NEWS In Brief army reaches peak, SHUTS OFF DRAFTING WASHINGTON, Jan. 17 —(#>— The Army, already at its author ized strength, has slowed its re cruiting program and stopped tak ing draftees to keep from going over the legal limit. An official said that as of Sat urday no two year enlistments will be accepted. While 18-year-olds may continue to enlist for one year as provided by the draft law, all other volunteers must sign up for three years’ service. While the Army had been au thorized to build its strength to 937,000 men, President Truman’s budget message set a new ceiling of 677,000. Officials said that fig ure would be passed if enlistments were allowed to continue at the present 35,000 a month rate. As for the draft, Maj. General Lewis B. Hershey, selective service director, ordered local boards to stop, until further notice, just about all activities except defer ring registrants and registering 18 year olds. LEGISLATOR’S PAY BILL DUE AGAIN AUSTIN, Jan. 17 —UP)— An other effort to raise the pay for state legislators is due in the house of Representatives today. Vernon McDaniel of Wichita Falls said he would offer a reso lution to provide a year-round pay ment not to exceed $7.50 per day for both senators and representa tives during their term of office. The year round payment would be in addition' to present payments of $10 per day for the first 120 days of a legislative session and $5 a day for the remainder of the session. Similar efforts to raise legisla tors’ pay have been coming up in recent sessions. McDaniel said that practically the same bill as his lost by one vote in the last senate. NEW DALLAS MED SCHOOL PLANNED DALLAS, Jan. 17 —(£>)— A movement to bring a state-support ed medical school to Dallas was begun at a meeting in Longview Saturday the Dallas Morning News reported. The News said that a group of University of Texas alumni, to gether with a few doctors, met to work out a plan for such a college. Present plans call for such a col lege to absorb Southwestern Medi cal Foundation in Dallas, which now is graduating about 50 stu dents each year. Under the propo sal, the combined school would graduate about 100. The project, according to the proposal, would, not disturb the present University Medical School at Galveston, which accepts about 100 students each year. MISSING PLANE FOUND WITH PILOT KILLED ALBANY, Tex., Jan. 17 —(£>)— The body of J. W. Thomas, Jr., of San Angelo, Texas was found Sat urday under his crashed plane on a ranch near Albany, Texas. Thomas, 35-year-old chief ob- Berver for a Stanolind Oil and Gas Co., field exploration crew had taken off from San Angelo last Sunday about the time a blinding ice and snow storm hit West Texas. He had taken off for Tulsa. 1175,000 IN BILLS STILL IS MISSING WAUKESHA, Wise., Jan. 17 — VP)—Postal inspectors have found n stolen mail bag, but the $75,000 ?n good and mutilated bills it con- lained Thursday still is missing. Two Milwaukee hunters walking *n a rural road Saturday morning found the bag, its straps slit, and an empty pouch within, postmaster Jay Laing declared. The sack disappeared Thursday night while being taken from the postoffice to a line train. BLACK DAHLIA MYSTERY REMAINS UNSOLVED LOS ANGELES, Jan. 17 —(A’)— On the second anniversary of the brutal “Black Dahlia” slaying, ha rassed police investigators today were no closer to cracking the mystery than ever. The latest of a long string of suspects, Jeff Conners, 40, a self- styled writer, was released Satur day night after 24-hour question ing. . . And the quest for the sadistic butcher-murderer of dark haired Elizabeth Short—the “Black Dah lia” to her friends—turned cold again. GREEK NATIONALS SCORE ATHENS, Jan. 17 —(A>)— A general staff spokesman announc ed Sunday Greek National troops have dislodged guerrillas from Na- oussa and are pursuing them. Guerrillas captured the biggest part of Naoussa, an industrial town 90 miles west of Salonika, from a 400-man garrison Saturday. A general staff communique earlier today said fighting continued in the area. Invitations Available At Student Activities Graduation Invitations may be picked up at the Student Ac tivities Office according to Gra dy Elms, assistant director of Student Activities. Elms urged all seniors that have placed orders for invita tions to pick up their orders as soon as possible. Battalion PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE Volume 48 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS MONDAY, JANUARY 17, 1949 Number 110 BOB SMITH, senior agronomy student from Rule, Texas, was selected King of Cotton by the Agronomy Society last week. He will reign over the Fifteenth Annual Cotton Style Show Pageant and Ball. Goff and Griener Receive Top Awards At Brazos A&M Club Banquet Friday Aggie Spirit in 1948 Commended by Dallas Club; Harnden Wins Lifetime Athletic Pass By SACK SPOEDE Bobby Goff and Max Greiner were the men of