* Page 6 THE BATTALION Wednesday, October 31, 1951 Morgan Leads baptist Revival This Week The First Baptist Church of College Station is sponsor ing a revival each night this week at 7:15. The nightly gathering is un der the direction of the Rev. James N. Morgan, pastor of the North Fort Worth Baptist Church and music is directed by Charles Downey of Huntsville. “Students attending the revival,” said the Rev. James J. McDan iel, interim pastor of the church, “will be released in time to be back in their dorms by 8:30.” Saturday night’s urogram will feature a movie entitled “Mr. Tex as.” This picture is a biography of the Fort Worth revival led by Billv Graham and stars Graham, Redd Harper and Cindy Walker. Included in the film are scenes of the conversion of a typical cow boy. “If the demand is great enough, the movie will be shown twice Sat urday night,” said the Rev. Mc Daniel. In Fort Worth, 16,000 people saw it at the premier on Oct. 9 and the requests for a re-run were so num- erous that it was shown three times. Cabinet (Continued from Page 1) Cherwell will coordinate Britain’s scientific research and development program—including that on atoms. Lord Leathers, 68, industrialist, secretary of state for transport, fuel and power. Harold MacMillian, 57, a wealthy book publisher, minister of housing and local government. His main job will be to fulfill the Conser vative promise of 300,000 new homes a year—100.000 more a year than under the Labor government. Peter Thornycroft, 42, president of the Board of Trade. He is a lawyer. Harry F. C. Crookshank, 58, a former diplomat turned politician, minister of health. Lord Simonds, 69, the lord high chancellor, and as such the new speaker of the House of Lords. James Stuart, 54, a former chief Conservative whip in the House of Commons, minister for Scotland. Louis (Continued from Page 5) labeled intentional. His sports manship will go down through years of praise along with his win and loss record. He told reporters Monday that he was going to withhold any posi tive statement as to his retiring until after he returns from an ex hibition tour in Japan. Another great career settles into the vastness of the past. Choir Party Tonight A party for members and pros pective members of the choir of St. Mary’s church will be held to night at 7:30 in the basement of the church, Mrs. E. M. Hildebrand, choir members, sai.d. Ex-Gestapo Agent Caught After Five Year Search Hamburg, Germany, Oct. 31—GP) A former Nazi gestapo (secret po lice) agent made his mistake of becoming a policeman after suc cessfully hiding his past for five years under a false name. His mistake cost him a two-year prison sentence today. Here’s how it happened: At war’s end, Herbert Balhom changed his name to Herbert Bau mann, because he was hunted for his nazitime crimes. After a few years, his wife suc ceeded in having him declared missing and legally dead. He re married her under his new alias. Then he got a job on the Bremen policed force. But one day his superior assign ed him to a routine checkup' on the disappearance of Balhom—his real self. Suddenly the superior noticed Balhorn’s picture in the old files and recognized him. Balhom was promptly arrested. A court today convicted him of mistreating eight German concen tration camp prisoners while he was serving in the gestapo. No Divorce, No Money Wails Abdullah King Houston, Oct. 31—(A 1 )—Sheppard (Abdullah) King III said tonight there is “too much prejudice against me” in Houston and that he may end up trying to divorce his wife somewhere else. The wealthy young Texan said he hoped for quick action in order that he might many Sarnia Gamal, the Egyptian belly dancer he met, courted and won in three hours time. A hearing yesterday on his wife’s annulment petition ended with no action and the curvacious Gloria dousing Sheppard with a glass of water. “I don’t know why I came back from Egypt,” he said. “I came back to get my money and a di vorce and I haven’t gotten either.” He said he was considering get ting a divorce in Egypt or Mexico. The romance of Sheppard, who has become a Moslem and taken the name Abdullah, and Samia has created international interest. It also has led to some story scenes and revelations. Claims Intoxication One was Gloria’s claim she did not remember her remarriage to Sheppard last June. In her annul ment petition she said she had con sumed “too many fancy drinks” and didn’t remember the ceremo ny. The hearing on the annulment ‘No Funds’ Says Commie Paper New York, Oct. 31—(IP)— The Communist newspaper, The Daily Worker, in another appeal for funds, said today “there is not now enough mon ey to publish for the rest of this week.” It asked readers to send in any thing from $1 up, adding: “And if you are somewhat af fluent, join those few who have already given us $50 or $100.” The newspaper has admitted for weeks that its back is to the wall. It blamed its plight on what is called a campaign to intimidate its advertisers and circulation chan nels. An original appeal for $25,000 to carry it through the year, the Daily Worker said in its front page appeal, brought only $1,884 in two weeks. USE BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO BUY, SELL, KENT OR TRADE. Kates .... 