College Station’s Official Newspaper; Circulated Daily To 90% of Local Residents Battalion Published By Students of Texas A&M For 74 Years PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE Number 65: Volume 52 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland 4 , TEXAS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1951 Price Five Cents 1,001 Basic Division Students On Probation, Registrar Says Snow In Panhandle By JOHN WHITMORE Battalion Editor A thousand and one men in the basic division are on academic pro bation for the fall semester, the fall probation list prepared by the registrar’s office showed. This list included the new and old 1 students still in the basic division. There are 1,830 men on proba tion out of the entire student body. BAFB Youngsters See Santa Claus More than 425 youngsters of all shapes and sizes gathered at Bryan Aii- Force Saturday for an after noon-long Christmas party. The children, all of them those of BAFB officers and airmen, ranged in age from just a few months old through 15. The program actually got under way in front of the Base Gym about 1 p. m. when the 515th Air- Force Band went through its book to entertain a waiting crowd—wait ing to see Santa Claus bail out of a C-47 transport over the field. He was then picked up by jeep and brought to the gym with the siren screaming. Santa and his little friends then moved into the gym to watch a 20- minute program which featured- magical acts by Pfc Charles Hid- lum and group singing, led by T/Sgt. Dick Rice and with M/Sgt. Bernard Beronio playing the piano accompaniment. Next came the presentation of a gift to each child by Santa and his “helper members of the NCO and Officers Wives Clubs. Before leav ing the youngsters had a chance for a “confidential” chat with San ta and received a box of candy and nuts before leaving for the Base Theater, where they finished the afternoon's activities by watching a 70-minute program of color car- loon comedies. As a total there are 2,286 men in the basic division. Of this num ber, 41.5 are students who were registered in A&M before this semester. When questioned about the reg istrar’s list, Dean of the Basic Division, John Bertrand, said in light of the changed academic stan dards this number is not excessive. Starting this year the minimum re quirements are for the student to a number of men who still have not passed enough hours with enough grade points to get out qf the division. Out of this number there are 142 men on probation. Before a person can get out of the basic division he has to have 30 hours with 36 grade points be fore the third semester. In the fourth and fifth semester he has to pass 42-51 and 54-66 respective ly. Taking this raised standard into consideration there would only be 33 per cent of the new men on probation, using the old 10-10 min imum. Out of the' entire basic division there are 43 per cent on proba tion. This is considering the new students, old students and trans fer students. At the first of the year there were 2,301 men registered in the non-degree granting school. The latest figures show there are 2,308 men enrolled. Of this number 1,793 are new men—counting the men who were here during the last part of' the summer and at Junction. Last year 28 per cent of the pass 12 hours with 12 grade points. Can’t Get Out He went on to say the basic div ision is carrying on their rolls freshmen were- on probation. Ill Prepared From the examinations given at the first of school, it appears the men entering A&M this year are not as well prepared as they have 'been in the past. About this the dean said, “It is ing device for the degree granting Traditional Christmas Tree Part of MSC Yule Tide Display The Memorial Student Center has completed its second Christmas decoration program since the building’s completion two years ago. This year the center is us ing the traditional Christmas tree with ornaments, spun glass snow and star decals, spruce bindings, and colored lights. Decorations were planned by the director’s office, the house com mittee and the social and educa tion office. Plans were made by these offices and submitted to the floriculture department for designs. Planning for the decoration pro gram started in the house commit tee’s office under the direction of Tom Rountree. 3 January 22 Deadline For Housing Fees Final deadline for the second semester housing fees is Jan. 22, according to Harry Boyer, direct or of the housing office. Fees have to be paid by then in order to re serve the room now occupied. The Fiscal office will begiif Jan. 4 taking semester fees, in cluding housing, food, hospitaliza tion, and student activities. First installment fees for mili tary students are .$75.20 and for non-military students are $48.80. Fees for the entire semester are $244.60 for military students and $92.85 for non-military students. The project is so large and con sidered to be of such importance that not any one group or office could undertake the task alone, said J. Wayne Stark, director. The main lounge in the Center is decorated w r ith a Christmas tree, and flowers. The main promenade has a spruce rope with colored lights around each window frame and spun glass ornament decals on the window panes. The Fountain Room has a Christ mas tree and spun glass ornaments on the windows. In the second floor lounge, there is another Christmas tree and assorted deco rations. On the roof of the main entrance there is a ten foot wreath with 120 colored lights. All along the front of the Center - there are spruce rope trimmings. Coffee tables in the Center have an ornament made-up of a candle and silver dyed spruce branches and red beeds. Materials for the decorations were purchased from stores in New York and Texas. Each year Stark said, they plan to build the MSC