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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 1948)
'\1 III : t 4 I I i f k 1 r[’‘l| ■ EAST COAST STRIKE CONFERENCES . BE# 1 i NEW YORK, Nov. ferences Monday iti an to settle a waterfront stri <f which has . paralyzed thfr east dtast’nibiR Ports- 1^ ■' ’ ii ; | |jj <! l am going to> give the picture up to date,” sa, Pi Ryan, president Of the ternational Longshoreme ciation, before: conferring Mayor William O’" - Ryan made his a meeting with Thomas E federal conciliator, and rn^ml the union’s wage negotiating Com mittee. irery,[ item Ji 8 , is&ificH PUSi Ndv. CABIN CRUIS i IN GULF OFF CORPUS CHRI; r . j (iD—The Coast Ghard a I continued today a. search foot cabin cruiser with orte * aboard. /■'■{ . j. i. j Coast Guard officers laid Shook of San Antonio lejfi V,, Naval Air Station dock n| Co: 4< r Christi Wednesda/i cnrou Myers, Fla. the boat is gene.” Snook had scheduled Galveston, the Coast Gu and should have arrived t day. There has been no re him. The Coast Guard euUl ton" loft Coi*pus Chrlstl n ycstordny ami a PBM reijc took off from tha air sttjMc * hours .later; - \'M . i AIRLIFT PLANS - CKAHHKH, HDRNR BERLIN, Nov, H, Navy plane pounds of coal I lin crashed and burned atjj hof Airfield last night, of four suffered Injuries, The plane. whfoK onlj Joined the fleet bi} Air I flying over the Russian overshot the runway upor Lt. Cmdr. Stephen Lucl uilbt, was not. seriously , lie was burned, |j’ fj The others, less aeriou were identified as Capt. L. Grenadier. U. S. 'Air F WUliam 0. Kueftcer, U. and Sidney P. Pointer, U. enlisted man. Kuertcer’s ‘ GALLUP DEFENDS PO ON GENERAL NEW YORK, Polluter'Oeetfe r tlon polls serve good,” but other* render invaluable eervi nation. ' Gallup, president* of th can Institute of public made his statement Mon on -NBC’s “meet the p: gram. He did not expand oif marks regarding election stoutly defended the nr other forms of public opi : pling. He did say,, howe he planned to continue th purvey. bpf 4 |tjri' illy Dies dc, I'z mm. iopi % At ritsy of ipn &m- r^leliS! ^ buian- <iom. f “Our heads are bloody! ‘ Ijowed/.' he declared, reffitrih^ to poll returns whi<gf pickbil Gov. Thomas E. Dewey to wi * ‘ * cent presidential election HOUSE BEGgfe AUTO MARKET IN«8TIGAT WASHINGTON, Nov. Two witnesses tbl mlttoe ytstcniay over $B00 presents or ’’c payments" when (Hey bo ightjii ears from a Washlhgten ISi. company official wmiod < story, 'li. jf: The special house com questionable trado timet li vd by Rap. Maoy (R-N^ ed two saltm agendas to Automobile Dealers’ poll asked General Mdtblv C ^p.J 4 representatives bn hnnd.f i ijlj The hearings aw the *esulw of several months’ investlgt ('on Maijy said last .Week 'We found that some dealers 1 five every effort to deal fairly.,... , . . , - , honestly with the: pubHit. Olj|! the chairmarj df the 1948 Christmas other hand, we hkte foijtiid Other Seal Sal* lit Brazos County, dealers who resbrt to evjtry Ques tionable trade practice ir or squeeze the greatest ajtnou money from the anxious pu er.” The committee estimatftd far this year new car ipu cross the country have pat' the Hudson Motor :Car 0 III |( p Hr didn’t want and have than $200,000,000 throui valuing or trade-ins. • -rr SIX KILLED IN CALC &TT. CALCUTTA, Sat., No " Six persons were'‘repo and 68 wounded today munal clash in Nbithe : i :i'a i. Ml Volume f i ’. j.j I'M •v. 'V "hi li A 4.11^4 D.V 1M ^ A,' ■ 1 ■ PUB '■ h- ■t •etary Will A Committee T< i ' Mi< Student I of the St ing WS£ ' mb +Hf | ; !