The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 30, 1943, Image 4

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    Page 4
■TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 30, 1943
OFFICIAL NOTICES
Notices appearing in this column mast be in the Battalion office
not later than 3 p.m. of the day before the paper is issued. Notices
ariving after that time absolutely cannot be carried in the following
days’ paper, and will automatically be carried over to the next
issue.
Classified
CARS WANTED — Pay highest cash
price for any make or model. H. L.
Whitley, Jr., Phone 27009, Bryan, Texas.
WANTED—A car for use every Tuesday,
Thursday, and Saturday for campus-wide
distribution of Battalion newspaper. If
interested, contact Student Activities Of
fice by Monday at 6 p.m.
WILL BOY WHO BORROWED my
brown striped Parker fountain pen Sat
urday, March 20, in the Commandant’s of
fice, please return it to Room 208, No. II,
Crozier, W. G.
CALIFORNIA, here I come! Contact
Mrs. Bill Chenault, Millican, Texas, for
passage to California, leaving any day
convenient. Offer open to man or woman.
LARGE BROWN, SHAGGY DOG picked
up and put in vet. hospital. Owner must
claim within four days, pay for vet. fee,
inoculation tag, and this ad. Loyd D.
Smith, City Office.
Announcements
CALLED MEETING Brazos
Union Lodge No. 129, tonight
at 8:0 p.m. There will be
work in the Master’s Degree.
All members and visiting
brethren are cordially invited
to be present.
R. M. Searcy, W.M.
J. W. Hall, Sec.
BEGINNING TUESDAY, March 30, the
Post Office will be closed at 10 p.m.
instead of 11 p.m. Mrs. Anna V. Smith,
Postmistress.
QUALIFYING TESTS to be given April
2 are in the hands of Dean Bolton, Dean
of the College.
We are directed to see that every one
of our reservists, those enlisted in the
E.R.C. and not under contract, takes this
test either for the Army or the Navy.
It is recommended that all students
other than those under contract avail
themselves of this opportunity for quali
fying under this examination. A. J.
Bennett, Lieutenant Colonel, C.A.C., Ex
ecutive.
AGRICULTURAL FACULTY — There
will be an important meeting of the Ag
ricultural Faculty to discuss post-war
problems relating to agriculture today
at 4:00 p.m.. Agricultural Engineering
We have just received
another large shipment
of regulation shirts . . .
slacks . . . belts ... in
signia . . . ties ... socks
. .. underwear and shoes.
Stop in and see our splen
did assortment.
Regulation Cotton Shirts —
Broadcloth Poplin or
Twill $2.00 to $3.75
High-Back Cotton Twill
Slacks with zipper front
$3.95 to $4.25
Light Tan Tropic Weight
Slacks ... Rayon and Wool
$7.50
Shirt to Match $6.50
All - Wool Tan Gabardine
Slacks (Lightweight).. $12.50
Shirt to Match $11.50
Airman Zelan Jackets . . .
Shower proof ... wind re
sistant. Tan Zelan with zip
per or button.. $2.95 to $5.95
Nunn-Bush Shoes.. $10 to $11
Nettleten Shoes $10.56 to
$12.50
Edgerten Shoes $6.50 to $7.95
Fortune Shoes $4.95
flTaldrop&(8
“Two Convenient Stores”
College Bryan
Building. E. J. Kyle, Dean of Agricul
ture. .
SENIOR RINGS due April 1 will be
ready for delivery in the Registrar’s of
fice Wednesday morning, March 31, 1943.
Next order leaves on Thursday, April 1,
1943.
THE FOODS GROUP will meet April
1 with Mrs. George Summey in North
Oakwood at 3 p.m. “Milk and Eggs in
the Diet” will be the program, given by
Mrs. J. N. Thompson.
Executive Offices
STUDENTS ARE WARNED that re
quests for authorized absences, if they are
to be approved, must be filled out on
the proper forms 48 hours after the re
turn from the absence covered by an au
thorized pass, or from release from the
hospital. Requests not made within that
time will not be approved.
F. C. BOLTON, Dean.
NAVY V-l AND V-7
1. The Navy Department has requested
the college to conduct a qualifying ex
amination for all men listed in the Class
V-l who will have completed four or more
semesters in college by the end of this
semester. Other V-l students will be giv
en a qualifying examination during the
last half of their sophomore year. The
examination will be given on Tuesday,
April 20th, in the Assembly Hall and is
expected to take the entire day.
