Delegates Endorse 'Negroes in T IS A Texan T h e D ai F i r st C o l l e g e D a i l y In The S o u t h measures to admit Negroes In that N O . HO Six Pages Today AUSTIN,'TEXAS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 195 organization. The bill w ill be V O LU M E 51 Price Five Cents voted on Thursday night at 7 That Negro colleges should be o’clock in Texas Union. illowed entrance to T IS A was In a meeting of the executive igreed on last night by the Unicouncil of T IS A , held a t A & M rersity T IS A delegation. A maF e b ru a ry IO, representatives jority opinion report w ill recoinvoted to poll member schools as mend such action to the Assembly to whether Negro schools should st a called meeting Thursday be invited to the state convention, night. to he held in the A & M student H a rry W ebb, associate justice center M arch 15, 16, and IT and member of the committee, The Negro schools, if allowed as Mid that, while agreeing sn prin­ visitors, would not attend meet­ ciple with the committee, he was ings on M arch 17. The member­ not in favor of such action heship committee w ill report at that eause he did not believe it repretime on whether to admit the sented the “ mind of Te>.a*,” W ebb B y B E R T T IP P IT Negro schools as full members of will author a m inority report to T IS A . the Assembly. We need faith in the amazing grace of God and in His I f a quorum gives an opinion on Other members of the commit­ goodness, asserted Ernest ( adman Colwell, president of the inviting the schools as visitors by tee. Jean W esley, Sally See, Bob M arch 4 and a quorum of those University of Chicago, Monday night in the International Puke. Betty Baum an, chairman, schools answering votes affirm a­ Room of the Texas Union. tively, the Negro schools w ill be A son of five generations of Methodist ministers and a invited. B e tty Baum an, chairman of the U niversity T IS A commit - 1 trained theologian, Dr. Colwell announced, “ Faith is not a tee, said that A & M already has superstition. The faith that a University student needs is the mechanics set up to accommo­ the same a> that which the whole world must have now in date the Negro students at all meetings and banquets if they j the time of crisis.” are invited. “Christian faith needs to be dtrong and vigorous. It Sterlin g Steves, past president seeks no hiding place, no cloister,” proclaimed the dignified Students interested in the con­ hereby appropriated for express of T IS A and past vice-president i of the Students’ Association, told scholar. He pointed out that the scientific advances made troversial N S A question held an 1purpose of paving said dues; A N D “ BK IT FU RTH ER P R O ­ members of the committee that open meeting in Texas Union yes­ in the p ast few years m akes the need of a true faith more terday. A t the meeting they drew V ID E D : that no other monies shall the function of T IS A was to help important than e \e r before. / 'n a petition urging the Students be considered as appropriated by member schools. “ I f any schools need our help, “Human goodness is a clue to the goodness of God. Jesus Association tr* call for a refer­ this act.”’ the Negro ones do,” he said. Another meeting was set for Christ, displayed goodness and the* 1 endum to decide whether the U n i­ Hand emphasized that the prob­ versity should become a member W ednesday at I p.m. in Texas H o ly S p irit that dwelled within lem wa* a basic one. He said the of National Students A n ociation, Union 215. H is followers dwells within us. purpose, of T IS A was for Texas M ark Lew is, unsuccessful candi­ colleges to help each other. “ W hile science points to hu­ date for student assembly last “ W e are simply dealing with man nature as conflict, Christian fall said, “ I f we hold a special other colleges, whether they be religion points to human nature election on N S A before the spring Negro or not,’’ Hand said, “ and •lections, then we save it from as co-operation and unity. these colleges are interested in becoming a political football.” “ W e owe the idea that God is education as we are ; they are The. petition, termed “ A Sta­ interested in better student gov­ Nom inations Open ju st to the ancient Jew ish faith. tutory In itia tiv e ," reads: ernment as we are.” From the revelation o f Christ we To A ny Mem ber W E, THE U N D E R S IG N E D , Miss Bauman announced that have seen his goodness and con­ W ic a failed to approved M on­ there would he a b rief meeting bonaftde students of the UniverNominatior s for Mica sweet­ sistency,” Dr. Colwell said. N l sity of Texas, in per,-nance of day night a motion endorsing the of the committee W ednesday a f ­ heart- an honor which includes a .N ati onal Student’s A s s o c ia tio n . t e r n o o n at 5:15 o'clock to discuss “ The words and deeds of Jesus A rticle IN , Section *, o f toe Con­ ticket to Lawrence, Kansas, and The vote on the motion was IS the m ajority report of the com­ stitution of the Students’ A-^ociaof Nazareth were incarnate. The the possibility of being chosen for and l l against, the motion mittee. fct**n of the U n iv e rsity of Texas, trust and faith that ramp from national sweetheart by Jo h n Rofailin g to carry because a twodo hereby petition to the Student the H oly Spirit demonstrated at bprt pOVkers 0f N ew Y o rk — ara thirds m ajo rity was necessary. Assembly to call a special elec­ that time are our assurance in now' being made. The motion was made and car­ tion for a referendum to the voter* this world of turmoil and confu­ The sweetheart w ill be elected ried that another vote be taken sion,'’ pointed out the president. the following b ill: March IO at the annual M ica a' the next W ica meeting on Feb ­ Although Dr. Colwell is one of Ranch Dance at the Union. The “ B E IT E N A C T E D : that the ru ary 26. . * the nation's leading scholars, he ballot w ill include the top five Students’ Association of the U n i­ I he group voted after addn sos j W O T K 171011 T O g TG H I spoke w ith a sim plicity that made nominees. versity of Texas become a member by Newton Schw artz, a member The Orange Jackets his talk easily understandable. His w ill handle the balloting and voteof the National Students’ Associa­ of the Student Assembly, and The Board of Student Pu b ­ ideas w ere those of a learned theo­ counting. tion ; A N D Ronnie Dugger, editor of the Tex­ lications, Inc., M onday a fte r­ logian— his talk was that of a T W O F IS H E R M EN , beth Ph.D's discuss the ; new fishing implement to Dr. L ,D. Haslew, dean Nomination blanks may be “ B e IT F U R T H E R ETN A C T E D : an. Schwartz objected to the noon adopted workm en’* com­ \ Diversity student. is at the I I of the College of Education. Dr, Colwe picked up in M ica office, Texas in itial cost of N S A and the re­ that an amount o f money equal po n-ation program fo r all sal­ merits of a g!ars fishing rod. Dr, E. M. Co'we I Chancellor Janie- P. H art intro­ U nion 307, by any M ica member. Religious University as principal speaker for to the membership dues in the gional dins. aried employes, including T ex­ duced D r. Colw ell to the audience Nominees must he members of president of the University ol C hicago, shows his Dugger said the in itial cost or National St ad® Mkt*’ A asocial ton I* Emphasis Program. an worker*. a fte r a piano prelude by Jo y ce W ica and have at least 30 and tuition fee Is $150 and the region­ Tha* w ill mean that all sal­ (filstrap. Mr. H art pointed out not more than 105 hours credit in al dues would be about $70 per aried Texan, Cactus, and R an ­ year. He said that the U n iv e r­ that although Dr. Colwell was the residence at the U niversity. ger workers will come under president of a northern U n iver­ sity would br forced to make The sweetheart w ill receive th* the benefits of the program. sity he had begun his education traditional sweetheart pin, do­ any other payments. In the case of part-time em­ in Georgia. nated by K ru g er’s on the Drag, ployes, such as night editors Dr. Colwell will speak Tuesday from Regina P rik ry l, Mica sweeton the Texan, they w ill be pro­ Rishw orth to Discuss night on “ The Vital N ature of heart fo r 1950. She w ill repretected during working hours. F a ith ” and w ill conclude his ap- sent the U niversity chapter at the Student views on the Korear R a d io Education at Hillel Independent Students pearanee at th e Univernity National situation w ill he discussed at a Feb. 17 D eadline Set W ednesday night w ith his ideas Association convention, meeting of the S C A W orld ReThe effect* that radio, teleon “ Faith as r Resource.” la ted now Commission in the “ Y ” vision and newspapers have had For Transfer Tests at 7:30 Tuesday evening. on education and the fam ily as a Tickets for the facu lty luncheon Students planning to tran sfe r with sim ilar power started push- not mean he questions the honesty Boh B a rta y w ill serve as mod- social unit w ill he discussed by next semester to a college requir- j R v th« As»oc*a*ed P r « * t to be held in Dr. C olw ell’s honor of state college administrators. Rumored extravagances in state I ing fo r a spending probe more orator. Presenting the views of Thomas B. Rishworth, director of ing the College T ran sfer Test Tuesday at noon at Fellowship “ I t ’s just a matter of poor bus­ popular opinion in their reapec- j Radio House, in an open forum must mail applications to Prince- j collage spending may he in for than a week ago. Ho is Senator H all of the U niversity Methodist i Keith K e lly of F o rt W orth. In a iness,” he said. Church may be obtained before 9 live countries concerning the K o ­ nt the H illel Foundation today at ton, New Jerse y by F e b ru a ry 17, investigation. The House yesterday heard a prepared statement, K e lly ques­ o’clock Tuesday by calling U n i­ rean situation w ill Ive Lloyd Hand, 4 p.m. H. T. Manuel, D irector of the Mr. Ri.shw'orth w ill explain his Tenting and Guidance Bureau, an ­ resolution calling for a fact-find- tional the spending of $25,237 versity extension 369. president of the student body, Enrollm ent for this semester irg committee to dig out the truth fo r a college golf course, $75,000 who will speak fo r the U nited idea that education is available nounced. will remain at about 12,499 ac­ for a president * home, $325 for before any action is taken on States; Ja ira m K am lani, repre­ to all of the people on a cafe­ Applications are available in V U n i o n C a n c e ls Activities cording to the B u rs a r’s office re­ senting India and W olfgang teria plan due to the m any state, H a ll 206. The tests w ill be given higher education appropriations an executive desk, etc. ports, This is a new low for post­ K elly said his study of expense lin k s , representing W estern G er­ church, city, and privately-en­ March IO in Hogg Auditorium be­ now’ pending in the Legislature. For C o l w e l l S p e e c h e s war enrollment. Veterans have Speaker Reuben S e n te ifitt sent records was prompted by college dowed colleges'. many, ginning at 8:30 a.m. finished their objective* and oth­ the proposal to the House State Regular UniOB-sponsored activi­ / ct iticism of close control over He w ill also discuss the changes N. S. Rao, program chairman, ers are leaving school to enlist in A ffa irs Committee for study. A p p l y T o d a y f o r S p e c ia l E x a m s tbeir spending sought by the leg­ occurring in the Am erican fam ily believes that India has been rn is­ ties this w'eek through Wednesday the services. An investigation already has in­ islative budget hoard. Dr, J . U. Dolley, U niversity Today is the la«t day to make •ndarstood in her stand against since the introduction of automow ill he canceled because of the re ­ This figure, said C. Lew is L in ­ branding Communist China as the biles, airplanes, radio, and