The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 27, 1948, Image 1

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POSSIBLE ^DU NIURK
PEIPlNO,; Oct. 27 -(*>- CW :
n#9P in uneasy Pripim? arc worried
about n posMblo now Dunkirk—a
Dunkirk of Manchuria. : 7 I
Tho port of escape may be new*
ly recaptured Yinjrkow, on the
western neck of tho LkotunK pen
insula. It is 100 mile* Sputhwcst
of Mukden and across the iculf of
Chihli from Hulatuo, also held by
the government. j
For the first time since early
last spring the government has a
clear route from Mukden to Ying-i
kow, and this has heightened talk
of getting but of the. sliver of
Manchupm hot yet tjakoh by the
Chinese Communists.-
To many ; ibservetis here it seems
a foregone conclusion^ that. Chiang
Kai-Shek (shortly will order the
withdrawal! 6f his troops from the
Manchuriarti corridor.
(In Nanking, however, argovern
ment military spokesman denied
knowledge bf any evacuation plans.
The American embassy, which keeps
a close watch through its consul
ate at Mijikden, said it hod not
heard of ahy such plans.)
Chiang flew to Mukden Tuesday
to 5 confer! with hih commanders
there. Thebe are the hard facts
facing them in the .winter of an
other year of the ci'Hl war.
The government 'qjean hope to
h^ng on to its najkowi’ corridor
le jaeeting ip#? communist
mfCJn north fapd northwest
cninffr ■< /
Oi it can withdraw
• Manchuria, take the
plies and put them ir
entirely from
men and sup-
to battle now
shaping up for; North China. It
can try then to swjjep the Com
munists out of ;Chi(ija proper be
fore turning ita Yuli;[military pow
er on Manchurid. : !
US PRC
_ATLAN'I
OFFERED 5 ORTH
TIC SECUJti TY PACT
PARIS, Oct. 27 >-p)— Foreign
ministers pf the ffvij-power Euro-
: jj pean unloii have uacided to ask
Uie United States t<) H 'kn a North
.tjl Atlantic phet fort niilltary soeurity.
The members of the union arc
Britain, Franco, Belgium, the
NothorlamiU and Luxembourg. The
foreign mj»Ut*r» efjthP five i>ow-
etn, omllngj u twd*diiy session Jn
. Purls yesterday ugnied to instruct
their ambimsudors tb Washington
to take up tho North Atlantic pro
ject With the U!$ State Dept. In
h the near future. ?! I
.. British Opposition! defeated n
Frnncc-Belglun broiijosal to estab
lish a Western Eurobettn. consulta
tive parliament. Hbivovor, British
j Foreign' ■Seci’etary lEmest Beyin
| ’consulted to join representatives, of
the other four countries in a fur
ther study of the Idea.
. -S
senate controversy
REOPENED BY PEOBERS
Rep. Lyndon Johnson, Democra
tic nominee for the U. S. Senate,
demanded; Tuesday (liat the Senate
seize all Texas balljiits cast in the,
August 2S runoff : px , (pria i *y if if
impounds the boxes! designated by
Coke Stevenson, hie opponent.
- The south Texas brobo asked of
the Senate by Stevtinsonigot under
full swing yesterday, as Johnson
made hisi I’eQueat in a: letter to
Senatm- C. Wayland' Brooks, chair
man of the Senatb’k comniittee on
rules and! admihistijation.
Arthur i E. Broeit of Arlington,
Va., chief investigator for the com-I
mittee, moved Lintb dim Wells
County this morning dnd subpoen
aed C. HJ (Hap) Hplrngieen. coun-
t. i
!
Volume 48!
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, ty clerk, to produce all Of the bal
lot boxes! used in nhe August pri
mary, together with their contents.
Broer was expectedjjto take similar
fct : on in Duval caunty later.
Johnson said inlhfe letter to Sen
ator Brooks that™
made, “it must hi
enough to embrace
In ftlT the 252 coui ties (Where the rector of th ^ Engineering Expert
rSma^t%,a%d> 1Hent Stat ^ aad Exte ^ ion Ser *
4 ®
What if
A E R i
a recount is
Engineers who supervise
eperations of the oil'refiner
ies and chemical' plants along
the Gulf Coast began arriv
ing at A&M Monday to at
tend the third annual short
course on instruitoentation for
the process industries. Ap
proximately 300 are expected
to register for the course,
which will continue through
Thursday.; j
Tuesday morning the engineers
heard J. A. Parker of the Shell
Chemical Cio., Houston; R. S.
