Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 3, 1947)
; : '1 ■' . I - m 1 14 '' f, W'i 1 N i <■ Lil— |i If i:; i$- ■ j a 1 1 •,\ / . . r i ; '. ■ 1 caused: a the nigh ,, sharply for sabojtaigej strikes. X. PASjS ^AROtAGR b\ PARIS, Tpcjc. ,3 -p-Thl- National Aisenibli||reactili ly to offi< iajl report that <: fi>tal trii|n wrec \ ■. appro\je|fl todg; ihcreasiiil the for COAST jlN MAJ 11 LE. /‘MIAMI, iFbi, lO-team Knajoj* les ed a dud! pnce bt vived in jthe Nat can Leagues iih-1 • The extecutiye ( up preliniihary pi four/Pacific Coat in the nufjprs, th(j learned from a r||i^hle r si c last night. The so are Los Oakland iijreei addjc 1 iAnjjele# ijind Hoi ywood >vn vt. A NO I t SAN WECO, !lardin r Sijmmons Jenej, TexL and College ’'11!' pi eel mia'l IR iPipH R< y here Novi yea^ that ! 'i , ench Kyift- jteurs iring haw ialtips tat^ng |UE$? 3 (flffU'The lie, whiitjh prov- inre, mi.ilOe re- '■ al an i!plmeri-. near fit ire. t neil ht/ h awn is for $j|ir iittl^g .Leagblf teams s?(icjiatj|d press Volume 47 | r teams San: iTpiiicisco, if mb r —- T n i'trers'ily; m Viieiio tile-fie foot I >ay. PLAN Sl'AHH riALlUs, Tex structiotpiof a ! Carjand'th ■ park i|iigsLba? liy the l(’hniSipi( r of Tole^y, Ohioi. |:t SLAlfPED j)|[tP 3 Abi- Sjtate ifui an- game Faith Greatest ; i! Nj I • :t ' K ? M 1 ! '\f ! ■kj \ • i ITT PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTE COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEjXAS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3,1947 I . J • . I w x-xx r i ^ | j ■ i - t ]' [ ii • ; j \ • ur Own Ability eed, Thinks A Our IK! AUSTIN, TL Three stidgnts for the j deaf y - |i- terdjii they ha/e, beer Roger t\I. Pow came aS the Stati began i!t|i fourti tion into student! he Tekjtis NEW! ATOM ATLANTIC __(A*t—^David It. man of Ithe Atr mission,, disclose I * United States n atomic weapons and plu|,onmm. 1 \ s onrLsRo MASON, TE? Toifi Joijdan of hunter’s,: dream legal depr with /f markpmansbji H iAffT ’’ l |—Con- ijiht| at tirre . of }un?ed pauki-l’lbg Cd. ‘ ’ ‘ f LS , i i.pi... school L stified Supt esjti monv iSn\ i’s anpaid ThL« lop rid ay of nmpklilrtfj. , ■ r WL Y.'K dlient ipl. ijic Eiiiigi yest«}iSdi|y is pco< iLm ho l \' iep he to sh Dec. S jL->A > ) psa ri‘|ili|red the Killed two jjTiiis feat Itmlr-Mcp on the Tom White RapiJn, 1|1 np|ei south ■j If ARABS 3 west of Mason.: 1 I DAMASCUS IT*—ThrChart l thbrizetl! the gf to pay jiu fijHit OOO.OOP : Syrian into an‘Arab “liberatiion” thy United Natiips vrjtu to pa’rtftioit. r i ; Triv AUGjJSTA, (JET FhNI JSlYRI.Aj |Pfc T -3 —$ • of, iMiif ies au- v /nmemttyijstenlay ! ^ (| A., De :|3 —tT*,- •The tifial of four‘neb cigirged with stealingj 2| Niivy m: (thine g'ins from nearby Eli si i Fielll/vpit to a jury in, U S., j liftiict fotprt here < yesterday. .TwjC / fied tha|t the ai ; paid', fob with s Republit ftinds repuhlid again vasiop-iiievplt. ' tended jin frglji were taken ai supplied pure! (verthriiw :>he P Pent «| Vp^iezi: bl i. otrFSTiJkjTst WAf IliNGl . Di A forhieTipifili'iail of account In day t|re|)jwv' I «i \so badif /bat j whetpei| tf h:y , ficit jintits infciimb T. iCoileman \n Itew a | balujp e : now Prinbess Amp I of his distant o their etigpgd a mUntl . a-si iph I’oyal fanijly tail TWO i f)RER # Imp ; |p t 1« •. \ ■■ 1 4 m \ % ■ K DR. FRANK Physiologii ' \ EATON jj | | j. iii I; I | •( i It ' j : by FARRIS BU)CK : • j j t ' 'I I ^ | j] ‘The only limitations on our realization of tomorrow is thq limitation we impose today. What we need is faith in bur own ability to cope with our problems; all things are possible