j Battalion itori a l m: It H« VALLEY ? FRIDAY, NbIWARY 20.1948 fl : Mdier, Statesman, Knightly Gentknfri’ 'j m f! I Have we beefa Hidtii •" this ‘‘cold war?” i4ne we ajc j a “hot’Vwar in th| near fu ^ hope hot, but news stories j particularly hearterang.; - | The State iDmrfraeht J'. ihg words in t&lkifag to derson, din office of Ni th^ Soviet ! J Jl es; ually headed for re? We certainly ijjnese dayslare not / ' i no longer mine- 7 ira. Loyd W. Hen- tjor bf Ttllie Slite Department’s r Eastern af)fjairs, has warned United Statejs will Jet Greece come •under the halnimer ajnd sick e flag. Witnesses bkfipre a Congres^iohal feoi{i|inittee this week have stated, fr mc(i Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Tuitions Getting Hotter... " dints; ourselves about Bulgarian Gq r itLil Bulgarian Communists "tHj.ve their activity into the United States. Hte said they have formed organizations and are pub lishing a Detroit newspaper called “Peoples extended A Ret hat the “not stand idly byf’! and siders nil „ oim theiiji __ n m tlhe Qonimuiiisi! movement, that the'United Statesjis,*‘]|l.oj. If rl I | justvin case.’f i But he quiickl know' whethier -t' ■ away, later bir e Hershejv'iyho ];f 1 djlperience as “in- movemei arget” of revolu- ttonio; Maj. Gen. selective^ service tipnary plans.; j Ahd yesterday irf San-4 lievfis B. Hershe) said thaj » : • is “getting reiad} for, whi lever comes up. I The.director Of tie Offiict ’of Selective Ser vice said “we’ve g it three cii four plans ready c\ ‘ - ~ pbiht^d me Iw'Oul ireSiclled Htrsney^wno presiciieu at tne r isn bowi f when sbldieijsjfor; World W ir II were called ' up, was in San Aijtohio to copier with armed wt 1 I,' :ever comes qp - ” forces resente;officers fruipfa five-state area regard to! {. otentiiil mill He listed | tpe tSouir plain 1. Natiotuil ifeglistratiO ,7 fwhat we’ve go.. . 2. Universal .iimfary |for.the military 118 to 20 yeaj'siolc] ■B. Supplenjen 4. Compljetje iwhat that meatus, j ■ He min injured •three plans, j • _ _ “€omplet)e |n,d : mainly educatliphal- J to know whajt ralinin ary r /Will.” || ,-.'11 ‘ fl . i i gd formula for destruction of the U. S. government wps t outlined by a former Communist party official at a deportation hearing. -- vd 'I If . . T . . ohcc Premier Joseph Stalin say the United States was “A fnain citadel pf Capitalism that must ' be destroyed.” ] p'' | J^v, Stalin made the statement in Moscow in 1932 in the presence; ;bf Earl Browder, then secretary-genera^ of the phrty in this coun try' and Browder latjet “repeated!’ the Stalin declaration in the United States, the witness "ST Tw 7 nn~T1 tL. 1 n ■ '•f |i;. ' 1 HaMHMiaMHMIlHIMlWIIIIMM Hfll W UUlMI mm*****"--.'*' Trampling Out the Vintage Law-Abiding Texan Lands in Jail After f By I.AH said. Hewitt was askbdhow destruction of the U. S. government wa v s to be accompEshed, i ut that he didn’t be a war right it the Fish Bowl Only Vets i Subsistence . .ry manpower. 7 1 ready for what- 1—“to find out Araining—“that’s g h' the youngsters rCcriidting—“that’s fails.’ case the reejuftipg progran rnoBiliizail in—“you know l 1. .. I he impo ilizatiion,’ m | wanted to.cojmp hjtjme.’’ 1 V I anCe of the first Die said, “will be ,\limt everybody to ,vheh tlhe time comes.” met He deplojrep the militiiy power of the doubt that such a, move would impress many jU.S. today. Hit ul .,1 •, ★ 11 Other unj[)lCaskn;; items) f rom the Associa ted Press Wireij: | George M. piipiilrov,; exiflH Bulgajri|an po- t J . . and he replied: ■ “Bjf following fh^ lesson of the Russian Revolution in whicl-every-day demands of the masses were ga hered to by the party, in which every grievance se:rved as a bihck to consolidate the mas^s until the masses be came sufficient in h umber to storm machin ery! of the Capitaliststatej and set up their own form of goviernpiieht.” Russia has forged the last link in a chain of treaties intended a barrier against the “Imperialist States,’! Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov announced, | , Molotov spoke ajtfer thq signing of a So viet - Hungarian friendship and mutual as sistance treaty. j f h- ' | . r > ML li' I II w How much propaganda or uiuu are in a nasty .situat^ipn, it is getting nastier, and we cannot afford to close our eyes to the possible end. It may be that at some time in the future many reservist# will be called ftfr shorttime, djuty. No such thing has Only veterans in sch suing full-time courses creased subsistence alio day by President Trumai tion office said today. Schools to Get aise, Says VA Is, colleges and universities pur- education will be entitled to bi- ices under the law signed Satur- the Waco Veterans Administra- Part-time students, on-thii-jpb-f—y .—-— - trainees and others will not b& en- training in which students attend titled to the increases, the VAfriHl- sChooi part time and are employed ing held. The hill signed into Jaw I part time, usually ;in a related amends the Servicemehjs Readjust- Held. 5. Internship and residency of this can we discodnt as 1 ® a n«e blufl?! Some, but not all. We'the end of the month nt “everybody.” been officially slighted, but there is And he ijidjic lojreld ^ r ^ , - , - sjunk soon after the signing nations; in the world. Would it also;be a step lot the peace j t.ijeal.y ivith J 4 an. Ail the boys toward a new \Vari? Would it help avert a new wur? The (Question is unanswerable. What , position ; dan a liberally-minded American take a.t this tinie? The advice of Walter Reuther, president of the CIO United Automobile Workers iSnion, is sound not only for laboring people but for others. Reuther calls upon liberals • afld progressives to dis card their “united front” .psychology and fight Communists. jBift, he says in a Collier’s Magazine article, fhei liberal should neither ally himfjelf with rdadtionaries to fight Com- f > hit now ip Russia iptm j j i gressional com- L • Personal In I litical leaded, siiid yesterfk: iAors” are being trained trig for eventual;diityf in thijs cc Dimitrov) a)so: tofd a cjc mittee that-: j ^ “America is i^pinmiini^ targeti. No. 1.’. Under the Red plan bf wmld domination:, munism, nor with (’oimmunists to fight for America is jmpposled to! si If Br most and get progressive legislation. Either alliahce would the. crudest tniatlmeint of iii r nation. be dangerous in the long run. ■I j. .j.. ■ ■ | ■ 1— ■ ■■ ■ i , ^ 7 \ r* — Football-Bullfighting # . . ■ ’y).. j j j ' ] ' American University (Washington, D.C.) this fall, banished! football. Said President Paul F. Douglass: “Postwar college football has no more relation to education than bull fighting to agncujtuire. . . I see no reason why one corpoTatioin .^ho.uld hire a specialized group of employee? to outrun, outbump, and outbruise the specia$zed employees of an other corporation 1. 4. A football pjjayer is nothing more than aJhuman slave caught in the biggest blackniarket ppersatidn in the history of higher education. jnent Act (GI Bill) and the Voca tional Rehabilitation Act (Piijblic Law 16) for the disabjetl. The ne^ypayments will be, at the monthly rate of 75 . dollars tor a veteran without depfen^ dents, 105 dollars fph a vetetan with one dependent, and 120 (Hol lars for a veteran with more than one dependent. : .\ | [| The b'gher rates ari> applichble^ to periods of training on and ajifU!r April 1. However, since'subsist|nce not due ijjntil in which:' the veteran is in training, most of! the eligible veteran-students ,will| te-1 ceive their first checks at tjhe high- j er rates on or shortly after M;iy 1. Veterans taking any of the ffol lowing types of training are > not entitled to the increases, hut will; continue to receive subsistence! payments at the old rates' of 65 j dollars a month for those without dependents and 90 dollars for those with dependents: f 1, Part-time institutiomd tijjajn ing. 5. Internship training. k 6. Graduate training under a fellowship requiring a reduced credit cpurse-ljoad because of services rendered under provisions of the. fellowship. Eligible veterans n o w in