DIAL 4-5444 OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION The Battalion DIAL 4-5444 OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION 122 ADMINISTRATION BLDG. VOLUME 42 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, TUESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 4, 1942 2275 NUMBER 27 Rope Stops Onlookers At Slab Dances Sophs Must Bring Dates to Juke Proms; Ring Dance Is Jan 15 A resolution to place a rope a- round the new outdoor dance floor approximately 50 feet from the fence beyond which no one who is not attending the dance will be al lowed to pass was passed by a large majority at a meeting of the senior class last night. The pur pose of this resolution was to keep “hangers on” away from the im mediate vicinity of the dance to pre vent disturbing noise and rowdi ness and also to admit more fresh air to the floor. It was pointed out that if the outdoor dances are not successful, they will have to be moved back into Sbisa Hall. Keeping excess crowds from the area in which the pavilion is lo cated will also facilitate traffic and parking accommodations and thus allow more dancers to park near the slab. Guards will be on duty during the dances to enforce this resolution, it was decided. Sophomores will no longer be allowed to attend Juke Box Proms without' dates as a result of action taken to relieve the overwhelming number of stags who have attended these dances in the past. However, they will be allowed to attend all corps dances without dates if they so desire. Freshmen as in the past must have dates to attend dances. January 15 has been set as the tentative' date for the Senior Ring Dance. This dance will fall one week before the graduation exer cises. Since there will be no class es for seniors the last week of school, holding the Ring Dance on the proposed night will mean that the seniors may leave after the dance and return a week later for the Final Ball and Final Review. Other action taken at the meet ing concerned the wearing of the eagle belt buckle. The class voted the wearing of this buckle a sen ior privilege, and underclassmen are warned not to wear this buckle, as the rule will be enforced ac cordingly. Saddle, Sirloin Club Will Sponsor * 24th Rodeo in Bryan August 14,15 Plans are progressing on the 24th Annual Texas Aggie Rodeo to be held in Bryan at the Ameri can Legion Park August 14 and 15. The only one of its kind in the world, the rodeo is sponsored by the Saddle and Sirloin Club, one of the largest clubs on the campus, which has grown from a handful to a number now more than 200 active mdbabers. The rodeo is held each year to send A. & M.’s Inter national Livestock Judging team to the annual Chicago livestock show and judging contests, in which the Aggies generally place high. No person promoting the ro- Norman Raine To Speak to Future Writers Tonight Lecture Will Begin At 8:00 in Physics Lecture Room; Press Club Invited Norman Reilly Raine, Hollywood scenarist, will address students in terested in writing and journalism tonight at 8:00 o’clock in the Physics lecture room under the sponsorship of the A. & M. Press Club, the English depart ment, an dthe English 331 (journa lism) class. , Raine’s talk will be addressed to students who hope to make radio, the screen, or writing their voca tion, and will be in the form of a short talk followed by questions from the students. Brooks Gofer, Battalion editor, will be in charge of the meeting, and will introduce G. Byron Win stead, director of college publicity who will introduce Raine, Students enrolled in journalism, radio, or other English courses, members of the English depart ment staff, members of the Press Club, and any other students especially interested in fiction writing, radio or screen work are ui’ged to be present. Raine’s wide experience in these fields and his experiences as a world traveller, soldier, and noted author well qualify him as an ex pert in hig field. He will be bn the campus until the latter part of this week gather ing material on which to base forthcoming screen story, “Ameri can Youth Has Never Been Lick ed.” DANCE SLAB CONTEST FORM Name for Dance Slab..._ , Your Name Organization P. O. Box deo profits by it financially, the promoters being a group of boys interested in livestock and major ing in animal husbandry. The president of the Saddle and Sirloin club each year is named King of the rodeo and he in turn selects his Queen. This year’s pres ident is Horace Brown, captain of H Company, Infantry. The rodeo is truly a western af fair; the entrants, chiefly boys from Texas ranches, are as non professional as the promoters, but still experienced rodeo hands. The tough stock will offer plenty of thrills and wild entertainment. The show will include a Wild Mule Race, Calf Roping, Bareback and Saddle Bronc Riding, a wild Brah ma steer, Ribbon Roping, and Wild Bull Riding. Friday night’s show will also include a children’s riding class, while Saturday night’s per formance will feature a “cowhorse” contest. Busses have been secured to run from the College to the Legion Park in Bryan. As in the past ,the proceeds will go to help send the Livestock judging teams to the various judging contests through out the United States. YMCA Parlors Near Completion; Furniture Arrives Gay Urges Anyone Who Is Interested in Decorating To Offer Plans for Lobby YMCA downstairs parlors are nearly completely furnished with the exception of the main lobby, states J. Gordon Gay, associate sec retary of the YMCA. There are a few items of fur niture that have not as yet arriv ed from the firm that is supply ing all the new fixtures. Among the