Page Two THE BATTALION, College Station (Aggieland), Texas, Thursday, May 1, 1947: Editorial Favors ... In our daily jaunts over the campus we meet with a lot of odd and peculiar characters, but the ones that bother us most are those who are always wanting us to say something “nice” about someone, who everybody knows is not such a wonderful guy after all. Our buddies become quite provoked when they fail to see these wonderful write-ups concerning their friends, cous ins, brothers^r ole ladies and for thoseAvho really do insist on havmg^stories lauding their frio^fijs published, we have made up the following rate card, T j^ich we trust will not be considered m>o exorbitant. We %ill not deviate from the price, but we hope to donate a certain percentage of our earn ings toward rounding an asylum for those feeble-minded persons who ^‘heve^f^ltor has a soft snap. |Eor telling^^rAggies that Joe Doaks, promising ,l, " w 'student from Buffalo Gulch, is an energetic w studious young chap, when he really shows promise only in “horizontial engineering”..- $ 2.75 Referring to one as a hero and a man of courage and one who stands by his convictions, when everybody knows he is a moral coward and would sell out for a dime $ 4.13 Referring to some gossipy female as a one time “Belle of Aggieland”, an estimable lady whom it is a pleasure to meet and know, when every man on the campus would rath er see Satan coming $ 8.10 Lambasting the daylights out of all students who frequently make the trek across the river, at the behest of local dry forces $ 6.77 For referring to some gallivanting fellow who sweat ed out freshman week in 1931 before pack ing of home, as a True Aggie, a friend and aid to the institution, and a living in spiration to present day students $3,475.23 More Aggie Journalists?... Journalism school at A. & M.? Why not? The greatest shortage in the journalism field is of exactly such writers as A&M is best equipped to train—reporters and editors who write about agriculture or engineering or science, and really know what they are writing about. There are many misconceptions about what a school of journalism is, and what courses are taught. Students who have sweated through an engineering course, so loaded with technical subjects that they get a bare minimum of other classes, tend to think that journalists carry about 18 semes ter hours of writing for four years, plus History 306 and Economics 403. But that is not the way journalism courses are planned. For those who have a natural liking for writing—and nobody else should enter journalism—the purpose of college training is not so much to learn how to write as to get’ a thorough knowledge of the matters one is to write about. For most journalism students, who will be occupied in politi cal, cultural and business developments, history, economics and cultural subjects are most important. For the technical journalist, such as A&M might train, the larger part of their classes would deal with agriculture and rural sociology, in one field, or engineering and science in the other. About 8 semester hours in each semester of the three final years would be enough of technical journalistic subjects. We believe that there should be a journalism course at A&M, leading to BA or BS in Journalism, with minors in agriculture, science or engineering. We believe that such a course would be properly within A&M’s sphere of teaching and would create a situation in which A&M trained agricul ture editors and technical editors would be writing about the achievements of their fellow Aggies in those fields. A Choice... We have a choice. The machine can be so used as to make men free as they have never been free before. We are not powerless. We have it in our hands to use the machine to augment the dignity of human existence. . . . We can choose deliberately and consciously whether the machine or man comes first. But that choice will not be exercised on a single occasion surrounded by spectacle and drama. We will move from decision to decision, from issue to issue, and you and I and all of us will be in the midst of this struggle for the rest of our days. We cannot master the machine in the interest of the human spirit unless we have a faith in people. Lilienthal Nemesis of Texas City Is Still Considered Useful Ammonium nitrate, the usually harmless aid to agriculture, is the basis of several explosives. Amitol, a mixture of ammonium nitrate and TNT, is a powerful explosive used extensively in the last World War. Great heat and shock evolve upon the detonation of Ammonal, a mixture of fine aluminum pow der and ammonium nitrate. To ammonium nitrate is attrib uted the initial explosions which resulted in the devastation of Tex as City. It is the same agent re sponsible for the comparable devas tation of Oppau, Germany in 1926. The fact that it contains oxygen in chemical compound makes its