Page 2- -THE BATTALION- -THURSDAY MORNING, MARCH 11, 1943 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, ia 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., at New York City, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. Office, Room 6, Administration Building. Telephone 4-6444. 1942 Member 1943 Ptesodded Gol!e6iate Press PRIVATE BUCK By Clyde Lewis Man, Your Manners By l. Sherwood N* John Holman Editor-in-Chief Jack Keith - Associate Editor Danell E. Griffin. Staff Photographer Sports Staff Hank Avery ; - Sports Editor John Stout Senior Sports Assistant Thomas Boog Sports Assistant Horace Bays Sports Writer Tom Sutherland ^...Reporter Tommy Gould - — —Reporter Circulation Staff Joe Stalcup Circulation Manager Advertising Staff Haskell Lindley Ed Slenker Buck Martib ...... Thursday Asst. Advertis Billy Bute Saturday Asst. Advertising Manager Thursday's Staff Tom Joumeay Managing Editor Jack Metcalf Reporter Henry Rougagnac Reporter Sylvester Boone -...Reporter “Candy” Magrane - Feature Writer War and Language. .. America will have many new words and phrases added to the language when the boys come marching home again from the far corners of the world. And the English lan guage will be enriched by them, in the opin ion of Prof. Walter K. Smart of the Medill school of Journalism at Northwestern Uni versity. “Contacts with other races and other peoples invaribly bring in additions to the language,” Prof Smart said. “Wars and in vasions through the ages have added many new word forms while mariners and settlers have been responsible for still others. “From the Indians we got such words as moose, hickory, hominy, skunk, persimmon, toboggan, moccasin, wigwam, and squaw. During and after the Mexican War when the Southwest was opened to American settlers we acquired a number pf words from the Spanish including adobe, buro, canyon, cor ral, coyote, sombrero, mustang, and lasso.” With soldiers in every part of the world; the words that they will bring home will be as varied as the battlefields on which the fighting is taking place, Prof. Smart said. The war has alredy produced a number .of words and phrases that seem destined to at tain a place in the language. He referred specifically to “Quisling” when used to designate a person who be trays his own people. Other words which have sprung from war or related activities are:“Commando,” “blitz,” “fifth column,” “fox hole,” “jeep,” “ersatz,” “spearhead,” “gremlin,” “blackout,” “paratroops,” and “ceiling.” The latter has acquired a new meaning when referring to “top limit.” Many words which became popular dur ing the first World War are still in use 25 years later, he said. Not only did the dough boys. of 1918 learn to sing “Mademoiselle from Armentieres,” and “Madelon,” but they also picked up a number of French words that still live. Among these are “beaucoup,” “parley vouz,” and “tout de suite,” the lat ter being popularized by the Americans as “toot sweet.” Some of the words that grew out of the first World War are now so common that we have almost forgotten their original source, Prof. Smart said. Such words as “dud,” “doughboy,” “pill-box,” “went west,” “carry on,” “shock troops,” “dugohut,” “barrage,” “cooties,” and “defeatist,” were either war terms or grew out of the war.—ACP. Quotable Quotes “The center of gravity in women is too low to permit them to be good competitive ath letes. In racing cars a low center of gravity is a good thing. It permits them to hold the road and allows greater speed. Not so in the human form. If you study an analysis of the female body, compared with the male, you will see that women are heavier around the hips than men. The capacity of a woman’s chest, on the average, is smaller than a man’s. A woman’s heart is smaller than a man’s. The man, with his big chest and heart and narrow hips, has his weight where it does him the greatest good, giving him heart and lung capacity. A woman’s weight, how ever, is around her hips and it adds nothing to her endurance. Women have a greater en durance of another sort. For example nurses and mothers usually can stay on their feet longer, tending a sick child, than fathers.” —Professor Granny Johnson of Denver Uni versity explains why the greatest athletes aren’t women. Introductions “How can I best cover up my embarrassment in introducing someone whose name I’ve for gotten?” If you have forgotten someone’s name there is nothing for you to do, but say, “I’m sorry, but I can’t remember your name for the present,” and the other person should furnish you with his name immediately. If introductions aren’t easy for you, your em barrassment may cause you to forget names or perhaps you do not place enough import ance on names at the time introductions are made to you. The following suggestions on memory aids may be helpful: 1. Repeat the name at the time you are introduced. 