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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 24, 1949)
-'■'■V / L The Ey :s / Our umu of lu education has noil extent that it co icourses offer ah ■i:: matter not lectures alwaj rs and te*t an involuntary pr^ forced by fear oi quizzes. Many departrr , their courses and s I better and more h < 1 . . f / ! course’s subject There are courses c ' ir ■ !} ■ A, i // \/ ion Editorials h \i FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 1949 / - w l v i' / / x It in Visual Education • • f i ! •/ -I • : jas a method of iiisde by the college and shown to stu- 1 here to the dents aa an instrument .of instruction. A , Only a few possible example is the bourse in butcher* by films. . ing. Methods of kill^g and butchering |[, These courses (r kaljlyj the Mechanical could be shown and questions in students Engineering shop courses) have given minds would be reduced; they would feel much vigorY md ill ill r inhtii n to the subject Bp “ seen ^ clear through The start made by the college in visual linents. Welding aids is a postive measure. Now that the techniques and principles are presented <, step has been made, another should be on the screen in a ijnariner sO/Simple and taken to put more work on fn other cla entertaining that .Igariung them becomes rooms. ,#w »ssi; father than one them asked on Boyle’s .There’S a mil< feud going Lieutenant Gov^: hr of Louisi J. D$id and T Price Papiel. D; the other nighl struck at the thi! heart—tidelands, i| The wan wl I ousiana when Et era in oing ,on between uisianas William Attorney General led off his horse ton Rouge and /■ Pephaps The College and the Indus trial Experiment Service could get tbgeth- ...J. j, ^ . er and produce films that could be/used in nr *« still need to analyze . j , 7 . , ’ j *.1 ' •. • t•. • , our class rooms and also ui many mdus- tudy the possibilities of , . , , : d,presentation of their ria ,P an • , > / alter through films. Visual aids is a seeing-pye dog that ijhe campus that could will lead us faithfully and effectively far- be improved through die use of films ther dowm the road of education. You Did! We Didn’t! You’re Another One . . . United States Supreme Court. Therefore, Texas was never really out of the union 'f I - , • / •* i and there was no act of ‘readmission’,” the Attorney General replied. He still thinjes that Texas has a % special claim on g nearest Price Daniel’s the land out/rom the Texas coast for ten miles (three leagues). Our reaction to the whole tideland is sue is about the same as our reaction to Tfxiws lost her special witnessing two relatives suddenly become n<lC vhJn she surrend* wrapped up over, a long lost black sheep urinii the Civil War. He uncle who appears with lots of money and fj j'Wil Wiir, r«M«' be. <'T ei * hty y**™ of ***• Whfr<! onc eh nllit« (I^iwtlani for ^ mu ^! “efore. the rfhiu*l hLn»|«Wle of b « om ** the center of «t- / We can't get worked up over the Waahp lahiiwi Ihuiiels to get oi/ ington side of the Issue because their (j a Mhot at Dodd. "The Arguments arei too dry. Ami we can't get bjy the southern states Worked up over Austin's claims because atjjd jvotdj on the fie/il of we don't think the men in the Alamo knew there was such a thing as .tidelands. Frenc Puts Cu ■ ■>, t •’r', f i ■; ' • nv ■ ■ ' .. I \ ■ 7 \ 1 777 • ■ W' i JX I ! ! . •"ti By IIAI. BOYLE 1 v-'JC „ Statistical Methods Are Being Tried in Dairy Research Here becomes governor of I Lo ig is out of the state, Dodd claims t | claim to her ti(h i I erod to the Kort-h f ! feels that after “ v« Dr. A. V: Moore, head of the dairy manufacturing division of the Dairy-Husbandry Department, and Professor J. fr. Covan, Of ti)e Management Engineering Depart ment, have combi rted their efforts to see if statistical quality cbntrol methods can be applied to the dairy industry, j j “We are tryinK,” Dr. Moore said, “to determine whether some type of statistical method can bd used in the dairy plant to allow the op erator to look at a chart and tell when, and in what volume, he will have trouble with such things us bacteria. This would ? be u vast amount of help the operator, for with It h« cupld, forecast and prepare for difficiiltles before they arose.” 