Circulated to More Than 90% of College Station’s Residents The Battalion PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE Peace May Cost Dream of World Government See Lead Editorial, Page 2 Number 75: Volume 51 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 1951 Price Five Cents UN Peace Plan VoleDueToday Lake Success, Jan. 12 — .^’UP) — The United Nations drove toward a vote today on Va final peace bid to Commun- igist China, offering a political ■conference on Far Eastern :i; p r o b 1 e m s in return for a pcease-fire in Korea. The United States accepted the plan. Russia, in what gseemed to be a stall for time, ■expressed coolness toward it. Non-Communist spokesmen made it plain that if Peiping ■rejects this offer, the Reds aT1 gcan expect no further overtures flanri the war will go on. v Peace Improbable Diplomats here held little hope *v|that China’s Communists would filagree to the proposals. They felt, ■however, s the effort was worth ®while if only as a demonstration Mthat the U. N. had explored the fplast possible avenue to peace. I The five-point plan, drafted by Jpeease-fire commission members I'jNasi’ollah Entezam of Iran, Sir ;-,Benegal N. Rau of India and Can- Sada’s Lester B. Pearson, will be put Jffijbefore the 150-nation political com- ■mittee in a resolution this after- Announcement of the plan yes terday brought from Soviet dele gate Jacob A. Malik the charge Society Sets War Picture “All Quiet on the Western Front,” a classic war picture, will be featured at Monday night’s meeting of the A&M Film Society in the YMCA Chapel at 7:30, Her- ■man Gollob, president, announced today. Starring Lew Ayres and Louis ■ Wolheim, the picture, which was j. released in 1930, is a bitter con- i tlemnation of war. Whereas most 'v frar films deal with America troops, |fd‘AlI Quiet” treats the G e r m a n s I tide of the question, depriving American audiences of the chance fe to associate war with glorious Rl patriotism. •i-witfi that it was an ultimatum. Malik, however, did not completely close the door. He said he needed more time to study the proposals. . Maintain Unity Explaining U. S. approval, American delegate Warren R. Aus tin said the proposals restated the principle that a cease-fire must precede negotiations. He added the U. S. wanted to maintain the unity of the United Nations. Rejection of the proposals, Aus tin added, will cause the U. S. to pursue its original plan to demand that the U.N. brand Red China as aggressor and call for her punishment. Science Group Sets District Meet at A&M A&M will be host to the Eastern District of the Texas Academy of Science regional Spring meeting on April 6 and 7, according to Dr. C. C. Doak, head of the Biology Department. Dr. W. Armstrong Price, pro fessor of geological oceanography and director and former president of the Academy, was elected gen eral chairman of the meeting at a recent meeting of the local mem bers. A local steering committee and sectional program chairmen from the colleges of the district will be selected soon, Doak said. Scientists and students of science from colleges and high schools of Texas and especially from the Eastern District will be invited to attend and take part in the meeting and in the celebration of Arts and Sciences Week. State and out-of-state speakers have been secured and more will be invited to speak in the near future. Members will be here from the district composed of schools and colleges in the Eastern half of the state. Other regional meetings will be held this Spring at Corpus Christi and Wichita Falls. AEG Chooses Nevada F or Atomic T esting Area Washington, Jan. 12—(A 5 )—The 1 . Atomic Energy Commission said 'll yesterday it will use a vast Nevada I area for a proving ground to speed | up development of atomic weapons, | indicating it has mastered a meth- I od of small scale explosion tests. This would mean a valuable short | cut in vital defense research. It £ also would hasten the day when I! the commission will know if it 1 can actually perfect the tremend- : V ously powerful hydrogen bomb. It also may speed up work on new I' type A-bombs for guided missies ;! and artillery shells. The military has indicated such developments are feasible. AEC Noncommittal AEC said nothing about small H scale atomic blasts but its state- & ment was open to interpretation >. .that such explosions can now be set is) off. Such .a method would provide a “test” of the explosiveness of materials designed for an A-bomb : ; without the necessity of detonating I a finished bomb itself as was done I in the spectacular series of atomic 1 studies in the Pacific. Senator Brien McMahon (D- | Conn), chairman of the Senate- House Atomic Committee, said the new testing ground “will save pre- ; cious weeks in making certain lim- | ited tests vital to weapons develop ment.” Authorized By Prexy Declaring that it has been auth- p orized by President Truman to use a part of the 5,000-square mile Marine Research Needed -- Gunter The need for more fisheries and marine research on the Gulf Coast was expressed this week by Dr. Gordon Gunter, Director of the In stitute of Marine Science at Port Aransas. Dr. Gunter, speaking to the Fish and Game Club, discussed the his tory and development of marine biology in the Gulf Coast area. New spring semester club of ficers elected at the meeting were John Harris, president; Albert Jackson, vice president; John Wal- thers, secretary; E. R. Berdine, treasurer; and W. B. Kucera, Ag council representative. Las Vegas, bombing and gunnery range for “experiments” necessary to the atomic weapons development program, AEC said. “The use of the range will make available to the Los Alamos, N. M., scientific laboratory a readily accessible site for periodic test work with a resultant speed-up in the weapons development program. Experimental Testing “Test activities at the new site will include experimental nuclear detonation for the development of atomic bombs — so-called “A- bombs”—carried out under controll ed conditions.” A committee spokesman said the phase “so-called ‘A-bombs’ ” had been intentionally used to make it clear that the Nevada tests were to be aimed at the development of A-bombs, as distinguished from hydrogen bombs. Ike ‘Drops In On Denmark In Pact Tour Copenhagen, Denmark, Jan. 12—