I Circulated Daily To 90 Per Cent Of Local Residents Number 185: Volume 52 The Battalion PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE Published By A & M Students For 74 Years COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 1952 Price 5 Cents Top Band Plays At Guion Oct. 6 By JERRY BENNETT Battalion Managing Editor Musicdom’s “Young Man With a Horn” will convey those velvet tones, which have made him famous, to the ears of Town'Hall patrons on October 6. Ray Anthony, his trumpet, and his orchestra will open the coming Town Hall season with a program of top tunes and dance numbers that have skyrocketed them to their top place in the music world. Featured with the Anthony orchestra will be vocalists t Tommy Mercer and Marcie Miller, The Skyliners and The Anthony Choir. Plenty of vocals along with straight orches trations will add variety to this+— pop concert. , Tagged as one of the most bril liant trumpet players in the coun try. Anthony directs a band com posed,^ y/mng men whose youth addjjjr greatly to the freshness of its /music. Consequently the An thony group has played itself to ! "the top of the scale by being vot ed “The Nation’s Number One Band” by the National Disk Jock ey Roll. Recording on Capital platters, Anthony has made several albums plus many single records. In ad dition to his recordings and con certs, his orchestra has provided dance music for many of the best hotels and night clubs over the ^country. The Anthony group has also been seen on the screen in several Columbia productions. Anthony was born in Cleveland, Ohio, and attended school in that •teity. Under the guidance of a tu tor, he started taking trumpet les sons at an early age. Before he was 16, he was work ing into the professional side of music by playing with local bands for proms and other Cleveland events. Prior to his seventeenth birthday, Anthony went on the J'oad with orchestra leader A1 Don- fchue. After leaving Donahue, he became a featured member of the Clenn Miller and Jimmy Dorsey Segregations. When he joined the Navy, An thony got together his own musi cal combination. It wasn’t long before he was put in charge of a dance band which created a sen sation in Navy circles. Still climbing to the top, he soon fronted an All-Pacific band which toured the islands of Okinawa, Tarawa, Guam and Midway. After receiving an honorable discharge in 1946, Anthony, organ ized his own first civilian oiches- tra. From then on, he gained pop- \ilarity with the same ease with which he plays his trumpet. Physics Dept. Add Professors And One Course The Physics Department will have two new instructors and one new course in Septem ber. Phillip G. Lichtenstein, as sistant professor of physics at the University of California, will sei-ve in the same capacity at A&M. Lichenstein received his PhD at the University of California. Alfred B. Hilton, who is to be an instructor in physics here, re ceived his Bachelor’s degree at Bluefield, Va., and taught there before taking his new position with the physics department here. The new course is physics 215, an introductory course for students of Veterinary Medicine. It is being offered for the first time this fall. Physics 314 is being revived this fall for those who desire a survey course in astronomy. Student to Instruct Boy Scout Aquatic Jerry McFarland, senior business major from Dallas, will serve as director of the Sam Houston area council Boy Scout swimming and aquatic meet Saturday. The swimming meet will be held at Camp Strake near Conroe. H. W. Barlow, dean of engineer ing department, said McFarland has worked in such meets and was capable of the job when he rec ommended him for the Saturday meet - ^ Nelsons to Attend Danforth Meeting Dr. and Mrs. Bardin H. Nelson, &&M associates of the Danforth foundation will attend a meeting hi that organization’s college rep resentatives at Shelby, Mich., Aug. J54-29. “We expect an attendance of 300 representatives from all states, in cluding about 30 Texans,” Nelson said. f. , , r purpose will be to consider i:tind means of making religion Ire vital force for students 'during and after college.” ie Danforth Foundation is the realization of the dreams of four ^college students who wanted to do something toward making the world a better place to live in. Practice Teaching Dates Announced Practice teaching dates have been set for senior agricultural education students for the 1952- 1953 school year, announced the agricultural education department. October 20-31 has been set for practice teaching for the fall se mester and March 2-13 for the spring semester. . Junior observation will be done at the same time. Observation will be in high school over a wider area of the state than was done last year. The new system will give 'the students a wider knowledge of farming and teaching procedures for the different sections of the state. . .)> ' { v, -4y Centered around William H. Danforth, president of the Ralston Purina Company, the organization sponsors the American Youth Foundation Camps and awards scholarships to outstanding grad uate students enabling them to work toward advanced degrees. Four two-week expense-paid en campments are held annually by the youth camps for the follow ing groups of young people: 400 teen-age boys, 400 teen-age girls, 400 college men and 400 college women. One senior and one freshman attend the encampment annually i-epresenting A&M. Danforth associates at colleges thi’oughout the United States are man and wife teams who are ex pected to further religious life with primary emphasis upon hav ing sizeable numbers of students entertained in the home. “As associates, Mrs. Nelson and I are especially busy during the Thanksgiving and Christmas holi days ai’ranging dinners for stu dents who can’t be home,” Nelson said. Marcie Miller Qualified Men Enforce Campus Safety Laws