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 VOLUME 41 122 ADMINISTRATION BLDG. COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPT. 25, 1941 Z275 NUMBER 8 Junior ClclSS Station’s Motorized Police Patrol Prexy Picked Friday Night Seating Sections, Motion Picture Set Up to Be Discussed Officers of the Junior Class will be elected after yell practice Fri day night in Guion Hall, Cadet Colonel Tom Gillis stated Wednes day. A president, vice president, sec retary-treasurer, historian, and three representatives on the Stu dent Welfare board will be elect ed at the meeting. Gillis will preside during the election and will be aided in tab ulating the votes by the regimental commanders and the yell-leaders. In order to complete the election rapidly, Gillis asked that the jun iors be as orderly as possible during the voting. The junior section in the stadium will be explained to the class mem bers, and in addition the motion picture situation will be clarified. Other business will be taken up by the class officers as they see fit. Last year’s officers of the soph omore class were Billy Bryant, president; Jack Miller, vice presi dent; Joe G. Maples, secretary- treasurer; J. M. Wilkinson, his torian; and Bob Bryant and H. R. Bright, student welfare repre sentatives. Turkey Day Clash Dedicated to Former Aggies Now in Service of Uncle Sam 4Y I * l IfSfi Aggies Sleep As Tail of Hurricane Sweeps College Station C. N. Surber, campus patrolman, stops Bill Wofford with his new motorcycle. The motorcycle is used cooperatively by the college and the city in enforcing the local speed limit of 20 miles per hour. Motorcycle Officer Turns Aggieland into ’Safety City Seniors From Battalions Added To Welfare Group Senior members of the student Welfare committee were appoint' ed at the meeting of the commit tee yesterday afternoon. The student welfare committee is made up of one senior from each battalion on the campus and rep resentatives from each of the three other classes and certain members of the faculty who meet with the student members to discuss cam pus problems. The members of the committee are as follows: first, second and third battalion Infantry; Willard C. Clark, A. J. Landua, and C. B. Admire; first, second, and third battalion, Field Artillery, Otto Scherz, Jack Tilton and Robin Ro- minger; first and second battalion Coast Artillery Corps, Gerald R. King and L. A. Dubose; first and second squadron Cavalry, R. H. Martin and John Yelameter; first and second battalion engineers, W. E. Frosh and A. E. Anderson; Sig nal Corps battalion, John Persohn; Chemical Warfare battalion, Ted Overbeck; and in the band, Jones F. Webb. A Battalion Feature With the addition of a motor cycle patrolman to the College po lice force and the strict enforce ment of the 20 mile speed limit, College Station has become the “Safety City” of Brazos county. The ever-increasing enrollment and the greater number of cars travelling on the campus created a traffic hazard which brought a number of complaints to the au thorities. This brought about the ideas of setting a standard speed C. E. Society Begins New Year Vanity Fair Deadline Is Set All Vanity Fair and Senior Fav orite pictures for the 1942 Long horn must be in by December 18, 1941. This year entrants in the Vanity Fair must submit three glossy fin ish pictures; an 8 by 10 inch full length picture taken in an eve ning gown, a 5 by 7 inch full length taken in a street or sport dress, and a 5 by 7 inch close-up. A light plain background for all pictures is desired. For Senior Favorites any close-up will suf fice. This year as in past years the charge for Vanity Fair will be $3.00 and will include a free pic ture in the Senior Favorite sec tion. The Senior Favorite charge is $1.50 for each picture submit ted. All Vanity Fair and Senior Fav orite pictures should be handed in to Bennie Hancock, features edi tor, Room 117, Dorm 4. The A. S. C. E. held its open ing meeting of the year in the lec ture room of the C. E. Building after yell practice Tuesday night. A total of 160 members and vis itors were present. Mark Goode, B. Engineers, was elected vice-president of the or ganization, J. C. Denny, secre tary-treasurer; G. R. Thenn, Jr. reporter. Previously elected offi cers are Jesse A. Teague, presi dent and Dan Ray Sutherland, student representative on the Engi neering Council. The club is spon sored by J. T. L. McNew head of the civil engineering department. F. J. Benson, assistant professor of civil engineering is the junior contact member and Col. O. A. Seward, Texas State Highway resi dent engineer of Groesbeck is the senior contact member. Opening the meeting, J. T. L. McNew gave a short talk, the salient points of which were the national recognition which the stu dent society had received during the past two years on their annual re ports. The plans for the coming year include at least two combined in spection-convention trips. Regular meetings of the student society are held on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month in the C. E. lecture room. limit and the enforcing