— ■ ■ Page 2 /1 ‘Gal ■;i[- * \ \ Battalion tori.a rf- i • old/er, Statesman, Knightly Gentle Sullivan Ross, Founder of Agi Kf J : •f • '■|v from theicte beef price to an old Whenever dor 11 creasfe, it u ■ry. JVJien Pfeuffer Hall fair l Although it 14 nice the c t, jlUdy’. M 1 office under ■I culation wanders drld War or roast It is also {a bit i i ingly gets back and more progi which! way will . to post its over the rear erl j ave permanent ill, some of the isk is worth it. i^red rumors' that ijments were dis train If the would be t cupants. With coming Up arid APRIL 2, 1948 jTraditi liedi . ieval appearing eyes. n cal that one of our newest Mive departments is forced a rement Engineering" sign tr« nee of Austin, old bu Wings were razed there He pjrobjem of relocating their oe uild- n, i and Pfeuffer ? Constructed in (they are 4&M’s thp new ^building program ning up and the small:size of the units to be redistributed, college facilities should be able to absorb the! groups shortly. [[f] At any length now is the time to gi t prominent Jand^ mjarks and ialrej even on trucks and serving uae^ul purposes. But ihjmany refuse heap. Other sfchools ;hei give grist for the comersatidi lads are wonderii g if tl; .'Phefe have evepijj: een wh; Physics accelerat oh exj continued m Pfetffer becjWse of the they placed bn the found; imbn. : Seriously speajking, habe such old ihgs as Foster, Poss, Aii^t served pastltheir (useful age the late eighteen hundr most now servin ways their'^enerajl raggddt appearancei ques- umc* acm tionable conid^ion, and pcjbf location hullify duly proud of their usefulpess. 1 . 11 j ing that even (theW hide the walls with ivy. Foster and Rdss arelpfcobably in the best At times vfe ithe inclined to agree! with State bf repair and hbusfe* more wor^ (Spaces, the reply:'given bv a Houston ex when a Nonetheless'it s ;ems cm&in that; many a matron of that pity belted him which of new Lieutenant h^s pepdered thoughts of A&M r s fine old bui dings He thought the most transfer w^en he first jejp^roached his new attractive. Hisj pe^ly ^vas “Gathright, Lady” cap simply shovel them BETWEEN THE BOOK ENDS .. •. the matter thought and decide if it is wise! to leave the bi ilclihgs odd-angled about the! campus | bdth s iggjihg floors and walls exud ing bricks unt 1 ... ’ iauil the remains away to the ive old buildings and are but We can’t Help potic-: hide th^ •Ml Mm know* "nothing:. He merely has beUefs. Some seventeen years ago Dr. J- B. Rhine of Duke University, hav ing gathered together all the mea ger evidence that existed Irom tne past, set himself to apply care ful, scientific method of the prob lem of consciousness and man’s mind. He developed a technique susceptible of detailed analysis, and started a series of experiments on countless Human,subjects which has gone on from that day to tnis, and is still continuing. p j Dr. Rnine got results. On the basis of controlled experiment it began to appear that mere was a non-pnsrsicai factor in man’s mind wfuen operated In accoruance with laws of its own and not in accord ance with the laws of the pnysicaf world. Dr. Rnme publisned has early findings in ’“hew Frontiers oi me Alina’ in 1937, and a storm of controversy immediately snook the scientific world. He was attainted by orthodox psychologists Whose science was based on me premise tnat nothing happened in me mind that was not oi a physical nature. They’ attacked his experiments and they attacked his statistics^ But the first vbn. San Antonio Of Southw Poetry Confi The twenty-first Intercollegiate Poetry held Saturday, iApnl 3 •University, ban An Goddard, president of Delta chapter of the Delte, has announced. Speaker for this session. w{ Amy Freeman Lee, farmer laureate of Texas, {jj j The meet will have n High s< division, an academy difision, • college division, each] of w! has its respect 1 ”- <-J This annual’ 1 ed in 1927 for TOT iana. All amateur ipoe send-their contribi the rules below. All ■ entries si in triplicate, and R. Crawford, Oha try Meet, Tritiity Antonio, 1, Texas. Fictitious names ed to the poei the school omi script. An enc — Italian Election Critical... tions in Italy j%s over b elections. Yet in some Italy may effejqt us as a -It’s a kraq&t tifrn rr . r .