The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 18, 1948, Image 1

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-U.S.-FRENCH
^ HpLD JOINT W*AR G
. . HEIDELBEItGi G«hiia
18 Ai/e^n 4ii
ticfeps held
Germany yesterday
Rhi^e River.
The maneuvers were a dompara
' .tively small shjow, involving a to’
. of 1500 troojs- But
French officers fcaid the
'perhnental war ^ame ‘
two nations was: “successful.
They predicted other ! simildil
joint efforts
)TS
I^fEST
-W-I
COUNTERFEIT-TE^I
SHOW UP IK >;SOU T
DALLAS, Au*. 18 —M—Dal
lasites were warned yesterday ; i
the United States * Secret; Servi^ i
that counterfeit $10 bills were!
ginning to find their \yay in
the city and thiit a full-jseale ii
filtration is ercpedted wijthiri
neict few day^. 1 ! j
,Ijco J. Williams, Dallas tre;
ury agent, •said the bogus hi
were “nearly perfect” iahjd that
nation-wide syndicate Was in tl
process of i distributing!
throughout thje isouthwlestj.
r
QUAKER CITY; BUTCHERS
BEEF ABOUT MEAT BAN
'PHILADELPHIA* Au^. 18
tFl—The meri who sell theb® 1 '
were singing 'the blues 'today
most as loudljy jas the h^usewi-
who buy it. j ;
The Cvenmd: bulletin! sajid a sd;
vey of Philad|elphia meat! packer
slaughterers anid jobbery showed
that many, dealers are findi
business so b|acj they wc|uld clc
shop if they (j*dn’t dxpject soi
improvement by fall.
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PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER
Volume 48
rrtj:
COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, WEDNESD.
14 &M COLLEGE
iA(Y, AUGUST 18,1948
...
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INCOME TAX :LAWS CAUSE
OFNATIONfS iTRQUBL
18 4-'
bw York te
%
LONDON, lAjug.
Margaret Mead; of Ne
the International Coitfetenee (on
mental hygiebe; Tuesday jthat they
should -work oh the people who
write iricomet tax lawfc.J
“Apart froni iincreasing the bleed
^-pressure in jolder people, th(*e
laws also hi,v£ affected peoples
mgrital relat iopships, aijid might
h even- determine fhow mini
parents woul
iave,"^H«
chi,ldi <fn
said. L 1
? first! 18 Rambouillet rains
Tuesday at Af][Nano:i|l
leLbrouight ah average of
Utah rancher sei
SHEEP FOR $1,050
SALT LAHEi CITY. 1 Aug.
IA»)—The " " ' ‘
offered
• Ram salalbriiight
around $400. | [ j
The top pride was $1*050, p
; for a yearlihg!rambouiilldt fdr 1
. > Cunningham Sjheep Company
Pendleton, Oife, John K. Madsen
Mount Pleasant, Utah, j sold
. ammal.
T ■ 14
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KNIGHTS OF] COLU
OPEN 66TH
'J:
CONVE2
Aug. 18 f-<]
tant! laymen And non-cbmnromis|
leaders in all! walks of lijfe.
htm-
‘ HOUSTON,
lie dignitaries from throughout the
nation yesterday openjed ■ the 6 i|h
annua) convention of the Knig its
of Columbus Ijy attendihg sole tin
’pontifical mass at Houslton’s Ah-
nunciation Chiirch. j j :
The sermon!, was pjresented' j&y
the most R^vf. Louis J Reiclj^r,
recently consjecrated as bishop of
the New Auptjin DiocCse.
He said [the Catholic Chui
needs more than, ever bejfore-
If 4
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ROOKIE SHOWS HOW NOT !
TO SPEAK TO A GENERAL j
CAMP HOOD, Tex., Aug. 18
: liPt—Maj. Gem Miller Ainswoim
36th Division) commander, made
unannounced *■
. - mess hall to
cooks/weye! g j
“Good morr
first soldier l
“Hi,” answered thej soldier,
vlously a»ho(vtce in the
“Are you t^e ipesb i
asked the gd!)eral,
“No/ he’s j<nit with; theip can
‘T Want tjoi see him,]’ Geml-ijal
Ainsworth sbid. “Go get hun.” 1
“Well, all ijight,” the jrdokie
plied after a itioment’s pause. “
I want to Je!l|you: hd’s pn edg^
The record) runs no further.
