The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 25, 1950, Image 1

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Circulated to
More than 90% Of
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Number 31: Volume 51
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Foreign Students
Observe UN Day,
Discuss Home Life
By JOHN WHITMORE
Five foreign students, represent
ing Mexico, Paraguay, India, Iraq,
and Pakistan, spoke on different
phases of life in their home coun
tries last night in observance of
United Nations Day.
The program held in the YMCA
Chapel was only one of the many
similar celebrations held all over
the world in honor of the “fifth
birthday” of the World Govern
ment.
G'. L. Ai'tecona, graduate student
from Paraguay, spoke on “Pan
Americanism.” He related the
United States part in working with
the other Americas and Compared
the present foreign policy with that
of 25 years ago.
US Influential
The former member of the Para-
guanian Legislature, explained the
United States influence in provid
ing technical aid in building up
railroads, highways, and factories
in the Latin American countries.
He also related the Americas to
the United Nations. The Americas
were build up, with the aid of all
nationalities—Indians, Caucasians,
Africans. This was the basis of
the understanding of the United
Nations.
. P. V. Popat, graduate student
from India, gave a brief history
of Ghandi’s influence on India and
the Far East. Ghandi’s philosophy
of non-violence, but strength of
character, is found in many of the
UN policies.
Groudwork laid by the Good
Indo-Chinese
Ask Assistance
In Red Battle
£aigon, Vietnam, Indo-Chi-
na, Oct. 25—(AP)—A bid for
. United Nations intervention
in embattled Indo-China came
yesterday from North Viet
nam’s governor, Nguyen Huu Tri.
Considered one of the top ad
ministrators in the French-spon
sored Bao Dai government of Viet
nam, Governor Tri declared in an
interview in Hanoi, his capital:
“The Indo-Chinese problem can
not be solved by military action
alone. We must have a political
solution. The people have always
expected the intervention of the
United Nations. Sooner or later
it must come. We hope the U. N.
will interfere energetically. This
situation is disastrous for both
the French and the Vietnamese
people.”
The Communist-led Nationalist
forces of Ho Chi Minh, who have
won coutrol of the frontier zone
bordering Communist China by
forcing French troops from a half
dozen posts, now have detachments
within artillery range of Hanoi.
More than 300,000 leaflets ask
ing the Vietnamese people to join
Americans in the fight for “peace
through prosperity and not misery
through terror” were dropped to
day by Bao Dai’s personal two-en
gined plane on Vietnam’s three
major cities—Saigon, Hanoi, and
Hue. Other thousands were loosed
elsewhere as part of a celebra
tion of United Nations Day.
U. N. Flags bedecked Saigon.
The leaflets, asking popular
backing for the Ameriqan aid
program for Indo-China, were sup
plied by the Saigon information of
fice of the United States Econo
mic Cooperation Administration
(EGA).
French warplanes concentrated
on destroying supplies at Langson
that French troops were unable to
demolish before they abandoned
that headquarters frontier city to
the Vietnam last Wednesday.
Ex-Student Heads
Industrial Editors
J. R. Latimer, '44, staff writer
for the Humble Way, has been
elected chairman of the Gulf Coast
chapter of the Society of Associat
ed Industrial Editors.'
The Huiflble Way is the publica
tion of the Humble Oil and Refin
ing Co.
While a student at A&M, Lati
mer was editor of the Engineer, a
captain in H Coast Artillery, vice
president of the Scholarship Hon
or Society, a member of the Stu
dent Engineering Council, vice-
president of the Press Club.
He was also a distinguished
student, a member of the Ross VoL
unteei’s, and was selected for Who’s
Who at A&M.
Latimer has returned to A&M
several times to speak to groups of
engineering and journalism stu
dents.
Neighbor Policy was associated
with the Present, Day United Na
tions by Ruben Flores of Mexico.
M. A. Khan, and S. I. Ahmed
spoke on their native country of
Pakistan.
Flags in Background
Serving as a background for the
speakers were the flags of the
United Nations and of the United i
States.
The blue flag of the UN was j
presented earlier in the week to |
1VI. T. Harrington, president of the !
college, by members of the Brazos
County Home Demonstration Asso
ciation. Mrs. R. W. Caldwell,
Brazos County Chairman of the
council made the presentation.
In making the presentation Mrs.
