The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 01, 1951, Image 1

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    -vtiT
V cOP^ Official Paper
Of Texas A&M College
And College Station
Number 11: Volume 52
The Battalion
PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE
COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS MONDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1951
See SWC
Statistics
Page 3
Price Five Cents
Dates, Places
Set for College
Draft Quizzes
Newly announced college quali
fication tests for draft deferment
consideration will be administered
in Texas at 60 educational insti
tutions in 46 towns and cities.
The first test will be given Dec.
13 and the second on April 24.
Applications for the December
test must be postmarked not later
than midnight Nov. 5. For the
April test the postmark must not
be later than March 10.
Brig. Gen. Paul L. Wakefield,
state Selective Service director,
said Texas draft boards would
have bulletins of information, ap
plication cards, and other neces-
Sportsmanship
Group to Meet
At Arkansas
The first meeting of the
Southwest Conference Sports-
manshipCommittee will get
under way in Fayetteville,
Ark., home of the University
of Arkansas Oct. 8.
Delegates from the colleges in
the SWC will attend the meeting
and take up items for the coordi
nation and cooperation between the
colleges.
Attending the meeting will be
members of the student govern
ment, editors of the school papers,
yell leaders, newswriters, and oth
er campus leaders.
Last year the meeting was held
on the A&M campus. The com
mittee was founded in 1947 by The
Battalion. The A&M paper dona
ted a three-foot-tall gold trophy to
be given to the school, which dur
ing the year exhibited the greatest
Jimount of sportsmanship.
At the meeting last year the
question of appointing a recog
nized sporswriter to the commit-
mittee was discussed. The motion
was passed and A&M appointed
Jack Gallagher of the Houston
Post as its representative.
Also a the Spring meeting it
was decided the winner of the tro
phy would be selected on the basis
of two votes cast during the year.
One vote will be taken at the end
of he football season and another
at the end of the basketball sea
son. The winner will be announced
at the annual Cotton Bowl gtme on
New Year’s day.
The trophy is now held by SMU,
who is a two-time winner. If the
trophy is won three time in a row
it goes to that school for perman
ent ownership.
sary material for student appli
cants by Wednesday, Oct. 3.
He urged students not to make
application for the material before
that time. He said the biggest de
mand for the printed material by
students would be on local boards
in college and university towns.
Students who make scores of 70
or better on the tests are eligible
for consideration by draft boards
for deferment as students. Boards
also may consider class standing
or other factors.
Students who have never receiv
ed a previous statutory deferment
to attend college, including fresh
men who began work this fall, are
entitled to a statutory deferment
for a full academic year, but after
that defennent will have to be on
other grounds, such as test score
or class standing.
The state draft director said
students who have taken the test
before will not be allowed to take
it again.
Testing Centers
Towns and institutions at which
the tests will be given follow:
Abilene—Abilene Christian, Har-
din-Simmons, McMurray; Alpine—
Sul Ross State; Amarillo—Ama
rillo College; Arlington State; Aus
tin—Samuel Huston, University of
Texas.
Baytown—Lee; Beaumont—La
mar; Big Spring—Howard County
Junior; Borger—Frank Phillips;
Brenham — Blinn; Brownsville—
Texas Southrnost; Brownwood—
Howard Payne.
Canyon—West Texas State; Col
lege Station—A&M; Commerce—
East Texas State; Corpus Christi
—Del Mar; Crockett—Mary Allen;
Dallas—SMU; Denton—North Tex
as State.
El Paso—Texas Western; Fort
Worth—TCU, Texas Wesleyan;
Hawkins—Jarvis Christian; Hous
ton—Rice, South Texas, Texas
Southern, University of Houston;
Huntsville—Sam Houston State.
Kilgore—Kilgore College; Kings
ville—Texas A&I; Laredo—Laredo
Junior; Lubbock — Texas Tech;
Marshall—Bishop, East Texas Bap
tist, Wiley; Nacogdoches—Stephen
F. Austin State.
Odessa—Odessa College; Paris—
Paris Junior; Plainview—Wayland;
Prairie View—Prairie View A&M;
San Angelo—San Angelo; San An
tonio—St. Mary’s St. Phillip’s, San
Antonio College, Trinity.
