Circulated Daily To 90 Per Cent Oi Local Residents ion Published By A&M Students For 75 Years PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE iber34: Volume 53 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1953 Price Five Cents &M Group Picks "ueen of Colton "t TSCW Sunday Cotton Harold Scaief and rt travel tomorrow to Den- pick a queen for the 20th Cotton Pageant and Ball, queen and her eight at- fs will be chosen from 32 hopefuls at a dance Satur- d announced Sunday. The jonipeting were picked for personality and pop- jomp< 11 pauty, • 1 bei*s of the Royal court will thelattendants at the Pag- lourt members making the re seniors Bob Johnson of 1 ^'orth, H. Fritz Welch Jr. of raulfels, Leonard Thornton nple and Tom Payne of i. Payne replaces Glenn ■of ftlexia, who is engaged Tarried and requested to be d for this reason. Juniors on Court >rs lire Ernie M. Enloe of a. Berry Buster of Way- nd Leonard Stasney of • .. Frank Ford of Lubbock only sophomore on the mpqnying the king and his ■re Clarence Watson, fncultv •; IVliss Frances (Tidge) director of the Pageant; Sennott and Frank N. Man- . f Tlie Battalion. A.ggies last year chose Pat TSCW junior from Stark- v iss., as their queen. “ V students each year are for this ceremony, held in md sponsored by the A&M my I Society. Money raised pageant is used for A&M to study cotton practices Since the founding of the in the early 30’s, students jtudied in Europe, Asia, [and South America. TSCW Nominees PSCW nominees, with their studies and home cities, follows: rs: Naomi Allison, bacter- md introduction to medical >gy, Carthage; Myrna Cas- nterior design, Hamilton; Fowler, health, physical >n, Bryan; Patsy Jo Nash, El Dorado, Ark.; Joan child development and nur- ducation, Austin; Peggy in, advertising design, Fort and Beth Singleton, art m, Commerce, rs: Cora Jane Becker, in design, New Braunfels; Bendy, radio-speech, Smith- Julie Bourg, radio-speech, ; Margot Dayton, costume and fashion illustration, Denton; Jane McBrierty, secretar ial service, Ennis; Jo An Rptledge, speech, Benavides; Ann Simmons, journalism, Paris; and Barbara Wise, kindergarten-primary edu cation, Hobbs, N. M. Sophomores: Connie Antone, bacteriology and introduction to medical technology, Little Rock, Ark.; Betty Bob Aughtry, kin dergarten - primary education, Gainesville; Marcia Dean, home economics education, Austin; Bev erly Drawe, journalism, Mercedes; Mary Lou Johnston, foods and nu trition, Port Isabel; Jonette Lov ett, French, Memphis, Tenn.; Joy McDermott, business, Alvin; and (See CANDIDATES, Page 4) - ■ • . *■/ Stalin Dies Successor Not Named John Scott Controversial ? f: Tidge Rattan Pageant Director Dallas Firm Plans Cotton Queen’s Dress Neiman-Marcus of Dallas, who designed Mrs. Eisenhower’s Inaug ural Ball gown, will design the gown to be worn by Queen Cot ton at the 20th ^annual Cotton Pageant and Ball, according to Frances (Tidge) Rattan, director of the Pageant. Miss Rattan is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Rattan, 305 Walton E., and a graduate of TSCW. “This Pageant will be entirely different this year,” the director said. “We are not going to have a style show, but a musical with cotton’s place in the south as our theme. In the past, the Pageant has consisted of a style show which presented the latest cotton fash ions. Mrs. Bill Turner of Col lege Station directed the Pageant last year. Definite plans for the show are being completed but probably will be kept secret, Miss Rattan said. She will leave tomorrow for Denton with the Cotton Court to help choose the queen. ‘Fish’ Ball Slated In Sbisa Tonight Freshmen will hold their annual dance Friday night followed Sat urday by the Third Division Ball. The Freshman., Ball, will last from 9 p., m. to 12 p. m. in Sbisa Dining Hall. Music will be sup plied by the Aggieland orchestra. Tickets cost $2 apiece and can p»e bought in the Office of Student Activities. They are alfeo being sold in each Third Division dorm itory. Seniors with dates may at tend. Scheduled from 9 to 12 p. m. in ientist to Speak n Space Travel 01 (By ED HOLDER |alion Managing Editor ecfets of Buck Rogers and e ships will be revealed at m. Monday in the Biologi- nces lecture room, illy Ley, a leading auth- i rockets and space travel, •uss “Interplanetary Travel ible.” most recent work was his a symposium which wrote of “Man on the Moon” in tober edition of Collier’s le. symposium said, “We will m isJ Dr. Willy Lee ‘many’s Rocket Man go to the moon in the next 25 years. Within 10 or 15 years, we can expect to see a permanent station erected in space, 1,075 miles high, in an orbit which will carry it around the earth once every two hours.” Ley