■SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 5, 1942 Page 2- ■THE BATTALION- The Battalion STUDENT TRI-WEEKLY NEWSPAPER TEXAS A, & M. COLLEGE The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas and the City of College Station, is published three times weekly, and issued Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday mornings. Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at College Station, Texas, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1870. Subscription rates' $3 per school year. Advertising rates upon request. Represented nationally by National Advertising Service. Inc.,. v at New York City, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. Office, Rootn 5, Administration Building. Telephone 4-5444. 1941 Member 1942 Pissocided Collegiate Press Brooks Gofer Editor-in-Chief Ken Bresnen Associate Editor Phil Crown.... Staff Photographer Sports Staff Mike Haikin - Sports Editor Mike Mann Assistant Sports Editor Chick Hurst Senior Sports Assistant N. Libson .....Junior Sports Editor Advertising Staff Reggie Smith Advertising Manager Jack E. Carter Tuesday Asst. Advertising Manager Louis A. Bridges Thursday Asst. Advertising Manager Jay Pumphrey Saturday Asst. Advertising Manager Circulation Staff F. D. Asbury, Jr Circulation Manager Bill Huber Senior Assistant H. R. Tampke. Senior Assistant Carlton Power....* Senior Assistant Joe Stalcup Junior Assistant Saturday’s Staff Clyde C. Franklin Managing Editor Benton Taylor Junior Editor John Holman Junior Editor Jack Keith ; Junior Editor Tom Journeay Junior Editor Reporters Tom Journeay, Harry Cordua, Bob Garrett, Ramon McKin ney, Gerald Fahrentold, Bert Kutrz, Bill Jarnagin, Bob Mere- dith. Bill Japhet, Jack Hood, Bill Murphy, and John Sparger. Football Signs With the first days of September football becomes the main topic of bull sessions; the campus takes on a gala appearance with the many football signs and the spirit of the corps as it becomes interested once more in the popular fall sport is evident. This year’s freshman class has not waited on the actual schedule of games, but have already hung their signs concerning the game with L. S. U. Some of these signs are clever and are good representations of the spirit of Aggieland, but others could be improved upon. The art work of many of these banners is evidence of the ability of some fish, but sometimes this ability is wasted because of the idea or theme of the banner. In the past no standards have been es tablished for signs which appear on the cam pus. It has been left up to the fish of the organization who make the sign. But if the sign does not meet the approval of the auth orities it is taken down. There have ben many comments made on the signs which adorn the prominent places around Aggieland. Some have been favor able, but others have been designated as carrying things too far. Objections have been made to some of these banners which visitors on the campus can not fail to see. Remember, freshmen, when you make a sign don’t try to make the worst sign possi ble, but try and hang a sign which actually is creditable to the Aggie spirit. Latest Rumor Rumors are to be had around this campus at about a half a cent a dozen, and the most prevalent ones that usually float around about this time during a semester are the ones concerning being kicked out of school for adademic reasons. Not only Aggies, but mothers and dads are seriously concerned over a recent rumor amounting to the fact that failure to pass as little, as one hour is cause for dismissal. This originated through the misinterpreted statement of one of the college officials. THIS IS OFFICIAL, STRAIGHT STUFF: This college has one, and only one rule con cerning dismissal for failure to pass work, and that rule is this: “A student must pass ten hours, and make ten grade points, to stay in good stand ing. Failure to come up to that standard is cause for dismissal if the dean concerned considers it the wise thing for the boy and the college. In actual practice, about ONE SIXTH of those failing to pass 10 hours with 10 grade points are sent home. Remember, -each boy is an individual case, and all possi ble efforts are made to treat each case as such.” That’s it, Army, the straight stuff, so let’s cut out all these “washhouse gazette” features. You won’t be sent home if you real ly want to stay, so let’s not let down now! This Collegiate World - ASSOCIATED COLLEGE PRESS ^ — A practical approach to training teachers is paying dividends for graduates of Stout institute. The small college has gained a national reputation by specializing in training teach- 'ers for specific lines of work that surveys show will be in demand at the time of grad uation. How well the plan works is illustrated by Stout’s placement