The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 23, 1948, Image 2

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    V
-
«(
n
, writer and p
ing editorial
ments this
aren’t going
i
.wrence
U
'Soldu
■ }/■ ^ . v).
nation ^ J
OR IA L S
. f . j i - . -L
8 a t iati o n
;s
r
MONDAY,
AUGUST 23, IMS
Statesman, Knightly Gentleman?
Ross, Founder
Traditiona
To those; o
stuck with us
If you raanair
while sitting i
the parched ca
worked for
t, Sweat, and Tears.. *
the type? - that .went to keep us cool.
itY:
OH« BABYF
if: 1
!! f!"
soul sear-
ir achieve-
)w, but we
\ • ‘
It’s been a long, hot, dreary, unexcit
ing summer, and the sooner it is filed
v « i At;' .r m. . -
away and forgotten the better it will be.
Whether it was worth the 10 or 12 hours
who have ^we .don't know, and it’s too late to do any-
,ny thanks, thing about it now anyway,
the paper* The tempeirature has been knocking
t shade of the 110 degree mark for the past few
r won’t have days. Water is s-carce. Initiative is scarcer,
f. Another word of But try and stick it out for a few more
thanks fcfetbe hoys, in the pttnt shop who days and thdn we can all say “the hell
have put up Wijh us, for without their help with it’’ and head for home in pursuit of
.O
we couldn’t h
mer,
hqe <
m
ipliug
le Vintase .
^ ■ ! ■!' 1 r
oo Reports Tige
From Anemia and
I
r
r, . : I' 1 --i j -j .'1
During the next'two w«
pay checks sleep, food and happiness.
•k
i.i'
on
Trial
Amplification Department
• • 0
talion
local draft
file. To som
story, and t
their names
the beginn
readers? will
dsitjo
many Bat-
n to their
r names on
be an old
H be to file
rip will be
dence.
.ining is a
the right
[head |
m
m it
l|y duty
b others th
f a new e
.military
t is handled i in
manner. It tojsomething-that should not
be dropped whien the present internation
al crisis Is passed, but should fbe continued
as long as oilir couptay retains its position
of world leadership, ' |
Whether compulsory military training
will be continued'depends on the Army.
Many of jthe top'jg|nerals ]'^cognize that
fact and stai| rea# toj live up to the re
sponsibility that Congress lias placed up
on theni. General Om,ar Bradley, army
r chief of staff .recently issued a statement
summing up fie army’s p
well serve as a credo for
in thd coming years of t
for that is
what the nfev| drift law has done to the
asjifioh. could
H army men
army—placed it uxwr*' trial
Colliejrs Magazine^ General
“There
American
■ ».
Home-I
is no longer anyplace in the
tor. a ‘treat em i-ough,
Writing for
Bradley said:
* . . «
tell ‘em nothing’ school of officers and
nohcom. If we are to make good use
of tnese valuable years from the lives
of new draftees, then we must offer
them a, healthy, moral, intellectual and
social climate in which they will serve
i • ■ ' tr '
willingly-^—not resentfully because of
force or compulsion.
“I believe that if the Army is to be
a democratic instrument of this nation,
then it must respect arid value the basic
human rights of its soldiers. It must
guard thei^ dignity,- defend their in
tegrity, and not permit these men to be
pushed around unnecessarily because of
the! inconsiderate assumption of privi
leges that come with rank.
“. The Army has made mistakes
before—-many of them. We may, unfor
tunately, make many 'more. But I do
want you to know that the Army is out
to prove, that not only the nation but
these young men ; as well may profit by .
their service. !
“The peacetime draft has put the
Army on trial before a ^>ar of critical
public opinion. We will stand on the
record.’’* ' vi -. I
By CARROLL, TRAIL
Dear Sir:
Just recently I lost my yellow
fee slip. I don’t know how, when,
or where; all I know is that I lost
it. , *
Now to get a duplicate, I will
have to pay 25 cents, which I
haven’t got. (I spent my last two-
bits for a card of buttons to sew
on my shirt.)
I would like to have some fun
and go to the highly entertaining
features that Student Activities is
joffering at the Grove. ^
j But since I haven’t a fee slip,
and the college doesn’t want its'
chairs removed from the dormitory
rooms, I find tha,t’ I can’t go.
I imagine there -are several oth
er fellows in the same fix? Can’t
you do something about it?