tele- applications fo r Postponed, A d ­ fluential backing. Co-Author of “ Facts,” K e lly said, “ indicate vice-preddent, said last night that ligious emphasis program in which dahl, bursar, represents the numthe resolution is Rep. W . R. Cham­ vanced Standing, and Re-examina­ nstanees cited in Senator Keith aggressor, According to Rao, In- vision. the recommendation may w'ell be K e lly ’s statement on extrav­ Dr. Ern e st Colwell, president of ber of fees paid and accounted d ia’s stand against the United “ W e have becom< an age of tions. Applications are to be made bers of M ay, chairman of the justified .” agances in state colleges are not the University of Chicago, will for by the B u rsa r’s office. The States in branding Communist J specialists, skilled in the “ how” in the Registrar’s O ffice. E x a m ­ House subcommittee on higher ed­ N eith er K e lly nor Chamber* number of students actually in ^cog nizab le as concerning the speak. China the aggressor was intended I w ithout know ng the‘w hy’,’’ says inations w ill be given in the Geol­ ucation appropriations. would reveal names of institutions A member of a Senate group Thursday, usual activities will school at this time is less than ogy Build ing 14 at 2 p.m. daily. University. as an e ffo rt to keep open fu rth e r, Mr. Rishworth. where abuses have occurred. “ U n til specific references to be resumed. Frid a y from 2 to 5 12,499. In the assistant registrar's negotiations and possible p e a c e fu l]— —•—------— --------------“ T here’s more than one,” was cases in individual schools aie o’clock Coffee Time is srheduled office more than IOO drops were settlement. In branding Commun­ Chambers only comment. told,” Dr. Dolley said, “ no intel­ in the M a in L o u n g e . Duplicate counted last Saturday. Students’ ist China as aggressor, the avenue Chambers emphasized however, ligent judgment can be parsed.” bridge will he played in Texas plan- change between pre-regis­ to a peaceful settlement is closed that the proposed resolution does “ I can say, though, that I don’t Union 315 Frid ay at 7:15 o ’clock. tration and the beginning of clas­ completely, he continued. ses. This is one explanation for re c o g n iz e any instances which the drops. may apply to the U niversity in the Free Dance Classes ‘Steer Here’ Members charges,” he added. In connection with Representa­ Meet Today at 1:30 W ill Begin Feb. 20 tive Chamber s proposal that the Persia Hopkins, Texas Union Committee members and inves­ state have tighter control on the dance instructor, and Mrs. E th e l nae of fee monies, Dr. Dolley tigators of Steer Here Committee M arine Corporal Thomas P. M c­ Form an, assistant director of the said that administration of these w ill meet in Texas Union 301 at Union, w ill set definite time,* C lellan Jr ., 22, form er student of By R U S S K E R S T E N Dr. M. J . IX W hite, professor funds is already controlled by I :30 p.m. today, said Charlie Rob­ today fo r this semester’s free erts, chairman of the committee. of zoology, w ill report to the memstate laws. State colleges are not the U n iversity was killed in action dance classes. Groups w ill not hers of Sigm a X i his findings on allowed to borrow money except Meeting times for the spring term Lim erick: in Korea on Novem ber 27, 1950. meet this week. The first class is “ Chromosomal V ariation and Na- jn certain instances provided by and other routine business w ill be A w onderful hire! is the pelican! scheduled for Tuesday, Feb ruary His parents were notified by a tural Selection in VV lid Popula­ U w , as in building of dormitories. transacted. His mouth can hold more than telegram from the Deparm ent of 20, at 7 p.m. tion of Insects” at the opening his belliean. -• Ten boys and two girls have Defense on December 23. meeting of the semester tonight He can take rn his beak , " 4' \ \ registered for tan and ballroom at 8 o’clock in Chemistry Bu ild ­ Enough food for a week— Cpl. M cClellan was also a stu­ classes. G irls are needed to help ing 15. I ’m darned if I kr, >w how tho dent at Austin High School until I ' coach the boys as well as perfect M B Dr. W hite believes that d iffe r­ bellical*. their own dancing. The one hour 1947, at which time he enlisted ent populations of the same spe­ M rn cies of grasshopper collection classes are held in the M ain in the M arine Corps. He com­ Night w atchm an: o u n g man, Lounge of the Union. pleted his basic training at Camp d o y o u i n t e n d t o k«»* t h a t g i r l ? from localities only ten to tw enty “ Women are standing shoulder) The government is now studySo far, no one has registered S u rp rise d s tu d e n t behind Main miles apart may d iffe r greatly in Pendleton and wag an a irc ra ft to shoulder in a nation that needs ing toe vast possibilities of vanfor afternoon classes, but Miss chromosomal constitution, sug­ B u i ld i n g : “ E r . uh . . No , i t r . ” mechanic at E l Toro A ir Base types of work that can be Hopkins still hopes to he able to W a t c h m a n : ‘ W' ell, t h e n , hold gesting the existence of an ex­ us,” declared Dr. Bernice Moore, consultant for Hogg foundation, . . , in C alifornia. schedule a few. trem ely complex mechanism of in an address to the Campus t you name a magazine sociation Board w ill be elected at ■i A - \ \ * Pendleton. From there he wTent and the Austin , i< : I A* e Dr. W hite discovered in his re­ the nation is endangered, fo r we tion the meeting. Home Companion toto Korea, landing on September s A ;v w search that, like humans, no two have no reserve manpower except Schools, agreed that women should hp drafted in the event that the bay. 15 w ith the F irs t M arine Division C o ld W e a t h e r o n t h e W a y grasshopper individuals are exact­ women and the aged, she stated. plunged into total war She said, in a voice reminiscent Colder weather is the predic­ in the Inchon invasion. The divi­ Iv a # ly alike. The general type, how­ Women have flexibility, and are nation IS of “ Bo rn Y e sterd ay:” “ T h e res ' * * * * * * . .y-vi * *■« * 4*0 . tion of the W eath er Bureau. A sion then moved to the Chosen ever, can be recognized by an ex­ capable of learning a skill well, and should be used according to .he added. their ability and training. * already one by that nam*. Reservoir, where he was killed low of 28 is seen for Wednesday. amination of it* chromosomes. t h o m a s p . McC l e l l a n j r . By CHARLEY TRIMBLE T e ra n A u o e ia te E d ito r and Lloyd Hand, student president, were of the opinion that the committee should ask the Assembly to instruct delegates in favor of Negro college entrance into T IS A . A & M , S M I , A ustin College, Texas Te f f ft p f tp O ............. _ . . I 0 I Fmith, f 3 I I l a m b e r t , f ----- .... ___ I 9 I) I Price, f — — 3 15 3 A m b l e r , c --------- ___fi 3 5 H e s s , g ___ ___— ...... 1 ____ 5 3 I2 2 Mi l l e r , g -— #> 0 6 W i l l i a m s , g ------- .. rir...o 0 18 T o t a l s ....... . A AM ( 3 8 ) ff D e w i t t , f ............ ___ 0 Martin, f . Mi ks c h , f Davis, r McDowell, g Walker, g H e f t , g .... 5 •? 0 I 5 6 *? 0 0 4 I 9 8 4 4 3 4 11 I IO 6 4 I 0 Bv T O N T O T O O L E Y Tetra» Sport* Writ** F O R T W O R T H . F e b . 12— (Bpi ) — The Southwest Conference cage race w e n t into a n o th e r mix-up Totals 15 8 23 38 w h e n t h e T e x a - L o n g h o r n s lost H a l f t i m e «<■»>*•©; A r k a n s a s I S , t h e i r s e c o n d C o n f e r e n c e b a t t l e to A A M TU T C U , 4 9- 3 4 . h e r e M o n d a y n i g h t Free throws missed: Smith I, b e f o r e 6 , 5 0 0 f a n ? sn Wi l l R o g e r ? l a m b e r t 3, A m b l e r I, Mi l l er, M a r ­ M e m o r i a l C o l i se u m, tin I, Davis I, M c D o w e l l 3, H o w e v e r , T e x a s ' l oss t o t h e Mi ksch I. Christians did not drop them c o m p l e t e l y o u t o f f i r s t pl a c e a? a Bears N ip O w ls , 6 1 -5 8 . r e s u lt of th e licking A ka n sa s h a n d e d A A M M o n d a y n i g h t , R A- a r e s u l t t h e L o n g h o r n s w e r e Air Fore* R<>T< 6". Prather Hall '* f» 12 45 B 26. AIM F. 4 able t o si nk o n l y 18.4 p e r c e n t of Post Hoi* t ! ggcrr I!» 7 hel*me * T ft 0 M u r a l Ca ge Scores Mariner- <2, Li*tle ( amp • Dorm i Panfctwile Club 22. South Centra Texas l l . R A D IO CONTROLLED 6-9194 it HALLAS, Feb. 12.— - P . A m o v e t o m a k e f r e s h m e n el i gi bl e P h i D elta T h e ta I f o r v a r s i t y s p r i n g s p o r t ? in t h e in Sigma A phi Epsilon I#, Phi Gamma S o u t h w e s t C o n f e r e n c e h a - b e e n Del- a l l . voted down. A poll o f t h e C o n f e r e n c e m e m ­ R o d e o A s s o e i a t i o o to M e e t bers, co m p l e te d M o nd ay , also d e ­ The U ni v ers ity o f T e x* ; Rodeo fe at ed a propo sa l to eli mi na te the A s s o c i a t i o n will n a v e a n o p e n r u l e r e q u i r i n g o n e y e a r r e s i d e n c e playing after transfer m e e t i n g a t 4 : 3 0 o ' r i ol k t o d a y at b e f o r e Ol d S e t ii * Vi s i t o r ^ a r e i n v i t e d . f r o m c o l l e g e s w h e r e s p o r t * h a v e While fouls b ro u g h t a d i f f e r e n t l i g h t o n t h e s c o r e, 8 o f t h e C h r i s ­ tians* 28 f i r s t h a l f s c o r e ? w e r e l o o p e d in on c h a r i t y t o s s e s . W om ack , ss _____ V i r x m o n t e * , g _ ____ Bim-*, st ------- — SWC STA NDING S W L Pct. T e x a* 6 2 . 750 TCC . .. AAM ... ...... A r k a n s a n ....... 6 2 6 3 4 i . 75 0 . 667 . 500 SMU 4 4 . 500 2 7 I 7 .222 . 125 ................. Baylor Ri c e ................. SWC Votes Down Proposal To Allow Frosh Varsity Play K appa Sigma 21. Delta I psi ten T Delta Kappa Kps lien 37, Kapp* Alpha t h e b al l , t h e y w o u l d p u t o n t h e fr eeze, an d would only s hoot w hen lay-up shot s w e r e available. D u r in g the fi rst half , th e L o n g ­ h o r n s w e r e o nl y ab l e t o f i n d t h e b u c k e t f o r t h r e e fi el d goal ?, t w o by S c a l i n g a n d one b y M o r g a n . The rem ainin g 8 points w ere made f r o m t h e f r e e t h r o w line. The 1 4-point lead held by th e Frogs a t halftime was too much T h e H o r n e d F r o g s t o o k to ball f o r t h e L o n g h o r n s t o o v e r c o m e . I n c o n t r o l t a c t i c s w i t h 12 m i n u t e ? r e ­ t h e s e c o n d h al f , t h e S t e e r ? m a n ­ m a i n i n g in ' h e s e c o n d h a l f a n d t h e a g e d t o s i n k o n l y six fi eld g oal s . Longhorns were using their re g u ­ The successful offensive p a t ­ l a r d e f e n s i v e t a c t ic ? w i t h t h e t e r n t h a t T e x a s used a g a i n s t Rice s c i e . 43-23, W i t h n i n e a n d a h a l f wa? c o m p l e t e l y t h w a r t e d b y t h e m i n u t e s to play, the L o n g h o rn s C hristians’ tight defense t hRt b e g a n a f ii! c o u r t p i e s ? d e f e n s e , s t o p p e d t h e Ag g i e s l as t w e e k . b u t w e r e still u n a b l e t o g a i n on th e Frogs. TEXAS <34! However,they were abb to g a i n c o n t r o l of t h e ball a t m a n y Dow i«*. I _ _ __ _ c r u c i a l t i me s . B u t w h e n t h e C h r i s ­ tun., f K ir in , c _ ____.____ tian s agai n received possession of g ----------- Amar;* House 26, Let tie * Ro a TS. p f *P H.A, Club IT, Brunet** Ho:;se I*. 3 0 I'ek*. Tau Delta I ”, Theta Xi I? W biti* Wildcats lh Mann* P e r 1os?’. RED B A L L T A X I I t h e i r f i e l d g oa l a t t e m p t s , w h i l e t h e C hr is tia ns m a d e 41.9 p e r cent of t h e i r f i e l d g o a l t r i e ? . T e x a s ’ a v e r a g e w a s in d i r e c t c o n t r a s t w i t h t h e i r . 