The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 09, 1941, Image 16

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page 16
THE BATTALION
Official Notices
CHANGE IN SCHEDULE OP CLASSES
Aero. 201, Section 505M has been chang
ed from Monday, Wednesday, Friday 9
to Tuesday, Thursday at 1 and Friday at
11.
Chemistry 443, 445, 447 and 449 will
be offered first semester at hours to be
arranged.
H. L. HEATON,
Acting Registrar.
FOR RENT—Three large bedrooms in
private home near campus; fully furnish
ed ; two bathrooms; $10.00 per month per
person. Corner Foster and Francis, Col
lege Hills. Phone 4-4749.
FOR RENT—Furnished garage apart
ment, all utilities, paved street, mail de
livery. College approved as room for several
students, with private bath and study
room; priced right. 1011 East 25th Street,
Bryan, or Rhone 2-7220.
STORAGE ROOMS
Storage rooms in the basement of Guion
Hall (rear entrance) and in the base
ment of Dormitory 3 (Briggs Hall) , will
be open for business on Tuesday, Septem
ber 8, and on Wednesday, September 9,
from 8 a. m. until 5 p. m. each day. On
September 10, 11, and 12, these storage
rooms will be open from 4 p. m. until 6
p. m. Then again on September 13, these
halls will be open from 8 a. m. until 5
p. m.
W. R. HORSLEY, Chairman,
Student Labor Committee.
NOTICE
The President’s Office has a thermome
ter returned from Manning, Maxwell &
Moore, Inc., which had been sent in for
repairs. Will the department owning this
please call for it.
LAUNDRY SERVICE
All laundry from old dormitories will be
turned in at Laundry Station 1 in two
west rooms of Austin Hall.
All laundry from the new dormitories
will be turned in at Laundry Station 2
in north end of dormitory No. 12.
Laundry slips may be secured from
Laundry Stations. The name, address, etc.,
will be placed in the space designated. It
is very essential that the surname be
very essential that the su:
fen first. All students that were
school last year please use your old lau
writte
school last year please use your old
dry mark. Marks will be assigned new
students. After the list has been filled
out the stub is torn from the list and pre-
ent at the time laundry is
sented to the age
turned in. When
laui
len prei
dry bundle. Duplicate stubs may be se-
cheek for
stamped only when
stamped, the stub is your
your laundry. The stub is
ly
esented with laun-
ay b
cured at main laundry for 5c each.
Laundry will be turned in and delivered
back to Sta. 1 according to the following
schedule:
All students whose surnames begin with
the letters: A B C D bundles in Saturday
7-8 a. m., bundles back Tuesday 3-6:30
p. m.; E F G H I bundles Monday 7-8 a.
p. m.;
day 7-8
a. m., bundles back Thursday 3-5 :30 p. m.;
O P Q R S bundles in Wednesday 7-8 a. m.,
bundles back Friday 3-5 :30 p. m.; T U V
W Y Z bundles in Thursday a. m., bun
dles back Saturday 1-3 p. m.
The schedule for Station 2 will be the
same with one exception: All boys whose
name begins with the letter A B C D will
turn in their laundry Friday 7-8 a. m.
and it will be delivered back Mon
day 3-5:30 p. m.
Laundry must b
for as scheduled as other laundry will be
iday
m., bundles back Wednesday 3-5 :30
J K L M Me N bundles in Tuesday 7-8
undry must be turned in and called
coming back on the following days and
unless cleared there will be congestion at
unless cleared there will be congestion at
the laundry rooms. Students please note
your respective dates and cooperate with
us. All late or out-of-place
have an extra charge of 15c.
pec
All late or out-of-place bundles will
an extra charge of 15c.
Students will be allowed 23 pieces per
week with a limit of 4 shirts, 2 pants, 1
coverall and 2 polo shirts. Shirts may be
exchanged for pants. Mess hall jackets
may be exchanged for pants. There will
be a charge on all excess pieces according
to the following: Shirts 10c, pants 15c,
polos 5c, coveralls 10c, jackets 10c and
all small pieces 2c each.
Your dress shirts will receive special at
tention if brought down to the main laun
dry and called for for 15c.