5:30 a. m. call Ui.a
(lake surp tiat rocMie
ting break fast rigWt.
ing/’. hej gj-eeted rtpe
saw%
iUlCl, w
service.,
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The home of E. E. McQUILLEN has been loaded 1
make room for the STUDENT MEMORIAL CENTER.
on wheels and is ready to move off the campus to
ER. The McQuillens are moving the house to their
south of the college. j, . t J 1 * i!. J '■
Right to left, they are $&m Rutherford, McQuillen. B. D. Marburger, and Clifton Bean.
Cans. Wires. Pipes Must Move
■ A-'/ : ! 1 r ■■ :■ ! •
When House Decides to Travel
By H. T. WRIGHT A
j < ‘Hey, Johnson, cut those pbwei
lilies. We’ve got to get this bouse
moved off the campus before quit
ting time,” R. P. Bean of the Ru
therford Construction Company was
giving orders to his men moving
the houses from the site which has
been selected for the new Mem or*
ial Student Center.
At that instant,' the order whs
carried out. Power lines were cut,
skirts were pried away from the
foundation, and house jacks were
moved in position. Everything
was going nicely until the plumber
started disconnecting the water
pipes. Someone k had forgotten to
turn off the water main. But this
wras soon remedied and everything
was ready. 1 „ 1
After disconnecting all | utili
ties, 1 the stage was set for the
long connecting beams which the
house rest on while being mov
ed.
A long cable was placed under
the house and connected to one end
Visitors Should Visit Mexico
While Peso is Cheap - Woolket
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“Now is the time to visit Mexico if you want to get your
hioney’s worth,” exclaimed J. J. Woolket, head of the Mod
erns Languages Department, who has just returned from
o City. • \ 1 . •
Because of the recent break in the value of the pesos,
♦buyers can receive 40.percent more
for their money than they could
Mexico City.
V “Becaus
D/D. Bi
EjK, Aug,. 1)8
rices fori Bjabe Rtith,
f FUN1
IMORR(
J
BABE RUT!
SET FOR T
NEW YO
Funeral sedfices fori
v who, died laid night, jwiill be Held
- Vat 9 a. m. fpST) Tljiurlsday \rith
. a;>solemn reediem mass |n St. l^kt-
_•]/ ffek’s Cathedral on Fifth Avenue.
The Babe /will lie iri state] at
Yankee Staqium—sometimes qfljH-
that Rutlh buil
,ed “The hoe:
from 5 a. m.
TEXAS PO
REACHES
7 p. m. today.
5MIC
IO EP1I
JEW HI
AUSTIN, Tex., Aug.
0 vVeel |of
h 90
rted, i
health officijejls said (Tufesday.
Texas had iff worst poll
week* with 90 hifew
^ported,; sjtfte
Tues' , -' T :
the year 1
cases in 33
jnties reic
f
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tine. •
“We feel
assistance
from someorte helping
-a legation spokesman
4a-4
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SAUDI ARABIA TL
DOWN AM !RI€AN
i • WASHINGTON, Ain
Saudi Arab a has turn
l* $15,000,000 Ameipcap: ilo
■' of this cou
-•A . tine. ■ 1 i 1
Iboi
Five counties reported polio
thp first time in 1948). ^ I
Karri's County case^ juniedf^
from 9 the puevious ‘Afeek to U.
The 1948 official fetal
stands at 11132 cases, on!
'short of tme 1274 recon
1943, the aljl time record.
Approximately one month of
feather—the- weather !in w
polio seems to flourish)—remains.
Health officials fori a
thought the - dread disease
-be on the decline follpw
port of 89 cases for the; wee!
ing July 10, They said; today
disease’appsjars to bejincrei
in central U4d west Tqxad.
e woulje Jke to
ert'd and
****
said
Burchard To
Attend Convention
At Colorado LI
Donald D. Burchard, head of the
newly organized ’Department of
Journalism, announced today that-
he will leave shortly for Boulder,
Colorado, where he will attend the
annual convention 06 the Ameri
can Association of Teachers of
Journalism and the Arfidfican A 8 '
sociation of Schools and Depart
ments of Journalism. }
These conventions are being held
simultaneously September/1, 2, and
3 at the University of Colorado
in A Boulder, be said.
