0 ?HURSDAY MORNING, MAY 7, 1942- THE BATTALION -Page 3 Highlights of the Nation to Be Inspected 3y Ag Eco Students on Two Summer Trips By Tom Journeay How would you like to stand at he foot of the Empire State luilding, the tallest man-made difice in the world and look up ,t the sun glistening down on the tainless steel and concrete? How vould you like to visit Abe Lin- loln’s final resting place; the jreat lakes; the red river valley; ;he Yellowstone National Park; or ■nany of the other wonders that jo to make up this America cf 3urs? No 1 , this is not all a pipe iream. It’s simply a few of the points on the itinerary of the two travel courses that will be offered by the department of Agricultural Economics this summer. The cour ses will last for six weeks each, starting May 18 and July 6. The purpose of the two courses is to observe first hand and study ' America as a whole—its complexi ties and its simplicities—to visit with the farmer in the Dakotas, and the manufacturer in the busy industrial districts of the North- East, to study local and central markets, private and co-operative business establishments and edu cational institutions. A large bus, used expressly for these tours, will leave, the college Monday morning, May 18, with Professor L. S. Paine of the De partment of Agricultural Econom ics and a bus load of Aggies. The bus will head first for Shreveport to allow the class to study East Texas land use problems and Northern Louisiana agriculture. Then on a bend northward, a study of Mississippi land use problems and a study of the black belt of Alabama will' be tackled. From there the aggregation will swing up through historic old Chatta nooga in the bend of the Tennessee River, and up through the Great 4-Ppallachian Valley. While in that vicinity a study will be made of the Tennessee Valley Authority, and Norris Dam. Into the land of tobacco, Raleigh, the capital of North Carolina, and up into our nation’s capitol the special Aggie bus will take the “Fightin’ Ag gies.” In Washington, such points of interest as the Washington Me morial, Lincoln’s Tomb, the U. S. D. A. and Congress will be visited. Three days will be spent in “The Big City,” New York, for visits to the stock exchange and whole sale fruit and vegetable markets as well as plenty of sightseeing of course. While up in that part of the country, colleges such as Yale and Dartmouth will play host to the Aggies and show them what college life is like in the old New England universities. Up through the heart of New Mother’s Day SUNDAY May 10 Remember Mother on “Her” Day with a Useful gift. Stop in and allow us to assist you in select ing a gift that she will cherish. Holeproof Hosiery Rochester Handkerchiefs Ingber Handbags Hansen Costume Gloves Aeroplane Luggage Aggie Novelty Jewelry We will be pleased to gift-wrap each Mother’s Day gift without extra cost to you. (jQSMropag “Two Convenient Stores” College Station Bryan England and across the border to our neighbor of the North, Canada, the Aggies will go. French Cana dian farming and culture will be observed first hand there as guests of the people of Canada. After a circuit in Canada back to the States via the mighty Niagra Falls the Texans will travel, to settle this time in East Lansing to view the industrial plants that abound in that locale. A day will then be spent at the Board of Trade and the Field Museum at Chicago. The class will leave the windy city on Tuesday, June 23, swinging southward through the Ozarks and then home again on June 27. The second summer travel tour will start on July 6 and head west ward. First they will visit the Kansas State college, then the University of Nebraska, followed by the Red River Valley of the North near Fargo. During this stretch the corn belt farming and great plains agricultural develop ments will be watched. The busload of Aggies will find themselves next at the Yellow stone National Park on July 18. Headed toward California the Ag gies next will pay a visit to the Morman State to study the Mor mon methods of agriculture, and Mormon customs. The Aggies will look into Reno with all its glamour and the Sierra Nevada Mountains, before arriving at Sacramento on July 26. A liberal look at Califor nia with such points as Los An- glees, Hollywood and Fresno on the docket will be followed by a jaunt to Las Cruces on August 10 and a study of range improve ment. The Aggies from there will travel through Van Horn, Marfa, and Uvalde back to College Sta tion, arriving home on August 14. Upon the completion of this course including a summary, sev en credit hours will be given. The summary will not be due until