If you have any complaints or sugges
tions in regard to your laundry come to
the main laundry and call for Mr. Ayers.
W. E. Higgins, Laundry agent Sta. 1.
J. C. Powers, Laundry agent Sta. 2
Schedule for Group Project House and
American Legion
Bundles turned in at Station 3 Wednes
day 7-7 :45 and will be delivered back Fri
day 3-6 p. m.
Students that pay laundry fee at Fis
cal office please present your receipt at
ing
wil
idles.
J. D. Wilson, Agent.
Main Laundry before turning in laundry.
If fee is not paid there v
of 60c for 23 piece bundle!
>aid there will be a charge
All day students will turn in laundry
Tuesday 7-9 a. m. at North side of Main
Laundry. Call for Thursday noon.
G. P. Ayers, Mgr.
BATTALION STAFF MEETING
All old members of The Battalion edi
torial and reportorial staffs are urged to
be present at a meeting to be held im
mediately after College Night activities
Thursday in room 122, Administration
Building. Promotions will be discussed and
plans for a bigger and better year made.
Those new students who are interested
in joining the staff should attend this meet
ing.
SINGING CADETS
The first meeting of the singing cadet will
be held tonight, September 9, at 7:00 p. m.
at Guion Hall. All old members are re
quested to attend.
OFFICIAL NOTICES
Any student who is interested in taking
Choral work here should contact Mr.
Richard W. Jenkins who will have charge
of this work. Mr. Jenkins is located in
the Student Activities Office and he will
be glad to talk with any student concern
ing this work. One-half unit of college
credit will be allowed per semester when
the work is completed to the satisfaction
of Mr. Jenkins.
H. L. HEATON
Acting Registrar
OFFICIAL NOTICE
English 441, Interpretative Writ
ing (3-0), Credit 3 will be offered
the first semester 1941-42 at hours
to be arranged. Anyone who
wishes to take this course should
see W. C. Stone, 126 Administra
tion Building. This course is m
addition to English 331, News Re
porting which was taught last
year.
H. L. HEATON,
Acting Registrar.
The value of the physical plant
at A. & M., exclusive of the prop
erty of the three branch colleges,
is in excess of $13,000,000 com
pared to $200,000 when the college
was opened in 1876.
Including the adjoining agricul
tural and engineering lands, A. &
M. is built on a total of over 4,000
acres but the main campus is sit
uated on approximately 450 acres.
Dr. T. 0. Walton, appointed to
his present office in 1925, is the
thirteenth executive to serve as
president of A. & M.
If You Are Having
“EYE TROUBLES”
Have Them Checked Now
DR. JOHN S. CALDWELL
REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST
Office
Caldwell’s Jewelry Store
Bryan, Texas
1
Copr 19J7, King Feiturej Syndicate. Inc., World righti reserved
"--and I've been trying to get that window open all summer!"
Aggie Immortal- Tyree L Bell-
Will Head Former Students
Extension Service
Employs Garth To
Supervise Mohair
Walter Garth, Jr., of Sanford,
Maine, has been employed by the
Texas Extension Service, effec
tive August 1, to supervise mohair
grading in Texas during the fall
season, Director H. H. William
son announces. Garth was asso
ciated with the Texas Mohair grad
ing committee during the fall and
spring seasons of 1940-41 in de
veloping proper grades and methods
of grading. The committee is com
posed of mohair producers and
warehousemen.
W. R. Nisbet, Extension Service
animal husbandman, with whom
Garth will work, said that it was
the purpose to develop in the
early fall season a definition of
the standards by which mohair is
to be graded. Garth will help de
fine the grades and after these
have been accepted by growers,
warehousemen, dealers and mills,
efforts will be made to have them
established as standard grades for
the United States.
WELCOME AGGIES
WE WELCOME ALL OF OUR OLD FRIENDS
WE WANT TO MAKE LOTS OF NEW ONES
DROP BY AND VISIT WITH US
COLLEGE COURTS COFFEE SHOP
Opposite East Gate
From The Texas Aggie
Tyree L. Bell, ’13, chosen pres
ident of the Association of Former
Students at its commencement
meeting, is one of the Southwest’s
best known and most successful
engineers. That is the way he is
known to the business and profes
sional men of the Southwest.