storage and transportation danger ous since it needs no outside source of oxygen to result in a violent expansion. In fertilizer mixtures, however, it is relatively harmless. But its practical uses far out number its disadvantages. Nitrous oxide, familiarly known as “laugh ing gas” can be made from heat ing ammonium nitrate at relative ly low temperatures. The chemi cal is rapidly coming into use as a fuel for internal combustion machines when mixed with anhy drous liquid ammonia. ‘ It is re ported as being used also as a fuel for the new ram-jet or rocket type engines, usable because it provides its own source of oxygen, the same reason that makes its handling dangerous. As far as is known, no ammoni um nitrate is manufactured in Tex as City. Normal production in America is over 100,000,000 pounds annually. World Bank . . . Putting World Back on Feet By A. D. Bruce, Jr. U. S. private investors are about to be asked to start taking over the job of putting the world back on its feet. Up to now, taxpayers have had the job, because the U. S. Government itself has been financ ing world recovery, partly on a loan basis and partly on a relief basis. Beginning this summer, in vestors are to be offered securities of the new International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, and the Bank is to make recovery loans abroad out of the proceeds of these sales. The U. S. Government, thus, is about to bow out of one important phase of foreign lending. This Government will continue to make big loans in cases where the aims are more political than economic. Also, the U. S. Export-I m p o r t Bank is to make smaller loans as needed to stimulate this country's world trade. But for long-term recovery loans, in cases where U. S. political interests are not in volved, foreign applicants are be ing referred to the International Bank. That is the job for which the Bank was set up under the Breton Woods Agreements. Already loan applications before the Bank add up to $2,310,000,000 and others are on the way. How ever, until the Bank is able to get some money from the U. S. invest ment market, it is likely to hold the total volume of loans below $700,000,000. ★ The process of how the Bank will work is briefly this: A loan is requested by one of the Bank’s 43 member governments. Say the French Government asks for a loan of $500,000,000. Along with the application, the French Government files complete statements on what the money is to be used for—re building factories, buying locomo tives in the United States, laying in raw materials, etc. The French also file details on their recovery plan, and show that the loan they seek is essential to that plan . The Bank, after thorough investigation, might approve the whole amount at once or only part of it, leaving the rest to be considered in later. Securities are issued by the Bank, if it develops that there is not enough money already in the Bank to finance the loan to France. The securities will bear whatever interest the market de mands, and will mature in 10 to 25 years. The loan is made with the pro ceeds of the securities sale. It is not paid out in a lump sum, but is merely set up by the Bank as a line of credit against which the French Government may draw as needed for specified projects. The Bank tells the French in detail what those projects can be, and no others can be paid for out of the loan. The loan is repaid over a period of years, say 20 to 25 years, with interest and commission for the Bank of 1 to 1% per cent. The theory being that the projects the French undertake with the loan will create enough earning power so that they can repay both the principal and the interest without running the Government short of dollars. As France repays the loan, the Bank builds up its own obligations when due, using any extra dollars for additional loans abroad. ★ If France defaults the Bank draws on whatever dollars it has on hand, including the reserve fund it has built up through its own profits, to pay off its obligations. If that is not enough, the Bank calls on member countries to pay in their proportionate shares of the dollars it needs to make its se curities good. The loss, if any, is borne by the Bank or its member governments, not by the investor. Each member country holds back 80 per cent of its subscription to meet any default on a Bank loan. The private investor, thus, is pro tected by the fact that 43 member countries stand back of the Bank’s obligations. F u rt h e r m o r e, the Bank cannot lend more than its capital and surplus. With that Am I Going Crazy? . . . ‘Americans Too Worried About Mental Diseases’ By Science Service If you have ever thought: “Am I going crazy?” here is reassurance: Americans worry too much about mental disease, Dr. C. Charles Burlingame, president of the Institute of Living, formerly known as the Hartford Retreat, warned today. And we