The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 13, 1949, Image 2

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    Page 2
I
The liC
There
hltfh wall
The ocjc
Claim of
cltirtif otflej
tuck WHH
trunt that
non*!corpH 4
iod began i
And w)
torn down,
and brickf
The fit
posal was
have both
president
order td hj
tation, an
governme
Imm<
of the wa
ject byl o
care anyt^
shouldn’t
They dre
confusion
both unify
wreckers
terms thk'
Aggies Un
the one-fo
times for
§ '!
",
talion Editorials
r-
'50 Assaults a Barrier
] TODAY, MAY 13, 1949
Batialion Poem Co
w
came forward with the
now would be a good
over
whelmingly adopted a motion to vote for
unified class, and not as ^
swayed
suglt made on a tremble, j j f
^[Wednesday night. More people
he meeting of the suggestion that
urpoae of elating time to start gejtting together, a id
barrier under at- whaiming)y adoptud a motion to va
uspicton and dis- all officers as a
etween corps and small, suspicion^ groups. The wni
the post war per- heavily.
Then the barrier-busters proceeded to
was by no means elect one of the most level headed, capable
Elks very foundation and co-operative minded groups tp head a
are falling till yet. class in some time. Loose brick began to
struck when a pro- come down and the wall rocked,
venal corpsmen to When thej meeting broke up, corps and
nd non-corps vice nqn-corps Aggies were seen drifting off
r’s senior class, in in all directions, earnestly discussing mu-
rly equal represen- tual problems. It looked like :he wall
dy a voice iri. class might not be long with us.
' i / We are extremely pleased with the
lew assistant builders slate of officers chosen by the class of ’50.
o the aid of their pro- We believe they can and will, put forth the %
that veteran’s didn’t effort to make next year an outstanding
"lass Activities and one in A&M’s history. Under their leader
them anyway, ship, we can ajll work together!—not/as
Ifowels and fled in corpsmen or nort-corpsmen—but As Aggies
vifhen an avalance of for a greater A&M College,
in 1 non-uniformed wall We’d like to see aU the class of ’50, and
i d? them in no uncertain all other students, get together and dis-
was a class of cover that they, are all Aggies and all
They repeated working for the! same school,
ifot one, angle several Let's reduce that old wall to pool table
|i|. jThe wall began to proportions in f950.
Barn urn in Short Pants .
. % ■ ■ - li- . . .
*r » riw
Youngster Pla
Amateur Coni
.... .... By DAVR C08LBTT I N flimh hff trl^i tO|t«U
• Wh..
Now when ■ fellow hee
Htinlaht Hhootln 1 uun end u
idee, he Juet ain’t uironne eit
end let the glrU outdo him,
Them’* the neutiti
aid lteiN(*r, a little fellow
abort hell* and Mu wene.
hen (internT hta bid for being
Texet* youngeet nroducer.dlNd'Urr 'iJrlplx, aeidJ)M
-not bed et nil foi; a aege wird* meehlhgful; look
Irab^ he tried toj teU
to uiyinu e pie!
"repaure iSendJ
la ideel however,
of produuinu in am a
A pley atlH eeemdi
idea, thoutrh.rao he u
Iowa Into, plnylot I
Plimr," WlHin thiiTo*
(he reheercMl w
Hok III
. . 1. ' 14 li
Craa mo: Out of the Frying Pan
the Now
ors, have
ie to tli
Rocko B
ther-slih
This
Bronx B
beak bu$
can now
pies facA
his mamt
! if yoji
months $i!
/; Rocky
failed to
came sh
• M
that prA
career,
hill an
Dischar
time th
fluenced
flimsy brj
turn up
Wednesd
I
But
boot and
gions tc
ing in
hipdlers of bad boys, title from Tony Zale, and in a littlO less
thletic Commission-
sugar covered cook-
dqlinquent, young
1 known to the tear
ilj Rocky Graziano.
Dauble given to the
reinstatement as a
than a year, dropped it again to the same
WV.,:, j k •• : 'j
Since then Rocky has been trailing for
a comeback amt has gotten himself
" This
the wid
short or
’’rhUy i f
talion i«
credited
ed heroii.
Goodwin
further bad publicity by running 6ut*of a
fight in California. He did, however, give
up a forfeit he hud put up to make the
mpire State. Rocky fi»bt, which made him legally even on the
ntickles into other peo- j.
li ill __ .J** ! Now Tony i Zale has retired, leaving
the middle title firmly, and apparently
unmolested, in fhe hands of Marcel Cerdan
the Africa-dwetling Frenchman. Strangely
enough, Rocky! is generally conceded by
the fistic crystal gazers as being the only
lad around who, is now capable of de- ,
throning the fhiling Frenchman
A local boxing fan was heard musing
■ • ■ 1 .* | J ! • / /1 1
aloud last Week on the possibility that
there might be some connection between
jlen just as often as
tim victims.
ias been but a few
st body bade young
after ;be allegedly
alleged bribe. All this
tjie general revelation
ai rather shady Army
s^jferal visits over the
yith a Dishonorable
Cople charged at the
ssion was more in-
; evil past than the
fy, the likes of which
each every Monday,
ly.