By PERRY SHEPARD Battalion Staff Writer Use of the nickname “KK’s” in reference to members of the Cam pus Security Department is apt to make you a very unpopulai’ person with the officers, said Fred Hick man, chief of campus security. The “KK’s,” to coin a phrase, desire to achieve better and more fi’iendly relations with students. Hickman admitted that the officers favor this handle to some ovei'- heard, but still do not relish the often used name. Congested traffic and limited parking facilities presents the greatest problem to security offi cers during the regular school year, stated Hickman. Numerous Duties Directing and controlling traffic are only two of the duties assigned to the security officers. Hickman explained that the protection of both .college and individual prop erty is an all important, if npt the ultimate, task. The Campus Security Depart ment was reorganized to serve in its present capacity in 1945. Pre viously, the department had been supervised and controlled by the commandant of the corps of ca dets. The change was instituted by John W. Rollins, dean of men at that time. Hickman said there are no set qualifications and no definite age Local Girl Scouts Begin Scrap Drive College Station and Bryan Girl Scouts started a scrap-metal drive Monday, announced Mrs. F. C. Teel Griffin, director of drive. Collections will last through August 16. Scrap-metal of any kind will be accepted, Mrs. Griffin explained. Collection boxes are located at the triangle of East Gate and the Girl Scout Little House. Trucks will canvas the entire Bryan-College Station area Satur day, August 16, making collections. Members of the collection com mittee are A. T. Ball, Mrs. Leo Ogg, Mrs. J. B. Page, and Mrs. R. E. Patterson, council president. limit for campsu security officers. However, they must be in good health and appear to have a well founded reason for desiring to serve on the force. The men must also show a sincere interest in the welfare of the school. Working hours differ from that of the students in that the officers must be willing to work any hour, an unlimited number of hours, and whatever shift assigned. When asked about the use of guns, Hickman said the officers wear them at night and at any other time deemed necessary. Hickman began working with law enforcement agencies with the state’s driver’s license division. He was a captain in the highway pa trol and rose to assistant director of the State Depai'tment of Public Safety. He was given a leave of .^absence to serve in the army, but after 26 months of service he assumed his present position with the college in 1945 rather than returning to the State Department agency. House Hits Local Area Samuels Named College Unions Student Head John Samuels of Galveston, economics major at A&M, has been named student chairman of the National Association of College Unions. Samuels is vice-president of the MSC Council for the 1952-53 school year. Samuels will preside at the na tional association’s annual confer ence in Berkeley, Cailf., this fall. In addition, he will attend an exec utive meeting of the association in Chicago, September 9-10, to help lay plans for the conference. Purpose of the annual confer ence, which is attended by repre sentatives of college unions all ov er the nation, is discussion of prob lems in administration of a union, and presentation of new ideas. The California session of the association will be the third which Samuels has attended. In 1950 and 1951 he served as a panel leader during annual conferences at Michigan State College and Okla homa A&M College respectively. He is the son of Mr. and Mi’s. J. S. Samuels of 1306 North One-Half Street in Galveston, and will be- Mrs. Thomas Retires From Library Staff Mrs. Willie D. Thomas, the first woman employee of the college, is retiring after 40 years of service on the library staff. Mrs. Thomas first came to A&M as Miss Willie Davis, October 1, 1907. Due to lack of funds, her services were discontinued in Jan uary, 1909. In 1914 she re-joined the staff after her marriage to W. H. Thomas. During her 40 years of service with the college, she has served under seven presidents. She has seen the library housed in three buildings, and has seen it grow from a handful of volumes and a staff of one, to over 200,000 vol umes and a staff of 30. ‘Pinky’ Growing 10 Foot Tomatoes The tomato vine is ten feet tall and bearing the love apples. Which is by the way of say that the prized tomato vine in the garden of P. L. Downs Jr., at Col lege Station, is doing just what Downs said it would do—grow to a height of 10 feet or more, and it is still growing. Aero Building To Be Completed Early The Aeronautical building will be furnished 100 days before the deadline date, said Oscar Telg, construction superintendent. The original contract called for 300 working days, but because of excellent weather conditions is 85 per cent complete, and will be ready for classes October 1. EE Prof Returns To Engineering Faculty E. H. Andrew, Jr., ’45, will re sume his position this September as an assistant professor in the department of electrical engineer ing. . Andrew was an instructor in that department from 1947 to 1949 when he took a leave of absence from the A&M staff to receive his master of science degree at M.I.T. Returning in the fall of 1950, Andrew taught for two days, at which time he was called to active duty with the Second Armored Di- New Korean G.I. Bill In Operation Aug. 20 Badgett Attending San Antonio ORC W. H. Badgett, manager of the office of Physical Plants for A&M will return Monday, August 18, *from Officers Reserve camp. He has been stationed at Ft. Sam Houston near San Antonio, the past two weeks. _ Korean veterans, who plan to enter training in September under the Korean G.I. bill should request application forms by writing to the nearest Veterans