Sincerely,
L. K.
'A
Answer: L. K., ,1 recognized your
problem long ago, and I am doing
something. I have suggested to
the head of the Fiscal Offuie that
a new system be started concern
ing the issuance of the yellow fee
slip.
If all goes well, beginning this
fall your troubles will be over.
Then, instead of writing out the
, receipt on yellow paper, the slip
Sneak Preview
will be tatooed on each student’s
arm. * | | i
Of course, this system will have
its disadvantages. For one thing,
the housing office will have a
little trouble rubber stamping the
back of the slip- And the days of
the tweniy-five cent charge for a
duplicate will be gdlle forever.
Howejver, if a mams arpi is cut,
broken, or mangled 5 |n any way
which will distort the tatoo, the
Office plans to make a duplicate
on the other arm for only $25.
★
Dear Sir|
I read recently where gasoline
is being made in solid lumps. Is
there anything to this rumor?
Sincerely^ ^ •
N. S.
Answer: -What you heard was
absolutely correct, ijl. S. They are
experimenting with [solidified gas
oline, but the experiments haven’t
been too successful.
If the)? do make it into lumps,
one can immediately see the great
military significance it would have.
It would revolutionize the fuel
problen) on the battlefield.
However, it would certainly
have its disadvantages. If you
\Cere out driving with ybur girl
and “ran put of gas," she could
just give ybu a couple of lumps.
, L ByJOEHOUJgj '
Wild animals are certainly getting tem-
permental these days. It used to be that
considered themselves lucky if Frank
got his hands upon them rather then
Some hunter, since Buck brought ’em
alive. Now, however, they practically
have hourly sedatives, psychologists
_7ing their mental outlook, and warm
milk before retiring.
At least that appears to be the situation
id the Dallas Zoo where the keepers are up
set over the condition of one of their prize
tigers. The poor thing is reported to have
anemia caused by lack of appetite, general
restlessness, and stomach trouble. The ail
ing tiger can’t seem to sleep properly and
wakes up screaming from nightmares,
j The veterinarian has high hopes of the
animal regaining its health and the 50 pounds
it has lost since the mental letdown. He has
prescribed a complete rest cure with bal-
aheed meals of bloody horsemeat and vita
mins. It is planned t^ have the tiger rest
more frequently and take naps during the
The captive jungle beasts are probably
nothing but pure and simple hypochondriacs,
that sit around all day and brag about their
symptoms. No doubtfthey talk about their'
cute doctors and just how much they’d like
to have them fpr dinner.
* ^ »•
; Oklahoma is trying to take a claim-to-
fame away from Texas. Some supposed
authority in that state has announced that
Oklahoma, not Texas, has lived under mpre
nations than any other state. The boasting
one braggs that twelve nations in all have
controlled that state,' or a part thereof. Six
of them are the sdme ruler’s that Texas has
<v
SOVd
A lond sjtaidingj cas^ of mistaken iudenti-
ty was ri|v(al}d in LoS Angeles, California,
F]orjl3 y jars a parrot’s owner has
to it as “he’. The truth was
The pan )t proudlly laid an egg.
t hap be eh christened a name
ter and the owner has
sebc of the unborn,
recently,
referred
known.
Now- the jpairrh
more suit at le jto a
been won le rir g ab
but expe( te 1.
A ligljt
has been
can somdt
teous indji
from tip
clerk. Hje
hat only
A pri
row wheh
him the
firm in
the literi
inmate.
Greatest
"Vi
For tht
piers of Liberties ...
Astaire and Garland Score
In Tuneful ‘Easter Parade’
ks headlines Anyone who enters the committee room
[ : i;
case
about moro
u
omraei
for
but what a
“the people
knowingly
of them aije
jtiittee and
jihio
: sho«
t the innocen
By ANDY DAVIS
KASTKR PARADE sir
ring Fred A Minin', Judy Gnrlimd,
Peter l.nwford, and Ann Miller.
MOM him irtrtjo nil out^to Km*
wionftl spy jjiftakj Whut.btjfted' out to lie clement in the gdyeijnnjjwit spare nobody, i^i Atuirv Sunni to tho Jnm
lifter hU Mhuft retiromoat, lyul
thoMc iluneinK nhocs of hla mHIiic
brighter thun ever. With Judy
Gnrluml iim Mm dnin'lng nnrtner
tiiliio on the voeitlH) mid 14 of Ir
ving Bvrlihhi riijingM, what cImu cun
you 'auk for. \\ . .
