIAL FILMS
An outstanding builder of mass-pro
duction metal machines has loaned two
films that are not ordinarily available
outside the company—“Utility Tools, Type
A, B, D, and Openside’’—“Automotive
Production Line—Packard Cylinder Block”.
Two other films have been obtained—
“Making a V-Type Engine”, and “Alum
inum Fabricating Processes”.
Those interested may see the films given
as part of the regular classroom instruc
tion in the basement projection room
of the ME Shops Friday and Saturday,
February 14 and 16, at 10 o’clock.
Student Technical Societies, or other
Department are invited to arrange with
the Industrial Engineering Department for
use of these films if they are interested.
The films listed above will be available
through the end of this week.
JUDSON, NEFF, Head
Industrial Engineering Dept.
PERSONNEL LEAFLETS
Printed personnel leaflets are ready for
the following seniors. Please call for these
at Room 133, Administration Building, at
your earliest convenience: J. W. Bailey,
Jack Boxer, George W. DeArmond, Jr„
M. E. Gililland, E. L. Gregory, Peck Har
dee, Jr., A. L. Harris, A. D. Johnston,
J. C. Kellis, Billy A. Newman, W. E.
Pump, J. R. Richmond, R. G. Roberts, B.
F. Sullivan, J. D. Wells.
PLACEMENT BUREAU
GARDEN CLUB
An official from the Freeport Sulphur
Company will speak at the meeting Fri
day night, Feb. 14 at 7:30 in Chemistry
Lecture Room. Interested men and women
of the community are cordially invited
to attend.
VETERINARY STUDENTS
The Student Chapter of the A.V.M.A.
will meet tonight at 7:30 in the Veterin
ary Hospital lecture room. Election of of
ficers and other important business will
be conducted. Pre-vets are invited.
Pre-Med Club
There will be a meeting of the Pre-
Med Club tonight at 7 o’clock in the Biol
ogy Lecture Room. Plans for the ban
quet will be discussed.
PARIS AND LAMAR COUNTY CLUB
Any member desiring a club picture
come to room 217, dorm 6, some time this
week. Bring fifty cents to cover the cost.
COTTON SOCIETY
A very important meeting of the Cot
ton Society will be held Thursday, Feb. 13,
at 7:30 in the Textile Building. Mr. E. A.
Miller, Extension Service Agronomist, will
speak on Texas Cotton Standards.
A.S.C.E. and S.A.M.E.
There will be a joint meeting of the
A.S.C.E. and the S.A.M.E. at 7:15 p. m.
Thursday night in the C.E. Lecture Room.
Slides on Foundation Problems of West
Side Elevated Highway will be presented.
Mr. F. J. Benson will explain the slides
as they are shown.
LANDSCAPE CLUB
There will be a meeting of the Land
scape Club in the landscape drafting room
Thursday night at 7:30. All members are
urged to be present.
MILITARILY SPEAKING
Knowing her language is essential
whether Germany or Latin America is our
friend or enemy. Eat in German or Span
ish under Dr. Luther Jones or Ford
Rackley at the Fellowship Luncheon
Thursday.
Classified
FOR RENT—Bedroom with adjoining
bath. Can serve breakfast if desired. Tel
ephone 2-7440.
WANTED—Text books for M. E. 438
(Marketing Industrial Products) and M.
S. E. 402 (Water Supply and Sewage).
Come by Room 201 number 4. Hub John
son.
LOST—Sheaffer’s Lifetime Fountain
Pen. Name John A. Kenagy printed there
on. Reward for return to room 208, No.
8.
RIDE TO DALLAS and return. Leave
College 1 o’clock Friday; leave Dallas 6
o’clock Sunday. 1939 Oldsmobile, radio,
heater. Price $1.00 either way, $2.00 round
trip. If interested, see Jim Gillespie, 120
No. 12.
LOST—Trench coat in Houston where
Aggies wait for rides on Washington St.
Name and outfit on collar. Reward for
return to room 302 No. 2.
LOST—Plaid Trench Coat, lost in road
in front of A.A.A. Building. Please re
turn to Sergeant at the A.A.A. Building.
ROOM FOR RENT—College Hills. Pri
vate entrance and private bath. Call af
ter 6 p. m. 4-9004.
ROOM FOR RENT—at North Gate. Sec
ond house north of the Church of Christ.
Merle Saxe.
LOST—In Hearne Sunday on Aggie
bench, two trench coats. Reward. Fish
Linam, Dorm 7, Room 422, Phone 4-4234.
LOST—Last Thursday, a five dollar
bill. Lost somewhere between the new
postoffice. Western Union and Adm. Bldg.
Reward. Please return to room 126, Adm.
Bldg.
