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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1948)
! 31 i . . - Al; f! . Trieste— Tin asking btim cf TijieAti ithe beginning ojf r ^ change irj|; situationl Certainly, the in ti|tiiie j denly been tkkefc by thi s DeSioicratic -who up to now-hiri bickerjei or accept the proposal Italy is to Italy. ! | European The Rome government, almost simull has $ud- nations^ amohg them- eously, formally accepted the proposal ah “a guarantee o ’ ington, Londpn; and Paris expressing i selves Without kny ’ooperajtifd or definite mate satisf^dtion for ithe initiative to palrti- J action, j . R . I ’ | • ' " ' ' " | ' Of course,/file s'tu d Wilfi; rOgi | Trieste could be dange’ous. If i ». j i -u _ i I 11 • i i 1 II iT.T T -1 l the heat’ which! whtyld tun [into a h<pt explosion. lut! i i so bad, there is jprpb ib y. noj T troubld. Certai.illy tl e greate.^] [made When Trieste vasi Ha i Yugoslavia^ that is to s ly, i i,* ,1— :ard to furnish I slays, uiider Tito’sTeadersliiiH ?to consider that Triestj, nup# I ali?at«jn,”'hiad actualb 1 bfee4 riii | . Charles Guy, pib lsherl | Avalanc lerTribjime, i lism stiu ents ini Ayst ‘hottest sp(t in E I | was the . . jj was before the jhew le il OnJT f announced. }. T * T i Premier Marshall llito’s gcjft Jed a protest With![tie wesleiH _ ? their action op T!ifi?s ;e, but did ncjt-rdject i J. -L IL I-! •Jj! 1 | in favorj of Universe | that Wd'de WI riuld 14c Id War” e situation is y ; of avoiding mist ike was promised to ija. The Yugo seemed nation- told S in this i have '‘Inte r 0n them, -.ubbock journal Trieste nd that ad been : ! ! enumtint lodg- 1 powers over cipate with the! promoting governments Russia in drafting a protocol to be subhiit ted later tp tie security council.”!, Yugoslavia’s protest! was pegged on contention that the Western pioWers did consult her in a matter iaffecting htfr fu ___ and the peace pf Europe. She condemned [the American-British 1 Military government for the northern part of the Trieste Free Terri tory. _K [i\j i- , JJi ' : 1 J* The MpsccW radio said the western allies had acted behind the back of the Soviet Un ion in suggesting the revision of the Italian peace treaty. - ' ji'j I . ■ f |i . French Fotreigpi Minister Bidault left) for Paris after a tHree-hb’ur conference With Italy's Premier Alcide 14 Gasperi. Emerging from their meeting, De Gasperi said: ‘‘We alre ^oing, I jthink, toward a Unfited Noted Correspondents Review Troubled World At News Meet Russians were British personnel. |[ says there will be no war row— unless someone blunder. Attending the Austin coni , frem A&M were Vick Liridley, Ken neth Bond, Louis Morgan, Louie Hardy, and Jimmie Nelson. 0ti» Miller, professor of agricul' journalism, and Roland Bing, ] ager of student publications, companied the group. mg ever chance U. S. and ,:i: States of And t ur< at, What Pride Freedom?... Perhaps thp strong ististptjjri ipjit fei made v Coiriptin that Mdde by l Karl (Tomptoju prespcleni i Masssacljusetts [ Insti tu te ^of r je jhno|)gy, be- Milit ? fore the Senatfc Arned Seivri s Copimittee. ? “Tinae is ruphinii out,” bjmtefjded Ur. Compton. ‘‘Modern vur cal s h r mere train- ; ing, and) it permits a warring fiffion to strike | with devastating qi ickii&riT 5pe. we think, is an excellent Idea. said that “timid souls and Members of the [ [Southwestern Journaliwn Congress, which met in Austin last Friday and Saturday heard journa lists report on their experiences in, all parts of the world. Reuben H. Markham, Balkan correspondent for the Christian Science M|)ni ;or, told of the troubled situation he hud found throughout! southern I 'rr~——ft ■ !