Batta lmn - Texas A&M...

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Batta l m n wmmm wiiiRprasB9:!3::ii8 r 1 yesterday ii s on Arab 1 m Utar, raakh, at t le Sea of Gal Id LABOR Mjvt JESTER RiE> AJUSTIN sponsored opponent 1 Jester is tajkfeg pbade here^I PVBUSBED DAILY IJV THE INTEREST Oh A GREATER A&M COLLEGE COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, FRIDAY, MAY 21,1 To Head Next Years !- y IA. Rood ma in connectiojn^ Rested fonrieS Go » Waco or Former ~ William MqOfawjof siil)le candi DEFEND ON NLGHf-CLUBBljNG LONDOlf; May 21 - persms cori| tvitlji the meetini v. P|it M. Jlvfjf Sfti Atiprner Glneral Dallas ap pbs- 1 { ' , i ^ n lldZABEjrn 1 i \ <-?)- ;Re- ^ponaihle cjourt koui Johdod Prifcjisn Elizjibeth atninst Scottish -chjaychmi'ri sf criticisrij The Seofs lcoirtphuiiod that i she went to horse races,':jri thcMttir /and flight club/ljdst Sunday in JPiris. ('(nirt'sourc^es;sai<i the rebuke# it'Ore unjustified tjufahtsnd unnJfntIful of1 continental amenities, . , - J -rI . JL-CT BAPTISTS fsK iroitPLF,T|r fonrf Elected Bait Editor For 1 [r ^lEMPmSi Tcrjrt.JMay 21 fiopthem Raiitists took theirfsiand foij- compl and state to jsepan resterdinj /IJtK \T( Staptzenberger Places First In Race for Athletic " Kenneth Bond won the election as veteran1 Battalion editor i t :■ Council _ .jt i . . . r»v....>,.w. .. ............ y.. *.«, v.v,vr.v------- ----------- -.......... .. and Odell IStaiitzenberger c II i fi( h. pa IE SEPARATION^ was elected Athletic Council representative inj the general elections last night. Tom LAros, election committee chairman, announced. The vote was one of the heaviest ever received rattion of (Ihiirch at A & M, pterdjfiyjafter hfea -im? | i Art Howard ran second in the Batt race it|nd R. L. Billingsley ran a close third. a. Jdenunciajtipn of F ivsident 1 !Vu-; Conrad Twihrins, not to b<? Icft^H------------ L-*-------------- L-H-1----- rH------ ------ mans appeinfmenjt. o* an ampobsa-. out. placed! .fourth. Ray Holbrook dop to the Vatican. ji i was second! in the race for Ath- : IMPEND ATDM c^IENTIKTS )R T.OY ft F/rY CHECK )AK RIlD(jlE; {Fei n., May '•TlThe uuiiperision of twd phy- sic(ists from! acciss to I'espirted, atomic fibs brought the asieiftion from other atomic . cientisw here tlujt contirucjd aciusationsvajg4irtst th4ir loyally will ma ce it mof-eidif- ficult to. g?;t scienjtiss to wcirl^ for thp government. I * 1 •] . [[.. | ' s r RF«SI V SIGHS FOR GHOMT OF F. D- I!. MOSCOW.j May] 2 -OTU Tas? leating circlesin Itiissia blajme current SoviotJ-Ameriepiiidif- ficulties oir the United Stateii Gov- ernments lepartufe: from tfiic pol- iciifs of Franklin D. Uoosevcit.: k j letic ; Council representative and : Andy Matulh was third. There were 1873 votes cast in the eieetioiiJ Bond received 779 votes, Howard polled 605 votes, and Billingsley had 459 votds. Twiggins was given 8 wffte-in votes, Paul Irwin .re- ceived 3 vpfos, Roland Bing took 1, Ivan Yantis polled 1:, Bob Hovel received 1 vtjte, and 16 ballots were rger received 990 ardeners U- ,('■ limyay, /hJL. beejt iuitttad fiift Ifduep xylmcr fm thq ichtn- plt dnnentj uvyaidsj. in the -veterans gfl -den ewitwt, 1*1. 1. Brifo|, pio- feshor of ; huirticUjtuY, a/mhunced Awprda! weiv gijv \uw hajvii\g,» tHo el* WiovrV. tin a and a i a to tilu*|7! vt t- stgirflcns, ,iy„.1 *f* if,'*addnts (have den pi oiM pro\ i<|ed h.V t|ej col- i*. The deiuu tn e#ts of taii'iicul- ibpen laijdsea) el ail huvl em peratirg Svith lili'se sUuwyjts. 'or his fir|st plnct garileiijiUi the lege Vie'it arei j, lllancy i(f(,viv- ed.the.first iprize o' $15. Tlej sec- ond place award vo *th $10- \|eht to ). B. Cli top, am.he tbinl place awiml of $5 iweii't It Roy D. fVVhite. 0. }B. Oil top, am (j:.. P. Vhs«i took'f mrth phice and rcqelvcd an! awuh ofs, $4.1 J. L.MihtcOF. jR. (.iliilithiam 2. H. Bejitly tcokri fifth/ sixtll, amlj.sev- enth phueS; and jir 'ceivcd $2, anil $1 rrspiectivch. .T ^ . '(Tie gardens arp, located |mt\vo anjas, on ; ojir the !a irport rotujF uiul thei other north of^t ic Collcgf; View Auartmeiits| Indivli ual plots! are of the size tjor-a small If, family Garden, •apniaximniojly 30 l|y 40 feci.;. The garden coriest was! hpon- .sored hy| f|ic Col ........ vef he" (ire Station De- opnjent •Associawon and|Chahi- of Cciimem.j J. F. Jlosbor- oui.h, exiunj-ion h >iticulturif.t| jud- ged the lilotjs ami nlade the kwards | ansordin*; tie the Following (score crqdfts. ! | ! I i* At leijsfc! 8 kind! of vegritiibles .ere required in a garden before it! was (fv®n elieihse to entprt the contest. The different vetriitables were wtjrfh 25 points. pj disqudlifietU Stautzertberger re< vott'S, Holbrook polk'd 755 votes and Matulai took 167 vofes. Besfides receiving 8j write-ins for Battalion editor, Twiggins was re- cipient of 1 vote fotf veteran yell leader, Athletic Council represen- tative!, and ^ortghonii editor. Tvventy-tiyo write-in votes were cast for veteran yelj leader. This list iilcludesi Ed Stajnton li Char- les Brown Ip, Vit Janda 2. Tom Stevens 2, Bennie Zinn 1, (Walter Hannl 2, Tin a Thomjis 2, Clayton laker l,j Charles Sec- . Ciilbert 1, and J„ tt. Lutz 1, Ed rest 2, (.. Strauiis 2. Twigginn rival Ivian Yantis al- so scored in the Athletic Council race. j Bond is !a 24-yeair-old veteran fi-om Pam pa, Texas/ majoring in Engliah. He Served in Um ai my for JS months as a secoi gunnery. In additio feature wrip numagtng ex torial staffi a staff sergeant ami lieutenant in aerial (V to a r, Bond item amll <■.. ii veteran jStahtzenperger, three years! 