X, \ PAGE 2 Thursday, June 25, 1959 The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas CADET SLOUCH ttv Jim Earl* “This is where we Aggies do our studyin’! It’s sometimes referred to as th’ clay pits.” ” An Editorial Will They? Tonight in the Consolidated Junior High School Cafe teria, citizens of College Station will have a golden oppor tunity to learn more about their public schools. As a results of this meeting, they should see where their schools are lacking and at the same time see where they (the citizens) can join hand in hand to help their schools. The meeting is spearheaded by the A&M Consolidated School Citizen’s Advisory Committee, a group that has been studying the Consolidated school system for the past sev eral months. Now the committee feels that it is ready to recommend a school program that is not only better than the current one, but is designed to adequately prepare the system for the years ahead. But a better school system means an interested, open minded following of citizens. Therefore, it goes without say ing, that this committee’s work is useless without the back ing of the people of College Station. In order to attain the improvements needed in the Consolidated school system, it will take a group of citizens who are not afraid to admit that their schools can be improved, a group of broad minded, civic individuals who are ready to roll back their sleeves and say “When do we start?” The system by which the public schools operate in Tex as requires a great deal of local interest and support. Will it be said of the people of College Station that they are guilty of neglegence toward their public schools ? Or will it be said that they are thoughtful and faithful toward their pub lic schools ? The answer lies in the meeting tonight. The meeting begins at 7:30. Will the people of College Station see the room for improvement? Will they join hand and hand to gain these improvements? Will they? Engineering Station Makes Iron - Nickel Alloy Studies Better alloys may result from j experiments at the Texas Engi- , neering Experiment Station. II The ef-fect of additions of zinc to iron-rich, nickel-iron alloys is being determined in materials re- ; search involving metallurgy. How the zinc content affects cor- : rosion resistance and magnetic i properties is of special interest in . the work. Dr. Bruce A. Rogers ' is the researcher in charge. Iron-nickel alloys are important in a number of ways. They have valuable magnetic properties and ■ good resistance to corrosive at- ; tack. They also have especially low coefficient of thermal expan- ; sion near the 35 per cent nickel composition, and other features. They will take up considerable amounts of zinc and still retain -f ductility. However, much needs to be learned on the change in proper ties when zinc is added. It is this gap in metallurgical knowledge which the research' aims to fill. Because of the volatility of zinc in comparison with iron and nickel, the alloys cannot be conveniently prepared by melting. Accordingly, the procedures of powder metal lurgy are being used; that is, pow ders of the different materials are mixed and pressed into bars which are then heated to bring about an alloying action. Such bars are then fabricable by pressing, swag ing, or other operations into suit able specimens for testing. Birds of Paradise are found in their natural habitat at only two places on earth—their native New Guinea and at Bird-Of-Paradise- Island. The latter is a small is land in the West Indies. THE BATTALION Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu dent writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax-supported, non profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited and op erated by students as a community newspaper and is under the supervision of the director of Student Publications at Texas A&M College. Members of the Student Publications Board are L. A. Duewall, director of Student Pub’ications, chairman ; J. W. Amyx, School of Engineering; Harry Lee Kidd, School of Arts and Sciences; Otto R. Kunze, School of Agriculture; and Dr. E. D. McMurry, School of Veterinary Medicine. The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A.&M., Is published in College Sta tion, Texas, daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods, Septem ber through May, and once a week during summer school. Entered as second - class matter at the Post Office in College Station, Texas, ander the Act of Con gress of March 8, 1870. MEMBER: The Associated Press Texas Press Ass’n. Represented nationally by National Advertising Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los An geles, and San Francisco' Mall subscriptions are |3.50 per semester, J3 per school year, $6.50 per full year. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA, Col Icga Station, Texas. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein, nights of republication of all other matter here in are also reserved. News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or VI 6-4910 or at th* tutorial office. Room 4. YMCA. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415. DAVID STOKER EDITOR Joe Steen, Dean Hord, Ernesto Uribe, John Wayne Clark....Staff Writets Francis Nivers Photographer Russell Brown Sports Correspondent Clyde Student Wins Award In Agronomy Wesley A. Robinson, son of Mr. and Mrs. William A. Robin son, Route 1, Clyde, has been nam ed winner of a $3,000 four year scholarship provided by th West ern Compress and Storage Co. of Abilene for a student in agronomy here. Robinson is a spring graduate of Clyde High School where he was in the top quarter of his class. He was an active member of the Future Farmers of America, be ing named Chapter Farmer last year. Similar scholarships of $1,000 each from the same source have been awarded Nathan Roeneal Boles, son of Mr. and Ms. Monroe W. Boles of 406 Wood St. Wint ers, and John Robert Gannaway, son of Mr. and Mrs. John M. Gan naway, Star Route, Haskell. The scholarships have been made available by the Western Compress and Storage Company with main offices at Abilene and compresses and cotton warehouses at Abilene, Hamlin, Rule ' and Sweetwater. The scholarship re cipient must reside in a ten county area composed of Taylor, Nolan, Mitchell, Runnels, Callahan, Scur ry, Fisher, Jones, Haskell and Knox counties. Previous winners of similar a- wards are David T. Richburg, Ros- coe, who will be a senior at A. and M. next year; Harold Don Barton, Star Route, Sweetwater, and Herman Ray Adams, Route 4, Winters, who has completed his freshman year. Rev. Earle Martin Ordained to Sacred Order of Priests The Rev. Earle Martin, Epis copal Chaplain and director of the Canterbury Bible Chair, was or dained to the Sacred Order of Priests this morning at St. Thom as’ Chapel. He was ordained by Right Rev.' John E. Hines, Bishop of the Dio cese of Texas. The service was held at 10 a.m. The Rev. Lane Denson, Episcopal Chaplain at the Rice Institute and at the Texas Medical Center in Houston, delivered the sermon. Clergy from Houston, Sealy, Co lumbus and Tomball participated in the historic rite of the church. The ordaining was followed by a luncheon in the parish hall. Highlights and Sidelights Legislators’ Second Special Session Brings Show-down Votes on Taxes By—Vern Sanford Texas Press Association AUSTIN, Tex.—At it again, for the third time this, year, Legisla tors go into the second special ses sion wearier, but wiser. Midnight wind-up of the second session brought show-down votes indicating what each house will and will not accept in the way of a tax program. Next conference commit tee on taxes will know that the line of compromise must be more finely drawn between Senate and House thinking. In addressing the new session, G'ov. Price Daniel reminded law makers of the “up against it” state of things. “Every function of state government depends on enactment of an appropriation bill before Sept. 1 with a tax bill to support it,” said the governor. State’s fiscal year and present appropriations run out Aug. 31. Unless a new appropriation bill can go into effect the next day, the whole state operation — including hospitals, schools, employe salaries and pensions—will stop. This is unthinkable, of course. No lawmaker could go home and face the voters with things in such a state. But there’s another pinching fac tor which the governor emphasized. Cost of deficit financing plus loss of potential tax income means that each day’s delay costs the state an estimated $200,000. Despite this, the House took a four-day weekend and the Senate, SVz days. But some lawmakers seemed to feel the delays, deadlocks and head- knocking were not necessarily ex pensive wasted motion, but mile stones along the long, hard road to democratic compromise. “We’ve crossed a lot of bridges we won’t have to cross again,” said Rep. Don Kennard of Fort Worth. NO SURRENDER — Legislature was thrown into another session when the House rejected, 117-to-23, a conference committee tax bill that was largely based on Senate thinking. Senate approved, 19-to-12. Some House members were in dignant that three of the five House appointees signed the con ference committee report which House opponents called a “com plete surrender” to Senate wishes. Social Whirl The Aggie Wives Bridge Club will meet tonight at 7:30 in the Memorial Student Center. Hos tesses will be Faye Brack and June Brown. th v 3-V-57 IflfiBEnfflSS*] Polishing Cloth ; | Cooled Cushion Only 39° | Only ^ 99 Full half-pound package I of highly absorbent cotton ii ... hundreds of uses. liij Open weave gives 100% | ventilation. Vinyl - coated || fiber, tempered steel Ij — -.mJiH.I. — — ijil springs. .,. and for extra-safe vacation driving, make sure your car’s riding on Tiresfott* Nylon Tires 4 wm\ N0W ° n,y " ^.copU'-vr' SMylU SIZES LOW PRICED! SHELTON, INC. College Are & 33rd St. Phone TA 2-0139 TA 2-0130 House passed a tax bill that was divided about 50-50 between taxes on business and selective