THE BA,TALION 5 'ofliae— Albert Einstein, it is said, is rarely seen without his pipe. HASSEMBLY HALL Janet Gaynor in ‘'Daddy Long Legs” Saturday, October 24 Two shows — 6:30 and 8:30 Wednesday, Oct. 28 Badget Fullback THIS AND THAT i Always formost in the ranks of critics feigning intei’est in activi ties, fads and other student inter ests is the professor—the pedant, pedagogue, purveyor of knowledge to avid American youth. The stu dent adopts pleated trousers and the professor scoffs—the same su perior attitude is maintained re garding the darling little, practic ally brimless hat. “Asinine,” the erudite gentleman rants to his wife and any other human unfortunate enough to be forced to listen. Youths acceptance of the silly “yo-yo,” of miniature golf and its annual disregard for studies dur ing football season have been the object of many caustic, cultured “cracks.” The learned gentleman himself never takes to anything “like a duck to water,” never loses himself in pursuit of pleasure— he must constantly maintain the professorial poisee. Yet, nightly, rain or shine, stu dents so moved may witness the unbelieveable. Just north of Wal ton Hall is a private electrically lighted croquet “layout” over which four advocates of strenuous outdoor exercise knock wooden balls through wire wickets. A Baylor— (Continued from page 4) the starting team is chosen. Willis Nolan, who received a badly wrenched kneed in the Tu- lane game in New Orleans, is rap idly recovering and may see some service in his position at center in the game Saturday. Leading the reserves on the ros ter are “Dooley’-’ Dawson, and Charlie Cummings, tackles; “Bus” Moore, and “Dick” Hornsby, guards; “Pete” Robertson, center; Ray Murry, and “Beax•” Wright, ends; Ted Spencer, fullback; “Frenchy” Domingue, quarterback; Henry Graves, Nelson Rees, Geo. Lord, and W. B. Williams, half backs. uxi/umco nearer we stoop than when we soar. W ordsworth. An acre in Middlesex is better than a principality in Utopia.— Macaulay. The annual Freshman Week was dropped this year at Mt. Union College. College-trained engineers revisit the athletic field Jack Schnellner, fullback of the Wisconsin university eleven, giv ing his kicking fleg a little exer- Before the coming of leisure, “life” was the monopoly of the very few.—Joseph Lee. THE ‘*uwnft SECRET THE COLONIAL \ \ \ CAFE \ “A Select Place to j ! Dine” i i i Navasota SUPERIORITY Campus Barber Shop Bert Smith THEM GOOD MALTED MILKS We Still Make Them! King’s, Whitman’s and Pangburn’s Candies Holmes Bros. Confectionery Bryan Phone 221 Neatness + Quality Mater ials = A Good Shoe Repair Job! THE CAMPUS SHOE SHOP On the Campus since ’91 (Over Exchange Store) New! IPs Baylor Now Old Army! A Complete line of jewelry, pennants, stationery, radios, toilet articles, and books to fit your taste—your needs and your pocketbooks. To sa^ nothing of our military goods V' and th^many, many swankey fixtures for yot| room—the latest in every sense. Thi Exchange Store ‘Official Ston 0 f the College” broad grin spreads over the spec tacled countenance of “Do c” Spriggs as he drives “Bloody” Morgan’s ball into the ditch amid raucous ejaculations from “-Tom my” Munson, E. J. Howell and their various and respective wives. “My God,” groans a resident of Ramp A, Walton Hall, “they’re at it again. There should be a law; we ought to circulate a petition or something. I’m damned if I can study while that mallet menace continues.” $ * Eating pie beneath the table is passed—even freshmen are no longer doing it. Not because of softening sophomore hearts, but because someone in an official ca pacity has decided that etiquette shall grace Sbisa Hall. That’s tear ing at the very foundation of Ag gie traditions. Once begun this eradication of “ancient and honor able” custom may become an ob session with those who “rale the roost.” Attempting to foretell the extent of this destructive tendency is prognostsication—but it may re sult in students forsaking the knife to eat their peas and beans with a fork, in the inaudible ingurgita tion of soup, the elimination of el bows from the table edge, proper manipulation of bread and disuse of the table clothes as napkin sub stitutes. All customs dear to every true Aggie. Culture may stalk the campus and students evolve into gentlemen. From two thousand cheer-strained throats the cry is heard, “may God and the ex-stu- dents forbid!” * * * ; An Economist,” says a contem porary humorist, “is a financier without money.” Not always. An Economist may also be a quagga, close relative to the ass. In proof of the forgoing conclusion witness several