The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 03, 1949, Image 2

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WEDNESDAY, AUGUS1
iM
The Wife Said, ‘We’re Graduatine’ jj ii
j , ;\ I '.'-I »1* >'!••*•
Bits of conversations
other clay
Cave:
.!
. “We’re graduating n&ct Januarj'.
course, I mean my husband ’Will get hih
iMjri m '
conversations ^overheard the a)fter the two years
from the next booth in the here
:
of
: i
she’s put up With me^
she go to work or m#
M
juit school
there Hadn’t been aj d - wjirji you
degree then, but we’re both gn^uatin^. wouldn’t see wives pitting their husbands
He’s- graduating from cpllege and J’tfi through school... ./Fn lucky I guess, Fye
graduating from my old )ob as Mr. L - - -’a. got the sweetest girl an the world for a
hat offiM " “ ■
Here i:
'
1949
we’ve lived
¥* W J V'VA A CJ j TT W- » V» W W
She’s a darn good w fe, and
“• uu —. It was either
down
secretary. I’ve worked in
since Sam and I came do!
3t ey^
in the One might say these conversations are
summer of ’46 . ,... Satn Jmd H were mar- ' ^k 118 of the timei .they speak the senti?
ried the next week after hje got out of the ments bf many students and wives on the
service. We decided that | he’d better go ! cjampus today, thbse a re the conv< r^atiohs
to college as he had plenty of time under bf'those who ^JUlsooail for the f rst time
the GI Bill. After n couple bf month# (iownf f six orjight jjj^rsJ fit back i ito nbr-
coljege, the G ! checks,
•'Jr,
here 1 we fjoynd out that our expenses werei
a lot moire than his check from the gov
ernment, . . . So'' he either had ^o quit
schooh and go to work oril had to start
linal life. The wa
t! h e crowded c<j)llegi
r '-m.,
7! i
vl'v it ••'
. ,
nights studying,
these , abnormal
working; we had to do ode or the other, months are about"gon5.
1 .. . . _ , 1 1 Mu * itLLi'i' L JtA». „
■, I figure he and I are
mHM
eveHb get anywhere
it ha* workcxl'ont
ip the same boat,
cessary if we are
Now I am glad
imtl
As ,1
:1a college degree is necessary if
BVC . ... Now I il
as smooth as it hnlH The who have sacrificed,
little apartment in CoHetge View isn’t " i normal family life mtil their
Lots'tjf times (mn complete their erlucation.
muc
weS
eh, but it’s home ...
ye got on each other’s nerves,’ but I
am happy we have stuck it out. Like I’
said, ‘Wo graduate next January’ ... : ”
“You know, Jim, I’m really glad I’m
4 ; getting/ out this semester. I don’t, guess
Mary and- L will ever have any tr
The strength and
:nn family i« not In
apartments, the
quizzes
the quizzes re' umed—
things over tjhe past
!i
m\\ x
:• ]).•(. )•
lli 'li ,
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Polio-What is Ki|
It and Precautions
( '•»
J
f
'll
4. \-
Hditions of abnormality
jass, uptake note of them to pay tribute
;o wives bj^ our students who havb worked,
>stponed
usbaitds
Increase in Veterans Pensions
And Disabilities Voted by House
who have
!>ower of the AmorL
jeopardy sb long as
Washington, Auk. ii—'/ry-yvn
annual increase of $112,000,000 in
veterans' pensions and disability
payments was voted yesterday by:
the House.
The bill was passed without ojh
pensation, instead of the present
75 per cent, to World War I vet
erans for disabilities legally pre
sumed to bo service-connected. £►,
timated first-year cost, $4,091,000.
Liberalise the compensation
By Howard w.
(Editor’s Note: This
first of three articles
science editor Howard W.
lee, eaplainlst what Is
about
take precautions
Om disease,
it strikes your family.!
