JT ? ' I RIOTS IN PARIS PARIS, Oct 29 ^—Unofficial •■timatM of the Injured ranted ^ from 40 to 900 early Wednesday VotlDM 47 after a bloody atreet battle in whicH Park police beat back nearly 36,000 Communiata who attempted unsuccessfully to break up an anti Conununiat meeting. It was the first major political •treet battld in Paris since the bitter riots of 1930. BARKLEYHURT , OWENSBORO, Ky., Oct 29 Sen. Alben W. Barkley (D-Ky) was shaken and bruised in an automo bile collision during a state cam paign tour yesterday, but contin ued bis speaking schedule. GAB GOES UP " HOUSTON, Tt*., Oct 29 <*»- Tank Wagon rates on all grades Of gasoline were hiked one-half cent per gallon in Texas today by the Texas Company. 11,000 FLRE POLAND . WARSAW, Poland. Oct 29 t*- Premier Josef Cyrankiewics told the Polish earl lament today that -iroatlar' girds had prevented M.immi i>er»op» from Illegally leav- * ing the oourttry this year but that opposition leeir Btanislsv Miko lajcsyk had managed to flee. AGGim RRmRR mm oalvkbton. Oct w neral services fpr William Carl (Billy) Hampel, 10, who died yes lerday of Injuries received in the Galveston Orsnfe high school foot hall game, were to be h«id today Burvltors tactod* a brother, R R. Mempel III, Tiaaa ARM etu 4aai, a PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER ARM COLLEGE ' { COLLEGE STATION (Affieland), TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29. 1947 Numbar Health Survey Rates All Aboard! February 3 ?.. Inn, >first . WRITKRB (TTKD . WASHINGTON, Oct. 19 -<*- ' House investigators voted con tempt citations yesterday against three more Hollywood writer* whs refused direct replies to questions , whether they are Communists. The House ComtolUdc on American activities -took the ac tion against writers Dalton Tram bo, Albert Malts and Ahrah Bee- ^ aid. A contempt move was made 1 yesterday againftt writer John . Howard Lawson, who also refused to say whether be is a Communist. NEW HUGHES HEARING WASHINGTON, Oct. 29 -UPU- Sehator Ferguson (R-Mich.) said yesterday that public hearings on the Senate War Investigating com t - mittee dealing with the 940,900,000 in government airplane contracts with Howard Hughes will resume Monday, November S. \ END BOLIVIA REVOLT * LA PLAZ, BOLIVIA, Oet 2i* t/Pt—Mlpleter of Government Al fmio MilimHlo said yesterday that police In the frontier tows of Gum- ysrmerin had put dawn an ap- ' rising apinst the local mayor. RAILROADS WOULD PLY WASHINGTON, Oct. 29 The Nation's railruads pleaded to day for the right to enter the alt . line business, asserting they are forced through taxes to contribute to i 1200,000,000 annual subeidy for the air industry. Churchill Urges changr LONDON, Oct. 29 —GH—Wlaq* ton Churchill urged Britain yeptal* day to toes aside Socialism tnd re gain economic prosperity by rein stating a system of free enter- C rtae such as now exists in the ' Inlted States. AGAINST WAOI WK)tT WASHINOtON, Oet 19 -<* Any RiMist m the preeent 4« «snu . an hour ifilnimum wnge eyentual ly will Ivlnl to "destroy bustneea rnmni* mm NesbitU ( afeteria Receives Lowent Score in InHpection Made by Senate N, ‘ > • i 4 j’-j! • I f v October’s health inspection of drug stones and restau rants in the College Station area rated the Aggieland Inn and Lipncomb’s Pharmacy 100ft. The Student Senate Mens Committee, which took over the inspection* last month from the Veteran Students Asso ciation, rated'Mesbit’s Cafeteria lowest of the fourteen eating establishments with a score of 74 ft. The complete impection list for October, as submitted to The Battalion by Marvin Kuers, Student Senate Mess Committeeman, is as foilowa: Name Score inmSm bm m LfliMfr too BSuf . m bmm M 1 ■ fijBi ^ l .H mmm ; J m ■ OtoTfri _ . . B A. 4 M. Qrlll L tt lUy'i Iaam B«r ,. . IB ffemTcEffc , fi Hack's Pharmawi |4 Anttand EharmMy If (ShSmI i i tt Hait^CbHliHj L 74 Heritage Committee Asked to Send ‘Freedom Train’ to College Station ikhrist aen*TeteHgl»;. : To Attorney General Clark Vets Wanting to Study Abroad Should Contact IEP, Not VA Veterans seeking information on the Fulbright Act, providing for study abroad on a