College Station’s Official V Newspaper; Circulated Daily To 90% of Local Residents The Battalion PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE News at College Station Church Services; See Story, Page 4 Number 168: Volume 51 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1951 Price Five Cents Ticket Applications For 1951 Football Games Available Ticket applications for 1951 football games, will be placed in the mail by June 20, C. D. Own- by, business manager for A&M, announced this morning. Applications and accompanying checks must be back in the A&M Athletic Department office by July 21 in order for the applications to receive priority for tickets. A&M has one of its best home game schedules in history with Jhe University of Oklahoma play ing on Kyle Field for the first time in recent years. Other home games are with Baylor, Southera Methodist and the University of Rexas, all Southwest Conference opponents. Expects Sellouts Vwnby expects sellouts on all o' ja^games except possibly the one V m Baylor. This game could be a sell-out in view of the 27-20 licking given the Aggies last year by the Bruins in a hard-fought game in Waco. ■ Four priority groups have been set up for distribution of tickets. The first group includes all em ployees of the college, who have priority second only to members of the Student Body, team, Aggie dub “T” card holders, State Leg- Collegi [ejre Hills Electric Lines Read for Use <5 College Hills residents liv ing in the Eisenhower, Putz itnd Kelly additions may now make the change from the Bryan REA service to the College Station service, City Man ager Raymond Rogers said today. In the Eisenhower, Putz and Kelly sections of the city 79 resi dents were not included in the original purchase of Bryan REA lines last May. “Persons living in the area can now change over from Bryan to College Station lines and take ad vantage of slightly cheaper rates,” Rogers said. | Walter J. Coney, new city elec trician, is in charge of making the changes and may be contact- Ad through the City Hall. | Coney is a former resident of Gainesville and is the first city electrician of College Station. Be fore Coney took the responsibility, vthe city had made arrangements with residential electricians and used seiwices of the A&&M College electrician, after hours. When 448 additional REA ser vices were purchased from Bryan, the services of an experienced, trained electrician became a ne cessity, Rogers said. City Tax Payments Payable by June 30 The last half of the split-pay ments of City and A&M Indepen dent School District taxes are pay- i;able between now and the end of the rponth with out penalty or interest, Assistant City Secretary Ran Boswell said today. After June 30, a charge will be made at the rate of one and one- half percent per month, which in cludes a penalty computed at ff.ght per year and the interest l|Jil overdue payments computed at six percent per year. I V islature and Athletic Department. Sales are made to these people on the basis of campus season tickets, but they will receive prior ity, by making application, for out-of-town games. Price of a season ticket is $14.40 for all ath letic events held on the campus by the A&M Athletic Department. This year for the first, a block of 400 of the 1,500 seats on the north side of DeWare Field House is being set aside as reserve seats during the 1951-52 basketball sea son. Season ticket holders will be admitted only to the remaining 1,100 general admission seats. General Public The second pnority group ap plies to the general public, and the same prices on tickets prevail for this group. The next best seats will be made available. Group III applies to all former students, faculty and employees of the college who do not desire sea son tickets but wish to purchase single game tickets. Applications for tickets in this group will be filled from the best available seats after the other priaqrity groups have been issued. Group IV includes the general public demand for single game tickets. Applications will be audited as received, classified, and placed in numbered folders, each folder con taining 50 applicants. On July 30 at 2 p. m., all appli cations received or postmarked July 21 will be eligible to participate in a drawing for seat location. The drawing will be held in the following manner: • Each folder number will be placed in a capsule and dropped into a container for each priority group. A committee composed of disinterested parties will supervise the drawing of these capsules. • Each number as it is drawn will be registered according to the sequence in which it is drawn until all capsules are withdrawn. • The folder bearing the first number drawn will be given prior ity in each group as to the loca tion of tickets, and so on down until the tickets for any particular game have been exhausted. limiting Titckets The Athletic Department is limiting the number of