Caldwell said it was one of the 3000
such presentations being made in
the United States—each with the
hopes that the flag will bring closer
home and emphasize the meaning
of world cooperation.
President Harrington said, “we
believe that the United Nations is
the greatest single instrument of
peace in the world. Men of three
nations are fighting and dying in
Korea under this very blue and
white flag in defense of all man
kind.”
Elsewhere in the World
Elsewhere in the world UN Day
was celebrated in a different man
ner.
In Moscow the newspapers told
Russian people the UN had the
choice of going either down the
“Path of Peace” pointed out by the
Soviet Union or the “Path of the
Aggressors,” meaning the United
States and the other western pow
ers.
President Truman in a speech to
the UN General Assembly in New i
York, said war fears could be dis
pelled if all nations agreed to a
foolproof disarmament program.
He proposed the UN combine its
tglks abopt Atomic Control and
conventional arms, a step that Rus
sia fought, for four years. So
viet Minister Andrei Vishinsky did
not applaud during the speech and
withheld comment later.
In Europe the Freedom Bell, a
10-ton bronze symbol, created for
Comunist surrounded West Berlin
by US Public subscription, was
dedicated by Gen. Lucius Clay
with the Pledge “To resist aggres
sion and tyranny wherever they
appear on earth.” A throng of al
most 500,000 Germans applauded.
Some wept.
Sgt. Curtis Added
To MS Department
Sgt. William P. Curtis of Dallas
recently replaced Sgt. Edgar W.
Sanders of the Military Depart
ment.
Sgt. Curtis was stationed at
Brooks Air Force Base in San An
tonio before coming to A&M. He
served with Headquarters, Head
quarters Squadron USAFE at
Wiesbaden, Germany as a first
sergeant. Curtis graduated from
Baylor in 1948.
Sergeant Brooks, who has been
recalled at the grade of Captain,
has been transferred to Brooks
Air Force for discharge from the
regular Air' Force.
He will report to the 2212th
Personnel Processing Squadron at
Langley Air Force Base, Virginia
for processing to Wright-Patterson
Air Force Base at Dayton Ohio.
Gallery Committee
Has 55 Members
More than 55 students are now
participating in the Art Gallery
Committee activities according to
Mrs. Ralph Terry, sponsor.
“We hope that every student
with any interest in art will become
a member of the committee,” Mrs.
Terry saiid.
In addition to the 55 students,
Mrs. Terry is also giving private
art lessons to 35 individual stu
dents, mostly faculty members and
their wives.
“We are planning to keep work
of the members of the Art Gallery
Committee on exhibit here in the
Memorial Student Center through
out the year,” Mrs. Terry con
tinued.
Austin Club Plans
For Turkey Dance
Final plans for a pre-game
Thanksgiving Dance were an
nounced by the Austin Club today.
The dance will be held in the
City Colesium with Bill Turner
and the Aggieland Orchestra fur
nishing the music.
President A1 Lock said ample
tables and dancing space will be
available. He also said that ar
rangements have been made for
night-club conveniences.
Battalion
PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE
COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1950
Nation’s Top
Safety Section
Lumberman’s 1949 Contest
Price Five Cents
student^speoken^l Aggie Sweetheart To Be (■hosen
★ 1 ★ ★ 4
Corps Trip Plans Take Shape
M
A,.
{ V.
Double Sweetheart Presentation
Homecoming Activities Scheduled
Delegations from A&M and SMU talked Corps Trip with
Dallas City Officials yesterday. And plans for the Armistice
Day meeting of the two schools began taking rapid shape.
Besides the Cotton Bowl clash of two teams presently
among the top ten in the nation (according to Williamson),
the Nov. 11 weekend will include a parade by each of the
schools and a dance with music by Ray McKinley and Co.
Preliminary details were mapped out in Dallas’ City Hall
by Inspector Flay D. Nelson of the Traffic Section of the
Twelve Man Selection Committee
Leaves for TSCW Tomorrow
The 1950-51 Aggie Sweetheart will be chosen this week
end in Denton by a special selection committee composed of
eight corps members and four civilian students.
She, as her predecessor last year, Jeannine Holland,
will be presented between halves of the A&M-SMU game on
the Corps Trip and will represent the College at such func
tions as Round-Up this Spring at the University of Texas
and at the Cotton Bowl Ball on New Year’s Day in Dallas.
