The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 20, 1938 Page: 1 of 4
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Beat of Luck on
Exams Next Week
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JME XXII
NORTH TEXAS STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE, DENTON, TEXAS. THURSDAY, JANUARY 20.1988
ie Chatterbox
By Shorty
pit of anonymous feminine
Iphy was sent to me this
; viu Uncle Sam's delivery
that contained toine real
h' for meditation on the sub-
collegiate dating Enclosed
letter was a clipping of the
in last week's Chat about
the new social dance class
fius escaping the agonies of
|kull flower." She, evidently,
the ('ollegc to offer a course
pill remedy situation dni
irirl encounter on dates
[they know "how to dance."
41 confidante suggested may
i'st thut it in the carcless-
jf the young n- n to whom
Iferred that create such sil
I* and the sooner they, the
men, learn to appreciate
|llr iorgetfulnei >>f women
>ner will these problems U'
litor's note): Why, Miss Itix
didn't you tell me?
* ♦ ♦
fel'INli rtl T THK H M.I.
kn Barnes and Evelyn Hunt
[called by "Brown, from the
to be at Mar<|uis Hall at
Iqnunted hour la^t Saturday
■oon for pictures for his pa-
ls they were recently elected
|ites of the College. They were
but the photographer didn't
up The old {fair still works.
• •
liise Parnell gets the floozie
for the week because she
jht that .limmie Tallant called
>r a date and it was ,limmie
^a She didn't till the date due
headache. "That'd give any-
headache," quoting Jimmie.
^petition (jot so strong that
Davis kinda dropped outn
uniting and also <|uit school.
_ ti King furnished th'1 com
i
College Print Shop
Begins Production
Of 1938 Yucca
T. (\ Is Only Texas
School hrinting
Own Annual
Takes State Post
Absence Leave
Given to 4 as
Semester Ends
Hass, Knox, Sowell
to Study; Mew Job
for McAlister
Enough hut Look
Speech Teams Debate Institute To
When It Happened Take Second In
>na>
ne ,
of
jgtdfi
i. \ i
,Ni'
A V
[K I
li garct Kingsbury, W .1 Mc-
•2 Mary Virginia Cannon, Floyd
pit, Lee Hint on and Mildred
have been frequenting the
jtudio down town. 'Ja ever
of anybody dancing while
|ig ? Well, they did.
• ♦ •
Hit McMichnel, .loe Strong,
pert Era see haw formed tlie
able triangle, and according
iHie, the sum of the other
are nil as far as he's con-
ral of the fellers are still
fing about giving Donald Me
Id "plent\ of room." Ya see,
loor boy was crowded during
holiday- and Winnie wanted
have more room. Aw, get
*' tell you about it
* * •
<ie McKensie is runner-up
ek for thinking that she had
i* with Don Robinson who
at the Burr store. Instead she
iven a date to the Donald
on who works at the West
ire Station.
* * +
se you've noticed alia' the
pinning, yoyoing, bantering,
olf-over-the-river that the
have been playing. Looks
green-up" time is right
the corner, but we might
^i merry go round if we start
}g that winter is over.
• * *
of our landladies called my
(>ti their being able to qualify
>fessorships for forgetful
|Oh-ii he -aid that anybody
|tcpt a house full of rabid
students could very easily
|ven to detraction by thei%
-on. 1 agreed.
♦ ♦ ♦
|l like "lied" Arnold slipped
this week. His girl friend
< HATTERBOX on page I
Placed In
Teaching Posts
more Teachers College stu-
liave been placed in teaching
puis by the Ccdlege Placement
tin- week, K. II Failing
plnect.ir, announced Wednes
S. Terhune has accepted
Itiin lit it I work in the fourth.
Iami sixth grade.- at Holliday
|i \ .leatiette Robeison is
|ng the tii st grade at (Juan
Iry Myrle Johnson has ae-
II work hi the elementary
at Burleson.
will begin teaching
at Spi Angclo
The College Press began print-
ing of the 1988 Yucca Friday.
Printing of the borders on the
pages of the annual, the second
to be issued from the plant of
the College print shop, is the first
step in the long mechanical process
which will continue for about 'our
months.
St veral days will be required to
complete the work on the borders,
which will be followed by the pro-
duction of the class, club, and fea-
ture sections.
The borders will l>e in maroon
and silver, carrying out the gen-
eral color scheme of the annual.
