v v» _"fc: ./^^lV#&«&&i W jr.y^A,^ » »**¥\-»*V $*,» VA-v*, <$> * V^V 'l^'fet &? « The World Crisis Pages 4, 5 VOLUME 51 With Freshman Hero . . •>;-•--•. „_!. j.«m Price Five Cents -<"*•» * iliHV^v $kVPj5 ;#^w4 £ S-SMS-sh .. . •• \_ " -1* "**r «<•Flj$t * Coljig **fia lly I n J ft • S o u Ih•* t V^> \\& t v 4 + **S5. ^1 «--— -„ AUSTIN. TEXAS, SUNDAY, JANUARY 7, 1951 -W -« v K* -VjA-4^ f—w STORY, log®tasee 7 j-*S§w t);sJf \ -''" t-W'sr®* *• ,pg jffp, fa^Fiy ,-'<-'m %&i''S'V* mrnJ •'•>'1]itff m! *k .MLi % u ! ', Ts^1^ »? ' > M ^^vlyJU> 1\ ^ •* „ ^J. j .j-U-U,„„v-t-Eight Pages Today NO* zt'te ~wtT" Drafting All 18-Yea^ £y th* Prttf ­ from 21 months to 27 or possibly SO labn^i^ Basic military training for all l8-year-old youths and com­v By ANN COURTER on deferments and exemptions. , Beautiful girls; frustrated stu-the freshman hero, bat duty for many of them were advocated Saturday by Sen­ When things After a talk Saturday with President Trtttfi dents, and the big wind . of the go wrong, she weeps on the sh'ouU ator Martin (R-Pa), only retired major general in Congregg. draft all sweep-by John Matthews, der of her consoling buddy, White House ^ong with other, congressional leaders, Senates ^ "Tiie 18-year-<)ld makes a grand combat soldier," Martin naive freshman, as he views the "Plash" Doggin, photographer for campus for the first, time in the campud publications. said, adding: * Lyndon Johnson \U-Tex) said the Senat» Armell Service^ scenes of "Time, Staggers On," In real life "Flash" is Randy Preparedness Subcommittee would begin manpower heur« annual musical show which.begins "There is no question that Congress must completely over­ Dodson, 21-year-old radio broad­i go Wdedy , v-'• Thursday evening in Hogg Audi­haul the present Selective Service Act quickly." n s n e n s a ^ -v f ' " torium. casting major who will graduate Leaders in both the Senate and House announced that pub­"Secretary of Defense Marshall will present the adminis­ Produced by Theta Sigma Phi, directly into the Army at the end national fraternity for women in of this seinester. He has sung in lic hearing would begin shortly on administration proposals tration's recommendations," Johnson, chairman of the Sea«\>? journalism, the IhW^snjtfgg' controls over-manpower. by Tommy Jones, with music by on the campus has appeared in These include revisions of the draft act that would lower shall will speak for all agencies of the government.rovpfred Harvey Schmidt, and choreogra­the "Round-Up Revue," "Forty 4.-8­ phy by Persig Hopkins. the induction age from 19 to 18, extend required services in the manpower question. Acre Follies/' and "Hipsy Boo." Tickets may be purchased from ' : * 4' . . i , ' : • L.J: „ Dodson is a member of Radio The draft act members of Theta Sigma 3®, or Guild and the Curtain Club, and is 9 and under it the DefeisaaT at the University Co-Op, Hemp­ also a. transfer from Kilgore Jun hill's Book ' Stores, William-ior College. Department already has Charles Music Co., the Texas Book Cheesecake, important ingre­ed for induction of 240,000 Store, J. R. Reed Music Co., the dient of college life, is personified young men in the 19 throughMusic Building box office, and by "Lungs" Bedlow, acted by Journalism Building 108. 26 age bracket for the Janu­ Jane Boulter. A senior drama Hero of the 1951 TSO is a ary-March quarter of tids jrwiv education major, Jane is a trans­young freshman coming to college Graduates of .the College of day by Joe Farrar, director of ploying engineers will select em­Such a rate, if continued, wouldfer from NTSC. She has appearedwith high and innocent ideals only Engineering ar« having youths—or ir "The Corn/is Grfeen," and no diffi­the Student Employment Bureau. ployees regardless of selective ser­draft 960,000 lust to be caught in the tangle of stu­culty securing jobs, even' if they short . of 1,000,000—into the "School for Husbands," and the Farrar said that students likely to vice or reserve status. If the pros­ dent politics and intrigue. He is 1950-TSO. She Is a member ~ot are eligible for the draft. be . called into service are having pective employe is called into armed services this yeaxv —•­ portrayed by (Jerry Matthews, So says W. R. Hudson, execu­a very difficult time finding jobs. Officials; say -that -more-^ ­ Curtain Club and Zeta Tau Alpha the service before reporting, his sophomore acting major. x tive assistant to the Dean of the "Job opportunities forengineers 1,000,000 young men mtist enter sorority. job will be held open for him, a A member of Curtain Club, College. are , better now than they have statement from the corporation the armed services each year to Matthew* has appeared in seven The character she portrays ir ''Engineers are critical ma^stial been in two years," Hudson con--says. • • •: attsin the minimum -goal of musical»withthe Houston Sum­the campus popularity queen; who} now and will probably remain so tintied. "We are not having dif-500,t>00 for the Army, fTavy and j Company. Hudson continued, "The coming mertime Light Opera goes all out for publicity and will Air-Forces set. by PWsident-Trtt^ for the next six to eight years," ficutly in finding jobs; we are Ht will be remembered 6n the dtf anything to get' "what she shortage of engineers has already Hudson explained Saturday. having difficulty in convincing the campus for performances in "The Wants. Unless some of those la the 19­ "Many boys feel that because they boys that >they should take jobs." been foreseen by the big com­World: We Make," "The Merchant A special productioh number in are eligible for the draft they Hudson alluded to' a coming 26 age bracket now defer^^Ml PHYSICAL CULCHOQR. Ruth Munson and' Jim Forwald show panies. That is why they are wil­ of Venice," "Hipsy Boo," and this year's shew is the "Registra­can't get jobs, hut they are shortage of engineers in future made eligible it apparently .will' "School for Husbands." He also what physical education a+ The University of Texas.did for them ling to take men who may be with tion Day Ballet," which includes wrong." years. be necessary to take t large num­ appeared on a television produc­such Sequences as the Physical in the special Registration Ballet, part of the 1951 TSO which Hudson's statement points up Last year there were 52,000 them only a short tlme-r-because ber of the 18-year-olds to iner cent of the stu­ who will portray him. Pitts is a A dim cellar with a large sup­handed in before the beginning of telly and physically alert Whea dents to play will be offered dur­ 26-year-old student from Dallas ply of the oil that burns at the Dead Week: 1. term papers, in­he becomes a little older he is set who has appeared in "Dear Bru­ing Dead Week which begins witching hour is the* habitat of cluding all essays, theses, synop­Jn his wmyt»" 1 -c Thursday. The remaining ;20 per Suggests tus" this year and in more than those students /$hose mental pro-ses, and the like, and 2. term;pro-Martin, who rose from private' cent—eager students that they a dozen plays in the past. A mem­cesses are more direct than others jects, including any type of'pro­to major general in bis long aTmr^ Immediate construction will be­are—will review a semester's Citizens must act to .keep the ber of Curtain Club, he worked "who would cavort midst pleasures, ject as&igned for completion out­Kfill not, Haskew added. career, said "history of our eottn-• gin on the $646,000 state head­work as a preliminary gesture to nation's best teachers out of the for one season ' in professional 'palaces, night clubs, and movie side regular hours. Also, teachers salaries must be try proves that men 18 and erea * quarters. and library building of fall-terat examinations. ' draft, L. D. Haskew, dean of the kept at. a level to cut*, outside theater in New York. houses. Rejecting worldly pleas­These practices are permitted younger make fine soldiers^' the State Medical Association of Cqllege of Education, told an edu-attractions, he declared. . ^ , Associate editor of the Ranger, Movie theaters, night clubs, ures they retdre to their dim cel­during Dead-Week: Texas, announced Dr. S. N. Key, catipti conference here Wednes­Haskew spoke before a confer­ Linda Smith, is acted by Janice and an assorted number of front­lars and in monkish seclusion pur­ Reeves, 21-year-old, sophomore Sr., chairman of the building com­door steps have been the beck and 1. Assigning advance work day. ence of school executives and oil sue intellectual attainment. "Deed Sweef to Teach mittee.. Building were daily (including daily problems), who transferred from Kilgore contracts call in.the past to the above-men­the legend r'~^Dean^^ fiaskew made-^^an except company tax experts from fiity­ approved at a recent meeting of Week," so goes, and the giving of a short quiz Junior College. A Curtain Club-tioned 80 per cent. These pea­evolved from these-—cheek oner— tion to those teachers who volun­eight districts, supported largely probationer, she is employed 'as the building committee andrBoard sants of the educational system, a. admirable, b. silly, practices. covering the assignment for that teer or whose special qualifications by taxing oil properties. of Trustees in Fort Worth. , day; History Seminai .full-time, secretary. of .the Departs howeYer, lalways_. pfcovide them­-After ^Wednesday, these prac­m*ke them valuable to the armed Two other meetings,'concerned —Lamar Boulevard and Nifie^ 2. Giving postponed, quizzes for with improving teacher certifica­ mejat of Physics, and is enrolled selves with an out. Rationalise tices *re not permissible: 1. the ' ^«v William -ijj,Warrea ^ 4$wwE teenth Streets will be the build­ for only one course. tion steps into the-picture when giving of quizzes or written re­individual students who present "Lay people must take the tion and getting better music edu­chairman of the. • • faculty «f ing site. .The association is* tem­they are confronted with, the is­acceptable excuses for not having cation, held the same day. were For TSO Janice must portray porarily occupying an old resi­views covering more than that lead in asking draft boards to de­^rkins School of Theology, 8ou4 a 25-year-old graduate student dence at Guadalupe and West sues of Dead Week. It go&s some-day's assignment, or 2. the giving taken the regular, quiz; and fer teachers in public schools who These meetings were sponsored tbern Methodist University, will^ by the Texas Education Agency. who falls hopelessly in love with tjiing like this: "How can anyone 3. Accepting postponed paper render good service," he said. Seventh Streets. of any part of a final examina­offer a seminar in the Depeitiaeittb learn in one week what hasn't tion. ' v : •• * and projects from students who School officials cannot request Construction will "start m the of History tiie second semester. present acceptable.' excuses for deferments, and patriotic teachers immediate future-if no new emer­1 Wats Interview Dr. M. B. Gutsch. chairman 1 delay. .. , gency: regulations intervene. Fur­Department^ eanoaneed^ -?:.v The'following recommendations MacCorkie Takes nishings and equipment for the Coffee Time' Whitehall Repairs Set Women Student! The, seminar will deal witk building will cost an, estimated for Dead Week have been offered those forces in America hi^l $50,000 in addition to the con­by the 20 per cent whose voices At 50 Days in Contract For Army Career est whielfc were responsible for the ys you heat echoing from their. . i1' Economy Offer / struction costs. as can eventual separation ef dhurd* eeHntract for reconstruction dim cellars. V Capt. Betty M. Sayre ahd Sgt, stat« and tihe adoption of the prin­ Dr. Stuart MacCorkie; munici­of Whitehall Co-Op was awarded 1; "Beaucoup" coffee, • -Vslsv. Anne K. Schuler of the Headquar­ciple of complete religious liberty* pal research 'expert and" Austin ROTC Will Talc. Men "Coffee Time," the replacement Wednesdays C;at tfie same times, to T. F. Scallorn of Austin Thurs­2. "Beaucoup" meditation, and ters Texas Military District were St. Sweet i* the outetaadhig au. City Council member, has tenta­for Friday Frolics, will make its and on Fridays fr.om 9 day by the offiee of the eomp- At Mid-Sem«st*r • 3. "Beaucoup" lists of alibis in on the campus Friday interview­tbor»t# oatUs subject. Dr.Out tively accepted ,ti»e executive di­tiroller. '•/„ debut Friday afternpon from 3 to o'clock. case one fails. ing women interested in reserve saut. * rectorship of the Texas Economy The contract," for $12,6867 final aanoancemMt I Col.; "Wilttin said the new en­the chief interest of Capt Sayre The Commission was'appointed rollees.. could take the second se­placement. and Sgt. Schuler, since applica­of couwies bwtause i^kas w«e ' by Gov. Allan Shivers last March mester > courses first, bqt must Students suggested to the Free: tions for this program must be completed „in,, time, for to study state government costs make'up the first semester courses Dance Committee the idea offer­in San Antonio by January 15. tion, Dr. Gutsch aijd seek economy routes. Lack later during the program. J -ing a dance on Friday afternoon-Regular army commissions are of funds has delayed its work. It -"Freshman students infcthe to help utilize the Union. more permanent than those is the L^­Is not expected to make recom­ ROTC program must be in at least The Free Dance? Committee fa reserve. Women receiving regu­ i Coffeorum Picks mendations to the 52nd Legisla­ one year, before they can be de­its' meeting Friday discussed lar commissions will he those ex­ ture,. which convenes Tuesday.' ferred from the draft," he said. plans for the dance end set' up-* jdhiim steering committee to pl4p the layout, publicity, and refresh-in the future. Selections ar« competitive and are made af­ter « thorough aereening proced­eaviloav^t a*d. eeom VLs4-cre5 mm » Members of the steering ettp-ure and includes; investigation* tiona, ox By CHARLIE LEWIS * mittee "are Ed Notestine, Margaret T Endress, Ronnie West, .JPortep t <' * *. i ' a moral coda «> ard^l , The geology lab instructor was "But tl>« erratic mal* «Uad«th Johnson, Jean Welhauscji; Jimmy Services Sunday These oqh&bi %yi WI;laboriously drawing a glacier on a mena* apart—lik« patii^n eB Laughlin, and James Lusk. They r *"• tMWfWWHOB an the blackboard. .After some, little taent, «nuli*r *t grlof." will meet Monday at 4 o'clock jta For Chancellor's Uncle difficulty, he jokingly asked ed to model. <*•* the Union to make final plans for ' I ?