• By LOUIS MORGAN feanne Cook, traveling secretary for the World rice Fund, will speak to the Executive Committee lent Senate tonight on the importance of support- on the campus! !; ' major purposes of WSSF are to help studei Meed of (oiing their education because of the lack of heces- ■fsities, and to build up studei t soli- ‘ darity throughout the work ^ Mist Cook told members of the YMCA Cabinet last night American students can he! SF most by taking an into and learning about fqrcic dents, Miss Cook said. She urgea that all students take time to be come aware of WSSF a|»d ip pur poses. MIm Cook graduated front Kent State College, Ohio, last spring and was employed as traveling secretary for the WSSF Ini Sep tember. Excepting weekendo, she visited a college a day in, Ohio and Indiana during the month of October. She has also visited five colleges in Arkansas, and four in Oklahoma. •rv «pl!* Kadio Held iat A&M A radio school for the col legiate PFA chapter and the Agrlcultiiriil Kxtcimion Meth ods 441j(Ja»8 will meet for tlu> flrpt Itime from 3 to 6 thla ftftcirnoon in the Lecture Room of! the Agricultural En gineering fiuildlng, according to K. N. Ungley, chnirman of the radio <fommlttpe. A sclmol, iin which methods of fratherliw iMreparing, ami presont- mg Infojrr mtion of an agricultural nature to a -radio audience will be Htudled, Ik planned, Langley said. D. A, \diam, extension service radio editor! and program diirector for the''Vitas Farm and Home Program, will conduct the school. Adam stiiteai that student* will prepare Bind! record programs and Then plaV them back for group eriticiara. [ i , • ! I TO, r. - The vi lue of radio as a meana \ of presenting news to farm peo- j pie will be the topic for dia- icusKion 11 (he first meeting. Meetings each Tuesday and m 3 to 6 for 6 weeks new planned and further plans 11 be announced at the finrt : meeting, Langley concluded. Annud Christinas paignfill Next Week Seal Oper tito i The fo: tyi-second annual; sale of Chitistma i j*eal*!]to finance the an- ti-tuberct loais campaign of the Na tional Tu »efculosis Associat bn add affiliated organization* wi l open Monday, and continue through Christmai Day, ty.ke Birron, pres ident of |thc Brazos CoUnty Asso- ciatioti, annpunetd today. The Chrlatmaa Seal pic- a small blond boy in ml pa ns slitlbg on the floor with la handii ejasped about hi* knees, guzing .Into a blazing fireplacti over whlfhi three empty stockings Mb • J.i [ I i The Texas tuberculosis rate jis 88,d deatih 100,000 population, based otij «. total of 2,744 deaths. (The nstifmrtl rate Is 88.2 per 100,- ‘ on 000 ’ l ^ ,d ’ i - L iand! NT A Statistic* reveal that Tex- isve ^ade «s hn* 8,2 dares of tuborculo* ch annual death i above! the national avefa a re- Which re of 3.8 case* for each annual: dentl The touil number of new reported: Ip Texas ip 1047 8,808. ' [. ' [and Mrs. Dansby of Brybn t o«o,ooo fo. JNeatier Completion Exams for Dept Being Competitive positions in publ tion with the affil units of the Tel imina hea ited 1< Heal the freed t.r ment will be gl tern Council announced frdaj Positions for which-ex^mii will bo conducted are: specter, Milk Sanitarian Drug Inspector, Sanitar an ant, Sanitation Aosocia iei, riun, and Senior! Senit<fria n trance salaries r* _ to $3450. . iP! t /. ions th Ddbart rit Sys for .n|U- ■ fl ! re eiv wtlc iiifcs : iU- n- 8100 con- IN struction it pourin Accord! headach< is the sdai ^0, mcd$S'- Center Is Sixteen Carloai : I More ithdn 16 carloiads of build ing materiials have already been