DIAL 4-5444 OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION Texas A«M The B BI-WEEKLY STUDENT NEWSPAPER TEXAS A. & M. DEEP IN AGGIELAND VOLUME 44 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 23, 1945 NUMBER 59 Leonard Warren Featured On Town Hall Here Friday Outstanding Young Baritone Has Appeared With Met. Opera; Program Begins at 8 p. m. Leonard Warren, the brilliant young American baritone of the Metropolitan Opera will be heard in Guion Hall at 8:00 p.m., Friday, January 26. He will appear here in recital under the auspices of the committee on Student Activities. Warren, who is easily one of the greatest baritone “finds” of recent years has the tremendous range and power of voice which comes as a gift to few singers of any generation. His appearances this season in leading roles in the Metropolitan Opera climax a career which is + notable for the fact that, virtually unknown a few years ago, he is now regarded as outstanding. Mr. Warren's success in his chos en profession is unlike his contem poraries. Born in New York and educated at Columbia University he originally had no intention of making singing his career. But his College to Give Short Course In Engineering Dwg. Trainees Must Accept War Work Upon Completion Of Course rich, “natural” voice decided it for him. The rough-and-ready school of singing was Warren’s only prep aration for a glee club engagement at Radio City Music Hall, which lasted three years and served to awaken his interest in the more serious aspects of music. He there upon took his first formal voice training under a well-known New York vocal teacher, Sidney Dietch; won the 1938 Metropolitan Audi tions of the Air; was given a Met ropolitan contract and sent to Italy to learn seven operatic roles in six months. He made his debut at the Met in a minor role in “Simon Boccanegra” on Friday, the 13th of January, 1939, and the rest is musical history! Mr. Warren’s extensive concert repertoire includes arias from “The Masked Ball,” Verdi; ‘Faust’, Gounod; and “Barber of Seville”, Rossini. He will be assisted by Mildred Snell at the piano. Following is the complete pro gram for his recital Friday night. Part I includes: Thanks Be to Thee, Handel; 0 Ruddier than the Cherry, from “Acis and Galatea,” Handel; Tu lo sai, Torelli; and L’esperto hocchiero, Buononcini. Part II follows with: Oh That I Might Retrace the Way, Brahms; The Drummer, Hugo Wolf and Se crecy by the same composer; and The Hidalgo, Schumann. The third part consists of Aria—Eri tu, from “The Masked Ball,” by Verdi. After the intermission, Impromp tu, Faure; Prelude in E flat, Rach maninoff; and Etude en forme de valse, Saint-Saens, will be heard. Warren will sing Arias from “Faust” by Gounod and “Barber of Seville” by Rossini, in the fifth part. Early One Morning, 17th Century arr. by Tarrasch; An Old Song Resung, Charles T. Griffes; Thalatta (The Sea), Harry R. Spier; and When Lights Go Roll ing John Ireland will conclude the program. Abilene Club Meets Wd. In Acdem. Bldg. Frank Gerlach, president, has called a meeting of the Abilene Club for Wednesday night at 7:00 p. m., in room 108 of the Academic Building. Plans will be made as to when the club picture is to be made. At this time the club will also make new plans for the coming semester. The engineering drawing depart ment of Texas A. & M. College, in cooperation with the U. S. Office of Education, is planning an eight- week intensive course in Engineer ing Drawing. This course is an intergal part of the national En gineering, Science and Management War Training program and is pre sented at this time to train urgent ly needed draftsmen for war in dustries. The course will be held on the A. & M. campus, beginning February 5 and running for a period of 8 weeks. The minimum entrance require ment is graduation from high school and at least two years of mathematics; or its equivalent as gained through industrial experi ence. Students will be permitted to enroll providing, they are en gaged in war work or will accept such employment upon completion of the course. The course includes 21 hours drafting; 3 hours of sketching; 9 hours practical descriptive geo metry; 3 hours of shop mathema tics; and 4 hours of shop processes per week. There is no tuition charge but students will he expected to pay for room, board, books and sup plies. They may live in the college dormitories and eat in the dining hall. The estimated cost is $100.00 to $150.00. Registration will be held at 9 (See SHORT COURSE, Page 3) Radar-Radio Tech. Tests Given Here Recently Cancelled All tests for qualifying men for radar-radio technician training which were given on the campus recently have been cancelled. The Naval Recruiting office in Hous ton which gave the tests has been notified by Captain W. C. Eddy, USN (Ret), Commanding Officer, Naval Training Schools (Radio Chicago), 190 North State Street, Chicago, Illinois, that all these tests which were previously used are now cancelled. After thirty days from the last examination, men who took the present tests may make a request to Captain Eddy to' take the present revised test (which will be given from Jan. 18, on) and possibly qualify him self for the training. Recruiting officers stated that results of the last examination were gratifying. Between 350 and 500 students were interviewed by Navy personnel in the Assembly Hall, and 83 Eddy tests were given; however, a great majority of the students were not prepared for the examination, stated J. F. Beebe, Lt. Comdr., USNR Officer- in Charge of the Naval Recruiting Station. He added that some were 17 years of age and could remain in school and obtain another se mester of college physics and this he urged them to do. Those who were not prepared were given sug gested material to study and were invited to call at the