The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 11, 1949, Image 2

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:-BUZZ SAW
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Boyle’s Column
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worthwhile addi-
for the summer pro-
te that time and
limit the productions to only one
ig the summer term,
pwever, this one production,
P n
Sometimes we wonder whether we ara^r ;
right when reflectihg on the “pulse count
ot the public,’’ but this time we. feel cer- 0 __
tail that|we have\taken an accurate count, cos
We cion4 think 4hat we are missing it
Lit: Z&ottlnTatoLtma fu “ 5r pr !T t f i h h: * !i p T n d th 4 v rf
Chocolate /Soldier this past weekend
thoroughly*enjoyed it and My apprecia, * “X ° f 8 ^ f
ted th<f workMope by all th^e who were ? ^ it ^ heP Jj we ^ def .
. associated with the product™. c j | initelJr loo)[ ^ tQ putting the Grove
Though feelings of appreciation have to setae use during the warmer months
been voiced individually here and there;
we would like to take this opportunity to as other forms of entertainment could be
speak for all those who saw the operetta scdieduled for tha 1 Grove during the first \ | i __ 1 _
and express a full thanks and appreciation and last months of the regular session. Tifi /w
to the Aggie-Players the Singing. Cadets, ' “The Chocolate Soldierf’ has been the OjT &M3JLU'
the directors, and tolilfthe others who " “trail hlazer” revealing to |us the possibil- ff!' if \\'
spent, theirs time helping to make it a sue- -ities of: the Grove.'!! Now it is up to us to
cess. •> - , exploit those possibilities to the best ad-
HrnnrnMOstrie
Unemployment
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By HAL BOYLE
New YoriiMA’l—Rainy |
Roundup: ’ /
An tinconscious hero of our times
is Ray Emmert of Zanesville, Ohio
This 401 year old ex-soldier
solved hi» personal unempl
Council 1
■4-‘-
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Three members of the staff
of the “ ‘ “
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Jq Ql^l^ ord. His chief! complaint vyas
Productions such as . “The Chocolate ' vantage for ourselves and the College.
1949-30 Appr<
ban So-
Educa
'7brk.
1 re-
tjerm
cuun-
served
ilnating
officers
resplu-
annual
i x
... , B : ; 1; ' IX. \'|p' jj.
Welcome to the Visitin* Firemen . .
■
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^ i.'jrix r/1. i^T • “N
there hasn’t been an eighteen , During it’s twenty year spjan, the
alarm fire! on the campus. All those course luls proved its value many times,
screaming red trucks and cars and hel- Firemen Who have taken thie coune, most-
meted' firemen are on the campus for an ly from si^iall towris, have return jd home
education, hot a Conflagration, as well trained as their brother firemen
They are here for the twentieth an- in larger dities with ^better financed de-
ndal Firemerr’s Training School, a sort partments. Any city whose firemen pass
of oversize fireman’s short course; that the course Receives an automatic lowering
completely covers the field, of fire fight- of its fire insurance rate by Over
iijg. V u the twenty yea^ period, BraV'ton estimates
Currently conducted by H. R. Brayton, this alone has saved policy hplders $1,000,-
a forjmer A&M Chemistry prof, the course 000. l
Was started back in 1029. Every., year
since then; firemen from all over the
state have rolled in to learn what to do
When the flames begin.' ;v
In-’29 thei*e Were onlyi 176 nrjen here
for the school. iThiijii year more thari GOO
>• i J 1 ?' Li T 1 ' ill : J
We are pleased that A&^|[ has a part in
this excellent program.; Tq the firemen
here for the course, we bid you welcome
and hope you enjoy your stajy on the cam
pus. - i ■; bi I
At least We ca^ promise you
men will take the; week-long course on the next five days you won’t
ire fighting equipment, answer any night alarms.
that for
have to
? ^ 'll
Leaving the detailed breakdown and (itemizing up to
Chancellor. Gibb Gifchrist, A&M’s Board of Directors ap
proved theVevised 1948-49 budget as the System Budget for
1949-50 in their mating [Saturday morning. 1 f i
Hurrying up of[ the approval was necessary because of
the late date of the fSMfMd ap- f j 1 | :"|(—— 1 "i 1 i. 1
piopriations from the legislature.