1 j “Such a method wiH*Se tried on ^ bottle filling, fat, tests, and otb- cumu liltf a)iy d : example) and f Texas Privilege^ ■. Those charges ! his horse anil fl acts of secessSoi were declared ntlj || battleand by at Ipast hejven decisions the Memories Past. Herald of Things to Come . . I pi 7 IP | - 7 ' ■ , . ’ ‘ 1 I Yesterday afternoon a man rose from the bill being considered to construct over having to do with the sanitizing agents used: in the dairy field. It. consists of establishing a “blanket formula” for the making up of quaternary compounds into weaker dilutions than those in which it is bought. At present, it is believed that the water has an effect on the power of the compounds; so it is with this In mind that he is having water samples brought in from many parts of the country with which to make up the weaker dilutions. “The Municipal and Sanitary Engineering. Department will check these imported samples for chem ical composition, and with these results, plus the ones obtained from trying thesis dilutions against pure culture! found in the daify' and creamery, d'e will attempt to es tablish a mixing formula that will he appHcttlge for any section of the countrjy' Moore said. Muller ((UiaminesH J; <!. Eeuiro, of the Agricultural texperlment HtaUoti, l« also work ing at the labs at the Creamery In an effort to solve ihe problem of gummy ; butter and to find a satiafactory teat to detect t Is« presence ofWwYlered sklnj milk In grade A milk, (Jummlnejoi, characlerUed hy slow melting and poor spreading qualities, lowers the price that tho butter will receive In the northern markets, Ffeatro stated. “It is a Southern problem,” he said, “and was once thought that when cottod seed meal was fed to dairy cows in large quantities, the butter madcf from their milk would the 'flqpr of the jHouse of Representatives mories rushed into 1 present. The man was in Washington, uid jnrtj the minds of a Franklin D. Rot f^evelt Ji;:', recently sworn in as a representative from New York. The voice, the iriahnersisms, the name had the power 1 ' who heard him [dilj'ftjall to most of those iMlinage of his father .., „ . .. . , „ . t m who had stood hkit Lame House of Rep- -* cene - The voice supported Pre S .dent Tpu- ^ i. J■ Up/fA J: ! I _ _ rnan jinn nr«s Fnir lipal onntiiniatinri nr niv resentaUVes anc addressed that body years 1 before. And atnong the representatives, a man wept, remc mbering the great Frank lin D. Roosevelt} Senior who, as President of the Unit chamber on Mo 8, 1941 and ask war upon Germ States, had stood in that_ oiday morning; December ad the Congress to declare The^subject was housing, and slum clearii entiitlvo for a City, young W ii!' . Exohatigt mwer purMUds trap purmio a a million low-rent apartment units. These would be made available to small income families, and maify of the units would be built on land cleared of dirtv, run-down 1. ’ . J ' ' I • slum buildings. This was Frarklin’s first speech on the floor, the ice had been broken. Another II V 1 ' T' 1 ' # 1 I Roosevelt voice was on the Congressional father’s. New Deal. Earlier this week Deal continuation of his after a talk with y and