'service ijn the marines, is n junior!from .San Antonio. Hx* is a nfoinlx)! of the In inji and 18 rtctjv Ictics. The two Nv inners bf tint election of. 44,i is 1011, engineering^ semester as has nerved as on the fdi* football team tramiirnl nth- will take df ice at jthe •beginning of the fall 'kc Earl! Rose, unopposed ja < editor.;!He is and iic pres A&M Club, CA Council, mester. vetcraii student, ran veteTfin Longhorn a 20-yearrold junior dent off the, Abilene iceretaijy of the YM- and mission director df tho Baptist Studimt Union William C. Lonquist Jr., also rani unopposed for the position as vet-i eran yell lender. LionqUist, Class oring ijn inanngerpent! Ite m It 0, f.L Jeheral iippeaijmce and jaktrac- tivieness of the gjnaclen with.! walk ways adjurent to lit added do1 more points to the sexiro. list, duality, unaformilyj aiid cpidition oif vege- lahles werp the mp(or factor in the judging |u|d 'wasj valued ajt 30 points., j' | jlndicatiaiis of jr p,proved- garden -practices huch a# insect and dis- ease control, stakjng, prirnhg, cul- ti vat ion,; weed coi trol, a mf inter- cropping betted the gardeners an- ~ other 15 (.possible; joints. I [A recpiil of quantity of vege- tables hajrfested tiom the ulpt. was kept j£nd: the vulpl of these (added 5 (more points to; jthe fipalf sjcorc. Ford Kepresents Newman Club At I 'j i . | Bishopis Ceremony CrexKl Fore of Ibiuston, a veter- an corps junior majjorihg in bush ness, roprecented | the, NcWmap Club at the! i ist.allation ceremonies of Bishop jL J. Reicher as heaxl of the new (Catholic Diocese which includes A&M. j . Ceremonies weije held last Thursday in St. Marys Cathedral in Austin. ; *.... . .' j Ford wtys hccompanied by Mon- Glcissner and Father Students May Store Baggagefor Sum mer Students who wish to store baggage and other personal belongings during the summer may do so under a plan re- leased by Bennie A. Zinn, assistant dean of men. Veteran students living in Dorms 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9 may ^store all items, except lamps* in the gun room of Dormitory Friday, May 28, from 3 until 5 mM and also from 2 until 5 p. m. Thursxlay, June 3. ROTC students living in the ca- det dorms may store their bag- gage, except lamps, in the guarxl room of Dorm ; i2 on Saturday, May 29, from Jl(p a, m. until 12 noon. The roomjAvill, also be open on Wednesday ahd Thursday, June 2 and 3, from 2 until 5 p, m. Students livinjg in dorms other than 1 through 12 may store all items, including jlampsi, in the gun room of Dovm lii. The room will be open on Friday, May 28, from 3j p. m. until 5 p. m. and on Wed- nesday anxl Thursday, June 2 and .{, fromi 3 p. m. until 5 p. in. Lamps of sludents living in Dorm 1 through 12 may be stor- ed in the gun jroom of Dorm 3. This room will be open from 3 to 5 p. m„ Friday, May 29. The room will alsoi be open at the same hours fr(|>hi Monday, May 31, through Friday. June i. Students who wish tx> attemd the i second suminei* seitu'ster but dot J the first semester may store all j items, Including lamps, in the gun room of Donnitofyj 5, Thursday, June 3, from 2 until 5 p. tn. Students of Little Aggieland may store their belongings in eith- er of. the places indicated above, preferably in the area where they expect tx» live next year. Storage of all baggage will be i handled by the Agronomy Society and all revenues received will be I placed in the treasury of the club. KENNETH BOND Battalion Co-Editor Martin Will Ed Daniel Is Town s; I / «» Dan Kasper will head* the Senior Class of 49 The presidential victory by Kasper, won by a Field Artillery, climaxed a two-hour voting sessic present! junior glass picked a nine-man slate to he/ Don Jarvis was elected vice-president; E rich jCiSo 1,1 Number 179 i 0 . Twiggins Threw To Contest Elect By IVAN YANTIS Conrad Twiggins, self-styled write-in canfli| Batt editor, threatened to contest yesterdays caij | tions on the grounds that intimidation, foul play, ministration were evidenCin the count. Twiggins lost out to Kenneth Bond bv a co|u|t to 8. j 4----------------:- Twiggihs was a crushed and utterly demoralized mass of chain-smoking nerves last night j j when all the ballots had bex-n *-- counted, Twiggihsprincipal objection to the validity of the results was that j l-sMofr he was not allowed to aid in thx*1 counting, uiul in addition to that he believed some of the bxixos he had gone to great pains to stuff had been unstuffed. ' nghorn; nager JIM STEPHENS Senior Yell Leader Flying Aggies Attend Fort Worth Trials GI Y -HL DANIEL Town Hitll Manager Baggage will bo stored at the stu The newly organized Flying T4* )• dents risk but all possible pre. as Aggies Club ; ttended the infot-; cautions will be taken to safe-collegiate air m|*et held at Eagle ! guard it, Zinn said. Mountain Lake (Air Base at Fort; Lamps will be stored at 40 cents Worth on Friday anxl Saturday, | each. All other baggage will be May 14 and 15. The meet was Flying Frogs o University, and and universities sponsored by tjhe f Texas Christian thirteen colleges throughout the tain, its memlers with a bar- ai Henscl llfirk Sunday cven- t 6130. . Li:.1 : ", . : > arbccue * Slated uniday by FFA The Collegiate; Chapter! of I Future rFarmers j of Americii will eiitertai j be cue at ink at 61if0. '' Each' pi 25 cents f Since td the inijulier. of) bevsons who will hej paesi nL J. thjat allmember . tepd go by.-the » tion office at tb tunity. Tlhey shot] secretary their n| of persons in cxjnts foil leach Aip hi* saijd. The procession proceeded down the derter aide of the cath- edral beneath an arch of swords carried by the Knights of Colum- bus. ; Thej bishof was led to the altar ncr Gleissner who has (her of Catholic ,Ag- past 114 years,- After baiKiijet was held in Hotel [in honor of the Installation ccremon- enxled with a recep- signor J. 0. Ed Matocha. Bishop Re colorful and Ford stated. 