ToC * r L-ttlli: mm *r r r ’rrrrili'r'r F f r r rrrrvrr •lillll Pi LOOM 5 ADMINISTRATION BLDG.—2275 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 25, 1944 VOLUME 43—NUMBER 94 Students Pay Fees Now, Sign For Rooms Wednesday Graduates To Receive Degrees Saturday Judge Barron of Bryan Will Speak to 39 Seniors at Guion Hall on January 29th Names of 39 men who will receive advanced or bacca laureate degrees at the end of the current semester, January 29, have been announced by the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas. This will make a total of .1,845 degrees presented by the College since the declaration of war. In normal times these graduates would have received their diplomas in June 1945. Under+ the speed-up program enacted by the Board of Directors shortly af ter Pearl Harbor, graduation will be accomplished 16 months earlier. First plans made for graduation did not include commencement ex ercises, but at the request of sev- . eral Aggies to be graduated, plans fi wlre changed. District Judge W. S. Barron of Bryan will be the commencement speaker. These ex cises will be held in Guion Hall a^/ 10:30 a.m. January 29. Diplomas will be awarded- ( to regular student graduate^' add certificates will be given to two groups of Army Specialized Train ing Program students. Advanced ASTP students \£ill receive certifi cates signifying completion of the advanced course. Basic students will . receive similar awards indicating t completion of l^asic studies. Three of the 39 graduates will ■ . receive Master degrees: Mahlon , Y •PtToyiile,, Bry^n.| ia Agricul tural Education; Arthur D.. Adam son, College Station, in Economics; and Frederico Alberto Landulpho Velloso, Salvador, Brazil, in Mu nicipal and Sanitary Engineering. Of 'the 36 Bachelor degrees to be conferred, 15 are*in Hie School of Agriculture; six in the School of Arts and Sciences; 10 in the School (See DEGREES, page 4) Senior Ring Dance And Banquet Plans Complete; Milner Hall Is Available For Weekend Guests President’s Ball PlannedWithMoney Going to Paralized Two Dances on 28th; Party on 29th; Dance Tickets, $1.10 and $.55 The President’s Ball, which raises large sums of money an nually for the care of those per sons afflicted by infantile paraly sis, will be held Friday night, Jan uary 28, according to Mrs. Ford Munnerlyn who is in charge of ticket sales for the occasion. The adult party will be held in the Bryan Country Club beginning at 9:00 o’clock in the evening while the younger generation begin celebrating at 8:30 in K. C. Hall. The following Saturday night a game tournament will be held in the Maggie' Parker Dining Room at , C ,:0Q, no’.-'l’.-yk j f .. r the ty^refit -of,- /TOOife it interested i in bridge, dom inoes, gin rummy, liverpool, (See BALL, Page 3) Campaign For War Prisoner’s Morale Fund Begun by Y Athletic Equipment, — Books, Musical Horns Among Articles Needed The Young Men’s Christian As sociation with M. L. Cashion in charge is beginning its campaign to collet money from the various organizations on the campus to night for the purpose of aiding in boosting the morale of war prison- Money which is raised will go to the YMCA which will in turn send overseas in the form of athletic equipment, musial instruments, technical books, and other forms of morale builders. No fund has such a wide range of aids to the many service men who are now war prisoners; some of the men that will be helped might be the relatives of some of the givers. To buy all the things that are needed by these prisoners of war, money is needed. Contributions have to be asked for and received. Books of the nature that are want ed cost money, just as do athletic equipment and musical instruments, or anything else that might aid in boosting morale. This is where the students and service men come in. Beginning tonight there will be an all out drive to collect funds that are needed to buy the things that are necessary to keep up the morale of the war prisoners. In each dorm itory, both service men and Aggie, there will be a collection made tonight and for many nights in the future. Let everyone give as much as he can for every little bit that can be obtained in just that much more to buy a game, a book, a football, or a violin. And remem ber, you would like to have some thing if you were in their place. Former Business Manager of College Receives Commendation From Army Co Major E. N. Holmgreen Cited for Services In Army Civil Affairs Major E. N. Holmgreen, former business manager of the college, recently received commendation from his commanding officer when he was given emergency duties immediately upon reporting at Sal erno on Sept. 29. Lt. Col. James L. Kincaid said of his work, “Although he is rated as Special Agriculture, due to the shortage of officers and the exi gencies of the military situation, I found it necessary to use him at once back of the forces in the Sorrento Peninsular. After report ing at Agerola he was immediately ordered forward in the wake of the 82 Air Borne Division to duty at Castellammare just occupied Ex Student of A&M Given Captain Rank The twin bars of Captain were placed Wednesday morning on the uniform of Joseph W. Davidson of Rt. 4, McKinney, Texas, as the Newport Amy Air Field flying officer was promoted to that rank. Captain Davidson a flight com mander at the AAF Pilot School (Basic) attended Texas A. & M. and the Anderson Diesel School. He entered the service on Sept. 27, 1941, and prior to that time was engaged in farming and as a Diesel mechanic. His previous Air Corps stations included Luke Field, Arizona, Cochran Field, Ga., and