student-exchange basis, should address their queries to the Division of International Exchange of Person*, Department of State, Washington 25, ). C M and not to the Veterans Administration. Information to veterans writing to VA about this pro gram hs* bran ly j TMma*W, II, It. C’hsmbar of Howard of Cummarv* raid yralardsy.! Dt UAULLi RLINTRRRD 1 PARI*. Oat. 99 -4AS--|toflall*l Pramiar Paul Ramadloa daltvarad s bli* taring atUek yaataMay agalnat Gati. Charlra Da Gaulla, and daclarad to tha National Aa aambly: "Thaw art man who want to divkto tha eoontry inkSH Mora. 1 warn you thta can only rt- *ult in economic ruin and elail wsfj PRINT PATTON CHARGES NEW YORK. Oct 99 ~»#»-Gen. Gaorga 8. Patton, Jr., atormy * time commander of tha United SUtra Third Amur, vigorou*! criticiaad BriUin’a licki Maraba! Montgomery and alao directed barba at top American officer* in * an abridgement of hi* war journal published posthumously in the Sat urday Evening Poet. * i JESTER PESSIMISTIC i AUSTIN, TEX., Oct. !*-<**- Gov. Baaoford H. Jeatcr yesterday raid "there la no rraaon to Uka comfort in word*" when the U. 8, Supreme Court's decision on Cali fornia's tide lands “ray* what it does." IN WITHDRAWAL 11K Seniors Hear Representative Of Humble Oil By TRUMAN a MARTIN of tbs Thursday afternoon, R. N, Dyer, per sonnel awnager af the Humble Oil and Refining Company in Houe- ton, diacuaaed the oualitira which industry expects college graduates to possess. Major qualities rat forth by Dvai are bonraty, loyalty (Includini pride in the organixation or coan pany of which the graduate bo comas a part), »ouiul analytical ability, and » T HMrouvt> grounding In the fundamentals af the mart chorap field. In pnawar to a ttudent’. quest u>i regarding grades. Dyer raid that griulea are • onsiderad as an indi- catlon of performance end •rtenttousneu of the man. He ray* that poor grades ira aaually trudl- tad to laek af study and fahvre ta realise that the mam purpose of •oilege is ta get Mi •duration. This failure often RmRn the man U develop a habit of not fulfilling hia major raalgnment* later in Ufa. During the laM’year, Humble received 1149 appRoaUene for 100 positions. Thera appll Hpm* docs not administer any p tiona These applications cams H Ralhutlani In II atatea About one-tblrd of the poalltons filled were A * M. ffraduates 'Humble baa many jCTA M. men In Ita organisation Dyer's Immed late superior, D. B. Harris, who was recently made a vice-president of the Humble Oil and Refining Company, is among the A. A M graduates. Dyer and ten aaeociatra will be on the campus November 6 to in terview January graduates who art interested in working for Humble. of the project and must refer these veterans to the Department of State. VA administers only that study abroad which enables a World War II veterans to study in a foreign institution under the same Cl Bill provisions that apply to study m college or univeraity in the Um- d States. The Fulbright Aet (While Law 684, 79th Congress) authorises the Department of State to uae for eign currencies and credit*, ac quirad through the rale of surplus property abroad, for the program of student exchange Under this program, financial aid may be provided U. S. citisena studying in *chools of foreign countries in which credit t* ac- quired, and far citisena of those countries to Study in the United Statas. > ^ * This assistance may Include pay ment for transportation, tuition, maintenance and ether expenses Incident to scholastic activity. Slnra all of those activities must be financed with foreign curren cies, the Fulbright' Act does not provide for the auanara of for eign etudenta mtMb the United StatM er the travf expenses of foreign students wljhln Mia United •tales or the trade) eipenaes of American students to foreign aeun tries unleaa the travel ie mode on ablpe er planw on wbieb peyment le made In foreign rarrency Under tha FulWigbt Alt, voter on* of Winl.i Wan 1 end II ar* given preference by the 10-man Board of Foreign Scholarship* wbieb eteerde the study grant* TILLIE HOLLAS, making the Singer aing, play* sweet manic to Aggleu who have opened a second