Battalion Editorials Page 2 THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1951 ' THE WARM SEASON APPROACHES Something Rotten In Texas POLISH up that Lone Star, put on your ^ best suit of Texas pride and read the latest issue of Collier’s. Someone has finally got around to declaring that “There’s Some thing Rotten in the State of Texas.” To deviate from the usual Texan’s brag- gary and at the risk of losing our citizenship as a Texan, we agree one-hundred percent. An article in the national magazine takes a thorough and uncomplimentary look at the filthy politics of Duval County and South Texas. The resulting expose threatens the notoriety of even Chicago and Kansas City. Tracing the history of the Parr regime in South Texas, the story dwells particularly on the Johnson-Stephenson election dispute and the cold-blooded murder of radio an nouncer W. H. “Bill” Mason who dared to oppose the machine. After inheriting his iron-fisted control from his father, George Parr spread out his game of fraud and foul government until it now holds state and national influence. From his San Diego, Tex. headquarters, the South Texas Czar pulls shady dealings to his heart’s content. Significantly mentioned in the article is the order from Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black quashing the investigation of the plainly fraudulent election of Lyndon B. It is astonishing hoio little you miss the news that you do 7iot hear- about. Protection For Freedom of Speech JUSTICE Hugo Black, dissenting in the Monday Supreme Court ruling that upheld the conviction of top Communist leaders in the U. S., listed in his opinion the fear that the convictions watered down freedom of the speech so much that it is not likely to protect any but “safe or orthodox views.” For his concern in the matter we would like to nominate Mr. Black to either our State Department or a prominent position on the UN Assembly. Apparently he would make a good candidate. His fears seem to match those of the na tional and international leaders who can’t call a war by its right name and who don’t dare impose any “harsh” restrictions on any one for fear of stepping on a few toes. Pray tell, what does Mr. Black think is included in the constitutional guarantee of free speech ? Did his engrossment in the Bill of Rights cause him to overlook the funda mental statement that “all governments de rive their just powers from the consent of the governed.” The ideal comes from the preamble to the Declaration of Independence, a document that holds some precedence over the first ten amendments to the Constitution. And that ideal is the clearest definition available of our form of democratic govern ment—a government of, by and for the peo ple. We challenge any intimation that Com munism could endure an instant under that doctrine. Perhaps Justice Black would prefer that we sit by and idly watch arrogant Commun ist leaders lay the groundwork for destruc tion of the government under which they seek protection. His attitude in the matter calls, indeed, for legitimate exercise of the practice of freedom of speech. When you hear an individual criti cized by another, you might try to find out just why the critic is in censed. Johnson over former governor Coke Stephen son. Black is the “liberal wing” justice who voiced one of the two dissenting opinions iri the recent Supreme Court ruling on Com munist leaders. The article should be well worth your while. It’s guaranteed as a good antidote to an overdose of Boyce House and other notor ious Texas braggarts. Extra-Curricula # Activities For All W7E ALL naturally assume that a newcomer ^ to college life needs a few words of guid ance on what to do with his college time and how to make the most of his college career. We regret, however, that more time is hot spent teaching a few of the same lessons to returning Aggies and summer students from other colleges. Senate Passes Tax Bill Will Adjourn Friday AUSTIN, June 7—UP)—The legis- ed a deadlock that has kept the passed in the Senate. It returned lature agreed on a tax program legislature in overtime session to the House with amendments, yesterday and voted to end its since May 8. The House accepted the dead- session Friday at noon. The tax plan will raise $65,000.