The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 19, 1953, Image 1
Circulated Daily To 90 Per Cent Of Docal Besidents Number 143: Volume 53 & Fnblished By A$:M Students x or </ o .v. e^rs rUBLiSnt:D DAil,Y iff THtu iffTEEEST OF A GREATeE A&M COl.jlEGE COLLEGE STATION (Agrgieiand), Texas, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1953 Price Five Cents ~W~ i 1 Lt ill Eight Aggies Held In Austin Tuesday BIG STICK — A&M’s traditional bonfire is. being built around this 60-foot center pole, which went up yesterday. The hole for the pole was drilled by Hole Milstead Founda tion Drillers, of Bryan, and the pole was lifted into place by Donald Conlee of Bryan’s Conlee Brothers. Both firms donated their time. News Briefs DR. EVELYN L. BLANCHARD, extension nutritionist with the U. S. Department of Agriculture in Washington, D. C., arrived here Tuesday. She will hold confer ences this week on the extension foods and nutrition program in Texas. * * * LT. JACK W. BIRKNER, ’52, received the Purple Heart medal recently. He was wounded while leading a platoon of the 7th In fantry in Korea. Birkner’s home is Bay City. * JK THE A&M COLLEGIATE chap ter of the American Foundrymen’s Society will tour the Lone Star- Steel company at Daingerfield Fri day. Nineteen students will make Hie trip. * * * w GEORGE ROBERTSON, animal husbandry department, will pre sent a thesis to the American So ciety of Animal Production in Chicago Nov. 25. The paper will be on swine research work he has been doing for two years. * * * STUDENT SENATE will meet at 7:30 p. m. in the MSC senate chamber. They will discuss the im provement of radio programs, din ners at A&M with Southwest Con ference student councils and float- outs and stealing of flush valves. * * * A TRAINING COURSE for management and supervisors of Texas industry being held here will close Friday. The course, under the supervision of the Engineer ing Extension service, started Mon day. * * * GEORGE HUNT, director of Vocational education in agricultur al on the state board of education, will speak Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. to the A&M Future Farmers of America chapter. THREE A&M STAFF members will be judges at the Houston Fat Stock show in January. They are Dr. Jack Millei’, head of the animal husbandry department; Di\ W. G. Kammlade jr., in charge of sheep production; and J. H. Jones, ex tension beef cattle specialist. * * * HAROLD DUNN, president of the Former Students association, will be the speaker for the Ross Volunteer’s initiation banquet Dec. 10. * * * THE A&M CHAPTER of Alpha Zeta, national agi’iculture honor society, will hold its formal fall initation Dec. 14 in the Memorial Student Center. About 50 stud- dents are being considered for membership. * * * CHANCELLOR M. T. Harring ton was recently reappointed to the executive committee of the As sociation of Land Grant Colleges and Universities meeting in Colum bus, Ohio. Seven A&M sophomoi-es were I held for a short time in Austin Tuesday night for questioning by Austin police authorities. Five freshmen were apprehended by University of Texas campus po lice. Both groups had paint brushes and paint in their posses sion at the time the pickups were made. Police reported the cadets’ brushes were dry however. No Formal Charge No formal charge was made by Austin or UT police and the Ag gies were released after a short time. Assistant dean of men Jack Holland of UT said some unidenti fied persons, assumed to be Ag gies, did an undisclosed amount of damage to university property and to UT fraternity houses Monday night. U of H Will ‘Allow’ Three To Resign “Appropriate diciplinary ac tion” has been taken against three students of the Univer sity of Houston for their part in the beating of thi’ee Aggies Saturday night in Houston. The Iniversity refused to re lease the names of the stu dents, but unconfirmed reports say two of them were fresh men football players. Another reliable source said the three men “will be allow ed to resign.” W. L. Penberthy, dean of men, has not received word. He said A&M is working very closely with the U of H on the incident. Unidentified persons also paint ed several automobiles with mar oon paint. Mustang Statue Painted The statue of the Mustangs at Littlefield memorial near the Me morial stadium was also painted. A&M students caught in Austin Tuesday also had several orange and white Austin street signs. The freshmen are members of C company. The sophomores are in squadron 6. State Law Bans ‘Worker’ in MSC Next Session Set for Monday By JACK BELL WASHINGTON—(FP)—Senators investigating the Har ry Dexter White case called a temporary lull today but gave no sign of abandoning their efforts because of President Eisenhower’s suggestion that the need for such inquiries may soon be ended. Sen. Jenner (R-Ind.) said he did not know where or how far the inquiry by the internal