Wednesday, November 14, 1951 THE BATTALION Page 5 Prairie View Gets $25,000 From Jones Jones Gives $25,000 A gift of, $25,000 from Mr. and Mrs. Jesse H. Jones to Prairie View A&M College has established scholarship funds to enable needy and deserving young Negro women to prepare themselves for careers in the field of nursing. The gift was made through Houston Endowment, Inc., a philan thropic organization endowed by Mr. and Mrs. Jones a number of years ago for the* support of char itable, educational and religious undertakings. Prairie View A&M College, which has the only accredited col lege work in nursing education among the Negro colleges of the southwest, will award the schol- 515th AF Band Started By Men at BAFB When one of the largest single personnel shipments in recent months arrived at Bry an Air Force Base last week, there was a band on hand but no music to greet the newcomers. The chief reason was that the new men, 34 of them, came to BAFB to join the newly-activated 515th Air Force Band, which will be under the direction of chief bandsman, M/Sgt. Harold Rouss- man. With the exception of two veter an bandsmen, S/Sgts. Daniel A. Jackson and Jay E. Lawyer, the group is composed of young airmen straight from the Air Force train ing center at Lackland AFB, Tex. Graduates of the band school at Lackland, most of the bandsmen had previous musical experience in high school and college bands and orchestras. Sgt. Roussman has been in the musical field for 25 years, earlier playing in and. leading college bands and later working with mili tary bands. A native of Miami, Fla., Sgt. Roussman transferred from the Army to the Air Force two years ago. Wolters AFB, Min eral Wells, Tex. was his last sta tion before coming to Bryan. At present the band is waiting for its instruments and music to arrive and within two weeks from the date they receive shipment they will be ready to play for all occa sions. The 515th Air Force Band will play for parades and formations, present band concerts and also form two dance orchestras. arships from this gift to deserving young Negro women of outstanding ability who wish to study nursing education at the college and. would not be able to do so without fi nancial aid. Selections will be made by the college’s scholarship committee on the basis of need, character and high school grades. Funds Made Available Funds will also be available for young women who have made cre ditable records in the study of nursing at the college but who are unable to complete their work with out assistance. With the demand for Negro nur ses at an all-time high many are still unable to make the necessary training because of a lack of mon ey, Prairie View’s Pres. E. B. Evans told Jones at the time the gift was made. These new scholarship funds will enable many competent young wo men to take the course of train ing and fit themselves for service in the nursing field. Prairie View’s trainings in addition to three years of academic work, includes exper ience at Jefferson Davis hospital in Houston and John Sealy Hospi tal at Galveston. The gift for nursing scholarships was the third scholarship fund made available to 'Prairie View by-f Mr. and Mrs. Jones, who in 1946 set aside $25,000 for the education of Negro boys in agriculture and of Negro girls in home economics at the school. Under the two previous gifts sixty-four young men and women have attended Prairie View to date, receiving college educations which W r ould have otherwise been denied them for financial reasons. A num ber have made outstanding records since graduation and the twenty- one now in college are excellent students. What’s Cooking Column Features Club News Club publicity in The Battalion is being handled this year by Corps Chaplain C. L. Ray. Organizations wishing to secure space for im portant speakers and programs may do so by contacting Ray. Notices of meetings and pro grams are printed by The Battalion in a special “What’s Cookin’’ col umn. Forms for submitting the in formation to The Batt are avail able in the Office of Student Ac- i tivities, second floor, Goodwin Hall. Information about meetings j must be left in the student activ- | ities office before 5 p. m. on the day before the notice is to appear in the paper. A&M is so diversified that the “What’s Cookin’ ” column is the Pres. E. B. Evans of Prairie View A&M thanks benefactor Jesse H. Jones as the Houston capitalist announces his third major gift of scholarships to Texas land grant college for Negroes. Latest of the Jones gifts to the Texas A&M System school was $25,000 to establish scholarships for young women studying nursing. Previous ly, through Houston Endowment, he had given the school $25,000 in scholarships for boys studying agriculture and $25,000 for girls in home economics. Saxe Harrington Names RE Week Speaker Change (Continued from Page 3) life unless he is sold or traded. Baseball, in order to be subject to the anti-trust law*, must first be found to be