n ge l Battalion Editorials Page 2 WEDNESDAY, August 1, 1951 TSIiSl High Prices May Get ‘Too Low’ On Farms More Basketball Fixes r pHE spreading expose of college basket- ball “fixes” is approaching the propor tions of the sensational world series base ball scandal of a generation ago. In a sense it is more serious and uglier, for it involves Propaganda Machine Rolling HTHE WHEELS of the Russian peace pro- paganda machine are turning rapidly. A recent visit by a group of British Quakers was seized by the Russians as a means of spreading more of its propaganda for peace to the outside world, but of course, not to the Russian people. The Quakers asked Deputy Foreign Min ister Malik if, in order to attain a more peaceful world, Russia would be willing to drop its antiwestern press campaign, stop interference in the internal affairs of non communist countries, enter into a disarma ment agreement and hold a meeting of chiefs of state to seek general settlements. Malik’s answer was, “Sure Russia wants peace. There is no anti-west propaganda campaign. It would be absurd to think that Russia was trying to export revolution when everyone knows revolution has to originate in the individual countries, and hasn’t Rus sia been trying all the time to get people to agree on disarmament? Look at Russia’s re cent efforts to get a big powers conference in Paris.” At the very moment Malik was prepar ing his answer for the Quakers, Russia was involved in a renewed propaganda campaign against Yugoslavia. It was evident that Malik was using double-talk to mislead un-thinking people about Russia’s real intentions. Warren R. Austin, Chief U. S. delegate to the United Nations, was not kidding, how- ever, when he said that if Yugoslavia is at tacked by Russia, the United Nations will go to the rescue. Apparently, Mr. Malik’s peace talks have little “fooling” effects upon Mr. Austin. young men seeking education and character development; young stars of college ath letics, supposed to exemplify the highest ideals of honorable sportsmanship. Investigations in New York and else where are beginning to indicate that bas ketball contests in the East and the North have been honeycombed with skulduggery —gamblers and racketeers bribing players to throw games or to hold their scoring down below designated figures. This sort of crime on the part of the gamblers—corrupting the morals of youth with tempting payoffs—deserves the sever est punishment. They are the ones pri marily to blame; but the student-players are guilty, too—guilty of a gross betrayal of their alma maters. They know better and deserve little sympathy, though the effect on their lives of the disgrace of exposure may prove worse punishment than the rack eteers themselves will suffer. The progressive discovery of more and more basketball riggings raises the ques tion: how many more players in how many more schools, not yet found out, have been selling out to the fixers ? And how long has it all been going on ? It is gratifying to know that no evidence of such knavery has been found in our section of the country. If there has been a nation-wide trend toward rigging basketball matches (this is the easiest kind of popular game to fix) —if the gamblers have been trying to develop it into a new sort of syndicate racket—let us hope that the disposition of the cases being exposed will set an example and raise a warning that will cause other players to resist the temptation of bribery, and thus nip the evil in the bud. Basketball is too fine a game to be killed by corruption.—The Houston Post. WASHINGTON, Aug. U. S. War on Polio - 1951 1—(JP)— ed in some degree before the Sum- ket supply. Often this causes the Weaking markets point to the mer is over include wheat, cotton, price of the commodity to go up, possibility that the government oats, barley and peanuts. or at least stabilize at the support soon may be working harder at Wheat already is selling below rate. keeping’ farm prices from going the support rate of 90 per cent T-lie department has about $2,* “too low” than at keeping them °f parity. Parity is standard for 000,000,000 invested in farm pro- from going “too high.” measuring farm prices, declared ducts produced in previous years . by law to be equally fair to farm- and stored under price support Recent price declines have car- ers an( j those who buy their pro- programs. They are mostly grains, ried several commodities down to (j uc ts. Price ceilings may not be tobacco, flaxseed and dried beans, or below levels at which the gov- pi ace( } on an y f arm products selling Fifteen months ago, the depart- ernment is committed to support t,d ow the parity level. ment had more than $4,000,000,001) them. Developments indicate that tled up in fa ,. m commodities. Since several others may drop to support cotton r nces uown that time ifc hag sold many of them levels by harvest time. Cotton prices have turned down to meet heavy demands under the CCC Prepared rather sharply since the Office defense