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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 24, 1949)
trr y*.i-t']''-. - j , ■ ■ t • • \ L- ( - if ; '-il f' • J ; l * ^ : T ' f ' ■ '■ ■ \ 1 ; ■ 4' ■: "'(■ ■ ! ' 77 ~ ! i J - .' ■ ' I ' - . j, i 'A, x \ ‘l- : V ■' :! \ ' ■V 71 . I [X In D&NVER, M •.-^as one of A’Vai.rirbe 1 That was of'the men % when they. ] A Joyd^^Red” Of the south outlaw families. Lloyd died Fi "as were Rate “ „; >rothers f Fred , and ast of the Barked rears old. His connection wasn’t revealed ii . .-nervous widow! j] •aigned on a m , w ,. When questii ...Attorney Cl said, she Husband with „.Walked toward - urban Denver. ■ifraid “he would ....children.” She .■py reason of taignment ■ Lloyd was in L - tentiary when [If I *• boys were robbi napping people •• U. S. matt at Bax " huh. Imprison released in 19ft!. Arthur “Ddc’'i " ’ested in Chicago > L tilled when he from Alcatrai Ma and Fro I down in gUU duel n*»i { at thalr Florida^M£(| A fourth son, Hotinepi. uarly IMO'jk . Tj|i |]] After Lloyd wasi h went * / , Jtralght. M f ! Solons Approving New : j a > \f V ' NJ/ v\ Battle Amid lost one ious •f . She as he hi sub- she was iitd my ent tr ill comes from is and several think it may thing mighty ments will be Served^ Wajffield said. eleemosynary m SENT INTO S] AUSTIN, Maic House yesterday to the Senate a approximately 3 for operating the nary Institutions two years. Hi It was the $ep big-money bills ;a House. The vote d was 119 to 1& t» ar- was I escape later, re shot J agents L r ... . M in the ptvd he MEMHEKH OF THE Senior Llveatock .lading Team are getting their medals at Uie Cattleman's .-Ball w ' Hall. The Ball waa held Hatarday In Stolsa HAIL Fowl Science J - ~r ■ -A*. Ma. I !, i Ii 'k OJ m The Baby Chidk, try Show will bd I cussion at a meotini try Science Clu in the YMCA R Mayfield, presi^ announced. A short busin held after the lub ow ilid Poul- of dis- the Poul- at 7:30 m, Bob e club, will be efresh- By OTTO R. KUNZE 1 Conrad A. Jud and Carl Mettler om ! Zurich, Switzerland, were visitors on the Campus last lues- The nd sent ►ppppriating ipn dollars lleemosy- pg the next . o| the must .roved by the jd passage p-i- Campus la day for, the purpose of getting some idea of agricultural condi tions existing in the Southern sec tions of the United States. , They were entertained and con ducted about the Campus by Dr. R. L. Hunt of the Agricultural Ec onomics- and Sociology Depart ment and A. L. Darnel of the Dairy pusbandry Department. Al though neither of the two men are professionally employed in agri culture, they were interested in this field of work in order to get a broader picture of conditions in the United Statesj Jud is a lawyer by profession and upon returning to Switzerland he hopes to find employment with some business firm or chamber of commerce. He came to the States last summer and attended the Uni- L. v : veraity of Michigan for unc semes ter. Following his term n college, he joined u student group oh an .excursion through the United States and Canada which was con ducted by the Internal onal Stu dent Association. After the trip he found employment in i the Swiss exchange bank in New York where he studied the commercial, indus trial and financial relationships of the United States and Switzerland. Jud toured England, France and Italy before the wah He said “It is interesting to study and learn the economic and political points of view of these differ ent nations because it inakei a person more broad minded." Judd, whose father is a langu age professor, at the University of Zurich, came to the United States on his own financial means. When asked by Dr. Hunt about conditions in Europe, he replied that its restoration is progressing very well. He stressed that war is -J By BO B1 •AUSTIN, March 23 —<iP) A three-way pull on state funds for educational purpos es is growing stronger. Some members of the House Appro priations Committee think its time to put on the brakes. The most' recent pull comes from ppblic junior colleges jmmittee members develop into something bard to handle. That’s why they showed signs of balking Monday night when con fronted by a request for nearly 5 million dollars to help run 31 pub lic schools and state-supported senior colleges and universities. “You came up here two years a- go