iu 1 Jil| Ji'i WPP RHR v* V&a _ F amoui n „,_. M prima! termiteknocked h.ryii.ii *4**«isAs»e4rt lijiiHjlliTiI| 'I 'M^'Mlllijifiiniii ter who will spesk in the Main; v itii {,S Wood It Jm \ ' <•— -' " * --U,<>K i . , i *• ~ w S %\ *\ AUSTIN. tBCAi, SUNDAY, MARCH \\r 1951 >1 Texas UnionMonday at , mm Twelve p.m.r gays that reading other • •* ;t *ood "AM, le's illiterate manuscripts td that1 publishing company he otoca ffi&F '> > May"-: •> <->• jSj» * 1« j­ orkedfor gave him the idea -r Fell through&he parlor floor s own writing. /rl ^ f todays; „ »' Uni ions Mr. Nash will speak on "Midway*' I"Versus," his latest * book ^Through Nash," under the auspi-?•»«, eontains *a, the title sug­ To Hear Ayres ccs of the Union Forum Speakers , gests, a long Bat of his aversions^ Committee. . * He takes a dim view of children's \ When "The Face Is Familiar" books that aren't realiy for child­ Wat published, one oritie said of ren, professional optimists, golf ay Might Uaph after reading it; 1 snobt, duck hunters, television, ^."His, crusade is ageless. He women who leave lipstick on m S BlA^TON lay out their^complete appropriations bill Monday If,j^r Free Enterprise ^ £bmes right out against parsley*: drinking glasses, and people who ; ^Whether or not the tJniversfty witl g«t the thesubcommittee reportihen*. |ittle:„.boySi banquets, women's invite youto dinner without $tjD4 Form of Socialism « .. 7.2 per cent Increase that it requested in its appropriation , £/There was considerable controversy in the Senate Finanee hats, salads, debts, bankers, and ing you how to get there. the recent frightening epidemic of Eco Prof BeReve^ r :p from the Legislature is still unanswered. Neither the Senate committee Friday. Thfe subcommittee recommended a total On tha other hand, he strongly sis? girl babies." Much of his popular­OGDENNASH favors spring, dogs, robins, and. nor the Hou^Appropriations,^Committee has reached any expenditure of $157,150,862 for the next two years to defense of free enterprise ity,'however,*ia due to the fact n tj-marriage. And since middle*age is decision^' 1 amounts to a defense of a form of the State's businesses and eourts. That is $3,669^12-lAore that he just "comes out against.'* lust to show % am not a inevitable for anyone who swM aocialism, Clarence E. Ayres, pro­•fe^Rep, yv. H. Rampy of Winters, appropriations committee Nash coyly chaffs the highbrow piker." vive« iohg enough, he' treats it than was proposed at the beginning of the sessioit by the. fessor of econbmics, will tell the In "Don't Look Now, But Your -Several of Mr./Nash's verses With affable resignation. In lines chairman, said Saturday, "'There is nothing definite yet. The been University Club Monday_at 8p.m." |6477BS Noblesse Oblige Is Showing" have pstto music,.and» finely c*liad "Let's Not CHmlr-the* 7'Speaking on "The Truth About sub-committee is working on it, and We expect to have their .rent spending^v ^' K ,"Bmart Folk to'whom you group of them have been com* Washington Monument Tonight,?' Free. Enterprise,'1 Dr. Ayres will report Monday."^.He thinks tBe committee will be able to ^ Howard Carney of Atlanta and Ottis Lock ef LufM%\ offer piled In Ogden Nash's Musical he may even have given the def­ explain that corporations are so­ a Virginia Bound kndw they Zoo" with tunes by-Vernon Poke. finance leadei^Wanted torush^ttto initive last word. According to cialized private ^property, and de- M cost a little more . Among such four-legged animals «f. Nash, it i* the tii»e Wft(?»: fending "what is widely believed Which leads me as a Lucky the * used for subject matter are , nobody will speak loud to be opposed to -etfr economic floor to meet the 60^d»y deadline '{ Striker,-' cow* cat, and the mouse. He does-jr ' J)-." enough for "you-to hear,. system. set oft the committee jeport by 1 Whenever t'offer smart folk i n't stop with animals, however, And you go to the ball gameand' Lucky to also -but includes little insects such as notice thjBt even the um­^#•1 would like to recall what joint.-Houie-Senate rule adopted —-slip _ -the ant_And-th£ centipede. Even j Ii£, pires. are getting yo everybody knows," Dr. Ayres said; early this session.­ namely,-that free-enterprise posits "i-Sii? themselves, the termite gets treatment: every year." Ignot'teg the r«te a»wf-iijia • private property, and is used as" of their leaders, tite coin- a euphemism for holding pro­ Prefers Moon to Russia perty." A bill was introduced"iri' the iteming from government bonds' bonds, the same as many other l longer,^;./. ­ 'ilMMNtf* Forms of ownership of private Texas House Friday that is in­is* stable, the value of the in­institutions are doing now< These i property have constantly changed tended . to reduce : the load tiie come has decreased due to the in­securtities are-not speculative, he Senator Walter Tynan of since feudalism, and most of our State General fund carries to pro­flationary economy. And,the long-stated. Antonio contended ihat the |ft« If Deported WliatiThln? property is now no longer pri. vide appropriations for The Unir term trend in all nations, including The Permanent University Fund sues involved, which he considers vately owned, Dr. Ayres added. versity of Tj^xas and Texas A&M. the United States, has been toward consists of approximately 2,000,-the most important facing tbe'«M~ sion^ are «ur too vital for? I This places Americans in the The proposed Constitutional more and more deterioration of 000 acres of land in West Texas S committee to take such actionwith. position of defending a name and Amendment would permit the the purchasing power of monfey, and a littfe more than $105^000,­ the various HQs not a reality, arid seriously di­Permanent University-Fund to be Mr. Taylor pointed out. , 000, in securities and cash. Since y* JL^ Sj-p r f ^ t " »•'>&. vides our economic strength, the invested in bonds, debentures, 7-There' will be no more risk September, 1934, Texas A&M. has \ The first study session for .tfe* By RONNIE DUGGER tof in Oregbn, Manuel lope^* orever -her Amencan economist .stated. and corporate securities, including nnder the' proposed plan than received one-third of the income Senate bill is at S p'clock Mon<^qr / r® Tttean Editor -•W'J writes: dream. > "If the United States is to be common and preferred bonds, having money in the bank," Mr. from, the fund. Additions to the morning. Majpr , twrision^' sugw (Th* ttorjr of Tamara Varoi, ; gested in the Senate bills was 4 "She has a keen sense of words Were she deported, would she the bulwark of the ^Western De­Jack G. Taylor, University busi­Taylor said. The fund will pur­fund" last year added up to a UT's anti-coramunUt RuwitB 14,762,027 boost tot higher'adw&i and style and is endowed with an go back to Russia? mocracies, we must abandon the ness manager, explained.-. chase' high grade institutional little more than. $8,600,000. student, b*g» ia the Texan tion over tiie eariier session p«* intellectual curiosity which is an before Chri»traa». Htr contia-"I would rather they sent me idea that the relative strength These securities would he In posal of $56,764,213. TWajiritof inspiration and a joy to the teach­ of economies depends on a matter addition to United Statek govern­ •y n«d stay in ti» Unit*d StatM to the moon," idie said.' She simp­ proposal had recommended a 4$ i.v now.,depends on fodorai immi­er who is'-privileged to work with ly would have no place to go. Her of choice of peoples. The rela­ment bonds, State of Texas -bonds, per cent ,decrease in the Univer* gration officials. H«r»U the her. Intellectually mature, her mother may or may not be dead tive.; strengths depend upon facts and certain types of Municipal <&•}&'J aity's stppropriat£»n)^>* S whole interest centers in literature which must be faced squarely \\9-i­ ' Uit articli of tha Texan ttriM. in Shanghai. She would not be bonds in whchi the fund can now Lbck 'wanted ^ • Copyright, 1951.——Ed.) and teaching.. accepted by Communist' Russia—-and called by their proper names," be invested. Thus, the amend­ "Completely * won over to ^ iv ^ *^4^ th«. bSSe Ifeli d«y# .^cos Dr. Ayres asserted.' would American ideals, she hopes soon or, if she were, she might make ment provide greater in. allowing, the bifti to jgyTw'^lef.<® Tamara Varm has rested her to-become an citizen. good Siberia-bait. > come. and better diversification floor. . a ^ ;Jl American case with' the government. of the fund, he said. i&'uSi \ It is with the greatest pleasure "In America," she says, "you "There ii poB^|'; J. She completed, her deportation and pride that-1 recommend her, get what-you deserve. The' prin­Committee Heads iri,The Constitutional amendments A personal rating sheet of each \ ^Each school will have a commit. here much, bigger than whetherhearing with San Antonio immi­without reservation or qualifica­ciple ia good. It does not work and laws which govern the invest­individual instructor by subject tee consisting of the^ Assemblymen somebody is going to jpsfr' a-?JI gration officials last week. The tion, to a teaching position on tha that way in Russia; always there ments of th« Permanent Univer­will be available to students when from -that school and appointees^ cent rais^i -«r a 08 eexit cut,"' %e -decision wilt be made hi Washing­ college level." . ^ is a small minority on top and a sity Fund were adopted during the student Faculty Evaluation. After evaluation is completed, stu­said. ''We ought to get these bfila ton. • Asked for Data Tamara'a deportation Hearing in big, big crowd beneath." ' 5 . . •• • ... «*• ; a period when interest rates were Committee compiles the results of dents'. grievances may be present-: to the floor mo ail theaenatorsan4 The Moscow-born White Rus­ .«• 1 • • San Antonio, the last stage of This, then, is the story'of Ta­ at much higher levels and in­its first University-wide faculty ed at the meeting of the commit-; the public can -fcava' *-;iook'.il ! sian,'*iow seeking her doctorate in which the writer attended Wednes-mara native of Chairmen -of all student govern­taxes . -* tee ^of Varm, Moscow, come were; nominai, /MS1evaluation rating sheets. the school in which the them and We Could have 15 )6 Spanish from &e University, hat: ment committees are asked to take 4ay, -ieayes her standing incon­runaway of Vladivostok,.graduate Taylor ., This;file, a permanent, statisti­course is, offered. Time lor -these g»%er' pub^vWactiw^gS^? Jived thirty-six unhappy, unsettled to the Siudents' Association office clusive, pending official word from Japanese convent, cal study, of University meetinga will annotmc^ as years before -she entered the tta|<> of a accOm-before. o'clock Monday ^iMaoch tntei^st imetiiis be •WtohiagtOK^'t-<-* : glishedv iwoa as tiw yereity lairt September. .. , ~ ­ " Homeless and wi£hoot a' state, State* universities, master of five pal ~ bond#, particularly, * have /^EacK ^mi^lttea .w|U irtp* 4 She fled Vladivostok during fh* She wants to finish her Doctor of language*—and confused citizen ecwioiopt tor topmetiog Ow atata% '2.929 Kussian peasant ektarminas, clined is the last fifteen yeai-s Texas Union for examination by resetttatiVe to present fhe stu­ tion program, migrating to,Har­Philosophy degree and take her of a confused world. to historically .low leveL In any student on Weekday aft«r> dents' grievances to*the chairman; departments, jfehoelejaosraary li jurisdiction and scope of ac­a bin, Manchuria, and thence dbwn place in the American community She is a tragic symbol of the 1933 tiie Permanent University noons,' NewtonSchwartz, BBA As­of .each department or school. t«n» junior eolNgea MM M as a professor .of Spanish. , But tivity in brief, and number of nnhr«rsitie«, and tha-indicteiy ' tiie Chinese toast to Shanghai; brutality of world forces as they Fund earned mora than 4' per semblyman who proposed the eval­The evaluation forms consider the technicalities of the law and people on committee. ' crush and grind and batter thojK uation, said. \. An attractive 17-year-old, slut cent. Last year the reutrrts were manner of presentation, emphasis the unreasoning antagonism of •and* of blameless, hopeless, state ' 2. effectiveness and limitations; caught th^ fancy of an American just a little more tth|q 2.5 per Students will have the oppor­placed on tiie textbook, material f;i» *^ESr*' parts of the general public may Jwss human beings. c > v 3. specific accomplishments; ­ businessman. who sent her to a tunity, of evaluating their instruct covered on finals, and,general ef­ -4. problems such as amount of Hart to Spea Japanese convent. and to the -j;*y&.. -nv -- tcfr during, the week of April 2^6. fectiveness of Hie instructor. •> , Due to tax; exemptian:on muni­ student interest, finance^ and-peo­ .United States in 1936. - TImi -. Committee will distribute cipal bonds from federal income The evaluation program ia rec­ " She studied first at thC'Univer- ple dealt with (faculty, students, forms to each department forJn-ommendatory. No instructor will taxes, State of Texas «nd Texas Mary: Esfher Haskell To UT jf-pcul idty of tialifornia and then at San and administration). municipal bonds aeQ jet yields imreri ptractors to distribute in their be forced to distribute the sheets Francisco State, where the '.re­ classes. Results 'for .each instruct' to his classes. lower than those on'United States ceived her bachelor of arts degree tor will be tabulated either by in English. Foreign Council to Pick Government bonds. Therefore, the If an instructor or student On SalaryCut one of his studentsor the Commit- University is untitdbty' purchaso needs more evaluation sheets,they . By -1941 she had saraed. hwr'1 NewMca mkhe&t April Convention Staff a substantial,]voitu»« of municipal will be available in the student msmwm master of arts degree, from, Ore­ i As^stated in the Student Assem­government offices* The sheets address interested, faculty gon with a. French minor. " " By BOBBY JONES rr" --< r> The International Council will bly Bill; £' ' , * ' wire provided free by the Uni­ She studied a year at Chicago, Mary Esther Haskell was an- meet Monday at 8:15 p.m. in the •m Although the rate of interest "In thCs manner tfiis'i Admin&­ thi:- versity Co-Op. . ^ CoQege Cks««om Teachers worked in San Brancisco a year# International Center to select its N/ and then entered Columbia Uni­n6unced last night as the winner bolising that Mica was taking its staff for the International Stu­Mild aad Cloudy TO^iy ' tration can receive valuably infor­All members of the committees ciation, on MSshury Problett mation,as to improving,darkroom versity in October, 1944,to.puzis# of tte Mica Sweetheart contest, new, Sweethearfe, to . heart,-no dents' Con^nton to be held The weather will be .mild and will-meet in the Main Lounge of th« 3?r^|;Legisiat^v"Wad: on relations between insfeiructor and, her doctorate in Russian. with ^ a human interest feature doubt. This was interrupted, how­tiie campus April 20-22. ^ J-." mostly^ cloudy today. Thore will Texas Union * "as proposed to Schwart* and House and §ena(ta. * Union. Introducing first th*afternoon. • "* head that betray a life harder approved' by; Charles Bobinsoju going sweetheart, Regina Prjkryl, than & * person of' her quality student vica-presidenV are,as f^l­ he then introduced the five «w«et-• r should have known, Tamara re­>•#1 IH lows; '• '---­ heart finalists: Rachel Godine, called in stark detail the indigni­ mm M ^ Sue Henslee, Terry Holtr, Mary ties of her confinement and the -ymh b if-^i*I«a] Louise Mays, and Miss BaskelL CereB growing antagonism toward her as .e twpaioa..... at 13*» pretext la *m Russia and the United States be­Miss Prikryl gave Mary Esther Fooshee, Ciaade Goldsmith, Clare leve^ membeia of the came more and more polarized in a bouquet of red roses and the jBomperts, Alvin S^U' "Fltaegt* ia the moH im world'politics. traditional Sweetheart pin—a sil­ant^eriod «»Univwf8i^list ' Released after five month*, she ver spur with "Mica" inscribed enrolled in the University of Ore­on it. V ? gon late in 1946. A, Here from President ^3 thetf gave Jy P*7 scale at tiw XTnitersity the Oregon registrar Says her Beth *°w Slegel, ^ oo grades were "very much above ways that Easter Seal donations /,45ree« and Candl«r and director of th« Centeir'* pro. Smyth* Spoorj camnamblfiunj average." • -Club Float Deadline fessional staff,, therapeutic ser-"A ara used, an open house will slow, and She was studying Spanish while Mar* ^ * *wult of tha work of vicaa were extended recently, to fiw Chancellor's Peterson Sayp held at the Cerebral Palsy Canter, Oottega of working on the aide (as her bene­ Dr. William G. Wolfe, associate include treatments for teen-agerr tion'; AUan f»ek Backer^ ftpfe factor had faded from the scene), A^y dub wlAhing to enter a and young adult patients. ' from $ to $ ] L •B«ii^^o«MWHb-u|!