DIAL 4-5444 STUDENT TRI WEEKLY NEWSPAPER OF TEXAS A. & M. COLLEGE The Battalion DIAL 4-5444 OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION VOL. 40 122 ADMINISTRATION BLDG. COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, THURSDAY MORNING, OCT. 31, 1940 Z725 NO. 20 Freshman Disappears Following Baylor Game Webb M. Carnes StilL Missing; Last Seen Catching Waco Ride Texas police and officers of Waco and San Antonio are on the look out for Webb M. Carnes, Jr. of San Antonio, pre-med freshman at A. & M., who has not been heard from since he thumbed a ride at Waco, about 2 o’clock Sunday morning, on his way to San An tonio to spend Sunday at home. According to Alvin Leske, Jr., also a freshman student from San Antonio, Saturday was Game’s birthday and his mother had in tended coming to college to spend it with him. As he planned to go on the the Aggie-Baylor game, she did not make the trip. Carnes saw the game and he and Leske had a double date, took in the dance, and he then said that as his mother could not visit him, he was going to seek a ride home, sur prise his parents and have dinner with them. Leske and the two girls took Carnes out to the highway, where he hailed a car, a New Pontiac coupe with white sidewall tires, driven by a man well dressed and of good appearance. He agreed to take Carnes with him as far as he was going. After being stopped, the man drove into a filling station to fill up with gas. Carnes was in the car with him. While the gas was being put in, Games got out of the car and again talked with Leske and the two girls, saying the man was going to take him part of the way home. The man came and they drove off. That is the last that has been seen or heard from him. College authorities are cooperat ing to the fullest extent with Game’s parents in trying to locate him. 7 Cadets Win Places As Aggie Livestock Judgers Selection of the seven A. & M. students who will make up the college team which will compete in the American Royal Livestock Con test, November 9, at Kansas City, has been announced. They are L. E. Brandes, M. R. Galliham, R. T. Foster, L. J. Gentry, M. B. Inman, J. L. Rice, and H. E. Shahan. The seven will compete in prac tice judging at stops at leading agricultural colleges on the trip and the best six will be chosen to enter the contest. They will leave College Station November 5 and will return November 9. R. J. von Roeder Jr., assistant professor of animal husbandry, is coach of the team. Brandes is from Weimar, Texas; Calliham from Conway, Texas; Fos ter from Sterling City, Texas; Gen try from Henrietta; Rice from Mc- Leon, Texas; Inman from Childress, Texas; and Shahan from Lipscomb, Texas. 48 Freshmen Listed In High School Who’s Who Forty-eight A. & M. freshmen are listed in the “Who’s Who Among High School Students in Texas” for 1940. These students were issued certificates of achieve ment which state that they were selected upon the qualities of schol arship, sportsmanship, and leader ship in extra-curricular activities in 350 high schools of the state. Of these students listed in the Who’s Who, 47 per cent of these were boys, which show an increase over last year. The grade average of the high school seniors in the list was above 92 per cent. The association restricted the list to seven per cent of the grad- duating class of each high school. More than 97 per cent of the grad uates expressed their desire to at tend college. Those of the Who’s Who who have registered at A. & M. for this semester include: Allen, K. W., Dallas; Allebt, A. A., Gonzales; Barton, Jack, Kaufman; Beer- winkle, M. A., Moody; Booker, T. F., Mexia; Boone, James L., Mexia; Brennecke, Charles, Brenham; Bul- ler, Wesley S., Brookshire; Bunch, J. H., Dallas; Buniva, Robert, Rock dale; Cantrell, J. D., Sweeny; Cone, Hanon L., Somerville; Cordes, W. W., Fayetteville; Craign, J. M., (Continued on Page 4) Senior Military Pay May Be Here Before Corps Trip Payrolls for the second year ad vanced subsistence payments have been made-up and sent to the Eighth Corps Area Headquarters for approval. Major J. B. Wise, Adjutant of the Military Depart ment said that it is hoped that the payroll will be approved and re turned by November 8 in order that the seniors may be paid before the Dallas corps trip. The payments will include the quarter year which began the day after summer camp and lasted through September 30, and will amount to approximately $16. A new system of paying the stu dents whereby a great amount of confusion and delay will be elim inated is to be installed this year. The senior instructor of each unit will be responsible for paying the seniors of that unit. Upon approval of the roll by the Finance Department of the Corps Area headquarters a check covering the amount will be sent to the Fiscal Department of the Col