: 'H •; i ; -U, • t • ■ /s \> r ' r - f V;. ■ a V t .j. 1 .■ . v\ fv ' i/v -i t>3 r" - \ X: PUBLISHED IN THE •- s ' : - '11 '’j —f-r ttalion Ot A GREATER A&H COLLEGE i vll- V -i •i ,T ^ • i. fl • ■I TT ’•T. I ' 1 ' V ■\ V Voluine 48 ..Ui 1 ♦ COLLEGE STATION (Agyieland FRIDAY, JULY 23,1948 Number 17 li .H i ■ mec reed' vo^ti - w ho was _ Enough for Pappy N By CONR Before I ?et of thas fouL nvention ch|ine, I want it fir d^rs that fl a^n not ‘Mr itself. In fadt I l(»T nal Voting Machine Must ' ' i- : ! . _ _ : ' ■ ' ; / i r. 'wiggins JVaiiis in Expose AD TWIGGINS arfy deepen into an expose known as the voting* r M ' ■ i‘ j when the person behind shoved me through the curtain). *' '[ Right then and there, the trouble begain. it finmly understood by all ,1 grabbed something for support, and before opposed to the act of I could stop myself, I had voted three times think so highly of the for Dewey: I figured out in no time my mis take, and in order to start off with a clean slate I had jto vote for Roosevelt and Norman Thomas three times, too. By that time my arm was plumb worn out. After 1 had rolled a smoke and taken a rest I gbt prepared to vote. I found the idea that I have cast as high as ten esjin a single flection. * i taxpaying citizen I fe£l jt is mj| ri£ht and duty to speak out agjjairist these works of the devil which are usfed to accent and tabulate the ballots. „ u , . . w^ull like tcj warn any person that might handle for the minor candidates a.nd gave all encounter opje oif these contraptions so he - Democrats a vote or two and then took iter opfe i j>eware. (.j 4pw even! if the off my coat and got set to really give Roose- . .. velt a landslide. i worked properly, j j ust W arming up to the job and w|ic| they definitely don t, I cannot see why hadn’t pulled the lever more than seven or we need a change.; What was good enough for I?appy, h maintain is good enough for 'Jukiiqr. Afterf all, why does a man have to go off by-hjmself to cast his ballot. Therms sojfhething m: ghty suspicious about someone sneaKing behind a curtaiato vote. It appears to that-they might be voting foir a Re- pidblipn or s< methiing. It is much better that he) vdte ih-pl iin, .sight'so we can make sure hejhajsn’t fall ?n for the other party’s lies. During tl e last presidential election, I' never hearjd anyone mention just how strong happened to in the city working and had it was. The man shook me until I lost my new to vote there. After standing in line for Sear’s teeth* hopri I tvnaty goti up to the voting spot. I I guess I have told you enough so that couldn’t see where to get the straight ticket you will know just how bad these machines for my marki anyplace. I was standing out- are. I hdpe tha^all voters will be convinced side ivhat I thought was a comfort station that ourrights are in danger of being taken wheniout canfe a lady. Like any true man of away. It’s high time that we get together and breeding, I locked about for the men’s place pass laws iaginst such infernal inventions. eight times when the machine started acting up. First h big sign saying “Tilt” started flashing, and then a horn started making all sorts of racket. I immediately understood that the machine was broken and started to put on my; coat to go vote elsewhere. Before I could leave the booth the cur tain was jerked back and a policeman grab bed me for, no reason at all. Now I’ve heard tell of the long arm of the law, but I had Draft Details Explained As I^ns $liape Up In Washington r , 1 l WASHINGTON draft t H$re mi F to bejgin BY ^AMES MARLOW 1 || r , July 23, (iP).