Page 4 THE BATTALION -SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1941 Official Notices THANKSGIVING HOLIDAYS Thanksgiving holidays for clerical staff have been changed from the dates shown in the College Catalogue to November 27- 29 inclusive. Thanksgiving holidays for students will extend from Thursday, November 27 to 6 p. m. Monday, December 1.—F. C. BOLTON, Dean. PRESIDENT’S OFFICE The President’s Office . has a package from the Ellison Photo Co., of Austin, Texas. Will the Department ordering this material please call for it. FENCING All members of the fencing squad and those interested in fencing are requested to attend a meeting in Room 203, Ag. Building, Monday evening after yell prac- eting is important. tice. ung, This RED CROSS All those wanting instructions or ma terials for knitting please call at the Red Cross Headquarters or the Dean Puryear House on Tuesday, Wedensday and Thursday mornings. FT. WORTH A. & M. CLUB The Ft. Worth A. & M. Club is giving a luncheon in the Texas Hotel at 12:30 p. m. Saturday, October 18, for the fac ulty members and their wives on the oc casion of the football game with T. C. U. Rooms will be available for the faculty members—one for the men and one for the ladies, at the Texas Hotel. Will you chool 18th. This information should be given to the Dean not later than Tuesday, October 14. whether you will be at the luncheon the you lunc NEW STUDENTS All new undergraduate students who did not take the Psychological test last Friday, October 3, and who have not taken the American Council on Educa tion Psychological test at some other in stitution are required to take this test Saturday afternoon, October 11, begin ning at 1:00 o’clock. This examination will be conducted in the lecture room of the Agricultural Engineering building, and each student is required to report prompt- Back That Team OLD ARMY EXCELLENT FOUNTAIN SERVICE Drugs Personal Needs CANADY’S PHARMACY Bryan TAXI REGULATION UNIFORMS And equipment V Junior Blouse $33 Junior Slacks —$13 Junior Cap $5.50 Junior Sam Browne $5.50 “Fish” Slacks ... 18 oz. All Wool Serge .—$8.95 Bombay Cotton Slacks $3.75 Reg. Trench Coats $3.95 Alligator Slickers $5.75 to $7.50 Alligator “Storm Wind” Trench Coats .—$12.50 Alligator “Samthur” Trench Coats ..._$ 14.75 Cap Covers ... _.__50£ See us for Made-To- Measure Blouses . . . Slacks . . . Shirts and Breeches . . . Every Gar ment Guaranteed To Fit. rflahfiSPfi ‘Two Convenient Stores” College Station Bryan ly at 1:00 o’clock—H. L. HEATON, For the Executive Committee. Church Notices AMERICAN LUTHERAN CONGREGATION Y. M. C. A. Parlors Kurt Hartmann, Pastor Student meeting in the mess hall parlors Sunday morning at 10. No Bible class this Sunday night. The regular service will be conducted by the Women’s Missionary Society of the congregation, Mrs. F. E. Hanson, presid ing. The service begins at 7:30 Sunday night. You are , welcome ! Lutheran Student Association of A. & M. officers: Sidney Herzik, President; R. F. Eisenhauer, Vice-President; Raymond Valinder, Secretary-Treasurer. A. & M. WALTHER LEAGUE The A. & M. Walther League will meet at 4 o’clock in the Y-chapel Sunday afternoon. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Saturday October 11 7:00 p. m.—Recreation time for all. Sunday October 12 9 :00 a. m.—Coffee and Fellowship hour 100 :00 a. m.—Church School 11:00 a. m.—Special World Service Ser- lon 7:00 p. m.