o?r*:* * •yneef; ijtie jtsaltalionnewspaper.library.tamu.edu/lccn/sn86088544/1953-08... ·...

1
* •*-*o?r*:* *•yneef; rl 11q culated Daily chemistr1 90 Per Cent * The Sou:iOCaj Residents Volume 53 tsadegh Jailed; n Needs Money Ousted and ailing ex-Premier titute atL: two assis:. ■n in their nt. The Lon?:: 03: ion of theft-------- ■ation at Ms ested in h chanical e.A 1 involve vf inection \vi: items asset icture of ie ® Mechanic I'mieal. pete kansa'ng " ^NIran (^)Shilt-epwt Mossadegh, long regarded as one of Irans richest >ration, pwiported to have been transferred Monday from the itiibution ofgrs Club here to a jail cell. natural was kicked out last week at the climax of an extens: vering the,- upheaval whcih first sent the Shah into a brief ten brought him back after the Nationalist Pre- Fresh mlld^faii. "wa'-lhtiM-Port 0;f Mossadeghs incarceration under more e stains are ondit ions came as dispatches from Washington iter, rinsings urgent appeal for n. ands for his country sympathetic study by Ii-14a, Cot:ates. Texas, ha- > official sources said iblieation is States, acting as a fices of e dleman, also might tention has o clear the way for ting drouth jmed [ at settling the British - Lranian oil nformants said Loy Jnited States ambas- J"JJC|j)ran, had arranged to ^ Irans new premier, azollah Zahedi, in a o discuss the new re- n policies. Henderson IJtie JtSaltalion PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1953 Published By A&M Students For 75 Years Price Five Cents der r < IV I found Zahedi out on ■lomatic relations be- i and London and ne- settlement of the oil (! row started in 1951 eghs government na- ALIS nian properties of the - 1 Anglo-Iranian Oil I1C ATE ste » fossadegh surrendered Zahedi, the aging ex- one of Irans biggest lias been detained in % (four well - equipped 3 top floor of the of- The building is one of End most luxurious in \eat Piece) ON. urces said that three J;hs lieutenants who with him also were o the jail ,location of >t disclosed. by Zahedis police \ liU/liFatemi, Mossadeghs ster, and a key mem- P17AK lste(I government. He I l-f A1V . to be hiding in the xr 'rVT Tehran. The govern- kk I it a price of 100,000 k lead. With the latest till/ID -change rate on the lllVll . S'hty Rials to the dol- s apprehension would 1 /^AjVlSO to the authorities, l/l A Viiments failure to say deghs jail is situated 1S ^'eflect newspiipsy dec- t mobs would kill the ' f they could get at , who cut quite a fig- nnk pajamas and tear- during the more than e dominated Iranian t stand a series of li told newsmen Sun- ted premier will be Jioth houses of parlia- and majlis, for mis- tted up to the time reed him replaced by 15. Then Irans Su- will try him for acts immitted in his name ate until his arrest, mier said. reports from Wash- hat the new govern- •ellent chances of ob- •gency aid from the ;. The Shah told news- , that Iran must have tely. Asked whether >.nt would accept help the monarch replied ' 'e are ready to acept ,iybody.new finance minister, |J n that his first' job Pjjmoney enough to pay alaries of government (IONS IE S'. TS . ice l clear in Washington 1 decision on what aid States government i to Iran would have 1 Stvle^f by President Eisen- .'. 2-- . , serve Meets i FriedJnday Night Volunteer Air Re- rtg Squadron held a day night at 7:30 in i Headquarters, 3600 Ave. Capt. Diony- s of Netherlands was the program, is stationed at Bryan le is in charge of all air students receiving d flying training in Training films com- togram. :servists, both airmen are invited to attend luadron training meet- ists receive points to- ent and promotion, [1ST 2# Third Annual Industry Meet Scheduled Here The third annual Industrial De- velopment Conference will be held at A&M Sept. 3-4. Sessions will be held in the Memorial Student Center. Top-flight businessmen will take an active part in the conference including William M. Shepherd, vice-president, Arkansas Power & Light Co., of Little Rock. Pres. David H. Morgan of A&M, will give the welcome address and Gordon H. Turrentine, vice-presi- dent, Texas National Bank, Hous- ton, will preside at the opening session at 9 a.m. Speakers include A Rogers Mi- elly, industrial commissioner, the Southern Pacific Lines, Houston; Paul G. Shelly, styrene production manager, the Dow Chemical Com- pany, Freeport; John M. Stem- mons, president, Industrial Prop- erties Coi'p., Dallas; H. E. Bur- gess, president of the East Texas Chamber of Commerce, College Station; Dr. John R. Stockton, di- dector, the Bureau of Business Re- search, University of Texas; W. R. Archer, national vice-president, the National Association of Manu- facturers and chairman of the board, Uncle Johnny Mills, Hous- ton; Trevor. Clark, associate direc- tor, Southeast Research Institute, San Antonio; Lee S. Paine, re- search economist, Industrial De- velopment SWPJSgJpy^SFtioilp Engi- neering Experiment statrbn and Dr. A. V. Moore, A&M Dairy Hus- bandry Department. HELDA.3.C Orville G. Miller of Decatur, 111., stationed at Sheppard Air Force Base, Wich- ita Fals, wears