r\ £ Cc^ eT . i. College Ce^ eT Battalion Award Winners for ’SO-’Sl f Lt. Col. Shelly P. Myers E. L. An sell Col. E. W. Napier W. H. Rothrock Harry L. Kidd The Battalion Circulated to More Than 90% of College Station’s Residents For Explanations Of TISA Negro Entrance, See Editorials, Letters Today PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE Number 85: Volume 51 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1951 Price Five Cents Railroad Men Stay ‘Sick’; 50 Lines Still Out Some cracks have appeared in the strike of about 12,000 railroad switchmen but a general back-to-work movement still was not in sight today. Nearly all the approximately 50 lines affected by the “sick” call walkout had little or no relief from the virtual tie-up of important terminal operations in about 100 of the nation’s major cities. More embargoes on shipments were imposed or ex tended, more industries were feeling the pinch of vanishing supplies of raw goods for processing while finished products piled up on their shipping docks; and more men were being, laid off. The government embargo on most mail continued. Bertrand, Myers, Angell, Napier, Rothrock, Kidd Get Bait Awards One of the first breaks in the walkout which began six flays ago came yesterday in the strategic rail center of At lanta. The return to work there of about 1,500 switchmen was sufficient to restore normal operations in three railroad yards and to lift embargoes by all but one line. But while the resumption of work in Atlanta and several other points was watched for signs of a Mothers March Re - Scheduled For Tuesday The Mothers March on Polio, originally set for last Wednesday, will be held Tues day evening after postpone ment due to bad weather con ditions, announced R. F. Cain, March of Dimes Director. The “march” is scheduled to last from 7 p. m. to 8 p. m. to morrow. Workers from, each block in the cities of College Station and Bryan will solicit houses in their block, stopping for donations only at these homes with porch lights on. College apartment residents have been requested to hang a shoe on the outside door-knob of their apartments if they wish to con- tribute to the drive. This method will be used because a lighted can dle would create a fire hazard, Cain said. Cain urged residents of the two towns to remember the time and make plans to be home between the hours of 7 and 8 p. m. A. blast from the* fire whistle in Bryan and the police car sirens in Col lege Station will mark, the begin ning of the one hour period and serve as a reminder to people of both towns to turn on their lights. Brazos County’s March of Dimes drive, sponsored by the local Lion’s Club, has been extended indefinite ly due to the loss of worker’s time during the recent cold spell, chair man H. T. Blackhurst said. The goal of $9,500 still seems to be a long way off, Blackhurst said. He also pointed out that cam paign officials are depending on the outcome of the Mother’s March on Polio to raise the total donations for polio. Young Attends Meeting Dr. Vernon A. Young, head of the Range & Forestry Dept., pre sented an invitational paper, en titled, “Teaching Range Facts— The Role of the Schools” at the annual meeting of the American Society of Range Management held at Billings, Montana recently. He also took part in committee ac tivities and interviewed prospec tive" graduate students wishing to attend A&M next fall, Texas Railroads A mail embargo slapped on bulky mail addressed to Texas points at Dallas last Thursday has been lifted on a day-to-day basis. Postmaster J. Howard Payne yesterday lifted the embargo— even though. 300 Dallas railroad 1 switchmen who say they’re sick stayed off the job. Payne yesterday said he had checked with postmasters at key distribution points of Fort Worth, San Antonio, Houston and Texarkana. He said he found that those cities, like Dal las, have been able to keep mail moving inside the state despite the nationwide sickness strike of railroad switchmen. Mail headed outside the state is still embargoed. Most switchmen went back to work Saturday in Fort Worth and Houston. But yards at El Paso and Dallas remain tied up. possible end of the strike, it broke out in some new spots. The New York, New Haven and Hartford, a vital link between New York and New England was forced to cancel all its service. With all rail op eration serving New York virtually paralyzed, the city faced a possible shortage of fuel and such foods as fresh fruits and vegetables. Future Aggies Win Scramble; Scholarships Two South Texas youths, Edsel Renken of Robstown, and Doug Symmank of Gid- dings, were officially wel comed to A&M during rodeo ceremonies at the Houston Fat Stock Show and Livestock Exposi tion Saturday night. The two boys are winners' of the annual beef and dairy scramble scholarship awards of $2,000 and $2,500 given each year by Hous ton businessmen to see the winners through four year of college at A&M. Members of the committee from A&M who welcomed the two win ners to this school during the rodeo ceremonies were C. N. Shepardson, dean of the School of Agriculture, Dean of Men W. L. Penberthy, L. O. Tiedt, and Charles Keilers. Tiedt, a junior agriculture jour nalism major, is winner of a pre vious scholarship given in 1948. Keilers, a freshman agriculture major, received a similar scholar ship in 1950. Donors for this year’s scholar ship awards are P. P. Butler, pres ident of the First National Bank of Houston, and L. E. Cowling, president of Southern States Life Insurance Company of Houston. Renken and Symmank will enter A&M this Fall. Extension Service Employs Trainer Edwin F. Jacobs has been em ployed by the Texas Engineering Extension Service as a supervisor trainer, specializing in accident prevention. His