The Sweetheart will be one of 12 nominees elected by
Photo by Battalion Chief Photographer Sam Molinary
Dallas Police Department; Bill Bumpas, ’46, president of the. the TSCW student Body last week, four representing each
In conjunction with the United Nation’s birthday celebration yes
terday, five foreign students attending A&M discussed life in their
home countries at a program in the YMCA last night. In the usual
order, they are Reuben Flores, Mexico; P. V. Lopat, Iraq; M. A.
Khan, Parkistan; L. T. Kadry, Iraq; and G. L. Artecona, Paraguay.
Aggies Arrested
For Car Painting
Waco, Tex., Oct. 25—(A 1 )—Some
Aggies said some Aggies stole
Barney and Bailey from the Baylor
campus.
Seven Texas A&M students
which Waco police arrested at 1:30
a. m. yesterday on a downtown
Waco street said they didn’t do it
but—.
They said six members of the
Aggie Band came to Waco last
week and took the twin bear cubs
-mascots of the Baylor football
team—from the bear pit on the
Baylor campus.
Bailey Returns
Bailey came back about four
hours after his capture. But Barney
wasn’t found until somebody called
a Baylor office and said he was
tied to a telephone pole on the
old Twelfth Street Road in Waco.
He was.
A check by Battalion reporters
last night revealed that a statement
made by A&M students who took
the cubs last week was on its way
to Baylor officials and student gov-
Army Admits
Discrimination
Dallas, Oct. 25 —(AP) —
The army replied yesterday to
charges that there had been
discrimination here in the
feeding of Negro and White
recruits.
Local officials of the National
Association for the Advancement
of Colored People—who made the
complaint—accepted the reply
“with gratitude for its fine spirit.”
The NAACP officials complained
that several Negro volunteers for
service in the Army and Air Force
were served in the kitchen of a
Dallas cafe, while white volunteers
were fed in the dining room.
The army—in a letter from Col.
A. L. Fulton, regional recruiting
chief—replied that the men were
not at the time actually paid of the
service; that since they had not
been sworn in, they were still civ-
The colonel invited NAACP mem
bers to visit its facilities for ser
vicemen at Love Field, and said
no racial discrimination is prac
ticed there.
U. Simpson Tate, regional
NAACP counsel, said he would re
port the whole matter to his
national headquarters, and any
other action would come from
there.
Wool, Meat Teams
Place in Contests
Two A&M judging teams placed
fourth and seventh in their re
spective contests at the American
Royal Livestock show in Kansas
City this last week.
The wool judging team placed
fourth in the intercollegiate wool
judging contest.
Members of the team which
was the first team from A&M en
tered in a wool judging contest
were Dale Malechek of Van Court,
Bert Gibbs of Justin, and Jim Bob
Steen of Goldthwaite.
The A&M Meats judging team
placed seventh in the inter-colleg
iate meats judging contest. The
team placed sixth in lamb grading,
second in lamb judging and third
in pork judging.
Douglas Wythe of Granbury,
Paul Weyerts of Alpine, and John
Sugarek of Skirmore, compose the
team.
ernment authorities.
Their statement read:
“We did take the bear cub from
Baylor, but it was intended
strictly as a joke. We had no in
tention or desire to harm the
bear of to deface the campus of
Baylor or to destroy any prop
erty whatsoever, and to the best
of our knowledge and belief we
did not harm the bear or deface
any property. We returned the
bear safe and unmarked, and
we repeat that it was meant
as a joke and in fun, and we re
gret any hard feelings that may
come from it. We hope the stu
dent body of Baylor will go along
with us without any hard feel
ing/and consider it in the light
that it was meant. We took
good care of the little cub while
we had him, and that’si more than
we can say for the bear in regard
to us.
“We sincerely hope the stu
dents of Baylor will know that
they are welcome on our campus
and that there was no malice
whatever in bringing the bear
to our campus for a visit. Cer
tainly there was no spirit of re
taliation as the result of a couple
of Aggies having fared badly on
the Baylor Campus just previous
to our taking the bear. As a mat
ter of fact, we did not know
about this affair until later, and
we had planned getting the bear
sometime before that.
