Page 2 THE B4TTALI0N THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 7, 1945 The Battalion r BACKWASH STUDENT WEEKLY NEWSPAPER Office, Room 5, Administration Building. Telephone 4-5444 Texas A. & M. College The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas and the City of College Station is published weekly, and circulated on Thursday 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., at New York City, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. Member Associated CpUe6ide Press Welcome Fish! The Corps of Cadets extends a welcome to the new men of A. & M. The process of becoming an Aggie essential ly is founded on a friendly, democratic spirit. The bonds of fraternity and friendship thus formed become more price less with the years as attested by the loyal host of true Aggies extending now around the world. To the hundreds of new Freshmen, who this week took the first step leading to membership in this mighty Aggie fraternity, the hearty welcome of the entire Corps and the staff of Texas A. & M. is extended. Whatever you may have been before you are now in the Corps—a potential Aggie, a future fighting member of the “TWELFTH MAN.” Wel come, Fish, good luck! Ho Hum! Summertime? “Summertime an’ the livin’ is easy,” may well be true in song—but certainly not of going to college. The factors contributing generally to discomfort during summer ses sions are numerous; heat and sweat, insects and vexatious living conditions; the natural languor that comes with the summer months plus the absence of some of the normal features of college life. All of these may lead a fellow to an unhappy frame of mind unless he can “grin and bear it.” A little weather never has and never will stop the Aggies. The Corps should move forward quickly into regu lar organization, militarily, by classes, by clubs and in line with a full scale program of activity and student life. Participation in intramurals, in student activities, in all Aggie activities is urged is expected of every Ag gie. The fall season, with all the gay color of football, will be here before we know it—if we stay busy. So don’t let a little Brazos sunshine get you down, ole Army. Remember the sun shines on all alike. When you think of how you sweat—remember that prof of yours still has to go home after class and mow the yard. Backwash: “An agitation resulting from SO me action or occurence.”—Webster. By Junior Canis HO HUM . . . Summertime and living, Brazos County style, ain’t easy. Junior Canis wags the dis approving tail at those lucky stiffs back home for the summer—noth ing much to do but sleep late, eat home-cooking, go on beach par ties and drive the ole man’s car. Pretty soft stuff, uh? As ole Pap Canis once said, if you’ve got the sugar you can cast your bread upon the water and it comes back Tootsie Rolls. * * * Orchards to J. B. Kearby and Johnny Spragins for a neat little hitchhike to San Diego and return with plenty of time for home cook ing and a taste of California de light under the stars (?). Ditto to Verne Scott, who has Cowtown buzzing cousins over his recent vis it. * * * Missing at registration—the an nual yarn about selling some Fish bottling rights to P. L. Downs Nat- atorium. Hear about the guy who brought the old man along to see that he didn’t get cheated by up perclassmen? The old man ended up paying Sonny’s radiator rent for the full four years—and get ting a receipt in full signed by J. Surber ? ? * * A solid rumor is making the rounds that there’s gonna be a mid-summer all-corps week-end, including a big name orchestra for a Friday nite dance—plus Aggie- land Orchestra playing a stage show and dance on Saturday—plus Tessyites—plus gals galore—Tell us more—tell us more. Speaking of Aggieland Orches tra, “Hot Licks” Bill Turner al ready has the gang rehearsing. The line-up: regular members from last year—F. D. Prater, trumpet; Pete Mayes, trumpet; C. L. James, sax; Ray Herrera, tenor sax; and R. S. Parker, bass; new members trying out, Jay Grubb, piano; J. V. Pike, drums; Francisco Montemayor, al to sax; H. T. Baxter, trumpet; G. P. Webb, trumpet; G. C. MacKen- zie, trombone; J. B. Doakes, alto sax; Jim Wheeler, alto sax; Clyde Bone, trombone; P. B. Wells, tenor sax; Don Simpson, trumpet, and C. B. Langham, alto sax. * * * POEM DEPT., by the Poet Lariat Letter Home Oh father dear, On getting here, I find it costs to be a scholar, Room rent, tuition, books, you know— Please send me fifty dollars. Reply My precious son, My little one, Your story doesn’t tally, The mon you say you spent for books, I know—you really spent on Sally. *. * * SOLID - - SOLID - - SOLD. Don’t miss Bill Turner’s jamboree, jointly sponsored by Student Ac tivities and Guion