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, TUESDAY MORNING, JAN. 20, 1942 Z275 NUMBER 48 College Publications Put on 12 Month Basis Eight Seniors Apply For Commissions at Mid - Term Final Semester of Military Science To Be Waived for Seniors Graduating Early Eight seniors who will complete their required work for a degree have made application to the War Department for commissions in January, according to information received from the Sergeant Major’s office yesterday. Only one of these men was scheduled for mid-term graduation originally. The others have completed their work by carrying extra hours the last semesters ot-k.— their attendance at A. & M., but they have completed only seven semesters of military science. E. B. McKemie, senior from Dallas, is assured of a commission. It will be necessary to waive the regular requirement of eight sem esters of military training in or der to be commissioned. Those who have made application for immed iate assignment to posts are: Don Gabriel,'C Coast Artillery; W. A. (Chipp) Routt, C Infantry; Leon F. Rahn; Eugene R. Curtan, C Cavalry; R B. Gibson, E Field Artillery; Wm. H. Granfors, B Signal Corps; and J. H. Snow, A Signal Corps. Civil Service Announces New Engineering Job Latest examination announce ment to come from the U. S. Civil Service Commission is for inspect or positions in the defense product ion service of the War Depart ment. Salaries range from $2,600 to $5,600 a year. Applications will be rated as soon as possible after receipt at the U. S. Civil Service Commission, Washington, D. C. Title of “Inspector, Defense Pro duction Protective Service” im plies the urgency of this examina tion. These inspectors will be re sponsible for making recommenda tions to prevent interruptions or delays in the production and de livery of all types of defense ma terial when the interruptions may be caused by major accidents, ex plosion or other hazards inherent in manufacturing plants. No writ ten test will be given. Applicants will be rated on their education, experience and personal qualifica tions. Gen Brees Visits Campus to Inspect College Facilities Yesterday A. & M. acted as host to Major General H. J. Brees, retired commander of the Eighth Corps Area. Acting in his capacity as a director of the college, Gener al Brees arrived on the campus at 9 a.m. yesterday to inspect the physical plant of the college and better acquaint himself with its fa cilities. Because his previous trips to College Station have been hurried and official, the general has not had time to thoroughly familiarize him self with the campus. Since he had a holiday in San Antonio, he availed himself of the opportunity to pay a visit to A. & M. While he was on the campus, Brees visited the mess halls, class rooms, and inspected the dormitor ies. At present General Brees is president of the First National Bank of Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio. At 2 p.m. he boarded his plane to return to San Anton io. Beck Reported Safe Somewhere in Pacific Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Beck of Pecos received word last week that their son, Bill Beck, is safe somewhere in the Pacific. The mes sage said that he had arrived at his destination other than the Phil- lipines. Bill was one of the Junior Yell Leaders in the 1940-41 school year until he resigned to join the air corps. He is now a lieutenant in the air corps. Sea Greyhound Has Attained Enviable Record in Naval War By L. R. Kirnsey Most landsmen have at best a hazy idea of the construction of a destroyer, as well as of, the type of job it must perform in sea warfare. A destroyer is just what the name imples . . . Designed in the last war as a counter-weapon against submarines, this type of vessel established an enviable rec ord. The modern “tin-cans,” as they are affectionately termed by Navy men, represent the last word in marine engineering. Equipped with powerful engines, the little vessels can attain terrific speeds, and with a main battery of torpedo tubes supplemented by dual-pur pose guns in twin-mounts, they can deal crushing blows even to capital ships in night or screened attacks. Armor is negligible on destroy ers; in fact, the hull is so thin that old gunners say a shell designed to explode on impact could pass clear through a “tin-can” and not detonate, unless it struck some in ternal machinery on the way through! The advantage gained in speed and maneuverability is tre mendous, however. Destroyers are used to screen the battle line against torpedo attack by subma rines, and are also of invaluable aid in scouting operations. These vessels carry depth charges, popu larly called “ash cans” which are thrown over when submarines are located. These depth charges are armed with time fuses, enabling them to be set at different depths when contact is made with a sub marine. The explosion of one of these charges is so severe that the concussion will open the seams of a submarine within a given radius of the blast. From the salient features of the ships