The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 21, 1948, Image 1

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PATROL J’ALEi TIN
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LglKE SUfcCE^ i
Thef UnitCkKNat on]? V
notified Sdttedaj that
desm’oyorsi were being
n l|. N. PalestH e pat
.A|i ann«punceni ?nt sapi
Na\|al Goiamand‘r in
ranlan ha:I been inst
the : i three vesse s ove|(!
Follfr Bejinadottf, ,U.
mediator.
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IN
JEWS RULED
10LY
WAR
wilROi Junn 21
Eg|ptian pewspi per si
«/>(|> JeM’R weie kill
Palestine | War 1 etwee
wh|n the Britis. i Mpi
andi June 111 whi n the
tior|js trueje was jdedar
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i
liv- 5 '
tokUMlfcNT 1)1
oil Mclenn an
I ! I - 1—4-'
SDIGi
WA1
WACO, Tex., June
A | ranite menu nent IP’i
ed lete Sunday to 56
McLennan Cptln y con
lost! their, lives in the
w'ftils. Attorney (ieiier.1
iel Spoke at sei vices
of fthe' City Hall. • -
P C.C LOOKS
POH COMMUNISTS
WASHINGTON, ,hi
Th^ House Sat trdny
: veS Plution : to in ^stigi
era| Communication
Th^i apnounceme nit ain
mil je whether feleral li
becjjp issued to r; diq’st uibns owned
or Operated by jJomnti(in sts
PALESTINE Tl UCE,
MAY BE EXTENDED.
^ RHODES, June 21 N^— The
possibility rose Saturday that
Coi mt Folke Bt rnado|to may ask
thalt the/ jfour-wi ek trticq iri Pales-
SucH
tin j be I dxtehde
wotild liajve to
U;N. Security
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•neij is a pracjtic hg attritiney.
AN SAYS GREEK
Sl'f’UATlONj C MTK'aL
/ASHINGfrtN,
President r mm an
lasjti weiek that Abe
“remaijiK
Ant^rfctm
couhtryls
j 1 Greek aHny
jinihresk
tluj p
, iiid to yjo to IJerUh.
f, A ael ion .ctjnie' af ifr 1 ru
tttijt the Russiai iR had
to their j;ide of thq fr
iitM the LAnterilanl Zo id.
ir
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fonhaljy
hree U. S<
.ssigned to
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the U. S.
ie Medjter-
deci to turn
to Count
Palestine
f/P»— An
id Saturday
id -in' the
: May 15
ate elided,
Jhited Na-
t T
’ED
DEAD
21 —(/PI
Ts dedicat-
en o| -this.
Huinifcy' whd
[two ‘worklT
Price Dan-
#4he.- lawir
:•
0 21
approved a
:e the Fcd-
Commission.
is to deter-
nsqs have
tomb t
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Volume 48
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PUBLISHED IN THE
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'
JST 01 A GREATER A &M COLLEGE
COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, MONDAY, JUNE 2jl, U
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Men and 7 Trucks Participate
Clean-Up
fl
Businesses Cooperate in Drive; Spray
ir
lough
request
tne
j DANCINC AT THE GROVE, to the music of THE MODERN DOWNBEATS, gets underway for the
summer. THE DOWNBEATS gave their first performance of the season Saturday night, and will
appbar at Thj* Grove every other Saturday nightJ
At least one “wolf” attended the dance Saturday night,'if the* glowing eyes (top center) mean
anything. • | - , . j
stores and injdivk u
uing the cleah- u P
Frances Vaughn,
clean-up/’ The ah
t Working har 1
8th polio casd, B.
> .> V.
