Page 2 THE BATTALION FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 17, 1944 The Battalion STUUDENT BI-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 twice weekly, and circulated on Tuesday and Friday afternoons. Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at College Station, Texas, under the Act of Congress of March 8, 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. Member Pbsocided Cr>Ue6iale Press Office, Room 6, Administration Building. Telephone 4-1444. Calvin Bromley Editor Dick Goad Managing Editor Alfred Jefferson Managing Editor Reporters: Eli Barker, Robert Gold, Bernstein, S. K. Adler.. Student Reporters: Henry Ash, Ernest Berry James Dilworth, Edwin Mayer, John Mizell, Damon Tassos, R. L. Bynes, L. H. Callahan. L. Inzer Sports Editor enyard W. Canis Backwash Editor ick Osterholm Amusements Editor S. Rei Dick usternoln Henry Holguin Intramural Reporter D. V. Hudson, B. J. Blankenship, Teddy y, Louie Clarke, Harold Phillips. Bobby Rosenthal us, lal. Half Way ... Stay or Leave Seven weeks of the current semester have been written down in class notebooks and major quizzes. One week is left before the mid-semester grade reports will be turned in by each professor and instructor. Although these grade reports are not entered on a student’s permanent record they do determine whether or not a student stays in school for the remainder of the semester. Mid-semester grade reports can either make or break a college career. One week is left. One week to put the finishing touches on grade books so that the report may be favorable. One week in which to study for that quiz which may bring the student over the borderline of failure or the next higher grade letter. It is not necessary to recount or enumerate the advan tages of a flattering grade. Grades are not a true indication of knowledge and ability but they are the best yet devised by educators and until the time that some better method is discovered students will have to be content with the con ventional way. As long as percentage grades are the measure of a student’s success, then a college man should expend the effort necessary not only to make the best grade possible but to garner the information in the process in such a man ner as will best aid retention. Mere passing is not enough. Not until each individual’s conscience is satisfied as to the amount of work done can any evaluation be consumated. Education is an individual matter. It is not something that soaks in. It is something that has to be willingly absorbed. Beacon Light... Student Crusade Universities and colleges have their ups and downs, their controversies, their problems, and their family quarrels. Usually these are carried on completely or partially under cover and very seldom is it that the linen is washed before the public and the taxpayers. Even though most of the educational squabbles of re cent months in Texas have been in the state schools there is little doubt that other institutions of higher learning also have their internal differences. Texas is more vitally in terested in the conduct and well being of her state institu tions because in a sense, Texas fathers the state institutions. Although state colleges do- not get their total financial sup port from tax sources, they do derive most of their income from public taxes and that which does not come from this source or other governmental subsidies, such as grants of land, makes up but a small fraction of the operating revenues. Because people of Texas are so vitally interested in their state schools it is usual for any serious controversy to be widely and publicly aired. More often than not these differ ences that concern the colleges are remote from the student body but American young manhood and womanhood, being what, they are, are quick to take the side of the underdog. It is an American habit, an American tradition to defend whatever or whomever they love and more frequently than not they defend that which is being beaten. Americans, although they consider themselves conserva tive, must be designated as liberal because they are quick to accept new things or new ways of doing old things. They are receptive to new ideas. Along with this adventurous pioneering spirit there is a companion spirit of instant deci sion, quick tempers, and quicker action. Students at a university or college represent the best of the young mental material of a nation. Their minds are alert. Minds are ready for action. Life in a university can be rather humdrum and especially so in these times of un rest and global conflict Surrounded by a worldwide environ ment of unrest it is quite understandable that any group given the opportunity would sieze upon any crusade wdiich presented itself. No one realizing the quantities of restricted, vibrant energy both physical and mental stored in college students*can condemn them for releasing part of this energy in behalf of a cause which they think is justifiable. The recent student clamor at