The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 07, 1949, Image 2

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    Wednesday we called attention to tfae Howeyerj the 1 irge number of cars in the
dangerous traffic situation at George's new area make it difficult to assign park-
corner iri the .corps area. Since that time ibg areas for H he ears which would have
we have given considerable! thought to to be moved if parking ware restricted to
another id^a which, if carrie|l through as one side. * 1 [ r [ : I • } 1 !
we hope our other suggestion is, might Another sol Uiop occurred tp us. Would
the corps it npt be possi )$e to make Trail Street a
go oven furthor toward making the
area;'safer ifor all concerned. oneway thoro igh are f tTheifi both sides
We refhr to the jammed traffic on could continue to It e used for parking and
TjaftStreet which adjoins the line of even the cars would! n6 be nearly as crowded
numbered dorms. Gars park on both sides for room. In jadd tion, students crossing
of that street, atid it also channels a great J;he ’ street wop Id have to be concerned
deal of traffic in both directions. But with only a sijigla direction traffic flow.
Trait-Street is narrow. Far too narrow Traffic could bt routed either north or
to handle two full lines of parked cars and south on Trail Street ami drivers could
two lanes of heavy traffic. This is espe- use the loop fojrmdd by Trail, Throckmor-
cially true when you consider the number ton, (and Lubbojck iiti-eets tloi complete their
of pedestrians which cross Trail Street circl^ of the area.;
about the time classes begin. r Such a sotytior
7 One? way to correct this would be to Military Walk
restrict parking to one side of the street, would be equail
k ■! ' " ■. - < J | j'| I i- I
V
-••Uh
• • ^ * * - - i —* * ’ ‘ i • «• ! * j' w • j.
Shoring Up the Newer Stones
.'4
-iLast night A&M got its first glimpse season’s
. r :
was very effective on
jt is our belief that it
jy effective on Trail Street.
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i—IHWIIMIHHMWM
uining Huntin,
of them. The
he doesn’t wi
ii
i HAL BOYLE j
Cl
ussia’s Attempt at German
of wif hin? fish Of the calibre we
ofJthb second level of the football struc- ! hat last year to create a winning varsity. Berlin as ijts capital,
r.—i -J t 11i— ' i -l-LiL. -!-i?—t i—X • w i| calculated tb ofi
turfe it is building. From the glimpse we Like the virsity, the freshman team
goti, it looked fairly solid. enjoys solid support from the Twelfth
1 So many players were pressed into ac- Man as much ias t does winning games,
tidft that it was-difficult to see just how The more' solic the student body support
they would hold up under full-game con- of the teams, he more of the borderline
ditions. But from the yardage-consuming games we win.
riiotions made by the Fish athletes, it In the urgency of sweating our climb-
docpn’t seem unreasonable to say We have ing vaysity thi oug h its schedule, let’s not
another top drawer freshman team this forget |he bej inn ng Aggies.
For a sturdy istructure you need solid
year-
. • ; , 'T r r Tj- I i
•Last year pur fish team was a consis- material all the way *up. Let’s all go down
tent winner. This year’s squad is start- for all the freshman games and bolster
ing out as a winner. It only takes two th
ose stones u
i
Free Presses: Our Ace in the Hole .
VT-'u 1 -v
This week having been designated Na- pamphlets and meagazinejs — through the
tiofial Newspaper Week, we-take time to. centuries have been on hand to provide
honor a profession that could have only
reached its zenith in this d$niocr$tic na-
itiqg. ^
Ever since early man ooQld utter gut-
terul noist's. and comburffcate with his
" prirnltive brothers he has beon, by nature, " ,,w , . .. .
