HjJH %. ■f !f m Brief INDUS ON HY NfcW . i India threw pi ; 'h;. the invaiion -e and captui from ■mf oapi from the west. The secoad 1 ‘ princely state, cantonment , s northwest, gr all that loothe defense mir* * Milita said tl IPS ADVANCE B4D FRONTS Sept ichute Hyd' lomnpl il. The " ! v ■ rgest uranga nde g Indii of the ... said, f inferman thoiaght I; of , and in. virtui state, Mad Itdjan . | ibadf c suburban Secujpderabad by xlay or FVidayiThis woqld vi: ly end the fighting, w lioh refusal of the w might reach Hyderabad city Secujnderabad by Th U- £ med from thy .Moslem state to the Ii forest! _ IN CA1JFORJ Nizam tjq> join iianUiikfi. i r Sept. 16 i/the Ojjai Val cqnsunied m .U U* SA i. RAGES} ■ \ > OJAI ,,Calif, Sent. 16 -L-'A* A. forest fire : area today; ha . than 30,000 acfes, much of it wild underbrush and is still raging out of contrbl on |.a northeast fromt, the Ur-StdFordBt Service reported. . Mpre than 4260 men; are cpm^ bating the flaifies along! a 50-mile stretch in ! Lop Padresf National . Forest. j-; .-I | ' '' | • TRAIN SMAsIhUP [ IN DALLAS FORT WORlTH, Sept .16 — 1 Twenty BERLIN AkRlIFT ' f V . ||r BEING REINFORCED !' ; ,’1 WASHINGTON, Septi 16 — The air force 6s sending a^piltniAO- more C-54 fburtengine cajrgo plants to Germany t •' . . "It’s; your magazine; so do your part toward making it # good one by working on the staff,” Smith concluded. L ROY ALL WOULD USES J. TROOPS AS STEVEDORES; 11 WASHINGTON, Septi T6 Secretary Royill aaid Wednesday the Army Will j| use'troojps to load military eargoqp on the (west, coast if it is unable or get the Wor A 14-day si; shoremen has t ■/./"rs e troops n the jW . to hire ^stevedores done b r contract, ike of :iO lopg- up mi ivement of . army cargo ,t6|'Pacific »^es. Tlhe Army has been; attempting to h dock workers,) With orly limi success thus fail*. “The Army must and will mi its essential overseas' cargoes fi the west coast;” Royall said inti] statement. J %. -- — I a Longhlorn Staff To Meet Friday There will; b clarifying this point the Coach sAid that anything we do to make the rival team angry is a bad thihg. “We are n)t in a position to be The Big Bu ly this year so we should not act like bullies,” he continued. Iri concluding his talk, Stiteler said, “When we leave the field you’ll know we’ve done the best we can possibly do. Give us every thing you’ve got, in the right way, and we’ll play in the right way.” Irvin told the freshmen that 26 years ago he came to A&M and got “the old Aggie spirit.” He as sured the new Agiges that there would probably be things happen ing that they wouldn’t like, but that if they stayed long enough, they top would get that same “Ag gie spirit” that he got 26 years ago. “Hold 'light, breathe the spirit of A&M and you’ll be alright,” he concluded. • Dr. Abbott, Dean of the Annex, in talking for freshman class to the upperclassmen, yell leaders, coaches, and ,to the members of the football tip arn > sa W that “Eve ry member or the class of ’52 will be behind the team every pnuute of: this year.” Campus Club Officers to Names With Student Activities ^ . M / ' Any organization formed on the campus this Semester is requested to hold election of officers as earl^as practical and submit a list of these officers with their college mailing addresses to the director of Student Activities, Grady Elms, assistant director of Student Activities has annouheed. ' ’ ‘ ♦College regulations require that Amarillo Club Meets Tonight The first meeting of the Ama rillo Club will be held tonight at 7:30 in Room 126? Academic Building. Wednesday’s Batt incorrectly stated that the meeting would be held last night. 