4 THE BATTALION THE BATTALION Published every Wednesday night by the Students’ Association of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas. Subscription price $1.75 per Year. ALL. ADS RUN UNTIL ORDERED OUT. Accepted for mailing at special rate of postage provided for in section 1103, Act of October 3, 1917, authorized October 18, 1922. All undergraduates in the College are eligible to try for a place on the Editorial Etaff of this paper. Freshmen, Sophomores, and Juniors who are interested in journalism for its own sake, are urged to make themselves known to some member of the Staff. EDITORIAL STAFF R. T. FALKENBERG ft. O. PEARSON . . . , R. H. JONES L. H. MADDOX S. BAKER A. R. MENGER C. M. FLORER T. A. PILKEY R. E. HOMANN W. G. RALPH W. C. MORRI'SS .... W. T. COLEMAN . . . B. P. GREENWADE . G. M. WRENN E. L. ANDREWS G. F. STARK R, B. TATE N. A. DONGES W. C. JOHNSON W. D. McELROY L. L. TAYLOR Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Sports Editor . . .Associate Sports Editor . .Assistant Sports Editor Exchange Editor Social Editor News Editor . . .Associate News Editor . . Assistant News Editor . . Assistant News Editor .... Assistant News Editor Literary Editor Literary Editor Literary Editor Associate Literary Editor Humorous Editor Cartoonist BUSINESS MANAGER R. L. EDGAR Business Manager J. A. DAVIS Assistant Business Manager R. E. O. SLOAN Circulation Manager TO THE SENIORS. For four years you have been Jearning to use books—the fundamental tools of education. Are you now gtoing to stop reading, as some men and women do, for two, perhaps five years, and then suddenly wake up to the lact that when your reading stopped your education stopped also? Or, are you going to make your reading, and therefore your education, a continu ous, life-long process? Most of you, next year, will be within hailing distance of a public libra ry. Libraries are increasingly aware of the fact that they are the universi ty of the man who has ended his formal education. More and more they are making special provision for the serious reader. The Reading with a Purpose series published by the American Library Association is one of the new tools provided for this purpose. These are little forty-page booklets written by such men as Vernon Kellogg, Lorado Taft, William Allen White, Alexander Meiklejohn, Edwin E. Slosson, Fred erick L. Paxsoh, and Samuel McChord Crothers. They briefly introduce a subject,—psychology, biology, painting, or whatever it may be, and then recommend six or eight readable books which will give a rounded view of the subject. If you have majored in science you may have missed out on literature. Dallas Lore Sharp’s SOME GREAT AMERICAN BOOKS, W. N. C. Carlton’s ENGLISH LITERATURE, Samuel McChord Crother’s THE MODERN ES SAY, or Marguerite Wilkinson’s THE POETRY OF OUR OWN TIMES will help to fill the gaps. Perhaps you have avoided history. Some day you may wish you hadn’t. Then Herbert Adams Gibbons’ THE EUROPE OF OUR DAY, or Frederic L. Paxon’s THE UNITED STATES IN RECENT TIMES will prove a stimulating and useful guide. And so of all the major subjects of knowledge. Twenty-two subjects have been covered and more are planned. And one thing more. You need not wait until next year to get ac quainted with the series. You will find the courses in the college library. SELF-CONFIDENCE. How many times have we wanted to do something worthwhile, or some thing that took lots of work and sacrifice, but finally gave it up because we were afraid we couldn’t put it over? How many times have you been called on to do something that you couldn’t get nerve enough to tackle? “Self- Confidence,” according to Samuel Johnson, isi the first requisite to great undertakings. If this be so, then it can easily be seen why there are so many failures, and I believe the statement to be very true. Many times I have seen A. and M. students completely fail to work some problem, pass some quiz, or other things of more or less importance, only because they lacked determination and self-confidence. Certainly, if you have no faith in yourself you cannot expect anyone else to do so, and it is evident that you cannot do the great things that you want to do. After all, the aim of education is to make one sure of himself and therefore able to do his work in full. In another instance, the boy may simply be worried for any one of the usual reasons: homesickness, the girl, finances, a quiz. The point is this: That fellow needs a smile, a friendly slap, a hearty greeting. He needs to be jarred out of his reveries. A smile is contagious. A smile, a true fellow- feeling, true understanding, true comradeship, they are worth practicing. And when practiced, the odd thing is that your own worries vanish away. ALL CONFERENCE BASEBALL GAMES TO BE BROADCAST With the arrival of the baseball sea son, several questions have been asked as to which athletic events are broad cast over the College Station WTAW. It is customary to broadcast all con ference athletic events, and other events that are important enough to be of interest to the citizens of Texas. The station is much mope powerful than it was last year, having been heard from Maine to California, and from Canada to Honduras. Most of the athletic events occur in the day, but WTAW has an exceptionally good I daylight range, a consistent 150 miles, with reports from both New York and | California. The main trouble of recep- | tion of this station is the interfer- ' ence with the KMOX of Saint Louis. These stations have the Same wave length, thus they “come in” at the same place on any radio receiving set. The folk at home can get WTAW at that place every day at 12:15 noon except Saturday, Tuesday and Thurs day at 7 p. m., Sunday at 11 a. m., and when ever a conference contest is held here. -M r 14 « A***********rf 1 *.fc.fc*.fc.fc , fc.l.*4..fc , l.*.™.***.fc.fc*****«>* , *»4..fc»*, j. AN OBSERVATION. Every once in awhile we see a boy walking along with his head dropped —thinking. That may be a good indication and it may not be. It is an in exorable rule with a college student that he is flooded with such a host of conflicting thoughts sometimes that he becomes bewildered. And he may become abnormal for a time, he is trying to adjust himself too rapidly, thinking and worrying too seriously. He may be trying to find the truth in life. In that case his contempla tion is excusable if he is sincere. What is the use to worry? None. Mostly, that chap needs only to grow up, a few stabilizing years. THE NEW Y A RK CAFE ;; * ■ j;; THE BEST PLACE TO EAT IN BRYAN :: j < > | j 11 j PHONE 460 :: :: ::