Crockett, plant superintendent of
the Neehes Butane Products Co.;
and Du. J. J. Grebe, director of the
physical research laboratory of the
Dow Chemical Co. at Midland
Mich. i
Jj- , | * ,- * • | I ' I
Yesterday afternoon they heard
L. W. Parten of the Foxboro Co.,
Houston; S! S. Smith, manager of
the products pipeline depai’tment,
Shell Oil Co., New York; apd J. F.
Furrh, assistant gas measurement
superintendent, The Chicago Corp.,
Corpus Chcisti. ■ I
This morping E. D. Matrix, Cit
ies Service Refining Corp., Lake
Charles, L«., amIR. NrIPbnd, ap
plication fbgineer, Taylor Instrii-
ment Co., Rochester, N. Y., ajl*
drcsswl the group.
At n bdnciuct tonight C. Pj
Thompson of Oklahoma A&M will
speak. AI Saonger of the Hum hie
Oil and Refining Co. will Iw the
toafttrhuRtui[. |
Wrtlnesdhy afternoon ipeakofs
will! b<> R. i|. O'Neil, ImluHtrisl
Sclenimc Houston; G. W.
WilHoiil senldr chomicnl <)nglnecr,
tecHnlctal ^ervice division,[Humble
Oil, BaytbNvilJ and Dr. A. 0* Bwh>
man. nresidcht, National Techni
cal Laboratories, South P
California. ]
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Season Features Tito Gui
! — ^. ra. m OeVllil ' h 11
CARLA and FERNAN
appeurs liere Wednesday nigt
held in the Assembly Hiiili.
the well-known Mexican Dance Team,
vith TITO GUIZAR. The shov
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Dance Friday Night
OpensBig Weekend
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65
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Representativ
Off ASM- Attend!
JC Installations j;
Ten representative^ of the A&M
College System are on tpeir way
to the inaugurations of tWo of the
system's junior college presidents.
They are j journeying jto John
Tarleton for the inauguration of
President EJj. Howell today, and ‘J
will !then corltinue on to NTAC for I
the I irtaugufation Thursday o|f
By BUDDY LUCE
Go
will
ham
Is, guys, ( cadets and colors
be flaunted high, wide and
wime Friday night when Sbisa
echoes tol the ii-ollcsomo gay-
)f paddle feet, swabbew, and
castlb (constructors.
Excuse for (this heralded erup
tion pti Ole’ Army’s classifi^l carn-
pus (is the First and Fifth Regi
ment’s; Ball. Participants In the
Presideht E.]H. Hertfordj
Tlje representatives arej Chancel
lor Gibb Gilchrist; President F. C.
Lewis?.head of
Experiment Sta-
-
'ooking
fray j will be the five-infantry com
panies, two cavalry troops, and
two | companies of engineers, all
with! accompanying frills and fil-
lies. | AH corps' seniors have been
invitied to attelid.
Stiisa Hall will put on one of its
ew j fall 100^6 when the troops
decojratc it wijth red, yellow 1 , blue,
orhrige, and black. A diamond
studded brass, spitton will (be lo
cated in the center of tho dance
floot for the convenience of tobac
co ^hewing members of the un
horsed horse cavalry. ( .
The Aggieland Orchestra will
shatter the stillness at eight
bells and the rat race wilF be on
until time for midnight yell
practice in preparation for the
Arkansas game here Saturday.
During the first intermisaion the
nine beauty nominees, fivfe from
the (infantry ranks and four from
the Fifth Regiment, will parade in
vice; D. A.j Anderson, acting di- frort of the bandstand before the
rector of the Texas Forestry Ser-; judges. Two Sweethearts will be
vice; E. L. A n g e U> assistant to the selected, one for each regirpent.
’ ,r ' ' TI T Boatner, I Tne judges for the Firsit Regi-;
Bolton; Div
the Agricul
tion; Dr. Ide P. Trotter,! head of
the Agricultural Extension Sen-
vice; D. W| Williams, yice-chan-
cellor of Agriculture; and Dean M.
