* W' \: ' r *! M 1 m ■ 'H feage 6 rf ' I; 'i PET' j M ii - jpt !'■: 'V if-* '.'j , ; ~. ■ - ' • ■ ‘ • ’ A T m ■ ir , HffiSBAtTAtlOK Ti 3 rv *T_'rr^- Lrr «Ui Iv-i r ■ J 14. .. rr K | - \4 BBY TOWNSEND and HOWARD RICHARDSON, B&cd 110 - _ . worker*, oull in « fife gallon bucket of concrete to finish the bannister of the ‘ iu o,n Hall halconyi The last concrete work cn the bantiister was jloiejlast Friday-- f ^ • ' FRIDAY. JULY 30.1<*4« J- f fm ' * 1 Saturday Will Be Last Day Of * g Or|eal At 01’Fort Sffl weeks Satu most oi tfie cadet The: pas I'pee .7, the six weeks.have seemed like months, past two Weeks have been the most difficult. First Call ha^ipeen sounding at 5:00 a. m., and classes were in sessiori !«r |7:00.\Mosk of the j>las-*"~—T “ 1—T— ses wtirei iiti observing and direct- A* 16 hosp i t a l two weeks. Let Du- day, Ju By TOM PARSONS <■ > y 31, will be, the end of a long, hard six or the cat ets at the Artillery school at Ft. dministrators eal* Education ssions jThrele Texas educators spoke oni “Planned Growth of Teachers” to the twelfth An nual Texas School Adminis tration Conference here Wed nesday morning. ^ Dr. J. C. Matthews, dean of the School of Education, North Texas Stale' Teachers College; Miss Ruth Huiey/ stake supervisor of Home- majkinx Education in Texas; and Drj E. R. Alexander, head of the Agriculture Education Depart- mejnt at A&M, were the educators whp addressed the conference Wed nesday. Dean Matthews discussed the advantages of workshops for teachers. He stressed that the group should meet in pre-school conference early enough before school starts that any problems^ arising, may be ironed ou t. > | Miss Huey outlined the status of! homemaking in the Texas high schools iahd told the superintend ents that! only since 1937 hks hojnemajcihg been accepted as vo cational training. Lack of funds, she brought out, has been the chief drawback in advancing home vo cational Gaining. In a talk on vocational agri- ; culture training in the schools, jUr. Alexander told school men, | ‘We’re kidding ourselves if we jihink that we can train a teach- jar during four years of college. Our colleges should follow their ‘graduates apd assist them until tjhey have become | successful tjeachers!” , :High praise for the conference membership and its cooperation wps expressed by retiring Pre|Si- ddnt Tetirell Ogg of Freeport and D|r. Geoi-ge Wilcox, secretary of the conference of A&M. . Incoming President D. U. Buck ner of Pharr outlined briefly plans fur the next conference. jThe, conference which had been in! sessioB since Monday concluded observing and direct ing ariil ejHr fire. I tomioiTOW•morning] the dijmax of 4 I -r infec ■j ■; I r the trdiring period v iill begin. The- CAdet’ battalion -will move put for ' an ov?r riight ft.S.C.F., recohais-i sance, sdkttion.land occupation of- C. position”. Fijie missioti will jbeigiv en throughput the night. f < Thu’st ayi aftemooi 1 the final re view 'vill lie held alid graduation exercines will follow. There Will be a final bal , fbursdafc night while Friday v'iJJ be used31 [n' prodesping.- •- Then jail c: dets' may jleave except those 1 who rare' tojs receive tfuur : commijss on s, these n en mupt wait 'untfl^ jSi tU ‘day moching to be jswornjir. i ! j .. Threo ij iggfes'bane met! with unfokfiilnalle accideiitjs and] slick- ' ' 7 ,n*ss,i FUdy Koenig; '49, broke, his lej; j fter. lieirg here two weeks.|.iiat Kirkland. '49, Was brji tick ajnd stayed in 1 ; j 1 '' 'H ■ j:-. Servirg i We . It: I! •> '! ■> rf- 4--.il you is -t^ur delight ho^e you.’.x try out tonjtfe .i. . ■ ! , j ; '.j e iCEIlil. RGH t“Nea ’-Cpunt|y Club” gan, ’49, is now in the post hos- : pital .with pneumonia. Since he will miss only One week of train ing he may be allowed to grad uate with the rest of the class. No cadet can complain because of the lack of entertainment that they have had during the encamp ment, for with the final ball there will have been four dances and innumerable parties at the beloved “Pecan Grove”— enlisted men’s be$r garden, ai noon Wednesday. More than, ’ 1(10 school superintendents and ad- y * jnjinistrators attended. I $2,400 Multilith Press Installed In A&M Press T- -iTi* ] f-iMi ' , | . -. J A iiew MultllitH printing prhss costing $2400 has been recently .added,,to the facilities of the A&M Print Shoj), according to M. H.. Go«>d€, assistant manager of siiopi.r 'k.” -• , - ; The standard sheet for the new preps is 844x11 but it will take up toh'9 x 14 sheet with a maximum speed of 6,000 copies per hour. Articles