Bain- bridge, Ga., before his assignment to the Newport Army Air Field. Captain Davidson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Onic W„ Davidson of Rt. 4, McKinney, Texas, and is married to the former Lillie Mar- nell Welch. by our forces. Airter three days in charge of Civil Affairs duties there, he was ordered to take charge of the important District No. 3, Nola, of this province with a population of 250,000. As no other officers were available then or later he single handedly admin istered this large district alone un til relieved today. His entire service has been marked by a splendid devotion to duty, hard work and an outstanding degree of adminis trative ability.” and Last Battalion of Semester on Thursday Thursday’ts issue of the Bat talion will be the last one for the present semester, it was an nounced today. The reason for this is that there will be no staff left for the week January 28th to February 3rd to put out the paper. Publishing of the Bat talion will begin again on Feb ruary 4th, the date of freshman registration. Anyone who might have news that should be printed before the 4th should contact the Bat talion at 4-5444 Wednesday afternoon. This includes news stories and columns that are usually printed in Saturday’s issue. Banquet Ticket Sales End Noon Wednesday; Seniors Urged to Buy Plans are complete for the Sen ior Ring Dance and Banquet for the Class of ’45 to be held in Sbisa Hall Friday night. The Banquet will start at 7:15 followed imme diately by the traditional ring ceremony, which will probably start about 8:45, according to Hank Avary, chairman of the Ring Dance committee. The Dance, featuring music by Barney Rapp and his “New Englanders”, will start at 10:00 following the cere mony. The top two floors of Milner Hall will definitely be available for dates on Friday night and in all probability Saturday night also, announced the Commandant’s of fice late yesterday afternoon. Deadline for purchasing banquet tickets has been set at Wednesday nopfYuce, the nc e ducats remaining o;j of the TatL Thursday V 'night, 'r, long before thW v-. 8.L r '^r:.^ P^jfcamp, howe's glance $2.50 per coup'iv. -etsUiiay be purchased from Bob-^Layton, E-10 Walton, Art Graf, or designated members of the 2nd, 10th and 11th com panies. Exceptionally fine programs will take the place of the tradi tional senior ring favors that were unobtainable in time for the dance this year due to wartime restric tions. Price of reserving a room and details on where this can be done will be announced in the dining hall or in Thursday’s Battalion, stated Avery. Names Of Aggie Dorms For Next Semester Not Kwown Students Urged to Pay Fees of $70.25 Now; Fiscal Will Accept Until 28th Fees for next semester are due now at the Fiscal office and can be paid from this date throug-h the 28th, it was stated by the Commandant’s office. Total fees amount to $158.55. The amount that is due now is $70.25 and it should be paid before the end of the semester and departure for home. Due to difficulty in estimating Student Employees Must File Renewals Renewals of applications for student employment and student concessions will be accepted at the Student Placement office from now until January 29, 1944. If you expect to continue on your present job or conces sion, please see that your re newal is completed on time. If you are not working now, but expect to work during the com ing semester, please complete a renewal so that we may keep an accurate record of students available for employment. Dog Drive Started By City Officials Dogs running loose in the lim its of the City of College Station will be picked up for empounding unless they are properly tagged with city license, it was stated today by Claude W. Rodgers of the city offices. The drive has (See DOG, Page 3) Dunninger, Famous Telepathist To Read Minds In Guion Hall Dunninger, the master mind reader who will present a baffling series of experiments in telepathy to Town Hall audiences on Febru ary 8, is at a loss to explain his own remarkable ability to probe into the minds of people he meets and to tell them exactly what they are thinking about. “I cannot explain it,” he says. “I only know that I can tell what is going on in other people’s minds if they are willing to cooperate in producing a degree of concentra tion that will give the proper re ceptivity for me. What I do is not supernatural. Telepathy is a power we all possess—some more, some less. I do not predict the future. I am not a fortune teller, not a medium. Definitely not. I simply seem to have a more sen sitive telepathic sense than most people. Why, I cannot tell. We cannot explain electricity, sun light, why we are alive. So we cannot explain this.” Telepathist Dunninger is unique. His feats are many and varied, with one thing in common—they all cause spectators to wonder. There are several volumes of vol untary testimony in newspaper clippings to prove that they are as honest as they are unbelieve- able. In a Blue Network radio series broadcast coast-to-coast, Dun ninger has told the names of strangers miles away; he has read names, addresses and tele phone numbers out of phone books in remote cities. He has read the minds of six Presidents of the United States, beginning with Theodore Roosevelt. He has told three cards picked by spectators out of 5,200. He has read head lines of newspapers before they were printed; read the title pages of books in a woman’s handbag; has told the person at one end of a telephone what the speaker at the other end, miles away, was saying at that very moment. Both persons were strangers. Dunninger’s telepathic