Page 2- The Battalion STUDENT TRI-WEEKLY NEWSPAPER TEXAS A. & M. COLLEGE The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Heehanical College of Texas and the city of College Station, is weekly from Jane 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, $8 a school year. Advertising rates upon Represented nationally by National Advertising Service, Inc., at New York City, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, and Ban fsaaeiseo. Office, Boons 122, Administration Building. Telephone 4-8444. 1940 Member 1941 Associated Go!Ie6iate Press Bob Nisbet Editor-in-Chief Qeorge Fuennann - Associate Editor Keith Hubbard Advertising Manager Tom Vannoy Editorial Assistant Pete Tumlinson Staff Artist J. B. Pierce, Phil Levine Proof Readers Sports Department Hub Johnson Sports Editor Bob Myers Assistant Sports Editor Mike Haikin, Jack Hollimon W. F. Oxford Junior Sports Editors Circulation Department Tommy Henderson Circulation Manager W. O. Hauger, E. D. Wilmeth Assistant Circulation Managers I!. D. Asbury, B. S. Henard Circulation Assistants Photography Department PbQ Golman Photographic Editor James Carpenter, Bob Crane, Jack Jones, Jack Siegal Assistant Photographers TUESDAY’S EDITORIAL STAFF Bill Clarkson Managing Editor Jack Hendricks Assistant Advertising Manager Junior Editors Lee Rogers E. M. Rosenthal Reportorial Staff Jack Aycock, Jack Decker, Walter Hall, Ralph Inglefield, Tom Leland, Beverly Miller, W. A. Moore, Mike Speer, Dow Wynn. Anti-Hitch-Hiking Bill Would Be Aggie Waterloo THE ANTI-HITCH-HIEING bill in the Legislature comes up this week for consideration by the House committee, and in that connection Keyes Carson, Champion Aggie Hitch-Hiker and active combatant of the measure will make the trip to Austin to speak against it. It seems that the idea behind the proposal of the bill is the prevention of murder along the high way. With all due respects to its authors, this bill as worded at present, if passed, would be a head ache to the state police and a nightmare for the judiciary. As presented, the bill would make it unlawful for a motorist to pick up any hitch-hiker with whom he is not personally acquainted. On first glance countless loopholes can be found in such a proposal. Closer inspection makes it appear ridiculous. How could a strict legal defini tion be placed upon the term “acquainted”. In the case of the Aggies the process of getting acquainted is the first thing on the schedule of getting a ride. If the law should make it illegal for the hitch hiker to stand on the road, the law would be more enforceable, but such action would jeopardize boys walking home from school or other pedestrians. If preventing murder along the highway is the purpose of the statute, then its authors are boxing shadows. Murder has been against the law as long as there has been law. Strict enforcement of a law preventing hitch hiking would be a calamity as far as students of A. & M. are concerned. Every weekend hundreds of Aggies depend on hitch-hiking for transportation to their home or other points over the state. Laws of the kind have been proposed before and have always been defeated. However, it seems that the Parent-Teacher Association has been in strumental in forcing the issue. In theory such a law might do wonders toward eliminating useless taking of life along the highway, but in practice such a law is preposterous. The bill will in all probability not be returned from the House committee. Quotable Quotes “NO ONE WILL DENY that the world today pre sents a sorry spectacle of international turmoil and domestic uncertainity. But to conclude that we who believe in education and religion are victims of a pleasant delusion, seems to me quite unwarranted. Rather should I say that in the past neither educa tion nor religion has had a fair chance to show what it could accomplish for human welfare, and that in the future we shall need more rather than less of both. I say this because the disease from which humanity is suffering seems to me to be one which only education and religion can ever hope to cure.” Dr. Franklin Bliss Snyder, President of Northwestern University, doesn't believe that educa tion’s future is entirely behind it. “I hold with Archibald MacLeish in believing that unless the lag between university scholarship, research, and education, and their application to the urgent and foreboding political and social problems of cur democracy, is greatly shortened, we shall see our democratic institutions seriously shaken, if not destroyed. I believe that American education forces as a whole owe something to American advertising for having found out how to communicate