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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 31, 1928)
THE BATTALION STUDENTS REGISTERED (Continued from Page 1) year, 1128 are new students, repre senting the largest freshman class in the history of the college. En rollment by schools is divided as fol lows: Agriculture 661, engineering 1587, arts and sciences 338, voca tional teaching 70, veterinary medi cine 17, special courses 20. Y CONTRACTS (Continued from Page 1) company out of New York City, and although this play has been shown there for prices ranging as high as $3.50, arrangements have been made whereby a big reduction of prices will be allowed in order to en able as big a number of students and campus people to attend as possible. More details about this opera will be received in the near future and they will be given out to the pub lic as soon as they are available. RUSSELL HOLDING been exposed to as much education as this group has. YEAR’S PROGRAM OF SEMINAR 1 ANNOUNCED (Continued from Page 1) (Continued from Page 1) ed to stay on any one subject and grow stale, as is the case in many of the bull pens. The advantage of the bull pen has often been discussed and has received much approval, so the Seniors should appreciate this opportunity of finding how others think, especially a group that has May 13—R. L. Hunt, Department of Marketing and Finance—“Agri cultural Cooperation.” May 20—Final Banquet with Sci ence Seminar, Speaker and Sub ject to be Selected. The next meeting will be held at 7:30 on the evening of November 12th, in the Physics Lecture room, with Dr. L. L. Click of the Uni versity of Texas as the speaker. Dr. Click will discuss George Meredith, of whom he has made an exhaustive study. Dr. Click is considered an au thority on his subject, and will doubtless give a highly interesting and worthwhile address. All stu dents interested in the subject are cordially invited to attend. Centenary showed a better team on Kyle Field than the Aggies had but, at that, they only nosed out a 6-0 win and a successful play on the goal line would have given the Ag gies a win or a tie. THE NEW La SALLE HOTEL Just what the Aggies and their friends have been needing. Barber Shop Coffee Shop IN CONNECTION Dupree Fountain Manager BRYAN, TEXAS THEM GOOD MALTEDS WE STILL MAKE ’EM Candies, Cigars, Confections Cadets and Campus People Invited to Call HOLMES Confectionery BRYAN, TEXAS but a mosquito ^ | E Panama Canal diggers had JL engineering brains and money aplenty. But they were blocked by the malaria and yellow-fever bearing mosqui toes, which killed men by thousands. Then Gorgas stamped out the mos quito. The fever was conquered. The Canal was completed. The importance of little things is rec ognized in the telephone industry too. blocked the way Effective service to the public is possible only when every step from purchase of raw material to the operator’s “Number, please” has been cared for. This is work for men who can sense the relations between seemingly unre lated factors, men with the vision to see a possible mountain-barrier in a mole hill— and with the resourcehilness to surmount it. BELL SYSTEM nation-wide system of 18,500,000 inter-connecting telephones JUST BEGUN” (§) (§) (§) SEE OUR AGENTS © © © (S) >< <§> <§> American © © © © © Steam © © © © Laundry © © © © DRY CLEANERS, © © © DYERS, © © © HATTERS © © © © Phone 585 © © © BRYAN © © © © © ©©©©©©©©©©©©(§> “OUR PIONEERING WORK HAS