to those who aspire.” said Ellis Arhall, former gov ernor of Georgia, in an address at the Bryan High School auditorium last night. Arnall was sponsored by the Bryan Artist series. • I ♦ Impressing ‘his audience with bcjth; his ideafism and reailism in rejaeping a solution to the prob- jlepisi of: the world today,, Arnall {attributed present day difficulties itio the world/ failure to keep pace ] • Iwith human rights and the idea of k ternal freedopi. “We talk fni terms pf peace and think in jtermp Pf war,” paid .Ar hall, speftkingiof the international ‘Duchess of Malfi’ to “At Guihn Hall Thursd ; | M jC . t . •' . • . ; Public Hearing To Be Held On Rent Controls A&M Assigned To miitrol j _ _ ‘ J i j\| ear Last !i Mission * ig- , ARON situation. Military might and the atomic bomb offer no solution to our problems and hope fpr world peace. Reace tranquility cannot be predicated on* fear, he continued. He saw hope in , the U.N.f)., even with its imperfections and weak nesses. “It does offer a pattern and guide thereby we can settle our differences.” In emphasizing the idea that no one can be free until all men are free, Antal! said. “If we are Igoing to effectively champion 'democracy and freedom we must start at home.” “Our needs; are simple,” contin- air- ;om- the cl ng/new radium l Dr Frank M. EaUh, senior phy> ed ^' nal1 lu ™ thn ' n « % ^ 3 I siologist of the US department of | to advance the^ standard of living Agriculture and the A&M Airri-! ?. n(i /trengthenmg democracy here, cultural Experiment; Station, hai, He t . ll8ted our,needs as better edu- been selected for air. advisory as r caUon our one cure /or ignorance signment in the Near East with and ^tolerance; better health by the Food and Agrhulture prganiL' ,ncreas,n ^ the number of doctors zation of the UnijTl Nations. specialist i ii crop product histaSliMntj of 2'.. [) >unds I$920,0001 (A rue fu|d|for the o|f fPalestjiifie, which hist week OTT1 As tion under irrigatior \ Eaton will gp to Egypt, Lebanjorj. Syria, and Iraq to observe agricultural con ditions and reviewj dans developed by these countries jf >r ityiprovement of their agriculture production: Dr. and Mrs. Eaton left College Station Saturday jfdr consultations in Washington, b ‘tlore isailing foh 1 Cairo, Egypt. He h/pects'tb return in March or April.!! I The Food, and Agriculture Or ganization of the United Nations is sending foijr Ug|%ultuMM spec ialists to help theie countries in the planning phas e: ftf cooperative iti upon, these youn lefenMntjs testi-1 to him foreign tji list wotf ttoigbt and } it into operation; ^•123 of |D([minican j Dik, Eaton, widejj to .hel|tj |rcjte(ct the j western states for agricultural rehjal| Eaton will be autihl breeding,’deep-w^ll drainage of irrigjilt fd land) These adviserd plans the four eoi|nt and suggest alter i thought • desirably, operative prograpi Jhas beep agrejed ilitation. With rities on dheep irrigation, and pros i^uI ion con- quality of irrjgj.tioih watojr kriow .that the guns , ledge, has been * siijkned to cooper 1 ■ Slinesjiaiid other ;ative work with] tip Texas station economic opportunity by decentral izing industry, destroying mono polies, cartels:^ and tariff barriers, ahd establishing a balanced pro gram of agricultural and industrial ejxpansion; more public works to make available better highways, schools, churches, and clinics; and the government keeping in st^p with the will and welfaire of the people. In dismissing the danger of communism ip this country, Ar nall pointed out, ‘The danger to America, is not communism but our. failur* Ox