—Wesley Foundation Service Classified LOST—Gold Lancet wrist watch, lav ender unbreakable crystal. Lost in gym nasium Wed. night. Reward for return to Dorm. 7, Room 107. r, months old. Answers to name of Susie- Billy Bob Hale, 4-1130. FOR RENT—Room, twin beds, private tile bath, southern exposure, 3 blocks from main entrance. Phone 4-6304 or 4-7564. LOST—Cameo ring in Campus Theater in the afternoon of Oct. 7. Return to Dick McIntyre, Room 53, Foster. Reward. LOST—Old fashioned gold locket and chain. Initialed “S” formed on face of locket by ' small stones. Return to Lt. Valliant, Military Dept. Reward. ig she case in Room 304, Aca. Bldg., Wed. Oct. 8, 11-12 o’clock. Name Alan Smith on case. Return to 337 Milner. Reward. FOR RENT—Room for one or two' stu dents, individual beds and study tables; close enough to come for three meals. $30.00 a month. Phone S. V. Perritte 4-8794. —AGGIES— (Continued from Page 3) Ruby and Wesson, tackles; Rich ardson and Roy Bucek, guards; and Sibley, center. Maples will be on hand to replace Richardson in the event the latter’s knee in ■ jury is still evident. The reserves will be: Tullis, Dickey, and Motley, tackles; Mul- hollan, Bucek, and Cure, guards; and Holder, Mercer, and “Cotton” Williams, centers. The New York University squad is built around twenty lettermen, outstanding of which are t|wo backfield men, Vinnie Finn and Len Bates, the great colored back. —DISTRACTIONS— (Continued from page 2) will like “Music In My Heart”; if not, then you will have a taste for that sort of thing. At a time when the world is filled with hate and animosity for our brother man, the motion picture lords have seen fit to produce “MEET JOHN DOE.” This is a story just running over with brotherly love and kindliness. Gary Cooper is a down-and-out baseball pitcher who happens to be lucky enough to be “John Doe” in a publicity stunt sponsored by a big-city daily paper. Barbara Stanwyck is the columnist on the paper who originated the idea. Cooper is bumming around the country living from hand to mouth when he is chosen for the job of “John Doe.” He is immediately catacaulted in the limelight as the man who spreads brotherly love. He makes speeches and organizes “John Doe” clubs all over the coun try. His adventures and misfor tunes are acted with a genuineness that is touching. 0 0 • . Copr. 19)7, Unj fcatun* Syndicate, Inc* WocM nxtnd. ‘As long as we’re passin’—J thought I’d give my lawn f the once-over.” WPA Libraries Contribute Material To All Army Camps Throughout Texas Reading matter for Uncle Sam’s soldiers and defense industry work - ers in Texas localities is enroute to principal military and indus trial areas in the form of 4,500 WPA-bought volumes, it was an nounced by Arthur R. Curry, state director of the WPA library pro ject. Although principal shipments are going to off-campsite army rec. reation centers at Brownwood, Galveston, Abilene, and Mineral Wells, many of the volumes will supplement reading facilities in other parts of Texas, Curry report- ed. Currently employed in defense areas to increase library services where large groups of defense in dustry workers and their families are gathered and in the vicinity of expanding military establish ments are 360 WPA library work ers. To serve the areas in the eastern section of Texas, WPA library employes are stationed at Ventilating: Engineer Discusses Problems While on Visit Here John James, technical secretary of the American Society of Heat ing and Ventilating Engineers, vis ited the campus Sunday. He dis cussed with college authorities projects of interest to heating and ventilating engineers. After luncheon at the Aggieland Inn with J. S. Hopper, W. E. Long, and W. I. Treuttner of the me chanical engineering department, S. S. Share and E. G. Smith of the physics department ,and Jack Keel ing of the electrical engineering department, James discussed the various projects now in progress on the campus. These included a bulletin on in termittent heating and cooling that will be