IME B A T $ ALIGN JUNIOR CLASS MEETS TO SELECT NEW SENIOR RING (Continued from Page 1) ed both pro and con. The committee did not have a ring of the proposed design, but a drawing showing ex actly how the new ring would look was passed upon. There were a num ber of rings of different colleges and universities stimulating in design the proposed type on display. The order was put in the form of a motion and a vote was cast, it being agreed almost unanimously that the new ring be adopted. The attendance at the meeting was large and very representative of the Junior class. The main ideas which the ring committee wished to present were that the new design was their own, and that everything that was on the old type would be used on the new. In addition, around the margin of the stone the name of the school and the date when it was founded will be engraved in raised letters of fairly legible size. DR. BEATY (Continued from Page 1) not miss the opportunity to bring Dr. Beaty here and help to clear up this problem. Students, and Bry an and Campus people are cordially invited. MODERN YOUTH. Flaming youth is flickering. The flapper and the jellybean prototype, the cynical super-sophisticated pose, and the bold, bad front, young peo ple like to assume, are alike disap pearing. Good manners, courtesy, and I even a little modesty, are returning. Not that the young people have been so bad. Their manners and their exterior, not their morals, have been perhaps, worse than those of the “gay nineties.” Alarmists, who de pict such a doleful state in the mor als of modern youth, would be shock ed if they knew what a large per cent of college men do not smoke. The ways of the younger set are no longer as fashionable as they were now since the older generation has adopted them. It is not so smart to brag of the gin you can guzzle, the sigarettes you can down, or the elo quence with which you can swear, when some matron twice your age can perform these feats with an adeptness equal to yours. And the drug store corner loafer dresses and acts more collegiate than the college man can. Thumbs up the spirit of industry... l, > OR every race or game or debate JL that one team wins, another must lose. . . It’sforever“thumbsup” or “thumbs down”, according to which side you are on. But in industry there’s one side only. Enlightened industrybackseverymanon her teams. For it is to industry’s advan tage to see that every man makes good. Here you have an inspiring picture. Co-operation. The “vet” encouraging the novice. All industry rooting for achievement. It is not surprising then that so many men have found the interests of after-college years fully as broad and as absorbing as those of un dergraduate days. wesrerst &secfi SINCE 1882 MANUFACTURERS FOR THE BELL SYSTEM f» When the blatancy of post-war youth is discarded a happy combi nation will result. For the superfi cially and the woodenness of the nineties have been relegated to a limbo; from which, we hope, they will never return. And when the nat uralness and the frankness, which are a product of this “jazz-mad” age, are coupled with refinement, modesty, and good manners, young people will be in a more praisable (or perhaps less vituperated) state than ever before.—Ex. FRESHMEN FEWER. (Continued from Page 3) parently the other institutions on the theory that their trends are more settled and indicative of ordi nary conditions the country over. It finds that among those ninety schools freshmen were fewer in 1928 than in 1927, and total enrollment was only a little larger. Of students of all kinds in these institutions there are now about 850,000, an average of almost 10,000 per school. California now has 26,562 and Columbia 32,036. The former is the largest on the basis of the number of full-term students and the latter first in the total number enrolled. The University of Texas is fifteenth in the list on the basis of regular full-time stu dents and twentieth when every stu dent of every sort is counted by all schools. How far the Transcript’s figures are reliable is a matter of question in some points, at least; for the ten largest colleges exclusively for women, as given by the Transcript, include Hunter, Smith, Wellesley, Florida State College for Women, Vassar, Mount Holyoke, Goucher, Radcliffe, Randolph-Macon and El mira. But the College of Industrial Arts at Denton shows an attendance of 2,343, which would place it ahead of any school in this district except Hunter, which is credited with 4,918 students. Unless the Transcript has made other important omissions, the Denton school is the second largest woman’s college in the country.— Dallas News. *** **********-><-**>«-*****>♦-*** | BRYAN NURSERY AND f ; FLORAL CO. i * $ ★ TELEPHONE 266 1 R $ * * $ F. H. REICHERT j * i * Student Representative 5 I * x Law Hall Ramp 6-93 % THEM GOOD MALTEDS WE STILL MAKE ’EM Cadets and Campus Peofle Invited to Call HOLMES Confectionery