r Page 4 THE BATTALION Tuesday, August 7, 1951 Truman Wants w To Acquaint Soviets with Peace Aims’ Walters Aggies (Continued from Page 1) Mr. Timm an sent it to Shvernik With a plea that' he “acquaint the Soviet people with the peace aims of the American people and gov ernment.” No Soviet radio or publication has yet carried the text of the American resolution, as far as can be learned, the State Department said. President Truman received Shvernik’s message Monday af ternoon and immediately instructed the State Department to make pub lic the Soviet resolution at once. Worked Overtime State Department translators and officials worked overtime to night to make it available to re porters, page by page. Officials said it would run about 2,500 words. The resolution adopted by the Eussian presidum (parliament) said the Eussian people can not understand why the U. S. govern ment has rejected previous sug gestions “for the conclusipn of a peace pact between the five pow ers.” The Eussian government, it said, has proposed such a move twice. Peace-loving peoples throughout the world, it claimed, have given “support and approval” to the idea of such a pact. The resolution maintained that Eussia has made repeated pro posals for the settlement of the Korean war and generally has tak en the lead in. trying to end the cold war. The United States has proposed a meeting in Washington this year of the “big four” foreign minis ters—the U. S., Eussia, England and France—to try to ease East- west tension. But a meeting of deputies in Paris failed to agree on an agenda. The U. S. has left open an in vitation to join in such talks. “No Aggressive Plans” The Soviet resolution said: “The Soviet Union has no aggressive plans and does not threaten any country or any people. “The armed forces of the Soviet Violinist Plays At Lion’s Meeting Members of the College Sta tion Lion’s Club were entertained yesterday by Mrs. John W. Hill as she played sevei’al violin numbers for the luncheon meeting in the MSC. Accompanied by Mrs. A. B. Med- len on the piano, Mrs. Hill offered the following renditions: “Play Fiddle Play,” “Trees,” “From the Canebreak,” and “Sylvia.” L. E. McCall, club vice-presi dent, presided in the absence of president Dr. A. A. Price. Union are not waging war any where and are not taking part in any military action. The peoples of the Soviet Union are completely absorbed in executing the tasks of peaceful construction.” In his letter to Mr. Truman, Shvernik said “the Soviet people has no basis for doubting that the American people do not want war.” The Eussian president said the Soviet resolution “expresses the feelings of sincere friendship of the peoples of the Soviet Union toward the peoples of the whole world. It speaks of the fact that the Soviet people is unified in its attempts to establish a stable peace and to eliminate the threat of a new war.” Plugging the idea of a five power treaty, Shvernik said: “Such a pact would raise the confidence of all peoples in the preservation of peace and, more over, would permit the possibility of limiting armaments, of lighten ing the burden of military expendi tures, which lie with all their heaviness on the people’s should ers.” Previous Efforts Blocked Previous efforts in the United Nations and elsewhere to reduce world armaments and control atomic energy have been blocked by Eussian refusal to permit inter national inspection of the aims production and storehouses. The paragraph in which Shver nik’s letter today first mentioned the idea of a five-power pact read as follows: “The duty of all peace-loving people consists in steadfastly carrying on a policy of war pre vention and preservation of peace, of not permitting arms races, of obtaining limitations of armaments and the prohibition of atomic Aggies Plan Games With M’ville, Cause Two games are o ntap for the Aggie Softballers this week. To night, they tangle with the Mad- isonville All-Stars at Madisonville and Thursday night they play Cause under the lights of the lighted diamond. Bryan Beard will oppose B. J. Lloyd tonight and will also pitch against Cause Thursday. The Cause hurler was not available this morning. Tonight’s match with Madison ville will be the rubber game for this year as the two teams have met six times previously with the Ags winning all three games played here and Madisonville champs three times at Madison ville. The game with Cause will be the second with that outfit this year, the Aggies having been defeated by them in a tournament earlier this summer. USB BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO SELL, RENT OR TRADE. Rates > ... 3c a word per Insertion with a tSe minimum. Space rate In classified lection .... 60c per column-inch. Send III classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE. All ads must be received In Stu- lent Activities office by 10 a.m. on the lay before publication. • WANTED TO BUY • USED CLOTHES and shoes, men’s — women’s — and children’s. Curtains, spreads, dishes, cheap furniture. 