n r.OF?^ Offk'ialP^per Of Texas' &M College And College Station Number 14: Volume 52 i Battalion PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1951 Published by The Students Of Texas A&M For 73 Years Price Five Cents Board to Hold First Meeting To Let Bids The board of directors of the A&M College System will hold its first meeting of the new school term on the A&M campus Saturday Oct. 6 at 9 a. m. in the board of directors meeting room. A report by President E. B. Evans of Prairie View A&M on its 75th year will be heard and action will be taken on bids for seven buildings at A&M. Bids to be acted on include those for an engineering building, the Texas Engineering Library, agro nomy field laboratory, horticulture, hut house and three quonset build ings for the poultry husbandry and range and forestry departmens. Action also is to be taken on, contract bids for a shop building at Tarleton State College, Stephen- ville. The board will consider appro priations for the paving now going on under the football stadium. Chancellor Gibb Gilchrist will present the annual report on the accomplishments of the A&M Col lege System for the year 1950-51. Iran’s Premier Weeps; British Dispute Unfair Tehran, Iran, Oct. 4—(A*) Premier Mohammed Mossa degh wept today as he told the Majlis (Lower House of Parliament) that the British Government had no right to bring the Iranian oil dispute up before the U.N. Security Council. Asserting that the oil nationali zation problem was an internal dis pute with the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, Mossadegh told the dep uties he will leave Sunday to argue Iran’s case in the U.N. Mossadegh wiped away tears as he said “I am sure that on this trip I will enjoy the prayers and support of the Iranian people, and I am sure that Almighty God will help me and the nation.” Premier Heads Delegation The premier will head the dele gation which includes four mem bers of the parliamentary oil board —the deputies Allahyar Saleh and Ali Shayegan, and the senators Ahmed Matin Dafteri, and Morteza Bayatt. Mossadegh turned down a sug gestion by a deputy that the Maj lis adopt a special resolution giv ing him full authority before the security council. He said a vote was unnecessary since he would be counseled by the four oil board members. Council Meets The security council met in New York last Monday at the urging of Britain. Over Russian and Yugo slav objection, it voted to consider Britain’s complaint that Iran’s ex pulsion of British technicians after ihe nationalization threatened world peace. But the Iranian delegate obtain ed a postponement until Oct. 11 to allow the premier to reach New York to argue the case. A government spokesman said Mossadegh planned to spend most of his time in a hospital, under the care of his physician-son, Dr. Gho- lem Hossein Mossadegh, when not attending security council sessions. Huff and Puff OU Seating A rrangement This will be the seating arrangement for the O.U. Game. The Student Senate will revise it as required Wanda Harris Chosen A&M’s Sweetheart By JOEL AUSTIN Battalion Managing Editor Wanda Harris, pretty blue-eyed TSCW sophomore, was named Ag gie Sweetheart for 1951-52 last night by a 17 man selection com mittee. It was her second time to be the number one choice of an Aggie selection group. As a freshman last spring, Miss Harris was chosen to reign as Queen over the An nual Cotton Pageant and Ball. The aubum-haired lass, who calls San Antonio home, topped a list of 12 nominees—four each from the Sophomore, Junior, and Senior classes. Climaxing an afternoon and evening of entertainment on the TSCW campus, the Aggies named their choice in the wee, early hours of the morning'after a run off vote was necessary to deter mine the final winner. Corps Marches Into Game Saturday The A&M Cadet Corps will make its first public appearance Sat urday night prior to the A&M- OU football game, Lt. Col. M. P. Bowden, assistant commandant, said Wednesday. At approximately 6:45 p. m., the first cadet organization will march on to the Kyle Field track. The entire pass-by review should be completed by about 7:20 p. m. in time for both teams to practice before game time. After marching on to the track, the corps will march down the west sidelines, make a left turn near the south goal, and march across the field. Near the south east corner, the outfits will bd dis missed by their commanding offi cers and students will proceed be hind the stadium to the Aggie sec tion. Arriving on the TSCW campus at 5 p.m. yesterday, the Aggies were welcomed at a “Howdy” din ner in Hubbard Dining Hall. Fol lowing supper, the group attended a