* ji • ' i I 1 ' I V ;c -Re/ults of have beerj a Agent Silver ed as contea. te Lee Fazzin< ora in the atal test. Castro dairy cattfe j j|iiging Lee Ffazzi if tool; in the state iridlviduB Brazos county | tjeatti bounty by rough.,! Over 5()0 bdy tftivnl ejidei-i \ part in the Various teats and jthe t fl e but an ejtjima o tended th Mbndi Adul agent« of viii mark, of tha 1 •d. Dutfwoo r th« ItouHe of I Mi L.l Wlimm, •ral ttxtthHloii Hlrfll’p lm IffiT Hourjd.tl •nv morn hf,i iFtojf I.y dub iia l # ' l< ‘ 1 weHHlort. f . ll dng'a Hev, JtiiM, l! the A AM Mejl the inyoeatlDi ■ Adu|t fK hanqutlt At HI and were ndl A Ruaad, A&M\ Today E Hounfup. ' L jjl 1 urt inee hitst •air com Bil k fou < air j llladtlll tan i 011 Hifry n 'orU « iretd U I «et Walj^ee Kimb- e< / rcli, bounty Limher tisifiid Slrector (leport- dr of I, and Fed. sppn* •efoj’e enlity 4.H morn- .or of gnvti ed it night Dmi tif the J Singing Metmnon i the the ♦ ' tet. Most •the cbmbt land 0rc of 1 Ph| est GROV w#dns»day, Thursday, ndem .in i y. Co l • , Ji |D»il I i a |ii oink Hsturdi . Kid ^Hunrtiiy ortls Mondaj Tuesda/, Black H „ a Ic otln |wi Tor ijt i CM tile | ; No, C > 11 in for an oil pictured on give, the >ro Civil Enjhv first hand foundatio i c I The 21 to a giant, < orkj ? by the Watojp pany of Da Mr. Watsth Jack, were iij . ago construe State Hi| ;hw t were on thejj when the;' de j a demons ;rat to the ei gi plained tl at Ju new in f( t!in4al wanted t> a tpmhiTow s ei i method. ji On Ut ilr saved th» st it mrs ight standing nep hand, ie Combo Jrcjf ce at f, for p. m., Vector leads boys lUifds Jcr- il, The new $n0,000 building of the College Station Htale Bank, Nerves as a liackgrouitd for a view of the old frame structure where College Station citizens once did their hanking, Faculty Relations Report Up For Final Action Thursday nltjO SajK Dm my hnson idnpn on sax, ami Members of the local chapter of till' American Assoclotloti if l!ni- ve|rslty I’rofessorM wilt meet to morrow nlgbti at 7:80 o'clock in the Assembly Boom of the YMCA to take final action on a committee report on family rela tions with the President, the Chan cellor, nnd Members.of the A&M Hoard of Directors, Committee ChuirmnnrOtis Miller said today. The- committee, after a three months survey-study of the! subject assigned to it, recommends that the faculty be given representation 01$ the Board of Directors of the College in an advisory and con sultative capacity, without the right to vote, j As a basis for such faculty rep resentation on the Board of Direct ors • the report declnrest “The growth of institutionalism at Tex as A&M College, which hjas been inevitable ns. a result of the ex- La- (mansion in all phases of its opera tion, has brought about an un desirable degree of separation be tween faculty and directors. The experience* in many other colleges jpritone Hev. Impel. ftalpj), has etojt for ql to for pjj)|4j||»r quar- mters of e )ULE ft ^ggie- !■ [Tn and> •i ig s r ut rg - r iv’j F f - *rr ne;i oin Qif i er pf Dan is Ag- Ilec* Movie a procedure to ht‘lp recapture and make explicit some of thej earlier spirit of cooperation sho*jvs that the problem is neither unique nor unsolvable. This [ encourages the belief that greater cooperation can and should be developed here." 'The report also points out that Opportunity Award (riven by Mothers K. E. M(■Quillen, directof of the Developement Fund, recently nn- nounced a Hchidurshlp dottuUd by the Han Antdnio AAM iMothers plub. The Nchblundiip Is an oppof- tunity award.' The scholarship, which Ik $1,000 for. four years, or $lir>0 per year, will he awarded to a San Antonio boy who will enter A&M (ember, McQuillen said. Announce- mynt of tho awardee has not yet bean made, hut. will probably be made soon,'MeQuillen added. in Hep- “ibo severance of this mutuality of interest nnd cooperation between faculty and Idirectors is artificial and destructive. It creates the fear on the part of both directors and faculty that each will encroach upon the sacred domain of the other; it implies that directors an* incompetent