Number 13: Volume 55 The Battalion COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1955 Consolidated To Begin .New Year Wednesday Price Five Cents RRSISilS m W f 'i SUMMER’S OVER—School bells will soon be ringing, and it’s time for Richard Davis and other first-graders to wave good-bye to carefree pre-school days. Richard is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Davis Jr.; his father is in the Department of Veterinary Physiology and Pharmacology. College Station boys and girls will know for sure next Wednes day that summer is over, for the city’s four schools in the A & M Consolidated School System will open at 8:15 a.m. About -1,200 students are expec ted for the beginning of the 1955- 56 school year. The white elemen tary school, under principal Mrs. Rowena Clark Creswell, expects 560 pupils this year; the junior high school expects 380; the senior high, 250; and Lincoln School about 350. W. T. Riedel is principal of the junior high; J. J. Skirvanek Jr. heads the senior high; and W. A. Tarrow is principal of Lincoln. Registration for the coming year is now taking place, and parents can continue to register their chil dren thi’ough next Wednesday. Superintendent Les Richardson will have his office open Saturday morning for registration. All not registered by the opening of school Wednesday will be registered that morning. School will be dismissed at 12 noon on the first day. 13 New Teachers School Adds To Staff Thirteen new teachers — eight for the white school and five for Lincoln School—have been added to the staff of the A&M Consoli dated School System. Mrs. Catharyn Worley will be in charge of a new second grade section, and Mrs. Lois Rogers will teach a newly-formed fifth grade section. The number o^ sections in both these grades was increased this year because of the rise in enrollment. Dr. Les Richardson School Superintendent A Few Notes ()n Personnel At Consolidated Dr. L. S. Richardson has been superintendent of A&M Consolidated Schools since 1949. Before that date he served as principal of the high school, and prior to that he was football coach. He has B.A. and M.A. from A&M and his Ph.D. from the University of Houston. The high school principal is J. J. Skrivanek Jr., who has served in this capacity since 1952. He holds his B.A. and his M.A. degrees from thg University of Texas. W. T. Riedel, principal of the junior high, received his B.A. and M.A. from A&M. He taught both in Texas and in Mississippi before coming here as principal in 1949. Another principal who came here in 1949 is Mrs. Rowena Clark Cres well, who is in charge of the ele mentary school. Mrs. Creswell was at Tarleton State College be fore coming to A&M Consolida ted. She was awarded the B.A. and M.A. degrees by the Univer sity of Texas. W. A. Tarrow, principal of Lin coln School, has been in the teach ing profession for 30 years, the last 14 of which he has spent here. He has been principal for seven years. He is a graduate of Prair ie View A&M and holds an M.A. from that school. Other new teachers for the grade school are Mi's. Maryann Cay- wood, first grade; Mrs. J. W. Sor enson, third grade; and Mrs. Jan- nette Godfrey, fourth grade. Added to the faculty of the high school are Mrs. Florence White, typing instructor, and Mrs. Dor othy Rush, who will teach English. Larry Hayes has been added to the physical education department. Horace Schaffer was moved to head coach. The new teachers for Lincoln School are Eunice Williams, sec ond grade; Jean Williams, fourth grade; James Stewart, seventh grade; Euril Henson, eighth grade; and Emamel Mack, industrial arts. All are graduates of Prairie View A&M. Recent resignations in the white grade school were Mrs. Doyle Letbetter, Mrs. Flora Dale, Mrs. Ray George and Mrs. Dor othy Criswell. Thomas Ryan, high school com mercial teacher, will teach and work toward a doctorate at North Texas State College. Jim Bevans, who resigned to enter the insur ance business, taught physical ed ucation and was high school coach. Returning teachers in the white elementary schools are Mesdames Lewis Knowles, Louis Coke and Eleanor Manning, first grade; Mesdames L. P. Dulaney, Georgia /Williamson and Jack Kent, second grade; Mesdames C. K. Leighton, Mary Camp and Fi'ank Coulter, third grade; and Mesdames Grace Skriv anek, C. K. Esten and Jhek Sloan, fourth grade. Edsel Jones, and Mesdames H. L. Heaton, Frances Brusse, A. R. Owen, V. E. Schember and D. W. Fleming will resume their duties as instructors in junior high. Back at the high school will be Mrs. S. S. Sorenson, English and Spanish; Mrs. A. R. Orr, mathe matics and Latin; Mrs. Mildred Byrd, home economics; Charles L. Byrd, vocational agriculture; Wil liam Miller, history; A. R. Orr, mathematics; K. C. Morgan, gen eral science and biology; Robert Knapp, English and chemistry; and J. D. Chaney, business manager. Educational specialists return ing to their posts will be Mrs. Shir ley Frazier, speech therapist; R. L. Boone, music director; Mrs. J. W. Barger, art instructor; and Mrs. J. T. Duncan, librarian. Returning to Lincoln Elementary School are Julia Campbell, first grade; James Hawkins, sixth grade; Audrey Pol’d Rogers, third grade and Madelyn Howard, fifth grade. J. R. Delley, history; L. E. King, science; Thay