Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1947)
w Battalion M editorials Pan I TtTCSDAY, OCTOBER T, 1MT Disease Uck of Mm and (ima«lniUon ki a db* I adaKhty b«ta•sciJISS**S2SaftL^lXr.&£J32 oM^henSSin^ 4 * y 10 in * tituUoM S5ft« during thedly\t aim4nr\h trmmUy devalopa •■•MrinK that space and seating capao* •■dn^ the brilliant of minds. A dearth of tty la at a premium, we find that perhaps hum-drum we must compromise for maybe the Junior ur classes rather than out ihinkuig usually accompanies tl^ hum-d -kJw proce ’ > of education ^ ‘uaiurational with afret ^change of .d^aabetween faculty and we that most faculty “f® 1 *™ » n d students are doing excellent would like hke to see them given outside help-~hetp from men who are fresh ■S° m new battiefronU of engineering, atomic enatKy control, education, politics, in- dustry, labor, maa other «im»ii r f£ids , ^r 0 **** 111 World today is proceed- jng at such a rapid clip that an honest man » forced to admit that he can ill afford to wiut the publication of a book to find out what ia gom^ on. tVf believe that thia student body ahnuid be mtnodured to some of the outstanding in dustrialists, engineers, labor leaders, auth ors, statesmen and what have you, in the and Senior chases rather than the eo student bod\'. At any rate, the bringing of outstanding men on to the campus for con ferences and speeches is definitely needed In addition, we believe that frequent meetings to acquaint the entire student body with the activities^ program, and objectives work to the advan- To Feed the Hungry World... of the institution tage of everyone. It has been our observation that people react more readily and cooperate more close ly if they inderstand the importance of the common objective. In advocating the bringing of outside speakers, to the campus, we do not neS aanly mean the securing of men who hold the same beliefs that we da It is often more educational to listen to g man with whom you cannot agree than it is to nod your head in uniaon with that speaker who sees things as you do. Again, we are are interested in the in troduction of “Thn students in the Cadet Corps of wholeheartedly U conform to the re- queat of the PrceWent of the I’nlled , Mtl hi* Kood Connenatioe CW •Wlie In ohoening meatletia Tumdav Md eggieNM Thu^ada). , • ’ ' r JL '^L ^ ‘ With these words the Aggie Cadet Cofjw !?" ,ta wttttnghaii to support Pres ent Truman’i nrofmm for feeding war* SSg" this winter. There is no (jUMtion but that all other groupe on tbo JpwwUl give simitar -upprfrt u! the PiT (Complacent Americana — if there were any left-mu* have been jolted yesterday nmnutitf when the food proffim was an nounced in the same newspapers that car ried word of the reactivation' of the Com- munlst Internationale. We are not i care-free era of peace, and we cannot c e i v e ourselves about the seriousness world affairs. The World is no better off than it jvas in 1939. Here are the sacrifices President Tru- * n<1 Charles Luck man, chairman of the Citizens Food Committee, urged bn soe- ific segments in their White House appeals- The Public: (AX MeaUess Tuesday, (B) poultryless The Brewers: A greater cut in grain consumption »fr»n they promised Saturday night, when two in dustry groups agree, 1 to recommend that breweries stop using wheat and turn loose •locks they have dn hand. The Bakers: i i. |H (11 ■ <i grala-saving measurw. both in manufacturw and distribution of br<<«d which Luckman saki will save up to one- tenth of the wheat they use. The farmers: «. ,r4to w B«lt liiat moat Americana Intend to "10 •long with the President's program, many are critical of the planning behind it. Mrs. Geonra Ripley, p A» M»cKenzie Scea IJ.... Comintern Revived as Russia Again Seeks World Revolution Mj DeWIXT MsrKKNZIE rwMcs Arum Auiytt W«U. now do tU doubten fi-t naHy undtraUnd that thr BoUkr mat world revolution for Um aa- 'WttAS TODAY tabluhmant of Cownuniam k real ly under If sot, announcement •nca^in Poland and the eatabliah- mant of a head quartan ia Yu foalavia for co ord l nation of tho Bolakeviit l-JLL By J ACX lIUTLKiNiK Ameivas l»- Aaooclatod Proaa Suff onraniaa- of the Lubbock C orporation Court, ^ b „!L # lif Wfcl ‘ (#ro ^ ** ”? Uln mittanily m you will an irsto woman that he waa In no hav. 1 ?! ltd » 10 uW,f have the aid aWimping. •^•Intarn Mho The woman talaphnnwl and oa « ' "mmuruam n real- EhsV’zz. Cut R * tes ^Stomping, Lubbock Citizenry Learn FSaSSSi inotad had baun ahollahed, iky quirtins tha faara of a lot „ >n . „„ inr wiahful thinker* ■.