The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 22, 1948, Image 2

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Page 2
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Denrooii
Last faill repiesejitfi
ment began to fujnct
Battalion
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MOND#-,
"So'tar, St<'tesman. Knightly Gentleman’
, jawf^nlce !5i i livah! Ross, I Founder of Aggie
electe
.
• f Of the Senate, ha|s beep com
\yiork in making irieradpvitb
ference schools, i- Th( Hosi 1
plugged for man},' mentis fl
to work in conjpnctic n wifi
Mess Committee! has nove
Ijason between
commissary offi
actihg as: an
Senate
cations-arid morf spefi
The recent action py th
nmittee dei ' r
that one group
Committee demonstrates
nin-icb
ajtement Of the sjtore,
e>'whn will be op th
on. t
udent Govei
^dent! govern- from a cursoy ^
campus. Con- form of student go’
ifom geograph- inherently demoi *
< has^met sfcc of this type clan!
/ i;
.
22, 1948
—
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1 . 'if 1
. i
'if.
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1 . * *
Tf
I if
I b
sisting of 34 studie
ical areas, the S|tu)dent Senhte has > met sijx of this type
times since its inPfptip 15 AltJ|rfugh no start- in a shorten fimi
“ feed,
] | |' {• Theoreticall
The Welcoming Oortn|tiitt<!q'ia sulj-divisian jtmiors are e$gi
pfl mented on its
Some members Of that body have fought for
3 buthwest Con- inclusion of I •fjj , eshhien members. | (Three
sil Committee freshmen nbiv represent Little Aggieland
Senate, h$s acte^ on |in|ter-i*4|ege ^ommuni-j strength”
t obti
er' who will be ojn the campi
students jn disposing o ' te^ct
used in epursesiofferee byj
k i || (Mectipn Cornmitlte e’|s la ndl __ __ o ^ _ ,
; ificationsjand pijpdedi n imjiejlvediHuch work ing body in jadion; jshouldl a student senator
>. and worry. Its fucce^s mayjl^e rti^asurOdl in cast a vote ladfersej tb
^ worry. Its success malv
^he number of totes cast
" dividuals! feel fhati Softie
that body are not dons:
hat body
leasurei
overstepped it:; bpinijls. Bb| pfefhaps that
fog ; can be- cleared by exaimi^g more thoro
ughly the senate biory
i
elec-
ar’s
"
lie itldasuredi in
ienaforial
<>tal|cji|t ip lastly^
gcnei
There] is little dojibt, thW, that 'Student
government is worhir g on tbq A&M campus.
However] there! is son; can fusion; as to. the
powers and duties of t le sen ite] ^erta'irt in-
tjhatl .‘jo^ne pf (the iactions of
fi i ! i
!i| | I ' , t i
representative!
the system is
the few members
ch more work
arftej'i^iiwiieldy
re men. \' '
at least,; sophomores and
to file for the senate race.
an ambulance; the Senate). Whether,: after veterans leave
mmmm
be ■ seeh. But the
hoBpptal. The A&M, those
two eld
its worth as a on that body rema ns to
* the school’s provision ex sts—apd tha
i bciiuui » provision exis
ident Council, step forward, j. |
ittied for the The old aa|iom„
Idual items.
:chahge Store
ild api
okii'll may apply
organizatio|n$. ft has
:i
es vvill have members
is . quite a large
‘fin numbers there is
to armies and similar
littld foundation when
of representative government
| •.I a s
I v
E xc
II [worthiness of
•co-dpf ratficfif with the man*
1 a b 0 °k deialf
s| shortly to aid
Oksmo longer and will reflect the!
h college. The stituents. Students
iof Voting nqab the senate meeting^ to watch their govern-
the question
is raised. j • jriWIj/d
But a fejw students, as chosen represen
tatives of the; majority, jean conduct busi
ness in an efficient,! rapid] manner. They can
^ (Opinions of their con-
‘"“e welcome to attend
cast a vote ladterse |tp th|e interests of their
dormitory dr area, n referendum vote could
be instituted to recall th(i recalcitrant sena
tor. What could be sampler ?
In considering ail; the
government]. We mufst
th • ’
h|
aspects of student
consider both the
cjortsistMt With traditional for individiiala and groups alike, it should be
in other wor(jl.'f, the penate has the improvjemfent o: A&M College. Sio long
as the end rk conce rned, there should! be no
grounds* fojr disagreement. We pan all look
forward to la gi'eatei school* turning out more
Two (listinctj adva|ntjagej; jirja'j’ be perceived capable men each year. I
vdfetnent..
ofgnvehiimentJ It pallsj fin
a unicameral lejgislal
electoral col|legp, World coji
force*
This is howl it Wou
of the world Wquild
world, would s ;lect
dent from each art
gftfion would elect the
nohiinees.
