r Circulated Daily To 90 Per Cent Of Cocal Residents Number 14: Volume 53 The Battalion PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1953 Published By A&M Students For 76 Years Price Five Cents Record Num ber Oj Scouts To Receive High Ragle Award The largest “flight” of Eagle Scouts to receive the Boy Scouts of America highest award in Brazos county will be presented at a special Eagle Court of Honor at 2:30 Sunday afternoon, Feb. 8, in the Crockett school auditorium. Beginning with a concert by the 515th Air Force band under War rant Officer Joseph Fanzilotti to the closing exercises led by R. H. Fletcher, the Eagle program will abound with ceremony. Ten boys, from three troops in the Bryan-College Station area, will receive awards. Three others will be presented with Eagle Palms, emblematic of scouting skills acquired after winning the Eagle rank. Eagle Winners Scouts to receive the Eagle award, and the coui’t member to present their respective citations, are: Hartley Duncan, Troop 81— A. M. Waldrop; William Ross Acres, Troop 81—D. C. Jones, Jr.; Robert Dunn Cleland, Post 411— M. C. Hughes; Jerry Newton Ko- necny, Troop 81—j. E. Tatum; Thomas Martin Barlow, Post 411 — Arthur Adamson; Robert Coryell Barlow, Post 411—George A. iloth; Orin George Helvey, Jr., Post 411—Rex Kathcai;t; Henry Albert Thomason, Troop 12—Ro land Dansby; Donald Champlin Burchard, Post 411—W. L. Pen- berthy; Ronald Engle Martin, Troop 81—Dr. S. J. Enloe. Eagle Palm awards will be pre Fi re Rages On Largest Liner SOUTHAMPTON, Eng., Jan 28 UP)—Fire raged for more than an hour Wednesday night aboard the world’s largest liner, the 83,673 ton Queen Elizabeth, before fire men extinguished the blaze. Fire brigade headquarters said the blaze was confined to one cabin on the main deck aboard ‘.he ship lying in drydock here iov its annual overhaul. Southampton police, alerted by the total loss of the 20,325-ton liner Empress of Canada in Livei 1 - \»ool Harbor Sunday, swarmed aboard while the fire raged out of control to see whether there had been sabotage. sented by E. R. Bryant to Julian Carsey, Troop 12; George Litton, Troop 102; and George Boyett, Post 411. Band Concert Following the band concert the program will open with presenta tion of the flag by Troop 81 and the invocation by Oliver Jarvis, A&M College Cadet Corps chap lain. The Air Force band will play for the singing of the na tional anthem, after which F. L. Paine, Brazos district advance ment chairman, will recognize the guests at the ceremony. R. H. Fletcher, assistant district commissioner, will explain the Eagle rank. Members of the spe cial Eagle court will give the Eagle Scout citations, and present the badges, followed by presenta tion of the Eagle palm awards Col. S. P. Myers, PMS&T at A&M College, will give the “Eagle Charge,” aftei’ which Mr. Fletcher, assistant district commissioner, will lead the singing of “God Bless America” as the closing exercise. The entire ceremony will be re corded and broadcast over Station KORA Sunday night. Service troop for the occasion will be Troop 409, Ralph McCormick, scoutmaster. Hearing Due On Tideland Senate interior committees prob ably will start hearings within two ■weeks on tidelands legislation, Sen Price Daniel of Texas said Wednes day. Daniel was assigned to the com mittee’s public lands group, which ordinarily would conduct tidelands hearings. Committee Chairman Hugh But ler (Rep.) of Nebraska said the full committee would handle hear ings on tidela,nds at the start but the public lands subcommittee would take over later if necessary Butler announced all witnesses asking to be heard would be al lowed to testify but he urged that repetition be avoided of material covered previously by cdngression al committees. UN Blames PW Rioting On Soviet Army Officer ‘Shame on You ? Tickets Given For Safety Day WICHITA, Kan., Jan. 29—(^P)—JVIotorists and jaywalk ers ran into a new response to their traffic offenses Wednes day. Police gave them special “shame on you” tickets—and reported mixed reactions, most including surprise and a tinge of chagrin. The tickets—a one-day substitute for the normal traffic court summonses that can lead to fines of $1 to $25—said on the back: “You have let your fellow citizens down by violating a traffic ordinance. Crime is an intolerable burden. Your co operation is needed to stop it.” It was “Traffic Safety Day” in a week-long demonstra tion for law observance—a preliminary to nation-wide Crime Prevention Week observance Feb. 15-21. Mutual Broadcasting System and 1,300 national Ex change Clubs are co-sponsors of the anti-crime drive. 