PAGE 4 THE BATTALION ■THURSDAY, JAN. 11, 1940 The Battalion STUDENT TRI-WEEKLY NEWSPAPER OP TEXAS A. & M. COLLEGE The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas and the city of College Station, is published three times weekly from September to June, issued Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday mornings; and is published weekly from June through August. Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at College Station, Texas, under the Act of Congress of March 8, 1879. Subscription rate, $3 a school year. Advertising rates upon request. Represented nationally by National Advertising Service, Inc., at New York City, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. Office, Room 122, Administration Building. Telephone 4-6444. 1939 Member 1940 Associated Golle&iate Press BILL MURRAY _ LARRY WEHRLE . lames Critz E. C. (Jeep) Oates H. G. Howard "Hub" Johnson Philip Golman John J. Moseley EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ADVERTISING MANAGER Associate Editor Sports Editor Circulation Manager Intramural Editor Staff Photographer Staff Artist THURSDAY STAFF . Ray Treadwell Managing Editor J. W. Jenkins Asst. Advertising Manager Don McChesney Asst. Circulation Manager Phil Levine Editorial Assistant Junior Editors George Fuermann ; Nisbet Senior Sports Assistants Jimmie Cokinos Jimmy James Junior Advertising Solicitors L. J. Nelson A. J. Hendrick Reportorial Staff Jack Aycock, H. D. Borgfeld, P. H. Brown, R. A. Doak, Jim Dooley, Walter Goodman, Guy Kane, R. R. Mattox, R. B. Pearce, R. G. Powell, Walter Sullivan, Delbert Whitaker. D. C. Thurman, Murray Evans, Dow Wynn, Joe Taylor Opportunity for Seniors Seniors: It won’t be long now. Some of you have only two or three more weeks on this campus, while a greater majority have only five more months or so before your college requirements for graduation are completed. Now is the time to think about tomorrow. Do you know what you are going to do as soon as you receive your coveted sheepskin? Have you al ready made business connections which will afford you employment as soon as you leave school? As is often the case, some of you will return home and wait for dad to find you employment. In most cases, isn’t it true that your family has done enough to assist you in obtaining a de gree? If you haven’t yet started, start now mak ing contacts which you can follow up next semes ter. With wars in foreign countries creating a de mand for American goods, many industries are affording new openings for young men who have made the most of their training. There is work for everyone if you have what it takes to get out and find it. 9 One of the best aids to your securing employ ment is the work the new Placement and Per sonnel Division of the Formfer Students Asso ciation is doing. If you have not yet consulted with this office you should take immediate advantage of this opportunity. They have advice which will help you. Remember that the staff of Texas A. & M. College is willing at all times to work with you and help you if you have a clean record and deserve such recommendation. O l’ i: N FORUM workers and professional men. Of these many will undoubtedly be associated intimately with you in the years to come. It is of great importance to all of us to know some of the men with whom we will be working. Secondly, in club meetings and club work you find a great opportunity to meet and associate with your professors. It is an advantage to both instructors and students to know each other on a friendly basis. A third great advantage of club activity is the widespread acquaintance you will have with boys of other organizations and from both sec tions of the A. & M. campus. Such contacts and experience in getting along with 'one’s fellowmen are helpful in many ways. The societies are all run by the students. Many outings and picnics, dances and other social activi ties are carried on regularly. There is always a great opportunity at club meetings to gain information about your course that will prove helpful now or later. Many excel lent speakers are chosen—men the finest in their fields—to address the students. These men are genuinely interested in A. & M. and the Aggies. I am simply expressing the sentiments of a great number of students and professors at A. & M. Think it over! PAUL DILLON, ’40. Books You'll flni J7 By Dr. T. F. Mayo A SELECTED LIST OF NEW BOOKS CATA LOGUED BY THE LIBRARY 24 of the more generally interesting new books catalogued in the library lately: Best Plays of 1938-39. Blackhurst, James Herbert. Humanized Geo metry. 1984. Carr, Mrs. Katherine (Cowin). . . South Ameri can Primer. 1939. Clyne, Robert W., editor. Engineering Oppor tunities. 