The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 05, 1942, Image 4

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

    i
Page 4
-THE BATTALION-
A
JL
Official Notices
Classified
FOR RENT—5 room house, modern con
veniences, completely furnished. One kit
chen sink for sale. Call 4-8514. J. W.
FOUND—At football game, tan sport
r may claim same at 49 Law
by paying for this ad.
coat. Owner
LOST—A Waltham Prumer watch with
blue crystal after the Arkansas game.
Please bring to Dorm No. 15, room 331
WANT TO BUY a car. Prefer Chevro
let ar^'
got? B
cai
nnd ’34 model. What have you
1859.
WANTED
football
by Room
night.)
Finder please return to
Hall, Room 4.
er pocket book
Fish Hedrick, P.G
LOST — Sometime Saturday after 1
o’clock, rose gold Bulova wrist watch
with expansion band. Return to Frog
Stewart, 416 Dorm No 7. Reward.
LOST—U.SuN.A. pin on the week end
of the TCU game. Zierman engraved on
the back. Please return to 102 Legett Hall.
Need Corps Trip Money? Lost one Men-
three gold
hip
Need Corps Trip Money.'
dl-Hornak, Jr. blouse, two
service stripes on arm, right hip
blouse contains considerable amount
podding, right pocket flap button is
broken in half. Anyone giving informa
tion as to the whereabouts of this blouse
will be generously rewarded. Contact
Henry King, 37 Puryear, immediately.
Announcements
NOTICE TO ALL CLUB PRESIDENTS
—Because of certain deadlines that must
be kept so that the Longhorn may be
out on time, please have your club pic
ture made by November 15. It is im
perative that this deadline be met. I
can not be any extension of time.
There
BRAZORIA COUNTY CLUB—The Bra
zoria County Club will have its annual
Longhorn picture made in front of Guion
Hall on Thursday, Nov. 5, at 1:40 p.m.
All boys from Brazoria county who wish
..-J
Regulation
Shirts
Here you’ll find a wide
variety of Reg. Shirts
... all styled to fit . . .
in fine fabrics that will
give the maximum in
wear.
“At Ease”
Broadcloth
Van Heusen
Broadcloth
$2.00
$2.50
Shirtcraft Airman $2.95
Pools’ Poplin $3.25
REGULATION SOCKS
Wilson Bros. 35^
N’uWeave ‘Crew Sox’ 450
Holeproof Rge Sox in
fine lisles 6x3 Ribs
or fine Rayons—
450 to 600
f l7aIdrop6(8
Two Convenient Stores”
College Station Bryan
to be in the picture are urged to be there
on time. The president is also urged to
be there on time. The uniform is serge
for tbe juniors and seniors, and serge
pants with khaki
and sophomores.
shirts for the freshmen
Meetings
I. E. CLUB—The Industrial Club will
meet tonight at 8:30 in the M. E. Shop
building. The guest speaker for the even
ing will be Mr. W. R. Horsley, director
of the Placement Office. All members
are urged to be present.
THE FELLOWSHIP LUNCHEON will
resume meeting at 1 p.m. on the Ter
race of the Aggieland Inn Thursday,
Nov. 5. You are welcome.
A.S.A.E.—There will be a meeting of
the student branch of the American So
ciety of Agricultural Engineers in the
Lecture Room
immediately af-
Agricultural Engineering
Thursday night, Nov. 5, immediately af
ter yell practice. Everyone taking Ag
ricultural Engineering is urged to be
ATTENTION AGRICULTURAL EDU
CATION MAJORS—The Agricultural Ed
ucation Society will meet with the Agron-
Socie
Koom, Thursday at 8:30 p.m. Dean Kyle
will be the speaker for the night.
om;
Roc
Society in the A. and I. Lecture
BIOLOGY CLUB—There wil
ular meeting of the* Biology Cl’
night,
There will be a reg-
ub Thursday
group c
afterward. The club picture will also be
discussed. All members and prospective
members are urged to be present.
—KYLE FIELD—
(Continued From Page 3)
. . . Don’t forget, now, SMU tick
ets will not be on sale in Dallas,
so be sure to get them at the
YMCA desk, where they will be
available until 5 pm. Friday.
....A few notes on conference stat
istics as compiled by Roy P. Gates
and Ed. Elmendorf of the Public
ity Department....Leo Daniels still
tops the passers with 50 comple
tions out of 112 attempts for 564
yards....Roy Dale McKay of Texas
is a notch behind, having connected
for 31 aerials out of 76 attempted
for 416 yards.... Barney Welch, the
brilliant Aggie sophomore ace, is
now listed among the leading punt
ers of the conference.... his average
is 41.4 yards.... he has kicked 6
boots for a total of 247 yards....
