- ‘71 City Of College Station al Nev m Officii ewspaper m Number 130 : Volume 49 * 1 "- »uy Now On Practice Held Bill Dupuy, senior* non-mil* stUdi 1 student living in Pur- Hall, has been added to r i- t I’ 1 .: itary year the Master Program, Ken Landrum, student senate inuMtur commiUtie clmirumn, «n- ijourtpwl at MiiNtar prai'tlca yeiitor- day aftai'iioun, liuuuy wlH dailver tha Muatar fratUtion rvaHiits on tha tiroyt-nm. . v '>n hanii .for tho tiraotlva wara mcmbcra of tho White Band com* mandod by Charlie Lundollus, tha Hlnslng Cadoto led by ‘Leonard Perkin*, and Mtudent* akpearinff . on thie year's Aside Muster. David Haines, College Station junior, will be this year’s master of ceremonies. He served In that ^ capacity last year for the 1948 -Aggie Muster broadcaat over the Texas Quality Network. , The invocation will be delivered ] by King Egger, corps chaplain. ■} Doyle Avant, cadet colonel of the corps, will give a short response to the? address by Louis A. Har- tung, ’29, president of the Asso ciation of Former Students. Principal speaker of the Even ing will be M.^S. Church, promin ent Dallas attorney. Jack Normfttr will read the Roll Call For The Absent, a poem read at Musters. He will also call the roll of Aggies 'who have died over the past year. The roll will contain three former students who have died since the last Muster. / - The closing ceremony includes a three volley salute to the men on roll call fired by a six man squad , of the Rosa Volunteers. The sal ute will be followed by Silver Taps. N This year’s Aggie Muster will be held, at B p. m. Friday in Guion Hall, Landrum said. * Freshmen to Hear Talk on MSC Jobs J. Wayne Stark, director jjf Memorial Student Center, will speak to all freshmen interested in working in the student center, Thursday night at 6:30 at the An- nex Theatre. Chris Gent, Assistant director of Memorial Student Center, and Rua- ■etl Wright student manager of the Cave, will also speak~ of the group. Stark will distribute and explain application forms to the fresh men gathering. He will also set tip arrangements for Initial Inter views at a later date, for those who are Interested. Other matters to he discussed will be the pay scale, chances for advancement, what a student cen ter job offers other than finan cial gain, and the type of men wanted for the positions. Stray Dog Killed; Is Reported Mad A report came from College Station city ’* officials yesterday that a stray dog .shot Saturday night was mad. ' J \ j. The dog’s head was sent to the State Health Department in Aus tin, Which reported the dog to have had rabies, according tojCity Man ager Raymond Rogers. The dog was killed on Jersey street near ]_ Consolidated High School aa^dsighway 6 by Curtis Bullock, mght patrolman here:,' Noticing the hound when it at tempted to bite the wheels of his car, Bullock shot the dog after observing its strange actions. The small speckled canine wore : no license tag. A ■ PUBLISHED IN THE COLLEGE STATION r 1 . U ^ ■ i r „ ■ INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE I), TEXAS, TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1950 Jv jL The above men left Thu rsday in four college cars on an,. Architectural inspection trip of Los Ange- They are, bottom row, Donald Jarvis, Jack Crook, Charles Estes, Jack Luther, Jake Boggs, and Harry Ransom; second TB Can Be Cciught Early . row, Victor Prassel, Sam I-anford, Bill Wales, Fred Minton, Frank Welch, and Oscar Wells; third row, Otto Frischmuth, Emmit Ingram, Ar thur Burch, and Harold Jones. Tuberculosis Caught Early In Chest X-Ray Survey By CATHERINE GHNT Is a pale; hallowed-eye 1 appar ition, with no appetite, lesis endur ance and a wracking cou jh, your conception of a .tubercuh sis sus pect ? If it is, then you ; are ten years behind the times. V Betty McDonald, author of the hast seller, “The Egg and found that out. She was still ept irtaining a healthy tapeworm ap'pt tite and was oply a little run do\ rn, from flu and n alight cold that fiung on. She found out, after takin ; a chest X-ray, that she had TB; With no more aymptoltnB than those, she entered a siinitorium listed as an advanced ctse. Now if is known that early T! [ usually has no