tickets to be purchased for the University of Texas game. If the demand for any other game becomes too great, the department may limit block purchases for this tilt also. Application blanks and further information may be secured by writing the Athletic Department. Prof Publishes Wildlife Book Seeing the need for a general text on the extensive field of wild life conservation and management, Dr. Leonard W. Wing, wildlife management professor, has writ ten a book entitled, “Practice of Wildlife Conservation.” Understanding the essential needs of the student in preparation for future work, Dr. Wing presents the information in a balanced form so that both theoretical and scien tific information are blended with the actual field practice used in conservation development today. Dr. Wing stresses clear, sim plified wording and expressions throughout the book so that stu dents may understand the involved phases of technical terminology more clearly. New Education Building Amid the vast construction program underway in College Station is this new educational build ing at the A&M Presbyterian Church at the North Gate. The building, which will house Sunday School classes and other group gatherings, is be ing built at a cost of approximately $150,000. Ernest Langford is the local architectural con sultant on the project which is expected to be completed by the end of January. (Photo by J. R Alderdice) Don Aggie Uniforms Freshmen Corps Will Get Military Touch Monday By DAVE COSLETT Battalion Staff Writer Cadet Lt. Col. Milburn R. Schrank’s 234 charges, comprising the Special Battalion of Freshman Cadets, moved toward the close of their first week at A&M rapidly becoming aware of the peril in the life of an Aggie “fish.” The group, first Freshman Sum mer Cadet Corps in the history of A&M, should feel the final touch of Military life next week when they don their uniforms. Starting college life at a rapid clip last Sunday, the lads are just about to get settled down to routine—a routine that seems a little rugged where compared to the carefree life of summer civilian students. Under the command of an es pecially chosen staff of juniors and senior cadet non-coms and of ficers, the fish have already found that 5:55 a. m. invariable brings first call ringing through the dorms. By 6:10 they are tackling breakfast in Sbisa Hall. Classes, of course, begin at 7. The average freshman class sche dule, even in the notorious B&A courses, calls for comparison to a heavily burdened engineering up per-classmen. That particular cur riculum finds the boys taking four subjects that pretty well fill their five and a half day week. Basic 101 and military studies supplement to normal load of all the curriculum. The Basic course still sometimes called by an old title of Freshman Orientation, is a non-credit hour course that gives each student three hours of special counciling per week. The military courses, either Air Force or Army take up another five hours—two in class and three at drill. Add to these an afternoon lab or two and you come up with a rather full schedule. All articles of the Summer Corps parallel those of its regular sem ester counterpart. Cadets answer to a full set of calls, march to every meal, eat family-style, stand Officers Named For Fish Corps Officers appointed to the Sum mer freshman cadet corps were listed this week in a special order issued by Lt. Col. M. P. Bowden, commandant of cadets. Commanding the summer corps is Lt. Col. Wilburn R. Schrank. Other battalion staff officers are as follows: Major Robert L. Hinckley, ex ecutive officer; Capt. R. I. Lay, UN Guns Threaten Kumhwa As Reds Open Flood Gates Tokyo, June 8—OP)—Allied guns thundered down on Chorwon today and threatened Kumhwa from the brink of central Korea’s Pyonggang Valley. Chinese Communists opened ' flood gates and employed a power ful new type anti-tank gun in ef- 5; forts to halt the relentless ap proach of United Nations ground forces. Chorwon and Kumhwa are en tries to the Reds’ buildup and sup ply area, and center of a vital road network. The area, known as the “Iron Triangle,” was blanketed with fragmentation bombs last night by 23 U.N. bombers. They used radar technique. Far East air forces said 9,000,000 bomb fragments splat- tered over the triangle in “one of the heaviest operations of its kind.” Reds Shifting Weight There were signs the Reds were shifting their weight eastward Iftfrom the triangle. U.N. officers ' said the shift indicated the Reds ( were moving toward Wonsan, east ; oast port at the head of Pyong- i.e-ang Valley. Wonsan has been for nearly four months. It is about 85 air miles north of the 38th parallel. Fiercest fighting was east of the triangle in the Yanggu-Inje area. Allied infantrymen clawed up ridges. With grenades and bayonets they dug North Koreans out of fortified dugouts and deep fox holes where they have withstood artillery and bombing for days. All