The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 06, 1953, Image 3

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    Tuesday, October 6, 1953
THE BATTALION
Page g
*A’ Anti-Aircraft Wins ’Mural
Swimming; Sqdn. 7 Is Second
AAA took the all around cham
pionship in swimming in P. L.
Downs jr. natatorium last night
with a total of 22 points.
Other units which placed includ
ed squadron 7, 18; A chemical, 13;
B armor, 11; and A armor 10.
Squadron 21 came out on top in
the freshman area with 21 points.
Other freshmen units which
placed in the meet were squadron
20, 16 points; company D, 15
points; squadron 17, 11 points; and
squadron 25, 10 points.
400 Foot Relay
The upperclassmen units which
took top honors included squadron
7 (1:10.4), first; AAA, second;
A armor, third; A ordnance,
fourth; and ASA, fifth. Freshmen
units which placed in the relay in
cluded squadron 21 (1:12.4), first;
squadi’on 23, second; squadron 24,
third; squadron 17; and squadron
22.
300 Foot Freestyle
Upperclassmen who placed were
\ Moser (65.5), first, squadron 8;
Seth, second, ASA; Staples, third,
squadron 11; Moriarty, fourth, A
engineers; and Andrews, fifth,
squadron 5.
Freshmen who placed were Kas-
par (62.6), first, fish band; Par
sons, second, company D; Lewis,
third, company C; Morton, fourth,
squadron 20, and Dailey, fifth,
squadron 24.
200 Foot Breastroke
The upperclassmen who placed
were first, Winburn (57.0), A
chemical; second, Batot, AAA;
C15 C L E
4-1250
TODAY & WEDNESDAY
—ALSO-
“Red Canyon”
Starring
Gearge Brent
Ann Blythe
NOW SHOWING
co.c., TECHNICOLOR f
I
i PARAMOUNT PICTURE
NOW SHOWING
“Rose of
Cimarron ”
third, Goldstone, A chemical;
fourth, Billingsley, B armor; and
fifth, Shaw, A engineers.
The freshmen who placed includ
ed Marchbanks (47.7) first, com
pany F; Kessler, second, squadron
20; Pope, third, company D; 11 il-
gartner, fourth, squadron 25; and
Pickett, fifth, squadron 24.
100 Foot Backstroke
Upperclassmen who placed in
cluded Magee (21.4), first, squad
ron 7; Winburn, second, A chemi
cal; Shaifer, third, squadron >5;
Goodwin, fourth, squadron 14; and
Bailey, fifth, B armor.
Freshmen who placed were Swof-
ford, (20,8) squadron 21, first;
Willingham, company B, second;
Finch, squadron 17, third; powden,
company K, fourth; and Kuich,
company A, fifth.
300 Foot Medley Relay
The upperclassmen units which
placed were AAA (104.5), first; B
armor, second; squadron 14, third;
squadron 5, fourth; and ASA, fifth.
The freshmen units which placed
included squadron 20 (104.1), first;
company D, second; company L,
third; squadron 22, fourth; and
squadron 25, fifth.
Diving
Robert Bruce Martin, a freshman
chemistry major from San Antonio,
won the diving championship with
124.2 points.
Joe Daniel of squadron 17 placed
second. Janak, squadron 23, Khou-
ry, E field artillery, and Hendrix,
squadron 19, placed third, fourth,
and fifth respectively.
Coughran of dormitory won the
upperclassmen’s championship with
116.1 points.
Others who placed in respect or
der were Lee, squadron 13; Aver-
itte, A armor; Marshall, squadron
15; Mitchell, A ordnance; and Sin
clair, squadron 2.
Basketball
AAA overtook A field artillery
yesterday in the grove in a first
round match by a score of 14-6.
Arthur McDonald was high point
man for AAA with 6 points.
A ordnance eked out a 10-4 vic
tory over squadron 2 with Law-
I’ence Lasloskie, Gilbert Brigham,
John Stacha, Tom Sanches, and
Fred Ayala all scoring one field
goal.
Vol Montgomery led squadron
7 to a 15-11 decision over A trans
portation corps by scoring 5 points.
Richard Gragg of ATC also scored
5 points.