Texas university was a release of pent up energy stimulated by actions of college authorities which the students resented because they felt that their president was being treated unfairly. People of Texas do not know the underlying causes of the dispute at Texas university and perhaps they will never know but Texas is proud of one thing. They are glad that their young people had the moral courage of their con victions. Texas cheers those students who, although they may be wrong, have the fortitude to speak for their beliefs, to act for their beliefs. Liberal education, here meaning freedom of thought, is the one beacon which can light the masses of the ignorant humanity to the better life of plenty. Galveston Corporal, Class of *37, Stays Overseas 18 Months AN 8TH AIR FORCE FIGHT ER STATION, England—Corporal Grant D. Gordon, 24, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. D. Gordon, 4706 Ave. O, Galveston, Texas, is an air craft mechanic at a fighter train ing station. He maintains and re pairs the P-47 Thunderbolt fight er planes. Cpl. Gordon enlisted in March of 1942 and was assigned to duty overseas in May of the following year. He was trained for his pre sent army job at Lockheed and other technical training schools in the States. Prior to entering the armed forces, he Was employed as an assistant engineering aide by the U. S. Engineers, at Gal veston. Cpl. Gordon attended Ball High Sohool and was graduated in the Former Student Now Flying - Marauders Capt. Thomas A. Reiner Jr., 24, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Reiner, 243 Arcadia Place, San An tonio, Texas, and former student at New Mexico Military Institute, Roswell, N. M., and Texas A. & M. College, was among scores of Ma rauder bomber pilots who were graduated at the Dodge City Army Air Field, Kansas, after com pleting a 10-week flying training course at this B-26 Marauder pilot school of the AAF Central Flying Training Command, which is part of the AAF Training Command. He was graduated as a first pilot. class of ’37. He later entered Texas A. & M., at College Station, Texas, and was a student there for three years. Mr. G. D. Gordon, his father, is an engine foreman with the Sante Fe Railroad. I CAO^WAjri-! Backwash: An agitation resulting from some action or occurrence.”—Webster. By Renyard W. Canis T WO IN A ROW. Wham! It was badly bent last week but the one in Houston will completely break it. Everyone knows what is referred to and all the Aggies are going to Houston with one thing in common. Broke. Busted. Flat. Avowed Purpose F ULLY REALIZING that the outcome of the Southwest Confer ence race depends largely upon who the Aggies beat and who they don’t beat the “Twelfth Man” will be in Houston strong to a man to support the Fighting Ag gies in a defeat of Rice and their Owls. These birds of the night are traditionally wise but they have shown a bit of bad judgement in meeting the powerful Aggise. Af ter Saturday they will be a decid edly wiser group of birds. They have the bird and they are going to get the bird. (See BACKWASH, Page 4) Man, Your Manners By I. Sherwood Whoever started the idea that you shouldn’t cut your salad with a knife? Emily Post says she didn’t! It is permissible to use a knife to cut a head-lettuce salad, a lettuce leaf or anything in a salad that needs cutting; take care that you do not cut more than one portion at a time, and use your fork for cutt ing as much as possible, but don’t hestitate to use your knife when necessary. Serving utensils are pretty im portant accessories to the salad bowl, and a knowledge of their proper use will give you confidence in yourself. The correct implements to be used when serving youself from a salad bowl are a large fork and a large spoon or server. Take the spoon in the right hand to lift the ealad, using the fork, as a balanc ing implement, in the left hand. Vegetables, desserts and meats may be served with the same uten sils, however, with meat the serv ing fork is used in the right hand and the spoon in the left. Never use your own fork or any of your individual pieces of silver to help yourself from a serving dish. Individual salads are usually eaten with a salad fork, but when they are served with the main din ner course, they may beaten with the dinner fork. It is not necessary to pick up and place on your plate any silver you have not needed to use. The one clearing the table will take them away. , PENNY’S SERENADE By W. L. Penberthy On the Mondays following the Saturdays when our team plays away from home a great many of us are in no con dition to put in a good day’s work. This is due in a H large part to the fact that we have If had a pretty strenuous week end and have not had our usual amount of rest. Following a team is a very plea surable past time but one must be in about the same physical condi tion as the players in order to stand the gaff. Watching an ex citing game takes a lot out of us and this, combined with the travel involved, loss of sleep