■SATURDAY, JAN. 13, 1940 PAGE 2 THE BATTALION The Battalion STUDENT TRI-WEEKLY NEWSPAPER OP TEXAS A. & M. COLLEGE The battalion, official newa Mechanical College of Tex times techanica ub'ished three Tuesday, ’ ■weekly fro Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday rom June through August 1 newspaper of the Agricultural and as and the city of College Station, is skly from September to June, issued •rnings; and is published 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., it New York City, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. Office. Room 122, Administration Building. Telephone *-6444. 5 1939 Member 1940 Associated Golle&iaie Press BILL MURRAY LARRY WEHRLE fames Critz E. C. (Jeep) Oates fL 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 SATURDAY STALF Acting Managing Editor Asst. Advertising Manager Editorial Assistant . Cecil De Vilbiss Tames Critz Don Burk W. C. Carter — Junior Editors A. J. Robinson Billy Clarkson ......... Senior Sports Assistants Jimmie Cokinos Jlmmy JameS Janior Advertising Solicitors Woodman J. M. Sedberry - -- - -- -- - G - Woodm Reportonal Staff Lee Rogers, E. M. Rosenthal, W. A. Moore, Glenn Mattox, Les lie Newman, M. L. Howard. Right Attitude We like the attitude of John Alex Kimbrough toward his job, which happens to be toting a foot ball in the fall of the year. New Year’s Day John Alec, who is just a kid of 22 years for all his ferocity on the gridiron, ran wild in the Sugar Bowl at New Orleans. The critics say he won the football classic al most single-handed, but when the yelling was over and John sat in the dressing room, nursing bruised and tired muscles, he summed up the afternoon in a few words: “All I can say is that I was following ten good men out there.” Another young fellow who completed an amaz ing feat back in 1927 said about the same thing. “We, my plane and I, flew the Atlantic,” said Charles A. Lindbergh, who at that time was not a colonel, a scientist, a society man or a political figure, but only a humble mechanic with a taste for adventure. In these times when the first person is used so freely by unworthy men, it is refreshing to find a hard-hitting, square shooting young fellow like John Alec Kimbrough using the editorial “we” and giving credit to others. We need more of that spirit in the world, as an antidote for the Hitlers and Stalins who send young fellows like John Alec out to die on battle fields and then boast about how “I” whipped ’em.— From Houston paper. Mistakes When a plumber makes a mistake, he charges twice for it. When a lawyer makes a mistake, it is just what he wanted, because he has a chance to try the case all over again. When a carpenter makes a mistake, it is just what he expected. When a judge makes a mistake, it becomes the law of the land. When a preacher makes a mistake, nobody knows the difference. BUT, when an editor makes a mistake—heaven help him! Boxing for All In analyzing the value of boxing as a sport the following statements from the book, “Boxing,” .by O’Brien and Bilik, prove important: “Boxing is almost an ideal form of physical recreation. It offers the youth and mature man •a clever and fascinating athletic pastime. It is a ^scientific sport combining a form of vigorous ex- ■ercise with a maximum of mental activity. There is probably no competitive sport that requires as much mental agility as boxing. You have to think while under machine-gun fire. You have to see, plan, and act instantaneously. There is no chance for a second thought, for “time out,” or “huddle.” Either you have grasped the opportunity or it is gone. In childhood and youth are laid the founda tions of character and health. Boxing aids in the development of both. In itself an excellent form of physical activity, it is rounded out by the supplementary training. Since thorough, physical conditioning is an almost indispensable prerequis ite in the attainment of proficiency in boxing, those who become interested in the sport usually strive to build up their strength, speed, and stamina. The vigorous health gained thereby is in variably associated with an abundance of “pep,” “drive,” “dare,” aggressiveness. Boxing breeds confidence, gameness, self-denial, sportsmanship, mental alertness. It enables you to stand a lot of knocking about, to take misfortune with a grin, and good fortune without getting a “swelled head.” It teaches self-control under the most trying cir cumstances, respect and confidence for your fel low beings, tolerance, control of emotions and facial expressions, ability to take and