The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 05, 1947, Image 1

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    '
NEWS,
IN BRIEF
MTKNNIh LRADH IN MlftH
UCKSON, MIm.. N^. » oL
J«*»« k. Ittnni., who
•oft-MtloJ thr r»ct it.u. in hla
r^mpoifn, pulM Into » norrow
HCOTi JOLT LAROR
LONDON, Nor. » JSSLiMA
▼ot*r» KoimM Britain’' mlinf la.
hor part* another Joltlni MtWk
In manlrlpal •ImIIooi yoatarday.
. W th rraulta nearly complete,
th# labor!Ua had droppod a net oi
_ •• •••ta, loaing 71 and winning 11
now aeata.
ARREST CHINA KI DS
NANKING, Nov. A Oft-Mora
than 60 ptraona, moat of them
army ©fOera and fovemmont am.
ployea, have boon arroatod in North
China and Manchuria on chargea
of spying for the Chi near Commu.
niata. Director of Information Hoi.
lington Tong told a newa confer*
once today.
ASH BURN ILL
DALLAS, TEX., Nor.
Col. Ue Aahbum, executive direc
tor of the Texas Good Roads As-
sociation, was reported in “good
condition" at Baylor University
hospital here yesterday, where he
was admitted Saturday following
a sliaht stroke.
Asnbum, who zee idea at Hous
ton, was at one time executive
assistant to Dr. T. 0. Walton,
former president of Texas A. A M.
College. For 20 yean he was colo
nel in command of the 380th Infan
try Reserve, 90th Division. He saw
action in both world wars.
wallacbback
NEW YORK, Nov. 5 -
Former vice-president Henry A.
I Wallace arrived at LaGuardia Field
yesterday by plana from Rome af
ter a three-week tour of Europe
1 and the Middle East Wallace, who
spent It days In Palestine, said
"the tension la not as great as it
had been reported."
: rehirterTanishiw
RERUN, Nov, I •—t^-—Ouenih-
| or Frieda, special correspondent trf
the U, R,.licensed Berlin newspap-
' or "IW Abend", ha» Item missing
sine# Huiulg* when he went ta the
Russian see lor of Merlin after re
reiving an spparsmly faked tele
phone sail.
PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A AM COLLEGE
Vokung 47
COLLEGE STATION (AoMud), TEXAS* WKPNFSOAY, NOVEMBER 5,1947
Number 61
>;
; ‘*f-
iikimuatii
FONT WORTH, TKX,, Nov ft-e
UTATlK
riix„H
'.^■iOenefal of the Arm
.■MMt DwmR
U Rlaenhnwer ehafaeterUed the
Milt Will Rogers as "a sammott
man with wnemimon i|iialitlee M it
dsdirallng a statula tn the humor
lai, movie and stags mat her* y. •
wrday.
. "46P9# wMatii, dianlif
•he rlNPleid, pirtlel|MiM Is I
(MMJMWmpIMwHmm
BAW ON TBIAL
RANGOON, BURMA, Nov ftV
'Ah—Former Premlsr U, Hsw en
tered • plea of Innocence yester
day to formal charvea of abetment
In the murder and ronaplrlng to
murder Mai. Qen. U Aung Ran and
a group of B
leaders.
Two Dances, Jamboree Highlight
Week-End of Aggie-Mustang Tilt
Merit Badge* Galore
Corps Sergeant-Major Holds
Many Awards From Boy Scouts
E. S. licFADDEN, agronomist for the
US Department of Agriculture with the
A. A Ml Experiment Station ninee 1936,
stands beside the monument erected in his
honor at Webster, South Dakota on Oc
tober 10.
Grateful farmers of Southeast South
Dakota, in appreciation of his brilliant
work in developing rust-proof varieties of
wheat, donated their quarters and dollars
for the granite memorial.