nearest Navy Recruiting Station at some later date for the test. Press Club Banquet To Be Held In Aggieland Inn Wednesday Evening * ij: 4c 4c 4c Dean Bolton to Give Out Awards Dean F. C. Bolton will give out the special awards to be issued to members of the Battalion staff at the Press Club Banquet Wednes day night. Bolton has served in a similar capacity at several ban quets of the club in the past. Scheduled to receive certificates commending service rendered on the Battalion staff for one semes ter are S. K. Adler, L. H. Calahan, R. L. Bynes, Intramural writer, and B. J. -Blankenship. Receiving Bronze Keys for two semesters service on the staff will be Eli Barker. Feature writer, and Teddy Bernstein, Amusements editor. Dick Goad and Alfred Jefferson, both managing editors on the pa per, will receive written certificates commemorating three semesters of work on the student publication. The highest award on the program will go to Calvin Brumley, editor of the paper for the past two se mesters, who will receive a silver key given for six semesters of service rendered to the staff. Three special awards will be given to Jefferson, Goad, and Brumley as they are the managing editors and editor of the paper re spectively. The United States is the world’s largest producer of naval stores with about 65.3 percent of the total; France is second with about 21 percent; Spain third with about 6 1-3 percent. Colonel McNew Is Principal Speaker Colonel J. T. L. McNew, newly appointed Vice President for En gineering, will be the principal speaker at the Press Club Banquet to be held Wednesday night in the Aggieland Inrr, it was announced today. McNew, here on terminal Lt. Col. J. T. L. McNew leave, is scheduled to take up his administrative duties with the col lege on February first. Opening the festivities at 6:45 p.m., G. B. Wilcox, director of stu dent personnel, will give the invo cation. Dinner will follow, after which Calvin Brumley, editor of (See COLONEL, Page 4) '-4: 4c 4« 4s 4« Press Club Begins Thirtieth Year Wednesday night’s banquet will mark the beginning of the thirti eth year of existence for the A. & M. Press Club. Back in 1915, the club was. organized to “promote the social and intellectual welfare of all student publications.” S. B. Haynes was elected the initial president of the club. The club has carried on through the years and its objective has remained un changed during that time. Only recently did the club sur vive a crisis, that being the end of the 1943 spring semester when the entire Junior class left the campus for the army after the Seniors had been called only a few weeks earlier. A group of sophomores managed to hold the club together and today it is as strong as ever, with the enrollment in the club increasing. Calvin Brumley, graduating sen ior, has filled the editor’s position for the past two semesters, having been preceded by H. Sylvester Boone, now serving as assistant county agent. Next semester, beginning Febru ary 6, will begin the thirtieth year for the Press Club, and plans are being made to make it and the Battalion more successful than in preceding years. Although written in 1776, the original copy of our Declaration of Independence is still in good, readable condition. Majority Df Graduating Veterinarians To Practice In Texas After Their Graduation By Henry Ash At the graduation exercises on the second of February, thirty students of Veterinary Medicine will receive their degrees of Doc tor of Veterinary Medicine. These thirty doctors will leave A. & M. for the last time. They will go to many sections of the country to practice their profession. Some shall head west to California, some will go east to Tennessee and North Carolina, some will go north, but the greater number will stay here in their home state. The Army will commission several of the doctors as First Lieutenants, and some will go in the army as privates. The Navy will get its share, and the Merchant Marines will also receive some volunteers. One doctor may remain here at A. & M. College to teach at the Veterinary Hospital. John Colvin will sail for the Hawaiian Islands where he will go into general practice. Jimmy Nash will go to Dallas where he will be in small animal practice at Dr. Ruthez-ford’s Hospital. “Duroc” Coscia will go into general prac tice in Tennessee. Claude Richey and possibly Bill Bumstead will soon be sailing the seas on Uncle Sam’s Merchant Ships. Charles Kel sey will practice in Sherman, while Raymond Ivie and Kid McCoy will go to Oklahoma. Jimmy Pulliam will return to Arkansas and James Reed will be in North Carolina. Tom Melius will be teaching in Louisiana. The others will go into the armed forces or will establish a practice somewhere in the state. These thirty men have a mighty job on their hands when they leave A. & M. They Will be charged with a great task—that of protecting the health of the people of the United States through their source of food supply. These veterinarians will help the farmer and rancher to produce plenty of wholesome meat. They will see to it, through their duty as city, state, or federal meat inspectors, that only good meats and other foods are placed on the market for our consump tion. We feel certain that the great responsibility placed upon the shoulders of these men is justly placed. They have undergone five years of training in the countries largest veterinary school—one of the best veterinary schools of the world. Graduating Seniors Elect Tom Melius Valedictorian Bernard Levy Has Highest Grade Point Average of 2.8 The ten highest students in the graduating class of 1945 were announced by the registrar’s office today. Bernard Levy had the highest grade point average, which was 2.8299. Levy, who is graduating with a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mechanical Engineering, is