The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 29, 1948, Image 1

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    i IPAA CX)NDEMfe ?
OIL PROGRAM T
SAN ANTONIO, Scj
The Independent Pctro
nation of AmerieiM
nod a proposal oil the Nltilohal J
curity Resources, Board that pottp-
leum production i,b^ cuj'tailed so ;|is
to create! an exejess produ '
parity.,' I «' 4 I '--Hy. I
Volume!
The associqtioi i’» ninjj
. wlopteSMjBfron
WordedresolutiOin branding the
nual conVentiji
JESTAI
or . » ca
WEDNESDAY, SI
p!fil
•; !;!][
t:4
riX':
' v
m 1
■! M.
II j l:j ■
1 ^
j
29,1948 I
, pmpAal as pUIMaS fbarai
j r • “It does not gfive eff«t'to
s historical ability of the * ipilijs
to find oil in evifr increasing ((uun-
titles,” the resolution read.7
The resouifetf board last wjjek
revealed it is RtudytntfAtt prop<
culling for 'siichi!curtailiinCnt of
. ,S. production bjj' T,000^000 ;barr«ls
«luily, with ilroflueqrs to tje co|f»-
pensated for th|ir losritt ihrodrf
KoVerument (jtubaidy. ii
An excess j prfxluctiv)?, I (|apach:
Was deemed , csllenlinl 'for | use i
event of u natioouil entciydHcy. :
Vkourkhtal ilium pIan
I FOR (‘IVlLlA.V DHERaNHE
U PALESTINE, ’Tex.,2ft
rijpi—iJofeiiHC; Secretary Jairtes
Forrestnl will ni)noune0'within 1
' ! Or three weeks A not iohdl plip
' ^fviliairiSdeferjseJcol, ONoiff* 'L
itt, e^ecAitiVe for the Tcxfi« inilji-
u ry district] Wild the: Palesljhic
nny advisory Committee Monday,
rf Col. ^hbott fold PorreiAaVs ich
.vHian defense plan, already in.tihc
process of dev^lopmeflh jwlill he
i recommended bi stnt$*: fpr] their
Ihction. He jemjbhasiz^i thp ; we
• Pbrrestal plan W1I be aavisjorti in
j nature and will not |*|j phue«|ed
i after the civirlisih defejifrafe brbglriim
i of World WarTl. Instead Lt will be
j a “disaster plan” foij us^ in tihe
J event of an emergency.
“We don’t want to lUanh people.
about the imminence of Aar,” he
said, “but I think we all know
what the next ijyar will he.”
EUROPEAN POWERS 1
UNIFY COMMAND S
PARIS, Scpt.[29 -iJPt— The de
fense chiefs o^ the-: five-power
western European alliance annpun-
?sdavt til
am
•i
JEOIRGE G. ALMllElMIRR and family beat the housing shortage in an unusual fashion.
i te«ie<a#ewl eun n laK»!•«■/• nr In \2naa/ Ilaau k^an iieanumaiftAjI ln#n a #Iipaa i»4w\m I**tfTI 1* H j
, .. # rir _ . .. r ; „ The!
ghway in New Jersey has been converted into a three room home with a
r the daughter. Just another odd example of how to beat the housing
f—i—it— 1 '! i—rH- 1 '! 1 » i— ii "'
Look Under the Surface
— ...• .ii.,!,, ,11,,.j i’i Ini.
Cifop judging Requires More
Than Touch, Students Find
ll .a-., ( . ( - 1 f i ’ . . 1 ! , I; -. !
Jjey arb '.setting up
elements ofi a ; land,'; sea] and air
eed Tuesday
command, to become! part of a
permanent orgainizatibn. 3 , [];
No details* were givOiu' The \ de-
. fense ministers of Britairt, France.
