1 C0^ BGE Circulated to More than 90% Of College Station’s Residents Battalion Nation’s Top Safety Section Lumberman’s 1949 Contest PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE Number 7: Volume 51 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1950 Price Five Cents Students for Senate Nine students had applied for Student Senate positions at 5 p.m. yesterday as the first day of filing passed. General elections for Senate members and for the three civil ian student positions on the Stu dent Life Committee have been set for Oct. 3 by the co-chairmen of ^ the Senate’s election committee, Roy Nance and Bill Moss. No one filed for the Student Life positions yesterday. Students may apply for candidacy for these and for the Senate through 5 p.m., Wednesday, Sept. 27. No Opponents Each of the nine students filed * from a separate dormitory or housing area. I. E. “Monty” Mont gomery Jr., fifth-year architec tural construction student from y Baytown, has become a candidate for re-election from Milner Hall. Filing for Bizzell Hall represen tative was Alfred R. Gibson, sen ior petroleum engineering student from Mexia. College View’s only announced candidate is L. B. Wed dell, senior management engineer ing major from Fort Worth. Lloyd H. Manjeot, secretary of last year’s Senate, is a candidate > from Dorm 17. The senior busi ness student from Hereford is commander of Company 9 in the Eighth Regiment. Leggett’s only first-day appli cant was Nolan H. Brunson, senior business major from Hobbs, N.M. Candidates File ' For City Office At Consolidated Only eleven candidates had filed for the various offices of the city staff at A&M Con- solidated School yesterday as Ihe 8:30 a.m. deadline today neared. The election, held this morning at 10, will decide what students will take over the various city offices Friday in the Kiwanis Club sponsored Kid’s Day. t The event, which is being ob served throughout the U. S. and Canada by Kiwanis International, has received widespread publicity for the help it gives in acquainting „ children with the government of their city. Candidates who had filed by late yesterday afternoon for the office of mayor were Jerry Leighton, Royce Rodgers, and Joe Motherall, Jr. Members of the junior class who filed for the Ward 3 coun cil positions are Gayle Klipple, • Billy Blakely, Wanda Goodwin, Louise Street, and Janice Hilde brand. Sophomores filing for the Ward 2 council seats were as follows: Don Burchard, Jerry Reedes, and Tom Barlow. At the close of school yesterday, no freshmen had signed up to be on the council as Ward 1 representatives. The members of the council will be installed in their new positions at noon tomorrow in the City Hall. The council will then gather around the table to select other city officials, such as city manag er, city secretary, treasurer, fire chief, police chief, etc., from their < classmates. Although their term of office will last only until 5 p.m. tomor row, the youths will actively take part in the operations of the city * for the afternoon. Present offic ials, who the students will release for the afternoon, will be on hand to assist in any way possible as the new oficials carry out the var ious acts of administration. Those students who are named to the city offices will be guests of - the Kiwanis Club at its regular noon meeting Tuesday. Filing for day student senator was Hayden I. Jenkins, sophomore stu dent in the School of Veterinary Medicine. Jenkins is married and is from Quanah. Mitchell, Dorm 9 Ralph E. Gorman, senior archi tecture student from Port Arthur, has applied as a candidate from Dorm 9. He is a member of C Armor. J. Fred Hambright, sen ior petroleum engineering major from F'ort Worth, has filed for senator from Mitchell. R. M. “Dick” Elliott is a candi date for the Senate from Dorm 5, where he is a member of E E’ield Artillery. Elliott is a senior petroleum and geological engineer ing major from Amarillo. Senate seats, held to 43 by the governing body’s constitution, will be filled by 24 dormitory repre sentatives, one each from College View, Vet Village, Trailer View- Project House area; two day stu dent senators — one from Bryan, one from College Station; the four class vice-presidents, and an un decided number of senator-at-large seats. Referendum Vote Should Friday night’s special campus-wide election approve the Senate’s constitutional amendment on TISA officers, the number of senators-at-large would be seven. Only six senators-at-large were chosen last year. The special election will seek a “yes-or-no” answer from each stu dent on whether or not three A&M students who are officers in the Texas Intercollegiate Students As sociation should be placed auto matically in the Senate. Results of the election will be announced in The Battalion Mon day. Queen