f I Circulated liaily To 90 Per Cent •f Local Residents Ihe Hattalion PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE Published By A&M Students For 75 Years r 89 : Volume 53 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1953 Price Five Cents ~^ies Attend j ing ROTC 1 4 2 2,1 2 he ;eadets from A & M ling the Fort Benning iti-y ROTC Camp are pper, Bobby J. Rankin, [well, and Philbei - t W. |TC Camp at Fort Ben- Via.iopened June 22, for and universities in the th, and Fifth Ai'my Ar- University of Puerto Aullof 2,187 cadets, ju- jsenior college students, n dance. ctive of camp training is lent the ROTC instruc- 2d by the student at the 1 by additional applica- |ng Ito qualify him for nt in the Army reserves, jiing is essentially of the and unit type, with the :eiyfng experience in the ■e of tactical, technical, istrbtive duties in the sram of instruction is a •ogjram including 288 pheduled military activi- program is made up of ibjects common to all f the army and typically objects. The character- juses of infantry individ- ew served weapons, both I delense will be studied. II week of camp will be a 3b hour field problem, will go from their bar- into a field bivouac and, conditions, the previous letailed instruction will Ihe test of practical ap- 2 f. h P aw Desk es It Easy lefty Pupil a uled students are receiv- ition, at last, since three :>f jnew seats to be in- the Academic Building ‘signed to accommodate |s,”| according to W. H. manager of physical t appropriation by the Directors allocated $20,- e hew seats. Bids will 1 within the next two d Badgett. •et arm chairs of wrought Ijardwood construction •manently installed. The ^pop-adjustable, and pe- \es -will be bolted to the * "seating arrangement al- • maximum use of light Pllfooards has been design ation may be completed itember 1. f the seats now in the ,pi Building have been in 9 nine years, having been re in 1914, Badgett said. alms Remain # mimer Series ;ains Came,” starring y, Tyrone Power and ^^ent, will be shown by Film Society July 13. Century Fox film con- iegeneration and regen- a group of English peo- immunity of India who pe with, among other unleashed forces of na vies remain after the 13th. Season tickets, a dollar, may be pur- the Office of Student ml at the MSC. Ivpm : y v ® ' v f sg -vAce-t- v AT METHODIST CONVENTION — Conferring: during a lull in the World Methodist Con vocation in Philadelphia’s Convention Hall are, left: the Rev. G. W. French, Fort Worth, Tex.; the Rev. John Wesley Ford, Corsicana, Tex.; the Rev. Leslie Seymour, Cisco, Tex.; Bishop William C. Martin, resident Bishop of the Fort Worth-Dallas area, and the Rev. J. W. Sprinkle, Fort Worth. Research V itamin’s Thomas M. Ferguson of the A&M research staff will seek the answer to vitamin B12 problems of egg fertility during the next two years. Ferguson, who will receive the Ph.D. degree in zoology from the Department of Biology and Bio chemistry and Nutrition, has just received a two-year post-doctoral research fellowship from the Na tional Cancer Institute of the U. S. Public Health Service, Depart ment of Health, Education and Welfare. The grant, which will cover sal ary and expenses, becomes effec tive September 1, immediately after Ferguson completes re quirements for his doctor’s degree. Staffer f'JTects To On Study Eggs Already Ferguson is deep into the problems for which the grant was set up, because his doctoral research was along the same lines. During this recent research, Ferguson learned that lack of the much-talked-about Vitamin B12 causes some very marked effects in incubating chicks. He found that organs through out their bodies are smaller and weaker. Some change in the life- process which occurs on the 17th day of incubation throws this weak ness into critical focus and the egg fails to hatch. Ferguson’s research will be done entirely on incubating eggs, since the egg is the largest, most readi- Former Aggies Make Military News Items Seven former students of A&M now in military service received decorations, jkt)motions or rtnas- fers recently. Second Lt. Kenneth E. Hill, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Hill of San Benito, received the Combat In fantryman Badge for excellent per formance of duty with the 7th In fantry Division in Korea. Lieu tenant Hill received the bachelor of science degree in range and fores try from A&M in 1952, entered the army in July of the same year and arrived in Korea in April of 1953. Maj. Francis H. Wilson Jr. of 2511 Woodmont, Austin, son of Col. F. H. Wilson of Montgomery, Ala., has been named assistant ordnance officer of the 2nd Infantry Divis ion in Korea. Major Wilson re ceived the bachelor of arts degree in liberal arts from the college in 1941, is a veteran of 12 years’ serv- ie, and wears six theater ribbons. Second Lt. John R. Knox of 215 Park Lane Drive, San Antonio, has been promoted to first lieutenant while serving with the 1st Cavah-y Division in Japan. Lieutenant Knox received the BS degree in geological engineering