swiftly, graphically, wholesomely and stimulatingly to the nations as a whole.” Macy executive Paul Hollister doesn’t think the world is going to beat a patch to education’s door. Twenty-three different uniforms or combin ations of uniforms are used at The Citadel. “The chaos of modem civilization can scarcely be attributed to acts of God. The structure of human society is not rotten but sound. It is the defective utilization of human culture that lies at the bottom of our present trouble. The most exigent task in education today is the appraisal of the biological and consequent social capacity of the individual so that his proper niche—if any—can be found and he can be stuffed into it.” Harvard University’s an thropologist, Dr. Ernest M. Hooten, presents his own blueprint for Utopia. “In Europe, even as in this country now, loyal ties to family, region and church thinned out and were replaced by one huge national loyalty. This is one of the causes of Europe’s present state.” Harry B. Gideonse, president of Brooklyn college, sees the lack of private loyalties as a serious draw back to the United States. —Associated Collegiate Press Man, Your Manners BY I. SHERWOOD Vitamins and Manners Bad manners in eating certain foods will not hinder our vitamin intake but if our manners are bad they may make of us objectionable table com panions. Artichokes: With. the fingers remove and eat one leaf at a time. Dip the soft end in the sauce or melt ed butter, then bite off the lower part of the leaf. Put the remainder at the side of the plate. When you reach the choke, if it hasn’t been removed, scrape out the prickly fuzz with a knife, and eat the heart with a fork. Asparagus: Is best eaten with the fork, starting from the tip. Either stop when you reach the tough, stringy part—or you may pick it up if you do it gracefully. Bacon: Never pick it up in the fingers. Use your fork. Bread: Take a roll, muffin, biscuit, cracker, slice of bread or piece of toast with the fingers. Place on butter plate if there is one; if not, on your place plate. Break off approximately a mouthful, butter it with the butter knife if there is one, or with the main course knife if there isn’t. Hold the bread on the edge of the plate while buttering it. Don’t lay, a whole piece flat on the palm for buttering. Butter: All breads, hot or cold, griddle cakes and waffles, and corn on the cob are buttered with a knife; vegetables such as potatoes, rice, cut com, etc., with the fork. Cake: Firm cake not having sticky icing may be picked up and eaten in the fingers by breaking off a small piece at a time. Soft and gooey cake is eaten with a fork. Large cookies are broken into smaller pieces and eaten with the fingers. Canapes: These are appetizers consisting of squares of toast, bread or crackers on which various mix tures are spread. Those that are sticky or odorifer ous are eaten with a fork; the dry, hard or odor less ones picked up but not eaten in one bite. Celery: Take celery with the fingers and place on butter plate, if there is one, or on the place plate. If the stalk is long, break it in half. Put salt on butter or dinner plate, then dip celery in it. Never dip it in salt dish or in salt on tablecloth. As the World Turns... BY DR. R. W. STEEN THE JAPANESE MINISTER, MATSUOKA, is visiting in Berlin. He arrived last week for the pur pose of being convinced by Hitler and his associates that the war is practically won, and that active in tervention on the part of Japan would bring it to a speedy conclusion. So far the luck of the Axis has been terrible. Mat- suoka arrived in Berlin in the midst of a celebration acclaiming the sign ing of an agreement with the Axis by Yugoslavia. But before the ink on the agreement was dry the Yugo slav government was overthrown, and a new regime set up. Now that work must be done all over again, and this time it may have to be done with something other than diplomacy. To make matters worse for the Axis the Italians at Cheren abandoned that post after holding out for seven weeks, and at the same time the British won other victories in Africa. Finally, the Italian fleet put to sea with the usual result: Only a part of it got back. The fleet had the misfortune to meet some British warships, and when the smoke cleared away it was discovered that three Italian cruisers and two destroyers had been sunk. All of this should be quite encouraging to Matsuoka and highly pleasing to Hitler and his friend beyond the Alps. The condition in Yugoslavia is serious. Germany can hardly stand the loss of prestige that will come if the little country withdraws from the Axis block, yet there may be no way of