THE BATTALION 5 i THE HEARTS OF WOMEN {Many a man is m doing- work day afterJgB day that an dectric % motor can do ior lessi/1 than a cent an hour^ College men and women recognize elec tricity as one of the principal aids to progress in the factory, on the farm, and in the home. Guided by human intelligence, electricity can do almost any job a man can do. From stirring to grinding, from lifting to pulling, there is a G-E motor specially adapted to any task. If you have played with the hearts of women, Be they old or merely maids, Be sure, my son, you’ll regret it As certain as spades are spades. You’ve laughed and joked with the other boys, At the way you’ve strung them along, Never considering the pain you’ve caused Nor think you’ve done any wrong. But wait, sometime you’ll really love, And then you’ll begin to pay, For the hearts you’ve broken will give you no rest In your dreams, your work or your play. You’ll see their faces as you talked to them, You’ll remember the look in their eyes As you spoke of love and other things, God, but you’ll hate those lies. For the day you find yourself in love, With a girl so wonderous fair, You’ll think of the hearts you’ve tri fled with, And you’ll begin to doubt she’s square. That day it will all come back to you, And the question you’ll ask will be, “I’ve fooled and played with a dozen girls, Do you suppose she’s playing with me ?” When you kiss the lips of the girl you love As you leave her at the door, You’ll wonder in spite of all you can do, If she has been kissed that way be fore. For the things she does with inno cence Will fill your heart with doubt, And the moments you spend away from her Will tear your heart-strings out. You’ll never think she’s doing right, Though she does and tries her best, You’ll be jealous of every man you see And think she is like the rest. For you’ll think of the many girls you’ve kissed, And you’ll reason that this is true, “The things I can do to the other man’s girl, The other man to my girl can do.” 210-60DH GENERAL ELECTRIC GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY SCHENECTADY Y O R K THE VALUE OF SMALL COLLEGES American parents will select small colleges near their homes for their children if they follow the advice of Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, noted educator and health authority. The great universities with present- day enrollments of 5,000 to 25,000 are like factories, turning out graduates supplied with specified facts on cer tain subjects, but they lack the ad vantage of intimate contacts between teacher and students and the congen ial community life which develops character and fosters culture, he de clares. “There is also a social threat which is more dangerous in huge crowds than in small companies,” he says. “It is the danger of bolshevism and atheism. It is an easy matter in these crowded educational centers to couple up disbelief in God with disbe lief in government. “One dollar expended at Hanover, a small college in Indiana, gives as much culture as five at Harvard. As a graduate of both institutions I can truly make this statement. “The real specific benefit of the small college lies in the fact that its students are individuals. They know their professors. They are not simply a number in a huge herd, with out recognition or individuality. “In a commencement in which from one to two thousand graduates receive their diplomas, as is the case in many of our large universities, there is no individuality. There may be a few who have graduated with honors, but most of them rise and, without even answering to their names, are given the degree of Bachelor of Arts, or whatever degree they may receive. * “The whole benefit of personal contact with the professor, the advan tage of his personal and sympathetic attention and his interest in each in dividual character as it is unfolded before him during the years of the association, are all lacking in this mass instruction. “The safety of the future, fhe purity of learning and the efficiency of teaching are all intimately bound up with the small educational unit,” his Good Housekeeping article concludes. CLASS OF ’28 TO LEAVE MEM ORIAL (Continued from Page 1) The plans for the Memorial have been made by Ernest Langford, the college architect, and its general ap pearance will be as follows: It will CORPS TRIP TO T. C. U. NOW ASSURED agent, is very anxious for those de siring Pullmans up to Dallas Friday night, to please report to the station and make their reservations so that he can obtain some idea of the num ber of cars to have set off. Do this early in the week. be eight feet square and will contain four ticket windows. The sides will be of white stucco, while the roof will be of red slate and the base red. If possible, a bronze football player will be placed on the peak of the roof, but more likely there will be a bronze football in the position ready for the kick-off. The tile will be furnished by the Athletic Department and all other materials by the Senior class. Since work is going to start im mediately, it is hoped to have the Memorial conpleted by the time of the S. M. U. game, early in Novem ber. At any rate, it will be dedicated along with the new stadium Thanks giving day. A bronze tablet will be placed on the structure showing that it was erected and dedicated by the Seniors of ’28.