in 1951, en tered the army in October of the same year, and is assistant sup- mdo Committee Meets jb.Jef Up Warning System , five-man Texas Torna- ? [Committee will meet p t aly 9 to discuss further |0l tting up a tornado and ’m-warning network in mittee was chosen last -fnl’ 1 all - da y conference by j, 1U* legists and radarmen at |i of the committee are l[),y, regional director, L T . * :• iBureau; Joe S. Flet- ant director of the Tex- nent of Public Safety; ll idiew Paton, command- IlJ* Bather Squadron, Air srvice; Jeff Davis, pub- n he Crockett Democrat, 2 lOl in Freeman Jr. of the irtment of Oceanogra- *ns will center around radar lookout for storm centers, and organization of an ef ficient warning system for cities within the tornadic path. During its first meeting after appointment, the committee drew up the following statement con cerning its function: “A more reliable local warning system for tornadoes and other severe storms can be established in Texas using existing forecast ing, communication and radar fa cilities. “Radar gives us more local in formation than any other means of observation and an effectual ra dar network will lead to more ac curate tornado and severe storm forecasts. Immediate first-hand re ports by responsible individuals of tornadoes or tornado damage to police or Weather Bui'eau offices are to be encouraged. ply officer in Pleadquarters and Service"! Company, 8th Engineer Combat Battalion. He wears two theater service ribbons. Second Lt. Corder S. Reynolds, son of Mr. and Mrs. Corder S. Reynolds of 716 Columbia, Shreve port, La., was promoted to first lieutenant while serving with the 1st Cavalry Division in Japan. Lieutenant Reynolds received the BS degree in mechanical engineer ing in* 1950, entered the army in November of 1951, and now is mess supply and transportation officer in Headquarters and Service Com pany of the 8th Engineer Combat Battalion. He wars two theater (Continued on Page 2) ly available form of fundamental life-tissue. For practical purposes, the egg represents a single cell, and the hatching pi’oeess closely, parallels embryonic development of any cell-form. Ferguson will conduct his re search in the Poultry Husbandry Department, unders supervision of Dr. J. R. Couch of the Depart ments of Poultry Husbandry and Biochemistry and Nutrition. The fellowship was made pos sible through a research grant which has financed studies carried out by Dr. Couch and his co-work ers since 1949. Dr. Couch and his group first reported the deficiency symptoms in a scientific article in the Jour nal of Nutrition in July of 1950. Ferguson picked up the problem in June of 1952 and has carried the study further into cellular de velopment and organ differentia tion. Born at Bumet November 8, 191.3, Ferguson served as a civilian instructor in aircraft instruments and as a naval reserve officer for three years during World War II. He received the B.A. degree from Southwestem University at Georgetown in 1936 and the M.S. degree in zoology from A&M 10 years later. He also attended the University of Texas. He has taught at A&M Consoli dated high school, Corpus Christi high school, and in the A&M Biol ogy Department. During the past year he has been on study leave from the Biology Department while working on his Ph.H. degree. He is married and is the father ,of four children. House O K’s Credit Bill, Seek $118 Million More Addition Made On Parking Lot For Law Hall The addition to the parking lot west and north of Law Hall is ex pected to be completed by Wednes day, and this addition will increase the holdmg capacity of this park ing az-ea by about 100 cars, said J. E. Hurt, job crew foreman. The area will be covered with native gravel similar to that now in the old parking lot. One and maybe two partitions will be placed in the new addition to regulate ve hicle parking and provide a thoroughfare through the area. A north side entrance to Jones Sti’eet will be provided for those using this parking lot, Hurt said. Shrubbery will be planted in an area 20 feet wide between the lot and Jones Street, added Hurt. With the exception of the entrance space, this shrubbery will extend from the east to the west side of the parking lot. A bottleneck area in the old lot that exists immediately north of Law’s west wing will be partitioned off. This parking lot is for those students living in Puryear, Law, Leggett, Bizzell and Mitchell Halls, Hurt said. Wildlife Grad Snares Moth A rare moth was caught in the Engineering Building last Friday, said Perry Glick, En tomologist. Known as the Old Witch Moths, these specimens breed in South and Central America and fly north to die, according to Glick. These moths fly like bats and at a terrific rate of speed, usually making the jour ney in four or five days. Some have been caught as far north as the Northern part of Canada and Ontario. The moth was found by John Scroggin, graduate student of Wildlife Management, from San Antonio. * WASHINGTON—UP)—The House Agriculture Commit tee approved Monday