The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 28, 1948, Image 1

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VIOLl.i
SHAK
iT EARTH^UAKFi
HONSHU COAST
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TOKYO, Jtuafi 08 wn—TJk* wes
coast of Honshu was rocki'd to
4 dnjr.bx violent bnijfchquakesf tha
| may have lulled thousnndioi Jap
. anese. I .
Tokyo newspapers es.timntbd the
deaths .bl 1,000 frori first reports
The City of Fukufi with; a -popu-f
lation of 44,000 ap lenred hardest
hit. Thje newspaper Asahi siid 90
; percent! of the ci|y’f buildings had
collapsed. Fires raqbd foot)hours
after the quakes. The gofremqr
of Fukjui Prefecture appealed for
aid. f } *
f
II • r
,
VANPORT STILL JNDER
^ ig fFJ?t of watJbr
/!! • • I
PORTLAND, 0reL June
waiting for hpmles.
Throughout the pacific
west at least,48 ar^ dead;
still niissihR from Vanport. |
of thetklcad were^fiMm then|
Columbia!/ v ver
The
was nine feet abdve its banki Fiye
•St
I t
weeks, ago it fir]
st-s^o here. I 1 i ^ ? i
Not for another 3( days infs dot
Tlieron: D. Weaver; North Pacific
Division Amy Enj ineer, c|n rej-
eonstruction start oU brokenflowelr
river dikes. | I |
are
• horth-
; JG are
Ten
Saturday
riki Five
\tent ovoq' flopd
GERM WARFARE WON’T! F,
CHANGE I1EFENSE—ROYALL
■ 'NORFOLK, Va., June 284^)-
Developments in worm Warfare
will not change th)| country’s die*
fense setup “ih tfad foreseeable fu-
tdre,”,iarmy secretary Ktmnjpth G.
Rojlall ! said Saturday.
Itoyall, -wHMmkltessed pratluates
of the jarmednsertrici's staff tfollepo
here, made the.state|nent at d pres?
conference. A reporter askikl him
whethea- Russian re search ip bac
teriological weapqnji miphtj prove-
“an aiiBwer to the I .tom Boteib.”
“Thejre is nothing in {rerm war
fare that would affect the farmed
forces iset-up here iin the forsee-
able fpture,” the
replied.!
’]! UL L
i
qrnuy sodi-etary
BRITISH DEVELOPING
FIRST! CLASS ARMY
7 i 1
u
■
H
Volume 48
—
COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, MONDAY, JUNE 28, 1948
Journalism Department to
■ - " W; ' " An. Jjiksi
S f.,r :7>s
I ; ■ ' t
First Aggie Cadet to Arrive
At Fort Sill Forgets Salute
By LARRY GOODWIN and TOM PARSONS
Howard McMillan, member of the Senior Class of 1948,
at A&M, and the first cadet arriving at Ft. Sill, Oklahoma,
Artillery School for summer ROTC training, performed in
true Aggie style when he stepped onto the post Friday, June
18: he forgot to salute the Commanding General.
McMillan, member of “A” RPt-if — 1 — 1 —
tory, Artillery at A&M last spring:,
V.*
LONDON, Juno >8—WU-War
! Minister Emanuel Shinw^ij said
Saturday nigrht Brifaun’s aii
rapidlyi developing |ito firslj
condition..
y ‘is
class
B
ACCOUNTANTS E
St
' 1
NEW PRESIDENT!
DALLAS, June. j>8—6'PI
President of the Tefcas Soc
Accounjlahts
ia R. B. McD
•. J^ w ^l el ^ cte( L , ,
meeting hjere yesterday.
New
ty of
ile of
t the
NEW WILCAT f
BLOWS IN
BROWNWOOD, T e\as, Jiine 28
*—CP)—A wildcat oi well 4aD feet
from tie Bangs Ci y limits blew
in Fridjiy and'causer itown-lot-leas-
ing to become activ 5.
The >; nearest ipr'»ductioi)| two
miles sputheasPof the;' wildcat, has
produced a million-c nH-a-hau' bar
rels during several years-. 1
., The ■jinklcat topped sand afal.OftO
feet an« bottomed at 1,107. if floW-
erl wider open throng n a sev(fi-inch
'casing/while prep n-ations f were
| jnajdejtjl stop .the gas.,- 4 .
A&M CARET HOWARD G. McMILLIAN, (right), is personally welcomed to the FORT SILL.
