The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 10, 1957, Image 2

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The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas
PAGE 2 Friday, May 10, 1957
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
Daniel Escapes Death
by D.ck B.bler ^ g CrUllli)!eS
50T\l?eD-rOR\Y I ALM05T FELL ASLEEP IN CLASS/
Honor Fraternity
Initiates 97May 16
Phi Kappa Phi will take 92 stu
dents and five faculty members
into its fold at its initiation cere
monies Friday May 16.
Dr. Paul Green, executive vice
president of Baylor University, will
be the principal speaker at the
initiation banquet.
Next year’s officers for the
fraternity will be Dr. Alvin A.
Price, veterinary anatomy, presi
dent; Dr. J. M. Nance, history,
vice president; Dr. Fred E. Ekfelt,
English, secretary; Ernest Lang
ford, architecture, treasurer; Dr.
B. F. Nelson, agricultural
economics and sociology, journal
correspondent.
The folowing will be initiated
into membership:
Faculty
Dr. Alfred F. Chalk, economics;
Dr. Leland C. Grumbles, veteri
nary microbiology; Dr. James
Leslie Liverman, biochemistry and
nutrition; Dr. William Low Russell,
geology and geophysics; Dr.
Walter J. Saucier, oceanography
and meteorology.
Graduate Students
William W. Hildreth Jr., College
Station, Ph. D. candidate, meteoro
logy; James Rod Martin, West
Columbia, M. S. candidate, agri
cultural economics; Kenneth B
Porter, Stafford, Kas., Ph. D
candidate, agronomy; Klaus Gus
tav Raven, M. S. candidate, ento
mology; Eldon Duane Scott, M. S.
candidate, electrical engineering;
Theodore A. Noyes, Dallas, M. “S’,
candidate, mechanical engineering.
The following undergraduate
students will be initiationed into
the fraternity:
School of Agriculture
Leon Travis Bates Jr., Waco;
Harold Edward Brown, Bellville;
J. Marcus Crow, Seminole; Benny
Eugene Fichte, Megargel; Freddie
E. Lehman, Warda; Charles Wesley
Newcomer and Jules Ralph Viterbo,
Beaumont; John H. Sinclair, Bry
an; John Henry Specht, New
Braunfels; Jesse Lee Tackett,
Dublin; David Calvin Whitenberg,
Linden;
School of Arts and Sciences
William Harold Albritton, David
Ray Huffman, Roy Ernest Mitchell,
Fort Worth; Paul Baird Beckman,
Paris; Charles H. Gloss, Bryan;
Junius Monroe Closs Jr., Edge;
Robert G. Gattis, Fort Smith, Ark.;
Pete D. Ghiglieri, Bushnell, Ill.;
Frank T. Kallus, La Grange;
Robert H. Kidd, Menard; Jacob O.
Koehl, Rosenberg; Everett D.
Laird, Galveston; W. T. Milner,
Forest, Miss.; Robert D. Purring-
ton, Lovington, N.M.; Connie A.
Quattlebaum, Terrell; Clarence J.
Shumbera, Weimar; Bryant E.
Spradley, McGregor.
School of Engineering
Byron Edward Andrews, Gerald
Lee Leighton, Otis Dean Wells,
College Station; George E. Bahl-
mann, Robert E. Kilmer, San An
tonio; James L. Baird, Belton;
Herbert W. Barnhouse, Newton,
Iowa; Jack C. Brady, Jacky R.
Ettinger, Tom C. Morris, Jon D.
Neely, Robert L. Ridings, Dallas;
Tom W. Brumfield Jr., Jack M.
Dreyfus, Edward W. Reeder, Rich
ard M. Wall, Houston; James R.
Cox, Austin; Harold E. Curtis,
Mirando City; Douglas R. DeCluitt,
Robert L. Patton Jr., Port Arthur;
George E. Detwiler, Los Angeles,
Calif.; Paul M. Duke, Philip E.