school, who are entitled to 75 dollars or 105 dollars under the new rates will not have to apply for the increased allowances, Existing applications will supply all the information needed to pay the new benefits. These vet erans, therefore, need not write VA at the present time concern ing their increases. Veteran-trainees entitled to 120 dollars been use they have more than one dependent will be required to submit information about their additional dependents before payments at the ne^v rate can be made. In the case of dependent chil dren, pMotOstats or certified copies of their birth'certificates will be ! necessary. In the case of dependent | Today’s oddity in the news comes from Chicago where one Arthur Casper can’t, understand why had to spend Monday night in jail. According to an Associated Press story, Camper had seer) a burglar, scuffled with him, and killed him when lie tried to escape. But police lack ed him upi even though one praised him for his.' deedi j ! , : The 19-year-old Bishop, Texas’ ex-Marine (old police he saw a broken front door glass ip a grocery store arid a man moving furtively about inside. Police said the youth, now ah electrical school Student here, told them he pulled out his pocket knife and . stabbed the intruder when he tried to » escape. 1 ' . i, . '• i ' r I! ; r The dead man was identified by Popce i^s Ed ward J. (Six Toes) Dicks. , “We take our citizenship seriously down in Texas,” the puzzled Casper tqld newsmen after he was detained without charge pending an inquest to day. “If you see'someone conknitting a crime jyou: try to stop him. But you don’t wind up in jail ypur- self,’* the Texan moaned. ■ ‘ ; I / : ' ]! Police Captain John Griffin said Casper rpust bej held for the inquest because “we always |iold h man in a case like this when there were no wit nesses.” , | But from a personal viewpoint, Griffin said “It Was a very brave deed.” ARSON ! ' ! T, PHILADELPHIA- Richard Light, a landlord, has been charged with arspn after Fire Marshal George Gallagher said Light admitted in a sigmjd statement trying to evict two tenants with the aid of smoke from a rubbish fire, Gallagher said the blaze in a bucket of rubbikh on an apartment hduse stairway was extinguished by, firemen after flqrne^ had scorched the stajis. In the statepient, IGal* lagher said Light declared: “I must have had a crazy day." ACCURACY / • ■ RONKONKOMA, N.Y. Postal employes, ipuz- Zled py the letters "NT.” jin pjace of the zone dum ber, oh mail addressed to |a schoolboy here, yielded to curiosity and asked hijm aibout it. The young ster said it was simple as could be. Hf had been answering advertisements, and in filling out; the coupons with his mailing address he' merely apbruj viated “north temperate" jn the zone spajcc. RUMMY AFTER 1() j !. f ! j| A famous producer came home at pine inj the morning, and explained that he had taken his beau- & trouse bare 1 AUffkenl declined -get! ihie summoned poll penniless aind iWI h s riame op file leipe^,"! hefsaid. thief unbelted the!/ Passe rsby saw two eft . 1 ■ ipibappy/ the victim a complaint. “For- i l iOF FRUNJES tEJ—Know /good recipes for DepartmqnUof Edu- The (Maryland rye ^1,000 pounds of the dried fruit f* 1 fAiar ii'^wxl/a (i-Lnt ♦ li nejxt [few no weeks, Whether, the ;One of the department's es Were sent here under ch-money program, ry theip to keep them off! i wej dish 'em out." — . r 1 SJrt'i to SChcx 1 kids in th youngst :rs lihi it officials explai ioi . terms of th^ ffediral 1 “Fadenu Jffi rials the tnaijketJ ti? iaicj,— AND RARK T8 | . ’Otrii. ]lL-4-Thje pext piember of the Ran- toul Ratjary Clpb who misses tWo consecutive meet ings hail bettep bje mighty fohdj of rabbits. Tftd clulbi engaged in an-4attcndancc contest, voted tliat t!h| ptnallty tor missing two meetings in a row |youte;i re to! care for a rabbit Then the rabbit dad a | ilepsedl evenjt—and tho-little rabbits now'gjoi[witfiMitr. - T (j UKE JCApjl 51 RANG SWALLOWS t .BERNArIdS flLLE; n). J. (This oertainly must be the IlirsL Niw