The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 22, 1948, Image 1

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    • *.. I#. ■ «
12
Ammbly
yesterday, jj
. - The At>r
ious after
lot to w5;
majority ol
He polle*
to 22 foir
A. BramuL.
date of the L
Evatt re#tfvje|ji 31 oj l
Hons’ vo !
to 20 for
CONTRlBlSmdN fr6
CULLEN pTOD
HOUSTON, jSept. 2t
“Thera is tipt ^ word ofitruth’
a report tpat !H. R., C uljen, H
ton oilman^ has contr bi|ted $1
000 to the diatps rights phesiden
i campaign, iudge Meiritt Ojbson,
director of ;i thi^ Thnnpopd-Wright
Campaign, iMared. .l '■
Gibson liid Monday ’"Not one
Volume 48
' ' . 'I
i. | ' f- , • , ‘
.. ' . . 4 • ’ i ■ ' / r ;
The Battalion
i: •
PUBLISHED IN m INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE
■ WFF
I 'v.
penny" h
Cullen, mi
pist who
p<»n re :e>
timilliOnaiite
-'r' ,
, K
i Wright ti^lJatmSjtV
GETTING ^EADY !
FOR THE AGGIES?
SAN ANtrONIQ, Septi 22
ihilant:
ilrmpj
£
4
fhwh Hall Race
Hot As Spence
Wins With Tie
By DAVE COSLETT
The latest episode in the
annual battle between two
long time nvals for the first
Town Hall ticket of the sea
son found T. R. Spence, man
ager of College Construction,
first bi&a neck tie.
For't several years,: Spence has
vied with Dr. W. L. Porter, head
of the Mathematics Department,
fbr first choice-of the Town Hall
reservesd seat tickets, • £ -
Determined to avenge last year’s
loss to Dr. Portei, Spence was at
Goodwin Hall shortly after-five
a. m. Monday, fully equipped with
a toaster, bread and butter, coffee,
.table cloth, aniT a few other es
sentials of an early morning snack.
There was ortly one thing he had
^ , . i l . r ’ J»a- *' •*. *1 ■■'■trrjs , -I^r A . ■<
COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1948
■ ■■■■■■ ■ Ajunniuh.
SEPTEMBER 22, 1948 ' i T
35 Submit Apffi
In Student Se
STATE PAIR VISITORS will
System exhibit In Dallas, October 9-24. This
Evidence has been til tajined that forgot—his radio. Faced with the
horse jneat! is being s>ld here fbr problem of doing without the radio
_ pi-oblem of doing without the radio
human coajiuihption,' Eh. ; A. |E. Ur taking a chance of losing his
Wharton .Chief 'vete] in^rian for I place in line, Spence hit upon
the-City Health Department, said j the • plan of hanging his neck tie
nTlIPKflAV.^ ft! • i !: ■ a /lrvrv*» LnrvK «»« /»1nov< Airi/trw«/tn
Tuesday., T . ,' on. a door knob as clear evidence
Tests conducted by h<l city and that he had arrived first
state health dfefcartme ity. of meat ■ ;When the Student Activities Of-
samples frottn three restaurants d|e- fj ce sta ff finally arrived, - they
finitely/indWted presencfe of horse found Spence waiting to serve
meat, be s«id.j / *• ' i l j v them toast and coffee. Porter, for
Onfc- of nhc ! restauijants subste- SO me reason, took an unosten-
querttly was closed/and charges are tioU * fourth place,
to be filed aga nst several persohs Spence, who had gotten the
during the tweCk.
1 il
this AAM
framework, designed by Ha) Moseley of A&M Architecture Department, will hold exhibits showing
progress of agriculture and amplifying the theme “The Texas A&M College System Serves You
Through Teaching, Research and Extension.”
Record Exhibit Will be Shown
By A&M System at State Fair
By VICK LINDLeV
How Texas farmers are being
helped by scientific research will
be shown to visitors at the Texas
State Fair in Dallas, October 9-24.
A huge exhibit,, prepared by
more, than^fifty scientists from the
A&M College System, will demon
strate new and improved crops, as
well as new and improved tech-
:
TU REJECTS SPEECH ,
BY NORMAN THOMASl
AUSTIN^Sept. 22 Norman HalTseats!
