i grai Hig Tex Battalion Editorials Page 2 FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 1951 The Last Word Draftee Becomes a Soldier Men Can’t Live on Air Meeting the Girls Is Aggie Problem From Induction To Hrst Job-Bound for Far East HTHE. LATEST issue of Reclbook devotes its editorial pages to the plight of men under 26 who, says the magazine, “can’t live on air.” Discussing the fact that more and more help-wanted signs specify draft exempt of “men over 26,” the magazine asks why these younger Americans should bear such a heavy burden of the war. The reason, of course, is that the healthy youth of our nation are nothing but “draft bait.” Those who would give them a job must take the risk of losing their services by a sudden call to service. Potential employers don’t want to take that risk. The inconvenience hits just as hard at the male college graduate, unless he be a veteran of the last war. These graduates, unless they have picked up a reserve com mission along with their degree, find them selves top priority with local boards. Those who have the reserve commissions are not much better off. Since the last call of the 1951 graduating classes, the services have made no committments at to what later graduates can expect. In view of the parti- • Air Defenses Found Inadequate AN AIR defense network for the U. S. •^and Canada has been tried and found wanting. The trial came a week ago over large sections of this country and its north ern neighbor. Air Defense Command officials, h o w - ever, were happy with the fact that the maneuvers had offered a chance to train and test thousands of civilian volunteers in ob servation posts and filter report centers.’ The air defense network is not intended to halt every attacking aircraft before it reaches its target. Its purpose is to minimize such attacks as might come. Most valuable lesson from the trial was that more anti-aircraft guns were needed for close-in defense at important centers. The maneuver takes us back to the num erous black-outs and practice air raids of World War II days. Those never had a prac tical work-out. Let’s hope the air defense net work doesn’t either. cularly apprehensive state of world affairs right now, it’s doubtful that- even the higher By VIVIAN CASTLEBERRY Battalion Women’s Editor The College had had numerous visitors this week. . . . peisonnel will be needed in the neat-future. j n j eans anc [ i ouc i shirts, the tails waving, the boys have Redbook sums it up very well with these been concerned chiefly with various judging contests and words: with the girls. . . . The girls have been interested in at- “This ‘limited emergency’ is everybody’s tending style shows, meetings and the boys Through all this the Aggies have voiced one big complaint: Here’s business, but has to often become ‘limited to men under 26.’ The young men are being asked to carry the heaviest burden of the emergency; the least the rest of us can do is stop penalizing them for doing it. (Editor’s note: This is the final article in the series of stories by Reiman Morin, a special correspondent of the As sociated Press. It summarizes the basic training given new American soldiers.) By RELMAN MORIN AP Special Correspondent f^ORT DIX, N. J., June 29—(A 3 )-— For the tow-headed kid from He discovered that he was in is enough equipment so that a top physical condition. That hill trainee can operate the same wea- was steep, but he had gone up the pons, new and old, that he may slope, half running. he called upon to use in combat. A slenddr lad, he had gained Remember the broomstick which two pounds since his induction. It was used in 1941 ? what we’ve been needing, a whole bunch of pretty girls, and New Hampshire, this was it—a there’s not a way to meet them! June graduation to a job in Korea. was all muscle. (The overweight man tends to lose.) The kid from New Hampshire is typical of some 35,000 Ameri can soldiers who will finish “basic” this month. By next October, nearly 50,000 will be completing the course every month. The officer posed a final ques tion to the boy from New Hamp shire. “If you have to go into combat, do you feel confident in your training.?” The soldier