Page 2- THE BATTALION -TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 28, 1942 the Battalion STUDENT TRI-WEEKLY NEWSPAPER 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, and issued Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday mornings. Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at College Station, Texas, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1870. Subscription rates ?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. 1941 Member 1942 (Yssociated GoUe&de Press E. M. Rosenthal Editor-in-chief D. C. Thurman Associate Editor Lee Rogers Associate Editor Ralph Criswell Advertising Manager Sports Staff Mike Haikin Sports Editor W. F. Oxford..... Assistant Sports Editor Mike Mann - Senior Sports Assistant Chick Hurst —Junior Sports Editor Russell Chatham —Junior Sports Assistant Circulation Staff Gene Wilmeth..„ Circulation Manager F. D. Asbury Junior Assistant Bill Huber, Joe Stalcup Circulation Assistants Cedric Landon Senior Assistant Photography Staff Jack Jones Staff Photographer Bob Crane, Ralph Stenzel Assistant Photographers Phil Crown Assistant Photographer Tuesday’s Staff Tom Vannoy Junior Managing Editor Clyde C. Franklin Junior Editor Ken Bresnen Junior Edjtor Brooks Gofer - —Junior Editor W. A. Goforth Assistant Advertising Manager Reporters Calvin Brumley, Arthur L. Cox, Russell Chatham, Bill Fox, Jack Keith, Tom Journeay, W. J. Hamilton, Nelson Kar- bach, Tom Leland, Doug Lancaster, Charles P. McKnight, Keith Kirk, Weinert Richardson, C. C. Scruggs, Henry H. Vollentine, Ed Kingery, Edmund Bard, Henry Tillet, Harold Jordon, Fred Pankay, John May, Lonnie Riley, Jack Hood. Federal Inspection Wednesday and Thursday of this week the annual Federal Inspetion will be conductedby a board of officers from the Eighth Corps Area. At that time each branch of the cadet corps will be under the critical eyes of an inspecting officer who will probably let noth ing pass his sight. This inspection is the annual War De partment inspection to determine the quality of work which the ROTC is doing here on the campus. The showing of the cadet corps will provide a means whereby future appro priations and military assistance will be granted to the college by the War Depart ment. Fullest cooperation from every student will be needed in order that the college and the military department can continue to keep the high standards which have been main tained in the past. To uphold high standards each cadet should do his individual part, no matter how small or large his participation may be. The military proficiency of the cadet corps will be that of the lowest ranking man on the campus. He will display the leadership of present cadet officers besides his own military appearance and behavior. It. is the corps as a whole which will be judged and not a selected group. For a good showing each cadet should continue to conform to the rules and regulations set up by the com mandant. Also the new orders concerning the inspection should be understood by all and strictly adhered to. All Aggies should enter into the inspec tion with a spirit of doing the best that he can, whether he is on the drill field or in the class room. Individual performances will constitute the performance of the corps as a whole. Organization Scrapbooks Every Aggie expects to come back to visit some years after he graduates. Then he will want to think about old times, about his old classmates and especially the fellows that used to be in his outfit. Now if an organization scrapbook were made for each outfit it could be handed down through the years; each year more material could be added to it and it would be, some thing that hundreds of men would be proud to look at and show their friends. For instance, clippings and pictures from newspapers concerning members of the com pany could be collected by each member of the outfit during the four years he is here and these could be compiled by some indi vidual in the company into a large scrapbook. Every outfit has many men each year for which it is proud because of their scho lastic, military, social or literary achieve ments. There’s no limit to the variety of things that could be preserved. A company picture as well as individual pictures collect ed or contributed by various persons, could be submitted each year. Since it would be necessary for one or two individuals of a company to be respon sible for the scrap book, if they could be selected at the first of the year by election and a small part of the company fund allot- ed for the work on the book. Penny's Serenade By W. L. Penberthy - Last fall the Placement Bureau of the Asso ciation of Former Students sponsored a lec ture on “Getting A Job”, by Paul W. Boyn ton, Supemsor of Employment, Socony Vac uum Oil .Company. In the lecture