Thomas, socialist paryji’ nominee
for presideiilt, has beer rejected hs
a ^speaker on the U n^ersity bf
Texas Campus, C. Will aia Ladwiig,
Texas secretary of tiieL socialfet
party, said Tuesday.
Lad wig spid lUniversityf President
-T) S. Painter land Comptroller C.
D. Simmonjl 'advised lii» “it w|as
against thd rules of tqe univ<iir- (>•
number one ticket every year until niques of crop-growing, all of
he was beaten outTjy Porter, has which were developed by the A&M
once more resumed the victor’s ‘System'. The exhibit; believed to
throne and with it the choice Town be the largest of its kind Over
Panhandle Aggies
Divide to Initiate
Top OTexas Club
presented in Texas, will be a cen
tral feature of the AgricultufO-"
Building. , / „ .
Unlike many previous exhibits,
there will be no “hands off” signs.
Farmers will be invited to pick up
and examine samples of the new
est types of wheat, coni.rkorgh’pm,
and other agricultural products.
The information booth of the
exhibit wilt" also be unusual, in
that it will be manned by top
visitors. Certain days will be set
aside for experts in particular
fields. ,
| . i n
- For instance, on a day set
aside for cotton, there will be
present at the information booth
or elsewhere in the exhibit a
specialist in soils for cotton,
an expert in mechanical culti
vation and picking of cotton, and
an entomologist whose specialty
is cotton insect ncison. Similar
arrangements will be made for
other Texas crops.
- The A&M exiubit, which will ex
tend for 100 feet through the ^en
ter of the Agricultural Building at
the fair, will express the theme of
a huge sign painted above it, “The
A&M College of Texas Serves You
Through Research, Teaching and
Extension.”
One or more panels will be de
voted to progress in these fields:
grain sorghums, corn, wheat, oats,
Missionary from Germany
Lecture on Europe Conditi
Delmar Bunn, missfoiiary to Germany of the Cl
of Christ in Amerjpa, will lecture on conditions in C^htfa
Thursday at 7:30 at the Church of Christ in Bryan»
and Washington street.
Bunn, a graduate of George Pepperdine in Los A ig^i
La PnrnriP twn vnarx aoa ——L-.
went to Europe two years ago to>
take a part in the relief work of
the Churches of Christ in Frank
furt He studied, in the University
of Zurich, Switierlahd, to better
prepare himself for helping the
German people.
General Lucius Clay authorized
the admission of; the group of nine
Americans, including Butin, into
Frankfurt, Germany. Since August
‘y.
Pictures of Gant
To Be Sho
QB Club To
Films of the A&MMll
football game will
* *• 1 ' - i •■>. j ii I ^ ^ tiiat It >V ill UC IimiUJCU Wjr glcllll OUl gltUIIIoy tUIIlj Y>llvtlly uuto
WoolSridgf’paiik'selpt 2y SpW>lc P*| j* Tbe'men who”dcvelopwf Hic^cw ton, fotagc.'Scr 0 MiSs'wUl’dea
\
President Painter
rules, [adopted by ,
board 'Of regentis, pijoh bSt the uliji-
versity frois jointly spbnWing p|0
litical and sectainaVi gatherings.
“Tha sarrtfe file Wot Id
L ri bniveraiitv The name of the new group The men who developed the nev
sa u university , , . ^ 0 ’Texas A&M' P lants and techniques will be pre
tjiej” schools ruA „ sent to discuss their work witl
colored pictures projected on
ground glass. < ^
Each panel will show what re
searchers have accomplished or
learned and how they succeeded.
For instance, a panel on cotton
will demonstrate the genetics
procedures necessary in getting
wild or asiatic cotton to cross
with- native cotton, resulting in
a strenger fibre. Also shown will
be experiments now in progress
toward getting better produc
tion from the resultant hybrid
cotton. (,
Recommended types of farm
buildings will be shown by models.
The framework of the exhibition
will be unusual in itself, in that
the picture-panels will be zig-zag
ged through the exhibit space; and
will be of an “open” design, in
order that visitors may see all the
_ disnlays with as little trouble as
new ton, forage. Other panels will deal possible. Hal Moseley of the A&M
ment subject will be presented by a " d relia * P acka ^ 3 ^ night at 7:30 in the Assc
mem sudjeci win oe pithtjueu oy ,, «<,
as part of the Quarter!
program
JAY CAVILL was th
of the contest last week,;a
be presented with two ticket!*
the Texas Tech game, j "wunty
entries picked aH of the w inder^,
but Cavall’s guesses wege
closest
A new scoring systent !\ ; ai
best jo
vented to pick/ the best card] T ic
r i-..:
u
lEka#’*
ap ly to
Painter
Cooking
L ■
! V.
