Circulated to More Than 90% of College Station’s Residents The Battalion PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE Aggies Win Border Olympics See Story, Page Three Number 110: Volume 51 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, MONDAY, MARCH 12, 1951 Price Five Cents Three Pronged Spearhead Hits JChinese Reds ■Tokyo, March 12—(H 5 )—Allied troops today hurled a three-pronged spearhead at the heart of Chinese Red resis tance in Korea. »The center prong stabbed to within five miles of Hong- chon, a huge Communist troop marshalling point and once reported to be Chinese general headquarters. KRed rear-guard fighting stiffened, hinting that the Com munists would make a last-ditch stand before Hongchon, an important highway town. Allied field officer^ expected a counterattack from the Red staging area. + British, Canadian and Australian ^ 1 A l I troops advanced to within five Second Annual Sales Clinic Opens Tuesday The Second Annual Sales Clinic will get underway to morrow evening at 7:30 p. m. in the MSC Ballroom with a welcoming address by E. R. Bulow. assistant professor in the Department of Business Admin istration. “This clinic is part of a pro gram to work closely with practi cal business men and to supple ment j class theory,” explained T. W. I,eland, head of the Department of Business Administration. “Men high in the professional selling field,” Bulow says, “will participate in the clinic, which is sponsored jointly by the Business Society and salesmanship class.” Horace E. Perry, president of Mosher Steel Co. of Houston, and president of the Houston Sales Executives Club, will outline and explain the purpose of the sales vlinic. “The Fine Art of Professional Belling,” by Verne Lane, president of Verne Lane Associates, will be the first of five talks including “Getting Ready to Sell,” by Char les N. Royds, sales manager of the National Cash Register Co.; “Presenting the Proposition,” by R. E. Scott, sales manager of the Gold Seal Co.; “Overcoming the Obstacles that Block Sales,” by Herbert Elston of the Minneso ta Mutual Life Insurance Co. And “Closing and Clenching the Sale,” by Herbert L. Crate, sales manager of Hodell & Co. These talks will be followed by questions and discussion by a ten- man panel board. Prof Presents Paper Rogers L. Barton, assistant pro fessor in the Industrial Education Department, presented a paper and demonstratiion on “Visual Aids for the Industrial Teacher” at the West Texas district meeting of the TSTA in Amarillo, on Friday. miles of Hongchon from the south. They were 22 miles south of the 38th Parallel. That is the north ernmost advance of the current al lied major offensive. The U. S. First Cavalry and the U. S. First Marine Divisions drove on the Red supply center from the southwest and southeast. The cau tiously advancing Marines were reported about six miles from Hongchon. The Cavalrymen were reported about seven miles south west of the town. Resistance Evaporated On the right side of the 70-mile United Nations front, Red resist ance evaporated suddenly. Allied troops quickly captured towering Mount Taemi, a mile-high vantage point. Not a shot was fired. Seizure of the commanding peak straightened out the east-central front. It was dented five miles last week by a ferocious Korean Red counterattack. Front line officers said there was no danger of further buckling of the line in that sector. Let Air Out Lt. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, U. S. Eighth Army commander, told war correspondents that U. N. “forces have let a lot of air out of the inflated balloon of the Chi nese military establishments.” In six days the grinding allied offensive has killed or wounded about 33,000 Communist troops. Ridgway said the ratio of Com munist casualties to U. N. losses was “well over 60 to 1.” The commander said “it would be a tremendous victory for the United Nations” if the Korean war ended at the 38th Parallel. The parallel was the pre-war dividing line between Red North and Re publican South Korea. Not to End But, Ridgway added, he knew of no plan to end the fighting there. “If Communist China failed to drive us into the sea, that would be a defeat for her of incalculable importance,” Ridgway said. The degree to which we deflate her military reputation,” he continued, influences the think ing of millions and millions of peo ple in Asia. Eventually it must react on the political action of their govern ment. This would be of tremen dous importance.” Ags Beat TU, -33; Seek Finale In Austin Cadets Stun Steers With Ballhandling Aggies Go Military On Field and Floor By CLAYTON SELPH The weekend past was a whirl wind of military and social activ ities both on the drill field and dance floor for several