I The 5 delegation
its members tp the
lature. j 1
' ; The- world pro si len
chancellor or fprim ; mininti
1r : •!
siaM
tr r-
Senate Asks for Secret Data
On “Cold War” With Commies
by JACK BELL
ii ■
WASHINGTON, March 22, UP).—Senators called on the
Truman administration today for secret data on the cold war
with Communism.
Senator Bridges (R-NH) told a reporter the armed serv
ices committee hopes to find out*
from Secretary of State Marshall
and Secretary of Defense Forres-
tal “if and where we intend to
fight.”
Both cabinet officers wete suiti-
moned to a closed door meeting this
afternoon. The session was called
to consider President Truman’s
plea for temporary revival of the’
wartime draft and for immediate
enactment of Universal Military
Training.
It was to be Marshall’s second
appearance of the day on •: Capitol
Hill. “ J ' ‘
?n
V 1
ill
■
World Go _
•.f fl ' rLr iilf'.i . (
As aji answer to v hatl-ibjey Consider the world govornhient br any of its component
greatest’need 4f tiuiy - ime]!e evep American -units.” . j 1 - [ .[; j
educators havellabtii ef I t\yo|j ears to produce The aifmed fprfces would be under the
a world donstjtutSo:i for; ite Atomic Age. president and a 6 T hian “chamber of guard-
. They realize,,that; no najipi jiAjyet willing ians”,elected jtor thfee-year ternis by t|he leg-
/ to surreindjer ifts “sovereignty.” but some- islature and the court No profespioilal sol-
thing has got to be d()ne,itlh;y believe. dier could be a “gijijajrdian.”
-ll'
d fi(iijc|iqnj: The people
e ect
Hill. Ho was invited to sit in with
Senate Foreign Relations Commit
tee members (9 a.m. CST) during
their final study of a bill"!to pro
vide $570,000,000 in economic aid
to China.
Just back from a series of West
Coast speeches on the administra
tion’s new stop-Russia policy, Mar
shall faced a busy schedule on'top
of his congressional engagements.
At the State Department] three
critical issues have arisen.
They involve: (1) a possible Rus
sian crackdown on the . Western
powers in Berlin, (2) uncertainty
over whether violence may flare in
Trieste as a result of the surprise
proposal to return that Strategic
iid& I uwiit!,|T il MciicVtr. u ici .vuuiii uc jia uwiii* ly* ' / pioposai 10 rewiin tnat
Their 48-art iclb jonstiti it unis patterned The dijitv ,bf the'‘chamber of guardians” ! Pprt city to Italy and, (3) this
after both the j America^ .i ib British forms would-be t© control] arms mtnufactujre and j dS^S^to wtliftfon PalSfin? 1, ,Cr
a world president, regulate di^esi of mfkber state militias. The ‘ 1 A^for Marshali^’and Fbn-estaPs
ederal convention president could gelj ’“extraordinary powers” | date with the Armed Servgtes Com-
ti, and an timed to handle emergencies bv a two-thirds vote mittee, Bridges said he isn’t sure
of .the legislature, mf w m wiiiWstn
“Theifduir ele
air, energy
cellor could be reca led if
ed to do so twijee at a: peri
The presicenf ,v]th 1
would also appoint a 6(1^y a
l“Grand Tribuhal” of \vh
as chief justicb. This triba
7-man suprepie (oirt
lower courts.! In, hi; tri
. “Tribune olf. t P< ;o )le”
be to “defend the i
the people against ritilati
v’ho wcfuld in nent edutator ah
oluir elerrjcjntslof life]—eqrth,] water,
4-jare thej common property of the
;e. The management and Ose of
(Be iegaites, one per v
one^flliion poftuUtioi. Tlfi^s ; delegates, rep- human race.; Thejldiaijiagem
resenting nin<) gieojgi aphjfea ji ifeas (rf‘ the such portions thereof as tire vested in par-
hree nbinnoesTorpresi- ticular onmeirship J. shall in all cases be
a. Thtei the entire dele- subordinated! to the cpjmmon good.”
pre.4k ent from the: 27 Howecer,. theepf 1 ”^’' 1
i l L ' f rights of indjividut}!
vvoubjl also elect ?99 of press and assembly
qnic^iindral world! legis rr " "
there seems no escape from setting
up temporarily the selective draft
machinery.” ji
Taft Vigorously opposed UMT.
So his sthtejnent s|:en|ied to add up
to acceptance of the draft as an
alternative. But like many of his
colleagues, the Ohioan said he
wants to kriow more about the
state of military defenses;
Positions Open
In Civil Service
|jl.-l| 1 j iJ>| I 1 * .if ; < * ^ 'I
Positions as health program spe
cialists in the Public Health Ser
vice in Washington, D. C. and
throughout the United States have
been announced by the Civil Ser
vice Commission.
