The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 23, 1948, Image 1

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ItALY RfejECTS YllftIO
OFFER Tp “SWAP’:!
1 ROME, karch 23 ^W-j-A
i| ministiy (spokesman j sa
■T' " "' Ai yv
i ?te; fu r
M
The Wcttern Allies pito;
free (t<r
H
:
onlj-
th ror
*}el< O]
return of! thi
Trieste to’ Italy last Sa 1
goslavia e Duntered yfesthrdjay
an offer to rejinquigh her c
■ on Trieste ; if Italy ■ will giv)e
Gorziga, to the no " 11
The Italian ans^
’ few hours after
roaring tjviva Triesjlte’ 1
| Premier Alcide of Gapped 4n<j Fbr
j . <‘ign Minister CoUnt{ C|rl4 ^fotza
]'. back to Rome. |
]" ARREST|MEAT STItl;CEL™
i ! AT FORT WORTH [PI-AN'S I f
FORT WORTH, Ilex ? Mafch
'- ! P)—Six strikers at the A toiou
C,(h packing plant iwere ante
lust night ^ hooked on ritia
of violating; the new stqte^a:
mass picletiing law."!)
. The strikers were nr'osted afte •
Eec Med mdon, th. ^ vv irk ?r at Oi i
plant, wa* struck ov<jr t re right ey j
w ith a befer bottle.
BIDAuif, BivTP
i * MEET WITH- MA
Volume 47
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PUBLISHED DA W «V THE INTERES',
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PARIS. March Z
quarter's said toda;
. qign Minister Georgtes Bicla
( probably (British Forfeit n Sei
Ernest Kevin will ccjitfor \jri
. retary lilarshall in (the
States nqxt month, j
YUGOStjAV WILUNp TO
TRIESTE TO ITALY
BELGRADE,* Maich 23
The Yugoslav Foteijn M nisjtdr,
Stanoje Sinaic, said! la;it nightjhjia-
.. government is willing to c^nsidhr
* giving Trieste to Itajly. M IF
Simic told a newsj co iference U re
, - Belgrade; government is pijepar :d
i to seek" through mujtusl effort^ un
agreed solution to the Triest qtoe s-
■ tion. j
- He said Yugoslav; is wiUinjg qvgn
to go so far as a coiiipi omisa Wni ;h
would give Trieste! to Itilp, jahd
1- allotting Gprizia—a; town in »rt| jof
the Adriatic port pity—t6 Yfgo- ;
^llavia.
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Of A GREATER A &M COLLEGE
COLLEGE STATION tAgjrielandl. TpUfa. TUESDAY, MARCH 23,1948
—
i
| .
Next Year’s Freshme
At m Annex, Direct
-v
ROYAL COURT—These members of the A&M Agronomy Society and their TSCW beantjes will
reign at the Cotton Ball and Pageant to be held hero April 16.
Front row, left to right, are: FRED ROBERTSON, M ARY LOU JORDAHL, DOYLE PETERS,
HE^EN TALLEY, JOYCE GILStRAP, and BOB SMITH.
Seated on the sofa, left to|rifht, are:J)AN STEDMAN, JEANNINE HOLLAND, MARTHA
JEAN LANGSTON (Queen), WALLACE HACKLER (King), DOROTHY MANGUM, and BARNEY
Standing are: THOMAS O’BRIESf, JEANNE ROUTT, VERA ADAMS, BILL MARTIN,
MAKIB KLEYrAS, and NEAL JjpnKfL : 1 / i|
ftf
i
From Palestrina to Stl Lotiis Blues
m
f; UN VOTES ANTI-CO]dMUNI
| , MEMBERS TO CO UNCIL
LAKEf'SUCCESa Mar. 2|5 4-0?)
•f. The United Nations^Securitj C|u|n-
,cil voted 9 to 2 ye^te rday to |aat
anti-communist Jan Papansk|ljor
the debate on th| • Ozegh isLqvhk
Comhiunist grab, j (
Only Russia and;the Scivet|l|k-
rainq voted against hear! ig 11 he -
recently -i dischargejl 1 ]zeqh >sl<|v^k
delegate to the'U. N.
