• ‘■■'••SSj 'i : ppt j. •• by staff ■; and Infant Ar ;a f • . '4 ,i_4~ ives Dormitoty / Cadet Corps Orj ■ ' • • . ■. V. : v; • I /' ' ~ ents for the 1948-49 school year have been an- . t commandant. 4 i . eterans, “A w Veterans and “D” Veterans will occupy Dormitory 12. the first floor; “B” Veterans, second floor; “A” Veterans, third m floor. ^ .^OTT ..tr. on t jlfirst foot, secon floor; “A’fl 1 I flooi and “C” or. f- tory-A* nr? u floor; “d* ArtHleri, tl “C” Af llery, thi d and “A” Arti efy, fourth Ki ■ - flo ° r ; IDorce, thlnf fl “A” QM, Dormitory ti firat floor; “]!}’ floor; “A” Or&i and “A’* TC i! floor; floor. .. f’orce, ^second ill units. if *A M Seniors, Seniors, third . fourth floor, used for over- Maroon h" half of third i ;ISenior " Sf : I - : w. . ♦ ■i ' \ •r 1 -I • I 1 ;■ r ; l •v'V *7 ■ '7 m u 1 • v 1 ri. 1 sS r 17 S-' .7 ' 4 ! • - fir r : : 1 floo ■. * \i Artillery. V rd, floor, second \ •• I m BOX TURNER Is dirtctor of the SINGING CADETS and the AGGIELAND ORCHES TRA. Turner is a graduate of NTSC with a major in music, and he has studied for two summers under FRED WAR ING. ! Expense for labor and materials represents about four-fifths of tho total handling expense on green- wrap tomatoes at shipping points in Texas, according to a prelimin ary study made by the Agricul tural Experiment Station recently. If packing costs are to be low ered, such reductions must be ef fected through greater efficiency in the use of labor and materials’ Administrative costs represent 9M: percent of the total cost of shed operation *nd management repre sented two thirds of all adminis trative costs. Wage rates in the Lower Rio Grande^Valley are relatively low but thiaVdoes not necessarily mean that labor costs Will be correspond ingly low.7 Available labor may be very inefficient unless properly supervised and trained. Hand la bor should be eliminated if mech anization can speed up the process and yet be practical. The Klondike is not in Alaska, as> most people believe, but in northwestern Canada. -Lc V -; J ir i»1 ■ 7*-'£ v 47' 'il vv . ■ " .. ’«■' 7 7. > ... ■ / ; F7. • ■ _ I 1 ' • M * 7; 1 r-y ' 'h W V- 1 \b ■ Km&S&i t M f: 0 ""I Page 6 tftfc B La Chi in Washington, D. iwards were for “Chapter :ieacy” and for “Profe^ /tchievement." awards % - Mi « rfs ?*/ A m HAl T .1 ■. • OME AGGIES f \ - - J- •sr’ J It Vou Need Perfect Fitted Uniform ■'I 1 'j' . I . ' •. •• : 4 I hi ’ " ' •' V . : | « f ;h ' ! f 0=3K>B=0 ArSEE — 7 jUniform Tailor Shop MENDL AND HORNAK ' WELCOME FRESHMEN * i' - f e out to Aggieland to see us — In retuAi we promise you that you can buy regulation • • i' • a . ^ Tailor-Made Dark Green Slacks ; 7' T THE SAME PRICE AS READY-MADE 7 7 i All [f ,7 V.id -Il 7 7. '; < TYPES. OF TAILORING ‘U I- : 4 UBIK & sons ■A-\ Uniform; Spedalists '■?: i* 52 YEARS OFTAUORING . ’ ■ ■ v t ■ f North Gate . * 1 > ™ ; TT • ■ v. •! V '■^1 tr v ’r I > ’ 'ilia- r 4717 : 'I • 1 • , 7 : • •tK 7 7, ■ 7 t • ^ /• • .- k : I i 4 7v ,1 4':. -v. T - iv l -l ■ :. I hit MM. and family are recent arrivals ate being offered this fall. • 7 - : 77. • •' i • ‘ ’'jT T^S HEAD 0P JOURNALISM DEPARTMENT, D. D. BURCHARD, in College Station, three Journalism courses in Burchard's department Head of New Journalism Department Has Had Experience in Both Teaching and Writing By H. C. MICHALAK A working newspaperman, Don ald D. Burchard of Chicago is head of A&M’s new Journalism Department. Burchard began his career in Journalism while a soph omore in college. He got his start by working on the school publica tion; the head of the Journalism Department was sort of lazy and let him do all of the work and the fact that the Professor lived at his house helped out too. During his senior year, Burchard was editor of the school publications. That in itself was quite a job. “ Upon graduation * from 1 Beloit University in Wisconsin, he had a job lined up with the Bell Tele phone Company to begin in July. However, the time element ex tending from January to July was just “a little too long to wait out, and being financially embarrassed he took a job with a small Chicago newspaper. Just a few weeks later the paper changed hands and,' as the only man left of the old person nel who could write "headings,” he was given a raise in pay and promoted to wife editor. When July came, along he was making more money than the Telephone Company would pay so he did not take the job, ; ^ . During the years he has worked in