Hall. Time— Wednesday night after chow; Place —Guion Hall; Whatisit—jive by Aggieland Orchestra, Songs by the Singing Cadets; gals, gals, gals, gals,—gals. :: Your City :: Let’s Get Together . . . State institutions of higher learning, facing the prospect of their first peace-time enrollments since 1941, should feel much assurance in the appropriation bill for educational in stitutions passed at the recent session of the Texas Legis lature. Broad general provisions plus the adequate salary al lowances should enable institutions to meet the increases in enrollments expected in the near future as victory over Japan becomes more and more a reality. One disappointment to all institutions however, was the failure to provide assistance for urgently needed buildings. In the case of A. & M., Senate Joint Resolution 18 was de feated by a narrow margin; hence, the proposed bond issue from revenues from the Permanent University Fund will not be possible. The defeat of this amendment was due largely to a lack of cooperation among the colleges themselves, evidenced in the insistence of some state institutions that they be permit ted to share in the Permanent University Fund, presently al located one-third to A. & M. and two-thirds to Texas Univer sity. The needs of schools other than Texas and A. & M. are no less important to them than the pressing needs on the campus of Aggieland and at Forty Acres. A. & M. believes these needs should be met, immediately and fully. The answer to the problem of all schools, however, is a cooperative attitude, a joint appeal to the wisdom and in tegrity of the Legislature, and a firm insistence on the re spective rights of the schools themselves. It is to be doubted that any school would benefit from a division of the Permanent Fund. What likely would result from spreading the fund would be a general weakening of the entire system of higher education in Texas. Schools other than the University and A. & M., now in a position to demand that their building needs be met by an appropriation from the general revenue fund, might find they had made a poor bargain. PENNY’S SERENADE By W. L. Penberthy In any well-rounded sports pro- gi'am there are at least two kinds of sports; namely, team and indi vidual. In the team sports the participants must team up with their fellow-play ers in an effort to attain a common (goal — victory i over the oppon- ^ We feel that fLy*! participation' in team sports de velops such char- Penberthy acteristics as co operation, teamwork and unselfish ness in the players who take part I feel that individual sports like swimming, track, boxing, wrest ling, etc. also have fine character building values in that they teach self-reliance. The individual who takes part in these sports is “on his own” and his sucess or failure depends upon his own efforts — he has no teammate to help or hinder him. Many of us are “on our own” for the first time in our lives and as is the case in individual sports, our success or failure will depend on our own performance. However, even though we be “on our own” there ai’e certain choices we can make—two of which I think are very important. First, we can choose our associates and along with this choice may go happiness and success, or unhappiness and failure. I know in sports we tend to seek the level of the perfor mance of those with whom we play, and I feel that the same is true in the case of people with whom we associate. We can choose associates who will be a blessing to us and whom we will love and cherish the rest of our lives, or we can choose those who will be a millstone around our neck and whose ac quaintance we will regret having made. Second, we can choose how we spend our spare time. We can spend it taking part in whole some worthwhile activities that will make us better citizens or we can spend it doing things that tear down rather than build up. Both of the things I have mentioned are of our own choosing. It has been my observation that a pretty good way to find out just what kind of a person a man or woman really is, is to find out the kind of people with whom he as sociates and how he spends his spare time. Here begins a series of articles about the city of College Station, its municipal government, mone tary receipts and expenditures, its facilities for school and utility pur poses, and a discussion of what the future should hold for the re sidents of this community. This first installment may be labeled “background”, as it is in tended as a curtain raiser for the material that is to follow each week in the Battalion. Without a Texas A&M College there would be no city of College Station as the city has grown up solely to serve the needs and in terests of the College and