(; #ia«|k and she lost several jobs when her in. the Parade open »?"? L \ 3 float Round-Up The housed T' lyn Bruea»: Jerome Burling, Sally ?vf employers found that she was should intact Herb Peterson, by the Travis County Society for ChesnieK, Thorns* Greene, RofeyMoscow-born. ^' chairman of the club division of Crippled Childreni Austin's Easter Haddwr AI Hildre®, M Qn^tIn 1948, she rode to E} Paso the Parade Committee, immedia­ Seal ^teneias, «nd the Jtmfe* Staida^ SUp«i£b4»i»; «bd Chariiea V4 and vteited in Juares for three tely. The deadline for listing'ten­league. ' f'-u §ngemaib ? ? jnonths to shaken her spoken tative float ideas < with the com­ ' V Austin's iHtSaatar SaaY Sf Spanish. Then she return' 7 t 5T' Los Angeles. 1 mittee is Marchi 10. paign has a goal of $16,000 for-" Bwwm* "I tried to "The list of club president* in support of tha Center. Jack Hop , months. A family I had known the dean's office ia incomplete, and land, dean 4f'4*ftn, la one of-ih* xt ba& ICeal* Ch«te Pratii^t Joan W prU ^|% for ten years wouldrould I have not been able to contact campaign offidals. His daughter IV, anot talk to flOto" al! groups on the campus," Peter­>•<» """ m*g* ^f Enginemrinl r tue and «vevme ?xo to go a^fay, v- L. nhejctsdO%„ Shej#oykg£jtwiee aa son said. If tile president* call ^rd, ^arMe Davis, " *r»f* Hs-servanti ilost seventeen pounds* and finally went back to Oregon, information about p*ratfr:ir«l Where she filed Iter citizenship ap­»nd %at n>|t|rials, hj a4#^t from 'Alpha Chi .Omega, Alpha i. --f'-.'-nJ-*i o^bps» Al«9*nd«p p. . , ^ plication anti got * child-care por Gaitoia Del^ and Zeta Tau AV Shirty im 'Bmmu G«n« Si, ' 0 > r "'/x 5>ha, thraa sororities who maint Clair.^Ed Segner. and-:ABte"'9RileWW I farad# Committal : extenalTa nation*! wh>jfcta £jm•> *^ Sfjir-.m ..Cottage of FiM' Arts: B«m* A«n#a JDavia, Maipr Cla%» 4 'if journey across «ka'Canadian «b««w Pladgw and nwb«^«rAlpn* • Howd JPeffier* Fltaf Phi Omega have taken the job «^r, ^ftofcncai Qoai«r» n6!"S^ch:' tea wfll meet Monday M of housecl«uaing and yard work s> tKasalar^. " Mollyl*** She was turned back into the la f«»» ti»« BowM for which she now land,v Dean Arno Nowotny, Dsr, 552" QtltW, ftg|n nity, club, traffic, &*hnicai, trans­ tion: that she had- Hal P. Bybee, Dr. Dewi«t Beddicfc i portation, and decoration com­ JNorth Brentwood and and C.T. Clark, cleaned the Center WHHa K*doli»ifc #i*i BwSWrisrts.'ss^ , mittees pem etoittot i* **tanA 4^mittedjto;Jfe^U« been working mj" %U V*~; cdnuniir £ -n-Tio-Kn-j, I , r. taa by .,w ^ye Cowdfn in'mora thpa.SBO basiaaaa:%ousas •V » f •, I^rraine Sanor, *aw>^Jwd^ i»v . or Kenney. ia Auatia'ai^i ^»vto\€ocMty. ^ Off f^ocampoi^' da CoouaSttos* T1»iy anPmidsa Bath«^'ss«iwp ta»t«blrar« Sit-if. 1 £» l/ * T^mr ?v t' «. VMS' m mm J*-\ ta&jBpisa '»* '#fl * ""• A2£k. * ,(f • ' •-9»Bi ' ' i '%e1^Hwi»nl MikL'" t ml W^f V W V $ WARD for 4h« game's last touchdown BURTON'SJERVICI T«wm &00H* simff with a^0 gene in tha lait qt|*r, In a brilliant display of «>lit­ ter. T«wnaend carried four a; offensive powdf and deception, straight tfeaes, starting from' the tsa >j$. piir" Billy penn-wonf s ,. v KEN IrpOLEY ^ a» Steer hardwood wH& a yis&ry Met for 1£ ti&i**, two squads of equally-matched White 19 and finishing over lkft oodtitms on the1 $£&$fM.AM&. W«4M twr Walt Davis, with 10. ^ Longh vilti " "W iW-jll 0LM wfN jpter<^.-.; the jump on the I» the Haw»y Haasin Ute Aggle« wis $l*y *tetortt taking tiie ball out of bounds six­^*he wore waillea, 8^37 fty the~ W«hin^Hm®ehlBes «* 30 c e«,.„$l.20 tal of 798 yards gained by bbtfe Trophy awarded each year to match in Gregory Gym Monday teen times when they could have Aggiea with a long push ihot by teams. The Whites outgained " Drying 1,20 lowest qualifier, Leading the 'ftigi& SiONwBBie^^sRSags^™-^ S&-. taken free throws instead. Davis after five minutes had their orange-clad, brethren a scant field ill the <*»?, he had a fou*- elapsed-The Carets began' to If a third game is Ae6essaryt li However, McDowell's scoring 10 yards, and all statistics boar pulled right out S«rvfce Charge and ble^ett .25 iround totalof 290, seven strokes gradually bui}a up their lead fnd r,;4^dof K^kend*!!. ' wfll be played Tuesday night. If did not dome easy with the hawk­at intermission utey were ahead out the equality of the two squads. '*' S the Cadets should take « second ing of Longhorn captain Frank The Orange ground game func­i / . Kuykend^U posted a 76 Friday, by a margin of 11 points, 21 j carries, and completed three of ~ ®WBS ?MS-Sl-?8—««8 Viramonte*. " n 10 yW«3cowteh Mors«n, * __—— 0. 11 1 four passes for 49 yards, despite Less 15% for Cash * Carry..., ,25ltdm*8*riot tS-tt-77-81—4l« Black, f ^'0 8 i the fact he played little more Looking Better Aa-r*.Sl.T?-~417 Cobb, t -;; ' -"y !" 6 t ,fl»-W-77-81-'—SID than, half the game. NET $j.44' .Total* it-3 1». »» RHrai ••qriMtwfaadc. Dan-Page, Sltf i&fjik 0ODD " runs. He showed nearly perfect TEXAS AAM <4S) of the Orange teain, matched -A SAVING OF 45^°/o OR =44.^1­Warn* Jferia _ ll-SUT»4l-4l? fMR Sport* 8tajf '~ ' control, and Cofich Falk seemed D»Wftt, f -6 f» H 0 pf t to It Jones in the air, getting 51 yards ~ " 4l-U4»-ti-4i{ Things were looking up in the highly'pleased.'" v" Uartia, t .e 10 l in completing three of four parses. Xion^horn baseball camp Saturday Mlkieb, f _— .0 1 t i ' The only unusual thing about Davis, c.J# • o 4 ic In addition, he gained 65 yards NOW I afternoon as Coach Bibb Falk put VeBonll, g .6 • 2 4 14 BURTON'S his boys through a nine-inning in-Texas's pitching staff is that there Walker, c __ .8 14 T in 13 running'attempts and made Heft, g .« 0 0 0 one touchdown, trasquad game. are more first-line southpaws than LAUNDRY CHARGES for a better Service "For the first time since practice righthander?. . Ehrler is the only Halftlme »e boxing cham­Club, and Church divisions must "his new halfback slot, contributed world into a brecte-swept This is anoHier case where a customer found pionship matches, which "will be t#Mtpyl$*fy!atfy fl^ year, pitched seven innings for the have their teams entered by March 28 -yards running and Page com­Pacific isle. F«t-dye col­ the feature attraction, there will reserves and allowed only two 21. Softball will be played on a pleted a 31-yarder to S.M. Meeks„ that Burtori*s service Is cheaper. Name fur­ EUIA MAE WOLF, ILC. be basketball, table, tennis, volley­ ors, thoroughly wal|rh double elimination basis. Practice to lead the Orange to their second TH4J6 4 , BURNETTE ball, Wrestling, and awards to tested — they'll give yew fields may be reserved by phoning score, with Jimmy Pace burrowing nished upon request. winners. the Intramural office. ' through right guard from the four. ' and your wardrobe a real Thie Class A championship in Tennis doubles entries are due Davis converted to make it 21-14. lift. Join the festival — Baseball basketball will be 'the first event WHY PAY MORE — FOR LESS? of the night. Kappa Sigma, fra­not later than Wednesday, March Early in the second half, Don pick a pattern today. Long 28. Organisations are limited to Barton scored for the Whites from ternity division "winners, and f , . SAVE AT the one, and Johnston again con­or short sleeves. B8U, Church division champs, will four entries in class A antl two 6 Scores play for: the roundball cigwn. in class B. Competition will be verted to raise the count to 28-14, $2.95 to $3.95 ; PROFESSIONAL • Finalist will battle it out for single elimination. Entries for golf Whites. 4, Red Sox 0. the'University table tennis cham­doubles must be turned in: to the Two timely penalties and Dan Cardinals 4, Giants 2. pionship. Table tennis is now in Intramural Office by Tuesday, Page sparked the Orange to their WHIIB YOU WAIT! Phillies 6, Braves 3, the quarter -finals, with several March 20. A~ qualifying jfbund" of third tally with Townsend pushing iNr *Mm Vmtkm " Senators 8, Athletics7. matches yet to be played, but by 18 holes will be played at ^ancock — — from -— one— ..to climax....— across the •mrrmt»9m,9„*.u Indiana 6, Yankees 6. the time fite nite rolls around the Golf Course. . Green fee for theia 73-yard drive in 7 plays. Davis WhiteSox 8, Cubs6. field will be narrowed down to a qualifying round is 75 jcents. The converted. WbcufiA ShopSAVE 20% SOUTHWEST CONFERENCE pair of ping pong experts. remaining rounds are free, Each Bill White took over the Oranga' «r -Baylor 6, Houston 4. Earle Cobb ^nd JamesUpchurch organization is limited to four quarterbacking and used Town-127 E. 6th 19th AT RIO ©RANDE' PHONE 8-4621 im your ou> pes Houston.5, Baylor 3 (Friday)» are 1951 Upiversity handball doublesteaiM. send effectively to drive 88 yeardsBrook^ Army Medical Center 7, champions. Cobb, is Phi 6am, de^ONE-STOPPB*! |SHOP TCU1, feated Ray Garza of Newman ;.Pfc»w«i..ffil^;; Sam Houston-4, SMU 0. (Friday) Club, 21-10 and 21-13, for the giiHMp? <£<^ £ SI . I Day-Glo-—more soft-spoken"ihart tho coW-firo colors, but dashing enough to satisfy the men who -fancy bright socks. Thfe new Westminster pattern has Iftrge, bright diamonds knitted into the sock, is a 'comfortable combination of Durene,. mercerized cotton, and rayon. Orders 1 ' yours todaAy! ' • ' ifoc-«A-r »• ; Acvetwstow ^i » Skij ( i-f i + i % J i ? •&L£tr;<)b.Wj V A ?W • n„gj&>5->w smfr 191HliHIRI J nuf0p»9 -.• ' i BliOB feRAY } mk. ***** { t ^ t , iv» Ht 6" »,T • > M 4^1? GOLD !'v .:!'• mm 9 rwjTSn^SkMOT t pj'jjjftMi atitanin • ixin >.iW ii/LjUijjUi) I' m m m i < <1 mm 0 m W".S | i>a*Millli''a*^IP^^ #f AF-I-VK^ £«£.*• FIVW.^V "*: "^j£Vi a J&T^gfeiX Klein Shoot. 65_ • . asmm^sm: 4A 'I' To fii|ual Record-, ^%i. >fr4—--:x TJIETRFI ijr tWlr-SEGAL 'N.^.VI.I.-^STVL ing a free throw putting the In­ aagair*. 1T^ •; & 1 •vsr Decatur in tha fbst f MIAMI BEACH, March 10.— 1 ' r«wm8*9 dians ^within l point of McLean^S LXfflbO, March. 10.— Ray Womack gave the Long-ball 51 feet 10%, inches to better and two others Wed in two diun 54-42, and managed a, o», $P)—Blfc Jim Ferrier.battled par, Texas AAM rode with th* brawny horns a tie for lint in the high the existing Southwest Conference and one night of ftctfoit four dff» Florence Jo Coan scored her Tigerettes. Cdan's record of 8# victor? over itoderiefcritarf 1& tii f stiff east' windj arid competitive arms of giant Darrow' Hooper to jump as he leaped 6 feet,' 2"*4 record by more than a foot and-a sions. ^ ' | eighty-sixth point of tbe girls' bas­points ftr'.ft* »«ri«s eijualled the ketball tournament in the last 6 J ressure Saturday to latch oft to on® of the most overwhelming inches. Don Graves of AAM half to blast the Border Olympics The college division cohtributed series record in boys* b»dfe«lMai seconds to give Comanche a 60-49 one stroke lead in the $10,000 victories in the history of the shared the first *. record by almost five feet. seven of the records. The last «et by Marcus Freiber^r of Jean DeWitt and-Jane BigitiUaBt2;y Miami Beach Open golf tourna­Border Olympics Saturday night. Other ' Longhorn competitors Another big thrill ,of the Olym­victory over McLean and the first Greenville in 1947. brou^t in the wmainla®. event was a r«cord as ?*ul Faulk­ Interscholastic League girls' slate ment. „ ,. •". With the 220-pound sophomore who scored were Bob Reise and pics was the battle of Abilene ner of Dorothy Gudgel scored 27 for Comanche wttli Abilene Christian vaulted •-Tho Siin Francisco Veteran Hooper setting a new high for C. A. Rundell who finished second Christian College* North Texas 13 feet, 6% inches to better his Conference A championship. • points for the losers, and it was «on»K honor* diridWi b*.loured'the Normandy Isle Course throwing the shot in the South-and fourth, respectively, in the State and Howard Payne for tjhe mark of 12 feet, 11 inches 4 Trailing 18-38 at the1half, Co-her follow-up shot thai gave-Mc­^reen Wilhemina Beckmautt and own fti 70, two strokes under* par, for West' and also winning the discus; 2-mile run won by A&M's Charles college division title. It rsquiripd set in 1949. manche's Indians snatched 4Tctory Lean a 49-47 lead With 26 -seconds Setty Brown, each with Iff points. * 54-hole total of 204. y ; the Aggies pushed to 76% points. Hudgens.1 the last event on the s^edule--in the final five seconds when remaining, ­ A-crowd of 3,000 watched the Comanche took a' 20-7 lead"si" r' Chuck Klein of San Atatonio Texas was second with 39% Texas relay teams came in sec­the mile relay4-to decide it. Abi­Coan scorel a field goal, follow-Led by Coan, the Indians passed windup of the big outdoor track the first -quarter sad had eaaymatched the course competitive and Louisiana was • third / with ond in the 44Q-yard event as A&M lene Christian won it and finished and field show iii perfect weather. * sailing throughout the game. record of 65 and climbed from 2i.%. f r . * stepped the distance in 42.7, and •With 39 points to 37% for North High point man of the Univer­ In Comanche's gam* witii D*. J8th plaice to the runner-up spot Texas, the defending South­third in the^ mile relay behind Texas and 34 %-for • Howard sity class was Hooper with 10. catur, Coan scored 32 points.fol« .-ft 205. :• • west Conference champions, had A&M and LSU. A&M's time was Payne. East Texas State was Faulkner led the college division lowed closely by Darlen^. r^r*Tf ; Slammiri' Sammy Snead had a 3:20.3. four first-place winners. * t ?•' fourth with 18. p with the same number. " for the Decatur Eagles wiWy25. '' par 72 which dropped him to a Ray Marek took first iii thi • • Hopper pitched the 16-pound Twelve records war* smashed Hooper bettered the Southwest, third place -tie at 206. In the last 5 minutes of tha javelin"*throw with a heave of Conference record set in 1934 by game the Eagles' drew tri*Mn § |Klein was one of the few golf­Boyce Irwin of Texas A&M at 60 186 feet, seven inches; whil'-Bob points of the wlimihg Comna-Ses. ers who didn't seem to mind the Cone feave the Longhorns a third feet, 2% inches. He wiped out the Spanking breeze. The Texan miss-in this eyent with a toss of 178 Border Olympics record of 46 feet, ?p«^ «ftW»e Leatherwood Sd a six foot putt at the 9th that feet, 1inch. 11% inches set by Harold Voss of — Claude's Mustangs staved off ed most for the game with 16, and snd Mattie Sue Ringgold, the Ca- Would have given him a competi­gerettes of West Columbia held A The Steers'Veteran broad jump­LSU in 1960. -a last-minute rally by the Den­Yvonne; Averyt, hitting. 13. Faye tive course record of 30. 21-18 lead over the Becktoam^ er, Charles Meeks, took his spe­Victoria swept tip the junior ton Valley (Clyde) Wildcats to Wilson led Duncanville with 14 led Billikens of Fredericksburg at cialty with a leap of 23 ;feet, 2% college championship with 49 cop the Class B girls' high school points. * , , » CC Cage Crown the half. After Peckm*n& scored' inches. Texas' Morris Johnson points, headed by Bill falters, basketball championship in Gre­Duncanville advanced, te the six. points in .the third quarter. La Fiesta was thirds —-—v --v-BALLXSf, «S-record-smashing broad jumper and gory Gym Saturday night. 42^40. semi-finals by throwing -Over In- San Antonio city"champton began Betty fcriwn meshed anotlw, fer.... In the low sprinter of jiote.