record. All 128 mem bers of last June’s graduating class as well as all of this winter’s midyear graduates have obtained employment. With all avail able graduates placed, employers even are “raiding” the senior class, according to Registrar Gertrude M. O'Brien. “In the last •semester,” she said, “I received calls for 20 more women than I have been able to fill.” Stout limits its curriculum to training men for industrial education and women in home economics. “It is the only school in the nation with such a singleness of pur pose,” asserts Dean C. A. Bowman. With the present emphasis on defense The World Turns On PRIVATE BUCK By Clyde Lewis By DR. R. W. STEEN Responsible American and British officers have been talking for some time of plans for large scale raids on many German cities. This talk, plus the raids that are being made and the knowledge that American bomber squadrons are being concentrated in Eng land, doubtless means that the occupants of German cities are doing plenty of worrying. A current magazine presents a plan for the destruction of German war industry by the concentrated bombing of thirty-one key cities in Germany. This magazine is of the opinion that these raids can be carried out with types of planes now available and need not wait upon the development of new types of planes. The plan would call for the regu lar use of 1,000 planes, with 2,000 more held in reserve. It would require a replacement ability of 600 planes per month, a figure be low the present reported production of Brit ish and American plants. Such a force would be able to drop from 30,000 to 50,000 tons of bombs per month on these cities. This fig ure assumes greater significance when it is remembered that Coventry was practically destroyed by 400 tons of bombs. The American position in the Solomons is constantly improving, and a recent attack on New Guinea by the Japs met with com plete failure. These facts do not mean that Japan is through with aggression in the South Pacific, nor do they mean that a great Allied offensive has begun. They do indicate, however, that the Jap is now coming into contact with forces as large and as well equipped as his own. If the Allied plans can be worked out in a satisfactory manner Jap losses will become constantly greater and his gains will be few. Stalingrad is now being approached by two German armies and it would take at least a first order miracle to save the city. It is possible however that the drive on the city will tax the Germans to f such an extent that they will be unable to make another major move for some time. It may possibly be the last important move until next spring. If the Russians are able to hold their armies to gether they should certainly have relief in the spring, because the second front will some day have to become a reality. □ <=3 □ the V, °w ? _S by J a c \ atnarqt=JC3i-i t3 campus ^ w n °n □ □ a e ditactlons > 1=1 a a \ tucnoacjaoED, “It beats me how that guy, Buck, fijui sleep so much!” BACKWASH By Jack Hood "Backwash: An agitation racniting from some action or occurence.”—Webster Something to Read : By Dr. T. P. Mayo : THE DARING YOUNG MAN FROM FRESNO (About William Saroyan) “Set ’em up for the boys in the back room” is the inspiration and title of Edmund Wil son’s closely cropped estimate of a group of California writers which includes a chap ter on Mr. William Saroyan. Mr. Saroyan’s trapeze acts in drama and short-story writ ing have irritated the critics if they have not convinced them that Mr. Saroyan is the greatest writer since Shakespeare. Mr. Wil son, for instance, thinks it would be nice if Mr. Saroyan would read a book and then learn to write. He admits the charm of the fellow and says that it is certainly his “en chanting temperament which induces us to take a good deal from him that we should not take from other people.” The exuberant Armenian, born in Fresno thirty-four years ago, made his notable be ginnings in THE DARING YOUNG MAN ON THE FLYING TRAPEZE and LOVE, HERE IS MY HAT. He reached his'peak in his latest volume of stories, which he called ’MY NAME IS ARAM. Aram lives a life free from ordinary social responsibilities (in Fresno, of course) in the heart of a col orful Armenian clan. The clan is presided over by a grandfather who can forgive any thing, even rice cooked like swill, if he can, in the end, sit under a tree and listen to his foolish son play beautifully upon the zither. Aram’s chief delight is stirring up trouble, whether it be in the matter of acquiring a horse, singing in the Presbyterian choir, or taking a correspondence course that will make him a second Bernarr McFadden. Everyone is now familiar with Mr. Sar oyan’s play THE TIME OF YOUR LIFE, which won for him both the Drama Critics award and the Pulitzer prize. He rejected