The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 20, 1948, Image 1
4! ■ "nN'rRO.ia» ksHlNteTOlC J'eb k BIMi TO . A bill to contjnuefrent cont ohe i month■*'' moved a stjc the House, f } •, '.The House ] cleared it tol the I: the House mehi to :vote on!it rfe Present re it'' i expire Sunjrhify Congress i^nfcws ^' ■J. ration L\r; or VOTED RV ^EN WASHINGTON A Senate iBank! voted 4 to |0 jyes ing: gj-aia io thi'ougn October The suboortimil; V that the liaugr ii{ j not less thjanj 2, grainampn STATE TEACH ihrotigl, Mare ‘toffafd pass* ulqs fom 'U:ie. That ?* vill be week. °n trol la^t { }T them: " MMMHt AtWvWUlillHnii' Volume 47 || TU PUBLISHED DAI GREATER A&M COLLEGE ittee leans will jilnless lUIRAP A|D| 1) FORT V The Texas State tioh wants the in rural aijd Tun or ahotherj, $. -I ^treasurer cjf |he declared here y* If the deficit megns !shdrtjer i Te’xas schools, o • without p4y foi pointed odt. FROM BOX INC H000,l)0( jleficit s |met, soiH ' way Cobb,: setr?tary- Ctateorgapsiiation, (tejrday. ip not in&t> it ^erms , foW j many ■s twi politics, Sa'i 5 i.orlis NEW tORK, He-avyweikht! C i sairi^ yesterday — r from- thidliQ^ing The cnamjpioii meat came shot 1H WHI TE (I RC Feb. 20 gj'-Subco rday for whisky. tee reflon lu^try |he 10 000 bu tj T f I ANlt CI4; 7P)- i littee tion- ir ak'ers j ! tb snded 1 lotted ?Ut of MAN FRTT CLEARED eb. 120 U(/P), tTehchers Mspocia- I T ; Feh. !20 irdpigni .1 iT'wdul|i.e itar the political'irjini a! I6r, hisi. ret i) ement ring. 1 ' ’s jisurpri. 1 t jstate- — rr AT ; V ||)efore.. i e|sailed on the Qmedn fury fpr Ilijgland, where hfr ;w|ll jtpfh 1111 <i<ipsive ; . . I 4 series of exlfribiit oifs. During hip t^lk with t ewstnen, lie repeated !a previous* s jafement d'hat he’ll gii’e jlffpey .Joe just two \feejks t|) sign for ^return shpt at thle teachers some pimp RING iM* • f mrlio ‘ : \\ ' ei Walcott .SUPERINTENDENT OF DEAF SCHOOL TO Bi RETAlNElD AUSTIN, Fejb. 20 -<Ah. Roper M. Powell, sunn rintendentj of the state! school for the deaf aful tar get for redenU student Uprisings there,; will he fotainedj. j,’. Tfiei state! hoprd of co iij ol an- npupced its! detisipn i|n x' formal report of its iirresitigatioijbj at the school folloh’inji the Nov Tiber 24 student stiike! which!, demanded Powell’s renova 1. ; ! j The bojarl, b (ts repcik noted that the school haH a lonir history of trpublj?s-f- land each 4ine the demand ljia.<| bhen made tljat the superintend'mt hie removed The boirc sa|<l it had found “out- ticle inflpeiiceT has dmHl ' students Mnj pipt distiuvhhfces at the schooB. •‘king Cobb tip)— Louis Prie-Med, Pre-Denial . : - : > : Banquet Is Tonight Cancer Research; Institute Member, )r. Beb Wells, Principal Speaker ! ; i ■- ' . .' i I ! ^ ' . 1 ■ j Final arrangements h^ve b^jpri completed for the annual bannuet of the Pre-Medical and Hre-Dental Society to be Held ton ght at 7 p. m., in Sbisa Hall, Don Carroll, president of the society, has announced. ^ i Principal speaker will be Dy. Ben Wells of the Cancer Research Institute, Houston, :who will atklress the meeting on “The Impact of (Cancer Research on Prb- fe-siohal 1 Education and Practice.’’ Cancer research is a topic on which Dr. Wells is well qualified to speak since he finished his post graduate work in this specialty at MayO Institute in Rochester, Minn. Carroll said. He is a native of Temple, Texas and a graduate of the Baylor University Medical School, j. • j * ! Other rnen prominent in medjeal jand dental schools of the Southwest Iwill also he present as honor guests, Carroll added. Those who have already accepted COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20,1948 ; i i nose who nave already Invitations to attend are Dr, Janies K. Peden of Southwestern Medical School, Dr. John C. Haley of the Baylor Medical School, Dr. D. Bai ley .Calvin of the University ;of Texas Medical School, Dr. George L. Powej-s, Dean of the Baylor T TO US-ENGLANIf ASK RICH CHECK DllMllLITARIZyif ON BERLlRi Flip. 20 Thr United States i|nd Brituii \ epiand- ed the rjgHt yfstjerday n| inspect all phases of i ideimUitiarii'A non in the Soviet occi|]iation koi e[ tif fb^r- many. •* |j i- j ; j v .. ! : | The demand, was in ml aver to Ruffsiaq Im isto ici orr th •' ight to examinejnaival lases iii-tn^ British zone; I p j : 'i ! * | The ddmamk wpr.c n al e at si meeting jof tjhi allied tqrti il coun cils cpiord iiati igi jijoriim t! pe. The Russiahsi c|iar| ed fhej wei tern alt libs were frustratiPg |<le n litaijizai tion. No agreenent was loathed. CIO MEAT p|(KER!S PLAN STRIKE STRATfti AT 1 TEH t(IO, tell iqa £ CHICAGO, Feb. 20 CIO Unitejl Pb ' ' ‘ of Anieriqh Ktlike’atj packing| The uniin’s m it tee siu^hor ter a 20 jtotone rtk inberji jn The cpnimit hut dec.jiii'd I ! ' !! Child’s Clinic Will Be Held Here On May 3 f! k w t'f > - The ckinphpusje | workers iestewlaiy [totod - e pjatioms jler int. sitifik ?a‘<\ the - v Note by sofiJt 100,000 ivor of! a| ®ilkoult. leei set a Itfike ijato d annoimif^i it, i, 1 hg meat p sitr^t ‘gy cofn- '<out af- ORAWflE . m R(|)CK,' The Arkansas democrat ic tee yesterday threatenpc “effecti|ei actldn” to will sulpporti |roir‘ the nptii if party! Ipadeps. coritipm tagonisfic attitude” ti South. [ .i “Uril^s^ th|.( national!; r ARKANSAS )EMS AV WITHDRAW UTTLB RC)CK, .Fdb. |2t| —(iP»— ‘‘j.cdihmit-j ‘ to fake! w its! I College of Dentistry, and Mason: R. fioudrye from the Texas Univer sity Dental School. Each of the honor gpests will Ispeak. According to G. ;E. Pgfiteij" of the biology department, it! is hoped that students planning to enter medical or dental school soon may become acquainted with 'the educators, and get information and advice from them. Sponsors of the Pre-Medical land Pre-Dental Society are members of the official Pre-Medical Com mittee. They are G. E. Potter land A. L, Schipper of the biology de- pa it ment,' E. B. Middleton anil C. T \V.. Buix-hard of the chemistry de partment, and C. H. Bernard of the physics department. Tickets for the banquet are $1.25 and may he purchased from Paul -Fiinguy in Room 3, Leggett .mil 1 ' t - J_ p|.; enperr lead of SAWA Poultry Division ! Dr., J. H. Quisenherry, head of the poultry husbandry department, has been elected chairman of the Poultry Section °f the Southern Agricultural Workers’ Association ftlr 1948. : . ?. { I . Dr. Quisenherry Has just returns l ed from Washington wher* be • at tended' a meeting of the associa tion and a session of the South ern Regional Poultry Breeding Project committee. Papers giving the results of re search and experimental work car ried on by the poultry hubsandry staff were presented at the meet ing. Additional funds were secured from, the’;USDA for the develop ment of the poultry breeding; work in Texas, Dr. Quisenberi-y reported. While in Washington! Dr. Quiscn- beirn conferred with reprefienta-, ti\j,es from Merck and Company and M’lhite I>aboratories concerning wOrk with the A&M poultry de- palrtment on the use of horinopes in! broiler production ami the use of sulfaquinoxline for' the, control) of coccidosis. . ' ■ . i } The annual Crippled Children’s cheduled for May the basement of the A&M Hos- pital, according to Daniel Russell, pf the agricultural economics and tuial sociology department. Assisting