Chaneelor-Gilchrist wasi given au
thority to go ahead witK the break
down of the budget ij| order, to
comply with a new istate law
requiring an itemized biidgjd. state
ment by, September 1.1 ■ i
Another reason tot Speedy ap-
provaf was pointed out| by Presi
dent F. C. Bolton who!! said that
“important people” on t|he campus
would be signing contracts else
where if not given def|nite infor
mation soon concerning^ their sal
aries for next year. 1
l
Special Meeting
paiiier it was suggested that the
boird Ho|d a special meeting before
‘Septemibfer 1 in order to approve
fh^ new budget. This.'; was dis
carded when President Bolton em
phasized the urgency of getting
the information on
out by next treek.
were
meeting ; of the
ciety for Ei ‘
tion held in Troy, N
Dean H. Wl Barlow
elected to serve aj two-:
as a member of the g<
cil of the Society. He
as a member pi Ithe
committee for njitib;
and as chairman |'df
tions committee of
meetmg. ■ S- l 1 , * ; ,
Prof. E. E. Brush, Head, de
partment of Aeronauticil Engin
eering, was elected chairman: of
the Aeronautical Engineering di
vision, and Prof. RjL. Peurifoy,
professor of civil englnee -ing, was
elected chairmah of the c smmittee
on construction engineering. ]Mr.
Peurifoy is also vice-president; of
the Southwestern Seqtio i of the
American Society for Engineering
Education, whteh include TeHas,
Oklahoma and ^tevr Mexico.
The American Society} for En
gineering Education is: a i national
organization, with members from
colleges and universities
out the nation;, and
tries which are interested
problem by having himself buried
alive in a coffin six feet/ lindjer-
ground. { .
For weeks thousands of curious
people thronged to his Ptttaipor*ry
grave and dropped coins into a
contribution box for the privilege
of staring down through a ten-Hich
observation tunrtel at Emmert’*
placid countenanMi.
After 45 days Emmert emerged,
collected his financial tribute,
claimed a new “buried alive”
V.
Walker (Reassigned
As ORC Instructor 1
Ootonel Isaa| CkWklkeiy form- “ff" i
erly assistant PMS&T and cavalry tries which are interested in eii-L iup n „ ra f/ Rbmvi
instructor here, has been assigned gineering education. The Tprimary * a , t '° n ’ /nH ? n e
to Waco as the Organized Reserve function of the society* i] to im- ^ at n e nl and * S P e
Corps Instructor of that arte, ac- prove the quallty of engineering Schools. [ : | . , | [' ,“j
education.
Majority of Bil
Sponsored b,. Go
Jester, JMow Laws
Austin, Tex., July '11—i.'Pu-A
majority of the legislative propos
als sponsored by Gov.: Beuuford H.
Jester wete^enacted into law, but
there wereachne prominent 1 (fail
ures. . .V • n “j f .
The Governor’s office has issued
what it ! termed a “Partial list of
the items he sponsored, mtire or
less directly; undKthetr fate.’ r j
This shbweil Legislative approval
of 31 of Jester’s suggestions,! and
rejection ; of 16. K '
From the administration’s View
point, important ttccomplfshn)ients
of the Slsjit Legislature wbye prison
Reform, dilmer-Aikin School Pro r
gram; Civil Rights Legislation
which irqluded an anti-lynihing
law arid submission of a proposed
Constitutional Amendhient tp re
peal the poll tax; A Yputh Devel-
ponded Rural
at nothi
he got “tired of 1
but faces.” • : .f\ \
The whole experience typlifies
the desire of Twentieth Century
man to escape from opreasive real
ity. And it may set a pattern for
th« man of the lfuture.
There is no reason (why every
man shouldn’t, from rime to time,
follow Emmert’s example.: All he
needs to “get a war; from. Jt all'’ k
a shovel, a cheap pine
a friend to cover him]
i ' The mi|k man could lower hhn
a fresh bottle- of mlik evdry mom
ing, and the delivery boy from
the delicatessen could drop him
a ham sandwich or a Hard-boded
egg once or twice a day; It would
be a wonderful way to spend a
resful vacation—right W your own
R-
i j
opment Council; exp^
cording to Colonel Oscar B. Ab
bott. Executive, of the Texas Mil
itary District.; j / , 1 .
Colonel Walter first entered the
army as an en|isted man in 1916
and received his commission in No
vember, 1916. He served through
World, War If in the “Rainbow”
Division and received the Purple
‘Heart for wounds received in ac
tion. ’ . . .