^^ WBtew icoi^ y Law-fmtrial of " 220-yard -hurdles, Muistangs, coached by Law-Vanderbat, 33-2J: mar of Houston smashed Alamo to'fade. And in the l»st' half, 17 and % points. the .Billikefls, giving them th%V3 •»Mexican food Ralph Personv bested SMU's Val rence (Jake). Halter,took an eariy The Denton Valley t Wildcats Heights of San Antonio, 78-62 Sat­wilted completely, trailing from lead for the first time in the ga»^ Joe Walker to win in a time of Odessa pushed to a repeat per­lead which was threatened only got their chance at the champion^ urday night and the City Confer­From then on the BilUkena l^ept • Steaksand 23.7. Person also ran second in 12 to 26 points. formance in the high schbol class, three times when the score was1 ship by first defeating" Barstolw in ence faded into history in record rolling up 44 and % points with je*^» »nd, ende^. gsnie^ the 100-yard dash, which was cap-Northside (Fcj*$ _Worth) beat "tied. • the opening round Thursday ~~ Seafoocf—. 44-36. fashion;- Tured by Baylor's ftoss Youngs -5f r-ya8chal fF^ ^^Mrth>r 43-41r, jn -to Jane^ Averyt lad the Claude night, 51-r20, and ' \ Rooms for 10.1. The, 78 points the Bayou City an overtime game to take1 third victories in both sprints and in attack with 24 points, sharing of. Troy in the semi-finals, 83>25y McLean's Tigerettes established champion ,; sc'ored-was the most placa. : 1 " all making 10 and % points as fensive honors with her 'sister* The close; scory in the Troy their superiority early in the gam*Private parties ever made by a high school team •The score was tied 40-40 at high man of the day. Yvonne, who scored 12 points. game Was broken after the 15-16 with Piano, moving to a* commahd-Tennis Schedule ih all Interscholastic League spon­the end of regulation play. Patsy Crow led the Wildcats with half-time score whejn the Wild-ing 14-4 lead in the flrst quartaxvLa Fiesta sored championship tournament. 22 points. Jo Parmer tallied 10. oats pulled away, taking a 27-23 ^^^m the early firing wa» Bo- In the semifihals (Aliamo Heights Summaries 806 Red River * MONDAY ' The ^scoreboard crapked City Claude led 10-5 at the quarter third-quarter advantage:. , Close nita Bailey, but scoring honors defeated. North Side 61-43; and Discus throw: 1—Darrow Hooper..Tex­ VARSITY COURTS . Conference records with almost and, 22-16 at, half-times ~Denton "went to Gudgel with 26.' Barbarm as AAM, 167 feet 2% inches; 2-~-Harold guarding by the Wildcats limited Lamar downed Paschal 47-38. 2:30 o'clock f Voss, Louisiana State,. 136 feet 2% Davidson 14d the way for Piano's Auktin v». St. John. every click in the waning seconds; Valley pulled up in the third Troy to one field go^l in tiie en­ inches; S—George Donaldson, Rice, 124 Bludworth vs. Kleinschmidt, aggregate scoring, most-points feet 7 inches (only three competed); • quarter on sharp work from the tire fourth Quarter. > / Wildcats by hitting the basket f<» to NAIB "• Sander* vs. Harris Southwest Texas throw: 1—R»y Marek, Texas, 16 points. / % 3:4S o'clock ;> scored by a championship team, Javelin free throw line and moved ahead Denton Valley's -14-year-old feet inches; 2-o-Sidney freshman s . Gerhardt StUea,' LUBBOCK, March "fO —r(^P)— 186 7 Steele, twftisi Jo v sihd Jean in the first round of piay(. Me» and most points scored by a cham­Louisiana State, ITSfeet 11 inchesJ— just after the final period got Oates vs. Smith. -t game Southwest Texas State came from Robert Cone.lTexas, 178 feet 1 Inch; 4— under way. Jane Averjrt regained Farmer, together made 27 of the |«ean • 'defeated Carrizo : Springs, ' vWl**W w^iww ^ 4:SO o'clock; pionship loser. Jack Simpson, Texas A&M, 172 feet 6 Kleinachmidt-A; St. John vs. Hanretta-behind to beat Tex$s Tech, 64-63, inches. the lead for. the , Mustangs and team's total 83 points with Patsy 40-32, Gudgel emerged air, a seor^ Sander. Big Eddie Rayburft, Lamar's OAV. I»TMCMt. TTTTL AHiflon-Sprlnger Friday night to grab Texas' last •they stAye.d Crow the^remaining ihg leader* for the victors with 20 TCKWLT TM M«« Texas AAMs 2—Bill Graf, Riee; 8— Mstnv IX E " Opitriona of the Texan are not necesaarily those of 11M Administra­vfonranri tnvraniucai, tion or other University officials. Otha Byrd, Rice; 4—R. H. Allen. Texas 8-3446 for full Information. 2010 Speedway >-3846 Entered as second-ciass matter October 18, 1MI at the Poet Office at AAM. Time: 1«7.4. Kelly to Referee Texas Relays ' Durham's is exclusively author­Austin. Texas, undfr the Act of ilareh S. 1S98. . 220-yard dash: 1—John Venable, Loui­* Calendar siana State; 2—James Baker, Texas Clyde Littlefield, Texas, trackised to teach "Speedwriting" in ~~~ ASSOCIATED PRESS WIRE SERVHX* 7^" AAM; 8—Ross Youngs, Baylor; 4—Wil­coach, announced Saturday that MONDAY , Austin. It is the only business Th» Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use tot republica­liam Stalter, Texas AAM. Time; 21.7. ' • S Vdstk tion of all news dispatches credited tortt or not otherwise credited io 100-yard dash:. 1'—ROBS Youngs, Bay­Jim Kelly, veteran University of Menagera*' meeting in Room t: f-* college here bearing the Approval this newspaiper, and local.items of spontaneous oritin published herein. lor; 2—Ralph Person, Texas; 8—Joe Captains' meeting for softbail ;)» Minnesota track coach, will be publication of al),otber matt# herein also reserved. Louisiana R CHMH , 4* • of the State. Department of Edu­Rights of Preston, Sttae; 4—Floyd Ro­-f.• r gers, Texas. Time 10.1. honorary referee of the 24th an* VctiifWi1 cation and fully accredited by the Represented tor National Advertising by National Advertising 120-yard high ' hurdles: 1—Val Joe nual Texas Relays, April 6 and 7. Siwa^J^lta^Tau »s. Aip)ta-Ddu PI II MrSssi&r Serriee, tns^ College Publishers Representative Walker, SMU; 2—Paul Leming, Texas American Association of Commer-v CHINESE KITCHEN (ill Madison Ave. New Sock, K>f> AAM;. 8—Bill Howton. Riee;* 4—-~Gerald : -Ohlcago —• Boston ---Los Angelee •— San franciseo Schallorn. Texas. Time 16.0. cial Colleges. (Adv.)" Two-mile run: I—Charles Hudgens. l~2th & Red River « MEMBER Texas A*M: 2—-Bob Relse, Texas; 8-r- Assoctated CbUegiate Prees AD-American Pacasnlur C. A. Rundell, Texas; 4—-Charles-Ga­ briel, Texas AAM. Time: 9 :C9.5. 220-yard low hurdles: 1—Ralph Per­ son, Texas: 2—Val Joe Walker. SMU; 3—Bobby Ragsdale, Texas A&M; 4—^ William Bless, Tex«« AAM.. Time; 28;7. --v-\ Mile, relar: 1-r-Texas A&M (Robert Mays; Donald Mitchell, Bernard Place. James MeCarty; 2—Louisiana State? 8— Texas; 4-^Riee. Tim*:-» :20.8, Pole -vault: 1—Jack• Simpson, Texas AAM, 18 feet «% Inches2—Don Graves, Texas AAM,. 18 feet » inches: 8—James Lowery, LAuisianis State, and Joe Rutnels, Texas, tied, 12 feet « inches. Intramural Schedule m tj MONDAY eninff Table Tennis 7 o'clock Boh Inge vs. Tom R. Moody. Don Perwein vs. Dixon DeGraffenreid. Tt20 o'clock • ' . Joe Tucker vs. James Warren. £ddi& (JjOA&flh'A Allen Becker-**. Joe Parlagreco. W*4sUing S o'clock Robt. Smith vs. Thomaa Boker. George Sewell vs. Don Rochetle. . • IZZr-^ w.' StOS o'clock ' ' I •• Preston Dial vs. Jack Klatt, • ­ S:iO o'clock I SL K. Vester vs. Mae Brannen. 1-SilS o'clock L'. Jaek Tnrner vs. Don Perweia. •• 1 . S:30 o'clock --^ . 1 ' • m Forrest McDonald v*. RUher Randall. •; L .1 : S;2S o'clock Jack RothweU vs. Wales Madden-.'. -. . _3. J S^O o'clock™ 16.50 pair Thos.' Perry vs. Peter Nichols. SiSS o'clock '•m Robt. Bauman. vs. Raymond Thornton. ' Si40 e clock Will G. Rjran t». Ward McCurtaln. •;St4S o'clock Our stacks are mads witfi the M7Mtartt.0M.ftim. •tW o'clock same high degre* of cara^tHat K. V. Weaver vs^ Otis Tom B«U. Si"iW 'StS*. o'clock » -i^> r if'v ^ Harold Xioet vs. Carol Conn. ehsracterlzes alt our, Nothing;i'v • **' S o'clock Albert Faetehe va. Jimmie Stodghill. -We've festured hare put popu-; 1 \ StOS o'clock vs< Jaa« Btevrnm, ^ ' lar continuous-waistband styles ^m-«tIO o'clock E. H. Oolden vs. Robt. Alllson.: -tv -' ft gets the popularSi^te among^ ana o'clock r' j Morris 611mo?e vs. Joel KarvlU' ft ® yd '&& , fallows who appreciate tih« r.­ ' Boht...CogUa-.^; , comfort thsiy get from tftr f , ^ Austin's fined, in bowling b now opml m un flrst-rotmd squash on or before '^msrt model. Choose from soft, Monday, March 18, at Ike Intramural iiYT4 from 12 unfit 12 daily, conveniently #o-^3 wCF~-f Office. %-r v-wutflid mixtures of tan, brown, Qsoyeaer blue, grey, green in smooth «f ^1uVi ceted far ail Univertify bowlers. Serving j p-i j^shaen finish, alt woo! sandtona 'JL 11 4,t cold beverages, $andwiehes and "Topt^ ' in Somebody1 m/gabardine.. Men's ^ Clol ...... ^ f . 1;K I f \-f , 1 */ Instructions ©•»? --SLIM iy-'AJ+y-.:Jiifl TUESDAYS and WEDNESDAYS bowling fun.** Come on 6vh~ ask -al^-hagues^oWf^M being formed, for Reservations, call YOUR PICTURE f ^ Second m>tK wm. ' nMhi w ^ S**98i(j6r -Tj-« JH: av rv •> t « •». w_f 5 I ; r fi- WeMate, 1U, I aP5« i\w*n®<\ v'«?«?iw^tv^-fe? ^ s.*; *r> 4(W^ifVv; -" — C ---.-. ••••••:•••• --.->••• •-• «A„^'...-.­ * WflJW <-Hi f'SlKwiSik*' T,W/ &BJS MardK tt .-tlifjg THE DAOl*^b*Afs|' t»*$e * -v? 'x^tUr*-i­ l^ir/ -if ffc *Z» *"85^i \*-"-^> * «v? - w cv ciAstftn^tf», +->5»d,5WjiPrV(ft!f*! yjS53& $ K • -v '&Tw\/y^ ,N / . . ;.. Made ift the-islands in authentic Hawaiian patterns v**­ fev and colors. Tailored in short sleeve washable rayon f#cbric with bamboo wood buttons, 59S M 2x2 Pima Sport Shirts The finest in cotton sport shirts tailored by Alpine. Hand stitched collar and poc-Icets in a beautiful array of pastel shades. * All Wool Gabardine Slacks Continuous waist bands with saddle* stitched side seams and set-forward poc­kets. Fine sheer light weight wool gabar* dine in many colors. «* „ ffeiC T Itfe-i i PlSfe "W 1 *\ l i vt*C r yjj ^, ifl?$erry Cloth Basque Shirts !¥*%• seasons fyios^ popular sport shiH'-^-short sleeve t'Jtarry clofli basque shirfi. Many colors and styles lift* «•«*»• <">">• ?t, 1®* , sffi# v«>-i iufSi C^j, %if 3M w /A. ' I r pis- v 4t^ '/ Ti-r i Catalina, iahtzen, Gantner r it»V Ji if** •> Swim Shorts ' v.iv-"'• • ^'r' • • i Boxer or fitted models in poplin, gabar­dine, nylon, or brightly printed! rayon. Sports shirts to match. " From 2.95 %mw k h&i -^ ' & £ wf TOKYO, Sunday, March lL*»gHir*oufr days. •within mile* of -Hongchon,(fl3)—-Three U.S. divisions today- eral psychology textbooks and na­tional" advertising agency execu­tive, will be presented .by the Committee on ^iblic Lectures and the Department of Psychology in a series of lectures this week on •the psychology of buying SttA Ifel-j ling. - ­ / The lectures will be giveh Mon^ day through Friday. The firsl topic4 "Why Do People Buy?' study of the strategy of consumer motivation, will be given Mondaj at 8 p.m. in Biology Laboratories 12. WE MAKE FACES N 234ft Guadalupe .Phon* 8-70S7 News Briefs Baaed on the Associated Press i A May draft call for. 3,112 j Texas men was issued Fri'day in • Austin. The quota, 1,03_8 less j than for April, is the state's share j of the national call for 60,000. j • j Baylor Univer»ity is asking the ! Air Force for three additional in­structors to take care of increased enrollment in the university's Air Force ROTC unit. A total of 625 students have enrolled in the unit for the new term. •k French Premier Henri' Queille Saturday-night formed a new mid-dle-of-the-roa>d. coalition govern­ment, largely a carbon copy of its predecessor,-the cabinet of Rene Pleven. • Representative Keating (R-NY) said Saturday night he had "heard" that President Truman has fired Mrs. E. Merl Young, the White House stenographer with a |9,450 mink coat. , Keating , made his statement in an ABC broad­cast in which he was questioned by Bert Andr&ws, radio commen­tator and newspaperman. /• • The Statewide Tideland* Com­mittee called Saturday in Austin for $1 fifom every Texan to make a nationwide *» i§ '4­ y. Msircfe »iE 0AtY T0CAN' llW -«J '^rn 1 * ]stfotUT.meM SI Concert Features iNfEiSiOrEWMfATRES orne Zfffiittittf m trijile servifag of%UBfele* ^h® "Symphony Eqpafttole -by •mi wiiW taring the talents of two artists Lalo^' witi be phycd by gelgn Horace Hefdt Shi oncert KwalwMBer, 22-year-old guest vio- lili :&xit Austin Symphony Orchestra in Mnist Miw Kwah*^weti who was To Give Audifions young baUerina/ hit herself off her front tooth with one of Hogg Auditorium . Sunday, March given » violin th« age of 3, professional debut began in the month, busted a toothy and her castanets. w ^ 11, at;3:;80:p.nf\^ was proclaimed a prodinr at 6, at fifteen when she appeared «t Talentsd Universitjr " students a genius at ll> and a veteran of became a success. Considering sti^'fa4.no Ivches-the opening of the War Memorial opportanfty to audi, Mil McGREA t^e concert atage at 19. She hat That Is the unusual story of "tral or stage rehearsal beforehand Opera House in San Francisco. She tion Sunday and Monday for th#1 SHELLEY TEKFIS made, two tours of the European Irene Hawthorne, who will appear and that the stag^was full, of lite* performed in a Summer con^ Horace Heidt "Youth Opportuidn ^Bich RICHARD WIDMARK . WINTERS NOW SHOWING capitals, as, well a* several tours with her ballet company Monday cracks that could trip her, it is cert series with the San Franrisco ^ ^ beld March 23 at ,City.Coli»eanu ­ Thtmo^bmi ttf present fgfner ftsap Wftft ^; ever get to see a filto without first PRICES FOR RESERVED versity Co-Op, the Music Building being Saturated Wiih data on how WED.-THURS. MAR. 28-29 More recent Heidt discoveries SEATS Box Office, and J.'JR. Reed's Mu­much the epic cost, how coura­ aire accordionistsDick Cohtinb and 1.20 -1.50 -1.80 MATINEE THURS. 29th sic Store, will be sold for $1.20 geous the director was, the genetfo} Editorial Candidates L "The Horace Heidt Treasure Two former University students, ring role was "not.to be missed." from Harreil Lee, editorial direc­Chest," on which; he questionedMr. and Mrs. James Finley, who . Remarkably enough,* both of tor of student publications, or Miss dancers for cash prizes,' was the are now members of the. Chula these claims -are quite true. And M«ry McCright iA Journalism program which preceded: his. pre--' «mm 'LET'S DANCE" Vista Theater Guild, have leads in even those who might not know Building 108. . sent and most successful one# Betty Hutton*Fred Astaire the guild's latest ."production, enough but to think that Ferrer is "STALLION CANYON" After filling out the blanks, ap­"Original Y outh Opportunity"Icebound." " ' a new dramatic discovery froih plicants may file then) with Mr. Show." .. Mrs. Finley is the former Eliza­South of. the Border and the CYRANO DE BERGARAC. Lee any time between Wednesday, "Cyrano" plot a product of a con­ beth Tiiley, daughter of Mr. and March.21, and-12 noon, Saturday, _ Special Prices esUftg resemblance to Virginia; \ CMmn An Island" cere. laughter and sympathy. B*er Bottle Barrage and "Roadside." The beautiful lady the swords-teresting expieriment." It is a At 7:00 & 10:09 At 7:00 & 10:45 M Mr. and Mrs. Finlejr are the man-poet wooed for another man thoroughly ' entertaining movie, "HOENGSONG, Korea, Sunday, In Technicolor "FOR parents of a B-month-dld girl, by his soulful poetry is played by ?nd should be approached in ex­March —Ail Allied plane ^For -Charlerl;« \ . "DESERT SIERRA Mary Hester. Mala Powers, who bears an inter-actly this spirit. -added-a new twist' to the usual HEAVEN'S Audie Murphy • Burl lyes SWrrt Wheel Riverboat J1AWK" Wanda Hendrix Korean btmibing' taetics the other SAKE" r Yvonne De Carlo Clifton WebS SPOOK TOWN" •/ night; Itdropped 2,400 empty b«br :r Richard Greene Joan Bennett Dave O'Brien and soft'drink' bottles on sleeping . • ' Bsfore yen decide en asy erckes-p.m. March 16 by the Faculty Re­4 tra fer /our Spring Fortaals be cital Series of the College, of Fine lUNPiE (8 lbs;Jndy.) NEW BRICK apartment. % block law * For Sale _ building.. Four rooms casement win. Rooms For Rent surete haarTED CARlt—Us Aria. -» dows. Tile baths, Venetians, Range end Saxaphoae..aad Onkeetral.' -Before his United States debai vjhirts 12^exfra­ ' - OLD 11. C. SMITH typewriter in trood Refrigerator. 