The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 18, 1948, Image 2

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Awrence
Let’s Do Somethi
ORIALS
■J- ! • • ■ - '' . ! ■; _
: k -
vt^
•i.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUSt 18,1948 *
Statesman, knightly Gentleman”
/an
Founder o£ Aggie Traditions
L-v
Cushing ^eraorififl tibra
place for anyone to study,
for anyone to work there
gmaH fans that haVe been
nothing but fstir the Hot, siittry air that
i-v
r
I
ninl of th
is found in et T ery rc
Counties^ times, jin! the.
editorialized! for soime -for
system in the library. Our
have worn but typewriters
About It. . .
HOMi
’• .
/
»g
is not a .fit should have more , fans, but j we also be-
is too hot lieve that fans should be placed through-
tod the few out the building for the benefit of stu-i
rovided do dents who come to the library to study,
from the h
A*
>ut to
something bfe done to jprovi
i heai
The onljl ! result J Of our
tori^l efforts has bfeeiji the
few> electric fans behind the
desks. We d > not begrudge
building.,; ~
we have
of cooling
predecessors
asking that
some relief
a^ail.
|revious edi-
ditk4 of a
(various loan
of the libraify their ]fahs. W||j; believe they to work in
I#
The Cloak
The ‘‘stites’ rights” fa
Democratic
bitter fight
i> | ' ^ Fort Worth
of
Party ini Tex;
on September,
to read, or eyeh to loaf.
We can think of no reason for not in
stalling'fans in the library. They would
cost money, sure, but it would be money
well spent. Many students avoid the li
brary simply because it is too hot for
anyone to work there.
It is time for someone to take action.
It is time to install window fans—big
ones—ob each floor and time to put stand
ing fahk throughout the building- These
meaauLes migni not lower tne tempera-
'{ . <: {: '■
Trampling Out the Vintag
MiMiWi—MimAlil—Mai
.1
I
otent Water Dial
A
Arouses
■A
By JOE HOLLIS
character in Raritan Township, New
sy, began to wonder about his water the
othpir day. The darned stuff had a peculiar
and seemed to have an after effect not
ofteiji subscribed to drinking watjer. ^
satisfy his curoisity, -he had it
tested and was informed, that the water
contained from 12 to 33 per cent alcohol.
The explanation was simple. LThe builders,
put. alcohol in pipes to prevent freezing
during construction, and apparently it
had not been removed from the pipes con-
tempting
single
ments.
The
o fqr. I
mfn it offeifed
house t h *r<, i aid:
ried?
Meals
nected to his plumbing. Until the Tire-water
..Jit. — * J - - J - * -iyidual
Amplification Department
I fee employees ture, but thjey will make the buildirig fit
/
tes’ Rights’..
tion of ( the tastic quality of their political scheming
is facing a have alienated a majarity of the voters
1114 when the in a majority of the states.
State Democratic Cpnventic n convenes in ' The Dixiecrats have cried loud and
Monday; the
/
i r-
ers of the barty declared'
the rebeljidus Dixiecjrats
i
r-alist memb- long that their party is dedicated to pte-
jrbal war on serving “states rights.” This is not true,
stipulating Their real dedication is fo maintain the
T that- only those party memtoptrs who open- status quo of the South’s racial minorities,
r . ly declared! themsdyfs as : jsupporters- of The cry of “states’ rights” is nothing but
the Trumaia-Barkley-ticket (would be giv- a cloak used 1 to shield their real purpose,
recognition at the convehition. It should be apparent to the men be-
This action nn the (part q : the Loyalists hind the Rebellious Democrats that the
is representative pi growip $ hostility for South cannot reasonably expect to main-
' the Dixiecijat movement, t) Toughout the tain a fixed and unchanging attitude to-
South. Eyecyday -jnbre pjS< mthern news- ward its, racial minorities. These 1 men
papers are? declaring them iclves opposed should use their misdirected energies to
to the rebejlious Democratic establish a fair and workable solution to
, The dream that the D Ikiecrat move- the racial problem. If they would do this
ment is the forerujinier of a new political the problem could be solved in a gradual
party in the South appears} to be nothing and non-disruptive manner rather th^n in
jnjbfe than; wahful) minkink on the part the sordid and degrading manner now
of a few,mjsikiThe impvemelit offers noth- being employed. 1 ^
jng that h is any'ml appeal to the ma- • Perhaps if th^ Dixiecrat leaders had
. jority of tie. natiojn’s'voters,; This means realized That the odds against maintaining
that they cun have:rip hopeIqf creating an the status (Juo of racial minorities are
^effective rational pdltical jparty/now or' greater now than the odd$.which faced
j ip the future. And, as the jArkansas Gaz- their predecessors' in 1860, they would
ette points out, “In the South itself the have paused to think before walking out
violence o: theikj (the• Dixiecrats) ap- of Convention Hall. They will discover,
proach, th£ excesscs jof their oratory, the sooner or later, that the bonds which tie