Jerry Keith scored 6 points to
‘DESERT SONG’
GORDON McRAE — and
‘SOUTH SEA SINNER’
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
UNIVERSAL-INTLRNATIONAL presents
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SAY COLLINS'CC5II MILLER
CAMPUS
TODAY THRU SATURDAY
OUT OF THE
MOST DARING
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OUR TIME!
starring
BUET * y MOKTGSMSRY
LANCASTER *CIIFT J
PESOHAH FRANK D33KA
KERR SINATRA REED
Screen Piay by DANIEL TARADASH • Based upon the novel by JAMES JONES
Produced by BUDDY ADLER • Directed by FRED 7INNEMANN
Adults
Children
lead squadron 4 to a 19-14 win
over ASA. Jerry Thomas of ASA
was high point man with 7 points.
Tennis
A infantry took a clean sweep
of the matches from squadron 13
by 3-0. Members of the winning
team included Ken Wesson, Mac
Moore, Gene Polzer, Lee Richards,
Gene Smith, and Winston Kimzey.
Squadron 14 won their matches
over squadron 3 by 3-0. Members
of the winning squad included Joe
Hipp, Buddy Smith, Mac McCus-
tram, John Dillan, Eddie Smith,
and Bill Spears.
Jack Herby, Jimmie Brewstei’,
David Strickler, Frank Dunn, Ray
Craig, and Von Smith of B field
artillery won over squadrdn 15 by
forfeit.
A signal had to play three
matches before beating A quarter
master by a 2-1 decision. The
squad of A signal was composed of
Carl Sherpian, Spencer Coleman,
Don Altwein, John Bomba, G. B.
Burrill, and E. E. Rossman. Ernie
Enloe and O. T. Hrncir won a
match for AQMC.
Squadron 6.edged A chemical in
three sets. Roseman and High
tower of Sq. 6 beat Srygley and
Goldstone 8-6. Bennett and Gaf-
ney of Sq. 6 won over Zumwalt
and Channing of Achem. 8-5. Fox
and Scott of A chem. outscored
Schmidt and Noble of Sq. 6 8-5.
Officials in yesterday’s intramu
rals included J. W. Jennings, Tom
Olsen, Jack Brady, Ed Dusebout,
Jack Brooks, Bob Maupin, Lynn
Swatzell, Tommy Rotrekl, James
Galimore, Jimmy Williams, Paul
Rathbau, Jewel Raymond, Charles
Leissner, Bill Brooks, Jim Ash-
lock, John Centilli, Ben Rauls,
Frank Urbanic, John Cheser, Dick
Hoese, and Wesley Adams for bas
ketball and tennis.
The swimming officials included
Art Adamson, meet refqree, Emil
Mamaliga, diving judge, Paul Wal
lin, starter, B. G. Lewis, clerk of
start, Larry Joyce, recorder, Bob
Johnson, Edwin Stawacki, John
Cameron, diving judges, and other
judges were John Spiech, Lee Pep
ping, Carl Maynard, Wynne Snoots,
Tommy Deveport, Dick Weick, and
Casey Snell.
NEWS FLASHES
Senators Probe
Korean POWs’ Fate
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON—The Senate investigations subcommit
tee today opened an inquiry into reported Communist atroc
ities in the Korean War and the fate of U. S. prisoners of
war for whom the Reds have not accounted.
★ ★ ★
PHILADELPHIA—A major investigation is under way in
the police department of the nation’s third largest city—shaken
by a self-styled “payoff” man’s story that he paid thousands
of dollars to buy police protection for a numbex-s gang.
★ ★ ★
NEW YORK—A court order today carried the romise
of an immediate end to a multimillion-dollar waterfront
strike from Maine to Virginia, but it left unsettled issues
carrying the threat of bloody dock warfare.
★ ★ ★
SEOUL—A South Korean general and his father, a colonel,
were convicted today of embezzelmeni and the general was
sentenced to three years at hard labor for giving military se
crets to Korean civilians.
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SALTON SEA, Calif.—An Air Force F-100 Super Sabre
has failed in an attempt to break the 753.4 m.p.h. speed rec
ord set Saturday by a Navy Douglas Skyray.
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SAN FRANCISCO—A new anti-polio vaccine made from
the tissue of monkey kidneys may be ready in time for next
year’s epidemics, says Joseph F. Nee, national fund-raising
director for the March of Dimes.
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CAMP STONEMAN, Calif.—Pvt. Robert Drane of Louis
ville, Ky., is over the hill again, the Army said today. It’s
the second time since he went AWOL in Korea and hitch-
inked to the United States aboard a troop transport.
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LOS ANGELES—A young mother and six children are
dead, victims of a traffic accident in which a steel-laden truck
crushed the new sedan in which they were riding.
