Page 4 THE BATTALION Tuesday, April 24, 1951 Look Writer Describes Atom Bomb ‘Dry Run’ New York, April 24 —'A 5 )— ^4 Look magazine writer-artist, who says he went on a “dry run” atom ic bomb flight, describes an A- bomb as about the size of an aver age room and weighing 10,000 pounds. The Atomic Energy Commission said the writer didn’t see a real bomb or even a representation of one. Gardner Cowles, Look editor, re plied that the article and pictures that accompanied it were cleared by high Air Force officials and an AEC representative at a conference in the Pentagon. Saw Dummy Used The magazine article was by Jim Berryman, Washington Star cartoonist and illustrator. It indi cated he actually saw a live or dummy A-bomb used in the test run in a B-50. He illustrated his story with pictures of a snub-nosed bornb with four fins on its stubby tail. The bomb, he said, is about 20 feet long, and nine or 10 feet in diameter. He said the trigger, set in the tail, is about the size of an um brella stand. The magazine said Maj. Gen. Roscie C. Wilson, deputy chief of staff on operations for Atomic Energy, arranged for the article and quoted him as saying: “I believe it is high time some of the ridiculous stories circulated about the A-bomb be killed and buried once and for all. “I’ve even heard that hundreds of thousands of American people fearfully believe that an enemy :agent could board a Hoboken ferry t oting the bomb in a zipper bag and jUow Manhattan clear into Brook- livn.” Berryman said he went on the simulated bombing mission from Hunter Air Force Base at Savan na h, Ga. He said the mission was to bomb an*, unnamed city, which appi'oxi- m;ated a Russian city target. Research Foundation Gives Monetary Aid The Refrigeration Research Foumdation, Colorado Springs, Colo'., has made available $2,000 to the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, Dr. R. D. Lewis, director of the station, has announced. jj ENTRYBLANK I The Battalion Fishing Contest On April 1951, I caught a' - (kind of fish) that measured - inches in length. I caught the fish in (name and location of lake, river, stream or pond), which is in (or near) - (name of town -) , ftvne I caught the fish on and make of rod), using — - (type and brand of bait), —- (test of line, in pounds), and a (make of reel). Mail entry to: - The Battalion (Name) FISHING (Address) CONTEST College Station, Tex. (Phone) RULES: Contest is open to A&M students and all other persons re siding in Bryan or College Station. a • Fish must be caught between April 10 and April 24. Entries must be postmarked by midnight, April 24. Fish caught on trot lines, throw lines and by any method other than fly fishing, spinning, bait casting, trolling or still fish ing, are not eligible for entry in the contest. Salt water en tries are not eligible. , . , This contest will be conducted on an honor basis. Your word is good. Pictures of you and your catch are not necessary, but we would like to have one for possible use in The Battalion. Prizes will be awarded. rSE BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO .UV, SELL, RENT OR TRADE. Rates . . . 3c a word per Insertion with a 5c minimum. Space rate in classified action .... 60c per column-inch. Send II classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES FFICE. All ads must be received in Stu- ent Activities office by 10 a.ra. on the ay before publication. FOR RENT • COMPLETELY furnished three bedroom house. Near Campus. . Phone 4-7139. FOR SALE VEL TABLE model radio with Tele- tiron clock and Sunbeam Shavemaster azor. Reasonable. Les Gay, Milner fo. 62. VRINGER TYPE washing machine with twin tubs. Good condition, $35.00. Phone 2-5888 after 5:30 p.m. WANTED \ R G E BOOTS! Ill/, - 12% foot, [fii/, - 17% calf — TALL — Dashiell L-303 or Leming, Box 59S3. STUDENT RADIO Serviceman to work in spare time—contact Student Publications, Box 210. • MISCELLANEOUS TYPING—reasonable rates. Phone 3-1776. WANTED TO BUY USED CLOTHES and shoes, men’s — women’s — and children’s. Curtains, spreads, dishes, cheap furniture. 