-Belgium, the! Netherlands and Lux-
-embourg held' i tfiteir;? ifeking | -or
joint defense measures lb the high
est of secrecy |t the’ F!i*dnch For-
Kf|cign NHnistiy offices, .j | 5 - ‘ir
I’ERON RETAINING
HIS POPULARITY If
LA PLATA, mi
—WP»^-p'ive more fte^tdiiis ?|iaVi|
been arrested In the; $dl|ge(| plot
jidejnt Jdprt J). Wron
IGIL C. CARAWAY;
‘ ' J i * • I / j • !• I ' LI ' I ' *|
Judging crops Is very similar; to
judging ir beauty contest— you
can’t gof by outward appearance;
alone, jjl' ’ , ]
It takbs touch, feel, smell; cdlor
and tastjj to tell the hjesjt in a
■i ops judging content,” were the
first woods-of-advice given to the
14 - prospective members of the
Crops Judging Team by FJ.Gi/
Collard, Agronomy instructor and
coaph of it he team. j] j|
The c|ops Judging Tpam, whiefc
his goal first! place in both coh-
teskvji '
The two contests are very
similar and are four and one-
half hours long. Identifying 187
crop varieties, weeds, and dis
eases and giving their scientific
names and localities where they
are found maike up the first one
third of the contest Commercial
grading of hay and grain, ac
cording to United States Depart
ment of Agriculture Standards,
is the second part erf the contest.
While in Chicago* the group will
visit a large flour mill, the Chica-
is competed of three men and one go Board of Trade, and attend the
alternate!] will go to Kansas City! annual meetiing of the Student
U!
and Chi
Collegia
Novemb
al Inter
Contest
spectivel
placed
contest
contest.
igo to enter the Nations
Crops Judging Contest^
23, and the Intemation-
ollegipte Grain Judging
lovember 2« and 27, re-
In 1947, the A&M team
fth in the . ifinsas City
nd third irii' the Chicago
rhis year Collard has as
Section of the American Society of
Agronomy. Virgil C.
president of the Agronomy So
out three nights a week and will
have a four and one-half hour
elimination contest each Sunday
up to November 14. The fonr
high point men on the elimina
tion contests will be selected as
the team members to make the
tmpw •?
According to CoUatfl, most col
leges that have team* ehtered in
these contests give/ academic cre
dit to students who try opt for the
team. This institution prefers to
keep the contest on ah eixtra-cur-
ricula basis.
When Collard was asked what
was required of a student] to make
the Crops Judging Team, he re-
p,,plied, ‘Those boys making the
mmv ! cro P s teani are abundantly instilled
ly
JKTSd tourer TttTSidSS i «»*>«' aMttS-. P«-
Section of the American Society i scrvanc 1 e ’ jurosity, mdgnjent and
of Agronomy; will attend this!» ^ niemory. The ability to
meeting.
> The prospective crops team
members are presently working
rf§?p
11 to kill PwAidArt
and his wife, ]bringhi|i|![ Abe potpl
in custody to ft2. 'll
ro§.|«h'
mi
IJI OUSUKiy IjO i(£. •fc-.HIM-f ''*1
f, Peron ha* qharged John Grif
fith, former qultuml ; 1 iiparljp a*
i the U. S,' Embassy hePi i witit be
ing the lend fr if the j>lpt] Griffith
now ln|hu tin|}»8 in, -Ybntevideo,
Uruguay, hi is branded »T* acriiiu-
ti'oitK an:ii "dolpctiv<j||i|t|y/’ ji
RUSSIANS
UP ROAD t f
VIENNA, Ajustrlai |c|)
l/W—RuiiH[»ii,t|ooj)* |6| tl
day stopped all Anmririip auix)i|m-
biles lyirout!’ to the Ah ri Iciin »lr
base »l !TulliniMon<&y> <
‘‘t Aim?r(euh! mJlhpriUi’it |nld ;tley
^ plnnned Ino protest, Anie ‘lcan (io tr
ees said tnc jwin^i, 1 dpt
demanding spwlal/ feriiv ll poii'mlts
and were ittlowing the [ArnWrlcan
^ NAVY iviLLieit 1 5; ' ;
<L ; ; j/u !
SINK TWO SHIPS;
WASHtNCIpN, debt; 2H
The Navy armbuncejll joday It will
j>ink tworniHafcctiviriwariihlpK dur
ing umphihioud training bpeiiitions
off Southern Gultfornia on Oct. 6.
The doohledi ship*; aid the sub
marine Skate i ami - the attack
i transport Crijitenduh which were
used in the Bilthii atom bomb; test
The Navy slid it will ]tJispo»e of’
them in lihe with v its ? policy of
sinking Bikini target; ships which
can not be; economically scrapped
or repaired] 1 •: t !
