- 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 122 ADMINISTRATION BLDG. VOLUME 41 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, THURSDAY MORNING, JAN. 15, 1942 Z275 NUMBER 46 Spring Maintenance Costs Swing Upward FoodExpense Hikes to 69c Daily, Up' ; 7c 86 Seniors and 9 Others up For Mid Term Degrees; No Exercises Stay till April For2ndTerm School Credit Graduating Seniors Waiting for Draft Should See Bolton Students who are called to the armed services during the course of the coming semester .by their selective service boards may secure credit for the semester’s work by remaining in school until, April 1, according to Dean F. C. Bolton. The academic council at its lat est meeting agreed on the policy to be followed. Seniors who plan to graduate May 16 should come to the office of the Dean of the College and se cure an application blank to be sent to their selective service boards in case they are about to be called to the army before April 1. Dean Bolton emphasized that student who voluntarily leave school when they are not going to be called to service will not be able to receive their grades. Stu dents should make every effort to remain in school until April 1, he added. ME Department Offers Welding For Employed Mechanics Beginning today, a course in welding will be offered through the auspices of the department of mechanical engineering which will be especially designed for the me chanics of this section. A limit of 14 men has) been set for the class which will meet in 3 hour shifts, two nights per week, for eight weeks. An enrollment fee of $2 will be charged with the cost of mater ials amounting to $12. Interested workers can enroll at the mechanical engineering de partment, where detailed informa tion about class days and hours will be given. 51 Ag Students, 20 Engineers, And 15 LA Majors to Get Sheepskins Degrees will be conferred on 86 seniors and nine grad uate students on January 23 at the close of this semester, H. L. Heaton, registrar, announced yesterday. No formal exercises will be held at that time. Of the candidates for baccalaureate degrees, 51 are in the school of agriculture, 15 in the school of arts and sciences, and 20 in the school of engineering. A number of the graduates will receive their reserve commissions at the same time and go on active duty with the army shortly. The graduate students who will- receive degrees of Master of Science are J. M. Carr in Munici pal and Sanitary Engineering, Mar tin Kagan in Entomology, R. N. McLean in Municipal and Sanitary Engineering, A. M. Meekma in Dairy Husbandry, J. D. Mauldin in Fish and Game, H. W. Sands in Agricultural Education, d. H. Sou- len in Fish and Game, E. S. Wind ham in Dairy Husbandry, and W. H. Whitcomb in Entomology. Those who are to receive the Baccalaureate Degrees are 0. G. Allen, Jr., John D. Atkins, Jr., L. C. Atkins, E. B. Baggett, A. G. Beene, C. D. Berry, Jr., C. D. Brow der, Jr., L. P. Bumpers, R. B. Cashion, Jr., G. W. Castleberry, W. L. Church, Jr., Frederick Clarke, G. W. Clynes, Jr., J. R. Colgin, Jr., C. H. Connor, F. D. Crouse, E. R. Curtan. J. R. Davis, C. P. Duncan, W. J. Fallwell, L. W. Fisher, B. M. Fletcher, E. D. Flores, George Don Gabriel, J. W. Gibson, L. M. Go- ber, A. D. Grant. J. B. Harbin, L. R. Hardage, G. G. Harris, F. B. Harvey, W. K. Harvey, Jr., W. E. Heai’n, Jr., R. R. Herring, W. J. Herring, D. K. Hill, J. P. Horan, Jr., J. W. Hudson, T. L. Hutto. 0. E. Jones, R. F. Jones, W. G. Knight, F. J. Krampi^z, Jr., J. P. Ledbetter, M. A. Lichenstein, J. V. Lindsey, E. B. McKemie, 0. M. McLen, J. B. Meriwether, Jr., J. H. Miller, Jr., M. A. Mujica, J. R. Mulvey, Jr. B. W. Nayovitz, H. W. New man, Jr., R. E. Odom, F. G. Olney, A. G. Plummer, J. A. Price, G. W. Proctor, Jr., G. W. Race, W. C. Ragan, Jr., L. F. Rahn, C. H. Rain ey, C. W. Reid, J. J. Roan, Jr., W. A. Routt, A. C. Rumbaugh, Jr. L. E. Sample, R. E. Sikes, T. S. Stephens, Ray Stockard, W. S. Ter ry, Jr., M. M. Thompson, C. H. (See GRADUATION, Page 4) Ample Lighting For All in 1943 Is New Prospect Government Priorities Listing Delays Arrival Of Generator 5 Months The power plant of the college will undergo many major changes during the next few years in or der to furnish utilities for he new buildings under construction on the campus. A new 8,000 kilo watt generator valued at $110,000 has been ordered from the Gener al Electric Company. The new gen erator will furnish enough electric ity for all the dormitories and will do away entirely with all restric tions, on the use of lights. The delivery and installation of this new generator has been con tracted at 270 days, but according to information recently received from the General Electric Com pany, the delivery of the new gen erator will be delayed until March, 1943, because of government pri ority. Ernest Hartford To Speak to ASME