'Circulated Daily To 90 Per Cent Of Local Residents Published By A&M Students For 75 Years PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE Number 155: Volume 53 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), Texas,FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1953 Price Five Cents Senate Erection of Ligh ts In Parking Areas The student senate last night recommended that flood lights be erected in campus parking lots to discourage petty thieves and gas siphoners. In other new business, the sena tors referred action to the student life committee on the qualifications for selecting Battalion editors. When asked by Ide Trotter, pres ident of the senate, why the item was included on the agenda, Denny Cole said it was brought up by Pehrlin (Sonny) Tutt. Cole is a member of the executive corrrmit- tee of the senate which prepares the agenda. Tutt said some students had told him that it would be better to give more persons a chance in elections for Battalion editors. Committee reports dominated last night’s meeting. A report from the welcoming committee was given by C. E. (Chuck) Fenner for V. M. Mont gomery, who was absent. In recent action, the committee met with SMU and University of Texas students. In a summary of their fall activities, the report said the committee felt it had done its job “to the best of our abilities.” Seymour Smith gave a short re port from the hospital committee *nd suggested that senators relate to him any complaints about the hospital. A report from the TTSA com mittee was given by Frank Ford. The senate has received informa tion from Lamar College request ing A&M enter a cooperative book ing arrangement for name bands and other talent. The senate passed a motion to see what could be done to make this possible. Under special committees, Buddy Vance told the senate the traffic committee had met with chief of campus security Fred Hickman and that plans had been discussed to enlarge parking facilities at A&M. Vance said Hickman told him Milner and Hart halls have the worst parking problems at A&M. The traffic committee meets with Rickman again Tuesday evening. Larry Hoffman told the senate the welcoming committee needed More funds to provide for the Burglar Licks Lockout CROWNSVILLE, Md. (A>)—Jor dan Dorsey thought he had the burglar problem licked by remov ing the front doorknob and hid ing it nearby every time he left the house. An intruder found the knob and let himself in. The loot? One can of beans, eaten on the premises. feeding of visiting delegates from other schools. ' One senator said a possible solu tion might be to feed them in the college dining halls. Hoffman said that wouldn’t quite be considered a banquet. No legal action can be taken by the senate in recent paintings of A&M students in Austin, said C. D. (Buddy) Foxworth, head of a com mittee to investigate the incident. However, he said, reports of the committee will be sent to A&M former students in Austin in hopes that they can do something about the situation. (See SENATE, Page 2) PE Majors Teach at CHS For Experience Nine A&M physical educa tion majors are gaining teach ing experience by conducting PE classes for boys and girls at A&M Consolidated high school. Each student teaches two classes a day Monday thi’ough Friday. The course in practice teaching must be completed by physical education majors before they can receive their degi’ees. Upon com- pleteion of the teaching course, the students are eligible to receive a physical education teaching certi ficate. A&M students teaching at CHS are under the supervision of Jim Bevans, athletic coach and head of the physical education department there. Practice teaching also requires that the physical education majors prepare lesson plans and do other administrative work. The program is designed to give high school boys and girls a more rounded preparation in physical education, said Dr. Carl Landiss of A&M’s physical education depart ment. Some of the activities the high school boys participate in under the supervision of the practice teach ers are touch football, rhythms, speedball, health education, tumbl ing and softball. Girls are supervised in volley ball, golf, rhythms, health edu cation and softball. The nine A&M students teaching at CHS are John Centilli, James Prewit, Calvin Janak, Richard Ross, Roscoe Hunt, Bob Pate, Ed ward Castillo, Gene Stephens and Johnny Cooley. . ’ KEEP OFF THE GRASS—College employes dig holes to put up posts north of the temporary classrooms area to keep cars from parking on the grass. Seven of the tem porary buildings, known as “the shacks”, are being paint ed. The other three were painted last summer. Last AF ROTC Tests Set for This Weekend Sophs and Some Juniors Will Take Tests By BILL ROBINSON Battalion Staff Writer The last air force ROTC pilot