Page 4 The Bat t a 1 i on Monday Afternoon, May 6, 1946 Man, Your Manners By I. Sherwood Contact Lenses Provide Aid For Flyers With Poor Vision By W. P. Riley “What are the expenses of a bridegroom?” The bridegroom must pay all of the following expenses incidental to his wedding: The cost of the engagement ring. The marriage license fee. The cost of the wedding ring. The cost of his gift to his bride. The c^st of his gifts to best man and ushers. The cost of ties, gloves, and bou tonnieres for the best man and ushers. The check for the bachelor din ner. The cost of the bouquet for his mother and the bride’s mother. The clergyman’s fee. All expenses of the wedding trip. It is important for the groom to be informed on wedding eti quette. The best man has to be in formed because he is the busiest man at the wedding. Why a groom, a normally capable fellow on other occasions, should appear so helpless on his wedding day, may be a matter of tradition, but it doesn’t make sense; he should be as interested in his wedding as the bride, and if he’ll spend just a fraction of the time she does, in learning wedding manners, the guests won’t even notice him. JAKKULA TO SHOW ^ BRIDGE PICTURES Dr. A. A. Jakkula, of the En gineering Experiment Station, will show his movie film on the failure of the Tacoma-Narrows Bridge at a meeting of the American Society of Civil Engineers scheduled for 7:30 p.m. tomorrow night in the lecture room of the Civil Engineer ing Building. Plans for a trip to the State Conference of the Society will be discussed. All engineering students and faculty members are invited to attend, and Freshmen and Sopho mores will be excused from C. Q. EDITOR’S NOTE: W. P. Riley is a student in the agricultural journalism course known as Rural Sociology 415, and the article below was submitted as a class paper. Individuals having only minor ab normalities of vision and wishing to learn to fly can take hope since science has provided a device known as contact lenses to correct such abnormalities. These lenses are made of a plastic material and shaped to con form to the eyeball as they are worn directly over the eye and be come essentially an integral part of one’s visual appartus. Being only the size of the colored part of the eye, contact lenses are hard to distinguish from a distance of even three or four feet. ' Equipment needed consists of a contact lens for each eye, a small rubber suction cup similar to the rubber suction cup on an eye drop per, and a solution of varying al- kilinity according to the individ ual’s metabolistic makeup. The average person starts wear ing contacts from two to four hours at first, and after a period of from six to eight months can increase this time to around 48 hours or even longer. Contacts are rather expensive at the present time, ranging between $150 and $200 for the examination and all, but may in the future be come very reasonable and eventual ly replace spectacles as an aid to better sight for not only flyers but everyone. The first social workers in the Empire State were the Dutch Sieckentroosters, whose duty it was to visit sick persons in their homes. Classified Used Microscope, Bausch and Lomb, Low —High dry and oil immersion lenses, lOx objective. In excellent condition. Room 404, Dorm 16. LOST—Tan leather billfold somewhere between North Gate and College Park on night of May 1st. Contained very little money but papers of importance to me. Name “K. D. Hedgpeth” stamped in gold letters inner fold and identification card inside. If found please call K. D. Hedg peth at Fiscal Dept., 4-8294. FOR SALE—3 room house on lot 100 by 175 feet four blocks off campus South. In quire at 108 Montclair. LOST—Fair glasses, no case, between Y and New Area. Return to Frank Dyer, 307-4. Commercial Art Work — Illustrating, signs, and banners. Jay Cowan, P. O. Box 1871 or A-l Walton. Equity in 5 room house—Furnished, 408 Montclair, College. WANTED TO BUY OR RENT—Elec tric Ice box. Call 4-4404. WANTED TO SELL CHEAP—New tux and accessories. J. E. Blanford, K-7 Wal ton. New studio couch for sale. K-7 Walton. FOR SALE—Sealy Mattress. Call 4-615T. Refresher courses in shorthand, type writing, and other commercial subjects start Monday. Phone 2-6655, McKenzie- Baldwin Business College, 702 S. Washing ton, Bryan. THE SCRIBE SHOP. Typing, mimeo graphing, drawing. Phone 2-6705, 1007 E. 23rd, Bryan. FOR SALE Transit and Level. See Marwil, Room 201, Dorm 1. FLOWERS FOR MOTHER Phone 2-6725 for Delivery J .COULTER SMITH FLORIST Copyright 1946. Dccrrr & Mvm Tobacco Co. ROBERT M. MARCOTTE is ma joring in Mechanical Engineering under a four-year G. I. Bill en rollment at Texas A. & M. “Bob” was discharged from the U. S. Army in August, 1945 with 86 points after overseas service with the 4th Infantry Division. He won the Victory Medal, Purple Heart, and two battle stars on his ETO ribbon. Marcotte is from Temple and is married to a Temple girl. When questioned about his reaction to education under the Gi I. Bill, Bob says: “My wife is all for it and Pm all out for this education the G. I. Bill of Rights way. It’s good for the nation.” Battalion STUDENT TRI-WEEKLY NEWSPAPER Office, Room 5, Administration Building, Telephone 4-6444. Texas A. & M. College Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at College Station, Texas, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1870. The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas and the City of College Station is published three times weekly, and circulated on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday aft ernoons. Member Pbsociofecl Colleftiote Press Subscription rate a.ou per school year. Advertising rates upon request. Sam Nixon Editor Marion Pugh Sports Editor Wendell McClure Adver. Manager HICKOK turns Pigskin into these beautiful Belts, Braces and Wallets... adds distinc tion to a distinctive leather. [XJaldrcpeg “Two Convenient Stores” College Station — Bryan