in operating this year’s intie-will be Dr. H. E. Hipps of r -ajeo and Dr. G. W. N. EggerS of Houston. Having these men will iriVT the clinic two of the best or- hopedic surgeons, in this part of he country, Russyll said. Dr. Eg- rens will be accompanied by a staff ifyfive men from the state ipedi- •al, sthool jn Galveston. Russelk in requesting the coop- jerrJtion of all interested citizens in getting crippled children to the clinic, emphasized that one does inot have to be a charity case to Sattend. However, those who <ran |pay for the service will he expect- jedii to do so while others will re- jceiyc the benefits of the clinic !vfiikout charge. patients do not have to be badly crippled to attend the clinic, . he explained. Thitae ; suffering from mibor h<)ne, muscular, or nerve ail- rgents might benefit more than the badly crippled. j Cooperating with the Kiwanis iClph in sponsoring this clinic arc the local Bi-County Medical Socie ty,'State Department of Health, Cciunty Health Department, State ,. ittuteabilitatwm Dffice, irate Home Economic Group, the ^derated Missionary Society, Col lege Station Development Associa tion, the County Crippled Chil dren’s (Jpmmittee, and other com munity welfare organizations. Religious Churches Act ■ ' '; j ; ( if .j-i.. A /wir -m r Livestock Show Planned May 8 By AH Club '»Pi ' , •• Number 11T (Closes; ' ' i\J I*, p*. BUTLER, right,, president of Houston’s First National Bank, presents $2,000 scholarship to L. O. TIEDT, JR. of La Grange who will entcii A&M this,fall. JIM TUCKET, left, Houston insurance man and breeder of Hereford cattle, will sponsor and award next year’s $2,000 scholarship. 1 )! All persons arb-urged to coop erate so that all the physically Handicapped children of this! area nijiy he reached, Russell concluded. Seven Company Interviewers To Be On Campus Next Week Representatives from seven companies will be on the campus during the week of February 23-27 to interview senior students in regard to future employment, according to W. R. Horsley, director of the Office of Placement and Personnel Relations. I ; \ Men desiring interviews may make appointments at the Placement Office in the ; Adminis-^ - — 1 —f ! ~— tration Building, ■ t | Manufacturing pompanv will meet A general meeting of all stu- i at 4 P- m. in the YMCA chapel on dents, senior and undergraduate, will be held February 25, at 4 p. m. in Guion Hall, during which Paul Boynton. natiqMjJir known personnel man, will speak on vo cational choice and (he best meth od of finding emplovmcht. mg for these men will be conducted ; _ UnAUi „ k „ „,;ii PebrUary 24. A film dealing with this type of work will he shown. Interviews will be conducted Feb ruary 25. Thursday, February 2G, the per-; PonnOl man from the Layne-Tyxas Company will speak to geologists and men majoring in civil, me- j Plans- for a Little South western Livestock Show to be held on the campus May 8 Were made Tuesday by the Saddle and Sirloin Club, Pres ident Jack Kingsbery said yesterday. The Little .Southwestern Show, started in 1940, was discontinued two years later because of the war. Purpose of the show, according to Kingsbery, is to acquaint students majoring in animal husbandry with the organization and operation of a stock show and give them ex perience in selecting and showing animals. In the past, fitting and 1, showing animals made up the show. This year, according to presenrt plans, a freshman judging contest, a matched roping event between two ex-Aggies, a jack-pot roping match between club members, a gaited horse show, and a reining contest will make up the program. ^ In addition, beef cattle,' horses, swine, and sheep will be Exhibited, Kingsberry said. 1 Each student will have an animal assigned to him to be trained and groomed, Kingsbery explaihed. The animal will be judged, with emphasis placed on the way the animal is trained, groomed and shown by the student. C. R. Stone has been named general superintendent of the Little Southwestern Livestock Slhow; Ri ley Kothmann, livestock superin tendent; J. P. Woods, horse show and roping superintendent; Claude Broome, judging superintendent; and C. D. Rankin, equipment super intendent. Tom Roberts is in- charge of the program committee, J. C. Hart heads the publicity committee, and Earl Guthrie is handling the con cessions committee. f ‘Know ¥ Hardin UMJ/ “To manage yojir lifi more intimately and jud would know and judge Hardin in his concluding Emphasis Week Eight Candida File for Stu|en Senate Position*, T ■■ ' ' IL l !' Eight students have (filed for ■’ n* cant positions on the SjtudentliSf ay.JU of stild' int form 1181 Chaijtfrii Charles! Bruhso||,! If Intimately;’ iff t* s P eefh iroperly you must know ^ourself Yourself morb severely than you y one else’’, said Reverend Grady e sage of the Onion Hall Religious M L' j A' Quoting the Grecian thinker So crates’ 1 famlous expression, “Know I Thjyselif,’’ Rev. Hardin said that it is simple to know the other person and even tp admit our own short coming to dur friends, but to admit th< se things to ourselves is gen- uirifrly difficulty Such minor things n.« : our personal I.Q., our head shppe,| or hiair color will affect ^>ur livlcH, and jve must know them to shlipe our jives. UtC" p. .. «m mg eWc ate as of 4 p.m. yes Elms, assistant direc activities, announced. Candidates for the sition are Raymond j Jack D. Russell, am Mitchell. Arthur E. filed bom Dorm 14, Rtewar Connell fi'om Dorm | IG, Fishen for Leggett Hi 11, Musick from the Tniiler VSfliijge, and Clayton L. Selphiln the ICoiT-S Annex. No applicatioji i! havdiwjtit received from Vet Vil age If no application is p 'ceiveA fi^oni an area, the place wil! remajin cant urttil next electtjdn. Si elected duping the eo| will fill positions op the ie- subcoipmittees that ate now V|cji The Student Senat ■ is th(| erning body of all sj v dent ! ties and is made up entirely,-. rollee. 1 * in the school who Uyi the various domitoit (s and/ai under college supervi^ on. ing an overall repie sentat this manner, the sei n te can quicker solutions to s .udentPp! bb~ Icms. One of the beiidfits gfaltejlf Student Sehators is 111 ? Guio| iI|^^i! , pass prenege. , ! Monday’s issue of The Bat will carry a ballot jcpntainjipg ci tion will Be listed in thtijr owitij alei Deadline for a cain idatieij |fiiSbg' Is Saturday noon, Fel ruaryj i!21 ■lit candidates’ names wjtli the | tion o!f the Annex chi id id at v»«j-t: '"'v i. ^ ymca S.jL i„" m^hanicali Hvil Tl S^IRM |management engi'neeringiindustrial <<l , ' 1 " K . " a ', * ls ’ ' ('('neation, business ami account- vn - ,hee ^ nff an<1 account,nK ma ‘ '! ' h fW, iout knowing and admit ting these things. Rev. Hardin continued, we iwill be like the statue df the discus thrower, pioiseri and physically attractive, but never acting or doing any good for humanity. Today’s jaddress marked the end of I the fontial Guion Hall services although services will continue i so|ne Of the local churches through Si|iidaiy. AJH pastors contacted ex pressed satisfaction with the man- neir in which the entire week was handled add with the turn-out of the student body- * jpr.; FoPrest Freezor will oont tipue holding services at th$ Col- lege Station Baptist