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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 12, 1946)
Page 6 THE BATTALION THURSDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 12, 1946 I U i ' ' * OFFICIAL NOTICES LAUNDRY NOTICE In filling out your laundry list put your last name first. Be sure that all and your Tear off the you laun clothei st is in your tom stub of the laundry list and keep seipt for hes are listed correctly dry list is in your bund! botti it. That is your receipt for your laundry. You will be charged 5(1 if you lose your stub. 11 Each student is allowed a 23 piece bun dle each week. If you have more than one bundle in the same week you will be charged 75^ for the extra bundle. Your bundle may include 4 shirts, 2 pants, 2 polos, 1 pr. coveralls, 4 sheets. Married students list your wife’s, clothes on a separate list. These must be paid for at Com V 1 I * igill : | llliilf /V ' ommercial rates. Turn them in at the same time you do your own, using your laundy mark. They will be returned to the station. Extra pieces will be charged for according to the following: Pants 15^ Shirts 10(! Polos h<f. Coveralls 15(f Sheets 5(f Small pieces 2$ All claims for lost or damaged articles must be made within 24 hours and you must bring your laundry list before an ad justment can be made. Students living in the Project Area turn in Laundry at Laundry Station back of Project House 0 on Tuesday morning before 9 a. m. Call for Friday afternoon. When it comes to fish stories, here is one with a new line. Laughing Lew Lehr, emcee of ABC’s audience-participation show "Detect and Collect”, has the tables turned on himself by old man Tuna. The 500 lb. fish looks pretty proud of his catch, too. Day Students turn in laundry in West End of P. G. Hall, Rooms No. 3 and 4, according to the following schedule: A through L tun in Saturday. M through Z day. Bring your receipt to the laundry station if you have paid a laundry fee. ANIMAL AND DAIRY HUSBANDRY MAJORS V.P.P. 321, required of all AH and DH juniors, is offered this semester and not in the spring semester. Those juniors who have not signed up for the course please note. All other students turn in according to the following: A. B. C. D. — Friday. E. F. G. H. I. -— Monday J. K. L. M. Me. N. — Tuesday 0. P. Q. R. S. — Wednesday T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. — Thursday All laundry must be in before 8 a. on the designated day. Students living in Dormitories 14, 15, 16, 17 and Walton Hall turn in laundry on porch of P.G. Hall. Students living in Leggett, Mitchell, Bizzell, Milner, Puryear and Law turn in laundry at Foster Hall. Students living in Dormitories 1 through 12 turn in laundry at Station 2, the last house on south end of row across the street from Dormitory No. 8. ATTENTION JUNIORS AND SENIORS For sale—Fine quality officer’s short overcoat. Never been worn. Size 38 long. P. O. Box 1936, College Station, Texas. After September 16th, the College Laun dry will cease taking on laundry work for A. & M. College employees. Due to unforeseen circumstances, this decision be comes necessar; y. B. D. Marburger, Manager of Utilities A. & M. College. CLASSIFIEDS Call for your laundry about three days it i ive rks. This slows laundry will be late getting back. Iry after you turn it in. The nrst two all Freshmen have to be assigned laund: marks. This slowi first two weeks dry the work and the For sale—Newly built duplex, 14 mile beyond North Gate on College Main St. Each Apt. has living room, bedroom, kit chen and bath. Contact Louderback at Student Activities Office, 4-5324. THE SCRIBE SHOP'. Typing, mimeo graphing, drawing. Phone 2-6705, 1007 E. 23rd, Bryan. STUDENT BUNDLES POSITIVELY WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED AT THE LAUNDRY. If your bundle is late, leave it at the station and it will be picked up later. J. W. ROLLINS DEAN OF MEN by L. R. HICKMAN Student Labor and Administrative Assistant Wanted—Student to do lettering on certificates and name cards at different times. Submit sample of lettering and con tact through Box 236 Faculty Exchange. For sale—1 pair pair boot bree 4-8177. pair senior boots, 8%C. 1 ches, 30 inch waist. Phone ATTENTION FLIGHT TRAINING STUDENTS All students enrolled in Flight Training (Aero 221) will meet in the Petroleum Engineering Lecture Room at 7 o’clock Monday night, September 16 for ground school schedules. For sale—1 pair senior boots, spurs and chains $45, size 7 : *4D-15% calf. Junior blouse S25, size 36. 2 pr. junior slacks $10 each, size 30-30. Pr. pink boot pants $10. Pr. khaki boot pants $5, size 30, med ium leg. 1 junior cap $5. Campaign hat, complete $5. Sam Browne junior $3. All in excellent condition. Call Rev; R. L. Brown, First Baptist Church. IBllIl iliiisiHi: mm 1 i : - ^111 V , % J •^1 ■ Vi f LA THEY SATISFY ALL OVER AMERICA-CHESTERfIELD IS TOPS! For sale—1 pair senior boots, size 10. Ask for Mr. DuBose at C. E. Building. Wyly. Please return to Dorm 11, Room 216. For sale—Junior blouse. Size 36-37. Pre war material. Right price. Dorm 8, Room 214. For sale—Size 36 junior blouse, size 7% Campaign hat. Garrisons caps, over seas caps. Phone 4-7404. For sale—Trailer house cheap. Phone 4-9064 or apartment A-2-4 Bryan Field Village. For sale—Baby carriag $20. 107 Fidelity St. Wes and bathinette, College Park. 1 pu months old. Small white spot under chin. Please call E. V. Adams, Bandmaster at 4-5824 or 4-5769. For sale—New 5 room house. 