1939. Coolidge, Dane. Old California Cowboys. 1939. Di Donato, Pietro. Christ in Concrete. 1939. Dos Passes, John. Adventures of a Young Man. 1939. Fadiman, Clifton. I Believe. 1939. (Beliefs of 25 distinguished contemporaries) Giddens, Paul Henry. The Birth of the Oil Industry. 1938. Guttmacher, A. F. Life in the Making. 1935. (All about the stork) Haslett, Arthur Woods. Unsolved Problems of Science. 1935. Jordanoff, Assen. Your Wings. 1937. Marquand, John Phillips. Wickford Point. 1939. McWilliams, Carey. Factories in the Field. 1939. (The facts behind “The Grapes of Wrath”.) Milay, Edna St. Vincent. Huntsman, What Quarry? 1939. Morgan, Alfred P. The Pageant of Electricity. 1939. Pierce, Watson O’Dell. Air War. 1939. Saint Exupery, Antoine de. Wind, Sand and Stars. 1939. (For aviators, real and armchair) Steinbeck, John. The Long Valley. 1938. (Short stories) Sheean, Vincent. Not Peace But a Sword. 1939. (Background of the war) Thompson, Dorothy. Let the Record Speak. 1939. Vance, Ethel. Escape. 1939. Woodbury, David Oakes. The Glass Giant of Palomar. 1939. Zola, Emile. Stores from Emile Zola. 1935. GLEE CLUB EXTENDS INVITATION TO STUDENTS We have almost finished the first half of our 1939-40 year in college. Excitement has been king on the campus since the doors of the Main Build ing opened for us in September. If you have had some experience in Glee Club work or have had voice training to where you can hold down a part in a singing organiza tion, you should be a member of the A. & M. Glee Club, to get greater enjoyment from the remainder of your college years. There has ben no dust settling on the shoes of Glee Club members since the term began. Activity has been their keynote. An enjoyable and entertaining program has been carried out with success and satisfaction to them all. For example, the club has made an appearance in Houston at the Loew’s State Theater; has had a monthly radio program over station WBAP of Fort Worth; has entertained at college banquets; appeared at the Country Club; has sung at local churches; can vassed the campus with Christmas carols before the holidays began; sponsored a successful benefit show; offered quartet groups to other organiza tions; sang over N. B. C.’s Blue Network; and has carried on many other activities. For real pleasure and relaxation from college worries, join the A. & M. Glee Club for the rest of this year. The organization is formulating plans for a spring concert on the campus; a spring trip to Fort Worth, Dallas, and Denton (with the T. S. C. W. girls’ club sponsoring a dance there); an A. & M. Mothers’ Club program in Houston; and other weekend engagements. The club meets three nights a week: Monday and Thursday nights in the basement of Sbisa Hall, and Tuesday nights in the radio room of the Y. M. C. A. The club is particularly anxious to increase its membership in the second tenor sec tion but is receiving all members who qualify. Re hearsals begin at the above places at 6:30 and last until 7:30 p. m. The officers will be glad to give you a try-out at this time. Join now and make the second half of your 1939-40 college year a real pleasure. —GILBERT MICHALK. TAKE PART IN CLUB ACTIVITIES Have you been attending the meetings of the student club or society dealing with your major course of study? If not, why not try to attend more regularly from now on? The meetings are generally short and interesting and you should en joy them. There are a great many reasons for attending these society meetings. Possibly the most im portant is the fact that a student in a particular field at A. & M. has an opportunity to meet and become acquainted with a great number of fellow- As the World Turns... By “COUNT” V. K. SUGAREFF Secretary of State Cordell Hull, has been sever ely criticized for his reciprocal tariff pacts. Some interests, like the cattle and dairy industries and the Granger Association, are opposed to these pacts. Still, a large number of women’s organizations, bus iness men interested in export and import trade, and organizations that work for the improvement of inter national relations, have approved the department’s foreign trade pro gram. That the reciprocal pacts have not hurt the agricultural in terests may be deduced from the fact that our agricultural imports now amount to only 7 percent of the domestic market while in 1924 they amounted to 11 percent. It might be that the Republicans are again, as in 1936, hunting for issues. The English cabinet shakeup is not an unusual event in England in time of peace or war. Mr. Hore-Belisha as Secretary for War has had the support of the cabinet in the policy of the war office. However, all was