the hour at the Brazos County A&M Club Banquet honoring the members of the football squad and Cross Country team in Sbisa Hall Friday night. Goff, a junior fullback from Kenedy, won the Lipscomb-Colson award as the most val uable player on the team. The 190 pounder, whose legs look like they have gone loco when he drives through the line, was second in conference ground gaining until injuries kept him Annual Title Final Election Slated Tuesday The final election on the title of the student yearbook will be held tomorrow even ing, according to Keith All sup, election chairman. The two remaining names to be voted on are Aggieland 1949 and Final Review. Ballots for the military dox-mi- tories will be distributed through the Student Activities Office. Oth er dormitories will receive distri bution through the two offices of William G. Breazeale and Robert O. Murray, Jr. Housemastei’s will have the bal lots distributed by 5 p. m. and will collect them at 10 p. m. Tuesday. Ballots must be in the Student Activities Office by 8 p. m. Wed nesday. Registration Schedule For Spring Semester Released Registi’ation for presently en rolled students for the spring se mester of 1949 will be held in Sbisa Hall Monday and Tuesday, January 31 and February 1. Students now enrolled and in good academic standing will re ceive their assignment cards at the east entrance to Sbisa Hall Monday and Tuesday according to H. L. Heaton, registrar. The complete schedule for reg istration is as follows: The complete schedule is as follows with all whose surnames begin with the letter indicated registering at the time given: Monday, January 31, 1949 8 to 9—G, HI. 9 to 10—Ho, I, J, K. 10 to 11—A, Be. 1 to 2—Bi, By. 2 to 3—T, U, V. 3 to 4—W, X, Y, Z. Tuesday, February 1, 1949 8 to 9—L, Ma. 9 to 10—Me, N, O. 10 to 11—P, Q, R. 1 to 2—S. 2 to 3—C 3 to 4—D, E, F. Any student who has not com pleted his registration and return ed his assignment card to the Reg istrar’s Office by 5 p. m. of regis tration day will pay an additional matriculation fee of $2.00 for late registration. As in the past, students will be required to follow a definate se quence in registering. After secur ing assignment cards, they will pay all fees at the Cashier’s Desk and then report to the Chief of Housing. The next step, Heaton said, will be to secure approval of the proposed courses from the head of the departments or their rep resentatives. After registering in all of their courses, registrants will then report to the dean of their respective school for approval of the schedule. The deans will be located in the Sbisa Annex. Veterans will then secure ap proval of book requisitions. The final step in registration will be turning in the assignment card at the Registrar’s Desk. Old returning students who have been authorized to return will fol low this same procedure, Heaton said. In order to avoid conflict in final examinations, students have been asked to take courses which have different letter designations appearing at the end of the sec tion number. Heaton also suggest ed that students will simplify reg istration by planning their sche dules so that all of their classes will have the same section number. Juniors and seniors in the Schools of Arts and Sciences and Agriculture will be required to have their assignment cards ini tialed by the heads of their major departments before presenting the cards to their deans for approval. All students in the Schools of Agriculture and Engineering who have attained junior standing or above must have their approved degree plans when presenting their assignment cards to their deans for approval. Heaton stated that any course may be withdrawn from the spring semester offerings in case the number of registrations is too small to justify the offering of the course. tout of several games. Greiner, a two year letterman in his sophomore year, won the Bert Pfaff Award as the outstand ing blocker on the team. After fin ishing Beaumont High, he enroll ed in A&M in the spx-ing of 1947 and was therefore eligible for vai*- sity sports immediately. Also a 190 pounder like Goff, Greiner suf fered an attack of pneumonia af ter the Thanksgiving Day game and missed sevex*al weeks of school. Plaque Presented As an added atti’action J. W. (Skinny) Williams presented the varsity football squad with a pla que that read: “Dedicated to the unconquei’able spii'it of the Texas Aggies of 1948. Presented by the Aggies of Dallas” the plaque was given by the Dallas A&M Club. One thing that the coaches at A&M probably appreciated more than the plaque, however, was the lai’ge number of stars from the Dallas high school ranks that were present at the banquet. A1 Saender, toastmaster of the evening kept the laughs rolling, with his frequent cracks at the speakers and the members of the Aggie coaching staff. Bill “Dog” Dawson, assistant to Athletic Di rector Bill Carmichael, was refer red to • as “Old Legs and Lungs” Dawson, while basketball coach Marty Karow, who helped with the scouting for the footballers, was said not to be able “to track an elephant in a snowstorm” in ref erence to his abilities as a scout. Skinny Williams, the Dallas rep resentative, got off the joke of the night, however, with his tale of the di’ought in West Texas this yeai\ Things got so dxy, he said, that there were two ti’ees chasing every dog. Freeman Sends Regards Dick Freeman, sports editor of the Houston Chronicle, sent a wire regretting his inability to be pres ent at the banuet, referring to the Aggies as the “Co-champions of the Southeastern C o nference.” (Compare the results of the Thanksgiving game at Austin with that of the Orange Bowl.) Two members of the A&M squad were not able to be at the ban quet. They were Bob Goode and Herb Turley. All the others were present to receive their awards, (Bee BANQUET on Page 3) Preliminary Fee Paying Will Begin Tuesday P r e liminary registration for the spring semester will start tomorrow when students will be allowed to pay their fees and reserve rooms. The Fiscal Office has an nounced that their represen tatives will be in Room 100, Goodwin Hall tomorrow and Wednesday to accept payment of fees. Students who do not pay them at Goodwin at that time may pay them at the Fiscal Office in the Administration Building before registration. Veteran students should secure a fee exemption slip from the Veteran’s Adviser’s Office be fore paying their fees. Total fees for the veterans are 55.50, and if paid by installments, the first installment is $9.70. Corps members will pay $240.90 If paid in installments, $75.10 will be paid at the time of registration. Registration for rooms- will be gin at 8 a. m. tomorrow and con tinue until noon Saturday for men who wish to reserve the rooms they now occupy, Harry Boyer, chief of housing, announced. Students who wish to reserve rooms other than those they now occupy may do so between 8 a.. m. January 24 and 5 p. m. January 26. Written permission from the student’s housemaster or organi zation commander must be presen ted in order to change rooms. Beginning Thursday, January 27, all remaining rooms will be available on a first come, first serve basis, Boyer said. Representatives of the Athletic Department will be in Room 100 of Goodwin Hall from January 18- 26 to issue coupon books to stu dents who have paid their fees. ^Requests’ Keep Him Going . . . Originator of ‘On the Beam 9 Program Has Been Radio Announcer 4 Years Confectioneries Plan Late Hours For Exam Week The Memorial Student Center’s two confectioneries, The Cave and I The Campus Corner, will stay open until midnight during the periods January 17-21, inclusive, accord ing to J. Wayne Stark, Director of the Memorial Student Center. The two confectionei’ies will also be open January 23-27 inclusive. These extra hours are for the con venience of those men who will be | studying for examinations who may like a late snack. The stores will close eaxdier any of these nights if business does not warrant their remaining open, Stark said. BILL THOMAS, KORA “On the Beam” announcer, has spun many a disc on his all-request program. (See ANNO By C. C. MUNROE With the exception of the War Hymn, the Spirit of Aggieland, and the Twelfth Man, probably the most familiar and most popular song along the banks of the Brazos River is Tommy Dorsey’s Opus Number One. The man responsible for this unusual hit parade leader is Bill Thomas, known to local ra dio listeners as “Slim” Thomas, private eye. Bill, or Slim as you will have it, is the hard working disc jockey who keeps the 1240 kilocycle slot on Aggie radios hot with his night ly edition of “On The Beam.” A senior chemical engineering ma jor from Bryan, Bill has been reading commercials, spinning rec ords, and reading fan mail telling him to “drop dead” since he was 16, some four years ago. Bill started in radio at the college station, WTAW. Then, when KORA went on the air he transferred down there as an announcer. “On The Beam” fell into his hands in the summer of 1948 when Paul Denwitt, originator of the re quest show, left the Bryan radio station. Since that -'time Bill has learned that patience, and ability to take the worst with the best, and lots of black coffee are prime requisites for feeding music to stu dents during the nighttime hours. Five night a week, at or about 10:15, Bill sits down at the control board and begins his onesided con versation with his listeners. Re quests, which number about 25 a day, make up a major portion of the program. Ninty-five percent of these come from Aggies, but there “UNCEF HEAD FOOTBALL COACH HARRY STITELER presents co captain JIM WINKLER with his bar and letter for the football cam paign of 1948. Winkler terminated his career at A&M this fall after playing four years of outstanding ball at, guard and tackle. Winkler has signed a