7 The Battalion Number 146: Volume 55 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1956 Price Five Cents Lions Select New Officers For Next Year Dr. Leland C. Grumbles of the Veterinary Bacteriology and Hygiene Department was elected president of the Col lege Station Lions Club at regular meeting in the MSC Mon day. Dr. Carlton Lee, optometrist in Bryan and past president of the Bryan Lions Club, installed 12 new officers for 1956-57. They are as follows: Giumbles, president; Charles G. Haas, Assistant Direc tor of the MSC, 1st vice president; Di\ Carl M. Lyman, head of the Biochemistry and Nutrition De partment, 2nd vice president; Dr. A. A. Lenert of the Veterinary Medicine and Surgery Department, 3rd vice president; Dr. Donald E. Davis of the Veterinary Research Department, secretary; Dr. George L. Huebner, Jr. of the Oceanog raphy Department, treasurer; J. J. Skrivanek, Jr., principal of A&M Consolidated High School, Lion Tamer; Dr. Archie I. Flowers of the Veterinary Research Depart ment, Tail Twister; Dr. W. A. Bon- ey of Dr. Boney Laboratories, Richard R. Broach, Jr. of Court ney's Humble Service Station, Dr. Fred P. Jaggi, Jr. of the Veteri nary Bacterioloy and Hygiene Department and Dr. Don W. Hood of the Oceanography Department, directors. A. A. Price of the Vet erinary Anatomy Department, is the new progi-am chairman. Next week's program will be pre sented by Jack Sloan of the Texas Agricultural Extension Service said Price. Sloan will show slides of a recent trip to Korea in which a Texas relief ship took supplies and livestock to a newly formed 4-H Club in Korea. Weather Today SCATTERED SHOWERS Clearing with occasional scatter ed thundershowers is forecasted for College Station. A&M Group Awaits Committee Decision $19 Million Laboratory Sought By A&M Officials LEAVING FOR ST. LOUIS—Boarding at Easterwood Field Tuesday morning are Ca sey Fannin, H. C. Dishman, R. B. Butler, Jack Springer, D. W. Williams, Chancellor M. T. Harrington and Dean W. W. Armistead. Dr. J. B. Page Grad School Dean Chosen Dr. John B. Page, head of the Department of Agronomy, has been appointed Dean of the Graduate School and Professor of Agronomy, effective September 1, 1956. Dr. Page’s appointment was con firmed by the board of directors of the System at their Saturday meet ing. The new dean of the Graduate School joined the staff of A&M in 1950, as a professor of agronomy, and was made head of the depart ment in 1955. He formerly served as a research assistant at the Uni versity of Missouri (1936-37); as research assistant at the experi ment station of Ohio State Univer sity (1937-40); and as assistant, later associate professor at Ohio State University (1943-49) and as DR. J. B. PAGE Water Right Questions Solved By City Council College Station Councilmen vot ed Monday night to give notice of termination of water-service to the Spring Green Community, south of College Station. The motion grew out of a study, at the regular meeting of the coun cil in the city hall, made involving recent questions of “water rights” of individuals that have tapped on to the line now serving that com munity. In looking over the or iginal agreement the Councilmen decided the simplest method to solve the problem, and remove the city from any danger of embar rassment arising from the situa tion, would be to get out of the situation altogether. The original contract gives the city the right to terminate services within 10 days notice at any time they feel the need to do so. Marion Pugh was elected Mayor Pro-tern for the meeting and pre sided in the absence of Mayor Er nest Langford and Mayor Pro-tem J. A. Orr, both of which were out of town. In other action the Council passed Ordnance 232 which grants the Southeastern States Telephone Co. an increase in monthly rates. The rates will go into effect with the October billing. The new rates will be as fol lows : Handset & Desk Business One Party $9 Business Two Party 6.75 Business Extension 1.50 are 25 designa- Residence One Party Residence Two Party Residence Four Party Residence Extension Wall phone rates cents cheaper for all tions. The council authorized the Ma yor to contact officials of the Mid west Video Corp and find out when College Station residents can ex pect service cables for their tele vision sets. full professor at Ohio State Uni versity (1949-50). Dr. Page has done outstanding work in soil physics and soil chem istry and was a pioneer in demon strating the possibilities of the electron microscope in soil studies. His work has shown that cropping profoundly affects structure and porosity of soils. He is a member of the American Society of Agronomy, Soil Science systems and cultivation practices Society of America and Interna tional Society of Soil Science. In 1953 he was chosen as the na tion’s outstanding young soils scientist and received the Steven son Award in soils research. He has served as consultant to gov- emmental and agricultural organi zations interested in problems re lating to soils structures. Dr. Page is the author of a number of technical articles on soils structures and compositions and their effects on plant growth. A native of Payson, Utah, he re ceived his bachelor of science de gree from Brigham Young Uni versity in 1936; his master’s de gree from the University of Mis- souri in 