along the front Reds are digging new hiding places from air attack. They are drafting civil ians to speed the job of going underground, said Maj. Gen. Frank F. Everest, commander of the 5th Air Force. New Tunnels Dug New tunnels are dug wherever there are no available railroad tunnels, mines or caves in which they can hide from fire and frag mentation bombs. There was no cover for Chinese still in Chorwon. U.N. artillery was looking down their throats from a 2,700 foot high mountain (Kodae). The town itself was al ready flattened. Long Toms and thundering How itzers centered on the roadway to Kumhwa, and on Chinese in hills before Chorwon. A driving rainstorm Friday slowed the Allied ground advance. Reds Try The Reds tried to stem the at tack Thursday by opening one of the 14 gates in Choiwon dam. A two foot wall of water swept down the Hantan River but failed to knock out any allied bridges. The flood subsided quickly and the River waters were back to nor mal Friday. A U.N. briefing officer called the flood attempt “a good sign. “It showed how desperately they want to hold Chorwon and the important lateral road it com mands,” he explained. If the Reds withdraw^ officers said they would be capable of fighting a month-long withdrawal as they pull back to a new line, probably anchored on Wonsan. Red trucks still streamed south with more supplies. And the Chin ese still have much heavy equip ment in the Pyonggang Triangle. adjutant; Capt. Walter E. Midgley, supply officer; T/Sgt. Leo A. Ka- hanek, sgt. major; and T/Sgt. J. A. Tanner supply sgt. Company officers include the following: A Squadron Capt. Percy J. Hendee, comman der; 1st. Lt. R. C. Tate, executive officer; 1st. Sgt. Alfred R. Pearcy, 1st. Sgt; S/Sgt. Vic H. Bird, sup ply sgt. B Squadron Capt. Cread L. Ray, commander; 1st Lt. James Cruz, executive of ficer; 1st Sgt. D. W. Marshall, 1st Sgt; T/Sgt. Rogerio I. Rabago, fit. sgt.; and S/Sgt. Don H. John son, supply sgt. C Company Capt. Karl F. Meyers, command er; 1st. Lt. James R. Stevenson, executive officer; 1st. Sgt. T. K. Burk, 1st. Sgt.; S/Sgt. E. W. LeFevre, supply sgt. D Company Capt. Autrey W. Frederick, com mander; 1st. Sgt. William R. Fag- ley, 1st. sgt.; S/Sgt. Robert S. Tevis, pit. sgt.; Grady D. Satter- white, S/Sgt. Waco Boys Club Will Tour A&M Fifty teen-tge boys from the Waco Boys club will tour the A&M campus July 12. The boys will be on the last lap of a tour of colleges and historic sites in Texas. The boys will range in age from 12 to 16 and one of the things they are looking forward to, according to Frank Burkhalter, who will be Chorwon-Kumhwa^ in charge of the party, is a swim in the P. L. Downs Jr., natatorium. a daily Retreat formation at 5:20 and get to their rooms by 7:30 for study. Taps sound at the usual hour of 10:30. Wednesday nights offer a stay of Call to Quarters until 8:30 and a late taps of 11 p. m. Cadets have Saturday afternoons and nights to themselves — until 12:30. Many of the first year boys are already glib at speaking the new language of the A&M Cadet Corps. Others are struggling hard to catch on to the intermixture of military parlance and strictly local termin ology that covers everthing from food to articles of uniform. The battalion-sized corps is di vided into four units—two Army and two Air Force. The outfits occupy about a floor and a half apiece in Dorm 14 and 15. They march at a strength of approxi mately 60 men per unit. From the academic viewpoint, they are under the close super vision of A&M’s Basic Division, begun last Fall. The modern guidance program, first of its kind in the South, keeps careful check of student progress in classroom work. By means of lectures, the stu dents are acquainted with the various major course offerings available to them. Failure to main tain adequate progress in their chosen field usually results in a personal counseling session. The students are thus guided into cour ses of study for which they are most suited. Vocational Teachers Hold Meetings Here Some 65 vocational indus trial teachers from the state’s public schools and junior col leges are enrolled at A&M for special teacher training cour ses. This special summer school is concurrent with the first six weeks of the regular A&M summer school. The school is operated jointly by Texas University and , the Texas Engineering Extension Service, a part of the A&M System. On al ternate summers the school is held on the University campus. The instructors for the summer school are H. D. Bearden, M. D. Darrow, Paul A. Van Tassel, teacher trainers for the Service; Joe L. Reed, Charles Cyras, and Earl Bowler of the University, and C. M. Allen of the State Educa tion Agency. Courses to be offered are Ana lysis and Course Making, Methods of Teaching Vocational Course, Organization and Use Of Instruc tional Material, Visual Aids, Re lated Subjects in the Part-Time Coperative Program. Shop and Classroom Organizaton and