symptoma at all. By the time one reaches the doughing, run-down, blood-spitting stage, it Is far advanced and difficult to cure. Since TR is highly ccntageous It may be contncted any place. A unit aimllar to the i me that discovered Betty Mr Ions Id's Tit Is now In' operation In the YMCA. Students and Citizen* of College Station and t te nor- rounding country are ell|[ible for the free chest X-Ray nurvey. The time involved is n inutc, in comparison!with the saving in time and money 1 if TB is cauitht while still in the early stages For if TB is caught in the early Stages, rrest may be the only | medicine needed. - *1 i At the Annex last'week, 1,435 persons had their pictures made. This included the students, facul ty, staff, clerical worker:! and all. Although the service is free, this is not a charity project. It is a “census of Chest Healtii.” With this survey or census it} is hoped that TB will be wiped ou ; of exis tence, in a similar manner to the 'killing out of small pojc by vac cination. For the campaign to be! effective at least 80 percent of th e popula- . Crisis at Issue Number 2,500 tion must- be X-rayed, Mrs. A. A. Blumberg, executive secretary of the Brazos County Tuberjculosis Association said. There is no undressing nor is an appointment necessary. The unit Will be in operation from 8:30 a. m. until 5:30 p. m. today through Friday. Z'j j On Saturday the hours are from until 4 p. m. The staff stop for the noon hour, ^lumberg added.. » project is an undertaking of th< National and State Health Departments in an effort to eliminate TR from t,he position Se nior Meeting Thursday Set TW Senior t’laas will meet ThurHday at 7 lift p.m. in the YMCA Chapel, Hobby Hying- ton, class president, Naid today. Included on the agenda for the fleeting will be selection of a class agent and designation of a place to hold the Senior King Dance. The dance can be held either at the Grove or at Sbisa Hall, Byinigton said. The class agent will tye re sponsible for making regular newij reports to the Texas Ag gie, newspaper of the Former Students’ Association. HO also writes three or four letters a year] to be sent to each member of the class. Thje agent receives and col lects! information from all class the i class’ Former Council, in apply ing for the position of class agent was asked to contact By- iiigton before the meeting. tall, i*r eave By C. MUNROE >- J- • \ Amarillo Aggies don’t know' it yet Ted Lokey doesn’t know it yet, and last of all, Miss Betty Joyce Scott doesn’t know it yet, but she just about messed up the%drks for’The Battalion Mondays after noon.' Baity is to be the Amarillo Club% duchess to the Cotton Ball and Ted Lokey is to be her escort Jjow Betty is a sharp looking young lady, one of the best, And she was scheduled to have her S leture In column aeven on Mon- ay’a front page, fn fact, for 2,500 issues, of tne paper that day, Betty DID' have her picture on the front page. That, however, was all. PreeUely on tha 3,SOOth copy Betty and The Battalion ceased to become friend*. It wasn’t ahy- -) thing personal, yon understand, but for a little while Monday she wee the center of an awful lot of trouble In the prhut shop. Here’s how It began. To have a picture in the paper i - A , . • y ' / it is, necessary to have 8 (metal engraving made from (a photo graph. This engravings is then mounted oh a wooden block and se curely locked in the | printing frames, surrounded by tjlpe metal. When the frames arejj put into the press and the wheet| start to turn, inking rollers, and various machinery preM| down on the frames, type metal; (i and! over the engraving or, ‘‘cut’’ It is all very Involved. Monday afternoon! everything went along all: right urftil at Is sue number 1 2,500 Betty’s metal en graving became separate; from the wooden mounting block. 1 ^ Propelled by the honv y the metal aquarc akippei < frames, tearing out ty ?