Page 2 THE BATTALION THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 3, 1945 The Battalion STUDENT WEEKLY NEWSPAPER Office, Room 5, Administration Building. Telephone 4-5444 Texas A. & M. College The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas and the City of College Station is published weekly, and circulated on Thursday afternoon. Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at College Station, Texas, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1870. Subscription rate $3.00 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 Gr>Ue6»ate Press Dick Goad - Editor-in-Chief Ed Wendt Sport Editor L. H. Calahan Feature Editor R. F. Huston Sports Writer F. B. DeLafosse Sports Writer R. L. Bynes Intramural Editor Dick Dillingham N....N Intramural Writer J. B. Clark Staff Photographer G. K. Dugan Circulation Manager Reporters: J. L. Everett, New Hope For Lagging Sports Here ... At a meeting of the Brazos County Aggie Exes Club held last winter, Football Coach Homer Norton made the statement that A. & M. athletic teams would take back water from no other college after the war, regardless of the sport. That this statement was made in all earnestness was proved recently by the addition of three new coaches to the college athletic department. Johnnie Frankie, whose Milby High cage team went to the semifinals in the state tourna ment this year, was hired as basketball coach, Frank Ander son, Aggie track tutor from 1920 to 1935, was named to take over the track team once again in September, and Bochy Koch, former Baylor grid great, was added to the staff as football line coach. All three men are widely known and highly respected in their individual fields. It is expected that their addition will bring about a much better record in certain sports here which have shamed the athletic record of A. & M. thus far. Hheretofore only football players had any possibilities of obtaining an athletic scholarship to A. & M., thereby forc ing outstanding state basketball, track and baseball per formers to enroll in the liberal University of Texas or some other institution. Thus, interest in these sports has lagged here and the College has continued to be the laughing stock of the conference in these activities. It is hoped that the addition of this veteran coaching trio can be interpreted such that intense interest will be developed in these previously lagging sports and they will occupy their rightful position in an institution of this size. We Shall Take Our Place . . . Now that the war in Europe is in its final bloody phases once again war weary people the world over are rejoicing and preparing for a normal peacetime life. But, despite the proximity of a successful finish to the war the cessation of organized hostilities will not end the conflict. A national emergency does not end with the hauling down of the last enemy war flags. The world will, at that critical moment of I armistice, be poised on the brink of riotous conflagrations, economic disorders and social upheavals. Boiling, heaving Europe will provide many a terrible scene of violence and destruction before its many factions can be harnessed to the giant tasks which lie ahead of them. At the present time the conquered peoples of Europe are little but slaves and slaves cannot be freed without violence; and there are so many slaves. Aggie Muster at William Beaumont Hospital Battle wounds and training in juries brought six Texas Aggies together for an Aggie reunion in the wards of William Beaumont General Hospital in El Paso where they are patients. They dusted off stories of old Aggieland and mingled them with stories direct from the fronts. Their meeting place was the bed of 2nd Lt. William Brown, Batesville Ag gie, who left the campus in 1939. Lieutenant Brown entertained his Aggie pals with his wounded foot suspended in the air in trac tion. He holds the Silver Star for action overseas. He served in England, France and Germany with the 95th Infantry Division. Last Nov. 27, German gunners stopped his advance with a burp gun which wounded him in the right leg. Second Lieut. Leslie R. Here ford, Ag. Education, '43, of Lo- meta, tucked his wounded arm un der his Army bathrobe and shuffled from the neighboring ward to at tend his 1945 Aggie muster. Last, year, Lt. Hereford joined other Ag gies in Southern England for the Aggie Muster. He was injured his second day in combat by fragmentation from a shell in Normandy. He was platoon leader with the 90th Infantry Div ision. Lt. Hereford went overseas Easter Sunday, 1944. First Lieut. Alfred H. Walker, Animal Husbandry, ’36, represented the Air Forces at the hospital re union. He was captured when his B-24 was shot down over Munich, Germany on his fifth mission. He was a prisdner of the Nazis until his liberation and return to the States Feb. 5. Flames from his crashed plane hospitalized him. The Dallas Ex-Aggie Chapter