Burchard is a meipber of the
Auditing Committee pf the Ameri
can Association of [Teachers of
Journalism. •< •.■vk!
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In addition to his work on the
committee, Burchard will partici
pate in two round-table discussions
in which the topics for debate will
be typography and advertising.
Two Instructors
Will Attend Farm
w J 1 ,
Economists’ Meet
Two members of the Department
qf Agricdltural Economics and So
ciology will attend the'annual meet
ing of the American Farm Eco
nomics Association at Green Lake,
Wisconsin, September 13-16, L. P.
Gabbard, Department Head, has
announced.
Dr. W. Ei Paulson, Marketing
Specialist, will participate in a
roundtable discussion of problems
affecting cottoW His subject will
be “Needed ' Research in Cotton
Marketing.”
Dr. Paulson is a veteran of two
years’ research. in agricultural
marketing and related problems in
Texas. •
At the same meeting, R. G.
Cherry, Economist in Farm Taxa
tion, will present a paper on “Costs
of Collecting Farm Taxes”. Cher
rys’ analysis grows out of his re
search projects on collection and
expenditure of state taxes and the
causes of ad valorem tax delinq
uencies. v
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a few weeks agd/t- Woolket ex
plained. Mr* and Mrs. Woolket
combined business with a vacation
to take personal greetings from
Gibb Gilchrist, A.&M. president!
to President Aleman of Mexico.
Mr. and [Mrs. Woolket were
greeted upon their arrival at the
airport in Mexico City by Tomas
Marentes, assistant director of the
Mexican National Lottery. They
were his guests during their visit
there.
Marentes, who is a personal
friend of President Aleman, has
a son, Tommy, who attended the
Annex last spring as a freshman.
In an interview President Ale
man, mentioned the amiable feeling
between the United States and
Mexico, and particularly between
A&M and Mexican students. Ale
man asked Woolket to express his
appreciatibn to A&M College for
the training and consideration
which <A&M has given the Mexican
students in the past. —^
During the interview, which was
attended by Aleman, Woolket,
Tommy, and Marentes, President
Aleman had Tommy .demonstrate
his military proficiency which he
had acquired at A&M.
Woolket also talked to Gener
al Antonio Cardenas, a commander
of the 201st Squadron which fought
in the Pacific. General Cardenas
expressed interest hi the Aero
courses which are being taught at
A&M.
A reunion of former students
was- held while Woolket was
there. Manuel L. Ortega, a CE
major in the Class of ’20 and
present president of the Mexican
Chamber of Commerce, described
A&M in olden times. Youngest
former student present was Paa-
cho Serna, Class of ’87.
Woolket also met C. E. Scruggs,
Dan Jackson, and other present
students at A&M who are visiting
in Mexico at the present time.
Mr. and Mrs. Woolket left here
on July 29 and returned August
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TEXAS CITIES AIDED
BY NEW REA LOANS
WASHINGTON, Aug. 18 —<*>
The jural electrification adminis
tration Tuesday announced loans
totaling $6j,158,000 to 11 borrow
ers to provide electrical service in
farming areas.
The loans included:
Kaufman County Electric Co
operative, Kaufman, Tex., $160,-
000. Bailey County Electric Coop
erative Association, Muleshoe, Tex
as, $430,000. -
of the beam. Then the winch
truck drew the beam under the
house until it fell into its correct
position. This operation was re
peated on the other side of the
house. This completed, the; men
were ablq to breathe freely again
for that was the job they''dreaded
most of ill. '
Now the job of raising the house
to the trailer rested with the house
jacks and nothing could stop them.
Before the Campus Cops could ar
rive to direct traffic, .the hppse
Was rekdy to rol!. f *
Getting the house down the
main street was the only prob
lem left. High lines were mov
ed. streets were made wider, and
all garbage cans were moved.
Now for the procession.
Campus security men fell in at
the head of the column, and the
trucks moved out. Everything went
smoothly and the house was soon
moving toward its new location.
The hardest part of the job
was over when the trucks reach
ed the new house location, but
a new foundation had to be con
structed. Carpenters were on
the job; to do the work.
Three hours later the house was
resting on its new foundation and
workers were ready to leave. I^ast
minute jobs were .completed and
Bean and his crew movqd out.