During World War II, Colonel
1/
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Mire fighting and fiti
: irf n
June Graduates, One in the Hand is Better .
iXf;.' JpF’l, , |’*i’ I ■ r,J* . 1,1*11 .; i.jl
Graduates from the nation’s colleges we should alsd take note that in most sec-
anS ijmiversities lasit June are a bunch of tions of our country the desire forj security
secupitY seekers, concluded Fortune maga- has seeped down to the level of those now
rine after polling graduates from a heal- graduating from colleges. We are the ex-
thy sample of American colleges.
I
In e
ceptions, not the rule.
Southwest
sity of Tulsa were (the oply Southwes
- e *l tiion’s willingness
duates were more in*
colleges polledT g
terested in working for large, well es(ta
lialied companies offering security (ban
taking chances with small com^ahies nr
by i [going in business for themselves.
“American ; Telephone and Telegraph
dbesnft sound very exciting, but there will
alwaylp be an AT&T,’ was; the general a
tidude. ; [ jlji
I * . ; i i* j |*
; Southweste^ners, on the othei? hanjd,
expressed a strong desire to go in business
fpr tljemselvesi either immediately after
graduation of after a few years experi
ence. Fortune attributes this adventurous
spirit * to a lingering pioneer * philosophy
of individualism in the Southwest that
vanisnecj in other parts of the country
We may be; proud that we of the South
west are still strongly individualistjic,
ment to render, services tha
security.
eral ameng
^ will be tha
o permit
becoipes
our popr
popula*
the govern-
promise of
\
ession that
Could cover a mulltitudejof life’s responsi
bilities and entei pfisesj In choosing lead
ers for the periods ahead when the drift
is toward greater individual security, let
’’ us first make mte that the “security”
they speak of is the name “security” we
have in mind; j • r. j l
<1 Thr] journey toward security—that pot
of gold at the Rainbow’s base—is a de
parture from our base of many individual
freedoms and prerogatives. For each step
has
but
toward promised
away from that
Ririty, we take a step
iiasel of freedom. Within
our own minds we are the sole judges of
the worth of one dr the desirability of the
other.
•HN
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The Battali
f, SoUter, Statejmarti
The Battalioilr'
City of
Friday
talion
Lawrence SuIlivan Ross, Fjounder of Aggie Iffadit ions.
official newspaper of the; Agrii ultural and 1M
Station; Texas, is published five t$"es a week a:
smoon, except during (holidays arid examination
bushed txi-weekly on Monday, Wednesdi y and
rates furnished on request.
credit
ed he
matter at Post
th* Act at Coagreaa of Man* ». 1870.
lim
. contribu
Goodwin Hall. Gi
Office, Room 209,
BILL BILLINGSLEY*
T~+-T— w —-■?—^ —-
MARVIN BROWlf, CLAYTON SELPH-—.;
dhariw Kirkiinm
W. K. ColTille. David
by telephone (4-5444) or at
ads may be placed by telephone (4-5824
^tightly Gentl
ted every
During ^le 1 a
'ption rate
1
\
College of Texas and the
' nday through
The Bat-
(Membcr of j [ Rapmcnted
Thc AssoJated Proj .Ir^* ^ ^
per school
ews dispatches
origin publish-
br National Ad-
New York City,
Shu FrmncUco.
salary changes Walker served on the Armjored
Instead of the Board at Ft - Knox * Kentucky, and^
special meeting, the boarfi will wait on the General Staff of the Re-?
until some later meeting, to ap- placement School Command j at;
- - ^ Birmingham, Alabama. Ordered
overseas in 1945, the Colonel was
assigned as G-3 of the Tenth Corp$
in Japan.
Mrs. Walker, pow in St. Joseph, •
Missouri, will j<jin the Colonel in
Waco in the very near future-
They have one ten, John Q. Walk
er, 20, in his second year at A&kL •
A ^ . \
Texas Natural Gas
And Oil Dwindling
Dr. L. P. Gabbard, head of the
pepartment of Agricultural Econ-j -
omics and Sociology, jias collabo
rated in a study of dwindling oil;
and natural gas resources in Tex-!
as, which is contained, in a copy!
of the National Planning Associa-i
tion’s report to the President’s!
Council of Economic Advisers.
The report js titled “The Impact
of Federal Policies on the Economy
of the South.” j \ '
. Pointing out , that in physical
resources Texas and other south
ern and southwestern sections of
the country chiefly depend on oil
and natural gas, the report de
clares that the very life blood of
these states’ economy is being
drained away daily in ever in+
creasing amounts!. It(is a problem
which calk for immediate and
■S serious consideration if drastic
harm to the states is to be pref
vented, the report said.
