* — JH : ' I . I . rntb* J If* *■*• . ■' NEWS IN BRIEF . M < T ' 4 COMINTERN REV1VEIH LONDON, Oet. 7 (A?)-T^i BritWi fc»M ifn offlc# today Utwl- Volum® 47 •4 erMtloa of on inUmalionat in- 1 VU,UI1 " formation borfi by tbo Commu- niita of alna fcump»an aUtoa aa “tbo official roauacitation of tk« •MniM. N Tbo Cornmunlata hart takon aon-1 aldorabla Mina to dony that tha now ortantaatlon formad In Poland loot month to « rrrtval of tha comlntom, which waa ordamd oat of buainaaa by Prtma Minuur Ru- Kn In 1M1 1 TU PUN! ( OURRL'M AUBTIN, to», Oct. 7 (AP)- A racommandation that a ona mil- non dollar rolloaam to aaat 11,000 to 10,000 apacUtora ba built at tha Vinvaraity of Taaaa will ro bafor* tha Board of Rannta at Ita na«t macllng haft. Tha inaUtution'a • Board of Dmkipmcnt made the racoqimendation. ^ PEACE TREATY ATTEMPT LONDON, Oet. 7 (AP)-Thel PUBLISHED W THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A AH COLLEGE COLLEGE STATION (Acfkknd), TEXAS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7,1947 Number 41 Seniors Appointed to Senior Court Named to Tribunal Surplus Radar Set Added to EE Dept -Valued at $79,000, SCR-345 Will Be J Housed at Easterwood Temporarily ■Wartime mdar materiel, in the form of an SCR-545 BriUah foivign (rffiea announced complete with accesaoriea, has been aded to the list of tech- electrical WI in«ring miniatera la London on Noa. 25, to dept r! m « n iV 1 announced today. M. C. Hughes, department head, said that the radar set, attempt to write a German peace treaty. r . END GYPSUM STRIKE DALLAS, To*., Oct 7 f the American Association of University Profeasors, Dr. J. J. Sparry has announced. These names are carried in tha spring and summer issues of the organi tat ion’s bulletin. Thar* are now more than 154 AM. staff members in the a»- dation. More than 81,000 per na representing every section of e nation are member*. Membershiu in the A. A. U. P. is open to all cottage and univer sity teacher* from faculties of eligible institutions. The list of eligible Institutions Is based pn marilv on the accredited list* af established accrediting agencies As a part of the objectlvee, the Maociatlon attempt# to bring about the more effective •BtNmtiaB among member* of the profession in the “^the^r "P**!*^ the intoreata of higher education and re •♦arch In America and to create a mean* for the authorita tive expraooion of the public opin io® of the body of college and uni- vervity teachers. v WAIT U. R. WORD LAKE SUCCESS, Oet 7 (AP) —Zionist circles were reported confident today that the United States would endorse an 11-mem ber 'United Nations Commission . totJority report calling for parti tion of Palestine into Soverign Jewish and Arab Countries MRS. R. SAYS PRESS FREE LAKE SUCCESS, Oet 7 (AP) I Mr*. Franklin. D. RoaacveH told) ' the United Nations yesterday in her second answer to Soviet at tacks on "War Mongers” in this country that the American Press . “on the whole is free." - FEAR LEWIS "WALK" RAN FRANCISCO. Oat. 7 (AP) —Start of the AFL’a 8«th coavm tie® was enlivened by the unspoken threat that John L .Lewis and William L Hutcheson might team up to lead more than 1,200,OOC miners and carpenters ia a'“walk' out of tha federation. Varvel Announces Exam for Students In Graduate Study An examination for graduating seniors who plan graduate study will ba glean at A. A M. October 27 and 28, according to Dr. W. A. Varvel, professor of psychology. A series of objective tests in eight bask fields of the under graduate cufficula plus an advanc ed tost in the student's major sub ject will comprise the graduate record examination. The