The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 14, 1948, Image 1
rm-i --'I - ■ t • 'l l ■ f ■; i P- ^4 tv * i- J"1 i i. t-’. j; •V-ii ■!;| lvi PUBLISHED iiV THE INTEREST ■ 1 •: i - I- a %ttalion m Oh A GREATER A & M C0LLE6K \ V ■ •j j f j 1 . ^ K I : u L •r.A <4 : il - • F COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 14,1948 [\ • I t ! ’ / ; ii' Session Re Il .f .. I v|j_ C\ ith Surn First; A to D Last il l il'FlF I -” '■■■ J• • ' = Registrat bn fcjr the. second term Of the 1948 summdr 9—All whose surtiames begin with S,tU,V/Vr,X,Y,Z. t< 10—All whose surnames gin at 8 a.m lh Surname S to Z gistering Heaton •begin with L,1V ,N,0,11,Q,Rs JO Id li—A begin with E, 11 <b 12—Alii whose surnames begin with A.B.C.D. • " j 0 d i tudents haVe hot com-i plet^d their registration and re^ turried thgir assignmer t cards by ^ p n . of reg stratiqn day; will pay an additiona matrifculatioin fee of t^vo dollars for late -egistration Heaton „^3>rned. . ' . • Hfeathn said tjh.at th|e following change i have b 3en made iii the schadpi i of clashes for the'second term o the 194f Summer Session^ C<iur»es added ‘ ‘ ?• 1 * ! k. Eng. 213, Dairy Mechanics, i(6-$) 3. AiH. 416, Live: itock Managementf/F a ce. l 9 fDaily 'i-fclS M. E. 2l-5 \}2 jDaily 7-S :15 T. Bios.' «10, Credit and h ink. 201, 2f3, 205 n> j Helicopter Roars Over Bryan For Johnson Campaign Monday evening at 6:30 Bryan was greeted with the sound of whirling helicopter rotors and the amplified voice of Congressman Lyndon B. Johnson. The plane cruised over the Bry an business district at some 5p0 feet with the loud speaker blarirtg Ian invitation to come out and in spect the helicopter and get ac quainted with the Johnson’ City candidate' in the Texas senatorial Th. 2 Coilec -5 tions, J2 (Daily 7-3:15 T. >1(9*)) ; 3. Ji, [Daily 11-12:15 EsE. 1307,;, Electrical Machinery K 9 £) '4. • : j I jit jr. Th. F. S. 10-112. W 11-12 ;i2 (M. 9-12' W. 94;1 F. 9-10 F. 2-5 • , 1 j 1 4l'9, Radio Conjimunicatiion ](9-)) .4- 1 r M. W. 9-11 T. S. 10-12 F.8 ^ T. Th. 144 F. £-il2. P*ys; 312 Nuc eur Physics; (6-0) jl ; Hours to be arranged. Chur es droppjed: Aed. 204 Biolj. 101, 102. 112- MuaJ 206 ii ■ ■ ... Uhein. 101, 2«j6, 216, 301' i |co». 203 gisf 105 ianT .. 306 Sfctiijns dropped: ' | E»gl( 103, Sec. 1 E$gl i 104, Sec 1 . f Etgll! 210, Sec 6 " Eggll 401, Secf 1, 6 Pbysl 203, Sei, 2 P|ys|i 204, Secj. 2 Tier* is also change in -meet ing tinie of A. 406, Beef Cattle Production 14 D'gily 7-8:lb T. Th. 2-5i 2 i Djiily 10-1415 W. F. 2-5. Sttiuldnts may pick up; apsign- menlt cirds at thje east]entrahce to Sbish Ball. sT 1 MiA Synjphonjy on {Wax Wm Be (Presented B j iMitcliell Hall h.. - B< ginning, on ruesddy, July 20, a pfogjram of jemiclissiiqa| and dasi i'cafi music e ititled (“Symphony on iVaK” will be presonted on Tue: iday, Thurs lay, and! Sunday ever inw$ at ^6 0’ dock on the lawn norti Af the Ai sembly Hall. This jail-record concept Will last from thirty mil utes jtq jap hour with stich Compositions ps. ^CJar- menj” Tchaikovsky’s i (‘Nutcracker Suitp,’' “Gaite Parislenne’| by t>f- fenbiacq, and^selpctions by (jleorge A Gejibwin being played B^ief commentaries will bje giv en liy Harvin Rice on each pf the V selehtio is. • j Tbest concerts ’ are being pre- , sented hnder thi • auspjices of the i Student! Activities and will be free : of cjiar fe. «i iN.**’ I I ^ ' i| ■ Joe Mashman of Bell Aircraft, Johnson’s pilot, floated the mja- chine down on a. vacant lot on South Main where a crowd had already begun gathering.: After a brief explanation-of heli copter campaigning techiVm me, Johnson took over the microphpjie and pledged himself to work foma bigger and better defense orgaijiA zation.. • j . ' ■ _! • ] “There isn’t a man in the crowd that would start a fjght With Jack Dempsey,” said Johnson.. “That’s why we must have a milliPn m^n Army and an Air Force equipped with the very best jet airplanfes •that money can buy.” Pretty girls who had competed in a July 4th bathing beauty