«&«cal s«ry|e^ for & the first dance. <•» "Why?" she purred ifi a low; In a chemistry lab not' long ago, JWwwtar la connection with ttew ideas to velvety voice."Do I act like an tjie instructor aslce4 a vtadent cellor James will he what H2S04 was. -promote student 'interest in i»e_|>eig|P^ ^ Unioq, tbfvjjlnlte ; *1 know' it," the student strug­ begin playing recori !r*»csrfr«jiyni U£On»profestor of.military -sciofica, gled. tip of my ieacher a1,, M*} -"u« iar and sttni-clawical thisVweek 4. Wmdhajw and Mis$ ••farl A»n^n«o#«ssistaiW daaa of (•'Mr*. Hartjia Sfitime th* follow{nx bit of ora-jtongee.% ^ , a graduate m deefi» on. Wednesday arid Thursday from ^ Mty M. Sayr# doas'tba . t«ry in • l«**l opinion, decided to Universi^r Law School in 1895 "Well^' the instructojf Mmrled, 9, to 4 o'clock in the Main Loung* «fh^a. Hident, fanptoyflaeBt^ 0?ract«»lf. -ihef women too can Ho fbeif part In a waj crjtf*,' fa ''h&ion'f it/fimpio «Wiat« it to his "Iworlu" ]»rof " jflplt IVs ni-Music will continue to bo played At game that approached ilingi • 88*88, at halftime; ing the last nine minutes of the minutes of the first half, then"', cedure mosi f|lwaM ptoportloM la the last five On a jump shot by Ralph Gra-horns ahead to stay with 11 min-te Yearlings scored 14 •quickly put on a gcoring splurge.£— minutes, the Texas Longhorns town.took it away Man Rice, v» wunder, two field goals and a free utes left to play. • "* • • t»f their own—eight by Joe Cor-le^d by Cortez. ipJMfcted off a desperate Rice rally A few seconds later the game throw by Gerhardt, and a charity Price added » field goal, end YEARLINGS. (43) tez—to build up a lead that Rice 5 Six points by the San Antonio^ t£t» «dn the Owls,66-54, for their WHS, sewed up when light fighting toss by McDermott, the Owls Black hit an underhsnd'crip shot could never really threaten. lad built Texas' lead to 1®-^ with^ '""-"-"Ud straight Southwest Confer-for the Wall, intentionally fouled grabbed the lead after four min­to give Texas a &-41 lead. Mohr, f "The closest the Owlets came in about six minutes remaining.vietoryhere Saturday night. Leon Black. The former alUState ute! of play in -the second half, Powell, f the second half was eight points<— Schwinger hit for Rice' with thre*~ With Dowies and Scaling taking v; Led by sophomore^guard George performer at Martins Hills ea! 82-31. -care of alflhe remaining scoring, McCurry, e 27-35—with about 10 minutes left minutes left, but a crip by Ford,;Stealing, wh» scored 18 points for threwin his firstfree throw -as scorer .tor tho Ford, g in the game. But-the Yearlings two free, throws by Buddy Cal-• Texas came back to tie it, up on Texas advanced their lead until fklgh-point honors, the Steers had Texas elected to take the: second Moore, g t^o free throws by Scaling and a' that fatal last minute when the longhorn cagers is James Dow­ began stalling in earnest and that houn, and a hoOk shot by Cortes '.~;:":«aere than one anxious moment in out of bounds. . I • Cortes, f folWw-tip two pointer by Falk Owls exploded for six points-— ies who ably Held his iojs hbhori was all as far as Rice was con-put the Yearlinga out front, 24-11,. • closely game • Wore Rice had eight seconds But they Lowrey, g idrtefScaUng^ tl\ree"p^tnt4shWtofYictory,hbw~ cerned. — at the half. " """""" " % i«>proximat«V%000 fans in Rice's only managed to tie up Cecil Mor­ White, g f'v*ew field house. gan and the Jump for the ball toss, 85-85. ever. Rice Saturday night. \ '' ' Cortez, who could collect only The Yearling* weye hot at the ' one point thi last 2QjninuteB, and outset of the last half, building With • little over five minjutes ended the game. Totals ^_ : 14 15 15 43 K^^mainiiig to play, Texas enjoyed Scaling wasn't the Longhorns' OWLETS (32) Gib Ford were by far Texas' best up their biggest margin at 18 alijfc: ;»<»»»*_ to* comfortable 8-point only leading ft ftpf tp TTCoring punch.' points, 29-l1. In fact, it could be* bulge over Bice. The situation tory for JUm Dowies played a Lance, f 3 6 5 Cortez totaled nine points, and said that For3^ ^s" K<^~forn6e\ 'iirmw' looked better when Jim standout offensive game, scoring Fulfer, f i. 0 0 4 0 Ford led all scorers with 15—nine scored those five points in 50 -18 Victory •" Dowiae and Sealing towed in crip 14 points. It was just a year ago Schwinger, e —6 2 3 14 of which came in the second half. seconds with Schwinger tallying , shots as the Owls pressed all over In the Houston Rice gams that Beavers, g __S 0 5 6 About the only bright spot in nine points? the Owlets -rallied to ; iHi« court trying to break a Texas Dowies first broke into the Steer Wylie, g __0 0 2 the Owlet attack was Eugene pull up to a 10-point deficit, 25% Game : vilfleese..-.. starting linenp, and he's been Small, g ™_1 1 3 Schwinger, 6-6% center. This lad, 35, with eleven and a half minutes" Then trailing, 48-86, with a there ever since. MOBILE, Ala., Jan. 6.—(^P)— bama's Ed Salem, and set up the cloudy skies. share in Cullman, f _ —.0 0 Or* who resembles more than some­left-Then Harvey Gilliam hit' minute left to play, the Owls Sealing was the master per­ Players Jechec, f i Bucky Curtis, Vanderbilt!s rangy third score with another long pass. the gate receipts, but the amount „..l 0 2 what former Rice greats like Bob about two minutes later to make, struck for two gpals fa. less than former, however. He drove well Schroeder,, e —0 0 2 the. score 27-35. end, staged a sensational, pass re­The North .staged an aerial ex­of the distribution wasn't immedi­Kenney, Bill Henry, and Bill Tom~1£ seconds as Jim Gerhardt under the basket to hit for lay-ceiving performance to lead Steve hibition of its own featuring Ne­ately announced. ~ Gilliam* f ....1 0 0 when they played freshman ball, However, the Yearlings went rammed home a tip in and Charley ups with dnerring accuracy be­ Kelley, g -j— __0 0 Owen's South forces to a. 19-18 braska's Fran Nagle and" UCLA's The South pile'd all its scoring 0 made 14 points. into a deep freeze, shooting only ­ -Tighe chipped In a crip shot. sides coining up with the ball at win ov«r~Ehe favored North in the end Bob Wilkinsqn and wpund up The contest was a very slow and crip was ayailable^ juj4-_ Texas only led, 55-52, with 42 the right time in the right places second Annual Senior Bowl-foot­on the South's one-yard line as iri a furious second quarter, when Totals 6 28 32 dull with the Yearlings when-' a affair it came > seconds to play. on defense. His 18 points included ball game Saturday. the game ended. ^ from behind, and surged Half time score: Yearlings 24, coasted into victory. in front to stay. Then the North, •t' -An unheralded Rice sophomore, seven field foals. •Owlets 11. The six fe«t, three inch wing-" A , disappointing crowd of had a bruising which relied on. ^ij^eague added another two-pointer A big contribution to the Texas Free throws missed: Lance 2, man nabbed two touchdown tomes 13,232 turned out for the contest, ground game in the first half,.took IJTO Mcmdi istn1. And the Owls victory was the guarding perfor­from Tulahe's Joe Ernst and Ala-played in mild weather under Fulfer 2, Schwinger 3, Small 3, to the air in the final quarter in Girls Parade Monday mance done on Uie Owls' leading Ford 6, Moore, Cortes 2; wmm a desperate effort to win. *f74V» ft pf tp Joe was held to 11 points as Don Actually, a conversion by Ken 0km -Falk, i 8 8 8 Klein and Joe Ed Falk stuck to tucky's all-America Bob Gain pro­1 , Dowies, £ 4 1 14 the Itice senior consistently. Falk vided the victory margin. It came Klein, c 1 6 3 did most of the work, as Klein was after the South's third touchdown, By LOUISE COLE :>yBcaIh*g» g 4 8 18 forced to sit out most all of the and was the only extra point of Woman's Intramural Writer ft^omaek,*. 8 4 4 second half after picking up his the game. • ' -Hundreds of campus lovelies, Thursday at 7:30 o'clock the final 0 1 fourth personal shortly after in­ Georgia's Billy Mixon scored the clad in bathing suits, and wearing sixteen will parade before the NCAA Conference SMU Mauls Bears ; Hawis, «* _ 0 4 termission. South's third touchdown at the SsmiI on (A« A«neiat»d Prts» half masks, will parade in judges first in campus clothes, •'.:,;:Sl*dt# g 1 0 Falk scored eight points ' and DALLAS, Jan. 6.—{#):—Dallas football rules. The unlimited sub­start of the second quarter on a TCU won its second consecu­Women's Gym Monday afternoon and then in evening dresses. ^"^ICorjrwa* p « « 'Black added seven mox», as he becomes the college athletie world stitution irulO and the fair catch four-yard sweep aroun.d end. tive Southwest Conference basket­at 4 o'clock in the annual posture The judges for the first two turned in one of his best varsity next week, rule, which was eliminated from Oklahoma's powerhouse, Leon ball game Saturday night by contest. rounds will be Mrs. Frances Craw­ totals : 21 14 20 86 performances. ' The National Collegiate Ath­football last year, will be the ma­Heatk, and Kyle Rote of SMU downing the favored Arkansas Spectators will be excluded ford and Miss Shiela O'Gara of Jim Gerhardt .led Rice scoring letic Association and its branches jor topics. The coaches say their counted two of the North's scores Razorbscks, 42-31, fn Cowtown. from the Monday and Tuesday the Department of Physical Train­with Me-_/ 8s#M:-,-i • ** ft pftp sixteen points, while will be meeting here. safety men were being massacred to wind up long ground drives. The Frogs were led by forward preliminary rounds, but can attend ing and Miss Dorothy Noll from /S mHudl,< , 8 4 4 16 Dermott's eleven points took sec­The sanity1 code governing fi­through elimination of the fair A 1'5-yard toss from Nagle to the Harvey Fromme who garnered 15 the finsis beginning Thursday at the Department of Health andWhite, f . t 1 4 S ond high honors.for Riee. nancial aid to athletes will be catch and want it back. A num-rangy Wilkinson brought Bo Mc-points. The Christians are unde-7:30 p.m. Physical Education. Judges for the —HtiBttW&tt, : need. not 22 yards, setting the stage for • . those whose names begin with Q Delta. ~ specify any limit although the lotte, N.C., on January 4. eeded in HeathTs scoring plunge. fs ~ . ^ " through Z Monday at 5 o'clock. Southwest alrieady has a limit and Mrs. Michalke is the former With the time ticking away and ®u*' Wins-Rockiie Award Tuesday at 4:30 o'clock all those says it plans to keep it. Barbara Bible, BFA '50, daughter the South clinging to a .narrow remaining in the contest must Beau Bell to CoachBy BftUCft ROCHE T h e Southeast Conference of Athletic Director f). X. Bible. WASHINGTON, Jan. 6.—(/P)—ham MTIMNI C» ordiwtor hasn't yet joined the Southwest Mr. Bichalke, BS '49, is working 19-18 lead, the North cut loose The Touchdown Club of Washing-appear for the second round. 1951 Aggie Baseballers^ H l« Hk* swimming, want te son, Dorm H, and Frank Hsfer-and Southern in promoting • the for the Aluminum Company of with an overhead offensive from toil Saturday night gave its 1950 |&®llay water polo and .have no team nick, Pem Club, 89 pointa each; its own 27-yard line. amendment 'but indicated such America in Charlotte. awards to some of the country's COLLEGE STATION, Jan. 6 %, H play with, fbe intramural of-Charles Gorin and Reuben Rab&go when Bernie Moore, Southeast .A pass, from Nagle to Texas' top athletes at a gala dinneF. Bob Smith, Hugh Meyer (/P)—It. C. (Beau) Bell, former PC0«e ipleoklng for you. of Pem Club, 86 points each; and Ben Procter carried to the North Named Aggie Captains Texas A&M star and a major Conference Commissioner, called Vice President Alben Barkley, Headquarters for men's intra-Ed Burrows, Pem Club, 85 points. 42-yard'line. Rote fired a 22-yard league player for eight years, Sat­ for H joint meeting of the three Intramural Schedule cabinet members, Supreme Court sMnsl aetivitiea is irttaging a spe-Walter Shur, Hillel, and Roy R. toss-to Arkansas's Buddy Rogefs, COLLEGE STATION, Jan. 6 urday was named baseball coach conferences Thursday. Justices and other government eial siffort to got independent stu­Day, Baptist Student < Union, 82 and Nagle tossed to Rote on the (&)—Bob Smith of Houston was of the Aggies. He aucceeds The American Association of notables along with top sports au­ dents joying water polo. pointa each; and Bobby Jack Tur­ MONDAY So,uth 13. Heath carried to the picked as the most valuable player Marty Karow, who resigned last College Football Coaches, which BASKETBALL thorities were among the guests Wedneeday st 4 o'clock, team ner, University Christian Church, "" "• CLASS A li-yard line and fumbled. With of the 1950 Texas A&M football summer to .go to Ohio State. •frill meet Wednesday, will talk 7 o'clock invited to the $15-a-plate black team at the annual winter sports swnagers sad titoss interested' in 81 pointa. over the matter of professional Alba Club vt. Cliff Court*. Tennessee's Bud Sherrod recover­tie affair at a leading hotel. Ho was selected by the athletie, water tp«r% will meet in the -Thirteen of the top fourteen cam­7:36 o'clock ing for the South. banquet Saturday night. council which also accepted the baseball raiding the college Gregory Gym Trophy Room to men in Miea Division are Oak Braekesridcc Hall va. Dorm J. In the final minute, Nagle fired The Knute Rockne Memorial Smith and Hugh . Meyer of resignation of football lino coaeh puses. President J. F. McKale of Sil2 o'clock' dsaw wf individual and' team Pi Kappa Alpha ti. Sigma Phi Kp*llon. Student Publications, tnc. titm in eaehi division (Cteb, Fra-COLUMBUS, D., Jan. 6.