PAGE 2 THE BATTALION TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 23, 1945 The Battalion STUDENT BI-WEEKLY NEWSPAPER ■— Texas A. & M. College The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas and the City of College Station is published twice weekly, and circulated on Tuesday and Friday afternoon. Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at College Station, Texas, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1870. Subscription rate $3.00 per school year. Advertising rates upon request. Represented nationally by National Advertising Service, Inc., Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. at New York City, Member Associated Collegiate Press Office, Room 5, Administration Building. Telephone 4-5444. Calvin Brumley Editor Djck Goad Managing Editor Alfred Jefferson Managing Editor S. L. Inzer Sports Editor Renyard W. Canis Backwash Editor R. L. Bynes Intramural Reporter Teddy Bernstein Amusement Editor Reporters: Eli Barker, B. J. Blankenship, S. K. Adler, R. L. Bynes, L. H. Calla han, James Dillworth, Ernest Berry, Teddy Bernstein. Student Reporters: Henry Ash, Louie Clarke, W. M. Cornelius, Edwin Mayer, John Mizell, Harold Phillips, Damon Tassos, J. C. Long. Coach Norton ... Hats Off Tonight A. & M. awarded letters and membership in the T Association to those Aggies who carried the maroon and white to glory during last fall and this winter. Each one of these men received one of the T medals which they can keep for a lifetime and which will always open the gates to them at any athletic contest held on Kyle Field. These boys get lots of publicity and many honors but the greatest honor of which any of them can boast is wearing the Aggie colors onto the athletic field. They are Aggies and provide one of the most potent and solidifying unifying factors of Aggieland. They deserve the praise and respect of every Aggie. A, & M. has turned out some great athletic teams during the past few years and the chances are that every year they will field a battling team of men that do not know the mean ing of the word quit. One of the men primarily responsible for the fine sports record made oy A. & M. during the last six years is Coach Homer Norton. Coach Norton, or Coacher as he is known to the athletes, is one of the brainyest and one Of the great football psychologist of the last decade. In 1939 he piloted A. & M. to an undefeated football sea son and a national championship. He nearly did it again in 1940. He has taken the Aggie football team to the Sugar Bowl once, to the Cotton Bowl twice, and to the Orange Bowl once. A. & M. has been powerful enough to play four bowl games since 1939. Can any other college in the entire country equal that record? Coach Norton did a good job. When the fall of 1943 rolled around he did not have a returning letterman. Coacher had a field full of seventeen year old high school footballers anxious to play for A. & M. and he took that group of fuzzy-faced youngsters and de veloped the “Whiz Kids” who lost only one game in regular season play. Always he has relied on Aggies for athletic tal ent and not once has an army or naval trainee played for an A. & M. team since the war started in 1941. Coach Homer Norton has done a good job. One thing about Norton stands out above all the rest of his talents. A. & M.’s footballers always play clean, sports manlike football. He teaches sportsmanship first and victory second. He also demands that any boy that wears the maroon and white of A. & M. be an Aggie. He recognizes the value of the Aggie Spirit and he does his share in instilling it in the boys under his tutorage. Coach Norton also recognizes the immeasurable aid that the corps gives to the athletic teams. More than once he has called on the Twelfth Man for help and never once has he been disappointed. Coach Norton has just signed a new contract as head coach and director of athletics at A. & M. If his past record can speak at all it speaks well for the Aggie football teams of future years. Loupot’s Aggie Quiz This Week’s Questions 1. What is the value of the physical plant of Texas A. & M.? 2. How many Schools are there at A. & M. and what is the name of each? 3. When did A. & M. win its first basketball championship? 