Circulated to More Than 90% of College Station’s Residents Number 108: Volume 51 The Battalion PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, THURSDAY, MARCH 8, 1951 Do You Think War Is Glorious? See Discussion, Page Two Price Five Cents MSC Councilmen Set f iled ion Date Election machinery was set in motion yesterday for the first campus-wide selection of members of the Memorial Stu dent Center Council. Members of that Council, meeting in special session, chose Tuesday, March 20 as election date for two elective positions on the Council. The two jobs will be open to qualified students in two categories in accordance with another measure passed at yesterday’s meet. One student member of the Council, the joint student-faculty-former student governing board of the ♦'MSC, will be chosen from a list of qualified candidates with Baylor Drubs Ag Debators With 17-4 Vote A two-man Baylor Debate team downed an Aggie duo by a 17-4 vote in a meet in the MSC last night. The Baylor team, composed of Russell ftennett and Fletcher Brown took 'the affirmative side of this year’s national question—Resolved: that non-communists nations should form a new international organiza tion. ; Aggies Dan Davis and James Farmer, members of the losing team last night will depart soon for a two day meet at Natchitoches, La., with Northwest State Col- lege. I Another team, composed of Bill Walker and Joe Murphy, will also « compete at the contest Friday and Saturday. Club sponsor Lee Martin, will also make the trip. L Yesterday afternoon two Aggies Bnd two Baylorites participated in * s 30-minute round-table discussion of the national question over WTAW. From Baylor were John Bagley and John Claypool. John Samuels and Robert Huffman re presented A&M. I Ted Mullinix, chairman of last night’s debate, was also chairman for the WTAW discussion. | The Aggie debaters will meet a West Point team Wednesday, March 14 in Guion Hall. The West Pointers will make the affirmative side of the national question. ■Tessies to Handle YMCA Services Miss Julie Brownlow, President • of TSCW’s Council of Religious Activities will bring a delegation ' 1 of five girls to A&M this Sunday : to conduct the Aggie Chapel ser- * vice at 9 a. m. in thd YMCA 1/ Chapel. Accompanying Miss Brownlow ff. will be Misses Peggy Peacock, Bet- p ty Clippard, Cynthia Alexander 1;' and Kitty Bethel. This council sponsors the chapel I services given in the Little Chapel . in the Woods at TSCW. The Aggie Chapel services which | began just before Ch/istmas are sponsored by the Inter-Church | Council. Patterned after the TSCW ser vices, they are inter-denomination al and conducted by students. De- I votional in nature, the programs | are designed to develop student I leadership and participation in re ligious work. Any student who wishes to take part in conducting the services is urged to see Curtis Edwards in I room 118, dorm 12. All students j are invited to attend each Sunday morning from 8:45 to 9:15. The purpose of these services . * is to establish a common meeting | ground for, and bring about a | greater understanding of all reli gions. | „ The chapel services are always over in time to attend the ser vices of the local churches. 15 Aggies Report For Examinations Fifteen Aggies reported to Hous ton Tuesday morning to take physical examinations for the armed forces. Men reporting were James Louis Kyle, Lonnie Bale, Jr., and Joe Felipe Martinez, all of Houston; T. Willson Davis, Jr. and Charles W. Tate, Jr., both of San Antonio and Carlos DeHerrera, El Paso. Other men reporting were Bobby Gene Touchstone, Brownwood; Ar thur W. Wight, Odessa; Edward * Geoffrey, Fredicksburg; John P. Pickens, Athens; Basil Pete Xres, Dalis; James Douglas Womach, Port Arthur. Even some out-of-state men had to report. They were Burwell D. Manning, Jr., Columbia, S. C:; Conrad Morgan, San Bernardino, Calif.; and, Peter J. Tremont, Trenton, N. J. Ex Accepts Position With Pampa Concern Henry Gilchrist, ’46, has recent ly accepted a position with Doug las and MacGuire Jaw firm in Pam pa. Gilchrist, a civil engineering • graduate from A&M, received his law degree from the University of Texas. He is a member of the Texas State Bar. year or more of school work left at A&M. The other vacancy will be filled from a list of candidates none of whom can have been a student in college for more than four semes ters at the time of election. Continuity of Council The restrictions placed on the one job were meant as