Weather Today Outlook for Thursday is for partly cloudy skies and general ly fair weather. Lowest expect ed temperature tonight 35-45. THE BATTALION UY Ticket Sale Ends at 5 p.m. Published Daily on Ihe .Texas A&M Coliege Campus Number 39: Volume 58 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1958 Price Five Cents 4th Army Chaplain Talks at RV Initiation RV Initiation Speaker Col. Robert H. Homiston, chaplain of the tion ceremonies last night in the Memorial Fourth Army, grins as he delivers his ban- Student Center. Seventy-one juniors were quet address at the Ross Volunteer initia- taken into the organization. Fourth Annual Turkey Shoot Set for Kyle Field Saturday The fourth annual Range and Forestry Club Turkey Shoot will be held from 1 to 7 p.m. Satur day at the rifle range beneath the east side of the Kyle Field Sat urday, Jerry Pitts and David Sanders, co-chairmen of the Turkey Shoot Committee, said yesterday. By courtesy of the Bryan Shrine Club, the shoot will be held before and during th^e half of the Shrine Benefit A&M Fish- University of Texas Shorthorn game. The range will be open un- ‘Fish’ Favor Big ’58 Blaze Members of the freshman class have pretty optimistic views on the bonfire. For example: Paul J. Cooper, A Fiefld Artillery member from Robstown, said, “It will be as large as Smoky Hyde wants, it to be. I’m really enthused over the bon fire and I’m sure glad the weather has cleared.” “Its a great tradition and sets Texas Aggies apart from any students of other universities,” commented David R. Arman, A- AAA, from Tulsa, Okla. Jerry W. Monroe, Squadron 10 cadet from Sanderson, said, “I think something that large is great because you can get so much cooperation in such a un dertaking. Even with the lack of time we should be able to build it to the expected height.” “It takes a lot of work, but its worth it. Tradition should be car ried on at all cost,” said Thomas A. Shifflett, Squadron 10 fresh man from Marble Falls. John D. Allen, Maroon Band member from Brownwood, com mented, “Its a good idea, it builds spirit and shows the tradi tions of Aggieland.” til 7 p.m. after the game. Proceeds from the shoot will be used to finance the Range Plant Identification Team at the National Intercollegiate Contest in Tulsa and Oklahoma, plus other club activities. Rules for this year’s Turkey Shoot are: (1) Ten contestants will compete for one turkey and the best score wins a turkey; (2) Two shots will be fired per per son and the person firing the two closet shots wins regardless of location on the target; (3) More than two shots on one target dis qualifies the individual; (4). All •contestants will fire from stand ing position; (5) No personal guns will be allowed; (6) Targets will be at a distance of 50 feet; (7) Safety rules of the range must be observed at all times. Violators will be removed from the range without refund of ticket price; (8) Safety instructions will be given to each group of 10 and the sup ervisor of each group must be obeyed at all times; and (9) A persons may win only two turkeys. Four ‘J’ Students Attending National SDX Convention Four A&M journalism students left Monday for San Diego, Calif., to attend the national convention of Sigma Delta Chi, Nov. 19-22. They are Johnny Johnson of Bo gota, Tucker Sutherland of Math is, Gayle McNutt of Comanche and Bill Reed of Bonham. The students were accompanied by Wesley D. Calvert, 'assistant professor of journalism. McNutt, president of the A&M chapter of SDX, a journalism fra ternity, is the official delegate from A&M and Reed is alternate delegate. The Range and Forestry Club has decided that varsity rifle team members will be excluded from open competition. This action was deemed necessary because of the unfairness of these men com peting against amateurs and be cause of severe criticism from the general public. Rifle team members may com pete against each other or other expert riflemen who care to com pete against them. Processing Center To Be Completed About June, 1959 Completion date for the build ing which will house the A&M College System’s Data Proces sing Center will be around June, 1959, according to R. L. Smith, helad of the center. The building, which cost an estimated $275,000 and has ap proximately 10,000 sq. ft. of floor space, will be located south of the Animal Industries Building. IBM equipment presently hous ed in the statistical laboratory in the System Administration building, the computer center in the Electrical Engineering build ing and the fiscal office installa tion will be located in the new building. An additional three million dol lar computer, the IBM 704, will be added to the present equip ment, which is valued at one mil lion dollars. The IBM Company made the computer available through a grant of 60% of the normal rental, a grant approxi mating $252,000 annually. The installation will serve . the A&M system by statistical anal ysis, engineering calculations and data processing of various types, and is expected to play an im portant part in the activation analysis of the Nuclear Science l Center. 71 Cadets Repeat Oath in Ceremony “And Then They Lived” was the topic of the speech given by Col. Robert M. Homiston, chaplain of the Fourth Army, Fort Sam Houston, at the Ross Volunteer initiation banquet in the Memorial Student Center last night. Highlight of the night’s events was administering the RV Oath to 71 juniors who became official members of the drill team during the ceremony. Homiston told his audience that there are eight areas of a person’s character, all needing equal development if the individual desired to lead a well-rounded life. The eight areas which allow a person to “live”, he said, are physical, business, recreation, esthetic, intellectual, co operative. emotional and re- + Unusual Hen Crows About News of the World By The Associated Press Lake Michigan Freighter Sinks CHARLEVOIX, Mich.