vwi<"-»^ *V ,}A'T VJi^T^ ft,W \ *4i r 'VTi-. % t W*9R.'* iWfW v I <" pi 'S \*V*Cv Jj •r^ v •w#. J&s&swfc 3'K 4 JTC* Student m^t-t ffir*Ji:C#il#^ C H^f jNf it^J^ S# «rt4 IVOLUME 51 ^Eight Pages Today Pf ice Fiv» Cdnts JUSTIN. TEXAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1951 m*imim*&mbm J. sf'^ Orange Jackets to Has ^,.irft-.j . - jf\i -••£*"&> rArli^^V 4, £%r,j H^SWi £ %mA> m By ANNE CHAMBERS . Fulbright awards are also the Center whil« Mr, Neal is on A T w i i gvz •S&'/i'wr/ "? T The University's first Interna­handled by ,.the loffice and eight leave, ^ > f f By CHARLEY TRIMBLE other expenses would i*covered* tional Center will be officially students and faculty have re­• The ftfftsfgn' studeiif enrollment lb*::, Ttstan AuocUU Editor ceived such within Suspension of rules to allow an immediate vote oil toe scholarships is the highest ever experienced by opened this afternoon by the • Tired of what one observer called "humming and haw­ Orange Jackets at -a reception the"last two years. Three more the University, and includes citi­issue was not called for until two visitors had spokeit before^ are expected to receive them this zens 41 countries, Iraq lead-ing," the lafrgest number of students to attend the Assembly honoring the ^foreign students. of he Assembly and the NSA committee had spade H negativeStudents* and faculty are in­year, said Mr. Neal. in& • this school year last night watched the student lawmakers vited. to the reception from 8 to , "We have a lot more informa-Future plans for the Center in report. _ ' ? '*;* refuse to vo ~ 5" pTm.Tn the Center, B. Ha , told members IMt "aint* exhibits, Already a focal point for the lsrships than most people realize,' cussicm .groups, films, trance into NSA or the admission of Negro colleges to TISA. 860 foreign; students now enrolled hu said. and dinners cooked by the foreign the Assembly has been ao negligent inr acting on HSMSI . , Charlie Robinson, assemblyman from the School of Law in the University, the Center also students. At the present the six group of students I have been working with will start circ#*' provides scholarship and travel invitation foreign student clubs and.the, In­ and a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity, was elected information "lor American stu­ternational Council use the Cen­ ating petitions next week calling for a student.referendum/* Orange Jacket*, hoaori«| tft dents and meeting space for ter for meetings. ' ~ 1 student vice-president, replacing Sterling.Staves, now.on foreign student*, invite* yon to "Mark Lewis, imsuccessfut Assembly candidate in the Fall' fl groups interested in international Interest in, international stu­ the -official opening of the In­ Governor Shivers' staff. Robinson has served as finance relations. .dents And their activities actually elections, told Assemblymen that he had started ofce petition 'J§ ternational Center Friday after­ "The Center is a noon, 3 to 5 o'clock. started' in 1941 when Mr. Neal committee chairman on the Assembly since the Fall elections. home where calling for a referendum to be held at the general spring was named co-ordinator of inte» the international students can be A bill calling for an Assembly decision on UT entrance hosts, but it is also a home for The office Is now responsible American student activities. After election. Miss Ball's petition wad tf>, ,call for the American students and faculty for the distribution -of over 260,-the war he returned to become to the National Students' Association was introduced by at an earlier date. * --radvisor. who havef an interest in world 000 worth of scholarships and foreign student, Since Sam Brewer, David Bennett, Fred Kessler, and Andre Late Thursday night it was reported that Lewis, Miss Ball* £jj| affairs," said Neal, foreign funds each year, 1946 the,Center. has progressed student advisor. Joe . Mr. Neal and, Viola Garcia, bis from, half-a-desk space in the his­Nahmias. and the four Assembly NSA sponsors will meet Monday Last spring Mr. Neal remarked assistant, must attend to scholar­tory department office to the two CHARLIE ROBINSON * Membership dues of $150 would be appropriated. No afternoon at 4 o'clock in the Union to consolidate petition that Texas was the only Univer­ships, housing, health, course ad­rooms now; occupied in B. Hall. efforts. The meeting is open-*­ sity in the country with a foreign vising, and extra-curricular acti­Plans for an international cen­ dents, we are admitting thatstudent enrollment of comparable vities of all foreign students. Miss tei'r or, house ^re now on the Uni­to the public. v are not a representative' jgroup»^-^ size that did not have a center Garcia.«is now acting director of versity's building list. Reporting that the Assem­ He pointed out that one ^ com* for its international activities. bly NSA committee was mittee split 3-3 pn joining and Was by The Center furnished against the Students' Associa­the Schwartz report was negative* tile Rotary Club and other Austin in tion joining, Newton Hand then said that it was the citizens..The Rotary Club has also duty of each Assembly toiember sponsored annually a Christmas Schwartz said that a referen­ Faculty members, townspeople, Active pallbearers were Dr. Al­F. Pittenger, L. -D. Haskew, to express an opinion and let it dinner for students left in town out-of-town friends, and students bert P. Brogan, Dr. L. L. Click, George I. Sanchez, D. K; Brace, dum, if held, should precede be known to the student body ' and a spring picnic for those for­ eign students who were "leaving crowded the University Preaby-' Dr. Newton Edwards, Dr. Warner C. C. Colvert, B. F. Holland, A. the-general elections. And that through the Texan. * iSf the University. terian Church Thursday afternoon E. Gettys, Stanley Finch, Dr. T, L. Chapman, James P. Jewett, F. NSA should be judged on its own David Bennett, Jt36o assembly­y to attend the funeral services for S. Painter, Dr. R. A. Tsanoff, Dr. merits, "not tied in with the gen­man, moved suspeivsion of ttie » Mr. T. J. Heinphill is chairiiian of Dr. Flinn. Arrowood, J. Adams, C. T. Gray, E. G. Oisen, Six Japanese law professors are dean the law department $f Charles Charles W. Hackett, and Dr. O. eral election." rules to allow an immediate vote\f the Rotary international com­ visiting on the University, campus Keio University and-Kirisho Kata-chairman of the Department of B. Williams. • I. I. Nelsbn, James Knight, J. W. "to let the students, know how tha mittee which sponsors the events. The committee recommended to study American systems of yama is dean of the law faculty History and Philosophy of Edu­Among the out-of-town atten­Reynolds, 1* B. Ezell, Hob Gray, Assembly stands on the question?* that the Assembly take a direct government and education. and director of Chuo University. cation. The Rev; Harry Moffett, dants at the services were Dr. T. H. Shelby, Frederick Eby, W. Before * vote could be takes, stand for or 'against NSA and Shigemitsii Dando, Kaneji Kimti assisted by the-'Rev. Flynn Long, Wilson Elkins, president of Texas Arriving Tuesday, the profes­J. Battle, Roger J. : 'VVilliams, also gave three reasons why they the chair asked if there was toot sors have attended discussions of ra, "Shira Kiyomiya and Sanj pastor of the First Southern Western Univereity, Dr. D. M. believed the University should not privileged motion to adjourn SuyenObu are all law professors Presbyterian Church, conducted Wiggins, president of TexaB Tech­Charles T. McCormick, Arno-No- the code, and case systems of join: , -already on the floor. The secre­ teaching government, problems of at Jjy»nese Universit^l^^^„; the'services. 'I;, nological College, and Dr. Chaun-wotny, J. C. Dolley, Read Gran­1. TISA sho.uld have a chance tary said there waa. and student government and admini­ Burial services will be held cey Leake, vice-president and dean In pointing out the difference in berry, C. D. Simmons, R. L. to prove itself. sembly voted to adjourn. ' "5 " strations. • have also heard one at Clinton, N. with of The University of Texas School 2. The question of costs is one committee's They Japanese and American law Sunday C-, Biesele, T. W. Riker, Paul Boner, An investigating discussions of criminal law, prison Rev. M. C. McQueen officiating. of Medicine at Galveston. . professor said that Japan usec Fred M. Bullard,-R. C. Cotner, of the future and not of the recommendation to re-establish administration, and laws affecting only a code system, while Ameri­For 22 years a member of the Honorary "pallbearers were: Campus Chest as a means of sup­ Hulon Black, Dr. H. L. Klotz, Dr. original fee. commercial papers. University faculty, Dr. Arrowood David L. Miller, Fred ~C. Ayer, 12,168 Students can judicial decisions arecusually James G. Umstattd, H. T. Manuel, John Crockett, Dr. Paul L. White .3. Texas legislators might-not plying money to a foreign afcut* ' Two of the professors are deaps based on previous decisions. In had taught in Columbia Univer­ agree with the University joining dent emergency fund, a sponsored ,.r Sign Up Wednesday tof law schools. Ryuichi Koike is sity, Clirksvilte, Tenn., Rice In­J. W. Baldwin, J. L. Henderson, Dr. W. M. Gambrell, Charles N Japan, law is expected'to be fully Zivley, P. W. E NSA. (DP) student fund, and « stitute* «nd Duke University^ Henry J. Otto, O. B. Douglas, B. C. Patterson^ A slow trickle of late regis-expanded by legislative codes. Allen, E. T. Mitchell, R. W. Petfc Graduate Assemblyman Sam sity emergency fund, was The 4apan»seL governnifint is es­way, W. L. McGill, J. Frank 'Brewer maid that he beliaves there tcaata, continued through Thu?s­ i «day. A total of 12,168 students tablished under a' oOmfeitti^^ Dobie, L. T. Bellmont, J. E. .Hick­are a great number of students ; " Members asked man of the committee, what wap had completed registration and Ranger Award's Gojmuch aa our own, but the national May Find man, Grady Chandler, E. I. who vote on issues and 30JLJ& legislature, the Diet, makes aUl Matiiews, A. B. Swanson, O. B. >arty line#. , f \ t nieant by a University emeiveneypaid their feea. lhrottgkJWednea­laeenotHingvtrrong wfthliav'r fund and who would benefit frafat laws. Thief prefecture, wbielt Wiliiamr, V. T. Schuhardt,-T.-P. day, Byron Shipp, registration su­ For Best Stories functions as a governing body Harrison, Thomas Rousse, C, E. ing the NSA referendum tied up the money. Schwartz estimated pervisor, reported Thuwday. -; New in the general election," Brewer that--$3,000' probably would -bf * be over over smaller areas such as our Rowe, Lem Scarbrough, C. A. "The total will few Prizes for fiction and feature counties or states, has no legisla­ Smith, W." A. Felsing, Everett G. said. " the goal of such a fnnd and conlf 12,000 because there will be can­ articles in the November and De­ tive powers. Dr. Loyal E. Loveless of the Institute's Dr. William Shive. Smith, R. W. Staytoh, D. B. Cas-Lloyd Hand, student'president, be raised within one or twot daya. cellations and withdrawals," he : cember issues of Ranger maga­Texas University is the last stop University's , Bio-ehemioal Jnsti--Thinking the nnknown concen- turning the chair over to Robin* His bill provided that the^ .^riva, teel, George J. Stephens, Robert added. "* -' v"" • zine were announced Thursday by on a tour which included visits son, told the Assembly that the be held only on a camptis-wide ^ tute has received a $3,333.33 post­ L. Sutherland, C. A. Swanson, B. Students still wishing to regis­editor Bill Bridges. to six other U.S. universities.' L. doctoral fellowship to attempt to trate might have cancer<-fighting C. Tharp, Paul J. Thompson, C. "whole picture' has been twisted basis and that bo contribution*| ter may do so with a penalty of T&scas Book Store and the Uni­G. Blsckstock, professor of busi­mysterious possibilities because of. its bio­W. Chewning, E. W. Doty, W. R. nto an absurdityr -""We're quib* be sought on an organisational "J four semester hours of negative isolate a substance level. versity Co-Op have eafeh agreed ness law, has acted as host ib the which reduces, cancer tumor-logical action, Dr. Shive. turned it Woolrich, O. D.. Weeks, W. L. jling like little children now. eredit. Four semester hours of to give $5 to the author of the professors. Kurt Steiner; legal "If every time we get important Funds from--the sponsored stt& growth rate. over Alfred Brown, E. negative credit is the maximum to Dr. Taylor who C. Castaneda, A. B.. best article in each field monthly. aide of the General Headquarters .Coir, Banks McLaurin, E. H. Sel-issues we have to go to the stn-See TEXAN, Page *, that may be assessed for"late re­In the feature division, "Young Command in Tokyo, is conducting-• The.Claytown Foundation, phil-tested its reaction on cancers in lards, W. Page Keeton, Harry S. * ~ V gr ^ ^ gistration, according to the regis­ Man, Put on Your Hat," by Ken the tour. • anthophic agency for Benjamin eggs and mice. Some compound in Vandiver, Carson McGuire, J. T. Steves Says— " trar. Late registrants may expect Gompertz and Simon Rubinsky re The professors have been enter­Cla'ytowh, former Houstown busi­the concentrate reduced the tu­Patterson, Geofge W. Stumbeiy, two hours of negative credit if nessman, now of Pasadena, Calif., mor-growth rate in the specimens ceived the award for November. tained by Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Paul Bolton, £. C. H. Bantel, Joe they registered f the Veterans Ad­the November issue, and "Your In his. Utter of ^ resignation, the Boa&d of Regeata. Tha'!i®spl ministration in;Austin, said. Vet-, Heart's Desire," by Bob Jones, 'mm Steves pointed opt, five major genta have a, definite intomt scarce which was printed in the December junior College -RO^c"5 nniti maity people thought girls in erans are by comparison The effect the draft and the problems .for close consideration. atudent govfrnmant, Sttm '«pd4i to last February 2.^—-there 6,896 magazine.• ~ could do much to help meet mili making the armed forces into,co­forms were lesser in quality* than proposed UMT might have on the "Surely every i»sa&i!!ty naiiat hfi enrolled at that lame. The stories were judged 1>y two tary training needs if Congress educational organizations. ^ tV the nice girls who stayed at home University will be discussed by They were: ,, ti pursued to conect the in committees made up of both fa­would allocate funds for such The main business .of military to work in factories. four University professors Friday 1. A vote on NSA as soon aa •ure taomaj^'K ihe ^ai^... Antique Show Feb. 9-12 culty and staff members. Fur­training, maintains Dr. C. C. Col­services is combat," she said, "and' The 24-hour-a-day supervision night at the meeting of the Texas possible. Whether we be for or: Stoves' advised^ thit Wv ther awards be vert, professor of junior college women should -be noncombatants. chapter of the Araerican Associa­against thfc question, Steves said, will announced of women in the' armed forces sembly "forget ^rty f who. facawwd W8^jnag:| Monday. Aware of World Affairs lem, he declares.. Except under Mrs. Horton thinks the -social Horton states. She asserts that the -present "An Inventory of' Aca­partial committee of conditions at The professionally managed total mobilization, the plan aims forces,which make women hesitate experience of most servicewomen demic Potential." He will sug­the Student Health Center"in re­11 ha«he)or ftf 'arta tfegre^Jhl show will be a combination expo­That university students of to-to give young men a choice in to volunteer for military duty was morally wholesome, "maturing gest how the University will he sponse to complaints which have summer, dropped . out School to assume hfe new dntir-* "' sition, fair and trade-mart of old have become more aware of the way they will obtan military would vanish if they were drafted. rather than degrading, enriching able to aid the war and defense been made. Recommendations ^ world affairs than the previous training. At 18 or high school He Witt ttavel wHk govarro .and rare objects—from buttons She says that in the last war too rather, than cheapening." effort. should be processed so "aon^et)5|^ to furniture arid guns to decora­ average student was the viewpoint graduation, youths would know concrete can on of^ciat trips and wiH aet ai&| be achieved.'