Mr. Boynton made the following statement: “It is pretty generally assumed that a student should re ceive average or better grades since the pri mary purpose in going to college is to at tend classes and study the subjects. It is from the manner in which the spare time is utilized that an employment man determines a great deaf concerning the applicant’s lead ership and managerial qualities.” I have always felt that students who go through college without having partici pated in some extra curricular activity miss a great deal because participation in these activities gives valuable training which can not be had from class room instruction. The experience gained makes for a better round ed person and from a selfish standpoint the difference in landing or not landing a desir able position. Our school offers many opportunities for spare time activities. Aside from participa tion on collegiate and intramural teams there are many activities that give excellent op portunities for organization and administra tive training. Working with Student Publi cations, being a personnel or recreational of ficer of one’s organization or being an intra mural manager are some of the various op portunities offered and in all of these activ ities there are places for the underclassmen as well as the seniors. In none of these activ ities are the rewards great—just a small token of appreciation—the real rewards be ing in the fine administrative experience gained and it is the kind of experience that cannot be bought. At the present time we are lining up our Sophomores Managers for next semester and many questions have been asked concern ing the position. We have three Senior Man agers, nine Junior Managers and an unlim ited number of Sophomore try-outs, the lat ter competing for the nine junior positions. The nine Junior Managers compete for the three senior positions. The duties of the sophomores consist in conducting different sport contests, the juniors are charged with “ the conduct of all contests in a particular Epitaphs sport and the seniors train and supervise the work of the juniors and sophomores. As an award the sophomores receive a ” 1 ' COVERING caps dim W WITH |||TOM \MJN0I weight sweater with the intramural emblem The attached, the juniors a heavy sweater or an equal award of their choosing and the seniors get a fine watch, These members of the present freshman class interested in being— sophomore try-outs should contact us at their earliest convenience. The World Turns On “Fire that gun and see ft y,ou Can wake up Smftk He f $ ifeeplng somewhere around herelV By M Hood "Baelnruh: An arttation resulting from Kma action or occurrence."—Wetcter years ago, NTSTC sent Joan Blon- dell to College Station to represent From a little cartoon is one of the college and the Aggies stole light the best °f the current war ideas, her baggage to persuade her to drawing By DR. C. C. DOAK The Hood 1 cartoon SPIRIT OF is of three small remain over a few extra days.” mounds of dirt. Olga Hendrick, Marlin sophomore At the head of who will represent the Teachers each mound is a this year, says she won’t mind small tombstone, following in Joan’s footsteps, if it One reads “Here leads to the motion picture fame Lies Hirohito.” that is Miss Blondell’s . . . Famous On another: Last Words: “Caught with Jap- “Here Lies Adol- ans down.” ph.” And the Lies r: Benito"” ^eGolyer Addresses is captioned, “the Banquet for Students, $18.75’—Buy u. s. Engineering Profs Everette De CJolyer, noted geol ogist and oil producer, was the main speaker last night at a ban quet for the faculty of the School of Engineering and 180 distin- Review—In the first column, of which this is number two in series, it was pointed out w D , that there is obvious oneness in the physical ar ' Bonds and Stamps, world. It was hinted that oneness in the so- • • • cial world is struggling to be born. Attention To V. M. I. and Back was called to the importance of a deep con- • • v viction of the permanence of principles in The b °ys an d girls around Vir- order to feel at home in a changing world, sinia Military Institute won’t for- The museum was recommended as a place get the Aggies soon. The local within easy reach of all Aggies where a start chapter sent Clayton Muse, c En- guished students in the school in might be made toward thinking in world gineers; Jess Teague, A Engin- Sbisa Hall. The faculty believed, terms. eers; and Luther Peterson, C En- that by this method, they could Reaction Since that article was writ- S ineer s , to Roanoke, Virginia, tor show their BpprecIation in a sma]1 ten, the writer has been told, You are wast- the National A.S.C.E. convention. ing your time. Aggies don’t care to think in Someone got the three Aggies way to those students who have terms broader than the sports