% t VvA-Vq -'4 Orders Taken For January Announcements Seniors will have a chance to show the world they are being graduated from A&M. Orders are now being taken for graduation announce- ments for those students graduat ing in Janury. Announcement cards will be on sale at Student Activity office, sec ond floor Goodwin Hall, until Dec. 10, according to Pete Hardesty, business manager of Student Ac tivities. Southern Engraving Co. of Houston has promised delivery on or about Jan. 7, for all cards ordered before Dec. 10. As in the past, announcements will be available in three types, leather bound, cardboard bound, and the French Folds, The card board and leather bound cards con tain a list of graduates, degrees re ceived, and name of home town. French Folds just have the simple announcement of graduation. Personalized cards may be order ed at same time as the announce ments, Hardesty announced. Battalion Editorials Page 2 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1951 No Other Drink PJCKS YOU UP Like A WORE TEXANS THAN EVER PREFER TEXAS’ OWN SOFT DRiNK It started in Texas—it’s made in Texas—it’s growing with Texas! More than ever, it’s a favorite Texas custom to enjoy "A Lift for Life” with Dr. Pepper at 10,2, and 4! i dL DR. PEPPER...A NATIVE OF TEXAS, RIGHT AT HOME IN YOUR HOME! Here’s a delicious sparkling drink, different from any you’ve tasted, that LIFTS your energy within 2 to 8 minutes... gives you new LIFE fast. Picks you up when you’re low. Noth ing like it—everyone loves it. Keep a carton or a case at hand, for a real "lift for life.” At soda fountains, too! Another Great Texas Product Bonfire or No W/E HAVE a challenge this weekend. We can either stay on ** the campus or leave. This is the first off weekend of the season for the team and we are not able to see any Aggie football game. It will be a chance to go to see that certain girl. But more than that we have a job to do. It is the job on the drill field trying to make this year’s bonfire the best yet. -Big, not only in the number of logs we lug over to the centerpole, but big in the pride we take in it. Men from every class are working on it, doing their best to make this year’s symbol of our burning desire to see A&M defeat Texas University, .and at the same time it represents the undying love of school we Aggies have. A bonfire is not a new or unique practice among colleges. Texas, SMU, and many of the others all have one big fire before their “game of season.” However, we have something that is different. Our bonfire is made up with the sweat of the entire student body. Men from the lowest freshman to the highest senior all take some part in the building of the mammouth pile of wood. Aggies cut wood, Aggies drive trucks, Aggies pile wood, Aggies . . . they do it all by working together. There on the drill field will be a burning symbol of our love of the school. Is this worth staying here for? Poage Speech To Highlight Electric Meet Congressman W. R. Poage of Waco will address the fifth annual Job Training and Safe ty Conference, which opens today in the MSC. Poage will speak at a banquet tonight. The conference is sponsored by the Engineering Extension Service, the State Advisory Committee for Rural Electric cooperatives, and the Texas Education Agency. Re presentatives from each of the 81 rural electric cooperatives in Texas will attend the conference. Safety and training talks will be given by Dr. C. J. Potthoff, na tional director of the American, Red Cross, Frank LaMaster, head of the Job Training and Safety Division of the Rural Electrifica tion Administration, and Harry C. Hutchinson, factory representa tive of the White Rubber Company. W .W. Mills, chief of rural elec tric training for the Engineering Extension Service, and E. W. Ker- lick, G. E. Baker, W. G. Wood, and T. S. Watson, field instructors, will report on the past year’s job training and safety activities. To coincide with the day that many of the state’s electric line men will be attending the confer ence, Gov. Allan Shivers has desig nated Nov. 23 as Electric Line men’s Day in Texas. ‘Streetcar Named Desire Proof of Better Movies Found in French Quarter By BERT WELLER Battalion Staff Writer “A Streetcar Named Desire” with Vivian Leigh, Marlon Bran do, and Kim Hunter. Script by Tennessee Williams; directed by Elia Kazan. Starts Sunday at the Queen for a one week run. tainly the American people have loyal to the “magic silver screen.” felt for a long time their most pop- To combat this movement away ular entertainment has needed im- from the motion picture houses, provement. The movie reviewers have filled their columns with criticisms of the latest Hollywood releases. Many theaters are forced to make Movies are better than ever, at ends meet on the popcorn profits least the ads read that way. Cer- of the patrons who have remained Cagney Is Alcoholic In Cop-Robber Movie By JERRY BENNETT Battalion Staff Writer In the last 20 years the name James Cagney has become synony mous with Hollywood’s conception of the ideal All-American Hood. During his long career as a and his eventual cure, is , well worth the price of the movie. It will remind some movie fans of the Academy Award winning picture, “The Lost Weekend.” The rest of the film falls short . , . , of attaining any individuality of ed entertainment of the highest type; yet each was written and produced for adult audiences in film companies have embarked on an ambitious program involving the release of a new type of mo tion picture. This trend in movie making is called a “movement to wards maturity.” Taking their lead from the British, French, and Italian mov ie makers, Americans began to make movies specifically design ed for the adult audience. Just how successful these films are— only time and the box office re ceipts will prove. Local movie houses in the Bryan- College Station area are present ing good examples of this new