OKLAHOMA, ROTC Camp by MAJOR GENERAL CLIFT ANDRI S. Post Commander.
McMillian, the first A&M cadet to arrive at Fort SHI. is one of 240 Artillery Cadets who are
attending the camp this summer to study the latest techniques adopted by the Artillery. ! (Signal
Corps Photo) i ] , l 1
Pups Will Whine
Grandpa Jones and Romona
Will Fidijjfi Wednesday Night
i I, / By BUDDY LUCE ■ \ ■
■ ^ | / 11 • ‘ s ’
Dogs will'howl, pups will whine, and trains will whistle Wednesday night when
Grandpa Jones ‘Turns them pups loose” at The Grove. Grandpa Jones will make a
personal appearance here to bring the long awaited "‘Old Rattler” to the‘A&M Campus
to the soothe the pains of studying Aggies. .
Not much recollection'is necessary to recall who Grandpa Jones is. He was the first
;
u. s., l'AnaDjan defense
CHIEFS IN CONFERENCE
’ WASHINGTON, June 2^ '^—
The two chief miliary scientists
of the United \Stat4s and Canada
will puj; their heads tiogethm - he*e
in a thjee-day meeti ig starting te-
diy. gheir nationsf have itSbfen^e
problenfe? in eommoi iLJ i !,,
1 Dr. , Dmond Mch illop Sfilandjl,
lairmitt of the Ca
risearegi board, is scheduled |to. ag-
r ve hero as a guest of Dig Vilil-
ngvar DusFi, ehairnfan of tjhe re-
olrd
Si-arch
and development board of
tne Uated States military; fcstaq-
lishmeitte; . ;• ,
j .— ' | I •
IB DIVISION MOEILE 4
FORCE PLANNED’
\ NORFOLK, Va., . une 284-CP-t-
Secretaa-y of the arny Kennfcth V|.'
lioyall isaid Sajtun ay a mobile
striking forte of Hi intently ami
anhoreo divisions i i : planttld foi -
the -arnrty by 1949. '
Roya|l said, the .kljvisions, of
efiuippeijl.,.'
The cabinet member
Institute of Oil-
Seed Technology
Established Here
An Institute of Oil Seed Techno
logy has been established at A&M
according to J. D. Lindsay, who
will direct the organization,
Lindsay said the Institute will
i ;adian (frfehsje ] bring all the resources of A&M
iS.ons, would beJully manned and Dartm „ nts of chei
tjie plans in (Se com jhence- jff f X y ’4adua^^^^
to bear on the problems of extract
ing and using oil from seeds.
In addition to college personnel,
advisors will be appointed from
such organizations as the Texas
A&M Research Foundation, the
Texas Cottonseed Crushers Asso-
cifitioh and the Texas Cottpiji Re
search Committee.
Dr. A. W. Mellch, as vice-dirOc-
tor of the Engineering Experiment
Station, is chairman of the policy
committee, which includes Dr.
Carl M; Lyman, Dr. S. G. Stephens,
Dr. W, R. Harris, Rr. William M.
Bryant R. Holland,
le de-
;ering
ag-
heads of t
partments of chemical engin
1 i Jlchemistiy, Dr. F. W. Jense
tlyealed*, v t
| and' foremost Cause bf the “Old
i Rattler” era on the campus during
j the spring semester. Music lovers
i remember the melodious strains of
| coon (logs, hound pups, a five string
; banjo, and the mountain top tenor
[of Grandpa himself. |
*
Accompanying Grandpa will
be his musically inclined “grand
children” featuring Ramona,
champion old time girl fiddler.
Grandpa and his “troops" come
to Aggieland from the “Grand
Ole Opry” of radio station WSM
in Nashville, Tennessee. Rumor
also has it that remnants of the
Aggie Ramblers will serve to
lengthen the program at The
Grove and help to act as hosts to
Grandpa.
5 I
Grandpa is not the old timer
that'' his name implies. Actually,
he is somewhere between 35 and
40 years oldf’Hc has been playing
and singing “coon dog” music for
many years, but his popularity did,
not grow-by leaps and bounds un
til he graced the airways with
“Old Rattler.” The musical story
of Rattler is the most popular of
a number of [hillbilly and= folk
songs that Grandpa sings and
plays.' ' j ; ; i
Listeners to WTAW during the,
spring semester will remember Ov
was among a group of cadets who
drove up to the Fort Sill Training
j School a full day early. Met by aj
parade of brass headed by Majorj
! General Clift Andrus, Camp Com-
j njandev and Col. Bryan L. Milbuyn,
j head of the ROTC program, Me-!
j Millan merely smiled and said hel-
!