, For his development of rust-proof wheat
which is supposed to have saved the lives
of hundreds of millions of jyeople who
otherwise would have died of starvation,
the Reader’s Digest Distinguished Service
Award of $2,500 was presented to Mc-
FADDEN.
First Presidential Visit Since 1937? . . .
Presidents Truman, Aleman
Invited To Visit Aggieland
8H8TC Plans to Present Honorary
Degrees to Two Chief Executives
Storm Delays
Unit by Stork
Ny ARNOLD NOWIITNV
Aii Invitation from (ha antlrg AAM student
I'raalrfant Harry N Truman to
t to the
Msrrh was aanl
Whlt« Hoiim
•fepartment It
lurmc'c government
FEAR MORE DEAD
UMA, PERU, Nov. 6 -t**~
Offtrials expreMcd fear yenDrduy
that the death toll frgm Saturday''
earthquake in Central Peru would
riae above the 63 now linted a*,
dead when roads and wires are sc
feasible to the stricken area.
PERON SEEK 8 CAPITAL
BUENOS AIRES. Nov. 6 —1*>_
U. S. Ambassador James Bruce
said in an extemporaneous speech
Monday night that President Juan
Peron was seeking to encourage
the investment of u. S. Capital in
Argentina.
VMgfMby
while studvini
for his misters degree at the Unf
verslty of Wisconsin that this oh
serration of the stork was made
by Olson
Mr. and Mrs. Olson living thirty
five miles out of Madison, Wlseon
JL M
ieaton
r "Time and tide may wall far no (
nuMi. hat ym slotk waiu for a.
fimweiarm.^says Roger n msonlr
new' Ihstmetar In IR| ffaagraphy 11
Return From
.' Registrars Parley
t of Madison, — -
pectftig a vt
t at the time
ing its seven
tlra AAM atudant bmly to of rarmlti
vlalt tha fampua oarly In
louaa yaalanlity by I'raadant " LT
— i. > M .i iimJ-t ij«{,■ h
Will |U III
wllh Pres
Btudont Ran«ta A, l), Hruv«, Jr,, und Curiot Uolonri nf
'orpa Hill Hrtiwn,
iilont Truman and I’rtaklant Alnmnti of Mwalni will
By LOUIS MORiw
It is not often that on* finds an
indhridual roaming the campus who
admits ha la'a Boy Scout and proud
of it. Such a person is 20-year-old
M. R. “Bab" McClure, mechanical
engineering student ‘ hmm Ttxdr-
kana.
Since joining the Scouts in 1939,
McClure has acquired 106 of the
possible 111 merit badges awarded
to Boy Scouts. An Eagle Scout,
hia first merit badge was for fire-
ms nship and his last for coin col
lecting. In between he has receiv
ed badges for study in the various
fields of natural and physical
sciencea. A member % the Order
of the Arrow, a national campers
society, be estimates that it will
take at least three years to earn
the remaining six badges.
McClure, now a Scouter, has been
active with scouting troops in
eight states. He served on the Na
tional Boy Scout Junior Staff in
1944 at Pinlmont Ranch in New
Mexico, largest boys ranch in the
world.
Named boat drilled corporal for
his sophomore year. McClure la
now nergeant-major of the Corps.
Hs la also a member of tha rifle
loam and tha town hall staff H#
first entered AAM In 1944, but
soon afterward want jnto tha army
where ha served with the I Mind
Special Regiment In'Panama and
Aa a sergeant In tha National
Guard, Manure has, entered the
of rearultlna members fur
RlUonal Guard
< "Wiity, Ne re-
IMS In i wo
The winner nf (he rnnlesl
Washinglun, U, (1,, dine
Ike Army Na
M. R. "BOB*’ McCLURE
‘Key to Progress
Lies in the Mind’
States Kentuckian
By W. E. COLVILLE
"The key that unlocks the secrets
of prugreaa lice In the mind ef
man," Trine Ntamee, Church ef
rkriat minister from Padueah,
Kantueky, told Xtwanie Club mom-
ben at i luncheon yea Unlay
RUrnee wae Introduced by Done
Rroek, following the luncheon, and
lie for a abort while en "Mana
ae of KnowH—"
First Pn -Game Dance Of
- Season Scheduled Friday
By TOM CARTER
Two bif dances and o jamboree will highlight the ac-
tivitie* of thin weekend. For the firot time thin neason, a prw*
game dance will be held oh Friday night with another danco
on Satujrday. Both dances will start at 9 p. m. and ond at
j — 4 midnight.
