DIAL 4-5444 r M I'M rh M M M * CIRCULATION 5,500 STUDENT TRI WEEKLY NEWSPAPER OF TEXAS A. & M. COLLEGE Ihe Battalion OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION VOL. 39 122 ADMINISTRATION BUILDING COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 25, 1940 Z725 NO. 92 RICHEY ELECTED TO HEAD SENIOR CLASS OF ’41 Tour Begins Friday After Graduation Middlewest And Canadian Cities To Be Included In Tour As the World War II has cheat ed four Texas A. & M. seniors out of the annual European traveling cotton study tour, they will make a comprehensive tour of the cot ton states and then visit numerous cities in Canada and the Middlewest during the first six weeks of the summer. Winners announced who will make the tour in company of Prof. Tildon Easley, of the college Agron omy Department, include H. L. Rucker and H. L. Petty, both of Santo; H. C. Forbes, Waxahachie; and C. L. Mason, New Boston. The winners weathered a series of nine hard examinations dealing in all phases of cotton, from the soil in which it is planted to the finished cloth, and came out ahead of all the other contestants. Forb es and Mason tied for third place and both were included in the party. In the past only three stu dents have made the trip. The party will leave College Sta tion immediately after the winners receive their degrees Friday night and will make the entire trip by automobile. Enroute they intend to make a full study of cotton pro duction, marketing and finished products, but also intend to look into the manufacture of competing fibers such as rayon, wool and oth ers. High School Students Take Driving Exams It will be final examination day for nine Consolidated High School students Saturday morning when the Texas Department of Public Safety Highway Patrolmen give driving examinations to those stu dents in the area just to the rear of the Cushing Library at Texas A. & M. During the present school year the Department of Industrial Edu cation at the college has conducted a course in automobile driving for the students of the Consolidated High School, with R. V. Baylor Jr., a senior in Industrial Educa tion, serving as instructor. A total of 15 students started the course under Baylor but only nine were able to finish to the point where they go before the highway ex aminers. Tests will start at 9 o’clock, E. L. Williams, head of the Industrial Education Department, has an nounced. These four Texas A. & M. College seniors really know their cotton for they emerged on top after a series of nine hard examinations dealing with all phases of cotton, from the soil in which it is planted to the finished cloth on the merchant’s shelf. As a reward for their ability, they will receive a six- week all-expense traveling cotton study fellowship that will carry them through the cotton states and as far north as Canada where they will visit numerous manufacturing plants. They will be accompanied by Prof. Tilden Easley, of the college agronomy department, who will be in charge of the study. In the past the study party has always gone abroad but World War II makes such travel impossible this year. Left to right: Prof. Easley; H. L. Petty, Santo; H. C. Forbes, Waxahachie; C. L. Mason, New Boston; and H. L. Rucker, Santo. Over Seventy-Eight Percent of Graduating Seniors Have Positions or Tentative Offers After Graduation Marine Band On ’40 - ’41 Town Hall Paul Haines, Town Hall man ager-elect for the coming year, an nounced at a meeting of the junior class Thursday night, that the re nowned United States Marine Band would be presented in two con certs to the students of A. & M. next October 3. It was only recent ly that the President of the U. S. granted his permission for a tour to be made of the United States by the Marine Band, which is also known as the “President’s Own”. The band will give two perform ances, one a matinee concert to which high school bands from all over Texas will be invited. The concerts given by the band should be particularly appealing to the cadets and much enthusiasm is ex pected. The United States Marine Band is under the leadership of Captain Taylor Branson and is directed by Captain W. F. Santelmann. In past years it has played to capacity crowds all over the country and is one of the finest concert ensem bles to be found in the world. With such a popular organization to initiate the Town Hall program for next year and with the support and backing that the junior class has shown, the coming year’s suc cess, insofar as A. & M.’s Town Hall is concerned, is practically as sured. LIBRARY DEADLINE All library books are due Mon day, May 27. - When the Commencement