professional football contract. Band, R Vs toMarch In Austin Parade A&M Drill Team Will Escort Jester In Procession Down Congress Avenue The Aggie Band and the Ross Volunteers will represent A&M at the Governor’s Inauguration Tuesday. The inaugural parade will begin its march down Con-' gress Avenue at 10:30 a. m. The Band will lead the way with Governor Jester and his party following. Jester will ♦be escorted by the Ross Volunteei’S who will march in double columns on each side of the Governor's party. Six Cadets Qualify For Regular Air Force Commissions Six January gx-aduates have been selected for appointment in the Regular Air Force, according to an announcement by Lt. Col. John H. Kelly, PMS&T for Air. The cadets are Ferd B. English, Ji\, Edwai’d A. Hinkle, John I. Hammonds, Jr., Gilford W. Koop- man, Joseph N. Miller, Jr., and Arnold M. Walkow. These are the only ixxti’a-year Distinguished Military Gx-aduates at A&M who have qualified to be come Regular Air Force offieex-s at this time, Kelly said. Upon certification of academic graduation by the Registx-ar and fulfillment of the academic requir- ments the students will be nomi nated for this appointment. 3R on Page 4) Dr. Hiram Coulter, A&M Graduate Of ’95, Dies in Temple Dr. Hiram Thomas Coulter of Rockdale, Texas suffered a severe stroke Thursday mox-ning, Janu- axy 6, while at his office and pass ed away one week later, at Temple Texas. Burial services were held at the home in Rockdale Fx-iday after noon followed by interment at the Bryan City Cemetery. He was a 1895 graduate of A&M and distinguished himself as Ca det Colonel, Captain of the Ross Volunteei’S, one of the founders of A&M’s first football team and a player of its first eleven. Following his gi’aduation fi’om A&M he entei’ed Bellevue Hospital in New Yoi’k City as a medical student and x’eceived his degree there in medicine. Coulter pi’acticed 48 years at Rockdale interrupted only by his service during the first world war, in which he served as a captain in the Medical Corps. - He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Edna Bi’aneh Coulter; one daughter, Mi-s. Ted B. Ryan of Rockdale; one sister, Mrs. Dona Coulter Carnes; one brother, Wal ter J. Coulter and one nephew, Coulter Hoppess, all of Bryan. Ag Ed Seniors Cancel Meetiing The meeting of Agricultural Ed ucation seniors scheduled for Thur sday night has been cancelled, ac cording to E. V. Walton of the Agricultural Education Depai’t- ment. The inaugui-al is at noon on the steps of the Capitol. Lloyd W. Davidson, commissioner of the Court of Criminal Appeals, will swear in Lieutenant Governor Al lan Shivers. After Shivers’ address Chief Justice John E. Hickman of the State Supreme Court will swear in Governor Jester for his second term. Then Jester will make his inaugural address. Plans are for both houses of the Legislature to be seated on the hoax’d terrace in fi’ont of the Capi tol. The Hai’din-Simmons University Cowboy Band from Abilene will play before the ceremony. Thous ands of spectators will stand on the spacious Capitol lawns. Austin’s Inauguration Commit tee and traffic officials are planning for a crowd of around 60,000 for the parade and inau guration. Following Governor Jester in the parade will be Shivers escorted by the Texas Ranger Company, a Texas University ROTC unit. Vet- ei’ans of Jester’s Woi’ld War I out fit—Company D, 357th Infantry, of the 90th Division—will march near the head of the parade. Other parade units include the 90th Infanti’y Division Band from Coi’pus Christi, troops from the 2nd Armored Division at Camp Hood, the 36th Division Band from New Braunfels, Texas National Guai’d troops fi-om San Antonio, Lockhart, Gonzales and Luling and high school and college bands. Tuesday afternoon Jester and Shivers will formally meet State Legislators and guests at an in vitation reception at the Austin Country Club. From 7:30 until 8:30 p. m. Jester and Shivers will meet the public in a reception in the Rotunda of the Capitol. Aftex’wards the Gover nor and Mrs. Jester will lead the Gi’and March in an inaugui’al ball at Gregory Gymnasium at the Uni versity of Texas. Later the gubernatoi’ial couple will visit other inaugui-al balls be ing held in the Union Building at the Univei’sity of Texas, the Ste phen F. Austin and Driskill Hotels and the Dorrie Miller Auditorium. In case of bad weather the oath-taking ceremonies will be held in the House of Represen tatives, which seats 3,000 per sons. Present weather indications show a ti’end toward fair and colder weather Tuesday. So fax-, weather men have been unable to issue a definite forecast. HOUSTON, Jan. 17 —(A>) Ernie Taylor, executive secretary of the Texas Retail Beverage Association announced yesterday that 18,000 persons have signed petitions ask ing legalization of liquor-by-the- drink sales in Texas and extension of the present curfew on the sale of alcoholic beverages.