i , - ; • Page 2 1 f Battalion Editorials THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1950 The Former Students and Opportunity A wan During the recent final exam period we had the opportunity to attend a meet ing 6n the campus of the officers of more than lOO^A&M clubs from throughout Texas and the neighboring states. We listened to their discussions, heard their speakers, and were able to see the goals which they are setting for themselves. Much of the conversation centered . around sports and how the Former Stu dents Association could help keep' A&M athleticaxm the comeback trail. - ‘ Ranking equally with athletics as a conversation topic was the program of Opportunity Awards. This program was begun in 1946 with ten scholarships. It has grown amazingly. Last year almost 11,000 contributions swelled the scholar ship furid by more than $94,000 making ;1949 a record year. This year, accord ing to E. E. McQuillen who administers the program for the exes, ain even higher number of contributions is {anticipated. In June, the first U Awards winners will be gr^ class of 1960. They will guard of hundreds of Tej will attend A&M because of the sacrifice Of the Aggie friends. Perhaps the time Cull come when any well qualified arid deserving high school graduate who has sire to attend A&M will be because of their efforts. We can think of no which could better illustratje the collective ambition of A&M men tharj a program de signed to give to the boyjs of Texas an opportunity to come to A&M. To us, if we can ever give a concrete example of it, Opportunity iduated in the the advance cas boys who the work and exes and their 1 an earnest de- able to do so other activity this program of Aggieland. represents the true Spirit The Fire Cracker With a Half-mile Radius In the same light that only a Paris could produce an Eiffel Tower, only the {United States could manufacture a hydro gen bomb. Isn’t the H-bomb the biggest / and best bomb ever developed, and isn’t Jt only in America where the biggest and best are the rule rather than the excep tion? { Four yeals ago the world was agog ov- ;er the now-fire-cracker sized, already out- ^ moded, atomic bomb which exploded over Hiroshima. Even in America there was a :brief ripple of ’ consternation. The rest of the, world thought the atom bomb was fearful, dreadful, inhumane; Americans only regarded it as another example of American scientific and technical genius. Such ideas as “an atom bomb will de stroy all buildings in a half-mile radius” were quickly absorbed into American thought processes, and some of our people even measured the size of cities by the number of atom bombs that would be re quired for their destruction. Now, long seasoned to thinking in terms of square miles of destruction by a single explosion, the announcement of the theoretical pos- silibities of the destructability of the hy drogen bomb (1,000 times that of the atom bomb) has been taken ini stride by the American pubhc. “Shucks, they use atom bombs to set off thehi hydrogen bombsj” a farmer was heard to remark. The hydrogen bomb has made the atom bomb as antique in propor tion as the 1950 model automobiles have made the Model “T”. i . Still, behind this flippant talk of the super-bomb’s strength, there lies the prickly thought qf what destruction could be wrought pn the United States by an other country if the dueling weapons were H-bombs and they chose to shoot first. To regard the potentialities of the hy drogen bomb lightly would be like laugh ing out in^fchurch. Yet, >ve cannot wrap ourselves in the mourning clothes of fear and gloom while anticipating the worst. War or peacri, with or without the H- bomb, or A-'tyomib, or guided missile is no more close or Remote than before their development. If'war is to erupt again, it will do so—comp high water or the hydro- t gen bomb. Missouri, Mud, Eggs, and Boards u j “Heaven has no rage like love to hat red turned, Nor hell a fury like a woman ' scorned,” or, we might add, like the De partment of the Navy during the .time its 45,000 ton battleship Missouri was strand ed on a mud bank. The “Mighty Mo”, as the battlewagon has been nicknamed by the public, came to rest on the equally mighty mudbank . Jan. 12. From that time until yesterday