The time is Easter 1910, the
place is New York City, sml the
utory . . . Fred Astaire and 4 ,in
Miller arc a headline, dance team,
only with Astaire it is a little
more than ju$t a partnership, he
is in love with the gal. Miss Miller'
htt» other ideas and breaks up tho
team in order that sho might star
in the Ziegfojd Follies.
Astaire, determined to show that
he can transform any chorus girl
into his leading lady (even better
than Miss Miller), selects Judy
Garland as the fall guy. Miss Gar
land, as the unschooled chorus girl
in iilmbHt e|ve|’y ilowdpuper i|> the country duffers,’ for the violent efforts of the com-
hnve banncfntl the!!events o| the congres- mittee members to; smoke out any foreign
Nional spy What.started out to be element in the gdvernn^nt spare nobody,
a mere routine imestigati or perhaps Some people sajyiunthinkingly, that it
“red herringj’ 'depenclinw ioi ; - your politi- will all “come puj^ ini the wash.” It may,
cal viewpoint! has, with thojeintram# onto yes, but those people who had clean repu-
the stage of Ihe tjvto Rusdiuni schooUea^" tations thrown into the congressional
ers, become sbmeivflhat of an international laundry will find they have reputations
problem. ; j !i ? I . ; that will be forev#“damp-dry’’ and wrtn*
\ j However. ftherd is another aspect to the Wed because of tHe experience.
, a domesjtic aapect that is befhg talked-. The conduct of the congressional com-
it more #id more as :tt| investigation mittee is all the more regrettable when it
roi is little djaiubt that there is compared with the investigation carried
1 drags on.’ There is little djoljubt that there
x.is comrauinisiic infiltrationlllinto tho gov- op by the Canadian government when it
' ugeop
ltrat|o’
trains for the act, and after much
difficulty succeeds in reaching the
top of thb ladder and Astaire'd
goal. By this time she has tho
“swootf ’ (anything for a change)
on him, and before the finale (the
Faster Parade on 6th Ave, New
York) the feeling is mutual.
Ymi aren't wanting your time
or money; when you see Faster
Parade! The entire family will en
joy It. :]
j ji f !
USDA Studies
Improved Methods
Of Ag Marketing
ho never km itjiringly or un
led the cbm
eing called
suffering
i !
be exposed,
What about
Headlines from the
Bulletin, ia ii|r 12
4J. S. Track|T
responsible was faced with a similar problem. There
the guiltjr were investigated and their
guilt was substantiated before any names
were r made public. It'is shocking that a
committee of our Congress should do less !
Foreign spies are bad, but home-grown
tramplers of liberties are worse.
Tho U. S. Department of Agri- :
culture ia leading a movement for ! Johnny made
j I ' I • V'f
Interview Reveals
1 ’ ■ ' J H;
Interesting Facts
On WTA\V Station
! CHARLES B. WILLIAMS
Through an informal interview"
With- Johnny Holmes, a studeht an
nouncer, many interesting facts
are revealed about our radio sta
tion jthat aren't realized by mos t
Students. , f | | <■
: Joljnny, an Ag, Ed. major, has
been on the WTAW stall since
jSepctjmber, 1946, and is popular
and Widely known in thista^ea as
a dis£ jockey and M. C. He handles
such programs as Johnny’s Juke
Box, hbard each Saturday at noon,
and the Coffee Club, heard Mon
day through Friday from 6:15 to
7:U0 in the morning. He [is heard
again from 7:16 to 7:30 1 Monday,
Wednesday, Friday and Saturday
handling Cowboy Melodies!
j Tile staff of WTAW fa under
the direction of Henderson Shuf-
; flerj head of the Dept.; of In.
: formation, and Frank Mosolik,
! imuiager and chief engineer.
There are three student nun oun
ce rs,! one full time annouhefr, uml
two jglrls on. thlv staff. Botty Jo
Cook is the station’s program ill*
; rector and Joyce Lovcrt()id book-
| keep >r,
On the broudcaatlng staff; every-
| ono s trulnod to do unyom! elso’a
[job n enso of emergemiy. Those
mentioned make up tho broadcast-
; ing staff and do not incUide the
Truni inltter stuff.