«• scratching other picture}, the paper : rolls, and creating havoc that had meniin an uproar. The brake waa throwjh praaa? motors. Slowly t te wheels, and slides gro nd atop, but the damage iad Hers, over the dugs, the press done. Page one looked like a scrap heap. The publication of this excellent newspaper was stopped in its tracks. Editors were called in. A lino type man went to work under heavy pressure. New pictures were jpulled from the racka, and a new 'mast head—that scroll type name plate at the top-of the page iden tifying this sheet as “The Battal ion”—was pressed into action. Twenty five minutes of hectic work repaired the damage. The frames were ahoved back into place and slowly the. motors were wound up end printing went on $s sche duled. But poor Betty, her bent, ed, and tattered engrnvh, useless. For 2,500 copies done he job well, hut as fa •cratch- tg was the had r as the res* was concerned she had been press fired. It’s just one of those but for a little while y Miss Betty Joyce Scott mighty unpopular young the print aitop. things, esterday was a lady in of a major health problem in the United States The primary aim of jthe survey is to discover unsuspected cases in each community, so! they may be isolated, treated, and returned to normal life. In addiiion to dis covering TB suspects the portable X-ray will ah o show chest dis orders such things as (scars from pneumonia, pleurisy, cancer or even the shadow of an enlarged heart. in the cases of a chest disorder, the report is forwarded to the in dividual’s doctor. All ojf these re ports are kept confidential between you and your physician, (Mrs. Blum berg said. Election Dates Set for ’50 - ’51 Junior Another spring Election Ib in the makin, next year's offices may day, R. A. Sophomore nounced at night. Applications be received in ities office, until noon Satju ter this time, n. received, Inge lj The eight Officers Candidates for ght junior class begin filing to- “Dick” Ingels, C ass president, an- class meeting last for candidacy will the Student Actiy Iwin tfaft, April 22. Af- iplications will be Coslett, Selph NAS include presi dent, vice-president, secretary,- treasureiysocial secretary, parlia- mentarkin, sergeant-at-arms, and repofter-histoi ian. Brimary elections will be held Tuesday night, April 24, he said, vrith run-off’s scheduled for Thursday night, April 26. Next year’s junior yell leaders will be chosen in the sanie elec tions, according to Ingels. Fifteen candidates hac applied for the two positions when the filing deadline fell last Saturday at noon. Voting will be by secret ballot, with a man appointed to distri bute and collect ballots in each dormitory. Tl ese ballots will he returned to ap appointed election committee, Ingels said, which will tabulate and a nnounce the results. A&M’s sop lomores have been : . invited to Saturday night’s Annual Spring Forma! of the TSCW Soph omore Class. Ingels read a letter from the clas^ president, in which in invitation was contained. Committee Asks Guarantee Of Privacy Rights A roMolutlon calling for atflctor college regulatlona guaranteeing Mtudent rights of privacy was sent to the Academic Council yesterday by the Student Life Committee. The resolution, If approved by the council, would require the pre sence of an authorized student at any search of r student belongings conducted by college authorities. Specifically, the resolution re commends alteration of a cifrrent college regulation. The regulation states, “Personal belongings of students are subject to inspection by the Dean of Students or his authorized representative at all times.” The revised regulation recom mended by the Student Life Com mittee would read, “Personal be longings of Student are subject to search by the Dean of Students or his authorized representatives at all times provided the inspector is V accompanied by a cadet officer, Kousemaker, or his designated rep resentative.” The motion containing the reso lution was approved unanimously following a lengthy discussion of student rights of privacy. Assist ant Dean of Students Bennie A. Zinn appeared before the commit tee to discuss the current policies regarding search of student be longings. No Regulation Now j No rooms are searched now without the presence of the stu dent concerned or his cadet officer or housemaster, Zinn saM. How ever, the present college regulation does not require their presence. The recommended alteration of college regulations would not re quire the presence of a student for routine “neatness” inspections carried out in the corps dormitor ies by the tactical officers and company commanders. Housemas ters in non-military dorms could also make “neatness” inspections without being accompanied by an other.student under the newly re commended regulation, j Purpose of the new regulation, If aporoved, -would be to make it illegal to conduct a search of any student room without the presence of the student’s cadet officer, house master, or designated re presentative. Heretofore, it has bTen the custom to have such a student representative but it was nbt T required. Stark Explains The Life Committee meeting was opened yesterday with a talk by J; Wayne Stark; director of the Memorial Student Center. He dis cussed proposed methods of fi nancing the new center. “Ninety per cent of the student unions in the, country are financed (See COMMITTEE, Page 4) r. - "■ Nation’s Top Daily & L949 Survey .'iW Price: Five Cents Dave Coslett Clayton L. Selph Juniors Now Filing For Senior Offices Eleven juniors had filed for next year’s senior class offices yesterday at the close of the first day of filing. Several candidates had filed for most of the offices and at least one aspirant had filed for each position. Candidates for president Class of ’51 are Bryan E. merman, chemistry major Cleburne of A Co. Chemical Corps; of the Zim- from , Band Schedules Annual Concert The A&M Band will hold ita Annual Spring Concert Tues day, April 25, at 7:30 p. m. in Guion Hall, Lt. Col. Vprgne Adams, band director an nounced today. The bund will present a program of varied music Mnoludlni con cert marches, overtures, novelty numbers, ami two instrumental quartets. This concert has been designed to appeal to th* musical ta itaS ot almost anyone Lt. Col. Adunis aaid. He emphasised tins fact that the concert Is one of the highlights of the band’s activties for the year. Two instrumental quartets will be featured in thie year’s concert. Wayne Dunlap, Richard Laj, R. I* Robinson, and W. J. Aabefg will, be featured in a cornet quartet, and E. D. Snead, Gordon Keller, Charles Rowen, and T. W. Carlisle will be featured in a trombone quartet. The program is expected to last an hour, Lt. Col. Adams said horticulture ma- of E Co. Vetje- Jack L. Solether, h jor from Weslaco of E Co, rans; and Levon Massengale, me- a chanical engineering! student from Dallas! of the Corps I Staff* T idat B ep McAllister, • from Sair An- Vice-presidential candidates Bill Parse, civil engineering m from Tulsa, Oklahoma, of Engineers, Bradei architecture major tonio of C Battery, Field (Artillery, and Ralph Gorman, architecture student from Port Arthur of C Troop Cavalry. [ • Those who have filed for secre- turv-treasurer are Herbert G. the Corps Staff, and Herman Gol- lob, English major from Houston of H Flight A r Force. Social secretary aspirants Kenneth W. Schuake, haziness jor from Chilton of B Co, Infan Jea D. Mclver, civil engineer! student from Honey*Gr ov « of,— Co. Engineers, and Joseph D. Hin ton, architecture major from Abil ene In C Battery Field Artillery. George Charlton, Journalism ma jor from Dallas of A Flight Air Voire was the only rniiiliuat* for Class j Historian. Deadline for filing for sen or class offices will be April 24| Official campaigning may begin as soon as the candidate has fllpd. No limit has born pet on the amount a candidate may spend on his campaign. The! only campaign ing regulations that the candidate must follow are those required by the college concerning! | posting of campaign signs. Election of qffiCersA (kill be hidd April 27 in a joint meeting of both corps and non-corps juniors. Ab voting will be by secret ballot. Inter-Church Film Program Planned An inter-chiirch movie program and fellowship hour Is being plan ned for Wednesday, April 19, at 7 p. m, in thd YMCA chapel. Jar- vis Miller, president of the YMCA Cabinet, said this morning. Present plans are to show three short movles—“He Leadoth Me," “One God," npd "The House I Live In," starring Frank Sinatra. The purpose of this meeting is to try to bring all the different student religious groups on the campus together to become bet ter acquainted Miller said. This prograpi is Intended to close the gap