*rr r r r rr rrrr f r r r r! * rmtrrn r r rr r rr f E S tea ROOM 5 ADMINISTRATION BLDG.—2275 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, SATURDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 26, 1944 VOLUME 43—NUMBER 105 I' ASTP 2nd Compan Plan Formal Dance Sat. Nite, March 4 Thirteen Man Band From Local School Unit Will Furnish Music A formal dance will be held by the 2nd A.S.T.P. company in the Banquet Room of Sbisa Hall from 8 p.m. to 12 p.m. on Saturday, March 4. Admission will be limited to members of the 2nd company and to their guests. J. E. Krakoff, C. L. Boyd, R. C. Mallet and W. E. Riley, members of the dance committee, announced today that the popular A.S.T.P. orchestra will furnish the music for the dance. This orchestra, con sisting of 13 pieces, displayed itself to great advantage when it played for the 4th company’s dance earlier this year. Col. Ike Ashburn Talks On Future Jobs For Youth Former Commandant Is On Jobs Ahead Program Over Radio WTAW and Network Though the present tempo of construction cannot be maintained in postwar years, there will always be large scale shipbuilding activ ities on the Texas coast worthy of intense preparation for employ ment by Texas boys, Col Ike Ash burn, public relations director for the Houston Shipbuilding Corpor ation, declared in the Jobs Ahead radio program, carried over the Texas Quality- Network to Texas high school boys and girls. Col. Ashburn, formerly execu tive assistant to the president of Texas A. & M. discussed the var ious aspects of the Texas shipbuild ing indutry with Professor Chris H. Groneman, acting head of the Department of Industrial Educa tion of the College. Major shipbuilding companies, where their yards are located and the types of craft they build were enumerated. There are between 80,000 and 90,000 persons emj- ployed by this industry in Texas, with an annual payroll of over 250,000,000, Col. Ashburn said. The four major classifications of employment are fiscal, engineer ing and designing, production, and management. A ship, like an automobile, after so much service and operation, re quires a thorough overhaul to in sure maximum performance effi ciency, the speaker pointed out. Therefore, the repair of ships has equal importance with construc tion. Ship construction for the coun try set a record in 1941. The total tonnage of cargo ships construct ed in 1942 was seven time the figure for the preceding year, and during 1943 the tonnage of con struction was two and a half times the 1942 record, being nearly a quarter of a million tons more than the goal set by President Roosevelt. In introducing Col. Ashburn, Professor Groneman reviewed the part that shipbuilding has con tributed to the development of the United States. He referred to the fact that Texas is unique among the states in that it had a navy of its own in the days of the Texas Republic. This was the 19th of 27 broad casts arranged by the Texas School of the Air and presented by the Texas A. & M. College in cooperation with the State De partment of Education to give Tex as boys and girls an inkling of employment opportunities await ing them. General manufacturing will be the subject of the program to be presented March 2. y Few Aggies Leave For DCS Thursday Once again the 10th and the 11th companies have gone to war. Thursday night around 40 more of the ROTC men marched to the station singing “Goodbye to Texas University” enroute to the train taking them to the Armored Force OCS. This was the fifth shipment since December from these two companies to such Candidate Schools as Engineers, Cavalry, Ordnance, Signal Corps, Infantry,/ Chemical Warfare, and a shipment from the 2nd Co. of QMC. This is part of a large scale plan which is sending men through OCS who enlisted while taking military training at college. At its begin ning on Jan. 1 only men with ROTC training and men from over seas units were eligible for com missions from OCS. There were some 8000 ROTC students just re turned from basic training in vari ous colleges at this time taking modified ASTP courses while wait ing to be sent to OCS. They are now being sent to their respective OCS’s at the rate of 1000 a month which will deplete the program in September. When public office is just looked on as a “plum”, democracy is no longer a way of life. It is nothing but a way to make a living. Freedom has not failed except where we have. Ninety-Six Men Are Prospective Baseball Players Official Practices Will Start On March 1st To Train Varsity Team Ninety-six Texas Aggie base ball prospects, an even six per cent of the student body, reported Thursday to Coach Homer Norton and heard plans for the 1944 sea son at Texas A. & M. College. Many of the boys reporting for baseball are familiar from the football and basketball teams. On a poll, Norton found he had about ten players who have had more or less experience in each posi tion, including nine boys with high school pitching experience, eight who swing from the right and at least one