themselves, interest nat urally turns to the men who oper ate them. There is a certain spir it among tin-can sailors that can be found in no other branch of the service. The crew of such a craft is necessarily small, and men become better acquainted. A destroyer’s chief officer is usually in the lower commissioned rat- (See DESTROYERS, Page 6) Gabriel Resigns Editorship Of ‘The Battalion’ to Enter Army The resignation of Don Gabriel as Editor of The Battalion in or der to graduate and receive a commission in the Coast Artillery Corps was announced yesterday at a meeting of the Student Ac tivities Board. Gabriel, a member of C Bat tery, Coast Artillery Corps, and cadet major, will graduate at mid term in order to go immediately into active duty with the army. Gabriel is an economics major and will receive his BA degree next Friday. The appointment of E. M. (Man ny) Rosenthal as Acting Editor was also approved by the board. Fur ther changes in The Battalion staff were not made at this time. Succeeding Tom Gillis as editor during the summer session when Gillis resigned to become Cadet Colonel, Gabriel assumed the post. Gabriel, who is from Fort Worth, is a member of the Economics Club, the Scholarship Honor Soc iety, and a former captain of the A. & M. Debate Club. Early graduation of the editor was possible as he had complet ed all requirements for his degree at midterm with the exception of the second semester of senior mil itary science. He was able to waive this in order to obtain his degree at this time. As yet, he has not re ceived his orders to go on duty. Gabriel had served as a Junior Editor during his Junior year and was appointed Associate Editor at the close of school last year. Prior to his appointment as editor for the 1941-42 college year, he had seiwed as Associate Editor and Editor of the Summer Battalion. Complete plans for The Battal ion staff for the second semester have not been announced. Present plans will call for a more ex tensive use of junior editors. At the same meeting the Student Activ ities Board recommended that The Battalion be continued as a tri weekly publication throughout the entire year. Because of this, move it is anticipated that there will be a great many openings for more students on The Battalion staff. Read the Ads! Maybe You Will Military Dept Be the Winner of Three Dollars Aggies are given a chance today to try their hands at judging the merits of advertisements appear ing in The Battalion. Three dol lars cash goes to the reader who can most nearly imitate the judges’ choices of ads appearing today. Students in the department of ag ricultural economics, who are tak ing “Principles of Advertising”, are participating in a contest in ad writing which is being run in cooperation with The Battlaion. The contest is under the direction of Professor Stewart H. McKin non. The Battalion will furnish $15 in prizes to be given the winners in the contest. “The primary objective of the contest is to stimulate the interest of students, readers, and merch ants in advertising,” McKinnon said. The contest is divided into two divisions. The students themselv es will receive $7.50 in prizes and the readers will receive the other $7.50. First prizes in each contest will be $3.00, second prize $2.00, Defense Council Says Brazos County Plans FDR Birthday Ball In commemoration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s birthday a dance will be held in Bryan at the Bryan Country Club on the night of January 30. The Aggie- land Sextet will furnish music for the affair and admission will be $1.10 with the proceeds going to the infantile paralysis fund for the crippled children at Warm Springs, Georgia. Tickets are on sale at Lipscomb’s Pharmacy at the north gate. third prize $1.50 and fourth prize $1.00. One hundred and sixty-eight stu dents are submitting ads in the contest. They drew the names of prospective advertisers from a hat and space was sold by the adver tising staff of The Battalion to 14 advertisers. The four best ads will be chosen and the students writing them will be awarded priz es. Readers of The Battalion will be allowed to judge the ads and send in their selection on the blank being printed in this paper. To enter the contest the read er need not buy anything. He need only submit the names of the ad vertisers whose ads he thinks are the best. These ads have already been judged and the readers who come nearest to selecting the win ning ads will receive the prizes. No one may receive two prizes. The decision of the judges will be fin al. Urgent Need Exists For First Aid Profs, The College Defense Council has urgent need immediately for ins tructors in first aid training cours es, it was announced by M. L. Cash- ion, chairman of the committee on medical services. The immediate need is for an instructor to work with post office employees; but other instructors are needed for student classes and housewives’ instruction. Any student or civilian who is competent to teach first aid is re quested to telephone Mr. Cashion