September 20. The cost? Only $142! That’s only $15 more than a resident course of the same duration would cost, and as well as learning many facts about the workings of Am erica, lots of fun is there: for the asking. The courses will be of special value to the students who need only a few more hours to grad uate. All requests for information about the courses should be pre sented to Professor L. S. Paine of the Department of Agricultural Economics. Annual Firemen’s Training School Will Be Held The thirteenth annual session of the Fireman’s Training school is scheduled to be held on the campus from May 17 to 22. This is one of the many short courses which the college sponsors that will not be called off due to the speed-up educational program. The theme of this year’s school will naturally be that of civilian defense. Heretofore the primary purpose of the five day meeting of Texas firemen has been to teach new methods of combating fire. But C. C. Hedges, acting director of the school, has announced that General Civilian Defense courses and Red Cross first aid courses will constitute the subjects to be taught the firemen who attend the school this year. In American history the year 1942 will go down as the period of intensive National Defense ef fort. This effort is aimed riot at aggression but at the total de fense of our population. For these reasons the Advisory Committee of the Firemen’s school has decid ed that a program of training the Texas firemen on the fundament als of Civilian National Defense should be the main purpose of the school. This program of training was taken from the British Fire Service, which had much to do with the saving of Britain. Winstead Attends Publicity Meeting At Ohio State U G. B. Winstead, director of in formation for A. & M. will at tend the silver anniversary con vention of the American College Publicity Association, - to be held May 7, 8, and 9 in Columbus at the invitation of Ohio State Uni versity. For its anniversary the associ ation is returning to the city of its birth. High point of the birthday ob servance will be the banquet on May 8, at which the principal speaker will be Governor John W. Bricker of Ohio. At other sessions during the three days the publicity directors and public relations workers will be devoting their time to the seri ous subject of the role of the col leges in the war, and the particu lar responsibilities of the publicity staff. Among the “headline” speakers are Dr. Benjamin Fine, education editor of the New York Times; Raymond B. Howard, president of National Editorial Association; Presidents H. T. Heald of Illinois Institute of Technology, Howard L. Bevis of Ohio State university, and Timothy Lehmann of Elm hurst College; Bland L. Stradley, past president of the North Cen tral Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools; Kenneth C. Ray, director of education for Ohio; Grove Patterson, editor of Toledo Blade; and numerous oth ers. In* addition to these addresses at general sessions, the 200 con vention attendants will have many round-table and discussion groups. Naval Cadet Enlistments Set Record New Level Of Air Cadets Leads Naval Expansion Program Procurement of naval aviation cadets in Texas and Oklahoma hit a new high, setting a record in the number of enlistments for any month in the history of the Naval Aviation Cadet Selection Board, Allen Building, Dallas, Lieut. Comdr. Barry Bolton, senior mem ber of the board, announced today at the close of the month of April. Although wartime censorship forbids the publishing of exact fig ures of the number of enlistments, Mr. Holton said that enlistments for the month totalled well over 100. ^ He pointed out that the new pro gram, under which high school graduates and 18-year-olds may be enlisted, was largely respon sible for the banner enlistment month even though the new pro gram opened just a week before the end of the month. The commander said that al though enlistments were at a new level, the expanding program of the navy will continue to demand more pilots for planes of the fleet air arm. All applications from young men in Texas and Oklahoma are hand led through the Dallas ‘flight board, but applicants may apply at their nearest recruiting office for navy flight training. At Indiana university, Forrest Shields is known as the campus “blind man.” But he can see as well as anyone, and it’s his job to keep others from seeing. He works for the buildings and grounds department, and he’s per formed as many as 400 “blind” operations a week. He cares for all the ailing and decrepit window blinds in every building on the campus. VoxPop-From Sidewalk