The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 15, 1949, Image 4

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J
F
^IREE-IR^E MEETING,
day 7;30 p. m. in E. E. Lecture
Room. Films will be shown.
ASCE will meet Tuesday, Nov.
16, 7:30 p. m. in Room 11, C. E.
Building.
BRAZORIA COUNTY CLUB
meets Thursday Nov. 17, 7:30 p. m.
in Room 224 of the Academic
Building to dUcuss > plans for
Thanksgiving party. „ |
BRliaii COUNTY CLUB meet-
ing Thursday, Nov. 17 after Yell
Practice in Room 306, Academic
Building.
HORTICULTURE CLUB meets
Tuesday, Nov. 16, 7:30 p, m. in
Room 103, Agriculture Building.
: 1. A. S. meeting tonight, Nov, 15,
,7:30 p. m. In Petroleum lecture
Room. Film "Power By Wright”
will be shown.
JUNIOR CLASS, NON-MILI
TARY MEMBERS, Tuesday, 0:30
p. m., Assembly Hall. Non-Military
class representative will be elected
to work with class officers from
the corps.j /
MARSHALL CLUB nieets Wed
nesday, Nov. 10, 7:80 pi m. Room
103, Academic Building to plan
Christmas Party.
NAVARRO COUNTY A&M
CLUB, Thursday, Nov. 17, 7:30 in
Room 228, Academic Building to
complete plans" for Thanksgiving
party. Refreshments will be served.
R. E. CLUB, Thursday, Nov.
7:30 p. m. in DeWare Fieldhouse.
W. R. Horsley will speak on ob
taining employment after gradua
tion. J 1
NEWCOMERS CLUB, Wednes
day, 2 p. m. in Cabinet Room,
YMCA./ : - t
PRE-MED, PRE-DENT SO
CIETY, Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. Room
32, Science Hall. Dean Harrington
will speak.
What’s Cooking
EETING, Tues- SAN ANTONIO CL1
SAN ANTONIO CLUB meeting,
Thursday; Nov. 17, 7:30 Riom 203,
Academic Building. Ticketji on sale
for Thanksgiving party.
SADDLE AND SIRLOI
Tuesday, Nov. 15, 7:30
AI Lecture Room.
SAN MARCOS CLU
Thursday night, Nov. 17,
in Room 106, Academic
ReorganUfttlonal meeting.
SENIOR PETROLEUM WIVES'
CLUB, Thursday, Nov. 17, at 7:30
u. m. in Habinet Room, YMCA.
Members to be taught how to play
Caiiasta.
WACO-McCLENNAN GOUNTY
CLUB, Wednesday, NoV.;Tc, 7 p.
m. in 301 Goodwin Hall. Plaps for
Christmas and Thanksgiving dan
ces will be discussed. Freji coffee
CLUB,
m. in
meets
at 7:30
uildlng
and doughnut* will bn
pawed.
Harlingen Wdi
Scorn Nude Sally
Harlingen, Tex.-UPi-The Har
lingen Women's Christian Temper
ance Union doesn’t like the idea
of fan-dancer Sally Rand appear
ing at the valley mid-winter fair.
"Feminine modesty, arid purity
can be artistically portrayed with
out nudity,” Mrs. Mary p. My-
rick, corresponding secretary of the
WCTU, wrote to the Valley Morn
ing Star. “Civilisation begjns with
the adoption of clothing, demoral
ization begins with its removal.”
The fair will be held Nov. 19
and 20. Booking of Miss R^nd and
a supporting cast of 53 pei-formers
was announced last Wednesday.
Mrs. Myrick said the WCT1J group
met Saturday and decided ;o write
the letter to the newspaper and
then tell Fair Association officials
A&M BILLIARDS CLUB
(Official Tournament Entry Blank)
' r"-' ' ■ •" • ' r — r •■! \
NAME .1
(Please Print)
ADDRESS
Mail to J. H. Flowers, Box 4866, College Station bjft
midnight, Thursday, November 17, 1949.