concert by Sidney Foster, bril liant young pianist, who played on the TSCW Concert and Drama Series. After the program, nominees and members of the selection com mittee were honored at a reception in Virginia-Car roll Lodge. After the reception, both groups went to Stoddard Hall Dormitory for danc ing and selecting of the winner. The committee finished its final tabulations at 2 a.m. this morning. Miss Harris is a speech correc tion major and a freshman dormi tory counselor in Capps Hall. The committee was composed of J. W. “Doggy” Dalston, president of the Senior Class; Bobby Dunn, vice-president of the Senior Class; C. L. Ray Senior Class social secre tary, and Lew Jobe, head yell lead er. Other members in the group were Eric Carlson, corps command er; Regimental Commanders Jim AftdeTson, Roy Striekert, Howard Kruse, Harold Chandler, John Wright, Lynn Stuart, and Grady Smallwood; Senior Battalion repre- ^en,tative Jim Dobbins, Consolidat ed Band Commander Buddy Burch, Battalion Managing Editor Joel Austin; and Pete Hardesty, busi ness manager for Student Activ ities. Quinton Johnson, Ralph Rowe, non-military representatives. Candidates Presented Senior nominees were Jane Tat um, Charlotte Williams, Johnnie Lois Neal, and Mary Jane Mon- crief. Juniors were Betty Ann Timmer man, Jean Putnam, Paula Mueller, and Laura Schwartz. Sophomores were Wanda Har ris, Jane McBriety, Patricia Hep- install and Joan Jopling. Personality, ability of fluenl Pipe Smoking Contest Has Many Different Sections By FRANK SCOTT Battalion Staff Writer to test will be to keep the weed lit standing pipe collections, as long as possible. Two section will be open Women are allowed to enter the “roll-your-own” fans. In the pro- Dig out your briars, stokers and contest in all branches and for you fessional division, the participants corncobs and get those lungs in fcnrale snuff dippers, special con- will be required to roll their own good condition. Soon you addicts sideration is being given to setting from a rougher cut tobacco than those in the amateur division,; conversation, graciousness, sincer ity and attractiveness were the points which the committee con sidered in making its decision. In her official capacity as sweetheart, Miss Harris, will be presented at halftime a^t the annual A&M-TSCW Corps TVip in Fort Worth Oct. 20 when the Aggies play TCU. She will also officially represent A&M at the Cotton Bowl football game in Dallas Jan. 1, at the Mili tary Mall here next spring, at the TSCW Redbud Festival at Denton in March, at the TU Round-Up in April and also at the Cotton Ball and Pageant here in April. Unofficial Tabulations Have 16 in Run-Offs Approximately 3,000 students, one of the largest groups voting in the history of a col lege election at A&M, cast ballots Wednes day night for student dormitory represen tatives to the Senate, senators at large, and non - corps representatives on the Student Life Committee. Interest in the first election of the school year was increased by vigorous room to room campaigning on the part of most candidates. Aggie Rodeo Opens Friday At Arena of the weed will have a chance to win prizes on your puffing ability. On Nov. 5, The Battalion will hold its fifth Annual Pipe Smok ing Contest. On that date you will find billowing clouds of smoke rolling from the Ballroom of the MSG as contestants puff for prizA es. Phases of the contest will be similar to those of last year and will include large bowl, medium bowl, small bowl, miniature bowl, and metal bowl competition. There will be a section of the contest for calabash and churchwarden type pipes also. Object of the pipe smoking con- up a section for you. * those in , those in this section may use easy Special Section for E acuity to . ro ll tobaccos. There will be a special section If enough -interest in indicat- set aside for faculty and staff ed, there may be a section open only. Cigar smoking as well as tobacco spitting. Prizes would pipe smoking will be included in he awarded on accuracy and dis- the profs’ section. tance. . . . , . , . Anyone connected with the col- A section in the cigar smoking i ege may enter the contest. An division will be open to all con- entry blank will soon appear in testants other than faculty and The Battalion. Prizes last staff. The one who smokes his totaled $278.00. cigar the longest will win this div- All of the'colleges in the South- lslon - west Conference have been invited Included in the general contest to send their champion puffers to will be smoke idng blowing. Prizes Aggieland to vie with the winners will also be given to corn cob of our contest, smokers and exhibitors of out- By