By CARROLL TRAIL
Dear Sir: <
Why j is there a garage being
built to be used about once every
three months when shades and
new desks are needed in the class
rooms ? h
Do you realize that there is only
one piug pong table to 8,000 stu
dents? I think that the situation
is deplorable,
Respectfully,,
T. M.
Answer: T. M., you shouldn’t ,be
so impulsive. If you would just
stop and consider a moment, I
feel sure that you will sec the ne-
cessity of the garage. :
Now the boaid meets avout every
two or three months. If you had a
now car, wpuld you like to leave
it out over night for two or three
nights every three months? Defi
nitely not.
Anyway, the money shouldn’t be
spent on anything as superfluous
as shades. The morning, or even
ing, sun will do you good. You’ll
enrich yourself with .the energy
giving vitamin D which comes
from the old Sol’s rays.
As for the ping pong tables, ap
parently you are taking one of
those Snap schedules. You have no
business playing ping pong. I have
heard quite a lot of complaint
about the table and paddles over
there, ¥ anc( ^ I have found every
charge is groundless. The paddles
are made of some very tough wood
which permits throwing ori the
floor without breaking. They are
even warped slightly to permit
p Iffli ■ !
. ea&y cutting. With these paddles,
one can geit quite a spin on his
serve. r '
New desks needed in the class
rooms? Never have I heard a more
absurd statement. Why that’s stu
pid. You probably think that the
seats with the arm rests gone are
broken. You .are wrong. The rests
were purposely removed to keep
the drowsy student from lying on '
them and falling asleep,
The removed rests are used to
prop up windows whose weights
are gone. I
Repairs and improvements rath
er than a garage, T. M.? I scoff
at you.
★
Dear Sir:ii! ' ■
How mtoiy state, legislatures
have ratified the proposed amend
ment limiting a president to two
terms? $ | •
Sincerely,
li jM. G.
Answer: Twenty-one of the nec
essary 36 have ratified it, in this
order: Maine, Michigan, Iowa,
Kansas, New’ Hampshire, Delaware
Illinois, Oregon, Colorado, Califor
nia. New’ Jersey, Vermont, Ohio,
Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Connec
ticut, Missouri, Nebraska, Virginia,
Mississippi, and New York.
If there Ss a Republican land
slide in I November, • it is quite
possible that the amendment will
be passed!
Apparently some people look for
a Democratic victory. It is rumor
ed that Missouri is trying to with
draw its ratification.
has been completely drained, the indiv
willjjust have to put up with the conditions.
robably the man doesn’t mind too much
having to suffer the spiked water. Why it
should even be a pleasure for him to get up
to get his wife a drink in the night.
A . ★ . J -
Perhaps campus life will be eased soon.
The Federal Communications Commission
has announced that since “citizen’s radios” ^
are how ready for the market, they will start
issuing licenses for their operation. Thesei
camera-sized two-day radios that will soon
be jmass produced are patterned after the
walky-talky used extensively in tji^iivar.
The uses of the midget broadcasters are
unlimited. Class lectures could be much more
pleasant when students start buying the
things. Rotation could be practiced among
the class members with one person attend
ing class carrying ope of the gadgets. The
rest could then merely tune in and lie back
in the sack to be educated in comfort.