its fac ulty, staff and students. Therefore, one should know something of the development of the College to un derstand and appreciate the forma tion of the local municipal gov ernment and the city of College Station which it serves. Founded m 1871 In 1882 the Morrill Act became law, setting aside portions of the public domain to be used by the states for instruction in agricul ture and the mechanic arts, to which later was added military science. Texas accepted the act in 1866 and state law created the Agricultural and Mechanical Col lege of Texas in 1871. The college locating commission chose a site of 2416 acres donated by the citi zens of Bryan and Brazos County. Succeeding state legislatures passed appropriations for the con struction of class rooms and dorm itories for the students, and ad ministrative quarters for the facul ty and staff. Dwellings were erect ed on the campus to house in structors and administrators. That was the beginning of College Sta tion as a designation on the map of Texas, in the files of the U. S. postal authorities and as a stop on the railroads and other trans portation systems serving the com munity. Until comparatively recent years there were facilities in plenty to supply residential demands. Tip ping of the scales on this situa tion through a combination of cir cumstances brought the city of College Station into being. Campus Center Shifts When the enlarged building program was inaugurated by the College in the early 1930’s it was found that expansion in some logical portions of the campus was blocked by residences, many of which had housed the same faculty and staff members for several de cades. In the years 1934 to 1938 College enrollment had leaped from about 3000 to over 6000. Early in 1939 construction was begun on a new dormitory and mess hall area some distance from the hereto fore center of college life. Faculty Leaves Campus For several years members of the school’s board of directors had discussed passage of an order re moving faculty and staff members from the campus, tearing down the houses : they occupied and adopting a master landscaping plan, as well as setting up a planning commis sion to pass on the site and kind of future construction. On Sept. 2, 1939 the board adopted such an order, giving the families that had to move until Sept. 1, 1941 to acquire living quarters elsewhere. Only those individuals who' held positions requiring constant pres ence close to the business of the college or to the student body were allowed to remain on the campus. (To be continued) Good Neighbors BRAZIL .... BIG NEIGHBOR AND GOOD FRIEND In Brazil, geography is impor tant. Her advantages and disad vantages, her accomplishments and problems, her relationship with the rest of the world never get very far away from her physical con formation. Her area comprises about 4,000,000 square miles. The land is vast—greater in area than that of the United States—com prising half of South America land. From Jungle to Civilization Topographically, the land divides into four regions. The largest is the basin worn by the Amazon river with its two hundred odd trib utaries. This flood plain of the Amazon is made up of jungle— savage and virgin. Human life there is almost impossible. Above the flood plain, on firm land, na ture is more hospitable. The hard wood forests, typical of higher tropical jungle, admit the sun. Here the climate divides itself be tween heavy tropical rains and a dry season. In a whole this Amazon basin can be cleared and worked. It is 2,225,000 square miles of Bra zil. In the rich and hospitable hilly country of the southern part of Brazil and the narrow, fertile coastal strip from Porto Alegre northward to Recife are concen trated the most important cities, the railroads and highways, the productive capacity and the wealth of this country. Here, on less than 30 percent of the land live nine- tenths of the nation’s 41,400,000 people. The climate is excellent and stimulating. Portuguese Plus Makes Brazilian The people are a well stirred mixture of many races. The base is Portuguese. To this base have been added several strains of Ger- Edna B. Woods Libraries are operated in order that many people may have the advantages of using and enjoying books, newspapers, pamphlets, and recorded music. To ignore this opportunity is to deny yourself a privilege of great financial wealth and at the same time to shun the wealth of knowledge and pleasure that can be yours through the use of the library. The College library not only offers the key to individual development; it cooperates with the various departments of the College by putting books on the Reserve Book and Required Read ing shelves to aid in the prepara tion of