and observer stanine tests will be given Saturday and Sunday to air force sophomores and second semester juniors. The observer portion of the test will begin at 1 p.m. Sat urday. The biographical test will be at 3:45 p.m. Saturday. The pilot part of the test will be at 1 p.m. Sunday. Juniors or seniors who have not taken part of the test will take the part they missed at the scheduled time. Seniors will take the test in the Biological Sciences lec ture room. Juniors will be tested in the chemistry lecture room. Sophomores will be divided between the two groups. In the future all air force juniors and seniors who want pilot or observer training will + have to take these tests, said Capt. J. N. Hoffman, air force adjutant. “The tests determine an ap titude for flying and observer training and do not reflect the general aptitude of a student,” Hoffman said. Of the 210 seniors who have completed the tests, nine, or four per cent, made a perfect score of nine. Eight per cent made eight, nine per cent made seven, 10 per cent made six, 33 per cent made five, 16 per cent made four, 19 per cent three, and one per cent made be low three. “No definite policy has been established as to how or if, the (See AF TESTS, Page 2) Rodeo Team Goes To Lake Charles The Aggie Rodeo Team will participate in an intercollegiate rodeo in Lake Charles, La., today and tomorrow sponsored by Mc- Neese State College. The rodeo will be held in the city’s indoor coliseum. Members of the team making the trip and the events each will enter are follows: Bobby Rankin, dogging and bai*eback bronc rid ing, Lowie Rice, dogging and calf roping; James Dickey, bareback bronc riding and saddle bronc rid ing; G. A. Burleson, bareback bronc riding, bull riding, and dogging; R. S. Higgins, bareback bronc riding and bull riding; Kenneth Beasley, bull riding and bareback bronc rid ing. Veigel Patrick was also schedul ed to make the tidp, but he suffered a broken ankle during the Thanks giving holidays and will not be able to attend. Stolen Aggie Ring Returned After Turning Up in Korea An A&M senior ring, stolen more than a year ago, was returned to its owner on Thanksgiving day after it was found in Korea beside two dead Chinese soldiers. Bill Robinson, Battalion staff writer and A&M senior, returned the ring to J. N. Parks ’45 after the A&M Texas game here. Someone had stolen Park’s ring on Sept. 2, 1952. It had been taken from the glove compartment of his car while he was fishing near San A ntonio. Weather Today CLEAR No important changes are fore cast in area weather. The high yesterday was 71. Low last night 42, High today 72, Robinson received the ring from Otto Yelton ’50 who found it while serving with the third quarter master company in Korea. Noticed Something One day while in Korea’s Chor- wan Valley, Yelton noticed some thing sparkling between two dead Chinese soldiers. Moving one of the bodies, he picked up the object. It was an A&M senior ring with the name of J. N. Parks inscribed on the inside of the band. Yelton kept the ring. The following sum mer he complete his tour of duty and returned to his home in Gal veston. When Yelton attended the Uni versity of Houston football game here this year he gave the ring to Robinson. Yelton believed Parks had been killed in Korea since the ring was found beside the two com munist soldiers. He asked Robinson to contact Parks’ family and return the ring to them. Checked Records Robinson checked the records of the Office of Former Students and the college ring clerk. He found listed several graduates named J. N. Parks. Then Robinson started writing letters to some of these men. They wrote back saying the ring did not belong to them. However one of Robinson’s letters was returned with “No One by This Name at This Address,” stamped on the en velope. Robinson then wrote the mother of this Parks. She is Mrs. Margaret Parks of San Antonio. Mrs. Parks did not reply. How ever, the letter was finally an swered by a Joe Parks of Corpus Christi. Parks said that the ring belonged to him. His mother had forward the letter to him. Reclaim Ring He said he would come to A&M on Thanksgiving for the University of Texas game and reclaim the ring. Robinson met Parks on Thanks giving and gave him the ring. Parks said someone had stolen the ring from the glove compartment of his car while he was on a fish ing trip. “The' thief or someone he gave or sold my ring to must have gone to Korea and been killed or cap tured by the Chinese,” he said. Robinson and Parks discovered that they had both been graduated from Schreiner Institute Junior college in Kerrville before enter ing A&M. Could Not Attend Yelton, who had found the ring in Korea, could not attend the re union. He was on his honeymoon in New Orleans. His wife is the former Miss Lee Terrell, a grad uate of Rebecca