Page -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, la 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 8, 1870 Subscription rates $3 per school year. Advertising rates jpon request. Represented nationally by National Advertising Service, uic., at New York City, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, anu jaii Francisco. Office, Room 5, Administration Building. Telephone 4-6444 1942 Member 1943 Associated Golleftiate Press Sylvester Boone Managing Editor Henry Tillett Managing Editor Ben Fortson Managing Editor Andy Matula Managing Editor Jack Kelly Business Management Michael Spolane Reporter Robert Orrick Reporter John N. Troxell Reporter L. Wolfe - Reporter L. S. Baer Reporter H. C. Finger Reporter Claude Stone Photographs Robert Irving Photographs John H. Wirtz Circulation Manager Maurice Zerr Circulation Manager D. W. May Editorial Advisor The Return of Aggie Spirit. . . Aggies, this is your Aggieland! The Spirit that goes with it is yours, too. In years passed the Spirit of Aggieland has been noted all over the world for its true ness and intensity. Outsiders used to wonder what it meant when 7,000 Aggies would cry their eyes out singing the Spirit of Aggie land and listening to Taps after an unlucky football game. The war and need for war training has caused changes but Aggies will always'l)e Aggies no matter what happens ’"^nd ex’s can be found all over the world who would glady give a fellow Aggie the shirt off their backs. Aggie Spirit is something which cannot be defined in ordinary phrases; it is some thing that is intagible to the non-Aggie, but something which, when it really gets a hold on you, becomes a part of your being. “True to each other as Aggies can be,” is a line from the Spirit of Aggieland. Have you ever stopped and thought what that line really means? You old Aggies know and you new Ag gies will know. Aggies stand together through thick and thin. In the fox holes of Tomorrow Is Another Day Yesterday’s tomorrow is today! The spirit of Americanism, the love of country, the honor and the traditions that go with being an American, instilled into the pres ent generation, is the outstanding element that is bringing glory to Old Glory on the far-flung battle fronts of the world. The armed services we have in the field to day, although manned the equipped in a very short time, were actually created in that yesterday when those who bear our arms learned to love their country, to protect the rights it gives to those who are its citizens, and to hold dear those traditions that can be found only in America. Winning today’s war is a matter of man power, a matter of machines and munitions and military skill—elements that America possesses in both the greatest quantity and quality. But after today there is another tomorrow—in which an even greater task must be undertaken, a task of such magni tude that the whole future of our civilization rests in the hands of those who undertake it. To reconstruct and rehabilitate a broken and bleeding world, to guide defeated, op pressed and disillusioned peoples into the warmth and sunlight of freedom and equal ity, to stamp from the earth the virus of hatred, and to sooth and heal the wounds and scars of combat is the task that tomor row’s generation must undertake! To accomplish such a feat—today, with the smoke of war and carnage blackening the sky, we must prepare men for tomorrow —men with training and skill, men with in itiative, men with unbounded faith in man kind, and men who place their destiny and well as the destiny of their world into the guidance of a kind and all-powerful Creator. Then the dawn of the tomorrow will bring mankind a little nearer to the Perfect Day. Bataan, the Japs were probably surprised when during the worst hours for the Amer icans, a song would drift out on the wind. That song was the “Aggie War Hymn” and the Aggies who sang it fought to the last wall. Ole, Army, we know things have chang ed and it can’t,be helped. Bleeding about it won’t do any good. Let’s just stick together and have the faith to believe that when it is all over, over there, Aggieland will come to even greater glory. ARMY ENGINEERS 1st. Sergeant’s Guff Cadet 1st Sgt. D. K. Springwater ne raining morning in March, small group of bewildered G.I.s andered down the main avenue from the railway depot searching for the Commandant’s office. By the braid on their caps one could tell they were of many different branches of the service: Artillery, Engineers, Medics and even M.P. At tinfes they were greeted by occasional Aggies with the “How dy” or “Hello” which they were later to discover exemplified the Aggie spirit of comradeship. These were the Army men long expected on the AMC campus and already christened previous to their arrival “The Engineers.” Under the provisions of the Army Spe cialized Training Program set up ARMY ENGINEERS Editor H. P. Bradley Associates: Ed Babich, D. K. Springwater, Bill Martin, and M. J. Kaft. last fall, these men had been sub jected to a series of competitive examinations and an interview be fore a board of three officers in order to determine their qualifica tions for acceptance as college trainees. These qualifications were in addition to the requirement that they must also be eligible Officer Candidates. This first small group composed the nucleus for -the present com pany of 107 men, taking courses in M.E., C.E., E.E. Some of them, such as Paul Bishop now studying Advanced E.E., has been out of school for 18 years . . . others, Bill Martin, M.E., were in football togs last fall. Meanwhile, the Army demanded SECOND - HAND BOOKS and EQUIPMENT There’s no use bleedin’ about it—just come over to the Co-op and get it. We have just what you want and we invite you to use the facilities of “Your Own Store” often. Yep, that’s the Student Co-op. \ STUDENT CO-OP “Your Own Store’ its pound of flesh and a physical training program calculated to strike fear to the heart of a Com mando was put into action. Bur- pees, push-ups, 300-yard dash were included and the men will be again examined upon completion of the course to note improvement. Courses officially began April 12th and will continue until July 3rd, when the trainees will again appear before a board for reclassi fication and consideration for the next term. Last month a cadet and* merit system was incorporated under the supervision of Capt. W. O. Reeves, F.A., with the assistance of 1st. Sgt. Fred Swan and Sgt. A. L. Swett, for the purpose of giving experience to the potential Officer Candidates. Through highways and byways, from the far corners of our coun try, the engineers have traveled far and wide and are now assem bled as a unit in Spence hall. At heart we are still loyal to our native states. The Californian prides himself as coming from the land of honey; the Texans, Suh, we are gentlemen; New Yorkers take pride in their ball teams, es pecially them bums from Brook lyn; Chicagoans, ours is the finest city, swell to the boys in uniform; and running true to form, the Mis sourians, Show me. We are now all grouped and our only difference appears to be which of the three branches of engineer ing, civil, mechanical or electrical overshadows the other two. Yet each is dependent on the other for advice and assistance. Hats off to Lt. Arthur Jors, our new Commanding Officer, who has plenty of punch and is always eager to lend a helping hand. To our skipper we come with our tales of woe and shortly after wards we emerge smiling. But above all we are never permitted to forget that we are soldiers. Our editor, Pat Bradley, swell chap who has seen plenty of service (ladies hose) and is some judge and ex ponent on the fair sex. JUST AN M. E. It took us a couple of months but we’ve finally broken into print. From here on watch our smoke! We are the Engineers! . . . Our name and reputation preceded us here, and by study we’ll try to live up to the name. But, then we’ll have plenty of time to fulfill the rep if we manage to get through the first three months. We have only a year or so of physics, a se mester of algebra, the same of trigonometry, analytical geometry, calculus and machine drawing to cover in twelve weeks. Nothing hard, you see . . . plenty of time for everything with a few mo ments left for P.E. obstacle course, two mile run, baseball, basketball pushups, et al. Oh yes, and our regular military education. In our spare time we sleep. After a year of this we are all set to become oficers (I get this straight from the latrine, but then many a cam paign and election has been settled there.) We live in Spence Hall, across the street from the sailors. Had a little trouble with all their five o’clock whistles at first. That’s all settled now. We just awaken at five and lie around until our reveille call at six. Simple isn’t it. All in all though, we are glad to be at A. & M. and we hope you Aggies are as glad to have us. You’ll be hearing more from us and about