The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 10, 1943, Image 4

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    Page 4
-THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 10, 1943
■THE BATTALION-
OFFICIAL
NOTICES
LAUNDRY NOTICE
All students whose surnames begin
with the letter A, B, C, D, turn in laun
dry from 7:30 till 8:00 Friday a.m. E, F,
G, H, I turn in laundry from 7:30 till
8:00 Monday a.m. J, K, L, M, Me, turn
in from 7:30 to 8:00 Tuesday a.m. O, P,
Q, R, S, turn in from 7:30 till 8:00
Wednesday a.m. T, U, V, W, Y, Z, turn
in from 7:30 till 8:00 a.m. on Thursday.
Students may call for their laundry two
days after turning it in.
Furnished room now available. Meals
if desired. Phone 4-7929. College Park.
Wanted
typewritei
Underwood
2-1477. Resid
Texas. P. O. Box 894.
to buy
if in A-l condition. P
or Royal. Call Bill Thom:
idence, 806 E. 28th St., B
A good used standard
Prefer
at
ryan.
LOST—Silver King metal clarinet in
black case with canvas zipper-case cov-
Return to Commandant’s Office. Lib-
Redman, 3708 0%, Gal-
er.
eral reward. A. H.
veston, Texas.
OFFICE OF COMMANDANT
Circular No. 3:
1. The following actions of the DISCIP
LINE COMMITTEE, duly Approved by
the PRESIDENT of the COLLEGE
are announced:
A. DISCIPLINE CASE NO. 732—John
Neal Miller.
CHARGE: Direct violation of college
regulations in that he conducted an
unauthorized yell practice.
FINDINGS: Guilty.
SENTENCE: To leave the campus at
once and not to be allowed to regis-
sce and not to be al
ter in A. & M. College until he has
eared before the Discipline Com-
appea
mittei
mittee.
B. DISCIPLINE CASE NO. 733 — Cadets
L. C. Smith and R. E. Kleas.
CHARGE: Direct violation of college
regulations in that tehy left their
room after taps to participate and as
sist in organizing an unauthorized yell
practice.
FINDINGS: Guilty.
SENTENCE: To be suspended for the
remainder of the current semester.
C. DISCIPLINE CASE NO. 734—Cadets
D. M. Cochran, G. G. Galloway, D. L.
Hearn, T. W. Hogan, R. H. Levy,
C. E. Murray, D. M. Seligman, G. C.
Stanley, R. O. Thomas, and J. A.
Veien.
CHARGE: Direct violation of college
regulations in that they did participate
in a bleed meeting for new students
on Wednesday, June 2, 1943.
FINDINGS: Guilty.
SENTEN CE: To be suspended until
6:00 P. M., JUNE 13, and then to be
readmitted to -college on probation and
further that upon return they be cam-
pused for one month from JUNE 13.
D. DISCIPLINE CASE NO. 736—Cadet
Marvin E. Alley.
CHARGE: Direct violation of college
regulations in that he left his room
after taps to participate and assist in
organizing an unauthorized yell prac-
FINDINGS: Guilty.
SENTENCE: To be suspended for the
remainder of the current semester.
M. D. Welty
Colonel, Infantry
Commandant
The regular weekly Fellowship luncheon
rill not be held Thursday, June 10, due
to lack of facilities at the mess hall. Please
will not be held T'
10, due
notify all interested members of your
department.
C. H. McDowell, Chairman.
Fordham college is admitting a
freshman class in February for the
first time in seven years.
THE FAVORITE TIE
OF OUR ARMED FORCES
m
& L
I A‘ \
few , f
X j
M
or con^fV
and fabric- Wade
i fabric • * *
rtion—vvrinkl 0 rC-
their fresh n e w
perfect dimpled
wiii out weor seV ;
constru<fr ion ° nd
nly washable tie
mstruefi 011, Black
enuine without th,s LAfiEl '
made IN AMERICA
FATHER'S DAY-JUNE 20th
f tTaldropfljfo
“Two Convenient Stores”
College Station Bryan
60 Thousand Men
To Be In Army
Program By August
Sixty thousand men will be en
rolled in the Army Specialized
Training Programs in 145 colleges
by the end of July, the War De
partment announced Sunday. At
the same time it named 103 of the
colleges which will participate in
the gigantic program of training
specialists in engineering, medi
cine, psychology and foreign-area
knowledges. Some of the institu
tions will have courses in several
of these fields.