566 a v e r a g e a g a i n s t Rice l a s t F r i d a y . Holding the scoring honors for t h e n i g h t w a s t h e H o r n e d Frogs* M c L e o d w i t h a t o t a l o f 19 p oi n t s . G eor ge Sc aling a n d Cecil M o r ­ g a n , who w e r e t e a m m a t e s on F o r t W o r t h ’s P a s c h a l H i g h b a s k e t b a l l te a m , took the sc or in g h o n o r s f o r t he T e x a s t e a m w i t h 13 a n d 9 points, re sp ect iv ely . Price, c __ _ Harris, f ___ ar .......... Morgan, r _ Scarborough, f Toi als TCL’ (49) Fromm*, f Reynolds, ? McLeod c ... Ethridge, g Swaim, g Knox. f Kilpatrick, f Campbell, g Kentucky Holds H. A. Club Victors First in AP Poll In Mural Cage Tilt O k la h o m a A A M Is Stronger Second By BRUCE ROCHE j t e a m s have been el im in ate d fr om the court game, the in tra m u ra l The week opened with a bang office su gges te d Mon da y t h a t o r ­ N E W Y O R K , F e b . 12.— (Ab— f o r m e n ' s i n t r a m u r a l * . A c t i v i t y g a n i z a t i o n ? b eg i n p r e p a r i n g f o r K e n t u c k y ’s W i l d c a t s still r a n k e d w a s r e c o r d e d in f o u r s p o r t s . Kite N i l e , M a r c h 20, a n d s p r i n g fi rst M o n d a y in t h e n i n t h w e e k l y Mo s t i m p o r t a n t o f t h e s e , of ; s p o r t s . A s s o c i a t e d P r e s s poll o f t h e n a ­ c o u r s e , w a s b a s k e t b a l l . H e r e a r e In b a s k e t b a l l M o n d a y n i g h t , t h e t i o n ’s b a s k e t b a l l g r e a t s — b u t look M o n d a y n i g h t s c o r e s : c l o s e s t - f o u g h t t i l t w a s H.A. C l u b ’s o u t f o r t h e O k l a h o m a A g gi e s . H a n d b a l l s i n g l e s o p e n e d M o n ­ 17-16 v e r d i c t o v e r B r u n e t t e O kla hom a A A M , which t a m e day. T w e n t y - t h r e e g am es were Hou>e,. J u a n Yald<.-, p a c e d his th ro ug h Kansas, Oklahoma, and s c h e d u l e d t o be p l a y e d in Cl ass t e a m t o v i c t or y . D r a k e w i t h c o l o r s f l yi ng l a s t w e e k , A c o m p e t i t i o n * a n d n i n e t e e n in Delta T a u Delta took a n o th e r is on t h e poll p r o w ! . The Aggies Cia?? B. cl o s e o n e f r o m T h e t a Xi, 17-16. a r e o nl y 44 p o i n t s b a c k o f K e n ­ Sigm a Alpha Epsilon du nk ed T h e F e lt s to o k a small lead and t u c k y in t h e l a t e s t t a b u l a t i o n . it t h r o u g h o u t the T h e r e w e r e n o c h a n g e s in t h e t o p A l p h a T a u O m e g a , 5-0, in t h e m a i n t a i n e d t e n t e a m s , b u t t h e o r d e r of r a n k ­ o n l y w a t e r pol o t u s s l e M o n d a y . g a m e . D e l t a S i g m a Phi d e f a u l t e d t o D e l ­ ing was scrambled. I he n i g h t ’s h i g h e s t scoring A w e e k a g o , K e n t u c k y h a d 78 t a T a u D e l t a in a n o t h e r s c h e d u l e d h o n o r s w e n t to Lee D i t t e r t . H e f i r s t - p l a c e v o t e s t o o n l y 15 f o r c o n t e c t . p u m p e d in e i g h t e e n p o i n t s t o l e ad O klahoma AAM. T h i s t i m e i t ’? W i l l i a m P a t m a n w a s t h e w h ol e hi? M a r i n e e r s o v e r L it tl e C a m ­ m u c h closer. K e n t u c k y r e c e i v e d s h o w f o r t h e S A E ’* as t h e y i n ­ p u s D o r m , 4 2-22. on l y 5 5 v o t e s a? t h e first t e a m , u n d a t e d ATO. Putman scored G e r r y H a g u e di d his s h a r e o f w h i l e O k l a h o m a A A M got 31, t w i c e in t h e f i r s t h a l f — g i v i n g t h e n i g h t ’s p o i n t - m a k i n g , t oo. He O k l a h o m a A A M , not? b o a s t i n g his t e a h a 2-0 h a l f t i m e a d v a n t a g e r i m m e d t h e h o o p s f o r f o u r t e e n a r e c o r d o f 2 1- 1, u n d o u b t e d l y — a n d t w i c e in t h e s e c o n d h al f . B. poi nt ?. H a g u e and teammate? p i c k e d u p h e a v y s u p p o r t b y a v e n g ­ F. P i t m a n ( al l i ed t h e o n l y o t h e r s l a u g h t e r e d a helpless P r a t h e r i n g it? o n l y loss t o O k l a h o m a . Last s c o r e . H a l l c r e w , 53- 1 6 , week, th e Aggies t u r n e d the t a ­ T h e t r a i n i n g p e r i o d w a s held Dorm B r ol le d o v e r A I M E , bles, b e a t i n g t h e S o o n e r s , 48- 4 5 . a* u s u a l f r o m 4 : 3 0 t o 5 : 3 0 in 2*6-8, a? H e n r y B e l t r a n p o s t e d K ansas S t a t e I 17-2), C olum bia G re g o ry G y m f o r boxer? and I e l e v e n p oi nt s. ( 1 5 - 0 ) , a n d St. L o u i s ( 1 8 - 4 ) all w r e s t l e r s . T h e p e r i o d is c o n d u c t e d W edne?«i ay, e n t r i e s a r e d u e f o r ju m p ed to new heights, taking every Monday, W ednesday, and a no ther in tram ural sport. Table t h i r d , f o u r t h , a n d f i f t h p l a c e s as F r i d a y . tenn is play er s have until t o m o r ­ old m a n d e f e a t d e a l t a b l o w t o B a s k e t b a l l is n e a r i n g t h e l e a g u c - r o w t o e n t e r t hi s y e a r ' s c o m p e t i ­ t h r i e o f t h e t o p t en. p l a y o f f stage. Since m a n y of the tion. In d i an a, u p s e t 61-54 by M i n n e ­ s o t a , s k i d d e d f r o m t h i r d to s i xt h. St . L o u i s h a n d e d B r a d l e y a 72- 6 7 setback, and Bradley was demoted o eighth, by T o l e d o, i, b e a t e from ninth a note trading p l a ce ? with St. J o h n ' s d in a S t a t e , seventh vn retain T exan I n tr a m u r a l C o -o rd in a to r J. Taylor, g . T ota l* b e e n dist o n t i n u e d . A tw o-thirds m a j o r i t y (5-2) was n e c e s s a r y f o r a p p r o v a l of e a c h p r o p o s a l . T h o r o '.cere t h r e e v o t e ? f or , a n d f o u r a g a i n s t t h e f r o s h proposal; and fo u r for and three a g a i n s t t h e t r a n s f e r eligibility* H alftim e arere Free throw.? 2 Klein 2, I in Cretonne I, MrJ. G a ily Colored Knit Shirts Sm art to w e a r! Cage Scores M i c h i g a n S t a t e 52. N o r t h w e s t e r * 4 8. However, H ow ard Grubbs, ex­ A l a b a m a 66, T u l a ne 57. ecutive s e c r e ta ry of th e C o n f e r ­ Mi s s o u r i 39, K a n s a s 38,. ence, who a n n o u n c e d th e results, O k l a h o m a 7 2, N e b r a s k a UU s a i d t h e poll w a s on m a k i n g t h e Il l i noi s 79, O h i o S t a t e 59. c h a n g e s ef f e c t i ve i m m e d i a t e l y , a n d D r a k e 54, T u b a 46. t h e r e f o r e r e f l e c t e d an o p i n i o n on ( 6 ) I n d i a n a 63, I o w a 54. s p r i n g s p o r t s b u t p o s s i b l y n o t on «8 ) B r a d l e y 65, W i c h i t a s t . f oo t h a i I. T e n n e s s e e 76, Mi??. St. 75. T h e C o n f e r e n c e has a m e e t i n g s c h e d u l e d t h e s e c o n d w e e k en d o f M a y a n d a n o t h e r v o t e on n e x t T o m p k i n s G e t * N e w Bo** fall' * f o o t b a l l c o ul d p o s s i b l y be F O R T W O R T H , F cb. 1 2 - ~ i . P t — d i s c u s s e d t h e n , G r u b b s s ai d. The B e n T o m p k i n s t h e l a t e s t b o n n ? B o r d e r C o n f e r e n c e M o n d a y v o t e d b a b ' of t h e P h i l a d e l p h i a Phi i l he? to a l l o w f r e s h m e n to p l a y a l o n g - o f t h e N a t i o n a l L e a g u e , h a s re s : de v a r s i t y s q u a d m e n in s p r i n g c e i l e d o r d e r ? t o r e p o r t Du i n ­ spot ts. duction into the A rm y n e xt Mon­ d ay. at C A P I T O L you g e t Sm art to See! I -D A Y In y o u r c h o i c e e t c o l o r * e n d Photo j (\ patterns. Fin, Fling Sturdy, s hirt* w ith n eck*, knit w a is t cotton handsome and cuffs. E v e r y t h in g t o r y o u r C a m e r a Free C a m e ra Rental Special 8 a n d 16 m m Mo v i e P r o j e c t o r s a n d fi lms f o r r e n t C W lcdkin’A A P I T O L P H O T O SUPPLY 2428 G u a d a l u p e 2426 Guadalupe 8 - 57 1 7 In tra m u r a l Schedule TUESDAY B « * k e t b ill Cl*'. A 7 o ’el nc k Dorm J va IV,as Club. Kapp* Aiph a va. S i g m a Alpha V . Prat b a r H a l t v s . D e l t a S i g m a Ti. 7 :4 5 © 'c lo c k Cliff C mar ta v* T A n o c i a t i o n B'ort in «' K«'**•(.’* v*. T w i n P in#* C o-op A s u n Club v *. AIM c 8 :3 9 o'clock C a m p ,* (7 u iid v*. W h i t I* W ildcat* Sou th (.'antral T a x i s '* . Wtnt*r (.*rH#r> Club. C lass R 7 ©’c lo c k Cliff Court s A lb a Club s. **. Tejas Club. 7 : 4 5 o ’c lock L o n g h o r n B ane 8 :3 0 o 'c lo c k Worley Foundation v*. N#wman Club, Univaraity Christian va. Lutheran S t u ­ dent* A*sn. H A N D B A L L SINGLE? Class A 7 o ’c lo c k Dour!** Marvin H u ie vs, -1 S p i r o D-»n S k in n e r . \n. Taman. Jerry Loyd Hampton v*. W m Kennedy, Glenn Pennington vs. Otis Rudd. 7 :4 5 o 'c lo c k vs. T o m Greene. Class B 7 o ’c l o c k R o b e r t Mc! eon va. EH. Thin!* W m . F i a t e r vs. J a m e s B r e n t l i n g e r , 7 ; 4 5 o 'c lo c k P a t Hndgeoxe v*. Carlo? W at k in*. A ll e n I x a k in va. W m , B r o w n . Timer Hanehutt vs Eugen e G o ld e n . W rn. K u h le r vs. R o b e r t Ka t /.. A l e x a n d e r H o f f m a n vs . l a r r y C o u g h l i n . c h a r • >• Mi ire vs E llio t B lu m b e r g . B r e n t F i s h e r vs, R o b e Honigfeld. R ober t. R a t s vs. R o b e r t Z i e h e . W' rn. F e l t i n g v*. J o e A ris e n . Ttfin»M Deal vs. F, . g e n e G o ld g a r . E l m e r H a n d e b u t t va, C a r lo * W a t k i n s . Sports Notice 4 f r e s h m a n >* n r m * * p ir * i ita m e e t it P tn f c k Court* a ' 2 :3 0 T u e s d a y gift oft: eon. lf u n a b l e to a**end t o m o r ­ ro w m m f b> x* goo n ** . l a s s e s a llo * D A. PENICK T e n n i a C ooch All f r e s h m e n i n t e r e s t e d in j o i n i n g ♦h e f r e s h m a n s w i m m i n g m a m g o to G re y e r, G ym from 2 'n 8 Tuexday afternoon. HANK ( H A I M A N S w i m m i n g Co ar b found little to titillate her in the recent deluge of quirk- judging cigarette mildne?s u ith just a fa?t puff or a bingle sniff. But, joy of joy«! . . . FOR LUXURY AT • : THE LOWEST COST j happiness came to her uhen ?he d isco\ered one test that left no doubt in her mind. Ride Katv Chair Cars A U S T IN to l l teas the s e n s i b l e l e s t ! . , , the 30-Day Camel Mildness levi, which simply asks you to try Darnel? as a steady smoke — a On* Round • • Way Trip • $ 1 .5 0 2 .0 0 3 .7 0 3 .7 0 $ 2 .7 0 JA O 8 .7 0 « 70 • • • • • • • • on a pack after pack, day after day basis. No -nap judgments needed. After you’ve enjoyed Camels — and only Nan A n t o n io V V *, o D ill* * F o rt W o rth • ( F l u . F#d*t *1 T**) • FO R EXTRA C O M V lw tw v * Cam els — for 30 days in your 4 T-Zone ’ i i for T hroat, : T for Taste) we believe you’ll knoll why . , . I USE YOUR KATY CREDIT CARD One of the most interesting and ver­ satile of the new plastics is D u Pont ' ’A lathon” polythene resin, chemical cousin of paraffin. Because of its unusual combinat ion of properties, it is now being used in everything from "squeeze-bottles” for toiletries to cable insulation and ch cm lea I-resistant linings. ’’A lathon” was born when lungfish scientists used high-pressure synthe­ sis to create polythene, the solid and semi-solid polymers of ethylene. D u P ont scientists and others added their background in high pres­ sure work to the field of ethylene polymers. T his concerted effort pro­ duced a greatly expanded range of uses. The first step of Du Font chemists and engineers was to produce poly­ thene in the laboratory to confirm earlier findings. Then the product. was turned over to c hemical engi­ neers for pilot-plant work. Finally, a plant for full-scale commercial pro­ duction was designed by chemical, mechanical and electrical engineers and m etallurgists. M any of the most promising uses J « '• I Phone: 8 -8 7 7 I M e re People Sm oke Cam el: the. th a n a n y a th a r c ig a r e tte ! *. « SA WKAl l o o n y SOVTSmST J r e fr ig e r a to r * Bringing Up Alathon* for ’’A lathon” could not be realized until technical difficulties were over­ come. For example, the chemical in­ ertness, which is one of the outstan d ­ ing properties of the m aterial in film form, also made the casting of film from solution impractical because it could not be dissolved in suitable solvents. In devising a special ex tru ­ sion technique to solve this problem, Du Font engineers opened up