The report continues to say that
the supply “will dwindle sharply,
during the next 20 years,” leaving
this* section of the nation “indeed
a blighted area.”
Ex-Aggie Donates
Scholarship Awar4
Ex-Aggie Dick Price, ’29, own
er of the Dick Price Motbr Com
pany of Dallas, Texas, has estab
lished a new; opportunity award
scholarship valued at twelve hun
dred dollars, E. E. McQuilleiii,
head of the Development Fund,
announced. ‘ , / *'j
; This award is granted to the
Dallas County high school student
who is selected by a faculty com
mittee on scholarships. Joe A.
Riddle of Dallas has been selected
the winner for 1949 and will enter
A&M in September as a freshman
prove the itemized budget.
The revised,* budget 4- for 1948-49
showed a total of $15,73^16.85 as
Ai^M’s share of the entire System
budget. This amount included all
student fees, gifts, and federal
fmjids as well as the stjitei appro
priation. State funds made avail-]
able by legislature action list
welek, totaled $4,121,298.54 for
A&M. i - j .
v *1 J
Appropriations approved by the
board during their weekend meet
ing injcluded $50,000 f^r moving
of Agricultural facilities to an
area west of the railrodd. A pre
views appropriation of $25,000 for
this work will be used i|f the work
done on the moving before Sep-
tember i. >| . 1 ] / •
Other Appropriations
A total of $25,000 wad approved
for minor improvements |and alter
ations to the physical plant here."
Also appropriated was|i$25,049.52
for payment of lease ;rental on
Bryan Army Airfield. Tijis amount
included fire insurance parried (on
20 Ibuijdings at the Field.
Graijtsiand aids and dther gifts
offered since the May meeting of
the board webe passec| in their
session Friday afternoop.
; ; | ■ [\ ■,] .. ; •
Brazos A&M Club
To Hold Bailie
er oft the
Dr. Quisenberry
Will Attend Meet
Dr. J. H. Quisenberry, (head ofn
the Poultry' Husbandry (Depart
ment, will leave about August 1
for Guelph, Ontario, Canada,: to
attend the annual meeting of the
Poultry Science Association.
Others who will accompany pr.
Quisenberry to Canada ate S.i Z.
Beanblossom, - Poultry Marketing
Specialist; James R. Grubp, pOul-r
try supervisor; Dr, JL R. Couch,
E. D. Parnel, D. H. Reid, ind Or
lando Olcese, graduate student
frbmj Peru, Quisenberry said. : j •
While at the meeting, Er Coilch
will present a paper on “Fo! ic Acid
Studies with the Mature Chicken.”'
OlCese will present a paper:on the
relationshiplbf unidentified (animal
factors to the nutrition of the ma
ture domeatic fowl, according to
Dr. Quisenberry.
This years meeting will he held
at the Ontario Agricultural Gjol-
legeji and will last from August
1 to (August 4. j'/* -(]• 1 |
Riggins-Bilderbaek
Nuptials Given
T ' j v' •
Miss Patricia Mount Riggins,; of
Forf Worth, was married td Ervin
Glen Bilderback Jr., P&M
graduate, Friday] in thh[ Fitet
Methodist Church of! Fort' [Worth.
Bilderback was a member! of the
A&M Championship Mile Relay
team, and is a member of the “T”
Association, ■ * |/ j |
Bilderback is ! a graduate of
TS0W, -pif 'i ( ,-
The couple are now en mute to
Colorado. After their returp they
will!! live in South JKexas.
Board for
c i a 1
The Goyernor'c prominent
failures included the Ejeemoaynary
Building Program; a Capital De
velopment Commission!; a Higher
Education Study; the Old Age As
sistance Ceiling; a Tax Stiidy* and
a Balanced Budget.
4J
ME Student
Lincoln Conti
ins
!•'
cue
The (Brazos chapter oft the Texas
Socijete of ProfessionalsEngineei-s
will hold its monthly meeting Fri
day, July 22, announced: J. G. Mc
Guire,; secretary-treasurer of the
Chaptelr. ,| , : If ’ ;
r I 1 .*
Members ^living in the Bryan
area' should meet at the Bryan
Courthouse Square at v4 p. m.,
while College Station members wall
meet! kt the same time In front >f
the YjMCA. Car groups will )e
arranged at the designated meet
ing places, McGuire said.
The meeting will include a trip
to Brenham • to inspect the cily
utilities, the local cotton mill, 1 and
the Dixie Poultry Farm Hatcheijy.