make democracy wprk. The Aiferican people will nefver accept communism because it can't work.” In introducing Arnall, Mrs. Jud Collier of IVfuroford, Texas, gave an. accpunt of hjs accomplishments while governor of thy state of Georgia. He was responsible for the abolishment of the poll tax, lowering the voting'age to 18, the . , passage of 4 soldier’s voting bill, Ijmicijans to put the promoting of industrial expan- j sjon, removal of education from will gtudy the |ries hhve made, ate plans if When the yp-, 'flee <|s are prepared knbjyn in the | the influence; of state politics, rais- iWn .s contributions j ing the educational standard of the Cp tjiminist in- .to irrigation agriilultuye and! the 1 state, and fighting freight rate discrimination; in the south. In pushing the jajtcr progjram, Arnall personaily aigued the case the U. S. Supreme Court. fv; j 1 »s mI' iif ; i a *; plot tp 1 ! since' 1940. pifovisiyilal 'gpyerh- ee (lec ne iff kej n< hut jcctolr cif the j IA Cl Cjrpotiiite Au dits Division; said that iactuall' the ‘fbuidget ?* rp us” 000 jannouneei ijjJ A.-L * U.. J, .j v. ua.iui v i come in and invite d"? |out on fish- Ivhep tHe tre^rj hlsj IliuyT-io \viis ing and huntiijgj f c; tli’ Z. ur] ids las t; ‘.yi 1 IT 1 M II \ I TORENHAMENi D R N MARK. D«;c. 3 -j-'A" f Ipashing/ouJig King ;Mihai I; of Rp ttiai i;( ; iti(f fcauteous lait, l(|l announce >nt pi- )h: hly within •cte Ho if tp the Dan- tt-41-l K' Reds! ip a’ L\iGi its PARI|S. Dpi murjist j Har fional ajssemH a r muiiisti ed str appyaa-cjd to jt| offensive agif ces jpecilipyii and ifuir es. ! i k den: HOllkTO “IVe doh’t ajd| it : a ilues C. \C. lirowij sup;rinlend| Conpany, s) refi rent e S| shi] liner t o! hiir in ! Fe« porp; 14 j A CCUS El \iA 7 SHl|(! TON Lc; ders of e ,es testiifiei pm er/ a ttal iun Atltoiyi cat s§ “ t pri ;es vthie ly (emhgiTti? US t-( A*— I general| Jester- i iitii books I 4ci! kjiows" j A public hearing to deter mine whether rent controls are needed in Brazos County, will be held tonight at 7:30, in the District Cpurt Rooms, Court Housp, in Bryaii according to Gyo. E. Adams, chairman of the Bryjan Rent Advisory Roard, , Witnesses representing tenants; landlords, and ojther civic groups are invited to atjtend the meeting. Those expecting to give .testimony! orally or written;, before the hear] ipg are requested to support their] testimony with specific facts. From the testimony of the wit nesses and othyr factual data, J. r U 11 11L ■ ■ Xv w /■ which is being [obtained through at the co ^ renct , of thc governess' and the vicar. Thi ms&ra. 'IP’s# i w. ^ Housing Expediter, Tighe E. Woods in Washington, D, C. It will.then] be det'ennined whether rent con-! trols should be ynded or continued/^ in Brazos Courjty, in accordance i with, the provisions of the Hopsing ; and .Rent Act of 1947, Adanyr sstat- edi VICAR!—Tanagra Kanellos as Cecily in The Importance of Being Earnest By FRANK KNEITFER Information which the. Board will consider at tonight’s/hearing in- cludys the vacancy/situation in renital units, thp humber of fam ilies seeking places to rent, the. question, along with prospective, derhiand for housing as render interest, came influenced hy . employment condi- tions, the/lrend of new construc tion, -pmtfnble changes in the gen eral IcWH '.of rentes resulting from ddcOHtrol, and t!hy ; effects of these changes in rctjtal costs on evic tions. ! Readers Make Suggestions To Improve Content of /Battalion is a sskflie from./the play to be pjresi»nte< !