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, JUNE 5, 1941 : ■< NUMBER 94 Commencement Friday Closes College Career of 747 Final Ball Marks End 01 Social Season Graduates Come Free at Jr. Prom And Final Ball The finish will be written on the 1941 social season this weekend when the junior class presents the Junior Prom and the Final Ball with Lou Breese furnishing the mu sic. Also completing the year are some 808 seniors whose finish will be honored by free admission to both the dances as guests of the junior class. Beginning at 10 and lasting until 2, the ball will be featured by the allowance of all students to make the affair out of uniform if they so desire. An important feature of the ev ening Friday will be the playing of Silver Taps at 11:00 p. m. signi fying the last time taps will be played during the year. Combining to furnish the distinctive bugle ceremony will be the five regular buglers furnished by the Aggie Band. They will play from the top of the Academic building in unison and in harmony. Lou Breese with his “Breezy Rhythm” will be a welcomed res pite from the trials and woes of examinations as he makes his first appearance on the A. & M. campus. His distinctive rhythm is an under current in all the band’s arrange ments, a rhythm pattern that mak es the orchestra immediately recog nizable. To musicians it is a varia tion of the six-eight tempo as con trasted with the straight four-four of most bands, or the straight eight-beats-to-a-bar of the boogie woogie style. 68 Students Begin Ship Building Work Sixty-eight A. & M. students will be notified within the next day or two when they will start work for the Houston Ship Building Corpo ration, Lucien Morgan, head of the Student Placement Bureau an nounced yesterday. Six representatives of the Texas State Employment Service and R. S. Bergquist, personnel director of the Houston Ship Building Corpo ration, interviewed 150 A. & M. students, who have had two or more years of engineering, several days ago and a list of sixty-eight of them is being forwarded to Mor gan with the designated dates that these men will start to work. Those students that were accept ed for the jobs will be interviewed again in Houston before starting to work. Some of the students will start work on June 9 and others will start June 12, June 16 and July 1. Each job will pay 75 cents per hours at 40 hours a week with time and a half overtime. The work that is offered includes structural work, mechanical end electrical engineer ing work, welding and drafting. The work will be offered to the ap plicants for just the summer or permanently. The Houston Ship Building Cor poration is a concern recently or ganized which has contracted to build 30 cargo vessels of the “ugly duckling” type. In the near future more offers for jobs will be made, Bergquist said. Plans for Paving City Street Now Underway Paving of the Streets of College Station will begin as soon as suf ficient funds have been collected from citizens, Mayor F. G. Ander son announced this week. Cost of the Seal-Coat Asphalt pavement will be approximately fifty cents per running foot. Of this, the property owner will be expected to pay twenty-five cents per foot. Commencement Speaker Blaisdell, Commencement Speaker, Has Worked for General Electric 37 Years Leonard Tibbetss Blaisdell, Com mercial Vice-President of the Gen eral Electric Company who will de liver the commencement address to the graduating seniors of the Class of ’41, has held almost every sort of position with GE since 1904. Born and reared on a New Eng land farm near Carlisle, Massa chusetts, Blaisdell attended the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Nautical Training School and grad uated in marine engineering in 1904. He was employed by GE the same year and has continued with them since. From 1904 to 1907, Blaisdell at tended the Students’ Testing Course for Engineering Graduates located in the factories at Lynn, Massachu setts. From 1907 to 1911 he was application engineer and supervisor of power plant installations on land and also on ships of the Merchant Marine and the U. S. Navy. In 1911 he was made commercial engi neer of the Baltimore, Maryland office and remained in this posi tion until 1917. During the World War I, he was transferred to the Washington, D. C. office where he participated in the General Electric Company’s activities with the War and Navy Department and Bureaus of the Federal Government. He continued as the manager of the Washington office until 1923. In 1923 Blaisdell was transfer red to Dallas, Texas, where he was made district manager in charge of the company’s activities on the engineering and apparatus lines for the several Southwestern states. In 1936 he was made Com mercial Vice-President of the Gen eral Electric Company, living in Dallas until 1939 when he was transferred to Cleveland, Ohio. Thirty-One College Staff Members Listed in Engineering Who's Who Thirty-one members of the col--f A. W. Stevens, M. K. Thornton, H. lege staff have been listed in the J. Vance, and S. R. Wright. fifth edition of Who’s Who in En gineering, a boigraphical dictionary of the engineering profession, re cently published. Qualifications for inclusion in the volume are engineers of out standing and acknowledged pro fessional eminence; engineers of at least ten years active practice, at least five years of which have been in responsible charge of im portant engineering work; teach ers