0 AUSTIN CLUB, afterfyell p
tice, Thursday; Room 108, A
demic Building; - .j
‘ “MA.Tfs
v
m., G
l
CHILI
CLUB, P- Bk, Thmjsi
Acadertlic
DENTON. C<
i 7:30 p. ra. fj ; T,
^ Academic Rui!
be elected
pildini;.
"NTY M
rsday,
ing. Qff
I
h.
GALVEsifOtl A&ii cjtUB, 7t|o
p. m. ThunsdajvJtoom 1129, Aoa-
demic. Bulking. ' - r
HJBK CHJB] after ye|l practice.
^ ‘ “ m, Ac*.
Club”, and At will include all stu
dents y-Jrbrtv Borger, Pampa, arid
Panhandle or the counties in which
these cities are located.
The first meeting is to be held
after yell practice, Thursday night
in Room 125,-Academic Building.
The old Panhandle Club was too
large and covered too much area,
dost* cooperation among
practically impos
sible.
There was usually no place to
with the subjects of soil cbnserva-
with tion, horticulture, education in ag-
rge
aking close
the member^
Juniors Name Twelve Nominees
For Offices At First Meeting
hold parties, because some mem-
jve. Smok- bers would Have to travel as much
or. Dean Bbuglton wjil Ispeak. ;,as 200 miles to 1 attend. The new
BEAUMGNT CLUB 7:30 p. At.? club, covering a triangular area
Wednesday, Room 108, (Academic of 23 miles, will be a much more
Building. Officers will he elected,' efficient organization,
and plans made for cojnkng sejn|(9- 1 Aims of the new club will be
tett ’' *§- 'j 1 j -- j|Fv more and better parties; bringing
BELL COUNTY a fcil CLUB, high school seniors to the campus .
7:3)0 >. im^TSlinrsday^Room IClJ, an| talking up A&M to them; and for the office
By C. C. MUNROE
Nominees for four class offices were chosen last even
ing when the Junior Class held its first meeting of the year
in the Assembly Hall. Doyle Avant, Jim Magruder and .Mal
colm McGregor were named as the class presidential nomi
nees from a field of 11 original nominees.
Three nominees were named for*
the vice-presidential post—George
Rogers, Ray Kinsey and 4lurt
Hoe#ner. Bob Speer, Clay Scott
and Bob Sykes were selected . Jto
demic Buijiing. Qffleers will providing closer contacts among
elected flnd plans made for the re ' ’
bming yt
dj ijplans niafle for the Residents of the area so news • of
p rides home will reach all
S$i couiiy A&M> • ' L —j
1
M CLUB
loom 2®
era u$ll
Room
ell practice, Ebom 20p,
ling, ii j
MARSHAL4IA&M
NTY <pi]UB, aftsr
AcadenllK
h* •,
p.m., Thun
domic Bull
ccra.
NVVARI»
Rood & If!
Elect: oA of offl-
bOUNTVrA&M
CLUB, Thu|sd»Ky> 7:80 ptm„ Rnoim
228, Academic, Buildli>gf Off leers
will be eleftishf
NEWCOMEftfS CLUB.f2;16 p.ih
Wednesday, YMCA Clapcl.
PANHANDLE A&M CtUB. 7:|5
p. m. TKursday, Room a05, Ai
demic Builcang; 1|
PALESTINE A&M |CLUB, 7:
p. m'. Thursday, Rppnii :306, A
demic Building.; > } II
PRE-LA\f SOCIETY, |7:30 p.i
Wednesday,| ^ M CA {Assembly
Rpom.. .v£]
SAN ANGELO TM.tly, 7:80
m., Thursday, RooiH^OLjAg.Dl
i \ STUDENT iflORI C ji T U RIIB
l-r COUNCIL MEMBERS^ 130 p. ni.
