The Battalion Number 147: Volume 55 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1956 Price Five Cents Sloan Speaks To Lions About Korea Jack T. Sloan, Visual Aids Specialist with the Texas Ag ricultural Extension Service, spoke to the College Station Lions Club Monday about the recent “Texas Friendship” voyage to Koi’ea. The voyage was a good-will ges ture and was intended to help in itiate more interest and work in the newly formed Korean 4-H Clubs, said Sloan. Sloan showed slides of the trip showing many of the highlights and spectacles of Korean customs and people. The visit in Korea was highlighted by an hour talk with President and Madam Syngman Rhee at their home in Seoul, Sloan said. The Voyage was not a relief op- ei’ation even though the Koreans were furnished supplies and live stock. The livestock will not be given to them until they furnish a like animal which will in tmm be given to another Korean 4-H Club, said Sloan. Fourteen Texans, including eight teenage 4-H boys, made the voyage which originated in Houston and ended in Pusan Harbor. This was the lai’gest shipment of livestock ever to be shipped to Korea, said Sloan. “This work was started in Ko rea by Col. Charles A. Anderson, a retired Army officer from Ne braska. He set up the fh'st 4-H Clubs in the Pusan, Seoul area and is still working in Korea now,” Sloan said. Another ship is leaving for Ko rea from Galveston on July 13, he said. Ticket Application Mailed to Faculty And Employees Applications for tickets to Aggi*e home football games have been mailed to all faculty members and employees of the A&M System by fhe Athletic Department. In order to receive top priority fickets applications must be re turned to the Athletic Department by July 31. Faculty and employees also will be admitted to all other Athletic DepartmiMit sponsored events throughout the school year if they purchase a season book. Top prior ity will not apply to single game purchases. Each faculty member and em ployee will be limited to two season books under the top priority rating and these are not transferable. This fall A&M will host Villa- nova, TCU, Arkansas and Rice on Kyle Field. Season tickojjt books, with reserve seats, are. $14 each. Season ticket books, with jjetieral admission seats are $8 each. COMMITTEE VIEWS HOSPITAL—Members of the site selection committee for a pro posed $19,000,000 animal disease laboratory of the USDA visited facilities of the college here this morning. The committee consists of T. C. Byerly, chief, animal husbandry and research and C. D. Van Houweling, director of livestock regulatory programs, both with the USDA; Don Collins, Wilber B. Plager, Lloyd Avila, Merrill N. Varnick, W. B. Young, Dr. G. H. Good, Dr. H. E. Kingman, Don Turnbill, Harold Hutton, and Carl Neumann. Tour Farms, Research Centers Turks Inspect Ag Facilities Six Governors and officials of the Ministry of Agriculture from Turkey visited on the campus ear lier this week. The men inspected teaching and research facilities of the System, met college and system officials and saw films on research carried on by the Experiment Sta tions. Elmer A. Starch, technical di rector for the travelers and for merly in charge of agriculture ad visers in Turkey, is traveling with the group which includes Ibrahim Sargut, Under-Secertary of Agri culture for Turkey; Abdi Bozoglu, counselor for Agricultural Rela tions with Foreign Countries; Ni- yazi M. Aki, governor of Erzurum Province; Uhsan S. Cagliyangil, governor of Bursa Province; Semal Gokten, governor of Ankara Prov ince; Mehmet H. Incesulu, governor of Balikezir Province and Mehmet S. Kelesoglu, governor of Konya Province. Construction Shack Burns Saturday A construction shack owned by the R. B. Butler Construction Co. of Bryan, burned to the ground Saturday morning at the site of the new Dairy and Biochemistry Build ing. The morning blaze consumed the small house, used to store work men’s tools, as hundreds of curious summer students gathered to watch the blaze. College Station Volunteer fire men brought the blaze under con trol before it spread to neaiby dry grass and stacked lumber. Origin of the fh - e was undeter mined and the loss was estimated at $1,500. Two interpreters, Oran Ozdemir they were met by D. A. Adam and party. They checked into the MSC and held a brief discussion of their program and confirmed appoint ments for Sunday. Monday morning Chancellor M- T. Harrington, D. W. Williams vice - chancellor for agriculture, greeted the group and traveled to and Ali Arman, are with the group. The visitors arrived Saturday night at Easterwood Field where Skunk Does Research In Library In consulting our files we could find no record of July 3 being “Be Kind to Animals” Week” or anything of the sort, but apparently Cushing Me morial Library officials felt the need for such a day. As you entered the library you were instantly aware that the library was observing some sort of unusual “day.” It wasn’t pictures on the bulletin board or anything of the sort, just “atmosphere” in the main lobby. Traveling upstairs the air became thickei 1 , and employees working the main circulation desk were almost on the verge of tears due to the presence of the visiting royalty. A check could not uncover the culprit, but speculators say that apparently a skunk had made its way into the air-con ditioned ducts of the library. (Probably in search of knowl edge.) the Beef Cattle, Horse and Sheep and Goat Centers where Dr. J. C. Miller, head of the Animal Hus bandry Department conducted in spections of facilities and answered questions concerned the various animals and their management. Leaving there the group traveled to the Poultry Center, Dah*y Cen ter anti the Brazos River Field Laboratory to inspect work being cerried on there in agricultural re search. Monday afternoon the groups met in the Senate Chamber of the MSC to discuss various phases of agriculture and were shown several films dealing with agriculture re search here on the campus and the System. An informal reception honoring the guests was held in the MSC Monday afternoon from 4 p.m. until 5 p.m. The visitors left Tuesday moming for Dallas. Married Student Seriously Injured A father of five children and a sophomore floriculture student at A&M is in the Veterans Hospital in Temple following a car wreck at Peach Creek Bridge, on High way 6, Sunday morning. Charles L. Burrow, 27 of X-l-B, College View is in seidous condition in Temple after his 1952 Nash sta tion wagon hit a guard rail on the bride and toppled 20 feet into a I'ocky stream-bed. Buitow was carried to Bryan Hospital and transferred to Tem ple and is suffering from a crack ed hip, broken leg and brain con- ) cussion. A&M’s By US f Steen Defines Interposition For Kiwanians Defining - interposition a s the “1956 model of nullifica tion,” Dr. Ralph Steen, of A&M’s History Department, explained and gave a short history and problems involved in the writing of the United States Constitution at Tuesday’s meeting of the College Station Kiwanis Club. Speaking to the group in ob servance of Independence Day, Steen drew a picture of the era of confusion that led to the writing of our Federal Constitution. John Longley, acting president of the Kiwanis Club introduced Steen to the members and urged them to “stop and think about what the constitution means to every Amer ican”. The period immediately prior to the meeting of the body that wrote our Constitution was described by Steen as “an era when debtors chased their creditors and paid them without mercy.” Such was the six years the Uni ted States lived through before the writing of our Constitution and the setting up of our present form of Federal Government. At the time congress had no powers and could only ask the separate states to honor their pleas for money, taxes and soldiers. Usually these pleas fell on deaf ears and the central government was quickly bank- rupted. This period convinced the men that something had to be done and the Constitution was the result of a 3-month meeting in Philadelphia in 1787. The signing of the Constitution compared to “the rising of the sun,” according to Ben Franklin. During the program Bill Adams, chairman of the Kiwanis Safety Committee, gave a report on the 25 percent decrease in accidents in Brazos County as compared with a similar period during 1955. Correction An error in last weeks Battalion stated