3 blocks west of North Gate. All utilities. See Kiel, 1st street, College Station. teffer one pair of sun shades between railway station and Veteran’s village. Please re turn to Veteran’s Village, Apt. 36B or the Security Office. Extensioners Attend Farm Editor’s Meet A group of five members of the A. & M. College Extension Service and Texas Agricultural Experiment Station staffs will attend the meeting of the American Associa tion of Agricultural College Edi tors at Auburn, Alabama, Septem ber 18-20, Extension Director Ide P. Trotter has announced. Included in the group are: Laura Lane, Extendion editor; C. W. Jackson, Extension radio editor; Jack T. Sloan, visual aids special ist; Leon Hale, assistant Extension editor; and Tad Moses, Chief, Div ision of Publications, Agricultural Experiment Station. Leon Hale will leave several days earlier to attend a publications workshop September 12-17. At that time southern farm editors will join Extension editors at the Ala bama Polytechnic Institute for studying effective writing, typo graphy and layout. —PROMOTIONS— (Continued from Page 1) 1st Bn. Artillery Hdq. Staff Major, Joseph P. Mueller, Bat talion Commander. “A” Battery Field Artillery Captain, Glen L. Bell. First Sergeant, Jack A. Krueger. “B” Battery Field Artillery Captain, Robert W. Martin. First Sergeant, Marvin L. Jones. “C” Battery Field Arillery Captain, Charles T. Spence. First Sergeant, Fred L. Hughes. “D” Battery Field Artillery Captain, Don B. Farrell. First Sergeant, Robert M. White. “E” Battery Field Artillery Captain, Vernon G. Hill. First Sergeant, James C. Mayes. “F” Battery Field Artillery Captain, Arthur B. Haws. First Sergeant, James C. Wink ler. “A” Battery Coast Artillery Captain, Edward D. Bateman. First Sergeant, Arthur N. Hart man. Composite Regimental Staff Lieutenant Colonel, Donald J. Nelson, Regimental Commander. 1st Bn. Cavalry Hdq. Staff Major, Durke T. Summers, Bat- “A” Troop Cavalry Captain, Billy Wayne Rosser. First Sergeant, Charles B. Hai’- ris. "B” Troop Cavalry Captain, Harry R. Reger. First Sergeant, Jack D. Adams. “C” Troop Cavalry Captain, Lewis D. Hammett. “D” Troop Cavalry Captain, Glenn C. Butler. First Sergeant, William L. Kruse. “A” Company Signal Corps Captain, Dean M. Denton. First Sergeant, Elmo C. Living ston. 2nd. Bn. Engineers Hdq. Staff Major, Abraham 0. Hamon, Bat talion Commander. “A” Company Engineers Captain, Owen Clyde Cecil. First Sergeant, Roy B. Gilliland. “B” Company Engineers Captain, Ralph V. Lunsford. First Sergeant, Joe C. Richard son. “C” Company Engineers Captain, Billy W. Bowden. First Sergeant, Robert B. Hyde. ‘A” Company Chemical Warfare Service Captain, Robert F. Huston. First Sergeant, Don Hodges, (acting). “A” Company Headquarters Captain, Everett J. Swindler. First Sergeant, Whitney W. Wil son. WHO BORROWED JAY’S FOUNTAIN PEN SUNDAY Have you a fountain pen in your pocket that you can’t ac count for? Last Sunday afternoon, when Lester L. Jay was in the fiscal office of the administration building, paying his fees, he lent his fountain pen to the next man in line. In the confusion, Jay failed to get the pen back, but didn’t miss it until he had left the building. Return of the pen to room 44, Milner Hall, would be appreciated. ATOMIC TEST SUBJECT OF KIRKBRIDE ADDRESS “Atomic Bomb Test” will be the subject of a speech by C. G'. Kirk- bride, chemical engineering depart ment, to the Brazos County Re serve Officers Chapter Tuesday, September 17 at 7:30 p. m. in the Geology Lecture Room. Kirkbride was an eyewitness of the test at Bikini Atoll this sum mer. Remember, the boss has to be a crank if you’re not a self-starter. If you stand in the way of your friend’s prosperity you’ll only hin der your own. A&M Scholarship Given Costa Rican Hugo A. Rodriguez Vega, 21, a graduate of the University of Costa Rica, will be attending A. &M. College for the 1946-47 aca demic year, it was announced re cently by the Pan American World Airways. Vega is one of the twelve outstanding students from many Latin American countries to be flown to the United States for graduate work in scattered North American universities. The twelve students selected this year are the winners of the an nual travel fellowships awarded by Pan American World Airways and the Institute of International Edu cation for promotion of closer edu cational and cultural relations among the Americas. Studies may include any recognized course, pro vided the Institute of International Education considers it sufficiently definite in aim, and believes the applicant suitably qualified. SPECIAL DELIVERY Postal regulations prevent the delivery of special delivery mail to a dormitory room unless the ser vice is specifically requested. Re quest blanks have been mimeo graphed and will be distributed through the first sergeants and housemasters. WE HAVE BEEN Smartly Outfitting Aggies Since 1896 in the , Finest of Military Uniforms SHIRTS SLACKS SHOES [jjaldroptfg Two Convenient Stores College Station — Bryan GREETINGS • • • The Exchange Store is glad to see the campus once more take on the life and spirit as only Aggieland can have. The return to days of a real Aggie hand shake and howdy makes A. & M. again the beloved home of those Fight ing Texas Aggies. That same friendly spirit of service will greet you in your store. Make it a habit to stop often. ' ■' VVr a “Serving Texas Aggies”