° 4- and ments: “Editorial page cries for improvement;” “Let’s have; more down to earth, facjual editorial writing and less 'of this “Lawrence Sullivan Ross’ tripe“The only reason I read the editorial page is sci I can have a good constant case of the botts;” and “The editorials are lousy!” One amigo advocated completely restaffing the editorial department And another said: “l Ernest E. Morrell. Jr., senior think the editors have been very architecture stildent from Bryan, successful in turning what used placed third in a contest to design : td be a damn good school paper a battlefield memorial to eommem-' hj,t6 a ‘small town’ weekly, publish- •fschool news, ‘bitch columns,’ What would you change if you 0n the othertsiHe of the Ifedger wore editor of the Battalion . That we i« e some replies that warmed a poll °f/editorial h.^rtsl “Look forward to out in last vour edito^ials^ , “getting better papers and netted much ^ the time;” “best Battalion in comment. Not all of it advocated n)y 2 o years at A&M;” “I like the radical change of policy and con- progressiyeness of the editorial Wp!' < ' staff;” and “A good " 10^ against Editorials bore thc brunt of un- tough opposition. Keep it up,” fil- pqpdlar. opinion Some of the com- tened into tjlie office among the week’s Merrell Third In ‘Texas’ Division Memorial Contest before AIL or a de- ihr. Guvs In A JatnjExtendej4 Invitations . . . Card index Will Bej Useful' When Kvle Returns to Texas ‘ in j i ' ' ■ ./U;. r i N I).] KIEL cator and they Ireceivejd me with }! f "|-mer di- 1 Ry PRESTO (actual !v 1757 ,()()(),'- treasury “When Lwasj(l|ear of! agriculture ol 1 hoys used to out at A&M, the ““"t got in a jam, I mil lirjx invitations and lust as yoon asj I; get back to TpXas to liVe, I am gainir to be ready to accept sqme of them." j ; t Slo said “Deiri-’l E- • Kyle, Am- trips; when they le a dat'd of these open arms.; One Guatejmalan told me once, “Ambi ssador Kyle, the people of iGuatemala jhave been 50 ydjars." The very friendly and waiting foil you people haver been eager to follow i id vice, j tpy opinion, “Guatemala, though a sin uia al- a small country is one of the most beautiful arid ‘colorful in the world,’’ (he said. Fotj its size it „ i , • i . i has the rpost extens ve flowy.r, m-harma,; ba^sador to .(iiiajtjcnr ala, who is in : f ru jt t and ;farm croppi anywhere. the Bryan and College Station area \ ts climate is almost perfect 0n r an ioT f n Ci ‘ k i!it U ! f I Dean die has In 1041 Deal Ky e made an,of- AGRI CULTURAL ftcial visit tp !|th(' Central and ofhte the landjng of the !3<ith Di vision at Saleino. \ t First place tit the contest was woh by Jose Miguel Alvarez, South American architecture student, at the University of Texas. E. E. De- t«n, also of tli|‘ University of Tex- as v took secorjd place. | The memoriill is to jbe erected on 5 lucres of la|nd at the Salerno Beach where tlje landing toog phite. The land wasl given tb the 36th i 1 11 Tl Division Memorial Association by DaSKCtbR S1 l>OUtS the Italian government: Competitors] in the contest con sisted of 60 third and fourth year architecture students of A. & M. and TU. Final judging, which was held in Austin on November 22, was other observations. Suggestions were not lacking to improve the over-all caliber. One wag, who facetiously! signed his poll with “Ivan Yantbf” but whom we know is not YantiS, complained about the stars used as page dres sing. “There are tool many stars in your publication, not in the sense describing youlr sta^f, but like in heaven.. I am cqntinually hupiming ‘You’re the Only Star in My Blue Heaven’ and ‘Stars in Mji'Eyes’ ns I read your paper.” “How about more ‘Letters to the Editors’ from piiofsj-i-thay should ed five times a week. There are plenty of first-class papers in the YMCA and library chock full of national and international events. Most of us would appreciate more; *he population. “I read everything] 1 , writes a man be good for a laugh,’ who doubts that any can come from thali segment of Brazos Club Sets Feb. 26-28 for JC cjiai i ArM Poultry Judges Today I National Conte frf* W£ Larnept . ] ;|hj) last; person tq 1 iifllthe iplay, alive Married at- t‘i iliCj; the; Duchess qf I ore with and secretly oijtio, Her/iociah inferior, ■iitge was kent secret tM'h ojf the third child: n Friday at 8 ijv LQtTIS MORGAN “The Duchess pf MalfU’i purest tlna redy ! In English literati re Out sail Shakespeare, will hg present ed on the stage (jt Guiqn - Hall Mlhllatre, Thursday might. IVrittcn, ift ’the | early pajrt ' of the seven-; teejfith century, by Joint V/ebsteif^ t n English .tailor turlne(l t drpma I is*, the play is based on f he ] trup Ii x; lerieitces of Sjignors: Jo tnna o Ar -agop, grand-tlaugh er if Kin JUe 'dinalnd of Naples. I is Itelievejl that I Webster, received pah of hij hlinijormdtion on the tragedy 1V<» t ,tq |s e e.Anto tio^tier t ,e - ■ Married at- Ri and wid )well at fell mnirried'A The thtdr- \ ntil tin ’ 'hell hei iyptheits, Duke Ferdinand and th< i jCprdjjnai of Arragon, in an at ised 11 ^mnt; '!to retain possessicr t of the Duchi'ss’s estate, decided t(i til the Dujchess, Antonio and thje'ichj ilren tjo dentlh Accordin): to tn 11 Mores of the 16th.century Italiii culture, in .which the pliy take prince, Imordbr was not c mjtiaerei a’n imjnrotier way to di^ppse ‘jUudesiirablesi” ' •'.First presented jit Lqmion’b ’ L * am The A&M. tollcghilk Judging team- ydll con phnei with more thanjttventy f e] Various parts (jf the Collegiate Pouljtily Jtnd test in Chicago. , Team members mci Greer] r '~ 2 Missouri, and Illinois, 2 number of'ROP poulijiv; While- in Chicago the t hers will see the Intern Stock Expositinjn, tour try processing ami agencies that hpndlp poultry prodUcjts. a'rud points of general inteh On thg,return trip' tl visit Iowa Sttjtq Cpll< Agriculthral College, am thing sensible ! b <>ma Stat -‘ Federation 3 L- ( 2 y-iNew pom- gucs ijailed aVn'a- V. ipte jyff tertlay on rigid! antj-hti fe jlpT as Corh- ijistv ed sjt • ke ■s y'fufi :hedl what a jo 1st gojsjc^t inept for- thifir Jljlalt t$, depots 4 CLOSB ! L| (TORlIiaA! —the big . Subply j C u two hours en^ployqs Bspcken ' triht fo. ' ' South Central; Countries for the Nelson-Rockvfeljpr Foundation. As a result of: this tijipj and tiis 30 years of teaching experience with Latin-America t students, tlfe dean was convinced tjhat “the Way to win goodwill iitid.confidence for ■ift 'd counter “myself and m> J eountry was to help them in the c eVjeloprPent of tfieir natural ! resoutcpjt through an (ag ricultural and j educational pro gram,” I ' ; ft j 4 •: U • I | 1 ] “When I g it ] therg,” the dean D»-i |! r FEK/Mj. 3 ‘i'P* it tny ivKlatipng jqr :i!of ijnjtt|pretation,'” di ’isj(in| projluction f ir I jhfc Ptjire Oil 1 he ‘e bpsjterdiy with ha rgpp ; if ; illegal hginb 1 fl ed against * bat Shreve- said, “f\told titplpeppie that I was no striped-pants politician but that I was an agri< imurm and an jedu- I f h * Varvel Speaks At 4Kiwanis Luncheon CLARK 3 ]—liD— n EXchang- they are ht Truman Clark be- cohceal re plolitical- ,M /0lR GAME ^ Dec 3 -4»7Pt Bethlehem witll close tc| enable Colrskana- ‘PsycholOgyjj the classroom; to many field; asserted Dr. leducation and; ment in a sp Club at their 1 