This will be the first Yucca which
has used two colors in the borders.
"Although printing this year
started nearly two weeks earlier
than last year," .J. 1). Hall, Jr.,
director of the College Press, said,
"the book will not appear any
earlier due to several last minute
sports events which will be in-
cluded."
Only the engraving of pictures,
binding, and covering of the Yucca
will be done outside of the campus
print shop Skilled student labor
11 • > w regularly employed in the
print shop will be used in produc-
ing the book, with no additional
labor hired. This will impose an
added burden on the present em-
ployees, but it will help reduce
costs, Mr Hall said.
The College is the only school
m Texas which prints its yearbook
on its campus. With the excep-
tion of New Mexico University,
the College is the only school in
the southwest which does this. The
1!(.'17 Yucca, edited by Dude Seville,
wa.« the first annual to be put out
by the print shop.
"The print shop is much better
equipped this year, and by profit-
ing from our last year's mistakes, i
we hope to produce a much better
annual this year than last," Mr.
Hall said yesterday. The 1938
Yucca, edited by Harry Black, will
embod\ at hast SOU pages, many
more copies will be issued, and
the book will carry more late ac-
tivities and news than Inst year's
book.
Ex-Students Take
New Posts as 2nd
Semester Begins
The following changes in ad-
drisses of teaching ex-students
become effective with the begin-
ning of the ■--econd semester of the
winter term:
Juanita Owen, '.'17. moves from
McAllen to Taft; C B. Midkiff
moves from Dumas to Shamrock;
Flo Mai ee Robertson from Denton
to Midland; (Jlenda Bevill, B. A.
:tl and M S. '37, from Den is on
to North Texas Agricultural Col
leg. Arlington.
Kvelyn Taliaferro. B A '28. is'
to take a position with the Nacog- !
doches High School effective .Inn-1
nary 1 f . She has lieen in the fac-
ulty of the Jiickslmro High School.
S. B. McALlSTER
McAlister Takes
State Education
Department Post
WILL HAVE CHARGE OF
LEGAL QUESTIONS
FOR WOODS
Dr. S. B McAlister, professor
of government at the College, has
been granted n leave of absence,
effective Jan. ''A, to fill a temporary
appointment in the State Depart-
ment of Education in Austin. Pres-
ident W. J McConnell announced
Monday.
Dr McAlister will serve as first
assistant superintendent to Dr. L.
A. Woods, state superintendent of
public instruction, and as such will
have charge of legal questions
which come before the State De-
partment. He will (ill for the time
the position formerly filled by Dr.
Jeremiah Rhodes, who died a few
weeks ngo. No announcement has
been made as to who will take Dr.
McAlister's place on the faculty
here.
The author of "The Government
and Law of the Texas Public
School System" and co-author of
'Citizenship in Our Democracy,"
Dr. McAlister is considered one of
the best authorities on school law
in Texas.
Dr. McAlister received his train-
ing at the College, the University
of Texas, and Harvard, and holds
the B. A.. M. A., and Hi. D. degrees.
He has taught six years in the
public schools of Texas and eleven
years in the department of govern-
ment here. He has served ns
special lecturer on civic education
for the department of education.
Commonwealth of Massachuetts,
and in 1937 he was research tech-
nician for the National Resources
Committee in Washington
NOTICE
All student labor time
slips must he turned in to
the Business Office h> p.m.
Tuesday, Januarv 25. in or-
der that students may gel
their checks on the 29th.
After the 29lh. no student
checks will be written again
until March .1.
Four faculty members will
leave the College the second semes-
ter on leaves of absence to fill
other positions or to do graduate
study.
They are Mis- Sadie Kate Bass,
dietician, Marquis Hall; Walte1'
S. Knox, assistant p.ofessor of
physical education; Miss Myra L.
Sowell, assistant professor of home
ccoii' inics, and Dr. S. B. McAlister.
professor of government.
Miss Bass will return to the
Teacher College, Columbia Uni-
versity. to complete work on the
master's degree. Her duties will
be assumed by Mrs. Pearl Acker,
social director at Marquis Hall.
Mr. Knox will go to the Univer-
sity of Iowa to work on the doctor-
ate. His work will be distrib-
uted among several people, Mrs,
Knox taking one of his classes.