—<#)— Sigma Alpha Epsllon vs. Alpha Epsllon News contributions will be accepted by telephone (2-247S) or at the editorial tcrnity, Church, Mica) having the-AnitJn Clob 10. IntliMt Ten* dub Dodgers Sehoen advertising be in J.B. 10S Marian* Cl«b It, Torkkk Oak SI. Vic Janowics, Ohio State Univer­%T office J.B. 1, or at the News Laboratory J.B. 102. -Inquiries eoneeraing delivery Draft vs. Houae. and should made (2-2478). gtestest numb«r nt All-Tear Tro­ sity's all-America halfback, visited 6:46 o'clock Ajr 'r«M lOtO K. Dma H I. Lasnbda Chi Alpha Delta Kappa Ep-Students are invited to visit the editor and associate editor during tfcs vs. the campus today as the first step morning" hours. phy pointa. As of Saturday, here Www Hobm Sl. JUmUlB' Rack* I.. * ailon. Opinions of the Texan ate not necessarily those of the Administration er other are tirn big three in each divfaioa TUOK. weiK>r <)«U«It troai Draft toward re-instatement n«t spring. Delta Sigma, Phi vs. Phi Kappa Ta«. University officials. Dodfta. - " a] The triple-threat gridder was Hargrove House vs. Shoalmont Arms, Entered as sec.ond-class matter October 18, 1S4S at the Post Office at Anatin, the rate toward the trophies, Blonqaist Sw*d«« vn Vjr default fpomN ' 9:24 o'clock Texas, under the Act of March 3,1879. • Ppoints,|n -parenthesis SMactant Dra««na. dropped from school because he Pi Kappa Alpha vs. Phi Delta Theta. s by iafaalt (nm Xio vs. Theta XI. Rrathar Hatl won failed two courses during the fall Theta Chi ASSOCIATED PRESS WIRE SERVICE T V^sternity ZHviisioB~>Phi Gaai-Craoda Vall«r. Wichita Yellow Jackets vs. Manie De- LiUJ* kf default quarter.' Under school regulations pressives. The Associated Pre°s is exciasively entitled to the use Tor republication of all > H O i -J FOR ME N r-wU DeiU (1085.8), Sigma Alpha Camw trom news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and (1014.8), Helta *obawTgab. he must remain during the local items of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of publication of all Xapps t Pem Auodtttai aad IMnt I*un out Scores for found three due on or before Other matter herein also reserved. dafanltad to f Texas' ner*up;'Ralph Person, lo# hurdler j our III a recent automobile accident. »t»$ Jpetsr Haoyoscr^ PM Delta point* that won the Southwest JUrvrell Hawkinson, half-mile run­, pofMs; 4»d Jiauny Conference Championship' last Ray Manic, runa»rrup in the ja­speciol Daniel Baiter Coach Fired m Dslte, 81 year and is facing a big rebuilding velin ttrow; Bobby Billon, quar ^jpojgrfw* * # job ftrom retarnflng lettermen and ter-mUer, And Bay ^omaek, high BROWNWOOD, Jan. t.—m~ collection of fabric samples -Jfc-^ m m't, • JilL -''"7 v' Miea Division—Don Smith, Oak «6wwBISrie HIlP Boj^ Masters, assistant" football 48 points; Bill ^Kminedy, NMlr*tipI flfUMda l«ttermen will be on^ Other rcturning 4*tteme»-ar^ 'jwwftL ^J^et-Jla^ :Coneie; ^^.#rove, 48 pointa; «ad j*ek |«t, known far and wide for its extra oomfort TV hand, and one other, Don Xlein, molar, 0»k%*ve^ 84 > • .• Rob Bschenburg, Morris Johnson, rsaturday h«7Ka^ be«H~WSfl-sxTureilsyjutK na/rtisos :durable Scoteh grain upper leather is welted to edtm-sniW^ ­" 1 X t e d t * B n d -{NMnUNui 'SlaWB, »' Floyd Rogers, Joe Runnels, and lled his services would no longer age soles, and the double deck Welt continues around the V- g'eorge nelion, cioti, arigoio heel, strongly stitched along the edge, -this shoe is 4 1 testa and many others ^ .. aft at . « special table of •*/*>{ UUNDERWELL 1%.. rftmnantt J n SlEAt THE CAMPUS* .c=• MTUMMR WII Gwadalupa Ph. 20233 WSJ < s ^AKIMP ae a*s«se BeadUa Automatic Laundry amat MAT* Iwmir? with «s 1 «BTtime at yo«r, rjance>as THE CHICKEN e*av«oal|HMi«; "v i­ S004 O0AOAt-UI»IE e 0.1O2# e AUftTIN.TKXA* .40 W«t wash aad flaff dry Kapalr m FiajMi Wojtlc done SHOE I STORIi, ralatiag—nSaat C«vet*'^$Mw Shiirts lSa Tkhww* Ms1^09 Lavaea Ph«ma 74117 2348 ^0^afu^%C>A fh# Jdrog ** wi1/, aBVywitw'-, •• k *•* ';*• £»'-.:'i • v?.S. : gg:.^ ,..;^Mm^---••• -;.-,v\ •••T; To Cut GI Retred , -TOKVo, Sunday* ton. T.—(ff) eetimated 219,000 Reds driving r^l *pM *••-"•-•» Nattons troop* Joday soutii to tha Central sector were l£g|i beyond Woflju. AppHcationssre still b%ng ac­Men fought*a bitter defense of Wonju May* fttdf Ilia 6eh(^): «C A force of6,000 to 6,009* toml Governor's cepted by tbelnstitute of Inter-ply for.fellowships CoBe^o > as onruShlng Communists flowed Shivers said.b* fjfpected. to.de-budget recommenda­national Education for fellowships , Iorwmo;tiia Col 7~ part tfcekey road-rail hub engaging UN units about 15 miles The 62nd Legislature must lhrer his .)peqM$aI ta tfce c©ndl«< tions. ' • ' CfhiSieri, ton ^fer "tuSti^n 'intata southeast of Wonju. Allied troops and scholarships for study abroad. i and th* Scdula Normals fat driving 60 miles deep into CeWtatL 1X0 million dollars in new moifer 'Sttfrtff the state* along; with :his Shivers «ai4 h* wei^Dio have tlrom 1,500 to 3^)00 Svrisa The deadlines for staking appli­ | V; ''• were fighting about 1,000 Reds to pay for state services^at the recommendations to the' Legisla­some specific proposal* on civil Cranfa for adtuwad «ipChinese and Korean Reds' were miles east of Wonju and enemy present rate of spending. ture, on Thursday. defense legislation, 'but he .would cations are March 1 for study in Three faffointttpft 2< that lut ; French secondary schodls an< will continue as much km possible Hefe Wednesday News Briefs ;eacher training institutions and in the.spirit of tjpus, .cnq9«^; are entitled to enroll in courses ;>.y&p$\or University will be the t in nearby universities. Tuition first opponent in a series of ex* Under its new management^ -"t also waived for them and they cafeteria will serve only two, hibition debates planned this, At KRUGERS US Presses for UN receive between 18,000 and 22,-spring by Darrow, new meals a day and cloee on Sato**: Barton 000 francs a month. , , days. ' Director of Forensks at the Uni­ A limited number of lecttirates The Campuii Co-Op ,'Cafet«3i versity. Z-' •. Vx---­ Action on Sino Reds in Frencfh universities and social was started in 1948 tod. haa been Batusrt on th* A*90c\aU*_£r the Uni­and called to active duty Decern* to military force which could de­.as drouth relief.. versity will attend a national ber 28, Col. Maybin H. Wibon, stroy the world organization. Ordered to File Form* , tournament at Miami University, professor of military science and; * « . Houao Speaker * Sam .Rayfcnm .- Miami, Fta. The topic will V "Re­tactics, announced Saturday.;v 5.95 Value Tut*!• in line for nearly.$40,< observed his 69th birthday Satr Faculty members, "Who" ate solved: that non-communist na­Those called-were Second 14. members of the Naval Reserve 000,000 in federal funds-to build urday in Washington at a series tions should lo«m • interna­Christopher IL Haydon, SetonA bomb shelters in critical target of parties an4 receptions in his in any capacity, should turn in a tional organisation•'* University IA. Delmas Wlippatd, and i^e­ form stating their name, rank or areas. Communities designated by honor. • ' teams will be Hulon BroW* and ond Lt Lon U. Xutz/The officers rate; and faculty position to Capt.' federal authorities as areas most pit BaSlrin, afflrmative, an^ Cle-are assigned to duty with thn Stu­ Robert A. Knapp, commandant of likely to be attacked will have to A ttrift of quakes hit sections bu»a Miller-and Bob Blumenthal, dent Detachment, Headquarts*» the University Naval ROTC. match the federal money to se­of Panama arid Venezuela Friday Fourth Army, and will remain at; •riiiijjjjjjf This information is for statist!* W.1 cure the grants; State Civil De­night and early Saturday. Minor The-U^^lrVwon*Irai their present homes pending re­ cal data only at this time and -as- of orders an­ fense Coordinator William L. M^ _..:i ..... ' • other significance, Capt. Xnapp Also on February 2-8, a Uni­ment. : l 10 PtCCI STAItTM III versity team -will go to Baylor :'Temas eSll«|M are producing said. .. . \ -' University Debate Tournament fct. Haydon and 1*. tut* wjwt $ INCLUDES: The forms, being distributed by five times as many high school named Dfetinguished Military debating the same question as at: >r. Milton R, Gutsch, secretary teachers as are needed and only dents last June when they com­ lunchaon Ptates, W«eh six* the Miami tournament. Members one-sixth of the elementary teach­ of the general faculty, should be pleted. their ROTC training. U» ,, of the team have not been select* Bufhir Pkrtas, 6-Inch six* ers needed, the State's Legislative iled to Professor of Naval Lippard frill graduate from .the^ ed, said Mr. Burrow. Research Expert John D. Mose-•Science, Littlefield Home, Univer­ University in January as a Dis*FmH *r Caraal Dlshaa lqr said in Austin Friday. sity Campus, Austin., tinguished Military Graduate. Hubenak Earned Editor Cupa Mrs. Ullian. Gilbreth, renowned lit. Lute, assigned to Transpoj^ Carjl Sandburg, poet and . Lin­efficiency expert and heroine of t Of Longhorn Pharmacist tation Corps, and Lt Haydon* ai^, coln biographer, observed his 78ird the book "Cheaper by the Dosen," ¥•1 Dan Hubenak was elected ed­signed to Military Poliee Corpe, I birthday quietly Saturday at his spoke Friday night on the neces­ itor of the Longhorn Pharmacist, will be detailed to the infantry Official ' NO INTEREST home in.I^at Rock, N.C.... sity of combining the human ele­ student-alumni publication, in an for duty. Lt. lipptod, asmgned • ment with the technological .as­election of the spring semester Quartermaster Corps, will ha i OPEN STOCK NO CARRYING F»rtjr-thr«« men students from pects of 'management, staff Friday night. tailed to artillery for duty, f PIECES, TOO Texas A.&I. College, most of them Using several .examples, Mrs. flatties Other membexp of the newCHARGE volunteers, have entered military Gilbreth emphasized the need of staff include Tfcancis^Hanejr, Jean Co-Op Wilting Contest Cheese beaattfal Laray -:s group co-operation , for effective Watson, and Bonnie fivans, assist­Has Monday Deadline ( SMwto «ko ar* pl»nnfnr in move Pastel Pottery hk the|. management today* A* one exam­ant edito«s;< Lorraine Banov, see- M tlurir m ueiaiilsti M-yfeee slai^ v.;^ am wMimm at th* «4 CO-OP WR0HNG" CONTEST^^ -er ple, Mrs. Gilbreth used the model atntvtm to m D«a m retaryj Afina Channe, cireulation set, er: seleet *pen' Wonis't oflie* to obtain p«r>»U«ion by Monday is the deadline for enN W' kitchen for m, v^oipwj, wlM>^bj»d j stoek. Items as wM cr« 'v •* i. ^A jranvwy li wcittcn noUe* of lnt«ntt810*-AlK^ veeapet ^ . American Heart Association, a ^"dobothy outm horn Pharmacist was .mailed to 0«m aC-'Weauut: piranto should submit entries group of individuals planned a 425 students and. »lumni of the Opportunities AM to "year sbl tm . idtchen that would minimise, the 8tu4mU who turn* pr»*Iou»ly College of Pharmacy Friday. The their Bnglish instructors. ..Cans,.: Saaeets, f" and-tesM w «n Wf attandlwr tha .Unl- Plates, Coape leap louseyrife's work. The "Heart of vendty at mu VageSble ,.. the San Antonio Office of the tvas called, contained "lasy. su mail for r»«l»tiatlon an -Fabruary 1, positions and a story on the suc-winners a' w*Wf later. First Matteis, Kaia; New England Mutual Life In zans" and even a magnet to-re­test. cess of tjhte annual TWEIA jartj# will be |l&,.s«send I Salt Pep- AppUoation (oraa an arailabW hi tha ii.'.rt'inji i.ii '.I,.. «en: Gravy Boats, Ow» • surance Company'will be on the trieve dropped knives. Mrutrar'a offlea aod stoat bo AM not «, Water Pttehen,, • campus January 16 -to interview A .time mttion expert was con­tew tbia /wutr 1#.' 1951." B" nWfpP w pMWtment PWea^. Juniors and Seniors who are in­sulted to aid the lay-out of the S««Iatrar and THE A IpJEii $& „ , ^^iipUatotortlon Sapanrlaw terested in insurance' work. This kitchen so as to eliminate wast* is. the oldest insurance company motion for the housewife;? BMMo. major* «mM lit bA» SI* W»Met (fcuiito Profleiancy Taat) mast noort in the United States and offers Mrs. Gilbreth-said, "There is «n PERMANENT STAW 10, from V Hall SOS Wadnaaday, Janoary from, 7i to IS ».m. AtUm • ---CBAKL£1T TRIMBLB tus is not important. Students in man element, everywhere." Using dasraa ftqiiiwx0^ lB lm»dea«t^ Associate Editor-i- Editorial As«stant« Bob Sadler, Jim Bob <5«a«WMr,| the Reserve or are about to be quotation from a recent speech, Cbariea.L«wk| drafted buts ^ire interested in in­Mrs. Gilbreth stated, "No natter Kewa H4itor . Claude Villarreal, Jean lapscomb,, surance work are urged to apply what is the technical knowledge, Jrt» g|« BnsMao. J8. ftrawer, June Fitsgorald, Chari^a ^ Stwiaat EmploymaBt for an interview in the Student without* human element, we are aajumneaa tbat Lt, Conutt^ V* Haipa wW agaia. W on te S Employment Bureau in B Hall nothing." r'aSS iitors ­ aatopua Jaaoary s to tetorvfaw man *A4 WS'ii' She said however, "A feeling woman smlor atadaota intara«t«d ta Beaumier, BUI Jenhixw, ^CwArum, " Baaarra. Naw axaaa ^rtieipa­ w~ An oil company in a large that puts emphasis on the human kav« baan opaoad in tha Baaarra. *. Jamea. South Texas city are' asking for element does not mean a dilution 1 Intaraatad, abould thi Bona tavaral daya bafora tba tntarrta«ra vp n jpfta® applications from January male of human effectiveness.". STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE to Mve tbafar MadantUUa^ graduates in accounting, business Mrs. Gilbreth fait that a par­ Itewe CHAJ i^fkss or economics who are intereste< son could combine 4, technical Night Editor bt clerical work.in tiie office o1' knowledge with the human «!e» WintN ?«(*»•••. jCopyreaders TomToneyj. tk* eliy €S»*hW| a refinery. A knowledge of typing ment and still retain hfii effectire-. ef Might Sports Editor Soutiieru wo»­ •1"^ Jnit.iri9tX« ASSWantS ivawii iiriw^iig jiij-t ®rm«mM n$u«th]r h «n s«a mm t «•* « At majoif air lines, is interested jointly by the Public Lectures wl in interviewing vromen, primarily1 Committee and the College pf flthft:-;* «8I 4ssl wgBlWW ••i . " Ui V. as-Stawar3iM«^^en^f stu -~-.-•tat* ,tj» WPS: oC M*» priaawa a( ia«f»»li^.;'.*aUitew: Si i£ dents should contact: Bureau Epsilon dinnei at the Home-Eco»­as to pertinent information con-monfics Tea/Hottpe. l-y. M. *. OUMCH •i> 'i5®/ cerning the qualifications, salary, & u t&VM training, and,general duties. Russian Christmas I . Y.' ,:*s§ The Southwestern Associated .w,mma«aa la"5» 4rt*a_ sail *ha. amw «f **>• O*" Telephone Company fa large today byOlclCalemlar ttt •** HO CWmmr.••> «r bafora Tawtar Texas city is interested in hiring MO^COW, Sunday, Jan.7«—1 ardwf-ttot mtHMbmuM auwbo 2 or 8 men who will graduate in —Alexei, patriarchJanuary with a degree & business and all Russia^ off^atedat Chrtrt­ 3/1 administration or Electri^sl En­mas Eve services last night at .WJuiar*­ gineering. Its business is to fur-Moscov^s, Cathedral of tha JReaor* I* -naafW^ bofara^a M«aw. -Wfta nish telephone service iii many recton^before a ch««li ,«W»W coinmunities with worshipers. baSnTr*^ ir*&--4g0whim 0* aw mm dox Church still uses Hue mi formation may be found in.the calendar its re^giotis hcttday* are . .. .. -p * |o oa. Ih«*»4»y mU v Student Employma«l :3wr«Mt By that calendar today is Decemr iaa aa­b mm lilt 'mMSmM msmi vm ^'C&ira»w» t'<"* ;wfiwimrTm^f^ Wi&-» »*» ? 