cop- test distributed, Jonnsop-for-Seh- ate literature to the crowd. Johnsonfs campaign headquair- ters in Bryan pointed out that Johnson has been a staunch advo cate of preparedness. Johnson bps joined othpr Southerners in Wash ington in opposing TJruiman’s fcitil rights proposals. ,i Johnson, Navy veteran and hold er of the Silver Star, promised to continue to give support to all vet erans’ legislation. .Monday Scorching Heal I o Usually Cause Deaths by Fire Almost half the 11,000 peo ple who died in fires last year were never touched by flames, T. Alfred Fleming of New York told‘600 Texas firemen here Monday. The firefighters are attending the nineteenth annual Fireman’s Training School at the college. Of all fire deaths in the year ending May 30, ;.1948, 42 per cent were due to the!, inhalation of su perheated air, according to Flem ing, who is director of conserva tion for the National Board of Fire -Underwriters. Air, heated to as high a temperature a$ 1100 degrees fahrenheit, sears the lungs and kills quickly, • A fire in the basement may kill people on the second story, Flem ing said. The effect is only too easily seen in nightclub and hotel fires where deaths occur hundreds of feet from the 1 flames. One of the great dangeps 1s that this superheated air need not be smoky but may be absolutely clear. Proper design, with fire walls and fire doors, give greatest protection against this dangerous eated air, he sjaid. leming bracketed delayed qns with faulty construction as keeping firemen from having an “even ureak” in .fighting fires. Every building in\ which people congregate \should have an auto matic fire ahqm system, he said. 4 f ,v* )»> l ;j j- If Doraine Appear ai Horticulturist Commended for Work in Greece Number 1!> s Team f 1^' -A j |.i DORAINE RENARD am Sweethearts, will perform at be no admission charge since dents Activity Fee. ELLIS LUCAS, America’s Singing he Grove this evening at 8. There will ill expenses will be paid by the Stu- ■fit] College Ficnic Called OK ....... r, / \ The College Station Comirii ity pichic scheduled for day has been failed off on the' advice of community physicians Grady Ehrm. assistant directo^ of student activities, announced today. Z mun- FrK Colonel Boatner Becomes Head „ 3 • , !| Of Military Department Aug. 15 Colonel Haydon L. Boatner, former Commanding General of Combat Troops in -the Ledo Sector, Commanding General of the Myitkyina Task Force and Deputy Commander of the Chinese Combat Command during World War II, will become commandant of cadets and professor of Military Science and ; — —1 ♦'Tactics at A&M on August 15, President Gibb Gilchrist announc- Methodist Church To Sponsor Youth Meeting Monday More than 500 young people ♦dll meet uf A&M July 19 for a ffve- day Yoiith Assembly sponsored; by the BoanT.of Education, Tekas Conference \qf the Method | s t Church. \ ’ ■ |! • The conference, which is being held at A&M for third consecu tive year, brings together leaders of the Methodist YoUth Fellow ship. \ Rev. Grady Hardin, askmahte pastor of the First Methodist Church, Houston, will give lectures during the session. Key; Emmett Dubberly, pastor of )4ie Methodist Church at Brenhamj is dean of the assembly. The dean of men will be Hev. Grady Earls, pastor of the Mqth- odist Church in Sour Lake, and also youth director for»the church in the Beaumont District. Mrs. F. A. Fisher of Port Arthur will be dean of women. The conference will meet in bath __ the Assembly Hall and the Boom- of^the""Infantry* School,"^om ed today. , Colonel Boatner will succeed Col. Guy S. Meloy, Jr., who is leaving to enter the General Staff and Command School at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, r j “We are fortunate in securing the services of Colonel Boatner to fill the important post made va cant by Colonel Meloy’s new as signment,” President Gilchrist said. “His record indicates that he is the high type of officer needed here.” . Serving as Assistant Chief of Staff in charge