not well in the ranks of the army and among the conservatives. Since cooperaion of all armed forces is essential in time of war, Hore- Belisha had to go “for the good of the service.” Lord Macmillan, who was asked to resign, was a newcomer in the cabinet. He was in charge of the newly-created ministry of information and had been sharply criticized by British and foreign newspaper publishers for his policy of giving out “unprintable trash” and for maintaining that “Adolph Hitler is the British Empire’s best propagandist.” King Carol’s recent defiant statement that the Rumanians “are ready to die together to defend their borders” is likely inspired by the reverses which the Russians have experienced from little Finland. Should the issue between Russia and Ru mania develop into a trial of arms, the Rumanians might not be able to offer such resistance as the Finns have. But King Carol and his prime minister, Tatarescu, are further encouraged by Mussolini’s energetic efforts to organize an effective Balkan entente against Russia’s march to the South. More over, the recent trade adjustment with Germany has placed Rumania in a favorable position. The exchange has been adjusted to Rumania’s advantage. Hitler is to provide Rumania with some 1,000 freight cars and locomotives. A new German company has already been established at Bucharest to develop the fishing industry in Rumania. Germany, thus, would be getting not only oil and grain from Rumania but also fish. Sn?areff Collegiate Kaleidoscope by Dob Nisbet The water polo team picked out a good show for a benefit, “FIFTH AVENUE GIRL,” at the Assembly Hall Thursday and Friday. Ginger Rogers and Walter Connolly share the burden of providing some sparkling comedy that should lay the Aggies in the aisles. The story is not a new one, but is one that is always good. Con nolly, a wealthy business man be set with labor troubles, takes a day off from his work to cele brate his birthday with his fam ily. When he gets home, he finds his wife out with a playboy friend, his son playing polo, and his daughter out with her fellow so cialites. Lonely, he wanders through Central Park and happens onto Ginger Rogers, also lonely and out of a job. Connolly is impressed with her philosophy on life and asks her to help him cele brate. In one of the more expen sive night clubs they encounter Connolly’s wife, who leaves in a huff. He wakes the next morn ing with his name in the gossip columns. His wife becomes inter ested in him one more time, so Connolly asks Ginger to stay and help bring the rest of his family together. Later she marries his son . Two grade-points plus. At the Palace for the weekend, beginning Sunday, is a show call ed “INVISIBLE STRIPES,” an other gangster picture with all the tension and high-powered gangster acting that both Humphrey Bogart and George Raft can put in a pic ture. It is a thriller from way back. The cast is as follows: Cliff Taylor George Raft Peggy Jane Bryan Tim Taylor William Holden Chuck Martin, Humphrey Bogart An interesting sidelight on the picture comes from the make-up department. The bullet holes and blood stains in the coat Humphrey Bogart wore in the picture were so real that a cleaning and pressing agency reported it to the police. The plot deals with tragedy and hardships that beset a convict try ing to start life anew in a world set against him. His best girl won’t see him, and employers fire him as soon as they find out he has been a convict. This is one of the better pictures of its kind, but not worth more than two grade-points. WHAT’S SHOWING AT THE ASSEMBLY HALL Thursday and Friday — “FIFTH AVENUE GIRL,” with Ginger Rogers and Walter Connolly. AT THE PALACE Thursday, Friday, and Sat urday—“MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON”, with James Stewart and Jean Arthur. AT THE QUEEN Friday and Saturday — “JAMAICA INN,” starring Charles Laughton. Turn about is fair play: The University of Texas’ newly-im ported Spanish instructor had a difficult time learning American language. So one of the co-eds in his class is giving him regular les sons—and reports he’s doing quite well, thank you. Whether they’re interested or not, Westminster College men will have definite domestic information about the co-eds they date. The women’s governing board has just passed a new set of rules which inflict dating restrictions on wom en who do not keep their rooms neat and orderly. But just to make the rules more enjoyable those who are super-neat will receive extra date nights. BACKWASH By George fuermann "Backwash: An agitation resulting from some action or occurrence.”