The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 12, 1951, Image 2

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    Battalion
Editorials
Page 2
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1951
Allied Negotiators Texans to Vole on Amendments
Accme Red Cltinafo gp ec i a l Election Tomorrow
Munsan, Korea, Nov. 12—WP)— ness.” I
11 * J T»_ * n - ITT* 1V* -kt 11 il
II /n- Go Sto/e?
By .GEORGIA OLIVER
Allied truce negotiators in strong Brig. Gen. William Nuckols, the
words today accused the Commun- official U.N. command spokesman,
ists of insisting on a phoney cease- said the •Communists hinted “pret-
fire line merely to stall the armi- ty broadly” that after a cease-fire Five constitutional amendments
stice talks. line was fixed, the next step would will be considered tomorrow by
After the subcommittees had withdrawal of all troops from voters in a special election through-
ture and are now being brought to per cent of the Permanent Univer- ancial group. Purchase of corpora-
W HY MUST college students go stale on their schools? wra ngltd for four hours and 15 th e buffer zone
Freshmen are too new to the campus, sophs are too minutes, an Allied spokesman said Both sides have agreed the
, ........ . . .. they were no closer to an agree- cease-fire line should follow the
busy, but by the time junior year rolls around, dissatistica- men t on the thorny buffer zone battle front with a buffer zone 2Vs
tion begin to set in and only after graduation does the “al- issue ‘ The y wil l meet again in miles wide. 1 hey also have agreed
J Panmunjom at 11 a.m. Tuesday that a special committee should de-
" termine the exact location of the
buffer zone, based on the line of
battle contact, and that the full
five-man truce delegations should
move on to the next agenda item
in the meantime.
The only point unsettled is the
matter of timing-should the cease-
out Texas.
the people for either acceptance or
rejection.
House Joint Resolution No. 37
(second amendment on the ballot)
stands out in importance to both
ways true to Alma Mater” feeling take hold. • ( 9 p. m . E ST Monday)—thtir 20th
TSCW seniors, or some at least, have the disease and an session;
uncompleted two-day survey of A&M gives the same impres- ma ^ f S'two^membf/u.N^om-
These five proposed amendments present and future college students,
have been passed by the Legisla- It provides for investment of 50
Description Of Weekend
Concentrated In ‘Great’
sion. The problem isn’t a new one—it happens every year, mand subcommittee, minced no
words in telling the Communist
negotiators:
“You intend to establish a pre-
Could be spending roughly eighty per cent of their young Steriz^tlonTo^whS wm re
lives in a class room.
Could be three years of same profs, same food, same
day in, day out.
By RUTH TIPTON
Student
sity Fund in corporation stocks.
The Fund was originally com
posed of land gifts and has grown
through profits derived from these
lands. Income from it is divided
two-thirds to the University of
Texas and one-third to A&M.
Previously, the funds have been
invested in municipal, national and
state bonds. However, in the event
the amendment is passed, up to
one half of the Fund may be in
vested in corporation stocks which
pay a higher rate of interest.
Certain restrictions would be
tion stocks would ordinarily be for
a long term with speculation in the
stock market improbable.
Voting boxes for the election in
College Station will be located at
Consolidated High School and the
Culpepper Building on the east
side of Highway Six.
Other amendments to be voted
on are a retirement plan for coun
ty appointive employes, tax in
crease for rural fire prevention
districts, increasing veterans land
bonds and raising the ceiling for
old age assistance.
Could be any of these reasons or others. And it is to a
degree, but there are other factors which complete the pic
ture.
By the time the final sling begins, students are just
zone,
lease, you of any necessity to settle
the remaining items of the (armi
stice) agenda with speed and tq-
uity.
Spurious Line
munists propose, or established af
ter armistice is reachtd?
The Communist Peiping radio
Monday accused the Allies of try
ing to scrap the agenda adopted
July at Kaesong and “get by black
mail what is favorable to them
“You want to establish a spur- alone.”
ious line and zone which will pro- An earlier broadcast charged
plain tired and maybe a little scared. Tired of going to class, vide you with the leisure and free- that the Allies were “deliberately
Tired of schedules. Tired of existing, but not really living mto continue delaying the con- twisting” the Red buffer zone pro-
^ ference. posal offered during a subcommit-
for four years. The Reds want to fix a cease- tee session Saturday. This would
fix the cease-fire line roughly
fire line be set first, as the Com- TSCW’ers could find only one word
to describe the past weekend—•
great!