Wednesday,; reading rqom of YM
1 GA» j' . | T • T
TUMBLING CLUB, | 5 p. m
i Thursday, Mat Room | c|f Gym.i|
VETERANS* WIVE 3 5 BRIDC
1 CLUB, 7:3<J p. in., Thuriday, “
i >
- WICHIT
p. m. Thi
demic ?B^i'
WILLIAMS
' 7:30 p. m m
Academic
, , WACO
1 t Wednesday,
WEATH
after yell
I * 104, Ai
Coffee
- not aa a
. ed into
iT il
]iUB, 7:15
^23, Acb-
,V-
i; ,
LLS C]
y, Roon
COUNTS CLUB
CLUB t:30 p. in.
3m 121, Academfc.
)RD A&M CLU
to, Thursday,
iuildini. U
Were
as a
3An like;
s r’ii
:h-
Batt Classifieds
To Provide Free
Passes to Campus
By ,7. K. B. Nelson
Want a free pass to the Cam
pus .theater, Try reading the
Battalion' Classifieds. Begin
ning with the Thursday, Sep-
7 tembor 23,. Issue, the nam^i of
. one or more Battalion subsejih-
nrs will be placed In the ,clfltof-
fled section. These chosen few,
will be admitted free of charge
to the Campus theater on the
following day providing they
are able to find their names hid
den among the regular classi
fied adds. %
The only admittance charge
will be proper identification at
the box office window of the
. Campus, plus the 7 cent Federal
ta&. /. V •' •! :.
Written in fine six-point, the
give-away lines will appear
' .somewhere among the classified
adds couched in such terms as,
“J. Doe, the Campus aiwaits
you!". ’ - *|
If J. Doe is a very bright lad
he will simplyv have to read the
classifieds thoroughly to discov
er his free admission clause for
the following day.
However, this admission will
be good for only one day. Thus,
if Joe is a dullard and does not
discover his name, until All
Saints celebrations have com
menced. he will indeed be in a
sad plight, for his day is done
and will not roll around again
tor 33 months, providing ,tiie
Battalion subscriptions don’t in
crease in the meanwhile.
JK
i >
of Secretary-
Treasurer, and the men chosen to
file for the position of Social Chair
man were John Christensen, Bruce
Simoneaux. and Bob Lawler.
Acting class presid°nt Don Mc
Clure presided at the meeting
which' Was attended by several
''hundred members of the class.
After taking a voice vote, it was
decided that three nominees
would be chosen- for each office,
and then the final selection would
h» mode bv means nf ballo*^.
-■ printed in the Battalion, which
would he filled out and turned
into company sergeants and dor
mitory housemasters.
Avnnt, one' of the presidential
nominees, is a (petroleum engineer
ing major from Laredo, and n
t *riembcr of the Army SecuHtv
Agency. Magruder is an induct rial
engineering malor from Ft, Worth
•b “B”' Air Force. McGregor, an
El Paso agricultural engineering
major, is a member of "B" Field
Artillery. ; _.
The vice-presidential nominees,
Rogers, Kinsey, and Huehner, are
ell from Texas. Rogers is from Col
lege Station and u member rtf ‘B’
Field Artillerv. Kinsey, a cjvll en-
College architectural school de
signed the framework. After the
fair, individual panel exhibits will
be available for county fairs, field
days or other such occasions. (
Typical of the way in which di
visions of the A&M System are
cooperating in producing the ex
hibit is the personnel of the sub
committee resoonsibl** for the grain
sorghum exhibit. Chairman of the
sub-committee is T. E. McAfee,
agronomy teacher. Other membera
are R. E. Karner, agronomist of
the Lubbock Experiment Station;
Frade Hale of the Feeding and
Breeding Station; J. W. Sorenson
of the Agriculture Engineering De
partment, and L. S. Payne of the
Agricultural Economics and Rural
Sociology Department.
Most of the other sub-commit
tees contain renresentatives from
the teaching staff, Experiment Sta
tion and Extension Sendee. All
told, fifty men are serving on these
Rub-fommitte^s.
The general committee is head
ed bt D. T. Kiilough of the Ag-
ricultitjal Experiment Station
and inHudes A. W. Crain and
R. C. Potts, Agronomy Depart
ment; M. K. Thornton and J"ck
Sloan of the Extension Service;
Howard Berry, Visual Aids Lab
oratory; Hal Moseley, Archi
tecture Departme^p and R H.
Shuffler, director of Informa
tion.
Two other exhibits will also rep
resent the A&M System at the
State F^ir.
