PAGE 2 THE SUMMER BATTALION \ FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1939 BATTALION Tk« Battal un published bp the students of Tctts a. & M. Colldjrt each Tuesday sad Ffidsy dorinc th school year from September to Jo^s; pabtishad each >Phday durinf June, July, aad Entered as second-class matter at the'Feet Office at College Station. Texas, wider the Act of # Certcung service, sao maowom mc« yowl M. r. BILL MURRAY™ DON BURK George Fuermann J. C. Diets Hub Johnson Bob Nisbet Edith Thomas AD — . itAW ' Margaret Hollingshead, Sara Taobenhaus, Margaret Ann Wil Winkler, Ross Earl Cox, Jimmy Yentxen. . i Assist aat Charles Ballowe Advertising Mi Albert W. Clay Steady A if i pen ding , aad then Some business cohcems tike the a lot of money all at once on adve i they retire from public view, end makg i*> effort to reach the public for a long time A big splurge in advertising once out a lot. But the most effective kind is the regular kind that fans some to the public every few days. When a the public that it ia doing business m awake, it has accomplished the fii advertising. If a concern does some advertising regularly, even if it is not Very much, the public College Editors Have Their Say About Hitler Collegians continue their vigorous denunciation of Hitler and his continued drive against the weaker nations of eastern Europe. Many urge one plan or another for the formation of a stop-Sitler movement —a movement that most believe is paramount to the continued life of the democratic nations. Tj The Oberljn College Review stated the current position of the colloire newspaper editorial writers in this way. "We cannot censure too severely the wenk-kaeed bowing and scraping and thg, magnani mous sacrifices of other peoples which the French and English governments have made. So long as the desire for ponce and our own souirHy is upper most in our mh>ds, we can hardly hope that more will coma out of the rumored four-power conference to stop Hitler than more guarantees." Many collegians predict that the latest moves of Der Fuehrer art steps in the direction of his down fall. The University of Baltimore B doo states this position ia this way: “For the firet time since the beginning of the Third Reich Germany has seised foreigners and not Germans. Germany now has a - strong, emaodingty brave minority within its own borders. Any further advance will brmg out more foreigners. The first step toward 'ftmWxj’i down fall has keen taken, but watch the future." Of the many plans proposed to step Hitler, the Duke University Chronicle proposed one of the most comprehensive Its main points ere: 1. Replace Neville Chamberlain with Anthony Edsti no Britain’s minister; 2. promote British sad French cooperation with Russia to give that country military leaders that would make Stalin's army valuable to himself and to a new three-power ring around Hitlerland; 8. immediate abandonment of all 'dilatory measures'; and 4. raise tariffs in all countries against import snd expert Of German goods. But, ss most collegians believe, only time will tell the future of Europe—end of democracy through out the world! BACKWASH Bt feoroc fucnMno Backwaahin' around Wagaet! will do the I i ,V. ! . “Chili” rs when the Battaliea starts its new ae ries of weekly broadcast# next Monday night . I . Roth Parkpr’s papers from New York to Ffanciaoo, and his recent hitch-hiking Jaunt was further highlighted by a radio interview in New York City. . £ynn Atkins idea of a REAL coed b one who “can get four nickname of ♦Pap- hours sleep the previous night, go py” will soon lose to eight classes, spend four hours its flavor wbeu at the hairdressers’, study, dress, hau begins to bios- m i t ^ then spend six hours •aom on hb near- dancing and still be abb to say hM&Radh claims he has B- ‘good night’ to the doorman whan bumped into a door my wriit." bald nelly learned the capse and cure .w* leaves of the COrse , . .'ffven during the _ MunmcU session It seems as though - o nmm-r . "Re last moment is favor of someone else whom H is not convenient to put in the limelight just now—say, Senator Wheeler? Did you know that . . . Great $Huin is cur rently spending 13,850,00(^000 a year for national defense? This b comparable to an f' !