The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 22, 1947, Image 1

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    I ’
, ; Jr
taylor nsTiriM » '
. -wAAMINOTON, Ort. M (A>>-
It w»a m U4Im' Day" today at th*
Howa# Un-ARMrtcan Artlvlu**
(’ommltUf'a Hoaiinc on (^6mmu*
ni*^n In Hollywood, with artor
Robort Tlylor topping a •rhtdulo
of fight WitlMMO*.
f?
w ♦ v ■ 1 'W /
Battalion
VolttflM 17
niBUSHM) IN THK IXTERKS1 OF A CRSATSH COLLKCK
COLLEGE STATION (AnMud). TEXAS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 22. 1M7
Number ftl
MRS. COBB WAIVS8 < \HH
DALLAS, Oct. U (AP) - Any
right at intoiwot in Iftl.hOO dtpoo-
itod in the lot* tax aMeMor-coi Ire-
tor Ed Cobb’s private bank ac
count has been disclaimed by hi*
widow, Mrs. Bessie Cobb.
The cash was placed in the Ins-
inf State Bank
known to her
efit of Dallas county anti to he ap-
ptihd to payment of the checks
< "bln left in his cash’* drawer at
the courthouse, the contest said
A&M to Contribute $2,000 To
World Student Service Fund
was piaren m ine ire-
lank by persons urf-
r, in trust fdr the ben-
a county anfil to he ap-
\
CALL FRENCH SESSION
PARIS, Oct. 22 (API-Premier
Paul Ramadier called the National
Assembly back from vacation to
day for a special aeeaior. beginning 1
ne*t Tuesday to deal with France’s
“gma" economic situation. ' t
DYER CONFIDENT
HOUSTON, Tex., Oct. 22 (AP)
Eddie Dyer, manager of the 8L
Louist Cardinals, thinks hi* team
will be the one to beat in the Nh-
tkmal League pennant race next
• Tffi ! ' 1 , -
HAYS "RaIhK MINIMUM”
WASHINGTON, Oct. 2t —(API
—luj. Oen. Philip Fleming, Ke«i-
eral Works Adminlatrator, says
the present 40-eenta an hour min*
Imuoi wage la M groUNmue and ub-
soWie" ami aheuld ba raised to a
, ( 7ft*eent hourly minimum.
fBOPAdANDA HIT
- • NKW YORK, Uct, If -.(AP)
Au»trolls formally demamlml yea
* lerday that tKe Unltml Natior
t« curb propaganda whirh "Inlae
ly 1 ! aeeuses national officials or
‘ other responsible persona of “war
mn«gorlng. N
By EDWARD L. t'HREY
A RM. students will be asked this year to contribute 12,000 to tha
World Student Service Fund. 'Hile Is a fund maintained to provide
needy students in war-tom countries with booka and other eaaentials
which they would otherwise be unable to obtain
x Last year, A.AM students contributed nearly a thousand dollars
<0 this fund. The Community Chest*
will contribute |600 to
this year, leaving
dents to pay oub-.i
pockets.
^ ame Iknefits For
According to M. L Caahion, gen- HpnpflflPYltS (irlVPfl
al secretary of the YMCA, . ^ptllUCIIlO \FiyCII
In Insurance Plan
TKAOUt IN Tl'RKRY
WASHINGTON, Ort. tt —(AP)
Mrs. OHn Teague has been In
formed In a telephone call from
her husband that the Texas Con
greasman was to to to Ankara yea
terday to check United States mill
tary aid to Turkey. He has been
in Athens, Greece.
TRUMAN Rl MMON8 LKADKR8
WASHINGTON, Oct. 22 —(AP)
—•President Truman haa summon
ed congressional leaders to the
White House for a conference
Thursday on Europe's financial
Plight
BRAZIL SNUBS RUSSIA *
RIO DE JANEIRO. Oct. 22 (AP)
—Brasil, second largest country in
the western hemisphere, announc
ed yesterday she had severed di
plomatic relations with Soviet
pmais. : - f
H-JKT PLANS FLIES
MUROC AIR BASE, CALIF
Oct. 22 —(AP)-The huge Nor
throp eight-Jet flying wing bomber
landed here safely on its maiden
flight yesterday after a 34-minute
trip from HMrthome, but its ob
server ship, K P-Al Black Widow
fighter, crashed enroute, Northrop
officials- reported.
eral secretary of
committee will be set up within the
next two weeks to plan and execute'
the drive for fuids. A AM faculty
members will alao be asked to
help in raising the quota assign
ed to the college.