of personnel for the Fourth Army,~Colonel Boatner is now stationed at Fort Sam Houston. Colonel Boatner, a native of New Orleans, is another of the army’s officers who have risen v[rom private to general. He serv ed as a private in the Marine Corps in 1918 and 1919. In 1920 he eMered the U. S. Military Academy and was graduated " a Second Lieutenant of Infantry in ;the class 1924, progressing through all grades to Brigadier General on Novendier 1,| 1942. He reverted to his permanent rank of Colonel December 31, 1946. Colonel Boatner is a graduate Ernest Mortensen, horticul turist at A&M’s Winter Gar den Experiment Station, has been commended for his as sistance in rehabilitating the citrus and truck crop of Greece. Mortensen has just returned from a three months stay in Greece where he was on loan from the Agricultural Experiment Station as a truck crops specialist trainer to the American Mission for aid to that country. Dwight P. Griswold, chief, of the American Mission for aid to Greece, wrote Station Director R. D. Lewis' that effective use will be made of: Mortensen’s reccomenda- tions and contacts. '■ “Mr. Mortensen’s relationships with high officials of the Greek government were excellent,” Gris wold stated. “His visits to the cit rus and truck crop area of the country furnished a background upon which he based mapy valu able recommendations. His Report to the ministry of agriculture and technicians within his field yere well received.” \ The climate of Greece is parti cularly adapted to truck crop4»nd citrus production. Most of the growers of that country were cui off from recent developments dur ing the war and postwar periods. It was to bring their production in these fields up to date that Mort ensen was borrowed by the Ameri can government. r ^ , Doraine Rerurp Sweethearts vHll J i The main pail groups of Dorainn groups include the “Student Prince,” a ows And Classii TTO Ellik for Profit; ■ • • C : KUNZE : / ; Lpcas, America’s Sinj irmaneje at The Grove at 8 p. ^n. prograrp will center around fo ir s “Gostikmed Cameos”. The fo il ’Chocolate Soldier”, “Showboat Get Your Gun.” ♦ ,, Doraine and Ellis have recehie< tributes from numerous nationallj known papers. A quotation foupc. the St. Louis Dispatch refd, town classrooms on the north s ide of the campus for study in courses designed to lead to personal en richment, stated Rev. James Jack- son, paslpr of the A&M Methodist Church. Some of the topics to be stuc ied are “What Do Protestants Be lieve ?” “Friendship and Marriage,” “To Drink or Not to Drink,” “Life of Jesus,” and “Choosing a Vcca tion.” Other courses concerning orga nization material include “Youth add Worship,” “Missions md World Friendship,” and “Recijea tion and Youth in the Small Church.” President Harry S. Truman plans to go Convention, in Philadelphia today if he receives the Democratic C> F, Bernatd, . jpstnictor phyfics at A&M and Vf. E^ $treet, heai .ol the Engineeri Department 4ter| ins erk-jat he A&M during; ilthe Sum 4 ship] h|}ur, ace trding to; pn an nouncei icjit from James ; Fowler, pastor. 1 H Church ay mjbming wor- of aide s, W. M Potts istry Ap aflpreface the) installation aims ng of prjef vieW 1 o[ the hisjtbry pf thp con- »tts, cht, insti’ucfcr, and W. E. Long bf the ME I pt jartment, gave a Mo’ ^ L> gregatibn since its establishment in J935 a|5 a chui ch, Fiwler added. Gri daati jlLi the nomination to run for president pf the Uniited States on the Democratic ticket. Truman-Barkley Ticket Takes Lead in Nominating Struggle PHILADELPHIA, July 14 G 2 ?)