|^Jtf| presented by four members of the they ^.would have to receive at Clark E, Myers, associate pro­liKivato aeesetaxy-#sA"-|iaiaft&;! tive items* fessor of industrial management,, 3. A check on the unanimously Cainpqa League of.Women Voters least a year at military training .beWeen t|ta . An admission disCoilnt fOf 8tu­ to the League Thursday ^ - d&cusa "What Can We Do [ adople& resolution fo ehange the nor and the Adjndant GemMu^ Austin or its equivalent. dents and faculty to the $176,000 X tot Our Students?" He will out­structure of the Disciplinary Com­In would antique display can be had by afternoon at the Y. Each youth have^fita addition to leaving "Today, students have become alternatives: line ways the University might mittee. "Student .j&p*e«unent .3* campus posts, Steves res^nad clipping and presenting the show's a functioning part, of their com­1., Enlist in any branch of the train students for specific military now gravitating toward more stu­prendant of TISA. newspaper advertisement. munity and are more interested regular services; < and defense jobs. , „ < dent control over student affairs, ceeded by Tom. StdHMdw th^n ever before in the welfare 2. Enter * basic training pro­"What Students;.:!%fll¥aWe which is a logical Tmove if we are of (heir country," said Joan Rags-gram for one year of continuous Have" will be discussed by Ri to develop today the leaders of however attend, .^....ISxeeut Wmi By TOM TOHEY dale, moderator. •training; chard C. Maxwell, associate pro­tomorrow," Steves sa|d, and added Comimiitoi ineefingottuiM ~Stcre5 Shelby Reed and ilH-r(82lM) prof couldn't understand , seri£e<| the'reacrtion of "University military£iU)ncurrenfe:;: , • Hgrberl mens, artificialslimbs, dentures^ 6. Of apply for admission to annunced a new program to epm-an . —fisenlty. JoBtHMamii • • " the class laughed students toward these two prob­a junior college or dent of the University Post Of­ mission ** Second Lieutenantl in sSnior or eye glasses, surgical instrumenta, T a These.measures reeiommended by t».. »m« ' ( tAll he said was "buy the litest lems,' r-v-'•?'$ technical, institute fice,' -aai& Thujrsda^ tbat ypj* catt or surgical -the Offi«ara Reserw, ?om-a]p- 1 , ,Ti. ^ lit i i< i.t-n .ijr ii1 Q„ .(littTi irl.M.lil n li i which' liaa^.a theAssembly,the UniVertity ehap­ "'' ' " Edition of the text. It's been military training , program. mail any-uadaUy adclptab^B item Large money sUpmeniTira^ plicanU experienced as special ser- M < tar ©I tha-AAliP*:Mt»d.1^.F«ei»lty to da^?,M Three New Regents Get Every college would decide whe­to any. place 4west of tit# Mis-, are also exempted, but lie added iilees officers, theatrical enters Coon^tt call for certain ^pertun* international student convent ther or not it wanted military sissippi River, except St. ;Louii that this information is probably tainment directors,, or athletic )» -JiJCr 1 K itiaa anil baale aaentitiea to. ^ Down at th« capttol, Senate Confirmation training, says Colwt "Vj. ^ Missouri. ; not necessary to -dire«t0J^ ]% -„}> . held at the 0niverwQr. ^ laettfty belfeva «ei 35* itill ribbinf « certain fr«*h»aii Appointments of three n«w Another plan forfUhng the mili • ¥jTith strong ngas ttMntlie.iX^ dents. . Tiie offer ts%p«» t» laetrtMata , CafitoouiC ««ar J present, The Ass«nhly reaSxee the Itpnttotalin who dnililw u * University Regents have been con tary need is thjer movement to tional railroad switchmen's st^ke "We expect the total embargo former officers, warrant officers, financisl strain brought on ]Umisiaiij>» University student In Ut spam firmed fey t&e Senate. ^ . dr&ft women for" noncombatant i* collapsi^ig, all embargoes are te be lifted at any tinte," Mr. of the Enlisted Reserve Corps, ha*a a««#to IQSBM in aypropria^aa 'an-' . Grumbles remarked. "We V Jim*. They are Claude % Voyles, duties, thereby doubling 'tite pool expected to, be lifted«« -any moment.* might Army, and enlisted re«e»vists njoar 1111. niiiiiiii i.ni' i 1 .,i ' by " "wfry** ; It itwmt that tin embryo soloa Austin «il operator and randier, of available draft-bait. Thursday Austin postofficee ftave order! by morning f P However, Ce favored Longy *r/*ACK WEAVER Owb. f«tts Had * *0-3 .;^M3tair.w^niila(.foiit «S Hv« prt-» ? ~2*a«fc»*Mr~ «aly loaa eame horns will find the competition Am*** 8*tf»i-~ watched it wilt aa Rice rallied to not won a game away from their m Gywft limfnary swinmming mcet8, Coach en tike West Coast,tour when they rough, Saturday night from three nprtt-minded Rtet Owja triumph, 54-47. Just a year Inter, home sourt since November year, the rangy center 8cot& XS Hank Chapman's defending South> were defeated hy Stanford Uni­ pool aces on the Bear ^fquad. '%&m. into Austin Friday with * the Owls continued their whammy 1M* •* a, ' points against the Ste«t$, and in west Conference champions will versity. This was :the first dual Heading the Bear triple threat ttifeft' honored objective In miBd— on the Steers in GiStgory Gym by r Offenaively, Rice has the advan­his sophomore year in.-l94$, he begin their Conference competi­ m,eet lost by,"'.the Steers is Frank Dicky, 4 fsncfful 1( , tasting the Longhoras in Gregory downing then, 4543, aft** Texas tage over the Steers this season. Itftllteg ii ]>oints -tion Saturday night when they In three years* •;* ^ yard'sprint hian^'^X^^ ,, Gym at & e'ctoek tonight. had made a good start in the They have averaged 61.6 point* Aiding McDefmott will W two swim in a" dual^ iftaet against The LdnghorilS and the Bfears , A sophomore^oti'themyfoirmer- Conference campaign? Sp«r game while the Longhorns Other scoring aces,' Jim Gerhsvdt, ftis!or~.tAnkitf*tr at 0 o'eloek; f|JHistorically speaking t1»U mat in competition in the first mnv-team is Roger Brooks, aii in-mnd-out Rice Owls have The Owls, however, liicve« jin* have an average of 49 points p.er who has scored 213 points this f Waco, % . . ' •' Since the beginning of the meet of the swimming season— excellent 3-meter ^>yer, one of 1 good chance of downing working against them this year. game. To offset this paper advan­year, and J. D. White with 203 most potent point-getters. the sWimming season, Baylor has split the Southwest Conference Relays u their Steer*. Ifi five of the last, nine Coach Don Sudan's lade have Won tage, however, Texas has yielded Points in 11 games. Gerhardt was two meeta in Southwest Confer­ at Houston January 18. The Steers "He is capable of • challenging •gamesptayed in Austin the Bird* only one game in five Conference only 48.2 points defensively While the chief thorn in Textui' aide last over Starts, and ovei the entire season ence play. They lost their first took, an expected victory Texas' Conference champion, Skip­tory repeats itself, Coach Jack they hate a 7-10 record. ers per game. •' * , : sneaked past the Owls, 56-54, He meet to the Aggies, 55-20, 'and the other four competing teams feave emerged victors, and if his­ the Owls have given up ^2.9 mark­month in Houston as the Steern py Browning. Roland Skeltori, a backstrokes, took the second meet from the with 52 points. Baylor placedGray's beys' are in for a battle* Also, the Owls will be attempt­Led by Joe. McDermott, who roped in 16 points, surpassed only has proven himself to be of great . Three years ago, the Longhorns, ing to change a disgusting road has tallied 238 points this season hy George Schling, Lbnghorn value to the Bear squad also. nHth a 5-1 record like they |now trip record. They have lost the and is. the third highest scorer in guard who Ullied 18 markers. •A: Wafer > Polo Coach Chapman has been put­ have, wen* upset by the nndtrdog last 16 games played away from the Conference over the season Rounding out the starting tejun 1 11 r"" ting his swimmers aitid diversfor the Owls will he Ralph Gra~ through rugged and strenuous wdnder and Maul-ice Teague; Leo­ workouts since their return from nard Childs and Charley Tighe WK, Kappa Sig Splashers 1 their California tour last Mon­ Rice SIimes Battle will be spell * 'J.™ •fSWT '*, < _ ' ,CtJ rf * available to them day. Coach Chapman said the wfceffjseeesggfy. team, Jn^ addition to working oat The only Conference gam* w the hfeight advlffitage^^€f~th^Owft;' y*a» by^^outelassmg ^hi Sjgma —^Looking forward,-handball aia.-before a meet. way." .. , ,i' in 238 points Ibf the Owls this gles play begins Monday. And The swimming mentor is taking Teicas scheduled for 6 o'clock in. greater for victory for the Texas but will' take a back seat to the •Kappa, 10-2, Thursday night. -^ Gregory Gym promises to'be more contingent will be minus k few of and experience. a squad of fifteen swimmers and The Yearlings, dropped from Birds' speed season. McDerfaott will be, mak­' F. S., Sheilds and. Mftrc Cuenod ejit^ies for table tennis closethe players who were key men in exciting than any 'other frosh the ranks of the undefeated ear­Although picked to finish no scored four goals each to spear­Wednesday. Boxers and wrestlers divers to" enter thg nine event game of the season. the victory over Rice, namely, than fifth ing his last appearance in Gre> J lier this week, will be trying to higher in the Confer­head the Kappa Sig attack. have until March 6 to enter their dual contest with the Baptist. Rice, fresh from a victory over Bill McCurry' and Don Lowery, regain their prestige in this en­ence race this year, the surprising gory Gym Friday night when Delta Kappa Epsilon blanked sports. The all-intramural team Coach Chapman said that two Allen Academy earlier , this week, lost to the service. the Owls ploy -the league lead­ counter after a heartbreaking loss Steers' have fooled the experts' Austin Club, 4-0, as Charles of volleyball, which was completed men will enter each event.will he out to"avenge, an early-The Slimes, improving steadily to Schreiner last Tuesday, 54-52. thus far by "using amazing deter­ing Longhoms. , White and Henry Perry scored two j.ust before finals, was announced Of the fifteen tankmen making \ season 43-32 setback at the han^s In their last few games, have the i# The, battle tonight should pro­mination apd . confidence to win points each, Austin played with this week. v the trip, five will be seniors who Mi games. :0;: Wk^ duce a flurry of fireworks as far only six of a regulation seven-The intramural d h a m p ions, are startting off their last year Women's Intramural as the scoring is concerned for it" The :Steers' attack will be led Cage Scores man team. » " AIME, placed only one man on iri Southwest Conference compe­ will , match four who by James Dowies' and George Scal­Delta Tau Delta splashed to * tition. They are Eddie Gilbert, k men have the squad, while Oak Grove, run­ been splitting the hoops most con­ing, the top scorers on the squad, (Numerate before a team indi­3-1 half time lead over Sigma Al­ner-up, and Kappa Sigma, frater­Milton Davis, Hugh Grover, Bob i-sistently the past few weeks. Six' with Joe Ed Ftflk, Don Klein, and cates its weekly rating in the pha Epsilon, and .coasted in t6 a nity champion, each placed two. Crawford, and Jerry Endicott. feet 6 inches Gene Schwinger *nd team captain Pancho Womack AP poll:} . 5-3 victory. Carlos Walker scored The other position was occupied Events for the first Conference Popeye" Beavers of Rice "will pit rounding out the starting'five. three point* for,the Delts. meet are the 220-yard freestyle; AChiO, ADPi (2) Oklahoma^AftM 48, Oklahoma by a Delta Sigma Phi. their scoring skills to work .against •Falk, 6-5% forward from Hous­Fridaj^^bipr:.'iittl^' 50-yard freestyle; 3-meter diving; 45. •••-.•. Bill. Capehart was the engineer Gib Ford and Billy Powell of ton, has been the bright spot in tramvral activity and no games 100-yard freestyle, 200-yard back­ Participation Awards , 'ifltio landed on the mythical squad. :/v - Maryland 46, VMI 41. Texas. - the last several games with his will be played. An organized stroke; 200-yard breaststroke; He and Virgil Cassel, Delta Sig­ 'Manhattan 65, NYU 56. Of the 80 groups on the campus -The other managers and groups Schwinger, fast for his heights, defensive work for the Steers, training period for boxers and 440-yard freestyle; 400-yard free­ ma Phi, and Henry Lindsley, Kap­Texas Western 80, Texasi>Tech entewd in women* . intramurals, represented were Mary Lee Flem­ has been moving around his de­while Don Klein, 6-6 center, has wrestlers planning to compete in style; 400-yard freestyle; and 300­ 76 (2 overtimes). f pa Sigma were elected as spikers two. Alpha Chi Omega and Alpha ing, Alpha Gamma Delta; Marilyn fenders with apparent ease re­been improving with every game. in the honorary team. yard medley relay. „ (8) St. John's 68, -John Carroll Delta Pi, were recognised by the Nierraan, Alpha Epsilon Phi; Mary cently and currently has his "fade­Womack, play-maker and good de­:",JCoach Chapman sttid that they intramural office this Week as Lynn Bell, Chi Omega; Jo Ann away" shot scorching: the nets. fensive man, has returned to form -'ei; •. . Kappa Sigma, and Don Smith and were only entering the 300-yar Jimmy Vir^ofttesi the top re­(S) Villanova 94, Kings (Pa.) 67. Is Bill Hudel, Oak Grove, CyWagnerr bers and ADPi with 124 partici­Also . receiving were real match to the Texas defense. lief Black, and in will not count total points. emblems man, Leon Cecil Midwestern 61, North Texas 44, on pants . in intramural ~ sports, Gib Ford's hooks and Billy Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and Henry Entering this event Will be Hugh Ellen,. jThomas, Kappa Alpha Morgan are good little .men who Temple 60, Drexel 51. receiv*d*warda along with eleven Powells tip-ins will be the bright NEW YORK, Feb. 8_W—. Heam, "Newman Club,' -spikers^ Grover, Johnny Crawford, and Theta; Mary Marcell Hamer, ^an be used for ball-stealing tac­(1?) Long Island 79, Seton Hall Other group Managers. »pot of the Texas attack, but a Cincinnati and -North Carolina and Jack Howard, AIME, James Eddie Gilbert. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Gail tics and ball control. •?-67. ~ ; Dee Carman, representing Campbell, Pi-Beta Phi; Clare man to watch will be Joe Cortez State are having a battle for sea­Rikard, Sigisia Chi, and Richard The boys making the trip will AChiO, and Betty Ann Theobalt Sigma Delta Tau; and who comes up with a long set shot son scoring honors in college bas­Jones* Phi/'Delta Theta, set-up he:'­when you least expect it. Texas ketball. • ITI6)FU Hugh Grover, Johnny Crawford, v I." .V office on the 'basts of group parti­be tough handle. • t • leased by the National Collegiate Roger Tolar, Milton -Black, Bill cipation which is k reflection on The Blue Bolts, employing much Athletic Bureau. The Ohio River To Replace Greasy Neale Hoff, Milton Davis, Skippy Brown­ SEC City Freeh Play the work the manager has done the same attack as their varsity, By BOB SEAMAN ing, Harold Lyvers, Lotiis Man- Bearcats have an average of 78.9 i ATLANTA, Feb/ 8—W—jThe with her group. will work the ball around until Te« Herbert, who played three known to;get, hot-and score60 For if the British can be made to —The Philadelphia Athletics tournaments on the winter trial points in one night'. He is a sllm* * Apartment for Rent,, ' . SERVICE CAPS & appreciate the genius of these Furnished House Rooms For Rent signed two more regulars Thurs­ as an amateur two years ago, jovial man who resembles greatly' % (Alt Force Bl«e we Amy O.D.) cagers, *nd that's exactly ^rhat Step *n Fetchit of motion picture BLOCK froni-eAtctpu*. 8-room «psrtni«nt, FOtJB-ROOM furaiahed prefabricated day—pitcher Bob Hooper ,and joined the tour as a pro at Phoe­happened last year, any of . utilities paid. Convanient to Eofi-home at 241S Leoa. Btadenta.' of 80PER BOOM for two men.' RIcht at$5.95 to $7.95 Ea. shortstop Eddie Joost. nix. He hasn't yet won any money. can't miss having a good timer Gainer; ';^L. , ' , w n«crinc Det>*rtm«nt. Alao l«rt« room couplepuple with eliild. Inquire 2800 Bio XJniyeraitjr. ^.PloOr tttraace, alao air. The Goose has' previously'dise^j-^ with eookinf facilltlM and living rootn< Orange, Phone 2-2727. eondltionin*. Tetepttone. abower. S-SSMf. After their regular season last POPUN SHIRTS pea^d from the 'Trotter bus to year, the Globetrotters went on a Leather Goods PEinSRTOM HBJQHTS Attraeti** (Air Fere* Bine «r Army Tan) be gone for several games, but it ..For Rent "' • A t. ?