to be printed by this 1 machine are laid out by the cus- Itomev m the form in which lljiey j are to-Appear. These drawings are in turn photographed and the neg- | ative burned into a Multex all pur- posfc^etal plate. This plate is. then put bn 4the press and, it is re^dy for operation. A translucent paper called Du- plimat may also be used- which will transfer any kind of Writing or drawing. Forms to be duplicated by this method must be drawn or printed with a special pencil. I One advantage of the Multijlith' machine is that any number! of polors may be run. on one sheej:. The machine'differs from niost 'presses in that it has a dryer pnd a pilestacker. The stacker itself will hold as many^ copies as the feeder thus saving tinie and[ wbrk for the operator. Goode expects the press to in operation in the very near future. .in ■ .1 sfrt» Ililil , - r, • ; n ^: DEAN CHARLES N. SHEP- ARDSON left today for New the j Orleans where he will embark for Honduras. He is one of a ill man party appointed to study' (U. S. agricultural projects there. Work Started On Bryan, College Telephone Cables ; Work began recently on a new Underground telephone system for Bryan a!hd College Station, M. C. Atkins of Bryan, district manager for the Southwestern States Tele phone Company, has announced. ; E.; L. Dalton and Company of Dallas was awarded the contract for the work and E. D. Sheridan, piember of the firm and *27 grad uate, of ^Y&M brought a construc tion cre\y to Bryan. ; Work ht College Station will in clude two sections of underground cable, one from Sulphur Springs Road to |the aeronautical engineer ing Wilcjing, and the other section extending from a point- east of Pushing [ Memorial library to a joint east-of the Academic build- ng and isouth to a point opposite ;he Campus Corner. / , ; Approximately 90 days \*iil be required To complete the work, At- nil About 100 ex-GI’s—members of the North Texas Cotton Variety Study Group and students in vet eran’s agricultural classes In the Blackland counties of Texas, reg istered for a | session at A&M to observe cotton work. The meeting was sponsored by the Texas 1 Extension Service and the Texas Planting Seed Associa tion, according to J. D. Prewit, acting extension direotbr. ; After registering, the group made a 1 tour of the Cotton Textile and Fiber laboratory, ending the evening with a banquet at Stu^a, Hall, ijvhere C. N. Shopwrdfeon, dean of the. School of Agriculture, gave the welcoming address. During the evening, Fred C. Elliott, extension cotton work specialist, and T. R. Richmond, Agronomy Department, showed slides of cotton work in Texas, while Bill Manning, also of the Agronomy Department, showed colored slides of his trip through the cotton growing sections of Old Mexico. - A tour of the Brazos Bottom plantation was made and work ob served on cottoq, variety, breeding and insect control. They were guests of the Texas Planting Seed ^Association,: at a noon barbecue. ‘ The group is made up of veter ans who were selected by their vocational agriculture classes to conduct cotton variety tests on their farms and to visit A&M. They represented every veterans’ agri cultural class in the area. Students are attending from Hunt, Collin, Dallas, Kaufman, Grayson, iFannin and Rockwell Counties. Lutheran Services In Student Center ‘ . Church services will be held Sunday for the first time in the new Lutheran Student Center in stead .of ;in the YMCA, Reverend Fred MgebrofA-Af the American Lutheran! Church of College Sta tion announced. Sunday School and (Students Bible Class will, begin at 9:30 a. m., and the regular Worship Service will *begih 10:45 a. m. The center, which is located at Main and Cross St, North Gate, will have • its formal dedication sometime in September. • I Dr John S. Caldwell Caldwell’s Jewelry Store Bryan, Texas -i- , . a,.,. h Jtometrist Rogers, ’36 Grad, New City Manager Raymond L. Rogers, ’36i grad uate of A&M, is the new city man ager of College Station. The new city officer was assis tant to the superintendent of A&M College utilities prior to his re porting fbr active duty in the Army in 1941. Rogers, a veteran of 36 months in Germany where he served as post ordnance officer at Amberp, was released from the serviiee this month with the rank of lieutenant colonel in the ordnance reserve corps. Dan Jackson Gone To Visit Mexico^ • Dan Jackson, a senior majoring in English, has left for a five week visit to Mexico City. Jackson plans to observe the habits of Latin Americans and perfect his knowledge of Spanish. He will return to A&M before the beginning of the fall semester. Two Grove Hits For Next Week i 1 The movies to be shown at The Grove next week are as follows: Monday, “Odd Man Oat” with James Mason; Thurs day “Nora Prentiss” with Ann Sheridtn and Lew Ayres. /' The movies are scheduled to start at 8 p. m. No admission will be charged. 