give as a man. General opinion to the contrary, very few boxers are mean or cruel. It is a game to them, a game challenging their manhood, testing their mettle, offering the joy of physical and mental combat, and earning them the knowledge that they have been tried in battle and have not been found wanting. It is an exhaust for the super abundant energy of vigorous youth. Because of its inestimable value as a health and character builder, boxing should be taught wherever the youth of today is being molded into the man of tomorrow. Colleges have taken up this sport with a vim. I hope to see the day when boxing will be considered as much an essential in the physical education program as is swim ming. Boxing is indeed a fine sport. More Aggies should take part in it here. Parade of Opinion By Associated Collegiate Press FINLAND. Soviet Russia and her communist supporters in the United States have a new place in the minds of the nation’s collegians—a position right beside Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini in the gallery of those who can no longer have the sympathies of the thinking college youth. This is the conclusion that must be drawn by a careful study of the shift of student opinion—a shift that was suddenly brought from the “approval” to the “disapproval” end of the opinion-pendulum’s swing by the invasion of small Finland by monster Russia. Here is how the college press reacted to the latest dramatic move in the campaign of the totalitarian states for world domination: Said the Harvard University Crimson: “And now it is Finland. Russia is the arch-criminal this time, not Germany, and so far as the United States is concerned she has committed an outrage with possibly even less justification than those of the Reich. As the (Russia) becomes a great Baltic power again, she appears more like the Imperialistic Russia of old than a new Communist Union, with purely selfish designs intended neither to help nor to hinder Adolf Hitler. For America and the other neutrals, if they were not convinced by the Russo- German alliance last August or the joint Polish seizure of September, the Finnish invasion will re move any hesitation they had in placing Russia and Germany in the same category.” In the same vein, the Cornell University Daily Sun said: “Those communists throughout the world who have been rationalizing the Nazi-Soviet pact, are now faced with a real problem. Their assertions that Russia would never stoop to im perialism were proved lies when the first Red bomb fell on Finland. All that Red Russia stood for in the communist circles of the world has been repudiated. Russia has at last shown her true face to the world and it is not a pretty one. The prospect of a general war has been renewed. Per haps it is the darkness before the dawn.” In the widdle west, the University of Minne sota Daily continued the nation-wide denunciation of the Russian invasion: “The whole affair was staged with the cold relentlessness of a Chicago gang killing—and with the same effect. When Russia saw that war was the way to win her ends in Finland, she deliberately took the path to war. Nothing short of a complete Finnish surrender could have averted the invasion. Nothing can justify it.” Man, Your Manners— A person in the street or anywhere in the public should be careful not to talk too loud; do not attract attention to yourself by loud laughing, and, above all, do not wear conspicuous clothes. Your behavior in public is the test of good breeding. QUESTION: How long should a cadet remain when making a call in the home of a faculty member?—H. I. ANSWER: If he is calling on business, he should not stay longer than it takes to com plete his business. A social call should last about twenty or thirty minutes; if he has been entertained at dinner and no other entainment has been plan ned, he should not stay longer than an hour after dinner is finished. As the World Turns... By DR. AL NELSON Guam fortification talk revived: defense desires to spend $4,000,000 there this year and Japan is once more beginning to “throw fits” at the idea. Also, the naval expansion program still contends that their expansion is purely defen sive and that their navy should be as large as that of the U. S. Finns invade Russia—the early Russian news headlines have actually come true at last. After destroying two Russian divisions in quick suc cession the fighting Finns have cross ed the Russian border and are in their turn threatening the Russian R. R. supply line. Nelson Maury Maverick, the publicity- loving mayor of San