may be developing a “national schizophrenic personality.” People are bewitched by psychiatric jargon and see mental dis ease in perfectly normal emotional swings. Unless this dangerous preoccupation is stopped, Dr. Bur-- 4 lingame told the board of directors of Connecticut’s oldest hospital, thousands of Americans will be looking for help from mental spe cialists. The vast majority will never have the opportunity to get with in speaking distance of a psychia trist, even to be reassuerd that they have no budding serious men tal disease. There are only 4,000 psychiatrists to take care of ad vising all the worried people in the country, and only 2,500 of these are certified by the Ameri can Board of Psychiatry and Neu rology. “We have been talking a good deal about taking a leaf from the book of the tubercu/osis and can cer movements,” Dn Burlin game, “preaching that mental ill ness must be attacked, like tuber culosis an 4 cancer, through a na tional alertness to early psychia tric disorders.” But the man who thinks he may have signs of tuberculo sis or cancer can get a physi cal checkup promptly. The person who fears he has men tal symptoms is not going to be so lucky. Explaining the developing of a possible “national schizophrenic personality,” Dr. Burlingame ob served that “schizophrenic”’ means “a splitting of the personality,” and Americans are split between group generosity and individual selfishness. “On the one side, we, as a nation, are extolling the need for love and light and philan thropic kindliness around the world, while on the other side we, as individuals, are basing our entire existence on the precept of ‘What can I get out of it?” He urged a new appreciation of spiritual values and teaching childi’en social responsi b i 1 i t y through the establishment of “par- entoriums”. Those would be parent guidance centers, not necessarily related to sickness of any kind. Hypnotic Tests Indicate The Extent of Suggestion Examinations to Be Held for Jobs With Health Department Competitive examinations for positions in the State Department of Health Laboratory and branch laboratories have been announced by the Merit System Council for the State Department of Health. These examinations are for public health laboratory positions, and will consist of evaluation of train ing and experience ad an oral ex amination. Positions for which examinations will be held, and their salaries, are: Junior Bacteriologist ($143.50); Assistant Bacteriologist ($172.50); Junior Chemist ($143.50); Assist ant Chemist ($172.50); Junior En tomologist ($143.50); Assistant En tomologist ($172.50); Junior Im munologist ($143.50); Assistant Immunologist ($172.50); Junior Parasitologist $(143.50); Assistant Parasitologist ($172.50); Junior Serologist ($143.50); Assistant Se- rologist ($172.50). Veterans preferance will be al lowed applicants who have been honorably discharged from the United States armed forces and who make a passing grade on the examination. Application blanks may be ob tained from Russel E. Shrader, Merit System Supervisor, Little field Building, Austin, Texas. All applications must be mailed before midnight May, 31, 1947. limitation and the other safeguards under which the Bank is to operate, officials say the agency can ride out a long world depression with out getting into financial trouble. 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 _on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday afternoens. Member Flssociofed Cplle6iate Press Entered as second-class matter at Post Office at College Station, (Aggieland), Texas, under the Act of Congress of March 8, 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 Lindley Charles E. Murray J. K. B. Nelson David M. Seligman Paul Martin Larry Goodwyn, Andy Matula, Jack Goodloe, Dick Baker, Earl Grant Sports Writers Wendell McClure Advertising Manager D. W. Springer Circulation Manager Ferd B. English, FrankHn Cleland, William Miller, Doyle Duncan, Ben Schrader, Wm. K. Colville, Walter Lowe, Jr., Lester B. Gray, Jr., Carl C. Krueger, Jr., Mack T. Nolen Reporters Corps Editor Veteran Editor —Tuesday Associate Editor -Thursday Associate Editor ..Saturday Associate Editor Sports Editor Butterflies, Moths Volumes Now in Library WILNORA BARTON Reader’s Adviser The semi-rare edition of the two volume set of Moths and Butter flies of the U. S. East of the Rocky Mountains by S. F. Denton has been added recently to the natural history collection of the Texas A. & M. Library. This library’s copy is one of a limited edition which features a very rare type of illus tration—the transfers of the scales in natural colors of the species from life. In the preface the auth or explains, “The color plates, or Nature Prints, used in the work, are direct transfers from the in sects themselves; that is to say, the scales of the wings of the in sects are transferred to the papers