placed bilojw ground.level: at) the [site of tie Memoral Student Cen ter, acccjrding to K. R. Simmons, superintendent in charge of con struction!. j Concrete, lumber and other ma terials a fei being consumed at the rate of 11 Carload a day, Simmons said. | : i , j - ‘ i The basement below Section I, which is tQ be the futurle home of the barber (shop, has been complet ed. Work above the ground level canno{t begin " until eiarljir June, bove n" un KtedMo^rilli cement to S the buildi: „ ty of reinforcing the center may lie held Simmons said. if I IimI engineers cing steel HI/: TOKTO worker* strike ,iNpv. 10 —i-T)— Seven- ty-five tHopsafrl metal mine work- a union t: AAM is tho first college Mu* hu visited In Texas, but sho plans t< leave for tho University ot illous - ton Wednesday. Shit exneofri to b 'n Texu* until Thnnk*g|vltig holi days begin. : T Miss Cook said she became in terested In WSSF becauije she felt that it was the one Oppor tunity a college student pas to do something about the world situation. i . She emphasized that all nkl sup died through WSSF wa* distribu ted on a basis of need with| no dis crimination on racial or political grounds, The organization furnish es little cash aid to'students, Miss Cook said, but Units itself mostly ’-o supplying books, food; And. ■lothing, and supporting libraries and rest camps f >r tubercular stu dents. WSSF aervicea are now being extended to tiuiee areas i of the: world, Miss Cook point* out Since its establishment in! 1937, by the YMCA and YWCA to give aid to Chinese students, WSSF now distributes its servi ces equally to Ejurope, China and Southwest Asia. The organiza tion is sponsored by Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish student organizations. European students who have been helped through W$$F are now giving assistance to students n other parts of the world through the World Student Relief zation, Miss Cook sajd. Health Education Director Will Address PE Club “Our Responsibility in a Well- rounded Health, Physica '• Kducn- lon, Recreation Program’' will bo the subject of on address by Lewis flpours, state director of; Health Education, In the civil engineering lecture Room at 7:30 Thursday evening, according to L. K, Winder Jr. of the Physical Education Club. Spears received his bachelor’s degree in health and phymral edu cation from Texas Tfechjlln 1938. He taught physical eduction and was trainer of athletic teafrs at Texas Tech from 1938 to H94l He served as a physical fitneis officer in the Army Air Corps: from 1942 to 1946. j ! • , In 1947 he received his Master of Education degree in. health and physical education frbm ithe Uni versity of Texas. Since 1947 Spears hasjserved in his present capacity Os director '.1 the Division of Health Ijlducut jr ip the State Department of Educa tion. ; r ' Winder emphasized that attend ance is not confined to club mem bers and that anyone who is in terested may attend. u TH!' *'! ■I,Hi. ■- > > v FR v r' <4 T /f If. ■LISHED COIXEGE STATION'I Aggicland). TEXAS ! TUESDAY; NOVEMBER 16,1W8 . .V ■ [ I l-'l 1 IK. RRil l:kl ,li; It. /.I/-V' ii ; R 1 Jfjjl . i; v ' n . ■ r-v' on t> l,l ' > mi •lil: ==*= I 4 •’! • > ■ I: rl ‘ In Bryan Audito v By DAVE COSLETf li: .! I si « Ji' : J.