4 THE B ATT ALIO N THE EATTALICN Student weekly publication of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas. Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at College Station, Texas, under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879. Subscription by the year, $1.75. EDITORIAL STAFF ROBT. L. HERBERT C. V. ELLIS FRED L. PORTER J. A. BARNES M. J. BLOCK G. M. WRENN W. G. CARNAHAN J. L. KEITH R. S. COLLEY RUSTY SMITH T. S. ROOTS FRANK W. THOMAS JR. W. J. FAULK J. C. POSGATE A. C. MOSER JR D. B. McNERNEY C. M. EVANS P. J. JOHN A. J. MILLER H. G. SEELIGSON II L. A. LELAURIN Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor Feature Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Art Editor Associate Art Editor Associate Art Editor .... Associate Art Editor Sports Editor .Associate Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor News Editor ..Associate News Editor ..Associate News Editor ... Associate News Editor ...Associate News Editor Reporter Reporter BUSINESS R. N. WINDERS Business Manager W. F. FRANKLIN Assistant Business Manager W. J. NEUMAN Circulation Manager of Texas for the wonderful part played by A. and M. College and the Band in the program of the Inaugural ceremonies and Recep tion given Governor Sterling here yesterday. Captain Harry and all the other officials and members of the A. and M. party contributed greatly to the success of the occasion, and all of us want to thank those who were in the party, as well as the student body at large, for their kind assistance given in this matter. The entire party displayed, as is very characteristic of the College and its training in the art of music, the refinement of their conduct and attentiveness to the duties assigned. Texas is proud of A. and M. College and we hope that you shall continue to advance in the wonderful achievements as you have in the past. With kindest personal regards and best wishes, I am, Sincerely yours, CLAUDE D. TEER, Chairman, State Board of Control. PAYS TRIBUTE TO YOUTH Paying tribute to youth by saying that the young were always hopeful and optimistic, Dr. F. S. Groner, president of the Marshall Junior Col lege, delivered the chapel address Sunday, January 18. “Youth,” said Dr. Groner, “is like Napoleon, who saw the world and dared to conquer it. The spirit of youth is to try un til success is attained, failure not be ing in the vocabulary of the young. For this reason youth is the mainstay of armies and the accomplishers of the greatest achievements.” No one, it has been observed, is ever completely miserable while suck ing a chocolate caramel.—Ivor Brown. One man’s meat being, as we know, another man’s poison, it is foolish and presumptuous for a man to prescribe for other men, to tell other men what their way of life should be.—Robert Hichens. Erect Building- For Demonstration Home A model six room cottage, desig ned by Ernest Langford of the archi- tectual department, which will be known as the Key Demonstration Farm Home, is now under construc tion on the southeast portion of the campus in the vicinity of the Consoli dated School. The purpose of build ing the house is to show the farmer that it is possible for him to have a good home architectually regardless of its smallness. Lumber used in the building of the cottage has been do nated by the Texas Lumbermen As sociation and the entire house-hold nated by the Texas Lumbermen’s As- ious manufacturers. The architec- tual design follows the colonial style in its adaption to small cottages. The home will be used for demon stration purposes by the Extension Service. EDUCATION OR DIPLOMA? What is a diploma? How many of us really know what this bit of sheep skin that we’re struggling for, that our mothers and fathers are paying for, is? Not many. Most of us have a hazy idea that when we walk upon the rostrum at Guion Hall and shake Prexy by the hand we have achieved our ultimate end. We think Prexy is handing us a “jimmy” to pry open the world’s treasure house door. Somehow or other it doesn’t work that way. Men, business men, have different ideas on the subject. They expect us to work. ^Really they do. Why, some of them have been heard to say that college, our glorious institution, should be looked upon as a method of training young men to study and apply what they will learn in later life. Now doesn’t that sound funny? To study and apply what we will learn in later life. Frankly, how many of us have the Idea that we will be fully equipped with all necessary information for earning a livelyhood when we leave college? Have an idea that all we need to learn after graduation is the address of the bootlegger and some phone numbers? Too many of us blindly believe just that. There is a sad awakening coming to us and if we can just get this awakening over before cold experience knocks it into us we will be that much ahead of the mob. Come on and try it. POLITICS AND EDUCATION The fact that three national associations composed from the leading colleges of the country have refused to recognize all Mis sissippi institutions under the jurisdiction of state offcials empha sizes at least one truth. Education and partisan politics cannot successfully be mixed. This is no new revelation. It has been shown time after time. It is indeed a hardship on the students attending these va rious colleges that selfish politicians have so interfered with their inalienable rights to good education and the natural benefits thereof. Mississippi has probably made more progress in estab lishing and improving its educational system over its former status in the last five years than any other state. Thus for a few ap parently unscrupulous state officials to do so much damage in such a short time is no less than a tragedy. However, the national bodies that officially reprimanded the action of our sister state’s political overseers have indicated their willingness to reestablish all Mississippi colleges in good standing as soon as they regain their former places and show themselves to be beyond the harm of uneducated job-seekers, prejudiced politicians and other incompetents.—Tulane Hullabaloo. CAMPUS CCMMENT This column is open to signed contributions from members of the student body and faculty at A & M. Contributions must be either typewritten or legibly written in ink, and The Battalion reserves the right to refuse publication of any contribution consid ered unfit. Dr. T. O. Walton, President, Agricultural and Mechanical College, College Station, Texas. Dear Doctor:— I hasten to write you, as President of A. and M. College, to express to you the thanks of the citizens of Austin and the people The ears that collided on purpose- tof a iMborutory test! Crash! A flat car loaded with reels of cable slams into a standing freight train. A movie camera grinds away. Watching intently is a ‘testaeaught °wlicu g rou P °f men — Western Electric engineers . . . What did such a test no eye could. show? Just this — that the new steel reel for telephone cable does not break under severe impacts — and the old style reel may . . . The stag ing of this collision is just one more evidence of Western Electric’s Changing a famil iar scene Steel reels replacetvood. Always open to new ideas and better methods. never-ending quest for certainty ... It is a part, too, of a policy of giving new ideas a thorough trial — a policy which enables Western Electric to meet its ever growing responsibilities in the Bell System. Western Etectric Manufacturers... Vurchasers.. Distributors