13: Volume 53 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, TUESDAY, JUNE 15, 1954 Price 5 Cents ib. b of the World f%By the ASSOCIATED PRESS —Texas’ big cities could control the September ition under a method of figuring delegate t slid like greased lightning through the demo- ive committee meeting yesterday. Without a ssent, the committee voted to count all the vptes fllan Shivers in 1952’s general elections—Demo- dican, or write-in—in allocating each' couhty’s nvention. NIX—A bundle of ransom money and a pistol 7 I yesterday near the Superstition mountains, 0 gapped Evelyn Ann Smith was held captive and d last week. Mrs. Smith, 23, wife of a Phoep- man, was abducted at gunpoint from in front beauty parlor last Wednesday. Jaime Ortix Patino, grandson of Bolivia’s tin pliceihere and abroad yesterday to search for his !months, the former Joanne Connelly, who was most beautiful debutante in 1948. She disap- la Rome clinic Thursday. iE—Officers tried Monday to trace the mem- . vhite supremacy society whose burning cross proes to turn out bearing arms. Sheriff Ches- 1 01 Mid the Negroes were quickly sent back to their r the incident before dawn Sunday. The ©r- elaims it has members throughout the Gulf e Local Boys Boys’ State opened yesterday lege IStation high delegates. They Antopy, Ben Trot- E. Wilkins, ates [from all over die camp in Austin iy of i state govem- d by the American State |is an annual mp’s To Retire B r Gammon is re- f the|A&M history 1 mtive|Sept. 1. I yesterday that lie liching classes, but *ng as department ance [with college :h specify that no HBHI^fcars of agp shall nistrative capacity. »u® rue to teach part- Rl 2 ; to A&M in Sep ias head of the his- He and one oth- were all the his- had at that time, lembers presently l this department, ane, idean of arts d that a successor probably be named er. lALVE'ioriS Op en rsaster or the position of 'allege Station will 1 July 6. ritten test for the applicants >will valuation of their issional experience the job, according dee commission, st have lived here -,ir, and be between or ftid. the former post- F Piecause of age. ir Today CLOUDY during the day, Ight showers. Yes- is 95 degrees; low degrees. program in which the boys divide into “political parties,” campaign for their candidates for local and state offices and a legislature. Attorney General John Ben Shepperd spoke to the group last night, telling them that by their attendance at the Boys’ State they were “throwing away a privilege claimed by most of the people 1 of the country—the privilege of irre sponsibility as citizens.” “Though you are not yet 21, your duty as a citizen has already be gun,” he said. “With the half hundred years remaining to you, you can sentence yourself, your state and your country to half a century of freedom, or to 50 years of half-freedom.” ^ Other speakers will be Lt. Gov. Ben Ramsey, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court J. E. Hickman, Comptroller Robert Calvert, Rail road Commissioner Ernest O. Thompspn, and Land Commissioner Bascom Giles. The Boys’ State governor’s in augural ball Friday will be the last function of the week’s program, and Boys’ State will be dismissed Saturday morning. All assemblies are being held on the University of Texas campus. 76 Cadets Take Air Guard Offer Seventy-six A&M air ibree ROTC cadets have decided to take commissions in the United States air national guard, said Maj. H. Q. Johnson, senior air science instruc tor. Cadets who received a certifi cate of completion in May, and those who will receive them in summer school, summer camp and in January, 1955, have been offer ed options to apply for commis sions in the air guard. “Those cadets who take advan tage of this program will receive such privileges as free $10,000 gov ernment insurance benefits, air force hospitalization for injury while on active duty, uniform al lowances, and the training receiv ed from the air guard will count toward retirement benefits,” John son said. SINGIN’ GALS—The Kelley Sisters of Bryan will be on the floor show of the “Stag ’N Hag” Dance tonight in the Memorial Student Center. They are Sandra (left), and Sylvia (right). Batt Chan ges Type For Easier Readme With today’s paper. The Battal ion takes another step in bringing Texas A&M and the city of Col lege Station a better newspaper. Although it is not obvious, a me chanical change has been made that will make The Batt easier to read. The difference is in the ampunt of space between the lilies of type. The lilies have more space between them than they did before. This difference is not appahefeit, but it MSC Will Show ‘Anthony Adverse’ “Anthony Adverse” the film sto ry of the individual’s adjustment to the society in which he lives, will