}")? °* atudio room, ireailng room. is. totir Of Europe and Africa. In is almost ti certainty that he will b*th in eoft green tile. Onttid* private $3.50 & $3.95 Ea. England, Where the eage sport is Western Clothtns t WEANGLER-lSiu» •ftranee,. Earage. Porter aerviee. dailr. ' FOR JUS#JS"1 hang arpttrtd until,they make Aus­__Je«]ia>TaUored 6hirte«Cowboy Hata— >ytilitlea paid. In outataadintrly lovely considered a sissy game and the KOOMMATS WANTBC. V, blo«k We maVe cowboy booti-belta. Repair home. $75 6-S720. ' ' -Am, Kluld tin since he-just got back into the & Olympic contests drew-only -150 . campu* 2016-A Speadw^y. $it pir ahoea. Capitol Saddlery, 1614 Lavaea. lineup after recovering -froin -a Gax%g* Apt; C<|ras« AV»U«dI«—$5 KTAfllJ! GARAGE BACHELOR ROOlit. bear Uni- TROUSERS - fans per'^game, nobody thought fractured hand. Music veraifcy *ccomodate one. Quiet, comfort, *>ri-u, ki-r».Hi, much of the Harlem Globetrotter*. able, with *ara*«. $23. Phone 2-1740. Other top performers are Mar­ rippw front But the first night there, fan# UecoapSD irosio k*» P.A. e^atema ques Saynes, the world's-best were admitted to Wembley Stadi­ ' ,forh* iUall oewocoaaiona..' "Carnpaa Hnaie Ser* $5.95 Pr. w dribbler; Louis (Babe) ft*essley, »l«e. S-S41S. Room and Board um free and the action was tele­ team captain; and Ernrtr R,obin-1940 FOKD COUPE. U»l»«r»itr Trotf­ ast^6ver-^h»-«nt>Te Ttritiwh net^ lini longshot artist.' ik # «or • stngl* owotr and driver. 41,ISO Rooms for Beys work? B»r>ll«nt ttnpdltfep. JUM Ogifi 5= -Incidentally $he jwmpj #»*•*, black »r The Fhone 8.180S. VACANCIES PM0 Hou.. »«6 per mrmth. Mra. pdaehed -by: Inmal) l«dcs<^t^ 180# Weat Avenue. >-H^ward Paine'e nVw^etttuu** *» i K' \IMMSiOa, i You Con Gcf ketball of the famous Negroes 15'13A1LROAT putim Mil, Only 2100 Hue««a B.B171 ' other all-timij 'potter hero. Iff, can MRtM o'Nmi t-utt thrilled the English so much 4h*t $5.95 to $7.95 Pr. Rooms for .Renfl^S: the next five ^ames were cdifrplete. caij;, *lso Furnished Apartment » 1-h V? '^W%p!ng iiSfVfFfcmttSor sellouts, * " ^ -t NEED MM male atudent -to share air. TROUSERS Mr. Saperstein, a very sjhatp each other's shouldere to shoots ..r-f^ i4 i Mcm hooae Uiree .fcloeka from cam­ kick-field goals, and jjeKfjornimany ptu. Bent S22.V0 per inoath—kitehes. businessman, started the„ famou^ disinr end living room, 'im T«% hrowo. : tfl« P . /"!. arvrat. BMMtiful new two bedrAemt, THESIS*typewriter.Beporta,Ura. Petmecky.ate. Eleetromatle«3-221S. Globetrotters—from Chicago, not1 eat reOr 3 to 4 bor*. 8«*Uom1 two bath>, aleeptnr porch, 1.1401 m 2-2474. dlvMi, loydy bmM furnl- ELECTRIC typewriter, trpin*. Harlem-—on the rosd to fabulous' m t«r«, Vftlirwewr Ms. ynty Ura*. manr Tb*aes, reporta. Phone S84S fame and fortdne In 1927, Sin^e fe'1 e)«Mta. 1100 .It iaU 80irrHWK8T BOOM. (onr wlndo«n for W«st#rn SHIRTS i <5oP. 0..^. y -• i -woman student, (twdtut* preferred. la that time the 'Trotter* have rollfed «utet private home, Univeraity neikh> t 3xp 8>24l victories white lying hair A^LlC^TtON US> B SAW ANTONIO. BwntA smatt borhood. Maid eervice. Plum* t-SISO. # 24S games"in 2$'seisons^i; -"fST M trptng doM to my heme. i« •rorOved nnivetaitj* honae for bftya. — WMtom BEITS sss*.tete... ..... •i*jt jnwr.Mo. omn uu.««• boya to'room. 125 per peraoo. On*-l*r«e M((l. Moore. gunea they ha*e woi , «4«Bt-LWBg room, kftcbes, two b*d» downataira toom-for one l». peraon fl.w * $198 Wk. coowa aiuf jHltfc wKJi stoMr aad tti" Sorter aerviee daily. PUla paid. S*S7S0« THE^fS. reporta. outlfnea. 2817 OWf. j,it©f«*• «es»on>-. i Unlmh-th<^', ar*4-^ ., •••>^.•>11 alifli I. n/im*J. .i I il^aii) if' ham. Phene 2-4744 after 0:80 p.m. »tte .eiitfaaee,•' tonight or tomorrow night, the ?rwo kW," tatk. 'CMfb«|r BOOTS 'Trotters will be after victories PROM CACTUS NEGATIVJS IW.WS? *»«w canm Oal \S$Z " ^fr*..«^#att^ ^ t 4|I* * Dt*g. f«S409. *20* San Antonio. , UvtH'talrrttii, kltelwft. fcat " — m .;wo 1$4 *nd105 Ber» in Avstfn. i!i "Al.s,i'gfrj».^.'»iiiUi.U"'!r.|-.ti|-|i.i. Ill 'liijiijiji : ^nifi ili) oil II Wanted . But winning streaks are nothing l iliVtiik' ifil to these feoya. '"Last aetuion tha tvm-XS'9. POOLf AU starts. JH-awtmbhw in-mku iiawBi.i [iuuuy *Trotters,wilt their all-time Meed tyjiUta. 0-4747 evenlSa. •CIUBL1U illliUB est screak of 113 yictories hefore MISIWARMY mi lioiiu uiifi if I V man to •mi liaifmrtMio «•*)» fiCJMuj iiirjk'i r'jf-i at), ^ey a^ [JUHHK1IU Ntvr Iri Coaching T wmnfcr roommatf won i(M straight: and JSk «-r4LU^Uk«ar-j uuu Ai foA Mi Mm suiJii IHIFJH yra 2346 Ouedalupa coAoamo BLIHB eiaiBUWH ^WUUIJH iiMiliill VACAWOfldrV' 8l«fS^{»ISW|S|* titan* Oar* ^jriHIJUU EUlillC! twor aoothn; atuiant 600 roomr.w peaks rnaay eques Macquire Is Peace (Continued from Page 1) the attorney general's ruling on . -• v :• -A.-­ dent portion would be used to whether the Assembly can love Movement Uadtri bring no more than two displaced an executive closed session to Calls Semite elect a vice-president.:^ ^ Clifford Macquire, leader in the . pppt: wl>o Report'Asinine* dents, he ttaid. In answer to Don Guinn's con­"—Secretary of Defease Marshall Rosenberg, Marshall grinned and limiting this at first to those 18 'been rejected or elas^ a* 4-if British religious peace. movement, will speak at a'public Mlettftfc recent tention! thst -l'when we'radUcus-and the Satiate Fxep&redaea*3nb~ said the lawmakers ''made very yearolds nearest 19, such as a Reguiring geryice by jmenjfrom WASHINGTON, Feb. Friday night at 8 o'clock at the mendations, the Assembly then sing ' people'a character it's no­committee appeared near agree­good" boy* 18 years and 9' months old. 19, through 25 years who are bus* President Truman assayed a» University Baptist Student Cen­voted, 18-6, against a pre-holiday body's business but our own," Sam ment Thursday night, upon the Chairman Lyndon Johnson CD-Originally Secretary Marshall op­' bands but have no children or pre­bine today a Senate Subcommittee ter. His topic will be "War and bill to "revoke the bill to discon­Brewer said that any man who controversial issue of drafting 18-Texas) indicated near agreement posed 'any restrictions. vious military service. report alleging runs for a "quite public office" is upon the "basic points in contro­Limiting actual service to two the Christian—What to Do Now." tinue the Campus Chest." No ac­year-olds for military training and . Some compromise tbat #oufd' House aide influenced the xotilfcM He has been brought to Texas by tion waa taken on* the recommen­subjecting himself to public dis­service. V-£.; ; ; versy." y^ars, if the men take no military permit National-Goard units to billion -dollar lending operations^ dations. . cussion. -----:. j... Stressing that all decisions were leave In that period. The Penta­ the American Friends Service Marshall was in closed-door dis­continue to enlist some 18 year of tite Reconstruction -JEKnanc* Bennett said that hj» thought a tentative, Chairman Johnson, said gon had asked tbat present re­ Committee. . Nahmias and Brewer introduced cussion with the Senate group go­olds, who would be temporarily Corporation (RFC). ^ . a' bill calling for entrance of secret ballot, as requested by Phil Secretary Marshall had been ques* quired service be extended from deferred from the draft. Mr. Maquire is executive sec­ing over proposed compromises on A Republican memW tioned on these modifications of retary of the British Fellowship Negro colleges into the Texas Ransophtr' and Gordon Llewelyn, the universal military service and 21.ta.27 month* subcommittee, Senator Capehart was ' dishonorable and that {stu­ the original UMST: Requiring the armed services by An agreement that 75,000 of of ! Reconciliation, a.. religious Intercollegiate ^StudenlaB Asaocia- training bill. the 18 year olds would be deferred of Indiana, took issue, saying: ^ tion'under the s*me provisions as dents to know how the Authority to draft 18 year Olds law to lower their standards and peace organization founded -in As he emerged with Asssitant •—one year below the present after four months basic training, "That's as bad as bis statement England before the First World those lot current member schools. Assembly votes. . take in more men in the 19 in order to study to be doctors, that the Hiss matter waa a ridThe bill,' if passed, would instruct Ann "Rankin asked Bennett if War. The organization now has scientists and technicians, they herring." any University delegates to TISA he thought secret ballot in the sections in more than twenty would not be required to go to Former President Hoover Said conventions or any TISA meetings election of the President of the countries around the world; classes in uniform, but might wear the subcommittee's report shdwa to "initiate and support" legisla­United States was dishonorable. After graduating with distinc­ some emblem or insignia. there is "a particularly fruitful tion admitting Negro colleges. He said he thought so—-but not tion from Paton " Theological field for Congressional activity** because it was-a secret ballot. Johnson said Marshall vigor­ School in Nottingham, England, Nahmias asked for a suspension in reforming "abuses and mal­ ; Robinson, Tommy Rodman, ously opposed a proposal that no in 1936, Macquire served as a of rules, asking immediate action 18 all organization" of such federal Newton Schwartz,^arid Sally See year olds be called until in time for an executive commit­ agencies as RFC. Congregational minister in Lon­were nominated for the position. non-father, non-veteran men in don and other cities.^During the tee meeting of TISA on Febru-In a run-off, held after, the As­the 19-25 class had been inducted. The report was issued last week Second WorldWar fcrw«T]5a*tOT ^wbich-^two llniverflity sembly voted candidates "Military leaders want to take by a Banking Subcommittee to let representatives will be present. Auocfafd Prttt ~~~~ . • • Angeles and1 St. Paul-Minneapolisf! day. of a church in Birmingham in Vote, Robinson received 16 votes both the 18 year old and the 19 an area which underwent con­. The A&M Student Senate The 10-day rail ptrike Thursday Minn. | The Army giaye pay boosts, ret­(D-Ark). to Rodman's 6. through 25 group simultaneously," stant bombing. White there he at­passed such a bill by unanimous Schwartz a buckled under an Army crack­In giving the Army its orders roactive to October 12% It declared three After presented 1" of Johnson said. "Then they can start of' the five approval last week, he said. down on '-sick" switchmen—and RFC directors "seriously abused** tended the wartime tribunals with committee report on faculty Thursday, President Truman char­cents an hour for yardmen and training the 18 year olds at once." signs it would be all five more than twenty of the boys of Suspension of the rules failed. evaluation and a faculty grievance there were acterized rail union leaders Thurs­yardmasters and cents an Johnson said thousands of mar­the agency's lending authority by his church who took the conscien­^ A move .to" elect the student committee, the Assembly tabled over Friday. day as behaving like a bunch of hour for empoyes in road service. ried men -from 19 through 25 submitting to outBide influence. .1^" tious objector position. Vice-president in a closed execu-action pending consultation with Striking switchmen • began "Russians." This is only about half what the years, who are not veterans and It named Donald Dawson, &!' MrrMaq tire session--of-tb»-Assembly-was^ faouliyTnember*.. —Tfas^Jieada .Qf .iftmr rail. utiiniia workers would have received had have no children, probably will be administrative assistant to the ancestry, Arrived in tVio defeated when three members of . Borrowing most points from the with a statement TTniipH .defeated Army on orders of President Tru­replied joint tft§y "accepted"!^ cfraJiedf shortly. Host of them Kad over States late in January. As part the Texan staff stayed in~~the--system-now—in_use_at Rice Insti- man issued a "work or be fired which said, "we are badly shocked gotiated by union leaders and been deferred in the past although "exercised influence" RFC T lending, and said Dawson "tried of his discussion he will talk on meefing after the Assembly had tute, the committee recommended "ultimai some -wen, mkrried since the Ko to dominate the RFC" with a the British outlook on the pros­voted to "request" all visitors to 1. Evaluation of the faculty at given until 3 p. m. (CST) Satur­us as 'Russians.' " White House sponsored talks in rean outbreak, have been inducted leaye. , day to comply. good deal of success. \ pects of a third world war. He mid-semester. Embargoes were ended in vari­December. in recent monthB. Dawson on looked smiling to­ has also been scheduled to speak-, Bennett read from the student 2. Transmittal of results to a The Army said Thursday night ous areas and other industries hit at the Saturday morning chapel constitution that all meetings of liaison committee in each school, the strike was "virtually ended" by the walkout prepared to call day as Mr. Truman told a news the Sltudent Assembly are Open to rather than from "prof to trash- conference he saw no basis for of Austin Presbyterian Theologi­ in Chicago, vital rail hub for their men back to work. The Ford criticizing either Dawson or any the public. Hand said that it is basket." cal Seminary. "our own' business" and that 3. Channels for grievances at transcontinental train traffic. The plant ers idle ii^ Chicago, since lastwith -2,600 work­WU coed on ere RFC directors. tstrike also was reported ended in Friday, asked nmm "there are little deviations from any time during the semester. Apparently, the President safd, the Constitution." northern California, Denver, Los employes to report for work Fri-the committee's report was in­ 4. Consultation between the • PROMPT SERVICE When all visitors did not leave, chairman of a department and the Friday son Hall i; tended as a reflection on himself. • REASONABLE PRICE Hand said that the group could respective professor on evaluation 10-12 and 3-5 — Last showing" 7:30 — Talk on "Radar" by Pro­And he said that never in his either continue the election pro­results. today and tomorrow of sculp­fessor Cullen M. Crain before life had he brought pressure on World News in Brief • QUALITY MATERIALSI cedure or move for a recess to get Bennett introduced a bill calling ture, ceramics, and paintings by VART Squadron, Chemistry the RFC or on any other agency •except in the public interest. . for Assembly recommendation to four young Texas artists, Ney Building 15. ' AUTO GLASS » the Administration that the Band on thm Anociatta Print rent" to World War I'n. Museum. 8 — Texas-Rice basketball game, AUSTIN -FURNITURE TOPS women's physical training require­ 2 — Panhellenicv Council, Texas Gregory Gym. SPEEDWAV-V;t^i Sanator Tift took sharp issue • RES1LVER1NGI WELDING A ment be lowered from three to with General Eisenhower Thurs­Union 315-816.' 8 — South Central Texas Club The 500,000th student to regij- RADIATOR two years. day, saying the General submitted t«r for the national piano-pla-ying 2-5 — Coffee Time dance, Main hayride and bam dance, Hud­RADIO Nahmias introduced a bill to set Lounge, Texas Union. son's. . NORTH'S Glass Shop WORKS a "hazy" report on European de­auditions of the National Guild of up a "Meet Youn-Assembly" week 3-5 —7 Advanced standing, exam­8 — Clifford Macquire to discuss SERVICE TaL S-3733 fense and exaggerated the dan-; *. 101 SAN JACINTO during which constituents would Piano Teachers was entered this inations in typing for journal­"War and the Christian—'What iwt] 7-3846 eoow.atfcst gers of a lost war on that, week. PHONE 0-3401 be encouraged to consult their ism, radio, and shorthand stu­to Do Now," Baptist Student continent. ,. He is Raleigh Edenfield of " r i representatives. Tampa, Fla. dents, Waggener Hall 216. Center. 3.5 — Formal opening of Inter­8 — Newcomers Club western Taft accused President Truman • in the Senate of claiming dicta­, Baylor University President W. national Center, B. Hall. party, Zilker Club House. WE DELIVER! Asiatic Club, B. Hall. — Students invited to nurses' RED BALLTAXI seas to defend Europe against Baylor faculty was being cut 25 4 — Sorority rush captains, Tex­dance, : Brackenridge nurses' 5 p.m. SPECIALIZING IN torial powers to send troops over­R. White announced Thursday the 4 — 8 as Union 315-316. hall. io I a.m. Communism. Taft said he thinks per cent for the 1951-52 academic • Steaks • Salads Eisenhower exaggerates "the dan­year. 5 — Girls receive bids to sorori­ 8:15 — Edward Arnold in "Ap­ Just Dial 7-8739 • Sea Food ger of an unsuccessful war in A drop in enrollment is affect­ties, Texan Union 315-316. ple of His Eye/' Paramount Europe." ing revenues and adjustments 6 — Texas-Rice freshman basket­Theater. Fpr Fast SorvJo* ball game, Gregory Gym. V • must be made, White said. Saturday ; •;y;-SandwichesOpen 11 a.m.-9 p.m.