the second semester of summer school will begin on Tuesday July 17. Registration will be held on Monday, July 16, with classes beginning on Tuesday, July 17. Burns Presents Dr. E. E. Burns, food technol ogist of the Depax-tment of Hoxti- cultui'e at A&M, presented a paper dealing with irradiation of foods during the x-ecent Sixteenth Annual Meeting of the Institute of Food Technologists in St. Louis, Mo. Inspected Officials Sec. Benson To Receive Committee's Report Soon Members of the United States Department of Agricul ture’s Site Selection Committee have inspected A&M’s offered site for the proposed $18,915,000 cattle disease laboratory to be built by the USDA. Ten committee members and two officials for the USDA arrived at Easterwood Field last night and checked in at the MSC prior to their inspection this morning. Greeting the men upon their arrival last night were Chancellor M. T. Harrington, D. W. Williams, vice-chancel lor for agriculture and Dr. W. W. Armistead, of the School of Veterinary Medicine. Mayor H. C. Dishman headed a group of Bryan officials present. Headed by committee chair man Don Collins, from Kit Carson, Colo., the “site-seers” traveled by air - conditioned bus to A&M’s land for the proposed laboratory (located south of, and adjoining Easterwood Field) this morning. Next on the itinerary was the School of Veterinary Medicine and its facilities. A loop was taken through various Agi’icultural Cen ters of the College; Dairy, Poultry, Swine, Sheep and Goat, Horse, Beef Cattle and Horticulture Centers were visited. Traveling next to downtown Bry an through the bxxsiness and resi dential districts the committeemen arrived back at the MSC and were scheduled to boai’d their MATS plane around 11 a.m. Members of the committee mak ing the inspection txdp ai’e Collins, Wilber B. Plager 1 , Lloyd Avila, Mer rill N. Varnick, W. B. Young, Dr. G. H. Good, Don Turnbull, Dr. H. E. Kingman, Harold Hutton and Carl Neumann. Gifts, Grants Accepted For A&M System A total of $103,026 in gifts, grants-in-aid, fellowships and scholarships was accepted for parts of the A&M System by the System’s board of direc- toi's at their meeting recently in College Station. Of the total amount, $42,100 went to the Texas Agricultural Ex periment Station as grants-in-aid from industry to support i’eseax*ch in twenty-three fields ranging from stxxdies of controls for cotton in sects to research on vii’us diseases of poultry. In addition the Station received $4,286 worth of supplies and the loan of equipment and cat tle for use in x’eseareh studies. A&M received a total of $56,- 640 in gifts, fellowships, scholar ships and awards funds. Of this amount $2,375 was given fox- equipment and furnishings of the Memox-ial Student Centex-, $11,700 was for support of the Student Conference on National Affairs, September to December, 1955; $2,000 was given to defray expen ses of a thx-ee-weeks tour of mid- westex-n industries for a selected gx-oup of senior industrial engi- neex-ing students, and the remain der was eaxmiaiked for scholar ships and fellowships. Books Presented Honoring Hahn Cushing Memox-ial Library has received 12 books in memory of the late Ira C. Hahn, ’32, an employee of the Kelley Manufacturing Co. of Houston. The company presented the books to Librarian Robext Houze x-ecently. Among the 12 books are such titles as “Savorla” by Sir Winston Chux-chill; “Lincoln Reconsidex-ed”, by David Donald; “The Px-esidency Today”, by E. S. Cox-win and L. W. Koenig; and James B. Conant’s “The Citadel of Learning.” Not members of the committee, but traveling with them, are Di\ T. C. Byerly, Head of the Animal and Poultry Husbandry Research of the USDA and Dx-. C. D. Van How- weling, Dix-ector of the Livestock Research Division of the USDA. The committee arrived at Col lege Station from Georgia, whex-e they inspected the University of Georgia’s site at Athens. Yester day mox-ning Oklahoma A&M was visited at Stillwater, Okla. Other sites px-eviously inspected by the committee included Kansas State College, University of Mis souri, Iowa State College, Univer sity of Wisconsin and Michigan State. Denver, Colo., (home of Colora do A&M) is the next stop for the