„m«l!Jp W * t PoUit i w.. .» Jr* teral eomull. X: * Uo "*: ^ 'r" r * n tCt ” " rr •»« cheata," What, and eggless Thursdays and (C) the'sav^e ^ . program ** overlooking of^one slice of bread a day by every P Public Estine Piwiw- • w ni f ht ^ President of his food ci thht further efforts be made to curb the black market in food in continental Europe and to prevent hoarding of food. “We know that frequently the relief sup plies, including food, do not reach the people who need them most,* Mrs. Ripley said A group of state agricultural commis- wonerx including McDonald of Texas crit- »cUw Ahe program as overlooking the nece»- ttlfv frar - : ba • . ^ , production. ^ Public Eating Pla^o .(A) Cooperation in the meatless Poul try I ws and eggless days campaign and (B) the serving of bread and butter only when patrons ask for them. T The Grain Exchanges: An increase to at least down payment, or margin, have the nation* which cither are communiaad and coaaequently are dominatad by Russia or have strong Bolshevist parties. The new headquarters is being established ta Belgrade, capital of Marshal Tito whfe breathes, eats and sleep* as Moscow directs. Andrei A. Zhdanov of Russia’s powerful politburo presented the international situation as seen through Moscow’s ages. At the conclusion of the conference the . —„ and mem- <w ««* t **-»»pirad by Zhdanov’s ^?pl« to«t!Sf m CO Z Bit i ee |, re,U “ tod , UW STLi “kl^ ordertoh * v ' ,0 “ ,ood ^ ^ P*Jteident Truman, the Secretary (of Aeri- “On tb* on* side the imperialist culture Clinton P. Andersoa), General J ,ld camp, which (George) Marshall (secretary of state) nor f ? r lU e * M ‘ nti * J the **- ~~w.. rmj «r margin, requirements on “W member of the Prcahtentta food com- iSmSTTiJl worW , d<miln *- i Truma'n^d^hc^ ^ ** n<>t C<>Bip,y ' Ur nflTenCik to the need for *• ashing Tn^an said the government may find it “\creaaed production, which ia the only rem- tl » oU - r - »* anU-.mpIri.lut and nm'ssary to limit the amount Of trading,” «ly. . . 7 <1 «>»ocratic camp, whose eaaential '-third of their luirementa on nm-ssary to limit the amount of trading.” The Din tutors: J • A complete 80-day shutdown at the ear- Ueat pounbln moment 'More than one-half the industry already has pltdgi-d a 50 per cent curtailment on corn and elimination of the use of wheat)." Caution i* Dan^eroti* wo In w 0? u ace of * tremendous need, we shaU all cooperate. Yet we cannot mis take the palliative for the cure. Feeding h£.m8EL2 job 01 ^ moment rget jSfJ* r£ dts to -““'y *• «* It needs no elaboration. with it or you don’t VWIIbom Hope, Oklahoma philosopher, remarks: ~ T . “ (’autioua, prudent people, never amount to anything in thia world, or the next. Men < ilu>r of the Nnlt Lake Cttv (Utahi we created only a Uttie lower than angels. jXm, aa he nTan AFatoS poutebUBleu they addom July trek of «'-»• . utment to Either you agree j > > Ah, those marvelous Mormons, aaid the ctefrtpp. and they are a dtaai>|K>in This combination of MflpR la passed on for w . , iy and iw lever it ia worth. 8on * Utah PiooeerV reenact the Mormon journey acroiw the plains •tory read: "In the event of raCSe kmnrn wm be given indoors," said irman D. James Cannon. The Battalion Th« BstUlkw, flfflclBl^n*w«j*a|iir^ ( ,f Uw AgrWulturjil UshcHl iutol-weskly, Bubacrlpllou IPU »| per schuol ywt. Advertising rates fumlslwd on rv«,ur»t M \ffnimr of the Amoetated Prreg KKkU of l«poUk.tion .< ,U otbor m.H,r Cnrii, LTILpUi. eXXX Wnta. RaOWV* SS ***oaSxl*** matter *1 Pn*t Oifls* •* CoUa— Staliur, Trxat. umUt Dm Act of Cmmrw* of Marrh 1. 