.T P1 '<''•] A ! yd ' j' T, r i .. ' /. / . .“f* ‘J ■ i. 'h r r :i ■ jT'L ' *A.M ’ v r •? / • .\i * ts-.M : mm j j ■; : < , . . ........ ■swii i F’ T-'Fmm ■■ lr||: i;!^v:'\ V - j i 4 [j. : J'.' //j ‘ i l 4 ivki /: 1 !l X A: n > • • 1 • (• . if .hr ■ ' ■ .i ■ 1 ■ - i I . ;j f: EV ; i'll /'K;l ■' OF A GREATER AAM faa K<< r .'■i| Volume 48 exas <<1 c. t. Yoftiu mert of Texfis" Walhau»0|i read long Acjeor ling to W»lha .mn, T«xm^ h«i 0<) lha nation for t < t>Mt »«v> «’ial yoi ra In Induitifitir ^ohutnic- tlon, ro taivlnK nearly, n a gOVt and of: nouthwestern nut other (jwilltlea. Tcxue toxoa and atabie govor the Bfeutcat attraction^ "The Tone** Manu ' Rocimtion believe# tlia ern nent appropriatio: ■ho ild be kept withinioiii* ineome," Wa hausen told, the jgi'bup. He mentioued the tremendous irjerease in atate spending for thin 1,947-48 perod as compared td 1||87 38. \ral ausen advocated a“ WHit-and I;, see attitude in Austim wffotie bur- denjing the ttate wlth|rtiptfe taxes. He fei.red that, higher jnd is trial taxles would drivie industry away frofh ’ rexas to areal Jltr tllarly ble isec with Texas’ advantag es but off srjr g less tax inteffevem e. 1 Earlier in the day,(the confer ence began its two-dayi session inj thje YMCA Chapel. After a welcoming address by President Bolton, a film wasj shown on T exai i industry. Lei am d S. Hob son, professor of Indpstrlal Edu- ci ktton at Kansas State College, s|>oke on the "Causes; for Job Evaluation.” T : ^|||[ the need for Ijv \ j I f 3itng ie rsta nding between Imnhl and liibor, Hobson slid] " many years ago employee r w( re not of major import induslry . . . They ( w< ire! 't interested in rebsoi is for the thini place in indu ' think yotr Kill »! [Sen MANA< tiidents Soi t Annual .. ) Stddenta who wot or e o»e frland# * or* pOMsed away during ate lequasted to (of of th e Muater Col Mirartgomonts to a t u< Annual AggH will Iho held on Apr The program, whH i!uct)d on the oatr Iroakast oyer jut iWetwork, Dick Hyr) cf the Association c ents. said. Th«j roll! for sir Student# whe i wair since last! Apr The members (pommittee, who ai prodram, feel that dr "Hi ref un- lement U too iations tte in took jay, I me, 6) ate# Swhd Mm** [Oiuliors eke "•t iC' f iihoi Id answer ■oil call for the djtce .dace. T ie committee echc) box available ans ver througl rani :ement will sf t le roll call for the ers ias well as campus. >e man is n of the fol passed a G. L Spann umely P. Greek ugh E. Wood len Dale ~ aines W. ilUam E. Charles F. Charles D. Jon Anyone eligible for any of the aW is requested to corbai Rice, 41 Leggett, “ Dick Hervey, so^ation of h o: vej 's phone n mm ,y: yp j i Ji I con- I lw llty lury Stu\ called Ussed ' J hipster the ain .« -be tiskes alve an men to “ !ar- fept ten- tihe • . !H<> r who f Students Visit A new building in rearing itn stately, modern Ixiumn on the campus, It is the bandstand shell on the west side of the Grove. , .Constructed of concrete tile, The Shell will be completed Within the next two or three weeks, accqrding to Joseph ♦Hahn. Job foreman. "Aft^r that time the Grove will be available for any of the sche duled spring dunces,” C. G. White, director of Student Activities, said today. He further statedj that the Grove equipped with it# modern addition may be used for dances, concerts, roller skating, and motion pictures this summer. The building will be approxi mately 60 by 30 by 23 feet and will include beneath its asbestos fjhingle roof a stage four feet high, three storage rooms, two rest rooms, and a concessions room. In the concessions room, hamburgers, soft drinks, and candy bars, will be sold, j Columns on each side of the stage will support the roof which will slant back at a 22 degree angle. A suitable color of paint for the character