—Its a Truman-Barkley ticket chosen without benefit of roll call, as the thirtieth Democratic Convention came to the put-up-or-shut-up point today on the heralded Southern revolt. The odds were heavy that few Southerners really would bolt what was billpd by Natioinal-f Chairman J. Howard McGrath \ as Cave Experiments With Equipment T Deadlines* For —* 3 on Lards Satbrday, uly II7, ja the deadline for <rdering gridua- tion announce uents,; according to Gi«dy Elms assistant direc tor ostudent activities. Th< annonn< erne order id in Rot m 2' Hall. K may be Goqidwin a marathon session to agree on a platform, pick two nominees and adjourn. I . !: i ! But if j the battle got, too ifot, the windup might be delayed uptil tomprrom ‘■ _ j f Presideht Truman planned ! to come up from Washington to ac cept his nomination in an off-tjhe- cuff speech. ! j • Senator Alben W. Barkley. of Kentucky, welcomed into the 1948 Dbmocratic partnership by Mr, Truman himself, still was being coy about accepting formally, i Although the Kentuckiaa_iQb- viously was miffed at Mr. Tiiu- man’s previous misfiring bid to ward Justice William O. Do friends said they had no » >' • i ' 1 that he would ; accept the No. 2 spot on the tideet. In fact, some rebellious South erners were talking of Barkley for No. 1 man, largely because the 28-minute demon stration given him when he comp eted his keynote speech Monday night hasn’t been approached in enthusiasm since. Gov. Beauford Jester of Tex as said he had been approached by Kentucky and California del egates to support Barkley as the No. 1 man. Hi» reply: ‘Texas would be very^hiuch interested.” Dave Foutz, a golden state dele gate, said “California would go for him.” } Barkley insisted, however, 1 he would squelch ajny such move. £ The Cave is being equipped with new equipment to test or ptove it’s worth for use in the Memorial Center, Wayne Stark, Directoi of the Texas A&M Student'Memcfrial Center, said today. A stainless steel sandwich cdum- ter has recently been installet: in the Cave. In thq next few moi ths more equipment will be installed in the Cave and in the Campus Corner. The Cave and the Campus O m- er are part of the Student Men or- ial Center,- and the new equipn ent being installed may or may nol be used in the Student Memorial C en ter Building after it’s -completion, Stark said. The equipment being used and other equipment to be insta led serves two purposes. The f|rst purpose being to experiment v ith new equipment-and test! it’s vilue for future use in the Student $4®” mortal Center Building. The, second purpose is to givejthe present customers faster serfice under sanitary conditions. The equipment which has been installed in the Cave i| proving very successful, Stark stated. -H- mand and General Staff ScftapL and was a language student ; Peking, China, where he was awarded the degree of Master of Arts from the California Col lege in China. This training and his China service proved valu able when he was assigned as assistant in the Chinese unit of the Defense Aid section, Supply Divi^on, War Department and General" Staff. In Washington in August 1941, he was assigned to duty in the office of the un der Secretary of War as a mem ber of the Military Mission to China. In December, 1941, he became assistant to the Chief of Train ing, Third Army, and in February 1942, went to Burma serving as Chief of the Stilwell group At Lashio. After the fall of Burma he was made acting Chief of Staff of the China-Burma-India theatre and later Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence. ». ; • . In October 1942, he was appoint ed Chief of staff of tlfe” Chinese Army at Ramgarh, India, and lat- iei( as Commanding General Com bat Troops, Ledo Sector. In 1944 he was Commanding General, My- ’itkyina Task Force, and in 1945 'Chief of Staff, Chinese Combat Command, later Deputy! Comman- der. • *%. A Registrar Ready With Class Rings Senior rings are now available in the Registrar’s Office for the following men: ^ I H. D. James, Lee A. Durst, Wil liam E. Egan, W. E. Holmgreen, G. W. Humphries, Kenneth C. Kre- nek, Clyde B. Miller, Don R. Mun son, Wilbur E. Richey, Charles W. Rogers, W. L. Shelton, Joseph R. Sacra, Frank M. Smith Jr., Oliver A. Toombs, Eugene W. Trotter, Wellington G. Watson, Robert W. Wilson Jr., C. A. Medberry, and Jack R. Woolf. Williams Will Direct Series of Short Courses E. L. Williams, director of the Industrial