The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 12, 1950, Image 1

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    I
Circulated to
More than 90% Of
College Station’s Residents
Number 22: Volume 51
The Battalion
PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE
COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1950
Nation’s Top
Safety Section
Lumberman’s 1949 Contest
Price Five Cents
First Ticket
Parse, Moss, Reed, Fuller
To Head Student Senate
First one in line, first one to jjet a non-student
Town Mali Ticket for the 1950-51 season, is W.
M. f'otts, of the Chemistry Department, left.
C. ti. ‘‘Spike” White, assistant dean of students,
center, happily hands over the ticket in exchange
for the cold cash. Jeanne McCullough, student
activities receptionist right, looks on.
Five Classes Set Reunions
For Home Game Saturday
Former students will take over
the campus this weekend as the
classes of 1910, ’25, '30, ’35, and
’40 return to A&M for their class
reunions. The feature event of the
occasion will he the A&M-VMI
football game Saturday night.
For the class of 1940 it will be
the first reunion, but for the 1910
; roup it will be just one of many.
However all classes, will follow
.inch the same reunion program,
laid Dick Heyvey, president of the
&
01
: i.
mm
Association of Former Students.
Reunion programs were organ
ized by local committees from each
class, in cooperation with the class
agents.
The general program will con
sist of registration in the Memorial
Student Center Saturday and, be
tween 2:30 and 4 Saturday after
noon, the Association of Former
Students will hold a reception for
all classes in the MSC Ballroom.
At 5j(30 p. m. all classes will
have sjeparate^ dinners in the
C._ Saturday night alt olaSKCi?..
„ T^ fl It'll t
SJiH^ii^h'iclV^Vsftti^.Jn- a. de<
1*
Snapshots foT .the :
erieland are uow- b'f
:g ccf-i
lected, Duand. ’) r ^^onber^,s
activities editor,
today. Students
lures take<n.'a|
grou]) s hyis/ itjr ■' :sn£k
interest lekfe
Aggielaivd‘^ffit'e^iVStT
In thelffitilfe^ of-
; »#wir Alass, nfneXing a»a a
i-^hioii 'Br^alfIasIT. * ’ after, •wtj’ichj
tlif/r ' .will 'In' aauiductcd ’ Uuir
Ceremort)', ^Jivyaf ds
d ;
-ucanTp;
t collegiate rifle.Aeam 'Were mi;oseftt-
V • &,. ]f ed medals u-oii-ih the 19^0-Nktional
fwm. >ian.. R0 -i-c-, nnir^JnWrcQli^iate .Rifle.
q* AaiHo rvn
dfett rn^nrber^ot lastifear’s A&M
through the MSC for wives of class
members.
Although this is the general pro
gram for all classes, Hervey said,
two classes plan individual pro
gram events. The Class of 1940
reunion will begin Friday night,
October 13, with a dinner dance at
the Maggie Parker Dining Hall
in Bryan, and their class meeting
will be held Saturday afternoon
instead of Sunday morning.
The Class of 1930 will be enter
tained after the game Sajturday
fazes ‘
eliibfKfu^, -by
C •'•Mt:. /Sub; / . f i-
/ .ft ■■'ira f tffrS •, Vi U ’ fjb’Vh *■
the • jpa'l'n "IdUfigefof- the •Membriab
StudeXtti Center.’ “ ' •. * ,f . ■
‘Clks's agents for ’ .the reunion
gvmps - -ale R; ,T. ShieJd§ ; of Dallas,
T0i 'K. C> Arriistrofig'of Houston.
! 25. ,J.. ‘A.'-Reynolds of .Dallas,. ’30,
F. W. H .Webber of, Big, Spring,
’.35';-/aud Major’F. Max- McCull'ar
of. Arlington! Vivginitl, -’40.
Spot is Dead
The Campus wept today—Spot is dead.
The famed unofficial Aggie mascot was run over
last night.
After the accident Spot was rushed to the Veter
inary Hospital where blood transfusions were adminis
tered and stimulents were given.
For a short time it looked like the “grand old dog
of A&M” would live, but five minutes after arriving at
the hospital, he passed on, Max Harkins, of the Vet
erinary Hospital, told The Battalion.
Funeral arrangements are pending.