terday. Dr. Varvel’i in Psycholog; its extensive during the w “Psycholo in the selectij ing the war,” the Army st“ Bi-Dis- l for psyoHol lingi’’ * is moving Dean Kvle has written THE jRICULTURAL REPORT OF GUATEMALA.; He states that Texas has shipped 8 lopds of beef cattle to Guatemala to be used as foundation breeding stock. |f ! The dean; Said that there will! be a great opportunity in Guatemala for agjriculturists sineg the Gua temalap Government is I sponsoring a vocational agricultural program similar to pur own. ! School Enrohnents Hit Record High WASHINGTON. Decj 3 made from es Chun ini if tee head of from the best ch school. five entries man .of the judging coni- were Ernest E. Langford, the architecture depart ment of A, & M.; Don Nelson, ar chitect from Dallas; Temple Phin- The Brazes County A. & M. Club meeting Tuesday night set Feb ruary 26, 27, and 28 as the dates for the junior college basketball tournament at College Station, which it will sponsor in coopera tion with Texas Aggie basketball Cobches. W. N. Colson will head the com mittee <if. local [former students Staging the tournament, while R. E- “Sach” Elkins is general chair- plan of the annual banquet given states one of sound economic Understanding, “because I like.tq gpt my, mohey’s worth.” . if The Battalion’s amlusenlente edi tor is still' suffering shock from this one,: “Mbvie reviews are good, but let’s get an intelligent review er Not all those'pictures are that good.” The staff is smiling and patting babies on heads now] Though not every comment was an ego-builder, all of thein proVe that the paper gets perused. , : The tqam plans to a campus December 7. .r- Mihden.TLa.; FUl. ton, Cuero, Texas: and ljl( fu v New Braunfels,’ Texas. FJ H., . noil, poultry hpsbandrj ifirjofdsjor, is team coach Enroute the foam wi) risl state agricultural colleges of 1 !kh honia, s k\i> 1 * as a I t/alersi bin: mem-; 11 innal live-tj rjj Jo: 1 poul-i Seniors to Tour Industrial Plants SAM Hears Speech On Salesmanship ney, architect from Dallas; and members of the A. & M. cross- Donald Stevens, professor of archi- country and football teams, E. B. lecture at the University of Texas. Sale and Marion Pugh are tlje clubs. permanent athletic committee, aid ing; Elkins with all preparations. Marvip Birdwell. Homer Coving-i tonj and George McCullough will (conduct a membership drive among : local forpier students now affilia ted with the club y H. E. Burgess. • . . Walter Coulter, and Fred L. Cn- “The qualities o/ a salesman hyitt were, instructed to investigate j was the topic of W. H. Waring, ^He possibility of building a club; pic was “Progress and he explained m n .. ./!.!., '.Contributed gres of perpopnel dur- rvel, “ * id Dr. has * .if /ccj .>—College enrollment ffir the 1947-48 school the recojrd total of most a mlillion rftorp thap the pre-war peak (of 1940 and 260,131 mdnf than a year ago,| the Federal Security Agency has an- nounced. ] J Included 4re 1,122,738 vetefans of World War II, of whom 24,091 are women. The veteraps comprise 48 percent of the total; enrolment, and their number increased 3.92 percent oyer the year befoer. were compiled by a result of a purvey. ,. v » SfCijtools-j-everjf institution ervices I of higher; education oh record irt ' thW’ljlSSj: |'M greatly New York has the highest stu- deht total, ij80,874, and Texas ranks witf perceni oyer 1 The figure? the agency] as of 1,763 schoc and sixth liiimiiiaiwiWIMBIItmilH 122,616 students. Cali ia, Illihois, Pennsylvania, am after Now, Yonki ii staff manager of Johns-Manville Company, whp spoke to th(f Society fbr the Adv!;ncement of Manage ment November. 