2. Professor G. B. Wilcox will be in
charge of the examination.
3. Students will be given authorized
absences from classes while actually tak
ing the examination.
4. V-l students who pass the qualifying
examination will be placed on active duty
about July 1, 1943, and assigmed to col
leges designated for Naval Training. Those
who. by the close of this semester, have
completed six or seven semesters will
receive one additional semester in college;
those with four or five semesters will
receive two additional semesters; those
with two or three semesters completed
will receive three additional, and those
who will have completed one semester’s
work will receive four additional semes
ters. Engineering Reservists with satis
factory grades may be allowed to complete
a total of eight semesters.
6. V-7 students who lack more than one
semester of completing their requirement
for a degree, will be placed on active
duty and assigned to a college giving
Naval Training about July 1st. Those who
lack one semester or less of completing
their courses here, may remain on inac-
■ tive duty here for an additional semester,
or they may request permission to be called
to active duty and assigned to another
institution to complete their course.
F. C. BOLTON, Dean
WE ARE ADVISED that members of
the Enlisted Reserve Corps, who are not
on active duty, are eligible for the A-12
examination scheduled for 9 a.m. Friday,
April 2nd. The Commanding General of
the Eighth Service Command urges that
all take the examination to establish their
ability for further college training later.
All such students should call at my
office at their first vacant period and
make application for permission to take
the examination. The A-12 application
blanks are now available both to the
Enlisted Reserves and to any other stu
dents who may desire to take the exam
ination.
F. C. BOLTON, Dean
MARINE RESERVES
1. Marine Corps Headquarters has re
quested the college to conduct a qualify
ing examination for students who are in
the Marine Reserves on Tuesday, April
20th.
2.Professor G. B. Wilcox will be in
charge of the examination, which will be
held in the Assembly Hall.
3. Students will be given authorized ab
sences from classes while actually taking
the examination.
4. The following disposition of Marine
Reserves now in college is contemplated:
(a) Those who receive their degrees
this semester will be called to ac
tive service on or before August
30, 1943, and assigned to candidate’s
class.
(b) Those who are now juniors and
seniors will be called to active duty
and assigned to further college train
ing in an institution selected for
Marine Corps College Training Units
about July 1, 1943. Students lacking
one semester or less of completing
the requirement for a degree may
remain on inactive duty an addi
tional semester here if they wish.
(c) Freshmen and sophomores (all who
have completed less than four se
mesters of their courses), will take
the qualifying test on April 20th.
Successful candidates will be placed"
on active duty as privates in the
U. S. Marine Corps Reserve about
July 1st and assigned to a college
giving Marine Corps Training.
(d) These Marine Corps Reserves who
do not qualify in this examination
will thereby be eliminated from the
College Training Program.
6. The college has been requested to
furnish certain personnel information re
garding each Marine Reserve. Each in
dividual, therefore, is requested to report
vacant period this week to supply this
to Mr. E. L. Angel’s office at his first
information.
F. C. BOLTON, Dean
Church Notices
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
R. L. Brown, Pastor
C. Roger Bell, Director Education and
Music
Sunday Services
9 :45 a.m.—Sunday School
10:50 a.m.—Morning Worship
3:00 p.m.—B.S.U. Council
4 :00 p.m.—Choir Rehearsal
6:15 p.m.—Training Union
7:15 p.m.—Evening Worship
Each evening at 6:30 p.m. a short
prayer service is held in the Education
Building.
Dean E. J. Kyle will talk on, and show
pictures of, his recent trip to South Amer
ica at the Family Night program, Wed
nesday, 7 :00 p.m.
We invite students to attend all the
services of our church.
War activity may change the
picture, but in 1929, as it was for
many, is the biggest year on rec
ord in the United States Post Of
fice Department. It sold 16,917,-
000,000 stamps that year, and han
dled 27,952,000 pieces of maiL
Patronize Our Agent in Your Outfit
——a pv
FUft 5TORAOCHATTCRS
J J 1»
D. M. DANSBY, ’37
—KYLE FIELD—
(Continued From Page 3)
in his bed. Mind you, I said started
off and not finish, for although the
Aggies are far from Barracks 2,
they still have ideas in mind.
Poncho took that pretty good and
in doing so gave the Cadets a lot
of laughs. After finding the cereal
in his bed his first remark went
like this: “When I came in the
barrack one Aggie greeted me
after another and I knew some
thing was up . . . but where did
you get those Grape Nuts?