Salaries range from $3,397 to
$7,102, and no written test is re
quired-
in one or a combination of the fol
lowing: program analysis and sur
vey, teaching graduate courses in
public health administration or
preventive medicine, and operating
a health program or project.
Letters
i.i
Dear Editor:
1
l With virtually every issue of
the “Batt” we find the Aggies
have been polluted again, and each
time it iis on some highly contro
versial issue. We personally know
of no one who has ever been ques
tioned, and after considering the
number we know who have not
been, we wonder if these polls are
based on a representative group.
The only poll we don’t question
is the one that seems to unanimous
ly support the opinion that the
mess hall could stand considerable
improvement.
JIM RIVENBARK, ’42
“SANDY” BROWN, ’44
EDGAR DEMEL, ’45
ED RICHIE, ’46 ‘
j FRED C. ZIMMERMAN, ’4$
C. J. LUTZ, “ ’49 ”
P. S. For obvious reasons,..: the
last signature may not indicate
that individual’s own opinion.
j..fG,..—l—| iU
MESS HALL DIET
Editor, The Battalion: |
In your note to the letter from
Rudy E. Takacs you state that W.
£. Dahlkempcr is a dietician with
experience in an army hospital dur
ing the war. You failed to state,
however, what the mortality rate
in the hospital wa?.
If Mr. Dahlkemper’s idea of a
good diet is one which does not
vary from week to week then he is
doing a! splendid job.
Yours for more and bigger
stomach ulcers,
,
DAVE FOWLER
DALACE
■ PHONP 2-087<3
TODAY—
AND ALL THIS WEEK!
, v$!
‘Great Issues
M«, Wedneada;
The Great
meet at the
class period, Tuesday
11:30 a.m., but will meet
the following Wednesday
at 7:30 p.m. to hear ~
discuss, “Can the Pisint_„„
American Homes Be Effc
Checked.”
This meeting will take pi
the usual assigned eb
The meeting is i
7:30 p.m. in order to avow a
fiict with Dr. Bernice >
meeting at 8:30 p.m. of the
evening* ,j T ] j
—
Methodist Grou
Hears Chaplain;
Reverend Sam Hill, the nJ
lege chaplain,'apoke at the i
ly dinner of the Men’s Fell
Group of the College Station
odist Church Wednesday ni
what Faith could accomoii
world affairs. T
The Fellowship C}roup| a] ocial
. :.i,.
col-
inth-
ship
[eth-
t ou
in
’ | ' t
chi has been active
; honored thf fiip-
1/
-7 |>
that either will be willing to draw
any line in Europe beyond which 1
further Communist encrtiachment
might call for American military
action. But the Senator lidded:
“Even if they don’t ^va]it to tell
us that, I think we have si right to
know in more detail why they need
more men in the artneq] services
]s't,itution safeguards the and what they intend to do with
' and guarantees speech,
l
The world constitution was devised under
I the leadershSp of! Dij Robert Hutchins of
1 wjould appoint a Chicago Uniyersitk! Other frajmbrfc were emi-
4 law, govefni
leirlslature vot-
if flhree months.
ij.
world court or
nfnent and po-
turn cbooKe ai^ je?i;© :u ;iy]e jaiini 4. The| eban- litical science j prtjfpssors of the nation.
. ★ [ I
Just as the stajt^s qt the
t
mericanl Union
ejgiifdaljive approval require a, higher ijegujatory power, soldo the
states of the world hertl a higher administra-
osie duty would selves back in pajldolithic tinliek ivith every
jjtvil rights of thing rent hsundiejr j by the piost disastrous
beglect by the of wars!—the nexjt one. ' ■ i j
Bargaiiiiiig J
For the best b ar fair
‘Wh
era. we give >fou the
of the Cut-Rate Co oitial lF
Here are some san p
Perf umes’ir
anything thajt wasi
price and quality, 50
fumes that jvill make
vkjeunks. Honiever
Vor/m and other njia
put around the liv
an imprem
N.
In
official
The Battalion,
- Of College Station.-Ttkas,
; aftemaon,.fexcept during
lished »emi-wetkly. Sibscii
rfe
r.
■—h-j-
them.”
After hearing the two cabinet
members, the armed services group
may decide whether it wants to go
ahead with an inquiry into UMT
or shift gears for a look at the
draft revival proposal.
The draft plan got a ! week-end
midget ‘from Senator Taft of Ohio,
Chairman of the Senate’s Republi
can Policy Committee.
Taft said in a Springfield, Ohio,
speech:
“If it can be shown that there is
no other way in which get the
men necessary for the fcrce deter?
mined to he essential for defense^
OPEgfS P H . 4-118!
TODAY — TtlES. — WED.