the latter and became more daring. He wrote a play about THE BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE. The hero of THE BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE writes plays of one word each; his'sister is on the kind of terms with mice that prompt them (she thinks) to spell out her name in flowers across the floor at night; their broth er, who plays the cornet, has gone to New York, N. Y., the fartherest you can go if you must go. The secret of Mr. Saroyan is that he be lieves in goodness of people. If he did not his plays and his stories, for all his trapeze and his acts upon it, would not win us. But when he dedicates MY HEART’S IN THE HIGH LANDS “to the pure in heart. To the poet in the world. To the lowly and great, whose lives are poetry. To the child grown old, and the child of childhood. To the heart in the highlands,” we believe him. production, the result has been that Stout graduates average $140 to $150 a month in their first teaching positions and some get as high as $200, according to Bowman. Burton E. Nelson, president, collaborates with Bowman in working out surveys used to determine types of training. To predict what specialized training will be in demand four or five years hence, Nelson and Bow man study past and present educational trends, both political and economic. They con sider trends in national affairs, world con flicts, trade unionism and their effect upon journeyman development, scientific discover ies and education. Ho«4 Comes The Light. . . It seems that Louella Parsons, Hollywood snoop artist, got the scoop on everybody. . . as usual. Headed “Texas Girl Cast In A. & M. Picture”, the following appear ed Sept. 2 under the Parson by line: Anne Gwynne has come up the hard way at Universal. Without benefit of “leg art” or bathing suit pictures on magazines, Anne ............................... v.v.v.v.v.v.:.-.-.- v.v.- • has gone alone tending to her knitting in B pic tures mostly. But she is a darned clever little ac tress and Walter Wanger has de cided she deserves a break. When Walter puts “Tex as A. & M.”, his college opus, in to production she gets the top femine role, with Dick Foran al ready set for one of the heroes. Did you know that Texas A. & M. turned out more officers in the last war than West Point? I didn’t eitther, but that’s one of the facts Scripter Norman Reilley Raine brought back after gathering data on the Lone Star State college. On Every Front... . . . this time, with the boys who dropped in on Dieppe, France. Aggieland and Temple had a front seat in the person of Flying- Pilot W. H. (Billy) Baker, Jr., member of the American Eagle fighting squadron with the RAF. Billy, who has been flying both Spitfires and dive bombers for months, is believed to have been a dive bomber in the sensational raid on the French coast. Remembered by many after his three years here, he left Septem ber, 1941, and has since been pho tographed with the king and queen of England. . . he recently wrote his parents about attending the premiere of a new show in London Lowell Thomas Heard By WTAW Listeners Lowell Thomas, noted news com mentator, presents another corres pondent’s report on the school sys tem in Russia, in “Education for Victory,” the “Treasury Star Pa rade” feature which airs on Sat urday at 11:30 a. m. over Station WTAW. Written by an American war correspondent in Russia whose name has been withheld by order of the censors, “Education for Victory” contrasts the Rus sian system with that in Germany, described by Gregor Zeimer in “Ed ucation for Death.” David Broek- man conducts the Treasury Sym phonic orchestra in the special background music. and sitting in “the Royal Circle” with the Duke of Kent, who was recently killed in a plane crash. Due to be transferred to the American Air Force Billy wrote that he had ci’ossed the channel “twice as many times as I am old and two added” . . . which is 44. Well, Well, & Well... From Franklin, Texas, comes this candid little kick: The Battalion please print this in the column that it belongs. I have read your “Batt”—neither do I like it. Dear Aggies: You two who had the misfortune of being called “bozos”. I truly shouldn’t have called you that, but we do not care for any Aggies. Pick better twins next time. Yours truly, “The Twins” P. S. Those two Aggies were tall and had natural curley hair. Ha. Tch, Tch! Now, we just bet that breaks all our hearts. . .to be called “bozos”. Only the other day, we down and cried when our roomie called us an oT fuddy-duddy. And... Grady Elms, formerly of the Student Activities Office, now of the U. S. Army, dropped by the office Monday p. m. . . The band has lost one of it’s batons. If you know where, see Ben Schleider. . . Captain Pelly Dittman, who stop ped here for a visit Monday, says the Australians area great race, he took several of them for $600 in four days with galloping dom inos. . . At 4:45 Thursday, Ed Ca- denas left a class saying, “Well, so long, fellas. . . I’m joining the navy.”