602 N. Main, Bryan. Texas. • WANTED • WANTED: Riders to South California. Round trip or one way. Share ex- ;nse. Leave about 25th. Inquire' D Project House. pen 12 LOST LOST: Black leather wallet Aug 2, prob ably near MSC. Reward. M.‘ M. Mul- cahy, M. D., Class ’46, Box 322, Center Point, Texas. Directory of Business Services • 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. Official Notice Identification Cards which were made in connection with registration for the current term, except for late registrants, are ready for distribution in the Registrar’s Office. They should be claimed in person immedi ately. H. L. Heaton, Registrar. ALL LINES of Life Insurance. Homer Adams, North Gate. Call 4-1217. FREE termite inspection and estimate. International Exterminators Corporation Power spraying for flies, mosquitoes, and other pests. Phone 2-1937. Dr. Carlton R. Lee OPTOMETRIST 203 S. Main Street Call 2-1662 for Appointment RADIOS & REPAIRING Call For and Delivery STUDENT CO-OP Phone 4-4114 Magazines For Sale TI/FRS. J. T. L. McNew is not working her way through college or winning a music scholarship, but IS selling mag azine subscriptions, new and re newals, for the Mother and Dads Club of the A&M Con solidated School. f^ALL her for special prices ^ on Life, Time, Newsweek, etc., at 4-9964, or drop a postal card to box 223, College Station. weapons with the establishment of inspection over the implementation of such a prohibition and of co operating in the conclusion of a five-power pact for the strengthen ing of peace.” Nowhere did Shvernik mention the United Nations as a device for maintaining world peace. The state department has con sistently taken the line that all “peace talks” must be carried out within the U. N. It also has insisted that it will not enter an agreement which involves other nations without their being rep resented at the conference table too. Shvernik’s letter called for “the elimination of any discrimination with regard to the Soviet Union on the part of the American authorities.” He did not elaborate as to the “discrimination” he had in mind. But he said, his pro posal would be “a most important step” on the road toward peace. Shares Opinion “I share your opinion that a de sire for peace and brotherhood exists in the hearts of a majority of people,” he said adding: “Therefore, governments which not with words but with deeds are striving to support peace must en courage by every means the peace ful strivings of their people.” The Soviet government, be con tended, “hospitably receives” peace communications from any country. This obviously was a reference to President Truman’s move in send ing the peace resolution passed by the American congress. Shvernik put other familiar pro paganda punches in his letter. The Soviet people, he said, “know well that there exists in some states forces which are striving to unleash a new world war.” He did not name these alleged war mongers but said they are seek ing new conflicts as a “source of their own enrichment.” He added: “The peoples of the Soviet Union believe that there will be no war if the people take into their own hands preservation of peace and defend it to the end, unmasking the attempts of those forces which have interests in war and which are trying to draw the people into another war.” License Examiner Increases Staff Due to the number of persons wishing to be examined for driv er’s licenses, two examiners will be present at the Court House in Bryan Monday. Ray Boyd, examiner for driver’s licenses from the Texas Depart ment of Public Safety for Bryan- College Station area is available for examinations every Monday and Saturday and on the first, third, and fifth Thursdays in the month. Regular hours are from 8-9 a. m. and 1-2 p. m. on; Mondays and Thursdays and 8-9 a. m. on Satur days. The extra examiner is expected to be present on Aug. 13, 16, and 18. The Texas Department of Public Safety employs about 120 men to conduct driver’s license tests over the state. I HL A— - w-- ■ SAFE-T-WAY TAXI Phone 2-1400 Brickmen Prolong Protest Walk-out Two weeks have elapsed since the eight bricklayers employed by Fisher Construction Company of Houston walked out leaving work on the main stairway and in the basement of the new Administra tion Building incompleted. Oscar E. Telg, construction engi neer said the workers could be ab sent another month and a half without seriously affecting the scheduled work period. The bricklayers, who are pres ently receiving $2.87% per hour, joined a 17 county protest strike against the Wage Stablization Board’s delay in acting on a union’s request for a 15-cent an hour wage increase. The brick layers are now seeking a 25-cent an hour raise. Although the WSB took up the bricklayers case two weeks ago to day, no action has