front Tillie the Tailor Supplies The Stitch in Time That Saves Nine , -L' Aasn. re# * 'ije* for the benefit of Aggieland for j hook*. “I alao make beautiful tow- t three yrars. In that time, boy shirts,” she said. By KENNETH BOM) Whether you have ripped a hole the east in your panta or eaten too much, hundreds of Aggies have come to “Some of the boys are more par- Tillie can fix you up. know her personally as a good ticular than my women customers,’ Jillte Hollas, who owns the A AM friend, always smiling agd helpful, she explained, “and they are al want ———I _ . _ . Alteration Shop across from the Tillie has performed numerous ways in such a hurry. Tn College Station Post Offica, is a rawing jobs besides the customary things finished yesterday chubby, laughing old maid who alterations. She regularly makes heedirahe! But 1 think they're tries to atuff 34" atomachs into athletic signs used on the campus, wonderful bunch of boysT' 32” trousers for the Aggies. She window drapes, blankets for stu has operated her alteration shop dent’s dogs, and coven for text The American Heritage fommittg* has been asked to send the Freedom Train to Coilege Station February 8, ac cording to President Gibb Gilchrist. IHftrain, carrying the original signed copies of the* Constitution, Declaration of Independence and other impora tant relics of America's early days, will be touring Texas el that time. , _ llj U. *. Attorney .General Toai Clerk Has uriitan President Oil* •hrtet tbst be la endorsing tbe request for the train, and *ay* In bit Jetteri Every effort la botn| made to comply with your wiab that THK freedom train .top at "»£*»- grading systems. After the disoua- tfve livestock judging basis. Pre- W °" f,r !V n A® 1 * I intramuAal activities and 1919, placing second in 1940. In 1941, Tommie Stuart of A. A M. waa sixth of the ten top rank ing students judging all claeaes of livestock. Burt Oderkirk is suparintendant in charge of the intercollegiate judging. sion plans fee in tel collegial intramufal activities will he die cussed, and officers will be elected. Refreshment* will be served L! Tbla la ANDKRBON! was la Stillwater, Oklahoma, with the cress Muatry team when F. L (Wntx who forgot fore leaving the t fOVltACtAd AhOA^ thA to those atu to buy them be- inina a . _ .npRi deraen aid woeld run om of Downs! rd by the entire fifth-year rlaaa but be evidently fears that eom from the local department. i erovt unfavorable allow himself to be parlaon would and will not | photographed We have had ph"<<>ll» *ph-1 after him for aever- al days. All this hub-hub Made te the ob servation that Shakespeare waa net entirely right when he aald, "Vanity, thy name to woman.” Men alee run. Expressing his pleasure with tha contest thus far, ‘faudlll com mended the students en their fine work and attitude, and astd he would like to thank nil members of the department na well as I. outside rontrtbutore far their aa* atataneo In making the praftsm a contributing factor toward a ■ Vvorthington Lendl) Aggie CheftM Club Robert Worthington, senior ar-, rhiteeture student from Houaton. was alorted president at the Ag gie rheas Club at Ha reorgnntoa- tional meeting last weak. Nelson Hewnrd, senior bualnoee student from San Antonio, waa ttl^Mo4AM4 v ifm g, rmmkt4mrif ^gggi A RM "tWwwMI vfxw'pPI wmreeWflV , ■VM1 ^ van Areken, secretary. , All atudauta InteiaaM^iM learn ing te piny oheea should meet H K.M.m 104. Acedemw Building on Thurodny evening at fill p. m. •• Kiwanians Hear Superintendent Tbe Kiwam# Club met yesterday at a luncheon in Ibtoa Hall, fos tering n abort speoch by Joseph R. Briggs. Mperintendent at the MMmi j at HuntmrUto, Texas. Hngg* was formerly the State Superintendent of Schools Tbe Girl Scouts were entertain ed at tha luncheon, and a short talk waa made hy Mr*. W. L F»a- berihy, dtotrtct head of the QM wWiw MvumIvIU i®la Ay the Nemlnating Committee for next year's Eternals offtoeea. Ie be reled en at thetr next meeting. ]razos & TUBERCULOSIS ASSOCIATION* THh,rruh>*iMl Tha mrtiar found tha Rr*>nrr eurati TV I.iv«-*tXAIAifl«4 ( vWWMMNI persons with mala, more el the milk etgq the dtooaae to