The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 17, 1941, 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-
THE BATTALION
Official Notices
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
17—Texas University and Texas
May 17—Texas
A. & M. Baseball Game.
INDUSTKAL FILMS
Industrial films available this week
are:
STEEL THROUGH THE AGES: a
16 mm. film showing the manufacture of
stainless steel. Time about 36 minutes.
This film will be shown Saturday.
17 at 10:00 a. ra. in the basement
May
pro
jection room of the M. E. Shopi
16 i
wspri
and
hshing of a great daily newspaper using
TREES TO TRIBUNES: a 16 mm. film
i i__ xi. - —— of nei
paper, and the pu
aily newspaper usii
mm
showing the making of newsprint from
and the pub-
the forest to finish
ng
led
such print, lime 40 minutes.
This film will be shown Friday, May
16 at 10:00 a. m. in the basement projec
tion room of the M. E. Shops.
Interested visitors are invited to see the
fHms as part of the regular class
instructio:
auction. Student Technical Soc:
other departments are invited to
rang*
The
and ar<
through
to ar-
films are booked
:e-with us for the use of these films,
boo!
arib
lay.
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING
e ordinarily aval
ough Saturd
for an
'ailable
on Monday
wee
inda
DEPARTMENT
JUDSON NEFF, Head
OFFICE OF THE COMMANDANT
CIRCULAR NO. 66:
Having been approved by the Execu
tive Committee of the College, the fol
lowing is published for the information
and guidance of all concerned:
1. Any candidate for a degree at this
College who at the end of the current
semester has accumulated demerits in
nas
excess of the authorized limit will not
idua
ed before
the College.
excess of the aut
be graduated until he shall have appear-
nmittee of
the Discipline Comn
sy v
of
2. Any undergraduate student who at
current semester has ac
cumulated demerits in excess of the auth-
I not be allowed to ag:
register in the College until he shall have
beared before the Di:
until
iscipli
ne Committee
orized limit will not be allowed to again
regist
appea
of the College.
3. The proceedings of the Discipline
Committee in each case considered must
have the approval of the President of
the College and a copy of the proceedings
will be made a part of the student’s per
manent record in the Registrar’s Of
fice.
By order of Lt. Colonel WATSON.
JOE E. DAVIS
1st Lt. Infantry
Assistant Commandant
R.O.T.C. SENIOR CADETS
MEMORANDUM NO. 49
1. Immediately after supper Ma;
21st,
l. immediately after supper May
all R.O.T.C. Senior Cadets who have re
ceived or will receive c
graduation or becoming
who
lissi
ons
upo
1 a:
1 nation or
ble in banquet room, Sbisa Hall, for
sei
the purpi
ucto:
comm
of age will as-
banquet roc
pose of contacting their future i
instructors of the First Military Area.
This contact is of the highest impor
tance and no absences will occur. Uni
form: As for mess.
By order of Lt. Colonel WATSON:
R. P. LIVELY,
- 5 - " A.,
Captain, F.
Adjutant.
CONFLICT EXAMINATION
SCHEDULES
chedule of all conflict examinations
:or second semester has been posted on
bulletin Boards 11, 12, and 13 of the
Academic building. Any error in this
second semester
loards
buildi)
schedule should be repi
trar’s Office at once.
tny error
orted to the Regis-
H. L. HEATON,
Assistant Registrar
CLASSES SUSPENDED FOR
LECTURE
Classes will be suspended for juniors
and seniors to attend a lecture by Dar
rel L. Brady in Guion Hall at 11:00 a.
m. Monday. A roll will be taken.
F. C. BOLTON,
Dean
HOUSING FOR SUMMER SCHOOL
If your house or apartment will be for
rent to Summer School students please
BRYAN CAFE
For Those
STEAKS
For Your
“FISH”
SUMMER
sox
Inspired by a
Turkish Towel
The soft, porous texture of
terry cloth has been faithful
ly reproduced in these un
usual new hose. Wear them
for school or for active
sports . . . You’ll enjoy their
cool comfort and brisk good
looks.
Frosty pastel shades in
distinctive pattern treat
ments.
25^ and 35^
f l7aldrop«(o
“Two Convenient Stores”
College Station - Bryan
call the YMCA (4-7684) to get it on the
“available houses or apartments” list.