Dt. _ .
m skjtonp
Foijpore Enter Ugly Contest
As Campaigns Enter Full Swing
«. it
Langford 16 Speak
To Ci ““ Jw
Maygr Ernest Langfdrd of Col
lege Statical will participate in a
panel; discussion, “The i Need and
What^ the iClties Cun !Do About
Legislation;” at thotiinijiual meet-
, ing of the League pfTdxas Muni
cipalities, at El Paso October 4. 5
j land", 0.1 LangfhriL i* head 6f the
A&M Arcldtbctulreipepartriient
More ithan 600 officials of Texas
cities 1 and towns are expected to
a ’ tteni 1 - [-KlMj] j l
■ if :
By LARRY GOODWYN
The cjjmraeptators’ *jUgly Map
Contest,’? gPthering steam as, |he
deadline! for the nominating pri*
niary draW^ nearerj y drew four
more eniricHj Tuesday bp bring the
total of'iuvovved eandidntes to/ 1-1.
The u|uuri pf David *iRiver*hoat”
Reeves,.! Dick Joseph, Malcolm
Stokes, rind Norfleci Rone were
added t^ the'list thpliftotaled 10
Monday,]' Other eiiiirRs include
Milt Buitiwell, Have Gentry, Rup
ert Halt Jimmy Sjtbbnons, Jack
Gnuglnri Eddie Pelu; Bob Noble,
Calvin J)upi'ce, Adiilpn Tlionme,
and ThcfiJitis CurpcntpL
1 A NCiilelty ,iof Nomhlating/Baiis
4i>ts imiifted in the HuttitliOo that
is direeffly frpceahle ]ti>t prganlxed
luiiAmy ganipaigns on the pun of
it 16' moie Serious CNndidatea has
forced several caiulidgtel to sub
mit petitions signed nV their sup-
nrter* jin liew of laillfrta.
BaUalions have |>een pilfered
from dormitories only to; show, tip
later wjth tlie bajlotjsi j neatly cut
out. Whjether this insthipient^—the
etitlop-j*-will he al lowed by the
Commeiitutorls cloctfipti Committee
has notlyet been docSdpd.
At any rate, “Rivetbpat" Reeves
launched hi* campaign with a let
ter to tie editor signed Hy 47 “ad-
Jhirers.’ 1 !! The petition written by
Reeves’] 1 carhplaign manager reads
as fol|lowa: ’
“Editor:. ] , f :\1
Havihg read in the Battalion
that a : search was underway to
determpnc the UGLIEST AGGIE,
we, the undersigned, feel it our|
duty tp nolminate and support a
creature known as David “River-
boat” Reeves for the position or
title;
r~Slpci a number dfj
ed pepple may rea the Bat
talion. We are force
manage
I'remeiticQl and pred.n
^ 1
.'*'•*'•*11 Mr the fall Fi
Way he
•tied
ncad.
Jfu
mi mat
tehdr i«.j
I liitruc.
at JRaom^
* Pottar
■ 1 iff I j
any detailed desc
candidate. We
that he is the only
iier than “Lena, the Hyena.
signe^i “Creeper” Grogan,
campajign manager aiai fl? others.
Another candidaid, J i ;m m y
Stephens, likewise faced with t a
-VovJTAf Nsllots, i* repomd to
be circulating an elaborate 1 peti-
his'rtfc-
the reg-
elected”,
eanW’hile, Rupert t'Pride of. thje
Jocks” Hall stepped l p hisi cam
paign ait the risk of military cen
sure by [marching his: piTganixatlon
to Hraefll Tuesday nig it carry a
brightly-painted campaign poster.
The sign was pa radix In Duncan
“ a tjhtll the nffulT was called
10 ‘ n
help,,
ballots,
be circulating an e
t.on, whiich not only
portersi but also na
sons wily! he “should
officer mn
deym rtnflenL' h
bhto
seen Tuesday
ilnti
mlllury
iy in the form af a
lornlng the aUM «
P«!
i..i
i
■ ■
Vv
•uin» m
■ing the
't I
virtues of C* A. McGuire, “the
face for the position,” the sign
apparently has failed to bring
immediate results, McGuire has
yet to poll his first Vote, and
thus, cannot he considered nomi
nated.