(i new# hungry Individual, At th»t tiipc.i 'y’. . l , .,
he craved Infomlttion abuot hunUng In " nnn »i'"
some distant -forest. In modern times,
- he wanted news about,Pearl Harbor, the
Helifan Bulge, North Africa, the United
Naiiohs conferences, and, most recently,
the-atomic explosion in Kuisia.
literate peoplej wi
1' i
We should be
State Described by Columnist
y DeWITT MacKENZLE
Al’ Forfign Affairs Analyst
KOssia shows signs of be kg
about to create a new, communlst-
nated German state out of
ne of occupation, wi
rn zo
ler
ith
i F
the Germi n republic recently les-
tablished it Bonn by the thince
western zt nes under guidance | |of
America, Iiritain and France.
When tiiese two Germanys are
functioning there will ensue a tuig-
munist state which would be a
satellite of Russia.
By the same token the three
western allies are aiming to attract
eastern l G erman y ' n t° the Bonn
government, if and when the Rus
sian military grip is relaxed.
Economically the Soviet and the
jwesterh zones not only complement
leach other but are essential to each
jother. The west has the greater
portion of the industries, while
the ehst is
of-war between Russia\aiid [the
thres denocracies to achiev^ a | 96000 re niiles and a opula .
umt>d Germany—communist if the L ’ Sn .
rich agriculturally.
West Larger
The west, of course, is imuch
larger, having an area of some
'1
h this information.
Soviet wirs and democratic if tjhe
western trio are successfuL
Future History
Tjie future history of pontiijen-
tal Europ - will be heavily influ
enced by tue outcome of this strug
gle, for u timately Germany may
w’ell re?un e her old position as the
keystone (f central Europe.
That is, she will resume it if sihe
is reunite 1. And on that sCpre
thleite Can be small doubt unless
events take a wholly unforeseen
turn. It jisn’t the nature of |ljhe
Germans be separated.
tion of about 45,000,000. The So-
Iviet zone contains 46,000 square
'miles and has a liopulatidn of
17,000,000.
! However, the eastern zone has a
tremendous drawing card—Berlin,
former proud capital of the Reich,
one of the world’s great cities and
hub of European transportation.
The fact that Berlin is now di
vided into four zones which are
occupied by Russia, Britain, France
and America won’t preclude the
| projected eastern German gov
ernment from Claiming it as the
J capital. •. \ ; v
By hook or by crook the two j
divisions vill unite to reestablish
the father
thankful that here in
th©‘t>n}ted fit ities we have the moat ideal
press system fn the world — uncensored
and with as mum' voices! on any disputed
an npenin f.
We are ih leblied to the free American
prebs, our vo
itjteiice. ! For
democratic princi
P
IJewspaiiers, and their counterparts, munist smile
■ • A j. - !,. ( ; .j I ^ f l
★ 'I- ' M'.-- ★
i-. i.
try,
' hi t |f f ., ■ ;•
Natural
draw we*
and as soon as they
Russian Hope
y Moscow’s hoj i H! it? to
tern Gei-many j into ! |he
Church Part in UN
Work is Discussed
Soviet cat tern zone, thereby hm-
Holidiiting
ce, iund griduftd for its ex
it [it shmjld go, any other
>als we cherished in the
t WOiild jvjanidh as quickly as a com-
of i atisfaction.
the Reich into a c|dm-
Of/icial Notice
lull
tlhrl!
i fwrrt-
Animal
Vi ilInrH-
All Mni'li"itn innjnrliur In An|nial
Imnilry; whi
Oi'icrai'! I'lat »rr iiruwt aoan'l a
j
injt In tin'
Inilualtlcii
day.
THp |>ur{i
i iiuaint you
Plirpniip, I o
bi'fr.ri.' mak
In unsVirr
l.rfturi' Konm of Oir
IliilljUnK' at |l li. m, Wulj
\<Mar'
said her mother reprovingly,
“every tipie you
other grey hair.’
“Gee, Mom, ,
are naughty, I get an-
terror when! you
at Grandma!!”
pou must have been a
were young—just look
. i I : {
THE AGA KHAN, interviewed on the
subject of what religion Rita Hayworth'S
shild will be reared in, “rapped his can on
the floor for emphasis and said: ‘Moslem
—then it won’t need a Papal dispensa
tion,’; according to the Pittsburgh (Pa.)
