1 Circulated Daily To 90 Per Cent J >f Local Residents The Battalion PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE Published By A&M Students For 75 Years r66: Volume 53 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1953 Price Five Cents President Rejects Proposal For Consolidation of Corps Reactions Vary On President’s Act Dr. D. J. Clazzic Looking for “man-of-distinction* Cartoon by Bob Hendry > NEX T PRESIDENT—II zzic Was Once vest at lears as an instructor college seems to be llazzic’s major qualifi- )e presidentcy of A&M. I I’m qualified for the told one of his friends |ear-old professor of phanics (car washing) BS degree from a [college in the Corn |nd his MS from the [f Cuba. While in Cuba, ireh work in advertis- to find the “man of ited a Ph. D. from the Kelogg University, known as the “most lefnan in the profes- isas bootlegging at the the “professor of in- i'lazzic is given unof- for inventing crib Ithe Hathaway patch, jer’s formula used for discharged from his jan instructor when he crib sheets. He was to students in oppon- Irs’ classes. ter accepted an instruc- ^^Hon with all-girls (he East where he re- nstructor foi; 15 yeai*s. irs Suggest p^ate ’er for Gift ar between the Col- m post office park- nd Sulphur Springs be one of the major of the class of ’53 oh Andrews, chairman of ’53 gift committee, cer. will be inscribed ge, Gift of class of jor suggestions include as a pulpuit, to be put :ith chapel, built by the ents association, and a iewing stand to replace one on the main drill oposals are a trophy 'trie ;;timing clock for ysical education plant, id in the new area and nt fund to be used for >f the members of the 3. said the class intends ut $12,00 for the gift, committee will meet ttei, senior class presi- m. Thursday to dis- f suggestions, of the gift committee ndrews, chirman, Bill 'ale Bientendorf, Kieth :ob Hutchison, Spencer nd Bill Chamlee. ; Reserved ] for 53-54 .ervations in the MSC >3-54 school year will through May 31, said e Holland, guest room iy be reserved by nam- nt during which hous ed, she said, fo or more events oc- ame week-end, a draw- held for the available “I was not promoted during this time,” the pi-esidential-candidate claims,” because the president of the college didn’t know I was teaching until the girls’ dormi tory burned down. I’d like the change at A&M and I can make gentlemen out of those men.” Besides being a bachelor, a good bridge player, ex-polo star for the Cuban Hotshots, Dr. Clazzic is well known as a mixer. He was official mascot for the East Coast Bar Maids Association for eight con secutive years. A consistant reader of the Dallas Morning News and The Rotarian, Clazzic considers himself well qualified for the job of presidency and “in the know on Texas politics and its higher education.” Military Cut Won’t Hit A&M Says Col. Davis The Defense Department’s plan to cut military manpow er should not materially af fect the A&M Corps of Ca dets, said Col. Joe E. Davis, commandant. When the Korean war ends, 250,000 men will be discharged. About 180,000 men will be dis charged if the war pursues its present stalemated course. “This is my own opinion,” Davis said. “The military department has not received any official word from Washington as yet.” High defense officials said the cut would save an estimated $2,400,000 during the 1953-54 fiscal year which starts July 1. President Eisenhower, at a news conference last week, gave little in dication that an immediate induc tion in defense output would be made. In reply to a question, the Presi dent said it possibly is true that there will be fewer armed services personnel in the distant future. Defense Department sources were unable to supply a break down by services or commands of any slackening in the defense ef fort. Follies, 4 Harvey’ Set Friday in Guion The Aggie Follies will be pre sented in conjunction with the Ag gie Player's’ presentation of “Har vey” Friday and Saturday in Guion Hall. Tickets will be 75^ for the Fri day performances and one dollar for the Saturday shows, single ticket will gain admission to both shows. ‘ X The first .'performance of “Har vey” will be presented Friday at 7:30 p. m. The Aggie Follies will follow it immediately. A matinee performance of Harvey will be pre sented Saturday at 3 p. m. The Saturday Follies show will start at 7:30 p. m. and the All- College Mother’s Day Dance will follow it in the Grove. International Theme The Follies will be presented on an international theme, John Sam uels, chairman of the Follies Com mittee said. The program will be in the form of a trip around the world made by an Aggie, John (Dukey) Childs. His tour will be conducted by H. L. McAdams, a “genie.” The opening scene will be at A&M. The Singing Cadets and the Aggieland Orchestra will repre sent A&M in this scene. McAdams’ Bryan Kiwanians Installed Friday A Kiwanis Club for Bryan will be formally installed at 7:15 p. m. Friday in Maggie Parker’s Dining Hall: The College Station Kiwanis Club assisted in forming the Bryan club. Speaker for the evening will be Kiwanis District Governor Bailey Choate. The Bryan Kiwanians in vited members of the College Sta tion Club and their wives to attend the meeting. Jesse Thames will be installed as president of the Bryan club. Senate to Discuss Election Board The powers and duties of the Election Commission will be dis cussed by the Student Senate at 7:30 p. m. Thursday in the MSC. Next year’s senators