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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1938)
\ fHE BATTALION WELCOME TO ACGJE EXES Aficie exutudent* >n tfce cafapu* this week kmecominK thw ftty generally Ibfical time llad they haw , To the who ire on tnd, Phe Batiilion (fiends a hearty wel« me on behalf of the student body of the ml leg. With an offkd# year] exes May* arre+d that dhi* for H and nh s chosen this Week' Tls school haii changed a lot— that will, of coiini; be the first observation. We lope, however, that they will find the change for the 1 otter. Ajain we extend our greeting and express 1 : the hope that their ▼iait to A. d M. new brings them a lot of mer orfcs, a lot of renew ed i eqoftaib aees. land on top of all, whal«fva gopd time. TOLERATE TJjfE i TUDENT T1 e Amer can student has, in I man ter of s| caking, become inured to tt les of i cial prejudice and in toleiance ii European countries Rep« rts of riohnat in Germany havs been I >tioed, but a study of eond itions a 11 shot*- that there just as mucl iinUiUrance in smaller natk ns, sue i as Hungary, Duma nia, and Po ind. Hardened though he i iay be, me mast still pay at- tent on to. ; lories teBing of mia* tons ment t ,J>wmh istudtats at universities ; n these countries , Thousand of Jed^ili’'aliiMSlt^ havi been fc reed to leave (the coun- trien named alxm to seek instruc tion in more' ioleram nations. Those who] for a m.- mason or other, have had fe . iiaMn,.have ex per- ienced great difTicdlty in being ad* mitthd to u livorsities, and evao diffkrt Ity inj ipurauing their onc^ they have gained en r fbll 21 TT V) -e — 14 1-1 Id—To be of . . 11—Founier IS—A layer of tw-ai.-. 20 © VT baying an •Ml Their r falkar s tabbr t IP—Nothing but 21 - HrsxUiaa coin S3—Bora , 24—A receptacle for coffee 2P—Like 27— gays further 28— A row iatangi 30 Depressing 32—A profea- siona) tramp 34—Incite 37—A vessel of O regular line St—A Mexican of a rah gtpus order la ancient Britain 14- -Over i con tracted i It—Potters fruitlessly 20—Guided * 22-Mother of .sr. Anna- 27—An ineect living on t» A vtuan m Shake speare's Othello tl Regret St—A number 14 Diminutive ef Benjamin 30 A mereal left at a meal 1> -Symbol for i lithium - > CHURCHES The Ret. Gordon M. Reese, rec tor of the Cburrh of the Redeemer, Houston, will be guest preacher at the 11 o’clock Services at 9L Tho- as’ Chapel Sunday. Mr. Reese is the first outside preacher to occupy the pulpit at St. Thomas’ for g regular service. wevet H is planned throughout the year to have outstanding men of the Episcopal Church in Texas to vfcit the Chapel ntmnmwf , 9:45, Sunday School; 11:00 Mom Lng Worship, Sermon Topic: “Why Do We Take Communion"; 7:00 Young Peoples’ League. Servian in the ‘Y* Chapel A cordial welcome to all. Norman Anderson, Pastor, Sermon by Pastor. Special Mask- Student quartet. 4:45 p. m.. Baptist Training Un* Mr 1 7 :S0 p. m., Evening Worship. The Wening service will include a play, “And When They Came", a abort talk by the pastor and special mu sk by the local men’s quartet. The play was written by Mrs. J. W. Marshall, the wife of ear state Baptist student secretary. A group of young girls from MavasoU Bap tist Church will render the play] It has a great message for students young people. The pablk is cordially invited to attend all aer BAPTIST SERVICES 2:45 a. m., Sunday School, C. H Bates, General Supt; 10:50, Mom lng worship, Sermon, J. W. Mar shall, ISp.-oial Mask. Paul Leath. ' 4:45 p. m.. Baptist Training Un km, W. T. Parmer, Director; 7:20 p. m. Evening worship, ermon, J. W. Marshall. Special Music. Paul Leath. A cordial welcome is ex tended to al.