The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, March 5, 1943 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: North Texas Daily / The Campus Chat and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries Special Collections.
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EDITORIALS • OPINIONS
PAGE TWO
THE CAMPUS CHAT, DENTON T EXAS. FRIDAY. MARCH 5. 1*43
REVIEWS • FEATURES
The Campu, Chat
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Friday, March 5, 1943
Jteeul-JlvaA* Aid
Two years ago on March II, the LemJ-
J>ase Bill wu signed by PmUhint Row
velt and went into affect Today that bill
is cloft«ly associated with a problem that
is **ry much in th« public mifd and in
the public conversation food rationing.
We have been told that one of the prin-
cipal Tfupun* lor the necessity of food
rationing in the need for sending food U>
our allien by way of the Lend-Leam- Bill,
arid, undoubtedly, this ia true Lmd-L«ut
food in helping to win the war, to permit
the Russians to continue their rush
against the Na«is, to give the fighting
British Eighth Army a lift in it* drive
into Orman-hald part* of Africa, and to
lend aid to ttie people of that "tight little
inland" of England in sustaining the
strength they w <-d to back their fighter*
with munition* and morale.
A lot of Land-Lease food was sent
abroad during 1942, and, according to
OWI, that amount will have to be prae
tirally doubled thi* year to sustain the
Ualt«l State* offensive*. Yet, surprising-
ly enough, the amount we have sent,
though important in the terms of battle*
won, in relatively small in terms of our
total supplv of food.
Of the five meat* noon to be rationed,
we sent only five per cent of our total
supply. We kept for our own need* over
nine and a half quart* out of every ten
quart* of milk we produced, and we pro
duced over 58 billion quarts in all. Of
cheese supplier, almost one quarter of
every pound the United State* produced
waa exported to our allies, of butter,
pr otnt of our total supply.
It took four and a half billion down
eggn to make the egg powder that wa*
exported under Lenn-tjease This waa one
egg out of every ten that went to market.
Ninety-nine out of every hundred can-*
of canned vegetable*, fruit* and fruit
juice* produced in thi* country went to
the U. 8. Armed Force* and to American
civilian*.
Lend Lea* is restwirwible for some of
the wmJ for food rationing, but the prin-
cipal reason* are the heavy need for food
for the United States Armed Force* and
the Iwraiid American civilian ability
and desire to buy more food than ever
before
Food rationing will be an inconvenience
but not a hardship. The American people
will not be able to find it in their heart*
to U-grudge what food is sent abroad to
those who are. in a large sense, responsi-
ble for a great deal of American*' pres-
ent freedom from fear in their own
homes.
At UlM . . .
To an institution for the training of
educators, the problem of educating for
freedom and for the future should be of
vital interest, for only through education
can the thing* for which we are lighting
today be preserved for the generation*
of tomorrow.
Many of us have seen the current film
"Hitler's Children" or have read the book
from which it was taken. "Education for
Death," and we have been appalled by
a way of living and of teaching that in
stills into even the youngest children a
doctrine of distrust, hate, and death.
It is for us, the educator* of the free
and freedom-loving, to see that such an
education for death never touches those
that we shall teach, that America's chil-
dren receive their customary education
for life, and that the childrer
dren who have been brought up on the
false teaching* of a Nazi-dominated Eu-
rope have their birthright as children
tiM right to learn to live fi to QBjdf Uv-
in#—returned to them.
«y _ A
course, these down here have their own
particular little cuteneases, such as a
back-xpacei that won't back, a line *pacer
that can't make up its mind whether to
follow the single- or double-space pat-
tern. and a general tendency to put Susie
Smalltime from Sandwichburg (don't
mind me; I'm just hungry) when she's
really from Hitching Center.
Everybody was working peacefully, fi-
nally, when someone discovered the as-
sociate editor and I. l>eing mere girls in
the long run, had less than 10 minutes to
make it across the campus and safe into
our cozy little dormitories before time for
Mr. Starr to start twinkling. Made a mad
dash for it and slid in just under the nose
of a very surprised hostess.
THURSDAY . . .