are invited to attend. Other business to be discussed is final plans for the Mothers Day program in Guion Hall and final arrangements for the Senate Ban quet May 12. Hillbilly Combo will represent West Texas in the second scene. The next stop on Childs’ trip will be an Italian Street Market where Lamar McNew will sing to the music of Roddy Peeples’ Com bo. Trpett Fields’ Barbershop Quartet. and singer Pete Mayeaux furnish;’ the entertainment in a French'“Night Club scene. Ernesto Martelino and his Latin American Combo and Latin Ameri can Trio will perform in a Latin American scene. The final scene will be back at-A&M. The Fresh man Drill Team and Dean H. W. Barlow’s Faculty Orchestra re present A&M in the final scene. Phi Kappa Czech for Tells Juniors Ties! for A&M’ By CHUCK NEIGHBORS Battalion News Editor Freshmen will remain segregated from the rest of the corps next year. “I cannot approve the recommendation that members of all classes be housed together on company level throughout the corps,” said President of the College M. T. Harrington, in a report to the 15-man junior steering committee which presented the original plan for consolidation. The results and advantages of the Third Division have proven most satisfactory, the president said. The number of freshmen withdrawing from school has been greatly re duced since the Third Division was established, he said. It is in the best interests of the corps that we continue oui’ present housing and unit or- + ganization, said Harrington. Classes should not “control” ca det life, said Harrington. Desig nated authority should come from cadet officers and non-commission ed officers if the corps is to func tion successfully. Harrington recommended that the committee makes every effort to improve the spirit and “disin terested” feeling in the First and Second Division towards the Third Division. He commended the committee for showing evidence of leadei*ship, and said he hoped their attitude could be adopted by the whole corps next year. Some of the steering committee’s original recommendations for con solidation included military and academic reasons. The group of juniors contended that CQ could be more rigidly en forced under consolidation of the corps and that freshmen would de velop a competitive spirit toward studies because of the ‘ General Moore award competition. Military Advantages In military advantages of doing away with the Third Division, the committee said sophomores would - have more responsibility, ease of control over discipline would re sult, sophomorers would serve one year instead of two as “low man” in the corps set up and greater interest in individual outfits would result. The committee also named some morale advantages. These includ ed the fact that spirit at A&M is divided under the present system, good examples would be "set by all upperclassmen instead of a few, more friendships would result in (See CONSOLIDATION, Page 2) Reaction to the president’s deci sion on the consolidation issue was varied. Col. Joe E. Davis, commandant of cadets, said he feels much the same as the president does, but the steering committee’s sugges tions were a “step in the right di rection.” “We are not ready for consoli dation,” Davis said, “until we com pletely do away with any adverse criticism of the corps.” Dean John R. Bertrand of the Basic Division, commends the ideas MSC Art Director Mrs. Terry Named For Top 10 Women By PEGGY MODDOX Battalion Women’s Editor Recently nominated by the local women’s clubs as “One of the Top 10 Women in Texas,” Mrs. Ralph B. (Emalita Newton Terry is continuing her work to promote art at A&M and College Station. “It was more wonderful than I ever dreamed,” said the MSC Ait Advisor and instructor about the recognition paid her by the local women’s clubs. “I don’t care if it never goes any further.” The project sponsored by a Corpus Christi organization has been postponed until next year; however, Mrs. Terry says she still feels honored by her nomina tion. She is constantly striving toward completion of her dream: to make A&M the art center of Texas. Con sequently, Emalita Terry is one of the busiest women on the cam pus. “I get tired, tired to death, but never bored,” she says. “I have taught art since I was in high school, but I have never thought of it as work. I guess it is because I am never bored.” It does seem unusual that she should have taught while attending high school. More un usual and amazing is the fact that Eduard Taborsky, who has lived under Communist. rule, will speak on the • consequences of Stalin’s death at the annual Phi Kappa Phi initiation banquet Thursday in the MSC. Taborsky, a history professor at the University of Texas, was once secretary to the latq Eduard Benes, president of Czechslovakia. He was. that nation’s envoy to Sweden when the Communists took she began work on her degree at Howard Payne College in Brown- wood when she was 13 years old and completed it when she was 15. Mrs. Terry finished her high school course at the Howard Payne Academy instead of the Brown- wood high school so she could spend all her spare time in the art studio. While doing all of this, she also was instructing. Her painting career began when she was 11 years old. For three years during the summer she attended the Texas Artists’ Camp at Christoval, a little town near- San Angelo, her birthplace. After she was graduated she did extensive study in San An tonio under Avier Gonzales and