DR. C. H. WINKLER,
Director, Summer Session
BAPTIST PICNIC
All Baptist students are invited to at
tend the annual Baptist picnic this af
ternoon at 5:00. Please meet at the Bap
tist church and proceed from there to
Hensel park.
REV. R. L. BROWN
Classified
FOR SALE—1 pair Lucchese Boots, size
approximately 9-10; 1 pair Ice Cream
Pants; 1 pair Bombay Pants, waist size
29; all for slender person. Come by No.
7 Mitchell or phone 4-4184.
LOST—4 keys in brown leather key
holder. Return to room 309, Hall No.
7. Usual reward.
-Brown billfold containing $24.
inish school without it. Reward
iy amount finder names. Notify Robert
atson, 913 S. Coll
LOST
Cannot finish
amount
Watson, 913 S.
2-7106.
Notify
ege St., Bryan. Phone
LOST—High school ring. R.A.H.S. Re
turn to Kesner, Dorm 2, Room 226. Phone
4-1143.
HOUSE FOR SALE—2 story, four bed
rooms, 2 baths, screened porch, double
garage, large lot. N. Oakwopd. Major
Stevens. Phone 4-1134.
FOR RENT—For summer months. Foi
garage apartment
igidaire and Ta:
room furnished
. Four-
adjoin
ing campus. Frigidaire and Tappan range
included in furnishings. Spike White,
MODEL ARIPLANE CONTEST
A wing belonging to one of the
contest models was lost last week
end. It is 48 inches long and six
inches wide and painted dark blue.
Will the finder please return it
at once to the Department of Aero
nautical Engineering.
H. W. Barlow.
ROTC Grads—
(Continued from Page 1)
for students who are completing
the course in advanced military
science and being ordered to ac
tive duty but who will not grad
uate at this time, Dean Bolton
said. Since these students would
not ordinarily be excused from
exams, special provisions for their
grade must be made.
Press Banquet—
(Continued from Page 1)
ident of the Press Club who will
introduce the speakers. The guest
speaker for the banquet will be
Colonel Ike Ashburn and the pre
sentation of awards will be made
by Dean F. C. Bolton, chairman of
the student publications board.
Those to receive watches will be
Jeff Montgomery, Tom Power,
Morton Robinson, L. L. Kilpatrick,
0. G. Allen, Bob Nisbet, George
Fuermann, Keith Hubbard, Earle
A. Shields Jr., A. J. Hendrick, and
William Clarkson.
1941-’42 Town Hall—
(Continued from Page 1)
everyone.
Quentin Reynolds, foreign cor
respondent and experienced jour
nalist, is a familiar name to the
reading and listening public. His
newsreel “London Can Take It”
has been seen in 15,000 of the na
tion’s 17,000 theatres, and his book,
“The Wounded Don’t Cry,” is a
current best seller. Though prob
ably more well-known as a writer,
Reynolds is a calm and convincing
speaker and achieves his effect
without dramatics.
The appearance of the Houston
Symphony Orchestra is now an
annual affair due to popular de
mand. Comprising between 75 and
80 members the orchestra is the
finest collection of musicians in
the Southwest. Ernest Hoffman,
conductor of the orchestra since
1935, has achieved fame through
out the nation for his brilliant con
ducting, his style, and his inter
pretations.
The Singing Cadets, Aggieland’s
own singing organization, will re
turn to next year’s series after a
very successful current season, in
which they gave a command Town
Hall performance.
One in a series of programs de
signed to bring the best in the
field of entertainment to the cam
pus, next year’s program will mark
the third year the organization
has operated under the name of
Town Hall.
Numbers presented in this year’s
series were the U. S. Marine Band,
the Fisk Jubilee Singers, the Hous
ton Symphony Orchestra, Jean
Dickenson, the Littlefield Ballet,
The Singing Cadets, William L.
White, Ira Lee Sullivan, Duke El
lington, and Darrel L. Brady.
Eight regional scholarships rep
resenting a total value of $12,800
are being offered for the first time
in 1941-42 by Hamilton college.
Midwestern Federation of Cam
pus Co-operatives will meet next
year at the University of Minne
sota.
The Modernaires
Everything is news with the Modernaires, outstanding quar
tet of radio, one of the latest additions to Glenn Miller’s “Chester
field Moonlight Serenade.” They sing everything swingable, swing
everything singable. Left to right. Bill Conway, Harold Dickenson,
Chuck Goldstein and Ralph Bronstein give with a smile over
CBS airwaves.