The council movijd
Ai'gentiiiii had deiifanped ’that
Westminster Choir Exhibits
Variety of Choral Singing
Homer Briggs, chairman of'the
Houston Chapter of the American
Society of Tool Engineers, will ad
dress the A&M Chapter of the So
ciety for the Advancement of Man
agement at its regular meeting
jj~ y March 30, at 7:16 p. m., in. thp
, | j t; • . I i | By VICK LINDLEY ;|^ 4 ■ . ' F.-i ! ;i i f ■ M , Speaking oj? “The Functions of
With a two-part prograjn that ranged from 400-year-old(-hurch music to the St. Louis ^Tl^ouSne" the P 1?tfegration"and
Bluep, the Westminster Choir last night pleased the Town Hall audience. Under the direc- cooperation of the tool design d
itiort of their founder, dignified, grey-headed t>r. John Finley Williamson, the group ex- partment with the; other plant d<
ihibited the rich bass and soaring sopr$lno voices that' have earned them world-Wide ap- p& n^ n J ts, : _ nr , Qbnf , aaeny ij
plause.
council give Papar
speak up. He was fired by
fPrdgue Communist regimd
'thi# ' * * "
leath of Jan
GUARDS STRENt
a c|h; nc|
i :e
sqryk
HENE(D
IGtriENE
ONf YUGOSLAV BERBER
», LOME, March 2B 4-<M
Eovarnment-control|(
bald last night thatfimi itaryjlguliijds “Gov Way from My Window,” ^t.
along the Yugoslav border W t(hc FLouih Blues," and “Old Man Riveri”
Frieste free territory have befen
reinforced by freshjjdet '
American and Brit|ih troops.
Military attaches o’ the AilpeH-
(an embassy in Rowe laid t ie> hjad
| no knowledge of t&e pporf
n
miO to Brookside park amj CleVe-
iand Zoo; $25,0001, to CPeyJlt nd
pavements; and cutb ng; $10|,('00
to streets and honfes in latgefspb-
yi-bs,,mostly on th( east side
000 to power, traps pic
tv and transit lines, i
'
N ^ f
KATON 9AYS WW HI
NOT VERY REjHOrE”
WASHINGTQNI Mir. 23) —
Chairman Eaton : (R-NJ)
House Foreign Affai
isterday
voirld wi
fii
war fis not
pjosibility
ver;
| aid yes
third -w
mote.” Cj-' j
Ea'top was asl^ingl the
llules Committee! to sene
The second part of the program
ijy 4fijer ,VM ; a series of American folk^r - — L ~“
song*. These were prepared b
choiij with the assistance
Librarian of Congress for
> ir
.—and the most popular with themudience last night—
ROSE
Dr. Mayo Elected
Head of College
English Teachers
Dr. Thomas F. Mayo, head of
thq A&M English department, was
named president of the Texas Con
ference of College Teachers of Eng-
lish at a one-day meeting held
Saturday in Houston’s Rice Hotel.
Other new officers include Dr.
Robert Rhode of Texas A&I, Kings
ville, vice-president, and Dr. L. N.
Wright of Southwest Texas State
College, San Marcos, secretary-.,
treasurer. q ... i
Dr. Mayo replaces Dr. L. M. El
lison of Texas State College for
Women.
1 L. E. Derrick, also of San Mar
cos, was named asqistant business
manager, and directors include Dr,
Truman Camp of Texas Tech, Lub
bock: Dr. John W. Bowyer of
Southern Methodipt University,
Dallas, and Dr. Troy Crenshaw of
East Texas State College, Com-
■ merce.
Continuance of “Littli
To Avoid Overcrowdii
i /C ? i]
!
IT'
■
r
: y
n s
!'(>•• 1.1;
r,:R
—
f
—
Number
By CHARLIE MURRAY
“Little Aggieland” will function for one more yii r.
The college board of directors, at their spring ntrietingi i
ed as follows: j : j 1 j .
“It is ordered that the use of Bryan Army Air field is
year. The president of the college is directed to.bring jto tm
Houston Engineer
To Address SAM
Engineers’ Council Votesji j
Favor of Honorary Societi
Local chapters of national honorary societjies should
established at A&M in the opinion of a research coijnmitt
i
.il
1^
■•v
hr-
u;
-
HP
it Beaumont last week, resolv-
cohti
meoti
qd repairs for one year** oc-
jUtncy ouly.”
Ag. Engineering
Profs to Addres
Society Meeting
I • j j if "]
Several members of the depaif ■
ment of agricultural er g neerii
will be on the program ati);] le me<
ing of the southWe^t sect}|on of t
-
Briggs is presently associ
with the Reed Roljter Bit Company
of Houston. I
-- .>.• i ■ 4 1 ' ai '
4f(er last (European tour, to show Eh-,
rope! what true American music is
like.j Quite a few of them wefe
“repeats” from the recent Tom
Scott Town Hill program.