NeW York, Aug. 3—UP)—Child
ren have had polio—infantile par
alysis—since ancient times. Today
a higher ^proportion recover -WitjtP-
This^w the only gain, and all
in the present century. The gain
comes from better nursing, and
not from anything else.
Almost everyone has had polio,
but only a few,ever become sick.
How the disease works in most
of us who don’t get ill i$j|n-
tirely unknown.
But what happens in the sick
is well known. It » in your spinal
cord. This cord is the cable carry
ing nerves from, the brain to
branch out, like switchboard wires,
to aU parts of your body.
i Attacks Spinal Nerves
One Set of nerves in this cord
governs muscles. Polio chooses, for
•Nome mysterious reason, to attack
these particular nerves and no
others. These nerves are made of
i horn-shoped cells,
damages
colls. Among the nerves, these horn
Polio damages or destroys horn
cells alone are unable to regenerate
themselves. Once gone, they break
/
7 |
the muscle-nerve cable for life.
Without these serves In
spine, muscles shrink. ] No
part of your body to
Polio can strike at any
along the spinal cable.
hi$i up, it paralyzes
hands. If in the
hits (he muscles
low down, it paralyzes lag muscles.
There is an additional poW of
attack, in the “bulb," a .
thing; half the size of a
at the top of your spine. '
cation of polio brings most
deaths.
Polio Caused by V
The cause of polio
a very/tiny particle
tein. How this parti
destruction is unknow
Two kinds of polio; virus are
known. More are suspected. You
can have polio more than once, ono
attack for each kind of virus.
In epidemics; those #rho recover
without any bad effects; range from
40 to 70 percent Sometimes there
will be 70 percent complete re
coveries without any medical' cars
i i
finis
a Virus*
ie of pro
does its'
Jhited
live beefl
reeen
i polio can
ently In the
adult victims
•J (!
Is (toil
to hcl
own; battle,
4
furring
it its own
be done)
special ails. Di
dy Help
help the body
frsr.:* *&■,.*» *
... ^ Imov
reduce cnppimg. ; A
Othfra Uuiri Sister Kenny
IHHPUiPr- —tt- -i-ti" besuk-Tae
other, movement of stricken ihus-
h arc Sister^, Elizabeth'
contributions kjid have
rise' to
%
merits of
she was
to ' conri
at the paipl
ie hom
doog; ai
atricl
whatever.
ithattt.
Sometimes I the death
rates and crippling arc high, de
spite care. I - |
This contradiction is due to the
virus being different; from year
to year, sometimes virulent and
sometimes mild.
In epidemics, hardly more than
one child in 300 gets visible polio.
The highest susceptibility is from
m
trouble
:hc wivca.and mother i in America’s horticH
lire of the caliber! tBis college (has seen
in its positions filled by students wives
Over the past few yea rs.
Fi Iff: i'i;
position dir debate and wht to tho schedule of any veterans suffering
Senate, ' : ■ y, fromf tuberculosis by continuing
It ivovtld make disability com- compensation for a limited Umo
-1
ionecl, but we think thqt the •Horse ^till
has a future.
What about the horse’s part In redoes?
Doesn’t he do as much now ak he ever
did? What machine! could replace a horse
in a rodeo? Certainly
not a mac
lorse, Never More
Every dog ha* his day f j and last week
the horse had seve i. ^ i ■ |
But those days of National Save the
Horse Week passed by as quietly As the
‘^Ood old horse is fading from the Ameri
can scene. According to population fig
ures released by whoever it is that Collects
■. l/orse fa^ts, there are only 9,151,000 hors
es in this country as complared-WitH 16,-
)683 r 000 in 1935, and 26,4931000 in 1915.
, ¥ " With the decline of the horse! (Whom
k .some say will never be "replaced-Hy) that
horseless contraption, the automobile)
there is a corresponding decline in the
rmount df—services that the horse can
render. Horses furnish only abqit 'four !