Candidate i Patsy Garrett One of the beautiful entries for the 75th Anniversary Queen Con test sponsored by The Commentator is Miss Garrett. The lucky guy who entered the lovely lass in the contest is J. H. Scroggins, Jr., and Miss Garrett’s address will not be disclosed, other than the fact that she hails from Houston. ‘Senior Vs. Cold Steel’ . . . Battle-Scarred Ex-Officer Tells of Tussle with Saber By C. C. MUNROE The saber is a vicious device. In the wrong hands it can create ha voc and yet every embyro officer needs must look forward, always with misgivings, to the day when the long blade is thrust into his hand. The statement has been made by a very responsible person on the campus that “I haven’t seen a man trip on a saber in 30 years of soldiering.” He should have seen me Wednes day night. A new experience would have been in the offing. But to go on with the saber. Standard procedure demands a de scription must preface further dis cussion. Essentially the saber is a knife. The blade is of varying length, usually long for short people and short for long people. A plastic grip with molded finger inden tions is attached to the top of the blade/ This grip was designed for Migmy Joe Young and, be cause of this, provides maximum discomfort to the man trying to hold the saber in a military man ner. This is especially true since a guard closely resembling the thumb screws of olden tortures en closes the grip. A scabbard or holder is pro vided with every saber. This, too, is of ingenious design. To the eye and even to the touch it appears solid, but when hung from a Sam Browne belt it secretly bends in three places. This makes it easy for the suck er wearing the saber to wrap it around his legs while on parade. A chain—which costs prohibitive ly—is used to attach the scabbard to the belt. It will also keep the scabbard standing up when the cadet is falling down. This makes the saber appear more intelligent than its wearer. Unfortunately this is sometimes true. Another little known fact about this contraption it that it acts in much the same manner as a com pass needle. Regardless of the way the cadet is facing, his saber always faces north. The one ex ception to this is when the cadet is facing north. At that point the saber forgets its natural inclina tion and sets up a gyrating motion with the cadet as the fulcrum for gyrations. The manual of the saber is also interestiing. Fey people have sur vived participation in it without suffering bodily injury. Theoretically the manual must be practiced for hours before any sort of proficiency can be reached. This is misleading. Two ten year men on the campus, Agriculturalist Staff To Meet Tonight Staff writers and men interested in writing for the Agriculturist will meet in the Agriculturist of fices Thursday after yell practice, Jim Tom House, editor announced. Staff positions are still open for make-up men, feature writers and typists. men who have been handling sabers for years, still cut them selves about the ear when coming to the position of “carry saber.” Returning the saber to the scab bard is a feat developed only af ter years of training. Novices can do the job up right once in every 48 times. But the saber does have one saving feature. You can use a sharp one to open packages from home. That is if you ever get packages. They make good can openers, too. Camera Club Sets Meeting Tonight An informal meeting of the A&M Camera Club will be held to night at 7:30 in Room 3A of the Memorial Student Center, Tom Harding, club president, announced today. At the meeting, Harding said, the club’s new photographic in struction course will be outlined. To be presented throughout the semester at club meetings, the course is designed to give the amateur photographer a compre hensive working knowledge of everything from camera operation to the enlarginb and developing of the finished photograph. Refreshments will be served in the MSC coffee lounge after the meeting. Army Call Takes Publication Assistant By THE BATTALION STAFF It’s time for a word for the Wise, if you’ll excuse the para phrase. This Wise, you see, is one Sidney L. who today leaves a Goodwin Hall desk he has occupied for the past two years. Sid, as he is better known, de parts the A&M campus today in much the same quiet way he ar rived not too long ago to assume the position of assistant manager of Student Publications. But don’t let the lack of bally hoo throw you. . This handsome young South Carolinian just seetns to prefer comparative silence. Per haps that state comes more natur ally to him due to his appropriate surname. At any rate Wise has manag ed to accomplish several deeds in his brief acquaintance with A&M that were certainly de serving of the fan-fares he al ways avoided. While here he has been handling the advertising program