The record made by AAM stu
dents in the past in contributing
to the World Student Service Fund
has prompted the secretary of the
International Student Service at
Geneva, SwiUbrlMMl, to writ*
President Gibb Gilchrist a letter
Inviting correspondence between
the students of the school of ag
riculture and a Viennese Agricul
tural Col lege, f
In his letter to Gilchrist the sec
retary said: ‘The faculty of the
Viennese agricultural aehool tells
us of the eagerness of students of
that school to rerreapon* with ag
riculture students in America,
with a view to obtaining a more
• uf modem agricultural
ami modern technological
device* In »ubJe«U like soil setenef,
fore*try and even brewing (yqb
will remember the fame of prewar
Austrian leer),"
A typual letter frem a Qer*
man youth regaeatlag aa Amer-
Wan -agrlmllural student aa a
rerreepnadeat reed l
u t am an Estonian refugee In
Germany. I am 14, a ftudent of
forestry ■ and a member of the
YMCA. I have lost my parents and
all relationa and have nobody in
the world to write to. I should he
very happy If gny of your mem
bers like to have a correspon
dence with me. I shall learn I
Rodeos, Dancing, A &|M - Baylor
Game to Highlight Week-end
A. A M. employees may have the
same protection for their wives
and children under the college
group hospital and surgical plan,
according to an announcement by
J. Wheeler Barger, secretary-trea
surer ef the coHege insurance com
mlttaa.
Under the college employees hos
pital plan, members of the family
are afforded essentially the samel
bvnefita aa the employee, namely,
9b per day while in the hoepital
Waada Je Windham from Me
Murry College who will ride m ib,
barrel race at the AggW RmIo,
Vegetable, Animal
Fats Research
*p CVZiJft* i»'S. h S!!llS!]T. (ndertaken
reimbursement for aurfcry accord- j * « Wv UI1UCI UIACII
£
■aurm i
Ing to scale up to U’>0; up to lit
for twrtoln Incidental hospital ex-1 Investigations which will
penaoai and up to 910 for ambul-1 deeper Into the mysteries of
ance service. Children under three
months and ever II years old, or
married, ar* net eovered, and ma
lemlty benefits are net Included
In the plan.
'If the 79 per cent participation
required by the Insurance company
to protect itself agatnet adverm
selection la attained, the family
coverage become* effective Novem
her 1. No evidence of good health
of dependent* la required If a»
E l tea 0 on for their Inclusion la made
y November 1.
Payments and claMiftoatton on
a semi-annual baais are: employee*
only. 97; employee and wife,
917.-"'j employee-wife and one ot
more children, 919.24.
I E Club Tonight
Dr. Howard W. Barlow, dean of
your language this wsy and I shall RarloU til
be happy again getting letters mill Ft **
from people who are living in free
dom and are as happy as I ism un
happy”
Members of the student body
who wish to correspond With for-
eign students may call at Cushion's
office and obtain special forma on
which to make official clearance.
This is necessary since peace trea
ties have not been signed with
these foreign countries.
composition of vegetable and ant
mal fats than has ever before been
possible In this eountry will be
undertaken at A AM. this year
Fata will be broken down into
their component parts In an effort
to determine the reason* for lee*
of flavor whirh eauses nuts, meats
and vegetable compound* to be
come rancid Studies will also be
made to determine relative nu
tritive value* of different fatty
substances.
Dr. Ralph Holman, Internation
ally known authority In the fWtd
of fata and liquids, who has been
appointed associate professor of
biochemistry at A. A M . will di
rect the research. In addition to
his teaching duties here. He will
assume his duties at the beginning .
of the second semester in Febru-I
ary. coming from the University
of Uppsala, Sweden, where he Is
at this time working with Dr. Tise-!
lias, Swedish inventor of the Tise
Ft Worth Mothers
Ask Ambulance
In Resolution
FORT WORTH, TEX. Oct 22-
(AP)—The Fort Worth A. A M.