statements given students in a recent true and false examina tion by a member of the Economics staff of the A & M College of Tex as—“George Washington was late to his first inaugural address be cause the train on which he was riding was late,” “Utility is some thing that may be removed from a commodity by a chemical pro cess.” So this is college? Apropos question, who should conduct the classes, the students or the instruc tor? ^ r The Minimax Shop Let us serve you’ during the coming year. Shave 20 cents Hair cut 25 cents Jones Barber Shop 2405 Bryan St. Bryan Bryan Nursery & Floral Co. Beautiful Flowers For All Occasions Bryan 266-R1 Bryan more than a hundred f floodlighted fields, foot- ball is being played and practiced in the evening hours, before larger audiences than ever before — with fewer injuries and in ' Ter conformity, with classroom duties. This constructive revolution in athletics is largely the work of college-trained engineers — young men personally familiar with the needs of college and school. They are dedicating the technical experience gained in the (jeneral Electric Test De partment to the practical service of under graduate athletics— designing and instal ling floodlighting equipment for virtually every sport—-football, baseball, hockey, tennis, and track. Other college men in the General Electric organization have specialized in street- SBSfPSl BBisiums N!ght photograph of Temple Stadium, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Roodliglited with G-E projectors lighting and floodlighting projects, or in the electrical equipment of industries and mines or of immense power stations; some are designing and applying electric apparatus to propel ocean liners and locomotives. All are engaged in the planning, production, or distribution of G-E products and so are performing a work of national betterment and creat ing for themselves recognized spheres of personal influence. You will he interested in Bulletin GEA-1206, “The Light that Started Sports at Night.” Write for it to the nearest G-E office or to Lighting Division, General Electric Company, Schenectady, New York 95-884H GENERAL® ELECTRIC let’s all ffo to Paving will soon start on the center lane of College Avenue in Bryan. This paving will greatly improve the ride from College to Bryan, it being up to now, the roughest street in the county. Technoscope Plans Subscription Drive V A subscription drive is planned by the Technoscope for the near future. The first edition of the yeear will be on November 10, featuring the Coast Artillery, new organization at this school, and an army unit in which many modernizing features have been in troduced. Many suggestions of the Engi neering College’s Magazine Asso ciation, and novel ideas of the edi tors will be embodied in the com ing issues of the magazine. It is good to love the unknown. —Charles Lamb. Dr. Loouis Ferdinand, 23, a grandson of the former German Kaiser, worked for two years in cognito at the Ford Motor Com pany in Detroit. Where Turkish tobacco grows Eastward ho! Four thousand miles nearer the rising sun—let’s go! To the land of mosques and minarets— so different from our skyscrapers, stacks and steeples. Let’s see this strange, strange country. Let’s see the land where the tobacco* grows in small leaves on slender stalks—to be tenderly ..,A, picked, leaf by leaf, hung in long fragrant strings, shelter-dried and blanket-cured. Precious stuff! T Let’s taste that delicate aromatic flavor — that | subtle difference that makes a cigarette! XANTHI .. CAYALLA . . SMYRNA <• In every important tobacco-growing cen ter Chesterfield has its oum tobaccobuyera .. samsoun . .famous tobaccos! *Turkish tobacco is to cigarettes what seasoning is to food—the''spice,” the"sauce” —or what rich, sweet cream is to coffee! You can taste the Turkish in Chesterfield —there’s enough of it, that’s why. Chester field has not been stingy with this impor tant addition to good taste and aroma; four famous kinds of Turkish leaf—Xanthi, Cavalla, Samsoun and Smyrna—go into the smooth, "spicy” Chesterfield blend. This is just one more reason for Chester field’s better taste. Tobaccos from far and near, the best of their several kinds—and the right kinds. And pure, tasteless cigarette paper, the purest made. The many requisites of a milder, better smoke, complete! That’s why they’re GOOD—they’ve got to be and they are. Since his death 15 years ago the estate of Richard Harding Davis, noted author and newspaper cor respondent, has more than dou- bleed in value as a result of royal ties from his writings. © 193L li ggett & Myers Tobacco Co.