- lock-breaking tax compromise, 120 The House was first to pass the ° 0{ > ™ new mone y> the to 11 Senate approval was 29 to 2. adjournment resolution. The Sen- budget, and provide substantial The House beat down an effort to ate concurred during a long after- iunds fo1 ' building rural roads for delay consideration of the joint noon session two y eai ' s - The rural road bloc conference committee report. 1 The legislators will reconvene in considered it a victory. . Advocates of delay said they an unofficial session next week to the revenue bill continues omm- wanted to keep the legislatuic in hear an address bv General Doug- bus tax increases adopted at the session until General MacArthur las MacArthur. special session last year with some speaks June 13. Other members " The' House held a brief after- further raise, and adds a tax on objected to the expense, and noted noon session and recessed until to- gathering natural gas. The House that a resolution has been passed morrow. The Senate killed a pro- was holding out for the gathering providing for an informal session posed constitutional amendment to f ax and f° r assurance of rural to hear the general, give elective state and county offi- 1,oa d support. House approval of the tax plan cers four-year terms. Other important legislation made brought cries of “let’s go home,” Then it began debate on a con- Progress. arK j that apparently labelled the gressional redistricting bill. The House accepted Senate lawmakers’ mood. The redistricting debate was changes in a proposed constitution- The Houge gent to the governor temporarily shut off. Senators vot- al amendment boosting the ceiling ei ht billg revamp i n g t h e state’s ed to hold a night session. on state welfare spending from cr f minal code . 0 ne m | kes it a fel . Overwhelming approval of a $35,0 00 ,000 to $42,000,000 a jear. 0]iy for a person to drive while compromise tax-rural roads financ- That ^assured^ submission of the under'the^ 1 infTuence'of TiquorTfTt special election ig a gecond offense _ A j ury couki ing formula by both Houses end- amendment — this fall. at a Oil Anti-Trust Suit Receives Dismissal By Federal Court Controversial Bill WASHINGTON, June 7 -(£>)- his college education. We have always felt it paradoxical that mind Th yesteMay m about Ch trymg to a serious-minded college student should have gef practically all of the multi- . , . . ,, . „ . bilhon-dollar oil industry into one to be urged to engage m those extras of col- courtroom for a single trial on lege life that do so much to lighten his cur- ant , i ^ rust c b ar 8' es - . , , ... ,, . ,. Attorney General McGrath went ricular burden while vastly supplementing into federal district court and got a dismissal of the anti-trust suit ml , , ,. , . . filed' more than ten years ago. Throughout the paper this last week have against the American Petroleum appeared invitations to students to join in Instlt ute and 367 individual oil . „ , . . corporations, various phases of extra-curricular activity, stripped of legal frills, his mo- So far response has been meager. There are t 101 } s f ld simply that the case was . just too big for any practical probably two principle reasons for this short- handling. He said he will proceed against various elements of the industry in smaller cases, involv ing fewer defendants and less complex issues. Largest Action coming in a summer term. In the first place a sizeable number of the students live off the campus. This es pecially holds true for the co-eds. And sec ondly, many of the summer students are graduate students, usually older than their undergrad brethren. Neither reason seems to us a valid ex cuse for shying away from our off class ac tivity. In fact extra-curricular activities could well serve as the bond to tie the grad and non-campus students closer to their col lege friends and to college life. Truman Accused down to 225 by dissolutions, an in active status or divorcement from the major coiporations. . . Practical Difficulties” McGrath asserted “the practical difficulties” of a trial were too great to go ahead. His announce ment disclosed that the Justice De partment has been considering abandonment for a long time, on the recommendations of Assistant Attorney General H. Graham Mor- ison, Anti-trust chief, and several of his predecessors. The attorney general emphasized that the program of “segment” prosecutions is already well under way and said investigations look ing to further actions are going forward. Currently under inquiry are complaints by some smaller concerns that the do not have ae- ard Stations, Inc.; which has re cess