on Number 60: Volume 54 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1955 Price 5 Cents World News By The Associated Press TOKYO—Peiping radio yester day charged that U. S. participa tion in the Tachen Islands evacua tion was a “pretext to invade the Chinese coastal islands and expand its aggression against China.” if 'k it WASHINGTON—The House voted 394-4 yesterday to continue the draft four years beyond June 30. It is currently taking about 11,000 young men each month. i ★ ★ ★ MOSCOW—G e o r gi Malenkov’s resignation from the Soviet pre miership likely will mean a sub stantial reshuffle of the whole Soviet government under the eye of Nikita S. Khrushchev, Western ers in Moscow believe. Malenkov stepped dowm yesterday with a confession of failure to do his job. To succeed him Khrushchev nomi nated Nikolai Bulganin, defense minister and an army marshal, as the choice of the Communist pai*ty. it it it WASHINGTON—President Ei senhower declared yesterday America “must face up to the dangers that still lurk about us” and also must help intensify “the will for freedom” in Soviet sat ellite countries. it it it FORT WORTH—A ginat B-36 bomber from Biggs air force base, Bf Paso, crashed and burned on the runway at Carswell air base last night. There were two killed „< it it it WASHINGTON—President Ei senhower outlined yesterday a three-year attack on the nation’s school shortage which would throw $1,100,000,000 of federal money into emergency construc tion. He said the program would preserve “the responsibility of communities and states in edu cating our children.” Step Taken Toward Formation Of Foreign delations Institute 'III? ■ ^ Offer Assigned Fori Bragg Post; Leaves Here Soon 1 1 W Col. Robert D. Offer Leaving PMS&T Post Col. Robert D. Offer, PMS&T here since August, will leave March 1 or April 1 for a new assignment. Offer said yesterday that he has been ordered to a field artillery group at Fort Bragg, N.C., prob ably to become commander of the group. He said he did not know who would replace him as top man of A&M’s army ROTC department, but he hoped the new man would arrive before he left. Offer said he did not know the S reason for his being transferred so soon after his arrival, but that he did not believe the Formosan crisis was the cause. “My orders were dated before that situation reached its present condition,” he said. Costs $200,000 Work To Begin On Chapel Construction on a $200,000 non- denominational chapel for medita tion and prayer will begin some time this year, according to Ernest Langfoi-d, head of the architecture Mass Evacuation Started on Tachen TAIPEI, Formosa—(A 1 )—The massive evacuation of the Commu nist-menaced Tachen Islands began yesterday with Chinese Nationalist Navy ships loading civilians from the rocky beaches of lower Tachen Island. U. S. Navy worships and planes threw a protective shield around the Tachens, 14 miles from the Red mainland and within gun range of Red Chinese artillery on Yi- t-iangshan Island. Officers on the U. S. amphibious flagship Estes said American ships had not taken aboard any of the nationalist civilians. Groundwork for the evacuation was performed Monday by U. S. Navy beachmastei’s and marines assisted by nationalist troops. Red artillery on Yikiangshan fir ed at U. S. 7th Fleet planes Mon day but none of the shells came close. Otherwise, the opening phase of the evacuation passed without incident. Peiping radio said U. S. planes flew over Yikiangshan and other islands near the Tachens in “a military provocation gravely en croaching upon China’s territory and sovereignty.” The broadcast said the U. S. planes left when Communist planes took the air. Col. Cho Kai, a Chinese Nation alist officer, said the last shelling of the island was Saturday and the last bombing a week ago. “Several Communist MIGs flew *?ver the island Saturday on an apparent reconnaissance flight but dropped no bombs,” he said. TRussell Recovering F rom Inj iiries Dr. Daniel Russell, who was in jured last year while on leave for Point 4 program duty in Haiti, is apparently recovered from his in- ju ries. An excerpt from a letter which Russell sent to Luther Jones, which appeared in the Feb. 8 edition of the Kiwnnis club weekly bulletin read as follows: “I finally got out on a fishing trip yesterday. Three of us caught ninety pounds in an hour and half. I am feeling just fine now and can see no permanent effect from my accident. Cho declared the garrison is prepared for any emergency if the Reds attack before the evacua tion is completed.” Col. Mu Wei said the soldiers had not yet been told they would be withdrawn but the civilians are all packed and ready to leave. U. S. tracks and jeeps range over the roads, carved from the steep hillsides. A strange silence hangs over the island and the singsong Chinese voices caimy far in this silence. There is no sign of movement on the Communist islands nearby. Navy officers on the U. S. flag ship Estes reported Lt. Gen. Liu Lien-yi, garrison commander, in sisted he still was without orders for a withdrawal. However, Liu’s soldiers were stacking ammunition and gear on the beaches, ready to pull out v r hen ordered. Frog teams—the U. S. underwa ter demolition experts—completed a beach survey for