The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 04, 1954, Image 2

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    i
Battalion Editorials
Page 2
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1954
Air Force Should Follow
Army Commission Plan
The Army-Navy-Air Force Journal’s es
timation that the Air Force will only accept
7,000 officers during the next fiscal year
makes the commission situation here more
doubtful than ever before.
This figure includes all officers, not just
AFROTC cadets. If the Journal is right,
this means that many students who would
have received commissions will not get them.
A total of 16,000 students taking Air Sci
ence will be graduated in June, according to
Air University figures. In December Air
University stated that it intended commis
sioning 8,500 of these students.
The December figure for AFROTC cadets
outnumbers this latest prediction which in
cludes all officers by 1,500. To meet the
Journal’s number, the cuts in student offi
cers would have to be great. And A&M is
only one college out of hundreds which now
offers Air Science.
The Air Force plans to give the surplus
graduates certificates of completion. These
students will enter the service as enlisted
men. After two year’s service they will be
offered a commission. But during those two
years, they wilf not hold the privileges they
expected when signing their contracts.
However army surplus cadets may re
ceive a much more attractive reward for
their ROTC training, according to the Jour
nal. The Army expects a 10,000 surplus of
students graduating from colleges this June.
The Army plan would commission these
students.. They would serve as \little as a
90-day indoctrination period. Then they
would go into active reserve units as civilians
for the remainder of their two year’s service.
It would be fairer to AFROTC students,
if the Air Force would also adopt such a
plan. Much of the trust and respect the
service has lost in colleges would be regained.
Blood Center Praises A&M
For Cooperation in Donating
The Waco Blood Center recently, praised
A&M for its cooperation in the November
blood drive. The compliments appeared in a
recent edition of The Longhorn Trail, pub
lished by the Center.
In that drive, A&M students and faculty
donated 258 pints of blood. Sixty-five of
these were used to replace blood from the
center used to save Cadet Charles Arnold’s
life. Arnold was seriously injured last se
mester in a car wreck near Waco.
The magazine stated that the center’s
work here “was a joy for the nurses, custo
dians and all concerned.” It explained that
the blood unit had more donors than it could
take.
“The operation was coordinated beauti
fully and the Bloodmobile crew is looking
forward eagerly to our next visit to College
Station,” the magazine said.
“The ‘esprit de corps’ demonstrated by
the students and faculty was in line with the
time-hallowed A&M tradition. Each stu
dent wished to be the one to repay for Cadet
Arnold.”
Another blood drive will be held March 2.
We hope the student body will show the
same interest that it did during the Novem
ber donations. No more worthy cause exists
than one which helps save human Inc.
Draft Laws - 10
(Ut%
(Editor’s note: This is the
final of a slvYs of 10 articles
on the draft laws and hov. (hey
affect persons of draft age,)
Ignorance of the law excuses no'
one.
That is something everybody has
heard, and it applies to a draft
board’s deliberations abd"" actions,
as. well as to any other agency set
up to administer public law.
. The law make:; it thUt rer-ponsi-
bilily r" the individual registrant
to' do everything that live law re
quires of him. The law requires him
to do these tiling:; within a/e.ertain
time limit. If he doesn’t do them,
he can lose- many privileges and
rights given him under the law.
“It is the duty of every man re
gistered with a draft board to be
alert and protect his rights under
the law,” advises Brig. Gen. Paul
L. Wakefield, state director of se
lective service.
“Certainly it is the moral re
sponsibility of parents to have tneir
sons make themselves rv/nre t-f the
necessity of complying with all
provisions < f ftnv and regulations,”
he says.
“It is too bad that registrants,
parents, and .employers of ten sleep
on their rights until it is too late,
or extremely difficult under • our
regulations, to do anything about
their cases,” he says.
Wakefield says that sometimes a
registrant, parents, or an employer
never request a filling at tlv- hoar;!
Cadet Slouch
by Earle
j, MM
i ■«- .j .
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>1
'it for
and
mccrn
until after an order t > re-
induction is issued.