program. , of Price Stabilization (OPS) slap- The Agriculture Department’s ped on a ce iling at 45 cents a $6,750,000,000 Commodity Credit po und last winter. New crop cotton Corporation (CCC) is fully pre- j s being sold for future delivery pared to step in to prevent exces- at less than 33 cents a pound, or sive price set backs. It operates on i y slightly more than a cent through the department’s far flung a b ove the support rate, system of farmer committees. The price of oats is only about Farm commodities whose prices five cents a bushel above the sup- probably will have to be support- port rate. Pea,nuts are bringing only about 10.8 cents a pound com pared with the average support Largest Iranian Plant Closes; Awaits Talks ii ~t: Polio Penicillin Sought By American Researchers (Editor’s note: This is the sec ond in a series of stories by Associated Press Science Editor Howard M. Blankeslee on the fight the United States is wag ing against the dread disease of polio.) come from the same source, soil, and it will act on the same prin ciples. Like penicillin, it will be an antibotic. This search centers at the New York Botanical Gardens with fi nancial support of the National Foundation for Infantile Para lysis. Antibotics are substances IVTEW YORK, Aug. 1—6P)— A •^penicillin for polio is one of this year’s research hopes in the invisibly small organisms that in annual epidemic now threatening. habit the soil. These creatures The new one won’t be named produce chemicals for their own penicillin, if discovered, but it will private use, to get their food or U. N. Negotiators Set Hard Schedule ands of samples of soil, gathered from all over the earth and flown to New York. It’s about time for the faint-hearted to ploiu up the spring gardens that they abandoned in the summer. Highway fatalities are often unnec essary and ahvays too numerous. Our New Weapons Have Bigger ‘Bang’ More Tests Set for Atomic Weapons virus in your stomach. This is TIN ADVANCE Headquarters, day in publishing their daily time based on the medical belief that ^ Korea, Aug. 1—(A 5 )—The Kae- table. ... . people get polio via food, drink song armistice talks last only a Staff Meetings or contamination entering their little over an hour each day. But Aside from the talks themselves, mouths. the delegates and their staffs work ^be most important events on the Other Chemical Souuht a rugged schedule from dawn to da jiy program are staff meetings , • , , ■ i ■ midnight. between the negotiators and their A tln r( ! chemical is sought to Hours of preparatory work are assistants. bolster the human serum that required for each session. mu -r < u • • u m ■ comes from the blood of polio pa- mu a ■ i. x- ,v TT • The first such session is held im- t ients. This serum has slight,re- The dayfetarts for the five Urn- me di a tely after breakfast. Then tarding effects on polio. The chem- the group discusses the papers pre- i C al, it is hoped, will add to po- pared the night before for possi- t ency of the serum, ble delivery during the day’s con- Another search is on Gamma ference with the Communists. Globulins, the fraction of your Most of the statements made by blood containing the antibodies by Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy, the chief which your body fights all sorts U. N. delegate, are read from of infections, including polio. This typed sheets prepared only after globulin comes from Red Cross long and careful study. blood donations. It is the same glo- . - • x . c u j- bulin that made the famous war- A few minutes before boarding time measles remed Someone ficials said. Those prices, as a oil nationalization act, but they, whole, have dropped six per cent should continue to be ran with from a record set last February. British know-how and salesman* The Agriculture Department sup- ship, ports most farm prices by means The partnership before national* of loans to farmers. Instead of ization had been on a basis of. The foundation is investing four selling his product in the open mar- royalties for Iran from the Brit- million dollars in research this ket, the farmer may put it in stor- ish-controlled company, year. One project is a synthetic a g e and obtain a government loan When a decision is reached, it chemical to kill polio virus. This 0 n it at the support rate. will take a month to bring the Take, Commodity From Circulation When the farmer does this, he in British technicians and Iranian effect takes the commodity out of employees are overhauling and circulation, thus reducing the mar- cleaning equipment. aides when reveille sounds at 6:15 a. m„ U. N. headquarters said to T^ASHINGTON, Aug. 1—1^)— working on the development of gence there and almost anything I ibility of the H-bomb,” Dean re- i n g the usual noon recess at Kae- * 3U ^ n W01 ’k on polio. ' ” The Atomic Energy Commis- atomic warheads for ^guided mis- say gets us into trouble.” plied only: “Not today.” ^ song, the delegates talk with their The hope for a polio