i t Battalion Number 2: Volume 54 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1954 Price 5 Centa Slate Commission Requests Forming Education Group Based on AP Reports The temporary state commission on higher education has recommen ded that a permanent commission be established to coordinate affairs of Texas’ nine colleges and univer sities. yhe temporary commission was set up by the last session of the legislature to study higher edu cation in Texas and investigate the need for more coordination be tween the schools. Its final recommendations to the legislature will be made at a meet ing of the commission in Austin Nov. 3-4. The permanent commission pro posed would have 21 members— one from each of the nine boards Military Group Asks Benefits For Students A Representatives from A&M and eight other military col leges are meeting today to alfk the department of defense for special benefits for their students. President David H. Morgan and Col. Joe E. Davis, commandant, are representing A&M at the meeting, which is at Roanoke, Va. The administratoi’s will ask for »pen quotas for advanced con- Iracts, guarantee of commissions, an increase in the subsistence pay to $1.50 a day, and an increase in the basic issue of woolen trousers and shoes. The requests are being made on the grounds that militai'y students receive no additional benefits for being in uniform all the time and living under military discipline. In a report prepared to present to defense department officials who will be at the meeting, the administrators of the nine military colleges list reasons why students at their schools should receive the additional benefits. “Unless additional considera tion is given for the extra training offered in MC units,” the report Fdys, “those schools will be forced by social pressures to change to CC type schools.” A CC, or civilian college, school is one in which the ROTC students wear the uniform only to militai’y class and drill. The nine MC colleges represent ed at the meeting are A&M, Vir ginia Polytechnic institute, Vir ginia military institute, The Cita del, Clemson, New Mexico Mili tary institute, Norwich university, North Georgia college, and Penn sylvania military college. Morgan and Davis will return Thursday night. of the schools, and 12 appointed by the governor. No one is sure yet what the ex act function of the commission would be, said Henderson Shuffler, A&M System director of informa tion, but it would probably be only a coordinating agency. “It would be a method of getting the schools together and avoiding unnecessary duplication,” he said. Shuffler said the commission, if approved by the legislature, would probably decide which school should offer a certain major, and whether or not two or more schools should offer the same specialized major. A. R. Bivins, who was named chairman of the temporary com mission Tuesday to fill a vacancy, said that as much power as pos sible would be left with the gov erning boards of the individual in stitutions. College board members of the commission would serve two-year terms, and the governor’s appoint ees would serve staggered six-year terms. No two of the governor’s ap pointees would be allowed from the same congressional districts. Chancellor M. T. Harrington of the A&M System is on an advisory committee for the temporary com mission. Student Election For Wednesday Officials Investigate I fat Stealing Aggies Alfred and Herbert Teltschik Next Town Hall Performers Duo-Piano Team Set for Town Hall American Legion Enrolls Veterans A community-wide campaign to enroll eligible veterans in the American Legion for 1955 was an nounced yesterday by Commander R. L. Elkins, post 541. Membership teams are contact ing veterans of Woi'ld Wars I and II, as well as men who served in Korea or elsewhere after June 25, 1950. Alfred and Herbert Teltschik, duo-pianists, will be the attraction at Town Hall at 8 p.m. Tuesday (Oct. 26) in the 9,000 seat G. Rol- lie White coliseum. Seats will be on a first come, first serve basis. Individual tick ets are on sale in the student activ ities office, said Bill Johnson, stu dent entertainment manager. Born in Floi’esville, Texas, of Austrian pax*ents, the Teltschik brothers began their musical train ing under the guidance of their father. They attended the Julliard School of Music in New Yoi’k city. Upon graduating, they re turned to Texas where they open ed their own studio. They began giving two-piano recitals to satisfy their love of making music for an audience. They were called to active duty during