THE BATTALION Page 3 3-D noie embarrassing to .•hnicians had rigged ite cord arrangement jould not possibly toss f camera range, y hurt because this ment is usually re iki and animal actors, h the cord I failed. 1 r can salvage any of the movie, nr was very kind. He he wasn't critical of hlity but hinted that to improve my throw- i wanted to continue nice so unnerved her •oducers Bob Fellows ayne wanted her for er of the Sun,” she ;k about the role, mted to know was as flat or 3D. Thank as a good old flattie." te Student ch At UCLA John Koratha, grad- ; from Travancore ms left for California dtion, of teaching as- ith the University of Los Angeles in the f zoology. the United States on ✓ ml scholarship offer- m msen Fund of Hous- ■ received his Master 4 ree from A&M, wherel two years of post-' k. pleting his require- rasters degree, Kora- V "* :iyed as an instructor ‘ liology department. | BINDER with 50 worth of . . . jppLm BINDER wAii FILLERS — $] .00 LS ★ 5 lb. bag 37c arton $2,09 2 FOR up . . . 35c id . pkg. 15c 5 LB. BAG .... 69c Ives . . can 29c . pkg. 45c . . can 49c . . can 25c * ES ^ 3s . lb. 15c No. 1—BURBANK . 5 lbs. 29c ;s . lb. 10c eason—PLAIN . lb, l^c . . lb. 2c 5t 3-4-5 f the Campus op Market k Texas Schoolboy Football Race Opens wi th 890 Teams Entered By Harold V. Ratliff Associated Press Sports Editor The world’s greatest football campaign—; the Texas schoolboy marathon that covers four months and draws more than 6,000,000 fans—is inaugurated this week. It’s a far cry from 1920 when the Texas Interscholastic League started its gridiron race. Fewer than 200 schools played football that first year. Now there are 890. They had no districts or classes then—everybody got into the swim. In December the teams with the best records were picked and pitted against each other. Today a team to play for the State title must have beaten all other teams in its district. Now there are six divisions— class AAAA, AAA, AA and A, which play through to State cham pionships; class B and Six-Man football, which decide regional tit- lists only. High School football starts the first week in September. Some of the teams play games before the school term has opened. Into the Hunter Hopes To Bag Limit Off Wasp Nest You’re probably heard of going bear-hunting with a switch—'but have you heard of hunting wasps With a 20-gauge shotgun ? EJ R. Alexander, retired head of the agricultural education de partment at A&M, is stocking up on shells for just that purpose. Alexander was clearing a bridle )>ath across a creek just northwest vf Bryan recently when he stirred ■np a wasp-nest and the little pests launched a mass attack. Propping his ax, he took to the timber. A little later the airborne scouts sighted him creeping back and attacked in formation. Before he could get away they had him surrounded. “I started swatting at them with pry hands and the first thing I knew, one glove was flying across the creek and I’d knocked off my hat and glasses. There I was, hat- less, gloveles sand almost blind. I ran! “The nest is too high to knock down with a stick, so I’m going to take my 20-gauge shotgun and shoot it down,” Alexander says. He’ll give them a sporting chance, though—he’ll be using a single-shot. State playoffs in December go eight district champions from classes AAAA and AAA and 32 district champion^ in classes AA and A. This year there are 49 schools in class AAAA, 48 in class AAA, 174 in class AA and 197 in class A, meaning- 478 schools that play for state titles. Defending champions are Lub bock, Breckenridge, Terrell and Wink in the respective classes, each rated a good chance of repeating. Lubbock has the best record in the State at this time—26 consecutive victories and two straight cham pionships. If Lubbock wins it ag-ain, it will tie the record for consecutive cham pionships in the 34 years of Texas schoolboy football. Waco won three championships in a row in the 1920’s. Amarillo did the same in the 1930’s. And Breckrindge can also tie the record for consecutive championships if it repeats this year. The all time record for state championships is four and a tie, held by Waco. Amarillo is second with four. The longest winning streak was set by Hull-Daisetta back in the early forties when that school took more than 40 in a row. Hull-Dai setta was a class B school then. It’s now class A. Class AAAA has probably the toughest district in the state — that one in which Lubbock plays. Abilene, Amarillo, Borger, Mid land, Odessa, Pampa and San An gelo are in it. They call it “the little Southwest Conference.” Class AAAA will have these dis tricts this year 1— Abilene, Amarillo, Borger, Lubbock, Midland, Odessa, Pampa, San Angelo. 