I>ercent of Hie wdrk done iii this countr> : . 5 we are eating paijt of some|x>dy’sj 01’
In 1819, they did k round 80%, and mach- Dobbin j
permation for veterans of all wart*
raise (allowances for dependents
and liberalize regulations govern
ing determination of service-con
nected disabilities for World War
J veteran*. j. j!
The Veterans Administration es
timated cost for the firslt year
would be $112,,597,300. It made no
estimate of the cost in subsequent
years. * j
Benefits of Bill
Here’s what the House Veterans'
Affairs committee said the bill
would do:
Provide for payment of full com-
'
after the disease has been arrested,
Estimated cost, $700,000.
Further Benefit#
N; ' , , I
Increase disability and death
compensation rates and bask rates
for service-connected disability.
Total disability rates would be
hiked from $13$ to $150 a month,
with corresponding raises for par
tial disability,
Increase the monthly payments
to widows and dependent children
oi wartime casualties, from $100
Agriculturists
To Study Fans
Refrigeration j
I f
A cooperative project spon*
Lgricul-
-i-
sort that wc can imagine.
What; makes a nieadow appear more
restful and rustic than horses j grazing?
Does a chugging tra ctor, or a jflat tired '
jeep lend to the country side that charm
only the horse can give?
Were it not for the horse, What.cOuld
we call a horse lau|!h?
Tears come into
)
ines did only about ten percent.
There are all sorts of, stoti
:•
prove i that the horse is on his v r $y out.
“He’s washed np,'finished,” *ay
r t-
^tics to
the fig
ures. Maylie it’s 5 beenuse?’we are.rjld fash;
j ■ / . •' j.; j ' ; ’
They Now Cross by Bridge
Lfjice all international jagreemiema, the
recently concluded Immigrant IVorkers
Agireement between the United Stntes and
Mexico is a give and take affair, | *
Vor the several thousand far n labor
ers that the Uhtted States sorelv needs
to Hblp harvest her crops, this country
hns/hud to make several noteworthy con
cessions.' Mexico i will, attempt to send
workers from the interior of her country
-Iv^tead of from along the international
j|d to en-
! 'border. Workers will be permittfl
^neof>»y . ij £,0088 Ends
■■
BY M. N.
Staff Advisor
BROWN
our eyes
bite into a hamburger and dis:over that
when; we
It is unfortunate that) the nearest dome
people get to a ho:‘Re is when tHey are
eating dinner — eating something that
looks like a steak.li nt tjhe butcher knows
it\4 01’ Dobbin. '
ry. Heretofore, they had to swim across
the Rio Grande at
estimated 25!00Q ep
M I ter only those countries where ho racial > “braceros
diserimination is practiced agair st Gatin much;Jfrictif
( Americans, and these countries
premise not to. apply discrl
measures
jircscnt.
• The immigrant agreement legalizes the grant Workers-Ag
entry of Mexican workers, into this count-: ample of good “go
n .IT • ■ < _ j L J I P i ■ 4 T ,r r T!
than they could at
can workers averaged about
This ' immigrai,^ agreer
have been reached
subject of the
s they
night. Lakt year an
ored the United States
illegally. Several hundred weije drowned
in their attempts/ ^ I!
Mexican farm hunds working ip; this
country cam varn roughly ten times more
lomc. Last year Mexi
co a week.
^ rt ■! jflMdi
many yea»|s‘‘ago. The
i legal imm IgrBBte, or
must
ninatory sible discusdions mid logical Concessions.
while Mexican laborers are an agreemert that
v . ! ! ;■ : i ! ! 4 7h J xi- /■»!• «_,iL
its friend tc the south. Now
are calk
n between this c
has cqused
ountry and
by the : sen-
countries has been reached.
reement is
xl neighbor
Dear Mr. Brown.
Following your instructions I
appeared at the Triangle but as
(far us I could tell, you weren’t
there. I couldn’t find a single per
son drinking a bottle of orange
soda pop. Your advice helped, me
a lot. but now a new question
arises. How? ‘ -J
Confusedly.