World War I. They gave numerous recitals for the armed News of the World By the ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW ORLEANS—Three Tulane University students were convicted Tuesday of disturbing the peace following a panty raid by 500 male students at a girls’ dormitory on the Tulane campus. One girl said some of the coeds encouraged the raiders because “it was good for school spirit. That was more spirit at Tulane than I can remember.” ★ ★ ★ CAIRO, Egypt—Under close security guard, Brit ish and Egyptian diplomats last night signed a historic treaty to end Britain’s occupation of the Suez Canal zone within 20 months. A proclamation held Egyptian police and armed forces in a state of alert after alleged agents of the Communist and the fanatical Moslem Brother hood had stoned and wrecked two buses near Cairo. ★ ★ ★ MOSCOW—Seven Western ambassadors walked out of a Burmese dinner party in Moscow yesterday rather than dine with Communist and European Soviet satellite repre sentatives. forces at home and overseas. Back into civilian life as a full- fledged two-piano team, they pur chased a small bus converted to transport their luggage and two concert grand pianos, which they maintain, tune and repair them selves. To date, they have completed their second completely “sold-out” transcontinental tour which has taken them into every state in the union and Canada. Ticket Sales For Saturday Close Today Student and student date ticets for the A&M-Baylor un iversity football game Satur day will go off sale at 5 p.m. today, Pat Dial of the athletic department announced. Student tickets are $1 if the student has an athletic sea son ticket paid for in the stu dent activities fee. Date tick ets without thie season ticket ai’e $3.25. The investigation of the hat stealing incident after Saturday’s A&M-Texas Christian university football game is continuing, but neither names of the students in volved nor the missing hats have been discovered. Lt. Col. Taylor Wilkins, assist ant commandant, said yesterday that he was working through the corps and the tactical officers to get the names of the students and see if any of the hats are still on the campus. Wilkins said Monday that the persons involved definitely will be punished if they are caught. Frank Ford, corps commander, said last night that he had instruc ted unit commanders to inspect ca det rooms in an effort to find the hats. He said he did not instruct the commanders to try to find out the names of the students who took the hats. He said the tactical of ficers were working on that part of the investigation. Am en dm ent s—1 Texas Law May Re Changed (Editor’s Note: This is first in a series of three articles on the proposed constitutional amendments for Texas. Absen tee balloting for the Nov. 2 election, which will include the regular state and local offi cers and the admendments, is now in progress at the office of A. B. Syptak, Brazos coun ty clerk.) Evei’y voter in Texas is going to have the chance to be a legislator fjor one day. The legislature has pi-oposed 11 changes for Texas’ 80- year old constitution, and now it is the voters duty to decide whether %ir not they will become the law in Texas. Since the present constitution was adopted by popular vote in 1876, 197 amendments have been submitted to the voters and 110 of these have been adopted. This has not changed the con stitution, the base of all Texas law, as much as it sounds like, because many of the amendments affected the same constitutional provision. In this series of articles, the amendments will be discussed one by one, in the order they will ap pear on the ballot. No. 1: Public Assistance This amendment would increase the amount of money the state can spend each year for old age assist ance, aid to the blind, and aid to dependent children. It would increase the state-wide amount from $35 million to $45 million annually. The federal gov ernment matches the amount the state puts up. The increase for each individual on the public assistance rolls would be about $5. About 38 out of every 100 Texas people over 65 are now receiving old age assistance, which is above the national average of 19 out of 100. About 1,150 persons in Brazos county are on the old age rolls. There would be no change in the provision that state money going to each individual is not to be more than $20 a month. The legislature is also instructed to make the pub lic assistance rolls open for inspec tion if the amendment passes. No 2: Teachers’ Retirement This amendment would allow a transfer of