Inter-College
Debate Planned
By New Group
To encourage participation
in its intercollegiate debating
program, the A. A M. Discus
sion and Debate Club is hold
ing an intramural debate open to
anyone In to re* ted
Past experience is not neeea-
aory. Boh Poison, member of the
club, atated yesterday.
♦irvelvo hmimai r degi -** fmm Ram l
Perryman ^Z. M 4*gie Delr»ntion
Mri In nalWmat ilefetim end the .. —... t
Cnief Kaeeutlve'e rule In cresting | M|w%| \\ , 1
! • renae of pranarednem In Ihe ■ V 171 Wl 77 llll RirP,
•in. from H. L Heaton and R. G. Perry-leer. Training Corp. All of them
Ute 'tork ju*t at ine time Wimon- Monday from the student, are potential officer, of
tin was having it. mvemt m>ow j Annual Meeting of the Text. ^ United State. Army, and many
•torm in recent year*. All road. * nnu *' meeung qi me irx.*
to town and a doctor were rioted AMoeiatlon of Collegiate Regi. wl11 comm ' Mton " ln »•
atarting on the last Thuraday in! trxr. at Port Worth.
■A
mind, of men of college age. lee i\*e* e a
Houston Officials
are member, of the Reserve Offl-
A delegation of tlx AAM atu
The subject chosen for the in
tramural debate program la "Re
solved; That Federal World Gov
ernment Should Be Established"
To clarify .the topic, Poison de
fined "federal" to mean that mem
ber nation, will surrender, in part,
thrir aovereignty.
Ratrloa moat be mad* la team,
of two peraona, with the deadline
Tueeday, November II, la the
•todept aetlvltlee efflee.
1
• l.t .iwks my warmly
dy. Mlllof nufte • fr*
talee tn IINottotc Mo
eloaaoi, «
related how a man lit Ml M • "•JV* 1
Ags ft km ilmftii mmmiitH ‘ , iy ^ * 11 ' D f
Taame may alsa file at th* Mon.
day night meeting of the club,
which will take place in Rtoim 914
Aradrml. Building at 1 a, m At
the meeting further ihformeUMi
may hd abtaiaed a. l«i the sompetU
Gan. Palaan .Mill Anyone who
weold like te »"ler but hoe no teom
mats may yoaelbly geb* 9 partner
at th. vatheriltf,
The Rtetiog yr«llin|nariM will
mpMM
Iwr. They are
Cheeter Chambora,
Plel'le, and Ri
MmiftftUNt
1.1«
Jam*
lee lo<
, | i Principal speaker at this meeting Htudent. on the A. A M. campu.,
3i k was getting still nearer; 01—g j Howell, Dean of John, are for the most part, veteran, of
January. By Friday At seemed the
•en and the whole neighborhood | Tarloton Agricultural College and the Second World War. and many
village- were nervously awbiting formerly Registrar at A. A M.,.hold commissions in the reserve
tn« turn of events, but still the j w h 0 # poh e on “Future Trendc in components of our armed forces."
road, were blocked with snow. Sat- 1 Admission Policies of Colleges and
urday morning the first day of' u nlTe r. it j w of Texas.”