been reported. Clean-up Drive Success Says Baty Commenting on the, community wide clean-up campaign for Col lege Station which ended Saturday, J. B. Baty, public health chairman for the Chamber of Commerce and Development Association said all citizens carried out the drive in fine order. During the drive, city tracks picked up 25 loads of trash and rubbish weighing around 100 tons, according to L. P. Dulaney, utilities supervisor. The clean-up drive is an annual affair sponsored by the City of College Station and the Chamber of Commerce and Development As sociation. Four Aggies, all 1951 A&M Air Force ROTC graduates, rendes- vous at Wolters Air Force Base where they have been recently assigned. They are, left to right: Second Lieutenants Winton B. Adams of Bryan, assistant base adjutant; Frederick P. Henry of Houston, assistant base accountable supply officer; Dorbandt J. Barton of Ft. Stockton, special service officer; and Robert L. Sturdivant from Dallas, assistant air installations officer. Herdsmen’s Course Opens Thursday Some 75 livestock men will at tend a herdsmen’s short course at Texas A&M College Thursday through Saturday to study the va- i rious phases of management and showing of purebred cattle. Registration will be from 8 a.m. until noon Thursday. The course will be held at the new beef cattle center. Included in the course will be breeding, feeding and management of the breeding herd, as well as feeding, fitting and showing pure bred cattle, and registration and transfer. Red’s Apology Not Enough--Ridgway Tokyo, Aug. 7—69?)—Gen. Mat thew S. Ridgway told the Reds today Korean cease-fire talks will not be resumed until they assure him they will keep their Kaesong neutrality agreement. The Allied supreme commander acknowledged the Red apology for last Saturday’s violation of the neutral zone. Then he told them that wasn’t enough. Strongly-Worded Message In a strongly worded message to the two Red commanders in Korea, Ridgway said he needed new assurances that Communists will keep their word. Only then, he said, will he send his five negotiators back to Kae song to resume negotiations. Ridgway, who has twice brok en off talks because armed Red troops violated the neutral area, said he didn’t think the appearance of a company of heavily armed Keane Needs 500 Pounds To Win Bet Harlingen, Tex. Aug. 7—(A*)—It looked today like Ed (Boll Wee vil) Keane would win his bet. He picked 229 pounds of cotton in 11 hours and 20 minutes Mon day. Now he needs less than 500 pounds to complete the 1,450-pound bale he boasted he could pluck in a week. He’s got three more days to pick the 500 pounds. His four day total is 1,005 pounds. Rain which kept the flippant disc jockey from the fields three days last week was termed an “act of God” by contest judges. They allowed him three extra days. Onlookers today tried to speed Keane up by reminding him the winner of a cotton picking con test in nearby San Benito Satur day picked 97 pounds in 90 min utes. “A steady pull for the long haul is the gait for me,” he puffed in Texas’ sizzling weather. The slender mass of sore muscles picked 129 pounds by noon Monday in his fifth day in the field. Sat urday he picked 141 pounds. Keane is trying to prove a boast made over coffee to a group of valley cotton people. If he wins he will get more than $2,000 in prizes. Drive Up...Any Time! Daytime . . . night time . . . any day in the week! When you need auto service, drive in here where you’re always sure of service! Auto Service Is Our Business Tom McCall’s Phillips 66 SERVICE STATION College Station, Texas ' Hwy. 6—North Corner of Campus—Phone 4*4792 Communists last Saturday was an “accident,” as the Reds .stated. He told Korean Gen. Kim II Sung and Chinese Gen. Peng Teh- Huai “it must be clearly under stood that my acceptance of a re sumption of the armistice talks is conditional on complete compli ance with your guarantees of neu tralization of the Kaesong area. Any further failure in this regard will he interpreted as a deliberate move on your part to terminate the armistice negotiations. “I await your acceptance of this condition.” Marched Through Kaesong A company of armed Red sol diers had marched through the Kaesong neutral zone while the armistice conference was under way Saturday. Because of this, Ridgway abruptly broke off the conferences Sunday. Generals Kim and Peng replied Monday that the presence of t h e troops was “a mistake and an acci dent.” Their joint statement, as broad cast by the Chinese Peiping radio, referred to it as “a small incident” and accepted General Ridgway’s conditions for resumption of the talks. Ridgway’s conditions were a “satisfactory explanation of this violation and assurance of non recurrence.” Benefit Tilt Slated For Sports Park A benefit baseball game will be played at 8 tomorrow night in Sports Park between the Texas Monarchs of Heame and the Grand Prize