had a strong edge at the hospital reunion. Two Dallas Aggies joined the circle ringed around the bed. They were Major James W. Smith, Architecture, '42, who spent seven months overseas in the Ord nance attached to the 7th Army, and Second Lieut. Paul H. Rosa mond, Agronomy, ’43, who, spent six months in the ETO with the 80th Infantry Division. Major Smith was injured in France, Jan. 11. Lieutenant Rosa mond came to William Beaumont, one of the Army’s largest hospitals, in March. Capt. L. O. Weatherbee, Animal Husbandry, '41, from Del Rio, represented the class of ’41 in the reunion. He was injured in training with the Infantry. He entered the Army shortly after his graduation from A&M. Across the row of beds, another Aggie lay unable to join the re union. He was 1st. Lieut. Homer Lemburg, Animal Husbandry ’37 from Mason. He was wheeled from the operating room shortly after the Aggie reunion started. Lieutenant Lemberg spent 22 months overseas with the 32nd In fantry on Attu, the Marshalls, and on Leyte. He was wounded on Leyte last October. Capt. Maylor Lass, class of ’37 from Bellville, was unable to make either the bedside reunion or the downtown Muster. Both his legs were in casts from a training in jury. 1st. Lieut. Jack S. Hart, class of ’41 from Jasper, planned to make the downtown reunion if his broken foot wouldn’t pain too much. He was injured in the crash of a four-motored bomber Jan. 18. He is a B-29 pilot. Other Aggie'patients at William Beaumont who were able to leave their beds attended the Aggie Muster in El Pa&o. Some were on crutches. Some limped with their feet encased in casts. Others had their arms in slings and casts. Still, the Aggies mustered. Thus far our efforts to recreate a balanced order of conditions has met with little success and when the tre mendous powers are set loose by the crushing of organized opposition our attempts will indeed seem utterly puny. Never before in all history will so few men be called upon to do so much in so many places at once, or so rapidly. They will wish they had had the wisdom of Solomon and the patience of a saint. These men will be called upon to set right a society long gone astray. They will need to be technical, men, for there will be much to rebuild. The old Europe will be gone. The new Europe will be built by these men. The plans for the postwar orders and systems will have to be formulated. The entire economic framework will have to be readjusted and the work will call for extensively train ed men capable of handling the transportation and distribu- ,tion of the essentials of life to people who have known little but poverty and scarcity since the invasion of Poland and Pearl Harbor. Work must be provided for all men capable of working so as to re-establish the social organization as soon as possible and give them the opportunity to supply their own needs. Where no social organization before existed all the physical fundamentals for social living must be pro vided. It should be a far more gratifying task than was the initial destruction of whatever these people possessed. As we have learned already there will need to be judges, for there will be so many vital decisions to be made. Trust worthiness has disappeared in countries under domination and who will there be but these leaders to determine the proper organization and political setup for every town, vil lage and hamlet shaken by war and revolt? Our leadership must provide the necessary co-operation from these people who could not be beaten into submission by our enemies. If the civilian population will not accept them, the respon sible ones will have to be chosen to represent us. They will need to be soldiers for there will be conflicts and uprisings for many years yet. Men who have killed for more than five years will not become docile under the control of our armies. They have the viciousness of hate instilled in them. Their cities have been bombed—their families have been murdered in cold blood. They cannot and will not forgive quickly or easily. A proud man never forgets. They will fight among themselves in battles that may be as fierce as any seen in this war. These battles will not resemble the organized conflicts that will close the war, they will be the vicious, treacherous street fights that must follow the breakdown of organization and order. We here in America must realize our responsibilities and duties to make this world safe for law and order, that decent, righteous men will have the opportunity to enjoy their life as they should. The war in Europe is yet to be fin ished but the day is not far when we must spare no efforts or energy in restoring a just and true world. Although stu dents now, we will represent the hopes and prayers of all decent, God-fearing people in a few years. We must prepare ourselves for this day and we must prepare ourselves fully if their hopes and prayers are to be