DIAL 4-5444 OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION The Battalion DIAL 4-5444 OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION m ADMINISTRATION BLDG. VOLUME 41 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 28, 1942 2275 NUMBER 89 Federal Inspection ROIC Facilities Held Tomorrow Tickets For Senior Ring Dance onSale Classified Seniors, 8-Semester Men May Attend Occasions Tickets for the Senior Ring Dance and Banquet to be held May 14 in Sbisa Hall are on sale through the organization comman ders, Dick Hervey, president of the senior class announced. Tic kets for the dance and banquet will cost $2.30. Favors will cost $1.71, of which 50 cents has al ready been paid on the down pay ment. All classified seniors and eight semester men are eligible to at tend the dance and banquet, and organization commanders are re sponsible for seeing that only those eligible to attend are allow ed to purchase tickets. Hervey said that it is urgent that all seniors pay for their tic kets now in order that more def inite plans for the banquet may be made. For those seniors not living with an organization, tickets may be purchased at the Corps Headquar ters office in Ross Hall tomorrow afternoon from 1 until 5 o’clock. Organization commancTers have been asked to turn in the money that they have collected for tickets and favors to the office at the same time. The deadline for the purchase of tickets will be set for sometime next week, Hervey add ed. Colonel Rice Promoted At Edgewood Arsenal Colonel James Wilson Rice, whose home is at Edgewood Ar senal, has been promoted from lieutenant colonel to colonel in the chemical Warfare Service. Formerly stationed with the Re serve Officers’ Training Corps at Texas A. & M., Colonel Rice re ported here in June of 1939 and was assigned, to the Chemical War fare Board. He attended the Uni versity of Nevada and the Massa chusetts Institute of Technology and has since been with the United States Regular Army nearly 25 years. Marines Land, Enjoy Mess Hall; Puzzled by Uniforms, Customs l The Marines have landed! Not content in having only the army, navy, and C.P.T. flying course, A. & M. now has the fighting Ma rines on the campus. In an interview with four of the Marine boys, it is found that they already think A. & M. is tops in every respect. The boys remarked over and over about how the peo ple they saw spoke to them on the campus. One said, “It’s not like Chicago, where I didn’t even know the people living four doors down the street from me.” Still confused about how to dis tinguish regular officers from ca det officers, one marine was won dering just how he was going to tell who was who around here. Most of the boys shipped in here have had one or more years of college training. Such questions as “How are the profs here,” and “Do you get good show like this here all the time?” were asked. “I can’t understand it. You get music with your food, and the food just slides right down with it.” Compared with the show they had been getting out of their mess- kits (that is not what they called them) at “boot camp,” this food is tops, they agreed. The “boot camp” is the basic training station where they learn how to shoot a rifle and pistol and all the drill and the field work that a marine goes through to make him the “outfightingest, out- thinkingest critter on two legs.” Now what about the girls? “I haven’t seen a girl in two months,” one of the men muttered. “How can one go about getting acquaint ed with these girls around here?” Boy did they put us through the mill at “boot camp”! Why we were human pin cushions by the time the doctors got through punching us for tetanus, typhoid, smallpox, and an extra jab or two just for good measure. When the supply sergeant issued them their rifles he said something like this, “This is your mother.” Then he gave them a bayonet to put on the rifle and said, “This is your brother. Take care of ’em.” And the ma rines did take care of that rifle right. “When you hit the bull’s eye at 500 yards you have to know that old rifle pretty well.” And when an air raid alarm was given each marine took his place in the trenches ready to kill any invader. National defense marches on at double time with the many branches of Uncle Sam’s fighting machine here at A. & M. Each branch of course, has its own char acteristics and attitudes; each branch being the only branch to get in, but every last man, even to his last »breath is ready to give the Axis a walloping of such a nature that they will stay wal loped. Singing Cadets Judge Sweater-Girl Contest on Northern Concert Tour Ag Ed Seniors Hold Outing at Cashion Cabin at 5 Tomorrow The annual informal get-togeth er of Agricultural Education ma jors and their professors will be held tomorrow afternoon from 5 till 8:30 at Cashion Cabin. John Pesek, chairman of the athletic committee, has planned a softball game between the stu dents and the professors to take place before the meal. Buddy White, chairman of the program committee, has planned the program for the get-together. Members of the Singing Cadets will appear on the program. Three dances and judging a sweater-girl contest are at least four things that will last in the memory of the members of the Singing Cadets who went on what was probably the most elaborate excursion ever undertaken by this group. In addition to these events-, members enjoyed the hospitality of nine towns at which they sang. The towns visited were Waco, Hillsboro, Itasca, Fort Worth, Dal las, Denton, Ennis and Marlin, at each of which they were enter tained and sang between the time they left, just after breakfast Wednesday morning, and