of the edifice has not been selected. Box plants, shrubs, and flowers will be grown[in flower beds and in built-in crevices of the struc ture. . ,Jj Contractor for the construction is R. B. Butler. A. G. Nixon, Class of ’33, is the general superintend- ant and Gordon Hill, Class of ’85, is job superintendant. Architect for the project is Carlton Adams. Construction was b^un Febru ary 14. Forty-six sophomores from John Tai-teton Agricultural College and the Uvalde Jun ior College will visit the A&M Campus this week-end, Dean Charles N. Shepardson, an nounced yesterday. Formerly only the group from John Tarleton was expected to make the trip but Dean Shepard son said that 16'additional sopho mores would bo here from Uvalde Junior College; 1 The men will arrive here Friday morning and Will be addressed, by Dean Sbepardsop at 11 a. m. In the afternoon the men will confer with the various department heads to determine the number of trans ferable hours that each has. The Agricultural Council will be host to the visiting students for the evening meal and will also pro vide entertainment. Dr. He P. T'olter will show the slinc filw.s which he took in the Orient. All tlw club j resioents are expected to deliver a ohort address, telling the visitors of G’C activities nnd plans of their respective clubs. Saturday the members of the Agriculture Council will conduct the visitors through the various agriculture departments, Dean C. N. Shepards m said that the object of the visit is to help the undecid ed students choose their major field and to ahow the students who have already picked their field what AAM has to offer. Tho visi tors will leave Saturday afternoon. Blue Ribbon Ham Shown by Riley ' H. E. Riley from Canton, Texas, exhibited the first nlace ham in the recent Animal Husbandry 431 ham show. 0. D. Butler, professor in the Animal Husbandry Department/ served as the official judge of tm show, and Roy Snyder, professor in the AH Department, awarded Riley with the winning ham. Dean Charles N. Shepardson* C. Peniston, manager of/ the sistence Department and Bill kemper, supervising chef, witnes sed the show. / here own Irvin G 1 . S Her- Gil< Stlo, chancellor th n morning he will confer of the Englr Piesidenfa ( wiv Safety, M Gilchrist, a# Kaginear's " IK A, A, Pott aid 0, W, Pr m ike plans for t) <>r Highway Washington, Potter Is 3 Purdue ind Rlnear for the nistratlon, -j The St. Louis about 8 days,: 1 u li left Vthere ibers .I s ring p lut 5,400 QUARTERS, 800 DIMES PRICE OF NEW AUTO BEAUMONT, An auto mobile salesman and his assistants needed four hours to count the money a Beaumont negro gave for 4 83,000 car. Experimenting With Substitutes Milk substitutes in Cflf feeding are being studied and J experimen ted with by Wilson Anthony* who is preparing n thesis for his mas ters degree. He is woi king in co operation with the Dairy Husban dry Department whcr> he is an instructor. Anthony Intends to fiemulate In expensive milk substitutes that will maintain ' optimum growth when uged fP early dalf feeding. His experiments are niknle on Holh stein ami Jersey calves that art* fed a limited whole mjilk schedule and gruel. Other established feed}- ing systems are used l as control!* at the same time. /Great variability in i weight nnd condition has been Observed in calves fed on four different gruel mixtures. Dried whey was the only milk constituent used in the gruels. Calves fed.on 1 mited whole milk were In better 'condition at six months, and the cost was about the same as for th'! gruel fed calves. No definite conclusions can be drawn yet, according [to Anthony, and the experiment w’ll be con tinued for some timei. Anthony will receive his masters degree in June. He graduated from the University of Illinois with a B. S. degree in Dairy Husbandry in February, 1948. I ROBERTA MtJltKHK, Rice In stitute senior from Houston, will represent Rice at the Cotton Hull as a, Cotton Ducheaa. Hhe will be.