Number 6
By KENNETH BOND
Seven trucks and 22 men reported to the City Hall yes
terday afternoon to participate in the garbage clean-up cam
paign o|f College Station. / • -
Nearly all businesses closed thij afternoon to clean their
Plans to Double-Deck K;
Field Delayed—Carmich
By JIMMY MAMARCHEV /
“Plans for adding double decker seats to Kyle Field have not been ktince 1c
new addition will not be made, this year,” Bill Carmichael, director of athletics
Saturday. _ . ' j
The Athletic Council had hoped to sell options to six thousand seats in oi cl
the money, but only one thousand seats have been contracted to date, Carpiich u
“Tlie plans for building a bigger and better stadium have niot qe$
—tied,” Carmichpel
ittouw
Action
/
(iiliner-Aiken Committee Members Report
!
- ligjjnce Branch j:)f the (Army, Bar-1.
(nmev. !
Juri(
«*
mi ay am
re beglim
'Csuif'l
BARNES El.FA TED
R(*A PRESI DE Si
_ DENVER, fluijo 21 -U(iT)— Colo
nel Claremce E. Barm s, mayor of
Guthrie,. Okl;(., Aa^'eliMiied nation
al jpresident. iof Ithe Resierve Offi-
ecre AssdciatSon dt th< rlosing „ses
sioji of |itjs 22nd jannd'iJl convention |
8a{urda> ir 1 • . . t
b officer lin the M|i ijtary Intel
Conference on Education
Begins in YMCA Tomorrow
21 |
to |l Chirg^
itiorf in I
if: cal.V But
ERtojfe - the j
jolster thi‘:
ing. to shov j
said. 1 i
"(I ADMIT n7 MELESS
L1.M ANf
S IIUL1 j
The tiventy-third annual conference of ebunty school superintendents and county su
pervisors will be held in the YMCA tomorrow, Wednesday and Thursday, G. B. Wilcox,
; head, of the Department of Education and Psychology, announced today.
Scheduled to speak before the conference are education officials from all parts of
the state, representative^ from thb State Department of Health, and members of the
♦"Oilmer-Aiken Cbmmittee. i ‘
j The conference; members will be
1 welcomed at 9 tomorrow morning
J in the YMCA chapel by President
m* i TV* [ ' ¥ Gibb Gilchrist. L. A. Woods, state
[Mouth /Disease In
; State Department of Education.
TT
Little Foot And
U. S., Simms Says
BRITISH ARMjOUiKD
C.HRs MOVE l P [>
lELMSTEm, (fer.Ji June 21
(.•Pl—The /BriitLsIii niovtjl 10 annoiv I • • ■ , j , . . ,
wl rears ISaturd fy ;to llthis station |. -I- oot and mouth disi/ase is be-; .v . • . . . ,.
bordermg the ifovfct Znii t>f-ocJ lf W held south of the! quarantine I Department htr«, Ottis Lock.
SToraa Rui %«%*?. Rno in.'Mexito, and is-no closer to! state representative from ' Luf-
>dIbaick huiulrec S of ti|\elers seek- 1 llw United States than h was.
The British twelvo“ ; months ago, Dr. \B. T
iiora' spread Bimms, chief of the U S. Bureau
piovk tanks' ' )f Apifhal Industry, Washington, j Speakers for Wednesday are
)i tulrl. odpo- I D- Aold the Fexas (.inference i Health Officer Dr. George
Tomorrow's speakers are John
0. Rodgers. Williamson County;
Dan Russell, Rural Sociology
kHij asid Joe Cl Humphrey, vice-
president of the Texas . State
Teachers’ Association.
Short Course For 4*™"
~ painting
Cotton Classers
Will End Today
$35,000 to Be
Spent on Guion
This Summer
1 j j , • j ;
Guion Hall is undc-rgoing
repairs pnd reconstruction to
taling $pi5,000, T. R. Spence,
(manager of college construc
tion, has announced.
Tom Buddy, manager, of the
audit or ip n, says it has taken thq
college t( n years to begin the pre
sent job, which includes complete
remodelir g and enlargement of the
stage, ai d a general overhauling
of the interior of the hall. ,
is supervising the con-
which also involves
of the'entire auditorium.