a whole new field of possibilities. T o k in g First Steps trick cigarette tests! She was not enthralled In the idea of tra y t, b e n d s , t a h i t i ! a r e a n t i p r o t e c t iv e c o v e r in g s . Du F o n t scientists fin d g r e a t p ro m ise in this y o u n g m e m b e r o f th e w a x fa m ily A lle n P i ' ' m a n vs R i c h a r d ( alai*. J i m G r e r r v* T Kn m a ? More? G. F r e y t a r vs M orris M eb an e J o h n I fa ir y m r # ' « • E u g e n e B a n e p x c h Bnbbv Tanner Al l " A l a t h o n " — i c e - r u b e b o ttle , w ith m o ld e d c lo s u r e . I t e m its a f in e s p r a y w h e n sq u e e z e d . R low -«nolde m i r C o r : _ . Cast Is Announced I I II p I I Harvey Schmidt Gets Top Drama Honors The C urtain I i - I• v * Club key, the ability and p erform an ce. w a * n r e - 1 Schm idt also received J u b . h.ghest honor,, W M p r e Rented to Harvey S e h m id t a t t h e annual aw ard sp am * reception given d q . C ast and a rra n g e m e n ts fo r the j bootblack; and Jim perform ance o f the mu, ical J,.I UijjtoJWij ii" ,.o « In M L B February 2 0 She'll love y o u at first bite o f T e x a s C h e w i e Pecan Pralines, the distinctive “ The Glass M enagerie,” which opens F e b r u a r y 20 in M L B 103, v\ ill be the third theater-in-theround production by the U niver­ sity ’s D ra m a D epartm ent. Dr. F ra n c is H odge, a ssista n t p r o f e s ­ sor o f d ram a, w ill direct the show. The play will run through March 3, The cast o f fo u r people volun­ teered to give up their m id-sem es­ ter v a ca tio n s in ord er to have the show r e a d y f o r the opening. In s p i t e o f ice and cold they re­ h earsed every day. T a k in g the p art o f L a u r a , the shy, crippled girl who collects g la ss anim als, is J a n e B o u lter, a senior d ram a education m ajor. Miss B o u lter played B essie W atty in this su m m er’s production of c a n d y gift for V a le n tin e , M a i l Pralines to y o u r V a le n t in e a n y w h e r e in the U.S.A. For H e a r t-B o x e s filled w it h chocolates o f all kinds, l a m m e 's su g g e sts: N a ­ t i o n a l l y - k n o w n Bra n d s, fr o m 8 o u nc es to 5 p o u n d s l T he M ost Com plete C an dy Shop in the Southw est! On the D r a g : 2 2 6 2 G u a d a lu p e %amm0 Downtown: C A N DjiJ. S 9 1 9 C on gress ct Texas “ The Corn Is G reen,” and was double cast a s Isabella in “ School fo r H u sb a n d s” this fall. She will also be rem em bered a s “ L u n g s ” Bedlow from the 1951 T S O . L a u r a ’s mother, A m a n d a , will be p ortrayed by Betty R ead, also a senior d ram a education m a jo r . Tom, L a u r a ’s brother who is badgered into bringing home a “ gentlem an caller,” will be Bob Sym onds, a senior in the College of A rts and Sciences. S ym o n d s has done several ou tstan d in g roles. The “ g entlem an c alle r” will be played by C harles Lane, a senior dram a m ajo r. He has ap p e are d a s G a rn ett in “ Com mand D ecision” in 1949, and Desmond in “ Win­ slow B o y ” this fall. T he W estm inster Choir, conducted by John Finley Williamson, will present m usic ran g in g fro m com positions of g r e a t mastors to sp irituals and fo lk son gs, in G re g o ry Gym S u n d ay a t 3 :3 0 p.m. S in c e 1921 the Choir has sung th ro u gh o u t the United S ta te s, Cu ba, and C an ada, and has m ade European tours to E n g lan d , S c o tlan d , Russia, and thirteen c ou n tries on the continent. It has m ade m ore than IOO orchestral a p p earan ces in the last ten y e a r s with orch estras such as the New Y ork Philharmonic and the K B C Symphony. The m em bers come fro m seventeen s t a t e s and one fo re ig n coun- ! mfog KSS NESCAFE makes coffee right...this minute and stir. Every cup's g o o d and fre sh ! N o p o t. N o gr ounds. N o brewing. Easy on the allowance, too. Even the 4-oz. size makes as many cups as a pound o f ordinary coffee, yet costs at least 2 0 * less. Make a note to get a jar today . . .forpure coffee enjoyment! Radio Guild to Hold Open Meet Wednesday More people drink than a ll other Instant Coffees! • • w e e * i tn *« M t i IK S £ l l i r ’ « t t n i : ' j i « ' * t ' " * .I'• . including illustrations , of the flood sit u a tjons that have developed through the years. “ The Plow T h at Broke the Plains,” produced by the U S Re­ settlem en t A dm inistration, pre­ sents the social and economic history o f the G re a t Plains and the rehabilitation o f the dust bowl. “ The Plow,” in its first p resen ta­ tion in 1934, stirred up quite a controversy fo r its stark p resen ­ tation o f the drouth situation, “ The Song of Bern ad ette,” which will be presented F e b ru a ry 22, will be the third in this series. SM O N B 7-1527 “ P A G A N LOVE SONG” For Charter! Stern W heel Riverboat COMMODORE In Technicolor ( S e e Yellow P a g e s ) Ph. 2-1201 or 2-2463 PHONS 7 *1 7 0 6 if /1 K S / T V Howard Du f f Brian Donleey in “S H A K E D O W N 1 TWO S H O W S N I G H T L Y Feat u re S t a r t s at 7 p.m. TEXAS g i. r iiT O T i pm On | 7 -1 9 6 4 Something D I F F E R E N T for the Adult and Discriminat­ i ng! Bert L an d c aster Dorothy McGuire "WYOMING WILDCAT” Dan “ R ed ” Berry Presenting the first picture of Marcel Pagnol • imm ortal trilogy of life on the French water front RAI MU “ EVERY GIRL SHOULD BE MARRIED” Ca r y Gr a n t Di ana Lynn also “ FARGO PHANTOM” in a MARIUS" nj O N T O P O i l S S T A R T I N G T ODA Y “ YEL LOW CAB MAN” Red S ke t o n “ PRAIRIE OUTLAW ” Eddie De an “ FANNY” on F e b r ua r y 20, and “ CESAR” on F e br ua ry 27 YA N K Each picture a unit in itself with a connecting theme. Plan to see all three. To be followed by “ ALL ABOUT EVE ’ Bette Davis * George Sanders “ O. MY D A R L I N G CLEMENTINE” Roy Acuff COMPLETE ENGLISH T ITL ES "p m o f n A U S T /// 7-2900 N e w O rleans” “Toast O f IRIS HAN MAT ADO A TONGOLELE” H i HI Use Daily Texan Classified Ads for Quick Results UT Paintings on Exhibit Receive G oo d Rating j I , I Room and Board if y o u h a v e U n iv e r sity Men Good home-cooked m eals, fa m ily style. Mrs. Howard P aine's new location. 2100 Nue ces 8-9171 N E E D one male studen t to »hare s ix room house three blocks from c a m ­ E L E C T R I C typewriter. E xpert typing. T h e ses, reports. Phone 2-5546. pus. Rent $22.50 per month— kitchen, dining and living room, two bedrooms, two hath*. Bleep in g porch. 2-1609 or L E T ME T Y P E your th eses, themes. 2-2473. Phone 5-9163. S O U T H W E S T ROOM, four windows for woman studen t, g ra d u a te preferred. In A NY K IN D o f typing d o n * in my home. 53-3546. quiet private home. U niversity neigh­ borhood. Maid service. Phone 2-8656. EXPER IEN CED scientific m anu sc ript ty p ist. T ab u la tions. Mrs. Moore. 7-5088. BD S pe cial music, including boogie and Beethoven, is to be p layed . Tr . * .... . r ' rn the Union B u d d in g from 9 to 4 cNery Monday, W ednesday, and F rid a y . This p rojec t Is sponsored by the Music Com mittee under the direction o f Henry Moore. Live talent will supply some o f the music a t certain tim es during the day. The r e st will come from records. Only the r e g u la r three minute re c o rd s are b ein g used now, b u t eventually the long playing type will be used. TWO G A R A G E a p a r tm e n ts rooms within few blocks of ca m pu s. Convenient I f o r one or two boys in each room. Phone 6-0655. Room s for Rent a a u i i the second p ro g ram this sem ester o f a series o f educational films. “ The R iv er,” a docum entary G A R A G E B A C H E L O R ROOM, near Un!- j veraity accom odate one. Quiet, co mfort- t able, with g a rag e, $23. Phone 2-1740. j T H E S E S . R eport s, etc. Electroraatie typew riter. Mrs. P etm ec ky. 53-2212. iM i a a Recordings, Live Talent 3 To Provide Union Music Results Typing Mf HOLLIDAY mm HOLDEN rotten* CRAWFORD The recital is open to the public. Flood, Land Films Set for Thursday Quick V A C A N C I E S Paso House $30 per month. 1808 W est Avenue. S *T i S I Ger­ | R ad io Guild will hold its first | m eeting o f the sem ester Wednes| day a t 7 p.m. in T e x a s Union 315. The m eetin g is open to stu d en ts in terested in learning and prac| tieing the techniques o f radio! bro ad castin g. Rad io Guild will prod uce com! edies and dram atic shows every ; two weeks, with Guild m em bers doing the directing, acting, and sound e ffe c ts. 2204 SA N A N T O N IO ; In nersp ring bed*, Daily maid service. Man, ahare privat® bath, entran ce, ((resting room. Upsta i r s , private bath for two. 7-6469. M u sic yesterday by Beyla Scheinberg. Miss Dvorak is a member o f Pi Mu sorority, Alpha L am b d a Delta and Mortar Board. In this recital, however, Miss I Dvorak will p resen t a varied pro­ gram o f Germ an, F rench and English selections. A m ong them will be H a n d e 1’s “ Lusinghe P iu c arre ,” B r a h m ’* “ Von Ew ige L ieh e” and “ Die M a i n a c h t,” j C h ausso n ’s “ L a C ara v an ed ' and B izet’* “ Micaela air from C a r ­ m en.” The English section o f the pro­ gram will consist o f “ Go Lovely R ose,” by Quilter; “ STen as a Lovely F lo w er,” by B r id g e s; and j two so n g * bv L a F o rg e , “ S a n d ” and “ Hills. try. Ohio still claims 25 per cent j ^ sg Dvorak, a pupil o f Geneof the m embership. F o r the first v ieve T a lia fe rro of the Music Detime in its history, a Chinese is a | pa r tm ent, will be a c c o m p a n ie d m ember. The reason: an ex cep ­ tional b a sso profund o voice. When the m em bers s a n g befo re the king and queen o f Norway, they were told th at they should not expect the k ing to king ap p lau d since it was no t his c u s­ tom. B u t a f t e r the Choir san g “ OI’ Man R iv er,” the king upset tradition and applauded enthusi‘ rhe Rlver nnd The ° astrally . T hat Broke the P lain s” will be B la n k e t T a x holders will be ad- presented by the U niversity Film mitted fre e . To others, tickets Committee T h u rsd a y a t 4 and 7 are 60 cents and $ 1 . 2 0 . p.m. in Physics Building 201 as Room s For Rent A p artm e n t for Rent For Rent Produce born Q c s /r e r /v Sings Here Sunday When the cjan^ drops in NESCAFE Read a s the Director fo r the show is Mrs. J a m e s Moll, who also directed “ B e g g a r on H orseback ” in 1949 and “ Two on an Islan d ” in 1950 fo r the Curtain Club. Production m an ager fo r “ B o m Y e ste rd a y ” will be Charles B aker, with Tommy J o n e s as assistan t production m an ag er. A ssista n t di­ rector will be J a c k A sh fo r d ; stag e m an ag er, Bill C oo k; and building and stag e crew head, E d Chavez. In charge o f paint crew is A r­ lene K e y ; lights, J e r r y L u te r; costume, B a rb ara B e r m a n ; hand props, M a rily n V en e r; and stag e crew, J a n e Cochran. S o u s e and publicity m an ag er is Fran k H arland, with Miolly M o ffett as house crew head and Jim m ie Meador as publicity head. Westminster Choir Get let to play h o s t . . . at a moment’s notice, any time o f day or night! In the sec­ on ds it takes to start a bull session, suet! coffee can be ready for the gan g. N e s c a f e * m a k e s ro asterfresh coffee . . . right id the cup. Simply put in a teaspoon­ ful, add piping hot water— PHO NE 2*5411 Dvorak to Give M e n a ge rie ' to O p e n Recital Today at 4 LAMME’S I In te rsta te T h e a tr ’ tttlUforflifi. n vnpnrem tiovaiere Af ^TtAvn \ fn tY, e s­ Walter. University o f “ Born r terd ay,” C urtain Club production “ O rch estra C o n cert,” b urles­ of a wom an accused o f witch- word, pantomime, and music, In this y e a r ’s Dance D ra m a the for March 7 through IO have been quing a m usical concert, will be c raft. In stea d o f com posing the dance spoken w ord will not be used. In­ announced and reh earsals are to Sunday ..H.pJy Boo „ The cup dances in the la st y e a r ’s winnerBlt o f the o!0n u tsta n d ,n - 1 D ep artm