■hi- j. r- City Of College St* •J Official Ne i:r e 49: Number 114 \> ■l-.: Wspaj cessions if ■T- ' ■ -V: ' ■; ' : ••. I t The ■ • •: 'mT !:■ : ■' r vi; :l' - I i I Club concessions for All-Collejji ray, which will be held xin Ma; 3 this 1 year, will be taxed ten per- ent.Hthe All-College Day Com' nittee decided at a meeting Mon ay evening. This tax money will be used b; ijhe committee to pay the expensi incurred in making the day possi. pie. Last year the concessions tai was 20 percent. After much de- bate and discussion as to whethi the tax should be completely abo! shed or whether the same 20 per] rent should ngain be charged thli ywir, the committee finally ngreei to "split the difference." ~ [ Any money which will not b> used for expenses of All'Collegi [Day will tw divided umong the four jiuajor schools In the college.' The group renehed Hn 1 agreement 'hut only dcpnrtmcutul rlubi .should;be eligible to run conces- 4 )slon stands on All-College Daj. The committee pointed out that all clubs receiving permission to rui a concession will be expected to comply with the food and saniti- tlon laws required by the Public Health Department. Clubs will all be responsible for keeping tl areas around the concession stands clean and free from discarded containers. 7 Johftnie Reeves has’ been ap pointed to handle all permits for concessions. Any club wishing Harrington To Speak at Dali Club Luncheo Dr. M. T. Harrington, di of the college arid preside) elect will address the Di A&M Club at a luncheon day honoring the Board Directorsrm Dallas, y ♦.‘Texas A&M College” will 1 the subject/of the talk. Dr. Hi rinaton 'sakLhe -plans to tell i group ot all phases, of the colli including an explanation of basic division freshman plan; i duled to go into effect next Fi The new building program buildings now being constru will - also be explained - , Dr. rington said. =r The Board, of Directors will | at tend. the luncheon Friday noon, then go into its “closed” executive session either Friday afternoon or that night in the Baker Hotel. - After the “open” meeting sche duled for ^Saturday morning, the aboard will leave for Arling(ton, where they will tour Arlington State College that afternoon. An other luncheon will be held for 1 the group in Arlington. nouncei • - . i , f run. a concession should first cleared with the head of its own department and then with the S dent Activities Office before c tacting Reeves. Departmental cl’ will be limited to concessions wi in their own areas unless spe permission is otherwise gran' th« committee decided. Clubs interested in a coni sion should contact Reeves per ally or address letters to Box at the College Station Post flee. Reeves may be contacted at his apartment at C-3-D in College The AIT - College Committee agreed that 104 should be charged by all stands for any soft drinks sold. The group suggeeted that each club prepare a sign for its concession booth, slating what dub Is In charge of the concession and perhaps the purpose for which profits will be used. .The committee stressed the fact that it would not be financially obligated to any club which failed to make a profit from its Conces sion stand. ~ J Frank Cleland reported that all the departments In the different schools had turned in their pro grams for All-College Day. A com mittee consisting of Clarence Fre- berg. Dean L. Boyd, Jim Hoban and Frank Cleland are now work ing on a master schedule which will be printed in the program for the All - College - Mother’s Day week-end. The All-College Day Commit tee will meet again next Monday evening' at 6 in the conference room of the Dean of Engineering, fr •VIS' -R •■jr r ms Theda Timeaus Theda, senior in the TCtI school of nursing. Will represent the Bell County A&M Mothers Club at the Cotton Pageant and Ball. She wiB be escorted by L. G. (Jerry) Maxfield. I June Peevy 1 ll PUBLISHED IN THE , i i i 1 , 'attalion ?. ' -I COLLEGE STATION ( MU*! senior School Golden the Con Joanle Jaworaki Jaworskl of Houston, a! at San Jacinto High and an officer of the __ Gauchoe, will represent .'omposite Regiment as their duchess at the Cotton Pageant and I Ball. Her escort will be Dob Hinton, A Company ASA. OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE l), TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22,1950 i V. Artist Profits Will Go To Campus Chest the Campus learned this The Pre-Law Society has ae- elected Miss Peevy as their Duchess to the Cotton Pageant and Ball. From Houston, she! will be escorted by C. L. Ray, Jr. of Waskom. ti-< T'7'7 . . -'[iJjr Logan Posts Bond On Three Charges Harry Lee Logan, former Sec retary-Manager of the Bryan Chamber of Commerce, posted bond yesterday for a | total I of $1500 on three charges of embez zlement returned last Saturday by the Brazos County grand jury.:; Logan was taken into custody by.Brazos County Sheriff J. ! W, Hamilton a«|d Dallas Couhty offi cers yesterday morning. He made bond with three Dallas residents as bondsmen, arid was released to appear in the 85th District Court in Bryan April 3. ' - ; Three Hort Men, 5 j Return from Trip Dr. Gustav M. t Watkins, pro fessor of Plant Pathology; .Hubert C. Mohr, assisUnt. professor of Horticulture; and Luther S. Bird, graduate student, recently return ed from a study tour of (he south ern part of the state. The group visited the three mai winter vegetable growing section of the state to study prevailing plant disease and methods ^for their prevention and cure. Cold‘Cures’Hit For False Ads By Government Washington, March 2— (AP)—The Federal Trade Cotnmission says that at least two so-called anti-cold drugs —those with the trade names “kesistab” and “Anahist”—do riot njteasure up to their advertising claims and may even be harmful, “anufacturers of both disputed statement. ie government agency its'complaint yesterday follov government investigation 01 effectiveness of antihistamine pre parations in preventing or treat ing common colds. In an outspoken charge that “false and misleading” advertising is;being used to promote the, sale of both “Resistab” and “Anahist,” FTC alleged: “The products are neither cures, preventstives nor adequate or competent treatments for the com mon cold or its manifestations.” IThe Trade Commission complaint whs directed at Bristol-Myers Co. arid the Anahist Co. Inc., both of Nejv York. Under federal law, FTC has power to force the companies tq halt or revise advertising claims if (he gbyernment can prove the “false .and misleading” complaint. I'Yhe Bristol-Myers product is ‘Resistab.” The Anahist Cbm 1 * pany’s preparation is called ‘‘Ana- Nistt.” Both have been extensively Advertised. All Exchange Store profits realized from the work of ar tist-caricaturist Juan R. Avila will be give* to Chest, it was morning. Receiving a 16% commission from each drawing by Avila, the Exchange Store will present the money to the Student Senate to handle as the governing body sees fit. , Tom Calhoun, (nember of the Exchange Store Advisory Commit tee of the Student Senate, immed iately accepted the offer and said the profits would pe placed in the Campus Chest. Principal aim of the Campus Chewt is to provide funds for a Twelfth Man Schol arship. j 1 j. Avila, a veteran iof 20 years with a brush, does portraits in sepia and pastel, as w4ll as the black and white drawings. Several of his j caricatures are now being displayed in the show window of the Exchange Store, along with many bf his “straight" drawings. An art student; for three years at San Carlos Academy in Mexico City, Avila has been traveling up an down the eastern seaboard, do ing his work in fraternity houses and college book (tores for a num ber of years. i He will continue his work in the Exchange Store for the remainder of the week. No estimate of ithe funds for the Campus Chest Are available at present, but .several students re ported Avila has been doing a “land-slide” business in the store. He usually finishes his exagerat ed feature studiies in' about five minutes, they said. i Nation's Top . Collegiate Daily NAS 1949 Survey : ' j t H ; -V’ Tr iV Reduced Skies Seen-—Lclund By CHARL Explaining p evening, T. W.j KIRKHAM rofitgraphs last Leland, head of Malar General W. D. Old waa a willing listener Haturday night when Herman Dleterleh and Kd Miles, both senior atopped by with their datea for a word of welcome to A&M. With Deitench and Milea are Mimi Hieka of Fort Worth and Norma Beth Cooke of Reagor Springs, a residential suburb of Waxahaehle. Military Spending Tops Appropriation Measure Late Wire Briefs { ■ V: ' I l ■ -I -r Washington, March 22- called on the senate to ■'tr' 1 A cotton and peanut acreage pfogram. Williams said in a sta< farm price supports are' 1c have to “inaugurate the g has ever seen.” Austin, Tex., Matyh 22——O AS—Senator Williams (R-Del) yeste) reject legislation which would incre lowed under this year’s govemme efease^the meat farm ment prepared for the senate that unless ered within a year the mav atest mass destruction > government m o? food the wo: may rid ne large Austin milk yesterday announced a two-cent a quart pnee reduction in tive immediately. . j. , • The reduction dropped the price from 22 to 20 cents a quari pasteurized milk and from 23 to 21 cents a quart for homogenized milk. A simultaneous cut of 80 cents per hundred pounds was announced by the kairy In the prices it will ,pay milk producers in thei Austin tnilkahed for their milk. ^ ^ j j f ] Dallas, March 22—(AS—Directom of Texas & Pacific Railway terday authorized diesel locomotives for all freight trains between 8P ^*^Sile^lg Spr ng-El Psso district thus will firfft ln the system to ge ; diesel-electric trains for every operation—switching, local trains, and through trains. ' " 1 - ' - ^ i . • - • &/■ ■ " : ■: ^ . become the ■y phase of Companies Complain Spokesmen for Bristol - Myers and Anahist, in separate state- rtuints, called the FTC’s complaint erroneous and said the Federal Food and Drug Administration had cleared their products for Sale. ; : •' l j '‘Every advertising claim we have made is backed by clinical Evidence,”! said Anahist. Similar ly; Bristol-Myer said: “All adver tising of Resistab has been based upon thorough clinical and scien tific investigation.” | jThe Fife served notice that it pifobabiy won’t stop with the ini tial complaints, that other com panies in I the field are under scru- phy. |Not only did the agency attack the value of the products in com bating colds, it also alleged that: ■ “Contrary to the claims of the respondents, both Resistab and Anahist, taken as directed, may be unsafe and produce injury or hrirm to the user.” No elaboration was made on this facet of ' FTC's charges. A&M Research Foundation Aids Industry “The Texas A&M Research Foundation is attempting to make research facilities avail able to Texas industries,” said Dr. A. A. Jakkula of the Re search Foundation to the College Station Kiwanis Club yesterday. Main speaker at the weekly lunch eon, Dr. Jakkiila spoke on “The Research Foundation and its Re lationship to Texas A&M College. The foundation was incorporat ed into the A&M system in 1944 through the efforts of Dr. L. P. Gabbard, Dr. ML T. Harrington, Dr. J. D. Lindsay,: Dr. J. H. Milllff, and Mr. W. E.| White, Dr. Jakkula reported. The organization su; Washington, March 22—tA’l— The House Appropriations Com mittee Tuesday cut $1,567,900,504 from the $30,612,980,668 President Truman asked for more than 40 federal agencies next year. It approved for House consid eration next week an omnibus $29,- 046,030,164 bill wrapping into a single package for the first time in years almost all federal appro priations except those for foreign assistance. Fixed charges such as interests are not included in the measure. Representing an outlay of about $200 for everyone in the nation for the year starting July 1, the bill projects a federal deficit of $4,153,682,312, or about a billion - Who's Who at A&M - iipervises re search in fifteen departments. About 90 individuals are connected with the program. Frequent re ports are made: on their work, with this material : made available to A&M and industries participating in the progrojjn, he told the Ki- wanians. j The foundation also finances the obtaining of patents for inventions and discoveries developed here, on the condition (hat it will share in any resulting profits. Patents are now being processed for six staff members of live college, according to Dr. Jakkula. The foundation has collected $1,235,000 in the, form of grants from major industries in the. past few years. It has used only $1,095,- 000 on research problems. Two special guests attending yesterday’s nieeting were Dr. S. R. Gamrnon, head of the history department and Dr. C. E. Kellogg, chief of the; soil survey in the United States: Department of Ag riculture. JP*.:, A