Antonio, made a speech to the students of Georgia Tech and is reported to have advised the Southerners to “throw in with the Yankees” in order to improve our economic status. The trouble with our economic status now, accord ing to many people, is that it has been thrown in with and by the Yankees too much already, and that we really need consideration according to our separate and individual needs and problems, and not have our prpblems lumped in with those of sections whose problems of economics are entire ly different. Baths in Germany are not limited to Saturday and Sunday, as that is the only time they are allowed to heat water. (Of course they can take cold baths if they desire.) Jimmie Cromwell, wealthy husband of super- wealthy Doris Duke, has just been appointed min ister to Canada, a job where the necessary expenses are more than double the salary allowed. Only a wealthy man can afford to accept the appointment because of the expense of holding down the job. Secretary Ickes, of the Interior Department, is now telling the nation why certain men would not do for president next term. Ickes says that Garner will not do as a candidate because he is too old, and John Dewey will not be a good Republican candidate because of his age (it seems he is too young). It would be fitting now for Ickes to tell what age has a monopoly on ability. To the person who wrote an anonymous letter to the editor of The Battalion in regard to Mr. Murphy and Madame Perkins: If the writer will send his name in and acknowledge the letter as his own, it will be printed in full at the request of the writer of this column. Collegiate Kaleidoscope After thinking about “Mr. Smith Goes To Washington” for a few days, I’ve about decided that its three grade-point rating was not quite enough. Please permit me to change it to three plus; I’m sure everyone will agree that it is the best show that has played here in many a day. It is still showing at the Palace today, so those who have not seen it have a chance to do so yet. The show at the Assembly Hall Saturday afternoon, “UNEXPECT ED FATHER,” is just so much time wasted except for the per formance of Baby Sandy. Of course babies are always cute. Foolishness is sometimes used to fine advantage in shows, but ab surdity is always boring. The story deals with Dennis O’Keefe and Mischa Auer, friends who live together, taking charge of an orphan baby with the help of O’Keefe’s sweetheart, Shirley Ross. One night during an act, Mischa Auer hides the baby in a chair which turns out to be a throne for one of the musical num bers. When the curtain opens, the audience goes wild at Sandy’s antics in the throne. However at this time the baby’s uncle, hearing of the baby’s stage success and thinking he could make himself some money, arrives to claim custody of the child. The finish is fast and furious with O’Keefe rushing across the state to stop his girl from marrying another man, marrying her himself, and the two adopting the baby. One grade-point. “DUST BE MY DESTINY” stars Priscilla Lane and John Garfield, the two have played in the “daugh ters” pictures, and who return in another show of the same caliber. John Garfield, having served a sentence for a crime he didn’t commit, is bitter against the world. Soon he is arrested for vagrancy and sent to the county work farm. The foreman has a beautiful daugh ter who immediately falls in love with Garfield. In a fight over the matter, John gets the blame for the father’s death. Together he and Priscilla, the daughter, flee. The two lead miserable lives dodg ing the law, and Priscilla finally gives them both up to the police, and stands trial. Then comes a dramatic plea for John and the thousands of “nobodies” like him. It might stand two grade-points. I7~ 1 —- WHATS SHOWING AT THE ASSEMBLY HALL Saturday 12:45—“UNEX PECTED FATHER,” with Baby Sandy, Dennis O’Keefe, and Mischa Auer. Saturday 5:30 and 8:30— “DUST BE MY DESTINY,” with Priscilla Lane and John Garfield. AT THE PALACE Beginning Sunday—“IN VISIBLE STRIPES,” with Jane Bryan, Humphrey Bo gart, and George Raft. ^ Musical Meanderings ^ By Murray Evans There has ben some talk laterly of Benny Goodman’s being on the downgrade in popularity. Such rumor probably arose out of the fact that the erstwhile “king of swing” was switched from a Tues day to a Saturday night broadcast, with Bob Crosby filling in the vacancy. But as a matter of fact, Benny still boasts an aggregation composed of some of the top flight musicians in the business. There is Ziggie Elman on trumpet, Fletcher Henderson on