A separate Forest Service booth
W/ ^ 17 •: /■'il 1 will be near the main A&M exhibit
W HCO F OriTIS LtlUK) A smaller booth will be mainr
tnined in the Agriculture Hall by
A* TLkHMojJn-.r Hfswit ^ A*M System. Lights on K
At 1 nursday Meet huge mH P *of Texas Will show how-
J | the System’s activities extend;
The Waco A&M Club plans an throughout the entire state. This;
organizational meeting at 7:30 p. booth will also serve as registra
nt. Wednesday in Room 126, Aca- < tion headquarters of A&M students
demic Building. 1 and graduatts on Sunday, October
, This will be the first meeting of. 17, which will be A&M Day at the
the yeaf.; i I Fair.
than $126,000. The Army officials
and the German government offi
cials in Frankfurt have commend
ed this relief work.,
Bunn reports that more than
six hundred people are attending
the teaching and preaching ser
vices of the Mission in Frank-
] furl. One hundred and thirty-
two have become members of the
local Church there in the last
twelve months.
Bunn will give a first hand re
port on religious, economic, and _
social conditions in Germany. In with the lowest total wa.4
regard to the prospects for war,
the missionary has found that the
German peoole do not speak of
war as a possibility, but as a cer
tainty. They are very much afraid
of the Russians and the mistakes
of our military government are
overlooked in contrast to the mis
takes of the Russians.
Recent moving pictures in color
will be shown of conditions in
Frankfurt. Bunn will lecture in
twenty different cities in this
country and return to Germany
October 1. . X
Kace
yWiUfte
Hast Day To
lie for Posts !
ty-fivo • students had ^
ited their applications
didatea for the Student
te in Student Activities J
5 p.m. yesterday,
tiesday closed out the sec-;. J
day in which students may file
p appllcatiDiiR. Deadline fqr
g Has been set for 5 p.m. Fri-
ddiy, Nf R. Leatherwood, present
,, S< aate president, has announced.
Ml applications for positions on -
Ui|p Student senate, with the ex-
1
ill
an-
-5T
Newmans Appoint
Committees, Hear
Outline for Year
both from Texas—Houston and
Galveston, respectively— while
Lawler is from Gardena, Califor
nia. Christensen is an industrial
engineering maior and member
of ’A’ Cavalry. Simoneaux, a civil
engineering major is a member
of ‘D* Flight, and Liwler is a
member of the White Band also
majoring in civil engineering.
McClure reauested that all jun
iors fill out the ballots appearing
on page 4, of today’s Battalion and
hand them to their company ser
geants or; dorm housemasters be
fore 6 p.m.'Thursday. These men
will then turn the signed ballots
into the Student Activities Office
in Goodwin Hall, McClure stated.
Day students should bring their
ballots directly to Student Activi
ties Office.
Three new committees w<*rc fa-
augerated by the A&M Newman
Club at their first meeting of the
fall semester Monday evjening.
Members, of the club heard Pat
Ramsey, 1 president, outline various
activities the club will offer this
year. - .
Ramsey pointed out that the club
wishes every Catholic on the cam
pus to become an acHve member
and enjoy the benefits derived
from its organization.
The new committees that were
appointed were the Religious Life
Committee, the Intellectual Life
Committee, and the Social Lif»
Committee. The joint pumose of
these new bodies is to stimulate
the religious and intellectual life
difference between thej eqjmjct
score and the guesser’s ijeore* w is"
taken for each game, anil hhi i o
iewi|ri-
ner.
Cavall picked Villanqvk *vejr
A&M 20-«fTU over LS!l|bI 28
to 6; Arkansas over
Christian 34-6; and T<£l pver
Kansas by a 21-13 scorje. - .
Some close guesserst wen Dan #
Hrachovy and H. K. Haims, lliu-
chovy failed to give Abilu) t Chrs*
t’an tfegir lone touchd »v n,l and
Haines gave Villnnova dn dii f sr 1
onlv 13 points. <1 j
No entry was consideree u ilrts
all winnera were picked jc< rr ct
Coach “Bones” Irvin will ta k
what may be expected fr >m
Red Raiders this week ini ! at
tonlo. Th addition, he will g
short talk on what may Jm e|pcjc-
ted from his freshman tda n.
Aggie Rambler,
Reorganize Fo
Fall Semester
ct ition of tha freshmen at the Ait*.
blasslfied as a aopho- j
mitre, have attended A&M for the
tv o previous semesters, and haye
ft: overall grade point ratio of one j
ot mbr* in order to be eligible. .