THE BATTALION
-THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1941
Hitch-Hiking—
(Continued from Page 1)
short-cut. Seems kinda like being
cheated out of your dessert after
eating a thick steak .... I just
can’t understand a thing like this.”
He let us out a Milano Junction
and then headed hell-bent for Waco,
We both heaved a sigh of relief
when he was gone, but it was
several hours before we could get
him out of our minds.
Well sir, our next ride came
along quick enough—in a big truck
so heavily loaded with bales of hay
that it didn’t seem possible for
them all to stay on. As luck would
have it, the driver had a girl with
him so there was only room for
one of us up front. Roommate and
I matched to see who had to ride
on top of the hay.
I lost!
Boy, was that ride cold! Good
thing I don’t have hay fever, too.
The truck didn’t go faster than 40
miles an hour, but the way the
wind whistled by I figured we must
have been going at least a hundred.
The driver took pity on me,
though, and we stopped in Rock
dale to get a cup of coffee.
It never occured to me before
then that truck drivers, too, might
have their problems, but if you’ve
ever talked with one any length of
time, you’re convinced already.
It seems that there’s a state law
about over-loading trucks,
“The trouble is,” the driver told
us while we were in the cafe, “it’s
impossible for a trucker to haul
a paying load if he stays under
the maximum weight allowed by
law.”
“As a result,” he went on, “we
have to take a chance with every
load we carry, and we exceed the_
limit every time. When we get
caught—and that’s plenty often—
we catch a fine which runs be
tween $15 and $30. Oh well, it’s a
hell of a life anyway,” he dismally
concluded.
“Sure is,” his girl agreed.
The trucker took us as far as
Round Rock where he had some
business to take care of, so we
hit the pavement again. And be-
lieve-you-me, I was mighty glad
to get off that dougle-high, triple
cold stack of hay!
Talk about going from one ex
treme to another, we did it.
Our next ride was in a new
Buick. The driver, an employee of
the Western Electric Co., was head
ed for San Antonio.
“My home is in Houston,” he
said, “but since the company has
received so many national defense
orders, I haven’t spent one day in
ten there.”
We gathered from his conversa-
LOST—One bluish gray vest. Return to
Room 119, Dorm 10 and claim reward.
LOST—Trench coat, in Mess Hall, Sat
urday of final exam week. Initials G.B.D.
inside collar. Return to Dorroh, 116 No. 1
for reward.
FOR RENT—One room for gentlemen.
Single beds. Meals if desired.
Mrs. S. V. Perritte
Phone 4-8794
Film Club—
(Continued from Page 1)
adventure of Night Train has been
made credible by underscoring its
terrors quite casually—even hu
morously. . . one and all the per
formances are keyed to the script.
Put down Night Train as the year’s
most perilous ride.” Cecelia Ager
in PM said “Unlike most English
movies, the accents are intelligi
ble.”
Arrangements for the rapid
seating of both club members and
guests will be carried out as at
the last club presentation.
The last showing of the reg
ularly scheduled picture at the
Campus Theater, “Kid Nightin
gale”, begins at 7 p.m. Members
of the film club will enter the
theater at 8:40 and general ad
mission tickets will go on sale at
8:45, The feature will be repeat
ed at 10:30 for those who are un
able to get in for the first perfor
mance.
Legislature—
(Continued from Page 3)
building are such that it can be
converted into a dormitory or used
for class rooms, and in the mean
time could be rented to federal
agencies.
The legislative committee of the
A. & M. board of directors was in
Austin last week and is expected
here this week, to follow through
on the proposed legislation. This
committee includes A. H. Demke
of Stephenville; R. W. Briggs of
Pharr; E. J. Kiest and Joe Utay of
Dallas.
tion that his job was to install
Western Electric’s telephone equip
ment for Bell Telephone Co.
“The biggest worry in my life
right now,” he told us, “is the draft
situation. It doesn’t affect me di
rectly because I’m past the max
imum age limit, but so many of
our men have been called that the
rest of us have had to triple-up on
our work.”
“Not that we mind,” he went on,
“because the company is very good
to us, but it seems to me that our
men should be exempt from the
draft. Surely it cannot be denied
that communications are an im
portant adjunct of national de
fense—but that’s just my opinion
of it,” he concluded.
In less than half an hour we
reached our destination—Austin—
and bid goodbye to our last bene
factor.
Within four hours we had made
a hundred-mile trip, met seven
widely different but interesting
people, learned of the problems of
three of them, learned their various
prejudices and opinions concern
ing current events and affairs and
received a near education the like
of which we would never get in
any classroom.
Farewell Banquet
Given for Lieut.
Col. 0. E. Beezley
Field Artillerymen
Give Banquet; Ashburn
Is Principal Speaker
Farewell to Lieut. Col. O. E.