I *
A Sacramento, California, newspaper ran
an advertisement recently that had a mighty
All wit|
It
ing d
©ng
that tyy
Perhaps
from a
and shh
ious coii4i
1 If a
tisemeil
-been p ap
a sma
civic s<
that fl|
.Hard
becau
married.
j'
*
bi
.
was to 3
tim ask4<J
billfolc
Was the
■f: Six
crimina
his ow|n
dress.
)eijs imn
g^ieiPusI
n
Learned Politician Ready to Head
v< ypur j
Vi d.j Lai
iu; ttoe ej pe
i st) bjj adijjiit
bit you
Ireid.
dm’t
e land
i like
it be
rAtion
■eider wc ulditake the above Adver- *
Communists Undermining M
4,.
r
wfeich
ed By
J
stigution
' Ti “-i I ,j ■■
fi
at icomfort-loving,
convincing argu-
ji .. ■ •.
placed by a boarding
:helor$, why get mar
ie Rooms., Beds made,
and cleaning service. | V
of a wife.”
that it’s an appe&l-
canT believe every-v
does a person know ’
the toast there too.,
would nag. Renting
tha ; is an important step
idmped into without ser-
* 4 I- • ■■
r: ■
ace falutel thtoi it should have «
i n Oi nard papers too. Oxpard,
U|wil in jalifornia, lost one of its
ia clubs the other day. The club
ir shed u ider the title of the Ox-
h ilor’s C ub, was forced to disband
tl e mem 3ersi had ; resigned to getl/
(jtqing has) bee n said yet but pre-
pours
latf 1
His er
b llfbld c
mist
5
sumablj^tlle pharfer qould be revised and the
ex-mem
Baby-I i
ganizanii
igain to fopm the Oxnarcf
lers Club or some such br^
• j . j ■;! ■>
(*: ' 1 '
A held up art!it ii Indianailolis, Indiana,
ohlij ing or ns own good. His, vie*
meekly for the return of the rifled
Tpe gum lan tossed what he thought
)ed-o||ie\s wallet and left. -
: dr*
r the police informed the
or. He had giVen the man
mts ining hip name and ad-
. M I
Brazos County Revealed by Conr
L-r
unsavory
have f Ipc
of those who - the South to the past cannot remain un-
r and the fan- broken. .
Character <j>t somip
kfed tb their bann|i
. . [4 l ■
Cotton Brokers please Take Notice ...
L ' ^ I : c > ; ■ Wi n j
Between the Book Endn L . .
: 1 J 1 * — ; "’"t y. '■ # 1 .
Americans Crazy, M.D. Finds
In Book on Mental Disorders
W- 4
The terms in Whhrh cotton quotations
are given peem rathjer 4rajji> besid^ those
used in tobacco markets jjiv Georgia;- and
Florida, where auction splis are now* dis
posing of;this year's crop. It’s not too
lunch to say that these tobacco terms have
a gustatory quality'.j ^
A typical report from the cotton mar-.
ket lists: Good brtliiiary, sftrict good ordi-
j!
nary, low i midd
4r
strict
low middling,'
sales:
Leaf: Good lemon, fair lemon, fair Or
ange, low' orange, j T
Cutters: Fair lemon, low lemon.
Lugs: Choice lemon, fine lemon, good
lemon, good orange, fair lemon, fair or
ange, low drange.
At the bottom of the’list of quotations,
beneath those nice citrous designations,
and at the bottom in price we find “Non-
middling, (strict middling, ({good middling, „ descript.” Maybe you have unwillingly in-
strict good middling. I haled some of the exhaust puffs emitted
Geoigi ttond Florida papers havfc these by a fellow who was smoking that grade.—
terms
rjujuuct tucoc uy a iciiuw uuv otii
reports from > (fen’ent | tobacco The Arkansas 'Gazette.