-—Closed Monday Four thousand-parson* are -out Dean M. S. Carroll said the 6:30 Freshman engineering ap­1 — Freshman engineering apti­Hambuncera of work in the lower Rio Grande reduction would affect part-time titude tests, Geology Building tude tests, Part II, Geology ' 'French Friea RADIO CONTROLLED 14. Malts—®halna Valley because of the recent teachers, wives of faculty mem­Building 14.2425 Exposition freeze which knocked out vege­bers, who have been teaching and 1:15 — Bridge -tournament, Texas 1:30 —• Retreat starts from NITE SNAK 6-9194 TARRY TOWN RESTAURANT tables and wrecked citrus. teachers in lower faculty ranks Union 315-316. VMCA. The Texas Employment, Com­who are going into military ser­7:30-10 — Co-Recreation for stu­2-4:30 —• Co-Recreatipn for stu» 19th* Wichita mission office says some of them vice or who have found other dents, faculty, and staff, Wom­dents', faculty, and staff, Wom­will get pretty ~ hungry if they jobs. en's Gym. -. . en's Gym. • " don't get a .iob soon. The University of Oklahoma 7:30 —• Max Helfman in an eve­ 4 —-Arab Students' Association, • Hospital for the first time in his ning of music, Hillel Founda­International Center,B. Well RED BALL Senator Brian McMahon tory ^enrolled two Negro girls to­tion. 7:30 — Two free films, "Vronsky(D-Conn.) said Thursday the day in the School of Nursing. 7:30 —-American Association of and 1 Babin" and • "Music in Transfer & ~ mysterious blasts-in Nevada in­There will, be no segregation or University Professors to dis­America," Hillel"Foundation. m ^ tvjjK creased America's atomic might, discrimination, said Mrs. Mary cuss the question," "Is the Uni­7:30 — Polish the Apple $arty, Storage which he called the "main deter­Caron, director of the school.' versity in Danger Now?" Garri­Baptist Student Center. •toad; * 8:15 — Wica costumeball, Main •Ho«s«baU Good Stent* Lounge, Texas Union. „ * iOnttag «wl Pkddai 8:15 — Austin Civic Theater pre­•All. Eqal|HBMit sents its weekly production of the melodrama, "Dirty Work at AL DYER, Owner the Crossroads," Saengerrunde «0C 8u J«cist« n. MHall. For An Order Of , I, Leslie's Fried Chicken "ITS A TREAT THAT CAN'T BB BEAT" THE CHICKEN ^ If you're looking for a room to rent . • « if you've lost something ...if you want SHACK a ride home ..,even if you S242 N. Lunar Phoo.5-5401 want tickets fori SttAU-HAVE game you'll get quick results by using the Clas­lAj! sified columns of the Daily 'TEXAN. R YOU GO­ AndJt's «o «a»y...Just phone 2-2475 and ask for the Classified Ad-Taker. She wiN help you "wit!ry>(ir wpy nnW snn thnt yr"» ii »»>{>•• *1.^ proper classification. Do this right now and your ad will be in tomorrow morning's paper. And ...if it's not convenient for you to come In and pay today you can come in temmorrow. hey^xS botih good basketball "on size, came up with a new small -^players. But-if we weie to .^type. When 600 of these new ampli­ * fudge &em the way we judge y fiers are'mounted on a frame two feet And; if you have lost something,* or have m \ ^ telephone equipment; we'd take the < , wide and eleven feet high, they do a room for rent, or want riders to help y pay % f J ^ roomful of the cost oTalflp .•.the'Classifieds are the %u see,telephoneequipment oecu-^ equipment Size was cut—but not answer* • * mmmpies valuable space, uses costly mate-|p«formapee! ^ r -T^^aals. Paring down its sbe hdps ke^p %^Fhis Is one of many cases wherethe »* ( * r I -^r^down the cost of telephone service. Bell System has madebig things small • '4 % ^ ^ "C \ ** '«W"5h' <*' New SNACK- Tha n«w T&CAN potiey of Tkke voice.amplifien, for exasxq>le. to belpkeep ^e^tof-tP|ephoi|e RECORDECt' MUStC^OGHT lone erjgineersjput the squeeze I TillPHONE SYSTEM kx-JM*: UfN x. t 2! \ 5V& ««* in m M otm® 2SL vaVW''W^tVI Mi ire THE OAllY TEXAN ' Pag* ? itttl# Man on Campus By Bibbr ^Vkwuanm AROtJOT the world, & growing sense / That's what Joe Neal, foreign student +** fof humanity riding in a single boat of adviser, means when he says we are just survival the Uniyersity, a step. i?eginning, ahead today. ^ _ But there will be no real campus inter­ nsn t^e new Int^ra&tidnat Center officially ~ nationalism if the Center becomes a place By RONNIE DUGGER NSA -is not contradictory to %|»wi in B. Hall Friday. It is to be a where foreign students mingle/ only •J"»xan Editor The Campus Chest TISA. You can have" both state -STAGGERING CONFUSION . Hhome*' to which foreign students may -among themselves. The best sort of in-last night the and national governments. persisted in Stu­The first idea last night—-tyell, : As Sam Brewer's bill'said, join­ Invite their friends and where American ternationalism involves cultural inter-dent Assembly. -it's awfully confusing-—was to ing NSA would commit UT to no $4! students and faculty mfey meet and ex­action alnong all peoples in all directions. Some irate girls told the As­further than original have & new kind of Campus Chest costs the ^\ sembly that it had been negligent with funds only for DP*s, foreign change ideas with our "unofficial ambas-$150 membership fee. in facing the issue of joining the students, and a "University stu- Delegates costs, as understood, . wdors.* National Student Association/ • dent emergency fund." None of ' would have to'be, borne by others "1*Jke Quariet Campus international activity has al­The Assembly adjourned rather these terms were defined, either than Student Government. r| ready begun to crowd the Center's facili­than vote on whether to discuss And finally, while it is true that in magnitude or meaning. a join $3,000 as ties. There are now six foreign student SITTING at a typewriter, an editorial­"bill to NSA—but it was the Legislature controls UT purse-, Schwartz first cited I late and that's understandable. " a general financial goal (last am • clubs that use it for headquarters—Tur-ist grows weaiy of:seeking but subjects The Campus Chest is how oack strings, I sure most legisla­year's $10,000), then later tors would be offended if anyone was 5 kish, Chinese, Commonwealth, Latin-of social significance. where it stood betfbre Christmas were to seriously call them "over­added: "We need a huge,student if,if* BUSINW —which is nowhere. emergency fund." American, Arabic, and Asiatic. His window faces West. The sun has lords" who would interfere with A move to kill the bill that the students joining a legitimate The.ideas about DP's and .emer­ Determined and energetic students have excused itself from the day, except for killed the Campus Chest was and firmly American national stu­gency funds—well, they just got revived the DP program, and according its lingering wine glow on the under­killed. The Assembly first killed dent group. -lost. the unified charity drive, although to1 Lloyd Hand, this year's International bellies of cloud-sticks hugging the hori-• • To start the evening right, some technically their substitute is per­Assemblymen moved to "exclude Council has set a record for achievement "zon. missive; then they decided tenta­Assembly Negligence the guests" during the viee-presi­ ithis The cross-bars of the window frame tively they had been too hasty; Midge Ball, pert little president _dential discussion. -That .alwolast night they decided they were afternoon or Who drop in at the Center four life paintings—each with its own of Wica, then asked to be heard. /meant the press. When they de­ right in the first place. Meanwhile, for morning coffee. Will rub elbows with delectable merit. One is the sad outline Complaining of Assembly negli­cided first to gently "ask" guests il i the charities go begging—in every gence (it's heen four months since to leave, we didn't—the three citizens of 41 countries. of the Tower at twilight—wistful, remi­sense. '-•s they opened NSA consideration), Texan people, Trimble, Flora AnnThe Center also handles scholarship niscent of the short college span that Sterling Steves, the vice-presi­she said: "We're not waiting any Blanton, and I. Trimble and I HP. dent who justr resigned, told the and travel information for American somehow lasts so long. longer. I guess we'll have £o~do cided they'd have to throw us out -Assembly in a message that they it ourselves." before we'd leave.­ JBau-.library -inclndea„.ilaj!y Another is the gentle rise-of-earpetr JHumm — uhmm—.Some transcript!" should call a" yote„on NSA as ex- JUark -Lewis, who haa onsi atii-.. Bennett' read from the ConatU .. foreign newspapers and—publications grass, a shady .sheen of coolness, each peditously as possible. dent to student (of--the As­ "So far this year, we have, not petition force a tution: "All sessions from almost all Washington embassies, blade at another's throat, yet all of them vote; Midge a-nd her groujp; and sembly) must be open to the pub­ been mindful of the larger per­ Even today our facilities are meager in harmony. the four sponsors of the NSA bill lic." Hand shrugged this off, sug­ spective of our responsibilities," Dave Andre gesting "little US. Report to GIs: —Brewer, Bennett,-that deviations when compared with other schools. Al-The third—but it is fading—is the he said of the Assembly, "but in­ Nahmias, and Fred Kesler—will from the Constitution" -aren't so though the University of Michigan has' symbol of the civilized—a concrete base, stead have become immersed, in. meet to get together on ,the pe­bad. ^ a myriad of details which right­ Gold-plated Foxhole almost twice the number of foreign stu-dug into the earth unnaturally, a blas-tition Monday. . But finally the Assembly de­ fully should bo ironed out in com­ Hand then spoke up against a cided not to order the press out HI dents as UT, it employs an eleven-phemy, in a way, to the grass around it. Boyle has to mittee meetings or elsewhere .. Hal returned The white girl cooks over here student vote as an indication that of the meeting, unfurled the ban­ mender staff in comparison to our two But it holds fast the iron bar that helps America after more than six are beautiful as ever. But, after Last night, after applauding the the Assembly was" not truly rep­ner of free reporting and the rightSteves message, the' Assembly pro­ workers and the center occupies the hold up the building. months in Korea. In the follow-Korea, it does seem funny to see resentative, of the students. of the people to knbw the truth, ceeded to get lost again. ihg open letter he gives his first women without bundles on their "Besides," he said, "in most isr and invited the guests back for whole ground floor of one building. We And the last—well, that"was the sun­• • impressions of life back in. GI pretty heads—or anything on sues like this, when they are put the pow-wo*w. (The Texan doeBn'tnow have two rooms. set. A scraggly, leafless tree stands lone­Joe's homeland. their pretty minds. Our Overlords to the people, the people will vote print personality slurs, anyway—Centers at Michigan, California, and ly now, the dismal spotlight of the sky NEW YORK, Feb. 8—^)—To There is quite war scare go­yes." By this he either meant: but they didn't ask ug,) a Columbia provide speakers bureaus, without the sun. The cloud-sticks fade Private GI Joe, Foxhole 12, Hill ing on, and the only really safe NEWTON SCHWARTZ gave a) that it would be bad if they The Student Assemblymen are the report Assembly yes, b) 364, Sputh^Korea: place left in America is a seat on of an com­Voted or that voters gen­good joes with good intentions. tours, films, dancing classes, discussion ijito ethereal blend with the darkening mittee appointed* b^ Hand erally a "yes" complex in Lloyd have But more of them should realize DSar Joe: the local draft board. The teen­ ^groups, and luncheons. They are able hues of the night. ager is longer the problem of saying that UT should not join plebiscites. that they're not playing with toys. I told you I'd let you know how no '2 * to integrate the foreign student with the And this moment—these four paint­things are doing back in your old civilization but "the hope-of to­NSA., In either event, his meaning They represent 13,000 ma'ture col­ Uncle" Sugar Able—-the USA. morrow." And the new theme The reasons? They svere dillies: was not clear. But whatever it lege students. What they decida % American student and bring faculty and ings^—they are as significant as anything TlSA, col­ Well, kid, it's still the gold-song of the 18-year-olds is: "Make 1. Give the Texas was, he overlooked the ten about NSA, campus charities, fa-/* townspeople in on the program. in life. . not just for lege student group, "a -chance." straight "No's" the Texas people culty evaluation—these things af-,r plated foxhole of the Western' me a child again . . 2. Consider later costs. turned in on the ten constitution­feet the whole community. World. If they don't have it here, tonight but for the next 10 years. 3. The Texas Legislature al amendments proposed in 1949. -It's time more students like the it ain't worth having. The people are thinking, moie "might not like" our . They got everything here in .oftCn of you now. Joe, as you joining Then the Assembly adjourned Wica girls and Lewis get inter­NSA, which mights "conflict in before Bennett's motion to con­ested in. what goes on those your old supply base except tanks comb the ravines with your burp Exams and peace of mind. gun, the enemy. policy with our overlords of the sider NSA immediately could be Thursday nights at the Student seeking hidden Universitv." voted on. Union. It's a boom country, Joe, but You aren't forgotten, boy. You're everybody seems to be mad about the .new number one hero of the something. The people are mad kids who used to thing that onlyabout the international situation. Hopalong Cassidy could reach the No one is sure who's to blame— villain. Point Four Aid Advances By KEN GOMPERTZ and sor of English, would approve grader, in grading the typed Washington, the United Nations, You've had a lonely, . uphill ANN COURTER paper. |'f ; ; _ of the plan if the system could . or Arthur Godfrey. walk and I hope it is about over. III?""WITH ALIi -• the' • noise , in be managed. He saw two po­A principal objection to the And Washington, is mad at the There's So much to come back to fefhi* American .society now,' tential problems,' those of adoption of the system on a pebple. They are making money here, Joe. I flew across. America of British Type v ||§ the clatter of a' typewriter or noise and space. University-wide scale would faster than. Washington can take the other day, and it was like, ; two would add little distrac­To offset this possible the lack of it away. There's a new tax com­walking through a long and love­(This ia the la*t of four ar­aid from American funds, and tions .have plainly been evolving be sufficient American tion for those taking final space handicap, the plan space, according to Miss Lou­ing up on everything but ly cathedral, with candles at the ticles on "The Eco­partly constructed with scarce Aia-toward what, Marquis Childs so HHBfnattoaa. would provide that the stu­homemade incense. end. candles stood for the nomic System and the World terials under priority. effectively called Sweden's "mid­ ise Barekman, head of the de-The Crisis." The final by Dr. H fct;'Dr. James G. Umstattd. dent designate his preference partment which assigns rooms Prices are higher than the hill hearts I was returning to. view is Will these mills contribute to dle way." Gaps in the resource- Eastin Nelson, associate profes­use pattern', coupled with deficien­ profenor of secondary educa­atthe beginning ~of the Be-~ for exams. ' • you're on,-J«e. They call a nickel As the wonderful American tion and chairman of the de­master, so that with' the ap­J"the Truman dollar" now. And in earth and waters unrolled be­sor of economics.