'cessiod consisting [ of Archbishop Lucy. Of Sah ofj other di cher tjook office in a spectacular ceremony, It began with a pro- Antoijiio; the bishops Jcesesj a number of 1 mpnsiynors, md a hundred priests by Moiisigm been Ithe fa giqs fjor the the mass, a the DHskill new bishop, res officially tion tjint evxning, Fonl concluded. -Hart requests who plan to at- I'ieultural ieduca- earliesi oppor- leave Vith the es, theitjumber group, and] 25 on imtfieir par- Pictuirc s Heady In EdmondsOffice ; All members of the Camera Club who submitted prints in the last -alon land who havje not yet picked up their phonos shpuld go by A. G. Edmondsoffice jin the Physics Budding as soon possible. Wayne Martin, secretary-treas- urer-iteportej* for j the cldb, said yesterday (that the next meeting will pot be held until the fall se- Hondafy is the begin- 1k.1 7 ; country compete);! in the six events of the meet. Schools represented were Ne- braska University, Stephens Wo- mens College, Denver University, Colorado Womens College, Middle Tennessee State, University of New Mexico, Arkansas Polytech- nic College, Oklahoma University, Texas University, TCU. Texas Tech. Texas Weselyan, and! Texas A&M. A&Mh only two entrants at the meet werie John R. Case, president of the local chapter, and Erwin Hengst of CFlight Air Force. | W. T. Piper; of Piper Aircraft Company w'as present at the meet and permitted jthe two Aggie en- trants to fly hik latest light plane, the Vagabond,in all events. The events ncluded a treasure hujnt, a speed c ash, a navigational event, bomb dropping, and spot landings on both water and land. A barbecue and swim party was held Friday night and a banquet and dance Saturday night. AT present the club is making plans for attending another inter- collegiate air meet in Detroit on June 20, Case said. * stored at 35 cents per piece con- tainers not exceeding two cubic feet in volume, footlockxr sfze. Other pieces wfll bb stored at pro- portionate rafos. Storage charges will be paid at the time mg. f j J v"......................... / Tjiu 80 Expected Fory" Former StudentsCouncil Meeting Agronomy Society To Honor Seniors Graduating seniors will be hon- ored at the Agronomy Societys annual pidnic to be held Tuesday afternoon at, 5:30 in area three of Hensel Park, j A chicken fry with all the trim- mings will be featured as well as a baseball game between the stu- dents and faculty. Juniors and sophomores will serve the food. Those planning to attend the picnic should turn in their names to Mrs. Diddle at the agronomy office. There will be a charge of 50 cents per person. SENATE KILLS BILL FOR HAWAII STATE WASHINGTON, May 21 The Senate has virtually kilk'd all changes for Hawaiian statehood this year. It refused 51 to .20, to Uikjt* the Houset-approvejd bill to admit Ha- waii as the forty-ninth state away from the Senate Interior and In- sular Affairs Committee. Eighty members of the Former StudentsAssociation Council in- cluding several out-of-state mem- beis, are exported to attend the council meeting here this weekend, Dick Hel'vey, jexecutive secretary of the associatlion, said yesterday. . Election of Officers and reports from the committees of the past year's activity will be the prin- cipal business (to be discussed]. A president, (two vice-presidents, four members iof the councilll ex- ecutive board, ia representative to of stor- i serve on the Athletic Council, two j members to serve on the Develop- | merit Fund boajrd, and student loan trustees will jbe elected, Hervey stated. j Reir'stratioh will be held in the 5.MCA Lobby tomorrow from 3 to 5 p. m. The main business session will heirin in the VMCA Chapel at 7:31) tomorrow night. Sunday morjning council mem- bers will havd breakfast in Sbisa Hall, after which class agents will hold a special! meeting. 4 Its enough to drive a feller to drink,Twiggins moaned, with a> icatch in his Voice. I pointed the way toward a solu- tion of A&M's problems and this is what I get! Dh, the shame of it all.; Veteran voters seemingly ivbuk- oxl Twigginsplatform of reaction in yestcinlay's election. Observers hesitate! to say that this rebuke means tihe voters are iii complete disagreement with Twigirina all along thy line. They think per- haps some other factor lost Twig- iiH, the knee. Yesterday morning the elec- tion campaign reached Us full pitch as two ostentatious Twig gins banners were seen on the campus. ^ v.; TOMMY HILITTjli Senior Yell Lje eitday iiiuiiiiiiK wir vitiv- j. i ....... . |,l impaign reached Us full I ;sltwo ostentatious Twig- i ¥ 1 \] London Jai Flying from the main flag polo 11,¥ *1 . f Ms-i t> Af ilirt A rtn /l A I ^ t KRI id^ tder in front (if tho Academic Building was an irremovable cloth rectangle inviting tine and all to vote for] * o o j Twiggins,! This rectangle could not A WI L be removed from tho pole because Amt l" ii j lUf of difficulties with the pulley mechanism. In the rotunda of the Academic Building floated another adver- tisement. ilt was sort of a testi- monial in Twigginshonor, reput- edly set up by scholarship honor society candidates. Twiggins, still with a catch in his voicfejjsaid he was planning a trip to Florida or Tierro del Fuego or somewjhere if he didnt protest the election. ATOMIC BURNS HIT PROJECT PHYSICISTS LAS ALAMOS, N. M.. May 21 OPRadiation burns on their hands have hospitalized four scientists at the Los Alamos Atomic Project. Their injuries, described as limi- ted, were; suffered in the Vecent Eniwetok j tests of atomic weapons in the Pacific, i ------ j j TTjfT "7 ~T:, t~t 7------------------ 7-J7 Summer Orders Released For' : | . j;' J j H ; ( j I C L j '' Army and Air Force Outfits Orders for ROTC cadets slated to attend stammer camp this year have been received by the military department and officers of the de- partment have been assigned to each camp for the training period. Army cadets will report to their 11 respective training camps by midnight June 19, and air force cadets will report to Kelly Field, Texas between 8, a. m. and mid- night June 6. f Officers assigned to Kelly Field for the summer training are; Lt. Col. D. L. Hodge, Major LU A. Willey, and Lt. W. E. Cain. Train- ing will begin June 7. Both cavjalry and infantry stu- dents will go to Camp Hood, Texas. Lt. Col. G. B. Owen, Major J. M. Cook, Major N,*;W, Parsons and Captain D, J. Moran of the mill- j. W. A. Becker,! Lt. Col tary department will also go to I mere and Major C. F. that camp. i :! Col. T, A. Adcock and Major V. C. Williams have been ordereid to Fort Belvoir, Virginia, where mem- StUdents taking ordnance train- ing will go to Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland. Lt. Col. F. R. Swoger is (the military depart- ment staff officer assigned to Ahat group. Quartermaster corps students will go to Camp Lee, Virginia. Lt. Col. W. P. Scroll has been order- ed to that cainp for the summer training termj J ' | Major H. E. Meisell and Captain G. Campbell will go to Fort Eustis, Virginia where members of the trahsportationicorps