The Student Commissary will *
ai plication form promising to live
in the urea or dormitory which he
represents for his tenure of office.
Tlje tenure of office, according to
tli!'Senate Constitution, is one
y< tr, Including the summer ses-
si ns provided the student is pre-s*
er . in summer school.
Election of three Senators from
th i. Frkshman Class at the Annex
w Ll held kit a. class meeting ■'
th ire; Bo it will not be necessary
fo ■ thorn to file their application!,
aflssification as a freshman at
nnex is the only qualification
owing students have sub-
■
-
Ited; applications:
nidtory 1
Rijdolph Li ( Schodde
Dmitry?
Charles Mattel ^
miltory 3 ; | '
Robert Gilchrist ’ •/', *
U<j>yd Baker, Senator-at-large
By BUDDY LUC
The strangely melodiojsj
coming from the general jvi<jjini|
of the Music Hall Momjla ? iiiojht
were not echoqs from ( raid mi
Jones, but the Aggie Rinnfolersj
warming up forAhe i948-f4f» sthqol!
year.
The Ramblers are staking obtl
this year rather short hand< d ne r d-
ing at the outset one l o > Wi Is
type fiddler, t a corresponjling steel
guitar player, and a bane fifldler
man to round out the agyr eatk n.
One addition to the Runlblers!
this year is feature ackoHIm
of the student as well as to offer' Bill Cree, a junior busimfs
him entertainment within Catholic
surroundings.
. it
Bill Miller, a senior from San
Antonio, was appo'nied head of
the Religious Life Committee and
Alex Sechelski with Ben Edwards
were approved as co-chairman of
the Intellectual Life Committee.
Creed Ford, a senior from Hous
ton, was named as head of the So
cial Committee. Bill Halcomb, sen-
ion student hailing from Sap An
tonio, and Charlie Mattel, junior
from Odessa, volunteered to be
come Athletic directors within the
club.
■»r
loiter Allowed i.. C • .
Dorm Equipment, Magazines
Financed With Coke Profits
her of ‘B’ Flight, is an aero major
from Lane City.
Stv*er and Scott, two of the
, Recretary-Treasurcr nominees, sre
business majors. Speer is a mem-,
her of ‘A’ Infantry and comes from
Donna, while Scott w a member
of ‘E’ Flight from Dallas. The
third nominee for Secretary-Trea-
surer, Bob Sykes, is an animal
husbandry major from Ballinger
and a member of ’B’ Field Artil
lery. _
Social Chairmen nominees Sir
moneaux and Christensen are
Wichita Falls Club
To Meet Thursday
• > • i *
Ah important meeting o#" the
ichita Falls Club has been plan-.
hr j
for 7^16 p. m. Thursday hi
223, Academic. Building,
Charles Davis, president, has an
nounced. I’
\
Childress Club To
Discuss 2 Dinners
The Childress County A&M Club
will hold an organizational meeting
at 7 p. m. Thursday in Room 226,
Academic Building, according to
Howard Mitchell, chairman of the
itcheH said that plans for a
rganizal
Mitche
stag dinner and
beque will
meeting.
i ■' ' | • ... y*
tion- committee.
be
a Christmas bar-
discussed at the
By EDDIE SMITH
“Yo ho ho and a bottle of Coke”
should be the new song at A&M
if figures .released on Coca-Cola
machine profits for the year are
any indication. Totals for the year
ending September 1, 1948, show
that imbibing Aggies- consumed
enough of the beverage to bring
a profit of $10,614.92 to various
student funds. $326,38 of this to
tal was gleaned from the ma
chines at Bryan Field Annex.
The $10,188.54 made on dormi-'
tory machines on the campus was
divided up with forty per cent go
ing to the' Student Activities Ac
count for overall campus use and
sixty per cent going to the cumu
lative fund of tile dormitory in
which the profit Was made.
According to Spike White,
Student Activities head, much of
the dormitory fund is lost due
to breakage expense which most
be deducted from the sixty per
cent before it is applied to the
unit fhndJ <*< • .f * ' •
t ■' * r . ; * A.