'h-.f^ vrt«^'l'' }%^^" V r V ^ <, »*> **!-n t 23*. Vfe­ ~> (ri«5 to ifi't, ? ^A" * v" • .Jmj HJUI i'm • I wwtz!-• ii*« 4V „>ft.*j}»« & «»!£ • 1THE NATION is awakening to. thft w cctert into direct and inare-than-negli-Obituary, Peace in 1961, an ideal; died, 1917,,jWt feat MacArthur and Mao ar«n't-«ibla competition with Russia for the Moscow. inlaying witli Chocolate Soldiers <> K-v '^Asiatic world#'* £ V X ;*; ~v * "Lenin is our teacher, and we Soviet people are ' Yfo havn fltrfferflrt ?«,*** in Ttn m* Hemisphere.-we ^nust unite Lenin's disciplei? '" 4 ? Br RONNIE DUGGER cans have died in Korea. Up to coming ever-increasingly vindic­the first five .and a half months of Ko-^before the infiltration of the Reds over* SO said Joseph Stalin to Harold Stassen on April -Tmtan Bdifar ten times that number of Chinese tive toward the free world, erver* boldev in threats and acts of agw *M& war—including ^6,180 d6ad; 4,664 whelms us from the South. The Wash- V THIS PAGE hopes to give you and Koreans are dead. % / 9, 1947 . ' * ; • ' - becomes 1T " *""*1 A", ington Conference '"gome of the facts and issues in If an atomic war gression, it eminently -next month among develops—as missing. Here are some of the essentials of Lenin's writings: the world at mid-clear that for all practical pur­ the crisis of many expect—the statistics of One of the wounded was returned to hemispheric nations may go a long way "As long as capitalism and Socialism remain, we centnry. Korea become trifles. This coun­poses we.may as well forget peac» for this decade. |he United States this week missing toward this Vnd. cannot live in peace. In the end one or the other will But what of the future? try has . about 1,000 A-Bombs? ;$grts< of each of his four limbs, 1 The coming conference with Russia— triumph—* funeral requiem will be sung feither over What does the decade hold for Russia, they say, about ^ffc-Thou-Pravda hailed 1851 aa "The the individual? • .„sanda died at' ttiroshima and-Na-Year of Great Victories." The * Fortunately, the nation's policy-mafc. if It cornea at all-*-can hardly be expect* the Soviet Republic or over world capitalism." _ J_ -What the half-century Lrterary Gazette said thaii this is does gasaki because' of two bombs; mil­ - ers have not-succumbed to the tempta-ed to provide more than propaganda and "Propaganda to be carried on among workers and hold for mankind? liona may be the •^fche yeaj ^f "the final triumph of" tteaa of Hooverism in this dark hour, more animosity. We have Jong since penaantfl should ha*only of irinrf Polipprofich such questions at communism on earth.". with 'freer,' or more 'democratic,' a bourgeois country is, the very moment at which two War a Reality President Truman hashistory of American culture. learned ttiat you can't bargain the more fiercely does the capitalist gang rageagainst huge, .cultural "The~communists as "the inheritors yff^twr Atfklt American policy at home neonle who want the whole world. worker's revolution; this is exemplified by the demo­coming into crashing conflict There is, in fact, no chance sat of Genghis Khan and Tamerlane," SfeV-' \ To China—our once beloved ally—we Could be an-exercise in futility. all that these ten years Will be *' and overseas its most damaging and un­cratic republic of the United States of America." Mongol murderers of old. But everyone is asking them. free of war. We. are at war now. justified injury by advocating that we must give economic isolation and, in Ko-. ". . , the existence of the Soviet Republic side by And, t^y coincidence, a state­ Let's try some answers. Even should the situation not be­ rea, unmitigated hell. side with imperialist states for a long, time is un­ ment by Mae Tse-tung of China '-give up our allies to the Kremlin. v-<\ It is clear that the next decade teome worse, we would have to supports such a tab with remark­ thinkable. One or the other must triumph in the end. ' Confronted with the familiar reality-'.jvDom^tically, we must vigorously op­ will yield violent, war-born death fr.ee it: we are at war. able force. Wrote Mao on one oc­ And before the end comes, a series of frightful clash­for many human beings—how i\$l war, the United States of America is pose the "counsel of despair" that Hoov­es between the Soviet Republic and the bourgeois And Wften you. couple this with casion: many, none can say. the fact that China and Russia er, Kennedy, Taft, Wherry, Colonel Mc- "Communism is not love. Com­ also confronted with the less familiar • states is inevitable." • Already, at least 6,000 Ameri­" together are feeling their oatsj.b$­ we • j^jpsality frf inner diAKssion in tuna -of --Cormiok, and William Randolph Hearst munism is a hammer which use to crush the enemy." P%lr. '^rg; " :;r-; ;;..V so vigorously advance. • So, as individuals, we—the col­ * TPhe leadership of Truman—a coura-We must resist the defeatism that lege students—face the draft, in­ p geous and well-meaning man—is not as sweeps over-people when we are reversed terruption of plans, loss of a part Jf"|mt as could be wished. He lacks fi-in Korea, when we see that we are losing-of, or all of our lives. Youth as a whole faces the : How nesse and the broad grasp, drama and friends in Europe. prospect. sanve |fche popular appeal. But he can certainly *: We must re-arm, control the economy, America faces an economyjBdo the job if the people and politicians and gird'for the fight. .How strong «re America's Al­socialists pro po S es negotiation Russia' would be sought. Germans west China. The Reds admit "con­strapped to the huge task of war- with the Russians and no re-arma­are to be includede, but cautiously tinuing subversive activities" but making at a realize that petty considerations of pet-• We must unite politically on a policy lies? ment. East. Germany is armed to (in light of a Russian threat that claim they are foreign., Chiang's for least decade. To what extent has communist Armaments, price and wage free­ flonai benefit must once again, be sub­of vigorous collective security in the infiltration softened them? the nose. . th'ey would "not tolerate" Ger­growing strength is on call in For-. zes, income taxes up to 50 perverted to the Cause of the Century: The anti-communist world.. Senator Taft To what extent may and must In. Italy, a"bout one-third com­man re-armament.) mosa. cent, loss of the pleasantries of .. Said Eisenhower: Th'e guerillas are a lightly armed should have aroused shame even in the we count on them? munist, Togliatti, speaking from the lives we have known. , Survival of Free Cultures. Russia as the Red chief of Italy, » "I know that it will be a long, .and are getting much support :~ What action must be taken? breasts of his" political bedfellows with Around those questions swirl & hard task." from soldiers deserting the Reds, America as"fa whole facea-r-in urged the'people to overthrow the a maze of facts and opinion, ignited this decade—the possibility of We'must continue to sustain and arm his speech from the Senate floor Friday. pro-American government in the according to Hanson Baldwin in into dangerous controversy by ex- tyfie of war never before exper­ the New York Times. Europe; we must count onGeneral Eisen­-We must root out subversive influences President Hoover's Gibral^erism interests of the people. The Gener­In Asia Malaya is a sore spot. Guerilla ienced: a war of indiscriminate al Confederation of Labor in Italy, China, of course, is lost to-the(see below). hower to draw from the Europeans their that undercut some of our most loyal claiming 5,000,000 members, will Soviets. We are blockading our activity is murderous against the and mutual destruction. best effort; we must recognize that we AmeHcans—-the McCarthys, the Gerald Were we to judge on perfor­fight a^y attempt to re-arm. The once great ally and we are deal­pro-American citizenry and gov­So the decade is not bright from mance in Korea, we would get a picture is not.bright. ing Mao's armies serious blows in ernment. Hong Kong is likewise this point in time and space. cannot prevent a war against world Smiths,' the Fulton Lewises. • , gloomy picture indeed. The U.S. a -vulnerable point at which the At Brussels, with Acheson pre­Korea. But the great numbers of • *' communism, nor c*n we win one, with-. . We must leave control of the Commun­has 140,000 -troops on the drab, siding over the Pact nations' re­the Asiatic world have convinced Chinese may next attack, as in out every ally we can scrape up and ists to the FBI, the police and the mili­muddy peninsula. Great-Britain presentatives, it. was agreed that policymakers that 4t will not again French Indo-China. The Half Century has 6,000, plus some equipment; Tibet is in the communist force to show the Russians. 1T : tary, instead of dragging in emotional Australia, 1,000; Belgium-Luxem­Eisenhower would Abe boss, an be a wise step to engage in a camp—the result of armed inva­And the only reason' for re­ armed force would be developed ground war in Asia. In Asia* we must carry the message politics and disrupting present plans for bourg, 750; Canada,. 1,000; sion which broke Mao's pledge to signing one's self to the trials of quickly, and a conference with Sabotage is growing in south- France, 1,000; Greece, 800;. New India has caused decade the of of democracy and the practical evils of interning the communists as enemy per­ Nehru of and the is hope the Zealand, 1,100; the Netherlands, -Nehru to begin arming in strength. half-century. the minds of sonnel when the FBI thinks best. ccflHimunlsm into every 650; the Philippines, 1,200; Siam, "India's straddle-the-fence attitude Professor Norbert Weiner an­ reachable one of the thousand .million But above all, we must have faith in 1,200; Turkey, 5,200. is swinging to, a Western favor­ nounced the other day that his N 'Defeat Lies In Altogether, our people that swarm over those far-off the future of free cultures. allies are sup­ itism. new mechanical figuring machine* plying about one-eigth of the In the Pacific, Japan is said to |»»d&v ' • ' -->;v-As a free culture ourselves, we must fighting force. will—within five years—release be responding slowly to MacAr­ 7,500,000 technicians from their f And we must convince the Asiatics be willing to make changes as the great­-It is injportant that the free thur's hints at re-armament, but desks. that we are on their side in practical er good demand them—liberal changes— . world is united—perhaps the the process is being begun with That is only one of many, many J greatest single credit to the UN— I s o1a t io n is m, retreatism, policy-makers, 2) the Democrats, the Japanese police as the core It ways; that we will support liberal re-while at the very same time fighting in principle against communism. of the magics of science and tech-1 re -examinationism, Hooverism, and 3) many .of the Republicans of a new army. £&\0ttamsi that we will not go on financing with full fury the communists and all The problem now is action. call it what you will, the anti-violently disagreed. nology which—is not totally dis- corrupt governments that have-led to the indignities that they would impose Here is the picture: intemationalist point of view is Truman: Isolationism, pure and Middle last rupted by war—will develop lei­ returning to prominence on the simple. We are not going back to sure—availability for man on a genuine and often justified revolts from upon us. Turkey's fighters have been record scale. In Europe American scene. . that. r This is the crisis of democratic culture. ^fanatic in the Korean fighting—• V the abused masses. Hoover started it in his loudly-Alben Barkley, vice-president: With that leisure availability #&-- The new bloom from an old We are not climbing into a storm-true to their-tradition—and are a may -come the greatest surge of 5$C In that way, andonly in that way, can There is no dodging it. stem—isolationism—has confused reverberating speeeh in which he great asset-to Ma^Arthur. cellar. intellectual and physical emanci­ said the United States must be­ m and demoralised many Europeans. Iran is getting entangled-with come the '.'Gibraltar of Western Dean Acheson: Hoover's policy pation in history. H Where, they ask, does this leave Russia in oil but they say it will civilization." He proposed a cor­would be "gigantic appeasement," Given machines to minimise ef­ M-us? fight with the US in event of war. would : help' the Kremlin immea­ don of sea bases, including per­ fort and release the energies of Gen. Eisenhower left Saturday The U.S. and Britain hold most surably. haps Britain "if she wuhes to the intellect, mankind of the late for & tour of the capitals of the of the Middle Eastern oil and co-operate." Thomas Dewey: If not on the Twentieth Century may be ap­ Atlantic Pact nations. His presence He opposed any more entangle­basis of our ideals, "the stark, would doubtless fight to hold it. proaching genuine self-realisa­may be reassurance to wavering necessities o f self-preservation (Australia and New Zealand are ments in-Europe—and insisted on tion: ' Europe. , wodld demand that we develop great assets in all-out war.) ­Our most reliable support at "not another dollar of another and keep strong brave allies." Freedom from the bonds of present comes from a nation that man" for the Europeans, until John Foster Dulles, GOP De­The Hemisphere physical needs in the sense that they, have themselves built up a is fascist and another that is com­ they dominate his productive ef­ partment Of State advisor: "We "sure dam" against communism. Truman* has called a conference forts; munist. will not shed ou^. allies who are By CHARLEY TRIMBLE of oil outside the Baku area; 'of the oil Moscow needs. We have renewed diplomatic In other words, if they, want to endangered. of the 21 American republics fbr Benefits of a growing know­Aautotat* That is the conclusion of ex-, There are no significant oil. ° relations with Spain, Stanton Grif­go communist unless we help The New York Times, the next month in Washington to con­ledge about man and mankind; Cam Russia afford to risk perts after a careful analysis resources in