—Ed.) the general diffusion of the eco­cies of tfapital enterprise and the In addition to the need for franchise? partment of curriculum and proximate number of students New York .you have to drop two neath the plane—the wide fields, By DR. EASTiN NELSON nomic It is the belief obvious shortcomings of foreign more space, she S&id, there of the writer that they will. As irvestment as a complete modus instruction, coold foresee no known, sufficient desk space would be difficulty in secur­of them in a phone box to call the deep rivers, the high hills Associate Professor-of Economies immediate objections "Jh eon-couldbereserved^forthe class . the wrong number. of home—I made ,a silent wish Written for The Texan basic industries, furnishing ma-operandi for national develop­ ing chairs and tables -for the nection with the question in one of several common . You spend as much for an hour upon an evening star. It was that How fares the American way -terials for other industry, they ment, have forced governments to machines. tfke the initiative and permitting students to take typing ropms. in a barber chair as it used to you could come back soon, too, of life in the underdeveloped may be kept in action with pesos, to accept Mr. P. J. Thompson, direc­cruzeiros, or other domestic cur­ finals by typewriter* At the time of the final, the take for .a week-end vacation at and let others take their turn in areas of the world' where Ameri­the management responsibility ixi tor of the .School of Journal­the beach. The $1.50 haircut is the Korean ice-box—if stay rency, and are available for use several types of industry. basic report we The ayatem, already in op­student to would either as­ism, was against the plan at getting fashionable if not popular, do. can influence is strong? The an­in time of war and depression, Power and fuels, as well as metals,eration lit the Harvard Gradu­first the regularly .first on the grounds that the and the 75 cent shave is respon­Regards ' to the lead platoon. swer to this query takes on added two periods when goods from in­are coming in for considerableate School, the Yale School of signed room and then go to noise and additional mental ^significance when it is realized, dustrial countries are not freely sible for a lot-of five o'clock c-mphasis as public enterprise. U», and the School of Law .the typing room or he would HAL BOYLE effort exert e d most stu­that people living in under-de­available. here, grants students taking .go directly to the latter. dents who type, would offset shadow. P. S.: I met a fellow in Kansas veloped countries If British, and Scandinavian far outnumber essay-type finals the option There the quizzes would be Steak is getting more and more City who said: "There's only one More importantly, they" repre­democracy represent a defeat for any possible advantage. Heaven. still the people living in the industrial a productive of of lumd-writang or typing ex­handed out by an approved like People yearn way to bring this international core of the world and sent more way the American way of life, because that since proctor, who supervises the He said that a-similar plan for it—but it's out of the aver­crisis to a head. That's for Joe life than did the subsistence and they use pricing yardsticks, rely ams. The student would sup­about 1931 t.ie aspirations s of ply his own typewriter. exams. • had been in practice in jour­age man's reach. Stalin to writfe a review in Pravda peoples a movement to export agriculture from which on consumer co-operation, and those to nalism during the 1920's and Folks are starting going to the criticizing Margaret Truman's their workers Were drawn. They have socialized some basic indus­ Noise is considered a major One general justification that it~had been dropped after movies again. What with televi­industrialize those areas has be­pay better wages, make possible singing. That'll bring action." try, then the American Way is , j problem by some professors. for the typing system is the come almost world wide. a few years. But on further sion, in the home, that's the only a larger volume of consumption, suffering serious neglect in the \ f President T. S. Painter extreme, illegibility of review of the jplan, Mr. place they can get away from More than -a few Americans extend consumer franchise to a many Scholarships Available policies of our .under-developed thought It would interfere students' handwriting. Thompson thought that there Milton Berle. leaders have objected to both the larger group. It-is true that there neighbors. with students' concentration. Mr. Granville Price, asso­might be a possibility. It's hard to tell just what to For Study in Monterrey fact and the manner of our par­is every evidence that these mills If, as this writer believes, Bri­ -However, many persons ciate profeuor of journalism, As for the lack of room believe rin. Jack Benny still says A University, student may win ticipation in foreign developmen­will remain agencies of the na­tish and Scandinavian democracyfeel that they ean organize thought that'such « system at tal programs -under public lend­tional governments, and that to space, it was pointed out that he is only 39 years old, and it a/ scholarship for;study the represent adaptations of the same their thoughts and expand the would not only be of benefit has been snowing in Florida. And Institute Tecnologico of Mon-ing agencies sinco 1935, usually pome Americans is a defeat for basic pattern as American-demo­ thoroughly many rooms are empty and subject , more to the poor hand-writing stu­could be used, during any sin­out in Nevada whenever a store orrey, Mexico, next summer, Dr. on the ground that we were un­the American way. « cracy, then the American Way iawhen working at a typewriter,, dent but might force an un­gle three-hour testing period. window topples in nobody is sure Jerome A. Moore, director of TCU dermining the American way of Without probably having for­gaining steadily in the under-de­Dr. D. T. Starnes, profes-warranted prejudice upon the whether"a~Etranger hit the jackpot summer terms, has announced. A life abroad. mulated-any such policy definite veloped countries .under American • • in the corner saloon—or the gov­scholarship is being offered to Is the democratic way of life ely, the major Latin American na­influence. _ Dr» M. K, Woodward, as­ ws ernment just dropped another one student from the University, promoted or hindered by Ameri­ sistant dean of the School of atom bomb. one from TCU, and one from can economic activity abroad? TEXAN Law, pointed out that-only Texan Crossword Puzzle So many atom bombs haVe been Stephens College as a token of For present purposes only this 10 per cent of the law stu­blowing up lately that people friendship. be considered. AUKOS3 10. Swift dents take the exams by-question can DOWN worid& whether the government Candidates may apply through 1. Vegetable 1. Mother * 14. French ­ . Tha Dally Tma, a atodest newspaper of Th« University of Texas, The extension of the democra­ » publUhad is An*tin arary morning execpt Holiday and Saturday, typewriter. He said that one is getting fumble-fingered—or tbe office of Dr. Thoma's F. Rich­resin superior of cardinal tic way of life as it has developed September to-Jone, andaxceptdorlDB holiday-ud examination typing room was sufficient 6. A son of a convent JgWw. and M«wAw darias (fa* •tuamar ictilsoi ander the title of for each testing period and just hoping the Chinese are lis­ardson, chairman of the. TCU in the United States is probably Adam 18. Afuel Today's 2. Vertical-21. Marsh Tpm Swumt Texan cm ToMday and PViday bjr Texas Student Publica-tening. t|iMa<-t)»e. that because of the honor sys­scholarship committee. a primary objective with the r (poss.) shaft in 23. Broodsof Answer Is eoftiftmtloM «fll bmacc«i>t«d by telvpfaooa (2-2*78) or at tem proctors American people. 11. A synthetic pheasants i oditoria] •Kb* JA or »tth« jM«w Laboratory, J.B., t02. Xnqgtrlfe« were needed Frequently, a glacier in the coaeanOag dalivary only to hand out the papers. however, the attempt to extend ruby 3. Except 25. A cloak advartiains aboald ba inada in l.B. 108. Classified it is self-defeating. The political 12. Strip of 4. Old 29. Consumes barltad to vtolt tha editor and a*»ociata aditor dnrins With most of the Univer­ moraloj names and forms are mistaken for leather measures 30. Slope Ads sity not on the honor system, iciaI Tlotice* , Opiolooa of tba Tcsaa ara not oacaaaarOy tboae of tha AdmlnUtra-the total reality, and Americans 13. Aman of length 31. Pendant Ika or other UnlraraJty offieiala. there arises the need for proc­servant 5. Emits vapor -of ice Entarjd «a aacoml-e^* matter October 18, 1848 at tha Po»t OSIcc at are ready by inference to extend tors. Dr. Joe B. Frantz, as­15. Inthis 6. Steamship 32. Trying Atwtfa. tnu. nndar tha ' Aet of March S. X878. .their-democracy to other peoples isa®* sistant* professor of history. place (abbr.) experience 39. Division of. with a disappointing emphasis on 'ASSOCIATE!} PXEM WIK£ SmSfJCB taka Notice from the University Library or 16. Elevated 7. Anglo-35. Circular in a long poem aptitude examinations ~ (Ganeral Inform*-any of its branches are official TiniT«rslty--train. Saxon letter »M«f ta anUUcd to tba om tor (•Dubllu.' need for only one proctor, fpr tion CataloK. * paao 9). Students communications requiring immediate at­the merely political--—V : — -43^weli ofthe who •••.'Sgtiewditad to it or not othenrUe «radited ia each typing room. -missed the series on January 31 will be tention. Students-who fail to respond to This can be. particularly true 17. Skim 8. Carefor section sea on shore aad to : r jfajL. AsaUtant Professor of Government __ examinations should be^reported to the* source-use pattern. w w* ^--. J 3l 4o-, Registrar before February 28. 44. Road * . V* Declamation American: aid extended tion. With several relatively v" The annual Wilmot Con-> to un-t (abbr.)^i -• te»t _for fr^sbmen students wlli be held H. Y. M5BCOWN • $ sixiaa d«p*rtment^ ^tt might on March 6. In the bayf and KirisVdtvi-. Registrar . 'der-developed economies fre-45. Roomfor a 41 '<>.• .I44 u I44-' , fa,,,» dmrlet Eiehey fil X quently takes the form .of public 'prisoner iSmm' Ken Gompertx Advanced standing examinations in 47. Not used-45 4± i47 48 M$r. Jt the rn,inl'«wth. their own paper. J52.Girl'a 52 R ' • -' " ?OWAE0 TOWj»SKX]> completed since the beginning of . t u toy wigfc Bjpten. * j' name ITiftilil Vn> TT 1OTSWrr; L ' m t/m5* usaer The sfecoud annual Dance DTs* tta which will be presented Feb­.ruaryU, at 8 pjn.-In Hogg Au­ Br ESTES JONES Hi arts—he was doorman it Grau-ditorium, represents what is still Tfmcm AmmttmnOd • Biitor vJJ man's Chinese Theater. Then Ani­a comparatively new art form in American the UniveraiQr, has A recent convert to that grow­ta Loos, author of "Gentlemen: college* and universi­ing circle of established theater Prefer Blonds," got him a -job as ties. Modem dance has been a ISargaret R'Dosbter ind people who have discovered the a messenger boy for MGM and part of the University's fine arts Holm. She was graduated from tiiw t importance and great appeal of after serving * while in the latter, curriculum for only four years. Mary Wigman Institute de-centralized drama was on the war he went batik to the studio This year, f<* the-first time, Dance in Berlin. Miss Dodgt campus Thursday. And he an­as a production' assistant. dance is being offered as a major danced professionally wittk Ukal nouncer an offer alluring enough From there he went to Broad­in the Department of Drama* Hanya Holm group. >|S to send many little theater groups way, made a few financial con­According to Miss Shirfee \ THERE'S "DIRTY WORK AT THE CROSSROADS". Saturday into .a flurry of consultation. tacts, and became co-producer of Dodge, choreographer and direc­ON rm STAG* it . »nE Austin's Saengerrunde Hall. He is Thomas Hammond, pro­"The Liar."' He had a musical tor of the Dance Concert, modern ducer of "Apple of His Eye" planned for next season, but he's daftce is a means of communica­TONIGHT AT 8£0 which stars Edward Arnold and abandoned that idea now and plans tion as well as an art form. will be presented on the Para­to produce only for the road.; "We use our bodies every day Plus to Be mount stage Friday at 8:15 p.m. Also in Mr. Hammond's pro­as a means of communication," He offered any little theater in duction of "Apple of His Eye" she explained. "Modfern dance ex­is Frances Waller, George Mit­ the nation the opportunity to presses a mood, feeling, or idea present one of five original play£ chell, Katherine Squire, and Fred EDWARD ARNOLD, FRANCES WALLER, AND like a piece, of sculpture does, but without having to pay royalty. E. Sherman. GEORGE MITCHELL Mock seriousness will reign at of much merriment as they por- it has the added dimension of "I don't want people to think time." "~ Saengerrunde Hall as Austin's tray the roles of Ida Rheingold, I visualize myself as the savior Originally a reaction.;against,Mra. Upson Asterbilt, and the Civic Theater re-opens • last sea- JRriftncVi wiairi, FlanVgtte. of the stage,", he cautioned. "It the overly rigid techniques of the SEATS NOW ON SALE , ; son's melodrama success Saturday ballet, modern dance /was regard­Weor lus an art form. This" opinion no long­ in 190J_ jn the photography shop Broadway. For they're all excel­ -the free use of poison are all at­ er stands, however, attd* this new Of Four Piano Ensemble of Mrs. Martyn Elliot when the lent, and I'll retain the right to tractive elements to be found in type of dancing is receiving, the Austin Community Players were "Dirty Work at the Crossroads", produce them on a professional By WALTER RUNDELL JR., vated the audience. In the Chopin selections, the recognition and respect of the SE organized and their first play, . Teaan Critic , level." Untie or--"Tempered, Tried, and True." Another effective transcription "Polonaise in A Flat" and the public. "NeighboJts/' wafl oaeted-by Di Those who stayed to the very of four pianos, a "Eddie M!r. Hammond^xpiaiii«d thathe medium many Duchin" noflfarne, of-^, Margaret-l HDmihler la tha The lovely, but brainless, hero­rector Mumford Jones. Along end of the Four Piano Ensemble felfc such plays would be a terri­ devotees of serious music fccorn, fered as an encore, the group dis­American pioneer in the field of ine, Nellie, Lovelace played by about 1921, the organization un­boost tec the program Thursday night in Greg­ fic de-centralized one the "Tannhauser Overture," ability Ro­modern Barbara Ross, succumbs to the derwent a change and came .out ory Gym heard of the most was played their in the educational datice. She' stage, where he believes the'great­ by Wagner. The combination of mantic field. The former hat, is the head of the Dance-Depart-* charms of the leering villain, Mon­ as the Austin Community Theater extensive boogie offerings of the est opportunities lie for actors the four instruments enabled the about as much fire as one coul( ment at the University of Wis­ portrayed with Charles D. Casey as the first local concert stage in many a sea­ roe Murgatroyd by who have not yet "arrived.*' group to convey the impression of wont Glenn Payne. But the final cur­president. Amateur jiramatics in son. expect, "and the latter possessed consin. Established about thirty The dramas now available are the scope and size of the Wagneri­the dreaminess,and sentimentality years ago,< her course in modern tain falls as Nellie is safely re­ the city continued under this name a Many of the encores, such as mystery based on "Wisteria an orchestra. of the composer's, style. dance spon became important turned to this arms of Bill Own- until 1950 when again it changed Cottage"; a of "Flight of the Bumble Bee" and the background new adaptation From distant Completing the Romantic por­ sley appearing as Adam Oakhart, titles and is now known as the Saber Dance" were begun in "The Lady of Camellias"; "Jane the Pilgrim's chorus is heard. In­tion of the concert were two num­ Nellie's long-suffering swain. Le- Austin Civic Theater. Houston," a their traditional form but evolved terrupted by drama about oppor- the voluptuous Ve-bers by Carl Maria nell Green, Betty Bunch, and or dissolved into the jazz idiom. von Weber, "Dirty Work" will run on Satr tuism; "Facades," concerning a nusburg music, it surges back (his ever-popular "Invitation to Sherry Trad are .the originators urday nights only. The way the four artists rollicked political machine in Boston; "Sil­ again in a great pean or joy and the Dance" and "Perpetual Mo­ TEXflt ver Wedding," dramatizing through "The Beer Barrel Polka" how praise. The pianists ably captured tion," the rondo from one of feis seemed to please the 2,000 listen­ parents and children drift apart; the mood of the music. sonatas. STARTS TODAY! ers. . and a fifth play about a ballerina Fort Worth Composer One of the more interesting who tries to retrace the career THE MIGHTIEST DRAMA items, in the Serious part of this of a famous dancer. EVER SCREENED" Cultural Entertainment ProgramThe preparation of each play SA Opera to Present was Milhaud's "Scaramouche » N, y. Journal Americancost Mr. Hammond about $1,500, Interested in Melody STATE PHOHI Suite." In this "clowning" work yet all he asks of the little thea­2-5291 Not only were many University even in his musical depiction of ter producing it is letters of cri­the composer employs his favor­ .students and Austinites treated to ticism and description of audience ite "modern" technique—poly- Barber of Seville, Aida |M.lquieft the turbulaht underworld of Cali­ the novelty of a premiere perform­reaction. tonality. • ance, Sunday, but they also writ-ban, in which most modern com­Since the' preparation of TV This writing in two or more Such well-known operas as "The 2 o'clock. loft nessed something else almost as posers would have used a great keys gives listeners an unusual Barber of Seville" and "Aida" are The Festival will continue the DOtB MY shows takes such a great amountdeal of dissonance, he did not unusual in the musical a aural experience. The verticle as­expected