The hjrge Corinthian columns,
which foi-myiTy restricted the stage
but
innauj;
Bernley
Dies of Mi
Second Vii
opening
moved, t
to.'35 feet
i providing
mpvie to
plans
of
provide for the
curtains and
A study of cotton fiber, ihclud-;. „ .
ing its history, present use, and
jirospectiye future, is be4ng made i ;ytner
at the annual cotton school iwiivg hAngmgj °l new
held at A&M. ! I 1 /! 1 ^Placing of the old
fr , , . . : , , Ji: {brjass railing around tne balcony
I no school is open to merchants, j a concrete one. If enough
ginners, plant hredders, and gene- m0ne y remains, a ventilating sysi
ticists dealing with cotton quality, j ^ will | be installed, Puddy said.
to 25, feet,
have been re
ins widening the opening
A new movable screen, other persons,
for quick changes from
stage productions will be
explained. ’ “We]
hope that in the J near future I;
enough funds will be collected to
start construction.”, '
Move Began Last Fall
The move to make Kyle Field
the only doubledecker stadium in !
the Southwest was announced by |
the Former Students Association,
last December.
The new septs were to he built !
through subscriptions. The oppor-
jtunity to buy options was thrown !
I open to all, public and former ! Bernley FL Give
I students alike. The option would be 0 i ( | stut l ent |j n t )
torja PCl'lwl ot twenty Vetel . i|lary l Med|
ns Orfereci N rickel > H
The Athletic Council decided I Texas, last Week,
that seats between the 25 yard i Weldon Maples,
lines would bp contracted for $50 Life Insurance A TV
Those seats between the* 10 and
25 yard lines would sell for $35,
and the price of box seats was set
at $60. This price did not include
the price of! tickets, Carmichael
said, i: ... ! j. j
By paying this sum, the person
subscribing hpd first option to
purchase tickets for that space. If
the tickets were not purchased Thursday,
within a reasonable length of time
they would be offered for sale to
'I
5ise
tel-
i.i ap
thj
[f
%
in force
years.
AUSTIN, Tex., ui
Bernley Greeit, 25, < f
of polio at a hospjt
night, five hours
been placed iji an rn
- Greer was Lstricli eiji
day while att!ehdin|;
College. Hej Was
i
nc 21 j—f*T>
Saturday a
homeless
(for Veterinarians here Friday. ('ox; R. E.) Harris, ‘presidemt’j^ ' s being carried on by the Agrp-
Thtj nearest cases of the dread- i 0 f* ^ 'caldweli'' County Supei-vis- no,n y . Departmqnt- under the m-[
led, cattle disease are at least 300 i org Association• and Dr. L f). I pervision of DrJJ. K. Adams.
I miles front the U-, S., boji'der, Simips i pjaskew, deal) of the College of | In addition to the 39th annual j
st a t«L .. ..... i Education at the University of cotton classing school, a new fiber
‘1 here is much misinformation , T i. xas _ - | laboratory is ,being offered. This!
an " hyStC 4 ' ,ml1 Stale,H.allh -em. ,h< ' fi » “ « ofta-i
-4-
Two Tiers Planned
The plans atid designs as devel
oped by Williqrd Simpson, consult
ing engineer of San Antonio, and
Arch, C. Baker, college architect,
called for 20 rows of seats to be
added on the west side of thg sta- Greer’s home is 1
dium. Another 20 rows were to be Pershing, College S
built on a second deck. Tfie press:! Greer was aj studi
(See KYLE FIELD, Page 4) I the war.
] \ ’ ' , 1 . . !
a. J—
^ Greer left Collegje
Tuesday to visit li
Burnet, and Ijiecam
local physiciari diadni
as polio and sent h
ridge Hospital Aus
polio diagnosis
A married veterar
1.
'* -»
29 HIGH' SCHOOLS
DROPPED FR)M ROLLS
AUSTIN, iJui ie 21 -Aft Failure
to ' meet state ] stsinda fdo, or con
so jidalion vAtht other !schools, has
re mlted ■ in jdiLppSng pi 29 foui-j-
ypar high Icli ooljs flom the ac-
cridited list, *
irive state at( mlitirlg committee,
whifh iniet leiri Friday,also warn
cdf 197 other flolir-year hjgh schools
tlwy might !Ipse accreditation. Of
thiis number/ jl !4 weivi wanuXt tiC-
cifuse of lo\t mroillnuht.