realized. But, prepared or not, we will take our place. We must be prepared! Man, Your Manners By I. Sherwood In asking a girl for a date a man should state what he has in mind for the particular evening in ques tion. This gives the girl a chance to decide whether she wishes to ac cept, and to know how she is ex pected to dress. She may have seen the movie that the man has in mind or she may not have an evening gown formal enough for the dance he plans to take her to. When a man calls for his girl, he should go to the door and ask for her. He should never sit in his car and blow the horn. Neither should keep the other waiting, but on the other hand the man should not arrive ahead of time. When he comes the girl should be ready to go. If he has not met her family, she should greet him at the door, then introduce him. Whenever pos sible he should call for her at her home, but if that is not convenient, an inconspicuous meeting place should be selected. No gentleman would think of asking a lady to meet him on a crowded street corner. When the evening is over the man should return her to her door —wartime exceptions to this rule permit the serviceman to take a bus back to camp and the girl a taxi home. Rj^g^f)G6l€9 INI •ACTION.. TIGHTIN’ TEXAS BOGIES' CLASS OF 1945 Lt.' Arthur L. Cox has been as signed to a post overseas. Lt. Wil liam P. Ridding has been assigned to a veteran Liberator Bombard ment squadron as a pilot. He is stationed in Italy. Lt. Robert S. Winters has gone overseas. Lt. Fred C. Seals recently arrived in the ETO and received a brief orientation at a United States Strategic Air Force station in England. The course is designed to help him adjust himself to the life in a combat zone. Pvt. Arthur C. Padilla has gone overseas. S. L.. Inzer is with the Humble Oil and Refining Company at Randado, Texas, and reports liking his work very much. Lt. Hugh P. Shovlin is reported to be somewhere over seas. Cpl. Nick Sabanovitch is somewhere in Burma. Lt. Eric W. McCabe reports that he is seeing plenty of China and India. Lt. Jules P. Sarran, Jr., is now in Germany and reports running across several other Aggies in that vicinity. Lt. Donald J. Engelking has been assigned to Camp Hood, Texas. Lt. O. M. Wilkinson, Jr., is in Italy and reports Lt. Ray N. Pritchett flying P-47’s in France. D. H. Daugherty has been slightly wounded in France. Lt. U. C. Ster- quell is inthe paratroopers. Lt. E. J. Yacek is serving with ,the 7th Army somewhere in France. Lt. J. E. Westbrook reports running across plenty of ’45 men. Lt. James P. Owings is somewhere in Ger many. Lt. George A. Boyd is pilot of a B-24 somewhere in the Pacific. Pfc. Vernon R. Schuchart is in Germany and has seen plenty of action. He reports S/Sgt. L. J. Wilson, ’44, in the same company. CLASS OF 1946 William E. “Red” Berry is in the Army. Albert C. Houtz, A/C, is in the Navy V-12 unit at Texas University. Daniel J. Scherer re cently received his commission as an Ensign in the Navy. He reports By Edna B. Woods According to the dictionary, geo graphy is “the science which des cribes the surface of the earth with its various peoples, animals, and natural products.” Generally speaking, until a few years ago geography was a dull, tedious subject, initiated into the curriculum at about the third-grade level. Four years of the monotony of memorizing the names of cap itals and rivers culminated in the seventh grade, when its qualities for inspiring boredom reached an all time peak. The ridiculously large textbook of the seventh grade, foreboding in appaarance, was heavy and inconvenient to carry around. There were a few people, even under those circumstances, who became fascinated with the subject, but there weren’t many. With the beginning of the war, with air lines operating in every possible direction, and with Tom, Dick, and Harry traveling for Un cle Sam, we suddenly wanted to know where “our boys” were go ing and what they were doing. So the study of geography came in to its own, and if ever again it becomes outmoded or if it lapses into its old, drab character, educa tion is regressing and the teachers of geography are not human. Van Loon’s Geography (1932) be gins like this, “If everybody in this world of ours were six feet tall and a foot and a half wide and a foot thick . . . then the whole of the human race . . . could be packed into a box measuring half a mile in each direction.” And in the same beginning chapter, Van Loon says, “We are all of us fel low-passengers on.the same planet and the weal and woe of everybody else means the weal and woe of our selves!” Of course, that doesn’t sound like the orthodox geography (the seventh-grade text-book), for Mr. Van Loon’s geography isn’t that at all. Mr. Van Loon wrote it because a friend pointed out the ineffectiveness of grammar school geography and requested that he cover the same subject in a logical and useful book. Ten years later, Mr. Van