-escorted by Charles Rates, Nvtfior Architecture major. ers .] j 1 Forbidden In Texas Waters AUSTIN, March 24 —(& A new plan to keep Louisi ana shrimp boats out of Tex as waters was sent back to the House Game and Fish committee after opponents of the bill succeeded jin lacking on two amendments on the House floor yesterday. The bill, by Senator Jimmy Phil lips of Angleton, had the approval of the governor and the state game and fish commission. It ori ginally would have allowed the game and fish department to make a survey each,year and issue com mercial fishing licenses on the basis of cstinmted edible marine life available off the Texas Coast. Rep. Miller Walker of Beau mont, who sponsored the bill al ready passed by the Senate, said it would allow the commission to keep Louisiana shrimp boats from 'invading Texas waters in large numbers. Ah amendment by Rep. Marshall Bell of San Antonio changed the license provisions to prohibit the game and fish commission from setting any duota on the dumber of commercial Ashing licenses to be issued each year. The amend- 'tnent, adopted 84-38, also would allow each fishing boat, regardless of size, to catch the same amount of Another amendment by Bell, adopted 77-38, would prohibit tho giwjuu add fish commission from issuing Hcoiihcn on any priority basis. Tho Vlglnul bill would havo given present license holders top pHhrity, j \ i id Walker said the amendment would allow Imuislnnn bonis to set licenaesi es well as Texas honts. A move l)y the\ opponents to recommit the bill to\ne State Af fairs Gomml(:tee failed 71-58. It was then recommitted to the game nnd fish committee by a voice vote. ‘! [ j . \ u lumber 15) \ Torn Named Head Of Texas CROP a., y \ J , « . ■ L : N Elmer R. Tom of Taylor, has been appointed state director for CROP, officially known as Chris tian Rural Overseas Program, it was announced today by Daniel Cj Russell, chairman of the Texas CROP committee. At a meeting here of religious, agricultural, educational and busii ness leaders it was decided to con tinue the CROP program in Texas for 1949. Si KIK Mk iPl ■ ■; Wy** $ £ r Visit Lubbock Area Teachers K, R, Alexander, bond oi* the Agrlcultural\Education Depiirtment, will leave March 27, for a week’# extensive tour of the Lubbock Area. \ The purpose of his tour will bt* to visit 15 January Ag Ed Grad uates who are teaching vocatiol^il agriculture in high schools. A po! icy of tlu* dcimctmont, said Alex nndur, is to visitj every agriculture teacher some time during his first year to give him teacher at- sistande. On Monday, March 28, Alexan der will stop ovler at Texas Tech. There he will visit Ray Chappclie, head of the Agricultural Educa tion Department and W. L. Stran ge], Dean of Agriculture. Sometime during the week, he expects to visit IWe#t Texas State Teachers College at Canyon. On Friday, Alexander will be the guest of Frank/Kennedy, vocation al agricultural, teacher, in Quail. At an FFA Father and Son Banquet Saturday night in Dal- hart, Alexander will be the guest speaker/Frank McDaniel, a Jan uary graduate, is the teacher the|e, Alexander will return to College Station Sunday, April 3. Proposal in House For Division Of University Fund AUSTIN, March 24 —UP)—The House yesterday in effect killed one bill to tax natural gas and gave new life to a proposal to divide part of the university per manent fund income among all- state supported colleges. This action came while legisla tors were mulling over the latest plan to solve the taxation-spending issue. It was a suggestion that only one-year appropriations be made thia