275 Register For Instrument Course More than 275 persons had reg istered for the Eighth Annual Symposium on Instrumentation for the Process Industries before the first session opened yesterday on the A&M campus. Total registration for the three- day conference is expected to ex ceed 300, according to P. G. Mur doch, who is chairman of the sym posium. Murdoch is a member of the chemical engineering department, which is the sponsoring organiza tion. The conference is designed to lead to an improved understanding of the principles and practice of instrumentation as applied to in dustries which use continuous flow of fluids. — A&M Oceanography I )ept. Rescues $15,000 Material Most of $15,000 worth of re search equipment used by the Tex as A&M Oceanography Depart ment has been removed from plat-, forms where a gas well fii*e has been raging in the Gulf of Mexico. Robert Reid, who directs two of three research projects conducted from the platform for the depart ment, said Tuesday that, “I don’t believe there is any extensive dam age to our equipment.” Recorder Burned At least one instrument, a wa ter-level recorder, was right be side the spot where the fire broke out, and Reid said, “I’m sure it has been baked to a crisp. There may be some wiring damage to other equipment which was re moved by barge and will have to be reinstalled.” Reid flew over the burning well and platforms Monday with Bill Clayton, also of the department, who is in charge of college equip ment on the scene. One piece of equipment, which weighs several tons, could not be removed. However, it is of metal and should not be damaged unduly by the fire. Reid said that if the platform doesn’t burn out from beneath it it will be recovered. Most of the college equipment was located on the farthest plat form from the fire area, Reid said. The work site is made up of four platforms connected by metal cat- walks. Concerning use of a 75-mm re coilless rifle to be used in blowing away the well’s “Christmas tree” for fire-fighting purposes, Reid said no damage to college equip ment should result. “They should be able to control that sufficiently to minimize damage,” he said. Gun Necessary Use of the gun is necessary be cause the “Christmas tree’s” loca tion causes the flames from the well to shoot out about 50 feet horizontally instead of vertically. This prevents effective fire-fight ing methods. College equipment on the plat forms is used in three reesarch projects. Project 30 deals with boundary-transfer processes, to de termine degree of momentum, heat and moisture transfer between sea and air. Particular interest in this (Continued on Page 4) SILVER BEAVER HONORS—Ten Scouters in the Sam Houston Area Council received the Silver Beaver Award, the highest Council award possible, at the annual meeting of the Council last Friday evening in the Rice Hotel, Houston. The award is given an nually for outstanding service to Scouting and youth over a period of years. In the picture (left to right) : George M. Garrett, Galena Park; W. H. Clement, Jr., Palacios; Bob L. Meisel, El Campo; Dr. Ray Black, Huntsville; Ben H. Allen, Houston; W. Emmett Sampson of Houston who presented the awards; Dr. Daniel Russell, College Station; Dr. J. A. Neely, Bellvile; John Dobmeyer, Jacinto City; Dr. Stuart Wallace, Houston; and Jack Shepher, who received the award for his uncle, Robert A. Josey of Houston, who could not be present because of illness. Local Polio Mai oh Ground Hog Day Based On S ;! r !'!.f! e ™.. T !' l l a Z Case of Mistaken Identity will move out tonight to collect donations for the March of Dimes campaign in College Station, said Mrs. J. J. Sperry, chairman. t Mothers will canvass all areas in College Station. The signals showing that people have contrib utions for the mothers are a light ed front porch light or a shoe or sock hung on the front door. Groundhog Day, Feb. 2, is an old American tradition, but it seems possible that the whole idea is based on a case of mistaken identity. The groundhog is sup posed to come out rtf his den on that day and take a look around. If he sees his shadow, he is sup posed to hurry back to his den and hold up for an extension of winter for six weeks. If he does not see any shadow, good weather | Pern is supposed to be in prospect. He sleeps so soundly that his breathing can be detected only with the most sensitive instru ments. And he does not wake up until about the middle of March. The groundhog is also some thing of a pest. In a season he can eat his way through half a ton of alfalfa. He can clean out a small garden in a night. Registration Expects 700 Decrease More than 5,500 students are expected to enroll for the Spring semester here tomor row and