' It ‘was learned from Jo|inny that
the ntation always continues opor-
atior s, holidays or not. It w^s also
lean ed that Melt Frertkbl will bo
; back this fall to give a play by
play description of all games play
ed at Kylo Field.
i As the interview w|i3 ended,
the statement that
'
Between the B<
ii(g
the Republii
' the Confed-
other sik he
Indian tribes which
the Eastern li
oma.
;puld well spare some
fame and Oklahoma--"
5; I ion’t think we should fl
?rith this. If we give
this point she might
ithd evchti
had: Sp
of Texas,
erate States
claims arq *ix
held full
Section
Even
of it’s mini
is in sore lepdofoi
allow her tc g it av ay
in so eas ly t<! lier on
just keel) on boast tig ihd eventually decide
she was t|h4 bigges; state in the union.
It ■.?
,V I
■
:
,
down updnjhim fre n the hat ban^
oik
l! ore ired
desi ed
By CHUCK MAISEL
Paris Mitchell of Kings RLw
Simon & Schuster, New York, 11118.
Sequels to any great w6rl hlavi!
an unhappy !habit of failin' fla
on their respective faces. But ifna-
gine what mantfer of
be in store fori a sequ
by another author from 'the oiigir
nal author’s notes, 5 ,1 [j*
It seems as though pari
ell of Kings Row his h
with a mosjt resoundin
nc 8
! *
?lev iland,
gerei je velryj store customer
fqrcjed 11 conclude that manners |
be a detriment. The cour-
Idiial c< uld hot restrain himself
his hat adjeu to a jewelry
lately jut forgetfully, raised his
lave his shoplifting loot , rain
hatband. •
’ll
■; ,*L:.
m peveiand, Ohio, raised a
:hfe pri ion jlibrary wouldn’t give „ .!
The officials were
refu al though, j! They decided
was t’t the right type for the
jook’.s title was “The 4
ispn Bfeak|s of AH Times'
i
i* ■; y
mai
cha
Katherine Bellamann goe^^n uc
trouble on the fly leaf
that ’she is qualify
■ral
’ed t6 Wri
1 xj |ui 1
e th«
second novel of her Into hu bt nd 4
planned trilogy of Kings 1 ov
but, don’t make book on Henry n<|t
turning over in Ms grave.
Mrs. Bcllamann says th it slfe
and her hpsjbuud have tal (ei I iff
nothing during tbu past pcyciwI
years other than the charm tens of am , al hough
mmwnists? Many
ifoi*e the com
use of that.
r!' 1
v
City of
St
Hall
Roo
A oo A
*-• credited to
cd herein.
E_-W ;
Hntircd
Omc* at
tb* Act of
!.!
idelphia (Pa.) 1
ek Births On
1 j 1 • 1 .1 . tJ;
1
A scientist says people will live longer
the next 500 years. Sorry, we can’t
' i i.* ' • i
Tnfant, Maternal
Mortality Rates
At New Low Level
wait.
!'• r-\
iated Press is '< ill
Battalia
KBNl^TH
iUr W
Andy
T.-Ni
Fr»nJ
W
l
s
•'i
-I
4
/•
.!
made by
a be
r if
day atu!
*
jj- 1 ..jr J .
iblication of all
Room 201,
it Aeuvitiea
Infant and maternal mortality
rates in Texas are at their lowgst
level in the history of the state,
according to tho State Health De
partment.
Infant mortality has reached a
low of 41.2 deaths for every 1000
live births. Compared to the fig
ures of 1940, this represents a re
duction of more than 39 per cent,
In that year there were 197,023-
live births and 8,685 deaths.
Maternal mortality has been re
duced over 66 her cent. In 1940
he rate was 4.6 deaths for every
s:
revision and modernization of ag-
ricultutaf marketing practi c e s
from the producer to the consum
er, John I. Thompson, Assistant i
Administrator of the Production
and Marketing Administrat ion,
said today.
Thompson spoko informally at
a conference of Texas State PMA :
Committeemen and Farmer-Field- ‘
’ men at College Station. He explain
ed the operations of the Depart- ;
ment under the Research and Mar
keting Ajet, enacted two years ago,
under which scores of research pro
jects of basic importance of both ?
producer and distributor already
are under why.,
Those projects, Thompson said,
include Surveys of what the con
sumer needs and wants, of tho ‘
channels through which goods \
move to him, and of the raw agri
cultural product from which the j
finished goods,, are made. They
cover *'
per,
wholesaler,
consumer.
