Fir ( ' "iV A ■r- 1 | w W. H. Thompson Wed in Houston William H. Thompson, sophomore chemistry student of A Co. A. S. A., was married to the former Miss Jacqueline Perry in Houston, December 22. The ceremony was held at the Third Presbyterian Church, with Reverend R. P. Douglas officiat ing. After the wedding, a reception was held in the home of Mrs. Thompson’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Peerry. The couple has established resi dence in Houston. Turnabout LIT ABNERjA r . r I 13 r ':' TT TAi ’.f r ■ ' ■ DOWN T KICK >r setni out m r wot roLK* AnouNo.r J H/r MutruLST— nrrv miu.yun mn—Anr wMorsi) thet Boyle’s Column -stm. ff m?i f •In., :■ y: By AI Cnpp son-’T-we gotta err tw* _ KK5MICS BACK r AUSTUALlA.'r, THEY IS JEST AS BAD AS NJOW." y' D. L. “Buddy” Boyd (left) and King Egger, sen ior members of the Town Hall staff, discuss the night’s program with pianist Jacques Abram. Groneman Hits News Jaci Chris H. Groneman, hea.l of the industrial education department, hit the jackpot in news last week. Groneman received first an in- Old Newspapermen Stunned By Death of New York Sun AFS-ASME, 17:80 p. Building. Joint What’s Cooking esday, Jim. 10, m., Room 3p3, 'M. E. I7'i "■A' ‘ •I ■ m Grad School Exam Here Feb. 3 and 4 Graduate Record Examinations, required to enter certain graduate schools, will be given on the cam pus Feb. 1 and 4, according to Dr. Walter AT Varvel, professor of psychology. Applications for permission to take the examination roust be re ceived at Princeton University be- for|e January 21, said Dr. Varvel. Application blanks may be obtain ed 1 ; directly from the Educational Teesting Service, P. O. Bob 592, Princeton, New Jersey, or from Dr, Varvel in room 102, Academic Building. y- 1 Prospective students should in- . quire of the graduate school in which he is interested whether or not he \fill be required to offer the examination in partial satis- - faction of admission requirements. For his second accomplishment of the week, his seventh book, Or namental Tin Craft, was announced for publication .by. the Brjice Pub lishing Company of Milwaukee. q} Dorm 15 Student Senatorship Open Applications are now being tak en for student senator for Dorm itory 15,; Roy Nance, co-chairman of the election committee, said to day. AH men Interested in applying should turn in their applications to Mrs. Helen Roberts in tfie Stu dent Activities office before Jan uary 17, Nance said. Coastal Cops Get Woolens Glendale, Calif. <•#>)—] letective Capt. Walter E. Hegi’s face is as red as the full-length all-wool longies he received toda; > fcom a couple of school day pals |n Texas, but he’s grateful. Police cars are chilly in Califor nia’s current freeze but Glendale Chief Carl Eggers banne 3 use of heaters in the cars, on the ground that officers might catch told leav ing warm cars to make cc Id inves tigations. Hegi’s friends in Petersburg, Tex., Paul Sams and “Fat” Hag- ood, read about this situation, so they sent him the wooliesl and a not which said: “We nptice that Texans are tak ing care of Texans in New York during the water shortage by send ing them' plenty of good Texas water, so we think it’s only fair that fellow Texans who are in frigid California should* be taken care of also. We feel it qur Boy Scout duty to see that you have good, heavy underwear. Please ex cept it With our warmest wishes.” By HAL BOYLE New jYork—lA 1 )—It ifc a sad and bitter tilling to dee a great news paper die. And that’s the way it was last week when the famous New York Sun ceased publication as a sep arate entity after more than 116 years. Bought by publisher Roy How ard, its good will and name will live on as the merged New York WorldTelegram and the Sun. But the New York Sun as such —the Sun ' that! Charles A. Dana made into a national institution— was dead. That is the way the men and women who nut it out felt. After the paper had been put to bed for the last time, they held a wake for it in a nearby bar. It was the quietest wake in newspaper history. Only about a score of the edi torial staff of 190 attended the informal obsequies. The rest, stun ned, had simply gone home. An odd thing about the wake was that few of the men and wo men talked about how the shutdown would affect themselves, how hard it would be for most of them to find new jobs Jn an overcrowded field. What they wanted to talk about was their paper, the New York Sun, which some of them had worked on for 35 to 45 years. For a newspaper staff, like an army, has pride of service. And the Sun I . wmim LEON B WEISS > •. i y * . c.j ' jj: , I 1 i _ j |: ■ j # j • • Gigantic Specials MEN S FINE Reductions Ranging 20% . - 25 % 0=2=30&*> 4 • • SUITS - 