102 East 20th. MEN. Across from Kirby Halt Suite of ' ' '-1-/-. : j ' -^ in 1941/ the Cuban violinist was fT' if condition. $25.'L. J; Hippchen, JB 108. rbotns and bath lor . three, two vacan­Th« Mntrt vfll rifymnm Smdajr^ weR-khown' among eoncert^goers Help Wanted cies. Privatd entrance. Redecorated. 3 to S p.as^ at tin YWCA. 10th * ;• jfOf SALE: 7-pas*enger Packard" town 6-0096.: in Cuba and Europe. A graduate .sedsn. -1935 model. Looks gootj, runs 8BA -graduate. Brasee. Come weutl a i.* _ Untversity^f nior^or of the Paris Consei^ator^, lie watf fcood Y.oa have never seen a -car like it (or S2S0. Inquire 2700 East &tt> $tre«t. Excellent opportunity. Asply. Personnel -Fer JUsarvattaas twhrt |jOTrded. ftreT priie m 1.'AH linenstrone erchi Director Goodfriends. 901 COnsreki, Typing DAN STKUVE. a-SS7ft J941 FORD. Espellent. motor. V«ftry highest.honor conferred by that dean, new tires, and seat covers. 147$. school. .• • . Losf and Found Radio extra-if desired. S802 Wynona. 2. Underweop socks & pa'i^^W dH^ct phone 6^5842. THESES, reports, outlines, 2317 Old* Tarn spiral notet-bpok. Lost ham. 'Phone 2-4?Ur after"6 <80 p.m. ifOR ".SAiilt Leica, model Jll, Snmrnar nV?*: 1st pageT""Mts. ~ Theses. • f' • 2, $125. Mrs. Akselrad, extension -.t*£it*?n Patrick. Hist. 615A, Sec; 8" BUI~ " "EXPERIENCED TYPIST": „AU STIN S ! SYMPHONY ,rssai' B. Plus,15^, discount for Cosh fir Corrf^" 811S or 6-0875. • Wartenn«n, 2804 Whitis. «.4S78 Themes, etc.. Univ. aelsliboiliood. H V'Tf '"'""tffiSfc EZRA liXCHLIN, Cmdutor SSLF*?** "M.A.," tiny dia- V> y". ATTENTION mond, lost between 12th-and-Rio TYPIST'S POOL; AH experienced typisU*. v -.SludetiM' *•' a \ Phone® 7"5^5^*t-and-Gtj«ewritar. Mr% :Petineeky. ttM'M-1li^|1^WiM1wlC1l m^m -1* J** UHli Man «n Campus By Bibl«r Last-wiek" idles mm 15 F^BSWTCJ ~A*?h JM wfc 'Wbrfcss# t^fi the are in peculiar situation Texan: *$ i, ^-sn?v i Sri'? » J^x "V 4*S Mpef education "Well. ^ ; aflrat-ClaiBafootball rrrr team, you've got to pay for it—academic* Through no -fault of their own, they ally aswell as ftnantially,' Are given particular fdvantages which That is not necessarily because, ath­ By RONNIE DUGGER ' . , . From *11 reports, the Hospital who are members of the "Fresl cannot stand critical comparison with letes need more academic help than other T*z*n Editor . is first-class; and for that mat-rilan'a faculty Friend" eommittei the opportunities of other OFF THE CHEST come these so to be E*ch student has h1« own facul thiaas-jny-lasfc-week notion! . . ter, teem the clinical At the University, those »dv*nta(M workout requirement* leave'them little & afjiffaW -w--r-—— r memhei? to. consultif he ^eta ii staffers. . The University Commons lias come under, the beading of fln*n.tu^-4^fer1rtutjytiir.' ™—' --• -~—. hot water~financial, moral, a collected a $250,000 surplus from, The fault=4ul Ihe Faculty Coun­demic, trtiat have you ,.. torim, and mitfeUaneoue academic con->T(l8 comes bi^iither t0 the its nonprofit operations. The cil,"Student Assembly, AAUP, and Will the various department siderations. money belongs to .the students. athletes nor the Athletic Council, but Texan have unanimously pointed job placement bureaus'never The scholarships our athletes receive And a quarter of amillion dollars OuW-lies in the jpolicy announced feuding and failing to realist to the distorted educational values that would go a long way toward Un­ are quite in keeping with Southwest Con* and-enforced by Dr. Painter to that they are doing the, student emphasise footballover learning. ion expansion ... , > a disservice by their itubbor Terence rulw; but the timplefactthat limit service to "emergency eases^ • %"place fo^ athletics ih the The. Faculty Council considers the division. . riess? ' .""" '' " so many NBtudents received scholarships matters that bear directly on stu­in clinical life of everyIndividual and in. the enter­ Thfere is no reason why , t6t athletic proficiency, as compared to dent life. Why, should not the The only hope would' seem to departmental job placement bur­ tainment Of every university; but to be a storm of student' protest: relativiely so few for academic jHrofiCien- . Assembly be allowed to elect a eaus c&n't continue to thrive in! allow the Mammoth Football to weight student representative to. the And students don't Usually storm their own realms with a central] r-?cy, is no'credit to University nor national Council? : >• protests * ... . the scales against first things first—edu­ job placement bureau at the head,: ^educational values. " " For instance, Dean Boner has After fighting for a voice with co-ordinating employers' requep .. cation itself—is unwise by any measure. ^ Perhaps the most unfair aspect of *>«»». concurred with the Texan that the Regents, Student Government for several different specialist^! the 'no-exemption" rule for final has apparently abdicated Its res­handling much paper work, and] |Iathletic treatment is tutorial. . Whereas «'<• exams, especially for A-students, ponsibility to consult with them gathering key information from! fjother students! must dig out their own 'X i should be re-examined. Who will for the last two years. all over the country for-the de-|||quiz.answers or else pay for their tutors, n C^motidn speak for the student? The Regent-Liaison Committee partment job-placers III.'4, ft|the Athletic Council provides special tu- And why is no reporter allowed has not met since 1949. Yet there _ Until the Campus Chest Is re.| vuo to attend? We are often chastized have been many problems before vive will be on the campus on March in not later than April 24. dfflanks for require every UT student to take the University, even on the el« 15 'to interview students who believe making application may be obtained at two yeArs of basic education • • ' '\ rash with only emotion, and beautiful-that they may be interested in working « ,.BV.re*u of Testing and .Guidance. . • Ws mentary levels. in $he merchandising field. H« is in­Hall, or at the Registrar's • * Student Worries Dean L. D. Haskew of the Co| V. Office. ** -v "-THE TEXAN regrets the. errors con-with intelligent emotion, terested in seeing June graduates in Results of these tests are required by fine arts, business administration, liberal the University's two medical branches And Then, Honor leg of Education is very Inter ceming the already-tried Escort Bureau, arts, -and home economies. Interested before final acceptance can >be made. WHEN THE third University ested and notes that summarj students should contact the Student student in 18 months -died from WHAT BECAME of the Assem­ attendance figures at Friday Frolics-Employment Bureau, in B Hall 117. R. JACKSON, courses are offered at many • University Examiner bly investigation into the feasi­a Tower plunge last week, we In 'the field of part-time . work the versities. They discuss, simplj . F'i^We haveja real respect f6r the hard and bureau has a need for students to do The permanent full-time • bility of an Honor System for couldn't help remembering what following .A 5. octe$ collection work the we the principles eiv be for American L«-. positions.in the non-acbdemic service of said after'Benny Sellers fell practical of pfcy In effective work of the Free Dance Com-kion Circus beginning now until . March the University of Texas now avail­UT? chology are 20. The work will .be on a commission able: in 1950.. |;^mifctee and did not intend to cast asper-THE CURTAIN CLUB is planning to basis with the possibility of earning $10 "We are too large," vre have A gay note: We have heard thai ($162), 1 Accounting Clerk minimum UT students with worries gen­ been told. Why then, can not such per dmfi There is also an urgent need requirement of Accounting 811a, and the Government Department planq I^bIobs upon it hold a convention of representatives of for students to do yardwork. some experienced prefered; 8 systems be organized the col­erally are not aware that they "lib with on JOB D. FARRAR,. Director Clerk-Typist 50 to abolish the use of the Ot ($146). typing speed of pi At the same time, we re-assert the the nation's drama schools and organize ~ " -Student Employment Biireau words per 'tninute and preferably a year lege levels-^-aa, for instance, a can go to a ^psychiatrist or the and Ray text ... " 1 1 "T or more of college; 1 Secretary ($180), Testing and Guidance Bureau. ^opinions that the Frolics should be re-a national association of college*drama­' Deadlines for applying for admission requiring the ability to assume responsi­Music School honor sytsem, a The utter of-insults: . y :V^,Hewed in behalf*v of the unorganized stu-tists.' to Southwestern Medical School or the bility. maturity and a shorthand speed BBA honor system, a pharmacy They should be able to consult George Tait said at the NSAl Jfi-—J -• ---«• •University of Teka« Medical Branch at of 100 words or more per minute; 3 honor system, and so on? Law a Central Counseling • Bureau Galveston is Mondays April 2, for party Friday night; "f can. tell* Stenographer-Office Assistant ($154), J^ents; and that the coffee time, which. That might go a_ little way toward de­Southwestern Medical School and May. typing speed of 50 words per School's plan works like a (even if it's only a change in you one thing: Oxford Uuniver­ minute .15 for the Galveston Branch. Students and' an accurate shorthand speed-of 80 charm . . name). see Mr. Hex Jackson, University exami­applicants urged And what will become of the Furthermore, should NSA.' ^I we hopfe will succeed, is not a substitute centralizing the legitimate theater from who have not yet made application should words per minute. sity will be the next school to' l^^or the Frolics. those few blocks of Broadway. ner, in the Registrar's Office. Interested are to students join apply at the Office of Non-Academic Per­Administration's restrictive policy have a faculty friend, as it were. \Vrong, though. England ha» The Mediea^ College Admission Test sonnel, Main Building 204. will be administered by the Bureau of CHARLES T. CLARK about the Health Center clinical At Baylor, every freshman is as-its own National Union of. Stu­ Testing jmd Guidance on Saturday, M#y Director service? signed to one of 85 professors dents. Mid-term Ehlistees Mr.'X' Speaking: O • • » -• • . • —• •• • RUSS KE»STEN Every Chance for Peace Xmtm ******* eontinuanee in tfee reserve of­tors explaining the draft sta­ x fice/ program. tus of registrants, selected for *0*C BNLISt^TES Mv# (George Kennan, "Mr. X" ot > ment as hostile to Soviet Russia More than ' half the d«r-enrollment or continuance in ourselves involved in a local mili­Nations. It is true that Communist Communism, as we have se Kiaie^w^la^l'it» good. . tk* Department of Stat« and-now . by preconception as Soviet, Rus­ all ROTC programs: , • tary conflict, replete with the China has committeed acts in Ko­ Abnlleti^froL MajorGenrf_errei Officers Traift- a member of, the Princeton In­sia had been hostile to-the capital­most grevious implications, i above, h^s been possible for ln|r',Corpe »tudent« «e in the 1. provided, m over rea can condone one Congress; stitute for Advanced Study, wrote •di which -no Lewis B. Hershey, direc-the Selective Service Act of ist West—that major war ensued. the problem of disposal of one of"* and fpr which its leaders bear the years. I do not know whether of Selective Service, aays freshman and sophomore cla|-1948, for the statutory de­a piece for The New York Time* -. . . By eliminating the armed those disputed areas from which gravest responsibility ... will continue to be possible for< *es of tiie nation's colleges. magazine about an extraordinarily long time to come . effect that all ROTC mem-. ferment of those students, power of Germany and Japan we required that the power of our But the question at issue here , . important and delicate notion. The The most promising students fleeted for enrollment or Texan here preaenty from certain very important areas recent adversaries be withdrawn. is not, and never h^s been, whe­. . . Admit that the dimness o| -,;.,gbers with good academic and excerpt*.—­ are chosen the first year, then continuance in the Senior Di­Ed.) of human habitation it opened up We are indignant oyer the refusal ther the Chinese Corhmunists were our vision-gives us the right nei^ d j^otcee standing are draft-ex-a selective process is put into vision of RC>TC of the new and delicate sources of dif­of Communist China, which is not "nice people^" The question lies ther to a total optimism nor to the ^:I«mpt. And it's mandatory that operation with the quobi get­ ference and controversy between a member of the UN, to recognize tin the amount of damage they are total pessimism, and that our duty! Army, Navy, or Air Force and ^^oeal draft boards grant de-ting smaller each succeeding The air vibrates with contro­theSoviet leaders and the West. . thte authority of that body in the capable .of doing, and are apt to to ourselves" and to the hopes of! Sj?*$Earments to these students. year, in litis way, only-the those appointed is,, midship­versy about -America's proper So these problems and action in do, to world stability ... there new dispute,, over its mankind lies, in avoiding, like the! best qualified ROTC men are men, United States Naval Re-course with respect to-Russia. - This answers * popular were; and they proved, indeed, to opposing that authority by force HOW MUCH DANGER? soul of evil itself, that final bit ofI writing to accept a commis­be anything but easy; and because Let us measure realistically the impatience which tells us to yield! |U;eampus question of the mo* untlmately commissioned -(up­serve, provided they agree in Much of it, it seems to me, is of arms. It is worth noting that; ill-con­ ^K«enti .axe the students, par­on graduation) an<} enter the shallow or.prejudiced or -oLthem it even turned out to be whereas, we introduced our forces • actual extent of this danger; let that last position-of hope before! ticularly, who belatedly join­services as second lieutenants sion if tendered and to serve ceived."It is hard to imagine that impossible, in the immediate post-, into the conflict, and I think prop­us be guided by that alone . we have been pressed from theitt|and ensigns. not less* than two years" on ever at "any. time in history has ed the several ROTC branches. active duty after ' receipt of been poured war years, td negotiate peace erly and wisely so, the Soyiet Now all of this might conceiva­by unanswerable force. —many at midterm—liable to Main points of the bulletin, more error ever out treaties at alt . . . And there were Government did not. If has pre­bly j»dd up to the necessity for • he drafted tins summer? Nil,: which was '-sent to their commission. upon a single subject ...,V to to With out all many foreign ministers' meetings, ferred operate, date, another world war; but before we As long as there is a one-thou-i not if they are selected for State Selective Service Direc-2. Those registrants select­Thirty-three years ago—not two many; disputes, many disappoint­the forces of its. puppets ... decide that it does, let Us.be ter­sandth chance that a major worl<3 ed for ROTC programs, who or three, mark you—there was a, ments, and much tension—but I• have long believed in the ribly, terribly sure we are right. conflict can be avoided—and sijpi the weement, shall be revolution: in Russia. That revo­ there was no major war. necessity for rearmament. I think In the old ^carpenter guilds there hold the chance far greater thai deferred from induction for' lution brought into power.a-politi­ it should have come, to gome ex­was a principle that you should that—let us guard chancy / that training or service until after cal movement already committed, The second consequence of tent, much earlier. But what I measure seven times, before you like the apple of our eye—let v graduation or termination of . and long aii'H deeply committed, to World War II that