And judging by the many smiles
that greeted yours truly while
wandering through the Brazos
Bottom’s own Memorial , , . , , ~ ,,
Center that fact couldn’t have been P laced on investments. One would
Friends, Aggies, and fellow stated'any plainer or with more Cattle Loaned To
feeling.
StewSSlM w Experiment Station
to'a kwri Batt eavesdropper! but cent ? f the v « tb 5 stock f f A TA
the general opinion was, to state P ora t lon could be owned by
it briefly:
along the present battle line.
No Proposal
Vive Adm. C. Turner Joy, chief
U.N. negotiator, made it clear
the four-man team that will
participate in a two-day In-
Scared of being completely independent for the first flre bne before taking up any oth-
,. ° ... . . er item on the agenda. The U.N.
time and for the rest of a life time. Scared of marriage, command insists that the line fol-
Scared of going into the service. lo Y' the war front at the time all
• , , , . .. , „ , other armistice terms are agreed
The educational system is partly at fault. But the por- upon. , _
tion that can be more easily adjusted rests with the students. . H o des quoted Shakespeare in a statement Sunday that the Allies teicollegiate Poultry Judging
brushing off a Communist claim will accept no proposal which would contest in Chicago Nov. 27 and 28.
Students should hurry through that last year and get that their method of determining make it impossible to maintain mil- They are J
out the quickest and easiest way possible ... but the next ^cease-fire line is the only scien- itary pressure on Communist Boardman, Jim
time boredom crops up, it’s ugly head can be cut off by ex- h e told Red negotiators h e
erting a little energy along personal lines and growing up to thought this quotation from “Ham-
^ . ' let” applied:
be men and women. “There is method in his mad-
“. . . the game was fine, the
Aggies were great, but we
thought Kyle Rote graduated.”
“The dance, in words of mono-
sylable, was hmmmmmmm.”
Few remarks were given to the
press concerning various and sun
dry activities following the dance,
.Seven A&M poultry judges but the certain lights were shining
are competing for slots on in a few dozen pair of eyes.
Poultry Judges
Vie for Team
itary pressure on Communist
troops while the armistice talks Grant,
Charles
C Iiurchill-Truman To Meet
In Washington in January
continue,
Joy also indicated the U.N. com
mand will insist on iron-clad ar
rangements to prevent a Red troop
buildup after the armistice goes
into effect.
The qutstion of troop strength,
including inspection behind the
Hand-holding reigned supreme
through said hallowed halls—
whoops, scrumptous corridors.
Practically every room was occu
pied with starry-eyed twosomes,
D. Allison, Bill trying to capture a few more mom-
Dobbyn, Kenneth ments of bliss before the whistle of
Mailhos, George the departure time shattred the air
E. D.
Townsen and Pat Vaught.
Parnell is team coach.
About twenty-five other colle
giate teams will enter the contest.
Winners will be declared National
Champion of Intercollegiate Poul
try Judging.
The A&M team will pi-actice
Key West, Fla., Nov. 12—UP)—
President Truman add Prime Min
ister Winston Churchill of Great
Britain are going to meet in Wash
ington in January.
The meeting was announced at a
news conference yesterday by Pres
idential Secretary Joseph Short
with a casualness associated with
the Truman administration’s han
dling of important events.
Short was telling reporters at
a news conference of how the Pres
ident got up early Sunday and
walked outside the naval submarine
station, where he has his quarters,
and of how he swam and sunbathed
at the naval submarine station.
Suddenly, a reporter asked about
a story, by John M. Hightower of
the Associated Press, that Church
ill is expected to visit Washington
early in January for talks with the
President.
“Quite probably, the Prime Min
ister wil be in Washington some
time in January,” Short said.
messages to Congress, will involve
either the French or the Russians.
Fi'ench President Auriol has sug
gested a meeting of President
Truman and the British, Russian
and Frehch heads of state to help
ease international tension.
Ever since the British election
campaigns that sent Churchill baek
into control of the British 1 govern
ment, it has been a generally
known faett hat Churchill would
renew his old acquaintance * with
Mi'. Truman if returned to power.
No matter what the two dis
cuss, nothing will exceed in im
portance British need for finan
cial aid.
Churchill, Short said, has had an
exchange of messages with the
President.
No Russian Premier
He added that he knew of no
Potsdam in 1945. Churchill was
replaced by Labor Prime Minister
Attlee in the midst of the confer
ences.