Tfjis group ihcluded “There is a;
goyernment-control|ed Ro^ne i|i(jiio Babr|j
'[i
in Gilead,” “Soldier, Soldier
• Roll Jordan Roll.
e wakd, of »he | Tjie classical part of the progriml
rtation,
,'s Cc nm lit tee
House floor quickfly ijegislAtio!
>i*i,205,000.000 (Bj); v orth of
nomic and military a d to Wi
(Lurope, China, Giteecq and Tii-Mev.l ^ sun
A little earlier, Ahq Forjeigiji |Vf- F«
fairs Committee jhad
/ ported fthe bill. Itf sa
to. ; the‘House that
\ ival Of the Uni ;ed
stake in the presen;
stop Communism am
recover economic illy
\
forr lall
Also “Lane’ County Bachelor’:
of- whicih was set hi Kansas but sound j
| ed qs though might haVe be m
ri - Texas, with jtfl startling “Yipeeee!’!
opening and references to sia|]d
and pugs. “Skip to My Lou,” “I Ani
a Ppor Warfftting Stranger,” tie
amusing “Dt‘af Woman’s Court-*
5S- iahjbi” “Ezekiel Saw de Wheel,” ahd
_ .“iRoll .IorH»n Roll ’*
. ( LEVELAND FLdiOll) Hits
A HALF-MILLION DO .LAI I
\ CLEVELAND,"Mur :h 23 —<1
I’lood damage in the wake,
’worst rainstorm f (elug< I Cjete- jcjprtAed irith Palestrina’s ‘“Stabat
land and its subujfhsj in 35 jfeiirs Matjer,” written for the boy’s choir
today went over th)e $ i00,0(0 liark. of St. Peteris; in Rome 400 yeijirg
Estimated damage i icluqed: |9E),- ago] The program .carried oil
f't-00 to'city cultural gardens, 145 1 IIi * • ‘ ‘ - - -
.-nthiiuugh such classical Germans as
li-
Ho ise
the
Bath, Schubert and Brahms.
Among mcidern numbers, ih|
ehofr sang the sonorous all-male
Arrangement of “The Crusadera v
|by jfhe American composer Edward
■MaeDowell; achieved a brilliant
OOrttrast by following immediately
with the fairy-light “Song without
Words, to be sung of a sunipior
bight on the water,” by the jate
Englishman, Frederick Delius. ‘‘At
Mqntserrat” by the Spanish njipd'
ern Antoni ^Nicolau pictured j the
fuperal of a choir boy in a monas
tery, ending with the ghostly ini il
ls i<j of the boy’s buried violin heard
frlm hakveni - v
Handel, the German-English
jeoinposer who wrote the timely
alleluja Chorous,” was font! of
d in a rferfort
:he i ery| s ur-
States” Is! lat
hel) Esir ipe
<1
, WEAim
Ea«t Texas—Fa ir
tonight ;»nd WeMneiday;
warmer i i west grid
tonight; ?erttle
e^wir^ 1 “ :
able. win< s
I m f iV c
i his
50Ut
—^ A - * — — - -
moderate' sop
tinigh
waraie
Text s-—flair
t and Wejdnekday
er ton ght. [
V
Batt.Q
Wedne
c >ast
Wedi
his
of the A&M Student Engineers’ Council.
In a recently issued report members of tfye co:
Q. M. Baker, W. W. Ward, and J. E. Wirschihg, ccjhp
that definite advantages would bet ;— -{fq-
derived from membership in one of 1
these societies.
Ph| Eta Sigma, frefchman honor
ary society; Tau Beta Pi, engineer
ing honorary society; Phi Kappa
Phi, ia Society for students in all
academic fields; Sigma Xi, (grad
uate and faculty honorary society;
and Alpha Zeta, agricultural hon
orary society are all mentioned as
especially suitable for establish
ment at A&M.
Some advantages which would be
obtained by having chapters of
these societies on the campus are
that they would give A&M students
a definite goal to work toward, that
affiliation with a national organi
zation would insure a more posi
tive prpgram of activity than a
local group alone, and that mutual
membership in these societies helps
to narroiw the faculty-student) gap.