I wish to> men­want to-get at is not the fact of cut once. Are we sure we have remain considerate of the hopefti>. the course of instruction and an attitude of <,£ hsstility toward tion is the establishment of the rearmament, it is the rationale of measured here for the seventh posibilities as well as the discoi : so long as they."continue in a our social land political sys­ aging ones—let it not be said. ovra United Nations. We Americans it. time, or even for the third or sec­ . anamination regular or reserve status af­tem and to many other things else­a leading part in ond? This is-no time to make a us that we allowed any hope fori took this. The We know many people in'thisoadar th« Utl* of ter being comtjussioned. The where vrhich w^ believe to .be es­ : n* fawlMt Trnsan on twmSv aad Friday by 7«ua Stadnt Publiea- Russians: reacted : to. proposals country are coming to believe that false incision. The material will the avoidance of war to die, like! tteaa. las. deferment of these students sential to world stability. from us. You will recall that they war is not only, unavoidable but bear >no more than one mistake. an unwanted child, by abandonMj is mandatory upon loca 1 boards. , , ; . . We did not create that at­were quite emphatic in thei^insist--imminent, and that the reasons "Co-existence" with Soviet ment and neglect ,*»-"•••iMvitr 4 titude, nor was there really much ence on the veto power in the Se­ . for rearmament lie . . . in some3. Department of Defense we could do tO; prevents its rise curity Council;;.. M.r-TTr.Tiy>1*W»i.» —4 HHeto ««t«» dwfcur new ...elements of menace in the Texan Crossword Puzzle policy governing the selection _ or ?.to, alter it After it appeared, Now gome of us liked these veto Soviet attitude, which" entitle us ot tk* Adnlniatr*. of registrants for enrollment > ' It arosd out"of ideology an«i pre­ provisions and others didn't, but . to despair altogether of avoidingin the various reserve officer conception, out of things whieh no one can say that the Soviet major war for any considerable Today'swere not our doing. training proj^rams places no ' Government was not frank ifi stat­further period ... ; " ACROSS 2. Greek epic 20. Narrow _ . • A33QCUTEP PKES3 WIRE aJt«VICE restrictions as to the time of*. . , This new political power, while, Aniwer is ing its position at the time, or that • 1. Amerry * poemi inlet (geol.l ( Selection or as to the Selec-.not exactly, a Russian phenome­ in thf «SS aw ta tt at ««K iTlwrslw trSiUxl to we were not warned that there WAR IS POSSIBLE -tune 3. Ignited 23. Angle ttaou of WMttMHt stiUt'ttiWiM t«h. tive SeiVic^ .status of the per-non, did succeed in estabisbing it- 5. First man 4. Tantalum 24. Stuck fast • IPsW* PttWwtiw of all «tker matter aerita >1»n i aiai i ail might" be categories of problems' Of ctmfse war is possible. Of Classified *son to be selected. The only self in Russia and in bringing un­would no one (Bib.) (sym.l 25. River whi.ch be less susceptible c course ciifnr'say that .we „ • restriction is on the total num-der a forjn of effective and stable 9, Eyelashes 5. Sacred bull .(Eng.)/-" Ads than others of treatment in the will not be attacked1 Or thatrmajor ber* to be selected—prescrib-control the energies of the peoples" (Anat.) . > (Egypt.) 26. The toward UN forum . , y. . " • > war will not develqp from the im­ % " C^lca|M>— Lo» Aoscla* ~> 8aa rr»w5K»^ "ed by the' Secretary of De* and the natural resources of that 10. Walked 6. Italian poet-part It was clearly our view at that' petus and the • cumulative compli­ fense. . • area .. •' back and 7. Division 27. Game at fdHufcti tww •• •< • time that the UN was to consist cations of this situation.. forth of a play cards „, JThe_ ^ Inter-Service Agree­• of both Communist and non-Com­...Before we assume the world 12. Death notice 8. An assentbly^&'Fiutter The Bolshevist leaders, in ac­ ment of the armed. forces munist powers ... situation has turned basically and ^ 13. A season of 9. Fuel 31. Living f.-" which the cordance with-their ideology, did prohibits enlist- .. Now we have on our hands'to­irrevocably against the chahces of the year 11. Male 33. Fleshy. ' 35. Fresh-water their best, in the years that wiOTift' *XTBt .ment of Vegistranta after thejr en­day a situation the seriousness of peace, we must make absoutely 14. B^Jiman honeybees pendant* $ • -«S sued* after the revolution, to tortoise f# axM% aiW la to** .so .: have been ordered to report , Which no one would denjK We find sure that we know what we're do­title 13. Put on in back 38. Extraordi­ tm mernVk. ' tm. the of : Mt «f achieve breakdown non- guard -*9 -for their Selective Service ing—that we test our views and IB. Immense of mouth nary person . Communist power in Western Eu­ 16. Toward PERMANENT STAFF ' pre-indaction physical exam retest them, putting aside all emor 15. Absolute o4. Terms used 41. Spring mont^ rope, in else­ Editor-isCkirf. RONNIE BUGGER does sot apply in theselection this country, and tion and irritation'and everything' 17. Scaling 18. Unexploded „ in trigo­42. Apple seed ' where. They operated Communist device • bomb nometry ­ Associate Editor .-CHARLEY TRIMBLE '' of students for the ROTC. subjective^—that we take care ; "44. Bone (anat.) l-Editorial fasist»ata fifth-column organi?ations in ^iriniz 19. Ireland • Jim Bob Gailaway, Run How many men are affect* that we ire hot being ...carried . (poet)' -practically eVery itrea in Jthe Kersten, ed, by this? General George away < here: by false -assumptions News Editoi 11. Vase with world. They unleashed civil wars <• P. BeMwifr Warren Marshall, Secretary of De-or short memories or emotion ..• • afoot.• quotas (De-and, revolutiojis wherever tbey W&Liihe It is tru^that the Kremlin is: 22. Suffix usedin to saw a chance..They sowed confu­1 for college hostile and secretive, and a con-i adjectives . sion and suspicion. MORE FROLICS'«- U fittL Cockrum, p^OTC programs: army—114,- , stant source of worry, danger/ ' 23jT«a4x>x, •They peddled bitterness and be-* To, the Editor:^ and annoyance ,.to na„all^ it-haa,^ ~ is-^y—contention that the* Ifl^that^Jwyn^STyiS^ ~ ^ Mt;: ]%orik Mi** " ^95? itSSB earned a great deal of resentment rWday Frolics should, come back*-• 1 29.;Oouvt • '" J.--.. *•" lOQtey ^ - f .* ;n ^ It is true that Western Europe . .nil MA f^eiety j^itor '^,, , VUrfiY in returi^ and no douhr a tfertain list semester there were Friday ii overshiidowed by Soviet'armed SO. Ostrich-like 2P ChR«b?*ge amount of subversive activity di-Rights when the Texas Union was fiun#n , * strength; it has been that way bird AmoM«neiita Editw-SZZ, -E«te#; Jon»||Sf ^rected against themselves ind »o crowded there was hazily room since 1945, and to some extent : 32. Stir 21 S" ,• . Tom Toney their system, Chough nothing. n.«»r 'to iSand. o •yen earliejr. 36. Northeast Ain Courter *t what they claimed. They were a Coffee Time has not replaced j (abbr.) i {Science Editor _ H is 'true that Russia.has the Jh 37.Oherish \ I nuisance and a danger to i&verjiy' ahything. lt just added coffee and bomb, , Exchange Editor atomic . I am asking ^ —.. Jim Tucker onis else . ,t, . _ 39. Vitality^ late JrUDMMT HEALTH CENTER , donute. I have talked the situa­whether they $xe new or unexpect-40.Valuable . WrWJon«4 didn't succeed i» destroying any? ,Of the few, opportunities for stu­^gainst the South Korean. Reppb-^ ' 44. Lubricated bodf', nobody succeeded -in ide-dents from different department# am not .toying to justify ; 4#.On«Vho •end with /ft »* JV^ii" J» % •?K\ a&»ra* ft "* .'9 . i* ^ —ivjft" T""The US Aimy woiild function' WFlTlfiethesis oTlhTnew" teste. -the romance ythtp you make his-The history starts with the was .willing to take WHi* ttnr; > • efficiently, happily, and victor-best seller "From Here to Eterri-The nook, the first novel of I'LL DIE BEFORE 'l'LL RUN. by C. L. Sonniehaen. New York; tory of tbejmyths. Fi*et of all bloody war between the Regula­of occupation when it got in tirba­ \ iously withput officers', and *11 ity" it expressed ina letter to the James Jones* Is top on the cam­ f. Ifor tnlor^l Hwt Harper. with this scholar stoc^ightens tors and Moderators, which And people pus best seller list. Aclearly writ­2M an­ out the the -ble with his cousins. officer* of the US Army are cor* Texan from Duke C. Trexler, notated bibliography. $3.50. < flared set-are etiU talking aboa^6ew WaH«f nature of feuding so we can for­up^soon skfter the first[ rapt, without elementary moral graduate student* who decries the ten story of the love, courage, and J.' Frank Dobie says that Texas get the patterri we inherited from tlemetft of the pine-clad hills along Reese knelt beside his father's j"™ „ I sense, and incompetent.*' book's theme as false and in poor brutality of American soldier* in fi*t Walked needs more appraisal and ' less Kentnclqr mythology ;and the com­the Sabine River—a no-manbody in the dosty Columbus street Hawaii during the three weeks oCthe New fo^ iecM^ praise, that we need to look more ic Btrips. Then he tells the real land, where horse thieves, •lave and swore to even, up the score; before and after Pearl Harbor, hr! Newsweek'a.new fikf* i ft-c realistically-at our history and stories so you can see for yourself. stealers, and fugitive* jErom a and the six Taylor boys wlto took a it is often repulsively realistic in reported Walter Wincli^lless through the rose-tinted spec­Here are the errors about feuds noose ovtomnb*redL boiiwt an oath of vengeance*t $£j^er­ its stark descriptions. in. his column "On &rSJ&: / *- the, book a. tacles of the "pioneer writers of which Sonnichsen corre reoitoi& wiM the is going to be seriously examined, 3. Feuds, afe not confined to bur-berg.Bandom. $8.50. Thomas Jr. Greystone. $3.75. her coming to -the University isolated communities and illiterate and 'From Here to Eternity' may 'e in River of the Sun, by James Ram­BotwtU'i London Journal, 1762 people. Some occur in . civilized Book Notts because, her parents serve .a good-end in hurrying up school here. t 1763. McGraw. $3. . ­ ntrsl say UUinan. Lippincott. $8.50. communities when the law breaks this examination. I can think of head, Look Yotanger, Live Longer, hy "She isn't to-Jotow//. The Bkltae* Wh««l, by Taylor no time better than the present down. uests .Gayelord Houser. Farrar. $3. nalist, however, and she *4t>ti8a$ A Caldwell, Scribner. $3.50. . . . and perhaps the armed forces 4. They are not simply "out­ like to lists, Foxfire, by Anya Seton. Hough­The Far Sidr of Pirtdiit, by Ar­could do no better than call in a, breaks of lawlessness. r TChey write. and except letters, and she yrftes th^Si'v ton. $3. thur Misener. Houghton. $4. body of administration professors usually are an appeal for a law from by the dozen, most of them> tot STUDY that is felt to be a reasonable sub­ to help them with it... If demo­UNESCOt ABROAD, ' v • s d«-l Campus "bookstores, however, Philip Wylie's "The Disappear stitute for legal redress which can­her dad," csported Jaek MeGnfi&l: cracy inust fight, what are the VOLUME III. Columbia .Urn- in «-story on Mj» WalkwJa be obtained, sometimes .for a Contest to report local deviations from the ance" holds its place. --r ' essential powers of authority? • T»r«ity Press'."' $1,28. not s re.J law that is more valid than those Miss Walker entered the . In non-fiction "Kon-Tiki}' and ' •"Unquestioned : obedience " is From Argentina to Zanzibar, list. High above everything in stu­ hem- on the^Statute books. versity in 1943. ^mcsnher­ dent preference is James Jones' *,Bo8well!s Journal," both locally ^necessary to the prosecution.of a from Afghanistan to the United The second annual student It to Wallace Stevens, in poetry,-for year,, .Chi Omega sorority, she tecef ' "Strangely enough," says Mr. "The Auroras of Autumn." <-From Here (to Eternity." It is popular, are rivaled closely in stu­war. I deplore with Mr, Jonep the Kingdom, you can obtain scholar­ brary contest, sponsored jointly next! necessity the /armed fbrces are ships, fellowships, internships, Sonnichsen, "the feud history of by The Daily Texan and the Li­her bachelor of arts df&ree saidf followed b> the .popular "Joy dent favor by Bertrand Russell's ' _r * ' l. August, 1940. She coptinned '!fn Street." and "The Disenchanted," "Unpopular Essays," and followed Under ef operating undemeera* and teaching Jobs. Texas is almost ankiaown to the brary Club, will be held during Several creative writing con average Texan; Sometimes a man school and Veceived' "River of the Sun,"1 number three immediately by Will ftuppy's "The tically, bufr I believe also,that you Of course, you must be quali­the. first:jKeek; in^ April;. tests to be held this7spring,, will on the national list, is not selling Decline and Fall of Practically •cannot, fight a war unless you do fied to gist these awards, and if will know about the feud down Open to every student, in ,the cover entries in writing poetry, in 1M8. , Everybody." ' just this." : you want to be prepared for a at the forks of the creek in his University, the contest will-be narratives, essays, and plays. Her father^ on oampus. at all the Instead, scholarship or position as a teach-own neighborhood, but the one in held -to hel^ stimulate interest in There are four individual con-books a* "The. Night Chib'Er^k t ofx the next "county has " usually es-ets; the University • Co-Op» the and "City Editor.'^ffaa a rf aura reticence on The Daily Texan in 19J6. -**$$ tries or dependencies co-operating the necessary adjuncts to a :cem» Texas Book Store, the D. A.' Frank tionj Going at least partly responsible for this stent with UNESCO, you can learh plete education. ' and the Dallas Daily Times Herald; condition. The old-time Texas :s if how in this book. Chairman of the contest com-contests. . * Going pioneer was close-mouthed, and as elfl Listed are the number and a consequence, only half a dozen mit£ee is Alexander Moffat, head Dr. Qerald Langford, chairman amount of grants given for each Gone!" , of the biggest and tyloodiest feuds librarian. Working with him, ere of creative writing contests, will Co| location, and the length of time are known, even by name, through­Dr.; Frank Wardlaw, director of announce details about deadlines And Many New Inter the grants: cover, as well as in­the University Press and Miss Es­at a later dAte« out, the state, though there must mar] formation on the best hotels and have been at least a hundred of ther Stallman, associate "professor the dollar exchange «tes> theih, big and little. Of library science. ' 'Kow you can get books by ma­ mplj Sensational Values You can discover the United A-'- m Nations Educational, "Even now many good people chine—if you live in New, York Scientific William Faulkner, modern sub­ will not discuss their local trou­City, Washington, D. C.