Administra tion immediately, Bennie A. Zinn, veterans advisor, suggested. Since the Veterans Administra tion has not received printed forms to send out, the letters will serve temporarily as an application form. The letters will be officially date stamped the day they are received by the Veterans Administration. This step will insure the veterans getting full subsistence should the printed forms be sent out after the veteran has entered training. Letters should include the date of school registration, field of training, and a copy of service separation papers, Zinn empha sized. Married veterans should also in clude a copy of their marriage cer tificate. Veterans having one or more children should include a copy of a birth certificate of at least one child. The new Korean G.I. bill will become effective Augusta 20. *■ A housing’ shortage has hit the College Station-Bryan area. Things are bad now—but it’s going to be much worse perhaps even before mid-September when the fall semester gets underway. Rental of houses is almost impossible. Two and three- bedroom houses just aren’t to be found. And the lucky ten ant who does stumble across a rental may find himself pay ing as much as $75 a month for a 2-bedroom unfurnished home or up to $125 a month for a place with three bedrooms. Even unfurnished apratments are reflecting the sting of inflation. Faculty members or students may have to shell out $60 to $85 a month for a small one-bedroom apartment. If they are looking for some thing furnished, the ante is even higher. Decent three - room fur nished apartments will hit up to $90 per month. Prices on furnished rooms in some areas are also skyrocketing. Some are being advertised now for as much as $50 per month. Gen erally, these are better rooms with private bath, but the price may still cut a big nick in the budget of a single student or faculty member. One-room apartments are in about the same price bracket as single rooms. The less attractive small apartments, furnished, start at $35 per month. Most of these are garage apartments. The fan cier the layout, the higher the price rises. These are figures compiled on housing conditions in a study by Battalion reporters. They mean that newcomers to the area are going to have a rough time trying to find a place to hang their hats. Faculty Discouraged Several new faculty members who have already spent some time house hunting are extremely dis couraged. They report almost no rental houses available. And the few empty homes for rent are tag ged with prices beyond the average AM employee budget. They might be able to buy be cause, strangely enough, the pur chase prices of homes has decreas ed in many instances. A new comer can buy property here gen erally for a less amount than he could in a comparable area. Some well-built homes are as much as $5,000 less here than in other sim ilar towns. Real estate men take a pessi mistic view of the housing future. They want to sell houses, not rent them. Most agencies believe ren tals will become hafder and hard er to find. The new Oak Terrace addition near the circle is now open only to Bryan AFB personnel. The ad dition is taking car.e of some in coming military personnel, and others already stationed at BAFB —but it has not yet made any ap preciable difference in the number of rental houses available to non military persons. Married college students will probably be able to find accommo dations either in the project hous ing near the south gate or at Col lege View, for veterans. Apart ments in these areas generally rent from $24 to $37.50 per month. Married students living off the campus may have a more difficult time. One real estate agency has a policy of not renting to students, either married or single. No new housing projects are planned in the College Station- Bryan area, the real estate men report. AH Professor Gets PhD at Missouri U. W. N. Warren, A&M’s livestock judging team coach from 1946 to 1950 receives his PhD from the University of Missouri this month. Warren left A&M in June, 1950 to work on his PhD in animal breeding at the university. Dr. Warren will return to A&M in September to continue his work as assistant professor of animal husbandry. vision at Fort Hood. Two weeks later he was ordered to the U. S. Military Academy at West Point, New York, where he completed his tour of active duty as an instructor of electricity. In connection with his duties at West Point, Andrew attended a six week radiological defense course at Edgewood, Maryland. The course dealt with national atomic defense. Andrew and his wife reside at 1309 Foster Street in College Sta tion. Left to right, C. E. Wilson, president of General Motors, and Charles A. Chayne, vice president in charge of engineering staff, welcomes C. W. Crawford, professor and head of the mechanical engineering department at A&M, Byron E. Short, professor and chairman of the department of me chanical engineering. University of Texas, and Wayne S. Beattie, professor and head of the de partment of mechanical engineering. University of Colorado, to the General Motors Engineering Conference in Detroit. 15 Thousand Books Added to Library \ Memorial Cushing Library has added over 15,000 volumes to its present stock during the past year. One of the outstanding gifts re ceived this year was a group of old military volumes. The volumes date back to the Civil War, and were printed by the Department of the Army of the Confederate States. In addition to the increased num ber of volumes, construction im provements to the library have been made. The reserve room and the required reading room have been remodeled. New wall shelv ing has been placed in both rooms, doubling the volume capacity of the two rooms. Flourescent lighting will soon be installed in the reference room, and eventually will be installed in the entire library building.