for all student publications in addition to assisting in the overall direction of the publications program. Un der his direction his advertising staffs have consistently set new highs in advertising for student publications. That particular accomplishment earns him much of the credit for the larger Battalion being offered readers this year. And while doing that part of his job, he managed to direct the re search program which won The Battalion first place in 1948-49 in a national competition with other collegiate papers. Nor did he stop with that. The following year (last year), he assisted greatly in the prep aration of The Battalion Christ mas Safety Edition which was also acclaimed the nation’s first. In both of these instances The Battalion and its staff members received considerable praise and publicity while Sid chose to remain in the background letting others have much of the credit due him. His mild, retiring manner even belies the service record that found him, during the last war, rise from the rank of private to that of sec ond lieutenant in record time. Serving in Europe mainly, he earn ed himself at least two Purple Elearts, a Silver Star and a Bronze Star, among other citations. His commission, incidentally, was given him on the battlefield. Wise’s services here were not restricted to Student Publications. He also taught Sunday School at the College Station Baptist Church and belonged to the Kiwanis Club and the Gulf Coast Professional Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, a na tional journalism fraternity. Wise came here from radio station KCRC in Enid, Oklahoma where he was news director. He had previously worked on the Columbia Record, Columbia, South Carolina, the State Asso ciated Press Bureau in Columbia and Institutions Magazine in Chicago. Reared in Columbia, Sid holds an AB degree in Journalism from the University of South Carolina where, as a student he was asso ciate editor of The Gamecock, stu dent newspaper, and business man ager of The Carolina Review, stu dent literary magazine. He also managed WUSC, campus radio station. More recently, he received his MA degree in Journalism from the Medill School o f Journalism, Northwestern University. Roland Bing, manager of stu dent publications, has this to say about Sid’s departure: “He made an enormous contribution to the development of Student Publica tions during the two years he was with us and we shall sorely miss him.” We staff members, who agree one hundred percent with the statement, will miss him for an other reason. With Wise gone from his desk in the corner of The Battalion offices, there’ll remain no place for our noise-weary re porters and editors to seek that brief solitude. Besides, we’ll have to be con tented in cheating each other with our two-head-coin-flips for cokes. 40 Mystery Red Tanks Seen Rolling Toward Besieged Seoul Tokyo, Sept. 21—UP)—U.S. Marines smashed at the heart of Seoul today but a new Red tank column was report ed rolling down from soviet-dominated Manchuria to fight for the Korean capital. The nationality of the armored column of 40 tanks and 200 other vehicles from Red China’s Yalu River frontier in Manchuria was not determined by 10th Corps Intelligence officers who said it may be nearing Seoul. Many Red Koreans who have fought in the South since their June 25 invasion across parallel 38 were seasoned in Communist China’s Manchurian armies. Their heavy equip ment and planes are all of Russian manufacture. The American Marines and their tanks entered Seoul from the northwest at 6 p.m. Wednesday (4 a.m., EST), AP Correspondent Russell Brines reported from the Inchon- Seoul beachhead. This was the strong force that crossed the Han River in amphibious tractors at dawn Wednesday eight miles down stream from Seoul. Another Leatherneck column was moving in from the west after seizing Seoul’s airfield across the Han River. The U. S. 10th Corps reported the southward movement Journalists Gather For Annual Clinic The Second Annual Texas News-1 ger for paper Clinic sponsored by the A&M Department of Journalism begins tomorrow at 9 a. m. with regis tration in the Memorial Student Center, D. D. Burchard, head of the Journalism Department nounced today. Endorsed by the Texas Gulf Coast Association, the Clinic en deavors to bring weekly and small town daily newspapermen togeth er for an exchange of ideas and information. A two-day program is planned beginning with registration Friday and ending with an informal din ner at the Lakeview Club at 6:30 p. mi Saturday. Program Speakers Speakers highlighting the pro gram will include Arthur Kowert of The Fredericksburg Standard; Addison Buckner, The San Marcos Record; Melvin Chatham, head machinist, The Houston Chronicle; Charles Stappenbeck, Western Newspaper Union; Walter Hum