Japan! Ft I). R} Junior’s speech jeral low-jrent, housing C, Standing as a repres- wor section of New. York sovpit spokif Ijv behalf of if The MRltntiort City of College Friday afternoon tallftn is publls ‘ idvi The Asaocia credited to it or ed herein. Itighti President Truman ,the new representative remarked 1 , “I told him (Truman) there was no question that I was a member of ... the team of which he was the captain and quarterback.” Harry Truman that he iington as a good Demo- ; He had- told 1 o j I had come to Was crat—-a Fair Dehl Democrat. The Party had accepted him! and he brings with him the magic name, Roosevelt, which means •’'ji j , millions of votes; hi* eiwtinuH. ! .HitnUixing Agi-nU Mnoi'i', |n Hiliijtiou to tlm ox- potimont, U working on it projoct Visual Aids Screen Film Wednesday jafternoon the * second of a series of weekly film previews was, presented 1 in the Petroleum Engineering Lecture Room. The program was Sponsored by the A&M Photographic and Visual Aids Laboratory under the direc- ^ have tht “ ? um t iy ^ fcct - but a * fai ‘ tion of Howard Berry. ; “Grqund Watei” was the fiyst fU^ shown. It \vps a summary bf ther'-effects of ground water on na ture and was produced for the purpose of teaching General Science in Junior High, School, Berrs stated. ‘The Adventures of Junior Raindrop” and f‘The Other Side of The Fencje” were also American products, bftt “The Lincolnshire Poacher” was not. It was an ex ample of what the British Govern ment has' done iti producing visual aid, materitl, Berrs commented. The Texas Fonestry Service Lib- rujy, Extension Service Library, Cen-Te£. Library, and the A&M Photographic and Visual Aids Lab oratory are located on the campus and many films for instructional purposes may be obtained from these Libraries, Berrs informed the audience. Next Wednesday the prograin will center around Industrial Arts, and anyone interested in non theatrical films j is invited to at tend, Berrs concluded. would not sej-m to be the case. Featro is working on his doc torate heret-at A&M. He received his mhsterk at Penn State. milri} nor [V'AlU.- • p a u - v i , modunt girl JoHfflhuH Hmrg\ Children are nmall doot a mouMo- people who are pot permitted to act Hu 1 their parentH t) Id at that ago, / _ Carter Appointed Marshal Formally The Battalion j "Soldttr, Statesman, knightly GtHlltman" [ p ^rence Sullivan Rom, Founder of Aggie Traditions y |. fftdttl nawapaper of tho AgrlculturRl and Mechanical College of Texas and the on, Texas, Is published five tipmi* u week and circulated every Monday through cchpt during holidays and examination periods, During the summer The Hat- . i* weekly on Monday, Wednesday and Friday.. Subjprlptiun rate $4.30 per school year; Advertising fortes "furnished on request. M * > i; Doullnicttii K4ivoluil(>n AiSmi)l Pul Down in it entitled exclusively to the use for credited in the paper end local ition of all other matter herein are hlicatlon of all news dispatches *ot spontaneous origin publiMb- reserved. In the Hhlerno and Analo Invas ions, won man y decorations and emerged from the Army as a lieutenant colonel. lie Is a Bryan city commissioner and president of the Bryan Junior Chamber of Commerce. A native of Smithsvillc, Tex., ‘Carter played football at the Un- Vlversity of Texas in 1938 and 1939. Earlier he had played tor Schrei- ner Institute at Kemille. < - i -i _ Entered at »ecor CXTfic*. at Collegr the Act of Coograac w.'i- pT“ 'j News, contri Goodwin Hall. Office, Room 201 BILL BILLINGSLEY MARVIN BROW1 .C'hnrlle Kirkham . Hmry Lacour::...;... W. K. Colville. David Anluir Hui-ton. Fayj t '' itobert WilHatnf Andy Davis / ' at'Poat Member of ' The Associated 1 , — may be made by ads