The day dawned bright and clear, but
a dark cloud immediately eclipsed the
whole thing when I remembered that this
was make-up and page-proof day. Met a
phy* ed class and now I begin to under-
stand what the fellas mean when they
groan al*>ut mass drills. We get them,
too. now.
In between groans over stories that
wouldn't fit, heads that got pied, and the
little gremlin* that sneak in and pick up
whole galley* of type and hide them from
the sight of humans, read a clever story
supposed to have come out of Nazi-held
Europe.
It seems that, after the attempted
bombing of Hitler in the Munich Brau-
haus became known, the following notices
appeared in the window* of several butch-
er shops in Prague the next morning:
"There will unfortunately be no lard or
pork today as the *wine wasn't killed
yesterday."
miS -
Ended the day in a blaze of humiliation
when the missing galley turned up in a
corner where I had taken it to practice
up on reading type like the Chinese (up-
side down and backwards). Finally, waai>
ed my way home to a belated supper and
bed after having stayed under the print
shop's feet long enough to get • final
proof.
FRIDAY. SATURDAY, SUNDAY . . .
Days of rest, relaxation, and fun. All I
have to do between now and time for
starting next week's paper ia write next
week's column, figure out a couple of edi-
torials, dodge the telephoned complaints,
and store up enough energy to start all
over again.
Did somebody say this life was
CAMPUS CAMERA
SCHOOL BACKGROUND OF DRAFTEES
W* WEEK . .
Eleanor may be able to cram aJJ her
doing* into a day-by-day description of
what *iwr does, but with me the day ia
only a minor division of the week—the
THAT week'
In answer to all thooe souk who coo
about the lovely, easy job we have, we'd
like to present herewith THE DIARY OF
AS EDVTOR or TIME S NOT THE ONLY
THING THAT FLIES.
MONDAY . . .
Dear Diary: Woke up this morning
just in time to throw a few of the laaa-
wrinkled of my clothes on and give the
bed a long loving look, which will be prac-
tkaliy ail the attention it will get from
me for the rest of the week. Spent 10 min-
utes or so giving the daily Spanish las*
•♦on a quick look-see to find out whether
or not the flashing Don Manrique and the
beautiful Leoiior have escaped from the
wicked Don S'uno, but wasn't quite sure
about the whole thing, so had to read it
again a rare luxury.
Visited the office to write the assign-
ments, trying to decide which' of the re-
porters would be less likely to do me bodi-
ly harm if he got a long assignment. De-
cided to Is tactfully out of reach when
t! ey read the assignment sheets, and
gave them ail whopper* Started dummy
.r:g the editorial page and worrying the
columnists about getting their material
in.
TI ESDAY . . .
Attended classes and took notes on
state government, but found myself wor-
rying about getting a little change into
front-page make-up Dashed down to the
office to work on my editorials, and ended
up by reading somebody else's and won-
dering why I couldn't do as well. Spent
10 minutes trying to placate an irate club
president, who wa* upset about his meet-
ing not having been reported, explaining
that it either hadn't come in in time to
meet the deadline or that there hadn't
been space for it. Took time out to eat
some supper, and then back again to write
headlines and help the staff editors in
dummying their page*
WEDNESDAY . . .
Ah, deadline day The day when we go
slightly nuts tracing down stories that
have gotten lost or have broken at the
last minute I^eft my bed reluctantly at
an ungodly hour when it wa* still *o dark
that 1 needed a guide to find my way to
clas*. Teacher evidently didn't get a
guide, 'cause he never showed up.