>• n.liture by the United States of about $1(U"m).!>imi,O0Q a year. < Actually, the United State# b spending *1,783.000.- 000.) The British outlay b at the raid of $10,000,000 daily; it was only 824,000^)00 daily fc the midst of the World War. . . . Thhihea milUM ef the thirty- five million children under 15 year#: of age iri the United StAtrs are ia familH-.- with iiromes of’ lee# than 8800 e year, er on relief" . . Out of the twenty-seven million American families, twelve mil lion, or 42%, had*incomes less than Ilf**) a year? Thirty-six thousand families, or l 1%, ebeh hav ing incomes of .ever 875,mh). received tkh Mme total By DR. T. F. MAYO. UbraHaa TEN GREAT STORIES L "Tern Jones’’, by Fielding. (Tom b Just a good old boy, with all the weaknesses aad tempta tions of the type. He b opposed by a smooth rascal. The story follows them through 18th century high way life, from one wayside inn to another, all full of jood things to eat snd drink. Sapposed to be one of the preen; j of the three perfect plots in English firtion.) ,1 | ^ **BesurrecUou” by Tolstoi (The story of a these vrbo } assn who got very low indeed hex who came alive and made a life.) j *• “OH Gork»t", by Zalxac (The most scathing j exhibition in any language of the cruelty that snob bishness can inflict.) 4. “Moby Dick”, by MelriUe (Perhaps the greatest American novel The story of a lifelong feud between aa implacable old sea captain and a killer whale.) “Pride aad Prejudice”, by Jane Austen (The word for this author, I think, b “keen". She never misses e single shade of subtlety in depicting the innumerable ways that people have discovered of making thesolvv* ridiculous. And yet she never raises her voice above e controverwationa! tone. As a pby, thb story made a tremendous hit on Broad way two or three years ago.) 6. “Of Human Bondage”, hv Somerset Maug ham. (Probably the very best analysis of the modern young man, hfrl. Conflicts, his problems.) 7. “The Brothers KaramaMv", by Dostoevsky. (The father, a subhuman beast; three sons; Dmitri, • good-hearted slave to hb impulses; Ivan, an intel lectual who tortue# himself with his own doubts end worries; Alyosha, what men may rise to be some day. And yet all four are equally human. taken ell together, they represent man aa he has been, he is today, aad as be may some day become if he’s toekyt) 8. Toilers of the Sea", by Victor Hugo (The .Wpic of man against nature, including the famous “fight with the octopus”.) i ' J . 9. “Point Counterpoint”, by AMous Huxley (A ruthless picture #f practically every kind of human weakness snd baseness, with s strong undertone of love and hope for man.) IA “PirlrnAelr t>„” ) The throe shows for the week— “Within the Law”, “Young Mr. Lincoln”, and “Artists snd Medela Abroad”. “Young Mr. Lincoln” rates this week’s top call, by a wide margin. It b being acclaimed as one of the best pictures of the season “Within the Lew” b Saturday’* show. It b another story of men against the b w > only in thb case the “men" b a woman. Beautiful Mary Turner b railroaded to pris on by the head of a large depart ment store where she has been working. While in prison she stud ies bw snd becomes expert in its practice. At the end of her .term she joins a gang of smart crim inals. Through her knowledge of the detaib of criminal bw, she b able to take thousand# of dollars from Gilder, the department store owner, aad still stay within the letter of the bw. Th further her revenge she marries hb son, and then she has everything including hb name. The only complication to arise b the discovery that she love* him. A really fine picture b “Young Mr. Lincoln”. It b the story of hb life at the beginning of his career ia the field of bw, and ' deals in particubr with hb first case. A murder b committed, and circumstontbl evidence points its bony finger at the head of a young husband. Because the family b poor and because they remind him of his own family when he was a boy, he offers hb services as jpaed with which summer lawyer. Employing the type of dry school CourSeq. are covered b well wit in whose use Lincoln was a illustraged by Harry SpringfMUTs master, he stalls the case until remark that "I