lege. The Fiscal Department will serve in the capacity of a bank and each student will be given a check to be paid by this depart ment. Recently Organized United Science Club Will Soon Hold Initial Meeting The newly organized A. & M. United Science Club will hold its initial meeting early next week for the purpose of electing dele gates to the state meeting of the Texas Academy of Science in San Antonio on November 8 and 9. At the club meeting the official voting delegates who will repre sent the A. & M. chapter of the Collegiate Division of the Academy are to be appointed, by Dr. C. C. Doak, sponsor of the local chapter, invites members who can do so to attend. Only the official delegates will vote in business matters but all those attending are privileged to sit in on all or any of the ses sions. A diverse social program has been arranged. Two more clubs on the campus have allied themselves with the United Science group this week. The Fish and Game club voted to join at its regular meeting Mon day night and the Kream and Kow club announced its decision to co operate in the united unit at Tues day night’s meeting of the dairy organization. At the present time the member ship of the United Science club in cludes, in order of seniority, the Biology, Entomology, Pre-Med, Fish and Game, and Kream and Kow clubs. It is hoped that event ually all scientific organizations on the campus will enter into the united club. The feasability of such action has been demonstrated on other campuses. The Biology Club is the only unit on the campus now a member of the Texas Academy of Science, Collegiate Division, but at the San Antonio meeting next week the charter will be expanded to include the united science clubs of Texas A. & M. College and thereby all of the units under it. Any student in any of these clubs who desires to do so may now become Fellows of the Academy and any person in terested is urged to see Dr. C. C. Doak, head of the Biology depart- (Continued on Page 4) 21 Aggies Named In Who’s Who In American Colleges and Universities Fisk Jubilee Singers Fisk Singers Present Town Hall Program Monday Dunn To Direct Houston Symphony I Orchestra In Own Arrangement Of “Star Spangled Banner” Monday Night The Fisk Jubilee Singers, one of the outstanding groups of Negro spiritual singing groups in the country, will present a Town Hall program Monday night in Guion Hall. The story of the Fisk Jubilee singers is one of the most dramat ic tales in all musical history. It traces the dizzy ascent of eleven young Negro men and women from breakfast in slave cabins of hominy and salt bacon to dinners in the mansions of the wealthy and receptions in drawing rooms of European nobility. They were or ganized soon after the war be tween the states by General Clin ton B. Fisk, the distinguished soldjer-educator, who established a liberal arts college for Negroes in Nashville, Tennessee. A few months after the college opened a young man named George L. White came to join the little group of teachers. He was the son of a village blacksmith of Cadiz, New York state, but was blessed with a sensitive soul and a perfect ear for tone. He began picking (Continued on Page 4) Dairy Judging Team To Appear On WTAW The members of the Intercolle giate National Dairy Judging team will present an interview-dialogue over WTAW during the Farm and Home hour Friday, November 1, at 6:00 A. M. The team has recently returned from the National Dairy Show at Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, where it participated in the contest. Those comprising the team were J. K. Adams of Tulia, C. F. Baird of Carlton, B. B.' Fowler of Rock- wood, and N. B. Yarling of Rosen- burg. All are seniors this year. A. L. Darnell, professor of Dairy Hus bandry and coach of the team, will also take part in the program. The purpose of the interview is to give radio listeners some idea as to the purpose of and the bene fits gained from the trip. Lutheran League Will Have Banquet Tonight The A. & M. Lutheran Walther League will hold a banquet in Sbisa hall tonight at seven o’clock. A program has been arranged for this event, and a large attendance is expected. Included in the program are pic tures to be shown by Coach Man ning Smith of one of the Aggie football games. Lutheran church services for the group are conducted by the Rev. H. A. Traugott of Kurten. The of ficers of the A. & M. league in clude Wm. Domaschk, president; Charles Malitz, vice-president; and H. O. Kunkel, secretary-treasurer. An invitation to conduct the Houston Symphony Orchestra in his own arrangement of the “Star Spangled Banner” at their opening performance for the fall season Monday night has been extended to Col. Richard J. Dunn, director of the Aggie Bajid. Because his outstanding arrange- Cattlemen To Convene Here November 15,16 