Page 2- -TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 12, 1943 The Battalion STUDENT TRI-WEEKLY NEWSPAPER Texas A. & M. COLLEGE The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Ueehanical College of Texas and the City of College Station, 1* 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, Ine., at New York City, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. Office, Room 6, Administration Building. Telephone 4-6444. 1941 Member 1942 Associated Golteftide Brooks Gofer —— — Editor-in-Chief Ken Bresnen Associate Editor Phil Crown - Staff Photographer Sports Staff Mike Haikin. Sports Editor Mike Mann Assistant Sports Editor Advertising Staff Reggie Smith Advertising Manager jack E. Carter Tuesday Asst. Advertising Manager Jay Pumphrey Saturday Asst. Advertising Manager Circulation Staff dill Huber Circulation Manager H. R. Tampke Senior Assistant Carlton Power Senior Assistant Joe Stalcup Junior Assistant Bill Trodlier Assistant Tuesday's Staff Tom Vannoy.. Tom Leland..., Douglas Lancaster.. John Holman Tom Journeay Bill Jarnagin Gene Robards Managing Editor ...Junior Managing Editor Junior Editor Junior Editor Junior Editor Reporter Reporter Thank You For several years now, The Battalion has been privileged to have the help and coopera tion of the faculty and other members of the college staff in filling the columns of the editorial page with thoughts both in teresting and educational. It has been said that it takes all kinds to make up a world. This may be applied not only to persons but changed a bit to read “it takes all kinds of news to make a newspaper', and applied to the Battalion. Their faithful attention and interest in fill ing their columns with interesting opinions and views, sometimes humorous philosophy, and sometimes sound advice, has made them an asset to the Battalion and to the Aggies who followed their writings each day. These are possibly the few to whom the Battalion owes so much, and the student staff wants to thank Mr. W. L. Penberthy of the physical educational department; Dr. R. W. Steen, Dr. Y. K. Sugareff, and Dr. A. B. Nelson of the history department; Dr. J. H, Quisenberry of the genetics department; Dr. A. F. Chalk, economics department; Dr. C. C. Doaks of the biology department; Dr. T. F. Mayo of the college library; and last but not least, Mrs. I. Sherwood, author of the Man, Your Manners column, for their splendid help and cooperation. This Collegiate World T-ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATE pwers ■■ At times the talk of college students in the halls and in rooming houses provse quite interesting and a bit disillusioning. Natural ly, a large part of Joe College’s conversation with classmates the familiar trend of the progress of the war. There seems to be a general feeling among the present crop of boys who fre quent the college campuses that they are riding the high road to an early death. And even if the youngster is not unduly pessimis- •tic, Latin, English, and zoology seem awfuly trite in comparison to the incomparable ad ventures which accompany the donning of a uniform. Too, each youth not now in uniform sec retly realizes that the good jobs after the war will go to the man who has helped on the front lines to openly repulse the enemy. One soldier soon after he was commissioned a second lieutenant, was heard to remark that he valued his bars more than his col lege degree. He was convinced that the com mission would be of more value after the peace then the result of his four year’s labor for a bachelor’s. Then there is a feeling by many eigh teen and nineteen year olds that this war is the biggest adventure of the century. It probably is. They feel that something of “once-in-a-life-time” variety is occurring and they are viewing it via letters from Pvt. Bill, lectures by history professors, the news paper and the radio. Boys needn’t believe that just because they are not in uniform now that they are about to miss the entire show. The first act of this super-thriller is still underway. And the head Allied coach has formulated defi nite plans for using all of his substitutes long before that final gun. Teachers are obviously having a difficult time in keeping students interested in train ing primarily for civilian life when military training seems so much more important. But even if this war lasts for years, there will be people who will emerge from it. The odds are in the soldier’s favor that he will come back, despite the innumerable dangers of military life in th etrenches. Of course, people will die. People are killed an nually in appalling numbers in automobile accidents. Most men will be back. Then how can college students afford to waste valua ble time now when they could be amply fit ting themselves not only for war but for life?