The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 14, 1952, Image 3

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    Friday, November 14, 1952
THE BATTALION
Page 3
'Seniors Discuss Hazing
(Continued from Page 1)
offered by the grievance commit
tee, which is vested with the faith
of all classes.
Amendments to Motion
“Amendment 1: Delete the
words—‘appointed by the president
of the senior class’ and substitute
the words, ‘chosen at a senior class
meeting.’
“Amendment 2: Delete the
words — ‘especially hazing’ — and
substitute the words, ‘especially
the problem of the use of the
board by cadets.’
The seniors argued whether they
0 should hold the board over the head
of college authorities as a bargain-
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TODAY & SATURDAY
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^co-starring AUBX NICOL • FRANCES DEE withiaiMBscaiiBBT;
PREVIEW TONIGHT 11:15
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^THE QUIET MAN" ^
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: MILDRED NATWICK • FRANCIS FORD,
, 'ARTHUR SHIELDS IHHM FfURD
! (ASBEY THEATRE PLAYERS »> 1 unu
Play FRANK S NUGENT t ion> S»o<y Dy MAURICE WALSW
Pioduced by MIRIAM C "COOPER »n ARCOSY PROOUCUON
BtpubU P.olvt+1 Coipotaboa Mfib«ri I Valet. P»es«denl
PREVIEW SAT. 11:15 P.M.
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QUEEN
NOW SHOWING
“IYANHOE”
ing power. Some agreed it was
no bargaining power since it is
against the law. Others claimed
the board is an effective means of
dealing with the situation, espe
cially because it is still used in
some companies on the campus,
regardless of existing laws and
regulations.
Joe Wallace, first division com
mander and chairman of the
grievance committee, said he be
lieves many cadet officers don’t
have the guts to run their units in
the proper manner.
“The fault of our present situ
ation in the Corps of Cadets rests
with the seniors,” said Wallace,
“too many of them have been sit
ting around complaining, but do
ing nothing. ,
“I believe if you put to use
everything available you can have
a good company. The majority of
company commanders and seniors
are too lazy to do anything about
the way underclassmen are han
dled. We say the freshmen are
poor, we complain, but in the
meantime do nothing about it.
“Let’s be men. If a sophomore,
junior, or freshman does some
thing wrong show enough guts to
give him extra duty, put him be
fore senior court, or do something
instead of letting him commit that
wrong again.”
LAST TIME TODAY
The battle
of Texas...
and the
battle
of the
sexes!
M-G-M’s
LIONEL BARRYMORE • beulah bondi
Screen Play by BORDEN CHASE • Directed by VINCENT SHERMAN
Produced by Z. WAYNE GRIFFIN • An M-G-M Picture
SATURDAY ONLY
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PREVIEW FRIDAY 11 P.M.
Also Sunday & Monday
Jf "'°'“ r 7ec/itt/eo/or music*!
^ “LOVELY TO LOOK AT”
KATHRYN RED HOWARD
GRAYSGN-SKELTON-KEEL
MARGE and GOWER CHAMPION
ANN MILLER-23AZSA GABOR
KURT KASZNAR
The meeting was opened with a
report from Wallace on the prog
ress of the grievance committee.
He said his group plans to take
their demands to President M. T.
Harrington Tuesday.
Bing Turner, class of 1946, from
Beaumont, advised the seniors to
forget all these little things they
want and pick out one demand and
stand behind it to the hilt. He
suggested the seniors first do away
with the board and then go to col
lege officials with this one point
which they would ask.
“I believe you are trying to gain
more respect for the senior class,”
said Turner. “To do this you would
go a long way by standing up to
gether as a class and asking for
one thing—the most important you
can find.”
A motion was presented by Bob
Travis concerning publicity of stu
dent problems to gain state-wide
support. The motion asked that a
committee draw up the aims of
the present campaign and then get
them aired through newspapers,
radio, and television.
The motion died for lack of sec
ond.
Beneath Full Moon
Stalin’s Hoax
(Continued from Page 2)
and the concepts of equality and
freedom of individuals and nations,
would not work. Soviet expansion
needs the growth of Soviet power,
and Soviet power can be safely
anchored only in Soviet national
ism, it obviously is felt now in the
Kremlin. That is why the rudder
was thrown around.
Something still, though wrongly
called “internationalism” contin
ues to be the final goal—a single
language world ruled by Moscow.
That was indicated by the Young
Communist journal Moskovski
Komsomolets which wrote: “The
future belongs to the Russian lan
guage, the world language of in-
ternationalsim.”
Next article: “Whip and
cookies” for Soviet labor.
:.y l , YA;; :
CIRCLE
PHONE 4-1250
TONIGHT LAST NIGHT
Children Under 12 Admitted
Free When Accompanied By
An Adult.