Jose Aipa, both natives of Spain. Since that time she has studied under Adele Brunet of Dallas and New York, Will Stevens of New Orleans, Anthony de Young of San Antonio. In 1942 she was married to Ralph Terry who now is attend ing A&M. While Uncle Sam was moving him around the country and overseas, she was em ployed at the only job that she considered work—drafting. When the war ended, Ralph re- tm-ned to college here. Emalita was selected as the first MSC Art (See MRS. TERRY, Page 4) Eduard Taborsky over in 1948. Taborsky’s speech will be “What After Stalin ? Initiates 123 People Phi Kappa Phi, the National Honor Society for all branches of higher learning, will initiate 20 faculty members and 103 students at the banquet before Taborsky’s speech. Students from the schools of Agriculture, Arts and Sciences, Engineering, and Veterinary Medi cine will be honored. Taborsky, who received his Phi Sets Speaker versity in Prague, entered the Czechoslavakian diplomatic ser vice in 1937. Fled to Britain After the Nazi invasion he fled to Britain where he acted as Benes’ secretary. In this capacity he attended state meets with Franklin D. Roosevelt, Stalin and Molotov. After the libei’ation, he was ap pointed to the Swedish post. He resigned in 1948 when the Com munists came into power. Since then he has taught his tory and political science at the University of Stockholm, Ohio State University and University of Texas. Taborsky is the author of several books on political theory, two of which have been translated into English. The banquet will begin at 7:30 in the MSC Ballroom. TSFW Director Hold Meet in MSC The Board of directors of the Texas State Federation of Wo men’s clubs is meeting in the MSC today and tomorrow. About 120 women are expected to be on hand for the program which will include business meet ings, luncheons and speakers. President M. T. Harrington will speak to the group on “Education at A&M” at 7 p. m. today. The five federated women’s clubs of Brazos County will serve as hostesses at a tea in the house of Mrs. M. T. Harrington this after noon. The five cloubs are The Bryan Women’s Club, the Extension Ser vice Club, the Campus Study Club, the Bryan Reading Club, and the College Station - Bryan Evening Study Club. Mrs. Van Hook Stubbs of Worth am is president of the organiza- doctor’s degree from Charles Uni- tion. HIGHEST ACADEMIC HONORS—Three senior students recently were named to receive the Faculty Achievement Award, highest academic award granted by the School of Arts and Sciences. They are (L to R) Otto Ashley Prather Jr. of Donna, business administration; Frank G. Nedbalek of Bryan, English; Dean J. P. Abbott, dean of the School of arts and sciences; and Robert E. Huffman of Brecken ridge, chemistry. of the committee, but feels that a move to end segregation of the freshman class at this time is unnecessary. With more upperclassmen added to Third Division organizations next year, the load on junioi - s and seniors there will be lightened, he said. Dean Bertrand expressed a hope for a better corps of cadets in the year 1953-54, one which would show evidence of readiness for a future change in its organizational structure. Fred H. Mitchell, sergeant ma jor of the corps of cadets and spokesman for the committee, said President of the College M. T. Harrington is not opposed to the consolidation program, but thinks instead that we are not ready for it at present. “If we really work on the prob lem next year, it looks like we might have the coips together again sometime in the near fu ture,” Mitchell said. A&M Marching Units Will Be In Bryan Parade The Freshman Band, Freshman Drill Team and the George Moore Trophy winner unit will take part in the Armed Forces Day Parade May 16, said Lt. Col. Taylor Wil kins, assistant commandant. The parade will be held in Bry an. The purpose of Armed Forces Day is to better inform the public on the nature of the armed forces. The Armed Forces Day parade, bing arranged by Major Robert H. Sanctuary, planning officer for this area, will include units from A&M, Allen Academy, Veterans of: Foreign Wars, American Legion and Bryan Air Force Base- Air cover will be provided for the parade by both jet and prop driven planes from th base. A helicopter will lead the march. A Battery AAA Wins Best Drilled A Battery Anti-Aircraft Artil lery placed first in competition for the best drilled unit in the corps for the 1952-53 school year. It won with a total of 4,644 points. Placing second with 4,460 points was the White Band. Others plac ing in the top 10 were Squadron 10, third; A Infantry, fourth; Ma roon Band, fifth; Freshman Band, sixth; Squadron 22, seventh; Squadron 5, eighth; Squadron 24, ninth; and Squadron 21, tenth. The Freshman Band won fii’st place in the Federal Inspection re view with 1,000 points. Others placing in top positions were a Battery Anti - Aircraft Artillery, second; Squadron 10, third; White Band, Maroon Band, and Squadron 6 fourth; Squadron 22, and Company A, sixth; A In fantry, Squadron 21, Squadron 23, and Squadron 3, eighth. Parade for Mothers Set for Sunday The annual Mother’s Day parade will be held at 9:05 a. m. Sunday on the main drill field. Uniform will be number one khaki with helmet liners, but with out white glives. Seniors and staff juniors will wear green ties; all other cadets will wear khaki ties. Order of march will be the same used for other corps reviews this year. The parade will not be grad ed.