;i! '• 4 •- • \' ■/l) "'• r 'i ' ’ ' r. i /» ' /' ■ 1 4 i If,-: • h / - - > ! i 4, ■ • • m* ary9 ' L The < nmmuED v INIKHKST N • mmm wim P o u' r teen ^students, acco: •tructer, boar cago today for of Europe am The “flying c • junior and setii Architect j ' ■ | . N. " ' j | . cgins Tour COUjKOE STATION ,(Aki’.I' IimhI), TEXAS, MONDAY, JUNK 20, HMD • : J \\ / • A ' V' m / litecture i an ih-' hel at Chi- i:r air tour I tifih Isles, ur for jin arch* un- archi- 1 4 itecture and al|{ed ^ffiris* der the sponsobhip : o fill tecture departipenti | Gander, ^Nevtfou^idlkihH the first stopping p ace group. After iltfl] top ocean, they •willl refu<} and then fly teen days will %e st ■ t, • where they unUrbe/thd ance of an authority architecture, Le Co t the consultaiits on i n tions building. Italji, Switke! Belgium, Holland will be visited recrosses the .chain most by August in E Invitations h iye; b by the Texaiis to yii while they are n Eh arranged fot t le the rebuildfil? pi P the guidance of] the of Plymouth.! | Students miauling t Richard I. Atkefhmn William A; Btlsihg, C T. Crook, CtyrtniH ‘ , will be for the oss the Ireland, to fif- Prance, the guid- ijv functional Howard, San Antonio; Emmit In gram Jr., Fort Worth; Marpiod Jaccard Jr., Houston; Donald E. Jarvis, Fort Worth; Tom B. Live- say, Beaumont; Russell L. Lown, San Antonio; Ira P. Montgomery, Baytown; Gerald Sellinger, San Antonio; Clayton B. Shiver, Am arillo; James R. Goodrum, Hous ton; and W. E. Huggins, Bryan. Joe T. Meador, instructor in archi tecture, is the faculty member of the party; tembourg, Denmark group spend J. '■ deceived idy Astor She. has to see under tjhgineer YMCA Cabinet Lays Plans For Fall Semester ! trip p il htortioif li 5 Jack A. E. IfHtUl Itii KnidUhthk ‘ "t Nl UCMiloh llljv * llMCfll] ill lijjdlli'iiHi J- pineal in ^ V, mltonr ueatloti bwifi “Ollp humlriu pritii Vave jbhdn pluw l p) 4i tlon Iwld It noi lufoh in thb ihiarpr Mjt lloti (itf Aiken law, ^Vjjijlton Of •mpioy achoolsj eight ' tM 1 : yM, Already tej»cli hg in high RerviicjB 08 H 23 a erabs* vocatibnj iAcoim]nercia into eixtensipi into ao 1 consbiibtic ness, ar/ned j st-i-vic teaching have take These graidditesi an average atmjiial shl with an additional , for traveling expeii?bif] “Due to several mitj-bf-sfate quests for thabherft kjHilmbre cancies in the , vet< ^fa* programs ha!iijl»sfen[||able to _ , .. /ill pweed at an accelerated ratje. W(! ajaticihate be ing out of nipn by the first of September, Walton* cjqkicluded. The Summer YMfCA Cabi net laid plans for next fall’s cabinet Friday evening at a lawn pupper given by M. L. Cashion, YMCA d^ector. Among the plans announced was ndtrcft?* r ^ e organization of study and dis- ’cussion groups to bring foreign students ; and American students together. This would call for an organization of a club similar in character td the Continent*! Club, formerly a campus organization. The Continental Club, discontinued several years ago, was composed of an equal number of foreign ami American students, 1 Also discussed were methods t« encourage local participation In a nation-wide drive sponsored by (he Hwan Snap Company, Aecordlng In reports of the Hwan drive, every I wo wrapper* of Hwan Honp sent Care, New Vink, Hie Hwan Com- jinny would ijehil one liar of soap in Kuroiie free, This would help people In couulties where soap I* *1 III almosl impossflde In olilalu, said Ken Kuuthlrn, treasurer of the cabinet, Members of ihe Hummer Cabinet present were Lloyd, Manjeot, Charles Klrkham, (lien (inmlmau. Sow Kunlhiroinnd Ken Kunlhlro. C. O. White ntfd Bennie !5lnn were guests of the Cabinet. Present also were the hosts, Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Cashion. : New Sanctu For Local .—r —Com The new Aggie Combo made its first appearance of the season at the Grove dance last Saturday night/ '• .