™PE8iE Slil! 1ft ^as sc sat " s* .^jfeylMte^li _ _ V < ,;?S i " ^ i^S#^H'ii^i:;^s^#Wi z&cm* biwf-.it '*k ommunity Student xVw Force/; f I'*UM?JijaNym' :r A • s• 0 fh ,s* ~ * •W iS.-*^ /% ; <^t "7 ~ '^i Z •iiViWi;1iifiVw')\iii^i^^iiiii^!ilii)ii^iijt|?iiiiViitf(^Ti»i']it^ wiil*V'T'-.'i!»kf>^IT^iii:trt if t»ifi^iiM»-iJiiiiTiffl jhjJXu" VOLUME S! >**£ >>S r* KhiU t> w £w,M,t A'»a,::ffiJSv'.v5) * r*>«4* {r "^v" tt '•'•St*,?*}§ c&Wft a ft .•;?'>- •• •. i declared '"'Stalin an dents to enter the University, L This Littlefield, Carothers, .and An­person or organization that can years of experience with the throughput the world to prevent peac& his associates have the power to remove the threat of war i _ means that many foreign drews dormitories' have offered offer any contribution, contact United Rations and the Security they will'' and added 'students whose education was i|fc» either Frost or Miss Wesley. They 'Council •hw-Tgfveiji Mr. Sein a ' terupted by war who foT.f^e:"¥r there is universal belief tha%,s,, and now also; ••• requested that this be done be­backgrouiid of knowlege in the find it impossible to return to ••« Thefo-«hairman of the commit-fore March 1» if at all possible. Workings and decisions of the the dangers in the world college in their own eountrydue Faculty Council groups. , . to political finaflwa^Tre&sonr or Olcutt' Sanders, regional direc­ -Stalin asserted the United ' {will be 'able to coinplete their tor of the American Friends Ser­ education here. .--•"'; spon Nationals dooming itself vice Committee which is The Displaced Student's Com­soring Mr. Sein's viBit, announced disint^ration with the^ mittee is urgently seeking contri-that the meeting will .be open to States leading' it toward war. i ,!f| butions of any kind toward the the public. -The U.S. statement said thai ",; upport of a displaced student. Mr. Sein will be honored at a Recommendations relating to I Monday's meeting of the Faculty of bachelor of science in medical "no man alive knows better thai*:^ Frost a-nd Jean Wesley, co-chair­luncheon Sunday by group : of graduate degrees and to the cre-j Council, to be held in Main Build-technology and a curriculum for Prime Minister Stalin whd Wiul^ a man of the committee, said that ation of a new science degree are ing 202 at 2:30 p.m. that degree has been called for behind the Communist aggression Austin and San Antonio Friends eash is-the greattestneed at this After six years on the Drag, ture on the• University. The arti- major legislation scheduled for' The establishment of a degree by the College of Arts and Sci­in Korea." It added that th* 'i at the home of Dr. Dan Stanislaw- time. . ele was written by Joe Whitley, ences. The degree is designed to "facts of Soviet armament and Stanley Depwe has many memo­skir. professor of geography. The a -former student and the first enabled the student preparing for responsibility for aggression an |These contributions, whether ries. The party photographer is luncheon will follow the regular lump sum on medical technology simultaneous-1too'well established "for th* ferutife made in one or a director of "Time Staggers On." meeting of the Friends at 11 a.m. closing the doors on February"28. Mri Depwe's prize picture in the ly to earn the bachelor of science'to be obscured by one more mi^Va' monthly basis, will go into the in the AFSC office in the YMCA. UT Group With reduced film allocations and article was a color shot of Jerry decree,degree, within the usual four-year statement. -"s'Vf Displaced Student's Fund. '' This higher photo Supply costs, Stanley Thompson, famed miler, and Tony Students attending the citizen- period, and to complete the tech­ fund will be placed under the las an eye toward defense work. Marshall; campus beauty. snip seminar being sponsored by nical training for certification by Attlee was the immediate object;direction of the committee and He was a precision-parts inspector Mr. Depwe began his campus tne Texas Methodist Student Move­ the Registry of Medical Technolo­of Stalin's attack in ' Pravda, supervised, by a faculty board. ment will hear Mr. Sein at 4 p.m. in the second World War. business in 1945 by selling action gists. speeded up delivery of *\eply to ~ J -S-The committee has contacted Monday. The place will, be Although the largest part of his shots of dramatic productions to an­ Recommendations from the Soviet charges of January 20 that ipocial, religious, professional, and nounced Monday at the noon lun­ lusiness has been covering fra­students in the Department of Set up to foster study and treat­When "sidetracking" occurs, edu­Graduate Faculty include the ad­Britain-had violated the 1842 An­ business organizations seeking cheon of the -seminar. ternity and sorority parties, many Drama. Since then, he has pho­ ment of mental hygiene problems, cational, religious, psychiatric; dition of civil engineering as one glo-Russian alliancfe. The British . whatever support each might of- The AFSC clothing committee of his pictures have achieved na­tographed every major campus the University Mental Health So­and other rehabilitation services of the fields of study for the de-' reply threw -the , entire postwar Several displaced students recognition. Ranger one excep­which has been recently organized will its first repair the damage, she ex­ record at Moscow;t-f]i^p®'^'';/^^ tional . As event and show, with ciety hold meeting musa gree of doctor of philosophy since b« brought to the campus .photogrftpher, he covered "The to gather clothes for Friends over­ tion. He was unable to attend of the semester at 8 p.m. Tuesday plained. it -is a standard subject and the Stalin termed ch^^V'A^ ugh the collective efforts of Cheat Compleat," an article de­the 1948 Coyrboy Minstrels be­seas will meet .with , Mr. Sein at in Texas Union 311, Vallie Sue staff present is adequate. leer In the House of Commons th|rt Mental disease is America's No. these organizations, Frost said. picting cheating practices of Uni­cause of an overflow of work. S o'clock in the AFSC office. -Thompson, temporary president^ Russia had not demobiliwd wit 1 health problem. At present, es­Also recommended -by-the The Foreign Student Advisory versity students in the" January, In-"addition to hir"irearw" with was increasing her armed force* ~ has announced. *'V Graduate Faculty is this creation Office has guaranteed flOO 1947, Ranger. When Life maga­the United Nations, Mr. Sein timates show that more than one as a "slfnder agaiftst the Swirt Dr. Bill L. Kellrassistant pro.-: of a degree master o"f fine, arts acholarships to be applied each zine printed the story later, Mr. worked in the Mexican Counsular family out of ten has a patient fessor-of educational psychology, semester for payment of .tuition. Depwe's pictures were used. Service and later in the Mexican in _applied_ art since a degree pro­-Londb^^ipl®Dy as the' new faculty sponsor. Pre­in a public mental institution.' gram of this type^has been estab­ Both campus and off-the-cam-When T. S. Painter Embassy • at.Washington, D, C. Miss erage of East-West tensions sine* Dr. and sently concerned with a training This represents, Thompson lished in most leading institutions. pus organizations have responded Dean Dorothy Gebauer visited Mr. Sein will leave the Uni­said*, about 61 per cent of all hos­the war, accused Russia among with contributions. Delta Delta Dinty Moore's as a publicity versity Tuesday for Sam Hous­program for counselors and thera­pitalized persons, or more Listed as minor legislation for other things of having • violated pists, he has had ex­ ton State College*He will be the ten years than action of the Council is schedul­the Yalta agreement by assisting Delta sorority, Delta Gamma sor­stunt for the Campus Chest in perience with ' emotionally-dis-600,000 people. ing the 1951 Thanksgiving holi­ ority, Chi Omega sorority, and November, 1948, Stanley Depwe key speaker in their Religious "Communist minorities, to sehpi turbed persons, both <>n _ ca mpus Ftom these figures, the care of days. A letter from V, T. Schu power" -throughout Eastern , Eu-­ Lutheran Student's • Association was on his liand. His photograph Dr. Hoffman Calls Emphasis program. ; and off. *. the mentally ill can be seen as hardt,. chairman of the Athletic rope, "aided and directed" 6r^»k and a group from the Protestant of the occasion appeared in The professional religious workers have Daily Texan. Austrian; Strong ' health consists of at­the commitnity project it is. Men­Council, to Dr. Milton R. <*utsch, CommuniBta in their civil war, vio» taining and maintaining a .sound tal health not an iwlated prob­secretary of the Faculty Couivctt, lated the Foitsd^n aceord ¥00*offered to take full sponsorship Life magazine, the Associated "Austria today is economically and alert mind, Miss Thompson lem, nor is its solution limited to asks that the Thanksgiving holi­ing off' the Soviet soiie pt iW •of one displaced student oach. Press, and, the Acme News Seip. a rich country and in'a free world said. It includes^; emotiottfl be­the families with patient* in hos­days be changed from the week Germany, attempted to Msfttt Other groups have made con­vice all wanted the picture. Tft*, tributions which will help sup­it could have a prosperous fu­ havior, thinking* feeling, and dor pitals, The very success of the end of the fourth Thursday, (No^ the economic-recovery of Wist Women's Christian Temperance program depends on widespread vember 22-25) to the week end Germany, set up the Berlin hlock­ port the students, Frost said. Phi Union, however, admonished Dr. ture," declared. Dr. George W. ing. M* sorority has offered * job Hoffman, assistant professor of In : Specifically, a. well-rounded education-and' co-operation in the of the fifth Thursday (Novem­ade, turned down, the Marshall* Painter and Miss Gebauer for treatment and prevention of such ber 29-December 2.)' Plan and made her satellites fol­waiting table* for a male student: "chaperoning a group of college geography, speaking before a A one-man show of works by mental hygiene program acta not diseases. This student^ to a honky tonk for an meeting of the Social Science Club Charles Umlauf, chairman of the only as a first aid stition to the action is requested to low suit and organized the Comin­ fortn "to .defeat tha recovery »: evening of debauchery." Later Friday. Art Department, are 'being ex­diseased mind, but also as a guide With better care and more mo­avoid the confusion which existed - the WCTU withdrew its condem­ hibited at the Mortimer Levitt to ' prevent such a breakdown. dern methods of treatment, psy­last year when the University's Europe." / -s Dr. Hoffman stressed three im­ Students Enter Thanksgiving holidays were held Senator Tom Connally (D-Teat)» nation, but upon the request of portant sourceB for Austria's new Gallery in New York City. chiatrists estimate that 40 per Dean Gebauer, Depwe re­The tenth cent all patients* eventually one week end and the Texas-A&M chairman of th» Senate Foreign Mr. economic independence: (1) it has show, his one-man of game was played on the follow­Relations Committee, said he had leased the picture only to the an-abundance of raw material exhibition, Consists,, of 43 gculp^ could be. released from institu­ "particularly noted" the Soviet Tickets On Sale Texan. (2) there is a surplus of skilled tures, all completed in the last tions," Miss Thompson said. Most ing Thursday. It is generally prime minister's statement that agreed among faculty members Two summers ago, Mr. Depwe's labor, and (8) it has. an impor­two years. It includes many of important of all, mental illness war is not inevitable, "ibaStntteh pictures of campus activities were tant steel industry. the religious subjects for which can be prevented. """ " ~r -~-that class attendance on the Fri* as there won't be an all-out war | Four entries have been made day and Saturday after the game used in a Varsity magazine fea­With the exception of coal, Aus>-Mr. Umlauf is best known and The'chief opportunities for pro­unless Stalin starts it.* | in the Intramural Oratory Gou­ was adversely affected. tria has considerable "deposits of which were introduced to the pub­ moting: good rtiental health lie ty test, reportS'Mrs. Jo McGhee, sec The College of'Fine Arts has Dr. Umstattd Presiding minerals, iron ore (second lar­lic last year through an illustrated Advance, sale of tickets for' the within the community. But, Miss | retary of the Department oJ annual March 2 meeting of the filed recommendations' relating |. Speech. More entries for -the con At Education Meeting gest stock in Europe) salt, talc* feature story in Life magazine. Thompson continued, equal oppor­to fees for art courses and re­5 UT Students Austin Texas Exes was announced gypsum, magnetite, oil and others. Mr. Umlauf, who joined the tunities are on the' campus also. | lestj /to be held Thursday in Dr. J. G. Umstattd, professor of Saturday by Everett Hujfcchinson, quirements for the bachelor' of During World War II, while the College of Fine Arts faculty in The Mental Health Society is one I Speech Building^Ol, are expected secondary education, is attending was leave -of The tickets, at $1 fine arts in drama which' will be Nazis occupied the country, they "1941, on absence $lub president. of them. | the seoretary added. education meetings in the East each, are on sale at Austin Sport­.brought up for 'action. ' ' ' improved the Austrian steel indus­last year with a Guggenheim Fel­ In Car Accident^ February 10-21. He is president Conquest " of * mental disorder Entries should be filed with ing-Goods, C&S Sporting Goods, try, and' used her raw materials lowship. of the National Society of College and rests on the ability to improve our Jr Mrs. McGhee in Speech Building Teachers of Edqcation. and production potential to nour­Born ii} South Haven, Mich., Reynolds-Penland, the Ex-lives, both, as individuals and as APO Invites Scouts^;' ^;Five UnfveMty ^identa Students' office, 115, before Wednesday. ish the German war machine. Umlauf studied at the Art Insti­Association in rowly escaped death Saturday «f-^'3 Dr. Umstattd is speaking on Texas Union. members of society* Miss Thomp­To Last Open Meeting -Each organization on the cam-Austria has now been occupied tute of Chicago and the Chicago son ternooft between Sain fibir^oa atad 'Evaluation of the Total School for last the All ex-students and UTr faculty explained. ivhen • i>us may enter three contestants. the six years by School of Sculpture. Segum the ear in, Program" at the National Associa­ and staff members who-wish to -Alpha Phi Omega,1 honorary Each contestant must prepare an United States, the Soviet Union, He is an exhibitor in leading they were ridii^f skidded on wet, ; any tion of Secondary School^ Princi­France, museums States, Light Rains •original speech on subject and ' England, and Dr. in the United attend are urged to purchase their Forecast Sunday service organization, will hold its pavement and overturned;.''' IhefS^ | 'from seven to ten minutes in pals annual convention February Hoffman believes that; this is no Canada, Europe, and .South tickets early -so that adequate pre­Occasional light is pre­last open meeting of the spring were enroute to Segu£n t« | rain • length. 10-13 in New York.City. • , longer necessary, because of Aus­America. His work is included in paration can be made for the fron­ semester at 2 pjn. Sunday i;n Art Tsehoepey a tJnhrerrity;, grad*|».:I dicted for Sunday by the Weather The winner of the contest will In Atlantic City he will serve tria's increased economic output. the permanent collections of the tier barbecue ** and dance, Mr. Texas Union $16. uate who left for motive dut#p^l?f I unfortunately Soviet -Bureau, with warmer and gen­"-The meeting is open to all for-| as chairman of a meeting of the But, the Witte Museum, San Antonio; the Hutchinson said. _ = the Marines Saturday n|^t,^ S|V fee awarded an intramural trophy American Association of. Colleges Union, in their zone, have been Instead of the usual dessert erally cloudy days Sunday and mJer Boy Scouts interested to join­ ;? kAd the organization which he te-Dallas, Houston, and Santa Bar-, -• Oecupai|ts of the' osr be batvthe change "of speed-, threw . " • debate at the Baylor University made the move desirable, said in Texas Union 301 Monday at petitions for a student referendum held March ?, A meeting of in­ -Tlie last scheduled ttyonts for later than Wednesday. His office the' car into a skid. The auto ,% -Tournament., " 'm the Round-Up Revue were held is in the Modern Languages Build-? Capt. John L, Hall, Volunteer Air 4 p.m. to have their pictures made on University membership in NSA. terested students will be called dowii the road and?1hrto, mMiss Kosbirgf was yarded a Reserve liaison officer for this for the Cactus, Charlie Robinson, The petitions, which need 422 Wednesday at ( pjaiu^fti Texaa ing 207, or be reached' it overturnied^i'The* Saturday, Mouipn Law, instruc­he can where V" gold cup after placing first in at his home, 8-5841. area. ?. chairman, has announced. signatures to be constitutional, union 316. , ,, did not stop. 1 * ^Women's Extemporaneous Speak-tor in drama who is in charge of "We do not believe that stu­ "ffig. Others participating in the dent ' opinion represented the.show, aaid Saturday that he was Regain. They 'rettely>­ fl -trip to the Qrand National Totir-up. of-talent and we should have the students are ignorant of the fi ,»-" nament March 21, 22, and 24 at a good show, representative of flieta concerning NSA, we plan mm _4 v; |^ Martha Washington College of to have speakers at the Wednes­ the student body," Mr. Law aaid. }: i,'Virginia ft F^derigi- txs'j day meeting who will give both ||MoUy Moffett, Mr. Law's assis* Ofi wi:WSmMSli aides of th?» major iasue,1'. she their "Hawaii Ca"-M ^jox^'^^^who ^^7^ mmstJ owlory ox ex^Sp^ Mrange thing* can happen to Jo McNlss wa*"^arfyiirg Tara-leirrncoffee and doughnuts from a reprw^ntative of the League of Py^vlenaly mm »il »y raneous speaking are invited to day afternoon during the try-outs, keet blue-crepe paper, Jerry Ren-8 to 5 o'clock on Friday after­Campni Most Potentials(?) aaid worked separately for joining people who walk up the fourteen ss^ join the Women's Speech Work-"the turn-out was better than ax* n6r carried red, Eddie _Walker noons. . . '•%{<*¥»> •" >' he had been ' appointed to ask NSA. :JThe diiilerenee was iae the Charlie the "V-p, " steps. just inside the front door #4»hop. They should ct the Clothes-for-Korea Drive ^ Law said it would be announced are,' or you can drop in to chat ly associated with tW little red students earned in «t green eanoa be bragged; justifiably, you un-spring elections, ?