The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 22, 1950, Image 1

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    i- , | i
aty Of *
College Station
Official Newspaper
• ■' r ■ _LL-
Battalion
rhj 'Mi' rArrrMPOFCnr nv a a 'rrn a d.aa s'fA11 rvc
PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE
r* 'r't
Nation’s Top
Collegiate Daily ,
1949 Survey •
Volume 49: Number 94
COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1950
Price Five Cents
William .E. Jonett is director of
the TSCW Modern Choir which
will appear in concert in Guion
Hall Saturday night at 7:30 p.
m. \
ManE Program
Has ‘Top Men’
Here March 1
\ - ’ \
The third annual confer
ence of the Maniagement En
gineering Department will be
held here on March 1 and 2
“to present ideas on certain
aspects of management, and get
ideas on r^ucing operating cost
by getting persons who are ex
perts in the field to make talks,”
according to R. tf. Bruckhart, Con
ference directpr.X
>P'
J : The~ two day conference pro
gram will be made u p of confer
ences, luncheon sessions, and a
banquet session on ^Wednesday,
Mach 1 at 6:30 p. m. \
About 25(&. of the people at
tending will’ be top executives and
a Vnajority will be manageYpent
, heads. V. M. ’Faires, chairman of
the conference said.
Registration for the conference
la *tchedul«d' to begin at 8:30 a,
m, and continue through 2:00 p,
m, Wednesday, March 1, In the
YMCA lobby, The registration fee
will lie $10,00,
The conference will open at 0:30
% a, m, Weilneaday with an add re**
of welcome by FY C. Holton, Pre*.
Idem of AA^Vt ('ollege, Fred V,
Gnrdoer, - imUmtHal Management,
('onsultant of Milwaukee, Wl*.
emmln, will pre$$nt *ttttl$tlc* for
management In coat control,
The afternoon eeialon will be
gin at 1:30 In the YMCA Chapel
with a discussion on the manage
ment audit by W, W. Finlay of
8MU. Herman T,. i Welchi of the
Reed Roller Hit Company tyill con
tinue the afternoon program with
a talk on ways of reducing tlirect
labor costs.
The banquet session is scheduled
to begin at 6:30 in Sbisn Ball with
H. W, Barlow, Dean of the school
of Engineering,, presklingr An af
ter dinner discussion will be led
by W. E. Lee of General Motors
Corporation.
Thursday morning’s program
will begin at 9 a. m. ip the YMC.A
Chapel. A discussion by John Mc
Kee of the Ford Motor Company
and K. W. Patterson of the
Emsco Derrick and - Equipment
Company head the mornings pro
gram.
Concluding the Management
Conference will be Cal C. Cham
bers with a talk on Cost Control
in a Jobbing Plant. Chambers is
president and general manager
of Texas Foundries at Lufkin. -
Ex-Bryai
Must Re]
A former manager of the
an-Chamber of Commerce mgst
imburse that organisation' w
CC Head
'ay! $1,92(1
m,- Tuesd ly,
$1,924.06
Feb. 28.
Harry Logan, who was for
years secretary-manager o
Bryan «roup. will be subject tb
flcial reclamation of the indebtjsd-
ness, unless he pays the req
amount, the Chamber’s hoai
directors decided In meeting
day morning. i ■
A salary uf $440.40 {plus j$|00
expense money may be ded
from the amount, the boa
cided.
Watched by a crow
enoe room audience, J
cent, first vice-president and
committee chairman, read
recommendation for payment! Ex
cerpts from Vincent’s report ’**"
reprinted as follows:
Recommendation Read
"This figure is understood
not contain any sums which 1
be due to the Bryan Industrial
Foundation, Inc.
“It is recommended that M
H. Conklin continue his audi
the records', of the Bryan Ind
trial Foundation, Inc., and Men
such audit is complete, the
cers of that corporation be au
orized to negotiate any differ* n
between that corporation and '
depository involved, provided
such negotiations are fair
just and full appreciation! of
cornoration kept in mind.
“When Mr. Conklin has com
ed this portion of his audit,
requested that his bill be pre:seat
ed and_ full payment made.
Amendments Added
Amendments By W. F.' Da
and Coulter Hoppess establish,
the time for payment and the le
gal redress to be taken if neces
sary.
The audit committee’s recom
mendation was prepared by Cfit ir-
man Vincent, R. I. Bernatb Jr.,
B. F. Swindler, Judge A. S. \ysre,
Brazos Varisco, and Jack Lester.