. . . at 5:45, he was standiijg outside the mess hall in an Ensigns uniform. . . Don’t ask us how he did it. . . Five dollars is a lot of money to get just for looking like a country hick, but that’s the amount the A. S. A. E. is offering to the best farmer-costumed couple at the BARNYARD FROLIC tonight. Curley Brient and his Bandwagon band are are presenting the music, this is the last time to hear them before they appear on the air Sep tember 13th. The lowdown on the Frolic is that it’ll prove to be the best dance of the summer, so get out your overalls and straw hats. Bobby Blake, cast in the title role of “MOKEY”, proves tops among the juvenile actors on the screen today. In this part, he a typ ical boy, not good, not bad, but with enough imagination to get in one scrap after another. Bobby plays the part with understanding and realism that are not possessed by many older actors. In the part of Mokey’s step mother, is M. G. M.’s young hope ful Donna Reed. We think that Miss Reed is a much better movie star than this picture gives her a chance to show. As the stepmother who refuses to understand her husband’s son, she has a thankless role that turns the audience against her. “MOKEY” is a story that will ap peal to all you “family men.” The childish escapades and the conse quent disciplinary action make it entertaining also to any one who recalls his boyhood days. Chief criticism is that the story is not definite enough, it seems to wan der aimlessly through disconnected episodes. The Lowdown:— a tear-jerker. There’s many a chance to poke fun at Hitler and his boys in a story of Nazi-occupied Holland, and the script of “THE WIFE TAKES A FLYER” utilizes every one of these chances. It laughs long and loud at the Nazis and the audience will do the same. Theme of the film play is the love of a German major, played by Allyn Joslyn, for a little Dutch Gal, Joan Bennett, Joan is supposed to divorce her husband who is away in a sanitarium the , next day, so the Nazi officer nWes in to her house. But Joan is hiding an RAF flyer (Franchot Tone) there, so he poses as her missing husband. Much to the bewilder ment of Joan and the amusement Now Playing Through Thursday Diana Barrymore Robert Stack — in — “EAGLE SQUADRON” WHAT’S SHOWING At the Campus Saturday—“The Mayor of 44th Street” with Anne Shir ley and George Murphy. Midnight & Sunday, Mon day—“The Wife Takes a Flyer” with Joan Bennett, Franchot Tone and Allyn Joslyn. At Guion Hall Saturday only— “Mokey” with Donna Reed and Bobby Blake. MOVIE Guion Hall SATURDAY 1:00 — 7:30 — 8:30 P. M. t Don Bailey and Donna Reed IN — k k MOKEY” Comedy — News — Mickey —COMING— Monday — Tuesday — Wednesday “SHIP AHOY” of Tone, they have to be divorced the next day to keep the Nazi from getting suspicious. It’s a comical situation with a happy ending for everybody but the ardent Nazi lover. Though Joan Bennett and Fran chot Tone play leading roles Allyn Joslyn furnishes most of the laughs. As the script has it, he’s more “swish than swastika”. The Lowdown:— story of an RAF flyer who landed in Holland and got the Nazis in Dutch. Qambiis 4-1181 Box Office Opens at 1:00 P. M. Last Day “MAYOR OF 44th STREET” - with - George Murphy - Ann Shirley - also - Popeye - Cartoon - News March of Time Preview Tonight Sunday and Monday STARRING BENNETT« TONE Go in 9:30 and see both shows HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID FOR USED B‘OOKS In the Following Courses: Accounting' and Statistics: 201 310 407 302 409 Agricultural Economics: 101 314 193 310 423 310 426 Agricultural Engineering: 201 322 208 424 Agronomy: 105 301 318 418 Animal Husbandry: 107 406 202 407 313 412 Biology: 101 106 102 107 Chemistry: 212 301 212 301 214 Civil Engineering: 202 311 206 315 305 Dairy Husbandry: 202 408 306 415 conomi 316 311 Electrical Engineering: 208 305 415 416 418 111 206 342 324 345 347 418 420 403 412 308 310 Engineering Drajving: 111 112 English: 103 210 317 104 307 401 207 Fish and Game: 201 304 Genetics: Geology: 204 301 210 320 205 History: 105 302 404 214 307 106 306 Horticulutre: 201 318 202 — 319 Mathematics: 101 109 102 110 204 103 202 104 203 Mechanical Engineering: 212 320 220 338 446 307 404 M. S. E.: 402 408 406 412 Petroleum Engineering: 204 402 414 306 404 416 308 408 Physics: 202 Poultry Husbandry: 201 310 303 410 308 Psychology: 207 Rural Sociology: 204 315 415 Men, check this list care fully and sell early to re ceive the highest possible prices. ACT NOW while there is a market for used books for both of us! LOUPO^S Trading Post J. E. Loupot—’32