Everybody spent the rest of the day
and up into the night working on head-
line* a„d cussing the typewriters that
seem to be thoroughly in the control of
those newspaper gremlins, etaoin and
shrdlu. It's amazing how those two can
get into a perfectly good typewriter and
completely ruin the way it spells! Of
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HBPMSC SOUXBS" BUY BONOS
Sign Mystery Cleared Up;
Ray Edwards Began It All
By ELMORA MESSER
You've heard of th* hot lamaU-
man who had ami Hpan-
tnh moonlight in hi* and
you've read about th* character
of the man h*hi d 'hi- iron m* k,
but you havt- yrt to !«ar« tb* eoiu
plete hiatory of the ''hat office'*
"This Stepped on th - Gra**"
• gn
A letter received thi* w k by
(iene Clark from '.18, '40. and '41
f'ampu* rhat Editor Ray Kdward*
gave a detailed history of the
sign, giving th«< background for
the preeent "Keep off the <.ra**"
campaign, *pon*orert by thr Inter
fraternity Counetl
"Like heck you're going t.« burn
my 'Keep off thr Grs**' mgn«'"
Edwards began "I'll tell you a
story about them " Kdward* pro
reeded with s rambling two-paged
tale < the validity of which is left
for those who knew Kdwafk to
deride )
The tale began somewhere and
sometime bark in u place referred
to as Prognot, in which the former
•rfltor acquired a very unique ac
romplishment that he believed
helped him through school.
Edwards wrote of the pumpkin
farm, which was harvested in i
laiy man's way by hi« father's
•hooting the vine in two, three
inches from the pumpkin, causing
it to roll down the hill where Ed-
wards caught it and stored it away
in the pumpkin houae.
The writer said he got so good at
catching those pumpkin* thai a
fallow by the name of Jack Hmro
came slong and right off de-
cided he would lie a very handy
man on the football squad. Sisco
told his maw and pa that there
were a bunch of pumpkin heads ov
er around Commerce that he would
like to see Edwards catch
And so the narration progres-
sed; Edwards couldn't hitch hike
over to Commerce often enough
to get enough pumpkins to satis
fy him, and he had to begin
work. His first job was punctur-
ing the bubbles on the fish pond
to release the air, the North
From Chat File*
25 Ifed/iA Ayo.
Across the front page of the
first March Chat in 191S was
smeared the red banner. SEN-
IOR- 8 P E C I A L EDITION -
SENIOR This «u the first of
the four class-edited Chats. And
you can bat there was plenty of
tombstontng in the job, and the
make-up was a bit unstable
The note from the regular Chat
staff read. "If you have aver
thought, believed, or preached that
there should be any change in edit-
ing the Chat, you have the chance
of 'showing yoar hand.' Like a
bachelor, wc enjoy making a visit
to see how other people 'flavor
things '"
And there was a detectable dif-
ference in the flavor, too.
In one of the lead stories (no-
tice the rsaort to one). "Who'*
Who and Why of the Senior Class
of Normal College," Miss Mamie
Smith was identified in this way:
"If anyone is ta doubt about any-
thing from his life's career to
This Waek
whether or not he will go to the
show on Saturday night, he ends
by saying. 'Well, III just ask
Mamie about that." Her patience is
miraculous."
I S. Brad-haw was described
as "Associate Editor-in-Chief, the
famous editorial writer! Impolite
enough to laugh at the trials of
the Senior Staff this weak."
The slogan of the "senior sev-
ens" who acted as the week's
stag was, "Can honor's voice pro-
roke a senior's ear, or flattery
soothe the sorrow of their parting
year?" Is that familiar?
Considering the large collection
of ads on the last page of the pa-
per, the seniors of 1918 should
have been congratulated for crowd-
ing a short carry-over and a story
that probably w .uid have been bet-
ter off in die "hell-bo*."
If that nounds bad, just wait
until nest week when the junior
edition is exposed.
Movig Viawt and Reviews
Hmely War Movie Tells of Fall of Paris,
Of Struggle Between Patriotism and Love
American worker wrote. Finally
he hit upon the ideal job, work-
ing in the publicity department
Edward* claimed the college
paid him 'i7c per hour for reclin
ing casually in the grass to give
the institution a very collegiate
appearance
"I liked the job," Edwards cor.
tinned, "for the bonnes could not
find me I had just come from
Frognot, and I blended right into
the grass, being rather green at
the time Well, I learned to love
the irraas I failed at football,
for I loved the grass no much that
I even aat out there at night. 1
kept sitting on it for four years "
Since he was a key man at the
irraas-sitting. Edwards wrote, Or
McConnell persuaded him to stay
by giving him the editor's job
along with his grass-sitting
"The first thing I did as editor
was plan an antt-grasswaiker
movement The move blossomed
forth alonir about the spring of '40
And here, after this very brief
introductory paragraph, I will tell
you what we did with the 'This--
Stepped on the Grass' signs.