UN Tanks Push
On Pyongyang
Tokyo, Oct. 12—lAb—Tank-led
Allied forces pushed steadily ahead
toward Pyongyang, the Red Ko
rean capital, on three fronts today.
Some Reds fiercely defended the
approaches to the seat of defiant
Premier Kim II Sung’s government.
Others withdrew.
In the final phases of what looks
like stark defeat for the Soviet
satellite Koreans, Russia’s Prime
Minister Joseph Stalin wished the
Korean Reds success. In a mes
sage to Kim the boss of the Krem
lin expressed hope for establish
ment “of a united, independent Ko
rea”—Soviet style.
Steps towai'd the goal of indepen
dence and unification under United
MM Tickets
0* +• v --mv * •:?: y Jv ..
low on Sale
i ^Ti.ck<fttk for the VMI game will
! W orv sale from 8 a. m. until 5
p. m. ah the athletic office only,
a spokesman from the athletic
office said today. The Athletic
office -is the white stucco build
ing behind the Memorial Student
Center and across from DeWare
Field House.
'‘WitlybiMTcj-c
a &i ^wMHPP ..........
lasting y(lkftjt- piW
lures shn^hUlbjrpIentiful,'’* advisdd
Vaffolentif ?“.$*■*'' ha vet two Corps
I rip-. e-V'i".-, •!u .'Sa-n ' Antoino ■ and
Waco amMowBfm&teiga»le^:-'..TJie;
^chool - ; ufeu^/l , /annual
^tber i'uiu^j'ohk
/dances,
eonncctcilj^fflak
‘ Student'
Place.’ aU-Trfeurg^.'m ap tylvelbpe
with VutfibTiffijir’ami. dorjn nujiiber
on,,tn4 outeldc. If no one is in the
Truman-MacArthur
May Meet on Mighty Mo
t & M ; tfi v elfs-a.r y '6. Cook, Jetj':'E .Braun /tnd Car-
asting yllWyxpi’i'. fniaToIjal- f(Jr- pib*/ roll ’ C, ^ Taylor. • These * mqiv. are
4.- - a }i .p.-, gphqol .ibis. semeSteb.i ,-.'■'f '
* -Robfeft./E.’ Vfpsker, and^, Clifford
A.- Taylor, 'y;ho were; members 'of
last' year’s' rifle, teaift ‘have .been
gfaduhte.d‘, bb.t will receive Ptedals
also^ M r Sgt. • AVjlliam ' R. Rees^,
e -hew^Meibbrial [tefthi co'ach, said
Washington; 6ct. 12—(A’l—feo-
lief gre>v in thp capital ^ocla^ tljat
President Truman’s historic con
ference', with .General ^fayAftbur
•this weekend.will take place aboard
the '45/000-ton Battleship. Missouri.
/.This idea gained circulation as a
result ,of reports' that the 4 Presi
dent and MacArthur are going to
Wake Island-Tor the meeting. Wakb
is aed'esolabe island about/ 2,000
Library Display Proves • • •
th ^ p - 5ct - u —. Farmers oj Ola Days'
Dan Lky Addresses | Were a Terrific Bunch
Forestry Group
„ Dap .Lay, biologist of the Texas
Game, Fish jjnd' Oyster Commis
sion, iftlih'-GSsetl a group of forest
ers from 1 College Station, Houston
and Hiptsville on “Forestry and
Its Relation to Wildlife” at Hunts-
viiks recently...
“The pineywoods area,” Lay
styted',’ “coti-ld carry considerably
more game than it does at pre
sent. The current trend to improve
I'orf^t land management practices
ire encouraging to those interested
' ift/Tncreasing the wildlife popula-
TMmA.
He' added that the construction
of fire lanes through heavy timber
stands is helpful in increasing the
wildlife population. Lay indicated
that there are 250,000 hunters in
Texas. If the game population in
v East Texas can be increased, there
atfcj impossibility of landowners ob-
tTWTOsg^itCiisb income from hunt
ing leases. -; p .
Local foresters attending, the
meeting include: E. O. Siecke/Ter
mer director of the Texas Forest
Service; D. A. Anderson, head,
Research and Education Depart
ment; Don Young, head, Manage
ment Department; E. R. Wagoner,
assistant, forestry educator, all of
the Tejcas'.Forest Service, and Dr.