Miss Sowell will go to Detroit
Mich, where she will take a special
course in nursery and parent ed-
ucation. in the Merrill-Palmer
School. Her position will lie fill-
ed during her absence by Miss
Willie Fletcher, who comes from
the Teachers College from Iowa
State College, Ames. Miss Fletch-
er's home is in Kusturn, La.
Dr. S. B McAlister, professor of
government, goes to Austin to be-
come first assistant superintendent
to Dr. L. A. Woods, state superin-
tendent of public instruction. No
announcement has yet been made
in regard to his successor.
White Hussars to
Appear Here on
Fine Arts Series
If you are going to slip and
fall in the bathtub, there are some
nights I>etter than others for it,
if you had your pick.
That's what Miss Lottie Bra-
shears, member of the library
staff, thinks She's in the College
hospital from injuries received in
a fall in u bathtub in her home
recently.
When did it happen?
? Held at C°lkge
Possibly Feb. 18-19
Fourteen Debater&,
Coaches Return
From Meet
Second place cups and individ-
Second Exhibit of
Living Art Opens
Miss Brashears blushes. It was ui l medals were won by two
on Saturday night. Teachers College teams in jun-
ior college competition in the Bay-
lor University s| eech department
tournament held in Waco January
11-15, it was learned following
the return this week of the Col-
lege's 14 debaters and their
« I . _ Coaches, Mrs. Olive M. Johnson,
InHsiV III I Inrjirv 'u>a<l "f t',<" "I"'1*1*1 department,
1 UUfl^y III iilUl <11 J an,| Bullock Hyder, debate coach.
The second place winner:, from
HEGIN'S AT SAME TIME North Texas are: Gordon Carpen-
AT BMI POINTS IN 11 -i and .lack Bobbins, both of
I'NITEI) STATES Dent n, who swept through eight
traight wins to lose the ninth to
Muskogee College, Muskogee, Ok-
m
Program Chairman High Sck—l Tfnrfirifs
From AH a/ Mv
To Be Invttod
Debaters from all Ten* Hick
.Schools will be invited to a praetiee
debate institute on the f ip—
next month, Dr. Joe M. Hay, pro-
fessor of government, aaid Wed-
nesday.
Dr. Ray will direct the insti-
tute, in which debate teams will
meet one another in practice tills
and will hear authorities speaking
! on the Interscholastic League 1M8
question, the unicameral tegiaJatavs
in Texas.
Tentative dates for the meet are
Feb. 18 and 10, Dr. Ray aaid.
Whether or not the institute caa
Dr. Jack Johnson, director of J* on these dates
The group of twelve pictures se
b-cted for the second exhibit by m the finals.
Living American Art, Inc.. of New 1" addition, the senior girla' __
York City opens here today and team, composed of Judy Ann Ste- economics at the College, will be however, on whether or not other
simultaneously at .'j(H) points veil- and Hazel I lagans, reached program chairman at the aanual ,n*;et8 art* slated for that time, he
throughout the United States. The 'he finals but lost in the first stockholders' meeting of the Den-
showing here will take place at round to Durant Teachers of Du- ton County Teachers Federal Credit Dr. Ray is the compiler of the
the l.ittle (iallery in the library '""l. Oklahoma. Fay Cooper and Union Friday night at Marquis official Interscholastic League de-
building under the direction of the Leah Tate lost in the finals to Hall.
Art Department. Sun Marcos Teachers College. 1*
This showing is the second of ,h" first tinu' in thr«*' V®*™ nA i i i j #
it. "■ i hM h,d • Stockholders of
by Living American Art during 1
the year The inaugural series two Miss Stevens also reached the
months ago was attended by more fi,,als in "fter-dinner speaking.
than half a million people in 225 whieh was held at the annual ban-
cities in lt> states. fluot at lhe Roosevelt Hotel.
Pictures included in the exhibit AboUt fl,ul' hundred people at-
Credit Union To
Meet Friday Night
include Valhalla Bridge by Thomas
Donnelly; Outdoor Circus by Lu-
cille Blanch; Hawthorne, New
DINNER WILL PRECEDE
ANNUAL ELECTION
OF OFFICERS
The Denton County Teachers stitute. Other state officials
SEASON'S SCHEIH'LE IS
COMPLETED: SPEAKS
HERE MARCH 10
F.S.P. Tests Indicate That
Faculty Member Is "Psychic"
Davis
first grade
(term
fene Ttinncll i* teaching the
[grade in the Big Lake School
at Texon.