Church through Sunday morning. He has set aside tonight as family n ght wjth jspeejal emphasis on the ire- 11 siiicej of tjhc entire family. Satur- d-Jy ijiighti services win be fol ow ed by a fellowship hour. Time fop mg, and economics willij he inter- Gilchrist Heads ASCE Committee ■E' nri : is. : ;; Ipresident Gibb Gilchrist has been appointed chairman of the execu tive committee of the Highway Di vision ojf the American Society of Civil Engineers, Colonel William N|. Carey, executive secretary of tile society, has announced. • !'The committee heads all the ac-, r » twiities of this technical division! . i 4, :th, 115-ycur—,1*1 S „ci rt y. . ) ^ interested in refinery jiwoi'k who arc majoring in chemistjfy; and me chanical or chemical epgineering. These men will meet with sthe per sonnel man from that fiifin on Wed nesday, February 25. J engiheering and thine sales. Horsley urges all Junior Class Announces Plans . ' ).•} j •; r : i |i ir,! I’i’.. •••JL;' [J'' 1 For ‘Best Junior Prom Ever’ )i men desiring | sSltlSim Jie1.n:|irs e M;;: j ^ ^ th “ tuar Liability Insurance* (joinpany . , ! for positions as underwriters, au-• ^,| < m' S!uE y -! Gowtown Uub lo Men majoring in petroleum, me chanical or chemical ehgineei'ing, who are interested in foreign ser vice will he interviewed) February 25 by a member of the personnel, department of Socony-VjWuum Oil Meet Monday Nit n F our sub-eonnnittees function Librarian to Talk To AAL'P Tuesday under the executive committee to which Gilchrist has been appoint ed; i Papers in the field of highways y;il! he prepared: fc^' presentation i i at* society nieetines. throughout the year, ahd through it, all activities piertaining to hi^hVays will pass, Cjolonej Carey said H r of the PaHy an be pre|ifled upon tp recojgpize that tr:u|i ijons and fjindamer tal irihcijplesA jthc par ty traijisiendj in jimpo ■ ance the s’upposejd political exped Hits of the moment, ther it-is t|mi fior us ,to take whijitevtr pffectivi ictjdn is Oiptm for us io withcra ' bur sup port,” a reschitjipn dec; tied. ., VA BRbMISES PETS BETTER FACILITIES < DALLAS,. Feb. 20 ~ i Ptj-Action’ to rnipfdve 'i iudi eNpBm! ijducation.i and traihi|ing* faqilitieis f: c veterans in Texas; Loi i$iana andij i ssissippi as ppqmisi d i*t. A ffefting Of ippl party ieir “anj i ,rd the! Paul S. Ballanee, college libra^ | rian, will address the American jadershij) I Association of Uhiversity ProfpStj A meeting of the Fort Worth A&M Club will be held Monday, February 23, in the Science Hall at 7:15 p.m,, according to W. L. Evens, publicity chairman. Plans are being made to discuss election of a new social chairman and treasurer, setting a date for Longhorn pictures, arranging a date for the Easter holiday dance, ami selecting'groups to inake talks Mon majoring in mechanical and at all Fort Worth high schools electrical engineering interested in about A&M. ■ taking a graduate training course Evans requests all members to being offered by Allis ; Chambers' be present. ''Vj made through five ^Ainmiit addition to the Invftatioiji mittee named abof nuttees are: Banquet Commit! ei ton, Bob Smith ant the*e Ro lohn sprs Ion Tuesday, February 24, a! 8 p.m. in the YMCA/ Norman F.