credits from the teach ers’ retirement system to the state employees’ retirement system. That means that if a man work ed as a state employee somewhere, and then became a teacher in a state school, the time in both jobs would be counted towai’d his i’e- tirement benefits. The ti’ansfer of credits would hold tnxe if the person wei’e a teacher first and then moved to another state job. About 1,500 persons would be af fected by this amendment. The legislature passed a law with these same provisions four yeai’s ago, but it was held unconstitutional by the State Supi’eme Coui’t, so it is now being submitted to the voters. No. 3: Extend OASI Coverage Number three would allow cities and other political subdivisions to pass a law placing their proprie- (See AMENDMENTS, Page 2) BAFB Plane Crash Kills Two Airmen BRYAN, Oct. 20 — (A*) — Two bodies wei’e found amid the scat- tei’ed wreckage of a T28 trainer plane fi’om Bryan air force base on a wooded hill four miles north east of hei’e yesterday. The victims left the base Monday night on a training flight to Waco, Austin and retura. The plane did not bum but seem ed to disintegrate after it hit a tx-ee and careened on the hill near by. Wreckage was scattei’ed over a 40-yai'd area. The dead were Lt. Ralph Iver son, 25, Pipestone, Minn., and Ca det Lemuel Oakes, 21, Melrose, Mass. The incident occured immediate ly after the football game. The TCU band was lined up on the sidelines, pi’epai’ing to mai’ch off, and A&M cadets were waiting on the sidelines to carry the football players off the field. Several cadets took hats from the bandsmen’s heads before the band moved off. Tactical officers and cadet offi cers returned some of the hats be- foi’e the band left the field, but some of them were still missing. Wilkins said yestex’day that no woi’d on the matter had been re ceived from TCU. Band Booster Club Sponsors Carnival By RALPH COLE Battalion City Editor Doris Goodx’ich Jones of Waco, will present her puppet theater at the Band Booster club cai'nival at 6 p.m. Satux’day on the A&M Con solidated high school slab. Pi’ofits. of the cai’nival will be used to pay for the new band uni forms, which cost approximately $3,000. Tickets to the carnival will be ten cents. Several games will provide inter est for both young and old. The Lions club will have a dunking vat along with the baseball tlvi’ow. When someone hits the tai'get; some pi’ominent citizen will be ducked in a pool of water. Getting ducked will be Les Richai’dson, school superintendent; Taylor Rie del, pi’incipal of junior high; J. J. Skrivanek, principal of senior high school, and Lucian Morgan, insur ance salesman. A local talent floor show featur ing James Baldorf and his magic will be presented. Numbers from the Jane Lee school of dancing and songs by Robex-t L. Boone will also be pi’esented with the floor show. Di\ I. I. Peters, of the dairy hus- bandi'y department, will be a for tune teller who knows all and tells all. Others aiding with the cai'nival are Mrs. Virginia Reynolds, coun try stoi'e; Mi’s. J. B. Baty, fish pond. Fi’ed Biison, of the hoi’ticul- ture department and Junius Clai’k, entomologist, will sell tickets. Di\ Charles LaMotte will be the professional photographer at the carnival. Pictui'es can be develop ed in five minutes. Chairman of the foods commit tee is Mi's. Kenneth Bailey. Food salesmen will be T. D. Letbetter, hambur-gei's; Mrs. Louis T. Dula ney, candy; Mrs. Paul Tanzei’, di'inks, and E. E. Ivey, pop corn. Mai’ion Pugh lumber company is furnishing the building supplies for the cai’nival. Consti'uctor of the booths is Don R. Dale. Ki- wanis club membei's are in charge of getting the grounds in shape for the carnival, and they will furnish sub-contractoi's to help Dale in the consti’uction. Di\ Ed Ivey and Luther Jones ax-e co-chairmen for the carnival. Jones is also chairman of the fi nance committee. Mrs. Wesley Smith is chaii’man of the Band Boosters club. Saturday is the last day for list ings on the community birthday calendar. A special booth will be at the cai’nival for those who still v<^h to be included. Auto Accident Investigation Nears End Highway Patrolman O. L. Luther hopes to complete his investigation today of the ac cident Saturday night which killed A&M Senior Don G. Dart. Luther said he plans to talk with Mi's. Mai'ia Bryan Fuller, who was also in the car with Dart, to deter mine who was di’iving the.automo bile when the accident occurred. He had questioned several wit nesses Tuesday, but he did not obtain any conclusive information. Mi’s. Fuller