looked at him with unwavering blue eyes. “Yes, sir,” he said. “I sure do.” He has asked for duty in the Far One Aggie commented that he found it extremely diffi- tr^trainln^lA'weksoTkimfng ( T J ese men ’ in the /° rd ® East £ ommand ’ That pi ' obably ^ i * ™ ™ -formnino v y 14 weeks oi learning of the camp commanders, are the means Korea. cult to keep his mind on his books with so much feminine how to remove armed obstacles, ° ream of t p e crop, the best in all pulchritude to divert his attention. Most of the boys would human or otherwise, and yet stay my experience.” “There is no question that some jobs re- have been quite willing to move over their classrooms and alive. Now he was^going through a Comparative statistics show gen- quire an older pefson, but if it is work for make room for such duties as Joan Herrin, Wanda Fain, ^?k befS^tTe^rip.^sras The JS^th^frerioul'amTavefage?. a young man he should be given the job. -Bo^ie Bacon, Alberta Haitman, Mai ilyn Honea anc e a record of those 14 weeks was in a So do fjg Ure s on physical condi- . . „, . , . . , Sue Arnold. Better still, they’d like to have foregone the file on the officer’s desk. When and H he goes into uniform his morale s ^ ll( jj es entirely and sat around in the cool MSC with one (or is what it showed: is going to be a lot better. He will know more; 0 f the pretties and a couple of cold drinks, what he S lighting for a way Of Hie that wggk approached an end, the campus was very nearly at gave him a chance when he needed it, and its normal population again. Similar to the Arabs of old, the 4-H’ers, during the night, had folded their tents—or, at least, packed their bags—and silently stolen away. Most of the Aggies were still won dering how to go about meeting the pretty girls. a job to return to.’ On Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Williams, Jr.—Bud and Skeeter—were packing, too. They had received orders to report for duty with the Army. Bud received his degree in industrial education in June. He and Marilyn made their home in College View and she was employed by the Architectural Department. They plan to check in to Fort Sill, Oklahoma, this afternoon or evening. He was nearly 20 years old. He had had one year of high school. His intelligence scores were far above the figure the Army Used to consider average. He knew how to use—and had actually fired—19 different wea pons, including a rifle, carbine, pistol, light and heavy machine- guns, rocket-launchers, grenades and mortars. onet. It also embraced some judo (Japanese-style wrestling) to- pro tect himself, even though unarmed, against a bayonet. He had been “under fire” in an operation that closely simulates battle conditions. “Live artillery and mortar shells crashed into the A New Style For Milady’s Bair |3EMEMBER the days when females out- • ^ did themselves to see who could grow the THE BELLS ARE RINGING. . . . Wedding bells ^ ^ him M . lchine un longest and most gorgeous tresses? They continue to peal their happy tidings as Aggies and Aggie- snarled'over'his header™ seem to have receded further into the dim exes P^y principal roles in ceremonies changing the names j n g bright gold streaks through ’ of their dream girls to their own. the green underbrush. On his . flanks, he saw a tank and a flame- No name changing took place in San Antonio Tuesday when Miss thrower crew supporting him. One Scarborough was wed to Mr. Scarborough. The bride’s name is Elean- 0 f ^jg buddies, firing a bazooka, or Margaret and her husband is Moliere, Jr., ’47, business. The couple k noc ked out an “enemy tank” motored to New Orleans and then on to Miami where they will board w jth three direct hits, a plane for Nassau. On their return trip they will visit in Savannah, He made some mistakes, main- Ga., and Charleston, S.C. before going to Philadelphia to make their home. . . . July 27 has been set as the wedding date of Miss Jane Hairston and H. Doak Neal, ’52, landscape art. The wedding will be held in Christ Episcopal Church, San Antonio. tion. Vise versa, the numbers of men going A. W. O. L. is below average, probably indicating bet ter morale. The Army is getting good men. In