The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 14, 1953, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Pa
c>
1
\
tho
con
me,
fisc
cur
pec
trei
the
foi
ls
and
the
alri
or
fac
fiel
ten
re a
mei
req
I
1
in t
tha
cau
tak
the
ing
fau
4
Sha
Te>
—a
sur-
S
thei
fan
G;
Ai
E
mai
at
Coll
the
16,
Kin
G
Can
a C
A
sior
out
can
h
u
A
ests
prei
of 1
yea
sem
his
T
in
mal
has
Moc
saw
old
H
mor
of <
tion
woo
en
mat
of i
“]
son
for
the
an i
C
bles
ieal
the
and
pub
and
and
tton
Bate:
matt
Celle
»Wde.
jresa
catii
the
of i
at t
plac
209
JEJ
Bob
Lou
JoljE
Page 4
THE BATTALION
Tuesday, July 14, |953
Langford
Named to Two
Committees
Ernest Langford, head of the
A&M Department of Architecture,
has been named to two national
committees.
He has been named to the Com
mittee on Education of The Amer
ican Institute of Architects and to
the Study Committee on Architec
tural Education of the Southern
Regional Education of the South
ern" Regional Education Board.
The duties of the Committee on
Education of the AIA are to for
mulate and recommend plans
whereby the aesthetic and the sci
entific qualifications of the profes
sion and the public appreciation of
the arts and design will be for
warded; to maintain collaborative
contact with the National Architec
tural Accrediting Board, the Na
tional Council of Architectural
Registration Boards and the As
sociation of Collegiate Schools of
Architecture and in collaboration
with other committees to consider
the general aspects and trends of
the educational programs and cur
ricula of the schools of architec
ture; to carry out the purposes of
the Wald Educational Fund ac
cording to plans approved by ex
ercise general supervision of the
carrying out of the purposes of
such income gifts to the education
al program as are designated by
the board, according to plans ap
proved by the board; to perform
other duties consistent with the
general duties stated above which
are assigned to the committee by
the board—to investigate sub-pro-
fessional and pre-professional
training in colleges, junior colleg
es, technical institutes, vocational
high schools, also education of lay
men regarding architecture, in
schools and colleges.
Poultry Breeders’
Set for MSC July
School
15-16
The Annual Poultry Breeders’
School will be held in the Memor
ial Student Center, July 15-16, J.
H. Quisenberry, poultry department
head has announced.
Two out-of-state speakers will be
featured on the program. J. I.
Taggart of Chickmaster Incubator
Company, Cleveland, Ohio, will dis
cuss “Incubator Hygiene”. Discus
sion topics scheduled for Dr. C. W.
Upp, head of Louisiana State Uni
versity Poultry Department, are,
“Will the Meat Bird of Tomorrow
be a Cross or a Standardbred ?”
and “Specialization of and in the
Poultry Industi’y”.
Panel discussion, “Turkey Hatch-
ability”, will be led by George Dra
per, turkey supervisor of the Na
tional Turkey Improvement Asso
ciation. Bill Moore, Extension
poultryman, will serve as chairman
of a second panel discussion,
“Trends in the National Plans”.
Faculty members appearing on
the program are Quisenberry; W.
E. Briles, professor of poultry hus
bandry; E. D. Parnell, professor of
Pecan Growers
Hold Conference
More than 145 are due to at
tend the Texas Pecan Growers As
sociation Conference to be held at
A&M today. Sessions will be held
in the Memorial Student Center.
John E. Hutchison of the Horti
culture Department will chair the
conference.
Congress Asked
For Hiway Funds
The 83rd session of Congress
should not go into history without
taking favorable action on a bill
to provide approximately $200 mil
lion of Federal funds for high
way construction, J. H. Kultgen
of Waco, President of the Texas
Good Roads Association, has ad-
vised Texas members.
In a letter addressed to Senator
Lyndon B. Johnson, Senator Price
Daniel and Representative Sam
Rayburn, Kultgen urged every ef
fort to bring about passage of road
assistance under either the Demp
sey or the Dondero bill.
Gen. Ike Ashburn, Executive
Vice President of the Texas Good
Roads Association, last week ap
peared before the House Sub-Com
mittee of the Public Works Com
mittee in Washington. He told
the committee members Texas
economy is dependent upon more
money for highways.
Under the present formula, bas
ed on highway mileage and motor
fuel tax payments, Texas would
get from $16 to $25 million addi
tional Federal funds for interstate
highways.
0TJY, SKI.I,, RKNT OK TUADK. Rateq
„ . . . ou u, word per insertion with
E5c minimum. Space rate in classified
section .... 6o€ per column-inch. Send
• II classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES
OFFICE. All ads must be received in
student Activities office by 10 a.m. on the
Say before publication.
FOR SALE
1950 CHEV. pickup, one-owner car in good
shape. Will sell right. Phone 6-2701.
