Directors Dismiss Clark as Economics Head Next Year’s Fish To Live at Annex Dr. F. B. Clark, head of the ec onomics department, was dismissed from the institution yesterday af ternoon by order of the board of directors. Dr. Clark, a chief fig ure in recent strife at the college, appeared before the board for ap proximately twenty minutes to ex plain his conduct in charging the college administration with intimi dation of faculty members. Dr. Clark appeared before the state legislative investigating committee a few months ago, but failed to substantiate his charges and was severely censured by the majority of the committee in their report. The board in their memoran dum stated: “In view of the ac tion of Dr. F. B. Clark in giving widespread publicity to charges against the administration of the college, which he later admitted he could not substantiate, the board of directors, after hearing Dr. Clark, deems it necessary to terminate his connection with the college effective immediate ly.” Dr. Clark had been associated with the college 31 years, and had approximately three years to go before he would have gone on mod ified service. He has been active for years in real estate promotion here, and it is assumed that he will continue to be active in that line. Clark made no statement when questioned by reporters. Clark’s successor as h^ad of the economics department will be named by President Gibb Gilchrist subject to approval of the board. No one has yet been considered for the post, it was announced. Col. Guy S. Meloy, Jr., com mandant of cadets, appeared before the board of directors Tuesday night behind closed doors in an executive session. This was the second executive session of the day, President Gibb Gilchrist having been closeted with the board for an hour earlier. Stating “The board contem plates no changes in the military status,” the group in effect de nied charges made by Rep. Olin E. Teague in Washngton that the board intended to change A. & M. from a military college to a civilian-basis ROTC school. Most Corps freshmen entering A. & M. next year will be quarter ed at A. & M. Annex at Bryan Air Field, the directors stated. Only 1,500 freshmen are expected and 2,000 can be cared for at the annex they reported. Treatment of freshmen at A. & M. was one of the controversial subjects involved in the recent in vestigation, and hazing practices were bitterly criticized by a major ity of the state investigating com mittee. Normally freshmen are quartered among upper classmen, which makes hazing comparatively easy. However, the board did not mention hazing in announcing their plans for next year’s crop of fresh men. The memorandum states: “The board in considering the anticipated heavy enrollment of students has directed, for the purpose of more effectively sys tematizing the housing and in struction, that the incoming freshman class shall be assigned to A. & M. Annex in so far as facilities are adequate, thereby making available the facilities on the main campus for advanced students.” Authorization was given for col lege authorities to sign the con tract for acquisition of the 16,000 acre Bluebonnet Ordnance Plant at McGregor for use as an experimen tal tract. The profit-sharing plan of the Exchange Store, which had been criticized by students during re cent disturbances, was temporar ily abolished. All profits will go into a General Welfare Fund. Only 6 percent of those who bought supplies at the store last year took advantage of the profit-sharing plan, it was reported. Rice’s Harry Stiteler Named Assistant Football Coach The geology department was transferred to the school of en gineering. Harry Stiteler, Aggie football letterman, will become assistant football coach at A.&M. this fall, according to an announcement by J. W. “Dough” Rollins, acting director of athletics. Stiteler will assist Homer Norton in whipping the ’47 team into shape. Stiteler, who has been an assist ant coach at Rice for the past year was an outstanding Aggie athlete from 1927 through 1931, lettering in football and also holding the Southwest conference record for the pole vault. After leaving A.&M., Stiteler be came a high school football coach, and brought state championships to Waco and Corpus Christi. His teams at Bellville and Smithville Texas A. & M. College \ *1111111 llllifpflillj ^ # raSi&S'iS&i/’/ SS&i » * ■* X - . '• > XX, >..v .-.L Volume 47 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1947 Number 6 Garbage Collection Service Kept; Warehouse Approved The citizens of College Station voted Monday night to* retain the garbage collection service at their bi-annual Town Meeting. Also approved were the ’47-’48 budget and the construction of a city warehouse and office building. The approved budget for the Fiscal Year July 1, 1947 to June 30, 1948 is as follows: Fund Revenue Expenditure Difference General $ 28,525.00 $ 44,807.33 $ 16,282.33 Electric 40,825.00 29,084.07 11,740.93 Water & Sewer 30,350.00 24,609.52 5,740.48 Cemetery 2,400.00 3,295.00* 895.00 Total $102,100.00 $101,795.92 *The expenditure in the Cemetery Fund is carried here because $2,400.00 has been included in the General Fund. Garbage collection fees will't be $1 a month for residence and a graduated scale of $1 to $5 a month for business houses. The scale as applied to business houses will be determined by the amount of garbage each business normally has. For example: A small shop dealing only in miscellaneous items ordinarily would not have an ex cessive amount .of garbage and would only be charged $1. On