The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 14, 1940, Image 4

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THE BATTALION
——TODAY, JUNE 14,1140
The Battalion
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MmIImi Qar^Mi Blflppl, Qn44to
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ra» Am WUMaaaa. NMr Jam Viokiar
Texiu Agfiiet
And The World War-No. 2
Kny Amor iron eiUtoo hoi moro than )uat o
•ooool tntoroot In tho curront World War. ,Anjr
Amor icon rttttan hoi § rifht to ho mWrootod In
Uilo wor. Evory Amor icon eUioon, oo to opook,
A vootod IntoTMt In this war bocauaa ovary Amrrt-
con ettioon mop ooon bo col lad upon to diroctiy ohoro
In tho ’far'a bunion 4
Bat Urn atodonta of Toioa A. A M ColWf*
ora toon moro coocomod *ith tho Bnropann con
fUct .. . they hoot toon o prcolor rifht and moro
of o ooatod latoreot in thio affair than tho averofo
Amortraa eiUooa.
To bofin with, Tcraa A 4 M ia tho lorfaat
miUtory eolloft ia tho vorld. In the ioat World War
Toxos A. A M aupphod tho armtoa of tho Unitod
Stotoo with moro offkora than any other A moncan
collofo or uahroratty la tho oooot of tho ootioa'a par
tkfpotion in another World Wor. tho collofo will
prohohiy ho colled upon to repeat ita performance
Should tho Unitod Stotoa afam enter armed
combat with affroaaor notiona. Toioa Afftoi
will ho amonf tho vary firat to bo called upon. With
four oxeoptiona, ovary A. A M cadet rceoivno at
looat two yoora military training durm* hia <*>llcfc
roroor, and many receive tho full four-year touted
and thua become reserve officer* in tho United
Autos Army. There were etx thousand member* of
tha A. A M cadet corps during the last long aoasion
Thors are thousands more of Texai Aggie* eeat-
tered throughout the world And so we my—tho
etodanta of Ttxaa A. A M College-have more of
a veated internal in thia affair than the- average
American rttiaon
•
Tho Battalion lo not In a position to mako a
valid doclaratum aa to Aggie opinion in respect to
the nation ! possible intervention in Europe • war.
but there are some thing* about thio Aggie opinion
that Tha Battalion ean any with accuracy.
One thing lo eorUin . . In the pool year Aggie
opinion haa changed oonoidorahiy but that'a not
new* boeauM m has the eptnon of almost ovary
Amrlaan One A A M profoaaor made It a point
to dioctiM tha oiluation with hia atudento a year ago.
and at that time tho sentiment was unanimous
not on# of the students was wtHiag ta fight nalsM
tho I'nHad Stotoo wm tavoded. Late last May tho
ohms profoaaor brought up tho an me discussion bo-
fart another group of students Tho opinion hod
almost about-faced—seventy percent ef the radoU
indicated that they believed the tailed States
shea id enter tho conflict NOW with possible favor
ahW resalta rather theo enter the war LATER at
whMh time H might ho tea late
Aggies don't want to go to war—but neither
does any other A moncan In hit address last Mon
day, madt from tho campua of tho University of
Virginia, Prastdent Roosevelt was right when ho
declared that complete isolation for the . Unitod
Stotoa waa an utter and fantastic impoooibility. Kg-
gteo recognise this fact and believe in it, but they're
•Mil not aauooo to die in some war that they didn't
have much part in storting
Aggie opinion, K aeema, goes something like
thia: Tea, wall fight if that is what h tehee to pre
serve the Amecieaa way of Ufa. Really, though, we’d
much rather otoy out of thio thing if that is possible
Prance's Premier Pant Raynaud recently aaid,
“We waat U. S. horoopowee—not mao power; we
need bar help—bat in the form of motorised equip
ment, ptanee, and other products of her tremendous
industrial organisation; all she enn ^ooaihly offer
m."