en t f Dtjonfti r a m a ’sw as annual fo r by theM m usic, G asrant, is the stead words have been set to begin im m ediately. ( X f . oYlrrn presented argaret ( usual one o f, the the comic The role o f Billie Dawn, the ing fem ale p erfo rm an c e o f the io Dance D ram a to be presented case, the m usic was com posed atmusic and will be sung. r e x c e p ts v t k m v t m winTiAf of the o u tsta n d -1Departm ent o f D ram a’s annual year aw ard W ed nesd ay thro ugh S a t u r d a y a t 8 ter this d ance had been c reated by A set o f dances in the concert dumb blond, will be played by y" n m in H o g g Auditorium . Shirlee D odge, director o f chore- is based on D. H, L a w r e n c e ’s E leano r Light, while H a rry Brock Music will be p ortrayed by J a c F arm er. P T h: Z r « > H c h a r a c t e „ in this < * » P h y fo r this. anc, Otho,- dance w,U u , s o n ,. concerts a t the University. fo r this w as written by Lowell Paul Verel will be played by Rea fo rm a n c e for her choreograp hy sa tiric a l view o f an o rc h estra and The d ance had its beginnings in Meister, teaching fellow in music, j Hooker and Ed Devry, the lawyer, and p e rfo rm an c e in “ H ip sy B o o .” I aud ien ce a t a S u n d ay concert b v ' w ere s u g g e s te d b y R o ss L a w t h e r , ! religion. From this b eginning who also wrote the music f o r by Pat Hines, ! H e r aw ard w a s presented vaar-a best o f D allas" who did the scrip t fo r I d ance b ec am e more and more fo r- j “ H y ste ria in S alem , 16 9 2 .” Others in the c ast will be Persis ‘ F r a n k H arlan d , la st I f rm er the popular “ D an ce of t h e 1m alized. One o f the basic ideas o f mo- Hopkins as H elen, the m a id ; Ken as E d d ie; W alter Rim J s c T a r ° m ct a i d Molly M o ffe tt Clow ns” of la st y e a r ’s dance o f - 1 Then a t the turn o f the cen- dern dance is the fre e in g o f t h e 1 Compert^ as tury I s a d o r a Duncan and Ruth j body, but such freed om o f e m o - 1chardson a s the a ssista n t hotel were recognized as o u tstan d in g farin g . l t th at ignite dance needed tion **jis no t uvr** new. av It idis avvtttvi fou n d *»*ini m a n a-< g*»— e r ;r Max K eller and Mildred # --I * rrt fi ni . n be Um seriou s *•» 11w ->­_ tSt. .^t Denis I /nu in fIepm. liial iiccucu I ««vn There will also num club p robatio ners fo r g en era l S e n a to r and Mrs. to be fre e d . They w anted a new ancient trib al dances. B a rn es as effort and p erform an c e by b ers on tho p rog ram . “ H ysteria of ex p ressin g em otions, “ H aitian D an ce” in the Dance H edges; Gene Price and Mel way in S alem , 1 6 9 2 ,” tells the story C h arles B aker, president. thoughts, an d ideas. D ram a illu stra te s this. C reate d I Hight as bellhops; Neil L ev a a? L ife from birth to death is the by Phil Gapy, who spent last sum- the b a r b e r ; T obe C ast as the ra n g e o f m o d e m dance. “ Conver- mer in H aiti, the dance will de- m an icurist; Marvin Rich as the sation s with D eath” in Dance pict native religious rites. D ra m a will exp ress the ideas, > T ickets f o r the dance concert loll J* , 1 I fe a r s , an d hopes o f death. m ay be obtained a t the Music The new dance idea utilizes Building box office. A dm ission classical fo rm s modified to ex- I is 35 cents f o r B lan k et T a x holdp re ss a s to r y through m ovem ent, ers and 70 cents fo r others. f(jr Ws w oA Pag* 3 - I the ^ ^ THE DAILY TEXAN T H E S I S , rep orts, outlines, 2 317 Old­ ham. Phone 2-4715 a f te r 6 :80 p.m. FO R N E A T acc u ra te typing . Call Mrs. Dement 5-8524, W a n te d T - V .. . you should have th isV -M tri-o-matic 955! I I I • * ; I I : your home entertainment picture just isn’t complete, without facilities for playing your favorite recorded music — and the t r i o * marie 955 fits the picture perfectly! Equipped with a six-foot plug-in cord and a four-foot phono-cord, the tri-o-matic 955 plays through the amplifying system of any T-V set or radio. Completely automatic for all records, all sizes, all speeds — and shuts off automan*cany after lase record has played! $ 5 0 . 2 5 ' •g r o v e m u s i c s h o p - T Y P I S T S ’S P O O L : All mature , experi­ enced ty p ist*. 6-4747 eve nings. V A C A N CY for one girl to sh a r e beth and two rooms with another stu d en t SOO; Be llevue Place. 6-4270. P aintings by University stu ­ dents on exhibit a t Sophie New ­ comb College in New Orleans were rated as “ very go o d ” by the chairman o f the art departm ent there. An exchange program is being worked out with S M U fo r the spring sem ester. H aving his work exhibited raises a s t u d e n t s morale, Seym our Fogel, assistan t professor o f art, said. A new experim ent was tried this y ear when ml paintings were displayed with ladies' clothes in the window^ of a downtown de­ partm ent store. A f N I rift \'r? ^ Seat Covers— Car H eaters mrn^rn Ph. 53-1221 3510 Gua da l up e D *« ^ r /ff/ Foe J sin ,■mmm 4.rn Originally C reated for Napoleon CHICKEN A LA MARENGO rn B a rg i ns in New and Trade-In Tires Bra ke Sc Wheel Servica Factory Method Recapping a, & 13 s i ? f SEIBERLING SPIRES TIRE CO. 309 WEST 21 st STREET— PHONE 6 4401 T i:.: j SCI Unless you have eaten it a la M arengo I pro­ perly p re p a re d ) you have no idea how good taken-for-granted chicken can be! Here It a dish created for Napoleon and Hotard a brings it to you just as it w as conceived back in Fran ce in the 18th century. Succulent Chicken a la M arengo is today’s entree sp e­ cial for lunch and dinner at kl.I ! Ilo tard ’s— where you get dishes of international fam e at cafeteria prices T u e sd a y , F eb ru ary 13, 1951 THE DAILY T E X A N Page 4 By Bibier Little M a n on Cam pus — D L 2 >. e e l M o n TISA, the Texas Intercollegiate S t u ­ lion, perh ap s because some of the mem­ dents Association, is a group of about 2 > bers w anted m ore time to consider the colleges and universities gath ered ram ifications of such action. to­ P e rh a p s the m a tte r is to come up gether for m utual benefit. S aturday a t College Station, it came T h u rsd ay night. to light that Texas A&M, Rice Institute, cerely hoped th a t the Assembly will indi­ SMU, Trinity, Texas Tech, and Stephen cate th a t it is tru ly a forw ard-looking F. Austin have all ta k en official action body and concur w ith these other fine seeking Texas in stitu tio n s in the question of Negro college admission to TISA. The executive committee decided to let By RUSS KERSTEN Texan E d itorial A mutt a n t I f so, it is to be sin­ Negro e n tra n c e into TISA. 'oAiti m ember schools vote w hether to invite om an N egro schools to the annual convention March 15-17 a t College Station. The U ni­ versity of Texas delegation favored this query. If tw o-thirds of th e schools say yes. a num ber of N egro colleges will be asked to send delegations as observers. I hen, a fte r a day or so of the meeting, the issue of Negro entrance will be voted W O M E N S T U D E N T S have organized into an alert, intelligent g ro u p called the Cam pus League of Women Voters. W ith a m em b erlhip of almost 400, the l e a g u e conducts p ro g ra m s on lead­ ing U niversity issues and is the sponsor of the annual S tum p Speaking. B ut th e most significant th in g upon. Since these other m a jo r universities about the League is th a t it has no male have taken a stand, this puts the issue co u n terp art. squarely before th e Student Assembly. The c a m p u s women, skipping special-interest political groups th a t are portant. Lloyd Hand, student characteristic of the men, have formed president, ha- a grow ing gro up of people interested in called a special session of the Assembly getting a t the root of the problem s of T h ursday nigh t to consider u rg en t stu­ the day. dent problems. A ndre N ahm ias, G rad u ate Assembly­ personalities but try to decide w h at is­ Your Assembly They don't dally w ith election s u e s make elections w orth while. man, last T h u rsd a y night introduced a If the women of the nation have as bill in stru ctin g Texas TISA delegates to much s p irit of unselfish curiosity as do sup port Negro entrance. the Cam pus League members, the next not suspended fo r im mediate considera- ' A n d as a member of our c ub, you'll enjoy our friendly rivalry with the frat next door. past What this school says will be vitally im ­ The ru les v c re “ There are little deviations from the Constitution,” comment­ ed Student President Lloyd Hand. The situation: three Texan staff members refused an Assembly “ request” to get out of the most recent (last Thursday night) Stu­ dent Assembly meeting. Hand wanted Sterling Steves’ vice­ presidential successor to be elect­ ed in closed executive session of the Assembly, and the group vote •d to ask guests to leave. But. as A&S Assemblyman Da­ vid Bennett pointed out at the time, the student Constitution provides that all meetings of the Student Assembly are open to the public. After the visitors— there were some, for a change, who showed enough interest to attend-— wouldn’t leave, Hand said that they could either continue the election procedure or recess for an attorney general’s ruling on a secret election. Why? W h a t’s wrong wuth following the Constitution and allowing re ­ porters? Granted that reporting of public meetings is a routine, takcn-for-granted function of the press, it remains one that is fu n ­ damental and highly desirable. Without such freedom of informa­ tion, the public— in this case the student body— is left in the dark on m atters where they clearly de­ serve full knowledge. The idea may have taken root two months ago . . . A Texan reporter xxa.- dismissed from a meeting of the University TISA Committee December L generation will be in good hands. irin g o L in e Public Does Not Realize Purpose of Universities' HUMAN TEARS To the Editor: I s a w “ All Quiet on the West­ ern F ro n t” yesterday after hav­ ing seen it before some fifteen year* ago and having experienced some of the same five years ago. And I cried right along with the rest of the audience in the spots where one wants to be human. 7 he fact th a t I’m a 29-yrar-old man and a combat v e t e r a n did not, make me ashamed of my tears. I would have been ashamed not to have cried . . . EUGENE L. KNADLER tunities and the chance to make the most of them. A model university in America at this time is neces­ sarily a’ war with ti e public, for the public ha* little or no idea what a university is or what it is for. The fact that popular misconceptions of the nature and purpose of univer­ sities originate in the fantas­ tic misconduct the universities themselves is not consoling. It shows that a model univer­ sity is needed; it shows how much one is needed; but it also suggests the tremendous difficulty of the enterprise upon which a model univer­ sity embarks and the strength of the tide against which its students have to contend. All students should want to re­ form their university. Mv observation leads me to think that happiness lies in the fullest use of one’s high­ est powers. I admit that it is folly to talk* of the fullest use of a man’s highest powers if he is starving to death. You are in little danger of starving to death, at least you are if a world catastrophe can be avoided. Your advantages are such that you have a decided We have been struggling superiority over the great ma­ In create here a model univer­ jority of your fellow-citizens sity. A model university is not when it comes to the sheer business of staying alive. one that ask*, “ W hat is good for these individual stu­ Your problem lies in th* dents?” but “ W hat is good moral and intellectual realm, for all students?’’; for a mod­ in achieving the feeling that el is useless unless it can he you hav. made the most of imitated. yourselves, th at you have It is more than a verbal done the best you could, and twist to say that a model uni­ th at you have not let down versity will do ita best to see yourselves; or your fellow­ to it th at each individual stu­ men. dent hag the greatest oppor­ I ha%p a life-long hatred of war that perhaps makes it im­ possible for me to have a ra­ tional view of the present T h e ^ D a ^ H T e x a n situation. War has always seemed to me the ultimate Th* Daily Texan, a st u d e n t newspaper of The University- of Texas, wickedness, the ultimate stu­ la published ic Austin ev e r y morning ex cept Monday andSaturday, pidity, And if thus was true September to June, end except during bolide) a n i exalt nation periods, and b l-weealy during the summer sess ion s under the ti* e of in less enlightened days when The Sum m er Texan on T uesday and Friday by Ic as Student Publica­ the best we could do was to tions, Inc. N e w s contributions will be accepted by telephone (.’