may bo placed Hall. 4 )l(e ( ted Press Reprcacntad nationally by National Ad- ioa Inc., st New York City, and San FrancUco. it the l) or ‘ YTON SELPH.. ., .i*,, .J.. 52— Berry Srait|>, ~r~ editorial office, Room 201, at the Student Activities He went into ond lieutenant from the UniversiJ of Texas. Texas Senators Tom Cona^y and Lyndon Johnson recommended him to President Truman fpjr the ap pointment. .............. ■4-+.. T- mm. -JSxecutive Editor Co-Editors . .Wire Editor Managing Editor Feature Writer* Staff Reporter* .Movie Review»i r Travis Brock, Bill Potts: Sports Co-Editor* Bill Thornton j — ports Writer F. L. Helvey.J. PhotoKrapher Bred Holmes, Hardy Ross, Joe Trevino Photo Engravers Kenneth Marak ...j Staff Cartoonist Ben Brittain. Autrey Fredrlrks.. .Advertising Representatives Trumair S House Pa; Washington,’ President Tru bill giving Hoi Extra easure June 2 3—(A*)— today i lan today signed a members ah ad ^,00U| e and $500 a year for telephone and telegraph ^messages. ditiohal $3,000; each for clerk hire if ‘ . Mrs. Gerhart Eisler Deported to Europe », New York, June 24—bSP)—Mrs. Gerhart Eisler was deported to Europe: by plane yesterday. Mrs. Eisler Has been held with out bail on Ellis Island since May 13 charged with overstaying a visitor’s permit. Her husband, described as the top Communist in this country, jumped $23,500 bail and escaped to England on the liner Batory. He now' is in the Russian zone of Germany. * // j - NEW YORK, June 24, OP. -Te > understand a Frenchman all y< , have to do Is to take a ride Wi him in his motor car. | After five miles you wt i know ' the spirit of France belt you had read a hundred You will never again French short, or believt through as a nation. / For the Frenchman naim’tj lei -the machine age take romance ou . of hia life. His ihotor cir Ish’i just an instrument to get him somewhere efficiently. Jt’s a tour Brazos Silt Count Tak rwing rves in whejeled adventure--a vet lejta him play highway hour. 1: I ■ the French the from Calen to passengers wer from thei war d n / i ■ f: W mMedan h« I /learned all 1 want about the dauntless cha French the other da) Caen to Paris, e two of the Nations] and Jack Th<? Tribune's Approximately 23,' tons of soil goes do' Brazos River to the Mexico annually repo: L. G. Jones of the Agronomy Dep cording to tests Agronomy 3 01 class. | { The Agronomy 301 class has been taking samples of water frojn the Brazos River at Jonek’ Bridge to determine the amount of sus pended material the wa : :er car ries. Three samples ar^ taken, one from each side and one from the middle of the river, tjhe sam ples are then tested and the re sults averaged. "It was found that the samples Iveraged 1.5 grams of suspended matter per 100 cc of water,’! said Dr. Jones. To co of soil the ri a person, mul 02,4 times .015 and then takes L-8 of that figure. The h.opb.OpO is the yearly flow of tlu Brakjw in acre feet, 02.4 is a ecjnversion factor for pounds qf sjiH|iendjinil matter, and the .015 Is the amount of iMispended matter expressed a decimal, If this la computed, It Cornea (to 28,000,000 tons of suspended m4ti ter, or soil, This Is n|ipitixlmntely jl/HKi o|f teh total sort loss figure for Ijhe country per year, Dr. Jones stated that thm )s an estlifmte whloji will vary liiccord* Ing to the velocity of theirIVer. Creamery to Have New Improvements was a hew' nault. In a Detroit ht be stepped oh cockroach. But: , fwhlch sell fr get 50 mile* are popular lit' There has been no t|nce Paul Revere. ! Ddwn the road our iped at 100 kilometers l maddened waterbug, ike ,a Frenchman maki lainting a picture- -wit jr drivi love oultry S"? fill End T 1 laboratory j Today’s progtamj ijrt; Poultry Short