she successfully resisted every effort to pull her out into the channel. And, to make matters worse, divers reported that the ship on which the Japs signed the surrender pact had developed several holes in her outer hull. The captain, W. D. Brown, was taking ; the battleship down Chesapeake Bay to the sea when she went aground. It was I fell in love with a girl named Kay; Then Edith came in view. his first triri op the monster as skipper. Why she Wont'aground he wouldn’t say other than i : was a series of “unusual and unfortunate ’ circumstances. The weather was good, tne pea was moderate, the vis- ability fine. I B|Ut aground she went and astray she stayed for more than two weeks. wp always eventually get dy resting L ’- time the s; But even figured the navy would the Missouri off her mud- laCe and we imagine that-in wrill be made as good as new. 6 outcome of the mishap X will turn out to be bright, we wouldn’t rifeh want to trade jplaces with Captain Brown for all the scrambled eggs on his cap visor. You see, evm with the Mo out of the mud, he’s due for a session with a board—a board of h quiry, that is. ★ I found, Have though, that ‘You cannot your Kay apd Edith, too.’ "i >- {The Battalion "Soldier, Statesman, Knightly Get tl Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Traditions News contribution* may be made bjr Ufephoria (4 : B444) Uaodwln Hall. Classified Offloe, Boom 8W, Cfoodwln _ , ClassiflecTadij.inaV be plaeed by telephone ( •raitaj - the editorial office, Room 201, ) or at the Stuudfpt Activities snieal College of Texas and the lirculatad syory Monday through e Bnt- Hohool _ , VWT Monday throuirh ^Durlnjut the summer Ths rate 14.80 par \The Associated Pres* la entitled exclusively to the use for) rep to It oi “ ‘ ‘ 1 ‘ •d herein. Rigt t or not otherwise credited inittie paper and Imml hts of rcpubltcatlon of all other matter horeig Entered Entered dUNeone-ewee Stelter el Past Office et Comae Btetlon. Tessa, osder the Act of Cosires* of March I, 1STS. BILL BILLJNOBLEY, C. C. MUNROB Member of The Associated Press 4- ibltcatlon of spent » reserve all nawa dispatches mooua origin publish- Mectetented jaatloeattr hr Netloeal AS- ervtee Tee., et New Verb Otto, Lee Ancela. end Has Vreneteco, flk Ccurton aelpb. Lewis Muiteo. : OttO KUllM® eeeeeeeeseee'eeec'eeeee e WBAfaB^ BultOTM John Whitmore ...... i, . Acting Man-gins Editor Georg- Charlton. Dean Xt—d* _ CUtIob Btlpii a*..e • # •..WtltortAl CaiiI Bunjet Jr. Dan Davi*. CorU* Edward-. J. C. Falla, Herechet FitU. Henry Lacour. B. F. Boland. •fy Zuber. Bob Young Newt Writer* Dave Check Barman W. K. Col Bob J ££„7' Frank Jerry Hites, Hardy Bate. Jo Kenneth Marik. Emmett Tract, Jack Brandt, Jack Stantboiy ■ | Cartoonietc ...... Petta Whitmore Cann. Frank A. W. Rueaell Larry OHv "-■SSJ JUb Bead Co-Editors roature Editor Bob Prise. r Feature WrHera Manltsaa. .... Sport* Writeve AhTertlaug Maaagae Garrett, Herbert Gibfce, AdvertUfng RepreaanUtiraa - Chreletion Manager Bob la -well. BUI Matash. Jobs Stunt* . . Circulation Aaautanta • • . . . , Horgue Hanager ^ ! WT Russia Demands Hirohito Trial For War Crimes in Note to U.S. Washington, Feb. 2 •j’P)—Russia demanded today that Emperor Hirohito of Japan be tried as a war criminal on charges involving bac teriological warfare. The demand was made in a note delivered to Secretary of State Acheson by Soviet Ambassador Alexander S. Panyushkin. It was understood the Soviets were also distributing the note to the other members of the 13 nation far east ern commission. That is the top policy making body for the Japan ese occupation. The note, which has yet to be made public, reportedly asks for war crimes trials of four other Japanese in addition to Hirohito. Their names were not immeditely made known. While the precise nature of the Soviet charges against Hirohito and the four other Japanese for ^the alleged crimes of which the Japanese officers were convicted at Khabarovsk. Diplomatic authorities speculat ed that the Soviet move was de signed to serve two Communist propaganda purposes: Letters (All letter* to the editor which are RlKncd by ft Ntudent or employee of the college and which do not contain ob« scene orrlibelous material will be pub lished. rersons wishing to havo their mimes