to common carrier pipelines, The big case, brought by then that they are shut out from many Attorney General Francis Biddle in - " ^ September, 1940, was the largest single anti-trust action ever start ed. It charged an over-all conspir acy of monopoly in the whole petroleum field, starting with the production of crude oil from the ground and ending in the sale of diverse finished products in retail outlets. The defendants include all of the major oil companies. Before the dismissal, the 367 corporate defendants had been cut retail outlets, that many refining processes are available to them only through patent pools charging excessive royalties and that sup plies of crude oil are controlled by a relatively small group of com panies. The department is also studying alleged price-fixing in the industry. Separate cases already started include: An, injunction suit against Stand ard bil of California and Stand- Interpreting the News In Tidelands Action Bvitisll~tjS I oliCy Gap Now Closing By J. M. ROBERTS, JR. Associated Press News Analyst TRIE staunch forefathers of Texas didn’t miss much when they 1 drew up the An nexation Agreement in 1845. Following in the path of what these men outlined many years ago, Texas Attorney General Price Daniel has accused President Truman of violating that agreement. He says Truman did so by directing the Federal Gov ernment to sue for the Texas tidelands. Daniels asserted that nationalization of Texas’ tidelands contrary to the solemn agreement between our two sovereigns is worse than nationalization of British oil in- u - N - seat n °. w held b v the Na - y tionahsts. But at Tuesday s trus- terests in Iran. teeship council meeting Sir Alan The attorney general’s statements appear Burns countered Russia’s usual , , . . ... .. i .. motion lor using the Nationalists to be justified with the added information and seating the Reds by siding that Presidents Tyler and Polk both pro- with the United States, mised President Sam Houston of the Re- Worn Practice public of Texas that titles of lands in the de clared boundries of the Republic would be defended. been trying to avoid upsetting the pattern of natural Japanese trade and thus ease the burden of her The gap between British and own responsibility for the occupied American policy regarding China country’s economic status. BC w7thlut b fa C „fa S ie g thUlSritish H °”S K °”S Without lantare, the nntish with t it mainland trade. The have dropped their effort to se- winshi of the two problems is an cure Chinese Communist represen- exa f e of what makes complete tation in the United Nations. Anglo-American agreement just as Since she extended diplomatic dif f icult as it makes it essential. recognition to Peiping, Britain has voted with Russia that the Com munists should be placed in the by disregarding the contract and promises of t\Vo former presidents. The Battalion Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Traditions "Soldier, Statesman, Knightly Gentleman” Entered as second-class matter at Post Office at College Station, Texas, under he Act of Congress of March 3, 1870. Member of The Associated Press The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, is published five times a week during the regular school year. During the summer terms, The Battalion is published four times a week, and during examination and vacation periods, twice a week. Days of publication are Monday through Friday for the regular school year, Tuesday through Friday during the summer terms, and Tuesday and Thursday during vacation and examination periods. Subscription rates $6.00 per year or $.50 per month. Advertising rates furnished on request. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news dispatches cred ited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. JOEL AUSTIN Andy Anderson Associate Editor and Sports Editor Bill Aaberg City Editor Vivian Castelberry British patience with Red tac tics in Korea has worn thin, he said. Not that withdrawal is in tended but, he implied, as long as Red China remains an aggressor, The U. b. Supreme Court ruled that when it will get no more positive support needed by the national government, - “prop- from Britain. ... ... . . ,. . _ . The statement came at an oppor- erty rights must then be SO subordinated to tune moment for Secretary Ache- political rights as in substance to coalesce and son > under fire for relying on ,. , . ,, agreement among U. N. members, unite