San Marcos—Southwest Texas
State; Sherman—Austin College;
Stephenville—Tarleton State; Tex
arkana—Texarkana College; Tyler
—Texas College, Tyler Junior; Vic
toria—Victoria College.
Waco — Baylor, Paul Quinn;
Waxahachie—Southwestern Bible
Institute; Wichita Falls—Midwest
ern.
MSC ‘Round-Up’
Opens at 7;30p.m.
Swinging into high gear tonight
wil be the MSC student recreation
al and educational program when
its annual Round-Up gets under
way at 7:30 in the Ballroom.
“Our Round-Up” is designed to
provide students with information
on the MSC program and give
them an opportunity to sign up
with their favorite activity,”
Round-Up Chairman Tom Rountree
explained.
Chairmen of the various com
mittees will briefly outline the ac
tivities of their groups following
a discussion of the overall MSC
student program by Dan Davis,
MSC Council president.
Register for Activities
Students will then be given an
opportunity to ask further ques
tions and register for any activity
they are interested in.
This year’s MSC program boasts
12 committees including Dance,
House, Crafts, Music, Public Rela
tions, Browsing Library, Bowling,
Table Tennis, Bridge, Radio, Cam
era and Art Gallery.
Students interested in Crafts or
Camera activities will find both
of these groups outfitted with
equipment. The Crafts group has
a completely outfitted shop located
in the MSC lower level. And the
Camera Club has darkroom facili
ties available for its members.
Registration Set For
Poultry Short Course
Registration will begin Tuesday
at 8 a. m. at the poultry farm for
a three day short course on Tur
key and Chicken Grading, said E.
D. Parnell of the Poultry Hus
bandry Department.
Meetings will be held at both the
poultry farm and the assembly
room of the MSC.
Cadet Eleven Overpowers Tech
As Ground Game Clicks, 20-7
Yale Lary, A&M’s leading punt returner who last year helped the Cadets lead the
nation in this department, went for 23 yards before being downed by Texas Tech
End Paul Erwin (88). Coming from behind to help Erwin is Charles Welton, Tech
fullback. Against UCLA the previocs week, Lary also bad a good week in return
ing punts as he retcrned three for 55 yards, while in the Tech game he was largely
responsible for the majority of the 85 yards which the Cadets gained in returns.
Glenn Lippman, who plays both right and left
halfback for A&M as well as call signals, is down
ed by two unidentified Texas Tech players alter
having gained 29 yards. Lippman led the ground
gainers Saturday, gaining 156 yards in 18 car
ries.
Two of the groups, Bowling and
Table Tennis, plan to compete in
intercollegiate matches this year
and the Radio Club plans to facil
itate a bowling match by radio
sometime during the year.
Art Gallery Schedule
This year’s Art Gallery Com
mittee already has a schedule of
exhibits arranged and offers in
struction in oils and water colors.
All students are invited to attend
the Round-Up and we want to es
pecially welcome all Freshmen so
that they may become acquainted
with MSC activities, Chairman
Rountree said.
“Informality is the keynote of
our program and there will be
plenty of coffee and cookies,”
Rountree added.
GOP Governors
Chose Gen. Ike
Over Bob Taft
Gatlinburg, Term., Oct. 1—
UP)—Gen. Dwight D. Eisen
hower is. the favorite for the
1952 GOP presidential nomi
nation among Republican gov
ernors who are willing to go on
record publicly.
Their next choice is Sen. Rob
ert A. Taft of Ohio—with more
strength than he showed among
them six months ago.
But about half the Republican
governors decline to commit them
selves openly so far.
Most Democratic governors be
lieve President Truman will run
again, and he is the choice among
those willing to state their pref
erence now. 5$;
This was disclosed today by an
Associated Press polls as the gov
ernors prepared to begin business
sessions of their annual national
conference tomorrow.
Of the 25 Republican governors,
nine said they want Eisenhower
for their nominee and four favored
Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio.