February the storm broke and
roads were immediately made Thomas J. Treads way, Regis-
passable; the stock, taking the cue. ,rmr St Mary’s University, was
f*
.dents, Colonel 0 8. Meloy and a
-epresentatlve of the Dean of
Men’s nfflee will mjeet with city
ular Army upon graduation" the officials and Rice student leaders
letter stated. "The remainder of in Houston tomorrow to make plans
RUSS SAY "FAKE-
LAKE SUCCESS, Nov. 6 -<*»
—The foreign minister of the So
viet Ukraine, Dmitri Z. Manuileky,
charged yesterday that the United
States is seeking to “pigon-holc"
the question of independence of Ko
rea and to sot up a "puppet gov
ernment.” \
RESUME HUGHES CASE
WASHINGTON, Nov. 6 -tAW
Senator Ferguson (E-Mich) said
yesterday the fact that Howard
Hughes' 200-ton flyine boat ran
fly does not affset plans to ns
sume hearings on Hughes' wartime
government plane contracts today.
ROVIElTaARt AIM
MOSCOW, Nev, ft —Trud,
Soviet trade union orggn; published
today • cartoon showing Pnlith op
leader Stanislaw Mikola)-
riyk Iwmg waftod to a haven on
Iter street" on wings of
Bterik
-HX
ar." •Nfl- "Pound
ling"
u
WIDOW SHtHXKD
QOMCORD, N, H„ Nov. I - ifi
from New York to ('on
rord under the Itnpre'slon that
huahanil had met accidental
Mri John G, W Inant wae
bins when, upon wcrivsl
news was broken to here
had ended Ma lira,
"I.MMiH believe ill" She earialtn-
ed to the former ambastedor's see-
retary. "We were so^Wappy to
gether In New York last week
. mmartbuTto tour
BALTIMORE, Nov. 6 -4
A story In the Baltimore Bun yeo-
terday said General Douglas Mac-
Arthur la planning "A triumphal
return to the United States" next
spring to “capture the Republican
nomination" for president in 1948.
-RESCUB BAILORS
*- NEW YORK, Noe. I -i^-The
Coast Guard said yesterday that
the Army Transport John Stafford
reported it had rescued a crew of
30 men from the three - master
Portuguese schooner Marie Car
lute. [.
followed the snow plows into town
and delivered a fine baby boy nam
ed Stephen.
Olson joined the staff of the
Geography Department in the sec
ond semester of this past summer.
He is inatructing in Geography
201, Principles of Geography, and
Geography 3M. Weather and Cli
mate. If the interest warrants it,
the course in Weather and Climate
may again be offered in the next
spring slmester.
Olson, born in Fargo, North Da
kota, rOceived his B.A. degree in
G«*< loKy from the University of
Wyoming before entering the Air
Corps. During his four year tour of
duty he studied meteorology at the
Maaeachusetts Institute of Tech
nology and from there went to the
weatker station it Goose Bay, Lab
rador, for twenty-one months.
Goose Bay was a Jumping off place
for aircraft to Greonland, Iceland,
and Scotland. All planes leaving
for the big jump over the Atlantic
had to dear with th* weather ata-
tlun. While stationed in Labrador
Olson flew over the beautiful Ham
ilton Fallo on tb* Hamilton River,
which are much higher
Niagara Falls.
Olson lays he Itbea Agglelapd
and the 9*>(*ie nf Texas, but mlaaes
the mirwcnt labaa ami te hoping
i see home snow L se this winter
la hebhles art playing with' hla
son htephen and learning to play
bridge
elected president of the associa-
Since Mexico’s President Aleman
will be at Huntsville to participate
in the joint ceremony. Brown and
Bruce wrote:
“Considering the many students
Gon. Harold t Bright, Registrar of A * M . ° f
nf q.n Anw.in rViii... s'™*rely believe that a brief re
oi nan Angelo College waa elected . ' . r . r . . . ,,
vice-president and Celeste Kitchen,
Registrar of Lamar Junior Col
lege was elected secretary-treas
urer.