4 -Li- i- ORDINANCE 119 AN ORDINANCE REGULATING TRAFFIC UPON THE PUBLIC STREETS, ALLEYS AND OTH ER THOROUGHFARES IN THE CITY]OF COLLEGE STATION, BEpIljoRDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, ARTICLE I WjDRDS AND PHRASES DEFINED Section 1. Definition of words and p irases. The following words and p irases when used in this or- dinande shall for the purpose of this oMinance have the meanings respectively ascribed to them in this article. Subdivision I. Vehicles, Traffic, Etc., Defined Seel ion 2. (a) Vehicle. Every device in, upon, or by which any persor or property is or may be transp orted or drawn upon a high way, 1 *cept devices moved by hu man power or used exclusively upon stationary rails or tracks. (b) Motor vehicle. Every ve hicle jvhich is self-propelled and every vehicle which is propelled by elqctric power obtained from Overhead trolley wires, but not op erated] upon rails. ■ (c) Authorized emergency ve hicle. | Vehicles of the fire depart ment if ire patrol), police vehicles, and such ambulances and emergen cy vehicles of municipal depart ments lor public service corpora tions as are designated or author ized bjr the (commissioner of mo tor vehicles) or the (chief of po lice of! this city). Section 3. (a) Bicycle. Every device I propelled by human power upon j^hich any person may ride, having! two tandem wheels either of whigh is over 20 inches in dia meter,! and including any device generally recognized as a bicycle though equipped with two front or two rear wheels. (b) Motorcycle. Every motor Vehicle having a saddle for the use of theirider and designed to travel on not' more than three wheels in contact with the ground,- but ex cluding a tractor. Section 4. (a) Railroad. A car rier of persons or property upon cars, other than street cars, oper ated upon stationary rails. (b) Railroad train. A steam en gine, electric or other motor, with or without cars coupled thereto, operatied upon rails, except street cars. ! \ t.. (c) Street car, A car other than ai railhead train for transporting persorjs or property and operated upon • -fails - priFieipiattyr -within - a municipality. Section 5. Traffic. Pedestrians, Unofficial Returns GiVes W. T. Moore f " • I; j{ . Lead Over York : •”' if - " ['■' i 1 1 Complete unofficial returns from the six counties .in the 14th Sena torial District of Texas Wednesday gave W. T. (Bill) Moore a lead of 1,483 Votes. Moore will be in the run-off August 28 with the incum bent Senator J. Alton York who totalled 8,824 votes to Moores 10,- 307. W. T. McDonald, the third man in the‘race and four times elected representative from this district polled 5,702. Moore at the present time is state representative from the 26th Legislative District. Brazos county supported Moore with 2,814 of‘its votes. York poll ed 1,247, and McDonald 1,977. The 14th Senatorial District in cludes the following counties: Bra zos, Robertson, Burleson, Lee, Bas trop, and Washington. r T ^ Classified Ads SE! jll With a battalion classi fied AD. Rat«« . . . S# a word per insertion with a 25f minimum. Space rataa in ClaMified Section ... 601 per oolumta inch. Send all claasifiedi with remittance to the Student Activitiea Of fice. All ada should be turned in by 10:00 a.m. of the day before publication. FOB SALE—Royal portable typewriters from |*our authorised Royal dealer, L. H. Adams, Bryan Business Machine Co.. Dial 1-IS28, 107 W. 22nd. Bryan. Texas. McKENZIE-BALDWIN BUSINESS COL LEGE offers refresher courses in short hand, bookkeeping and associated sub jects. Dial 2-6666. Bryan, Texas. FOB SALE—Cocker Spaniel puppies. Rea- sonable, 2600 Todd, block east of Hwy. 6, Bryan. DWELLINGS FOR SALE — Sealed bids will be received until 10:00 a.m., Mon day, August 16, 1048. for seven single family idwellings with out-buildings lo cated re 4s in the main improved wit i dwell ings or dwellings and bui dii gs in use for business. ARTICLE II AUTHORIZATION AN administration Section 17! AMhoriza police department is he£e thorized and,directed to en b traffic regulations of tl is | pijdi- nance and the regulation! applic able to street traffic in hi; qity of the Uniform : Act Red I >01 i