-. ■iu- :i'K ; --5 Ml 1 • > Number 78 A- ROBERT 8WINNEY, another member of the Aggie Players, will play the na» , t of Leo Hub bard in “The Little Foxes.” JEANNE, KERNODLE trill play the role of Birdie Hubbard in the coming *t*ge! production. “The little Foxea.” j f l JE W1LLMAN is an- other mejmber of the Aggie Play ers who will present the stage play, “The Little Foxea-” Will- man will play the part of Oarar Hubbard 1 . Tf |! LINDY HESTER Witt play the part of Addie in the stage play, “The Little Foxes.” The first performance wlllif be given Thursday evening In tho Assem bly Half. I Raymond Swing, news analyst and radio personality, will bei the featured speaker on the Bryan Artist’s Series program, 8 tonight in Stephen F. Austirv'High Schboj auditorium. Swing, with a background of 41 years in journalism, soured to pop of the German invasion of Poland ih 1939 with his Analyses of the eve last war. He is still sought for his objective approach And judgment Of cf f —■: ■! .. Cofrmentfrjg on the jprenent per- Veteran Aggie Players Naiked To Roles In “The Little | conditions djonge iod ofpo*tWir uncerti inty, Swing d, “lit is an oid fact that mtire quickly ajnd yro are in the pro- Publications, Journalism Dept To Give Weekly Radio Program A&M Student Publications and the Journalism Depart ment will team to present a weekly program oyer WTAW as part of “The College Speaks” series. Presented under the general title of ‘The Editor’s Voice,’ each of the publications will take turns on the Friday after- ioon 1 broadcast. The Journalism*— f ~ i 1—j ■} : j ■ - t Trend anil Effect Course Listed Fo: Spring Semester | Rural ..Sociology 412, jtjhe study of population trends and their ef fects ofr. the economic ajnd social welfare people, will be offere for the firify time next semester according to Dan Russel, profes sor of rural sociology, j \ 1 The course will include a study of the distribution and growth of the world pqpulation with empha sis on the United States and es- Texas population trends, r course, ttural sjo-: is as a prerequisite y 206. Aij r »tudejnt ademic st« iding i wledge of iDcial pi vovar, be Allowed course, Ru»rell a nta will paed oi tion of tha initruo- iw eoim. ' !!■ , K2» £ three h ciology 2 Rural ! with a _ sufficient blama may taka ‘ tod. Si the tor! Department will give every fourth program in the Series. Two members of the Battalion staff will team with Donald D. Burchard, head of the Journalism Department, to present the first program at 5:15 p. m. Friday over WTAW. Dave Coalett and Henry Micha lak, both student* In beginning repurling, and Rurehiml will din- cuss the origin of Journal U|n work at A&M and outline future plans for journalism Department. The schedule for the group to handle tho progrnmn i* a* follows: December 3 The Commfntstor December 10—-The Engineer December 17—The Battalion January 7—Journallffr Dept. January M—Longhorn January 21—The Agriculturist. Tho editor or co-editors ,for each ublieation will be res|)onjiibic for the program!. .M ] [ 1 •• 'I .■.jf'. | CHIANG RUMORS SPIKED NANKING, Nov. 16 —L*) Hoi- lington Tong, government! spokes man, branded a* absolutely false oday Communist statements that ome Kuomintang leaders were seeking to force president; Chiang Kai-Shek to “abdicate."; Reserve Officers To Be Interviewed For Qualifications Tht- Department oi the Army Huh direct«(| that Organized Reiiorvi! Offieer* bd inyentoried of their ijuallficntionHi I Colonel Oscar B. Abbott, senior army Instructor for tho Ofgnnixedi Roservos in Texas, announced Thuwdiiy. The inventory will bifl used to es tablish for fru-h reservist a snoelnl- ty hared on his military and civil ian cxmcrlnnce anil education, to allow the Army to give a mobiliza tion aitHignlment to the individual reserve officer, to establish n bal anced lmsi*{ for the Organized Re