On May 21, the Army an
nounced, 21,068 men were in col
leges and universities participat
ing in the program, including 4,668
who were ordered to new special
ized units beginning June 14. There
will be a total of 30,000 in the
programs by the end of June.
Seventeen of the institutions
will train for administrative serv
ice in foreign areas. The students,
the number not specified, will be
given intensified courses in his
tory and area knowledge—geog
raphy, economics, religion, sociol
ogy and political customs, lan
guage, police science and law en
forcement systems of the area to
which they are eventually to be
assigned. In the occupied countries
these specialists will serve as as
sistants to senior officers now
training at Charlottesville, Va.
Following is a list of colleges
and universities participating in
the ASTP program:
Basic Phase Instruction:
Michigan State College of Arts
gnd Sciences; Alabama Polytech
nic; Georgia School of Technology;
The Citadel; Mississippi State Col
lege; Purdue University; West
Virginia N.; U. of Cincinnati; U.
of Illinois; U. of Michigan; U. of
Alabama; Johns Hopkins; Penn
sylvania Military College; North
Georgia College; St. Bonaventure;
Niagara University; Virginia
Polytechnic Institute; Drexel In
stitute of Technology; Lafayette
College; New York University;
Rutgers University; Yale Univer
sity; Rhode Island State College;
U. of Connecticut; U. of New
Hampshire; Fordham; Lehigh;
Ohio; Ripon College; U. of Mis
souri; State College of Washing
ton; U. of Maryland; U. of Maine;
Clarkson; U. of Georgia; U. of
Mississippi; Vanderbilt U.; Indi
ana U.; U. of Wisconsin; South
Dakota State College of Agricul
ture and Mechanical Arts; U. of
South Dakota; Kansas State Col
lege of Agriculture and Applied
Science; Washington U., St. Louis,
Mo.; Louisiana State U.; Okla
homa A. and M.; U. of Oregon;
Pomona College; U. of Santa
Clara; U. of Utah; Western Mary
land College; U. of Delaware;
Howard U.; Utah State Agricul
tural College; U. of San Fran
cisco; U. of Arizona; Oregon State
College; U. of Idaho; Stanford U.;
U. of Oklahoma; St. Norbert, West
De Pere, Wis.; U. of Nebraska; U.
of Wyoming; U. of Minnesota;
Colorado School of Mines; Iowa
State College; U. of Kansas; Mis
souri School of Mines; Rose Poly
technic Institute, Terre Haute, Ind.
Advanced Engineering:
Ohio State U.; U. of Santa Clara;
U. of Wyoming; Texas Technologi
cal College; U. of Oklahoma; Le
high U.; U. of Florida; U. of Mis
souri; State College of Washing
ton; Rose Polytechnic Institute.
Foreign Area and Language
Studies:
University of Michigan; Indi
ana U.; Harvard U.; Cornell U.;
Ohio State; U. of Wisconsin; Po
mona College; U. of California;
U. of Pittsburgh; Yale; Johns
Hopkins; U. of Minnesota; U. of
Washington; Princeton; U. of
Pennsylvania; U. of Chicago;
Stanford.
Advanced Personnel Psychology:
Harvard U.; Cornell; U. of Pitts
burgh; Ohio State; U. of Califor-
liia; U. of Minnesota; U. of Chi
cago; Stanford.