‘ WOOO 14-To >ourney from place to plac e dollar IV Speck* P laughing i s NortbauA il I rare 1 I (l f Denmark 2— Man's aMfet 1 7—An islaad mIb- I, ia the north 3- Male adulu AOanUc * “ - 3—Piece out 10—Hat 12— The front of an army 13— Governs 15—A member fw lng Inquiry 4-Native of students, ar propaganda policies jin central and eastern Europe, hash asrrjed on terrorist cam taigns hi the universities Jqwiah stpdewu have had the difficult time in Poland. Tra- ditidna) acqdeaiic tolerance has been no> protection brutal at- g M frequently in the es of Cracow and Vilnh as in khei mfre modem uni at Wagsap and Lemberg. Pen ecu tors i haira i flNhaadef) that the lews be jsefreflated an<f placed Oh i ertain |en4he* h> the lecture rao* is. Proffsadrs have been pow- arlei a to stop the beatings and at tack k, whiclq hgve occurred in the claa rooms fiedise vet. The Polish gov. rament haslbedn lax in correct ing the situation and has taken no which krill definitely pro- Jewish studems. . Tie story is much the same in Rarqania, whetw the influence of Rumanian: Maxis has been ■trofig. Jewish! women, as well as have HtiaaiasQODnra raianinB—Eaaa Rnna xicitaDaiTi 3 ■■ •TirjiT pauias ma anna"—ranan ,3a mm aars aaanraa*-«i3! aaaaara paaa EinaEJ" 03333 raanjinfflanasia M18801 Rl SYNOD LI THERAN8 Services will ha held in the Y. M C. A. Chapel at 5:00 p.,m. Sunday Please be there if possible apodal invitation to hear the Rev. Mr. Reeaa this Sandsy at the 11 o'dock service. THE FIRST BAPTIST CHI RCH la Bryasp WHlaai Harvey Aadrew, Pastor A cordial welcome awaits every Aggie here at all the services. Sunday School—“The Dsn Rus sell A. A M. Class”. 9:45i a. m. Morning Worship, 10:54 tf. ra. kagMali Training Union, 6:30 p. Evening Worship, 7:30 p. m. Free busses to the church Wave the Y. M. C. A. end Project House Area at 2:90 every Sunday morn ing THE A. A M. CHURCH OF CHRIST , , R. B. Sw»*t, Minister Schedule of Service: Sunday 10 a. m. Bible classes, worship and sermon: 7 p. m. evening worship: Wednesday 7 p, m. prayer meding /\Ve do not have h Urge number of aeryicea, but are concentrating upon these three, to make them realty worthwhile to every one of you. Each aenriee ia comparatively «hort, moves right along and does not grow tiresome. Every stodent should be able to take enough'time hia studies aad»MMf to worship three'Itali LOST - FOUND UWT: A MrraMn jenl Gn»n wrist watch with a brown leather hand. Lost between Geedwia NaH' and the Hospital. Liberal reward offend Please return tOi85 Good Win Hall. f LOST rule. If 258M. Reward A Log Log Vgcter *l,de found please call Bryan LOST: Stetson campaign hat. dm- 7* with signal cord Last seen in room 204 Aradtmk Bldg. Finder bring to Mr. Parser, Math. Sept f for usual reward. Came Sunday morning o’dock and bring a friend t 14 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH College Station, Texas R. L. Brown. Pastor 9:45 a. ra.. Sunday School. 10:50 a. m., Morning vr,. -hip. Chapel, and you are extended 8T. THOMAS CHAPEL (Episcopal) Rev. Roscoe C Haaaer, Jr.. Roc tor 8:30 a. m., Holy Communion. 11:00 a. m., Morning prayer and sermon by the Rev. Gordon Reeee of Houston. .Visitors are alwajrs welcome to attend the services at 8L Thomas’ At the first monthly m . of the A. A M. ex-4-H Club hers Association Monday aigklt the discfftsioni v MMkMud around: the plane of the association for the 1928-1939 school session. ! Subsequent meetings will, con sist of talks by faculty m« (nb<-r* or men from the Extension' Ser- . Ml vice who wiD discus* topic! re- MpMr to sgricultare, thus kipping the members ia contact Milk the latest developments in the ^gri caltaral field. . Jj The next meeting of the club will be held November B. . U. C. Hopmann heads the aaeo- ciation for this year. 1 front of LOST. Library. handed, narrow handlebars, blue wtth A white sti ipe^ a wnail hask.: 4, ; E- Day, Washington Q). Project House, College Park. j ^ Bkycle from Roll-Fast Modal, at ImUmi; LOST: One Browning Junior ko dak with exposed film iaaide in Y. M. C. A. Monday, yell practice. See B C Mitchell. Reward. ■« iwrae in aft<r l fhsnix, 28 LOST: 4 tickets to Bayior-A. and , M football game. Please return to E. E: Kribba, Eastland Project House No. 5. Good rewnip 1 + canras LOST: Light tan knh. Left on jeareer ef 25th and College Ave. hut Friday afternoon If found return to 82 INuMr., ■ tact to TlslgnBi on the campuses to aehkve their enj|s I The peraecutimi of Jews must be rikTHnied with Becisl alarm when it reaches schools and universities, Jor here is the |ast refuge of tol erance. The dismissal and exile of professor! 