>%4 liikt^'>peroi with Iioyd Hand, student presi­man with horns. He said the hard­and deposited it in th» middle of , 1! Olcutt to get in toxkh with Mr. Law not in front of you, Jeati Welhausen was prewding In^qharlwtoB lessor&& »W. tolg «ni that a aew ap^ Thursday y ' i * mm. Sanders,. secretary of the spon- And there it la—the only place over the coffee pot.; A boy in ,» Dave Dunn, eurrently of Aus-er system was being installed.r «• Spieell'fia Wm I$ •oring > Austin Friends ^Service on th* campus Where you can go green shirt .who Mentiflpd him-tin,, was reading a life magaifine A good 'one,* she laid. thec&^ftwM -a^od^e»^'*Prda«ce~i«HrtH»-»hef 1 rT"l';-1 irill P sp<^ February 'jj^MB^T^iiofiyiiioiii. Iffhyjmm. liSIaTlw toffi! "TyfdSTfa irtiat was started to say that the Free Dance had are four or five D. Dunns In the Okrt&tiM, living units, and clubs— ?«i*d witti 148,469 running baliis dat* Committee permission. to log in S«n Francisco oh a lo mad Is 1949/th* University Bureau «f Men^m Weeiwinster] change Coffee Time to the morn* Rodent diwAoWtd^lKiPt Aod the Mk'mmA aet • *-§m&5R M •' f.3" ^w tJ if*. » H K« V^*i> f sW * *;%•£. '-& i V £> •^if-C'ti s w^;;iWiiii(irtiiifi|* " ^ 1i' f""J-j•"•• ^a O^IMl #£** l^<--fKi( >**f #i PGA to Penalize v 1 u»r *' By BRUCE ROCHE WBr • ' -r V ?***% Sjwrt* Staff r \'Y$r AWOl US Golfers i r-i* *• # ' 5®%!^ Gorgeous Gussie Moran 'ei|ht.-No'M''"';"" especially "overweight, *F JEAN LIPSCOMB ifcrs. Addie and Segura "made w* shorts fiiiaha up a swift game.. Then-the Calf- straightened costume ~ MEXICO CITY, J)eb. 17.—(^P) , the /brief .: &%Jake Kramer boopad .out short work of Kramer and Miss sweater. They barely got warmed fornian iced away the set and The gorgeous one elainied she Argentina's Robert de Vicenso that she WAS wearing?, admired her-needed to go on a diet, bfttjth»" » ids mf *•**«, hia powerful over-Moran 6-2, 6-3, in. the mixed up or a lock'of hair oat of place Mfttoh 6-1. Utayed in front Saturday with a *eW in the mirror, and answered vital statistics without hesitation* '.SmM,-«n* Ms deadly „wIII« to doubles nightcap natch, before Mrs. Addie had tucked After a ten minute intermission, - par 72 in the Mexican National thequestion. • I'm 6'8"; weight 180 ponndiA trounce Pancho Segura >-7, 6-1, Bobby Rings' touring raqUeteers away her fifty-seventh victory in the gals and boys trotted back onfe taiort tonus 2,060 hohumming cus-are billed as the world's best is 88 starts. court in fresh togs. Orange and Open Golf Tournament. r --''I think Texas men are, won­Wps. 86; waisj, 26; bust, 86/'. The Argentine Open champion ; Suturday tennis but Saturday night's ex­Four«time" winner 'of the na-white playsuit for the loyal Gits* derful. I guess I like their Texas Her rich brown htflr" had a pink has 207 atrokes for the three dsys bow in it. Her green eyds flashed t^fbt* v • -•• hibition left the crowd lukewarm. iional singles title, Mrs. Addie sie, leopard-skin shorts for Paul* 1 J IwenW play so far. . " » '* when she remarked; 5 • The fan* perked: up wbttaever Was It tennis or a fashion show? played her usual steady game. ine, and long white trousers'for ."Are they any better than men Ceitww Gussie Moran paraded Miss Morari came out for her She never hit a shot as hard as the men. Vic Ghexzi is in second place anywhere else1M "College audiences ara the with 211, on his 69 Saturday. singles match, attired in' a brief ahe can but waited for -Gussie The mixed doubles provoked a But best." And she's played befor* «n court, but the glamour gal Tony Holguin of San Antonio, the Well, she didn't think so. quite a few audiences, eoUege antf beared''*? PiauUne Beta Addie #1. satin dress. Mrs. Addie wore sil-to make the "errors. Gussie ob­few laughs, some cat calls, and they were still wonderful. liged with four double faults to a few early exits among the au­defending champion, shot a 70 for otherwise, since she's been batting 212." , , Her attention turned to the the tennis ball around. ^ Pauline's one. dience. One fan advised "A little she wearing. costume was Jimmie Demaret carded 75 for What about marriage? She's notMiss Moran opened the match sportmanship, "Gussie," when, her a 214 total. He is tied with Agus­ by serving a double fault; she Irish rose to the aurfac^, "I started the tour With ten contemplating it right now and- ended the match with a double tin Martinez, the highest Mexican of these." She brushed some ima­has no 'one in mind. But »yieB« Another asked, "What time\do in the tournament.-~ ; TWO-TIME letter winner al ginary dust dff the costume. "Now tually, she figures, to tie th« knoi| V*.' -t" '" - fault. In between these two im­you get off tonight, Gufesie." The Demaret, talking in the locker third baso for the Texas Long-I have only three. Two I like; this portant points, both she and Mrs. match ended 6-2, 6-3 as Segura rooms later, threatened to sue the horns is Frank Kana, Weimar one I don't." ' " Addie showed brief flashe&,of the and Mrs. Addie tied the series. PGA "for-everything they've got" good tennis they are capable of. tad who is one of two lettsrmen-. ^Tfxas weather siirpHsM her a Was it tennis or was it a fashion StUrvTCU, 54-49 if he and other United States bit. She expected sunny skies and . Kramer put another notch in show? ' infielders left from the 1950 players are suspended. . The PGA amisTON, Feb. 1?*—m— tory. ( . his racket, number S3, in his 74- NCAA championship nine hot weather. Instead: at 2006 Speedway ordered its members not to t play Rice's Owls knocked TCU out of The Owls, buried in last place match-old series with the two- "I've never been colder in my in the Mexican tournament "this SPEEDWAY BARBER SHOP til* undisputed Southwest Confer-in the Conference, went ahead handed slugger from Ecuador. The life," she stated. ;: . ' «nc« basketball lead Saturday with seven minutes remaining in See-sawing first set was charac­Cage Scores year, saying it was not a major Frosh Netters Defeat You would think that hopping Across from Intrauaral Fid4 »• tournament and conflicted with night with a shocking 64-49 vte-the first half and held the lead teristic of the men's games. When San Angelo High around a'tennis court,would keep the Harlingen Open. The. PGA her slim. But Gussie complained the rat of the game, TCU never his Big Game rolled, Kramer CCNY 96, Temple 71. may fine Or suspend the players The University,freshmen netters got closer than three points to the rolled. When Segura boomed in Kansas 56, Iowa State 54. ^hodisob^yecttHeorder, — — defeated San Angela Higk.School that she had gained weight. CA^iTOL you 90+ Owls after itice had gone: ahead. Ks much improved ie^e.feathered Rlee Frosh 73, Wharton JC 53. United States players oii the Freshman Courts here —One glance m her trlhi figure Other Baylor Bears Lose The score was tied four times a drop shot, or slugged past'Kra­(2) Okla. A&M 62, Detroit 37. and you couldn't see that she was nodded agreement. He said he Saturday in five out of six "" 1-DAY in the, first half and the lead mer, Big Jake could only shake (1) Kentucky 86, Tennessee 61. matcher. ; J , ^­ Would play in "Mexico "whenever changed hands six times!. Bice held Over He COM, 15 Feat! his head. Pancho served at least <4) Columbia 90, Harvard 63. Jim Pruitt of the Yearlings de­ He added To Porkers, 55-44 a 25-20 halftime advantage and I can qualify." it is NE^r YORK, Feb. .17— went to the server until the six-(8)-Bradley 71, Drake 61. The eight recalcitrant American i taking the match, 6-1, 6-0. Mike first major mile run in 4:09.4 at tverythiiig for your Camera backs a 55-44 basketball victory it cautiously the „rest of . „ --Kramer again Missouri 41, Colorado defied and whitewashed in the National AAU track and field the way., teenth game when- 36. tl^e PGA Northcutt golfers who Welch over Baylor Saturday night. Joe . McDermott's championships Saturday night. Free Camera Rental 23 points | broke Pancho's and took the set I Lon Morris 58, Baylor Frosh 51. went to Mexico to play in the love sets, 6-0, 6-0, ' Three minutes before the ertd, paced the Owl attack. 9-7. Oklahoma 4&, (3) Kansas State Mexican National Open in open The only Yearling to lose a m Baylor trimmed the Hogs' lead to • In-that last game, Pancho 46. set was Curtis Wittington who conflict with the Rio Grande Val­ 46*48 on Harris' shot over the head TCM (49) played his game of old—scramb­Iowa 78, Wisconsin 60. ley Open have been penalized. split two sets with Manitzas—- 8 and 16 mm Movie Projectors Sports Notice of Heeter, but Miller came back f| ft pf tp ling, retrieving sort of gatne-r-and (11) Illinois 70, Purdue 65. They won't know the costs until h-lost 4-6 in the opener, but took and films for rent to put it on ice with a drive-in Reynolds, f 4 2 S 10 4 <6) Indiana 94, Northwestern 63. next week. the second match, 6-4. There tie pf will a rheetlnjr the *'T" bucket The star guard suffered Fromme, f . 4 -5 5 13 (9) N.C.State 68, North Carolina The PGA Tournament Commit­In the only doubles match Akioelation Wedti««dajr( February 21, «t CAPITOL • a painful knee injury on the play McI«eod", c . ?. 4 4 8i-ruled " the second set 7 o clock in the "T" Room in Gregory Kramer 53. tee, meeting in Harlingen, took Pruitt and Tommy Springer de 2 Gym. New lettermen will be; initiated PHOTO SUPPLY that may keep him out" of his „—.— .....4 1 9 Swain, g all the way. He ran up a three TWC 64, Midwestern 54. the action but would not reveal j feated Kolberg and Walker, 6-3, into th« Association at this meeting.team's important Monday night Ethridge, g _i_2 1 1 5i game lead before Pancho served Manhattan 64, Colgate 59. the penalty. . 16-1." JOHNNY CRAWFORD '2428 Guadalupe 8-571T game with Texas at Austin. -Knox, f 0 0 0 0 _ President •k J. Taylor, g —— 1 2 0 4! iSvV ' ARKANSAS CSS) Kilpatrick, f 0 0 1 0 53S&&. f, ft pfLambert, f -1 1 Totals „17 15 16 49 wr Price, 0 2 RICE (84) j Smith, f —». 1 4 U ft pf tp: Hester, e _ s S 18 Gerhardt, f 8 1 4 7 Ambler, « _ 4 1 0 White, f_ 2 0 8 4 Miller, g — 5 0 14 McDermott, e . 8 7 3 23| Hess, g 1 4,4 Chiids, g , 8 1 5 7 1 4 2 8iTeague, g 4 1 4 9 ; 9 ­ Williams, * 2 1 6 Tighe, g 2 0 1 4i .-Totals ..:i _• 19 17 18 65 Grawunder, g ,.„.o 0 0 0! BAYLOR <44) Bellamy, g „ 0 0 0 0; ft *P -r T'T^fTr-T '* pf Totals 22 10 20 54 8 3 4 9 «v 4 Halftime score—Rice 26, TCU Johnson, f .--'4 4 12 U Sparkle Tone" 20. »a*ie, f i— 1 1 4 3 Free throws missed—Gerhardt Hatrii, -e -—^2 0 6 4 2 6 2, White, Grawunder 2, Reynolds Starkey, "... 1 4 2, McLeod 4, Knox, McDermott. Quillen, e „ i,, I., 0 0 0 6 • Hovde, gr f „.„',"-„„X; 0 I 1 2 GABARDINES Carrington, g —__ $ 4 i 10 • ~ SWC STANDINGS Fleetwood,. g 0 0 1 0 W L Pel.; . Totals ±_ 14 18 28 44 T-,». «' 3 .667 , Halftime ' score: Baylor 22, TCU-..... 6 3 .6671-(An Entirely New Concept SL Arkansas 17^ .A&M , 6 3 .667! Free throw* RUsse: Hester 2, RMU ' K 4 .556, Killer, Williams, Smith S, Price, Arkansas maimi ... 5 . 4 .556] in Cloth Decoration) Johnson, Hovde, Starkey, Mul-Rice 2 7 .222 4 litts % Carrington 2, Baylor —' 2 ' 8 .200! it §?v: i <* Five-sport Schedule <, 4 For Gals This Week Fine, lustre finished gabardine . .. loomed with cx4 By BETTY SEGAL. Vmmh'4 Intr&imrtl WrUtr • • * • Four women** intramural tour-491; Delta Gamma, 427; and Al-flecks of contrasting colored yarn that brightens paments—badminton, bowling, pha Gamma Delta, 860. shufflebOard, and tennis doubles Keglers from last year again fhe cloth with irregular pattern work. You'll like —-wiH be played this week, .Mixed entered in the tournament are l badminton tournament, is in the ADPi, now in second place in the final round, with mixed softball winners bracket; and tri-Delt, this new fabric the moment you see it, and to matches to begin Tuesday. first place. Third and fourth Badminton singles have re­places last, year went to AChiO j 7 ' . ^ add to its handsomeness, HYDE PARK has ceived 171 entries. When the tour­and Delta Zeta. nament begins Monday, June Preliminary games will be r'f> Knox of Gamma Phi Beta; who played Wednesday for shuffle-tailored it into * smart patch pocket suit that's •i X W*s the, lust place winner last board. The tournament beginsspring, wiQ be seeded first Three Thursday. None of last year's win­ other outstanding players are Ag­ just the right weight for year 'round wear in ners are back. nes Amelung, Gamina Phi Beta, A.hundred and twenty-six girls who wis runner up last year; 01-.are entered tennis in doubles Texas. wyjt Davieg, Kappa Alpha Theta; which begins Thursday. Those par­jU»B bmket Those g 6 p.m. for atcnety in Wom- s3st.. STEEL GREY- HMMi* Imaeket and ^t*a Gym'iE. ^elhninary toffinuk Chi Omega,-fcbsway 1— • . -. .* „ . 1 d ««>fe CM Kappa Kap. % The second round of mixed illil :|>#.jC5aau»a, W9} Guam* Phi Be^k, bowling |« doe Monday* 1,4. 1 wl P#sS? M —^ f1 H'Z i SEE THESE. 1^-n 34* i 'JMsdj 1 ^2 t 'Li1 IN WB -r^JI t/, JJI j SONMitfWb murtnm. k * W Sii p ft College Style i- rt*' & akM 0biKtm of flhe A.V rJZ mm cowftaeaa IMiiM m iWMlliMiS gMt • > vu. Smaller Enr 1 By BRUCE for*instance, 398 players' ROCH£ |f« The Texas Longhorns will at-' Led by forward, Jack BroWn, Texas fouled attempting to teal Tesan Intra*turn/ Coordinator^' • entered table tennis this' year. . tempt to ehange their losing ways vrho tallied 18 points, SMU the hill. The Longhorn commit­ < If you read the murals,column Monday night when they tangle This compare# with 341 last year jumped into tibe lead and never ted 26 personal fopls; SMU '•v.. last week,-you noticed, no doubt, Vw i L* anil 438 in 1949, ^ with the Arkansas Raiorbacks in relinquished it despite Longhorn scored on 12 of the mtscues, our attention to the female figure. »*' Handball moved HipJii»rer last Gregory Gym after losing their pressure late in the first Half and missed only three, and took the Xhe story 'on -women* intramurals year. Two hundred , and ninety second straight Conference game early in the second half. ball out cQouafa the reat of the that is. four entered in I960; 312 signed to the SMU,Mustangs, 'B4-41, in BrowoL astounded the packed So today, mens intramurals fi­ ik up for 19S1 competition. Perkins Gym in ; Pallas Friday se goal from be­^t^rkansas.lla­ louse with a field Mo^lfaf; gures demand a-little attention. * "Wow. compare hind juftt sorbacks move into Austin for a enrollment fi­ 'might. mid-court as the first And the first thing thafr , at­ 4 gures. Last year, therfe were 12** half ended.v%Tames Dowies had crucial game with the Steers— tracts one's attention is the "gen­955' men in -the University. Tl»« Yearling* will play Tarle­ dropped ion"® In for Texas with crucial for both teams. The boys Ml tM Stkto Co0*|t Monday tt 6:00 eralization: male enrollment may Though no exact figures are av&iU only seconds left but Brown Ye- from the Oxarks, after a misera­ '• p.m. and the Stews will meet the be decreasing* but entries in in­ itf atle for 1951, about DOOO-ef-l&a-Hog* at 8:00 in Gregory Gym, tali&ted with something like a 55-ble early-season start, bave been tramurals over at Gregory.Gym ,. male sex are now in school here. foot basket.„ doing what was predicted of them.itf •.i is holding its own,-and in some A comparison of the first post­Inability to hit the basket from Don Klein and Jim Dowies were After winning only, one of their actually going Pp. '•the field cost Coach Jack Gray's >fc war year in, intramurals, 1945* tiie offensive 'fireworks for the first four Conference games, the 46, with thiB -year, reveals that cagers again Friday as the Steers Longhorns as each scored nine Hogs suddenly eaaght fire and $r !t» 1950-51 participation is much could score only 14 field goals. . points. Klein, center and defen­have won three straight, including . As against TCU Monday night, greater, and with about the same sive. ace,;dropped in four field a victory over the second-place male enrollment, too, when the Frogs romped past the goals and one free throw while Aggies. ft LonghoTns, 49*34* the Steers were In tennis singles* this year leads Dowies sunk three field goals and With their regular center, Bob playing eateh-np bftll against three charity tosses. 