30% SLACKS ; , j! 100% Virgin Wool Flannel Former Pricey $13.95 and $16.50 Now L| $6.98 (NOT A FULL, SIZE fyANGE) MEN’S WHITE Values to $3.65 —■ lor Only $1.99 o=3=i:Ot==s> SHIRTS SPORT COATS - All Wool Brown or Bine — Sizes 35 to 38 $9.99 j ” i v ’ i 1 T , \ PLASTIC RAIN COATS Big Value $1.98 - ■ 'jly' .7 Substantial Savi ngs On Many Itenns H' .I- I, . i ■u: LEON . H ^ had been America’s first “news paperman’s newspaper.” - How could anything 116 years old die?” Asked one reporter, un believingly. Pulitzer-prize winning reporter Malcolm Johnson, who wrote the story of the Sun’s sale, told them Sigma Xi Party Set at Parkers The Sigma Xi Club will hold its annual banquet at the Maggie Parker Dining Room at 6:45 p. m. Tuesday, Jan. 17. Dr. R. D. Lewis, retiring presi dent, will give the address. Sigma Xi members may bring as many guests as they wish. Ticket* are $2.00 per plate, and may be pur chased from Charles LaMotte, Bi ology: Walter Varvel, Education and Psychology: Robert F. Cain, Horticulture: Carl M. Lyman, Bio chemistry and Nutrition; E. B. Reynolds, Agronomy; R. H. Leroy, Chemistry; Travis J. Parker, Geo logy; Harold Heady, Range and Forestry. Dr. Bradley M. Patten, profes sor of anatomy at the University of Michigan, wTH speak on Tues day, Feb. 7. He will speak on “The First Heart Beats and the Begin ning of the Embryonic Circula tion.” He will show movies and slides to illustrate his lecture. Dr. Patten is a National Lec turer for the Society of the Sigma Xi Club. He will arrive in the morn ing of Feb. 7 and be available for conference during the day. Anyone desiring to confer with him should contact Dr. J. R. Couch of the Poultry and Biochemistry Department. all he knew. He said the assign mant was given to him by 70.year- old executive editor Keats Speed, one of New York’s best-loved edi tors. And he said Speed wept when he. gave it to him. Johnson, worked all day In secret on the story—so the Sun wouldn't be scooped on its l«st day. And when he handed in the story, the city editor read the first page, and broke into tears. He asked Johnson if he would like a byline. “I told him that was a story nt Sun reporter would want a by line on,” Johnson said. And it bore no byline. The men talked at the bar about some of the great Sun reporters of the past—Frank Ward O’Malley and Richard Harding Davis. A few were bitter. They ques tioned the management explana tion that the Sun’s sale had been! made necessary by rising produc tion costs and falling circulation and advertising revenue. These fac tors have helped kill many met ropolitan dalies in the last half century. “The papei 1 just wasn’t in touch with the people like it., was in Dana’s day,” said one young re porter. Others differed. There r were many attempts at diagnosis. But postmortems don’t bring anything back to life. The Sun had set. That was the numbing fact. John Fuller Will Wed Emma Galvin John L. Fuller Jr., junior AH major from Mason, has recently become engaged to Miss Emma Jeanne Galvin of Kansas City, Missouri. •. . • - Miss Galvin is a sociology ma jor at Texas State College Women at Denton, Texas. Shock Test Shows Bodies in Crashes ■ • t//. ■ h "• j A -I * I I WEISS Station : , , \ I Hawthorne, Calif., Jan. 9—(A*)—- The Air Force, using human guin ea pigs is proving that .the hu man body—“a leather sack with a few bones and 14 quarts of liquid" —can stand crashes amazingly if properly protected. Maj. John P. Stapp of the Medi cal Corps, who gave the de scription of a body in describing tests resembling plane crashes, said that on some runs of a rock et-propelled vehicle running on a track it was braked from 150 miles an hour to 76 miles an hour in one-fifth of a second. It’s like stopping an automobile going 75 miles an hour in nine feet. Such sudden deceleration, he said, can be compared with plac ing a man under a mattress and placing a load of four tons on him very briefly. Subjects Examined After such shock tests the sub jects were examined for changes in pulse, temperature, respira tion, kidney function and heart action. “There was no effect that would differ materially from a brief per iod of violent exercise,” he report- $ YOU MUST HAVE Taka yoar home-town newspaper lor your home-town news. It is doing a job no other newspaper JU your second newspaper, The Dallas Morning Mews offers: Cossetote wodd. MOooal ad stale mws wt* A*. W. Wire- Sue**: IMs Wee? every’ the We eeeeee or eaH year loerf dMribelse. Sundey. ■ i-.'i THE DALLAS MORNING MEWS. Dodkss 1 Tern The Dadkas Mnruing Mews, j 1 of ffeeee. #•••••• was »SBeB«a»aee»«'»eeeeeB«e»es»«mt J I v - 5 Tneetintt to hear SP A&m'COLLEGIATE 4-H CLUB, Monday, January 9, ‘7:^5 ;p. m„ Moore House, (south of ; Extension Service bufldingB). Formeiv 4-H Club members invited. AGRONOMY SOCIETY. 