Page Two ~ THE BATTALION, College Station (Aggieland), Texas, Tuesday, April 29, 1947: Misled... Dr. T. 0. Walton was a campus hero a while back. Stu dents acclaimed him as their saviour. His “secret” files were loaded with enough explosive evidence to blast Gilchrist and his aides not only from the big white building, but into the pen as well—they believed. He was the source from whom blessings—and charges—flowed. He could do no wrong. His disciples are beginning to fall away from him now and slip into quiet corners to do some thinking. Some feel that they have been duped into following a false messiah. They are beginning to realize that he is not the man they thought he was, and with reason. The trek to Austin is a long one, but the largest number of Aggies to attend an investigation hearing speeded to the Senate chamber, forsaking their books for one night, in order to hear Walton“blow the lid off.” They sat through three hours of dreary testimony by Dean Bolton and the college comptroller, earnest W. H. Holzmann. Then, at elev en o’clock, Dr. T. 0. Walton took the stand. Spectators stood up, crowded close to the witness stand, whispering to each other, “This is going to be good!” Questioning of the former college president began, with rapier-tongued Sen. Dorsey Hardeman leading. Walton, in the course of his testimony, leveled some serious charges against the administration. He called it “authoritarian”. He charged intimidation, mishandling of funds, dictatorship, “inept” administration. But when asked for proof of these charges, he could furnish little. And his biggest concern was not for the stu dent body, but for the experiment station and extension service. • . r * t * * 4 • Walton breezed over details of student uprisings when he was president of A&M. He would not even label them as uprisings. This was calculated, no doubt, to leave the im pression that he had always had support of the student body. Students who were here before the war, in the spring of 1942, will dispute this. That spring, an objectionable “new order” rule was put out by President Walton. Meeting after meeting of the senior class resulted. Seniors planned a strike, but were in formed that if they carried it through, they would enter the army immediately as privates. The Battalion was strang ely silent during all this, but it is a well-known fact that certain members of the staff, fearing suppression, organized an underground publication criticizing the administration of T. O. Walton charging him with coercion, intimidation, etc. The leader, a junior, was apprehended and summarily tossed out of school for expressing his views. Certain mem bers of the Longhorn staff were severely disciplined. Was all this forgotten? Walton testified that no advice or counsel had passed from his lips to the ears of students. He had, he claimed, kept discreetly out of the whole controversy. But now it comes to light that there is a dusky chap in the cordwood somewhere. Delbert Shultz testified last week that not only had he consulted Walton about criticisms of the administration, but that Walton had actually written three paragraphs of the famous Shultz Letter personally. Sombody perjured himself, a serious offense, both mor ally and legally. And it smacked of collusion when the word ing of the prepared statement he read from the stand was almost identical to that of the Shultz letter. Although Walton denied it under oath, it is a known fact in select circles that he has been meddling in the internal affairs of the college, spreading unrest and dis content among the faculty and students with seemingly un founded charges about financial transactions of the college. The rumor is now circulating around the campus that both Walton and Clark have information which they did not air at the investigation, but are “saying” for a grand jury hearing. Evidently, it is a case of either cold feet, or lack of facts in the first place. The students are disappointed, bitterly disappointed. Dr. Walton has been like powder in the students’ skyrocket. A flash, a brilliant trail of light as the rocket goes up, up, up. Then, at the height of its trajectory, when a great burst of light is expected—pffffftttt. A dud! Judging from correspondence between Drs. Walton and Clark, they have been participants in a “Mutual Sympathy Society.” As Dr. Clark fizzled worse than Walton, they might continue to comiserate each other, but they need not expect any more student sympathy. The students’ case would be in a better position today were it not for the wild charges, inspired by outsiders, toss ed around at the outset. They have a grievance, a valid grievance, against Gilchrist’s conduct of student relations. A majority of the student body is opposed to him, perhaps more for the things he has not done than for his accomplish ed acts. Aggies have proven before their ability to stand on their own two feet. Dr. Walton’s help or inspiration should never have been