Battalion Editorials Page 2 * WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1951 Might Get More Done W hat if Congressional To Even Greater Heights... Sessions Were on TV A&M ENDED its most successful South- west Conference basketball season in many years last night as they sneered at the Gregory Gymn jinx and cinched travel plans to the Kansas City NCAA Tournament. Well- deserved wild-cats sounded from every cor ner of the campus as the closing seconds found the Maroon and White besting the co-champion Longhorns. The 1950-51 Cadet cagemen will go down in the Conference annals as the team that just wouldn’t quit until it came out on top. Though they only share the championship officially, the team members can rightfully claim that rating of tops. Fe$-, if any people expected Coach Floyd to produce that caliber of team. He came to A&M, unknown to most of us, and manu factured a winning ball club. • Little Evita, CharmingandBrave: jT’VA PERON visits Europe. ^ Time, Quick, and Newsweek vie for the “honor” of writing the most flattering story of her fashionable clothes, her wit and in telligence, her body, and the attention she aroused. Eva Peron hints that she will be a candi date for the vice presidency in Argentina’s election next February. Immeditely, our newspapers flood us with the Horatio Alger story of her climb from boarding house keeper’s daughter to first lady of the land. They praise her political accomplish ments. Because she forced Juan Domingo, an army colonel, to stand on the observation platform of a train and hand out campaign literature in the face of pot shots from the opposition, they laud her great courage. Our journalists even attempt, by failing to point out that she is wife of the dictator, to show that her political zeal alone practical ly assures her election next Spring. And yet in the same issue, we read that La Prensa, one of the most outspoken, inde pendent, and influential newspapers in South America, is losing its fight for an Argentine free press. For eighty-one years, La Prensa has waged a Courageous fight for democracy and clean government. But now Dictator Peron and his beauti ful wife, Eva, have decided that a free press is not very kind to their filthy fascist gov ernment. So they called in their gang of thugs, the General Confederation of Labor, and told them to ruin La Prensa. They are doing a good job of it. Charming, beautiful, brave little Evita! By JAMES MARLOW Floyd’s contract, we believe, will prob ably be extended long beyond its present three-year duration, if on the merits of this WASHINGTON, March 14—-(/?)— , .. .. Would you like to be able to year s squad alone. And you can bet now that s { t a t home and watch, on your the Aggie basketballers will be heard from TV screen, the full Congress at , j .li. , work in the House and Senate next year and the year after that. They re chambers? not through being heard from this year. i guess a lot of people would, We don’t believe we could be blamed with J ' udg ’ ln f, fron ? i ^1? thousands who . pour through Washington every favoritism now when we claim the Aggies year, wanting a look at Congress owned the best in the conference this year. [ n actl0n ; But the day when it Even beyond the facts and figures of the 0 ff. won-lost column looms that pure talent that With few exceptions, Congress ,, , , , , . . , , . wont even let news photographers isn’t too hard to recognize. And we had that t a k e pictures now inside the House talent. and Senate chambers. The excep- T ’ • o a , . tions are times when someone like It came in the form of a hard-working, hard-playing team Each member of that p City Desk squad—from the stars to those who sel- dom saw action—has contributed much to A&M’s general welfare. Sports is certainly not a primary pur pose of our college, but it is undeniably an important secondary one. To the team—thanks for bringing us our first share of conference championship in 28 years. To the coach—you’ve performed a minor miracle this year; we’ll be anxiously await ing next year’s cage season. And to the student body—you’ve shown remarkable control throughout President Truman addresses a joint session. (Pictures are permitted in public committee hearings but as for the regular day-in-and- day-out sessions on the floor of House and Senate—no pictures of any kind by anybody.) Of course, there might be quite an improvement in both Houses if the people back home were watch ing them on TV, although there’s another side to this argument, as you’ll see in a minute. Senator so-and-so, who never learned how to attach a period to the end of a sentence, might learn pretty quickly he was boring the daylights out of his constitutents Eating Places Get Top Health Rate By Joel Austin WELL DESERVED “congratulations” is due the 17 eating establishments in College Station each of which House doings be televised. with those long-winded talks of his. Now, with no one listening ex cept maybe a handful of people in the gallery and less than half a dozen senators on the floor, he will talk for hours, even though it’s only to impress himself. In the House—which has 435 members, all pretty good talkers, while the Senate has only 96—all speeches have short limites, so there’s not much room for mara thons. And