Ernest Hartford, assistant sec retary of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, will talk to the student branch of the A. S. M. E. tonight at 7 p.m. in the Physics lecture room. Hartford, who is in the south west to arrange for the annual spring meeting of the society in Houston, will answer any ques tions about the relation of me chanical engineers to our present war effort. Agronomy Exams For Cotton Tour Start Tonight at 7 Three Winners, Dept Member, and F G Collard Will Make US Study Trip Competitive examinations for the travel scholarship offered each year by the Agronomy society will begin tonight a 7 o’clock. Three scholarships will be offered for a tour of the United States and Canada. Four Aggies and a member of the faculty will make this trip in order to make a study of the cotton industry. The examinations will be resumed on or about February lb and will run for several weeks. They will deal with cotton production, bot any, insects, diseases, machinery, marketing, genetics, grading and stapling, and with textiles. The men making the three highest scores in these examinations will win the scholarships. The winners and F. G. Collard, a winner of last year, will make a detailed study of the cotton indus try, production, manufacture, and all other processes concerning cot ton from the time the seed is plant ed until the finished product is ul timately purchased by the consum- City Property Values Near Two Million Mark; $200,000 Increase Expected for Current Year Religious Week Leader Announced Dr. George W. Truett, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Dallas, will be the principal speaker each day during religious emphasis week on the A. & M. college cam pus beginning Monday, February 23 and closing Friday, February 27. The religious emphasis week is being sponsored by the College Y.M.C.A. and all of the College Station churches. All denomina tions are inviting outstanding stu dent leaders to participate in the meetings. Dr. Truett will speak each day at 11 a. m. and all students will be given an opportunity to attend the meetings. There will be a coffee hour each day during the week and students will be met by the outstanding religious leaders who will be here for the series. Awards to Be Given at Grid Dinner Thurs Moser, Ruby Will Get Trophies, 27 Letters Given Squad The 1941 Aggie championship football squad will get its due reward Thursday, January 22, when the annual gridiron banquet is held. As was the case last year, End Coach Dough Rollins will be master of ceremonies at the feast which will be held in the east wing of Sbisa hall. The dinner will be open to the general public and all seniors. Tickets will go on sale immediately at 50 cents for the students and $1.00 for the public. Highlight of the affair will be the presentation of the Houston Post trophy to Derace Moser and Martin-Ruby for being chosen by a committee of sport writers as the best back and linesman, res pectively, in the Southwest Con ference. The annual Bert Pfaff trophy, which goes to the best blocker on the team, will also be awarded. As a climax to the dinner, lettermen of the 1941 Aggie team will be announced. President T. O. Walton will make the main address, and honored guests will be called on by Toast master Rollins for comments and statements. Special guests will in clude Dan Rogers, chairman of the Cotton Bowl Committee; James Stewart, business manager of the Coton Bowl and S.M.U.; Felix Mc- Knight, staff writer on the Dallas Morning News; Col. Ike Ashburn, and many others, including fam ous sports writers from all over the state. The highlights and sidelights of the banquet will be broadcast over state-wide networks from the ban quet room by Pat Flagherty, Hous ton sports announcer. The city of College Station in the past few years has attained a growth that is quite astounding to {he visitor who has been away from the community for any length of time. To the citizen^ who live here, it is taken as matter of course. The field or pastures of just a few short years ago are now the College Hills, West Park, Col lege Park, North Gate, and Oak- wood areas of the City of College Station. The property values show an assessment in 1940 of $951,439. In 1941 the values showed an increase of $87,160 to $1,038,599. The increase for 1942 as estimat ed by the city office will be about $200,000. The assessed values represent about 60 per cent of the true values. Mayor F. G. Anderson plans to present a full and detailed ex WTAW Plans Aggie Hit Parade Program A new program patterned some what after the popular Saturday night Hit Parade will be started soon on WTAW. The program to be heard on Fridays at 5, will feature the eight or nine top musical num bers with the Aggies that particu lar week and will be conducted by Conrad Bering. planation of the 1942 budget and