The committee’s report brought
out the fact that membership in a
national honorary society would re
move the present handicap on |A&M
graduates in trying for fellowships
and scholarships at other schooliF
In discussing the important
question of the possible conse
quences of establishing these so-
cieties here, the committee is
itt
luti
3
T •
mlUsical jpranks, ahd one of them
s sung .by the choir last n ght.
aste- Thee Nymph” has a jojyous
“fia ha ha!”l chorous which sei. the
audience laughing along with the
'choir.
Jean-Up Week For
exas, April 4 - ill
|Ji
nfiodeilate |vkri-SlL
miming
9diy(
’teflon,
sljjgfitly
p F
In Will
• MM*
Thfc last Batt before
ter holidays will
press Wednesday a
cprding Ho Ro And
ager of student i
Persons wish
stories, for pu
Wednesday is
_ ■ a U
201, Goadwin^HsI)
l»mg them by
Room 201, Goc
6 p. m., Tuesd|ay.
roll off
a|fteriiDon
ulS
to s
ic^tior in
lakeli
I
Ml
\ 1 : V ■!
: Dr. George W. Cox, state health
I
n
fteipnoon, ^
slightly (
postions
Officer, is urging all communities
cities in the state to coo
Texas Clean-Up Week, April
Dr. Cox said a general clean-lip
program should include ‘surface
cleaning, drainage, gravefling pf
i treets an^ alley, cleaning of narks
And playgrounds, and the
ing of weeds and rubbish
i acant lots.
“The destruction
1 reeding places and
i ge, the proper disposal
i ge, and trash, and the ge
(leaning of all premises,” Dt.
said, “will be of inestimabh
n helping to keep down
th hazards such as d;
oid and poliomyelitis.'
stressed the
diseases
only possil
o control them » to eliminate the
nitary conditions responsible
tGS, 1
spread,
• L
clear-
from
' 1
quick to point out that the na
tional honorary societies are not
to be confused with the various
Greek letter social fraternities.
Eligibility for the honor societ
ies Would depend on scholarship
and it would take a vote of one
fourtjh Of the total membership of
the society to prevent any eligible
frqm becoming a member.
A&M is the only land-grant
school without some type of hon
orary society, according to the re
port. Most land-grant institutions
lave' two or more.
and 27. | ! I
Those from A&M who. 'Ajll spe
are W. S. Allen, extensio^ iagricA
tural engineer; J, W. Soifeason J|i
cjlities at the main campus have
r l«n duplicated, with snack bar,-
. ..Jlouhge, movies, and church serVi-i
associate agricultural i€|n^ine l ||), ! there. A “Little Batt” has
Texas Experiment Statiojp
P. Hollingsworth, ire:
ant in rural electmic
L. Jones, superinitenderjlt of tW
Lubbock Experiment Station.
George A- R 6 '^
society, will delivclr an fWp r * M
3:30, Triday aftern
\ “\Ve should havp a goq( att?^:
presit
ion, M
ance at the meeting,” Frill. Jon
head of the agricultural (ejhgine^-
ing department, said. j j
cut of tf 3 |oi
ch 26
Foreign Service
Exams Announce
By DepL of State
!! inatitf!
to )e
M*y:
re
ritinued for one more
ing an entimate of
nation from
Continuance
ided to p
■| According to information
lAtficlal sources, the
the Annex was decided to pre-
ut the posibiJity-of having three
ipur men in a room next yfar.
ugh a drop in the number of
married veteran students is expec-
,j Jit: is Ibelicvcd that there grill
iliiw more single fituilents
bly accommodated *
us.
UMT! ahotifd be adopted, en
£ At
anticipated heavy enrollment of
students has .directed; for the
purpose of more effectively sys
tematizing the; housing and in
struction!, that the f incoming
freshman class shall be assigned
A&M Annex in so far as facil- |
s are: adequate, thereby mak-
ig available the facilities on the
ftin campus for advanced stu-
Jemts;” . . ] J j
American Society [of A^HcultuiWl mdudTg^So AeterS,, ^
Engineers at Texarkana, March 11 f e d and educated at the' i
Annex this year. So fur an posible,
A : fqcjjities at the main campus have
■ (been duplicated, with snack bar,
ill
Geophysical Jobs.
Open to Students
For June-August
Undergraduate students are
needed for work in the geophysical
department of the Magnolia Pe
troleum Department, Wendell R.