4. Who is the only woman to graduate from Texas A. & M.? 5. When and where did the famous Aggie tradition of the “Twelfth Man” originate? 6. Who is the only man to be honored by having his statue placed on the A. & M. campus ? What honorary drill organization is named for him ? 7. How many seats are there on the 50 yard line of Kyle Field? 8. When did each of the deans of the schools at A. & M. take of fice ? How many deans did each school have before the present dean assumed tire deanship ? 9. Under what act of Congress was A. & M. established? Why is A. & M. considered a branch of Texas university? 10. How many dormitories for students does A. & M. maintain? Last Week’s Answers F Battery, Field Artillery, Dorm 15 won the first contest spon sored by Loupot. The correct answers as turned in by “F” Battery are as follows: 1. The college first opened on September 17, 1876 (formally Oct. 4, 1876). Six; students reported on the first day. The first permanent building was Gathright Hall. 2. Texas A. & M. first played Texas university in 1894 at Austin. We beat T. u. the first time in 1902. 3. Jefferson Davis was offered the first presidency of A. & M. 4. Bernard Sbisa was the first Supervisor of Subsistence. (The first mess hall manager.) Sbisa Hall was named after him. 5. The stones at the base of the live oaks bordering the drill field are for the 52 Aggies killed in World War I. 6. Jesse Easterwood was an Aggie who was killed in World War I. He was a Lt. in the Air Corps. The field was in his memory. 7. Ina Ray Hutton and her band dedicated the Grove. 8. Uncle Ed’s is on the old Houston Highway. It is the Ed Hrd- lioka place, south of the college about one mile. 9. “The Spirit of Aggieland” is by Col. Dunn and Mr. Nimms. “The Aggie War Hymn” is by T. K. Wilson. “The Twelfth Man” is by Mrs. Ford Munnerylns. 10. The first College Annual was named ‘Olio” and was published in 1895. SPANISH LESSONS OVER WTAW at 7:15 a. m., MON., WED., FRL CACKWAJH Backwash: An agitation resulting from some action or occurence.”—Webster. Merchants serve as a constant reminder of the seasons of the year, coming holidays, and anything else that will make them a sale. Heart shaped boxes of candy are the pi’imary decoration in every window now and lucky indeed is the fellow that doesn’t succumb. When an Aggie starts buying hearts to give away on Valentine’s Renyard day he begins to ruin his financial standing. Nearly every town of any size in Texas harbors one of the Aggie’s one-and-onlies. Yes, he says, as he rubs his nose. Aggies are as free with their hearts as the American people have been with blood for the blood banks. In the Window One OF THE LOCAL flower and heart motiff in their display window. Something they probably didn’t count on though was a cat prowling around sniffing at the hearts. Cat in this instance means a feline. Seen Towards Bryan C ARS coming by and not stop ping to take the Aggie to the big city. . . . Finally one stops and picks up the Aggie hitchhiker but gets passed by the bus on the way in. . . . Two little (about 15 or 16) grinning and giggling on the cor ner waiting for a bus, presumably . . . Thfe long, tall, eagle-faced sailor waiting for a bus first on one foot then another. . . . The sailor finally giving up and sub stituting a cup of coffee. . . . Three lads playing keep-away in the middle of the street. ... On the way to Bryan on Sunday af ternoon one sees Aggies with go ing places caps on coming deject edly back to College. Watching- the Latins G US CARLSON, a Peruvian from Lima, provides the merri ment between and during classes in the Ag Building. Gus, blonde head and all, says that in Peru they call him an artist but here they call him something else. What is it Gus ? Also on the campus this week end, practically alone, were a few of the boys from south of the bor der with their gal friends. Every body is wondering how they do it. An Epicemic Saturday afternoon at supper mess formation one Aggie came out in a suit, yes a complete suit. Saturday night several more blos somed out and by Sunday the cam pus looked like the Forty Acres had suddenly broken loose. It’s reaching emidemic proportions. Nothing like good Dr. De Bull to cure that though. Letter to Backwash Dear Canis, “Having been reading your col umn for sometime, don’t ask me why because I really don’t