Medical Training:
U. of Cincinnati; U. of West
Virginia; Ohio State; U. of Louis
ville; Marquette U.; Northwestern
U.; U. of Chicago; Wayne U.; Loy
ola U.; U. of Wisconsin; U. of
Illinois; U. of Michigan; U. of
South Dakota; State U. of Iowa;
St. Louis U.; Creighton, Omaha,
Nebr.; U. of Missouri; U. of Ne
braska; U. of Colorado; U. of
Minnesota; Washington U.; U. of
North Dakota; Louisiana State U.;
U. of Texas; Tulane U.; U. 0 f Ar
kansas; U. of California; U. of
Utah; U. of Oregon; Southern
Calif. U.; Yale U.; Boston U.;
Tufts College; Dartmouth; U. of
Vermont; Columbia U.; Albany
Medical College, Albany, N. Y.;
Long Island College of Medicine,
Brooklyn; U. o Rochester; Cornell
U.; New York U.; New York Med-
★ BACKWASH ★
By Ben Fortson
“Backwnh: Ah affttatiMi rwraltJnx fmi aom* action or ooonironoo” — Wabator
Dances . . . Last Saturday night
when it came time for the Juke
Box Prom, the rain also came,
much to the disappointment of
all. From all appearances there
were plenty of the fairer sex on the
campus, too. These dances from
now on will be a regular feature
on Saturday night, with the con
ventional Juke Box and occasion
ally some orchestra. Let’s all turn
out and make them a success, huh ?
Backwashin’ . . . During all the
rain and flood last week, we noted
some Aggie fishing about in the
knee-deep water in front of Wal
ton Hall; just a fellow Louisianan
ical College; U. of Pennsylvania;
Syracuse U.; George Washington
U.; Howard U.; U. of Virginia;
Johns Hopkins; Temple U.; Hane-
man Medical College and Hospital
of Philadelphia; U. of Pennsyl
vania; U. of Pittsburgh; Medical
College of Virginia; U. of Mary
land; Jefferson Medical College,
Philadelphia; U. of Mississippi; U.
of Alabama; Emory School of Med
icine, Atlanta," Ga.; Vanderbilt U.;
Bowman-Gray School of Medicine,
Winston-Salem, N. C.; U. of North
Carolina; Medical College of the
State of South Carolina; Duke U.;
U. of Georgia; U. of Memphis;
Meharry Medical College, Nash
ville; Indiana U.; Western Reserve
U.; Stanorfd U.; College of Medi
cal Evangelists, Loma Linda, Cal.;
Georgetown U.; U. of Oklahoma;
U. of Kansas.
Dental Training:
Tufts College; Harvard Dental
School, Boston; Columbia U.; New
York U.; U. of Buffalo; U. of
Maryland; Temple U.; U. of Penn
sylvania; U. of Pittsburgh; Medi
cal College of Virginia; Atlanta
Southern Dental College; Meharry
Medical College; U. of Tennessee;
Indiana U.; Ohio State U.; West
ern Reserve U.; U. of Louisville;
Chicago College of Dental Sur
gery; Northwestern U.; U. of Illi
nois; U. of Detroit; U. of Michi
gan; Marquette U.; U. of Iowa;
U. of Minnesota; U. of Kansas
City; St. Louis U.; Washington U.;
Creighton U.; U. of Nebraska;
Loyola U.; Texas Dental College;
College of Physicians and Sur
geons, San Francisco; U. of Cali
fornia; North Pacific College of
Oregon; Georgetown U.; Howard
U.; U. of Southern California; Me
harry Medical College.
Veterinary Medical Training:
New York State Veterinary Col
lege, Cornell U.; U. of Pennsyl
vania; Alabama Polytechnic Insti
tute; Ohio State U.; Michigan
Staate College of Agriculture and
Applied Sciences; Colorado State
College of Agriculture and Me
chanics; Iowa State College of
Agriculture and Mechanical Arts;
Kansas State College of Agricul
ture and Applied Science; Agricul
tural and Mechanical College of
Texas; State College of Washing
ton, Pullman, Wash.
Pre-medical Training:
Cornell U.; U. of Wisconsin;
Louisiana State U.; U. of Califor
nia; Ohio State U.; Stanford U.
Experiment Station
Plant Pathologist
Discusses Plowing
By B. H. Godfrey, Ulant Patholo
gist, Substation No. 15
The root-knot nematode, Hetero-
dera marioni, is sensitive to high
summer temperatures and to dry
ing. The nematode eggs and lar
vae in the roots of an infected
crop can be killed by exposing the
roots to the sun, and drying of in
fested soils appears to be a means
of reducing the damage from this
pest in cultivated fields. In the
summer of 1942 a farm test was
conducted in the Lower Rio Grande
Valley, to determine if this prin
ciple could be applied practically
for reducing nematode infestation
in vegetable lands. A 40-acre field
trying to feel at home, no doubt.