MY 1941 BUICK—S195.00. D. M. Vestal
304 Gilchrist, College Hills, 4-7981.
THREE (3) 1949 Chevrolet Two Boor Se
dans, one (1) 1949 Chevrolet Four Door
Sedan and one <T> 1950 Chevrolet Two
Door Sedan. Sealed bids will be re
ceived In the Office of the Comptroller
until 10 a.m. Tuesday, July 14, 1953.
The right is reserved to reject any and
all bids and to waive any and all tech-
caiities. Address: Comptroller. Texas
A. and M. College Svstem. College Sta
tion, Texas for further information.
• FOR RENT •
FURNISHED Garage Apartment in South
Oakwood. Available second six weeks
only. Call 4-7712.
a pa
North Gate. Available July 10 to Aug
ust 25. Phone 4-1197 or see at 418
College Main.
UNUSUALLY nice three-room furnished
apartment. Just off campus. Very
large rooms. Two closets. Coolest
anartment in College Station. S50.00.
Phone 6-3776 or inquire at 601 Montclair
by Southside Grocery.
TWO BEDROOM furnished house in Col
lege Hills, Phone 4-5358.
ROOMS with private baths, meals. Table
boarders accommodated. Mrs. M. B.
Parker, The Oaks, 200 S. Congress, Bry
an, Texas.
IN COLLEGE HILLS—one bedroom fur
nished apartment adults only, no pets.
! Di
S55.00. Inquire 103 Francis Drive.
SEWING machines. Pruitt’s Fabric Shop.
• WANTED •
RIDE from 800 N. Crenshaw in Bryan to
College View. 5% davs a week. Call
4-1229 or write Box 5045.
• SPECIAL NOTICE •
SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300 A.F. A A.M.
Work in E. A. Degree. Al
so examinations.
EDWARD MADELEY, W.M.
N. M. MCGINNIS, Sec.
K&B DRIVING
RANGE
NOW OPEN
On Fin Feather Road
Bryan, Texas
poultry husbandry, R. R. Shrode,
piofessor of genetics.
The number pre-registering for
the breeders’ school has been small
but approximately 200 are expected
to attend the Poultry Disease Clin
ic on Friday, following adjourn
ment of the earlier meeting. No
women are registered for the
school, but some wives will prob
ably attend the clinic, Quisenberry
said.
Department of Poultry Husband
ry and School of Veterinary Medi
cine are jointly sponsoring Fri
day’s meeting which will be in ses
sion from 9:00 a.m. to 4:15 p.m.
in the ballroom of the Memorial
Student Center.
A. H. Students Visit
Bryan Cattle Sale
A.H. 406 students, accompanied
by Professor F. I. Dahlberg of the
animal husbandry department, at
tended the Bryan Cattle Auction
Tuesday afternoon.
The students conducted a study
of the procedures followed by the
Bryan Auction Company. Among
the activities studied were facili
ties furnished, number of buyers,
prices, kind of cattle sold, and
weighing facilities at the auction
barn.
70,000 Chinese Attack
(Continued from Page 1)
other United States adviser to the
South Koreans.
“Our men have been at it five
hours now and they are still hold
ing well,” he said.
The Eighth Army said the at
tacks apparently were in two ma
jor sections. Up to 35,000 men—
were striking between Kumhwa
and Kumsong, northeast of the old
Sniper Ridge battle scene.
The second Chinese force with
about 5,000 men was striking west
of the Pukham River.
All along the line, however, the
Allies fought back with counter
attacks and artilery fire that
matched or surpassed the Reds in
volume.
By 4 a.m. Tuesday the battle ap
peared to be developing as a ma
jor thrust—but still a limited Red
offensive.
Unless the action suddenly wid
ens or deepens it seemed likely to
Army sources that the Reds were
striking only to flatten out the
Kumsong bulge as a display of
power.
The battle dwarfed any action
the front has seen since the truce
talks began two years ago.
“The enemy artillery is extra-
CLEVELAND, O. — Milk pro
duced annually in the United States
would fill a river 3000 miles long,
40 feet wide, and three feet deep,
according to the Milk Producers
Federation of Cleveland.
ordinary,” said Maj. Ralph Cowan
of Elmira, N.Y., a United States
adviser at the front. “This is a
big battle—not just another out
post battle.”
A steady rain began to fall in
the western half of Korea early
Tuesday. If extended to the east,
it might slow the Chinese effort.
Carpenters Repair
Windows of Mitchell
Carpenters have been repairing
the windows and screens of Mit
chell Dorm. The carpenters have
put in new windows, window-panes,
screen wire, and screen frames
where needed.
The wood work on the outside
will be painted when the wood work
is completed, said the carpenters.
culat<
Seedmen F
For S/w,ocal
R. C. Potts (
of Agronomyv
the Seed men’s
held at A&I1 J! r Vol
than 40 are due
sessions being l-
ial Student Cen. I
AGGIES!!