exer cises are held at Texas A. & M. Friday night, approximately 550 members of the graduating class of 700 Texas Aggies, or 78.6 percent, will have been placed in positions or have tentative offers which they probably will accept before next fall. Graduates most in demand this year were those in the civil and mechanical engineering depart ments, although 12 of the 30 de partments of the college having graduates placed 100 percent of their students. The civil engineering department had 25 candidates for the degree of bachelor of science in civil engi neering but had requests for more than twice that .number. In me chanical engineering the 70 grad uates had a wide selection of offers from which to choose but in the main they are going into aircraft production. All of the 39 Doctors of Veter inary Medicine have accepted posi tions with health departments, on the staffs of veterinary hospitals or are opening their own establish ments. The 26 graduates in chem ical engineering all found openings in the chemical industry with the work including practically all phas es. Building must be on the upgrade for all of the 12 architects either have positions or are opening their own offices, according to the re port from that department head. The 14 graduates in rural sociology all have been placed in social ser vice agencies of various kinds. Always in demand are the Texas A. & M. College graduates in in dustrial education. This year nine students are graduating in that course and have their choice of (Continued on page 4) George Hall To Play for Prom And Final Ball In a statement yesterday, Ele Baggett promised the class of ’41 the best dance that they have ever attended when they attend the junior prom Thursday night. The basis of his statement was the popular orchestra of George Hall, featuring Dolly Dawn and the Dawn Patrol, which will play for the prom and also for the final ball Friday night. The prom, which will be held from ten until twelve in Sbisa Hall, will follow the junior banquet that is scheduled to start at seven. The price of tickets now on sale for both junior activities with a favor included is $2.75. The dance alone is $2.00. As in the past, $2.50 will be the fee for final ball tickets. The committee in charge decided on leather compacts as favors this year. On each one is a crest of the seal of the college and a scroll with the inscription “Junior Prom, 1941.” Hall’s orchestra comes here aft er the longest engagement on rec ord for any band on one job. George and the boys went to the Taft Hotel in New York in the early thirties and stayed there for eight long years, leaving not on account of diminished popularity but because of offers from theaters and out-of-New York hotels that he couldn’t afford to turn down. Hall is well-known for not let ting his personal preferences in music dictate the sort of thing (Continued on page 4) Montgomery, Hamilton, Shelton Get Other Offices Graduating Seniors Must Sign Oaths Of Office by Friday Oaths of Office must be signed by seniors graduating into the ranks of the Officers Reserve Corps before Friday noon, May 31, Colonel Moore has announced. The oaths must be signed before a grad uating senior may receive his com mission in the O. R. C. Brigadier General Walter B. Pyron, Texas National Guard, from Houston, will present the commis sions at 8:30 Saturday morning, June 1, in Guion Hall. The Oath of Office will be administered as part of the ceremony. The attention of all seniors is invited to the fact that, except for students completing the first four prescribed years of a regular five year course, only those students who graduate and receive a diplo ma may be appointed in the Of ficers Reserve Corps at this time. Students who satisfactorily com plete the prescribed R. O. T. C. course but who fail to graduate, may be appointed one year from the date on which they should have graduated. Oaths of Office of graduates Ap pointed in the O. R. C. will be signed in Room 101, Academic Building, during the hours from 8 a. m. to 12 noon, and 1 p. m. to 5 p. m. Wednesday and Thursday, May 29 and 30, and from 8 a. m. to 12 noon Friday, May 31. No oath can be signed legally before May 29. Prospective appointees whose graduation is assured should re port before noon Friday, May 31, and all others should report as soon as graduation is assured. Oath of Office cannot be admin istered nor commission delivered to the individual until he has sign ed his Oath of Office. Ex-Students Honor Faculty And Class ’40 Monday is the date on which the Association of Former Students honors the teaching staff of the college and members of the 1940 