the piano, Toots Mondello on sax, and Charlie Christian on guitar. On a recent program Goodman brought back memories by playing “Don’t Be That Way.” He may be slipping momentarily, but you can’t keep a good band down, and with his pres ent band roster, the odds are on his forging to the undisputed lead ership of swing which he enjoyed a year ago. The Hit Parade last Saturday night listed “Scatterbrain” as lead ing the pack, and for the second consecutive week. It’s a tune something like “Annabclle” and “Josephine”; just doesn’t ever end unless you stop it in sheer desper ation on some convenient “turn around.” And then it seems im- complete. But it does have dis tinctive rhythm in the popular polka tempo, which probably ac counts for its placing first on the Hit Parade. Oren Tucker, his orchestra, and little Bonnie Baker, of “Especially For You” and “Oh, Johnnie” fame, joined the Hit Parade last week for regular appearance. Bonnie is from Houston, Texas, by the way. Dorothy Thames, the girl who you might remember sang with the Aggieland Orchestra the second semester of last year, is now vocal izing for Nick Stuart at the Plan tation Club in Dallas. Cole Porter wrote the score for “Dubarry was a Lady.” IT WAS WRITTEN IN THE STARS is perhaps the most important song in this production. When Porter has a good idea, he seldom misses, and he possessed an exceptional inspiration when writing this most promising hit. Ray Eberle is vocal ist in the smooth sweet-swing Miller interpretation. The compan ion piece, JOHNSON RAG, leans a little more to the swing side and is performed in the most ap proved jitterbug fashion. Requests for the new Frankie Carle composition, SHADOWS, in dicate that this number may reach the height of its predecessor, “Sun rise Serenade.” Artie Shaw and his orchestra plays a beautiful, medium-slow swing version of SHADOWS featuring Shaw’s clar inet and the orchestra’s velvet toned sax section. The companion piece, DIDN’T KNOW WHAT TIME IT WAS, is the Rodgers and Hart hit from “Too Many Gilds.” Helen Forrest is vocalist. BACKWASH By (eorge Fuermann “Backwash: An agitation resalting from soms action or occurrence.”—Webster. Well all right ... The staff had hoped this would get out: Mary Kate Jordan, a Waco high school girl, writes an Aggie jun ior, “Having seen my first copy of The Battalion Magazine, I think I have been pass ing up a lot of laughs as well as valuable informa tion.” . . . The Economics De partment’s popu lar and affable law professor, Dr. P. L. Gettys, re cently “brought the house down” when he declared that “Eastern women think more of their dogs than they do of their husbands.” . . . Curtis LeDoux: “You can’t kiss a girl unexpectedly. The near est you can come to it is to kiss her sooner than she thought you would.” . . . And it was Percy Bennett who recently pointed out that, “I had coffee and a head ache for breakfast.” . . . “Politics be damned,” says Aggie Audie Belcher. Audie was the only Tex as collegian to attend Houston’s recent Jackson Day Dinner and, as such, “They treated me like a prince” Audie affirms. • The contest closes on February 15: The Aggie writing the best one hundred words or less on the sub ject, “What I Like (Or Don’t Like) About T.S.C.W.-ites” will win a subscription to The Battalion Maga zine and newspaper and, if the winner already receives the publi cation, it will be sent to any ad dress in the United States he wishes. All entries must be sent to the writer, Box 2279, College Station, Texas, and, as mentioned before, the contest closes on Feb ruary 15. Ten cadets and one graduate as sistant will act as a committee of judges, the committee being com-; posed of Henry Hauser, Joe Gault, Robert English, Tom Richey, Mack Duncan, Derrell Pitts, Don Peter son, Bob Lynch, Mick Williams, Willard Clark, and graduate assist ant Troy Wakefield. Besides the winning entry, which will be pub lished in the T.S.C.W. student pub lication—The Lass-0—the best runners-up will appear in a future issue of The Battalion Magazine. • Well - - - ? It would seem that the boys at Brown University are showing real initiative. After every exam date is published, a group of them get together and make up official notices for their student publica tion to the effect that such and such a teacher will be unable to give his hour exam as per sched ule because of a cold or some other minor illness. The newspaper, of course, usually prints the notice without going to the bother of checking its validity with the main office; the result being that about two-thirds of the