type of motion picture production. Those who saw “A Place In the Sun,” “Cyrano de Bergerac” and “People Will Talk” will agree Hollywood is on the right track. Each of these pictures provid- , , ,, , its own and becomes nothing more celluloid bad man, he has rubbed a s j ow p acec [ “cops and rob- out countless numbers of police- bers „ pro(luc t ion S pi ce d with just stead 1] for the overgrown jm men and rival mobsters, occasion ally taking time out to slap down a leading lady. In “Come Fill the Cup”, the current attraction at the Cam pus Theatre, Cagney shows he can kill a fifth as easily as a cop. Cagney plays a crack newspap er man who can’t hold a job be cause of his craving for bever ages labeled “100 proof.” He fin- the right amount of corn. Actors Cagney and Young give two first - rate performances. Both make good use of the script’s fast, sharp dialogue. Al though Cagney gives in excellent performance as an alcoholic, he seems more at home with a re volver roughing up the opposi tion. venile Hollywood formerly believ ed made up the, majority of their patrons. “A Streetcar Named Desire” has every quality needed to make it an outstandingly successful picture in light of the new idea. The script was done by Ten nessee Williams, author of the original Broadway play. The screenplay is a faithful adap tion of the work which won Wil liams the New York Drama Crit ics Award and the Pulitzer Prize. .. The actors recreate on the His continual desire for “just ally develops into an alcoholic and one more drink,” with the know- loses the job. Fiance Phyllis Thax- ledge that it will rain him, sup- ter quits the ex-journalist as Cag- plies the film with its greatest ney begins to go on binges, some suspense. Best scene: The agon- screen the same roles they played of which last for weeks. On one izing convulsions of an alcoholic so well upon the stage. Marlon of the all-night sprees he col- as he tries to go for one night Brando and Kim Hunter appeared lapses in the middle of the street without taking a drink. in the New York production and and is almost run over by a truck. Seeing “Come Fill the Cup” will Vivian Leigh in the London ver- result in either a case of bloodshot sion. Their wealth of experience in eyes or a terrific hangover. (See STREETCAR, Page 4) After spending a night in the alcoholic ward of the local hos pital the former scribe decides to go on the wagon or not show up for the last reel. The hero swears off without ever losing and desire for drink in order to get the newspaper job back. The reporter’s boss decides that an ex-alcoholic is the man to help cure a nephew (Gig Young) who “makes the average alcoholic look like a piker.” The Battalion Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Traditions ''Soldier, Statesman, Knightly Gentleman” The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texes, is published by students five times a week during the regular school year. During the summer terms, The Battalion is published four times a week, and during Cagney decides to help the boy examination and vacation periods, twice a week. Days of publication are Monday but discovers his assistance has gotten him in trouble with some of the local mobsters. His actions arouse the animosity of the local gang chief who has the do good re porter brought in at gun point. The first portion of “Come Fill the Cup” keeps the picture from being classified a grade B melo drama. This part, which shows Cagney’s life as an alcoholic bum through Friday for the regular school year, Tuesday through Friday during the summer terms, and Tuesday and Thursday during vacation and examination periods. Subscrip tion rates $6.00 per year or $.60 per month. Advertising rates furnished on request Entered as second-class natter at Post Office at College Staton, Texas, ander the Act of Con- rress of March 3, 1870. Member of The Associated Press Represented nationally by National Advertising Service Inc., at New York City, Chicago, Los An- geles, and San Francisco. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. News contributions may be made by telephone (4-5444) or at the editorial office, Room 201, Goodwin Hall. Classified ads may be placed by telephone (4-6324) or at the Student Activities Office, Room 209, Goodwin Hall. “The'Story of Texas A&M” — ON SALE — NOVEMBER 28 The Exchange Store JOHN WHITMORE Editor Joel Austin Associate Editor Bill Streich Managing Editor Bob Selleck Sports Editor Frank Davis City Editor Pat Morley Women’s Editor T. H. Baker, E. R. Briggs, Benny Holub, Bryan Spencer, Ide Trotter Edgar Watkins, Carl Posey, Gene Steed, Jerry Bennett, Bert Weller Staff Writers Bob Cullen, Jack Brandt Staff Cartoonist Frank Scott Quarterback Club Director Dick Zeek Staff Photographer Pat LeBlanc, Hugh Fhilippus, Gus Becker, Joe Blanchette Ed Holder Sports Staff Writers John Lancaster Chief Photo Engraver Russel! Hagens Advertising Manager Robert Haynie. Advertising Representative Sam Beck Circulation Manager ies For 1951-1952 Are Here!! If you know his name, you can find out who he is and where he lives by using the handy STUDENT DIRECTORY. Get your copy right away. The STUDENT DIRECTORY contains a listing of the faculty, officers, and employes of the college, and a listing of students. ; ;! | 3 ! ! If | II I tl I J ■ Jll! ’ li; II I'! it Ht-i jus i! juimimm PER COPY, by cash, check, money order or inter departmental order. Get Yours NOW ! ! USE THIS HANDY COUPON STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Texas A&M College College Station, Tex. Please send me copies of the 1951-1952 STUDENT DIRECTORY. Enclosed is ... in (cash) (check) (money order) (interdepartmental order). NAME ADDRESS .1 ... They’re On Sale at The Following Places: • STUDENT ACTIVITIES • NEWSSTANDS 1 AND 2 • NORTH GATE • DORMITORIES PO GO r Hmenm sleep/n' SOMp-^Opy STOLE TURTLE IN MV LUNCH gASKer- By Walt Kelly LP LABN5R Undercover Man By A1 Capp