"Naturally I wanted to go whoie
bog and say 'This Pool Stopped
<m the Grass,' but some of the
saner dtisens pointed out that
there are certain individuals who
icsent being called a fool- -at leant
they do not care to go around wear
ing a sign that «ays they are one."
A club on the campus agreed to
be the police force. Every time the
police caught someone walking on
the gras« they put the sleeve on
him and hauled him into court. Ed-
wards pinned the sign on the mis-
creant's bark, and he went out
among his fellows wearing the sign
for the remainder of the day.
"We did a landofUce business for
several day*," Edwards explained
" I lot- Carrico was one of thi? of-
fenders. Many students cam>. to
the office trying to find out what
the three dashes in the sign meant,
so I told them that it meant 'This
Carrico Stepped on the Grass"
"And you wanted to throw those
signs away!"
By VERNELlE GRABLE
One «f the meat <
ly-rwwiwd cinema# in many a day
wa* Httfcr'g Chtidrew, with Den-
toe fans turning oat #a mtmm to
sk a verification <n picture of
propaganda of Nasi horrors The
mora was eb"wr for a four-day
ran at the Texas Theater last
weak-end. and there wa* a capa
city crowd for evary performance
I «aw the caavie twice, and both
times the theatre was filled and
overflowing with spectators Who
proved, by their whole-hearted re-
sponse, that they are not idly ur.-
.nterested as to America's fate
and the situation existing in Ger-
many The audience* seemed, as
a whole, to And the aw. tie good
as a show as well as a timely
filming of events
There was. indeed, much cause
for their enthusiastic response to
ChtMrm. The movie w *
something new in the way of
propaganda show*. It was very
definitely a propaganda movie,
but it was one of the highest
type The story wa* refreshing
end encouraging, with a hope-
filled ending There was much
really excellent acting in the mr.v
le as well as exceptionally pood
photography and careful, well-
timed directing
Bonita Granville, as the leading
lady in Hitler"* CkiMren, gave
what was easily her best perform
ance to date Heretofore. Miss
Granville ha* played juvenile leads
and supporting role* in class B
movie* She showed sympathetic
understanding of Her role a* the
German-born American, and
proved that she is capable of tak
ing mature parts Thi* teen-age
Hollywood actress wax refreshing
and unimitative in her charar
terisatlon, presenting her role
'-learly and simply but with a
ifrrxi deal of restrained dramatic
acting.
Restraint, I think, was one of
the movie's high points. Tim Holt,
who took the role of the Nazi
youth and Hitler-follower, wa.*
outstanding because of the re-
straint he showed in playing his
Psychologists Use
Real-Life Situations
As Practical Texts
Taking children as their text-
books. and real-life situations as
their laboratories. North Texas
State students are learning un-
forgettable lesson* in child psy-
chology through a unique project
directed by Dr M E. Bonney of
the education faculty The project
was initiated last semester with
such «ticcea fui results that it is
being continued and extended
this semester.
I^st fall collegians enrolled in
rhiid Psychology and Abnormal
Psychology found themselves in a
new type of functional course
which placed them in every day
contact with the children they
sought to understand. The project
required work with children for
at least *even weeks, two or three
day* a week for approximately one
hour each week. The ♦>! students
were divided among such institu
tion* as the WPA Nursery School,
the Negro School, the Cumberland
Orphan's Home, the Boy Scouts,
the Demonstration School, the
Denton Senior High School, the
churches, and the Friendship
House.
Coarse Procedure
They reported to these head-
quarters, aided the person in
charge and initiated activities un
der the approval of this person.
Cautioned to be on the alert for
opportunities to participate in
activities and learn about child
development, the students later
made oral and written reports on
what they learned from their ex-
periences, and, in addition, did out-
side reading on the problems dis-
covered.