Extension Service, here will conduct a- series of short cour ses on supervision for top execu tives for the Shell Pipe Line com pany. The first short course was held in Tulsa, July 8-10. Superin tendents and general foremen and managers from Illinois, Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma attended. The other short courses will be held in September at Odessa and Houston. Men from Arkansas, La., and Texas will attend. Everyone who has surance will receive from the govemme|t’i surplus, provided the! force for at least three An optimistic esti mailing of the .first summer of 1949, a VA official. All Wo veterans are eligible dividend, whether or icy is now in force. The size of the estimated at befcweqh 000 and $2,000,0jj0,0(ij0, j vided among sorpe erans. The average ceive about $100;, actorlijag tjo age, how long his : »ol|cy Wh force, and several ot iei| actoi i. Payment of the dividejjuls will suit in one of thh biij g th<j the ing jobs ever tajcklei ernment. All NSiLl i tsu cies must be auifitodl tc how much an imSividi jail i ? eligible ‘lYouJl Tall in love with Doraine ajnd Ellis. They radiate wholeso ne Miami”. A quote from the Cine in- mti Times-Star read, “They hive ■ixcopjtional voices and a refrenh- ing approach f .. altogether a mpst pleasant entertainment,” Doraine Renard showed promise, of musical talent from earli ist childhood. She tvas born in a musi cal family, her father having been a vio in teacher, And her mother, hjefort Hheir marriage, his siar ttipil.j . \'* A ■ At the age of 15 poraine sang :ifer th* tenor Giovanni Martin;- |lH. When 17. she completed a fi’ e lyearjcourse in music at the Ohio plati University. She received the highest honors in her class. i)oraine furthered- her vocal -baickgjround under the tutelage of [Marioi Rubini of Chicago and laier his worked with the New York'hrlist teacher Louis Buchner. At the time of the second vtorjd war, Miss Re- nlard joined the Salzburg Oppra 'Company. Wo.- ncej oli- ' etert: ine to receive. Then i|the'Bx|ct ath ^nt of the surplus tq be: paid 1 ou*< trtll be computed, jand among the veterans. This surplus has Ig present aize. because; ol of reasons. Policies h|a\ inis Ellis Lucas, the {baritone, received |ra ini ng as a juv the McLaughlin | P bail education <18 en out, premiums pith and them are dropped providing any bqnefi er. The premium* coi) tin ui to iqiaw ipjport^lhed - >n |it|houlj "the) son of am Irish his dramt tic pnile member of ayers. His mi si- complcted alt th* Cleveland Institute of .Mudc.. During his school years Ellis vas a tenor soloist On the CBS ahd NBC networks. 1 r ’ •'[ I ! 1 jiTheae two young singer*-haVe | amassed a repertoire of colorful ly costumed duet They met the summer aflfer Ujair three percent injte treasury. Another reasoii foF is that obsolet* nio tables were used to fi., ium rates at thb start! Although NSLI pr!m|i| cheap, they were stii 1 The exact size of th fronting the VA is d>t it is estimated thg; ; number who will refitovi and how mych will b< afailabl distribution has befe) i it will take '27,000,; ms figure how much each \fi get. .. I ’i .1 sud'fejlus ity p|B,te inj- m ^ ’ ff re tjasfcfln- graduations from college; Afte* a re t |rj th* |US brief courtship they were marred, and,, realizing thsit success in |he npwti, Lifter [ ivii he iii ids for iill Effects of New Dugas Po As Extinguisher Learned [ere men were rotated s<i tjjn t ev« one would have t cl an|ce. By BARRY R. SMITH \ “One of the most effective methods of fightjin] electncal fires is with the new Dugas Powder,” John TB^llew of Childress, Texas, told his class Tuesdays ! V ' “The powder is fired from a gun in the .form ridge and haV.a smothering effect,” he explainei “At least 90 percent of the men> in the basic courses qf fire train ing are here for the Tirst time”, said Chief Adolph Solmky, presi dent of the state association. Chief Solmky of the Seguin Fire Depart ment, is in charge of the course qn hose evolution this week. \ Officials of the State Firemen Association have called Chief Solmky one of the most exper ienced men in the training school. He has attended the school here for 19 consecutive yaan. ! ' ■When questioned about the source of the equipment used in teaching the courses, the Seguin Fire Chief said that most of the large i stuff came from the A&M Fire Department, but that some of/the special equipment was brought from other cities. 