phrey, editor, The Fort Worth Press; Marshall Lynam, farm edi tor, Tyler Morning Telegraph; and Brad Smith, Weslaco News. Dr. M. T. Harrington, President of the College, will deliver the welcome address at a luncheon in the Assembly Room of the MSC. Following the talk there will be a “get acquainted” period. Friday Afternoon Friday afternoon will be de voted to a panel on Pictures for Profits at 1:30 p. m. in the MSC. At 2:45 p. m. there will be a Mechanical Conference with a dis cussion of “Linecasting Machines, Their Trials and Troubles”, by Melvin Chatham and a discussion of “Press Room Troubles—- Some Whys and Wherefores,” by Char les Stappenbeck. President of the Texas Gulf Coast Press Association, George Carmack will preside at a dinner in the Assembly Room of the MSC Friday afternoon at 6 p. m. Wal ter Humphrey, editor, The Fort Worth Press, will give a talk on “Why Agriculture Is a Touchstone for Newspapers.” A demonstartion of Fairchild en graving will be given by George Pollard of Dallas district mana- Registration Ends Sat.; 6538 Today Registration in the college and graduate school for the fall sem ester reached a total of 6,538 at 5 p. m. Tuesday, according to R. G. Perryman, assistant registrar. Some students are still register ing and more are expected to reg ister before the deadline, Saturday, September 23, Perryman added. Saturday is also the deadline for adding or dropping courses. The number of students regis tered for this semester falls con siderably below the all time rec ord of 8,651 set during the fall semester of 1946. The large number of returning veterans caused the high record to be set at that time, Perryman said. Student Heads to Plan Social Calendar Today Class presidents and regimental commanders will meet at 5 p. m. today in room 306, Goodwin Hall to plan the fall social calendar, according to Grady Elms, assist ant director of Student Activities. All class presidents and regimen tal commanders are urged to at tend, Elms said. Fairchild, at the Bryan Daily News office, at 8 p. m. Mechanical Operations Saturday morning will be de voted to Mechanical Operations with a demonstration, question and answer period. It will be held at the A&M College Press in the base ment of Goodwin Hall. Fred Massengill, Jr., President Texas Press Association, will pre side at the Saturday luncheon and Dr. J. P. Abbott, Dean of the School of Arts and Sciences, will present a talk on “Why We Edu cate For Journalism.” Panel Discussion A panel discussion, “Serve Your Farm Friends,” at 1:30 p. m. will begin Saturday afternoon’s pro gram. Panel chairman will be Marshall Lynam. Another painel, “Plan For Ex tra Advertising Business,” will be held at 3:15 p. m. with Brad Smith as panel chairman. Rounding out the two-day pro gram will be an informal dinner at the Lakeview Club Saturday af ternoon at 6:30 p. m. Moderators for the several pan els will be Otis Miller and Earl Newsom, both professors in the Journalism Department. Acheson Asks UN to Chip in Armed Forces Lake Success, Sept. 21— (AP)—Secretary of State Acheson yesterday called on members of the United Na tions, Communist and non- Communist alike, to chip in armed forces for a United Nations army to put down armed aggres sion. The American chief delegate also proposed a roving peace patrol to seek out international trouble spots. He called on the U. N. general assembly to clear its decks for action against aggression, if necessary, on 24 hours’ notice. Acheson put Formosa before the assembly as a matter of special and urgent importance. He recom mended the delegates seek a solu tion and that everyone concerned —presumably the Chinese Reds as well as the Nationalists—refrain from using force meanwhile. Acheson spoke in general debate which began in the assembly this afternoon. Foreign Minister Andrei Y. Vishinsky is slated to make the Soviet Union’s response shortly. In a general review of the tense times, Acheson said there is no longer any question whether the U. N. will survive: AirROTC Officials Ponder Rights of Co-ed Applicant St. Louis, Sept. 21—(AP)—A coed applied for admis sion to the all-male Air Force R. O. T. C. unit at St. Louis University. She is Margery Lawton, an 18-year-old freshman. “I’m just as capable and just as patriotic as any boy,” she said. “I think we are in for total mobilization.” She added that she had read up on Air Force regulations that say “any student” is eligible. Major Aubrey J. Bouch, professor of Air Science and Tactics has asked the 10th Air Force Headquarters for guidance on her application. Said the major: “We have just never had this problem before.” of the large tank-led force from Manchuria had joined the race for Seoul as a mystery reinforcement. Korean Red troops were converging on Seoul from sev eral directions—many of them from the old