Lester was not present, howeyer,
at the meeting.
City Attorney Richard Cobke
sat in on the meeting, to render
legal advice. ^
Logan told the audit group
he was ready to do as the lMrd
wants.
Swindler, Chamber president,
SMU Law Profs
In Club Tal
ProfenHor* Roy R. Ray land
Whitney R. HiutIn of SMIU
talked informally to the
Law club TuCNday nigh
how the undergraduate a^u
dent cnii best prepare hlmsel
Law School.
Ray Is Qhalrman of Corrlcjul
and Supervisor of Instbuctloi
the SMU Law School and ii
outhor of “Texas Law of
dcncej’’ )
Harris was formerly a pro
tor in the war crimes trials
Nurenburg, Germany, and isj bow
a vhdting professor of la
SMU. He received the awai
Legion of Merit for his woifk
the U. S. Chief of Counsel
in Germany, and later serv.
Deputy chief. Legal /
Branch of the Military G<
ment of Germany.
A lawyer must fundamentally
be a man of character, cult ire,
and possess wit and intellife ice,
Harris said.. He said that itf J
canon of the legal profession
while pleading a case, the lawyer-
must be guided by his own cedi: of
morals and integrity. This i
grave reponsibility and trust,
said.
Harris’ advice to the aspiring
law student is to acquire a
usage of English and a
general background.
thought, however*, that Logan was
"playing on our sympathies” by
tilling oft h>s depleted financial
condition, j I '
County Attorney Davis Grant
was present at the meeting! to ex
plain functions of the grand jury,
should legal action be desired by
tbe Chamber. ] •
Class ’52 Meets,
Discusses Plans
For Soph Ball
Plans for the Sophomore (Sweet
heart Ball, Scheduled for th4 night
of March 4, were discussed at a
meeting of the Sophomore Class
last night In the Assembly Hall.
Corsages will be optional for the
Ball, R. A, “Dick” Ingels, class
president, announced, after (a dis
cussion and vote by the class.
“Invitations to the Ball are
available in every outfit,” Ingels
said. 'They include all concessions
at the Ballj—refreshments, hat
check, and programs.”
Deadline for entering pictures
in the sweetheart contest for the
Ball will be Friday, February
24. at 5 p. m., Ingels emphasized.
All entries must be taken to
.Student Activities, second floor
of Goodwin Hall.
In gels cited the date as falling
on Sports Day, an annual A&M
Saturday event. Participating in
the Sports Day ceremonies Will be
the Rangerettes of Tyler Junior
College, a | group of 100 ; girls.
The Rangerettes will soon be ex
tended an invitation to attend the
Ball that night, Ingels said.
A financial renort, showihg the
class has $120.29 in itsY treasury,
was also made by Ingels.
The Ball will begin at 8:30 p. m.
and will have music by the Acgie-
land Qrchestra, Ingels said.j Dress
will b0 fornial. , |
Progress on the Student Memorial Center Is
rapid, as shown above. The structure is due to lie
completed Kept. 1. It is port of the $6,$93,006
construction progrlam now underway here.
Aggies In 60-58
Win Over TCU
By HAROLD
with a thrilling 60-!
victory over TCU's
overtime
fast-breaking
Crawford Injured
In Auto Accident
LeRoy Crawford, 21-year-old
junior of “B” Field Artillery, was
hospitalized in Texas City Mon-
day following Injuries obtained
when » car he was riding ib over-
turned and rolled three tlfnes,
Religious Talks
Planned Here
Discussion groups similar to
those held during Religious
Emphasis Week will be held in
five dormitories over the cam
pus Thursday night, at 7 :30,
King Egger, Cadet Chaplain bf the
Corps, has announced.
The purpose of these groups
will be to clarify questions aris
ing from last week’s services and
discussions, plus any new topics
desired by the groups. Several
local ministers have agreed to di
rect the series of discussions which
will last for five consecutive weeks.^
Leaders of the groups will be
Reverend Norman Anderson, pas
tor of the Presbyterian Church of
College Station; Reverend Robert
Sneed, associate pastor of A&M
Methodist Church; and Reverend
O. G. Helvey, St. Thomas Chapel.
The-Reverend James Moody of
the A&M Christian Church will be
asked to lead bne of the groups
but is out bf town at the present
time, Egger said. .-Ifi
The first meeting of the groups,
Thursday, night, will be to get ac
quainted and to help students clar
ify and Refine tbeir questions
thereby giving the leaders an idea
of what, the greater majority of
students ] want to discuss.