to lure many University following week end with the "dou­ scene: of time and talent, and since they stray too far from what he be­ pect of the music is somewhat students to San Antonio's Munici­ble feature" performance Satur­ contemporary composer who em­ cannot be repeated, like stage per­ be the supreme task of phasizes pure melody above-ail lieves to formances and movies, he believes elongatea, yet there seems to be pal Auditorium this week end for day night, February 17, of "The composers^—creation of melody. else. , ' * that this medium will be a tre­no core of sound. The ear receives the opening of the seventh Grand Old Maid and the Thief," afod "Sa­ Serge. Saxe was the composer Another unusual element in the many sensations but cannot de­Opera Festival. lome." . . mendous boom to the many unem­ and the work—presented by. the program was a concerto played ployed Broadway actors and grass-termine any real substance. Rossini's comic opera, "The "Madame Buterfly,"• scheduled PMONI Austin Symphony Orchestra for for its own sake, and not purely root aspirants. Further he be­In composing in this style, Mil-Barber "of Seville," will be the for Sunday afternoon, February QV£T£W 7-I5ZT the first time—was "The Tem­ as a vehicle for a virtuoso. haud keeps each melody in each initial offering Saturday night at 18, wili conclude the opera sea­ lieves that the progress of local pest," a concerto for piano and Sigi Weissenberg, pianist, will television will mean that talented key comparatively simple and dia­8 o'clock. Verdi'B "Aida" will be son. Is woitt-. orchestra inspired by the Shake­ be the next artist on the Austin youngsters can stay in the larger tonic, that is, with no altered scale performed Sunday afternoon at Heading "The Barber of Se­|Lmk k*Ak MM vfvsv man PVIV MVH spearean drama. Mr. Saxe, now Symphony Orchestra series. He cities of their own state and still steps or accidentals. Any altera­ville" cast Saturday night will be «d lane tesseR." > a Port Worth resident, is a fer- will perform February 25 in Hogg be discovered by New York ta­tion would tend to destroy the All Students May Try Patrice Munsel, young (Coloratura -WoJtfrWINCKfU. Vant foe of 'dissonance without Auditorium. On March 1.Helen lent scouts; polytonal effect. * of the Metropolitan Opera; Giu­N. TMmt . purpose" and keeps so-termed mo­Kwalwasser will also play in Hogg, Something of a theatrical prodi­The third movement .of the for Radio House Casts seppe di Stefano, leading tenor of AYRES v ­dern harmonies in his work to a and the season will be concluded gy, Mr. Hammond is only 26. suite, "Brazileira," made use of Auditions for Radio House ac­La Scal$ Milan and the Met; and kOUIt bf e minimum. March 18 with the opera "Tosca Eight years ago he got his first Latin melodic and rhythmic pat­tors and announcers4 will be held Frank Guarerra, young baritone WOLHEIM Local music followers.noted that in concert form. job connected with the dramatic terns., Its tiash and spirit cap.ti-Monday from 8 to 5 p.m. in Stu­Of the Met. ,, dio A at Radio Housa, Herva Nelli, a discovery of Ar­ — Students who present * script turo Toscanini, will sing the title of three short characterizations role in "Aida." Blanche Thebom, Wr«#^byUWISMAKTON« ir Complete Mexican Dinner* will have their names placed on Lloyd Thomas Leech, Norman ic Chicken enchiladas and tacos Radio House actors' list. This list Scott, and George London, .will , 3l?VArfA if Sandwiches and hamburger* will be used to cast parts 'for the sing the other major roles. ' i -TJi"/ /f Adult EatertalMWrt Fried chicken and steaks spring productions. All those who In the "Triumphal March" and DRIVE IN THtATRfcS auditioned last fall ,must fill out JblUgfr of "Ajda," art opera known Free Delivery and TWO, SHOWS MGHTLX^ new schedule cards which are for its great visual appeal as Feature Starts at 7 ]mk •yl«r Curb Service available in the production office. well as its music, more than 300 Open 11 aJn. to 1 a.m. daily All students are welcome to try artists will be assembled on the "DEVIL'S DOORWAY*' out. * stage at%ne time. 81' EL TAXCO CAFE In ajddition to these tryouts Prima ballerina for the "Aida" . "I WAS A &s>7Ays/ ry ms 8701 Guadalupe 7-0109 there 'is a position available as ballet is Albia Kavan, who was SHOPLIFTER*' announcer for the weekly series, featured soloist with the Ballet STARTS TODAY! Scott Brady -Monia Fwwian "Reading Is Adventure," Theater and Markova-Dolin com­Fint Austin Showifcg "THE SHOWDOWN^ ? pany. ' William Elliott Jonel Perlea will direct the San Antonio Symphony for the per­ !"»K IVI-IN formances, / Tickets for the Festival are "THE FARMER'S available through the Symphony1 And for good reason, too. For you can get DAUGHTER" Box office rt Municipal Auditori­ Loretta Yonuf « Joaepli Cottea um in San. Antonio. • wonderfully prepared food*at sensible prices J1 "WYOBllHa WILDCAT* ' "" ' ' " ' ' y "W "it.!' , — HOW — at Hotard's, Students and faculty alike are March of Dimes Needs . P finding that it pays to eat lunch and dinner at " 9 Student Talent for Show CAN YOU BE SURE As part of the current March the clean,convenient cafeteria just across 21st *TII<| JfACk^ of Dimes drive in Austin, station OF GETTING THIS ANNUAL Wallace Beery Richard Cast* KTBG will run • special ''ijeqaest street from the campus at Wichita. Here is to* "O, MY DAiRLINC and pledge" program starting *t day's main dish offerings. .11:06 Saturday night and running • CLEMENTINE" ? ? ? ? Roy Aeaff through Sunday morning :for as long as requests continue to eome Shrimp Creole and Rtcfe The University of Texas yearbook, THE in, says Cactus Pryor, program di­YANK CACTUS, is publshed on an annual basis, rector. Fried Cod and Tartar Sauce . rather than on a semi-annual basis like 'TWO FLAGS WEST' Radio House has been asked to most yearbooks, that is, Spring events are Joaeph Cetten Liada Darnell find University talent for. the Fi«h Croquette and Egg Sauce included for the current year. Thus the "PANIC IN THE STREET* CACTUS is distributed in the Fall (usu-hourse 12-1 and 2-3 ajn. Upon re­Richard Widmant /JVST/A/ 7-2900 ..." • • --Shrimp Okra Gumbo ,..alljr about September 16). Seniors get quest for song dedication and wy tony#their books through the mail while Other after pledging certain anicirint a Rath Roaw*.-" . students receive theirs on the camptii. to the March of Dimes, either Pot Roast of Beef and Brown GraVy IF YOU DID NOT ORDER AND PAY records or the talent will play fak. FOR YOURS -DURING THE FALL OR the requests. Breaded Veal Cutlet and Country Gravy SPRING REGISTRATION PERIOD AND "EL CUARTO The^Travis -County Chapter of HAVE IT INCLUDED ON YOUR AUDI­MANDAMIENTO^' -•—— Individual Chicken Pot Pie the Polio Foundation will have TOR'S BILL—COME BY JOURNALISM workers to collect tho pledges •i.yHMieyiW'ih Hj.ifiy ip.o.i.i -BUILDING 108 TODAY AND ORDER Beef Stew with Vegetable* YOURS. Over 600 pages of quality, un­during the' program hours, those forgettable memories of the best years of who knake pledges are asked to .your life for the reasonable price of leave their porch lights tHrned on. 5-1710 You'll always find morethan adozen crisp, Hadi—-com wUi me f x Csiifcsli flavorful salads, a delicious'soup or toalfht. Z*r have n Band—«• Dtte Jackpot inr—se so cover chart*. Za Caybfch, two, and many tdste-satisfying where a* lul meats m VaaV tsff disserts at , Tht Casbah 19th 4b Gnai*lap« PublitKed By GOING AUSTIN CIVIC THW|TRl PARTYING? * mams TEXAS STUDENT ;PUBUCATIONS MAKE ':1nc At THE CROSSROADS' i ;v ' f ^ , ,T EVERY SATURDAY &IS PJA>rt BOTTLE CALL 64541 FOR TICKETS ififr JOURNAll 108 SASN6ERRUNDE HAU. Wik* CAFETERIA DINING 21ST moJ WICHITA '0; wmm & *•> wmm A date bureau will be in Coffee and cookies were'served 21, Miss Gloria Ragus, sponsor, pany her at the piano. , v operation for members of the by the staff of the-office of the WWT a BMK BMWW *1 ask yon will The annual report to the Gov* announced* Wednesdays * Beuth Central Tekas €fafe-plan­De&u of Women. " Dawson of thi CbUdjrens' Theater, Washington aepra ay Htewrr ernor of the Soy-Scoutsof Ameri­All girls interested Iif trying far ning to attend the bam dance and City Recreation Department, will have aothhig on a Univer-• a« «bta ft in My last five bucks 1 her® be­ca in Texas will be broadesst over * • i' membership should meet on hayride Friday at 8 p.m. at Hud­ sorority who proudly claims haspassed through a succession of quest, * • --Since this powerful behind-the-reported hidden treasures and sity „ at the dose of the first ings, and antique picture frames 1515 Preston. > > games and refreshments will be Arthur High School and the Uni­ in every state in the Union and scenes political leader made no rooms, and a large "black room." semester.: " were exhibited. There were flow­• served. versity, and was affiliated with also in Washington before Presi­ visits, important men from all over The .room is Do named because a Mrs. Emilia S. Ramarez and her er arrangements, doilies, and Brackearidge Nurses Home will Theta Xi. She is now employed dent Truman. the nation came to see bim. It fraternity had its ritual written son, Alfonso Rene Ramirez, both children's'dresses on display. hold their annual Sweetheart with Gulf Oil Corporation in Announcer for the show is Jim-Newly wedded brides attending has been Mid that,, the large ver­on the walls and had to paint it school teachers in Edinburg, re­Ceramics and rugs were among Dance Friday night beginning at the University as'1 wives of stu­Houston. mie Morriss, radio broadcasting anda to the south wa& the scene when they moved. *" ceived their master of education the hobbies shown. On exhibit 8 o'clock . The Queen of the dents are especially invited to major, and producer is R. C. Nor­also were scrapbooks and unusual "'•of more political conferencesthan The tale is told of a murder degrees at the same time.. ris. . School of Nursing will be crowned attend a program of music pre­Mrs. Alice Brown Yeager, UT's band-made notes .und enclosure a bachelor of j — at the dance. All students who sented by the National Associa-first bride, died January 24 in ?• Witb a flair for the unique, Col. and a suicide in one of thetower-science degree from Texas A&M "fcardsj '&F6—l&tCf68tCu— to at-ticm of University Dames tniJSic ner set and teapot were displayed. Bouse bailt his -home fcot unlike like rooms on third floor. All of and wrote his master's thesis on tend. and drama group. It will, be pre­to Judge M. S. Yeager in 1886 which • adds excitement when Dee Chi Epsilon Picks A cookbook..will be compiled • sented Friday night at 7:30 p.m. an. ocean-going vessel. The kit-"A Study of the Reactions of and came to Austin with Judge Zees go exploring.-from the recipes collected; Mrs. Tryouts for Orchesis will be a • chen, or g^leytiainthe basement, Latin-American Pupils to English in Texas Union 309. Yeager,' law student in the .with dumb waiter* tjo bring „the One night in 1947 the girls were and Spanish Film Commentaries." Leaders Stella Hardin, .president of the held during the first meeting* of Miss Jo Ann Hale will sing and University and member of the association, said. the club oxi Wednesday, February • food upstairs to the dining room. frightened from their beds upon Miss Carolyn Scott will; accom­first law graduating class. Mrs. Kamirez, who has a bache­New officers of Chi Epsilon, , A wide veranda encircles almost hearing strange sounds issuing lor of arts' degree from Texas honorary civil and architectural -the entire bouse, like a ship's "fromthfrbasemect^T^ SSI, chose "Wetback Children in engineering society foF thc apring a staterooms. Also each bedroom sounded like the; walls were.being semester are Howard South Texas" as her thesis topic. L. Smith., . opens onto its individual porch. torn apart. William T. White, vice-president;CoL Honse ;had the floors on Anxious members conferred Joe A. Ayers, secretary; Charles , first and second floors inlaid with with housemother, Mrs. A. J. Cald- UT Prof Attends L. Corivis, treasurer; and Josephintricate designs of imported wel, and called the police. As the E. Aaron, Transit editor. wood, the chandeliers sent'from police arrived, greeted by co-eds France, and the red stone on the in curlers and housecoats, the cul­Nursing Workshop New initiates were presented outside hewn by band and set into prit escaped from the basement with certificates of membership V Miss"Irene Healy, associate pro­at the last meeting of the group. position • by prisoners of a' chain door. After a dramatic chase, the They are Joseph E. Aaron, Bobby|i.gang. /V/.•;:_ • ' ' victorious police fragged the thief fessor of nursing education, was Dean Campbell, Charles L. Con-For the smart size 7 and 9|^"• The man known as the "maker and is certain chest he had located recently granted leave of absence vis, Bill G. Eppes, , Robert M. UNf kings/' who never accepted a in the basement back to the house. by the Board of Regents to at­ Frelict, Robert Ray Gloyna, and political position himself, achieved The indignant burglar cried, "I tend a curriculum planning work­Glenn E. Hamman. SCj?an»e as one;of the American sign-: found it and it's mine," unwrap­ |pt ers of the Treaty of .' Versailles./ ping a piece of paper he found in shop in administration of nursing Also Delbert Bruce Hankins, served as personal emissary for.; the chest. It said: servicesyat the University of Chi­Edward L. Hines, Albert C. Mit­A brand-spanlcing, eyelash-bat­ |yr President Wilson on many occas-"Of soundest mind and senses cago. chell, Colman L. Phillips, James ting new collection of cottons for jsfe' ions, most of Which took Mm far clear, The workshop, sponsored by the L. Sutton and Robert Carl Ziehe. the Smart Size Juniors, especially W. K. Kellogg Foundation, is in­tended to improve the utilization you size 7's and 9's! A smooth of nursing services by strengthen-: Kopacek Elected little sleeveless grey chambraying educational programs iyr nur­sing administrators. At its con­Czech Club Head dress flashed with pockets and an June 80, Miss Healy clusion on edging of crisp white waffle will return as associate professor Jerry Kopacek was re-elected 'chairman of the Czech Club in the College of Nursing at the pique. Shirred moulded bodice. Wednesday night. Darwin LabajGalveston Medical Branch of the Size 7 1^ -15. 11.95. A provocative was elected vice-chairAian; LillianUniversity. Musil, secretary-treasurer; Gereon three-toned" dress of Wamsutta Approximately 35 representa­ Jerry I tives of fourteen universities and Kostelnik, reporter; and * with e«y-to*slip-into frog front, - Coufal, sergeant-at-arms. other institutions are attending Sponsors are JPr. Eduard Micek, opening, softly ~ gather skirt, the workshop upon invitation of Jaroslav Zivney and Joe Malik of clinched-in self buckled belt of the Kellogg Foundation. the -Depiartment of Slavonic Lan­ contrasting Havana Orange, guages. Navy with lime or purple With 3 Exes In South's Who's Who lime. Sixe*7 to 15. 14.95. ifis •Sich cjCidt Three former students of the University, now faculty members Cotton Collection from !0.95 to at the University of Houston, have repaired been mentioned in "Who's Who in STUDENT HEALTH CENTER 69.95, Second Floor the South and Southwest." They are Martin "Wright, associate pro­ Helmi Saber Al-Uthman, El­ fessor of lpathematics; Mrs. Ruthliott A. Chamberlain, Ruben. Ur-S. Wikoff, librarian; and E. W. guide Chavex, Consuelo Cisneros, Schumann, professor of physics. Marilyn Ruth Cohn, John Ward Dixon, Robert Harris Dyer, Rob­ert Frias, Muriel Joy Giles, Bur­Anna Jansen Getting Well ton * Doyle . Hanbury, J. Perdee Hudson, Barbara Sue Ivey, Ger­Miss Anna Janzen, director of trude H. Jarvis, Robert L. Lans-the University Commons, who has dell. • . been in the hospital for several Also Donald Stuart McKie, weeks is reported recovering from Gardner Frank Marston, Fernan­her recent illness. do L. Moreno, Frances Morris, Mrs. Eva Tiroff has acted as Barbara Ann Murphy, Lois Elva director during her absence. Nickerson, John Martin Norwood, ii# Herbert Ray Petty, Russell Glen As-Poling, Henry Gordon Ritchie, Richard-Lawrence Russell, i--V Charles F. Sugarman, Alice Mack­ie Tacquard, Clara Briseoe Tay­\ lor, Agnes Elizabeth Tipton, Don­ ald Wand. t'HstmtCytds Arab Students to Elect The Arab Students Association will elect officers and discuss a V program for the spring semester in the International Center of B. // Hail at 4 p. m. Saturday. Say "be my valentine'"' with the. kind of valentine* every girl would live to get: a sentimental froth pt nylon net.and lace on Wi7<. . If M UlAC a nylon tricot half slip in cloud , whjte, petal pink, blue horizons. r§&-S PINK SML 6.95. Cologne by Christian I "Dior. Heavenly fragrance for" • AQUA 4.00 and 7.50 plus tax. Stockings " V•^ m by Christian Dior. Beautiful, • m BEfGE m beautiful stockings 2.25 a pair. fchrtsfiu Dior jcAt; n mum hMitt * Remember to have yourk*. / deleft colors valentine gift done up,in a - •; w; •. tn ^ * distinctive Goodffbend gift wrap~-without charge, •a#5*w Missue, faille? .xi.. • ... •: Wjb $;s BLACK First Floor Shops Krafts li h { ttJ (m . \ i WJ « £&>• i mmmm wHhfrai i/ptfkk,H«r», fha cwrfacf bloy***' Mm-»• JjtBfA f (H. ' . ^»u«faiHa, e«pslaavad, colors r " -,v" Sin 10 to118. k? iti i II• -m­ f: , f. m ssssssa DBCfWnSU ft if, %r •k"' §in > *$•&!?!