C.L.B.
Dear C.L.B.,
Again you make it difficult fqr
me to answer you. As I remember
the advice I gave you in my la$t-
column (if I may use the terfn.
loosely) would apply to studying
whiskey, cold beer, watermelon?,
women and other perishables. To
which one of the list does “How?”
apply? T hesitate to use my lih:
| agination. hi [ j f
Perhaps I should arrange a pri-
[ vatc consultatiop. Keep locking for
the orarige soda pop.
M.N.B.
Vetch Seed Lab’s
Facilities Doubled
The Vetch Seed Testing Lnbort*
lory here has doubled its capacity
- for* testing vetch seed, nrcordihg 3
tw—Dr. k B. Reynolds of 'the
Agronomy Deportment, who (Ijin
charge of the In born lory.
Farmers are; now sending so
manly vetch seed samples for tent
ing that the old germ I na tor is not
sliffleient to take cafo of the
violuimu 1 ;
In addition to increased volume
capacity, the new equipment will
enable the laboratory to, give the
farmer the reftults of the test
quicker, Reynolds, said.
a month for a widow with one
child to $105, plus $25 for each
additional child instead of the pres
ent $16. Estimated overall cost,
$91,800,000.
Extend additional compensation
benefits to dependents of veterans
with a 50 per cent service-connect
ed disability. The present schedule
provides payment's only if the dis-
abilty is 60 per cent and service-
connected. Estimated cost, $15,-
406,300. : '
Experiment Station and the
U. S. Department of Agriculture’s
Bureau :of Plant Industry, Roils
and Agricultural Engineering will
test refrigerators designed for
farjm uae, P. T. Montfort, profes
sor of Agricultural Engineering,
said today./
Now under construction for use
in tho project is a refrigerated
room which will have a capacity: of
3»72 cubic feet. In this room it
will be possible to place refrigera
tors especially designed for farm
1 / usol under constant temperature
A£r11/t ™ W f^md
DFRZOS AiKlTl Lulu on faml-s Montfort added.
Jbe Hollingsworth. I agricultural
engineer representing the Texas
Agricultural ,Experiment Station
in cooperation With the IT. S. De
partment of Agriculture, and
James Ard, research asskUnt in'
I farm electrification of the Agri
cultural: Engineering Department
are building the refrigerated room
which will bo located in the Agrj-
. cultural;:Engineering building. Ifol-
lings worth and Ard will continue
to w'ork with the, project upon
completion j of the room, Montfort
said. I ;
Montfort stated thjat the exper
iments./‘which are to be made oh
refrigerators designed by the. co-
ojkratiifg organizations, will begin
is satisfaetjory. to both Man Sleeps While
House Moves Away
The Immi-
another ex-
relations.
/ l
•L
-t.
I
The Battalion
■ . ; 4*! lli ! ■ , :
c. isLi-r.+tl
%
"Soldier, Statesman, Knightly Getltleman'
Lawrence Siillivan Ross, Poiindcr of; Aggie Tfaditions
The Battalion, official newspaper of the AapripilUfttl pud Meehanirt 1 College of Texas fttid the
. ^j umesTpLwwk and circulated every Mbnday trough
-ct,— tj, e 8an pncr Tff BaW
>er si
talion is published tri-weekly on Monday, Wedn
year. Advertising rates furnished oji request.
kidllii
The Assoc||atcd Press is entitled exclusively tO|
credited to- it or not otherwise credited in the _
) ed .herein. Rights of -republication <rf all other
per
iter
Entered u •eeond-eldM niatUr at Post
Offlc* «t Collage Stution, Teua, under
Um A«t of CongroMi of March I, lllft.
I —n—
| «cw» con
Goodwin Ball.
j Office, Rjora ^UU.lGoodwi^Hall
' f * ; J |
ons may be made by tel
sifiui ads may be placed
MAUVIN HIlpWN, CLAYTON SELPH...
v.'. j
CliUi'U* KliKlmm
/ l,i'^ U llurion.,
< iohi) UrUdiiJ.',
xrl k, t.'obi
Ami)' UttvU„.