handcuffs as he eaves office of District Attorney George W. Anderson. The 19- year-old airman is held under bonds totalling $75,000 on three charges of arson. Officers es- timated loss from the fires at a total of $716,000. They quoted Miller as saying he set fires be- cause Wichita Falls is dull and I wanted to create some excite- ment.Library Employs New Junior Clerk Miss Judy Garr^tson of Green- ville, Mississippi, was employed as a Junior Catalogue Clerk in the Cushing Memorial Library on Au- gust 1. Miss Garretson was graduated fro mthe Mississippi State College for Women. She received her de- gree in Library Science in June 1953. OUSTER HEARINGDistrict Judge C. Woodrow Laugh- lin of Alice, sits in the witness chair m an unprecedented court proceeding at Austin to determine whether he should be ousted from office. In background, listening to testi- mony, is District Judge D. B. Wood of Georgetown, acting as special master for the, Texas Supreme Court. Staf f Officers Named For Corps Of Cadets Frederick Hartel Mitchell has been appointed cadet colonel of the cadet corps at A&M, it was an- nounced Thursday. He is a senior from Galveston and his duty as- signment is cadet corps command- er. Appointments and assignments to the corps staff, approved by the president of the college, for the school year 1953-54, also include John Kert Goode from Bertram, as cadet deputy commander of the corps with the rank of cadet col- onel. Other cadet assignments to the corps staff with the dank of lieu- tenant colonel include Stanton Paul Bell of 505 Delmar, Corpus Christi, G-I (adjutant); Jerrell Bennett Jr. of 350 Bellaire, Fort Worth,, G-2 (public information officer); Roy Franklin Sullivan, Pampa, G-3 (op- erations); Thomas D. Theriot, Sour Lake, G-4, (supply); Charles A. Garyj, San Marcos, inspector general; fde Peeples Trotter, Bry- an, chaplain; Roscoe L. Hunt of 2535 E. Houston, San Antonio, ath- letic officer; Carroll W. Phillips, Henrietta, scholastic officer; Rich- ard Needham, Texarkana, com- mander consolidated band; Vol. M. Montgomery of 418 Riverside, Abi- lene, corps liason officer. They are all seniors. Juniors with the rank of mas- ter sergeants on the corps staff include Jesse Frank Fork of 3122 21st St., Lubbock, operations ser- geant; Fehrlin E. Tutt, Rotan, sup- ply sergeant; Conrad M. Cum- mings of 654 Longleaf Dr., Shreve- port, La., athletic sergeant; Thom- as H. Baker of 1519 Harbert, Mem- phis, Tenn., intelligence sergeant; Allen R. Heimer, Blanco, communi- cations sergeant; Earl L. Pike, Hammond, La., consolidated band liaison sergeant. Commanding officers of the first regiment, first wing and first com- posite regiments, with the rank of colonel, announced today include Bobby Keith Boyd, Tahoka, com- manding officer, first regiment; William M. Reed of 1035 Fulton Ave., San Antonio, commanding officer, first wing; Victor R. Ken- nedy, Fredonia, commanding offi- cer, first composite regiment. They all are seniors. Aggie-Ex Ordered To European Post HUNTSVILLE, Ala.(Spl.) Lt. Max Statman, son of M r. and Mrs. Charles Statman, ,6442 Pem-I berton Dr., Dallas, Texas', has been reassigned to the European Com- mand from Redstone Arsenal, the Army Ordnance center of the roc- ket and guided missle projects. He graduated from Texas A&M in June, 1952, with a bachelor of science degree in chemical engi- neering. Prior to being assigned at Red- stone as a procurement officer in the National Procurement Division, Statman completed the basic com- pany ornance officers course at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md. Lt. Statman entered the armed forces in July, 1952. He holds an ROTC commission. Public Schools Open Sept. 8 \&MSept. 14; Allen Sept. 16 /- Schools in Bryan, College Sta- tion and the rural areas of Brazos County will all open the fall ses- sion on September 8. Texas - A&M College will open September 14 for the schools 78th year of operation, and Allen Mili- tary Academy will delay opening until September 16. This will be Allens 69th year of operation. With the new Ben Milam School sufficiently completed for use and a full complement of teachers en- gaged, Bryans public school sys- tem is ready to swing into opei-a- tion, according to Superintendent W. R. Carmichael. Built at a cost of $245,000, the Ben Milam School is a part of the $400,000 improvement program for the Bryan schools this summer. Eight rooms were added at the Travis Elementary School and eight at the Crockett elementary. L. S. Richardson, superintendent of A&M Consolidated Schools, has announced completion of his fac- ulty for the coming year with the addition of six new teachers to the staff. Although the annual school cen- sus conducted last spring promised only a slight increase in enroll- ment in rural schools for the 1953- 54 year, transfer requests during the summer indicate a substantial gain in new pupils. At Allen Academy, Texasold- est preparatory school for boys, advanced registration indicates there will be approximately 450 students, which will fill all the available housing