withheld from publication ^Jiny re'iuest such action and these mimes win not. without the consent of the writer, be divulgad to any persona other than the editors.]) PRAISE FOR EVERYBODY Student Publications Manager And Editors The Battalion: Thank you for your promptness in sending The Battalion which came today. I think the editorial staff and ' reporters do a splendid job in covering the activities at A&M. It was my pleasure recently to see the Aggie cagers defeat Ark ansas in the DeWare Field House. Almost as gratifying as the vic- tqj-y itself was the sportsmanlike conduct of both teams and the stu dent body. It was delightful to watch an exciting, close game wherein there was no arguing with the referees, heckling the oppon ents while making free throws, etc. These discourtesies are preva lent in most college games now adays and ruin the contests for fans like myself, who deplore such breeches in decorum. Mrs. Sarah DeWitt Waco, Texas 1. To j distract attention in Japan from repeated insistent demands made by Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur, as allied occupation chief, and by the American government for re turn to Japan of . several hundred thousand Japanese war prisoners believed to have been taken by the Russians. 2. To try to put the United States in the position of keeping the emperor from being tried as a war criminal and use. that man euver as anti-American; propagan da in Communist China and else- in Aqia The United States has followed the policy of making a distinction between Japan’s military leaders and the emperor insofar as crimin al responsibility for Japan's part in the war is concerned. County Bond Sales On Decrease in ’49 The people of Brazos County in vested $705,918,75 in UL S. Savings Bonds during 1949, according to the annual sales report received to day by Judge A. S. Ware, county Sayings Bonds chairman, from Nathan Adams of state chairman. This comparts with sales of $750,080.00 for 1948. Of the 1949 total. Series E, the so-called “people's bond” account ed for $507,618.75, as compared with $527,765.50 E bond sales in 1948. Series F and G sales were $198,300.00 as compared with $222,324,50 in 1948. Total sales for the {entire state were $191,499,089, as compared with $196,448,280 in 1948, Mr. Adams declared that sales last year were highly satisfactory in view of economic trends and be cause of a 3.9 per cent increase in the sale of E bonds, from $139,691,- 216 irt 1948 to $145,114,738 in 1949. Series F and G bonds account ed for $46,384,351 of the state’s sales total last year. Pearson Gets Post With AEG Branch Dr. Paul B. Pearson, former dean of the A&M Graduate School, has been named chief of the bio logy branch of the Atomic Energy Commission. Pearson, now a native of Oakley, Utah, will do work in the AEC’s division of biology and medicine. BOOKS — BOOKS — BOO We have more Books than the law allows. Make ‘Ole Lou an offer NOW! . | , ~ ■ Come See Lou — That’s the Thing to Do 1 LOUPOT’S TRADING POST ! I North Gate i__ ; m j ’I m. Open Every - ! " | " J '.j Evening a r i ’ s ■ You’ll make new friends, meet old ones, In the neighborly atmosphere of out* bowling alleys. Special arrangement* made for tournajnerita. RELAX AND BOWL HERE TONIGHT! Bowling Center i yV •-T Mf; Jolson Bac Still In G ki By HERMAN C. GOLLOB Jolson Singe Again (Columbia) atarring Larry Parka, Barbara Hale, and Ludwig Donath (Queen) In 1947 the bobbyaoxcra of America, thoae nauaeous biota up on the entire female aex, crowned a new alnging idol with wreath* of impaiaioned screams, amorous gurgle*, and chauvinUtlc fan cluha which deluged radio atationa with requests for his and only hia re cords. Strangely enough, the object of their affection was A1 Jolson, singing rage of the 20’a and early thirties, and it was Columbia’s technicolored “The Jolson Story” which not only introduced him to the present generation but gave the old timers a chance to see the man they claimed as “The world's greatest entertainer.” Old and young joined in a mass exodus to the nation’s box offices sending gate receipts soaring. ‘The Jolson Story”, while not a model of factual biography had a script that waa cogent and highly creditable melodrama. Show business, with its fairy tale, Cinderella