A long list of Republicans was
mentioned as second or third choic
es.
Of 23 Democrat governors, elev
en said they are back.of Mr. Tru
man for a new term,'two believe
Eisenhower is the man their party
needs and one supports Senator
Richard Russell of Georgia.
Eisehower got two second choic
es among the Democrats, tying
with Chief Justice Fred Vinson in
that category. Senator Paul H.
Douglas of Illinois ahd one sec
ond place vote and split a third
place vote with Vinson.
In contrast to a similar poll six
months ago, Taft appeared to be
gaining some strength among the
Republican governors. Four of
them picked him i as their first
choice in today’s canvass, com
pared with only two previously.
Ralph Terry Wins QB Club
Contest; Meeting Tuesday
Ralph Terry of College Station was winner of last week’s
Battalion Quarterback Club Contest. Terry picked all six
winners, as did 141 other contestants, but edged his nearest
competitor, C. A. Peterson, by more accurately predicting
the scores.
Other contestants who followed the first two places, in
the order they finished were T. B. Goodson, Carlos Melina,
H. G. Pierce, Otis Miller, Stanley Yarde. and Gary Boring.
Entries in last week’s contest totaled 1237. Odds for
picking six winners, according to Frank Scott, Quarterback
Club manager, were 36-1.
Terry will be presented two tickets to the A&M-Okla-
homa game at the Tuesday night meeting of the Quarterback
Club.
Morris Frank, columnist for the Houston Chronicle, will
speak at the meeting Tuesday which gets underway at 7:45
p. m.
Movies of the rugged Texas Tech-A&M game will also
be shown.
Governing Boards
To Hear Sen. Aikin
Sen. A. M. Aikin of Paris will
represent Gov. Allan Shivers of
Texas at the annual meeting of
the Association of Governing
Boards of State Universities and
Allied Institutions, to be held at
A&M Oct. 9-13. The senator Avill
deliver an address at 7:30 p. m.
Oct. 10.
Vice-President and Provost
Grayson Kirk of Columbia Univer
sity, will also deliver an address
at the annual banquet. He will
speak on “Education for Citizen
ship.” Senator Aikin, an authority
on educational legislation will talk
on “Slate Support of Higher Ed
ucation in Texas.”
Wyoming Prexy To Preside
Mil ward L. Simpson, president of
the association, will preside. He is
president of the board of trustees,
University of Wyoming.
“It is a genuine pleasure,” Gov
ernor Shivers says in naming Sen
ator Aikin to represent him at the
meeting, “to know that the Asso
ciation of Governing Boards of
State Universities and Allied In
stitutions will hold their 1951
(See AIKIN, Page 2)
W. Wipprecht,
Class of 1884,
Dies in Bryan
Walter Wipprecht, class of
’84, died at the age of 87 in
Bryan Friday afternoon.
Wipprecht was one of the old
est graduates of A&M re
maining before his death.
The well-known man of Bryan
and College Station was familiar
to many of his friends as a re
spected citizen, as well as a fin
ancier, statistician, and historian
of Bryan. He passed away in a
Bryan hospital at 4 p.m. Friday.
Funeral services were held at
2:30 p.m. Saturday in the Hillier
Funeral Home Chapel. With serv
ices conducted by the Rev. A. T.
Dyal, interment was made in Bry
an City Cemetery.
Wipprecht received a cei’tificate
from A&M in 1884 for completing
the course offered in Agriculture.
In June of 1885 he was awarded
a Bachelor of Scientific Agricul
ture degree, one of the few given
at A&M.
Following the degree presenta
tion, he became a member of the
Chemistry Department faculty —
a position he held for many years.
He was one of the early pres
idents of the Association of Form
er Students, serving during 1890-
1891.
Wipprecht became business man
ager of the College in 1914 and
held that position for 23 years.
Survivors are one daughter, Mrs.
T. W. Kernodle of Bryan; three
sons, Read Wipprecht of College
Station, Carl Wipprecht of Rusk,
Walter Wipprecht of Miami, Fla.;
and five grandchildren, and two
great grandchildren.