—Mixed up about some answers to questions you may have va|uo.. % | 1 hor lexample h,00)0 4 ra tt bbards-f -- ft T ' * plenty of points about the draft still kre mle Jet mbers to a up, under —with? at least Ihrep boaH—havej to ] be se stafe directors, j BtutFfirstj all jthei stdte directors havje to" be apji)oir|te#. Then the mettibeis - ofj the draft Hoards have to pe^ jappoihtedj'The boards^ have toJin^ office snacbl £ AH this is exjected to bb fini'sh- he eiid oi August-because— ep over 18 and “undi st^rt register ier 26 must with those boprd^ August 30 And! the regis- < tn|tich ends September 18. The 25jyear!-old| mejn start register ing. (1' f • (There’ll be cuntipuitig rfegistra- tiontaf|ter September 1$, of course, for ‘youths, as thfey rlbacjh 18. Abok| 100|)00 reach 1 i ever y month).]; Und^r the li w, last parsed by Conprejss, attuaj drafting of men canpot, start bef ore | Sebtember 22. Bjat because o ’ various delays— sucll afi time ru edejd fior classify ing ] thb registrt nts^ and so on— the klraft p^obaHly won’t start be fore! October 1 I t t)ie earliest. Majdr' Gdn. I ^wis B. Hershey suggested vhgue y tjhatl maybe the first rp^n to b; drafted will be those 35 years old. i But Jthat; ides of Hjershey’s at this! rndmenfis ' ery vajgue indeed; Keep this dn mi id:! }. v All! war ve erqns nnder 26 v muist iregister betw«in„_August 301 arid SCpter ibe| 1|! That T, w r ± it i 1 eadline se Drops c diiopijjing pr aiding bourses the second « U, i U J\ . ... , for tor semester,? according to« Rj L. Heaton, registrar. tAfter today ]iny course which is dropped wi l carry a grade of F' Heaton iai< It us also 1 he last day for •egistratiin. i doesn’t mean? they’ll be drafted. But they mdst register. So must all members of the Na tional Guard and Reserve units— if they are under 26—unless tjhey are on active duty. Only man over 19 and undeir 26 can be drafted. When they are drafted, their length of service is 21 months. And they can be used anywhere: inside Abe United States or over seas. But—youths over 18 and urider 19, although they must register, cannot be drafted till they’ve reached their 19th birthday. Yet—those youths ..over 18 but under 19 can enlist for one year. By doing that, they escape the longer 21 months? service jif they wait till they’re 19 and aire drafted. And they’ll serve their one year inside the United States. They can't be used overseas. But when they get’ out, they must spend four to six years jinx a reserve outfit. But—not all 18 year old youths can volunteer and be accepted. The draft law limits the number! of such youths who can enlist j to .161,000 a year. That means those who can’t en list,"because the quota of 161,|)00 has been used up, must wait fill they’re 19 and then face :being drafted for 21 months’ service (in stead of the 12 they could h^ve Tiad if they enlisted at 18. j i 13y WAGE HIKE GRANTED BY FORD DETROIT, July is!UP—A 13- cant; an hour wage increase for 116,000 CIO production workers today erased a national strike Tthreat against the Ford Motor Company. Climaxing, more than 21) hoprs ; ik Ts ,i won increases in premium piy. nearly continuous negotjjiati the CIO United Auto Worked also cation improvements, and a group insurance plan revision. j X v on m ■ : SERGE JAROFF, director of the original Don Cossacks Chor us, will appear on Town H«U, December 7. NEWS ■:) IN BRIEF MEXICO PLANS TO IK ALTER EXCHANGE RATE t; MEXICO CITY, July 23 (tfk Mexico decided Thursday to che en the peso. She has lost a 1 fight to keep it at 4.85 Ao the w.t. dollar where it has been pegged since 1940. The new exchange rjate will [be set after consultation with the In ternational monetary- fund. Th® bank of Mexico, effective yester day morning, stopped all buying and selling of "foreign currencies until the new rate is s|et. BERRY NAMED SELECTIVE SERVICE BOARD HEAD AUSTIN, Tex., July 23 tk- State Adjutant General K. L. Bpr- ry Thursday was notified by tele gram from Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, National Director of] Selective Service, of his appointment as Tex as State Director of Selective Service. The