season, leaving tax talk and future spending to a special session next January. * The tax bill was Rep. Derio Tu- fares’ measure levying a cent and n half on each 1,000 cubic feet of natural gas,. It was sent to an un favorable subcommittee by the House revenue and taxation com mittee. Tufares asked the House to send it to the Committee on highways and roads .The House re* fused 85 to 50 and that virtually finished the bill. By a vote of 71 to 50, the lipase granted Rep. James L. Norton’s request to send the college fund proposal to the committee on con stitutional amendments, which had sent it to an: unfriendly subcom mittee. The action gave the pro posed constitutional change a new lease on life. Gov. Beauford H. Jester had no immediate recommendation on the proposal voiced by Lt, Gov. Allan Shivers yesterday to postpone fin- 1 kl decision oh spending and tax ation until next year. He said it deserved consideration and study. ■ ■ ► 1 ! A By C. C. MUNI Guion Hall's newly enlarged stage will receive Ing when the Aggie Players open their second mail nar ? s romantic edmedy, “The Play’a The Thing.’ Mrs. Jeanne Ostner has been cast in the begin at 8 p. m. ; - I, , /A ' \ . ii ■ I..,. ■■■■ — i — .i. - m m frv f »■§ Sft.f H r if rM js£fia ... T , , — -iwl k»* atnaeera w me icam arr. •»••<»» Penii, F»rt Worthi Delvln HsrreH, Bflblllei ()r»(ly 8huiie wires, After « struggle, he broke free, dragging several hundred S nrdM of wire up a hillside and lumpting service over a wide area, m gr | A \'/>‘r'{ "\ \H- - Tit! * ptlsm of the your this eve Ferenc Mol prodqptk) i which wilL ban nj>- and i Of. * h Will MKS. JKANNE OSTNEK, former member of ihe Tennessee Playhouse and the Jacksonville Little Theater, Starring role tonight when the Aggie Players present Moll Play's The Thing". ;/ 1 play, Which Tojrmanees «>n Broad ban 2(KI Wh repfoduMd { VeUe«l! I> romantic , brmighil iq feature#,:t4i i ghts who trouhlti wi n a young by JUltry iptlful Ilunfl Mrs, Ostrn OfUutr, lor U. 1ft epaitiiH'iit,; resH, hwvinl Univoi-sitj ousc and Theater, has wiorki 'dth/B n more than n It first yin 1020 it was succoi* st Apr|l. Is a liHlmps of two tvu their hands i\ a love affair j ttiusIrlaTi, pur- IcFni'Inml, and Hjtubo portray* io[ Is the wife lUr of tho Mill- H on expeiten-* been a member I of Tonnesshe/ is. Jacksonville th groups, n which shj g for Lef lorse.f 1 Krause a long time ie , Players, ! of the t complicati 'affair betwi : musician Sligehi T e[rs of [ the 3 Players, n and ; R0f tlai the pa in i tMell in Ahei I Wtfc nlay’g set 1 filled castj ra. . tfi . Puddy productions land among tho participated are ' yr "Three Men r‘1 Remember a C. G. Milne, j tembers of 4he will take the lojiplaywrighbi. .[plemsnt of tho i Horn and the portrayed by to (other veteran Players, George rt Blakeney will bi Dwomitschek t comedy actions; hg is in a sus- on the Italian nd Betty Bisby been cast-if the play as two [who do their part to help hg. who recently from Columbia been active in f this' second . ntation. In will incorpor- of make-up. setting taught ! Masquerade Dance / f ■ • 4 i r ' I i 1 . I*V IK ' If An effort will be made to contact approxfonaft}! high nchoolH that have an enrollment of400 or ntqn " Open House Day, Bennie Zinn, director of Studfnt told members of the Opert House Committee, TuMpy.] Zinn presented a letten which had been sent tcthtfHe} -♦(flub presidents by jClrwt assistant director or. StlnJ*', tiviltlos, The letter tdd n/tj>i send ab AAM student Id k#; Texas high schools; as dmi In this letter Elms j’peij that each club presld bers of his! organlzd 111 all the towns c( club membership, ted that uniforme .bers would ;be prefei Since there would ob, .., enough of these to take I the schools, non-miUtar^_ would be used also. In a* ner senior students will red to lower classmen. affair podge Dillay] lined to A& rersity, 'h I production le! Player 1 llav icth Seqtatloq, ai Columbia. uvou wjas Play’s embers of iochnical si if Uhls jda. Icflors who mu Aggie }g[tbiH gro lUntPHH H.