• i f • I Seated, left to right: Laverne Hunt, Herb Beadle, Tommy Bullock, Jerry Steves, and Lindell James.' Standing: Bill Turner, and Roland Johnson. -4- Architects Leave Chicago For Western Europe Tour Ijr. jUtlP tun11 piI- nM Loom liwiL.i ■ rr- Wl* IF would rndnn- sys ilmer- lin vet- ^\\r are Vc gone i d two /al e busi- d college iich. , iceiving $3,204, #r year B. f ^ 000 jin thi Associatioi nounced L. •FSA. j This fund u since 1026, H mei MudiiuUi Ex-Agglc |u husiimss mun tcmlfd A&M., The fund i#as Agg es wha.Jic h Ifrl: pleiod «l )(jil j uiij» mu icA(|f $245,- T ,i Students Nk an- of the L|N i , kccumuluting fts fjoin ffor- 3|thflfS CljullH. ! spccemsful jcvcTi at- hHp J TiimijiciiBi ihnfugh r it sip,.Lkeku slid,^ Wfttjtf Wtfl.ll |i|tj* : Mj I'isu t s ive Wum iriliH AAM, l i lit I'tllo flimludHl furii to Ihrtw.ltnndii' hesn itmde.; n| l e li InUtest rstoiffHit griiiti /terWl chan dot- isve !4»'{, granted for rel[hibkp teiC.it chaw used primal fund; and kek tional basis few rs y n iktnjwideiilnie ihefti, Tl^ in- lid Mns is dihir up the in hit opern- Iddcd. W. E. HUGGINS, from Bryan, Is another un-hitecture student who is flying to Europe this summer. T GROVE SCHEDULE Monday, Juno 20 -Skating . Tuesday, June 21, “Tower of London," with Boris Karloff and Basil Kathbone. Wednesday, June 20—Dance, Aggie Combo. Thursday, June 23, "The Man Who Reclaimed His Head," with Claude 'Ruins, Friday, June 24, Skating, rec ords, 1 / ' By ART HOWARD (Editor's note: This is the first of a series of articles which will appear at Irregular•IntiH'Vnls, Art oWard, Haflallon conespitnilenl, is n member of the grou(l of archi* lecitue sRidcnts louring Europe ihli summed) ',- i ! CHIOAno, III,, June HI (Mpe> *ini lo Ihn imn i Hy the lime tills niljlcle np|iehr* In (lie Haltnllon, fifteen A4iM archlteitural MtU* denis will he well on their way to I'Ill'll, Franck, and a lour of Weal- em Europe, From the Windy City we fly (o New York for inure tourist*, thence do Labrador for gak. Our flWd *lop In Europe will he at Ddblln, Ireland, anil then on to Haris.. The plane I* Mcheduled to leave at P, Monday morning, b u t we will be nt the nlrjmrt two hours before that to get checked through customs. We arc now staying at Shbrmnn Hotel in the Loop . Most of the members came In Saturday, and the party is now complete with today's arrival of Jack Crook and Emmit Ingram, who thumbed in from Bryan. Joe Meador, our prof and guide, has been here three dayh getting ev erything checked so that there will Belcher Appoints New Staff Member L. L. O'Connor has joined the staff of the Industrial Division of the Engineering Extension Service, according to D. L. Belcher of the Extension Service. O’Connor will do supervisory training in eleemos ynary institutions throughout the state. A native of Houston, O’Connor received BA and MA degrees from the University of Texas. O'Connor and h|s family now make their home in Marlin. • Before coming to the Extension Service, O’Connor was employed as vocational advisor at the VA Hospital in Waco and served as psychologist counselor at TU, in the Testing, and Guidance Bureau. O’Connor will bpend this week uf the Hunk State Hospital In RUsk, Texas, doing supervisory training. This Is part of a five- year program undertaken hy the indmjtrial Division of (he Engin eering Extension Hervice in oo- with' the State Hoard of Oiiiptrnl,. Heleher «nid, he a minimum of red tape tomor row. A meettng of the entire group has been called for fi p,m„ when Meador will give u* our final hrlefingr Humor ha* It that he will Impose a ten o'clock curfew loniglit to make certain (hat there are no hit) nr sleepy heads tomor row, .j Nearly everyone In the class has been In my TOnni this afternoon using the scales J him owed from the motel. We'are allowed only (til pininds of liiggagY'i niut so far only Russ Lmcn has met I he lum* dienp. Every |Niuml over mi draws a |t,2fi lat Iff, and we are having to leave something behind, Doniihl Jarvis has a new alarm but will have to check it at- the lintel hernuse Its two pounds Wiitild cost him $2,5(1. Many of os also have forgotten to bring essentials, such as razor blades and shaving soap, which would be hard to pick up in Europe, 4 It ig a lucky thing that Chicago has pilenty of cleaning and press* ing shops with one-day service be cause most of us had dirty clothes which had to he cleaned yesterday, And the problem of clean clothes will he tne hardest part of our len-weeks trip through Europe, Last nig hi, Haturdny, we made a short tour of some of I he better burlesque shows on the fringe of the tjsiop, Russ Lnwn, who are- rived here Mondfcy, Was our guide, He also drove us around to all of Chicago's good examples of ar chil eel tin yesterday, T 1 K Plant Growers Short Course Here June 22 Construction Methodist Church to the Rev. Jamt* second unit to b< and student cent m : l i ' : fif m . A '•w Numbfr U I I 4* j l Use of plant hormones for ornamental