Johnson, Beaumont and Charles
Edwards, Itasca.
Ivo Marino Ferreira, Sao Paulo,
Brazil; Ray N. Finch, Bay City;
Joe B. Foster, Greenville; Eddie
V. Gray, William J. Ruez III,
Baytown; Billy J. Harris, Long
view; Cyrus H. Holley, Taft;
Merion L. Johnson, Weatherford;
John M. Kelley, Waco; Randolph
S. King Jr., Sinton; Louis H.
Lavergne, Eunice, Louisiana; Joe
A. Marek, Victoria; Ronald S.
McCarter, Mt. Vernon, Missouri;
Kilby T. Meyer, Harlingen;
Leonard D. Miller, Corpus Christi;
Joe K. Moore, DeLeon and Lonnie
E. Myrick Jr., Sherman.
James M. Peacock, Cleburne;
Edwin G. Pierson Jr., Marlin;
George M. Ragsdale, Memphis,
Tennessee; Robert C. Schlaudt,
Fredericksburg; Charles S. Skill-
man Jr., Fort Belvoir, Virginia;
Daniel M. Stalmach, San Benito;
Samuel L. Sullivan Jr., Port La
vaca; Gary E. Thomas, Laredo;
Barney R. Treadway, Orange;
Harvey O. Wende, Hico, and Her
bert W. Whitney, Big Spring.
School of Veterinary Medicine
Delmar R. Cassidy, Texarkana;
Harvey T. Helms, Corsicana; James
B. Henson, Lake Jackson; Kenneth
R. Pierce, Winters; Frank M.
Roach, Tucson, Arizona; Billy Ray
Williams, Ralls.
AUSTIN, CP)—Gov. Daniel had
a close brush with tragedy yester
day when a big chunk of frescoe
crumbled from a ceiling in the
Mansion and fell near him.
The governor was standing at
the foot of the mansion’s impos
ing- and slightly shaky - stairway
in the main hall when the plaster
dropped from the second floor
ceiling.
It bounced on the stairs, where
several women were standing,
broke into three pieces, and show
ered dust and debris over guests
at a tea. The morning affair was
in honor of the governor’s sister,
Miss Ellen Daniel and his aunts,
Miss Bessie Partlow and Miss
Miriam Partlow of Midland.
Mrs. Daniel was standing in a
doorway nearby, but was not in
direct line of the fall.
Workmen were rushed to begin
immediately on a repair job that
the governor said was long over
due. He and his family will con
oid
its
Foster, Gleason
Chosen to Head
4 Vet’ Company
A tentative list of officers
and non - commissioned offi
cers for the newly organized
“A” Veterinary Company was
announced last night in a com
pany meeting held in the Memorial
Student Center.
John Foster will be commanding
officer With Ivan “Rusty” David
son as executive officer. Ed Pigott
will be a platoon leader.
Jerry Gleason will serve as first
sergeant with Clark Mulkey and
Everett Howard as platoon ser-
g e a n t s. Barney Stumbo and
Ralph Vosdingh will be supply ser
geant and scholastic sergeant re
spectively.
“Our goal is to win the General
Moore Trophy for being the best
outfit on the campus,” Foster
said. “We should have the best
grades in the corps and should
have one of the biggest outfits so
we ought to do all right in intra-
murals and extra curricular activ
ities.”
According to the registrar’s of
fice 42 freshmen have signed up
to major in pre-veterinary medi
cine next year. Foster said he ex
pects this number to rise to 60 by
September. The outfit will have
about 20 upperclassmen.
The company will be attached to
the third battalion of the second
regiment. Maj. Edward L. Scott
will be the tactical officer.
tjnue to occupy the 102 year
residence the state furnishes
governors.
“I’m sure glad to see the Lord
is still wdth us,” Daniel said. “That
was a close one.”