Christmas deco rating program more and more by acquiring and saving each year’s newly purchased ornaments. With this method the MSC can build their supply and it will be possible for more elaborate deco rations to be undertaken each year, said Stark. probable the ability level of the men this year is lower than in the past years.” He went on to say it was pro bable that for some reason we had a large number of men who or dinarily would not have gone to college and were not prepared to meet college requirements. “In any college,” he said, “with out restrictive admission require ments, it is possible for many stu dents to enter who should not be in college. Many of them should aim. at the trade level of work father than work requiring college training.” Bewildered “Many of the students do not know what is expected of them,” he continued. Again comparing this year’s rec ord with that of last year, he point ed out 66 men resigned from school out of the 1,384 that entered. This year only 78 have resigned out of the entering enrollment, of 1,871 freshmen. “Probation figures in the basic division,” Dean Bertrand comment ed,” will probably continue to be high since we serve as a screen- Graduates To Be Called In 90 Days Air Force ROTC officials an nounced that January graduates will be called to extended active duty within 90 days after grad uation. Orders will be failed di rectly to the graduate’s home ad dress. Veterans are excluded from this call; nevertheless, they may be called should future requirements of the service call for such action. The Oath of Office for the com mission will be administered for AFROTC graduates at 11 a. m.-in the YMCA Chapel, Friday, Jan. 25. Cadets to be commissioned must be present to receive the Com mission. The cadet is free to wear either the cadet uniform or proper civilian clothes. When reporting for duty the of ficer must be in proper officer’s uniform which may be purchased at any local Air Force sales store at a considerably lower price than at private military stores. It will be necessary that a copy of the Special Orders ordering the officer to extended active duty be presented when reporting for duty. school.” Moving up a notch on the pro bation list there were 103 sopho mores listed as being on probation in the school of arts and sciences out of a total of 351 in all degree granting schools. The school of engineering led the list with 172 sophomores on pro bation and the school .of agricul ture was low with only 74 sopho mores on the “dean’s team.” Deans of the degree granting schools were in accord as to the cause of the number of men from their schools on probation—“Not, enough studying.” Twenty Per Cent At the time of the mid-semester grades, 20 per cent of the 3,807 men in the degree granting schools were on probation. Of this 783 there were 22.7 per cent from the school of engineering. From arts and sciences came 19.2 per cent and 18.5 of the agriculture enroll ment was on the list. Bizzell Op en Over Holidays Others Closed Because all dormitories ex cept Bizzell will be locked ov er the holidays, students who will stay on the campus dur ing Christmas must contact someone in Bizzell Hall and make arrangements to use a room. Bennie A. Zinn, assistant to the Dean of Men, announced that all dormitories will be locked at 5:30- p. m. Wednesday. They will be unlocked at 1 p. m. Wednesday, Jan. 2. Zinn said that clearance to en- teq a locked dormitory during the holidays must be obtained from the Housing Office in Goodwin Hall. To secure rooms in Bizzell, the student must bring a note of per mission from the occupant of the room to the Housing Office. Each student will sign a roster show ing what room he will be in, so he may be located in case of an emergency. Zinn asked that all students lock the doors and close the windows of their rooms, particularly the first floor windows. Supper Wednesday will be the last regular meal served in the mess hall. Regular meals will start again with supper, Jan. 2. Flu Won Class A Panhandle boy, Ronnie Weisinger, adds a little smoking tobacco to Mr. Snowman’s pipe. (AP Texas Mat Service) Committee Seeks Fines for Welfare The Student Life Committe de cided yesterday to ask the presi dent to turn fines from late fee payments over to the committee for use in student welfare. This motion was made by John Whitmore, editor of The Battalion, and was endorsed unanimously by the committee. Thirty Thousand In checking with the Fiscal Of fice it was discovered over the past ten years these fines have amounted to about $30,000. This figure also includes the unreturn ed fees of students who resign. After a short discussion the com mittee decided to approve the Eu ropean Tour fund and stipulated the first money raised by the com mittee would go into this fund. In the past years this amounted to a grant of $500 to a student picked by a sub-committee of the Student Life Committee. The stu dent is required to pay all other ex penses involved in the trip. For a Couple of Bucks Last year Dan Davis, president of the MSC Council, Was given the grant. He is available, as a provision of the grant, to make talks to campus groups. The committee also approved the Student Activities calendar of events. A major revision it is is not permissable to have a campus organization meet on Wednesday nights^ which has been reserved for the local churches. In the closing minutes of the meeting, which was held at 4 p. m. in the Senate Chamber, the group discussed the selection of Who’s Who at A&M. Split Two Ways Dr. R. W. Steen, chairman, ap pointed a nominating committee to make up a list of prospective can didates. This committee was split into two sections, the corps and non-corps. On the corps committee are Har old Chandler, Ralph Ellis, Ken Wiggins, Eric Carlson, J. W. Dal- ston, and