- r — TC _ T ^ Americans asjnuich worried qvfer the elec- % the government. • ! oi tne.least known and-most importa Dff evelnts that gets chamber and therefore had the right to form of the earth. Liberia i$ little known own Presidential rays the rbsults in fally jas the results re . is a test between Some Christian Democrats, Republicans and anti-Commiin^f Socialists point out that anti-Cdmmuni?ts together commanding an assembly majority could make a froht gov- Story of Country’s Growth Told in Morrow’s ‘Liberia’ iT iffM ; : , ! By MRS. WILNORA ARNOLD Readers’ Adviser j ! LIBERIA By Charles Morrow Wilsoi$i ; ! i [pi i |.i One hupdrqd years ago there was ^founded on the west coast of Africa the small Negro republic that is today one of the least known andilmost importantveountries on the face :ause it is small and its story has never f here. For the election th Communists arid /"i^aly goes, iso ttia tead^rsancl fof|i?S3l|)fnatr^ t|ie‘sTtMa- J Communists^ould fight to back their claim tton., according to Frank; O’Brien of jAssocia- On one side in [fhe Ifcahan camnaitrn stand ted Press.:T Ij ; ; : £ - Italy is the! iwest’s Europe. 1 If the Co ion ^ flue nee may ^ ^ But sh frontline bkstiori in If 'the Commjmists! IIsjiil to win a control ling positidn in I ;aly the spread of Soviet in- halted western democmcy. capitalism and the Ro man Catholic Church. Oni the other are Rus sia’s so-called! eastern democracy and Com munism. !i i. Mj I Z But should Jtaly hands, Sovjiet iiiiiluence orful forward thrust. In his campaign, premier De Gafeperi has comnared theiprefiejit to the last days of the Roman Empire whe fMll into Communist down on Rome, i nimst ,'pcwi «tauld receiye a Srful forward' thrust. I M Z, The result,, these s toes believe, prob ably would, be eventual inclusion of all eontinental Eyirope; wxcspt Spain and Portu gal, within theiR ussian, D|rbit. - Italy’s voters numbe ‘ some 26.0 )D,000. On election dky, tpy will dhoose a chamber of deputies ahd a sonate. - The campaign is shadowed by a wide spread fear thajt. .befoffe or after'the elec- the Barbarians swept Thg churcH hafe wurped that those voting for tlje Comnjmbi^t-dbmihated popular front risk 1 T goes the Marshall | Pla!i|. j ! It alsq has saiq that any Italian who joins the Coi|nmuniht-p4rty never may emigrate to the United States.] - Thq Marshall 3 :> Ianihas become a holy de- bated Campaign [asue. ^Simultaneously; with tion, the pjoweii|fiil extrebie left may resort to Russiafs oppejsitidp to ERP.Nfralian jCommun- strong measures to| gairj jcontrol. | ism m^de the plan its chief bogeyman. d be: (1;) a strike The proposalWestern democracies to remote, because it is poor, and because been completely tojkl until Uow. v—* ^ mr Liberia Herpelf, loitbis nyw Rioaujte aDout 17 ifer ^ f orrA 0l eo vernment is an eX-l^hey altftr the basic scientific con cent ol the world s supply oi natur- p eriment " certam to ij e gtudied by ce P ts tbe world. Man has be- beLibenl S^hv new coutUms formed during the Ueved similar things from time im- huppens to be a Labena and why d i ssoluti( j h o{ empires. Here is a momonal, but he has never known in Dr. ttmne'B Case stood prov< Dr. Rhine has tound out many things since those early days. This book is the story of what was tound, and how each finding led to another,land how each one increased the evidence. iMi A few of the things that have contain the been scientifically proved by Dr. Rhine’s Work Can be brieily and startlingly named. Without, sen sory aid, the communication of thought from one mind to another is a common human capacity,' So is clairvoyance, the ability to perceive | external physical objects. Distance j has no eafeCt bn either capacity: Both telepathy and clairvoyance | can be shown to operate in the fu ture as well as in the present and the past. Thus time has no eflect on them and there is such a thing as precog’mtionL ’ Most remarkable of all, it is shown in this book that a force of the mind of a non-physical or-|| der can produce a physical etiect upon an ob,eci. Furthermore, the etfectiveness of the force has no relation to the size of the object or the number of objects. ' These proofs are revolutionary. ihvit folio to if the rfmity, ANKS1 Uditor, The {Battalion: 11 While in Corpus Christi the fen* of Mr. and Mrs iQ provided most lous banquet whii Mtieliloi sly A s entertained hi fhe u. Joe gen » “nr horte following lalf bf the forty people who this j hospitality we wish td through the coltimns of Tho generously a ich was served ing the truck MU' vwsl the coltimns pf 1 sincere thanks for. re as ion of Aggie loyalty! on of tpe parents of Joe Mv ’ r, who is now a ! member ie ;i repent jSenior Class. Sincerely, ARTHUR HARNDEN Traick Captain, FRANK G. ANDERSON Track Coach. i ( * ■Mocna happens to cumvate ruo- spent his life learning and writing tr * a * aoout the tropics ana their prob lems, Charles Morrow Wilson, au- tnor of “Ambassadors, in Wnitp.” it is no small acnijevement on Li beria’s part mat: she nas survived as a nation for one hundred yeafs, empires. her is told nere by a man who has jgT of |ving democracy in severe Irp j ; * !