Shortly afterward, McMillan
emerged from an intensive-proc
essing completely decked out in
baggy army issues and the usual
accompanying bewildered look.
But bewildered look and all,
McMillan is now saluting*
★
A camp newspaper “Ranging
’Round” will be published five
times a week, Tuesday through
Saturday; Co-Editors: .Alan Skip
Self, former Battalion editor,
and Larry Goodwyn: Also Tom
Larsons, Bill Brown, and John
Standefer (Senior in the Band
last year) on the predominately
Aggie staff.
Lieutenant Herb Carter, June
Graduate of A&M, is athletic of
ficer and assistant special services
officer.
-t Schools represented at Camp:
St. Mary's of San Antonio, Okla-
i homa University, Colorado A&M
i and Arkansas State. Approximate-
j ly half of the 285 cadets here are
I Aggies. i
Welcoming ceremonies, offiically
! openihg the camp, were held June
’ 21. Major General Clift Andrus
[ made, the welcoming address,
i The first copies of The Battalion
| received here werp passed around
among the Aggies as if they were
(See FORT SILL, Page 4)
~r
Churchmen Meeting Today For
Discussion of Rural Problems
1 hT IF j ■ 4 !; ■
^ I By W.LH. BEARDSLEY
, Rural church leadens from many southern and central
states met today in the YMCA for the first session of the
third annual Rural Church Conference. The conference,
which will end Wednesday, will be devoted to discussions of
agriculture, economics and social problems of rural areas.
Among the prqminent church4— 1 -H—■—
leaders present to apeak at the
conference are Reverends J. C.
Spurger, H. C Ziche of Taylpr, R.
H.' Kuretsch of Gerohimo, and G.
C. Scjnirman, state rural church
evangelist of the Christian chjurch.
Dr. T. F. GulU.xson, president
of the Luther Theological Sem
inary wiU make several address-
Msgr. Hubert Lerschen, piaster
of Saint Joseph Catholic Church
in Rayne, Louisiana, will be one
of the conference speakers. He
was born in the Netherlands, and
attended Fribourg University in
Switzerland.
Msgr. Lerschen is now vice-jpres*
ident of the National Catholic
• •*
P - B -
Royalil said the itational | guard I College divisions which will take
division*'would include thf 49 th j part in the research are: depart-
“ments of chemical engineeririg,
chemistry, biochemistry and nutri
tion, agronomy, genetics, mechani-
cal engineering; the cotton pro-
—I ducts research and chemdrgic re-
Sep-pearch laboratory; Engineering
Experiment Station, _ Agricultural
Old Rattler record contest carried ^ ur j^ Life Conference.
armored iif Texas.
^ i - Hi ■
GUARANT
CATIONS INCREAS
IINGTON, June 2(
Far the first time sjince
|
>e dine
timber Jjthere has been an in
|l
rease
ications forj yetera
?es, the veterans adminis-
..Uon said Saturday. 1
The 34,000 applications received
May were *7 j perce
»ber w Apfil.’a nionthlyj
ry showed. May, 1947, ap
plications totaled 51,000.
loan Experiment Station, Industrial Ex-
the graquate
tension Service and
school.
i
I !
during
the nu
Stimma
lications loiaieo o*,ouo. ?
There was a decrease in the Dal
lis a T; v ’ll 11'
7k U. k. TROOPS i 1
IjNtePALEST]
onie
j-
ESTINE
IINGTON, ,
i imembers
tateg navy and
ve been assigned
the United Nations 'truce
in Palestine, tl*e nary said
day. 1 1 ;
Fiftyifone marines
R. H. Mullen, Hous
l indied 'last week
Marquette, now
' V^jPjet in the M
handle signal com
the Tnlce Mission
-Ig
nited
pine 2:
if. the
marine | corps
to duti with
sjsions
htur-
stqp
&c
headed by Lt
Texas, were
tom Hie; USS
h the! sixth
iterranfan, to
niicatiojns for
' .jj
Bryan to Get Neiw
Water-Saving Plan
Sprinkling of lawns between
midnight and 9^ a. m. has been
proposed ,by Mills P. Walker, Brjy-
an city manager, to save both wat
er and )awna. . .