a matter of insurance of continuity within the Council. A man, to meet the qual ifications of the latter positions, will be a potential two-year mem ber of the Council. That body is composed of four student representatives from the MSC Directorate or the outgoing Council elected by the Council; the editorship of The Battalion; one member of the Student Senate elected by the Senate; five mem bers of the faculty appointed by the president of the college. Also two former students, chosen by the governing board of the For mer Student Association, the di rector of the Center (without vote) and the two student members elect ed at large. Replaced Next Month The present Council, to be re placed next month, is the first governing body of the MSC. All members were either appointed by the president of the College or chosen in conformance with poli cies set by the Council in the MSC Constitutiion • which it drew up. Balloting in the March 20 elec tion will be campus-wide. Filing for the two jobs should begin within the next few days. A filing deadline will be announced soon. All candidates will have to meet qualifications set up in the by laws of the MSC—grade point ratio of 1.00, and required one- year membership in the MSC (all students who have paid Student Activities fees are members of the Center. The Council, in the words of the MSC constitution, is charged “with the organization and operation of the activities and events within the Center.” Liquor Drouth Proposed In State Senate Austin, March 7—(AP)— A call for a statewide prohi bition election in 1952 was sounded yesterday. Rep. Milton Wilkinson of Patroon filed the proposed consti tutional prohibition amendment. “It will be introduced to the House today,” Wilkinson said. His proposal calls for prohibition of the sale of all whiskey, beer, wine, or ale except that used for medical purposes. It calls for a statewide election in November, 1952. The co-author is Rep. Joe Gandy of Winnsboro. Not Expected “After days and days of discus sion, meditation and thought, some of us thought best not to bring up the prohibition amendment this year” Gandy said, “but to cam paign the next two years to get more members in the House who would be more favorable to the pro position. “However, since Mr. Wilkinson has sponsored the amendment, I will give him by whole-hearted sup port.” Mrs. Claude De Van Watts of Austin, president of the state WCTU, said this was the first pro hibition amendment actually intro duced in the legislature since re peal. “Let People Decide” “We are not asking the legislat ors to take a stand on this ques tion. We only want them to sub mit this to the people and let them decide, she says. “We feel Texas is ready for it. We have petitions urging a pro hibition election from almost every county in the state and we will start delivering them today to the legislators from these counties.” Mrs. Watts said that the United Texas Drys, whose president is Dr. W. R. White, president of Bay lor, are with the WCTU in backing prohibition. “No Comment” Notified by telephone that the prohibition amendment had been filed, Emmett Morse, general coun sel for the Texas wholesale Liquor Dealers Association, said he had no comment to make. The annual report of the Texas Liquor Control Board for 1950 showed 142 counties in the state totally dry. These are mostly in the northern half of Texas. Kind to Animals Pays Off For Lion Loving Britisher London, March 8 —(AP)—A laborer proved yesterday that it pays to be nice to animals—even an eight-ton stone one. He scratched the back of the famed old “Lion of Hun- gerford”—now being refurbished for exhibition at the fes tival of Britain—and discovered a secret compartment. The niche, long sealed by dozens of coat of red paint, yielded a bottle containing some coins dating back to William the fourth (1830-1836) and a note which hasn’t been deciphered yet. The red lion graced the roof of a Thames-Side Brewery for 125 years. Dynamic Songstress Betsy Ross, billed as the “Dynamic Lady of Song and Dance,” will be featured female vocalist for Denny Beckner and Orches tra who will play for the military Ball in Sbisa Hall Saturday night. She will sing and dance with the “Mad Cap Merrymaker” —Beckner—at a concert in Guion Hall at 7:15 Saturday evening. Helen Woodard ... is the youngest member of Vanity Fair, but doesn’t take a back seat in any other respect. She’s 5’ 3”, a brownette and has blue eyes. The 17-year-old Milby High-School senior from