410*1111football, 16-15-884;Jiand-JACK BROWN j Ambler, recovered from, early Co«ch Doe Hayes',Pony squad. Pancho season Schedule 5 Meets ball singles, 312-127; handball Womack, guard and Injuries, the hill country •fe :: ^ :v : doubles, 340-142, and. golf sin­playmaker for the-Steers, made team will be after revenge for 4 The University wrestling or­gles* 141-85. And the list is longer, three baskets from the field and their 60*42 loss to Texas early in •if one free throw. George Scaling, the season. Also Arkansas stillganization, sponsored by the Uni-v. The success of the intramural UT Swimmers OwrT Texas' leading scorer in Confer­has a chance for a tie-in the Con­|wwity of Texas Sports Asso­program this year A. A. Rooker, T««, you can save money by having your portrait made from ence play, was held to one field ference race if th$y win all their ciation for Men, has five meets assistant director, attributes to scheduled for the year. three factors. goal, but he tallied six free remaining games.-— CACTUS NEGATIVES now on file at Koen's Studio on fink throws to offset his bad luck from J On March 8; ttte'y tangle with First, the director of the pro­ Drag. This jt a wonderful opportunity to save money and giv« outside.. . . ^ " SMU (54) the Dallas Y aftd HouSton ^ itere gram, Berry Whitakfer, has been in a March 191-4. ' "If it takes records Wprove tHaT combinedThey woifnthe events Jumping into, an-early lead and " trirtf jr someonea-ftneportralt of youttetf. triangular meet. On running intramurals since Murphy, t . •. „i_ something is good, then the Texas and placed a second in 11. , maintaining a stout defense, $MU Brown, -t • • • ­10 they meet Texas A&M at Col­Taking two years out _ during swimjning; team e a n. provide -This" w/an when Bob Oone tted Holm, © managed to stay well in-front Of Freeman,'t • lege Station. A&M fell before the World War I, Mr. Whitaker has enough records to prpve that point all-American -Bob Tarlton's 100­ well that the t — University matmen last year. the Longhorns, so LOt». i., been at the helm for 35 years. to anyone. yard backstroke record of 1:02.9 a 29'19 lead at the Galey, g Ponies had |The regional junior National Second, mens intramurals has set in 1935—the oldest one on Mitchell, e ' Foj instance, out of nineteen half. Despite Texas closing the Owen, f. • " XJ meet at New Orleans will a separate senior manager for SoutWest Conference champion-, the books. Eddie Gilbert set a gap, Brown's leaping push shots .Wheeler, .g • w their attention on March IB, promotion. This includes personal ship meets since 1932, University 440-yard freestyle mark of 4:56.5. kept SMU out of« danger, v -Si 12 15 S4 Totals YOURSELF 6,. and 17. The winners of that contacts and the like. Johnny Crawford posted the other tankmen have swam their way to Then in the second half Derrell TEXAS (41) •••.. •• -J 1 • ;-;­ meet will go to the national"meet. Third, the majority of men now and with record in the 200-yard backstroke ft ft pt t» * ^ M t seventeen , crowns tied Murphy, Mustang forward, got the • Dowlrn, f .» S 1' 1 In Houston on March 24, the in the University are younger and Texas A&M for-one in 1944. Their' with a time of 2:80.2. range and "kept the Longhorns be­Falk, t _1 No need to rit for^ndtfuii' ^ University group will oppose the are single. The veteran, Who com­only losss in the nineteen years of The Longhorn squad can also hind the eight-ball, as he scored Klein, e Z ture. It (ust fakes a "momentM "Womaclc, Houston Y. No date has been set prised most of the male popula­swimming competition was, to boast of the two ail-Americans with set shots and tip-ins. His ef­Scaling, gtor a match with the Corpus tion up to this year, got his share A&M in 1945. It was lost by only that are now on the team—Skippy forts for the night netted him 14 Morgan, g -to select the sixo pietwro and Viramontes, g Christi Naval Air Station. The of exercise in the service." a four-rpoint margin, 80-84. Browning and Eddie Gilbert. points on five field goals and four Black, k number of copies you want;meet will .be held In Austin. The Longhorn swimming team Browning is a 3-meter and. 1-from the free throw line. Cobb, g Scarborough, f made. Coma by early Monday • tlie University wrestling team has set eight Conference records meter diver and his teammate is &MU began a semi-freeze after Raniopher. ( has five returning lettermen; Har­Intramural Schedule out of a total of 13 events. Texas, a freestyler. Gilbert's best record ten minutes of the second half morning and place your order; Total* __U W t# 71 old Jindrich, "Warren Jindrich, tankers gained • three of -these in the 220-yard freestyle event is had elapsed and made the Long­Halftlme *cor«: SMU 19, ^Texai Take advantage of this Omawl MONDAY 19. , jack Turner, Sidney Kacir, and records last season. 2:10.2. horns play catch-as-catch-can. As Free throw* mtsaed: Mun>hy, Holm, WATER POLO Wales Madden. In the 1950 Conference meet Also the backbone of the squad, Lutx, Dowiea 2, Klein, Womack, Seal­opportunity to SAVE! J|| .7 o'clock a result, the Ponies benefitted as ing, Cobb. Returning squadmen are Mor-Delta1 Too Delta v». Beta TAeta PI. . held at Waco, the Longhorns were Coach Hank Chapman, was an all- BOXING AND WRESTLING Gilmore and Carrol Conn. Training periods for . boxer# .ana winners all the way. They racked American" in 1940. He is also a Ask also about application pi<|| 11 Crenshaw coaches the wrestlers -are held -every Monday, up a record total of 128 points to former captain of the Longhorn turos from Wednesday, and Friday from 4:80 to 11® for SMU, A&M, and Baylor team. • Furgol Takes Lead In Harlingen Golf Open ng team. 5:80 o'clock in Gregory Gym. HARLINGEN, Feb. 17(/F)— urday to make his score 202. He Lean, lainky Marty Furgol of Long Slipped to^ second place. • Beach, Calif., shooting for the In third place as the field looked cash-he needs so badly, turned in toward Sunday's final 18 holes and a blazing sirt-under-par 65 Satur­the $2,000 first money was Max ."Wo Make hacas' n -4 Evans, who« carved out a 66 Satr day to lead the $10,000 Rio 2346 Guadalupo^t^l^^^ SWione 8-70$: KRUGER'S OFFERS THE BEST urday afternoon. Grande Valley Open with a 54­ hole scorevof 200. A stroke back at Z04 were A1 Brosch and Lloyd Mangrum, the DIAMOND VALUES IN AUSTIN Furgol came from a tie for sec­ pre-tournament favorite. Broschond -place to overtake Charles shot a 66' while Mangrum had a (Chuck) Klein of San Antonio* 69. leader Friday; k We sold out the first time we More eaglet were sprayed over Klein fired a two-under-par 69 the course. .One was by Klein at advertised these gorgeous over the windy, barren 6,095-yard the number Brogued.. like it/ 3 hole while EvansHarlingen Municipal Course Sat-­ did it on number 18 where heDiamond Rings! We've just rammed down a 40-foot putt after; getting on with two shots. ^ * ••• received a second shipment! RED BALLTAXI Furgol was pleased as a school boy with his first shave* Here'a proof that beautiful diamond rings "I'm not a good pacer," he com­OUR FIN need not; bo expensive I Compart Kroger mented. "Yesterday, I-was lead­j * r * Mt? %v«i ~ ing. Today I came from behind^ values and see how you save t OpenExquisite simplicity! S'oll»' It makes a lot of difference." a Krufor"account * * . ju»f "Charge itl**" A year to pay! taire and matching band, His putting was much better 14-Karat gold mounting,! „ and he was sinking long ones. He: sank three 12-footers. for. birdies. RADIO CONTROLLED Klein had trouble with his put­ting although it was a 20-footer Pay $1 Weekly Buy Diamonds Like that brought him the eagle on 3 6-9194 after he got on with a drive and"mi •A The Experts Buy Them a three iron. -x.. ¥j A'MJwa MW In a collection of loo** diamond* you can best determine the cut...the color.. . the clarity! Buy like a diamond expert :..see your diamond before It's mounted! Your mounting can be individually (elected ~ 1 ^ (<-5 and your diamond set in our shops the same day I , * faf? tK NO INTEREST Pick up your phone. NO CARRYING CHARGE Dial 2-2475, I brilliance . . . at modo*t cost I Compare! Take •it full year to pay! Tell the Classified ' mm* Pay $2 Weekly Ad Taker what •** you want to say In r Jt£ rA^\J — t ^ r!V TJ hTf 1 t 'r" T, " .Jig. and your ad will t9 lights muely. and attractively ttacad.• Magnifi<*nt beauty) Largf "iis1i nkAtt* Q/1AAAA Editor- varsities with about 900,000 stu­ways is debatable. ROBERTCANTU, enr brother j&e>. /: The Assembly has not yet had time to consider1 dents. It has' no' rival-as thtf' But Gordon Llewellyn said At the "Ten Most Hatsd" fr*t«r­ V^it, btrt students who are interested should let their : spokesman, of . Ainerica!*, college the Assembly meeting that NSA jsnity. and ^be most prolific Firing'' made $40,000 profit from these j^Usemblymen know: ,4 j Line contributor of the year, • I. f J 1$ was formed inl&48 at Madi­toura la^t year—typical of the I";'! The results of public concern about th? Assembly- ^-Saturday signed the petition to cell son,-Wisconsin. Tlie legislature irresponsible charges againfct lor a student vote on tJT entrance already clear after a two-week drive. The stu (or Student Congress) meets NSA, The entire NSA budget last into the .National Student Associa­ l^fent Ijtfamiakfirs are out on the open field where tion. every summer; it is made up of year was $83,000; TOTAL NSA delegates from member schools. income from such travel abroad in Jffreryo&e can see them, and It is clear that issues r~ Old Bob, as firm a Texas iso­ XJT would he entitled to seven— 1948-49 was $718.83. lationist as you"ll find» will prob-' receive careful consideration.' the maximum far any sehool. ­ ably vote against NSA—but the (It was Gordon who said th^ The unreasonable three-year PT requirement— fact that he's for' a referendum There ate 24' regions in NSA. students weien't educated because r^pfwhlch as yet has not been publicly defended by should just about clinch a student Texas belongs , to Region T— of Texan omissions. Specifically, NSA vote on March 7. Texas and Oklahoma. he charged the Texan hid "not member of the Women's PT department or any- We have been pro-NSA all year,,. What does NSA stand for? printed" negative reports received ®-f„^»ne taking PT, in .spite of the Texan's frequent With that clear at the start, we ; ^mment^ahould be; modified by the end of the, want to present, to the many stu­ dents who are asking, what we think are the issues and the argu­ Girls who want to take three years—or four, for ment. ^ *. •tlthat matter, should, of course, be allowed to do sof You won't *be limited to our. to require the "gentler sex" to take a year more ? views. Student Government is fix­ 1? -ing up the pro's and con's, and •fe#jPTtftan men has no basis in physioiogyor. logicLand-™.-.. the Texan will -print them when­ is highly inconsiderate of the rights of junior girls study time and treatment *s more mature stu-. ||||^^ v .. .. . 1^; ' It is hoped that the Assembly will take afirm ^litand on this matter and press ftnra publiedeeisien :iby the Physical Training for Women officials. || It is strange how a wrong can stay unrighted for m :'!*o iong. r-: '4>-THE HEALTH CENTER protest is now virtual­ ly unanimous. ' ^ The Faculty Council unanimously asked for fac­|||ulty use of the Center. The TJniversity chapter of the American Asso­i^ciation of University Professors unanimously asked I for faculty use. ' ' The Student Assembly concurred with these two >ups unanimously. The Student Opinion Survey indicated 9-to-l stu­ #4Jjdent sentiment for faculty use and 8-to*l sentiment' ^i"tor a reversal of the "emergency treatment only'* -policy Of the Health Center, which is obviously un-. ,^der pressure from local doctors and the AMA. In the face of this overwhelming protest, how can Dr. Painter and the Administration continue restrictive policy ? The noble drive for a new medfcal healing place has provided an excellent hospital for students. Butte fife* the clinical service is still sorely inadequate. What's to be done? by* w SUMLMoul Jt? WHAT DOES the'Administration think about a University-wide plan to exempt A-average students from finals In all courses with two or more regular Hquizzes? *-. " This practice is already practiced, in Chemistry and has been a stimulant to study and a reward industriousness.­ ' Such a scheme would not work in Law School or, for most courses, in Graduate school. -­ Another alternative would be to let students with A averages on the regular quizzes write a paper in place of the final on some aspect of. the course that particularly interested them. — —­ That plan would let the student draw creatively from the course, as well as spit out facts and dates an examination. m*.What say? ** ' -• ' • • -• > • •' :• •••• »""•:• t * »tud«ot o«w»i»p«r or Tb« U*l*«r*ity at Tana, tin «v«rr monfos «*eept Monday «nr>t*<* ** ***" *** *#th*r on or other nsi*«rattr irffleiaia. i -fi Mrtanjl aa tarowl rli«« matter Uetotoar is, (HI at tk* Pott Omi* at klliMtia. tw.wMlkr Act of Mateli «. U7B . ^ ^ MKW9AVm MUESS WliUK SESV1CE -I . t^rpaa m akMtwtraly asutlcd to tha a of ipoflttMog, origin paUttM lwehk-' ^"wbUeatioa pi alTothar amttar^»afate SiitSS^Sr M I* *4.v aawnwwtt^ tw National AdwttolM by Natlaaai Ajyartidii^i m .. Serrica. foe,, Col{«f« PwblUbara Jtapraaaotativa . €?• MHOB A»a. , , uM Turk N V 1-* 'Chtea^o^ Mmum ^ Ua A*s«I«a ~,Sm 4taSSU 0* MEMBE* (Wtlto Fraaa AW-*WHrtra» Pacamafcar SUBSCRIPTION RATES owmttu auUad Top Ten^K » been covered by rose-rimmed spec-mi li,,> Ann C&mrtM^fc tacles end conditioned by my deep ^Jlurdocb Parse#!' affection . and loyalty to all mm PpR fl|fS ISSUE Americans, veiled by <£he gossa­ dent referendum on the question of Whether or not the University should join NSA. It was said at", the meeting that those who have signed the petition are not edu­cated on the pro's and con's of NSA. The students of this Uni­versity will become educated, be­fore the question is brought to. vote.' I hope that when this question comes to a student vote, there will be a large number of stu­dents voting. In that way we will be truly showing how the average fctudent feels. I'll go into no long diserta.­tions on the why's and where­fores' of NSA. I just want to urge all students to become in­terested..'' in this :vital issue and learn what you will shortly vote on. Whether it' be pro or con, get out, and vote and show that you are interested in your Uni­versity's issues. SHIRLEY KLEIN • MAYBE SO To the Editor: We, Of Athenaeum: Literary So­ciety, take, exception with your article of today entitled "Rusk Literary; Oldest J^n's Society St'l> for Men Only." Athenaeum. not Rusk, is the oldest men's society ,on the tfni­vrsjty of Texas campus. Our claim is based On the recorded minutes of the first meeting 'in the Hall of Athenaeum in .1883. Your reporter can look up the facts in the Archives. We will be glad to direct her to the source of information. Athenaeum requests, a retrac­tion of this unfounded statement —"Oldest Men's Society"-pertain­ing to Rusk. Also, Athenaeum would never consider the motion of .letting girls, women, or any on^ of the female species become a mem­ber of the Hall of Athenaeum, because our traditions are even olaer than those of Rusk. THEODORE G. MILLER if ' RAPE OF DEMOCRACY To the Editor; , I am a Filipino student with five months residence in the Univer­" aity and } confess that I have not been interested nor have I par­ " ticipated in the affairs of the Student.. Government, because then, I was so busy being /home­tick and besides, just like any foreign student, I had a lot of ad­justment and grinding to do with my studies. But since last week's Assembly: . meeting I have heard NSA men­tioned often. Last night, driven by , will start the initiative in this movement, he will be amazed at the abounding ingenuity of the students in project planning. / Lloyd, also stressed that unless the budget is sure and guaranteed he will not attempt to venture into this as yet unexplored area. There are so many things in life that one can never be sure of. , During wars, for example, one is willing to give not only time, mon­ey, and effort, but also life, be­cause he believes, it is a noble cause. Why not for this construc­tive upheaval? " . If vLloyd Hand says that he be­lieves. that he is hot really against NSA and recognizes the benefits to be derived from it, then there ie no reason why he should • shy away from his duty and hide be­hind the conservatism and "mon­ey problem" of it. If thit is his idea of "Service above self" or "the greatest good for the great­est number" then someone should enlighten him. Fdon't think Amer­ica would have made this world­wide progress if it had been" afraid to try.without assurance at the .. results. -• " • •' ' ­ Then there was Gordon Llewel­lyn, I am completely perplexed at how a student holding such a re­sponsible office can be so careless in his reference and quotation to the galaxy of letters, that he pre­sented. It is so easy to confuse and sway the public with some­thing that seems so true and is ex­pertly camouflaged, He also said that he' was defi­nitely against a referendum be­cause the students were not edu­cated enough about NSA. In my opinion, it is he, Gordon Llewel­lyn,.who is sadly in need of such education.. . He also mentioned aboiit some girls who have requested to have their signatures yrithdrawnr frpm the list. I think those girls should be ashamed of .the fact that as college students: they give such little regard and respect for their of" the studfe'fit""go'vernmeifits **.' noble ideal. I offer orchids to the alert and remarkable Midge Ball, Wica president, and Andre Nah­mias, a very inspiring example of a foreigner who has integrated and embraced the true and basic meaning of democracy and done away with the veneer and super­ ficial. Since Wica4 and the Mortar Board are the body of students who understand something about ,the NSA, then by. all means we must rally and support them in trying to reach the heretofore un­informed and misinformed stu­dents. This constructive upheaval in the student government may be frowned upon by the conserva­tives as radicalism, but neverthe­less we might live in the consola­tion that we may in the fulufe hand down to our posterity the heritage of "courage." I also want to congratulate the Texan editor in his defense of the integrity of the University newspaper. I wish you more power in the "Freedom of the Press," JOSIE R. VARIAS • BACK AGAIN? To the Editor: , . , There was another high-pres­sure magazine selling .crew at. work in the Deep Eddy Vets Housing area Thursday . Tell the little wife to keep the screen door locked while you're away. JACK SMITH v * NOT OS -To the Editor: ( We submit this comment con­cerning your lambasting the Dal­las Morning News . .. We certainly don't want peo­ • pie to think that the students of this University heartily concur to the statements . propounded in 7'our-."dynamic" editorial. ROBERT C. CARPENTER EDWARD H. NABERHAUS • " NSA TOO COSTLY To the Editor:' •v Having been a visitor at the last Assembly; meeting, it was quite apparent tj^jpie that report­ers of the Texan failed to. print lone of the) . more pertinent points of the evening, as follows: Total Yearly Cost for NSA j U. of . Washington $1,151.45 _ U. of Wisconsin..J $ 626.25 U. of Illinois .! $ ' 980.00 ' It is interesting to note et this point that the anticipated budget for the University student govern­ment next year will be only ap­proximately $1,800.00. ' Here's hoping the Assembly will keep up the good work. {-/''^GEORGE GOWANS (PImim ebluma en NSA^ ­ —Ed.) ^ Y<> From the Preamble to the NSA on NSA from Stanford and Wash­ Constitution: , ington, "Maintain academic freedom, (If he had read the .Texan, he stimulate and improve democratic would have seen reports not onlystudent government, di$elop bet-from Stanford and Washington, ter educational standards* improve but from nve other schools that student welfare, promote interna­favored NS./^. tional Understanding,"guarantee to (He neglected to tell the.As­ ote blities for education and foster the was 6-2 for NSA; arid that those recognition of the rights and res­seven letters represent only two ponsibilities of students to the per cent of the member schools,) school, the community, humanity, 5. Publications. and, Gdd, pnd preserve the in­ , -. 