appointment had been rec ommended by Gov. Beauford |j. Jester: I 1 STRIKES HINDER ERP PROGRAM IN ITALY ROME, July 23 'AN — Strikes threaten to iipset the Marshall Plan timetable in Italy. A quickening* quarrel between organized workers and manage ment over wholesale labor layoffs has focused attention, on the creaky condition of Italy's indus try. Production must be doubled and new markets found for Italian goods if the Marshall l?la n * s meet major objectives. I Caught in the tight Squeeze iff mounting costs (about; 85 times above prewar levels) and falling demand, Italian industrialists have trimmed their sales, cutting production and laying off labor. y\ ■ j T \ Sheep And Goat Short Course Will Atlen And Hobgood Write Article For Farmers’ Magazine W.; S. Allen, of the Extension Service, and Price Hobgood, Pro fessor .of Social Agricultural En gineering have written- an article for the jiAugust edition of the PROGRESSIVE FARMER, which will be guide to farmers and dairymen] planning to build or re model milking barns. Allen graduated from the Uni versity of Tennessee in 1947, and assume^ bis P 08 ' 1 ' 011 w ith the Ex tension S erv > ce shortly thereaf- jter. H°bgood began his duties at A&M in 1939, but was away three years during the war. Allen and Hobgood surveyed two ideal dairy farms in Houston County and returned with pictures and floor plans which appear with the article. These designs offer ideal and practical milking barns which could be constructed at low cost. . Each plan is of different con struction and arrangement, which provides for more than adequate window space,, and sloping floors for proper drainage and cleanli ness. Begin Monday I -A Sheep and Goat Short Course will 'begin at A&M Monday, and end August 14, according to J. Cl Miller, head of the Department of Animal Husbandry. Enrollment in the shjort course will be limited to 25 students ah4 to vocational agriculturje teachers and county agricultural .agents. The course Iwill be held under the direction of James A. Gray, associate professor oi animal hus bandry. Gray will be assisted by Stanley Davis, Texas/Agricultur al Experiment Station wool and mohair specialist, and pr. R. O. Berry, associate professor of ani mal husbandry. The first two weeks of the thfee- week course will be devoted to lectures in the morning and prac tical or laboratory work in the afternoon. The class will spend the last-week in the field visiting wool warehouses, manufacturing plants ranches and purebred flocks. J. A. Hill, dean of the schoPl of agriculture of the University of Wyoming, will be guest professor for the course and will lecture to the class on August 5 and (5. He will also spend August 9 and 10 in the field with the class, Gray said. In addition, Dean Hill will cover that part of the; course dealing with the selection of ewes for the breed ing flock. Movie Schedule Given for Week The movie schedule for next week at the Grove is as fol- lows * Monday, “Moss Ros*” with Victor Mature and Pegjgy Cum mins. Thursday, “Humoresque’’ with John Garfield attd Joan Crawford. No admission will be] charged for these shows which are pre sented as a summer entertain ment feature. Each feature 8:30 p. m. will STUDENT SAID. >egin at Skating, Dance, i Will Highligb oay Ob eekend i T.../ W *3 „X. • ’'k. WmmMm Members of the Organized Reserves examine the 75MM Recoilless Rifle after witi castration by the 2nd Armored Division. This is a part of the training the Rese rves get er unit camp at Camp Hood. onel Adcock Killed In Blast At Ft. Belvoir ! Colonel Thomas A. Adcock, as sistant PMS&T at A&M, was kill- d in a demolition explosion at brt Belyoir, Virginia July 22. plonel Adcock was attending sum- er chmp at Fort Belvoir. .Colonel Adcock, senior instructor in ! the engineering section of the Military Science Department, first came to A&M in September