Stu-tfetegraj^h.4- .| ’ ; i,
' ■ iJ^" • 3 i'i#- * #
A teacher was giving his clag^f lecture pendent: I “Severfel (grand jurymen) were
on charity. “Willie,” he said; “if I saw tight-lippied and |rim as Judge Bird spoke
a boy beating a donkey and stopped him to them concerning the three murders and
from, doing so, what virtue should I be the entire panel i /as observed to lean for-
showing?” j j • --4- ward tfcnsily wi
Willie (promptly): “Brotherly love.” the jury to make
of <hcj Dejf-w Plan.
wlt|h the Digr«' l‘l«it mi
rlitcuna what nhmil'i In*
nu nut the Dourer Plan
iiueatinns runcerninu any
Ynu will
vantnRe to
lflea|se bv
All atuddi
io7, AkHci
5 p. m.. c
have not workeil ' out !l|h''lr
't- i
me of the luebtinit lx to mc-
finil it definitely to your
attend the meetin*.
there.
B. U. Dana
Anipial Husbandry Depa
v
ad-
nnir
dnts ma jorintr In hortiejujture
are re)riiiir<‘i to register with the sec^utary
jf th^ Hoiticulture Department in Room
i Iture guilduiR not laterj {than
Cctober 14.
uy W. AdrianCe !
ead. Horticulture Department
FROM the St! Petersburg (Fla.) Inde
W
TODAY & SAT.
j -(-Features Start—
1:20 - 3:20 - 5:15 - 7:10.9:10
1.
r
L
r7
—
iV.
en the court instructed
a jail break.”
' r
'DfDVEjjnmim
NOW; LASTDAY
-.•r \ •• v
The Battalion
!•
"Soldier, Statesman, KmMy Gentleman"
/rencc Sullivan Ross, Founded of AggieT raditions
Lawrence Sullivan Ross,
...., ■ ~~ •, ^ ;■
SATURDAY ONLY
Technicolor —-
IUBLE BILL
per of tile Agricultural apdj
times a .wet *
xaminatiqn
day and
ntcal Colleg i of Texas and the
reflated every Monday_thrqugh
Associated Press is entitled exclusively to tie use for republfcation of
to it or not otherwise credited in the paperj and lo
in. Rights of repuHication of all other matter jtereip
dl news dispatches
news tijf. spontantjous origin publish-
also preserve^.
Entered m aecond^laa* matter at Port I Member (If
om. M CU... auto.; | The ABoci^ted F
Reyeretented nationally by Nationjil Ad-
the Act of Congraw of March 3, 1870.
Chita jo. Loa Ang dee, and San Franciaco.
15
trs contributions ma
Hall. Classified
Room 209, Goodwin
T be
ads i
Hall.
INGSLEY, C. C
Law la Burton,
I Otto Kun*e
Coaiett 1 ........ .Feature
nneth Marak. Emmett Trant, Jack Brandt .. CartoonUU
made
may ty
MXTNROf I..........'
(4-5444) -or at tlje editorial office. Room 201,
hone (4-5324) pr at the
-t-
; Al.
Georpr
1“ ChjutoT'lU
Clayton Selph...
- • .. . , f U i • a t b
W. K. ColViUe, Roger ipoalett. G,
■P _ L OartocnUU
in Howard .1. ... , Photographer
Holmes, Bill Hltea. Hardy Rosa, Joa "
Brittain.;
A. IW. •FWdrlct.l.
’ OUfer.. . . ... .
\. . j . Photo Engraeets
... J:.. Advertlalng Manager
A Advertlaing Rapreaentauve j
Weldon Aid-
Bunjea i
' Fails. Dt
him. Bo.
Dean
Service h
Stuudent Activities
i........Editorial Board
Dean Reed.