7:30 Tuesday, Jan. 10, in A&I Lecture room. j j CAMERA CLUB, Monday, Jan uary 9, 7:80 p, m., Physics Build ing, room i 32. ENTOMOLOGY SOCIETY, Tuesday, Jan. 19, 8 p. j Boom Longhorn Director Suffers Strokes Col. George Hurt, director of the Texas University 'Longhorn Band, is confined to Set9h Hos pital, Austin, after suffering strokes two weeks ago. fj. \ * Doctors said he has a cerewral disturbance and low blood pres sure, with little strength in one arm. He is unable to speak. Only members of his family are allowed to visit him. 10, Science Hall. Dr. E. F. Kipling W, FL?GHT A, 9807th VOLUN TEER AIR RESERVE TRAINING SQUADRON, Monday, January 9, 7:30 p. m„ room 30f, Goodwin Hall, Fred E. Smith and William S. McCulley, speakers. HANDICRAFT GROUP of the College Women’s Sociial .Cli Tuesday, Jan. 10, 9:30! a. i YMCA Cabinet Room. [Etl Ruybom of A&M Industrial Educatior Dept: will speak. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION WIVES, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 7:30 p m., South Solarium, YMCA- Elec tion of officers. JUNIOR CHAPTER, A V M / AUX- regular meeting Wednesday night, Jan. 11, 7:30 p.ni,, 'South Solarium, YMCA. Election of of fleers. S. A. M.f-Tuesday, January 10 7:30! p. in., room 301, Goodwir Hall, Dick Price, speaker; elec tions ‘of officers for Spring S<‘ mestpr. SUL ROSS RESEARCH (iLUB Wednesday, January 11, 5 L -p. m., steps of Agriculture Building coats and ties or No. 1 uniform foi Aggieland picture. Baita lion CLASSIFIED ADS Page 4 ; b MONDAY, JANUARY 9, [1950 SHU, WITH A BATTALION CLASSIFIED AD. Rat*a . . . 35c a word p«r Insertion with a 25c minimum. Bpac*! rates m Classified Section . . . 50c per column inch. Send all classifieds with remit tance to the Student Activities Office. All ads should be turned In by 10:00 ~a.m. of the day before publication. • FOB SALE e! Official Student - Facility DIRECTORY Of Texas A&M College 50c per copy Phone 4-5444 ed. The story of the tests, released today by the Air Force and North rop Aircraft, Inc., said ttye expert ments, started in 1947,! are be ing conducted at Edwards Air Force Base on the desert near Muroc. Calif. The test vehicle, weighing 1,500 pounds, travels on a 2,000-foot railroad-type track. Four rockets propel it. At a point 1,250 feet from the start there are 46 sets of hydraulic brakes which can exert a total braking pressure of 1,056,000 pounds. Determine Tolerance Purpose of the tests is to de termine tolerance of human bodies and to develop and test equipment for protecting crews and passen gers involved in crash landings or ditchings. Northrop Engineer Geoi Nichols said it was found that ny. Ion yeb straps three inches wide give much greater shock protec j tion than the present straps used by the Air Force, which are only one and one-half inches wide. H4 said it also was found that the harness needs more straps, includ ing an additional chest strap. i 'l or Mail 50c to STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Texas A&M College College Station, Texas <>=23013=0 JT [-.j i; —On Sale at Annex— SNACK BAR & NEWS STAND 1937 CHEVROLET. Good condition, rex 208, Dorm 14, or Box 4818. ; 1948 CUSHMAN—Perfect conditioner Priced to aell — Sbe Donald Klee. Black's Pharmacy, Kant Gate. • MISCELLANEOUS • EXPERT REWEAVINO done at my home. Damaged by burns, tears, moth hdles. Work guararitetd. Agnes Tydlacka. , 2007 8. College Road. Phone 2-7120. ATTENTION STUDENTS: I Will Identify your plants at my home nt ten cents each. H. B. Parks, 209 Highland Street, College Station, Texas, Phone. 4-8177. # LOST AND FOUND e , LOS£T: Spur tie chain with Maaonlc*Em blem. Reward, C. W. Landiss, P.E. Dept. ’ , i j ■, ; ~ ♦ HELP WANTED 1 ADVERTISING SALESMAN wanted for Student Publications. Apply mornlngK t at BATTALIpN Advertising Desk. Reclamation Bureau In Need of Engineers f Washington, Jan, d-j-tJP)—The Bureau of Reclamation jput in a cair for student engineers. today, ' Examination will be j given by the Civil jService Cjommissioi shortly after! Jan. 26. Some ap. pointments would be in (Texas \ VI TT Dr. Car OPTO With Youp 203 S. Phb: Consult Iton R. Lee MKTR1ST Visual Ih-oblems Main &— Bryan me 2-1662 Insure Tomorrow EUGENE RUSH, G American National 19 North Gate . hi • 1 Today i^ral Agent surance Co. Above A|ggieland Pharmacy I X V .1 PERSONALLY YOURS.. . FOUNTAIN PEN !—tr1r—-ft?—r—— Choose The Rig, For The Way rOEt Write { Tfce worid’a largest variety of point style* to cbooes Dam. Choose the point that’s right foe you and St it into the barrel yourself! V, J V -Urn. ftSfa.4. \ i The '' i! ange Store Texas Aggie*” ;,V