James McGee. Members of the non-corps com mittee are John Davis, Jim Mar tin, Max Word and John Whitmore. College Hospital Treats Major, Minor Injuries Tabb, Willimgham Rodeo Delegates Don Tabb and Jack Willingham have been selected as representa tives of the Texas Aggie Rodeo Club, to attend the national con vention of the National Intercol legiate Rodeo Association, which will be held in Denver Colorado, Dec. 28-29. They were chosen at a regular meeting of the rodeo club, Monday night, Bryan A&M Club Elects ’52 Officers Carroll Jones was elected presi dent of the Bryan-College Station A&M Club at a short organization al meeting. Members of the club elected Gor don Smith, vice president; Mason Lee Cashion, secretary; Maiwin At kins, social chairman; and Ide Trotter, reporter. Plans were made for the Christ mas Dance which is to be held in the Brazos County A&M Club house this Friday, Dec. 21, at 7:30 p. m. Refreshments will be served. Admission is $1.00 stag or drag and tickets will be sold at the door. By W. C. MARTIN The college hospital often seems deserted because of its quiet at mosphere, but actually it does a thriving business. Business in the form of treating and distributing medicine to ailing Aggies. In the period from Sept. 1 to Nov. 23 of this year a total of 3,530 students visited the drug room alone to get cold pills, cough syrup, gargle, etc. This number does not include other's Who were sick enough to be put to bed. Even so, the total fig ure is not unusually high because there were 3,906 students treated for the same period last year. Financial aid to the hospital comes entirely from the medical fees paid by the students of the college. Its staff consists of Dr. J. E. Marsh, 11 nurses, 2 tech- nicans, and two student workers. When the hospital was built there was no roof mentioned in the contract. Upon its completion the college officials came to view the new building, and there it stood bright and shining minus a roof. It was added later and consequently has never held up like it should, having been replaced several times. The hospital probably has had more epidemics than other hospi tals in this area because its pa tients live in such a concentrated area. However there has not been an epidemic on the campus since 1940. Records show that up until 1940 there was an epidemic al most every year. These epi demics are usually minor dis eases, such as influenza, measles, and mumps. During the time when naval stu dents were on the campus there was a double epidemic of mumps and influenza. The basement of the hospital was full of the Navy and the main floor was full of Aggies. There have been many gripes made by the students about the hospital but the picture is not re versed. The only complaint the hospital has about the patients is that some of them want to diagnose their own cases and prescribe the proper treatment for it. The staff feels that this is just Vanity Fair Pixs Accepted In ’52 The Aggieland ’52 staff has an nounced they will start accepting Vanity Fair pictures immediately following the Christmas holidays. Pictures may be turned in at the Student Activities office on the second floor of Goodwin Hall. All photos must be 8 x 10 inches. Two pictures are required, one bust pose and one full length formal or semi-foraal pose. The pictures will be returaed after the judging. Winning girls will be presented at the Military Ball. Vanity Fair will be featured in the Aggieland, receiving a two page spread for each girl. By GENE STEED Battalion Staff Writer Classes will not be dismissed early for the Christmas holidays, W. L. Penberthy, Dean of Men, and Col. Joe E. Davis, Commandant, announced yesterday after a conference held in Ross Hall. They made this announcement to dispell all rumors which have been circulating throughout the dormitory areas the past few days. At 3 p. m. yesterday, the hospital reported only 92 pa tients and a check of the new area dormitories by the Offi cer of the Day revealed that there are a total of 285 men sick. This last number includes the men in the hospital and those who have already gone home, due to illness. If the num ber of men sick becomes serious, school will be dismissed, Abut at the present time, there is, no urgent need to begin the holi days early, Dean Penberthy said. “Anyone who can walk-out of the hospital Wednesday morning will be released,” according to Dr. J. E. Marsh, College Physician. Dr. Marsh made this statement yester day in hopes that the boys who are sick in the dormitories and those who are sick, yet still going to classes, will come to the hospital. They will be excused from all of their major exams until a later date if they are sick in the hospi tal; however, if they are sick in their room's, they probably will not be excused from their classes, he said. The College Doctor was quick to say that the hospital could ade quately take care of 300 or more students and that , they would not turn away any sick man who came to them. However, he pointed out that it is foolish for men who are not sick to attempt to fill the hos pital in hopes that school might be dismissed early. Several men have admitted that they were not sick when they en tered the hospital, however, they be came sick after going to bed in wards with boys who had bad cases of flu. Announcements were due to be made in the mess halls last night and over local radio stations to quell the rumors school might be dismissed early. Dean Penberthy promised if school were to be dis missed early, all students would be promptly informed. a bit out of the Aggie’s field. A humorous incident occurred along this line a few years ago. It is a custom at the hospital that when a patient comes in whose treatment requires an un usual amount of pain “Mom” is called. A freshman student with a badly stumped