PAGE 2 THE BATTALION FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 25, 1944 STUDENT TRI-WEEKLY NEWSPAPER TEXAS A. & M. COLLEGE The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College ?f Texas and the City of College Station is published three times weekly, and issued Tuesday,, Thursday and Saturday mornings except during the summer semester when it is published two times weekly and issued on Tuesday and Friday afternoon* and is the official publication of the students of the A. & M. College of Texas and serves unofficially in the interest of the enlisted personnel of the United States Army and Navy stationed on the campus. Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at College Station, Texas, mder the Act of Congress of March 8, 1870. Subscription rate $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 5, Administration Building. Telephone 4-1444. Member Fbsocided Cplle&ide Press Calvin Brumley Editor Dick Goad Managing Editor Alfred Jefferson Managing Editor S. L. Inzer Sports Editor J. W. Bell Sports Writer Renyard W. Canis Backwash Editor Robert Gold : Reporter Eli Barker Reporter D. V. Hudson Reporter B. J. Blankenship Reporter Dick Osterholm Reporter Jimmie Deraopulos Cartoonist Preparation, Practice, Performance . .. It is a long established precept that any person or group of persons subject to human frailties will make mistakes but it is also true that mistakes can be eliminated by thought before action and by careful practice before action is taken. Any organization or individual which expects to function smoothly must put in long periods of practice. There can be no expectation that a person completely unfamiliar with a particular job can perform that task without a period of preparation and introduction. It has been the practice in the United States to devote approxi mately the first twenty years of life to formal education and the remainder to informal learning and the business of making a living. > Any group which represents A. & M. College should be thoroughly trained because it is certain that an institution with the excellent standing of A. & M. does not desire to have its name associated with an individual or group of individuals which cannot do their best because of scanty preparation. These facts are certainly pertinent when con sideration is given the right of the corps to practice in those things which represent the student body. For many seasons the “Twelfth Man” has been recog nized as the most perfectly drilled and disciplined student body in the Southwest Conference. The reputation for lusty yelling at football games has largely been gained by the precision timing which is employed. This timing requires practice. Aggie conduct at games is also praised. The gentlemanly conduct is attributable to responsibility taken by yell lead ers and cadet officers. Proper group conduct is best attain ed by practice $f the group itself rather than practice in dividually. Yell practices are undoubtedly the only means of at taining group precision and they are also perhaps the best means of obtaining group discipline at football games. A Job for the Twelfth Man ... This fall an unusual situation confronts the corps in that two of the football games are scheduled for the week between the summer and fall semesters. The first game against Bryan Field is scheduled for Saturday, September 23, one day after the summer semester ends and the second game is scheduled for September 30, the Saturday before registration opens on Monday, October 1. The problem confronting the “Twelfth Man” is the necessity of cutting short the weeks vacation between semes ters in order that the corps may be in the stands at both games. The problem is further complicated by the fact that the second game will be in Alamo Stadium in San Antonio against Texas Tech. Any inconvenience that might arise if the corps at tends both of these games is more than offset by the sup port which they can give the team. The football team needs the spirit of the corps at every game and especially do they need the complete “Twelfth Man” at the first few games. It is the corps job to be on hand at every game possible. The corps is a part of the Fighting Aggie Team and no Aggie would think for a minute about sending an incomplete team on the field. The football team is not complete without the “Twelfth Man.” Every man of the student body who calls himself an Aggie will be on Kyle Field September 23 and also in Alamo Stadium on September 30. The first few games of the season will, in a large measure, determine the possibilities of a vic torious season. The “Twelfth Man” must function. SOMETHING TO READ Edna B. Woods Ass’t Circulation Librarian FAIR STOOD THE WIND FOR FRANCE by H. E. Bates The attention of the world is focused on France. The French people anxiously await the moment when they will be completely free from the oppression and disgrace of German domination. Practically their only contributions to civiliza tion in the past three years have resulted from their efforts to house and feed allied fighters and secret service personnel, and to smuggle them to channels of safe ty. The actions of the French Underground were limited by ne cessity, bnt its members have work ed none the less diligently. Fair Stood the Wind for France, an adventure novel, is the story of French patriots who worked for the survival of France. More litera ry than most novels with similar plots, Fair Stood the Wind for France describes the French ter rain and the inhabitants of the southern provinces with accuracy and understanding. A broken airscrew forces a Well ington bomber and its crew of 5 members into a crash-landing. The catastrophe occurred in southern France as the English crew was returning from a bombing mission over Italy. All members except the pilot, whose arm was severely in jured, landed safely. Immediately, upon landing, members of the crew, bound together by many com mon experiences, begin a new ex perience. This time, they must con ceal themselves