Houston was a 75th Anniversary Queen finalist and Armor - Engineer Regimental Sweetheart. Russ Hagens has the proud smile. General Crutcher Here for Review Brigadier General Harry Crutch er, Jr., Dallas, Chief of Staff, Air Section of the Texas Air Nation al Guard is just one of the many military dignitaries who will be on the campus for the Military 1 Day review and Ball Saturday. Gen. Crutcher is a North Dal las high school graduate and a 1931 graduate of SMU. He began his Air Force career in 1931 as a student of the Kelly Air Force Base Cadet School. His instructor was the present Air Force head, Brig. Gen. Harry Crutcher Judgers Schedule Oklahoma Meeting The Junior Livestock Judging Team will go to Oklahoma City for a judging meet open to junior livestock judging teams of senior colleges. Six men will make the trip, five on the team and one alternate. The members of the team are Tho mas M. Nanny, John Fuller, J. K. Miller, Bob Leschper Louis Ams- ler and Harold Bragg. Waco W. Alberts is the coach. The team and coach will leave Friday and return Tuesday. The team will spend Saturday at Still water, where they will be guests of Oklahoma A&M. Sunday they will go to Oklahoma City. They will judge Monday morning and the results will be announced Tuesday morning. Swine, quarter horses, cattle, and sheep will be the classes of live stock judged. UN Club Cancels Meet The United Nations Club meet ing scheduled for Friday has been postponed P. V. Popat, vice-presi dent of the club, announced, this morning. A meeting date will be announc ed later. Gen. Hoyt Vandenberg, who was at that time a first lieutenant. Upon graduation in 1932 Gen. Crutcher was assigned to various squadron positions with the 9th Bomb Squadron, March Field, Calif. ■ In 1934 when the Air Force took over commercial mail runs for a while, G'en. Crutcher flew the mail in a fighter plane from Cheyenne to Salt Lake City. Gen. Crutcher received his regu lar Air Force commission in 1935 and in 1936 was appointed a flight instructor at Randolph Field in San Antonio, a position he held for two years. In 1938 he was promoted to the rank of Captain and made a flight commander at the “West Point of the Air.” During the period from 1939 to 1942, Gen. Crutcher rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel and was at various times Stage command er, and director of training at Ran dolph and Goodfellow Air Force Bases. 6,000 Hours In Air Gen. Crutcher, who has accum ulated 6,000 hours flying time in F-51’s, C-47’s and B-26’s, was named Assistant to the Chief of Staff of the AAF Training Com mand in 1943 and promoted to the rank of Colonel. Overseas service in 1944 • and 1945 saw the then Colonel Crutcher flying in Tinian and the Saipan Islands. The latter part of 1945 he was with the Flying Training Com mand and in 1946 was named Exe cutive Officer of Randolph Field. Resigned Commission He resigned his regular com missioned while stationed at Tyn dall AFB in Florida to return to civilian status. In 1948 he was appointed a colonel in the Texas Air National Guard commanding the 136th Fighter Group in Dallas and in 1949 was promoted to Brigadier General and made commander of the 63rd Fighter Wing in Hous ton. Last year he was appointed to his present rank on the staff of the Texas Air National Guard. New ORC Outfit Will Be Organized Authorization has been secured to organize the Headquarters and Headquarters Company of the 420th Engineer Aviation Brigade in the Bryan-College Station area according to Captain Marion B. Findlay, local Organized Reserve Officer. This new unit of the ORC has an authorized strength of 39 officers and 83 enlisted men. Lt. Col Spen cer J. Buchanan, Professor of Civil Engineering will be Brigade Com mander. The unit will meet twice monthly. Captain Findlay urged that local men interested in becoming mem bers of this unit contact the ORC office on Welborn Road or phone 6-1811. UN Troops Move Ahead On 70 Mile Korea Front Tokyo, March 8 — GP) — Allied troops smashed ahead in Korea today along a 70- mile front in the second day of their new offensive. It was one of the biggest United Na tions attacks of the war. A U.S. Eighth Army briefing officer said 11,039 Chinese and North Korean Reds were killed or wounded Wednesday on the opening day of the assault. The sudden U. N. .push surprised Reds on the western end of the fighting front— east of Seoul. There the U.S. 25th Division crossed the Han River with tanks at three points. They inflicted 