The discussions will he held In
the lounge* of dorms 2, I), 18,
Legett and Hart Hull,
Sntokey Senators Slap Tax
Slated to Stifle Stogies
Austin, Tex., Felt. 22Y lA’t
Cigars got branded as tbe rich
man’s smoke In the Senate yes.
terday.
But the Senators just j leaned
hack In their red' leather (chairs,
plopped their re-soled shoes up on
their desks, took another puff
and voted 16-12, not to tax {them.
* When the vote was taken, a
hand and/or mouth count showed
four senators smoking cigars, four
smoking cigorettes, two smoking
pipes and one munching (candy.
Sen. Strauss, the genial 300-
pound solon from Hallettsville,
surreptiously slipped his hand into
his pocket, brought out some sug
ared peanuts, crammed his mbiith
full and kept aloof from the whole
proceedings. Senate rules j forbid
such snacks.
- “Why shouldn’t we tax cigars ? ”
Sen Rogers Kelley of Edinburg
demanded during debate on tbe
cigarette tax bill.
“Here we jare taxing the poor
man’s smoke. Why don’t we tax
the rich man’s smoke?”
“Smoking cigars is one | of the
most outstanding luxuries! that I
Library Display $hotvs Life
During 4 Year of ^Revolutions 9
“1848”, a new exhibition prepar
ed by the editors of Life Magazine,
is now on display on the main, floor
of Cushing Memorial Library. It
was prepared by that magazine
In their aeries of exhibitions on
the history of Western culture.
Twenty-fouf large panels pic
ture that, year of the 19th. cen
tury which some historians have
called “the turning point of his
tory at which history didn’t turn.”
I . The explanation of thU per
iod goe* beyond the magaslne
article and include* many rare
' pictures from 19th century per
iodical* sad other sourer* com-
temimrary with the em.'The ex
hibit will continue through Feb.
28, according to librarian Mins
B. J’Nell Fowler.^
The absolute ifionarch* of Bu-
hope met at the Congress of Vi
enna in 1816 and smothered 'but
did not extinguish the fires of two
decades of unrest and Ni
turmoil.'
Nor did they solve the co|
problem confronting them i
that of how to protect them
against the ravages of their
mutually exclusive ambitions
attempts at a solution are
known ae tho Metternlch Ree
and the Concert of Europe.
The Metternlch Reaction
its alma repressing civil 1
by means at a secret po
police and stopping the
of Europe from direct In
by a coalition of the powei
ever the absolute monarchy
aasailad. These policies and
failures led to the revolutt
crisis which erupted all ov<
rope In 1848.
“1848” attempts to Idea
something of the complex n
of the events which cams
ves
own
elr
now
Jon
* conrtu
terventk)
fef* w! ten
leal
newt
n
len-
vaa
head in the turbulent year.
The exhibition is divided into
five sections, which concern Eng
land anti Industrialism, France,
Austria, Italy, and Germany. (
The title panel is a reproduc
tion in color of Delacroix’s “Lib
erty Leading the People” and in
followed by a peortralt of Prince
Metternlch and a painting of the
diplomats at the Congress of VI-
The last panel contains
toon from Punch of that
and a painting of Now
City'a Mattery as It was
ita landed there la
from Europe after
The panels Include a
text which attempt* to ex|
political and economic foi
made 184l>the year of
lions.” Z
a car-
year
York
when
their
1848.
■unning
p aln the
»s that
revolu-
brlleve exist* In the stole of Tex-
os tmloy , . ”
Hen. Rny Cnusins of lieoumont
hod storied the whole thing bv
sending up an amendment to the
cigarette tax bill to levy n tax
of 20 per rent of the retail val
ue on “cigars, cheroots, stogies
or little cigars.’’
After that, he just sat back
quietly puffing on a cork-tipped
cigarette while, the debate floated
around him. ”
Sen. A. M. Aikin Jr., of Paris,
crushed his cigarette out in an
ash tray and was the first one on
his feet to object.
“This is putting an entirely
new item in the bill,” he declared.
“Will the senator yield?” Kelley
interposed.
"Senator, will you yield to the
senator from Hidalgo,” President
of the Senate, Grady Hazelwood
of Amarillo, asked Aikin.
Aikin iust nodded.