1937; his Ph.D. degree from Ohio State University, in 1940. Dr. and Mrs. Page reside at 310 Hensel Street, Bryan. They have two children, John Boyd Page Jr., 17, and Ann Elizabeth Page, 14. Mrs. Page is the former Miss Helen Young, of American Fork, Utah. Jacobs Speaks To Kiwanians On Ethiopia Bob Jacobs, former member of the College Station Kiwan- is Club and formerly associa ted with the Basic Division at A&M, spoke to the Kiwanians at their regular meeting, Tuesday noon in the MSC, on his recent job in Ethiopia. Jacobs and his family returned recently from Ethiopia where he has been working with the Point Four Program on Education in that country. Jacobs said that the Em peror is veiy interested in raising the standards of his people. As of now only four percent of the child ren of school-age are attending schools. After a short talk on the coun try, Jacobs supplemented the speech with slides taken on various occasions during his tour of duty in Ethiopia. Pointing out that “as a whole the people were primitive in their nature, they are very eager to learn and improve their country.” j Jacobs showed slides of work that ' is being done to augment backward situations in the country. “To many people’s surprise the natives, although primitive in hab its and environment, are surpris ingly in good health and possess pride and good spirits,” said Ja cobs. With his wife, Oma Lee and three children, Bobby, 14, Janice, 9 and Larry 5, Jacobs is catching up on the goings-on in College Station and will remain here the rest of the week. Following that they will travel to Illinois, their home, and are scheduled to return overseas in August. Vet Deadline Near Korean Veterans are urged to report to the Veteran Ad visors Office, located on the ground floor of the YMCA, to sign monthly certification for pay. This must be signed be fore Tuesday, July 3, accord ing to Bennie A. Zinn, Veter ans Advisor. MIKADO REHEARSAL CAST—Shown above at Tuesday night’s rehearsal are right) Bill Swann, Richard Reiser, Toby Hughes, Joel Spitzer, Bob Moody, Blackburn and Norman Jacobson. Fourteenth Annual Musical Scheduled For July 10 & 11 By JERRY NEIGHBORS I Bill Turner and Mrs. Joe Barron Battalion Staff Writer are co-directors. This season’s Summer Musical, Principal members of the cast the Mikado, is scheduled for the are Coralyn Thurman, , Camille Grove July tenth and eleventh. The ; Kennedy, Carolyn Vance, Iris Bul- cast includes A&M students and ; lard, Toby Hughes, Harry Gooding, other members of the community, i Norman Jacobson, Warner Dahl- —— berg and Robert Boone. There is also a chorus of sixteen boys and girls. The Mikado is the fourteenth Summer musical to be sponsored | by the Office of Student Activities J as a joint college and community. activity. Admission will be by j Summer entertainment season tick ets. Individual performance tickets will also be sold at the box office, j Many of the cast members will J be familiar to local audiences as they have played in previous Grove j operettas. Several members are j Aggie Players. There is much mu sical and dramatic talent included which promises to make this pro- j duction live up to the reputation of past performances in the Grove. Besides the experienced direc- tors, the operetta will be ably as- | sisted on its way by the production I staff which includes B. B. Smith, | stage manager; Shirley Cannon, i dance director; Clare Rogers, Mar- | garet Berry and Eve Porter, aceom- • panists; and Jean Martin, script 1 girl. Another reminder, don’t miss lit! Two Graduates Seriously Hurt Two former students, Don ald Napp and Z. VV. Falcone, were seriously injured in a head-on collision near Hatties burg, Miss., June 13. Napp, who received his master’s degree in Geology in June, is suf fering from a broken back, crushed ribs and a bruised lung, has been transferred to a Houston hospital. Falcone, driver of the car and January graduate in geological en gineering, received a crushed right leg and left leg broken in three '■ places. He was unconscious for | three days following the accident ■ and was given six transfusions. There was no information avail- able on the fourth person, a rider in the Falcone car. Calvin Moore, a friend of the Falcones, received a letter from Mrs. Falcone three days after the accident giving this information. Three men from the A&M System and four men from Bryan are in St. Louis, Mo. waiting' for the decision of the United States Department of Agriculture’s Site Selection Committee for the location of the proposed $18,915,000 cattle disease laboratory. Among the men from this area representing A&M are Chancellor M. T. Harrington, D. W. Williams, vice-chancellor for agriculture and Dean W. W. Armistead of the School of Veterinary Medicine. Bryan men that left College Station Tuesday morning, with the trio from the A&M System, included Mayor H. C. Dishman, Jack Springer, secretary of the Chamber of Com merce, Casey Fannin, city manager and R. B. Butler, president of the Bryan Indus trial Foundation and vice- president of the East Texas Chamber of Commerce. Arriving in St. Louis the men joined people from other parts of Texas that are backing A&M’§ bid for the laboratory. Norman Moser, of DeKalb, a vice-president of the Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Ass’n; Jay Taylor, Amarillo, past