THE BATTALION 8 Call on our Jewelry Agent: J. H. REKTORIK Class Pins Gold Brick Pins Start the New Year off right, by buying that much needed WRIST WATCH I COLLEGE JEWELRY A SPECIALTY We make senior rings for any year; also, junior pins, fish pins and jeweled pins of all kinds. CALDWELL’S JEWELRY STORE Buy your minature Senior Ring from W. E. ANDERSON 16 Alpha BRYAN, TEXAS T. Pins R. V. Pins WEEK’S NEWS IN REVIEW (Continued from Page 1) A brief meeting of the Senior Class was held Sunday afternoon for the selection of a committee to attend to drawing up the resolutions of respect and sending floral tributes to the Baylor athletes that were ^ ^cci^cnt last Saturday. At a meeting Sunday night the Class decided to send its presi dent, S. I. Stratton, as a representa tive to the joint service to be held for these men at Baylor on Monday. The “T†Association held a meeting at the same time and decided to send a representative also, D. C. Arnold being selected. i- V A fern prime favorite on the campus IN ANY group of regular fellows, you’ll find Prince Albert. It belongs. It speaks the lan guage. You get what we mean the minute you tamp a load of this wonderful tobacco into the bowl of your j immy-pipe and make fire with a match. Cool as a northeast bedroom. Sweet as a note from the Girl of Girls. Fragrant as a wood land trail. Prince Albert never bites your tongue or parches your throat, no matter how fast you feed it. You’ll smoke pipe-load on pipe-load with never a regret. Buy a tidy red tin of P. A. today. Throw back the hinged lid and breathe deeply of that real tobacco aroma. Then . . . tuck a neat wad into the business-end of your jimmy-pipe and light up. Now you have it . . . that taste! That’s Prince Albert, Fellows! Fringe albert P. A. is sold everywhere in tidy red tins, pound and half- pound tin humidors, and pound crystal-glass humidors with sponge-moistener top. always with every bit And always of bite and parch removed by the Prince Albert process. —no other tobacco is like it! © 1927, Compan 1927, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco ipany, Winston-Salem, N. C. Dean and Mrs. F. C. Bolton were hosts to twelve members of the Senior Electrical Engineering Class Sunday afternoon. It has always been the custom of Mr. and Mrs. Bolton to entertain the class as a whole at times during the year, but this year owing to the very large class, they are entertaining the class in small groups. . * * * The basketball tournament which the Athletic department is trying to get here on March 4th and 5th has not been assured but they feel that the movement for raising the money will go across. Letters or statements have been sent to the Company commanders and the men who will promise to buy a season ticket for $1.00 when they come out have been asked to sign the paper. From all appearances the money will be raised because the boys are signing up pretty well and not many of them vili go back on their promise. If this tournament is assured it will mean much to the college from an athletic point of view if not from several others. The exact outcome ot the plans will not be known for about a week. * * * Out of the 272 Seniors that reciev- ed their commissions Saturday, all but the first two were very dis appointed, for they were expecting to find a luxurious rug, but only a bare floor greeted them and they have been unable to this minute to find out what Dick Goodson stumbled At the end of the scolastic year, all the Seniors in the cadet corps at 1 ~ost, will be able to boast that they have crossed Guion Hall stage, received a rolled up paper, and been congratulated. * * * Once again, as on several occasions, the Seniors and Juniors see the reason for their three hours elective that all of them get. Some of the of course, get more than three hours, but that amount is left open for the election of Military Sclent d, so that every man can take the R. O. T. C. work if he wants to. Now that regis tration time is here again and courses have to be selected, the echo of the fight on R. O. T. C. work in Northern Colleges sounds here at A. & M. There is a group of people who do not believe in offering R. O. T. C. work, and who are trying to have it abolished in all colleges and high schools. Some of these people are the students enrolled in this work, co evidentally there is some reason for wanting the R. O. T. C. done away with. There are, however, very few if ^ '■• r V -1*-.-J-* ^ —r. !-« Of P ’ V 1 o-y ^ are here that few who gripe and fuss about the military department, but if the truth were known, they too are glad to get a chance to take the work and are proud of their uniforms. They probably also believe in protec tion, and are willing to spend what time is required by the Government to qualify for Reserve Officers. SENIORS RECEIVE COMMIS SIONS !l (Crntinued from Page 1) Officers Reserve Corps commissions will be awarded at commencement in May. This was Mr. Miller’s first vLS> • ■> the College during which he and Mrs. Miller were guests of President Walton.