'A few titles of pamphlets will _ aiul^4ntagrity .of the gov-—suffice: ^Jeh OpportunitieH; ^C6Tl- "erhment and. Constitution of the ference/' "Faculty Rating," "Stu- United States of .America." dent Government Organization," A by-law makes it" olear that "National Student Unions," "Sum­ NSA will not meddle in state af­mer Study, Travel, and Workfairs, but will advance its ideajs Abroad," "Essai,' national stu­on.campuses only by local group's dent literary magazine. They are"on the campus level." available at reduced rates to NSA schools. Bread and Butter 6. Pursuit of federal college scholarships. TWO ISSUES were dominant From The*New York Times: Thursday night when the Student NSA hajs established a commit­ Assembly voted against NSA, 13-5. tee "to seek Congressional sup­ Those who voted against NSA port for a program of federally believed that, it had little prac­financed "scholarships for approx­ tical value and that it would cost imately 300,000 college students." too much. • The idea is to lower economic It is true that NSA has not barriers to education of those with borne fruit on some of its projects. ability/ It is just three years oldrit is More broadly, NSA lobbies with operating as a group entitled to ^Congress for student interests, their own representative integrity. 7. Regional employment agen- What does it offer? cies. 1. Ideas.' It is easy to say you There are others that could be can get these by writing your own listed. And it can be quite validlyletters; > but we didn't get-the argued that any one of theseinspiration for a Great Issues MIGHT not work or apply at UT. Course (a reality at l^gst in. 1950). •The~point is that it is equally as nor for Steer Here as a check on •posible that they will be of bene­ UT area business sanitation (a fit to-the students—and we'll nev­reab.ty.Jor two ycars) ^:rom writmg er know til we try. letters. Leo Goodman, Barefoot San­ders, and Jack Skaggs returned The Cosh from the 1947 NSA convention with these ideas. THIS IS all well and good, but if NSA is going to cost $1,^00 of UT has not had delegates to Student Government's $1,800 al­an NSA convention since then. lotment, it's got a strong count 2. A developing nation'al student culture. • against it. The important word is "if." Right now an exhibit of 150 student paintings is on tour of 50 Lloyd Hand made two charges universities under NSA auspices. -asa5pst NSA Thursday: The paintings "Won in the annual" • 1. That it would Cost from $500 NSA student art eontest-. to $1,000 4a.figure often given as Student artists and major talent $1,100); : can be booked, at the school's Op­2. That the NSA is'financially tion, when swinging the country unstable. under NSA sponsorship. The pro-NSA plan is to limit 3. National Purchase Card sys­the Student Government expendi­tem. • ture to tuition fees—$150 to the . NSA negotiates with national national and aboutr $70 to the re­manufacturers for student dis­gional „(^e had overlooked the lat­counts; and schools-make local ter until last week). That figure's arrangements. out at about 1.5 cents per student • • —a penny, and a half. As Lloyd Hand has said, the no­There are, however, two sources tion of discounts to students was from which these funds-could tried at UT last' year and failed come: ­—as a wild-hare venture. It has a. The delegates themselves. worked at numerous NSA schools, They should certainly be; williiig. saving the students dollars and to pay at least a part of their cents—bread and butter-At Colo­expenses. rado U., for example, about a doz­• b. The book stores.'. They are en of the merchants around the not committed. We spoke to the school give students substantial Co-Op Board of Directors about discounts under the NSA plan. it; they were very interested and • " ' friendly, but could not take a , 4. Student trayel aid. ' stand in a student issue until it If' you can travel in the sum­wag resolved by the students. Jn mers, you might want to board one 1947, the Book Stores paid the of the two, NSA-chattered boats cost of our NSA delegates to Ma­to Europe or consult the Travel dison. '" Aid Committee; --So the delegate cost problem i» Doily Texan Cg>ssword Puzzle ~ ACROSS 3. Emmet 19. Small :H 1. Kind of .4. Tensile cabinets stone strength forbottlesi 6. Rfver island (abbr.) 20. Consumes^ Today's (Eng.) 6, And (L.) 22. Coarsely Answer Is 9. faithfulness 6; Relating ground 11. Jog to the grain in the ; 12. Stairs ., ; South Pole 25. Dry Classified 14. Ineffectual 7. Frown 26. Ancient ' " actor water Greek Ads 15. Samoan ,4.One who , geographer seaport -types •' . 27. Goddess of signatures and if only to save their • animal $ot sorrow 35. City in. il> Sun 7our editorial column. It isvthe 24. Elevated,$ 16. Knclosure t , p. American 10. Largest : mischief f;*, moth continent „ 28. Putin a 37. e old over ^ WIll t-,:S I8.0yerhead 11.Thtimp • case 38. Apron top'­To the Editor: -* '.i , 19. Most lucid, 13. Habitual ;29.Chair 40. Compass I want you to knoW how^mucb4, %l. Degrades'?'; drunkard "SO.Astern -N direction ­ 23. Feline 15. Sxpressiahi '31.'Betreat (abbr.) I enjoy, your papei and especially mer aura of beautiful arid endear-" nt>t; fc««h JUjshtwsiUrfB, P*nn V«> Urlae« . v protecting Q»riw* Fnmk Kvnntb UmnUOt, ing impressions and momentor but also worthy citteetwk' C-Al Eu*«sf Paltlar, John Ro-gunsthat'tlwt greeted -me daring my The Wica members «re rnot only . gjgjc 42. Goddessof item** fjbest semester study, t Am aware Wicas but are aTso students. They jtogr m>b«ru^,^uw}{« ^ harvests It) ? faces from their acts of stupidity, "'-/Russia.j't^fli funniwt thing I have ever read, , ?*;* trains ; .'.i they should have kept their si­ ' i ~Ld . ='• v. *; JAMES BALL C 25. Attorney lence. Anyway. the petition only (abbr.) asks for the endorsement and vote 26. Salt (chem.) jX!t for the referendum and not for* 27.Originates « $SA as yet. : .•* 30. One of the v. -'For the first'time,,the students' large'ocean»|ij interests have been alerted. They % * * 32. Neon ( are now becoming conscious of the M. France growing rieeds of the student and STUDENT ^oder tt"€rehdr^r"e« HoIuuamiMl spa 7^ At wrca"^ lu'^^AubW"!0 R*n •r,M' Hmrv«x BeiL »Urt tMW. ' to^ asert its citizenship in student H*""" ! m Geenr* p«trie Botow. erican government but its growth was Thwfew Ana nipp'ed in the bud, , and it w/w Choat, Kenn«tb AUa Djrtr, Ctatle toy 'Ecldlfli, Champ Oarfc Sllia, Molly Ann faSfJ 86. cruelly nccused df turning to poli­Fe»a*on, Bob«rt Krn»t 1Hcrhcrt ,-88i'Film .'on, tics, M a human being living in Cirney Hamilton, Kujl K«z]« jBanaa, ,M«ry«r*t Ann Harcrov*. Alice * / porridge a-government by the people, they • t9. Earthworks ^ A i>6t wh*t up to be ~ •» ^ 2. Is NSA financially instable? What are the facts? According to a letter from Rob­ ert Kelly, NSA president, in 1949­ •50 NSA operated 15 per cent be­ low its $38,000 budget as a result of operational economies. Dues have decrea&ed 60 , per Cent in three years. They started out at $869 for e school of UTs they are now $150. Grants in 1949-50 for specialNSA projects tot&ied $26,000 (a benefit NSA schools didn't have to pay for). It seems doubtful that such donations would go to a fininciaHy unstable organization. The year ending August 31, 1949, saw NSA with a total in­come of $22,845 and a total ex­penditure of $27,417 for ft net loss of $4,572, Kelly said-it was caused by a stocking-up of publi­cationg and offset by the surplus (which totaled $2,708.76 on Au­gust 31 after the loss was sub' tracted.) Furthermose, it seems highly improbable--that— 300 Schools in the _ > UII wojild eent-iftue-m«Htbership in *'financially unstable organiza­ tion. These are the facts. They were not brought out at the Assembly meeting. They are being brought out now, and it is hoped that they will be of value in the stutffeot election.- > • * Right or Left? ANOTHER good question is whether NSA is rightist or leftist. In 1947, the charge that it was radical ha»d some strength. But perhaps the best explana­tion of what has happened since then is contained in the Interfra­ternity Research and Advisory Council Newsletter of November 6, 1950. According to reports feceiv by the Council, NSA was domi ed by-a "middle-of-the-road/li of thought" at the 1960 conve tion. With 1,000 delegates presen the UN action in Korea was su. ported with only four negative votes. An outsider and communis who asked ,to be heard was al-f] lowed to speak—and Was met with absolute silence. When a report from NSA obser­vers at the International Union of Students indicated European Communists were dominating that body, NSA "broke completely" with it, the Council said. It observed, on the other han that it thinks NSA is probabl; concerned with national prqble of the student# rather than cam pus matters. The positive course of action is? to join and take part in forming! policies of NSA. When NSA speaks, it is speak­ing on behalf of the college stu­dents of America; it has no rival of national weight. We. can't com­plain if we don't take part in the policy-making. And Where, Idealism WELL, NOW, with these con-j sideratiohs discussed, what about ideals? It is a strange sort of thinking I that says the abstract is not im-f portant, the ideal has little me: It is clear that college student^ have a definite "community of in­terests." For example, when the Depart­ment of Defense was working out deferment" policies, it called in NSA is the student spokesman.Deferment policies have been markedly generous toward col­leges. NSA is. the only student repre­tentative on the National Educa­ tion Association, the American " Council. ' of, Education, and UNESCO. It is consulted by the Department of State on student matters. -v. "' -r\ How can the Assembly majority shrug vft, such considerations? How can they say that they are not concerned with what'happens on a national student level—-when every day decisions are made that decide whether students will«be drafted or deferred, offered fed­eral scholarships, and so on.­ The University of Texas does not stand high at present amoni the student communities of the tion. The smirches of the Rainey fight persist; the University has e long road to pull. • The writer has .nothing to gain personally from the University'# joining NSA. We'll he gone in -June; it will be of no material Importance to us whether UT is in NSA or hot. But after "four .years around here,"you develope a simple, hope­.the-»Jfeiver«t1^^^ 'truildingsl ite profs, its students, its future. The issue T& whether the Uni­ versity -is' now ready to take itf • place in the community of * col­leges and stand alongside Hat* & yard, ' Yale, Princeton, M.I,T«v Dartmouth, and SOO or so others, «r Whether we wil again retreW Into -what Sinn Brewer called self!^ eenteredness, chauvinism, and pro**. ^ yincialinn. -=^™^3a»­ *i*•»vhMj.10j —. €%arl«s rmj > harshly Telesn alWrfcomin^M bri^^t?i^tK ,|u2S" wK2 ««into «nexp]*ine4 . cancanSATnha atand fo» 1f^tBrs~c*rHw% leka unexplained 4..can ^asn^'*hi stand united ton a . $h3»"^2dw&'^ee view k'oth* k > Ai . '-S-h , . -SfcwP. sWHfc V^cT -, ,7iW •^r&i nlA.smmrnKA~..« j._ * O-K c * sfewt* M V H^TV^ •*•»/»' r 'V <*,i, •« * i 4 wf X KM>^4W,s--C ^f#l THE AHGKY ' fii gW. Mot thi jnii-f ^ f *0* " Hammond Innes. Harpir. 'u4 happened -to -be -donkey _ Bro». 37* -imfm. $2.7(1. ; -'* * i which iwe« Earrell.tha way. in taiclcy, the "When Italy*# Mount Vesuvius pftM I which they *11 escape from the blows its top, all the mystery and picture waa taken as be*wHmpered intrigue"that has collected in Ham­crumbling building*, the just-Verse Themes Prefers beside his mother's coiffr&e hr a tor mond Innes' "The Angry Moun­happened-to-be-there airplane in Texas field and published in Life book* tain" unravel midst boiling lava which Farrell flies them out from Made Obscure magazine, is subject of a book to the flows, ash-thickened air, 'and the the encircling lava, and the "jus­T# Station appear in April, Author of the crumbling ruins of mountain-side tice of it all" when the donkey original life story about him was m m n u wvutnm 9 . per villages. " Johnny Bryaon, former Banger tarted kills Sansevino, is a hammy and By Symbolism In Cold Garret frontispiece and «nd paa^ek, teaching fellow in and covers his life from an orphan Awed from 'Miss Fannie Bate! 0 to a ences. . air dtiring the eruption; and live history and illustnitor of Frank ford, rare books librarian^ and tract to get to the reality* Frank to New York penthouse and tele* tion. However, the whole story re­the fear that Farrell lives. Innes* Limbo's book of impressionistic vision darling. Text is by Bay Carlos Caataneda, WJ pxotmiot solves itself in the tradition of a knowledge of Italy, Italians and R. Lembo has included much un­poetry, "Raindust." ' history. t 31, Mackland.' Pearl White"serial, with a host of their mountain is extensive and necessary symbolism in his second al in-She thinks that' perhaps the Fhrat Wlia'. gimmicks and situations that turn interpreted well. He understands 1605, the history wa's; or al ex-book of poetry, "Rairidust." tamo reasoning can be applied to out just right, at the right time, the psychology of those who went Lembo, ass^tant. professor of: the present civilisation* for this Dr. John G. Varner, associate written in Spaidsh by-6«rc&ia« ia net for the right people.-The bad through mental-. and physical an­professor o^. English, and his wife t was music at Southwest Texas State age is a mixtnreyof the two ele-la Vega, son opim Inea. * men are killed, the good ones guish du#ing the war. menta also. , • -Dr. Jeanette Varner, head of the •nd a conquistadM'. publi-Teachers College in San Marcos, live and the hero hobbles off, But the neat' conclusion is an reference deparfineht of the Aus« book tanslated into lrplus also is author of "Words in Mild "After each period of extreme ~ Httle^^orffe for it all, withrthef easy "and trite way to resolve it tin Public Libraary, have com-tempc EngHaii and |a 1 Au-Breezes." The abstract drawings realism, for instance* there is a l auburn-haired, red-lipped girl with all—consign the wicked to Hell, illustrating his latest are c s of ook sub-poems backwash of decadence, a wallow whom he fell-In love atflrst sight. have the,"good" live happily ever "or May*.;: by Merry Kone Fitzpatrick, a of sentimentality," she says. And Although Farrell has become a after. Had the atmosphere been lighly teaching, fellow in the Department she also points out that the back­ in the -representative .for a peacetime a little less in&nse, and the set­of History at the University. wash" lasts longer than the moti­P*ul G. Hoffman* British, tool-manufacturing con­ting a -little more ordinary, "An-tellers jhinistrator of the Marshall lip tn . To the lay poetry lover, Lem-vation in such reactions. cern, he is stilr Tortured with -gry Mountain" would be but a has written in outline f^r iniza-Jbo's book combines the disturbing -: Mrs, FitePatrick cam^r to the recollection of his' war-time ex­shivering mole-hiil. -But the early awareness of the world found in" University from San Marcos' As ; reported in PaBUiWd ^ ^ s periences. During a trip to chapters, and the chase and excite­m pamphlet fo^m Aj Southwest Teachers .Weekly: were Czechoslovakia, it all catches up ment through a well-set European Carl Sandburg's best works with Texas "State Doubleday. ;mbly with him and conseaut^tiy he air background, set the novel up as*a the lyrical delicacy and whimsical • College where Frank Jtimbo, her FICTION timistic outlook,' the book tkiaought most goes insane. -' swift-moving, easy-to-read story charm of Thomas Moore. Were it brother's friend, taiight music. Joy. Stract, by Prances Parkinson a program fo^r th» anee«Mthey He those days during for those who relief from not for hallucinations of T. S. A year or so ago, Mr. Limbo Keyes. Messner. $3.