of the rul ing with a penalty of a fine on each offender. Sgt. C. N. Surber, the first and only motorcycle policeman of Col lege Station diligently pursues any person who speeds through the campus at a rate of more than 20 miles an hour. The total fines for the first two weeks of the new speed enforcement project were $140 which meant that 140 persons were travelling through the campus at a hazardous rate. Offenders are overtaken by Surber and must appear before the city judge of College Station to pay the penal ty. City officials act as a collecting agency for the college. Surber came here in the fall of 1938 to work for the College laun dry. The following year he was made a campus sergeant in the new area. During the year he was transferred to another part of the campus to perform similar dut ies. It was during the past sum mer that Surber was motorized in order to enable him to more ef ficiently patrol the entire cam pus. Evidence of his ability to act as patrolman lies in the fact that he was connected with the Sheriff’s offices in Waco before coming to College Station to the position of receiving and returning the stu dent laundry. Since the enforcement of a standard speed limit there have been no casualties on the campus. Opening of Guion As Picture House Delayed Till Oct 8 Postponment of Curtain Delivery Causes YMCA Officials to Set Date Up Delivery of curtains will delay the opening of Guion Hall as a new motion picture showplace until October 8 if not later, J. Gordon Gay, who is in charge of the thea ter, states. When it was originally plan ned, the staff of the YMCA ex pected to be moved into the new building by the beginnig of school, but construction and delivery of material has caused the opening to be delayed. Moving of the picture show from the Assembly Hall to Guion Hall will make room for a new student program under the direction of Ri chard Jenkii s, who is the new di rector of the singing cadets. After the moving of the equip ment from the Assembly Hall, Jenkins will have his office there and will start work on organiza tion shows such as the engineers show which was held last year. The programs will be made up of var ious forms of talent found, in the organizations over the campus. Repercussions of the much talk ed of Texas hurricane hit College Station Tuesday night while most of the Aggies were in bed or burn ing the mid-night oil. At approximately 8:30 Tuesday night the hurricane battered the Texas coast with a wind velocity of 90 to 100 miles an hour. After doing minor damage in Galveston, the storm lost some of its inten sity and headed for Houston and points north west. Shortly before midnight Tuesday winds, estimat ed at 40 miles an hour, hit College Station. This was accompanied by a hard blowing rain that chalked up 1.31 inches in some five hours. The only known damage on the campus was a tree blown down by Guion Hall. This is a striking contrast to the 1915 storm which struck about 2:30 in the morning and in two hours had several houses roofless. The 1915 storm brought a wind of between 75 and 80 miles an hour, some 30 to 35 miles per hour stronger than the winds that blew through here Tuesday night. • - SENIOR PICTURE DEADLINES Sept. 23 through 29—In fantry. Sept. 30 through Oct. 5— Composite Regiment. Oct. 6 through Oct. 8— Cavalry. Oct. 9 through Oct. 13— Engineers. Supplementary Promotion List To Be Out October First The second promotion list of Corps Cadet will be published com plete on October 1, Lieut. Joe E. Davis, assistant commandant, an nounced. The cadet officers that will be named on this list will be the permanent cadet corps officers and no other changes will be made. Haltom Heads Fort Worth Club for Year The Fort Worth A. & M. Club has elected officers for the term 1941-42 with G. W. Haltom as president. Bob McLarn was elect ed vice president; Lyle Reynolds secretary-treasurer; Cliff Mitchell, reporter, Rufus Lackland, sgt. at arms. The club voted to meet the first and third Tuesdays of each month. The club also has tentative plans to cooperate with the Dallas club in giving a Christmas dance and various other functions. The orch estra has not as yet been select ed. Editor Announces Vacancies Open On Engineer Magazine Several vacancies on the staff of the Engineer Magazine are re ported by Billy Davis, editor of the publication. Positions are op en to sophomores and juniors who are taking engineering. Students wishing to join the staff should contact Billy Davis im mediately. By doing so at this time the applicants will be qualified for position of editor their senior year. The applicants will be judged on their scholastic ability, experience, and willingness to work. To qual ify as editor the candidate must have worked on the publication a year before the election and be a classified senior with a 1.25 grade point average. Davis requested all who are interested to see him at room 218 dormitory eight as soon as pos sible. 