proposed extensions of utilities at a public budget hearing on January 28 at 7 o’clock in the Physics lecture room. Serving the various areas of the city with power, water, sewer and streets, is a complicated job, and the spread of the city increases this service both in expense and difficulty. The city acquired power lines and sewer lines and disposal plants from College Park, Oakwood, and College Hills at a cost of $31,500. College Park and Oakwood are be ing paid at the rate of $200 per month, and a like sum is paid each month on the College Hills indebt edness. In the meantime, total expendi tures of $7,735.32 for extensions of sewers have been made in the city, and an additional $1,500 for water lines, with another $1,500 for power lines. To offset these and other operat ing expenses, the city collects from all sources a total of approximate ly $4,000 per month, to which may be added $6,000 per year in tax collections. Purchases of water from Bryan and power from the College amount to about $2,200 per month. The proposed budget for the fis cal year of 1942 contains the fol lowing items: Expenditures: salaries, $5,160; fire calls and rental on fire plugs, $700; health center, $300; tending sewer beds, $480; sewer extensions, $9,000; car maintenance and in surance $500; office rent, $240; publicity, publications, and ord nances, $200; office supplies, stamps, etc., $250; miscellaneous, $500; street maintenance, $2,500; utility payments to former own ers, $4,800; water extensions, $1,750; and power extensions, $1,- 750. This represents a total of $28,130 estimated expenditures for the current year. Interest in Fish Ball Lags; Freshmen Must Sign for TSCW Dates The response to the announce ment made recently about dates for the Freshman Ball to be held February 6 has not been great enough to warrant bringing the 150 girls here from T.S.C.W. as originally planned, according to the committee in charge. How ever, if enough freshmen sign up by Saturday noon the girls will be brought here. To sign up for a date contact the representative in your outfit on the Date committee, or G. A. Lamb, room 127, dorm 1. You must sign up for your date by Saturday noon. Defense Drawing Course Offered By Arch Dept Next Term The Architecture department will offer a national defense course in architectural drafting beginning with the new semester. The course will be comparable to the one offered by the department last summer and is offered primarily to make it possible for civilians to prepare themselves for work in the interest of national defense. Minimum requirements will be two years of architectural draw ing in high school, one year of architectural drawing in college, or the equivalent in professional practice. The course will run for 12 weeks, eight hours daily, Mon day through Friday. The pro gram will be| built around profes sional practice and in all respects the work will be comparable to that carried on by professional offices. Students who have the proper qualifications are invited to call at the office of the architecture department for further informa tion. The architecture department does not guarantee jobs upon com pletion of the course but every effort will be made to place men who complete the course success fully. Holds New Job Alfred C. Payne, former assis tant secretary of the college YMCA, is now regional rep resentative in charge of youth activities in the eighth civilian defense region. He is in San Antonio where he has charge of setting up a program in which young people can par ticipate in practicing principles of democracy. Regimental Heads Collect R0A Dues Dues to the Reserve Officers As sociation and for the Reserve Of ficers magazine will be collected by the regimental commanders rather than be deducted from the military science checks as origin ally planned, Cadet Colonel Tom Gillis stated yesterday. The commanders of the various regiments have the applications for memberships which the advanced ROTC seniors signed in class. A receipt will be given and the mem bership dues sent in to the nation al headquarters on next Wednes day, January 21. The first issue of the magazine will be received by the students soon thereafter. Sid Loveless, president of the local ROA chapter, stated that the method of payment of the military science checks made it impossible to collect the dues as originally planned, and he has asked that the funds be collected as in previous years through the regimental of ficers. t & !l First Installment Is $72.75; Total Outlay Is $140.20 Maintenance for the spring semester has been increased from $134.65 to $140.20. This rise is caused by the fact that board in the mess halls will be 69 cents per day instead of the 62 cents in effect dur ing the fall semester. The 7 cents increase was authorized at a meeting of the college Board of Directors