class doesn’t show up and nobody has been able to pin the blame for the skull duggery on anyone in particular. The Battalion, by the way, checks the validity of such notices before printing them! • It doesn’t mean a thing, but now that finals are almost upon us, here’s a bit of nonsense some one recently wrote in respect to what NOT to do: “In promulgating your esoteric cognitations or raticulating your superficial sentimentalities and amicable philosophical, or psychol ogical observations, beware of platitudinous ponderosity. Let your conversational communicatioiis possess a clarified conciseness, a compact comprehensibleness, coalescent consistency, and a con catenated cogency. Eschew all conglomerations of flatulent gar rulity, jejune babblement, and asinine affectations. Let your ex temporaneous descantings and un premeditated expatiations have in telligibility and veracious vivacity without rhodomontade or thrasoni cal bambast. “Sedulously avoid all polysyl labic profundity, pompous prolix ity, psittaceous vacuity, ventrillo- quial berbosity, and ventriloquent vapidity. Shun double entendre, prurient jocosity, and pestiferous profanity, obscurent or apparent. “In other words, talk plainly, briefly, sensibly, truthfully, pure ly. Keep from using slang. Don’t put on airs. Say what you mean. Mean what you say. And don’t use big words!” Fnermann AH WOMEN Charlton Special to The Battalion from The Lass-O of T. S. C. W. thing of the past, TSCW-ites, in °f them. spite of on-coming finals, look to Some of you Aggies who ai the future with bright eyes. After con ^onted with the problem c all, it’s Leap Year, you know. empt y mai1 boxes almost dail “Beetle” War- mig ' ht tr y writing open letters 1 litor of s ^ uden ^ bodies of Vassa Lass-O, Wellesle y> and Smith. across HeIen Ruth Porter, who rode i brilliant ^ ew O r l eans on the special trai mea as to how ^ ith the band ’ swears she woi to raise money house shoes the whole time she ws for our much m that Picturesque city. “For res needed student comfort ’ there’s nothing like them, says Helen Ruth. News of three new buildings 1 be t>uilt on the TSCW campc girls who have has been recei ved. One is to 1 “cussed out” the new bome of the president, a* . r j Aggies pay the otber win be a memorial dormito ffiven to the cnlWp W +V.o A union building. She suggests that all TSCW trifling sum of 25^, and in no given to the college by the Amei can Legion, and the third w Tess Charlton Auip, auu m no ° 7 ~— time at all we will have our build- bouse the Department of Edu< ing paid for! tion - Tbat doesn’t exactly add Some of the girls here corres- *° ” e J dorm ‘ tories at 1 mH with uni™™™ ™ii^ time ’ but its a good start. pond with unknown college boys at Annapolis, West Point, and Ran What they say: . . .Mickie Ra XTLimcipuiiO, vvtrsu JUUUIL, ctllU. XVan- ^ dolph Field, but Meta Turner, land ’ alw ays hesitate to critic freshman, has received best re- l 117 date for getting drunk becau suits from writing an open letter ^ either make him so asham to all the students of Dartmouth that he wil1 g° out and get drui requesting a few letters in return. a ^ over again, or else it will ma Not only has she received stacks b ^ m mad and h® will go out a: of letters from that school, but her ^ drunk a11 over again.” Margai letter was sent on to the Univer- ^iHy. “Once I knew an Aggie w sity of Washington, re-printed in wasn a heel.’ Bea Conley: “I their college newspaper, and then no ^ scbocd that I mind, it is ju sent to the University of Toronto. ^ be Masses and assignments th Mail has been pouring in ever bore me.” since. And now, Meta, who asked < - )n bbe cam pus last week-en for letters because “being 350 Bodie Pierce slushing through t miles from home is very dull”, is snow to see Hallie Beth Willin much too busy just reading her bam * Collegiate Review A new method of storing heat from the sun has been devised by a Massachusetts Institute of Tech nology scientist. A Worcester Polytechnic Insti tute physicist is calibrating the amount of sunlight that is found at varying depths in the ocean. Emory University has recently received $3,000,000 to aid in the development of a great university center in the Atlanta area. Gus Dorais, University of De troit grid coach, is a candidate for election to Detroit’s city council. Massachusetts Institute of Tech nology has set up a board to pub lish books written by its faculty members. Cornell University has launched a project to determine whether critical thinking about social prob lems can be developed in high school pupils.