to deal with peda gogical matters; and it creates the implication that the members of the faculty do not possess the competence, generally recognized in the other professions, to partici pate intelligently in the determina tion of fundamental policies re lating to the field of endeavor in which they arc extensively edu cated and to which their lives arc dedicated.” ‘ th* report also recommends the appointment of a faculty consti tutional committee to spend at lease ni.nc months study on facul ty government nnd to draft a constitution under which the A&M faculty would operate after such cobstitution had been approved by the executive and administrative toffidals and the B<>urd of Direct ors of the College. The committee making the study and presenting the repart is com posed of Otis Miller, Department of Journalism; Dr. Thomas F. Mayo, Head of the Fiiigiish De partment; Norman F. Kode, pro fessor of Electrical Engineering; and'L. 8. Paine, professor of Ag ricultural Economics. - Jester Signs Big Game Laws And A&M Airport Legislation AUSTIN, Tex., June 15—(-/B—Texas big game hunters ami universities ,with formaimug must buy a special $2 license next season under a bill signed by Gov. Beau ford H. jester yesterday. The bill by Rep. John Crosthwait of Dallas places that fee on deer and turkey hunting and provides for tagging of slain deer. It will go into effect* f “ : 90i days after the end of the ses sion. Other bills signed today included: H. B. 39(5 - - Reed - - Donating to Dallas flood control district all State General Revenue nnd Valor em taxes for next two years, not to exceed $100,000 a year, tip-day bill. 8. li, 477 - - Hazelwood - - Auth orizing West Texas State and Tex as A&M Colleges to own and op erate airports. Immediate effect; Ik fi. 453 * - Jackson ■* - Em ergency appropriation of $3,000 for Department of Agriculture out of monies voluntarily paid by Cer tified Heed Breeders and Growers. Immediate effect. II. B, fit)I - - Hull ■ - Authorizes employment of purchasing, agents ami assistants in certain, counties, Immediate effect.’ H. B. f»48 - - Bradshaw - -Two- year closed season on deer nnd T College Station .. • oundation Featured ikon Foundation Firm a is not •rttus Used to >f the lient a’ new mique. >it like |reloped Com- Hs son, days or the They Dallas d give lure Mon ex- hething ^,ion, he urce of iis hew Okt they h time Widfo cotnpari- ! ■on was made by doing half the- foundation by the old method of pile driving. I On the demonstration, threfe holes Were drilled to a depth of about 30 feet. The rig can drill a' 30 foot hole in about .30 minutes. A lineal foot of dirt is removed on each operation. i The holes drilled on the campus are not going to be the foundation of any proposed building. Thermo couples are to be placed jin each hole to measure the temperature beneath the ground. Temperature of the ground affects the mois ture flow in the soil. The moisture flow in turn causes buildings to heave and erack. An excellent ex ample was Guion Hall before it was repaired. In constructing’ a foundation by this new method, the holes : are drilled to 22 - - Mokes & Stokard - - Closed season on deer in Navarro County. Immediate effect. H. B. 025 - - Heflin - - Relating to operation of jury wheels, re moving maximum for payment of clerical hel|\ Immediate effect. H. B, 002 - - Parkhbuse - - Re quiring all cities to keep current muii in office of City Secretary or Town Clerk, showing municipal boundaries. Immediate effect, H. B< 007 - - Brooks of Red River - • Open season on dear in Red River, Larum and Familn Counties. Immediate effect. H. B. 700 • • Loving - • Closed season oil wild turkey in Jask County. Immediate effect. II. B. 713 - -'ParkhouM -Am- mends Employees Retirement Sys tem Act so as to clarify procedure by which employees may serve us ex Offit'io members on Board of Trustees. Immediate effect. H. B. 732 - - Stovell - - Chong- ing the name of Hu! Ross State Teachers College nt Alpine to Sul Ross State College. Immediate ef fect. Future Aggies A son, Christopher