} Rode) electrical engineering plofex- j sor. announced today. He will speak on “The Texas A&M College Library—Its Orkftnij zations and Functions.” I ' | The meeting is open to all pekf sons associated with the cqllfcgo, Rode said. Boak \^iker, Karloff, or Joe Loiiis? Ags Baffled By 6 IFalkingMan’; Theories of His Identity Abound By LARRY GOODWYN With “the best Junior Prom ever, at a reach” as its avowed poal. the Class of ’49 has laij for the annual Junior Prom and Banquet, schedi|djed a March 19. John Orr, class president, stated Thursday lions entered their third week, thatT the plans were “developing satis-' factorily” for the Prom, perennial ly one of the high spots of A&M's spring social calendar. With the vie\s r in blind of “spend ing, as little as possible on the af fair so that the class will have ample funds for the Senior Ring Dance and other activities neit year,” Orr said that the' class has decided against bringing, a “name” band down for the occasion. The Aggieland Orchestra will play fof the J J roin and for the All-College Dfiu/ce the following nigjht. Sam Hill, recently appointed chaplain of the College, will make the banquet address, O.rr stated. Ticket sales are now under way and may be purchased from the fol lowing: Lawrence Sextom, Dorm 2; Jim Burrus, Dorm 4; Fred Ham- bright, Dorm 6; Wallace Cox, Dorm 8; Tommy Splitgarber, Dorm 10; Dick Denny, Dorm 9; George Ed wards, Dorm 11; and A. D. Salmon Dorm 12. Plans for the weekend are being By HARVEY J. CHELF J; . ii .yi, wtt! IV etc Americjtov Lfegion yesterdia^. < Aboiit|150 legjion from titie tifi-state Region) JO siffipialsi a jo^nt fjujunyi^ : ii ^ i - i’EATHE East; Tek#st Cloud. (Iloudyj; poldfrj showers easjt-ceinUral |portidn jthi) Partlyi Sloudyl pojdqr -south pbrtiipi, tqmpe, freezing in Mppeii-Redl Icy tonfight.Jlfturday p Adrrtiqjslpitjion and here Sigma Xi Installs Officers Feb. 26 5 f the pot so!<Jold lions j: sioually s' ;. T !•; the c •y. I cr this) Wesl Tex is: P : ifter boon pot BO cold, temple iifc-PanHand le land; -ight.) SatiPday rarme^ >n kttem ■ |h| noilthi icon. Frj norther linisf tjo partly extreme njfternbqn. east and tqres near ver Val- y elomfy, west por- t to ocea- winds on aturday. oudy, cold- cloudy ant Ihe A&M Sigma Xi'Clnb will in- offipp-o i stall new officers at the annual and VA 1 banquet in Sbisa Hall Thursday; - - February 2G, at 7 p. m., Carl. 6$. Lyman, secretary-treasurer,: has announced.. . !| Officers to be installed are prest-, Bent, Dr. J, H. Quisenherry, piresi-' Bent-elect, Dr. R. 1). Lewis, ami secretary-treasurer, Dr. Sylvia Cover. ■ .! ' . ; j f j. Dr. C. C. Doqk, retiring president will deliver the address of the even- subject Will be “Biology and the Prospects! for More Ef fective Research at A&M;'’ 1 I j I. : | Ralph Edwards current gucss- khp game of identifying the j Walking Man” is turning the earn- |»uji into a teeming, seething mass |jf speculation. In Tact, College Station might well be lenamed the Valley! of Indecision, inhabited by people) who continue to eat, sleep, pod attend class, blit who talk and plunk bf nothing elpe. When the contest began, most Igies were smugly aloof to the entire proceedings, for they had bther, more important things to oc cupy their thoughts—and besides they had no phone on which to be, NM ' ■ I But with oach passing week as ithe list of prizes continue to .grow, ja decided change has co how he knows: who thtf“Walking Man” is. ' i ||i|j '! By far the most popular choice at present is mine other than Doak Walker of SMU. '‘Of course it’s Walker!” shout ed one arm-waving faiiutlc in ans wer to tho-que^tioh. “Yjni know the part that goes; ‘Ding, dong, bell’? Well, that’s Mtjtty Bel^. and where it says ‘ten to one add only one can tell/Mths ‘ten and one’ are eleven Which stands for thar -team, and the “one can tell 1 is Doak because he’s the quarter - hack. And just who was that 1 horse they had two weeks ago if it wasn’t Peruna? Just answer me that one.” ho sneered. “Ha,” scoffed anotheijr. “Any fool, with half a brain could figure out that it’s Joe Lquis! The ‘ten’ stands for what the referee counts over Louis’ opponehts, and that part about ‘master of Metropolis’ ob viously means St Louis. St. Louis —Louis, get it?” I . ) The choice of identity on the cam pus is by no means limited to Doak over jthe campus. Aggies began to day- dream of snatching Up a 7 telephone (it sand "’flouting, “Sure,/I know who *viu ucuvci imi; «uiui:3.