Horsley, director of Placement and
Personnel relations, announced to-
day.( I [ h!' ■ [I
ii
ity to interpret mathemi itical
lations, graphs and tables, breadth
Successful applicants will be as- of factual knowledge, krtdwledg«](f
signed to geophysical crews to re-1 history and government; < cononiy s
i THE JUNIOR PROM was a gala affair Friday nig it, as hundreds of Aggies and their dates
.daneed to the music of the Aggieland Orchestra, At midnight the dancers adjourned to Goodwin
i to take part in thi* yell practiced. : jlrii
J:|.Hqfrrj| ; ■ ' ■lllllri: ri'—-fHi'l "
Chem Students. Cause Manufacttrers Misery ^ J .
First Senior Rings Went Back;
Test Wound All Lead-Plugged
lieve men for vacations, the com
pany stated. Employment will run
through the months of June, July,
artd August.
The salary for the job is around
$270 a i month, with traveling ex
penses ; incurred while on the job
paid by the company.
Interested applicants should con
tact Horsley at the Placement Of
fice in the Administration Building
for further information. K j
''ll. Ay BOB WEYNAND
After three years of bleeding,
'sweating and weeping copiously,
Aggie Seniors are permitted to
work a band of engraved gold
over the knuckles of their third
fingers. Jt’s more than just a rin$,
however! it’s a symbol of determi
nation and toil.
, The desire for such a symbol to
represent A&M was first voiced
by (the class of 1894. A committee,
under A. C. Jonas,; a member of
the class recognized for hiis artistic
ability, was appointed by the class
to offer suggestions for the design
of the ring.
design was submitted to
“-two members, of the
4, approved, and a con-
made with a New York
manufacture the! rings,
the first consignment of
ived from the manufacj
class had reason to be*
was not as it should be. In
chemistry lab stu&ents rain
all Ij
IX
j ind found
with lead.‘The 'wholej shipment
returned to New Ydrk to U
i ;
| I (II
Plug-
rii
I
Since its creation; the ring has; fore his retirement. He still wears
incorporated three factors in its his ring which he received eight
design. On one side has always years after graduation because the
been the school seal|i;ttn the oppo-
site side the military insignia of
crossed rifle and saber superim
posed on a vertical cannon, and on
the crown the eagle, date of grad
uation, and the letters “AMC” or
the words “Agricultural and Me
chanical College of Texas.”
No radical change has been made
in the ring’s composition since it’s
creation, but various minor im
provements have been made all
along. In 1934 the state and na
tional flags were added as back
ground to the crossadl rifle and
saber and the seal, and the present
crown was added- Ittl 1943 the
shield which came iri with the 1934
changes was raised and the ring
enlarge]. : ||
Allin F. Mitchell of the class of
1894 who roomed
ring’s designer, ;
much information
of the ring, was pr
neering drawing fo
th Jonas, the
who gave
the origin
of engi-
years be-
94 rings were lead-plugged and
had to be remade. The basic design
fe still well embossed on the ring
with the ’94 remaining firm des
pite the wear of the years.
Further assistance in compiling
mfbmation was given by Martin
Hamilton wbo worked for 14 years
for the company making the rings.
“No school has stricter require
ments for wearing a school ring
than A&M,” he says. “Because of
these rigid requirements the ring
has come to be known as the
Senior Ring aid the annual ring
dance the symbol of the honor A&
M men feel when they have earn
ed the privilege of wearing the gold
band.”
Today Hamilton is a representa
tive of L. G. Balfour Co. at the
South Gate. Of his association with
college rbstijittunilton says, *Tve
never knowni * ring to have more
tradition than the A&M ring. It is.
truly the greatest military ring in
April 2 Deadline
For Invitations
'
June graduates are reminded
that graduation invitations must'
be ordered before April 2.
Invitations come in three
classes: leather-bound with ( a 1
list of graduates, 45 cents each;
cardboard-bound also having a
list of graduates, 20 cents each;
and French-fold, which cost 8
cents.
Grady Elms, assistant direc
tor of student activities, requests
that (seniors place their orders
now to avoid the last-minute
rush after the Easter holidays.
Invitations may be ordered in
the Student Activities Office,
Room 209, Goodwin •Hall.
Gloria Am|Wilson
Is VFW Duchess
^11
duchess
•kgeant
(xnihty
of Foreign Wart Post
raining center, was deactiv
n, 1946.
jj Ued.s.on to open an annex there
wap: made when the school found
it would need extra quarters, un-:'
Idas many' hjgh school students
wore to be refused entrance.