Gyil Engineers
Plan Bryan Picnic
The A.S.C.E. 'will hold its an
nual summer barbecue tomorrow
evening at 7:30 at the £ity Park
in Bryan. ;r /f
All Civil Engineering;'students
and their friends; are invited to at
tend.
Tickets for the barbecue may be
purchased in the main hall of the
C.E. Building.
The picnic spot is Ideated on
Williamson Drive north of the Girl
Sqout house.
Henry Scott, Conce
Will Perform at Grov
« n o 'Described as Originator of
Versatfle Piano Style Will
L t I
Semester
Registration
Begins Monday
All students now enrolled
should pay their fees and reg
ister for their rooms begin
ning at 8 a. m. Monday, Aug.
23 in order to retain this fall
the rooms they now occupy,
Bennie Zinn, assistant dean
of men, has announced.
Pre-registration will follow the
usual procedure, Zinn said. Vet
erans must get their fee waiver
slips from the Veteran Advisor’s
office in Room 104, Goodwin Hall.
Fees may be paid in Room 100
Goodwin on Monday and Tuesday
but after that time they must be
paid; ift the Fiscal Office.
The Athletic Department will
have representatives 1 in Room 100
Goodwin from August 23 to 27 to
issue qoupon books to students who
have paid their fees.
AH students should be moved
into their newly assigned rooms
by 12 noon on Saturday, August
28, Zijm said. 1 •
Day ; students must secure day
student permits before paying fees.
Bids on College
Buildings Start
From $57 Low
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A $57 bid, if approved by
the Board of Directors, is go
ing to buy one of the college
buildings.
No, you cap, relax, men,
Pfeuffqr hasn’t gone under the
hammer; the bid is on one of seven
buildings for which bids were op
ened Monday in the Comptroller’s
Office. Bidder was Sam Ruther
ford of Mesquite who is on the
campus now moving three build
ings he bought at the last bid-
saty j I' ' . j*'
Other high bidders and pros
pective building-owners were A. B.
Syptak and Walter D. Lloyd, Bry
an; and Roy .C. Garrett and Irby
R. Adams, College Station.
Fpr bidding purposes the build
ings were numbered. Three hous
es remaining on the Memorial Stu
dent Center site were designated as
numbers 242; 244; and 248. A
house near Old Highway 6 was
numbered 256 and three houses
west of the new dormitory area
were assigned numbers 411; 413
and 417.
Syptak’s bids of $1379 and
$1239 were high, respectively, for
buildings number 248 and 413;
Lloyd’s bid of $3001 was the high
est submitted for building number
244; Qarrett ftfd $1875 as the
highest bidder on building number
256; Adams’ bids of $2217 and
$875 were high, respectively, for
buildings number 242 and 417; and
,Sam Rutherford’s bid of $57 was
high bid by virtue of being the
only one on building 411.
All bids will be considered by
the Board of Directors when it
meets to discuss the Memorial
Student Center bids, and awards
will be made between August
20 and 23.
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Number 28
ianist,
onight
By ROLLY C. KOLB YE
Those who like the boogie-woogie, rumbas, tangos
A 4-a 4-la A Vin a o An vivIiam UTammip T C!As.4
some “eight to the bar” samples when Henry L. Sect;, ,he wo
• • . _ • ' a« _ a .a a .a a ... a _' a ' _ .
pianist and hailed by thousands through-out the land f
the Grove tonight at 8.
Scott, originator of Concert Humor, described
and
his nei
awn
mor;
payed straight, will get
most versatile concert
m or art, performs fit
d’s
form oy*i
K
V
V
d drama critics as the
ill Rogers of the Piano,” and
e Master ibf the Piano/’
resetting something unique on
American concert scene. His
r represents a long and im
ive)
enfes,
mt, rtadio engagements, a sca-
at New York’s famous Rain-,
Roam, and a debut at Totyn
as America’s First Concert
ortyij
arrajl of theater appear-
abort pictures for Para-
ilton
IRY L. 8 1
admission is free/aR who come r
ed to bring chairs or show their yellow fee slips.
feminine Cries of Complaint
Follow Heckled Cigar Smol
By HAL BOYLE
t^P)—The cigar is sending up
smoke signals of prosperity—amid
some feminine cries of complaint.
| Last year 15,500,000 smokers in
the United States did away with
about 6,500,000,000 cigars. This
June almost 430,000,000 cigars
were released to the trade, 11 per
cent more than a year ago.