Also appearing for the first time
in the scoring department is Cullen
against Arkansas last week,
boosted his scoring punch to 24
points....Daniels too, is the leading
punt returner of the conference,
having run back 10 punts for 167
yards, which is an average of 16.7
yards per carry....
Louis K. Manley, formerly dean
of the University of Pittsburgh
school of business administration,
has been named dean of the grad
uate school at the University of
The “Old Oaken Buckett” for
which Dickenson and Gettysburg
colleges vie on the football field is
in reality a mahogany bucket, and
only a few years old.
NOTICE
AGGIES
I LOUPOT HAS
| RESERVED TWO j
ROOMS IN THE
j BAKER HOTEL
! ALL FOR YOU
j Let’s All Go and
Beat S.M.U.
I
Compliments of
LOUPOT
W-A-N-T-E-D
Your Old Brown Technical Drawing
Books (E.D. Ill)
Also
Slide Rules, Drawing Sets, Radios
and Bicycles
The Student Co-op
Phone 4-4114
Eagle Squadron
Diana Barrymore and Robert Stack have leading romantic and
dramatic roles in Walter Wanger’s Universal production of “Eagle
Squadron,” story of U. S. fighter pilots in the RAF. The picture
will be shown at the Campus Theatre today, Friday, and Saturday.
Horticulturists
Study In California
Dehydration Plans
Benito Canales, special student
from Mexico, and Professor R. F.
Cain of the Department of Horti
culture left for California on Tues
day, November 3, where they will
study the dehydration industry.
As representatives of this school,
they will bo permitted to study the
new processes of food preservation.
Their chief interest will be cen
tered around vegetable dehydra
tion and its possibilities in Texas.
They plan to spend most of their
time around Los Angeles and the
San Francisco Bay area. On their
return, November 24, they will con
tinue the work begun here on the
dehydration of vegetables. The de
hydration industry, because of the
army’s lack of containers and need
for concentrated food, is of unlim
ited importance to the national
welfare.
—CONTRACTS— k
(Continued From Page 1)
contract.”
Those in either the Army Air
Force, Naval, Marine or Coast
Guard Reserves need not apply for
a contract, because only those in
the Enlisted Reserve Corps of the
army will be considered.
Students should also know all
of their former military science
grades (freshman and sophomore
years) in order to properly fill
out the application.
All students now taking advan
ced military science must enlist in
the Enlisted Reserve Corps im
mediately or they will definitely
be dropped from the rolls of the
military science course they are
taking, added Col. Bennett. It is
imperative that they not only take
out their papers signifying that
they intend to join the ERC, but
they must actually complete their
enlistment, the adjutant concluded.
—DISTRACTIONS—
(Continued From Page 2)
for good acting.
Walter Pidgeon is Mr. Miniver,
architect and father of three chil
dren. As such, his performance is
ideal. Teresa Wright, the girl who
becomes the wife of the older Min
iver son, is heart-stirringly real
and lovely and Richard Ney as the
son is about the most important
thing that’s happened to MGM since
Robert Taylor.
Helmut Dantine gives the best
interpretation of a Nazi we have
ever seen on the screen. Dame May
Whitty, Reginald Owen and Henry
Travers complete the cast.
The Lowdown — entertainment
extraordinary.
Another among the top few of
the current war pictures is “Eagle
Squadron,” showing now at the
Campus Theater. This picture is a
tribute to those American boys who
didn’t wait for the U. S. to de
clare war, but, instead, joined the
R. A. F. and fought with England
against the common enemy.
Through the use of official shots
of the squadron in action, filmed
by RAF cameramen, the picture
has realism and a note of authen
ticity which are interest-captivat
ing. Robert Stack is the American
who joins the Eagle Squadron %nd
grows bitter at the seeming indif
ference of his English friends to
his pal’s death. But somehow he
learns that the English have buried
all selfish and personal sorrows to
cope with the one great united
sorrow at hand.
Diana Barrymore plays the Eng
lish girl in service; John Loder as
the officer who loses her! and Leif
Erikson is cast as Robert Stack’s
pal. The story is begun with a
foreword by Quentin Reynolds.
The Lowdown — worth cutting
that afternoon lab to see.
Camouflage is being taught at
Queens college and Columbia uni
versity in New York.
Refrigerator Used
To Carry Blood To
Red Cross Centers
A refrigerated container, orig
inally developed for transporting
small quantities of perishable foods
that require temperature protec
tion in transit, is now being used
to carry blood from Red Cross col
lecting centers to laboratories
where it is processed for shipment
to America’s armed forces over
seas.
Designed by Major Elihu Church,
built by refrigeration experts of
the General Electric Company and
transported by the Railway Ex
press Agency, the Church Contain
ers service the nation’s 17 blood
centers where 50,000 contributions
a week are being made by blood
donors. To handle the increasing
donations of blood, the War Pro
duction Board has granted priori
ties for 200 more containers, which
are now being built by General
Electric.
-THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 5, 1942
War has put a crimp in housing
at Northwestern university. Girls
crowded into sorority dormitories
have been moved into two Evan
ston hotels.
— WILLIAMSON PICKS—
(Continued From Page 3)
Home Town
Visiting: Team
Arkansas U
Wr
Wr.
.84.3
Manhattan 86.8
Northwestern 88.2
ILLINOIS 94.0
RICE 89.8 Nebraska 88.5
ARIZONA U 88.2 MISSOURI 89.3
New Mexico 77.0 Oregon U 85.4
Auburn 91.1 UCLA 93.6
GEORGIA PREFLIGHT 94.2 OREGON STATE 88.2
Army 90.9 Montana 74.4
NOTRE DAME 95.9 OKLAHOMA 88.0
ALABAMA 96.8 Kansas State 75.2
South Carolina 85.2 Princeton 88.5
Brig-Young 75.3 DARTMOUTH 88.5
DENVER 85.3 Purdue 90.4
BROWN 88.4 GREAT LAKES 92.8
Holy Cross 88.4 PENNSYLVANIA 92.0
BOSTON COLLEGE 97.8 Navy 89.0
t'emple , 88.5 Pittsburg 89.9
Columbia 86.9 OHIO STATE 93.0
COLGATE 89.9 Penn State 90.2
CLEMSON 87.0 SYRACUSE 91.4
George Washington 81.0 RUTGERS 86.5
Cornell 86.6 Lafayette - ..........85.0
YALE 88.7 Richmond ?4.2
Dayton 80.8 V F I 86.0
CHATTANOOGA 84.3 Stanford 86.7
Davidson 80.8 WASHINGTON CST ’ 89.0
NORTH CAROLINA : 88.0 Southern California 84.7
DUKE 91.2 CALIFORNIA 89.8
Maryland 87.0 Trinity 63.5
Florida 85.2 AMHERST 79.1
GEORGIA 99.4 Texas Tech 85.2
Fordham 91.7 TCU 93.7
LOUISIANA STATE 94.6 TENNESSEE 95.0
GEORGIA TECH 98.1 Cincinnati 83.2
Kentucky 90.4 Texas A.&M. 87.0
Iowa U 91.2 SMU 89.2
WISCONSIN 97.8 Tulane 91.0
Kansas 79.0 MISSISSIPPI STATE 92.0
WASHINGTON STATE 80.2 TULSA 96.1
MICHIGAN 94.4 Oklahoma A.&M 87.0
Harvard 88.2 TEXAS MINES 78.8
MINNESOTA 93,8 Temple 73.0
Indiana 90.9 Texas U 93.1
Mississippi 83.3 BAYLOR 93.1
VANDERBILT 90.8 V M I 88.4
MARQUETTE 93.9 Wake Forest 87.9
WTAW
Thursday, Nov. 5
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.
Newman, FSA
11:55 a.m.—The Town Crier—R.
E. Gottlieb
12:00 noon—Sign-off
Friday, Nov. 6
11:25 a.m.—Music
11:30 a.m.—You Can’t Do Busi
ness With Hitler (Office for
Emergency Management)
11:45 a.m.—The Town Crier—C.
—FLIGHT—
(Continued From Page 1)
tinue. Refueling in Atlanta, Geo
rgia, was a pleasant interlude be
cause Kraras contacted many
former Aggies of the Field Art
illery. v
“In short Old Army, Aggies are
found wherever one goes and are
rated as tops and posses a prest
ige of which everyone is proud”
so says Jack.
Bering
11:45 a.m.—Brazos Valley Farm
and Home Program—Triple-
A
12:00 noon—Sign-off
4:30-5:30 p.m.—THE AGGIE
CLAMBAKE
GOOD LUCK, AGGIES
LET’S BEAT S.M.U.
HRDLICKA’S
Old Navasota Road
PALACE
NT phom e ^ - a.B79
You Bet They’re Back Together Again
CLARK LANA
GABLE TURNER
“Somewhere lil Find You”
The “HONKY TONK” STARS
with
Robert Sterling Patricia Dane
Lee Patrick
Reginald Owen
FOUR BIG DAYS
STARTS WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11th
Also Showing Thursday, Friday and Saturday
;1K ■ ■ 5 >: ' *
~. U.
*
- - ; mm ’ "M
s* —1m| , H-• 'MmM
- . .. „
We Are Backing You To Take Those Mustangs,
Aggies
Aggieland Pharmacy
Zubik& Sons, Tailors
College Book Store
Holick Cleaners
Y.M.C.A. Barber Shop
Campus Cleaners
Aggieland Studio
Student Co-Op
Uniform Tailors
Madeley’s Pharmacy
Standard Tailors
White Way Cafe
Aggieland Barber and
Beauty Shop
i