Mothers Club planned te send a
request to college president Gibb
Gikhrist asking that an ambulance
be obtained for emergency use on
the campus.
The group met here Monday with
the Dallas Mothers Chib of Texas
A. A M. and voted to repeat a
previous request.
The rosolution was paased after
Mra. W. E. Jarvis recounted the
| traffic death October 10 pf Robert
H. Gaaway, A. A M. student from
Ungview and read an editorial
from the college paper, 'The Bat
talion.”
Mra, Jarvia said the Injured
(iasway youth was taken to the
college hoapltql In a sedan flagged
down by her eon, Don Jarvia,
and three uthf atudenta, and upon
arrival •( the hospital, "The hoc-
plial didn't even send down n
stretcher for him tnd the four
bov* had to carry MP OTH
friend to the emergency table,
she declared.
A previous t«iueet lor an am
bulance waa made lent January,
Mn. Jarvis reported, and brought
forth a reply from the college hoe
pital that th# college had a edb-
tract with a Bryan ambulance
company ami with a "veteran stu
dent who haa converted his truck
into an ambulance.”
Dean Brooks
Given Watch
Couple With Most Original
Costume Will Receive Prize
Dean T. D. Brooks was presented
with a gold watch and chain laat
night from the faculty of the
School of Arts and Science* and
from the Department of Geology
for hia 19 years of “splendid”
service.
Th# presentation was made by
R. L. Elkins of the B A A Depart
ment who gave a short review of
Dean Brooks' life and accomplish
ments. The gift came as a com
plete surprise to Dean Brooks, who
thought that he was attending a
regular meeting of th# Faculty of
the School of Arts and Science#.
Other events of the meeting was
the election of Dr. John Q. Hayes
of the English Department as Bsc-
retery of the faculty. Three new
hoods of dopartmomc wore alao
introduced 'IW wore) Dr. F, W.
Jenson, ChomMry Deportment;
Dr (’ W. Randle, Economic* De
partment, and Mr. Carl E Tlshler,
r. E Department,
Dr. M. T, Harrington spoke to
the group on th* r, Opportunltl**
and Reeponsibtllttea of the Behool
of Arts and Heleneoa.” An address
on the "Functions of the Office of
Dean of Men” was given by Dean
W L. Penberthy. Dean F. (’ Sol
ton alao made a short talk.
By DUKE HOBBS
U*
Waivers, Fees Due
By Thursday INoon
This week-end will be onfe of thrilln, chills, and spills bv
the hundreds as Agrieland goes western The anneal Saddle
and Sirloin Club Rodeo will be the scene of many a bong-
» r. ,ik my tussle between man and beast.
The opening performance will begin at 7:30 Fridajr
evening at the Bryan Roping Club Arena, one-half mile north
£ of Bryan on highway 9. Saturday**
show will got under way at 7 p.
m., following th« Aggic-Baylor
game.
Armihg the many features of the
1947 rodeo will hr the cowgirl rep
resentatives from southwestern
colleges, s hilarious rodeo clown
act, and riding by outstanding vet-
enan performer* of nationally
kaown rodeos.
For the*** who a re not too stiff
Slid sore after leaving the mdeo]
grounds with Its' chutes full of
fiery steeds, th* Agfielaad Cow
boy Orchestra will fumlih mu»le
for a real oP western dance. The
1 dance will be held to Slnsa Hall
at V Saturday evening Admission
uriee will It* 91 W drag or stag A
five dollar prise will he given Ihe
couple wearing Ihe mwsl original
western costume. Cowboys Hill
Turner, Claud* Broom. Tommy
John, and Jimmy Nelaon will form
Ih* lodging panel to select Ihe
moat originally glutted couple
no worn mooraiory oi ia« am-
Ml IMwtiiea bulMtug from
liM to 9t#9 p.m. Wednesday and
'rem I a.m. to II nmm Thur*-
Fish Begin Taking
Pictures Oct 27
TV?* 7 j- "T" p or nest .m Holman Tommy John am? Bobby William-
All contestant* in the Aggie
Rodeo moot pay their entronce
fee* and aign waivers by noon
Thnradoy according to J. C. Eck
ert. chairman of tho arena di-
rectors. Fees wHI be received In
the wool Wsoeatory of Urn Ani
mal
ir
from
Walvera relieving Ihe Boddte
A Sirloin Club of responsIMUly
for Inlurloo must he signed b>
rontestanls If Ihey are aver II.
or by parents If the ronleslants
•re under that age.