at 4-7584 or the general chairman of College Defense Council, Dr. C. C. Hedges at 4-5514. Requests Early Payment of Fees The Commandant’s Office re quests that students who have been in school the first semester pay their fees and make their room res ervations for the next term as soon as possible. This will save the stu dent much time in registering for the next term and make it easier for the commandant’s office to keep the reservations correct. The fees for the next term may be paid at the fiscal office any time from now until registration is com pleted. However, the fees must be paid before registering. The fees for the whole term are $142.00 or $72.75 for the first installment which includes $2.50 for the Y card. Students who have paid their board for January will be given credit for $6.20. Waco Mothers Club Gives $5 to Library General Reading Fund The Library General Reading Fund has just been increased by a five dollar gift from the Waco A. & M. Mothers’ Club. This con tribution and other gifts that have been received this year bring this fund to a total of $270. i This fund has been contributed to for four years by the A. & M. Mothers’ Clubs. It is spent by the Library for books and classical records requested by the boys them selves, general policies being de termined by a Student Library Committee. Committee Votes Annuals i For Each Graduating Class Date for Senior Ring Dance Remains Undecided; Gabriel Resigns as Editor In a sweeping action the Student Activities Board decided by a unanimous vote to continue the present publication policy on in the usual manner during the summer semester, at a meeting held Monday afternoon in Dean F. C. Bolton’s office. Under the proposal as adopted by the committee, The Battalion would continue as a tri-weekly publication throughout the entire 12 month school year. Special ef forts would also be made to con tinue publication of The Battal ion magazine as a monthly publi cation. In the case of the Longhorn a slightly different situation would prevail, Joe Skiles, manager of student activities explained. The board went on record as recom mending that each Senior Class have a Longhorn. This is a gen eral policy, Skiles explained, and will have to be modified to meet any changes in present conditions. In the case of the college’s two technical publications, The Engi neer and the Agriculturist, the committee voiced a strong deter mination that these publications should continue publication even if it became necessary for them to be published every other month. “The entire publications staff will gear itself to the present emerg ency,” Skiles stated. Hel cautioned that the publications set-up is de pendent upon the ability to get suf ficient paper and other materials. The board voted to defer action on placing a date for the Senior Ring Dance. It was decided that the Senior Class should be given a full opportunity to express its desires concerning the dance. It was pointed out that the Sen ior Class could choose the date it desired for the Ring Dance. The action of deferment was taken af ter several members of the com mittee proposed that it might be wise to combine the usual Mothers’ Day and Ring Dance activities, and hold them at Easter. Last week the class voted to hold the dance on May 14 . Other action of the board was the acceptance of the resignation of Don Gabriel as editor of The Bat talion and the appointment of Manny Rosenthal as Acting Edi tor. Committee Approves Ring Contract Again The ring committee met last Friday afternoon and took up a two-year option on the three year contract held by Josten Manufac turing Company of Minnesota. This company has made the Senior rings for the past three years and will continue to do so for the next two years. Singing Cadets Have Full House At Group Singing Approximately four hundred peo ple attended “Audience Participa tion Program” in the Assembly Hall last Saturday night. The Sing ing Cadets provided the stage en tertainment and their director, Ri chard Jenkins, was the master of ceremonies. To quote Jenkins, “Everyone had a swell time.” This same type of presentation will be held every Saturday night next semester at 7 p.m. The next show will be February 6. This program is designed to give the students a free entertainment on Saturday night, provide a place for students and their dates to go before dances. This is an en tirely new form of program and cannot be compared with anything which has previously occured or is now taking place. By limiting the show to one hour, anyone can afford to attend with out changing their entertainment plans. These gatherings are open to fac ulty members and outsiders as well as students. Red Cross Game Brings Over $300 The American Red Cross bene fit game between the Maroons and Whites held last Saturday at Kyle Field has already brought in $289.