PAGE 2 THE BATTALION THURSDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 22, 1946 page We Who Leave . .. 7 m r We who leave Aggieland, as most of us do for the second time, have learned in the past eight or nine years that a rea' 1 college, one that we honor and point to with pride, is not UIl lone made up of books, profs and classes alone. No one has •p* ever been able to accurately describe the 1 perfect college or r irS university. No one can ever point to a school or institution and say it is without fault. Effe* Some of us feel that too much emphasis is placed on one Zinn wtype of course or subject while others of us feel that we have Bu * ld V"b een slighted in still another field. There are those amongst Men bus w ^ 1 ° physical education and intramurals played erly h< a great role in our college life while there are others who ner. feel that such activities were good to merely fill idle hours. Alth We have often grouped together for certain rights we in the felt were deserving of the school and of the country and of PP^^our own class, be it ’40 or ’46. We realize that the college as vetera^he country would be in a terrible situation if we all though the pf bound periodicals in the lower stacks. These volumes have so - be constantly removed from the shelves, dusted and treat ed with mildew inhibitor. In addition to those volumes that are attacked by mil- | liew, there are hundreds of volumes whose leather and buck ram bindings are fast deteriorating because of the excessive ^ieat and humidity during a normal summer. The high tem- lierature and high rate of humidity has its effect on the paper of the books and periodicals, causing it to become brittle and deteriorate. These volumes which are no longer Usable because of deterioration are not replacable because they have long since been out of print. It seems to us that it would be an excellent investment lor the college to spend a few thousand dollars in installing 1m air conditioning system to help preserve the $400,000 Investment in books. In addition, if the reading rooms were ir-conditioned, the maximum use would be made of the col lection, because everyone would be able to work in comfort. It is true that for most buildings on the campus, the :ost of air-conditioning is prohibitive. But the library al ready has ducts installed in the walls. The trouble is that dr now blown by fans through the ducts is hot air, heated to i high temperature by the sun. The stacks are of the open ;ype and cold air pumped in at one or two levels should drculate through the entire area. If projects are judged by the number of people benefit- id, air-conditioning for the library should rate high. the Battalion _)ffice. Room 6, Administration Building, Telephone 4-5444, Texas A. & M. College. Vugust, wl lay, Wednesday and Friday, except during the m when it is published weekly and circulated on Thru ,nd Mechanical Colli es weekly and ciri onths of June, July and on Thursday. ege of culated Member Phsoctoted Gplle&iate Press Entered as second-class matter at Post Office at College Station, Texas, under Jie Act of Congress of March 3, 1870. Subscription rate $3.00 per school year. Advertising rates on request. Represented nationally by National Advertising Service, Inc., at New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Hub" JUHJNSUJN, JR. .Co-Editor VICK LINDLEY -..Managing Editor U. V. JOHNSTON Sports Editor WENDELL McCLURE ...' .Advertising Manager PAUL MARTIN, WALLACE H. BENNETT, FERD ENGLISH, KATHY WILSON, L. R. SCHALIT Reporters •ALLEN SELF - Co-Editor •On summer leave.. Serving Aggies 19 Years Two-Day Two Service Service Stations Joel English, Mgr. Campus Cleaners OYER THE EXCHANGE — NEAR GEORGE’S Non-Profit Exchange Store Must Be Self-Supported Why, who and how operates the Exchange Store? Frequently discussed and often just cussed, the Exchange Store is self operated and owned. No provision has ever been made by the Texas Legislature for the es tablishment and operation of a college book store. Financial statements are made each month to the Business Man ager of the College, Comptroller, the Board of Directors and the president. An annual audit is made by the State Auditor. Like many other installations of the college, the Exchange Store is a non-profit one but it must be self supporting. At the end of each fiscal year, June 30, the net profit is determined as is the amount required for operation during the next year. The difference is re commended for rebate to student purchasers. Student Rebate Next to the cash register in the store there is a box where persons making cash purchases may en-' dorse sales slips and deposit same for rebate. When the amount is approved by the board of directors each person who has deposited en dorsed sales slips is proportioned his share of the profit rebate. Pur chasers must endorse sales slips. The rebate usually is paid in the month of September following the fiscal year closed. Books and Equipment