was released from Bi’yan hospital Tuesday. She suf fered a «cut scalp and a braised back when the car in which she and Dai’t were riding ovex*turned two and a half times on Farax Highway 60 about five miles west of the college. Luther was unable to contact her Tuesday to complete his investigation. Among those questioned Tuesday were three A&M students who met the car in which Dai’t was xid ing just before the accident oc- cui'red. However, the students told Luther that they did not no tice who was di’iving. Silver Taps will be held tonight at 10:30 for Dart, and the flag in fi'ont of the Academic building will be flown at half mast. Funei'al sei’vices wei’e held Tuesday in El Paso. PUPPETS—Doris Goodrich Jones of Waco, will be one of the main entertainers in the Band Boosters club carnival Saturday at A&M Consolidated high school. Profits from the carnival will go toward paying the $3,000 debt on band uniforms. Civilian Council Sets Election To Fill Vacany Another election for day student representative to the Civilian Student Council has been set for Wednesday, Oct. 27. In the previous election of the day students, only one person filed for the position. However, he was later disqualified because he did not meet all the requirements for the council. In the council meeting yesterday, the group voted to hold another election to assure equal representa tion on the council. Filings will be open from 8 a.m. Thux-sday un til 5 p.m. Monday in room 1-H, Pui’year hall. The election will be conducted in the same room from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. Wednesday. Approved Seating The council also voiced approval of the Kyle field seating arrange ment dx-awn up by the Student Senate. A letter is being sent to the senate requesting that in the future the Civilian Student Coun cil be allowed to control seating in the civilian section allotted by the senate each year. A report by the committee formed to investigate the civilian dining hall included a list of statements by J. G. Peniston, su pervisor of subsistence. Soma of these statements were: • There wil be a better distri bution of food, especially in sec ond servings, and the council is requested to help in cutting down the waste of food. • Civilian students eat twice as much as corps students, but no reason was given. • Request for the cooperation in regulating entrance to the diixing hall. • Request for help in preventing mishandling of meal tickets. If students continue to exchange meal tickets, the cafeteria will replace the civilians’ dining hall. Another committee, formed at the px-evious meeting of the coun cil, reported on the college laun dry. They were asked by the coun cil to discuss the problem further with laundi-y officials and make I'ecommendations at the council’s next meeting, Tuesday at 4 p.m. in the Memoi'ial Student Center ballroom. Press Building Now Under Way Consti’uction on the new A&M Press building was begun Oct. 11. The one-story, concrete and brick structure will be of production line design. It will cost $252,625. The building will be equipped with air conditioning and humidity control. It will be located in the genei’al utilities area of the campus across the street from the ice plant. The contract for the building was awarded to Martin Semands of Coni’oe, Tex., by the boai’d of di rectors of the A&M System. No completion date has been set. Van Gogh Pictures On Display in MSC Two paintings, worth $95,000, ai’e on exhibit in the large display window in the Memoi’ial Student Center. “The Novel Reader,” by Vincent Van Gogh is valued at $75,000. ‘Place Pigalle,” by Piei-re Auguste Renoir is valued at $20,000. The paintings belong to the Contempor- ary Arts museum of Houston. Van Gogh killed himself at the age of 37 because he thought he was a failure at painting. He earn ed only $180 as an artist during his life. Today his paintings are valued at 40 million dollai’s, said Mrs. Ralph Tei’ry, advisor to the Art Gallex-y committee who is sponsoring the exhibit. The paintings went on display last Thux-sday and will I’emain un til Oct. 28. Ag Council Elects Munns President Geoi’ge Munns has been elected chairman of the Agriculture coun cil. He represents the Entomology club. Other officers elected were John DeWald, Agi'icultural Engineer ing club, yice chahtnan; Jex-ry Johnson, FFA, secretary; and Sam McAnally, Saddle and Sirloin club, reporter. Weather Today The forecast for today is partly cloudy this afternoon. Yesterday’s high was 86, low 50. The tempei’a- ture at 11:30 this moiming was 78.