­ relives want America and the. free worid ade^t Eliot the author suffers, this might asked her to read some of the The Disenchanted, by Budd Schul­ •A which he, Reece, and Shirer had their mechanical and ordinary aus the Commtmiat drive^ for i lives. be a great work. • poems which he intended to put berg. Random; $3.50. been under the care of a sadistic domination, its title: "Waging Almost reader into his forthcoming book, and the. San, by James Ram­ doctor, Sansevino. KENNETH GOMPERTZ any will toil Stiver of Peace/* " through the intricate channels MRS. McCALl FITZPATRICK draw illustrations^sfrom her im­say Ullman. Lippincott. $8.50. FarrelPs plane had crashed, af­and multitudinous complexities of pressions. -The Cardinal', by Henry Morton Two of the better , known . ter he had dropped the two men P A poetry critic or even an ex­man to whom it is addressed, much n is behind Italian His symbolism if the result is an idea "He had to talk me into it," Robinson, Simon and Schuster. temporary philosophera wfll bx lines. leg iftist. or thought that could not have perienced ^Connoisseur might enjoy of the complexity of the sym­says Mrs. FitzPatrick, "because I $3.60. crushed, Farrell was taken to $5,000 Awarded out books soon. Bertrand Rs been in a all of Lemoo's works. But before bolism must go. : -. had done anything in that of Kinrs, t was Villa d* Este, where Sansevino adequately expressed never Son a Hundred by Nobel Prize-winning: more natural style. But to throw a their message reaches the common FLO COX line at all, except design a book Thomas B. Costain. Doubleday. tortured him to make him reveal has collected a book of the whereabouts of Reece and film of abstract and far-fetched Jacket for Dr. H. Bailey Carroll." $3. lar Essays" to be released comparison over what could be Dr. Carroll is head of the Texas For 'In Our Image' Shirer. -> NON-FICTION ary 28. They are ao named: b*#|­ State Historical Association. said as well in a crystal-clear Kon-Tiki, Jjy Thor Heyerdahl. cause Russell's last ^puMa^(io<)i " Sansevino took pleasure in am­Houston Harte-and Guy Rowe style is misleading and unfair to, " She is hesitant about calling Rand. $4. proved too difficult it putating sections of Farrell's in­ the reader. herself an artist, even though art jured leg—in a series of three have been granted the $5,000 Oat of Thi» World,' by LoweU the layman. operations without the use of an Christopher Award for the Ro­A few poems escape the poor is much more than' a hobby with Thomas Jr. Greystone. $3.76. Latest IKKAC, bf-..G«0*g* anesthetic. When "il dottore" man Catholic edition of-their and over-elaborate impressionism her. Boawell't London Journal, 1762-tayana, called "hia crowning: threatened to start cutting the book, "In Our Image," in recog­that permeates most of the works, "It is a well-known fact 1763. McGraw. $3. work" by the good leg, Farrell broke. Soon nition of their contribution to ^'feaindust" the title poem, is a> though," she says, "that Ameri­Look Younger, Live Los|«r, by nation and Pow^^;;^:i^iid^.:; after, Reece and Shirer were the task of bringing Christian stirring, half-satirical, half-sad IN ONE HEAD AND OUT THE,mile and female brains: "... the can artists don't take to starving Gayelord Houser. Farnur. $8. human relationshtpa .in the " brought in, wounded, and the principles into American life. song of a man who is tortured in garrets very well, so I'm teach­Hinge of Fate, by Winpton society, the jstate, ahd the , . OTHER.^ By Roger Price, Si-:male brain is divided into four three recovered side by side, Far­Published by the Oxford Uni­because, he thinks different mon and Schuster, Inc. 1731v » i ing. Art is nice to do, but it's Churchill. Houghton. $6 it will be r«dea9ed in Ajttll.' thoughts from his contemporaries. pages. $2.50. j basic parts. They are olfactory, not very good to teach, so I ma­ rell hated by the two he had versity Press, the book is a collec­ betrayed. tion of narratives from the Old Lembo writes . , • . . 'sensory, auditory, and Jane Rus-jored in history." However, she The nonsensical qualities of In . . , Before the war's end, Sanse-Testament selected-by.Mr. Harte, So . r> tjt j j « • A, .. , ; sel1 • • • Part 4 also enjoys a pre-did take "a degree in art at San Mm and Marcos. vino repents. Farrell hears that a San Angelo newspaper publish­I hurried here to heathen heats, • ne 0ut the other ^ dominate position, in the brain, the doctor has helped Reece and er, and illustrated with 32 four-, Where heavy ^labor and heavy love Pr,ce-are s° utterly absurd, per cent of "The smaller school was WU"" U U" up 92 itg total very Shirer to escape and then shot color paintings by Mr. Rowe, a Paced of tugging desire .... the book may well be placed in good for me for one reason," she ' >ser-himself. He also hears reports Time magazine cover artist. Where death-means not to die area* As you can see, this messes believes. "I gained a foundation GIRL the same category as "Barefoot! li of that the two ' had been killed in Original paintings from the Bufc-JlUg a legend outworn. up the balance." there and then developed my own ?ean their flight. work are now housed in a special and a few stanzas later, f" ™v.Che?r Md'"Th« In-i On the other hand, Mr. Price artistic individuality, whereas had fernal Machine." I gone to a larger school I would that This is part of thq past that wing recently added to' the Helen J,They will cup me in their mouths states that the female brain is So foolish are the bases of Mr. have had to fight to keep myselfely". tortures Farrell—his false alumi­King Kendall Memorial in San And cook their curses for awhile," divided into only two partis; "dol­of the from unconsciously imitating work num leg a constant reminder. Angelo. Price's theory of avoidism, the In this and several other poems, lars and cents." which I admired." While in Milan he meets the in­such as "Rhapsody, on a Slave. reader may often find himself, on evitable Mata Hari—gorgeous, Sal** of Douglas Novel* Climb Theme" and "A Day: the After­the verge of hysteria. "Avoidism," In succeeding chapters the Mrs. FitzPatrick grew Up with author discusses various symptoms two brothers in San Marcos. One brunette, Countess Zina. At her Following the death of Uoyd math of Night," the South's newest Mr. Price states, " is a new, op­ is now in the Cincinnati Conser­apartment* one evening, they are poet of any fame Hves up to of copelessness, mental treats C. Douglas in Los Angeles Febru­timistic philosophy designed to vatory of Music and the other interrupted by the arrival of Shi­the compliments of the paid modern man himself: ments, of avoidist of a band ary 18, sales of his popular novels re­save from history the was director school Luz Rivas is ^senior rer. Afterwards Farrell realizes viewers. movement, conversation-avoiding, have clim'bed steadily at the Texas Th€ -principle of avoidism is sim­until he retired from4 teaching. from Refugio, Texas, that it is really Sansevino in dis-Book books by poems a keen An simply avoiding advertising, and even the Store. The older These express ple. avo"rdist avoids majoring in Latin , guise. He almoBt goes insane, method of indoctrinating a child Mr. Douglas are more popular sympathy of the ironies and in­things." night the doctor visits American studies, Span­ when him in one his darkened hotel room. than the new ones with "The Mag­justices of the world in a highly with the avoidist theory. ish Education and miii- The formulation of avoidist nificent Obsession" topping the personal" verse form of musical Throughout the book Mr. Price To get away from it all, Farrell theory is due to man's "inability displays individualistic Reprints oring in Portuguese.^:? list. rhythms and half-rhymes that re­an wit, tn cope" or "copelessness." Thus flies to Zina's house in Naples. flect Lembo's musical background. ranging his quips frorft those suit­Luz is an Upper Cif&s Mr. Douglas had been ill for Mr. Price wrote his book for "peo­ Baid able for Sunday School picnics to Under a belching Vesuvius it sometime, Mrs. C. F. Hills-But in many of the other poems, ple who just want to lie down." The Hanter,by Hugh Fosburgh. Advisor -at Kirby Hall ''W all unravels. those appropriate for. bull sessions this year, and .was berg, the author's niece now living Lembo's style battles with the very Stating that to understand Bantam, 25. cents. Showdown be^ aw Description of advancing lava, in Austin, but had been preparing good things he has to say, and "copelessness," tfne must under­in a men's dormitory. tweenrH'^inah and a ^irf^ovef the Student Relation Coun­tar toppling buildings, and fleeing to start on a new-book. i loses. stand the workings of the human ,Cai Newton, business manager man's torn desires between wild­cil member last year. mind, he cites in Tiis' study the of , Texas Student Publications, erness and civilization. Scribner Luz is also a member of Alba Club, Newman C3olr ^ son-j parts both the made this statement after reading edition, February, 1.950*. ; out Produce comparative of and is the president of ^^o^X^ta the book: "This. must, not, should , ' * • , «' .. ' V.:':.. not, and could not be missed by Dairy .Foods Take Tumble angf 1 any member of the faculty, ad­Broken Valley, by Thomas „ Manufacture of dairy products im-| ministration, student body, stu­Thompson. Bantam,'25 cents..A Texan in Texas slid 1 per cent in 195'0 dent assembly, or children of the range war broiling out of a dou­' (faL& SkM%jtudio mtS>( If • Results to 747,146,000 pounds milk foregoing. In the present-day fu­ble-crossed rancher's fury'with the equivalent as with in-1l compared rore of incessant confusion, a per­powerful family who used him, Photography for of T«30M 754,058,000 in 1949, the Uni­son will realize, even jSter paradoxically brings peace, to the -Vr 2514 Gu«dilup« A Apartment for Rent versity Bureau of Business Re­OPEN THURSDAY NIGHT 1 Furnished Room Rooms For Rent glancing at the cover, the futility valley. , Doubleday edition,. De­ »rt-Ir search reparted. cember, 1949. ' of passing this by." - out BLOCK FROM CAMPUS, near Health TWO. ROOMS with private entrance, TWO GARAGE apartments/rooms with­I :> Center and Ensincertaa Department. bath, shower, innersprings, ideal for in % quiet Utilities two Phone after 5:S0 or in few blocks of campus. Convenient Small »p«rtment. paid. men. 2-1043 SiSPpp? an. Large cooking Uring-week .ends. for one or two boys in eaeh room. Phone room, facOlti**, 6-0866. room. 8-6588. een »1-Help Wanted UPPERCLASSMAN needs two root mates to share comfortable, apartment. One Mock from Northeast corner Cam- WANTED IMMEDIATELY, experienced. Coaching pas, Maid service twice, week. Call re-'J N ' retail fashion, artist for 'part-time 7-1961. ^ , fashion ^ drawing. Apply In person. am ca-i Cheaard's. 2888' Guadalupe. . . Qs ENGLISH COACHING by PliD e*»d!> 2204 SAN ANTONIO: Innerspring beds. :an i date. Phoq* 6M6U. Leather Goods ' Dally maid service. Man, share pri­ ind '|> vate bath, entrance, dressing room. Up­ COACHING, tra&alatlons. Preach, CNnr-stairs, private bath for two. 7-6469. WRANGLER-Blue .Jeans-Tailored Shirts-Cowboy Hats— she man. SUtoD. 2809 San Antonio. Western „ Clothing j ent,. SINGLE ROOM, available March 1st. COACHING in Spanish. Experienced We make eowboy boots^belts. Repair Male student. Private entrance, bath,'hoes. Capitol Saddlery. 1614 Lavaca. teaflifer. Near University. 2-8662. telephone, maid service. Deposit accepted ity. now. Phone 6-8124. 2809 North Guada­ lupe. ! Loft and Found For Rent 2422 SAN ANTONIO. Rooms for Wys ire ' LOST!_ A jParker Butane lighter, lost In, in approved house. 2 boys per room. of Home Economics Build­ ;ns . °* Carpeted floors, innerspring mattresses. Here are fust fofs and tots of foys hig. FAruary 14th between 9 and 10. Electric refrigerated. Porter service. No en UNIVERSITY MEN Wwse ^nrtftrn to Dsivo Calvert, 1808 extra charges. »25 per boy. 6-8720.iat i • 4v > For a SMOOTH place to live ; West Avenue. Rewitrd. 8-2187, at are sure to Iceep your little tyke be ":eheck-the LOST: Green billfold between V Hall \ A-BAR HOTEL and iUnfro's. Reward. Call-Bonnie id­ \ ' \/ SUlon. «-8871, ext. 201. Room and 8oard lyjs;^«,42: FLOCK "Year round Air conditioned FAINTING SET. N.»— Single or two boy rooms, i . LOST: 1 jeweled Delta Gamma Pen. les Convenient to campua. " Jtowwrd. Call Marlene Coe. 8-6481. U„f., [„ UM,,!.,. University Men nar 2612 Guadalupe Phone 6-4858 Music Oood home-cooked meals, family styla. LARGE flve-rootn apartment nicely tar­NOTCH.EM TOYS—* Mrs. HoWard Paine's sew location. nished modern conveniences, garage. RECORDED MUSIO id P.A. systems » "BI Educational for all MMMSM. 2100 Nueces 8-9171 WD-EjlaTIST-c^ F„ S.t $80. No children or pets. Phone 8-7949; pas Musis Ser- Large garage room with private hath vice. M41L < £ MP'1 t at 2007 San Antonio. Two rooms at -405 West 21st. Nursery Typing PLUSUTE L.BLACKBOARD-D DOWNTOWN KINDERGARTEN. Ex-*aw For Sale Pfrimeed day care; 2-» >wri. Maw , .•« white with 0AME^- TmOM, Cbmrte. ete. ClMtromatic' ^luipment. _*«.50 wekly. baby sitting W,. aolors-complete all. Soand-sitht-speUin*. The *y>ewiltsr. world'a SOe kour. 400 East 2nd. >-8168.: Mrs. Petmeaity. M-aait. *ith cmyoffs. j FOR SALE tuxedo and shirt, sixe 40. BMCCTKIC tn»ewzlt«. Ex»«t typia*. Worn only-once. Son gone in service. Will sacrifice: Call Mrs. Jones at 6-9181* Rpoms for Rent Thssas. rsports. Phona 2-»8«g; • r t M Est. 49. After 5:30 p.m. and all day *ND Saturday and Sund»y1 S-0091. N^ED one male studeat to share ibt« USL 1U!. JK* ,our tksisa, tkaaass-C0Lf* *ekiteheti. ** m* irw -TZ°" cu"-,h« FurnTsli%^l^Ap 2-2478, to|«tkns«|rw '•* SOUTHWEST ROOM, four windows for BXPE&nSHCKp seientifie maDOseriptCOUPLES ONLY: Iarae rooms, pri­ *?»«» »tud«nt, graduate prefarrwL In 7-J08? TeboJatioas. Mrs. Moors. EASEL. AST SET-CI^..,^,^ vate bath, two private,entrances. (66. r Utmties paia<14W W«wt 7ih. f-BMft. 1 ' > Washable with THESM,mirsports, outlipcs, *!"1T Old-paints. ^ Col e*n a viimctik: sm»u "cot«a*»v W uv-baw. Phons t-4116 after B JO pj#. -u * i V > jV Color .. ing room, bedroom;'bath and kftehm, I tt} ir--& n Servel srefritferator,^ Table top run WR NKAI aeeozate trptef. Call lbs. Furnished for-couple. -B11U .fsll fBS.-UGOMHUcitan * e-8720. V, .. V-; V; -V. W Dsansnt (-SSK. t m iiLIKH [JkiliUfj r.lLlL) UlillV . uc-j Z05it II 19S2B *N ANTONIO: No. *. UyHw­ '••• roomi-vy™. bedroom', kitchen. bath. Lower l»JU HHNLUJUrLi Wanted uwl• >» %a Willi f.lSiO MLiaunti * TVPISTS'8 POOLi All mature, enwrl, (0i& •teibSj-iaSV floor. *Private entrance. Bills i«fd. $6*, it »ae*< tjjjistii, fr-47^7 svnlcjgs. rir.v tit!Hf Rff Cfiif.'«i; iJHkitff tuurin fa other apartment <100, lor t or (IXO fer uuu uuunfi PRIVATE IN8TSUCTION8 ln Alxcbra % Ar V. m't 1 Janiff i.Tiimi ' •• ri x "-i , * «-V r i &»&?« 4 iswma$fe mail and feminine, Lux doesn't s|Wit like a career woman whoM 4tan make her wajr in a field in Three Wlea'IspedU Intent m shn*«M TfyMcir ©wm strong men Weaken. groups will meet Mohda^i at ? " < But Ashe's determined to--— j— P.m. do just The Social Science and CUl­ndfriendssa it Lu«!» de-turegroupa will meet in the IBs* termination can % moatj. ©h-office,, The Social Welfare groupWill meet in the Women's Lounge. ^ A senior from Refugio, Luz Ail group? will elect office**. The r^ransfefred here last year from Social Science group will make a TSCW. She has applied her dip­tonr of the capitol after their lomatic leanings to student -gov-meeting. ' :l"' ,%mae«t Work at Tessie and at Xirby Hall hei'is at "the Univeiv Man of the Week JSitjf. At TSCW, she was a presi­dent of the Scholarship Club, fi­nance chairman of her dormitory, ,r*u»d secretary of the Student Fi­ance Council of the student body. -At -the' University, she iB presi­dent of Sigma Delta Pi, honorary f«iternity for Spanish majors-and mi nors, member of the social ac­tion comfnittee of the Newman Club, and an upperclass' advisor ^ • Luz was instrumental in writ-f ittg the constitution -for Kirby, ^ /"wherr she is -now part-time aec-r retary. She has been on the dean's honor roll every semester both i here and at TSCW. Unofficially, the vivacious bru^ --aefte-am "^eoad mother" to al­ :• M6||r ^Yr thaiJHeH Lee V drmkwg b toasf k> ^"s as^Wll+^^didt^.Pmd*J&lp50nt d-nd--P.sd-X ^ k>ok on in approval'. Faculty m'erubsrs, a; -.veil «s UT students, find this closeby cafefejla r. for the discriminating-diner. [Adv.! K"M foreign country probably Mexico or Brazil. First, however, " she jf would like to work on a masters degree at an. eastern university. She has been offered several fel­lowships while she studies, and is especially interested in one" in reaching immigrant groups to hptak-Spanish. -. "In my spare time, I could com­ MR i & rshSE •/iiium, i;i)^! A tour through the StecJc Com-P*ny will he conducted for mem­bers and prospective Rtedges of AlpU Oaltk St|ma, national pro-,, fessional, advertising fraternity,Monday and Tuesday-afternoons. Students will meet in Journalism Building 109 «A 2 p.m. both days. * All former scout*" or persons who have had any experience in scouting are invited to attend the open meeting of the/Alpha Phi Omega* Sunday afWrnoon 4at % o'clock, This is the last openmeeting of the year, and is held for the purpose of interesjtingother people in APO's activities, Members of Texas Union Charm Walter Xylie, Houston; Jim Par­prove our ability to-make the Uni­ ffe The University of Texas leads SEPARATES ker, Beaumont; and Boh More-versity an even finer institution. all US educational institutions in; man, Beaumont. mute back and forth in New takings govern­ CHARLIE ROBINSON ment; Stork City and study at Columbia"' University," she says. Charlie plans to graduate-from { This semester the former Tessie the School of Law and take his is-prai^iee-teaching-at Allan Jufa-&ar examination in July. He has ior High with ninth graders. Af­ies hopes of returning to Palestine," ter a -week she already has been his home town, to practice law. aslied to sponsor aSpanishCIub However, he will be pommissioned lot the students. is a ill Hear Lecture by the ROTC in June and The pride pf Luz's life are her member of the National Guard. Members of the University La-; tsree brothex-s, who range in age The Sawing Group -meets at Before deciding to study law, dies Club have ^ planned a -full iiom 11 to 18.' 