The Student Activities Account,
located in Goodwin Hall, uses its
forty per cent to finance Various
carrtpus club meetings, \jjieet ex
penses of visiting speakers and to
improve other student .facilities
around the campus. The ^public ad
dress system used at boxing
matches was obtained through this
fund as were the flowers presented
to the Aggie Sweetheart at the
TCU game last fall, i
The company commander or the
student senator in the case of non-,
military dormitories must approve
all expenditures from the unit
fund. Some of the money goes for
reading material in the new dor
mitory lounges, some for athletic
equipment for the more energetic
members of the outfit. Recently,
Hart Hall donated a portion, of its
fund to the Breazeale Loan Fund.
The unit fund may also pc used
for parties provided none of the
money is used for the purchase of
intoxicating beverages.
The Annex profits of $326.38
are divided in a slightly differ
ent way. Forty per cent goea to
the, Student Activities Account,
bat the other sixty per cent goes
to the Freshman Class fund. Ex
penses incurred from class
dances and parties are paid from
this fund. 5 -
v . ^ . 7. ,
In the past year broken bottles
have taken a heavy toll in profits
despite precautions taken by both
the Coca-Cola Company and col
lege authorities. During some
months several of the dormitories
have realized no profit at all, their
entire sixty per cent going toward
the replacing of bottles./
from San Antonio. Returning
bers from last year’s hi n
Tex Fields and Buddy Luie
The initial practice si>8iiojh by
the Ramblers was held in 0 e mne
of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. ’idyit in
College Hills. The Ramble i]we|ro
guests of Miss Virginia PifwjL
bride-to-be of Ch"st»*r 31 ^
who was the Accordionist' fci i
er of th» Ramblers last ¥$ if,
The Ramblers expertr to f - r
heard soon on their old fi mjliar
spet ov-r WTAW. 'T f(
Any fiddlers, steel gu U (Liila f
era, or base fiddle pullers j itarei t*
ed in joining the Rum il irsf for
this school year shook comajct;
Buddy Luce in Roopi C-ljO Wjdtpn]
JIall as soon as possible
j'
a
u
diaries J. Matscl, Jr.
Dormitory 9
Ribhard W. Denny, Senator-
at-largt'
miltory 10 /
>ba Scrlmgeoiir
Dormitory 11
T.!A. Carlton, Jr.
Walter Wendlandt, Senator-
[ at-large also
)rge R..'{Edward!
es H. Simpson . . V
. *y I* ;
W iliam M. Phllly, Jr.
miltory 15
s
rics D, Cabaniss
B^’an Day Students .
bert J. Ransom
Jacob M. Russell
Claude Lawrence \
Bi yan Annex (Non-freshm^n)
' Marvin L. Ifltone • "L 7
C'4|llegi View
Monroe C. (Neff ■ '
John W. Tlppit
illtip
Jack Shepherd
Howard E. {Brass
Mjjlner Hall
JOjscph S. p'Connor '
tchfill Hull
i AW
V#
w
Art Howard
I Stanley L. Rogers
ryrtjr Hall' jjT ■
I rtjjrks D. Klrkhu
Harry Ratiey
, cTh. Burk
dt<4
T.!l
am
; :
m
, T
.ill
A. Bnntft
Tliomaa JJLeger •
.j! —Ut
An El Campo A&M Cltb
formed in Room 207 of i,t|e
demic Building after yell
Thursday night, accordin;
Craft, senior business
El Campo.
1 The club is being fo
request of exes
area, Craft said
missary Will
After Sale
1
>
Rifle Team Wi
Discuss Tryou
Captain G. E. Hedrick
appointed manager of
C Rifle. Team, haa
meeting of all men !
in trying out for
Team.
The meeting will
the Library, Ross
p. m. Wednesday.
1
r
"j- w.
.
11 > !} .• 1 14'
student Commissajy wijl
i soon as the dose-out «slc
romplcted, the student piauagpr
atijnounced.'l *• > i ,
le said that this store, avail*
tc| students and their wives,
red | as aa emergency measure
»n yeteran students needed it.
ied has now diminished.
4s have been reduced in this
e concluded.
Mi
t ; ■
^ing out saley h
Ik A&M Club To
laii Party, Dance
; .-1 1 ,• i
Polk County A&M Chib will
1 its first meeting of the year
f:30Th '
1
31
lub president, announced
»y-.r
Thursday evening jn Room
ed
will,he made for a Thanka-
Christmas
from Polk
Academic ’ Building] C.
,
msM . u
are asked to be at tiiia im-
meeting, Jones said.
* i!
U