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, SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 31, 1941 NUMBER 93 Dallas Insurance Man Is Movie Dispute Arbitrator Jefferson Amusement Company Will Defend Clearance Clause Which Gives Bryan Shows First Run Movie Preference + L. W. Klingman, Dallas insur ance man, has been named arbi trator of the clearance dispute in volving the Campus Theater of College Station, the Bryan Amuse ment Company, and the Jefferson Booking Company of Beaumont, Ben Ferguson, manager of the Campus Theater announced today. Hearings on the matter will be gin Monday, June 9. The case as filed by the Campus Theater con tends that the Jefferson Amuse ment Company has a financial in terest in the Bryan theaters as booking agent, and further, that the Palace and the Queen thea ters in Bryan have 30 to 45 days clearance over College Station. This clearance, the complaint holds, is unreasonable because College Station and Bryan are separate municipalities. The re quest for arbitration asks that this clearance be eliminated or ad justed to a reasonable basis. Members of the student com mittee who have aided the Campus Theater in obtaining the arbitra tion hearing in order to relieve the present situation were Wil liam A. Becker, cadet colonel, Ben ton Elliot, president of the Engi neering Council, and George Fuer- mann, associate Battalion editor. A new committee composed of this year’s junior class will be appointed shortly to continue the work for next year if necessary. The arbitrator was chosen from a list of approved arbitrators. These are W. J. Brown, president of the Titche-Goettinger Com pany; Lawrence H. Fleck, S. M. U. professor; Fred F. Florence, pres ident of the Republic National Bank; J. E. Hutchinson, account ant with Hutchinson, Bonner, and Burleson; Dean C. S. Potts of S. M. U. school of law; L. W. Klingman, Equitable Life Insur ance company; Ted Robinson, gen eral manager of the Borden Com pany; Robert J. Smith, Braniff Airways attorney; Leslie Waggon er, vice-president of the Republic National Bank, and C. H. Zachry, vice-president of the Southern Union Gas Company. The interested parties submit ted a list for approval of the men on list who were desirable for this case. Junior Engineer Qualifying Course Offered in Summer From the most reliable informa tion on hand, the Government is going to need aeronautical engi neers, marine engineers and naval architects in the near future Gibb Gilchrist, Dean of Engineering an nounced Friday. Students who have completed the four-year course in either civil, electrical, mechanical or petroleum engineering could qualify for a rating as junior engi neers by taking a special ten-week course during the summer in the subject selected. “We are taking steps to provide these courses in case as many as twenty graduates for each course offer to enroll. Seniors interested should get the forms specified in the official notice, filling it out and returning it to my office. Should this ben done only as a means of expressing interest, those filling out the forms should strike out that portion in which they agree to enroll and substitute some ex pression of interest,” Gilchrist said. Manley Awarded Baker Trophy For Best-Drilled Platoon At a special formation of the Chemical Warfare Battalion yes terday afternoon, C. H. Manley, Denison, Texas, was presented with the Baker Trophy, an annual award given to the leader of the best-drilled platoon of the Chem ical Warfare Service. Manley, leader of the second platoon of Company A, by com manding the best-drilled platoon, also gained for his company the position of Honor Company of the Chemical Warfare Battalion for the coming year. AAA Building Area Clearance In 30 Days Planned Key Utility Men Will Occupy Proposed College View Enlargement A clearance of houses from the area needed for the construction of the new AAA building will be com pleted within 30 days, E. M. Holm- green, business manager, announc ed Friday evening. Nine houses have been either moved or demol ished in the clearance program dur ing the past 6 months to clear the grounds for the new building project. Seven of the houses on the cam pus will be moved to College View to complete a unit of 14 houses which will house key utility men from the college and members of the fire department. The plans which are now being completed calls for complete landscaping. “Thirty years ago the campus plan was developed which was dis carded because the planners were foolish enough to think that the col lege would some day have 3,300 students. The movement of houses and re-arranging of areas is merely the result of the almost unbeliev able growth of the college,” Holm- green said. All houses that will interfere with the new campus plan will be either razed or moved before Sep tember 1, 1941. Cotton Tour Gets Early Start The annual agronomy summer cotton tour got off to an early start Thursday when Professor Louis M. Thompson, agronomy de partment, Ralph B. Hartgraves, J. H. Robinson, and E. R. Butler left for Houston Thursday. F. G. Collard, junior agronomy major, was originally scheduled to make the trip, but because he has an R. O. T. C. contract, he