test* are prepared and scored by the grad uate record office in New York, but given in local centers four times yearly. . The tests to be given this month are timed for the convenience of students entering graduate schools in the spring seme*ted. Report of test resehs are supplied to the student and to the school he plans on entering. |Dt. Varvel stated that a num ber of the larger graduate schools require that these testa ba taken before entrance will be considered, He stated that AAM does not requirt such examinations prior to graduate study. Two periods of four hours each are required in taking the tests. A fee of five doliara is charged for examinations at the regularly scheduled dates. Students interested in taking the testa should contact Dr. Varvel in Room 102, Academic Building, where a prospectus and application schedule* are available. Registra tions must be completed by noon, October I. Two Chemical Engineer Grads To Receive Honors From AICE Local AALP Group To Discuss Course Interdependence The chapter of the American Association of University Profes sors will discuss "Devtloping Stu dent Awareness of Course Inter dependence’’ at their next meeting, Thursday, October 9, Dr. J. J. Sperry, has announced. The group will meet in the assembly room of the YMCA. Led by Omer E. Sperry as dis cussion leader, the panel will in clude John R. Bertrand, represent ing the school of agriculture, R. K. Snuggs from the school of arts and sciences, and Norman F. Rode, of the school of engineering. Dr. Sperry urges partmpstion in the discussion of means that may b* used to invoke student under standing of the interdependence of of subject matter with various cur ricula. The question roouiring an answer ia “what methods can we use to develop more student re sponsibility for the carry over of pertinent Information from one course to another?", Dr. Sperry further states. Two Network Radio Shows To Originate From A&M Campus Manor to Head Falls Countv Club bAAR WANTS MJEC TO BE FRENCH I ter the meeting RAARBRUECKEN, Oet 7 (AP) —Official returns skowad today that Saarlander*—who 11 years ago voted to join Naai Qonwany— had overwhelmingly elected a par liament pledged to make tha eoa|- ttah Saar basin west of the Rhine an autonomous part of Franc*. Cream & Kow Chi!) n o BeShowp Film A film. The will be -hown at a meeting df the Kream ind lKow (Dub Tuesday night at 7:80 in the creamery lecture room. Following the film, a short re sume of the National Dairy Show »t Waterloo, Iowa will be given >y E. V. Niemeycr, club vtec-presi- ient. All Dairy Husbandry majors a* ligible for mombership In the or- tanitation. Refreshments will be served af- Bill Manor, senior Curil Engl nee mg student, from Martin, wa* elected president of the Fhlla County A. A M. Club Thursday night. The following officers were elec ted to aid Manor in the executive duties of the clubr Jim Newman from Moorevill, vice-president; John Sibely from Rosebud, secre tory-treasurer; Homer Souther land from Marlin, reporter; Horace Goodrich and Jack Blann from Marlin, seargeantf-at-urma. The object of the dub is to stimulate interest in A. A M. in Falls County, according to Marlin. Plana are underway for a Christ mas dance, part of the proceeds , which will go ta local clubs to stimulate interest in A. AM. t The next meeting of The Falls ! County Cub will be October 28 at 18 pi m. By imrTTNm.nHr InternatlonA) honor* will vo to two 1947 Chemical Engl- neering graduate* of A. k M.. W. i. Terrell and C. R. Thomas, for their original solution* to the problem of a design for a hydrogen purification plant. Terrell