T. Hanihgton, of the School of
Ai-Ls and Sciences and acting Dean
of the college. f
Also Dean Howard Blarlow of
all Allots cast the School of Engineering and di-
I
AGGIE AERO MODELERS;
7:1B p.ni. Wednesday, Room 108,
ME Shop Builditig.:
BEAUMONT MM CLUB, 7:30
p, m., Thursday, Room 108, Aca
demic Building, : .
BRYAN & COLLEGE STATION
AiM CLUB, 7:30 ip. m;, Thursday
Room. 305, Academic Building,
. CORYELL COUNTY CLUB,
7:30 p. 1% Thursday, Room 125,
Academic BulldingL ■ .
- COOKE COUNTflY CLUB, after
yell practice, Thmkduy, third floor
Acadenuc^cU A J^ CLUB nftcr
yell practice, Thursday, Room 326
Academic Buildlhgi r . ■ j
FORT WOUTHi CLUBi 7:16 p.
ra., Wednesday, Lecture Room,
Science Hall. [ i
GALVESTON Al&M CLUB, 7:30
p. m. Thursday^ Room 129, Aca
demic Building. ; If
GRAYSON CQUNtY CLUB,
7:30 p. ;m. Thursday, Rotunda of
Academic Building, * 'J.
HEART OF THE 1ULLS CLUB
ulrsday, Room
. in., Ifed-
nesday. Room 126, Academic Bldg.
" (LANDSCAPE ART, CLUB, 7:30
p. tn., Monday, YMCA, Assembly
Room. i
Chancellor
PMS&T
be Coi.
—-
Owen,; Major
Wednesday,
THE COI.
ClAL CLUB,
Ball. All newcoi
( ored at this
479TH C(
ARMY ORGANI
7:30 p. m., Thnrs
of DMA Bu
i 49ER’S CL
; Todd St.,
p. m.,
R(
Ifl.rV.
'jL
7:16
:ture Room.
7 p. m.,
Annex.
EN’S SO-
Sbisa
are to be hon-
- r ,
[TE GROUP,
D RESERVE,
.y, second Door
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.
SITTON from
iment’s dnrii
LRRY B
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h.
v
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■■*. f.. rjiv
la a candidate for Cavalry-
wil1 ^
i A iroop cavalry.
Gari'ett, Major Sfhinitz, find Ser-
geaht Bratton. Judges for the
Fiftlh Regiment sweetheart will bo
Major Parsons of the cavalry, Ma
jor Parsons of the Engineers, and
^Sergeant Pell of tho eaValry. i
While the beautiful hopefuls
are being gazed upon by judges
and Aggies alike, the Aggieland
Orchestra will play “A Pretty
Girl Is Like A Melody.”
The two sweethearts will not be
announced until the second inter
mission. when they will all line up
in front of the bandstand. When
the two top-notchers are named
and presented with gifts, the or-
chestra will soften the cheers,
whoops and whistles with “Let Me,
Call You Sweetheart.”
Then, while the lights in Hallo
ween decorated Sbisa Hall glow
few and far between, dance on into
the; night until the old Aggie spirit
calls all butterfly-equipped play
boys away from the smooth music
of the Aggieland Orchestra to hear
the yell leaders pave the way for
the defeat of the Arkansas Razor-
backs as only a midnight yell
practice can do.
$120 Is Prize
In Swift & Co.
Essay Contest
Swift & Company drill award
$120 to the winner of the 1948
College Essay Contest
Each year a trip to Chicago is
awarded to one man from each
state for writing the best 1500
word essay on the methods em
ployed by the meat packing busi
ness ;in the marketing of meats,
poultry, eggs, butter, and cheese.
The prize money will be used by
the winner for traveling expenses
to and from Chicago. He will par
ticipate in the market study course
conducted by the Swift Company
and will be in Chicago during the
International Livestock Exposi
tion.
J. A. Gray, of the Animal Hus
bandry Department is in charge
of the contest in Texas. Persons
interested should contact him in
the A&I Building to receive com
plete information regarding con
test rules, Gray said,
j .. -( *' j r ■'
Thiamine Research
Project Receives
Grant of $4000
A grant of $4,000 from tho Re
search Corporation of New York to
the Texas Agricultural Experi
ment Station for research on sim
pler methods of determining tho
amount of thinnilno in rice was
announced today by Director R. D.