Brady Speaks—
(Continued from Page 1)
ican youth today. He spent three
years in Europe working for the
Scout movement and earning his
own way and attending several
European Universities. In spite of
his youth Darrell Brady has travel
ed in 27 foreign countries. Here is
what he said, “I wanted to do the
things people write and act about—
go out and see for myself—see be
yond the horizon. I wanted to do
it and so I did. I went beyond it
and it was more than I hoped for.
Real, fascinating and full of oppor
tunity. That’s what I want to tell.
I want to tell people that they are
half-gods, not weak incapable
worms who must crawl in miser
able ruts all of their lives.”
The subject of Brady’s lecture
will be “How to Start a Business
on an Idea and Make it Pay and
Have Fun Doing it.” He did this
very thing. It all began when he
“starved” on an American college
campus and it made him sore to
be socially, and scholastically stop
ped because he didn’t have any
money. So he went to work to make
money and did it. “I’d like to tell
how to start a business on a shoe
string,” Brady stated, “and make
it pay and have fun doing it. I
just had an idea about cows! Very
simple but new—if I can do it,
others can too!
“Sure I got socked on the chin
and went hungry” says Brady but
I’m bragging about it now. People
told me I couldn’t do it and laughed
at me. But I worked my way
through 27 countries and studied at
six of the world’s greatest univer
sities, but the biggest lesson I
learned was living with the com
mon people of those countries and
that’s what I want to tell—what
I learned from the people.”
High School Swim—
(Continued from Page 3)
portunity, one man may compete
in only two events.
Accommodations have been ar
ranged for an overflow crowd ex
pected to witness these statewide
swimming champions in open com
petition, and Adamson has planned
the meet in detail to avoid unne
cessary delay. All races are to be
run under National Scholastic
rules and records made are eligi
ble for acceptance into national
record books. No admission is to
be charged as has been the policy
in the past.
Teams registered with Coach
Adamson by Friday afternoon were
Adamson High of Dallas, Bracken-
ridge High of San Antonio, San
Jacinto High of Houston, Tech
High of Santonio, Highland Park
of Dallas, Stephen F. Austin of
Houston, A. & M. Consolidated
High of College Station, Sunset
High of Dallas, Griener Junior
High of Dallas, and Austin High
of El Paso.
Kyle Field—
(Continued from Page 3)
tensive treatments. Phil Wrigley,
owner of the Chicago Cubs and
Dean, went deep into the old mon
ey bag for Diz’s price, and he has
gotten little in return. However,
Dean has been the hottest thing
that side of the Mississippi and
it was probably worth the chance.
“Dizzy” is a coach for the Cubs
now, but his pitching days gone
by should stay around in John Q.
Public’s mind a long time.
20 New Polo Mounts for
1941 - 1942 Aggie Club
Notice has been received by the
Cavalry instructors that 20 new
Plan Permits
Dorm Occupation
A plan to permit unmarried male
employees of the college to room
in the dining hall dormitory has
been approved by the board of di
rectors and details of the move are
being completed by J. C. Hotard,
director of the college mess halls,
E. M. Holmgreen, business manager
of the college announced Friday.
Extra rooms are now available
in the dormitory. This plan will
give college employees an oppor
tunity to live more cheaply. “This
plan will enable the college to more
fully utilize its facilities,” Holm-
green said.
summer for the team of 1941-42.
Manager Clyde Raley and player
Bill Braid have made arrange
ments to spend the vacation per
iod in College Station training
these ponies. Probably they are
remounts and uneducated in mal
let-swinging ways, but Braid and
Raley should get them ready.
Jackson Field may be moved, in
cidentally, to the Cavalry drill
grounds near where the horse
show ring is located. This will oc
cur if present ideas are worked
out.
Freshman Baseball Team
Finds Conference Going Hard
Texas A. & M.’s freshman base
ball team ran into difficulties in
their invasion of Baylor terri
tory Thursday afternoon and
Bruin freshman Star Howard Wa
fer set the Cadets down with three
scratch hits while his teammates
pounded out an 11 to 1 win. Wa
fer had the Aggies well in hand
throughout the contest and Bay
lor was never headed.