One person on the campus-—a
member of the faculty rates being
called a "psychic" «s a result of
the tests in clairvoyance and telep-
athy given to a book review aud-
ience in the library auditorium
Thursday afternoon by Miss Bessie
Shook, who reviewed Rhine's "New
Frontiers of the Mind."
Mrs. fieorge Medders was the
highest scorer in the clairvoyant
test with a score of 1M correct
"psychic impressions" out of a
possible 25. In the test in telcp
at by, she received the second
highest score with 1<> correct guess-
es out of the possible 25. Mrs.
Wesley V. Hite of Denton scored
highest in this test with ail correct
guesses, and Mrs. J. R Swenson
with n score also of 10. C hance
will give a person five correct
guesses out of the 25, the book
holds.
Lowest scorer in the clairvoyant
test was Mrs U. A. Odam who
guessed one correctly. In the telep-
athy test one person in the au-
dience received a score of zero but
the name was not learned. Al-
most every person who attended
the review participated in the test-
ing, which is accomplished with
a deck of cards on which are
squares, circles, wavy lines, and
stars.
In the review Miss Shook de-
clared that the author, a member of
the faculty of Duke University, set
out to tell of his seven years of
experience in the field of telepathy
and clairvoyance and did tell of
them clearly, and she described
his work as worthwhile, as he has
approached this field from the
standpoint of science. The book
leaves a question for its readers:
in v hat field should the scientists
go to study these "extra-sensory
perceptions." Rhine thinks the field
of physics will finally furnish the
answer, Miss Shook said.
The White Hussars, a quintet
in brass accompanied by harp and
piano, is scheduled for February
11 by the Fine Arts Committee
and will open the spring series of
fine arts numbers, it was announc-
ed this week.
The White Hussars derive their
name from their attire of white
and gold uniforms. They will pre-
sent a program of operatic gems
and symphonic arrangements of
familiar classics.
Margaret Speaks, well-known
soprano on the "Voice of Fire-
stone," will appear in concert here
March 10. Miss Speaks has won
universal acclaim and praise for
her pleasing personality as well
as her voice.
Also winning much praise from
critics is the Humphey-Weidman
Dance group whose appearance
here will Is1 on March 2t'. Th*'
group will present a recital of
modern dance.
The following night Jack Rank,
noted portrayer of Shakespearean
characters, will present his one-
man "Shakespearean Revue."
the characters of the revue
Shyloek, Portia, Antonio,
Lady Macbeth.
Te Ata. Indian princess
student of Indian folklore,
and customs, will be at the
lege May H-4. She has an ex-
tensive collection of Indian cos-
tumes which will be use*! in her
program here.
40 Vacancies in
Annexes Expected
There will l«- approximately 10
vacancies ill the annexes of Mar-
quis Hall at the end of this seme-
tcr. Mrs. Pearl Acker, director,
snid Wednesday.
These houses are owned by the
school and are under the super-
vision of Mrs. Acker, social direc-
tor of Marquis Hall. The girls of
both annexes are under the rules
of the dormitory and also have
dancing privilege in the Hall dut
ing the dinner hour.
Any girl interested in an incx
pensive but comfortable place to
live next semester may make reser-
vations through Mr- Acker at Mar
qllis Hall, or through either of the
hostesses, Miss Klectra Pickett at
the Mulberry Annex, and Mis1-
Carolyn Williams, at Annex No.
2 on Sycamore Street. Both houses
are directly Itehind Marquis Hall.
tended. Miss Stevens and Billie
Murray, of Baylor, were the only
women in the after-dinner finals,
York. by'YiVi'i'rge' Pick en; My Wife lind W*,v lht' fim women ir' th«
by Alexander Brook; Still Life See SPEECH TEAMS on page 4
by Niles Spencer; American In-
terior by Charles Sheelcr; Fire
Eater by Franklin Watkins; Th*'
Village Church by Kmil (ianso;
The Kid by Isabel Bishop; Autumn
Leaves by Georgia O'Keefe; Deer
Isle Islets, Maine by John Marin;
and West Point, New York by Louis
M. Eilshemius.
The movement has attracted at-
tention because of tin fact that No mid-term changes will be business calendar for the evening
royalties from the ale of the prints made in the number of students Program chairman will he Dr.