5,250 Communist casualties. Field dispatches said Allied losses were amazingly low. Front line officers said the surprise at tack caught the Reds flatfooted as they were They’re Young Yet Patience Advised On UN, US Policy By CLAYTON SELPH The United States must take a common sense view toward Rus sia—it must deal with her firmly, but not precipitate a war. At present our tendency is to creidt her with more strength and cun ning than she has. And most of all, we must not yield to a feeling of constant panic toward Russia. That was the advice offered by Mrs. Vera M. Dean to the Great Issues Class and a crowd of inter ested students and college staff members in the MSC Assembly Room last night. Mrs. Dean is ed itor of all publications of the For eign Policy Association and is dir ector of research, for that organ ization. Speaking to a group almost fill ing the Assembly Room, she told her audience that “Our fear of Russia is stronger than their prop aganda.” Russia Not Infallible It is fantastic, she said, to think that they are infallible, or don’t have troubles of their own. “I do not belong to the defeat ist group in concerning the U.S. and world affairs.” A solid for eign policy is evolving from our ex- Cotton Queen Selection Set For March 31 March 31 has been the date set for the selection of this year’s Queen Cotton and her Court, Eli Whiteley, Agrono my department instructor, an nounced yesterday. A group 1 to be chosen by the Ag ronomy Society will go to Denton to select the queen and her court from the candidates at TSCW. King Cotton, who will reign with his queen over the Cotton Ball and Pageant festivities, will be chosen here Tuesday. Invitations to send a duchess to the Ball and Pageant will be sent to all organizations on the campus this week. Organizations failing to receive an invitation are instructed to get one in room 201 of the Agricultural Experiment Building, Tommie Duffie, Society social secretary, said. The style show for the Pageant will be given this year by San ger Brothers of Dallas. “Entertainment plans have not been completed, but they will be announced soon,” Whiteley said. Negro Singers Will Sing at Benefit A girl’s sextette from Lincoln school will appear as a special fea ture of the entertainment offer ed during the library benefit pro ject Saturday evening, March 10 at Consolidated High School. The benefit will be sponsored by the Campus Study Club. The sextette, made-up by Ester line Welbourn, Alma Ruth Searcy, Johnnie Lois Columbus, Jeffie Boone, Ethel Mae Steen and Audry Lee Steen, will sing four numbers: “Tampico,” “Tennessee Waltz,” “I’ll Never Be Free,” and “Huckle Buck.” St. Patrick’s Day Dance Scheduled A St. Patrick’s Day dance is scheduled for March 17 in the MSC Ballroom. The MSC dance committee has planned a dance with St. Patrick’s Day as the theme for March 17 in the MSC ballroom. The dance will be cabaret style and refreshments will be available. The Aggieland Combo will fur nish the music for the dance. Admission will be sixty cents. perimentation in world affairs since WW II. Breaking present U.S. policy’ into two camps, she said the Truman doctrine advocating aid whenever, wherever and in whatever form needed represents one side, while the “limited commitment” views of former President Hoover com poses the opposing attitude. Hoover Not Isolationist “Hoover’s policies are not iso lationist in the old sense of stay ing at home and exercising no in fluence in world dffairs,” the aud ience heard. He anerely feels that the use of armed might on the European and Asian mainland should be limited, Mrs. Dean said. She praised Hoover’s public stand on foreign policy as being responsible for a more construc tive study of what American atti tude and actions should be. “It is time,” she said, “for the well in formed to quit looking for a scape goat.” “What is done is past,” she emphasized. Lack of Confidence Explaining that there is no rea son for the American lack of con fidence in U.S. foreign policy and the United Nations, she said that neither have existed long enough to prove themselves. “This country has gone through a foreign policy revolution. Pre vious to World War II we had nev er had to make policies on such problems as face us today,” she said. There is no wonder that our pol icies have been perplexing, and con fusing, the tall and slightly gray- (See ARMING, Page 2) Robert F. Brown . . . newly elected editor of The Engineer, magazine written, and edited by men