Roy Ddnahue, extension agron-
omistj Texas Agricultural Exten
sion Service.
the “Register,” a fine seed drill is
illustrated. By only filling a hop
per with seed, and pushing it be
fore him, the ambitious farmer
of 1830 could plod merrily along,
row after row, seeding his farm.
This was recommended for small
farms. In the same issue, a hand
By WAYNE DAVIS
Scientific agricultural marvels
of great-great-granddad’s day are
on display in book form in an ex
hibit now appearing in the second-
floor lobby of Cushing Memorial
Library.
Composed of sixteen, books on cultivator is shown, and the ad-
farming and scientific crop pro- vertisement claims that “it is part-
duction, the exhibition promises to icularly useful for small field cul-
be highly popular with agriculture ture, cleaning such crops as car-
students who now have the chance rots, rutabagas ...”
to see how farming was done in Where a farmer with the size
the “Good Old Days.” and strength of a Shire stallion
Among the labor-saving devices could be found to manipulate the
appealing in the Illustrated An- device was not explained.
nual Register of Rural Affairs
of many, many years ago is a
slick little item called the uni
versal pl-qw.
Simple, inexpensive, and small
enough to be drawn by only seven
Span of Alabama oxen, the Uni
versal Plow was a thing of beauty
and a joy for economy. Its primary
advantage lay in a detachable
moldboard, for which could be sub
stituted a stubble moldboard, for-
w\&.cL. jdpw and moldboard, and
qbzetTsrof other forms of mold-
board which might he required to
work all types of soil.
It was predicted of this gem
of ingenuity that it would be
come a valuable and popular im
plement to all farmers unable to
buy a whole series of plows.
In a somewhat later issue of
The steam engine was appar
ently the white hope of rural
America long ago. Not less than
three are demonstrated on two
pages. Their primary use was
for threshing machinery. While
it was admitted that “fires have
been sometimes occasioned by
these engines,” it was neverthe
less pointed out that “by a fair
amount of care, the danger may
be obviated.” Fire-fighting ma
chinery for hayfield fires was
not discussed.
Times haven’t really changed
much, though. Alongside the an
cient agriculture books is a case
of profusely-illustrated entomology
books, circa 1758. Among them is
one entitled Moths and Butter
flies. And would you believe it?
Butterflies still look like that.
miles west of Hawaii. It was the
scene of bitter fighting early in
World Wai 1, II.
Persons familiar with the island
said it'offers little more than a
few quonset huts to accommodate
visitors—hardly adequate for the
some 100 persons in the two offi
cial parties.,
On the other hand, the Missouri
could provide quarters, communica
tions and an impressive setting for
the meeting. Mr. Truman and Gen
eral MacArthur eould go aboard
after traveling to Wake by air.
Thus far, the President’s itinerary
has been disclosed only as far west
as Hawai. He is scheduled to reach
there by plane tomorrow morning.
The “Mig;hty Mo” has a strong
sentimental appeal for both con
ferees. It is named for Mr. Tru
man’s home state and was spon
sored by his daughter, Margaret,
when the President was senator
from Missouri.
On its broad deck in Tokyo Bay
on Sept. 2, 1945, Japanese repre
sentatives and MacArthur signed
the formal surrender of Japan to
the allied powers, thus bringing th.e
second world war to a close.
During recent fighting in Korea,
the Missouri has added new chap
ters to its battle record. It bom
barded the east coast port of Sam-
chok, supporting a South Korean
marine landing. It was the only
U. S. battleship in active service
when the Korean fighting started.
Although the Missouri now is
most mentioned as the probable
■meeting place of the President and
MacArthur, another ship — the
Mount McKinley—has also been
discussed as a possibility. It is an
amphibious force command ship
and, accordingly, has a large
amount of quarters and communi
cations facilities.
However, the Mount McKinley is
a slow ship and might not be able
to reach the xj^inity of the meet
ing in the ttnie available since the
plans fbT the conference were
adopted. The Missouri, on the oth
er hand, can make ^3 nautical miles
an hour.
Nations auspices will be discussed
by President Truman and General
MacArthur at their Pacific confer
ence this weekend.
On the fighting fronts, the Reds
were tasting the bitter medicine
they forced on U.N. forces early
in the war.
Out-numbered and out-gunned,
the back-pedalling Communist
troops strove in vain to stem the
three-pronged offensive stabbing at
the capital.