forcing it back in with out resorting to arms. An attack on Yugoslavia would of course be the signal for a general Balkan war, and that is something Germany has hoped to avoid. The German lines of communication would have to extend through several hundred miles of hostile territory, and the mountains of Yugoslavia would be far less suitable than France and the Low Countries for the operation of tanks and other motorized units. Then, there is always the enigma of Russia. Stalin has made no announcements, but there are rumors that a German invasion of Yugo slavia would put the friendship of Russia and Ger many to a severe strain. The session of the legislature is about half over, and as yet not much of importance has been accomplished. A few acts have been passed, and of course many others are making progress in the committees. No means has yet been agreed upon for raising the additional funds that are generally agreed to be necessary for the proper operation of the government and its numerous agencies. The governor still works for the transactions tax, while the House continues to favor the omnibus tax bill. At present it seems that the governor’s plan has no chance of passage. The House bill, perhaps in a modified form, will doubtless be the means of pro viding additional revenue. Antelope milk is of better quality than cow’s milk, according to Dr. J. B. Hagg, agricultural chemist at Oregon State College. Rensselaer Polytechnic institute is planning to build an astronomical observatory. Iowa State college holds the national dairy products judging championship for the second year. Sixty-seven per cent of University of Cincin nati students come from Cincinnati homes. Cadets at The Citadel, South Carolina military college, daily consume 1,730 quarts of milk. Beginning enrollment in Spanish is up 40 per cent at the University of Vermont. THE BATTALION -TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1941 BACKWASH By George Fuermann “Backwash: An agitation resulting from some action or occurrence.”—Webster Concerning Orchestras . . . The first tabulation of Backwash’s 1941 orchestra poll will be released in Thursday’s column. Committeemen, including Carroll Cooper, Bob Alexander, George Mueller, John Kellis, Dan Grant, Joe Snow, R. B. Pearce, and Howard Wilson, met last night and tabulated results for the mid-point of the social sea son . . . Although the committee met after the column went to press, the writer feels that B e r n i e Cummins and Boyd Raeburn Fuermann wil1 have a nip- and-tuck race for the No. 1 spot, that Bill Carlsen has a cinch for third place leaving Maestro Russ Morgan last place . . . Back of Morgan’s failure to satisfy the corps was the unfortunate accident which put four of his men in the hospital previous to his A. & M. engagement and which destroyed almost all of his instruments . . . This is all speculation, of course, and the findings of the committee are the ones which will be listed as the corps’ official rating of the bands and singers—the list which is picked-up at the end of the sea- spn by the various musicians’ trade magazines from all colleges—but Thursday’s column will probably show the singers rated something like this: Nova Coggan at the top, Jeri Sullivan second, Lois Lee in the No. 3 spot and Phyllis Lynne last—which is only a guess .. . The final tabulation will be taken pre vious to the Final Ball and, natural ly, will not include the orchestra contracted for that event. • • • W. G. Carlsen A hundred-fold more popular than George Hamilton’s band, which maestroed last year’s Engi neer's Ball, Bill Carlsen and com pany satisfied the Engineers all the way and was popular with ca dets at Saturday night’s corps dance. The smallest name band to play here this year (10 men, two vocal ists and himself), Bill is little known in Texas; is principally a middle-western outfit; opened for a two-week run at Fort Worth’s Texas hotel last night; has a com mercial pilot’s license and owns his own Stinson plane, which, in good weather, he flies from one en gagement to another; is a versa tile musician himself, alternating on a clarinet, a tenor and an alto sax when he’s not directing; was far and away the most conserva tive and quiet-spoken band leader on the campus in many a day. Now in its fifth week, the Aggie Hit Parade saw the old American folk song, Hoagy Carmichael’s “Star Dust” return to the top notch; “The Last Time I Saw Paris” came on the mythical hit parade for the first time this year in the No. 2 place, and “Begin to Beguine,” another newcomer, rode third place in cadet requests. • • • The Palestine Girl Regularly, Bill does not have a girl