Cburse,; beij offered in conjunctfoii .ifwjf the Texas Poultry jARiifo ment Association, ^puls' practice work in thej sejeett of birds for use in thje lyati Hi Poultry Improveitient p and testing birds foil; brum. ;->• . j; \ Thiniwill he followe<J| by| aj wrijt tcHi final examination cw’crina hotli field and cIbhk room'itqrij [isMotI i’burV chairman E. D. PPa»)h<|ll‘|(if nounetd i todsy. •, ; Total \enroJlnumt, toij thn time course, is forty sdvim (Flf bore poultrymen slgnbj uirjf# tofi esher coukse Thuisliliy i PaifiK i lidded,. • V vli[ ■ | The course ciajs UMUy, IcpVfi'ed the lire^llni' /feeding/cape, and disei (try flocks, 1 4 | r j j i After completing tlii yonH ixniltrymen will he Poultry flocks under I ilscensvd poultry select Ing agents, Parnell sal Instruction, has heel sors In the Poultry H(i(fbs[h(| nart ment. the cobfs* Monday and has hat! W 'pi (h.dl the Texas City Blast Sabotage Hinted Galveston, Tex., June 24— A goveinmentr^ttorney says explosion of theSS Ocean Liberty at Brest, France, and the devas tating Texas City explosions may have been 1 caused by saboteurs. Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph Cash made, his statement yester day during the trial of $200,000, J 000 (M) in damage suits .against the federal government growing out of the Texas City disaster. Cash said the Brest ship explo sion may ^kve been touched <tff by a thermite pencil. Earlier, he said; Sabotage may have caused the April, 1947 Texas City, Tex., disaster which left more than 500 persons dead or missing. He hfnted at the possibility-rat the time of the Texas City ex* plosion*—pf a tong range plan to dishipt shipments of ammonium nitrate fertilizer from the United State* to foreign land*, He said! the *cr)e* of hluit* at Texu* City may have been itaited With n ilcylcc *imllar to a “candle utlek" found la*t year at New Or* lean* In i} loud of ammonium nl* Date* j 7 / •• The A&M Creamery will have some new improvements added this summer kvhicti will improve; the service offered by thie cream ery, and will also improve )he; quality of the product producied.s Dr. Moore, head of the dspry man ufacture division of the Dairy Hus bandry Department," said! today; } A new dry ice- cutting) machjind and a plate type cooler are on or der for installation during the hot largest attendances iti Ijistory. Moat Of tfuj jjnplo H and *Ute. sire employees of poult farms and hatcheries if the s During the week (ip covered courses in nU :fit on orders, housing j)roblt‘ns fq: try and internal parair 4 ^ - The course whs oUtl ne|l. ' months. The dry ice cutter will available a service to theism maka iustomeij that the creamery has been lack* ing for some time. It will aljowi ice cream, bought in quarts and gallons, to be packed and used some four to five hours latej/ Moore said. The plate type cooler lis saic} to be one of the best on the market, and will improve the quality of the products produced) by thp creamery, Moore said, 'file cooler can handle up to 6000 pounds, of n\Uk an hour. [ A House Bill ciukejs Brief Altercatioi) School Di Will be Co i 14 T rfiv. «1 ill Mil i\i Pne Pf .hi d .J jj riaijis ritjon I The Brazps county i ni^ht? Creek Washington, June 2 4—WR-* IVosirttmt Truman Thursday nom* imjittHl Clifton (]', Gar tor to bo tJ, B, Marshal for |iu' Houtharn Dlat- rldt of Texas to succaad Krank Hnmimmd, rrtlftai, Ctriwr Is a Bryan, Tex,, li»(.tllng plant ownar, I (lartier camt to Bryan wftar tho war, A mombur of the Trxas Nat* ’’ AtfomiU fu Put Imml Uqjird Hdth Division, ho was /' *PiPwa|W If Havana, Cuba, Jun/ 24 -ldh— A Dominican Oovowtinaht broad* cast said last nlgh),li thlni attempt to land Bevolutlflnary invadirs tn the Repiibllc jw .plane had