Bill Tliiimpaon, John Whitmore . . . Feature Writers
r|<UM.L.Lawrence Ashlurn. Jr., Bmil
r.. John Diisdale, Curtis Edwards, J. C.
Fuller logen. Bol) l^ne. Bee Land-
indheira Bruce NfcwiOn, Jack Raley.
.News 1
s kummer The Bat-
te $4.30
L30 per school
D^UBl
lamity Jane
Sam Bass
PLUS* CARTOON — NEWS
Prevue Tonight 11 P.M.
SUNDAY thru TUESDAY
FIRST RUN
. i
at New York City,
•Easy
Living”
M
PLUS CARTOON
Saturday Prevue 11 P.M.
.Editorial Board
Newton, John Tapley,
It Wo
Now
Tt Be Long
. Soon
r*M
EvfaN VEST
And Her 2 Hour Show
OeditaN
to tllf;
Oiunllesj
tcuiato
o! me
iiuuiton
Soiiker!
PLUS CARTOON
HMBfeKvV’.K V"
^let,
Louisiana . I
held oat in St. Louis, Mb-, wa;
in 1904! [ "ilk
Here—45 years later—it’s Caus
es thlft o!4
Purchase ExposiUon
mg a
e—145 years later—it’s Caus-
scarcity of wild deer in the
Central {Adirondack Mountains.
So sayis Gerald Kenwell, 62, the
bouts. This
best woodsman herea
is his rkasonihg:
“Some of our guides went out
to the St. Louis fair; They saw
some beavers on exhibi ion. Looked
real cutb, so they brought a pair
back and turned them loose. Then
somebody pjut out some more.”
Protected fbr years by a closed
hunting sjeason and with few
natural; enjemie* to catch them,
the beayef throve like rabbits.
And now, ,"Kenwell says, they’ve
got nature out of balance.
“The boaver is the dread of the
woods,” he-Fsaid. “They’ve dammed
up thelfStreams and flooded the
natural winter quarters I for the
deer, leaving the deer nothing to
eot. 1 ■ IT , 1
“And they re destroying the
trout, top. The trous ctm’t get past
the dams tip spawn, atjd the water
in the ponds heat up in the sun,
and the tfout can’t j stand that
eitherit f
Kenwell holds that the Otter,
also increasing rapidly, is an
equal threat to the fisherman's
! fun - ; • I ’ k
“An ottei| catches and eats about
two pounds*(of fish a day t and fifty
of them w|H get rid of a lot of
fine trolit.’J
“They say there’s more deer now
than there: ever was. And that’s
true. But where are the deer?
Down jb some farmer’s pasture
lit
on his
I'" ■: j 7 f l'
sy’re a nuisance,
want hunters dim
» pastilrexit's too
ser
If"
“And the hunters don’t like it
either—itlisb’t sporting.” .1 IF
United Stat
inks the deer would
he woods is the “con-
would spend
year to stock their
with | food—a fraej-
tjie amount sportement
or hunting licenses alone.
Rough Treatment ofjAmeri
Washington, Oct. 7 (AP)—The United States
Russian
erican
a
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:Ff
ashington, Oct: 7 (AP)-HThe United States sent a
strongly worded note to Russia yesterday protesting the
“shocking” mistreatment oU (Americana; whti stray Into the,
Soviet zone of Germany, i ••• : '• : ; i. ■ .1 ,i'
"This treatment the United $t|ates government rinds to
be in shocking contra vcntioji !to4—ft-L+i—IT-Mi-' i-"'i-.+-4 '
the most elementary standards lof
.'ll
the note
international decency,"
*5kt the same time, the.
ted States, through Ambahsadbij
Kirk in Moscow, notified the; Hus
sian foreign office that “it expect
that those Soviet official? who are
mixing with his cows, and looking
for food. [They’re not in the woods.
Some of ’em even gb right into
the city, they’re so hungry.