“The above statement is true
and correct to the best of our
knowledge:”
•
Texas A&M plays Baylor Sat
urday in Waco. And it’s Baylor
homecoming., too.
These seven Aggies police picked
up today—they were caught paint
ing a sign in lampblack in the
middle of a downtown Waco street.
All they had painted was “beat”
when a police car and a load of
Baylor students found them.
Offer to Pay Fine
The Baylor students offered to
pay the Aggies’ fines and be re
sponsible for their custody, but
police were suspicious of the of
fer and decided huh-uh.
The Aggies stayed in the city jail
until morning when City Judge
Wayne Lee released them with a
warning that they would have to
pay if two cars found painted up
were damaged. The cars, parked on
a street, had been decorated with
“Beat the hell out of Baylor” in
shoe polish.
Police got the tip on the Aggies
being in town when an all-night
grocery called them and said a
bunch of students had just bought
a lot of shoe polish.
Cub Too Rough
The Aggies said that the cub-
nappers stole the cubs in burlap
sacks, but Bailey escaped. They
took Barney to College Station,
they said, but found he was too
rough and ate too much, so they
brought him back.
Let’s all be calm and not take
any reprisals, President W. R.
White of Baylor, urged his stu
dents, “I admonish all Baylor stu
dents to keep their spirit on a
high plane and then display it on
the football field Saturday.”
Berlin Festivities Fund
Berlin —UP)— The city fathers
of Buehl, in southwest Germany,
recently met in secret session to
approve an expenditure of 10
marks ($2.38) for improving the
curves of the Buehl “Plum Queen”
for 1950.
The money, to be spent to buy
falsies, will be listed in the muni
cipal books under “public festi-
ities.”
Dallas A&M Club: Dean Rich of
SMU; B. C. Goodwin, SMU Student!
Council president; Bob Brown,
Homecoming Chairman at SMU,
and a five-man A&M delegation.
The parade by both schools will
be the first official event of the 1
week-end. The Cadet Corps march
down Main Street will be followed
by an SMU Homecoming Parade.
Tentatively, the Corps will assem- i
ble at the foot of Main to the
Triple Underpass at 9 p. m. The |
band will move out at 10 sharp.!
As in previous years a reviewing
stand will be located in front of
the City Hall.
Combined Parade
Immediately trailing the Aggie
march will be the SMU procession
of bands and floats heralding the
Homecoming. The combined schools
parade should consume about an
hour and a half.
In keeping with the traditions
of Armistice Day observance, the
SMU line of march has planned a
simultaneous halt at 10:58 a. m.
At that time Taps will be p(ayed
over a loudspeaker located atop
the Mercantile National Bank
Building in triubte to those who
have died in the- two past World
Wars. The march will be resumed
at 11:01.
All Aggies and all Tessies,' ; who
will be Co-Corps Tripping, have
been invited to the SMU Homecom
ing Dance at 8t30 Saturday night
in the Agricultural Building at
Fair Park. Ray McKinley and his
orchestra will play for dancing
amid a circle of the SMU floats.
Tickets for this dance are now
being sold by the A&M Student
Senate. Bill Parse, Senate president
who is handling the sale of the
tickets, says that only students
properly identified as Aggies, Tes-
sies or Southern Methodist stu
dents will be admitted. This does
not, of course, bar dates who may
be members of neither of the
schools.
Sweetheart Presentation
At the football game in the
afternoon, the Aggie Sweetheart
will be presented. The A&M Band
will, during its half-time march,
form the traditional heart and play
“Let Me Call You Sweetheart”
while Miss A&M of 1950 gets the
also-traditional kiss and bouquet of
roses.
SMU will present its Homecom
ing Queen during half-time after
parading its floats around the Cot
ton Bowl.
For early-comers, SMU has ex
tended an invitation to “The Pig
skin Review” being held on the
Dallas campus Thursday and Fri
day nights. A type of variety show,
the review is always held in con
junction with homecoming. There
will also be dancing Friday night
in the SMU Student Center.
Members of the A&M delegation
who made the trip yesterday were
Col. M. P. Bowden, assistant com
mandant; A. D. Martin, colonel of
the corps; Bill Parse, president of
the Student Senate; Ferris Brown,
corps information officer and Dave
Coslett, public information officer.