' / j J r ' t j •j-.
LONG’S A0M NiSTI AtlQN
COSTS UP 80 PERC S!
' -BATON ROUGE, Lu, I Judo 21-
'•4-THi cost of! Gov. ■ Earl’ K.
Ling’s pdpiihii triitiou dufringl the
ntfxt ty*o years will tie about* 80
percent g re ate:' t|h:in current ex-
jianditum*!. *
8.
1
Y
the BOO at the Ann
Boyer; of tie Hou’sir
announced today.
The! apartflnents ire
Ho tn|itrried jstudeit s,
Married
|nd ion-yetltrahs.
Ho
t". ,,1
Students,
“Tf •**
should
Hce. ,
'Li
L.~.
A’ASHINGTOxN, Ju|
The. aenftte aptiroped
5if. to admit M2u5.()(0 ,. ,
KijhowSRiiis jn tvp leafs. It goes to ! mouth-disease; Simms saidi “Such
tlu-White Houpe. , ' X-j j misinformation is causing ' unnec-
• I;j- ■] Li j- essai'y concern. It .it continues, we
('OGRESS .APPROVES ' ' sct ‘ stil j tes settin F UP quaran-
HUEE ARMY JILL |tines againft. each other because
Washington j..... , ,.
A compromise ! 6,7167 G6S,T63 Army , “hoot ^ml mouth disease is
appropriation tjiill fi| the Jyoar ; f ouml on all continents. Rrecau-
•startJuly 1 w;>s ukskod {fatiir-1 Kv tho animal industrial bu-
dab, by tlhe [Housel a*u SenatSi and : ^au of the Department of Agri-1 Thursday.
s,. j|he W1 itel Hobsie. i culture havci kept the disease from j Others scheduled to speak be-
The total is miore tnan •jfcojC'O.-1 coining in from other ceuntries; | fore the conference ends at noon
00!),000 fcssithj.n presidential bud’-’But wo m ist realize..-thit• it is Thursday includes Dr. H. A. Moore,
gef cstiiiiatcis i if ^7,2 f8/842,000. | necessary t<J exercise eternal vigil-1 executive • secretary of the Gilmer-
' ! ’ ante; not only to jirevgnt [the dis-! Aikin Committee; and Senator
lease entering from Mexico, - but I James E. Taylor, chairman, Gilmer
nc
25
Scnol
uYj
ii Bui
.•omiii
Arnep
it.
a'
’j exa?
1 oved
bers who will speak Wednesday
include D. B. Taylor. Dr. C. F.
Moore, Jr., A P. Bl'^banm. E.
H. Rolston, Mrs. Billie Louise
Crook. Dr. W. A. Buckner, and
1). B. Knudsqn,
Dr. Has^ew will deliver a sec-
nul address before the Conference
also from
pthdr areas.”
.JL...
' -Aikin Comrtdttpe.
Citizens Cooperate
••j . I -i K j- ^
In Cleanup Drive
ed in an academic school. It is ex
pected to help the milling indus-
! tries of the state.'Aj, \ n
Eighty- five students, severalXj
from Latin America and Egypt,
are enrolled. Dr. B. P. Johnson,. - j Byj LOUIS MORGAN
cotton expert for the Production 4 J N \ i . • 1
and Marketing Division of the Na- i The annual conference of
tinnal Cotton Council is assisting, county school superintendents
Adams in the course. all( j 8U pb rv isors begins tomor-
Dr. Johnson began his cotton , tw in r the YMCA and the
Tiber work m the cotton breedei ^
laboratory in the Arkansas Agri- Rian who fathered the COll-
cultural Experiment Station. He ference 24 years ago will be
has been with the National Cot- very mi|ch interested in what
ton Council since the first’of t|e j on [at the meeting. |
y 5 l ‘“ . 4 . : W. L ‘Pop” Hughes, founder of
.Examinations will be given at | A & M - s Education Department,/
the end of the course, June 21. j started ihe superintendents’ con-
Those passing will be given a di- j ference i i 1924. Since that time he
ploma signifying that the studept • ^ mis ded only two meetings of
is a cotton classer. j i ^Le group. Conferences were not,
The cotton schpol is being sup-j ps comnvjin in 1924 as they are tq-
poti'ted in part by the^ Colon Re- day, h/ says. , j
a /\ J v
‘Teach School, Young Mali
‘Pop’ Hughes’ Advice to A
7mm
e 21
lurniet
here
er 1 he
K
Mt
ud
5 tat io
pare
|1
>| ed
to
will ej
c()jifin
th (jni
;i ted-
t|on.