3c a word per insertion with a 25c minimum. Space rate in classified section .... 60c per column-inch. Send all classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE. Ail ads must be received in Student Activities office by 10 a.m. on the day before publication. FOR SALE • (70) used automobile batteries. Sealed bids will be received in the office of the Auditor until 10 a.m. Friday, November 12, 1951. The right is reserved to re ject any and all bids and to waive any and all technicalities. Address Auditor, Texas A&M College. College Station. Texas, for further information. • FOR RENT • Why not rent this $5,000 Estate until you can afford to own it? If you are a graduating senior in A & M College, we will rent you a $5,000 Estate until after your graduation and then sell it to you on easy terms. . . . The rental is only 5c per day (for a man age 21), and the lease contains a clause which guarantees you the right to purchase the Estate on a 20-year payment plan for only 40c per day after you graduate. The Estate is in cash and will be paid to you at age 65 or to your family if you should die from any cause (except suicide) before that time, including the rental period See Eu gene Rush at the North Gate for further details. RADIOS & REPAIRING Call For and Delivery STUDENT CO-OP Phone 4-4114 • WANTED TO RENT • FURNISHED APARTMENT or house for rent in January, 1952. Carl Schlinke, Box 6477, College. • PERSONAL • A big BIG, SALE at The Exchange Store, November 6. Directory of Business Services ALL LINES of Life Insurance. Homer Adams, North Gate. Call 4-1217. • WANTED TO BUY • USED CLOTHES ana shoes, men's — women’s — and children’s. Curtains, spreads, dishes, cheap furniture. 602 N. Main, Bryan. Texas. was postponed until Dec. 10. This was because Houston attorney Rob ert L. Sonfield, who had filed a “friend of the court” intervention petition, insisted on Dallas District Judge Robert A. Hall appearing as a witness. Hall remarried the couple. Son- field’s petition asking the annul ment be denied said the annulment petition mocked the integrity of Texas courts and judges, particu larly Hall. He said Hall would not have performed the ceremony if Gloria had been intoxicated. Attorneys for Gloria said Hall did not know she was intoxicated and had no way of knowing it from her actions. Egyptian Divorce? Sheppard said he had asked his attorney in Egypt if a. divorce there would be recognized in the United States. If it would be, King said he would fly to Egypt and obtain one. “If it isn’t,” he said, “I might end up in Mexico, and I might do it anyway. The fishtails on this Cadillac might be passing that way any day now.” King said he didn’t think he would get a “fair hearing” in any divorce suit in Harris county. “There’s too much prejudice against me,” he said, adding “you know, everybody can take a poke at me, but I can’t say anything back.” He said he had a cable from Sa rnia, today, but wouldn’t reveal its contents. He had cabled her yes terday to let her know how the annulment petition hearing ended. Denies Disinheritance He denied that he had moved from his mother’s house, and said she wasn’t going to disinherit him. The socially prominent mother, Mrs. Bonner King, had threatened this shortly after the news of his romance became of global interest. King said that “there might be shooting going on in Egypt now but I’d be more peaceful there.” He added he just might fly to Cairo and Samia by Nov. 20. In Cairo today, Samia said “I’ll wait for Ugly (her pet name for him) no matteh how long. I love him.” She also said she had virtually accepted an offer to appear in a Miamin, Fla., show in January. Young Aeronautical Head Works on Air Development Only 38 years old and with an go directly into industry or the air ceived his BS degree from New What’s Cooking ABILENE CLUB: Thursday, af ter yell practice, Room 3-B MSC. Thanksgiving plans will be dis- CUSS ed AGGIE CHRISTIAN FELLOW SHIP: Wednesday, 7:30 p. m., YMCA Cabinet Room. Ross Jen nings will speak, also a, mission ary emphasis. BRAZORIA COUNTY CLUB: Wednesdav, 7:15 p. m., Room 2-B MSC. CANTERBURY CLUB: Wednes day, 7:15 p. m., St. Thomas Chapel. Program by Rev. Oran Helvey; all Episcopal Aggies urged to attend. DAMES: Thursday, 7:30 p. m., YMCA Cabinet Room. Mrs. John E. Hutchinson will “read” visitors welcome. DEL RIO CLUB: Thursday after yell practice, YMCA Reading Room. Christmas dance will be dis cussed; a date must be