Out of this unique functional
plan came a series of important
first-hand discoveries on child psy-
chology, which were shared with
other claas members and discussed
by the entire group
Practical Values
For example, students at the
WPA Nursery School teamed that
teaching children to play is not
eaay, that such qualities as initia-
tive, originality, curiosity, and
creativeneas are not natural by-
products of child development, but
mast be stimulated
Similar obaervations grew oat
of the students' participation in
other real-life situations. Prom the
various activitea, the collegians
learned group management, value
of immediate goals, appreciation
of the colored race, discipline,
poise, realistic attitude* toward
children, self-confidence, and many
other practical lessens ia paychot-
part Holt has good facial expres-
sions. he says more with bis face
and hi* eyea than with his speech
He has a definite appeal, partly
that of a young, fresh actor, and
partiy an appeal that appear* to
he native. 1 don't know how flolt
will handle other leading dramatic
toles, provided he i* given them,
but his anaiysation of the char-
aeter he portrayed in //<*!e«" Chit-
drtn could hardly have been knit-
ter Part of this was, of course,
due to the guiding hand of the di-
rector.
H B Warner, returning to the
screen after an absence of sev-
eral years, also turned in a good
character performance Warner
make* use of some of the same
gesture* and facial emotions that
were hi* in nia portrayal of Christ
in Amy of Htngi of many year*
ago There is a restrained pas-
sion. u volcano of quietness about
hitn that help* Warner to play
such part* a.s the idealistic Ameri
can. the silent-hero type.
Another good point worth men-
tion in fiitler't Children was the
effective beginning and the suit-
able. inspinag ftnale.
Another timely war movie is
Rtuuum ia France, which will
show at the Texas Sunday, Mon
day, and Tuesday of neat week.
Produced by M-G-M and starring
Juar. Crawford, Philip Dorn, and
John Wayne, this movie talis the
story of the fall and occupation
of Paris.
Misa Crawford takes the part
of a spoiled and wealthy Paris-
icnne in Jove with a Frenchman,
Dom, whom she discovers to be
working with the Naxia. Much of
the movie has to do with her
struggle between love for her
•weetheart and love for her coun-
try. When the conflict in ber mind
is at it* height, along comes John
Wayne, an American escaped
from a concentration camp, for
whom she risks life and liberty
to help him make his way to Eng-
land A movie with a surprise
ending, Rrunion tn France is a
fairly good one, with drama, sus-
pense, and timeliness its main
feature*.
/
Off the Campui with the Exes
Weddings, Warrings Shine
In Reports from NT Exes
t
By ELMCRA MESSER
A NEW NAME ha- been added
for these former co-eds of North
Texas State . ex Nadym- Mc-
Whorter of Waxahachle is no v.
Mrs Orval Pursley . ex Wilma
Redu* of Rotan married Arthur
W Lorenx, chemical engineer
ex Sadie Binford of Tyler to
Staff Sgt Ralph Budlong of Ran
doiph Field . . ex Dorothy M' -
Murtray of McAllen to Pvt.
Charle* B Kreher of Moore Field.
SERVICE EXES who found th"y
could carry on for Uncle Sam and
a Mr*, too. include ex Lt. Milner
Moss of the Marine Corps and
Miir) 1a>u Barton of Brownsboro;
Lt M Os* has just completed his
officer* training course in Vir-
ginia and is being transferred to
San Diego. Calif ex Lt Fred
Vaughn of Army Air Forces an/I
Otha Mae Miller of Dallas: Lt.
Vaughn is stationed in Green-
ville . ex Charles W. Murphy
of the North American and Mary
Lucille Porterfield of Piano.
FULL-FLEDGED FIGHTERS
are filling the column of N'TST''
exes. . . ex Thomas C. Hardie of
the Army Air Corps, stationed at
Sheppard Field ex James 11
Malone, entered the t'. S. Naval
Reserve a.s a chief specialist
ex Naval Aviation Cadet Dean
Hallmark Sanders, Bowie, ordered
to the Naval Air Station at Mem-
phis, Tenn., for primary flight
training "to join the fleet" . . .
ex Lt A B Roger*, appointed
commanding officer of the head-
quarters squadron at the advanced
flying school near Bryan.