‘fore
the
couldr
ie team lougni an me way ana
•ver gave up. The corps made
{good impression on Houston,
o.” By ing ton is an electrical
I- ‘ ! V - v , t \.
TRIP F
from Page 1)
line looked plenty good, in fact,
mle team looked good. We
t ask for more.”
I Bylngton, president of the
senior class, said the weekend
"turned out fine. I liked the way
the team fought_all the way and
never
» *o«
too.” Bylngton
opgjhwerlng major from Dallaa.
One man who didn't enjoy the
w«mkend waa Joe Hodlne, a Junior
pre-law major in A Flight. "It
was my fault, though. I don't like
Houston. It's too big. I'm just
a country boy.”
Bodlnc commented that he en
joyed the gome a great deal. "Some
Rico boys Helped ua Out, too, We
were looking for some directions
and these guys come over, met us,
and showed us where we wanted to
go. They even remembered our
names when we took off, too.”
Johnny Gossett, junior business
major on the corps staff, said,
"McCarthy can be complimented
for the way he treated
us, es
pecially over the nation-wide radio
hook-up.”
Another corps staff man, Conrad
Ohlendorf, said "It was a grand
ball game. The team showed lots
of spirit, but the second half was
tM MfL” | . 1
John Taylor, senior business
major in C Troop, was another
man who didn’t enjoy the week
end. Asked for a reason, Taylor
commented that "It just wasn’t
my week. I’ve had so many good
times this year that once in a
while one doesn’t live up to ex -
pdctations.
“The Aggies played a fine game,
and might have won if they^ could
have capitalized on the breaks.”
Taylor said, i
"The Shamrock went out of its
way to be nice to us,” he con
cluded. , I
The general opinion of all the
students questioned can be best
summed up (n the words of I. E.
Montgomery, senior architecture
major from Baytown.
He wandered into the Battalion
office when this story was being
written and, after hearing of the
comments of the people who en
joyed the weekend, said "well, I
agree. Up until this past weekend
my best corps trip was the one we
made in 1945 to Fort Worth. But
this Houston trip has replaced
that weekend for me. That’s* my
comment if you want it.”
;
UH Plan
Larg« Stadiums
i : ‘ ' j "j
Houston, (AP)—Plans to
build a 100,000 seat football
stadium hero are just about
dead but there is a good
chance two others of about
60,000 each will become reality.
Both Rice Inatitute and the Uni
versity of Houston are talking ata
dlum construction.
Sources at Rice say a 50,000 seat,
concrete structure may be ready
by next season. Houston news
papers say It Is a cinch the new
structure will be built at least by
1961.
The University of Houston
spokesman advised the school's
Sideline Coaches Club this week
the Cougars will have a stadium of
Its own by 1951.
Corbin Robertson, son-in-law of
Hugh Rov Cullen, oilman who has
given millions to the university,
did not talk in terms of seating
capacity but indicated the new
structure would accomodate a min
imum of 40,000, and probably more.
These developments followed by
only one week a statement from
oilman Glenn McCarthy that Hous
ton would have a new stadium, de
spite the fact plans for the huge
municipal structure had fallen
through. |
McCarthy had offered 150 acres
for the 100,000 seat structure and
had agreed to underwrite half of
the estimated cost of $3,000,000.
He withdrew the offers because,
he said, city officials and other
residents had been too slow getting
things organized.
Ut. ABNER
'UfMfV
"'j I
t
Pre-Law Group Holds
Social at Franklin’s!
~ i
Aspirant lawyers will wine and
dance this evening as the Pre-Law
Society holds its first social gath
ering of the year at Franklin's
Herman Gollob, club reporter
said today.
The affair will be a combined
meeting-social with a program also
on tap for the evening, President
Dave Kreager announced.
All members are invited, and
those who plan to go should meet
in the Y Cabinet Room immediate
ly after yell practice, Kreager
said.