programs are not easy on him. His hands get ice-cold with nervousness be fore each demonstration, and he has been known to lose several pounds during his program be cause of the nervous strain. His fine figure of a man has stood him in good stead through more than 30 years of demonstrations. A native New Yorker, he first creased the brows of his family, friends and teachers, when at the age of nine, he told who was calling at the telephone and “mind-read” most of the answers in the public school curriculum. Today, as a student of psychiatry and hypnotism, Dunninger is help ing prominent physicians in hyp notic treatment of maladjusted cases. In one of his radio programs he located three envelopes hidden in the 65-story RCA Building, and accurately described their con tents before they were found in the exact spots that he had said they would be. There are sever al thousand offices in the RCA Building, but it was impossible to hide anything there that he could not find. What’s on your mind ? Dun ninger knows. Town Hall To Bring Denton Choir Oni 4th . y—^ A Cappella Group to Sing on Guiori Stage On February 4, 8:15 Forty voices strong, the pictur esque Denton A Cappella Choir from the North Texas State Teach ers College will be heard in con cert here February 4, at 8:15 o’clock in Guion Hall. Their ap pearance is sponsored by the A. & M. Town Hall, Under the direction of Dr. Wil fred C. Bain, head of the music department of the Denton Teach ers College, the Denton A Cappel la Choir is said by critics to be one of the most dramatic and colorful musical organizations in the Southwest. Trained to the precision of Prussian guardsmen, the forty young men and women offer a (See TOWN HALL, Page 4) Dallas Club to Plan Social Between Terms The Dallas A. & M. Club has scheduled a meeting for tomorrow night in the Eletrical Engineering building immediately after supper, Conrad Sommers, president of the Club. All members are urged to be present for the planning of a social to be held during the holi days. Details relative to the planning of the party have to be worked out before the end of the semester. At the last meeting which was held recently, a weiner roast and dance was planned, but detailed planning has to be made, Sommers announced. Every Dallas A. & M. Club member should be at the meet ing tomorrow night to take part in the discussion. the number of students who will register for the coming semester, the Commandant’s office was un able to state the dormitories which . will be occupied by the Aggies. Because of this, students cannot register today, but will have to wait until tomorrow at 8 a. m. at which time it is hoped that this can be worked out. Registration plans have been made and released by H. L. Hea ton, registrar of the college. New students will register on Friday, February 4th, with old students registering on the 5th, Saturday. Time limit for this has been set to start at 8 and end at 3 in the afternoon of the particular day. On page 2 of today’s Battalion is printed the schedule which will be effective this semester. Stu dents will prepare their trial schedules from it or do so with the printed leaflet that will be out for distribution at the time of registration.! For old students, the following information,Us released to allow tlTcifi'-to-'to, about . egisirat.oii—' .Uie quickest time possible: For students currently enrolled, the official registration for the Third Semester will be from 8:00 a. m. to 3:00 p. m., Saturday, February 5. All students now enrolled and who are in good academic standing at the end of the Fall Semester will be allowed to register as shown below. As signments cards will be released to graduate and undergraduate students from the Assembly Hall in accordance with the following schedule: Saturday, February 5, 8:00 to 9:00—All students whose sur- (See DORMS, Page 3) San Antonio Club To Hold Meeting Wed. Wednesday night at 7 o’clock, the San Antonio A. & M. Club will meet in room 212 of the Academic Building, according to Paul Gra ham, the club president. At the coming meeting plans will be dis cussed for a mid-semester social. The proposed plan so far is a hay- ride scheduled for Tuesday, Feb. 1. Graham urges that all members of the club be present next Wed nesday night, since it most urgent that the members discuss these plans and the meeting will be the last one for the semester. Bryan Rotary Club To Present Series Of Talks From HU Prominent Speakers To Lecture on Phases Of Foreign Affairs Beginning January 26th and continuing till February 23, 1944, a series of talks by prominent speakers will be held in Bryan and College Station. The Insti tute of International Understand ing is held under the sponsorship of the Bryan Rotary Club and will consist of a series of four weekly meetings, presenting out standing authorities on various phases of international affairs. Following each formal address there will be a forum period in which members of the audience may ask questions of the speak ers. According to Ide Trotter, Pres ident of the Bryan Rotary Club, this program is being developed by the club to give the people of the community an opportunity to hear from informed speakers con cerning the dominating forces on world scene and their probable impact upon the pqst-war world. In addition to the public forunas held in the evening, the Institute will also offer to the young peo ple of the community a study course in world affairs. The speakers will address the students during the day at their respective schools. “Contributors to a New World Order” will be the general theme (See ROTARY, Page 2) 14; •