the withdrawal. Two Red mines were found and disposed of. A Navy beach master said the pullout may be “painfully slow” because of the high tides and poor beaches. Pilots from carrier planes said they saw explosions on Yikiang shan, eight miles to the north, and speculated the Reds were blasting out gun positions. One officer said the Communists made “no threatening nor unfriend ly maneuvers” in the first day of the withdrawal. “Indications are the Reds do not intend tk make any,” he added. “But we cannot relax and do not intend to. We will have the same air patrols.” department. • The winning design for the chap el was submitted by Richard Vroo- man, assistant professor of archi tecture. Vrooman was awarded commission as architect for the chapel. He has an AB degree from Obeilin college, Bachelor of Archi tecture degree from Westeim Re serve, and Master of Architecture from A&M. He has been with the college four years. Vrooman’s eight panel design will be on display in the Memorial Student Center the later paid of the week, Langford said. Two other designs submitted by former students drew prizes of $500 and $250. Second place went Film Group Names Spring Schedule “Drole De Drame” and “Pinky” will be the next films presented by the Memorial Student Center Film society in the MSC ballroom Fri day, according to Cyrus Johnston, chairman. Tickets are on sale at the main desk of the MSC for $1.25 for stu dents and $1.50 for non-residents. They will remain on sale until 5 p.m. Friday. The society will show several foreign films dui’ing the semester The schedule is as follows: Feb. 18, “Phantom of the Opera;” March 4, “The Strange Ones;” March 20, “Chaplin Festival;” April 1, “Gigi;” April 22, “Thirteen Rue Made line;” May 15, “A Run for Your Money,” “The Tramp” and “Steps of the Ballet;” to Preston M. Bolton, ’41, son of former president and Mrs. F. C. Bolton, and third to Donald E. Jar vis, ’50, of Fisher and Jarvis of Dallas. Langford was appointed profes sional adviser for the contest. Jury members making the awards in cluded Thomas E. Gracen of Hous ton, chairman; Carl Koch of the Massachusetts Institute of Technol ogy; Oscar T. Hotchkiss jr., presi dent of the Former Students as sociation; Howard R. Meyer, Dal las; and Robert F. White of the architecture department. The $200,000, set aside by the Former Students association will include mechanical equipment and air conditioning, but will not in clude architect’s fees, costs of su pervision, furnishings, or landscap ing. “Plans for the new chapel will begin immediately,” Langford said. “Vrooman will present detailed pre liminary drawings to the Former Students association in May, and construction will probably begin in September.” The normal tour of duty for a PMS&T is three years. “But the army wanted me, so I’m going,” he said. When asked what he thought of A&M, his first ROTC assignment, Offer said, “About the best thing to say is that it’s quite a place.” “I was surprised in many ways,” he said. “A&M is large, and it takes a little time to get used to so many people stomping around.” Offer, a West Point graduate, at tended the army’s Command and General Staff college for a year just before coming to A&M. He has also seen service in the Pentagon, with the Military Ad visory gi'oup at Rome, and with the fifth division in Iceland, Ire land, North Africa, and Italy. Offer replaced Col. Shelly P. Myers, who left for duty in Eu rope. Silver Taps Planned Tonight Silver Taps will be held to night. at 10:30 for Dan Burgin, freshman business administration major from San Antonio. Burgin was killed in a car- truck crash 20 miles west of Beeville Feb. 1. Influenza Leads Influenza was the leading dis ease in Brazos county last week with 22 cases reported to the county health unit. Mumps was second with 13 cases, and diarrhea was third with 12 cases. Eleven cases of chickenpox were also re ported. Committee Formed By Student Center The first step has been taken toward creating at A&M an annual Student Foreign Relations Institute that would be one of the two organizations of its kind in the nation. The Memorial Student Center has set up a temporary committee to plan for the conference, which would involve from 150 to 200 college students and cost an estimated $10- 15,000 a year to put on. First problem to be solved is financing the institute, said Bud Whitney, MSC council vice-president and temporary chairman of the committee. He said the financing would probably be done by getting a grant, and that there is a “good chance” of getting the “■money. Whitney mentioned the Jesse Jones foundation and the Ford foundation as pos sible sources. He said Robert Hutchins, who was formerly con nected with the Ford foundation, offered his assistance when he was here as a Great Issues series speak- Aggieland Names Dates For Pictures Picture schedule for military students has been announced by the Aggieland ’55. The schedule is as follows: Feb. 9-10, A, B, C, and D infantry; A, B and C armor; Feb. 11-14, A and B engineers, A transportation, A ordnance; Feb. 15-16, A, B, C and D field artillery, A, B and C anti aircraft artillery; Feb. 17-18, A quai*termaster, A signal, A chemical; Feb. 21-22, A and B composite, maroon band, A and B athletics. Feb. 