College Station’s Official Newspaper; Circulated Daily To 90% of Local Residents The Battalion PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE “I Admire the Human Race” See Story, Editorial Page Number 166: Volume 51 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1951 Price Five Cents New Freshmen Hear Activity Program Outlined at Meeting By JOEL AUSTIN Battalion Editor “Academic achievement is what you came here for. How well you do will depend greatly on how I well you get along with people be cause if you get along with people ti in college work you can be as- ■ sured of gaining greater academic achievement.” Those were the words of ad- i| vice spoken to Basic Division fresh men last night by Dr. C. Clement French, dean of the college, at an !§, orientation meeting in the MSC. “Your employer will expect many things of you when you come ■t out of college. What you do in rl the next four years will have a direct bearing on whether or not ■i: you fulfill his expectations,” Dr. ^f'rench said. Factual Knowledge The dean cited the importance | of factual knowledge and intellect Apifo the major characteristics looked B^^r in the prospective employee. “The basic reason you came here was to leam something. Don’t learn something in the exclusion of all other things, but by all means get a well rounded educa tion,” he said. Presiding at the meeting of ap proximately 230 freshmen military students, Dr. John Bertrand, dean of the Basic Division, next intro duced W. L. Penberthy, dean of men. Dean Penberthy stressed the im portance of extra-curricula activi ties in the college program. “Your spai’e time can curse you or bless you according to the way you spend it—it’s up to you,” he said. Function of Office The dean also explained the func tions of the Dean of Men’s office and what services are made avail able to students from it. Dean Penberthy introduced Bar ney Welch director of Intramurals at A&M. Welch told the freshmen about the vast intramural pre- All Happy Now Divorce Receives ‘Poetic Justice 9 Tyler, June 6—t®—Tyler di- : vorce lawyer F. G. Swanson filed a petition in verse. Graven Beard, attorney for the defense, replied in kind. Then today, Judge Otis T. Duna- ■t gan followed suit in ruling on the ■ case. The result including a happy end- B ing, was poetic. Motion to dismiss in the case of ^ Nell Hayes vs Robert D. Hayes: The parties to this cause can now relate Surprisingly again, they’ve cleared the slate. However rough the pleadings herein filed, They now admit again, they’re reconciled. Alone, the roughness fades; ’twas worse than tough. So, once again, they’ll try to Police Officer Tells Galveston To Clean House Galveston, June 6—(AP) — 0 The state’s top police officer warned Galveston today to “clean house” or he would send in the Texas Rangers to do the job. Director of Public Safety Homer Garrison Jr. arrived with State Rep. Fred Meridith of Terrell for the Texas Police Association Con vention. Meridith is chairman of the House Crime Investigation Committee which recently held a lengthy closed session on the opera tions of the Maceo interests in Galveston. “Galveston has been a thorn in my side” but “new information” uncovered by the crime probe would enable his state police force to en force state laws here. “Either Galveston itself will clean house or the rangers will come in and do it,” he said. “Galveston is trying to live in /tn world of its own,” Meridith said. 1 volt is trying to segrate itself ^from the balance of the state. The gambling situation is not Galves- ’ton’s problem. It is the state’s problem.” Meridith said that illegitimate businesses in Texas last year took in nearly $4,000,000. He named gamblers, i-acketeers and hoodlums as operators of the illegitimate en terprises. He cited results of his commit tee’s investigation in Galveston, “which it has been vividly shown that a small handful of men have banded themselves together in pro moting the violations of our state laws.” He named these violations as sale of liquor by the drink, operat ing of gambling houses with open dice and roulette tables, public operation of lotteries, such as tip books on a “large scale operation, display of slot machines, transmis sion and broadcast of horseracing information, open and admitted bookmaking and gambling.” x live together, Each hoping, praying for less stormy weather. With plans completed for a chance of scene, they hope to live quite happy and serene. Wherefore, with all