Rocky’s return
is campus as well as the next,
iresented should leave you unvexed.
^ it’s round and it stands right side up,
out a liquid that’s found in a cup.
iread your Batt and on it do mull,
In Degree Battle
! /'[ \ ’ \By BIDDY LUCE
“What does this mean?” said the belligerent looking
graduating senior as he handed a white card to the man be
hind the mail behind the big door in the registrar’s office.
“It means,” replied Whispering Winn, that you need one
more credit hour to graduate this semester.
The wild-eyed senior drew his saber and ran his fOe
through like Douglas Fairbanks. Jr. Winn’s last words just
before rigor mortis set in were “you’ll never graduate!”
Each semester at Texas C&P there appears in the daily
student publication, The Ratrace, a notice for all graduating
seniors to file for their degrees. *
The seniors, with their rheumatism knees aching from
years and years of stair climbing, stage a footrace to the
Administration Building to fill out the little white cards. They
have come a long way, changing courses three or four times,
and most of them have accumulated at least 200 hours in
everything jfrojm atomic physics to animal husbandry.
Weeks pais! Then one by one the^ are called back to the
office of Whispering Winn who stays awake nights thinking
up ways to keep seniors from graduating. They relate to him
their sad stories about slaving for dear old C&P for so many
years and one grade point shouldn't make so much difference
in graauatijiuM <■ i v .
Whispering Winn smiles sadly and shakes his head.* He
has won again. No pink cards for that senior. What if he does
have a job waiting for him in June as vice-president of Stand
ard Oil? Shame on him for needing one grade point.
Think of it! He can stay another semester and eat in Club
Sbisa where baepn is only! 80 cents per molecule. Where else
could he get his laundry done where his shirts come back with
technicolor buttons on them (if any) ? 1
Year after year the battle of the B. S. degree goes on.
Some win; some lose. All those gray haired cripples trying to
get up the steps of the. Administration Building are not looking
for old age pensions. All they want to do is file for a degree.
KiwWr who'll only olght ymrn ol(U|
Dfck U rMpoiMlbi* for u Immi
•fit nmtUui- dhow that wlll tM
held Suturdiiv morning
by Un third grade of A&M
Kolldatcd School from
11 kt th* CempiMi Thealer.
It all started somp weeks peck!
when the girls of the school staged
u production of “Cinderella’I for
I, Mey 28
\&M Con-
i ID until
tutin
WL 0 u
tMtjj.iMre.
Of course, you ckjf
amateur show wilhojii
young tilthsrd went
merchants on
ting prises un,.
mars romplimcti
to th# ehow. [' *
the purpose of raising fund* for The youthful pr
the Cancer Drive, said Dick us h* will also be muster
fingered his German luger cap- at the amateur contik
pistol. be open to all cMIdrtft
ntlrt’. ivU.hoad j bes i
iwltcitod back to plan | 1
eur show. ’ i
Well, he figured as how the
ought to do something, too.
gals are likely to get a little
up over a thing like th^t.
boy* through seventh 1
The founding schools 1 / Jdi
stuck- Paul BUdabrand; Will
prizes.;'ii
So he took matters in hand. At The Campus Tjieafc j!
Sneak Preview • • • > If
Day, Carson Frolic T.
Another Warner Musicc
By HERMAN C. GOLLOB yet biting and wittj
"My Dream Is Ypura- (War- tS^Eve Arjkn;
hers) starring Doris Day and Menjo and f ^ chp |
Jack (arson (Campus). ika j j -' „ M D ^ m T ‘
Congratulations to the Campus, hig hi y pitable ^
whoso* midnight offering tonight
is of a lighter vein than have been
the past few late nocturnal piece-
de-resistances,
At the hour of 11:30 p. m., O. L.
Army, with gems of wisdom from
the knowlcdge-ladep pages of his
texts] still whirling; around jin his
feverish head, finds it quite a job
to keep awake if th(j film isjof too
serious, slow, or thoughtful a na
ture, full of meatyj or inane dia-
log-ue.
:
e (occasion by showing
In addition to tfio
the winners of
will be door pr
Tickets will
studjenta and 30
ii..
d asku that any chlldr
to enter the show go x ~
tkr i<> register. AH profits
for the drive against c*n-
th%t, he couldv
mudh else to aay-
he»n interviewed
irter bifore. And anyhok
i lime lw. get home fro)!