the way, got a match, bud? year Fierce Fights Seen As UN Army Advances U.S. 8th Army Headquar ters, Korea, Oct. 4 — E/P) — Troops from nine United Na tions today crunched forward along a 40 mile front in West ern Korea. Everywhere, they met fierce Chi nese resistance. In bitter hand-to-hand fighting infantrymen of five divisions gain ed up to two miles Wednesday. A series of Chinese counterat tacks slowed the advance. Censor ship delayed details and reports of progress. The offensive smashed to within earshot of Kaesong, site of dis rupted truce negotiations which the Reds Thursday refused to reopen anywhere else. A roaring artillery barrage Wed nesday opened the attack — the largest launched on the Korean ■front in three months. The Allies—British, Canadian, Australian, New Zealand, Ameri can, Greek, Turkish, Filipino and Korean troops—fought shoulder to shoulder. Tanks Roll Forward Fifty-seven ton British Centur ion tanks rolled forward with them as the foot soldiers seared Chinese out of the hills with flame throw ers. Front line dispatches reported the Reds were well entrenched in bunkers lining strategic hill masses. One dispatch said resistance west of Chorwon suddenly evaporated in the night on the northern end of a ridge line. The Communists gave up their positions under cover of darkness and let the Allies take over without firing a shot. The Reds previously had blocked every attempt to take the ridges. * “Elsewhere,” the dispatch said, “U.N. troops continued to run into the same heavy Communist ie- sistance that had stalled all. allied attacks for the past three days. “An estimated two Red com panies surged from their ridge positions late last night in a count erattack against nearby U.N. units. The enemy fought vainly for two and a half hours before being forced to withdraw to their posi tions.” Major Concerns Schedule Job Interview Here Representatives of seven ^ major companies will be on 1 the campus between Oct. 91 and Oct. 18 to interview stu dents graduating at mid-term, Bill Hensel of the placement of fice, said Wednesday. Humble Oil and Refining will hold a general meeting in the YMCA Chapel at 9 a. m, Oct. 11. Engineering majors, chemists, phy sicists, and geologists who will re ceive their degree in January may make appointments for interviews at the meeting, Hensel commented. Phillips Petroleum Company will conduct interviews for mid term graduates in chemical, electrical, mechanical, petroleum, and civil engineering Oct. 10. Interviews with mechanical and electrical engineers and physicists will be held by the International Business Machines Corporation on Oct. 16. The Shell Chemical Corporation scheduled interviews for Oct. 16. These representatives will talk to chemical and mechanical engineers and chemists. Petroleum, electrical, mechanical, civil, and chemical engineers; geol ogists, math and physics majors will be interviewed by the Atlantic Refining Company Oct. 17. The Standard Oil Company of California will talk to mechanical, civil, chemical, and electrical engin eers; chemists, physicists, and geol ogists. They will hold their inter view Oct. 18. Oct. 9 is the date set for the Cessna Aircraft Company to inter view mid term graduates in aero nautical, mechanical, and industrial engineering. MSC Opens Ticket Sale for Dance The first MSC sponsored dance of the year will be held after the A&M-OU football game Saturday night. Aggies, their dates, and OU visitors will dance in the MSC Ballroom and on the terrace from 10 until midnight. Tickets will be on sale begin ning Thursday afternoon in the Post Office area and Directorate offices of the MSC. Miss Betty Bolander, MSC assist ant social director, announced that cokes would be sold throughout the evening and music will be furnished by the MSC jukebox. By RAYMOND YORK Battalion Staff Writer That team of wild horses talked about so much in that old saying “one used to drag people away from something” will be on the Campus Friday when the Saddle and Sirloin Club presents their an nual Aggie Rodeo. This is the second year the all student rodeo has been held in the new Rodeo Arena. This year, the two day show will start at 8 p. m. Friday. One of the stars of the show will be Jack Long of San Antonio. Long was the rodeo star that ori ginated the one-hand stand roping trick. Bo Damuth, senior AH major from Magnolia, has signed up to be the clown for the show. He will appear with his mule “Simon” and pet skunk “Stinky.” Saddle and Sivloiners working on the rodeo say the wild horse race this year will be one of the best ever held. In this race there are three men in the arena 1 with one horse. The men rope the