ASS'N FORMER^STUDENTS 4 copies f ,e. Published by Students Of Texas A&M For 73 Years The Battalion PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE Number 205: Volume 51 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1951 Oldest Continuously Published College Newspaper In Texas Price Five Cents Negotiators Create Committee to Settle Buffer Zone Dispute First Pioneer Flight Herd a l Munsan, Korea, Aug. 16—t/P)— Armistice negotiators diverted truce talks into a new phase today in an effort to break their three- I week-old controversy. They created a subcommittee to try informally to solve the prob lem of where to create a line of demarcation between opposing armies in Korea. Committee Meets Tomorrow The subcommittee — two repre sentatives from each side — will hold its first meeting at 11 a.m. tomorrow (8 p.m. Thursday EST). It will meet in the Kaesong con ference hall where all truce talks have been held. Daily sessions of the full, five- man delegations will be suspended while the smaller group works. The subcommittee idea was ad vanced Wednesday by Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy, chief U.N. delegate. He suggested a small group meet ing informally might solve the question which has stymied con ferences of the full delegations for 16 consecutive meetings. The Communists accepted in a 56 minute session Thursday—the shortest meeting since talks start ed July 10. Wants Two Delegates North Korean Lt. Gen. Nam II, chief Communist negotiator, pro posed two delegates from each side instead of one as Joy had sugges ted. The U.N. accepted. The change permitted Nam 11 to name both a Red Korean and a Chinese general to the subcommit tee. He appointed North Korean Maj. Gen. Lee Song Cho and Chi nese Maj. Gen. Hsiem Fang. Joy named only one of his dele gates immediately—Maj. Gen. Wil liam I. Hodes, deputy chief o staff of the U.S. 8th Army. Brig. Gen. William P. Nuckols,' U.N. spokesman, said the other will be named Friday. Set Buffer Zone The subcommittee’s job will be k) recommend location of a mili tary demarcation line and a buffer lone separating opposing armies for the duration of the armistice. In formal sessions neither side ! moved from its original position, although Joy said the U.N. would consider modifications in the line it recommended. The U.N. proposal calls for a buffer zone along present battle lines. The Communists have in sisted on making the 38th parallel the demarcation line. Most of the battle front now runs north of this old political boundary. Street Light Erected At North Gate The intersection of Sulphur Springs Road and College Main at North Gate spoils a new street light with a photo-electric cell which turns the light on when darkness arrives and off when dawn approaches. The light was erected yesterday at the corner of the bus stop across from the Post Office. This light formerly stood in front of the College Station Bank, but was removed about a year ago, according to Raymond Rogers, city manager. Registration Schedule, Regulations Released Advanced registration for the I Students registering for less Fall semester of 1951 will be con- than 12 credit hours will report to ducted in Sbisa Hall Saturday, the Registrar’s desk in Sbisa for Aug. 25 starting at 8 a. m., H. L. a statement of expenses before be- Heaton, registrar, announced to- ginning registration. In case of Pioneer Airlines landed at the college-owned East- erpood Field yesterday at 7:01 for the first of four regular flights from here. Several officials of the college were on hand to greet the initial opening of the service. Left to right, T. R. Spence, manager of Physical Plants; Joe Sorrels, College Station Chamber of Commerce President; Dr. Howard W. Barlow, dean of the School of Engineering; Howard Badgett, College Station City Councilman; Dr. M. T. Harrington, president of A&M; R. N. Schafranka, pilot; Miss Jean Hart, hostess; Gibb Gilchrist, chancellor of the A&M System; R. F. Cobb, co-pilot; and A. G. Magee, president of the College Station Kiwanis Club. Sun Beauts Down With 106 Reading Again City Sees 20th Day of 100-Plus Heat College Station posted another temperatures in the eighties in the Dallas, Tyler and College Sta- ciable amount of rain has falle College Station posted day of 106 degree temperatures yesterday, the twentieth consecu tive day in which the thermometer climbed over the 100-degree mark. \ A minimum of 75 degrees was reported by the CAA weather sta- ti