will tukV their bers of the corps of engineers will dered to Fort Meade) Marylanx take their training. where cadets baking summer train summer training. Artillery cadets will go t<) Fort Sill* Oklahoma for their slimmer camp. Three officers of the tnili- ,tary departmeint have been order- ed to Fort Sijl. They are Ljt. Col. L. Ej Som- Ostner. Students taking signal corps training will go to Fort Monmouth Major L. W. Jones has been or- dered to Fort Meade, Maryland lt trail ing will in the army security agency or be ordered. Cadets in the chemical corps will take) their training at the Army Chemical Center in Mary- land. Major A. O. WHken of the militarydepartment has been or- dered to Ihut activity for the sum- mer training period. Orders for all men who will take their stmimer camp in the Fourth Army area have been distributed. Orders for cadets who will take their ttaiiiing in other army area? have beeii received and are ip the hands of! the branch instructors for distribution. Six caxiets have been assigned to act as camp reporters for the Batt during the summer camp training. All men who wish to serve as re- porter* for their camp are re- quested to come by the Battalion office for information. Men order- ed to Fort Meade, Army Chemical Center, Camp Hood, Fort Eustis, and Fort) Sill have already been contac Bill London, juniojrj neering Student, was gears president of the tfcr of the Americair Civil Entrineciri at a jme< the dub Tuesday nie'htj. L a member of BEnglnet tjs, Other (Officers , deitec Ruddy Schoddic, vigsM) es < William Bohlmap, sep 'et: ry, M. A. Landry, trcasUifir. pchlji I is a veteran civil enk ine San Antonio; Bohlmi)i| is veteran, and Landry | s. ( more from Port Ncdje . Guest speaker foil (he I'jvdrt was Frank H. Newmi n, « ing engineer frosm t ou.itii: Newmans sutyjecti ijvas and Why Is A Conjsultir g neer?He exnlaineqi th that a consulting eijig nei|)l pected to do andfshowlxd s pictures to illustrate j iji s rjojii ; -Three reasons! that! fin consulting engineers! ine to gain specialized kjijow exi^ get a broader viewpoint take care Of peak loij* Newman graduntedfj an 1931 and is now the firm of Lockwood of Houston. ml - ijn 41 Swedish Scijenti Will Visit C; Dr. Folke Fagerlindj fa nq togeneticist from Stoxlchc Im. den, will be on the campu i 1^! and 24 to confer wini I f. Blackhui st of the hot|tici ItU# partment. , Drs. FagerLinitl and] will discuss thl prohtjem# breeding. Dr. Fagerljnd obtain cytological mh erAjl | phyrantes and Rndbf eki i| available near Millipan from H. B. Parks of seum. An informal semina r ii ed for Monday afterfoo 1 in Room 104, Agricultui i ing. for men of thCj vapioiij partments to meet D| shments will be If [ ROTC Checks Due Beginning June 2 May pay Checks for advpnoed ROTC students will be available at ROTC Headqiiartcr* on June 2, 3, .and 4. , | Students must rjick up their checks before leaving for the sum- mer vacation. Undelivered checks will be re- »nce officer at § \ jhcol year 1948-40, ririni over J. B. Bochelle of CtBsembly Hall last niirht as the text: year, j ; |. , n t he sedretary-treasu rer race Foy Blantqn won the nod for sp- c al Mtcrotaa-y; Truman Martin won t ie race jfolr Ljonghorp editor, Guy E. Damiel will be Town Hall Man- ager/Ralph liamel won the Ath- letic Council berth ami Jim Ste- phens and Tommy- Splittgorber v ere elected senior yell lenders. .Stephens will be head yell leader. Kasper, a 19-year-bld agrieuD tural iecoiiomies major, won a hot- ly <011 tested race from Rochelle in t a- second riundff after the two cnulldatys outdistanced a field of f jur in the primary. Kasper Is a master sergeant, on the corps staff and is j|ttachpd to CInfantry. Lochelle, firaft sergeant of laffory, placqxl second in front of A ubrey Spnijvls; sergeant major of thx* third iregiment, and Herb Si'hwarz, busijiess major from Fort . \ forth. | f \ , ' ' Jatfvis sergeant major of the First B|attalijon, Fjelxl Artillery, taimid the vic<;-presidential not! in a runoff pxfcr Hiram Smith, 19- vear-old niernber of the band. Jac- kie Hedge, Al. K. Jacobson, J.. I), I iupek, and Homer Osbourne ctiwn I leted the fi<i'ld of six. (Jottliii'l) wop over Jerry Stewatl 4 f MelvSn. ini the closest race of t he likignt. Stewart ted (iottlicbl by . x neivottj in the primary but wax l eaten Uy two votes lifter two run- < ff.s. Roiunding out the secretary- tienlsurer field weix» Johnny Dieb Hurt Frjx'nehj ahd Lawrence Spx- tan. Ralph Daniel, lettertnan fullback 'ion the Athletic Council vote over Pete Slegall, while GuV ft. Daniel, 1 luster sergeant on the corps staff, levxiiived the Tofivii Hall jiost <|Ver George :Edwftrd|». Martin wqn the Longhorn edi- torship over Phil K. Sheet/, in the runioff after Elvis It. ('hap- imuji iviiK. eliminated in the pri- nupy. I ' "! [/ j ;• •* . j,' Sll'phns alml Snlijf'tgerher, jjim- iui* yx'll leaders this iyeuii won thd ijonijxir Lerths oVer tin.* only bther unt!i!'stii(iit, J. A. Shdrtal. THe social HecreUuy poHltson itoijti to Blantoh, in a runoff vitT- 1 ory) ovjer Wallace Uox. Howard Pietiich Sind Mehiute Stafford com- pleted the fotur-inan field. The 200 juniors Voting in the clodnoni; alsj)/ passed two renofo- 1 ions concorging uniform regulft- ibnS for next year. White belts, 1 privilege fokjen away from the uniors by the present Senior Class vasj resfored to next vears juniors. All juniors [next j year Will be lenpitted tojwqar white belts withv .greens. The class also voted to •etatn (he pjresent ruling making he iwegring! of Eisenhower Jack- •ts a senior}privilege. Court Upholds Building it Amendment lAUBTINL Tex., May 21 t/P)- Dihtrict (lourt Judge Roy C. Archeir toduy ruled Fcxmh OOO.OOO college buildint* amend- ment is Sufficient and fonsti- tuHonal.j j ' | " | The; amendment, adopted by a closts^ votje, provides a 30-year building program for 15 State- supported coileges, A&M Col- lege and foe University of Tex- as, [ftitterx opposition to the plan had centered from West Txjxas through almost (he en- tife histor)* Ofothe plan.} The election contestants are exjpecjted tjo ; appeal from the judgment (o Ihe Tford Court of Cjjvil Appeal^ .* II , 7. 5