horse, put on a riding rig, sad dle, and ride the bronc to the opposite side of the arena. After getting to the end of the arena, the wild horse is unsaddled and the participants lug the saddle back to the center of the ring. Work on the wild horses is done as a team, with the group complet ing the job in the shortest amount of time winning. All the faculty of the animal husbandry department will take part in the Professor’s Bloomer Race. This will be in addition to the usual calf-roping, bare-back bronc hiding, bull dogging, wild bull riding, and a long distance horse race. Contestants entered in the rod eo are all students and a final listing of all men entering the com petition will be released this week, Warren Pierce, publicity chairman, announced. Contestants placing first in the events will be awarded prizes. While a full list of the prizes is not available, Pierce said, the winner of the wild horse event will receive a trophy belt buckle. Time for the Saturday show has been set for 2 p. m. Tickets are available from all AH majors and tickets will also be available at the gate after the show starts. A dance will also be held after the rodeo Friday night at the Shilo Hall. Unusual however, was the fact most candi dates for Student Senate positions had def-» inite plans in mind which they intended to present to the senators, if elected. Most candidates seemed to rely on their v own personal contacts with other students. The Battalion offered to print any campaign statements, 50 words or less in length, but only a few of the 111 students running for offices to advantage of the offer. When the election committee, headed by Don Young, member of last year’s Senate, finally finished counting all ballots 28 of the col lege dormitories had chosen an equal number of senators. Also, 11 places on the Senate were filled by newly elected senators-at-large. These members of the student gov erning body were chosen by vote of the entire student body. Five students filed for three, positions as non-corps representa-^ tives on the Student Life Com mittee. Play ers Rehearse Command Decision “Command Decision,” the Ag gie Players’ current production, is going into its second week of re hearsals under Director C. K. Es- ten of the English Department. The play, which starred Holly wood’s Paul Kelly in the role, of Brig. Gen. K. C. Dennis on Broad way, will be presented at 8:15 p. m. 12 and 13. Gen. Dennis will be played by Harry Gooding in the Aggieland version. The rest of the cast in cludes Dick Black as Sgt. Evans, Dennis’ aide, Chuck Neighbors as Col. Caley, Dennis’ executive offi cer, Roger Coslett as Brockhurst, la, magazine correspondent, and John Samuels as Brig. Gen. Gar nett. Bill Witty portrays Col. Mar tin, a group commander and old friend of Dennis’, Jerry MacFar- land as Maj. Gen. Kane; Carl Stephens as Maj. Prescott; John Caple as Capt. Jenks; Carroll Phillips and Don Lance are cast as Senators Malcolm and Stone re spectively, and John King plays Lt. Goldberg. Weather officer Maj. Davis will be played by Howard Allison. Rog er Melton will play Maj. Lansing; Williard Jenkins will play Maj. Dayhuff; Capt. Lee will be por trayed by Doyle Smith; and Don Dempke will be a guard. Jack of All Trades Title Goes to B&CU By ALLEN PENGELLY Battalion Staff Writer “If anything on this campus needs to be done and mo one else will do it, the chances are ten to one that we will end up with the job,” said J. K. Walker, superin tendent of the College B&CU de partment. “Our department either operates or is responsible for all college carpentry, painting, plumbing, elec trical work, laundry, sewage and drainage, heating, a volunteer fire department, and janitorial service,” Walker continued. Walker said his department’s Allied, Red Peace Talks To Start Again Tokyo, Oct. 4—In an abrupt exchange today, Red and Al lied commanders each pro posed that Korean truce talks be resumed immediately—but disagreed on a site. Gen. Ridgway injected a new note by telling the Reds to pick a hew site—as long as it was in no- man’s-land. If it looks OK to him, he said, armistice negotia tions could resume at once. Communist coirtmanders had pro posed immediate reopening of talks at the original site, Red-controlled Kaesong. The talks were broken off a- bruptly by the Communists Aug. 23. The Reds started today’s rapid exchange by suddenly breaking a weak-long silence. As a new allied offensive roared within earshot of Kaesong, they answered a mess age Ridgway sent them last Thurs day. The Reds rejected Ridgway’s suggestion that talks start anew near Songhyon, a no-man’s land village six miles southeast of Kae song. They said