2. Ask him to spell it if it is difficult. 3. Find out something about him to remember him by. “What shall I say when someone says, T’m glad to have met you’?” * The reply is, “Thank you” or “Thank you very much” or “I’m glad to have met you.” “What shall I say when I am introduced to someone whom I have met?” If the other person doesn’t appear to re member you, you would say, “How do you do,” but if he does remember you, you would say, “Yes, Mr: Smith and I have met be fore.” If introductions seem difficult for you, they won’t get any easier by avoiding them. You should create opportunities for practic- ing them until you find they are as easily as SweDping’S any other social situation. Candidate for IZZfc J2ovjclown on Campus ^Distractions ■!3y ^om Q.ou%nc.a.y By Henry Rougenac Navy is faced with the task of pre- At the Campus today, tomorrow venting the Nazis from capturing and Saturday SHIP WITH WINGS a strategic point. In the battle is featured. A British production, tha t follows, the advocates of air this is another picture about World power win. War II—this time narrowing down Many of the scenes were photo- to the old argument of Airplane graphed from the British aircraft vs. battleship. The theory is put carrier, Ark Royal, before it went to Davy Jones locker courtesy der Fuehrer. The actors, although lit tle known to American theatre goers, turn in swell performances. The Lowdown— Too slow to get started. At the other end of the campus, Guion Hall features THE KEEPER OF THE FLAME, starring Kath- “You’ll never get a promotion the other way. Now you go in there and simply take command!” ¥ BACKWASH ★ “CAN DT” MAG CANE "Backwash: An agitation resulting from some action or occurrence” — Webster We all thought it was funny as hell, but the police made quite a fuss about it. Something to Read By Dr. T. F. Mayo the anthology of army humor: The Camp Hood pri vate who, when asked at a class Rumor Clinic in military courtesy, “Whom do you salute in the army?” answer ed readily, “All officers and lieu tenants, sir.” to the acid test when the British Who’s Who Editor Makes Statements About Manpower The editor and publisher of Who’s erine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy, Who in America says “Controlled whose names right off the bat tag Brainpower is just as essential for this cinema as a good show. America as controlled strategic The story is the familiar one of materials.” a world renown newspaper man Wheeler Sammons, of Chicago, an d foreign correspondent (Spen- publisher of the reference volume, cer Tracy) who returns to the Uni- told a committee of congress that ted States just at the time fnueral training programs of the army and services are being held for an Am- navy threaten extinction of the erican political leader of wealth small American liberal arts col- an d fame whose hold on the people leges. This, he said would be “an is fanatical. irreparable loss.” Tracy sees something sinister He warned against total, empha- i n the deceased’s recent career and sis on technical training during family life, and tries to find out the war period, and said “Liberal the truth from the virtually unap- education should not be a war cas- proachable widow, Katherine Hep- ualty.” burn. She withheld the facts from He said denial of liberal educa- Tracy for quite a while, but finally tion to the thousands of 18 and 19- the journalist discovered the shock- year-olds who are being drafted ing 1 news that she murdered the will rob the nation of its reservoir hubby, however the act was justi- of potential professional men, and Led for the reason that the dead emphasized the need for “controlled naan was a leader—not for the No. 64,792: Beginning next se- k ra j