“Now, I don’t smoke—cigars or
cigarettes,” Kelley began. “But
there’s no use in our sitting here
laying the tax on thick on tbe
poor mail’s smoke, while we let the
rick man’s smoke go free. It isn’t
equitable distribution.
But Aikin interrupted again—
“furthermore, senator, it isn’t
germane! I move to table the
amendment.”
That, did it. Cigars weren’t ger
mane. They weren’t germane to the
'eantion of the bill, which said the
bill wbuljd be about a tax on cig
arettes, without even mentioning
cigars.
So Hazelwood rapped his gavel
and began: “The senator from
Jefferson sends up an amend
ment; the senator from Lamar
moves to table. Do you want a
roll call vote?"
“Yes,” Kelley demanded. "Yaa,
I want a roll call. I want to know
how many people are opposed to
taxing c|gars.”
The clerk began calling the roll
of the senators. Sen. Jimmy Phll-
llpe of Angleton, who has never
been seen In public without a
cigar In hla hand, craated a atir
when he voted against tabling the
propose! tax. Sen. Nevellle Col
son of Nevaeote, the only woman
^ - had slipped quietly out of
of the Senate, before vot
ing began.
Straus i swallowed one more bite
- msUuI apd voted “Aye” to table
New Water Supply
Will Be Sufficient
By L. O. TIEDT
“Our developing water supply
will be sufficient tartake care of
Jtioth college and College Station
users,” M. E. Jones told members
of the American Society of Civil
Engineers last night.
Jones filled in for Homer H.
Hunter, who was unable to attend
the meeting. The speaker has been
working with the Dallas group
making plans for the new wells
since the wells were first planned.
He received his Masters Degree
from A&M in 1949.
The college was faced with sev
eral solutions to the water prob
lem, Jones told the C. E. majors.
We could have continued buying
the water from Bryan or help
them build new wells and increase
the water supply, developed a
Kiwanis Club
Hears Harsch
Aspects of Communist op
erations in Iron Curtain satel
lite countries were discussed
by ffoMph C. Harach at yes
terday's meeting of the Col
lage Station Klwnni* Club.
A widening gup between the
people mul government* of theae
eountrle* Im neen by the Kjlwnni*
*|>enker, chief of the Washington
Bureau of the Chrlntlnn Science
Monitor. Imposition of /'foreign”
bureaucrat* from the Moscow
tmining school, which teiids to
nrouse nntlonnlistlc spirit, I* the
Imsls for Hnrsch's oredlctlon.
“We coo not Iook for on early
revolt .against Moscow,” he warn
ed, "nor can we expect any revo-
lotion to restore pre-war condi
tions to Europe. Communism has
done too much for many of the
people' of eastern Europe, down
trodden by generations of dicta
tors”. ,
Later part of the Kiwanis pro
gram was devoted to recognition
of the work of the athletic de
partment at A&M Consolidated
High School. Charles j La Motte,
chairman of the boys and girls
committee, introduced Les Rich
ardson, school superintendent.
Richardson in turn presented Jim
Bevens, junior high coach, and
O. B. Chafin, high school coach,
who told of the record of Con
solidated High basketball teams
this year.
rbservoir or developed a new well
f^eld of our ow0. After carefiil
consideration of the problem, col
lege authorities
the latter action,
decided to
Jones said.
The four wells scheduled to he
built have beeii contracte'd to
the Lane Wells Company for $20,-
000 each. The contract guarantees
the college four Wells producing a
ipinimum of 450 gallons of low
mineral .content water per minute,
the speaker added.
Seven and one-half to eight
miles of line will be required to
Carry the water from the wells
to the feeder-breeder station,
where a second Tump station will
be erected. At the site of the
wells, a pump station, an aerator,
4nd a reservoir will be constructed,
A two million gallon reservoir,
pump station, and a chlorine unit
will be constructed at the feeder-
breeder station. The entire water
project will coat around 840
thousand dollars. Jones told lis
teners. Construction on the wells
and lines should be comuleted hy
some time this summer, the speak
er added.
US Breaks Off
With Bulgaria!
Washington, Fob, 22 (API
(—The United Staten broke off
relations with Communlet
Hulgnrla today in the tough-
out American action ngnlntt
nny of I he Soviet bloc cnuntrUix,
Climaxing a “long series of lh-
'tolerable restrictions and Indignl-
tarlea” against the U. H, Legntlpn
In Sofia, American Minister Don
ald R. Heath and hla staff were
(ordered home.