the suggestion was “devoid of reason.” The Communists said it would provide no new assurance that neutrality agreements would be observed. Instead they suggested: “Both sides immediately resume the conference at Kaesong. At the first meetaing all appropriate ma chinery should be established to stipulate 'a strict agreement con cerning the neutralization of Kae song.” Two hours after announcing the text of the Communist communica tion, Ridgway replied. He told North Korean Premier Kim 11 Sung and Chinese Gen. Peng Teh-Huai: “1 have already made clear to you my views regarding the un- suitabulity of Kaesong as a con ference sit. . . satisfactory condi tions for the resumption of the armistice talks can only be in sured by moving the conference site to an area where it is not un der the exclusive control of other side. Complete tabulations on the stu dent at large vote are tentative and a run-off election will probably be called for. However from last night’s voting it is possible to tab- the top 16 in the voting for Sen ators at Large. Grady Smallwood, commander of the eighth regiment, was high man on the balloting. He received 1,470 votes, with the biggest concentra tion of the votes coming from the basic division. Others in the top 16, of which 11 will be chosen, are Monty Montgomery-with 1,407 Marshall Crouch with 1,281 Baxter Honeycutt with 1,281 Warren Pierce with 1, 133 Ted Uptmore, 1,105 George Germond, 985 Harold Chandler, 982 Frank Morris, 968 Ken Wiggins, 893 Jack (Spiid) Mergle, 855 Putter Jarvis, 802 Lyles, 71,9 Bob Chapman, 684 Bob Chapman, 666 Duane Vandenberg, 641 The election committee was not available for a story this morning. An announcement of the plans for the run-off elections in the dorm senators and senators at large will be announced in tomorrow’s Batta lion. biggest task is that of mainten ance. Whenever a power line breaks, the steam pressure fails, a Massachusetts can be seen as the Navy Exhibit On Display in Bryan A huge model of the battleship Non-Students Tickets on Sale For Town Hall Non-student reserved seat tickets for the 1951-52 Town Hall series went on sale at 7 a. m. in Guion Hall. By 10 a. m. the ticket sales men were forced to return to the Student Activities office to handle the volumn of people wishing to purchase tickets. The only people eligible to pur chase these tickets were faculty members and non-students, Stu dent Activities was forced to limit the purchaser to four tickets so that they could be more evenly dis tributed. Featured this year at Town Hall will be “Tex” Beneke and his or chestra, scheduled to perform this Monday night. On Oct. 16, Rise Stevens, star of the Metropolitan Opera and movies, will give a con cert for Town Hallers. The Houston Symphony Orches tra, under the direction of Efrem Kurtz, conductor, will come to A&M on Dec. 11 to offer special arrangements of some of the more popular classics. Beginning the new year, the Rev elers, famous male quartet, will make their appearance on the Town Hall series. It is unknown at this time what type of program this group will offer. The last program of the 1951- 52 series will be Morley & Ger hart, duo-pianists with the Fred Waring Orchestra. They will ap pear in Guion Hall on Feb. 12. water main bursts, a man from the B&CU must work at the job until the service is restored. “This summer I recall,” said Walker, “at least 15 water mains burst at the joints because of ex pansion of the lines caused by the drought.” Another job which is delegated to the B&CU is the maintenance and repair of the dormitories. The largest type repair job in the dorms is the replacing of kicked-down doors, broken windows, and push- (See B&CU, Page 2) main exhibit of a navy mobile exhibit on display today in Bryan at 25th Street between Bryan and Main announced Chief Torpe doman J. H. Howard, navy recruit er for the area. The official navy sedan and trailer are also carrying complete 16mm motion picture equipment and film. These show various phas es of navy life and outstanding navy accomplishments. Howard said the exhibits were sent from the main district recruit ing office in Houston. Dr. Traxler Speaks At JC Conference “Establishing a Functioning Guidance Program in the Junior College,” is the topic which Dr. Arthur E. Traxler will speak at the MSC, Oct. 8. His talks in con junction with the program for the 8th has written several books on vocational guidance and has been working with the Education Record Bureau 15 years. He spent three months in Ger many helping the German educa tors prepare tests for their youth. Several of the tests he has writ ten have been translated into German and Japanese.