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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1942)
Page 6 Official Notices Classified SPECIAL RATES to students only: Life, $3.50 ; Time, $3.50 : Fortune, $6.00 ; Es quire, $3.33 for 8 mo. Subscribe now thru either Dail Hammons, Box 4255, or Phil Bible, Box 6081. ROOM FOR RENT—Private bath, pri vate entrance. 711 South Baker, Bryan. 2-5356. FOR SALE: Bargain in 1940 Plymouth DeLuxe Coupe. Excellent condition. Good tires. Will take small trade-in. Call 2-7859 after 5 p.m. LOST—Awning cloth laundry bag with laundry mark W-69, containing clothes with same mark, pair size 10$ shoes and other items. Contact Dorsey, 70 Mitchell or Journeay, 54 Mitchell. Liberal Reward. WANTED—Cooperative riding arrange ment with person or persons living near the Bryan Country Club. John J. Sperry, Biology Dept., Residence 104 Davis Street. LOST—Brown loafer jacket in basement of Sbisa Hall, Monday, Sept. 28. Return to 34 Legett for reward. H. R. Tampke. LOST—Elgin wrist watch at yell prap- tice Tuesday. Gold case and leather strap. Please return to Law 21. Reward. John Perteous. DON’T TAKE CHANCES on your food these days. You can get your meals fam ily style at Perrittes Dining Room. Make your plans now. Phone 4-8794. LOST—Green Shaffer Lifetime fountain pen. Loaned to a frog in the Command ant’s office Friday, Sept. 25. Please return to room 6, P. G. Hall. Meetings BIOLOGY CLUB—-The Biology Club will hold its first meeting Thursday night at 8:30 in the Biology lecture room. A film will be shown. All old members are urged to attend and new prospective members are invited to visit. There will be a meeting of The In stitute of the Aeronautical Sciences in the Physics Lecture room tonight after Yell-Practice. Curtis Electric Propeller film will be shown. All members are urged to attend. GET YOUR NEXT TERM SUPPLIES EARLY! School Supplies, Inks and Fountain Pens, Electrical Supplies, Radio Aerials, Window Shades, Waste Baskets, Brooms, Tennis Shoes A-M-C Stationery, Shoe Polishes CAMPUS VARIETY STORE North Gate Junior Uniforms See us for Regulation Blouse . . . Slacks and Shirts ... We carry a com plete stock of all Regulation Army Uni forms. REG. ALL-WOOL BLOUSE With Belt . . . Dark Elastique L REG. ALL-WOOL ELASTIQUE SLACKS ... to match blouse REG. WOOL GABARDINE SHIRT Made-to-Measure REG. JUNIOR CAP $1700 to match uniform I SENIOR ICE CREAM SLACKS Made-to-Measure . . . All Wool SENIOR ICE CREAM BREECHES Made-to-Measure . . . Leather Knee $grpo $|goo $ir $750 to I $jgoo $jg00 “Two Convenient Stores” College Station Bryan LAUTERSTEIN’S ALWAYS SAVES YOU MONEY TRY HIM FIRST LISTEN TO WTAW Thursday, Oct. 1, 1942 11:25 a. m.—Music 11:30 a. m.—Neighborhood Call (Office of War Information) 11:45 a. m.—Brazos Valley Farm and Home Program—N. N. New man, FSA 11:50 a. m.—A. & M.' Sports Re view 11:55 a. m.—The Town Crier 12:00 noon—Sign-Off Friday, Oct. 2, 1942 11:25 a. m.—Music 11:30 a. m.—You Can’t Do Busi ness With Hitler (Office of Emergency Management) 11:45 a. m.—Brazos Valley Farm and Home Program—Triple-A 11:55 a. m.—The Town Crier 12:00 noon—Sign-Off 4:30-5:30 p. m.— The Aggie Clam bake —TEXAS TECH— (Continued From Page 4) difficult for the opposition to handle at right end this season. There you have the eleven Texas Tech players who will be shooting for the moon in their impending clash with the Texas Aggies. They will go into the fray as underdogs but still concede nothing ta the Cadets. “It is imperative that a man speaking for the Japanese nation to the English speaking world have the perfect understanding and command of the English language and country of which Mr. Yoshii so possesses,” wrote the newspaper. Announcements jrrent series, is am- Uircuiar No. 2b, current mended to read as follows: Effective Thvirsday, October 1, 1942, ties will be worn - by all cadets, except during hours of military instruction when they may be omitted if ordered by the Senior Instructor. By order of Colonel Welty: Joe E. Davis, Captain, Infantry, Assistant Commandant. Administration 402 will meet in the Chemistry Lecture Room Thursdays at 12 o’clock. F. C. Bolton, Dean. American Lutheran Congregation Y.M.C.A. Chapel, Campus Kurt Hartmann, Pastor Please notice the change of the