presi dent of the association, past presi dent of the American National Livestock Ass’n and now a director of the National Livestock and Meat Board; R. M. (Dick) Kleberg, Jr., of the King Ranch and a director of the Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Ass’n; Ernest L. Williams, San Angelo, secretary of the Texas Sheep and Goat Raisers Ass’n; Harold F. Nelson, San An tonio, attoimey for the. Texas Milk Producers Federation and chairman of the Texas Animal Health Com mittee are among some of the men that are in St. Louis for the hear ings. Many organizations are backing A&M in their bid to secure the site. A few are as follows: Texas Technological College; Texas Farm Bureau; Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Ass’n; East Texas Chamber of Commerce; Texas Jaycees; Office of Governor Allan Shivers; Texas Veterinary Medical Association; Texas Swine Breeders Ass’n; Texas Biown Swiss Ass’n; Texas Guernsey Ass’n; Holstein Friesian Ass’n of Texas; Texas Poultry Improvement Ass’n; Texas Turkey Federation; Texas Broiler Ass’n; Texas Ayrshire Breeders Ass’n and the Texas Jersey Cat tle Club. The men representing the A&M System, headed by Chancellor Har rington in St. Louis, were schedul ed to go befoi’e the Site Committee yesterday morning at 9 a.m. How ever, it is expected to be several days at least before any informa tion will be released as to the out come of the hearings. As originally scheduled the Site Committee will hear all petitions, (See ST. LOUIS, Page 3) Annual Picnic Scheduled For July 2 The Community Picnic previous ly scheduled for July 4 has been moved up to July 2 at 5:30 p.m. according to Dr. Luther G. Jones, president, College Station Recrea tion Council, sponsors of the af fair. The annual picnic will be held at the Consolidated High. School Stadium under the chairmanship of Mrs. E. C. Klipple. A concession stand will be op erated by the Mothers and Dads club of the high school and will be selling popcorn, peanuts, hotdogs, hamburgers, and soft drinks. An elaborate fireworks display has been planned for that evening directed by Ran Boswell and as sisted by Raymond Rogers. Dr. Jones has submitted a com pleted list of enrollment of the summer recreation program for publicatiqn. Swimming had a reg istration of 451 students beginning with eight year olds and up which have been divided in 12 classes of advanced, intermediate and begin ners. Art Adamson is the coach. Horace Schaffer is the instructor for the 99 persons enrolled in ten nis classes while Joe Fagan coaches 15 persons in golf. Jack Chaney is in charge of the Driver Training program Avith the enrollment of 17 persons. John Geiger is giving instructions to some 70 bowling enrollees. Tumbling classes have an enroll ment of some 85 persons under the direction of Dick Dowell, assisted by Susan Dowell. Mrs. John Fagan has 42 children in the pre-school class. The College Station Amer ican Legion team has 24 members coached by Sam Zucero. President Morgan Returns Friday Dr. David H. Morgan, president of A&M and his Avife, Avill return to College Station tomorrow. Dr. Morgan has been at Har- vard University since Monday at tending a meeting of the Institute of College and University Adminis trators held at the Harvard Busi ness School. A. F. Chalk Named Head of Eco. Dept. Dr. Alfred F. Chalk Jr. has been named head of the Department of Economics, effective September 1, He will succeed Dr. Clark 1956. gree from A&M in 1936 and re ceived his Ph.D. degree from the University of Texas in 1950. Dr. Chalk seiwed as chairman of the economics section, Southwest ern Social Science Association, 1950; Du Pont Symposium for So cial Scientists, Wilmington, Dela- Avare, 1953; and is a member of the Economic Association, Economic Association, and Southwestem Social Science Association. He is the author of articles on sistant professor from 1939-43 as I po,itical economics and has served as research economist for se\'eral industrial and business organiza- Schedule Change Consolidated High School stu dents AA'ho contemplate further schedule changes should see Prin cipal J. J. Skriv r anek, Jr. in his office sometime this Aveek. SkriA-anek pointed out that he Avill not be available during the month of July. Students who haA-e mo\ r ed to College Station recently and intend to attend Consolidated may register at this time also. Lee Allen, AA'ho has resigned to be come head of the economics depart ment of North Carolina State Col lege. Dr. Chalk’s appointment Avas an nounced by Dr. David H. Morgan, | American president of the college recently. > Southern Dr. Chalk has served as instruc tor in the Department of Economics at A&M from 1936 to 1939, as as- associate professor from 1952. $ 1946 to (left to Barney tions. Dr. Chalk is a nath-e of McAl- j len, Texas, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Chalk. His Avife is the for mer Miss Marie Giles, daughter of Mrs. Josie Wood. 24 CottomA'ood Street, W’aco. They haA-e three He is a 1934 graduate of Baylot j children—Elaine, 15; Linda, 13 and l niA-ersity, took his master’s de- Marcia, 11. He was an economist for the Na tional War Labor Board, Kansas 1 City, Mo., from 1943 to 1944 and aa as associate director, case analy sis division. Wage Stabilization Board, Dallas, from 1951 to 1952. W : ^ DR. A. F. CHALK