says the conquest of space is within man’s reach in our time. Now Has Skill As brought out in his many books, he says the United States now has the information and en gineering skill to realize without delay a revolution in rapid trans port, and to create interplanatary bodies for the advancement of travel and communications. Ley’s lecture is sponsored joint ly by the Schools of Engineering and Arts and Sciences. Bom in Berlin in 1906, he stud ied at the Universities of Berlin and Konisberg in East Piussia. He studied paleontology, astrono my and physics. Helped Create Society In 1927 he became one of the founders, and later vice-president of the German Rocket Society. Af ter Hitler’s advent in Germany, he went to England, and then to America in 1935. Ley is now an American citizen. He has been science editor of New York newspapers, a research en gineer for the Washington Insti tute of Technology and a consul tant to the Office of Technical Services of the Department of Commerce. His many books include, '‘Days of Creation,” “The Conquest of Space” and “Rockets, Missiles and Space Travel.” Sbisa, Satui'day’s Third Division Ball will have the Prairie View Collegians playing the music. Tickets cost $1.25. Nominees, for Freshman Sweetheart include Rob in Hood, Wichita Falls; Jean nette Cline, Seabrook; Eddie Fern McCarnaack, Dallas; Anne Thomp son, Whco; Betty Balthrop, Fort Worth; and Sue Yancey of Beau mont. Committee chairman for the ball are R. C. Barlow, guests; J. D. Bishop, decorations; Buddy Pat terson, sweethearts; Billy Trimble, program; R. C. Moore, tickets; and Joe Dierschke, class president and dance chairman. Sweetheart Nominees Nominees for Third Division Sweetheart include Miss Shirley Stroup of Greggton; Eddie Fern McCarmack, Dallas; Sylvia Cle venger, Houston; Sue Yancey, Beaumont; and Claire Holliday of Houston. Committee members ‘ include Truett Fields and Charles Blank, dance; Henry Prochaska, Thomas Kelly, and Joe Fritz, ticket; Rob- erT Jones and Jack Halsell, pro gram; Joe Pafford, Dick Faulkner, and Malcolm Dimmitt, sweetheart; and Doug Goode and James Moore, guest. Bruce Gibson, Third Divi sion Commander is in charge of all committees. Expert On Russia Ta Iks Here Ton igh t By HARRI BAKER Battalion City Editor A controversial figure who is a qualified expert on Russo-Am- erican relations will speak at 7:30 tonight in the MSC Ballroom. John Scott, a Time magazine correspondent, was kicked out of Russia for “slandering” Soviet foreign policy and “inventing” re ports of German-Russian friction. On the other hand, Whitaker Chambers, a reformed Communist, has accused Scott as being among the Time correspondents who op posed his editing the magazine’s foreign news section because Chambers was anti-Russian. At any rate, Scott knows as much about Russia and the Rus sian attitude as any man in the world. Living and working for nine years in Russia, he has a first-hand knowledge of the Rus sian experiment. Scott has reported on European affairs for 20 years. He first went to Russia in 1932. After working as a welder and chemist in Magnitogorsk, he became Mos cow correspondent for the London News Chronicle and the French news agency Havas. In 1940 and 1941 he traveled through the Balkans, the Middle East, and Asiatic Russia writing 1‘eports of what he saw. He was asked to leave Russia two months before Gei-many attacked Russia. Fie went to Japan, where he joined the staff of Time. During World War II he was head of a Time news bureau in Stockholm. An authority on European prob lems, he is the author of “Duel of Europe,” “Europe in Revolution” and “Beyond the Urals.” Now making a tour of the na tion’s colleges and universities he will speak here on the mechan ics and problems of modern jour nalism in a period of severe inter national tensions. Sponsored by the Journalism Club, the talk is open to the pub lic. After the talk, Scott will meet the members of the club for coffee. Senate Discusses Campus Chest Drive Brain Hemorrhage Kills Soviet Leader MOSCOW, March G—(/P)—The body of Premier Joseph Stalin, dead at 73, today awaited a state funeral befitting world communism’s second great leader and one of the most powerful men in history. The Soviet man of steel, whose power and influence reached a third of the world’s people, died in the Kremlin at 9:50 p.m., (12:50 p.m., CST) last night—four days after a brain hemorrhage left him unconscious and partly paralyzed. For 29 years he had led the 200 million people of the Soviet Union and called the turn for Communists the world over. Giving no hint of who might succeed him, a joint state ment by the Soviet Communist party and the government called for continuation