first assignment will be giv ing a 20-hour unit on accident pre vention for 500 employees of the Texas and Pacific Railroad from El Paso to New Orleans, La. Tessies Name ‘Tessandra’ Official School Mascot Mary had a little lamb, now, Tes- sie has one too. “Tessandra,” a white lamb, will reign as TSCW’s mascot. Tessandi’a was chosen from five finalists. The others were a swan, a peacock, a calf and a canary but Tessandra won by a large majority. The winning pet was suggested by Mary Lamb, a senior home eco nomics education major from Tex arkana. She was very surprised when told that her selection ha<\ won. Miss Lamb, a cute brunette, sug gested Tessandra because she wanted “something with Tess in it.” She said it was the first time she had ever won anything. By winning the contest, Miss Lamb won not only the honor of having her selection named but prizes offered by most of the bus- prizes along the “Drag,” the TSCW business district. The contest began Dec. 4, spon sored by The Daily Lass-0 and the Student Council of TSCW, when a stationery salesman asked if TSCW had a mascot to go on the stationery and he was told no. Hundreds of mascot suggestions were turned over to the Student Council from which the five final ists were finally weeded out. Some of the many entries included deer, ducks, geese, turtles and penguins and quite logically “The Thing.” Most all the entries for the “crit ter” had Tess or Tessie attached to it in some form. Even some Aggies were men tioned. Truman Asks Congress For Pocketbook Hitting Taxes Washington, Feb. 5—UP)—The Truman administration asked Congress today to add four per cent to Federal Income Tax rates, double the tax on gasoline and sharply boost lev ies on cigarettes, automobiles, appliances and other items. > The program, which would hit the pocketbooks of mil lions of taxpayers, would nearly triple the excise tax on automobiles and more than double the tax on television and radio sets, refrigerators and other appliances. Three cents a pack would be added to the excise tax on cigarettes, making the total 10 cents a pack. The excise whisky would go up about 60 cents a fifth and the tax on an ordinary bottle of beer would be raised 1.3 cents. Linegar RE Week Speaker Feb. 12-16 By CURTIS EDWARDS Ned Linegar, regional YMCA secretary for Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas, will conduct forums and discussion groups in the Legett Hall lounge during Religious Em phasis Week, Feb. 12-16. He will be available to the students living in Legett, Milner and Mitchell Halls. In addition, to his activities with YMCA Forum Will Discuss Foreign Landis Seven officers of the Mili tary Department will discuss conditions of governments, the political thinking, the trends of foreign policy, and the customs, habits, problems and philosophy of residents of the South Pacific, Australia and the Far East at a meeting of the YMCA Tuesday at 7:15 p. m. Headed by Col. H. L. Boatner, Commandant and PMS&T who has spent ten years in the Far East and is intimately acquainted with conditions and problems there, the forum will be on hand to discuss, examine and answer all problems directed to it. There will be no formal talks and Col. Boatner’s opening remarks will be designed more toward creating a background for subsequent discussions upon topics presented from the floor than toward being of a lecture na ture. Seiwing on the forum will be Lt. Col. Chester C. Schaefer, Artillery, New Guinea; Lt. Col. Shelly P. Myers, Artillery, Philippine Is lands; Lt. Col. Jordan J. Wilder- man, Artillery, Japan; Major Hen ry B. Greer, Infantry, Southwest Pacific; Maj. William A. Burruss, CE. Guam; CWO George W. Lynch, Jr., Korea; and, CW Robert B. Mills, Australia. Invitation is extended by the YMCA to everyone interested. the A&M YMCA, this is the sec ond A&M R. E. Week in which Linegar has participated. Some of Linegar’s special fields in which he has done work are Recreational and Religion, Personality Growth and Develop ment, Christianity and Commun ism, The Campus Community, Education Is Not Enough, Brotherhood—a Matter of Heart and Mind, and Moral Leadership. Linegar is one of thirteen lead ers who will be on the campus dur ing R. E. Week to conduct forums from 4 to 5:30 p. m. and discus sion groups at 9 each night in the dorms which have lounges. The discussions will be operated on a come and go basis thereby letting the students without much time come and leave as they wish. Subjects discussed will be at the discretion of the groups and will be held before any size group. The men will live in the dorms and will be available at all times to the students. Linegar received his A. B. De gree in 1936, from Miami Univer sity, then entered the University of Cincinnati to work on his M. A. in the field of Sociology. He has also studied at George Wil liams and the Chicago Univer sity’s Divinity School. After graduation, he joined the staff of the Pennsylvania State College Association, where he served until he accepted the exe cutive secretaryship of the asso ciation of Kansas University in 1946. From this job he accepted his present position. While at Pennsylvania State Col lege, Linegar was secretary of the ministerial alliance, preaching of ten in local Lutheran and Presby terian churches. Science Meet Tonight Plans for the April regional meet of Texas Academy of Science to be held on the A&M campus will be discussed at the local chapter meeting in the new science building lecture room at 7:30 to night, Allied Tanks Crush Toward Seoul Again Tokyo, Feb. 5—CP)—The greatest force' of Allied tanks yet mounted in the Korean war smashed today within five air miles of Seoul. It mauled Chinese Red forces all along the route and then withdrew to the south. The column was one of three tank-infantry task forces which slugged northward toward the burned-out former South Korean capital. Lt. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, Eighth Army commander, watched the main assault within a few hun dred yards of the front. The big punch fell on Chinese Reds dug in on the hills around Anyang, nine air miles south of Seoul. Rolling behind a terrific aerial and military blasting, the task force took Anyang’s smoking ruins almost unopposed and slashed on northward. But the four miles beyond An yang were bitterly contested. One staff officer told A.P. correspon dent Jim Becker the column got into “a hell of a battle,” and add ed: “We killed a hell of a lot of them.” The main Allied spearhead, and another six miles to the west, were executing what frontline officers called “ a double envelopment with in a double envelopment.” Becker reported the spearhead to the west met even more fierce resistance. It managed to make “only a slightly smaller total yard age.” This column “smashed into heavy enemy pressure and stalled about five miles west of Anyang,” Beck er added. An Eighth Army spokesman said the three-pronged thrust “may be described as the greatest exploita tion of armor during the Korean war.” He added, however, “the ap proach of our tank columns toward Seoul should be regarded as of no particular significance at this time.” Presentation Made At Prof Banquet Six members of A&M’s professorial and staff ranks re ceived this year’s Battalion achievement awards at the first annual Student-Prof Relations banquet, held in the Memor ial Student Center ballroom Friday night. Presented with the awards were Dr. John R. Bertrand, dean of the Dasic Division; Lt. Col. Shelly P. Myers of the Military Department, E. L. Angell of the chancellor’s office; W. H. Rothrock of the Modern Languages Department; Col E. W. Napier, PAS&.T; and Harry L. Kidd of the English Department. The six were chosen by a selection board composed of Battalion staff members. Their identity was kept “top sec ret” until the presentation was announced at the banquet. Battalion awards are made annually to members of the college staff and faculty who have contributed signally to A&M’s welfare and that of its students. Friday night’s cere- money marked the fifth consecutive year the awards were given. Each of the winners was presented an 8x10 certificate, headed by The Battalion’s masthead and inscribed with a citation to each recipient. They were presented and signed by Battalion Co-editors Clayton Selph and Dave Coslett. Following are the inscriptions, in part, from each of the six awards: Dr. John R. Bertrand “ ... to Dr. John R. Bertrand, dean of the Basic Division, for his work in the initial founding and direction of the Basic Division.” Lt. Col. Shelly P. Myers “ ... to Lt. Col Shelly P. Meyers, Jr., associate professor in the School of Military Science, for his far-sighted interest in both the future military and civilian life of the students in his classes.” E. L. Angell “ . . . to E. L. Angell, assistant to the chancellor, for the efficient administration of his present job and for his past work in helping to found and guide the development of A&M’s far-reaching Student Ac tivities and Student Publications program.” W. H. Rothrock “ . . . to W. H. Rothrock, assistant professor in the Modern Languages Department, for his conscientious interest in students and for his high level of classroom instruction.” Col. E. W. Napier “ ... to Col. E. W. Napier, professor of Air Science and Tactics, for having, in his short time here, so completely won the respect and confidence of the cadets under his supervision and all others with whom he has come in contact and for having raised the level' of Air Force ROTC at A&M.” Extension Granted For Tax Payment Because of the recent bad weather, an extension of time to pay both the College Station city taxes and the A&M Independent School District taxes has been giv en to the local citizens says Ran Boswell, assistant city secretary. Failure to pay taxes by the dead line will result in the assessment of a 1.5 per cent increase in amount as a penalty. This penalty will be increased by the same amount every month the taxpayer fails to pay his taxes. “This office feels the weather prevented many people from pay ing their taxes because they were unable to drive their cars to the city hall. It was this opinion that caused the officials to grant an extension of time.” Harry L. Kidd “ ... to Harry L. Kidd, assistant professor in the English Depart ment, for his guidance and inspiration of creative writing at A&M both in and out of the classroom.” ' The banquet, to be made an an nual affair, is sponsored by the Press Club, composed of all mem bers of Student Publications staffs. With a humorous theme general ly prevailing, the dinner had “pop” quizzes for the profs, music by Uncle Ed Harrington’s orchestra, songs from an Arts and Sciences Sextet and an Engineer quartet, with the faculty supplying music and song. Dr. J. P. Abbott, dean of Arts and Sciences, burlesqued the other schools with his talk, “Why Arts and Sciences Students Should Take Technical Subjects.” On the more serious side came an address from Dr. M. T. Har rington, president of the college. Dr. Harrington told of the many ways in which students could be come better acquainted with the faculty. Levant Concert Postponed Oscar Levant, world famous pianist scheduled to appear in Guion Hall tonight, will not play as originally scheduled, C. G. “Spike” White, assistant dean of men in charge of student activi ties, reminded Town Hall ticket holders this morning. Levant’s tour in the South west was cancelled because of illness. He will appear on Town Hall later in the year.