The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 01, 1954, Image 1

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Local Residents
Battalion
Published By
A<&]>1 Students
For 75 Years
PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE
Volume 53
COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, TUESDAY, JUNE 1, 1954
Price 5 Cents
New Little League Park
^teat J11 _
E—Gov. Allan Shivers chats with two of the
eanlgiils who welcomed him and Govs. Fine of
lOast n * a | anc * Thornton of Colorado on their trip to
rvey of the American reconstruction program in
ast. Shivers returned to the state Sunday.
Hi. Si
Wins Highest
ne for Cowham
in .
iam , of Conway and
vied 218 for the high-
the evening at the
ner league in the Me-
nt Center Thursday,
resident of -the league,
r of the Field Maint-
ron, BAFB, bowled a
e highest of the even-
Course
ril2S‘s Sales
U
manufactures study
i has been revised to
Ipfc ' administration and
lClS. gj Dr. I. W. Rupel,
department, said re-
rant
dlNfee*
ias said it needs men
1 ounded training,” Dr.
“I think this new pro-
amates the need. It
dern student interest-
'dustry more business
hout neglecting the
enhance his ability to
nagement and sales
es
1, the new cur-
adesl semester credit
k in business and eco-
'I ciples of accounting,
ng, eonomics market-
law, psychology, per-
jement and food plant
, the student may use
tive hours to include
in business or related
urses in business man-
salesmanship are sug-
ing. His high game was 217, one
point under Cowham.
The high team game was rolled
by Conway and Company, with a
752 and a total series of 2,137.
A tentative match game has
been set up between members of
the All Star summer league and
teams from Brenham.
League Standings
Team
Won
Lost
Game
Ave.
Fid Maint Sqd
4
0
1,000
Conway & <^o.
4
0
1,000
Faulk’s Auto
3
1
750
Tremont
1
3
2&0
Student Coop
0
3
0
Air Base Gp
0
3
0
League Records
Team Game: 752, by Gotryvay
and Company.
Team Series: 2,137, by Conway
and Company.
Individual Game: 218, by Her
bert Cowham, of Conway and Com
pany. } -
Individual Series: 592, by Bill
Selmer of Fid Maint Sqd.
Mothers and Dads
Elects Barger
J. W. Barger will be president
of the A&M Consolidated Mothers
and Dads club for the year 1954-55.
Other recently-elected officers
are Mrs. W. B. Harris, first vice-
president; Mrs. Eugene Rush, sec
ond vice-president; Mrs. John Mc-
Cannon, third vice-president.
Mrs. R. V. Hite, recording sec
retary; Mrs. George Huebner, cor
responding secretary; Ernest C.
Wright, treasurer.
Mrs. Joe E. Davis is the retir
ing president.
To Be Dedicated
Recreation Council
1 registers Monday
Registration for all summer Rec
reation council programs except
swimming will be next Monday.
Registration for the swimming
series will be June 3 from 1 to 4
p.m. at De Ware field house.
Registration for the other pro
grams on June 7 is as follows:
Tennis: 8 a.m. at the A&M ten
nis courts.
Supervised play: 9 a.m. at the
junior high school building.
Tumbling: 10 a.m. at A&M Con
solidated gymnasium.
Fees for the programs will be
$4 for one eight-week swimming
term, $2 for each six-week tennis
term, and $2 for the one six week
supervised play term.
Persons who are not residents
of College Station will pay double
fees, according to the by-laws of
the recreation council.
Council members in charge of
each program are Mrs. Fred Weick,
swimming; Mrs. Norman Ander
son, tennis; Mrs. C. G. (Spike)
White, pre-school and supervised
play; K. A. Manning, tumbling;
A. E. Denton, softball.
Herb Thompson, Little League
baseball; and minor league base
ball; A. E. Denton, American Le
gion baseball; E. E. Ivy, volley
ball.
Members of the Recreation coun
cil are Herb Thompson, president;
A. Ijk Denton, vice-president; Bob
A&M System Aids
Education Agency
Two members of the A&M Sys
tem are serving the Conservation
and Resource Use Education com
mittee of the Texas Education
agency.