Jeijsey mpsquiio story of the year and Frtijnk A^ir, a l<»cal fiifeman, said maybe It was a signl winter ijis ( veif. Sportingfa large swelling on his nec“l|, Mr. IM< r spid he was Written by a mosquito jc had; ul ed witb t^e h^lp of a second! map. g«ed the : statioqJ and. tl ey[ plpn tjo Have IN A tlGHT k PH [LADE LBH glc g<)tj hrmsglf I int qmpa quito into the ftre t stuffed. EE^E KjARLY Two-yaui-old Stephen Kar- o suclli a jlight squeeze while sleeping that it dock twq policemen to free him. Thc yoi ngster dcfcidfntally wedged his head between the metal-bars of his crib. His mother, Mrs. Marie Eargle, twent/.Jwpjs awakenel by his cries and called >olice. ijwoi offiiltjrs b:nt the bars apart. The bo /'s flatl leii Ftrahp, is a Navy aviation ordl-. nance ii lan |se :oifd vlask, stationed at Norfolk, Va. I t—rM—f---— .i - 'I - f h Some people th wind up on 4 dikbetes frt k or mat lion !’ iH T if link pro: esflqrs have'.single » track mindsiwithlai hul imisking. Some people belLve thaf leacjhi tteacfiek] knows only has own subject] and is; capable Of talking only • on hi^ own jsqbjecL Umdoiijlj :ed|y both opin ions have sameTacjUtal basis is some instanc es. But we. kuttw .i. profesJof of whom such thing's are niot tT ii. j ! Dr, D. S. Fbw.? 1 is jltpitjcl Ing a course in Victorian - eksa vUtHLlhL ■ Ner iester, and ac cording to tjhe gosfid of ?i)nte committee or ! other he c<;-; to July l, 1948, they will receive diuctive labor. ^ ; 'f retroactive payments at the new 4. Combination or cooper|tive I rates back to ApriJ .1, 1948. " ''''' I '• Truman Denounces Privileged Few in Jackson Day Special 'U ' l; Li 1 h WASHINGTON, P’eb. 20 'fB— I ; In his prepared radio address he President Truman headed intq the I sized up this year’s political battle' 1948 campaign! today with ajddl a s a fight between a Democratic for the common people to jrally party of “progressive liberalism" Sch‘<*)i of Education Record Dog Killer We woijdetf h(iw mjai’ij' jtrofs who tl pent qlasst drial leftlon j. classes in oilt-of-:hhr (kpjiht^ient qla$sro | could comnient on the nuit • blackboard I. i ceding them. ’ Note ftforhj i Staff, adve Tisin 5 story . . . ales ; drenched patio j with rippling ipj ‘ 4 : ... •isaclhcjit, ingU)ei tlimihi nu insert lain.’ . 1. The Batlliilioh of College Stjatioii . afternoon, eieept - lialied semi-vveekl I't L win Hall. Ail-Amerii J ed to it or ol :icial T i kas, during ultiotns miy He made by telephone (4,-5444), or at the Righta of rebubljeit: Entered as 8MCond^c(aa.H Office at Collcjgc the Act Of Con( teas caAifckg Vick I.lndley J. T. Miller. Kt ;n ixx Tom Carter. Ted C. C. Munroe - C. Ottft-K. Kunse, J. fess 1b (ritll lied exclusively to the use for matte: 4l T^xi ts The following Ldv^ertisement recently ap peared in the Albertan (Ga.) Star: “NOTICE: this is to certify that I know the forked tongue, isnake-eyed j skunk that killed my pobernjarj; Pinscher dog in cold blood., I certainly knpw the “Judy Hole’ in the Savannah River: where he'took a rock and tied it to him aikd sank him in 20 feet of water to keep; the buzzards away so I could not find hint If the man will have the nerve to come to hie am cl admit it, I will give around in a battle against jf’the privileged few.” In a 30-miriute Jefjferson-jiack- son Day speech the president i|ever did refer directly to the challenge he faces from angry Southerners in his own party. Nor did he mention directly the threat to Democratic ; presidential chances offered by Henry A. Wal lace’s third party. ' He spoke highly of Thomas; Jef ferson’s attacks against “lawsiithat reserved for the party restricted citizenship.”NAnd helsaid Olm Johnston (D-SC). the Democratic party'Still believes, has criticized Mr. in protecting the rights of "all the j rights proposals! groups and individuals in ouf na ; Negro Democrats who attended were concentrated largely at three tables in the sprawling banquet against a “reactionary conserva tive” opposition which he said is behind the wealthy and “favored few.” > " f ' He