from Dallas. At a meeting held Thursday night by the Graduating Class, Tom Melius was elected Valedictorian. The Valedic torian is elected from the ten highest men in the class by Three Weeks Soft Drink Short Course To Be Given Here Major phases of soft drink plant operation and beverage manufac ture will be stressed in a three- weeks short course to be conducted by the Texas A. & M. College in cooperation with the national as sociation of American Bottlers of Carbonated Beverages, Jan. 29- Feb. 16. Basic principles of the soft drink industry and their practical application will be conducted at three of the leading technical schools of the country to help meet the industry’s growing need for trained technicians and produc tion , personnel after the war. The other schools are the Drexel Insti tute of Technology in Philadelphia and the Illinois Institute of Tech nology in Chicago. This initial course is open to selected industry employees hav ing complete high school educa tion or its equivalent in plant ex perience. Instruction which deals with specialized feaures of bever ages manufacture and plant opera tion will be given by experts from the industry, while the regular Texas A. & M. College faculty will lecture on more general sub jects, W. R. Horsley, director of Texas A. & M. short courses, has announced. Registration at the short course is limited but already applications have been received from over 50 persons from 19 states, including Texas. These registrants will be housed in . College dormitories at nominal charge, and meals may be secured at restaurants on or ad jacent to the College campus. Professor Hughes Leaves for A. I. E. E. Meeting in New York Professor M. C. Hughes leaves today to attend the mid-winter meeting of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers in New York City. He goes as the mem ber of the National AIEE Nomi nating Committee from the 7th Geographical District. He will stop in Cleveland for a conference with General Electric Company officials and in Pitts burgh for a conference with the Westinghouse Elec, and Mfg. Company officials. Mr. A. E. Salis has gone to Chi cago to attend a meeting on High Frequency Electronics—Induction and Dielectric Heating. Professor H. C. Dillingham has returned from Tyler where he dis cussed with the officials of the Gulf States Telephone Company and the Tyler Business College ESMWT courses in wire commun ications and industrial electronics to be sponsored by the A. & M. College. Mr. L. M. Haupt will go to Ft. Worth Friday to attend a meet ing of the Ft. Worth Electronics Club and also to inspect the servo mechanism equipment at Consoli dated Vultee Aircraft Company. Wendell C. Fowler, Sales En gineer for the Sangamo Electric Co., Ft. Worth, Texas, will speak to the student Branch AIEE on “The Significance of Measure ments”, Tuesday night, January 23. ♦the other graduating students. E. D. Dillon, who is graduating in the school of Veterinary Medi cine, was second highest in the class with an average of 2.2558. Dillion’s home town is Marble Falls. J. A. Pulliam, another Veterinary student from Truman, Arkansas, was third highest with a grade point average of 2.2324. The six next highest in the group were named in the follow ing order: T. W. Melius, Graduating in Veterinary Medicine, with an average of 2.2312, is from Met airie in northern Louisiana. R. C. Johnson, who is now in the armed forces, is graduating with a Bach elor of Science Degree in Electri cal Engineering. Johnson is from Galveston. Calvin Brumley, grad uating with a degree in Agricul tural Administration, and a grade point average of 2.1904, is from Hereford, Texas. Harlan Bullock, another Agricultural Administra tion graduate from Bryan, has an average of 2.0800. C. L. Boyd, graduating in Veterinary Medicine with a grade point average of 1.9738, is from Grandview, Texas. Paul Olschner, Graduating with a Degree in Electrical Engineering with an average of 1.9545, is from Shreveport, La. Charles Kelsey, who is the tenth man of the grad uating class, is graduating with a degree in Veterinary Medicine and has an average of 1.8920. Kel sey is from Denison, Texas. Sixty students are to get degrees at the exercises. Thirty of which are to be awarded to members of the School of Veterinary Medi cine, and eight are to receive de grees in Bachelor of Science. There are nine students graduat ing in Agriculture, three in Agri cultural Administration, and two in Bachelor of Arts. There is one student graduating in Landscape Art, Agricultural Education, and Agricultural Engineering. Four students are to get degrees for graduate work. Three Master of Science Degrees, and one Master of Education Degree will be award ed. College Professor Named to Descriptive Geom. Study Board A five man committee to study nomenclature for descriptive geom etry authorized by the drawing di vision of S. P. E. E. in Cincinnati, includes W. E. Street, head of the engineering drawing department of Texas A. & M. College. Many textbooks have been writ ten on this subject, but there is no agreement on terms used as each author has used a different set of nomenclature. This committee has been asked to prepare a simplified set of nomenclature that can be adopted as American standard practice for use by authors of de scriptive geometry texts. Other members of the commit tee are: F. M. Porter, University of Illinois, chairman; H. C. T. Eg- gers, University of Minnesota; F. M. Warner, University of Washing ton; J. H. Porsch, Purdue Univer sity. San Antonio Aggies To Meet Wednesday Dick Smith, President of the San Antonio A. & M. Club announced today that there will be a meeting Wednesday night at 7:00 in Room 212 Academic Building. Smith said that it was important that all Ag gies attend as plans for the Club’s picture will be announced.