The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 13, 1942, Image 4

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    Page 4
Vermont is the only state not
represented by a student at the
University of California this year.
-THE BATTALION-
AUGUST
CLEARANCE
Men’s Suits . . . Slack
Suits . . . Straw Hats . . .
Sport Shoes . . . Catalina
Swim Suits and Trunks
. . . Kaynee Wash Suits
. . . Kaynee Shorts . . .
Boys’ Longies . . . Men’s
Rayon Slacks. Ladies
Bags .. Gloves and Belts.
Catalina
Swim Trunks
$1.95 Trunks . .
$2.50 Trunks . .
$3.00 Trunks . .
$4.00 Trunks . .
$5.00 Trunks . .
. . $1.55
. . $1.95
. . $2.35
. . $3.15
. . $3.95
f iTaldropflfo
“Two Convenient Stores”
College and Bryan
OFFICIAL
NOTICES
Classified
FOR SALE—Standard Underwood type
writer No. 5.—Phone 4-4489.
TERRAPINS WANTED—Need 600 in a
hurry to be used in a turtle race. Will
pay apiece. Campus Theatre, College
Station.
WANTED—A good campaign hat, size
7% long oval. See Jeff Bell, 131 No. 16.
FOR RENT FOR THE WEEK-END
ONLY—4 nice cool bedrooms within walk
ing distance of the campus. Phone 4-4764.
FOR RENT—Furnished apartment, cou
ple only. Walking distance North Gate.—
J. B. Lauterstein.
Meetings
A. I. Ch. E.—There will be a meeting
of the A. I. Ch. E. tonight in the Physics
lecture room, starting at 7:15.—O. W.
Silvey. ,
DAMES CLUB PICNIC—Friday, Au
gust 21. Meet at YMCA steps at 6:45.
Bring own eats and your husband. We
would like all old and new married stu
dents to come and get acquainted.
ALL FISH AND GAME majors and
minors who plan to attend the water
melon feast at the home of Dr. Taylor
Monday night, August 17, are requested
to leave their names on the bulletin board
outside the Fish and Game office before
Monday noon.—Otheil Erlund, president.
Commandant’s Office
CIRCULAR NO. 21:
1. Home town clubs and other authorized
organizations who desire to have meet
ings in classroom buildings must get
authority in writing from the building
custodian of the building where they
wish to have a meeting and present
this authority to the Commandant’s
Office before approval for the meeting
will be given.
By order of Colonel WELTY:
JOE E. DAVIS,
Captain, Infantry,
Assistant Commandant.
For a Haircut
and Shampoo
That Will Really Please
You, Try The
YMCA & Varsity
Barber Shops
COLUMBIA AND VICTOR
RECORDS
AMEN—Abe Lyman
ALL THOSE WONDERFUL YEARS—Gene Krupa
MY DEVOTION—Charlie Spivak
ON THE SUNNY SIDE OF THE STREET
—Goodman Sextet
HASWELL’S
Bryan
For That One Stop Service
On Your Hair Cuts
Why Not Drop In At The
Aggieland Barber and Beauty Shop
North Gate
JUNIOR/
Make Your Deposits
NOW
So That We Can Get
YOUR BOOTS
Out On Time
★
We Wish To Serve Everyone
HOUCK'S BOOT SHOP
North Gate
Musical Meanderings
By BILL MURPHY
The Corps is still talking about
the past glorious weekend. Every
one seems happy and pleased over
the outcome. Bobby Stephens and
L. D. Boone of the Student Ac
tivities report it was one of the
largest crowds ever to attend a
dance on this campus. Franklin’s
and Navle's report the biggest
weekends in history, having to
turn away hundreds of potential
fun-lovers. While Uncle Ed, who
hung out the Standing Room Only
sign at ten o’clock both nights, hacl
to extend his curb service half
way over the C. E. Field. Of course
all hotels, tourist courts, and pri
vate homes were filled to capacity.
In fact, Scalpers were selling
hotel rooms for $5.00 a night.
Yes sir, it will be many weeks
before Aggieland fully recovers
from the past weekend. Incidental
ly, the various Profs over the
campus report that class attend
ance fell 65% over the period of
two days, and the hospital looked
like a Home for Aged Men when
Dorothy Lamour was in town. . . .
I’m still sleepy.
. This correspondent happened
to over-see one of the most amus
ing incidents of the year Satur
day night. Among the birddogs
and sweaters in front of the hand
stand stood one of the daintiest,
cutest, sweetest little chunks of
flesh and bone we have ever had
the pleasure of seeing on the
campus. Some of the fellaws said
he was masculine while the general
concensus was that he must have
been feminine. You know the type.
We see them along about every
Thanksgiving. Anyhow, the sweet
thing made a remark about how
much better Ina’s band was in
comparison with the Aggieland
Orchestra. Simultaneously three
khaki-klad kadets turned, picked
him graciously up, whisked him
out the gate, and on into the dark
ness. At intermission his date was
still looking for him.