The first year men have found
the going rough in conference
competition and they have not
fared well. Material is scanty in
the pitchers position and although
several players are prospects for
varsity harness in future seasons,
they have been unable to stop the
noisy bats of opposing clubs. De
fensive play has been lacking al
so.
Probable improvement is expect
ed next year, according to Aggie
coaches, and shellackings will not
be as common. Should A. & M.
come through for a varsity con
ference flag, good high school
stars will be more available and
this means more wins than moral
victories.
University of Minnesota students
are heavier, healthier and taller
than they were a decade ago, but
they have 10 per cent more tooth
decay.
There are two George Strebels—
father and son—enrolled in the en
gineering defense training course
being given by Cornell university
polo mounts will arrive early this college of engineering.
Aggies Win—
(Continued from Page 3)
walked to fill the bases, and Bump
ers scored as Scoggins skied to
left.
Then came the eighth frame in
which the cadets scored the win
ning run without a hit. With two
down, Pugh walked. Bostick, the
Longhorn catcher, became jittery
and let two balls get through with
Pugh advancing each time. Carden
then bunted a perfect sacrifice to
score Pugh.
Brilliant and sparkling play fea
tured the game. Jack Lindsey’s
play at the middle sack was superb,
while Les Croucher’s handling of
the hot corner was the Longhorn
fielding contribution.
SMU Mustangs Make
11 Miscues as Baylor
Bears Victorious, 9-4
Southern Methodist and Baylor
played their final game in Dallas
Thursday and the Bruins took the
Southwest Conference clash 9 to
4. It was an easy win for Baylor
as the Mustangs booted, kicked,
and juggled the ball to make 11
errors in nine innings. Despite
5. M. U.’s terrific team total of
errors, however, second baseman
Willis of Baylor contributed three
miscues for individual faults.
Baylor is scheduled to play Tex
as A. & M. a game that was rain
ed out earlier in the season, in the
event the Aggies win from Texas
University in their present series.
This tilt will take place in Waco
if it is played, and A. & M. will
experience another Baylor team
hustle as was shown in their last
out. The Cadets will need a vic
tory from Baylor to aid in their
quest of a conference pennant.
-SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1941
Show Tonight To
Benefit Foreign Fund
A benefit show, “Come Lave With
Me,” which is sponsored by the
Y. M. C. A., will be presented to
night at 10:30 at the Assembly
Hall for the purpose of raising
money for the World Student Ser
vice Fund, a national organization
for the purpose of raising money
to help students in foreign coun
tries.
The W.S.S.F. was organized by
the colleges and universities of
the United States to collect funds
to help students of foreign coun
tries who, because of the war, are
unable to get needed equipment
and books to continue their studies.
A goal of $100,000 has been set
for the whole country. Most of the
money is collected by Y. M. C. A.’s
and Y. W. C. A.’s all over the
country.
Mr. Claude Nelson, former sec
retary of the Y. M. C. A. in Rome,
Italy, and present director of the
Foreign Fund came through Col
lege Station several weeks ago and
addressed some students at the
Y. M. C. A. explaining the details
and purpose of the organization.
Song Festival To
Feature Native Songs
The religious and patriotic song
festival, sponsored by the enter
tainment committee of the Bryan
and Brazos County Chamber of
Commerce, will be presented Sun
day night at 7:30 at Forest Field
(Bryan High school football field).
The program will consist of
native songs to be presented by
Bohemian, Italian, Mexican, Pol
ish, and Negro groups; specialty
groups, consisting of mixed choirs,
the singing cadets, and a capella
choir.
Let Us Fix
Your Radio
EXPERT RADIO
REPAIR WORK
STUDENT
CO-OP
North Gate
Phone 4-4114
DYERS HATTEM
AMERICAN- STEAM
DRY • * CLEANERS
PHONE 2-1585 BRYAN
Patronize Your Agent in Your Organization
America
out-of-doors
M Oiesterfield
i
Smokers everywhere like their
COOLER, MILDER, BETTER TASTE
With outdoor lovers the
country over, there’s nothing like
Chesterfield for a completely satis
fying cigarette . . . they’re always
Cooler-Smoking, Definitely Milder
and far Better-Tasting.
Chesterfield’s right combina
tion of the world’s best cigarette
tobaccos is the big reason for their
ever-growing popularity.
Copyright 1941, Liccnr & Mtem Tosacco Co-