* Boston,DURING OUR and Cultural Organization's pro­bles, feeling that if nobody talks jective short story writer, -has ot Tucson, The VendAvon, *me­ I thai gram for the . international ex-been named the top' fiction author the feud may be 'lived down.' It chanical book dispenser, has been plana chaiige of Students "for the pur-o1 1950 by the book industry for is hard to convince them that developed to hold from 400 to Qt pose of benefitting the student his ."The Collected Short, Stories feuds are history, and important 600 books with 24 titles. Goodand promoting international un­of William Faulkner." Last year history-^that few human actions, locations for the < machines have V v derstanding." ^ he was awarded the Nobel Prize particularly if they are scandalous, been .found .tp be fertyrboats*-air^Technicians and scientists have NSA.1 for literature. Two other. gold- can be sure of decent burial— ports^ supermarkets, hospitals^ the best opportunities, but stu­ t -telll medal awards went to Newton Ar that it is surely late enough to luncheonettes, and military posts. dents interested in -the humani­ liver- ties, language, or talk of the feudt of 50, 60", and vin, in non-fiction, f(>r his , bi0-And there have, been even some literature .are ol to 70 years ago." ' graphy, "Herman Melville," and installed in movie theater lounges, also in demand. . BANKRUPT in case you get tired of the pic­ If you are thinking about any ture. : specific grant" in a foreign coun­try, in this hemisphere or in the STOCK Dr. William B. Gardner, assis­ Middle East, this book will tell VALUED AT you about it. tant professor of English, has col­ One copy is in the Journalism lected the prologues and epilogues Library. and one is-being ordered of Dryden, as last revised by"the by the Foreign Students Ad­poei himself, • in a' book • to be visory Office, B. Hall 21. released soon by tiie • Columbia KOREA N-AMER1CAN RELA -t Printed by the University of %—JOEL KIRKPATRICK University .Acess.. Covwrtng.m per* TIONS, VOLUME 1. Edited by California Press, this book is the iod from.the Restoration to 1700, ' George M. McCune and John first of a three-volume series con- the poems are a running Commen­' A/Hkrriibii. Uniteriity of Cali-cernhrg Korea-US relations dw­tary on the-political, religious# so­ forma Press. $2.50. ing the explosive 1888-1905; cial, anci artistic activities of the An addition to the growing pile period. "The late Mfct McCune— jr ep of new books on Korea is just out*. who did the larger share of the timp. BID ler But unless you happen, to. be editing—was recognized aS the* for« ' ^Specially interested in what hap­leading authority on Koreia, and ^The first books'Of the. Middle AND BUY AT YOUR OWN PRICE Cyrano ile Bergersc, by fJdmond an advisor itt-the. State De­Ages were not meant to bs read. pened on this particular peninsula was Rostahd. Bantam. 25 cents. The between 1883 and 1886, you can partment during the war. , Exquisitely bound In,' handsome 33S OX heroically swashbuckling romance pass this latest volume by without The introduction, Which is jewel-encrusted leather, covers, t neiJ now showing in movie version is missing a great deal. • about one-fourth as long ,as the they* were used only-as an at­ Watches + Jewelry # Many Values! to available in the same translation entire volume, summarizes all the However, the serious student of tractive decoration in the ..homes, : du< as that used in the film. Henry US Far • Eastern diplomacy will data "which is included in the bul­of vrealthy nobles. v 5H| ICS off Holt. Inc. edition, 1947. find "Korean -American Rela­letins, communiques, and personal :e the! 3 Auctions Daily 10:45 a.m. -2 fir 7:30 a.m. ' . • tions," prepared by George M. correspondence . concerning Far The state papers and addresses^ bit off The Wooden Hor»e, by Eric McCune and John A. Harrison, to Eastern diplomacy.' Painstakingly of the late Governor James S. yield] Williams. Bantam, 25 cents..Three be one of the few keys.to under­authentic, the d^uments are leforef Hogg are being collected .and edit­ British officers escaping from a standing that, significant three-printed verbatim and therefore theitti German prison camp dig a tunnel contain some marked inconsisten­ed by "Robert C. CotnefT assistant year era in which Korea was in­ professor of history, under tb^ which begins under the very noses dependent, but wavering between cies in spelling, capitalization and ACROS FROM THE UNION ON THE DRAG supervision of the ex-governor'A of their,guards. A tale of suspense. the domination of China, Japan, grammar. -thou* 2268 Guadalupe i £STES JONES daughter, Miss Ima Hogg. Harper edition, 1950. |Russia, and England world Cactus Ad In Last Sunday s|Texan^ fsiO—we figured you might nof have, so agciin we want to imprest on you the fact tha* thero ALL THBSB EXTRA FEATURES books left that can be reserved. You might not have realized that the heavy coated paper used in Th# * THIS YEARI University of Texas Cactus is exceedingly hard to get. We have' figured that wo have enough on -r "to print 8,000 books. However it is not loJaicaf to order more than the students have reserved. 'Qiereforo More color pages! : Larger Spocts Section ( it would be a good IDEA for you to make certairf of yours today.. ^ 'V with Great Coverage of Texas Champion Teamsl More Feature Pages Than Evarl Do Yoir Know How The Cactus Is Produced? NEW Religious Group Section! ." Ur Features on Representative Professors- The average student who has never worked on afetu­ • in'ALL Different'.Schoolst dent publication does not realize the enormous Complete Coverage of ' ' \ amount of time and work Involved In producing a '1* Student Government! t yearbook the size of the CACTUS. So the staff has -••••-.t. . • . .... . . .• -• •• -,7^-: • .• •• -'•••u.' made up a display of some of the steps in putting ^4^ Class Sections Divided by Schools 1$ together YOUR yearbook. These displays art located * And ALL Schools Have Big Write-Upsi And More Beauties Than * Ivl, In thebasement corridor of Main Building. We would ,, sr^^ * • v.* • * f* -.• r . \% -> *v-. -.-'i •«­ "-> Imagine! Imagine^ it* * ^ — I' — V 1 ' All these NEW features, plus aH the Old Good Ones that havj» made ( ^ ^ Wli "THE 195T CSwOS iTW ^the Qactus the "Nation's Outstanding Year Book! Here's e complete -V'/1 Z-.V.'-.C'.,:-•• _• .t ^r 1. -m?.• • f t-, •T.V*.> *. . e'lf.• • '. . Record of Everything that has .happened at your University during • +h© past year. This book will mean more to you as the years PfU<, In spita of 4ncreased <»sts of everything, that goes ^ make up e great big book Kke this year'i CACTUS, the 9 -• . it •-s ^ price remains the same, and thafs a bargain! ONLY £flPP mm '' * Jr Jt&ytee M (,i;jM«ij4Mi i?giSt?>'i8ii«a^i'^^e^:•T^^i\it-i1iW^'!TT*i^*^ii,i'dfi'fi iHfaiMjliri'i'iv mm &W8mm vwn EEESy^eiSSi sSf ^ #*&*«# ' » 'i $8^8 .^•§1* J£$M$ r* ^ *& ® , t.-iaX C\V.,:^-> •; ®s:--::i* h 1 .'*'1 * ¥Hi8 *^£^S t^icflabad>4|ii «x^d Thom*« versity Baptist Chapel^ February cehred ajbachelor of arte degree tian Church in F«rt Worth. ­old," tW*» Jr. Mil be marrifed *4 ** from the University, The couple " The -bride-elect, now a sopho­' > rTfiCS # in Dallas A°Mi*s Higgin^ "Mts. Vickland graduated from Trill lire at-302 Eaft {3rd Streefcr more at the University, attended ^'VwApv s K» T «tttijt3e& the University, llice Institute and it continuing Christian College in .Columbia, » "Christian Dating and Court­Worship" will be the tiopic of Wed-r Bruce Jones, publicity chairman? She^'tfna •' i^toemtesr.''W ^ her studies 'ft clinical psychology £u»j*KB Rlcts and Klljlibraw Mo;, and M*rtin, who is a mem­ship" is the topic o£ » panel dis­nnihWiinetfday's discussion. and Charles Woodward, librarian^ at ' Phi sorority, -Thdmas Ur*. at the University. The.bridegroom, Taylor Martin Jr. will b«K> married ber of Sigma No fraterniay, grad­cussion Wesley1 Foundation's In pla^e of the regular coffeor-~ » h gHiflriatedftthe1UtHtfertrty ami «. whe-now works for ICTBC, re-March 24 at the University Chria-uated from junior college at Kem­regular evening meeting at 5:45 um the last of' the series talks Bishop Clinton S. Quin, Episco^ p.m. Sunday in Fellowship Hall of member Of^e"Steeplechase Club, per Military ^Academy. will be held Thursday, Subject pal bishop of Texas, will visit Aus­ the Foil Worth Club,' and Sigma ' The couple will live iii Austin the University Methodist Educa­will be "Resources for Worship." tin this Sunday, the Rev. Joseph tion Center. ­ ~Nfc maimer*>er ofofPhi Mu sorority, Alpha Epsilon fraternity. while attending the University. * Harte, pastor of the All Saints* Phi sororit C« League of Women Voteri, •" -Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Ledbet-Christian Science Organisation Episcopal Churchr, announced Sat­' 'Jo Xnn Bytirt will W married' ter will head the p^nel composed recently elected urday,. jjgf*3** *nd C^^^^liBi^qnb'. Mr. and Mrs. Edwfa Brazelton officers for the «>d tiie-Dalisst dub~ to 'llfieron Elwood Nijghofea March Snead of Austin have announced of Wesley Foundation students spring semester. Lil Crittenden is The bishop, who'is from Hous­,2b at the Highland Park Method the engagement of their daugh­Lee Tinker, Jimmy Biggs, and president, Eiitoll Scott, vice-presi­ton, will conduct two services ,BI dist Charehsian Dalian. Mias Byars, ter Mary Lev to Whitman Fraser. Wayne Odom. Dr. Ledbetter is a dent; Lee Moore, secretary; June while in the city. At 8 o'clock thwClob, ttc daiij^itfer of Ms. gnd M«. Joe, -The wedding is planned, for professor at Wesley Bible Chair. McCarthy, treasurer; Carew Mc-Sunday morning he will_be the te setM*The engagement of Carolyn Miss Snead is attending the Uni­"How far> can I go and still be in tudes towards it will be the discus­-Dr. William C. Finch, president .**"&»£«.«• °> Mints of Houston to Stanley Lev- versity and pledge of Chi sion at Canterbury open Southwestern in is a line with Christian morality?" topic of-University : WllUfl*IW> WUI Iw ^nlOQ'Jtt&fCD DallasL.has an­ eufchal' of been Omega sorority. Fraser is a sen­These are some of the questions house Sunday evening. The dis­Georgetown, will speak Sunday at aafcerliiiony' at ifc'fc nounced.' Miss Mitx~ attended the ior at the University. • , to be discussed^ Other questions cussion will be led by the Rev. the 10:55 morning-service of tiie1 University in 1948^50 and was a Gray Blandy. . ^ -• » Central Methodist Church. will what students look term m$m$er of Si^na Delta Tau Bftror- The engagement of Bobbie Jane concern T ; for in dating and what the Chris­Evening prayer service begins A sound movie will be shovfrn" at S^ v V,^; l-( " ' Atchley to Kenneth Alan Dyer at 6 o'clock in All Saints' Chapel was recently announced by tian responsibilities are of both the 7:30 evening service. The mov­ the i !*' » boy and. girl toward ^each other aijd will be, followed by supper ie, "The Road Back," centers 1 -The engagement of Yvonne bride-elect's mother. ~Y ° and-the program at Canterbury lafent^flPril^fed H»rt .of1Dallas to Lynn Harwell while on -dates. around a modern advertising man Misr Atchley, an interior decor-' House. lj»" AIrSs of Vega^has been aimounced. The meeting will start with the who chooses faith in the face of ation student at the University, is '*Mi&s Hart , te a sopihomore -at fellowship session ahd a light sup­New members of the executive adversity. In hig'experiences, he a Bluebonnet. Belle nominee and Uifiv*r»ity «.nd a member of a member of JDelta Delta Delta per at 5:45. Each student on the council of Canterbury Club are finds new meaning in Easter. panel wijt present a f ew questions Texann&t * I.' -* . " t - sorority, the Home Economics and give his answers. Then the h, 'SdtUs Hart4s a sophomore -atthe Club, and the Campus League of meeting will be open, to discussion diversity and a member of Tex* Women Voters. by everyone present on any of the aanefc,^ ^ ' Dyer, majoring in ceramie en­ questions already discussed or any . , v* y * gineering, will graduate from the u '?&oyce Kate B-uliardwas mar­ mifiSStratioh, nia>5r and a member TTnTversItjfln JTuneT He'is a mem­group may ask. •lie^toi ArdueLLEE Black on Feb* of 'Sij^ia Phi Epsilon. ber of Phi Sigma Kappa and •roary d? * in < -San' Antonio, The /Th^-touple ftre planning to be Alpha Phi Omega fraternities, A* t&lk on "Customs of Court­'C A #' .bride? isi*-.graduatesof Bracken.­ the Longhorn Band, and the * sometime this summer. ship and Marriage" will be given rid^1High School,"where she was FOR TYPICAL CHINESE FOOD American Ceramic Society. He secretary of the \Stadleni Council. \»'W * *' / by the Rev. Paul .Wassenich, in­ The ebg$^eiaent of /• Joell Laree served in the Naval Air Force structor in Bible, Texas Bible Our Authentic Chinese Cuisine pre­ during World War II. Williams, to Ward Barton Hutto Chair, at the World Relatedness pared exclusively by skilled Chinese rtefaaae^ * chefs. 'lias been announced. Miss Wil- CommissionTTuesday night at 7:80 Suate4ijrom.JtJraOalver Mili­Wooster in1 Ohio, and from Nor­ Dating and Courtship," Wesley The engagement of Margaret 3-5—Southwestern printing and vited to attend this open meeting tary 4«lwli^|i^lB)d.>asa> He at-throp Aeronautical Institute in Foundation. ROM to Charles Anderson Hinton drawing exhibit, Laguna Gloria. of the Guild. of the tend^^e* |Jgbtefsity. He seized Los Angeles.'. 6—Supper and program, Canter-has been announced. 3-5—rPictures by Juanita Tittle, with J^ tjS 'Navy in the Pacific Ney Museum._ bufy House. The bride-elect attended the • TheaWf ^for two^years'^tfrmg the . Jo~ Dement was~married to Ar." 3—Dartmouth ex-students, Texas 6—Supper -and the movie, "Mice University where she was a pledge Members of the Disciple Stu­ *»*'I*-*:-1~*4 ) thajp F", Vickland Jr. in the Uni-Union 301. and Men," Hillel Foundation. of Zeta Tau Alpha sorority. dent Fellowship will meet Tues­ day at 6:30 p.m. at the Univer­ 6—William Hilgers to address The bridegroom-elect is a grad­ sity Christian Church for their •DSFj University Christian uate of A&M. He is employed as WEEK first report dinfler on their cur­ Church.-, a petroleum engineer in East rent visitation campaign. 8:15—Depaumer Trio, Hill el Texas. Foundation. • The purpose of this campaign MONDAY _ JLonUe Trainer and Bobby is to bring new student members 9-5—Exhibit of children's art, Mu­frank WiHiwa* will be married into the church. At the end of the Eleanor Light is aJunior sic Building loggia. in a double-ring ceremony April campaign on Palm Sunday they from St. Joseph, Mis­ 4—Clothing campaign committee, expect to receive 30 new members 7. in the First Methodist Church. souri, majoring in Dra­ ' YMCA. into the church. . This"peek's French The bride, a' graduate of Austin 1:45—Chancellor James P. Hart An Ottis Statu High School, attended the Uni­• ma. -.* * to address Campus League of versity, and the groom will ^re­A three-day Disciples worship Portrait -„ Women Voters on "The Role Eleanor is a member of ceive degree the Uni­in for of the University in Education his from workshop preparation a versity in.June. Lenten season worsnip program the Curtain Club, Radio House, and Alpha Epsilon Phi. •jBootery pretty foot in Texas," Main Lounge, Texas will also begin Tuesday. The work­Union. Barbara-Ann Murphy, senior shops will start at 4:30 p.m. each 5—Round-Up parade committee, elementary education major from Bethe Benson, Texas Union 301. ——. afternoon, presi­ i . Houston, and Jama* Ogilvie, dent, announced. 5:15__Foreign student organize v ward goes to . . . tion presidents, International teaching fellow in the Department Tuesday's program will be a dis­ Photography for The University of Texas t -Center. of Chemistry, were married Fri­cussion led by Clarence Doss, stu­N 7—Phi Lambda Upsilon, Chemis­day in the University Methodist dent work director, on "What Is 2514 Guadalupe try Building 218. • Church. The bride • is a' member, Worship?" " OPEN THURSDAY NIGHT TILL 9:00 7—Alpha Kappa Psi, Texas Union of Kappa Alpha Theta. "Methods and Techniques of 401. -Guess Who? 7:30—Wilmot speech contest fi­nals, Texas Union 311. • 7:30—Tryouts. for Horace Herdt show, KTBC studio. I 8—r-Centex chapter of American . Guild of Organists to hear pro­ gram of Gregorian chant, St. Jlmim^-^taajorlng "'In Mary's Cathedral.' . .. 8-^Ogden Nasjh to speak on "Mid­ way Through Nash," Main I Zxiunge, Texas Union. MAN-TAILORED 8—Dr. S. H. Britt to sjpeak on i" . "Why Do People Buy? The • Strategy of Consumer Motiva­tion," Biology Building-12.­8—Texas>A&M playoff basketball game, Gregory Gym. 8—Dr. C. E. Ayres will speak on W§»4h(w'8«i ^ "The Truth About, Free Enter­ 3^and.,'Dance'-Drunk Con-" k prise," University Club.;* 8jl5—-International Council, In­ternational Center in B. Hall. 8:15—-Irene Hawthorne and hfr , ballet, Hogg Auditorium. OR. EUGENE H.DUKEt Optomeirist m 7 ^ > -Mr -specfafpr jjump Is the'*£al«fe Ouchess," De L1SO debs n v t ' > •' In Nav/Snd White high -WhltrfthTgh or midh^ heels—$(6.95.