know, but even with all your sum total lack of knowledge you might be able to help me with a little prob lem that has been bothering me. Well, its been bothering me some but it has been a pleasant bother. The problem is how am I going to get rid of this bother without hurting it. What I really mean is that I’m going to be leaving A. & M. in about a semester and while here I don’t won’t to give up this bother but after I leave I would like to be sure that this little bother, wow! ,what a bother, will be happy and will have someone else to bother after I leave. Sure, there are plenty of guys around here it could bother but I don’t want it bothering just any body yet I want it to bother some body that it will enjoy bothering. What am I going to do. Bewildered. Bewildered, you are quite be wildered. Furthermore you have Backwash bewildered, confused, mixed-up, going in circles, butting its head against the wall, and playing a tune on its lips besides Backwash is confounded, mysti fied, and perplexed. Best thing for you to do is to take some of Old Doctor Wixem’s Cure-All. Paintbrushes & Paint 0 NE BY ONE, slowly yet sure ly, every organization is getting its sign on the water tower. Lat est edition was the one by F Com pany Infantry. Think someone call ed in a parachute division to as sist in the operations. Scissors Section Women’s clothes should be like a speech or an editorial— long enough to cover the subject but short enough to sustain inter est. . . . That finishes my tail said the cat as he backed into the lawn mower. . . . Remember the remark of the lightning bug when he back ed into the lown mower. He said, “Delighted no-end.” . . . Befoi-e they were married she called him :: As The World Turns :: By Dr. A1 B. Nelson Jesse Jones out and Henry Wal lace in as Secretary of Commerce, Franklin D. Roosevelt demanded tlie resignation of Jesse Jones of Houston as Secretary of Com merce in order that he might re ward the faithful political support of Wallace. As you may recall Wallace wanted to remain in the Vice Presidency but was kicked off the ticket by his “boss” be cause of the tre mendous opposi tion throughout Nelson the nation. How ever, Henry has the support of the C.I.O. and will now run the Commerce Department and the Re construction Finance Corporation which still has control of the lend ing of billions of dollars and is thus one of the most powerful political weapons in the nation. Jesse Jones is a Texan and as such may be safely kicked in the teeth now that the election is over. Dog’s secret friend is sought. The great question which has been asked in newspaper headlines all over the natioh is, who gave Col. Elliot Roosevelt’s DOG an “A” priority for travel by plane. The dog’s crate took three seats and caused three soldiers to be kicked off the plane. The dog was on the way to Col. Roosevelt’s new wife (the third in his marital line-up) the former “Miss” Faye Emerson (who is giving marriage a second trial with the President’s marry ing second son. Elliot Roosevelt quickly denied responsibility for the priority, Steve Early, White House secretary officially denied that the President had anything to do with it, the Army completely denied all responsibility, and no one can be found who will admit having anything to do with the pri ority. Even the dog has kept his mouth shut about the whole af fair. Maybe the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is responsible for the mixup. The Bonehead Club of Dallas has nrotested against the discrimina tion against Dallas dogs and has asked for “A” priorities for two hundred and sixty-six inhabitants of the Dallas dog pound in order that they may take a tour of the nation by plane. The highly advertised great Rus sian offensive on the eastern front is obviously being played up for morale and political reasons de spite the fact that it is obviously a strategic retreat by the Ger mans to a line within their own borders which can be more easily defended. No great battles have been fought or are being fought so far. Look for the Russians to be held up and forced to fight every inch of the way as soon as they reach their shortened line of defense, probably along the Oder River where the Germans will be fighting on their own soil. There the Russians will probably encoun ter the