|; : i THE REiVCH OF THE MIND. By J. B. Rhine. Man btoke the atom and he tra vels with the spepd of sound. He has turi|jd his science upop the Her precarious hiktbiy has been! a physical World and ripped out its succession of crises brought on by secrets, Releasing forces that can epidem.es, slave traders, outright ami perhaps will destroy him. He territorial imperialism by i the great has done] all this, but he has only thfem. And thisj is a book that none of us can afford to miss. FRIDAY AND SA ' ! u. ^ Betrayed by l^v’e, slayer^ defies world! >r and Hie school with the fic-, us name on the outside, ms njUBt be typed, double and not excew more then 1 ed pages, and ho more I ban ree poems may be submitted by iy student, Decision of the judges will be and the poems iurill become of the file i'of the Poetry Or John 8. Caldwell Optometrist Caldwell’s Jewelry Store ! Bryan, Texas powers, and, more recently, eco nomic imperialism which has been equally dangerouL Ml That Liberia exists at all today is due more, to her own courage and determination, than to any help she has received officially - These measures cou wave; (2) or ah uprising bv underground 50,000 Strong, (3) turn Trieste Hack liant stroke, jand j to the, Italians was a bril light!Help in the flections, Shame D, on «.■ I :1ml With jthe ccmihg but the Comjnunist-inspired strike news- Communist forces, abb orboth. ' j : fij fi j if L. Ijj. . , — r — n j—, — r - The pppuljafi’ftpnti ff submerging party paper printers kept many Italians from,read- identities. Supptjsb it elects the biggest dele- ing about it, Clevir people, these RedsJ Xl gation/to the chamber ajnd then presents its The letters:! written by many AmeHcan- deputies pot as paroels of Co.mnjunists, So- Italians biick to thleir families mav have! some eialists and others bul ras a soh1c|; group of effect, but the bad Reaction might cancel out ^Popular Front Depiuties.” ‘ j ! j the good. For the most part, we have to hope This wiouldL nable i; tb make the techni- that the hajile^s!Italians will see more hope cal claim that it was th a biggest party in the in our VVestithaii in tlte Russian East. j h j fth -I Tii -■ r ! i m i. I: Us Engineers. I If? Anrinrri'mpu: rmmt nn.aicrhfU spring, .comes! once again the old aiiestjpn] f‘What is to be done about thbjstrejetjs on thi[campus?” ' M no ill from the United States, the na tion in which the'idea of Liberia was conceived. : ■ I M |'.j I Early in the nineteenth Century Liberia began as q series of tiny colonies ot freed American slaves on the west coast 0^ equatorial Af- tica. With practically nothitig at their disposal but ydurage the Set tlers ma.ntained themselves, began to work out friendly relations Wuh the great tribes of the interior, and finally, in 18(74, combined the small coastal settlements uridOr one gov ernment as the Commonwealth of Liberia. if] ' ' 1 Ninety percent of its people'are tribe members, but all, women as well as men, are Citizens of .the republic and cast their votes in free and regular elections. This book is the story of Liberia to the present, both an inspiring and a tragic story’, but the great est and moat decisive chapters are still ijin the future. Whether they will Record triuriiph or disaster de- thought it worth-while to turn his science tjpon himself and to at- tefnpt toil discover what it is that makes him [enow he is man. (It is frightening to consider that about man, the knowef, man -t—j. ■« ANN D t 1 • i 1; I ■:k • • '' i l I i >15 ii kl IINHeew I I-. ■ ,:to a mere crawl, thei - breaking one p ' more streets passing thrS.fi Sections of the camfi too, there may or msiy In either cai the streets t •T unsightly as vralL .jj • | , Aside from the obvious dangers caused by these conditions there is the poor impres sion given to visitors tb the* college. A&M is one pf the outstanding engineering sfchools in the country, yet the condition of streets Ously poor engineering] jand absence ofj sur- in the country, yet the j facing to mention. They! are already too well and roads ojn tHis eartjpus probably rate as ; s udehis and residents of Col- the poorest Of any. Jege Station.