vaccine is sion (AEG) is planning “much siles and artillery shells as well as Breed Atomic Fuel Today’s report said that “early staff officers°at the nearby “U. sti11 vague. By the end of this more frequent tests” of its wea- on bombs. construction work is underway” at N. House” on the progress of the y ear the foundation expects the pons in the future. Congressional Renort The coinmission announced at the AEC’s Savannah River plant in morning session. first ste P have been completed wao smiminporl vecUovHnv P news conference completion of on South Carolina. In that plant, the in the vaccine program. This is at a news conference in connection To CooS 1 ' 688 * AEC reported: experimental device with which it commission has said previously, Review Day s Events the census of the different kinds with AEC’s tenth semi-annual re- ® Continued progress so far in hopes to determine whether it will materials for either H-bombs, A- Immediately after returning here °f polio virsus. Three are known, port to Congress. The report was 1951 in military and peacetime ap- be actually possible to “Breed” or bombs or for potential industrial j n the afternoon, the delegates and There may be others, made public today. plications of the atom—including create new 7 atomic fuel at a rate power uses could be made. staff review and evaluate the day’s Each one can cause the disease, „ advances to\vai'ds developing atom- faster than operating fuel is con- New advances towards develop- events. After dinner they meet but polio caused by one of them Bigger Bang ] c powered submarines and air- sumed. First operation of the ing atomic energy machines de- again to plan the next day’s does not protect you from getting At the conference it was also craft. “breeder” is scheduled to take signed to power submarines and program, including discussion of polio from a different virus. A vac- disclosed that the United States * Tnpvpaspd oennisifinn of m-an P lace in about two or three weeks, aircraft were listed among the pro- the papers that will cram the dele- cine will have to be made from all has developed some weapons that ium ores and ‘stepped-up produc- There was no mention in the re- l^tWw^ no" snedfi^aSnlt ^ P ° li0 Vh ' USeS ' have a bigger bang that is, t j on 0 f fissionable materials from nort. to Congress of how thine-s are x,-.. xi__. A:. ^ ^ turn to Kaesong m the morning. Polio Vaccines Produced turn to Kaesong in the morning. A large part of every day is -that is, tion of fissionable materials from port to Co^ss of imw tMr^ a^ Sion of ihis. ^ SP ^ others The commission said that th ^ n - x x xr. T t -x j mn the P r °j ected hydrogen In various other fields of atomic " ia!|e pan, ui every aay is A vaccine already has been made “ s-“toY & Sti »ave ^ SS considerations ,i„ I^St ^ me consruerauons un Belgian Congo. (Sumner Pike, Eniwetok proving grounds, but the p0 sed to heavy doses of radiation The choosing testing grounds) is hurt- ™e rseigian dongo. ^umner nxe, posed to heavy doses of radiation The five delegates and some work for humans.. Monkeys can ing somebody,” AEG Chairtmarf a commission member, sard some commission has never gone beyond dur j ng atomic bombings or accr- members of their staff travel by be vaccinated and then given a - - - -- —‘ time a &° that the U - S * had sur- its statement that those tests in- dentSi helicopter—a 15 to 20 minute hop leasing capacity) we away from people.” The commission did not make it how the , dose of polio that wall kill them if ® Production and distribution of 0V er the hills. The air strip here the vaccine fails, search ” which means research on Americaa - made . radioactive iso- borders the heavily guarded tent No one will take such a chance Asked at the news conference wh, i e8eaic n on topes—the atomic program’s first city where the delegates live. But on human beings. In human out- ■”* United States compares y * definite contribution to peaceful a t Kaesong the Janding field is breaks, the cases are too scattered Canada to take J ' take them ^ clear whether the weapons dif- with Russia in uranium production, Asked at the news conference if application of the atom’s power— fered in actual physical size. AEG Dean answered: he could say “what progress is be- have been increased, has previously disclosed that it is “You’re in the field of intelli- ing made to determine the feas- • New applications for the ma terials in industrial, agricultural 1 " and medical fields were found. (See NEGOTIATORS, Page 4) (See POLIO, Page 4) The Battalion New Studies Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Traditions ''Soldier, Statesman, Knightly Gentleman” The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, is published 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. Subscription rates $6.00 per year or $.50 per month. Advertising rates furnished on request. Entered as second-class matter at Post Office at College Station, Texas, under he Act of Congress of March 3, 1870. Member of The