of j(fT939. In February 1942 he left the college and went to Alaska to jvork or( the Alcan highway. He T ater shw duty in the, European heater. Among other ribbons and decorations, he received the Leo pold 2nd Class while in Europe. < Colonel Adcock graduated from West Point in 1929 and received his masters degree frotn the Uni versity of Iowa in 1934. Born on October 14, 1905, his home was in Hopkinsville, Ky. He is survived by his wife and |wo children. Water Supply Cut Off Temporarily j The water supply to the college was cut off last night when the 16 inch pipe between here and Bryan was damaged. The line was open for some work being done on a sewer pipe nearby. Some of the machinery being used swung around accidentally and struck and broke the water line. A siqaller Tine of lower pressure was used during the four hours required to repair the line. Mills P. Walker, City Manager of Bry- ;tm, said that it was most unusual for a 16 inch main to be broken an accident. Cyan Firm Gives A&M Gift of $600 Cotton Poisons, Inc,, of Bryan, has given the Agricultural Experi ment Station, $600, R. D. Lewis, director of the station has announ ced. Cameron Siddall, manager of the Bryan firm, said that the money Mil oe used “in support of research on cotton insect control investiga tions under the supervision of Dr. J. C. Gaines of the Department of Entomology.” Batt Will Hold ‘Open ■ To Provide Election Rctu The Battalion will have an “Open House” f *o n until midnight Saturday in order to give the laidsjj tion returns. Jl 1 Members of The Battalion staff will post 1< tion returns and state returns on ttye black-boa •djihIR 202, Goodwin Hall. Chairs will be Available, aid a beyerage Will be served. <1 The Associated Press teletype will be tinuously until midnight in order to bring ret' oficounty balloting. Local returns wilLbe hand phone. ■ These releases will be available to anyohje, and faculty, who care to visit the office. r- T I By HENRY LACOUfij a dance $md the rej „ Free skating, live music”, #1 i ii Gilchrist Explains Chan In System Under New i * 'M ^ . jV -j Changes in the administration of!'the I Ad were explained to the “home folks” by Chancelh r- Gilchrist in a recorded speech rebroadcast bve} noon today. , . . j j Gilchrist traced the development of the A|&] irony the founding of the'parent* school here in 1871. The complexi ty of the present system, which in cludes A&M, John Tarletoft, NTAC Praitie View A&M, the, Agricul tural Experiment Station, the Ag ricultural Extension Service, and the Engineering Experiment Sta tion, ! was noted. I Under the new plan, Gilchrist said, the heads of Tarleton, NT AC,! and Prairie View, now deans, will become presidents of their respective institutions, with wide discretion and author ity. They will have primary ad ministrative responsibility i n their schools. Gilchrist expressed personal sat isfaction about the appointment of F. C, Bolton, present] Dean of the Colleige, as the first president of A&M under the nevr<, administra tive isystem. “Since 1909, Dean Bolton has worked diligently and faithfully for the best interests of the insti tution. He has never wavered in the face of a difficult or unpleas ant fask and has never failed to mak# any effort which he believed to be in -the best interests of the College. It is most fitting that his final year of service in an admin istrative capacity shquld be as President,” Gilchrist said. President-elect Bolton and his family will movie i ito the jl. dent’s home before n he ntllv isdh year begins in September; jGii|c lit said. Bolton’s office i s ve; hm GIANT PLANE TQ CROSS-COUNTRY BURBANK, Calif;, The world’s bigge st plane, the Navy’s j ic Constitution, will rr ski trans-continental fli fl N ' "l ~ Wi - Another IM AFRAID THAT |F I WENT, HOME DURING THE SUMMER, I D ! GET LONESOME FOR THE FRIENDLY AND POLITE SALES GIRLS AMD WAITRESS AT TH«- GATE-'p . I f I Where else could I find A LAUNDRY that will rcturi MV SMStrs- still dirty, ove WWi White socks red, blue, and purple, and - |RT MY new shiRt Be Yon ✓r ALL re pain- Y Inc student •what. GO HOME. >OR Mfir mi YOU GOING SCHOOL A SUMMER AND Ml$S^ THE FREE DAILY 'ERS IN THE. / NOT ON LIFE/* 1 ] C.A.f not FO»* «e‘m e tummt(t M SCHOOL IS THAT HE COULD NEVER GET HIS HAIR CUT AT HOME THE WAY HE DOES HERE. HC ASKS THE BARBER FOR A LIGHT TRIM AND GETS scalpidA *• l :? 