the time they returned, at 6:30 Friday night. Wednesday, the cadets sang at Waco High School, at the Itasca high school and the Presbyterian orphans’ home, and at the Hills boro high school and junior col lege. From there they went to Fort Worth, where they sang for the Fort Worth A. & M. Mother’s Club at a banquet at Simpson’s Dining Room Wednesday night. From the banquet they went to the Lake Worth Casino, where they judged the sweater girl con test, electing Ruth Rushing the winner. She then became hostess for the rest of the evening and the dance. Members of the cadets spent the night at homes of mem bers of the Mothers’ Club. Thursday morning they sang at North Side High School in Fort Worth, from where they went to Dallas, and had lunch at the Ha waiian Century Room. Here they also enjoyed a floor show on ice, and danced with a group of thirty girls from the American Airlines to the music of Legon Smith’s or chestra. After lunch they sang at Highland Park High School. From Dallas they went to Den ton, where they gave a concert Thursday night. After the concert, they attended a dance at the Col lege Club, with the girls doing the tagging. Friday morning they left Den ton, for Ennis and Marlin and pre sented programs. Sandwiches and drinks were served in Marlin, and a dance was given later. From here they returned to College Station, arriving at 6:30 Friday night, and having present ed ten different programs. ASCE Banquet To Be Tonight; Col hevalier Speaker Awards For Outstanding Junior and Senior Of Year to Be Made Also The American Society of Civil Engineers will hold its final ban quet of the year tonight at 7 in Sbisa Hall, Jesse Teague, presi dent, stated. Officers for the coming year and Junior Engineer’s Council repre sentative will be elected. An award of $5 each to the outstanding jun ior and the outstanding senior in the society will also be presented. Colonel Willard Chevalier, prom inent engineer, will speak at the banquet. The doors will be opened at 8:15 in order that the general public may hear Colonel Cheva lier’s address. Colonel Chevalier is vice-presi dent of McGraw-Hill Publishing Company, and will be remembered by many as the speaker of a series of letures held here last year. Registration for Men 45-65 Held Yesterday “Between 365 and 370 men have registered in the Selective Service registration for men between the ages of 45 and 65,’’ Alva Mitchell, who was in charge of the registra tion, declared late yesterday, be fore the booths had closed on the ground floor of the Administration building. He stated that the registration had gone smoothly, with the reg istrants coming in regularly, so that there was no rush at any time. Agronomy Society Elects James Next Year’s President Morrison, Barton, Mills Brown, Lancaster Chosen As Other Club Officials At the regular meeting of the Agronomy Society last Thursday night, the officers for the coming year were elected. The officers elected are Durwood James, Sul phur Springs, president; Dorward Morrison, Greenville, vice-presi dent; Jack Barton, Kaufman, sec retary-treasurer; Alanson Brown, Houston, parliamentarian; Jim Frank Mills, Winnsboro, sergeant- at-arms; Doug Lancaster, College Station, reporter; and faculty ad visor for the club, A. W. Crain, instructor in agronomy. During the remainder of the meeting plans for the decorations, tickets for the Cotton Pageant and Ball, the ushers and their du ties were discussed. The Cotton Pageant will take place in Guion Hall this year in stead of the DeWare Field House, were it has always been held in the preceding years. Sbisa Hall was discussed as a place for the Cotton Pageant, but it was de cided that the floor could not be cleared in time for the ball, which will be held in Sbisa as it was for- | merly announced. Khaki Shirts to Be Worn With Blouses at Review Campaign Hats Are to Be Worn At All Times While Inspection Is Under Way Federal inspectors will arrive on the campus tonight to begin the annual two day inspection of the military training facilities of the college tomorrow and Thursday. Highlight of the inspection will be a mounted review of the corps in Number 1 uniform at 1 p.m. Thursday. Classes will be suspended Thursday afternoon from 1 until 4 to per mit cadets to attend the review. For the first time in the his tory of the school khajri shirts have been prescribed for wear with the Number 1 uniform at a review. The purpose of hold ing the review in woolens is to permit the inspecting officers -fto see the government uniforms English Teachers Hold Annual Meet In YMCA Saturday Dr S S Morgan Elected Vice-President of Group; Dr Summey Delivers Paper Dr. Robert A. Law of the Uni- versit yof Texas was elected pres ident and Dr. L. N. Wright was re-elected secretary-treasurer at the tenth annual meeting of the Texas Conference of College Teachers of English held here in the Y.M.C.A. Saturday. Dr. S. S. Morgan of A. & M. was elected vice-president. The morning session was de voted to a discussion of general teaching problems, including a dis cussion of a laboratory course in English where students would write their exercises under the supervision of an instructor, and their efforts would be graded and discussed during the laboratory session. Dr. George Summey, Jr., head of the English department deliver ed a paper on The Teaching of English in Wartime, ii) which he stated that the process is essen tially the same, except in wartime the teaching must be improved to be of benefit. The teaching must be more vital because it is more difficult to get the students’ at tention, and to get them to real ize the importance of the subject. The afternoon