'ne of the men in Solmky’s class Richard Case. Case is attach- Fpre C fir 4 a oil fjpd ef Fire Marshall G'. C Quanah, Texas is ancl dii at firefighting. Whep many times he had ■Abort courses, he j- ted that this was his LStjjh he vtosn’t taking any ling about 11* tinguish^ was one valuable pieces of gained by dvr depart; Daniel said. [cDaniijt of r dld-f‘ ifked to t irgu; ed’to the Center, Texas Fire De partment and only 17 years old he ha$ the distinction of being the youngest firemen mow attending the school. Among those listening to the lecture on “Static Protection for Gag Stations and Tank Tracks” was Fire Marshall Neal Harris , of Tyler, Texas.’ This whole course is strictly ed ucational, and everyone is taking it seriously,” Harris said. He explained!.that every year his city and many others are bene fited by the lessons learned here. “The instructors’ course* will be the most valuable”, the Tyler Mar shall said, “because they are able to teach those who didn’t [come.” Harris pointed ont that the most capable men were sent whenever possible, and that the ir ■ f'LL Kyle Namei Of FCA Diij( E. J. Kyle has b eri ajppo chairman of the boar 1 c f of the Farm Credt A< tion of Houston, to jfil pired term of Judge sey of Tyler. Kyle, former djeani at A&M, will resign ambassdor to Guaten tember and will talk > duties at that time. Now 71 years of ag e, Guatemala nicknamei, ' Father Ambassador.’ was bestowed upon h|m his interest and help ‘ the culture and a; Guatemalan peopl In the two anna h*lf has been ai mala he has cooperate government in helpin : I _ to improve the qui iity of products. 1 modern world of music demanded neiw thought, they devised tl ei# unique presentation of “Costumed CaniTOs of Famous Musicals.” Doraine and made their first appearance on the stage 'at the Pre-Opera Week presentation In Cleveland. Latfr they appeared in a concert at the Cleveland Pub- lie Auditorium where they spng for an audience of 10,000.'n While abroad during the wlar years, they rAcohli-d a series of programs at BBC in London lor the Armed Forces Netwoik.- Their, presentations of light tp- era classics ha>e carried th^m through 23 countries. [7 . • 7, C J The musical artahgements to be presented at The Grove will be by Doraine Renard. Costumes will be by Madamie Elsa pf New York ind all Western Attire by Marge Rfley Of! Hollywood. ’ A critic once jemarked, “Tliey make a handsome couple list standing In their;costumed. Wh they sing they Are wonderful” I The duet appeared at Oklahoma A&M on July 6 and 7, at the Uni versity of Oklahoma on July 8, and at the outdoor Sunken Gaiden Theatre in San Antonio on . uly 13. Following their appeannee here they Will go to the Louisiana Polytechnic Institute, Ruston, La. The program at The Grove will bei divided into fbur parts. There will be no admUsion charge [for the perforiinahce. Loveless Agency Rends :hool mi *5 Sid Loveless, agent for Ameri can General Life Insurance office St College Statijon, left Friday norning for Frenich Lick Springs, ndiana, where he will atten 1 a fwo-weeks meeting of an agtncy management school. Five managers of American (!en eral Life of Texas'will attend the meeting. Ray Smith, formerly of allege Station, is; one of the njan- who will attend. Cave'Witi Remaiji Opetitf^tirilP. The uaual closiitg 1 p. m.. for ‘The Ca*< extended to 11 p. m nesday, Thursday, and nights of this week fpl benefit of students who wi K!* " i ‘ ht f, d ° r,n * “The Campi ntihue to do time [of 5 p. m hour of. will n Whd i-,. Corner” viill at Its regu sr !■ 1 . } I * ■ ■