Meanwhile, t h e Commentator
Magntine, sponsors of the contest,
were pushing effort* to odd to the
growing total! of prizes to be of
fered the eye lit bu I winner. A HjjiorlfH
coat from n liJorth Gate cHtuhlish-
ment is now in the offing plus
free transportation to the A.&.M.-
Texas game. These awards n)fc in
nddition to the preseiit. list which
includes hotel! reservations in Aus
tin the night before tin- Turkey
Day game, tyfo tickets to the; con
test, a paying job a* “publicity
directov” at Guloti Hall and all ad-
ditionnl prize whieh will not he
make correct ahd instant j derisions
umit-r pressure is no doubt the
most important trait developed in
this type of training.” . 1
Students who are trying out
for the crops team arc R. P.
Bates, C. A. Blakeley, R. N.
iBrunnemann, Curtis Cox, Don
J. E. Endrizzi, W- I-
Hackler, E. L. Jo*tC8, wFA. Kell-
lag. L. G. Mikeska, Frank Mor
ris. E. W. Pauls, W. H. Tanama-
chi, and F, M. Zabick. These stu
dents are all agronomy majors.
Five of the members' went to
Tdrople, September 21, [to judge
grain and other farm‘[products at
the Central T]exas Fflr.
Judging Team Off
For Iowa Contest
'!
Three men dcpurtul Sunday for
tha Nat Iona 1 Judging contest,
which Is to k* held Ih Waterloo,
Iowa, the find week in October,.
Thetimin are Rolarddluumhardt,
Vit Jnnda, ami Willii m Edwin. Ac
companying them is PrOfmsor Dar-
mill <tf the Dairy liushnndry De
partment, wllio will coni uet them
on visits to various Da ry.Herd*
on the wnv up.
The Dairy Ifushn idry Judging
announced unili the; contest is jver.
Nomination* will close Tlnint- topms have been sueeessful In the
day, Bepiemher 80th. At that .line, different past Judglrg chnlest* in
ballots will Ut counted and the five which they have participated, Dar-
highest nominees Mil (jualify for
the runoff which in to be belt
toiler 7.
Aggieland Then
nril said.
They are expected; to return to
college in about twif weeks.
and Now
i -
T
Artillery Ball
Will Be Held
On October 11
Reviving a pre-war custom,
the Artillery Repriment will
hold its annual ball on Octob
er 15, J. Fred Davis, repri-
montal command^ announ
ced today, f
. Featuring an Artillery Sweet
heart, the; dance will be held from
8 to 12 p. m. with music being
furnished by the Aggieland Or
chestra. | | \m ! ■
Tickets to the dance, which will
be for the members of the artillery
regiment and invited guests, will
be $2.00 % ,
Don Decker is chairman of the
program committee with Charles
Estes and J. F. Dodson assisting
him.
In charge of the decorations is
Jack Luther. Bitsy Davis, Charles
Estes and Donald Jarvis will also
serve on this committee, j
Serving on the finance commit
tee are Wallace Cox, chairman, Ed
Hodges, Homer Osborne, Bill Hays
Pat Henry, Bobby Sykes, and A. G.
Scalkc]
J. B, Rochell is chairman of the
committee which will select the
sweetheart. Serving with him are
Burton French, Floyd Blackburn,
Bob Smith, and Bitsy Davis.
This ball, the first regimental
ball to be held in the fall since
the war, will be on the weekend
of the TCU football game.
In addition to the football game
and the regimental ball, the Ag
gieland Rodeo will be held on the
15 and 16 with a Western Dance
on Saturday night I
Officers Elected
By Amarillo dob
For Fall Semester
I
Reorganization of the Amarillo
Club was completed at the chib’s
stjeond meeting of the present
school term held liwt Thursday,
Tod Lakey, new president, said.
Offiijer* were elected fcjr the
first semester with Lokey elected
president by acclamation. Other of
ficers include Hat land Collins, vice
president; Charles Fowlkes, secre
tary-treasurer ;Glann Williams, re
porter; and James Carter, social
chairman.
The dub is considering bring
ing the Aggieland Orchestra to
Amarillo during the Christmas
holidays for one or two dancas,
unit now have contacted Amarillo
ex-Aggies for their opinion of the
proposal, Lokcy continued.
Next meeting of the Club will
be on October 7 in Room 120 of
the Academic Building.
bright
!fopenaia||
(Holbrook, Sutherland and Ho
For Three Posts On Student Life
i.M ii.. ltrxrvr.'nr r>nvn
\ •;
I
I
ir!:
! 1 ■ k
Monte Moncrief ran
rimbright abd John Oijr t'
Moncrief, Hambright, Qrr, uoe p. V/Umiwr, ixiarviii meu, m
ard E. Deniiy were in the lejad as the final ballots were counted irj the
at-large race.