items not yet received, but or dered, are four wicker chairs for the parents’ lounge, a bridge ta ble and five chairs to match, also four other lounge chairs to go in the Ex-Students’ lounge, and a large unique furnishing for the reading room that features a dou ble divan with table in between and folding chairs on either end that may be made into an end table at will. To go around this centerpiece in the reading room will be four ot tomans that arrived recently at the YMCA. Several plans for decorating and furnishing the main lobby of the YMCA are under consideration and Gay urged that any students that may be interested in interior dec orating as an art or hobby get in touch with him and go over the plans. The entire furnishings and dec orations are exepcted to be in and arranged in a definite scheme (See YMCA, Page 4) Saturday Prom to Be Semi - formal Cadets Allowed To * WearSummerTuxes If They Desire To Because of many requests from girls all ovey Texas, the Ina Ray Hutton dance Saturday night, Aug ust 8, will be a semi-formal dance. Girls will wear evening dresses if they so desire, and boys, re gardless of class or classification, may wear tuxes if they want to. However, khakis will still be reg ulation uniform. Said one girl in a letter to Bobby Stephens, social secretary of the senior class, “We are all very dis appointed. Two hundred miles is an awfully long way to come to attend an informal dance. Since it’s to be the biggest dance of the summer, we certainly all agree that it should be formal.” That seems to express the feel ing among all girls in general, so the previously announced informal ruling has been changed to semi- formal. Stephens feels that this will suit the girls better, and will lessen their embarrassment if they show up in either street or evening dres ses. Friday night, the new, energetic, and enthusiastic Aggieland, under the able direction of bull-fiddler Curley Brient, will open the new as-yet-unnamed dance slab. Fea tured with the orchestra is Ade- lene Koffman, sensational new comer to the Aggieland, and Fish Sullivan, who will lend his vocal talents toward the evenings en tertainment. The band will also put on a floor show during the intermission. Scrip Friday and Saturday nights will be $1.10. Parts Of Disney Film Heard on WTAW Wilt Disney, originator of Mick ey Mouse, Donald Duck, the Re luctant Dragon and a score of other equally loveable and fan tastic creatures, introduced the newest member of his inkwell men agerie, when he presents dramatic and musical highlights from his full-length motion picture “Bambi” on the Treasury Star Parade” Broacast which airs over Station WTAW on Tuesday at 11:30 a. m. Bambi the deer, Thumper the rabbit and the other newcomers who make their debut in this pic ture will add their voices to the broadcast, in which David Briek- man’s orchestra and the soloists Jimmy Cash, Lee Sweetland, and Sally Miller presents tunes from the film’s score. A Cavalry Starts Series of Tactical Overnight Marches Hikes Made to Give Cadets Experience In Making Camp Maneuvers Last Saturday Troop A Cav alry inaugurated a series of over night marches. Each week during August and September one of the six troops will carry out one of these week end tactical marches. These marches have been under taken to afford the cadets some practical experience in preparation for the camp they will attend at Ft. Riley, Kansas upon gradua tion, revealed Lt. A. P. Uter- back, Jr., senior Cavalry instruc tor. Members of the regiment ex pressed a desire to conduct such maneuvers so that they might gain some field experience before going to duty. Plans for the marches are made by the regimental staff, and the cadet officers of each troop are detailed for such special duties as mess officer, supply officer, or stable officer. Arrangements are made ahead of time with the mess hall for food and mess equipment. Since no bedding rolls are avail able, each cadet is held responsible for his own personal equipment which must include certain speci fied items. Upon arriving in bivouac, picket lines are established and a for mal stables is conducted. After the horses have been watered, fed and properly groomed, the men are fed and are then at liberty until 11 p. m. when taps is sounded. At six in the morning reveille is sounded and the horses are fed again. After breakfast, the Ijorses are watered, camp is broken and the return march begins. Security is maintained at all times on the march and during the night in bivouac. Sentinels are posted on all sides of the encamp ment to preserve order and report any irregularities. A guard detail maintains watch on the picket line to prevent disturbances which might result in injury to the horses or the escape of some of the ani mals. Throug^ such marches, the men are able to see just how the Cav alry operates and what is expected of a Cavalryman in the field. Slab Naming Contest Ends Tomorrow at 3 Names for the new Aggie Dance Slab must be turned in to the Stu dent Activities Office or placed in the Longhorn picture contest boxes in the YMCAs before 3 p. m. Wed nesday, August 5. “No real good names have been turned in. Some original, catchy name will be necessary to win the honor of being selected and taking its place in Aggie tradi tions,” says Bobby Stephens, so cial secretary of the senior class and one of the contest judges. Yell Practice to Be Held For Raine at Kyle Field College’s Purpose in Days Gone By Considerably Altered from Todays Aim fr .. .a Refuge for Rough, Unprincipled Boys, Whose Parents Were Ashamed of Them.. .”