inter-state com merce. Celler said he was “quite certain” that the Supreme Court would so declare. The congressman cited Ned Gar ver, 20-game winner of the last place St. Louis Browns as a victim of the reserve clause. Celler claim ed that Garver drew $18,000 last year. “He’s an ace,” Celler pointed out. ' He won 20 games with a poor hall club and a bad infield and outfield behind him. “If I were an owner and I had lin opportunity of getting Garver I’d give him $90,000 to $100,000 year. Weight Lifters (Continued from Page 3) lb. class to edme cldse to this rec ord. Fletcher wanted to stress the fact that club medals will be given out this spring to club members, and that also medals are given in these tourneys for the winners and runner’s up. He also brought out that this was a fine chance for Aggies to get good workouts, keep in shape, and take part in a fast advancing club. (Continued from Page 3) brother) arid me. I felt fine. “Mac (Charlie McDonald) and I started talking about the ‘glup up’ or bad play that we both pulled in the game. In. fact, (we still talk about it now. “McDonald and 1 were part of the defense against Benner’s pass es. An SMU rebeiver was in a spot that wasn’t in my zone or Mac’s. The receiver was really in the safety man’s zone, but the safety was occupied at the time. ‘We both left our zones and started following the ball, like you are supposed to do. Well, we ran into each other and knocked one another down. The SMU player caught the ball and ran for a, touchdown. “I don’t think that could have happened this year because we have been working together for so long now that we could shift from zone defense to man-to-man with out blinking an eye. Augie Saxe is the 21 year old South Park (Beaumont) product who was one of the vital elements of A&M’s Saxe-McDonald-Lary de fense combination. This stalwart defensive network had- risen to become the No. 3 de fense in the nation. Saxe fractured his left forearm in the Trinity game and although the team has some fairly capable replacements, the absence of this fine defensive demon has definitely hurt. Architecture is the course that this 176 pound, 5’ 11” senior is majoring in. Augie will be in school next year to complete his five year architecture curriculum, but he will not be eligible for football. 1 He is contemplating on getting married in January. Because he is going to stay on the campus, he has hopes of helping out the coaches and Bill Dayton, the train er. Dr. W. F. Denham, pastor of the River Oaks Baptist Church in Houston, will be the principal speaker during Religious Empha sis Week in February. President M. T, Harrington made the announcement at the monthly meeting of the Ministerial Alliance of College Station yesterday af ternoon. A graduate of the University of Washington, Dr. Denham is a young minister, 37. For a time he was pastor of the First Baptist Church of Macon, Ga. He holds a master’s degree from Washing ton. Other speakers who have been secured for the week long pro gram include: Willis Tate, vice president of SMU; the Rev. Lar ry Eiscnberg, Methodist student leader from Nashville, Tenn.; Dr. George W. Forell, National Luth eran Council, Chicago; and Dr. Grady Snuggs, department of re ligion, Tulsa University. Other speakers will be H. E. Speck, Dean of Men at Southwest Texas State; the Rev. Herbert Pol- linard, pastor of the Waxahachie Christian Church; and two chap lains, Col. Edwin L. Kirtley and Col. Eugene J. Graebner, air chap lain, Fourteenth Air Force. 4 Vacancies Vacancies in the speakers sche dule still to be filled include an other Episcopal minister, two Bap tists, and a Rabbi. Tate and the Reverend Eisen- berg are the only returning speak ers from last year’s program. Work being done on the campus by the Inter Faith • Council was explained to the group by John Olsen, winner of the Rabbi Cohen Scholarship last year. The council was originally form ed to handle the mechanical as pects of Religious Emphasis Week, ajor Colleges Heady to Hall ring Ice Cream King but has since spread its work to other fields, Olsen said. Another function of the coun cil is sponsoring the Corps Chapel each Sunday. This service was be gun last year by Curtis Edwards, former corps chaplain. Attendance at these programs has been small, but programs have been well prepared and interesting, J Gordon Gay, director of the YMCA, told the alliance. In addition to this work, the In ter Faith Council stresses the ob servance of Church Night by, the college each Wednesday. A recommendation to have stu dents write essays on Religious Emphasis Week was made by Dr; T. F. Mayo, head of the English department. This,, he said would stimulate interest in the week’s activities. Thanksgiving services, it was an nounced by the council, will be held at 6:30 a. m. Thursday, Nov. 29 at the A&M Methodist Church. The service.will last approximate ly 45 minutes. The Rev. C. W. Ketch will give the sermon, and music will be furnished by the Presbyterian Junior