port sider. Official practice will not start until March 1 and Coach Norton will not meet again with the team until that time. Each afternoon however the boys will practice among themselves, beginning at 3:00 p. m. Texas A. & M. was co-champion in 1943 with the University of Texas. Rice, Texas and A. & M. are the three Southwest Confer ence teams which definitely will play baseball. A. & M. will play two games with each at College Station and two games with each at Houston and Austin respective ly. About 12 other games are planned with service nines. “We will not beat everybody, but we will beat somebody,” Nor ton declared, “and we all will have a lot of fun.” Hundreds of Men Attend Dance and Bryan Open House Another Affair To Be Held By KC Lodge This Week-end; Men Invited Over 2300 servicemen used the facilities of the Knights of Colum bus Hall in Bryan over the past week end it was reported this week by members of that organi zation. It is the custom of the order to hold a dance every Sat urday night and have open house on Sunday afternoon for men in all branches of the service, the members of the lodge and their ladies being the hosts and hostess for the occasions. Tonight a Juke Box dance will be held in the K. C. Hall it was announced and all men in the service are invited and urged to attend. Tomorrow afternoon an open house, with refreshments, will be held and the same invitation is open. Navy, Marine Corps, Air Corps and Army men are invited to attend these two functions spon sored by the K. C. Lodge. The Hall is located across the street south from the U. S. Post- office in Bryan. « Consolidated High Annual Football Banquet Is Held The annual football banquet for A. & M. Consolidated High School was held Tuesday night in the study hall of the school. W. L. Penberthy was speaker of the. evening. £Ie .spoke on s.p.qj^s«. manship and the qualities and re quirements of a champion. W. D. Bunting was toastmaster for the evening and gave a brief history of the team, reviewed the games of the past year and gave reasons why the team had met with such success this year In addition to squad and yell leader members, parents and letter- men, members of the A. & M. Con solidated Mother’s Club Athletic Award Committee, and members of the School Board’s Athletic Committee and their wives were also present for the\ ceremony. First string lettermen to receive their jackets were Jimmie Cashion co-captain), John Hollingshead, (co-captain), John L. Davis, Mac McCullough, Carlisle Spiker, Bob by Carroll, Donald Carroll, Bud Williams, Robert Dowling, Ray Hart, Antone'' Dobrovolny, Edsel Jones, John Marshall, Horace Schaffer,, Bob Wright, Jerry Bon- nen, Melvin Sheffield, Charles Wil son and Mason Lee Cashion man ager). Reserve sweaters go to Robert Lee Hunt, Charlie Carlson, Wind sor Farmer, Jennings Hagler, Bill (See CONSOLIDATED Page 3) Dean E. J. Kyle ★ ★ ★ Foreign Students Asked To Meet Dr. Elliott Monday Problems of Out-of- Country Students To Be Discussed By Expert Dr. A. Randle Elliott of the Chief Council and Guidance Cen ter Institute of International Edu cation in New York City will be on the campus of A. & M. Mon day February 28, according to an announcement made here this week by Dr. John Ashton. Dr. Elliott is particularly de sirous of meeting Latin-American students and students from other foreign countries who may have specific problems concerning which Dr. Elliott may lend assistance. All foreign students are cor dially invited to attend the meet ing called for 4 p. m., Room 208 Agricultural Building, on Mon day, February 28, for the pur pose of meeting Dr. Elliott. Petitions For Freshmen Officers Must Be Filed President, Vice-President From Fish Class; Sec.-Treas., Historian From Frogs ^ , Transfer of Head Kyle Speaks In Department Is About Farm Work In War Tells Achievements Of Texas Farmers Over TQ.N In Austin Texas maintains many “firsts” in the war effort, E. J. Kyle, dean of the Texas A. & M. College School of Agriculture, ’declared in -s-pesking nvar'Vbe. TON~£rom Jwe* t&S ■ ran k tin Friday night in reviewing the achievements of Texas farm peo ple, as part of the ceremonies ob serving the Texas Farm and School Victory Day, proclaimed for Feb. 25 by Governor Coke Stevenson. Our rural people, in spite of sending a larger percent of their sons to the fighting fronts than any other state, in spite of ser ious shortages of labor and the tools of agriculture, have contri buted magnificently in the pro duction of food, feed and raiment for the commercial markets of the world, Dean Kyle said. Texas stands first in the production of beef cattle, sheep, goats, cotton, grain sorghums, and is close to the top in many other lines of farm and ranch produce. Particular credit was given by Dean Kyle to the extra efforts put forth by tens of thousands of boys and girls in FFA' and 4-H clubs to increase the supply of food and feed for a famine strick en world. Also appearing on the broadcast were Governor Stevenson and President Homer