Transcript of Batta lmn - Texas A&M...

Page 1: Batta lmn - Texas A&M Universitynewspaper.library.tamu.edu/lccn/sn86088544/1948-05-21/ed-1/seq-1.pdf · Batta lmn wmmm wiiiRprasB9:!3::ii8 r 1 yesterday ii s on Arab 1 m Utar, raakh,

Batta l m nwmmm wiiiRprasB9:!3::ii8

r1

yesterday ii s on Arab 1 m Utar, raakh, at t le Sea of Gal Id

LABOR Mjvt JESTER RiE>

AJUSTIN sponsored opponent 1 Jester is tajkfeg pbade here^I

PVBUSBED DAILY IJV THE INTEREST Oh A GREATER A&M COLLEGE

COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, FRIDAY, MAY 21,1

To Head Next Year’s

!-y

IA. Rood ma in connectiojn^ Rested fonrieS Go

» Waco or Former ~ William MqOfawjof

siil)le candi

DEFENDON NLGHf-CLUBBljNG

LONDOlf; May 21 -

persms cori| tvitlji the meetini

v. P|it M. Jlvfjf Sfti Atiprner Glneral

Dallas ap pbs- 1 { '

, i ^ nlldZABEjrn 1 i\

<-?)- ;Re-^ponaihle cjourt koui Johdod Prifcjisn Elizjibeth atninst Scottish -chjaychmi'ri ’sf criticisrij

The Seofs lcoirtphuiiod that i she went to horse races,':jri thcMttir /and flight club/ljdst Sunday in JPiris. ('(nirt'sourc^es;sai<i the rebuke# it'Ore unjustified tjufah’ tsnd unnJfntIful of1 continental amenities, . , -

J —-r—I . JL-CTBAPTISTS fsK iroitPLF,T|r

fonrf Elected Bait Editor For 1

[r^lEMPmSi Tcrjrt.JMay 21 fiopthem Raiitists took theirfsiandfoij- compl and state

to jsepan resterdinj

/IJtK

\T(

Staptzenberger Places First In Race for Athletic "

Kenneth Bond won the election as veteran1 Battalion editor i

t :■

Council_ .jt i . . . r»v....>,.w. .. ............y.. *.«, v.v,vr.v------- ----------- -—............ —and Odell IStaiitzenberger

c II i fi( h. pa IE SEPARATION^ was elected Athletic Council representative inj the general elections last night. Tom LAros,election committee chairman, announced. The vote was one of the heaviest ever received

rattion of (Ihiirch at A & M,pterdjfiyjafter hfea -im? | i Art Howard ran second in the Batt race it|nd R. L. Billingsley ran a close third.

a. Jdenunciajtipn of F ivsident 1 !Vu-; Conrad Twihrins, not to b<? Icft^H------------ L——-*-------------- L—-H-1-----—r——H———------ ------man’s appeinfmenjt. o* an ampobsa-. out. placed! .fourth. Ray Holbrook dop to the Vatican. ji i was second! in the race for Ath-:

IMPEND ATDM c^IENTIKTS )R T.OY ft F/rY CHECK )AK RIlD(jlE; {Fei n., May —

'•Tl—The uuiiperision of twd phy- sic(ists from! acciss to I'espirted, atomic fibs brought the asieiftion from other atomic . cientisw here tlujt contirucjd aciusationsvajg4irtst th4ir loyally will ma ce it mof-eidif­ficult to. g?;t scienjtis’s to wcirl^ for thp government. I *

1 •] . [[—.. | ' s rRF«SI V SIGHS FORGHOMT OF F. D- I!.

MOSCOW.j May] 2 -OTU Tas? “leating circles” in Itiissia

blajme current SoviotJ-Ameriepiiidif­ficulties oir the United Stateii Gov­ernment’s lepartufe: from tfiic pol- iciifs of Franklin D. Uoosevcit.:

k

j letic ; Council representative and : Andy Matulh was third.

There were 1873 votes cast in the eieetioiiJ

Bond received 779 votes, Howard polled 605 votes, and Billingsley had 459 votds. Twiggins was given 8 wffte-in votes, Paul Irwin .re­ceived 3 vpfos, Roland Bing took1, Ivan Yantis polled 1:, Bob Hovel received 1 vtjte, and 16 ballots were

rger received 990

ardenersU- ,('■ limy ay, /hJL. beejt iuitttad

fiift Ifduep xylmcr fm thq ichtn-plt dnnentj uvyaidsj. in the -veteran’s gfl -den ewitwt, 1*1. 1. Brifo|, pio- feshor of ; huirticUjtuY, a/mhunced

Awprda! weiv gijv \uw hajvii\g,» tHoel*

WiovrV.

tin a and

• a i ’ ■a to tilu*|7! vt t-stgirflcns,

,iy„.1 *f* if,'*addnts (have den pi oiM pro\ i<|ed h.V t|ej col- i*. The deiuu tn e#ts of taii'iicul-

ibpenlaijdsea) el ail huvl em peratirg Svith lili'se sUuwyjts.

'or his fir|st plnct garileiijiUi the lege Vie'it arei j, lllan’cy i(f(,viv-

ed.the.first iprize o' $15. Tlej sec­ond place award vo *th $10- \|eht to ). B. Cli top, am’ .he tbinl place

awiml of $5 iweii't It Roy D. fVVhite.0. }B. Oil top, am

(j:.. P. Vhs«i took'f mrth phice and rcqelvcd an! awuh ofs, $4.1 J. L.’ MihtcOF. jR. (.iliilithiam 2. H. Bejitly tcokri fifth/ sixtll, amlj.sev­enth phueS; and jir 'ceivcd $2,

■ anil $1 rrspiectivch. .T ^ .'(Tie gardens arp, located |m’t\vo

anjas, on ; ojir the !a irport rotujF uiul thei other north of^t ic Collcgf; View Auartmeiits| Indivli ual plots! are of the size tjor-a small If, family Garden, •apniaximniojly 30 l|y 40 feci.;.

The garden coriest was! hpon-.sored hy| f|ic Col ........vef he"

(ire Station De-opnjent •Associawon and|Chahi-

of Cciimem.j J. F. Jlosbor- oui.’h, exiunj-ion h >iticulturif.t| jud­ged the lilotjs ami nlade the kwards | ansordin*; tie the • Following (score crqdfts. ! | ! I i*

At leijsfc! 8 kind! of vegritiibles .ere required in a garden before

it! was (fv®n elieihse to entprt the contest. The different vetriitables were wtjrfh 25 points. pj

disqudlifietUStautzertberger re<

vott'S, Holbrook polk'd 755 votes and Matulai took 167 vofes.

Besfides receiving 8j write-ins for Battalion editor, Twiggins was re­cipient of 1 vote fotf veteran yell leader, Athletic Council represen­tative!, and ^ortghonii editor.

Tvventy-tiyo write-in votes were cast for veteran yelj leader. This list iilcludesi Ed Stajnton li Char­les Brown Ip, Vit Janda 2. Tom Stevens 2, Bennie Zinn 1, (Walter Hannl 2, Tin a Thomjis 2, Clayton

laker l,j Charles Sec- . Ciilbert 1, and J„ tt.

Lutz 1, Ed rest 2, (.’.Strauiis 2.

Twigginn rival Ivian Yantis al­so scored in the Athletic Council race. j

Bond is !a 24-yeair-old veteran fi-om Pam pa, Texas/ majoring inEngliah. He Served in Um ai my for

JSmonths as a secoi gunnery.