above al leged, confessed, Proceeding here, we move they be dismissed. —F. G. Swanson, attorney for plaintiff. Defendant’s reply: “ . . . attorneys for defendant are glad Swanson saw his blunder; “What God hath joined togeth er let no man put asunder.” —Craven Beard, attorney for de fendant. Court’s Ruling: “In the above case, lawyers Swanson and Beard admit A boner they pulled when they encouraged a fit. Between plaintiff and defendant to gain an end That happens too often because of the trend. Domestic relations are talked in this our today Away from the principles and precepts of yesterday; So it is ordered, adjudged and decreed, That the Swanson-Beard prac tice be adopted in deed; And this cause in all things dis missed So the parties may continue in wedded bliss. —Otis T. Dunagan, 7th District court. Plant Breeders Meeting Here Plant breeders from 13 south ern states, Puerto Rico and the U. S. Department of Agriculture yes terday opened a two-day discus sion here of world plants. The breeders wanted to know the plants’ possible adaptation to growing conditions in the south ern states. gram carried on at A&M, and he encouraged their participation in the numerous sports scheduled for the summer. The intramural director asked the boys to “get to know each other” and be better equipped to play as a team in the sports sche duled. Pete Hardesty of the Student Activities Office was next on the program after an introduction from Dean Penberthy. The Student Activities business manager explained the functions of that office and of his duties as sponsor of the college clubs sys tem. Hardesty explained the various programs sponsored by Student Ac tivities. He urged interested stu dents to join the Singing Cadets, The Aggieland Oi’chestra, and oth er campus groups. Next on the schedule was a short “sermon” from Roland Bing, manager of Student Publications. Bing told the boys, as a word of advice, “Be your own self at your very best all the time and you will achieve success in any endeavor.” Publications Program Bing outlined the student pub lications program to the new stu dents and urged them to become a member of one of the publica tion staffs. He asked for students interested in working on the only active Summer publication, The Battalion, to meet him after the meeting. M. E. Thomas of the Memorial Student Center staff explained the functions of that building and told the freshmen of the many activi ties available to them there during leisure time. Dr. Bertrand adjourned the meet ing to The Grove where a free movie was shown. School Laundry Lists Schedule For Summer The laundry schedule for all summer school students has been released by Bennie A. Zinn, assistant dean of men. Dormitory students whose last names begin with the letter A through L will turn in laundry be fore 9 a. m. on Mondays. Those students with last names begin ning with the letters M through Z will turn in laundiy before 9 a, m. on Tuesdays. All students living in dormitor ies 14, 15, 16, 17, and Walton will turn in laundry at the West end of P. G. Hall, while students living in Milner and Bizzell turn in laundry at the Hart Hal station. All day students, including those living in College Apartments, will turn in laundry at the main office on Mondays before 9 a. m. College employees will turn in laundry at the same time and place as day students. Each student is allowed 23 pieces per bundle each week and all extra pieces will be charged accordingly. Students who send more than one bundle a week will be charged 75 cents for each extra bundle. All dormitory stations will be closed from 1 p. m. to 2 p. m. daily, and closed all day Saturday, according to Zinn. Greets New Prexy : Bolton to Attend Florida Assembly Dr. F. C. Bolton, President Emeritus of the College, and the Rev. A. T. Dyal, pastor of the First Presbytertan Church of Bry an, will represent Brazos Presby tery as commissioners at the Gen eral Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, U. S. If The meeting will be held in Or lando, Fla., June 7-12. I Executive Committee George B. Morgan ’18 A. E. Caraway ’34, retiring president of the Former Students As sociation, greets newly elected prexy George B. Morgan ’18, who took over the reins of that organization recently. Morgan is president of the Beaumont Natural Gas Company in Beaumont. Posing for a picture between sessions of a recent conference here are members of the A&M For mer Students Association Executive Committee. They