Loon fulfilled the request. His geography, which he not only wrote, but also illustrated, partly in color, is a fascinating story of the earth in 525 pages (ordinary book size), including a page of facts and a very useful index. “His tory is the fourth Dimension of Geography. It gives it both time and meaning.” Van Loon’s Geo graphy encompasses all four di mensions. He discusses people, planets—their habits and manners, maps, geographical divisions; then he discusses the continents and the countries, the islands and the empires that compose the world. Van Loon’s Geography, though not new, is neither complicated nor difficult to understand. It is in teresting, easy reading, and is the first book recommended to you, if you have an interest in the sub ject or if you’d like to have one. New World Horizons; geography for the air age (1942), edited by Chester H. Lawrence, with maps by Ray Ramsey, is colorful and cpndensed, resembling a picture book in appearance. According to the editor, New World Horizons is a geography for the millions, be- ause it is brief and can be read through in an hour or so, and be cause its maps which are original and unique suggest the point that the narrative wants to make with a minimum of detail and with lots of color. Only one or two pages of discussion accompanies at map of each country. Look at New World Horizons especially for its maps; they are beautiful and graphic. The War in Maps (1943), by Francis Brown, with maps by Emil Hei-lin and Vaughn Gray, contains 78 maps of the war with their interpretations. Emphasis is placed on military strategy. Most of the maps are reprints from the New York Times; however, some of them have been revised, and others have been drawn especially for this volume. Prefaced with a chapter called, “A Backdrop to War,” some of the most interest ing of these black and white maps are, “The Strategic North Pacific”, “Battle of the ' Atlantic, 1942”, others who received their commis sions are Robert A. Brown. Alfred H. Plyer, Willie Roof, and Wood- son E. Dryden. Pfc. George D. Everett is now stationed at Camp Howze, Texas. F/O George M. Callihan is on a B-25 in New Guinea. Pvt. Richard O. Thomas, USMC, is in the experimental sec tion for amphibian tractors at Camp Pendleton, Oceanside, Calif. “The Allied Blockade”, and “Amer ican Contingents Abroad.” The War in Maps has been edited once, and probably a final edition will be a compltete summary of the war in maps. The Geography of the Peace (1944), by Nicholas John Spyk- man, was edited after the author’s death by Helen R. Nichol. Mr. Spykman, a professor of International Relations at Yale University, was one of few Ameri cans who realized before 1938, that to overlook the geographic factor was to ignore one of the most important sources of light on the subject of security. In that year, he published a series of articles on This week-end we are holding our Intramural Swimming Meet at the P. L. Downs, Jr., Natatorium. The meet will be well worth seeing because the con- testants will be ' ' fPl su PP or ted by * > their loyal or- • : Jl g an i za tions in the ! ||| stands. ; Swimming has come a long way p\’' V W j it this school. Un- IIfiBSe " -Mo a sma ^ pool iu “Y” where the Penberthy bowling - alleys are now located. In 1932 the P. L. Downs, Jr., Natatorium, the finest in the South, was completed as the result of the efforts of the man whose name it bears. We imme diately started swimming classes in the P. E. program and were represented by a team in the con ference. However, it was not until 1934 when Mr. Arthur Adamson One of the better movies that have recently shown at the Campus Theater is “Mrs. Parkington”, a story based on the novel of the same title by Louis Bromfield. As usual with movies based on novels “Mrs. Parkington” does not come up to its namesake. Specifically the production falls short in the por trayal of character. One of the most convincing characters in the novel, Lady Nora Ebbsworth, is reduced in the play from an interesting English adventures to a Holly wood snob. And Jack, son of Amory, is another character typed in the movie and individualized in the novel. But the principals, Major and Mrs. Parkington, adequately repre sent Bromfield’s characters. The story of their life together starts in a Western mining town of the 1870’s, where Susie Graham (Miss Greer Garson) works as a maid in her mother’s boarding house. When the New York multimillion aire, Major Parkington (Mr. Wal ter Pidgeon,) comes along, Susie is won in a whirlwind courtship and whisked off to the East. In New York, with the aid of his ex mistress, the Duchess, the Major converts his wife into a fashion able society woman. This change is accompanied by a usual movie stunt of showing the .actress’ un- petticoated charms in the fitting room of a fashionable dressmaker. Before long the Major turns his at tention to an English beauty, but