In additio feature wrip numagtng ex torial staffi

a staff sergeant ami lieutenant in aerial

(V to a r, Bond item amll

<■..ii veteranjStahtzenperger,

three years! 'service ijn the marines, is n junior!from .San Antonio. Hx* is a nfoinlx)! of the

In injiand 18 rtctjv Ictics.

The two Nv inners bf tint election

of. ’44,i is 1011, engineering^

semester as has nerved as

on the f‘di*

football team tramiirnl nth-

will take df ice at jthe •beginning of the fall 'kc

Earl! Rose, unopposed ja < editor.;!He is and iic pres A&M Club,CA Council,

mester. vetcraii student, ran

veteTfin Longhorn a 20-yearrold junior

dent off the, Abilene iceretaijy of the YM- and mission director

df tho Baptist Studimt Union William C. Lonquist Jr., also rani

unopposed for the position as vet-i eran yell lender. LionqUist, Class

oring ijn inanngerpent!

Item

It

0, f’.LJeheral iippeaijmce and jaktrac- tivieness of the gjnaclen with.! walk ways adjurent to lit added do1 more points to the sexiro. list, duality, unaformilyj aiid cpidition oif vege- lahles werp the mp(or factor in the judging |u|d 'wasj valued ajt 30 points., j' |

jlndicatiaiis of jr p,proved- garden -practices huch a# insect and dis­ease control, stakjng, prirnhg, cul- ti vat ion,; weed coi trol, a mf inter­cropping betted the gardeners an-

~ other 15 (.possible; joints. I[A recpiil of quantity of vege­

tables hajrfested tiom the ulpt. was kept j£nd: the vulpl of these (added 5 (more points to; jthe fipalf sjcorc.

Ford Kepresents Newman Club At

I 'j • i . |

Bishopis CeremonyCrexKl Fore of Ibiuston, a veter­

an corps junior majjorihg in bush ness, roprecented | the, NcWmap Club at the! i ist.allation ceremonies of Bishop jL J. Reicher as heaxl of the new (Catholic Diocese which includes A&M. j .

Ceremonies weije held last Thursday in St. Mary’s Cathedral in Austin. ; *.... . .' j

Ford wtys hccompanied by Mon- Glcissner and Father

Students May Store Baggage for Sum mer

Students who wish to store baggage and other personal belongings during the summer may do so under a plan re­leased by Bennie A. Zinn, assistant dean of men.

Veteran students living in Dorms 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9 may ^store all items, except lamps* in the gun room of Dormitory

Friday, May 28, from 3 until 5 mM and also from 2 until 5 p. m.

Thursxlay, June 3.ROTC students living in the ca­

det dorms may store their bag­gage, except lamps, in the guarxl room of Dorm ; i2 on Saturday, May 29, from Jl(p a, m. until 12 noon. The roomjAvill, also be open on Wednesday ahd Thursday, June 2 and 3, from 2 until 5 p, m.

Students livinjg in dorms other than 1 through 12 may store all items, including jlampsi, in the gun room of Dovm lii. The room will be open on Friday, May 28, from 3j p. m. until 5 p. m. and on Wed­nesday anxl Thursday, June 2 and .{, fromi 3 p. m. until 5 p. in.

Lamps of sludents living in Dorm 1 through 12 may be stor­ed in the gun jroom of Dorm 3. This room will be open from 3 to 5 p. m„ Friday, May 29. The room will alsoi be open at the same hours fr(|>hi Monday, May 31, through Friday. June i.Students who wish tx> attemd the i

second suminei* seitu'ster but dot J the first semester may store all j items, Including lamps, in the gun room of Donnitofyj 5, Thursday, June 3, from 2 until 5 p. tn.

Students of Little Aggieland may store their belongings in eith­er of. the places indicated above, preferably in the area where they expect tx» live next year.

Storage of all baggage will be i handled by the Agronomy Society

and all revenues received will be I placed in the treasury of the club.

KENNETH BOND Battalion Co-Editor

Martin Will EdDaniel Is Town

s; I / «»

Dan Kasper will head* the Senior Class of ’49 The presidential victory by Kasper, won by a

Field Artillery, climaxed a two-hour voting sessic present! junior glass picked a nine-man slate to he/

Don Jarvis was elected vice-president; E rich jCiSo

1,1

Number 179 i 0

.

Twiggins Threw To Contest Elect

By IVAN YANTIS

Conrad Twiggins, self-styled write-in canfli| Batt editor, threatened to contest yesterday’s caij

| tions on the grounds that intimidation, foul play, ministration were evidenCin the count.

Twiggins lost out to Kenneth Bond bv a co|u|tto 8. j 4— ----------------:-

Twiggihs was a crushed and utterly demoralized mass of chain-smoking nerves last night j j when all the ballots had bex-n *--counted,Twiggihs’ principal objection to

the validity of the results was that j l-sMofr he was not allowed to aid in thx*1 counting, uiul in addition to that he believed some of the bxixos he had gone to great pains to stuff had been unstuffed.

'

nghorn;nager

JIM STEPHENS Senior Yell Leader

Flying Aggies Attend Fort Worth Trials

GI Y -HL DANIEL Town Hitll Manager

Baggage will bo stored at the stu The newly organized Flying T4* )• dent’s risk but all possible pre.

as Aggies Club ; ttended the infot-; cautions will be taken to safe-’ collegiate air m|*et held at Eagle ! guard it, Zinn said.Mountain Lake (Air Base at Fort; Lamps will be stored at 40 cents Worth on Friday anxl Saturday, | each. All other baggage will beMay 14 and 15.

The meet was Flying Frogs o University, and and universities

sponsored by tjhe f Texas Christian

thirteen collegesthroughout the

tain, its memlers with a bar- ai Henscl llfirk Sunday cven-

t 6130. . Li:.1 : ", .

: >

arbccue * Slated uniday by FFAThe Collegiate; Chapter! of I

Future rFarmers j of Americii will eiitertai

j be cue at ink at 61if0.

'' Each' pi 25 cents f

Sincetd the inijulier. of) bevsons who will hej paesi nL J. thjat all’ member

. tepd go by.-the » tion office at tb tunity. Tlhey shot] secretary their n| of persons in cxjnts foil leach

Aiphi* saijd. The procession proceeded down the derter aide of the cath­edral beneath an arch of swords carried by the Knights of Colum­bus. ;

Thej bishof was led to the altar ncr Gleissner who has

(her of Catholic ,Ag- past 114 years,- After baiKiijet was held in

Hotel [in honor of the Installation ccremon- enxled with a recep-

signor J. 0.Ed Matocha.

Bishop Re colorful and Ford stated.'cessiod consisting [ of Archbishop Lucy. Of Sah ofj other di

cher tjook office in a spectacular ceremony, It began with a pro-

Antoijiio; the bishops Jcesesj a number of1

mpnsiynors, md a hundred priests

by Moiisigm been Ithe fa giqs fjor the the mass, a the DHskill new bishop, res officiallytion tjint evxning, Fonl concluded.

