THE BATTALION Civilian Council Meets Tonight Number 251: Volume 55 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1957 Price Five Cents Off the Cuff What Goes On Here About 9:30- in the middle of the rainstorm-the Housing Office got a frantic call from a civilian stu dent in Law Hall who excitedly explained his room was rapidly filling with water. A rush call was put through to the plumbers who hurried out to brave the storm, evidently visualiz ing water neck deep in the room. However, when they arrived, the flood had subsided and only an embarrassed student remained in the draining room. Seems the student had gotten the urge for Spring cleaning and began shifting his furniture in order to get at the dirt. A little too much umph on the Iron bed banged it against the radiator which promptly broke, causing a short-lived stream of Vvater to rush into the room. ★ ★ ★ Campus Security officers were Still looking for a reportedly stolen car last night—as well as its owner. The search began about 8 p. m. Vvhen the student called the office Baying that his 1947 tan four- door Oldsmobile was missing. Upon hearing the complaint and the car’s license number. Patrol man Emmitt Folsom immediately said he had just seen the car parked at Duncan Mess Hall, dis playing a knack for remembering such things as only a policeman can claim. Checking to see if the car was Still there, they -did not find it. A search of all parking lots on the campus also failed to uncover the Vehicle, so a “pickup” was placed )/ith Bryan Police. What really had Folsom and his patrol partner Rufus Batten sus picious of trickery was that they could not find the student. Maybe the fellow just forgot momentarily where he had parked his car, found it and drove off. Chemical Society To Hear GE Official Local American Chemical So ciety will hear Dr. John R. Elliot of the General Electric Company Research Laboratory in Schenec tady, New York, Monday at 7:45 p. m. speak on “New Frontiers in Silicones.” Meeting place is the Chemistry Building lecture room. An informal dinner for society members and their wives will be held at 6 p. m. in the Memorial Student Center. A social hour after the talk will be at the home of Dr. and Mrs. J. D. Lindsay at 1029 Walton Ave., College Sta tion. Supervision Course Next Week In MSC A short course in supervision will be held in the Memorial Stu dent Center from Monday through Friday. The course is being spon sored by the Engineering Extension Service. Topics will include com pany organization, the supervisors part in management, duties and responsibilities of the supervisor, human relations in industry and other topics. FINALLY UPROOTED, the historic bugle stand was moved yesterday to its new position at the north end of the quadrangle in the “new” area between dorms 1 and 2. The circle which formerly guarded the circle from the traffic is being removed. Yul Brynner Actor of ’56 HOLLYWOOD, (TP).—Yul Brynner, the regal autocrat of “The King and I,” was selected the best actor of 1956 at the 29th annual Academy Awards last night. Ingrid Bergman, who made a stunning return to Ameri can films as the Russian princess in “Anastasia,” was named best actress of the year. The Oscar for the best picture of 1956 was- given to “Around the World in 80 Days,” the globe-girdling epic pro duced by the dynamic Michael Todd. Anthony Quinn, the free-living artist Gauguin of “Lust for Life,” won his second Oscar for a supporting perform ance. Dorothy Malone, the sexy * 5 — Texas heiress of “Written on 171 T)> i O • r our B.A. seniors Get Mohle Awards the Wind,” was selected the best supporting actress of the year. Jacques-Yves Cousteau, French pioneer of the skin-diving sport, won the best documentary feature Oscar for his underwater epic, “The Silent World.” Louis Clyde Stoumen was named as best documentary shot pro ducer for his “The True Story of the Civil War.” George K. Arthur, once a movie comedian with Karl Dane and now a producer in England, won the best two-reel short award for his “The Bespoke Overcoat.” Other shorts awards went to Konstantin Kaiser for “Crashing the Water Barrier”—one-reel, and Stephen Bosustow for “Mr. Ma- goo’s Puddle Jumper”—cartoon. Other awards: Best sound recording: “The King and I,” 20th Century-Fox Sound Department. Best costume design, black and white: Jean Louis, “The Solid Gold Cadillac.” Best costume design, color: Irene Sharaff, “The King and I.” Best special effects: John P. Fulton, “The Ten Commandments.” Best film editing: Gene Rug giero and Paul Weatherwax, “Around the World in 80 Days.” Four A&M business administra tion seniors