Saturday, Registrar H. L. Heaton said. This represents less than a two per cent drop from the same period of 1952, he pointed out. Of those enrolling, approx imately 200 will be new stu dents from high schools, transfers from other colleges and graduate students. Oth ers will be returning stu dents. A drop of about 700 stu dents from last fall’s attend ance of 6,277 must be ex pected, Heaton said. This drop, along with the number of new students expected is estimated from studies of former years. New students in the Basic Division, who have done no college work will register Friday, Jan. 30. Others reg ister Saturday. E. D. Department Sets Grad Courses The Engineering Drawing De partment is offering their grad uate courses the spring semester of 1953. These com*ses are E. D. 603, Advanced Machine Drawing; E. D. 606, Stereographic and Cli- nographic Projection; and E. D. 607, Descriptive Geometry for Teachers. Advanced machine drawing cov ers such subjects as the history of conventional practices and design of fastenings. The second half of the semester is devoted to a term project consisting of graphical analysis of a design of a com plete problem including research, working drawings, design draw ings, manufacturing procedures and specifications. Stenographic projection is the portrayal of depth in a two-di mensional pictm*e by means of su- perimposition of images while clinographic is studied in its ap plication to crystallography and related fields. Descriptive geometry compares the three generally accepted meth ods of solution of three dimen sional problems and some of the short-cuts invaluing combinations of these methods. Final Break In Truce Talks TOKYO, Jan. 29 (Thursday)— LT 5 )—The United Nations command charg-ed Thursday that a “Soviet army officer” and top Communist armistice negotiators “deliberately planned and master-minded” Red prisoner-of-war riots in Allied camps as part of a “second front” of the Korean War. The charges, fully documented from captured papers and prisoner admissions, pressaged the possible final breakdown of the long recessed Korean truce talks, although no responsi ble authority would comment. A startling 50-page intelli gence report, accompanied by a five-page United Nations command statement, traced a fantastic chain of command from the Communist truce delegation to the prisoner mutinies on Koje, Cheju and Pongam Islands last year in which more than 200 prisoners were killed. It specially named as responsible for “a new area of total war” the following: —-—* Gen. Nam II, former Soviet army Physicist Says Russia A Bomb Problematical I BEAUMONT, Jan. 29—UP) What about Russia and the A-bomb? Does she have it? A Nobel- prize winning physicist who pioneered in atomic reseaich said today Russia has the scientific know-how to make an atomic bomb. But Dr. Arthur H. Compton de scribed as “highly problematical” whether that nation can “put a workable A-bomb together.” He told the Beaumont Journal he wasn’t taking issue with for mer President Truman’s statement yesterday that Russia may not have the A-bomb. “Without a doubt Russia has all the information needed to make an atomic bomb,” Compton said. “But whether she has the tech nical knowledge and the industrial technology to put a workable A- bomb together is highly problem atical. “Mr. Truman has had access to much more intelligence, reports and information than I, and I am not in a position to make conclu sions as to what he does or does not know about Russia and the A-bomb. Remember he did not say that Russia does not have a work able atomic bomb. He merely questioned whether Russia has such a bomb.” officer and USSR citizen of Ko rean extraction, senior Red truce negotiator at the stalemated talks. Gen. Lee Sang Cho, Nam IPs deputy at Panmunjom, chief of the collection of military intelligence section for the North Korean army. Gen. Pae Choi, described as “a Soviet army officer,” as chief of the Korean Guerrilla Guidance Bu reau, he was “responsible for in filtration of agents into South Ko rea and conti’ol of guerrilla opera tions.” Secret Police Gen. Kim Pa, a former Soviet MVD (secret police) agent who holds a high position in the North Korean political security depart ment. The report said “he was re ported on various occasions to be present at the armistice negotia tions disguised variously as a ser geant or lieutenant.” Jeon Moon II, or Pak Sang Hvon, leader of the political committee inside the UN prison compound at Koje with the rank of private. He was identified by prisoners as per sonally ordering the capture of Brig. Gen. Francis T. Dodd, the Koje commandant held tempor arily as prisoner last May. Jeon