But these figures bring small
cheer to many women who persist
in the strange delusion that a man
who smokes cigars probably also
takes opium and eats small chil
dren. ,
Why? The cigar is as_American
as the vanishing redskin.
Yet the cigar smoker today is
the victim of a widespread female
conspiracy against him. If he
lights up his Colorado Claro in an
a(rplane, the stewardess flutters
up like an angry butterfly.
“Cigarette smoking only!” she
says, ferrying away thtf offending
hunk of weed.
You stoke up in a friend's house
and what often happens? His wife
throws open the ' windows ,tiqs
back the curtains, turns the fan
Einstein Couldn’t Pass
rX
em
Students Driven to Cheating
By Unfair Physics Quizzes
t
This is the fourth article on the
“Cheating” series. Before we have
pointed out why students cheat,
dealing primarily with the charac
ter of the cheater. The following
testimony to a Battalion reporter
by Hortense Smoltz deall, with an
other motive for cheating. j
All ijriy life I have been walking
the straight and narrow path.
While f was no fanatic!, I did at
tend church regularly and I parti
cipated in choir practice on Wed
nesday evenings.
I served my country during the
war, and I was honorably discharg
ed at the epd of three and one-
half years service. My record is
clean; I did my duty.
Upon my discharge f decided
to come to college under the GI
Bill. I entered A&M January,
1947, and I have been going reg
ularly ever since. If
While: I didn’t join the corps, I
have attended yell practice regul
arly, anjd I have never up-stream
ed. I haVe cut a minimum number
of, classes, and I am a constant
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eater of roast beef, beef, stew, and
meat loaf.
Ifyave always been kind to dumb
animals, and once I gave first-aitf
to a fly who had been hit with a
swattor.
When I entered school I was
determined to be a successful en
gineer, and I began the freshman
course in that study. As yet, I
haven't decided what kind of en
gineer I wanted to be. It wasn’t
necessary then.
I did pretty good in my grades.
I studied hard, and while I didn’t
win) 'any laurels in those first se
mester, I did manage to pass every
thing -with at least a C.
However, I was doomed. Last
January I registered for the
regular engineering first semes
ter sophomore curriculum.
Among the courses required was
PUlcs 203.
Now I won’t say that this course
is hard. I can work the problems;
I. can derive the equations that
are given. But I don’t believe Ein
stein himself could pass my prof's
quizzes.
His tests were the multiple
choice type. He would give a prob
lem, under which were listed sev
eral possible answers. Now these
answers weren’t derived from var
ious methods of working the prob
lem, but instead, they came from
possible slide rule error or a mis-
ilaced decimal.
In other words, I could get no.
Iredit for my work when I knew
e formula and could set up the
problem, if I made a slide rule er
ror in working it.
On top of Uiia, my prof insist
ed that I learn such stuff as
moment of inertia of various
shaped bodies, and moduli of
elasticity of varions materials.
Both of which things could be
found in any handbook.
It was these type of quizzes that
paused my downfall. 1 cheat on
1 hem, certainly. The professor who
fives these quizzes, engenders in
iis students a desire to even the
score.
If cheating is to be stamped out
I suggest that the type of
described bo outlawed.
here, I sugges
quizzes just dea
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Giblf,”
fn m
on you—arid sits glaring
baleful eye.:-
My own wife does it It ions ao
good for me to remind lerjthat
she thinks Clark Gable pa< kf| t<
rific he-man glgmor, and Gable
smokes cigars.
“If you are going to trjy
pare yourself with Gar!
says Frances, “let’s s
scratch.” 1 . . f ;
Nor does it influence wives'
point out thafothe Duke
sor, who did give up *a
for love, didn’t forsake
ranee of a good Havana)
Remembering what ha
the fine old lost art
chewing, the worried cij
tute of America has undl
campaign to placate the jh|di|s.
It said a survey disclmed! that
many women basically 0 >je it to
the way a cigar is usually sn okpd,
rather than to the cigail tsllf. It
gives these etiaueite tips:
“(1) Look before yoju
fot an ash on the tray is w
on the vest
“(2) Puff a good cig^i gently.
Laying a smoke screen mi y »sily
turn the puff that pleaaejs in|o the
cloud that chokes.