the other hand a drugstore, hotel, or restaurant, which would have al most a truckload of garbage would be charged $5. Collection will be daily in business areas and twice weekly in the residential sections. Construction of the new city warehouse and office will begin as soon as materials become avail able. It will be located on old highway 6 two blocks north of the A.A.A. Building. The City also wants to purchase the College Hills R.E.A. power line. According to Mayor Ernest Langford this line would give the City an added $7,500 yearly in come which could be used to elim inate the garbage fee. Sixty College Stationites at- $ 304.08 as $3,295.00 tended the meeting and according to Langford, “It was the most suc cessful Town Meeting we have ever had”. Registration Of Serial-Items May Mean ‘Recovery’ By Jim Etherington A free registration service for A.&M. students which provides possible identification of prop erty lost or stolen is operating at the Office of Campus Secur ity. Such items as typewriters, bicycles, slide rules, watches, and any other serial-numbered item may be registered and filled in numerical order. If serial-numbered articles are reported lost or stolen, the Office of Campus Security notifies lo cal merchants and other avenues of disposal to “be on the look out”. With their cooperation, the lost article may be recovered. A registration slip for identi fiable articles may be secured at the Campus Security Office, filled in, and submitted to house masters or the Goodwin Hall office for filing. Agronomy Class To Leave Tomorrow On Temple Trip Soil Conservation Class, Agronomy 418, will leave to morrow in private automobiles to visit Elm Creek Water Shed and Blackland Experiment Station at Temple. Instructors J. F. Mills and Eli Whitely will be in charge of the 18 students who will make the trip. Among the group are two students from Brazil. Two stops to study soil profiles are planned between College Sta tion and Burlington. T. J. Elder, work unit conserva tionist, will join the group at Bur lington and will conduct them through the Elm Creek Water Shed. Several farms are to be visited where soil conservation is now practiced. The group will stop at Temple for lunch. The Blackland Experiment Sta tion visit will begin with a talk by J. R. Johnston, acting superin tendent of the station. A study of the various projects underway will conclude the trip. Camera Club to Elect Officers Monday The A. & M. Camera Club will elect officers at its next scheduled meeting on Monday, June 30, ac cording to Claude Stone, acting president of the club. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p. m. in Room 33 of the Physics Building. Joe Atchinson of Austin • • • • First Aggie at Fort Sill Gets General Welcome Deputy Commander Greets F. A. Cadet Cadet Joe W. Atchinson of Battery E, Field Artillery was the first A. & M. student to report to Fort Sill, Oklahoma, for the new advanced Reserve Of ficers Training Corps summer camp, which began June 23. A pleasant surprise for Atchinson was a personal greeting by Briga dier General John Millikin, Deputy Post Commander. While at Fort Sill, Atchison will receive the latest instruction in trends and developments of artil lery from specially trained instruc tors. He will also have an oppor tunity to witness several field de monstrations by the 5th Field Ar tillery Group now stationed at Fort Sill. A special section of the historic military installation has been de signated for ROTC students. It will have its own Post Exchange and will be accessible to other re creational and entertainment faci lities. During World War II, Atchison served with the Naval Air Corps. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Atchison, live at 2201 Indian Trail in Austin. JOE W. ATCHINSON of Austin, first Aggie to report to Fort Sill, receives a royal welcome from BRIGADIER GENERAL JOHN MILLIKIN, Deputy Post Commander. Adriance Invited To Tour Countries Of Latin America Dr. Guy W. Adriance, head of the horticulture depart ment, has been invited by the United Fruit Company to make a month’s tour of Guate mala, Honduras, and Costa Rica. Accompanied by. his family, Dr. Adriance will sail from New Or leans tomorrow for Guatemala, where he will visit the two agri cultural colleges in and near the capital. , Dr. AdidarAiGHwillx then *.4sit i'hc National Agriculture,J College in Honduras, which wai established several years ago by the United Fruit Company. While in Hondu ras, Dr. Adriance will gather na tive potato and sorghum species for experimental breeding purpos es. He will then study the possi bilities of planting red grapefruit in that country. Dr. Adriance will finish his tour by visiting the Inter-American In stitute of Tropical Agriculture at Turriaba, Costa Rica. He will dem onstrate propagation work to stu dents of the college and also will observe research work being car ried on there. Campus Theater Sponsors Weekly Children’s Party Each Saturday morning from 8:30 until 11 a free pro gram of entertainment is held at the Campus Theater for children under 14. The first part of the program is a movie made up of “shorts” and cartoons. From 10 to 11 the “Happy Birthday Party” is broad cast over station WTAW, a gene ral talent show in which the child ren take part. Refreshments are served after the broadcast. Children who wish to participate in the radio program must report to the WTAW studios in the Ad ministration Building at 1:30 on Friday afternoon before the Sat urday on which they want to enter. This is for auditions