in the national soyerign. rather than the veto, which the It is unfortunate that in spite of the £ tate . Department has criticized _ n , Russia for using m the matter of agreement, our Federal Government has seen u. N. membership. Acheson said fit to deprive Texas of the tidelands wealth be col l ld kee x? Peiping out without it, and the British action tends to support him. It also increases the conviction that the divergent Anglo-American views on China will not be allowed to hold up a Japanese peace treaty much longer. Britain’s main wor ries about Japan seem to revolve around competition-revived textile production and ship-building. In these discussions, the argu ment about who should sign for China, with Britain advocating Peiping’s case, may have been largely a bargaining point. It would not be consistent for her to insist on Red China’s participation in the Japanese deal while with drawing insistence regarding the U. N. membership. Suggestion Withdrawn Already Britain had withdrawn a suggestiion that Formosa be giv en to the Red government as the de facto ruler of China in return for a Korean peace treaty. One of the great problems in both U. S. and British policy is ti'ade between Japan and China on the one hand, and Hong Kong and Women’s Editor China on the other. The U. S. has Represented nationally by National Ad- vertising Service Inc., at New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. Qampt. TODAY thru SATURDAY —•Features Start— 1:32 - 3:39 - 5:46 - 7:53 - 10:00 ERROL OLiViA ’ANN mm ■liViA eH AVI LLANO] ■SHERIDAN DODGE CITY A WARNER BROS. RE-RELEASE DIRECTED BY Original Scrwi PI MICHAEL CURTIZ NEWS — CARTOON that exclusive dealing contracts between major oil companies and their service station outlets vio late the Clayton Act. An action against Sun Oil at Philadelphia, due for early trial, charging Sun with keeping com petitors out of thousands of its service station outlets in 19 states. recommend a fine of $100 to $5,000 or ten days to two years in jail,» A controversial bill to permit the or ^ or a Penitentiary sentence railroad commission to establish up to ^ lve y ears - minimum field prices for natural Conference Committee gas was virtually killed in the r, u i Senate. The Senate refused to sus- , Both Hous< r s a Pproved a con-, pend its rules to consider the ference committee report on a bill House-approved measure. S non f f r The Sat, passed a House-ap- ““ . proved bill making it illegal to =>miinment for Three changes were made in the^ soil conservation act. One sets a maximum of $700 which conser vation districts can spend for new equipment without approval of the state board of control and legis lative audit committee. Repair of equipment in excess of $200 must receive prior approv al of those two agencies. suited in a Supreme Court ruling maintain a place or equipment for ag °' playing policy games. It went back to the House with amendments. The bill proves penalties of $100 to $1,000 and jail terms from 30 to 90 days. A bill requiring drivers involved in traffic accidents to show proof of financial responsibil ity, through insurance or other means, for claims up to $15,000 was V ARMOUR CLOVER BLOOM “99” Made in Real Churns Yellow Oleomargarine Pound 39c • MARKET • REN FED BABY BEEF Porter House Steak, lb. 79c SHORT CUT—NO BONE Ham Slices lb. 79c Ham Hocks lb. 25c TALL KORN—SLICED Bacon lb. 47c FRESH TENDER CALVES Liver lb. 79c FRESH GROUND MEAT FOR Hamburgers . . . . lb. 62c • PRODUCE • CARTON Tomatoes . . 18c 490 SIZE Lemons doz. 21c 150-SIZE WINESAP Apples . lb. 9c ALSO—HOME GROWN Corn - Squash - Beans B.I. Peas, Cucumbers & Tomatoes • GROCERIES Crisco 3 lb. can 99c CROSSE POINTE DICED- Carrots . . . . -NO. 2!/ 2 CANS 2 cans 21c MALLORY SLICED BABY—NO 2'/ 2 CANS Beets 2 cans 21c NO. 2 CANS—BOUNTY BLENDED ORANGE & Grapefruit Juice, 2 cans 19c 46-OZ. CAN TEXAS CLUB Orange Juice 25c QUART JAR DIAMOND—SOUR OR Dill Pickles 27c 2—303 CANS MUSSELMAN’S Apple Sauce . . . 35c 3 CANS HEINZ Strained Baby Food . . 25c 2—NO. 2 CANS MOON ROSE Whole Green Beans . . 43c 2—NO. 2 CANS—DOLE’S Pineapple Juice . . . .27c 14-OZ. BOTTLE HEINZ Tomatoe Ketchup . . . 25c 5 LB. BAG BEWLEY’S BEST—WITH 2 LB. BAG BEWLEY’S BEST MEAL Flour only 49c WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT ALL SALES Specials for Friday & Saturday — June 8th & 9th Charlie's Food Market North Gate — WE DELIVER — College Station LPL ABNER Easy Credit By Al Capp Editor f