maybe even attendance on the House and Senate floors would pick up if the folks back home were watching TV to see if the members were on the job every day. Time, a member of Congress may be working like a beaver on con gressional business somewhere else —in a committee meeting or in vestigation—without poking his nose inside the House or Senate chamber doors. But he’d hardly forget, certain ly around election time, to get his face in focus on. TV pretty often. There was a great lack of cheer ing when one member of the House— Rep. Javits, elected from New York on the Republican-Lib eral party ticket—suggested the contributed in getting a rating of 96.17 for this city from the U S Public Health Service. The story behind the rating College Station received is a season rather interesting in that state officials hesitated in releas- filled with high-pressure games. Only a few f ig ure because it was so high. dark marks have blighted our conduct, and . Last October the city council was interested in finding out just how the local eating places were complying with state health regulations for cleanliness. those, we believe, were minor. Our congratulations to the tri-champs— He thinks it’s a good idea, pointing to the “highly success ful” TV coverage of the United Nation’s debates in the Security Council and General Assembly. That’s all just a kind of optimis tic notion about what might come of televising Congress. The Wash ington Post recently raised anoth- Soine Things Considered What Does MSC Council Do; Who Are Its Members? By CLAYTON SELPH J UST WHAT do men on the MSC council do? That is a question some of you may be pondering, who noticed in The Battalion last week and again Monday that there is to be a student-body-wide election for two at-large members to next year’s Council. Before they were removed Monday, that question could have been answered to some extent by a clever series of display panels in the MSC East lobby picturing activities of the MSC Council and Directorate and the various clubs and committees sponsored there. But since the display is gone, let’s in vestigate the Council’s organization, its re sponsibilities and the program it is charged with carrying out. Organized somewhat like the Student Life Committee, the Council depends upon three main sources for its membership—the student body, the faculty and college staff, and former students. From the student body come eight of the 15 members on the Council. Four of these are selected from the Council and Direct orate (club presidents and committee chairmen) by the out going Council. One member is a student senator elected by the Student Senate. And the co-editors of The Battalion share a vote as one member. The remaining two are selected from the student body in the election already mentioned. Appointed by the president of the college, five members are named from the faculty and college staff. And the last two are former students elected by the governing board of Former Students Association. Sitting on the Council as a non-voting member and sec retary-treasurer, is the director of the Center. What Work Does the Council Do? Selph c A 0 M r n r a P f The surve y was ordered by the council and two repre- Revising'coTg^ssfonal committee Texas A&M College—of Southwest Confer- sentatives from the food and drug inspection service of the investigations regularly. It said: ence basketball in 1950-51. Our eyes and the State Department of Health were sent to do the job. Both “The regular use of television in eyes of the nation will be upon you as you men were recognized by the state health office as competent committee investigations would move even beyond your present greatness. “Rectors. One we are told, has been with the department. g r ^V a "row toteadotlataly seeking information. Witnesses likewise would be tempted to re- Stopping Dollar Erosion’ for several years. Cafe Owners Surprised by Inspectors Surprising owners of the local eating places, the in spectors gave a thorough going-over of all facilities for sort to spectacular stunts and col orful charges.” That editorial grew out of the predicament of James J. Carroll, odds, when he walked out of St. Louis hearing conducted by the Senate Kefauver crime investi gating committee. He strode out because cameras were set up in the hearing room to televise him testifying. He said this was an invasion of his privacy and an outrage to his sense of propriety. The Post took the position that witnesses in a coui’troom don’t If She Helps Other Countries cooking, cleaning dishes and glass-ware, handling of food, nationally known maker of betting and the mhny other items checked in the yearly inspection. Their report went into the state offices and when the E SHOULD certainly not permit any fur- tabulations were made, no one believed the final figure was ther erosion of the dollar’s buyin°- pow- accura te. In the meantime, College Station officials were pr ” ThPSP wplcome words were snoken bv wonderin g what the outcome of the survey was and wrote er. inese welcome words were spoKen oy Dn George CoX; head of the health department. K. M. Evans who is a member of the oard When no answer was received by city authorities, Dr. of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. David