-> t»i *.,nr o.-vil- .be is!: He’s .. And then they See ing. His subject will bej“Biology themselves driving about in the new convertible; accompanied by Tickets at $1.50 each may be ob- teined from W. B. DaVis,, J. F. Fudge, W. D. Harris, E. a 26 to 301 brand, E. P. Humbert, Plains to- man, S. A. Lynch, V cloudy) j H. Quisenherry, E. B. Rej A. Varvel, an I « ■ji, J'iL I .« ^important things. Theories abound. In the Cave, the Campus Corner, in the dorms, and the <lassroonU, in the mess -j .*- excited groups each waiting the others te stop at he can explain halls and the i closer m the clues, though at times the reasoning seemed a bit weird and far-fetched. For those who as yet have made no choice—-if such still exist on the camphs—there are several schemes whereby the identity of this meandering male may he fte* termined. The primary thing to do is to pick out someone who walks, and as is suggested in the title, it may be wise to choose some one ,of the. stronger sex. After that the field is wide open. The usual procedure from here is to shrewdly discard all clues, and pick a name at random from a telephone directory, consult a swami, or ask someone who makes those grade points. Thera may be a few whogpimply don’t care who the “Walking Man” is; Everyone should pick some - name, any natne to offer whep ap proached on this pertinent problem. ^Otherwise there is danger of being Classed as an incurable recluse, and then comes social ostracizm.), * Walker qnd Joe LouisL Others arej Of course this writer knows, and equally sure that the “Walking he expects to win this contest him- Man” is John L. Lewis, James E. self. Picnic Announced; w^ i - • For Aggie Players! The Aggie Players Will hold a picnic in Hchscl Park on Runday, February 22, at 4 p.m. The picnic Will be for members and their guests and is being sponsored by Student Activities. The Players will meet at the Assembly Hall at 3:3® p.m. and will go from there to the park. Each member is allowed one guest. Members of the committees have been working for the past week preparing for the picnic. Final ar rangements are under the super vision of John Laufenbeng, presi dent. Members of the Social Commit tee are Jambs Nelson, chairman, Jean Kernodle, and Bill Krause. : ' - I j- -4- John, L. Petrillo, Boris Karloff, or Robert Wailker.’ more, everyone could positively identify his ■ j. IT " ’ !-U Jela Lugosi - what’s tutely and oice from I f. self. However, even he has a prob lem. Dastardly characters insist on using the public telephone in the drug store while he’s waiting* Tor the call. j : 4. ■ Students Needed For Confectionery Work !■ b Students are needed to work in the campus’ confectioneries. Manager J. Wayne Stark said today. Interested persons should a^ply in Room 106,- Goodwin I .1 I .T ;, fik 4 *41 Orchestra Committee Stephens and Murualr Cbijj Decoration Comrlittee: Estes) Don Jarvis, Jampf and John Luther Prqjgram Comm t^ee: Martin, George Ek wards, Chapman, Robert jB}ankejtejy ia Richard Taylor. ' I [1 •ice Mfithin niched blurts t |Sb[irta : ta pridpidr; ■4*4f b<[th seiwices is 7:15 p. m. Reverrtnd R. L. Brown, church istior, will hold the regular Her- ! ices Supday night. jThe