offered or accepted. His participation in the con troversy has proved a hindrance rather than an aid. A True Light... We are a democracy, and there is only one way to get a democracy on its feet in the matter of its individual, its social, its municipal, its state, its national conduct, and that is by keeping the public informed. There is not a crime, there is not a dodge, there is not a trick, there is not a swindle, there is not a vice which does not live by secrecy. Get these things out in the open, describe them, attack them, ridicule them in the press and sooner or later public opinion will sweep them away. Joseph Pulitzer SHOTGUNS FOR SALE! LOVEMAN’S Department Store in Birmingham, Alabama has scheduled its advertising on the society page of the daily Post for years. Recently its copy featured H & R rifles. Said the ad: “Ten to one this .22 caliber repeater rifle .... is the gun for you!” Right alongside was an item headed, “Plans for Wedding An nounced.” The Battalion The Battalion,^ official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas and the City of College Station, is published tri-weekly and circulated on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday afternoons. Member Plssoaoted GpUe&iate p rG ss Entered as second-class matter at Post Office at College Station, (Aggieland), Texas, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1870. Subscription rate 4.00 per school year. Advertising rates on request. Represented nationally by National Advertising Service, Inc., at New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Allen Self Vick Lindley Charles E. Murray J. K. B. Nelson David M. Seligman Paul Martin Corps Editor Veteran Editor —Tuesday Associate Editor Thursday Associate Editor .Saturday Associate Editor _ Sports Editor Larry Goodwyn, Andy Matula, Jack Goodloe, Dick Baker, Earl Grant Sports Writers Wendell McClure Advertising Manager D. W. Springer Circulation Manager Ferd B. English, Franklin Cleland, William Miller, Doyle Duncan, Ben Schrader, Wm. K. Colville, Walter Lowe, Jr., Lester B. Gray, Jr., Carl C. Krueger, Jr., Mack T. Nolen Reporters Going Higher Mail Rates Go Greatest Disaster in History Of Up With Cost US Was GalvestonFlood in 1900 Of Living By H. W. Spencer Labor has been setting the pace for increased wages commensu rate rising cost of living. Among those following the same vogue will be the sedate Post Office Department. In lieu of wages in creased postal rates will be affect ed. The 1946 postal workers’ pay raise is more or less indirectly re sponsible as that increment cul minated a deficit trend in 83 out of the last 100 years of Post Office Department operation. In fact the department has been los ing about $300 million here of late. All kinds of postal service ex cept first-class mail are scheduled for a price rise. Some prices will be raised sharply others moder ately. Just about everyone will notice the change as most of the services will be altered. The in creased rates will probably go in to effect July 1. ★ As mentioned above, first-class mail is expected to remain the same, that is, 3 cents an ounce. Current legislation will no doubt prevent it from slipping to 2 cents an ounce on July 1, as the law now provides. Postal cards will be increased to 2 cents. The 100 percent jump is expected to bring at least $20 million in additional revenue, de spite the portended one-third drop in the use of postal cards. Busi ness and church reminders via the post card route will be curtailed. Despite the fact that neither the Post Office Department nor the airlines desire increases in air mail rates, the House Post Office and Civil Service Com mittee seem inclined to raise them. This will nullify the recent 8-cent to 5-cent an ounce reduct ion. The new rate is expected to be 6 cents an ounce. ★ Other services will probably be affected as follows: Special De livery for letters is likely to be increased from 13 cents to 20 cents; registered-mail fees will be raised about 25 percent; insured- mailed rates will be increased from 3 to 5 cents for $5 f insur ance, etc; and a money order for $50 will cost 25 instead of the present 18 cents. Newspapers and magazines will be paying more postage next year. The new rates now are being worked out under a complicated formula that involves the amount of advertising carried, the per centage of circulation deliveered through the mails, the service rendered the public, and whether a publication comes out daily, weekly, monthly or quarterly. Prospects are that small county papers will get the smallest in crease under this arrangement, while monthly magazines with mass circulation will be hardest hit by increased postal rates. Cancer Blamed On Cosmic Rays Cosmic rays which continually bombard us, piercing our bodies from head to toe at a rate of more than twenty times per second, may be the invisible guns that start off cancers. This was revealed in ex periments conducted by Dr. Frank H. J. Figge of