committee, according to Chairman Collins. They will ax-rive thex-e this afternoon and spend the night. The committee will recommend one site and possibly two alternates to Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Benson next week. Li verm an Elected James L. Livex-man, of the Bio- chemistiy and Nutrition Depart ment, was elected Secretary-treas urer of the Southern Section of the American Society of Plant Physiol ogists for 1956-57. Summer Musical-The Mikado-Opens Tuesday in Grove 1* JERRY NEIGHBORS Battalion Staff Writer Gilbex-t and Sullivan’s stoxy of several mixed-up x-omances, “The Mikado,” will be seen on the stage of the Gx-ove next Tuesday and Wednesday nights, July 10 and 11. As has been the case in year’s past, the director is Bill Tux-nei’, A&M’s well-known dix-ector of the Aggielaxxd Oi-chesti*a and Singing Cadets. This year, Turner is most ably assisted by Mx-s. Billie Jean Bai-i-on and Miss Shix-ley Cannon. The Summer musical has been a Summer Session tradition in Col lege Station for 14 yeax-s. They have all been joint College and community undertakings. And they have all been enjoyable. The Mi kado will, we’x-e sure, live up to this tradition of fine entertain ment. The cast contains several mem- bers noted locally for their w-ork I in church choirs. Sevex-al have had musical training at various col leges. Some are students and will be no-doubt x-ecognized from their work in many of the Aggie Players productions of recent years. Worthy of special attention is the ox-chestra which is also com posed of some of the community’s best musical talent. The orchestra is directed by Turner and will in clude Claix-e Rogex-s at the piano; Toby Hughe* organ—Margax-et Berry; violins— Mx-s. Ross Strader, Mrs. John Hill and Jim McDonald; viola—Melvin Eisner and cello—Beatx-ice Lxxthex-. Other membex-s of the ox-chestra are: flutes—Johnny Holick, Chax-- lotte Baty and Mary Varvel; clari nets—Stewax-t Jeraigan and Bob Alexander; trumpets—Carl Zeitler and Mi-s. C. E. Yost; trombone— Dan Hanna; dx-ums—Tom Pax-ish and horns—Betsy Burchaid and Kathryn Gould. No Gilbex-t and Sullivan operetta would be quite as effective without the pioper costuming. The Mikado will be presented in full costume with Mx-s. Ron Logan filling the duties of Mistress of Costumes. This yeax-’s sets have been de signed by Miss Marcia Smith. The stage manager is B. B. Smith and members of the set crew and pro duction assistants include Joe De- lotte, Janet Folweiler, Joel Spitzer, Bill Swann and Robert Wenck. Lighting is also being handled by Wenck. Shirley Cannon, progx-am con sultant at the MSC for the past year will dix-ect the dances for The Mikado. Miss Cannon is well known for her dancing and chore ography in the Aggie Follies of 1956. The Mikado would definitely not be complete without a chonxs. This talented group features A&M stu dents and many local girls. In cluded in the chorus are Fx-ank Dahlbex-g, Binnie Ann Dansby, Bob Moody, Ann Hite, Bill Swann and Jean Ann Smith. Othex-s in the chox-us ax-e Bax-ney Blackbux-n, Richard Reiser, Sally Millex-, Larry Leighton, Eve Pox-tex-, Joel Spitzex-, Rita Stitlex-, Geox-ge Davis and Virginia Ridings. Principal membex-s of the cast are Cox-alyn Thux-man as Yum- Yum, Camille Kennedy as Pitti Sing, Cax-oline Vance as Peep-Bo, Iris Bullaxd as Katisha, Toby Hughes as Nanki-Poo, Harry Good ing as Ko-Ko, Nox-man Jacobson as Pish-Tush, Warner Dahlbexg as Pooh-Bah and Robex-t Boone in the title role of the Mikado. The Mikado has been in rehearsal for almost a month and the pro duction has been most effectively aided by Claix-e Regex's, Eve Pox-ter and Margaret Berry, all acting as rehearsal accompanists. The Mikado will be presented in the Grove next Tuesday and Wed nesday nights at eight o’clock. Reg ular student activities Summer sea son tickets will be honored at the gate. Or, single performance tick ets may be pux-chased at the gate for twenty-five cents each. Norman Jacobsen Weather Today ■ SCATTERED SHOWERS Partly cloudy with widely scat tered thunder showex-s is forecast ed for College Station today. Yes terday’s high and low were 99 de grees and 76 degrees. Tempera- tui-e at 10:30 this moxning was 89 | degrees.