Department Heads notify the Exchange Store of the books and equipment which will be required for the next semester based on the planned sections. Often times this will vary considerably with the demand for the courses. These items are ordered by the store and the dealers at North Gate are now informed by the store manager of the required book and equipment lists. This co-operation between the college store and the privately operated stores prevents the “gate” dealers from purchasing blind and having a heavy inventory of unrequired items on hand. Veterans schooling under the GI Bill of Rights usually request new books and equipment whereas the majority of students here before the war were primarily interested in obtaining used books and ma terials. Veterans should be sure that in purchasing used items un der the G. I. Bill requisition that the used price be entered on the sales slips. This demand of new publications and copies has .changed the book business of the store considerably. Repurchase of Books The general policies on the re purchase of books are as follows: 1. New books may be returned for full refund within two weeks of date of purchase, provided they are unused, marked and resalable as new books. 2. New books kept out of stock for a longer period are refunded at 80 per cent of list price if they are resalable as new books. 3. New books that have been soiled, written in or otherwise de faced are refunded at one-half price and are resold as new books. The repurchase price on equip ment runs slightly higher than the above, usually about 60 per cent if resalable as used equipment. The difference is due to the hazard of having used books left on hand after departmental changes. Change of List Prices The prices of new books are changed by publishers notification and by invoice quotations. When such changes are made, prices are also changed on used books. This is done in the follow ing manner. Jones buys a new book for $3.00 and resells it to the Exchange Store for $1.50. The Exchange Store resells the books for $2.00 to Smith. While Smith has the book the price is raised to $3.50. The Exchange Store repurchases the book from Smith for $1.75 and then resells the copy for $2.35. Used books are kold at two-thirds list • price. Back Orders Back Orders are no longer taken on stocked items. Orders will be taken however of items not car ried in stock or graduate publica tions and equipment. Branch Store A branch store initially stocked with copies and equipment requir ed for students living at Bryan Army Air Field Annex will be opened there, according to Carl Birdwell, Exchange Store man- ager. Radar “Plumbing” and Ex-Secret Tubes Are Presented to College Radar tubes—those mysterious things that were always kept under armed guard during the war — have been added to the experiment al equipment of the A. & M. Phy sics department. A large number of such tubes, made for military use, were presented to the college by Western Electric Co. Some of them were developed by the Bell Laboratories during the time that Dr. J. G. Potter, now head of the college physics department, was associated with that research group during the war. Some radar “plumbing” — the technicians’ name for ulta high- frequency equipment—has also been presented to the college by the General Electric Co. and will be used for demonstration pur poses. Architect Profs to Exhibit in Dallas Three professors in the Depart ment of Architecture have been invited to exhibit examples of their work at the Museum of Fine Arts in Dallas during the latter part of this month and the early portion of September while the State Fair is going on. The exhibit is to be titled “Contemporary Texas Architecture” and only twenty ar chitects in the state have been asked to exhibit. OFFICIAL NOTICES All students who are interested in student employment for the fall se mester should call at the Placement Of fice and file applications. This also applies to renewals for students- now employed. Applications will be received beginning Monday, Aug. 19. PLACEMENT OFFICE BOOKS AND SUPPLIES FOR VETERANS All veterans who have not received au thorization to attend school under the “G. I. Bill” will be required to purchase all books and supplies, retain cash sales slips and secure a requisition for re-im- bursement. This policy is effective at once. Bennie A. Zinn Veterans Advisor A financial statement on all Student Concessions in effect during the sum mer, is due at the Student Activities Office by Thursday, August 22nd. The College Library will be closed the entire week of August 26-31, for the pur pose of inventory, with one exception. From 9:00 to 12:00 on Wednesday, August 28, the library will be oqen for faculty and college personnel to borrow and return books. Classified THE SCRIBE SHOP. Typing, mimeo graphing, drawing. Phone 2-6705, 1007 E. 23rd, Bryan. ENGINEERS get your math chart at the Exchange Store. Notebook size 35tf. Concession owned by W. O. Reese, ’46. Last chance for Ex-Servicemen to get Reader’s Digest for % price, get your new or renewal before September 1st. Johnson’s Magazine Agency at College Book Store, phone 4-8814. Will trade apartment in Dallas for jartment in Bryan or College Station, srpenter. Box 3005. LOST—Ladies Bulova wrist watch at Post Office in vicinity of North Gate. Re ward offered. Box 2195. Practically new—2 inner spring mattress es, 1 box spring with legs, 1 heavy coil spring. Also— 6 chairs and dining table, 1 heavy maple high chair. 