Curtis, was born last Wednesday to Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Oliver Higgs. Higgs is a mechanical engineering student from San Antonio. WEATHER EAST TEXAS: Partly cloudy in the north, cloudy with local thundershowers in south portions this afternoon and tonight. Thursday part ly cloudy, local thundershowers near Upper Coast. Not much change in tempera- ture. Gentle to moderate vari able Winds on the coast, most ly aputherly. Partly cloudy wmi. this afternoon, tonight and Thurs day; not much change In tempera tura. College Stati To Hold Formal Ope / A "A f-r.. ■ V ■ ■ lU. >.. . Gear Meeting Held Friday In ME Building / *■. i \ \ J *1 rY /., v ' The American Society of Mechanical Engineers Gear Conference was held Friday, June 10 in the M.E. Building, R. M. Wingren, chairman of the South. Texas Section, an nounced that the conference was held to discuss gear prob lems and their solutions in this region. Approximately twenty-five via- itors attended. Prpf. V. L. noughti« of the Uni versity of Texan acted as chair man for the group of talks on gear design and mnlntenanca In the morning session. J. B. Hopper of the Lufkin Foundry nnd Ma chine Go, spoke on gear problems nt the Lufkin plant. Himllar.prob lems nt (he LcTournrnu plant In Longview were discussed by Paul McAdams. Kenneth N, Mills of the Emsoo Derrick and Equipment Co, talked about problems there. The afternoon session began nt 2 p.m, with Prof. K. M, Matson of Southern Methodist University In charge. James A. Trull of the Hy-. ait Bearing Co., spoke on bearing' selection. Installation and care. Lubrication problems . were dis cussed by B. P. Robertson of the Humble Oil nnd Refining Co. Professor C. W. Crawford of the ME department, speaking of Wtn- gren, said: "Mr. Wtngren has done the most outstanding job In or ganizing activity of any chairman of the South Texas Section of the last decade." \ ,’ / T’ ' '* Puppy, But No Cougar Love At UH DALLAS, June 16—(/P»—Uni versity of Houston students tried to arrange n wedding between their mascot, Shasta; a cougar, and Tom, a male of the same spec ies at the Marsalis. Park Zoo here. But Shasta has been unimpres sed by the old college try, She sleeps through the. games. The ash-blond cougar was furn ished a veil, a cake nnd other wed ding trimmings for the ceremony that was planned yesterday. She was put into thi cage with Tom, a 12-year-old cat. Shasta Is three. Perhaps the disparity in their ages hud unmet king to do with it. Tom liked Shgstu’s looks but it wasn’t mutual] After a few gestures, Shasta swatted Tom on the Mde of the hand. Jim Buchanan, an Engineering student from the University, said he hoped In time Shasta would change her mind. "We| sure could use another mascot,” hb said. V /. Y President H. A. Llpscoipb of the HUtlon H‘«g* It it nk. College .which formally building fiNlay. Hi ale opens B a n k, its new ■NMNaMMsqMBMMMM* Hughes Speaks To Kiwanians “The most common weaktieNs among A&M students is jin (riiHq- Ing ability the ulillljty to not only read words, but to Int^rpet iwhrtl they mean," sa,Ul Holloway Hughes, advisor of the A&M Votoiqn'ii Ap praisal Service. Hughes spoke yes terday at the weekly hmiheon meeting of the KlWqjnls Club on the subject, “Guldanc*." “Many people seeip to think tv guidance program is (for the pur pose of influencing the studont to take one course of study or an other. This is not true," Kahj Mr. Hughes, “it is more like* a sign post at a fork in the road, sh iwing the student where each br$ncn will lead, not recommending orie or the other, but leaving that cho ce to\ the 4udent.” The guidance program attempts to use tektsdtt helping the student find th*Tiql J D. D. Biirchnrd r Journalism Dcpu'rtmm the 70th Annual Mel Texas Press Associatli in Galveston, June 1 Elmer Wheeler, 4 man from Dallas, will con vent Ion’s fantill'ajl Rolwrt E. Htrlpllug, former chairman of Committee on livltlcs will also utidpj Ushers. On Thursday aflM day of jtlic meeting* I people'will take Id l dozen yachts which wl disposal for a cruise i< MarbqE Thursday I will attend a dinner j CaldeE one of the responsible for-the bu Southland I’nper Mil Friday afternoon, p^|| be entertained with a At a breakfast on Han ing, awards in the paper Contests will to Texas’ outstuiulin! s. One of the .higlili convention will hei a Shamrock Hotel in itji' day morning. 