They are Henry Ross of the
agricultural education department
and Dr. Howard Weaver of the
Forest service.
Weaver was named to a com
mittee to work on future plans for
a textbook of comprehensive na
ture for teacher use as a source
book or information guide on Con
servation.
Ross is a regular member of the
committee, and in a recent meeting
helped lay plans for resource edu
cation courses to be taught in
teacher education institutions this
summer. Several public and pri
vate agencies will cooperate in pre
senting the course to the colleges.
Among them are the Soil Con-
servation service, the Public Health
service, the Department of Public
Safety, the Forest service, the
Game and Fish commission, the
Texas Education agency and sever
al oil and gas companies.
Cherry, secretary; E. E. Ivy, treas
urer- Mi’s. C. G. (Spike) White,
Mrs. W. W. Armistead, Mrs. Fred
Weick, Mrs. W. A. Price, Mrs.
Norman Anderson, Carl Tishler,
Les Richardson, Ran Boswell, J.
W. Hill, K. A. Manning, W. T.
Reidel.
300 Attend
Dedication,
Field Day
More than 300 persons at
tended the City Farm and
Ranch Club Field Day and
Dairy Center dedication here
Thursday.
They heard Dean C. N. Shepard-
son of the School of Agriculture
pledge the Dairy Center to the
continued improvement and growth
of the relatively new dairy indus
try in the state.
Four departments in the School
of Agriculture provided the pro
gram for the day. They were
agronomy, animal husbandry, dairy
husbandry and range and forestry.
Special buses and automobiles
carried the group to field labora
tory areas of the range and fores
try and agronomy departments
where they saw examples of brush
control by aerial and ground
sprays, fall and spring burning
and other cultural improvement
practices for range reclamation,
and imported grasses under test
in the introductory nursery.
After lunch they watched lab
oratory demonstrations of compari
sons between meat- and fat-type
carcasses of hogs and cattle for
market purposes, and were shown
differentials between the price paid
by the producer and that paid by
the consumer of meats.
Moving to the college’s new
$400,000 dairy center, the group
got a quick look at the milking
operation in the modern milking
parlor, saw grazing management
practices followed by the depart
ment, then moved to the new breed
ing center for the dedication.
Dr. I. W. Rupel, head of the
dairy husbandry department, was
master of ceremonies; Rev. Nolan
Vance of the First Methodist
church at College Station asked
the invocation, and Shepardson was
the principal speaker.
The group also saw collection of
semen from a member of the cen
ter’s bull stud, and the artificial
insemination of a cow.
Fo
aids Given for School Year
t school assembly for
£:M Consolidated high
nizejd its outstanding
11 phases of school and
ar work.
J. J. Skrivanek pre-
y to Fred Anderson,
president, and a cer-
nerit to Melvin Free,
r vice-president,
le, music director, pre-
Vrion Music award to
: the band and Jimmy
choir. Bai’bara Arlt
ted as the outstanding
nd HJimmy Bond was
tstanding choral mem-
K t> presented key awards
j ofpithe opera cast,
(verty was winner of
^^,Lomb Science Award,
--■'^''Patton won the Science
, Kenneth Morgan, sci-
} p L tor, made the presen-
;y selection of the most
, t and girl were David
’" Marilyn Dads, Thomas
Ryan, senior sponsor, and Boone
made the presentation of certifi
cates of merit.
The following were awarded cer
tificates of merit for outstanding
home room leadership:
Homeroom 10-1, Nadine Smith,
presented by Mrs. Muriel Orr.
Homeroom 11-12, Jerry Oden,
presented for Mrs. Sorenson by
Skrivanek.
Homeroom 12, Martha Williams,
presented by Thomas Ryan.
Students who were on the honor
roll for all of the five six-week
periods were given scholarship cer
tificates by Skrivanek.