Miss Hutton, who without a
doubt possesses one of the finest
chasis ever reviewed in “these
hyar parts,” also boasts one of the
finest guitarists in the business—
Jack Purcell. For the benefit of
the girls . . . the male vocalist was
Stuart Foster, a handsome stack
of beautiful ballads, that really
knew how to put them over.
—DISTRACTIONS—
(Comtinued From Page 2)
Clean dagger.
This is a woman’s picture—the
story of a ballerina dancer who
is loved by three men. The first,
is Conrad Veidt, a retired actor
whom she marries in gratitude
after he makes her famous as a
dancer. The second is a staid and
solid American multi-millionaire
who makes her promise never to
dance again.
She breaks her promise, hut
they are reconciled when their
child is born. The third lover is
the one she really loved but never
married.
The dancing scenes are the best;
dramatic ones are weakest. All in
all its pretty' entertaining with an
out-of-ordinary story that proves
interesting to most viewers.
The Lowdown:—fair production
of a unique story.
Announcements
•All can
to be conferred Sept.
nd a meeting
room tonight
CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES
didates for degr
19th, 1942 are called to attend
in the Chemistry lecture
(August 13, 1942) at 7 :00 p. m. The meet
ing will be short. Important
matters must
ing
be acted upon and announcements made.
By order of President T. O. Walton.
E. P. Humbert, Chairman.
gift
vols
ceived as
g De]
Professors: The Library has reel
ifts from departments on the campus
ols. 1, 5, and 8 of Schlomann’s "Illus
trated technical dictionaries in six lan_
guages ...” We would be pleased to re
ceive as transfers or gifts the other vol
umes of this 17 vol. set.—(Mrs.) A. A.
Barnard, Acquisitions Librarian.
HORTICULTURE MAJORS are remind
ed that there will be a watermelon cutting
about eight o’clock Thursday evening at
the farm. Bring your dues and ball-play
ing shoes.
A letter from the Fitch com
pany reminds us that the advance
scouts are counting on heavy vot
ing from this part of the state to
put the Aggieland on the Band
wagon next month. Run up to the
gate during your next period off
and vote for the boys. By the way,
they are being backed over the
state by the various Ex-Aggie
and Mothers Clubs.
Thirty-Second Notes
Among the many visitors Sat
urday night was the former Ag
gieland leader Don Hackney. “Al
bino” you will remember as hav
ing played one of the finest saxes
in the South. . . . Mr. and Mrs. L.
D. Boone were seen in the seething
mass Friday night proudly in
specting “The Grove”. It’s a de
finite achievement and deserves
all of the credit given it.
Curley Brient knows now why
his boys played inspirecl music
Friday. Besides singing the Fitch
Bandwagon Theme Song to them
before the dance, the hoys also had
their one and onlys odmiring them
from the dance floor, WE hope.
To those of you that have been
complaining how small and rough
the dance floor was, let me leave
this thought . . . just be thankful
that you can dodge the stags and
other dancers instead of bombs and
machine-gun bullets.
Openings in Civil
Service Announced
Civil Service announcements of
the opening for the positions of
Junior Assistants Professional
have been received by Dr. L. G.
Jones of the Agronomy Depart
ment.
Only college graduates and sen
ior students who will complete
their course of study by Septem
ber 30, are eligible to take the
examination.
Junior Assistant Professional
positions pay $2,000 a year al
though vacancies exist at $1,800,
$1,620, and $1,440 a year which
will be filled by persons willing
to accept these salaries.
Apointments are known as War
Service Appointments and will be
for the duration of the war. Ap
plication may be made through the
United States Civil Service Com
mission in Washington, D. C., and
application blanks may be secured
thru any first or second class post-
office.
A general examination is given
to determine the applicants gen
eral knowledge and the aptitude
for learning. Appointees will be
placed on the Civil Service eligible
list from which the thirty or forty
bureaus in the Civil Service Com
mission will draw candidates for
professional, sub-professional, tech
nical, semi-technical or clerical
work requiring specialized know
ledge in connection with various
governmental activities in the war
program.
Students are not required to
be majors in any particular field,
however, qualified persons are par
ticularly desired in the fields of
public and business administration,
economics, library science, and
mathematics through calculus.
It’s a long stretch from first
violin to fourth down, but Donald
C. Greason, artist, has sucessfully
bridged the gap.
Greason, whose studies of the
Boston Symphony orchestra won
him fame, has concluded a folio of
paintings and drawings made on
the “playing fields of Harvard.”
Greason sees no incongruity be
tween his choice of subjects.'
Grace and Rhythm, he says, are
as characteristic of football as
they are of playing the viola.
A portable alcoholmeter to be'
used in determining degrees of
drunkenness, invented by two Yale
university scientists, has been ac
cepted by Connecticut state po
lice.