M. Owens, home ec onomics; and Pearl Carter, Eng lish, will resume their duties at Lincoln High School. Returning to their administra tive posts are J. J. Skrivanek Jr., high school principal; W. A. Tar row, principal of Lincoln School; W. T. Riedel, junior high school principal; and Mrs. Rowena Cres well, principal of the elementai’y school. All schools in the system will begin work on Sept. 7. Starting time has been changed from 8:25 to 8:15 a.m., but dismissal time will remain the same. The fpllowing holidays were ap proved by the Board of Trustees: Thanksgiving (Nov. 24 to 25), Christmas (Dec. 19, 1955 to Jan. 1, 1956) and Easter (March 29 to April 2). There will be a holiday in March so that teachers can at tend the T.S.T.A. District Conven tion. The school year will end on May 29, 1956. Turkey Course Sch edu led Here A turkey short course, sponsored by the Poultry Husbandry Depart ment, will be held on the campus Sept. 12-16. Registration will be conducted in the Reid Laboratory at the Poul try Center beginning at 8 a.m. Monday, Sept. 12. All meetings will take place in the Reid Labor- atoi’y. About 40 people will be present for the course, which is under the direction of E. D. Parnell. School busses, both city and rui’- al, will run in the morning and at noon. There will be no cafeteria meals served until Thursday, which will be a full day except for first graders. The first grade will go only half a day for the first six weeks. The A&M Consolidated Indepen dent School District includes al most all of the southern half of Brazos County. Within the school district’s limits are the entire City of College Station area and a ma jor part of the Texas A&M cam pus. The boundaries enclose ap proximately 90 square miles, the* whole area being served by school busses. The schools are administered by a seven-member Board of Trustees who serve overlapping three year terms. The members are elected at large by the residents of the school district. The Board is inde pendent of the administration of the County School Superintendent and the County School Board. Present members of the Board are John H, Rogers, president; Milton D. Williams, vice-president; Henry L. Allen, secretary; E. E. Brown; J. R. Jackson; Ernest J. Redman Jr.; and C. A. Bonnen. ^ The Board recently approved a $362,684 budget for the coming school year. Expenses expected are $17,200 for administration; $183,552, white school instruction; $44,463, Negro; $33,000, cafeteria; $13,194, transportation; $22,940, operation and maintenance of plant; and $40,690.38 for fixed charges. Receipts expected are $13,038.20 from federal * funds; $231,877, state funds; $357, county funds; and $117,412, local funds. The school district is entirely in dependent of the city government but contracts with the City Council to have school taxes collected by the city-employed tax assessor and collector. The district has the legal power to levy taxes, establish its own yearly budget and issue school building bonds as prescribed by statute. Bond issues for the schools are as follows: 1939, $75,000; 1941, $40,000; 1949, $125,000; 1951, $111,- 000; and 1953; $385,000. The 1953 bond issue was for the construction of the new senior high school build ings. Consolidated has a Band Boosters Club and a Mothers and Dads Club. Lincoln School also has a Mothers and Dads Club. With the start of the school year membership drives for these clubs, which serve the school, will be starting. The original school district was chartered in 1909, but apparently no tax-supported school was oper ated until 1920. Union Hill, Well born, Rock Prairie, and Shiloh com mon school districts joined with the A&M College Independent School District in 1928 to form the A&M Consolidated Independent School District. The letters “A” & “M” in the name are not abbreviations of “Agricultural & Mechanical” and are used simply as letters, without punctuation, in the name. Most of the original Union Hill district is now a part of the Bryan School District. The Peach Creek and Minter Springs districts were added to the A&M C.I.S.D. in 1949. The present district has had no legal connection with Texas A&M since 1939 when the public school system obtained its own buildings and moved from the college cam pus. By mutual agreement, but without financial reimbursement, student teachers from the various teacher-training departments of A&M College gain experience ip the local public school system. Th^ number doing so is small since the primary purpose of the college is directed along engineering and ag riculture lines. Nearly half (41%) of tEe par- (See CONSOLIDATED, Page 2) Jpri v WEEK EARLY—Lincoln School won’t open its doors until Wednesday, but Lavorn Mitchell, who will be entering the first grade, is already prepared to go to school. Lavorn is six years old and is the daughter of Mrs. Clemmie Mit chell. South and West US Industry Moving American industry is on the move on a completely unprecen- dented scale—and the trend of the moves of industry is defintely to ward the South and the West. Speaking at the fifth annual In dustrial Development Course be ing held at A&M today and tomor row, Charles Layng, associate edi tor, Industrial Development of At lanta, Ga., told the conference that the industrial