17 Boy Scouts Go On Weekend Trip to Burnet Seventeen members of Boy Scout Troop 102 of College Station and Scoutmaster Bill Manning spent the past weekend at Lake Buch anan in thfe scenic hill country of West Central Texas. This troop is sponsored by the Kiwanis Club of College Station. Tentative plans have been made" for other weekend campouts, in cluding one to the San Jacinto battle grounds and an inspection of the Battleship Texas, and one to the Gulf Coast. Enroute home, the troop went through Longhorn Cavern, third largest in the United States, which is about five miles west of Burnet. Scouts making the trip included Dayton Moses, Byron Andrews, Donnie Harris^ Ralph Shuffler, Bobby Jackson, Jake Magee, Ber-. ry Belcher, Pinky Cooner, Billy McKay, Bobby Wilkins, David Bon- hen, Fred Anderson, John Hilde brand, Dick Birdwell, Clifford La- Motte, Homer LaMotte, and George Johnstap. Bill Manning scout mas ter, accompanied them. James Young Goes On Active Duty With Army Today James B. Young, class of ’43 and. a Captain in the Veterinary Corps of the Organized Reserves, ce-en-\ ters the Army today for a thyee- year tour of extended active duty, Colonel Oscar B. Abbott, senior in-* structor for the Organized Reser ves in Texas, has announced. He will be stationed at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, for the time being, Colonel Abbott said. Captain Young, a Texan born in GatesVille, was first commis sioned ini the Army in January 144. He served in the Asiatic Pa cific Theatre, with station in India during the war. j The captain and Mrs. Young re side in College Station, Texas. the Student jActivities office have these lists, in order that, officers, may be'notified of intramural and social events. The schedule of club and society meetings will be the same as last year. Horiie-town clubs will meet on Thursday nights; Technical groups on Tuesday nights; Relig ious groups and class meetings on Wednesday evenings; and other club meetings on Monday nights. Friday nights are available for clubs whose members would have other meetings on regularly sche duled nights. Treasurers of cfbganlzations are reminded that the Student Activi ties Office provides banking ser vice for clubs, classes, and other groups, and that College regula tions require that the groups’ funds be deposited in this office. Monthly statements are sent to the treasurer so .that the club’s finan cial condition ib known at all times. * _ The Student Life Committee has again allocated funds to be used for club aid. Application' forms for this aid are available at the Student Activities Office and may be secured by any club requiring it. Deadline for appli cations to secure aid is October 25.' Any major social activities (such as dances) planned for the coming year should bp placed on the So cial Calendar., A meeting to allo cate dates for social events will be held sometime within the next ten days. Leaders of all clubs must be present for this meeting, so organizations should hold elec tions as soon as possible. Any minor social event planned by an organization (other than regular ly scheduled meetings) must be approved by securing an Approv ed Permit Card at the Student Ac tivities Office. Employee’s Dinner Dance Is Thursday The A&M Employees Dinner Club will hold its first dinner- dance of the fall season at Sbisa Hall Thursday at; 6:45 p. m. a! Ludlow Machine Added 6 New Look’ of Batt Cans By Change to New Headd : ' By CHUCK MAISEL If ^ you have been picking up your cherished- copy of the Batt of late and, after glancing at it, you think it’s the Dallas News, tha. New York Herald-Trifcune, or some Mother small time newspaper, ■don’t throw it away without read ing. It’s still the same high quality ne"ws sheet you have always known (all replies, to this, address Let ters to the Editor). t -T The “flew look" is a difference in type used. If you will.note the headline used over this story and you are an old printer from way back, you'll recognize it as being' a form known as Bodoni Type. The name come? from an early Italian printer who designed the type. Bodoni is now used exclusi- rely in Battalion “heads” as it * ress in the heads of most of the leading newspapers of the country includ ing those mentioned above. This step forward is made pos sible by the