2:30 o'clock Thursday afternoon Charlie received a BBA degree schedule of events in the coming 'They lead me a merry chase at the home oi Mrs. T. J. Ockey, from the University in 1949. week. . -. 3101 Lafayette. Mrs. T. N. Camp­Prior to that time he attendedwhile I'm home, but I certainly Dr. Clarence P. Oliver, profes­bell is co-hostess. Virginia Military "Institute for should be conditioned for, rough­sor of zoology, will speak to the ~sn# it-,in " South America or Eu-The following dates have been two ye>rs. In law school/Charlie Intermediate Group on "Cancer" set for the Bridge 'sections: has served on the Board of Gov->? ope," Luz points out. in the Geology Lecture Hall at Group II will meet Tuesday eve-ernors of the Bar Association, ancfS o'clock Wednesday evening. Mrs. Jiihg at 7:46 o'clock at the,home as associate editor of the Pere- Frank Field will -introduce the of Mrs. D. S. Hughes, 8101 Park grinus, the yearbook of the School speaker, and Mrs. W. E-Shallepe Blvd.; Group IV will meet Friday of Law. will be in charge of refreshments. morning at 9:30 o'clock at the One of his favorite interests is Mrs. Roy Krezdorn and Mrs. J. home of Mrs. W. E. Shallene with ehoral work. He served as presi­L. Reed will assist the hostess, Mrs.4 E. B. Atwood assisting as dent of the Men's Glee Club, as Mrs. J. C. Akin, in entertaining eo-hostess. .« song leader of Beta Theta Pi the Arts and Crafts Group at her fraternity for the past two years, home, 510. W. l?th Street, Mon­and was a member of the choiir day morning at 9:30 o'clock. Fur­Sigma Chi Elects of the University -Presbyterianniture refinishing and rebuilding Church. will be demonstrated. Spring Officers He feels that it is the duty of Projects for the spring semes­those in the student government ter will be discussed by the Sigma Chi fraternity has an­to do all within their power to Social Service group at the home nounced the following new pledg­bring the government closer _to of Mrs. Ralph Lane, 2807 Breeze es: Fred Hansen, El Paso; Bill the students to stimulate a real Terrace, at & o'clock Monday eve­Moye, Nederland; Will Barber, and active interest in the func­ning. Linden; Grover Haliburton, tions of the student government.Orange; Steve Kembal, Orange; By so doing, he believes we can IfT Concrete Research LeadTar the number of concrete research projects conducted, the Americanin Concrete Institute reveals. The University currently has 18 inves­tigations under way. Second isProspector the University of California with 17 projects. sharkskin Social Calendar SUNDAY 2:80-4:30—Sigma Alpha Mu des­ aqua sert party for Delta Phi Epsilon. 7:00»8:80—Sigma. Delta Tau des­ pink sert party for Alpha Epsilon $wr. Pi. • grey QR. EUGENE H. DUKE • beige * Optometrist ~ 4-^/r 3f&ta 9*95« ' I-ia .-i gfolfl i 3.95 A ;< «.vfi;£ f - li© ®5S'7 ",+ Iadividuality A Spedtol^^ NEW FASHIONS FOR NOW AND NOW ON *31 m : like fhe eH«p look ol sft^rkslctr» \H glory, fashioned by GI&li vest i$ attached to tjhe worn over a Iclck pleat skirl. ? ^ By CAROLYN BUSCH A diversity of interests and a special capability for leadership in campus government were doubt­less two of Charlie Robinson's main'assets which the Student Assembly Considered ^ him vice-president of the student tjody. " ' Charlie served ias assemblyman from the School of Law and chair-Imah :df the assembly's finance committee since fall, -Charlie** Hve-foot, ten inch frame is also a familiar figure beneath the capital dome. In ad­dition to a full load of work in his third year of law school, he works half time for James R. Pax­ton, representative from Charlie's 4tom« county. As the new vice-president, Char­lie's biggest headache Will be the allocation of Blanket Tax funds. The coming, year will be the first time in recent years that the Blan­ket Tax will be optional. _ Another duty of the vice-presi­dent is to. prepare, the student government financial report at the end of the semester for submis­sion to the student body and ad­ministration. But by no means are these two responsibilities the extent of his work. Charlie will work in close harmony with Lloyd Hand, Stu­dent President, on all the under­ of the student Richters Are.Parents The new officers for the spring semester are John J. Locy, presi­Mr. and Mrs. Walter Richter of dent; Ralph Daugherty, vice-San Antonio have announced the president; Robert Steer, secre­birth of a daughter, Robyn .Rene, tary; Chalres Eldridge, treasurer; on February 9. Mr. Richter was a and Slaon Blair, pledge trainer. former student' of the University. Encore! By Popular Demand! • MAGNOUA BLOND Prescriptions Filled ;/ • PURPLE 4 the shoes Leases Duplicated".1^ o • FUSCHIA' ^jG&ums adit^ted -M®, • wnk the bogMIGNOH -H il 1 Im&y rWw iBiiTTT iiIWiiwifiiTi lliIiisM 2?28 _ ORANGE PO _ «m48QSEILUK flfeOrti ?r-4 £>*$ fl -/>£"> Committee recently elected Molly. .Motfett chairman for the spring semester,"and Myrtlfe Watkins, as­ sistant Tchairtrtanr Plant a?8'b«ihg made for the spring style show sponsored by the committee. A called meeting has been an­nounced for Tuesday at 7 "o'clock in the Union. k „ • 1 • *: " The American Association of Architectural Engineers will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. In Architec­ture Building 208. Freshman-and sophomore students are invited to attend. .. •* ' '''If Mrs.' Frances Frazier, supervi­sor of physical restoration of the Texas Education Agency, division of vocational rehabilitation,: Will be .guest speaker of NAUD Tues day at 7:30 p.m. in Texas UniOn ^ -c"' » w< j, -j w-f B-2" \ f 8:15. ' * > -Hostetees for the meeting will be Mrs. William H. Mathews and Mrs; Malcolm Coonei^ -Univi&rsitystudent wives should cail Mw Matthews at 6-1130 . for reserva­tions. : ' -'O- Members and pledges of Pelta Gamma sorority are holding a re­treat at Mo Ranch near KemfUlo Saturday and Sunday. , * The program for the retreat is, built on a dual theme, "The Spi­rit of the Individual" and "Th#., Spirit of the Fraternity." Re­source people who will accompany the group will include the Rev. Gray Blandy, rector of All Saint'* Episcopal Church, Dean and Mrs. Arno Nowotny, and Mrs. Helen Byers, national president of Delta Gamma. a I gardenia sun dress Ever-fresh, ever-beautiful? JPastel picolay with white late fresdng the winged shoulders and hidden pockets. Matletexed to do more for your figure than any dress you've ever worn. S-M-L. 16.95 618 CongrMi $7.95 |7.95 Jllsa^aliW*""' Pliuon, tit „,rf*urnalism graduate, way married "December 30 to James Alexin-' d«r Logan Jr. at Si Alban's Epis­copal Church hi Harlingen. Mr*. Logan received her de­cree in January, 1940.' She was ^afffflaiadwith ThetitrBigmePhir Delta Sigma Rho and Varsity De« onte beof something smart for \ young Black Suede Navy Suede feet! Tan Suede Broum Swede Gray Suede Such heavenly thoet at odose-fo-ffce-tcrffc price/ They doomo&eo'storrlng fob with practically yovr entire wardrobe, beside giving you waHdng-on-ah"com!orh Brown Leather Hand-sewn trim and flexible hather totes give OtDMAftiHtOTrm that woixfcrM $8.95 workbench took. fmr wHufi «wrh|| Boiler Sejttngf UEH&l SHOE | STORE 2348 Guadalupe^ On the Drag black and \ bate squad. In her freshman y*ar; she wu a member of Alpha Lamb* da Delta. She was en the staff of the Daily Texan anji served as an uppei«laa*-advisor-in An* djrews Dormitory. " The bridegroom holds a bache­lor's degreeinchemical engineer­ing from Corner. University. He Is now employed byMegnoli* J»*, troleam Company. • Virginia Bushnell and Charles yerIla..t;vW«,re. married on Feb? ruary 4 in the First Methodist Church In Rosenberg. The bride attended Southwest Texas State Collegen&nd the Uni­versity. Mr. Werlla graduatedStotfi the University: and wis a member of Phi Mu Xlpha honor­ary, music fraternity. • Virginia BrooJw was married to Grover M. Howell February 3 at Oceanside, Calif. •; ; -The bride formerly attended the University and is a graduate of Austin High Scftoot ' The bridegroom was a senior engineering student at the Uni­versity when recalled to active duty with the U. S. Marines at Camp Pendleton, Calif. :-r it • '/v-v; and Art Ochoa were married February 1at the Blessed Sacrament Church in Laredo. MiBs Puig will graduate with a bachelor of arts degree in En­glish this semester. She is a mem­ber of Chi Omega -sorority, Blue* stockings, Bow' and . Arrow,. and corresponding secretory of Ash­bel Literary Society. She was 1949 Bluebonnet Belle nominee of the Laredo Club. The couple will live in Com­ merce where Mr. Ochoa attends Fast .Texas State College. He is a member of the school's track and football teams. * * Alice Schultz and Russell Tho­mas were married on January 29 in Sah Antonio. The bride-elect is-a junior at the University, Tho­mas is attending A&M. • Marilyn Lois Ray was married to Bruce SinOneaux February 3 in Houston. Miss Ray, popularly known as "Rusty," was a member of Alpha Delta Pi sorority and appeared in several campus shows. She was also an Aqua Carnival finalist in 1K50. Mr. Simoneaux pttended A&M College. • ' The wedding of Ann Durst to A Seminar on Christian Citizen­ship, sponsored'by the Texas Me­thodist Student Movement which opened Saturday will continue un­til 9:30 p.m. Monday. Saturday, the statewide group of students attending the seminar had supper at the Campus Cafe­teria. A Short program at the Uni­versity Methodist Church followed the supper. Sunday, Mrs. Marguerite Bed­ding, educational and research director, Texas Social and Legisla­tive Conference, will give a lecture on.the concern of religion with Texas government. The entire Seminar leaves the Campus Cafeteria at 2 p.m. Sun­day to picnic at Zilker Park Club- subtle ji elrorrt our collection of smooth swauve Tinin wm give you this wonderful dress ...-trimmed v in sh4t» Tf >"23! wmmmm t *• ' * V A " ^ MRS. JAMES A. LOGAN Harold S. Harris will take place Miss Baker graduated from some time in February. Austin High School and is now Harris, a former student at employed in" Austin. Taylor is The program for DU«iple Stu­dent Fellowship of University Club Annex Sunday at 6 pan. WK,designated ffotl Christian Church will feature a dent Christiau Fellowsitlp.radio play, "Satan and the Fed­Election of four new officers will be a Bible study p*( eration/' directed rby-Annetta for the "Canterbury Cleb Will be,_a espper and fellowshipClark. • heTd Sunday night Services at All{7 p>». A&M College, is now Stationed former student of the University Newman Club meeting at 11 a.m. in San Francisco-with th^ Navy. and was affiliated with Acacia-Sunday in the Texas Theater. The bride-elect attended the fraternity. University where she was an Al­Best-liked love poems; selected • ­ pha Chi Omega pledge and a mem­ by Ted Malona. from those most' Patricia Holmes, daughter of ber of Bow and AITOW Club. She requested by listeners, will be Mr. and Mrs. Grover Holmes of has also atended Sam Houston read by Mary Esther Haskell* Austin, became the bride of Ce­ State College, a and Southwest Connie Elizando, Jo Ann Joseph, cil Harry Banner, Bon of Mr. and State College in San Marcos. Rachel Godinez, Dwight Manny, Mrs. Cecil Benner of San Antonio, and Richard Hatch; • in a double-ring ceremony oh De­ . Accompanied by Charlene Sta- The engagement of Novice Rita cember 23 in thfe Presbyterian vinoha, Mary Harkleroad will sing Baker to Jimmy Taylor was re­ A supper at 6 p.m.will precede Saints' Chapel at 6 p.m. will pre­the program. :^'r cede a supper and meeting to be held at Canterbury Hous^V^-^; The. first in a series of discus­sions on Sunday sermon topics will be held Monday at 7 pjn. in Dr. Eduard Taborsky, associate the student lounge of the Univer­professor of government, will sity Christian Church. The Disci-speak to Ganma Delta, Lutheran pl& Student Fellowship will spon­student group, at a supper Meet­sor the series, designed to provide ing at 5 p.m. Sunday at St. Paul more detailed discussioft of the Lutheran Church. His topic will be minister's Sunday sermons. "Religious Aspects of I^e, Be­ hind the Iron Curtain." The executive council of the ^ . * , -, 1 2»' Baptist Student Union will meet The Westminster jtadeat fel­at 8 p.m. Monday at the BSU cen­lowship at the University Pres­ter. This will be the first meeting byterian Church will observe -tills of the new council, and semester plans will bo discussed, Bill Blum-be^president, said. .• Robert G. Gordon, director of the University.' Veterans Advisory* Service and co-ordin^tor of .Reli­gious Activities at the University*... will represent the Hogg Founda­tion for Mental Hygiene &t a com­munity-wide seminar in human re­lations to be held-in Lubbock,Feb­ruary 18 through 23. , Mr. Gordon will conduct a Practicum Course in Pastoral Counseling for ministers, laymen, and religious leaders in Lubbock. Dr. Thomas W. Street, Instruc­ tor in Bible, Presbyterian Bible Chair; and Dr. Clabe W. Hall, in­ structor in .Bible. Wesley Bible Chair, will also attend. . ' it "Love" will be the theme of the OM ot ^be mm inv«tit&|£/marriage is the idea o^f Drs. Harry and Bemie« said at the H.U.I Fo«» terfaith Supper Wedttesdsiy ning. , _ -aJw* "For the dominance and submi^4ii^~'!l#l the husband-wife rdatioia$p< being thrown outthe window> <^(d;: the woman Is getting equal foo^/ ing with her husband, they.said^i' In many instances, the woau&;; go«s to work ^ each week, as does her huibaa4 <1* ing in business administration. Dr. Kobe to Go on Lecture Tour mm m ists Stu ill••Si Winifred Cox and Harry John­Dr. Kenneth A. Kobe, professor son were married February 10 of chemical engineering, will go "SINGlNG EiSIE DVOtAK prepare for futurfe," a GiH of in a double-ring ceremony in St. on a special lecture tour February Week headline read on May 7. Sne wet quoted as saying corofp^ Christian Citizens Paul's Episcopal Church in Hous­24-March 23 for the American Theological Seminary Chapel in mm the top three love songs of the ; cently announced. The wedding Austin. season, as determined by "Hit Pa- : • date has not been set. M Mrs. Benner is a graduate of rajde." ttfe~iJnivfersity, and Mr. Benner is The" weekly supper and open a senior at the University, major­ r living is "just right for .you tf you're going to get married." Tw*< ton. Both are former students of Chemical Society. He will speak house and to hear the rest of the engagement ana approaching marriage of Miss Dvorak and GecwgfcVi the University. They will make on under-water. combustionJ of lectures for that day. fuels before 19 ACS local chap­Kedera was-recently announced. She has also recently presented ; their home in La Porte. "How a Bill Goes Through the ters in the Rocky Mountain area her senior voice recital* and slm has the lead in-"Tws Bartered^/ Legislature," will be the topic of * • -' and the Far West. Bride." .. , the first lecture at Zilker Park Wilma Morgatf~of -Dallas and by H.A.Calkins, associate profes­Roswell Blinn McClelland of sor of government at 1:30 p.m Brownwood were, married Febrq- Bascom Hays, director of the ery 9, at .the First' Presbyterian administrative services for the Church of Dallas. Texas : Education Agency; will The bride attended the Uni­speak at 7 p.m. on "The Texas versity and Mr. McClelland .is a Education Agency and Gilmer-graduate of Daniel Baker College. Aiken,'' and will be followed by a Mr. and Mrs.: McClelland, who short speech' by Senator George are on a wedding trip to AcapulcoRoy Nokes of Corsicana. and Mexico City, will live in Tulsa, "Texas Good Neighbor Commis­Okla. sion and Council on Human Rela­• tions" will be the subject, of the Bertha Bess Gray and 'Samuel lecture by Mr. Tom Sutherland, Jame« Jamiaon Jr. were married executive director of the commis­February 10, at Saint Paul's Me­sion at 8 p.m. thodist Church in Houston.' Monday, the students attending The bride is a student at Rice the seminar will meet at the Cen­ Institute and will be "graduated tral Methodist Church at 8:30 in June. Jamison will graduate ina.m. for breakfast and will remain June from the University. He is to hear a lecture at 9 a.m. "Texas a member of Phi Delta Theta fra­Party Machinery; Getting to Work ternity. The couple went to New Or­leans for their wedding trip. Asiatic Clyb Tea 10 to 12 a.m. A luncheon talk will be given by W. J. Murray of -the For Foreign Clubs Texas Railroad Commission at 12 a.m. on "The Christian Should Go Planned for March into Politics." At 2 p.m. the students will at­" This Asiatic Club, at its last tend a hearing of the House Edu­meeting, voted to hold a tea on cational Committee. * : March 1 from 4 to 5:30 p.m. at Mexican delegate to the Secur­Iri^grnational Center for officers ity Council, Mr. Heberto Sein will and clubs, of other foreign student associations and dubs at the Uni­versity and members of the Inter­nationa;! Council. AtS:30 p.m. ladies of the Latin-The club reelected its current American Methodist Church will officers for another semester. serve a Mexican supper at the They are Guillermo R. Padolina,Central Metho&UtChurch, and Phillipine: Islands, president; Jer-. Harold Matthews, director of in-ome Hideo Mitsuhashi, Japan, vice- president; and Josefina Varias,Youth Development Council. •*: Philippine Islands, secretary-trea- The Students will attend hear­surer. ings in the House and Senate at ~ The meeting also set the first Thursday of each month as the regular meeting time Qnd invited students from Israel and other p.m. by J.S^Williams, professor of asiatic countries Who are not yetlaw at the University. members of the club to join. ^jSomebody Wants PICTURE ITS THE CLEAN SHIItT THAT GIVES HIM SUCH CONFIDENCE1 Briny r*w eletiMM te Hwe Steam iModry when yM want "wuwthia# k.' H w|B • Horn* Steam Ldry. 8-7067 Ph. flf-3702 . . IJWkiU 10th wsir1 Scorbroiagh & Sm$ frances denny and Eleanor Kassner, beauty problem Lipsticic trouble? This new "stay-on" formula contains lip­ oids t& help bring smoother, line-free, softer beatify to'the lips. Six new colors for luscious A I!