dropped he dan find a flaw in the evidence and now I’m a chapter' behind!” against the boy. Nothing’ more And Harold Hausman, Frank thjm a simple qlbanac furnishes Daagh4|rt& end Mika O’Hhara th# aaadad Acts for the boy’s re* were hoard agreeing that “Af A M. b S place where women are of dance. Such music should in clude achettisches, hillbilly pieces, etc., instead of modern numbers. Ws ca)i dance to that kind of music any time.” . Mqakjaaah \nvite* any opinions which you may have regarding thb because your opinion may be a help to the committee. The sign hanging beneath the stalls the ease until remark that “I dropped my book r ' fiW sto P signal at MuUth Gate has apparently raneod considerabl« comment. Someone pointed out that the sign, which reads "Stop—Then Proceed,” might flatter motorists even further by reading “Pray, come to a halt—thereafter you may continue.” . :\ leaae. The third show b "Artists and Model* Abroad” starring Jack Benny. Buck Boswell takes hb theatrical troupe abroad and gets at landed in Paris. He signs up a giH for the show, but he doesn’t know that she b the daughter of a millionaire. He even takes her tough about father into the show out of “pity”, the city’s nc pven during eum- %'■ r only a tnemory- mer school.” • The ' student deputies, tempora rily employed by College Station, are occasionally running into some one who wants to get a little the enforcement of r traffic ordinances. On the whob, however, they re port that people ere cooperstim: splendidly. Finding jewels in the old man’# rooms, Buck comes to the con- clasion that the man is a thief. Then he sticks his nose into things snd causes an important contract fdblicity on a national scale is to fall through. His blunder works the record of Aggie Keyes Catson.l out for the best, however,-and Bos- organiser of the National College hb chosen field; he has money in well marries a million dollars. Really more than that, because the gift b Joan Bennett It happened almost a month ago but it’s still worth mentioning^ Lynn Landrum, Dallas Morning New# columnist, recently devoted an entire column In Steve Sakach. Aggie, who graduated last month. Steve came to A! A M. four years ago with 20 cents in cash, s pocketknife, some shears for trim-1 ming hedges, and an ambition to become a landscape architect. To day he b e college graduate i" r: Travel Club. Pictures snd feature the bank, and the respect of all tones have appeared In metro pel- who know him. > } i ’ r I I ‘ Mars Nearest in 15 Years; First Color Pictures Prove Life There What’s Showing AT THE ASSEMBLY HAL Saturday—“Within the Law", with Ruth Hussey, Tom Neal, and P4l MeOy. . Tuesday—“Young Mr. Lincoln”, . ^ ^ ^ with Henry Fonda, Attee B ™uly. ttar j a>1 m Chicago. Others put the miles deep, though scarcer than on “What's that bright star ia the south.'ti'*tern sky in.the early even ings?” Many persons telephone to ask that question of Miss Maude Bennot, who directs the Adler Plan- Men, which appear to establish the presence of plant life there— spring-like growth over aa area as large as the United States. The new pictures show atmosphere 60 1111 W..„r, .nd ArlM> Whe. iBqu , a „ ^ c T ElwJ „ j . j •_ tronomer in ckarg# of McDonald Th»«i,y-“Artl.u .nd Model, ob^rr.totj on Mount Locke, in o t>>,ne4-, *«1> B*""*. J»*" th , loin. Bi( Bond. Sckmtuu a Bennett, and Mar> Boland everywhere—and newspaper offic- ' _L i__ es—have been besieged with like inquiries, j - AROUND THE CAMPUS lehetn* returned, and its reddish ■ ■'< -M*- ■ ■ii.!.»,.»! ■ ... ' - color is not a portent of war,either. WITH EDITH THOMAS I! * 14 ln opposition— i and that occurs every 780 day#, temoon with a po’lR party to when the earth and Mars are on which several friei u.v-R IS invited, the same side of the sun. Every 15 I H «!