The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 11, 1956, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Center News
The MSC dii’ectorate is sponsor
ing an informal reception for all
Aggies and their parents from 2
to 4:30 p.m. tomorrow. Entertain
ment will be furnished by The
Moderns.
The Camera Committee will be at
[the reception taking complimentary
pictures of the Aggies and their
[mothers. These pictures will be
xolarized pictures, so all of you Ags
[come by the reception and have
your mother’s picture made.
The Ham Radio Station is open
to the public.
Louisiana Police
Foil Panty Raid
BATON ROUGE—UP)—S t a t e , |
city, parish and campus police com- |
bined forces last night to break up
the second panty raid in two nights
at Louisiana State University.
The fire department also was
called out to help disperse an esti
mated 700 students, some of them
shooting blanks in pistols, setting
off firecrackers, throwing rotten
egg£, iron bars, rocks and bottles.
One group of 600 students was
driven across the campus befoi'e
police in autos.
New Soviet Developments
Show Sign For Peace— Dulles
The Battalion .... College Station (Brazos County), Texas
Friday. May 11, 1956 PAGE 5
A dial Charges Republicans
With Financial Influence
•ATTALION CLASSIFIED
W AJVT AO KATES
[One day .... 2^ per word
|l^“ per word each additional day
Minimum charge 4U£
HEAHLliNES
5 p.m. day betore publication
Classified Uisplay
8U£ per column inch
each insertion
PHONE VI 6-6415
Tor Sale
(1) Toledo electric band meat
[saw on floor stand, serial No. 4421,
[model 5200-0-010, with 1 hp. elec
tric motor, 220 volts. (1) Hobart
steakmaster (deluxe tenderizer and
^eak machine), model No. 400 with
1/3 hp. electric motor. Both in ex
cellent condition. Sealed bids will
be received in the Office of the
lousiness Manager, College Admin
istration Building until 10:30 a.m..
May 28, 1956. The right is re
served to reject any and all bids
and to waive any and all technical
ities. Address Business Manager,
A. and M. College of Texas, Col
lege Station, Texas, for further in
formation. 132t2
(1) 1954 6-cylinder Ford Fordor
Sedan; (1) 1954 6-cylinder Ford
Country Sed,an. Sealed bids will be
received in the Office of the Busi
ness Manager, College Administra-
Sson Building until 10:30 a.m.. May
28, 1956. The right is reserved to
reject any and all bids and to
waive any and all technicalities.
Address Business Manager, A. and
M. College of Texas, College Sta
tion, Texas, for further informa
tion. 132t2
For Kent
Available June 1 unfurnished two
bedroom, five room brick house,
front and back screen porches, fire
place, attic fan, $75 per mojith.
Located at 701 Park Place, College
Park. Phone Mrs. Sullivan, Vi-
6-6441 for appointment. 132t5
Three room and four room apart
ments, private bath, entrance and
garage. Available June 1st. Phone
VI 6-5915. 129t5
1 suite, sitting room, sleeping
porch, private bath, garage, 2
meals per day, maid service. 1
southeast bedroom, private bath,
2 meals per day, maid service, gar
age. Mrs. Maggie Parker, 200
'Congress, Bryan, Phone TAylor
3-4375. 126tf
If you are moving, a one way
trailer will save you money and
•get your merchandise there safely.
Also for local trailers call Baker’s
Tire Co. Phone TA 2-8159.
120t22
Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric
Shop. 98tf
June 1 - Sept. 1, two bedroom
house, fui'nished. College Park,
next to campus. Cool; large attic
fan, insulated i - oof. 601 Jersey,
VI 6-5441. 129t4
Tost
15 foot Lakewood Vacationette
trailex*. Sleeps 5, stove, ice box,
auxiliary water tank. Ideal for
vacations, camping, fishing tx-ips or
home for couple. See H. L. Stod-
dai’d, C-5-D College View. 130tf
Established Vetei'inary pi’actice,
clinic and living quaifei's combined.
In a good Texas town above 6500
population. Lots of dairying. . A
good Mixed pi’actice. Reason for
selling: Have something elsewhere
moi’e suitable for wife’s health. At
tractive offer for Veteran. 129t4
Write Box 3, c/o Battalion.
Bell & Howell 8 MM movie cam-
(ya and projectoi’. VI 6-4142.