JoseK&Ioreno, Phitippinb consul to New' We are definitely against any further
Orleans, spid his country iftans to increase uplift movements—so far as prices are
trade with the United Stales. Day by day, concerned,
we becom| rtiore
never wanted
5 Ooitvinced the Philipp;
a i compleb! divorce f:
Uncle Ss
tenance c
but opb' a
'1
1 ■
1
The Baittalion, offji'
Gity of College Stapo
Friday afl
talion is p
4/year. A
News
ntrihutioi
111 Cla: '
Office, Ro<#n 209, (
■ ••t t- /
Goodwin
£ ' The
credited
fed herein. 1
rnoon, epee j;
Mlshed tri-"
rtising »a
cial ne'
^ Tetxa
pt-dur
weekly
dfis fur
sociated ]
it or holt
Rights
Entered .«j :8ccond<li
QUice At Ctfncct StAtlon,
the Act of
r , -i. ‘ KEN
• ■ . c. .c.
, 1 f.
Hervei Chi
*• VJvhn Si
. Andyl Duels
■
AC. J, W
B0NI>, I
Separate
ines .
from
main-
^ From time ftp time some outfit or other
investigates high living costs and invari-
ably confirms our belief that they are.
The Battalion
, T - K _
irja may
iped ads
Iwin
japer of the Agricultural and Mechanical College^ of Texas and the
is published five times a week and circulated every Monday through
g holidays and examination periods. During the summer The Bat-
i Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Subscription rate $4.30 per school
ihed on request. i. 4 . , -j
made by telephone (4-5444) * or at the editorial, office, Room 201,
traye he placed by' telephone (4-5324) or at the Student Activities
&ss is
jtherwis
repirbli
" ’ll ; 1 • ~ 1—
titled ^exclusively to the use for republicaticn of all news dispatches
credited in the paper and local-news of spontaneous origin publilh-
,tion of all other matter herein are also reserved.
iUIS Mi
; Marvin
tietary
inj Billy.-hw
"Eddie
SifJI
Member of
The Associated Press
Represented natio«(ally by National Ad-
vertfeins Service Ini*, at New York City.
Xngales,
Chicago, Los
and San Francisco. >
JAN...,
..Wire Editor
W ilson; H, Ti Wright. R. C. K bye Staff Reportera
-iioL. ...Sports Editor
E. Rom
.Co-Editors
wnii
ie»ur. Da
; ?
i
rd SWtoi t. ^HnnuUHi
'
_ Featme Wnatni Bnitagalay. V. C. Caraway, . M ^ >tOKraph * ,
irson,-
O. Critvey,
s’olen,
nrj i
Boh'ii Sack)
By T. NANNEY |
MIND AND BODY: PSYCHOSO
MATIC MEDICINE, by Dr. Flan
ders Dunbar, Random House: New
York, $3.50.
' People are crazy, nearly^ all of
them, that is. Eighty percent of
the U. S. population needs the
service of a competent psychia
trist. Fitly percent of the people
in our hospital beds are there be
cause of mental difficulties.- .Nine
ty percent of the pains,of this uni
verse are self inflicted. We’re
crazy alright
Dr. Dunar has come to our aid.
She didn’t write this book for her
professional associates. She ‘wrote
it for us. We need to understand
the relationship between mind and
body. Fading to understand we
must at least recognize that there
is a relationship and seek to un
derstand. The problems of medi
cine and psychiatry arc more than
statistics; no arabic digit!can ac?
curately convoy the tragedy be
hind’a suffering body or tortured
mind. [ s
Because this book is written for
us it is written in our.language. It
is pleasantly free of technical ver
biage and theox-etical obscurities.
The book does not attempt to pre
pare its readers for the - practice
of psychiatry. The complexities of
psychosomatic medicine are not for
amateurs. The book often simpli
fies the difficulties of psychoso
matic treatment in order to make
them comprehensible, and to make
their presentation more simple.
Many, physical i pains and disor
ders arc directly related to mental
pains and disorders.,We have sus
pected tjhis for centuries. We can
now prove; the Inner relationship
and make it a useful part of our
knowledge. Nearly all of us know
that such physical ilk as ulcers,
drug addiction, heart trouble, and
allergies are directly related to
mental difficulties. Few of us re
alize -that the extent of mental-
physical relationship'-goes much
further than this.