Brewers of Houston. The ball game between the two Negro teams is being played to help defray the burial expenses of Ray Grant, Hearne shortstop from Cause who was fatally in jured in an unavoidable accident during a recent meeting of the two teams. The two teams have met four times previously with each team winning two games. Admission for the 8 p. m. tilt is 50 cents. Tribe, Pirates Take CS Softball Wins In games played in the College Station Summer Softball League yesterday the Pirates swamped the Tigers 12-0 while the Indians mauled the giants 23-3. Homer Adams was the victor for the Pirates while Newt Wil liamson suffered the defeat. This was Adam’s second straight shut out. Sarg White took the loss for the Giants while Bob Seymour gained credit for the win. Virgil Faires Takes Job With DuPont Virgil M. Faires, head of the post graduation studies, Mechan ical Engineering Department, has accepted a, DuPont Industrial Fel lowship. These fellowships have been created by the E. I. DuPont de Nemours and Company in order to promote a closer cooperation be tween engineering colleges and in dustry. They are for a year and the ap pointee visits all the various en gineering departments, spending two to four weeks in each de partment studying its operation and its relation to their depart ments of the company. lunem— BOGART BAMIL m W-60U)«'«S VmZJtW EVERY MONDAY KORA 8:00 P.M. AMERICAN LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Stoves—Refrigerators New Government Regulation 15% Down 18 Months to Pay Use Old Appliance as Down Payment HENRY A. MILLER CO. North Gate Ph. 4-1145 College Station Hot Story Puts Cold Slash A In Prices of Anti-Freeze In a move that should warm the cockles of any motorist’s heart, the Office of Price Stabilization has issued a hot news story on a chilly subject: The price of anti-freeze has been frozen. Smack in the middle of 100-degree, plus, weather, the Houston district OPS has announced that dollars-and-cents ceilings have been placed on three standard types of anti freeze. The new ceilings apply to retail sales and sales to re tail dealers. Details of the new regulation, which went into effect August 6 in all the sweltering 38 Southeast Texas counties of the Houston OPS district, are given in Ceiling Price Regu lation 57. Net result of the anti-freeze is that the motorist now (in August) pays the same price for his car’s anti-freeze as he did on January 26, 1951. The new regulation also provides that if good ol’ Joe down at the gas station filled the radiator with anti-freeze for you last January, he can fill it again now—but can’t charge extra for the service. The fill-up service is under the retail ceiling price regulation, too. That news should add an extra fillup to your purchase of frozen anti-freeze in August. Little American League Flag Goes to 7-Up Tiger: The Seven-Up Tigers are the winners of the Little Ameincan League pennant by virtue of their win Saturday afternoon from the South Side Food Market Red Sox, 7-5. Gordon Gregg received credit for the win Saturday, his second decision in three days as the also gained credit for the first game of the two-out-of-three series on. Thursday afternoon. Gregg pitched five innings of the Saturday tilt with Joe Cam- pise playing fireman in the sixth. The two hurlers allowed eight hits, the same number the Tigers got off two Sox hurlers, Bobby Potts and Wayne Thompson. , Potts, who went five innings, was the loser as the Bengals went ahead 3-0 in the fourth only to see the Sox tally five in the fifth to go in the lead 5-3. The Tigers were not to he denied though, as they roared hack with four more in the ■'bottom of the fifth to put the game on ice and gain the right to meet the Conway Phillies in the Little League World Series. Friday afternoon the two teams battled to a 15-15 draw back that was called at the end of the fifth because of darknesss. The Red Sox had a 15-6 lead after four in nings but the Bengals roared back to tie up the game and cause the two teams to have to play again Saturday. Campise, as usual, was instru mental in all his teams wins with his extraordinary hitting and pitching. DR. WILLIAM GOTTLIEB Registered Chiropodist Foot Specialist 4824 S. Main, Houston Will Be in Bryan the 2nd Wednesday of each month. Next visit will be — WEDNESDAY AUG. 8, 1951 at the LaSalle Hotel Office Hours 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Evening: 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Final Clearance SUMMER CLOTHING, HATS and FURNISHINGS Men’s SUITS and SLACKS Reduced Vs STRAW HATS ^/2 Price Summer BELTS SWIM TRUNKS ^2 Price ^2 Price Special Reduced Prices Reduction on on Fine SPORT SHIRTS DRESS SHIRTS PAJAMAS at All NECKWEAR Special at Special Reduced Price Reduced Prices Special Reductions Throughout Our Ladies’ and Boys’ Departments 7 t * C^ T\ WIMBERLEY •STONE*DANSBt WA-J7X7 CLOCKIERS College Station and Bryan