published in the near fu ture by the Engineering Experi ment Station; the inspection cf equipment for measuring fluid fric tion in pipes sponsored by the en gineering experiment station and the ASHVE in the mechanical engineering shops; the inspection of a nearly completed air-conditioned research room also in the mechan ical engineering department; and a discussion of an analysis of some heat flow problems that are .being performed by the physics de partment. After class, enjoy a delicious Soda or Malt GEORGE’S CONFECTIONERY NEW AREA Angleton, Galveston, Camp Wal lace, Houston, Goose Creek, Beau mont, Port Arthur, Palacios, Camp Hulen, Orange, El Campo, and Wharton. At Fort Worth, Mineral Wells, and Wichita Falls other WPA workers are employed to as sist librarians whose readers have increased with the influx of de fense and service men . Workers have been added at the San Antonio Public library and San Antonio Vocational and Tech nical School, at Fort Sam Hous ton and Duncan Field, and at New Braunfels and Seguin. In South Texas new labrarians have been placed at Fort Brown, the Nueces County Library and Fort McIntosh. In the West Texas sector WPA library workers have been added at Brownwood, Coleman, Santa Anna, and Abilene. Nine workers have been added to the library staff at Fort Bliss in El Paso. Books which have been purchased by WPA range from light fiction through adventure and mystery thrillers to classics and reference works and will supplement books and magazines which have been sent to army recreation centers adjacent to camps and organiza tions of Texas. The library books will be available to wives and fam ilies of soldiers at the libraries which are located off of campsites and will be available also to fam ilies of woi’kers in shipbuilding and aviation centers, such as Orange and Grand Prairie. —WILLIAMSON— (Continued from Page 3) Cornell will have to live up to its high ratings to defeat Harvard. Mississippi State should beat L. S. U. and the same goes for Min nesota over Illinois, Fordham over North Carolina, Tulane over Rice, and Penn over Yale. Princeton will take Columbia by a shade and other close games will be V. P. I. over William & Mary, Southwestern of Memphis over Centre, and North Carolina State over Furman. The Williamson predictions for Saturday and Sunday follow. Prob able winners are listed in capi tals: SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11 Home Team Visiting Team AMHERST Bowdoin ARIZONA Nevada U. AUBURN La. Tech ARMY Va. Mil. Ins. Alfred CLARKSON American Inter ST. ANSELM AUGUSTANA S. D St. Ambrose Albright MORAVIAN BOSTON U Upsala BAYLOR Arkansas U. BRADLEY POLY Ripon BALDWIN WALLACE .... Ohio Wesleyan BOONE ST. T W. Caro. Tchrs. BROWN U Rhode Island Bates TUFTS Bellingham PORTLAND Boston College CLEMSON Centenary HARDIN SIMMONS Chico St CALIF. POLY COLO. COL Utah St. DREXEL Buffalo Dartmouth COLGATE Davidson Col SEWANEE Erskine WOFFORD Evansville ROSE POLY E. N. Mex ST. MARY (TEX.) FRANK.-MARSHALL .... Hampton Sydney FLORIDA U Villanova Furman NO. CARO. ST. Flagstaff N. MEX. ST. Fort Hays EMPORIA COL. Ginnell :... KNOX Gunnison IDAHO U. Georgia Tech NOTRE DAME Gettysburg MUHLENBURG Harverford* SUSQUEHANNA Howard ALA. U. Harvard CORNELL U. Indiana TEXAS CHRISTIAN J. MILLIKIN 111. Col. Kentucky U VANDERBILT KING Maryville Tenn. LAKE FOREST Carroll Col. Lebanon Valley C. C. N. Y. Porter Instructs Mechanical Engineers In Use of Mathematics W. L. Porter, head of the Mathe matics department, headed the ins • tructional program of the A.S.M. E. Thursday night. Porter perform ed many educational feats with his manipulation of figures. Also on the program was a showing of the film, “The Unseen World,” a pic ture on