C enter Col^ e &, Uq-0)^ ■ o G0p^- eS S * Southwest Conference Duchesses Miss Dorothy Mangiun Escorted by Don Joseph A&M Miss Martha White Escorted by Dick Taylor University of Arkansas Miss Hue Leita Zachry Escorted by Chico Mason Baylor University Miss Alice Jan Flack Escorted by Jimmy Cuthbortson Rice Institute Miss Margaret Pankey Escorted by Carl L. Black II Texas Christian University Miss Sharon Smith Escorted by Milton Ray Patterson Southern Methodist University Miss Mary Ester Haskell Escorted by John Wakefield Texas University College Station’s Official Newspaper; Circulated Daily To 90% of Local Residents The Battalion PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE Wake Island Meeting of MacArthur And Truman, Page 2 Number 146: Volume 51 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1951 Price Five Cents Gen. MacArthur Meets Congressional Hearing Washington, May 3—(A 5 )—A rag ing battle over public hearings and secret documents preceded Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s first across- the-table discussion with lawmak ers today of his ouster by Presi dent Truman. The five-star Genei'al of the ar- i^ies, arriving from New York by plane, sat down (9 a.m., EST) to outline briefly his Asiatic views and answer questions of 25 sena tors ranged at tables around him. Advisers forecast a firm stand by the General on his contention that the vital fight against Com munism lies in Asia and that it ought to be accelerated by a block ade of China, air operations over Manchuria and use of Chinese Na tionalist troops. Expansion Might Be War President Truman has said any expansion of this kind in the fight ing in Korea might lead to World War III. The 25 members of the Armed Services and Foreign Relations Committees were what some Re publicans called the “chosen few” privileged to hear the fired Pacific commander. Unless there were last minute changes, the public and other mem bers of Congress would have to de pend for information largely on copies of testimony to be passed to newsmen after it has been combed of matters touching on national se curity. However, Senator Russell (D- Ga) said he might call the com bined committees together a few minutes before MacArthur’s sched uled appearance to discuss letting other senators sit in. “Peanut Move” Senator Wherry of Nebraska, the GOP floor leader, called that move “peanuts” and said Republicans will continue to press for his mo tion to throw the hearings open to the public. With a four and a half hour fili buster against the Wherry propo sal, topped with a 42 to 40 vote to recess the Senate, Senate Demo crats staved off the move for the public hearings—at least until 11 a.m., (EST), two hours after the scheduled beginning of MacAr thur’s testimony. Of the public hearing move, Rus sell commented: “General MacArthur himself has a pretty good sense of security. Schools to Vote On $150,000Bondlssue People of the A&M Consolidated School District go to the polls Sat urday to ballot on a $150,()()() school bond issue which would provide for such improvements as a cafeteria, classrooms, and girls’ dressing rooms for A&M Consolidated Ele mentary School and a science room and shop for Lincoln High School. Polls will open at 8 a.m. Satur day in the Music Room of A&M Consolidated High School. J. E. Mosley will be in charge of the voting. Increased Enrollment Increased enrollment anticipated during the next five years caused Board of Trustees members to pro- «pose the bond issue. A public meeting was held Mon day night in order to familiarize local people of school board plans to use the $150,000 if the bond vote is successful. Richardson said that if passed, the bonds will be financed on the nresent tax schedule. “New buildings in the school dis trict have increased in valuation since 1948,” he said, “and suffi cient tax funds will be available next year and thereafter to pay off the proposed bond issue.” Building Can Start June 1 Construction can begin around June 1, Richardson pointed out, giving ample time to have the cafeteria and some classrooms ready for use in September. Paul A. Silver and Company of San Antonio are the architects re tained for the proposed work. The new construction is slated to be made of masonry. Listed on Saturday’s ballot are three questions. The first asks “yes” or “no” to the issuance of the $150,000 in bonds. Next is the query,. ‘Should the district assume all bonds which have previously been issued.” The final question concerns the revot ing of the present $1.50 per $1,000 value of property taxable for the schools. He didn’t ask for open hearings.” Russell has contended such hear ings might lay open vital military secrets. Even with the closed sessions, some Republican senators charged the committees have been denied a look at highly important secret doc uments. These were said to in clude the minutes of the Joint Chiefs of Staff meetings and Asia tic war plans prepared before the Communist aggression in Korea last June. Russell, presiding over the com bined committees, conceded to re porters that not all of the docu ments asked by the committee had been made available by the De fense Department. Having Electricity Trouble? Just Switching to New Lines If you’re a resident of College Hills and have been un- ’ fortunate enough to be without power for the last day or two, don’t think it is an example of the regular College Sta tion’ electric service. . , , , * Workmen