Registered men, parents
employers should begin to c
themselves about the selective ser
vice lav.- and regulations im
mediately after men register,
Wakefield points out.
The state draft director reminds
all registrants, their parents, em
ployers, public officials and citizens
in general.that the doors of Texas
draft boards are always open to
tell the people how to get informa
tion and help with draft problems.
Calls
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©Fet,. 5—Firestone Tire & Rubber
Company will interview spring and
summer graduates at all degree
levels- in business administration,
econo m i c s and agricultural
economics. They will be interview
ing at this time for prospective
sales trainees.
© Feb. 5-Airher-Danieis-Midland
Company will interview chemistry
(organic), chemical engineering
and business administration ma
jors. Chemists would go into
research work, chemical engineers
would go into plant operation and
manageme.nl. or process develop
ment and engineering -'70i k and
business administration m a j o r s
would go into sales.
Q Feb. 8—Graduates in the electri
cal, mechanical or industrial .engi
neering field:; at all degree levels'
nr be jntr ■ Vi ■ wed by Westnrn
Union Telegrap i Company. At this
time (hoy iur.e opening's in then'
Operating, Plant and Engineering,
Development and Research and
International Communications De
partments. Those openings are in
the south as well as in all other
major sections of the country.
® Feb. 8&9—-Chance Vought will
i n t e r v i e w 7 aeronautical, archi
tectural, civil, c-iedrieal and me
chanical'engine ring majors at all
de$fc-' levels, v ."id * ailyi rc d d i-
git:' 4 inf mathiSni&lfirj “f^pplicmits
will be consider."! for direct as
signment in their field::; of speciali
zation, and will be eligible lor
placement in diie of t!r:r training
programs of the Engineering
organisation to par! icionto in The
research, dsiign and devcioiuncnt
of military aircraft.
®Fcb. 3&9..— Monsanto Chemical
Company will interview men train
ed in njcohariicaJ or chemical engi
neering, or chemistry, at.all degree
levels who finish this spring and
and summer. They have available
some two-hundred positions of
various types for college graduates
at'all Monsanto locations with the
exception
on the Wc
Divisic
Feb.
is
C
nee rm
pring ar.
chan i cal
g, industrial educ;
id ministration and
have a general tr:
for ultimate ansi
SAVED BY VET—Bobby Ray of Lubbock listens to the braathing of Terry, his pet
monkey, who stopped breathing for eight hours after a veterinarian had given him anes
thetic to pull some teeth. Three hours of pullmotor respiration by the fire department
failed, but another veterinarian, Dr. H. M. Byrd, applied artificial respiration and revived
the monkey.
The Battalion
Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Traditions
“Soldier, Statesman, Knightly Gentleman”
The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechan
ical College of Texas, is published by students four times a week, during
the regular school year. During the summer terms, and examination
and vacation periods, The Battalion is published twice a week. Days of
publications are Tuesday through Friday for the regular school year,
and Tuesday and Thursday during examination and vacation periods
and the summer terms. Subscription rates $9.00 per year or $ .75 per
month. Advertising rales furnished on request.
Bntered as second-class
matter at Post Office at
College Station, Texas
under the Act of Con
gress of Match 3, 1870.
Member of
The Associated Press
Represented nationally by
National Advertlolng
Services, Inc., at New
York City, Chicago, Los
Angeles, and San Fran- |
cisco.
In 1840 there were about 675
American whale ships in the Paci
fic Ocean with about 15,000 crew
men aboard.
.Co-Editors
JERRY BENNETT, ED HOLDER
Chuck Neighbors ..Managing Editor
Harri Baker * Campus Editor
Bob Boriskie Sports Editoi
Ion Kinslow City Editor
Terry Estes Basic Division Editor
Bob Hendry Feature Editor
Barbara Rubin Society Editor
Jerry Wizig Associate Sports Editor
Prank Hines, Jerry Neighbors, Bob Domey, Jim Collins, Ray Wall,
A1 Eisenberg, Arnold Goldstein, BUI Parsons, Bill Warren,
Jack Farley, John Linton, King McGowan, Jay Ireland,
Charles Kingsbury, George Manitzas, E. B. McGowan Staff Writers
Gardner Collins Exchange Editor'
Bob Palmer, Tom Skrabanek Advertising Staff
lames Earle Staff Cartoonist
Seymour Smith, Will Holladay, John Maacher Staff Photographers]
Larry Lightfoot .... Circulation Manager ]
Roland Baird, Jewel Raymond, Monroe Odom, Tom Syler, Buddy Williams,
Russell Reed .Circulation Staff:
m
h Itevia
MMM
'® ACm,
Save Your Money!