The State Department demand
ed the recall of Dr. Peter Voutpv
and his smaller Bulgarian staff
(in Washington.
j ' It was the first formal Amor-
'ican diplomatic 'break with any
country since World War II.
Officials indicated the move re
flected a harder diplomatic atti
tude by President Truman and
Secretary of State Acheson toward
the Moscow satellites.
A ban on American travel in
Hungary is already in effett.
There have been vieled hints in
recent notes to Communist Czech
oslovakia and Poland and that re
lations might be severed. Ail
; j: *
uiMfS-
> //’.i*
Ilfr'M:
OaaMer Thomas Lee,
out Home valuable
Staff. Thq exhibit of
tatat through Feb. $7
e, of the College MUtion StaXe Bank, points
folding money to Bob Mitchell of the Corps
4 rare currency will remain oh display In the
$7. \
Horned Frogs before 8,500 fan*.
Bill Turnbow’* three free-ahot*
were the only Aggie faille* in the
extra *e**lon, but that wa* enough
to give A&M Ita xtxtn conference
win- TCU hadn't!lost a game on
I heir home hardwoods all aeaaon,
Anttea
A&M's win wax It* first In the
OollMUm In seven year* and waa
TCU'* flrat heme defeat In two
campaign*. Baylor's |43-41 Vlotpry
over Texas last night forced the
Bears Into a second place tie with
SMU.
Arkansas strengthened their grip
on first place with a 61-38 con
quest over Rice in ( Fayetteville.
A&M moved next tq Baylor and
SMU, shoving TCU below with a
5-6 record.
George McLeod, the Frog’s 6’ 5”
hook shot specialist, collected 27
points to cop high point honors
in the high-scoring contest.
Walter Davis madk dp for his
last two low-scoring outings by
meshing the hoop fpr 22 points
before he fouled out late in the
oyer-time period, despite hip four
personals going into halftime.
The bitterly fought contest was
Author Visits
A&M to Get
Magazine Data
Llewellyn White, vice-direc
tor of the commission which
wrote “Freedom of the Press”
and present National Affairs
Editor of the Reporter, was
a visitor on the campus yester-
day. A , j
“I am getting ta-acquainted
with Texas and al*b trying to
line up some prospective contri
butors for the Reporter”, he ipuid.
White spent soma time with the
Extension Service Collecting data
on Texas agriculture,
“I was particularly Impressed
with the improved knowledge In
the use of cover enpp* in TeypH”,
he «nld. j
In addition to being vice-direc
tor of the general report, “Free
dom of the Pres*"] -White Wrote
two of the seven book* himself,
"People Hpeak to i People'', and
"The American Ratilo” were hi*
personal work*,
Time, Life, ami Fortune maga
zine* flimnced the commissions
work. Although \8 few of : the
hook* are still h*l|ig used, none
have been published since 1947,
he said.
"There was a need for the re
port* and there wi|is a very good
idea behind them (but they ^ere
riot ns effective (a* they could’
have been", White; said.
White has been In journalistic
work for more thari 30 years. He
has worked for the I New York'
Tribune, News^veek, and' the New
York Sun. He also worked abroad
for the State Department for a
while. :
White is, now roving national
affairs ediior of t,he Reporter, a
magazine founded 10ss than a lyear
ago by Max Ascoji^ His job not
only takes him, all over the Uni
ted States but to foreign countries
also. | 1
John DeWitt took a hot paaa from
Jewell McDowell and crammed I in
a lay-up In the last 25 seconds:of
the regulation game.
DeWItt’a bucket gave hia team
a 67-66 margin, but nine seconds
before the finish he fouled Mcl-eoU
who made hla last poltit of the
night to force the Issue into over
time as time ran out with the
count atalemated at 67-67.
No field goals were registered: In
the tenZe overtime a* the Af*
smartly played poaaeaeion ball af
ter Turnbow'* charities had given
them n 60-68 margin. „ r
In the final one Meoond of play.
Davl* fouled Oene Schmidt, 6 , :4 , '
veteran guard, while the Frog wa*
■hooting, but the pressure wa* too
much for the TCU captain, and (he
missed both trie*. ,
The Frogs were masters for the
first 17 minutes holding the lead
by virtue of McLeod's deadly
hooks, and 'guard Harvey From-
me’s one-handed puihp shot*. Da
vis, Turnbow, and Martin kept
A&M in close range of the lead:
McDowell knotted the count (at
33-33 on a two-handed pump shot
with three minutes left In the fifat
half before Davis committed his
fourth foul, sending McLeod to the...
free throw line. McLeod made his
free-shot, but A&M surged irtto
the lead for the first time on Mc-
DoWell’s two gift-tosses, leading
at the half by 35-34.