We Have Food to Suit Your Taste
W.
Excellent Service
Wehrman's Cafe
Highway 21 West in Bryan City Limits
1009 W. 25TH STREET
Across the Highway from Bryan Tractor & Supply Co.
M, Thu
lommam
egotiato
our tod
iturday,
Friday
15-mi m
ay’s mec
.m. and
possible
ed at 11
word
for tho
insual s1
sion.
ve been
ent stri
/e alwaj
• HELP WANTED •
NATIONAL Office Machine Company, lead
er in its field, opening agency in College
Station - Bryan area has opportunity for
ambitious willing worker whose record
will stand investigation. No investment
as company furnishes machine and serv
ice department—also trains men in pro
fessional sales and business systems—Car
necessary—$10,000 to $15,000 year in
come and profitable career for right man.
Reply to F.E. Box 284-A, A&M College.
College Station stating age, physical ap
pearance, eduuction, and past work his
tory.
• NURSERIES •
BABY SITTING in my home or part time.
C-3-Z College View.
Directory of
Business Services
CNSURANCH of all kinds. Homer Adam*
KTnrtb Oato. Call 4-1217.
Official Notice
“All Korean veterans are reminded that
if they do not plan to enroll for the Second
Summer Term, they must report to the
Veterans Advisor’s office prior to leaving
college. The proper forms must be signed
in order that the Veterans may receives
their July subsistence.”
Oath of Office for personnel being com
missioned at the end of the first summer
session will be administered in the Mili
tary Science Buildine. Room 209, at 0900
hours on 17 July 1953.
C. L. BROWN, CWO, USA
“Applications for degrees are now being
accepted in tbe Office of the Dean of the
Graduate School from students expeting
to complete requirements for their degree
by the end of the August term.
IDE P. TROTTER, Dean
Ring order 11-A which was to have been
due August 1, has already been received
in the office of the Registrar. The rings
will be ready for distribution Friday morn
ing.
H. L. Heaton
Registar
Dr. Carlton R. Lee
OPTOMETRIST
303A East 26th
Call 2-1662 for Appointment
(Across from Court House)
ZARAPE
Air Conditioned . . .
Restaurant
Open every day—5 to 12
Closed Sunday
'it w ^ 0 s i’
# Confeioi
s Juno
charge
g farm
iro11 l
ny.
is spons
$l1 O verse]
!|ill be m:
^red, thn
53 heifm
i of su.i
d two
0 of lie
1 with
many \vl
istribut i<
igh vari
on of tin
tes has I
■ge, by |
I the Mi
on of |
Day for t
ornu
Mo
QP^aticm
The water is cold. Line fire snaps overhead
and a demolition charge has gone off—spattering
dirt and debris on inud-soaked trainees. Combat
training like this presents all of the discomfort
and much of the danger of the real thing. It’s
part of the tough job these men are doing well—
to protect the f uture of America.
■r studei
graii te
irvard I
oks Mar
ved the
painlessly and surely tlirough the P^th^nuist
Plan where you work.
Roy
"IwEe"
For a happier future for yourself, nama (
and your country, invest more—start* bachelor
in United States Savings Bonds, chanical
engineer
ge was
Perhaps you’ve asked yourself,
“What can I do to help?” The
answer is, you are helping—in a
very vital way—by investing in
United States Savings Bonds.
Doing a good job of maintaining
our country’s economic strength, just as these
men are maintaining her military strength. And
you aren’t alone—because 43 million other
Americans now own Bonds! Building a fortress
of peace—when peace is only for the strong.
Remember—every time you in
vest in Bonds, you are strength
ening your own financial se
curity, too! So plan now to
save more—to save regularly—
with Bonds. You can do this
II
s-in-aid
3 to the
3 All maturing E Bonds aulomalio 1 r j meri t
interest at the new, higher rate (aw , IS a tmoi
compounded semiannually). a Chemi
Start now! Invest more savings in Y. has
paying Series E Bonds—through tb’ oV t c
roll Savings Plan where you work. ^ 1 f 0 rrn
hloride-E
% insects.
nder the
Tfeac© is &r the strong! Tor peace and prosperity invest inU. S. SavMfeS
iness ad
rvard
Here’s how E bonds mes Mi
now earn more money fory( ; receivei
; degree
Now Series E Bonds pay an even an ted
return than ever before . .. tha-
3 brand new money-earning featura
ministry
t Now every Series E Bond «
earning interest after only 6 monffsVilR
3%, compounded semiannually.
2 Every Series E Bond you owncai
a ien t!
on earning interest for 10 more jean
it reaches the original maturity date
& an t-in-ai
■Thg If. S. Government does not pay for this advertising. The Treasury Department thanks, for their.
The Battalion