p He further suggested that peo
ple living in houses bearing even
numbers Sjprinkle on Monday, Wed
nesday, a$id Saturday, and those
living in houses bearine odd num
bers, spribkle on Tuesday, Thurs
day, and Friday. • ! i J
If this plan does not work, Walk
er says some other method to pre
vent total depletion of stored water
will be sought. I
on under the auspices of the Ag
gie Ramblers. The versatile Tex
Fields, possessor of the widest
grin and longest drawl among the
Ramblers, brought down the house
in a Guion Hall performance of
Old Rattler during the'1948 Follies
on All College Day. Tex is widely
known for his antics with a banjo,
guitjar, fiddle, or base fiddle, and
was a contributing factor to the
success of Grandpa Jones’ classic
on the A&M campus.! *»
When Spike White, director of
Student Activities, notified the
King Recording Company of Old
Rattler’s popularity on' the cam
pus, they immediately sent to ra
dm station WTAW 25 discs of the
thing. This resulted in the record
contest. , i ;
Dr. Mark Rich, secretary of
town and’country work for the
American "Baptist Home Mission
Society, will speak on! tThe
Church in its Community” Wpd-
Any listener to the Ramblers
could entet the contest by telling
why they wanted^ a record ;of
Old Rattler. The best 25 letters
won free Recordings* The re
sponse to this contest was almost
alarming, and the records ran
out fast. Rattler scored another
triumph in the minds of Aggie
music lovers.
: i
IA large turnout is expected for
the Grandpa Jones show on Wed
nesday night, and, since the show
is free, some-music lovers had bet
ter bring their own chairs. Grand
pa won’t disappoint you.
l \; ?|| " ^
SUT^iaSiw
•rrskSi
nesday morning.
Dr. Rich, a native of Oregon, is
a graduate of Linfield; College and
fcolgate-Rochester Divinity School.
He did his M.A. and Ph.D. work
hi rural sociology at Cornell.
He Is author of several maga
zine articles and has written a
book about ids work, “An Ef
fective Organization for Rural
Churches.” ■ In 19S5 he was hon
ored with an award for rural
work by the Northern Baptist
Convention.
An attraction of the conference
will be the Deseret Quartet of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints, who will give special
musical numbers for several of the
sessions. This church, although it
has only one rural colony In Texas,
is well known for its church pro
gram in Utah where it has been
responsible for the agricultural
development of the Utah desert,
r* _ i i * I . ' i I t
Assistant Dean
Of Agriculture
Receives Award
By LOUIS F. FIELDS
A fellowship at Cornell
University has been awarded
John Bertrand, assistant to
the Dean of Agriculture, ac
cording to D. W. Williams,
vice-president of the Agricultural
School.
A veteran of more than threw
years in the naval submarine serv
ice during the war, Bertrand was
dean of men at Sqm Houston State
Teachers College before he became
associated with A&M in 1946.
Bertrand wilt study in the field
of rural sociology - and , education
in the New York | State College of
Agriculture, which Is a branch col
lege of ComeU AUiiversitaU
studies will emphasize personnel
training and academic guidanjee
in land grant colleges and the Ex
tension Service. This type of work
is designed to aid students in va
rious phases of college training,
including close co-operation be
tween the faculty ami the student
body.
By this means, jt is believed thjat
a great many individual problems'
in planning schedules and main
taining higher scholastic standings
may be solved. Helpful suggestions
to students will be stressed in
stead of a quick recourse to
threats.
Bertrand will remain at A’&M
[for Freshman Week in September,
during which time he Will be avail
able for consultation and guidance
in the office of the Dean of Agri
culture. He will' eave for Cornell
(University immediately thereafter.
the field for which our
particularly suited. i
Our students will be
broad educational hackgn uUd \v|t)
a minimum of technical < o i •ses i
journalism. Students ma
this department will al.qo
a sufficient knowledge o
chanics of newspaper ,
to fit them for practi
town operation.”
“Interne” Trainii
Editors and publisher?
as weekly and daily n<
will be gsked to visit tl e
as lecturers and obser
their advice will bc.teufh
deg to keep the curriculju
ticoi An arrangement
mer “interne” training o
ven
ing i
ceiv
!|ie mq*
.j ftl °
a if smn
1
mi
Vex;
w fljpapertii
.dasses
y, arid
cd students in local m v
throughout the state wil
sought.