Mrs. Daniel first ran to see if
her husband was unharmed. Then
the governor’s pretty and poised
wife took the mishap calmly and
with a touch of humor. As depart
ing guests told her what a nice
party it was, she replied:
“It certainly was different.” The
hall ceiling was not replaced when
other rooms in the mansion were
replaced several years ago.
“This work has been recom
mended for several years,” the
governor said, “But the appropria
tion from the Legislature was
never enough to do the job.
“For at least the last six years
it has been a safety rule not to
allow more than 25 persons at a
time on the stairway. The stair
way leans and the Sam Houston
bedrooms leans. All of that needs
fixing.”
The big Georgian mansion got
its first modern face lifting in
1953. Outmoded electrical wiring
was replaced, the plumbing im
proved and a great deal of re
decorating done.
State Nears
For Double
4 Yes’-
Tuition.
AUSTIN, (/P)—The Senate yesterday shoved to within
one step of final passage a bill doubling the tuition in state
colleges and universities.
Sen. Jarrard Secrest of Temple, sponsor of the bill ap
proved by the House, said he expected to get final passage
Wednesday by voice vote. The extra money the bill would
bring in has been earmarked
for public school teachers’ pay
raises.
The measure was given
temporary approval by a vote
of 13-10, with six senators paired,
or 16-13.. Opponents indicated
earlier they could not stop it but
the Senate returned in some appre
hension that a filibuster might be
forthroming. The vote to lay out
the bill for debate was 18-8.
Sen. Jimmy Phillips and Sen.
Culp Krueger who spearheaded the
opposition, spoke for about 10 min
utes each against the bill.
“I challenge members that think
this is a good place to get money
to go out to the university and look
at some of those married couples
living in tar paper apartments .
the young married mothers attend
ing classes with the babies in bas-
inetts,” Krueger said.
FRIDAY
“OVER EXPOSED”
with CLEO MOORE
— Also —
“FEMALE JUNGLE”
with KATHLEEN CROWLEY
SATURDAY
ALAN LADD NIGHT
with
“The McConnell Story”
“Drum Beat”
“Thunder in the East”
The Statue of Liberty was pre
sented by France to the United
States on the hundredth anniver
sary of American independence.
C11C L 6
FRIDAY
u Love Me Tender”
Elvis Presley
—Also—
“Silver Star”
SATURDAY ONLY
“Hot Cars”
John Bromfield
— ALSO—
Rock, Rock, Rock’
Is wjtfcTtWt&K,!
WINSTON
wins the cheers for flavor I
The Battalion
The Editorial Policy of The Battalion
Represents the View's of the Student Editors
The Battalion, dally newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of
Texas and the City of College Station, la published by students In the Office of Student
Publications as a non-profit educational service. The Director of Student Publications
Is Ross Strader. The governing body of all student publications of the A.&M. College
of Texas is the Student Publications Board. Faculty members are Dr. Carroll D.
Laverty, Chairman: Prof. Donald D. Burcljard, Prof. Tom Leland and Mr. Bennie
Zinn. Student members axe VV. T. Williams, Murray Milner, Jr., and Leighlus E.
Sheppard, Jr., Ex-officio members are Mr. Charles Roeber, and Ross Strader. Sec
retary. The Battalion is published four times a week during the regular school year
and once a week during the summer and vacation and examination periods. Days of
publication are Tuesday through Friday for the regular school year and on Thursday
during the summer terms and during examination and vacation periods. Subscription
rates arc $3.50 per semester, $0.00 per school year, $6.50 per full year or $1.00
per month. Advertising rates furnished on request.
Entered as second-class
matter at Post Office at
College Station, Texas,
■nder the Act of Con-
ffracs of March 8. 1870.
Member of:
The Associated Press
Texas Press Association
Represented nationally by
National Advertising
Services, Inc., a t New
York City, Chicago, Los
Angeles, and San Fran
cisco.
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republi
cation of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in
the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights
of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved.
JOE TINDEL Editor
Jim Neighbors Managing Editor
Jim Carrell Sports Editor
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