E. Brown, Brazos County Health Unit director, was in- This statement seems to be more reason- structed to find out what happened to the local rating. In able as an immediate objective than Eric answer to Dr. Brown’s inquiries, the health department said _ they had apparently made a mistake and a new inspection havc'Yo face TV cameras and wTt- team was on its way to make another check. He did, however, nesses before a congressional in- tell of the 96.17 figure. vestigating committee shouldn’t yggggj have to, either, against their will. Officials Contact Health Department The Kefauver committee, very much put out by Carroll’s per- College Station officials quickly contacted the depart- formance, wants to test whether a ment and told them if they could not rely on results from ^ ne o S c ? f n be f ° rce<1 ^ 0 , a i’i’ eai ,° 1 r j the first inspection, the people of this city would not be sure Senate°to cite him fo/contemot that any results from a second inspection were valid. if the Post is fight about the TT ., . ^ . With this thought in mind, the health department made effect of TV cameras on congress- He added ‘If we permit a further rise Coll station’s rating official. men maybe TV of both Houses in the cost of living, we will be plowing and a quick check today by City Manager Raymond Rogers SttSidT/betterVfTtm preparing the field and sowing the seeds of with J. F. Lakey, director of the Bureau of Food and Drugs' like to sec it tried. socialism or some form of Communistic die- of the U. S. Public Health Service office in Austin, proved that this city’s rating is the highest ever to be received by a qp , municipality of any size in the state of Texas. J lexans to Vote Lakey said each year an honor roll of outstanding Now that we know who does the work, let’s see what kind of work the Council does. Fi’om a broad outlook, as stated in its constitution, the Council has three primary purposes. • To provide a social-educational program for the students and staff of the college. ® To provide more adequate op portunity for social and personal contacts among students, former students, and faculty and friends of the college. © And to foster the social, cul tural, and spiritual phases of stu dent life. The Council busies itself with carrying out these purposes through a varied schedule of ac tivities. It approves and allocates a year ly budget of $10,000 that goes for the operation of MSC clubs and service committees and implement ing the social-educational program. All groups having jurisdiction in the MSC or using the building are responsible to the Council for their activities, programs and conduct, and the Council sets policies gov erning the use of rooms and fac ilities. New clubs and organizations join* the MSC only with the approval of the Council. The group must consider the organization’s worth whileness to the student body as a. whole and to the Center. To provide for implementation of its purposes, the Council must appoint responsible chairmen of service groups such as the dance, house, publicity, and music commit tees. The entire function of the Coun cil, then, is to provide a govern ing voice for those groups using the Center—the student body, the college staff, and former students. Council Must Be Responsible, Wise Johnston’s hope that the dollar can soon be restored to a full hundred cents in value. As a means to this end, Evans advocates a fiscal program that will pay for the de fense program as it develops, and a debt management program that will encourage in vestors to buy and hold government secur ities. A moments thought, here, reveals that the Council has before it a considerable challenge—one that demands a responsible attitude and the capacity for making wise de cisions. Individuals on the Council do not have to put in a great deal of time to do their job well, but they must be alert to what is go ing on in the Center, to what peo ple are thinking about the Center, and to how it can be made more useful to those it serves. And most of all, they must be able to assim ilate all available information and come up with workable plans and policies. Work on the Council, then, boils down to two elements—keen inter est and clear thinking. Councilmen who employ these* two necessary implements of their job finish the year with a wealth of valuable experience as directors and planners. Those who are not willing to (See COUNCIL, Page 4) tatorship.” US Will Have to Talk Plain towns and cities in the US is prepared and he wouldn’t be at Enr IWpw SiPnuirf* all surprised if College Station topped the list. That’s quite * IlC-w OCIlait/ an achievement which everyone in this area should be proud of, Rogers said. By J. M. ROBERTS, JR. AP Foreign Affairs Analyst Austin, March 14—(A*)—Texas voters under 51 will have a new experience next year. They will vote in an entire state senate. Usually only half the sen- Last year’s mark of 94.5 is evidence enough that the ate members come up for election Last Year’s Mark Is Evidence TF THE United States goes into a real development program for the President’s international dev- undeveloped areas of the world elopment advisory board for the The Battalion Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Traditions ''Soldier, Statesman, Knightly