and got your appropriation rai sed from $60 to' $100 per student, and now you come back and want $205, more than double the amount for last time,” Rep. Louis Godard of Texas City snapped at Rep. Jerry Stockard of Frost. Godard wanted to know how come. A , Stockard, author of the bill, said the last anpropriation fell short of paying $100 per student bv 60 cents on each student; teachers will have to ba paid higher salar ies to keep them irt the junior col leges and oi\c more junior college has baan ctasted since two years ago, I His measure was sent to sub committee for study. Dr. L. W, iHurtsfield of the Uni versity of Houston, Dr. J. R. Me- Lftnore, president of the Paris junior college, and Dr. Tom S|pen- cer, president of Blinn junior col lege at Brcnham, supported Stock- ard’s stand. / SW Texans Select Cotton Duchess Miss Louise Adatps was selected as the Southwest j Texas Club’s duchess to the Cotton Ball at a meeting held Thursday night. Edward. Youngblood, secretary FORT WORTI —AT) - ifi it VS is a senior in Pearsall High School in Pearsall Texas. ! !l I March 23-26 ON irocenes Prodi seemingly much (ess likely now than it was a year ago. Jud com mented further that the Marshall Plan has in some, cases had the tendency of making the people lazy, since the people received the aid regardless of whether they worked 6r not.] “America is often thought of as Being the first pow er in Europe today,” Judd said with an air of satisfaction. Since the Swijss people have neve rlost their initiative to work, Switzerland is npw very nearly back on its pre-war standards, he of the club will be her escort. She explained. He ; continued that the. last form of rationing was discon tinued in 1948.; Switzerland is pro bably the only country in Europe where prices of goods on the open market are lower than i those of the black market, Judd pointed out. Even at the present though, Swit zerland must still import two- thirds of its graip and one-fourth of its vegetables.! Daring the war Jud ' worked three years for the Swiss Govern ment in Bern, and then- Was the secretary of the Chamber of Com merce in Zurich before coming to the States. He plans to leave Dal las by plane tomtorrow and hopes to board the ! Queen Elizabeth in New York for his return trip to Switzerland on Friday. ; j ? His traveling companion, Carl Mettler, is a medical doctor by profession. He graduated from the medical school in Zuridh, Switzer land, but is hoW here to see and study the latestmedical practices being followed. When asked his opinion of medical practices in America, he replied that medical science Is much more advanced here than ii is in Switzerland. He said, ’America has a much greater financial means to carry on its medical science, than Switzerland lias, and besides Switzerland did not make any [medical progress during the war.” Mettler esti mated that his country is ap proximately ten years behind In medical practices. When flral cdmlng to the states ho spent approximately two months in New York vjhore he visited 15 or more clirHca, and then went to the medical centot 1 at the Columbia University to Study the medical practices there.. He has visited clinits in Chicago, St. Louis, Mem- phisj and niimcrous other cities. Mettler is J employed by the Uni versity clinic in Zurich, Switzer land. He intfemls to keep on study ing medical [progress in the States until this' coming August at which time he plans iet. return to Switz erland. .LI : one year old this month. Our business has been excel- id to express our thanks for your fine patronage we are a 10 percent discount from our low every day shelf on every item in our store EXCEPT CIGARETTE^. (I ARETrES, Popular Brands, per ctn. rcent will be deducted from the total amount your piir jj . [ v ( i *1 'I * * ‘ I I ' i ^ iiit our check-out counters. We know of no better wfry I j ' > C f to show our appreciation. We Reserve the Bight to Limit Quantities :/ r?i K A TIN* WOMAN R$$T INCREASE J Bryan and College, Houston Highway No. 6, South _ Jf:00 A. M. TO 9:00 P. M.—7 DAYS A WEEK BRYAN’S LARGEST NEIGHBORHOOD STORE IPHONE 4-im 1 f ■r i i . Cass County, Club Chooses Duchess Miss Caroline Thompson of Bry an’s Mill, Tpxas, has been selected Cass County Club Duchess for the Cotton BaUl Aj>ril^9. Miss Thompson n* a senior stu dent at N6rth Texas State College, Denton, where she is majoring in English. | V She wHl be escorted by Keith Allsup, a senior architecture ma jor. GUN TOT Vi ANTS K*..'