A&M, Oklahoma
Meet In Home Tilt
By ED HOLDER
Battalion Sports Writer
Coach Ray George’s undefeated Maroon and White
eleven will put their “neck on the block” Saturday night
against Bud Wilkinson’s Oklahoma Sooners, who are also
undefeated, as a hard-hitting, hustling A&.M football team
held true to form this past weekend overpowering an inex
perienced Texas Tech eleven, 20-7.
Lightning rough play marked each minute of the hard
fought Cotton Bowl battle witnessed by 27,000 fans, a record
crowd for an Aggie-Red Raider tilt.
Taking the lead in the first five minutes of play, the
j Cadets were checked but once when, in the second quarter,
I the Raiders drove 46 yards to pay dirt by a series of end-
around and off tackle dashes.
Wilkinson, flew from the site of
the OU and William-Mary game at
Norman to see the ground gaining
power of the Cadets.
Glenn Lippman displayed a speed
and deceptive power the likes of
which Aggie fans have not seen
since the El Campo Flash’s mighty
freshman year. In 18 carries,
Lippman toted the ball for 156
yards to be the leading ground
gainer of the evening.
The penetrating power of the
Aggies was first shown by Lipp-
man as he returned the ball 15
yards on the kick-off and followed
up with a five yard smash over
right tackle on the first play of
the game.
This beginning drive continued
as the Cadets pushed the Raiders
to their six yard line where Dick
Gardemal threw to Charley Hodge
for the first Aggie touchdown.
Left end Darrow Hooper converted
the extra point.
But, the youthful Tech team was
not to be denied.
Quarterback Junior Arterburn
took Yale Lary’s punt Which was
booted from nine yards deep in
the Aggies end zone and returned
it nine yards to the Cadet 46.
In six plays, displaying tricky
ball handling and speedy running
Tech scored. Left halfback Jim
Turner started the scoring series
as he hit around left end for two
yards.
Frank Graves, one of Tech’s out
standing backs, busted over right
tackle for 11 yards and a first
down. Turner then took over and
on a pitch out from Atterburn, who
then passed to Graves on the Ag
gies 23. Turner carried for two,
Pete Rinaldi for three, then Tur
ner scored from 12 yards out. No
one touched him as he sped
(See GRAVES, Page 4)
Aggie Rodeo
Slated Here
This Weekend
The annual Aggie Rodeo
sponsored by the Saddle and
Sirloin Club will open with
all student contestants Friday
for a two day stand.
Featuring the famous stock
from the Triangle-Bell Ranch, the
club plans a big performance with
many special attractions.
Included in the specialties will
be trick and fancy riding and rop
ing, a professors bloomer race,
and a long distance horse race.
The two productions of the rodeo
have been scheduled for 8 p. m.
Friday and 2 p.m. Saturday, an
nounced Warren Pierce of the Pub
licity Committee.
Bo Damuth, senior animal hus
bandry major from Magnolia, will
be the clown for both shows. “Da
muth is well known for his rodeo
clowning all over the country,”
said Pierce.
No contestants for the rodeo have
been announced yet, but final list
ing of the men to compete in the
various events will be released
early this week, the publicity com
mitteeman said.
Posters and signs have already
been distributed throughout the
area and preliminary plans ha\M
been completed, Pierce said.
The rodeo will feature the usual
roping, riding, bull-dogging, and
bull riding events.
96 Students OK’d
For Oct. 3 Ballot
Election of dormitory student
senators, senators-at-large, and
Student Life Committee members
will be held Wednesday night.
“Organization first sergeants,
housemasters, and special repre
sentatives will pick-up and distri
bute ballots in the dorms and apart
ments and after balloting is com
pleted will deliver the votes to the
Student Activities office,” said Don
Young, election committee chair
man.
Twenty-two candidates filed be
fore the 5 p. m. Friday deadline.
Bands Provide Halftime Color
Big Weekend for Ags In Dallas
By JOEL AUSTIN
Battalion Managing Editor
A yell practice in front of Dal
las’ Jefferson Hotel set off activ
ities in the Cotton Bowl City Sat
urday afternoon as the Texas Ag
gies moved in to see the Maroon
and White in their first Texas
game of the year.