LbwUI ■( ( ■ , j
The grant was made from the
Williams-Waterman fund to com
bat dietary diseases, Work on the
project Will be carried on in the
department of biochemistry and
nutrition under the direction of
•Dr. P. B. Pearson.
Rico is the staple food of more
than half of the human race Lewis
said, and its nutritive value is in-,
fluenced by the degree to which it
is milled, and by the method of
cooking. From one-third to two-
thirds of the thiamine is lost in
the usual milling process.
Since a lack of thiamine is the
cause of beriberi, a nutritional dis-l
ease of frequent occurrence in the
Orient, finding ways of retaining
a high percentage of the vitamin
is very important, Lewis stated.
Present methods of determining
the amount of thiamine take lots
of time . and require expensive
equipment.
Success of the experiments to
be made under this grant may lead
to the marketing of rice of much
higher nutritional value. This in
turn would improve the nutritional
status of a large number of people.
Mexican Dance Team, Singer of Folk
Concert Pianist Complete Tonight’s P
tar sound like a whole Lktin-Amer-
icA orohentm at‘times., j ; / J
60%( of Land in State Devoted
To Grazing, Kiwanians Hear
About 60 percent of the surface
of Texas is devoted to gra-’in 0 ',
Tad Moses, df the Texas Agricul
tural Experiment Station, pointed
out yesterday in a talk at the
Kiwanis club luncheon.
“It is probable for all time to
come,” Moses, former editor of the
Texas Cattleman at Fort Worth,
said, “that Texas will have a larg
er acreage in Pasture than in cul
tivated crons.*’ This is due, he
said, “to climatic conditions and
to the topography of much Of this
land."
Moses said that “Texas owes her
lasting prominence in the livestock
business to the diversity of her
natural resources and to policies
of land disposal that encouraged
large holdings.
“Such broad policies of land
disposal made possible the great
Prairie Cattle Company, which
was said to have once owned 'all
outdoors’; the XIT ranch of the
Capitol Syndicate, extendi n g
through 10 counties of the wes
tern Panhandle, the three mil
lion acres we traded for our
state capitol; and in our time
the King ranch in South Texas,
established in 1853 and the Mat
ador ranch in North Texas, es
tablished in 1879. each spread
holding nearly a million acres
inside its fences.” Mi
“It has been estimated that in 1
the three decades beginning with
1886 some ten million cattle were
driven from Texas
the north and
ern ranges. The two
lion dollars they brought were the
first real wealth to percolate the
million cBttle were
exas to railheads in
to stock northwest-
te two hundred mil-
arteries of Texas business.
“The cattle
vided into five main pi
established in *
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south Texas on large land grants
from Spain. Next, there were the
open range Anglo-Saxon ranches
before and during the trail drives.
“This was followed by the
eastern and foreign corporations
that came in during the ’boom’
period. In later years there were
smaller operators with fenced
ranges and blooded stock, And
lastly, we have the stock farm
ers who devote a portion of their
holdings to the production of
ilMd crops. .
“No longer is knowledge of
'working cattle’ tho prime requis
ite for successful cattle ranching.
Tho cattleman, more and more, has
become a practical husbandman.
Basic fundamentals of his profes
sion are now taught even in high
schools over the country.
“While his forebears were criti
cal of the ‘white collar feller’ from
agricultural colleges, the book
learning of the latter has now be
come standard procedure of the
cow country.”
t
By H. C. MICKALAK
Tito Guizar and his singing gui
tar will fill the Assembly Hall
with melodious strains tonight
when the curtain goes up at 8.
The Ringing Idol of “All the
Americas” is perhaps one of the
greatestj living guitarists.
In fact, hq is the originator of
the guitar slapping technique he
uses so effectively in accompany
ing himself. He can make one gui-
ica orchestra „ ..
Not being content W
making music, pe is t ™ !
a book to further the art of -glib
tar' playing. Tito’s guitar is d"
highly valued instrument
refused $25,000 for it. lt was madi?
in 1922 by Santos Hi
Madrid, and the ns
varius is to violins w!
dez's naipe is to guiti
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•a-. m»a*
ndez of
StrmBr
on
Eight Proposed Amendments Tf «■■§
Be Discussed On WTAW Tt
By CHUCK CABANISS ' . }ff
The eight proposed amendments to the Toxas Constj-
tution, which will be voted on in the Novemher > |j-genem
election will be the subject of a WTAW broadcast;’(ffed. [1]
Judge W. S. Barron of Bryan will explain the proposed
amendments and answer questions about the circUthstancipH
surrounding them.