The list of physical ilk that
are often precipitated by mental
ilk is astonishing: abortion, ar
thritis, asthma, cancer, colitis,
appendicitis, constipation, diabe
tes, eczema, deafness, gout, hem
orrhoids, laryngitis, and tuber
culosis arc all interdependent
with the mind of man. Fortnnate*
ly for os, these ilk can also be
fought with -the mind as well as
■ PbyaphiatrkU now wojk in close
cooperation with physicians and
ns so that their tskilk can
the skill* of i the other,
sidvancet have .bean .made- in
Accumulation-of psychosomatic
knowledge. The advances have been
made so storift that men have not
|
yet been trained to apply it where
it can be|useful.
This country has only forty-five
hundred qualified psychiatrists. It
needs forty-five thousand. We still
go to witch doctors for aid. This
Week, Octi 19, 1947 reported that
we support twenty five thousand
full time “payfchqquacks” to treat
us for opr mental ills. The first
step in remedydiig thk situation is
to inform ourselves. Hr. Dunbar’s
book can help us do that.
Letters
SERIOUS OR NOT?
Editors, The Battalion:.
What do you think of cheating;
are you for or against it? Judg
ing from the Friday issue of the
Batt, I surmise that your attitude
is either; one of approval or of in
difference. When I read that a
series of articles were to be pub
lished oh this subject, I assumed;.
that the Batt was about to begin
a crusade for the elimination of a
deplorable practice. How wrong I
was! Jr
Instead of a crusade, you arc
making a farce of the matter. It
seems father inconsistant to see
the subject of cheating treated as
a big joke on the front page and
then rdad on the editorial page,
“When & person loses his self-re
spect apd integrity, what he have
left?”. ?Is this a serious matter
or is it not? Make up your mind!
i tif ■
ink it is a very serious
mattef. Most of the world’s trou
bles today arc caused by the fact
that there are too many people
who have rather loose ideas
about honor and Integrity. In
your discussion of the “instruc
tor's angle” you imply that an
instructor who takes precautions
to prevent cheating is himself a
cheater. Holy smoke.
If A&M had only a normal
amount of cheating, the students
would consider it an insult to be
checked on continually. Ordinarily
one expects to fmd in any size
able group a small percentage of
thieves and cheats, whq jure looked
down upon by the rest of tho
group, Here it almost unbelievable,:
to find that the general attitude is
expressed by the popular slogan
“Cooperate to .graduate”; in other
words cheating is perfectly all
right! In the face of such an
attitude the instructor would be a
fool not check on his students, and
vofy few students are insulted
wkenLc does.
Name withheld by request
note: The Battalion
ig a campaign to eli-
or„at least, reduce cheat*
By CONRAD TWIGGINS
{ I had planned to take a rest
from my wearing life as a public
sefyant. All the log rolling I’Ve
donp during my political life has.
weakened my once strong consti-
tutijon. However I feel that the
people of Brazos County need me
whether they realize it or hot.-
. ITtiings have gone too far in this-
^ proud count 17 and we must band
together to get rid. of ..the Com
munists. It is indeed a serious sit
uation when a body can't even
wiilk near a building without be
ing afraid of being hit by some
window-jumper who’s getting away
fripfn. the Reds..
It has come to my attention that
we in this area are hot free from
the menace of Joe Stalin. 1 guess
hbwever we must expect much
treacherous activity in a region as
highly industrialized as thj$ one.
