THE BATTALION, College Station (Aggieland), Texas Thursday, March 20, 1947: Page Two Tears in Our Coffee ... Reading the gripe letters received by the Batt, or listen ing to the heated discussion over coffee-cups in George’s or Casey’s, one gets the impression that everybody at A. & M. is mad at everybody else. Hardly a week passes that the Batt isn’t asked to jump with all four feet on somebody or some institution. Usually there is no specific grievance stated. Just something vague like a political campaign speech. Hints, insinuations, innuen do. Seldom any facts. When a rumor is investigated and found to be untrue, there is a sigh of disappointment heard oveh the entire campus. Is this a healthy situation for A. & M.? There is a kind of griping with which we are familiar (and which we all do) that lets out the hot air and makes us feel better for it. Suck griping is a standard condition in all colleges and all military units. But the griping around here lately doesn’t seem to let off any steam, or make anyone feel better. Week by week, faces are growing longer, eyes growing sadder, while more and more tears are shed in our coffee. As part of this defeatist, negativistic attitude, someone asks the Batt every week to “open fire” on various indivi duals or institutions, on general principles. Here is a par tial list of those we have been asked to “roast” editorially: All officers of the college, the Board of Directors, the Athletic Council, and everybody in the Administration Building. The military department in toto. The Athletic Department, the Housing Department, the Veterans Administration and the Veterans Advisor. B. & CU. The faculty, the laundry, the Y.M.C.A. All officers of the Cadet Corps, of the Veteran Stu dents Association, the Senior and Junior class, in fact all officers of any kind whatever. The Battalion, the Longhorn, the Engineer and the Agriculturist. The Band, the Aggielanders, the Singing Cadets. The Student Life Committee, the Student Council, and the Student Activities Office. George’s and Casey’s. The Post Office. The railroads and the bus lines. The Exchange Store, the college cafeterias, Guion Hall, the Campus and Palace theatres, Town Hall. The town of Bryan generally. The town of College Station in all ways. The weather. (Did we leave anybody out? We wouldn’t want any one’s feelings hurt.) What are the charges against these various organiza tions? It doesn’t matter. Fill them in yourself. “Nothing is easier than fault finding. No brains, no talent, no self-denial, no character of any sort are re quired to set up in the grumbling business”—Elbert Hubbard’s Scrap Book. Conductor or Coach?... Being the conductor of a symphony orchestra is about like being a football coach, to judge by the blow-ups this year. Not long ago Arthur Rodzinksi walked out on the New York Philharmonic in a huff, accepting the lower-paid post of conductor of the Chicago Symphony. Reason ? Too much bickering among the backers. Now Ernst Hoffman of the Houston Symphony has an nounced that he will leave at the end of the season. Hoff man has built up the Houston orchestra from a collection of amateur violinists to a ranking professional symphony, but his backers are said to be unhappy, and to want a “big name” conductor so that the Houston group will be rated more close ly to the Dallas orchestra. Personally, we wonder why any one ever becomes an orchestra conductor ... or a football coach. BETWEEN THE BOOKENDS .. . FDR Biography, ‘Hiroshima 9 Excellent Reading for All STUDENT ACTIVITIES WAR TALK By Wilnora Barton AS HE SAW IT; By Elliott Roosevelt This highly controversial book is one of the five or six published concerning the late President Roosevelt. Almost everyone agrees that no biography of FDR can even approach objectiveness or comprehensiveness until after the passage of decades which we hope will allow future biographers an unbiased (if such a thing is pos sible) view. Be that as it may— contemporary accounts by those who knew him will be of great value to the future biographers of Mr. Roosevelt. One thing is certain—regard less of your personal views, any book about Franklin D. Roosevelt will receive plenty of interest from the people, here and a- broad. Elliott Roosevelt was in a unique position as his father’s constant companion and, he says, confidant. The book covers the period from the Atlantic Char ter meeting to Yalta and after. « Here’s the story as told freely by the late President to his son in private chats after the long days of conferences with world leaders were over. Elliott Roosevelt’s purpose in writing the book was to show how far, in his opinion, the world has moved from the paths and plans that Franklin D. Roosevelt hoped and worked, prayed that it might follow. As such, it deserves care ful reading. □ □ □ HIROSHIMA; By John Hersey You have heard of this story. Perhaps you have read parts of it, for the New Yorker of August 31, 1946 gave all of its space to it, and newspapers here and abroad reprinted it. Now it is out in book form, a story of six human beings who lived