Journalism students
to work in agricultural wU
be given sufficient nj'jrif.’fiUu:
background to enable th<
derstand the problems
communities. Those whi
into oil or industrial a
receive engineering co nflps
background for their wor
Special Training
In addition to traini i|{
peetive newspapermen, tl e
also M
I,
Mil >ectiiiu|
nijto u
c 1 thei
f ill £'
das will
y
ment will furnish training in neWsj
paper writing for futui o countj
agents, vocational si fiji -ultui
tehehfers and others wh d; e work
will be enhanced by this
Engineers- will receive
training in the field of
writing.
Provision will be made
cial traihing of young
will work on agriculture
meal magazines, ns well
who will specialize in ag i
oil or other technical wfi
newspapers.
Department Ilea
The new dcpartnujnt
headed by Donald I
11 lining
(specta
•hnicn
\ r spe
ir&ii wh
i ■ tech
■it thos.
11 dturial]
i|ig fa
y :
iai
■chan
who is coming to Texa.4 fi o {i Soiitl
Dakota State College,
is professor and head i
partment of Printing ai
Journalism.
Bui'chard received his
gree from the University
sobri with a major ih jeju
and taught journalism
University, Indianapolis
homa A&M College befoife
to South .Dakota. -
r In addition to his
training, Burchard has
city editor of a midwestli^
owner-publisher of a
weekly, associate editor
Digest magazine and a sta ll mem!
her of the Chicago Herah
aminer.
WTAW 4 Kampus Kuiz’ Prpj
Offers Fame, Theatre Ticl
D. D. Burchard, South Dakota State, Nam
Head; Will Specialize in General Trainin
A Department of Journalism to train A&M students for the operation of sm \
weekly and daily newspapers will be established here in September, President Gibb (!
announced today. The department will also emphasize training for writing on agr c
and technical subjects. | ! 1
“We have no intention of duplicating the efforts of existing schools and depsrtfher
■fof journalism," President (pilch:
said, “but intend to speyih ize
i lool
y
it pape:
prosfj
(icjmr*
J
'
-
. 1
Number 9
—-
<4'.
Anderson has been eleva-
[from silvicultural research
to acting director of; tie
Tcxfls Forest Service effectiire
1.
chic
Julj
A. Anderso
»:re
die i)t>-
Kura
)*|A. da
f Mis-
alisra
ijButW
l Oklafi _
|jnoviIng| April
.*
a^uiemii
cjrJmd
dail;
issouri
Ra|’ n
>“P
, nd Ex!
By BARRY SJIITH
Do you sit. by your radio day after day and-ben otn tj
fact that you can’t be the next contestant on your fii/orjt|
quiz program? Have you missed the one and only c'laWM
fame and fortune just because you don’t have a teb
No doubt everyone at one time
“What a yokel, if I were there !♦
could win that new fluid drive
dirigible.”
Yearn, no more my intelligent
fx-iend, for the quiz fever hap
struck College Station.
That guy you see in front of
Sbisa Dining Hall from 12:30 to
112:45. Monday through Friday is
actually giving away something
for nothing.
or another hd
THE VERY RE!
MSGR. HUBERT L
of Rayne, Louisiana, first
resident of the National
tenci
CHI
NFERENCE here Jane $0.
Rural Life Conferenc
idress the RURAL
&
I 1 '
, j . * , ,
; :
-
1L
REVEREND
secretary of Toi
Work of the
Home Mission Society, will
dresi the RURAL CHURCH
CON) "
1(1
ARK rich.
and Country
rican Baptist
rill ad-
IFERENCE here June 30.
Bill Guthrie is to be the perma-
ent announcer on the Kampus
uiz, but until his return next
eek Milt Frenkel is plying the
al peasantry with questions on
cjurrent events and getting their
opinionated views on vital issues,
j At last there : is something to
do between : that two hour class
ih the mofning and that one
of clock lab; j so if you can recite
the Constitution backwards or ex
plain Einstein’s Theory in twenty
five words or less, don’t be bash
ful, uncover that hidden genius.
You lovers of the cinema will
know that free
f given away to
enough to ha.;
contestants. Numerous
es are to be added to
the list as the program , com- |
tinues. T
Sponsors of this new sidewalk
show are Bryan Office Equipment
Company, Halsell-Donaho Com
pany, Launderette, Pruitts Beauty
Shops and Automatic Gas Com-
pany. ,
The questions will be thought
up by the “highly imaginative”
minds of; tl|e staff of WTAW;
so one can only guess what
strange and fantastic subjects
fill be dwelt upon.