us from now on. Bye now. Phone 4—1168 4-1181 Open at 1 p. m. TODAY - WEDNESDAY “SEVEN MILES FROM ALCATRAZ” — with -T- James Craig Bonita Granville THURS. - FRI. - SAT. “ORCHESTRA WIVES” — with George Montgomery Ann Rutherford Glenn Miller Orchestra TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY Joe E. Brown — in — “THE DARING YOUNG MAN” — also Sports and News COMING ATTRACTION Sunday and Monday ITS A COLLEGE FULL OF ENTERTAINMENT! as W! RNER BROS! Re-release witu dick powell PI IISCILLA LANE • ROSEMARY LANE Directed by WILLIAM KEIGHLEY ■i cut Lyra by Dick Whiting & Johnny Mercer E iee) buy i (ma “Bat” and you of A. & M. for al lowing us to become a part of your tradition. And know you that when we go forth it will be with pride of A. & M. in our hearts, and on our lips will be, “Yes sir, my college was V.M.I. and Texas A. & M.” . . . “That’s right, I’m a Buckeye and an Aggie.” . . . “Col lege town, surely, Cambridge and College Station . . . I’ve lived in both.” May we prove worthy of your name and may we bring new glory to your old glory. “SAGA”... by Brad “The miners came in forty- nine” ... and so the’'story goes. But the Army forty-niners were no miners ... It was when the last battery of test had been fired, the last pencil laid to rest, when the last smoke of fevered brow had risen, there was discovered forty-nine who were neither ani mal, vegetable nor yet mineral. With pure Army Snafu forty- nine had been sent to the wrong college, for there was to be no basic engineering taught here, no psychology, no language. And so as we others worked our slip sticks proving again that two times two is 3.9999999, there came into being the forty-niners whiling away their hours with hup-twos, push-ups, baseball and bull. Here on an athletic scholarship was the comment. Training for soft-ball cadres said others. A goodly group they were, too. Our first Cadet C.O. was a forty- niner, now “Dickie Boy” Nelson is at Stanford University studying Psychology, and Bud Koehler, co author of the “strictly G.I.” show, is also on the coast. Johnny Toner is taking basic in New Mexico and will be back ere long. Ben Mor rison, the last to go, writes from the University of California, “As for the school, it is large, very beautiful and quite friendly, but why in h— it was built in a bunch of gullies on the side of a mountain beats me. We get enough walking and climbing just going to classes and back to ruin the morale of a common Texas mule.” This . . . this . . . blasphemy of my dearest, my own, my alma ma ter. My beautiful sun drenched hills overlooking the city by the golden gate . . . Alas it was ever thus. Even heaven has compain- ants to the C.O. that the golden streets do not bear the 22k stamp. Closer home, forty-niner, Rufus Grace just proved that eight hours a day of hup-twos is indeed better than early to bed, early to rise. Grace flew around the muddy mile and seven-tenths jaunt the other day in better than ten minutes. Pat Blanford, no forty-niner, ex cept perhaps in years, showed that even C.O.’s could run by beating in under twelve. -TUESDAY MORNING, JUNE 8, 1943 make up the 1st ST. Co., Unit 3800. A unit composed of soldiers from every branch of the Army from MP to KP. “What are we doing here?” If you can answer that, you have an swered a question that no one else on this campus has been able to answer . . not even the military personnel. The latrine generals have it all doped out . . . the same way they solved Hitler’s secret weapon. To the campus goes the credit of baptizing this organization the “Engineers.” The Army lists it as the “Specialized Training Unit.” Three branches of engineering are offered under this system, mechan ical, civil and electrical. The soldiers are taught on an accelerated program. Accelerated, that’s where you stoop over to pick up your pencil and miss two weeks of physics. This advanced engi neering course lasts one year. We hope to last an equally long time. The fellows of the Army Special ized Training Unit No. 3800 are proud of their organization. It was a tough outfit to get into but it’s so easy to get out of. Sgt. Webb, one hour of his long awaited furlough gone, - receives a telegram from his C.O. ordering him to report to A. & M. College of Texas immediately. Pvt. “Pat” Putzer called off the drill field at Camp Maxey and given two hours to pack his barracks bag and catch the train to A. & M. College of Texas. Similar experiences could be related for 105 more men who