set. FORT WORTH CLUB: Thurs day after yell practice, Room 107 New Science Bldg. HILLEL FOUNDATION: Wed nesday, 7:15 p. m., Room 2-B MSC. Mr. C. K. Esten, will speak on the Book of Jonah from the Bible. HOUSTON COUNTY CLUB: Wednesday, 7:30 p. m., 303 Good win. All interested persons please bve present for, election of officers. MILBY CLUB: Thursday after yell practice, Room 307 Goodwin Hall. All freshmen and sophs are urged to attend, party plans will be discussed. TAU BETA PI: Wednesday, 6:30 p. m., Wesley Foundation Cen ter. Supper will be served and Mr. L. V. Hanna will talk on “Christ ian Life on the Campus.” extensive background in air frame design and research, Professor Ed ward E. Brush, head of the aero nautical engineering department, has a great enthusiasm for A&M’s role in recent aeronautical develop ments. Besides cooperative work with agriculturalists, such as A&M’s much publicized crop-dusting air planes, Brush said his department is now doing research on new ma terials for air frame construction. “This year we are beginning re search on a metal, titanium, which is newly adopted in the airplane in dustry,” Brush said. Another research is being made on an extremely strong structure called “sandwich construction” which consists of two sheets of metal bonded to a cone of low density plastic, he explained. This laminated, construction, by separat ing the metal, gives unusual strength and stiffness, he added. A supersonic wind tunnel is now in the designing stage, which will be constructed in connection with the new engineering building, ac cording to Brush. Since the department was es tablished in 1940, aircraft prin ciples and design have changed at such a rapid pace there has been no chance for the curricula to become stale. Brush believes his major problem has been that of converting the curricula to the principles of jet engines and sup ersonic speed. “In the future we will be faced with more changes in order to cope with atomic powered planes, and few of our graduates will deal with the old type piston engine craft since the majority of them force,” Brush said. Although born into a family of physicians, Brush said he was in spired at an early age to study the field of aeronautics. His first job was with the Curtis Aircraft Com pany where he did part of the stress analysis on the first P-40 fig;hter plane. Later he went to Lockheed as a senior engineer and worked on the first Constellation and P-38 fighter. During World War II he de signed military aircraft for the Fleetwing division of Kaiser Car go in Bristol, Conn. He also de voted a portion of his war time activities to experimental work on the first guided missiles. A native of Nebraska, Brush re- York University. He also did four years part time graduate work on his PhD at the University of Min nesota. For the past four years he has served in his present position at A&M. He said his observation of A&M students has been that they are more clean-cut and more con scientious than many students he has worked with at other colleges. Four New Schools Scheduled by ORC During the next few weeks four more Army Organized Reserve Corps schools are scheduled for opening in Texas, according to Col onel C. M. Culp, Chief of the Texas Military District. Two schools have been in operation since January at Houston and Dallas. The new schools will be at Beau mont, Fort Worth, Austin and Waco, with Austin being the first of the four actually scheduled classes. The ORC school program, inaug urated in Texas with the opening of the Dallas and Houston Schools, 4 Students Finish First PhD Exams Four advanced students in wild life management have completed preliminary examinations and will be candidates for PhD degrees at graduation exercises in June, ac cording to Dr. W. B. Davis, head of the wildlife management depart ment. The candidates for doctor’s de grees and the title of their dis- setations are Richard B. Davis “Competition Between Deer and Livestock on South Texas Range Land;” Wendell G. Swank, “Re production of Mourning Doves in Central Texas;” Paul W. Parmalee, “Ecology of Quail in the Post Oak Region of Texas;” and John Wood, “Ecology of Fur Bearers in Up land Post Oak Woodlands of Cen tral Texas.” Elves, Goblins Prepare To March Forth Tonight By ROBERT FARRINGTON New York, Oct. 31—OP)—This is the night that elves and goblins (junior grade, that is) are abroad in the land. A handful of candy, paid in tribute to the masked small fry of the neighborhood, will save you from the fearful depradations of “trick or treat” night. Failure to come across may re sult in soap smears on your screen door, front step or car windows. The Halloween goblins of 1951 hang few fence gates on church steeples as their fathers did in an earlier, simpler era. To cut down on the Halloween urge to smear, break, overturn and confuse things