—Eastern (HI.) Teachers News. * * * . College Training Plans For Army, Navy Men As students left the nation’s campuses for holidays at home, the Secretaries of War and Navy—with approval of Manpower Commissioner Paul V. McNutt—announced the long-awaited college training program for service men and servicemen—to-be. Loose ends of the dual program still need to be tied together. For example, just From Capital to Campus ACP’s Jay Richter Reports from Washington “Often during these long do-nothing days and nights my mind wanders back to those familiar faces and places which have been stamped into my mind my constant associa tion. The college that stands like an anchor in a silent symphony of green, brown, and gold, the men who steer its course, the stu dents who give it life—all a part of my life. It will never be the same, nor will I. This present phase seems like an interlude, a stormy one to be sure, between a past life that has ended and future one that I hope to build; an interlude that is fully dramatiz ed by the two word date-line above (at sea).” Don H. Gannon, with a British army ambulance unit in Africa, writes his former college prexy, E. O. Holland of Washington State college. * * * Mark up another score for stiff exercise! University of Texas co-eds who took a “war conditioning” physical training course show ed an improvement of 24,69 per cent in total physical fitness, according to a survey of actual tests made at the begining and end of the course. Results of a battery of tests given to the co-eds have been analyzed by Miss Bertha Lee, who has written her thesis for the de gree of master of education in physical edu cation on this problem. She found that the 94 girls who com pleted the course had: stabilized their weight perceptibly; improved their lung capacity 4.32 per cent, their army strength 36.87 per cent, chest strength 6.65 per cent, shoul der strength 4.47 per cent, abdominal strength 13.25 per cent, leg strength 29 per cent and agility 11 per cent. * * * A survey of the nation’s universities and colleges shows a 9V2 per cent decline from a year ago in the number of full-timyle students. The report, covering 667 approved in stitutions having 746,922 full-time students, was made by President Raymond Walters of the University of Cincinnati and was pub lished in “School and Society,” national edu cation journal. The University of California, with 18,- 364 full-time students, ranked highest in the nation. The University of Minnesota was second with 11,859, and the University of Illinois third, with 11,294. * * * Dr. Robert A. Millikan, noted physicist and head of the California Institute of Technolo gy, predicts power obtained from atom never will displace that from oil and coal. “The possible sources of atomic power are too small,” he told students. “So I make bold to predict oil and coal will continue as our principal fuels for the next 1,000 years. After oil and coal are gone we can get our power from the sun.” how men are to be chosen for the college work isn’t yet clear. Which colleges will be selected for training centers is another unanswered question, although secretary of Navy Knox has said “We will give special consideration to those (colleges) with meager financial resources whose existence is threatened by the war.” * * * “Provided our production reaches the de sired volume, the coming spring and early summer, if not sooner, will witness a gigan tic Axis disaster by simultaneous attack from without and by revolution of the sub jugated nations in Europe from within. The actual establishment of a second front on European soil may well be the signal of Nazi Germany’s internal collapse and of the out break of European revolt of the nations against the Nazis.” War analysis by Dr. Robert J. Kerner, professor of history. Uni versity of California. As you’ve probably noticed, the Navy’s plan for college training provides students more opportunity to complete their education does the Army plan. The Army plan has been severely criti cized by a number of leading educators. Dr. Harold W. Dodds of Princeton, Dr. Edmund E. Day of Cornell, and Chancellor Harry Woodburn Chase of New York university have said the Army’s plan is inadequate. They believe it will disrupt special war train ing programs now in operation, and weaken colleges to boot. President Kary T. Compton of Massa chusetts Institute of Technology charged that the Army plan is “clumsy” and involves “unnecessary delays.” He said that it fails to take advantage of existing facilities. He pointed out