plants and for fruits and vegetables will be discussed at the Texas Assoc- ipn of Nurserymen’s Short Course which starts here Wed nesday, according to Lucian Morgan, assistant director of the Placement Office. Special methods for handling hardwood cuttings in [the South west will be discussed by A. F. DeWerth, head of -the landscape Art Department. He will also give recent development* in control of greenhouse pests. M ' , E. W. Schultz, also of the Land scape Art Department, willr.pre- sent problems in seed germipStion, land give results of tests >vith various seeds used in 1U4D. E. M. Hilderbrand of A A M will talk on plant galls and over growths. A. A, Dunlap and WuJ, McJIrath will discuss "Camellia Pleback and Canker;"] and "Inside the Riant," respectively, E, It, Bryson of the Horticulture Department, will iIIscunn far tars that influence successful trails- plnntingi Ollier topics lo he tl|s> cussed are iiecan Insect eontrol. spray schedule far {stane fruits, rantral of major peiMs on orna mental shruhs, soil* fertility and fertilisers, and ptirimse and Valin of adhoreinius, • i - EMMITT INGRAM, JR., of Fort Worth, left,Chicago today with of architecture sen- the group of arc lont and juniors. New Spectacles f Have Safety Glass NEW YORK,-<**>—A now safe ty glass for eyeglasses was an nounced today by the Amerleten Optical Uampany, Those lenses are sandwich glees, thq same us auto windshields, In the middle of each lens is a sheet of plastic, 1 Sho, Ely, Don't llollfcr Me . . , ' 5 ‘Eggrrr^^aai^/- ngyagr nTTOirr~Trrr:. j : • . • ■ n> estruction Await Fear ye the chophoune named Sbisa, o lowly house fly. Beat not your dusty wings and scrape your muddied boots within its portals, for only death and disaster await you! . , . Extermination of 'the irksome fly has long bean, a problem for the messhalls a| A&M. With in genuity comparable to the A-Bomb creation, a system has finally been installed in Sbisa that makes hash of the puny, fly, figuratively speak- ins. Each room in the messhall has lengths of copper piping running the span of one wall, with inter mittent holes, or nozzles in them. Mounted on these pipes at certain intervals are half-gallon bottles of insecticide and chloridine. At night all the windows are closed, air pressure is turned into the pipes. me Fly in ^bisa nthl the roomi arc "fnggj»d" with oreaiqmv xnvc when one of the -the mixture for 15 miiHites. After, the file* have simmered in this unhealthy atmosphere (for, about 0 hours, .and have, no doubt, gasped dying curses upon atrocious man, the watchman comes and 'Opens the windows, allowing the air to clear for we mortal insects. Roaches, too, ignominiously “cross the bay" when this lethal mjist comes .creeping into their rdid quarters, but the singular ing about these wee crawling ts is that they can poslibly bijrird up an immunity against it e first or second time a new insecticide is used, they are dis patched on-the-double, but after ,t they have the strange quality qf endowing their., progeny with a distance to it, and another poison lust be used. / Now I, personally, bear no ani- y toward these plucky Uttla husky rascals detnijbhn of "( nips nt the Old Ferment" cached in my closet. After all, they, got kids, they gotta eatl However, when J they build up resistatnice against a well-aimed kick, oif a staggering blow from the business end of a fly-swatter, I shall pack my tent and silently steal away. Now that the fly and I have gotten all up in the air, and the muse of poetry has breathed the vapor of inspiration into my cof fee-laden soul, I make my bid for immorality. Ode To A Fly Entering The Messhall With The Malicious In tent of Rubbing His Spavined Hin4-quarbers Over My Hard Earned Victuals Bye, IW I Move over Shelley, if you pliz. Camp Hood Ex Group Formed A 36th Division A&M Club was formed at Camp Hood recently by a special meeting of ex-students in that area, attending the Texas National Guard summer encampment. One hundred and fifteen exes attended the organizational barbe cue to elect th« first officers. They are: President,\Maj. William G. Breqzeale of College Station. Bre- azeale, of the A&M dean of men’s office, is executive officer of the 1st Battalion, 143d Regiment of the division. Honorary vice-presi dent, Jack Roach of Gatesville. A 1935 graduate of A&M, Roach is a member of the Coryell County A&M Club. Secretary-treasurer, Capt. Jack