1 and 'the violence done students bode 4n unhappy future for Jews is those countries, for attitudes of intblersnce developed in the *tua. nts df today win persist for generations* to come.—Califor nia Daly Brum. - professor, CUtl Ml. 14 Hu its government barfed from they be »eg* cultind life. Senior Ticket Sil )res ition WHY IS THIS THE BEST WEEK TO PKK YOUR ARROW SHIRTS? Sii THIS POST 6, — it KI Uy beaten, and y harmed to the perse- apti-Semetic a petition to the that Jews be schools and that from national they tumdd THE BAITALION Student Semi-weekly new*pap.r of 1 'axas A. A M College and of fkiAl collcg* p ibhtation 1 stored as second class matter at * ha Postoffice at College Sta tkm, Taxaa, under.the Act of Con- gvw ■ of March S. 1879. ^ Bbbscription rat!, |1.76 per year. Advertising rate* upon raquaet OMtoe in ‘Room 122, Administra- tkm 'Duildi*. tvl^hone College 8. Off ce open from 11 a. m until 4 Pw4 ,TW7tl “ V for national adver- by } Natiohal Advertising 420 Madiaoa Ave, Naif Y ntitipm I’m only a'drtfior at this institute of higher learning and it seems a shame that PnC-looking forward to graduating this June without the knowledge of hfw our Athletk De partment operskea ia one reapect: aamslyt :that Af dispensing with tickets for the annual Aggie foot ball game with the Tens Loag- horas. And in peeking this know ledge, I sincerely believe that not only the rest If the senior class, but juniors, sophomores, and freah- men as well, vtill be interested in furthering their education to that extent It seems downright unfair to each and evtrjr student of A. and M that after supporting a team all season - win. Ipse, or draw— he can't evia get a ticket for a seat somewhere out|ide of the ten yard Jtripe. And thal on the very first day the ticketsjko oa sale ap here! I am MTU tkak all ci the tkkets that this colleger is alkoud for the game are not faphind the goal posts or limitad to a section between the jMgjyard strip on one ,side of the fkid Aset DOSS EDITOR-1 N«<3IIRF SMITH ADVERTISING Hanackr aaies Crits Editors C Knetsar Mgrs. syne Stark Eparta Editor C nets H. G. Howard listanta proof - reader AFF Sports Aa- • H4MI ...LJualer Editor ..Llnior Editor Junior Editor Editor : J. F. L. A. Scholl. M . DbAtmond Jr, Jhck NewmfuL c . Ray iTNadVtll that; very aame line on the opposite something is our Athletic ing something on them! Ho that is the c: ed last year ft* that We ter than end from—at so to step up hardly tBink valued just that of stretching thhk* the. of the field. If so.' ically wrong with t for hav- that shoved off , I do not believe because it happapi- hen the game was played here on: Kyle Field. After all, ouf game with the Uni versity is the; biggest one of the season to 98%: of us fellows and I 11-headed enough to believe are should jhave something bet- seats to choose the first doxen or their money. I eur money isn’t on a par with And am I too far to even mothers and fath much as people! I am hardly in' tion to sajK anything about our IH ijonal section styice RVin good a poaMaa'gHj hut I about the cl for our rela should at with the | ticket buying ii don't the angles a* of selling 1 Day game. and be ex- griping of aeVta wa get and f^ienda. We fair atari customers in this NATIONAL AFFAIRS BY DR. R. P. lUDLUM One of the mori intriguing things in politics ia the relation between