One thing followed another until
Saturday night when Poncho tried
to sleep in another barrack. We
all knew we were leaving Sunday
morning and with that in mind and
he knew it, Poncho didn’t want to
sleep in that barrack that night.
It took him ten minutes to get in
his room although nothing had been
dope to it (much). Tales reached
him that the Aggies had sawed the
rafters in two from the bottom
floor, and Monaco went in his room
feeling the floor like a girl does
the first time she goes swimming.
These Texas Aggies have a les
son for many in this day and age
and believe me, they practice it.
That is a sense of humor. They
made fun where others that were
there at the same time found bore-
some and work. Don’t get the wrong
idea, for the Aggies worked when
the time came. Incidentally, the
only barrack that was perfect
during, inspection Saturday, was
the site for all their antics. All was
not fun but those laughs from time
to time found their place where
they were needed most.
Because of the good distribution
of fun and work, the boys from
Aggieland carried a good name with
them and left it there. Because
they could laugh, non-coms hated
to see the Aggies leave. They got
a kick out of drilling the cadets
and at every opportunity they made
it known who was in command.
Before leaving, the Cadets all
kicked in a dime or so and made a
present of a couple of cartons of
cigarettes to every “House Moth
er.” There were two to each bar
racks. At times the non-coms wish
ed there were more.
Many more tales could be told
if space permitted, but through it
all, the Texas Aggies will be re
membered for a long time at the
Reception Center at Fort Sam
Houston, Texas.
—TRACK TEAM—
(Continued From Page 3)
does not have a place on the Re
lays program. Whether Texas can
get together a top mile relay team
by Saturday is one of the minor
problems facing Littlefield now.
Hurdles interest will center in
the special event for all comers in
the 120-highs, where Rice Insti
tute’s Bill Cummins, Texas’ Doug
las Jacques, Texas A. & M.’s Pete
Watkins, and Oklahoma A. & M.’s
Ralph Tait will meet. Watkins is
favored to establish a new high
jump record, although he will have
to out-jump Rice’s Bill Christopher
to do the trick.
Garland Bridges, a Howard
Payne senior letterman will oppose
Texas’ Max Minor, Stan Tharp
and Bert Lindsey in the special
100-yard dash, and Oklahoma A.
& M. will enter two men for the
event.
Sprint relay honors are current
ly held by the University of Texas
team, although Rice Institute’s
1941 team set the record at 41.4
seconds. Minor, Tharp, Lindsey,
and Footballer Jackie Field will
comprise the team which will seek
to lower the mark for Texas this
trip. Minor and Field were on the
combination rated second in the
nation last year.
Weight event top hands will ap
parently be Jack Sachse of Texas,
Bill Blackburn of Rice and Bill
Henderson of A. & M., although
Bob Williams of Southwest Texas
Teachers has defeated Sachse and
Henderson previously in the discus,
and Frank Shirley of the San Mar
cos Teachers has won the pole vault
in high-sounding competition.
Representatives of all Southwest
Conference schools except T. C. U.
and Arkansas will have entries in
the meet, as will college and uni
versity teams from six states. Thir
ty high schools and five junior col
leges have filed entries, and seven
armed service posts will be repre
sented.
University class relays are the
quarter-mile ,half-mile, mile, two
mile, distance medley and sprint
medley events. Colleges have their
medley and their one mile relays
and junior colleges their mile and
quarter-mile relays. High school
teams may enter medley, mile or
quarter-mile relay events.
Special events open to university
and college entries and service
men, are the 100-yard dash, the
high hurdles, 3000-meter run, shot
put, discus, javelin, high jump,
broad jump, and pole vault.
Junior colleges, academies and
service men desiring may compete
■THE BATTALION-
This is a scene from Broadway’s smashing story “The Big Strete,”
starring Henry Fonda and Lucille Ball—now playing at the Cam
pus Theatre.
—BUILDING—
(Continued From Page 1)
creased interest in egg grades, as
ceilings are hardly possible on a
semi-perishable product such as
eggs unless they are sorted into
quality and size grades, Professor
Parnell believes. Texas merchants
candle eggs but do little grading.
“Candling is but the first step
in a grading program,” Parnell
says. “I believe grades can be
quickly and easily trained in Texas
if egg handlers want to go to a
full grading program. At present
most dealers are handling eggs as
'assorted’ or current receipts with
most of them being resold without
grading. However, there is a lot of
interest in grading, Professor Reid
reports, and the A. & M. College
Poultry Husbandry Department of
fers its full facilities and staff to
help in meeting the demand for
training graders.