Sealey Nursing school in Galveston. Yelton met her only a few days before he gave Robinson the lost ring, A&M Helps Solve Herd Sire Problem By JIM WEATHERBY Battalion Staff Writer The guessing game in choosing a good herd sire may soon be ended for cattlemen, thanks to a group of scientists in A&M’s biochemis try and nutrition depaftment. The scientists have discovered a method to predict whether or not a herd sire will gain weight, and whether or not the sire can pass weight-gaining qualities on to his calves. This means that a cattleman can select a good bull scientifically and from that bull get fast-gaining calves. In time a whole herd of cattle with superior weight-gain ing abilities could be developed. A blood test is used to predict weight-gaining ability. Dr. H. O. Kunkel, Dr. Mary F. Futrell and David K. Stokes jr., developers of the method, say it is “reasonably accui'ate.” They say they can predict how much the animal will gain daily under a pi’escribed feeding pro gram—letting the animal eat all it wants to. The test has more meaning, the scientists pointed out, because 60 to 90 per cent of an animal’s gain ing ability is inherited. When the experiments started, the researchers had little to go on. They went up many blind alleys before they struck paydirt through work with metabolism. Metabolism is the chemical pro cess by which the body uses food as fuel. Although vitamins and other nutrients used by the body didn’t mean anything to the weight-gain ing problem, a hormone called thy roxine did. Through their study of thy roxine, the scientists learned of what they called protein - bound iodine in the blood. The protein- bound iodine, or PBI, in the blood directly effects the thyroid gland in cattle, which in turn effects the metabolism, or rate of gain. Tests made on about 300 cattle have showed that animals with a low amount of PBI are poor gain- Dorm Field Phones To Be Replaced Corps dormitory field telephones will be replaced by Friday evening, said Joe Bill McAllister, corps communications officei*. The phones were taken to Ft. Hood at Belton for repairs and modifications earlier in the week. Ft. Hood did not have the neces sary equipment for modifications, so the telephones were returned and are to be reinstalled tomorrow. ers. The tests also showed that those with too much PBI didn’t gain fast either. The top 20 per cent of the gain ers were neai* the center, or me dium amount, on the PBI scale. The team of scientists has also been working on heat tolerance in cattle. Working with cattle of tro pical origin, like the Indian Brah man, they have discovered as- enzyme, or digestive juice, that aids these animals in resisting heat. The enzyme, serum alkaline phosphatese, helps metabolism by breaking down certain food ma terials. Since this factor is also handed down from parent to offspring, simple tests can select breeder bulls whose calves will be better able to stand Texas summers. By putting these two tests to gether, cattlemen should be able to choose the most promising calf for growing a breeder bull. No Immediate Action Taken On MSC Leaks No immediate action will be taken to repair the leaks in the MSC roof, said C. R. Brock, building superintendent. Under the terms of its con- tract with the bond holdei’s, the college can not make re pairs on the MSC unless im mediate repairs ai’e needed to prevent further property dam age, explained Brock. The leaks, one in the roof over the hall near the bowling alley entrance and the other in the post office roof, are not causing any property damage. “When the leaks were re ported to the bond holders, they agreed to fix them, but no action has been taken,” said Brock. The leaks were caused by ex pansion and contraction of the roof due to temperature changes, he said. ‘Float-Out’ Refund Made to Regiments A correction has been made in the amount of money the corps of cadets was charged for. the re cent “float outs”. The original cost was $180 and was paid by the corps. This amount was then corrected to $101.88. The corps is being refunded $78.12 This money will be distribut ed to the three regimental com manders and they will divide it equally among their outfits. The refund was given because the building and college utilities department found some of the mis sing flush valves, according to Bennie Zinn, assistant dean of men. Second Town Hall Laughton To Read Passages Monday By BOB HENDRY Battalion Feature Editor America’s greatest one man show comes to A&M Monday for the second Town Hall performance of the year. “An Evening with Charles Laughton” will be presented at 7 and 9 p. m. in Guion hall. Both per formances will last one hour. Persons with Town Hall season passes should come by the stu dent activities office and pick up individual performance tickets, said C. G. (Spike) White, student