graduating class with the year’s biggest picnic, the second annual : “Harvest Picnic”. The event is giv en by the Association to celebrate the completion of another year’s school work. Invitations have been mailed to 1,250 guests and Association Sec retary E. E. McQuillen requests that all members of the teaching staff and students graduating in June or in the summer be on hand, regardless of whether or not they receive invitations. He ex plained that this type of mailing list is very difficult to compile. The affair will be strictly in formal and will be held from 5:30 to 7:00 p. m. in the formal garden in front of the Administration Building. Thomas B. (Tom) Richey, jun ior of C Cavalry from San Benito, has been elected president of the class of ’41, to serve next ses sion. Baptist Church To Honor Behrman At Services Sunday The College Station Baptist Church will honor, Jim Behrman, Baptist student leader < on the campus who will enter medical school this fall, in services at the church Sunday. Behrman, who is from Long view, is preparing himself for a medical missionary career. He was captain of K Company Infan try last year, has served as pres ident of the Baptist Student Union Council and has been active in the church program ever since he en tered A. & M. The pastor will speak at the morning service and Behrman will speak at the evening hour. The public is cordially invited to at tend the services and Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. and the B. S. U. meeting at 6:45 p. m. At Orderly, Quiet Meeting Thursday Six-Semester Men And Classified Seniors Will Be Allowed To Wear Boots In the quietest and most order ly election ever held by the class of ’41, Tom Richey was elected to hold the office of senior class pres ident for next session. Other men elected to office were the follow ing: Howard Shelton, vice-presi dent; Jeff Montgomery, secretary- treasurer; Aubrey Hamilton, his torian. A clear majority of 19 votes over two other opponents put Tom Richey into the president’s office. A lower Rio Grande Valley boy from San Benito, Richey is in C Cavalry, and is majoring in Agri cultural Administration. The election results follow: For President Tom Richey 186 Graham Purcell 100 Howard Shea 67 For Vice-President (Runoff) Howard Shelton 217 Joe Slicker 149 Also primary candidates were Jack Richmond, Ted Duce, Grover Mushaway. For Secretary-Treasurer (Runoff) Jeff Montgomery 248 Preston Bolton 91 Also primary candidates were W. B. Sims, George Hardin, Bob Lit tle, Ernest Wehner, Hub Gillespie, Ted Duce. For Class Historian (Runoff) Aubrey Hamilton 175 R. T. Caperton 120 Also primary candidates were Preston Bolton, John Hall, and Joe Braden. O After the elections were finished, matters of class business were brought up for discussion. These included the following topics: the seniors’ wearing boots next term; the possibility of substituting light weight khaki pants during the warmer months; and the distribu tion and sale of tickets to the benefit show for George Stidham. About men eligible to wear boots next year, the class decided that in order to do justice to all men who started with the original class of ’41, only six-semester men and classified seniors can wear the boots. That rule means that “frogs” or mid-term entrants in the class cannot wear boots unless they have accumulated 108 semes ter hours and 100 grade-points, but that “frogs,” transfers, and boys who have missed a year can wear boots if they classify. The class (Continued on page 4) Aggie Spirit Staunch Behind Drive To Aid Badly Injured Cadet With typical Texas Aggie- thoroughness, the drive to raise funds to help Co. A Signal Corps sophomore George Stidham is as sured of being a tremendous suc cess as students, college officials and professors, and College Sta tion businessmen cooperate in help ing the injured Aggie. Stidham is the Aggie whose back was broken—split—in an accident just a few days ago. Jimmy Lane Elected Houston Club Head The Houston Club held their reg ular meeting Thursday night for the purpose of electing officers for next year. The following officers were elect ed: James R. Lane, President; Clar ence Bland, Vice President (Se nior); William T. Grisham, Vice President (Junior); Paul O. Egner, Secretary; and A. C. SoRelle, Treasurer. ■ His mother is dead; and he hasn’t- seen his father for several years and doesn’t know where to locate him. George has been working his way through college; he is penni less, hasn’t had money for any of the luxuries of life. He is faced with a long period in a hospital and the possibility of being crip pled for life. He is in the