Thompson mentioned
h
u<{h frl
civ
(ill- llll
the .now book. Their convtm tl(n th) nigh)
must hiivo been most boring in tlv>t tov ivslnt
case. Not slriw tho earliest n ivc f n\y i,vr v
1ms a story been filial wijh
won k lings,
Paris Mitchell, the hciji,
fimphN over Ms llfcdong erten y
Fulmer Green not lives use I'lrijls
In strong but liwnuse Fu m([r
Just a wee mite weaker.
Parris' wife BHho Is so V
that one gags whenever shi
tho story—which she has
cal place In nimvay, Sho
sweet worried Victorian liffc,
Mi) Icli -
e irt i
t iu<
i ho>
PI*
ii(fr,
m|.
htre
M»g r n
Fails To
er States
• ' If*''
pncl dies with
! * •. u
Vjctpri^u
Mrs. Bellamann deviates
modi from the great book written
er hlupband ia in her depiction
li town Kings Row. This was
Hue value.Of the original work.
dllamaniu\ has shown the
dj (hypocrisy, an$ narrow-
iiiBness of a small town' aa no I
h r modeni .author save Sinclair
“ity.
Ms* latest story of Kings) Row,
ever j leases one with * thft’
tho ight
ieavt
•e T
icait uf it, and-that the
eir the town, "A Good
l4> Raise Your Children,” is
sol mn liiuth. ij
’ he ilql is; sq dlajointod as to
mate ettolllng .Imposktblo. Parris
MiHL«ln>ll JhuH mis ,ups -Mvl downs
tei i
iriuh fri
itens tb
lo| I- yo
liion a th'
ilnna wi o
ictbri m ini
WTAW has in the past and will in
the future strive to bring Aggies
and residents of College Station
what they want when they want it
f : !
1000 live births in 1947 the rate research projects on lives
was 1.6 deaths for every 1000 live grains, fruits, and vegetables
births. But despite these gains, ton, wool and other commoc
tttlqd exclusively to the use. for repub
credited in the paper and local news of spontam
n of all other matter herein ate also reserved.
all news dispatches
ecus origin; publilh-
if ' 1
the Associated Pmh
Swire^ T. WitebC'lL c!
nte4 nath)nelly Vy National A4-
Sorviee lari, at Kef, Tort City.
LM Angelca, end Sen VrencUco.
-A* ,'*• • •* A . i
.V
• v«, r . t x
...'Feature Writers
6.cS&. ■',>
Hr, Noita. Bob («
Atea-Cuur —
/•!'
..Co-Editors
— r-
* Utporters
4
Writer!
^4.PHO
V. G Cerewey, Meek
Texas still has the sixth highest
infant mortality rate in the Uni
ted States.
Dr. George W. Cox, State Health
Officer, attributes the reduction in
rates to the increase in public re
sponse to the educational efforts
of .the Texas State Health Depart
ment.
, “Wc have reason for pride in our
reduced.infant and maternal mor
tality when it; is realized that the
reduction,.mains more than 6000
babies are being saved l annuallv
which would otherwise have died, 1
says Cox. “In addition, the birth
rate is higher thun the 1910 fig-
urw ly more than 71,000,”'.
numerous
livestock,
cot-
other commodities.;
Ho observed that the mohalir pro-
ducing industry' hi having some
maiketing troubles, and said the
marketing branch of PMA is con-;
sideriMf“a research project to try
to assist the producers by recap
turing lost markets or finding new '
ones, or both.
Thero vt urgent need for a con-;
tinuotis exchange of information
all along thd line from producer to
consumer, Thompson said. Produc
ers showld try to keep advised of
the klrtds of produett^needed by
processors ahd distributors and the .
latter should sec that the needed
infoi'mution is passed back to thu
producer, k; ui-Iaiu^d,
Chemical Analysis
Reveals Value Of
Yellow Tallow Nut
Dr. W. W. Potts of the Chemis
try Department, and Dr, B. R,.
Hoi and from tlye cottonseed re
search lab, have cmKhuted B qual
itative and quantative^ analysis of
the Chinese tallow nut to deter
mine the food value of the nut and
its potentialities as a food for live-,
stoc iC.
Holland stated that the analysis
showed that sufficient; feed nu-
trie its are present in the nut, but
that it is impractical to grow,
hardest, and process the nuts for
feed alone.