Edward M. “Buck” Schiwetz, ’21, points out some of the finer
points of commercial art, using one of his own color paintings as
ail example. Known for his works in oil and water colors as well
as free hand sketches, Schiwetz specializes in scenes taken from
pioneer days in Texas. His paintings and sketches are now on
display in the Memorial Student Center.
Spanish Club Picks
Oificers for Term
Wendy Elliot, senior modern
language major from Laredo, was
elected president of the A&M
Spanish club at the recent meet
ing.
Other officers chosen were Vice
President David Sechelski, modern
language major fi-om Anderson;
Secretary E. Graham Martin, his
tory major from Dallas; Treasurer
Jimmy Sparkman, geology major
from San Antonio; and Reporter
Tommy Martinez, modern langu
age major from Port Arthur.
Shoemaker To Speak
To QB Club Thursday
—-fof the top three classes.
- ; Committeemen will be looking
i for the girl with personality as
well as looks, according to Ken
Schaake, head of the Aggie dele
gation. She must be attractive as
well as friendly, he added. An
nouncement of the winner’s name
will probably be given sometime
! next week in a joint news release
from TSCW and A&M.
Committee Members
Members of the committee are
A. 1). Martin, cadet colonel of the
| corps; Dare Keelan, president of
the Senior Class; Bill Parse, presi-
, dent of the Student Senate; Kai l
Meyers, Senate Social Committee
: member; and George Charlton,
i Commentator co-editor. Other
members are Tom Flukinger, mem
ber of Senate Social Committee;
W. D. “Pusher” Barnes, Student
Life Committee members; Boh Al
len, non-corps vice president of
the Senior Class; Allan Eubank,
member of the Senate Social Com
mittee; Roy Nance, editor of Ag
gieland ’51; Joe Fuller, member
of the Senate social committee;
and Schaake.
The ratio of corps-civilian stu
dents was determined by the per
centage of the two groups in the
student body.
Schaake, as social secretary of
the Senior Class, automatically as
sumes chairmanship of the group
which leaves tomorrow afternoon
for Denton. Tomorrow night, the
committee members are guests of
TSCW, and the 12 beauty nominees
will attend a dinner and get ac
quainted session shortly after ar
rival.
Color movies of the A&M-TCU
game, a talk by Aggie Freshman
Coach Perron Shoemaker, and the
awarding of prizes to the winners
of last week’s contest will high
light the program for The Battal
ion Quarterback Club when it
meets Thursday at 7:30 p. m. in
the Assembly Hall.
Ralph L. Terry Jr., sociology
major from Brownwood, winner of
last week’s contest will receive
two tickets to this week’s game
with Baylor. Second place prize,
being offered for the first time
this season, is a Frank Medico
Pipe Smoking Kit to Fred H.
Dunn Jr., pre-med major from
Dallas.
The kit contains two pipes and
three boxes of Medico Filters.
This prize will be awarded to the
second best guesser for the re
mainder of the club’s meetings,
Chinese Forces
To Invade Tibet
Two Admitted To
Bryan Hospitals
Two College Station residents
were admitted to Bryan hospitals
for treatment yesterday.
Ralph H. Shuffler Jr. of 408
Throckmorton, underwent surgical
treatment, according to a report
from Bryan Hospital.
St. Joseph Hospital reported that
an 8 pound, 12 1/4 ounce baby girl
was bora to Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Bryant. Bryant is a junior electri
cal engineering major'.
Berlin, Oct. 25 — (AP) —
The Soviet-licensed news
agency ADN reported last
night that Chinese Commun
ist forces have been ordered
jto invade Tibet to “free its 3,000,-
000 inhabitants from oppression.”
ADN quoted the new China
News Agency of Red China as say
ing the southwest Chinese Mili
tary District and Headquarters
of the Second Chinese Field Army
had exhorted troops to fulfill
their “honorable duty” in “liberat
ing” Tibet.
Phrasing of the dispatch by
ADN, virtually the official voice
of Soviet occupation forces in
East Germany, indicated the troops
already were on the march to
Tibet.
“Officers and men and members
of the Communist party of the
advancing army units are asked to
fulfill their task and thereby de-
jmonstrate their deep sympathy for
the revolution,” and quoted the
new China News Agency.
The dispatch followed by a few
hours the report from New Delhi,
India, that a Tibetan delegation
from the priest-ruled country was
leaving for the capital of Red
China tomorrow to seek negotia
tions in Peiping.