Gentleman” she’s going to have to do some implementation of point four is plain talking with some of her doomed unless it escapes all the new fjg Ure j s probably correct. Lakey commended local best friends. appearances of and sympathy with ^ ^ Any plan such as that outlined by colonialism. in the biennial elections. The constitution provides that Entered as second-class matter at Post Office at College Staton, Texas, under the Act of Con gress of March 3, 1870. Member of The Associated Press The United States already has lost face among the under developed peoples because, through the urgencies of her con nections with Britain, France, Holland and other European countries, she has been trying to straddle the fence on this ever since the war. Nationalism, the first for inde pendence, is growing in all of the so-called colored areas—from the r „ Southwest Pacific to the Atlantic by^i^ationat* 1 Advertising shores of Africa. Anti-British and Service Inc., at New York anti-American feeling is strong food establishment proprietors for doing such a good job in after each re -districting the entire their efforts to keep the College Station rating at a continu- senate must be elected. Members OUS high. draw lots to see who serves two Mayor Ernest Langford was asked by the city council ye ^ r Y ho sei T es f ? u J. to write a letter to each of the establishments contributing andUJfo! The far^remstrfeting was to College Station’s cafe cleanliness record. in 1920. City, Chicago, Los An geles, and San Francisco. throughout the Moslem world From the western border of Rus sia to the farthest tips of Asia Texas Considered For AF Academy The Air Force Academy Site Se lection Board has selected seven sites that will receive further con sideration as the most suitable CLAYTON L. SELPH, DAVE COSLETT Co-Editors John Whitmore, Dean Reed , Managing Editors Andy Anderson, Bob Hughson Campus Editors Ralph Gorman Sports Editor Fred Walker Associate Sports Editor Joel Austin...... City Editor techniques, and some of the in- able on Randolph Air Force Base, Vivian Castleberry Womens Editor ,i lis t. r inl honpfits. of tho wosi. Tho one of the seven sites, and a de- the word for westerners is either for the proposed Air Force Aca- stay out or get out. demy, secretary of the Air Force The United States proposes to Thomas K. Finletter announced lo go in. It proposes to send in the day. food and raw material producing Information is presently avail- 24564 m DYERS*PURSTOEAOE HATTEPS TYi-tyt"*! n Loupot’s Trading Post-Agents Having Trouble Selling Your Used Sewing Machine ? An ad in BATTALION CLASSIFIEDS will help you find a buyer Try . BATTALION CLASSIFIEDS For just about any transaction. They’ll help you find lost billfolds . . . new friends . . . and maybe even lost chords. Today’s Issue John Whitmore.. Andy Anderson.. Fred Walker Joel Austin Managing Editor .Campus News Editor ...Sports News Editor ,City News Editor T. M. Fontaine, Carter Phillips —Editorialists Allen Pengelly Assistant City Editor Leon McClellan, Jack Fontaine, Ed Holder, Bryan Spencer, Bob Venable, Dale Walston, Bee Landrutn, Frank Davis, Phil Snyder, Art Giese, Cristy Orth, James Fuller, Leo Wallace. W. H. Dickens, Fig Newton, Joe Price, Pete Hermann, Wesley Mason, B. F. Boland, Ivan Yantis, Sid Ragsdale, Bill Aabcrg, Ide Trotter, John Hildebrand, Chuck Neighbors, Bob Sclleck, Bill Strcich, Curtis Edwards. Howard Heard Staff Writers Jimmy Ashlock, Joe Blanchette, Ray Holbrook, Joe Hollis, Pat LeBlanc , ....Sports Staff Writers Sam Molinary, Bob Alderdice Staff Photographers Sid Abernathy — Page Make-up Joe Gray. —Photo Engraving Shop Manager Tom Fontaine, Johnny Lancaster, Charles McCullough, R. R. Peeples, R. D. Witter — - Photo Engravers Aubrey Frederick - Advertising Manager Russell Hagens, Bob Heywe.; Advertising Representatives Dick Kelly — Club Publicity Co-ordmatof dustrial benefits, of the west. The one of the seven sites, and a de government seeks through aid for tailed survey of the location will increased food production, tax in- not be required, centives and arrangement of sound The seven selected sites are: relations with other governments, Camp Beale, California; a site near to send in western free enterprise. Colorado Springs, Colorado; anoth- In return it wants stable, non- er site near Madison/Indiana; a communist political conditions and site near Charlotte, North Carolina; good customers. one near Grapevine, Tdxas;. anoth- If the plan succeeds, the U. e1 ’ in Grayson bounty, Texas and LTL ABNER Love Laughs Last - —^ By AI Capp T/» T . - Randolph Air Force Base. Congressional approval will be the final authority for the estab lishment of the' Air Force Aca demy. S. will have to tell France, Brit ain and the others that, in the interest of world security, they must give up all colonial-type interests as time goes on; that the U. S. will work for this whether they agree or not; and that their actions and agree ments with submerged peoples now must be convincing of this ultimate intent. This may be hard. Unity is a Lord is the strength of my life; of vital need among the allies. But whom shall 1 be afraid? unity without principle cannot win. —Psalm 27: 1. Bible Verse r I T HE Lord is my light and my sal- 4 vation; whom shall I fear? The