Then there was the bright dew-
head who threatened, for various
reasons, to buy a house trailer and
live at the North Gate. History
Prof: “What do they raise in the
Oklahoma Dust Bowl?” Aggie:
“Dust.” No comment.
Flies . . . The other day we heard
a good deal of comotion in the
hall in B Ramp of Walton. Stick
ing our head out to see the cause^
we discovered an Aggie picking
himself up from the floor ex
claiming: “It’s bad enough when
these flies wake you out of a
sound sleep pulling you out of the
bed, but when they start drag
ging you out into the hall in your
pajamas, something has to be done’
The fly situation is rather serious
over there. As one inmate ex
pressed it, “you have to throw a
rock and talk through the hole it
makes.” Corny, isn’t it? Express
es the idea anyway.
P.E. , . . Someone should tell
the P. E. Department that hazing
is against the rules. You should
have seen the faces of the group
coming in from their first cross
country run.
Ex’s . . . Up at Stanford Uni
versity where boys who have com-
- BRAZOS COUNTY -
(Continued from Page 1)
rious waste of the nation’s re-
souces in wartime. Enemy codes
and secret writing will be discussed
by a Special Agent of the FBI’s
Houston Office, who will tell about
some of the espionage cases solved
by the FBI and local officers. The
meeting will end with a short
moving picture, made by MGM,
showing a group of saboteurs at
work in New York City. The pic
ture is based on some of the tech
niques used by German agents
during the first World War.
Peace officers and other persons
having an official connection with
law enforcement have been invit
ed to the meeting, Mr. Abbaticchio
said. The meeting is designed to
promote cooperation among the
various local agencies and the FBI,
and to provide an opportunity to
discuss some of the latest crime
detection methods.
Officers from Brazos, Madison
and Grimes Counties are expected
to be at the meeting. It will be
held in the Assembly Hall at A. &
M. College and will open at 1:00
p. m.
belonging to Mr. F. N. Vining in
Hidalgo county had showed nema
tode damage over a period of years
and string beans were severely
damaged in the spring of 1942.
Following harvest of the beans,
the field was given three summer
plowings: the first in early July
was performed in such a way as
to turn the beans over, exposing
as much as possible of the invest
ed root systems to the sun. The
roots were left exposed for several
days until they were dry and hard.
Most of the nematodes were in
the exposed bean roots and were
destroyed completely. Plowing un
der of the roots would have al
lowed the nematodes to survive
for several months and attack the
next susceptible crop. The second
and third plowings were similar
to the first, after 7 to 10 day in
tervals, with the plow set to turn
the soil IV2 inches deeper each
time. Each time, the soil was turn
ed over completely by setting the
discs properly and driving the trac
tor at a rapid speed, leaving the
deepest layer flat on top of the
ground. This operation exposed the
nematodes in deeper roots and in
the soil to the direct effects of the
sun, which extend to a depth of at
least 3 inches in hot, dry weather.
In this way all but a small propor
tion of the original nematode pop
ulation of the soil were killed. All
three of these plowings were done
in 100° F. weather. The intervals
between plowings were determined
by the weather, rather than by
any set schedule.
CADETS
Today, it is more essential than ever to protea your money, for once cash is
lost or stolen, it is usually gone forever.
When changed into American Express Travelers Cheques, however, your
money is safe and in readily spendable form always. If lost or stolen, you
are entitled to a prompt refund—a valuable safety feature.
For sale at Banks, Railway Express offices, at principal railroad ticket offices.
AMERICAN EXPRESS
TRAVELERS CHEQUES
J2oojcLoojn on .
Campus distractions
By Ben Fortson
pleted their training as STARS, a
general discussion about the
schools in which they received
their first training was in pro
gress. Some of the boys made such
remarks as “MY STAR unit was
paradise, you should have seen all
the women!” and ‘There were 700
girls and 30 boys in my school.”