Fiijst Christian Churchjwill hold’a recreation and social fiumj- i:U “ tonight as the conclusion of tipn tljBir religious program. The so-, ill ibe held in the home of ,nj C. |N. Shepardson. Rev. S, len Watson, of the Bryan First iriittianj Church, has been con- ictihg tpe services. The Hijtel Foundation has con- chided - its special services arid ‘ar services will be resumed. J! Th|e Catholic Church will '-conJ Kjtlwijird Matloeha offering ay of |tht| Cross,” Their •i Rev. ‘Th»! next 4 icjudfl sedviees tonight with ‘ at. hd siji vijees will he, held at the regular hies. 1 Th(e Ldtheran Church's se eflul Itonight with a social .binet Room of the YMCA- V Ll Reverbrtd Hardin delivers HiS last sermon tonight at the A&M Methodist Church. Sunday night the Sinking .Cadets will hold an hour song service for the church. Bibhopfjohn E. Hines will W at the St. Thomas Chapel at 11a, h*- f^r donfiimation services. Reverend rini Helyey will lesUiqe regular es Sun Bryan Tlicater To Be Constitu ted ■\i ladies Ii- T ruinan |! lairker Movie-goers will tional theatre to ch near future, accor|ihg tcj-| Mr anagefv eatre >t site! ncuncenient made! pi Morris Schulman, ! Queeh and Palace An 80 by 150 : corner of North Street has been put of $52,000. Construj as soon as governm strictiions are rerjil IE Club Meeting Slated Weilnesffif ’he Industrial jESducatibri ji(Jh The , . will meet Wednesdluir, Fet T> -vrvrt xl r i* ||(plub . , ^ 2i, in Room 107 of the 4echani< aJ En gineering Shops. [ Members are asUejd to Bfiug pi<t- turetij of nomineesj for L represent the clul it Ball. Selections w| 1 be the pictures submil All expenses M chosen will be part it was stated, ii ( I lave pirf *ddi- te frqjtn ire the Mpn'is the , (the ain and i!3rd lasetdirtf ion nt bup«|ni fed. be miadf t|ed- i the dr by Toxcy Natiied TU Honor (Co The firat year 1 Uniyersity has d Toxey, Jr., A. & resentative ol The Monor the Law Toxey _ in January 19 Veterinary M< I! il i j ' services Sunday morning. { f Df. C r ^ n - 1 *" L tpc the Gfod’js pu| night ryis 4 VU ahd^ mb, “God is, God’s love, apd )uFpo.se”il in his findil speech , at , the Church of Christ 's jpC 7:15. hrislian Science ha|ker to Hear IcRiae Tonight / I i from th #> s H|arry!B. MacRae, CSB of Da,l as dll, spefek tonight at 8 p. m. in ie! YMCA chapel or( the subject’ (Christian Science: The Authority >1 Its pealing Mission.” MacRae will be introduced by rainz^ Springer, president of the |. |tudent (Christian Science Organi- I atijon. Which is sponsoring the ad- MacRbe has lectured in many of he major cities of (the Unijtcd lies. iHe was in the Air4jprps luring tVorld War I and has been i practitioner of Christian Science n Dallas for many years. ! The Christian Science! Orgi feation if College Station ct Ing] of ’about 50 members, regular] meetings on Sundays' ift . the Asqmbly Room of the YMCA k 11 ai m. ' )•• , I The bringing of Mr. MacRrte, to the eampus represents quite a tri-' \ umiph f ir the group which has been in ,exis*nce for 9 years without achieviiig general recognition un til this; year., I [ j, ; t;. PhiliA Goode of the business and accounung department; and facul ty npo (Organr, . 7 . — .— r-i.—i-——— faculty] members arc invited tend thb lecture. GIVE Up psychology and FIGHT! COMMUNISM. REUTHER NEV YORK, Feb. 20 —Ufr- Wultcr P. Reuther, president of the CIO Ujnited Automobile Workers, says iberals and progressives should discard their “united-front psiycho ogy” to fight Communists, he liberal, says Reuther , in y’s. issue of Collier’s magazine ild'aUy neither with'/eac ‘ it Communism nor pi ■v! • il sire legislation. lit Mi