WTAW has scheduled the h*lf
hour program to begin at 4:45 p.
m. The A&M Pre-Law Society is
sponsoring Judge Barron’s talk,
and members of that organization
will participate in the panel ques
tioning! during tho second half of
tho program. | /I f
Barron has boon Judge of tho
Texas 94th Judicial District since
1940. He has practiced law in
Bryan since 1017 and bus ropro*
sented the local state representa
tive district in tho Texas Legis
lature for three terms during hii
stay Inj Brntoa County.
Chuck Uabnniss and Paul Landry,
president and vice president of the
society; Will assist Burton In pre
senting tho information on the
amendments.
The ntaendmonts will be dlscus-
sed Ih approximately the same or-
Nutrition Group
Will Meet Here j
The Texas Nutrition Conference
will be held Thursday, Friday, and
Saturday of this week in the
YMCA Chapel.
Feed manufacturers representa
tives and students in the fieldtof
animal husbandry, dairy husban
dry and poultry husbandry will aG
tend the conference.
On the program and arranger
ment committee art Fred Hales,
professor of animal husbandry; P.
B. Pearson, head of the biochem
istry department, I. W. Rupel, head
of the dairy husbandry depart
ment and Ross M. Sherwood, pro
fessor of poultry husbandry.
Representing the Poultry Hus
bandry Department at the Nutri
tion Conference will be Dr. J. H.
Quisenberry, Dr. J. R. Couch, Har-
ry German and R. M. Sherwood.
My
dor as they wrill.appear on the bal
lot, Barton said.' 4LK* -rib
The first nnundmCht on the
ballot would provide 7 |dmpen«a«
lion insurance for county ein-
ployees If It is adopted. A boohl
to redbitrlct the state [into sent*
latiye. dUricts
torial and represent
after each fedfral WnM. if ttitf
state legislature falls to do so,
la covered in the second, amend-
mint.:: ' !’
Partitioning of conupuhlty Prt-
porty between a hualintju -and
Is the object of tho third mnead-
' ' k " ' •jgpi
stances are InvolvedMItt exar
of such unusi' nl -
ich unusual clrctpnirtjr
the Tftlmadgc-ThompjiOri;
ment, Whllo the fodrtjt'ypropo'M
provisions to cover ijipibilrnatoml
succession where unufcutll clrcum-
mjile
nces wiiB.
.
in Gepr^jn lnst;yeaivj ^ M
fectivc
ment la adopted, meimxjj provrops
that $3,000 of .homestead resi
dences will be exempt:.from sthte
ad valorem thxea. j |
Amendment number; seven °o Die
ballot would do awity • \vith the
state general 'rtvenul) ad valorem
tax of thirty cents pti the $100’. It
removes the $3,000 eKepiption froth
state taxes at the salmpjjtune; there
fore, it is necessary. to vote for
both the, fifth and seyptith amend
ments ih order to do away With
state general revenue, (jaX and atill
have the $3,000 exemption from
otherl state taxes, Barton explhm-
ed. . •: • ;
r The seventh apiendnient woiUd
allow the county to iollect this
cents tax tkhikh
Cowtown Qub Will
Elect Officers
The Fort Worth A&M Club will
meet tonight at 7:15 in the Lecture
Room of the Science Hall. To
night’s meeting will be the first
of the year.
The president of the 1947-48
dob, J. D. Strickle, will preside at
tonight’s meeting until new offi
cers have been elected.
Suggestions as to a new meet
ing place will be discussed and
tentative plans for the Thanks
giving Dance will be made.
Weatherford Will
Speak to LA Club
J. W. Weatherfofd, president pf
the Southern Floral Company bf
Houston, will address the Land
scape Art Club Monday at 7:30
p. m. in the YMCA Assembly
Room, according to J. A. Kelly,
club publicity chairman.
His topic will be “Opportunities
In Floriculture in Texas.” After
Weatherford’s address, the club
will hold a short bpsiness meeting,
Kelly added.
Tau Beta Pi Plans
Discussed Tonight
Plans for the cPming year will
be discusaed at a meeting of the
Tau Beta Pi chapter at 7 p. in.