while the bodies are printed from ingravings and afterwards colored by hand.” The author had to make over fifty thousand of these transfers for the entire edition, and not be ing able to get any help to do the delicate work to his satisfaction, he collected and transferred each one himself! This is indeed a labor of love, and the results must have been rewarding. Denton succeeded in capturing all the beauty and perfection of the species them selves. This_ process, called Na ture Printing, is not original with Denton. The same process was in use by 17th Century naturalists, but in subsequent years has become a lost art. Denton revived Nature Printing and experimented with it for some time before he used it in his work, which was published in 1900 by Bradlee Whidden of Bos ton. Finch to Preach For A&M Methodists Dr. W. S. Finch, Administrative Assistant and professor of Bible, Southwestern University, George town, Texas will preach during the Sunday Morning Worship Serv ice May 4 to the A. & M. Metho dist Church on “The Call to the Christian Ministry”. FRIDAY - SATURDAY DOUBLE FEATURE VINCENT PRICE LYNN BARI CORSAGES-- Contact Our Agent at COLLEGE BOOK STORE or Phone 2-1658 PLEASE ORDER EARLY Bryan’s Main Street Florist BLOSSOM SHOP Flowers — Gifts Next to Canady Pharmacy—Bryan FRANK LATIMORE- , ANABEL SHAW X. MICHAEL DUNNE ^ Directed by A ALFRED WERKER 20th Produced by CENTURY-FOX AUBREY SCHENCK P,CTURE — Also — First Pictures of Texas City Disaster Hypnotism can be dangerous-'*' Recent experiments by Dr. John G. Watkins of Welch Convalescent Hospital, Datona Beach, Florida, suggested that when hypnotized, some people might be made to com mit murder. . ^ In one of his experiments Dr. Watkins hypnotized a private and told him, “In front of you, you will see a dirty Jap soldier. He has a bayonet, and is going to kill you unless you kill him first. You will have to strangle him with your bare hands.” “The dirty Jap soldier” was a lieutenant colonel, head psychiat rist and director of the neuroply- chiatric division of the hospital. Upon opening his eyes, the pri vate creeped slowly forward and with a flying tackle knocked the lieutenant colonel against the wall and began strangling him. Guards pulled the soldier off. “The dirty Jap” said that the grip had been “strong and dangerous”. Pointing out that the private did not violate his own conscience, be cause he thought he was attacking an enemy, Dr. Watkins said the Private “was acting under an in duced hallucination.” In other trance tests, Dr. Wat kins, forced soldiers to divulge mil itary information. “The controls,” he explained, “were not as rigid as one would desire to establish firmly that criminal compulsions are possible, yet the combined weight of the evidence from the studies definitely favors that con- A&M Research Foundation Trustees to Meet May 20 Trustees of the Texas A&M Re search Foundation will hold their spring meeting here May 20, Dr. A. A. Jakkula, Foundation execu tive directtor, announced today. tention.” He added that the subjects chos en for the experiments were high ly hypnotizable, but warned: “There apparently would be many thousands of individuals like them in the total population.” NEW RAZOR Simplifies Shaving World’s Newest Razor Gives Swifter, Smoother, Safer Shaves Mystic, Conn., Mar. 7, 1947. There’s a new razor out, sim pler by far than any that has ever been made. The new Enders Razor is all one piece, no moving parts, no extra gad- gets. All you do is i click the blade in & and shave. And what a shave! The razor doesn’t clog; it’s easy to clean and keep clean. Its modern plastic handle is curved to fit your hand. Its shaving angle is so well set to your face that it reaches easily all the hard-to-get-at spots—around chin, ears, nose. Get this amazing new Enders Razor at your campus store, at the special intro ductory price. SPECIAL OFFER... RAZOR AND 5 BLADES... 49^ DURHAM-ENDERS RAZOR C0RP., MYSTIC, CONN. THE WESTCHESTER by for urban and suburban wear. . . beautifully tailored button-down sports shirt with stitch less collar and cuffs... ocean pearl buttons... long shirttails. Sizes 14 to 17y^. In soft pastel shades. Flannel, rayon, rayon and cotton. LEON B. WEISS — College — Opens 1:00 p.m. Ph. 4-1181 — AIR CONDITIONED — THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY DICK EVELYN POWEll- KEYES %I0!/ O’clock 3 te).COBB-Ellen DREW-Nina FOCH S. THOMAS GOMEZ • JOHN KELLOGG Screenplay by Robert Rossen DvecM ly ROBERT ROSSEN TEXAS CITY DISASTER NEWS-REEL SHORTS Going Down!! SPECIALS MEADOWLAKE Oleomargarine lb 36c All Brands All Brands CIGARETTES SOAP POWDERS $1.65 (Large) Carton 29c Libby’s ’ - ' V i 11 n BABY FOOD, each 7c Hi-Est. PLUM PRESERVES, 16 oz 25c Libby’s APRICOTS, No. 2i/ 2 31c Rosedale ENGLISH PEAS, No. 2 18c VIGORO, 5 lb 38c MANNING SMITH Fine Foods “At the Entrance to Aggieland” East Gate (Formerly Luke’s)