Far ahead of the 135-mile front,
stretching slant-wise across the
peninsula north of parallel 38, Al
lied planes extended their strikes
in Red Korea close to the Manchu
rian and Siberian borders.
Withdraw
A spokesman at General NacAr
thur’s headquarters, said a general
withdrawal of from t!,00() to 10,000
Reds irqni. the central sector may
have begun. But die-hards were
fighting stubbornly on the western
end, at Kumchon, and in the north
east, near captured Wonsan port
on the sea of Japan.
Allied gains were reported in
field dispatches from the central
sector but no wholesale withdraw
als were indicated. South Korean
Sixth Division troops overwhelmed
Red resistance at the rail-highway
hubs of Kumhwa, Chorwon and
Pyongyang.
Those captured cities form a tri
angle, with Pyongyang at the apex
28 miles north of 38. Roads from
them lead northwestward toward
Pyongyang. An Eighth Army
spokesman said there was stubborn
and fierce fighting in each ttwn
beftre they were taken.
West of the triangle, U. S. First
Cavalry troopers were joined by
British and Australian troops in
their smash on Kumchon, a sup
posed defense bastion for Pyong
yang, which lies 62 miles to the
northwest.
Drive On Kumchon
AP correspondent William J.
Waugh, .with U. S. First Cavalry
troopers, said two tank-led col
umns were driving on Kumchon
from the south and east, with a
third making a wide end run to
high ground northwest of the city.
From that high ground, the cav
alry’s artillery dominated the road
leading northwest from Kumchon
toward Pyongyang. Waugh said
it was estimated some 20,000 Reds
might be trapped in and south of
Khmchon.
Maj. Gen. Hobart R. Gay, First
Cavalry Division commander, esti
mated Wednesday that a total force
of 25,000 might be defending the
Southwestern approaches to Pyong
yang.
Gay said Thursday the Reds
lacked the men for a solid defense
line, and added: “There are soft
spots and .we will find them.”
Slowed
His field officers said the ad
vance was' slowed more by precau
tions taken to wipe out all Red
pbekets than by formidable de
fenses. The Kurnchon-Pyongyang
rogd was heavily mined.
“This won’t be as fast, but it
will cost less lives,” Gay comment
ed.
The cavalry division had advanc
ed 12 miles above parallel 38 up
to noon-time Thursday.
On the northeast sector, ele
ments of the South Korean Third
and Capital Divisions battled Reds
on high ground about a mile west
of Wonsan, the big east coast oil
refining city and seaport.
Aimed at Pyongyang
The South Koreans’ advance was
aimed at Pyongyang directly across
the peninsula—95 air milgs almost
due west. Allied fighj^rs and
bombers were expected soon to op
erate from Wonsan's large airfield
in closer support of the Jepublican
troops. fl
Aggie-Ex First
Bill Parse, senior civil engineering student from Tulsa,
Okla., is president of the Student Senate for 1950-51.
Parse, Bill Moss, Dean Reed, and Joe Fuller were last
night elected to fill the Senate’s four top positions in its
¥ H \ IN* * * second meeting of the year. Moss, a senior history major
111 /til UlV1S1011 * rorn Bryan, was elected vice president; Reed, a Pasadena
junior majoring in journalism, is secretary of the Senate,
rji T/*ll I> 1 Re-elected parliamentarian was Joe Fuller, senior civil engi-
10 IVlll hedS neering student from Port Arthur.
Chosen to represent the Senate on the Student Life
An Aggie, Major Leonard Committee were W. D. “Pusher” Barnes, Lloyd Manjeot, Ken
E. Garrett, class of ’39, was 1 Wiggins, and Joe L. Johnson. This group completes the stu-
the first man in the Seventh dent representation to Student Life, which is expected to
Division to get official credit
for shooting a North Korean.
Major Garrett who is from Beau
mont, shot in self defense when
the enemy opened fire on him as
he was starting an assembly area
for infantry troops.
South Koreans told Major Gar
rett that two of the Red invaders
were hiding in a nearby rice paddy.
The former student was searching
for them when one opened fire on
him. The major returned the fire
with his .45 automatic pistol and
killed one of the Korean Commun
ists in the exchange of fire. Major
Garret then grabbed an M-l rifle
and finished off the other one.