Churchill and the President later
journeyed to Fulton, Mo., where
the British statesman delivered a
historic address in which he gave
popularity to the “iron curtain”
phrase which has become the ac
cepted description for the bans of
news from Russia and her satel
lites.
battle lines, will come up rif and J u dge at several pomts along the
when the buffer zone issue is set- ™ u t e to Chicago. First stop will
tied. Other items on the agenda be at Crockett where White Rocks
include the exchange of prisoners will be judged. The team will then
of war and recommendations to re- S. 0 Fayetteville, Ark., for prac-
spective governments regarding ^' lce ^ University of Arkansas
the withdrawal of troops from Ko- and Swansons Poultry Co.
rea. Judging will also be done at
University of Missouri, Henderson
Produce Co. in Monroe City, Mo.,
Producers Produce Co. in Spring-
field and other poultry breeding
farms. ,
At the contest, team members
will take a conducted tour to points
of interest in Chicago. Winners
of the contest will be announced at
a banquet Nov. 28.
Enroute home, the team will vis-
of romantic quiteness.
Summing it up, we could give the
“Ode of an Aggie weekend.”
“ . . . The Weather was fine,
The game was great,
Aggies we did appreciate.
But after all is said and done,
We wish to heck the Ags had
won.
And at the dance, Art Mooney
style,
We laughed and loved and sighed
a while,
Yet all good things must some
time ctid,
And this is where we say Amen.
Royal Couple
Head for Home
Grant-in-Aid For
Experiment Station
I^'tawSbjgton wfth Ctarchm farewell.today to North Amer-
following a speech the latter made lca > taking home what Lrit-
to the Massachussetts Institute of ain’s future queen described as
A grant-in-aid of $300 has been
made available to the Texas Agri
cultural Experiment Station, Dr.
R. D. Lewis, director, said today.
,, -p. . j. „, . . , „.rr ,.c,- The grant-in-aid is from the
the uuke ot Edinburgh said it the Purina Experimental Farm Moorman Manufacturing Company
and Laboratories in St. Louis. of Quincy, Illinois.
UP)—Princess Elizabeth and
State of Union
There was no indication whatso- session of Congress,
ever that the conference, certain The meeting of the two will
to be delayed until after Mr. Tru- bring two old friends face-to-face
man has submitted his “State of -for the fourth time. Mr. Truman
the Union,” t budget and economic met with Churchill and Stalin in
The Battalion
Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Traditions
"Soldier, Statesman, Knightly Gentleman”
The Battalion, Lass-0 edition, is published annually by the staff
of The Daily Lass-O. It is the official paper of The Battalion and
anyone else who wants to have an official paper. Subscription rates
to this edition of the paper are not enough to even talk about—it runs
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responsibility for any of the news in the paper, but if there is any
glory, he will be more than glad to accept it. If there are any mis
takes just drop a two cent postal card to the editor of The Daily Lass-
0 and they will be corrected next year.
The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of
Texes, is published by students 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. Subscrip
tion rates $6.00 per year or $.60 per month. Advertising rates furnished on request.
plans to include Russian Premier ain which would involve not only
Stalin or French Prime Minister frequent meetings with President
Rene Plevin in the discussions.
There was speculation that
Churchill might address a joint
“new strength and inspiration.”
Winding up their five-week tour
which crossed 15,000 miles in Can
ada and the United States, Eliza
beth in her nationwide radio good-
by last night said Canada “has be
come a second home in every
sense.”
Her husband, in an earlier fare-
Truman, but even more frequent we il address at Halifax, had said
meetings between Secretary of he was returning to Britain with
Technology.
Three Proposals
Churchill, presidential aides be
lieve, will propose:
® A closer partnership between
the United States and Great Brit-
State Acheson and Foreign Min
ister Edeh.
® Substantial financial help
from the United States (running
the message that “Canada is a
good investment.”
A fleet of little fishing boats
u:n: + i, was readied to escort the couple
!:: it \. th :r l ; ,lll ™:L“ irt combat from this old port to the Empress
First American Life Insurance Co.
in Texas - - - - At Houston
Bryan-College Agency
JOE DILLARD, Mgr.
REPRESENTATIVES
L. E. (Skeeter) Winder, ’50
C. R. (Dusty) Morrison, ’46 John T. Knight
Charles H. Sledge, ’50 A. H. “Heeter” Winder, ’52
306 VARISCO BLDG. PHONE 3-3700
the
fund.
Such stocks would have to be
in companies incorporated in the
United States which have paid
dividends for ten consecutive years
or longer prior to the purchase
date.
Any stocks purchased except
bank and insurance stocks would
have to be listed on an exchange
registered with the Securities and
Exchange Commission.
The purchasing power would lie
in the controlling boards of the in
stitutions under advice of a fin-
The Texas Agricultural Experi
ment Station received loans of
cattle valued at $8,750 for use in
experimental work.