^; hum ^be^coAteat| *r « * esmaUest"aetail=~ V V f 1-««# of FrfHeli Bocdcry' (lasiptr , »rival your best beau's finest— ) jMflfce (i*«fe to 4^ w1>o swm cotrmctiy Am n*mm *f woeltV pretty JDr better «tiH, to match it. : n . • x . -. • >/'•'**'*,v of yow MitpJIfLjS{• ' 1 1 '.U* • ' '* 1 '» ,% Bounded collar, in .white on white madras­ irVw >mmmr'4 mhumf^uamm wtHton aermw Individuality A 9pecWty 'jt*A r i Jb> sSstlw.o-x • - b» White, pique trim on plaid tissue gingham. NEW FASHIONS FOR ft ^ r HOW AND NOW ONR & < H;c. White; pique, .button,down collar. 4.50r • Eyea Examined . » • Prtscriptions IHkd . x* Lense• Duplieatad' our .. 'Ds4SkM&> • 1*** * •• * y£"3E: • '. •' . '• 55 -f I -laaiii • n i 0|>tom«lricCllii)ic b^i - .r 3228 Guadalupa Phona 286S4 Grtdk Oambitt i,-.. ^ J' -*avel Also Gloria Meye*, Alicemarie or, Barbara York, Kitty McDonald, tranee; leading to a wishing well Meyers, Kathleen Miller, Connie Peggy Collier, BettyJLain, Martha entwiried with ivy. Panels abotit Nelson, Virginia Nchols, Gteto Byan, Katheryn Y9Ung, and Junst the yoom were covered in pink Nissan, Regina Prikryl, Sally Sad­Zerr. . :r. -Vv: •. and scattered witii arrangements Girl delegates for the national the Sewing Groop at t40 >in. tk« tyfcnrtk ' cowention be Group wiU dler, Sara Sample, Jan Scut-lock, The Best scholarship award yjas of; ivy and' large. white camillias. Wica-Mics will Bridge Vl »«et e| ASM Ovum iMH,; chosen at the ttica meeting Mon-Wednesday at-^7o'cloek *t the Marilyn Shaw;-Bobbie Gene Sher­given to Mary Ellen Ford and the New. initiates df-Sigma Delta Artcarved day at 7 =p.m> in Texfts Union 31«, home,of Mrs, R.C. Redfield, 1101 wood, Frances Schneider, Betty best pledge award to Carolyn Dor-Tau are Norma t'ink, Jeneane s The delegates will go to the con* "A* DIAMOND ^ANB WIDDING RINOl v Ray Smith, Margaret Somttiew, set. • * -" Gartner, Sharlene Gerrick, lluth Schvllen • v— ; 1 venting whjch will be held in —>'•'.•» Ellen Thomas, June Tolar;.Pat * Golbergv Valerie G^tsman, Gloria! Mm. Charles Prather, 1100 Kansas from March 29 to Manh v The following girls were Yecen-Kusin, Marian Levy, Eliane Lu- £arkw»jr, will he hostess to Bridge Torn, Mary JUSan Tucker, Doro­ ^1. Other busines* Will inelade tly initiated -into Phi Mat Patty bef, Dena Fai Mayers, Marlene N>np 1 at h«r hone . Thursday thy Weiss, Betty Wheless, Cookie a discussion of the^lumber pfrty »t MO o'eloek. C^hoeteac Abernethy, Barbam Beard, Lollle Mil When Williams, Clam Williams, and Ribnick, Elaine Waldraan, Ruth planned for all, Wie* . menibers ; Biekley, Katy Boyd, Shirley Wertheimer, and Betty Wolens. be; Mrs. Idwart MeUon. Laura Woods. V, v.: r* and to be held „next Saturday Brownt . Gail McDonough* Lois Betty Wolens Wj^ elected best Bridge Group 111 win »«tt Bluebonnet Belle nominations night. t it's for Mic>erson4 Yvonne RaolHns,.La-pledge; Marlene Ribhick\hd Ruth Thti«*d*y at 7:4i o'clock at tiie Were made by campus organiza­ Theo Lender will present three cile Sims, Carol Snavely, And Bar-Wertheimer" received^' honorable home of Mti. 8tanlef MHtel* tions. The nominees were inter- amendments to the Wica eonsti*' bans Tise. i mention, Gerrick dlw^ysE. •• sharlene was stution, and! Midgo Ball/ Wic* staedt,, 1408.Bentwood, «lub »IMT . viewed by a committee of cam­awarded the pledge scholarship Chosen a$ best pledge was Lois president, will present.^four. pttlA .... pus -lehders and members of the Niqkerson, who war awarded and Norma Fink, honorable men­A slrit will be griven. entitled ^tiii B.eyetly Smith, staW s«c?e* cm WjtotW;C«r«M. Chop** 4ft* of «ur s«mrih* Cactus staff and chosen for facial tion. •. • Artcarved Hamvnd ring. A bracelet WM ptesented to • °. -*?'feir thsChlMm af^ke.AiMi^ beauty, figure, pose, and person^ Nita Phippa for most, improved Among the' characters will b» iaan Rev«liitl*«, partkip|t4Ni in rings! Made by America's ality. . Alpha Phi announces the pledg­ grades. Pat Gibson wil^have her Terry Holtz, Lula Corovinis, Dnlee the annunal state meeting Friday 8-8810, oldest and largest ;; From the top 60, twenty final­ing of Johana Walker. name engraved on the scholanhip Monroe, and Billy Grace Ungerer, and Saturday in Georgetown; , bershipHKof n. ists will be picked, and -from these ^ . la freshman d* • ringmakar—and set with cup .for being the active with the • program chairman. Mi«, Smith a from : the six Bluebonnet Belled will be Delta Taa Delta has announced is thft jftci . V; ' * * li "il^ili/' Worn. Registered and chosen to be presented in tine 1961 ond year she has held that honor. initiation Of the following: Edwin Ph| Lambda Uptilon, Henorai^ ^guaranteed for Cactus. The Bluebonnet Belles^ Awards were given by the Aus­Agnew, Claibor'ne Bell, Jerry chemical society, will.elect --new and finalists will be announced at tin "alumnae group. Chi^idler^' ;Kehneth Eastw menibers into the society Monday your protection. Every the, Cactus banquet in May., * * ridge, JameS Fuller, Jess' Ham­(March 12) at 7 p.m. in Chemistry one a real value! See our mock, Paul Mohr, Henry Moore; Representatives from Tan Delta Building 218. All members are t collection today. Wayne Ogden, Michael Raine, requested to attgnd, R.H. Perry, Phi, Sigma Alpha Ma, Phi Sigma Monday Opehing Wesley Strahan, Gardner Thomas, reporter, said. SaoVBSYI ; cot too vtAtc Dalta, Alpha Epiilan Pi, Alpha Harry Thomas, Gynn Teague, Mi­ • -* Ep|ilon Phi, Delta Phi Epeiloa, ; chael Welch, Madison Weaver, and Touche honored six new initiates Of ClothingDrive ana Sigma Delta Taa will have a tbwMfk'W ipi'SP Conrad Werkenthin. at a dinner at El' Mataihpros lastchance to become Queen Esther A campus-Wide < drive for the • •-^ week. The new members are Onah or Mordechai at the Purim Dance Recently, initiated into Phi Sig-Barwise, Betty Hagler, Minerva collection of ^ cast-away clothing at Hillel Foundation Saturday ma Kappa were: Bobby G. AskeW, Hobart, Ow«ta Hoke, Louise It* will begin Monday. > evening, March 17, from 8 until 12. Niven J. Baird, William Bv Bris­ lm Win, and Barbara Meredith. -III yfVIVVvfJPP*' i®®lP^PPP*. - A steering committtee of the • coe, Robert F. Crawford, George '• Judges will be Mr. Stanley Pol­ •• American Friend's Service Com­ V. Hays,. James H. Hingst, -Jack The Economic* Club '•will hold \ lack, instructor in art, Mrs. S. A fflamorou* vniftpvrmt , mittee will meet at 4 p.m. Monday Ingfram, W, Dick Smith, Daniel H. its first meeting of th«i springkuttner, and Dr. Winston Weis-Spoor, Eugene A. Todd, and Kyle semester on Tuesday at 7:80 p.nti. b*anty fot in the AFSC office on the second man, assistant professor of art E. Wilson. in the.cellar of Old Seville. stockings m#f, floor, of the' "Y" to open' the history. s • A program of recorded songsdrive... The clothing will: be. sent -: Music-at the dance will be pro­Lambda Chi Alpha announces from the collection of Dr. Fre» to needy people in Austria, Fin­vided by the eight-piece" orchestra the pledging' of Gerry Gerald, deric Meyers, associate professor p&irtttd etox 6^ ^ of Ted Carr. Sb)8< mnlargtd lo ihow de. „ land, France, Germany, Japan, John Hamilton, and Carl Coleman. of economics, will be played, FldeM «!%;* tail (Hm htd. f»d. to*. \ Admission is $1.25 stag or drag. • Meetings of . the Economics and. Korea. ; $1.00 Tickets may be purchased at Hil­New initiates in Chi Omega are Club are open to the student ^'jpfev WBTOM SIT. OtoMOnd Ate. $J00. Md«*» dr> »Tr»d. lunia*. cM, IS7J0. Groaa'* rfa«, I24J10. ThU «tyl« with A list is being compiled of lel Foundation. Dabney. Murph, Cordelia Sprong, body and faculty. Any One who *.95. Jforitryj, „ . __ _ , , ; ' -larger -stone, up • Pay 4.00 Weekly v to $2500. representatives from each housing C i1 e Robertson, Georgeanne is interested in discussions of this unit ti supervise collections in Sigma Phi Epailois fraterniay Beane, Margaret Collier, Shirley type is welcome. *Hi Texas Dependable Jewelers will entertain Zeta Taa Alpha so­ '• the units, said Susie Brown, steer­ Roberts, Joyce Word, Susan Siner, ­ » WAYS for over 46 years ..... rority with a picnic at Bull Creek The Uniw#itf Ladlea Intern** ing committee member. Peggy Beall, Pat Evans, Jewel TO PA* The committee is especially Sunday afternoon from 2 to 5 Evans, Frances McCullough, Jane diat* Club has announced its group * WwUr short of names representing boys' p m. • ' * Hardwick, Shirliey Moody, Martha meetings for the week, Parnnts * MantHljr units, she -said.' She hopes that -' * * Hinkel, and Rosemari Haskew,./ The Drama Group will meet at • , Payment* such units will be represented lit Theta Xi'fraternity "hsai initiated . Also Jo Ann Stillwagon, Jean tHe home of Mrs. Philip-Worchel; * Charf* Account* the Monday meeting. the following new inembers: John Brownlee, Pat Puig*, Jo Howard', 3101 Highland Terrace, Tuesday For those who live in unrepres­Br Moon, Edwin A. Bluestein, Alice Cochran Reed, Barbara Kerr,. at 7:30 o'clock. Mrs. Beith Mor­ onthaDrag ented units, a large box will be Charles T. Moore, James L. Tune, Gail Plettner, Sylyia Scharfenr rison will sei^e iifc cbrhostess. 2230/ Guadalupe maintained in Texas Union by James B. Slade, and Lawtence E. berg, Pat Barker, Gladys Vernon, Mrs. M^.D. Whit^ 2100 ,B«­ ? iowBt«#n 722 Conffreas leigh Avenue, will be hostess; to APO. . , Martin. , '* Jean Dean,. Mary Pollard, Dottie Ross, and Betty ^aipaond. New members'of,I*i Beta Phi are Mary K. Alexander, Anne * ' ^5 Arbaugh, Msry Bancus, Virginia Baberg, Anne Page Chandler Rita Crocker, >fhncylu Croswaiti, Bettie $ M. Dancy, Mary Marth Dickie, Jean Marie Edge, Miry Lou Ed­mondson, Barbara Eagen, Jane, Eliabeth. Everett, Florence Fitch, a mist of white Shirley F. Fleming, Cfayle, Garth, Mary Gay, and Anne Hogan. vej/s your ftoiimtaip Also Joan K. Holloway, Nancy / Florence Riphter f ' -*­ Crowned Queen of Nothing matches ike fpirit, of the Border Olympics : Round-lip Bail better, than (town . of white:-Nothiiijf ffattfri |i»# Florence .> Ann Richtejr was plezion'more^or $he crowned ^ueen of the lAredo Boiv crowd better, either! ,,8o whether der OlympiCs Sattjrday night »t you are a Bluebonnet B'eifai or the close of the .two-day annual another belle of the bcUl^ihis Ut the athletic and social 6vent. gown for Round-Up. In eTisp rayon Miss Bichter, presented at the . net with Miles of tfoy ruffl finalB Saturday nightp" wore .a over the, ikirti ana short white forfejsl .w.ith a mar- of stole caught at the teft Hoe and quisette skirt and a satin bodice penter back of the ho4$i% with a g4r* studded,v^th rhinestones. "w land of flowem: AUo &^, meitt Miss Richter, senoy BBA stu­dent, live# at Scottish Rita Dor­9 to 13. 'Colkffo' & f$#i{ Jackef 5,95 mitory., #• .1 ...II," i liijm.'jWIil i•luii.'iVlVnn "Sash ....—1.00 JimBobGalloway Blouse 5.95 Gets SDX Award Skirt .... 7.95. Striped Bra —...» 2.95 Jim Bob Gallaway, senior jour­nalism major, ;he3» been awarded Pedal Pusher 5.95 the Austin Sigma Delta Chi Scho­ larship for the spring semester, Plain Shorts 3.95 Paul J. Thompson, dii^ectd^ of the lx -Use your [ School of Journalism, announced. Striped Shorts 4.95 ', Gallaway is an editorial assis­ •PRICE'S tant,on The Daily Texan and a member of the student chapter of charge account Sigma Delta' Chi, r—*——1 journalist f*»tenjit Th» award, a cash gift'of $50, is made on the basis of scholar­ship and journalistic activities. **' ""i. * v ^ • APPLICATION • PASSPORT ­ " SAILCLOTH SEPARATES •^Every+hmg-you need ,< I.-^or a gay holiday _ #v /AUSTIN McCARTY mixes -and m«tc^e$ pU?n colortdand »tripe4jancIot|i1n» yowp of »turdy_ i^ay-dptbe? *o & alannect to co-ordinatp with the ot?5Sl PHon.».7067 &W> JSHf U' tS ^'A •" s4 , » \t V *** * 'a-fvutCi v Tw.V -"-.Or.s^i.;^:/^ • »i?7; 5*1J sS ijsiic '~-iAwj v* ^ »> "-•«r.^; => -;•; y, v^j ^i.-! *c: > :::-~i^ '-V:i^ir-^ ^-"jjMcf-",-'v SufciU UM "TO. 4,? * 1f^rh^,%>&-W* ** Xir " m f *5 m 4, * |i•£, m x aaa ^JSl * «f' «rt « *" * fit >S ' && * •» ,,rfWF i V w iHS, i t , t ' ^ ' A ^ 4 ' t W W'$ M\ mmmm rencies. three medicalr 41 Other' branches include several katlierihe Drake Vf Austin, Kitppa Slgwa 'fraternity, wic sehoola and a, Cblle'gB of Nursing, itiflltKted hospitals; " -* "a Phu iieta. kappa graduate ofChancellor James P. Hart, who tive on the ^debate team, and ran v school, and the McDonald pbserv-University^ in 1929.' They -W shortly after his.appointment said, ^4 * » f ' « i . atoiy at Fopt DavW. two daughters and thre^, sons. for student president. *1 want to be close to the stu­' For his leadership,, scholarship, Librarian Resigns His, appointment returned him dents and help them, whenever I to the campus, which pleases him Dallas.Ad-Man te S^wk' can," will speak to ind ^ervice, he was selected one +«) V J _ , _ really very black," mid After,34 Years much, Jor he declares, "I've al­ student*' Monday, Of the twelve outstanding students Tom McHale, president of the EleanorLight In adow voice quite ways loved the University." The r unlitoe the one we have come to Hfe"talk,open to studenteand of 1925. ,tT> A" «!{? At University appointment of .the'" ^-year-old Dallas Advertising Chib and adver­ won tising -"associate with her this past week. faculty, is sponsored by the jCam-After receiving Wb BA, degree jurist by the Regents also manager, of the Dallas .;» Eleanor, UTfc own Billie Dawn pus League of Women Voters, It. and attending the^ University Miss LeNoir Dimmitt,' -who the hearty approval of «»e Uni­Chamber of Commerce magazine, v-of "Born Yesterday," is the prond will be at 4s4S Monday in the School of Law for one year, Mr. served cas"director of the Package versity's faculty. J • ' j."1' will apeak on "Opportunities in possessor of -probably the most Main Lounge of Texas Union. Loan Library Bureau in the Divi­Advertising" at the Alpha Deltjk Hart received a scholarship-to Hr. Hart is des«^ibed as, "an -.His topic will be "The Bole of sion of Extension for 34 years, Sigma initiation,banquet Wednes­ discussed vofc^M^JNM^ Harvafd. JHe graduated with hOfi enlightened, progressive, practi­ 2* ; on the campus. O- the.University irt the Education of has recently resigned.. day evening. Initiation ceremonies ors in 1928 and set vip a law prac tioner of justice, young, fair­ , "\Tve always secretly viranted.to Texas." He will approach the sub­I {foe will continue ,with the li­minded, and respected by both will be held iff Texas Union 301 ject both from the, standpoint of tice with his father's firm in Aus­ •change my hair coloring1—I guess brary on modified service under liberate and coniervativjei'^ He is at 6 p.m. Immediately after in­ the -influence that-%the alumni tift.N , -^ that's every girl'« aappreescd de- the title of director emeritus. ' considered a scholar with'an easy itiation, members will meet at I have on the culture of Texas and He served as district attorney » *|rfti6->-eo when-iAe Dratna Depart- Miss Imogene Thompson, com­personality, well-suited for ^ the TarrytoVn Restaurant for the the effect of the Un^ersity'arpql-of Travis county district judge, ^jn^ntiold me to get out the bleach mand librarian for the air train­high level public relations with banquet. Transportation will be v-feottle, 1didn't mind," she said* ietee. -' ^ _ and assistant attorney general be­ing Of the United States Air the.legislature. . . :• -: provided from the Texas Union Chancellor Hart is wpll quali­fore he was appointed to the ?