1I7*. Member » _ 7. AMOcuted College Pro, ' CHARUE MURRAY, JIMMIE NELSON- ’ « ^ ran* BkKA. Dak* HoMa. J. T. MUktr. Wire Editor Paal lUrtm ^ ‘ Mas* T. Notes Loom Mors**. K*n*«U Bond . I A. D- -Cain At* WUM H. Tr the world, and then went On the program Sunday night neither 4e, “* the “ »ident_Truman, the Secretary (of Asri- "P® th* on* side tha imperialist on to aanpMHBPBm aim consists tn undermining im-1 Penaltom, reinforcing democracy, and liquidating the ramains of IMMCWn. | “The struggle between than* two camps — between the imperialist camp and the anU-imperi*li.t camp l—is developing under conditions of the continued accentuation of the feneral capitalistic crlsla, the weakening of the forces of capital jam, and the atrangthaning eg th< forma of socialism and democra cy.” That’* ulkiM turkey. *Ttes^| no •ubtorfuf.. It’* a daclamtum of (Uolafical war to a finish-and that means a continuation of the strong-arm methods which Bol- sbeviatn has bean eihibiiing in Eastern Europe. Youth Oioir To Sing Thursday By KBNNVTM BOND The YouMi Halt af |to amm AvreiwiapUrtXgaSSS S .m-rwl music pwgram at iTm. J. hur t U / ^ Ojtehtr 9, at the teurvh in B^aa. Fiugraai la opea to the puMb. ^ Tkle choir made up of outotand- in !f, Z** *{ nr * n J «MKk, wiu sing such well-known number* »tew a Roe. ’Krv Bloom- Love My Shepherd Is". 1 Chorous will sing "lift Thine Eym- and -H.lh.ll Feed Hi. noek". The Girla’ Quartette will •waent “f Heard the Voice of Jews Say* and “The Beautiful Canton af Prayet*/ Ins Mae Aftor the program, the efelt chofar members wUl be boeti to Ike t iwople aad atoo to ail who I the concert in the lower rrtom of the rhnrrh. Fontaine Going To Be Own Boss By bob moiUM , HOLLYWOOD. Oei I (AIM-- Juan Konuine, frae far the fkmt Umo from film eaatraeU, an- nounea* that hwhafter shell werV wly for ham If, « u"? '* w y own bavid 0. Sebntok, she told me. Me i* now making «Uitm fn,a> an On- known Woman - fbr her rampart productions and will either make ■totuia* for that company or be loaned out by Itr She is happy with the new set-up after year* of work ing for Babakk. For instance, on her tost loarwnit, “iTy” the pro ducer received six times as much money as she did. #• HmrUland, »ho Just fnushe<l The Snake Pit,” wants to d" another ftlm right away. “But it’s got to be good,” she says That’s the trouble with Academy Award winner*—they want to keep topping their previous effort*. So they don’t work a* often. . . Bette Davis tells tne the Holly wood Canteen Foundation has found a worthy use for its large fual As soon as a location, can be found, the foundation will build a veterans’ housing center with apart menu to rent at 1*5 The foundation has discovered thht vet erans don’t want charity^ but a helping hand in housing would fill the bill . , Charles Boyer wanted to be in ’ Joan” but was turned down, and for sn interesting reason. His French accent would have conflict ed. All of the performers except Ingnd Bergman will be English or American and Chari**’ gallic tones would have stuck out like garlic in a French pastry. Sheriff A. T. Buchanan of n#lt county for a shooting spree at Rowena. Trigger-happy individuals shot up the town, Wild West fashion. They shot out street lights, and some plate glass windows. . _ ★ 1 V 1 Coanty Court at Law Judge Glenn Polk heard a prowl er, took the law in his own hands (in Um form of a pistol) but was forced to retreat. He saw a shadowy figure, chal lenged it, opened fire, then took to his heels. The prowler was a skunk. A traffic accident in Fort Worth scared a young mother bad- DALACE ■ t-MONr today-last day ida lupino in ‘Deep Valley’ TOMORROW THIIR8.-nU.