of such Stalin policies as strengthen ing the nation’s armed forces, increased vigilance at home and ♦ tighter bonds • with Communists Discussion of the Campus Chest Drive which starts March 16, highlighted the Student Senate meeting last night in the MSC. March 24 or 26, will be Campus Chest sports day with an Air Force-Army basketball game plan ned and boxing and wrestling bouts scheduled in DeWare Field House, said Harold Hudspeth, chairman of the Campus Chest committee. “We’ve Never Been Licked” will be shown March 20. Admission will be 50 cents. A suggestion was made by Joe Wallace that would put responsi- Student Leaders Wo Coeds ree: By JOEL AUSTIN Battalion Co-Editor It’s all over now;- there will be no coeds at A&M. Many former students put down their pens for the first time since news of a Senate resolution to make A&M coed had been announc ed. The exes had been busy writing their disapproval and ap proval to legislators. Capitol newsmen called it the greatest avalanche of letters and telegrams in recent years — and many controversial issues have faced the lawmakers in that time. Coeducation Issue Most people who favored the co education issue kept in the back ground. Sen. William T. Moore of Bryan, author of the resolu tion to make A&M coed, charged there are just as many people foi* coeducation as against; they have just kept quiet. There was a sigh of relief and regret by the students as the end war written to this measure which shocked everyone with the sudden ness in which it occurred. The resolution was erased from the picture yesterday almost as fast as it came into existence by a 26-1 vote of the Senate. Senator Moore cast the lone dissenting vote. First Division Commander Joe Wallace claimed it was apparent Moore had really slipped some thing by the lawmakers. This was proved, he said, by the force with which they killed the resolution. The I'econsidering of the resolu tion was oi’iginally set for Monday, but was moved to Thursday. “I think the way it was intro duced in the first place was a sly move,” said Third Division Com mander Bruce Gibson. Resolution Favored He said a few senators may have favored the resolution if they had known what it was when first in troduced, “but all it took to con vince them the people weren’t for it was to gain their opinion through the letters which poured in.” Gibson called the resolution “hasty action without the senators realizing the consequences.” President of the senior class Joe Mattel, said, “It shows people all over the state feel A&M doesn’t have to go coed to offer some thing extra to attract high school seniors.” (See WHEELS SPEAK, Page 2) bility for dormitory Campus Chest collection in the hands of sena tors living in the dorms. Dormi tory 14 is the only one not repre sented on the Senate. Aggie Muster Plans Tentative plans have been made for the annual Aggie Muster April 21, said Gene Steed, chairman of the Senate Muster Committee. The committee arranged for Colorado’s Gov. Dan Thornton to be principal speaker for the pro gram. Col. Ike, Ashburn consented to be chairman for the muster. The traditional rifle volley by the RV’s and roll call for all Ag gies who have died since the last muster will be part of the cei’e- mony. Who’ll Keep Rev? A long discussion followed Has kell Simon’s question about sum mer and vacation arrangements that should be made for ft A&M’s mascot, Reveille II. Lamar McNew was selected by the Senate to investigate the pos sibility of day students caring for the dog while the corps was not on campus. The dog recently was spayed by doctors, at the veterinary hospital. Election Commission At their last meeting, the elec tion commission was puzzled by the ruling in the case of newly- elected Senator Gil S’tribling. He was elected by a one-vote plurality, 133-132. The commission, according to Leo Draper who reported to the Senate, wanted the Senate’s opin ion of run-offs when narrow mar gins appear in student elections. The Senate voted to leave the rules as they were. Class elections usually have run-offs, but the senate felt they were not neces sary in the »ase of the student governmental body. Travis Receives Gavel John Pelt, a sophomore repre sentative to the Senate, present ed Senate President Bob Travis with a hand-made gavel for use at meetings-to-come. (See SENATE, Page 2) Honor Code Favored by Many By BOB BORISKIE Battalion News Staff A&M students gave their views yesterday on the Honor Code pledge, and the majority of those asked seems to be^ready for it. In answer to the question: “Do you think the Honbr Code will work at A&M?”, Carl Berglund, senior wildlife management major from Marshall, said that the pres sure would