declared that if the “common, everyday man” is truly informed, *'he will not turn the government over to a hunch of reactionaries who are trying to take us hack to 1896.” The empty table in front of the president ; as he spoke had been reserved for the party of Senator Johnston Truman’s civil Opens 01:0 p.m. 4-1 ' / TODAY - SATURDAY Zeossynw* i^OtolisO - Friday Features -! - 1:20 - 3:30 - 5:35 - 7:50 - 10:00 Saturday Features 1:00 - 3:00 - 5:00 - 7:05 - 9:10 Cartoon — News SATURDAY PREVUE . . Also SUN. - MON. - TUES. A 1ST RUN ATTRACTION t a sTimE asi or rnntfiT TONE BLAIR Hove trouble A COLUMBIA PICTURE ■1:40 Cartoon Sunday Features 3:45 - 5:50 l 8:00 - 1:00 Short - News tion.” i Before him as he spoke vf»jjre a dozen empty seats—paid for: and left pointedly empty by Southern- ol shaded patio . I don’t; mean maybe.’*' ■ 1 : i i j(Signed) “0.3E. SMITH.’ \ • i i '■ i!, , a . 4-rt* : niiijva »per of the Agricultural and MecKanioal CoBcge of Texas and the City s putjliished flvia'.times a week and circidated qtveijy^ionday through Friday ^ o i|Ia|,-s and examination periods. During the suntmer The Battalion is pub- :!ubiscri( tioi j raje $4.30 per scjhool year. Advertisili|: tatqs It rje maac py luiepnone pbif placed by telephone (4-5324) Bom Loulf 1 b iAwyni mirkao tXV JIMjMljE ijfELS^N, Battalion rates furnished on resuest. te 1 in the paper and local new other matter herein are also reserved or at thf Sl Member rial 'Office, Room 201, Goods (dhnt Activities Office, Room e Associated Press republicatton of of spout Associated Collegiate Press Membei; ' dre' Editor Ing,Editors .Feature Editor .1. ...Feature Writers f. ilartln, i. Kelson, all news dispatches credit- Jispatches published DtjMl nationally by National. Ad- fSeolco. Inc., at New York City, Angeles, and flan Francisco. otgi a. ., .Mam Singletary..., v .Reporter* Maurice Howell aKaat m Art, Howard James DeAnda. Aw Bob Kennell*y jii .'■ . ..................... ;■ . TWT .....Co-Editors Ai# i Matitla, Zero Hammond, ' Orejr ...j..liJ. .Bporta Editor Sports Writers 'IL rocnis. House - Democratic Leader Sam Rayburn of Texas served notice he isn’t joining the Southern revolt. Rayburn has been talked of as a possible vice presidential candidate to appease Dixie congressmen, j “I am a Democrat,” Rayburn told the dinner audience, “I am. ciucat™, anJ hUing. L S'TTromX' inside.” ; ers, protesting his civil rights , pro gram. j: ; I J] Mr. Truman lumped oppbner|tsijpf his legislative program together ate the forces of “reactionary j con-; servatism.” He described those who sjtand I against his .proposals for improving “backward-looking” j and j and jfalnt ists,” “men of hearts.” He said the Democrats offer a “parcel of progressive liberajjishti”« and “progressive liberals will l ajlly to the Democratic party.” | But while the president j; \yas making his confident speedy tile Southern revolt within his • own party got hotter stilly Senator Byrd (D-Vd) aksertid in a speech at Richmond that:: Mir. Truman’s civil rights commission had urged a “mass; invasiph of states’ rights.” Southern congressdien froth !at least, three states called a confer ence today to organize agai anti-lyncht anti-poll tax and no- color-line proposals. (Senator McGrath of Rhddfc land. Democratic national oh*',, niqn, told a reporteij he wil| see governoi# of five southern states on the mpttor Monday. He fisi the chief executives bf South Kna, Texas, Ark; and Maryland. , t a The president talked twice' night—first impromptu to omjj sec tion of the Jefferson-Jackson) din ner at the Statler Hbtel and: then in a prepared address to the s«|ction at the Mayflower. : 1 Ajt the Statler he struck at at tempts by the GOP-confrolied’Con- gress to cut his budget and reduce federal taxes. gMlAX FRIDAY — SATURDAY TODAY AND ALL THIS WEEK ■ MMtK DauHCEXlMMtt SONNY TUFTS ANN BETIH TQGETHE fijgip mm 5 A1 N M WARNER RRCS: Lana TURNER-Van HEFLIN Donna REED‘Richard HART m WARRICK WI6UUM. THOMAS 60MB map hash-mina j tAUR£N Mi jl Dare Passage BWSH'« s MSMIlAlO.