facilities and is the normal enrollment the school has maintained through the past several years. More than 6,000 students are ex- pected to enroll this year at Texas A&M College. New students will start registering September 4 and registration for new students for the Basic Division will be Septem- ber 11. Registration for all other students will be held September 12. Students Return From Park Job Charles Gray, Victor Hinze and Bill Carroll have returned from summer employment with the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. They were employed by the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service to work in Yellowstone National Park. Hinze and Carroll were employed to col- lect fish and fish eggs; and Gray conducted tounsts about the hatch- ery explaining its operation. South Koreans lief use India as Peace Member Communist AppeasementFive Little Stinkers Find Home at A&M Skunks Sunday night gave the air around Law and Pur- year Halls a very disagreeable odor and brought on protest- ing reactions among students. Responsible for the odor was a mother skunk and her litter of four. The skunks were caught Sunday about 7:00 p.m. on the lawn of the old Admin- istration Building by Gary M. Rosenberg, senior D. H. major from Bellville and three other students. Gary related his story as follows: We were just driv- ing back from a weekend trip when we spotted the mother skunk and her litter on the old Administration Building 1 a w n. After considerable chasing and excitement we fi- nally caught them and I sat on the front fender of the car, holding them as we drove. The Veterinary Building was closed so there was nothing to do but bring them back to the dorm. I will try to get them deodor- ized and have them as pets.And speaking of deodoriz- ing, Gary will probably be us- ing some deodorant himself for the next day or so. DeWareFieldhouse Will Get New Lease What will become of DeWare Field House upon completion of the new field house? This is a ques- tion which has a very interesting answer. DeWare Field House is to be remodeled following completion of the new building. The outside will look approximately the same, but the inside will have a' new and different look. Instead of one floor, there will be three floors with the top one being the bas- ketball court. The other two floors will be divided intq class rooms and offices. ________________ ^_______ £___ Army Is Still Flying But Wings Clipped Theres still an A in the United States Army that stands for Avia- tion. Combat in World War II and in the Korean conflict proved the tremendous value of the use of small aircraft by the Army. Today many irreplaceable military func- tions are performed by Army pro- peller-driven craft and helicopters. Planes have been used to detei- mine the exact positions of adjoin- ing units, to examine natural ob- stacles and to locate the emplace- ments of the enemy forces. To accomplish these objectives, air- craft are assigned to the Infantry, Artillery, Armor, Corps of Engi- neers, Signal Corps, Transporta- tion Corps as well as the Medical Service Corps. The value of using aircraft for Artillery fire direction has assum- ed tactical importance. Another example of the use of planes to guide ground activity became ap- parent during the Korean action. That is, a preponderance of observ- ed Artillery fire was directed by observers flying in the small L-5s and L-19s. Over 140 thousand missions were flown in the Korean war. Aiding the Artillery in blasting enemy fortifications was not the only use of Army aircraft. In addition, there were Administrative flights that carried vital supplies and also acted as military couriers as well as a rapid means of transporting important personages to and from the fighting fronts. Army air- planes also made front line re- connaissance flights collecting in- formation and taking vital photo- graphs, increasing the knowledge of ground force commanders and thereby enabling more secure troop movement. Evacuation flights weer also important actions of Army aviators. Helicopters have come of age as efficient movers of men and supplies. Over 16 thousand wound- ed fighting men were evacuated Charge Hurled At India UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.LP).South Korea served notice Monday it will refuse to sit on the same side with India in the Korean peace conference. Foreign Minister Y. T. Pyun of South Korea accused India of appeasingand traffickingwith the Communist aggressors. He told the U.N. Assemblys political committee it would be next to impossiblefor his country to take part in the conference with India on the U.N. side. After the committee adjourned, Col. Ben C. Limb, South Koreas permanent observer at the U.N. and a former Foreign Minister, told reporters that Pyun meant to say it would be “impossibleto sit with India on the U.N. side. He said he was making the change to clarify the texa. V. K. Krishma Menon, India delegate, was obviously greatly angered at Pyuns speech, but he told newsmen he had no comment. He may speak late