thoroughly, and at the same time, they must seek as sistance which will facilitate their escape from occupied territory. To reveal their identity erronneously is to place themselves in a German prison camp; to involve French citizens is to endanger their lives. H. E. (Herbert Ernest Bates, the author of Fair Stood the Wind for France, is a R. A. F. Squadron lead- der. He was one of the creative writers admitted to the Air forces to serve and to write. Mr. Bates, a widely anthologized short story writer, was not known or read by the bulk of the American reading public before the publication of this novel. However, the tone of his writing is largely American. His story is. appealing, since all of us are continously interested in the fate of our airmen who are forced down over enemy territory. Fair Stood the Wind for France isn’t spoiled by the melodrama that has saturated other similar books. Told simply in a straightforward manner typical of the English, it combines a moving love story with the dangerous adventures of an injured pilot and his crew. Francoise, “the girl” as she is called throughout the book, and her family accept the responsibility of helping the unfortunate crew, but apparently they aren’t enthusiastic about it. Their matter-of-fact at titude makes the story more real istic and its sequence more logical. Francoise, according to Henry Seidel Canby, may be intended to symbolize France. Calmness, intel ligence, sympathy, and idealism combine themselves in her charac ter. Her enduring faith fulfills not only her own spiritual needs, but (See LIBRARY, Page 4) t BACrWA/H By Renyard W. Canis Backwash: An agitation resulting from some action or occurrence.”—Webster. P LANS ARE UNDERWAY, in fact they are practically com plete, for a big weekend for the Aggies in San Antonio after the Aggies win their second Alamo Stadium victory over the Texas Red Raiders on September 30. Dick Smith, president of the San Antonio A. & M. club, reports that the Alamo City Aggies have com pleted arangements for the use of the Hotel Gunter Rose Room on that night. It will be a big weekend. To start things off there will be the customary yell practice in down town San Antonio which will be climaxed by a victorious sixty min utes of football which will be topp ed off by an unKnown amount of dancing and merry, making. Some few Aggies have expressed the fear that there will not be enojUgh Aggies in the Alamo City to have a yell practice in view of the fact that the game is on the Saturday before school opens for the fall semester. Someone has suggested that the roll be called just before yell practice. Rumor HAS IT that the Ag- gieland Orchestra will play for the Aggie Gridiron Dance. Sounds good. The Aggieland made a swell initial showing at their first ap pearance and since that time they have received arrangements of new pieces and have rehearsed (See BACKWASH, Page 3) Man, Your Manners By I. Sherwood If Men are inclined to skip any in formation on setting a table and serving a meal and yet table ser vice cannot be separated from ta ble manners. A man who is a per fect host is pretty apt to have had a great deal of gracious living, when a boy, that furnished him with a background for his present day living. Nice table manners just don’t happen; they come from proper training when young, and con tinued practice of proper table technique throughout a lifetime; they are very revealing, and if yours are remiss you had better go to work on them. Just how valuable they are you will never know but the following story may serve as an illustration: A young man of high academic rating had been interviewed by the president of a large manufac turing company, in view of getting a job, only to be turned down. The owner of the company had taken the young man out to lunch and he gave as his excuse for turning him down, that his company could not have a representative, who could not eat properly. We indulge in the necessary pro cess of eating on an average of three meals a day throughout our lives, and since we are so often judged by the way we eat, we should know how to do it correctly. Such a knowledge will save us embarrassment. PENNY’S SERENADE W. L. Penberthy —■ Earl Thomson of Dartmouth was one of the best high hurdlers this country has known. He was the Olympic champion in 1920 and the first man to of ficially run the ■ event in 14 2/5 Hseconds. I once |iheard a man J speak who knew 1 Thomson and had watched him work out. He said W&m that Thomson £ ' " S;' •§§|gwas so diligent in his training that he could place a nickel on top of Penb«rthy a hurdle and knock it off without touching the hurdle. To attain this degree of performance, it surely must have taken many hours of practice be yond what would be considered as sufficient to develop a good hurd ler. Our fall football practice start ed on Monday and we have a fine looking group of young men try ing out for the team. These men will practice long and hard and out of the group will emerge those who will represent the college in our games this season. Most of these boys will practice during the regular practice periods but there will be some who will arrive early and remain after practice each day to improve their kicking, passing or some other skill in which they desire to excell. They will work out whenever they have the time. These men will stand out on our team and many spectators will re mark about their unusual ability not knowing that they paid the price to develop themselves into expert performers. The successful men and women I know have no set number of hours to work. They put in the amount of time necessary to do the job right—they pay the price. Our government is recognizing this in the citations given with awards, for bravery. These citations often point out that the honored soldier or sailor performed beyond the call of duty. If we have average ability, we can usually get by with doing the prescribed amount of work; but if we want to be outstanding we have to work overtime—we have to pay the price.