thousand Aggie cadets and dates, this year’s Vanity Fair winners, and college and visiting dignitaries. A&M’s annual all-out military weekend really got underway Fri day night when, after competing for the first hour with a confer ence championship playoff basket ball game, the first annual Engin eers’ Ball and Press Club Ball were held in the MSC. The early • starters of Friday night and early guests arriving on the campus took a breather Sat urday morning before military wheels swung into action with a review of the Ross Volunteers on the MSC front lawn. A little later guests lined the Three inept Longhrons gape in amazement as giant Aggie center Buddy Davis turns his back to the camera and leaps high above the defenders to score two of the ten points that he garnered against TU Friday night when the Cadets massacred the visitors 45-33 to take a one game edge in the two-out-of-three game series. The Farmers meet Texas tonight in Austin in the second game with the NCAA trip in the balance. Beckner Plays Concert Then Runs Over for Ball By GEORGE CHARLTON Four groups of people on the campus this weekend were probab ly pretty well worn-out Sunday morning—the Vanity Fair winners, the members of Denny Beckner’s band, the corps of cadets, and any- day night’s activities. Beckner’s part in the military weekend began with a concert in Guion Hall early Saturday evening. Although drab in many respects, the concert was brighteded by the presence of the six Vanity Fair (See ENTERTAINMENT, Page 4) Filing for MSC Council Posts Begins Today Students wishing to file for next year’s at-large posts on the MSC Council may do so between now and 5 p.m. Fri day, Joe Fuller, MSC Council president, announced this niorning. Students may file applications with Miss Betty Bolander, MSC assis tant social and educational direc tor,in the MSC front office. Students may file in either one of two categories, according to their academic standing, Fuller said. One category is for students who are not now in later than their fourth semester of college, he said. The MSC Council constitution states that one of the students elected at-large must be a sopho more or freshman, Fuller said. Any student, regardless of clas sification, except seniors gradu ating in June or January, may file in the second category, Fuller ex plained. Date of the student body wide 'election has been set for Tuesday, March 20. rim of the drill field West of Dun can Hall for A&M’s annual Mili tary Day review in which a Cadet Corps over 4,000 strong paraded for visiting brass. Competing for honors with visit ing brass hats over the weekend were this year’s six Vanity Fair beauties, who probably got more wistful glances and the generals got salutes. As guests of Aggie land ’51, these half-dozen lovelies began their weekend Friday even ing at a “sneak preview” presenta tion at the Press Club Ball. “Vanity Fair” Luncheon Saturday noon found the girls and their dates at a luncheon spon sored in their behalf, after which they toured the campus for pictures scheduled to go in this year’s Ag gieland. Moving over to the parade ground the beauties watched the Cadet Corps march by as offi cial guests in the reviewing stand. Later in the evening Aggieland Editor Roy Nance introduced offi cially his publication’s beauties at the Denny Beckner concert as sisted by the comedian-bandleader who presented the girls with bou quets of red roses. The two most recent additions to A&M’s “annual dances,” the En gineers’ Ball and Press Club Ball, both featured something new or special for their guests. The En gineers’ Ball is the first dance giv en by a school of the college for its students and professors. Batt Awards Made Three certificates of merit and a check for $250 awarded by Lum bermen’s Mutual Insurance Com pany to the Battalion for its sec ond place winning Safety Edition last December competed with a Student Publication’s Ugly Man contest for intermission honors at the Press Club affair. E. R. Hook, Southwest representative for Lum bermen’s, presented the awards to the Battalion editors. “Presenting Arms” under the command of C. C. Taylor, the Ross Volunteers company was inspected Saturday afternoon by a "detaiil” including five generals. Later, the five generals and other visiting officers observed a colorful “officers center” and sa luted to the National Anthem of Norway, Italy and the United States during highlights of the Mil itary Day review. By RALPH GORMAN Battalion Sports Editor One jinx broken, a precedent set, and the only remain ing barrier to thwart the Farmers’ hopes of representing Dis trict 6 in the NCAA tournament in Kansas City March 21 will be the Gregory Gym jinx; meaning that the Aggies haven’t won from the Texas clan in Austin since 