the Maryland Med ical School in Baltimore. This is the first time that cosmic rays have been linked with cancer. Farmers and others who live most of their lives outdoors are less subject to internal cancers than persons spending most of their lives in buildings which pro duce cosmic rays showers and intensify the radiation. However, . we will not have to spend the rest of our lives in underground shelters to escape cancer-causing rays. Dr. Figge suggests that plastic material would be more pro tective than the conventional steel and concrete structure. Trotter to Attend Chicago Conference Dr. Ide P. Trotter, Extension director, will leave by plane to morrow for Chicago to participate in a conference 'called by the Farm Foundation. Members of the conference will consider problems of land grant colleges in social and economic fields. The conference is composed of two experiment station directors, two state Extension directors, two deans of agriculture, two presi dents of land grant colleges, a group of rural sociologists, and M. L. Wilson, director of the Federal Extension Service, Washington D. C. Enroute back to College Station, Dr. Trotter will be met in Dallas by Dean Joe Howell of John Tar- leton Agricultural College and will go with him to Stephenville to speak at Parent’s Day Services on Sunday, May 4. San Antonians To Meet Thursday at 7 Election of officers and the plan ning of summer activity will be the main points of the San Antonio A. & M. Club meeting Thursday evening at 7 p.m., according to President Tommy John. The meet ing will be held in Room 205, Aca demic Building. By Richard Alterman ^ The greatest disaster in Amer ican history was the Galveston flood of September 8, 1900. Be tween 5,000 and 8,000 lives were lost, and property damage totalled $30,000,000. The next greatest dis aster was the Johnstown Flood, May 31, 1889, which took 2,229 lives. The worst explosion in our his tory was recorded in 1865 when the ship Sultana carrying ex changed Union prisoners of war exploded- and sank seven miles north of Memphis. Over 1400 men lost their lives in this single blast. The most serious fire took 1,152 lives in October, 1871, at Peshtigo, Wisconsin. A forest fire swept the area. Some other major disasters are: 1906, San Francisco earthquake, 452 dead. 1903, Iroquois Theater fire, Chi cago^ 575 dead. 1944, Hartford circus fire, 168 dead. 1926, Florida hurricanes, 327 dead. 1915, U. S. Eastland capsized in Chicago, 812 dead. 1947, New London, Texas, school explosion, 294 dead. 1947, O’Connor electro - plating plant blast, Los Angeles, 15 dead. 1947, mine explosion, Centralia, Illinois, 111 dead. This year alone, more than thir ty-five catrophies in the U. S. have taken a toll of well over 1,100 lives. This year’s death toll is running at Printing Office, Reclamation Bureau Examinations Open The Civil Service Commission today announced examinations for Engineers for employment in the Bureau of Reclamation, and for the following positions in the Gov ernment Printing Office, Washing ton, D. C.: Electrotyper (Finish er and Molder); Stereotyper; Prin ter (Monotype Keyboard Opera tor Keyboard Operator and Slug Machine Operator); and Photoen graver. The Engineer positions, paying $3,397 to $4,902 a year, are located in Oregon, Washington, Californ ia, Arizona, Nevada, Idaho, Mon tana, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, North Dakota, Ne braska, Kansa^Gklahoina, and Texas. Td qualitypapplicafnts ’must have completed a professional en gineering curriculum leading to a bachelor’s degree in a college or university; or they must have had 4 years of technical engineering experience. Graduate study in en gineering may be substituted for 2 years of the required profession al experience. Applications must be filled with the Executive Secre tary, Central Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, Bureau of Re clamation, Room 230, New Cus tomhouse Building, Denver 2, Colo rado, not later than May 20. For Electrotyper and Stereotyp er positions ($1.94 an hour), ap plicants must have completed an apprenticeship of at least 5 years, or they must have had 5 years of practical experience. Applicants for Printer positions ($1.88 an hour) must have had at least 5 years appropriate exper ience. For Photoengraver positions ($2.10 an hour), applicants must have completed an apprenticeship of at least 6 years in the photoen graving trade, or have had at least 6 years of practical experience. Applicants for positions in the Government Printing Office must be received in the Civil Service Commission, Washington 25, D. C., not later than May 13. Further information and appli- the Commission’s local Secretary cation forms may be obtained from at the Post Office. a rate far above the average for the last ten years. Among the catastrophies which took more than 300 lives during the last decade are: 1942, Boston night club fire at Coconut Grove, 492 dead. 1937, Ohio-Mississippi