Aftkr all, thcikc ahowmf
lots uf iftinga to de.
lip the ion <*f Mr. nml Mrs.
i(l Hebt»r of College Hta-
fnihe ■ tenohes In Oic Ho-
ry ilnd NutrUlon Depkrt-
M, 4
- --
aiul HATl RDA1
iHHT Rvn
features St#rt—
- 5:X5 - 7:10 - D:25
Features Start *
&:30 - 7:30 - 9:25
v ,11V. ,’gt
numr
SHOWING
his chances of unhinging
Cerdan, and the fact that New York could
use a good middle weight scrap.
, We told the fan we didn’t know, but
that it would be interesting to,
middle fights were signed in
may, Rocky got the couple of months.
see what
the next
self into foreign re
ts profession. Fight-
he won the middle
|i'raradie...
e panhandle refutes
that all Texans are
quote).
8hor wtroie u citizen
w educated and cul-
If there is any catspawing being done,
we’d like to know who is the catj and who
is the chestnut.
PALACE
Bryan
TODAY THRU SATURDAY
tivated people hero pronounced (the name
of the town, i- • ,|
The citizen replied; “Educated and
cultivated people here pronounced it with
first ‘A* Jong and accented.”
And he added; “The rest of um do, too.”
IIV
i
'he Battalion
"Solditr, Statesman, Knightly Gentleman”
f fence Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Traditions
il nawipaper of the Agricultural ami Mechanical College of Tex|as and the
rexae, ia published five times a week and icirculated every Monday through
during holidays and examination pe
kly on Monday, Wednesday and Frida;
furnished oft request.
During the summer The Bat-
iubscription rate |4.30
is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news dispatches
rwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin publish-
blication of all other matter herein are also reserved.
SVBCIAL PREVIEW FKIDAY—-U P.M.
ALIAS NICK BEAL"
—wlwrp?' | j v; / V •; 1 >
Ray MUIand & Audrey Loiter
T SATURDAY PREVlEW^ril P.M.
per school
>) wcitinir advctiturf in time ...
*» x, Portrait of jiennie..
Member of
The Associated Press
Rcpmentad national]? by National A4-
vertiiing Service Inc., at Near York City.
Chicago. Loo Angelas, and “ ~
nay be made by telephone (4-5444)
" ads may be placed by telephone
n Hall. 1 S
or ait t
(4-53*4)
the editorial office, Room 201,
or at the Student Activitiei
QUEEN
CARTER..
1*1
'«i|
msi.
illiiiikii
KilHMi
&
Wits Editor
Managing Editor*
Fr..).
SPECIAL PREVIEW' SAT. — 11 P.M.
Cu.hin., Gmrf.
& a
WeZBiF*
geaMth Msrak. 8am Lsaiord. R. M - "
7:5 Tiiviio. Hard; > Rcw, Brad
me bMSir
-nmmmrw. JHlU MpertSSIr*
j: ik* i * 1
Bill Potta
Co-Editon
.. ,
k N > —. I
The cleverly-written, briskly*
paced, tuneful "Mv Dream IS
YourM" off era 0. L no chance
for cut-nupplng.
Using a plot that, has served as
the framework for mahy it past
musical comedy - roniancc, My
Dream, serves its it showcase for
the infeetious vitality Uiul mellow
voice of warbler Dhrls Day. Miss
D. delivers several Harry Wurren
numbers "My Drefim Is Yours '
"Someone Uke Ymi," "f’U String
Along with You," etir., iri her dovTn
to earth, invigoratiilg style, Using
u melodious mixture of zing, zest,
and girl-next-door ^armth.
The lightweight story, full of
complications and corn, is of the,.
Cinderella vintage. Miss Day, a
female disc jockey, is discovered
by publicity man, .lack Carsan,
who is hot in pursuit of a new
personality to sell to a frustrated
sponsor, S. Z. Sakall.
^Suffering the usual bough break
at first, Doris gets! a break when
egotistic crooner Loe Bowrtian hits
the bottle and can^t do his show.
She is substituted for him, and
from then on rises meteorically to
fame, while Bowman rapidly slips
to the bottom. After- carrying the
torch for Bowman for quite a while
she finally discovers his everything
for me character at|d tuyns to Jack
Carson, who’s been waiting aroundT
all the time. i
As a result of the singing peppy
personality of Dorist Day, the broad
7l\ j 'LXzi/Jr iL J*
T tl I) N O |- n I I- c T El M I I II. II I i
‘aj*'!”'!" v '-Sfi
10 AN USUI ■ JAMC OUM. :
SATtKIlA
IIOHKRT
>. -ijllVitl
The Co
'V
Monte C
m n
a
PHKVUE S
—AM
Sunday &
#•111
foil . - f
[piiw
LAST DAY
John Wayne
TBGHNlOOLpit HIT
GODFATHKHS?
SATURDAY — % HITS
KtfcKV TOWN HAM A
NCARI.KT HTRRKT
i AUt/l/T
! ACTION
SUNDAY — SEX
\ / i : ■ ' I ;|/l
SPECTACULAR!!
"NORTHWEST
STAMPEDE
IN CINECOLORI
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