PAGE 4 THE BATTALION SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 4, 1943 OFFICIAL NOTICES STUDENT EMPLOYMENT Those students expecting part-time em ployment during the coming term a: urged to fill an application or application Offic renewal with the Placement September 10. W. R. Horsley Placement Office. ice before Church Notices THE CHURCH OF CHRIST R. B. Sweet, Minister Sunday: 9:45 a.m. the Bible classes; 10:45 a.m. the morning worship; 7 p.m. the evening worship. Wednesday: 7 p.m. Prayer Meeting, e invited to atte All are invited to attend all these services. You will be most welcome. The Circles of the College Presbyterian Church will meet Monday, Sept. 6, as follows: Circle I, Mrs. P'ool, chairman, will meet in the home of Mrs. D. W. Williams at 3:30 p.n Circle Circle II, Mrs. M. L. Cashion, chairman, will meet in the home of Mrs. C. O. Sprigs at 3 p.m. Circle III, Mrs. H. H. Garretson, chair' man, will meet with Mrs. Nat Edmond son at 8 p.m. AMERICAN LUTHERAN CONGREGATION Y.M.C.A. Chapel, Campus Kurt Hartmann, Pastor No Sunday School, Sunday, September 6. Divine Srevice at 11:00 a.m. The pastor is attending the Ashram (national convention of the Lutheran Stu dent Association of America) at Camp Aurora on Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. In the absence of the pastor Rev. E. C. Poehlmann of Caldwell will conduct the service and preach the sermon. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, College R. L. Brown, Pastor C. Roger Bell, Ed. and Music 9 :45 a.m.—Sunday School 10:60 a.m.—Morning Worship 4:00 p.m.—Choir Rehearsal 6:06 p.m. Training Union. 7:15 p.m.—Evening Worship Wednesday evening — 7:30 p.m. — Mid-Week Prayer Service. Each evening except Wednesday and Saturday there is a short Vesper service at 6:30. Both at the church and in the n We cordially invite Students and serv- :e men to attend our services. You are welcome at any time you can worship with us. ice men to attend services. THE FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Sonth College and Twenty-Seventh, Bryan E. S. Bledsoe, Pastor 10:00 Sunday School 11:00 Communion and Sermon 6 :80 Youn 7:30 Eve: immunion and He; ung People Meet. 7:3U Evening Worship. Election of officers in the A. and M. Service Men’s Class. A special invitati to all, especially those wl of the Christian Church Christ. special invitation ose who are members Church of A. and M. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Norman Anderson, Pastor Sunday School 9:45 Morning Worship Service 11:00 Sermon Topic: “Shackles to Faith. Young People’s League 6:30 7:30 the Campus Theater and evening services on the lawn east of Guion Hall. If the weather is unfavorable, evening services will be held in the YMCA Chapel. Young People’s League 6:30 Evening Bible Study and Fellowship ' Morning services will be held in A. AND M. COLLEGE METHODIST CHURCH AND WESLEY FOUNDATION Rev. Walton B. Gardner, Pastor-Director Rev. S. Burton Smith, Associate-Director Sunday, September 6, 1943: Sunday School—9 :45 a.m. Classes for Aggies, Servicemen, and civ ilians of all ages. Public Worship — 11:00 a.m. Serm< n by the pastor. Wesley Foundation (for Young People) ■—7:30 p.m. Social hour following. Christmas Gifts For Service Men That Are Overseas Do your Christmas shopping now for men in service overseas. We have a pleasing assortment of practical gifts that will be certain to please. Hansen Gloves All Wood Mufflers All Wool Reg. Sweaters Khaki Shorts and Shirts Regulation Shirts Regulation Slacks Officers Uniforms Officers Wool Shirts Reg. Trench Coats Reg. Field Jackets Regulation Caps Regulation Shoes Regulation Ties Officers Insignia Bill Folds . . . Toilet Kits Shaving Aprons .. . Sew ing Kits . . . Money Belts Leather Writing Kits. (j0aldrop&(3 “Two Convenient Storee” College Station Bryan * A.S.T.LJ. NEWS * ACAiy ENGINEERS ARMy VET! Track Meet Postponed The ASTP Track Meet scheduled for Sunday, September 5, will be run Sunday, September 12, at Kyle Field it was announced by ASTP athletic manager Beer winkle today. The events will be as listed in the issue of the “Bat” and athletes interested are urged to see their company athletic ma nager. C. Q. Ramblings Drug Fred Marinaro, 1st company athletic manager, is getting tred of everyone calling him marijua na. Fred says that marijuana is a dope Well!!!!! Air-Corps Feud No fooling, we have a great deal of respect for all of you Air Force boys here at ASTP and we know that when the history of this war is written and the glory is passed about, you Air Force boys will be right up there grab bing it. Bon-Mot Johnny Flesher, pride of the Ci vil Engineers, is becoming dis couraged. He seemingly can’t get above 65 in a test and never falls below 55 . . . Says Flesher . . . “It is taking so long to flunk out this way.” Important Discovery The Advanced Engineers have discovered a new constant to he used in calculus. It is called the Ignorance Factor and is the con stant you add or substract from your answer to give you the right answer. Without Comment REGISTRAR’S OFFICE College Station, Texas August 27, 1943 Mr. Roy L. Brown Dear Mr. Brown: Before we can give you any definite information concerning your entrance in A. & M. College, it