Brown of Luling; parliamentarian, Maj. Karl Wallace of Fort Worth. Sergeant at arms, Capt. Sam Wheeler, a 290-pound Houston of ficer. Gert. H. Miller Ainsworth of Luling, commander of the divi sion; is honorary president. He is a 1918 graduate of A&M. Ainsworth told the group, “I can’t think of any two better groups working together than the 30th Division and A&M College." The organization will meet an nually gt the summer encampment. Of the estimated 0,000 members of the 30th ami attached units, about '500 are A&M exes. Hreuzeule said, He gave credit to the Coryell Coun ty A&M Club, with Carroll Smith as president, for helping form the new organisation, j ’ yf'rrv-i nHa-mirpr! .■ » ' Annex Dance Club * 1 To Meet Mondays Ttia Hqtiore Dmhi'H Club at Hi'y* an Field wilt tudd Its flNl meet ing of Hie summer, bmlgltl, The weekly meetings will be held mi the emieeete the concrete ainb lie* hind the Student Center every Monday night at i, Li 8. Dillon .director of, the club, will be the caller until the return Of!David Darter In July. Besides old god new squares, there Will be waltzes, shoddlshes, and ■ other group dances. Special instruction will be given the beginners at 7:30 each night. Irrigation problems will be pre seuted In shurt cOUl'se members, These problems Inclmlo lit* amount of water a pump will deliver, melh ods uf application, effect* on soil and soil atructure, and eunscnld, Morgan Nld. Reglstrallon for the course will be held In the lobby of’ the Ag Engineering Building starting at 10 Wednesday mortdng. NliiSty person*., are expected to register for the course. Tickets for a dinner to be held Thursday evening in Sbisa Hall may be obtained at the registra tion desk, according to Morgan. I RICHARD < Han Antonio, At 1 Is one ebitects taking tlm . “ Itll cagw 1 to Europe. ropi todu The grit T Organised HesslVa cers nut on active d! I Pie 11 (liven the. anthiil 1*1 «r l hr Mill It uf el the Enlisted Reserve Ml Oscar U. Alditit, tile] Texas Military aithounred, * Agricultural Films Slated Wednesday Films on agricultural subjects will be featured at the second weekly film preview, announced Walter Barnes of the A&M Visual Aids Laboratory. The show will be held in the Petroleum Building lectUie room at 3:30 Wednesday, afternoon. Among the films to be shown are “Adventures of a Junior Rain Drop,” ah animated cartoon on soil conservation; "The Lincoln shire Preacher," a musical short based on an English folk song with cartoon illustrations; and “Imprdvements for Perinanent Pas tures." Several other films will be on the program, Barnes added. All interested persons are in vited to attend, said Howard tBer- ry, director of the previews. N Under lids new certain selMcted RcH may xerv; «* ,Rceti|| although U|ey are f» duly. Many neservl td.travel over lot) m!ij41 enlisted: now Ihey llxted in their hbm home town Reserve This authority t the authority grant physicians to make! physical examination Reserve applicants,'v cUitate enlistments 1 ments of personnel i; Reserve Corps, es; lying communities. The following me: inted Recruitin] ilege Station: Mi edmond. Major Osl % Captain Allen M 1st Lt. Russell A. " " \y: 5;!' i Aggies Inj Collision F — Lewis M. Teubnej dent from Dallas, wi day morning when colltded with a time! of South College t Avenues. The trm by W. W. McWhorti Bryan. Teubner was tak Hospital and relenN aid treatment. il r: i" Vhdn i O' Cd| 14 T i Hi ists * ) te’ College St|tipi^ ieai future, according'. alii}. Tip sanctuary is the rdmoiied three-portion church —’ PI section of the plant, J i Edqca i >nal Unit, was recently ishled. The completed portion, t t a vst of $110,000, contains ;s •ooirs a nursery,rand a p*r- i ki x hen, four more, claoz- ma lard several storage and oops are on tfie second whole, portion is used school and educational 47 by 132 feet, tha sanctuary will contain northex, arcade, and on the first floor. A occupy one end of the , and oygan chambers the other end. Seating the- s^rirtuary will be s room and the chancel eluded |n this portio* which W»H cost about i '‘lii ic feint, t;i; unit planned of t i Ihulftri (•iii«i| « •« Iff • M IMKIm in* rpi t DtUh'l tuii I'd Mli* us wl I btft Mini jfjth* It 4 t ie L-shaped sanctuary a tower-unit will be he interior Comer of i unit will contain «n t iver, an .orcadh, and * s/of the tower unit 4* n't $45,000. .-4‘ ho ji tilt v I major portion of ilia |