a bill to provide emergency credit to farmers and cattlemen in the drouth-stricken Southwest. At the same time Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson, (D-Texas), called on Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Benson to launch a $118 million cattle program to help relieve the “economic ca tastrophe” caused by the drouth. Johnson, the Senate minority leader, also urged Benson in a floor speech to use price-support authority within his jurisdiction to try to stabilize the market for cattle. While Johnson took this track, Benson, in a statement, urged the nation’s cattlemen to go slow in selling off beef- producing herds in a “mistaken belief” that the price outlook is hopeless. “Unfortunate farmers and livestock men in the drouth ■♦■areas are being forced to sell cattle—especially where water is no longer available,” the secretary said. “This does not apply to farmers with good pastures and lots of hay and feed. Such fortunate farmers should study the situation carefully before sacrificing cattle on the present distressed market. Rains and winter pastures may bring a reverse in the present situation.” The emergency credit bill, sponsored by Chairman Clifford R. Hope, (R.Kan.), of the House Agriculture Committee, would authorize federal loans to farmers in disaster areas and special live stock areas and special livestock loans to established ranchers and stockmen if their credit needs are not met elsewhere. It would also let the Agriculture Department use disaster loan funds to furnish feed or seed to farmers in the bone-dry areas of six states. Money for this purpose now must come from the President’s Emer gency Fund or other sources. The bill is expected to go to the House floor soon for action. Johnson told the Senate that farmers and stockmen in the South west already have gone so deeply into debt that only “a miracle” can save them. “There is little left other than liquidation of their remaining as sets,” he said. “This is the great est farm trgedy since the Dust Bowl. Unless it is checked it will be an even greater tragedy. The (Continued on Page 4) Contribution Made To 12lh Man Fund A $20.00 contribution to the “Twelfth Man Scholarship Fund” has been received from Lt. H. A. “Al” Sexton, ’52, a former oppor tunity award holder, of 1300 New ton, Dothan, Alabama. “I would like to give this check to be used to help give some boy the same break I had,” said Sex ton in making this contribution. Vet Medicine To Move Aug.l To New Home New quarters of the Veterinary Medicine and Surgery Clinic will be ready for occupancy August 1, according to H. E. Redmond, pro fessor of veterinary surgery and medicine. This is the first to be completed of several buildings planned for the Veterinary School. Others to be completed during the next two years will house the remaining six departments of the school. The new, functional design build ing is as modern as any in the country, said Redmond. It is be ing constructed at a cost of approx imately $800,000 by Andrews and Parker, Inc. of Bryan. The clinic is located northwest of the campus, beyond the railroad, where other buildings of the Vet erinary School will be built. This location was chosen because of the need to get all animals off the cam pus. Junior and senior agriculture students who have completed pre- vet requirements are eligible for enrollment in the School of Veter inary Medicine, but must be ap proved for admission. Enrollment is limited to 64 new students each year. This year 47 were graduated from the school. The Veterinary School has occu pied its present quarters since 1934. Seedsmen To Attend Short Course July 13 More than 40 seedsmen repre senting the wholesale and retail seed trade in Texas are expected to attend the Seedsmen’s Short Course to be held at A&M July 13-16. The course is sponsored by A&M, the Texas Seedsmen’s Asso ciation and the Texas Department of Agriculture. Purpose of the course, according to Associate Prof. R. C. Potts of the Department of Agronomy, is “to present first hand information regarding seed laws, identification of crop and weed seed and proce dures for making purity analysis “Pirates Of Penzance” Summer Operetta Presents A Cast With Much Experience In Musicals The cast of “Pirates of Pen zance,” summer operetta to be pre sented at The Grove on July 14 and 15, has members who have had con siderable experience in this type of entertainment. Mrs. Lenora Silby who plays Ma- ble, the soprano lead, has recently come from New York. She is a graduate of Juilliard School of Mu sic and has had extensive exper ience in many musical fields. Out standing was her tour with “Show- boat” through Canada as Julie a three month contract on BBC with a concert series representative at the National Symposium of Music, and a $1500 scholarship with Met Opera School won as second-place “Miss Alabama”. Also, television including colored TV, are among Lenora’s many accomplishments. Lamar McNew, as Frederic, is apprentice to the “Pirates of Pen zance” around whom