129t4
Registered boxer puppies, 6
weeks old, must be seen to appre
ciate, $35. 804 Fairview, College
Station, VI 6-7222. 127t6
Two-Bedroom home close to cam
pus. Garage, screened-in back
porch, nice yard, fenced-in back.
Victor 6-5176. 126t7
May is bargain month at our
store. All Sherwin-Williams Paint
mcluding Kem-glo and Super Kem-
fone at 10% off. COX LUMBER
COMPANY, 2705 South College
^\.venue, Bryan, Texas. 125tl2
K & E Log Log Duplex Vector
slide x’ule. Believe left in M.E.
Building, Friday, April 27. J. L.
Koi’enek, Doi-m 5-326. Box 5404.
129t4
• K.NOI.N'KKKINQ A .VI)
ARCHITECTURAI. Sl’FPI.IES
• BLUE LXNE PRINTS
• BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
M3 Old t*ulptmr Spring* Road
BRYAN. TEXAS
PROMPT RADIO SERVICE
— Call —
SOSOLIK’S RADIO AND
TV SERVICE
713 8. Main St.
< A rros* from Railroad Tower)
PHONE TA 2-1941 BRYAN
Wanted to Buy
20” boy’s bicycle, good condi
tion, reasonable. Call Carl Lan-
diss, VI 6-5854. 129t4
Wanted to Kent
By staff member and family,
nice home, convenient to campus.
Call VI 6-7220. 130t3
Help Wanted
A lady with a pleasant person
ality for constantly meeting the
public to work as cashier’ in the
Memorial Student Center dining
room. Good hours with meals on
duty. Student wife preferred. Pos
ition to be filled immediately. Con
tact in person only Mrs. Adams,
Director’s Office of the MSC.
132tl
ADVERTISING SALESMAN to
R’ork in spare time, Battalion Of
fice. 127tf
Waitress wanted. Hours 6 a.m.
•— 3 p.m. Apply in person West-
ern Restaurant. Interested in em
ploying Aggie Wife. 126tf
Found
Slide Rule. Come to Student
Publications Office and identify.
125t4
Work Wanted
Neat accurate typist desires typ
ing in my home. Own electric type
writer. Have May 8 until May
20 I can devote full time. Call
VI 6-5805. 129t8
Attention Working Mothers! All
Day nursery, $25.00 month. Also
baby sitting by hour, 35 cents.
VI 6-4142 or 304 W. Dexter. 128tf
Guaranteed radio and appliance
-epair. C-13-D College View.
81tf
Typing wanted to do in my
nome. Mrs. C. E. Carlson, Jr.
Phone TA 2-3532 after 6 p.m. lOOtf
* Wanted
1954 Leather Graduation Invita
tion. Contact Charles Saxe. Room
6, YMCA. 130t4
WASHINGTON— (A 1 )—Secretai-y
of State Dulles said yesterday that
new Soviet developments may in-
ci’ease long-range chances for
peace, thei’e is no time to “tei’ini-
nate or cux-tail” the administxa-
tion’s big foreign aid program.
Dulles spoke for moi’e than two
houi*s in a final plea before the
House Foi’eign Affairs Committee
for $4,900,000,000 in new foi’eign
aid funds for the year beginning
July 1.
Next week the House group
starts voting on the bill and the
Male and Female employees to
work in the A&M Laundry. Ex-
pei-ience prefei’red but not neces-
sai’y. 130tf
Pets
Dogs, cats boarded—low daily,
.veekiy, monthly xates. Grooming,
Puppies. Free pickup, delivery.
3AYARD KENNELS, Highway 6
South. College. VI 6-5535. 70tf
Male Help Wanted
We would like to contact a gxad-
uate Engineer who would be in
terested in the field of Hot Woi’k-
ing of Metals. If employed, he
would be trained in Tool and Die
designing. Witte Mr. Perry M.
Simonds, General Metals Corpora
tion, P. O. Box 198, Houston 1,
Texas. 125tl7
Special Notice
A&M Produces
Mature Men,
Says Dittman
“No man through wishing
ever becomes great. The Lord
provides the fishing but you
must dig the bait,” concluded
Col. Henry Dittman, professor
of Air Science, in an i m—
promptu speech to the Speechmas-
ters Club this week.
Col. Dittman, speaking on “The
Future of Our Country in Young
Hands,” raised the question as to
whether or not the youth of today
were becoming complacent and tak
ing the path of least resistance.