herle
5
case
kon-
the’
•hild if
308 J
i fore
iys
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;
By HARRY SUTHERLAND f polio insurance policies by phone
Is the public awajre. of the ex- while being interviewed,
tensive clean-up campaign'of the j In (he interview with G. T. Hill j-i
Bryan-Cojlege Station area? .Ap-|(/ivil Instructoit, Bill told how his
patently It is if the'results of a j home was the scene of an exten-
recent pcjll by a Battalion staff i sive ami strenuous clean-up cm-
meinber fan be, taken as conclu- j sade. Though the general cleanup
sive. r ' J plan wks long overdue, he thought
In an Attempt to obtain a cross , it was a shame that it took a polio
search Committee of Texas. J. M.
Ward of the Department of Eco-
nojmics and Ervin B.-Conway. Cot
ton technologist with the State of
Tf/xas, are assisting Dr. Johnson.
yp-
M/ONTFORT NAMED .1
CONFERENC!: (|H A RMAN
NEW YGRt, jluiif 21 -'T)—
Ej T. Mohtl'ort, research associate
ir the Agrici Itufal ; Engineering
Di/partment 3 Texajs
Rge, has H beer nameid
A ce chairman of tfie
Firm Electricifation Corlfetonce.
A&M Col-
regional
National
tpartm ent$ Open
At Anm
ex
rtmentk are avi liable in
Bo7«r said.
Hhoi are interested,
dousing Of*
Harry
Office
available
veterans
section cf tho'entire community,
businessmen, faculty members,
students, and. wives- were quizzed
on subjeitsVpertaining to this clean
up plan.] The general Consensus of
opinion was that individuals are
working] hard, -and that the cam
paign, though late, is worthwhile.
, According to O, K. Smith of
Lipkcomsb’s Pharmacy, a clean-up
plan of j his own is being directed
by his wife at their home. Smith
also believes that an annual cam
paign is inadequate? Several clean
up drives a year would be worthy
regardless of their connection with
the curfent polib epidemic, hclsaid.
Eugene A. Rush, North Gate
lawyer land father of three (jhil-
dren, explained how. his 1 family Was
comply og with' requests of local
commit :ees by cleaning their yard
and ga -ago and by buying a new
garbage ton, f
Rushj’cmphasized the fact that
UnsKnitpry conditions go hand in
hand wjith any outbreak, and this
any
campaign was
To illuictrate
riate.
Bra
zos Covinty citizens, Rush sold two
A;
highly approp
the ahxicty of
outbreak to make people do what
should come naturally. .
Dr. S. R. Gammon, head of the
history department, said that his
home Jn the Oakwood Addition met
all the requirements of the Bryan
J.C.Ci’s ten point program to as
sist home owners in this campaign.
Gammon explained that even
though the ^publicity reached All
available homes, certain sections of
Bryan could not cany out thq de
sired program for financial rea
sons. Plans are being "worked out
to include these homes however/
. “Living in a new house makes
the clean-up campaign a cinch,”
said 8 Mrs. W. F. Odx, secretary in
the Geography and Modern Lan
guage Departments. Her opinion
of filth as a germ breeder is simi
lar to others qiiizzed/’Tf diseases
are spread from
plates, they shout
jack Huddleston
Named Editor
Of ’48 Yoncopin
Jack M. Huddleston, formerly
the co-editor of the Engineer, has
been selected as editor of the Cen-
tenary Yearbook, the Yoncopin, ac-
cordiog to a letter received by
Roland Bing, Manager of Student
Publications.