Tuesday or Wednesday. Pyun used unusually bitter language to tell the committee that South Korean President Syngman Rhee did not want India on his side at the conference. Some delegates have said that Rhee threatened to boycott the confer- ence if India is invited, but Pyun and Limb made it clear they would not object to India attending on the Communist side if India desired to do so. Pyun said after the meeting that South Korea has no right to keep India out of the peace conference but that the Rhee government has a right to refuse to attend the con- ference. He said South Korea may walk out of the conference if the U.N. Assembly sends India to the meeting as a part of the U.N. side. Pyuns blast at India came shortly after Sen. Alexander Wiley (Rep.) of Wisconsin, chairman of the Senate foreign relations com- mittee, appealed in a public state- ment for India to withdraw from the heated contest. V. K. Krishna Menon, Indian delegate, told a reporter that India was not withdrawing. During the day Menon talked three times with Russian delegates but refused to discuss the conferences, one of which was with Soviet Delegate Andrei Y. Vishinsky. Pyun told the delegates that the participation of India in the peace conference would presage the con- tinuance of appeasement so long as India remains what it has been.India is not only trafficking with the Communists but intrigu- ing with them to make the free world look contemptible and thus eventually undermining the very foundations of the United Nations,Pyun said. Pyun touched lightly on the ques- tion of giving Russia a seat. He said his delegation believed that since it is the. Soviet Union that has both masterminded and sup- ported the Kroean invasion, it is only proper that it should come in on the Communist side, not other- wise.$3r 000 Given To Exp. Sta. For Research A grant-in-aid of $3,000 has been made available to the Texas Agri- cultural Experiment Station by the Distillers Feed Research Council Inc., of Cincinnati. The fund will be used in support of studies in which various sources of unidentified growth and hatcha- bility factors are being evaluated and the relationships between such factors and known nutrients are being studied, Dir. R. D. Lewis of the station says. This research is conducted in bur department of poultry husban- dry and biochemistry and nutrition under the supervision of Dr. J. R. Couch,Dr. Lewis says. The Texas Cottonseed CrushersAssociation Inc. of Dallas, has re- newede its grant-in-aid for $1,000 to the station, Dr. Lewis also an- nounced. It will be used in sup- port of cotton breeding studies un- der the direction of Dr. D. L. Jones, superintendent of Substation No. 8 at Lubbock. by the helicopter, the Whirly Birdof GI fame. Helicopters were able to go places that even the jeep with all its ruggedness could not go. The helicopter was seldom stopped. Evacuation was not the only purpose of these Egg Beaters.They supplied the front lines with whole blood, plasma and medical supplies. The speed and versatili- ty by which its missions were ac- complished were factors in saving the lives of many soldiers. It takes men to keep the Army in the air. Men must be traine<i to complete the expanding air- program of the Army. With this expansion come new opportunities for todays aviators and for the men who will be tomorrows air- soldiers. Training is open to officers up to and including first lieutenant, who must be less than thirty years of age. Applicants must have completed an OfficersCandidate School or the Basic OfficersCourse. No prior flight experience is necessary. Training is accom- plished in a nine-month course of instruction conducted at Gary Air Force Base, San Marcos, Texas, and at the Army Aviation School, Fort Sill, Oklahoma. Upon graduation the Army avi- ator receives his wings. This sym- bol of flight is one of gallant Army aviation traditions of the past, but also a symbol that will give direction to the Army of the future. As a bonus for incentive, pilots receive additional flight du- ty pay. Additional information on appli- cations and training is available from Major R. T. Blair, Aviation Division, Fourth Army, Fort Sam Houston, Texas; Captain Joseph W. Bowler, Medical Field Seiwice School, Brooke Army Medical Cen- ter, Fort Sam Houston, Texas; and Fourth Army Flight Section, Brooks Air Force Base, Texas. Maybe Skunk' Was Seeking Front Phew A half grown skunk was seen trotting down the aisle of the Palace Theater Sunday night. Movie goers scattered, and many left the show as the skunk odor spread through the theater. How the skunk obtained en- trance to the theater is not known, but Sunday night pa- trons will readily verify the fact that there definitely was a skunk. ______________ 7 Mrs. Ebbs Leaves Library August 31 Mrs. John Ebbs of the Cushing Memorial Library has announced her resignation as head of the cir- culation department effective Au- gust 31. Mrs. Ebbs was formerly employ- ed at Midwestern University at Wichita Falls. She joined the staff of the Cushing Library on June 1, 1952. ,

