Circulated Daily To 90 Per Cent Of Local Residents Battalion Published By A&M Students For 75 Years PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE Number 205: Volume 53 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1954 Price 5 Cents Runoff Elect lion For Senior Gift Will Re Tuesday 'A runoff election will be held Tuesday to decide what the senior class will give the school. The election will he between a scoreboard for Kyle Field and a fund to be used for construction of a west wing for the Memorial Student Center. The senior class gift committee decided last night to hold the runoff. “Most of- the members of the committee felt a runoff would be desired by the seniors,” said Chuck Fenner, chairman of the committee. The election will be held in the MSC from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tables will also be set up in Sbisa and both sides of Duncan dining hall during the noon meal to give more seniors a chance to vote, Fenner said. Balloting in yesterday’s election Was as follows: Scoreboard, 122 MSC wing, 75 Student loan fund, 04 Three voting machines, 27 West Gate memorial, 23 The senior class decided Monday night to hold the election yester day. The class thought not enough seniors were pi’esent at the Mon day meeting to give fair represen tation on a vote for the class gift. The scoreboard will cost about $1,500-2,000. The class has about $1,500 to spend for a gift. Barlow (Bones) Irvin told the committee that the athletic department would give the class a chance to donate the scoi-eboard. He said the athle tic department may build the score- board even if the class does not donate it. The donation toward a west wing for the MSC will start a trust fund which must eventually be used for that purpose, accoi'ding to John Samuels, president of the MSC council. This is what the class of ’39 did in starting the MSC, he said. News Briefs CITY DESK—George Man- itzas will be city editor of The Battalion, and will be responsible for news of College Station. He is a sophomore petroleum engi neering major from San Angelo. College Announces Saturday Events The schedule of events for High School Day, Satui’day, has been an nounced by the college. They are as follows: 8 a. m., registration, Guion hall lobby. *■' 9 a. m., orientation meeting, Guion hall. This meeting will in clude -a welcome by President David H. Morgan, and a 30-minute color movie about life at A. and M. 10 a. m., group tours on the campus. 12,dinner, Duncan or Sbisa mess halls. 1 p. m., free time for visiting with home town friends. 2 p. m., sports day, as guests of the “T” Association. Baseball game, Rice vs. A&M, tennis match, Baylor vs. A&M and a track meet. 5:30 p. m., supper, Duncan or Sbisa mess hall. 7:30 p. m., intra-squad football game on Kyle Field. The more than 1,000 high school seniors expected for the day will be guests of students from their hometowns. Movie Set In MSC Tonight “DARK VICTORY” will be pre sented by the A&M Film society tonight in the Memorial Student Center ballroom. The film, star ring Bette Davis, will start at 7:30 p.m. * * * A THREE DAY shell egg grad ing school will be held here April 22. The school is sponsored by the poultry husbandry department and the Agricultural Marketing service of the Department of Agriculture. * * * E. V. WALTON, head of the de partment of agricultural education, pi'esented several awards recently to Edward Coufal of Temple, out standing future farmer in the state. He also addressed a parent- son banquet. * * CAFE RUE PINALLE will be held Saturday in the games area of the Memorial Student Center. The Melo Tones from Sam Hous ton State college will play. The Cafe will start at 8 p.m. Multi-Million Dollar Mexican School Opens MEXICO CITY, March 25—CP)— Mexico’s new 22 million-dollar Uni versity City opened for classes yesterday with scant ceremony. Only 5,000 of the 20,000-odd stu dents will study this year on the new campus, 15 miles out of town. The rest will not be moved' to University City until all buildings have been furnished. Shepardson Talks To FFA Chapter Charles N. Shepardson, dean of the School of Agriculture, spoke on the relationship of agriculture to industry to the A&M Collegiate FFA chapter at its regular meet ing Tuesday. Shepardson said agricultural must produce products of higher quality which will attract consum ers and produce the products more economically. He told the group to “first teach the boys the funda mentals that have made America what it is, then teach them agri culture”. A student-prof banquet will be held April 29. The chapter will also conduct a talent contest to get entei-tainment for the high school boys during the State Judging pontest Maj\ 1. COBS PROVE DANGEROUS RULO, Neb.