same type of fighting as that faced by the Americans and English on Germany’s western bor der. Books Received By College Library General Reading: Hear, Hear! an informal guide to public speaking, by William Freeman. This Modern Music, by John T. Howard. Arena; an adventure in the American theatre, by Hallie Flan agan. Our Contemporary Composers; American music in the twentieth century, by John T. Howard. Boston Adventure, by Jean Staf ford. America, by Stephen V. Benet. Writing Magazine Fiction, by Walter S. Campbell. The Astors; the story of the amazing family whose name has become a symbol for wealth and aristocracy in America, by Har vey O’Connor. Left Hand, Right Hand! by Sir Osbert Sitwell. Doctor in Arabia, by Paul W. Harrison. Shakespeare in Harlem; a new volume of poems, by Langston Hughes. Wings for Words; the story of Johann Gutenberg and his inven tion of printing, by Douglas C. McMurtrie. How to Carve Meat, Game and Poultry, by M. O. Cullen. Dostoevski; the making of a novelist, by Ernest J. Simmons. Conversational Spanish, by S. Lipp and H. V. Besso. You’re the Doctor, by Victor Heiser. Safe Deliverance, by Fredierick C. Irving. Cloudless May, by Storm Jame son. Sound and Fury; an informal history of broadcasting, by Fran cis Chase, Jr. Civilization Against Cancer, by Clarence C. Little. Man’s First Million Years, by Jannette M. Lucas. Photographic Occupations; choos ing your career in photography, by Captain Burr Leyson. The Feminine Fifties, by Fred L. Pattee. Rebellion in the Backlands; Bra zil’s greatest classic, by Euclides da Cunha. The Artist’s Handbook, by Ralph Mayer. Social Sciences: Russia and the, Peace, by Ber nard Pares. Race and Rumors of Race, by Howard W. Odum. Woodrow Wilson; as the cam era saw him then and as we begin to see him today, by Gerald W. Johnson. U. S. War Aims, by Walter Lipp- man. Pan America Progress, by Phil lip L. Green. The News and how to Under stand it, by Quincy Howe. The Rubber Workers; labor or ganization and collective bargain ing in the rubber industry, by Harold S. Roberts. Our Southern Highlanders, by Horace Kephart. The Indian States and Indian Federation, by Sir Geoffrey De Montmorency. Ante-Bellum North Carolina, by Guion G. Johnson. Mexico Speaxs, by Guido Rosa. The Making of Modern China, by Owen and Eleanor Lattimore. Studies in National Income, edited by A. L. Bowley. Victory Without Peace; present ing with the drama and reality of a newsreel the clash of forces here and abroad, by Roger Burlingame and Alden Stevens. Winning the Peace in the Pa- the light of her life. Now the light goes out every night—for a bottle of brew. . . . There are no rounds of drinks on the ladder of success. . . . Who wants to be a success ? Busted Rib to Music C AROLYN O’CONNELL, yes that’s the name of the little jitter- bugging fushia sweater at the corps ball January 13. Also Back wash must apologize to everyone concerned for the “Fish” wasn’t a fish but a frog from “C” Company. The series of contortions result ed in a broken rib for the lass. But they say that she is only waiting for the rib to heal so that she can come from Houston to Aggieland again to get some of that good Aggie swinging. The Lowdown On Campus ‘Distractions • By Teddy Bernstein GUION—Playing Tuesday for the last time is Lady in the Dark, with Ginger Rogers, Ray Milland, Jon Hall, Warner Baxter, and oth ers. Ginger Rogers, a woman editor of a swank style magazine, goes to to psychiatrist and has her dreams interpreted. She is slowly going mad from the strain of her work and what is worse she is having difficulties in her love life trying to decide whether she loves her husband or her advertising man ager or a famous movie star. She ends up by turning her job over to her advertising manager and also her hand in marriage. The picture of her dream at the psy chiatrist is photographed and since the picture is in technicolor is very pretty. Lowdown: A very good show and if you like pretty women you’ll like this picture. Wednesday and Thursday is “You Can’t Ration Love” with Bet ty Rhodes, Johnnie Johnston, Bill Edwards and Marjorie Weaver. The war has brought on a shortage of men in a certain coed college and the girls undertake a venture to ration the remaining men. The girls naturally start cheating on each other and