THIS'LL MAKE TH’ RACE MM-ON
ACCOUNT SMB IS NO/ AS Hi
«r
In a Poke
??-BUr-THIS IS 's
oasr m SABLT-Evtr/
DOOWrCH BACHELOR
WILL ami. KNOW
WHO TH' FABULOUS
FABULOUS
OONES is.r
STAND
OUTfcUKt
A SOME
■r
■■i
ipp
[WE
TAKE
>OFF,Uf<m!L
/
PERFECT MARK-
(Continued from Page
Jacksonville and Conroe pla7* Pal
estine this week. Lufkin heavily fa
vored over Jacksonville, cap take
title by winning if Palestine beats
Conroe. If both Lufkin ami Con
roe win this week, Conroe ! would
get title since it beat Luijkln, 7
to 6.
11. Port Arthur (3-0) and Beau
mont (2-0) in lead. Port Arthur
will be heavily favored when it
plays Beaumont, Nov. 25.
12. Galveston (4-0) and Bay-
town, which had 3-0 record before
its Saturday afternoon game with
Freeport, will decide title when
they meet each other next Ifriday.
13. Temple (4-0) and Coifsicana
(4-0) leading. Will decide title in
their clash at Corsicana Friday
night.
14. Austin (2-0) and Corpus
Christi (2-0) will determine titlist
in their Friday night game at
Corpus Christi.
Cinch For Alice
15. Alice (2-0) has cinch with
only one more game against La
redo (0-2) left to play. Alice in
vades Laredo Friday night.
16. Harlingen, which has t^o vic
tories, one tie and no defeats in
conference play, can take title by
beating Brownsville irt its last dis
trict game Friday night. Edinburg,
which has a 2-tol edge in pene
trations in its 13-to-13 tie with
Harlingen, has won two, lojst one
and tied one after being upset by
San Benito, 14 to 13. A Browns
ville victory over Harlingen would
give the title to Edinburg.
Austin, Texts — <#•— Upsets
marked Class A play over the
weekend, and the state’s list of un
beaten teams dwindled to 14.
Alvin was knocked out qf the
perfect record class by j Udine.
13-7, to highlight Friday night’s
play which^ saw several district
races: muddled, others clarified.
Alvin’s defeat coupled with
Webster's 26-12 victory over Cy-
press-Fairbanks left those
teams tied for the 25-A lend
Ballinger, was dropped
Major Hm Hoys, Otfefa
•Aviation Emotive. US. Air font!
/;
L -
i
y
A native of Grove, Oklahoma, Norman
Hays graduated from Grove High School
in 1936. The following year he entered
Oklahoma A&M, where he majored In
engineering; also took public speaking.
T
Sent to an RAF Navigation School jn
Canada, he graduated with the highest
possible rating of Specialist. Norman
served overseas for IS months in the
Aleutians, Italy and Saipan.
-•41
-vT
Active in national 4H Club work while in r
college, he helped organise its statewide
activities, won a national 4H champion
ship in Public Speaking. In 1940 he re
ceived hie BS degree In engineering.
Accepting
the war,
of navigai
B-29 M Pi
Hawaii
a regular commission after
waa assigned to development
>n instruments; navigated the
Dresmbost” on its famed
ro non-stop Sight in 1940.
\
A month later he began navigator train
ing a« an Aviation Cadet In 1941, he
received his navigator's wings and a
commission as Second Lieutenant . , .
married hie college sweetheart.
Typical of college graduate! who have
found their place In the U, 8. Air Force,
Major Haya ia Chief, Navigation Section,
at Headquarters In Washington ... with
a secure career ... a promising future.
ilfc
nil
coneider a
U. S. Air
■ the hiffh
and be
compute A
retunto
‘SSJfc;
" T! ''
tingle, between the ogee of to
t two yeare of college,
at on officer 4* the
be able to meet
requiremente
j. If you do not
t training, you may
or have opportunity to
fficer aetignment in
Air Force offieor procurement toamo are
vioiting many oolUget and univertitiee to
explain about thoee career opportunities.