of engineering subjects in col leges or schools of accepted stand ings who have taught such sub jects for at least ten years, at least five years of which have been in responsible charge of a major en gineering course in such college or school. Those listed from A. & M. are Howard W. Barlow, F. C. Bolton, F. A. Burt, C. W. Crawford, H. C. Dillingham, Nat Edmondson, V. M. Faires, L. L. Fouraker, F. E. Gie- secke, Gibb Gilchrist, L. L. Grandi, H. E. Gross, L. M. Haupt, E. J. Howell, M. C. Huges, A. A. Jak- kula, F. R. Jones, J. D. Lindsay, J. T. L. McNew and T. A. Munson. Also Judson Neff, N. F. Rode, O. W. Silvey, E. G. Smith, H. P. Smith, H. C. Spencer, E. W. Steel, The book is published every four years and contains only material as submitted by the indicidual to publishers. Bundles for Britain Headquarters Open The local Bundles for Britain headquarters will be closed until June 9 after which time it will be opened for the summer according to an announcement Friday by Mrs. C. B. Campbell, chairman. During the summer the head quarters, which is located at Dean Puryear’s old residence, will be op en on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thurs day and Friday mornings from 8:30 to 11:30. Engineering faculty wives will be in chcarge on Tuesdays while wives of experiment station work ers will take over on Wednesdays. On Thursdays the work will be di rected by army officers’ wives, and liberal arts faculty wives do the work on Fridays. Mrs. Campbell urged all students to bring their old clothes over to to the headquarters instead of throwing them away. Motion Picture Committee Chosen To Continue Fight With Last Week’s Exercises [J , ™ e . r stu ? e " te . Year’s Total Grads No. 808 Here oZ Weekend Gillis, Heitkamp and Sterling Will Carry on Work of Current Committee The Senior Class Motion Picture committee announced yesterday af ternoon the three juniors who will carry on the work during the forth coming long session in the event that the controversy is not settled by the arbitration which begins in Dallas June 9. Battalion Editor-Elect Tom Gil lis, Longhorn Editor-Elect R. L. Heitkamp and Varsity Letterman James Sterling are the men who have been named by Senior Com mitteemen W. A. Becker, George Fuermann and Benton Elliott. 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 reasanable basis. Many Students Make Applications With recruiting officers from both the Army Quartermaster corps and Air corps on the cam pus many students are treking daily to Ross Hall to make appli cation. Students who will receive com missions this week but who desire to do construction work in the army should make application to Captain C. W. Terry, QMC, who will be in Room 18, Ross Hall at 8 p. m. to day, Friday, and Saturday. Engineering or architecture graduates who will not receive commissions but who want Quar termaster corps service in a civil ian capacity should also contact Captain Terry. Many applications for flying ca det training have been received by (Continued on Page 6) Weekend's Festivities Begin Today With Concert and End with Final Review Seven hundred and forty-seven graduates—the remainder from the special early graduation exercises held last week—will parade across the stand to receive a diploma certifying that their college careers have come to a close. With the 61 graduated Friday, the total figure for the year is 808, the largest graduating class to come forth from the college in its 65-year history. The weekend’s activities open this afternoon with a concert from the Aggie Band at 4:30 in Guion hall. The program will be presented from the stage with Lieut. Col. R. J. Dunn directing. Tonight from 10 ’till 2 the juniors hold their prom in Sbisa hall, dancing to the music of Lou Breese and his orchestra. Graduating sen iors will be the guests of the class at the dance and will be allowed to enter free of charge both at the Junior Prom and the Final Ball. The baccalaureate, sermon will be given Friday morning at 10:30 by Rev. Umphrey Lee, D.D., president of Southern Methodist univer sity at Dallas. Seniors and parents will attend. The processional to Guion hall for the sermon will form in the order as follows: President Walton, Rev. Lee, members of the board of directors, deans and directors, heads of departments and candidates for degrees. The formation will be in column of two’s, and with the exception of the candidates, will^. - form in the lobby of the Academic building. The graduating class will form on the lawn west of the Academic building and south of the sidewalk, arranged alphabetically according to courses, those receiving ad vanced degrees first in line. Marvin McMillan Receives Danforth Scholarship Award Friday at 6:00 p. m. the com mencement program will begin. Leonard T. Blaisdell, commercial vice-president of General Electric at Cleveland will make the com mencement address. This speech will be followed by the valedic tory address, delivered by Jeff Montgomery who was elected by the graduating class as its scho lastic leader. The same order of procession will be observed for the commencement program as for the baccalaureate address. As is cus tomary, President Walton will con fer the degrees and the president of the board of directors, F. M. Law of Houston will present the Montgomery, Haines Presented Harvard Awards W. Jefferson Montgomery of Mason, Texas, and Paul G. Haines of College Station have received word from Harvard University that