session was de voted to research papers and the principal address of the meeting— “Humanism versus Education for Death,” by Dr. Alwin Thaler of the University of Tennessee, a noted authority on Shakespeare Dr. Thaler declared “we must (See ENGLISH, Page 4) Maids of Honor for the Cotton Pageant Freshmen Predominate in Maids Chosen from TSCW for Court Marjorie Ann Monaghan Dorothy Middleton Jerry Heim Margaret Kerby Dorothy Dillingham By Clyde C. Franklin 1 ridge. Her escort is Robin Romin-\ Hutchens, junior at TSCW, is pic-1 No tickets for the Cotton Ball ger. Dorothy Middleton from Or-1 tured at the lower right. She is I be sold except at the door of an and ^ ueare e Pre- ange is a senior atTSC W and willfrom Fort Worth and will be es-L bisa H all immediately preceding dominating order of the day here 1 be escorted by Leslie McCarty. \ corted by Zolus Motley. I v. a i ■ \ at A. & M. but this week-end 1 Miss Jerry Heim, sophomore, from! These maids will enter first inU e ance - ^ was P revious Y an promises to show a change with!Tulsa, Oklahoma, will be escorted! the pageant and will be seated 1 nounced that these could be bought Jean Harris Louise Williford the Cotton Pageant and Ball ahead. The 160-odd duchesses and their escorts will bring to the cam pus the first showing of spring styles and for the most part the corps will be wearing white suits and gala sports coats. Pictured above and to each side are the pictures of the eight maids of honor to the queen of the elev enth annual Cotton Pageant and Ball. Reading across the top are Miss Majorie Ann Monaghan a TSCW freshman from Brecken- by Jewel Ramage. Miss Magaret Kerby, also a freshman, will be escorted by Lon nie Sears. She is from McKinney. Dorothy Dillingham, freshman, will be escorted by Bugs Tate; she is from Ardmore, Oklahoma. Miss Jean Harris, sophomore of Wichita Falls, will be escorted-by Julio Trigo. Miss Mary Louise Williford, bot tom left, freshman, comes from Corpus Christi and will be escort ed by Louis Brenner. Miss Lillian with their escorts on the stage about the throne of the king and queen. The maids will enter down the left aisle of Guion Hall and the escorts down the right aisle. Duchesses will enter down the right aisle, mount the stage and display their dress and meet their escort at the foot of the stage. After meeting her escort the duchess will exit down the left aisle and proceed to the balcony to be seated. in the Agronomy Office. Only tic kets to the pageant can be bought at that office. Miss Ernestine Ashe was chosen queen of the pageant at the same time the maids were chosen. She will be queen to the king, Gene Wilmeth. These girls were chosen to be the most beautiful in a group of 100 of the prettiest girls on the TSCW campus at the recent Red bud festival held there. The girls were chosen by the social commit tee of the Cotton Pageant. I which are issued to cadets enrolled in the basic military course. Tomorrow morning the officers will be guests of the corps in Sbisa Hall for breakfast. At 8 a.m. all senior officers of the Military de partment will meet with the in specting officers in the office of the commandant and from there will proceed with the inspection as follows. Hosts to the inspectors at a luncheon in Duncan Hall tomorrow will be the senior cadet officer of each unit. Col. E. A. Keyes, senior officer of the inspecting party, will be the guest of Cadet Colonel Tom Gillis. Late in the afternoon, the visit ing officers will call upon the president, T. O. Walton, Executive Assistant E. L. Angell and Dean T. D. Brooks.- The commandant has announced his desire that each student keep his personal appearance, conduct and quarters in irreproachable condition during this week espe cially, so that the inspecting offi cers may be well impressed by the corps. Cotton uniforms have been pre scribed for wear from reveille un til retreat on April 29 and 30. Campaign hats will be worn by all cadets whenever they are out-of- doors during the two days of the inspection. Major A. J. Bennett has announced that any cadet who does not wear the campaign hat will be considered out of uniform and awarded demerits according ly. The regulation fatigue uniform with hat must be worn to all laboratories. Members of the inspecting party and their respective units are as follows Col. E. A. Keyos, Cav. r civilian components officer; Col. C. L. Mitchell, Inf.; Col. Wm. J. Calvert, Q.M.C.; Col. John Per kins, C.A.C.; Lt. Col. O. C. Mc Intyre, F.A.; Lt. Col. B. F. Chad wick, Eng.; Lt. Col. R. A. Eads, C.W.S.; Maj. J. B. Wise, Jr., Cav.; Capt. G. T. Turner, Sig. C.; and Lt. D. C. Cutter, Ord. Dept. Colonel Chevalier To Deliver Series Of Speeches Here Col. Willard Chevalier, publish er of Business Week, and an ex ecutive of McGraw-Hill Publish ing Company, will give his fourth annual series of lectures to A. & M. students and all others inter ested this week. Col. Chevalier’s first lecture open to the public will be at Sbisa hall at 8:30 p. m. Tuesday. An other open meeting will be at 8 p. m. Thursday in the chemistry lecture room. He will speak at all engineering students at 11 a. m. Friday at Guion Hall. The public is cordially invited to attend Tues day and Thursday evening meet ings, according to Dean Gibb Gil christ of the School of Engineer ing. f * feji? Lillian Hutchens Civilian Defense First Aid Starts. First aid classes for enlisted personnel of the War Department Civilian Defense Training School were started last night in the Ag ricultural Engineering lecture room by R. E. Snuggs. The ma terial covered will "be standard first aid instruction. Classes will meet on Monday and Wednesday nights at 7:30.