giants have announ ced plans for new plants involving Weather Today Today will be partly cloudy, with lower temperatures but no chance of rain. Low today was 71 de grees; high yesterday, only 90 degrees. > expenditures of from fifty million to a billion dollars each. “Thous ands of small industries, too, are laying plans for moving else where,” the Atlanta editor declar- ed. Layng .said that “the competi tion for new industry is bitterly keen.” He declared that the first thing- in attracting industries is to learn what industries it is possible to attract. “What about the South?” the speaker asked. “The Southern As sociation of Science and Industry predicts that our territory will gain more than three thousand multi million dolar factories in the next ten years and many more smaller ones. Included will be more than 200 multi-million dollar plants that IN RECOGNITION—Forty-six Junior bowlers received certificates of merit for success fully completing the summer Junior Bowling classes conducted by John Geiger, MSC Bowling Alley manager. Shown are the 34 boys and girls who were at the presentation | ceremonies Friday night. Kneeling in front are the two boys and two girls who received j trophies for outstanding improvement and learning. They are, left to right. Lunette Fazzino, Tommie Letbetter, Connie Lyrdahl, and Furman Isbell. Geiger is kneeling on I the left. Junior Bowlers Get Certificates Forty-six boys and girls re- president A1 McClellan, presented ceived achievement awards Friday the certificates to the group. Four night, certifying that they had sue- trophies, the awarding being based cessfully completed the 11-week o n performance, improvement, Junior Bowling Classes held this bowling ettiquette and ability to summer at the Memorial Student take instruction, were also award- Center bowling alleys. e d by Geiger. John Geiger, manager, who in- The trophy winners in the 7 to structed the classes with the as- ll-year-old class were Connie Dry- sistance of A&M Bowling Club dahl for the girls and Furman Is bell, boys. In the older group, 12- 17, Lunette Fazzino was picked as winner of the girl’s trophy and Tommie Letbetter got the boy’s award. A special award was giv en to Mrs. Bea Durdhal who, al though not participating, attended every class meeting. She got a certificate for one free line of bowling at the Center. Many parents turned out for the presentation ceremony, which was held in the MSC assembly room. A film, “Striking Champions,” fea turing some of the top men and women in bowling, was shown be fore the awards were given. The complete list of award win ners is as follows: Hank Halstead, Nils Ekfelt, Steven Morris, John ny Lane, Jeff Wallin, Dianna Dyr- dahl, Connie Dyrdahl, Furman Is bell, Larry Randolph, Ricky Peters, Bob Koch, Robert Klerk, Gerry Morris, Jerry Dyrdahl,, Brad Gun- elson, Lynn Morris, tfimmy Hol land, Billy Letbetter, Tommie Let- better, Dennis Minor, Bill Jones, Jackie Lane, Lunette Fazzino, Paula Kidby, Mike O’Grady, Nick O’Grady, Pat Rye, Peggy Rye, Dali McCannon, David Smyth, Dicky Hickerson, Dick McCannon, Joe Randolph, Susie Minor, Fred Brison, Sandra Klerk, Jan Zim merman, Ronnie Bolen, Patsy O’Grady, Tom Kahan, Allen Coul ter, Lane Coulter, Glenn Gregg, Judy McPherson, Jay Pruitt and David McCannon. will be making products of which we haven’t heard today, because they haven’t yet been invented.” “There is an increase rather than a diminution of the south ward trend of a large number of industries. Our pleasant Southland continues to hold a strong lure of manufacturers. On the other hand, never forget that competition is getting tougher every day.” Harrington At Biloxi For Conference Dr. M. T. Harrington, chan cellor of the A&M System, is participating as a guest in the Southern Regional Educa tion Board’s fourth annual Legislative Work Conference in Biloxi, Miss., which will end to morrow. Delegations of legislators ap pointed by the governors of the 14 states of the Southern Regional Education Compact were welcomed by Lt. Gov. Carroll Gartin repre senting Gov. Hugh White of Mis sissippi before settling down to study the crisis in higher educa tion resulting from rapidly expand ing enrollments. The Conference has as guests the presidents and representatives of the governing boards of the major state colleges and universities of the region. Also present as ob servers were a delegation appoint ed by the governor of West Vir ginia, which is considering ratify ing the Southern Regional Educa tion Compact. The Board has advocated state and regional planning on a long term, continuing basis to prepare for the doubled and tripled college enrollments expected during the 1960’s and 1970’s. Cadet Officers To Be Oriented Cadet officers and non-commis sioned officers of the cadet corps at A&M will undergo a two-day orientation course Sept. 7-8. About 175 students will be on hand for the orientation instructions, prior to the opening of school Sept. 19. Purpose of the course is to pre pare cadet officers to take com mand of the corps of cadets. Newly-appointed officers and non- coms who will attend include the entire cadet corps staff, regimental commanders and their sergeant- majors, battalion commanders and their sergeant-majors, and the company and squadron command-