The cattle are to be used in the
Biochemistry and Nutrition depart
ment’s project on methods for mea
suring potential efficiency of feed
utilization in immature beef cattle.
Gifts of equipment for use in
turf research were made to the
Agronomy department by Rototil-
ler, Inc., Troy, N. Y.; Goldthwaite’s
Texas Toro Company, Fort Worth;
and MathieSon Chemical Company,
Houston.
PALACE
NOW SHOWING
QUEEM
NOW SHOWING
OUT OF SPACE CAME A TERRIBLE
MACH!NE...to spread panic on the
earth!
the English economic crisis.
® The United States give Eng
land a greater voice in the devel
opment of foreign, policy involving
both governments, possibly includ-
of Scotland, on which they sail
early this afternoon for home.
Elizabeth and Philip arrived
here yesterday from Nova Scotia
POGO
By Walt Kelly
ing more say-so in atomic policy, aboard the spic and span cruiser
Whatever the two may agree Ontario, Canada’s second largest
upon, there was no assurance of warship. Despite clear weather,
congressional approval.
Poetry Society
Meets Tonight
The 25 members of the Bryan-
College Station Poetry Society will
meet tonight at the home of Mrs.
McNeil Drumweight, 1201 Hoppess
St., Bryan.
Each will bring one or two ori
ginal poems for reading and crit
icism by the group.
fog horns along the rugged New
foundland coast mingled their wel
come moans with the guns of the
royal salute as the vessel moved
into her berth.
Entered as second-class
natter at Post Office at
College Staton, Texas,
under the Act of Con
gress of March 3, 1870.
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of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication 6f all other matter
herein are also reserved.
News contributions may be made by telephone (4-6444) or at the editorial office.
Room 201, Goodwin Hall. Classified ads may be placed by telephone (4-6324) or at
the Student Activities Office, Room 209, Goodwin Hall.
Milfred Budd Whip Cracker
Betty Canavespi Military Affairs Expert
Nelda Bearden City Editor
Marie Jackson Theater Editor
Pat Powless Blood Editor
Georgia Oliver Political Ahalysist
Anne Singleton Pogo Editor
Mary Davenport Trippen’ Fantastic Editor
Judy Whitson Sporty Editor
Ruth Tipton : Miscellaneous Editor
Mary Lou Richardson Assorted Editor
JOHN WHITMORE Editor
Joel Austin Managing Editor
Bill Streich News Editor
Allen Pengelly Assistant News Editor
Bob Selleck Sports News Editor
Pat Morley Women’s Editor
T. H. Baker, E. R. Briggs, Al Bruton, Norman Campbell,
Mickey Cannon, Monte Curry, Dan Dawson, Bob Fagley,
Benny Holub, Howard Hough, Jon Kinslow, Bryan Spencer,
Ide Trotter, John Robards, Carol Vance, Edgar Watkins,
Berthold Weller, Jerry Wizlg, Raymond York News and Feature Writers
Bob Cullen, Jack Brandt Cartoonists
Frank Scott Quarterback Club Director
Jim Jenson Photographer
Pat LeBlanc, Hugh Phillips, F. T. Scott, Chuck Neighbors,
Gus Becker, Joe Blanchette, Ed Holder Sports News Writers
John Lancaster Chief Photo Engraver
Russel Hagens Advertising Manager
Robert H&ynle, .Advertising Representative
TODAY thru THURSDAY
FIRST RUN
—Features Start—•
1:55 - 4:37 - 7:19 - 10:01
SittrijvNi Wciiiit
NEWS
CARTOON
LAST TIMES TODAY
^Prehistoric
Women”
TUBS. sTwEdT -
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* -and the whoie
farm’s jumpin'
M
NG • MEG RANDALL-RAY COLLINS
Story and Screenplay by IACK HENUV
Directed by EDWARD SEDGWICK • Produced by LEONARD GOLDSTEIN
FOR THE BENEFIT OF THOSE
OF YOU WHO HAVEN'T BEEN
SO-GOBF -WHEN
WOBBER AN'BOGGO
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WELL, THAT'S ABOUT
ALL-—MY SAKE5,
HERE’S THE END OF
THE STRIP, AlREApy-
GOOOY/,
POGO
By Walt Kelly
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LI’L ABNER
The Bite That Failed
By Al Capp
AH Q-OCKED DAISY MAE'S
RUNNIN'TIME,THIS MORNIbj;
GRAMMY SCRAGG — AM' AH
GOT FAITH SHE'LL KETCH
LI'L ABNER IM TH'
RACE