—SYMPHONY—
(Continued From Page 1)
ments has greatly increased the
technical ability of modem trum
pet players. Passages considered
impossible by the old school trum
pet players are today merely rou
tine affairs.
Modem symphony composers do
not hesitate to write seemingly im
possible passages for the trumpet
in the knowledge that the modern
player can play them.
The Houston Symphony will play
on Town Hall in Guion Hall on
Tuesday, April 6.
—THINLY CLAD—
(Continued From Page 3)
440-yard dash: won by Frye,
A.&M.; Battin, A.&M., second.
Time: 50.3.
One-mile run: won by Porter,
Rice; Garrett, A.&M., second.
Time: 4.37.
High jump: Won by Christopher,
Rice; Henderson, A.&M., second.
Height: 6 feet, 2 inches.
Pole vault: Won by Cummins,
Rice; King, A.&M., second. Height:
12 feet.
220-yard dash: Won by Williams,
Rice; Cristopher, Rice, second.
Time: 22.4.
120 yard high hurdles won by
Cummins, Rice; Tope, A&M, sec
ond. Time 15.1.
880 yard run. won by Jajdos,
A&M; Porter, Rice, second. Time:
1.55.5.
Discus throw: won by Donaldson,
Rice; Eikenberg, Rice second. Dis
tance: 131.6.
Shot put: won by Henderson,
A&M; Blackburn, Rice, second. Dis
tance, 46 feet.
440 yard relay: Won by Rice
(Christopher, Mills, Perkins, Wil
iams). Time: 44.8.
Two-mile run: Won by Maddox,
A&M; Garret, A&M, second. Time:
10:25.7.
Broad jump won by Christopher-
Rice; Jay, A&M; second distance:
22 feet 6 inches.
220 yard low hurdles won by
Cummins, Rice, Tope, A&M, sec
ond. Time: 26.2.
Javelin: Won by Henderson,
A&M; King, A&M, second. Dis
tance: 180 feet 814 inches.
Mile relay won by A&M (Bil-
derback, Battin, Jajdos, Frye) Time
3:23.8.
Four students who have been
studying Japanese »t Southern
Methodist university have been ac
cepted by the intelligence division
of the army.
in a special 100-yard dash. High
school special events are the 100,
the high hurdles, shot put and high
jump.
Action starts at 8:40 a.m., Sat
urday, continues until 5:05 when
the one-mile relay, university class,
tops off the program. High school
competition starts the day.
Good attendance prospects this
year center in the large numbers
of service men who will be in and
around Austin, and a special rate
has been set for their benefit. At
tendance of 10,000 is hoped for.
Scientific Or
Technical Studies
To Give Deferments
College students in the scientific
and technical fields may be defer
red until July 1, 1945, under the
provisions of a new occupational
bulletin sent from Selective Serv
ice Headquarters to local boards
last week.
In colleges which are running on
accelerated programs, this broad
liberalization of the deferment pol
icy for college students means that
men who now enter freshman
classes in the approved fields are
eligible immediately on enrollment
for deferment for the whole length
of their college training. Formerly
deferment was only possible for
students who had completed at
least part of their courses.
Materially affected by the re
vised policy are under-graduate
and graduate students in scientific
and specialized fields, internes, and
students of agriculture, forestry,
pharmacy and optometry.
The specialized fields in which
graduate and under-graduate stu
dents are ‘eligible for deferment
are: aeronautical engineers, auto
motive engineers, bacteriologists,
chemical engineers, chemists, civil
engineers, geophysicists, mathema
ticians, mechanical- engineers, me
teorologists, mining and metallur
gical engineers (including mineral
technologists), naval architects, pe
troleum engineers, physicists, (in
cluding astronomers), radio engi
neers, safety engineers, sanitary
engineers, transportation engineers
—air, highway, railroad, water.
The occupational bulletin sent to
the draft board states: “A student
in under-graduate work in any of
the scientific and specialized fields
listed should be considered for oc
cupational classification if he is a
full-time student in good standing
in a recognized college or univer
sity and if it is certified by the in
stitution as follows: (1) that he is
competent and gives promise of
successful completion of such
course of study, and' (2) that if
he continues his progress he will
graduate from such course of study
on or before July 1, 1943.”