last Sat urday in order to absorb the rising cost of foods. Students who have paid for board for the last month of the fall semester will be given credit of $6.20 or ten days board at the'old cost of 62 cents per day on their main tenance for the spring semes ter. First installment on mainten ance, which is due at registration, will be $72.75 including $2.50 for the YMCA privilege card which is voluntary. The second installment payable March 2 to 5, will be $32.70. The last payment, which is due April 6 to 9, is $34.75. For the students who have paid their board for January, the first payment will be $66.75 including the Y card. The board increase was neces sary in order to maintain the quali ty of the food served in the mess halls, J. C. Hotard, supervisor of subsistence, said. Overall food costs have risen 30% in the col lege area. Aniong the commodi ties showing unusual cost rises are rice which is 167% higher, bacon and eggs both up 100 per cent, po tatoes up 38 per cent, and beef cuts up 61 per cent. As the mess hall operating costs have not risen, the 10 per cent board increase will cover the in creased food costs. Hotard does not anticipate any further rise in the costs of food this year as the normal seasonal trend of food prices after March 1 is downward. (See MAINTENANCE, Page 4) Houston Symphony Proves Ags ’ Town Hall Favorite Again By Tom Leland The annual performance of the Houston Symphony Orchestra on the A. & M. Town Hall program last night more than lived up to its. splendid reputation as the most enjoyable program of the entire Town Hall Series. The Houston Symphony Orch estra is one of the few organiz ations to be engaged year after year by the Town Hall. The reason for this could readily be seen by any person who attended 1 the per formance last night, The pro gram selected by Ernst Hoffman, conductor of the orchestra, was one which was suited to the tastes of all music lovers. The playing of such favorites as the “Emperor Waltz” by Strauss and the prelude to Bizet’s “Carmen” was especially well liked by the corps. Nancy Swinford, Houston so- More Photos, More Propaganda, More Fame; New York Mirror Pictures Aggie Life In Two Page ‘Glory’ Spread Next Sunday prano who was the soloist on the* program, gave rendition- of two. popular operatic arias, selected- from Verdi’s “La Forza del Des- tino” and “Madame Butterfly” by Puccini. On completion of the program,, the orchestra received a record breaking round of applause which drew many encores. The complete program given by the orchestra consisted of Miss Swinford’s sel ections, aria from “La Forza del Destine,” by Verdi and an aria from “Madame Butterfly” by Puc cini; and the following selections by the orchestra: Prelude to “Car men” by Bizet, two movements from Tschaikovski’s Symphony No. 6 in B minor, the L’Arlesienne Suite No. 2 by Bizet, Strauss’ “Emperor Waltz” and the Rouman ian Rhapsody No. 1 by George En- esco. By Tom Vannoy “The College that produces more officers than West Point.” That’s the headline spread across the top of two pages of the New York Sunday Mirror Mag azine Section for next Sunday, January 18. Pictures of the motor ized Field Artillery battery on ROOP, the Easterwood airport, a Coast Artillery map, a shot of the horse show, the rifle range, the corps marching to mess in the new area, the Aeronautical engineering shops, and field artillery cadets using a BC scope are included in the article. The story accompanying the photographic outlay sums up the ability of the college to turn out officers for the expanding army at a greater rate than West Point, in words to this effect: “Overshadowed by the fame of precise-stepping West Point Acad emy, the Agricultural and Me chanical College of Texas, nonthe- less, furnishes more officers for Uncle Sam’s Army than any other college in the U. S., including West Point. “Beginning with six students in 1876, Texas A. & M., an all-male college, now has an enrollment of 7,000 students, 91 per cent of them from the Lone Star State itself. Each year more than one-half of the approximate 1,000 graduates become commissioned army offi- ceite. “Situated at College Station, Texas, the 65-year old institution is known far and wide among mili tary men as a college where offi cers of tomorrow are thoroughly grounded in every fundamental of military science. Here students learn the “real thing,” not mere- (See GLORY SPREAD, Page 4) First Term Drops Out Number 695 to Jan 14 Up to and including January 14, 695 students had dropped out of A. & M. Up to this same date last year 511 cadets had dropped out. This increase is not alarm ing, according to the registrar’s of fice, in view of the fact that many have left this year to join the army, navy, air force, and other branches of the armed forces. The enrollment is considerably lai-ger this year than last also.