Pitch To Big Time Radio Production Ten years ago the station staff at KTRH, Houston, Texas, had an idea and worked fast. Out of the window went a microphone line, foot after foot until it reached the sidewalk. An engineer connected a mike. Curious passers-by stopped to watch. The KTRH people, among them Parks Johnson, grab bed likely ones from the crowd and before they quite realized what was happening, questions were popping and John Q. Public was getting his first chance to say something over the air. Vox Pop, they called it; short for vox populi, Latin for “the voice of the people.” Since that day early in Novem ber 1932 many thousands of aver age citizens have voiced opinions and answered questions on Vox Pop and the countless other radio interview and quiz shows which mushroomed all over the dial. On Vox Pop alone more than 5,000 persons have been interviewed in SJdFtT WAy TAX PHONE 2-1400 approximately 800 broadcasts. It was a very simple matter to do a Vox Pop program in those early Houston days. The Vox Pop crew placed a microphone on _a busy street corner and had their pick of the large crowd that never failed to assemble. It was still a simple procedure when the show came to New York in the sum mer of 1935 for the first net work coast-to-coast broadcast of this new kind of radio entertain ment. A roving talent scout for an advertising agency had discovered Vox Pop’s phenomenal success on the local Texas air, and lured the program to Manhattan with a fat contract to broadcast for an im portant national account. Parks Johnson says they were plenty nervous preparing for their initial New York show at Colum bus Circle. It’s odd they picked this spot, famous for windy soap box orators with all sorts of screwy messages. Here gathers nightly one of the world’s greatest collection of crackpots. While the agency and network men real ized the dangers and sought to protect the program with a sprink- (See VOX POP, Page 6) SENIORS If you buy your Corsages in groups for the Senior Ring Dance be sure to consider our bid on Orchids, Gardenias and other corsage flowers before you pur chase. J. COULTER SMITH FLORIST College Avenue Phone 2-6725 Trade With Lou HE’S RIGHT WITH YOU Aggies -- Read This! SAVE $$$ ON JUNE BOOKS Buy or trade now and save 33 1/3% to 50% on summer semester books. Will refund money if books are not used next semester. June might be too late to get used books ... Let Loupot take the risk. LODPOT'S TRADING POST J. E. Loupot, Class of ’32 North Gate S' O' WHEN YOU’RE FLYING the big bombers across, you don’t want jangled nerves. These veterans at the right are Camel smokers. (Names censored by Bomber Ferry Command.) The capta.in(nearest camera),aTennessea.n, says: *T smoke a lot in this job. Camels are extra mild with plenty of flavor.” you want STEADY NERVES to fly Uncle Sam’s bombers across the ocean CPT Will Be Offered Again Next Semester Civilian Pilot Training Element ary and Secondary Flight and Ground School course will be of fered again during next semester according to H. W. Barlow, head of the Aeronautical Engineering department. Any student who is interested in such flight training can meet in the Petroleum Engi neering lecture room Thursday night at 7:00 and discuss the course with Mr. Barlow. First priority will be given to those students who can meet the requirements for appointment as aviation cadets in the U. S. Army. If additional facilities are avail able they will be used to train stu dents who can qualify as instruct ors after an advanced course. All trainees will have to agree in writ ing to contribute to future effort in the field of aeronautics, and some will serve in the Army Air Corps after completion of the pre scribed course. % /// .-v , % Xi WITH THESE MEN WHO FLY BOMBERS, it’s Camels. The co-pilot of this crew (name censored), (second from left in photograph at the left) says: "I found Camels a milder, better smoke for me in every way.” The smoke of slow-burning CAMELS contains LESS NICOTINE than that of the four other largest-selling brands tested — less than any of them — according to independent scientific tests of the smoke itself! B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, North Carolina ickirkir4 FIRST IN THE SERVICE- The favorite cigarette with men in the Army, the Navy, the Marines, and the Coast Guard is Camel. (Based on actual sales records in Post Exchanges, Sales Commissaries, Ship’s Service Stores, Ship’s Stores, and Canteens.) -AND THE FAVORITE AT HOME! IN MV NEW DEFENSE JOB, I APPRECIATE CAMELS MORE THAN EVER. thev're extra MILD WITH A GRAND FLAVOR itidri! irick1ckidckicickkickickickick+w*k*-k k-trin