npower to assure an adequate peoples liberty—but for the mester the college curriculum will be divided into four quarters, of It’S easy to overlook the good books which Women must be surprised to find are neither new best-sellers nor yet old they are as P°P ular without enough to be recommended as “Classics.” sllks as tkey were wlth lt- American literature since the First World „ . ,. War has been particularly rich in books Some wives are working wives supply.” ,, Representative Thomason three montts each All hoi,days T insisted the and odranl8 will be eliminated to facilitate a <( , . . ,, ... . . -a. ar e doing the best they possibly concentrated year of study. „ , (T , , J can.” “I don’t see how we can save Retraction ... all the small colleges—many of them are on,the ragged edge any- In last Saturday’s Battalion ref- h ow> ” he said slavement. of The Lowdown—A powerful mel- War has been particularly rich m books VV1¥CC ' ” 7 erence was made to the “Veteran’s a 1- J ^ v x I- which stirred and Stimulated people when an £ some a f workm ^ husbands of the e ^,.4 Callae o “ Sammons rephed that decentral,- they appeared, but which are now temper- Rannms: after women never hurt * he ^ C “ e c ub "Ml pre_ sat,on of army-navy trammg pro- arily overshadowed by the hits of the pres- catchmg them that Kcr*hi„ was thnnvht n, he onmnosed erams.s the_ answer. He mt,e,zed ent hour. I believe that the following select- does the ed casually from a great number, will in- . . terest you if you missed them in the rush The “ ia ^ lcian , wall ! ea . rvf o-o+Kna- Wn and r-aioorl the footlights and asked gXCHIlO ia LI1C CVIIDWCX. JLJ.C: UA 1 LACAZiCJU. bership was thought to be composed the policy of emphasis 0 ‘ n promi _ of “those poor devils who had giv- nent schools> en up hope of graduating.” Thanks of to one of its former members, or not> but that they had no bus _ however, we have discovered that iness drivinR their other custom _ it really consisted of senior “pri vates” whose “lost cause” referred to buttons and not “sheepskins.” ence was no longer wanted the three remaining Aggies walked The crowd cheered and stamped ThCSC Cnide AgglCS . . out ’ but not before the cashier got its feet. . . in one more “ dl g>” by saying, “We ( „ , . Last Sunday night three Aggies d on ’t need the business of those “As is customary before doing were (figuratively s p e a ki n g ) walked down to of getting born and raised. \ ™ e IOO ™g nts and asked f youn ^ rr,. ,• - 0 . , _ r . J lx lady to step up on the stage. The satires of Sinclair . Lewis dealt amusingly, if rather acidly, wiKi many sides Now, as a climax to my act, of modern life in the U.S.A. Msdl Street hits 1 am g° m g to saw this young lady off most of the weaknesses anqf absurdities in two rig,ht before y° ur e y es - of most small towns. Babbitt makes good- natured fun of the Great American Business Man. Arrowsmith will interest anybody who .xo were (.Iigurauveiy s pea King! crude Aceies anvwav has anything to do With doctors (and who the trick,” he continued, “I’d like thrown out of Kelly’s Cafe in the ’ has not?). Elmer Gantry indicates what first to make sure that you all thriving (?) metropolis of Hemp- Llicky Dog'S . . . might happen in the ministry. Dodsworth want to see . . . stead. It seems that after placing Discarded liquor barrels are now accuses American husbands of spoiling their A thundering “sure” rocked the an order for some chili and wait- going to the dogs. The Army wives. Lewis later, novels have not been SO house. ing for over an hour they discov- Quartermaster Corps is using them pungent as these five. “And there are no objections ered that said chili was not even for the WAGS—dogs in service— I opular psychology has.produced a num- f 0 m y performing . . .?” in the making. who, lucky devils, will get to live her of stimulating books since 1919. Since “No!!!” About this time six more Ag- in them. The barrels are converted most of them contradict each other, it is “The girl’s sorority sisters—do gies came in, and to prevent their into kennels at an approximate obviously necessary to take them all with they object?” suffering the same fate of wait- cost of $3.50 each, a . grain of salt.. Dorsey S Why We Behave “Not at all, please do.” ing they were told by our “heroes” The barrels