-Hart requests who plan to at- I'ieultural ieduca-

earliesi oppor- leave Vith the es, theitjumber group, and] 25

on imtfieir par-

Pictuirc s Heady In Edmonds’ Office ;

All members of the Camera Club who submitted prints in the last -alon land who havje not yet picked up their phonos shpuld go by A. G. Edmonds’ office jin the Physics Budding as soon possible.

Wayne Martin, secretary-treas- urer-iteportej* for j the cldb, said yesterday (that the next meeting will pot be held until the fall se-

Hondafy is the begin-1k.” 1 7 ;

country compete);! in the six events of the meet.

Schools represented were Ne­braska University, Stephens W’o- men’s College, Denver University, Colorado Women’s College, Middle Tennessee State, University of New Mexico, Arkansas Polytech­nic College, Oklahoma University, Texas University, TCU. Texas Tech. Texas Weselyan, and! Texas A&M.

A&M’h only two entrants at the meet werie John R. Case, president of the local chapter, and Erwin Hengst of “C” Flight Air Force. |W. T. Piper; of Piper Aircraft

Company w'as present at the meet and permitted jthe two Aggie en­trants to fly hik latest light plane, the “Vagabond,” in all events.

The events ncluded a treasure hujnt, a speed c ash, a navigational event, bomb dropping, and spot landings on both water and land.

A barbecue and swim party was held Friday night and a banquet and dance Saturday night.

AT present the club is making plans for attending another inter­collegiate air meet in Detroit on June 20, Case said. *

stored at 35 cents per piece con­tainers not exceeding two cubic feet in volume, footlockx’r sfze. Other pieces wfll bb stored at pro­portionate rafos. Storage charges will be paid at the time mg. f j

■ J v"........................./ Tjiu

80 Expected Fory" Former Students’ Council Meeting

Agronomy Society To Honor Seniors

Graduating seniors will be hon­ored at the Agronomy Society’s annual pidnic to be held Tuesday afternoon at, 5:30 in area three of Hensel Park, j

A chicken fry with all the trim­mings will be featured as well as a baseball game between the stu­dents and faculty. Juniors and sophomores will serve the food.

Those planning to attend the picnic should turn in their names to Mrs. Diddle at the agronomy office. There will be a charge of 50 cents per person.

SENATE KILLS BILL FOR HAWAII STATE

WASHINGTON, May 21 The Senate has virtually kilk'd all changes for Hawaiian statehood this year.

It refused 51 to .20, to Uikjt* the Houset-approvejd bill to admit Ha­waii as the forty-ninth state away from the Senate Interior and In­sular Affairs Committee.

Eighty members of the Former Students’ Association Council in­cluding several out-of-state mem- beis, are exported to attend the council meeting here this weekend, Dick Hel'vey, jexecutive secretary of the associatlion, said yesterday. . Election of Officers and reports from the committees of the past year's activity will be the prin­cipal business (to be discussed].

A president, (two vice-presidents, four members iof the council’ll ex­ecutive board, ia representative to

of stor- i serve on the Athletic Council, two j members to serve on the Develop- | merit Fund boajrd, and student loan

trustees will jbe elected, Hervey stated. j

Reir'stratioh will be held in the 5’.MCA Lobby tomorrow from 3 to 5 p. m. The main business session will heirin in the VMCA Chapel at 7:31) tomorrow night. Sunday morjning council mem­

bers will havd breakfast in Sbisa Hall, after which class agents will hold a special! meeting.

4

“It’s enough to drive a feller to drink,” Twiggins moaned, with a> icatch in his Voice. “I pointed the way toward a solu­tion of A&M's problems and this is what I get! Dh, the shame of it all.” ;Veteran voters seemingly ivbuk-

oxl Twiggins’ platform of reaction in yestcinlay's election. Observers hesitate! to say that this rebuke means tihe voters are iii complete disagreement with Twigirina all along thy line. They think per­haps some other factor lost Twig-

iiH, the knee.

Yesterday morning the elec­tion campaign reached Us full pitch as two ostentatious Twig gins banners were seen on the campus. ^ v.;

TOMMY HI’LITTjli Senior Yell Ljeeitday iiiuiiiiiiK wir vitiv- j. i ....... . |,l

impaign reached Us full I;sltwo ostentatious Twig- i ¥ 1 \]

London JaiFlying from the main flag polo 11,¥ *1 .f Ms-i (« t> Af ilirt A rtn /l A I ^ t

KRI id^tder

in front (if tho Academic Building was an irremovable cloth rectangle inviting tine and all to vote for] * o o jTwiggins,! This rectangle could not A WI L be removed from tho pole because Amt l" ii j lUf of difficulties with the pulley mechanism.

In the rotunda of the AcademicBuilding floated another adver­tisement. ilt was sort of a testi­monial in Twiggins’ honor, reput­edly set up by scholarship honor society candidates.

Twiggins, still with a catch in his voicfejjsaid he was planning a trip to Florida or Tierro del Fuego or somewjhere if he didn’t protest the election.

ATOMIC BURNS HIT PROJECT PHYSICISTS

LAS ALAMOS, N. M.. May 21 OP’ Radiation burns on their hands have hospitalized four scientists at the Los Alamos Atomic Project.

Their injuries, described as limi­ted, were; suffered in the Vecent Eniwetok j tests of atomic weapons in the Pacific, i

------ j j T— Tj—fT —"7 ~T:, t—~t 7------------------ 7-J7

Summer Orders Released For': | . j;' J j H ; ( ■ j I C L j ''

Army and Air Force OutfitsOrders for ROTC cadets slated

to attend stammer camp this year have been received by the military department and officers of the de­partment have been assigned to each camp for the training period.

Army cadets will report to their 11 respective training camps by midnight June 19, and air force cadets will report to Kelly Field, Texas between 8, a. m. and mid­night June 6. f

Officers assigned to Kelly Field for the summer training are; Lt.Col. D. L. Hodge, Major LU A.Willey, and Lt. W. E. Cain. Train­ing will begin June 7. „

Both cavjalry and infantry stu­dents will go to Camp Hood, Texas.Lt. Col. G. B. Owen, Major J. M.Cook, Major N,*;W, Parsons and Captain D, J. Moran of the mill- j. W. A. Becker,! Lt. Col tary department will also go to I mere and Major C. F. that camp. i • :!

Col. T, A. Adcock and Major V.C. Williams have been ordereid to Fort Belvoir, Virginia, where mem-

StUdents taking ordnance train­ing will go to Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland. Lt. Col. F. R. Swoger is (the military depart­ment staff officer assigned to Ahat group.

Quartermaster corps students will go to Camp Lee, Virginia. Lt. Col. W. P. Scroll has been order­ed to that cainp for the summer training termj

J ' ★ |Major H. E. Meisell and Captain

G. Campbell will go to Fort Eustis, Virginia where members of the trahsportationicorps will tukV their

bers of the corps of engineers will dered to Fort Meade) Marylanx take their training. where cadets baking summer train

summer training.Artillery cadets will go t<) Fort

Sill* Oklahoma for their slimmer camp. Three officers of the tnili-

,tary departmeint have been order­ed to Fort Sijl. They are Ljt. Col.