502 N. Main, Bryan, Texas. LEICA lit C with 50 mm Elmar. Sam uel Molinary, Box 5068, Campus, or Dorm 7-110. WHEN IN DOUBT ABOUT YOUR EYES — CONSULT . . DR. J. W. PAYNE OPTOMETRIST 109 South Main — Bryan, Tex. Next to Palace Theatre CHILDREN'S RECORDS ALL SPEEDS =: SHAFFER'S • HOME REPAIR • ALL TYPES home repair work—additions,; roofing, siding, painting, concrete work, and redecorating. Low down payment and 30 months to pay. For free esti mates call 4-9589 or 4-4236. BABY SITTER Feel tied to the house? A slave to your children? Crave an evening of freedom? Special—expert child care in your home— 45c per hour this month only. Call Mrs. McCullough, 4-5324. Official Notice PUBLIC NOTICE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held at the City Hall on Monday evening, April 30, 1951, at 7:30 on the question of annexing a cer tain tract of land adjacent to the City be ing described more fully as follows: Beginning at the most Easterly corner of Block 8, Highland Park Addition to the City of Bryan, Texas; Thence North 45° East along rsryan present city limits, a distance of 1350 feet more or less to a point in the East right- of-way line of Texas State Highway No. 308; Thence South 45° East along the East right-of-way line of State Highway No. 308 which also is the West property line of the A.&M. College nursery plot, a dis tance of 600 feet to the present College Station city limits; Thnce South 45° West a distance of 140 feet more or less to the West right-of-way line of Texas State Highway No. 308. Thence South 45° East along the West right-of-way line of State Highway No. 308, a distance of 850 feet more or less; Thence in a Southwesterly direction along the present city limits line, a distance of 1170 feet more or less to the West right- of-way line of Nagle Street. Thence North 45° West along the West right-of-way line of Nagle Street, a dis tance of 950 feet more or less to the most easterly corner of Lot A of the Tauber Addition to the City of College Station, Texas; Thence North 42° 06” West along the Northeast side of Lot A a distance of 404.5 feet to the point of beginning. - APPROVED: S/Ernest Langford Ernest Langford, Mayor ATTEST: S/N. M. McQinhis N. M. McGinnis, City Secretary Accounting Speakers McCarthy Scorns Truman Administration - - P olicy P Ians W. H. Garbade J. B. Parker J. Brooks Heckert The Fourth annual Accounting Conference be gins tomorrow in the MSC with these three men presenting talks on the problems faced by the accountant. Garbade will give the audience his views on “What Management Expects of the Accountant” and Parker will talk on “The Viewpoint of the Internal Auditor.” Heckert will discuss, “Control of Distribution Costs.” Old Uniforms in Review Archives Tailors Construct Dummies to Fit Suit Sizes' By FIG NEWTON Battalion Staff Writer Archives tailors have partially solved the problem of ill-fitting uniforms. Instead of altering the uniform, they alter the figure. The figure in this case is not human but a mannequin. To get the uniform to fit the body, arms and legs are shortened but to fit the cap, the old methods of alter ing the cap is brought back into use. These are just a few of the prob- Swim Team (Continutd from Page 3) record breaker of 2:39.8 in the 200 yd. breaststroke event. Coach Art Adamson’s tankers suffered their first defeat of the season to SMU in Dallas. The chief consolation to the 45-30 loss was Van Adamson’s winning the 220 yd. freestyle with a time of 2:18.2. He not only took first place, but broke a pool record. More Comstock Comstock starred again as he swam the 220 yd. breaststroke in 2:18.2 and won the event. Jim Flowers swam into second place honors in the same event as he fin ished just behind Comstock in 2:40. The OU swimmers took home the honors from their meet here with the Aggies Feb. 23. In doing so, they set three pool records. The Ags wound up with three first places, 220 and 440 yd. freestyles arid the 440 yd. freestyle relay. In the SWC Title Meet, March 24, the tankers came in second as Van Adamson starred again with a record-setting time of 1:37.2 in the 150 yd. medley. Texas University won the meet with 120 points, with the Aggies next, scoring 100. SMU came in third with 95. Baylor trailed bad ly with only nine counters. This was Texas’ 18th victory out of the 20 times that this meet has been held. It took place in TU’s “home ground” pool at Austin. Four Lost “Only four squadmen will be missing when workouts start.again next year,” said Coach Adamson. “This leads me to believe that we should have a good team,” he added. Baker, Butler, Flowers, and Ka- row will not return to the 1951 team. This will be a heavy loss to A&M, but Van Adamson, outstand ing scorer this year, will be back to swim for the Aggies in 1952 along with Don Blundell, Tommy Comstock, Don Crawford, and Rolph Ellis. Other returners will be Ernest Johnson, Alfred Noyes, Bill Sar gent, Bob Shaeffer, John Parnell, Wayne Strickler, Caroll Jones, and Bill Karow. Students who were registered for 16 hours or more for the Fall Semester 1950 and whose grade report for that semester showed no grade less than “C” and a grade point ratio of 2.25 may call for their “Distinguished Student Cards” at the Registrar’s Office, Window No. 7, SUMMER STUDY IN EUROPE 28 DAY STUDY TOUR $TQC By Air; five Countries, 10 semincrs * t 42 DAY STUDY TOUR $OQE By Air; eight countries, 15 seminnrs w 56 DAY STUDY TOUR $QQ5 By Air,- nine countries, 20 seminors • University Summer Sessions UNIVERSITY OF PARIS .... $585 UNIVERSITY OF HEIDELBERG . 