By KENNETH BOND
away with [the election for Student Sen^tor-at-jlargfe With
f tunning neck and neck for second plait s.
rr, Joe ft. Coulter, Marvin Rice, Mickey Mc^ ’ *
; ii
rfce race. U ; • jjl til j ‘h JJ
Charles Holbrook, Jetty Sutherland, and Charles Howard received the mosl
--fi--—•— ‘“‘-ftiio Sfiient Life Camp
I i -LJ m f. i . lirnoK Ji eccivsd!
Future Home to Be Equipped
With Sunshine Piped Inside
r
By GEORGE (t’HARLTON
If Donald M. Vestal] Jr;, has anything to do wfth it,
homes of the future will be heated by sunshine pumped
from the ground.
Vestal] Class of ’39 and research enginer in the Engi
neering Experiment Station, outlined the project this week
Cv
;
• T ,. i 1 IjlT
DONALjD M. VESTAL, JR,
a research engineer for the En
gineering Experiment Stjatlon,
ha* been Working on a project
which would [pipe sunshine right
into th6 living room.
iA.'member of the class of ’39,
Vestal is working on his Masters
degree while doing research on
the
heat |iump.
New Schedule Of
Masses Announced
The schedule of services a]t St.
Wii/
icjy,
man Club, has announced,
U
Mary’s Chapel has been nreii
Puftl Bamscly, fajosldent. of the pi
iscd,
ew-
.Sunday muss will now mi held
in the murniijg at 8:30 aruj 10.
Weekday piasKes will ho riild at
0:45 Friday morning.
idonfcsslbtis will bo held on 1 Sat
urday ovenlngH from 0:30 until
7:80. r T , ii ’
Publication of [First Annual, Defeat
Of Varsity Was Talk of Campus in ’95
By aiUCK MAlSEL
station;
if taking
imltai!
year by year. This
(Ed. Notr: Radio
have oft used the idea of taking
a certain year in the past, and
telling what the hit tunes, head-
1 ines, fads, etc. of that year were.
This is the first in a series of
life at A&M
article ron-
i cents the jteair 1*95 at Aggieland
k as this is the earUest year on
which a complete account can be
ftaMjjr! / ;
The year of the “Olid", A&M’s
first annual., F. M. Law was edi-
tor-in-chief. Ij IH* 1 alao Beaded up
the Battalion, then a monthly. The
name of the annual came from an
-Itaiion word meaning “hash” add
was Law:.s personal choice for a
title.;
The toll
sounds like
buildings ni
There Were
Francla, Ni
Oieakecl
. •){ . I • ;; i , t
of the facility
run down of the
now 1 on thd campus.
Puryear,.
pence, Sblsa, and
“*■ there are no
tM name of
college archl*
“ the new
and all
waia ate*
'* beloved
■ I'
Sully had come to College Sta
tion in 1892 from the governor’s
chair in order to save the college
ftom becoming a negro \ lunatic
asylum. His first official act was |
to have two notices pu)L into the
college bulletin. The first was to
the effect that parents of vicious
boys who had hoped to send their
sons to A&M for disciplinary rea
sons had [better find Junior another
school in which to [blow His
ffp. I j .! ,| ; | 1
The other read that, due to
waft
morals
temp-
young men
In the cities are absent here.”
When A&Jrf was first set into
operation, a system much like that
at West Point was used. Three
boys were ajlowed for each sena
torial district in Texas,: the state
the ,two
In ’95,
inationa
fijom the 16
f before the College Station Kiwaniff
I Club.
“W<i have here everywhere
around us this great natural re
source, "the sun’s heat,” Vesta)l
pointed out. “Part of R is hot be
ing used for anything itnd it would
seem desirable that this vast re
source be utilized to the fullest
extent.”
The applications of the heat
pump i are not limited to household
and commercial installations, how
ever. [In industry it is possible by
the upe of the heat pump idea to
obtain simultaneously heating and
cooling of two different rooms.