Recipients were 12th grade, Fred
Anderson, Robert Cleland, Robert
Jackson, Carolyn Landiss, Penny
Laverty, Janice Latimer; 11th
grade, Bonnie Carroll; tenth grade,
Marilyn Davis; ninth grade, Mar
cia Smith, Charles Delaplane, Mau
rice Olian, Larry Leighton, Jo Ann
Walker.
The nine national honor society
members were presented merit cer
tificates by Mrs. J. T. Duncan,
sponsor. They are Fred Anderson,
Robert Cleland, Jerry Holmes, Rob
ert Jackson, Charles Johnson, Caro
lyn Landiss, Janice Latimer, Penny
Laverty, Patricia Owen.
The winner of the daughters of
the American Revolution Ameri
can History award was Penny Lav
erty. She was given a medal by
Mrs. Frank Brown, Sr., represent
ing the DAR.
Certificates of merit were given
to students with perfect attend
ance records, with each home room
teacher making the presentations.
Mrs. Lord’s home room 9-3 won
overall recognition for keeping the
highest percentage of attendance
during the school year.
Recipients of the certificates
were 9-3, Mrs. Lord, Joyce Arring
ton, Ronald Gandy, Charles Gentry,
Jo Ann Walker, Billy Taylor, Don
ald Tax.
11-1, Mrs. Byrd, Patsy Nolan.
12, Mr. Ryan, Dorothy Huff,
Marian Gaddis.
10-1, Mrs. Orr, Anna Parsons (2
years), Dolly Smith, John Way.
9-2, Mr. Morgan, Betty Mead,
Dali McCannon.
9-1, Mr. Forsyth, Amando Mar-
telino, Charles Delaplane.
Superintendent Les Richardson
presented the Babe Ruth Sports
manship award to two juniors,
Anna Beaty and Henry Phillips.
Mrs. Muriel Orr presented a key
to Jerry Holmes as editor of the
annual and a certificate of merit
to Penny Laverty, treasurer of the
annual.
Mrs. Mildred Byrd presented to
Clifton Bates the Athletic Sta
tistics award for keeping athletic
statistics during the school year.
Clifton is The Battalion’s Consoli
dated correspondent.
Boone presented to Roy Curtis
a certificate of merit for his extra
curricular work during the school
year.
Jimmie Forsyth, sponsor of the
Round-Up, the school newspaper,
recognized his staff and presented
the editor’s key to Betsy Burchard,
editor-in-chief.
Kid Baseball
Season Starts
College Station’s own Little League park will be offi
cially dedicated at 5 p.m. this afternoon, starting off the
summer season of kid baseball.
College Station residents and officials of the Little Lea
gue association will be on hand for the ceremonies, and more
than 250 parents and friends are expected.
All four College Station teams will be there in uniform,
with the White Sox and the Senators playing the game today
at 5:30 p.m.
After the invocation by the Rev. Norman Anderson and
the flag raising, Marion Pugh, chairman of the park pro
curement and construction committee, will present the park
to Ray Oden, president of the*
College Station Little League.
C. G. (Spike) White will be
master of ceremonies and
Barney Welch will explain the
Sportsmanship award for the Little
League.
Pugh will express his thanks to
the persons who have helped in
the building of the park, which is
estimated as being worth $11,000
in actual cost, donations, and volun
teer labor.
Oden will introduce persons con
cerned with operation of the Little
League.
Park construction personnel were
Fred Benson, engineering; Barney
Law Men Get
Degrees Here
Sixteen law ; enforcement officers
from 13 Texas cities received cer
tificates Friday for completion of
the seventh Texas Municipal Police
school here.
The four-week course was con
ducted by Wallace D. Beasley of
the Engineering Extension service.
Experts from the state Department
of Public Safety and from police
departments of Dallas, Houston and
other cities served on the faculty.