Ho added that there were pos
sibilities for the Chinese; tallow
nut! in other industries and that
when these products were develop
ed, the by-products, in' the form
of feed, might bo available to *thc
farthers of this area.
RIvtn
ant
rricu
/ill l
fc| to
, ShepjlMsoit, Dean of Agriculture;
r
i- d i
it
njd
way in ah admirable V
I (.'V.'* • •
lew Ag Cu
Men Planni
vi’f'/tr '*'■ , j>y-
Animal Science and
ded to the agriculturp
povst-grujuate work, "C
has announced.
No new departmeln
stated, but students follo\ h
new curricula will get a mi cl
thorough foundation in ‘ c) enjistjry, sjjsljen
mathematics, physics and '''
and will omit the general
ture courses taken by ftrelh
and sophomore agricultu *al
dents. lj j i . '
Junior and' senior stadi nth
take advanced science cd liri es j as
that (ho town actually i«
n-on-ejarth when you get
rvmniniing passiviy
lagl'H, licks the
ijiuU m p
lohutidial. Tho wife is put
gi'ttvovarit leaving, him
ntu-ry if»o wotnun of hi*
• 'cl
Mil- 'Still 'loving Mm Wlfo
othut* worn oil, mltal you.
\\to, o1 the hooks minor! chaw-
itrujout of the twio dlnumaloift
is ho||Dcvi)it! Thu doomed l&Ve affair
Pun,’I) and Dyanrta; two kids
|m iimloss thu] track, Is told In
most gratifying Nvuy. Tho
thful «motluh of these two iff
llttehafy highpolnt of an ,oth«iih
dl utppoihtlng story of noth-
*|i»obodlii, • '
•n
WE- |
Soil Science will be a!d-
prepare students tor
e set up, Dean Shepardson
f
"fi
ij .:M' , ,
tit l- attack such problems a:,
biplogy, tl e Ide cdlopment of a mutable breed
Ofliidul- o ijat;l(! for; the Gulf Coast Prni-
'•“* 1 controlling * mastitis among
cattle, abd overcoming' dfo-
■ >£ citrus fruit now prevalent
“io Grande Valley, ,
ultural! science, offers
drive to get the tveps growing
us locality is being; sponsored
•"red RABrispn of the Horti-
in
by*
culture Department. Brlsdn states
that the tice is easily adaptable to
moHt any type soil.
!he
.. ytttjl
ctjug a d ior Concluded
Ml
unllenge to the imagination,
! wind of young men today ns
jng in the world," Dean Shop- 1
I fl
■ii
well as advanced courses in
departments. Under this ] Ig: i
dents will' not have to ta Ke
science courses ^after conp
their undergraduate wor ; i
der to .do graduate work.. | j.
The new curricula yfill leid to
a Bachelor of Science d< gr * in
agriculture science, Dean I Ihtjp-
ardaon agld--
“The greatest shortage in airi-
culture is professional a| ti< ulijur-
ally trained scientists,” D« sjn Snep-
ardson said* “For this r« ss' in the,
School of Agriculture ir tei dsj to
watch for arid select, men) rhi show 1
the ability and Jntereat ti| lec<Vno r
trained agricultural scie it&ts in r i ebt here,;ha»been given a year's
their firijt semostcr ns ft warm n.” I ake of ubscHfcc to accept an np-
“Only men of outstand nn at It-
itiea will be selected ehic# pc
■ < li
iad is .the most valuable fish
of the Atlantic Coast and next to
the Pacific salmon, thd most im-
uew curricula will be n gded.
Dean Shepardson emphpi^od
need for such a program
ing that for the past, y
have been 15 to 20 opci
.
■:k,
.♦
I /
r
,1,
! |
porfauS aperies of North Aweriu. agricultural sridbtiaU in
I r !; - ':'I- ' ■ ; f-
i
a
.
it
•ri
the
skat-
tltere
A£11 > jU j;o to Franco w September*
t| >T I Jr
orgatt Accepts j;
Appointment
E. Morgan, president, of A&
|(’dllcge of Arkansas, and fqt-
ejdy with the/ Economic* Depurt-
llblntihttnt by ! the State Dopuft-
as deputy ichief of,Food ijpd
t elert
11'c .. ...
^g|ricjultum headquarters of tho,
uiroj ean ReccrVery Program, Paris
<e.
•gnn wilt go to Washington,
this week to be briefed and
Ji
X'i
m
\j
'ir
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