Man agement, and Selectiion, Placement, and Follow-up in Vocational Ed ucation. Adjunct Classes Begin With 53 Students Listed Classes officially began yesterday at the A&M Adjunct in Junction with 53 high school graduates reporting for the first class ses sion at 7:30 a.m. The program got underway for the first year’s operations in the newly constructed Camp in West Texas’ Kimble County. “The boys are well satisfied and happy with the Adjunct, and I think that we will accomplish what we started out to do,” As- College Wells Finished Water System Now Operating By BILL A A BERG Battalion City Editor The new A&M College water system went into operation for the first time yesterday. Water was pumped through the college mains by the new facilities during the day between 8 a. m. and 5 p. m. Yesterday’s operation was the first in a series of test runs which will continue daily for about a week. In testing ^he new system, which has wells northwest of Bryan Field, adjustments are being made on pumps, automatic pump con trols, automatic pressure recorders, and the automatic chlorination sys tem. System on Schedule With tests complete, the system will go on a 24-hour schedule. Water will be furnished by the new system to the College and to all of College Station south of Jersey Street. Life Insurance Managers Meet Here Monday Approximately 70 manag ers of life insurance agencies will attend a training course for two weeks with classes beginning Monday in the MSC. The classes in agency manage ment, conducted by the Life In surance Agency Management As sociation of Hartford, Conn., will be attended by 22 life insurance companies. Most of the men regis tered are from Texas and H. E. Conner of Bryan, manager for Texas Pradential Insurance Com pany in Hartford, will be among the group. Faculty members, who will con duct the classes are Burk Huey, Tom Irvine, Fred Pierce, Myron Bean, and Brice McEwen, all in surance management authorities. The session beginning next week will be the 104th school to be held by the association since 1929. More than 5000 managers and home office executives have been graduated during that period, and many are now leading company presidents and field managers. In setting up the College Sta tion school, the association staff was assisted by Sidney L. Loveless, manager of the Central Texas Agency of the American General Life Insurance Company in Col lege Station; Ford Munnerlyn, vice president and Agency director of that company at its home office in Houston; and several other prominent insurance executives in Texas. An eight mile-long inches in diameter, brings water from the four wells near Bryan Field to the 2,000,000 gallon reser voir located on the hill near the Ag Feeding and Breeding Station. Bryan has eight wells which have been in use for a number of years and cannot work in as large a capacity as a new well. The four new wells will increase the total water available for the two cities by 60 percent while only increasing the number of wells by 50 percent. Capacity 2,500,000 Gallons The new system will have a capacity of 2,500,000 gallons daily with pumps handling the water from both the well end and the College Station end of the eight mile line. A&M College will use only 1.000. 000 gallons daily from the 2.000. 000 gallon reservoir. During the summer last year the water reserve became danger ously low. The citizens of College Station and Bryan were called upon to conserve water by water ing their lawns only between cer tain hours. The freshly planted A&M golf course suffered for water. In complying with conservation requests, the residents of College Station and Bryan greatly allevi ated an unavoidable situation. T. R. Spence, manager of the A&M College physical plant, said the increase in water available and in use in the College Station-Bryan area would relieve the Bryan water works of the A&M and south Col lege Station responsibility. The new water system should end the series of summer water shortages that have occurred in years past. sistant Director to the Adjunct C. H. Rans- dell told a Battalion reporter by telephone yesterday. “Everything is going as well as expected, and we are further along with the program than we thought we would be at this time,” Ransdell said. The assistant director reported that the boys have been swimming, canoeing, and af ter having taken their tests and registering ♦•are getting ready to get down and work. The students have been at the Adjunct, which is located on the South Llano river near Junction, since Sunday. Monday they took their entrance examinations. All day Tuesday and Wednesday moraing the students were in counciling, and Wednes day afternoon the group registeded for classes. The same day, all students and faculty members were guests of the Junction churches which held open house. Civil Engineering, Geologists Along with the new student group, there are also 24 civil en