-8AT. QUEEN -Tahtf UX Oty- OBNE AITOV ly. but in ip tor years abe’U laugh at it. Mrs. R. G. Watkins was driving te,5 tebg shower. U one arm she held ber two-months-old daughter. Saudi« U-igh. The car struck a rmtfh *pot in n tone, went out of control, and overturned. Dnaad, Mrs. Watkins climbed wreckage, still holding the baby. |h* thought the. child 11 *** ^ •N"" 1 ’ *** JI'M * quartor of a mile for help, was taken to a doctor and then to JLhe hnspitat. y M ihe kuepRal they (mind that the Uhv was j u „ astoep. Brs^ Waikm* suffemi a brehati arm, hut refused help unlU she waa certain the child was all right. ★ Sptotaag of accidents, one p*r- tlrtflar car U eenstawed Jinxed. Mr. and Mn. Jay Dickens of Clayton, N. M. were returning from a visit when their smalt son on the back seat managed to open the door, which flew o^TandtoT cd him onto the highway. He was not seriously injured. Mayor Douglas Cornwall, who had owned the car previously, said one of his daughters had fallen from it in the tame manner, with approximately the same reeawS Background on Comninnkt, Ubor Boards, an4 Unions WASHINGTON, Oct 7,—(AP)—Htre'a an mplanatlon of tha piwnt rgcitrenant about unlonu, oottimunlata, tha new labor itW, and tba labor boanl It aU fOYolvrei around an fw-not a-commiuM oath. But, before coin* ImIa Ota* i inAii J, , xmi* | t" 1 * here’s^ 7 * ‘ " ' '» JE ^ TMfrXX'Ji •p of more tean 100 unions there •re 41 to the CIO tte AFL and CIO have officer*. Bfee I-. •~ ! * , 1 ^ „ Th V m hM a Preeideut, wn- Itotn Green, a secreury-treasurer, aa# 18 vice-presidents y who are prestdents of AFL unions. Th- no has » president, phil- Hp Murrey, n secretoryttrensurer, •nd nine vice presidents who are presidents of CIO union*. So much for I mekground Ust June Congress passed the a*? Jrtf! bw ’ ^ Taft-Bartley AdL R did a number of things, in- eluding this: It reoreantoed the NaUonal U- bor Relations Board (NLRB.) The job of the beard ia to settle labor isputes between employer* and nlOflR. ; \ * * In shprt, it must protest cm- ptoyers from unfair dealing, by unions and unions from unfairness by employer*. But. to get this protection of the board, the unions must comply with the new law in several ways. One of them It thii* Butere the board will give any union protection against an *m- ployer, ft* officers must swear they’re not eommunista. Union* with one or more com- mumM officer, don’t get board pretectio*. There ere several such (Unions drni’t violate the law If their efftoere, even though not communists, refuse to swear they 1*y i-t don’t gat board t ion.) « But along earn* Robert L Den- t* 1 "', c, }i P, '* oun "l o< »bo labor b«ard. He has an timpartant job. H* investigate* complaint* that <»mo iu th« hoard • toling which aaidt L If* not enough for the of. ftare. if an indirtdual union to .wear Du-y are npt rommunlat*. ^ The tap far have •8* they're wL*9MHb j ThatSi whore the present cltoment slprtod «f the CIO re the fm-not a- xsax. m. CIO un ttoa. Rome frt board protec- topi AFL officer* were For Your Visual ProWema Consult Dr. Carlton R. Lee OPTOMETRIST 8W 8. Mala — Bry an Phene 8-lggS OPENS P. M. 4-1181 UST DAY hyvJMW'OSW*- - — Extra! — “CAT CONCERTO” A ‘Tom 'n Jerry' Afartamy Winn^ w4BB to tig*. §o, becauae Lewis hae refused to go along, to date no AFL anion can hot boxrd protoettoa. Maanwhilr, the whoie problem may be eolved for the union* by the five-man labor board itself This beard eaa overrule Denham and aay: For unions to get board pro tection the top atfken of the A FI. *®d CIO don't have to take the no-communist oath. Any individual union can get the protection simply by having its otei officers swegir they’re not communist*. Sorry, Please Entomology Officers No* Listed Correctly Officers for the Ento«M|Hr Club were incorrectly stated to the Friday issue of The Battalion C. B. Breteale, listed as secretary- treasurer, should have been named rico-premdent. and G. E. Capren- Ur, omitted entirely from the •tory, was elected secretary-treas urer. J*mre A. Deer ia president of the dub, and A. M Hillis, reporter. Regular meetiaa* •*• heM an , UN second Tuesday of every - month, with the next meeUng DR N. R McNUTT 'DENTIST 0W« la Pkriwr BaiUta, Over f snady'E I’haimary nm I-14IT Bryan. Ttu* UcU’B AutO StOFfh *». WSCAWA'II . Whterer Bikr Moteru ■teypte HyppHre Bouthgate CDtleg* BU 4-nre / BIT Bo. Main Bryan 8-iire HALL TVESDAY THBl THI RUDAY LOVE'S NO GAMBLE tire w«y lire piayti Want to teonv ho w lire 4o«« it fluid win*? Watch lor.,. m B BAT. Mm MIN. • MON. mu Of WAIMtH