in general, many communities stage ragamuffin pa rades, parties and dances. On the theory that if you know where they are, you know where they ain’t, teenagers are lured to these affairs and even encouraged to soap store windows (with mer chants’ permission). They are giv en prizes for the best hobgoblin design. Some of these self-protection gatherings assume major size. A parade in Yonkers, N.Y., will fea ture 15,000 costumed kids, 16 band floats and a king and queen selec tion. Halloween began in the dim past before Christianity, and was mark ed by the lighting of bonfires and the established belief that this was the night that ghosts and witches rose from the netherworld to har ass mankind. In the Christian world it is the even of All Saints Day, an autumn festival of the first rank, and in ancient times regarded as a night of magic happenings. Just where the “trick or treat” chant of small children originated is uncertain, but the terrorized home owners of America certainly give out more treats than they suffer tricks from the grosts too young to go to the organized fes tivities. Ever tell you about the time Deacon Brinkerhoff’s spang-new cutter wound up on the church roof? Well, sir. . . provides instruction for reservists who are not members of organized units but who desire to receive training in their specific branch of service. The schools are admin istered and all classes conducted by qualified reserve officers under the general direction and guidance of the local Army Organized Reserve Instructor. Teaching staffs of the schools are selected from among the best qualified reserve officers who are given additional special training by their branch service schools prior to taking up their teaching duties. The ORC school program is of especial interest to members of the Volunteer Reserve as’ only those Volunteer Reservists who are as signed to school detachments are authorized active duty training during the coming year. Also, attendance at the school enables reservists to earn points necessary for retention in the ac tive reserve, credit toward pro motion and reserve duty points re quired for the satisfactory year for retirement nurnoses. The number of courses offered at the schools will be determined by the interest shown by the local reservists. Each class is required to have a minimum of ten officers in attendance. Failure to maintain required attendance will result in discontinuance of the course. Classroom training will be ac complished during training assem blies held two evenings per month. In addition weekend and 15-day summer field training will be car ried on within budgetary limita tions WANTED! Need 4 good tickets to . . A&M vs. TEXAS GAME C. P. PACE Box 592 Livingston, Texas PAY-DAY STOCKUP SALE SPECIALS FOR THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1-2-3 GROCERY SPECIALS Official Notice Mrs. Dell Bauer, who is in charge oi senior rings, said that rings which were du» in October 1 are now ready for distribu tion. October 31 is the last day for plac ing orders for rings for delivery be fori Christmas. The ring window in the registrar’s office is open from 8 a.m. until 12 noon daily. Dr. Carlton R. Lee OPTOMETRIST 303A East 26th (Across from Court House) call 2-1662 for Appointment Bets (Continued from Page 1) Top veterinary scientists of two continents reviewed major animal disease problems having important relationships to the economy and public health of the Western hem isphere, control work in progress on these diseases, and their re search phases. Also discussed were veterinary educational facilities, present and planned, and factoi’s affecting ani mal production. Practically every country in the western hemisphere represented. Giant Assorted Candy Hershey Bars.... 2 for 35c This Size and Grade Were Recently 80c Per Dozen—Large (24-Oz.) White Infertile Eggs.... doz. 67c Buy With Complete Confidence Maxwell House or Folger’s COFFEE lb. 77c . . . with 10c coupon free with purchase of 1—28c pkg. of— 7-MINUTE COMPLETE PIE MIX Chocolate — Lemon — Coconut Choice . . . each 25c No. 1 Tall Cans Alaska—Brookdale Keta Salmon ea. 53c No. y 2 Cans Grated Tuna ... 2 cans 41c 10-Oz. Can —White or Golden TNT Popcorn can 15c Meadowgold—Made of Pure Sweet Cram Butter lb. 83c New Crop—Evaporated—Lb. Cello Apricots 49c 15-Oz. Pkg. Sunmaid (Red Pkg.) Seedless Raisins. . . pkg. 25c J FREE: No. 300 can Gebhardt’s Mexican"[ J Style Beans with purchase of any two of J ! the following J Gebhardt’s Plain Chili can 49c Gebhardt’s Chili-with beans. can 37c | Kraft’s Salad Dressing Miracle Whip pint 35c 1 Lb. Box Sunshine Krispy Crackers. . . each 29c Crisco 3 lbs. 89c No. 2 Cans Kimbell’s Grade A—Fancy Grapefruit Juice . 2 cans 19c 46-OZ.—2 CANS 43c Waldorf Toilet Tissue ... 3 rolls 25c 14-Oz. Bottle Libby’s 9 A*) Mellow, Yellow Northwestern Cals "P 2 l,< * ll