- 05. All of the money has not yet been turned in and it is expected to go well over $300 when the com plete totals are checked. All the net proceeds of the game will go to the American Red Cross. Only the actual expense of putting the game on will be deducted. Much of the success of the affair goes to the players, coaches, print shop, publicity department, and First Sergeants. The players of the teams will receive medals and pictures of the squads they played on. CPI Scholarships Still Available To Students For Coming Spring Semester Flight scholarships under the C.P.T. program are still available for the spring pi’ogram. Ample Corsages for National Defense; Student Floral Concession Buys Defense Continue Hensel Fellowship After End Bonds To of Conflict By Ken Bresnen A new idea in the Aggie “all out aid” program has been adopted by the Student Floral Concession. In former years the concession was operately solely for the profit of the student who ran the conces sion, but beginning this year the concession will be held by the Landscape club and operated by students. All profits accruing from the sale of corsages will be invested in United States Defense Savings Bonds which will be set up as the F. W. Hensel fellowship for the outstanding senior in Land scape art, so that he may continue graduate work in his field. Since all seniors will go into .the military service upon gradua tion and hence will not be able to avail themselves of this oppor tunity, it has been decided to in vest the money in bonds, thus help ing win the war, and at the same time increasing the amount of the fellowship by the interest that will accrue on the bonds. “Highly commendable” was the comment of Dean Gilchrist, “A splendid idea to help our nation to finance the war,” said Jess Casey, of Casey’s confectionery. Dean Kyle agreed that the five hundred dol lar bond purchase would make a scholarship to be much sought af ter. These three men constitute the board of trustees for the Hen sel fund. At the same.time that the bus iness is building the scholarship, it will be providing employment for about fifty Aggies. These men who are engaged in selling the cor sages, making and delivering them are able to make several dollars each week by working only a few hours. When the Student Floral Con cession goes into action for the first time this year on February 6 to make the corsages for the an nual Fish Ball, it will be operating from its new office and shop in the old house east of the college green house. The rooms in this house are now used by the students of landscape art as drafting rooms. Last year, the writer had the opportunity to watch the corsage makers at work, and it is his opin ion that these Aggie made corsages are far superior in design and construction to any others seen at the dances. At last years senior ring dance, the concession was able to purchase orchids from a large floral concern in New Orleans at a reasonable price. Two hundred and eighty nine seniors sent their “one and onlys” orchids for the dance that night, because they were made up by the students in the insterest of the students, and therefore could be sold at a much lower price than is usual for these gems of the floral world. A mass production scheme, as sembly line and all, has been plan ned to facilitate the making of corsages this year, so that more corsages can be made in a shorter time, thereby assuring the arrival of the flowers while they are still blossom fresh. All orders will be brought by the salesmen to the desk of the manager at the door who will sort them and send them to the various departments where they will be put into operation. From ice box back to ice box, the process of making a gardenia corsage would go something like this—The gardenias are unpacked from the boxes in which they are received in their natural state and are sprayed with cool water to keep them fresh during processing. Then the leaves and stems are re moved. While one fellow is wash ing each leaf and polishing it on a cotton cloth, another is supplant ing the natural stem with one of (See SCHOLARSHIP, Page 6) quotas have been received to take care of qualified applicants who can meet the requirements. The pri mary course has a value of about $500 and the secondary course of about $1,000 flight and ground school work and are available to A. & M. students for a total cost of less than $40. The expense to the student covers an insurance policy, a physical examination com parable to that given by the U. S. Army Air Corps, and transporta tion to and from the airport. Under Civil Authority The military aspects of this pro gram are particularly important, although pilot training is still a civil activity. The Army and Navy Forces are particularly anxious to obtain graduates of either the pri mary or secondary courses since their past records indicate that about 90 per cent of these grad uates complete their military flight training while only 60 per cent of those who have not had C.P.T. training can be expected to finish satisfactorily. Selective service deferment has been given in practically all cases of students who are doing satis factory work in this flight train ing program. Students who are (See CPT TRAINING, Page 6)