time for our Sunday School and services. Sunday School with Bible Class, 10:15. Divine service at 11:30. You are welcome. Students whose names begin with A, B, C, or D will turn in their bundles on Friday and Saturday, Sept. 18 and 19, as usual. These bundles will be ready at the beginning of next semester. Each student will be assigned a new laundry mark at the beginning of the September term. This is going to take extra time and requires the cooperation of all concerned. Print your LAST NAME FIRST so that the proper mark will be assigned you. Indicate your NEW HALL OR DORMITORY, but do not put old laundry marks on slip. Cadet officers remaining over the hol idays will please instruct freshmen in the method of sending off laundries. Have these freshmen send off a bundle the first week of the new semester (starting Sept. 28th) so as to aid this department in maintaining its schedule. Lists may be obtained by the first sergeants at the substations. Your cooperation will be greatly ap preciated. G. P. Ayers Mgr. A. & M. Laundry THE CHURCH OF CHRIST R. B. Sweet, Minister Sunday: 9:45 a.m., the Bible classes; 10:45. morning worship ; 8 p.m., even- in-g worship. Tuesday: 10:00 a.m.. Ladies Bible Class. Wednesday: 8 p.m., the Prayer Meeting. You are invited to attend all these ser vices. You will be most welcome. HORTICULTURE MAJORS will meet Thursday night at 8:15 in Room 103, Science Building. New members will be admitted and plans for the Annual Hor ticulture Show will be made. NOTICE—All students who wish to sell refreshments at the football games this season .please report to the Gym, Fri day, 8 p.m., October 2. All men who wish season, please report to the Gym, Fri- Manager, Athletic Council. THE BATTALION Machinists Needed At Corpus Christi An immediate urgent need for aviation heat treaters, toolmakers and machinists at the Naval Air Station, Corpus Christi, Texas, was reported today by College Station, Texas, secretary, local board of Civil Service examiners. All three positions pay $9.12 per day, based on a 40 hour week, with time and one half overtime. Full information and application forms may be obtained by apply ing in person to any first or second class post office in Louisiana or Texas or by writing the Regional Director, Tenth Civil Service Re gion, Customhouse, New Orleans, or the Recorder, Labor, U. S. Naval Air Station, Corpus Christi, Texas. —MEANDERINGS— (Continued From Page 2) at the Corps Dance Saturday night, THIRTY-SECOND NOTES The Aggieland sets a precedent Friday by playing an All-Schol dance over at Forty Acres for the Tea Sippers. This will be the first time in the history of either school where an orchestra of one. plays a dance at the opposite school. Not band, huh ? Surprise of the year (to the Sophomores) Frances Beasley and her fine (?) orchestra are now playing at the Plantation in big D. This is war. Recently the Aggieland was given the distinction of being the nations No. 1 collegiate band. To prove this the boys have been ask ed to come to Dallas Oct. 10 to play the “Show Time” broadcast over WFAA. This broadcast is a weekly show offered every Sunday afteroon over the Texas Quality Network and features a differ ent orchestra each week. Incident ally if the band accepts it will be the first time a college orchestra has played on the show. Strictly on the Q-T is the fact that the boys have also been ofered a one night stand at the Plantation. It just goes to show you what using Fitch Hair Oil will do for you. —COAST BALL— (Continued from Page 1) Weeks family, and his young son already proficient on trombone and piano, promises to carry on the forth generation. Jack’s great great grandfather in Uxbridge, Canada, was a talented musician, composer and arranger. His grand father, Anson’s father’, was a sing er and choir director. Margie Little, well known, charming vocalist, will be featur ed during brief respites of “Dan cin’ With Anson.” —BAND— (Continued From Page 1) ganization is one of the most ver satile bands in the world being not “Thanks A Million!” You folks have been A-l with your patronage since our opening night and we’re grateful for the turn-out. Here’s hoping you have enjoyed the Lanes as much as we’ve enjoyed having you. WE REGRET... Many of you have