L. Ej Som- Ostner.

Students taking signal corps training will go to Fort Monmouth

Major L. W. Jones has been or­dered to Fort Meade, Maryland

lt trail

ingwill

in the army security agency orbe ordered.

Cadets ■ in the chemical corps will take) their training at the Army Chemical Center in Mary­land. Major A. O. WHken of the military’ department has been or­dered to Ihut activity for the sum­mer training period.

★Orders for all men who will take

their stmimer camp in the Fourth Army area have been distributed. Orders for cadets who will take their ttaiiiing in other army area? have beeii received and are ip the hands of! the branch instructors for distribution.

Six caxiets have been assigned to act as camp reporters for the Batt during the summer camp training. All men who wish to serve as re­porter* for their camp are re­quested to come by the Battalion office for information. Men order­ed to Fort Meade, Army Chemical Center, Camp Hood, Fort Eustis, and Fort) Sill have already been contac

Bill London, juniojrj neering Student, was gear’s president of the tfcr of the Americair Civil Entrineciri at a jme< the dub Tuesday nie'htj. L a member of “B” Englnet tjs,

Other (Officers , deitec Ruddy Schoddic, vigsM) es < William Bohlmap, sep 'et: ry, M. A. Landry, trcasUifir. pchlji I is a veteran civil enk ine San Antonio; Bohlmi)i| is veteran, and Landry | s. ( more from Port Ncdje .

Guest speaker foil (he I'jvdrt was Frank H. Newmi n, « ing engineer frosm t ou.itii:

Newman’s sutyjecti ijvas and Why Is A Conjsultir g neer?” He exnlaineqi th that a consulting eijig nei|)l pected to do andfshowlxd s pictures to illustrate j iji s rjojii ; -Three reasons! that! fin consulting engineers! ine to gain specialized kjijow exi^ get a broader viewpoint take care Of peak loij*

Newman graduntedfj an 1931 and is now the firm of Lockwood of Houston.

ml -

ijn

41

Swedish Scijenti Will Visit C;

Dr. Folke Fagerlindj fa nq togeneticist from Stoxlchc Im. den, will be on the campu i 1^! and 24 to confer wini I f. Blackhui st of the hot|tici ItU# partment. ,

Drs. FagerLinitl and] will discuss thl prohtjem# breeding. Dr. Fagerljnd obtain cytological mh erAjl | phyrantes and Rndbf eki i| available near Millipan from H. B. Parks of seum.

An informal semina r ii ed for Monday afterfoo 1 in Room 104, Agricultui i ing. for men of thCj vapioiij partments to meet D|

shments will beIf

[ ROTC Checks Due Beginning June 2

May pay Checks for advpnoed ROTC students will be available at ROTC Headqiiartcr* on June 2, 3, .and 4. , |

Students must • rjick up their checks before leaving for the sum­mer vacation.

Undelivered checks will be re- »nce officer at

§

\

jhcol year 1948-40, ririni over J. B. Bochelle of ‘C’

tBsembly Hall last niirht as the ’text: year, j ; |. ,

n t he sedretary-treasu rer race Foy Blantqn won the nod for sp- c al Mtcrotaa-y; Truman Martin won t ie race jfolr Ljonghorp editor, Guy E. Damiel will be Town Hall Man­ager/Ralph liamel won the Ath­letic Council berth ami Jim Ste­phens and Tommy- Splittgorber v ere elected senior yell lenders. .Stephens will be head yell leader.

Kasper, a 19-year-bld agrieuD tural iecoiiomies major, won a hot- ly <011 tested race from Rochelle in t a- second riundff after the two cnulldatys outdistanced a field of f jur in the primary. Kasper Is a master sergeant, on the corps staff and is j|ttachpd to “C” Infantry. Lochelle, firaft sergeant of laffory, placqxl second in front of A ubrey Spnijvls; sergeant major of thx* third iregiment, and Herb Si'hwarz, busijiess major from Fort . \ forth. | f \ , ' '

Jatfvis sergeant major of the First B|attalijon, Fjelxl Artillery, taimid the vic<;-presidential not! in a runoff pxfcr Hiram Smith, 19- vear-old niernber of the band. Jac­kie Hedge, Al. K. Jacobson, J.. I),I iupek, and Homer Osbourne ctiwn I leted the fi<i'ld of six.

(Jottliii'l) wop over Jerry Stewatl 4 f MelvSn. ini the closest race of t he likignt. Stewart ted (iottlicbl by . x neivottj in the primary but wax l eaten Uy two votes lifter two run- < ff.s. Roiunding out the secretary- ti’enlsurer field weix» Johnny Dieb Hurt Frjx'nehj ahd Lawrence Spx- tan.

Ralph Daniel, lettertnan fullback 'ion the Athletic Council vote over Pete Slegall, while GuV ft. Daniel,1 luster sergeant on the corps staff, levxiiived the Tofivii Hall jiost <|Ver George :Edwftrd|».

Martin wqn the Longhorn edi­torship over Phil K. Sheet/, in the runioff after Elvis It. ('hap- imuji iviiK. eliminated in the pri- nupy. I ' "! [/

• j ;• •* . j,'Sll'ph‘ns alml Snlijf'tgerher, jjim-

iui* yx'll leaders this iyeuii won thd ijonijxir Lerths oVer tin.* only bther ’ unt!i!'stii(iit, J. A. Shdrtal.

THe social HecreUuy poHltson itoijti to Blantoh, in a runoff vitT- 1 ory) ovjer Wallace Uox. Howard Pietiich Sind Mehiute Stafford com­pleted the fotur-inan field.

The 200 juniors Voting in the clodnoni; alsj)/ passed two renofo- 1 ions concorging uniform regulft- ibnS for next year. White belts,

1 privilege fokjen away from the uniors by the present Senior Class vasj resfored to next vear’s juniors.

All juniors [next j year Will be lenpitted tojwqar white belts withv

.greens. The class also voted to •etatn (he pjresent ruling making he iwegring! of Eisenhower Jack- •ts a senior}privilege.

Court Upholds Building

it AmendmentlAUBTINL Tex., May 21 t/P)-

Dihtrict (lourt Judge Roy C. Archeir toduy ruled Fcxmh OOO.OOO college buildint* amend­ment is “Sufficient and fonsti- tuHonal.” j j ' | " |

The; amendment, adopted by a closts^ votje, provides a 30-year building program for 15 State- supported coileges, A&M Col­lege and foe University of Tex­as, [ftitterx opposition to the plan had centered from West Txjxas through almost (he en- tife histor)* Ofothe plan.}

The election contestants are exjpecjted tjo ; appeal from the judgment (o Ihe Tford Court of Cjjvil Appeal^

.*

II

, •

7. 5