they have been awarded schol arships in the Harvard Business School. Only two other schools in Texas, Rice Institute and Southern Metho dist University, were represented by the fifty-five students who will enter the business school next Sep tember. Twenty-one students have receiver National Scholarships ranging in amount from $100 to graduates with their diplomas. Marvin McMillan, Jr., animal husbandry freshman from Mason, Texas, has been named as winner of the Freshman Danforth Award for this year, according to an an nouncement from Dean E. J. Kyle of the school of agriculture. This fellowship is awarded by W. H. Danforth, president of the Ralston Purina Mills of St. Louis, Mo. The outstanding freshman ag riculture student from every major state agriculture college is given a two-weeks trip to a summer camp on the shores of Lake Michigan to the American Youth Foundation Leadership Training Camp. Previously this year Stephen B. Williams and Jack B. Taylor were named as winners of the Danforth fellowships for outstanding junior agriculture students in 38 colleges and universities over the nation. Williams is a dairy husbandry major from Los Fresnos, Texas, and a member of Headquarters Troop Cavalry. Taylor is taking animal husbandry. His home is As- permont, Texas, and is in 3rd Battery Field Artillery. These junior fellowships are awarded jointly by the Danforth Foundation and the Ralston Purina Mills. Students are given an op portunity to study, through actual experience, problems of manufac turing, commercial research, sales promotion, advertising, • personnel and leadership. The trips, which will begin July 28, consists of two phases. The (Continued on page 5) A uld Lang Syne Above The Battalion’s editors for the 1940-41 session are seen working on the last edition of the publication issued under their editorship. Left to right, they are Associate Editor George Fuermann, Houston; Editor-in-Chief Bob Nisbet, Bryan; Managing Editor Bill Clarkson, Corsicana and Manag ing Editor Earle A. Shields Jr., Amarillo. Several Changes Made In Arrangements to Make It a Livelier Occasion Friday and Saturday Aggie-Exes from all parts of the country will trek to Aggieland for the annual meeting of the Former Students’ Association. “Service to A. & M. men who have been called to military duty” will be the central theme of this year’s meeting. At a recent called meeting the Executive Committee of the Association declared this subject to be the most important facing A. & M. men today. Speak ing for the Committee, Association President Bert Pfaff of Tyler, said, “We believe this subject should have the earnest consideration of every A. & M. man and the of ficers and directors of the Associa tion of Former Students need your thoughts upon what we and our organization can do along this line.” Meeting Changes In an effort to make the annual meeting this year a livelier occa sion the Executive Committee at its recent meeting authorized sev eral changes in general arrange ments. The annual Association business meeting will follow im mediately the Faculty-Former Stu dent luncheon at Sbisa Hall, Sat. noon, June 7. This will eliminate the usual delay in moving from the luncheon to the Y. M. C. A. Chapel. Another change designed to both improve and facilitate the business meeting will be delaying the meet ing of the newly elected Board of Directors until after the conclusion of the general session. In the past the Directors have retired during the meeting for the election of of ficers, as provided by the by-laws of the organization. Under the new program their session will be held after the general meeting and new ly elected officers announced thru the Press and the Texas Aggie. These changes and a general shortening of other routine items of business have been designed by the Executive Committee to pro vide more time for general dis cussion by Association members. Busy Week-End The annual meeting will get under way Friday, June 6, with re union classes leading the way with special class parties that after noon. Graduation exercises at Kyle Field, the lawn party of President and Mrs. T. O. Walton and the Final Ball will complete the Friday program. Commencement speaker will be Mr. L. T. Blaisdell, Com mercial Vice President, General Electric Co., Cleveland, Ohio. Mr. Blaisdell is an honorary member of the Dallas A. & M. Club. On Saturday morning the Final Review will provide its old, old thrill to visiting A. & M. men. Members of the Auditing, Nomina tions and Resolutions Committees, appointed by President Pfaff, will meet for business sessions that morning in preparation for the gen eral meeting. YMCA Sponsors Trip To Camp in Hollister This morning J. Gordon Gay and Alfred Paine of the Y. M. C. A. leave with several A. & M. stu dents to go to Hollister, Missouri for a nine-day camp beginning June 6 and ending June 15. This camp is held each year at the close of the academic school year and is maintained by the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. of the southwest. The A. & M. Y. M. C. A. has attended this camp every sum mer for several years, taking from three to six students for the train ing program that is carried on there. The camp is attended by both students and faculty members from the various colleges and uni versities of the southwest and in cludes training courses in leader ship and planning, religious inspi ration, and includes opportunities for outdoor i-ecreation.