will be awarded first place honor* and Thomas twill receive a honorable mention award, when the American Insti tute of Chemical Engineers holds its annual meeting in Detroit Mi chigan, November 12, Dr. J. D. Lindsay, head of the Chemical Engineering department announc ed. The solutions by Terrell and Thomas were selected by the staff of the Chemical Engineering de partment as the best submitted by members of the local student chap ter of the A. I. Ch. E. They com peted nationally with two such papers from each of eighty elig ible colleges and universities in the United States and Canada, winning two of the six awards offered. As first place winner. Terrell will receive the A. MeLarin White award of $100, and his winning paper will be published in the an nual "Tranaactions of the Ameri- Institute of Chemical Ehgi- neering’’ with coi*n>ents by lead ing industrial chrinkal engineers who served as judges. Thomas, one of three Honorable Mention win- 1, will receive a plaque, to be presented at the Detroit meeting, ami a rash award of |10. Terrell, who graduated from A. A M in May, is employed by the Gulf Oil Corporation at Port Ar thur. He came to college from Navaaoto In IU41, leaving school in 11*44 to serve with the Naval Air Corns. Upon release from the service he returned to Aggteland I* 1944. This Is Terrell's second honor from the national professional In stUute. In his junior year at A. A M. ha received the inetltuto 1 * Heginning this fall, two network radio nhown will origi note from the A. k M. Campus. Job* Ahead, a vocational guidance program for high achol and junior high school Rtudentn, will be aired over the Texan Quality Network. Over 26,000 high school students listenf «" to the program weekly daring the well that certain of the programs school year, | were recorded and rebroadenst to The newest radio feature pro- high school students In the Chicago gram. DO YOU KNOW? will be I presented throughout the Texas State Network. JOBS AHEAD, the older of the two programs, begins its sixth year, Thursday morning at 11:16 over WTAW. It ia a part of the Texaa School of the Air, whkh is sponsored by the State Depart ment of Education. The purpose of the series of pro grams is to furnish senior and junior high school student* of TeX- a* schools an insight into various occupations which are in demand or may be utilised within the state Crafts, agriculture, professional fields, and aierchandiaing are dis cussed on the broadcast*. Each program features one vocation. Last year’s series covered 80 vo cations ranging from "Chemicals, Our Gulf Coast Treasure” ta "Money Grows oa Tree#’’. Last year the Chicago School System liked the Texas series so DO YOU KNOW? will appeal to adults and college students. Various phases of science will be discussed in each broadcast Em phasis will be placed on astronomy, chemistry, physics, and biology. Material for the two series is obtained from men on the campus well acquainted with the subject Harry L. Kidd, assistant professor of English, interviews experts in the specialised fields. He then weaves a story around the voca tion, bringing in the requirements expected of persons in that parti cular field, and at the same time describes the type of work whkh is done in the fieldi- C. 0. Spriggs, prqfessor of Eng lish, is Institute Director for the campus. He has requested that all students interested in radio work meet in the WTAW studios Wed nesday night at 7. «M ing during his first college yean. Active in student affairs, hs ser ved as secretory of the freshman clas*. president of the sophomore class, president of the