1 The first meetingj ( Press Association wi Hutchins House IP May 19, 11*80, with tending. “We've grdWf numbers and in usofili hewspapers of Texas pic we serve,” said 0 TPA president" anti the Baytown Daily our ambition to i <|ou(; crease the usefulness papers of the state, sd t be of even greater s* communities." | .v| 4^ n. 1 ili mil -re r nig iihitii i 1 r i Ex-Aggie Walter class of ’43, an ng^ soil specialist,, whs it«ov. Bemiford H. J( do the' State Prison Cardwell majored Husbandry. He was the ‘ Ross Volunteerjj president ofl the j Country Club. Caldwell will rrsiin hershlp on the soil board to take tiie new t He Is also Chairman Foundation. Profs Will Attend ASEE Convention Several members of tho School of Engineering will attend /the American Society of Engineering Education annual convention to be held at Rensaleer Polytechnic In stitute, Tray, New York from June 20 to June 26. In addition to H. W. Barlow, dean of engineering, the party will include W. E, Street, head of. the Department of Engineering Draw ing; V. M. Faires, head of the Department of Management En gineering; E. E. Brush, head of the Department of Aeronautical Engineering; Dr. J. D. Lindsay, head of the Department of Chem ical Engineering; C. W. Crawford, head of the Department of Mech anical Engineering; J. G. McGuire, Engineering Drawing dept.; R. L. Peurifoy, Civil Engineering dept.; S. A. Wykes, Management Engin eering dept; and A. R. Burgess, Management Engineering dept Dein Barlow, Dr. Lindsay, Brush, Faires, and Peurifoy will attend the convention as official represen tatives of the college. '/ McGuire will present a paper on “The Theory of the Ellipse Guide.” ? . / On the way back from the A. S. E. E. Convention, Dean Barlow and Brush will attend a Symposium on Supersonic Flow to be held at the Naval Ordnaiwa, Whiteoak Maryland, / N % ; !v ■ ' ! Number 4 a iik /h l i* pip d »Mr|S[K.7" WM ok & Mayfleh ‘j/m, designed I' 1 i Ilk i Ll Jthe formal opening of building w'U be held at Springs Road and Tau- n received from iGov. auford H. Jester, Ronald e, vlje president of the attomd Bank. New York, 'Mia Cfljnpell, vice preatdent atioiAR City Bank of New allege Station State Bank •ned for business on July lb n prefabricated wooden g| measuring 32 by 82 feet. was conducted in thia g until February, 194*9, wh«n buildihg was started, ng the const ruction' of the • hiding, the hank was located iirhry quartern i In Die Ho- lams Insuianee Ageiiry ■jrhljph wan ijiri'iipled fur .Y", pb I Arch 11 eels ■new huikL fdiimlatlon Art iiiulei'ieamet In a ifleplh of 118 feel Will HljiHsihle Die nddlllim of au- siory when neenssary in the, . L, V, HaUnm i»r Bryan Iki eontrartor for Dip Job. ,, Liritl’d mi the mezzanine floor j I Lwi' fallowing: employee'al nri', (lining tallies for employees. r*(it irji’ (jiisrtrfs, ami a storage m|I k imijy room, In which the nlr- ii(|tiiiliiliig unit Is housed. The 0 ii(gi Klillioning system Is also ad- for hen ting, the Imildiag winter months. , . miczaianiMe ground floor ig space is;of asphalt tile, of'psi'/" 0 floor in the lobby ana quarters.- The roof On sU'ri bar jolstn. , Jb4ilding is of modem rte- Tpei interior walls are done 1 green, with metui vtine- iiid$ to match. The spacious an two enlarged counters OKqmiier use. The fixturea are 0rO Ore four paying and rel _ tellers' cages, and one hote slleciiort cage, the upper per- >f th|e fixtures being encased e gljasa panels. Lighting is ct]throughout;. There are sep- spupd-proof office ’adjacent conferencesj The bank i lern office equipment nfojilrhjnult, and* in equipped with a!k jfor recording on film all ic^iops processed through the ■ . '.j artk was originally opened pstncisH July 1* 194fli At the of husine** on thati