page, older dates for the dance, and it turned undertaken a job and completed it than last week’s song hit, or further from out the boys of V.M.I. frowned on properly. home than the Rose Bowl.” Being a good the custom of cutting in on DeGolyer, Dallas geologist and Aggie myself, I have remained unconvinced strange girls ... but the Aggies oil producer, is, at the present Ot these charges. . had Other views . . . before the time, Director of Conservation for Ex-Aggie H-ogram and “Aggie Field dance was over the Aggies were the PetroIeum Coordinatol ., s in any field of pure or applied sci ence. DeGolyer received this medal “for his vision and leadership in developing and applying the art of Force”—It is with pleasure that I point lu intrrwWimr o-.-ric v m i tt u ei u i. ^ Th - ^ ^ Medal" aents Association, mat program Otters proot stai . genera i s introduced them- which is awarded for notable sci- “ “; d r“ «° j i i t i i j colonel to tend bar. they have been convinced that a movement has real meaning for their state, nation, and . * * the world Aggies can be counted on to sup- Sweeping’S port that movement 100 percent. The new plan has been outlined with a view to weld- Foreword: She was only a bar- geophysical exploration to petrol ing the Aggies in each community into a ® dau Fbter, but she was always cum deposits.” civilian “Field Force.” Aggies out of college cuttin s up . . . The Bluejackets Born in Greensburg, Kansas, are to be charged with taking home to the were * be g ues ts of the American DeGolyer received his bachelors people some Of the fraternity, enlighten- Legion Saturday night at the degree from the University of Ok- ment, and improved practices which are Country Club in Bryan . . . and lahoma, and his doctor’s degree originated and taught at this great center. a note f rom someone adds that the from the Colorado School of Mines. When it is remembered that Aggies have Sailor-boys are not slow with the He served with the United States volunteered to do every type of difficult loca l Misses—and the Leather- Geological Survey and as presi- job in the most inaccessible foreign lands, necks (having landed) like worn- dent of the Mexican Eagle Oil no more argument is necessary in order to en ... We learned that much in Company, Amerada Corporation, refute all charges of narrowness of vision, the first grade . . . Eavesdropped and Rycade Corporation. He also Aggie Opportunities—Only a world that around the Ad bldg lately: “Seems served as president of the Amer- makes sense is considered bj7 a man to be like there’s change in everything ican Association of Petroleum worth fighting for on any and all fronts. A these days—except my pockets” Geologists, and the American In- program of study and work makes plenty of ... If Tricycle Willie had in mind Stitute of Mining and Metallurgi- sense to a man who is convinced that he is to air out Mr. Garrigan, head man cal Engineers, and recently served supporting the sound principles upon which at the Horse Stables, or to give as “Distinguished Professor of the world as a whole will either go forward him a thrill, he must have been Geology” at the University of Tex- or move back. Once we are convinced that disappointed. Willie carried Mr as. the world is governed by understandable nat- Garrigan up to the Academic bldg ural laws, it becomes our duty to understand post office in his tri , t0 t The castor bean bc( . ome a these laws Study, aud lots of it, is required his mail . Mr . G . calml sM “ t0 major United States from for so eomulex a subject. There are unbound- the side . car aIld read his ^ which will fIow oil nceded i ’ t0 re _ LmSfate'abilit^asTstudlftanYa wu” while Wi " ie “ K>l ‘ oft like a bat pl,,ce imports cut off by the Pa ‘ lingness to work at the lob " ut ot be,<,w ■ • • According to the cific war, says Dr. W. L. Eurlison Knowledge must be used—Uncle Sam NTSTC scho01 news: “ Nl,t ma " 5 ' of the University of Illinois, is busy investigating and reprimanding those American companies who have held patents without using them. What he is trying to say is, that after one has studied out a way to harness the laws of nature, he robs so ciety if the benefits of the discovery are withheld from use. Thought is the rarest product of man, and its fruitful reward should neither be covered by a bushel nor hidden in a patent office. Americans learn the hard way. We would not see the truth until Hitler started, turning American patents (the products of American brains) into weapons for our de struction. We rqust learn to use the prod ucts of both our brains and our hands. With out study there will be no products from the brain; without work there will be no products from the hand; and without the skillful use of both in the fight, there will be no victory. Aggie Slogan Suggested^-Several