addition to the A&M Pres? of an amazing little machine known as a Ludlow Type. Casting Machine. In the past, Batt heads have had to "be made from many kinds of type because, while using the old band-set method, the press would run out of letters of the al phabet in Bodoni type. With the new Ludlow there is no limit to the number of heads that can be made. With the machine,, type for heads ban be made as fast as those for lines within the stories are made by linotype. Molds for the letters are placed in a holder and the -1 ~ head made up. It is then placed in the machine | where hot lead fills the mold. Fifteen seconds after the initial operation, the complet ed head drops out cool enough to handle. Although tiie Batt will stick r to Bodoni, the Ludlow comes 1 equipped with 40 different.styles and sizfs of type. These extra } forms will be for use in the oth er student publications and ma terial for the college. The labor saving device came at a cost of $8,000. Besides putting the Battalion on a par with the larger dailies of the nation, it is a great step forward for the A&M Press itself, making it one oif the most modernly •hops in our part r . > equipped print of the state. Details concerning club aid, club intramurals, standing of club ac counts, and other matters pertain ing to campus organizations will be sent to those organizations hav ing a complete list of officers, with their mailing addresses, on file with Student Activities within next ten oays. Engineer Society Plans Fall Meeting The Brazos Chapter of the Tex as Society of Professional Engi neers will mebt at 7:30 p. m., Sep tember 20, T. R. Newton, secretary has announced. The meeting, which is scheduled for the Lecture Room in the Elec trical Engineering Building, is the first for the fall. Newton asked that all members make a special effort to be pres ent. \ i tor Bill Carmichael. Roy Hager of the college photographic depart ment also went along to take pic tures of the game. The plane is scheduled to land at the Philadelphia Municipal Airport at 3 p. m. Carmichael flew there yesterday morning to make arrangements for the game. The Aggie lineup will be over three deep in every position Sat-‘ urday. Ends Wray Whittaker, Charlie Wright, newcomer Andy Hillhouse, Dorbandt Barton, Geo. Kadera, Cedric Copeland, and Ed. Hooker are making the trip. JJeven tackles, Jimmy Flowers, James Winkler, Marion Settegast, Dwy- anC Tucker .Percy Burk, and Ral ston Chapin will share the lineup. -Guards Odell Staulzenberger, Max Greiner, Herbert .Turley, Calvin Dupree, Car! Mblberg, Mickey Spencer, and A. J. Dugas were picked to make this firbt game. Even the center position will be well represented at Philadelphia. Letterman Herbert Ellis and two men up from the freshman team, Bob Ba^es and Hulin Smith, are* on the plane. AH three of A&M’s quarterbacks Jimmy Cashion, Buryi Baty, and Don Nichblasf were on the plane. Bobby Goff, Ralph Daniel, Ken neth Voss, and Paul Yates v .will all probably see action in the fullback slot against Villanova. At the Quarterback Club meet ing last night Coach Bill Du Bose explained that while not . every player making the trip would see action, a surplus was needed in case of an accident dr injury. • In addition, the coaches are anx ious to see how the players do in a real game and may give every one of them a chance to prove himself. A&M will be well represented at the halfback slot, with Bob Goode, James Boswell, Preston Smith, lightweight Charlie Royalty, James Booth, and Frank Torno ready for action. The Aggies will work out this afternoon and tomorrow morning at Shibc Field! Then tomorrow afternoon they will watch thd Phillies play the Chicago Cubs. Coach Stiteler .stated that the schedule calls for the team - io leave Philadelphia Sunday morn ing and arrive at Bryan- Airfield at approximately 5:30 p. m. Trainer Blaine Rideout said yesterday that all of the men mak ing the trip are alrig)it physically. Copeland’s/, leg was