-’95 Yearbook United Science Starts Scientific Paper Competition Entries Should Be Not Over 15 Minutes Long And Turned in to Dr Doak At a recent meeting of the presidents of 15 A. & M. science clubs it was decided that the spring contest of the United Science Club will be held on Thurs day evening August 20. Any undergraduate member is eligible to take part in the con test. Papers can be on any scientif ic subject and should not exceed 15 minutes in length. Clearness, log ical arrangement, extent of mas tery of the subject and delivery will be considered when the paper is read. A copy of all manuscripts must be in the hdnds of the sponsor at least one week prior to the meet ing. Either mail them to Box B, EE, or leave them with the sec retary in room 26 Biology Building by August 13. The club sponsor, Dr. C. C. Doak, will be glad to interview prospective contestants at any time. The following clubs either belong or have declared intention of be coming metabers of the United Science Club; Biology, Pre-Med, Entomology, Fish & Game, Kream & Kow, Collegiate Chapter F. F. A., Agronomy Society, Junior Chapter, A. V. M. A., Geology, Student Affiliate American Chem istry Society, Horticulture Society, Rural Sociology, Poultry Science, Radio Club, and Institute of Aero nautical Sciences. Editor’s Note: This article in augurates a series of feature stories by John Holman on the origins of the cadet corps and its traditions and the activit ies associated with the college. By John Holman . a refuge for rough, un- principjed boys, whose parents were ashamed of them. . .” —1895 Olio, First Yearkbook. Today, Texas A. and M. sprawls out over forty-five hundred of Brazos County’s acres, and has every facility available to make this one of the finest educational institutions in the country. But in 1895, the date Aggieland saw its first year-book published, there wasn’t much material with which to fill its one hundred fifty small pages. A. & M. was here, though, and the “Olio” was pub lished. There was eight editors for the first yearbook, presided over by a “board of executives” consisting of F. M. Law, Jr. (now chairman of the board of directors). P. P. Mills, and H. B. Martin. The title “Olio” was picked after denomination, politics, and choicest much argument and discussion, and is the Italian word for “hash”. Lover’s Retreat “It is rumored that there will be a re-arrangement of some of the College buildings, forming a long street which will run in front of Assembly and Ross Halls, and par allel to the “Line”, affording space for the new Mess Hall, and for any professor’s houses which may be built in the near future.” “The “new” Mess Hall is Sbisa, completed in 1912. The “Line” was the main road, and is today the esplanade running from the rail road stations to the Academic buildings. Just past where the tracks are was a lake, the College Lake, and according to the ‘95 Olio, “A more delightfully picturesque spot could not be imagined.” “Many’s the time some love-sick soldier boy, in light canoe, on this placid lake, has made rash vows to his dulcinea while the breezes wist fully sighed among the drooping willows, and the moon discreetly hid behind some passing cloud.” “Behind the great dam of the lake, cozily nestling in a corner of the wide ravine, is Lover’s Re treat. This charming grotto, car- peled with green Bermuda and shut in by intertwining branches and clambering vines, affords a safe retreat for lovers where iyme may see or hear except the curiotis fays and peeping wood-nymph.” But the Olio didn’t say where they got their girls! Twenty-seven Profs “This school was at one time a refuge for rough, unprincipled and uncultivated boys, whose parents were ashamed of them and sent them to this College, hoping that strict military discipline might al ter their dispostion and make them useful men . . . But all that has changed.” And that was in 1895! At that time there were twenty- seven professors and instructors here, and the military staff con sisted of four lieutenants, one of whom, Lt. G. T. Bartlett, Third Ar tillery, U. S. A., was Commandant. Thirty-two senors graduated that I year, and one page of the Olio was devoted to listing their religious quality found in women. Purity, sweetness, and gentleness ranked one, two, and three in their choice. The “mighty” Aggie band con sisted of eleven players and a lead er, and the college was as large as the band. “Sully” Ross was fifty-seven years old and president of the Col lege. Throughout the Olio are fre quent tributes to this great man. The college consisted of five buildings a row of tents and a few houses in which the profs lived. However, the Legislature had just approiated $174,000 for new build ings and equipment. The original appropriation made April 17, 1871, of $187,000 put the school into op eration. 225 Men in Corps The corps of about 225 students was divided into four companies, all infantry, with each outfit or ganized about as it is today. On the campus in ‘95 was a Red-Headed Club, the Ross Volun teers, a football, and baseball team. Charles Puryear was manager of the eleven, and the four subs were frankly listed as “substitutes”. Games played, College vs Varsity, 34-0; College vs Galvestin, 24-6. The baseball team played four games, one with Navasota, who they beat 16-1. The nine lost the first game with Galveston, 3-4. In the back section were adver tisements for men’s fine shoes, seed, baking powder, extracts and cider, Remington standard typewriters, bicycles, and a college with exten sive addition to dormitory (tents) and called the State Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas. It boasted “a stand-pipe, ice plant, laundry and electric light