serve Corps, and to givje considera tion to the! request of the reserve officers foij assignment and parti cipation ifr the ORC, By JOHN W. LAUFENBBRG Three returning members of The Aggio Players have bedn named to receive role* in tho Aggie Player*’ production of “Tho Little Foxo*” which opens Thursday night in the Assembly Hall. George C. Wlllman, Jr. ho* been cant in the role of Oscar Hubbard, Countess Jones will appear as Alexandria Giddenf, and Robert Swlntvcy will portray Loo Hub bard. ! • | j. /j j} | The rolo of Oscar Hubbard marks tho second rolo in an Aggie Elayer production fqr George C. Wlllman. HU first appear unco was aa! Constable Warren in “Our Town.” Ah Oflcar Hubbard, Wlllman I Interprets the role with n force- fulness that gives new meaning to the character of the vicious and sadistic Hubbard whose only . thoughts arc of power, money, and his own welfare. Wlllman had much experience prior to Joining the Aggie Players, for he participated in all of the school play* which were presented while he attended Smithville High School. He also took part in th; interscholastic competition ; for one act plays, and won aeveral first and second places in interscholastic debate meets. Wlllman is now doing graduate work on his master's—having re ceived his BS degree in (K-onomics from AAM in June, 1948^ . .. He has been a member of the Fencing Team and the YMCA Council, and in 1944 he was presi dent of the YMCA Cabinet. He served in the army as a 1st Lt. in the tank destroyers, the field ar tillery, and later in Staff Head quarters of the European com mand. Countess Jones, who makes her debut this season as Alexan dria Giddens, last appeared on the Assembly Hall stage os Mrs. Gibbs in “Our TowU.” She did important work backstage on the ^production “Hedda Gabler." ^ Countess Jones i is the wife of Robert L. Jones, a Junior M.E. student, and they both reside in • Bryan. . ■ ] If ' * ‘ Highland m ! carious posi tion of -1 eotcring on * ' * v * uu nk oi the d ^ live by in 1948. The trouble if we are not oi the dangerous folly trsths of 1019 Park High School* Tyler Junior | l )iving in U 1(919World. The world ' ' ror ' u/ active of Wilson 1* gone, and « new one College and TSCW. Shi In *cveral plays *t TJC iand at U upbn TSCW. While , at freslelind: she ActV was a radio arfrouheor for! station , aff ‘ KDNT, and upon iaavingi TSCW Sw •he Joined tho Dallns Morning resi News as a reporter, She hfe* work- Born •d for Tho Brynn Ncv^, and |,Swim nor Mrir Jar etiveTJn rep frn in (ortlimd - Ut wtlon led 'Obfrrttn College , . ,J aneii did and Conservi tory%f Muald. Ho en- •ome publicity work In Hcnuton t«red; Journu Um AV the age of 19 11 ' m, 4 Wport T omithd Cleveland andjin San Antonia'•, / •• , . A* Alexandria G4<Wfha ( who U „ stift, Innocent, beautiful, young I In WM, h« > beoamo h member of Imly! of the deep tiouthb GoumU 1 ** rijo board of iHlltors of Tho Nation. June* h perfect. 7 fl" E i That ymr «tNo aaw film .turn to mdlo aa u ou Ter, u ctireer in which nternatlofril acclnitu. this past Rummer ink on world ti ie first war fareign cor- yekri. NeW York, Robert Hwlnnoy; • aenfrr his- lioJor! :eu hlH first several seasons wl as Leo Hubbard •n* but grai of Oscar and Swlnnoy has been actlvfrln Are be mulveU li .JSSiWn ,, > l * 't" • k - - 1 Mmrlw . iVvinncy has l>#ert actlv«il„ — mnt|c work from Klli Junior high I «a. b ou« first rad » common- ve won oth of the that pr< esslon, the’ Peah war he ovdi! IlltCti tho Krlilsh Empire and shortwfred to Utln Amerl- HWlng's: U Ik, schooldays Utroug^s coHi'gq ca- “ ' has untiear-1 Series, will Can’t Take It’ Wlth You,”j!