To A. & M. men he is all that
and more. He is a football im
mortal—one of the two men in A.
& M. athletic history to captain
two different A. & M. football
teams, and still rated as one of
the finest captains who ever led
an Aggie eleven into battle. More
important, he is regarded as an
outstanding example of the finest
type of A. & M. man in his loyalty,
interest, and work for his college.
Election of Bell as president of
the Ex-Students’ Association was
a natural step for a man who since
gradaution has loyally and ca
pably served in many College and
ex-student capacities. He has been
previously vice president of the As
sociation and is a past president
and active member of the Dallas
A. & M. Club.
He has served as ex-student rep-
hesentative on the Athletic Council.
Those were official positions. Dur
ing the past 30 years he has served
unofficially in many more and
equally important capacities.
Coming to A. & M. from Dallas,
Bell played halfback on the Aggie
football teams of 1910, 1911, 1912,
and 1914. He captained the teams
of both 1912 and 1914. Following
his graduation in civil engineering
he went to work with the Missis
sippi River Commission at Vicks
burg, Mississippi.
World War No. 1 called him from
this work, and he achieved a bril
liant record in that war. He was
first lieutenant and captain of the
312th Engineers overseas. He
emerged from the war as a major
in the Corps of Engineers. He
served as an instructor at Fort
Oglethorpe, Georgia, Officers’
Training Camp. Overseas his last
assignment was camp engineer of
the Bordeaux Embarkment Camp,
Bordeaux, France. He was in
France during 1918-19.
Following the war he was made
district manager of the Lakewood
Engineering Company, dealing in
general contracting equipment. In
1922, he became associated with F.
P. McElwrath, at Corsicana, in the
contracting business and in 1934,
he formed and was made vice pres
ident and general manager of the
Austin Road Company at Dallas.
He continues in that capacity. He
is a director of the Texas Power
& Light Company.
It is a safe bet that Texas motor
ists can hardly cover 100 miles
WELCOME BACK AGUES
FRESHMEN ATTENTION:
• the most important thing is a good
start. Learn from the first that our ex-
per tailoring work is the best in Aggie-
land.
AGENT IN EVERY HALL
without riding over some roadway
that has been built under the direc
tion of Tyree L. Bell. A. man of tre
mendous energy, he finds time
from his busy work to participate
actively in A. & M. activities and
to achieve some fame as both a
fisherman and a hunter.
Mr. and Mrs. Bell and their
daughter live at 6968 Tokalon Drive
in Dallas.
Head of A & M
Poultry Department
Obtains Honor Degree
D. H. Reid, head of the poultry
husbandry department of A. & M.,
was elected “Fellow,” an honorary
degree award for distinguished
service, by the American Poultry
Science Association in its annual
meeting held recently at Oklahoma
A. & M. College, Stillwater, Okla.
Advance Orders For
Football Tickets Will
Put Big Dent in Stock
Ticket reservations for the Tex
as Aggie football games continue
to move along at a good speed, or
at least the flood of advance or
ders indicate that Sept. 1 will see
a big dent made in the stock of
pasteboards, E. W. Hooker, Aggie
ticket manager, said this week.
All advance orders From former
students have been filled but the
orders for John General Public
will not go out until Sept. 1, Hook
er explained. However, the former
student sales did leave some desir
able tickets for all games but it
is likely that the general public sale
will take all seats on the side lines
and part way into the end zone.
Largest demand is for Texas—
Texas A. & M.' game tickets so
Hooker has gone ahead and had
general admission tickets printed
for the temporary seats which will
be erected in the south or open
end of the stadium. This will make
possible an attendance of 38,383
for that game which will be played
on Thursday, Nov. 27, this year.
Other large demand is for the
S. M. U. game on Nov. 8 which will
see the co-champions of the past
season in action. The Baylor game
booked for Oct. 25 is also selling
well.
-SOPHS-
(Continued from page 14)
for a man his build, and is a deadly
tackier and fine blocker.