through the greatest man-made disaster in history. With simplicity that approaches genius John Hersey relates what these six—a clerk, a widowed s e a m- stress, a physician, a Methodist Minister, a young surgeon, and a German Catholic priest—were do ing at the time the atom bomb was dropped destroying the city. This book has been called by Lewis Gannett “the best reporting to come out of the war”, and it has already become classic. Its power derives from the fact that it is the honest story of little people in an average city caught up in the fury of the mightiest destructive force yet discovered by man. Dear Editor: In reply to A1 Hudeck’s letter suggesting use of the $1,400 paid to Student Activities by A. & M. Photo Shop to defray the bonfire expenses, you say that the $1,400 has to go to help defray a $22,000 LONGHORN printing bill. You’ll have to be a lot plainer than that. We pay $16 for Student Acti vities. Some goes for a coupon book, some goes to the Batt, (I wonder why), and a lot goes for the purchase of a copy of the LONGHORN. Most photographic costs for the LONGHORN are paid by students or clubs. In addition, each club is soaked $25 printing costs for their page. Then, we have paid ads in the LONGHORN. Figuring 6,000 copies printed and sold for $6 a copy, you have $36,- 000 in sales, plus the club’s $25 donations, paid advertisements, and that dear $1,400 paid by the photographer. Just who in (- ) is supposed to retire after this is sue of the LONGHORN comes out? Sincerely yours, DONALD M. CORLEY, 46 $ $ $ (Longhorn Editor’s Note: If I could keep books and add fig ures the way Corley does in his letter, I would say immediately that I would be the one to re tire. If such were the case, I would be $14,000 over in LONG HORN sales alone, as 5,500 books at $4' per copy does not quite add up to his figure. I won’t attempt to enumerate the exact cost of the 1947 LONG HORN or where the total amount of revenue comes from to pay for it; but I am in the position to know that after adding up all totals of incoming revenue, we will lack several dollars of making the book pay for itself. The remainder is made up by the Student Activities Office. If Corley, or anyone else with the “intellectual curiosity”, would like to know more about the functions of the LONGHORN staff, or maybe more about the financial dealings involved, the LONGHORN office in Room 5, Administration Building, is open every afternoon from 3 to 5. New workers are always welcome to join the group of students who are interested enough in the book to come down and lend a helping hand. There are mul titudes of tasks necessary to put out a book of this size. (And oddly enough, they receive no monetary benefits.) HARRY W. SAUNDERS, '44 Co-Editor, 1947 LONGHORN ALICIA, NOT NORA Dear Editor: That was a good review of the Ballet Theatre, but your critic stumbled in one spot. It was Al icia Alonzo, not Nora Kaye, who danced the Pas de Deux with Youskevitch. WICK VAN KOUENHOVEN (Ed Note: Quite right. The critic, mired down in Brazos mud, arrived too late to hear announcement of the .change, and took the printed program liter ally.) What’s Cooking THURSDAY, March 20 7:00 p.m. — College Employees Dinner Club. Sbisa Hall. 7:30 p.m.—Land of the Lakes Club meets in room 324, Academic Building. 7:00 p.m. — Brownwood Club meets in room 123, Academic Build ing. 7:00 p.m.—Corpus Christi Club, Room 227* Academic Building. * 7:30 p.m.—Denton County Club Room 325 in Academic Building. A duchess for the cotton ball will be selected. FRIDAY, March 21 7:30 p.m.—Chess Club Meeting, Vets Lounge, Sbisa Hall. Brief discussion of the “end game”. 9:00 p.m.—Infantry Ball, Sbisa Hall. SATURDAY, March 22 9:00 p.m. — All-College Dance, Sbisa Hall. MONDAY, March 24 7:00 p.m.—Range & Forestry Club, Agricultural Engineering Building. Election of officers will be held. 7:15 p.m.—A&M Collegiate FFA Chapter, lecture room of Agricul tural Engineering Building. Mr. R. A. Manire & Mr. Lano Barron will be the speakers. 7:30 p.m.—Marketing & Finance Club. Annual Picnic to Be Held By El Paso Club Friday The El Paso Club will hold a picnic Friday, March 21, and its members will meet at 6 p. m. in front of the YMCA to go to the picnic grounds. Students of the Bryan Field Annex are cordially invited to join in. The menu will consist of beer and barbeque. Dr. H. G. Johnston To Address Entomology Club A meeting of the Entomology Club will be held Thursday, March 20, at 7:30 p. m. in room 6 of the Science Hall. Dr. H .G. Johnston, head of the newly formed Department of En tomology, embracing the School, the Experiment Station, and the Extension Service, will address the Club members. All persons inter ested are urged to attend the meet ing. Dear Editor: I’ve never expressed myself in this manner before, but after read ing, as I have in the past, the letters in your column, I have this to say: Damn this talk about who won the war. War is a subject which, by all of us, should best be put from our minds. It is by the sub ject and the amount of thinking we perform on the subject