are (left to right, front row) Bob Sherman ’24, Waco; Oscar Hotchkiss ’24, Port Arthur; Jiggs Freeman ’22, Shreveport; Dutch Sebesta ’32, Marlin; Dick Hervey, ’42, Executive Secre tary, College Station. Standing on the back row are Ed Caraway ’34, retiring president, Dallas; A. F. Mitchell ’09, new vice-president, Corsi cana; George Morgan ’18, new president, Beau mont; Louis Bloodworth ’32, AVichita Falls; and N. E. Buescher ’22, McAllen. OPS Schedules ‘Home Folks’ Meeting in Bryan June 12 Scheduling price stabalization meetings on the “home folks” level, the Houston District Office of Price Stabilization is sending representa tives to Bryan Tuesday, June 12 to conduct a prices clinic and help merchants and businessmen comply With government regulations. The price clinic will be held in the Bryan City Library from 9 a. m. until 12 noon, sponsored by the Bryan Chamber of Commerce. OPS Representative Four OPS representatives will conduct the clinic and counsel with businessmen. They are W. B. Foulis of the consumer goods branch, Joseph J. Gatti of the food branch, A. G. Bader of the fuel and chemi cals branch and E. N. Riechardt of the industrial materials and manufactured products branch. Retailers, wholesalers, restau rant operators and slaughterers of Brazos County and vicinity are urged to attend the clinic and bring their problems on price regu lations, Charles H. Winerich, Jr., director of the Houston OPS, said. Explaining that he has elaborat ed on the price clinic program so that merchants may have the ser vices of OPS representative in their home communities, Winerich said that the OPS was cooperating in every way to make it easier and quicker for retailers and whole salers to comply with government regulation and record-keeping re- Wildlife Group Leaves on Field Trip to Mexico Nineteen members of the Wildlife Management Depart ment left the campus Tuesday for Victoria, Mexico, for field studies in botony and wildlife techniques. The group, accompanied by Dr. Leonard Wing, wildlife manage ment professor and Chester M. Rowell, biology instmetor, will work in coordination with the Tex as Game, Fish and Oyster Commis sion and the United States De partment of Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service, on the project concerning the AVhite Wing Dove. It is believed that doves from that area of Mexico might possibly help to populate some sections of Tex as. In addition, the group will make a botonnical study of a section of Mexico, near Victoria, ranging from the lowlands to the foothills of the mountains in that area. A study of the desert area near Vic toria will also be made. Results of such studies in the past have been the discovering of unknown species. That is what this years group is expecting to ac complish, according to Dr. Wing. While on the field trip, the group will camp out, living in tents and studying by gasoline lanterns, for the six weeks of their studies. quirements. He said that it was es sential for merchants to retain their records at their places of bus iness in order to comply. Meat retailers in the 39 South east Texas counties comprising the Houston District have until June 18 to post official OPS retail beef ceiling price lists, Winerich announced. Because of delays in printing the official lists, the OPS extended the posting requirement for two weeks from June 4. Retail ceiling prices above which retailers can not charge for beef went into effect May 14 and posting of the offi cial ceilings had been scheduled to begin within 20 days. Kosher Beef The extension does not apply to the ceiling price list for kosher beef sold at retail. The kosher lists will be available in ample quantity by June 11, the date for their posting. Although the retail beef posting time is being extended until June 18, retailers have been required since May 14 to display the individ ual prices for cuts of beef by grades. These prices must not be more than the ceiling price. When the official lists are available, housewives will have a readily available check that these prices are not in excess of official OPS ceilings. The 8 by 17-inch posters in black ink on white paper are now being prepared by the government print ing office. Display Lists Retailers may display the price lists as soon as they get copies from the district office. They may use either the official list which will be furnished free of one that is an exact copy of the official OPS list if the planting is legible and at