Northern Russia, fins being our new ambassador. them, let them go communist. Christian Science Monitor, the sider steps to be taken against A new dignity for individual \ a large-scale #ar' involving of Russia's present oil supply. . and development of the Ural-Truman, in addition; implemented, The reactions were' inMnediato#; post,. former Secretary of aggressive worldCommunism. The variability; " ~ «w Unit®d Stat«s now? -Civilian -requirements of Volga oil area has not come the $100,000,000 loan to Spain, and revealing. Was* Robert Patterson, Brien Mc-move is timed' to assure our hem­....... Benefits of a machine complex If the current status of Russia are estimated afc, 13&. up to advance predictions. ; ; in spite of his distaste for Franco. On Hoover's side came these Mahon, many others chimed • in . isphere neighbors that we are not oriented to man's needs and mere Basstan and nMnr«i is This West,' however, is not Congress has passed a $38,000,-men: with collective security. forgetting them in the crisis. productive than conceivable now; million barrels. of oil. . Argentina poses the largest pro* «onelosive, the jsnswer is no. •without its troubles/ While it 0001 appropriation for Yugoslav . Robert Taft (who Friday as­.» And said General Eisenhower: Great leisure, and, therefore, v' That leaves ISO' xnilUon blem. Peron has "just declaredr: has enough oil to is producing 10 times more oil famine relief. The Titoists are a sailed Truman for committing "I am convinced that to retire greater opportunity foT self-devel­ Tiarrels of oil a year for mili-. Capatilism has "undoubtedly a li^tning war to Eu-than Russia, its reserves are real thorn in Russia's crown. Vi-troops in Korea "beyond his au­to our own country and wait for opment, interest in others and in wartime. During r tito MiddBe East wHSi tary use • dwindling much faster. shinsky and Malik made overtures thority"): "I agree with many the end would bring sure defeat." been the curse of mankind." Com­contemplation. of victory. But '/World War II, the Unite! Also, American and British* ^ to the ^^goslay. delegate in th'e of the general principles he James Reston in the Times munism is a reaction, "If commu­If we can but give the machines States military forces used an nism is to disappear^capitalism has attacks would undoubt­oil companies. are_ running UN aj^emWg? recently—but he states." pointed out that nobody in Wash­ we devise a chance to reduce the estimated 400 million barrels to disappear first." . ed^? touch off Worid War III into trouhle with foreign gov-snubbed them. Kenneth Wherry, a top GOP ington pl&ns to fight any more shortages that now make for avar­ a year. ^ * „ it ' The Yugoslav line is that ground • battles Asia; that ; • The U.S. recently spent $800,­ ion a full-si*e scale), bring--'ernment. on the question of ry: new senator; Hoover expressed "exact­in ice and jealousies; 000 in Point Four funds to Bra­ ing inth# U.S., which has 10^ largestUBer of royalties. Iranian oil is slosh­the state capitalism of Russia has ly my sentiments." Hoover did not even consider If we can but give the expand­ zil. Strong communist groups are the oil Stalin has. time oL would certainly be ing idly * underground while, prostituted the socialistic ideal Homer Capehart, GOP senator whether it is in pur interests to ing knowledge of man about men-' flourishing in South' and Central Soviet oU production, in-Russia's air forcei With an es-. the British majority stock­and degenerated into pure aggres­from Indiana: "I. agree with keep Western Europe in friendly kind and his environment a chance » eluding that of the satellites, timated fleet of 19,000 opera-holders wrangle with-the sion and a self-perpetuating bu­Hoove/100 per eent." hands; that his policy would leave America, of course, but the threat tc reduce the causes of hate and & estimated at $24 million tional plants, 125 million bar-government or -U4L ytdauc«oii, of 2,Slip per, cent of th« planes ar« " considered defensible against* is aided by guerilla experience it history, try men's spirit^ in Yugoslav Mils. bassador to Russia and pre-war is whether we are to resign totally fronts and is distinctly gloomy batrdi of erode be jets, as reported, Russia by U. S. diplomats, Then shall stand :<>n the we France |s^ recalcitrant but will isolationist: ditto. „ to war and decide to abandon our on some. * . * and natxuml gasoline, and a^:; Russian ground forces oil, stays broke and defenseless. threshliold of a future which will , To maintain high produc­probably re-arm, The Gallup poll But hardly had these .concurv allies, or whether to continue try-But they are our allies" and we total Western Hemi^>here|| ^requirements bear no rela-oing to prevent war by deterring aire setting out to convince them harvest the full fruits of man's jtpttt of S,075 million bas-^Htion to the oil used by U.S;* tion in Saudi. Arabian fields, says that 32 per cent of the rences come to light when it' enlightenment. Frenchmen would vote communist became apparent that 1) the Russia with a strong free world.. we are behind them. new r^fcSs. all Hie figure? a«;'§Iand armies. Except for ' t fa e Arabians-American Oil . in the next election; and a good -added'tip JNwda fuw jnst Sjfjarmored spearheads, it still Company recently completed portion of the French army is red. 0 At world's totalf|||nioves largely by foot and by an agreement to split profits The French re-armament themo "J0. is enough t^f^fcwMse-drawn vehicles. F oj with, the government 50-50. . has been Russia's prime need Is more • minister advocates, "neutrality." ^»eeedingfy stlo^ maiato 30 m«d>»nized diTUdoni oil—available at the source. 19SO. Year of Hate But the Plevin government's re­ f that would need 12 million That is why military leaders f » A. *V ' armament bill passedlirst big ^ U W'V 1 :ispheric basis. .barrels of oil to fight a three-oxpect Iran and the Middle , test, 416-180, in the French As­1960 was the year. to defend South Korea; the UN give registration-passes Congress, fn policy, disagree to pa^culars, ia slightly better off ^woijith campaign. Other gen* , East to be chief objectives sembly last week, asks other members to help, June Sept. 29-Dec. 24. v reserves. The; .Leral needs would take 7 mil-of Soviet attack in case of v; In 80 clean-cut steps, domestic -v Britain's Labor Government is ' 24. GOP in Congress demands has lfon bwrds—a total of 19 war. . and international, the world crisis 27. backing the, U.S. against Russia, Chinese Attack . Acheson's inmoval as -he prepares of the world's oil million for an offensive war Iran alone produces 251 t but Attlee on his recent visit op-teached its crescendo on the very 7. Tydings sub-committee dis-* • to represent US to Brussels, Dec. wbSie Urn' Weat*r&f/pa the ground. f 'million barrels of oil a year. credits McCarthy's charges of,, 15. UN"Assembly approves S.® • posed this country'sinsistence that eve of 1951, when the Chinese 15. But getting it 'to Russia re? p W0ri4 fm 40 pe4S Navy needs 1 quires shipment sea ? China not be appeased by a secur-Communists began their big drive Reds to the Department of State, »^ crossing Parallel 38, Oct. 7» . 25. Truman declares, national the total oil merv»r4;>be about 18 million barrels by w ity Council seat in the UN. BrJ- July 17. It. Chinese Reds announce in* emergency, Dec. 16. -k > ^ • howev«$y can " ilyearly. This corresponds with liirough the Indian Ocean, to push the UN off the Korean . .V.tish commercial interests in Hong Vasion of Tibet, Oct. 454. , ofi reserves aH aroun-_ t ,products tjsed by the Geiv > Oie'Suez Canal, and the Dar-? , peninsula. -, ; ; -8. Truman' calls tot partial' 26. Atlantic Fact ministers at '-"Kong are suffering from the 1% Chinese Reds begin attack­ wtyfyI lUustda^ ta jn ^or^ Il-^f blockade aqd assets fteete of Chi-"; <. -we see them: mobilisation—taxes, draft, arms, Brussels approve arms*plata but toget man navy in World War II-—"^Banelles. -Here thdy are,"•i-iit Russia's weakness lies both jing UN in Korea, Oct. 26. 'go-: stow on West German re-arma­ ^%amhis to whieh performed tasks+««w simi­a!mi. na now imposed by the U.S* Amer-,0\ s 1. Russia begins six-month July 19. v'v18. UK Assembly approves the ment under Soviet threat, Dec. 18>k pitfatts lar to th«9e the Russians in • her limited , sources of oil icapExportiug to Hong Kong musti«^yooott m ov„ nationalist 9. Southwestern Korean Aeheson plan co|l«i^|ve ae-27. Eisenhower appointed WOHI4 encounter in a future and in the-exposed position war, " jv f /| of :iwii: W licensed l)y to® U»S» ftAmn»n • beachhead battle opens, Aug. m wM Western European commander,The Briton* bave MM score Pec. 19. ' Military planners is. the West ^10. Striking US railroads-' •field^ total of 157 million bejfe; .nd. tit u.s. th.t th, «r wgs>«». , 19. Republicans heavy Ldhyg c 28. Hoover proposes we the crest of " the Mc- buil4and ^bfflse yearly* This barely c seem convinced that Russian Korea should be localised. • m 2. Truman says US will make seised by the government* Aug,Vij'gains.. a US Gibraltar^ with small out* 25 t uarwy wave .and MacArthur-an­ gn>o^jHt.;''lo bom' million stratogistjMf. *heyhav« thier. W8st Germany .poses real H-Bomb, Jan. 81. "posts, Dec. 20* hit tliom from gsicei»;of rnw m not waiing ^ yi^c 11. Prfe»M Prodqotion Act ,"tb,ck' "Kor®*' S°*' 7 29. Acheson, reasserting pdW Sm. Ss^mated-to be available open warfare with the U. S. •1Uance' comes law, Sept. 8. '20, MacArthur be^ns "end-icy of collective security, a«»\ ifotin MfUmr pre mm Baku eaft re-armament, and the snubb^^ defenw> Ftb' 12. Johnson resigns, -Marshall , the-war" offensive, Nov. 24., > ' US has power to retaliate against \ id from air attack* Geffaans were offended; Germa^<^^' attack from "any aggresso*," I}#c, maintain^fulA* a.r«»^,Stalin and his ^Uitary and husiness leadew hav^5 • 4^ US sends first arms load to replaces him as' Secretary-of 21. Red China's Wu demafids two s . a , UN get out of Korem Nov.. 28. ^ proble ^ WW"'**"" to b« content " under wiUtar^ 'State, Sept. 12, , „ p^^Sr«loaked ,Red Chinese ^Russia'a oil ;Hfind ^ eg*n> their big push tp shove the • • ^ * -ftp#. R^mchia, inyade the South, June 25. *5* m 14^: XcQinali Ast {far !Crtawtti i. Trumaa ordera US'V * '-ggs ..{/V BSOSa mm "Literary Amatsur," a quar­ter's was recently "The Writer's Market" contains THE W6Rif> IN cal poiat ef View (8e« review of terly publication of selected ama­issued, is the largest of the thir­information about editorial re­•el as* : Sotlsil Men*mtMti tt "ferasmus and Our Struggle for as "An old world is' dying and a workers agiiinst «conomic hazards y^i«» teur -writing, has made it» tint teen editions of the book which quirements, rate of payment, Ae Twentieth : Ctoti^.'-|ly'J.< Peace" below.) bat gum,,world. M straggfing to be of life, ha«s appeared in -the fast twenty style rules and word lengths of apraca»a ^oint WM born" and MOnly *n the rock of The author lands Britain a^ 1961, number. Wfci. 2,600 editors. tike Twintieth Century. d«noftracy can a free one world rfftH Franc# for 1»viug taken Published by the Morristown History can ittake dull reading, It is in the final ehaptet, "The on fly fishing in Press, Morristown, Indiana, the -Soon to ha published is "Star but her* is a history hook' that Unfinished Task," that Mr. Scha­-greaf atepi "along tiie road and tiie BritiA Is"Quick"-stee literary magazine Quality?" a collection of six short ia hard to put down. ^ piro reveals his message: "No ' America, Brflidn^ an)»il li»ar!i| ]associate librarian. -; : ties, nationalism, iriligious free­A., Sorokio. Bostons Tha Baa-theories on the evolution of cul­those seeking the answers that of but-never seen. Although his work is mostly ad­dom, imperialism, the conflict be­;://«on/Prfi»,''^22;.|>age«i $4. .• ture through the ages. Mr*, Soro­the author purports to supply to ttFH«s" eerUinJy m.book ministrative, dealing with per* tween economic classes, popular The main weakness of Pltirim kin has presented tiiem in n pro­the same qnestlods that J. Salwyn <»wcy ftsherniui and 1irette» «C; sonnel, budgets, and services to education, etc, A. Sorokin's "Social Philosophieff fessional style usually found only Schapiro raises in "The World in to ^Jtwji^han^r,. m.Me faculty and students, he finds Thorough analyses of each of of an Age of Crisis" is that the in:text books. ,;,1 v :/ Crisis.11 (See above.) shelf*^4|C^^ time to select some of the material the so-called legacies of the Nine­book is every bit as deep as its The second and thtr^ parts of Howeter, Mr. Sorokin ^oes for the library; 'fMost'of the rec­teenth Century to the Twentieth title,suggests. the; book, comparatively critical ifcake Us over-all contlusion, or ommendations for purchasing of are' made in. early chapters of . While Mr. Sorokin has accom­analyses of modern social philoso­message, clear: "All the writer* , the book to show where the world materials, for.the library are made plished. the large task of compil­phies, are n learned discourse on agree that the great crisis of ow is. today and how it got there. by the faculty," Mx. Moffit saidi ing and integrating the social how the philosophers agree or age is not necessarily tantamount . Maria Madelaine de The ease with which Mr. Schapiro philosophies of some of the disagree or vary in their theories BikStttM Kossaczky is a graduate He received his bachelor of has interwoven the social, politi­world's greatest modern social of sociological evolution. to the fatal last act' in the drama 1,111arts degree from the University of of human Jiistory. In.spite of its 1 JI 'i' nininv student majoring in cal, and economic implications of thinkers, he has failed to write These, of course, are Hr, Soro- Iowa in 1926. He later attended apocalyptic character, its further As reptrftad in PaMIAsrV French and Genhan. historic events is praiseworthy. at .a level that can be read and kin's own conclusions reached af­ the library school at the Univer­development can be itopped and The prophecy for the Twentieth Maria studied in her sity of Illinois, where he received •understood easily. ter long research; and study. It eventually replaced by a new «on-«fiction. home town of Budapest, Century was for democratic gov­Mr. Sorokin, in the first sec­ the bachelor of library science in would take more than a book re-Structiva era."'