and our bat tle with the elements, doesn’t leave us much for our job on Mondays. But ' if done in moderation, it is Penberthy good for us to have this kind of a change once in a while because it gives us a rest from our daily work. I have observed, though, that where we err is that we feel that we should come home and rest up from our little vacation. Vacations are for the purpose of refreshing us for the job ahead and not to rest us from one just completed. A vacation should recharge our nervous system and if this is ac complished we should be able to attack our Monday’s work with a lot of enthusiasm even though our body is a little weary. Driving a weary body is where our self-dis cipline must exert itself but it has been my experience and ob servation that on these so-called “Blue Mondays” we will feel much better at the close of the day if we make ourselves do a good day’s work than if we give in to our tired feelings and loaf through the day. Try it some time. Tessie Talk By SuSu Beard SOMETHING TO READ By Edna B. Woods Nobody questions the fact that our biggest job is to win the war! No person of common decency ne glects his part in helping to ac complish that task quickly and ef fectively. But War to those pf us on the home front (as opposed to our fighting men on the battle fronts of the world) is a compara tively remote thing. We buy Bonds, donate to the Blood Bank, give our time to the USO, help with Red Cross work, and write letters to the men in service. Yet, par ticipation in all of these activi ties doesn’t sap our energy. If we have a spark of intelligence or a feeble concern about the future, we’ll direct at least part of our thinking toward understanding the possibilities for the world of to morrow, in order to achieve for ourselves and for those who will live generations hence the best of those possibilities. Men who con centrate their undivided powers on fighting don’t always approve our constant demands for post-war planning; they sometimes consider our efforts premature. But none more capable than veterans of past wars and the young veterans of this war tell us how necessary this planning is. A continuous search to secure new information on the subject of post-war planning revealed two very small, but vital books: To wards An Abiding Peace by R. M. Maclver, and How New Will the Better World Be by Carl L. Becker. R. M. Maclver is not one of those persons who believes that wars between nations is a natural state of affairs, and that since there have always been wars, we must continue to have them. Scep tics who uphold this pessimistic philosophy are handled rather ef fectively by Mr. Maclver. Yet, he is the first to. emphasize that “peace, like war, demands its price.” Being an internationalist, Mr. Maclver’s first prescription is that we give up the idea of abso lute sovereignty of nations. “A tremendous psychological readjust ment which this would necessitate is perhaps the chief obstacle in the path of the new warless order.” The new international order which he prescribes will have to be built on a new international law and backed by an international police force. He demands “removals of the major barriers to international trade; equal access for all coun- ti’ies to the natural resources of the world; maintenance of relative ly stable parities between the mon etary units of different countries.” The psychological readjustment which Mr. Maclver demands is far-reaching, but the author places his faith in democracy (which he defines as “the only political scheme that makes government constitutionally responsive to the free tides of public opinion”) to promote it. Carl Becker doesn’t think that the world-to-be will be much newer than the pre-war world. He denies the idea that our nation can re turn to a state of “normalcy,” however. “Nationalism will remain the strongest political power in the modern world and its force will be exerted in’ the form of many sov ereign independent states. But every nation should take into con sideration the rights and interests of other nations.” Mr. Becker thinks it illogical to urge great empires to make full use of their powers for the purpose of ending the war and of establishing a dur able peace, only to give up these powers after war is over. The author points out that there were many things wrong with the pre-war world. To eliminate some thing like mass unemployment, the essential causes of economic con fusion must be understood, and there must be united action on the (See BOOKS, Page 4) Whether because of the team’s determination or black cheeks, the SMU Mustang was properly locked in his stall last Saturday. A swell game and pattern for future ones. Wouldn’t try to describe the wide awake, bouyant looks of the girls as they straggled in the dorms late Sunday night or Mon day morning. Did all have a good time? They looked it. Again speaking of last Satur day’s game, it was too bad that the SMU “spot of blue” band had to march after the A&M sizeable