sore but is well now',4nd Ed Hooker has full use of his strained shoulder. Rideout stated that Blanton Tay lor the line-busting fullback from Hondo, would be kept out of pra^ tice until a head injury is recheck ed, and would not make the trip. Halfback Bobby Dew had been previously gulled from the list when his injured knee failed to get better. Bob Goode was getting off some long pdnts in practice yesterday and will probably handle that chore in the game. San Antonio Club Will Meet Tonight There will be a special meeting of all San Antonio Aggies in Room 207, Academic Building at 7:15 tonight. v This meeting will be for the purpose of making final arrange ments for the party and dance to be held after the A&M-Texas Tech game in San Antonio. Meat and Stock ■ / , * Judges to J^leet All persons interested in stock judging and meat .judg ing are requested to meet with O. D. Butler and Bill Warren at R Friday afternoon in Room 203, of the Animal Husbandry Building. 5si . „ V £, ’4; ' \ A ■.U' £ Magazine Writers Plan Friday Meet Staff members and potential staff members of The Commenta tor, all-college magazine, will meeit tonight in Room 208, Goodwin Hall, J. T. Miller, editor of the publica tion, has announced.. " The magazine, which will fea- turie sports, humor, fiction, non fiction, and cartoonists, needs both writers and artists, Miller said. “Cartoonists with a real sense of humor will be especially welcome,” he said. “Although The Commen tator wUl not be like the bid B«tt magazine, it will use as mt ny car toons as possible in each issue,” he added. The Coirtmentator started its second year of publication with the September issue. WhofsCooking? PORT ARTHUR CLUB, after Thursday yell practice, Room 225, Academic Building. ; AGGIE WIVES, 7:30 p. m. Sep tember 20, Orville Cartwright, College View Apartment C-21 Y. ing. First meeting. I EMPLOYEES DINNER CLUB, 6:45 p. m. Thursday, Sbisa Hall. • & ■Jd Number 36 - — . -- ootball ■' 'ifT ■ ■ n Game U : O' Members of Boy S the past weekend at Lai Front row; !Dayton Mips Shuffler, Bobby Jackson er, Pinky Cooner, Billy! Fred Anderson. Back r<|iw LaMotte, Homer LaMot|te master. ‘Y’ Cabine Improve Ca n J. W. Robinson,] i H: new challenge to th that group’s meeting! D following steps be tat tual Hfe on the A&M sV: illege Station who spent •id {from left to right: Donnie Harris, Ralph igec. Middle; row; Berry Belch- Wilkins, David Bonaen and Dick Birdwell. Clifford nstimi and Hill Manning, scout- tit b h< b j a -eli New parking areas for f and employees’ automc all other vehicles on tqe have been designated Hickman, chief of campuk Day students have been ed the parking area nort; Petroleum Engineering and the area west of the ary cldssroom buildings. Other students have n vided with parking armrs lows: , 111 Dorms f-3-5: Parking of Dorms 3 and 5. Dorms 2-4-6-8-1042: area behind Dorm 12. ■ , „ Dorms 7-9-11: Parkjir^ south of Dorm 11. . Hart: Parking area balk Hall. Bizzell: Parking area Main prill Field; Purvear, Law, jMltchellj, i gett: Parking area.west of Law Hall. Milner: Parking area Milner and east of Sbis^. Walton: Parking ares Walton Hall. Dorms 15-16: parking pf AAA Building, opst Dorms 14-17: Parking of Dorm 17. niitlj I II I nf*i hue K /j REP. TEAGUE PROPOW TRUMAN-STALIN ME15 1 CORSICANA, Tex., Septi M Rep. Olin Teague of Blrj i itii kiyjs President Truman ■ aqd pijefrjiqr Stalin should get togi prove American-SoViet rel itiibi s, Teague proposed the in an address to the here Wednesday. lid t u l|l ' g- po •th I «rly. 1 V 'SX ice ub jtc id t ie di y at *' he : ai usti m si ig til a per i sip id. ’ j ‘Jr •:)' Reorganize the discussion group wiiichi broughtrieading professohi t( pen «d lopatfons on the cam f- sti-apsj Soap showers must also be tdfktn beforp entering the pool 1 . : • :-v rH .1 '1 off,' take Proxy F. C. Bolton did and man to man as ti4 ndr ceived with enthusiasm - .•v. •Hi r ■ ,• - i fth Man. am the roar. And ig was informal staff were rt* \ v - ‘i