Major Garrett was stationed at
A&M until the end of the last
school year in the School of Mili
tary Science.
The former student from Beau
mont was graduated from A&M in
1939 with a B. S. degree in Me
chanical Engineering.
While a student at A&M, Major
Garrett was a cadet Captain in G
Infantry, secretary-treasurer of the
Senior Class, Junior Student Wel
fare Representative, captain of the
Eighth Corps Area Rifle Team ’38,
and a member of American Soc
iety of Mechanical Engineers.
McFadden Says
‘More Bombs
Than Bombers’
The fifth annual sympos
ium on “Instrumentation for
the Process Industries” ended
its initial days’ activities with
a banquet in the Memorial
Student Center assembly room.
The purpose of the three day
meeting is to exchange ideas on
problems relating to the process in
dustry.
Over 230 men attended the ban
quet. R. D. Nichols, of the Magno
lia Petroleum Corporation, was the
master of ceremonies for the even
ing.
After dinner served by the MSC
dining staff, the group was enter
tained by a quartet from Prairie
Vievy College.
The after dinner speaker was
Dave McFadden, of the Humble
Oil Company, at present assigned
to the Chance-Vought Aircraft Cor
poration. McFadden, who has
adopted, the B-36 as his hobby
enumerated the many merits of
this “magnesium monster,” pres
ently the world’s largest airplane.
“This country heeds more sound,
logical thinldivg among its mid
dle class of people. In this manner
we will be abl^ to educate the
younger generatW in the proper
channels of thought so as to pre
vent socialism, communism, and
any other isms contrary to our way
of life from conquering this na
tion as it has others.:
“It is now possible fok me to an
nounce this country has more A-
bombs than it has A-borpb car
riers.”
McFadden concluded hi^ talk
with a four line poem. It goes;
Every time I pass a church .
I always go in to visit,
For when I pass into the great be
yond,
The Lord won’t have to say,
Who is it?”
Dr. Lee of Ireland
Addresses AVMA
Dr. Robert P. Lee of Dublin,
Ireland, member of the veterinary
branch of the Department of Ag
riculture of Ireland, spoke to the
Junior Chapter of the American
Veterinary Medical Association.
Tuesday night in the Lecture Room
of the Veterinary Hospital.
Dr. Lee spoke on the veterinary
and agricultural problems of Ire
land as compared with those of the
United States and more particular
ly those of Texas.
After graduating from the Col
lege of Veterinary Medicine of
Ireland at Dublin in 1943, Dr. Lee
spent four years in Africa with
the Colonial Service.
meet and organize soon. Ferris Brown was elected as the
Senate’s representative to the Memorial Student Center
—— 4-Council.
One new office was established
at the meeting. After a motion
by I. E. “Monty” Montgomery
passed, Curtis Edwards, corps
chaplain, was elected by acclama
tion as chaplain of the Senate for
the year.
A student seating arrangement
for , Kyle Field, with only one
change from that of last year, was
passed by the Senate. Montgom
ery presented the plan, the result
of a study which had been made
after the Tuesday night meeting.
“Our only change from last
year’s arrangement will be that
non-military students receive one
less row at the top of the stands,”
Montgomery said. He used a large
diagram of Kyle Field’s stands to
explain his proposal.
As the plan now stands, corps
seniors will occupy seats immedi
ately behind the band, starting on
the 50-yard line and stretching
north to the 14. Rows 13 through
33 will he set aside for corps sen
iors in this area.
Civilian Students
Civilian students have the area
immediately behind the corps sen
iors—the top seven rows from the
50 north to the 14—allotted to
MSC Groups
Organizational
Plans Complete
Final organization of the
Memorial Student Center Ac
tivities Committees is nearing
completion, according to J.
Wayne Stark, director.
There will be an explanation of
the various MSC sponsored activ
ities and organizations which stu
dents can join, Monday night, at
7:15, in the MSC Assembly Room.
MSC sponsored committees, and |
activities, some of which have been
organized for a year now, are the
Browsing Library, Music Commit
tee, Art Gallery Committee, House
Committee, Bridge Committee,
Games Committee, Camera Com
mittee, Craft Committee, and the
Bowling Club.
The MSC Council, governing
body of these various activities,
plans to set up a directorate to
determine room space to be allo
cated each of the committees, clubs,
ami activities. Chairmen of, com
mittees and presidents of all MSC
sponsored activities or clubs will
be members of the directorate.