—A Great Lakes freighter with a crew of 35 to 40 men was reported to have broken up and sunk in gale-whipped northern Lake Michigan Tuesday night. There was no report on survivors. The U. S. Coast Guard station at Port Huron—on Lake Huron far to the south—said the 615-foot Carl D. Bradley of the Bradley Transportation Co. of Rogers City, Mich., had gone down. The Port Huron station said the Bradley, a stone and gravel carrier captained by Roland Bryan, went down short ly before 6 p. m. off Gull Island about halfway between Michi gan and Wisconsin and 38 milesl north of here. ★ ★ ★ U. S. Airliner Outruns British Jet NEW YORK—An American jet airliner beat a British jet across the Atlantic Ocean Tuesday after twice giving it a head start. The American plane passed the British ship more than five miles in the air 100 miles east of Boston, then swooped out of a thick mist and landed at Idlewild Airport 11 minutes in advance of its rival. It was the first opportunity since the recent inaugura tion of transatlantic jet travel to judge ship to ship the American-built Boeing 707 airliner flown by Pan American World Airways and the British Overseas Airways Corp’s Comet IV. ★ ★ ★ Cuban Rebels Attack Police HAVANA—Eleven rebels and four policemen were killed in a running gunfight Monday night in Havana suburb. The raiders, riding in a fast car, invaded the fringe of the capital and sprayed the policemen with gunfire as the night shift lined up in front of the station absut to go on duty. ligious values. Homiston compared a per son’s concentration on only one area to having an eight- story building- and using only one floor to transact business in. Waiter Kappel, first platoon leader of the RV’s, gave the in vocation at the banquet. Melbern Glasscock, RV commander, then introduced the honor guests which included college and military of ficials and supporters of the drill team. Initiation ceremonies were open ed with a roll call by Robert Turn er, first sergeant, after which Ex ecutive Officer Herbert Whalen read the RV Constitution. Other rites saw Administrative Officer Robert Hunter give a his tory of the company since its or ganization in 1887. Randy Curtis, third platoon leader, then outlined responsibilities of the Volunteers. Glasscock administered the oath to the new members after which Jack McCrary, second platoon leader, read and explained the RV certificates which were given to the new members. Hennard to Lead Intercouncil Group Tommie A. Henard, senior vet erinary medicine major, was elect ed chairman of the Intercouncil Committee at a committee meeting Monday evening, Dr. A. A. Price, Dean of the School of Veterinary Medicine, said yesterday. The committee is a coordinating group between the four A&M schools. One of the committee’s biggest functions is sponsoring the A&M Open House Day which in cludes the Aggie Follies. Other officers elected were Ma son L. Nevill, civil engineering sen- Three Legs So you’ve heard everything— then try the Department of Poultry Science. Housed in the poultry pavilion is a three-legged chicken. But chow- hounds can get rid of the idea that there will be extra drumsticks on the table from now on. This fully mature hen with the tricycle landing gear is just a freak of nature that occurs from time to time, according to B. L. Reid, assistant professor of poultry science. “I have seen some chickens with four legs,” Reid said. “Mu tations occur in other forms. Once we had an egg hatch a two-headed bird. Usually these freaks of nature live only for a short time.” As for the bird with the tri pod torso, Reid described the thiid leg, located behind the two normal legs, as being completely non-functional and, from a com mercial standpoint, of no value. Exactly where this bird came from or how it got into the poultry department’s cages at the pavilion, no one seems to know. Anyone lose a three- legged chicken ? Savings and Loan Plan Now Ready For Residents’ Use The College Station Kiwanis Club heard Phillip B. Goode tell about the new Community Savings and Loan Assn., at the regular noon meeting Tuesday in the Me morial Student Center. Goode stated that the new bus iness, located on Sulphur Springs Road, is ready to make loans now. Applications has been made for depositor’s insurance and accept ance is expected in the very near future, he said. The speaker pointed out that over $275,000 has been subscribed in stock and it is expected that the deposits will reach $1 million the first year of operation. The beginning interest rate will be 3 1/ 2 per cent on savings, while the loan rate will depend upon the type of loan. The predominant rate will be G per cent, he said. UT Game Tickets Go Off Sale Today Aggies have until 5 p.m. to day to purchase student and date tickets to the A&M-University of Texas football game, accord ing to Pat Dial, Athletic De partment Business Manager. All unsold tickets will be returned to UT. Guide Posts “Democracy is that madness that ! believes about men what isn’t so, and yet without that faith they will never become what we be- I lieve them to be.”—E. Stanley Jones ' “It is love, as the outward ex pression of one spirit within, which ior, vice president; and Glen I). : is the means of making oneness of Hitchcock, School of Arts and Sci- ! mankind a genuine reality.”—E. ences, secretary-treasyrer. I Stanley Jones M wmim : it 1958 Centerpole Rises Up . . . JH.; m HP ■ m % ^ Photos by John Avant Wildcat!