Allied Southeast beachhead perimeter. A big battle for Seoul seemed to be shaping up—a battle of deep significance if the force from Manchuria should turn out to be non-Korean in its manpower. A spokesman said it may already have crossed the 38th parallel, dividing North and South Korea and only 30 air miles north of Seoul. It was reported to have started out from the Manchurian border town of Antung on the Yalu River. Marines Push into Northwest Seoul Correspondent Brines said elements of the First Mar ine Division rumbled into Seoul’s northwest outskirts just 12 hours after ramming across the Han. Brines reported the Leathernecks bore down on the city from two sides. The second column swept in from the southwestern suburb of Yongdungpo to the Seoul satellite airfield and headed for three makeshift bridges spanning the Han. The main Seoul airfield, Kimpo, was taken by Mar ines Sunday 12 miles northwest of the capital on the far side of the Han. The second thrust inside the Seoul metropolitan area cut the main highway leading South to Suwon. Fighter planes covered both columns. The Seoul-Suwon highway was the key Red supply ar tery supporting Communists forces around the Allied pe' i w- eter in the Southeast. It is also a route for Reds returning from the South to defend Seoul. U. S. Seventh Army Division troopers battled for the last ridge line west of the highway, on the Marines’ right flank 10 miles south of Seoul. Front reports said the Marine tanks found the going on narrow roads too slow and took to the railroad tracks to enter Seoul from the northwest. In the built-up outskirts of the capital, the Leatherneck spearhead was slowed for a while by mortar fire. But Marine artillery fire drove some 75 Reds from a cave on heights north of the city. They came out waving a white flag. Veteran AP War Correspondent Reiman Morin reported the drive on Seoul from the Northwest and South was a big push “like the big ones near the end of the last war.” Morin said Reds captured on the Han’s nortli bank had been brought into battle from. North Korea only five days previously—just after the United Nations started landing a 40,000-man liberation force at Inchon, 22 miles west of Seoul, last Friday. The prisoners said they were ordered to hold the line at all costs until reinforcements from the South could arrive. Hiding Reds Offering Resistance Small Red bands, hiding out in corn and rice fields, still offered resistance west of the Han River, Morin report ed, but these pockets were being cleaned out by South Korean Marines. To the southeast, around the old United Nations beach head, the Reds were withdrawing in some sectors and put ting up stiff resistance in others. Elimination of the trapped division cleared the way for an Allied advance up the Kumchon-Taejon rail and highway corridor to Seoul—this is the shortest and best route north ward to the capital. On the right flank of the cavalry, the U. S. Second Div ision drove ahead again at dawn, expanding their three crossings of the winding Naktong River west and northwest of Changyong. The objective in that sector was Chogya, dominating heights six miles west of the river. In another sector of the Second Division push, the Americans advanced nearly a mile against the Reds’ Hyong- pung bridgehead, the only territory east of the Naktong still held bv the Communists. This is about 14 miles Southwest of Taegu. On the U. S. 25th Division front, at, the extreme south west of the arching beachhead perimeter, the Reds were thrown back west of Kangju, seven miles northwest of Haman. But the Red resistance had slowed the 25th Divis ion’s advance all along the line. Advances up to a mile and a half were made by the South Korean Third Division which captured Pohang port yesterday on the East coast. First Cavalrymen Trap 5,000 Reds With U. S. First Cavalry in Korea, Sept. 21—(/P)—Cav alry troopers trapped about 5,000 Communist soldiers today in a small pocket near Tabu, 13 miles north of Taegu. A Red divisional chief of staff surrendered. “We’ve got them now,” said Maj. Gen. Hobart R. Gay, commanding officer of the First Cavalry. “We have troops all around them.” That left the trapped Reds two choices. They can fight it out against the Americans or they can surrender. Asked if he expected to go in after the Communists General Gay replied: “Maybe we won’t have to. They’re pretty hungry.” The surrendered chief of staff is 30-year-old Senior Col. Lee Hak Ku of the 13th North Korean Div ision. He told interrogators he be lieved the Red cause was finished and he believes in democracy now after studying it out. Remnants of both the North Ko rean Third and 13th Divisions were believed caught in the trap. Ele ments of both divisions had ham mered the American defenders of Taegu. One cavalry non-com said “now we move.”