MORE MILITARY MEN would
take in ex Pfc. Clifford H. Sankey,
with the Army in Hawaii . . .
ex Lt. Charlie C. Davie, ground
-chool instructor at the Army Air
Forces Advanced Flying School,
I'ampa ex Cadet Wilson C.
Terry, who has completed primary
training at Grand Prairie Naval
Air Station and has been ordered
to Corpus Christi ... ex Lt. Roy
C Johnson, who was assigned di-
tector of physical education at
Bryan Field ... ex Ray Alfred
Taylor, an Alpha Phi Omega, also
who completed primary training
at Grand Prairie and was order-
ed to Corpus Christi.
A WAVE AND A SPAR are the
most recent titles taken on by ex
co-eds ... ex Mary Katherine
Elder of Coleman, received orders
to report to the WAVES School
for Officers at Smith College,
Northampton, Mass. ... ex Mrs.
Eva Williamson, first woman in
Texas to qualify for the SPARS,
was -worn in at Houston, and also
ordered to report to Smith College.
e&ynflft'j. to £fcaaiPEraj7
A CP'* Ujr Iboklw H •p«ru Ikmb WtikiiflM
It's getting so no nice young
girl in Washington is safe-—from
job offers. So acute is the office
help shortage that popping the
question now means asking, "Can
you type*" Many a high-paid ex-
ecutive doesn't know where his
next stenographer is coming
from. And a War Department
bureau is experimentng with
training boys and girls to be typ-
ist*. The experiment is directed
by Dr. Maye Ilyton of Columbia
University, who ays she can
make a typist of an average-in-
telligerice girl in three week*.
Stenographers take a little longer.
Trainees get $1,440 a year plus
$312 overtime.
Congresewoman Clare Boo the
Luce has been hailed in some quar-
ter* as a profound political think-
er on the strength of her "glob-
aloney" wisecrack. But for months
this time-wise expression has been
a pet of thoae who dislike talk-
ing about the war along anything
but "sound buaineas lines."
Speaking of gags, another
prankster has made his mark in
a WPB publication called "Offi-
cial Directory of Product Assign-
ments." The book guide* business-
men to the proper Wf|f branches
holding jurisdiction over their
products. One section reads:
"Strip cork _ Cork branch
Strip steel Steel branch
Strip teaae WAACs"
The perpetrator of this mischief
is judged to outclass the press
release writer who embellished a
long statement an cotton duck with
a tale about Donald Duck--and
almost got away with It.
Wartime Washington
Draft jitter* are hitting young
married men who staff many fed-
eral agencies. Reports that they
eligible far a 3-B induction
delay until 3-A's are called raised
false hopes Then came the order
abolishing dependency deferments.
Queries about deferable war jobs
flooded Employment Service of-
fices It'* fairly clear now that
most agencies will ask 3-B ratings
for only a few key men. Some
won't request deferments on any
basis.
War is giving many handicapped
!>er*ons their first chance at a
real job. Two thousand were hired
here in six months. They include
a blind mechanic, an arm leas tele-
phone operator, a truck driver
without feet, and many one-armed
chauffeurs.
"The nation's capital" ia being
spread across the map in the war-
time decentralisation program. In
a single year, enough agencies
were moved from Washington to
make room for 37.07G workers
here Removal of one office alone
took 9,000 jobs out of town.
War Job for Small Colleges
Many a small college finds it-
self cast into the stormy night now
that the Army-Navy-War Man-
power joint selection board has
picked the schools to carry out
the armed services' specialised
training programs.
One promising plan comes to
Washington from Robert G. Ram-
sey, dean of student* at Olivet
Colltge in Michigan. He suggests
•uch schools be used for rehabili-
tating and re-educationg wounded
fighters as they return from the
front. Small college surroundings.
Dean Ramatty believes, would be
ideal for restoring mind, body, and
skills For colleges, the plan of-
fers useful war service for the
duration and some time after.
The idea has gone to Manpow-
er Commissioner McNutt.
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Clark, Gene. The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, March 5, 1943, newspaper, March 5, 1943; Denton, TX. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth313326/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.