--L t M* : Clogged pores? Deep down Cleansing Cream foams' away every trace of make-up in' one clean sweep. Just wash it in ' dearer t h a n ever before., 1.50*, 2.50*, and 4.00*. , Poor coloring? Texture Tirtt', '0^ half texture lotion, half foun-fij dation, stays on all day without ^, touch-ups. Five shades, each 5.00*. -> * I,.,- siun blemishes? Beautjlylng^lo« tkMir-'fhat-really works worSie^r wi-Hi skin that ''breaks pyt." For all types—dcy, oily, even sensitive skins. «In "14-Day" Beautifying Treatment with cleaning meat, 3.50-*. Cosme­tics, Street Fk>ort, •Plus s Miss Kassner will be in our Cosmetics Department,•feb-^ IT TWttllf •/w^sir^tuwynftewfa^fT a?-JSSSK 5S3K8S ^ffi^ii i»y. BTniffi r?iiiiA^«m'»ifi.-QK,Wiimrjir^frf^iTiiiiY^^ii^-tWi A tjvw a. '-. "v^ *f H„ .14 play tead- Dick Rowan, University of y K. ^-quai ' ladjf* comedian tewwffl'? *r«i*Kft fOOftall player last \ is wortd-i *re*t*et. son, broke up a threatened jail NEW YOBK, Feb ^1T.—i(AP)-t-Pe»ai-"iV" "She troublr was," said Dr. Henry 11 betwwTao-s* ym* of WASHINGTON, Feb. lT~49y*ew military poWer for year* to 500,000 men to the armiee they break hereTriday. tniei^ which gripped colleges and universi­ Wrhiton, president of Brown University and nowljave on Uie battle. front, they' _^,/'ita^;lj«»et aqfcrifefca P*«-^A»«rle^:nill^rr IttdWlltf« , Rowan, visiting his father-in­ f«abl« tmt aot .^ecfeMtty. Apply Such ''mi* offensive, they lay, might be ahle to shove the Allied law. Sheriff Ed Darnell, ties because of, the propose^ Universal spokesman for university presidents, "too. gt confident Saturday the Eighth was Ai '1«* Chaplin Stadia Holly. Army ea» atay tn Korel Wen il 'Would *ipe5^ut a ^rge percent-forces south to a comparatively attracted to jail cell by cries Military Training Bill—has -begun to many educators failed to read the bill care^ el' P^i age of China's best troops. < small Beachhead around the port the Chinese throw 1,000,000 men of help, ff ^ ; fully and began to issue scare statements to General Omar N. Bradley, of Piua. The Chinese are believed lW,i* effect, did Chaplin an-into the front Ihte struggle. Deputy Sheriff F. 8. Bueka-A survey shows that many educators who W chairman -of the joint chiefs ©! to have'some 500,000. at,^he.frf»nt the effect the drafting of l^yea^-olds meant ni rone* t»4$r that he finished lew had heen slugged with a a* h» latest aovie "Litne-This optimum reflect* a grow­staff, saya; "Under present con* home made black jack as he fed have taken a aecond look at the proposal to a life and death straggler for institutions of ing belief hero that the "human -ditiona, liold Korea. # we,'" ean in draft 18-year-olds for as many as 27 months > ^MetflNlPW to begin ca*t~ ae&f tactics of the Reda have the ,prison«rsr One «f the men higher learning." ; ' M *i> \ , ;'v:-:•' They just can't drive u» out—un-my troops, these men reason, had pulled a "gun" earved from •are now breathing more easily. failed against the firepower «f a "We have been assured," Dr; Wriston le» they aw willing to pay an would not be enough for a decisive C __ -Jtrned bagfy^paatfc «o*nk a piece of soap. modern, battle-hardened army. exorbitant price." . ' ' Red victory. On a small, tight said, "that all men how in -«jf tbiei siltftfc jereea will be the Rowan arrived on the seem Some military men think the What wonld be an exorbitant front, the, Chinese superiority"in doing well will • college and «l**-of <*• ttotfo. His «on, Syd-Chinese would have to put 1,500,-price? Bradley declined in an in­numbers would not be such an ad­just in time to shut the jail door *1 W, Will play the romantic lead. terview to estimate: But other and hold it until more help be allowed to finish. Of the f< News in Brief 000 men into an "all-out effort" vantage as it is on a long,,loosely Chaplin's secretary made the to push the United Nations troops officers who share Bradley's held line. Massed Allied firepower-came. 18-year-olds, the military, we w announcement of the search fox ttS off the 'peninsula. And they figure views on the Korea* situation put die leading lady in a statement in-depth could take a tremendous The Texas Madicat Center has imethods of treatment." are toid, cannot absorb all of t( the cost of such an offensive it this way: toll of 'lives and : protect every (feat read like a newspaper clac- tlfe makings of the nation'* big. them at one time. This means ti would be a crippling blow W Chi-If. the Chinese add another yard of the beachhead. Tech Wins Denver * • "•• gest plant for the advancement The thr*« labor «tt*oib«r» of the many of them/ will b# permitted a; If the Chinese are willing to of medical science,..Dr. Charles Wage Stabilization Board carried to continue." perience to dramatic art and bal­gamble 1,500,000 men in the Ko-W. Mayo of Mayo Clinic and< their walkout a step further -Sat-^ Education Commissioner illet —then they mteht pomi---f^da^r-seto^tpa^f^ urday by sending resignations to ,L M^Grath chimed in: a 'x«iut» b Wy be able to achieve a military neces- Dr. Mayo, h®te from Rochester, President Truman. The govern­There is no question but that ' si victory—but ata cost which would a*• •*: DENVER, Feb. 17—(5^—Texas Minn., for a three-day stay, ment .did not abandon hope of the general •picture is one of diffi-"ti v$8fi| captiona! talent. be * terrible blow to China's Tech of Lubbock carried away praised-the-growing Texas Medi­bringing unions, back into the culty, even of hardship for many Si armed might and economy. " Sfr^T^ ;i£^~ cal Center and the research wage "control program. smi&H colleges, but it is also clear V 1 f sS K _ _. •» inajor honors in the college sec­ac­ —g At present, the Chinese are complishments of Veterans Ad­Union leaders want a big voice that ... drastic cuts in total en­,.'Colder Than Normal* believed to have some* 2,000,000 tion of the Rocky Mountain rollments, will not be the order of ministration hospitals. in the defense program. When theSpeech Conference which ended crack troops plus another 2,000,- the day. On the whole, I b§lieye ^-Seen-ior. htex! Month OOOtmtralffedifflilitta. r"~" sigtentNorfh Korean Ked efforts urday night that they now had , optimism over The Texas Tech team-of David pos- The Korea ... during to seise Chechon and thus turn general « government's SO-day "w6a-"restored" their lines. springs largely from the Eighth Blackbird and Jam^s Choate won the difficult years ahead. The the right flank of the Allied line " & • '• than your M. D, Anderson Hos grievances. The Walkout of their Ifcer oatlook predicts "slightly Army's Red-killing tactics in the the debate contest. Blackbird won two critical years are.1954-55 and in central were .. Remnants of the North Korean pitaf," he said. representatives from the Korea being board colder than normal*' temperataires past two months. The Army, Air the oratory contest and Choate 1955-56,"which reflect the pinch, hurled back today by counterat­Second. Corps, estimated still to "And the Veterans Administra­was followed by a hlast at the ior JFsm. until aid-March. Rate Force and Navy—working as a the after-dinner speaking. of the first two years Of the* tacking doughboys and South Ko­contain 8,000 to 10,000 men, was tion program (of whiqh Dr. Mayo whole mobilization effort by the was predicted to "exceed normal.' team—haVe claimed more than Richard Gelwick, veteran SMU plan." , X rean*, JVl, attempting to move Southeast . is chairman of the medical advis-United Labor Policy.-Committee."'V.-L towards the-Chechon front from< 250,000 enemy killed and wound­debater, won, first place in men's jory group) has done a lot to prop---------it 7 ! -:-Aln^pst all schools will feel the­ "We are. riot going to let them ed in this' period. erly new drugs pinch — even women's , colleges. the hills east of Wonju. ; extemporaneous speaking, ' evaluate and Premier Ma^rthftl Tito told his take Chechon," said * high Amer­Co -educational • institutions al­ican staff officer on the central .. The Korean Bed movement was Elite Guard troops in a broadcast ready are intensifying efforts to Pen Repairs frontier undoubtedly coordinated with the Saturday that a Cominform inva­lure greater ' numbers of highWHILE YOU WAITI This officer,safd Saturday night big Chinese Red offensive which sion of ~~ugoslavia would cause a school girls for matriculation next that the Fifth North Korean file Allies smashed north'of Wonju general war. But he said his coun­fall. ^Jtajr* H«r fwfc«r «r Corps, with an estimated 10,000 in the Chipydng-Hoengsong area try would not seek arms from the tkmtgii «wr *!»•*» ©*»•*«jF to' 20,000 men, was spearheading two days ago, the American offi­west until SuctT anj rnttack ^as SPEEDWAY made; -.; v"the thruota against .Chechon. cer told Waugfe. The two appar­ SAY3E 20% . Lead elements reached within ently had intended to move to­ The .independent Communist­ gether. leader, bitter foe of Stalinist RADIO three miles of that town before mums:tw nwm his"cies," the group said its economiccity, and dispersion.of effort and their already high salaries consi­country could put 1,500,000 menand social achievements have more resources." _ * . . derably out of line with -those f I Storage -\ ^ »w;-pfT UN take-home , pay is -supple­^aid to US nationals and rational* than justified its existence. the population. •Heavy Hauling — mented by eleven types of al­of other countries for similar It said the system has been Belgrade A" Local 4t Lonf-distanc* Meving Foreign observers in lowance and ranges up to $40,000 work," the committee reported, unable to perform as intended •Household. Good Storar* estimated unofficially that Yugo­ a.year in the case of Secretary and added: because of the "intransigence and "k Crating and Paclttnr slavia now has an army of \ip to •All Equipment'-In*ured General Trygve Lie, an executive "Outstanding men and women international lawlessness of So­ 600,000 trained men—one of theexpenditures subcommittee re­are definitely needed. However, it viet Russia." t largest in Western Europe. ported. There was no criticism of hardly seems in order to offer XL DVER, Owner S06 Sab Jacinto Ph. 6-1ZOO what Lie-gets, however. _ them such extraordinary induce­ The group demanded that the ments in view of the fact that salary, allowancie, and leave sys­their basic salaries are* clearly tem be put on a "more economi­adequate . . ." / icia( Tloticeical and realistic basis." The report was the latest of FOR THE SAME BUNDLE The United States pays about a five-member group headed, by RENT will be administered in Hogrg Auditorium advise the .Library Sctiodl Secretary, *> i L •* WEIGHING 10 POUNOS on Saturday, May 13.' beginning: at 8:4S Mrs. Jerry Jones, M.B. 818, 'Extension a.m. Application* and examination fees 448, Monday, 19,~ TYPEWRITERS by noon FeBruarjr most be received by the Educational Drive Out For An Order Of . Testfng Service, Princeton, New-Jersey, ROBERT R. DOUGLAS Director, Library School on or, before April 28. No other test WASHATERIA CHARGES will bo given before November. Bulle­The following permanent full time tins of Information and application positions in tbe non-scsdemic service on Leslie's Fried Chicken blanks b* at Regis- may obtained the the University of Texas are now avail­ tr*y?a Offiee, Dr. D. B. Giisteel's office. able; • ­ Biology Laboratory J07, or-at V Hall Washing — 2 machine! at 30c each *06. 2 Clerk-Typist . requirine _ "fPS A TREAT THAT ' speed SO per typing of words, minute H, T. MANUEL, Director Drying and accurate typing. One position re­ . . Testing and Guidance Bureau auiring the use of the Friden Calcu- AT^ j -. CAN'T BE BEAT" PER MqNTH — lator. Servic® Charge The General. Education Test, which is one of for 8 Stenographer-Office Assistant ($154) the prerequisites admission requiring a, typing ipeed of B0 . wordsto tbe Library School, will be admini­ TOTAL ...$1.30 THE CHICKEN stered in M.B. 8ZS on Tuesday, February per minute, shorthand of 80 words pe» AB lat# models—Royal Rem­ minute more relatively 10, from 1:30 to B .•00 p.m. Students who or with a per­ expect to enter Library School and who manent statu*. .. ington, and Underwood. SHACK 2 Secretary (4180), requiring a typ­ have not passed the test are expected ing speed of SO .words per minute and to take tbe test on this dacte. Students 5242 N. Lamajr Phone & 5401 to raise the score a shorthand speed of 100 words per min­ who wish made on BURTON'S LAUNDRY CHARGES previous test are alq'o eligible. Those ute. Experience, maturity and prefera-Lower charges for periods ex­ bly a college, degree and a relatively permanent-status.- ceeding one month. or the same type service 2 Senior Clerk (1180), requiring ex­ perience in requisitioning, and purchas­ • ing -with either a State hot Government Agency. Typing speed of SS words per SOFT DRY Washed and Tumbled Dry 7 minute. Positions available March 1. ,1 Accounting Clerk (»l«2), minimum requirement of Accounting Cours« 811 a10 Pounds at 7c per pound and b from the University of Texas and fleld°**i'>le •*p®r'en•"*' TYPEWRITER SPECIALISTS iPi* A SAVING OF 53% OR » .69 The Gassified Ads are the if Can Do the Job Better: n -i j > * r r W® Pick Up rf?*!,"ill *~~1 vt-^jSs? quickest result getters in the -and Deliver M BURTON'S LAUNDRY CHARGES Phone 84360 Daily Texan. >1* FLUFF DR Student Semi Rrrish Wearing Appaftl washed and drfed. Flat work ironed Just pick up your phone 10 Poundc at 9c per pound insurance for fire or theft dial 2-2475 ..Vtell the Classified a?> v. . Ad Taker what you have for Y%% for Cash It Cany *• ^ j f ^ 1 v NET r ANNOUNCING sale or wan^ to buy-or have EVENING (CLASSES A SAVING OF. 46% OR .52 ^(ft a COACHING COURSE ' ~ toreot-^ye lo?t or Fok * ' " * •• HSifM ift I• -'blvlt ' h> £*»<•" CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS this isanactuo!caW tonier?*' mid—and it will come osdHF Ig5 FORMING NOW S - -" * w - a >L..» I , I . « ,found tircrtlaundry ffiyic# 1$ theaper,> j 8frl ita " " ^ for elerk, clerk-typist, typist and ateno­civil «rvice «itrain8tion». Claweannl a w*»y for aix week*. Cobr»e toiludes" counaelhii^1^­ •poeuuued pj»p«rfttion for CM1 Tfcrrfc*. FOR LESS? J., ' I Come in ana day. '.vjwi LIMITED ENROI4LMKNT^ •> » , „ NIXON^LA^j^ ESTABLISHED 190S * '^'^v ^ COMMERCIAL tsisjLyitfjuisnJiiii. Eighth and Colotmdo <• Tel»phon«« 7-69B5 and 7-0782 MAIL COUPON TODAY FOR SPECIAL COACHING |COI^DE (Witiumli & ^ \ •mfW£ 1 !6 ti.'-i s* 1 '^AJ-\ v a-'JS % l/B-W. tJl^u ^ H K KT1" "> n . _» -\U-rL „v r£^ r'"U !uil m JoJb^SS-To Build 'Menagerie • tw» !AJi3:3a '".•••'• '•• •"' :v'F:' Tennessee WiUism*> catch : ill .i P-riU i thaw? of "Thew©h*l Menagerie." ' J' ' A great variety of hymns, Ne­ The 40 young singers, under "The Shepherds Had an Angel, Creation,"which tells the familiar thia gossamer-1 world in the. set* • • Th* i»*»y gro spirituals, and folk songs of Chamber music enthi&la^ DHll the direction of John Finley Wil­ by Maurice Besly and "Haste Thee story. The lyrics are narrated and America and England artllbe in­ ting of an. alley apartment, calls Department of praxa*,-.ipetm *t hear one of the nation's outstand* liamson, will open,with "$tag Un­ Nymph,byGeorge Frederick the Choir-furnishes the back­beet worlat ft opeiii^ 1$ __ cluded In the program of the W ^ng e^Bembles, the Uttiver-upon many different device*, 8 p.m» Tuesday in thi theatar-ii^: to the Lord -a New Song," by Handel.