be on the individual. “I’m undecided. I feel like the people it would work with are al ready honest and wouldn’t lie or cheat or steal whether or not un der oath. I don’t think it will change the character of people who are dishonest,” Berglund said. Another wildlife management senior, E. H. Cooper, of San Mar cos, said the pledge is a good thing. “I think it will work,” Cooper said, “because in the majority of the cases, the guys would like it. If it’s not mandatory to tell who made the offense, I feel sure it will work.” A strong negative vote was registered by B. A. Guest Jr., sophomore chemical engineering student from Killeen. “I don’t believe it will work here. It’s tradition here for the fellows to stick together. None of the boys would tell the prof who was cheating. It’s better the way it is now. I don’t think 10 per cent of the boys will sign it.” John Dorchester, senior fisheries major from Denison, gives the idea an affirmative vote. He said “The way the pledge is set-up is pretty good. It’s voluntary and the fact that you report the offense and not the offender is very good.” B. K. Boyd, junior history major from Tahoka, said the system has possibilities. “I’m not sure whether it will work or not, but I’ve been under one that did work. I believe that though the system may not be en tirely successful at first, it can be impi-oved,” Boyd said. A veterinary medicine junior, from McLean, John D. Coleman, “The honor system in the vet school is by classes. Each class decides on how it is to be run. In the best interests of A&M, each class would have to adopt it.” The first Aggie who actually mentioned signing the pledge was Clifford Hobbs, sophomoi’e agri cultural education major from Longview. He said, “They’ve got to try it fh’st. By experiments, they’ll find out if it will work. I’m willing to sign.” Central America was represent ed by the statements of Fernando Montes, Tegucigalpa, Honduras, who is taking special courses in agriculture. “It’s a good idea. We have the same thing at the University of Honduras, and this year it is be ing increased there among the students. I hope the idea is adopt ed by the students for the good of the college.” The last opinion came from Peter Araoz, Tingo Maria, Peru. “It’s a nice plan. We don’t have it in Peru yet, but very soon we hope to have it started there. We have different rules. If you break the rules, it is very severe and you leave the school for perhaps one year or perhaps for life.” throughout the world. The statement said the body of world communism’s fallen leader would lie in state in the beautiful Hall of Columns in Moscow’s House of Trade Unions—only a few hun dred yards from the gr’eat Lenin mausoleum in Red Square where the body of the founder of Rus sian communism lies embalmed for posterity in a glass coffin. Funeral Date Not Set A committee of top Soviet lead ers was appointed to arrange the funeral but its date was not im mediately announced. Nor w a s there any word of Stalin’s final resting place. The death of the man who sparked the development of Rus sia from a near-feudal farmland to a great industrial power ex ceeded only by the United States was first announced by Moscow radio at 4:07 a.m. today, local tfmo 8:07 p.m., EST Thursday, in a broadcast beamed to Soviet pro vincial newspapers. Two hours later, Moscow radio’s star announcer, Yuri Levitan, fold the saddened nation that its chief had succumbed. Levitan twice read both the official announce ment and the final bulletin from the 10 Kremlin doctors who bad been in constant attendance on Sta lin since his stroke Sunday. The radio then played the solemn last movement of Tschaikowsky’s “Pa- thetique” symphony. Official Announcement The official announcement said: “There has ceased to beat the heart of comrade-in-arms and ge nius-continuer of the cause of Len in, the wise leader and teacher of the Communist party and the Sov iet people — Joseph Vissariono vich Stalin. The death of Stalin, who gave all his life to dedicated service to the great cause of com munism, is the heaviest loss for the party and workers of the So viet nation and for all humanity.” It was issued in the name of the Communist party’s Central Com mittee, the Council of Ministers government cabinet and the Pres idium of the Supreme Soviet. The Russian people appeared stunned and grief-stricken by the news. To many, Stalin had seemed like a father. “Excuse me,” said one Muscovite chauffeur of his own tears, “he was a real person.” Weather Today w>' e CLEA R WEATHER TODAY: Clear to partly cloudy. The maximum tem perature is expected to be in the upper 60’s and the minimum near 5f-. The high yesterday was 64 and the low was 43.