-24 is or s t slaughter one another with the editorial office J.B. I, or at the News Labors:. • , J R. . )•_• lr juiri** concerning delivery and ad vert ising should be made in J.B. Id s TNT, it is plain as day now, (2r24T S). when, thanks to the progress S tu d en ts mr* Invited to v isit the editor and assot ate editor during the morning hours. of higher learning, we can Opinions of the Texan are not neces sarily those of th* A rn n i l tra­ wipe out thousands of inno­ tion or othe r U n iv ersity o f f i c i a l s . IIn • ered as se con d-cla ss matter October I* 1641 at the Post Office at cent people at one blow, and Austin. Texas, under t h e A et of March I, 1876. be wiped out ourselves in th« -ame way. I am not a pacifist. ASSOCIA TED PRESS WIR E SERVICE T h e Asso ciated P r e ss is exclu sively entitled t o the use tog republica­ I would echo the sentiments tion of all news d isp atch es credited to it or not othe rw ise credited ;n of Patrick Henry. I admit that this newspaper, and local item s of sp ontaneous origin published herein. E ig h ts of publication of all other matter herein also reserved when a great power is loose in the world seeking whom it Represented for National Advertising by National Ad vertising Service, Inc., College Publishers Representative may destroy, it is necessary 410 Madison Ave. New York, N.Y. to prepare to defend our * Chicago — B o sto n — Los Angeles — San Francisco country against it. MEMBER We appear to believe that A ll-A m erican P ac e m a k e r A ssociated C o lleg ia te P ress strength consists of masses of men and machines. I do not deny that they have their role. But surely the essential in­ SUBSCRIPTION RATES -*70 Per mouth gredients of -trength are .60 Per month. mailed In tow n-----trained intelligence, love of .60 Ber me nth, mailed out of town country, the understanding of PERM ANENT STAFF its ideals, and, above all, a ............................ RONNIE DUGGER conviction of the justice of F-diior-in-Chief .. .... ....__________ CHARLEY TRIMBLE Associate Editor ... our cause. Since men of good ..._____ Jim BobGallaway, Rugs Editorial Assistants will c an regard war as con­ Ken-ten, ( laude Villarreal ceivable only as a last resort, News Ed; t o f f ..... ....................... Mary Ann Beau liner, Warren they must be convinced that Burkett, Clan Brawer, Ju n e Fitzgerald, ail channels of negotiation Claude Villarreal, Marian Pendergrass, have been kept open till the Herby Herbsleb last moment and that their Night Editors .......... Jim Cochrum, Flo Cox, Jennilu Kelly, Simon Rubinsky, Betty < ardwell, own government has sought in Marjorie Cia pp good faith, and without con­ Associate Sports E d i t o r ...................... -....... Kelly Crozier oid* ration of face or pres­ Society Editor ... — --------- Fairfax Smith to * , to prevent the outbreak Amusement4 E d i t o r mw —•— .......... Estes Jones of war. — --- Tom Toney Telegraph Editor . . . ...................... Men of good will must be __ Ami Courter Book Editor ____________________ convinced that they are not Jo h n n y H um an Church Editor ______________ — fighting to maintain colonism, .... Murdoch Darkey Science Editor ......... .... Ann Courter feudalism, or any other form Club Co-ordinator . _______ ___ _ Johnnie Human Church Editor ............ ......... of entrenched injustice. And since it is obvious to the mer­ STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE est simpleton th at war must J U N E F I T Z G E R A L D New*. E d ito r ...... come sooner or later to a JIM COCHRUM Night Editor ...... „ world of anarchy, men of Night Reporters ........... „ „ jim Rech, Bruce Roche, Sui good will would hope that Allen1, B ert Tippit, Charley Trimble their own government would Betty Farwell, John Bitser Copyreaders .... ...... .... Jack Weaver Night Sports E kIten ......... proclaim its desire to trans­ ......... Kelly Crozier Aaaiatam form the United Nations from Marjorie Clapp N ig h t S o c ie ty E d i t o r a loose association of inde­ ^...... L-. Claude Villarreal Ad is ta n t .............. Charles Richey pendent state.- into an organ­ Night Amusements Ed tim ... ization that could adopt and I ......... M.E. P arley N ig h t T e le g r a p h E d i t o r enforce world law. ..._____ .... Bascom Nelson Assistant -------------- — ------------( E x c e r p t * f r o m t he F a r e ­ w e l l Addr * ** o f R o b e r t M. H u t c h i n s , c h a n c e l l o r o f t he University of Chicago, F e b ­ r u a r y 2, 1 9 5 1 . C h a n c e l l o r Hutchins, who resigned to b e c o m e an a s s o c i a t e d i r e c ­ t or o f t he F o r d F o u n d a t i o n , is o n l e a v e f r o m t h e u n i v e r ­ s i t y . Hi s r e s i g n a t i o n is e f ­ fective June 30, 1951 .) UTs Press Freedom Not an Official’s Toy Ordinarily, meetings of that type are routinely reported on. Defending the dismissal the next day. Hand said: “ I can see no reason for pro­ hibiting the presence of report­ ers, Texan or otherwise, a t any public committee meeting. However, when there is a private meet­ ing designated as such, whether a committee meeting, student cab­ inet meeting, a caucus, o r the Student Assembly, I believe the chairman of said committee, or the members, should have the pri­ vilege of deciding whether or not the discussion should be for pub­ lication.” Which seems to mean that any normally-accepted public meeting becomes “ private” at the whim o f student officials, then remains a mystery until it is their pleasure to permit its release—along with the recognized private gathering*. Herbert Hoover expressed it well; “Absolute freedom of the press to discuss public questions is a foundation stone of American liberty.” T h at’s all we ask— that no per­ son, student official or otherwise, attem pt to stifle the right to r e ­ port the news. Little constitutional deviations No. Nature-lovers Face New Segregation Test By A . T. SIPPER There’s a chance UT “ nature lovers” may soon have one less place to spread their blankets. I f s about a 50-50 chance. But it’s a chance. Bastrop State Park is included in a statewide plan to give Texas Negroes equal park facilities. If the plan goes through, segrega­ tion would go to work in reverse, and white University students would b e barred from everything in the piney playground except the golf course. This park plan comes out of study by a Senate investigating committee. The Senators started investigating about this time last year afte r some Tyler Negroes took a charge of unequal recrea­ tion facilities to federal court. The court hasn’t acted on the petition, but Tyler State Park has been closed as a result of it, and now this plan for setting up “ sep­ arate and equal” parks in Texas has resulted. If it gets support from the Legislature, the report is about the biggest blow a t Texas JimCrowism since the Supreme Court ruled on the Sxveatt case. But the “ I F ” is a big one. Besides the proposed change at Bastrop, the plan includes crea­ tion of two brand new parks and earmarking of certain parts of Tyler, Stephen F. Austin, and Possum Kingdom State Parks for Negro use. Then th ere’s a part dealing with fish-famous Caddo State Park. That's in the part of the state where the South, suh, is still the Old South. Negroes would have exclusive access to Caddo Park, though whites would be allowed to con­ tinue fishing on the Lake. Well, there’s not much telling how much protestation will come forth from the folks in the areas near the affected parks. The Sen­ ators’ park plan is just too liberal to get a peaeable reception. It might even make “separate but equal” a reality. If old A. T. was asked to guess what part of the proposal gets Vishinskied first, he’d say the Caddo Lake plan. It would take a far stretch of the imagination to conjure up a vision of people in that neck of the woods feeling the inconvenient side of segregation. Nearby M ar­ shall, you’ll remember, is the town with the movie censors that banned “ Pinky.” ★ it But getting hack to the positive side of this patter on parks, the mere fact that such a report actually got to the floor of the Senate is mighty gratifying. Con­ tinuance of segregation may have been the plan’s main inspiration, but the liberality of the recom­ mendations indicates the authors realized th at an unfair situation existed. It seems they decided to make a genuine effort to ease it Senators on the committee stuck their necks out. Tyler'* own Warren McDonald was a commit­ teeman. The, uh, nature studies under Bastrop’* piney shade* may have been great fun, but A. T, predict* t h e r e won’t he many folks f r o m t h e Forty Acres lobbying down at the Capitol against giving Texas Negroes an even hreak on out­ door fun. O ffic ia l T U iced Th e annual Wilmot Declamation Con­ t e s t for freshm en students will be held on March 6. In the boys* and girl* divi­ sions the re will be a first prize of $26 and a second of l i b . , k (K Stu dents should register now with th* se cret ary in Speech Building Mo. rbey can se cure help from the speech staff rn selectin g and preparing d c la vatio n*, prose se lections not to exceed seven __. , , , „ n m inutes in length. HOWARD W. TOW NSEND Director Candidates for the College Tr ansfe r T e st and the College Entrance Exami­ nation m ust have their apphcaitone in Princeton, New Jersey, by feb ru ary 17, 1961. Information bulletins and appli­ cation blank* may be secured from th* T e stin g and Guidance Bureau, \ Hall 206. Thes e test s will he administered March IO, 1861. in H ogg Auditorium, beginning at 8:80 a m. H. T. MANUE L, Director Te stin g and Guidance Bureau dude White sides Jal Q The United States Civil Service Commission has announced exam­ inations for stenographer and typist openings and an examina­ tion for the blind only for Dic­ tating Machine Transcriber. All placements will be in Washington, D. C. and vicinity. The Dictating Machine Trans­ cribe) jobs pay from $2,150 and $2,650 a year and is open only to persons who are blind or whose vision is seriously impaired. No experience required. The starting salaries for stenog­ raphers range from $2,450 to $2,875 a year and for typists they are $2,450 and $2,650 a year with no experience required for either position. Further information and appli­ cation forms may be obtained from Mr. A. E. Davis at the Aus­ tin Post Office. ★ Open competitive examinations for clerical positions with the Texas State Department of Cold Storage Holdings of Te x a s Cold storage holdings of Texas dairy products dropped 30 per cent in December from November, but shower a 134 per cent in­ crease over December, 1949, the University of Texas Bureau of Business Research reported. December cheese holdings fell 38 per cent from November; creamery butter, 20 per cent evaporated and condensed milk, 7 per cent; and cream, 6 per cent. y jy j o t t u n i tied Health have been