“Junior I idultf and 13,60 forfrtu’donJs ^hnd Awards. broadcast 1 kkets for flte scried are ™P reer, He Is 4 chafBI mWhber of the Aggie Ploiyers and ha*! appear ed in their production* tit “You Can’t Take It With You ” ."Junior, T .~ Mis*,”, “A Muixler Has Been, Ar- Utuddmts* wires, ranged,” and 1 has done buftk-Mag* | ’ !' ^— worjt on the This past sur SI,ter S.innjp, U>i,« ney should enWoke galea ter from the audiences fine 1 interprefrtion of the iv.v. MasonfrCreljiir Have Picture Made rtiirt! on thh year’s Bryan Artist* Series, will fart nt 8 p. m. Season i $6.for tho ootond pro* M Se Mrs. Jones attended Highlaiu Smliitf ManTw Turkey Day Game Announced Today Married student* and tholr wives will sit in Sections 3 and 4 in the west stands of Memorial Stadium and other studonfr and their dates will occupy tho oiist stand from the 50 yard line south for the Texas game, Charles Klrkhnm, president of tho Student Skate, said today. Ticket* for wmii will be $1.20 in the 2000 seat section reserved for them. Date ticket* for a place in the 8,892 seat! area of the east are being stands cost $3.60, Klrkham said. purchased f< holders must bbott said. Tho questionnaires forwarded in three cobies, one to If tickets are be used ail a work spect by the (west stand, reservist and the remaining two the tickets are marked, to be filled in and forwarded to said, the office of the senior army in- j The tickets will be on sale Until structor in Austin. 16:00 p. m. today. . r i—^ ;— v 4 - 1 "-" - The Hour of Charm I ! Brilliant Shorn By AltkGirl Orchestra Opens Totyn Hall |3y WICK VAN KOWENHOVEN Phil Spitalny and hi* 35—count sm—36 beautiful musicians open 'd the 1948-49 Town Hall series n Guion Hall last night. The hall vas packed as never before for a Town Hall event. The new stage ■ame Into its own, accommodating comfortably a group that; could tot have been Squeezed onto the boards a year ago—what with two uanos, a harp, a sousaphone, a huge set of sky-blue drums and tther instruments. Spitalny’s group is aj little dif ferent from 1 most of the events scheduled as Town Hall programs. He 'works in the middlcf-land that resents our of the group successfully over the air as The Charm. Lijght classics, with an oc casional switch to either popular or serious music, make up the pro gram. , j Outstanding artist, as expected, was Evelyn, who.is billed as “the girl with the magic violin.” In “Russian Rhapsody,” “Claire de Lune,” and “Hora Staccato,” Eve lyn showed mastery of the bow equal to that of many concert vir tuoso^;' f ' j. But the big hit; so |far as AAM students wore concjerneid, Vos Jeanette McLean, the trum who peter 1 from Cali nas made good time. In the Concerto Jeanette invited com Harry James, and; dents wsre heard “against James the big th tally, there are three girls from Texas in the Spitalny organization. Other featured performers were Myrna Loo, whose songs; varied from “Listen to the Mockingbird” to Gounod’s “Ave Maria;” Jean Phillips (from Laredo) who sang the “Bell Song” from Lakme; Jean Pate who gave a rich, moving “Lord’s Prayer,” and Betty Kelly who presented a rousing “Free dom Train.”,! ; ! • Louise (Spitalny** musicians go only by first names unless there are more than one of that name) was brilliant in Gershwin’s ^Rhap sody in Blue” and Scarlatti’s “f nata in A Major.” Ti”; > The performance ended SpitalnF verajon of th« k “Ni Emblem Mareh,” treated all On. Nov, 1 Compass Clu SM ay at '"lieu" the