crushed. / Eight dF the Invaderj! wen* kill* ed and tour captured, the board- east skid. Horaclo Jll o Hornes, “Chidf of Operations” fir the Reb els; w;as reported among the cap- VT nnillHK l.l'IU/ M Llliv —1^11—tA punch swinging oncount#’ Ijotween punch swinging encounter (p*IUl) and Ucp/Cox (D*da.) look ^l«pe on the House floor vesterdw, touched off by dispute over tpe ad^inistratldn's Housing Mill,. /An rye witness, Ken, Walter (p- /ra,), said Cox/who in bis sixties, slappod Hahath in the jiiouth apd knocked off his glasses, He sub] Hahath counlleied with a ond two right and left In Con's face before they were jiartet) The unbilled one rounder fa (luring a duoriim call to get members to the floor foi the of debate on the Mousing bl|l.|-iv Walter said It l>egan In a gument over whether’Sab»th give Cox time to talk.i I I t. Therirlias been a butter pceyioae debate, with Sabath Jumping on the “real estate IpDbjr.jfilW Ing with th^, Mouse td help 1 "(Us* serving American citlaena" who are crying lot, housing. Il .1 tirrr.K lanaicl SF€VWJhIY r . LAST d|! “Unknown ' lOQaAGREY 1AKTON Mad ■'4 t l! i* .7 : ■ : l >1; ;■ . ; Y. 2/. A /. MaclUVSE | PHILLIP REED He voteq Tuesday the Peach j Springs spljool distrj A&M Consolidated school district. The a< a meeting with triis dents,bf bjoth jrojmi' According to nten^ent a| students from and Minted Springs tending A&M Cons contract basis but will attend as me district. Riichardson the change was mud< with a provision p: Aiken bill which prov school district which I mined a ejehooi for years must consol “live" ack^ol dlatrlc bihed I J ■w ■ ! • k' r V slon, We) np rtisittii frency. sheerol mm i Jains, V gratc t tho handlHunrs of dd- and they pooled off to Um Wo iklmmcd tho paint off cars nomlng at ui, and they Off to the loft. Then wo ogught in a abrloa of traffic Kls<-where in the world — *- a traffic jath, the to a tangled halt, /r* road to Paris. Tho the faster It moves, ara -u p and hundreds in op]xffllte dirdctlons i eacn other in shift- honking, masses at r. Sijow down!' 1 we driver turned, grinned, Ck and picked up ted the Americans time. mirac e we reached n l the outskirts of Par ly as It had erupted fic slowed down to -mlle-an hour crawl, n we discovered our was I boiling mad . By ges- and phrase he let us know It seemed a truck had ed into his path without a porn. And he was an- because he hadn't crashed -on into the truck to punish '-n Fre hman would rather get an acfcident if justice is qn Id* thabi avoid an accident and Ihe . had npt insisted on his (»,” he'said with dignity, t is Ml anyone needs to know abojujt the F rench spirit. He’ll hold on to iti—e/en if it: lands him in a ^.-L I 1 - ,11 • I I II' -I I,'*' , — - . ,•••. '• V 1 - E,| V.j \V r |iton, profcHsor of agrl- cultuml jednektion, has been named chkitman 4f a committee for the ijnm)iiiVeme}lt, of adult ngiirultural '72."”! Appointed ttee Head VV'klton, profesiio n, has be •Vi ifoufd Id Ir'omijtosdd r ial: st i 'ku4 co nmittoe of lh« Hlate Votjatlonal Agrlculturii, d bf. Vaimey Wtowgrt, letviwui- from t'oipmerce Mil I IK h " ri- palaci: ; •' vlioB where iduijHt, Odd 1 oultlti pKiblemS’ 1 eaebens K, A, 1 Lloyd <1, L, Howell of I'Yeitk- K/J), jGhandloi from eyjiwl I work to set up an ad y/fou iVII In each Icommunliy orstIona) iigrleulttiro Is fir the purpose of atudylhg l.liillng solutions for the tf that community. Hast day 111 ■ 1 ’X itmilPtlSUTUOlBS. I!AR A OAVIO ■ j fCK* NIVEN m^/m R CHARD CONTE ww UmyntMnMMl • Mira SAW antlakwWMWtalm K ocTOTH • ACMVIO UIMdm MWMlNI Sat. PrevM \ n ‘V.. •J J _ i. •l m W SAT. s Monday — BOSS Of' fl' jfj) Rod CAMERON Bonita GRANVILLE DonCASnfl lluAar txwM HOVDCOHIOIN auOcowT .4 f HUttniMAMH —* mimi-m -Vi