Don’t you stay-at-homes feel as
if] you have been left out From
lone?
A. Anderson will bo clq-
vatetll from silvicultural ri'v,
search chief to acting direc
tor ( f the Texas Forest Serv
ice Jply :i, according to an
annqi iijcemcnt by President i»ibb
Gilchfist
Anderson will succeed s 8. L.
Frofd Whose resignation as acting
(Hrecioir will become effective June
30 no that he may accept the exec
utive directory hip of the American
:ry /AsiBociatiejn in Washihg*
resea ra
Thi
Forejatiry/AsiBoci
|)y (|!. Frost had been actjntf
cq April 1 of this yeat
following the resignation of W. E.
tehib j r | I 1: ’ i ■.
An lerson baa. been associated
with the Texas Forest Service for
12 y» aiv. He joined the organ iz:>-
tion iniMiay, 1936, as assistant for
ester tb the forest protection Chief
at Lifkin. Hiis duties were gradu
ally changed to forest research
and management phases. ■ I ( i.
Thi sp duties enus(*d him te be
kui
!•[ r : ' ; V ' f :
opition of director vacated
by n slgnation of W. E. White on
April I is expected to be filled by j
Septqnjbor 1.
A Field Worker
t Conclude Two-Day
Meet Here Friday
6:30 to 6:45 in the evUn
Krause will be sending y
a program called
Sponsor.”
This radio show is belnj
sored by Joyce Togs ’N T >;
ed Appliance Farm, an
Store, Frank Seale Eleclri
pany, Champion Tire
Supply, Deaton Tynewji
change, and Youngblood
The object of this quiz i:
ten to the commercial* Bi
ing and wait for hiip Ho
number. When the ‘ phftjii
do not 'answer with tjhe < uHoma
“hello,” instead, give the ij»mc o
the company you think i|j’
advertised.
The right answer will b u
ed with a dollar and th<
cumulative. To date the
four dollars.
g- Bill
ir waj
“Nhijje- The
spJonj
Unit
Ham
Cqm
!afe.
to lix-ij
read
1 you
rings
edit©
Prddpction and Marketing Ad- •
ministrat on field workers con-,
elude 1 their two-day school in in-.
formation methods here test Fri-
' day.- j '.1 ' [j 1 •_
Th >j jgnoup which attended con-
siste< of 16 district! field men And
20 ACA (AAA) secretaries.
Howard Kiingsberry, acting state
PMA director, presided at the ses
sions Arrangements were handled
l by \Li-Ij. Chenault of thg state
PMA office. Jack Sloan, visual aids
speci ilist of the vxteasion se^
|demonstrated the usp of co
slidei and other visual methods.
D. A* Adams, extension radjo
i*
f
wadfd
■ize It
Dt” is
I
y k
j
Jensen Is Inv
To Address
Dr. Fred W. Jensen, hendj of th<
chemistry department Hi s | receivt
ed an invitation to i )<)ik a
the national meeting of tl e|j\me|
can Chemical Society to I e Ik
St Louis next September.
Dr. Jensen, one Of thi e<
ists who have been invitep
,at the symposium, wi
the subject of “High 1
Oscillator Titrations*” His
tion to speak was extend tdl by
H. A. Laitinen of the Diptytm
of Chemistry, Universit
nois, at the suggestior
PWlip l Elving of the |A
Chemical Society.
ex
A
&M, was in
Of Texas
chan e of the radio clinic with a
faculty! Consisting of the.
ing radio farm directors:
Cox, W
ncr, U
wbjpI
Shell or
Th» PMA district field men gre
expected! to hold siimilar schools
for count? ACA secretaries in
their distlricts so that farmers-and
rancl mcn may receive'information
on AAA activities and programs
throigh their local newspapers'and
radio Stations.
Dr. Edds Receives
Educational Award
r,
;r
rge T. Edds, oi the De-
t of Veterinarj' Physiolo-
H IbHu
fa fellowship by the Gen-
Board, according
T. Edds; of
Veterinarj' 1
jlPharmacology, has
rlded a fellows 1 -’- 7 '-
Dducational 1 „
iJW. Williams, Vice-President
Agricultural School.u
pave of absence has been
Dr. Edds for the one-year
, at the University of
During this t
in the field of d;
and at the san
work on a doctor’s
r’-’tt
W \