634 Applicants Get By Physical For MS Contracts Passing of Exam Is Not Assurance Of Obtaining Government OK Of the 685 juniors and seniors who took physical examinations last week for first year advanced military contracts, 634 passed. Re jections numbered 43, five men were recommended on waiver and three were recommended with no waiver. The 685 who took the physical examinations compared with ap proximately 510 who took them last year. Some of the applicants for con tracts who passed their examina tions will be unable to obtain them since there is a limited number available. However, some seniors who had contracts last year are not eligible to continue their ad vanced study for various reasons, both scholastic and physical, and some failed to return to school. These contracts will be given to new students in the advanced course. Governor Stevenson Scheduled to Deliver Dedicatory Address The annual Thanksgiving Day football game between A. & M. and the University of Texas to be played on Kyle Field November 27 will be dedicated to all former Aggies now in the armed forces of the United States, it was an nounced by President T. O. Wal ton. Tom Gillis, Cadet Colonel of the A. & M. Corps has written the president of the University of Texas student body asking him to solicit the cooperation of the Tex as student body in the dedication ceremonies. It is planned that the University of Texas too shall ded icate the game to all former stu dents of their school who are now serving in the armed forces. Appropriate ceremonies are plan ned just prior, to the opening kick off of the game and it is likely that Governor Coke Stevenson will make the dedicatory address. The annual Thanksgiving clash between the two state schools al ways attracts thousands of alum ni of both institutions, and many of the sexVice men to whom the game will be dedicated will be in the stands. Hundreds of tickets to the game have been mailed to former students in various army camps throughout the entire Un ited States, and it is estimated that about 37,000 persons will see the game. PH Group Makes Up Replacement Center Regiment 64 Men from Two Houses In Each of 8 Companies Organized by Lieut Sale Results of the physical examina tions will be sent to the Eighth Corps Area Headquarters where they will be received and remitted to A. & M. September 11 is the date from which the contracts are effective. Of those Infantry students tak ing the physical examinations 182 qualified; 147 Field Artillery stu dents; 99 C. A. C.; 74 Cavalry; 68 Engineers; 33 Signal Corps; and 31 C. W. S. Both the Infantry and Field Artillery have 264 contracts each, both new and old. The Coast Ar tillery has 117; the Cavalry 105; and the Signal Corps and Chemi cal Warfare each has 63. This makes a total of 1,051 new and old contracts for the entire school. Senior Section At Games Designated Class sections in the stadium were announced yesterday for the current football season. Sections for the four classes are clearly defined and must be adhered to, Cadet Colonel Tom Gillis stated. Underclassmen caught in the senior class section will be sub ject to trial by the Senior Court. The senior section includes sec tions 130, 131, 132, from the top of the ramp to the top row. This is from the 50-yard line to the 15. • The junior class section is be low the senior section to the aisle in sections 130, 131, 132, all of section 129 from the top down to the aisle, and eight seats in section 128 adjacent to Ramp O from the top row to the aisle. Sophomores will sit in sections 128, 129, 130, 131, from row 11 to the aisle and from the top row down to row 24 in section 128 and around in the end zone as far as necessary. Freshmen will sit in sections 131, 130, 129, 128, from the first row through row ten and around in the end zone below the aisle as far as necessary. Section 132 below the aisle has been reserved for the band. Lieutenant E. B. Sales, tactical officer in charge of the 16 project houses on the campus, has or ganized the students living in the project houses into a Replacement Center Regiment of eight com panies. Each company consists of two houses, each containing 32 boys, making a company of 64 men. All companies have a sports manager, social officer, and an of ficer in charge of discipline. These newly created organizations will compete in intramural contests on the same basis a& a dormitory or ganization. There are a number of ■potential athletes, Lieutenant Sale contends, among these stu dents who have not taken the op portunity, heretofore, to partici pate in intramural sports contests. Officers of the companies are contemplating holding competition drills between their respective or ganizations. Lieutenant S]ale is also working on the possibility of securing a number of rifles for the students to drill with thus giving them a better opportunity to be come more efficient in the art of the manual of arms. Those cadet officers who are to command the companies are John Box, Co. A; M. J. Morris, Jr., Co. B; L. A. Maddox, Co. C; Swish Filgo, Co. D; Fred Coley, E Co.; G. C. McGourik, G. Co.; F. G. Collard, F Co.; E. L. Davis, H Co.; C. O. Duty, I Co. The Cadet Major, who will com mand the regiment, has not as yet been appointed by the