P '-l the artists themselves, employed by the N. Y. A. on the •'ft(,k Johnson, director of the de-
ivgardlc of the current owner- eampus according to Charles Wil- psrtment of economics.
ship, creating w new and needed |jam.s. N. Y. A. administrator of Special music tor the dinner pro-
sourec of income for the artist, d,,. College. There will, however, i gram will be provided by a men's
I'.ach o| the twelve painters rep- some changes made in nersonnel
resented in the -bowing is alive jf students now employed fail to
and working in this country. The make their grades, Williams
jury which has selected these pic- warned. Students cannot be em-
tu.'e includes three well-known ployed by N. Y. A. who fail to
artists, Louis Bouche, Alexander pass their work.
Brook, and Adolf Dehn, and Pro- During the fall term 214 stu-
fessor Hughes Mearns of New lents have been working under N.
York University. V. A. regular and part time
bating bulletin of material for tha
question, "Texas Legislature- One
House or Two." He was among ths
principal speakers at a similar da-
bate institute held at the Univer-
sity of Texas last week-end and
is known as an authority on tha
unicameral legislature. A news ra-
port of one of his addresses at the
University, published in the Daily
Texan, appears in this issue of this
Chat.
State Senators G. N. Nelson,
Grady Woodruff, and Van Zandt
will be invited to appear on the pro-
tram of lectures during the in-
\JV 4 CLulAwin M..„l Federal Credit Union will hold its proponents of unicameralism I
11 1 n illUUCniS MUSI nnu*' stockholders' meeting Fri- bicameralism are expected to
xiaxs XTMK>* day #t 6;!5 pm in tho rrysUil also
Dnnn UJ^wlr -j, I j* Room st Marquis Hall. An informal
1 dm Tf (Jill Or LIlBv dinner will precede the business
Iflhe \pvt SoHMwtflf Election of officers and declara-
'"vAI OrillCOtiCI i tion of a dividend for the year will
be the most important items on the
nlAMi lM|M|aMm|
livW vvHnauM
Course, Editing,
Will be Offered
. , „ . . „ . Journalism 332, a course in
trio composed of Robert B. Neale. ,H|itiri(r and editorial writing, will
Jr. Bob McDonald, and Tom Moore offt,ri>(1 fo|. tht> first tjmc> at
the College next semester, C. E.
Cox.
Tickets are sixty-five cents and shuford. instructor in journalism!
may be purchased from Miss f aro- ha„ nnnounc0(1.
line Currte, head of tho ticket
sales committee. Kenneth Hunt is , rh" nt'w l,,,"rse wi *,ve tu-
in charge of decorations, and the dl'n'3 an Wrtun.ty to do copy-
hospitality committee is composed jading and headline writing and
Students employed work an average of Dr R. L. Conrod, Miss Hazel . work on the t ampus
nn/l of fifty hours per month and re- Hershman, and Miss Curry. ' , " ,0 ",tudy l^e editorial
renrod anci Nun *•«« ** . —
— — page in th*' mo*lern newspaper.
Prerequisite for the course after
this year will be Journalism 281-
232, both semesters of reporting,
but since the editing course ii
being offered for the first time
"The American Dream." a story fhi? ^ar' s0"11' will
be made next .semester in
1 v 111 1/11 CI 111.1 OCllll i'eive salaries totalinR 52,070.
Is Saturday FilmTw NsVPhvsks J®
Courses (Mend ^8 Rtvlew
In
are
and
and
life.
Col-
"Penrod and Sam," starring Billy
Matich, will be th*' film Saturday
night at #'15 o'clock in the audi-
torium Th< piny i- taken from the A practical course in radio con- about three Irishmen, will be re- , . . .
-toi v "f the same name hv B>><<th truction and a double-credit course viewed by Mrs. Phoebe Mizell of ° u us ,9 en * .
Tarkington nkv.ir. «r.. In tw. nt. Ih^ nnmnn.tr.iinn Seh.v.l J'.'tft wh" ^ httd previous experience.