purposes and the means of realis ing them, together with the asso ciated question of the effect the means have upon the ends. This country is large, and the machin ery of Hs political organisations is complicated. The gap between the ideal and the translation of it into practice, therefore, ia often laugh ably wide. Some of the present actions of the New Deal constitute a case in point Mr. Roosevelt seems con vinced of the desirability of sepa rating the voters Into two nrw par ties, one liberal and one ronserva tive, to replace the Republican and Democratic parties as they are constituted now. There is much common sense in the idea. Each of the parties, at present, has within its membership people whose ideas range from the radical or extremely liberal to the deeply conservative or reactionary. In other words, each party has what has come to b< called a “Left’ wing and a “Right’’ wing. Urn par ties divide the country, so to speak, along horisontal lines. Thus the Democratic party has such widely differing members (reading from left to right) as Maury Maverick, Harry Hopkins, Senator Schwell ••nback, the President himself, Gov ernor Lehman, Bernard Bansch, John N. Garner, A1 Smith, and Frank Hague. The Republican par ty, similarly, includes F. H. La Guardis, the LaFollettes (until re cently, at least), Senator Vamien berg, Alf Landon, Herbert Hoover, Nicholas Murray Butler, and Frank Gannett It would be bard to find men who*e principles contraM more sharply than, say, Maury Maverick and Frank Hague, or F. H. La- Guard ia and Frank Gannett. The President’s purpose, his policy, his ia to discard this horizontal division and to set op in Ha place a vertical division. Maury Maverick and LaGuardia, Harry Hopkins and the LaFollettes, if the n«w division were effected, would belong to one new party, and Frank Hague and Frank Gannett A1 Smith and Nich olas Murray Butler, would belong to the other. The new alignment certainly would he more realistic Men whose ideas were of one type would he in pae party, agd whose ideas Xere of the opposing type would be in the other. The ideal sounds sensible. But how is it to be put into effect? As a matter of practical politics. Mr. Roosevelt needs to control what- ever political invention he Intends (Continued on page 7) £i/oy the Thst tonig 'L T\* to know aU of to the method to our Turkey I do know that H’a FOOTBALL bc wh»t thqr i how U* ,00 ‘ b *” the end tone *.t» ** for? WhytheyOrror thet youcompUm the n«net of when y«t iP to thk B* 0 * 8*u*oW I sensation I ; l by , i tom meany • e e • •• pretty darn unsatisfactory to quite a few peoplq. I will be only to happy to apobgize for this missile of discontent if and when S satis factory explanation of tkia situa tion Is forth-coming providing the situation proves to be unavoidable lincerely, Rex Colston, • senior. ■ * Howard WCSOAT ANNtf SAWS OfF AUG Getting a 52,200 dabtout of fish-eyed Ob Own was like openin' a drum o' fuel ofl with a toothpick,” but that didn’t stop Tugfrwt Annie Hrwwan fiuax. trying. Mbrman Reilly Rains rein tugh- • You'« read p^t and •** the rest But thett wu,- on those Vonf- read- What h*PP" r ” Thwbodiea? ZV.' ntrvr ’ r ,^ UI , An Army pilot ' you ndr^awc^ fljoht. * ■om on durum a lomk'distwrca ®a No More Glamour by Uen.BHWtWt.lr r tells you shout her latest adventure i And.. . LOOK KFORf YOU LOYI- eapeonDy if a man's hsart is in stecplccbsshg. R-ad Stoophchsm for Two, by Ruth Burr Sanborn...WHY • CHICS MAY SWING INC NEXT PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION. Revealed i high-class baniboosling. Read bow k worhsd out I by David Lawrence, b The /Yew Pohtic*... HOLLYWOOD’S PRACTICAL JOKERS. Alva Johnston tells you about them m Whaf f > A 1 a ^ n r i nw — - • - 4- Wh.- -a. *» - 1 - . LJtfM . AiMO. irccietA ttnftit, iroit and cartoons. AB to this week's Post. THE S/nVI(pjlY EVENING POST