your assignments. The idea of shelves, stacks, and floors filled with books may be terrifying, but a visit to the A. & M. College library will soon dispel that terror. Attractive reading rooms, carefully selected collec tions, and staff members on hand to answer your questions give the Library an atmosphere of com fortable vitality. For instance, on the first floor is the Newspaper room, furnished with comfortable chairs and con venient tables. The Library sub scribes to more than thirty news papers, most of them Texas papers, which ai’e placed on wooden racks daily and which may be read at any time a student has a few min utes to stop in the Library. The Library is open from 8 AM until 10 PM—Monday through Friday; on Saturday it i^ open from 8 AM until 4 PM, and on Sunday, the man, Italian, Dutch, Swiss, Polish, Spanish, Russian, French and Af rican blood. All this variety of na tionalities has been assimilated by the Brazilian people. The biggest problem confronting Brazil is its system of communi cations. There is a great system of inland waterways 40,000 navi gable miles. Ocean steamers can travel as far as 2,000 miles up the Amazon river. The overland com munication is quite a problem for the government. Only Sao Paulo, Rio and Minas Gerais, the power trio, have a road system adequate to their local needs. The largest per cent of Brazil’s 21,240 miles of railroads is concentrated here. Land transportation between these three cities and the rest of the eighteen states does not exist. The cause for this problem of overland communication is primarily the great distances to be traveled be tween one state and another and the difficulty of the terrain in the interior. The scant population to be served makes justification of the high cost per mile difficult. The airway system is a modern and fast one for both passengers and freight. Brazil’s Economy The story of Brazil’s economy is one of the struggle of a nation to free itself from the inherited bonds of a semi-feudal system and to build a modern framework of pro duction and distribution which will permit the development of an enor mous amount of natural resources. The' soil is rich. From north to south it can produce nearly every crop known to man. In the north are the forests of the Amazon basin and the adjoin ing uplands. In these forests are millions of trees making up the original source of that now price less commodity, rubber. There is also a great variety of trees that produce materials for the produc tion of such products as wax, ma nioc, and nut-oils. Moving toward the south out of the tropical zone, from the semi tropics to the beginning of the temperate zone, the soil grows to bacco, sugar cane, vanilla, cacao, oranges, coffee, and cotton. Under the ground are the met als, diverse in kind and immense in quantity, a formidable arsenal of the materials of war—bauxite, tin, chromium, tungsten, lead, zinc, silver, diamonds, platinum, gold, mica, crystal, and one of the world’s largest deposits of man ganese. These resources already are being used by the United States of America in great quantities for the pi-osecution of this war. The country produces three- fifths of the world’s coffee, is the second largest producer of cacao, exports large quantities of or anges, sugar, cotton, hides, dia monds, oil. It also is the largest buyer of United States goods in South America. Progress Since 1930 Under Getuli Vargas, who has been in office since 1930, the agri culture has been diversified, means of communication have been im proved, and the country has been Library is open from 2 PM until 10 PM. Also on the first floor is the Periodical Room in which are kept the current issues of more than one thousand magazines. Located as it is, close to the door on the ground floor, this is an ideal place to spend a few minutes or hours each week. Here are your old favorites —Time, Life, Readers Digest, and Esquire, and here also are some excellent magazines with discus sions of more serious problems— New Republic, Nation, and the At lantic; they suggest excellent sub jects for speeches and for term pa pers. Other than the general read ing magazines, however, there are technical magazines on practically every course taught—Engineering News Record, Aviation, Veterinary Journal, and Agricultural Engineer ing. Most of the 110,000 volumes in the Library’s collection are avail able at the Main Loan desk on the second floor. Display cases near by contain books of special interest; one of them, kept up to the times, contains books about the War and International problems. On the sec ond floor also is the Reference Room where one may go to find information or facts about anything in which he is interested. The BrowsingRoom