“The farmer wants to get rid
Kadera Chosen To
Govern P E Club
responsible for these acts will
punished.” j ) . ,| I
College Students ,;ji ;
The American note referred spec-'
ifkally to fthe case of the twe
American college students ■ who
“inadverently and innocently” ep'
tered the Russian zone while; bicy
cling and who were detained fb 1
eight weeks. J .
It also cited the case of Pvt. John
J. Sinkowicz, an American soldier,
who escaped September 16 from a
prison in the Soviet sector of Bet r
lin after Ij) months bf: imprison
ment. The note said |ie : watt Fhe|d
under “brujal and uncivilized con-
ditions.” [ ! i ',.j| : | F
Note Sent To Russia {
The note said bluntly!
“There can be no | justification
for this kind of treatment bjf citi
zens of a friendly nation,jtfcrsonjs
whose only violation of aw .is
purely technical at most am whoS
innocence of criminal charges ea
easily be established;” j\ }
The note despatched; Jjl th,i
State Department described th
case
TT
Scj etis; 19, of Radnor, Pomvsylvan-
ia,; as only the latest in a number
of inciiients of the-.same kind.
.MtJitfcamitancps viry but thw
*1 basic pattern is the same,’’ it said.
l 1 “United | States citizens, whether
a ciylliab or military, are arrested,
hpld for Ibtig [periods, sonietlmes
miserably mistreated, and ■» even
tuallyre eased;, without charges,
explanations or apologies."
The j At ierieap« government, the
note continued, “raises the most
'r Id - •A-.’j - -'-Ti-n
energetic jroteXt’* against such act
J lit
tfcns by J bvikt authorities jn cast
ernl Gerniony. '
i(J. ^ Dehisnds Rights
loiicc-that the
! It alpo yrave /loticc-thut tbe Uni-
pd States der
meptary rights? of itk citizens be
bhsierved' n the future in aepord-
ahde with the ipternatjional cbmify
George Kadera was elected pres
ident at the initial meeting of the
Physical Education Club in De
Ware Field Hopse last Tuesday
night. I . siuuenis, warren uqisner, #u, oi iiyai'P wun] i
Other officers elected were Ed! Oyster Bay, New York, andPeter ; govprnmcjrlt.,'
Hookerj vice president; George 1
vlhich go -erns the conduct of all
civilized states.”
Ill rqferting tol the case of Oelk-
rter! ajnd Sellersi thp State Depart
ment noted that; they were ncjvcr,
considered/even by Russian auth-
Ities irj Uprmaby to be criminals
qr spies, Mor were formal charges
uveb prefpjred against them.
: “In short, t\Vo American stud-
dnta, iri Europe as tourists, whose
identity arid {harmless 1 purpose
cjou d ricVer havte been long in
•Wye' 1 -
<|oubt,{ hajs{c beeij treated as, efim-
s Department desprihetl the ihala,/Subject io loni
of the two American bpllegC ; tiiiori, Bhcl not allowed
students, Warren Oelsrier, 20, of jijcatp with their famil
Bav. New York ' nn/1 II Peter ! ffovenimorit/’ I
Stuart, treasurer; Joe Gibson, seer)
'—-
retary;: D|AP Proctor, reporter.
"The Churches’ Part in the Uni
ted Nations’ Work" will he the sub
ject f«r discussion on the regular
Thursday morning broadcast of the
College Station Council of Church
Women,
Miss Jo Watts will he the prin
ciple speaker on the program. Pro-
gran) time l« 10 a m. over Radio
Station VVTAW. These programs
arc sponsored by the A&M Meth
odist Church, the {jit. Thonmy Epis
copal Church, the A&M Christian
and the A&M Presbyterian church
es.
The Presbytprian church will
have charge of the< programs for
the month of October. These broad
casts will be presented by Miss
Watts.
Vmll //
——nail
t—r
Ijarig incarcera
te icohimuii-
families or their
ilf J p
-
PALACE
B.yin 2-SS71
T ! ■ ■ " 1 1
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n
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Last day