that advanced students already enrolled in courses designed to meet Army needs would be called for basic military training, and that the new plan “suffles these students all together in a basic military program and then will try to unshuffle them so that the right ones can be sent back into technical training programs.” Enrollment at Catholic University of America has reached 1,875. Aggie Crgptogram (The following cryptogram waa enciphered by takiag a plain-text quotation dealing with Aggieland and dividing it into groups of five letters, then arranging each of these groups alphabetically.) Today’s Aggie Cryptogram HNOTW ALLPR EENST AFMOS INSSU CGGIN ADEST GINOT HT — B. H. Luther. Saturday’s Solution MINIATURE RING IS VERY SWANKY. -THE BATTALION- PRIVATE BUCK By Clyde Lewis] cucnaizjtntzjcnt] campus n t dSiactions ~ a a/ by a a s\ "All right. Buck, cut out th’ trick riding. You’re in the cavalry now, not the circus! ” ★ BACKWASH ★ “Backwash i An sgttatisn resulting from some setien or occurrence** — Webstar By John Holman Texas U, vs. ERC . . . Headlines in the Daily Texan, T. U.’s daily newsrag, these days mostly concern such things as “Senior Reservists Called at End of Semester’’ and similar glaring banners. They are crying for de grees to be given the seniors if they are called out. Pipe this! The ground for their pleas is “hold ing that a sacrifice by the Uni versity of fifteen or less hours from the required scholastic stand ard is little as compared with the sacrifices we men are asked to make.” Aren’t they noble? University Registrar Mathews is quoted as saying, “If I were a senior, I would stay in school un til somebody in uniform got in my way and blocked my path.” That sounds just like a registrar, doesn’t it. A. & M. vs. ERC . . . An Office of War Information pamphlet recently issued states definitely that 18 and 19-year- olds will be called out definitely beginning in January, but accord ing to an Austin, Texas, news paper this does not apply to en listed reservists. Fortune maga- says that college students both in and out of the reserves have been “the chief victim of government wobbling and indecision.” Back wash agrees. As the article further points out, what is a student to think with the President, General Hershey, other high government officials, college deans and presi dents incessantly hammering at the kid that his place is in school. Then, the Army turns around,, tells him the Army needs him, then takes him through the local draft board. If he joins a reserve, he’s in the mess we are now in—in decision and confusion as to what to do or expect. Laugh, Brother!... With so much cussing and dis cussing of the government and ERC, it is nice to have a lighter side to the situation. The follow ing poems were found on the blackboard of a second-floor of the Academic building. My time is almost due. I hear them calling me. I’m feeling downright blue, —I joined the ERC. And this one: Today the Army’s calling me, I guess I’ll have to go. I’ll tell my girl goodbye tonight, Great guns! I’m feeling low! You have all seen these recruit ing signs showing Uncle Sam pointing a mean finger at you with the caption, “Uncle Sam Wants You.” Someone reproduced one on a blackboard, but crossed Charles Cunningham In Naval Air Corps Charles Ray Cunningham has been selected for training as a Naval Aviation Cadet and will be ordered to active duty shortly. Graduated from Sunset High School in Dallas, Texas, in 1941. Since that time he has been at tending Texas A. & M. College. When ordered to active duty, he will report to the U. S. Navy Pre-Flight School, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, for three nionths of physical conditioning, instruction in naval essentials, military drill and ground school subjects. out the “Wants” and wrote in “Has”! Girls? . . . By now it is an undisputed fact that the freshmen have the best looking girls down for their ball every year than any other class. Between twelve and fifteen hun dred fish and their dates, seniors and their dates, and seniors and freshmen’s dates really cut a mean rug around Sbisa Saturday night. The most successful Fish ball in many a year, too! Married Dec. 29 . . . t Elmer C. Ellis, Crockett, Texas, class of ’41, to Miss Sarah Daugh- drill, of Houston, at the First Methodist Church in Waukegan, Illinois. (Wonder if Jack Benny was there.) Elmer is in the Navy at Great Lakes. He majored in rural sociology. Town Hall Tonight... Dick and his Dizzy Dandies, alias the Swinging Kadets, alias Jenkins’ Jive Gems, commonly known as the Singing Cadets of Aggieland, go their fifteen rounds with a Town Hall audience to night. This promises to be