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Page 1: o?r*:* * •yneef; IJtie JtSaltalionnewspaper.library.tamu.edu/lccn/sn86088544/1953-08... · chemistr1 90 Per Cent * The Sou:iOCaj Residents Volume 53 tsadegh Jailed; n Needs Money

* •*-*o?r*:* * •yneef;

rl 11q culated Dailychemistr1 90 Per Cent

* The Sou:iOCaj Residents

Volume 53

tsadegh Jailed; n Needs Money

Ousted and ailing ex-Premier

titute atL: two assis:.

■n in their nt. ’► The Lon?:: 03:ion of theft--------■ation at Ms ested in h chanical e.A 1 involve vf inection \vi‘:

items asset icture of ie ® Mechanic I'mieal. pete

kansa'ng " ^N’ Iran — (^)‘Shilt-epwt Mossadegh, long regarded as one of Iran’s richest

>ration, pwiported to have been transferred Monday from the itiibution ofgrs Club here to a jail cell.natural was kicked out last week at the climax ofan extens:

vering the,- upheaval whcih first sent the Shah into a brief —ten brought him back after the Nationalist Pre-

Fresh mlld^faii.

"wa'-lhtiM-Port 0;f Mossadegh’s incarceration under more e stains are ondit ions came as dispatches from Washingtoniter, rinsing’s urgent appeal for n. ands for his country

sympathetic study byIi-14a, Cot’:ates.Texas, ha- > official sources said

iblieation is States, acting as afices of e dleman, also might tention has o clear the way for ting drouth jmed [ at settling the

British - Lranian oil nformants said Loy Jnited States ambas-

J"JJC|j)ran, had arranged to ^ Iran’s new premier,

azollah Zahedi, in a o discuss the new re- n policies. Henderson

IJtie JtSaltalionPUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGECOLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1953

Published By A&M Students For 75 Years

Price Five Cents

derr < IV I found Zahedi out on ■lomatic relations be- i and London and ne-

• • settlement of the oil(! row started in 1951 egh’s government na-

ALIS nian properties of the- 1 Anglo-Iranian Oil

I1CATE

ste

» fossadegh surrendered Zahedi, the aging ex- one of Iran’s biggest

lias been detained in % (four well - equipped

3 top floor of the of- The building is one of

End most luxurious in

\eat

Piece)

ON.

urces said that three J;h’s ’lieutenants who with him also were o the jail ,location of >t disclosed.

by Zahedi’s police \ liU/liFatemi, Mossadegh’s

ster, and a key mem- P17AK lste(I government. He I l-f A1V . to be hiding in the

xr 'rVT Tehran. The govern- kk I it a price of 100,000 k lead. With the latesttill/ID -change rate on the lllVll . S'hty Rials to the dol-

s apprehension would 1 /^AjVlSO to the authorities,

l/l A Vi’ iment’s failure to say degh’s jail is situated

”1S ^'eflect newspiipsy dec- t mobs would kill the

• • • ' f they could get at

, who cut quite a fig- nnk pajamas and tear- during the more than e dominated Iranian t stand a series of li told newsmen Sun- ted premier will be

Jioth houses of parlia- and majlis, for mis-

tted up to the time reed him replaced by 15. Then Iran’s Su- will try him for acts immitted in his name ate until his arrest, mier said.reports from Wash-

hat the new govern- •ellent chances of ob- •gency aid from the ;. The Shah told news-

, that Iran must have tely. Asked whether >.nt would accept help the monarch replied

' 'e are ready to acept ,iybody.”new finance minister,

|J n that his first' job Pjjmoney enough to pay

alaries of government

(IONS

IE S'. TS .

icel clear in Washington 1 decision on what aid

States government i to Iran would have

1 Stvle—^f by President Eisen-

.'. 2-—- . , serve Meets

i Fried—Jnday Night

Volunteer Air Re- rtg Squadron held a day night at 7:30 in i Headquarters, 3600

■ Ave. Capt. Diony- s of Netherlands was the program, is stationed at Bryan

le is in charge of all air students receiving d flying training in

Training films com- t’ogram.:servists, both airmen are invited to attend luadron training meet- ists receive points to- ent and promotion,

[1ST 2#

Third Annual Industry Meet Scheduled Here

The third annual Industrial De­velopment Conference will be held at A&M Sept. 3-4. Sessions will be held in the Memorial Student Center.

Top-flight businessmen will take an active part in the conference including William M. Shepherd, vice-president, Arkansas Power & Light Co., of Little Rock.

Pres. David H. Morgan of A&M, will give the welcome address and Gordon H. Turrentine, vice-presi­dent, Texas National Bank, Hous­ton, will preside at the opening session at 9 a.m.

Speakers include A Rogers Mi- elly, industrial commissioner, the Southern Pacific Lines, Houston; Paul G. Shelly, styrene production manager, the Dow Chemical Com­pany, Freeport; John M. Stem- mons, president, Industrial Prop­erties Coi'p., Dallas; H. E. Bur­gess, president of the East Texas Chamber of Commerce, College Station; Dr. John R. Stockton, di- dector, the Bureau of Business Re­search, University of Texas; W. R. Archer, national vice-president, the National Association of Manu- facturers and chairman of the board, Uncle Johnny Mills, Hous­ton; Trevor. Clark, associate direc­tor, Southeast Research Institute, San Antonio; Lee S. Paine, re­search economist, Industrial De­velopment SWPJSgJpy^SFtioilp Engi­neering Experiment statrbn and Dr. A. V. Moore, A&M Dairy Hus­bandry Department.