Watch for their arrival or got full detaiU
at your nearett Air Force Bate, local re-
U. S. AIR PORCE
ONLY THE BEST CAN BE AVIATION CADETS!
.'V:
-n!,
■> . ..
' s..
-t.. v ^
two
a peg
from a perfect classification as
its traditional Armistice Daly riv
al, Coleman, scrambled to a 13-13
tie and was threatening to score
again as the game ended. The game
failed to keep Ballinger from win
ning the 7-A crown, however.
Meanwhile, the other unbeaten
teams came through. Dalhart
stopped Dunums, 40-12, Lefors beat
McLean, 41-12, Arlington stopped
Terrell, 34-14, Edna beat Karnes
City, 26-6, Uvalde stopped Pear
sall, 40-0, and Del Rio beat Crystal
City, 34-6.
Others Idle
N?w Braunfels, Kaufman, Mexia
and Leveretts Chapel were idle.
Beaumont French, Bowie and Ir
ving won Thursday night games,
while Nederland fell from the list
the same night.
Spur took over the 3-A lead
by defeating Ralls, 29-0, while co
leader Floydada lost to Crosby-
ton, 6-14.
Littlefield sacked up the 4-A
north crown by defeating Level-
land, 20-13, while Slaton upset
Post, 7-6, to win the 4-A south
title.
Rotan took the 6-A east crown
by downing Hamlin, 7-0, while
Haskell grabbed the 6-A west flag
by defeating Munday 46-14. Ran
ger clinched its 8-A title by wal
loping Eastland 37-6.
Archer City knocked Holiday
out of a tie with Burkburnett for
the 9-A lead with an 18-12 vic
tory.
Garland stayed in a tie with
Irving for the 12-A lead with a
32-0 victory over Carrollton. Clarks
ville took the 13-A lead by down
ing Commerce 20-0, while Honey
Grove dropped out of the lead when
Farmersville gained a 13-13 tie,
Mlneola clinched a tie for the 16-A
crown' by defeating Pittsburgh,
44-13.
Cameron Upsets
Cameron upsets Rosebud, 7-0, to
toss 21-A Into a tie between these
two clubs.
Lampasas, Burnet and Llano
remained in a triple tie for the
22-A lead ns Lampasas beat Ma
son 27-0. Burnet stopped Frede
ricksburg, 20-0, and Llano beat
Goldwaithe, 45-19.
Edns’i defeat of Karnes City
gave that city the 28-A crown,
while Freer took the 29-A flag by
defeating Aransas Pass, 18-0.
Minion won the 30-A race by
beating Pharr-San Juan-AlamotJB-
6.
Uvalde and Del Rio meet next
week for the 32-A title.
CotfdemSrln
Jim Voice Out
Atlanta, "The next tithe,”
said nine-year-old James McCurry,
"Well, FH just keep my big rnoutn
shut.” ;
J Young Jim said he was talking
with hit) uncle out in a field, when
the wind blew a cocklebur into his
mouth. ;
Jim swallowed —and lost his
voice, j ,5
The dpetor at the Ponce De Leon
Infirmary found the trouble. The
cokebur' had stopped in j i m ’ s
Larynx, [and was stuck between the
vocal cords.
The doctor got the bur out with
forceps.
Jim was able today to tell every
body about his operation.
ChE Seniors Plan
South Texas Trip
Senior chemical engineering ma
jors graduating at the end of the
current semester will leave Mon
day, Nov. 28, on a three day in
spection trip of a number of chem
ical plants in Southeast Texas,
Dr. J. I). Lindsay, head of the
Chemical Engineering Department
said tojay.
Purpose of the trip is primarily
educational. Students will be es
corted through different plants so
■they may have an opportunity to
observe methods and equipment ac
tually used in each field.
