fe 3 SE y > Circulated Daily To 90 Per Cent Of Tocal Residents Number 191: Volume 53 # on Published By A&M Students For 75 Years PUB!ASHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1954 Price Five Cents Journalism Cluh To Fete Publishers At Coffee Tonight » A coffee for members of the ^ Texas Press association will be given at 7:30 tonight in the Me morial Student Center. . The coffee will be sponsored by the Journalism club. More than 100 members of TPA will be here for the fifth Annual Mechanical conference tomorrow. At this conference, Howard N. Author Says US Neglected Latin Nations . The United States has miss ed a golden opportunity by * neglecting the South Ameri can republics so long, Miss - Bernita Harding, author and traveler, told the Bryan-College Station Knife and Fork Club Tues day night. “The Monroe Doctrine, by which the United States sought to keep European influence out of the western hemisphere, was eventual- \y accepted 200 per cent by the Latin Americans, but eventually resulted in a separation of view point between them and the north ern nations,” she said. For hundreds of years North * Americans have looked to Europe and by defalut have forced Latin Americans to do likewise, she said. This lias prevented cultural ties between the two American Con- * tinents', Miss Harding added. Miss Harding, born in .Aus tria, was reared' in Mexico whei'e $he got the material for her first iook “Phantom Crown”. The next meeting will be at the Parker dining hall in Bryan. Nich olas Nayaradi, former minister of finance of Hungary, will be the ''speaker. •‘Gershwin Festival' .To He Town Uall The music of George Gershwin will be featured in the next Town Hall performance, Feb. 25. The program, ejititled “A Ger shwin Festival”, will be presented by the Gershwin Concert orchestra. The organization is now on its se cond tour of the United States. Robert Zeller will conduct the group of 30 musicians. Also featur- rd will be several soloists. Two performances will be given «t Guion hall. The fii’st perfor mance will be held at 7 p. m. and the second at 9 p. m. Tickets will be on sale at stu dent activities office and at the “door. Campus Will Get 3,290 Feet of Curb Three thousand two hundred and ninety feet of curbing will be con structed on Houston and Ross streets and around the System ad ministration building, said C. K. Layton, engineer for the project. No deadline was set for the work and is to be done at the con- tractors convenience. The bid that was taken was two dollars per linear foot. Unnecessary breaks in curbing and old driveways will be included in the contract, Layton said. ^ * Weather Today PARTLY CLOUDY Cloudy to partly cloudy today 'with continued rain. High yester day 69. Low this morning 64, King, nationally famous typo grapher, will talk on effective makeup. King’s talk will include how to get the most effective makeup with existing type supplies at the lowest possible cost. President David H. Morgan will welcome the publishers at a lunch eon after a morning of talks on production problems. Ed L. Williams, vice director of the engineering extension service, will speak on time and motion studies as applied to newspapef production. Roy Craig of the Stamford American and Jake Smyth of the Liberty Vindicator will open the program at 8:30 a. m. with their discussion of “Shop Kinks.” Hal Bredlow of Stamps-Conhaim advertising service will discuss stereotyping, and Rigby Owen of The Conroe Courier will talk on “Should You Build a New Plant.” Head Coach Paul (Bear) Bryant will speak to the group at the luncheon. During the afternoon session there will be a panel discussion on shop problems. It will be moderated by Williams, The conference is sponsored by the journalism department and the TPA. D. E. Newsom is conference director. mm ■,v.'■ III* AND OVER — Three members of the Swedish National Gymnastics team do a flip in formation. The team will perform here Tuesday night. Swedish Gym Team Perform .Here HOWARD KING Typography Expert Sweden’s world famous gym nastics team, currently on a nation wide tour of the United States, will perform in DeWare field house next Tuesday night at 8:30 p. m. The 16-man team will be ac companied by Henry Allard, member of the Swedish Parlia ment. Also accompanying the team is Olle Areborn, manager of the Swedish Gymnastics fedei’ation. Eunnar Dryselius’and his family from Houston will be on hand for the team’s performance. Dryselius is Consul General of Sweden for the South and Southwestern