collection. Sort of took away any glory they might have had. Thought: Someday someone will invent a portable perch for the yell leaders. No need to mention names, you know who they are. Seeing those fellows shuffling on the wall trimming of the Adolphus at the “to win” practice was panicky enough. However, the “we won” session at Louanns Saturday night was far worse. To the two who paraded on the roof-top, I only hoped that somehow those boots could have had rubber soles. Although few of us know the true and full reason for the mix- up at A. & M., many noticed the scarcity of properly worn dia monds, circles and such. Rank seems to change more frequently during a semester than before a semester. Would like to stop now to say a short thankful prayer for those grand Aggie-exes. The spirt seems to only grow larger. No foolin’ fellows it’s hard to realize how really much their yelling and backing means to the team, to you, and to themselves. Not too many of us are going to get to go to Houston this week end to watch the Aggies re-nest the Rice Owls. Don’t forget tho’ we’re planning on counting the score, and A. & M. has it all. Beat the Stuffing out of the Owls— SuSu PALACE FRIDAY and SATURDAY PREVUE SATURDAY NITE Also MON. - TUBS. - WED. BURLESQUE TO BIG TIME! -A $ RKO Rodio Picture The Lowdown On Campus Tlistractions By Dick Osterholm On the entertainment bill, show ing at the Palace in Bryan, is the much talked of propaganda picture of the war, “The Hitler Gang”. This picture has everything in it about the rise of Hitler into pow er. How the party got its beginning from the last war and the slow up rising principles by which it took over Germany and tried to con quer Europe. This is the picture that is supposed to show all the facts of the Nazi set-up, time to life and just as startling as it can be. The Lowdown: Not a romantic picture by any means but a re vealing one if you are not afraid to face the facts. It’s playing through Saturday. Playing at the Saturday night prevue and through Tuesday at the Palace is the musical comedy “Show Business”, with George Mur phy, Eddie Cantor, Joan Davis and a cast of others. In this picture, there is the usual love angle, and happy go lucky plot. But there’s good dancing, music and plenty of laughs. The Lowdown: Good musical but no dramatics. The Campus theater is showing a double feature for the Saturday ‘bill. “Three Russian Girls” with Anna Stein and Kent Smith. Another picture of the fighting front only this time it is the Rus sian front. This is the story of the Russian women who fight with their men at the battle scarred lines. It has the romance angle and exciting moments of the ordinary war picture.- There’s been a picture like it before only in different ter ritory. The Lowdown: Not a bad picture but nothing out of the ordinary. Playing second on the bill is “The McGuerins of Brooklyn” with William Bendix, Grace Bradley, Max Baer and others. Two business executives take a little vacation and get tangled up with a blonde and consequently with their wives. There are wolves all over the place and the husbands don’t think it funny when they take after their wives. It’s a pretty good mix up when things get going. The Lowdown: A funny picture but not too much plot to it. How ever, it’s pretty good. One of the best shows to come to the Campus for some time is showing Sunday and Monday. “The Adventures of Mark Twain”. The life story of Samuel Clements is told here on the screen as it can be told no where else. Frederic March and Alexis Smith play the part of the Twains. This is truly a great picture, for you will live the moments of Samuel Clements as you watch it. The Lowdown: A good picture, see it. Showing at Guion Friday and Saturday is “Trocadero” with Rose mary Lane and Johnny Downs. A high flying musical with not too Opens 1 P.M. — 4-1181 SATURDAY ONLY Double Feature R-F Productions Present also — William Bendix “McGUEMS FROM BROOKLYN” NO PREVUE SUNDAY and MONDAY # AT LAST AT p M FREDRICMARCH ’ALEXIS SMITH DONALD CRISP-alan hale C AUMEY SMITH • JOHN CAKSAOT* • tIU HENKY *0«E» BASRA? • WAITES HAMPDEN • JOYCB REYNOIOS Owcwdi* Irvlno Rapper much plot to it except the ordinary light romance. This picture is not (See DISTRACTIONS, Page 4) Phone 4-1166 i a s™ s ll on .9c &20c Tax Included Box Office Opens at 1 P.M. Closes at 8:30 FRIDAY and SATURDAY Double Feature TREK TO THE “TROC!” ... for tantalizing! talent... intoxicating tunes... and a thousand thrills! JOHNNY DOWNS RALPH MORGAN DICK PURCELL CLIFF NAZARRO CHS ARNHEM awl HIS OSCHESIM EDDIE UBASON mi IK ODCHESTM — also — “JACKASS MAIL” — with — Wallace Beery Majorie Main SATURDAY 9:45 PREVUE and SUNDAY BRUCE BENNETT • J. CARROL NA1SH LLOYD BRIDGES * REX INGRAM Screen Play by John Howard Lawson and Zoltan Korda • Directed by ZOLTAN KORDA A COLUMBIA PICTURE vBHPmmmmKnmKmmwmmmO!. — also — Donald Duck in Commando Duck MONDAY and TUESDAY THE, PICTURE THAT WILL LIVE IH YOUR HEART FOREVER! ^ DOROTHY McGUIRL "ROBERT YOUNG-INAClAIRf J