When one fellow spoke up with,
“The STAR unit I was in didn’t
have much social activity because
it was strictly a masculine univer
sity. The dormitories were well
equipped and the mess halls serv
ed some of the best food out. The
drills were well under control,
sometimes to well. Even though
there weren’t many women there,
some dances were given at the
Country Club and we had to wglk
about three miles to get there, but
it was worth it. They had more
spirit there of any school I have
ever attended. The whole school
used to come out for the baseball
games and they really yelled!
Then the civilian students used to
come up to us and introduce them
selves on the campus. Later on we
learned they were freshmen and
told to do that, but it sure made
us feel good, anyway!”
You see, Ole’ Army, the old
Aggie Spirit gets into anyone, if
they stay here long enough.
Speaking . . . Army, a lot of
things may have changed around
here, but let’s don’t forget to speak
to any and everyone we see or
meet when walking on the campus
or anywhere for that matter. For
the benefit of you new freshmen,
it has been a tradition down here
for a long time, to speak to ev
eryone, and it is a valuable trait
for use in later life. So how about
a few “Hello’s” now and then?
Featured at the Campus today,
tomorrow and Saturday is the mus
ical triumph, ORCHESTRA
WIVES, starring Ann Rutherford,
George Montgomery, Cesar Rom
ero, also Glen Miller and his band.
This is a picture showing how
jive and wives don’t mix when the
boys in the band hit the road.
Ann Rutherford plays the part of
a cute little jitterbug who falls in
love with Miller’s star trumpeter,
The two get married and Ann goes
along with the other orchestra
wives when the band goes on tour.
Glen Miller fans will enjoy the fine
music put out by the band includ
ing such numbers as “Kalamazoo,”
“At Last,” “Serenade in Blue,”
and “People Like You and Me.”
This show is no mere musical but
contains a story that all will en
joy.
JOE PICARD GETS NAME
IN PAPER; NO CHARGE
PARAMARIBO, Dutch Guiana.
—Lieut. Joseph C. Picard Jr. spot
ted the green arm-band and the
white C worn by a correspondent
and was told what it meant.
“Gee!” exclaimed Picard, who
hails from East Providence, R. L,
“I never get my name in the pa
per.”
You’re wrong, Joe. Here it is.
“Orchestra Wives” is truly a jam
session of love laughter, and lone
some ladies, with the music sweet,
hot, and lowdown, and the story
down to earth.
The Lowdown: Don’t miss it.
At Guion Hall today and tomor
row is 101 minutes of melodrama
entitled CAIRO, with Jeanette Mac
Donald and Robert Young.
The picture is meant to satirize
spy dramas but is just a fair-to-
middlin’ show. Miss MacDonald
does some fine singing and every
one plays his part well, but the
story is sadly lacking. It takes
place in Cairo and the Pyramids
are very evident throughout. To
wards the end the satire goes ser
ious when a radio controlled bomber
tries to blast a troopship to pieces.
There are several comedy inci
dents in the picture and some fair
love scenes.
The picture is nothing out of the
ordinary but most would call it
a pretty fair show.
The Lowdown: Let’s call it good.
When in Doubt About Your
Eyes or Your Glasses
Consult
DR. J. W. PAYNE
Optometrist
109 S. Main Bryan
Next to Palace Theatre
“YOU’LL LIKE IT BETTER’’
Look smart and military! Get your campaign
hat from The Exchange Store — your own store,
“An Aggie Institution.”
We have the Stetson—and there’s no quality like a Stetson. We
can fit any head size or shape perfectly.
Use the Exchange Store often — it’s operated
and maintained for your convenience.
j CHECK YOUR NEED AGAINST THIS LIST
. . . and then come to the Exchange Store for the things you
will have to buy: Hats, Shoes, Shirts, Uniforms, Insignia, Web
Belts, Trench Coats, Books, T-Squares, Drawing Boards, School
Supplies, Biology Supplies, College Jewelry, and Drawing In
struments.
EXCHANGE STORE
AN AGGIE INSTITUTION”
V