getting more than their share and so many funny complications arise. \ Lowdown: A typical midweek show. Friday and Saturday is a double feature. First on the bill is “Higher and Higher” with Frankie Sinatra, Michele Morgan, Jack Haley and Leon Errol. A man, unable to pay his servants, forms a corporation with them, and together in hila rious fashion, work out a financial plan. A picture with a plot that a jack-rabbit couldn’t stand for two hours. Lowdown: A perfectly swell pic ture for a moron. Second on the list, like wise on anybodies list, is “The Unknown Guest” with Victor Jory and Pa mela Blake. The plot of this pic- cific; a Chinese view of the East ern postwar plans and require ments for a stable security system in the Pacific, by S. R. Chow. The Great Decision, by James T. Shotwell. U. S. S. R.; the story of Soviet Russia, by Walter Duranty. The Great Century in Northern Africa and in Asia; volume 6 in a history of the Expansion of Christ ianity, by Kenneth S. Latourette. The Long Balkan Night, by Leigh White. Voiceless India, by Gertrude Emerson. The Constitution and World Or ganization, by Edward S. Corwin. Freedom’s Ferment; phases of American social history to 1860, by Alice F. Tyler. Bureaucracy Runs Amuck, by Lawrence Sullivan. Tailor’s Progress; the story of a famous union and the men who made it, by Benjamin Stolberg. Germany; the last phase, by Gunnar Pihl. Engineering and its Sciences: Fightin’ Oil; the inside story of the relationship between our pe troleum supply and the state of global war, by Harold L. Ickes. Principles of Modern Industrial Organization, by Walter Rauten- strauch. Fields and Waves in Modern Ra dio; for modern radio and electron- (See BOOKS, Page 4) f. Opens 1 P.M. — 4-1181 TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY COLUMBIA PICTURES presents DUNNE ^^s^BOYER] TOGETHER AGAIN COBURN Plus Three Stooges THURSDAY and FRIDAY Also Comedy and Fox News ture is that a girl is in love with a man who is branded a criminal. A murder mystery without a mur der. Lowdown: It is simply too, too thrilling. CAMPUS—Showing Tuesd a y and Wednesday will be “Together Again” with Irene Dunne, Charles Boyer, Charles Colburn, and oth ers. This is a comedy about a woman mayor of a small Vermont town who by the influence of her impish father-in-law is tricked in to a trip to New York, where she buys a gay, new hat. In Greenwich Village, she meets a sculptor, Char les Boyer—and romance follows. Lowdown: If your technique needs improving, see this. Thursday and Friday is “Are These Our Parents” with Helen Vinson. Lyle Talbot, and Ivan Le- bedeff. War plant workers for parents brings trouble to this fami ly and their daughter becomes one of “those” girls. A returning war veteran turns the tide and reme dies the situation. Lowdown: Nothing extra. PALACE—Playing Tuesday in Bryan is “Till We Meet Again” with Ray Milland, Barbara Brit ton, and Walter Slezak. A story of an American flyer who para chutes into France and also into love with a girl whose only am bition is to be a Nun. The result is that she falls for him like a ton of bricks and since she knows she can’t be a Nun and love this Amer ican she quits the Convent and helps the flyer to escape. The re sult is she gets killed. Lowdown: A very good show. Playing Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday is “Impatient Years” with Jean Arthur, Lee Bow man, Charles Colburn, and Edgar Buchanan. A soldier returning from war finds that his wife whom he met and married in a very few days no longer loves him. The judge’s advise to this married cou ple is to go through their court ship and try to find again their love for one another. This plan succeeds and the result, a rock bound war marriage is saved. Lowdown: A picture with a lot of very good acting. HELP BRING VICTORY BUY MORE WAR BONDS Phone 4-1166 i A s D s“ S ll 0N . 9c & 20c Tax Included Box Office Opens at 1 P.M. Closes at 8:30 LAST DAY “LADY IN THE DARK” — with — Ray Milland Ginger Rogers in Technicolor WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY Laugks,! Cirls! Music! Love! The tuneful love- and-lough hit from Paramount jiwl&M ** //*••• w ith Six // Big Song Hits! FRIDAY and SATURDAY Double Feature — and — “THE UNKNOWN GUEST” — with — Victor Jory Pamela Blake ? T t X * « * • ♦ f 5