will be necessary that you fill out the forms checked below and forward them to this office im mediately. We are glad to know that you are making application to enroll with us and just as soon as we have received the checked forms, we shall be happy to advise you concerning your admission. Very truly yours, Acting Registrar Dear Registrar: I am afraid that Mr. Roy L. Brown will be unable to comply as he has been in the Army the past three years and at present is an Advanced Engineering Trainee at ASTP 3800, stationed at Texas A. & M. College, College Station, Texas. a friend / The Lord and Registrar’s Of fice move in wonderous ways their mysteries to perform. Roy L. Brown is an advanced Engineering Trainee at ASTP 3800, stationed at Texas A. & M. College. —DISTRACTIONS— (Continued From Page 3) of his commader of his branch of the Tigers. Carroll and his friend are put in as members and at first don’t get along with the other flyers at all, but later they win their favor by their acts of bravery. Carroll is killed in the end, dying destroying a Jap sup ply train. The aerial scenes of bat tle are really good and some of the shots are especially realistic. The Lowdown: This is a good show. Sunday and Monday at Guion Hall is TORTILLA FLAT, star ring Spencer Tracy, Hedy Lamarr, John Garfield, and Frank Morgan. This is an old picture but will always be an entertaining show. With Spencer Tracy as the cen tral figure, the story concerns the way he lives off the connivances he instills in his wine-drinking, chicken-eating friends in his best element. Garfield and Mis Lamarr have a romance going that Tracy tries to disrupt because of its in terference with his soft job. Al most everyone in the show is led around like so many sheep by Tracy’s subtle, superior way. His plot to borrow the tottering Mor gan’s savings and wreck the afore said romance falls through, how ever, but the whole thing ends happily as could be expected. The Lowdown: Not as good as it’s cracked up to be, but worth while. Promotion —By BRAD The announcement that. Lt. Howard “Coach” Pickett has been transferred from the 1st student training company to Regimental Supply Officer wes received with much regret by the advanced en gineers though they wish hipo; every good fortune in his new job. While Lt. Pickett has been located at A. & M a short time, he has made countless friends among the trainees and in turn has been most active in their behalf. This promotion marks the 2nd change of duty Lt. Pickett has had in two and one half months at Aggieland. Coming from the Adjutant Gen eral’s Office he went to the 1st company where he instructed the advanced students in the fine art of P. T. at the same time helping organize a softball team. He then became Special Service Officer for the regiment and now he will be doing duty as both Special Ser vice and Supply Officer under Re gimental Commander Col. Buvens and Adjutant, Lt. Williams. Moving about is nothing new for the lientenant for he has ser ved in most states of the union since entering the army. After being commissioned from Florida U. O. C. S., he served as an instructor in the Army Ad ministration School at LSU. Prior to being commissioned he was a staff Sergeant in the 110th Engi neers. The new Supply Officer has served at Camp Robinson, Arkan sas, Fort Belvoir, Va., and Fort Ord, California, where, during the early days of the war, he was as signed to patrol duty. To the query, did the engineers have to do patrol duty, he replied, “H in those days the engineers did everything.” Well, Lieutenant, those days are back and once more you will be expected to do everything, which reminds me, “how about some new ” But I’d better get in that long line with the rest. Just An M.E. By KAFF We could not help but smile just a bit when we read of life at A. S. T. P. at L. S. U. It re minded us so much of home— and we do mean home. But of course, we at A. & M. are stay ing here primarily to learn Engi neering, and not just because our shipping orders read College Sta tion. We in 1st Co. would not even stay out of ter C. Q. for an hour occasionally to watch the Navy beat the Marines in a soft- ball game behind Dorm. 1. Engi neers we will be, if we have to sweat it out all summer on this front. And, incidentally, when does summer end down here in Texas? Monday is Labor Day, but the thermometer reads Chicago’s July 4th. But to get back to L. S. U.— “others recuperate from the day’s activities by bowling. . . .