214 Houston St. on campus. PAINT your CAR $35.00 Bryan Motor Co. N. Main St. - Phone 2-1333 Fully automatic record player and table jnodel radio enclosed in walnut cabinet, ular records. Will sell for $80.00. Inquire 209 Glenwood, Bryan after 5:00 p. m. weekdays and any time Saturday and Sunday. Thorough courses in shorthand, book keeping, typewriting and all commercial subjects available for fall term beginning September 16th. Enrollment will be limit ed. Phone 2-6655 or call at McKinsey- Baldwin Business College, 702 S. Wash ington, Bryan. FOUND—Set of keys. Student Activities Office. Please claim at FOR SALE—24 Foot Phone 4-9064. Trailer House, WASH and GREASE BOTH ^ 1 ONLY This is a real bargain, in a double feature because both are as good as money can buy. Drive in today, or let us call for and deUver your car. AGGIELAND SERVICE STATION and Garage East Gate Letters To The Battalion: It’s getting to be one heck of a thing when your own school will not provide you with the means to take your friends or families to the TU game. And that is just what has been done. It is an in teresting commentary on policies of this Administration that one of its students has to depend on friends at the U of T for tickets to the game when they have.delib- eriately and premeditatedly coup led with misinformation, made it impossible for us to secure tickets here at school. Why? Student Activities Office A. & M. College of Texas College Station, Texas Dear Sir: Your policy and method of hand ling the tickets for the Texas A. & M. game this Thanksgiving is the neatest piece of misinforma tion that has been perpetrated on us to date. First, you publish in the Battalion that applications for tickets would be accepted Septem ber first. In the August 15 issue of the Battalion you state that all the tickets had been sold. You very neatly circumvented your statement by saying that active members of the Ex-Student’s As sociation are not subject to this, and you had sold each and every available ticket to them. They were carefully informed when they could apply for tickets. Of course you neglected, or disregarded, inform ing the students who also desired tickets and are not members of the Ex-Student’s Association, if indeed there was any chance of their obtaining tickets under your system. I can find no grounds for justi fication of this policy. It smacks of a discrimination against those of us forced by circumstances to still be students and not graduates. But the most glaring injustice is the deliberate misleading state ment that the tickets would be re leased September first, no condi tions attached. Many of us had made plans based on the assump tion that we could get tickets for ourselves and friends or families on that date, or at least have a chance to get them. Your policy is a good reflection of what is forc ing the change in Aggie Spirit from what it was in former years. Incidentally, I am not interested in tickets for the game. I phoned The Daily Texan, with which I worked while stationed in Austin, and they have obtained tickets for me. However, there are many more Aggies not so fortunate. I hope you enjoy the game as much as they will. Robert L. Goodman Box 2762 College Station, Texas (Ed Note: Your letter was mis addressed ' to the Student Activi ties Office. It seems as though it should have been addressed to the Athletic Department. The Batt and the Student Activities Office will take no part of the mis-announce- ment of ticket sales. The paper publishes the notifications of the Athletic Department as released by them either directly or through the Department of Information. As tor every student not having a ticket to the game, it hasn’t happened yet. If it does turn out that every student doesn’t get at least one, then the Batt will join in the yell for the same. As for you personally, the For mer Students mailed to you at your former address an application blank. Perhaps you should notify them of your change of address. We’re sweatin’ too. —Ed) Do not be afraid to learn word- for-word whatever is more effi ciently learned that way. The sciences and languages contain large units of subject matter than must be memorized.