The Red and Black of Texas
Tech was also on hand in force, as
the students from the Lubbock
school and their 104 piece band
paraded down the streets of Dal
las Saturday afternoon.
A little tiff between students
of both schools over whose signs
and banners would hang from the
hotel balcony resulted in a mad
scramble as the Tech boosters
rang down an Aggie sign as the
yell practice was coming to a
close. Police had to intervene
to quell the disturbance.
A substantial night crowd of
approximately 30,000 seemed
dwarfed in the enormous Cotton
Bowl which seats 75,500.
Adding much color and attaaction
to the game were the bands which
represented the two schools.
Clad in Red and Black uniforms,
the 104 piece band of Texas Tech
entered the field at half time from
the South end of the stadium to
give an impressive performance.
The Red Raider band went into a
T-E-X formation after stopping
with 10 yard intervals from 20-to-
20 yard lines. While playing the
“Spirit of Aggieland” they moved
into an enormous A-M-C formation.
In a salute to their own school,
the Tech musical contingent
formed their famous “Double
T” and after playing the school
alma mater, marched off the
field in that formation.
The 180-piece Aggie Band moved
in from the North in a formation
which stretched the width of the
end zone. Buglers sounded “Re
call” and the famous band from
Aggieland stepped off to strains
of the “Aggie War Hymn.”
After several flanking move
ments, and two double minstral
turns, the band did a spectacular
triple countermarch which brought
a big ovation from the audience.
A quadruple minstral turn
(What else would you call it?)
separated the band in half length
wise. Always playing, the cadet
marching unit formed the letters
T-E-C-H facing both sides of
the stadium. Then they went into
a T-A-M-C formation, again fac
ing ’the east and west sides of
the bowl. Still split into two
units and still playing, the band
saluted Dallas with the letters
B-I-G-D.
After the salute to Dallas and
a round of applause from fans,
the band stayed in a split forma- lon -
tion and formed two large “T”s.
They marched to the south in this
manner, still playing, did a count
er march, and emerged with the
two “Ts” moving back down the
field. The Aggies flanked to the
east stands and broke the forma
tions as they went off the playing
field.
Fans were rather amused when
a public address system announcer
made the following statement,
“O’Grady was in on the tackle for
Texas Tech—O’Grady taken out of
the game and replaced by ”
. (See FISH, Page 4)
New candidates are James
Strain, Charles Steward, Hirschel
Sexton, Clayton Selph, C. E.
“Dutch” Sebasta, William Row
land, Ralph Rowe, Vance Riley, T.
K. Perkins, Robert “Rip” Martin,
Eugene Nixon, Ronny Kaspar, and
Lawrence Goats.
Jerry Fineg, Marshall Crouch,
Jack Craig, John Coolidge, John
Childs, Bill Cawley, Billy Camp
bell, A. C. Burkhalter, and Bob
Andrews.
These new candidates brought
the total number filing up to 96—•
63 for dorm senator, 28 for sena
tor-at-large, and 5 for student life
committee.
•
At 1 p.m. today 45 students
who had filed for positions on
the ballot had not been approved
by the Dean of Men’s office.
The following students were dis
qualified by the election committee:
Dan Clinton, C. R. Guy, Jerry Kant-
er, Fagon Mason, and James Upt-
more.
Only two candidates have thus
far submitted a statement of plat
form for publication in The Battal-
John Whitmore, editor of the
Battalion, has extended the dead
line for this service until Tuesday.
Candidates approved for the fall
election race are:
Dorm 1—Ted Stephens, Bill
“Pluto” Cawley, John O. Childs,
C. E. “Dutch” Sebasta, Dee Fran
cis.
Dorm 2—Jack Morris, A. C.
Burkhalter.
Dorm 3—Hobart Fatheree, Arlie
Winn, Eugene Nixon, John Clif
ford.
Dorm 4—Bob Andrews, Vance
(See ELECTION, Page 4)