on the third floor furnishes comfort in the form of easy chairs, and smoking stands, and furnishes pleasurable reading in the form of three thou sand books located on the open shelves which line its walls. Recent popular books on scientific sub- greatly industrialized. The stock raising industry has become one of the largest in the world and much attention has been paid to the breeding of high-grade ani mals. Vargas has combined his in terest in the welfare of the poor people with a campaign aimed at ending the ‘latifundio” system. The poor are helped to buy small tracts of land, and with this encourage ment the number of small land units have increased a great deal. The government concerns itself seriously with public health. Here are problems greatly complicated by temperature and expanses of territory lacking adequate natural drainage. These problems have been met with the combined help of the Brazilian government and that of the United States. In gen eral Brazil’s cities are as healthy as the cities in this country. Education is greatly improving. The government is keenly interest ed in making Brazil one of the outstanding educated countries of the world. During the past ten years the percentage of illiterate persons has, decreased about ten per cent. The government super vises most of the education in pub lic schools—^primary, secondary, and colleges and universities. There is a great number of privately owned colleges and universities. Brazil’s contribution to arts and literature are numerous and nota ble. Brazilian music is gaining rap id popularity among the people of the United States as well as the rest of the world. Brazil at War Brazil’s contribution to the war effort of the Americas has played an important role in the prosecu tion of this war. The United States has been getting from Brazil valu able material which is badly need ed in keeping the war factories going full blast. Such materials as tin, manganese, rubber, zinc, dia monds and many other valuable materials have been coming into the United States. Not only in the furnishing of the above critical war materials has Brazil helped win this war but they sent a whole Brazilian army to the Italian the ater of war and dealt severe blows to the German war machine. They were highly commended by Rus sians, English and Americans for their exploits on Italian soil. jects, books on radio, travel, and medicine, besides all the fiction books which the library owns are here. You may browse as long as you wish, without interruption. You may- read here, or you may take your choice to read at home by charging it out at the Reserve Book desk in the room adjacent. In 1937, the Carnegie Corpora tion gave the A. & M. Library a remote control phonograph, a small collection of records, and several hundred books (some of them scores) about music and musicians. After being played continuously for almost eight years, the phono graph needed a complete overhaul- ing.In the next few weeks it will be back in the Music Room ready for use. The Music library of ele ven hundred classical records is kept at the Reserve Book desk. Almost one hundred composers are recorded in the collection. It is interesting to know that Beethoven and Tchaikowsky have been with out exception more popular than any other composers in the past three years. The A. & M. College library is your Library; its staff is here to serve you and to help you get the most from your college years. Library rules and regulations are necessary to protect you as well as to protect your brother Aggie, next year. Use the Library, respect its property, and suggest books you would like to read by dropping the titles and author’s names, your name and address in the box provided for student requests on the first floor. FINE UNIFORMS LAUTERSTEIN’S PHONE 4-4444 Box Office Opens at 1 P.M. Closes at 8:30 fs D S M TI S L S L 0N . 9c & 20c Tax Included Phone 4-1166 SATURDAY and SUNDAY “THE SEVENTH CROSS” Spencer Tracy in his greatest role. also News of the Day presents FILM EPIC OF OKINAWA! Drama of American advance as desperate battle rages for vital Japanese island. TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY “LOST IN a HAREM” — with — Bud Abbott - Lou Costello also latest news and EXTRA ATTRACTION “ALL-STAR BOND RALLY” * New Summer Schedule * * Guion Hall Theater will * * be open on the following * * days during the summer * * semester: * * Saturday and Sundays * * Tuesdays & Wednesdays * WELCOME TO A. & M. For fresh, attractive FLOWERS at moderate prices, telephone or call at our Greenhouse on College Avenue. We deliver anywhere, either by truck or wire. No order too small or too large for us. J. COULTER SMITH Bonded Member F.T.D. Dial 2-6725