return, it is giving them a type of training beyond anything it has ever attempted. World War II veterans never saw any thing like it. Today, there are thousands of battle-trained instructors, teach ing the men. Techniques of in- His training included the bay- struc tion have improved. Facilities if are bett e r . Most important, there dark past than we might at first think. The boyish bob is a piker compared to a new style reported via the Associated Press from Los Angeles. And, though we don’t think the trend will be encouraged by Mad- amoiselle, it arrested our attention. One Josephine Amaya decided to emulate a male fashion that hasn’t yet been accepted by even the more reckless of that sex. She now boasts a Mohican haircut. It’s as bad as it sounds, too—a head shaved bald with the exception of a 1 three- inch wide strip of hair extending from fore head to the back of the neck. Just to pre serve the feminine touch, she has a pig-tail extending below the shoulder line. And she left enough to wear a ribbon. Mary Beth Forstner and Cecil H. Stubblefield, ’49, Ag. Eco., wer% wed in Hillsboro’s Methodist* Church recently. Mrs. Stubblefield is a graduate of NTSC. ... A Fort Worth ceremony last Friday night united Jeanneane Ann Lewis and David H. Cline, ’51 English. A graduate of Texas Technological College, the bride was married in an ivory slipper satin gown. The couple will live in Fort Worth. ly from excitement. But he came out of the operation, bursting with a new-found confidence in himself and his weapons. He was a proud soldier, that day. His instructors, both combat vet erans, answered his questions, pointed out his mistakes, praised his good points. They told him, from experience, “this, is the way it feels and smells in combat.” She doesn’t expect the other girls to try Dr. and Mrs. Scott Haggard are living in Kansas City following their marriage on June 17 in Houston. The bride was Miss Virginia Wooldridge. She was graduated from the style ‘•because they're afraid they could- n’t go any place with their boy friends.” She V ersity College pf Medicine. explains that she has no boy friends. Lona Mae Carter and Bobby Hettich, Aggie grad, were married nousioii, ouir Nor, Miss Josephine, do we think you last Friday at the Pleasant Mound Methodist Church near Dallas. They Jesse H. Jones, T • T\_n„~ +v*irx TV/fvc? TToPfipli 1C cj crrarlnutp n i vrvi o n onirl Jesse Jones Claims Profit Made on Loans Houston, June 29 — UP) — former RFC, need fear finding any. President Hoping Russia’s Peace Bid Will be Explored WASHINGTON, June 29—Presi- fused with special interest amend- Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. and the dent Truman said yesterday he ments that it would be worse than Iranian government will get to- hopes the Russian proposal for a useless in the fight against infla- gether and make an equitable set- will live in Dallas following a wedding trip. Mrs. Hettich is a graduate chairman, said Wednesday the of NTSC. ... At home in Bryan following a wedding trip to South a g ency h as made a profit of Texas are Peggy Jean and James W. McAdams. Peggy Jean is the .i coo non qqq from • Two members of the class of ’51 have just repeated their marriage vows. Lt. Gale N. Brundrett was married in Woodsboro Saturday to Mary Ruth Boone. The bride received her degree this year from TCU where she was a member of Alpha Chi. Lt. Brundrett and his bride are on a wedding trip that will end in Camp Lee, Virginia, where he will be stationed with the Army. cease-fire in Korea plored further. will be ex- tion.” n,, “If either of these things hap- I he I resident opened the news pens,” he said, “the consumers in conference with two announce- this country will take a beating, 111 tt' , , , „ ' and our whole defense effort—our He nominated secretary of the whole stake in the free world’s Na\ y Francis I. Matthews, for- security—will be placed in serious mer Omaha lawyer and a leading jeopardy.” Catholic layman, as ambassador to Ireland to succeed George A. Garrett, who_ resigned as of May tlement. Making Settlement Efforts Railroad. The former federal loan admin istrator and secretary of commerce said this to the Senate