gineering and 61 geology students attending their respective summer camps now located at the Ad junct. Dr. John R. Bertrand, dean of the Basic Division, is director of the Summer adjunct. Dr-. Ber trand is in College Station at the. present time, but will join Rans« dell soon, his office reported to* day. The Adjunct was formed to help the student “know himself bet ter,” and that way be able more in- tellegiently to decide upon hia course of study in college. Courses being offered for col* lege credit include first year math* ematics, 101 and 102; freshman English, 103; physical education 101, and basic 101, remedial read ing. Courses Offered main, 18 Financial Proof Required For Auto Accidents Austin, June 8 — UP) — A bill forcing owners and driv ers of cars to provide financial responsibility for accidents in Texas was sent to the Govern or yesterday. The measure would require proof of ability to pay up to $15,000 for personal and property damage resulting from an automo bile accident. If the Governor approves, the bill will mean most Texas car own ers will have to buy more insur ance unless they have the cash to protect themselves against damage claims. Such insurance would cost about $30 per year. House approval of Senate amendments represented final leg islative action which moved the bill to Gov Shivers. Similar bills had failed of passage in several sessions. Fourth Annual Yet Med Conference Ends Today The fourth annual Texas Con ference for Veterinarians conclud ed a two-day program in the MSC today as visiting lecturers held a panel discussion on previous lec tures during the meeting. Dr. H. E. Redmond, veterinary medicine and surgery department, acted as moderator. Beginning the final day’s activ ities, Dr. W. S. Monlux, a confer ence chairman, opened the session with a film of the 1950 A&M-SMU football game. Following the film, Dr. G. R. Moore, professor of veterinary surgery, gave a discus sion on “Bovine Surgery.” Dr. Blakely Speaks Dr. C. L. Blakely, director of surgery, Angell Memorial Animal Hospital, Boston, Mass, spoke on “Useful Surgical Procedures.” Col. W. O. Kester, United States Air Force, discussed “U. S. Air Force.” Concluding the morning ses sion, Dr. J. P. Delaplane, head of the veterinary bacteriology and hygiene department, spoke on “Respiratory Diseases of Poultry.” Dr. P. H. Vardiman, Texas Ag ricultural Experiment Station, Marfa, and a conference chairman, opened the final and afternoon ses sion by showing a film entitled “Turkey Diseases.” “Make Room For Sheep” “Make Room for Sheep in Your Practice” was the topic discussed by Dr. D. A. Price, Ranch Experi ment Station, Sonora. Dr. G. K. Davis, animal nutritionist, Univer sity of Florida College of Agricul ture, gave the final speech for the conference on “Trace Elements in Cattle Nutrition.” Veterinary authorities from all over the United States attended the two-day program of lectures. Courses being offered which do not give college credit are pre paratory courses in English, math ematics and solid geometry. Various forms of recreation are being made available for the stu dents at the Adjunct, which has many permanent buildings as well as temporary quarters. A formu- lized recreation program includes canoeing, softball, swimming, bad minton, volleyball and horseshoes Other forms of entertainment in clude a full length movie each week. Among the permanent buildings is a cafeteria which is capable of feeding 500 persons. Another per manent building houses classrooms, the library, the medical clinic, and offices. Housed in Tents The students are housed in tents with concrete floors, and asbestos walls. The room equipment includes beds, steel chests and study tables like the ones used in the dorms on the College Station campus. Among the instructors at the Adjunct are Dr. S. S. Kyle, head of freshman English; R. R. Lyle and H. B. Curtis, mathematics; Herman Segrist, physical educa- tipn; Luke Harrison, organized recreation; and D. H. Nelson, coun selor. Heading the mess hall is Willie, Yeager, who during the regular school year managed the opera tion of Duncan Hall. E. D. Tar- rott is in charge of the utilities which works off an REA unit from Junction. Joe Orr, civil engineering depart ment, is in charge of the summer course in surveying, and S. A. Lynch, of the geology department, is directing the geologists. Toyko GIs Form ‘Local’ Hit Parade Tokyo, Thursday!, June 8—(A 5 ) Punsters among American ser vicemen are having a field day working up a “Tokyo hit parade” by using place names from Ko rea and Japan. A few samples: There’s a Sonjjin My Heart: Senshu Went Away; Boddy and Seoul; Wagewan Wheels Hon shu Sorry I made You Cry and O, How I Mizu Tonight. And they talk about a Jap anese hit show: “Annie Geisha Gun.” At the Grove This Weekend Friday— Dancing, Aggieland Combo—8 p. m. Saturday—Square dancing—8 p. m. Monday—Movies, “Desert Hawk” with Yvonne DeCarlo—8 p. m.