least as large. The price list must be placed at or near where the meat is sold and where customers can readily see and read it. At least one list must be. posted for each 20 feet of meat counter space. Schoolboy Apologizes For ‘Borrowing’ Steam Engine London, June 6—DP)—A shiny, black railroad engine gleamed in the sunshine on a track in the yards today. Steam hissed into the air to show it was ready for work. Suddenly there was a grinding noise, the brake lever went up and the engine began to move. Smoke belched from its stack as it lumbered about 30 yards down the track. Then it stopped, churned backward and came to a halt on almost exactly the same spot from which it started. A small, sooty schoolboy peered from the engineer’s cab, slid to the ground and slapped the dirt from his hands. “Sorry mister,” he said to the red-faced station foreman who came running up, “I always wanted to do it. But I put it back, didn’t I?” Camera Club Schedules Discussions in MSC The MSC Camera Club gets its Summer program underway tomor row night with the first of a ser ies of “print discussions.” An open invitation has been extended by the president of the club to “anyone interested in improving the quality of their pictures.” Scheduled for 7:30 tomorrow evening in the MSC, the print dis cussions will be presented in terms understandable to the layman, ac cording to club officers. “Because he uses a box camera or Brownie is no reason why a per son should not be just as interested Alexander Will Go To SBSUC Meeting David K. Alexander, director of the Baptist Student Union at A&M, left Sunday for Ridgecrest, N. C. to attend the Southwide Baptist Student Union Conference meeting the 6th through 14th. Alexander will participate on the Southwide program at various times through out the session. in improving his pictures as the person who uses an expensive cam era,” Henry Cole, club president said. The Camera Club’s purpose is to help everyone get better pictures and more enjoyment from their picture taking. And our series of print discussions are being present ed in line with this purpose, Cole said. Developing and printing, a sec ond feature of the club’s Summer program, will be taught to those interested. Persons wishing to re ceive this instruction will have ac cess to the MSC darkroom facil ities and a regular meeting sche dule will be arranged, Cole said. “The darkroom is completely equipped for the processing of roll film and cut film up to four or five inches Cole explained. Assisting Cole in the Camera Club program this Summer are Alvin Aaronson, vice-president; and J. R. Alderice, treasurer. Refreshments will be served at tomorrow night’s meeting. Mud, Commies Hold Allies To Two Mile Gain Tokyo, June 6—6*?)— United Na tions troops smashed forward a mile or two today through Korean mud and Red defenses. Tight censorship blacked out just what happened. Or how close Allies pressed to the vital Red Chorwon-Kumhwa-Pyonggang tri angle facing the central front. Close censorship often screens important battlefront actions. Eighth Army troops gained one to nearly two miles around Yon- chon on the Western approaches to Chorwon. A tank patrol, stabbing out to ward Chorwon, probed 2V> miles in front of Allied lines. It ran a gantlet of heavy fire from Com munists dug in along ridges on both sides of the road. Reds Pull Back On the Eastern approaches to the troop and supply triangle, Reds pulled back as much as three miles between Hwachon and Kumhwa. They withdrew to stronger defen ses under cover of night, protected by small rear guard forces. U. N. troops followed cautiously. They combed the wooded hills as they moved up taking no chances of walking into a Red trap. The Eighth army gave this pic- ture of the front Wednesday: • WEST: Only patrol action on the dragging left flank South of the 38th Parallel. Gains of up to two miles near Yonchon, six miles North of the border. • CENTER: U. N. forces gained a little more than a half mile in the Yongpyong area; one to two miles to the East and Northeast. Limited gains were made in the Hwachon area. • EAST: Reds put up heavy re sistance North and Northeast of Yanggu at the Eastern end of Hwachon reservoir. This was the communique’s only reference to heavy resistance. AP Correspondent George A. McArthur said fierce fighting flared all along the Eastern sector from Yanggu to Inje. Slight Gains North Koreans, fighting stub bornly from their dugouts in the hills, held attacking allies to