Heaton, who is the
past president Of the Texas Asm-
nation of Collegiate Registrars, is
now nuking plans to attend the
National Meeting of Registrars to
be held in Philadelphia April 19
to 22.
No Problem in Palestine, Heilman
Says in Address at Hillel Meeting
view of the Corps of Cadets by the
chief executives of the two neigh
boring countries would accomplish
more than ten thousand could do
relative to racial tolerance and
immediate 1 friendship toward minority groupe.
President Gibb Gilchrist, who
wdl i ‘tend a highway conference
at th- White House early next
week, promised to back the stu
dent request whAe at the nation’s
capital
"There is- no problem hi Palee-4-
Research Engineer
To Addrc" Groups
Louis E. Kndslev Jr., resetreh
wtlbaar for tha BaaMM >mMM>
lories. New York, will speak at a
joint meeting of the RAE, A8ME,
and Institute of Aeronaut leal
Sciences Thursday evening at 7:10
L m. la the Cnemlstry Lecture
HI.
Endeley will speak on "Mano
factors. Physical Properties and
Operating Characteristic* of fuels
for Gasoline and Diesel Engines."
While here Endsley wit) inter
view senior engineering students
interested in research for the Tex
as Company.
probl
tine," Jehudah Hallman told his
audience at the Hillel Club meet
ing In the Y-Chapel last night He
added that the Jews control the
resources, finances, politics, and
commun leaUons of the country-
a Jewish state actually exists In
Palestine, hut It laeks official rec
ognition
■peaking in his dynamic, vola
tile manner, Heilman gave his Us-
teenra a kev-hol* view af Middle
Eastern affair* Taking up some
ri'unlrle' of that pari uf the world
Indlvlduallf, fte pointed out thel
» non la IM bitty Arab nation
a majority of Christian
Arabs WM
Although nat an the Hat te be
interviewed by the Anglo-A
aaa Committee that vtatted
Middle East, the Archbishop
Beirut told Heilman that l strong
Jewish state was neeaaeary to aa-
sur* Christian freadom tn the
Arab world
Heilman emphaslaed the Imper
tones of religion In Middle Eastern
politics, saying that religious and
political Woden were one and the
ike pi
for the Aggie corps trip to Hous
ton on November 16 for the Rice
game. v
Cadet Colonel of the Corp* Wil
liam L. Brown, l orp* Adjutant
lames D. Tittle, Corps Operations
Officer Sammy B. [White, Corps
Public Relations Officer J, K. H
Nelson, Senior Class President El
mo C. Livingston and PM SAT Col
onel Guy S- Meloy will most with
i epreaetitatives of the Houston
Chambet ef Commerce at 10:30
m. to arrange for the Corps pa
rade through downtown Houston
Saturday morning before th* Ag
gie-Rice tilt, and to prepare for
the midnight yell practice to be
held by Aggies Friday night in
Houston before the game.
Tomorrow afternoon at 2:20 p.
., th* student group and a dele
gate from the Dean of Mea’s of
fice will meet with student leaders
and the Dean of Student Affaire
at Rice in a move to elimhtato any
unfavorabW contacts or troubles
between th* student bodies of the
two schools during th* week end
of the game
The AAM group win return to
campus MU fhurm
to o#
imeri-
d the
lop ol
Aa a reply to tb* vartoas report*
of Arab armies moving to pelala af
attack, Heilman team tered tbnt tb*
ealy army ef nominal Mae that
ceald attack Palestine waa the Ira-
qataa fere*. Bat thin graap. be ex
plained, were tied dawn ta their
own caaatry by tba threat af Ear-
dink r*»oh against the rnMng and
Itvermtag party ta Iraq.