For 'example, an industrial plant
may desire to have a cold room. By
means of the heat pump, It;is pos
sible to extract heat from that
cold room and then deliver it to
some i space to. be heated, for ex
ample, the office space in tnc win-
ter. j f J 'Vi
“Of coarse iii the summer, if
no other use can be found for
the heat, it must be dissipated
to the atmosphere by means of
a cooling tower, as is usually
done now the year arouhd. But
the saving pf the winter heat
would be effected.
“There are | also rural applica
tions i for the heat pUmp,” Vestal
said.; “The farmer has plenty of
ground in vtfiich a buried coil could
be placed. Hn may eveh have n
tank near his home where lie could
bury a coll or could pump wutor
out of the tank and twe a'Wfftuw
watef heat pump, if the farmer
desire* a cold room he could uw
the heat pump Idea by putting the
heat which Is extracted in cooling
the rjoom in hi* homo or hi* bam.
He might even use dt to heat n
chlckjon brooder.” 1
The cost of InstallIngj ft he«t
pump in the homo today, Vestal
said,(would be $2,000 to $2^00.
“If the heat pump I* out of
reach today,” Vestal askid, “how
dor* It affeat each one of usf
It n}ay affect us in thiir way: Hy
the uae of the,heat putnp it In
possible to deliver to a apace to
be hfated three to four tlmek a*
much a* the heat equivalent of
the electric power which It takea
to operate the heat pump. Thus,
the heat pump is tnrae to four
hundred percent efficient in heat*
ing.j
This project has been under way
for 18 months. Technically,' It Is
“seeking information on the basic
thermal properties of soils for mfc
in conjunction with the design of
the buried coil typo heat pump.”
To the laymen this means that the
" :t is to see if sunshine can
iped” into the homes of to-
brpol
orinrtd lolled
tecrived! 1_,_
nrd received 6:16 vote:
Committee
198? 8]jl
(tri, and ik>!
Othf]i| tntal* fpr oflii dldtotea
pnt LIlfo C<tni nit tee
Chelf, 270 j. Oril
1; Marvin (Kucri*, 354;
' il
lathon)*; 371; [IChari
35; Albert Rjidk*,] 4
ter*
■owe, ^1;
vf a
11
.Mar!/
Us Stuteint Senator
n FiJ
■Ecwurd
iBthTlSt); and
X
1
I:
Vtiili
senator
re pro.so
iver,
given.
Ion, qu
“Add 123
Give the
or of 108
Bpellcoi
The
407*8.
)n divia-
ulgobra and 10 hours of Texas
History. His total expenses were
$140 for the ENTIRE YEAR,
but was he happy about it?
Why, in ’76, the two sessions
cost $128. Lou pot would have
starved, as textbooks were free.
When the new , Fish heard he
couldn’t leave the bampus for any
reason until Christmas, he took a
second look at. his second home.
What he saw was a hospital, the
Chapel, (where Harjt is! now), the
Old! Main, and Pfeuffer, Ross, Aus
tin, a|nd Gathright Halls. But the
lucky dog could accrue 250 rams
beforje taking a one-way corps
trip.!
All the classes had a motto, a
yell, and colors which were worn
on tieir caps. The Soph class
motto was: Health, Wisdom, and
Girls No change here.
Other than stealing
the main diversion of campus
life was membership In one ef
the two literary “
Austin or the
which everyone
Olio says:
“Not more than 10 iyaara ago,
the aocletlea wert noUd for throve*
ing dead ant
y societies, the
ik. — —
to
belonged. T he
\
m
U
iL : J
i'A
now
' -
i
lit
animals of the feltno apt-
iqroea the hall at Meh other,
thla being a progreaaive age,
have diecarded the cat* and
throw brteka," T
IT hi* h*it w„. «“*• '0“ «
hue, the new student could join the
Red Head club whose sole article
in the club constitution was that
the members be redheaded and
the reddest of the lot would be
president.
In football, the Farmer^ troun
ced Varsity 38*0 and Galveston
24-$. Baseba}) had a bit rounder
schedule, playing four games of
which three ware victoiys and only
one a loss. Scores were reported
then as now With A&M’e score
first, .win or lose.
How do butf traditions stack up
with those of ’95? Another quote
from the Olio:
Til • _ fll! » I ■ •! i
"We all <T L *"
ahd sleep ali
you be a so
have demeri
dbr your
extra Uke a man.’