junior rlana, Town Hall manager, and was ato- dent representative on the Asso ciation of Former Students Coun cil in 1948-44. In 1944 he was a distance runner on the Aggie track team. Thomas, from Altos, Oklahoma, first came to A. A M. in 1941, in terrupting his education for mili tary service, with the Army, in 1943. After serving in the Pacific theatre, he was released in 194* and returned to A. A M.'Upon graduation he was awarded the Humble Oil A Refining Company fellowship in Chemical Engineer ing here and is now doing grad uate work in research studies of the fundamentals of alkylation. I Tm Artiflery, Signal Corpn Men; 1 From AF, Cavalry, QuartermaMter L J 1 jFv I I } j : 1 If/ * * * Ten cadet* have been designated aa member* of tha Senior Court for the fall semester, Lt. Col. Joe E. Davis, aitaistant commandant, announced Monday. The court i* em powered to try almoat ajl violation* of the Articles of the Cadet Cewis, 19, an elec trical engineering student from Terrell. He is a distinguished stu- Thirty prominent Mexican I dent and ia commander of the ranchers and fanners arrived I Fourth Regiment . on the campu* at eleven o’-1 Cob v m**u, l®. executive officer, is an major from Temple. He t,,- > re f««,r c. i*»gi*«* r lo. P.IT PutnU. who I. In -h»I- S iT’i n" . Some of the memkati of the r ' . , . . party are Federal Congressmen, The executive offker of the Deputy MaUqulss Huttron, as rep- £9** ^•*in»ent C«4at Lt. (o(. reselltolive of the Governor of $h* *«nr A. Pato, 19, waa (kaignatod Federal District of Mwieo. Mr. * member of the court. .He haa Manuel 4* Mom. th* Governor's *•" • distinguished stuJent and brother, and Mr Abel Moreno, of ™paglng editor of th# Federal District «f Msitea. tip "Longhorn.” Pate la a language President Gibb Gikhriet off I- "Hdor *">"> Han Antonio, rially welcomed the group to the Cadet Lt. Col. Nathaniel R. ’Jag' enntpua ia a short ceremony at the Leather wood, 19, a rhemieal en- Administration Building. Luneh gin—eing student from Rvaumont, ws* served to the vlsitore at Dun- ia one of the reurewntotivea from ran Mesa Hall after which Utey the Second Regiment. He I* eom- went to th* horse bora fed# hone iaan«i#r of th* Reeond Artillery show. iRaUallpn. social secretory of th* r _ rtor rise*, aad la Dormitory 8*1 American Saddle and Student Representative. Ha has Quarter hnras stock, the party wit- linen president of the juniw •las*, nested a demoastratlun of slaagh-1 a DhiNktilawed student, and was taring in tha MeaU Ub of the listed in Who's Who In American Animal Industries Building. Fol College* and Univereities last year, lowing this demonstration, they He received the Cobea Fellowship were earorted on a motet tour of Award this spring, the campus. ! i Cadet Lt Col John T. Milter, fe » Navy veteran from Dallas, Ranchers, Fanners! From Mexico Visit Campus Tuesday By CARL M. CATES irty prominent Mm lera and farmers an on the campu* at eleven o'-| w. tuny ■. i clock this morning from San “fF* ” ec “ t| v c of A—* ■* g ^"1 !TT!iw*LS£i .3. for tonight.-at six twelve. Kennel Club •now of the Brazos Kennel Club To Hold Dog Show The Braxos Valley wiH hold its first dog season October 12 at the Animal Husbandry pavilion. The event will be an all-breed, all-age show, to be judged by Her man Cox of Fort Worth; judging will begin at 1 p. m. Aggie Wife Win* Far i)i Conte*! j A model farm made by Mr*. Mar- S ret Raper of the Farm Labor fiee wan a blue ribbon in bobby exhibit at the recent Mi County Fair at Stanton, cording to W. L. Ulkh, fbrm lal shop supervisor. This small aeale farm made most ly. of bslse wood shows an ideal