The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 26, 1931, Image 5

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    THE BATTALION
5
Columbia University
Fraternities At War
NEW YORK.—An Associated Press
reporter is authority for the fact that
Columbia university has a frat war
on its hands. And Mr. Grundy is said
to have done it.
Says the reporter:
“Mr. Grundy, former senator of
Pennsylvania, told western senators
from states not so thickly populated
they ‘ought to talk darn small.’
The idea got to Columbia and the
daily studnet paper translated it into
college language for the edification of
fraternities whose equipment consist
ed of a name, by-laws, and maybe a
couple of chairs in a dormitory.
Until then the oldest and strongest
fraternities were more or less content
with the interfraternity council which
enforced an agreement to regulate
rushing and other such campus busi
ness. Not unlike the western sena
tors, the smaller fraternities talked as
they pleased—and the war began.
Fifteen of the largest societies with
drew from the council and drew up a
new agreement which provides, among
other things, that weaker fraternities
can talk only as much as their size and
stability are worth.
For further complication Beta Theta
Pi washed its hands of the whole af
fair and announced independence of
any and all groups. Thirteen frater
nities remain in the council.
Actual hostility is not looked for
until the next rushing season when,
under the present arrangement, ‘rush
ing’ will turn into ‘sandbagging.’
‘Sandbagging,’ students explained,
is a process whereby upper classmen,
spotting an eligible freshman, attempt
to get him into their fraternity ‘by fair
means or foul.’
It is a process not conducive to peace
of mind on the part of the unsophis
ticated frosh.
The old agreement was made in
1925.”
Smoke
Cigarettes in prime
condition have a
moisture content
of about 10%. It will
be seen by the
Pittsburgh Testing
Laboratory Chart
that cigarettes in
the ordin ary
wrapped package
lose more than
half of their total
moisture in thirty
days and that only
the Camel Humi
dor Pack delivers
cigarettes to you
in prime condition
r 11HE whole country is talking about the throat-
I easy mildness and the prime freshness of Camel
Cigarettes in the new Humidor Pack.
The above chart prepared by the Pittsburgh Testing
Laboratory tells you why.
Please examine it carefully. It is an unfailing guide
to cigarette selection and enjoyment.
As you can quickly see by the three upper curves on
this interesting chart, cigarettes that lack the protec
tion of the Humidor Pack lose their moisture rapidly
from the day they are manufactured.
And day by day as this moisture disappears, the
smoke from these cigarettes becomes harsher, hotter,
more unkind to the smoker’s throat.
Not so with Camels!
The Humidor Pack is moisture proof and sealed air
tight at every point. It protects the rich, flavorful
aroma of the choice Turkish and Domestic tobaccos
of which Camels are blended.
MaMte these tests yourself
It is so easy to tell the difference between parched dry
cigarettes and fresh prime Camels that it is no wonder
everybody is reaching for afresh cigarette today.
Your fingers identify stale, dried-out tobaccos at once.
While a Camel is flexible and pliant.
Your ears can tell the difference too. For a dust-dry
cigarette crackles under pressure.
But the real test is taste and there is simply no com
parison between the rich mildness of a Camel and the
hot, brackish smoke from a stale, dry cigarette.
Switch to Camels just for today then leave them
tomorrow if you can.
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, VTimton-Salem, IS. C.
Camels
Artificial heat in houses and
apartments soon dries the mois
ture out of cigarettes wrapped
the old fashioned way. It is the
mark of a considerate hostess,
by means of the Humidor Pack,
to "Serve a fresh cigarette. n
Buy Camels by the carton—
this cigarette will remain fresh
in your home and office.
© 1931, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.