United States. The program will feature tumbl ing, vaulting, gymnastics with the use of parallel and horizontal bars, and “free gymnastics”. Tickets for the attraction are 50 cents each and all proceeds will go to the A&M tumbling team. End of Week Four Churches Set Last RE Services Four local churches will hold services Friday night in conclusion of Religious Emphasis week. “The object of the meeting to night is to bring about the con tinuation of religious feelings that have been brought into the stu dents, and to answer their ques tions’,, said Gordon Gay, director of the YMCA who is in charge of Religious Emphasis week. The Lutheran Student associa tion is conducting a special service of Thanksgiving at 7:30 p. m. in the Lutheran Student center. The service will be conducted entirely by students. Students taking part in the ser vice are John Stacha, Bernard Hal- version, Theo Lindig, Richard Fischer, Luther Dube and Glenn Specht. The Presbyterian church will hold a special forum at 7:15 p. m. conducted by Dr. Louis Evans, principal speaker of Religious Em phasis week. Evans subject will be guided by questions from the Manke To Speak To AIEE Tuesday A non-technical discussion on how to get rid of a high voltage arc will be the theme of a talk by George H. Manke next Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. in the electrical engi neering building. Manke, chief laboratory and training engineer of the Line Material company of South Mil waukee, Wise., will talk on “Sui cide of a High Voltage, Arc.” He will use slides, demonstrations of an actual fuse operation and high speed 16 mm movies of arc inter ruptions. Sponsored by the American In stitute of Electrical engineers, Manke’s lecture will be followed by a question and answer period. audience, and questions may either be asked directly or written. A commitment service will be presented by the Presbyterian Stu dent league. Prayer will be offered by Fair Colvin, president of the Presbyterian Student league, and invocation by Frank Clark. At the close of the program an invitation to offer your life to Christ will be conducted by the Rev. Charles Workman as he leads the audience in “Stand Up for Clirist.” The program will colse with a hymn of dedication. A social hour will follow in the Presbyterian Student Center. The College Avenue Baptist church will conduct services at 7:30 p. m. The Rev. Bruce Mclver, Religious Emphasis week leaden, will be guest speaker. His subject will deal with Christian life as re lated to student life. Ide Trotter jr., will preside over the services, and music will be di rected by Bob . Bond. Rabbi Rosenbaum, a religious emphasis week leader, will conduct services and be guest speaker at the regular 7:15 p. m. Friday night Jewish serwices at the YMCA chapel. His subject will be, “What I Like and Dislike About Being Jewish.” ‘Aggieland Going Smoothly’ -- Holt “The Aggieland is running smoothly and according to schedule,” said Allan “Bootsie” Hohlt, co-editor. The senior and freshmen picture schedules have been completed. Junior pictures are expected to be completed by the end of the month. The sophomore picture schedule will start next month. Club pictures started yesterday and the Who’s Who’ pictures are scheduled throughout next week. “The military section of the Ag gieland will probably be the First unit completed. It will be ready when all snapshots are in. This should be sometime in April,” Hohlt said. Indochina Peace Move Planned .by Big Four The attraction was originally scheduled for 8 p. m. according to C. G. (Spike) White, manager of student activities. The performance is to be held at 8:30 p. m. due to the Basic Division open house which will be ended by 8:15 p. m. Prayer Day Observed Here March 5 A&M will observe the World Day of Prayer March 5 with one minute of silence over the whole campus. The college whistle will blow at 10 a. m. to signal the start of the minute of silence. The whistle will blow again at 10.01 to signal the end of the minute. Hymns will be played over the public address system of the Memorial Student Center starting at 9:50 a. m. Persons in 100 countries all over the world will observe tbe minute of silence at the same time. Korean Peace Conference Set in Geneva, April 26 BERLIN—(IP)—The Big- Four foreign ministers headed home from their Berlin meeting today to prepare for another conference in two months—this time to seek peace in Korea and Indochina. They wrote off any change of agreement on European problems for the