/Huddleston, a native of Shreve
port, resigned as co-editor of The
^Engineer last February so that he
could attend Centenary College. A
veteran of the navy, he was classi
fied as a. fourth year architectural
student while at A&M. j.
Huddleston served with Henry
Gilchrist-as co-editor of the En
gineer. Gilchrist graduated from
A&M in January and entered law
exfts.
se unsanitary; A&M in January and entered
be cleaned out school at the University of T<
said Mrs.
y
for obvious reasons,” said Mrs. According to Qilchrist, Huddle- gociation
Cox. * ston went to Centenary to study
Mrs. W. R. Bradshaw, secretary economics. Huddleston plans to
in the Campus Security Office and combine his economics course with
trailer camp resident, explained the architecture courses that he
(See CITIZENS, Page 4) studied at A&M.
i ii/c
m
“Pop”! Hughes started teach
ing in Texas schools in 1897,
and retired last year after com
pleting a half century in the
teaching profession. He was head
of the Department of Education
at A&M 25 years.
Although “Pop” claims to belong
to the leisure class since his re
tirement,! he still finds plenty df
things to occupy ,his time. For in
stance, when his son, R. H. Hughes
director of the Veterans Appraise!
Sendee, left for two weeks mili
tary sendee June 1, “Pop” took
over the job of counseling and
testing A&M students.
He says he has always believed
in guidance to help students get
into fields where they will be
happiest jam! can accomplish the
most. He! says he thinks it a good
idea for Ji student to check up ojn
his IQ and try to understand
where hisl interests jlie before start
ing out in a courke of study. In
fact he sjays it is not a bad idea
to “Know Thyself.”
“Pop” Hughes was bom In
Williamson County, Texas, and
has attended the University of
Texas, 1 Howard Payne College
and A&M. 1
In 192$ he was made president
of the Tfexas State Teachers’ As-
He was for eight years
I superintendent of Bra-
for four years, county
perintendent of Tom
ty.
while serving as coun-
m
4/
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1 hoir#s; Tfte! [garbage trucks gre continh
id tw spray iipits are working in whit
c|i;y manage -, iddled “al highly auccessfu
i|t cam )aigilife/well under way. j.
n the heelu 611 the announcement bf the
rebr wonjiTn committees have been cir-
jluting throughout the town mak-
.ng observations and giving con
s':i!iictive advice on7'cleaning (ih
a uh individuHl’s premises!, /Foufr
committees', woiking under the dj*
r/tion of General Chairman, Mr$,
ll. j W. Lcland, distributed oucfi-
oinnaires to all resideikts residing
ojff the College premises.
All uhsanitary conditions wepa
nuirked and the corrective, mens-
res which -were necessary in the
nj-marks section”. Vaughn, N. M.
McGinnis,, city secretary, Dean
diaries Snepardson, and othena
processed the questionnaires Sun-
:iajy morning and madei plans fqr
‘ js garbage, clean-up. | |-f ! I
Four Committees | |
Mrs. J; C. CplpeppeT, who work-
1: in College Hills, had 22 women
aiding her in distributing the-quesj-
tt<jnn|iires. Her area was the larg
est one in College ' Station.
(Mrs. AH Adamson and Mrs. J.
R. Odom were the leaders in West
■ Park. Ten warden aided tho two
twhihon.. -■I ' - ]• t| . : -
[Mrs. Frank Amlersort and 12
(|tiier ladies circulated the bDnkf
College Park. Mrs. M. Li Cash
ijoh and Mrs. C. B. Goddey dis-
wibuted tho questionmures! Tm
fcjutlv OakwOod. > '1 ' ’
Town Scctionalized
[Dividing , the ’ town into si?vcn
dejetions, Vaughn assigned a truck)
drjiver, and ,two or three men t«i
[ADMINISTRATIVE M E M 0 -
[LANDUM NO. 48-0
TO; Deans, Directors anj Heads
of Departments ;,/ 1
SUBJECT: Community' Cleanup
I Drive Against Possible Souvcen
j Of Polio Infection
The College Sanitary Board
reports that everyone connected
limb the A. and M. College ik co
operating in a fine manndr' in’
the cleanup drive agaiuH pos-
silije sources of polio infection.