- I ! i j I Many reasons havf been given for this A visitor drivyigluDj the finMbublei ^he deplorable condition, but the fact remains highway ieadijhK,to the Administration Build- that even a little attention given to our mg receives aijbigj let^cwn when he turnls on- streets would go a long way toward irtiprov-j to the stjreetk; that le^cf to various partts of ing their over-all condition and the appear- the campus. Ait inteiFepiidns, unless he slows ance of the lcamipus. tlhere in rejnj , S, _ The Battaiioi, offii bf College Statio i, [Tisx afternoon, except durii lished serairweek y. Su is a real danger of A thbroiigh overHauling of the worst pyings in His car. On parts of the streets, a planned program of wne jof the hewer surfacing and iresurfkcing, and a regular ind the older ones plan of upkeep i for all! the streets would do jt be Surfacing, and much to help remedy this condition and give laijy flarge holes in the campus an appeaitance that befits one July dangerous but of our nationV major engineering schools. I® Battalion I I News: contributions win Haltr i ClakisifUfcd ads nt; 209. Goodwin Haf] .. -V*|£l , • \ The c^i to it Rights lewspaper of the published five times holidays and; examination period^; Agricultural and Mechanijc imes a week and circulate! ; i I m ■ ■' '■iM- A Complete Supply Of CANDIES Jones Pharmacy /f !■' I ‘ 101 N. Main ! B ^i K ay and Saturday THRILLING, CHEERING i ROMANCE! Sunday Through Wednesday pm ..UtfeWte-j:' /OKtVEWAL* INTER NATIONW. M Tt! GUY H. D E A T O N Typewriter Exchange New & Used Typewriters i (Guaranteed Repairs i j 116 s. Main ; ’ • :BryBp f" l S NPWNNtellllMS T Froductd by ROBERT HAKIM and ANATC Directed by AN^TC Screen Pipy by JpH ta.ed one Story by ' SPECIAL SATI Motioi /! !. i Ml RAMpNB) I UTV/I rj tlTVA YMn DAY :.i JAMES WARREN .'JOHN •I0BEITI HAIRY HODS ROBERT CLARKE iSTEYE 6I0DIE HARRY HARVEY Produced ly J Qlrectid by HERMAN SCHISM • WIUUM It Scroon Play by hORMAN HOUSTI TroM tbt Noval by 2ANE SRI V ir . MjORNING SNOW—10 O'CLOCK T ' n! i j; I | P- ' '' 17 ' m ]:ture! kasociation B’ilm Library’s [n oi him ()P|5NS 1J00 P.M. PH. 4-MSI TODAY & SAT. -^Friday Features Begin— 1:40 »■ 3:45 -15:50 - to - 10:45 -v-Sjaturday! (Features Begin-— 1:20 -| 3:25 p 5:1m 7:15 - 9:20 ouuayp tuiOj exammaEion penous. During Rnei sumwier me oaiuuion is ption ,ratej|4.30 per school year Advertising|rates!.furnished on resuest. College of Texas and the City Monday through Friday er The Battalion (is pub-. tjed Pri otherwiie I cati » ■ Entered Office at the Act of ■*- i Vick Lindldy J. T. Millen I n. ' John SinRktaryi. lj ol > Mnurirr HnWieil ^fl—..': i i My be ipade — r ephone (4-5324) or at the m ijiade Wy telephone (4-5444) or at the ,< jay be placeid by telephone (4-5324) or it the r*- I ite4*h> other Mem lusively to the u& for rfepupli (ie paper and local news itter herein are also resfe: Coll< Member! I I Tidr ijndi tarn) news origin . ( office, Room 201i Good- t Activities Office: Room , • * . • ■ jA' K I e Associated Press e credit- herei It )_. Wire Editor " ...MBntsing •«--*- rtin, C. Kuncc, ..Feature C. Munr rot. J. C. .Fails, , Goodw:-n Reporters ArfvpftUin? Mnnuiyey Art Jaapoti Don “ Grady Grll Ss*n 'TiObfril ‘ •■'r l£l m MS nationally by National Inc., at [Now Irork City. 1 jda Angela*, and San ,L..Oo-Edi .. . ferkk z c !!.pboto Hammond, ,B vans..—........... ’ ■ ~Sp ?ports Writers- ...Photographer PALACE •"m ’’fit—^ SFRlIbAV AVn Q ATTiRTb AV I )AY AND Douglas Fail !| I = | _ta— . “I'he Corsican Brothers” i ; tlPKEVIEW jSAItlKDAY NIGHT SUNDAY THBOilGH XHVBSDAV T UK tmi torn" un, ■1 ; '■mil ;V ill TUESDAY EOPLI .WHO L AND LOVE IN! THE SHADOW OP OANOLAN Harley Gra and o Great ■■ Mpioa-^ NEWS - SHORT - CARTOON j 30c -t- Tax Included — 12c ■■ UmT-LT SAT. WH5VUE U:00 P.M. SUN- - MON. - TUBS. - WED. I 1 ;,-4-Fhajtures Begin— 1:10 - 3:20 i- 5:35 I 7:45 - 10:00 TL MUIfy WOOLLEY —Plus— WA1 r F r B » C Cl OCK HIGH l a—■iMi.iwiu.ama .... 4- ■ 1 tl I TMTAiacma . * ? Angela LANSBURY 0««g»lv MURPHY “ 4 tod I p < t i ^ Tb - Hi rii 1 !i ’I : i T f ; i