TCU Lead*
Gene Schmidt put TCU
the lead early in the second
with a long set-shot arid a
McDowell made the score!
read 37-38 seconds later, but
qultk long ones by Fromme and
Tommy Taylpr’s 10 footer gave
the Purple its greatest margin of
the evening—43-37.
Coach Buster Brannon’s boys j
again controlled the game and: it ,
appeared that the Aggies were bn (
their way to their third defeat 'in ;
four SWC exposure*.
Play was fast and furious diir--
ing the final fifteen minutes, ahd
the officials had to stop play mapy
times to wipe the ball'free <5f per
spiration.
The Farmers were able to gfet ;
their share of backboard grabs arid
tap-ins for the first time in two
weeks. DeWitt, Davis, Martin, apd
Turnbow grabbed moat Ag De-
bounds. I.
With eight minutes teft TCU
waa ahead 6S-60. [From then until
the 40th minute, the *
ing aubaided.
Turnbow'* lay-up puljed the da
det* to within one point
lead before a double foul wa*
ed on Kddle Houser and MeLei
McLeod made It 54-52,'
mlNMed hi* trp, but compnnNu
with a lay In lu knot the !mnu» at
64 all with three minute* and H0
Mecond* remaining, ,
McLeod Ninin to hi* left and
Nllpped a right-hand brink Into the
net and, Mecond* later, McDowell
made 11 66*66 on a free shot. Both
loam* failed to ocrateh until De
Witt sank hi* pre**ure bucket with
les* than a half minute to play.
Ten eecond* were lef t when Me- j
Lend drew a foul and calmly *tep-
ped to the free throw line to throw i
the game Into overtime.
DeWitt’* final two pointer was |
the last field goal of the gam*.
Turnbow sank two charities, each !
coming a minute apart, to give'
A&M a 50-57 lead.
McLeod made the last Frog point'
of the night on a free shot, mak-j
ing the score 59-58. With a min
ute and 40 seconds to go, T\irn-
bow added his final glft-loaa.
Schmidt was fouled while ahooting
with one second left, but he missed
both of them. ;
frequent seqr-
- Late Wire Briefs -
seriously affecting
Austin. Tex., Keb. 22. t.T)—Railroad Commission memb
Culberson accused a representative of the U. 8. Department
Interior of displaying “abysmal ignorance of true conditions”
nation’s oil Industry. j:’
Culberson said 'Tuesday the federal official, whom
name, had stated In effect that foreign Imports are not
domestic oil Industry;
<£ ’
Denver, Feb. 22 (^FV—Federal conciliators are bolding sparate meet
ings with union and company representatives la an effort to stave off
• telephone strike In the mountain states. -
Joseph Vincent of the U. $. Conciliation Service said matters are
still in what he
The strike of
New Mexico and
movement.
London. Feb. 22 lA*)—Conservative Leader Winston Churcl
the “If Htajf**",
division in Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, Arizona.
slated as
hUl made
this comment last night when asked about the possibility of a cqalltlon
government sa a result of Britain’s general election Thursday:
“I do aot believe In a coalition that le made up of a lot oif little
close ae many
lajority can be
m Labor! tea *1-
petty deals betw
There has
obMervers now
fiiHhloned In the
Interests aad political forces."
speculation that If the election la
way a workable majority
la h “ " ‘
by a coalition. The
ready hays said they want no part of such a grouping parties If tko
erew-the only
v parliament
y want no pm
voters fall to return them to control of parliament.
Washington, Feb. $$ (/!■>—The^\lr Force added $7 site* to 4t*
final list of IM phu'e* suggested as the possible location for the
posed Air Academy,
The Air Force announced Tuesday
will he surveyed by the Army Knglneer*
stallatlon’e officer,
After the preliminary survey* are completed, the . Trr
engage a nationally recognised eagtaser to atft thee# sites considered
most suitable. Congress will have the final word. * ^ 1
Tbe $7 sites announced today Inchidodi
Texas—Brackettvllle, Brownwootf, Lampasas, Bait Angelo,
thnt all of tb* 89$ lerath
or the nearest Air .Force