Free hose* will «arry specta
tor# te the roping arena Friday
and Satnrday ntfbbh.lwo leav
ing th# YMCA and three leav-
lag from Ihe flag pole at 7 p.m
of the mechanical engineering
shdps.
Visitor*, as well as industrial
education majors, ar* invited.
Welcoming Committee Leaves
Baylor With Neff's Blessings
For the post yee. ur Holman Tommy John and Bobby
as been doing post - doctorate * on - to-odUors. announced today.
work In tbe department of bio
chemistry of the Noble Institute
in Stockholm as a fellow of the
National Research Council.
. J
BLASTS RUSSIAN BOYCOTT
NEW YORK, Oct. 22 —<AP)-
Australia'a Minister for external
affairs, Dr. Herbert V. Evatt, de
clared yesterday that Russia's an
nounced boycott of the proposed
UAHrA MiiAgi'tomAMa^ com-
« ,t' £,L‘rV<,V u-Yp^Tto
1^ the 2900 freshmen and sophomore*
United Nations. assembled for the doily chapel, held
at 10.
Ralph Rothman, chairman of the
Welcoming CommiUee, issued a
formal note of welcome in a short
By JOHN T. MILLER
"Tell Gibb Gikhrist that I'm going to hold hia hand during the
game whik our Baylor mea wipe those Aggie kids in the groond.”
Those were the parting worda that President Pat Neff of Baylor threw
at the Aggie Welcoming Committee Tuesday morning
The committee left early Tuesday for the purpose of cementing
relations between the two schools by inviting the atadent body to tbe
A. A M. campqs. It hoped to con-*-— 1 ■§ ■ v
tact as many atudenta as possible
at Baylor. Rather than talk to the
Bears aa individual*, committee
DsGAl'LLK MAKES FLANS
PARIS, Oct n —(AP)— Gen
Charles Ik Gaulle, hia new anti-
•j* Communlat'party holding a steady
loud In returns .from Somlav's
Municipal election*, will press for
’Mtlonel parliamentary elections as
soon a* possible to open tho way
for his return to power, a Dc
Gatille spokesmen said, v
WHY TAKE THE COWT
BRIDGETON, N J„ Oct. 22 -
(AP)—Mra. Pearl Rhodarmer Me
. Clure told tho court that her hus
band, after 41 yrars of mgrrioft,
cam* home on* day, unhitched the
, cow sod both went away without
saying goodbye - -
■r Judge Linwood W. Erickson
granted Mr*. McClure a divorce
from John T, McClure on desertion
grounds.
PARLIAMENT OPBN8 |
LONDON, Oct 22 —(AP)— A
new session of parliament opened
yesterday with an announcement
of Socialist plans to curb the Houle
of Lords. 'like L* bo rites' program
immediately aroused a storm of
conaervativ* opposition. Winston
Churchill attacked the measure as
"a deliberate act of social aggres
sion."
were to be seen following the pro
gram.
Committee memoert lunched
with President Neff in the new
Student Union Building cafeteria.
Aside from a few "messenger
boy" remarks, th* visitors wars re
ceived aardtally by all students
It appeared al though half tha
males on the Baylor campus had,
at one time or another attended A.
Potter to Serve
On AAUP Council
Dr. George E. Potter, professor
of tooiogy at A. A M., will go to
Washington, D. C. to serve as
councilman on the National Coun
cil of the American Association of
University Professor*.
Dr. Potter will represent the
southwest area, which include*
Arkanaaa, Oklahoma, Colorado,
New Mexico, and Texas. This is
the regular annual meeting of the
council for this professional orga
nisation of university teachers.
Dr. Potter will he done from
October 24 -28.
A ohotograpber will be at the
Student Center October 27 through
Noveanber 9 (excluding November
2) to take pictures of all students.
The following schedule for An
nex freshmen will be in affect:
Date Surname
Oct *7 A, B
Oct 28 - C, D. E
Oct IS . - ~ F, G. H
Oct. 10 L 4. K
Oct ii Lm
Nov. 1 N, 0. J», Q
Nov. I R. 8.