1 —Feature® Begin—
1:40 \ .3:45 - b:50 - 8:00 - 10:05
, ■:
(Vtile
JEAN peters
TEEMICBltR
.
some
fazi
nf no
ape
D-ill-m ti’hirl. Anyway .dj’dip by and get a couple of
| * * * these bottles. ..that don’t open them in the
ojfl the postwar stor ( e ’’..I '• L ^ | J 1 II ,
Klephant Sale" Pilfr—One last chance at some pills been
riuacv in Dallas, around’here so Ibng that We are going to
Jr " f throw them; out. fick any two you want and
if Ji \ i, 1 niay the Lord haie mercy on your soul. All
hetiilar we-bought guaranteed! to .tneive. the bowels of tlje earth.
qegalrdlOsst of the ..‘7,rtecD>irfe«-i-Gnarantee<l to kill every
v p have some per- kind of anythh
jfoii itnell like two vines or volir nu
ate; advertised in
NEW!
LITTLE DR 11’
Individual
COFFEE MAKER
tup
nortlwh hhve some per- kind of anything Sprinkle some on your
vines oh volir hlujband-
-watch them dry up.
* News contributi in i ma
win Hall. Clapslfied aids
£09, Goodwin Hall.
- All-Ami
?r ;ss 1}
not otbe w de
"4.
ibliqa
Kotiuld as Mcind-cil;
omce at Colic.-* Statli
Uia Act of Cougrjiss c
CHARLIE MXjrKRA T,
01 a jaoUci- ; lat
Jia^cU 3, ii'
V ic,k I.iluUey
J. T*- Millcf, Keqaetb lift
Mack it Nolen
K. L. UlUinK»lcy,
Tom. Carter, Ted to
^ C. C.| Trail, Ji
John Sinirli
' 'UoWi
i , -
t
■ -
in,.the social
—TIDE
heBattaliof
}| 11 •; , , » M ; . . ' -.^-1.. I.I.V . L..
a ia « i r
japer of fhe Agricultural and Mejch;
nth®* 1 f*vt> times, a week anjd circulated f
W (uid
rate $4.30
1
lination periods,
school year,
itle by Itelcphone, (4-5444)
■, ?;
--
aced by telephone (4-5324) or at the
. ; i '..hi'
During thi
Advertisini
—rt-r
QUEEN
TODAY—
TUE/s. AND WED.
x \
’
V
'ii
he fire that was in
/ways kind In
in her heart!
(tarring
HGGY ANN
GARNER
X
fiicW Haydn
(pirtcltd by JOHN Hjl,
ClirtORrtOX
31
NE ^ S ^ H0 ^ T ~~^’ ART00 ^
40c—rTax j fnclmled—12c
TUESDAY, MARCH 23
. / L • . ;
PALACE
WILLIAM A, BACHER.
X
\
i
TrttTIWbAV
liege of Texas and the City
Y Mondlay through Friday
ir The Battalion is pub-
,tes furniahed on reSueSt.
I I ; i
Only $1.89
lU
cup capapity
r^l DIRECT FROM)
HOLLYWOOD!
or lat the
arial office, Room 201, Good-
udent Activities Office, Room
I - !
i-
exclusively to the use for
In the paper mu’ ’ * ~
r matter herein
Member
Nelson...
id local news of spontaneous oi
are also reserved.
t'
Assocililted Coileciate Frets tt'»>fe*nt e d natlopallr by National
c M y* -tiying Servlc*. Ink. at Now Tort i
Editor
Ilditors
, , Editor
odwyti ...Feature Writer*
Ma in, C. C. JMunjroe,
" Kuiutc, J. C. F*ijs,
Griffin
l^nford. K. J. M<
doh’ord
Grndy
Sum
Art Hi
Don Knife Ik intf. Itol. Sip
Bob
of Tlio Associated Press
bljcati^ii of all news dispatches cre<%-
I
blished herein.
iu
Clj(lea«o, Lea Angel**, *
Ad-
Tort citri
and San FrancUco.
..Co-Editors
IDEAL FOR . .
• Office Workers
• Coffd Fans
• Hostesses who desire a/
more distinctive coffee
service.
KRA
Furniture Co.
BEGINNING FRIDAY
FOR ON* BIG WEEK
....
,. .. “Pr
, Bill Evan*
jia. Zero Hauiipond,
■Ma Aatunak-ar
'rnmMm'
t< narnun. •»*>(
CUr* CABLE
Tr*\ino,
} •]
;,i l.j
Hardy £.
Writer.
.WMM
o Itanncer
Engraver*
.■v
...
*
■MaMgavNMMMwaM^
3lt
tort at**
r
IjkahA.'
-XT ■'
THESE BIG ONES
C BIO CLOCK
H X G H WALL
IF YOU KMtW SUSIE
OOIIS iSJSiai.Siiiil,