toe came in for treatment, so the case was turned, over to “Mom.” The nail of the toe was so bad ly torn that it had to be removed completely. “Mom” worked as rapidly as she could and the freshman took the pain without a word. When she was through he looked at her and said, “I didn’t want it cut off, I just wanted it trimmed.” She said, “Well, son you sure got it cut off.” To which he replied, “Yes, and damn short too!” The hospital handles all its cases except those which by their nature require treatment elsewhere. Such cases as polio and spinal menin gitis are rare and require special equipment which the hospital does not have. Other emergency cases such as broken bones, appendec tomies, and severe cuts are treated by the hospital. A student may be treated or put to bed at any time. The regular hours for seeing the doctor are frohi 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. and from 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. Visiting hours are from 5 to 7 p.m. A patient’s family, or his outfit commander may see him at any time during the day. Honey Business Grosses 2 Million “We are approaching the two million dollar mark gross income from honey in Texas,” John F. Nelson of Corsicana said at a meet ing of the American Bee Breeders Association meeting held here re cently. Nelson pointed out that there are approximately 300,000 colon ies of bees in Texas, representing 800 bee keepers. “The farmers are benefited many millions more by this industry by pollination of their various crops,” he said. The Beekeepers attending the meeting here at A&M were from the southem states and their prin cipal business was to discuss ways and means of developing strains of bees to meen the conditions of the various areas. Student Lost, Friends Find In Hospital For two days the college hospital had no record of a man who was admitted during the flu epidemic on the cam pus, said Wayne Showers and Murphy Vaught. Sunday afternoon, the two found the car of Richard Faulkner parked at North Gate. They were unable to locate Faulkner on the campus and they checked by the college hospital, they said. Attendents at the hospital said their was no such patient as Faulk ner and showed Showers and Vaught the records of the patients in the hospital. Contact BAFB The two men also checked the Bryan hospitals and the Bryan po lice. Tracking down the rumor which spread over the corps area, they contacted the Bryan Air Force Base Hospital. Sunday night they contacted Faulkner’s home in Port Arthur, where his parents said he was not at home and told the men calling he must be at A&M. Monday morning, the men said, they checked the hospital records again. In all they made two trips to see if Faulkner was in the hos pital, both times the attendents said he was not in the hospital. Parents Worried “All during this time, his father and mother were getting worried. His Dad was going to fly up to College Station,” they said. As a last resort before declaring the man missing they checked the hospital again. While standing by the main desk the two men said they were talk ing rather loudly and Faulkner shouted to them from another room. He was in a bed in the ward by the desk. After the men found their lost friend, the hospital attendents told them they had the record all of the time. The men commented, “No harm was done, but it sure did have us worried.” Mcllroy Receives Indian Mission W. W. Mcllroy, instructor in the agriculture education department will leave on a special mission to India the first of next month, the agriculture education department announced. Mcllroy’s appointment to India will be supervised by the United States Department of Agriculture with salaries furnished by the state. His objective will be to train Indian agricultural agents and per sonnel in the development of great er food and agriculture production. He is taking a leave of ab sence and plans to return to A&M after his work is completed in In dia. Agriculture Education classes taught by Mcllroy will be taught by Henry Ross or other instructors in the department for the remaind er of the year. Seat Change Operation Jakes One Day at BAFB Woxking on a ’round-the-clock schedule, a two-man team install ed 275 new seats and cushions in Bi-yan Air Force Base’s theater without causing the cancellation of a single performance. Starting yesterday afternoon, the workers from the J. T. Boutwell Installation Company of Temple, Texas, removed half of the theater seats, leaving enough for that evening’s screen showing. They had finished drilling the holes for the new seat mountings before the first members of the audience en tered the theater. After the last of the theater goers had left, the team went back to work, and continued through the night at removing the remaining seats and drilling the rest of the holes. The job will be completed late this afternoon and this even ing’s patrons will view their film fare from the new upholstered deep rose-colored seats. According to Capt. William T. Whittaker, Personnel Sendees Of ficer, the Army and Air Force Motion Picture Service has pro mised installation of a new screen and curtains in the theater. No definite date has been set but de livery is expected within the near future. Company Leaders Check on Stripes A first-sergeants’ meeting Was held Dec. 12 to discuss the corp inspection held Monday. • Each company was inspected by fciic Company Commander and a thorough check was made on non commissioned cadet officers to see if they had their stripes on. Every first-sergeant was told to encourage his men to complete their pictures for the 1952 Aggie land. It was announced by the Ag gieland co-editors that eight-by- ten pictures will be awarded to the first-sergeants if half or more of the men in their units have their pictures made.