valley floods, 360 dead. 1944, explosion of two ammuni tion ships at Port Chicago, Cali fornia, 322 dead. 1938, hurricane and flood along the Atlantic coast, 682 dead. 1947, explosion of French freight er Grandcamp loaded with ammo nium nitrate set off a series of blasts at Texas City, 575 dead. These disasters alone have tak en a toll of over 2,600 lives. The number of persons injured has run into the thousands, and property valued at millions of dollars has been destroyed. Texas Mishaps Totaled 10,000 Deaths and $200 Million Loss The April 16 explosion at Texas 4' City was the second worst disas ter ever recorded in Texas and the second within a week. The worst was the Galveston hurricane of September 8-9, 1900, which killed 5,000 - 8,000 persons with a prop erty damage estimated at $30,000,- 000, On April 9-10 a tornado struck the panhandle leaving 132 dead with property damage run ning into the millions. Among the other notable Texas tragedies was the second Galves ton hurricane of August 17, 1915. Some 275 inhabitants were killed and property in the amount of $50,000,000 was damaged. Other were the Brazos River flood of June 17 - July 1, 1899 and the Brazos River flood of December 1-5, 1913. The former killed 35 with a property damage of $9,000,- 000, as compared to 180 dead and damage amounting to $8,000,000 in the latter. A rainstorm throughout most of Texas on September 14, 1921 killed 224 persons with estimates of prop erty damage as high as $17,000,000. Another Texas hurricane at Corpus Christi September 14, 1919, left in its wake 284 dead and a property damage of $20,000,000. The aforementioned disasters killed almost 10,000 persons with property damage amounting to more than $200,000,000, Tyler Club Meets Thursday The Tyler A. & M. Club will meet Thursday evening at 7:15 p. m. to discuss plans for a party at the end of the semester, accord ing to W. P. Patrick, president. The meeting will be held in Room 108, Academic Building. Model Airplane Leaders' Short Course Slated The first annual short course of model aviation lead ers will be held on the cam pus May 9-11, respectively, under the direction of the Indus trial Education Department, it was announced Saturday. It will be a course in organizing and ad ministering model airplane clubs and contests. Cooperating agencies with the Industrial Education Department will be the American Legion posts of Texas and the Institute of Air Age Activities. Speakers and instructors will .in clude Dr. H. W. Barlow, dean of engineering; Chris H. Groneman, acting head of the Industrial Edu cation department of A&M and secretary of the Institute of Air Age Activities; E. F. Burgdorf, coordinator of A. M. A., District 8, including Texas, Oklahoma, Ar kansas, Louisiana and New Mexi co; R. R. Pressler, Southwest Gas Model Association representative and Academy of Model Aeronau tics contest director; R. L. Barton, vice-president and contest board representative A. M. A. District 8. The three-day airplane leaders’ meet will open with a welcome ad dress by Dean H. W. Barlow at 9 a. m., May 9. C. H. Groneman will act as master ceremonies. The following two days will be spent on the different phases of model airplane development and club organization. Try Our Service Department WORK GUARANTEED TERMS IP DESIRED VANCE MOTORS KAISER-FRAZER DEALER Phone 2-1605 1309 Hiway 6—S The Atmosphere and Hospitality of the OLD SOUTH is always to be found — at — HOTARD’S CAFETERIA 311 N. Main—Bryan ‘Where the art of fine cookery has not been forgotten’ Hospitality in your hands BRYAN COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. Research Survey To Be Given Sigma Xi The Sigma Xi Club of A.&M. will meet on Thursday evening, May 1, at 8 p.m. in the lecture room of the Animal Industry Building. The program will consist of a survey of the research work being conducted at A. & M. in the field of biochemistry and nutrition. Fol lowing brief reports from a num ber of research leaders, the group will be conducted on a tour through the research laboratories in the Animal Industries Building. All members are urged to be present for this program. 4 Day Service on Cleaning and Staffing. 1 Day Service on Main Springs and Crowns. 2 Hour Service for Crystals. T. C. HINMAN North Gate BRYAN, TEXAS WED., THURS., FRI. and SATURDAY RONALD REAGAN — In — “STALLION ROAD” Opens 1:00 p.m. Ph. 4-1181 —. AIR CONDITIONED — TUESDAY LAST DAY! 4 BIG DAYS WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY DICK EVELYN POWELL-KEYES UelCOBB-Blen DREW-Hina FOCH S. THOMS G0ME2-JOHN KEU.0SG ( Screenplay by Robert Rossen -> Directed by ROBERT ROSSEN -•/ Opens 1:00 p.m. Daily TUESDAY - WEDI THURSDAY INTERNATIONAL PICTURES presents EDWARD G. ROBINSON LORETTA YOUNG ORSON WELLES n k by RKO .RADIO PICTUKS^ •lib millf MEtIVAl! • RICHARD 10H6 • RIUT H00SI Direst* br ORSON WPIUS • *■ INTERNATIONAI PICTUH Produced b r S. P EACIE • Story by VICTOR TIIVAS end DECIA DOHHIW » Streeoploy by AHTHOHV WHLU