be shown by the Memorial Student Center Film society at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. The film features Frederic March and Olivia DeHavilland in the lead roles. Produced by War ner Brothers, the story is reported by film critics Hervey Allen as “one of the great modern classics which, although fiction, shed so much light upon the adjustment of individuals to modern society.” One hundred tickets have already been sold for the show, according to Gary Bourgeois of the MSC entertainment committee. Tickets are one dollar for adults and 75 cents for children. Bourgeois said that the society will show a film each Thursday night throughout the sumer. Two bonus movies will be shown for Society members on dates to be announced later. One of these films. Bourgeois said, will be a musical and the other a foreign film. will make reading The Battalion easier on the eyes. This is how it was done: The Battalion’s body type is 8 points high. “Points” are a standard type measure, and there are 72 points to an inch. This means that the type is one ninth of an inch high. This height has npt been changed. What has been changed is the amount of space between lines. Formerly, there was only one point of space between each line; now there are two points of space, or twice as much. To illustrate the difference, this paragraph you are now reading is set in the old style; it has less space between the lines than the rest of the type in this story and on the rest of the page. The dif ference can be seen when the two styles are compared, but the main value is that even this small in crease of spacing makes it easier to read The Battalion. Now you are again reading the new, wider-spaced type. You are probably not conscious of the change, but your eye is, and your eye will appreciate it. This is another move in The Battalion’s efforts to keep abreast of all the latest improvements in modem journalism. BULLETIN E. L. Williams, former direc tor of the Engineering Exten sion service, died yesterday of cancer. Funeral services will be at 10 a.m. Thursday at the A&M Presbyterian church. Sick for about three months, Williams resigned June 1 as head of the Extension service “because of poor health.” From New Zealand Girls Need Aggie Pen-Pals Some girls in New Zealand want Aggies for pen-pals. Miss Mary Yelavich, writing from Aukland, New Zealand, says that • she and her friends find it “both educational and interesting” to write to overseas pen-friends. “We would be extremely grateful if you could fulfil our wish,” she said. The girls, who attend St. Mary’s college in Auckland, range in age from 16 to 20, but Mary says, “Should our girls be too young" we would soon find pen-friends for your students.” In the letter, which was address ed to the president of the college and came to The Battalion through Dean of Men W. L. Penberthy, Mary said she and the other girls had learned about Texas A&M in an article in a back issue of The Saturday Evening Post. The article, by George Sessions Perry, was entitled “The Rowdiest School in the Country,” and ap peared about two years ago. In a reply to Mary, Penberthy said, “We appreciate very much the warm spirit of friendship indi cated in your desire to become pen- friends with some of our students and I assure you that we will en courage our students in every way possible to accept this kind invi tation.” Mary’s address is Miss Mary Ye lavich, 36 Richmond Road, Pon- sonby, Auckland, New Zealand. She will contact the other girls at the college. MSC For ht Is Hass’ First of Series Of Weekly Dances A “Stag ’N Hag” dance, the first of a series of weekly dances sponsored by the Memorial Student Center, will be tonight, with boys and girls coming without dates to “get acquainted.” The dance tonight, and the other weekly dances, will be held in a partitioned part of the MSC fountain room, newly- dubbed “The Hide-A-Way”. Music for the informal dance tonight will be furnished by the juke box, and there will be a charge of 25 cents, stag or drag. The dance will start at 7:30 p.m. Floor show for tonight’s dance will include the singing Kelley Sisters of Bryan, and Mary Ellen Fussell of Bryan, a singer. Miss Fussell graduated this year from Stevens college in Missouri, after majoring in voice and piano.. Dick Clark will be the master of ceremonies. “We’ve got plenty of girls lined up for the ‘Stag ’N Hag’, but we want the boys to come too,” said Mrs. Helen Atterbury, MSC sec retary. Each week the theme for the weekly dance will be different, and a formal dance will be held once a month in the ballroom. Gary Bourgeois is summer chairman for the activities program, and Miss Fussell and Reba McDermott are sub-chairmen fbr the Hide-A-Way dances. Anyone who plays a