activi ties manager. Individual tickets will be sold to persons without season passes for $2 each, he said. Tickets may be bought at the door or at the stu dent activities office. “An Evening with Charles Laughton” is one of the strangest plays in America. It has only one actor, and books are its only “props,” All Laughton does is read passages from the books. But strange or not, the perform ance has been so successful with the American people that Laughton can draw more money at the box- office than most full-dress attrac tions, and all but top - ranking, first-run movies. Poultry Team Wins National Judging Contest The A&M Poultry Judging team captured first place re cently at the national inter collegiate poultry judging con test in Chicago. A&M was first out of the 22 college teams entered. University of Arkansas was second and Uni versity of North Carolina was third. Charley Kammerdiener, senior from Gainesville, was first in in dividual scoring at the contest. Alton Fuchs, senior from Came ron, was third, and Eugene Rozacky, from Taylor, was fifth. All three are senior poultry hus bandry majors. The roving trophy for the win ner will now be kept at A&M for a year. The team and E. D. Parnell, coach, will return Saturday. Laughton, who describes his ap pearance as that of “the hind side of an elephant”, walks upon the stage carrying an arm load of these “props.” These include the works of Dick ens, Twain, Shakespeare, Benet, Irving, Thurber and others. But he never carries any he does not like himself. A recognized critic of letters," Laughton despises books with mes sages. “Our classics of literature were written for the entertain ment and enlightment of mankind,’-’ he says. “They are works of art. I say no creative work by a genuinely great writer was wi’itten with a message in mind. “If I carried along a carload in stead of an armload of books with me on my reading tours, you may be sure there would not be a mess age in any of them.” The Saturday Evening Post call ed Laughton “a strangely and richly endowed man.” Life gave him 12 pages stressing the im portance of his readings from literary classics, and the new trend of entertainment he has started. Laughton directed and edited the script of the play “John Brown’s Body”, based on the book by Step hen Vincent Benet. News Briefs TWO GROUPS of senior agri cultural education students will go to Waco and Brenham Saturday to help judge area FFA leader ship contests. Both gi'oups will re turn to the campus Saturday even ing. THE AGRONOMY SOCIETY discussed recently plans for the Cotton Pageant and Ball scheduled for April. Proceeds from the event will finance a trip by the Agronomy society to a Texas farm area. 7 . ■* * * L. E. PAGE, state commander of the American Legion, spoke Wednesday in the Memorial Stu dent Center on the battle 'the Legion is conducting to fight public apathy to Communism. The oc casion was a bi-district meeting of Texas American Legion districts 6 and 7. ❖ * * ROBERT P. STUART , former A&M student, completed recently his first solo flight as a naval aviation cadet. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Stuart of Joshua. * * * EDWARD L. MAREK, president of the Slavonic Benevolent Order of the State of Texas, will speak to the A&M Czech club at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday in the social room of the Memorial Student Center. FIVE MEMBERS of the chemi cal engineering department have returned from a two day tour of the Dow Chemical company labora tories in Freepoif. Those making the trip wei'e Dr. J. D. Lindsay, Dr. R. V. Andrews, Dr. W. D. Hol land, Dr. W. D. Harris and F. F. Bishop. ❖ MUD KEPT air force ROTC stu dents from drilling yesterday, said T/Sgt. Turner M. Buford of the air science department. Buford in spected the drill field at 11 a. m. yesterday and decided it was too wet to drill. * * # THE THIRD Brunswick Red Crown bowling contest will be Dec. 5 to 13. Prizes range from $100 in cash to a $1 bowling coupon. Con testants may also win bowling balls and other equipment, said John Geiger, manager of the Memorial Student Center bowling alleys. Capacity Crowd Expected Mondays A capacity crowd is expected for the 7 p. m. Charles Laughton Town Hall performance Monday in Guion Hall. Over 1,600 of the 2,000 tickets available for the 7 p. m. perform ance have been picked up, said John Akard, student entertain ment manager. Over half of the 9 p. m. show tickets have been picked up. Tickets for either performance may be obtained by showing a season Town Hall pass at the stu dent activities office or the din ing hall. Tickets will not be dis tributed outside the dining hall after tonight, Akard said. Tickets will be sold to pepole without season passes at $2 a per son at the student activities office or at the door, he said.