was described by the re port as one of the original thirty- six Soviet Koreans brought into North Korea by the Russians in 1945 to organize the North Korean satellit state. Also among the thirty-six were Nam II and Premier Kim II Sung. The report brought out that 12- man teams equipped with portable radios of Russian manufacture in filtrated near the camps and main tained communication between the prisoners and North Korea. The U. N. statement declared that truce delegates, Nam II and Le Sang Cho, “and their fanatical followers have exploited a new area of total war.” “Their assignment as delegates was only incidental to their con tinued performance of their mili- (See RUSSIA, Page 2) High School Day Set This Year for March Actually, says the National Geo graphic Society, this tradition was first attached to the European hedgehog, a porcupine. When the idea was transferred to America the weather chore was attached to the groundhog which is a kind ot marmot. , , The hedgehog seems to be a good candidate for such honors. ne sleeps only lightly through the winter. On many days he can seen wondering around out of his den. The groundhog, on ^ "‘U ! hand, goes to. sleep an mad-nutunm, But the groundhog has been the Qailldeil DiSCUSSCS lt eb 2 weather prophet in the Radiation Feb. 3 prophetic duties remain today what they have been for a long time 1 nleasant fantasy. U ff the sun shines Feb 2, men women and children will nod to each other in mock solemnity. “The groundhog must have see hiS Jn-I radiation Kr.” ,n A gloomy Feb. 2 will bring structure the opposite prediction. It much fun that some “T™* _ societies dedicated to the observ ! ancs of the dajr» is so have High School Day will again be celebrated on the A&M campus March 14. The annual event, which serves to acquaint prospec tive students with college life at A&M, is cooperatively sponsored by the student body, which issues invitations, supplies lodgings, and acts as hosts; the former students, who provide transportation to the event; and the College, which fur nishes the day’s entertainment. 1,000 Expected Approximately 1,000 high school students from Texas and the bor dering states are expected to at tend the event-packed occasion. Tentatively, the schedule for the day-long meet will begin at 9 o’clock Saturday morning with orientation in Guion Hall. Tours will then be conducted r the campus so that prospec- students may familiarize themselves with the various phases Her talk is entitled, “Effects of j 0 f co ilege work and life. ‘ ’ — Athletic Events The afternoon and evening will be devoted to athletic events, which 11 include football, basketball, baseball games, as well as Dr. Mary Esther Gaulden, biol ogist at the Oak Ridge National Laboratories, Oak Ridge, will present a talk in the Biological Sciences building heb. 3, !9o3, 7:30 p.m is entmeu, — and chemicals on cell and mitosis as observed i 7 n living cells.” The lecture will be sponfored by the Plant Sc re nee Colloquium and Zoolog> groups here on the campus. ove tive wi and tennis, track, and swimming meets. Students wishing to stay over through Sunday are invited to at tend the church of their choice. During the two preceding years the percentage of students attend ing this meet and returning to A&M the following semester as freshman passed the 50 per cent mark. Last year former students took credit for inviting over 25 per cent of the visitors, while the A&M home town clubs were re sponsible for almost 50 per cent. Provide Transportation Former students are urged to provide transportation for boys desiring to visit the campus. Free passes to sports events will be furnished them for this service. Students arriving on the cam pus Friday evening, March 13 will register in the housing office and those arriving Saturday in the lobby of Guion. ^ isiting students will incur ex- j penses only for their meals, which may be obtained for as little as 50 cents each in Sbisa Hall. All interested boys are urged to attend. New Course For College Faculty A course in college teaching will be offered for the first time this semester. The course will be ti tled Administration 601 and will carry two hours credit. The course will be directed by Dr. T. D. Brooks, dean emeritus of the schools of Arts and Sci ences. He will be assisted by other consultants on* the college staff and faculty. The course will deal with con cepts of higher education tech niques of classroom instruction and other phases of higher education. Meeting time will be Wednesday from 3 to 5. Weather Today CLEA R WEATHER TODAY: Clear j with winds out of the south. The | low this morning was 38 and the l high yesterday was 65. „