security sub-committee he heads would lead. The group’s next session was set for Monday afternoon, but there was no announcement whether witnesses would be heard then. Jenner told newsmen that “for the first time we have been able to show” that FBI reports on suspected individuals ♦■“reached the hands of top officials,” and he added it was The MSC Browsing Library com mittee can not subscribe to the Communist newspaper. The Daily Worker. A bill passed at the last session of the Texas legislature made buy ing Communist literature against the law for state supported schools. The proposal to buy the news paper was made at the last MSC council meeting by Jerry Moseley, senior dairy manufacturing major from Coleman. The matter was dis cussed, but referred to the next council meeting. It has been the policy of the Bi’owsing Library committee in the past, said committee chairman Bob Miller, to take suggestions from students as to what magazines and newspapers they wanted in the library. These suggestions were consider ed by the committee, and if worth while, the publications were sub scribed for, he said. Since several students had asked about subscribing to the Daily Worker, council member Jerry Moseley was asked to present the suggestion to the group. Miller said the primary concern of the Browsing Library commit tee was to provide recreational reading matter rather than edu cational material. Students interested in the news paper may find it in the stacks at the Cushing Memorial library, he said. A&M’s $350,000 Calculator Is One of 25 in the World A&M has one of 25 existing cal culator laboratories in the world. There are only four in operation the same size as the $350,000 cal culator operated by the A&M Re search foundation. Operating an average of 45 weeks a year since its installation in 1947, the calculator occupies a complete laboratory on the second floor of the Electrical Engineering building. According to the laboratory schedule, the calculator will be in use for the remainder of the year. The laboratory was established through the cooperation of 10 electric utility companies who con tracted for services on the cal culator or made grants to the foundation. It is the only one operated in connection with a school that has two control desks which permit the study of two problems sim ultaneously. Lewis M. Haupt is supervisor of the laboratory, and W. S. Lindsay is in charge of the laboratory’s operations. They are assisted by Mrs. Jacky Green, part-time operator; Salvio Navarro, graduate student; Mrs. R. L. Watson, secretary; and three student assistants, J. P. Sutton, H. A. Breedlove and C. F. Jack. TV Aerial Planned For PE Building Tentative plans are set to place a master antenna for all campus TV sets on the new PE building. “The antenna would be extremely costly and would have to be install ed before the completion of the building,” said John Samuels, MSC president. Conduits would be run to build ings wishing TV sets, including the Memorial Student Center. Donations will finance the pro ject. Charlie Parker heads the campus-wide fund drive. Engineer School Is Reaccredited The A&M School of Engineering curicula has been reaccredited by the Engineers Council for Pro fessional Development. The ECPD, which is the official organization in the United States for accrediting schools of-engineer ing, examines schools every five years. Results of the examination made here last spring were found to be satisfactory, and the School of Engineering was officially accred ited. Dairy Short Course Scheduled Dec. 5 The annual Dairyman’s short course will 'be held by the daii-y husbandry department ■ December 3 - 4. in the Memorial Student Center. The short course is designed to serve dairymen, pldnt fieldmen, feed company fieldmen and others interested in discussions of pro blems in the field of dairying. Marketing products of the dairy cow will be the principal topic of discussion for the first session of the course. Other sessions will in clude topics on feeding, breeding, management and diseases of the dairy herd. Professor A. L. Darnell will pre side over the Thursday session and R. E. Burleson, extension dairy man, will guide the Friday session. Tan Beta Pi Plans Initiation of 39 Thirty-nine members will be in itiated into Tau Beta Pi engi neering honor society, at 7:30 p. m. Dec. 14 in the Memorial Stu dent Center ballroom. Tau Beta Pi is the highest engi neering society in the United States. Scholarship and character are qualifications for Tau Beta Pi. The society, founded in 1885, was established for undergraduates and alumni in the field of engineer ing. The following men have been selected for membership in the so ciety: Byron Hubert Anderson, Hickman Shuts Out Batt Reporter Campus Security Chief. Fred Hickman closed the doors on The Battalion yesterday at a meeting of a committee to study the cam pus traffic