K, l, n«hKf.
bum ,l•..
iin. Olio Kvu«c...J. lHau
}<•, Kay* ' Vau'lir, LooWJuiim, 1
(niUl. Hebert W’WlMNia . ; . . L. HI
y .**»^**»*—*.h>—
>4. >»M.< ><>.*..> ^<* < ........ M. . H 1
tion rate $4.30 per school
1^1 mS
local
are all
of an nhws dispatches
aneoua prigin publisb-
d.
i. r’» A« i
C • • »ff
IMS
urirfmr Bdia
Bruv. N*i*U*>,
Hluff HipvrU.
Iiuluru Writer
MovUi Uuv|«««
T'in}i(igr«r!j. r
p . j J. 1
i.]/■ i : ■
BBtloD&IJj
tfllCeg
Angelo.
KbUUetU Mel
Uw UrUuiie,
I4.r0 01f'vr
(1Urlif],WHrtl*
■11
/■.
1
nli.
i.
ROCK FALLS, Hi., -V yp) j—
Douglas Unger woke up j yesterday
morning to find his bed rocking
to-ahd-fro and the bednom doing
an imitation Mexican ha; dance.
He thought he was experiencing
his first earthquake.
Unger quickly propped himself
ip on the pillows and peered out
he .window.
Workmen were busily moving the
house down the street. } • ‘
“I forgot all about ordering the
house moved,” Unger Said wist
fully. “It was my day off and I
was so sleepy. It was the oddest
sensation.? , , | .
!
|
Clubhouse Seen
The Brazos County A&M Club
willj build a new clubhouse in the
near future, club president, Oscar
Crain, said today.
The building will be either a
qupnset hut or a steel frame build
ing of some type, according to
Crain. It will be erected on the
club’s own property behind Mun-
ncrlyn Village between Bryan and
College Station.
There are now $0,000 in the chib
building fund although. 200 of the
600 eligible club members have
not yet been contacted. Crain said
that, the furnishings will bo simple
for the present, but that the club
hopes to eventually own a com
fortable meeting place.
Any organization in the area
that wishes to use the new; build
ing for meetings or picnics may
rent the property, Cralii added.
Monster Is Only
Big, Black Fake
Miami Beach, Flu.—lAt—Miss
Carol Krelg was swimming in the
ocean yesterday when something
big, black and slimy moved along
side her.
Miss I?» serpamed. "A
sea monster!” she cried.
Her parents took one look and
agreed. They splashed ashore and
rah to their hotel. A bellhop in
vestigated. It looked like a sea
mobster all right.
Soon a police squad car arrived,
Siren howling. Patrolmen Abe Zis-
kin and John Walsh went on the
double to investigate.
Ziskin snorted. ,
“That’s no monstef,” -ho an
nounced. “It’s just an old auto
mobile tire.”
about September 1.
7 -
Three MA&MChib
Establishes Award
Thu ilple M AA»4 Club hajj esj.
tablinhifl a four-yoar Opportunity
Awurd.fKInal plans for the award
were jipnouncod at a club picnic
mar Mtnurd recently.
The 1 |lrs( recipient! of the
l lw . rT1T . ctpiontiornno uiwj
will riflgefi A4M In September
; trinlo M Club inrludOH'fi
L"
dis-
at thej editorial off$c, Room 201,
' ‘) op it the Student Activities
Co-Editors
.Sportljiui^r
...Sporu WrltcrH
,81*11 CufVMuUt
a IWyeuWiUthWi
fl irul«ti<rti MtttitgC'tf
ulutiiin
Noah’s Ark Sough
By American
MOSCOW —hPl —A
patch from Ankara, Turkey, Says
the Turkish Army Oenerjal Staff i
has given permission to an Ameri
can group to explore utrategic
Mount Ararat for the remaihs of
Noah’s ark.