For Fine Foods
and Ice Cold Drinks
That Beat the Heat
Join Your Friends and
Have a Good Time at
A. & M. GRILL
Kelly Boys, Jim and A1
North Gate
LISTEN TO
WTAW
1150 KC
Thursday, August 13, 1942
11:55 a. m.—Music
11:30 a. m.—Neighborhood
Call (Office of War In
formation)
11:45 a. m.—Brazos Valley
Farm and Home Program
—Farm Security Adminis
tration
11:55 a. m.—The Town Crier
12:00 noon—Sign-Off
Friday, August 14, 1942
11:25 a. m.—Music
11:30 a. m.—You Can’t Do
Business with Hitler (Of
fice for Emergency Man
agement
11:45 a. m.—Brazos Valley
Farm and Home Program
—Tripple-A
11:55 a. m.—The Town Crier
12:00 noon—Sign-Off
4:30-5:30 p. m.—The Aggie
Clambake
Walter Garth Made
Specialist In
Extension Service
Appointment of Walter Garth,
Jr., of Sanford, Maine, as special
ist in mohair and yrool has been
announced by Director H. H. Wil
liamson of the Texas A. & M. Col
lege Extension Service. He is em
ployed jointly on a full time basis
by the Extension Service and the
Texas Mohair Grading committee.
He will work with W. R. Nisbet,
extension sheep and goat special
ist, toward establishing mohair
grades and assisting growers in
perfecting an action program.
With Nisbet, he will meet with the
grading committee at Rocksprings
on August 7 to lay plans for the
season’s work. Buster Halbert of
Sonora is chairman of the com
mittee.
The angora goat raisers of Tex
as, producers of mohair, for several
seasins have been developing a
program designed to promote grad
ing and marketing of mohair on
Garth to conduct grading in the
fall of 1940, and again in the
spring and fall of 1941, but here
after he will devote his full time
to mohair and wool ma&eting
work.
“Approximately 17,000,000 lbs.
of mohair—mostly grown in Tex
as—normally finds its way into
clothing, upholstery, drapery, car
pets, and other fabrics yearly,”
Nisbet said in indicating the scope
of Garth’s work. “Mohair is a
textile fibre of superior qualities,
and its production should remain
the basis of an important industry
in Texas.
“An aggressive marketing pro
gram is essentail to safeguarding
its present position, as well as to
finding new uses for the fibre.”
Fartherest outpost of the Uni
versity of Minnesota is a weather
{station in Tucson, Arizona.
Students of Loyola university of
the South (New Orleans) have
quit kicking about examinations.
The Rev. R. Jerome Mullin, S.J.,
gave his philosophy class a lone
question for their examinatiom.
They groaned. Then he told them
to consult their text books and
notes, and to use the library for
reference. They felt better. Then
he said, “Hand in your papers in
THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 13, 1942
two days.”
American cities of 10,000 and
more population are training six
men to one woman for civilian de
fense, according to a University of
California survey.
Four members of Clemson col
lege’s first class, in 1896, are now
professors on the college’s faculty.
ANNOUNCING
A CHANGE IN OUR POLICY
Cover Charges Will Be:
250 Week Nights
400 Saturday Nights
Franklins
INVITES YOU TO SEE
THE MOST EXPEN
SIVE BELT IN THE
WORLD.
Now on special display
at this store . . . The
$597.00 , Diamond En
crusted “Five O’ Dia
monds” Texas Ranger
Belt, only belt of its kind
in America. It’s a belt
to appeal to the imagi
nation ... a belt spch
as few men may own.
The finest of a line of
belts that have set a
new style for active men.
The Texas Ranger “Five
O’ Diamonds” will be on
display here all this
week. Don’t fail to see it.
The
Texas Ranger
Five O’ Diamonds
by Tex-Tan
$597.00
★
Don’t Fail To See The
Texas Aggie
RODEO
Friday and Saturday
Nights, 14th & 15th.
AMERICAN LEGION
GROUNDS
SEE OUR WINDOW
For Special Display For This Occasion
Featuring the Famous
Hereford Saddles, Bridles, Lariat
and many other items made by
TEXAS TANNING AND MFG. CO.
Yoakum, Texas
GET YOUR TICKETS HERE
Sophomores
1. I have 200 Lilley-Ames Uniforms, America’s
leading uniform manufacturer, reserved for me.
You may reserve one of these for $25.00, and if
you decide by October 1st or later not to buy it,
I will return the down payment plus 10% inter
est.
2. 1/3 down payment will cut and deliver your uni
form within 5 weeks.
3. These prices will be kept at $97.50 until I have
permission from the O.P.M. to raise my ceiling
price to $114.70, this being the suggested price
all over the U. S.
4. Compare the quality of the first line uniforms
and then be your own judge.
Lilley-Ames Corporation
Columbus, Ohio
Represented locally by
LOUPOT’S TRADING POST
Blouse strictly latest regu
lation, including new regu
lation cloth belt.
THE FINEST IN
UNIFORMS