problem. Hickman said that he did not want the committee’s decisions re leased until they had been passed by the president. The Security chief later told a Battalion reporter that the com mittee made no formal recommen dations. However he said the committee located the campus ar eas where traffic problems existed. ward Gene Battle, Leonard Ray Birdwell, Wyndham Kenneth Brinkley, James Enoch Caffey. Robert Edwin Campbell, Rondal Garlin Crawford, Billie Frank Dickard, Billy Ray Dickey, Beirne Tillotson, Georg’e. Kelley Fling, Hilliard Otis French, Jack William Garrett, Harry Nesper Gilland, Al bert Neal Gist, John Tom Gray, Donald Brice Hayes. William Field Herbert, James Michael Hughes, Tom Lewis Irby, Samuel Jahn, Eugene Thomas Lewis, Rollin J. Lord, Philip Dewey Matthews, George Dan Palmer, James Max Pinson. Wilford Clyde Rister, Cooper Polk Robbins, Anthony Sam Russo, Edward Earl Sewell, John Herman Simmonds, Jack Simmons jr., James Curtis Trimble, Alfred Pal mer Williams, Carl Weldon Wil son jr., Robert Elliott Zumwalt. Benson Prepares Sewerage Plans City Engineer Fred Benson has drawn up preliminary plans for proposals to improve the College Station sewer system. The three proposals will be pre sented to the Citizens Advisory Board on Sewerage Disposal early in December. The board will then make recommendations to the City Council on the plan they think is most practical. The proposals will cost between $250,000 and $320,000. “The. disposal plant will cost $150,000. The rest of the money is for the system,” Benson said. The most expensive plan would have a plant out of town and a complete gravity system for the sewerline. The other plans would require pumping and a higher maintenance cost, Benson said. impossible to say now what developments might follow. Some Republicans and most Democrats seconded Eisenhower’s hope, expressed at his news con ference yesterday, that security firings may so completely solve the problem of alleged Red infil tration of government that the is sues will be forgotten by next year’s congx-essional campaign. Eisenhower said he was not sug gesting current congressional probes be called off. The President declined to com ment directly on the case of White, who Atty. Gen. Brownell says was promoted in 1946 by former Pres ident Truman in the face of FBI reports which, Brownell asserted, tagged White as a Soviet spy. While Jenner’s subcommittee planned to go ahead with its hear ings, the only ones by a congres sional group thus far in the White case, the House Un-American Ac tivities Committee showed signs of stepping out of the case. Rep. Clardy (R-Mich.) an nounced in Lansing, Mich., yester day that he saw no need now for a subcommittee to take testimony from Gov. James F. Byrnes of South Carolina, who was Truman’s secretary of state at the time of White’s promotion. Clardy had been named to head the subcom mittee. (See WHITE CASE, page 5) Gary Named Freshman President James Wallace Gary, one of A&M’s two winners of the Carnegie Hero award, was elected freshman class presi dent Tuesday in the run-off election. Gary received 291 votes to beat his nearest opponent, W. L. Dan Winship, 168 votes. The results of the election were announced yesterday by Leo Drap er, election commission chairman. In the race for vice-president James E. Goode received 353 votes. Paul. M. Bass, runner up, had 215 votes. The narrowest margin recorded for the election was for the re cording secretary office. Jack T. Steel had 63 more votes than Brad Crockett. Robert Walter McClesky, jr., won the social secretary office with 394 votes. John David Selensky was second with 260 votes. Berne Clark, 440 votes, was elected treasurer over Jon F. Cobb. All freshman class officers are in squadron 23 except McClesky, who is in squadron 21. Timm Attends Banking Meet Dr. Tyrus R. Timm, head of the agriculture economics and so ciology department, is attending the Agriculture Commission Ameri can Banking association conference in Chicago this week. J. Wheeler Barger, of the same department, is also attending the conference. Timm is leading a panel dis cussion on “Financing the Young Farmer.” A&M Men Attend Agronomy Meet A&M system personnel are at tending the 45th annual meeting of the American Society of Agromony in Dallas. The meeting ends Fri day. C. N. Shepardson, dean of the School of Agriculture, presided over the Monday morning session. R. D. Lewis, director of the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station presided over the Monday after noon session. Men Outnumber Women In Area More Than 6-1 Printers’ President To Speak at Clinic H. N. King, typographic consult ant and president of the Interna tional Association of Printing House Craftsmen, will be the principal speaker at the fifth an nual Texas Newspaper Clinic and Mechanical Conference. Sponsored by the Tejcas Press association and A&M’s journalism