The college annex was oppnei
at thd air field in Septomber, 1946
when 600 ^ “overflow” freshnkei
vreafe housed tfwre, together with
miumbir of upperclassmen who olep
ijl barracks at the annex but com
ii
ri itlmied to attend*classes,on the linaty
J, iiciaiapus. About 1,000 students in
all were at thf Annex that year.
and knowledge of a mddtni la
uage.
If the written exam I ration
passed, the applicant p’11 go
Washington fgr an orajl oxamifi; i
tion.
Qualifications for the positi
are: citizenship in tp; Un
States for at least ten ysj rs;
ty-one years of age as; f Jul;
1948 and under thirty-oW; “
ried, it must be to aii jAt
citizen. .
Application blanks rndy _
tained from the Board b|l Ejxan
ers for the Foreign Ser J ‘
partment of State, WaaH
D. C.
rTT i -tttt * * a-.vwsw mmwv
biefi published in mimeograph
(form fen the Annex campus. A full
fledged ROTC elementary program
hks: been carried out, the resultjs of
(Hlieh were shown by a drill team
1
rts Day here last week. The
even has its own large band,
name, “Little Aggieland,"
djWft chosen by vote among the stu-
diirits there. j
Bryan Army A1F Field, built
| during the waf as an Instrument
“rated
h
State Department ejx,,
for the position of ForeiW Servi
Officer have been anndu iced f
September 27-30, 1948;!]! Iowev»(Ai
application to take the iqiiz mb i t™
The job of the Forcigr Ser
officer is to carry out! rah ^ fo;
policy of the Pres dent in bonsu
and diplomatic posts atttiad,
aries range from $3300 up
cost of livihg allowancdi in add -
tionrio quarters! lallowani is, The^e
are opportunities! to senjrpf in mati|y
places during the car
The Septembeii examihiitions
elude tests of thp appliqi it’s c<
prehension and Use of Erie ish, a
r'
1 [Even before the Annex was open-
eld, many veteran students were
living! in the jAlr Field Village
built! outside the main cnclofurc,
qriginally to house air field work-
Bill
rs
l ■ s
^ ets Earned Noli
To Send: Insurance
i Premiums in Cash
8
nK»nl5.
Gloria Ann Wilson,.j 17,
has been elected
Cotton Ball and Fiageant
ting the Brazos
t.J rsi
a .
[- :V
, ’ !
Candidatesg
In Local R
| J; . j iHH||
Candidates for offi
April 16 city election w
ced today by N. M. M<
lege Station city score
In the; nmyorality i
Langford, head of the
chitecture department,
ed. This ia Langford’s
as candidate for mayor
ved three terms alread
N. M. McGinnis of tl
art department is urn
re-election as dty seer
Candidates for coum
Ward x atfJ. A. Orr]
engineering department!
G. Faulkenberry.
Tn the Ward 2 rac^
Halpin of the ag-eeo
is unopposed. m
For the Ward 3 job b]
incumbent councilman;
against A. P. Boyett
ns needlessly jtake the
Of bring their money-and
ley mall cash to pay premiuiini on
ational Service Life Insurance
Bides, the Veterans Administra-
licyholders cohtiri-
M,
j annottri-
nnis, ri-
y- ri
Jfiii iiw^rn 1
t , k
Ue to send cash to the VA brancli
office at 1114' Commerce Street,
for premium payments, of-
said. Early this month, an
steirn VA Branch, Office received
in envelope with $1,700 in $100-
)iils to be applied to; the veterans
tisurance account.
The Veterans . Adminisi
pointed out thqt a veteran
his insurance payents ....
through ordinary mail has no wfly
I prove he made the payment in
ic (event it fails to reach VA-
ailure to receive the money L,
VA no choiCe but to lapse’
»dicy.J ;• . »
Veterans are urged to use money
orders, postal notes (with th
vers* side filled out in full), or
s for NSU premium
and also to use th
irnlshed
I
|
I
l
envelopes fu;
use the ye
ed by VAin rnai;
payments to the Insura
Dallas Branch
1 M
Ji l
Inf:
Hel Pi
ffii!
S.,fi
dent a<
April
Ball will be
Friday, Ap
rding to G
nt-di rector of
TheifKlBaft.,,. II
will play for the
!!