Maybe that's the answer ... At any rata, that
ososm tr ho tho way that Aggmo fool about tho
■itnatioa Lot's giro till it harts whore our iudno
trial prndaota are cone ora id. Aa far as the Unitod
Stotoa ta conremsd. let’s make thia aa iiaaamk war-
faro. lr poaoihie. LETS STAY OUT OP ARMED
COMBAT. But If and whoa tha Unitod Stotoo does
eater armed conflict again, Tasas Aggies will load
tho way.
that shall wo say, of mot
kwM Lm
WKmWI EMBH* eSwuum
i that art Intended to mas
tiro adhsei: Lihrartoo am
jmun of laduotnons labor, with infinite study as
to tha mast daairuhlo honks to hao% lihrurias in
clude in their calieetioae myriad voiumeo with in
formation thht students may toko hums, may have
all to thoosoolves into tho woa house of tho
morning Why supplement thane with hooka tkat art
for am ONLY in tke library? Why toko tho chance
of losing soak books and depriving got only otkors
but aim yourself of such volumes in the future ?
IV modern hbrery is perhaps the boat oourco
of well collected informstioa that may ho found.
Students find • valla Wo for their oho volume* oo
theory, volumes on practice, aourcoo for primary
iafemotion, information an tho iatsot discoveries
ia tho field of study When the library was form-
ad, K waa far the purpose of ootaWiShmg a perma
nent institution of. Warning .got for tho purpoae
of providing collecting students with oi^eaaure
chest of volumes for their private libraries.
It lo rtraage that person who would atvor think
of taking a dime from aa overflowing treasury, or
snitching oven a sip from a feiloir's coke, have
absolutely pa qualms about the effects of adding
a few well-oeierted volumes to their pwn collections.
There art a few laws that are necessary for
effective library usage The firat. Books Are Com
mon Property; Protort Thom As Sugh Tho Second,
Consider Others in Your Use of Rooks -They May
Want Thom Too. Tho Third, Reserve Boohs, Week
Books May Decorate Your Room For a While. But
Don't Lot TVlr Appearance Becoipe a Habitual,
an Unchangeable Habit. Tho Fiuglh. Reference
Books Art Pur Reference, Not Per Use as Book-
•tops Pot Yeur Private Library
i
V
oAROUND THE CAMPUS
•rt.cle
to p-
"1 hod all my tnnth pvllnd and mod* this ntckloct-
H'l bdovHhil, twil hr
(JtmMffaKear'
By Betty Shelton
Ip BITTY JAN* WINKUOI A sow
Hart's p Tops University sand hia Ag.
tal tha saddle and eolumning far
ths first time far a collegiate nows- ,
pnpar sr any other kind af A *
newspaper Bo Wt “Gone With ^ hut lung enough Is
TV Wind" in ssoro ways than one savor tho ouhjost
an this, tV first of n five-week Profoooor D. W. Williamo n pH
run af Around tV Campua exerted about his newest pot; the
Sum J. Roloy. "A" Signal Cor P * first giri in hw Maas since V Vs
Junior and employee of station boon at A. A M.
WTAW, underwent an operation l
for sppondifitis Tuesday aflar
naou. His condition i> reported as
mtisfactory.
Kike Rodrigues, Infantry senior
Avlpf tV past long session slid "tgdj are yon married," k
Puerto Rico Clubs returned to his Ung-off conversation with summer
homo to Puerto Rico Friday mom- ^ lMimt ^ lnf
^ moot af tV femmes around Pin
Eceentneity on the loose Tho wedded
summer school student who phoned
tV Battohon office at 11:10 tost
night with the more-than-aerious Fifty-five per coot of men and
quix, “Do you Vve aa English t31 44 par cant of wo mil at tV Uni-
book that wo stoy borrow to- versity of Michigs^ would like
nifht?” more dates, a survey shows.
Tharo’s bruins behind tV throne
of tV Press Club this summer
Prosy CswpVU to one af M
graduates of tV University
of Texas this sprisg.
ii tV
£ The New Point Syttem
The recently adopted point system which ltm»
its the number of activitteo A A M students may
participate to—is the answer to s long needed reg
uletion of thio sort. But more than that, the regu
lation comoo from the student body is well as from
the faculty—tV faculty passed on the ruling after
it was recommended by e student committee.