—CP)—Don Ferron’s car stalled on a pile of corn cobs on a farm so Don walked to the farmhouse for help, leaving the en gine running. The car’s exhaust ignited the cobs, which then set fire to the car. The car’s gas tank exploded, set ting fire to a hog house nearby. Both car and hog house were de stroyed. College View To Gel $140,000Impr ovement New Shower Stalls Now Being Installed New Date Set By Aggieland For Pictures The deadline for turning snapshots to be used in the military section of the Aggie- land has been extended tc April 1. “The deadline was extended because only 23 pictures have been turned in,” said Paul Roper, military editor. March 20 had originally been set as the deadline. “April 1 will positively be the last date for turning in snapshots,” said Roper. LOOKS GOOD—Mrs. Mary Norris inspects the new show ers now being installed in the College View apartments. The new showers are part of a $140,000 improvement pro gram for the apartments. Lost Aggie Ring Used as Weapon A misplaced A&M i-ing has been used as weapon in Lubbock. Claude C. Boyd ’45 a teacher in the Latin-American section of Lub bock told The Battalion that he had taken from one of his students an A&M ring of the class of ’45. The boy, 10-year-old John Joe Conterras, said his big brother found the ring “maybe thi'ee, may be five months ago.” John Joe had been keeping the ring on a watch chain. Boyd let him keep it, ‘until he started using the ring on the end of the chain as an offensive and defensive weapon against older boys who bothered him.” Boyd is holding the ring until the owner can be found. He said the name “Jim H. Cass Jr.”, is engraved inside the ring. Boyd has been unable to locate anyone by that name. Traffic Committee Met Yesterday The traffic committee of the Academic council met yesterday to propose recommendations on the traffic situation. Campus Security Chief Fred Hickman, chairman of the com mittee, would not release the com mittee’s recomendations for publi cation. “It would be unfair. They ai’en’t definite yet,” he said. The recomendations will go through the president to the Academic council for consideration. The former students directory identifies Cass as a doctor of veteri nary medicine and a practicioner of veterinary medicine. His home is listed as Buckeye, Ariz. The former students office has Cass listed as overseas now. The Battalion has given the informa tion on the w'hereabouts of the ring to the former students office, and they will contact him about it. So Cass will probably get his ring back, and the boy in Lubbock will have to look for some other type of weapon. Filings Increase For Class Election Twenty-nine persons have filed for the class elections which will be held Tuesday, April 6. Filings close March 30. Filings for senior class president included J. B. Lilley, K. R. Nauck, Charles Minter and Bob Rowland. Bill Bradshaw and Charles Seely have filed for senior class vice- president. Senior yell leader filings include Howard Childers, Glenn Langford, J. R. (Bubba) Plumlee and Sam Ackard. Other filings for senior offices include Clarence Hatcher and Ro main Slabbaei't, sergeant-at-arms; W. V. Johnson and Bill Ut^man, student entertainment manager Harry Espey, Tony Specia, and Thomas Schmidt, social secretary; and Wallace Eversberg, secretary. Ray Howdeshel and Gaines God frey have filed for junior class president. Others who have filed, for junior offices are James Braentigam, vice- president; John Cunningham and David Bailey, yell leader; B. A. Local Magazine Dealer Finds Aggies Are Honest By JOHN NELMS Battalion Staff Writer One of the College Station’s most colorful and interesting citizens is Mrs. Juanita Kearby, founder and operator of Nita’s News stand at North Gate. In her day-to-day contact with Aggies, Mrs. Kearby, who prefers to be called “Nita,” has assumed a motherly attitude toward them. She constantly receives cards, let ters and marriage announcements from former students all over the world. In her years at the stand she has had very few magazines stolen. Her implicit trust in Aggies has even led her to leave the store in their cai-e while she goes for coffee. She repays