Graduates and post-graduates
who are acting as graduate assist
ants in a recognized college as well
as pursuing further studies should
alos be considered for deferment,
the bulletin states. A graduate as
sistant is defined as anyone who is
pursuing scientific research certi
fied by a federal agency, or who is
acting as a classroom or laboratory
instructor in one of the approved
fields for not less than 12 hours a
week.
The bulletin instructs local draft
boards to consider under-graduate,
pre-professional, medical, dental,
veterinary, osteopathic, and theo
logical students for deferment if
(1) they are full-time students in
a recognized college or university,
(2) if it is certified by their insti
tution that they will graduate be
fore July 1, 1945, and (3) if it is
certified by a recognized melical,
dental, veterinary, osteopathic, or
theological college that they are
accepted for admission when they
finish their pre-professional work.
Cedi H. Connell
Promoted to Major
The promotion of Cecil H. Con
nell, of the Faculty Exchange, Col
lege Station, from captain to ma
jor in the Sanitary Corps, United
States Army was announced to
day at headquarters of the Med
ical Field Service School, Carlisle
Barracks, Pa., where Major Con
nell is an instructor in the Depart-
me of Military Sanitation.
Major Connell received his com
mission in October, 1935; promot
ed to First Lieutenant in Novem
ber, 1936, and to the rank of Cap
tain in March, 1942. He was sta
tioned at Camp Wallace and Camp
Swift, Texas, before being as
signed to Carlisle Barracks.
gDAS /
try a
VICTORY
■MILK SHAKE
DONAOeO e>'f" "TOwW «CA.UWU«
— CLIP THIS COUPON FOR REFERENCE
—
Baseball SWC Schedule
Date
Teams
Place
April 2-3
Rice vs. Texas
.. Houston
April 6-7
.Coll. Sta.
April 9-10
A.&M. vs. Texas
Austin
April 16-17
A.&M. vs. Rice
.. Houston
April 21-22
Rice vs. Texas
April 30-May 1 ...
A.&M. vs. Texas
Coll. Sta.
Non-Conference A.&M. Baseball Schedule
March 25
A.&M. vs. Duncan Field
San Ant.
March 31-April 1
A.&M. vs. Randolph Field
..San Ant.
April 2-3
San Ant.
Ajiril 23-24
A.&M. vs. Duncan Field
Coll. Sta.
Track Schedule
March 27
A.&M. vs. Rice
Coll. Sta.
April 3
Texas Relays
.... Austin
April 10
Southwestern
SW Teachers
Howard Payne
E. Tex. St. Teachers
Coll. Sta.
April 17
A.&M. vs. Rice
. Houston
May 1
May 7-8
SWC Teams
.. Houston
Ex's Get Commissions Jas Morgan Attends
Two ex-Aggies, Lt. Elmer F.
Smith, ’41, and Lt. John F. Rougar-
nac, ’42, received their commissions
from Officer Candidate School at
Miami Beach this morning. Lt.
Smith’s home is Fort Worth and
Lt. Rougarnac’s is Houston.
Gilbert M. Turner
Given Cotton Award
Gilmert M. Turner, H Infantry,
was awarded a medal for being the
outstanding cotton marketing stu
dent at A. & M. March 24 at the
War Convention of the Texas Cot
ton Association, held recently in
Dallas.
Seniors May Get
Rings Wednesday
Senior rings due April 1 will be
ready for delivery in the Regis
trar’s Office Wednesday morning
March 31, 1943.
Next order leaves Thursday,
April 1, 1943.
Artillery School
Fort Sill, Okla., March 29.—1st.
Lt. James O. Morgan of College
Station, Texas, is attending the
Battery Officers Course at the
Field Artillery School.
Lieutenant Morgan, son of Mrs.
James Sullivan, College Station,
Texas, reported here from his sta
tion at Fort Bragg, N. C.
From the Civil War to World
War I, the government’s largest
single source of internal revenue
was spirits and wines. Between
1906 and 1910, they accounted for
more than half the total. Last
year, however, they were fifth on
the list producing less than one
fourteenth.
When in Doubt About Your
Eyes or Your Glasses
Comnlt
DR. J. W. PAYNE
OPTOMETRIST
109 S. Main Bryan
Next to Palace Theatre
STATIONERY
and
SCHOOL SUPPLIES
College Book Store
North Gate
AGGIES and SERVICE MEfJ
Get That
Military Haircut
at the
Aggieland Barber and Beanty Shop
North Gate
We Are Now Able To Do Your
DEVELOPING and PRINTING
Must Be Paid in Advance
Have a Portrait Made Now at the
Aggieland Studio
North Gate