He gave examples of some of the
heroic accomplishments of the lead
ers of this century and pointed out
that if this country wants to con
tinue to turn out men of this caliber
it must not become complacent and
undisciplined.
“I try to tell everybody I can
that military training at A&M is
one of the finest things that a
mother’s young son can be subject
ed to,” Dittman said. “We are not
hazing the men or trying to beat
them to death, we are disciplining
them so they can mature and follow
the lines they should. It was the
poorly trained and undisciplined
soldiers who failed to make it back
from the Korean concentration
camps.”
He told the story of Joe Routt,
All-American guard from A&M,
who during the Battle of the Bulge,
asked to be transferred from a
staff position to a command posi
tion. The next day Joe led his men
into battle and was machine-gun
ned down. He gave his life for an
ideal.
“What we need is capable, alert
young men with a lot of drive and
hustle who want to do something
for their fellow man,” said Ditt
man. “The Korean War was won
by a small number of men, com
paratively speaking, with obsolete
weapons who had the guts, desire
and determination to protect our
country at all costs.”
The speech was made in the So
cial room of the Memorial Student
Center before the 30 members of
the Spcechmasters Club.
main question has not been wheth
er the amount will be cut, but how
much. Chairman Richards D-SC
said in advance of Dulles’ testi
mony the committee might lop of!
anywhere up to as much as IV2
billion dollars.
Dulles told the committee: 1. It
is quite possible that the Soviets
have cut their armed forces and
may reduce them more. And there
are “germs of highly favorable de
velopments” in Russia which, in-
terms of 10 years or a generation,
could bring about an end to the
cold war.
He said the armed forces reduc
tion announced by Russia is pos
sible because the Soviets may be
overextending themselves by such
simultaneous efforts as new weap
ons development and industrial and
agricultural expansion.
2. But the Kremlin’s new for
eign policy “smile” is purely a
change in tactics, not goals. Dulles
said it is “demonstrable” that Rus
sia’s developing foreign aid pro
gram is not aimed at strengthen
ing the independence of other coun
tries, but is “only for the purpose
of bringing about what Lenin called
the ‘amalgamation’ of these peoples
into the Communist bloc.”
“Nothing has yet happened which
in my opinion would make it pru
dent to terminate or curtail the
present U. S. aid program,” he
said.
3. Significant cuts in American
aid are not likely to be proposed
in the immediately foreseeable fu
ture. U.S. foreign aid spending
is now running about four and one
third billion dollars a year.
Dulles called this “part and par
cel” of America’s own defense ef
fort and said the 35 billion dollar
military budget would have to be
increased “considerable more than
four billion dollars” if it weren’t
for the U.S. program to help other
Foerster Elected
Leroy Foerster Jr. has been
elected chairman of the A&M So
ciety of Automotive Engineers.
Other oficers for next year will be
Herbert Acheson, vice-chairman;
Ernest Rickel, secretary; Donald
Kirby, treasurer; and Gary Prof-
Beau Bell
Visit our bargain shed where you
will find manv items at greatly re
duced prices. COX LUMBER COM
PANY, 2705 South College Avenue,
Bryan, Texas. 125tl2
OFFICIAL NOTICES
Official notices muni r>e hromthl, mulled,
nr telephoned so as to arrive !■ the Offlc*
of Student Publications (Ground Ulool
YMC’A, VI 6-6415. hours 8-12. T-5. dailj
Monday thronith Friday) at or before (hi
deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceding
publication — Director of Student Publica
tions.
REGALIA FOR BACCALAUREATE
SERMON AND COM M ENCEMENT 1
EXERCISES
All civilian students who are candidates
for the degree of Doctor of Veterinary
Medicine will wear the doctor’s cap. gown
and hood appropriate to that degree. (Hoods
will not be worn at the Baccalaureate Ser
mon.) Ph.D. candidates are also required
to order hoods and leave them with the
Registrar no later than 1:00 p.m.. Tuesday.
May 15. The Ph.D. hoods will not be worn
in the procession since all such candidates
will be hooded on the stage. Candidates
for the Master’s and Professional degrees
will wear the Master’s cap and gown Can
didates for the Bachelor’s degree will wear
the bachelor's cap and gown. All military
personnel, or military students who are
candidates for any of the above degrees,
will wear the appropriate uniform.
Rental of caps and gowns may be ar
ranged with the College Exchange Store.