—Bowl ing—we haven’t had the chance to “strike”, “spare”, or even try for the nearly impossible 7 and 10 pin split, since we left Fort Sill in March. Don’t think we could stand a year of that though —much too strenuous. Besides, we still have our obstacle course and mile to keep us in shape. Need we say what shape we are in? Of course we do spend our weekends doing the following week’s Thermo and Mechanics. And if we were at L. S. U. we would probably be doing exactly as we do here. After all it is Co-Ed, and only five miles from Baton Rouge. Then there is a gigantic “Field House”, wher all meet for the af ternoon or evening cokes or milk shakes, where there are club- rooms, two large dance floors, and a swimming-pool. We call our George’s, but what’s in a name? That Day-Room idea still sounds to us like the answer to a few of the assets of Louisiana State!! ‘Bye Now! - CHURCH SOCIAL - (Continued From Page 3) look at the wall charts showing the remarkable progress of the Children of Israel across the Red Sea. The kiddies, who have been brought in to gorge themselves, are having a pay time tearing up and down the stairs. They manage to reach the door just as Mrs. Carmack is entering with a plat ter of cabbage, and later as she spunges cabbage off of the dress, she remarks to Mrs. Redding that this is the last time she is going Personalities A. C. Kaltwasser Adolpuh Conrad Kaltwasser, our graduating senior for today, hails from Caldwell, Texas. “Cold wat er” as he is called by his friends attended school at Caldwell until the urge hit him to begin in veter inary medicine at A. & M. Fish Kaltwasser began in “D” Troop cavalry in Sep tember, 1939 and hasn’t missed a semester since that time. Now, after ten semes ters, the old sheepskin is about to become a real ity provided of course that he completes his schedule of twenty-four hours and forty-seven grade points. With “Coldwater’s” determination he could handle half again as much work, so the D. V. M. is practical ly in the bag. A. C. has worked most of his way through school having worked for the Landscape Arts depart ment and the Veterinary Science department over a total of nine semesters. He has been an active member in the Jr. A. V. M. A. and a well known member of the Luth- ern Students Association here at College Station. For sports, A. C. likes to play volleyball and . . . confidentially, robbing cradles runs a close sec ond to volleyball. After World Mess II is over, A. C. plans to have a large animal practice somewhere in Texas. His secret ambition, other than a vocational one, is “to walk down military walk again with his senior boots on.” So long Coldwater . . .and here’s hoping you get to see those boots again . . . being exhibited again at A. & M. as of old. Aggie News Things still happen around here, but it seems that some of the members of this organization are a bit reticent about telling of their experiences. The reporters have to hound it out of them . . . Two-bits of a hole in a doughnut that a majority of the army vets have been in more formal reviews than some of the other boys might imagine .... We have great hopes for the Vet Ball Saturday night. Chuck “playboy” Elia is trying to get a group of W. A. C.’s to come and entertain some of the boys. From all reports the brown clads down Nacogdoches way enjoy be ing entertained . . . Has anyone in this outfit got some extra dough? After those table tips, pay day and the old Alma Mater pay ing off, all in the course of about three days, it seems that someone should have an extra century note to spare. (Oh, I forget! . . . buy bonds and stamps) . . . Rumor has it that we will get a week off be tween semesters. Well! every day off will certainly be appreciated. Some of the boys have gone to school here for ten to twelve se mesters without respite, and a week of freedom will be heaven on earth to them . . . Ask “Yank” Phillips why he is always getting his forefinger dirty. Boy, he can look in some of the most unsus pected places for a spech of dust . . . It’s gratifying to the editors of this column to know that some one reads it . . . the reason we know ? . . . because there never are enough Batts to go around each morning of circulation . . . could be that the boys are reading some thing on the front pages. to have anything to do with any thing if those children are allowed. The children, in the meantime, are devoting all of their time to put ting colored chalk in the hot rolls, and considering what small child ren they are, they are doing re markably well. Finally, after the church mem bers had sat down to several tons of food, Lena Curtiss said that we could leave now. So considering the progress ev eryone had made, I say, “Let’s have more church social.” Your Yeterinarian Joe Farrel has kindly brought to our attention some articles written concerning what the veterinary profession has meant to mankind and we will pass them on to you as long as they last. The Blessings of Toxoid ... No veterinary contribution to man kind is more outstanding than the discovery of toxoid—the work of Gaston Ramon, a veterinarian of France. The full significance of this achievement can be realized when ti is remembered that only because of the discovery of Ramon can physicians immunize little children in advance of exposure, against both tetanus and diphtheria. Only because of this discovery can soldiers as well as civilians in hazardous occupations, be safe guarded in advance of injury against the horrors of tetanus. Because of the owrk of Ramon, diphtheria may some day disap pear from the earth, because of it, as mankind learns to take advan tage of his discovery, even tetanus will lose it’s terror. All of this, over and above the use of toxoid by veterinarians to protect valuable horses against tetanus . . . Allied Laboratories, Inc. —CIRCLING— (Continued From Page 3) should I say thump; here’s a lit tle story about a -fellow student that has hit the silk. No, he isn’t one