microscopic development and research. Valuable aid in the manipulation of the slide rule was also given. At the business meeting after the program, plans for future meetings were discussed by Ed Clark, chairman, and Leland Ellis, program chairman. Plans were made to invite Huntsville girls at some future tentative date to the A.S.M.E. dance. Plans were also made for a banquet to be held Nov ember 20. Present plans are to feature a speaker from Houston. The next meeting will be con ducted solely by ME seniors. Each senior will give a talk upon some subject that is of interest to the club. European Living Conditions Worse j Than US Imagines “Living conditions on the Europ ean continent are even worse than most Americans suspect,” says Herbert Kadden, freshman engi neering student at Iowa State Col lege. Kadden, a German citizen, was interned in Belgium when the Nazi war machine rolled into the low countries. He later was sent to a concentration camp in south ern France, where he stayed 10 months, refusing to go back to Germany. The Y. M. C. A. was first brought to the A. & M. campus in 1906. The association that year was form ed with a membership of 165. Dr. H. W. Hooper Dentistry College Hills Phone 4-8704 LAWRENCE Carleton La. St. U MISS. ST. Mt. St. Mary W. MARYLAND MINNESOTA U Illinois Maryland DUKE MOREHEAD Davis & Elkins Morningside IOWA ST McMurray TEXAS WESLEYAN MONMOUTH Coe MICH. U Pittsburgh U. MAINE New Hampshire Michigan St. Y MARQUETTE MIAMI U Bowling Green MISSOURI U Kansas St. Mass. St NORWICH New York U TEXAS A. & M. NORTHWESTERN Wisconsin N. Dak. St ,.. S. DAK. ST. NAVY Lafayette NEBRASKA Kansas N. Carolina FORDHAM Ohio U MURRAY KEN. Oregon St STANFORD OCCIDENTAL Redlands PORTLAND St. Francis POMONA Whittier Peru Tchrs KEARNEY Pittsburgh Tchrs WASHBURN Pacific College S. M. U. PRINCETON Columbia PA. ST Bucknell RUTGERS Lehigh Rensselaer CST. GRD. ACAL. Richmond U VIRGINA Rice TULANE Lock Haven SLIPPERY ROCK River Falls GUSTAVUS ADOLPH ST. JOSEPH Mt. Pleasant Simpson OMAHA St. Martin PACIFIC LUTHER. St. Benedicts SOUTHWESTERN KA. SO. CAL Oregon S. Caro WAKE FOREST Syracuse HOLY CROSS Santa Barbara FRESNO S. F. Austin COMMERCE TCHRS. TULSA U Creighton TENN. U Dayton TEMPLE TCHRS N. Mex. U. TEXAS U : Okla. U. Toledo MARSHALL COL. TRINITY Worcester TEXAS MINES 260th C. A^ HAIRCUT 25c Sanitary Barber Shop 306 Main Bryan TEXAS A. & I Sam Houston Utah St COLO. U. Ursinus DELAWARE VA. POLY Wm. & Mary Wyoming UTAH WASH. & JEFF Dickinson WASH. ST Wash. U. W. VA. U W. Va. Wesleyan Wesleyan U CONNECTICUT WEST TEXAS ST N. Mex. A. & M. Wash. U„ S. L. .... OKLAHOMA A. & M. WHITTENBERG Lawrence Tech WILLIAMS N. Eastern U. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 12 Yale PENNSYLVANIA Canisius PROVIDENCE J. Carrol XAVIER LA SALLE Niagara ST. BONAVENTURE Scranton San Francisco ST. MARY, CAL. Ursinus BUCKNELL vVH"/, I \ OLE ARMY! YOU TOO Will Be Delighted With The Service At Our Station Under Our New Management Humble Products Paul Gregg Agent East Gate Ph. 4-8884 It’s Time To Start Getting Ready For The Corps Trip, Aggies FOR A GOOD HAIR CUT VISIT THE Y. «. C. i. BARBER SHOP VARSITY BARBER SHOP % ■vjl \. W'- TSj PATRICIA COMPTON of Dallas, Texas I at WmmL . I ’isW r - on the campus ffs Ol They’' 6 eheer, "9 Chesterfields because they’re MILDER COOU R and BETTER-TASTING You’d enjoy reading “Tobaccoland, U.S.A.,” c* hea 7 n S a lecture on Chesterfield’s can’t-be-copi etl <’‘<'>“1 of the world’s best ciga rette tobaccos... but the best way to learn about Chesterfields is to try ’em. You’ll find more cigarette pleasure than you ever had before. You’ll join the millions who soy WITH ME IT’S CHESTERFIELD ... 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