quite a show, so don’t miss it. Especially good will be the guest artist (Wal ter Jenkins, baritone) and a new arrangement of “The Spirit of Ag gieland.” On the Guion Hall double-feature screen today and tomorrow may be seen an oldie, but a goodie, with two of the favorite stars of a few years back—William Powell and Mary Astor, in “Kennel Murder Case.” Though Powell is still a top-ranking star, the picture was made a few years ago and has that ancient look to it. It has the gen eral stereotyped plot usually found in movie mystery stories, but is changed enough to give you many minutes of spine-tingling thrills. Bill Powell is at his usual best with his comedy-stuff, making the show laughable. The Lowdown—Excellent, if you like Powell and Astor. Fair, if you don’t. Number two feature on the pro- Want to Know How Superchargers Work? Then Figure This Out Want to know how an airplane supercharger works? Well, you can hear an explan ation of sorts in the current Warn er Brothers’ motion picture “Des perate Journey.” “How do you manage to super charge the engines at the extreme cold of these high altitudes?” a Nazi officer asks a captive Amer- ical flier. “If I told you—the others would not know? answers Johnny, the prisoner, played by Ronald Rea gan. “Certainly not,” assures the German. Johnny casts a glance to the closed door. “You’re sure they can’t hear us?” “Through the door? It’s quite soundproof, Lieutenant. Now, about the supercharger—?” Johnny slides his chair closer to the desk and lowers his voice so th^t the Nazi leans forward. “It’s done with a thermotrockle,” says Johnny. “With a what?” asks the Nazi. “A thermotrockle amfilated thru a daligonitor,” continues Johnny beginning to sketch with his left hand. “You see, the dornadyne. has a frenicoupling and the amsometer prenulates the kinutaspel hepulace —here—and the—” The Nazi, now off his guard, is then slugged by Johnny, and the Americans, one of whom is played by Errol Flynn, continue on their way. gram is also a class double “A” feature of last year, returned as a “B” attraction this year. It has its setting in the terrors that are the big city slums, and has the usual soft, romantic love scenes by Miss Priscilla Lane, starred with Richard Whorf, (a newcomfer and an excellent actor) in “Blues in the Night.” This show is good, the act ing is fine, but combined with “Kennel Murder Case” gives al most too gloomy an atmosphere to be taken lightly in one evening of theater-going. The Lowdown—Also very good, could be better if you didn’t have to sit through the murder case to see it. Bright spot of the evening is the brand-new Merrie Melody cartoon current with the two gloomy fea tures. Up North-Gate way at the Cam pus, we find another of these dra matic super-dupers in the form of “Ladies in Retirement.” Pictures such as this depend on good acting and unusual story development to give the film its push. Ida Lupino and Louis Hayward make all the love in this picture, and do it very nicely. The Lowdown—fair to middlin’, okay considering the partner they tied it up in a double feature with. Co-featured with the “Ladies” is a ripping and roaring musical comedy, “Sailors on Leave.” This little number moves fast, depend ing not so much on story and good acting as it does on good music and happy-feeling. Shirley Ross, come ly little blonde crooner with a pair of bright, flashing blue eyes, leads William Lundigan around like a calf follows Mama. The Lowdown—Fair, lot of mu sic, leg shots, and sailor atmos phere. ORCHIDS! ORCHIDS! ORCHIDS! WE HAVE PLENTY OF ORCHIDS FOR THE SENIOR RING DANCE Special Prices for This Occasion We Also Have a Good Selection of Other Flowers Suitable for Corsages Call Us for Prices J. COULTER SMITH, FLORIST Telephone 2-6725 4-1181 Box Office Opens 2 p.m. TODAY - TOMORROW DOUBLE FEATURE “LADIES IN RETIREMENT” With Ida Lupino Louis Hayward 2:00 - 4:59 - 7:58 “Sailors on Leave” With Shirley Ross William Lundigan 3:48 - 6:47 - 9:46 Also “Bugs Bunny Gets Boid” SEND HOME A PICTURE FINISHED BY EXPERTS “Photographs of Distinction’ AGGIELAND STUDIO North Gate Ice Cream is a Nutritious Food ... Refreshing Relax at George’s After Classes GEORGE’S Across from New “Y” Phone 4-1168 Box Office Opens 2 p.m.— Closes 10 p.m. DOUBLE FEATURE TODAY - WEDNESDAY “Blues in the Night” Starring Priscilla Lane Bette Field Richard Whorf Show Time: 3:23 - 6:34 - 9:45 —Second Feature — ZZdC mmiiiiam Dfe KENNEL MURDER. CASE with MARY ASTOR Eugene PaUette . Ralph Morgan Helen Vinson . Paul Cavanaugh Jack La Rue. Directed by Michael Curtiz A Warner Brot.-Fint National Picture Shows at 2:10 - 5:21 - 8:32 Also News Draft Horse Short > E * a * f u I & L i a W