Russia couldn’t afford to leave the
Brazos Bottoms alone. 11 -
Now my plan, which I’m sure
shiart people will back [up, is
appoint a Committee to >jpy on
Un-American thought jh Bra-
County and especially in Well-
bpto. You will need a fartecing,
intelligent, justice-dealing, Impar
tial, discriminating, and honest*
man to be the'chairman of Such a
committee. I must choke down my
natural modesty in ..the interest of
the people and confess, that I'm
the man.
ji Knowing that the voters are
right behind me on this investG
gation, I have mapped out a
program already. I’ll tell you a
few of my plans so that you’ll
know just what a bulwark of
djemocracy I’ll be against the
Reds infiltration.
jijrho first thing I’ve got to do is
Clbse up tho Economics Depart
ment. I've had my eye upon that
body for some time and now is the
time to strike. Friends, they have
bden spreading the rumor around
foil’ some time that the Post Office
whs a Communistic deal. (There’s
ielally no difference between the
Communists and Socialists which
th|ey have said that setup is.) That
Kind of talk has got to be stopped,
iTney haven’t fooled me with all
[their talk about perfect enmpoti-
tim and their drawing them cur
ves. That’s just a red barring to
ertnfuse you people. I repeat, The
Etonomics Department has got to
gt>.
serious thinker knows. Hojv £oujl<l go
they ever get a bomb if y e lon’t an
give them some atoms. (My of wa
you people interested cai 1 loc * up »e
in tho records and see that I pi- se
1- y
tion to place an immediate enter- te
go on shipments of‘atom? to t le^jpgr#
USSR.) Obviously then,t(use phy
sicists are trying to. hint (haft tjhe
traduced last year a reoon montia- lo k algie on the inside. You can’t
Russians should be sent u to ns v ,
1 could go on all day tell in j
about the material I’ve found,
But I think I’d better ‘xilain
how I’ll prosecute the> e p< n
with UnBrazos-like-thoughti.
I’ve contacted Paramo
Pathe and they are ready to comb
film the trials I’m goipf to hold.
I might even give the t 'hHsio
people an invitation to t< 1c vif e t
proceedings, I calculate hut ’ll pij(otec(t
get an academy award ojr lw|. ij’m lx}
Sneak Preview
-r + :
By ANDY DAY It
<U
aim! si
fhlps'e
of
>n
linci
to
plfl the
in c to
A ty
a. |
I*' ■ *
.X
ds of People In
IITwiggiiti
' ■ 1 •■' • i . ■" '
• ■ .1 /.
J*
Hull
that
ng tb ' get tbe Assembly
sill tickets. (Anybody
nts the popcorn concession just
nn .M’ll need several program
lers too, Ydu know “They all
juld
I'he
ifrafi
.any!
Hr communists
ii,”)
without a
’ll jjjiit bn i show that will make - '
boys in. Washington ashnm-
tiheir investigations, I ain’t '
going to give them Reds a
jto say that they aren’t go-
bhswt'jr fny questions. Fact
inatter is I’m. not even go-
gi|ve them a chance to speak,
tjoinfl knows there guilty a rate
bie punished. I certainly do.
'jieoplo Of Brazos Bottonjs
1 sliffi seriire at night.. Just qs
i^i Thel, lj|u Klux Klan atul
’ Tvviggiks are around to
you, there ain’t going to
doinmuniste in this areal .
I- ' f
J
Cilbirt,
A|ac< hr,
oris,
w lick,
io s
fif-ei c v
tu th T
“] lo< y
%'\ \ \[ .
A&M.)
j
Next wc got to get rid of (hr
Agriculture faculty. I heard
some of them the other day say
ing (hat Henry Wallace had done
some wonderful things for corn
raisers. Anybody that says that
kind of stuff, let alone thinks it
had better lose their Job.
The library can’t be forgotten
yhite we move in on these hid-
Ibn Russians. Someone over there
been putting some downright
sonous books on the shelf. .
me of those books that I’ve heat’d
ut have said some awful thihgs
abdut the United States in general
aid the South in particular. I’m
not sure just which person at the
1 bVary is responsible for theise
books but I’ll get ’em all fired
and then wefll be sure. ^
.There’s no doubt but whut tho
physics Department needs a Make
up. 1 have been suspicious come
true of the people over there and i
at last a break has come. I have
i straight that some of those'
courses, mainly oil, -apd 412, have
t een teaching the students that
t»e atom doesn’t belo
da akme. They have
tiat the Russians wi
qwn bomb someday.