Considering other armed groups
capable of attacks on Palestine,
Heilman stated that tb* Trans
jordan army, th* only other group
near Palestine, eonatituted no
threat slnac R la Wd by British of
ftatra and It la highly unlikely that
they would move on British soil
Heilman said that Ihe strength
of th* Eton let movement will he
shown by He giving th* Jews in
Palestine a now direction in spit*
af tb* siWtlng eondlMons He si
plalnad this by saying that they
must primarily aat up a commun
ty far free Idea* and fra* living aa
opposed te ana far defense atone
The PiWotlntoa Jews bellevs
that It to their hiatortoal, patitWal,
ooi hams* right to riatm that
eaaatry aa a homeland far th*
Jawtoh people, Heilman staled.
RtlaGng that the Mufti to Jt-
ruaatom has as Id that he la ready
to tet along with th* Jews already
la Palestine, Heilman says this W
a sign that there can be peace In
Palestine when the Issue of Parti
tion to passed. Th* ramson far th*
Arab protects W that Jewish Im
migration into Palestine W a thorn
in th* side of rising Arab nation
It to unfortunate that two paa-
pto should reach thy stage af na
tionalism at the sama*|imekM
Heilman. That, he Mdcd. to
•tefftea
Paso during
had tail svvry 1
ally decided to end It al
Ing Miwrienwa of other suleldala.
he didn’t want to muff th* job and
suffer any pain, to he went dawn-
town and bought some poison, a
rope, a pistol, and some gasoline.
He then went to the river with all
of this paraphernalia, got In a row
boat and shoved out from shore.
He rowed .under an overhanging
limb, tied th* rope to high branch,
saturated himself with the gaso
line, aimed th* pistol at his head,
rope around his neck, lit the gaso
line, aimed the ptoto 1st hie head,
and then kicked the boht out from
under himself. The bultot missed
his head and cut the rope, hto fall
into the river put the gasoline out,
and he gagged upon swellowing
f water and got rid of the
patm.. ,,
Then, said Starnes, “he ueed hto
head and swam out of the river."
"The keyword for immeasurable
ogreea," slid Starnes in hto clos
ing statement, "to to bring indus
try to Texas."
He added, “We are drifting into
state of mental lethargy: some
one else thinks for ua; we need to
use our heads."
meter and a visit
member Plans far (hr
are not eompleta, but
are tontetlvsiy 'cheduled over th#
local brdadeast station. Awards will
be In the f«rm of medals ta the
first four team*
Since the same question will be
ueed later In the interrollegtote
competition, the debating society
hopes this subject choice will pre
pare chib member* slnng that line,
as well as encourage others to join
the club.
price ta ike
imee* to It senu, Thta prte* la
JSyASjisEfim
iV# twill Vttlte ; All ml I lift ftH item atMaaaim* tttiftft La.
iBteftft VlftlteB rweirveiwmi eyi if* efl™ MmWill rW
..j 11LT, III •• per nlghl,
Consolidated Pet
Show la Thursday
Do* and Pet show of the
M Consolidate! School wUI
■u: nuiay evening.
Women’s Food Group
To Meet Friday
Breakfast to Ready" will be
tha subject demonstrated Ufo..-
the Callage Station Women’s Pood
P meeting Friday at ftilO p.
n the home of Mrs. Georg*
Potter, MN Kairry Iteaai
Mm, Carl Files, skalman, will
Me over tha meeting
I'HMlI
MANKMALL
FAIR PARK FOtl
MARMIAI.L, Tea, Nav, ft -
A eontraet awarding th* ua#
fair (writ stadium far tl
••sseball seasen ta H ,H.
operators of the Langritw,
FgAasmLLaea taMaat t.~.i aMaasdai^maMa
11 mim n»pr, Dvina WWIPMVTH
hart tadaj^One of the nine garb
mi af Ihe whale trouble »The
rabton nsiioo'ii'm that was try
a ta ripe during the war wae
allowed expression by the Arab
leader* MipMMB4*’jptean si-
plslned, adding that their neutral
ity In the war waa a forasd event
formed by the Arab leader*, ale*.
Whih sttemptmg to convln#* tb*
Palaaltaa
Wichitans Plan .