“(3) Please—n6 butts,
lion of/Unsightly buttn
en, oy ijii
Sc tt’s
sh ws
sp ofin
Im
tb
cert
promiscuously around t
will
wifi
*
11 antagonize the mo$t
’e.
“(4) Don’t chew 1 the dgjtar or
talk with a perfecto cla nned in
the mouth. Cut the cigfu v itn a
sharp blade; don’t bite of j ,nd
spit out the end. And ligjh; i v |th
a; match that has burned 0 f the
sulphur. It helps keep thje aroir a.
There you are, men. N>w Hfht
up a big two-for-fifteejn forma
Deluxe extra hemp sped il- - 1 md
watch your wife’s face) )ei m; in
tender pride and understai ding. To
keep her happy there is < ne mjore
thing you can do.
Swallow the smoke.
toll sc
ried
ibpse
lie
Cards Now
For Gradu
invitatip
Graduation
now be
Activities
floor of Goodwin HaH
Elms* assistant director
picked up at
s Office on tte!
am ot
dent Activities, haf
Students who wsl
at the end of the Second
mer session are urge<
these announcements
added.
1
is cm
Stride it
«co:id
Craly
gfrai uate
isui li
es
e has been applauded by thou
ojf college students for his
rioui satire of serious music*
played with great acclaim
istudenta at Notre Dame,
it l elnt, Annapolis, Michigan
te, ’urdue, U. of Wisconsin*
is U., and many more large
t«i. : pi
O’Steen, head of the de-
irieht of music at the Univer-
of Alabama, said, ‘‘Scott’s
expert blend of humor and good
mi lie is long overdue on the coq-
cei t strge. He will, I am afraid,
wii more converts to serious .mus-
ic ban all our college courses. I
ho e tie students in every college
arijj university in the country will
in and again Henry j L.
finsobie personality as he
through his^. brilliant
of the great 'musk we
uch. I doubt if one in a
could resist him.”
Scott) iis hailed as a master -of
pa itomime, al'brilliant concert pl
an *t and an authority on swing.
H< Utilizes these talents to. pro
se it a program of swing, classic^
an l hu nor. His concerts are deveiv
sii ed 10 as to please all muail
k> ere, but at all times he has hw
at lien<[e ! laughing. i
tmong his antics at the piano is
“I »y Genius” who makes awful
bi itak is while learning to play the
pi no. As the same genius at 9C
hej] ma ten exactly the sam^ mis-
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ne qf his pet tricks is playinj^
with njilttens on his hands. He L
faitnouii! for such renditions a
“I ow the Lost Chord, Got Lost
ar i “Ilach Goes the Weasel.” H
al 0 g vfts imitations of' a youn
la y taking a) cold bath.
yelln^ feelslips will be require
fo 1 a lpiittance because Of th
si irtaGt of seating arrangements
bi t anyone bringing their 1 owi
tl airs wilt 1 be admitted, C. G*
“1 pike 1 White said. ’ V
Colo id Qatar B, Abbott Senio:
tractor, for the Texas Ofganiz
Rererve Corps, said today tha
slice the announcement on Jua<
6 of the opportunity to re-entei
tl e Army on extended active du
2|0 Texas reservists have
pliti iion to don their khak
three-year enlistment,
The results of the applications
e being felt throughout the AnUy
the United States, as each d*y
reserve officers are being. ordered
U various cfmip*> posts; and sta-
ti ms. [t is too early for the effect
ti be felt in the overseas com-
npnds as most reservists are giv-
tin e to get their persona! af
fairs in order,
The Adjutant General of the
y has published a new list of
personnel needed by Septem-
SK 1 The need is principally
r company grade officers; how-
r, there are openings in the
'omeiis Army Corps, and twenty,
bliher branches besides the infan-
Appijcation blanks and further
ihforrr ation may be obtained from
(Japta n Stockell in the PM A
College Station.
gess Will Join
Staff in Fall
The Management Engineering
partment has announced that A.
Burgess will .join their staff
iiR as an acting professor.
Burgess is an expert on statts-
methods of quality control,
was chief of the' quality con-
sjection of the 8t. Louis Ord-
during the period
whoto M. S. degree Is
Jcal engineering, comes
from Washington Univer-
St. Louis where he was an
it proflessor in the M. E.
lent,
.-..J, ..dL
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