|»4—-—; 1 v ■ 1 ' - Europe. He said that npt tnly j n . j'— 1 —*'•-* 1 dustrialists are sufferjing the Communist regime, ibutl quoted a letter that he had received from a farmer’s daughter In Bjutgaria telling how her father h^d been taken away and killed by the police. A person no longer receives a fair trial in the Commuhist-dblininated countries, he said. Margaret Bourke — White, Life ’ w under! world, but that censorship is still very heavy in Japan. He interview ed General Douglas MacArthur and the Jap Emperor, and he believes that an excellent job is being done by American forces in re-educataon of the Japanese in the ideals of democracy. A favorite saying in Compton Was chairman I tial comjmissioh Whi d last yt ; recommended Univebal milli ! Comfef dn said thi it ^yeri coihmis^ieflr pwliJoiftlt for TIMT 1 ihe sa d. the iresideii- mininimously y training. ; ^id rntleyery neason his study Utiioitli forTlplT ip months ago. “cap be ujicfemo *edi wit# added empha sis in tlje light!'of : w Jild-'evri#^ End of Oil ‘ ‘This,” he [added, “is one Of the surest } n i^dia. she said too' m|anylAmeri. ways to get into serious trouble, for if the cans went to India-looking!for the situation conjtmhes to worsen ami we jeon- unusual and failed to irepprt the tinue to hope ^or the biSt while doing nothing gX-Vhlu is S unpleasant,. j\e may, ipse fieedom, [last reporter to have interviewed Senator Saltonsthll (R-MasS) wanted to Mohandes K. Gandhi i before hi? know Whetheirtho country could bear thei cost assassination. She has made two of Universal! trailring on top Of What |it is 1 { ri P s , t0 , In(1 ‘ a , collec ting riateml already spenking fo^ the armed forces. , j<?*■ f' 15 " 0 ” „ Compton kail it Could-that ‘;th f amounts I LtlS" we have been talking Hbout, while large; are journalism, reported to the news small compared with M hat we spend on lux- congress on a visit he made to Ja il ries ea<jh yieaf.” >T i I pan. He said the Japanese wci-c the What price freehorti? i 'I T , -I |] sp f When cb ECIAL NOTICE . ecking your mail £ -t the main P.O., don’t forget t 0 give— JOHNNIE .y.. a ring on his cash register 1 7 ■ r - c PALACE If pMON E 2-8879 TODAY— AND ALL THIS WEEK TTT OPENS ftOO P.M. PH. 4-1181 TOllAY * WED. ’ —Features Begin— 1:40 - 5:45 - 5:50 - 8:00 - 10:05 DANGER ,4 and INTRIGUE 1 . r The| current issue J p • V deinand. loomed: up dead , Instead of slo|wiyj easn fM oil had dhot up almc j the country is usiifg abouj \ a day—1-700,000 ml oi e than hi vr d Been tt | Thej experts laa | of gasoline and ihu ;c mqjbiiy. | according to [Sidney A. Sf'InH i vice-pijesidenit of I fewer automobiles would Be a riump Dneymoon ... ^ 1 •; }j ■ j: . Texas A&M estimates 3h perceht mure gasobn^ will be .used in the first quarter of 1948 than ib the point kame months of 194Lri : —-hii : -—• hing, What cajight |the ojl men off gpard? five! editorial. i Editors The 1 Engineer contains al protj j ‘‘End of Oil Et-a” in which out thaf withjTqxap refee|yej!d|iMihishing, n.**? V4 * we)Tnai havi* to m amp pik Wajfs pf life, enormous mcreabe in the demand 5 foWpatro- Texas has Icing been roijtJnftfe m having leum products other than gasolinb, Total de cheap fuel oil land mrural tai- They may not mand for petroleum products jumped 5S| per, vanish [altogejther, jb it may| Ijiecome so ex- cent in, the'f-year period, pensivejthat sjihftititu es will lave tp he found. Derivatives of crude oil which once Werej . The; oil shortage is a iMsf serious prob- considered by-products chiefly s ac(jounte(| for lem. According to parke piacli. Associated the rise. Biggest ipebease ha? been ini the Press Writer, the sho-tage fchfisi winter caught demand for! “distilkU” fuels—a ! vise o|f 85 both government ani industrial ^xpens by percent sincile the fiifstquarter of 1041. these surprise. , ] !, - T; -- : are the oils! that ape used in home oil bjurn- ' They hadf thought tHa’.' a Tef the war ers, in diesel qngines and jet propulsion en- there would .hie only i: gradfui il Ucrfease in the gines. | rivilianrconsuinptioh of petn Iqulm products— Home owners Converted their coal fur- which [had been ite luced about j one-third naces to oil burners so rapidly after the i war through ratiejnihg. i 1 ! S that dealer^ received 250 percent more burn- Theiy thoiight ta<iy- hafl ^-eiril years, at ers in the first nine months of 1947 than in h/jf least* tp prepare fo:r ahyj ^rnatl^ increased the same pyiod of 'Burners Use an a|ver- he Gi jv ould n gasol Butj by 1|9471 tfif re -wd the rl rcent s.l The i passenger airs on there were 83.6 f percenf more huse Thpse dairy bp fighting to Main tax do not object arguments. - JMo rsan Gjiie, t* . 