-&■& •a-s- a-a a-a aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa a a aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa Long Horn Rush is About Over We can now fill your reorders from your Long Horn plate which we have on file. Special prices will be given on reorders. You will also be given credit for the “Dollar” already paid in on these plates. Have a flashlight picture made of your room while it is looking its best. Don’t Wait Too Long! We Are Now Delivering the Goods! SMITH BROS. CAMPUS STUDIO aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa a a aa a a a a aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa aa MANY AGGIE SPEED ARTISTS WARM UP FOR COMING SEASON. Now that the first term examina tions are over the thoughts of athletes are turning to track. Captain Dudley Everett, generally regarded as one of the best all-round athletes in the State, and Student Manager Dan Scott are making elaborate preparations for the coming season. Last year J. A. Clutter of the dairy husbandry department, who during ins college career at Ames, Iowa, proved one of the best track men in that section, coached the track squad. The A. & M. speed artists captured second place in the State meet. Clut ter has just returned from Iowa, where he underwent an operation for A. & M. GLEE CLUB TO HAVE GOOD TRIP Program for Annual Barnstorming Tour Best in History of Club. A splendid schedule is being ar ranged for the Glee Club trip in North Texas for the season of 1915. The management finds no difficulty in booking engagements for this popular organization, for they have made good in the student centers of North Texas. With the assistance of Miss Anita Park, reader, and Mrs. G. D. Marshall, lyric soprano soloist, and C. A. Case, barytone, the club will present the most attractive and varied program in its history. The following schedule is tentative: A. & M. College — Wednesday, February 24. appendicitis. Whether he will be able to take charge of the squad or whether a coach for this activity will he employed is not known yet. However that may he, there is a wealth of good track material here and the Aggies will make all con tenders hump themselves this year. Everett, Collins, Rothe, Mitchell, Braumiller, Settegast, Haines, Hud son, McFadden, Peabody, Turner and others are track men of much experi ence and all of these will turn out in answer to the first call for men. In addition to the State meet, A. & M. will compete with Texas and with Rice Institute in a triangular meet this season. Bryan—Thursday, February 25. Marlin high school—Friday, Feb ruary 26. Waco, Baylor University—Saturday, February 27. Waxahachie, Trinity University— Monday, March 1. Fort Worth, Texas Christian Uni versity—Tuesday, March 2. Denton, College of Industrial Arts— Wednesday, March 3. Sherman, Kidd-Key College—Thurs day, March 4. Greenville—Friday March 5. It costs nothing to look. Come down and look through my line of samples. Charlie Nitch. Watch my announcements in the “Bat.” Charlie Nitch. T. C. U. PLANNING MANY INNOVATIONS Texas Christian University, Feb. 3. —Recommendation will be made by the faculty of the university to the hoard of trustees at their meeting this month that they provide for six days of school a week instead of five, as is now the rule. The faculty will also ask that the year be divided into four terms of twelve weeks each and that the session extend throughout the en tire year. This plan is different from any in practice in Texas colleges, as it makes provision for a summer term which would be on the same basis as any of the other terms. By this arrange ment a student could either go to school the entire year or take a three months’ vacation at any of the four seasons he chose. All of the four terms will be on the same standing and as complete in themselves as pos sible. If the six days a week plan is adopt ed by the hoard, the dean announces that all courses will be arranged so as to fall on alternate days three times a week. If the four terms a year plan is adopted, each course will complete itself in three months, as near as pos sible. Dedicated Bible Hall. Dedication services for the new Brite College of the Bible, affiliated with Texas Christian University, were held in the auditorium of the univer sity Tuesday morning and afternoon. The new modern building for the col lege has just been completed and is being thoroly equipped for the sole use of the ministerial students. To Give Spanish Play. Members of the advanced Spanish classes in the university will form the cast in a play to he given before the students in the auditorium next Tues day. The play will be staged under the auspices of the Spanish Society. The actors will speak in Spanish. Gym Work for Co-Eds. At last Texas Christian University’s fair co-eds are to have the physical training and gym work which has long been promised them and which they have looked forward to as an un realizable dream. Miss Ruth Hum phrey has been obtained by the uni versity to direct the gym work of the young ladies and is now organizing her classes. SENIOR C. E.’s TO TAKE CIVIL SERVICE TESTS Students of the civil engineering de partment of the A. & M. College have gone to Waco and to Houston to take the civil service examinations for civil engineering students. Five of the C. E. ’s went to Waco to take the tests and four others went to Houston for the same purpose. All of them are members of the Senior class. Those who went to Waco are E. O. Francisco, E. F. Hurdle, S. C. Mc Carthy, B. H. Faber and Mac Moss. F. W. Cawthon, S. K. Mason, W. H. Gillespie and J. E. Bell went to Hous ton. “How about the new cook?” “She says she wants three nights out a week, beefsteak at every meal and a room with southern exposure.” “Has she any references?” “No; all she has is preferences.”— Louisville Courier-Journal. Nine presses for $1. Eleven cents per piece. A. & M. Pressing Club.