1/ ■ — i: HA« GREER WAS * BULL OVER HAS (BEEN PROFESSC A CREA1 4^ MAN £ will be in the Act defnl ing, and the offices system administrat on the present Cotlegd tion Building. ; “We axle happy to hi privilege of serving fo|)r ]yqhh5 President of the A< .M| CpUqge Texas. I say we be< aupe my has contributed gnatly to success as we may 1 avte had;’’ christ said. [ J : [| “Our relations wit i tne Htaff ajtid student body in this position been a source ,0f reil us. We appreciate t|e nesses they have si “As we go on td greater opportunities fc r this great System, frcj Ai that our duties iare can still have tjhe official and persona as in the past."; ?lect “Symphony on Wax” are the main attractions on the Caim, pus this weekend. Intramural softball, games will also pro vide entertainment. ] I Free skating at The Grove will be one of the Friday attractions. Law and Bizzell will play on the lijghted diamond in the Intramural ~ sa fue. Game time ip eight p. m. ' Dance Saturday Night Saturday night The Grove will be the scene of a dance, with music furnished by the Modem Dowu- beattr The Downbeats have made ah addition to their organization i^ce|nt|y. ; ' ■ . ] | [ jlBill Tumer will play as an ad- ] dition to the brass section. Tum- |,eiij hopes to add more members to [the group in the near future. |j.[ j j Carmen Featured f;j J j | , I Lk 1 [Symphony op Wax, the all-rec‘ oxd program of classical and semi- classical music, will present the oftera “Carmen” Sunday evening ait six, The featured singers are Gladys Swairthouit as Carmen, Ramon Vi- nhy as Don Jose, Licia Albajneile a < Micaela, am ctMnillo, the Toreador. raela, and Robert Men’ll as E» This opera, written by Bizet, will be remembered as the opera from which the justly famous “Habd- niera” and the “Toreador Song” are Rice Commentsto|*, A brief sketch of [the story of the opera will be 1 ^iven by the Commentator, Marvin Rice, be tween each act so that everyone may understand what is^ happen iimg while the music is being play^ n im ha; k® r These programs will continue to b^ preseated each Tuesday, Thurs day, and Sunday evening, at six. The programs art sponsored by Student Activities. TWlandscape Art Students Receive , Bclsterling Award? ! C. Fl Morris, Jr., of Houston am Martin John Zerr of Corpus Chris- ti, landscape art students at A&M have been awarded the ffplsterl- iitig Scholarships. . M. The Bclsterling Scholarships have a value of $300 and extend from 'September 1, 1948, to May 3L 1949. . . The scholarships were awarded by The Dallas Garden Club. Mrs; Mark Lemmon is chairman of the Scholarship Committee of the club. Morris transferred to A&M from the University of Houston. He [entered school here in September 11946. He'works for an engineer- ing firm in Houston- during the summer, doing draftsman’s „ work; He is employed by the grounds de partment of A&M during , the school year. Zc|rr’specializes in sketching and eneral design. He is working for /finds' trier.; I- undseape architect this sum- tl p'J- antis Returns van Yaritis returns to throw, ght into coming election. Chancellor - Elect Gilchrist strums note of welcome on guftar.' See Page 2 for story. wi; FHERSI tA l AFFORD TO MU« THEME .Y RELAXATION out at AY THEY ARE IN USE THEY .COULD .OOO I.. . OR THE •S' SQUARE R, iCAN YOU IM A GUY THAT “"OL To^ CLAIMS Ey.ri Ti ! Lf2v