Officers completing the course
were E. J. Betros and Hugh Gar
land, Waco; Clem E. Bolton and
John P. Yeager, Jr., Bryan; Robert
L. Richards and John G. Dement,
San Angelo; James V. Andrus,
Wichita Falls; Truman W. Biggs,
El Campo; William P. Carter, Wea
therford; Carlos Z. Gracia, Harlin
gen;
John G. Haas, Corpus Christi;
Homer C. Howard, Carrollton; Bil
ly J, Kilgore, Burkburnett; Jake
R. Morse, Dalhart; C. Joseph Pres
sley, Denison; Carnel J. Weight-
man, Dumas.
Welch, park layout; Marion Pugh,
construction; T. E. McAfee, sod
ding; Fisher Concrete company,
fence posts bases; Otis Robertson,
painting; Mickey Neville, supervi
sion.
T. W. Huglies, carpenters; Carl
Kuegkendall, water and ice; Wayne
Stark, concessions; Jack Fugate,
flag; Barlow (Bones) Irvin, W. F.
Fitts, C. G. (Spike) White, stands.
John Denison, public address sys
tem; Eddie Chew, pitching and bat
ting boxes; Don Dale, Herb Thomp
son, Jack Fugate, Marion Pugh,
Ed Gamer, sale of fence posts and
score board.
Officers of the Brazos County
Little League association are Cliff
Carter, commissioner; Buddy
Moehlmann, secretary; Carl Wil
liams, treasurer; Brownrigg Dew
ey, attorney; Whitey Vance, um
pire-in-chief.'
College Station Little League of
ficers are Ray Oden, president; Don
Vestal, vice-president; T. E. Mc
Afee, secretary; Larry Hayes, mi
nor league commissioner; W. T.
Reidel, enrollment.
Herb Thompson, Recreation
council; Les Richardson, earliest
advocate of Little League; Clarence
Watson, Jerry Holmes, Clifton
Bates, official minor league scor
ers; Maurice Olian and Larry
Hayes, publicity.
Barney Welch, C. G. (Spike)
White, Marion Pugh, sportsman
ship committee; Harold Sullivan,
Cotton Price, and Les Richardson,
protest committee.
College Station city officials who
will be present are Ernest Lang
ford, mayor; Ran Boswell, city
manager; and L. P. Dulaney, as
sistant city manager.
The first ball in the game will
be thrown by Mayor Langford,
with School Superintendent Rich-
^.ardson catching.
Film Society
Sets 12 Shows
For Summer
The Memorial Student Cen
ter Film society will present
12 movies in the summer Film
society series, beginning June
10.
Movies to be presented are Life
boat, Anthony Adverse, The Count
of Monte Cristo, The Mudlark,
The Adventures of Sherlock Hol
mes, Colonel Effingham’s Raid,
The Story of Dr. Ehrlich’s Magic
Bullet, Panic In The Streets, Hud
son’s Bay, Sundown, Young Mr.
Pitt, and The Late George Apley.
The dates for the pictures are
June 10, 17, 24; July 1, 8, 15, 22,
29; August 6, 9, 12, 19. Scheduling
of pictures to dates has not yet
been completed. Each picture will
start at 7:30 in the MSC ball
room.
Film society tickets for each six-
weeks summer term will be 75
cents for students and their wives,
and one dollar for all others.
Tickets may also be purchased
for the entire summer. All tickets
are available at the main desk of
the MSC, and may be purchased
during the first week of summer
school.
The MSC Film society commit
tee was formerly the A&M Film
Society, under the direction of The.
Battalion. At the request of The
Battalion, it is now a committee
of the MSC directorate.
Three Will Attend
Cotton Congress
Three members of the agricul
tural economics and sociology de
partment will represent A&M at
the 15th annual meeting of the
American Cotton congress in Cor
pus Christi June 3-5.
Dr. Tyrus R. Timm, head of the
department, will appear on a “Mar
keting of Cotton” panel with Karl
Fox of the U. S. Department of
Agriculture and Dr. A. B. Cox of
the University of Texas, Friday
morning.
Ralph Rogers is a member of th©
Congress’ program and arrange
ments committee.
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HOW TO GET THERE—This map shows the location
League park, at the corner of Montclair and Luther
of the College
streets.
Station Little