plant, which makes the college modern in every detail.” Toward the back of the 1895 “Olio” was this little poem, as true today as it was then, If a cadet of this college would be in luck. Upon matriculation he must learn how to “suck”. The way to success can be told in a word— He must “suck, suck, suck,” till he catches the bird! Good Health Is Vital Factor In , Nation’s Drive “Not steel, money, rubber, sugar, gasoline, nor any other material equipment can win this war with out manpower,” declared Dr. Geo. W. Cox, State Health Officer. The backbone of the entire civi lian war program is the health and physical stamina of the men and women who stand behind the machines, who mold the steel, who conserve the rationed articles, who volunteer for defense activities, who earn the money that buys the war bonds, who work the farms and ranches that feed the fighters and who look after the homes and families that the military men are fighting for. There can be no doubt that the protection and promotion of the health of these people, then, is as important to the outcome of the war as it is to the lives and peace time welfare of the people them selves. It is the State and local health departments’ duty to help them choose foods necessary for build ing strong bones and strudy re sistance to disease, to tell them about immunization against cer tain diseases, to urge periodic health check-ups, protect water and milk supplies, and tell them how to prevent illness and acci dents. T D Brooks Discusses Problem of Pre-Med Students at Meeting General problems confronting the average pre-medical student were discussed by Dean T. D. Brooks, dean of the school of Arts and Sciences, at a meeting of the Pre-Medical Society Thursday evening. Dean Brooks stressed the neces sity of maintaining a high scholas tic average in order to be admit ted to any medical school. He went on to point out that if a student could not complete his training after completing prepra- tory work at Texas A. & M. he has the choice of entering either teach ing, health work and sanitatidn, or medical tehcnology. The U. S. Army intends to sup ply one doctor for every sixty men in the armed services, thus leaving only one doctor for every 1800 civilians, stated Brooks. Yell Leaders To Form Corps in “T”; Band Will Perform Immediately after supper to night the entire corps will gather en masse at Kyle Field to put on a yell practice, band drill forma tions, and form the Aggie “T” as it is done during the half at foot ball games. The corps will be led by the yell leaders in a regular yell prac tice, going through the yells that are heard at the Aggie football games, from “Military” to “Liz zie”. This will be the first yell practice for the new senior assist ant yell leader, Bob Hanby, who replaces Ted O’Leary, former as sistant to Chuck Chalmers, head yell leader. The two junior yell leaders are Bernard “Shorty” Booth and Bijl McKenzie, who also will get their first experience at stand ing on the cinder track and lead ing the corps in yells. Following the yell practice, the band will play “The Aggie War Hymn”, “The Spirit of Aggieland” while the band is going through the regular formations that it makes during the half on the foot ball field at home and out of town games. Topping off the Kyle Field ac tivities will be the formation of the Aggie “T” by the members of the entire cadet corps. The corps will line up with an eight-man front in front of the east side of the stadium, with the seniors first, followed by the juniors, sopho mores, and freshmen in that or der. The seniors will lead the corps out on the field, with every man holding on to the shoulders of the man in front of him. The corps will then- form the “T” un der the direction of Chuck Chalm ers, and the yell leaders. When the “T” has been formed, the corps will give the regular “T” forma tion yells—skyrocket and locomo tive. The corps then breaks the formation and runs back into the stands. These traditional Aggie doings are for the benefit of Norman Reilly Raine, who is gathering ma terial for the movie to be made of Aggieland. Raine was looking for football spirit for the movie, and these are things that should not be left out, said G. B. Win stead, head of the publicity de partment. Company, troop, and battery commanders are requested by Winstead to see that their respec tive organizations cooperate to the fullest extent by having their en tire organizations down at Kyle Field immediately after supper to night. Deficiency List To Be Published There will be a deficiency list posted, which will include the name of all those students who failed to pass the required ten hours, it was announced yesterday from the office of the registrar. “It is certain that there will be a deficiency list, but as to the exact date of the appearance of the list, it is yet unknown,” H. L. Heaton, aiting registrar said. “The Executive Committee will probably meet some time this week to decide the' details of the list,” said Heaton. Heaton went on to say that the required number of hours to be passed in order to stay in school is ten, however, the number will possibly vary in the different schools of the college. This will be up to the deans of the various schools, and their judgment in each case of a student’s deficiency. Last Payment Due On Maintenance Thursday, August 6, is the last day students may pay the last maintenence installment of this semester without having to pay the $1 additional fee for being late. The amount is $42.10. On Thursday only, for the con venience of students paying their fees on that day, the Fiscal office will remain open until 5 o’clock.