7 rir ,^two merabers fought a duel but r Wbrifm mking v with Douglas Dick Mikhail Rasumny land. i , TU > I ^ : age of 1,80) gallons of oil a yearj But! in Septeriifce' thejslo ^ suddenly The rai roads are changing to dieseljs so ned;up dead tjhnd. j|. I I r fast that d new jdiesel is hitting the fails f . , jUiBSjei js muuig me rs ai uvi.pd, demand every week or ten days. Of the locomotives stj vertically. Now now on order, 92 percent are diesels, they 5,700,000 barrels average 10,00 gallons of fuel a year— e peak. enough to [heat 03 averagp homes. irig in terms Kerosene [ consumption haS taken aj I ' . 1 A .• . T-V* fit I ■ • A V, A ■ • I reasoned, percent jump. First outcries to interior! dc- executive partment uel men about the oil shortage 0|l Dorp., that came from kerosene users in North Carolina, ilh usb and there Aviatioi gasoline consumption has doub le xjerfiand. led. Farmers are using twice as much gaso line as ever, forthey have doubled their me chanized e< uipment. Indusitiy’s use of oil has 000 more d] thijn in j.941. ore trucks.; 43.5 tijalelim industry risen m pyoporiion to the tremendous m- " 'M crease m p reduction. .. 4. ■ t cqnkfeirinijn who are tile fedifa oleomargarine to a l|t|le eojjbr in their n the ither .. , « .. ., their politics sefimisly ill pA ’genftina—more want to kijow who are the walkihg-out ben variously than tkei ri duelsl hi kiav§a& Ga^efte. —Arkaimsl: Gazette. { i N gi iptine Congress s hurt. They take -4*. i T YOU COULDNt FIND A BETTER PLACE TO HAVE YOUR FORD SERVICED .--2S President Truman is reported as saying tics” made his job more difficult [“playing" politics’’’ was the only thing that mkfie ii posibje. Arkansas Gazette, | i! iP'"’ 'T - j | The ‘‘walking man" has been guessed, but at the Uenfocratio National Convention we’ll Bryan Motor Co. “Your Friendly Fotjd Dealer” JN. MAIN S ' BRYAN Look Your Best -mi- NEWS — SHORT — CARTOON 40c—Tax Included—12c KSS j ! i BEGINNING FRIDAY— FOR ONE BIG WEEK 1 pavid a salmon aujcakw mrcBta-ss-T^ow^k CONE WITH THE WIND IN TcaiNtCOWR <un« v jj ClakX Gable. uMr T ■■ .. ouvu HOWARD. Dr IlAVILUND i* ;tad |i«r«(»t4»f l VlVlENjptlGH « Scvrlr* OTIan. X A lafrarU—alFr>dat<L— / W ATCH FOR THESE BIG ONES THE BISHOP’S Wilt j: l^fcyt-l HIGH»*W ALL !F YOU KNIW SUSH - ' Battalion It| Good Businesn! is Battalion, of College Station, afternopn, except di liahed Semi-woekly. Newa contri ii. class Goodwqn ;H: AU-Americ ". 1"! Tp 2 Associated. Press is i|tlt|lcd e xlusivelyl to the use fejr rcpiibllcat ed to i:- or not otliieiwise eri d8te I hi the paper aud local news cl spon .Rights of repahlichtlpii ol ‘ ‘ “ ’ —! Hrif Entered as second-c{fw , [natter ; t lOfftc at College StHtitfi. Tekaa 'the Act CHAR 141 E if! • • i' ■r. Il ityns may ‘ ads ma r naldej by telephone (4-5444) or ait the Editorial 'office, Room 201, Good- Del placed by telephone (4-5324) or at the SttjKient Activities Office, iRoor A ilember of of Congress j of itaxcH J. I m Y, JIMM 1 NELSON. Vick Ui dley J. T. Miller. Kem»etk Muck T. Nolan R. L. Bi lingsley, Har Tom Caiker. Ted (tot C. C. V'r"'!. -lomeS John • Sinolntanpl ... - MauVice tlowoll ,-Louis lli :h sK. .(!. 1 'ruman 1 Icl son, Otl > V V; naod . Cl ui me iucai o VIL aj tier matter hetein are also reservejd. . j ... . i . . —. I, .. « Associated Collegiate Press Member •A ....... Kunzc WireIRditor . Grady -Griffin J (knaging Editors ; Sam Lanford. K. J. Mnruk Feature fipditor . Art Howard ..Feature Writer! Don EnKelkii < . C. Munro*. ‘ James DeAndnv,Andy J. C. Kail*. Hcrachiel Shdlby Reporter* Bob Kcnnelley jj,L.J foe Tfwvtnn Hurdr V Rom* _ ..Adv ertislntr Mam user \ “V “ & V ARSITY ik f Jvji! *•* e ‘ r-t* tion of ai ntaneous ii= vrrUstng Chicago,' tt ?d nationally by National Ad- •vice. lno. f at New York city, Lid Angeles, and San kljancisco TT i Tl J •wL«r*iei< .ri ' " ie Associated Press news dispatches credit- origin published — ..Co-Efdltors ...Photographer kvti^mx: £ idst.ula, Ze o Hammond, ports ports 1 lanager Barber SkOpb rWr 8j. j v ,K,.o.db,J0HN M.S Friday \fi Saturday HL’plojhctd byWIUlAM A. BACHERJ Monday TODAY— Opening—11:00 Midnite Show Admission: 60c J' l!- tMMpna tfTf fll. il B y comin g b >- piggy m AGGIE GLEANERS & DYERS , L . V “FRIEDA” An All English Cast i. i::j.l, ’ SST.ewl UEEN Frl. - Sat.