received the T. W. Mohle awards this year for their outstanding academic record and participation i n extra-curricular activities, according to Dr. T. W. Leland, head of the B.A. Divis ion. ' Michael J. August, Lupe Fraga, Bobby Joe Lawrence and Gene C. Nash were named winners of wrist and pocket watches made available by T. W. Mohle & Co., certified public accountants, of Houston. Se lection of the winners was made by committees from the B. A. Di vision. August gnd Fraga are account ing majors from Houston. Law rence, from Roscoe, and Nash, from La Marque, are marketing majors. Foods Display Slated Chicken and g-reen beans which have been sterilized by gamma ra diations from fission fuel ele ments may be seen from 3:30 to 5 p.m. Friday in the library of the Animal Husbandry Building. Father-in-law Deal Told to ICT Probers Storms Plague Central Texas; North Digs Out By The ASSOCIATED PRESS Hail, wind and rain storms skipped across Central Texas Wednesday night, striking south of Corsicana and at Wa co. Hail up to an inch in diameter pounded a square-mile area be tween Angus and Richland, 10 miles south of Corsicana about 4:30 p. m. Hail six inches deep covered U. S. Highway 75 and knocked out windshields of trucks and cars. No injuries were reported. In North Texas heavy rain storms and hail stones up to one- half inch in diameter fell at Sher man, Denison and Whitewright Wednesday afternoon. Lighter rains fell at Wichita Falls, Browns ville, Mineral Wells, oFrt Worth and Dallas. The Panhandle death toll from the weekend storm, which roared into the area on winds up to 74 miles an hour and piled snow into drifts as high as 10 feet, rose to nine persons Wednesday. Virtually all main highways were open in the Panhandle Wednesday with only one stretch in Lipscomb county still repoi'ted blocked. How ever, many secondary and farm roads were still blocked by snow drifts. Because many ranchers had not been able to get completely over their ranges because of drifts and a number of cattle which had drifted far from their own pas tures were still missing, it was difficult to estimate the livestock losses. However, in at least two coun ties, agricultural agents said the losses would run into the thou sands. CHS Srs. Invade Service Station Consolidated High School seniors will take charge of Hall’s Sinclair Service Station Saturday to make money for their senior trip. They will perform such jobs as car washes, grease jobs, polish jobs and oil changes. They will fill up the gas tanks, clean wind shields and check tires. The service station is at 3706 Texas Ave., across the street from Miller’s Super Market. Beginning at 6 a.m. the students will offer a free pick up and de livery of cars. This service will end at 10 p.m. For the free pick up call VI 6-7161. Free bubble gum and suckers will be given to the “kiddies.” ICT Money Given To Garland Smith AUSTIN, (TP).—Max Rychlik, A&M graduate, testified yesterday he used $1,800 of his wages from a no-work job with an ICT affiliate to help Garland A. Smith, former in surance commission chief, organize a new insurance firm. The cash came from a little black box that he kept under the bed, Rychlik, whose parents live in Edge, said. It was part of a total of $18,200 “Benjack Cage money” he said he received in 1953-54-55 for a position that “Chink” Smith, his father-in-law, arranged for him with Cage. Rychlik’s testimony was before the House ICT investigating commit tee. Earlier Rychlik revealed for* the first time that he had been paid $9,800 in 1953-54 by a Cage affiliate. This was in addition to $8,400 he had re ceived in 1955 and about which he testified in a hearing about two weeks ago. Smith testified that he had not said anything about the $9,800 at the previous hearing “because I wasn’t asked.” “And so we finally dug it out,” snapped the investigating commit tee chairman, Rep. Scott McDon ald of Fort Worth, after Smith said he knew of the other checks at that time. Smith was a member of the in surance commission when he ar ranged for Rychlik’s work with BenJack Cage, promoter of the huge defunct insurance and in vestments empire. He has repeatedly told the in vestigators he gave Cage no con cessions in return for such favors as his son-in-law’s jobs and plea sure trips at Cage’s expense. Part of the money he said he “advanced” was for the $1,000 re quired for deposit with the com mission on the company he and Smith were starting, Rychlik told the investigators. “This advance was more or less my idea,” Rychlik said. Iran Thugs Kidnap Wife Of American TEHERAN, (TP) — Tribal thugs in the southeastern des ert