Food will be served at (the hatch
ery. j
All members planning to make
the tlripishould contact H. C. Dill-, in ChE.
ingham at 4-6784 or McGuire at v | The! scholarshi;
4-845(4, he concluded. j
Xi ’ ■ ! ' I ' '
PALACE
Bryan 2'$$79
m6n. — TUBS
“COLORADO
TERRITORY
j.
■ 1 \
Joel McCrea
Virginia Maya
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the editorial
or at the St
'•» •<
, rzaMSSKs j ar
Itcwi* Hurton. Fiyw VnnU*y, LoutieiJonu. Henry LectAir, r L. Hrtvey
Bobic Myers, Bruce Newton, Barry SmlUi. Rob#t
uiiiiams «•••..... ........Staff Reporters
.....Mtfvia ItetrH
Andy Davin...
!
P ’
Br.d Hobaee, "Hsrdy
Kenneth MarSk
V !
.
K, r—
hi
Ben PrIUe'n, Autrey
V' n 1
■. ■! ; , i '
1
V • ■[i'
.j'.-jl
r 1
wleCrelt
i; I
'MLL
. Room 201,
it Activitiei
Co-Editors
ri.t . Ill Staff CartannUt
Houston Engineers
Honop Bolton
Dr. F.‘C. Bolton, president of
meeting of the Hqustoa Engine
Club and the Houston (A&M
Tha Houston A&M Club joined
ferring the honor 1 at a lunch-
neeting held at inaon today
in the Ben Milam Hotel in Hous
ton. r :Ti.i
is of four year
warranty arid will pay its recipient
three hundred dollarsi per year: j
: A ; J • , ;• I ' i i l
Vehicle Short Course
Here in July, August
Short courses
supervision will tie offered by
Industrial Extension Service
during July and August, according i
to E,. IT! Williams, director, of the
ies. i ■ ^
motor vehicle
tjhe
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|i P4i: .|i
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will receive isntruction
weeks of August} 1 and 8,
common carriers (getting instruc
tion during the week of August 22.
QUEEN
MON. —ICES:
“Mr. Belvede
Goes to Col leg
I . ; j 1 ;;
COMING
“CITY ACR0
S RIVER
? /
tUd;:,
, 'I t
U,
■lr
Lewis F. Cheek, ME junidr from
Abilene, has just received! a $50
award m .the Engineering Under
graduate Award and Scholarship
Program conducted by the! James
F. Lincoln Arc Welding Founda
tion, according to a release from
the Foundation.1 ,•
A total of $5001) in 77 awards,
ranging from $1000 to $25L is be
ing given to undergraduates of 47
different engineering colleges and
universities. Awards were! for ex
cellence of papers prepared by en
gineering students on the subject
:n
of arc ,’welded desigin, fabrication,
maintenance or research.
Cheek's paper! was “Dejsign of
Arc Welded Fixtures for Mfar Pro
duction.”
FT
C*ampu.
THURS,
IT
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.A<*jaa»«r;ss.rsi«.
•t[_
MON. thru WED
FIRST RUN
A
i \
GARY
PdridafKIIL
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—Features Start—
1:06 - 3:23 - 5:27 - 7;44 j 10:00
Li
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back yard. And you wouldn't have
to go .through that annual argu
ment with your wife oy0r whether-
to go to the mountai
shore, j 17
What could be bettertj No worri
some Sunburn, no vexing mos
quitoes, no hotel billfjy no sore
muscles. ,
This relaking fad of bfing hur
ried alive might Well sweep the
country except fori one dhing:
Every man has an uheaay feel
ing, that once he was six . feet
under-ground, his' relatives^ and
friends might decide he Wikpn’.t
worth the trouble of digging hR.'F
Whatl can a man bilieve any-:
more? : ! ■ : i H . J j. *.
The.corset industry soys Ameri
can women buy 3,600,00© “Falsies”
a yegr, ;. ,. 1, [ 7 , L7
And, as if that weren’t bad*
enough, Manhattan butcher shops,
are AovT unde^ rubber parsley in;
tVwxi’n- rlicnlaxr
their display cases.
becaiise his child wks si
to talk
51
r
Then, one morniri
the child looked up
ely:
“This is now. 1
The Papa is convinced
got a genius. i, r
'_L L
A friend of mide wa(s wonriedl
9 to learn
>roak fast,
aid grav-
|! : {|
now he’s
-• :
MONDAY
nr sm
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HOW*
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safe®®
and
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8 o
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present, a
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..MmUYJOMS 0 ^
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