are cleaned and lined Like Human Beings presents clearly and en- “How about you,” he asked to where they might secure more with parafin insuring sanitation, tertainingly a good many important things the girl. “Do you mind being sawed prompt service. After a brief con- One end of the barrel is sealed and about your roommate S mind. Everett Dean i n two?” ference they left for another cafe the other covered with a blanket. Martin S Psychology: Lectures in Print out The girl shook her head. causing no end of distress to the Some of them have shaded front lines most of the interesting ideas on modern “Well then,” the magician said, cashier in Kelley’s. She told the porches where the pooches can do psychology. Menninger S The Human Mind "here I go.” And he sawed the three Aggies that “it was imma- their “horizontal engineering” illlfstrates with dozens of case histories all girl in two. terial to her whether they got out when off duty, the brain-twists and complexes. WHAT’S SHOWING At the Campus Today, tomorrow and Sat urday, SHIP WITH WINGS with John Clements and Les lie Banks At Guion Hall Today and Tomorrow KEEPER OF THE FLAME with Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn Also Whistling In Dixie Perhaps the field of popular economics has been the richest of all since the last war. Stuart Chase has never surpassed his first books, The Tragedy of Waste and Men and Machines, in clearness and enduring inter est. The Modern Corporation and Private Property, by Berle and Means, which will probably remain one of the classics of the Depression Period, is also remarkably easy and rewarding to read. Bertrand Russell’s tiny book, Political 'Ideals, which came out as long ago as 1916, contains more concen trated good sense about economics and so ciety in general than most ponderous tomes. Income and Economic Progress, by H. G. Moulton of the stately Brooklings Institu tion, makes more sense to this reviewer than most of the conservative defense of cap italism. Above all, if you missed Of Human Bondage, Somerset Maugham’s only great novel, go back and pick it up now. With Dreiser’s An American Tragedy and Gals- worth’s Man of Property, and Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms, it probably represents the best that the modern Anglo-American novel could do before Steinbeck hit his stride and Hemingway himself wrote For Whom the Bell Tolls. Every branch of the Armed Services uses the telephone. One of a series, Anti-Aircraft. This Collegiate World : ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATE PRESS: YALE LAUNCHES PROGRAM OF “FOREIGN AREA STUDIES” On the theory that the “diploma follows the flag,” Yale University is embarking on a program of “Foreign Area Studies” to train experts in various fields in the language, history and customs of those parts of the world which may be occupied by United Na tions forces as the war unfolds. The courses will be open to economists, engineers, public health officers, social work ers, government officials, business men and others with a college degree whose precise talents would be valuable in re-building shat tered nations after the war. As tentatively outlined by Edgar S. Furniss, dean of the Graduate School, the training will be of an intensive nature and limited to those who may be assigned abroad during the war and afterward. Students will study a given section of the world for twelve weeks, although this period might be cut to six weeks m the case of those who had a fair grasp of the language. Phone 4-1168 TODAY - TOMORROW KEEPER OF THE FLAME Starring SPENCER TRACY KATHARINE HEPBURN Also CARTOON — SHORTS NEWS SATURDAY - MONDAY WHISTLING IN DIXIE With Red Skelton To his mother and dad it seems only yesterday that he was using the family telephone to call his high school sweetheart. But today the orders he sends and receives over his wartime telephone help speed the day when love and laughter, peace and progress shall again rule the world. Western Electric IN PEACE...SOURCE OF SUPPLY FOR THE BELL SYSTEM. IN WAR...ARSENAL OF COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT. 4-1181 Box Office Opens 1 P. M. TODAY - FRI. - SAT. sfarring JOHM CLEMENTS-LESUE BANKS JANE BAXTER ;ANNT0D» BASIL SYDNEY • EDW. CHAPMAH Pefecsed thru Un.ted Art.s*^ Also Comedy - Short - News