Christmas Dance
The Wichita Falls AAM Clab at
its meeGng this weak mad* further
plans for s Christmas banquet and
dance to be held In that city De
cember 14.
Tha Aggtalaad Orahaatn will
play at the Wichita PaUs Country
' iut> on December St-14, the latter
data being an sll-colicg* dance far
Aggies from -that vicinity. Admis
sion will be $4-71 per couple.
A page la The 1941 Lengham
« been reserved far the olub.
Th* neat tawMEi ol the Wtahha
Falla Club will be bald en Novem
ber II In Room Ml
Calves Selected
For Experiments
J. H. Jones of the animal hus
bandry department and G. W. Bar
nes of the Extension Service have
gone to Amarillo to select ealvea
from th* Bevins Estate for experi
mental pasture and feeding work
at the Amarillo Agriculture Exper
iment Sub-station.
The calves selected will be win
tered in groups of ton. Some of
the groups will receive bundle feed
and cotton seed cake, and others
will run on pasture supplemented
with cottonseed cake.
After th* feeding period th*
cahre* will be graaed until next
summer and then sent to market.
The yearling ealvea at the end of
the grating period ar* expected to
weigh 900 pound* and grade ‘good’.
twlHBaatetaal' is designed to
determine practical and economic
studies of utilising pasture and
forage with a minimum of grain
and concentrate* for production of
acceptable market beef.
Glowing Bird*
Reported by 1'
Wildlife Her vie*
IR^UI BKRVICB
Eastern rela
audience on the merit af
partittaa, Heilman alee presented
Intepaattaf Insight* of conditions
that exist In Midd* 1
lions. Boise of his
not those
ports from
fersnt light* on the trouble
tb* Patastta*
f II In
jlldlng
" ^
Mothers Honor
Former President*
Ute Braaas Caaaty AAM
Mother'a Olub bald a Hallgwsan
social si their tost meeting, Thurs
day afternoon ta th* ealtaf* YMCA
Tha aaatel waa bald ta honor af
pfctet pf^teldtefitii te(f tHte
club. Pact presidents present at
th* meeting war* Meeds met F. L
Thom*., r odent wfc* tba club
anmntaed In till. F, C. B«i
ton, C. H. Winkler. I. M. Ehsrwiad.
W. L Porter, J. It. Jamaa. G. E.
M*d*ley, B. D. Gofer. Ivan Lang
ford, ML Cnihtan, and R. H Her-
i <
ight. Music for both eccaa- >
ions will be furniehed by the Ag- /
gietond Orchestra.
The Friday night dance will let
out in time for dancers to attend
midnight yell practice, BUI Tur
ner. director of th* orchestra, said : .
today.
Supplementing the dance on Fri
day night will be an Aggw-SMU
Jamboree ta Geion Hall. The Jam
boree which starts at 7:30 will in
clude entertainers from A. A M.
and SMU.
Participating ta the program
will be Pansy Ytarrta and Trey
Taylor, a Intis-Americas dance
team from SMU, sad The Mus
tang Men, SMU’s all-male glee-
club.
Aggie talent for th* show w4i)
include The Aggie land Orchestra,
Th* dinging Cadets, The Bnrlwr.
shop Quartet, hotter known as the
"Aggie-nisers", Willy Pierre, vo
calist, and The Aggie Ramblers.
Pierre will stag "All Th* Things
You Are". "M Down, Servant"
and "Dry Bones", 'plrituals wtU
t>* sung hy the Staging Cadets.
Buddy Boyd, soloist, will ring "Kris
OaaaT, assampsntod by the Bing,
tug Cadets.
The Barbershop Quartet whtoh
created quit# a name for liaelf last
year will be mmpoeed of Tommy
Gould, first tenon Ralph Wheat,
seeund tenor; Bob Rlinson, bari.
tattei ami Helmut Qulrsn, bass
Playing western numbers, The
Aggie NsmMeea boast five mem*
They ar* Roland Johnson,
tabor*, jtaa Ulimp, Tea •
The
AAM.
be held in tb* Animal Husbandly
pavilion Thuraday evening at I p
m., stated Ray Oden, husineS' maiW
uger for Gw show.
The show will be the eighth an
nual l)oif Hter p t show for gradl
school and junior high school spon
sored tay the Mother’s and Data*
Club. . -i
Poster winner* for the best *d-
vertising pesters were Virginia
Hickman, fifth grade student, and
Jimtay Simpson, second grade *tl»-
d*at with each mceiving a foun
tain pen.
E. M. Hildebrand, general chair
man, listed hto committeemen a*
follows: C. O. Spriggs, production,
Ray Oden, business manager, Man
ning Smith, ringmaster Charlaa
La Motto, judging and awards,
Marty G. Karow, registration, C.
G. “Spike” White, stunts and fea
tures, Reverend Orta Helvey, food,
Rurmoad Reiser, publicity, and F.
l. Dahlberg, property.
Pet* owned by children or the
family may be registered at 6 p
m. , and the parade of all entries
will begin at 7 p. m. ,
R.R. CommiNHioner
Suggests Hiring Oh
Research Engiitr^r
# af hto statement* were
commonly heard ta I*-
t this area sad throw dif-
hU on the trouble ta
Rarity
Member ol
wftliINGTON , Nov, 6^ -Birds
that shin* ta tha AafR.wfl) a
phaaphorascent light Hite that
given aff by same fish and other
•oa ayaature* are th* nesrta-
rredfbta rarity ropartad hy Dr,
‘ leAtee of the Ul Fl*h
ilif* Borvtao,
htafi aftethteDterl ihta atAttemafitJi
- - wm El™wvwvw t e row w vrovwrffWf* x^e
tiderabl* number of ro*
who ttaalart
they have soon tha pheno
mena ta eueh diver** bird* *9
bofltoewta, nlghi-herons and Aus
traDan finches
Or. MeAte# ha* not boon ebte ta
dlsaavar what cause* the light,
b«l Ir euspoeta It eonw* from
huaEMMB bnetaria or fanfi oaten
by the birds nr sttached to their
t
ihst they hsvi
The fifty members present were
served spiced tea by Mrs. Gibb
Gilchrist, and cake by Mrs. 0, A.
Modberry.
WARDEN FREED I
, 1EUNBWICK, QA., Nov I -VFi
—H. G. Worthy, Former Warden,
and fear former guard* at
Glynn County Convict Cat
acquitted yeetei
chargea that they violated civil
rights of prisoners In tb* slaying
of eight negro convicts Jaly IL
t amp ware
of federal
Fifty engineers should be hired
at |M per month to do rosoaiEb
»»rk at A. A M„ the Uaiveretto
of Texas, and any other state eof-
Wg* whore graduate w&t in pe
troleum engineering to don*.
According to an Aeaocinud Prose
fljMfc i Ohiimaa Ernest 0.
Thetapaon, of the Teaaa Railroad
Commlseion, mad* that suggeetien
! Mmarh at a Houston Trofflr
(’tab luncheon yesterday.
NuUng thgt the Urgoat refinery
In Ihe wand hai boon built m Ah
agldi
rinfftetatHl treat
» "vyWw^tlwfi lr| PH
Mitt! ta thaft in enr
the** of our alltoa Ull* oil
the dtfftranet between freedom
atevary. ^
Thftiwuii said Ute commi
hoped "to be ebu to skew tb*
ban of the next Texaa
that H woo Id ba food *
th* logtalotuW to authoriae
sppn.pt.ate out af the ample
ulatory oil tax npw levied, a
of money euffteient ta add Rfly
graduate engineer* to oar staff at
I2U0 per month each."
Ha computed stadtoa, bo said,
could bo tha baato for giving tfe
rradust** resesrehers their mae-