The frip will also give them an 1
opportunity to meet and talk with
men actively engaged in different
phases : of chemical engineering
work. ; c ^
Students will visit the South
Texas (jotton Oil Co. mill in Hous
ton and the Humble Oil and Re
fining Co. plant in Baytown Mon
day, Nov. 28. Tuesday they will
tour the E. I. Du Pont plant in
Orange and the Gulf Company Re
finery in Port Arthur.
The trip will be concluded with
visits to the Texas Co. Refinery
in iPort; Arthur and the McCarthy
Chemical Co. at Winnie on Wed
nesday.:
in
i- 'i
■ '• \ ;
-NYj
(Continued
forced down in Russia and not re
turned to American authorities. {.
Cites A>r Lift
| Speaking with a decided foreign
accent Nyaradi praised the Berlin
airlift as an example of American
power and coordination which trL
umphed over whgt Russia had com
siflered insurmountable obstacles.
"The airlift showed free peoples of
west that when America seta out
to do something she means to do
the job well.” He- said that the ef
fect of the airlift was to show the
Russians and the world America’s
air might.
America, however, has bungled
badly in her diplonjatic negotiations^
with the Russians Nyaradi contin
ued. Half of Europe is occupied by
Soviet troops, and those areas
under occupation are being “soviet-
ized. Accomplishment of this sdv-
ietization is not by popular support
but rather through ruthless purging
of opponents to ; communism and ,
rigid control of occupied countries’ !
economies, transportation, politics,
and military strength.
; China A Defeat j 1 M
This country, he charged, has
suffered a defeat !in China. But, he
added, China does not have the-
strategic or military importance
that many attach; to her.
Nyaradi traced the development
of Soviet resistance to cooperation;
with the Western nations. In 1946,
he said, Molotoy announced, the
break down of Rtissian-Western co-
Texas Asks Oklahoma
For Longhorn Steer
Dallas —The Dallas City Zoo
had to ask the federal government
for a longhorn steer.
The zoo’s steer died recently.
A truck will be sent Wednesday
to get the longhorn from the De
partment of the Interior at Cache,
Oku.,
Collard Announces
A&M Crops Team
F. G.iCollardj Jr., corps judging
team cojach, announced members of
the tea(n at the Collegiate Ameri
can Society of Agronomy meeting
last we^k.
Team? members are L. E. Mi-
keska, senior agronomy major from
Temple,; W. A. Kelling, senior ag
ronomy major from Chapel Hill,
and J. R. Walzel, senior agronomy
major from Cameron. J. E. Wil
liams, junior agronomy major from
Blossom, is team alternate,
To select the corps team, three
judging contests were held, one
each week for the past three weeks.
Scores pf each individual in the
three contests were compiled and
then averaged.
Mikeska had the highest aver
age, 1,696 points out of a possible
1,800 points. Kelling was Second
with 1,686 points. Walzel and Wil
liams scored 1,661 points qnd 1,606
points respectively.
Coplon and Lover
On Trial as Spies
New York, Nov. 15 UP)—Judith
Coplon and Valentin Gubjichev
were culled into federal court yes*-
terday for trial on charges of con
spiracy to commit espionage for
Russia, (9:30 a. m. CST).' i
The little 28-year-old brunette,
formerly a Department of Justice
employee, already is under sentence
of 40 months to 19 years in prL
had found fkKhar
optratjloh Inexpedient.
Hlnqe 1940 th« Russian pollc;
has bu eti aimed at integt itlng tin
araaa! under her occup! ion Into
the B0vl
the nex
In a question and answer
following his speech, Nyju
pressed bis views on the Y
viet orbit and preparing foi
war,
sesaioit
Jkradi ex-j 1
pressed his views on the\Yugo*la-
via-Russia controversy. Tito has
challenged the Russian belief that
all true! communism sterna from
Moscow. Both Yugoslavia and Rus-;
sia are , communist^ nations, but
t
sian Ortho-
volutionists
son.