25, Waring, an Ag gie, class of '26, declared that the salesman is 1 the most important man in a concern. “He is the com pany representative in all types of sales and should be thoroughly fa miliar with (pe companys products” said Waring] “Salesmen are more aware of the] capabilities and limi- tatibns of their products than any other group! of men in the com pany. For this reason salesmen en joy a position that offers them a chance for fi more rapid rise through the | company to positions of responsibility.” In explaining the qualities need- j qd to becom]e a good salesman, Waring stated, “First he must! have a fundamental honesty, not: only to himpelf but to Ipd custo-i mer. He should possess temperate habits, have personality, confidence in himself J.nd the eorhijany that he rejiresenljs, and he shpuld have courage and intelligence along with tp. sell himself as nroduot”: hoiue. .President C. N. Hielscher bounced that the club would hold a Deqember meeting. Industrial power and communi cation installations' in the Austin- San Antonio region will be inspec ted by dectrica! engiheejring sen iors Decamber 8-18, it has been an- nounced by Prof. N. I". Rode. Rode f-aid that approximately 55 students along With several faculty members will vjisit the hydroelec tric plant at Marshall Ford dam near Austin on December 8 and will spend the next tiwo days in San Antonio 1 inspecting utility’, tele phone and army installations. Faculty men to accompany the M. D. Crops Team In Internati Chicago Mee Third place] honors Wt*rc by A. & M students i ./hi national Collegiate Ci(p [|, gdgjnj lovelpi Hlltry ; oday from in a Con- ByacltfHars Theatre on IS, 16}4, the pill a gte»t tHqn Hall presentation \ j jecejmbe t Hay was/pot reco ttiked )ts a gireiit work ui til Lam leisiirrected it jten years latcf. The original! five actCVTll to Ipfeserited in tlhree parts] »t 11)0 T^y., .r- Limpn nan inpsemauonj ihp a Itiiin tak|‘s place in Maifi. Ijlom;, Ancona and otper parts of Italy j The Duchess] will be ilaycd ty ‘Tiinagra KamelUos. whilo Mich(ik*l C)ook wjll act as Antoni ».' E W(lli BtrowiUr a no Dean Nelson am ' Duchclss’s brothers. Roekwell Sto njays the part) of Bosol ..htin. [ , '«o:‘jippi-jj .. Iiu keting 1 ilt'i y tind! • sit .other! t ii r ips rn will 4cAans’as th( OVla. lo\r] ti ije, <in th< . : i Hird », the 11 Students, Wi Given Preference Store AM In Exchange By W. P. INGR lal I Pg! iContest held in Chicago) |||n her 29. ' I ; jlj Arnold Novyotny, J T] .and W. L. Zabfik^ [eighth, and ninth reSnoi '* ling it possil^ for jASj third in the' ipitionj.; Oklahoma A&M t/q( with Texas (Tech fit j place., A. & M.’s team wifi hundred dollars and wiH be preshmed wit! ia! -al. Tjrinlbl siixtID ? ntial plat seniors include A. E Salis, L. an- j Haupt, L. L. Grarini. and R. not Chenoweth, Roiie said, j Thc team also plaiij-il the National f'ollcgiaJ ing Contest which was sas City. The contest] consist! < ing 204 cronS and var ing their scientific jnn region where the grown; judging thi' grains; and j grading and cbtton ijccordinj: standards | tT-tt tf Student Masons To Meet Friday at 5 A meeting of all students who are Master Masons has been called for Friday afternoon, December 5, at 5 in the Civil Engineering Lec ture Room, President Gibb Gil christ stated yesterday. • According to word received from j. J. Woolket, College Station rep resentative to the Grand Lodge of Texas how in session in Waco, it is hoped that a Grand Master will be here December 12 to grant a chartep to the Sul Ross Lodge. '■ At the Friday afternoon meet ing, provisions will be made for vouching Masons. Persons who would like to see the Sul Ross Lodge chartered are invited to at- tend. litiN Jet-Engine Course Offered to Aeros 1 ^ ■ A new aeronautical .engineering course, Principles of Reaction En gines,, will be (offered this spring, E. E. Brush, head of the aeronau tical engineering department, an nounced yesterday. The course will include funda mentals, methods of construction, performance calculations, and theo ries of ram-jet, turibo-jet, pulse-jet propeller-jet, and rocket power plants. C. W. Files of the mechanical engineering department will be the instructor for the course, which will be tapghf with fhe coopera tion of that department. The course will be a 3-hour elec tive and will be listed as Aeronau tical Engineering 417. Prerequi-, sites for the course wity be Aero 303, and Aero] 4011 ; v —I—p.. I 4141, ■, Schools for Handlers B 'i'll Schools for food bin 1) held in College Statin according tc) Carl . Brazos County Healt The schodl at (Dll will he held Decht Sbisa Hall, (while f will be held jn the gn cf thej courthouse, O Restaurjant owne other food handle pate in the, ifree ac ficates will he giv* tending. The schools will rection of C. B.' B State Healfh Depi the spon County H * , fj[ 1“ takol inre! 11 i piai secorti ' | velope 1 inertill ?o d ihcj /I Exr omn the haig( loycei PC ;m min> L hr ret - itu ■, th? bei', Vflt- ir jrth In roh J(u|l n Ks s: ind! hdj<t pmlity ' if rrain. Iht fedeji ial| y.( “TSio policy; of the Stf'rel with reference tx other: than members o) i.henli staff! is "to emnloy as studeints and Wives of vpleriiin ! tu- oentsi as ciip profitahl r be ju4id', states Chrl Biirdwell, 1 vanagfer, This statement is borne out the fact; that there nr • seven icran : students and 31 reteran dentil’ wives on- the pavroll of Exchqngo Store. Of this npn one VetQvam student and five, eran! students wives are empljivejr] at ttye A&M Annex, whije the jitt ters Work qn the main carno is'. Birdwell pointed out " th it tlyi salaries paid these studet t en iilbyi’es and their wiveS anlointeit to aj considerable sum lind/.ccijtjr hurejt* materially to the support, (f these students and their \mi$ while they are obtaining thfii col lege! education. During the |916-47 jfisciil year apjproxlrlikiqly was] earned by students and fdent wives As the veteran student wiyey appear from the ; <fp|llegp ixtCt Birdwell hones mori sjudenti will [seek part timq emh qypientj i ij the Exchahge Store. “F art tirrtc wo k ip/jelling will giyil tne slide it] sohie 'fundamental hasinesai rail ing in addition to supplementing his-income.'],.Birdwell .stated. . At the miening of each tern, a ;>i proximat(|ly]75 people are en nlojr-j ed for from one to three wexks it the Exchange Store. R|obert B Barhapy ps pen npr et director of | the story ! and] will , >q If 2)6,500 s|i L 1 di *- ere. ^mrec gtad, to irterView aijV student studeht/wife interestejlvin w irk. lr i LONGHORN NOTICE)! Friday, December j. ja day that clubs and societies may reserve apace in the! Longhori Reservations may be made ii ttie Student Activitieis Office tx tiyeen the hoprs of 8 and !(. —. ——.——-——«reip. 4 ci ry r« (* r 15 5.1.9. t ad ; X Student Leaves SAM Conferen Jack Turner, ’48,jci|idet n ajor B Flight Airforce, (left by iir jV! day evening to attend the Society for The Advancement of Hi(naj;c- mpht Student Chap Arjnual Conferenci th* Hotel New Yobb cetnber 1-5. Turner is represilnting the Ai Student Chapter Jof the j Soct which ia the professional affi] for qtudgnta IQhfi