-' . ,/'* . ground and support. All thre* , lt«4­ Westminster Choir Sunday after- «ity String Quartet, Monday at which he so skillfully Bandies that the-round in the L«a-„ In the fourth part of the per­folk songs are specially arranged niiit at 3:30 in Gregory Oym* Heinrich Schutz. Henry Furcell's for the Choir by the famous bal­8:30 p.m. in Recital Hall of the they are absorbed into the living guage Building run formance, one of the oldest stories composition, "My Soul Doth .Mag* Music-Building. before wmi* It tbeii­ rsW «t to music, ""fhe Story of ladsinger,.Tom Scott. nify the Lord," will follow. The moved, to tfc* Playhowke ia H#;1 The,Quartet wilt be joined by 'Born Yosterday' to Bo Twelve," will'be ftqng. This #ong The last group of selections joyous "Today Christ Is Bom" is where it ran ira« •#*->' Mrs. Joan Kuhiman Ryan, pian­ was actually used before the writ­ will include a cowboy song, "Lane Curtain Club's Biggest also included in the group of well-ing of the Bible. "Go Down ist, and Mary Ellen Keller, vio­lected for the Dram*CrftitiF known hymns. .County Bachelor," by Artells «sla Amri as th« Mt, linist. The program opens with Death" is a traditional death Dickinson, "Lonesome Valley,"' a : Spot-lights, carpets, a 2?-page . An almost unknown work to music is "The Warren Martin. lqver, the Quartet is composed "of terday," March 7 big produc­ a Among several selections from Angel Reyes, violin; Alfio Pig-. about the aJgnificancft «f • tion, Jim Meador, publicity man­ and reality. the Bible, the Choir has chosen 1 f notti, violin; Albert Gillis, viola; ager, has predicted, . to sing Psalm 110: The Lord said and Professor Britt, cello. In the play,.«»!t waaf|m^aea#i Allotted the iargfest budget in Unto my Lord, "Sit thou at my on Broadway, musier t*emxhm' Professor Reyes, internationally aer its history, the Curtaitf Club Is right hand until Imakethine ene-. themes, gauze -curtams^ fecial; known concert violinist, made his arranging for a 15-minute tran­tDies thy footstool." and Beatus lighting effect® andfsymbolic la»> debut"'-it'^ Carnegie Hall in 1941.' scription broadcast of. all digni­ Vir (Psalm ij2:. Blessed is the" tern elides were used to help && A native of Cuba, he graduated taries attending th$ opening, he man that f earest the Lord. )~ •U the mo from the Parie Conservatory of said. The Texas Legislature, along Part three of the program in­Music with a first prize in .vio­Tide play rehtains repreeeata*: with other state and campus cludes an English folk song The Grand. Opera Festival, is based on. the' Biblical story of lin, the highest honor conferred tive of Williams^ beat work. A#-. "wheels," will be invited and in­ known as "Wassail Song,"» ar­ sponsored by the . Symphony So­the woman who had John the Bap­by the school. He also won highest Williams himself «aid> -"I'inut­ terviewed. ranged by Vaughan Williams*' ciety of San. Antonio will close honors in the International Vio­snatched out of virtual oblivion Sunday afternoonwith "Madame tist's head cut off; One of the and thrust into sudden promii^ lin Contest sponsored by the Butteray^'^' "V-.V7-•<5' fntnt. popular ecenes Belgium.--— < «nce." He haa. sustain^ that •y THt mim flvtc mwi > is the "Dance of the Seven Veils, t»f Foreign students who. plan -to Kugene Ormandy, conductor of of his art. attend this opera should be at the otherwise known as "Salome's the Philadelphia Symphony, has International-Center at 8:30 Sun­ Dance," where-Salome is re­called Jsim "one of the greatest ROBERT SYMOND.AND 5ETTY READ in « scene from Tickets to the predodj«H day morning to obtain rides to warded -with.1 the head of John violinists living today." Slass Menagerie," which opens Here Tuesday,,, > " j 36 cents for Blanket Tex>hrild*rt San Antonio. the Baptist. and 75 cenUt1 for non-BBintet T«t "Goodbye, Mr. Pignotti, former concert­ "The Oltf Maid and the Thief," holders. Ticket* are on sale art the "Madame Butterfly,". one of master of the San Antonio Sym­ box office of the 54usie .B^iildinj^.";' Puccini's favorites, relates* the is a • eoipedy performed in ;En-phony, received his musical train­ glish, and written by Menotti, who well-known story of a Japanese ing at the American Conservatory Au+ori to Conduct girl who marries an American. was orte of the pioneers in bring* of Music in Chicago and at theing opera to Broadway^ KESERVAT10KS Included in this opera will be Eastman School of Music at Ro­ several famous flower duets,, the TJhe'cast of "Salome" included chester, N. Y; aria "Un Bel Di" (One Fine Day) ,, Ljuba Welitch, Frederick Jagel, Mr.-Gillis, graduate of the Yale .and "Addio" (Farewell). Claramae Turner,and Marko School of Music, New Haven, Saturday, two operas, "The Old Rothmueller. * ' Conn., was assistant, concertmas-Franco Autori, former associ-the Chicago Opera Company^ and ate conductor of the New. York Maid and the Thief," and "Sa- , DorotK'y Kirsten, Brian Sulli­ter of the Honolulu Symphony and that summer Autori became con­ Philharmonic-Symphony, will take V>me," Were presented. van, and Thelma Altman will sing first violinist"of the Central Pa­nected with the Ravinia Opera. the in "Salome," an opera of passion, in "Madame. Butterfly. cific String Quartet. over podium Hogg Audi­During the put few years he has torium Wednesday evening, when Professor^ Britt is a familiar conducted in Poland and has been the San Antonio Symphony* ap­ musician in the United States', the guest conductor of the Toron­ pears. the V-M tri-o-matic Canada, Europe, and Latin to -Philharmonic and th« JpC ii America. Born in Naples, Italy, Autort Symphony; / \"?/j 5 Mi has been ,in the United States for Mrs. Ryan received her master In his appearance here, iqpion­ more than two decades. In 1928 /.JlMMv of music degree from the Uni­ sored by the Cultural Entertain­ he. was engaged, as assistant conn versity-of Michigan. She has, stu­ ment Committee, he will lead-the ductor of the Pennsylvania Grand died with Robert Casadesus in o r cheit ra in Tchaikovsky's Opera Company in Philadelphia. Fontainbleu, France. "Fourth Symphony" in F minor, TwoA fT V UniversityWJ' students are dents*»V»» W in f MarjorieAUIki J The' following he joined V* VVUiUV^ka |U V •*» the play; and year WMV «|*VI it) . Miss Keller, a graduate student of by cast in "Goodbye, My Fancy," the Farr, as Ginny Merrill, also one "Variations a Theme" A s\: :_ mi i L" . . . in violin, studied at the Yale Haydn, and "Caprico Espanol" by STATE Austin Civic Theater's second in of the students. School^ of Music and. the Univer­ Rimsky-Korsakoff. the-round production which opens 4 to appear soon. 309 WEST 2J«t STREET—PHONE 6-4401 King of Siam" scheduled -for Mrs. Jo McGhee, secretary of the presented In the last fl^e; years. Roy Roitw ^ DaU Evanish The exhibition may be visited March l.-K:' Department of Speech, announced Bob Andrews is stage manager, fiTh« TKcm" from 9 a.m. through & p.m. daily, Saturday. Entries are still being an^.Miss Marie Kossaczky will de­VANK Story mi MlcbalanoU except Sundays, and there will be accepted. sign the set and costumes. te«i by Frederic Marefc no admission charge. i "'SADDLE TRAMP^ .,. . About 25 students have entered The play will be presented In Joel McQrea *Wanda Hendrlx When You Use THE AUSTIN each year in the past, she com­the latter part of .April in the SU'ST/A/ "WHERE THE SIDEWALK 7SS85 mented. Ah annual speech con­auditorium of the Architecture ENDS" Pnl Hi Baylor Students test for freshmen, it is sponsored Building. : , • Dm Aadrews•Geae Ttmrnay eCOMMO0ORE^ is the shorter period. This is the ment and can make the tour. His -. <5m Yellow Paces) Ph. 2*1291 6r bUtS . OR SBMHSSSB m AST OF Frt^BROAl^* ftA* -*•*»,, yw. V f * SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 25, 3i?(fRT5l.-~ fZ Vi W V ­U•'•ft'? 4 tfat*" t u SUBSTATION 21st & WICHITA A* «t«» m i*tii aj&W4* CITY WIDE PICK UP & DELIVERY SERVICE "To ­ chsrle* f IW-• VT»«alel)4|. ".I " ' >• ' J-" V ] j -waWPfWWJ^BWS^M^^ 31 *,»•> ' ?• •?*' " ' f'*s-i t p>yyf^ttC"f'¥-•*£-''" |'i\ v' C , J •*• '.£« rjNi^fiKiiT'•-;.r:•/;'•Viiv.vi ^;;..;:'^«i-•-:-'^ v -jauui '"''uf&'&$*? pmw* "^^^gsssfe^r'' "" .. ||l I J > J,11111 UlfcJJI U, |l MfiiSii * Defense ler/ancr ilitary* T&Qiqtt D Americans' And improvement of for nations) defense the huge machine was lilted into Both, tecjtions «f, th* |^«e> trographic sensitivities ^ the, Ufn*Aioeric»n ecWftomifr sta­ -Campos Research d#-platt* '^r.'I)eaitri)w^~^nw inbora* troscopy Laboratory have defense auta metals in solution, -"ty tus. . '7.. * f:ll«rtSir^«a(i»-iw4 m.rnmm Neighbor CominiiH^on, hasWtt _ has taken a sharp upturn dur* tery expects to be in operation by research projects. The mass spec­-T.KTho Military Physics Re­ ^lr, Suthedind also 'deelt ^ |M«* bee* «*•*•** *tt# ng the last six months, Ji, Neils early 1952. It is being established trometry section is Analysing search Laboratory, most secret of loaned for. three months to the problems of a similar nature n ROfCMflftsry *»niwr» Thompson*" director, announced by the University in Oo-operition gases for a classifield project in all units at the Research Center, Texas Council on Human Rela­ A field representative for the Of­ "Saturday. With the Atomic Energy Commis-the Defense Research Laboratory. is composed of three buildings tions. -: • • • ' fice of Inter-American Affairs Twelve of the seventeen labora­scion. Present Indications are the The emission spectrographs sec* in which scientists are working The Ten* Council will hold its during. 1943-44. tories in operation are perform­laboratory will engage in some tlon's work includes a project "on the general ptybtaa.ftg. jfr; farritattons to attend the n»*t meeting in the Academic ing: research, some of it secret, classified projects; Mr. Thompson supported by the Atomic Energy Amr Orf."^«sfe- Room at jft sSO a.m. Tuesday. that has a direct or potential ap­'•aid.' Commission to determine the spec- Alpha Phi Omega Begins 8. 'Hie Structures 'Laboratory, plication to the preparedness pro­ r This council, which was recently iNtee, A*M, felin faile-gram, Jfr. Thompson said.;, C/ of which Mr. Thompson is direc ^established by Governor Allan Emergency Blood Drive There are several laboratories tor, now is in negotiations with Shivers, is a study agency in the ^ . fcllege, AjS6aftf- World War H of the propagation San Antonio UK ' will be approved soon. The Navy, at 2:80, from there titey will go from the amed forees are of radio wares through the lower 8:45—Day of Prayer observed at cation, and vice-chairman of the 9:30—^Ladies Intermediate Club he said, is interested in this type to the Health Center to have their atmosphere. These studies have a committee. Mr. Sutherland's office Their goal for vol- •**««•**<> *»• **»««*• (J|jf • Baptist Student Center. arts and crafts group, 510 West research because precastconcrete blood typed. • • wHl be in V Hall 208. ,. National Decorator*, a fflwHpn direct bearing on the problem of 11—American Friends -Seirtifce Seventeenth. ' construction has many advantages unteers Was set for 7 5 persons. improving the accuracy of radar-CommiUee,. YMCA. • Other members include R. E. of Robin Studio of San Antonio, 2:80 — Faculty Council, Main in the development ol. advance ccntrolied gunfire and are being 11—Newman Club, Texas Thea-^ chairmsp; Henderson Co« h±i been engaged to decorate Building 202. -— -bjjises.-.^^—-X-; Mm sponsored by the Offtce of Naval *ter.'• r"yjl ;r :" ; John Van Croijkhite; Gus C, WE StHUICE AUSTIN. (Sregorjr Gymnasium, ^«Jftt 3—Cap and-Gown Couneil,.^ean laboratories, including im­ wav» •2—Alpha Phi Omega open meet­ Gajcia^J^hop Mariano S. Garri-RADIflTOKS dance Is to be held. Cadet Major Research* Other radio stu* of Women's Office. ^ this "Mectrical EtigiriMfing Re- t "11 ^ WELDING it dies,,axe being conducted for the ing, Texas.IJnion 815. ga, Corpus. Christi; Dr. Umphrey Brace Hanlrins said that Mr. SKINNAY fcNNIS SroOe Robin was on the campus 1 National Bureau of Standards and 2;S0-—Auetin Archery Club, near 4—Steer Here, Texas Union' 801; search Laboratory and the Spec­Lee, president Of SMU; Neville RADIATOR ..A))! \m , ^« > mw 10W'•'WV • the Air Force. *>. City Coliseum. 5—Clothes for Koreans drive be^ troscopy Laboratory already men­Penrose; and . Dr.. W. R. White, ^WORKS, last week for •* pew^L^py Aimy, Navy; incl Afc Fowe BOTC I Some of tMe facilities of the 8-6^—Pictures by San Antonio ar­gins, YMCA. tioned, are engaged in research of president of Baylor University. ' T*i. S^733of the gynvnaaiiATO. --/.v.. • Associations. tists, Ney Museum. 6—r-Texas-John Tarleton freshman direct benefit to the-oil industry. eoo w. su« st Mechanics Robin Studio has decorated so­^*ROTC graduates still on the Engineering Labora­3:30—^Concert by Westminster basketball games, Gregory.Gym. Their importance to Rational de­With the Good Nei^xbor Com­ da! functions ranging from the ica&pus may join their respective tory are being used by staff mem­Choir, Gregory Gym. 7—DSF Sunday sermon discus-fense Mr. Thompson said needs mission, which has . as its purpose • Jbers of the 'TJniversity's Defense Livestock Show of; Phoenix,^Art* associations and still attend the 5—-9u)f®t sapperr Newman Annex.' "^ion.^UntverattyChTistian 'no elaboration." Ifomted'wt. Research Laboratory fo investi­between Texas, Mexico and other Worth, they, have also handled gate the dynamic behavior of com­5—Ganima Delta to hear Dr. Ed-Church. • . These,-laboratories were listed Latin-American countries, Mr. Su­the decorations for the famed ponents of guided missiles. uard Taborsky.borsky on "Religious 7:30—Radio Workshop, Radio as the Well Sample and Core Li­therland has* done outstanding Petes b«ek on Aspects of Life Behind the Iron House. Black and White Ball in San An­Vernon Speaks Monday 3. The Engines Test Laboratory brary, which houses three million work towards the solution of racial . the Drag • • » • is .being put in shape to perform Curtain," St. Paul Lutheran 7:30—^American Association of individual samples from ' 32,000 problems and, more particularly, tonio. To Student Engineers oasic studies of almost any pro­Church. Architectural Engineers, Archi­oil, gas, and water wells in every in rwpect to bettering; relations • The dance is by invitation only 6—Canterbury "Club to elect offi­tecture Building 208. ' section' of the State, "a source of ' 2508 Guadalupe Had, is open to members of the JT. % Vernon, secretary and pulsive device, including rockets, cers, Canterbury House. 7:30—-Free movie, "'Nothing Sa­between Americans sind; Latin­ 4. The High Mach Number Su­ Research material used constantly sales promotion manager of the 6—DSF supper and radio play, cred" with Frederic March and Phone 8-0193 : personic Wind Tunpel is under by oil company geologists;" the Johnson Service, Company, Mil- "Satan and the Federation," ' Carole Lombard,; Main Lounge, United States Geological Survey Ranger Statf to Meet WE DELIVER! Navy sponsorship and in co-opera waukee, Wise., will speak before University Christian Church. Texas Union. tion the Defense Laboratory, which is investigating • Cold Beverages. University student engineers' this with Research 6—CYF supper, Central Christian 8 —• TexaVArkansas basketball For Cactus Pictures ' S JMIU the limestone reef oil fields in Laboratory. It' is conducting basic week. Church; games, Gregory Gym. •o f 4Kb research witk experimental models Scurry County and elsewhere in There will be a meeting of the • Soft Lighting' A joint meeting of the Ameri­ 7~WSF Day .of Prayer program, 8—Herberto Sein to discuss "The ol planes and guided missiles un­•University Presbyterian Church. United Nations in a Divided North and West-Central Texas; Ranger staff at 7 p.m. Tuesday infat 7-8739 can Society of -Heating, and der simulated conditions equiva-the Mineral Technology Labora­ Ventilating Engineers and The 11:05—"Music of Distinction," -World," YMCA. the Ranger 'office. This meeting • Nice Atmosphere for Fast Service lent to speeds of 6,000 to 7,000 tory, which makes analyses of American Society of Mechanical KTBC. 8—BSU executive council, Bap­is for the Cactus picture, and miles, ^er hour. 'I mineral* and rocks for the Bureau Sandwiches -Engineers will l»e held at 7 o'clock MONDAY tist Student"Center. those who fail to show up will not Hamburgers -5. The Nuclear Physics Re 8—-Ladies Intermediate Club so 8:15—Opening night of ACT's of Economic Geology; and the ni Monday' night in Engineering Freneh Fries , Building l88 to hear him. Mr. search Laborartory has made con­Cial service group, 2807 Breeze "Goodbye, My Fancy," Hancock Petroleum Engineering Oil Well be in the Cactus, said Bill Bridges, Halts—Shakes siderable* progress in installing Core Depository, which is contri­editor. ' • Vernon wSl speak on recent de­ Terrace. Recreation Center. velopments in automatic tempera­an "atom-smasher" for basic stu­8-5-—Mica Sweetheart nomination, 8:30—Concert by University of buting to a study of methods of Plans for the Round-Up issue NITE SNAK ture control for heating and air dies in nucleai physics. The seven-Texas Union 30t. Texas String Quartet) Music Re­increasing recovery from ^exas Of the magazine will also be dis­on the drag 19th & . Wichita conditioning. ton pressure vessel that will house 9-5—Prints by European artists, cital Hall. oil fields. * cussed. . r,^to* Sv "*• t <-S. * s 'ptz; 3***te*Sss.AliS&l* * P? ^... -• fesfe ^4 a* ViM * Slacks! -s-'t*1& . " >. rtyZ&t *«v" ; '• \'i.'a:V't'»)•> ^ ft. •%-••/>£< ' j.* -f^ ur nv^»it. x •i 4 h tSo exce!enf_for casua! campus and! classroom wear, for-off-tfie-camp^t m f ,v Siiiiiil lijscfivities, too. Gabardin« slacks in desert tones,, an