Yugoslavia prefers wr own brand!'
of cofpijiunism.
Titoi while lacking popular su
port, flo^s find high favor atnoi
Yugoslavian mjlitary forces, Nya:
adi so id. The Marshal has take
good eare of his soldiers, who a
perpetuating his regime in Yugo
'plaviu,; Nyaradi claimed. The mili-j
tary strength of Yugoslavia
'only enqugh to preserve domestic
order.
He said that the Russ
jdox church and the revolutionist!
joined hands immediately upon the
Outbreak! of hostilities against the
Czar, |32; years ago. Religious per
secution in Russia is almost non-
existajit | because ‘the church if!
the tool df Stalin, Nyaradi charged!
In the flatelite countries there isi
religious: persecution by Commun-}
ists upop church members whose
faiths are linked with thd Westerr!
C1111 re hr, .
Russian communism, or socialism
as the Soviets call it, is rot Marx
ist socialism but rather a rude
blend |)f a few ideas of M* rx, many
Russian traditions, ami much of the
long ataiiding Russian imperialism
that has existed through tin- age*,,
Nyarttjdi [emphasized.
•y.i
belief that
j He ! expressed His
concerted; American actioh to stop'
Russian Advances In Europe and
Sia could swing the pendulum
from
inevitability of war to
-t-
She was convicted in Washington
last June 30 of taking secret
documents with intent to transmit
them to a foreign power. Tpe ex
government girl ha? been flee in
bail pending appeal and her second
trial here.
i - '
Today’s trial is the first for
Gubitchev, 32, Russian engineer
and suspended United Natiops em
ployee whom Miss Coplon 'said she
once loved.
The v Washington trial involved
the taking of government secrets.
The trial in New York involves the
alleged conspiracy of Miss Coplop,
and Gubitchev, at meetings jin this
vicinity, to get the secrets into Rus
sian hands.
The second perjury trial of Al
ger Hiss—which also involves al
leged efforts of Russian spies to
get U. S. secret—is set for [Thurs
day.
. It, like the Coplon-Gubitchev
trial, will be held m the federal
courthouse where eleven top U, $.
Communist leaders were sentenced
recently to prison terms arid fines.
They were convicted after a nine-
month trial op charges of conspir
acy to advocate violent overthrow'
of the goverpment.
in uncertain status of pehce. Thin
pan bp (|one only if the United
States will show her pdwer and
Her (Iptei jninution to resist furthe!
Russian attempts to advance th«
Cause |of communism in the world.!
! He Clos&d his speech with a Latin ;
quotation which, when translated,
read, [“If you want peaefr prepare
ftti'^ar.’’
Battalion
CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 4
i
SHU- WITH A BATTALION CLAiaiFIBD
AD. RatM , . , 3o » word p«r insortldn
with a ilfa minimum, Hpftm rniM In
(lUMirltd wtotion , , , «o« p*r column
Inch, Send nil clMMlflndn with remit-
tnnen to (he Student Aotlvtllee Offlco,
All ndir nhould be turned In by 10:00
# m, u( the dny before publlosllon,
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1949
NCRLLANILOU8 #
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College Station.
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"T*
t—Delta: Latha, 12" Swing; all toola.
1—Harley Davldaon Motor Cycle, Model IIS
1—20,000 B.T.U. Floor Furnace
319 Foeter Avenue, College Hill*
FOR BALE—Portable Wiehlng Machine.
Used only short time and Stilt In per
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Collets View after 0.
TWO TEAR OLD registered quarter mare
and a thre-year-old quarter gelding. See
Bill Hoover, Trailer V-2, Area ft.
Business men who do not adver-
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>RD 2-door sedan
is! dean and ready
Now 1949 FORD
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DOWN
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BRYAN MOTOR
COMPANY
“Your
High
way 6 8 — 416 N. Mala
Phone : 1-1607 —i Phone S-1SS$
BRYAN, TEXAS
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Friendly Ford Dealer"
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