•••• to 17 years the two plsneta are earth. « Thus, animal life may sxbt on Mars, too; even intelligent beings —end possibly, as the late Dr. Per- cival Lowell* stoutly insisted, a race of canal-builders. However that may be, doubtless there are no Martians like H. G. Wells imagined and Orson Welles depicted in hb hair-raising radio drama last fall. for each mber of days ¥ 178 days, school dur- s. some a* few mqney to 1 ■I; keep as the lowest 42%—ten billion i group. . . . The national average during which children attend hut one school child out of four at ing far fewer days than the ai as 90 days? TTlis b due to bek the schools running. Keep an eye upon what b happeabfc'in France. Premier Debdier, using his fxtr*ordfcmry decree’ powers, has extended the terms of the members of Parliament fbr two years, so ’that them will be no elections in that interval Thb is dOnq.ibstensilly, so that the country may not bb Aqtrectod by in ternal quarrels, during one of which the Faacbt blbc might perpetrate farther aggression Prance seems to choose to fight Faacfrtn with Fascist methods. It migjht be well to kc. p[ tato to mind if we decide to aid the “democratic” nations in a Eurot ~ n ""ffe The Hatch till, prahjbitin, all «es except those who hold poliey- from engaging ia- political petivi the President, Snd probably he original Civil Service legbletion. fifty yearftago, was intended to branch by jtaking.it out of politics, one unexpected result, however: it the political parties more dependent campaign contribution®, iq place ofi received from Office-holders. I Hatch bill may have employ- portions lias gone to 4ign It The more than " *”» »«>♦' t~~ ' ^ return to Graham where he has Jul * 21 • IUr * wm * A11 new •tudents registered in Tib teaching, after spending the ** 38 miUion n,iU " A A U {or ^ firrt tim « summer at the home of hb parents, TYmt b Maro* n^rot.pproach here in Sep- Dr and Mr* F L Thomas A 0 **** 1 25 ’ 1 ®2<. M (ember, should come to the Regb- S || ••• was Sttlfc million miles distant. The trar’s Office and secure a new be. Frod Smith of the Geology P Unel '• * tal0 » t “ *>"*** “ * entrance card. Department is spending the sum- 15 y ear8 a 8 ,w * loT « , T »ickt All old studento who were not mer in Toa^ New Mexico, work- th * ** lb v»H was s In atteadance at A. A M. at the ing on a fellowship from Harm*] m treat for ^ “bonomer*. who end of the 1938-39 session, snd , . . have better instruments—particu- who expect to re-register in Sep- . I .. ,, brly for picture mak , L’ ' 4 moro u mber should report to the Rcgis- 5 ‘refinsri methods of using-them, trar’s Office and secure re-en- — Club Wto honopwi -nU, . ^ ^ bad lb rton roUm«,t p,rmiu^E J. H, n ll. Dr. Earl C. Slipher, working at Registrar. B1 >. mfonteia (South Afriea), has - - made the first color pictures of All applicants for — ,],. gr ,. €1 as ^11 as. advanced de- JIMORS DESIRING TO TAKE ** conferred Angost 26, advanced R.O.T.C. during the com- 1W * mu9t their application In ing regular session will take their th * Registrar’s Office not later physical examination, which they than Monday, August 7.-E. J. must pass to be allowed to take Nowell, Registrar. Mbk;;C. honored with n party given by Dr. and ■ H. Winkler snd their daughter Betty Jane, a member of the Summer Battalion staff. The party ended with a songfest. The watermelon was pronounced deli rious aad the party a groat suc cess, by all who attended. < • e • Dr. mad Mrs. C. R < ampbell. Peggy and Sonny Campbell, left yesterday for a several weeks’ tour of Max ice Peggy has been a member of The Summer Battalion staff aad was co-chairman of the dance committee which planned the fl J the advanced course, during the second week after school ! Stotts again, according to plans being made by Captain Cbude Burbach It b possible but not probable that the Regular Army officer* who fir.. Rammer P..tor, Prma U« semester. date. ECHO TEAROOM Special Ratos for August Until Sept. 16th . 1 uach aad Supper 25* Breakfast 86* N. E. Corner College Campus Highway 6 Honoring her bouse guest, Mrs. Mear of Austin, Mrs. Gibb Gilchrist entertained informally Friday af- D. B. Gofer of the Englbh De partment, and Brooks Gofer are leaving today for Elisabethtown, Keatutky, to speAd the month of AaUi . • • 4 . Jl V- Mitchell, Mrs. Mitchell, and Caroline are spending thb month, to Washington, D. C. jQltotorest to friends on the cam pus ia the approaching Marriage of Miss Jo Guidera, who has been i 1 f" here. COME BY AND PLACE YOUR ORDER •j For Your • " JUNIOR UNIFORM and BOOT PANTS ^ A Small Deposit la Sufficient UNIFORM TAILOR SHOP MENDL A HORNAK ^ North Gate tk 1 -r •