been un able to find idle lanes, but that’s been taken care of now. We have new and faster pin-setters. Lanes will clear quicker, the turn-over faster. Bowl between classes now, with time to spare! EVERYTHING BRAND NEW! You have the tops in Duck Pin Lanes right here at the North Gate. It’s here for your use and fun. • Every effort has been made to make it perfec tion personified. It’s all yours, folks! The price is right, too—10# per line, and ladies are welcome! You’re Always Welcome at AGGIE LANES NEW BOWLING CENTER NORTH GATE only the largest aggregation of college musicians now in existence, but containing within itself three complete bands. Boys in the Field Artillery unit at A. & M. play in the Field Artillery Band, while boys taking Infantry training are in the Infantry Band. From both bands, about eighty-five boys are taken to 'make up the Concert Band, which not only plays every thing from swing to the classics, but goes on a tour of the South west every spring to play before high schools and civic organizations —people who seldom ever get a chance to hear a good college band. During the spring, try-outs are held for the Concert Band, and following the eliminations, there come many hours of weary blow ing and re-blowing in preparation for the long tour taken by the boys during the spring months. All types of music are included in the repertoire of this finest of all musical organizations of the camp us. Specializing in the classics and rousing military aires, the band thrills thousands of people all over the Southwest with its impressive and stirring aires. Each if the two regular units, the Field Artillery and the In fantry, is composed of about 125 members, taken during their fresh man year after try-outs before Col. Dunn. These boys live on op posite sides of the Aggje campus, and each plays for meal forma tions and retreat before the two mess halls. The A?ggie corps of 6,000 boys makes such a long pro cession when on parade down the main streets of Austin, Houston, Ft. Worth or Dallas, that the band must be split up—one unit leading the parade, the other about two thirds of the way to the rear—in order that the boys may hear the drums’ cadence in their marching. Those intricate manuevers so thoroughly enjoyed by football fans are the results of many hours of tiring practice. Each week, the next Saturdays’ formations are figured out by Head Drum Major Ben Schleider of Brenham, and his assistants, Drum Majors Joe Gor don of Homer, Lousiana, and Ed Perry of Palestine. Every afternoon from 6 until 7 o’clock, they march and play, march and play, forever ironing out the kinks in their maneuvers. As if an hour a day of hard drilling isn’t enough, after supper the band plays for the four-nights weekly yell practice topped off by another hour of regular music al practice under Col. Dunn and Mr. Covington. On the campus of A. & M., the Band is an all-powerful organiza tion, and many student leaders -THURSDAY MORNING, OCT. 1, 1942 come from its ranks. Because it does so much more drilling than the ordinary Aggie outfit, the Band is proud of its military ef ficiency and smartness. / {Hr ix icy Are you the Daguerreotype or theType? rp\EEP breathely and IK/ picture yourself in one of Arrow’s new pride-swelling white ,shirts. They’re tops in authentic styling and sport a collar that made history. Sanforized-la- beled (fabric shrinkage less than 1%). Cost less than you’d expect. $2.25 up * BUY U. S. WAf. BONDS AND STAMPS if ARROW SHIRTS TIES • COLLARS • HANDKERCHIEFS • UNDERWEAR • SPORT SHIRTS WE NEED YOUR COAT HANGERS 75c per 100 SOPHS, HERE’S YOUR CHANCE TO MAKE SOME MONEY LAUTERSTEIN’S North Gate —ACTIVITIES— (Continued Prom Page 1) details of the Development Fund Campaign which was initially launched in September. Senior Class President Rocky Sutherland and Junior President Sid Smith have been invited to sit in this meeting in order that through them the student body may be better ‘informed on plans of the Alumni group to be of assistance to the College. New and Old Students We Have Your Remaining Needs REGUUTION UNIFORMS . HATS SHOES SHIRTS . SERGE AND BOMBAY SUCKS SAM BROWNE BELTS TEXT BOOKS AND SUPPLIES DRAWING BOARDS T-SQUARES NOTEBOOKS PAPER STATIONERY The Exchange Store An Aggie Institution