The president of the MSC Coun
cil will also he president of the
directorate. This president will be
a member of the , student bod.y in
the unique position of presiding
over members of the faculty and
ex-students. The student president
will be announced by the MSC
Council at one of its bi-monthly
meetings.
The MSC Council has !t!10,000 for
the purpose of financing the activ
ities. A large part of this revenue
comes from Student Activities fees.
The Council determines who will
be invited as guests and speakers
and allocates the money for financ
ing room space from budgetary
requests of the organizations.
These programs are designed to
offer the student a more balanced
education, from a social and class
room angle, Stark said. Besides
learning how to earn'a living, the
student will also learn/ the art of
living,, he concluded.
A&M-OU Films
Main Theme on
OB Me^ c ig
The BatAli<J^i^(arterback
Club meets in the As
sembly Hall with the main
theme of the program being
carried out with the showing
of the OU-A&M football movies.
The regular scheduled speaker
for tonight was supposed to be the
scout of Virginia Military Insti
tute, but the person will not be
available. Perron Shoemaker, the
scout, is also Fish football coach,
and is with the freshman eleven hi
V^aco.
Tl^e Contest will be conducted as
always and the winner of last
week’ll contest will be presented
with the two tickets to the game
this weekend.
The meeting and the contest’are
open to evetyone and no admission
or entry fee is charged. The Bat
talion is able to sponsor the Quar
terback Club and contest due ,to
the cooperation yf Bryan business
men.
These bilginessrften and their bus
inesses are. Elton‘D. Smith, San
itary Dairies^ Ralph Stacy, Kelly’s
Restaurant; Charles Cade Sr., Bry
Students may begin filing for
the senatorship from Dorm 4, a
representative of the Senate’s
Election Comriutfee annouiU'ed,
last night. The ddrhutofyjtlul
not have a qualified candidate
in the original '.election lafet
week.
Candidates may file in the
Student Activities office, second
floor of Goodwin Hall. All ap
plications for candidacy must be
made bv 5 p.m. Monday (Oct.
16).
Qualifications for the position
are as follows:
The candidate must live in
Dorm 4.
He must have a grade point
ratio of 1.0 or better.
He must have attended
A&M during the two previous
semesters.
He must be academically
classified as a sophomore or
above.
He must not have an exces
sive number of activity points,
should he be elected.
them. In addition, those students
have all rows from row 25—in
cluding that row—to the top of the
stands, beginning at the north end
14-yard line and around to Ramp
M in the end zone. From Ramp Yf
to the mid-point of the end zone,
all rows from 13 to the top are
theirs.
A special map of the sealing
plan will be printed in Friday’s
Battalion.
Acting upon a motion by Fuller,
the Senate requested its Publicity
Committee to announce any extra
seats that are not filled by visit
ing schools, should they be avail
able for A&M students.
After election of officers and
members of Student Life, the re
mainder of the meeting was taken
up with election of committeemen
for the numerous committees of
the Senate.
(Sde SENATE ELECTS, Page 6)
the Class of 1932 with
with the Class of 1Q17 second k'ith
an Motors; Charles R. Potts, Jew-| $1,935, and the Class of 1943 has
Former Students
Raise $52,961 Sum
The 1950 Development Fund of
the^Association of Former Students
has reached $52,961 through Sept.
21, according to Dick Hervey, exe-
dutive secretary.
Deadlin^\for the fund drive is
Dec. 31 anVi. the present fund
will have to increase by 51 per
cent if it is tl\ reach the goal
of $80,000. ^
In the amount contributed and
per cent of contributork^from their
groups, the older classes, are in
the lead. Biggest donor sixfar is
Class of 1932 with $4,492,
elry; Guy W. Sims, Marshall Bul
lock, Bullock-Sims Clothiers; J. C.
Hotard, Hotard’s Cafeteria; Joe
Faulk, Lacks Associate Store; C.
L. Atmar, Parker-Astin Hardware;
J. E. Clayton, Johnny Morrell, The
Texan; and S. Peters, Peters Music
Store.
a total of $1,878.80.
The Class of 1943 led the top
three in number of men contribut
ing with a total of 307, followed
by the class of 1945 with 302 con
tributors and the Class of 1942
was third with 280 members re-
i porting.