HELD—A.3.C Orville G. Miller of Decatur, 111., stationed at Sheppard Air Force Base, Wich­ita Fals, wears handcuffs as he eaves office of District Attorney George W. Anderson. The 19- year-old airman is held under bonds totalling $75,000 on three charges of arson. Officers es­timated loss from the fires at a total of $716,000. They quoted Miller as saying he set fires be­cause “Wichita Falls is dull and I wanted to create some excite­ment.”

Library Employs

New Junior ClerkMiss Judy Garr^tson of Green­

ville, Mississippi, was employed as a Junior Catalogue Clerk in the Cushing Memorial Library on Au­gust 1.

Miss Garretson was graduated fro mthe Mississippi State College for Women. She received her de­gree in Library Science in June 1953.

OUSTER HEARING—District Judge C. Woodrow Laugh- lin of Alice, sits in the witness chair m an unprecedented court proceeding at Austin to determine whether he should be ousted from office. In background, listening to testi­mony, is District Judge D. B. Wood of Georgetown, acting as special master for the, Texas Supreme Court.

Staf f Officers Named For Corps Of Cadets

Frederick Hartel Mitchell has been appointed cadet colonel of the cadet corps at A&M, it was an­nounced Thursday. He is a senior from Galveston and his duty as­signment is cadet corps command­er.

Appointments and assignments to the corps staff, approved by the president of the college, for the school year 1953-54, also include John Kert Goode from Bertram, as cadet deputy commander of the corps with the rank of cadet col­onel.

Other cadet assignments to the corps staff with the dank of lieu­tenant colonel include Stanton Paul Bell of 505 Delmar, Corpus Christi, G-I (adjutant); Jerrell Bennett Jr. of 350 Bellaire, Fort Worth,, G-2 (public information officer); Roy Franklin Sullivan, Pampa, G-3 (op­erations); Thomas D. Theriot, Sour Lake, G-4, (supply); Charles A. Garyj, San Marcos, inspector general; fde Peeples Trotter, Bry­an, chaplain; Roscoe L. Hunt of 2535 E. Houston, San Antonio, ath­letic officer; Carroll W. Phillips, Henrietta, scholastic officer; Rich­ard Needham, Texarkana, com­mander consolidated band; Vol. M. Montgomery of 418 Riverside, Abi­lene, corps liason officer. They are all seniors.

Juniors with the rank of mas­ter sergeants on the corps staff include Jesse Frank Fork of 3122 21st St., Lubbock, operations ser­geant; Fehrlin E. Tutt, Rotan, sup­ply sergeant; Conrad M. Cum­mings of 654 Longleaf Dr., Shreve­port, La., athletic sergeant; Thom­

as H. Baker of 1519 Harbert, Mem­phis, Tenn., intelligence sergeant; Allen R. Heimer, Blanco, communi­cations sergeant; Earl L. Pike, Hammond, La., consolidated band liaison sergeant.

Commanding officers of the first regiment, first wing and first com­posite regiments, with the rank of colonel, announced today include Bobby Keith Boyd, Tahoka, com­manding officer, first regiment; William M. Reed of 1035 Fulton Ave., San Antonio, commanding officer, first wing; Victor R. Ken­nedy, Fredonia, commanding offi­cer, first composite regiment. They all are seniors.

Aggie-Ex Ordered To European Post

HUNTSVILLE, Ala.— (Spl.) — Lt. Max Statman, son of M r. and Mrs. Charles Statman, ,6442 Pem-I berton Dr., Dallas, Texas', has been reassigned to the European Com­mand from Redstone Arsenal, the Army Ordnance center of the roc­ket and guided missle projects.

He graduated from Texas A&M in June, 1952, with a bachelor of science degree in chemical engi­neering.

Prior to being assigned at Red­stone as a procurement officer in the National Procurement Division, Statman completed the basic com­pany ornance ■ officers course at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md.

Lt. Statman entered the armed forces in July, 1952. He holds an ROTC commission.

Public Schools Open Sept. 8 \&MSept. 14; Allen Sept. 16/-

Schools in Bryan, College Sta­tion and the rural areas of Brazos County will all open the fall ses­sion on September 8.

Texas - A&M College will open September 14 for the school’s 78th year of operation, and Allen Mili­tary Academy will delay opening until September 16. This will be Allen’s 69th year of operation.