Save Your Clothes!
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
Tb .
gram for
sales, production, engineering, pro
cess control, purchasing, research
and development.
© Feb. 10—The Hughes Tool Com-
pHiiy will interview mechanical and
industrial engineering majorsjat all
degree levels who graduate this
spring or summer. College grad
uates arc first employed as Junior
Engineers with asignment to a
practical Engineer^ Training Por-
gram involving on-the-job training
in successive phases of product de
sign and manufacture.
® Feb. 10—The Sperry Gyroscope
Company will intelAievv graduates
at all degree levels in mechanical,
electrical, industrial and aeronauti
cal engineering, physics and mathe
matics. They have openings for
qualified men in such fields as
aerodynamics, chemical analysis,
electrical measurements, etc.
® Feb. 10 & 11-General Electric
representatives will i n t e r v i e w
spring andAn’.' Unor graduates rl
all degree levels, as follows: On
the 10th, chemical engineers and
.chemistry majors will be inter
viewed for various C. E. programs.
Also on the 10th, business admini
stration, economics and agricultur
al economics majors will be in
terviewed (’or candidates for their
Business Training, Course. On the
10th and 11th, elcctt i-tl, mochani-;
cal and industrial engine "ing and
physics majors will be interviewed
for various phases cf work with
G. E.
.O FcK idf i
Ccmefiny-^R TJiieD
civil and 'a-'r mauti il
majors at all degree
Jfwm
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j
J)il
trr-.yt. aawiititiliwmi.IWWWmumiwiliw,
J
Delhi Doctors
1UE
ineer
on
1 t )B INTI')RVIEWS
re 5)
Editors
Editors The* Battalion
Tonight, Tuesday, while at Silxcr
Taps we witnessed one of the most
discourteous acts a person can do.
This person wore his fatigue hat
while Silver Taps was being play
ed. Perhaps this was -due to
ignorance or to forgetfulness but in
either case we think that a person
should have more respect for the
occasion.
Jack Collins ’54
James Collins ’54
Joseph Robisheaux ’54
Tom O. Moisslcr ’54
NEW DELHI, India —CP) —A
gaunt, snarling lad dubbed the
“wolf boy” is providing medical
authorities in Lucknow with the
twin ■problems of keeping' him alive
and determining his background.
The Joctors said today the boy,
who walks on all fours, wolfs down
raw meat and laps water like an
animal, is 9 years old. With his
hair loiig and matted, he was
found mysteriously in a railway
freight car Jan; 17. Though def
initely a human, doctors conjec
ture that he was reared by animals.
The boy was removed to the Bal-
rampur Hospital in Lucknow, in
noflh-central India, where symp
toms of a serious circulatory ail
ment were noted.
Much against his will, he is being
fed cooked meat, milk, porridge,
4
fruit juices and pancakes, as well
as the raw meat he likes.
Despite more than two weeks of
hospital care, however, he still lies
huddled weakly in his bed, giving;
an occasional snarl and trying t()|j
bite attendants. He cringes from
light. He shows little interest in
his surrounding until raw meat is
produced. This he devours avidly. 1 ?
The hospital superintendent, Dr,
D. N. Sharma, said massage wilH
be used in an effort to restore the
boy to normal human shape.
“Ho has serious contracture of
(lie muscles of the limbs and flex
ion at both elbow and knee joints,^®
Dr. Sharma said.
►Surgical reconstruction to enabli
him to walk upright is planned' ►
after the massage treatments build
up his physical sti'cngih.