that our philosophies of life are deve loped. Certainly it is for our best interest and the best interest of our nation that warlike philoso phies be steered clear of. Unless we elevate our topic of contro versy and discussion to a higher moral and more sensible plane, we people, from whom national and international policy is to come in the future, will be lucky if we have as much as a family policy to formulate. God forbid that I should ever discredit fellow countryman, for however little or great the duty and sacrifice he made for our country, as long as he was in there pitching and was sincere in his efforts. Whenever I hear a man say, “Look what I did,” or, “look what a showing my outfit made in this war,” the well known mathemati cal process of elimination asserts itself with me and the final con clusion is that some in this school, at one time or another, had it just as tough as he or his outfit did. If not in this school, then perhaps over this vast nation there is someone whft endured greater hardship or made greater sacri fices than he. But of this one thing I am cer tain, there are thousands who are not personally able to go on record as saying “I did more than anyone else toward winnign the war.” Can anyone of us dare say, “I did more”? With your permission, may I say it for those who are not here to say it, “We gave everything”. Forgive us our silly prattle, and thanks fellows for all you’ve done. PRESTON R. CONNALLY AIR CORPS Dear Editor: We have delayed writing this letter in order to collect a more representative group of facts con cerning Air Corps policy than those brought forward in A. D. Bruce’s article. Qualified Air Corps personnel are authorized flight pay for sev eral very good reasons. To begin with, the insurance premiums of flying personnel are higher than those of our friends on the ground. The life expectancy of flying per sonnel is fifty-five years compared to sixty-two for members of the Ground Forces. This gives the ground forces men seven years more in which to earn their world ly fortune than the Air Corps men. On cross country flights, crew members are not always on per diem, but often have to pay for their meals and quarters out of their flying pay. The statement that four hours a month of flying time is all that is necessary to stay on flying stat us is erroneous, because a cer tain proficiency must be main tained in order to continue receiv ing the extra pay. If all of our flying personnel only flew four hours per month there would soon be few aircraft left to fly and fewer crews to fly them. The four hours is merely a minimum. In answer to the uniform issue, the pink and forrest green uniform seen so often on the backs and legs of all army officer personnel was introduced by Air Corps officers as an Air Corps uniform a few years before the war. The ground for ces “borrowed” the uniform and during the war years it was com monly worn by all officers. The Air Corps must design a uniform that can not be borrowed by their fellow members of the armed for ces and that will set it off from the army, just as the navy is set off from the army. The technical information con tained in the above paragraphs was obtained from a ground forces man who transferred to the Air Corps and who has never drawn a day’s flight pay. His only regret is that all ground forces personnel can not get into the Air Corps. Wilton N. Hammond ’48; Jack E. Turner ’47; Jack E. Jackson ’47; Hugh M. Riggins, Jr. ’42; Ivan F. Bradshaw ’49; Howard W. Horne ’47; Robert P. Ingram ’47. Lavaca Club Elects Duchess; Donates $25 to FFA Clubs Miss Mary Alice Peters, Yoa kum high school senior, has been chosen to represent the Lavaca County Club at the Cotton Ball and Pageant on April 18, Jimmie Baros, club reporter, announced. She will be escorted by Ben Sustr of Moulton, a junior cadet. The Lavaca Club voted to do nate $25 to each of the FFA chapters in the county: Moulton, Shiner, Yoakum, and Hallettsville. Each chapter may use the money as they so desire, for prizes or showmanship, at their next FFA show. Prof. Grandi Named to AIEE L. L. Grandi, associate profes sor of electrical engineering, has been made a full member in the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, it was announced to day. There are two other full mem bers among the electrical engineer ing faculty, while another two have attained the top rank of fel low. The Battalion The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas and the City of College Station, is published tri-weekly and circulated i Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday afternoons. Member Pbsocided CoQe6»ate Press Entered as second-class matter at Post Office at College Station, (Aggieland), Texas, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1870. Subscription rate 4.00 per school year. Advertising rates on request. Represented nationally by National Advertising Service, Inc., at New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Allen Self Vick Bindley Charles E. Murray . J. K. B. Nelson David M. Seligman Paul Martin flartm .. Matula Andy Wendell McClure Martin E. Crossly Ferd B. English, FrankUn Cleland, William Miller, Doyle Duncan, Ben Schrader, Jack Goodloe, Wm. K. Colville, Walter Lowe, Jr., Lester B. Gray, Jr., Carl C. Krueger, Jr., Mack T. Nolen Corps Editor Veteran Editor —Tuesday Associate Editor -Thursday Associate Editor -Saturday Associate Editor Sports Editor ..Sports Writer -Advertising Manager Circulation Manager -Reportera It Pays to Advertise . . . Telling Others About U. S. Through Facts by A. D. Bruce, Jr. A project of the Public Affairs Division of the State Department has been dramatized recently by the beginning of daily broadcasts to Russia, with short-wave radio penetrating the Soviet Govern ment’s “iron curtain.” The broad casts, much criticized both here and abroad, are, however, but a small part of the activities of this office. These include broadcasts in many more languages, the distribution of American moving pictures, books, magazines, newspaper ar ticles and news, and exchanges of students. It all is costing $19,000,- 000 this year. The Budget Bureau, going against the trend toward reduced expenditures, has approv ed an increase of $6,000,000 for next year. Meanwhile, criticisms are many. They range from left- wing mutterings about an effort to control international avenues of information, to right-wing ap prehensions about “propaganda wars” and questions as to what is being accomplished. The following might throw some light as to the last question. The Russian program is still in an experimental phase. Russian listeners welcomed the news that the early broadcasts brought, but they found little entertainment in American folk music of the “Tur key in the Straw” variety, and little information in lengthy and technical discussions of the Ameri can Government and scientific sub jects. The effort is to present news not published in the Russian press or to give information that may have been distorted by Soviet news papers and radio. Russian views on the international control of the atomic bomb have been the subject of several news announcements. The broadcasts are supplemen ted by a Russian-language maga zine called “America”, a slick- paper job, rich in color printing and illustration. The Soviet Gov ernment permits 50,000 copies to be sent in monthly—they are read to tatters. ★ OTHER BROADCASTS. In ad dition to Russian, broadcasts go out in 24 languages daily. Most of the world is covered, and all programs are regularly scheduled. About 17 per cent of their content is news, 34 per cent are comments on the news, and 49 per cent are features on America. MOVING PICTURES. Documen tary film dealing with aspects of American life, are distributed by the foreign staffs to interested or ganizations and institutions, The audience is estimated at 15,000,- 000 monthly. The films are ac quired from governmental agen cies, industrial concerns and or ganizations. New sound tracks in many languages are added. THE PRESS. A daily, 7,000- word report on developments in the United States is sent to all points. This is for the information of embassy and consulate officials, and also for the use of newspapers in other countries. Articles oft the U. S., accompanied by photographs or printing matrices are sent by mail and made available to news papers and magazines for publi cation or background use. Libra ries, too, are maintained in 41 countries. They are stocked with American books, periodicals, re cordings and art exhibits, and are prepared to answer questions about the United States. Some 220,000 readers use the libraries monthly, and about 35,000,000 questions on America are asked annually. STUDENT EXCHANGE. The Department places great stress on the exchange of students as an in strument for peace. Under its aus pices, 11,000 foreign students were enrolled in American educational institutions, despite overcrowding, last year. They expect to increase that number to 50,000. The effort, as laid down by President Truman, is to present a “full and fair picture” of the United States and let that clear up the distortions and misconcep tions. "N Be one of the fotaT? one} The two-buttoner coat with long, low roll lapels gives you the style points that are truly new. (jjaldroptfg “Two Convenient Store*” College Station - Bryan PALACE BRYAN, TEXAS THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY James Stewart in It’s A Wonderful Life” COMING—Preview Saturday Night, Sunday, Monday and Tuesday Sonny Tufts in “EASY COME EASY GO” Opens 1:00 p.m. Ph. 4-1181 THURS.LAST DAY S IPs the grandest romantif fun ever set to music/ mm. CLAP HANDS — What a happy hit! What romance 1 "Cliimu s'ftps our Aczciod.lrjm "Pot O Gold" HORACf CHARLES HITS FRIDAY and SATURDAY “Tall in The Saddle” — With — John Wayne Ella Raines OPENS 1 p. m. DAILY TODAY ONLY! lig^ nonMilWAvMt -JOAN LESLIE JANIS PAIGE ■SjjAKAR-PATljtRAgr FRIDAY and SATURDAY DOUBLE FEATURE William Eythe Lloyd Nolan Signe Basso directed by Produced by HENRY LOUIS HAIHAWM • de MEM A 20th Century-Fox Picture UNITED APTlSTS p'eserus “-““Bennett ““"Fields Paris-UiKlerpii"' 1