D. W. Williams, head of the animal husbandry department, has announced that the executive com mittee of the Texas and South western Cattle Raisers Association will meet at A. & M. November 15 and 16 for a regular business meeting. The members will register Fri day afternoon at 1 p. m., and at 2 p. m. the executive committee will meet in the A. & I. lecture room with J. Taylor, president, and Hen ry Bell, secretary, presiding. Following the committee meet ing, Dean E. J. Kyle, Dean R. P. Marsteller, H. H. Williamson of the Extension Service, and A. B. Conner of the Experiment Station, will speak to the entire group, con sisting of about 75 men. After this meeting there will be an inspection trip of the campus and the Experiment Station. A banquet will be held for the group in Sbisa Hall Friday night. Dean Kyle will speak and the Sing ing Cadets will give a short pro gram. The men will be free to do as they wish all day Saturday. Singing Cadets Have Begun Active Season The Singing Cadets, the largest male chorus in the nation, have begun the year with a group of ex perienced and well trained singers. Two performances have already been given, one for the Sheep and Goat Raisers convention, and one for the Women’s Club of Bryan. This Friday night, the club i§ to sing before the Cattleman’s Asso ciation who will convene here at that time. A novelty song, sung to the tune of the “Beer Barrel Polka”, has been sent down by students of T. S. C. W. and is entitled “Aggie Sweethearts.” They have requested that several of the juniors in the Singing Cadets learn the song and sing it at the junior prom in Den ton, which is the Friday night pre- ceeding the S. M. U. game and tentative plans indicate that this will be done. ment of the Star Spangled Banner, played for years by the Aggie Band, Col. Dunn has received no little recognition in recent years from musicians over the nation. Ernest Hoffman, director of the Houston Symphony wrote request ing Col. Dunn for music to the national anthem and later requested that Col. Dunn himself attend the initial performance and direct the piece. The performance of the Sym phony Monday night is the first concert of the fall season known as a subscription performance and will be held in the Municipal Audi torium. During the World War Col. Dunn played under the direction of John Philip Sousa, and it was at that time that he conceived the inspira tion for his composition. Upon his selection as director of the band at Texas A. & M., Col. Dunn intro duced his arrangement to be played at meal formations and on festive occasions. 20 Farm Credit Administrators Meet Here Today The officials of Farm Credit Ad ministration from Houston will visit on the A. & M. College cam pus Thursday at the invitation of Extension Service Workers of the headquarters staff. According to Director H. H. Williamson of the Extension Ser vice, the group will be met at the Aggieland Inn at 10 a.m. and con ducted on a two-hour tour of the campus. A luncheon at Sbisa Hall at 12:15 is also planned for the visitors. Among the officials to be pre sent are A. C. Williams, pres ident of the Houston Branch of the Federal Land Bank; Sterling C. Evans, president of the Houston Bank for Cooperatives, and Dr. Virgil P. Lee, president Produc tion Credit Corporation. Regional Secretary Of YMCA Here Friday Fern Babcock, regional secretary of the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. will be in College Station Friday through Sunday for conferences with the “Y” cabinets and “Y” com mittees to help plan for the year. Miss Babcock has been the travel ing secretary for the “Y” move ment for eight years. It is through her efforts that many of the sum mer conferences held throughout Texas and the meeting at Hollister, Missouri is made possible. Gen. Pyron To Be Here Military Day Will Be Guest Of Honor At Arkansas Game Here Saturday Brig. Gen. Walter- B. Pyron, commanding general of the 156th Cavalry Brigade, Texas National Guard, will be guest of honor at the A. & M. college Military Day being held Saturday. Gen. Pyron will attend the football game be tween Texas A. & M. and the University of Arkansas, both mil itary training schools. When the general arrives, he will be met by Col. Ike Ashburn, Pres. T. O. Walton, Lt. Col J. A. Watson, and Dean E. J. Kyle. Troop C Cav alry will act as the mounted escort for the military dignitary and will escort the official party to the en trance of Kyle Stadium. At that point the party will leave the car and be escorted across the field to their box by a group of uniformed seniors. Battery D Field Artillery will have its guns set up at the south end of Kyle Field and will fire an 11-gun salute for the gen eral. The Aggie band will then play the national anthem as the flag is raised, while the corps will stand and salute. Prior to the