> m­ lans for the combined ROTO No radio time for Ennls' music virgmia Rogers will uftr for­ Military Ball; scheduled for Feb­has been announced yet. get her first day ai the Univer­ ruary 24 in Gregory Gymnasium, About a,000 guests are expected •ity. To her ,that dajr is' import­ were given a bi£ boost Wednesday to attend the ball. ant, not in the usual sense of be­ when it was announced that Skin- r ginning an intwesting car«cr of of the fearful, trembling, *fy had gotta play.at%e::«y*nk::g:^^ married to Howard Swell £llis editorial assistant, has been an­ Anstia. ?«•« ' . brought her courage which opened • * The dance, which will >Jast from All will remain silent for girls January 26 in a dduble-ring cere­nounced. The w*ddibg date Has Mians Page is employed in the fpMil, she wt* cahnand her 8 until 12 o'clock, is open to Amy, going through mid-year sorority mony performed at the Presby­)>ot been set., office of the Dean of Engineering.' the doom to « new and happieT and movements lif€. Navy, and Air Force ROTC per­rush until 6 p.m. Friday after­terian geological Seminary Cha­Miss Sdwell is a freshman at Mr. Welty received his degree in t4l was like an older noon when formal invitations will vtfgin&''#V-experienced sonnel 'by invitation only, though pel in Austin. Abilene Christian College. mechanical engineering front the ^ML* be handed out. University,,., bral palsy, and that first day she advtee and help] many dignitaries, both campus and Miss Gilstrap' is a Kersten is a member of Sigma well-known state personalities are Members of Panhellenic Council the University, where she Was a Delta CM honorary journalism had gone to see a professor of dexfctandabottt expected to * attend. Governor will begin giving out invitations member of Alpha Chi ,Omega, fraternity, Baptist Student Union, Mill Agnes Josephine Kelos, special education whom the had Ae said. Shivers has been invited, said at 5 p.m. in Texas Union 315-816, Mortar Board, Student Assembly, Tarleton Club, and Grassroots who received la BA in languages heard could help her. She was Virginia gtU# Cadet Captain Leonard McLaugh­Girls who receive invitations to Orange Jackets, and Panhellenic from the University In 1947, was nervous and frightened, but she *te «tad«oit itk ^the' Cirteti*itgr*j»|> lin, invitation committee chairman. join a sorority will go directly to Council, and was an outstanding I"" married January 27 at the New­hoped with his encouragement •' ipedaT edTiettti^ nu^eCk ^ Guests from thirty-four other their houses. student In the I960 Cactus. man Club to Robert Hood Perry, she would be able to do Some using her new lottnd eMfltatt ^ special tutoring for other handi­ schools have been invited, and Rush captains will come to Ellis is a graduate student at -The engagement, of Patricia who is Working 09 a doctor's de­to help others understated that"'-* several generals fmrom'theJ"ourth Texas Union 315-316 at 4 p.m. the University and is a member Siegol to Andro H. Zilberman has gree in chemisfcryg;, ^ capped persons. "1 "•-J, ? there » a place, and ai important Army, 14th Air Force and admir­to obtain-names of girls^iyho will of Sigma Nu and Southwestern been announced by-Miss Spiegel's Mrs. Petty was' a mem&er of The first thing fibTtS profewor one, In sofiiely fm peraoni afffict^ iff als from the New Orleans Naval become their pledges and pick up Geological Society. parents. • Newman CluB, Tee Glub, and the asked her was if she could make ed with cerebral palsy as sh* wasg;' L District are expected to attend. blank bid cards. * " Miss Siegel attended Golf Park Czech-Club. Perry is a member a speech, and before she could "Wie ptihlie has int College and the University. She and Phi JLambda murmur -a weak "No," he had qUately educated to help and «a*> Anne Virginia San derstand*cerebral pahtf^d. it a member of Delta Phi Epeilon r married to Dick Dorman Wooten 4 % er to talk to his class about * t 1 j her experiences. but they are gvadiujaQr sorority. . O-SLIv* I-­ in a double-ring ceremony March Marian Roeenbtadt and Norman said the gfri. the Christian Her fiance was graduated front "It is quite characteristic of22 at University Tulani University and received R. Powers were united in marriage a C. p.," Virginia said, "to dou­Virginiavrett^hiai^li' 4 Ceded in 'Bird' Play Church, with the Rev. Lawrence MARJORIE SIUSTRAP his master of arts degree in en­on January 20 in the Central ble up in knots, and the more ner­grade school when she wac fizat W. Bash, pastor, officiating. The seeded players for the All-College. ^ The oth&s, in order, gineering from the University. He Methodist Church. Officiating at vous we are the worse we" per­affected by the ailment., Collegiate Badminton Tournament are Mickey little, June Knox, Miss Sandlin is a sophomore at ness administration,'' the formal rites was Dr. Ton# W. the University, and Wooten at­is a member of Sigma Alpha Mu form., It was like facing a firing control of her right hand and hadi J which,JiaginsFriday morning-have .hith-from..the University, and * *• ' -• ' Brabham. to go through the diffici|tt,i«Uriw tended the-University two yearsi * been announced by Miss Peggy Bobbie Hughes from Sam Hous " Announcement" of thb' engage^ j-bride is the .daughter of a«4s df feiinfeg Ann Morgan was warne&te The „ yilbig, sponsor of Poona Club, the ton State Teachers College. -• '* ment of Miss Helen Cathryn Allen Mr. and Mrs. Ben Rosenblad Sr., do all her Wtfrk. football star Bobby Dillon Janu They Left School-Beeaos* p«oplt V; organization "sponsoring 'the meet. In doubles the players are first, Mary Wanda Craven's engage­to James/Michael Ryan has been ary 27 in Temple. of Taylor. The bridegroom, son stared she always tried The bride, First ceded players in' the sin­Helen Thieme ind Billi? Blunt ment to Arthur L. Talley Jr. has made. The wedding took place on of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Powers Sr., j|n Alpha Phi, is a senior interior crippled hand hidden. Ctietlbni£!i: gles are Helen Thieme-from from SWSTC, and second,' Mickey been announced by the Rev. and February 6 at the Church of the decoration majorv •' -of Lubbock, received a bachelor The Army Got 'Em is a br«iBriiijui3r.:whi&t.. :"| .Southwest Texas State Teachers Little and Olwyn Davies, UT. Good Shepherd in Corpus Christi. of business administrstidA degree cars before Mrs. John Craven of Sherman. A member of the T Association, Whitehead Brenham, or someUmaa .jffear• Ryan is a graduate of the Uni­ from the University, Tom of birth, but Virginia was not 4(ware ^ . Miss Craven graduated from Dillon has lettered two years in B. J.,'49, has been .inducted into versity and is a member of Kappa of her ailment until aha lost Austin High School and attended football and ope year, in track. the Armed .Services. Alpha fraternity. farol of her right hand. -* 1 the University. Mr. Talley, the He wiss tapped by Cowboys last Center Needs A former night editor of The * ­ son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. spring and is a junior accounting Daily Texan, Whitehead has been "But now when people stare v Announcement had been made Talley of Arlington; also attended of the engagement'of Rosa Adele major. • Scrap Material. employed with the American? «tn tempted t6 walk iq> to thettSj | and try to-explain, everything," 1 ; Statesman as court ,and police re­ the University. Junemann of Galveston to Johp Barbara Tinker and Vernon she said. "Through the technique,''1. J The bride's father will perform Paul Niemann Miss; Junemann re­ The Pan-American Center, a porter sinee his graduation- Barnes Hill Jr. were married Jan­ of special education l am trying ,* .the double ring cetemohy Feb­ceived her degree iii January, and year-round recreational center for . . ' uary 26. The ceremony was per­ to make good as aia exampla for •' ruary 24 in the University Presby­Nieman will receive a degree in formed at the' Harris Memorial all -children in the East Third and First Lt. Wayne B. Lee, BA '49, others who are handicapped *nd^ c Canal district, is asking for dona­left for San Antonio January 17 i terian Church. industrial engineering iii June. * Chapel of the University Method­try to , help them over the darfc'^ • ' tions of scrap materials to use in for active duty with the Air ist Church. -iti crafts program. road to eonfidenc#,*^# The engagement of Bette Jo The engagement and *approach-The bride is a junior music Force. He ia now 'stationed-at El­iftg marrage of Charlene Stroud Any scrap from articles made lers Field, Alexandria, La*v l.:\ > Cornett of San" Jose, Calif., to major from Edna. She 4*^ a James B. Binford, ex-University to Paul Williams has been an­member of Wica and formerly of wood, plastics, and met&ls to Lt. Lee is theowner of the Nite SAE Choosesold pillow cases, clothing, shaving student from Dallas, has been an­nounced. Both. are from Lufkin, was a counselor at Kirby Hall, Snak cafe. His wife, who will re­ kits, and pieces., of ribbon are The bride-elect is a member of Hill is a senior pre-law student main in Austin with her three nounced. useful for the woddworking pro- Spring Officer •Mr. Binford graduated from Delta Delta Delts sorority. , at the , University. He is from sons, is managing the cafe in his M grant. Sul Ross School of Geology and Williams is s member of Kappa Mission and is .'a member-of Phi absence*--< , Sigma Alpha itpsflbn Donators hiay call Miss Cecil Sigma .fraternity and plays right Kappa Psi fraternity. the following in the Army. The couple is now Scarborough, district supervisor will be married early in thf end: on the Longhorn football of centers and playgrounds, at vRay H. Buckland, ~ who re spring semester; Tom Wun< fraternity. \ " Miss Ann Fage;will be married spring. , •. the City Recreation Department. ieeived his Bachelor of Business lick, president? Frarit Jifkbr^ _ • to Richard O. Weliy, mechanical Administration from the Univer­yice-president; Charles De^hadg. >% The Center includes clubroomS' Nancy Patricia Draper and Wel­The engagement of engineering instructor, March 24 And and a sity was treamxtr; : Miss Jane wo^shops is play-this ^January, recently 9<&fraai»: retary; Bill Canvender and-Jim kin Louis Eckhoff exchanged vows ground for children six years and drafted and Assigned to the 40th Febi'uary 3 in the home of the up. It also holds parties for Infantry Division at Camp .Cooke Cavender^ iUNjlal ehairdMto^ ^ bride-elect's parents, Mr. a.nd rMsv these youngsters. for training. While at the Univer­ C. Draper of Austin. / ee A co-ordinated board composed sity, Buckland was » member of Also Bill Archer, intramntsl K Both Miss Draper anil Mr. Eck­of clubs, of which Frank Pinedo, Theta Xi fraternity, * manager;, MQton Black, herald; 1 hoff are graduates of Austin High University law student, is presi­Jack Underwood, correspondent; School. She attended "the Univer­dent, sponsors activities to r*ise Greek Regional Advisor to Visit Bill Patman, warden}' Bill Ar^Wf money for the budget t>f the cen­rush captain.; Jaque Adou#, chroSk-, sity of Texas and is now workings ter. One of the moat successful >" SigmayDelta Tnu sorority wM icier; Din Moody, chssplant^ Tom at the Capital National Bank. Tjhte If you are feeling and blue, the boppers. projects was the entertain' thsir regional advisor, se»Uoif. .tnt«ir»t«t»« -^ bridegroom-to-be is a student at the cam­Pan-Ameriean Wuiiderfick, and'yont-feet are killing you, then Signs will appear on Carnival in September; which net­ Mi^CrRita^^ ity Coyndl representative ^ ithe. University, majoring in busi­ the Texas Union Will'have a cure pus today to insure the proper ted a total ^2,300 under the junior i.nswrtrwiw«u»jr wiusr we Wisconsin, Monday. Mrs. Bess^remmvan^Sullivan,, vjwiKwr Inttrfrtternl^ ^ of for all thajt ails you today from turnout, the . committee said c£ar£® the Center's director, (matt will visit in Austin until j Council rep»sehtatir«; viiNi­2 to 5 o'clock. --w—-.Thursday. So if you'xe .feeling Roy Guerrerb. ^ Thursday. < Archer,, songjeadw. * ^ A sure cure for all those add tired and blue, let 'em take a look and drop blues will be had by all at you this afternoon from 2 to Scheduled for May when the-Free Dance Committee 5 o'clock in the Main Lounge of the Union. holds its second "Coffee Time" inThe first "Greek Week" to be the form of a dance in the Mainheld on the University campus Lounge. ••••' y v;; .-j-• ­ mms has been Scheduled for the first There won't be any section week in May by Inter-F.raternity worries in the circular seating Social Calendar Council.— arrangement that the committee The "Greek Week" program is has arranged in the Lounge. The FRIDAY designed to offer leadership train­friendlyilittle circle will allow you v --v ing to fraternity officers and lead­to sit in a cosy manner while 7-9-—Gamma Phi Beta open ipft* ers in all student organizations. munching on doughnuts that will house for Sigma Phi Epsilon. pmi Plans are to emphasize participa­be served with the coffee. There 7:30-12—Kapi>a Psi banquet and tion of younger men in this train­really is coffee, you see. ' dance/ Palomino Club. Jennilu is wearing a four-piece coitume of gray miron flannel ing program since many officers 9-12—Alpha Omicron Pi formal This is thevsecond-of a planned and polished cotton. Her long-sleeved blouse i« of polished have left for the armed services. dance, Austin Hotel. cotton print and the detachable capo la lined with matching series that the committee will ar­ The activities of the program 9-12—Zeta Tau AlphK formal cotton print. The new end popular sheath lines are highlighted range. During the last, which was will include a coffee for all fra­ dance, Texas Union. in the slim skirt. A »est completes this fashion-right costume—' held before—pardon the .expres­ ternity men. in the Texas Union. at Buttrey'a, the store for the well-dressed girl. Meetings are sion—finals, participants had a scheduled for each SATURDAY great time. night with presidents, house'man-. There Goes a Weil-Dressed.Girl 7»12—Delta Kappa Epsilon infor­ agefSr and other officers meeting Not all will be in the form of mal party*-chapter house. together in discussions. coffee and doughnuts, though, be­ 8-11—Baptist Students Union* % Planning committees for the cause the muBic committee has ar­ for to Bapitst Student Center. program will be set up at the next ranged tunes the tastes. 8-12—TLOK informal dance at Eight 0'Clocks Make Council meeting. Bop for the boppers, and hop for new Boy Scout Hut. 8-12—Sigma Chi valentine (iance,chapter house. it V-* University Life Hard -> 8-12—Phi Sigma Delta elosed house. X ' By BITTY BUTTREY 8-12—Phi. Gamma Delta Valen­ "These 8 o'clock classes get harder every semester," tine Party, closed house. 8-12—WICA Valentine Ball, Tex-! a jaded senior moaned to a friend. "I thought I 1*" as Union. wouldn't have any when I got this close to that degree— 8:30-12—-Thet* Xi dance,7 closed but I've got the things every morning!" This seems house. 9-12—Phi Sigma Kappa Corona­ to be the general pessimistic viewpoint taken by 99%t tion Ball, Commodore Perry of the students. Mid-semester vacation, even though Hotel, . %*oCS it was lengthened by the weather, ju$t seemed to make ler for most people to get back into the "salt mina 2-5—Curtain Club reception, Tex­ schedule." as Union, A few -of the things that velty wetives. The material of 7-8:30—Ali^ lbsiloa_ Phi dea­make the first few weeks your dress should be considered •»» S N. M sert party for Alpha Epsilon Pi, brighter are the fact that as carefully as the style and , '? * s classes are. still unsettled and color for a fashion-right ward-i the ft © m e w o r k. assignment robe, v «. > > hasn't become tooV'hjeavy yet. ANTIQUES In spite of the cold weather,' ••»» <*** ^ ^ %. si *•.. The opera seaso«' in San An­romance managed-to bloom for tonio .Will also brighten up the couples during tfte-mid-semes^ ; OfttSKIU Horn week ends of quite a few s'tu-ter. Among th^el happy co-eds : dents. who are newly pinned is Pat linen top^ On the are an Chi M. 9-10-11-1J pessimistic side Cater, Alpha Omega pjn^iom ** heavy loads of new books from Baytown. The Delta Tatt if® • • ­ and, the light Mfife&kooks that Del£&»>pm she is fearing*-be­ . :r-n-#oBCSS_­ " from signing up for lit longs to John Deaton from '• ^ ' spring suitoiysummer bochelo^ Si, courses. Also, the dreaded Galena Park. Pat, a senior, is jU j^r^Qoyirf|yl4f orange grade slips will be majoring in history. ready in the v $e$isfraf^ office -Alice Whitnjore, a senior"-•: $175,000 Antiqua Monday, f in white and from Harlingen, "is* literally . . Display ' Jennila Kell/,1 Buftrey's m?