Nov. 4 *> T. U. V
Nov. 9 W, X, Y, Z
Fourth Regiment Parades Today As
Units From Seven Branches Compete
The Fourth Regiment will parade thla afternoon- at 6 p.
m
Hi. oa the Infantry Drill
laat scheduled regimental
of nekt week.
Commanded by Cadet
talk. Me was followed by John T.
MlHer, another roiqmltte* member, . M . tKn . . tulUf4U -
who briefly notod ialntl to be con- ■ M. and thoie aUidenU aroeted
•tdorod by visitor* whlk-on the A. with hearty
Attend Meeting Of
Houston Engineers
M. C. Hughes, head of the elec
trical engineering department W.
S. Adams, and E. W. Markle rep
resented AAM Wednesday evening
at a meeting of the Houston En
gineers Club.
Speaker for the evening was
M. C Clerc of the Texas Division
of Research Development of Dow
Chemical Company. He discussed
the technical phases of the spherics
syutem of hurricane detection now
WASHINGTON, Oct 22 -(AP) umkr investigation by the Dm#
—Veteran Actor Adolphe Menjou Chemical Company and Texas
and movie critic John Charles Mof- AAM Research Foundation,
flu agreed yesterday that Com Other members of the electrical
munists are active to Hollywood engineering department started
and both pointed to John Howard! for Houston but had to turn back
Lawson, film writer. ' because of car trouble.
oi Duwcwa
for* the corpa review
Colonel Gene E. Lewis, the fourth
+regiment is compose! of two bat-
ig sevbn
ACCUSES LAWSON
Lurlan Kruse, senior animal hus
bandry student from Cam,-run will
hb one of the major rontomtrni to
the Aggie Rodeo.
Kruse was rhampion calf roper
at th* Aggie Rodeo In 1949 and
will be trying to repeat this year.
He la entered in tne calf roping
and la teamed with Ralph Vernon,
veteran student from Belton, la the
wild cow milking contest
Kruse waa a member of the ro-
> team whkh rsproaantod AAM
-ci’liege rodeo held in Tor
•on, Ariiona, in 1949. He atarted
competing in rodeos when he was
13 years old and since that time
has made a name for himself in
the rodeo circles.
Kruse contributes much of his
Ulions embracing wvkn different
branches of military instruction
The First Battalion, commanded I success to his favorite roping horse
by Cadet Lt. Colonel Edward A. | "Nubbin”. He has been rop|ng on
Nubbin for the past six years,
com-i; it v
Joseph Earl Guthrie, junior student in
and Company “B" com animal husbandry from Ft. Worth,
mended by Cadet Captain Joe C. will participate
| Gulhi
latialion. command-
Colo!
ny laoet Lt. < olonel Edwartl A.
Pela, is made up of two engineer
ing companies. Company "A”, com-
manded by Cadet Captain Joseph
M campus.
Miller discussed the caUng fa-
handshakes,
One feature whkh visitor* nolle-
riUttoaT triformation booth* wkleh Iwn^ktely upon their arrival
wa* the Spirit prevailing all over
th? canflBQs. The Bear* speak to
one Knbther; almost all spoke to
Teo, they
spirit in another
way: if the visitor heard "That
Good Old Baylor Line" once, they
heard tt four or five times It was
embarrasing not knowing the
worda to such a song!
Other students making the trip
were Jack E. Jackson and E. H.
Richardson. Grady Elms, student
(AP)
00 tO
on 47
and the official welcome that will
he tendered Saturday morning at I 01 * • l f vo * 1
11 when the speciaf train will ar-
rive carrying Baykr rooters
David Fort, president o| the A.
M Baptist Student .Upton, told
the asaembly about plans for the
Saturday night get-together spon
sored by the First Bhptist Church
of Bryan.
Although President Neff re-
,'kl! I ra»n*r»r, «
tors, few of those young ladiea j
Loveless Sells First Million,
. l r-r i ^
Teaches Know-How to Students
Richardson.
Tbe Second Bs
ed by Cadet Lt CdloncI Howard W
Oliver, contains the three compo
site companies. Company "A" is
cum posed df Signal Corps and
Army Security unite, and is com
manded by Cadet Captain Elmo C.