Orders may be placed until noon, Saturday.
May 12, but it is desirable to place them
as early as possible. The rental is as fol
lows: Doctor's cap and gown 53.90: Mas
ter’s cap and gown 53.60: Bachelor’s cap
and gown 53.30. The rental for hoods Is
the same as that for caps and gowns.
C. E. Tishler. Chairman
Convocations Committee 119114
(Continued from Page 4)
says, “We have a fine pitching
\ staff and defensive team, but we
don’t have enough offensive
strength.”
Besides baseball and basketball,
golf rates high on the list of activi
ties for Bell. A World War II
veteran, Beau’s excess time is en
joyed with his wife and daughtei’s.
Coach Bell says next year’s team
depends upon what good material
the freshman team has.
“We can be sure of a good short
stop, but beyond that there is a
question mark.”
ALL DEPARTMENTS: Copies of the
1955-56 Student Directory are available
(50 -cents ooch) at the Office of Student
Publications, Ground Floor YMCA. 72tf
Dr. Carlton R. Lee
OPTOMETRIST
303A East 26th
Jail TA 2-1662 for Appointment
(Across from Court House)
ROPED IN BY
WASHDAY WOES?
LET US SET YOU FREE!
Thanks to our quick efficient
service, your laundry is done in
a jigtime.
counti’ies resist communism.
By coincidence, the House was
debating the new defense appro
priations bill as Dulles was speak-
ng to the committee.
4. The Democratic administra
tions that preceded President Ei
senhower did much to develop a
jood foreign aid program. Dulles
bestowed an unusual amount of
praise on Richards, who is not
seeking re-election this year, and
stressed what he called the aid
program’s bipartisanship.
“The progress we have made,”
Dulles said, “is the cumulation of
10 years of postwar effort and a
great contribution to it was made
by my predecessors in office.”
General Mills
Chickens To Be
Here Saturday
The only trained chicken
show in the United States will
be featured at the Texas
Chick, Poult and Egg Show at
DeWare Field House, Satur
day.
The trained chickens are the
property of General Mills Inc. and
consist of six acts. The show has
traveled to all parts of the United
States and at the State Fair of
Texas, more than one million peo
ple saw the show. It has received
national recognition by twice hav
ing stories in Life Magazine as well
as many other national magazines.
Some of the things which the
chickens will do include laying a
golden egg, shooting a gun, play
ing poker with members of the au
dience, answer any question with
either yes or no, work math prob
lems such as addition, subtraction,
multiplication and getting square
roots and pick out objects from un
der covers:
These hens have been trained at
the Animal Behavior Enterprise
Farm at Hot Springs, Arkansas.
The shows wilPbegiri at 9:30 and
11:30 a.m. and 2 and 4 p.m. The
public is invited and no admission
will be charged.
By The Associated Press
Adlai Stevenson says “heavy fi
nancial contributors to the Repub
lican party are attempting to in
fluence the Democratic primaries”
against him this year.
Stevenson, seeking to become the
Democratic presidential nominee
again, told a group of labor union
leaders in Los Angeles Thursday
that he has been informed that
some of the most influential men
in Amei'ica raised in one night “all
the Republican money needed to
defeat me in Minnesota.”
“If this report is true,” Steven
son added, “it appears that the
Republican leaders who helped elect
President Eisenhower in 1952 are
now trying to dictate the choice of
the Democratic candidate this year.
If that is so, it is not unlikely that
their money has or will turn up in
Florida and California.”
Stevenson tangles with Sen.
Estes Kefauver of Tennessee in
the Florida primary May 29 and
in California June 5.
Kefauver, also campaigning in
California, was not available for
comment but one of his campaign
spokesmen said the Senator “knows
nothing of any such support.” This
spokesman, former Atty. Gen. J.
Howard McGrath, said Stevenson’s
statement “sounds to me like a man
in the first stages of panic.”
ENGINEERS
Want to Stay in Texas?
Research and Development
Positions open for work in:
1. Gamma Ray Radiation Effects
2. Jet Engine Lpbricants and Fuels
3. Gear and Bearing Research
4. High Temperature Lubrication
Problems
5. Radioactive Tracer Technique for
Wear Studies
CONTACT FOR PERSONAL INTERVIEW:
Mr. John M. Clark, Jr.
Aviation Dept.
Southwest Research Institute
8500 Culebra Road
San Antonio, Texas