­ counting the days until gra-. #SSldel of the year is wearing a duation, She is still re-reading*four-piece costume^ dross fa­ a jctter from her parents tell- Wofwierfully flexible leather In' shioned of gray ®iron flannel. ihg her that a ' new car 'la' The blouse js 'a ,print iijpt}-waiting for her vrhen she his hondtoma moc wedgie, scoop«d tow Student and FeeuHy eomin§ into its a bachelor ll3hed cotton* i" Olseoun^: that diploma. Alice 4 member «t the »i w .two of the most Important fa- Tissue jmria broadcloth and polished cotton are also S«oond stepping .in the perennial favorite Jn rayon, crepes, botlTin plain s#d WW***ULU4W. -^W hssWs^sfe&Bed ;m^?r •?U ^i4*-WRg,W^;£^M^¥/a,Rc­ fc&M dS «» S2k'^ By• BARBARA RUBENSTE1N-, 'taachittg of * Ptac^cally At"-*'7/--v't -% :*§ W» £« , _We.are.in the habit of memor-everyone stated the Golden ¥. a 7 • «• ising words in ebureh an# doinr but~Dr» _ . . .. . 'At powtajflr. F«teo«t W» h«J»«en 4eat"v^arter, T^'*V&" nothing about them. Dr. Ernest M. was the fourteenth to state tho _*»» Mr*f iWw.H* the World second Street. LigOn, head of the psychology .Golden Rule in some form or an­ a Union Student OMtoto F«jJo**Mp-.-Ser-All students are invited to at­'"By JOHNNIE HUMAN ^ Christianity faces Communism." different presuppositions. tny "belief for myself and for an department at-College, other and that it. was a part of v< 'HMt-«!*'*• b* feaftt «t Harri* tend the.annual welcoming {tarty ,e important thing for «ie This la the belier of Miss SalUe The reaction of .the Christian tto individual is a maturity which will Schenectady, N. Y., said when he all major religion's philosophies for -newcomers to Forty Acres. religious man is the way he wiU Roller, on the staff of the Uni­the criticisms of a person*who op­enable one*to act according to the appeared in behalf of the Reli­today. Educational Building. The prayer It will be held from 8 until 11 or react to the person whoje-Ideals versity YM-YWCA. She was • ex­poses his thought is Important greatest amount of truth, taking gions Emphasis Committee in the ^However* Jesus was original in International Roort of the Union ««r*ie* igtpoBxored by theU$WA. il:30 o'clock. T . are different from bis own.' That plaining the difficulty involved in "I don't believe'that life is grim into account primarily the fihcta saying in the Gospel, "He thai Thursday afternoon. \-, Jlai*ar*t Endr«u», An Cham-Faculty members and hosts will is one problem which arisefc.when trying to live with people having and bitter, and thing are getting and the feelings of other people" saveth his life shall lose it" And %*trttd ®<» Bi«M ha*e been «* greet party-comers in kindergar­* «• K ' ji * , " worse. The reason we are' more Missi. Roller commented. , /"When religioh is translated it was on this principle that Dr. 'IcetedV,^' jwdrfcicli*ate ten Rotate*, sensitive to society's ills is that we The three understandings which into * attitudes, which influence Ligon built his Character Re­. wonhip Bfty^e. i --«•> • are more and mofe ambitious for characterize a mature perso^t are what you do from day to day, it search Project, which is under it?* -.'4 i.-> -At , Tbe HilUl Feundatittn will pre* mankind," Miss Roller' said. "If a concept of truth" in terms; of the affects your character," he told the direction of the International "Att&rew, tfce Man of Decision" sent two free movies, "Music In the Christian Church fails to sense power which comes into his life, the audience, mainly composed of Council of Religious Education. will be the sermon theme at the America" and "Vronsky and Ba> this rising tide of hope, then it a fair evaluation of himself with graduate'students.. ' This principle, which Dr. Ligon UMnrrity Av*>v* Charek of bin," Saturday at 7:30 p.m. Dan­Will not have been adequate T;o "his strengths and weaknesses, and It never occurs to many church­, sacrifice," was called "vicariousdrbi Soaday morning. ,-4 cing will follow the program which its founder." k j a complete acceptance, of esery goers what important things they developed into the concept of dom­ is open to the ^public* 0,. *v' . In a period of confused "values, human being' and an appreciation have been taught all their lives This sennon is one of a series Christianity has found some tre­of every living being. in Sunday School. He gave an inating purpose in the service of on the apostles said &. B. Sweet, mankind and his pl&po in themendous truths of the spirit, Miss More people do not attain this example of his going into a churchminister of the church. The series There will be-a meeting of the wcrld. Roller said. The Christian's diffi­maturity, she feels, because they on Sunday.and asking questions: .-was begun last Sunday. ;!, -. Student Christian Aa*oci*tion ca­ culty arisesJ in loving and inter­stop after searching the first or "Do you believe jn the teachings Among the first successful pro­Bam# " ' binet Friday afternoon from 4:30 preting these truths in such a second understanding and fail to of Jesus? Then if. someone slapped jects in the Character Researchin Berlin* will be to 5:45 at the YMCA. The offi­ JKay^as '' move on to the third. you on the face, would you ttirb Project was that involving,a group Dm ttfpic «f the Rev. Edmund cers of Freshman .Fellowship, Up-in the light of this experience. It is important to intergrat'e tve children in the third and fourth—Heinaohn at the University M*-erclass sponsors of Freshman tfeodistCWcfc Sunday at IX a.m. ellowship, and the upperclass God is a power who is creative our lives around adequate ambi­that turning the other cheek grades. Among these 100 children both in the original sense and in would be effective.?" there was an attitude of fear of ^'A:^Bhe-choir* under the direction council.are invited to attend. The tions, MisS Roller believes. Wo ef Dr. Archie N. Jones, will sing meeting will be presided over by the sustaining sense and a con­tend to think of ambition .as sel­Although everyone, there re­failure. " -Lord to Thee Our Hearts Are Jody Edmondsen and Richard trolling force in any dedicated life, fish seeking, but an adequate am plied that they beheted in the If they meet a difficult prob­ si Mids Roller believes. bition is built around real values. teachings -of Jesus; tfily iaid they lem, the children see the problemRaised" by Glinka. "Let Not the Robertson. " i Wi*« Man Glory ill Hi* Wisdom" • " ' , To tier it is important that peo­"If the power of life can be would. not turn the /Other cheek a» possible disgrace, which in* by Dermaid will be wng by Mal­-Dr. Lewis Speaker wiR "de-ple grow by realizing in every geafed to worthwhile values, then« and did not believe * that -turning creases tension, and failure oc­ife un choice the possibility of a creative life makes, much more sense,*:*-she the -other cheek Would be effec­curs. Failure isn't too bad, how* 8 eel colm Gregory. liver the sermon • "On Being er I, Tempted" as tiie first Sunday in decision. Truth and the power of said. tive ever, Dr. Ligon said. If you don't • 'The Dark Night" of the Soul" our lives and irili be Dr. Heinsohn's topic at the Lent at the Firat English Luther­truth.can permeate Miss Roller believes that God Dr. Ligon then told them that fail at all, you aren't trying thingsdecisions, she explained. is reaching for all -men every-^tbey^reouldh't-possibly believe ;in complicated enough. 7:80 evening service. The.Vesper. an Church is observed. At 8:00_ the basis of belief, I_ ' 1 •;* « AM a J r "On that .1 mi ' ^Aail 4lt «•* I 'Choir nnder the direction of Dr. p.m. Dr. Speaker-will continue where, and that a good evidence of yesus'' rules because they had just "You should change the state­& V. Bakkegard will sing "Praise his lectures on the fundamentals whether he has found a man is contradicted themselves in re­ment, "If at first you don't sucv T« the Lord",-by Palmer, of the Christian faith as inter­MISS SALLIE ROLLER 'Y' Groups Plan that man's attitude toward his gard to one of His principles.-ceed, try and try again," to "If\ "'''S./A' A,r-* " preted by the Lutheran Church. fellow man. Af another time he, inquired at first you succeed, try something I S^ThoBw. Lawrence W.Bash will The mid-week Lenten 'services Picnic Retreat In talking about comparisons of about the mos* characteristic harder," Dr. Ligon believes deliver a' sermon entitled "On at 8:00 p.m. next Wednesday religions, Miss Roller said that Plain Honesty" at both the 8:30 will be sponsored by the Youth of Hillel Service Has For Saturday most religions which men have are ANTIQUES MJmi and 10:45 a.m. services at the parish. The special preacher reaching for God. She believes Uwm«it| CkmliU Church Sun-will be the Reverend Maynard L. A picnic retreat will be held that the truth of a religion de­ Silseth of Texas Lutheran Col­Saturday afternoon for all groups pends-in a large part on how &Mn. Elisabeth Boderifctein of lege, Seguin. > r of the Student Christian Associa­much it affirms life rather than • the University faeultywill speak tion including the Freshman Fel­denies it. \ * at the Disciple Student Fellowship ^'Andrew, the Man of Decision" lowship, UppercSass „ Fellowship, "For me, Christianity is ' the An evening if. music will be a-choral suite, new settings for Of the Rare, Unique and Unusual meeting Sunday at 6 o'clock. Her will be the sermon theme at the World Relhtedness group, and all complete religion because it deals presented by Max Helfman, noted "Kol Nidre," "Ani Maamin," and collection of DOCTOR HARRY topic will be ''Socialism in University Avenue Church " of general members at a ranch be­with the spiritual, physical, a;nd GROLL NEWTON (on the .Prem- Jewish composer and director, at England." Mrs. Sodenstein for­Christ Sunday morning. R. B, several original songs. His "New tween Dripping Springs and Blan-philosophical phases of like," Miss ises.) the Friday evening service at the Hagadah," a dramatic oratorio for merly 1iw| in London send later, Sweet, minister, said that this ser­co; Roller said. 2108 LAKE AUSTIN BLVD. Hillel "Foundation this week. in Berlin. Members of Hillel mon is one of a series begun last readers, chorus, and balle|,~ was All will meet at the University AUSTIN, TEXAS Mr. Helfman, who has studied lion will be ..dinner Sunday on the Apostles, presented at Csirnegie Hall where "Y" at 1:30 Transportation will *timts of the 1P»Hnw«hip. J,, ,? —„ oSok Mr. Helfnuui conducted it's pre-be by car. Admission will be 85 inid Sunday and Monday lero', Ralph Peopole, Frank B. '*j|^ ^ "*•' \C miere. . cents. Tfiose wanting to attend ^^el^tiMeAedbt Church will Dr. • John Barclay, pastor of Ward and Frit* Reiner,/will lead should contact the "Y" office by Gets High Office February 11 and 12 Centra] Christian Ctrarch,_ will the service beginning at 7:80. For ttie past five pears, Mr. IiSO AFTERNOONS—7s30 EVENINGS bonor the 40th anniversary of the Friday afternoon.. have" as his topic Sunday morn-Helfman has been devoting his Coast*tin* ef an* «f Oic ftnul tndlvldukl co!I*ettoo* of Teapots in America He will singljand also lecture. Boy Scouts of America by having The general plan is informal. Virginia Haney, junior educa­(nationally famous). Unusual Paintings, Oriental Ruts, Old World Porce­ the Boy Scouts as special guests ing, wJesus' Method^ Learn by He is conductor of the People's 'time exclusively, to the Brandeis In the afternoon, games will be tion . major from Pearland, has lains, Waterford Crystal, Fin« (lass and pottery piecas, clock*, figurines, Doing." Services are to be held at Philharmonic choral 'Society of Youth Foundation, for which he sketehas, Maissen, Drwdn, Sevras, Bristol, French and .English Porcelains at the 10:55 services Sunday with played. In the evening there will been appointed vice-president of and .Glassware in ftfuriaes, rroupa, plates, platters, cups, saucers, bowls, etc. the Rev. Marvin D. Vance in the 10;55 o'clock. At this morning New York, which has performed helped organize the first music be a supper followed by discussion the Provincial Youth Commission Paisley and India shawls, hand-pieced patchwork quilts. Illustrations by worship service, Troop 11, the Air at the Metropolitan Opera House, Dere., QM scrap book* of etchings and engravings, Godey's, Patterson's, and and dance institute at Santa' Su­ yolpit. ~ ' of. general information and plans of the Episcopal Church. She will French; Fashion Marasines. Large assortment of mlscdlaaeous books on In pfoer of the regular 7:30 Explorer Squadron, and the scouts Carnegie Hall, Town Hall, Madi­sana, California. It is concerned replace the former vice-president, nany subjects in single volumes and sets. Old glass paper weight*,, etc. for the future. and leaders: will be honored. son Square Garden, and the Lew^ with the course of Jewish creative Displayed Thursday, Friday, atnd Saturday, Fab. 8, 9, and 10. o'clock evening worship service. a This retreat is pointing to the who resigned, until this summer These scouts will bring in the flag isohn Stadium. At present, he is 10 a.m. to I p.m. each day.­ fllm, "Again Pioneer8" wiII be pre­arts in America. Student Finance Drive which will when new officers are elected. By all means attend this sale and secure some ef these rare Items. in a processional, will give' the working for the furtherance of Mr. Helfman is preparing a de­March; sented, in, the church sanctuary* be held the first week of The Commission is composed of Illustrated and descriptive circular sent Free upon request pledge of allegiance, and will ait in Hebrew culture in America by or­finitive'anthology of Israeli songs, This oHp. |a * joint project of the The opportunity for students to representatives from a six-state AUCTIONEERS Marion Board and the Protestant a. body for the Services. ganizing a resident institute on which will include the classics contribute has been carried on area and includes youths of from COL. JOE T. PRESSWOOD, EDW. B. FABACHER, The C. Y. F. Supper Meeting .the' West Coast Film Commission and is the main of the last twenty-five years and since the late 1800's. During the 12-to 25 years. Miss Haney was PR-9680 LY-5318will be held Sunday Evening at <. Mr. Helfman has published such some of the more .important mo­Campus Chest drives, these drives chairman of the Commission last 1702 Washington Ave.; • • Houston, Texas 6:00 p.m. compositions as "Hair Habilurim." dern comnoaitions. vai>« FS%3wt 'Sfarfwt AsseeSa­iJm will meet at5o'clock Sunday, Februaryll>et Gethsemane Pa­ rish Hall,, Sixtenth and Congress Avenue. A play, "Satan and the Federation," directed by Jane Melin will be presented., Supper will be served. ' JPreceding „th*s meeting will be ah open house from 4 to 5 o'clock at the new Lutheran Student. Cen­ter in the Campus Cafeteria, 504 West Twenty-fourth Street All new students are invited, Alice Otterneas, Lutheran student coun aelor, said. I I (ore than 300 old and new stu­ dents will ^polish the apple" to­ morrow night at the Baptist 3t«­ • —1 Dr.EC Colwell in •4 f rp Dedicates SMU ; manif Smart outfits Lectin wltit Thfojogy School • ' ¥ exe attention oi the Methodist world 1 focnsed' .otC Sontberit' Methodist lif^ I0nt»ein^r«itoday Jor the formal ? dedication of the new f3,600,000 SPRING SLACKS ? «Terkii» The§lo|ry School Quadran­ r^-*tc­= ifc& ffirt^ateiiP^wA of '3,800 E. C. Colwell,.president the University of Chicago, de> 'er the dedicatory address dur­,l»g the day-Jong ceremonies. r (i IXcKms people of the nation have Jw> sustaining faith adequate to £ si the praseat world «eisis \ mm % t J** T* yc, 5s ^ «ew» i»l£e of ^he theoi^ffy •oadtasgle Include * cha^l; a Jvti arrived! A tparklhig ntw selection of distinc­ '.H rfx a dawErorm and ai|jnlmB­ tive gabardine slacks^ m^ch in demand for apssr^n Ibouaea their wardrobe-stretching versatility. These are tailored with imorf continuouswqistband andoff­* *9+ 5 seam pocket$ » A inished oH mith saddle-stitchhlr -:,% ij$-Y ^ trim.Yoo'ilwear withsportepats,yow At. Dwj pocket $uit coats, shirts, sport Jackets* v 2* * & * ' *m*mn S.9fio Also Spring-weightfUmneU(h nm» Spring Unw of heig*, wmmmfwm mmmm ilia Minis