P. Rainey of the University of Texas. Announced Locally Jaynes Succeeds Ray In Post at Extension Dept.; Ray Enters Navy Service Transfer of M. C. Jaynes, pres ent cotton work specialist, to the position of organization and co operative marketing specialist on the staff of the Texas A. & M. College Extension Service, was an nounced today by Acting Direc tor James D. Prewit. He replaces C. B. Ray who has entered the United States naval service with of lieutenant, junior grade. Jaynes, a Kentuckian by birth, entered the Extension Service as county agricultural agent in Re fugio County in 1917. Three years later he transferred to a similar position in Nueces County where he began the cotton improvement work in which he has been active in recent years. He withdrew from the service to engage in pri vate business but returned in 1935 as Harrison County agricultural Food Expert To Be At Consolidated School Tuesday College Social Club Is Sponsor of Nationally Known Expert on Cooking Announcement has been made that Miss Anna Bines, of Chicago, home economist sponsored by the National Live Stock and Meat Board, will conduct a program on “Pointers on Stretching the Meat Points” here Tuesday February 29 at the Home Economics De partment of the A. & M. Consol idated School. Miss Bines is be ing presented under the auspices of the Food Group of the College Social Club. The lecturer is a nationally recognized expert on meet cook ery and is in a position to give valuable information in regard to this subject. Miss Bines will also conduct a practical demonstration of the subject of her lecture, which will prove to be very interesting to the housewives of this com munity as well as to the students of the Home Economics depart ment of the school. agent. In September, 1939, he was appointed cotton work special ist at headquarters, College Sta tion. As a result of his work the num ber of one variety cotton areas in Texas have trebled in five years. For the past two years he has taken a leading part in the pro gram of the U. S. Department of Agriculture to promote the pro duction and maintenance of good cotton seed through payments of subsidies. Let’s back America by living like Americans. Americans are honest, unselfish, neighborly^ clean, free and united. Are we? All of the time? C. N. Shepardson Is New President Of Texas Dairy Group C. N. Shepardson of College, head of the dairy husbandry staff of Texas A. & M. College, has been chosen president of the Texas Dairy Products Association. Shep ardson was elected in balloting held at three Texas cities—Lubbock, Ft. Worth, and San Antonio. In commenting on the organiza tion’s program and the wartime tasks confronting it, Shepardson quoted figures showing that Texas was eighth in the United States in the amount of milk produced. Pro duction of milk products in the United States, which last year was 118,000,000 pounds, will have to be raised if the estimated need of 140 million pounds is to be met. The goal Thought possible of attain ment in 1944 is 122,000,000 pounds. The culling of herds and more care in the manufacture of milk prod ucts are two means suggested for helping the situation. We must live democracy, as well as believe in it, in order to have it. Mme.J|Francescatti Gossips About Activities Intimate Life Of Zino Francescatti Given By Wife Of Celebrated Violinist Who Appears On Town Hall By Mme. Zino Francescatti NOTE: The wife of the great French violinist Zino Francescatti who plays aristocratic family she appeared as soloist with some of the foremost orches tras of Faris under her maiden name of Yolande Potel de la Briere. When she married the most famous of contempor ary French violinists she gave up her own career to further his. This followed a precedent in Francescatti’s own family: his mother, preparing for a concert career, studied violin under his father ihe decided to marry her teacher until shi instead! In America I hear much talk among women about the question of marriage versus a career and I am often asked how I felt about giving up my own career for that of my husband. For I was a con cert violinist myself, you know, and before my marriage appeared as soloist with such well-known Parisian orchestras as the Pasde- loup and the Poulet. Just a month before my wed ding I was rehearsing a perform ance of his second sonata with Albert Roussel, the French com poser. When I told him I was going to be married he smiled and said jokingly, “I’m afraid, dear Mademoiselle, that this is the last time we shall play my sonata to gether.” I protested vigorously at the time but I know now that he was much wiser than I, I soon saw that if I pursued my own career I couldn’t give the proper kind of help to my hus band. Then I realized that, after all, what I sought as a musician was perfection in violin playing, and there was no question but that my husband was better equip ped to attain that end than I. To have a share in his achievement was a more glorious “career” than I could carve out for myself. As