2— Austin (El Paso), Bowie (El Paso), El Paso High, Jefferson (El Paso), Ysleta. Laboratory Bugs Are Hard To Raise Growing various types of bugs and worms in captivity proves to be quite a problem, acocrding to Dan Timmermann, student worker at the entomology laboratory. “Most of our present work is in connection with raising cotton boll worms, leaf worms, and cotton boll weevils,” Timmermann said. The insects are raised to later be used to test new types of cotton poison prepared by various chemi cal companies. The insects, when in captivity, contact various diseas es and are extremely hard to keep alive, Timmermann said. 3— Fort Worth: Arlington Heights, Amon Carter, Riverside, Fort Worth Tech, North Side, Pas chal, Poly. 4— Dallas: Adamson, Crozier Tech, Forest, North Dallas, South Oak Cliff, Sunset, Woodrow Wil son. 5— Highland Park (Dallas), Ty ler, Waco, Wichita Falls. 6— Brackenridge (San Antonio), Laredo, Miller (Corpus Christ!) Ray (Corpus Christ!), San Antonio Tech, Austin (Austin), Jefferson (San Antonio). 7— Houston: Jeff Davis, Lamar, Milby, Reagan, San Jacinto, Step hen F. Austin. 8— Beaumont, Galveston, Orange, Pasadena, Port Arthur, Baytown, Footballer Can’t Take ‘Old Army’’ SAN JOSE, Calif., Sept. 2— San Jose State lost a promis ing football player to .... a whistle. The whistle signalled players to run from blocking- bag to tackling dummy. It blew . . . and blew . . . and blew. . . When it was over, end Ralph Zachary, a Chicago junior col lege transfer, turned in his suit. “It’s too much like the Army,” he told Coach Bob Bronzan. “All those whistles and lining up every five min utes for some new activity. I’m going home.” Air Force Orders Billioii-Dollar Cut WASHINGTON, Sept. 3—)_ The Washington Post said today the Air Force has notified plane producers of a new billion-dollar dutback that would trim nearly 1,000 aircraft off previous buying plans. Three quarters of the cutback was said to, gpply to combat-type planes. The Post said word of the move came from “reliable sources” fol lowing a meeting yesterday be tween Roger Lewis assistant sec retary of the Air Force, and rep resentatives of the aircraft manu facturers involved. The cut would be in addition to the controversial five billion dollar reduction in Air Force funds pro grammed this fiscal year. Class AAA will have these dis tricts : 1—Big Spring, Breckenridge, La- mesa, Plainview, Snyder, Sweet water, Vernon. 2^—-Arlington, Brownwood, Cle burne, Garland, Grand Prarie, Irv ing, Pleasant Grove (Dallas). 3— Denison, Denton, Gainesville, Greenville, McKinney, Paris, Sher man. 4— —Gladewater, Kilgore, Long view, Lufkin, Marshall, Nacogdo ches, Texarkana. 5— Bryan, Corsicana, McCallum (Austin), Palestine, Temple Travis (Austin). 6— Aldine (Houston), Conroe, Freeport, Galena Park, Port Nech- es, South Park (Beaumont), Texas City. 7— Alamo Heights (San An tonio), Burbank (San Antonio), Harlandale (San Antonio), Kerr- ville, New Braunfels, Seguin, Lan ier (San Antonio), Edison (San Antonio), Victoria. 8— Alice, Brownsville, Edinburg, Harlingen, Kingsville, McAllen, Pharr-San Juan-Alamo, San Benito. Marine Flyer Sets New Speed Record (A > )—A Marine Corps speed pilot who flew the Douglas D558-2 Sky rocket to a record altitude of 83,- 235 feet now has piloted the rocket plane at a speed faster than any other military flyer. In an attempt to crack the 1,238 m.p.h. record set in the same air craft by Douglas test pilot Bill Bridgeman, Lt. Col. Marion E. Carl, 37, of Quantico, Va., flew it at 1,143 m.p.h. yesterday high above Edwards Air Force Base. The Skyrocket was dropped from the bomb bay of a Superfortress at 32,000 feet. Carl ingnited his rock ets and roared upward. He leveled off at 68,000 feet and started into a downglide. The peak speed was reached at 48,000 feet. Aggie Signed By St. Louis Broivns ST. LOUIS, Sept. 3—