Associated Press Represented nationally by National Ad vertising Service Inc., at New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. These included studies designed to determine exactly how a cow produces milk; a new remote-con trol technique for measuring the water content of snowfall on moun tain slopes; and a new method for testing the efficiency of rust-pre ventives. In outlining the results of treat ing certain diseases with radio active materials during the ten year period, 1940-1950, AEG said that in more than 1,000 cases of luekemia, in which red blood cells are over-produced, “life may not have been prolonged . . . but the HEY AGGIES! Are you moving into a new apartment this semester? Chapman’s suggest a visit to our new color bar . . . over 1500 colors. Spred-Satin (a rubber emulsion) or Texolite with your floors. matching woodtrim Tile-like for Chapman’s Paint & Wallpaper Co. “Next to the Post Office” BRYAN DIAL 2-1318 “We’re Air-Conditioned” For The Clean-tJp Drive Special on Garbage Cans 20 Gallon, Hot Dipped GALVANIZED GARBAGE CAN with cover (weight: 11 pounds) $3.00 We Also Have RAKES SHOVELS HOES WHEEL BARROWS LEAF RAKES WIRE INCINERATORS Parkcr-Astin Hardware Co. N. Bryan St. Phone 2-1541 LI’L ABNER When A McTurkle Writhes By A1 Capp The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news dispatches cred ited 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. comfort of many patients was greatly improved.” SWEET DOCTOR IN DOG PATCH That instant- the m^turkle cabin. News contributions may be made by telephone (4-5444) or at the editorial office, Room 201, Goodwin Hall. Classified ads may be placed by telephone (4-5324) or at the Student Activities Office, Room 209, Goodwin Hall. JOEL AUSTIN Editor Andy Anderson ...Associate Editor and Sports Editor Pat Morley Women’s Editor William Dickens Feature Editor Frank Davis City Editor Frank Price Editorialist Ira Vail Photographer John Lancaster, E D. Witter. Charles McCullough. Jim Thompson ..” Photo Engravers Advertising Manager Owen Lee. Allen Pengelly, B. F. Roland, Frank Davis, William Dickens Staff News Writers Tom Rountree. Gus Becker, Ray Holbrook Sports News Writers Ray Rushing. ................................. tpyyji 1.0 ix e vy o vv a a Calvin Janak Picture File Clerk Capt. White Assumes B&F Duties at BAFB Capt. Allen S. White, Valpar aiso, Ind., reported to Bryan Air Force Base today and has been as signed Budget and Fiscal Officer, it was announced by Col. James C. McGehee, BAFB commanding of ficer. Capt. White came to Bryan from Headquarters, Air Training Com mand, Scott Air Force Base, Illin ois, where he has been budget and fiscal officer for the past three years. IST'GIVE HIM DME SICK FOLKS T'TAKt. CARE OF- -WAL-HERE COME HIS FUST CASE-. ttlflH FfVs/frr fj|/RNIN'OR SHADDUR AN'LEMME; SLEEP, < M C TURKLE, DEAR." v —x .x,.. .."ip AN', HERE COME A CASE O' CH lU.S.'. r -CACKi£?. r - MIGHT'S WELL KEEP IT IN TH' SAME FAMBLY."-IT'LL BE MORE CORN-VENIENT FO'HIM THET WAY- 7 W AH GC AH GOT TH' ? GALLOPIN' xCHILLSr/ 'docW '1 ctx Vi vv it/ll i/iitL ct. V V. X oc rate of 11.5 cents. Barley is selling A BA-LAN, Iran, Aug. 1—(A 1 )—The I at around $1.15 a bushel compared Anglo-Iranian Oil Company's/ * L with the support rate of $1.11. Abadan refinery, the world’s lar-' h. Only relatively few farm pro- gest, shut down yesterday to ducts have claimed above minimum await outcome of new negotiationst '»E price ceiling levels since price con- between Britain and Iran. fW: h trol authority was set up last year. The talks are to be held in Teh- t They include beef cattle, veal ran after American negotiator W. r calves, sheep, lambs, cotton, wool, Averell Harriman clears away what rice and soy beans. Rice and soy he called one or two minor prelira- t beans have since dropped below inaries. K i those levels. On his return to Tehran from a r defend their lives. Beef At Ceding Brices JgtS SflB Produce Every Chemical Possible Beef cattle are selling at ceil- ain’s somewhat skeptical agree- ThporpHnllv thpsp mirmnrp-nn- big prices now, but agricultural ment to send a cabinet mission riirm m-odncp ’ hist •ihout pvptv officials believe the price will drop headed by Richard Stokes, Lord chemical possible It is virtually W* ‘!>»« ^els in •*! l al1 when «L "f™ 1 * <•» *4 certain somewhere there is a mic- marketing ot cattle and hogs nor- sion to talk with Britons, ro-family producing one that can ma (U increase. The conferees aie expected to xy Bi0 . xxJu™ xxxU BU u 0 xunx; CB kill the virus which causes polio. , Favorable crop prospects coup- try for reconciliation on a basis made by germs, molds and other It may take a very long time, how- ^ with the possibility of peace of British reco-mHon thei m - ever, to find one that is also non- 111 Ko / ea aie the ™ a -> or factors > n ™ ns the ml production and mstal * poisonous for humans recent declinesjn farm prices, of- ations of the AlOO under Irans The botanical gardens are mak ing the tedious search in thous-