game all seven units of the R.O.T.C. at the college will put on demonstrations and ex hibits for all visitors from 11:30 till 1:30 on the old drill field show ing instruments and weapons in use at the college for training the students to be commissioned of ficers. The displays will offetr civilians an excellent opportunity to see some aspects of military training other than parade for mations and drill. The weapons used by the armed forces while in actual combat will be shown. New $15,000 Cooling Tower Nears Completion The $15,000 cooling tower which is under construction by the J. F. Pritchet Company of Kansas City will be completed in two more weeks, B. D. Marburger, Building and College Utilities department, announced today. The new struc ture is located on the north corner of the power plant. California red wood was shipped here to be used in the construction of the new cooling system because of this material’s wearing quali ties and resistance to weather. The new cooling tower will have a rat ing of 40,000 kilowatts and will en tirely replace the old cooling sys tem located acx-oss the road. Faculty Committee Names 1941’s List Twenty-one students of Texas A. & M. College were selected for the “Who’s Who in American Col leges and Universities for 1940-41” by the coordination of a faculty and a student committee,. This list includes 19 new selections for this year plus two that made the list last year. It was previously announced that only 19 men would be placed on the list, but a check of the pro visions of the Who’s Who indicated that those juniors on the list last year were automatically members for their senior year, and were not to be included on the school’s quota. A list of 26 names was selected by the student committee from among the outstanding students on the campus and the list submitted to the faculty committee for the picking of the 19 new members. The student committee was com posed of the cadet colonel and the regimental commanders. The stu dent Activities committee was used as the faculty committee for the selection. D. W. Williams served as chairman of the faculty com mittee. Those men selected for Who’s Who in American Colleges and Un iversities for 1941 are as follows (in alphabetical order): ANDERSON, GABE D., JR., President Scholarship Honor Soc iety; Captain C Battery Field Artillery. APPELT, LESLIE Lw, Lt. Col Engineer Corps; Vice President (Continued on Page 4) Two Instructors Escape Injury As Airplane Crashes In an airplane crash about a 100 yards south of the college airport early Monday morning, Guy Smith and T. C. Carlisle, instructors in the advanced flying course, sus tained slight injuries as their plane nosed toward the ground clipping off several tree tops. The instructors had been check ing the ceiling for the students just before the time of the crash which was around 7:30 a. m. Ac cording to Capt. C. A. Miller, in charge of the student flying in struction, the cause of the crash was due to a misunderstanding be tween the two instructors. The plane, one of two new Meyer’s Advanced Trainers recent ly purchased by the college at an approximate cost of $6,000 each, was said to be a total loss by the authorities who made an inspect ion of the wreck. Smith suffered a broken nose and several cuts on his body and was taken to the St. Joseph hospi tal in Bryan for a few days ob servation. Carlisle was released to go home after treatment for a slight face cut. Official Drill Field Changed; Reviews Will Be Held In New Area The official drill field for re-- views and other military functions has been changed from the old area to the space immediately to the rear of the new mess hall. This announcement was made by the Military Department through Ma jor J. B. Wise, adjutant. The reason given for changing from the drill field which has been used for years past is that the new area offers more space for the corps and for spectators as well. The difference in location will be only slightly farther for the stud ents residing in the old area than the old drill field was for those living in the new dormitory area. The new field will be used for the first time next week when the entire corps will form for a prac tice review. This review will be held to prepare the students for the parade in Dallas which will be held on the morning of Novem ber 9. Juniors to Sign Contracts This Week Members of the junior class who applied for and received advanced military science contracts will sign these contracts the latter part of this week or the first part of next week on the second floor of Ross Hall, according to an announce ment from the military depart ment yesterday. Payment of commutation of sub sistence will begin as of October 1. The first period will end Decem ber 31, and first payment will be made to the juniors early in Jan uary.