There’s nothing new about the system Amer-
icaa educational circles have been advocating it for
more than twenty yoars, and many other American
colleges and universities have similar ruling* Any
institution, when it becomes as large os Texas A.
A M. haa become, has e definite need for this
sort of regulation
One fact about this ruling theft is frequently
misunderstood is its underlying purpose. It isn't t
intended os e method of honoring studento—it's a
limitation, pure and simple
In too many instances Is it true that the
burden of student government fells on the shoul
ders of e few Under the new point system this
will be impossible True enough. th« weights given
the various student executive positions may not
be as accurate or fair as possible at the present
time, but only experience and time can indicate
thia and the weights will be ckangad if it is found
that any of them are out of proportion.
The Battalion believes that the new system will
not only serve to divide student Jobs more evenly,
but that the ruling will make for more interest in
and competition for these various positions.
At the Assembly Hall Saturday tV famous Jonas family dtoeovers
is "Two Okie on Broadway", a that Ufa really befits to the forties
T*- 4 !—‘■-V a -Y°.„ .. You fool-. Dod tor*,
•leal background. Jean Blended . ,
ploys on entirely new sort of role, !>*•***• moU ** T t—
and Una T«n»er and George Mur- A* the Joneses stop out In
phy make their bow ao the screen's ^yU as they take ever Broadway
newest dance teem TV two girts Prouty, Spring Byington. Rue-
ore sisters who Journey from e Gleason, Eon Howell, George
small mid western town to New Earnest, June Carlson, Florence
York City in on attempt to crask *®*"ris. i»ly Mahan are back
tV big time shows. TV romance »» familiar roles to the num
centers about the love of the two ** T on * ?*" family,
girls tor the seme boy, hoofer Eddie
Wpr and final examinations eeem to hold no
fMr for psychology students of Georgia SouthwMt
am College In compiling e "fear Itot" recently. tVy
listed the following as tV thing* tVy feared moat;
InakM, drunks, water, wild animals, mad dogs,
fire, story weather, reckleas driving, and higher
altitudea.
Kerns, portrayed by Murphy.
“Three search for fame and love,
which only two can Vve.”
TV romance and adventure of
life as it is lived at tV Unitod
States Military Academy ia unfold
ed in “TV Duke a( West Point";
which will be at Die Assembly Hall
Tuesday Joan FonUtoportrays tV
leading lady, and Leu is Hayward,
Richard Carlson, Tom Brown, and
Alan Curtu are the four important
males As tV story opens. Steve
Early arrives from England. wVre
he has been a star on the Cam
bridge Varsity Rugby Team, to
start life os e West Point Cadet,
He was the freuVst “plebe" in the
corps, end he took the biggest rid
ing 2,000 cadets ever handed out
He shamed himself when V violat
ed the sacred Honor Code lo save
s friend, end V stole a kiss and a
heart in e forbidden stroll on Flir
tation Walk. With the other "ple-
bes" he goes from one mis-adven-
ture to another until the thrilling
climax, when Weal Point plays ito
annual ire hockey gome with tV
Royal Military College of Canada.
At the Assembly Hall Tueaday
WBAVS SHOWING
AT THE ASSEMBLY HALL
Saturday—Twa Girls oa
Broadway" with Una Turn
er, Joan Blondell, and George
Murphy.
Tuesday—“TV Duke of
West Point" with Joan Foun
tain, Louie Hayward, Rich
ard Carlson, Tom Brown and
Alan Curtis.
Thursday—“Yeong as You
Feel" with tV Jones family.
AT THE CAMPUS
Saturday—"Room Service"
with tV Marx Brothers
Preview Saturday night,
Sunday, and Monday—“Tail-
•pm" with Alice Fey and
Nancy Kelly
Tuesday—“TV Flying Ir
ishman" with Douglas Cor
rigan.
Wednesday end Thursday—
Submarine Petrol" with
Richard Green end Nancy
Kelly.
As the World Turns...