of these lads that has been scaring our flying instructors, he has been confining his efforts to his room. (We can’t build him up too much for fear that thq paratroopers might grab him.) Our paratrooper, Mr. Cardwell, had his first jump last Monday morning when Mr. Buckner found him lying on the floor counting, “4-5-6-7”. It seems that Mr. Buck ner, who sleeps below our para trooper, woke up about three in the morning and found Mr. Card- well lying on the floor frantically counting—he had fallen from his second story bed. Mr. Buckner asked, “What’s wrong, didn’t the Chute open?” Our man picked himself up and climbed back into his bunk trying to figure out what had happened. No one knows—do you? Have you noticed a long faced A/S wandering around? Don’t worry, he isn’t a Bryan Field den tist’s victim, it’s just Mr. Buck ner. His Commanding Officer and Adjutant have left him and he is in full command; but he doesn’t know what to do. Mrs. Buckner, his wife of course, left College Station last week-end for Rusk, Texts, where she is taking care of her mother who is sick. Gentlemen, I know that all of us greatly enjoyed Captain Mur phy’s valedictory and saludatory address last Wednesday night. I believe that the applause he re ceived didn’t begin to show our feelings for him. Captain Murphy, wherever you are , we proudly salute a real officer and a wonder ful friend of every man under your command. Well, young gentlemen, this is the end of another bit of news from our Squadron. I hope my two readers have been able to bear with me long enough about this; Did you hear about the little moron who thought that Western Union was cowboy underwear? When in Doubt About Your Eyes or Your Glasses Consult DR J. W. PAYNE Optometrist 109 S. Main Bryan Next to Palace Theatre LOUPOT’S An Aggie Institution MARINES Let Us Do Your Alterations Lauterstein’s ’ LOUPOT’S Where You Always Get a Fair Trade —RUST — (Continued From Page 1) will add from one to several months of grazing over the old rust-susceptible kinds. The Texas Agricultural Expe riment Station began about 15 years ago to develop rust-resist ant varieties of wheat and oats adapted to the central and sou thern parts of the State. Five years later, cooperative relations with the Bureau of Plant Indus try, USD A, were entered into, and shortly thereafter, barley and flax were added to the list of crops to be bred for rust resist ance. In the breeding program for Cen tral and Southern Texas, the re port states that special emphasis is being placed on disease resist ance combined with quantity and quality of forage, with grain pro duction secondary. Types are be ing sought which give a maximum of grazing during December, Jan uary and February. The standard of perfection to ward which the breeding work at the Texas Agricultural Experi ment Station is aimed calls for varieties that are vigorous win ter growers, tiller freely, produce long dark green blades, recover rapidly after close grazing, do not come into joint during warm periods in the winter, and carry high degrees of resistance to the cereal rusts and other humid- climate diseases. A complete series of new rust- resistant varieties of wheat, oats, and barely adapted to the soil and climatic conditions from Central Texas to the Lower Rio Grande Valley has been developed at the Texas station. Some of these va rieties have been released to commercial growers; others are being released; and still others are being increased for later re lease as soon as sufficient seed is available. According to the report, seed of the following varieties of small grains now are available: Austin wheat; Ranger, Rustler and Verde oats, and Tunis barley. The re port concludes with a discussion of the methods used n producing each variety, weher best results in growth may be expected and where seed may be obtained. —CROOKS— (Conturned irom Page 1) singers can be cast in young parts. The growing American opera pub lic, weaned upon movies and the legitimate stage, just won’t put up with it any more. “Americans have proved they can do the job just as well as any im portant singer who ever crossed the sea. We have the best schools in the world here, we are develop ing means of giving young sing ers poise and experience. Ameri cans has matched their talents against the best foreign voices and have won places in the spotlight. The American singer has arrived.’’ DR. N. B. McNUTT DENTIST Office in Parker Building Over Canady's Pharmacy Phone 2-1457 Bryan, Texas lOUPOT’S j A Little Place and a Big: Saving! WHERE TO SPEND YOUR SPARE MOMENTS There’s nothing more relax ing and refreshing after a long session in classes or a hard afternoon on the drill field than to come by George’s and enjoy a cooling and re freshing drink and spend a few minutes visiting with the fellows. You’re always wel come at George’s—where the guys all get together! GEORGE’S ' New “Y” For - - - QUALITY- SERVICE - FRIENDLINESS — VISIT THE — AGGIELAND PHARMACY WHERE EVERYONE IS WELCOME Come in for your Gifts — Novelties — Supplies —Shaving Needs — School Needs — Sandwiches — Fountain Drinks — and the latest tunes on the Juke Box. • ••• Aggieland Pharmacy “Keep To The Right At The North Gate And You Can’t Go Wrong”