They had tht first Junior ban
quet that year. Floors of dorms
were call:
en had “u
Perhaps the best evi
It la the same o)d place U a poem
ffeahmen had to memorize In ’95:
“If a cadet of thU college would
bo In luck,
Upon matriculation,
T Mata!to‘Buck*
It may half j boon only tha llth
but AMMland a* we know
1 \.
i.4
tea
must
Ji,
<1;
• |> |
• j : . ;
ifj,
sm
ronomists
m
mbers, the
j history of
iety, were ini-
hilajriou* c«-
yalcb Lecture
\ Martin reported to-
one of the la L “ ,
PU flic highlight of the inte
program was tlic entrance
3STOSS , ‘' BtoU
A' n
■ i •if
•jj
it I f
'
m
it: .' •! ,*
M
; i
i! !
m
tn Min
S; sar
nchor,.
Rbbtirt
. !/-]
L. Sri»nc vfu reelt
, rialor jfrom (the!
Firil AnnckJ Hb 4m! no c
flition. iTi. i 1 f.
lit lie race for Student ^
ate h r day Ntudeint*, Wei
Wlllin or fccclived 40 votes,
Rober Ransom receive J 30 vi
to wir the election!. Other to
in tbit race were Marvin
Hager tier, 29; liimfaey ^
comb, 15; Richard Davisi
Rex 1 ’acker, 20; Alonso Hf
son, ,1 r„ 11; Bud Jacob 3
, sell, |i 5 votes] j
J . Willi tm Ai Friti teceivci
votes b i win the ratjc from Co
View. [iJjave Sdligmhn receive
Votes, md Monroe Iljeff reci
12 ^ott a .fromi this twea.
Rich: rd D. Hodgtis won the
from jtite Tra 1
vottet. Robert
^ ]*!* Raney tan
mtativc j from
'? ot
were counted for the Mthdcnt*
nlng 1' >r the keven po$ts as
deni fwamtor-atrlarpej] 1
•M
Hamltjrlght, 1365
1348} Joe Cdulter
Rice, 114; Mickey
and If }charil DeniieL
Haritjy Doroin. 851;
;
w
80C; I) thie}, Pfoetjor
Jones,! 7881 Jjoct jNiifjy,
| Sam
Bcriy, |718;
votes.
Jo 1.! Pitcock. 675
linson, 071; W. D. iajtn
2I19CI; I
J^hn : l<
,1k; Ma,
effuire,.(
m
nford,
oil p. ijKolty, C4t; A.
041; as d R. I. A teitm r
Ricli(ti»il Taylojr, <|2t
ihn
s
(-
[es, 000
JHadhij
ftf] (l|t>V Jp|»n|Sfcorinlukor,
len llcnison, Kitiff; 1W. T. ,Di|r
50D| ; Liuren lluhtijj, 602; and
tinm l Itchelis. 8311 vpli* j
Dicilj Joseph, 471 Vi» ei»s Hi
Smitl,! 440; Purvla ibraNh, #
Johcim Crunf, 464f T.[W!. Wf
Inadt, 399; Frank iwHIti
| Claytmi Hellph, 342; and
fimitl ijwlth 334 vbtj*.
A. • ] Cottrii, n j vtj
datt! f Hinator-
f23; vHe*. ()|tlier
were written In hOt
rocelvi a* tnkny Mol
thw ea iillditwri tm «lu
Uhe Ttolulai for tal
id hyj Klecti
t srimlr
tah.ulu
of Ftti
t ;1g« t
her ntnd'itt'H H
icy did
*1 11*11 il
waUdt.
|)ONt*i „
Contiil
' I
arevoflhlal.
ijS
Determine
theart Folic
The j Social Cor
Sttideiif Senate wi
icy of selectliig tli
hogrt,ip. RJ Lca|l
chairman of the ^
.< announce
policy wait djctermiol
the ecutive Commi toe
Stride: 1 Senate ih a meeting|
day a: ter the subject Was hr
in'a ilenior Class il
week, Uathorwocd sail!, j
etjtjing fOr the Umj|
.T-
MujsHuriL
iwanis
m “ b,rtl h
Vornt Hunt and
rafe
Jr ‘* icheon
fa
Mi«
hall, .j !:. ;'f|i
, Hunt playtri
byd, tticor
by Peomar
a.J
Unlv.ir.it y
I'
at
s
: I 1]]'
, j
lljl
t:, :
l
t; i' ii
u
"
-
! 8
I
'.lJ