M
Using the Library
"I l»vt to «
«■ IM to to Uw
supposed to take ti
• *eam ***** ptoy-
to only mformatioe that I
reference Veka. I am Ml
out, but as one will really
dotton af a library!
reference bonks are far tha
By DR A B NEI.A0S
For tV pari rear this column has been catling
nttention to the fact tVt tV Unitod States has e
vital interest in the outcome of the struggle for
domination in Europe Even though we set aside ell
question of “natural sympathies’*,
or of democracy against autocracy,
aur own selfish interests require
tVt England end France win the
war end make it impossible for
Germany to upset tV world again.
TV French Government Vs
Just pledged itself to continue the
Vttle ea long as a corner of France
or a fragment of her colonial em
pire remains free, and Winston
1 Churchill has promised that the
r 1,111 British fleet shall never surrender
nor give up the fight even though
tV worst should happen
Our country has Jast awakened to tV serious
ness of tV situation in Europe and more than two
hundred U. 8. Army and Navy planes, hundreds of
cannon, and twenty of our eider destroyers Vve
been released by the government end are, or will
sVrUy be, on their way to England end France.
President Vargas of Brasil just made a speech
which indicated that V to lining up to sentiment
with tV European dictators, and the Unitod States
haa already dispatched two warships to South Amer
ican waters with the indication that others will V
sent la a short time. Most of tV other South
Amqrican nations Vve indicated tVir sympathy
with tV doneocmcioo After tV Monday speech by
Prsaidsnt Reeaevelt the Mexkaa Gevsrnment an
nounced that H to definitely pro-ally to Ha sympa
thies and that to the present crisis Its foreign pol
icy to to line with tVt of tV Unitod States.
One of the great handkapo af the Americas
people to making preparation fog defense to that
far eevea years tV r sec Ureas of tV nation have
been wmetod la supporting the grunt army if these
wV believe that someone “owes*’ them a living,
art that tV eomtog Dam-
will V completely dominated
by the “Otmmecrate" end that tV next fear yuan
will see tV nation taxed to tV limit lav necessary
Summer Short Coarse Calendar
June 10-11—State Veterinary Medical Association
June 17-11—Cottonseed Oil Mill Operators
June S4-f7—County Superintendents and Texas School
Administration Conference '
July 14-10—-Poultry Short Course
July 7-10—Farmers' Short Course, junior and adult divitione
* July 1S-I0—Farm Security Administration Conference
July 28 through August 2—Firemen's Short Course
August 7-10—Vocational Agricultural Teacher* Conference
August 10-17—Air Conditioning Short Coant
August lft-24—Coaching School
M
this year) far
ONE OF OUR TYPICAL 30c LUNCHES
SOUP: Fresh Cream of Tomato
CHOICE OF MEATS:
Fried Fillet of Treat
Chicken Fried Steak
Assorted Gold Cuts with Potato Salad
VEGETABLES:
Mexican Style Brown Beans
Freeh Garden Spinach with Hard Boiled
Egg*
Snow Flake Potatoes
Spanish Slaw
DESERT: Mixed Fruit Jallo With Whip Ciaam
10% Oft On Meal Tickets
College Inn Cafe
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LOOK
YOUR BEST
AND FEEL
•• THIS SUMMER
Do not "live” or just exist in summer. Enjoy sum
mer pleasures — happy days and nights out-of-doors,
.exciting week-ends, picnics snd other activities. Half
the fun of it all is wearing the appropriate clothes for
every occasion. You’ll find s well selected stock of
cool clothing and furnishings at this store. The right
kind of cool clothes to help you "look snd fed your
best this summer H
Nor-East or Sheer Tropical
Worsted Suita
Cool Summer Slacks
Ventilated Straw Hats
Summer Sport Suits (Slacks and Shirts)
Sport Shirts, Sheer or Sun Spun Rayons
Ventilated Sport Oxfords
Mesh Socks by Interwoven
Arrow and Marlboro Mesh Shirts
Nor-East and Arrow Summer Ties
Hickok Summer Sport Belts
Cool Pajamas
(Short Sleeve - Knee Ler^t; i
Summer Wash Robes ► Mesh Underwear
Gantner Swim Suits
FOR TENNIS aad OTHER SPORTS, Me oar SHIRTS
SPORT SHORTS, ATHLETIC SOCKS, TENNIS
OXFORDS, etc.
CLOCMERS
BRYAN