advertising, magazine writing, newspaper work and journalism teaching. . U One of his most exciting exper iences was when he worked for one of the Hearst papers and covered a gangster war during prohibition. All of the action took place at a gangster report in Lake County Illinois. On this occasion, known as the 3 ■' • Fox Lake Massacre, two rival gangster, gangs were at a road house getting all liquored up when they dedded to engage in a nice little gangster free for all with machine guns instead of the usual broken bottles and brass-knuckles. These boys went about it in a busi- enss-like manner by taking their sub-machine guns out of their fiddle cases and really having a target practice session. They used garlic oh the bullets to make death certain from a wound even if the wound was not fatal. When the shooting was over and the smoke cleared away, about 15 men were ready for the morgue. Burchard wentto the inquest next da]f to cover the story for his paper ahd it was the only time that he. ever became sick from what he wrote about. The bodies were in a small, hot, ill ventilated room. The stench of garlic fumes was just a little too much for him. After several years of news paper work, Bufthard realized the dream of every newspaper man. He owned and operated his own paper in Oakgrove, Missou ri Burchard got into journalism teaching when he took over the department at Butler University. During ; his work on newspapers, one of his jobs was that of break ing in hew men. Heiiked it, so he hqs been teaching ever since. From Butler University he went to Oklahoma A&M where he was in charke of thb Technical Jour nalism Department. He went to South Dakota State College of Mechanics and Arts. The highlight of Burchard’s teaching came last year when the - U|< ^ - ~ - Journalism Department of S. D .4. i • *' f K 'H A V ’ Naturally I’m Pleased v *. Mi THE NEW— ESOUIRE LAUNDRY SERVICE j : * DOES MY CLOTHES THE WAY I WANT ' I. • :ii "■ THEM ... AND QUICK TOO! ■>. i* H * t • ! l l .. “Makes it easy for a man to look his best” ■7 • J ^ ~ » • , *’7 A new 24-hour service for men’s wash clothing. A complete “BACHELOR’S BUNDLE”—shirts washed] starched and finished on our new Pantex laundry units; those difficult work clothes washed and i , N:! ' j p*; '!* < • ironed, pajamas, sox; underclothing. \ ' ' / •i- “■ . Try ESQUIRE today! / 7! i . f , J 108 N. Washingto: 7 7’ ! | : • •. 1 7. . Bryan, texas Phone 2-1304 % J : . J 47 7: j State won two of the most cherish ed awards in Journalism at the National Convention of Sigma Del | LADIES 0 : “ 7 1 Come in and see thA 11,1948 Jouri aliki goini to coun » from (He H has been added to Two other courses ikm’ 415 and 416 are also offered; these two been transferred Sociology Depart- n 416 is a course writing with a little nagement thrown in. classrooms for the ill occupy four west comer of tulre .1 fit ** v WAS* VV»| W VMtO. VV/ SSSM* a ; a iy i ime about journalism or anyt ng else. “ i j . r ■: In the Next m li'..' _ ‘v Aggies Welcome. LEON B. WElSS • f' ” College Station 1 L ! ■ * 1 I ■ Offers you the very best X. top quality and CLOTHING & FURNI$ Civilian & Milita Ready Made & Made to ! > Location: Next to Camp / ! f ’ ■i ^ " . ■ .‘V ± iunc % IE sire theatre GIELAND als in . . Y 4 TERS { . and HOSIERY • • i • 7 . t . :-'r.. iting to find out any- ■P1 new department willljece vei a warm reception fTom ~ ’or Miller. Burch- persons in all fields come by to talk to him -Hr. *• ■7 rich egg weighs about i * Is. The, empty shell can 4. ontents of 18 eggs of ‘ fowl - .. \ . 1 ~t— 1 • ; ■ ^ . 7 ‘t,’ 1 • " • ' I , . U ■ I-. » : {• - •fi;..' \ ! 'Mi •*% '! * / ■ * >. X: I’ 1 Mi ' j , . . A A ' 1 ■ •7 .7 ■I-" BUY YOUR UNIFORM I * ' ■ , • i \ L «T - ••• ' ‘A . ' . >c 1. k. H • »- < iii? * ; S| If ' Iflfe •% \ \ Hi JlsP v , . wmmm . r -M , -• i i WM i ‘•Sr « 0 m Stop in to Regulation find Qualitj certain to 1 4 ,: 7 r .. M’’ 1-7177 j >- •*' ' I I ' i ..1 V'| , Our salesmen are thoroughly familiar we will be happy to show you our Uniio < ■. • '.I COME IN AND MEET THESE AGQIES . ■ '• I - \ J. H. Conway, Jr., ’SI Ray CopuH, ’47I * .’T ’ f ‘ uj> befl(>re iiifoi CONWAY & i i • 7 1 03 North Main ,.. « ... - 7-7 !■ ) 2,7. ‘: i ■ fr j & Co. f you buy your Here you will that will be t . Mck B>b t f T and 1 v, 1 \ : ' •' •j.. •i SW-'*’ 1 v ■ r . ♦ fu ■ . •. 7: ,7 *•' ' L w 7 m . • i-i ifi 74 , y, , m 7. r.Y: I ~ o Sis: i •' IsIa 1 [v.- 177 77} ft ■ T ia