the determined Mrs. Parkington, with the aid of the Prince of Wales, wins him back. We see no more of the Major. Another part of the story con cerns Mrs. Parkington’s grand children and great grandchildren living in 1938. These generations fail to live up to the independence and dash of Major and Mrs. Park ington. Instead they become dis gusting, fashionable snobs—all but the great granddaughter, Janie. With Mrs. Parkington’s blessing, Janie wins an ambitious young man contemptuous of the Parking ton wealth. Finally Mrs. Parking ton gives up her wealth to save a spineless grandson who has em bezzled from his firm the good round sum of $31,000,000. The story is presented in flash backs. Through the use of these flashbacks, the action frequently, and usually with adequate transi tions, changes from 1938 to various years in the late nineteenth cen tury. Some of the shifts seemed forced. What idea appears in the play rests upon an attempt to balance the vigor of Major Parkington and his world with the unsocial uninspired modern generation, the relation of geography to war. His analysis in The Geography of War includes chapters on: “Map ping the world,” “The position of the Western Hemisphere,” “The political map of Europe,” and “The strategy of security.” The result is a very strong case for the ac tive participation of the United States in World affairs. The Geo graphy of the Peace shows isola tionism as the policy of wishers, not thinkers. It is a well written, carefully edited study; it can be read easily and with complete un derstanding. An Intelligent American’s Guide to the Peace (1945), edited and in- See BOOKS, Page 6 came to us that ‘business really picked up”. Art registered as a special stu dent, took a near normal schedule, taught P. E. classes, coached the swimming team and got his degree in 1939. He got his Master’s in January, 1944. His team tied for the conference championship last year and won the championship this year. Through his interest in swim ming and untiring efforts he has developed at our school a swim ming program that ranks second to none. Many of our students now in service owe their lives to the fact that Art Adamson taught them to swim. The “Duck”, as we affectionately call him, gets as much kick out of teaching a boy how to swim and be a good water man as he does in having a champ ion. To me he is the shining example of what can be done in the promo tion of an activity by an indivi dual who is genuinely interested. young people who lack the initia tive even to hold the family for tune together. Walter Pidgeon and Greer Garson do their usual com petent acting, getting much out of the material before them. .. .The Woman in the Window is a murder picture, but it is in no sense one of the ordinary “who don- nit” mystery thrillers. For one thing there is no attempt to con ceal the identity of murderer since the audience sees the man when he commits the crime. The main purpose of the movie is to study the thoughts and actions of the murderer as he attempts to avoid detection. The result is some very good dramatic acting on the part of Edward G. Robinson and Joan Bennett, and such suspense that the movie-goer feels that he is act ually living the story. The story starts off slowly in troducing the characters, the set ting, and the situation. With the murder the story moves into high gear and continues to accelerate until the skilful climax comes at the last of the picture. Professor Richard Wanley, play ed by Edward G. Robinson, is first seen with his wife and children leaving him to take a trip. After ward as he is going to his club to meet his two best friends, a doctor and the assistant district attorney, played by Raymond Mas sey, he sees a portrait of a very beautiful woman in a window near his club. With his friends the con versation centers around this woman and their desire to meet her. While looking at the picture again later that night, Professor Wanley suddenly becomes aware that the woman whose portrait he is admiring is standing beside him. Seeking adventure, and per haps something more, he accom panies the woman to her apart ment, literally to see her etchings. Just when he and the woman, play ed by Joan Bennett, are getting quite friendly, her regular boy friend walks in. In the battle that follows, Wanley kills the man in self-defense. Wanley realizes that his posi tion as a teacher of psychology, his home, everything would be lost to him if the facts became known, and the girl is panicky with fear of going to jail; so they decide to dispose of the body to clear them selves. That is when the story really begins. In spite of their efforts to be calm and thorough in the matter, they make almost every conceivable blunder. Moreover when the police begin their search for the killer, Wanley’s friend, the assistance dis- (See STUDENT REVIEW, Page 6) PENNY’S SERENADE By W. L. Penberthy : Student Reviews: