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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 8, 1947)
■f A 4 I IN |i • B t FLARBS^JN jerus4lem w Comkiunalrfury flated iifi Land agaiil Sati dyihg out tempkf after bringing d< Jews, andj othe ■ East sincejth^ U ed to partition The de^ionstiia that marked thf Lebanon, Syria, i,|t 5ul A IB «y bu ily 14 to 1-16 in t(ie d Nht: estifiej , i tq, ajnd Adeb the fl' ll- y - ubsided. Dispatches 'British (J^lony , cpast, said 25 Arsis ah -. vAere killdd in j^wiousl'th diWorders Jhe^e, but that <3 11 a^y prevailed and the / edi Reports from the ijerday sail 44 hsTdfceen jl that British tropjps we |] ' to help a \ British naMal! ^ '! •‘party and j policq jrt ?ain 1 cqm ■#»e rah: oily ired ggie Masons AttendT 1 | Charter a V! I NEW; FARM PR0Gft WASHf4GTWl Dec! * A Senate; agricjult ire pub<jf> tee expectp to^jrdst - tions for ia combine dev farm program ,■& ut the the year, jChairimaii Aiw said. , \ ‘ ■tf. idipg 1.: m|ilt- 4nda- , m ii| \VRITEktS FAVCfR w|a NEW YORK, Die. 8)-4(i a poll-of $3 sports wrl\tdrs; I f last night’s Jo«f Ijouis-Uqi f Walcott ^ight, ;20 |thoqgh t .Tao wnn i. 1 ■ saw Jde irsjey Joe won. I | at | Even tW radio fveidib: fight seeded ‘tOjfwo^ |W| (f retain the . With tfro miriutfa to Ihst round . Dop' l|jmphy American Broadcaping sportscas :er, .p)ad«| it 'cte^rf '. Louis ha< to*scor| a In title, j H i !: mj I Manufactijrer Will Addr Chapiter Tjie r«on|l,; pi- Laundry npaiiy i olf the tihe femn )any p Volume 47 1 .M — r Provisions are being made to enable all student Master j Masons to attend the charter ing ceremonies' of the College Station Sul Ross Lodge, by the Grand Officers! of the Grand Lodgie of Tolas on Fri day, December 12, Jj J. Wbol- ket, head of the modern lang uage department, said yester- $y- : .'Ij'-Pj The Bryan Lodge has calldd a. sbqclul meeting for Wednesday, December 10, to conduct examina tions and provide an'opportunity for the vouching!of students who h^ve neveip attended a Lodge nieet- injg with a Master Mason whpjw|i|l bt[ present at the cerenlohies. Those riot qualified to sit wiith a Mdstejr liljason should be precept bec4 se no examinations can jb® held iKri-i dty night, Woolket ssiitl. I Transportation to Btykn is being aifranged, and those! desiringHa ride should phone or| leave their names with Woolket, irpom 119 of Academic Building. Mating 7 1 ■ i i: 1 i- William S. Han . of the Hamrndnd ing Machinery I Co nbaity ^ will address the st ipen^; the Society for_. t id of Manajgemenjfc T liesijaj ' C at 7 in tlhe Eldctr cal Lecture Room Hammpnd’s hrgb: originated in 1®|11 as af and tailoring llmj, is'' no Jident; Qleim- Wajco, 4eri of anient [fjHnjirig Irieferung m I ' bjjich wear cog nized as jthe latKeitjsoiirtdMs^ch equipment in tjlne squth, als|b! stap- plying Mexico!'an 1 jSqutih^ l^neri- can countries. limfnbnldl, i allsp founder Of the )Hi< k£ I ubb|e| jcOm- pany of Waco,; p|ujs to esttablish sales outlets |h aj3iit|al TO I;S of every m*jor coiint-yr. I 1 In the: article, ‘|Tiixp s DyiHiinw,” ' appearing in aijrete it ;is u e-! 1 * f [the magazine, TrOinod Men, was stated: “Men wore for H: mfiomd; i he works for ithen j—^ • v: tl jqcite ; amazing, and iialso j quits’ p*tural “results all aroitnd|”j, S | i j Following I^anjmjonp’i Jack Turner, licalei ihvnj 1 'if of B Flight Airforqe who : rdf rNenlted the SAM 'Student Ctiabttr cl AifeM ini Cone ayfe and |; , “ . f Ycrk, December 1- 5,!; w 11 I r^pOrf f an ; his trip. '"j ] Visitdrs, as iwe 1 isljm the society anjijl .<tudfb t!i agement engiheeiinje:,: air of places for the transportation which will leave at 6:30j We Ipjesdayi will be the YMCA, the circle on Sul phur ^prinps Road foif thobel l!|ving in College/View, and the Student ; < Center at Bryan, Field Annex. The charter for; the peiv SullRoss Lodge No. 1300 was gnarjted Thors-' day at,the 112th Communication of the Masonic Grand Lodgb in Waco, President Gibb Gilchrist an- nojunced Friday > upon j! returning from the meeting. | Attending the conyerition from College Station were Gilchrist, W. H Badgett, secretary : Ray Odeii, | Ji|j. Woblket. J. H. Sorrels, S. R. . » ¥> At VBUSHED DAILY /IV THE COLLEpE STATION (Aggiel»nd),.TEXAi MONDAY^ DECEMBER 8,1947 A&M COLLEGE Staging of ‘Ear Large Aggie, St The grandfather of all wise crackin’ com edies, “The importahee of Being Earnest” proved spry enough to amuse a large A&M audience Friday, night when that play by Oscar Wilde was presented by the National; R* Wi now tl tocrat adoxic K :•! ■'! V. if H Numberll photographer’s shadow w Sleep Becomes A Luxury Motorized Keeps Miln CRAIG LATASTE, here showing off his sound truck, actually wears matching tfocks, but the ouldn’t lead one to think so. rt to attend. Rugh 3 Yet • Before Clip ri of . 1 nian‘- jijivjited t- ! Si J, i>il si ^ol or the! use o| tlieiii -yea . hjblitiw a certaih mininjun yisoi; fj | The' first ahd thiti. fail ^.pissed the Serufte ahd kre|jl)n Calendar. Thtj sdjconjcj a)i increasie subsist training, are,; onj thb; cjlfe have not be^n |eMre u If; aiiow- WASHING’fO House Republijcar 'bja^ersliaite con sidering special ush; ptipijiliefeto, get three bilk, or 'Yaf 1 ^vejteirans thorugh Congress Jbafor« !jIhjntit- mas. >. I J; ■ | •' > The'top thrt-e arc) 1. Raise th? < ubj/Mtem ance for veterans ibPsqh the G. I. Bill jhf Rights. 2. Establish! a lispqili ty scale for arrested <g£e: culosisj when !)th< i'distias(( tracted; by the Vetejfai military service. 3. Extend tjhe $1^()0 mobile allowainct tin 1 ’ 0 - have Wst onej on/noitp i By LOUIS MORGAN The Lassie-like-jeanine stared lobks away as Wright, jfl. W. Barlok, and A Nelson, jj, y J ' j , -j Members of the H r yan delega-i; tfi' _ tiejn were 1 C. E. Nisbet, Di W. jFair- ‘ja im ' ed ” in his d ir 4 tion - Craig D. ir^n, A. F. Carson, A. p. Syptak, ‘jBottsie” LaTaste, electrical engi- i. askance from two e battery of loud+speakerS was anjd T. FI Carson. ^ Forms for Pepsi- Cola Fellowships Due Before Jan. 2 !Wit\i January 2, ifl48,!;set as the d eei ing major, whistjled shrilly into e microphone. Fop an instant the og hesitated,/ then,: anchoring his il, struck out for tall timber, aTaste’s fiendish ! laughter urg- i : • j oise-Maker r Hall Awake ing him to plishments! of Thus LaTas volume of his His portable equipment ea produce or rqi pends upon certain dials truck, resemb dry delivery even greater accom-f speed. te demonstrated the amplifierf-on-wheels. Strbmbqrg-Caidson. be used either to :ord sound. It all d«- he manipulation of and switches. The ing a modified laun- ehiclej he built him self, beginning with only an axle. for the Pepsl-Cola graduate fel lowships; may be ntade, all eligible seniors ahoiuld obtain fhe hecds- closing date on which applications tola graduate ftll |xh( saty' recommendatibits Woi(e the Christmas vacation,; according tp JohnfM^ Stalnaker, ;dirt<jtor pf th^ feHovtship program. ! [l! The Completed applicaition forn , endorsed by the dean orithp presi dent, must be accompanied by at official transcript of undergraduate credits through the jijiriipt year, the announcement sjtates; and irecorr - mendatipns from two professors shpuld also be sent : to theH^oard on! the forms provided. All material must be in the offices of!thq Repsi; Gqla ! Scholarship Board t in Pa’o Alto, California, by midnight of the closing data. - Application forma may be ob tained from the dean. 1 Twenty-six of these graduate fellowships wjll b^ awarded in March to college students schedul ed to receive bacHeloRs degrees during the academici yeiir 1947-48. Sik winners will be selected from each of four geographic regions in thb United States, and ib addition, aiuuw i tvVo f e ll° ws will be j cabsel from 1 uhder ?taduates of Negro college^. f The winners v-ill receive ^750 a i_L4:, year for three years and they willi have their full tuition paid to any accredited graduate Or professional sciool in the T|niteijl States. They may work in any field of study ! i mfefits ' ttjiber'- Vtl S COR- ^liilic in ' i ■ iiffl *u : ii is! who J hiimps, 14k House b^ll to Ithle-job Jar but liSenate. which will lead! to ain M.A., Ph.D be awarded the wihning 8 contest ants. The quest for actual writing* skill is only part of the search, the ability to think up plots and titles! being the otljer. In the short story division of the contest, | the estijita of the lata Jack London will pjiy $1,000 cash for the best story submitted, $300 for the second best, and $200 for third. 7 j Cosmopolitan magazine, in ad dition, ]vill pay $1,500 for serial rights to the winning story, and \yill havej rights pf H rs t refusal on all other promising; material sub mitted. Thus, even! if an entry fails tp win a. prize there is the possibility that it may eventually lead to a lucrative writing career. Stories submitted will be judged Jbg Adela Rogers St. Johns, Paul iGallicQ, Walter Dufanty, Frances IMariop, and Irving Shepard, neph- iew of the late Jack London. For the best plqt submitted from which i!a motion picture can be made Roy l}>el Ruth and Allied Artists Productions will pay $1,000 cash and sign the winning contestant tp a ten week writing contract at M D., Pr other advanced ’profes^ $187.50 per week, plus transporta- sinnal degree. ! j !! j I tion. ! | , ,i 1 I Awards of $i ( 00O, $300, and $200 will be made in the Rudy Vallee Radio Division fori winning sug gestions for weekly radio shows, such as “Take It or iReave Itj”. Don Wilson, Harry von jZell and Vick Writer’s Talent Scout, Inc. to Sponsor Writing Contest A nation-wide contest to discover people who think they ca nwrite short stories or create ideas fo r motion pictures^ movie titles, or radio shows has Been announced hy Writers Talent Scout, Inc. J ! ;, ! Prizes totalling several thousand dollajrs and a ten week Hollywood writer’s contract wilM—!— - Knight eoniprise board for judges. 1 the advisory Writers Tteent Scoijit will also endeavor, as the author’s literary agent, to sell all promising mater ial so that st mes or idjeas of merit will hot be forgotten! simply be cause they failed to win an award. Further information jnay be ob tained by writing Writers Talent Scout, Inc., 1067 N. Fairfax Ave., Hollywood, Calif;, which requests that no man /scripts bje sent with-1 scale out first writing for further infor mation. ’ 1 [ T can play inusic for dances' or picnics of any kind,, anywhere, anytime,” says LaTaste whose sound sense of economic principles is a standing joke among his friends. His equipment includes a generator, that can be towed be hind the sound jtruck to produce power in out-of-the-way place? where electricity is unavailable. Six huge speakers, three mounted on top of the truck, give out equal ly well with the classics or' hill billy—depending upon the tastes of the individual. An unmarried Navy veteran from Big D, LaTaste first became in terested in the mechanics of sound production while attending North Dallas High School.' He saved money in the service and upon dis charge invested. it in sound equip ment. He built the sound truck, which }s also a workshop, when his mother grew tired of finding vacuum tubes in the bath tub and resistors on the divan. LaTaste’s former roommate, JJ. M. Painter, lets his garage be used as a workshop and general store room. Each piece in the weird and seemingly useless collection idf electrical apparatus strewn about the garage has served a purpose in the past or will serve one in the future. “ j!;j The sound truck was used to welcome the Baylor visitors to the A&M campus. LaTaste says he has some “fooling ground yet to do” before he will be ready for ft/ll entertainment. Entertain ment “of-any kind, anywhere, any time,” that is. Pesday, riobn, December 17. Honored guests at the party will include those who have been with the college for 25 years and follow ing the phristmas message by President Gibb Gilchrist, they will be presented by Dean F. C. Bolton. Tyrus K. Timm will act as toast master. The program follows: “Jingle Bdls,” everybody, Mrs. Ralph .Steen, accompanist; invoca tion, Rev. James Jackson; Har mony i Choral Club, directed by Mrs. Grace Krug, accompanied by Mrs. Steen; Christmas message, President Gilchrist; presentation of honored guests, Dean F. C. Bolton; and “Auld Lang Syne,” everybody:. j r J . :j, i : ■; J jit i Guests pf honor include: Frank G. Andersotv athletic department; A. V. Brewer, mechanical engiheer- ing department; Fred R. Brison, horticulture department; Dr. L. P. Gabbard, "‘-agricultural economics and sociology department; W. H. Holzmann, fiscal office; Dr. George Summer Jr. and Dr. S. S. Morgan, English department; and C. N. Warren and Curtis Cheeks, build ing and cbjlege utUitie* depart ment. Hoqored guests of the Agricul tural Experiment Station will be John J. Bayles, C. H. McDowell, John Rhodes, and Sylvester Steen. From the Agricultural Exten sion Service will be Jesse C. Brad ford, R, O. Dunkle, J. Wi. Jackson, W. M. Lbve, W. R. Morgan, H. C. Robinson, Miss Irma Sealy, Mrs. Sendee Claytor, and Mrs. Jeffie f Please Audience ter at Guion Hall, re does jnot seemj so biting nd has thrown over its aris- sociai-laborites. But his pap- Faculty, Staff Christmas Pari Scheduled Thursday Evenin Tickets for the annual Christmas dinner pirty fdir the jabhltl and staff, Thursday, December 18 at 7:15 p. m., In the main room of S|>M Hall, went on sale Monday^at the Aggieland Irn tickets, costing $1.25 each, will be available up to and including (rwofi, ~ 9 A&M Delegates Attend Discussion Nine delegates from A&M at tended thq South Texas Sectional Conference of the Student Chris tian Association at Catnp Idlewild in central Texas over the weekend. Accompanying Don Hanks, co- chairman of the conference, were Julio Casas, Don Peters, Earl Rose, Frank Sheffield, Boyd Rogers, Bob Speer, Don McClure,! and Ernest Pitzer. Also attending the discussion were YMCA and YWCA leaders from eigRt Texas colleges. Rev. Bill Morgan of the Wesley Founda tion at Southwestern University was principle speaker* leading in discussions of social, economic and religious subjects. r , idi < M Houston Affairs Commi To Present Aw Colonel Charles E. Ka Army, retiree, chairmah Military Affairs CommjiUei Houston Chamber |of! Coi will present lUnit Citation. (J] “B” Battery . Artillery' at ^ parade Wedn :sday afte: 5:15; on the Infantry Drill ; Brigadier G ienral E. W. deputy commander of thaj Military District, who wil the campus Monday, Tuesi Wednesday ol this week ing informal inspection Cadet Corps, will also be reviewing stird. “B” Battery is receiving jl^ie tation Cords in recognise being named the outstand of the year; 1946-47 at “regimental,” and “march vieWs, and formal inspec .... Commanded last year det Captain Bob MartijL Battery this year is tinietr command of Cadet; Capta' vin L. Jones;. Individual cadets who signed to “B ’ Battery li or were subsequently assi; ycaj-, will be entitled t<jj Unilt Citatioji Cord, i The Citatiqn Cord will;! roon speckle^ with white, be worn on the Ijeft sho The corps will parade ; one uniform with .Ww® seniors will p/ear boots eluding sabers, guidons, standards will be borne. Should inclement weat|je|r vent the cqi ps parade fr< held Wednesday aftenn presentation [ceremonies place at retreat formati nesflay even I - M V Ra Stock ShoWL ost Successfi Authority On Pike’s Peak Gold Rush . . . — ' The i;! f el 11 o jw s H i p ; progranj, according to Dijrectqr^ Stjalnaker, is designed to dipcover ytoutig men and women of Smarked'ability and trim them fori intelligent leader ship within thejr own' fields. Mi A new radio .< tatilcp, Jlil be dedicated at ! :30j!]>. day akiLufkik Vexas, S. L.Hjack”|Fr>st,p rector for A. Mil est Service, j!' The station, n,. Kurth^ trustee < f tiff A search! Foumiati an nesmen of liufl in, fj the promotion »f“ Since the Fories . Prodoc ts L 1 . tt - I' w siLT—^ I. J-El m j' 1; u ’.E will fejines- liffir to injal di- ta! FOr- S * . ?,• L- M. Re- sr! busi- ated to brkstry. -atoora- toi l y afui Heidqjiarb?rsj cift|hc For est Protection Service I cp|M. ate located ‘there, ift jwfajp? decided that Rufkin ! wo ild Ke ithesjbest lo cation! for K*TR S. | I ;i| ! Governor Beafifoijp JeSteff, Presi dent (Bibb Gijcl ris director of tihe S. L. frost fill pe speakers, j dets are being (nadi ing so igs to be m tion:>Tree*,” “I TexasiAggif,” fThi and “ i'he Sj?iri L White, and ij guest mg Ca- fjollow- fedica- Be A Special Cooking School Will Be Conducted at Campus Dec. 16-17 ^ 'i .■ H '• J f“: li 1 ! ' 1 A National livebtock and Mjeat Board specialist; will conduct a eciai codking school on the campifs December 16 and 17, in coopera- on with the A. & M. meats laboratory, is was announced today. | Miss Helen Shepard, cooking school demonstrator, will be in arge. A: kitchen |s to! be sett up king on (s to' be sett up4" the Animal Indjustries Lecture Rpom for the demonstrations and inlTTwill be found alj the facilities a modem kitchen;. The demon- rations will deal i primarily wiith th(e use of meat, but complete eals will ‘also b^ prepared and, presented. : The program fot th<j school In cludes the identification and se lection of retail cuts, tips On choos ing less popular jmesit cuts ^ ffr economy, principles of mfcat cook ery, carving cooked meat 'meat! hi the dipt, and the results of me*t ipaeaiteh. f ■ The professors of the meats lab oratory will demonstrate! [the ori gin of the different cuts by taking a wholesale piece oif ratal and cut ting it into the regular retail “ Miss Shepard will demons stion of su d»b H Hi ii fth ! I.! ; . ii I ■ i i !| »■ i , !| History Prof Shares Fondness For Fishing With Izaak Walton a rolled lamb shoulder, ham hocks and cabbage, hush puppies, and other dishes ofj-j interest to the housewife, using I Especially the less expensive cuts of meat. Not a classroom affair, the dem onstrations will bO open to the public. At 2:30 p.j m., December 16, Miss Shepard will hold a dem onstration for high school students of Bn* 8 " and College Station. That evening at 7:30 the r school will be open for college students and their UnVes. '■ i r H [ r J The following afternoon at 12:30 a demonstration w 11 be con ducted for the women of Bryan and College Station. Since the schedr le is npt rigid, rsons may attend the session "qr them, jit was trate most convenient i||u hone concluded. JL l By KENNETH BOljfD,, There is pnly one instnictor in A&M who qan be fnjm the west, teach in the south, speak iwith an easterner’s icceht, arid want to spend vacat ohs in the north, and he is Richard A, Bartlett; history instructor. ■ ; j ; J - 6. • ,;. ) If progeny inherit iMtalent from their parents, then Bartlett, a slender, boyish fellow; should be a success. Hi? father and mother have edited and published the na tionally distributed magazine “Au thor and Joi rnalist” since 1929. His father’s woik on this magazine, a monthly magazine providing the largest mar|ceting sendee for busi- nes articles in this country, earned him a place; in Who’s Who in America fre m L937 until his death last year: lis mother is continu ing to publish the magazine. Upon Bartlett’s graduation from Boulder High School in 1938, he entered the University of Colorado at. Bouldfer where he majored in history and carried a minor in po litical science. Alternating between good gradesi and enjoying the privi leges of a social fraternity, he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts Degree in 1942. He went to Washington, D. C., where he Writ a position as a ref erence archivest in the National Archives. “ )f course, the Archives have that odor of decaying leather and iold paper,” he said. “Though "I I thumbed tjhroughipiany books di rummaged among the shelves, h« tranaf. A 1 ■ <1.1 i was not thfere long ejnough to de velop the tame odor: even though I like to smell it.” the Archives, my Intellrg- After tw6 years in fernd to A Ik:: I RICHARD A. BARTLETT O ' I if jj ;j H ence in the Pentagon Building. Since work for intelligence is always secretive he declined to divulge the nature of his jjwork. When asked if he had ever been lost in the Pentagon, he replied with a rise of color, “Not exacjtly, but I did stumble into the women’s lounge by mistake.” Before leaving Washington, he ember 1945. ered the University September 1944 to pursue studies towards his Mas ter’s Degree. In August of the fol lowing year he temporarily dropped froni school to accept a teaching position here at A&M. The follpw-e ing year he returned to Chicago and completed work,fa hi? Mas ter’s Degree in 1946 and did some work towards his Ph.D. Upon his return to A&M this past September, he started teach ing his favorite subjects again: History 105, 106 and 306. He is teaching 180 regular students and one class of veteran’s wives. Only one hobby appeals to Bart lett, and that is trout fishing in Colorado. It seems that he has a special spot reserved fa him in Estes Park. “There is nothing like fly fishing, a cold drink, and a shady tree,” he sighs. ^ Bartlett firmly believes in two things: “Ail students should have a good course in American his tory and all exams should be in the;form of essays. Both improve the, ihtelligence.” Since his home is near Colorado Springs and he has given much time to a study of tihat part of the country, he feels that he is an authority on the Pike’s Peak Gold Rush. He has written anj article on it which is scheduled in toe March issue of Historical Magazine has recently had Holick’s Boot Shop, aejeepted : by a shoe and boot magazine. 7 ? In j reference to his teaching, Bartlett said, “I teach because I want ;to teach. There is compensa tion over and above the wh: 1 * . pt to exper- a Ah i : 1 1 HICAGO, Dec. 8 - 48th International Liv position Saturday enda dajl run which show off; oribed as “the most sitjcdes Of all internationals. | j Auction of the last.o ning cattle, blus an afte: evening honeshow, wig® remained of the show Judges from 19 stalt land dispose^ of more; |tl animals—catlle, sheep, during the (eight dajt With the exception j Wf . animals, mof t of the livestock sold for prices far ab&refjtijle mercial markets. Champion^ of the shbovaoli prices genially lowier 1 fihgn year, following a pattern set the sale of the grand ijohair steer which brought! liti: io\ Claude Millikee, 18, of For Okla.. $8 a pound, Sf.SOlileBs the 1946 grand champio Auctioned* yesterdayljiskld steers belon fing to juijiifr jfei contest exh bitors with; i weight of 284,400 pou|nd|ti jan average wei ght.. of l,<f6iy to' The steers s >ld for a tataYojf 648.80 with an averagej! pjn $42.68 a hundred pounds.;- L| minute, |f The audience roared its approv al time after time as D«ian Nelson playing the part or Algernon Mon- crieff turned loose one oi his caus tic stinging remarks. Rri^gy night’s perfiorniiance sprf passed (thg ’previous night’s prts entation ih every respect. The on tirb cast seemed ’to -fit into tlhi Friday night play. There were n4 hesitation?, no jumbled beginnings) William Browder, whej plaved the part of John Worthing, gave n brilliiant performance. iThei whole! play was built around. Worthing, who invented a worldly brother in order to leave his country home on, frequent occasions to pay suit to a London debutante. At the time he deemed proper and necessary fa the destruction of his imtijgi- nary brotheiyhe discovered that ! e Algernon hadypresented himself at! the country estate in! the guise, ofj thih remarkable brother in jor- deir to vijsit Worthing’s attractive; young wdrd, Gwendolen Fairfax.. . Outstanding performances were given t’jbyi! Barbara Belden, May Lewis, Tanagra Kanellos and Isa- betlk Ward. Strangely enough Wilde’s plky wu' unpopular when first nre-; sented. This has [been attributed to the unpleasant Jlegal situation in whidh the ai thor found himself. |T|e castumes and scenery were as colorful : as that Victorian cm which thifey represented. The troupe on! a national tour of colleges came here from Austin and left here to go to Rice. m i AOAf .ra. r eneral Piburn Oh Campus for First Corps Inspection L*|Mi the i climpus Sunday fo|r a three- day informal inspection tour of the Cadet Corps. Lt. Colonels Kirk and Roddy and Captain Morrissey arrived this morning tp! aid in the During these three dsiys all jmil- itary [activities of the corps will be observed in th<j first informal insoectipn of the year. Today's schedule:of activities for the committee included inspection of the military ai minihtratioiii df the ROTC and a trip to “Little Ag, gieiand” for General Piburn to ob-' serve g [freshman parade.; , Tuesdjay, military science classes gli and practical ifvork periiods will ,be inspected, and Wednesday, General Piburn will inspect the corps dor mitories in the toorning, review the noon, meal formation, and eat with the corps in Duncan Ha 1 At the nqoin meal. ! -!]*- General Pibujrn will also repiain to review the' corps Wednesday afternoon, when "B” Battery .Ar tillery is to be presented with U^it Citlati6ii| Cords for being the out standing “outfit” of last year in military proficiency. fattier General E./W. deputy commandkrl of Texas Military District, arrived op tpe j campus Sunday for a three- K % i in- tad lT Will be the first o: schedplpd informal inspedtions of the Ctjdet Corps this year and 'Will affect; the final standing coups ait the end of the y<ar w ir ratings are givpn R|^ PB»y C toe when OTC Mget Wednetwlay TheAggie PlayLrJ ; Wednfkjday evening! at 1 Assembly Hell,;‘it Was Saturday. ‘will '’tmfrt ■/ 7:30 in the jwaS announced MiH Frenkel, president of the club, Will have available pictures of: “Biirt As the Driven Snow” which! were ordered by metobert. ‘■•1 ; il | PH-f- ' 1 # t: A. & M. antici; anytime |n the near Heaton waS questiane Texas University, bejgii not finishing in tHeiui their high school grj to enter the Unive< lastic probation. The ngW ^ule, a fi ed roeasiHe adopted :b itefl “4 •L:i. r - v .. : change” jn its entrance jt" egistnif | Heaton laid the j WiL 'i" of Regenti, supercede^ ». presently ig effat j at Tell quiring only those studdmtl lower quarter to en J tic probation. Heaton said that still search ng for a quate method of men students. “T jn the standards o: schools make: fairly judg< student* of how they ranked particular ugh schoo class,” Hegton said, we don’t anticipate ar): the present of* i] Li Heaton said^_ aclosure from Aus ll the fall off’49, will require) i .in ie.” |.| sibie them simil quiz! 4 freshi at the /Convent! tssociation of Texas iin Fort Worth in Odtqber plan was put forth that brflt.d# 1 rank freshmen by giving series of ex« man We to the “inti which are no lied that program we inations dur- each fall Kst local given, wasn't /Id affor interest V to show t! utudes of nt and fit in the wroi suitable 11 ( . change in ts at A. 4 made by the with faculty who course r their ii 11 ’’Il A .. I HI