Sqi Wcdnessiay ai; met and heart change the name to the Sul Ron Study Group. ! . i 7 ; Mi p All E. A., F. C., and M.M-isWl 4re either student* or efrplpy of the College are reques tend ita meeting* to boioi acquainted ami dittusn Common interest. During i; plci of iryilii it ii booed that *overal ntiN Mi tonic Hpeakenr will. addriiiur th 4Toup, i among them Horsop Jadnon, ... . |: ’ Ir Wednesday aftornt her 17, at.6:18 p. m., ... t)u< Chemistrv Building, the jno wfU • have It* picture n Hd4; 1 the Longhorn *nd the Textt* Gtatt LiHlgjD Magazine. Alt jjMiirdni whether they bu E, A.L IL C.l OX M*»ter* ana who are sttfrenl* employee* of the college! are r* |que*ti*d and urged to bo prelim (. John Hermanson W* Will Address A Fellowship Grou ill : V' The Bort en and Keep dairy scholarship} will be presented during the Kream and Kow Klub meeti ig tonight at 7:30 In the Lect ire:Boom of Mark Fral cia !H; ill, Don Shelton, pre6 dent a unounced Monday. The Borden Gbmpapy of New YOrk .City awards 1 first semijst ho has tajien s in lairy hu achieved r thehlgi rd in hin class t year. Tho it >y the h ad of tl each year senior atu- a cwr^iuore rndry and t seholasth- ling his ent is selec- Dairy Hus- ^nfoi ted b; baniiry DepaKmept _... Brynn Blaock of Bordon’s wlU t tho i wart. ' ) I ,„JUnan Fi Heep, past president nt tfid Amerikn Jersey Cattle Club Will preserit Ids anndal awards of tioo to tfr{ dairy husbandry stu dent* of Ithi i Sophoijnoro, Junior, snd Senior; Classes having the highest scholastic mtard* in thslr respective cIussMi during the pre- redin* year. He wiili give $60 to >*: dairy bisbqmlry students Of Jo Sophomore, Junior and Sonloi Cftasss* haVifg the sn : ! ... ■ . ' M . 1 John Hermanson, the Inter-Vo •ity Christian FelioWshlb If member for Texas, Oklahoma, i Kansas, will be guest speaker a meeting of the Aggie Christ! FelloW*hip at 7:16 Wednesday «■ the YMCA, KenJtamW j pus Wednesday, Thursday,; an I Friday of this Week, Kunihiro ,' k . CjlaSM* haviiiL. . , Ncbohistlc h« :orils {of the proved second highest . .o*J* , Hh dton saljtl, will aWsnl $200 to tho I IMP wll ., *hmsn (is ry liusbSndry student ring achieved ! the higheat scho- tic: and U>i dership record in 4-H club'or FFA work ii Texas high scnools for the preesding year. BUiock will make the principal talk, and a n ovie on (the science of |k milk Secretin i will b(j shown, Shel- -.-i-L- #— l^ e Longhorn ]the 'meeting .Club pictures for iff [be take i * * lelton added. MJ ors are we Visitor meeting, Kunihiro sohal counseling by ■tjsaw BuildW” beu£’.t tl illfhmre division superintend of poultry at Ui4 wu Fat Stock Show, rtin will superintend try; Beanbloesom, “ •nd Pare ■‘t ay he arranged throng luerjin Room 130, f for The tx>n t the Wednei Ktmihiro added. Pat Slock I how j. 1 . ■k) A- I ! w durinf Landscapers iWin ° 1 ption Race . 11 i • The LandJcape Ar|t Club is the winner of The Agriculturist sub scription con est, Gerald York, edi tor, announced today. The Land scaper* obt* ned 1.7 subscriptions per club frefrber to Win first plice and a free barbecue, York said. In secoi d place wts the Kftam and Kow Klub,! wfrch ran the * ndscape dub a close race by Ing 1.1 subscriptions per nr-rr, Soclety __ , riptions any othei club, bi it since It has member »hp of 11), it averaged tty; 1.2 sub cription* per member Yorkaddfri.ir 3 ii ves Member» intent <i! .ruing to Wldlif rm: 'j of the Wildlife Man- class lift Saturday nak* a biological y of condlkions of Lake Tsxemu. F, T. jCijapp seoompanled teti an (the trip. The to return to-