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KANSAS CITY—A missing spokesman at the home of
the wealthy parents of 6-year-old Bobby Greenlease aroused
more speculation today that a break might come any time
now in the nine-day-old-kidnapping case. The spokesman,
Robert Ledterman of Tulsa, hasn’t been seen at the home of
the 71-year-old father, Robert C. Greenlease, since early Sun
day morning.
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CAIRO, Egypt—Former Wafdist Minister Ibrahim Farag
was sentenced to life imprisonment by a special revolutionary
court today for high treason and “conspiracy with a foreign
power against state security.”
KETTLER KEEPS DIGGING—Elwood Kettler meets re
sistance after circling the Georgia right end for 6 yards in
the second quarter to move to the Bulldog 23. Marvin Tate
(66) works on Georgia tackier.
DYERS'FUR. STORAGE HATTERS
210 S. Main
Bryan
Pho. 2-1584
No Drought Worries Here
Marine Corps Officer
To Be Here Tomorrow
About 372,988 people migrated
out of Kentucky between 1940 and
1950 according to an estimate by 5
university of Kentucky sociologist.
Captain Frank G. Peterson,
marine corps procurement officer,
will visit A&M Oct. 7-8 to discuss
opportunities for receiving com-
College Conference
Attended by 100
One hundred Texas junior col
lege executives met here Sunday,
Monday and this morning to hear
talks on all phases of junior col
lege administration at the junior
college conference sponsored by A
x<iM.
Among the topics discussed were
professional growth, college publi
cations, reading improvement and
athletics.
The group had a banquet in the
Memorial Student Center Monday
night.
Wh at’s Cooki ng
TUESDAY
7:30 p.m.—Czech club meeting,
x'oom 2D MSG. Refreshments.
Business society meeting, social
room, MSG. Get together of stu
dents and faculty. Refreshments
and Humble Football Preview of
1952 to be shown.
Society of Automotive Engineers
meeting, assembly room, MSG.
Joint meeting of SAE, ASME,
APS, ASH and VE. Speaker is
Dr. Andrew on Nuclear Energy.
Journalism club, room 2A, MSC.
Dean Abbott will speak.
Pre-Law society meeting, assem
bly room, YMCA. Plans for the
coming year to be discussed.
A&M Domestic Group meeting,
cabinet room, YMCA.
Building Products Marketing club
meeting, room 2B, MSC. H. E.
Burgess will speak on business eth
ics.
Entomology clxxb meeting, room
105, Biological Science building.
Refreshments.
AIIE meeting, room 207, New
Engineering building. Student
speakers, year’s first meeting.
7:45 p.m.—Kream and Kow Klub,
room 3C, MSC. Guest speaker and
refreshments.
misions in the marine reserve and
to enroll students in these pro
grams.
Peterson and his team will be in
rooms 3B and 3C of the Memorial
Student Center on Oct. 7, and in
rooms 2A and 2B Oct. 8 from 8
a. m. to 5 p. m.
A platoon leaders class is open
to juniors, sophomores, and fresh
men. Students are assured of re
maining in school 'until receiving
a degree. Applicants must attend
two six - week training periods
during the summer.
The officers candidate course is
open to qualified seniors and
graduates. After completing dcgx - ee
requirements and one ten-week
training period, the applicant is
commissioned a second lieutenant
in the marine reserve.
Upon commissioning in either of
these programs the student is re
quired to serve two years active
duty and six years in the inactive
or active reserve.
The A&M Graduate School of
fers master degrees in more than
40 fields, and Ph.D. degrees in
more than 15 fields of study. These
include veterinary medicine, ocean
ography, petroleum engineering,
soil physics, plant breeding, bio
chemistry, and animal nutrition.
CHEMICAL AND MECHANICAL
ENGINEERING SENIORS '
Our representatives will conduct interviews on
your campus Tuesday, October 6, and Wednes
day, October 7, for positions open in the Engi
neering, Operating and Technical departments
of our Beaumont, Texas, refinery.
REFINING DIVISION
MAGNOLIA PETROLEUM CO.
(A Socony-Vacuum Company)
STOP
By And See Us For
Fine food and refreshing beverages
served in our air-conditioned
dining-lounge or outside in the
comfort of your own car. We
specialize in . . .
Prompt Courteous
TEXAN DRIVE-IN & LOUNGE
3204 College Road
BRYAN, TEXAS