musical in strument is wanted to play for floor shows at the future dances, Mrs. Atterbury said. “We especially need some one to play the organ each Sunday after noon between 4 and 5 p.m. in the main lobby,” she said. Next on the MSC summer en tertainment schedule is a popular music concert next Tuesday night, with a Bryan air force band play ing. ROTC Camps Monday for Four weeks of combat training in army and air force ROTC summer camp began June 19-20 for approximately 600 A&M cadets who will be seniors next year. Attendance is required to receive reserve commissions as second lieu tenants upon graduation. A total of 353 cadets are sched uled for 13 different army installa tions in all sections of the United States. The largest numbers have been ordered to the infantry school at Fort Benning, Ga., the field Ar tillery center at Fort Sill, Okla., the anti-aircraft artillery school at Fort Bliss, and the armor camp at Fort Knox, Ky. The 265 air force cadets are as signed to 13 bases in Texas, Ari zona, Nevada and California. Big gest percentage of these are in regular flying categories of pilots and observers. Enrollment Is 1,516 For Summer Enrollment for the first six- week summer school term here is 1,516 students, H. L. Heaton, registrar, announced Friday. On the same date last year the enrollment was 1,538. There are 1,378 students en rolled in classes on the cam pus and 138 are enrolled at the Junction Adjunct, summer school camp near Junction. There are 81 freshmen at the camp, 27 students taking civil engineering surveying and 30 taking field geology. Speakers Set For School Conference Consultants and speakers for the school conference here June 21-23, have been an nounced by George B. Wilcox, head of the education and psychology department. He is sec retary to the conference and gener al chairman. Six hundred are ex pected to attend. The speakers and consultants in clude Dr. H. I. Willett, superinten dent, Richmond, Va., public schools and president-elect of the Ameri can Association of School Admin- istfators; Dr. Jone Franseth, spe cialist in tural education, U.S. Of fice of Education, Department of Health and Education and Welfare, Washington, D. C. Dr. Charles Nelson, assistant Superintendent, Houston public schools, elementary education; Da vid Sellars, coordinator of instruc tion, Ft. Worth public schools; Dr. A. T. Dyal, pastor, First Presby terian church, Bay City, Thos. B. Ro*aey, chairman. State Board of Education, Tyler. Team Wins Judging Meet Brazos county 4 - H club members Thursday walked away with top honors in live stock judging and second in poultry and dairy judging at the close of the annual round-up on the campus. More than 500 Texas youths participated in 17 state wide judging and team demonstra tions. Composed of Walter Wilcox, Donald Barker, Kent Potts, all of Bryan, and Henry Blazek of Wheelock, the local livestock team won first with 1,841 of a possible 2,100 points. County Agent Wallace Kim brough was their coach. Potts was an alternate. Wilcox and Barker were first and second high-place individuals in the entire contest. Howard and Nolan counties came in second and third. Twelve teams participated in this division. A $100 cash award from the Tex as Aberdeen Angus association of Fort Worth goes to the team to help pay expenses to the National 4-H Livestock Judging contest, which is held in Chicago in Novem ber. Floyd Abbott, Tommy Barker, Ross Salvaggio, of Bryan, and Dan Williams of College Station com posed the second place dairy judg 1 - ing team. The team racked up 1,354 of a possible 1,500 points. Abbott was second high place individual with 454 of a possible 500. Nine teams participated in this contest, Wheeler county tak ing first. Bob Mayfield coached the poul try team into second place, the county’s third honor of the day. Gwinn Thompson, Fred Henry Schram, Eddie Melasky and’ Billy Hymen scored 2,075 of a possible 2,400. Guadalupe county took first in this class and HopkinS county* third. Ten teams entered this competition. Metal awards were made to each member of the first, second and third place teams and to first, sec ond and third place high individu als. Brazos Off-Limits For BAFB Men The Brazos river has been de clared off-limits for Bryan air force base personnel, after ah air man drowned there. Airman Robert J. Fortunate drowned there last month wheri he attempted to swim across the rivel’. Bryan AFB’s newspaper, Jet Blasts, called the river “a treacher ous stream of water that has claim ed the lives of many persons ih this area in times past.” IN A CIRCLE—The circular foundation for the auditorium of the new A&M Consolidated high school building is in place, waiting for the arch-girders that will be put over it Wed- 1 nesday.