have been busy since early Wednesday mora ine switching onto a new line built from Cooner Street to Kyle Avenue to transport REA electricity to consumers be- vond College Station. The new line parallels former facilities used by the REA » which had several outlets in College Hills addition of College iy Only one tap will be made on the new line, where power will pass from the City of Bryan-REA lines to local con- • sumers via the city meters. A meter will be placed at this outlet to be located near the Bravenec Service Station on Lincoln Avenue. City Manager Raymond Rogers said the transfer should be completed in two or three days, depending on weather con ditions, and the College Hills facilities in the hands of Col lege Station officials by next week. 1 e a Bob Curtis Wilson won last nights civilian yell ders election by defeating Harris 449 to 53. A&M’s Guest, Bear Cub Dies in Waco A&M’s guest during the football season, Bailey, one of Baylor’s two bear cubs, is dead. The cub was found sick in his den Saturday by Keeper Bill Ogg who removed him. He died shortly afterwards. Speculators say the bear was injured while scuffling with his twin brother, Barney. “They were always fighting,” Ogg says, “but they never hurt each other before. It was always in fun, you could tell that.” Other amateur Sherlock Holmes think the bear cub might have fall en from a tree overhanging the bear pit or might have been knock ed into the deep moat surrounding the pit. The two cubs, w’hose mother is Josephine, were born Jan. 17, 1950. They were named a year ago after a campus wide contest. In the bear family, only Mama Josephine seemed to care about the cub’s death. She paced around in the pit and looked in all of the corners seeming to be looking for Bailey, the Baylor Lariat, reported. The cub will be buried some where in the country without cere mony, Baylor College officials an nounced. MSC Committee To Award Prizes Easy money is available to win ners of the MSC Craft Committee contest, Mother’s Day. Jerry Staffel, chairman of the committee has announced that stu dents and other members of the committee who are interested in crafts are eligible for prizes. The contest will be divided into sections for novice in leathercraft, ceramics and work other than leathercraft, and a class for leath- erwork on the professional level. Prizes up to $6 can be won, with an additional prize of $5 for the best piece of work done by any type. Entries must be in by May 10. Jarvis Named Mother of Year Selected Top Mom For Parent's Day Mrs. W. E. Jarvis Irons Out the Wrinkles Cotton Pageant Director Brings Versatility to Job By VIVIAN CASTLEBERRY Battalion Women’s Editor When the beauty and pageantry of the 17th annual Cotton Pageant & Ball begins to unreel on Kyle Field tomorrow night, a lovely lady in the wings will have her finger on the pulse of every moment. She is Frances Gossett Tur ner, director of the Pageant, whose duties, aside from plan ning the actual program, have included every movement of the duchesses and their dukes, right down to the final bow and curtsy. Mrs. Turner, wife of A&M’s di rector of music, Bill Turner, and mother of 10-year-old Johnny, a Consolidated fifth grader, is di- decting the Cotton Pageant for the second year. She has been Mrs. Turner for 15 years and an Aggie- lander for seven, and lives at Col lege Station, 207 Milner in College Hills. Mrs. Turner has worked hand- in-harid with Eli Whiteley, faculty sponsor of the Pageant and with all the boys and gills who will be in the show'. She also has planned with Sanger Bros, the gowns that will be worn. She was along w’hen the Aggie delegation chose Queen Wanda Harris to reign over the Ball. She has been the final word on how the courts will march, where each duchess and her date will stand, on the most minute detail of the program. She has bought gifts and made hotel reserva tions, answered questions by long distance telephone, chosen colors and ordered flowers, picked the children who will be in the Pag eant. She has briefed each of the escorts once on the exact role ex pected of him in the show. Just before the Pageant goes Frances Gossett Turner before the audience tomorrow night, Mrs. Turner will be putting the Cotton Ball duchesses and their escorts through every motion ex pected of them in the big show. The director of the giant show must not only have a way of deal ing with people and a command of theatrics. She must also have an eye for style. This Mrs. Turner does. The duchesses will wear white eyelet redingoats over pink satin slips. They will carry white sat; in baskets with pink and white roses and carnations. The queen will be in all-white. The five-foot four inch blue-eyed director is every inch a queen her self. She began her training for the important role she assumes in the Cotton Pageant in McKinney High School where she once was chosen queen. She has done some modeling and at North Texas State College, of which she is a graduate, she continued her interest in model ing and dramatics. When she is not directing a Cotton Pageant and Ball or keep ing the home fires burning for her music-minded husband and son, Frances Turner may be working at any one of a number of outside activities. She is a member of the local Garden Club and a member of Chapter BG of PEG. For the past two years she has been chairman of the Methodist Church Circle. U. S. Demands Embargo Rule United Nations, N.Y., May 3—(/P)—U n i t e d States de mands for a world-wide em bargo against Red China on all strategic war materials, including supplies for making atomic bombs, come up today in a U. N. committee on punishments for Peiping. Britain and France are reported holding back fyom such a course at present. Ernest A. Gross, deputy U. S. delegate to the United Nations, is ready to present the American po sition to the members of the 12- nation committee. It was said au thoritatively that he would argue that: 1. The United Nations must take action, as strong as possible, to halt the shipment of everything to Red China that can be used in making war materials and in car rying on Red China’s aggression in Korea. 