The idea is preposterous as any
its. He saves her fromlldfcst rw tion yj* W NBl’i hi^forec'
as she.attempts to ju np JffI ^ 5lM: <* M&LI to ^“-c.
balcony, and before{ pi !
comes to a dose he is ipulchiin
with her.
Haze! Brooks, as thi (otller
man, doesn’t do much a :ti ig,
she manages to keep you intensted
due to her brief wardrodo. J vi< ent-
ly Miss Brooks dislike » T jv r-< res-
sing, because she payules no^t of
the. time in filmy gai n en s
der), which most cerfa n(: r
lih:
. /.. ?.
her off to an advnp
whistling please).’
The top pcrfomiuncbs
Dr. Dunn Ebdted
To AVMAPosi
(C au-
inl;
tug
ars
bj^autltol
us
akc
ovic
susponso in watching a
woman’s mind crumble,
lazel Brooks torso add«f" to
j M Slce^, My Love” a super
•‘i ; I" (I (
L !■ '
e
the
picjture
Dr. R. C. Dunu, cem
school of veterinarj- ncliditw
bpen elected a vice ]>r»ijlei
tijie American Veteriiuiy
Association. ' ;i
Dr. C--P. Zepp, St
!•>
Ctty, -L the president« dc
The 1
meeting f and 4l4cti|on
held (n San Francisco
I
1 ii iiuli
j.
” ests Vets
e NSLI Policy
SLEEP, MY LOVE
angle) starring-(Claudyt
Robert Cummmtfs, Doh
Hazel Brocks, George
and Rita Johnson.
This is another ono of t oe(e psy
chological .movies in
husband (Don Amechc
best, to remove his w
dette Colbert) froni the
cause of ’his love for a
man (Hazel Brooks of
Soul”).
Nightly, Amcche : drurt Hiss
Colberts night cup of rhccoiate,
and when she awakem i;hc f
herself on a train headifd fdi’
ton, or he suggests to hei t! at she
jump off her balcony in o thb
river, and even has. her se a a,. a , 8 B Ve ' ednsistenf with thi
wild-eyed (George Cop 0, ro ) k-ho lan?) : obligations and incomes,
professes to be a psyphattnt. _, * . . ,
u * r. • • TKj “threq-way clujck should coy-
Robert Cummins a cast al ac , r { k be^ficlaries,' both princi
quaintancc of Miss Cotert s 3 u 8 - nla L CDn ti.lgent; 2) manner in
peels a little % m t) e 0l itment , hith; procw< g ur ’ \ 0 ; ^ paK j t0
and moceeds to Justifj thjeor- ^ n(; k. iudc ^ Bnd (3) amount and'
f, NSLI r in
love
wo-
but
Ve erans Administration advised
’Jetervtis to' five their National
! ervide Lite • Insurance polibles
] erioljic “throe-way checks” to
ipake jeertain that their NSLI pro-
tneir
^ «%» r\v\ A
(un-
|how
(No
iU
Medical
York
1/"
was
trim
y veberans fail to name Mow
iuriek when they murrj' or,
Mi
jjvheHia desjgnatod beneficiary dies
“he 1 /ieterdns Administration said.
If k, veteran dies without mim
ing 1 beneficiary, or if no doiigna-,.
led benefldhiry, is alive at the
lime bl his dilath. Proceeds of the
limitWiice go into.bis estate and
are subject to inheritance taxon.
[FttMi distribution qf the, proceeds
may' jfiot theft be such as th® to 1 *
would have desired!
Changes in family status; or '
aftillyf Income often roquiro al vet-
oranj 'to change the • method pf
jwtttoment. He may joloct to : i’
his NBU proceeds paid to f
neficiary in U lump ^um or
m pqual monthly * installments’.-1
ranging frpm 36 to 240 months in «'
multiiints of 12 months, or a Uft-
l income. ' • - J -
tj’pe wid amount of NSLI
by a veteran should be that ,
best fits his pocketbook and
giv*. him Oikmost coverage. NSLI
term, ordiuavy
life, 29-paymer.t v
mt at age 60, age
65, dud 20 year endowment.
time
7,
i!
7,
■l