The story called the eippedftion
“atii itotclligtmee service activity
under the guise of i(k-search for
Noah’s ark.T • j •. •’-} :
It said the | group is stay kg in
Ankara waiting for a ship t> ar
rive from the United State! with
their equipment. ; /
Mount Arurut is locutodne* r the
Sovlot-Turkl«li frontier, jj
X
X
■<-
M
'.j 1 . j;
i: j- • ...li kill I
A
X i L
Denton Joins jVet
Appraisal Service
A. E. (Buddy) Dcntojp, U
now assistant director of Veterans
Appraisal Service according to R.
H. Hughes, director of the Service.
Denton is also working on his
masters degree which he . will re
ceive in August. In September l 10
will become a full time member
for the appraisal serviee here.
’ t , • ■>' - 1 ’ X V *, vlf 1 |7| I
Hornless Cattle
Webster City, r Iowa—dT?—E. C.
Clover, vocational agriculture im.
sti-uctor in the 1 Webster City
schools, has gained nationwide at
tention for his work with hornless
cattio.
Clover spent more than four
years developing a herd of Guern
sey cattio which aye hornlcw., He;
wasinamed director of the rocently-
fonbed Nuiional Polled Cattle Pro
motion Club. He now 1ms, a herd
of 10 polled cuttle, all descondotita
of his original block-
The Triple M Club inrludON, for
mer Aggies from Mbnard, Mason,
MrCuljrich, Concho, and Kiinblc
eountlii. j v 1 j !: X
Old Chest Reveals
$2(1,000 Jewelry i
Ma^atc, EJnglandMm.
Fnink| Mackic, cleaning her attic
!<umd; 11 dirty napkin pinned to
gether in the drawer: of aq old
chc.st.i X" 1*
Sh^ undid it and out rolled $20,-
000 vmrth of rings, broaches and
bracelets set with rubies, emeralds
and diamonds.
Heg husband' derided it, must be
the l<jbt fpom a 1937 jewel jTO *
at th| Queen’s Hotel, whe:
night^ porter. He was
chesXafter the hotel cl|
but Hiad never thou;
side. |j:
Mqckie turned the jewelry
topriice. j
ri closed it, 1939
jght to loifk in-
t
-r-rr
ir
IW
two treatments
person' who’
doctors. Bot
muscles and
Is. Nothing now
any good for the
cells in spinal cords
Eariy Diagnosis Important
Early . diag noiis—detectirig the
diseaw—is tie most - important
sihglq thin ■ '
most
proof is to iiab sipinal cord fluid to
make a monkey sick. This test
takes weeks and hundreds of dol
lars, A recent French teat promistw
to doj something similar with (nice
1 “ week?. Both aro too slow
to help
I'I
1.V
help your jehiild.
Kejen doettrs; and nurtes have
to make the tecision with the eye's
0$: ttpsrisuct.
!i Tomorrow--
to kjoop fi
j. yf i|!i|| k
Battalion Crossword
ACROII 3,1. (jeartit
l *' T K» ro .a
♦. ImruT 1
ll! Ort*o( day ill UtVl
U. Mina «f dr- 41. ?r«g*
, terntngi! abtr.
Zi. Tallest
10m getting polio.
In <*• PN»«
tain poetry 42. (hewer
14. Late: comb. 44. arnlfe
‘ ,n “ «, o.m:;.
a- Sprit*
!«. Tubea
17. Novel
IS. Akin ;.
20. Chide
21 Brazilian
mocaw
22. Cotuuletn
24. Nov« by
Duma*
27. Darter -
30. Pocma
Jt. American
Indian
42. Endeavora
10. Evasi coutr.
Ut Dmui! '
it, Prnftn In
Proton in
tilkwot m
t,T. Makes eyes
tt. Luzon nSUv
00. Llndsn Uoe
life
63. Letter
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SolutKh 1 >f Yesterday’s Russia
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