lead ing Texas newspapers have adopted the slo gan Work-or-Fight. This short line is repeat ed between articles. Since study ts as neces sary for victory as either work or fight and since all three are essential why cannot we, as Aggies adopt the slogan “Study, Work and Fight”? By Jack Keith Guion Hall is showing Wallace Beery in “THE BUGLE SOUNDS” today and tomorrow. Beery is ably supported by Marjorie Main, Lewis Stone and George Ban croft. “The Bugle Sounds is a story of an iron-fisted, rough-and- tough Sergeant in the U. S. Cav- a j r y w jj 0 >u have | nothing to do | with the new- i f am g 1 e d “tank j outfit.” Marjorie ; Main plays the I part of the Sarg’s fiancee and runs a restaurant close to the army Wallace Beery Beery, as Serg- ent Doan, blows up when a wild tank roars through the stables killing his favorite horse. He is dishonorably discharged when he openly insults the colonel of his outfit (Lewis Stone). Doan then works himself into the confidence of a band of saboteurs who are planning to blow up the tank train and manages to capture the gang single-handed. Naturally, he is welcomed back to his “non-com”- ship with new honors. Although “The Bugle Sounds” is one of a flock of comedy films with military and naval backgrounds Senior Scouts Adopt New Name The senior Scout Association of A. & M. voted to adopt the name “Aggie Rover Crew” at its last meeting, Thursday night. A rover crew is an older Scout’s organiza tion designed to meet the desires of boys who have been members of the Boy Scouts and who wish to continue their Scouting. Officers of the Aggie Rover Crew are Bill Fitch, leader; Louis White, assistant leader, and Thom as Tighe, secretary-treasurer. Members of the organization are planning to start classes in life saving, first aid, bird study and signaling so that those who have not attained the rank of Eagle Scout. Any former Scout who is interested in these and similar subjects should contact one of the officers of the crew. now rampant, it presents a def inite contrast to most of these. It devotes a few sequences to cav alry and tank maneuvers that are above the average picturizations. First of the double features showing at the Campus today and Wednesday is “THE KID FROM KANSAS,” with Dick Koran, Leo Carrillo and Andy Divine. Andy displays his usual talent for mak ing ordinary things sound funny with his high-pitched voice, while the rest of the cast engage in the operations of a banana plantation in a mythical South American Re public. The show is full of sabo tage and jail breaks. The second feature, “MYSTERY SHIP,” with Paul Kelly and Lola Lane is a fantastic story about a shipful of enemy aliens being tracked down by a girl reporter and a never-say-die G-man. The newshawk, Lola Lane, and Kelly, the G-man, are always on the verge of getting married, but at the crucial moment, he has to go round up the culprits or her edi tor sends her on a long assign ment. As a stowaway on the mys tery ship, Lola succeeds in get ting her scoop, and Kelly “gets his man.” Loupot Is An Aggie Tradition WE WILL PAY 60^ Per Hundred For Coat Hangers NOW We will pay them up when in bundles of 25 each HOLICK CLEANERS Dial 4-1181 WHAT’S SHOWING AT THE CAMPUS Tuesday, Wednesday— “Mystery Ship” with Paul Kelly and Lola Lane. Also, “Kid From Kansas,” with Dick Foran, Leo Carillo and Andy Devine. AT GUION HALL Tuesday, Wednesday— “The Bugle Sounds” starring Wallace Beery, Marjorie Main and Lewis Stone. TODAY - TOMORROW DOUBLE FEATURE “THE KID FROM KANSAS” with DICK FORAN LEO CARILLO ANDY DEVINE ' 2:15 — 4:39 — 7:03 — 9:2 “MYSTERY SHIP” with PAUL REILLY Lola Lane — Larry Parks 1:10—3:34—5:58—8:22—10:28 Also MERRIE MELODY COTTON BALL IS THIS WEEK AGGIES Come by to see us for Quality Barber Work Y. M. C. A. BARBER SHOP and VARSITY BARBER SHOP Patronize Our Agent In Your Outfit. p VEM» FUR STORAGE HATTERS J LL v_JJl p j.v~sd.jr L NmmwvYYkms r 2*1565 m CASH & CARRY NORTH GATE D. M. DANSBY, ’37 r A\ MOVIE GUION HALL 3:30 and 6:45 Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday April 27, 28 and 29 I M I J HISGREATESTROLE!TIMELY!THRILLING! Bugle sounds MIST MAIN t,STONE > BANCROFT HiBnfO’MEHL .DonnaREED . ChilWILIS ♦ WilliamiHHmcni Screen play by Cyril Hume—Based on a story by Lawrence Kimble and Cyril Hume. Directed by S. Sylvan Simon. Produced by J. Wal ter Ruben. f *) I TUf 4 t ► » * I* 4 * *> » * * v i » 4 I P 1 4 le Ag; Rec Hai was i contri basebi of fa> team? The mond say h far oi certaii wheth< ing or ticular tional banks certain fielder style t. ning t. Wha good ii ant coi pecialb Here a ball tes Southw one res mitt hi one of ations had in against their p timed i Ag pitc nations. Not c rale of helps in and at ships. 1 Sporl Expe Charli shot bil the YA 1 ( For Grif: are i New can trasl smai “Sol: Gab: Cord Co $ % C ✓