them for their hon esty by allowing the boys to come in and read magazines without buy ing them. Mrs. Kearby has had two sons attend the college and has a neph ew who is now a freshman. It was at her son’s request that she came to College Station from Mineral Wells and opened her stand on Dec. 2, 1947. She calls her stand “the only complete newsstand in the College Station area.” The only types of magazines she does not sell are technical magazines and nudist magazines. She said she doesn’t read many of her magazines, but that she does “put away a few good ones for my old age.” Civil War Veteran Old Warrior Will Head Base By JON KINSLOW Battalion Managing Editor Bergstrom air force base in Aus tin will change commanding offi cers Sunday, but only for the day. Col. Walt Williams, 111-year-old Confederate veteran from Frank lin, will be honorary commanding officer for the day in connection with Bergstrom’s annual sports car i-aces. Williams will wear the Con federate gray unifoi-m with a plumed cap and a sash. He is the oldest surviving veter an of the Civil War and might have his musket with him Sunday. Williams will leave his home in Franklin, 25 miles north of Bryan, by car and will be met in Bryan with a military escort. He will board a plane at Easterwood air port at 11:06 a.m. and will fly to Austin by Trans-Texas air lines. Accompanying Williams will be his son, Gene, a veteran of World War II, and his nurse, Mrs. Frances Moss. Those staging the races did not expect the Confederate veteran. He simply wrote and asked to pur chase tickets. After further in quiry, the base officials decided to honor him as a special guest. Maj. Victor W. H. Rankin is in charge of details for Williams’ visit. Williams said he had never seen Ex-Aggie Publishes First Novel Soon A 1943 graduate of A&M will publish his first novel Apx-il 30. Vurrell Yentzen, of Nederland, is the author. The book, titled “A Feast for the Forgiven,” deals with the Cajun-French people of Bayou du Sang, La. It is released by Appleton-Centui'y-Crafts, Inc. Yentzen majored in dairy hus bandry here. After serving in World War II, he was editor of the National Dairy Products corpora tion’s farm publication. a sports car, and he just wanted to be a spectator. “I have heard about those cars,” he said, “and I want to see them in action.” Williams is one soldier who has neither died or faded away. He took a plane trip last fall to the State Fair in Dallas. He has as tounded physicians with his re markable health. He lives with his 84-year-old wife, Ella Mae. Williams was 18 years old when he left as a volunteer with “Hood’s Texans.” Hood was a Kentuckian who had seen military service in Texas prior to the war. The soldiers are perpetuated in history by an unusual incident. Williams was one of the soldiers who disobeyed orders at the battle of Chancellorsville. The Texans would not attack until Gen. Robert E. Lee went to the rear. When they did attack, they won one of the most important battles of the conflict. The colonel is scheduled to ar rive in Austin at 11:45 Sunday morning. He will have a military escort from the airport to the air base. After his arrival, Williams, who last went to war more than 90 years ago, will take command. Another tidp he wants to make is to see the monument to Hood’s Texans on the capitol grounds. Few soldiers can say they left as many of their buddies behind them. Some 5,000 Texans marched off to fight in Hood’s brigade. Only 557 of them came back. The brigade seiwed in Virginia under Robert E. Lee’s command, and was in Tennessee and Georgia when Hood took command of the West. The brigade fought in more battles than any other Confederate unit. The one man left of that brigade is Williams, and he will take over a 20th century air base Sunday and see his first sports cars. More than $140,000 in improvements are being added to the College View housing units. Now being installed are new shower stalls for each apartment. The first shipment of the stalls arrived last week and installation was begun Thursday. When the job is completed, 466 stalls will have been put in. “We are starting with the front row of apartments and going down the line/’ said Calvin Moore, manager of student apartments. “We are installing about six or eight stalls a day.” The project will cost about $35,000, including labor. A contract will be let April 1 for kitchen sinks and cab- ■♦■inets for the apartments, Moore said. Youngstown cab