PAGE 2 THE BATTALION SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 2, 1943 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 Poet Office at College Station, Teseaa, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1870. Subscription rate $3 per 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 S, Administration Building. Telephone 4-6444. 1942 Member 1943 Phsociated Colle6iate Press THURSDAY’S STAFF Sylvester Boone Editor-in-Chief Andy Matula Managing Editor Harold Borofsky Sports Editor Ed Katten Reporter William H. Baker Reporter Max Mohnke Reporter Charles R. West Reporter Jack E. Turner Reporter J. W. (Tiny) Stanifer Reporter Fred Manget Reporter Archie Broodo Reporter Robert Orrick Sports Reporter Claude Stone Photographer Steele Nixon Circulation Manager Ben Fortson Asst. Circulation Mgr. ARMY ENGINEERS STAFF Editor-in-Chief Pat Bradley Managing Editor Len Sutton Press Club Representative Marvin Kaff 1st Co. Editor John Cornell 2nd Co. Editor Joe Bennison 3rd Company Editor R. J. Lomax, Jr. 5th Co. Editor Len Sutton Returning Home to Aggieland ... Greeting all the returning Aggies was a sight to behold yesterday because a trace of that old Aggie spirit could be seen on every face. Excepting the Engineers, every branch of the service containing juniors has come in for a short stay on the campus. The formerly inactive school has at last come to life and with this has come a lot of the friend liness that characterizes the Spirit of Aggieland. These Aggies are going to be here with the A. S. T. P. for a short while, and then it will be 0. C, S. for most of them. Speaking of friendliness and the Aggie spirit being carried in a person for the fellow man brings the thought to mind that as an Aggie who is enrolled in College here speaks to them, their faces light up to know that a little of the spirit is still alive although it appears to be dead. This is another reason why those who are enrolled here should get the habit of speaking to everyone on the campus. Many changes have taken place since you activated Ag gies have left Agigeland for camps and basic training, but the spirit is basically the same as far as the real things are concerned. Anyway you may look at it, though, the Battalion wishes to speak for the Corps and say “Welcome home” to all of those who are now here for a short stay. These two cuts are scenes of the Air Crew Training Detachment ball which was held recently in Sbisa Hall. The top picture is one show ing one of the men who is stationed here exhibit his well trained voice as the enlistees dance. The bottom cut is a typical scene of the dancers and their dates; it is most typical of the balls that the Aggies had when regiments were on the campus. At Ohio State the housing sit uation is mixed up. An army ATSP unit moved into Mack and Can- field Halls, two coed dormitories, while the coeds took over some of the local fraternity houses. What with every branch of the services utilizing colleges for spe cialized training, it’s no wonder that there are many examples of military shuffling of students that break the bonds of Alma Mater. Something to Read “THE MINSTRY OF FEAR’' The Ministry of Fear is Graham Green’s newest novel. The author scorns the trite furnishings of the usual detective or horror story His hero is a middle-aged, shabbily dressed gentleman with a cruel past—a past which is tantalizingly revealed to the rea der a dribble at a time over the 237 pages of the story, this art fully done by the author with a flick of the wrist while he deals out the plot of international in trigue. Arthur Rowe, the middle-aged hero, drawn by the strong com pulsion of nostalgia, walks into a bazaar in an English garden. It all reminds him of his childhood, the ladies in floppy hats and long dresses, the smooth faced clergy man, the stalls where cakes are sold, and the fortune teller’s booth and encounters the wonderful Mrs. Bellairs. Because he has a past, Arthur Rowe hits by crazy coinci dence upon the words which preci pitate him into a sequence of cha ses, mad houses, Seances, and fifth columnists extraordinary, in short, into the ministry of fear which the Fascists have set up all over the world. The seemingly innocent words are: “Don’t tell me the past. Tell me the future.” What the Fascists had not counted upon was that Arthur Rowe was used to living with a horror more hideous than any thing they could devise, the hor ror of his own conscience. He had killed his wife because she was suffering from an incurable di sease and he had not been able to watch her suffer. Would his wife have preferred life on any terms to death? With this tor turing question in his mind, Ar thur Rowe is undaunted by the at tempts of the Fascist ring to murder him . Graham Greene is much more than a writer of first rate horror stories. He is well launched into the field of serious fiction, fiction which is not dependent upon a war or a social cause for its mate rial. The psychological study which he presents of Arthur Rowe does not resolve itself in the end into happiness. Mr. Green i| interested in man’s dual personality, and here he explores it minutely. As a matter of fact, each of his cha racters is drawn with the utmost care. Even the traitors are indi viduals who include a psychiatrist, a pacifist rector, a fashionable me dium, and a proletarian poet. Green is a master stylist. I know of no writer who mixes violence and conventionality so neatly, achieving thereby realistic nightmare. His horror is in the tradition of Henry James’ Turn of the Screw and Marie Belloc Lown des’ The Lodger. His dialogue is intelligent and double-edged, his commentary brief but pointed. He is, as a writer, a challenge. “As with the best and subtlest crafts men he is able to write of certain things in such a way that the knowing are not disturbed and the ignorant are not aware.” Feed Buying Pools Discussed By Ray Converting a farmers’ feed buy ing pool into a permanent coope rative entails obligations not asso ciated with the simple