present. The deadlock at Panmunjom was bypassed by the decis ion yesterday to open the long-debated Korean peace con ference in Geneva April 26 with Red China among the nations to participate, not as a sponsor but by invitation. The ministers agreed the problem of ending the seven- year-old war in Indochina “shall also be discussed’’ at the conference. The top diplomats of the? United States, Britain, France and Russia promised also to “hold an exchange of views” on world disarmament under a resolution adopted by the United Nations General Assembly last Nov. 28. This resolution proposed secret big-po2 talks to speed arms reduction. But the problems of Germany, Austria and European security were left unsolved when Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov, the chairman of the final session, rapped out adjournment at 7 p.m. Secretary of State Dulles, due in Washington by plane late today, voiced “a large measure of re gret” at the failures, which he attributed to a fundamental differ ence of views between the East and West. “Our failures,” Dulles said, “are of a kind which coidd not have been avoided by mere diplomatic or negotiating skills at this con ference. . . . All of our basic dif ferences have been revolved around the question of whether it was right, or indeed safe, to give men and nations a genuine free dom of choice. PL Instructor To Lead Section Of Conference An A&M professor will lead a section of a conference next week with 600 members re presenting 13 states. Herman B. Segrest, asso ciate professor of physical edu cation, will be the summarizer for the men’s athletic section at the Southern District convention of the Fop Engineer To Be Named Next Thursday Local professional engi neers will announce their choice of the “Engineer of the Year” at a banquet next Thursday. The banquet will be to celebrate National Engineer’s week, Feb. 21- 27. All local engineers and their wives have been invited to attend the banquet at the “Oaks” in Bry an. John P. Oliver, president of tbe Brazos chapter of the Texas So ciety of Professional Engineers and a professor in tbe engineering drawing department, is selling tickets for the banquet. M. A. Coleman at the Bryan City Engineer’s office also is selling tickets for the affair. Ernest Langford, mayor of Col lege Station, issued a proclamation Wednesday praising the engineer ing pi’ofession and setting aside Feb. 21-27 as Engineers’ Week in College Station. Tbe name of the “Engineer of the Year” will be announced in The Battalion next Thursday. m Western Powers The Western Powers were will ing to place trust in the German and Austrian peoples. The Soviet Union was not.” Both sides gave ground on the Korean conference decision in Ber lin. Molotov dropped his promo tion of Red China as a sponsoring power. The United States waived its demand that the conference be two sided, with Russia sitting in only as a Communist belligerent. The closing conference commu nique said the Geneva parley would be open to the Big Four, South Korea, North Korea and oth er nations whose ti’oops fought in Korea. This excludes such neu trals as India. ‘Whiskey Bridge’ Being Replaced Jone’s bridge, better known as ‘Whisky Bridge’, is being replaced. Texas Highway department re sident engineer Joseph M. McLain said the load limit will be 20 tons. The limit for the old bridge is five tons. The new 643-foot bridge will be located so as to eliminate danger ous curves on both sides of the Brazos river, McLain said. The present detour will be closed next spring when construction is completed. Business establishments located at the old bridge will be by-passed. * General specifications for the new, modern structure are 541 feet and nine inches of continous steel girder, one 50 foot eye beam span on each end and a reinforced con crete deck with a 26—foot road way. ' HERMAN B. SEGREST Conference Leader American Association for Health, Physical Education and Recrea tion. This convention annually brings together leaders and workers in the fields of health, physical edu cation and recreation. The purpose of the convention is “to impi'ove educational pi’oeesses through an exchange of ideas and experiences.” Segrest has been at A&M for nine years, and has been a member of his profession for the past 17 years. He did his undergraduate work at North Texas State and his grad uate work there, at A&M and Tex as university. Practice Teaching Starts for 62 Sixty-two senior agricultural education majors from A&M will be practice teaching