. \ DALLAS^—well-dressed woman stormed into the dffice of the area rent director here re cently. • 7 She carried a ( rifle and demanded to see the [director. Federal guards were called and they took the rifle frqm the irate visitor. They found the gun un loaded. The guards left the room, but the woman took a seat and said, she would stay there until she saw the director., I ! / \ 1 Thu woman told bystanders she wants to move into another apart ment and wants the director to agree to ap' increaie In the rent. She made jit clear that she was not asking a decrease, but an in* creaae. i • TH, Tex When Norman L. Daugherty whis tled “Dixie” he didn’t'raise any rebel yelm./ ■! K ' * 1 Instead, he raised the ire of a yankee .]/. . and started a fight. And m the melee the young air force veteran lost an eye. i s e circumstances were brought out in district court here iy in a suit in which an in- mce company is seeking to cut off Daugherty’s compensation: The eye was injured, Daughei told the court, when Freddie dig hit hjim last Sept. 3. Fcrdig, a yankee, was an structor in a bread-rolling conducted in a bakery shop whe: Daugherty was an apprentice bread-roller. A state industrial accident board awarded Daugherty compensatf " of $21.66 a week for 100 wee The case came before Judge R. Young and a jury today when Lil erty Mutual Insurance Company asked that the award he set aside. “Did you tell fellow workers you were going to whistle ‘Dixie’ and get reddie mad?” asked Emory Caney, the insurance company’s l&WVGT i “Yes, I did, but M a joke," Daugherty replied. But it was no joke to Ferdig. “Freddie always resented Dixie because he was from the north,’’ Daugherty testified. It was no joke to the inaurance company, either, which asked that the oomponMation award be can celled on the grounds that Daugh erty’s fight with Ferdig wasn’t an accident but only another chapter in the war raged by Grunt and Lea. j SUB MOORE the Labaar Count; duchess to the ' geant. She is from P. Broi UM . „ T M >1,! Brown ent a megt vJm inagric r on hi icience He On. | 10 fiht the Agric Sociology c from A&M ajol A A Troop Chapt< Scholars! iVed hie ( education, n expects ree of m i ultural o< ent pr< to College View Should Angli ii Students living in C61 Apartments are reminds into the curb when they cars, Fred Hickmaiw d Campus Se<urity, earn If the stu lents will manner, the t* will be fur all of tlielr cate, a ve been liven bccausi ve had td park In un places who) their tegii ate full of I mpropetiy. |ufr Hickman added. Cecil Williams,’39 NewPoultry Prpf Cecil Williams, class of ’89, has tment as iltryman. n< Mardh sted iy Minyljrd, junior ind\ itioit Wat eletj AM - indent froz tedi presidi ily^A&M l the new vi inisation a »rve as sen iam S. Pr imwmfor joined the Poultry Department as on Poul uties ort : Assistant He assumed his After graduation ^rOm AAM, Williams went to work as a hatch ery manager. Since thCti, he has been closely associated with the poultry and livestock industry }n the commercial field of Texai Williafiis is married and^as^two children. I TWO$5|),(HK>V: - NEW YORA—I ^ inberg, a successful ridn fornla trad s, is thfr.oi to win two $66,000 SUk the first two months-o’ t Litzenberk scored A Wi , a 30 toT l shoC^h argarite- handicap p A month li ter he p 7 to 1 che nee, to . jw* Santa Susana Stakes,[tV getting 10 percent s of won In stakes, Limn stake winners nettep hi $8;42(). Both horses ire If (Ijljt iss Jim Ar esent thufcliu lion Ball!;#! b« eactf or sgropi inyard hhn ling of thu P»Pl fny‘ n «-S Bra tj ihnal Bimk there fo offictuls ■•PiiF Will be n< I the County^ Item eeks ’ildll of the Bryan wi a more wed |ted toddy Hilb and the B Game Prot )n display |UfC that may eami ivflO .11 :!/| 4 Luckies* fine tobacco (jlckf you 19 when yep’r# * ow • • • cobiig you down when you're tense—pyts you on the Lucky lovoli That’s why it’s so important to remember that Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco leac f \ .. .. So round, to firm; 10 fully packed * - ■ ■ ft Z. 1 ’Z of Kf\: n 10 m m ' 1 • j ■ . ii. ’ \ .J- i * . . »y 1,1 v*'N n the ♦ess., th» indepen- and ware, e neat two today! li J .!:! 1 resscee eoMFAN