With the new Ben Milam School sufficiently completed for use and a full complement of teachers en­gaged, Bryan’s public school sys­tem is ready to swing into opei-a- tion, according to Superintendent W. R. Carmichael.

Built at a cost of $245,000, the Ben Milam School is a part of the $400,000 improvement program for the Bryan schools this summer. Eight rooms were added at the Travis Elementary School and eight at the Crockett elementary.

L. S. Richardson, superintendent of A&M Consolidated Schools, has announced completion of his fac­ulty for the coming year with the addition of six new teachers to the staff.

Although the annual school cen­sus conducted last spring promised only a slight increase in enroll­ment in rural schools for the 1953- 54 year, transfer requests during the summer indicate a substantial gain in new pupils.

At Allen Academy, Texas’ old­est preparatory school for boys, advanced registration indicates there will be approximately 450 students, which will fill all the available housing facilities and is the normal enrollment the school has maintained through the past several years.

More than 6,000 students are ex­pected to enroll this year at Texas A&M College. New students will start registering September 4 and registration for new students for the Basic Division will be Septem­ber 11. Registration for all other students will be held September 12.

Students Return From Park Job

Charles Gray, Victor Hinze and Bill Carroll have returned from summer employment with the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. They were employed by the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service to work in Yellowstone National Park. Hinze and Carroll were employed to col­lect fish and fish eggs; and Gray conducted tounsts about the hatch­ery explaining its operation.

South Koreans lief use India as Peace Member

‘Communist Appeasement’Five Little Stinkers Find Home at A&M

Skunks Sunday night gave the air around Law and Pur- year Halls a very disagreeable odor and brought on protest­ing reactions among students.

Responsible for the odor was a mother skunk and her litter of four. The skunks were caught Sunday about 7:00 p.m. on the lawn of the old Admin­istration Building by Gary M. Rosenberg, senior D. H. major from Bellville and three other students.

Gary related his story as follows: “We were just driv­ing back from a weekend trip when we spotted the mother skunk and her litter on the old Administration Building 1 a w n. After considerable chasing and excitement we fi­nally caught them and I sat on the front fender of the car, holding them as we drove. The Veterinary Building was closed so there was nothing to do but bring them back to the dorm. I will try to get them deodor­ized and have them as pets.”

And speaking of deodoriz­ing, Gary will probably be us­ing some deodorant himself for the next day or so.

DeW areFieldhouse Will Get New Lease

What will become of DeWare Field House upon completion of the new field house? This is a ques­tion which has a very interesting answer.

DeWare Field House is to be remodeled following completion of the new building. The outside will look approximately the same, but the inside will have a' new and different look. Instead of one floor, there will be three floors with the top one being the bas­ketball court. The other two floors will be divided intq class rooms and offices.________________ ^_______ £___

Army Is Still Flying But Wings Clipped

There’s still an A in the United States Army that stands for Avia­tion.

Combat in World War II and in the Korean conflict proved the tremendous value of the use of small aircraft by the Army. Today many irreplaceable military func­tions are performed by Army pro­peller-driven craft and helicopters.

Planes have been used to detei’- mine the exact positions of adjoin­ing units, to examine natural ob­stacles and to locate the emplace­ments of the enemy forces. To accomplish these objectives, air­craft are assigned to the Infantry, Artillery, Armor, Corps of Engi­neers, Signal Corps, Transporta­tion Corps as well as the Medical Service Corps.

The value of using aircraft for Artillery fire direction has assum­ed tactical importance. Another example of the use of planes to guide ground activity became ap­parent during the Korean action. That is, a preponderance of observ­ed Artillery fire was directed by observers flying in the small L-5’s and L-19’s.

Over 140 thousand missions were flown in the Korean war. Aiding the Artillery in blasting enemy fortifications was not the only use of Army aircraft. In addition, there were Administrative flights that carried vital supplies and also acted as military couriers as well as a rapid means of transporting important personages to and from the fighting fronts. Army air­planes also made front line re­connaissance flights collecting in­formation and taking vital photo­graphs, increasing the knowledge of ground force commanders and thereby enabling more secure troop movement. Evacuation flights weer also important actions of Army aviators.

Helicopters have come of age as efficient movers of men and supplies. Over 16 thousand wound­ed fighting men were evacuated

Charge Hurled At IndiaUNITED NATIONS, N.Y.—LP).—South Korea served

notice Monday it will refuse to sit on the same side with India in the Korean peace conference.

Foreign Minister Y. T. Pyun of South Korea accused India of “appeasing” and “trafficking” with the Communist aggressors. He told the U.N. Assembly’s political committee it would be “next to impossible” for his country to take part in the conference with India on the U.N. side.

After the committee adjourned, Col. Ben C. Limb, South Korea’s permanent observer at the U.N. and a former Foreign Minister, told reporters that Pyun meant to say it would be “impossible” to sit with India on the U.N. side. He said he was making the change to clarify the texa.