I appreciate this United effort (jin.^'
(he part of the Staff.
1 requested a report front tfycj
Sanitary Board concerning con-!
(litions on the campus’an/quoto!
below their recommendations:
: “All departments and' indi
viduals, paririeularly those living
to- college-owned apavtmehts and
homes, will take continuous, ut-
tivc measures to see that their
Premises do not become unsani
tary or provide breeding places,
particularly as follows:
“(1) Be sure that all manure
ftoin all barns in removed daily,
nml spread in the sun. Keep all
barns sprayed inside with DDT
at regular intervals. j |!
“(2) pee to it at all times that
/arbage cans do not leak and
have tight-fitting lids. Keep lids
in garbage cans, '> I |
"(3) Cut grass will not be piled
-o that it becomes a decomposed
heap which becomes a, hreHing j
place in we( weather.”
I appreciate the fine
^oopera* ,
tion we Tiave already received,
md I hope that a llttltf extra’ef
fort may be put forth and our
College Sanitary Inspector will
have the complete support of all
in any recommendations he might
make concerning sanitary meas
ures.
Glim GILCHRIST, -
President
hph of these sect ions. The namci
4*
n
V:.*
m
if the people working in (each sec
' ion Of towh were *ns follow/
' The Lilly Ice'Cream Company
oaned a truck which was drive?
y Purgeraon in Section 1. Helper!,
[Were Wayne Long and J. C. Miller
Marion Pugh' drove his truck*
[and Tim Faufkcpberty und • Ray
Tishler picked up the garbage,
This group w'orked in Section II.
! Section III was coveraj by Here
Ahcl Burgess in his truck. E.. Ll
Apgell, assistant to President Gibl
Gilchrist, and 1 W. G. Magee ser
F -/ T
& v!- \
it %
City scho
School
Green
In IS
,
T
f
W. L. “POP” HUGHES relaxes with a book in.'his f
home after 50 years of teaching school. He founded
of County School Superintendents and Supervisors aft
on the campus tomorrow, j
r ■. [■ ■■ -ii- •• ■ ■
ty school superintendent, he met
and married Mrs. Hughes in
San Angelo. They lost the older
of their two aons, W. L. Hughes
Jr., during World War II.
After 50
•H
years of
fiM
“Pop” Hughes reports that
had a mighty gooi
“I have one
for all young nten
“Spend your life t cl i
“Teaching," he
in satisfaction
buy."
v.H,, / i:, i L -
tion
Bence
neet
/
ii
ued as pick-up men for Burgess.
Parker-Astin ftirnished a truck
and. Jimmy Martin served as"the
driver. Hillburn, Bob Pihkertotw
and Price were workers in Section
IV. ■ . • : •' ! , . L| - I
; M. C^ Taylor drove his truck fo)
Sectiori V. Tayldr, Ran and Jimm
'Boswell went into this urea, oni
idf, the. colored fibetions.'but wc
j (See CLEAN-UF, Page 4)
Architect Head T
Attend Utah Mee
Bmest Langford, head,, Archil
terijunTDepartmentj, will attend a
meeting of the Association of Col-
Hegiato Schools of Architectiye in
Balt] Lake City, Utah, this week.
Practically every bratftih of
Architecture organizations w
meet in Salt Lake City, Langfi
said. jT ,
Recently the Architecture
part men t of A&M Was (ifiven
credited rating by the National
sociation of Architecture Accredi
ing Board. A&M is one of
schools in the United States ha
ibis rating, Langford ^
!
.
,hL
If