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
Jlitf, SELL, KENT OR TRADE. Kates
... 3c a work per insertion with :<
!5o minimum. Space rate in classified
lection .... 60c per column-inch. Send
nil classifted to STUDENT ACTIVITIES
OFFICE. ill ads must he received in
Student Activities Office by 10 a.m. on the
fay before publication. \
SPECIAL NOTICE •
FOR SALE
PORTABLE electric washer, drain hose and
wringer. Used one month. .|I20.U0. Apt.
A-4-r.' College View.
SIX WEEKS OLD Wired haired fox ter
rier registered and pedigreed. 1318 Mil
ner St., College Station.
O FOR SALE OR TRADE «>
W.’• DELUXE Plymouth coupe With dual
,*•*•># hfcdy, Wrcsr tor motor-
"r,v:le. Phone: Jock 6-1372. J
TWO BEDROOM homo Hi J31S Milner si.,
College Hills, for 1050 or earlier house
trailer.
FOR RENT •
LARGE UNFURNISHED apartment. 540.00
month. Children welcome. See at 4407
Aspen,'Bryan (about 6 blocks from North
Catei alter 6 p.m. or call Mr. Herman
Morohcad between 8 and 5 at 4-8044.
FURNISHED APARTMENT, bills paid,
walking distance, couples only. Phone
. 3-2904 or 4-9844.
ATTRACTIVE 2 bedroom unfurnished du
plex apartment with carport and utility
room near Millers Shopping center on
Hwy. G, phone 4-11G2.
ONE nice comfortable bedroom in my
home. Phone 4-7054 or come by 401
Dexter South, College Station.
1EWING machines. Pruitt’s Fabric Shop.
HELP WANTED
IKN to solicit subscriptions for Houston
Chronicle in new area, fish area and
College View. Commission of 75c per
subscription. See Carter Price, 004
Guernsey St., or phone 3-3905.
Prompt Radio Service
— C A L L —
Sosolik’s Radio Sei-vicfc
712 8. Main St.
tl. 2-1941 BRYAN
EX PERT It EVVEA V1 N«
of articles damaged by burns, tears
and moths work. .Guaranteed ^
AGNES TYDLACKA
Phone 6-1473
105 Church St. — College Station I
CALI. 4,-0099 for typing and related work.
WANTED: Typing. Reasonable rates
Phone: 3-1776 (after 5 p.m.)
ICL LOSS LODGE NO. l.’<00 A.F. A A.M.
'/Q
Called meeting Sul Boss
l odge . AF and AM For
Fob. 4. 1904, 7 p.m. Work
in MM degree. i,
Edward M.adcley, W.M.
N. M. McGinnis, Sec’)'.
Official Notice
A new section of Engineering Drawing
100 meeting, Tuesday, Thursday, Satflrdaii
8 to 10. has been created. All students in
terested in registering for this courst
should come to the engineering drawinl
department immediately.
w. E. Street
Head of Department
SCHOOL OF AGRICULTURE
DISTINGUISHED STUDENT CARDS |
All students in the School of Agriculture .
who qualified as Distinguished Students
last semester should call for their D. S. |
Cards at my office at their earliest con
venience.
Chas. N. Shcpardson
Dean of Agriculture
READ
B A T T ALIGN
CLASSIFIED
® Blue line prints
» Blue prints
• Photostats
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
Phone 3-6887
LFL ABNER
| 0;bWMUTAGC0 r 5> fOUL "j
| ROBERT Q. LULU ISf. r — J
TH'FUST i 10,000 AH
EARNS IS HSS, NATCHERLV,
BUT TH' SECON D &10.000,
AH EARNS IS ALL MINS.ff
By A1 Cafip
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WILL THAT
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FOR #10,000?
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to auT-sir.THe tap an"/ i*snt
COUNTIN’ ON BPLITTINVO/AI/V'
With >X7 ‘CgPTlN'MB^E. 4
ZAhKWlCA IP YOU GOT ONE.
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ph-tac
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By Walt Kelly
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WHEPEP WE FINP FOLKE
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