It is a thriller-comedy punctu-
ated by the exploits of the "gang,"
headed by Penrod. Harry Watson
plays th*- roll of Sam. Others in
the cast are Spring Byington,
Frank Craven, Craig Reynolds,
in first year physics are to be of- the Demonstration School at 4:30
fered for the first time by the o'clock today in the library audi- Journalism '.''<2 will be advanced
physics department next semester, torium. reporting, with an introduction
The course in radio and public The author, Michael Foster, seeks the principals of headline writ-
address amplifier construction, to put in this book the idea that 'ng i'nd copyreading. Reporting
Ii-ted as Physics 33fi, will be open gas made the American people students in 231 are expected to
, ,, , e ,„i * s "n'v "indents who have com- what they are today. The story continue in 232 to meet the re-
lael 'i" M.'i-imw ,lii,l"liukeUtli." .'i'oir pleted the prerequisites, Physics tells the life of three generations quirements for either of the ad-
and 236. A supply of material of the Thrall family. The first im- vanced courses which they may
and equipment has already been migrated from Ireland to America wish to take next year. Mr. Shuford
has announced.
On the stage students from Den-
ton Senior High School will be ,, , . .. > . . .
f . | . , i . y assembled for the course. in 1848. His son became a news-
hen,o„ High" and ha*ketball re- >he double-credit course will paper man in the Middle West
- iilt - will mt i otitic, a full program l 131 and 132 in the His grandson became a successful
whjch wjl, jl|0hldl. a ,|a,uv r()Ulini. one semester ami is open to fresh- newspaper man on the Pacific
by cmilla Williams an,I Kvelyn m,'n aml othcr "tudMlt.. coast.
Kmg. Tin1 D H. S. trio, Dudley
King, Fred Kllison, and Ed Miller
will sing "Josephine."
In the grand finale, K. L. Minor,
Mary Lee Fouts, Budell Loftin,
Billy Floyd Brooks and Then
Brooks will be presented in routine.
Popular hits of the day, "Dipsy
Doodle," "Once in a While," "I
Hum a Walts," and "Rosali*
to be selections from the pit
Print Shop Expands Work
And Enlarges Facilities l
Hanson To Speak
On T. C. Broadcast
Dr. E. H. Hanson, professor of
mathematics in the College, wrill
speak this week on "Romance of
Mathematics" on the College's
————— weekly Srturday broadcast oeer
With the recent addition of a of one. WFAA, Dallas, Floyd Graham,
UIV new Chandler & Price automatic This shop was first opened in program director, said yeeterday.
platen press, another step was order to print the Chat and sta- The program will originate !■ Ike
taken toward enlarging the facili- tionery supplies for the College and campus studios.
French and Spanish tb'* the Teachers College Press, to make it possible for the in- Other program features
/'*!*«>• u iMHAMMMil which is located in the basement dustrial education department to singing by J. B. Woodrum,
I Ollt SeS \nnOUnceU ,,{ t|„. manual arts building and offer courses in linotyping and Iters by the stage band, Hi
which this week began work on printing. At present the print chestra, and radio
New course for the spring the l! :!s Yucca. This press, which shop, under the supervision of J. the whistling of Herman
-emcster have been organized in takes a maximum sine sheet of ten D. Hall, Jr., prints all College "Dreamland Town," one of •
beginning French and beginning |,y fifteen inches, makes 3,500 im- bulletins and catalogs, the Avesta. group of children's poems h Veato
Spanish, Dr. Ruby Smith, director n-essions per hour. No human and the Yucca, in addition to the Cnin, former student of tfcs 0*
of the department of forcigp Ian- hand need touch the paper being material intended when the shop lege, which appeared ia Ike ' *
guages, said Monday. printed. vitas opened. issue of the Avesta erIU be
Students interested in these During its 13 years of existence, It is the policy of the print on the program. The
courses -hould consult Dr. Smith tin- Teachers College Press has shop to employ only student labor musical numbers will
in th*- foreign language oriec in increased and replaced its origi- Employees are L. K. Walker and Study in Brown" Mid
A312. nal equipment, which was second- Raleigh Usry, linotype operators; stage band; "Once hi a
hand when installed, by adding a Benge Daniel, pressman; Arthur J. B. Woodrum; f
ROOMS: downstairs room nd linotype and a No. 2 Kelly press. Turner, Arthur Evans, and Harry quin." "salon oi
meals for two girls, also room as well as the new job press. It Herrmann, compositors and opera- tine," ensemble
with kitchen privileges !'l.r> W has expanded to the extent that it tors of the three job presses; snd Wsiting for the
Sycamore Mi's. J. Maggard. now requires three rooms instead Frances Taylor, proof reader. j Bomar,
;-4Si
{M
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Jamison, Alonzo, Jr. The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 20, 1938, newspaper, January 20, 1938; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth306367/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.