-.: -i. * Hungary and in Austria 19S1 and his master's degree i& ernment, national self-defcermina tion of the book, haa condensed viswer ^i-evaluate^ th^ validity berg. Random. $8.li0. . ^ ' tion, religious toleration, and free­wmeofthesrgTiiffcant "aesthetic of his conclusions; probably no This era, Mr. Sorolun lmicw£before coming here to 1986. ' dom of thought. But no one, says interpretations of history" of such two sociology professors on the must be characterised by "wi»-Son ^ .HmaM K}«0MW the University two sem-' An ottos Statu "The University Library is con­dom« knowledge, beauty, and < Mr. Schapiro, could visualize the' noted philosophers as Nikolai Dan-University faculty would agree esters ago. Maria has * Portrait stantly growing," he said. Ap­pecially aU-giving and alt> 18. ' v: appearance of the hew forces of ilevslqr, Oswald, Spengler, Arnold on this, and they are more quali­the tha just been elected INTERNATIONAL QUEEN. Her proximately 80,000 to $6,000 vol­totalitarianism that would shatter J. Toynbee, P. S. C. Northrup, forgiving love or reverence for fied to judge. . Phtnam.,1180^ activities here at Texas include: Chairman of World umes are added every year. The the hopes for a peaceful, united Albert Schweitaer, and others.-life"-on the part of "humanity. . it i9rfor-^ese reasons that "So-Acreaa lite Rl-rar 'Sad Relatedness Commission of the "Y," and Historian of library has grown from 609,000 and free worid. • .I'.'il ^ .. _ Without this "notable altruisa­the NeWman Club. volumes in 1936 to its present Totalitarianism, the new revolu tion of individuals and groups, of Trim*. By Srneeb Be , size of 915,000 volumes. tionary force, appeared in the social institutions and culture^ Scribtier.$S. Tha Car^mL HP firat half of the century in the neither can future waH he pre­ •fix Head* Kiigere JC Monk Saw Peace Robinson. Simon and Schuftor, • forms of communism and fascism. vented net a new, truly creative ' $3.60 and »1, Mi George Carlisle Jr., advertising Their efforts' in repudiating de­order be built.'* NON-PICTIORsalesman for The Daily Texan in mocracy are analyzed briefly but \ CLAUDE VILLARREAL Photography for The University of Texas 1948-49, has been elected presi­documented carefully by Mh In Universal Faith Koa-TliiL Hey^aht i 2514 Guadalupe dent of the Xilgore Junior . Cham­Schapiro without overworking the UT Graduate |n Haidetbarg' ,OPEN THURSDAY "NIGHT TILL SiOO ber of Commerce. He is a mem­use of footnotes. , 5 ' ERASMUS AND OUR STRUG­on an international plane* y First Lt. James C. IMckson, BS 1763. MeGraW. $$. ­ ber of the advertising staff for ' In defense of Mmobracy from GLE FOR PEACE. By Jose Erasmus, in his struggle lor po­in mechanical engineering '43, has the Kilgore News Herald. .. totalitarianism aggression, Amer­Chapiro. Boston. The litical as well as spiritual peace, recently arrived at Heidelberg Oayelord Bouser. I^rs«; S8., ica has bid for world security, not Press. 164 p*|*i. $2.50. dreamed 6f a religion which, Military Post i^ the tJS Zone of B«llMOBTh«irTMa.By< The a new concept from a philosophi-freed from dogmas that divided Germany, where he has assumed Produce In these days of cold war rapid­and Carey. CroweQ. $S. men and made thetn Intolerant tq his new duties as resident ettgi-r ly.precipitating full warfare, it is Tha Hiag* -•! JFat*. win utmumumm the point of cruelty, would unite fleer for; the Mannheim.Suh-?cwt, Daily refreshing Pa pick up a book like GhurchUl. Boughten. IC . them all in the same ardent faith. The lieutenant had been a con­ "Erasmus and Our Struggle for Only universality in spiritual apd suiting engineer in Houston for fsSanttoWasOGS Texan Results FOR RENT Peace.".,; ; 'r,r , ^ political domains, he believed of-four years following his return •' Marar Jo Suudo2. L Gfai^iro'ij^fe 'ff fasci­the infallible epndition for from Army service hi 1946. He si^dent, who is a Wae nating study of Erasmus of Bot-ending ws,r and .hatred* Refrt^eretors was recelled to nctive d^ty lest has been,sent to officer's Apartment for Rent Furnished Aparifnent terdam completely new month. Music and a "The iehpo! of thought of Eras­school translation of "Peace Protests!", Washer* mus was that of * free men/' NEW GARAGE apartment for two man, RECORDED MUSIO writtenbyErasmusinl5l7. TOWN AND COUNTRY for all oeeaatoaa. Chapiro says. For that refuon, bath, shower, Frigidafre. Quiet. Giadirons > In part one, "Erasmus: Herald 1 and % bedroom apartments in new Bills paid. Phone 2-1048.. vice. 8-8418. tiie / outspoken thinker would IS ualt eut stone apartment build* of a tfaited • World," Chapiro, a write what he wished about.whom Ing. Convenient to bus ukd Unlver-FURNISHED apartment for one to four Position Wanted Sevfing Mech!nes .• {scholar who is at home in R dosen room boys. Phone 2-9822. he wished; and for thaireason, he lity. Living-room, dining and language, has given a scant pic­ kitchen with 8 ft. refrigerator, and was, feared ,and respected,by the PART TIME POStTlOH wanUd. Iriah Hardwick gas ranges. All tile bath 5 BLOCKS from campus. 2 furnished ture of the monk Erasmus and hiu with ahower. Modern oak furniture, apartments 4 rooms and bath. Vacant _ bookkeep^g, stenographer experience. Church and rotate of nations in esrpets, bendix and driur*. Well January 6th. $65.00. Call 8-1084. 2607 Jwj* •• *• F. M. College graduate. theorized on; why Erasmos was his time., supervised and University approved Salado. THf the first writer to think of peace for boy*. See Mr». Piekett, ^Manager, Erasmus,, who to given credit for apt. 101, 801 East 8*th. Call 2-7155. BOYS^ Block University two bedroom Room and Board Levis Pmnf it Scoutmaster originating ideas that eventually duplex. Twin beds. innertprlngs. New Frigidaire. Quiet place—study* AUo led to the Reformatio^, was at HEN i Two bedroom apartment small cottage.' Bills paid.-' 6-9444. ROOM AND BOARD for University Lonis Pagej^r^sophomore -^rom both the Church and -no girls. Phone 2-6612. 1807 odds with kitchen, tile bath, Private * quifet. Fort Worth, has been appointed Enfield. Luther;. the German / On 8 bum lines. Call 6-9807 acting scoutmaster of Troop 11 Martin re? ^22 EAST 6 th ST. or 8-6604. "i Rooms for Rent former. Jhi Catholidt accused 2^Z1__ in Austin. Page is also, assistant PHONE t.2603 AIR-CONDITIONED apartments. For 1VACANCY for boy student in 8 oeeu-advisor of Air'Explorer Stjuadron him. of being the real father of <•** four male students. Completely fur-Lutheranism and the revolt nUhed. Maid service. Automatic wash­ 2011-2018C Red River: Several at-^u*5a«rd,rs»r-"",M 11. against Bome in general. Luthir, er-Congress 8-7007. m'I? furnished apartments now ftTailable; AVAILABLE January 11th. Kieely .fnr-on the other hand; accused him .;Mshe«| front bedroom. Convenient .; i«»" Mureom. vonvenient to at timea of papistry, at -timee ofBoard l«th. Private entrance. 1701 Ria, Grande, Phone 2-998S. atheism; and the Lutherans point Living wm, bedroom, kitchen and The Austin Laundry & out the fact that he never re­ .Sth> _Ntw Eames furniture, Asrock S422 SAN ANTONIO. Tw6 spaoee ia BAT AT. MeGILL HOUSE. Good whole-tile floors. Sectional divan. Lovely —approved house for University men. nounced hie Catholic faith. tome food. Hot rolls for supper. Save—buy meal Large dining njw available. Jtleotrie refrigerator fur-Tha author, who Is jnreparing a tickets. $12o"r'eS* F<>r 8 or 4 m'n •* IllO or disked. Carpeted Boon, Innerspring aatv room. Tnone 8-9514. tresses. Porter service. Bills paid, major life of Erasmus, gives the |SM0 per boy. H block from eampos! reader a taste of the rich life of MIX. garage the controversial figure Erasmus: Coaching Upper M»nt of .living room, dinette, two is, bath, COMFORTABLE large room for boys. |ust enough to give him a back­ Kinsnen ana outsioe terrace. 880.-Private eatracee and bath. Near cam- ground for reading the second COACHING In Spanish. Experienced Living room, dinette, kiteken, one PhoneB2*88»6 n0 •: teacher. Near University. 2-8652. bedroom, bath—hollywood bed in Hv-part' of the book put also jpit lugroom. ffi5. VY6 OARAGE ROOM for one gentlexaan. enough to make him Want to learn Her# si*tootfe y«m COACHING, translations. JFrench, G*r-Private man. Silton 2809 San Antonio. 7-2711. bus iinfc Call more abprat th£ exciting to own tad 3aM^8-4S8St Uwre upper south—huge living room ftrttre. ^ I fceitf.iufe t?olc(i youH FRENCH, GERMAN, RUSSIAN, Expert nreplace, bedroom, bath and Part two, as the Jacket teacher.. Phone 7-1409 or 2-1659. new For Typin9;i.iMS wane to git^ottien|^ kitchen with equipment. couple or girls. »JS. bids paidi R fthe first completely fresh trensf Reports, _et«. Eleetr«satie lation fine^, IBM-el' Erasmus's -For Sale typewriter. Mrs. Petmeekjr. C8-2212. 'Pea^» ProteststV? Erasmus, ILRCTHIC rypeWRITER. Expert tj». wrote in Latin, put down In this -fiction, and poetry* *41 CHRYSLER Cluh Conpe. Radio, •tog. Theeea. rej>orta. Phoaei5>«S. essay his ideas on universal peace. heater, defroster, white sidewalls. ALSO: Several attractive apartments J Clean and in wpnderful shape. See to for University boys, pm• btoeS^fr^l THESES. REPORTS, University Erasmus considered peace "ev­ Priced from |4S to 860. Ail 25«siPfP t-appreciate, 1425. 712B Park Place. with kitchen and electric refrigera­ate. lira. JuKaa. Call S-SS28, erybody's business." The art of 8-5285, tors. For information call 6-8720. peace, he said, is the most impor­ *7' GLIDES tudem }-!-V X'" * tVPlSW' Ppol., Bzpert typists, GROUP TWO:Fiction, HOUSE v ete. S»474t evenings. tant, yet the most Ignored spidy; wheels, ' 8*xl«' room adjoining, re­ and good, condition. of mankind. frigerator : butane. > * EXPERIENCED~~ ~ •; ———-TYPIST i Theses, disser-i . '. ".-'vVt' Phone 7-1*72. .•, js^-..-'.I.'-".'.' . tatlofts. mannseripts. Phone 2-T191. His argument is af sound today as it was in 1517. But fc .lopfcs For Rent T^mO: Neat mosk. Will caD for and deliver. Phone 2-4812 or 2-060*. as if the world wilf turn a deef VACANCIES tqr boys, % block from Nurwry ear to it once again. campus. Meals if desired.' Available CLAUDE VILLAKREALl February 1st. Phone 2-8090. THE SAFgrf Individaal ear* ROOM, kitehei y the-hour, 4ay, themeK/ Experieneed. Univjer-WITAT*'11A WYING-ROOMt kitchen, ^bedroom. AWiMR Also imaQ jjedroom, mo® 'Very, Phone «-«468, N«tghborhood, Mrs. .Tayki. WI1AIA 1^1llril1MAiiJb^ bedroom for 2 boys. IPrivate hath. SSo! 6-0696. Phone 8-1298. 1 DOWNTOWN KINDERGARTEN. Esper-SXFBROMCKD T. SEIBERUNE sonable rates, Pb^a TWO APABTMENW, one thrae^ room ^ *NNhI w»^on't mean the dreams thaf waksi you . and one five rooth for couples or teacher. u/a'sia aMAaaiiiA A^.-as^laa aaaiO^ -— •— 'aa^AeM —• ~ .v;. AL graduate studenti.Nice neighbor test reasonable. Phone • TIRES hood. Phone 2-8681. East Sad. r ««n piwve f« B«a lugMnuMro olfhoworstsort ff you don't^ innil i, lilibe iV HEW GARAGE AP ^2 yiTv. Hiifii mpPT illVVIflUlirAwl * limf MHIV yQVn pPinifM ^needli lWslmooftant eare, eel! Hie Austin LaunehY—youl f M» 4he perfect rMtilH ... our convtnlent c«H-f©r and Ifier1^1Trailo-Ia Tfarae i4 l*s TH6 0XUY TEXAN Pag. I nt'.* a--r>i ; Ovtr t Officer TrSfPlff junior major, from Corpus Christl, was appointed" secretary of %he O Episcopal college student execu­ tive -donttnlttea «( the Southwest Provineet at the annual,mid-winter \ Phi ftu Alpha, music fraternity, January 8, during the Christmas •will initiate new members 'Sunday Building 14. His topic will ba inn ami Sigma fraternity. * j University, where hewwas a. mem holidays; ,: morning, January 7, at 7 Vclock . from the Uniyertifcy of Texas ia "The Othisr Half of Engineering." " There will bfe no meeting ofW lab Antonio. •$$%(§%} istes''"' ' 'iL _ * , Wvbf l^ Kappa Silgma frater-1949, where she received^ a bached Students and chaplains from in the Music Building Recital Hall. Bench and Ba> this month, Page Tkonu of Austin and D««|Im ... S«df*n V4y..... .... , , ... , . gree. Sensing^ m Alpha Phi, )s FlorenceFiereac* Eleanor Thomaa lor of business administration de­colleges five southwestern After the ceremonies" a breakfast ./Sidney Lantar Literary Society Keeton, dean of Law School, an­ ^$»Mi semester: series, regularly scheduled each: J%4&i^ fc/sentor accounting ma-married November IS in Nuttro W.lkowto Melvyn H. SelirtiUr, Texas State College and is now a Laredo, Mexico. Principal action taken at the •rae new members are Max Bel-Cornie Miffleton^ president; Daina Tuesday, has been discontinued loir. Is*member of Delta tlppOos has been-announced by Mr. and senior pharmltdy sjjmdent at the ;lah, Jack King, Charles Kiser, conference was the formation of Gerson, vice-president; Sally until next month due to impending- The couple is at home,in Austin Mrs. H. W. Walkow of Honston. University. a College Student Commission to Elpp, Lopes, James Miller, Lafal­ exams. at 3605 Cherry Lane. Dawkins Miss Walkow is a drama major Chesnick,.recording secretary; Pat int^rate the Canterbury "Move­e^jfRob^ftson, Ted Runyeon, is a student at the University and and is soeial chairman of the Cater and Mary Gene Johnson^ iSf Mary Anh Clarke, Dallas, wit ment in the province.Whe dele­Russell Sayers and Charles Van-Alpha Kappa P«i, professional • we$e married ...Da* Mrs.Dewkins is employed ,in the S.RJ). Jk«aiiBMai^*mw at the TTnl- and is now associated with the Guided by the theme of "Christ in Room 31^816 in the Texas Women fraternity, Dallas Times Herald. >, . • ces Wise, outgoing president. vice-president; Joe Mathews, sec­ Hfcfjsalsft an honor-• A report on --•'. • S4® on the Campus,"':*|he^.-delegate# Union at 2 o'clock. *: retary; Robert Parnell, treasurer; mmm; ary member . of Alpha Epsilon ;;; the aational convention which was ' J. .,.3... Eugenia Selman and David E. Delta, national medieal fraternity; The approaching marriage of discussed problems aiad^how recently held in DesMoines, Iowa N«W officers of the Raagsar-fcft-and Harry Kiely, master of rituals. si , ^ B*ri»ankL»*ise B«m and Clem Canterbury iCluba cap best helft * DaUfa Jr., a graduate of the Uni­and in Phi Eta, Sigma Mi»i Lou Elain*.Riffs to Lieu­ will be given. -, erary Society are Betty Lou Horn, No-was as a hiin solve problems. -The Pharmacy Student Council married JresbiR^,.;. Walter Hall • ' Amy vice versity, were November tenant Williiim Jr. The Rev^ Gray Blandyi director ' president; Johnson, i vtimber 80 In :a formal ceremony 2$ at Bnda in the SSrst Baptist elected Frank < Dannelley, presid­ was annonnced recently in. Bound . -J.