The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 03, 1967, Image 26
THE BATTALION Page 8 College Station, Texas Thursday, August!, CHE B A&M’s ROTC Toi 4 In Its Training ..this is the year! ■■ WBHBEKBKM A lot of new things are happening at Texas A&M University . . . you're coming as a freshman join ing the largest student body in history . . . more campus activity, housing, building . . . and even girls! And this year . . . “THE AGGIES ARE BACK!” PAUL TIMMINS ’65 HHflMi We look to the future growth of our store to parallel with profound growth that A&M is con tinuing to enjoy . . . we’re mighty proud to be a part of this fabulous area and all of us at Iva Starnes Men’s Wear dedicate our efforts to help ing to build and maintain this great tradition. At Iva Starnes Men’s Wear, we sell only fine quality, stylish, good-taste merchandise. Flor- sheim, Arrow, Puritan, Clubman names are the backbone of our stock. We wait on you with enthusiasm . . . we’re happy to have you and we want you to feel at home at the store. RONNIE JACKSON ’69 ms ' PHIL TREMONT ’69 [1 lltro Starnes # ^ ^ men's meat* 100 NORTH MAIN . TI-.L. 713/822-62H • RYAN, TKXAS 77801 ,1 IVA STARNES MARCH IN REVIEW Cadets spend virtually every walking hour in uniform and live in the dormitories in military organizations. They stand room inspections, buglers sound Reveille, C.Q., Mess Calls, Retreat, and Taps. Full-dress reviews, like the one above, are held several times during the year. Texas A&M today has one of the most comprehensive pro grams of military science and tactics in the nation. It enrolls the largest Corps of Cadets of any military college in the United States and is the na tion’s largest single source of trained officer reserves for the Army and Air Force. Since the establishment of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps at the school in 1920, Texas A&M has given one or two years of basic training to some 50,000 men and has afforded advanced training under government con tract leading to commissions to more than 20,000. From the first days of the uni versity, when the early facilities were made up largely of veter- Stop and Consider Our Book Policy Before You Buy We Will Buy Back All Books We Sell When Edition Is Still Current. When You Buy From Us - Well Buy From You. USED BOOKS ARE A REAL SAYING But They Never Last Long. BUY EARLY and SAVE MONEY. If You Know Your Course WE KNOW YOUR BOOKS. You Can’t Lose When We Guarantee Full Cash Re funds For 2 Weeks. This Eliminates Errors and Allows For Course Changes. LOUPOT'S MADE BY TRADES WHERE TRADES ARE MADE ans of the Confederate including several general!! military tradition has been[ ly ingrained in this school! definite part of its characte| a source of one of its contributions to the welfal the state and the nation, Sons of the university hj served with honor in the! ish-American War, in thel World Wars, the Korean cot and today in Vietnam. The senior class of 1917 J teered in a body foroffj training camp at Leon Spl near San Antonio, a montl fore the end of school, nizing the patriotic motiveoi action, the College aw;ir<led| their degree. Training could not be 1 rupted for academic ceiw on the campus, and that yeti graduation exercises for[ A&M College of Texas wen if under a large oak tree in tht| near San Antonio. Fifty-two Aggies gave| lives in this conflict and more were wounded in the* ice of their country. In World War II, some ^ reserve officers were train«» commissioned at the College.® Every other 7,000 who had reiia certai some military training henttrters were commissioned through Biese r eers’ Candidate School, aiwBeir scl the call to arms. Ti ey fir Six sons of the universit; ft! ^ eneI the nation’s highest n P 1 ^ rrani honor, the Congressional hil T' exas of Honor, in World War![.p° has of the survivors, Lieutenan| Whiteley, is now a merah the Agronomy staff of thel versity, while the other, Set* William G. Harrel, is >el \h At with the Veterans Administn in San Antonio. Over thirty former studectl the university have reached! eral officer rank, inoludinra admiral. Among these wa$| late General George F. Ml onetime Commandant of i9 whose brilliant service in tH fense of Corregidor is onedl bright pages of military hiafl Today the honor company o(| Corps of Cadets is allowe carry the General GeorgeJ Moore banner. During the early stagesi World War II General Douf MacArthur wrote: “Texas A&M is writing itsl military history in the bloo<l| its graduates . . . No namestf out more brilliantly than th<| roic defender of Corregidor,# eral George F. Moore. WheM I see a Texas man in my 1 mand, I have a feeling of ( dence.” General Eisenhower, speai at the Victory Homeeominfl 1946, declared: “I feel onl'H lasting admiration for the TM^af y ( A&M Corps of Cadets. This miration extends to the indivim^gt p] as well as the institution 1( Jen produced you.” Hggj e These tributes by military kj ers of our time bear witness the fact that A&M has ser well the last of the great p poses set out for it by its desii ers—to serve “as the streii! and shield of civil liberties." Today, Texas A&M is carry! on its honorable tradition by fering a military program wh permits a man to prepare hinis to fulfill the military obligati! facing all American men in country at the same time he ceives his college education. Novelty and Stationery Department Here you will find complete selections of Parker, Sheaffer, and Esterbrook fountain pens, ball points and mechanical pen cils. Here also you find many attractive designs of die stamped college stationery from the Houses of Montag, Charles Elliott, Carmelle and Eldridge. Just the thing for writing Mom or the girl friend. Every Aggie likes to have the college seal on his personal items. We have a dazzling display ranging from belt buckles to hitch hiking bags. Decals, pennants, stuffed animals, ash trays and many other gift items are available. You name it, we have it! EXCHANGE STORE “For Thinking Men”