—A. & M. Handbook. WASH AND GREASE YOUR CAR 95c Bryan Motor Co. N. Main St. - Phone 2-1333 It’s Time to Order NOW SENIOR PINKS and JUNIOR SERGE Neatness demands expert tailoring in your Made-to- Order Uniforms. SMITHS Cleaning and Pressing N. Gate Phone 4-4444 PENNY’S SERENADE By W. L. Penberthy -i At the close of the current se mester of Summer School 184 stu dents will receive their degree from this institution. Of this number there are a very few who are not veterans of the past war so that this class may well be considered the first veteran class to graduate from the school since the First I have always felt that one of the best ways to teach is through example and one of the best ways to learn and im prove in anything is to associate closely and study the best perform ance of one who is an expert in the performance of the thing one is trying to learn. This class of vet erans has set an example in sever- First, this class is to be high ly commended for the example it set in the way of scholastic at tainment. This group of men came to us with a seriousness of pur pose and a determination to get the most in the least amount of time and as a group have made a fine record and at which fu ture students would do well to shoot. Second, the conduct of these men has been excellent and in this re spect they have also set a fine example for future students to follow. I feel that our school has done everything possible to make our veterans, especially our mar ried ones, as comfortable as pos sible, but if there have been some inconveniences they have been tak en with understanding and good grace. Constructive criticisms have been made in the proper spirit and manner. Third, by their eagerness to get tlie most of what the school had to offer and their spirit of coop eration, they have endeared them selves to the members of the teaching staff. We appreciate this class set ting the pattern and whatever they do the best in the world is the worst we could wish for them. World War. Penny al respects. "On This Star” Is A Relief From Many Depressing Novels By Wilnora Barton College Library The new novel by Virginia E. Sorensen, “On This Star”, pre sents nothing new, really in the forever intriguing mazes of life, love and death, but is a refresh ing change from the overdose of gloomy and perplexing psycholo gical studies which we have been getting from present-day novel ists. This is a good story, a tale well told, not for your edification, but for your enjoyment, which some of us still hope to find when we pick up a novel. The story takes place in a Mor mon settlement soon after the first World War when society had al ready forced some modifications on the religion and life of those devout people. The influences of the outside world were bringing change to the community, and new horizons were . opening to the younger men and women. Jens was the youngest son of a large and wealthy Danish family in the settlement. He has chosen for his bride the most talented and the most beautiful of all the girls in the valley. The match was LIBRARY CLOSED WEEK OF AUGUST 26-31 The college library will be closed for inventory during the entire week from August 26 to 31, according to Paul L. Bal- lance, librarian. The only ex ception will be the period from 9:00 to 12:00 p. m. on Wed nesday, August 26, when facul ty and college staff may return or borrow books. GUION HALL THEATER Box Office Opens 1:00 p. m. Closes 8:30 p. m. Thursday Only BARGAIN DAY INTERNATIONAL PICTURES. INC. ' * ‘ fl RANDOLPH SCOH GYPSY ROSE LEE DINAH SHORE BOB BURNS fittfsced aod Directed b? * WILLIAM A.SEITER ^Charles winninger mu** MAoaAu - am-m aor-mium • icaui MmncKs amucxktu-m^* ttKUMfMMKUa MKSIOMOttMt-ftMl. wa« • • • Wmm* r OF THE si Friday and Saturday DOUBLE FEATURE and Notice! Guion Hall will be closed during the Summer Holidays, beginning August 25th, to in stall new seats and equipment and will reopen Sept. 8th. highly satisfactory to everyone—• except the bride-to-be, Chel Bowen, who had some uncomfortable mo ments of doubt. When Jens’ brother, a famous pianist offered to give Chel lessons for a wedding present during his summer vacation, complications set in almost immediately. The sweeping emotion which caught them up could not be blamed en tirely upon their common love for music. It has happened before, but not like it happened for Chel and the two brothers who loved her. They were held helplessly in a trap from which there was no escape. The outcome brought com plete and enveloping tragedy for the whole family. Except for a little slowness in the beginning of the book, the story moves along at a rapid clip. The style is unpretentious and in places approaches dignity, especial ly in the passages depicting the concealed suffering of Chel who had no wish to be the cause of so much misery. This book is a review copy, a gift from the publishers, Reynal and Hitchcock, and is now avail able in the Browsing Room of the College Library. Air Conditioned Opens 1:00 p. m. Ph. 4-1181 Thurs. - Last Day “A NIGHT IN PARADISE” in Technicolor with MERLE OBERON Friday - Saturday 2 BIG FEATURES No. 1 On Night ol r&XOK/ SUSAN HAYWARD • PAUL LUKAS I BILL WILLIAMS * i [ No.2 smCfttlOVil msHittheHar Sunday - Monday Also Color Cartoon - News