Banking Committee, which recently heard critical testimony about the loan. His statement was released here today. Jones said B&O’s present indebt edness to the RFC is secured by worth nearly three times the marketable and other securities amount of the loans. He said Congress created the RFC in 1932 largely to relp rail roads and that the B&O was among the first to apply for help. The RFC’s handling of B&O Alice Myrtle Krog is now Mrs. girls. Prizes will be awarded for William Gary Cooper. She and the answer—in 500 words or less Bill, Ch E., were wed in a candle- —to the question “Why I came to He said this country has been light ceremony Friday in San An- Texas A&M College.” making efforts to bring about a CW. Secretely, we think the guys are settlement and will continue to do Following a wedding trip to wondering why on earth anybody so. points of interest in South Texas, would choose A&M—even if they The White House made public a Mr. and Mrs. Cooper are at home did do the same thing. In any , rritiYwpd in' a rennrt- ™ m , message from Prime Minister Mo- i n San Antonio where he is sta- event, we’d surely like to tell ’em. "ftT Sic bv tie committee in Mr. Truman expressed thh hope hammed Mossadegh of Iran to Mr. tioned at Lackland Air Force Base. . , . And we are eagerly awaiting vVashimrton Tune 1—nearlv four , - - a „ the Congress will either send him Truman saying Iran would make A recently announced wedding the next (we’ve had one) entry in A, •, submitted hv 31. Dan A. Kimball, Navy under- a (peh law” by Saturday, or ex- every effort to keep oil flowing i s that of Richard M. Vehon and the contest. Senator Tobev tR-NHl The re secretary and a Californian, was tei ) d the present law until it can under nationalization. But Mossa- Jeanette Keithley which was sol- Wh • „i. orv7 It doesn’t nort was never adopted bv the elevated to the secretatyship. Ret a good new law » shape. s*d that if British oil em- eranized in Mareh in Durant, Okla J^haTatS of truth in EalnTsuSnrlS^hich eon- He issued a formal statement Asked if he thought the Senate f 1 A s - 1 f ne ^ en ,T ass< s 0 , r J oad " The bridegroom will' iecel ^ e his . t know. ducted the 1947 probe. expressing great worry over the bill a good one, he replied no, ^ 0 ?, was de l a y ed > the re- degree in January. Mrs. Vehon is possibility that Congress may not period. sponsibihty for grave consequen. expected to join her husband here LrL A BNER Look Who’s Here pass any bill extending price and The President said the Iranian ce ® would rest on the British. i n September, other controls by the Saturday situation is serious. But he added the president said he hopes for • night deadline, or else that it will there is plenty of opportunity for eai /V settlement of the United M , Harris settlvucn^that Z hop,/ the * ,S Asked if he would make a tour is big enough for three—especially of the south before the next Demo- when that third person is _ their chatic National Convention, he re- daughter, Toni Mac. Toni joined plied he is always open to an in- the Harris family last Friday. She PALACE Bryan Z‘SW TODAY & SATURDAY C( Bus1 erne: over in tl the pion Ri Jacc yarc Ohi( Tl eagl No. ente divii TODAY thru SATURDAY FIRST RUN —Features Start les - 3:26 - 5:24 - 7:22 - 9:20 But Jaci ROD CAMERON i PTItJgg t NEWS — CARTOON PREVUE TONIGHT II P.M. FIRST RUN . Shugglers S^ISIAHD 3EE3 QUEEN SATURDAY NITE PREVUE TODAY & SATURDAY “Tarazan and The Amazons” JEFF CHANDLER EVELYN KEYES NEWS — CARTOON PREVUE SATURDAY 11 P.M. FIRST RUN NEWS — CARTOON 8/mDAYS /UNESS Sy/HPATHY * f?l GREETING CARDS « uruEt nvuej^, WEDDINGS ANNIVERSARIES G/FT CARDS RELIGIONS ty/anjc you travel ER/ENDSN/P THE EXCHANGE STORE “Serving Texas Aggies’* LPL ABNER nignt aeaoune, or else mat it win pass a bill “so crippled and con- The Battalion ItKtfrito&THAr | AMERICAN FOOL, TRADED HIS FABULOUS DINER FOR MY MISERABLE i DOM A'' NOW-YO'KIN ’REELIZe YOUR AMBITION- * 'WHICH IST'BE A SHORT-ORDER COOK — vitation. Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Traditions "Soldier, Statesman, Knightly Gentleman" Entered as second-clasa matter at Post Office at College Staton, Texas, under the Act of Con- eresa of Mareh 3, 1870. Member of The Associated Press Represented nationally by National Advertising Service Inc., at New York City, Chic gelea, and Neyv go, Los f'. an Francis The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, is published by students five times a week during the regular school year. During the summer terms, The Battalion is published four times a week, and during examination and vacation periods, twice a week. Days of publication, are Monday through Friday for the regular school year, Tuesday through Friday during the summer terms, and Tuesday and Thursday during vacation and examination periods. Subscrip tion rates $6.00 per year or $.50 per month. Advertising rates furnished on request. weighed 8 lbs., 10 ozs. . . . Miss Debra Ann McCants will be a can didate for Aggie beauty queen hon ors about 1970. She recently made her debut in to the McCants family at St. Jo seph Hospital. Debra Ann’s fath er is Erskine McCants who grad uated June 1. Her mother is Th„e mechanical en e i„eeri„ B ment. Mary Ann and the new daughter ME Profs Work On Cooling Tower professors are working on a cool ing tower project to develop a de- V.U s y mS P mecha„ n : -AN' AH KIN REELIZE MINE-WHICH IS—NOT r ’ MARRY YO’. 1 ?', ATTENTION- „ PASSENGERS.^ -WE'RE LANDING IN NEW JERSEY.':'’/ m in Snyder next week where employed by Standard Oil Co. of The Associ news dispatche: iated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republicatio exclusively to tne use tor republication of all is credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. SI ical engineering department. Professors C. E. Jones, J. R. Ballentine, and Smith are gather- 4exas ‘ ing information on cooling tower 9 design and operation. The experi- TELL IT T0 THE BATTALION, merit is being conducted jointly by 0h if r were only taking at least sir Lll ] ie -V°- ffman C m° ling T u We o? one course in A&M! The Batt has News contributions may be made by telephone (4-5444) or at the editorial office, me. OI riainview, lex., and bt. -Uppyi oob-ino’ fnr pntriP* in a now Room 201, Goodwin Hall. Classified ads may be placed by telephone (4-5324) or at Louis, Mo., and the Ene:ineerimr a a j • j • n s the student Activities Office, Room 209, Goodwin Hall. Experiment Station here g e contest designed especially for JOEL AUSTIN Editor T he team will collect data that Andy Anderson Associate Editor and Sports Editor Vivian Castleberry Women’s Editor William Dickens Feature Editor Dave Coslett Editorial Assistant James Fuller Church News Editor J, R. Alderdice Staff Photographer ' R, D, Witter, Charles McCullough . .Photo Engravers Autry Fredricks, Ed Moses Advertising Representatives JOta WmiaL h< Scken!.' .. !sui News Writers ^ The first phJse of the LFL ABNER Does “Maymie” Spell Mammy? LI’L ABNER direction of A. W. Miller, vice director of the Engineering Experi ment Station. The first phase of the Ray Rushing. Tom Rountree. Ray Holbrook .....Sports News Writers work Will be Completed m Septem- Owen Lee, Calvin Janak Ovulation her, Smith said. will enable engineers to design W3.T VctCTJUl and predict the performance of a AssigllGd to A&M given unit before an actual test is ® made, Smith said. First Korean war veteran to be Work of the project has been go- assigned to duty at A&M is Ser- ing on since Feb. 1 1949 under the geant William R. E. L. Burgess. Burgess, a wounded Korean vet eran, is assisting Lt. Col. W. F. Lewis in the Infantry. At the pre sent time Burgess is at the Ft, Hood Infantry Summer Camp. HERE'S A TIP. 1FA STARVIN' CUSTOMER KEEPS ASKIN'FER FOOD-UUST TURN ON HIM AN' YELL, "I ONLY GOT TWO HANDS. MAC fT" I SHALL TRY TO REMEMBER THAT MAGICAL PHRASE. r . r , LET'S GO BOWLIN' AGAIN TONIGHT , HUH, MAYMlE.'. r I . r . r ?-SH£ HAINT 1 NO GALLIVANTIN' WAITRESS NAMED MAYMIE//—SHE'S A SWEET OLE ' LADY. NAMED MAMMY.*/' «*v'' mm—M • . YO' IS ONLY AS OLD AS YO' FEELS// J AN'AH IS STILL A CHICKEN, HONEY/." OH-SoB/'-DONT YO' REMEMBER ME?-AH IS r- DAISY MAE J ~ FUM ^ DOGRATCH."/- \ AH MEETS LOTS O' PEOPLE, DEARIE"" CAIN'T REMEMBER 'EM ALL""— OQHJT THET LUMP ON MAH HAID SHORE ACHES/" {-THET' i EXPLAINS ITET-SHE LOST HER MEMOfWr SHE NEEDS 'A T-TERRIFIC SHOCKTT-) l i>*y jv I