it is now we have one career to gether. A good part of our life is spent I always carry with me photo graphs of family and friends, people who are dear to us. Then I have some splendid pieces of old lace which I use as table covers. Then there are our dogs—made of plush! I adore dogs and as a promise of the time when we can have real ones my husband brought these home to me one day in Switzerland shortly after our marriage. Now they are as much a part of our household as his violins. All these small objects spell “home” and intimacy for my husband whe nhe is resting be tween concert dates. As we travel and visit the homes of American friends I am always on the watch for details which I can use when we have our own permanent home in America. Am erican women are wonderfully in hotel rooms but there are ways imaginative in getting the most of making these seem like “home”.' out of a room. Particularly I Zino Francescatti ★ ★ ★ admire the way they use plants— small plants, cactuses and flow ers, arranged with such taste and bringing a note of country fresh ness into the four walls of a city apartment. My American home is a New York apartment with a small terrace overlooking Central Park. We are happy there though oc casionally we think wistfully back to our little apartment in Auteuil, a suburb of Paris. When we locked the door for the last time we had no idea that the Germans would be in Paris within a few days. We thought we would be back in several weeks and left everything but a few clothes, some music, and my husband’s violin. Since then we haven’t even had a word about our things. They in cluded a collection of modern paintings which my husband had (See ZINO Page 3) Petitions for candidates for the offices of president, vice-president, secretary-treasurer, and historian of the freshman class must be filed at the Commandant’s office not later than 5 p.m. Wednesday, March 1. In order for a man to be entered as a candidate, it is neces sary that at least 50 signatures be obtained in his support. The elections will be held in the Assembly Hall on the evening of March 1. The freshmen should be gin now to consider which men will be the most suitable for these positions. Setting a precedent, the presi dent and vice-president are to be elected from the members of the second semester freshmen. Their election will take place at the meet ing on the first. The secretary- treasurer and historian will be elected from the first semester freshmen. Their election will take place at a later date which has not been set as yet. Freshmen are urged to elect those men who will be best able to represent their class in the various activities on the campus. Cam paigning for these offices should begin at once. In order for the best showing to be made, it is rec ommended that each company should sponsor at least one man for some office. WTAW Features “Music By Master Composers” On Saturday Afternoons This afternoon at one o’clock WTAW will broadcast Jacques Of fenbach’s tuneful opera, “The Tales of Hoffman.” The broadcast, which ■is a Blue Network program spon sored by the Texas Company, comes from the stage of the Metro politan Opera House, and will also include a discussion of current af fairs as one of the intermission features. Offenbach, German born but French by citizenship, did not live to see the first performance of the work, which took place in 1881* four months after the composer’s: death. But the work has been pop ular ever since it was first pro duced, though it is not one of the stand-bys of the operatic reper toire. An opera in three acts, with pro logue and epilogue, “The Tales of Hoffman” is the story of the three toagic love affairs of the poet Hoffman. In the prologue we see the melancholy poet musing in a tavern among a merry group of students. He rouses to sing a gay song, but falls to dreaming before he completes it. The students begin to brag about their love affairs, and Hoffman interrupts to tell about his three loves. The first was with Olympia, a mechanical doll whom Hoffman believes to be alive and with whom he falls in love. But when the spell is broken, he sees only a shattered doll, and realizes he has been cruelly im posed upon by her creator, the evil Spalanzani. His second love affair is with Giulietta, a Venetian Courtesan. Her real lover, the malignant Dap- ertutto the counterpart of Spalan zani in Act I and of Dr. Miracle in Act III) involves the poet in a tragic duel with one Schlemil, whom Hoffman kills. Giulietta and Dapertutto flee, and Hoffman is once more disillusioned. His third beloved is the consump tive Antonia, who is under the in fluence of Dr. Miracle. He forces her to sing for Hoffman, and the weakened girl expires after her song. Thus ends his third romance. In the epilogue, back in the tav ern, after he has told of his three loves, Hoffman finishes the gay song of the prologue, and then falls into a drunken sleep. The students leave, and Stella enters. She sees him asleep, and departs (See WTAW Page 3)