responsibili ties of a temporary group engaged in quantity buying. Pointing out some of the re quirements to successful operation, C. B. Ray of the A. and M. College Extension Service says that mem bers of a real cooperative must provide operating funds and a part of the capital needed to buy facili ties. In contrast, members of a loosely organized pool have no obli gations except, perhaps, to order feed in advance and pay for it. Notwithstanding, a cooperative feed business has a number of ad vantages over a buying pool, the organization and cooperative mar keting specialist believes. A sound cooperative collects from mem bers, upon delivery, the prevailing price of feed. He suggests that it is an excellent plan to add about three per cent to this to be devoted to the purchase of stock in the cooperative for individual mem bers. A member would actually pay a little more for feed from his cooperative than from other retailers. But in a well-conducted cooperative this stock would bear interest and have a cash value. A part of the purchase price should come back to the member as a pa tronage dividend. “ ‘Cut rate’ cooperatives usual ly are short-lived,” Ray observes. Experience proves that it is better to continue as a car-door pool than to convert to a poorly financed cooperative business.” Cooperatives which own ware houses remove the uncertainty of delayed shipments. Cars must be unloaded upon arrival regardless of weather and pressure of farm work. Once the feed buying is on a business basis, additional services, such as grinding and mixing, can be added. Shown above is Franchot Tone and Marsha Hunt, stars of “Pil ot No. 5”. This show will be at Guion Hall next week. DYERS** FUR STORAGE HATTERS irvencan. 2*1565 m 214 SOUTH MAIN BRYAN, TEXAS Why fight for freedom to do so if we do not Worship — Come Worship With Us THE CHURCH OF CHRIST Sunday 10:45 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday Prayer Meeting 7 p.m. Each Service Only an Hour You Will Be Most Welcome — Come! One Block North of Main Postoffice 'DIL Xc ovjdovjn on Qamt>us ‘Distractions By Ben Fortson The double feature on at Guion Hall tomorrow only includes THE MYSTERIOUS DOCTOR and SULLIVAN’S TRAVELS. THE MYSTERIOUS DOCTOR features John Loder, Eleanor Paiv ker, and Bruce Lester. Whodunit fans who like fog- shrouded moors, dank tin mines, mysterious killings, and headless ghosts would enjoy this one. With an all-British cast, the story con cerns a half-wit who is still going strong after being shot twice. It is centered around an old tin mine which the British government wants worked because it needs the tin for war purposes. Miners won’t go near it, and a young English officer and a mysterious doctor solve the mystery. The Lowdown: A good support ing fare to the main feature. SULLIVAN’S TRAVELS stars Veronica Lake and Joel MsCrea. This is the story of a rich man who wants to find out how the poorer, class lives by disguising himself' as one of them. He meets Veronica Lake during his travels and develops a romance with her. During his travels he makes many friends among the tramps and one of his best friends is killed. The romantic angle is played up to a good advantage as is the adven ture and excitement angle. The Lowdown: This one is rated as one of the three best pictures of the year. Sunday and Monday at Guion Hall is PILOT NUMBER 6, with Franchot Tone and Marsh Hunt. A moving story of a young lawyer who casts aside his details to take a short cut to wealth, wrecks his romance and career and (Ja/tipu Dial 4-1181 Open at 1 p. m. LAST DAY GAY...DARINC...DIFF[R[flT! HUKT STROMBERG ladyoflknif^ — also — Bugs Bunny Cartoon SATURDAY PREVIEW SUNDAY and MONDAY “ARIZONA” — starring — Jean Arthur William Holden STARTS 9:30 pays his debt to his country by diving a lane on a Japanese Air craft carrier. It is told by means of a message from a jungle camp in the South Sea Islands. As the story goes on it is interupted by radio messages from the pilot who has only minutes to go before his (See DISTRACTIONS, Page 3) Phone 4-1168 HXTs 9c & 20° Tax Included Box Office Opens 1 p. m. Closes 7:30 SATURDAY ONLY Double Feature “SULLIVAN’S TRAVELS” — with — Veronica Joel LAKE McCREA — also — “MYSTERIOUS DOCTOR” — with — John Loder and Clyde Cook COMING SATURDAY 9:45 Prevue Also SUNDAY and MONDAY “PILOT NO. 5” — with — Franchot Marsha TONE HUNT also “Spirt of West Point” Vet. Students CHECK THIS LIST FOR YOUR NEED Brumley—“Diseases of the Small Domestic Animals” Williams—“Veterinary Obstetrics” Milk—“Practical Veterinary Pharmacology, Materia, Medica, and Thero- peutics” Reiser—“Manual of Veterinary Bacteriology” Udall—“The Practice of Veterinary Medicine” Malkums—“Clinical Diagnostics” Bark—“Index of Diagnosis” Hobday—“Surgical Diseases of the Dog and Cat” Sallman—“A Manual of Pharamacology” White—“Animal Castration” “Useful Drugs” Stumen—“Pharmaceutical and Chemical Arithmetic” Davidson—“Synopsis of Materia, Medica, Toxcology and Pharmacology” Hogan—“The Infectious Diseases of Domestic Animals” Brumley—Pasology and Prescription” Wright—“Veterinary Anaesthesia” Duke—“The Physic of Domestic Animals” Goodwin and Gilmer—“The Pharmacological Basis of Theropeutics” Boyd’s—Textbook of Pathology” Merillat—“Veterinary Surgical Operation” Ogilvie—“Pathological Histology” Dorlando—“The American Illustrated Medical Disctionary” Muenscher—“Poisonous Plants of the United States” Barger and Card—“Disease and Parasites of Poultry” “New and Non-official Remedies—1943” O’Connor—“Dollars Veterinary Surgery” Howell—“Text Book of Physiology” French—“Surgical Disease and Surgery of the Dog” Bergmann and Hewitt—Lab. Manual for Experimental Physiology” Hawk and Bertiem—“Practical Physiological Chemistry” We will buy your H107, Dairying 202, and Chemistry 206, if you want to sell them. We will pay highest prices for your used Veterinary Medicine Books. Keep them if you can—you will need them in practice, but if you have to sell them, remember, Lou pays the most. “Trade With Lou—He’s Right With You”