Luethy is another sophomore
that will be hard to keep out of
action this year, and his coaches
predict great things for him before
he closes his grid career. Don is
as rugged as they come and likes
hard and tough football.
Other Stars
These are only a few examples
of. the on-coming sophomore stars.
Norton has enough sophomore
stars to make a full team—one
which could give any team in the
conference a mighty hard tussle.
Besides those mentioned, there are
Bill Andrews and Bob Williams,
backs, and A. J. Mercer, hustling
center, who may prove to be hefty
substitutes and even starters before
the season is over.
The average age of cadets in
A. & M. in 1903 was 18 years.
AGGIE CLEANERS & DYERS
Dial 4-4554
North Gate
HEY AGGIES!
• We have just the
typewriters to make
your school year a
success.
Complete Repair Service
GUY H. DEATON
typewriter
EXCHANGE
116 So. Main Phone 2-5254
BRYAN
The award was for leadership in
the poultry education field. His
was the fourteenth such award ever
given by the Association, and Reid
will be presented with a plaque
signifying the honor.
-TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1941
Reid has been head of the poul
try husbandry department of the
college since 1923 and has been ac
tive in poultry improvement work
throughout the state.
BIGGER, BEITER, STILL GROWING
8
Copies A Year For Each Magazine
THE ENGINEER
and
THE AGRICULTURIST
4 t
WE WISH TO WELCOME YOU
— Aggies, Old and New
To the old—many thanks for your past favors
To the new—we invite you to visit us
SHOE REPAIRING
CLEANING & PRESSING
Belts — Silver Buckles — Leather Novelties
We Are The Makers Of Those Famous
HOLICK BOOTS
HOLICK’S SONS
A. & M.’s Oldest Firm
Est. 1891
North Gate
4 r
FRESHMEN
SAVE MONEY ON YOUR A. & M. UNIFORM
A. M. Waldrop & Co's Two Stores
COLLEGE STATION STOBE- “ *™ "™
BRIAN STORE-
Post Office
Main and 26th Streets—Where the Aggie Bus Stops
“AGGIE TELLS AGGIE”—THAT A. M. WALDROP & CO. HAS
SERVED A. & M. MEN FOR 46 YEARS
All Uniform Goods Guaranteed Strictly Regulation
FREE—With Every Regulation Shirt... We Furnish
R.O.T.C. Patch and Fish Stripe ... And Sew
Them On For You.
REGULATION SLACKS - HIGH BACK *
18 Ounce All Wool Serge
REGULATION COTTON SLACKS - HIGH BACK
Cramerton Army Cloth
POOL’S WHITE “AGGIE” COVERALLS
Sanforized Bleached Herringbone
MALER REGULATION CAPS
ARCHER REGULATION TRENCH COATS
CALIFORNIA LEATHER JACKETS
REGULATION ARMY SHIRTS (Form-Fit)
MANHATTAN ARMY SHIRTS
POOL’S POPLIN SHIRTS
REGULATION ARMY BLANKETS
REGULATION SAM BROWNE BELTS
REGULATION FRESHMEN GYM SUITS
REGULATION HATS, HAT CORDS, COLLAR
ORNAMENTS, WEB BELTS, EMBROIDERED
INSIGNIA
LAUNDRY BAGS, SHEETS, TOWELS, PILLOW
CASES, THREAD, BUTTONS, “FISH” STRIPE
BLITZ POLISHING CLOTHS, SIGNET POL SH
GRIFFIN SHOE POLISH AND SADDLE SOAR
Consult Us About
TAILOR MADE
BLOUSES
SLACKS
BREECHES
AND SHIRTS
We Stock Complete
Lines Of
LACE BOOTS
DRESS BOOTS
And
COWBOY BOOTS
REGULATION SOCKS, WHITE SHIRTS
UNDERWEAR
COMPLETE STOCKS OF A. & M PENNANTS
COLLEGE BELTS AND JEWELRY
Our two stores will be open every night during the first week of school for
your convenience. Our Army Departments are managed by former
“Aggies”—and we employ trained student assistants to help you select
your needs. See us before you buy your uniform and equipment.
rpaldrop&fo.
College Station
“TWO CONVENIENT STORES”
Bryan
( ♦
* >
i
i *