Hous ton Memorial Hospital, being treat ed by Dr. J. B. Foster, one of the finest specialists in the South. George’ll be there at least three months, in a cast at least five months, and maybe the rest of his life in a steel brace. And he hasn’t the money to pay for any of it, but his life depends on receiving this treatment. Third Headquarters Battery Field Artillery was the first or ganization to turn a check over to the Fiscal Office. “We’ve got $48.75 here,” Bill Henderson and Euel Wesson declared as they -handed in the money for Third- Headquarters Battery, “and our battery challenges any other or ganization to equal our record.” Freshmen and sophomores of the organization raised the money and the juniors and seniors will add their donations later. “We’re a new organization,” freshman Allen Ellerbee said, “and we want to see if some of the older organizations can equal our record.” Headed by head yell-leader- elect Buster Keeton and Battal ion junior editor George Fuermann, the committee conducting the drive includes businessman S. E. Lipscomb, Professor V. K. “Count” Sugareff, Battalion editor Bill Murray, varsity footballer Ernie Pannell, Graham Purcell, and Allen Ellerbee. At a committee meeting last night it was decided that all money received would be turn ed in to the College Fiscal Office and kept on deposit there. Per sons wishing to make contribu- ■tions, who do not live in dormi-" tories or project houses, may do so by giving the money to any committee member or by turning it over directly to the Fiscal Of fice. First sergeant and project house managers have been asked to turn their money over to the Fiscal Office. This afternoon at one o’clock a benefit picture show will be held at the Assembly Hall, all proceeds of which will go to the George Stidham Fund. The feature is “You Can’t Cheat An Honest Man,” starring W. C. Fields, Charlie Mc Carthy, and others. A second showing will begin at 2:45, and a third will be held if necessary. The cooperation on the part of the Y.M.C.A. gave a tremendous push to the drive. Moving picture oper ators R. R. Hass and H. C. Her- rington, together with Fred Gib son, supervisor of the Assembly Hall, offered to donate their time and services Saturday afternoon •to make it possible for the Stidham- fund to realize as much as possi ble from the benefit showings. Only 1,200 persons can be ac commodated in the Assembly Hall at one time; when the place is fill ed cadets are asked to cooperate by waiting until the next showing. Committeemen explained that it was the hope of the committee that more than enough money could be raised to help Stidham. The surplus will be used to establish a permanent fund for other such purposes if such an undertaking is found feasible. The money that is raised by the drive will be placed in a responsible trusteeship and given to Stidham as the need arises. The chairmen will make the presentation of the first check sometime late next week, at which time they will go to Houston’s Memorial Hospital and present the check to Stidham on behalf of the corps. - The enthusiasm and cooperation- on the part of the cadet corps was clearly shown at the yell practice held last night. Keeton and Fuermann have an nounced that the drive is to close next Thursday night. It is also expected that boxes will be placed at the various College Station drug stores, cafes, and business houses in order to gain further contributions. These boxes will remain at the stores throughout the coming summer and will be placed in the hands of a responsi ble college official who -will collect the funds deposited in them as often as is necessary. Although the committee was re luctant to say what goal they ex pected to reach, the chairmen pointed out that $2,000 was an opti mistic expectation. John O. Pasco, author of the recently published book “Fish Sergeant,” announced that five cents of the $1 purchase price of every copy of his book would be turned over to the fund. J. T. Anderson Head Of Agronomy Society The Agronomy Society has held its last meeting of the year, and elected officers for next term. The officers were inaugurated at a barbecue picnic at Hensel Park on May 16. Officers of the group elected for next year are: James Anderson, K Infantry, president; John Robinson, A Infantry, vice-president; Howard Warner, F Field Artillery, secre tary; Jim Pinson, C Cavalry, par liamentarian; Walter Clark, C In fantry, sergeant-at-ferms. The intercollegiate crops team which made the trip to Kansas City and Chicago in the fall were L. L. Jacobs, E. F. Guilland, C. G. Pow ell, and C. G. Ward. These members were awarded gold medals.