must make summer camp. Butler, the al ternate, replaced Collard, on the tour who was winner of second place in the cotton contest. After arriving in Shreveport late today the group will remain over and leave Sunday for Greenville, Miss. From Greenville they will go to the experiment station at Leland, Miss. Baton Rouge, is scheduled to be the next destination of tour. From Baton Rouge, the will pro ceed to New Orleans, where they will visit the U. S. Government Laboratories there. From New Orleans the tour will go to Montgomery, Alabama and from there to Tuskegee. On Tues day, June 10, they will drive to West Point, Georgia, and will ex amine the West Point Testing Lab oratories there. Atlanta, Georgia, and Clemson college will be the next destination of the group. Washington, D. C. will be the scene of a three day stop beginning Sunday, June 15. While in the na tional capital, they will visit the Bureau of Agricultural Economics and the Department of Agriculture. The schedule next includes a trip through the Rayon plant at Wil mington, Delaware; from there the tour will leave for New York City. After New York the trip leads up through Norwalk, Connecticut to Montreal, Canada. After a short stay in Montreal, the group will head back south and pass through Detroit and Chicago. Reception Held For Graduating Seniors A reception for members of the Senior class who participated in last night’s graduation exercises was held at the home of President and Mrs. T. O. Walton. The reception, which was held immediately following the gradua tion exercises in Guion hall, was in honor of the seniors and their parents. Breezy Rhythm Maker Lou Breese and his band comes to the campus to close the social season with the Junior Prom and the Final Ball. Selected because of the popularity of the orchestra in the East, the Junior Committee promises a new high in band music in a social season which featured many top-flight bands. "BreezyRhythm” Brings Final Respite From “Breezy Rhythm” will be a wel comed respite from the trials and woes of examinations when Lou Breese and his orchestra make their A. & M. debut at the Junior Prom and the Final Ball, June 5 and 6. “We were extremely fortunate to secure Lou Breese and his orches tra to close the social season,” Al- den Cathey, Junior Class President, said, “because the band has been one of the top-ranking bands dur ing the past season. Although a comparatively new band, Lou Breese has been an in stantaneous success since his lauch- ed his “Breezy Rhythm” band in 1939. The “Breezy Rhythm” is a dis tinctive undercurrent in everyone of the band’s arrangements, a rhy thmic pattern that makes the or chestra immediately recognizable. To musicians, it’s a variation of six-eight tempo as contrasted with the four-four of most bands, or the two-four of the Dixieland bands or straight eight-beats to a bar of the Boogie Woogie style. To non musicians, it’s simply a tricky rhy- them that makes the Breese dance music extra-danceable. Lou Breese is one of the younger school of bandleaders, who not content with merely waving a baton in front of their orchestras, are also noted for their proficiency as solo instrumentalists. Breese is equally spectacular as a soloist on two wholly unrelated instruments, trumpet and banjo. Instructions For Room Reservations Announced for Fall Instructions for room reserva tions for the 1941-42 school year were released Thursday by Lieut. Col. James A. Watson, Command ant. Old students who are classified will be permitted to submit their applications for room reservations on July 1. Applications for room reservations must be sent to the registrar. Unclassified old students will be permitted to turn in applications for reservations on August 1. Class ified students must turn in their reservations before August 1. After that date they have no priority ov er the unclassified students. Students will be permitted to cancel their reservations for rooms as late as September 5 and receive a full refund. The fee for room reservations will be $6, which will include the room key deposit. Weary Exams Song Rights To Texas AMC Given College by Writer Copyright Gives Exclusive Right For Purposes Except Sale of Copies to The Public “TEXAS A. M. C.”—this is the most recent addition to the list of A- & M.’s songs that so easily arouse the fighting spirit of the Aggies. This song was written by the late George Epton Perfect of Dal las on October 28, 1938. He secur ed a copyright to the composition as soon as it was written. The original license to the song gave radio stations WBAP, KGKO and WFAA the right to use it in any broadcasts, but Perfect’s heirs have given A. & M. exclu sive right to the song to be used by A. & M. for all purposes except for the sale of copies to the gen eral public. These radio stations can still use the song on any of their broad casts, but A. & M. can cancel this privilege at any time providing it gives the stations a 30-day no tice to the effect that it is can celling the privilege. Latin Americans Plan REA Study The Department of Agriculture today announced that a group of outstanding young Central and South American engineers will spend a year studying