23-24, white band, squadrons 1 through 3; Feb. 25-28, squadrons 4 tshrough 10; March 1-2, squadrons 11 and 21; March 3-4, squadrons 22 and 25. Juniors To Meet The junior class will meet tonight in the Memorial Student Center ballroom at 7:30, according to Allen Greer, junior class president. Plans for the Junior Prom will be dis cussed, he said. During Meeting Rites Conducted For Pigg’s Father Funeral sexvices wei’e held yes terday in Waxahachie for Calvin Harvey Pigg, Texas agrtcultural and livestock leadex*. He was the father of Calvin Pigg jr., A&M agricultural journalism major frbm Bryan. Pigg, 61, was chainnan of the Texas Agricultux'al Stablization committee and state vice-president of the Agricultural Association of Texas. Waxahachie was his home. Agriculture Plane To Be Shown Soon By DON SHEPARD Battalion News Editor A new experimental agriculture ail-plane, the Ag-3, will be demon strated at the Texas Agi'icultui'al Aviation conference and shox-t course on pest conti’ol here Feb. 20, 21 and 22, said Fi-ed Weick, direc tor of the Pei’sonal Aircraft Re search centei'. The 135 h.p. plane is designed to carx-y a spray or dust load of about 800 pounds, and will do all agriculture work such as spraying, dusting, and seeding. It is one of two airplanes in this Registration Set For Dance Classes Registration for the spxnng se mester dance classes of the Memo rial Student Center will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday in the MSC ballroom. Sponsoi'ed by the MSC dance group, the classes will be conducted by Manning Smith. mm \ ■ i;;»tfi f % ^ -V -iflj “ -r ~ § .y. ’.. <'s* ip p i NEW DUSTER—The Ag-3, an experimental spraying and dusting plane designed by Per sonal Aircraft Research center at Easterwood airport, was flown in yesterday from Lockhaven, Penn, where it was being tested. Standing by the plane are Tom Heffner, pi lot, Fred Weick and George Roth, who worked together designing the plane. field, Weick said, that have been financed by the Piper Aircraft cor poration. Weick, w r ho sxxpervised the design of the plane, pointed out that it will be a much smaller and cheaper airplane than those used before. The Ag-1, also designed by the Personal Airci'aft Reseai'ch center at Easterwood aii’port, carried a job load of 1,200 pounds, and the Ag-2, now being developed in Cali fornia, carries 2,000 pounds. Both planes, he said, would cost approxi mately $15-20,000 while the Ag-3 will cost about $6-7,000 including equipment. It is an easily maneuvered plane which wall take off and climb 50 feet in a distance of 920 feet. The equipment to be used on the Ag-3 is not yet complete, but should be finished in sevei'al months, he said. Weick pointed out that using planes in agincultux-e costs a little more, but thei'e are definite advan tages. “Most important is speed,” he said. “You can control insects w T hich nox-mally damage your crops so rapidly that by the time you have treated with ground equip- merit it is too late. The Ag-3 will be a powexTul and readily available weapon against insect infestation.” Most spraying at the present time, Weick explained, is done by professional applicator firms. “Since the Ag-3 is a small cheap er plane,” Weick said, “I think it will px-obably inci’ease the number sold. Three persons will be able to buy where only one could af ford the larger planes,” he added. “The purpose of the institute would be to give intei'ested students a chaxxce to express their opinions about world affail's in conference with informed students from other schools,” Whitney said. Held Annually The institute would be held an nually, with students from selected schools invited to send representa tives to the four or five-day meet ing. The list would probably be con fined to schools west of the Mis sissippi river, since West Point sponsoi’s a similar conference for eastern schools, Whitney said. The institute’s program would also include speaker's prominent in the field of foi*eign relations and United States foreign policy. It would probably be held in the late fall of each year, and the temporary committee is already planning for next fall, Whitney said. Committee Members Membei’s of the temporary com mittee include Weldon Walker, Bill Alsup, Henry Goff, Harold Sellers, John Jenkins, Larry Kennedy, Les Robinson, Bob Bucher, Bob Castor, Cynis Johnson, Wilson Hardy, and Peter Stromberg. When definite planning starts, Whitney said, this committee will be broken into sub-committees, and enlarged to 50 or 100 A&M stu dents. “It will be a big thing, and it will requii'e a lot of work/’ he said. Only One Other The West Poixxt conference, call ed the Student Conference on Unit ed States Affaii's, is the only other student confei'ence of this type in the nation. Several cities, includ ing Houston and Dallas, have sim ilar foreign relations groups. Two repi'esentatives from A&M, Whitney and Coi*ps Commander Frank Ford, attended the West Point meeting last fall. Whitney and Johnson attended a meeting of the Houston group a month ago to get ideas for the proposed A&M institute. Weather Today ^=r CLEAR $ The weather outlook for today is clear with little change in tem perature. Yesterday’s high was 60, low 48. The temperature at 10:15 Khis morning was 53.