The Tibetan delegation has been
in New Delhi for months attempt
ing to reach an accord with the
Red Chinese.
Roger Coslett, club director said.
Martin M. Schrank, Calvin A.
Rinn and Faymond J. Kunze fin
ished behind Dunn in the order
named.
Baylor Scout
Shoemaker, guest speaker for the
evening, has been scouting Baylor
for Coach Harry Stiteler. It is
expected that his talk will be along
lines connected with those duties.
The Quarterback Club and con
test are open to the general pub
lic. No admission or entry fee is
charged. The club endeavors to
bring sports authorities before
their members in an effort to
create a greater interest in foot
ball and broaden knowledge of the
.finer points of the game.
' Advertising space purchased by
Bryan businessmen, who are in
terested in furthering team sup
port and interest, make it possible
for The Battalion to sponsor the
club and contest.
QB Advertisers
These businessmen and their
business’ are Ralph Stacy, Kelly’s
Restaurant; Joe' Faulk, Lack’s As
sociate Store; J. C. Hotard, Ho-
tard’s Cafeteria; Johnny Morrell
and J. E. Clayton, Texas Drive-in;
Marshall Bullock and Guy Sims,
Bullock & Sims Clothiers; Charlie
Cade, Bryan Motors; Sanitary
Dairies; Charlie Potts, Potts Jew
elry Store; S. Peters, Peters Music
Store; and Parker-Astin Hard
ware Store.
“Bully” G'ilstrap of the Univer
sity of Texas coaching staff and
“Dog” Dawson, Aggie end coach
are slated to appear at the Nov.
2, meeting of the club.
Movies of the Aggie’s preceed-
ing Saturday’s game are shown at
all meetings in addition to having
guest speakers.
Visit for Info,
Sheriff Says
El Paso, Tex., Oct. 25—kT)—The
El Paso Herald-Post said yester
day that border town residents
registered no apparent reaction to
Sheriff Joe Campbell’s week-end
visit in Los Angeles with gambler
Mickey Cohen.
“If more sheriffs would mingle
with gamblers, they would find out
more about gamblers’ activities,”
Campbell said.
That was the El Paso County
Sheriff’s reply to questions about
his week-end visit with Cohen. The
sheriff and Mrs. Campbell went
night clubbing with Cohen and his
wife and had the use of Cohen’s
automobile and chauffer.
A reporter asked whether Camp
bell thought the Cohen episode
might hurt him politically.
“I’m not now and never have
been interested in politics,” he
said. His term as sheriff expires
Jan. 1 and Campbell said he will
not ask re-election.
Texas peace officers hustled
Cohen out of several cities during
a recent trip by the little gamb
ler to this state.
Cohen later told Los Angeles
newsmen that Campbell “was the
only guy who treated me decent
in the whole state of Texas.”
Art Exhibits Open
In MSC Lobby
Now on display in the Memorial
Student Center are the paintings
by Edwin M. Schiwetz, partner
in the Houston advertising firm of
Wilkinson, Schiwetz and Tips.
Also on display are ceramics by
Harding Black of the Witte Mu
seum in San Antonio.
An effort is being made to se
cure a number of art exhibits now
on tour for a showing at the cen
ter, announced Mrs. Terry, sponsor
of the Art Gallery Committee.
An exhibit of paintings by Gaitha
Browning, one of Texas’ best
known artists, of Brownwood, will (
be shown in about two weeks.
75th Anniversary
Medallions Here
The Exchange Store now has in
stock 5,000 bronze medallions com
memorating the 75th anniversary
of the college, according to man
ager Carl Birdwell.
The medallions, slightly larger
than a half-dollar in size, will re
tail at fifty cents each.
The Student Senate has accept
ed sponsorship of the sale and all
members will be supplied with
medallions to sell. Approximately
25 cents of each sale will go to the
Student Senate.
Bill Parse, president of the Stu
dent Senate, says 75 per cent of
the profits will be used for the
12th Man Scholarship and the re
maining 25 percent will go to the
Campus Chest.
The college also has a limited
quantity of solid gold medallions
for presentation purposes.
Gov. Allan Shivers received the
first of these during the anniver
sary ceremonies at Kyle Field, Oct.
4.