| Dajjvin fob^W/l lay will ed.in production e Thing" by all a Aggie Players, f for the produc- hcluded many of ve appeared In «yer productions, were J. Howard (Ones, Carl 8t«v« lodges, Dick Al ice,^. D.j HIvHvm fenberg. ! w featured tonight rm ,'rlday nlgli In Guion Hall In Iwfejof the nig|}ar movie. Tickets <1. ^ule in lln Btudent Aetivi- fflee ar al|tl)o boxonioe. ac- to John ff,aufmibrrg, chair* t rpinmlttec. A Masquerade Ball will be held in the gymnasium at Consolidated High School at 7:30 Friday night, according to Nancy Reynolds, so cial reporter for tne Consolidated High School paper. The ball is sponsored, bV the Consolidated Senior Class btut is open to the general public. Admis sion is SOtf. The two best costumes will be selected at. the dance and the Win ners will be rewarded by having their photograph taken together. Everyone is requested to cpme in costume but a costume is not necessary for admission, Miss Rey nolds said. A Olds Will Address Chemistry Society AlF. C. Olds, mechanical super intendent of the Proctor; and Gam ble Manufacturing Company plant at Dallas, will speak to the j Stu dent Chapter of the American In stitute of Chemical Engineers Thursday evening at 7:15 ins the Petroleum Lecture Room, Gene Boynton, president, stated today. Olds will speak on the problems S resented young engineers and on ow changing technology causes changes in plant operations and processes. “All chemical engineer ing students are invited,” Boynton said. . v . jf\ - ■ . . m , Barnes Author Of ■ Article in Magazine A story by Walter Barnes, as sistant director of the AAM Pho tographic and Visual Aids Labora tory is the lend article In the Mardh is#u£ of "Audio Visual Guide,” a publication In the field of audio-visual education, The article hi one of a series appearing In the monthly publloa- tfon during the next several months, It streseeo the planning of the nnalwetlon of a filmstrip, The style is eunveraational, j "My next article will deal with script writing,” Barnas said, •. j. In his letter Elms yeqU« the club presidents^: cor office in Room 212, God and register the naities who have been cltpsef purpose before Saturds 26. Plans are bein£ meeting of these tepr who will speak in the in order to supply the! formation and suggest’ their talks, 'the letter , In .conclusion the let that the two principle of this program a^e students in coming to to extend an inviutic school stud; Open House Day held here on Ma James W. Andre the original sched’ for the Open Hous to be condensed so advertising has no to print was orii House the Ross Voluntee: bera of the pro ( about condensing t! dule of activities. The committee will rt|ii next Tuesday evening at 1 Howard Harlow's lit it a program , as . iginally planned, 1 Committee awq iw Miss Cam Be Cotton Mary Lou Carroll, has beep choeen by t» Gam* Club j»s their the Oottuh Vageuftt a Miss Carroll will be Don Kberhart c wildlife managav U< ‘Mm V; ' man- )WARDS, recently parti- Jevelopment of job ires now in el-companies. m BA] E.'Sl US Cl tee m« i family- ' ve be. theft! i! Inst’ «r,j ntdncc efsun, ioh. v; four Sthoolj! '28, Hi mor at To do, ANDITS CE8 liTI, March 24+- ib^rs of a Corpqa pother and entenced in. $9,000 from 23. one of the ;e burned $3,1 n. Rosa Rico, to two years Va., Wor n was comr in tih# Fede^ Englewood, sentenced 4 w m h in Did irk mu, Fedasal TAriH HIGH HlfOLDB I 8TIN, itop [plea tli. I hiiiler thei a Mm fedi ,)hi 1(1 Wadnij p jeme ICour G 14 dcketlng is la ' speech guai'H eonstlUiBon f by the Ti ■ ■? I