1934—a period of 17 years that dates back to the days when current TU Cage Coach Jack Gray was playing his junior year on the Texas varsity. A&M’s cage team established a precedent Friday night when they smothered the Texas Longhorns 45 to 33, for at no place on the record books does it show that one of these two teams was triumphant over the other twice on the ♦ same court during one season. On Last Jan. 31 this same Aggie quintet halted a five year reign of the cage game, when the Cadets outlasted the Horns 32-29—a feat that hadn’t been done since Feb. 6, 1946. Tonight will possibly tell the tale in deciding who will carry their one-third share of the SWC roundball triumvirate into the bat tle with best teams throughout the nation. Host team Friday night, the Ag gies will be the visiting five to night in the shadow of the Tower and will attempt to prove further that Coach John Floyd’s ball controlling tactics are certainly to be reckoned with. Ball Control Controversy In the Orange and White camp, ball control is a bitter subject to Gray, for it was he who denounced such deliberate methods earlier in, the season and since has been known to revert to the “sinful” style. During the most recent Aggie slaughter of the once-favored Longhorns, the TU mentor choked audibly as the Cadets shoved their No. 1 national defensive rating down his esophagus. The Longhorns will have their hands full tonight as they try to uncover their own basket and check the Cadets onslaught. Austin hopes will lean heavily on James Dowies, a 6’ 3” forward who is capable of dealing much misery in his hook shots. Dowies netted eight points in a scant four minutes when the Longhorns worked desperately at the game of catch-up in the open ing moments of the final period Friday. Two more eight-point-getters were TU’s George Scaling and Joe Ed Falk. In a previous game Scal ing teamed with Frank Womack to (See STEERS HELPLESS, Pg. 3) Wage Control Groups Seeking Peace Efforts Washington, March 12 — UP)—Labor and management agreed on one thing concern ing wage controls today. In fluential men on both sides told a reporter the peace-making efforts of Economic Stabilizer Eric Johnston are deadlocked—for the time being at least. At the same time, Price Director Michael V. DiSalle- criticized labor leaders for walking out of positions in government mobilization agen cies. “You can’t have teamwork, if half the team is outside the sta dium,”,he said yesterday in a tele vision debate with James B. Carey, Secretary-Treasurer of the CIO. Carey retorted there was no real teamwork before the walkout eith er. He said the walkout was “not a strike against the government,” but an action to call the public’s attention to what he termed failure to include representatives of work ers, housewives, and farmers in the mobilization program. At DiSalle’s Office of Price Sta bilization (OPS), officials began putting the final touches oh thi'ee big food orders which they expect to issue this week. America’s 500,000 retail grocery stores and about 2,000 wholesalers will go under a new system of price controls. As a result, house wives are expected to pay higher prices on some items and lower prices on others. Highlights of the ‘Big’ Weekend S TARTING off “The Weekend” with money in its pocket was The Battalion, which was presented a check for $250 as the second place prize in the Lumberman’s Mutual In surance Company’s annual Safety Contest. The Battalion won first place in the contest last year and this with its annual Christmas Safety Section. Not only money was passed out at the presentation made at the Press Club Ball, but also certificates of editorial excellence in features and editorials. Left to right inspecting the certificates and check are President M. T..Harrington, John Whitmore, managing editor, Dave Coslett, co-editor, E. A. Hooks, district agency manager for Lumberman’s, Clayton Selph, co-editor, and Dean J. P. Abbott. But money isn’t everything. There is also beauty as represented by the six Vanity Fair winners of the Aggieland ’51. They were selected by George Petty, Esquire artist. They were presented to the students of the Press Club Ball, the Guion Hall Concert, and at the Military Ball. Left to right the winners are: Helen Woodard, Robbie Watson, Wanda Lou Sisk, Ann Malcolm, Mrs. Pat Hooten, Bettie Bledsoe. And then you have the brass and foreign repre- .'iioio by BatUi ion Chief Photographer Sam iColinary sentatives. Flying cadets representing France, Norway and Denmark were invited down from their Air Force Training Bases to be present at the Ball. Left to right they are Air Cadet Rolv Soppn, Norway; President Harrington, Col. H. L. Boatner, PMS&T and commandant; Inge Moundol, Belgium, and Jean Santpus, France.