Loretta
mm
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1 A COLUMBIA Picruffe
Kent SMITH • Alexander KNOX
—Also—
“DEADLY ENEMIES”
Starring
ROD and BRODERIC
CAMERON CRAWFORD
SATURDAY ONLY
Road Block
Starring
Joan Dixon &
Charles McGaw
—Also—
Sk®3®
wlfHSL
Lex barker : dorothV ha»t
Bird Migration Count
Underway By Students
Olympic Stars Set
If on the night of the next full
moon you see several people on
the drill field behind Duncan Hall
peering through a telescope at the
moon do not be alarmed. Most
probably the people are wildlife
management students who are
counting birds that fly across the
face of the moon.
A nation-wide program has been
undertaken this fall to study the
nocturnal migration of birds.
The data collected at College
Station by the wildlife manage
ment students, under the super
vision of Prof. K. L. Dixon, will
in turn be sent to R. J. Newman
of the Museum of Zoology, Loui
siana State University, for eval
uation. He is directing the pro
gram.
Methodists Appoint
Fund Committees
The Methodist Wesley Founda
tion opened their $10,000 fund
raising campaign last night with
a dinner in the foundation build
ing.
Bill Wiseman, Dumas junior, is
chaii'man of the 1952-53 campaign
to raise money for the Methodist
youth organization.
Three committees were set up
under Wiseman. George Black,
Houston senior, is chairman of the
solicitation committee for the
drive.
Carl Johnson, also a Houston
senior, is head of the mechanics
committee.
Bill Lay will head the education
committee for the fund drive.
UN0EMT2 YEARS- f t
— LAST DAY —
'Don’t Bother to Knock”
—and—
“Golden Girl”
Color
—SATURDAY ONLY—
“Callahan Went Thata Way’
—and—
“Law and the Lady”
4-1181
TODAY & SATURDAY
—Feature Starts—
1:25 - 3:08 - 4:51 - 6:34
8:17 - 10:00
iiiihj
MI
NEWS — CARTOON
No Prevue Tonight
PREVUE SAT. 11 P.M.
NEWS — CARTOON
LI’L ABNER
All This And Heaven, Too
By A1 Capp
Newman has several hundred
cooperators throughout the Unit
ed States and parts of Canade
and Mexico who have been record
ing the number of birds that pass
over the face of the moon at their
particular station.
The system of collecting data is
simple, Dixon said. One person
watches through the telescope,
while another records. The time
each object passes the moon, the
direction in and out. The direction
is expressed as if the moon were
the face of a clock, such as in at
12 o’clock and out at 6.
Relative speed and relative size,
as compared to a large crater on
the moon also are recorded. Reve-
lant weather data, such as tem
perature and wind movement, is
recorded hourly.
From this mass of data, sent
in from all parts of the nation,
Newman will attempt to reveal
more about the mystery of bird
migration, Dixon said.
(Continued from Page 1)
Blair, Charley Saxe, and Dick
Frey.
Hooper, Jerry Crossman, and
Walter ((Horrow) Hill are three
others who Coach George will
mourn because of graduation. All
three are ends, and with the excep
tion of Hooper each played almost
the entire time in all the games.
Walter Hill is chiefly a defen
sive end, and Hooper was out of
most of the play for the past two
games due to an injury.
Hooper is one of the .men who
will be honored at halftime. He
took second place in the shot put
in Helsinki, Finland, last summer.
Olympic Honors
Another Aggie-ex who will be
honored tomorrow for his Olympic
accomplishments is Davis. He took
the gold medal in the high jump
in last summer’s world-wide athle
tic meet.
Mahan, who placed sixth in the
javelin in the 1920 Olympics at
Antwerp, Belgium, will be on hand
with Harnden, who ran the open
ing leg of the champion US 1,600
meter (mile) relay in the 1948
games at London.
Down the Aggie line up for the
game will be Leo Marquette at
center, Ray Barrett at left guard,
and Sidney Theriot at right guard.
Tackles will be Dixon on the left
side and Durwood Scott on the
right. Crossman and Hooper will
alternate with Eric Miller at the
end posts.
If Ellis doesn’t run quarterback,
he will be at left halfback. Either
Haas or Charlie Hall will run at
the other halfback spot, while Con
nie Magouirk and Don Kashtik will
alternate at the fullback position.
All-America Little will run
at the defensive tackle slot, with
Langford. Rush and Marvin Tate
will be in the guard holes. Hill
and Howard Zuch will take over
the defensive end positions, v4th
Johnny Salyer and Bob McCarley
playing linebackers.
Joe Boring, leading SWC pass
intei'ceptor, and Joe Shero will run
at the defensive halfbacks. Ellis
is likely to see double duty again
as he plays safety on the defensive
platoon.
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Gabardine
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Slacks
All Wool
for Warmth
and Comfort
Flannel
Gabardine
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‘Serving Texas Aggies”