Choir. Offerings taken at this service will be given to the World Wide Church Relief fund and will be designated for Korean relief in particular. New York, Nov. 14—(H 3 )— Many of the nation’s major colleges were ready today to follow Yale’s example of drop ping Spring football, but they were playing it cagey—they want ed assurances it would be done on a national scale. An attitude - of watchful waiting generally followed the report that university presidents, alarmed over the future of the sport, were con templating reforms likely to af fect spring practice, bowl games and the two-platoon system. Yale University, one of the ivy- covered institutions .that helped give birth to American football, announced yesterday 'that the eli would drop spring practice, begin ning in 1952. Smaller colleges such as Wil liams, Wesleyan and Amherst‘al ready had taken such action. Yale was the first of the big ones. Others had talked about it, such as the 17-member Southern confer ence and the nine-member Pacific Coast. They recommended the move to their conference directors and to the National Collegiate Ath letic Association, the parent or ganization. The Southern, by an overwhelm ing vote of its presidents, also rec ommended banning all bowl games. The Pacific! Coast suggested reex amination of post-season football and the two-platoon system. Here was the situation in other conferences: Southwest -T- Question of elimi nating spring training and bowl games listed for discussion at meeting Dec. 7-8. Most members reportedly are ready to follow any national trend but they are known to favor bowl games. Big Seven—Situation same as in the Southwest. most consistent and effective meth od of informing members of club activities, according to Pete Hard esty, business manager of student activities. It is intended to eliminate many of the announcements in the mess halls. Only if a notice fails to up per in The Batt or if there is a correction to be made can such announcements be broadcast, he said. In order to coordinate the activ ities of the more than 200 clubs and technical organizations on the campus the following schedule has been set up regarding meeting dates: Home Town Clubs—First and Third Thursdays of each month. Technical Societies—First and Third Tuesdays of each month. Religious Activities — Wednes days. Student Senate—First Thursday of each month. MSG Council—Second Monday of each month. • Student Life Committee—Third Monday of each month. All organizations not already listed in the Office of Student Ac tivities must be registered, Hardes ty stressed. College regulations re quire that each club have its con stitution on file in the office and that all club money be deposited here. Approximately 25 organizations have requested club aid. The ap plications total about $4,000. Granted requests will be used for sending delegates to conventions, having speakers on the campus and for renting educational films. The club aid fund will supply 50 per cent of the expenses incurred for these activities. Beauteous June Bostrom, America’s Butter Queen for 1951, places a crown on S. R. Allen, of A&M wdio was gold medalist in ice cream judging in the world famous Collegiate Students’ Interna tional Contest in Judging Dairy products held in Detroit. Allen, a,20-year-old senior, is the youngest person to win a gold medal in this year’s event. Sponsoring the team of T. M. Houston, A. F. Madison, Jr., Allen, and Howard Kruse was F. E. Potter of the Dairy Department who accompanied the A&M team to Detroit. Lawyer Accuses Reds erinarians At Peruvian Meeting Two department heads of the School of Veterinary Medicine took part in the first Pan American Conferences on Veterinary Medi cine in Lima, Peru. Dr. John Delaplane, head of the veterinary bacteriology and hy giene department and nationally recognized authority on poultry diseases, took part in a discussion of poultry diseases. Dr. R. D. Turk, head of the vet erinary parasitology ' department, participated in a round table dis cussion on animal parasitism. Dr. Turk, Dr. Delaplane, and other leading veterinary authorities of. the United States were guests of the Peruvian government, which made the necessary arrangements for them to attend. Top veterinary scientists of the two continents reviewed the major animal disease problems having important relationships to the eco nomy and public health of the Western Hemisphere, control work in progress on these 'diseases, and their research phases. Influenza Leads Local Week’s Morbidity Report Influenza leads the Bryan-Col- lege Station morbidity report for the week ending Nov. 10, accord ing to the Bryan-Brazos County Health Unit. Cases reported num bered 34. Diarrhea, last week’s first, is now second, with 22 cases. Septic sore throat and gonorrhea totaled 13 case,s each. WTAW Program THURSDAY 6:00 Texas Farm & Home 6:15 Uncle John’s Jive 6:45 News TAKE IT EASY Worried about what you will wear for the big holiday party? No Need! Depend on us