the meth ods and techniques of the Rural Electrification Administration. One of these engineers, Manuel Lopez- Jimenez, of Peru, is on his way by sea to the United States, and another, Luis Adolfo Cagno Rossi, of Uruguay, is due to said from Montevideo on May 30. Both en gineers are expected to reach Washington around the middle of June. About half a dozen others are expected to leave their re spective countries within the next few weeks. The plan of having a group of engineers from the other American republics spend a year as student- members of the REA staff is a coopei-ative effort by the various American Governments concerned, to facilitate and expand mutual (Continued on page 4) Sixty-One Seniors Receive Diplomas In Unprecedented Graduation Exercises Col. Ike Ashburn As Speaker Wishes Class God’s Speed As They Enter Active Duty Nurses Must Apply For Civil Service In National Defense Boom Even nurses must now apply to the Civil Service Commission for jobs in connection with the pre sent National Defense boom. The United States Civil Service Com mission has announced open con tinuous examinations to secure nurses, but despite these exami nations, there is a continuing acute shortage of nurses for the posi tions. From all parts of the country, floods of inquiries are coming into Washington from women who ask how they can serve their country in the present emergency. The word to nurses is that the nursing branch of the service is one that is vital to the success of the Na tional Defense Program. The nurse examinations open the way to an opportunity to render patriotic ser vice, and at the same time to serve in interesting and satisfying work. There is an opportunity for ad vancement, and the Government provides for retirement for super annuation or disability. A large staff of nurses is em ployed regularly in the civil ser vice — principally in the U. S. Public Health Service, the Indian Service, and the Veterans’ Admin istration. They serve in hospitals and other medical centers through out the United States and in the Panama Canal Zone and Alaska. Public health nurses carry on field work of community-health care and education, giving home care to the sick, class work in home hygiene, etc., principally in the Indian Ser vice and the U. S. Public Health Service. In the more remote regions these nurses render first air, and they even give emergency medical treat ment in the absence of a doctor. There has been an increased de mand for public health nurses under the U. S. Public Health Ser vice in extra-cantonment zones and where large defense industries are located, but there still aren’t enough nurses. Local Board Mails All Questionnaires The local draft board mailed 3600 questionnaires Thursday to the men who are subject to the draft. These questionnaires are to be filled out and returned to the board within five days. All the men should be classified by the end of next week, and each one will receive his card as soon as he is classified. By Allan Madeley So you think that modern com munications and modes of trans portation have made the world a small place? Well, it took Vincent J. Neuman two years and nearly $3000 to get from Czechslovakia to the United States. Who is Vin cent J. Neuman ? He is the first ex-Aggie to return to A. & M. with an account of his actual experienc es in war-torn Europe. A graduate of the class of 1931, Neuman was back on the campus Tuesday for the first time in ten years. He spoke informally to two groups while here. Tuesday morn ing in the Architectural Library, Neuman recounted some of his ex periences for architectural stu dents. In the afternoon he spoke to a Lansdcape Art class about problems involved in group hous ing projects which he had encoun tered in his work as a construction engineer. Neuman’s personal history for the past fifteen years runs some thing like this: After finishing school in Czecho slovakia he had the opportunity to take college work anywhere in Europe or in the United States. Having a brother at Rosenberg, Texas, Neuman decided to come to Titley Named New Petroleum Geology President Amis, Kennard, Elwall, Woodman To Fill Other Club Offices The Petroleum-Geology club held its annual barbecue Thursday ev ening at 6:30 on the lawn in front of the Petroleum building. Approximately fifty students and faculty members were present, and after the meeting, they were shown through the museum by Cur tis J. Hesse, director. The barbecue and meeting con cluded the activities of the club for the current year. The following boys were elected officers of the club for next year: Richard Titley of Dallas, president; C. D. Elwall of San Angelo, vice- president; Bill Amis of Abilene, treasurer; H. J. Kennard of Gon zales, secretary; George Woodman of Fort Worth, social secretary. Flying Cadets Training Unit Men Announced Lt. J. W. Williford, ’38, A. C. and Lt. L. R. Dudney, M. C. who are supervising the recruiting campaign at A. & M. for the Fly ing Cadets training unit have an nounced that Unit No. 1 has been completed and examinations are being given to those applicants who desire to become members of other units. Recruiting campaigns are being conducted in six of Texas’ major colleges and each college is trying to enroll as many units as possi ble. It is thought that A. & M. will have more units than any oth er college. Those Aggies who have suc cessfully passed their physical ex aminations are: Phil H. Parker, Bay City; Hayden P. Ellis, Mert- zon; T. B. Jennings, Rowlett; J. H. Stephens, College Station; I. A. Glassen, Dallas; R. M. Camp ion, Dallas; K. A. Gray, Groon; J. K. Boyd, Winsboro; J. S. Griffin, Blooming Grove; P. S. Cox, La- mesa; F. D. Downs, Brenham; T. H. Freeman, San Antonio; M. W. Lehmann, Houston; J. L. Wilk, Jr., Houston; R. A. Smith, Gil- mer; 4 R. S. English, Crockett; E. A. Womack, Boonsvill; J. V. Gilil- land, Dallas; J. R. Mullins, Gal veston; B. G. Hayes, Houston. ^America. After arriving here and conferring with his brother and others, he settled on A. & M. for his college work. Being interested in structure and design he chose Architectural Engineering as a course of study. When Neuman landed in America in 1926, he could n’t speak a word of English. By September 1927 he had mastered enough of the language to enter school. He played in the band while in school and was an excellent mu sician. Upon his graduation in 1931 Neuman returned to Czechoslovakia and went to w^ork for the Bata Shoe Company, the largest shoe manufacturing concern in the world. His job did not deal with shoes at all but with construction work. When the Bata Shoe Co. built a bactory it built a small city along with it. Houses were constructed for the workers, streets were laid out and paved, and com plete recreational facilities were provided for the entire population. The company even built its own automobiles for the workers to pur chase. In other words each factory was a complete unit in itself. By 1938 Neuman was in charge of the (Continued on page 4) With Memorial Day and all its memories as a background, A. & M. presented diplomas last night in Guion Hall to 61 Aggies who are being graduated early in order that they might immediately begin a period of active duty with the Army. For the first time since 1917, it has become necessary to graduate a portion of the senior class in some special manner. Many members of the class of ’17 graduated while at the Officers Training Camp at Leon Springs, Texas. Members of the Corps of Engi neers, the Signal Corps, and the Coast Artillery Corps who have been called to immediate active duty were formally graduated from A. & M. at the exercises. Colonel Ike Ashburn, executive. assistant to the president of the college delivered the commence ment address. Prior to Col. Ash- burn’s address an invocation was given by Dr. Thomas Gordon Watts, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, Bryan. Dr. T. O. Walton, president of A. & M. spoke a few words and then Cadet Lieutenant Colonel Jeff Montgomery delivered the valedictory address. Imme diately following the valedictory Col. Ashburn delivered the com mencement address. “This is Memorial Day. Like wise, a thoughtful faculty has chosen this day to mark the com pletion of your undergraduate stay at the A. & M. college and to pay tribute to you and wish you God’s speed as you begin an extraordi nary service for your country.” With these words Col. Ashburn opened his commencement address to the class of ’41. Col. Ashburn’s speech told of a similar situation at A. & M. back during World War I. and about the experiences of A. & M. during the first great war. In speaking of the responsibili ties which would soon be thrown upon the shoulders of this graduat ing class Col. Ashburn said, “I urge you to take with you a keen (Continued on Page 4) Aggie Exes Will Attend Reunion Here Next Weekend Several hundred Aggie Exes will be on the campus for Commence ment next week-end and to attend the annual meeting and class re unions of the Association of Former Sstudents, E. E. McQuillen, secre tary of the Former Students Asso ciation, announced. The general theme of the meeting will be “What Can We do to be of service to A. & M. men in the armed forces of the United States.” Reunions will be held by the 1906, the 1911, the 1916 and the 1926 classes. The 1931 class re union was postponed because so many members of the class were on active duty. Each of the reun ion classes will hold class parties Friday afternoon, then attend grad uation exercises and the Presi dent’s reception in a body. At noon Saturday the annual Faculty-Former Student luncheon will be held in Sbisa Hall, followed immediately by the annual bus iness meeting and election of Di rectors of the Association of For mer Students. Routine business of the meeting will be stream-lined to permit a full discussion of how the Association and the College may be of service to men on military duty. Presiding will be the President of the Association, A. G. “Bert” Pfaff, ’25, Tyler. Nisbet Announces No Tuesday Battalion The Battalion will not be issued Tuesday, Bob Nisbet, editor, an nounced yesterday. One more issue of The Battalion will be published Thursday. Be cause so many members of the Battalion staff will have to take final exams, it was necessary to limit next week’s work to only one issue. World-Traveled Aggie Ex Relates European Adventures