inets and sinks were used in the specifications for the con tract bids. The bottom cabinets will be 66 inches long, and the top cabinets will be 30 inches tall and 54 inches long, Moore said. Cost of this project will be about $72,000. New light fixtures will also be installed this year. The fixtures for the living rooms, bedrooms and kitchens will be of the bowl type. Bathroom type light fixtures will be installed in the bathrooms. These fixtures will cost about $9,000 when installed. “This is all the work we will be able to do on the apartments this year,” said Moore. The buildings and college utilities are doing all the work. Already nearing completion is the leveling of the buildings in Colege View. New concrete piers are being put under the buildings and the underpinning is being re paired. Moore said there are about 20 buildings to be completed. “As soon as the leveling is fin ished, the doors and interior parts of the buildings will be leveled,” Moore said. This work was begun in the fall. Cost of the leveling will be about $25 - 30,00, Moore said. Parham, Richard Tackibana, sec retary; and Jan Broderick, social seci'etary. Filing for the sophomore class president are Brad Crockett and Dick Wall. Other sophomore filings are Joe Dixon, vice-president; and Bob Marshall, sergeant-at-arms. No one has filed for class agent or assistant class agent for the class of ’54. Plan May Benefit Civilian Engineers Non-military engineering grad uates of A&M may benefit from a new program of the Department of the Army. The program is open to engineer ing and scientific graduates who can meet the requirement for the special Scientific and Professional Personnel program. All graduates of the major engi neering fields are eligible, and also graduates in chemistry, physics, mathematics, geology and certain others. The candidate must have a BS degree and at least one year of experience in his field. Candidates will serve the initital basic training course and then will be assigned a military occupational specialty number according to the results of aptitude tests, experience and formal education. Most of the men then will go to officers candidate school or serve where they ai ! e needed the most, said Maj. R. T. Willets of the Mili tary science department. Miss Marschall Is Ag Editor Marie Marschall has begun her duties as assistant editor with headquarters here in the Agricul tural Information Office. Miss Marschall, according to the announcement made by Director G. G. Gibson of the Extension Service, is a native of Mason but grew up in San Angelo. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Marschall of San Angelo. Her father prior to his retirement served as a district ex tension agent. She graduated from San Angelo high school and Baylor University in 1950. Her majors were journal ism and english. She taught school for one year in San Angelo and since August 1951 has served as editor of Shellegram, a publication of the Shell Oil Company in Hous ton. She will handle home economics information in the Agricultural In formation Office and work with county home demonstration of the state in developing the information phases of their work. SIGNS ARE WRONG EMMETT, Idaho UP)—R. O. Me- Maham, a real estate agent, figur ed it was just a routine request when he asked the city council for permission to put up one of those wooden signs he’d seen over the sidewalk in front of other business houses. The council looked in the statute book to make sure, found a 36- year-old fire ordinance on the sub ject, and had to order all the wooden signs taken down. Wonder Who Will Do All The Work? ROCKFORD, Ill., March 25 (A 5 )—A new Illinois national guard company was activated in Rockford this week with this roster: One lieutenant colonel, four lieutenants, seven sergeants, one corporal, one private first class and no privates. Air Reserve Unit To Change Trainin Specialized training will soon be added to the air force reserve train ing in this area, said Lt. Col. W. S. McCulley, commander of the 9807th Air Reserve Squadron. The training is now generalized to give non-specialized training and information, he said. “If enough officers and airmen in such fields as administration, supply, operations and other fields request training, a program will be established,” McCulley said. Weather Today FAIR with DUST Outlook tonight is clearing skies with dust decreasing by tomorrow. High yesterday 85. Low this morning 65. _