in the School of Engineering. He is a junior CE major from Dallas. The Engin eering council named him editor- in- chief. Drawing Contest Set for April 28 Preparations and plans are now being made for the annual engin eering drawing contest to be held April 28 for freshmen students en rolled in engineering drawing cour ses, announced L. E. Stark, chair man of the contest. Contestants may compete in any one of four types of drawing: an instrument working (shop) draw ing, freehand lettering, a freehand pictorial drawing, and the solu tion of a descriptive geometry prob lem. “Although the contest will not be held until mid-Spring the En gineering Drawing Department, by announcing at this early date, is seeking to stimulate interest and effectiveness of work among all its students rather in a selected few,” . the chairman said. Other members of the contest committee are Sam M. Cleland, B. C. Doggett and B. A. Hardaway. ypreparmg an attack of their own. Allied warplanes bombed, straf ed and rocketed Communist forces ahead of the advancing United Na tions ground troops. By noori Thursday, the U. S. Fifth Air Force had hurled more than 300 sorties against the Reds in clear weather. Stiffest ground fighting was re ported near Hoengsong in the mid dle of the central front. British commonwealth troops there ran in to stubborn Chinese defense of two hills. South Koreans Recover At the eastern end of the line, South Korean troops recovered from a setback of three miles in East Central Korea Wednesday and have regained some of the ground they lost to an estimated 13,500 attacking North Koreans. On the western front, the U. S. 25th Division surged across the Han River in assault boats and planted three bridgeheads east of Red-held Seoul. The crossing ranged from 12 to 15 miles east of Seoul, near the point where the Pukhan River from the north flows into the great Han River. Artillery Gives Cover Engineers who bridged the Han came under Red mortar fire but Allied artillery gave them cover. When the job was done, infantry men surged across the river and drove two to three miles north ward in pursuit of fleeing Reds. The Reds attempted no counter attack during the night. On Thurs day morning the 25th Division troops jumped off again to expand their triple bridgehead. Fake Crossing Made While the assault crossings were under way, South' Korean First Division troops made a fake cross ing maneuver northwest of Seoul. Apparently expecting the main Al lied crossing there, the Reds fought back with tank fire from the North bank of the Han. The diversion kept the Red tanks busy in that sector while the 25th D i v i s i o n crossed the river east of Seoul. Seven American divisions were in the line on the Allied drive to the North—the 25th, 24th, Seventh, First Cavalry, Third, Second and the First Marines. In addition, British, Turkish, Greek, French, Australian, South Korean and New Zealand troops drove forward in the new push. The shock of the Allied blow numbed the Reds on the western front and netted the Eighth Army its biggest one-day prisoner bag in a long while—260. Of the total, 213 were captured in the 25th Div ision’s across-the-Han assault. Solon Proposes State College Commission Bill Austin, March 7—(AP) — A state commission to control programs of state-supported colleges was proposed today. It would stop unnecessary overlapping of educational services and be a central agency to coor dinate the whole state program of higher education. It would determine the degree programs and educational services of each college or university but would not set administrative prac tices, say what should be taught in the courses or what books should be used. Rep. Callan Graham of Junction, who wrote the bill, said a study made by the legislative council showed that the role of the state- supported institutions of higher learning was not adequately mark ed. Graham called for a nine-mem ber commission to be paid $10 for each day spent on actual duty. For each student that does to any state-supported institution, Graham would charge a per capi ta equilization fee in addition to tuition. The fee would be $10 a semester for undergraduates and $15 for graduates. Club Rosters Wanted Representatives of clubs which have had their pictures taken for the Aggie and ’51 are requested to bring complete rosters of their club to the Student Activities of fice by Friday, it was announced this morning. The Student Activities office is in room 209 of Goodwin Hall.