Wednesday in the Petroleum Lec
ture Room, Howard Oliver, chap
ter presIdenW has announced.
A rtfrtlar meeting time will be
set during the meeting, Oliver said.
The chapter will hear a report on
the recent National Convention in
Austin.
Oliver asked all eligible memb
ers tp attend.
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Students Needed
To Direct Traffic
■ - i m x 7 r■' \ji- •
more students are needed
in directing traffic this Sat-
Fred Hickman, chief of
Campua Security, has announced/
These students will aid in traf
fic control and in parking ears.
These ten students are needed in
addition to those already con
tacted, Hickman said. /
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program wiU
nando, dance
and Maria Teresa*
er( of Mexican
Tito was odpcai
iu/htedicine, bit
for' music whe n
he [ was succei
thd gin*! in G ,
to Mildnlj Italy J toj!
direction of famed
quil Amato,
tn audition he Is
art of
a south i (f
Among tho f<
'ogram tonight
brteca,” Guteai
t, and “ du
i of these
sCntcd by M*
ci, who is a favori
i« this country as
Ctl. She is a master of
taken from Mexican fol
s' ■ ’ ; li, j
Another feature
will be 'CordPba“-
Olles dci Sevi la/}
by: tli)«* dano/
and Fortiando. J
I
of*Mei
onseca. nlng-
songs.
for a career
abandoned it
realized that
X, serenading,
jam. He went
dy under the
iritbno, ; Pas-
mastered the
fljjhting,
bonder. .] •.
of the g
be “Cancion
(own arrange-
” by Lara,
will be pre-
'eresa Fonse-
of audience*
el! as Mexl-
-‘&zy
if the concert
and ‘‘Por las
o be perform-
tfam of Carla
• Huiihrrs which-w
ed by Tito himself
” by Simons, ♦•\4rlta' de Nar-
9 I
11 be present-
will be "Mar-
by Pardave ind 'Morena"
Dpi : Moral. T Tocata/’ by
chaturiaa. Wil he rendered
1st Vinrimt de
hachaturisn, W
bj’ the concert pb
P # | m I j
Pthw numbjftr^ ijicludml Pn tin*
anxu llulchot/*
in ami Indian
and,. Fernando.
ami
prtgnltn include ?T
d/sutlre on Mexlc
ISnlceH, By OafSi
Bpirltp” by Titp
I'M
Marjorip Hnr-
1st. “Cha-
pianist
■j - a ^Ws/’ *nd "La
t«” by Titp pulsar and hls(
orchestra will; bp featured. ) ’
K' Uloilng nunabw- Of the program
Wfll be'“CclljtofLhdo” In whlch
t^ie entiife com]Minty will. parllcl-
Wto. |,! [' ;f T .Cji; ■ j/Vj
/ Tickets are. qb : dvancc »«
thjp Student Activities Offi
Goodwin Hall, Admission for stu
dents is 75 cerift. General admis
sipn tickets sell ifbr$1.
Ill •! •••■
40 at
lie In
i!
thirty
is re
moved from the state taxihg
powers and apply it tcf>oad and.
flood control consfkhcUon. f'*!
Paying county layfjienforcement
officers, on a salary-basis rather
than on the -basis of fpes is tye
plan of thqi sixth .amendment.
.The eighth proposed t
coptains provisions m|i v
ment with pay of Testes
and appellate ju'dge*{|:j|i '• >.
<r
Glass Is fPjrexy Of
Interfaith! Council
ThprlcR Glnlps.j 2d-ycnr old agri-
iltural enginegrirlig senior from
tint Pleasant/ wps unanimously
cted president of the Interfaith
uncil at a meetiiig of the group
-the YMCA Monjuay night.
Representatives jfrom most of
e churches in' the college area, ji
inning the counel; elected L. P/
irk. Veterinary njedicine veteran
m Breckehriftgel vice president
1 Bill.Miller,; EE senior from
h Antonio, jse|re ary treasurer.
One of the principal functions, of
Interfaith;o>ui dl is the man- ’,. j
jnbnt of the frel gious act'vtyes ;
ing Religlonf Emphasis Week.
:/ .
•iU
I
li 1
..n
_ kUA A’
ED HAAKER dt
1* * member of A
the Cavalry
]>(
X •
ilx
V
:n~y
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ml
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Hid
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