-C. Slonneger, consulting en-president; Jerry Renner, secre­ of student work at the University ing chairman, and Connie Elixon­ .f Marie '%&£ and k'A!%aihleu Rock. - Canterbury House, was chairman gineer, will speak to a joint meet-, tary; and Ida Joan Olff, treasurer. ^«&Hw bride attended the Uni- do, secretary, at their Thursday Jr. were married in Aiutin on Miss Biggs is employed in the ing of ASME and AIME Monday, • Guest speaker at the meet was ' s Willy,.where she was a member Carol -Maries Fahrlander December 23. Mrs. Mathieu at­office of the Dean of Graduate pt thi conference.: ; night meeting. ' ' £~f*f'1*t Beta Phi matUy and the Astfcsay DUmH f •—pliell were tended the University and was a School at the University. She at­During the same days of this • -% Newrtan Club, 'and married December 1, at the Con* Delta Gamma. conference* other delegates from Eta Kappa Nw, electrical engi­ tended TSC.W and the University. 'bonnet Belle nominee.mm gtegatiohal Church of Brule, Neb. ' v ''''•:' each diocese in the country were neering honorary, will hold spring f The bridegroom received a' 3e-The bride is a graduate of Araa-Jane Wahlenrtiaier «nd Verse The engagement of Margaret meeting at Cranbrook *School in election of officers Monday night -greein geology from the Univer-rillo Junior College. The bride-Frank Knick«r1>oek«r were mar­Mitchell to Thomas Kennedy, Uni­Michigan to formulate the na­in Engineering Building 141 at tional Canterbury Movement. 7:80 p.m. ried December 28 in. the First versity students, has beetu. an­ Each province in the country is V -:. -• Methodist Church in San Angelo. nounced. m Knickerbocker is a law student Miss Mitchell iir ""W iiuMng forming student commissions to Thej possibilities school make-up; . Karchmer, A business meeting of PVI aid and comply with the national of a Madeline at the University and the bride education major from Houston for brides and a school of man­Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemi­ conversation; Gina Nichols and Oft ere ii is a Chi Omega at the University and Kennedy is a business admin­movement. ners for boys were announced' by Arhopulbs, manners; C. C. cal society, will be held ia V Nell of Oklahoma. istration student from Galveston. Mrs. Ethel Forman, assistant di-Eckhoff Joaiin Chemistry Building 218 Monday and Armstrong, * Both 4re members of the Newman ir of the Texas Union, at the January 8, 7 p.m., reporter -R. ' jay ..... .T ; g The engagement and approach Club. ''' ^-v-Tobe-Coburn clothes, and B. J; Lilly and Ann H. Perry Jr: has announced. Mem­ ^>008 Washington of "Per*. Dwosldh, dating {Hroblems. 7—InitiatSon of new members of 10-12 and 8-5—Water colors by g marriage of Awdmy Lsniu sonality Plus," charm school spon A party foUowed the meeting bers are urged to attend. Phi Mn Alpha at Music Building itmt Jack*on to T. A. Brown have been Mr.-and Mrs. E. D. Wooten, Schocjl Announces sored by the Union Charm Com­ Ney„1 Ma and refreshments of eokes and ligr«a^k£i«rt; ^lMber. ^ scum. announced by her mother, M^s. 1024 ElKngson Lane, have an­ „ mittee. served. IX—Newman,. Club, Texas ^Thea­8—Music, Zhmma, and Poetry Dorothy Jones Briudel of Long-nounced the engagement and Fashion Awards ; round resume of all cookies were DR. EUGENE H.DUKi A table Plans for the spring style show ter. ' view. approaching marriage of their Group, AAUW# meets with Mrs; topics discussed during the fall will be mad* at the January 12 Optometrist 1:15-—Lutheran Student Associa­Fred Bollard, 903 West Thirti­The semi-formaj, double-ring daughter, Martha Jorene Wooten Fashion Fellowships covering series of six lectures was led by tion retreat starts frotn office to eth!. ceremony *^1 be January 27 at to Beverly G, Goria. ; , full tuition for one year at Tobe- meeting of the Charm Committee Coburn School for Fashion Ca­Madeline Karchmer, chairman. from 7 to 9 o'clock in Ae Wo­ • Ijake Buchanan. 4—Steering committee of Free the University Baptist Chapel. Dr. . The couple will be mttirried in 1—Alpha Phi Omega, TeJGu reers will be awarded in nation­The most important points of each wen's Lounge of the Union. All IDance Committee, Texas Union. Harry M. Moffat;will officiate. a formal, double-ring ceremony Union 316-136. ' : 4-6—Posture Contest prelimina­February 16 in the Presbyterian wide competition among college lecture were stressed again by membeni are urged to attend* M—•Public tea and showing of ries, Women's Gym. Theological Seminary-Chapel, with seniors, the school has announced. individual leaders of each group. * vwtw «olora by four Texas ar~ 4:45—Campus League of Women House Chairmen the Rev. John J. Mueller Offici­The fellowships, valued at |950 Discussion^ were given by Myr­ ' iists, Ney Museum. Voters, Texas Union. ating. ^ each, are offered to senior women tle Watkins, posture; Patsy Keat­Hillel Interfaith 8;80—Austin Symphony Orches-Are Sponsoring graduatihg before August 21, ing and Nadine. Sivley, hair and 7—Phi Lambda Upsilon, Chemis- Both Miss^ Wooten and Mr. tm In concert with Gerald and. Gorin are graduates of Austin 1961, for the year 1951-52. This Supper This Week tryBuilding 218. ; "Wilfred Beal, young twin Viet 7 Kappa Psi, Texas Union Clothing Drive High School. She. is now employed New Ydrk school trains young Newman Society^ Hillel Foundation will hold its 301. , The Association of House by, the Capital. National Bank. women for. executive positions in next Interfaith Supper Wednes­ 7:15—J. G. Blonniger to address Chairmen is sponsoring a clothing Corin, s, Csnterbnry 7:80—Great Books -Foundation certain age child and is collecting Miss Allday attended the Uni­pay in stores and other fashion the meeting. Musical entertain­gical Music," with special empha­ Honse. ! course, % Austin Public Library garmento for flhat group. versity, wh6re she .'was.a member organizations. .. >. - sis on Easter, Orthodox, Roman NEW FASHIONS FOR ment will be provided by a group -^a«l <*. Waswmich to t»lk to auditorium. " 1 House Chairmen whose resi­of Zeta Tau Alpha sorority. The Registration blanks may be bb<-of boys from St. Edward's Uni­and Anglican liturgical-music. NOW AND NOW ON ? »SF, University Oirfstian 7:30r—Eta.Kappa Nu to elect of-, dences are participating in tiie bridegroom is a graduate of the tained; from the Fashion Fellow-versity.^ .:'0radt . fleers, Engineering .Building drive are requested to call the University of Colorado. s h i p Secretary, T o b e -Coburn On the agenda for Sunday night DSF Meeting Tonight • ~ -Eyes Examined 141. School for Fashion Careers, 851 '/How do -fre live u Christians , m office of the Dean.of Women on is a buffet supper in the Newman Prescriptions Filled Munson Tonkin col­8—rKennetii H. Jehn. to address or before Tuesday,' in order that Cultural Groups Madison Avenue, New York 21. Club Anne* at 5:30 p.m. in the Face of a 15-year War?" Lenses Duplicated lection of etchings, Bare Books Sigma XI in open, non-technical arrangements may be made for *&• will-be discussed at the Sunday ; Boom. address on "Meteorological Be-the collection of the garments, Of AAUW Plan JE* Marrta* in Fort Worth night meeting of tie DSF at Uni­?Glasses adjusted at ^ , S-*-^'*The Incas" in photographs the of Davis versity Christian Church by Paul search at University Miss Jesse Earl Anderson, assist­ Baptists to Give Nancy was married to from Life, Music Building log-Texas," Petroleuta Engineering ant to the Dean of Women, said. Week's Meetings Robert Thomas Edwards in Fort G. Wassenich. A nomination of University Building 307. Mission Program Worth December 18. Both are spring office^ Will be held and -Mrs. Donald Brand will inter­ Optometric Clink It, 3-5, 8-10—AAGW members 8—Baptist Student Union to elect graduates of Taylor High Schobl. elections held the following Sun­ . stuff"March of Dimes envelopes. officers, Baptist Student Center. Sermons to Aid pret her play "Moonlight and ,. The ^ BSU mission progra|n Edwards served with the Navy day. The program will begin at 2228 Guadalupe Phone 28684 Rosa," for the Music, Drama, and ^hich is given monthly at Shoal and attended the University. 6 p.m. Poetry Group of AAUW, Mrfnday Bible Readers " Crest Baptist Church will be giv­ at 3 p.m. The group will meet in Don't Forget "The Living Word" is the ti­ en Sunday evening by a group of the home, of Mrs. Fred -Ballard, University students led by Tom tle of a series of sermons to be 908 West 30th. Perkins and Roy Ray. The theme delivered by Bev. Lawrence Bash, New Member and Recent Grad­ (D&Lba minister of the University Chris­uate Groups of AAUW will stuff of the program will be "Choose are Ye This Day." -_ tian Church. These sermons March of Dimes envelopes Mon­ Monrff|, NighJ, January 8 is your style show . Another-group of BSU members designed to help in reading and day in the home of Mrs. G. H. understanding the Bible. The first Newlove at 3008 Washington WiU give a Sunday morning ser­ vice at the Lake View Church will be an interpretation of the Square. Sessions will be held from with Wallace Hudson preaching problem of suffering and will be 9 to 11 o'clock 'Monday morning, the sermon. given Sunday morning. from 8 to 6 in the afternoon and # The 8:30 morning service will from 8 to 10 Monday uin o w iv monaay evening. ••• be held again Sunday after having Conversational Spanish Class of UnivPrr.tj­ tion Committee will lead the dis­ son. Mrs. Parker C. Fielder will cussion. assist her as co-hostes^. * Hostess for the sewing group V.-trn.'Sfi the vary essence of spring LSA SponsoiSj^JT meeting Thursday at S^O p.m. will be Mrs. Frank Herrold, 1516 crease resistant pure Irish linan .»• RetreadJoday Preston, with Mrs. Frank Elsass I rl * 4 The Lower^ Colorado River serving as eo-h&stess. with a yoke of knrfr ribbing toat Lake Buchanan will ba the Bridge Group Four will meat m scene of a retreat sponsored by Friday morning at 9:30 a.m.at the the Lutheran Student Association home of Mrs. Paul Thompson, Wm "VrtatSh, hdnd the" sparWe' rhina-Saturday noon to Sunday A£t*r> 1507 Wool^ridga Drive. Co-hos­noon. Approximately 15 to 20 stu­tess wfll be Mrs. Alexander Mof dents are expected to attencLvfe fit . Ann Rosa'f casual linen Mjairafes Dr. A. G. Wiederaenders ,of ' 90 to many places this Springf Texas Lutheran Collie, Seguin, Final Wica Meeting Monday ^ THa iop has a ribbed knit •Will act aa supervisor at the meet >Th«, final meeting of Wica for and later 'lead a discussion per­ this semester will be held Man? waif* and twriu and fhe skirt It taining to campus •evangelism. day nlght in T%a Unl«» ; J «v«f *fim with poclceh. Red, white The program will include recre­ J 7 PJ». J-MWfcation and Bible study, and navy^tofof combmatidos All members are urgsd • to be * Sunday night the LSA will aet axdusivefypurt In Pteeent beeause a new president as sponsor of a supper meeting 14.95 and -vice-preiident will be electd to be held at Gethsemane Parish to serve dtaring the spritig term. Hall 5 p,m. The group will parti­ following the meeting, the ax*, |;ipate fen a' discussion, and crit­ eutiva council will, me#t, in th« icism and offer suggestions for Mica Office at the Union at 8 next semester's LSA activities. p.m. It is compulsory for all' eooa> The meet is open to the public. cil members to attend. *(cG«fv» WO! T£la*£ WF "•. * -4.ij" '' 1' '~ir : Dr.'lCawon" fMoe&ta 'iMay ^ professor of edncatlbniil psychol­An Evening Prayer service (irfn ogy, will speak to th. Wesley #3w4s!«siuti.* " it^ l> * Itfi ri'lflihii • 31'I IT " Wm> 5e will be ialks be given ia Fellowship &all of who natl^ial and pro-MdMt Cfnxth vincial esnvepi|on» last summed r/'-r ~ii-1',.^ and4irill ba follawad> by avf-42*» the regular social hdur WiU V ku \­ ^J " mmmm Wl '•? sum.on M ' " ww WQK-.a. Pre >k * ft1*1.^ / iSrtfC ^4ftI > J* lo becoming—theWcsthcmae with eesllpped revert *nd imtrt rtitdiin*. Solid colors inptstels and lent I ipign _ _ phase of « state-wide effort to r^se approximately |450^Q09 f^r a complete church plant, iariiadHnk' student «md Bible chair facilities Four student teams ar« mQci^ ing student church members J& pleto. fiwwCoffey JV., Bob Cornell, JLula M "is®!S-M" Spring.pick-up for your wardrobe: wi* street floor separates V 5.95 5.95 7.95 2.95 WW* M ' 1 -sVt 1^'­Y** I ^>19I V'-*A Is * Wm­ -» % * %•w-* 1 \iy4 * %J r i-^£ * ^r­-ffe­•m 1 -4*?­[*> MR1* & 4 >wt^ u ft, v^r.%4 ^ i *»*. i 1st a »•«:•!«• l\ I'm,, .i . / ••// "» 14 lily.t •* f 4II/,' '•i*; !•« -'fen 1^ •S . ^it * • irt. l"li.'JifgA Iff: T"ii; s f The straight, stafghf afcfrf that's the vary tReme of ,fashion this year ...your boslc In rayon worsted, In block, brown, green, or red. Sites 10 to 20, S.95. A trouser > slim worsted shorkskln with twin watch packets at th# wol^ . . . ..* slteTIn grey or brown 10 to 18, MS. All wjM>l shepherd's pttitd • * . alto with allm llnte •5 . . fly-front Availing. Slack with, white, eltos 10 Ki 'to 20, 7.% Majestl* ''ihlrt 4%^ Mouse of fino broadcloth, -*•!*^ ^ • "n white, "TOvy^ftfrtkrbhio or mate*/ »*• m SPECIALLY PRICED^® BDY-STYLE JACKETS,15J1DL e « . o ptrftc# companion to th* boy frfencft ®«l»! Hero's o spodot ^p<»rhinityx||^ metcb your sports {adtef to that of your 'detaili, «nd mado %V. -Tu", f-v • saf"" 'V 'Great Dane ^ ?ri "~V*< A«..W;ij;f» 1 ll ayin .. •. •. ­ i-*. Lftlifit* -the January 14 programs w|U Melchlor, world­ ^4­ s include Melchior's singing of some ^4, renowned Metropolitan Wftgherian of tfie best^known u-Im frops /* tenor, will be gueat soloist with 1 gsEES the Austin Symphony Orchestra Wagnfer's Lohengrin and Siegfrifd , m and his narration • tfi Prokofiev's Sunday afternoon, January H, at "Peter and the Wolf" whiles the -> 8:80 in Gregory Gym ' ^ By ROBERT C, JONES Bothof them are enrolled"in ; Mr. Melehior, ai!e«ttionatety orchestra plays the selection. ; ; TO _ "t*oM« «»t ||^*Wfci»t,s" '»y favorite type of the Julliard School -*t> Ifusie; Tickets will be on sale at Reeds» _ known as the"'-Great Dane," tena­ Josef *wt Sternberg tea ** tnusic? Jau," said Jerry Beal. whewi they carry acadeniie ltudiw' ciously seeks to improve his avo-William-Charles, Univerait> .nrotoisd <&««*. to, atfad "Stan Kenton. And Benny as well as their music. cational skills in his apiare Co-Op,' and the iMusic Building.' ,$* produced ^Bhie ABt«^ Goodman; say, you ought to get moments. His widely varied in­ '•v"^* «t the t«sm ?»