and timing. The program, sponsored by the Campus Theater and the Butter- crust Bread Company, will con tinue until August 9. It is written and produced by Mickey Collis. Mrs. Bill Barren plays the piano. All children of 14 and under are urged to come and bring their mothers. In addition to the prizes given each Saturday, there are grand prizes, including a bicycle, an elec tric roaster, and a registered cock er spaniel. Children get one chance at the grand prize for each Satur day they attend. Reserve Officers Barbecue Monday The Brazos County Reserve Of ficers Association will hold a bar becue and dance at Franklin’s Mon day evening, June 30, at 7 ; 30. Tickets at $1.50 per person may be obtained from Hank Murray at his office in the Coast Artillery Armory, telephone 4-5674. Reservations must be made be fore noon tomorrow. Dress for the occasion will be informal. Bass-Baritone, Tenor to Sing Tuesday Night A program to suit all types of audiences will be presented at the Grove Tuesday even ing, July 1, at 8:30 p.m., when Robert Sprecher, a tenor and Wil liam Wright, bass-baritone, appear under the sponsorship of the Stu dent Activities Office. Among the selections to be heard are “Au Clair de la Lune”, which ^yin be a duet; “On Wings of Song”, “It’s A Gran4 Night for Singing”, and “I’m Falling in Love With Someone”, by Sprecher; and “Deep River” and “The Erie Canal” by Wright. Sprecher served three years aboard the U.S.S. Copahee, one of the first escort aircraft carriers, as communications watch officer, entertainment officer, and gunnery officer. A native of New Mexico, Sprecher has attended the Uni versity of California and the Uni versity of Southern California. At the conclusion of this tour he will return to New York for rehearsals for the fall opening of opera. Wright first worked with John Parish, tenor, then head of the Voice Department at Columbia col leges. After attending the Uni versity of Missouri on a scholar ship, he practiced under Oscar Seagle, with the help of Mrs. Anna Freman, mother of Jane Freman of screen and radio fame. During the winter of 1934 he studied in Paris, and has sung such roles as “Mep- histopheles” in Faust and “Friar Lawrence” in Romeo and Juliet. The program next Tuesday even ing will be free to everyone. In case of inclement weather, it will be presented from the stage of Guion Hall. A&M Methodists To Welcome New Minister Tonight Rev. James F. Jackson and his family will be given a welcome re ception by the A.&M. Methodist Church this evening at 8 p.m. Rev. Jackson just recently arrived in the city to assume his duties of minister of the local Methodist church. Plans for the new church struc ture will be on display, and the architect for the project will be present to discuss it features and answer questions. A report of the progress made in the local financial drive will be presented. A-M Poultry Team Prospects to Meet Monday Evening Students interested in becoming members of the collegiate poultry judging team this fall are invited to attend a called meeting Monday evening, June 30, at 7:30 in Room 317, Animal Industries Building. Tentative plans will be made then for a brief summer training pro gram. The A&M-team will compete in a national contest to be held in Chicago in December, E. D. Parnell, team coach, reported. Either juniors or seniors are eligible to compete for team places. Team members need not be poultry majors in order to compete for team membership, Parnell stated. also hung up impressive records. In his worst season as a high school coach, Stiteler’s team won five and lost four. Stiteler, who is prematurely gray at 37, will instruct the back- field this year. No other athletic appointments will be made until the new athletic council has a chance to meet, ac cording to D. W. Williams newly appointed chairman. The board expressed its appre ciation to the “men of courage and integrity” who composed the state investigating committee, and stated the group had done a great service to the college and the people of the state. The board created a new post, director of the Student Union Building, to be filled September 1. This official will guide the pro posed Student Union Memorial Building through the final phases of planning and construction, and will direct its operations after com pletion. Kyle Field will get a major face lifting this year. The college board of directors authorized expenditure of $60,000 to erect buildings under the stadium, to house class rooms, athletic offices and similar facili ties. What is expected to be one of the finest training rooms anywhere will be under the stands, and will be equipped at a cost of $6,000. Semi-permanent steel bleachers, to accommodate 4,000 additional spectators at Turkey Day games against Texas University, will be erected at a cost of $25,000. It is hoped to have the seats in use for the Texas game this fall. The ad ditional seats give Kyle Field room for 40,000 spectators. An electric scoreboard costing $5,600 will be installed to replace an old one burned last year. A. & M. and its affiliates will spend twenty two and a half mil lion dollars during the coming fis cal year, according to a budget adopted by the board of directors Wednesday. The sum allotted in cludes income from all sources and operations of the college, in addi tion to legislative appropriations. Teachers salaries at A.