arrangement for farm buildings. It is part of the labor saving de \ ■ xhibiw-d at field days and fain over the state by the Fifai Labor Office of the Extension 8*r- Mra. Raper ia the wife of J. T. Raper, animal husbandry student. Both are from Waco. is a member of the court from the Third Regiment. He is commander of the Air Fores Squadron, and is the Student Representative from Dormitory *. Miller ia managing editor of “The Battalion" and men- aging editor of "The Commonto- (See SENIOR COURT on Page 4) "MW Mmatof Mf* 1 ' FAN! a j THi S un*tor eepMad gartkw wort to iwadlff 1 * tiMMo P (May by tralrt la roMHi to „ itorilia w* wirnkto# i" 't>* rewkri oflka aaM liar had kft aartiorl yeatoi hat* Mi Oovsrttar r mandamus the ■ iapaeial to ml •ton of the UglilMMf by RcJkrt V. Yerber of Coreieana. ROBOT TO FLY BACK MARTLE8HAM HEATH, ENG. Oet 7—(AP)—Colonel James M. Gillespie, Commander of the U. 8. Amy 1 * "push batten" plane, the Robert E. Lee, announced yester day he would entrust the experi mental craft’s return flight to the "Aatomatk Brain" that guided it across the Atlantic to an English airdrome, untouched by human hands. "David" Trader dibs -'BENTON HARBOR MICH., Oet. 7 —(APi -The earner ef Harry T. Dewhirst, under whose aha famed house of David religious colony grew into a $1,000,000 a year business, waa ended yesterday by death. Speakers Listed For Garden Club Meeting Dr. A. F. DeWerth and Mra. J) E. KnUrts will be the principal speaker* on the A. A M. Garden Club prograii Friday, October 10 at 8 p. m. In the YMCA, It wee annouaea* Saturday, 1)9. paWerth will speak an ruae* • bile Mm Robert*’ subject wtl! be hulbe, the (riq In pertkulav. TWSlVt TW WIUm, itotti >H*irel fur Alik Rwaok Hash, wlni Hip iMppi 111in - tiiiiHalllnn Hiai iraini id Is tatls M KrWk) Wt ^ list’s Cooking? ABILENE AAM CLUB. 7 p.m., Wedaaaday. ARCHITECTURAL SOCIETY; 7:80 pjn., Tuesday, Arekiteetural lecture Room. ASCX, 7:30 pjn., Tuesday, Room 11. C.E. building. AVMA, 7:30 p. m., Tureday, Am- • phitheator of Veterinary Hospital. BADMINTON CLUB, 7-JO p.nu, Mondays and Fridays. ' BRAZOS VALLEY KENNEL CLUB, sponsoring d«g abow, Oete- bar It, 1 pan.. Animal Husbandry Pavilion. * /"" COMMENTATOR, staff meet ing, 4-Jo pja., Wednesday, 2to| ioodwin. COMMUNITY CHEST i MITTEE, 7:80 o. m_.Tuea, YM(M| - CORPUS CmURf! CLUS, after yell practlee, Tuesday, room 227, Academic building. DALLAS AAM CLUE. V'JO p. ro ., rhurwtay, Y (’hapl EARTTKXAR ClAlB.filK) p.m., T , Itauw ita, Ah "■nls n'.es. i«, r*o, CTinp IiHp Di bjp"" uouutwd 4 tt r | S i Mm wthl Room, prior In the 4.1*.-?!^. I AW fl ■ from left to rttHI m fame Uvlngniort. Maty Imp Tokod, <)*■« Lmaw, Patti DUlmut, Kath- ryn Rlaikniakip, Bill BPawm, T«rma Hiller, Patsy Wolfe, Bob Taylor, Bobby Wllltamnom Norman Walk er. Jintnti* Nclmm. Roberta Hampton, Jama Vaa Art- dale, Robert Weathe-rw ood Floraaee MeGrew, aad Cl>(k DatAanam i Heated are Gm Vletaa, Fat Smith, Jack Jadnoa, Lam Smaion*, Jack Knic S t, Beverly Gee, aad Fred agbea. •L Jfl DLDH.'rw Crearnkty ts-elure LANDSCAPE AST &US, 1 ». , Tuesday, Room 110, Agrieul- ral wmeartac Satiiaa. MARKET AND FINANCE LUB, t p.m., Tuesday, Room 811, AfricuKanl Building. MARSHAL AAM CLUB, 7:11 ’ Wsdnemtoy, Mother's Loonge. TRANS-PECOS CLUB. 7 p.m., loom 228, Aeademk Building. PREMEDICAL .JBXDENTAL SOCIETY, 7 p. m., Tueaday, He >f Dr. George E. Potior, 308 Ke street, College Park. SOCIETY FOR THE AD VANCEMENT OF MANAGE- HINT, 7 p. m., Tueaday, Elertri- * •al Engineering Lecture Room SOCIAL CLUB. 3 to 6 n. bl, Wadaosday, Home of Mra. Gib GiL IXM, . • VETERANS’ WIVES CLUB, , 7:30 P. m., Tueeday, YMCA. Kerry