*» tkfct LP record they made of his a day> bat wait, you better jnst terests grange from big gameillustrate tin power., ja» eoaeagt in. Canngis Hall? put down seven. And even that Toa, Art for Public hunting to cooking.. • ^ t ~ ankle a»d a nice-; itfa gjreatssr-Bothing like itt" This 4s almost too tnuch for anyone Id' An " expert at still1 and •vA-'­ .*et of laga. • 3 from Fred. * helieve. i don't belieye it myself both At Elitabet Noy at 3 4 o motion, pictwr# photography, Mel­ , at the risk <>f sounduv* 4B*i The twins were in Music Build­came A to This from Fred, who also tea, free the art-loving ehior h«s his'own photo lab and A «t ». w»i» «»* .aw;* ing 206 for jrbrief session before volunteered the information thit i projection room in his Beverly public, will open the exhibit ^pf • i« UiKbrn *! Modem-' going out to eat the first Mexi­baseball is his ^favorite sport Hills home. He amuses friends water colors by four Texas artists__~Hbrary# this is what he can meal of their IS years. Jerry likes football—and at the Elisabet Ney Museum from with taken hi _ Not many visitors, celebrities or thinks, by the way,; that "Texas pictures on game hunts, and his still photographs 3 to 8 o'clock Sunday afternoon. *erjr attributes eatat*1 otherwise, get away from Texas was robbed against Tennessee.*' I __ Work by. Vera Wise and Helen are considered by many experts being asked^ three -Both tgy hard to keep from be­ of! te tho mbvie, as*d--4iweafy1 MARLENE DIETRICH i very elemental questions. ing one-sided, and to " Its production fe v* are emphatic Melehior takes a month so Sari Antonio, and Polly Howertpn or '•Iter co-actor Mer-character in, say, 'the opening -But the twins didn't even wait in their disapproval of musicians Mutually for big game hunting, of Cuero will-be included. The scene when he discovers his ca-for-th«y to be asked. who can .talk <>nly ^ bagging trophies for himself and four artists painted together lastprflmoted to nary is dead, and one of the latter1 "You can quote me en this,*' ~At~thfe end of the inter^lew^ several museums. He ^lso takes summer in Mexico, and their fefca*'fc&tfair over Emil Jennings, leofthe gwtes* Ibis scenes when le is on-stage of the said Fred. "I've been to * lot oif Fred,, who is majoring in English* these opportunities to furnish his paintings Were exhibited at the campuses, and—this is the truth vV.j. '-*• s. " < ^.'SataM&g "Blue Angel" cabaret worked out a press release to wife with fut-coats and himself Romama Galleries and the Nation­ now—Texas has' one of the. most al Library in Mexico City. 'Itot regardless of '-wfceSe name It is interesting ttf 4iMotS that explain just how he and Jerry with opera -costumes. Oiv a recent :V;;: **%» the nuurqatee and why it is Jennings' microscopically detailed beautiful that I've ever seen. have such good teamwork—an ex­ safari into Africa, he shot a new The pictures will be on exhibit "Texas girls are outstanding— two "Blue Angel" is Jennings' acting doss. not. eclipse the per­ample of which concert-goers will leopard coat for his wife. at Ney Museum for weeks, vehicle. He I* au;thentic, mar-formance of Dietrich in her first they're just . . „ well, outstand­hear this , afternoon when they Melehior has made two trips at 10-12 and 3-5 *n week days velotufiy convincing to the last de-Sim. She is not mere cardboard ing." play with Ejrs Bachlin and the overseas to sing for American and 3-5 on Sundays. ~ f ­ "Texas, as a state, is wonder^ tailinthis tragic rale of a Gorman femme fatal#, but a .ssrmbol of Austin Symphony Orchestra at troops still serving in foreign £ professor who falls in love with % lasciviousness and abandon that is ful." 3:30 in Gregory. • " •, 'V; - areas, and he modestly calls them •cabaret singer. and is reduced to disturbingly alive. There : was a pause while;the "Ensemble playing is much one of my hobbies." , But the one perfect scene is not twins.lit cigarets and thought ufr ^peddling risque pictures .of Ida more easily perfected when the trife aadportraying p down in liem. For sheer shock, for' dra-some more answers. team has worked together for- M I, W»w«. I matic intensity, -few moments in They were on television 'recent­work only UT Profs Serve in "This was Jennings' first talkie, film can surpass the final scene ly—Ed Sullivan's "Toast of the years. Ensemble can be perfected when the artists in-i PHONE when Jannings begins hia~mania-Town" show, where they played and he brought -with him a. tre­ cal aping of a rooster's crow that Bach's double Concerto. That stinctively know what each other . 2-5411 »enendoui gift for pantomine which scepes dimensional is so devastating a parallel of an brought about the logipal question is doing. They must be able to (ivet his a. apprehend arising circumstances* quelitywhich is toe often earlier, happier event in his life. of "What do you think about Irem Frw at any time; That is the art of Six Univeraity faculty members ft i« monies which employ actors television an entertainment DUKHE -MacMURRAY as an ensemble team." JERRY AND FRED BEAU attended the national professional ); wbohave only conquered fte stu­ medium?" speech . convention in New York dio diction lessons.And the di­ "Well, I think it's ideal for—" during the holidays, Bruce Roach, rector, who wisely . was not "I believe the artist is much interscholastic speech director, ©ver-awed by this new *asred cow more effective when he can fee was in charge.of registration at SOOND, permitted the great star seen- Offers UT the ^convention. He..spoke on "A loner stretchtes of pantomine. Fred was the more "energetic Of Ancient Incas Survey .of Drama Loan Services , It is perhaps, lot this reason m waving his hands, so he tri­ in the United States." mmk people will find the movie umphed that time. They "The Ihcas,"* an exhibit por­were T. A. Roufese, professor of fHONl ||*%ibw/,_ aOTuming that -if actors both agreed that television-was traying the rums of w-vanished speech,; sponsored a group which 2-5291 arentengaged in furious conver­ marvelous medium. -­ •IPlan to Study Other Lands civilization, and based'en a pho­ debated on public speaking. F. L. sation or reciting, Ion* pages of One of the striking things about tographic essay which appeared in Winship,. associate professor of well-edited drawingroom patter, ife Ma.gazinfi»Jg„iiow on display the twins is that they are twol living co-operatively in a Lisle Danish Folk Schools* pointed out it becomes one' world in action. drama and editor, of American n the Music Building Loggia. The different personalities. -There Fellowship group brings out every that Lisle f ellawship is what the Mr. Nielson would like to in­Educational Theater Association's But it would take an exhibit wiJJ run for about 30 days. waa.®° at each other for [aide of a personality and makes students make it, and what it ac­terest some University students publication, served In an execu­ aharp scripster to get The tographs, taken by confnrnation. They interrupted one of the group, realize what it complishes Is what the group de­in going to Denmark with him tive capacity at the convention. ever, in words what the camera ?rank Scherschel, are one of each other constantly, and-the j m^ans to take responsibility, Mrs. sires to accomplish. next August to study for six Lucy Barton, associate profes­ lens revealed of Professor Bath's matter of which one answered P/ series of exhibits prepared by It is irritating at first, said Mr. months in the Folk Schools. sor. of drama, was chairman of Life. 1 Additional pictures.not in­ the ^|^W^~She-«hM®4 Jfte floor with Nielson, but after the individuals Those students who go to Den the theater history panel. Jesse I % cluded' in the original stoiy are f """ -^^ke? resivongibility and mark. will, spend their „Qffet. two J. Vjllarreal, associate' professor MIVMteV1|fa|||« st£t ^ ^[he?,, husband at an info shown in the display. about learn .that JSei» is not food for Mohths living in-Danish of speech, attended in iin official RHON! cussion Lisle. Fellowships. homes fpro BS Tm&Kt The incas were sun worship­In-the jnatter of music their capacity and Ernest Hardin, asso­ Mr; Nielson, a. teacher in the them jeverytime they want it, then and learning the language. They 7-1527 'the _ ers and built their cities in the tistes, too, are different. Fred's; prQl then go to study in the ciate professor of speech, also HELD OVER! Deliveries to composers are : ' eat ' your door & high eold mountains of Peru. In favorite Beetho­ schools. attended. la Color sec ven s day* time. the 100 years before Pizarro con­and Stravinsky, while Jerry Daily Texan Crossword Puzzle The Fellowship units are for "AMERICAN CUEfclLLA edShirts the :' quered them, they had conquered prefers Bach and Bartosh. But ~ DOWN 21.Oriental six weeks summer periods. IN THE PHILIPPINES" ACROSS way jmn like >oth slopes^of the Andes stretch-they are agreed on Bohuslav Mar 1.A leaf of.. 1, Daughter of nurses .. The cost of the Fellowship Tyrone Powtr v J Mi them when ing 2^00 miles fr6m Columbia tinu, whose new concerto they a cajyx . Herodias 22. Assam DRIVE IN THtXTKIS phowT Te: groups are $150 per student and today's C/1P/TOL. 2-8789 ' ^fem want i 4< down to Southern Chile. will world -premiere next Sunday 6. Animai'a ,,• 2. A going tribe, -the cost of going to Denmark is TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY by When lihe Spaniards arrived in in Dallas. -fbot:" , forth i,1 Naga hills Answer Is I960, though the lack of money Feature Starts it 7, p. m. "A LADY TAKES at 188S, the highly organised, in4 By this time Fred, who had be­•.Political j 3. Kettles 24. Styglances not keep anybody away, A CHANCE" of ' jehould grown culture of'the Incas was gun -the interview in.a -eoat but subdivision ~ 4. Insect 27. Uttle child in the " "UNION J«aa Arthur ' pre said Mr. Nielson. „ John Wayna over-ripe. It could hot withstand no tie, had shucked off the coat ~ IC. Ger.). 9. A lixhrium 28.Roman Classified STATION" est ii»s tm 10. Brightly-«. River (It.y magistrate Andre Nahmias, who has at­William Holdea *«MR. LUCKY" l the impact of the conquistadors.; *nd .paced, the floor with nervous -colored flsh 7. Brazilian -29.Come back Ads. tended a' Fellowship unit told the "CASSINO TO KOREA*'^ u Cary Grant By 1600, it had ^completely van­energy. Jerry—coated and tied—? of 12. Coagulated wallaba JO. Whether students, -"The Fellowship places-(Documentary" Lorraine Day ished. j_ stood placidly by. isir 14. Moslem 8. Carts ,v 32. Gotobed you in a situation where you are Iwimm The exhibit includes pictures-of Neither twin Considers himself i^/A'S/ry larj title -' 9. Twist 33. Smoothed, 42.TiDcLan able to be among people of all the Valley of Urubamba, Modern a prodigy. "Eighteen it getting "MY BLUE -" say "ONE WAY STREET" Eat • 19. PolesW-s-^.. ll.JUaping.— . as with "v gazelle; cultures, economic, statuses, re­ Cuxco which is superimposed on quite old," said Fired. "Besides, 16. Partof •" 13.Miupond r an iron 44.GoddessOf ~ - HEAVEN" . James Mason hai ligions, and races* giving you a ancient Inca ruins. and Fort Sac-I don't see mueh use for the la* Mto beM,vi7/:-17, Internal-84. Anierican healing ^ DanDuryea . ^ it synthesis of cultures that make sahuaxnan, which -^SS built of mas­bel of ''prodigy." An artist should 18. Gold ':-l combustion financier (Norse) Batty Grable Dan JDallay. ^ ST i you understand other peoples and TiTX/lS T-l sive mountain stones transported be judged solely on the basis of (Heraldry) "engine and 45 Measure \S "COPPER"^ tak find the similarities and the basic several miles and caryed and his capabilities" 19. Ostrichlike 29-Varying statesmanT (Dominican jO?OU CANYON" FIRST SHOW «>. M. shaped by stone tools. ' , ; ' bird weight, 36. Lubricate Republic) needs of all people. Ray Millan Also shown is the Throne of 20. People of (India) 40. Cosy > 47. Spain (abbr.) Hedjr Laiqar Q MMl£NCnCT8»«. the Inca at Sacsahuaman and a "WAKE ISLAND" Samoa ­ 23. Founder of IBUIE date... rainbow over the Urubamba Val­UT Beauties Rival Methodism I ( X i ;r-5 1* 5 June Stokes Plays Brian Doplavy ft ley near Wteay-Wayna is an un­ Robert Preston 25. Nonsense, < usual pho|ogn^>h. -Iio Wit (Brit,slang) "TO LATE FOR Xpas with 26-Muse of lyric TEARS" •tid lor that snack, thorn Sfait«UBt« •*«' the Way ^^ ~ poetry ii \i Li>ab»th Scott— EM1L JANNINGS W In Concert Today •• ••.*••• Is nothing as good as F^e statements for next semes­28. One of the -• •••• • DanDuryea pho h a "Such photographic pulchri 1i14 ii-ift June Stokes, University" juniorj jqvsr/Af Immmi and oqy come ter will be tnailed either Tuesday --Great Lakes---" •THE VALIANT HOMBRE" 7-2900 or Wednesday^ to students who tu3e," sighed Bill Dunagan, ar will be presented in a solo piano Duncan Renaldo •Laon Carillo "GOD IS MY CO-PILOT"lorreal ireatl pre-registered,' W. Byron Shipp, he looke^ lingeringly through —SOrRemove w w 2o;'; 22" -y • concert in'Scott-Hall 4n -Dallas .. Dannie-Morgan-r­ llfift f ifnri mft r*If T*T* Campus Calen­ice from „ 3 o'clock . Sunday" afternoon. IRIS "LA CASA CHICA" • MEALTIAjUU CAFE registratio'n'supervisor, an­the months of at Raymond Massay ib '• 21 dars for 1961* 97. Epoch The program will be a part of her nounces. Deadline for paying fees P 201S Guadalupe' Ph. 6-1114 -Starting with Ann Shriver as • • 88. Neuter "reward as'one of the four winners 1* January 22. January and ending with Mary pronoun,;! ¥ A 27 of the. Young Artist Competitions Esther Haskell as December, 39. River i'I I1 W ii sponsored-by the Civic Federation s r 2$ Z1 w 32 34 34 PIrniuir .uT BURNET the calendar offers monthly ln-i - of Dallas. ~ " —lumuiii * spiration from the autographed, 40. Pack •- |' Yftf A pupil of Dalies Frantz, pro­5-1710 V. 27 *m pictures of Jane Bradner, Pala: away -fessor of piano, Miss Stokes was "GLASS Color %y Tacktalcolwr 41.Carry with • Ellis, Jackie Ferris, Elaine Fos­ guest pianist with the.Austin Sym­MENAGERIE •COPPER 'imm V," difficulty t* 38 40 . ~~s JSCANYON" • 5' ter, Ruth Hancock, Barbara; Jana Wyman . <3.v Pertaining „ i yfft phony Orchestra and, in 1944 and Kelley, Mae Leath, EUie Luck-|4< Kirk Deu*la> Ray MQIaad ea rood to the lion n 44 45 1947 she was soloist' with the i-.-i.-H'idy ett, Clare Masterson, and Cecile' 48. God of love ^Houston Symphony. Last year she "ABILENE "^E ISLE Whalley.