&M. are now on a par with those paid at the University of Texas, the board was told by W. H. Holzmann, comptroller of the college. During the past year there was an aver age increase of six and a half per cent in salaries paid to the teach ing staff, at College Station, mak ing a total increase of approxi mately thirty five percent since 1939, Holzmann said. Similar in creases'have been made for John Tarleton and North Texas Agri cultural Colleges, junior colleges of the A.&M. system. Instructors at Prairie View are receiving a slight ly smaller increase, Holzmann said. Among items in the budget for Prairie View is an appropriation for a new administration building to replace one destroyed by fire earlier this year. Dr. Paul B. Pearson, national ly known nutritionist, was named dean of the graduate school, suc ceeding Dr. T. D. Brooks who will go on modified service at the end of the summer. Dr. Brooks will continue as dean of the school of arts and sciences until his successor is named. Dr. Pearson has been nutritionist on the staff of the Texas Agri cultural Experimentation, work ing with the animal husbandry department of the college. Dr. Sloan Jones, assistant dir-' ector of the Texas Experiment Station, was raised to vice-director. Dr. E. C. Hereford, acting dean at North Texas Agricultural College, Arlington, was named dean by permanent appointment. Tuition charges for out-of-state students were raised to $150 per semester by the board. Previously the charges have been reciprocal, A. & M. receiving whatever the home state of the student would charge a Texas resident, with $100 the limit. Even under the new charge, the college will receive on ly half of what each student costs the institution, it was stated. The change was made possible by a new state statute. Also acting under a new statute, the board made a student activities fee mandatory for all students. The fee cannot exceed $15 a semester, and includes athletic coupons and publication subscriptions along with hospital fees and other mat ters. Three new faculty members of the school athletic council were ap proved: D. W. Williams, vice- president for agriculture, M. T. Harrington, chemistry professor and J. B. Jaggi of the veterinary medical school. Renamed for an- (See CLARK on Page 4) Proposed Cadet Change Annoys War Dept. According to the Dallas Morning New’s Washington correspondent, David Better, the War Department would not welcome a change at A. & M. College from a military- cadet system to a civilian ca det system. This view was expressed by Lt. General C. P. Hall, director or of organization and training on General Eisenhower’s staff in a letter to Rep. Olin E. “Tiger” Teague of College Station, stating that the War Department would iregret any change that would “jeopardize the eminently satis factory relationship which now ex ists”. Teague added that he felt that any attempt to lessen the emphasis on military training at A.&M. would be an affront against the whole nation, especially during a time when the country is attempt ing “to strengthen our nation’s armed force for any eventuality in this unsettled period of world his tory”. Eddie Now in Padded Cell . . . Budding Reporter Assigned To Sewer Story Gets Run-Around By Jerry Lucy Eddie Zuzzale was our most ar dent reporter. He volunteered his humble services to the Batt in the same manner that he asked for Army K.P. Being an eager beaver and an honor student—six and four last semester—Eddie reported to the Battalion office with the text in one hand, dictionary in another, and a ball point pen in the other (You don’t believe it?) A fellow known as the “Frog” came in, snapped his fingers once, took a good look at Eddie, and assigned him the sewer story. Eddie could have walked to Washington to interview the presi dent in the time it took him to work on that sewer story. He made an appointment with the construc tion superintendent, but he failed to appear. Days went by and silence pre vailed. Rumors were that the ditch on the drill field was a canal to the Brazos so that A.&M. could have a Naval ROTC. Others said that it was a separate sewer for some confectionary. It seems that their coffee had eaten up the other one. Eddie went to the site of the dig ging. The man running the ma chine didn’t know where he was going. He just followed the stakes and got paid weekly. Some col ored man told him that the ditch was twenty-one feet deep and wag es were pretty good. That man knew more than anyone Eddie had confronted. After days of effort and patient waiting in empty offices, Eddie re turned to his college apartment. His wife was starving from lack to a pulp for letting thp ice pan to a pulp for etting the ice pan run over. The sewer had Eddie well on the way to ruin. He was raving crazy. Before entering the padded cell, Eddie asked me to get the story. I had an appointment with some bird this morning but he failed to show up. Now I’m waiting for the engineer in charge. Merchants Increase Prizes For Monday Bingo Games Through the courtesy of College Station merchants, the number of prizes for bingo games at the Grove has been increased. In this way students and wives will be able to play more games in one even ing. Bingo games are held every Monday evening beginning at 7:30 under the sponsorship of the Student Activities Office. The following night Lee Thompson and Manning Smith conduct square dancing instruction open to everyone. Every Friday night a free movie is shown at the Grove. The weekly schedule of activities is as follows: Monday—7:30: Bingo Tuesday—7-8: Square dance instruction Wednesday—7: Dancing to juke box Thursday—7-8: Square dance for students Friday—8:30: Free movie Saturday—7: Dancing, bridge, dominoes, etc.