department, the conference is held here every year. The coming conference will be Feb. 20, 1954, in the Memorial Stu dent Center. There will be repre sentatives from approximately 110 Texas newspapers. Topics to be discussed include printing machines, work flow, stereotyping, ad setting, type cast ing and other press room problems. AFROTC Seniors To Evaluate Corps Corps evaluation is now being taken up by the senior air science classes, who are studying problem solving techniques. There are 10 sections of air science 441 classes discussing the topics of evaluation, said Maj. Hubert O. Johnston, instructor. The sections are broken down into approximately 35 committees. The topics of the committees are regulations of the operation of the corps, physical oi-ganization of the corps, relationship of corps and the academic college, uniform of the corps, traditions, responsi bilities and priviliges of the corps and methods, of correcting major violations. All findings of the committees will be sent to corps commander Fred Mitchell. A fact that Aggies have realized for many years was revealed of ficially recently when the 1950 census figures were released. Single males in Brazos county AGC Makes Field Trip to Houston The A&M student chaper of the the American General Contractors association recently made a field trip to Houston. Twenty five members made the trip with Frank Robinson, arch itecture instructor, acting as head of the group. Gilchrist Portrait To Be Presented A portrait of Gibb Gilchrist, former chancellor, will be present ed to the college by the board of directors Thanksgiving day. Presentation ceremonies will be in the Texas Engineers Library building, where the picture will hang, at 10:30 a. m. Gov. Allan Shivers will make the presentation, on behalf of the board. President David H. Morgan will accept the gift for the col lege. John Moranz, Dallas artist who painted the protrait, will speak at the ceremonies. Judge J. W. Witherspoon of Hereford, chairman of the board committee for the portrait, will preside. The ceremony is open to the public. outnumber single females in Brazos county almost six to one. Out of a total population of 38,390 persons, there are 6,567 single males and 1,896 single females in these parts. In addition to the 1,896 single women, there are an added 1,670 females who are widowed or di vorced. No figures were given on the average age of single women. Other statistics on Brazos coun ty include an average per capita income of $1,340. But more than 60 per cent of .Brazos county’s citizens earn less than $2,000 a year. The majority of Brazos county residents live in urban areas. Only 32 per cent live in rural areas or on farms. This average age of county residents is 24.2 years. Whites outnumber Negroes 76 per cent to 24 per cent. Of a total male population of 16,086, 8,884 men are married, 635 are widowed or divorced. Of a total famale population of women from 14 years old up, of 12,401, 8,835 are married. There are 8,570 married couples in Brazos county. Of these, 8,205 have their own homes: 365 do not. Bottle Breakage Decreases Breakage of softdrink bot tles has decreased 31.3 per cent since this time last year. A total of 412 cases or 9,888 bottles were broken last year at A&M. This year 283 cases have been broken. Dormitory 1 leads in number broken with 16 cases. Dormitory 5 is second with 15 cases, and dormitories 4 and 6 are tied for third with 14 cases each. Dormitory 14 and Milner hall are lowest with two cases each. Apartment Housing Office Sets Move The college apartment housing office will be moved from Goodwin hall to a quonset hut at the south end of College View. The quonset hut originally housed public telephons, laundry pickup station, and storage of apartment furniture. Part of the building is being remedied to house the office staff, which takes care of the 456 College View and 60 project housing apartments. Calvin Moore, of the Housing Department, said the change will be more convenient for all patrons. He said the change will be made as soon as the building is com pleted, he thinks it will be before Christmas. A notice will be given to all concerned when the change will go into effect. Weather Today If MSC Fireplace To Get First Fire A fire will be lighted in the Memorial Student Center lobby fireplace for the first time Friday night. The Odessa Mothers club con tributed a $300 hand-tooled screen for the fire place. The fire place will be used for the first time at a listening party conducted by the MSC music com mittee. The committee will play semi-classical records on equip ment provided by the A&M audio club. OCCASIONAL RAIN Rain with thundershowers and winds today and tonight are ex pected to hamper work on the bon fire. A western cold front is ex pected to hit this area late today dropping temperatures about 10 degrees. High yesterday 77. Low this morning 65.