may have skipped into Pakistan with a pretty Amer ican woman captive after slaying her husband and a fellow U. S. aid official. That was speculation from a high government source last night on a bizarre murder-kidnap case that has unfolded slowly since Sunday. Iranian forces including camel- mounted cavalry were reported closing in on the bandits. Offi cials suggested some already may have been captured. The search is being pressed day and night on personal orders of the Shah of Iran. The bandit leader in the area long has been wary of Iranian forces who know him well. An Iranian government source said he might have taken the miss ing 35-year-old Mrs. Anita Carroll across the thinly guarded Paki stani frontier in an area peopled only by illiterate tribes. Teamster Boss Denounced For Arrogance WASHINGTON, (TP)— Teamster titan Dave Beck, a Fifth Amendment witness, wound up an initial appear ance before Senate rackets probers yesterday under scorching denunciation for “arrogant con tempt.” Before senators talking o f “theft” of union funds, the presi dent of the powerful International Teamsters Union had repeatedly sought refuse behind the Fifth Amendment on all sorts of ques tions. It might incriminate him, Beck declared, to say whether he bor rowed $200,000 through two busi ness firms to replenish the union treasury after federal income tax agents set out on his trail. He even said it might incriminate him to say whether he used $9.68 of union money to buy five dozen diapers. Sen. McClellan (D-Ark.), chair man of the special Senate com mittee investigating improper la bor and industry activities, said he did not know whether Beck’s refusal to answer questions con stituted “actionable contempt” of Congress —'punishable upon con viction by a fine and one-year jail term. Civilian Council Meeting Tonight Members of the Civilian Stu dent Council will hear committee reports on traditions and Civilian Weekend at the meeting tonight at 7:30 in the Senate Chamber of the Memorial Student Center. A special report on the banquet will also be given. . Vet Medicine Students Help Fellow Classmates In Need By LELAND BOYD At the beginning of this se mester, a series of handicapping events happened to a third year Veterinary Medicine student, Rich ard Whitmire Jr. He was admitted to the College Hospital the first week of classes with acute appendicitis. As is usual for illnesses that require major surgery, he was transferred to a Bryan hospital. With the operation underway the appendix ruptured, but physicians finished the operation successfully, or so they thought at the time. But complications developed. Doctors obseiwed that he had an enduring unsettled stomach after the operation and about a week later they operated again and found the small intestine grown together. So finally Whitmire . was re leased and came back to classes after about a four week absence. In that time not only had moun tains of studying piled up, but also a stack of hospital bills had collect ed, which amounted to something mountainous, especially to a college student. Junior Sweetheart Finalists ML Miss Patricia Morrison F. G. Belote, escort Miss Lynda Benton Floyd Hardiman, escort Miss Jo Anna Taulman James Owen, escort Miss Jo Ann Winchester Jon Hagler, escort Miss Frances Boone John Mayfield, escort Unknown to Whitmire until about a week ago, members of his class, the third year Vet. Meds., had been quietly preparing to see that a fellow student was re membered. A week ago they handed Whit mire a check for $500, which in a sense is “blood money”. Buddies Sell Blood For to raise the cash, some 59 fellow vet students each sold a pint of blood and put the proceeds into a common fund, part of which went to Whitmire. But the deeds of mercy did not stop with helping one person. Another member of their class, this time the president Donald Clark, is in difficulties. Last Sunday afternoon at 4 Clark’s three-month-old son, Jef frey, was stricken with a heart attack. Rushed to St. Joseph’s Hospital in Bryan, the youngster was placed under an oxygen tent in critical condition. The anxious parents, clinging to slim hopes, learned from doctors that another attack would probably be fatal to their child. And another struck—just six hours after the first. But young Jeffrey pulled through, and last (See VET STUDENTS, Page 6) Weather Today CLOUDY Mostly cloudy until late after noon, becoming partly cloudy, is the forecast for the area. Rainfall last night measured 1.25 inches. Yesterday’s high and low temper ature readings were 76 and 48 de grees. At 10:30 this morning the mercury stood at 51 degrees.