slight gains above Yanggu. U. N. infantrymen attacked through a mortar barrage North and Northeast of Inje. They hack ed out small gains. “Despite mounting Red resist ance,” McArthur reported, “There were no indications that the Com munists were fighting anything but a defensive action.” He said no Chinese were en countered in the area, only North The Fifth Air Force reported that with a letup in the rains it mounted 456 air strikes during the day. Pilots complained a low haze hampered their effectiveness. Ground Fighting—Light The Eighth Army described vir tually all ground fighting as light to moderate. But the headquar- ers’ view of what constitutes light or heavy fighting doesn’t neces sarily agree with the viewpoint of the doughboy actually in the fight. Field reports said Allies were less than ten miles from Chorwon, western gateway to the.wide and' long Pyonggang Valley. The flat lands, beyond the rugged ridges over which the infantrymen are fighting, is ideal tank country. Students Can Still Take Draft Tests Students who were sche duled to take the Selective Service college qualification test on May 26 and did not due to circumstances beyond their control may get a chance at i a later test. Brigadier General Paul L. Wake- I field, state Selective Service di- j rector, was advised to this effect | today in a telegram from Major j General Lewis B. Hcrshey, national | director of Selective Service. Previously, test rules made it! impossible for any student to take the test if he missed it for any reason. Text of the official telegram re ceived is as follows: “Students who were issued tick ets for the May 26th test and were precluded from taking test by cir cumstance beyond their control should immediately write to the Selective Service Examining Sec tion, Educational Testing Service, P. O. Box 586, Princeton, N. J., explaining the circumstances and returning their ticket of admission, if available. “New tickets will be issued for later test in deserving cases.” MSC Library Receives Books f rom Perry George Sessions Perry, Tex as author, autographed eight of his past works for the A&M student body in the MSC Browsing Library Monday. The novelist inscribed, “Present ed to the Memorial Student Ceutef Browsing Library with the best wishes of George Sessions Perry,” in the eight books which weru presented to the library a few' moments earlier by the Associa tion of Former Students. At the present time, Perry is writing a historical resume of A&M in novel form for the Association as a 1951 Development Fund pro ject. The autographed books, which are available for student use, are Hold Autumn in Your Hand, Hack- berry Cavalier, Texas-A World in Itself, Where Away, My Granfty Van Families of America, Walls Rise Up,' and Tale of a Foolish Farmer, his latest novel. Architects Seek Permit to Organize Texas landscape architects have voted to petition the board of trustees of the American Society of Landscape Architects for per mission to create a Southwest Chapter of the society, Wallace M. Ruff, of the Department of Flor iculture and Landscape Architec ture, said today. At a meeting here Friday a committee was named to present the group’s intention to Bradford Williams, corresponding secretary of the society, Boston. A prelim inary constitution and by-laws will be prepared, Ruff says. The committee is composed of Robert F. White, College Station; Homer L. Fry, Austin; Donald D. Obert Fort Worth; Herbert L. Skogland and Ralph S. Ellifrit, Houston, members of the ASLA. Dr. D. A. Price Conference Speaker Veterinary Conference Slated Here The men whose job it is to keep Texas livestock healthy will gath er at A&M College Thursday and Friday for the fourth annual Texas Conference for Veterinarians. Leading authorities in many phases of veterinary science from several other states, as ’well as faculty members of the A&M Col lege School of Veterinary Medicine, Will appear on the program. Included are Dr. G. T. Easley, veterinarian of the Turner Ranch, Sulphur, Okla.; Dr. G. R. Moore, professor of veterinary surgery and medicine, Michigan State Col lege, and W. M. Coffee, general practioner of La Center Ky., and president of the American Veter inary Medical Association. Dr. R. D. Turk, head of the A&M Veterinary Parasitology De partment, is chairman of the com mittee responsible for arranging the annual conference. He has been assisted by Drs. W. W. Armistead, H. A. Smith, Leon C. Gibbs and F. P. Jaggi, Jr., all of A&M.