the story un folds. Lamar is a recent graduate of A&M in Civil Engineering. This past year as a senior, he was a member of the Student Senate, a Cadet Captain, President of MSC, and was mentioned in Who’s Who in American Universities and Col leges. He has studied music pri- i Locally she has taken an active vately, has been soloist for church es and organizations. Singing Ca dets, and took part in Rio Rita. Mabel’s father, the Major Gen eral, is eloquently portrayed by Bill Guthrie. From the A Capella Choir, the Singing Cadets, and a Liberal Arts Degree at A&M, Bill has become an accomplished musi cian. This past year he was Dir ector of Music at Bordertown Mili tary Institute and Minister of Mu sic for the Trinity Methodist Church in Bordentown, New Jersey. He is at present on vacation from the Westminster Choir College in Princeton, N.J. where he is a sen ior. Gilbert & Sullivan gives the fem inine “character role” to a con tralto, in “Pirates of Penzance,” it is Ruth, played by Iris Bullard as Katisha in the “Mikado”. Iris is a graduate of Johns Hopkins Uni versity and Peabody Conservatory of Music in Baltimore Maryland, and a member of the Baltimore Civic Opera Co. She has had ex perience in grand opera, light op era, oratorio, concert and radio. part in civic campaigns, in radio, and Aggie Players. Billy M. Philp, the pirate king, is best known in this community as Uncle Remus, a radio program cre ated, written, and produced by Bil ly. In past years he has sung with the a capella choir, at Tarlton State College and took part in pro ductions of “The Student Prince”, “Chocolate Soldier,” and “Blossom Time”. Mrs. Helen Crook, as Edith, is one of Gilbert & Sullivan’s young girls, a ward of the Major General. Helen was soloist with the A Ca pella Choir at Stephen F. Austin and had the distinction of perform ing a solo in Morman Tabernacle with the choir. She studied at Baylor and has taken part in “The Chocolate Soldier” and “Blossom Time”. Kate, another ward, is Mrs. Shirley Smith. Shirley comes from New York where she was a mem ber of the Tri-City Light Opera Co., and Branch Chorus of the Met Opera Co. Both in Texas and New York, she has won first place in Music Festivals. For the past two years, she has been soloist for the Eastern Star, other organizations and churches. Sergeant of Police will be played by Buddy Vance, another Bryan boy who started his singing career in the A Capella Choir at SFA in Bryan. He has, studied music pri vately, . is a member • of a mixed quartette and mixed octet, and is also an experienced radio announ cer. At present he is a student in Animal Husbandry and on the staff of radio station WTAW. Miss Carolyn Thurman, Isabel, is a senior at SFA and a member of the A Capella Choir. She has sung on the Paul Whiteman ‘Teen Club” show in New York, she won first place in the State Solo Contest in Houston this year and appeared on KPRC TV. Caralyn sang in the “Mikado” last year and is a pop ular soloist for clubs and churches. Singing Cadet, Roland Bahl- mann, senior in architecture, plays Samuel, a Pirate Lieutenant. Ro land, who hails from San Antonio, is Associate Editor of “The Engi neer”, member of Phi Eta Sigma, and a Distinglished Student. and germination tests. Varietal adaption, fertilizer recommenda tions and insect control for high production will be given.” Scientists of the Department of Agronomy will give talks includ ing Dr. Potts, L. C. Coffey, George Rivers, Ben R. Spears, E. M. TreW, C. E. Watson, M. K. Thornton, J. S. Rodgers, W. B. Coke and Maur ice Futrell, plant pathologist, US- DA, J. C. Gaines, Department of Entomology, Cliff Deaton, chief Seed Divisions, State Department of Agriculture, Ellis Taylor, chief inspector, State Seed Laboratory, State Department of Agriculture, John R. Hutchison, extension horti culturist. Sessions will be held in the Me morial Student Center. Dr. Potts will be in charge of the short course. The short course committee of the Association includes Tony Bar- tos, Ruhman Grain and Seed Co., Waco; A. J. Biggio, Robert Nich olson Seed Co., Dallas; Ervil S. Fry, Asgrow Texas Co., San An tonio; William H. Hogge, The States Seed Co., Garland; Marshall Manley, Southern Seed Co., Brown- wood; W. C. O’Neal, Brown-O’Neal Seeds Corsicana; Z. P. Pilgreen, Martin-Lane Co., Vernon; W. H. Raymond, Archer Grain Co., Inc., Houston; Grady Clark, Eastern Seed Co., Taft; Ted Tipps, Hunt and Tipps Grain and Seed Co., Lubbock and Mensing West, Term inal Grain Co., Fort Worth. Guion To Show 3-Dimension Films Guion Hall will have Three Di mension movies next September since many good quality pictures should be available by then, man ager Tom Puddy has announced. A little additional equipment is necessary for showing them in Guion Hall, but it will be installed in August. Hollywood has not yet adopted a standard 3-D method, Plddy said, but the current method uses two projectors simultaneously with spectators wearing polarized glas ses. They also have 3-D movies that use a wide rectangular screen.