—Webstar. Backwashin’ around . . . The pressure’s on: The college recent ly received a wire from the gover nor of Massachusetts and the mayor of Boston urging the Aggies to accept a game with Boston Col lege next football season . . . And one A. & M. prof recently told his class, “You mustn’t have too good a time—this is supposed to be a class, you know.” . . . An injured ankle caused Aggie cage star J. T. Lang to be out of an entire game for the first time in his eight-year basketball career last Saturday night . . . Best quip of the week is Charles Walker’s declaration that “I’m preparing for the get-ready-for.-the-finals quizzes.” . . . Bruce Davis and Keith Dahl, who represented A. & M. at the National Student Feder ation of America meeting in Minne apolis during the Christmas holi days, return with the word that T. S. C. W.’s delegates were by far the most beautiful representa tives at the meeting which was attended by students from all of the nation’s leading colleges and universities. • Carolyn Robbert, the attractive Sophie Newcomb yell leader whose more-than-different Southern drawl and wavy blond hair did their part in making her a quick favor ite on the campus when she visit ed before the holidays to welcome the corps to the Sugar Bowl class ic, has this to say about Aggie- land in Tulane’s student newspa per: “They have a perfect set-up (re ferring to A. & M.) to develop the attitude that every boy on the campus has. They live together in a city that’s all their own and governed by themselves. But the feeling goes deeper than just living together. They love that place.” Right again, Carolyn. • More about the junior class pub licity committee: Chairman George Mueller points out that all orchestras to whom the committee sent requests to play the “Aggie War Hymn” and the “Spirit of Aggieland” have replied affirmatively. The com mittee, which is also composed of Bob Little, Tom Hill, and Jack Nelson have thus far heard Kay Kyser play the Aggie War Hymn and Fred Waring, Del Courtney, and Bob Chester play the Spirit of Aggieland. Incidentally, Fred Waring’s playing of the Spirit of Aggieland has been the subject of much com ment. If you heard the number, which was played the night of December 22, you will remember that the manner of playing border ed on swing style, and most Aggies contend that the Spirit of Aggie land should NOT be played ‘swing style.’ • Fifty-two entries were received: Your columnist, who makes a weekly effort in the TSCW stu dent publication—The Lass-O, re cently sponsored a contest in that column offering $1 in cash and a subscription to The Battalion Magazine and newspaper for the remainder of the year to the girl writing the best hundred-word let ter on “What I Like (or don’t like) About Aggies.” It was promised that no names would be mentioned in connection with entries publish ed, and the promise will be kept. But here it is, the winning entry, selected by a committee of ten cadets and one prof: WHAT I LIKE ABOUT AGGIES!! “I like the Aggies because, at least when they’re up in this fem inine neck of the woods, their dis positions are as bright as the ten- cent shine on their boots. They act like escaped convicts or babies first discovering their toes. They’re not particular, either. Their roam, ing eyes flatter the little wilting wallflower as well as the “It” girl. And while the famous Aggie kiss sounds like a cow pulling her foot out of a mudhole, it does smack of sincerity! Mainly, though, I like them because they are not so egotistical as the Denton males who have to be diluted to go ’round!” And by the way, in rendering their decision, the judges had the following to say about the win ner: “Concise, with no words wasted; intelligently and correctly written; witty and amusing.” Backwash will soon announce a similar contest — in reverse — in which Aggies will participate. The five best letters from each college will then be printed in the Feb ruary issue of The Battalion Mag azine. • Walter Carmichael is telling the story about a fellow home on leave from an African port gener ally held to be unhealthy. In the course of recounting his experience the gentleman pointed out that “There’s nothing the matter with the country. All it requires is a better type of settler and a decent water supply.” If you come to think of it,” remarked one of his listeners, “those are the only drawbacks to Hell.” FOR Eye Examination And Glasses Consult J. W. PAYNE DOCTOR OP OPTOMETRY Masonic Bldg. Bryan, Tex. Next to Palace Theater NEAT APPEARANCE Is Your Greatest Asset LET US HELP YOU TO LOOK YOUR BEST AGGIELAND BARBER SHOP MID-WINTER SPECIALTIES GLOVER CROSBY SQUARE JACKETS, SWEATERS SHOES PAJAMAS & SCARFS P AR-P AK AREO - FRAME ZIPPER BAGS THE EXCHANGE STORE DEPENDABILITY