Military department. Pearce & Company with Vocalist Norma Jean Take Over Tonight’s Yell Practice in Guion Company Captains Will Sell Town Hall Tickets Until Friday Season tickets for Town Hall will be sold to any sttudent through Thursday, Sepetmber 25 for the regular price of $2.09, Fred Smitham, Town Hall Manager an nounced yesterday. Until that date these tickets may be obtained fronj any company commander. Anyone wishing to purchase re serve seat tickets may do so at eight o’clock Wednesday, October 1 at the “Y” and at A. M. Waldrop and Co. in Bryan. The cost of the reserve seat tickets will be $4.00. Single admissions will be on sale at all times, Smitham stat ed. Classifications Given All Clubs Asking for Y Money Grinding through a two-hour session Wednesday afternoon, the Student Activities Committee pas sed a motion whereby all student campus organizations will be re quired to submit application to the student activities office before be ing granted certain funds for op eration. As a means of determining which clubs will receive the limi ted funds four classifications were- set up, and the various clubs will be given money according to which classification they are assigned. Classifications are based on points of general benefit to the college, to the cadet corps as a student body and as a plan of service. To be eligible for classifica tion the clubs must be a dues-pay- ing organization and must submit their annual budget at the time of application. Several other matters were brought up for discussion, but formal action was postponed un til a more complete investigation could be made of the various cas- All pending matters and new business will be discussed at a fu ture meeting soon. A free 30-minute concert of tice short in order that the con- Horticultural Society Lays Plans for , 41-42 The A. & M. Horticulture Society held its first meeting of the year last Thursday night. Plans were discussed and made for the current year’s work to be done by the club with special em phasis on the annual horticulture show to be held in the Fall. The Society is planning on get ting several new members in the club and having the largest and most educational show in its his tory. popular music will be presented tonight at yell practice by Toppy Pearce and his Aggieland Orches tra previewing their “Music As You Like It!” for the corps and introducing the organization’s new blonde singing star Norma Jean Jahn. The program is being spon sored by the senior class through ifs social secretary, Alden Cathey. In order to save time and facil itate assemblage, yell practice will be held in Guion Hall where the concert is to be presented. Yell practice will begin at the regular time, 7 p. m., but it has been ar ranged with head yell leader, Skeen Staley to cut tonight’s prac- cert may start at 7: 15 o’clock. The picture show at the As sembly Hall, in order to accom modate the program will not begin until 7:45. The familiar strains of “I’d Rath er Be a Texas Aggie,” the theme song for the Aggieland, will get the program under way. The lat est hit tunes will be presented as a sample of their new and im proved style. The feature of the program will be the introduction of the orchestra’s new singer, Norma Jean Jahn, who makes her first appearance at A. & M. She will sing several numbers. With this concert Toppy Pearce initiates a campaign to furnish music the Aggies like played as the Aggies like it played. For that reason he has dubbed his music, “Music As You Like It!” The orchestra will keep abreast of the battle of Swing vs. Swing this year and will attempt to please the majority. But that portion of the orches tra that is sure to please all is pretty Norma Jean Jahn (pro nounced Yahn) who sparkles with personality and who sings with her eyes. Featured in the past with such orchestras as Phil Spitalny’s All Girl Orchestra, Peck Kelly, and Eddie Fitzpatrick, Norma Jean is a real asset to the group. Ex 4-H Committees Appointed at Meeting At the first meeting of the Ex- 4-H club last Tuesday night, so cial and program committees were appointed and a regular meeting night on the first Thursday in each month was selected. Officers of the club are Bugs Tate, president; J. D. Gordan, vice president; Floyd Clyburn, secre tary-treasurer; and Billy Kidd, re porter. At the meeting a movie of the wildlife reserve at Rockport, and some scenes of the A. & M. cam pus were shown by Mr. L. L. Johnson, State 4-H club agent. Dallas Club President Announces New Policy The newly reorganized Dallas County A. & M. Club has announc ed a new policy for the coming year. In the past it has been the custom, if not the rule, for only the boys from the city of Dallas to take active participation in the club work. The custom will hold no longer, President Vincent Hagan said. Hagan issued an invitation to all boys from Dallas and Dallas coun ty to meet Thursday night in the Y chapel. Plans for the next year will be discussed. The activities for this year will be under the leadership of Rod Gambrell, vice president; T. K. Pierce, secretary; and Austin Nance, treasurer.