sales tax es. Senate pared back the business taxes to about 18 per cent, added new or heavier sales taxes to make up the difference. Conference committee proposed a bill that would have raised $177,- 066,000 with essentially the same levies approved by the Senate plus a temporary hike from $1 to $2 in drivers licenses. Appropriations conference com mittee was reportedly deadlocked and never made a report. After the new session opened, most of the same taxing and spend ing bills were introduced again, in cluding the twice-killed abandoned property bill. House quickly re-passed the same appropriation bill it had pass ed before. Most bills are expected to follow the same pattern they did in the last special session—up to the point where the conference committees start working out dif ferences. ONE MADE IT — Only major money bill to make the grade is the bookkeeping bill, passed by both Houses and signed into law by the governor. Effect of the law is to change accounting procedures so that an VETERAN AT 12 ARLINGTON, VA. hf*)—At 12, Boy Scout Bobby Neu is a veteran at making presentations. He has presented President Eisenhower with a handbook for emergencies, actor Danny Kaye with a Scout pin and Allen Dulles, head of the Central Intelligence with a simi lar emblem. He has also spoken at National Presbyterian Church at Washing ton, which the President attends, addressed the Metropolitan Rotary Club and spoken before the execu tive council of the Boy Scouts of America. Bobby admits that “Dad helps me outline talks.” estimated $28,000,000 moe will be credited to the state’s general fund when the fiscal year runs out Aug. 31. It means that much less that has to be raised to balance the books. STUDENT FEE BILL BACK — Rep. W. S. Heatley Jr. of Paducah re-introduced a bill to let colleges require students to pay up to $30 a semester for various campus serv ices. Bill passed the House last ses sion, but died in the Senate on the last day. Sen. William S. Fly of Victoria was Senate sponsor. Heatley, Fly and other support ers pointed to the crying need for new money and said college presi dents were urging the bill. Oppon ents said there were better places to get money than from working- their-way college studepts who would rather do without the foot ball tickets, parking spaces, etc., covered by the fee. PUBLIC BEACHES ASKED — Providing public access to Gulf Coast beaches is the only non-mon ey matter submitted by the gover nor to the new session. House passed such a bill over whelmingly last session, but it died in the Senate on the last day. A recent State Supreme Court ruling changed the general concep tion of where the boundary line is between private and public ownei’- ship along the coastline. To clear up resulting confusion, the House- passed bill provided for a “public easement” of 200 feet from the low tide mark. It also prohibited fenc es or other obstructions. Rep. Bob Eckhardt of Houston re-introduced the bill in the new session. OIL CUT AGAIN — Texas oil production will take another tum ble when the July allowable takes effect. Railroad Commission ordered production cut by 226,044 barrels a day and run on a nine-day pro ducing pattern.. Ten producing days were allowed for June which was a cutback from May. Oil men testified that they not only had more gasoline than they could sell,- but faced the prospect of running out of storage space. ARRANGED CONTRACTS HIT — Atty. Gen. Will Wilson has filed an anti-trust suit against certain Houston electrical contractors and an electrical workers union. Wilson said his office had gath ered evidence indicating the South east Texas Chapter of the National Electrical Contractors Assn, was deciding in advance which member of the group should be allowed to make the low bid on a job. Then others, said Wilson, would put in higher bids. Suit also charges that members of Local 716 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers aided the contractors’ association by not sending enough workers to jobs of non-members. Price-fixing conspiracies, Wilson declared, cut away the foundation of a competitive free enterprise economy. BE A MAGICIAN WRITE MEYER-BLOCH DIR.-CONJURORS’ CLUB 240 RIVINGTON ST, N. Y. C. 2 ___ - ••••••-" State Farm Saved Texans Money We aim to insure careful drivers only. Savings here have allowed us to pay divi dends to Texas policyholders year after year. Call me. STATE FARM U. M. Alexander, Jr., ’4$ 215 S. Main Phone TA 3-3610 SUI* Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company Mom* Offic*—Bloomineton UUaoia Fishing for more Business? Your ad in our classified pages a sure fire lure No matter what business you’re in— be it boats, banks, or baking— you will be able to reel in more customers quickly by luring them through the classified pages of the telephone directory. . Business people and consumers alike use the classified pages as a buyer’s guide. It makes good sense to reach them where they’re most likely to look for you. The Southwestern States