to freshen your clothes to tip top shape! AGGIE CLEANERS North Gate Meet the Merchant Coffee Club News Hebrew Christian Open House Breakfast in Phoenix Freedom Is Our Business Church Women Polka Tie Majpr Lively Dan Malloy Drifting Playboys News Weather 11:15 Country Visitor 11:30 Chuckwagon 12:00 News 12:05 Bryan News 12:15 White House Conference 12:30 News 12 :45 Keys to Music Platter Party Strike Out the Band News Bandstand Upper Room Football Forecasts Carousel 7:00 7:15 7:30 7 :45 8:00 8:30 9 :00 9:15 9:30 10 :Q0 10:15 10:30 11:00 11:10 1:00 1 :30 2:00 2:15 3:00 3:15 3:30 Pusan, Korea, Nov. 14—(/P) The U.S. Eighth Army’s top lawyer today said Commun ists have killed at least 5,790 United Nations prisoners of war, other than South Korean troops, in atrocity slayings since the start of the war. Col. James M. Hanley of Seattle, chief of the Eighth Army’s Judge Advocate section, said in a state ment nearly 75 per cent of the list ed victims were Americans and the rest volunteers from other coun tries. “The figures compiled by the United Nations command are far from complete,” Hanley said, “but show a record of killings and bar barism unique even in Communist China.” He said untabulated atrocity kill ings of South Korean.soldiers prob ably far outnumber - the tabulated losses and do not even touch atroc ity slayings of Korean civilians. Hanley said South Korean mili tary casualties in general have run at least twice that of other U.N. countries. Hanley’s statement estimated about 250,000 Korean civilians had been killed by Communist since the start of the fighting. He said 25,575 political prisoners and local South Korean officials were killed in the Red retreat to North Korea in the fall of 1950. An additional 10,284 North Ko- 1 rean civilians' were killed in Octo ber as the North Korean army made a further retreat toward the Ya.lu River border between Korea and Manchuria. Most of the latter were labeled “reactionaries,” Hanley said. Question: Can an ROTC student ov a. member of the ORC buy life insurance today without a War Exclusion Rider? Answer: Yes. Most Texas life insur ance companies and many of the out-of- state companies doing business in Texas will still sell an ORC student or a memebr of the ORC a life Insurance policy which will pay off the full face amount of in surance in event of his death from any cause, including death in combat in a for eign land. Once the policy is issued, it can never have the War Exclusion Rider added, even if i.ho company which issued it should change its underwriting rules in the fu ture. ... If the person applying for insurance has had training as an aircraft pilot or crew member, or if he intenrs to take such training in the future, the prac tice of most insurance companies is to place an Aviation Exclusion Rider on any life insurance policy issued to him. The effect of this Aviation Rider ordinarily is to limit the amount paid to the beneficiary, in event of the insured’s death from an aircraft hazard (excluding flight as a passenger on a commercial aircraft), to the total of the premiums he has paid in, with interest thereon. If a policy is prop erly issued without an Aviation Rider, no such Rider can later be added to the policy even if the insured should change his mind in the future and decide to take aviation training. NOTE: Any questions on life insurance from A & M College students Will he answered in this column or through direct communication by Eugene Rush. Address your questions to him at Box 1211, or call him at 44066, or see him in his office above the Aggieland Pharmacy. (Adv.) ( 3:45 News 4 :00 4:15 4:30 4:45 5:00 5:25 5 :30 5:45 John Vandercbok Here’s to Veterans Brad Steele Uncle Remus Record Rack Party Line John Flynn Spotlight on Sports 6:00 Sign Off LUNCHES AND STEAKS B&B GRILL North Gats General Dennis, star in the cast of Command De cision, lets off steam on a visiting congressman. Anxiously watching are Sergeant Evans, General Kane, another congressman, and General Garn ett. Harry Gooding plays the part of General Dennis while the alarmed congressman is por trayed by Carroll Phillips. Richard Black plays the witty Sergeant Evans and Jerry McFarland portrays General Kane. Don Lance plays the other congressman and John Samuels plays Gen eral Garnett. Woof - Woof Here is just the gift for Mother or Sweetheart. We have a complete selection of these little fellows and there is at least one that will catch your eye. These little stuffed animals make wonderful Christmas gifts. Do your Christmas Shopping early. The Exchange Store , “Serving Texas Aggies” Order Your Fort Worth Star-Telegram Amor; Carte! 1 , •“’resident lARGfST CIRCUlAflOr IN aXAS OVER 200.000 DAILY AND SUNDAY NOW ON REDUCED BARGAIN ©AYS RATES EFFECTIVE A SHORT TIME Daily and Susiday 7 Days e Week ? 18 00 Per Year WAS , NOW » 4 « ft Daily Without Sunday 6 Days tt Week WAS. ? 15 0u ®12«° Per Year NOW By Mail Fill out coupon below, mail direct or hand to your nearest Home Town Agent.