in 31 Texas high schools from March 1-12, Schools in all parts of Texas will be hosts to these student teachers with the exception of the Panhandle, Far West and Valley regions. “These student teachers must have senior classification in order to qualify for this two week prac tice teaching period”, said Dr. M. N. Abrams of the agricultural edu cation department. April l Deadline Set for Theses The final date for submitting theses and dissertations to the Graduate School will be April 1, said Ide P. Trotter, dean of the Graduate School. The papers must be approved by the student’s committee. They will be read by the appointed faculty readers during the spring recess. The final examination must be before May 7, to allow proper clearance for graduation. March 1 is the deadline for making applications for a degree to be granted in May. Radio Series Begins Sunday on 24 Stations Former Student Watches Review Col. James D. Ogltree of Ft. Lee, Va. watched the practice corps re view here yesterday. A former student, class of ’25, Ogltree said the corps compares favoi-ably with the corps 29 years ago. While on the campus Ogltree went to see his old room in Leg gett hall. He is here on a routine laison visit from the quartermaster corps. Females Still Sorry, Boys, By RUSSELL CONDON Battalion Staff Writer A little girl goat who wanted to be a co-ed Aggie has been forced to leave the campus. Jack Herbig, Ronnie Hayes, Bud Williams and Charlie Davenport, juniors in B field artillery, found a small Angola goat on a road near Del Rio. The goat, which Was weak from starvation, was stashed in the base ment of dormitory 3 and nursed back to health with milk from the mess hall. The goat was to be the official mascot of B field, but complications arose. The housing office heard that Can 't Stay; Got to Go there was a goat in the dorm, and Capt. Emmett Trant, counselor, issued and order to “remove the beast from the basement.” The goat was placed in a pen out side dormitory three, but according to college regulations it could never have qualified for a contract, so it was ordered off the campus. Harry McMenemy, agriculture major from Houston, rescued the refugee mascot and it is now living in Houston. If anyone in the College Sta tion area would like to keep the goat for these men, they would ap preciate it. “There are enough women in Houston without taking 'her’ down there,” they said. “A Report From the Dean,” dramatized stories of typical col lege students and their problems, will be launched Sunday, February 21, over more than 24 i*adio sta tions around the state. The weekly programs will be boadcast for 13 consective weeks. It is the thii-d successive spring that stations of the Texas State netwoik have canned a radio series originating here. This year out lets of the Cactus network have joined in presenting the programs as a public service feature. Written, directed and produced by Harry L. Kidd, jr. of the Eng lish department, the shows have a cast of 15 persons, including stu dents, student wives, staff and faculty members of the college, and staff members of radio station WTAW. Bob Hollenbaugh, student an nouncer on the WTAW staff, plays the part of the dean in the drama tizations. “A Report From the Dean” takes a fictionalized case-histoi*y ap proach to problems faced by col lege students. Stations in the following cities will carry the broad casts: Waco, Longview, Fort Worth, Texarkana, Austin,. Tyler, Abilene, Brown- wood, San Angelo, Greenville, Paris, Sherman, Dallas, Big Spring, McAllen, San Antonio, Amarillo, Wichita Falls, Houston, Pecos, Odessa, Monahans and Al pine. Officials of the two networks said other stations probably will be added for a later starting date on the series. BSU Nominations Not Definite Yet No definite conclusions have been made as to the nominations of students for the Baptist Student Union council committee, said Cliff Harris, BSU director. Harris is serving as advisor for the nominating committee. Presi dent Dave Mitchell will act as chairman. Other members of the nominat ing committee are Paul Roper, business major from Dallas who is now program director, and Jim Trimple, petroleum engineering major from Texarkana. He is pro motional director of the council. Two previous meetings have nar rowed the prospects down. Inter views have started on those remain ing. Announcements of the choices may be made next week, Harris said. r * the ne of state Fort last Aus- & M hair- andez u d of n the o re- ) re- 7 aco’s night adges