existing in our religious activities, the inter-church phase, he added. After the movies, re freshment* Will be served. ■■ Here’s partial proof of how herd Staff worked putting out y« the T8CW student paper. Htai behind the nose, la John Wh Hathaway peering over hla ... the materia). “Little" Hob Hugl out a report on a tea party with I checking on who poured. Bill Dave Coalett try to stlffle a at Whitmore. Mimi Hicks, Hattalion with . O, left, in wanna itertnevsi stares ft Walston, sluing, while Dean Read the Lane-O, check was used to fill writes a letter hi the weekend. Sltt Clayton Selnh who I the help of Betty roachfully at the out vnn late a . Dale pussle ...tor .of »y, which 1 smugly » money for t » table Is | typewriter with t .. ► n >ose< 'in Top ithout By virtu® of tH< Lift Commltt®® ctjmmondaUon by thi Commit!®® ot th® Samite, Dave C< wee Student Imr .a r®» r K] action Student leti and Clkyton Selph yesterds) became co-editors of Thai ion for the 1960-51 school year. The student life group approved afternoon he 1 Hallal- reebmmen- lat If in the ilified can- he military (>r positions, be elected jfied catidi- by, unanimous Vot»\. dafton of the senate there were no for neither military co-odit co-editors would from the list of dates by a campus-wide elect|pii. Being the only two qualified can didates to file before last Satur day’s filing deadline, Coslett and - L are assured of the Co-editor ns. Background Coslett, a junior journalism ma jor from Miles, is this year’s fea ture editor of The Battalion, has worked three years on the Batt staff, and was elected to Who’* Who on the campus. In A Flight Air Force, he is an opportunity award scholarship winneV, and re cently edited The Battalion’s na tional first-place Christmas safe ty section. .I 1 Selph, a junior journalism major from Houston, is currently manag ing editor of The’ Battalion, and is also a three-year staff veteran. A member of H (Flight All- Force, he served as summer co-editor of The Batt last year, and worked with this year’s co-editors on tho 1949 Freshman edition, the largest Batt ever published. No Oppoaitloti Thus for the second year in sue- . cession, co-editors of The Battal-. ion have bean ushered into office* without formal opposition. Last year military co-editor C. C, Mun- roe and non-military co-editor Bill Billingsley assumed their jobs without campaign opponents. Qualifications for co-editors in the college regulations call for can didates to be taking at least jl2 hours of classes, have paaspd 3/6 of that wukk th* previous semen- experience In * qualify them for and Have »'• grade rano or 1.26. , of this year’s applicants for tty* non-military editor’s position Were disqualified hy( the Benate. election committee on on« or more of the regulations. Contacted as to their respective positions of work this morning, neither of the.corddltoni elect would mnke statements as to their anticipated policies-for next year’s 'Wiper. j !: i Current office! rumor, however, has it that the present low wage scale for staffnlen will continue throughout the approaching year. or that work th* 'Wn hsye a year’! staff position to the editorships ar polpl ratio of 1.26. ■ *(l ;'' JVo Electii •Report ion \ Jt No re of cand general mh4w by committee delay tail ratio qual Wednea carry the ified candii on the official slate for the coming election w^s e Senate election Ccause of a g grade point ha. y’a Battalion will mplete list of qual- well ,as the npus todaj An Aggif invadi campus this past w< his wanderings ove he chanced to coi Methodist’s Engine*] Strolling about oi floor the College S d the SMU L-kend and in “The Hill” a upon the Show, the first tion visitor ng he visit on the (Second floor; tivuted by curiosity he climbed stairs and headed fqr a door way ovarj which hung a sign pro claiming that inside was Exhibit B3A. * T -* Beside the sign was another no- lants Han) at ijsturb- Texas Ijloubt." noticed signs Exhibit 53A < s: leside th e sign wa i, "Drafting Students rk—Do Not *D M Students. No 1 alvl slide, was 6* ki lied In. to keep opened as quiet as whose cur- amused-tom- Ihe door and y drafting tables were lined ilde.f Equipment lay ready Uy .-ji was miss, was In the