vocalist, but bands playing at A. & M. must agree to employ one for this engagement when the con tract is signed. Blond Lois Lee, a Palestine girl, was the result of this arrange ment—and thereby hangs a story hard to believe. Although Lois sang with Bill’s outfit for eight months last year, she is now with Carol Lofner’s or ganization, one of the better swing bands in this part of the country. The responsibility for getting Bill the needed feminine vocalist was with Norman Steppe, head of M.C.A.’s Dallas branch. Norman, however, was under the mistaken impression that Carol’s band had a two-night lay-off, and that’s why Lois was drafted for the Friday- Saturday night stand at A. & M. All went well until Carol began burning up the wires between Dal las and College Station Saturday morning trying to contact Lois. The point being, Carol had pre viously contracted to play Nava- sota’s Bluebonnet Festival Satur day night! The problem wasn’t a pretty one. If Lois deserted Bill to make the Navasota engagement, she would leave Bill in a tough spot trying to explain to a thousand or so Ag- (Continued on Page 4) This Backwash photo, by The Battalion’s ace photographer Phil Golman, shows Lois and Micky dueting with Maestro Bill standing by. Juniors, Be Personality-Wise An ill-tempered Senior may have ill-fitting- boots. When you select your boots, see LUCCHESE’S first. They are Better Fitting and Bet ter Looking . . . Comfortable, too. These good natured boots have been part of the well dressed officer’s dress for 53 years. The Perfect Ankle Break Boot LUCCHESE BOOT CO. 101 W. Travis - - San Antonio Your chance to see an Academy Award winner in action is in “THE PHILADELPHIA STORY.” For his foie in this show, James Stew art got the precious little Oscar, and the Academy doesn’t pass out those little statues to many ham actors. And the show contains not only Stewart, but Katherine Hep burn and Carry Grant. Katherine’s role in this movie is straight down her alley. The pro ducers knew it and gave her a good deal of say-so in how her picture should be run, because she is the mainspring of the story. To fit her straight and logically minded wom an role, Katherine acts as an in human woman would. She figures that mind and will power control one’s actions, and hers are perfect. Thus she refuses to tolerate faults in anyone else; as described by her father, she has everything to make a lovely young woman except an understanding heart. As a smug society divorcee, Katherine is about to marry her The twenty-five percent of the people in the United States living on the land are furnished 50 per cent of the increase in the coun try’s population. WHATS SHOWING AT THE CAMPUS Tuesday & Wednesday— “GIVE US WINGS,” featur ing the Dead End Kids, the Little Tough Guys, Billy Ha- lop, Bobby Jordan and Wal lace Ford. AT THE ASSEMBLY HALL Tuesday 3:30 & 6:45— “COMRADE X,” featuring Hedy Lamarr, Clark Gable, Oscar Homolka, Felix Bres- sart and Eve Arden. Wednesday, Thursday 3:30 & 6:45—“THE PHILADEL PHIA STORY,” starring Katherine Hepburn, James Stewart, Cary Grant, Ruth Hussey, John Howard, Rol and Young and Virginia Weidler. _____ second husband when hubby No. 1, Cary Grant, and a cheap-paper magazine reporter, James Stewart, appear on the scene. She has a little too much champagne one night and goes swimming with Stewart. Husband-to-be thinks this is awful; husband-who-was thinks it is fine; and reporter Stewart gets lots of good pictures and copy on spoiled uppercrust society. There is a treatise on high so ciety in this picture and you can see its effect by noting Stewart’s attitude toward it when he enters the picture and when he leaves it. The reporter comes in grumbling about the privileged class but leaves thinking they are fine fel lows. The human interest in the well developed characters helps put the show over, but it really doesn’t need any help. It is plenty good. Dr. A. Benbow DENTIST Phone 375 Astin Building - Bryan College Station 15^ to 5 p.m. — 20^ after Today and Tomorrow also “Jitterbug No. 1” “Film Fan” Thurs. - Fri. - Sat. also Community Sing “Snow Man” - News Assembly Hall 3:30 and 6:45 Last Day A KINS VIDOR production with Oscar HOMOLKA • Felix BRESSART • Eve ARDEN Scr..n PUy by BEN HECHT and CHARLES LEDERER • Produced by Ooefri.d R.inhardk News - - Crime Doesn’t Pay Presents “You The People” I m <> ^ * % THE 3-STAR LAUGH HIT! GRANT HEPBURN ^Meut^rry/rffeycr HUSSEY John HOWARD . Roland YOUNG HAUJDAY • Mary NASH • Virginia WEIDLER teamed- STEWART J# Story Wednesday - Thursday, April 2-3 3:30 & 6:45 Each Day Shorts - - Pete Smith in “Sea For Yourself” * 1 r • . 4 ; . ' « r ti - v* t 4 « a 4 * 1 * •