Livingston. Company "B” is com
posed of Quartermaster and Tran*-
portation unite and is cohiiqanded
i by Cadet Captain Whitney W7 Wil-
son. Company “C” is composed df
Chemical Corps and Ordnance unite
and la commanded by Cadet Cap
tain Don Hodge*.
Unite will be graded in this re
view, and points wUl be awarded
first, second, and third plae* win
nan, In the competition for
George F, Moore Tro
Saturday Seating
Plans Announced
Pioneer (Graduate
ClaH8 of *79 Dies
TU VOTES TODAY
AUSTIN. TEX.. Oct. 22 —
—University of Texas will
campus polls today te vote
candidates for positions in
student association assembly
court.
i TAFT TO DBC1DE
COLUMBUS. O. Oct. 22 (AP)
—U. S. Senator Robert A. Taft'a,
decision whether to seek the Re-
. publican nomination for prroidant
will be announced at I a. m. (CST)
Mn.+[
The anneuncement will be made
from Reuublkan state headqoart-
er» and from Senator Taft'a office
In Washington.
The 90-yard line Motion on the
east side of Kyk Field from th*
bottom to the top has been reser
ved for the. Cadet Corps, for Sat
urday's Baylor-AAM game the
Student Council decided Tuesday.
The Corps will also have the bet-
tom 14 rows of Sections 129-191
whkh run from th* 40-yard line
into th* end son*. Veteran students
have been reserved the top 24 rows
from the 40-yard line into the end
■one.
In announcing the plan at the
Student Coanril, Bennie A. Zinn,
assistant dean of mea, said tha
saats would he held for the cadets
until the corps haa marched onto
Kyk Field and been dismissed.
SHREVEPORT. La., Oct. 22
(AP)—Funeral services were to be
held here today for George W.
Hardy, class of *79, 88, attorney
and tarty day oil developer to
East Texas and Northwest Loui
siana.
Hardy diod here yesterday after
a long illness.
Bora in Athens, Texas, and a
member* of the first graduating
das* of AAM. Hardy practiced
law in ( orxirana, Texas, and once
served as district attorocy for the
•linnet corn!
By KENNETH BOND
Some people teach horsemanship
but ar* afraid of horses; aom*
teach prlnciplaa of flying but can
not fly; Sidney L Lbveles*. not
only teaches insurance, he sell* It
Throe weeks before the fall *e
mester, T. W. Leland, Head of
Business and Accounting, asked
Loveless to teach Courae 919, ”A
Practical Course in Insure nee”, a
course designed to give the stu
dents a practical knowledge of all
types of insurance and techniques
in selling. After deliberation, Love-
leas consented to take time from
his Job as insurance salesman to
teach a section for three hours per
week. The demand for such a
course happened to be so groat
that throe sections were organised.
In order to handle two of the sec
tions, Loveless agreed to teach
from sight until nine each day,
six days a week. J. B. Johnson,
assistant pi>>fex*or is Business and
Accounting, is teaching the other
asetion.
Loveless first came to A. A M
aa a student in 1934. During hi*
sojourn as student, he was presi
dent ef the Kreaai sad Kow Klub,
secretary of the T Cabinet to *37
and sditor of the
He
Club, Student Welfare Committee
/
r of th# Longhorn in *38 »• i» president of tk
a member of the PreaoHJountv Reserve Officer’s
. -Jdem Welfare Committee “«» Lowkm k also aw
imposed of Navarro, | amj historian of the Junior class,
and Freestone counties. j n addition to being a member of
p Ueutenant colonel in the Economics Chib and Scholar*
HBflHHkmknor
He was
the Fourth Texas Volunteer In
fantry during the Spaniah-Ameri-
can war and later became colonel
of th* Third Texas Volunteer In-
Rtotoy.
:. vi
of
■Icholar-
ahip Honor Society, he waa CapL
•f A Cavalry and to Who's Who
to American Colleges and Univer-
fitiaa.
He received a Bachelor of
Science to
Biology to
toiry Husbandry and
1938 and completed
moat of the work necessary for a
Masters to 1989.
tha Braaoa
Asaocia-
second vice-
president of th* College Stetlon
Kiwanis, and a member of the
Methodist Church. He ia on tha
board of directors ef th* Braaoa
County AAM Club.