Beezley was expressed Tuesday
night by the entire senior class of
the Field Artillery regiment at a
special banquet in his honor.
The Field Artillery unit of the
cadet corps took the opportunity to
present Col. Beezley with a pock
et watch engraved with his name
and a farewell message.
As an added token of their ap
preciation, the Field Artillery men
gave him a combination pipe hold
er and humidor with two pipes.
George Holm, B Battery senior,
acted as toastmaster for the eve
ning.
Introduced as the principal
speaker, Col. Ike Ashburn paid
tribute to the accomplishments
and merit of Col. Beezley’s term
of office as head instructor in Field
Artellery Military Science here.
“Col. Beezley and his fine fam
ily are leaving a very definite and
equally fine imprint upon the life
of this community and the officers
and teachers of the college deplore
his leaving.
“Speaking for these senior artil
lerymen and their younger breth-
ern, Colonel, they pay you tonight
man’s finest tribute—that of great
confidence, abiding respect and ten
der regard of a junior for a senior
in a man’s organization. This dinner
has no synthetic sound-producing
effects but evolves wholly from-
the minds and hearts of a fine
group of young men men who want
salute you, sir, wish you bon voy
age, and who are grateful to you
for your inspiring and understand
ing leadership.”
Col. Beezley, who has been with
the college since 1936, served in the
World War in the Finance Depart
ment (QMC) as Financial Requis
ition officer of the A.E.F.
Before being transferred to Tex
as A. & M. he commanded the
Oklahoma district, C.C.C.
His new assignment will be acting
colonel, Regimental Commander,
353rd F.A. Camp Livingstone,
Louisiana’s new organization being
formed of colored selective ser
vice men.
Dr. George N. Shuster, president
of Hunter college, believes Latin
and Greek philosophy and religion
must be restored to the American
education scheme if young people
are expected to defend democracy.
Prof. R. B. Harvey of the Uni
versity of Minnesota is using ultra
violet rays for finding and elimi
nating bacterial ring rot in pota
toes.
Purdue’s Hockema
To Be Here March 2-5
Prof. Frank C. Hockema, assist
ant to the President of Purdue
University, Lafayette, Ind., will be
at Texas A. & M. college March
2-5, on a nationwide study which
he is making of certain educational
problems, under a special grant
from the Carnegie Corporation.
Prof. Hockema, who is on a 60-
day leave of absence to make the
study, will confer with local Tex
as A. & M. authorities, including
President T. O. Walton and Gibb
Gilchrist, dean of the School of
Engineering, on such topics as
methods of selecting students, se
lection and development of instruct
ors, contents of curricula, research
work by faculty and students, per
sonnel and counseling service, value
of professional societies to stu
dents, employers’ attitude toward
present approved curricula and oth
er live topics in the field of higher
education.
Giesecke—
(Continued from Page 1)
tioning more important every day,
he believes. Defense officials are
recognizing this, he said, in in
cluding air conditioning in the
blueprints of new battleships and
airplane hangers. It makes sailors
and soldiers more efficient.
Dr. Giesecke also spoke on “fac
tors Affecting the Span of Human
Life,” and listed as those factors,
in their order of importance as:
heredity, environment and beha
vior.
Civil Service Examinations
The United State Civil Service
Commission announces open com
petitive examinations for the po
sitions of Leather and Canvas
Worker, $1680 a Year, Junior Lea
ther and Canvas Worker, $1500 a
Year, and Leather and Canvas
Worker’s helper, $1200 a Year, for
employment in the Tenth U. S.
Civil Service District, comprising
Louisiana and Texas.
Applicants for Leather and Can
vas Worker must have had four
years’ experience (which may in
clude apprenticeship) as a leather
and canvas worker, parachute
machanic or upholsterer, and such
experiences must have included the
operation of industrial power sew
ing machines. Applicants for Jun
ior Leather and Canvas Worker
must have had two years of such
experience, and for Leather and
Canvas Worker’s Helper, six
months of such experience is re
quired. Applicants for Leather and
Canvas Worker must have reached
their 21st but must not have pas
sed their 48th birthday; for the two
lower grade positions, applicants
must have reached their 18th but
must not have passed their 48th
birthday; the age limits are waived
for persons granted military pre
ference because of military or
naval service.
Appplications may be filed until
further notice. They will be rated
as received and certification made
as the needs of the service require.
FEATURES
★ COMPACT, STURDY, ATTRACTIVE
★ WEIGHS LESS THAN TWENTY POUNDS
★ BUILT-IN LOOP ANTENNA
★ PLAYS lO" AND 12" RECORDS
NOW YOU CAN OWN A RECORDING RADIO
HASWELL’S .
BRYAN
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