V. K. Krishma Menon, India delegate, was obviously greatly angered at Pyun’s speech, but he told newsmen he had

no comment. He may speak late Tuesday or Wednesday.

Pyun used unusually bitter language to tell the committee that South Korean President Syngman Rhee did not want India on his side at the conference. Some delegates have said that Rhee threatened to boycott the confer­ence if India is invited, but Pyun and Limb made it clear they would not object to India attending on the Communist side if India desired to do so.

Pyun said after the meeting that South Korea has no right to keep India out of the peace conference but that the Rhee government has a right to refuse to attend the con­ference. He said South Korea may walk out of the conference if the U.N. Assembly sends India to the meeting as a part of the U.N. side.

Pyun’s blast at India came shortly after Sen. Alexander Wiley (Rep.) of Wisconsin, chairman of the Senate foreign relations com­mittee, appealed in a public state­ment for India to withdraw from the heated contest.

V. K. Krishna Menon, Indian delegate, told a reporter that India was not withdrawing. During the day Menon talked three times with Russian delegates but refused to discuss the conferences, one of which was with Soviet Delegate Andrei Y. Vishinsky.

Pyun told the delegates that the participation of India in the peace conference would presage the con­tinuance of appeasement “so long as India remains what it has been.”

“India is not only trafficking with the Communists but intrigu­ing with them to make the free world look contemptible and thus eventually undermining the very foundations of the United Nations,” Pyun said.

Pyun touched lightly on the ques­tion of giving Russia a seat. He said his delegation believed that “since it is the. Soviet Union that has both masterminded and sup­ported the Kroean invasion, it is only proper that it should come in on the Communist side, not other­wise.”

$3r 000 Given To Exp. Sta. For Research

A grant-in-aid of $3,000 has been made available to the Texas Agri­cultural Experiment Station by the Distillers Feed Research Council Inc., of Cincinnati.

The fund will be used in support of studies in which various sources of unidentified growth and hatcha- bility factors are being evaluated and the relationships between such factors and known nutrients are being studied, Dir. R. D. Lewis of the station says.

“This research is conducted in bur department of poultry husban­dry and biochemistry and nutrition under the supervision of Dr. J. R. Couch,” Dr. Lewis says.

The Texas Cottonseed Crushers’ Association Inc. of Dallas, has re- newede its grant-in-aid for $1,000 to the station, Dr. Lewis also an­nounced. It will be used in sup­port of cotton breeding studies un­der the direction of Dr. D. L. Jones, superintendent of Substation No. 8 at Lubbock.

by the helicopter, the “Whirly Bird” of GI fame.

Helicopters were able to go places that even the jeep with all its ruggedness could not go. The helicopter was seldom stopped.

Evacuation was not the only purpose of these “Egg Beaters.” They supplied the front lines with whole blood, plasma and medical supplies. The speed and versatili­ty by which its missions were ac­complished were factors in saving the lives of many soldiers.

It takes men to keep the Army in the air. Men must be traine<i to complete the expanding air- program of the Army. With this expansion come new opportunities for today’s aviators and for the men who will be tomorrow’s air- soldiers.

Training is open to officers up to and including first lieutenant, who must be less than thirty years of age. Applicants must have completed an Officers’ Candidate School or the Basic Officers’ Course. No prior flight experience is necessary. Training is accom­plished in a nine-month course of instruction conducted at Gary Air Force Base, San Marcos, Texas, and at the Army Aviation School, Fort Sill, Oklahoma.

Upon graduation the Army avi­ator receives his wings. This sym­bol of flight is one of gallant Army aviation traditions of the past, but also a symbol that will give direction to the Army of the future. As a bonus for incentive, pilots receive additional flight du­ty pay.

Additional information on appli­cations and training is available from Major R. T. Blair, Aviation Division, Fourth Army, Fort Sam Houston, Texas; Captain Joseph W. Bowler, Medical Field Seiwice School, Brooke Army Medical Cen­ter, Fort Sam Houston, Texas; and Fourth Army Flight Section, Brooks Air Force Base, Texas.

Maybe Skunk' Was Seeking Front Phew

A half grown skunk was seen trotting down the aisle of the Palace Theater Sunday night. Movie goers scattered, and many left the show as the skunk odor spread through the theater.

How the skunk obtained en­trance to the theater is not known, but Sunday night pa­trons will readily verify the fact that there definitely was a skunk.______________ 7

Mrs. Ebbs Leaves

Library August 31Mrs. John Ebbs of the Cushing

Memorial Library has announced her resignation as head of the cir­culation department effective Au­gust 31.

Mrs. Ebbs was formerly employ­ed at Midwestern University at Wichita Falls. She joined the staff of the Cushing Library on June 1, 1952. ,