Loveless haa served as the total
representative of th* American
General Life Insurance Company
Central Texas Life Underwriter's
Association and tha Texas Leader*
Hound Table. He qualified for the
National Quality Award to lu<6
44. This award was for an excellent
record In maintaining In-force and
extending benefits of life insur-
anea. He la a member of hie com
pany's ‘‘President's Cabinet
th# 'Million Dollar Chib’, an honor
for repreMnUtivaa with over
million dollars of insurance
flma.'
Horseback riding la the main
hobby of Loveless. He owns several
five gaited horses whkh he |
for jumping. Some of them will
dear a 8 Vi foot natural obstacle
He married the former
Janet Mkks of Galneevillc to 1989
She attended th* Texas State
Teachers College for Women
Denton for two years. The Love-
leas' have two children. Joan, five
4 Buss, throe.
Loveless entered the U. 8. Cav
airy with the rank of first lieuten
ant to January 1942. He served for
a year aa Executive Officer _
the Horsemanship Department at
Cavalry Replacement Training
Center nt Fort Riky, Kansas. He
was transferred to California whan
he patrolled th* Mexican Border
with the Hon* Cavalry for a year.
He waa transferred to North Af
rica, and served several mouths be
fore moving into Italy and Aus
tria. He was placed in reaerva to
January 1944 with th* rank of U.
CoL "I wen few etan and gathered
no scars," says Loveless.
rrophy.
)ann: to Be Held
At Annex Saturday
Guihrie is a member of the "A”
Flight Air Force, the Saddle, and
Sinoin Club, and the Fort Worth
Club.
Rodeo fans at suck major shows
as Big Spring, Arlington Downs,
Stamford, Denison, Waco Club, and
Mineral Wells ha ve ' witnessed
Earl’s performances.
Be plans to enter the bull rid-
wild cow milking, and the
I race in the Aggie Rodeo.
Champion bull rider at the last
Mineral Wells Show and money
winner at several other major
shows art among the honors he
has gainad in recent performances,
Guthrie worked at the cow barn
during his fish year al 'AAM and
the I plans to be a rancher after grad*
‘ vaUaa.
it -
Ray Davia, Wichita Falla, hp«
been selected by h|a fellow stw.
dents In the Saddle and Mlrldto
Club to judge aome of the events.
A Veterinary Medkine major,
(Bee ROfiRo an Page 4fc
Van Kirkpatrick and hU orches
tra which played a month's an-
gagement this summer at the Hous
ton Plantation, will play for a
dance at the Annex Student Canter
from I te It Saturday, October 29.
Under the sponsorship of the
Little Agfielaad Band, the dance
will cost 91A0 with or without
dates. Tickets may be purchased
at the Annex Student Center or at
the Student Activities Office on
the main campus
Housing accomixiatfens for guests
will be made available at Little
Afftola* erlth reservation* sc-
x iubl, at the Student Center
until Id a. m.. Wedensday. In ad-
turn to the Aggies' dates, girls
Corn Hiyan will be present.
According to C. G. “Spike" White
director of student activities, stu
dents from the mam Campus are
invited to attend
ManE Senior* To
Make Trip to Waco
'Mb 0>9|lnits, senior* in the
maxaf—wit engineering depart
ment. will taka part to a field In:
•peetton trip to Waco next TW
Jay. Virgil M. Ksire*. department
head, announced today.
Faires will conduct a tour of the
General Tire Company, William
Cameron Company, and Owens-IHI.
nois Glass Comps ny plants at
Waco, with student# studying vir-
tooa modern production methods to
use there.
v mL
TUBERCULOSIS
ASSOCIATION ♦
Tuberculosis:
The earlier founti
the sooner cured
It la no crime or dis
grace to have tubercu-
loaia. But it lx both a
crime and disgrace to
give this disease to oth
ers. Th* beat way for
every person to protect
both himself and oth
er* is to have a chest
X-ray once a year.
HUrt that habit this
fall when the Health
Department haa one of
ite X-ray machines
here for a case find
ing survey. It will cost
each person nothing but
the time to come te
the machine, v /
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