announced hy Russell E. Shrader, supervisor of the Merit System Council. Applications and information are available from Merit System Council, 805 Littlefield Building, Austin 15, Texas. Examinations will consist o f written and performance tests f o r clerical portions. Classifications for which examination* may be taken are; junior clerk, clerk, sen­ ior clerk, principal clerk, chief clerk, clerk-typist, clerk-stenographer, stenographer, secretary, and senior secretary. All applicants must have high school education and additional training and experience appropri­ ate to the classification. Closing date for receipt of ap­ plications is March 3, 1951. ic h c jL iA t ST U D E N T HE ALTH CENTER Helmi Sab* c Al-L'than, Thorn** H. Bar lift. t, David T. Black stock, James Howard Brooks, Weldon Harrold Car­ te*, Consuelo Cisneros, John Ward Dixon, M. P. Frank. Robert Frias, Jea n ­ nette Hack, Marjorie Louise Holtzrlaw, J. Perdue Hudson, Georg* F. Lancaster. Robert L. Lansdell, Martha ( aterine Leigh, Willian E. Love, Oralie Maldonaldo, Gadrner Frank Marston, Rue! James Mason, Patrick O'Rannon NcShane, Nark Vincent Mechler, Fernando Lope* Mo­ reno, Barbara Ann Murphy, Leis Riva Nickerson. A u iu ro T. Pere/., Leslie Ann Robin*!!, Renee Hon,lek. Joe Alan St. John, Arleen J ranee t a Simmnn*. Charles Mark S t e ­ re o s George Talbot S te ven s, Florence May Swing, Alice Markia 'jacquard, Donald Wand, Postponed, An\anced Standing, and Re­ examinations will be given February 23 through March 2. Applications to take exam in ations in this series must he made a t the Registrar’s Office before February 13Examination* will be given in Geology Building 14 at 2 p m. daily, in the fol­ lowing order: Friday, Feb. 2 3 — Art. en gineering ( e x ­ cept drawing), English, speech. Monday, Feb. 26— Anthropology, drama. Th e Medical College Admission Test will be administered in Hogg Auditorium on Saturday, May 12. beginning at 8:4a a.m. Applications and examination fee* m u s t be re< eived by th* Educational T e stin g Service, Princeton. New Jersey, on or before April l r . No other test will ba g iv e n before November. Bulle­ t in s of information and application blank* m ay be obtained a t the R eg is­ trar's Office, Dr. D, B. Casteel s office, Biology Laboratory 307. or at \ Had 9AR governm ent, philosophy, physics , p s y ­ chology, Tuesday, Feb, 27— Education, journalism, m athem atics. Wednesday, Feb. 28— All foreign l a n ­ guages, Bible, business administration, drawing, pharmacy. Thursday, March I — Botany, ch em istry, economics, geology, music. Friday. March 2— Bac teriology, biology, history, home economics, sociology, zoology, o ther subject*. A student, may take only on e exam ina­ tion each day. Conflicts in scheduled examinations should be reported to the Registrar before February 23. H. Y. Mel OWN Registrar Interested applicant* are urged to apply af (tie OFFICE OF NON­ ACADEMIC P ERSONNEL, Main Bu dd­ ing 204. CHARLES T. CLARK Director H. T. MANI EL, Director T e st in g and Guidance Bureau The organized Group for Naval Re­ se rv e Communications Supplementary A ctivities in Austin has openings to r inte rested and qualified personnel, both men and women. P reviou s military or communica tions experience is not re­ quired. For further information re­ garding this program of the Naval Re­ serv e con ta ct Profes sor Lynn Kirtland, Main Building 2606, NROTC member* and men classified I-A by their draft h e r d . . r e not . « ■ * & Commanding Officer Tick ets for th* facu lty luncheon for Dr Er ne st Cartman Colwell, to he held st 12 o'clock Tuesday at Fellowship Hall of University Methodist Church, mav he obtained up until 9 o ’clock T uesday morning h y calling the i rnv a n i t y • , tension S O . ALBERS. Chairman Student* interested in sa les work with the Ralston Purina Company should contact the stu d e n t Employm ent Bu­ reau in B. Hall 117. A rep re s e n t a tL * of the com pany will he on the campus on W ednesday, Feb. 14. Student* in­ tereste d in su m m er employment in rec­ reational fields should also contact th# bureau. „ _ JOE D. FARRAR, Director Studen t Employm ent Bureau The following permanent full-tim e po­ sition* in the non academic service of The U n iversity of Texas are now ava il­ able: 3 c lerk -ty p ists ( $ 1 4 6 ) — Requiring a ty pin g speed of 60 words per minute accurate typing. One position requir­ ing the use Of the Friden Calculator. 3 secretaries ( $ 1 8 0 ) — Requiring a typing speed of 60 words per minute and shorthan d speed of IOO words per m inute. Experience, maturity and pre­ ferably a college degree and a relatively perm anen t st a t u s. . 3 se nior clerks ( 1 1 8 0 ) — One position requiring a degree from the Un iversity. Two positions requiring experience in requ isition ing, and purchasing with either a S ta te or Governmental Agen cy. Positio n s available March I. Typing speed of 65 words per minute. 2 stenographer-office a ss ist a n ts ($16 4 ) — Requiring rn typing speed of 60 words per minute, shorthand of 80 words per minute or more with a relatively per­ m anent stat us. Experience cr a college d eg re t req uired. Daily T e xa n Crossword Puzzle DOWN A stone lip ACROSS I. An a ttic 5. Swiftly IO. Operatic melody l l V iolent 17. P o rtico (Gr. arch .) 20. Boil slowly 22. Keep 25, W hite ant ( v a r .) 27. E sne 29. D rug (K ipling) 30. Gap SI. Keen 33. N ative* of Iow a 34. R equire 37. L eaf of a calyx 40. P ila s te r 42. Sea eagle decoration Sphere A decree w indstorm Silent H ebrew t r e a , u re r . W a V n c A t the form al M ary Ann was are invited, may be purchased for Alpha G a m m a Delta , Phi Mu Officers w ill also be elected, meet tonight at * p.m. in Texas historian* and Lend Gist, chosen from the top five, who 25 cents at the dance. B e tty Lou B ritta in , P o rt A r ­ H and; Urn Hoover, Corner,; A n d tO Those nominated by the executive j Union to choose a new < C raw ford, Au stin ; Connie Mae and I anelle Brooks, secretary, ' n , and M olly M o ffe tt is the tem- nanking and finance, is faculty M ary A n n ’s picture w ill be pub­ assistant professor of physical Olle, A u stin ; J o K e ll Russell, I H a rry Moore associate Doney, Austin. Other nominations may be made ! porary chairman. Plans for spring advisor. Ottis Stahl is province lished in Phi Sigma Kap p a’* re- training fo r women, Odessa; Owen Slaybaugh, P o rt professor of sociology at the U n i­ -------------' officer. Pi B e t a P hi gional publication along w ith each The Disciple Student Fellowship j N®che»; Kinta Adda. Syadlenak, versity, and his wife, Dr. Bern ice Ague- Bel! Ford trail, Stockdale; of the other nine chapters’ Moonll - §-................. ’ T h ra ll; P a tric ia Jo y c e Zeller, R ich ­ Moore, consultant w ith the Hogg K a y Fort on, Fort W o rth ; Patricia The P a n h a n d l e C l u b w ill meet , , . , , k u region, ,» » ;« « light G irls tfrom 4this iifi of the Christian Church w ill spon- mond. Memorial Foundation, w ill speak Morton Honer, F o rt W orth. , .. sor an international dance on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Sutton i w M ary Ann wins the regional alec- i A l p h a Om icron Pi I at the Intel-faith supper a t H llle l j — * , mi ,. i March IO. Dances by other church H a l l , IC I t o riect officers. lion she w ill go to the national • Gladys Appel, Brenham ; Mar- foundation at 6 p rn. w e d n e sd ay .; -r. . , ... . • groups are still to be scheduled, ♦ convention in W ashington during .............. __________ __ garet Chandler, San A n to n io ; They w ill talk on marriage counPlane fot a picnic- will he dis­ the Easter holidays. Maxme Gackle, Hobbs, X . M .; soling. cussed at a meeting of the Hi l l G wyn M cCullough, Austin; Sy lv ia M ar j A n n ’s favorite pa time (G o r d o n tO A s s i s t Both received their bachelor of County- HilUboro College C l u b are horseback riding and dancing. Shultz, Kentwood, La. journalism and master of arts in J A l p h a Phi Thursday at 7:00 p.m. m the She belongs to Delta Zeta soror­ sociology at the U niversity. They I The <■go go rnen ta o f twins E liz a ­ Gwendolyn G I y n n, A u stin ; were the first husband and w ife beth A n n e and E d i t h M a r y G ray ity and Forensick, women s hon­ texas U nion 309. A & M has invited Dean Robert Grace Elizabeth H ill, Bayto w n ; to receive their doctor of philoso­ have been announced by their Ail members are urged to a L- orary speech organization. Brown-eyed and brunette, M ary Gordon to assist in the staging Katherine Sang uily, Houston; D ix­ phy degrees in the same ceremony parent-, Mr. a d M s. A lfred tnd the first meeting of th*1 new Ann was a Bluebonnet B e lle F in a l- j of the religion and life week of ie M ay Schaefer, San A ntonio; at the U n iversity of North t am- G ray of Boerne. The brides-elect semester. ist last year, R O T E sponsor, f i- 1the college Tuesday through KH* Joan Catherine Stevenson, San Una. The degrees were received are June candidates for bachelor * Antonio; Lu cy Diane W ells, W e l­ in sociology. of science degrees in bacteriology nalist in the Freshm an B e a u t y : day. The G i r l * ’ G l e e C l u b w ill meet lington. from the U niversity. Dr. M core ha^ done newspaper Contest. V a rsity C arnival Queen Sunday, Dean Gordon, director tonight at 7 o’clock in Texas U n ­ Chi O m e g a T h a t lo o k o f a n t i c i p a t i o n ? work, held research and teaching candidate, a Bluebonnet Belle of the U niversity V eterans’ A d ­ In a doubt! -wedding ceremony ion 401, Thomas W illiam s, di­ Sara Alice Boteler, Lit*Ie Rock, grants, and w ritten several books candidate this year, and was voted visory Service and co-ordinator in Ju n e . Elizabeth w ill be married rector, has announced, A rk,; Catherine Chambers, D allas;! O f co arse . . . sh ft knows already and articles. Both he and his w ife to Jam es A . Hudson, I niversity one of the Ten Most B ea u tifu l of religious activities, w ill meet Barb ara Culver, I ongview; M ary ★ have done numerous book reviews student, a id Edith w ill he married with two churr hee in Bryan . girls on tho campus. that she's going to hr your Jo Htillum, W ills Po in t; Joan T h e C o - o r d i n a t o r # C o u n c il, a n together. to Roland H. CsMweU of San On the A A M campus, Dean Johnson, Kilgore, Dr. Bernice Moore is consulting Antonio. trganizciion within the W om en’s v a le n t in e . Gordon w ill lecture and illustrate F o u n d a t i o n G i v e * A w a r d D e l t a D f l t * D e l t a C e r a m ic -oriologist on com munity fam ily Co-op houses, hap elected “ G in­ H ujson, member of Delta Kapp* the m anner by which academic Norm a Ruth Brooks, H ouston;! ger” Hendricks chairm an and The Edw ard Orton, J r . , Ce­ subject* may be interwoven with V irg in ia Sue Easley, San Antonio; life problems in Hogg Foundation Epsilon, w ill receive his bachelor Jan e Watson secretary fro the ramic Foundation of Golumou*, religion and vised in everyday Lucy Ruth W o n ,mack, Lubbock; and Austin Public Schools, \mong of arts degree in philosophy in her sponsors are the Home Eco­ J me. m I'. n ; r \t mm- is. in d e e d . A m e n d A M M - ' tmI vs ii i y.iret* i_ 1 | ^ ^ ^ H 9 to 15 1(161 SR EY H H test great wide pockets encircle 9 to IS iu d has a dewbi# colin end cuff rreatment Nice. Do e x a ctly the same th in g —DON'T in h a l e . Notice th a t bite, that sting? Quite a difference from PHILIP MORRIS! • , i ! .rn j u i t i , rn \udi>e, rn fit f i d e to r i m m j f , drtssroakff with great at fj.nfH-.n fn VUJ8 '# shoulders, th* honors with its it cess maker details, born smell rolled 2 . . . lig h t up your present brand I Optometrist “ SUNSET BOULEVARD” fake# . . Light up a PHILIP MORRIS Just take a puff - D O N T iN H A i f - a n d s-l-o-w-l-y let the smoke com e th ro ug h your nose. Easy, isn t it? And N O W ... Lenses Duplicated BO SI Glasses adjusted at h- University Optometric Clinic 2228 Guadalupe Phone 2^634 NO CIGARETTE HANGOVER means MORE SM OKING PLEASURE! ■ philipMORRIS Tu«sF) — I'm me M inister A ttire tod ay d e ­ m anded “ f u ll c o n s u lta tio n ’' am o n g U nited N a tio n s m e m b e r s f i g h t ­ ing in Korea b e fo re G e n e ra l Mac­ A r t h u r ’* fo rc e s driv e across the 38 th parallel. A n th o n y E den , d e p u t y c o n s e r v ­ ative l e a d e r in a H ouse o f C ouim o n s speech critica l of th e L a b o r G o v e r n m e n t, called f o r a plain d e c la ra tio n by th e W e s te r n P o w ­ ers t h a t th e y would d e f e n d Y u g o ­ slavia f ro m C o m m u n ist a g g r e s ­ sion. • PROMPT SE R V IC E • R E A S O N A B L E P R IC E • Q U A L IT Y M A T E R IA L S a u to g la s s F URNITURE TOPS RESILVERING N O R T H 'S Glass Shop 101 SAN JACINTO PHONE 6-3401 im m Petes back on the D ra g • • . • 2508 G u adalu pe “We c a n best se rv e p eace by w a r n in g a n y w ould-be a g g r e s s o rs : o f th e co n s e q u e n c e s o f t h e i r ac ts b e f o r e th e y m a ke t h e m . ” said Eden. A ttic e > speech to C om m o ns was m a d e a f t e r offic ia l r e p o r ts fro m K orea had said S o u th Ko­ re a n C a p ita l Division p a t r o l s a l ­ r e a d y had crossed th e 3 8 th p a r a l ­ lel, old o c c u p a tio n b o r d e r b e ­ n o r th a n d south. L a t e r o ffic ia l r e p o r ts c o n t r a ­ dicted th e first a c c o u n ts t h a t a five-mile p e n e tr a ti o n had been m a d e into N o rth K o re a on the east coast. I t a p p e a r e d by th e l a t ­ er r e p o r ts th a t a f ig h t b a d ta k e n place on o r v ery close to th e b o r ­ der. A ttle e r a is e d an old issue b e ­ tw ee n W a sh in g to n a n d L o n d o n on how f a r G e n e ra l Mac A r t h u r ’s fo rc e s should go. In this case the new o f fe n s iv e by C hinese C o m ­ m u n is ts in C e n tr a l K o re a m a y m ake the issue academ ic. B rita in r e l u c ta n t ly a g r e e d to the f i r s t cro ssin g of th e 3 8 th p a r ­ allel last y e a r . F o re ig n S e c r e ta r y E r n e s t B e v m especially c o unselled a g a in s t th e d riv e to th e M a n c h u r ­ ian and S ib e ria n b o rd ers. G en e ra l M a c A r t h u r w as se v erely criticized h ere fo r la u n c h in g th e N o v e m b e r o f fe n siv e to w a r d th e V a in river. C ritics said th e action provoked c o m m u n ist C hina s in te rv e n tio n . Phone 8-0193 # Summer Courses Cold Beverages University of Madrid 0 Soft Lighting 0 Nice Atmosphere FETES on the drag Study and Trave! R A JU . o p p o rtu n ity to rn jo y m e m o r a b le e x p e rien ce s in ear- nu and l i v i n g ! F or s tu d e n ts, te a c h e r s , o th e r s y e t to d is c o v e r tsarin a? m g. h isto r ic * ! Sp ain. C ourse# in clu d e S p a n ish la n g u a g e , art an d c u ltu re. I n te r e s tin g r ec r e a tio n a l p rogram in ­ clu d ed . F o r d e ta ils , w r ite now to S P A N IS H S T U D E N T T O I RS, INC. SOO F ifth A v e , N ew York IS . \ Y 4 SP E E D W A Y RADIO A *»oe*ct*d P r »*» n o rity th a t t h e c o m m itt e e - d r a w n S E R V I T w o d r u n k * d e c i d e d it would bill “ s to m p e d o n ” a n d “ w r e c k e d ” be lots o f f u n to rob a b a n k y e s ­ th e ir d is t r ic ts T h e y called it “ u n ­ 2 0 1 0 Sprrdwa t e r d a y , so th e y took $ 1 1 ,0 0 0 a t f a ir, u n j u s t a n d u n c o n s t i t u t i o n a l . ” g u n p o in t f r o m th e N ix on S t a t e ! President Truman y e s te r d a y B ank. B u t one r o b b e r s a t on th e p o s to f f ic e step s and w a ite d to be ch allen ged S e n a t e critics by r e ­ ON TH E C E N T R A L FRONT, arm ies ( th r e e divisions to an W o n ju a n d 55 miles e a s t of Seoul. c a p t u r e d a n d th e o th e r s u r r e n - i n o m in a tin g all fiv e m e m b e rs o f K O R E A , T u e s d a y , F e b . 13— (ZP)— a r m y ) a n d tw o N o r t h K o re a n • APPLIC ATIO N I t w a s th e re t h a t the Reds d e re d to an im p ro m p tu po sse a f t e r the R e c o n s t r u c tio n F in a n c e C o r ­ C h in e se C o m m u n ist t r o o p s w r e s t ­ C o r p s ( t h r e e divisions t o a c o rp s) • PASSPORT s t r u c k in fo rc e e a r ly M o n d a y in p o ratio n to new te rm s on t h e ed H o e n g s o n g f r o m U n ite d N a ­ w e re ta k in g p a r t in th e drive. w o u n d in g one man. an attac k th a t s n o w b a l l e d • PERSONAL D is tr ic t A tto r n e y W illis EUL I m u ltih iliio n -d o lla r le n d in g a g e n ­ tio n s tr o o p s a t m id n i g h t, T u e s ­ A t f u l l s t r e n g t h th is w-ould t h r o u g h o u t th e d ay a n d r a g e d all «*>n o f G onzales id e n tif ie d th e m en c y ’s board. day, m e a n as m a n y as 150 ,0 0 0 to 200,- n i g h t in savage, c o n f u s e d fig h tin g . as G len n H. Hayes, 27, a n d E d T h e R e d s ’ c a p t u r e o f H o e n g ­ 000 R e d s w e r e on th e m ove. H ow ­ Mr. T r u m a n a c te d in th e f a c e p D ugie, 39, both of M a rb le Falls. of c h a r g e s by a S e n a t e B a n k in g s o n g clim axed a 2 4 - h o u r d rive ev e r, h ea v y c a s u a ltie s have been El C o u n t y A t t o r n e y E. W. P a t t e r ­ S u b c o m m itte e th a t th r e e of th e t h a t p u n c h e d th e UN C e n tr a l in f lic te d on th e C o m m u n is t fo rc es, j RED BALL son said both will be c h a r g e d t o ­ five RFC d ir e c to r s “ s e rio u s ly F r o n t a lm o st back t o W o n j u , im­ p a r t i c u l a r l y since th e U N lim ite d j F R O M C A C T U S NEGATIVES d a y w ith ro b b e r y b> f i r e a r m s . He a b u s e d ” th e a g e n c y ’s a u t h o r i ty by p o r t a n t h ighw ay to w n IO miles o f f e n s iv e o p e n e d J a n u a r y 25. O f­ Transfer & said H a y e s w til be c h a r g e d o n two yie ldin g to o u ts id e in flu e n ce in so u th o f H oengsong. fic ia l claim ed Red e a su a ltie s c o u n t s o f a s s a u lt to m u r d e r an d g r a n t i n g loans. A r e p o r t fro m T o k y o said m ore since th e n , by g r o u n d a c tio n alon e, I Storage D ugic w ith one c o u n t T he S e n a t e g r o u p , h ead ed b y , th a n 100,000 C hin ese a n d N o rth to t a l 80,121 th r o u g h S u n d a y . ★ H e a v y H au lin g The Texet Senate y e s te r d a y S e n a t o r F u l b r i g h t ( D - A r k ) , s p e ­ K o r e a n Rods— som e u sin g A m e r ­ On th* w est, f a c in g Red-held A’ I ocal Ac L o n g -d ista n c e M o v in g w h irled to fin al p as sag e , 24-7, a cifically ac c u s e d D o n ald D aw son, I ic a n - ty p e b a z o o k as a g a i n s t A m e r ­ S eoul. U S 2 5 th Division tr o o p s re- * ★ H o u se h o ld Good S to r a g e tan k s— sw ept d ow n th e j p u ls e d a m id n ig h t a t t a c k on Y o n g -j pian to r e d is t r i c t th e s t a t e ’s 31 i an a d m in is t r a tiv e a s s is ta n t to th e ican 4 C r a tin g and P a c k in g P re sid e n t, a s one o f th o se who sno w y m o u n ta in p a s s e s o f C e n tr a l d u n g p o in 15 m in u t e s o f bloody S e n a t e seats. ★ A ll E q u ip m en t In su re d T he a c tio n bru sh ed a s id e crie s , “ exercised i n f l u e n c e ” o v er R F C K o re a to d a y in a n e w t h r e a t to f ig h t i n g ea rly T u e s d a y . T h e r e div ide U n ite d N a ti o n s fo rc es. f r o m a sm all bu* v o c i f e r o u s m i­ oans. w e r e sig ns th e Reds w e r e t r y i n g 234 6 G u a d a l u p e A L DYER O w n er T h e c o u n t e r - d r iv e by e le m e n ts to e x t e n d th e ir c o u n t e r - d r iv e to 6 0 6 S a n J a c in to P hone 8-7067 Ph. 6 - 1 2 0 ( o f n in e C hinese a n d six N o rth Ko­ th is s e c to r. On t h e F a r E a s t c o a st, r e a n divisions la n d e d w ith s t u n ­ a S o u th K o re a n p a tro l b a t tle d a n in g f o r c e on tw o S o u th K orean sm a ll d e t a c h m e n t o f R e d s in th e d iv is io n s a n d f o r w a r d A m e ric a n v ic in ity of th e 3 8 th P a r a lle l. un its. O ffic ia l r e p o r ts e a r l i e r had 8-5 — P r i n t s b y E u r o p e a n a r t - ! Hall. T h e Red o f fe n s iv e , g a i n in g m o­ pla ce d th e S o u th K o r e a n s (R O K S ) isis, Music B u ild in g loggia. 5 — T a l e n t C o m m itt e e , T e x a s U n ­ m e n t u m all day M o n d a y a f t e r its a t Y a n g y a n g , five miles n o r th cf ion. 8-5 — Mica is a c c e p tin g n o m i n a ­ s t a r t late S u n d a y n ig h t, drove a 38. tio n s f o r Mica Q u e e n , T ex a s 5 — D ea d lin e f o r ap p ly in g f o r se v en -m ile w ed g e in t h e Allied B u t today A m e r ic a n a d v isers U n io n 307. w ith th e RO K S said th e p a t r o l had special e x a m in a tio n s , Regis­ lines. 10-12 a n d 2-5 — P ic tu r e s by San t r a r ' s O ffice. It w as a typical b lo o d -c u rd lin g nm cro sse d th e political b o u n d a r y A n to n io a r ti s t, E lis a b e t N ey 7 — Circle D o t D is tr ic t o f Mica, C h in e se C o m m u n ist a t t a c k , c o m ­ in to N o r t h K orea. M useum, A Red b u ild u p w as r e p o r te d T e x a s U n io n 301. p le te w ith suicid al c h a r g e s , bugleIO — H a r d in g Black to d e m o n ­ 7 — C h a rm C o m m itte e , T e x a s blow ing, bell r in g in g , w histle- S u n d a y in f r o n t o f fiv e U N col­ s t r a t e p o tte r y m a k in g in lee-: U nion. t o o t i n g a n d d r u m - b e a t in g . T r e a c h ­ u m n s f a n n in g o u t n o r th , n o r t h ­ l u r e s e rie s by T e x a s F in e A rts 7:30 — A A C W d r a m a g roup. ero u sly , some C h in ese w aved w e s t a n d n o r t h e a s t o f H o en g so n g , \ - s o c i a ti o n , L a g u n a G loria. 2816 W o o ld rid g e Drive. w h ite f la g s an d o f f e r e d h a n d ­ an a n c h o r point IO m iles n o r th o f 12 — F a c u l ty lu n c h e o n f o r Dr. 7 :3 0 -9 :3 0 — T r y o u t for th e sh a k es in a s u r r e n d e r g e s t u r e — | E r n e s t C. Colwell, F e llo w sh ip ! Round-U p R e v u e, T ex as U n ion th e n b la ste d an A m e r ic a n unit W E DELIVER! Hall, U n iv e rsity M e th o d ist 311. Th at smug l o o k ? Sure . . . w ith h a n d g r e n a d e s . Church. 7:30 — D iscussion o f the K o re a n S w a r m s o f C hinese, “ like f le a s ,” 5 p.m. h< knows he's going to he somebody's 1:30 — S te e r H ere, T e x a s U n io n situ a tio n by W o rld R e la te d n e ss p o u r e d o u t of t h e i r m o u n ta in to I a.m . 301. C om m ission, Y M CA . h i d e o u ts to e n g a g e in “ a point■rah ut in c . 4 — T alk by D r. E r n e s t C. Col­ 8 — Dr. M. J. D. W hite to a d ­ b la n k m e ss,” A P C o r r e s p o n d e n t J u s t Dial 7-8739 well, Hillet F o u n d a tio n . dress S ig m a Xi in open m e e ti n g J o h n R a n d o lp h q u o te d one US o f ­ For Fast Service 4 —- M e n ’s D e b a te S q u a d t r y o u ts , on “ C h r o m o so m a l V a ria tio n a n d ficer. S p e e c h B u ild ing 201. S a n d w ic h e s N a tu r a l S e le c tio n in Wild P o p ­ T h e Red h o rd e s s w a r m e d dow n H am burgers 4 — T h o m a s D. R ish w o rth t o give u la tio n o f I n s e c ts , ” C h e m is try j f ro m th e n o r th in t h e i r f ir s t m a ­ F r e n c h F r ie s f o r u m discussio n o f “ M e dia o f B uilding 15. j o r a t t a c k since th e y sm a shed M a lts— S h a k e s C o m m u n ic a tio n in T h is C h a n g ­ 8:15 — A d d re s s by D r. E r n e s t C. a c ro ss th e 38th P a r a ll e l Newing W o r ld ,” Hi lie! F o u n d a tio n . Colwell on “ The V ital N a tu r e Y e a r 's eve. NITE S N A K 4 -— E lsie D v o ra k , s o p r a n o , in of F a i t h , ” Main L o u n g e, -Texas Th*' US E ig h th A rm y c o m m u n i­ 19th & W ichita s tu d e n t re c ita l, Music R e c i ta l. 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