2. The United Nations General Assembly should call on every member, even including the Soviet Union, to clamp this embargo on all materials—a long list—of a strategic nature. 3. Red China cannot make atomic bombs but the Soviet Union, which the U. S. said had a hand in promoting the Communist ag gression in North Korea, has had an atomic explosion. The embargo should cover materials used in pro ducing atomic energy so the So viet Union cannot obtain help along that line. Vet School’s Essay Contest Winners Out By DAVE COSLETT Battalion Co-Editor Mrs. W. E. Jarvis of 901 Oakland Blvd., Ft. Worth, has increased her family quite substantially in one day. From three boys to almost 6,000 to be exact. The addition, of course, is adopted—adopted, that is, via the naming today of Mrs. Jarvis as Aggie Mother of the Year for 1951. Nominated by the Ft. Worth A&M Mother’s Club, Mrs. Jarvis lists numerous qualifications for the job. Her son Duane is currently a sophomore at Aggieland. Another son, Donald, is well remembered around here as val edictorian of last year’s graduating class. An outstanding cadet, Don majored in architecture and listed among many other accomplishments his selection in 1946 as winner of the European Fellowship Tour. Mrs. Jarvis is currently third vice-president and mem bership and yearbook chairman for the Ft. Worth Mother’s "Club. She was president of that group last year. A delegate to the Senate Feder ation of A&M College Mothers’ Clubs for the last two years, she this year assisted in the typing of copy for the State Yearbook. Community Worker In her community, this year’s top Mom is active in PTA work, has served as Room Mother, cur rently bakes a cake a week for veterans of World War II in the U.S. Hospital in Ft. Worth, and also finds time to teach a Sunday School class in the primary de partment of her church. Other activities find Mrs. Jarvis as an active member of Polytechnic Woman’s Club, a closed member ship for literary and civic better ment. Her Red. Cross work has also been outstanding, accoi’ding to re ports concerning the volume of her output in that work. In a recent project of making service kits for the Red Cross, she produced 14 as compared to an average of two or three from other contributors. Praise From Club The Ft. Worth Mother’s Club praises her in these words: “In addition to the offices and commit tees listed on her record, Mrs. Jar vis has given unstintingly of her time and energy helping on all ex tra appointed committees for the betterment of the Ft. Worth A&M Mother’s Club. “Through Mrs. Jarvis’ untiring and unceasing efforts, as Presi dent in 1949-50,” the report con tinues, “the custom of giving a $200 scholarship award (yearly) to a needy and worthy Tarrant County A&M student was origina ted. “Mrs. Jarvis worked actively earning the money for this award by selling Christmas cards, sta tionery, and flowers. She also served on the Scholarship Com mittee, giving generously of her time and the use of her car.” Honored on Parent’s Day The Ft. Worth Aggie mother will be honored during the Parent’s Day activities here Sunday, May 13, when Cadet Colonel A. D. Mar tin presents her to the audience at the special Guion Hall program honoring mother's. She will then receive a bouquet on behalf of Ag gie mothers everywhere. The winners of the Moss Essay Contest were annouPced Tuesday night by Dr. I. B. Boughton, dean of the School of Veterinary Medi cine, Texas A&M College. The contest is sponsored by the American Hospital Association. The local winners may submit their papers for the national competi tion. First prize, $15, went to Robert T. Terrell of Denton, a junior in the School of Veterinary Medicine. Second prize went to Wade M. Smith of College Station, a grad uating senior. He will receive $10 and third prize $5 went to Edgar D. McMurray, College Station, a graduating senior in the School of Veterinary Medicine. Crate to Address BA Sales Classes Herbert L. Crate, manager of sales for Hodell and Co. Real Es tate Counselors of Houston, will address Business Administration sales and sales management class es'May 9 in the YMCA Chapel. Crate, who is a member of the Houston Sales Executives Club, will speak on “Can I Sell”, E. R. Bulow, assistant professor of Bus iness Administration said today. The Houston realtor is an in tense student of modern selling methods and a strong believer in the professional status of real es tate councelorship, Bulow contin ued. Spring Outing Set By Fish-Game Club The Fish and Game Club will hold its annual Spring outing in Hensel Park, May 18, John Harris, president of the club announced this morning. All members are invited to at tend, Harris said, and may bring their wives, children, or other guests.