core, offers fruitful material io the capable scripter, and Sidney Buchman was quick to exploit it in the first Jolson saga. But not so in its sequel, “Jol son Sings Again,” which has been playing to overflow crowds since its arrival at the Queen earlier this week. Buchman’s story is un even for the most part, too arti ficial and soap-operaish. Only -in the first few reels does the folloy/- up match its predecessor. Jolson fans, however, will not be overly concerned with plot dis crepancies. They go to hear Al sing and sing he does in his throaty and passionate sob, making mem orable “Toot Toot Tootsie,” Chi natown,” “Sonny Boy,” etc., his infectious delivery inciting audi ence emulation as it always has, The story itself takes up where “The Jolson Story” left off, with Al singing in a night club a{rtd Julie walking out’because she real izes he can love nothing but show business. Al goes back to Broadway, driving himself beyond endurance in an effort to forget Julie. When this doesn’t work, he goes on on epicurean binge as a med ium of forgetting the past- It taken his mother’s death and the war to set Al on the right track again; he agrees to entertain American troops abroad, la stricken with a fever overseas, and is sent to convalesce in the U. 8. Here he meets army nurse Bar bara Hale, a practical and phle gmatic miss who nurses him through a recurrence of the fever which costs Him a lung, marines him, and in her efficient, easy going way, engineers his coitie- back. \' j ij Seen again as Jolson, Larry Parks is equally aa good this time as the last. His performance super-confidence and exuberant extroversion that ts so much the Jolson personality. In supporting roles, Barbara Hale exudes a freshness and rad iance which should chivvy her up the pin-up ladder, William Dema- rest is his same brash self, and Ludwig Donatth absconds ’with a generous helping of scenes as Can to Yoelson. - THURSDAY & FRIDAY •qr aAmSms sf s # iksckihr kaky-tMtor m w*t*l 'staflsL 'A ■ Dwitchwy Of interest to us also was that portion of the film which explain ed the technical methods emplo; in the making of “The Jolson Story,” And wo enjoyed [the song excerpts from the parent film! far, as we’re concerned, nothli Jolson sings can surpass “Mamm or “April Showers” or “Swanet, musical Far above the [or average biography, "Jolson Sings Again") will disappoint none qf the mins man’s coterie, and may add soi new sheep to the fold. Prince of Foxes (20 Century Fox) e tar ring Orson Welles, Tyrone Power, and Wanda Hendrix (Pal- lace) r ij iTmffl What should havq been a melo drama bristling with the intrigjuel adventure, and romance that wag; so much a part of the Borgia era it depicts turns out to be a torpid, routine costume picture weighted down with anti-climaxes and per formances which reveal more cari cature than character. Even the spec all too familiar storming number—the , ,, , Of tty castle walls—makes it appear as if the director had seen too man; Cecil B. DeMille pictures, es] ially 1 “The Crusades,” and to duplicate them. He didn’t. PALACE Bryjn 2'8879 TODAY thru SATURIL l sasyr TYRONE iismitmwim limim FRIDAY PREVUE UP, M. Stop tfce Wedding... iSkes R»rr«ing the Wrong Ritter! Qi'ty mm ' YOUNG HALE And Bcty MalM'fhMe j i / ••Caiy Grant # * te DON HARTMAN'S production £ Every Girl • Should *. Be Mamed y. Hw'ii'Wiuti' ‘f.i.vl SSVSwki * mmemJSZn SATURDAY ONLY QUEEN NOW SHOWING THE NEW JOLSON PICTURE $ AGGIES— How About Thai Treat At. ... Nita’s Newsstand & Confectioner^ Owned A Operated " By a Student JEROME C. KEARBY North Gate LAST DA — Double Feature —| “HOLIDAY Ilf HAVANA” AND [| “LONE WOLF & HIS LADY” FIRST RU1JT' f FRIDAY & SATURD/ -4- Double Feature —Features Start— 1:40 - 5:10f 8:45 Cary Grant Jean Arthur I —in-- “Talk of the Town” NO. * FIRST RUN' -Features Bturt--3:40 r -< COWBOY INDIANS ALSO: CARTOON — NKU'8 \h * bSbb * EkSadR * »SSk?i SAT. PREVUE - Ip; mT j n STANWYCK GARDNER isms E SON f' TO FRIDAY PREVUI 11:00 P.M. —Feature Starts- -11:30 p.te.— WILL ROGERS DAVID HARUM LOUIS! DRESSER l< ( N 1 TAYLOR FVCIYN J ! N A RI ( S T f PIN EfTCHIT PLUS CARTOON SATURDAY PREVUE 11:00 P.M. FIRST RUN —Feature Starts 11:30 P.M.—• FIRST ; . il 'M! j . : V/W JOHNSON^ JOHN ] ' HOWAK RICARDO’’ MONTAtBAN GEORGE MURPHY '•I