59S OXFORD UNIVERSITY . .... 555 ALL EXPENSES: air & rail transportation; tuition, room and board; 2 to 6 weeks. STUDY TOURS — $435 to $995 BY SEA OR AIR — 28 to 76 days STUDENT TOURS — STUDENT PRICES STUDENT TRAVEL SERVICE Ltd. 1540 E. 57th Street • Chicago 37, Illinois lems that the 75th Anniversary Committee has to cope with, since the uniforms they plan to exhibit are seldom the same size as the mannequins they have to display them. When glass cases for displaying uniforms and explanatory signs are finished, enlargement of the archives exhibit in the MSC will be under way, J. J. Woolket, chair man of the 75th Anniversary Com mittee said today. We are preparing an exhibit which will be larger than the one shown during muster ceremonies for Mother’s Day Open House, May 12-13, he said. In a couple of days, the changes will begin with the addition of explanatory signs. Then, slowly, various documents and uniforms will be replaced with others typical of different times rearranging the set up so that one comer can be set aside for athletic equipment. One of the glass cases, Woolket pointed out, will contain a uniform worn by a head yell leader in the 1920’s which, he added, “resem bles the garb of a Mississippi river boat gambler.” This red vest with a red and white striped jumper over it will be on exhibit in a couple of weeks, Woolket continued. WhaVs Cooking AGGIE CHRISTIAN FELLOW SHIP, Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. As sembly Room YMCA. AGRONOMY SOCIETY, Tues day, 7:30 p. m. Room 2A, 2B MSC. Dr. D. T. Killough will speak on his recent trip to Turkey. BIOLOGY CLUB, Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. Biology Building Room 107. Films on cancer and pneumonia will be shown. CANTERBURY CLUB, Wednes day, 7:15 p. m. St. Thomas Chapel. Discussion of the convention of Canterbury Clubs. CHEMICAL ENGINEERS, Wed nesday, 2:30 p. m. Dr. Stephenson will speak on “Engineering for Radioisotopes” and a film on the same subject. EL PASO CLUB, Tuesday, 7:15 p. m. Room 301 Academic Building. Special meeting. HILLEL CLUB, Wednesday, 7:15 p. m. Room 2A MSC. KREAM & ROW KLUB, Tues day, 7:30 p. m. MSC. MSC MUSIC COMMITTEE, Tuesday, 7:15 p. m. MSC Record Room. Range Class Will Take Lee County Field Trip The Range and Forestry 301 classes have planned field trips to Lee County Thursday afternoon. The classes plan to visit differ ent peat bogs in that county and study them as related to hydrosere and the ecological development of the area. How To Keep A Flame Burning A Zippo—engraved with your intimate messagel Most personal gift in the world . ^. constant remind- ! ej£s> er of you I We have Zippo K# lighters from $3.00 up. n Engraving, $1.00 extra. ^7 ■rtf The Gift that never fails! The Exchange Store "Serving Texas Aggies” Some of the uniforms need repair for moth holes and tears. Besides that, committeemen are still searching for brass for some of them. Putting together the exhibit be gan in September. Since its first showing Nov. 9, it has doubled in content Woolket added. Col. Richard T. Black . . . Carswall Air Force Base, will speak on the B-36 at a joint meeting of the Institute of Aer onautical Science and the So ciety of Automotive Engineers tonight at a barbecue in Hensel Park. Cudahy, Wis., April 24—UP)— Harry Truman “is President of this nation in name only,” Senator Mc Carthy (R-Wis) said last night. “The Hiss crowd still runs the State Department and not only de termines foreign policy but mili tary strategy as well,” the Wiscon sin Republican told a Chamber of Commerce banquet of about 500 persons. “I think Truman is essentially just as loyal as the average Ameri can citizen,” McCarthy said. “He is not part of the Hiss- Lattimore-Acheson crowd. That is the only bright spot in the whole picture. However, the oil men have him.” Wasting Time McCarthy said the President “confuses s t u b b o r n-e s s with strength of character” and added that “those who talk about im peaching him are largely wasting their time.” Such an impeachment would not save the country today, McCarthy declared. New Coach (Continued from Page 1) The new head coach was named All-Pacific Coast in 1938, when Southern Cal defeated Notre Dame, national champs, l3~-0; and took Duke in the Rose Bowl, 7-3. He received the Davis Teske award as outstanding athlete at USC that year. Pro Ball George played professional ball one year each with the Detroit Lions and Philadelphia Eagles be fore coaching the Porterville (Calif.) high school team to an undefeated season in 1941. As a naval officer during World War II, George was in the Saipan- Guam campaign and played foot ball with Iowa and St. Mary’s pre flight clubs. Following his war service, George joined the Southern Cal staff. The Trojans won one Paci fic Coast title and were among the top three in the conference for three years while he was there. The 1948 Trojan line, coached by George, was one of the big factors in tieing mighty Notre Dame and in beating this football power last season. George is married and lives with his wife and two sons, John Den nis, 8, and Gregory Stephen, 2, at 300 North Avenue in College Sta tion. Comments from A&M football players on the appointment of George as head coach were all fa vorable last night. Ranging from a loud “Yippee-eee” to “one of the best,” every player contacted ex pressed “complete confidence.” “I think it is a good deal; if he makes as good a head coach as he has a line coach, he’ll be terrific,” said one lineman. Another gridder said “this is the best news I’ve heard since a rumor came through that Pfeuffer Hall had burned down.” FREE DINNER Watch for Your Name in This Space. Each Week, The . . Fish Stribling, Gilbert T. Walton—J-4 12th MAN INN Will give away a free dinner to the person whose name appears. • WATCH FOR YOUR NAME • Bring This By - - - - It’s Yours Free “Then we’d have Barkley, a fine old gentleman, and after that we’d still have the Acheson crowd. We must impeach Acheson, the heart of the octupus.” The President did not fire Gen eral MacArthur, McCarthy told the banquet crowd. “That was done by a sinister, many headed, many tentacled mon ster conceived in the Kremlin and given birth to by Acheson with Attlee and Morrison as midwives.” (He referred to British Prime Minister Clement Attlee and Brit ish Foreign Minister Herbert Mor rison.) “MacArthur Greatest American” McCarthy declared MacArthur was the “greatest American ever born.” “The Yalta crowd thinks it has MacArthur’s scalp, but they have not destroyed him. You can see that from what is happening in America today since the General returned.” He said he owned an explanation to Robert Fleming, reporter for the Aggie Rodeo Team To Ride at H-SU Six members of the Aggie Rodeo Club will leave for Abilene Thurs day to participate in the annual Hardin-Simmons University inter collegiate rodeo April 26-28, Don Tabb, secretary of the club said today. The group will consist of Maxie Overstreet, bare back bronc and bull riding, ribbon roping, and bull- dogging; Pat Mitchell, calf and rib bon roping; Macky Trickey, bull and bare back bronc riding; Jim Smith, bare back bronc riding; Jim Watson, bull riding; and an alternate who has yet to be select ed. IT’S THE LITTLE THINGS THAT COUNT •• Yes, the little things like a button sewed on or a hole patched, really make a difference in how well you appear .... and in how well you like the cleaners. So for expert cleaning, plus these little “EXTRAS”, bring your clothes to ... . CAMPUS CLEANERS • Over the Exchange Store • Behind Sbisa • In “George’s” Milwaukee Journal. Earlier this month Fleming’s story in the Jour nal quoted McCarthy as saying in a Milwaukee speech that the Mac Arthur dismissal was a “Commu nist victory won with the aid of Bourbon and Benedictine.” Fleming also quoted McCarthy as applying an epithet to the Pres ident in an interview preceding the speech. “Normally I call in all newspa per men before I give a speech for an off the record discussion on what I am going to say to prepare them ahead of time. I did that last week and, my god, what I read in the Journal the next day. “The reason I didn’t bring you up to my hotel room today, Bob, was because I did not want to take another chance,” McCarthy said. Both McCarthy and Fleming ' grinned. Fish Coach Resting OK After Attack James “Klepto” Holmes, fresh man football coach was resting quite comfortably this morning af ter suffering a slight heart attack yesterday afternoon. He was rushed to St. Joseph’s Hospital in Bryan after the at tack at 5:30 yesterday afternoon. Holmes was just recently named freshman football coach to replace Perron Shoemaker who went to the University of Alabama as end coach. Have You Always Wanted a New AUTOMATIC WASHER? The New Frigidaire IS A DREAM COME TRUE See it ... . Watch it . . J % Try It ... . FREE Demonstration JUST CALL 4-9876 and make an appointment to see the FRIGIDAIRE RAPIDRY AUTOMATIC WASHER • Install it Anywhere • New Live-Water Action • 1140 RPM Spin • One Dial Does All • Lifetime Porcelain Finish C. E. GRIESSER Electric Co. Southside College Station CALL 4-9876 This Is The SPOT Where YOUR Ad Should Be To Bring YOU More Business