||§'*Wheu asked how ahe ever Force for the* past five years, has Chancetyr Hart married Miss to Tarrytown at 7 p.m. |ie«rned the "*udy HoUiday whine" fied to describe the "place of the Texas Supreme Court in 19.47 been appointed to succeed Miss ..p&e said it wasn't too hard, but University in educating the state. Mr. Hart^ who gave up a seat Dimmitt. ' -J ^that it did take sOme intense re- He assumed the duties of the first on the Supreme. Court to accept , «Aear$al > x , . •/. '•• Chancellorr of the University in Miss Dimmitt came the, Univer­Drive Out For Ant Order Of the first chancelioiihip, is -paid sity in 1914 and was director of *%»-4,l have enjoyed playing the5 November^ Creation of the post $20,000 annually. He serves as the library bureau in 1917. She ' -$art of Millie Dawn more than was inatfe nece»ary _by the rapid liaison between the students and has published articles in; The Li­Leslie's Fried Chicken LJust about anything I have ever. expansion of. educational and re is coordinator brary Library the Regents and Journal,' Wilson. .:Aonei" said Eleanor. "Ttfme, Bp* search p^tbts. .H^rt was selected between and i« great, warny-imd lovable. over 100 candidates to fill the top the tliiiversity the Bullietinj'Texas Outlook, and Tex­"IT'S A TREAT THAT ^'Altliough it was qfcite a tempta- administrative office of the far' public. To the Board of Regents* as Federation News. , CAN'T BE BEAT':' r-tion, I didn't see the movie 0/ flung University with assets of the Chancellor is the chief advisor Miss Dimmitt has served as f^orn Yesterday.' I wanted my more than and principal agent--president of the' Texas Library gillie Daws, to Immine—-noi fody / Aside from his executive duties, Within his ju^adtetieh lir~in~-Association, as chairman of the THE CHICKEN r • yolliday's." . . , ;S|.: Library Round Mr. E(art has been associated with cluded the Main University, Texas Extension Table Eleanor,-a native of St. Joseph, the Usiversity all his -life. His par­Western College at El Paso, 40 of the American Library Associa­SHACK . wIf "fjMo., entered the University in tion, and as counselor of the ents, Mr. and. Mrs. James H. Hart, organized research . bureaus,. a 5242 N.*L*mar Phone S.S401 1948, transferred to the 'niver' ^ are both foriher students of the state-wide extension division, pub-American Library Association. ik-A sity of Iowa in 1949, and returned The elder • 1 T.T>P'1,nt ^nmtimVnr —— . -., '. TTwivor«ity. Mr^ Jiart ^jrto Ui la8t 3epwn)Dcr. graduated in 1899 and that same |>-/ * "J just love Texas, the Univer­year lie was captain of the foot­f p>; 1eity, and especially the Drama ball te^.m and editor of the Cac­®£r Department, but the weather here tus. M^ HaJrt Was vice-presidept ?|?r \ could be better," she said, wjpinjj? ELEANOR UGHT 6f tt»e j^or claw in 1®°® "•V f*-t \ her brow. Chancellor Hart was reared and \ vM,Blelvin, who ii studying history. A junior drama major, Eleanor schooled in Austin where in 1919here at the University, is certainly is an aifitive member of Radio he was a member of the State |f%r I after „ a an understanding husband," she House,'Curtain Club, and Alpha Debate team.-At three-year, cross-country said., 'fit seemed like we never EpsHon Phi sorority. Slie has also Championship THESE ARE THE LABELS THAT MEAN romance. They met in a Missouri the University he majored in eco got to see each other so he. joined appeared i#rCampus product!ons of • . • \ \ • • • i-college. After transferring from nomics, history, aind government, the Curtain Club,;in seli-defertse;" "Dear Brutus" and "The InjpCr­ { ||r I'college*to college and a'great deal and Was elected to Phi Beta Kap­j of corresponding, they finally got laughed Eleanor. '* , tance of Peing Earnest." pa. He"was-an outstanding, active Alvi^felCA'S FINEST SWIM SUITS* Wiien asked • abput any " p^t sJA Her plans for the future are to student while on the caihpius. He peeves, she said she Jbst-never had go, to Loncton iij two years where was a member of the varsity foot-• ^ ' • • v: time ito develop any for she has she1 will attend' drama school, and I* 1; SMART V been .kept so busy* with "morning her husband will *rite his doctoral and you'll find them at the Marie Antoinette! classes, afternoon rehearsals,° and dissertation on history. Ex-Students Choose President WMa ***1»« *"» 1 evening performances. *PO¥TRAI% The> Austin Ex-Students' Asso­ She confesses to be a complete x 'Mice and Men* at Hillel ; v ciation at its.March Z dinner elects failure at housework, butjgclaims tb be the. fastest cook (by neces­ed Walter, Lawson as president, The movie ''Mice and Men" will sity) imaginable. " ' Mrs. Harry Wilder as vice-presi­ be shown at Hillel Foundation fol­ i^wm / Eleanor has had thirteen "years dent and Wallace Scott, secretary. lowing, th«i Sunday supper and fo­ of private training in musie and The group adopted a resolution rum at 6 plm, \ drama. She studied for two yeais commending.the Board pf Regents at the Conservatory of Music and Admission to the s&pper jjwill be upon the selection of Judge James mns Drama in Kansas City, did summer 60c and reservations are to be P. Hart as University chancellor, theater work at Princeton, and made at the foundation. The film and offering Chancellor Hart the 2344 Gwtdfelupe i toured the mid-west on U.S.O. will be free, and open to the pub­full co-operation of the ex-stu­ Phoac S'70et ' tours duringthe war." ^ . lic. ' ':3- dents. \ ^ llttilSi Hi V mm •fer SB. mm k • * 1 '.\v iM \\ •• " * .... A W: :('V • i -,d ••* Our swlrn shop js brimming with the season's smartest bathing beauties. You'll find W'l . every wanted fabric in a wide sk: array of colors fashioned by 1 "-V your favorite designers. Priced , from 10.95 4o 29.95. m ^ ; / ? t-'f-i-y:i cl Slcetched:\Cole of California. styhd by MAJESTIC ,Vh" fare* A,f' f * fabulously flatterng swimsuit! A singli strap upcurving ^ -5 J you re ^joing the bosom, giving you freedom ln jhe water, beaufy . » smartest wbmen seen ||^|: N't *• * f f& \ ashore. Stardust-flecked laton in shimmering anywljere. this tester, you'il be in a «urf| \.k with figure-tapering panels. 32-3^417,^5r-'; • '•< « ' f f -> # »-i Ufa £J««rfc liirtn fpr cool flattery, batted on slender lines - •gm 4'«?' n* * ^ ! lil i < ~ •"'• ihmJQ to 20. $22.95 TM ­ . -msi Ri? discovery" fyifortd'lfl «'aiwr»^uli' mJ: , ••; '^ ft «ii4'WfcH§i.. •> iv* &!?$£&&& „ ' Mfc $I3.9S J*±% j;H" m *$m, 9QdHoorfathjow *\p\* &&* ^e™ tS »i> T n rv y *t Ns. ski®! 6 Cr. Lodclia, Origin of itoyews uader kry scholastic fraternity for fresh­Chartw R. McCord, HowfUS. Me- I wMaiatt^ man men, will hold initiation for Creaty, J*mesE. MvsMJL gfe**|ef T the oceans will be the subject of been selected for the Turtle Clah'jt. « talk fey Dr. fi^neb Shepwd, 49 new members *t 5:45 p.m. E. Nemir, Edward C* Nott Jr„ annua spfing water pageant >HWch W I ^ 9f JIHWILU KELLY vbiting lecturer, Tuesday ,^.9 March 19 in Recital Hall. Fol­and Raymond R. Palmer Jr. will he given M*r«h at 8 lowing-theceremonyi a banquet Abo, Heriberto A. pen*,JoJ»n ' Fortune mag«-gnu jn the Women's Gym, ^ula ^record xpodertt Professor of submarine geology Will be held in the English Room Rttman, Frank R, ?rebm ... '* only P*r rchesis begins, re)iour ahd 'Pomp anc) Circumstance!' to Invitations'are Wawll Jr., nmd WiUiam Wrigfct. for Representative A. J.-Roge hours of work. 4«del«»dei» H* Rui-draw the distinetiOn between % won Any student who.feds thai hb He has a BBA degree and Candidates for-membership are lard, professor 'of geology* "Dr. proper Bostoniap and a Southern ttie# &r name should be included on this graduate from Law School ne; Shepard'*, appearWM» ,%r<»nh Belle/'-she said, Richard T. Akin, William G. Bar­ list should report to the Office £«ttb4a Delta, fteihaMW-weaieft^y'r ber, Paul P. Bird, Leroy Bird' pas b tim«ly»" r.,/ ,< Vy of the Dean of Student Life, Main When he and Wairiren Fruenl Members of the Turtle Ciufe.are honorary sorority, duiring'.lik#'fya"% well Jr., Edward M. Brook, Al« Severe! yeara ago, Dr. Shepard making then? own costumes for Budding 101M, to have his record heard about a Bastrop man. who iem«|rt«r;.' ; -'' bert fit. Cox Jr., Remand 0. Dow, checked *• soon as possible. discovered deep, submarine cen-the pageant as well as composing Robert A. Fairey, Harry D. Fend-had inyentfd% nt»chine that'cut* yons p)u tfas continental ?h«4f off the routines. Forty firls wjty swim Tfe&tt etigihle fof n|einhei^|& UIL New In 40th Year down ^trew le 24 inches in California. Some, of thesf can-and dive. ley, John T. Frazer, William' J. m«fe liav^iMren!M&m # •dbn^^;^ ..the' yen* were comparable in abifi t -, Girb who b^eveKenneth L. Kotsebue, Urban J.P. of contests in acadeinb, musical, tomers, sold stock, and found a wThe origin of the canyons is tejrson, Toni Corn^n,. and Clar% gible, who ^not jeecei^jl Leavitt, Lester I* Levy Jr., Allen and athletic events. v Jean Qresham. way to produce tin machines. Now $k subject of mych debate; at (the invitation hy Ut^rcK |j|JbQtii!d c the work b ready to get under present time,*1 Dr. Bullard said. Tickets for the wattr pageant %sct Mi«i Helen'Ffi^nr SIKauKM? way In Ap*®.. *'Sotffr explanations postulate a are on sab at.the Women'* Gym, the group, at Littlefield They have received inquiries lowwring of the sea level «# much Admission for a4ult» will beA50 tory or Sh^Iey Van Warmer from 47 countries and have been as q,000to 10,000 feet." , cents and 25 cent® for children. the Alpha Phi housei • . HOW DO YOU kept busy answering the. 2,000 "Such changes in the pmIUoa . Girb in Orchesi# are beginning Those most .likely to have _ letters wanting to know more rehearsals for the' annual spring overlooked are, tiiose gjirb who of continents,and oceans intredudu - r-MEASURE UP? t:-" about the machine. —— --many steious pyoh\«>n^it,< ^ eg modern dance recital Ap*tf 2^-27. ^ now first sem' . -• "It b tiie only one of its kind t^nued. , j ^ v j - in the world,says Tommy. "For The lecture is sponsored >y tib(e Start today +© improve your figure for pulp mill work and things of 1 Si Co^mjittga.on Public. Lectwfs, Spring. Stauffer treatments help to dim that kind it has possibilities for TOMMY WEST d#wn waist, abdomen, hips, thighs and rather far-reachingdevelopments.'? Tommy and. Warren haven't set teaches what personnel tnansge-ma Pi, professional BBA frater­Biological Warfare up, ah office for "Specblized men fails'to teach: how to get nity, Cowboys, and Ten, Most Call today for Demonstration Machinery, Incorporated" yet, but along with people and how to Hated. He b also chairman of Subject of Film >, when they do they intend to com­put your ideas, and capabilities the .Forum Speakers Committee. bine' the site with their oil bro­across." "I guess I'll throw sop»e black For Symposium * kerage business. "Of course, politics for politics face on and sneak in'the 'Cowboy, sake' stinks," says Tommy. Minstrel's chorus," he ^d, >1 Major Ira F. Ferguson, assistant"Big men don't act~ biggety," Tommy came to the University don't have much faith in my en. professor of air science and tac­ says Tommy* "If we have a piece tics; will speak to-the Iqterdep&t* when he was. fifteen, and joined tjertaining ability,' however." Die! 7-6075 903 W. Ave, of land tiutt has oil possibilities, mental Symposium Gjhoup at its the Navy at seventeen. He b a In 1949 he was a Cactus Good- we call prospective buyers. If they weekly meeting Wednesday at member of Tejas Club, Phi Alpha 'ellow, in 1950, an Outstanding want it they buy it." 7:30 p.m. in University Communi­ Delta, law fraternity, Delta Sig­Student. ^ • Tommy has not been what one ty Church. would call a slouch of an organ* WejorFerguson will present the TYPEWRITER SPECIALISTS ifer at the University,either. He Him, "Where Will You Hide?" Can Do was what the wheels call "the first The picture deals with the theme the Job Better attorney general to make the stu­ of this week's dbcussion, "Radio­ We Pick Up am Deliver dent body realize they had an logical Defense and Biological . ^ attorney general." when he held Warfare." "• Phone 8-4360 MRS. BESS GJEARY, marwgar of Hotftr^s, osks fietf^ ­ that office last year. Obtaining hb bachelor's degree "Fishing Tommy*West they cill in chemistry at SWTSTC in 1929, Read and Bob JordaHl if ^Yecythl^g i4»eir*hmdfe me," he says, referring to the : Major Ferguson later came to the Easter—-March 25 this year is God. ' , . University where he received hb is totheioatisfaetion. TK« personal concern evidemced time when last year's Texan Edi­ tor Dick Elam wrote' a referen­the earliest observance of the holi­* The term,* Easter, was derived master's in chemistry and educa­ by Mrs; G«ary lor. th*contentnient of the patrons of day in the second half of the many years ago from Ostart, the tion. dum story' roasting, West for not Twentieth Century. The world Norsemen's divinity of spring. Hotard's Is just on« more reason why the cafeteria «f-I being around to decide the co«- Following service aa principal of will have to wait until the year When sh^'i came to earth each yea? stitutionaUty of referendum)). LaGrange and Somerville High 21st and Wichita is the choice 6f 2008 to celebrate it as early again. to spread" her rich blessings of Schools, Major Ferguson eptered "I was fishing and I'm glad,*' •E ' Easter is called "a "movable sunshitie and" greenery, she was the army in 1942. He was an Air varsity peopW fpr luftcht-and dinner. .Hotard^ lt he says. "I had already arranged ?8« feast" because it ha£ no set date welcomed with a celebration. Force wing chemical defense offi? to take care of that, and I could v -pleasant habit; on the calendar. The date* is That symbol, of rebirth led to cer serving in Engbnd. -v go fishing If I wanted to/' He determined as Sunday the' firqt the beginnings' of other symbols grinned and added, "so there." after the Pascal full moon, or the such as the Easter egg. The egg He calb himself an independent K full moon which matures Upon or is an obvious form of new life. 1 V politician. He managed Pic Wag­next after March 21. If the full The custom of coloring eggs Camener'* two Cactus ed campaigns, moon-matures upon a Sunday, from the rays of the aurora bore-the dual campaign of Ellis Brown Easter b the next" Sunday. alis—^the northern lights—and the and Bob Ferguson's presidential The day which should be cele­ dawning of the hues of the Easterand vice-presidential-race, -and brated was fixed by the Council sun. • . helped with Dugger's race for of Nicea A.D. 325 as the first Sun- OPTOMETRISTS „ Exactly why the rabbit occupies Texan editor. day after the full moon that ap­a place among our Easter customs"As a matter of . fact, I'll give pears on or next after the vernal b not known. Perhaps it b be­ equinox, March 21. Eafcter j&ovesadvice to . just about anybody," . Office Hour* front 8>00 to StOQ cause of his white coloring and he says.;"Of course, the good between "March 22 and April 26. rovnd-uptime atTexas! apparent quiet nature which sym­Often forgotten in the routineadvice goes to my friends." SEVENTH & CONGRESS "I think credit should be given of everyday .life is the purpose of bolize purity. -\ Easter Day. Easter commemo­The origin of the Easter bon­ for student politics," he says. "It rates the great historical far ' and net is not so difficult to determine. fundamental truth upon which the ..Long ago, young women emerging April 6th—rtfoe big Roundl-Up Week €nck ,, - - Vf?'J Seek Professional Advice—Not Glome* at a Price whole structure of the Christian from Lenten dbcipline and limited Use Classifieds religion rests—the death and re­sp'cial.activities liked to don new & . Big wind-up —-the famous Rourtd:Up Ball. ' surrection of Christ, the Son of spring bonnets for the occasion. Here, a dress to have all the stags in your >•?& corner. Ceil Chapman's strapless ankle- length gown of Imported embroidered organdy in tones of white, pink and rose. ( Minute bo3ice is covered jwlth a J soft removable veiveteorsalet And Swiss ' t fi&wj* «V > "!> \ * iff |,| c|uipec*tainb^jde^t>|ff» ^deli^teJt£ pattern of flowers acr6ss the skirt. 99.95 . Fornml Stfo«l4 %fjp >K •f r> ^ \ '' OF 'If r ^ -s V, 3LEMGN \ * For Spring .> .for Easter ...whatever »; ^' v J'V *( -t the occasion we can match any color you'll be wearing with these fashionable dye oper* pumps * ? a f fsf \ ha in "1 * of linen. Your choice of three heel height*, 5«> and remember, at teon's there is no extra ­ is frtfi' , charge for dyeing J %IMATCB ~" S \\*^° 1 ) Vv^<^Sw ia SjaWVTHIMCI sm£%s& 'i ."5. i 1 INOv F s ' v * 1 1 ^ u 57i * v f'I hf & 4;; J *1*1 rst f'&M. mb^na ' • s We've a wide assortment wonderfully white linen bags. 4I8 . W- Congress Mr'*'J-% vMS •< ---•' •­t JA.j. , m f mass Bais male members of ..> the audience But Berkey said that all of wheduledfo» Ttii*r and Satur-aright prefer sweetness to the theis numbers at*, just extras day nights tor Htgfr Auditorium. croon^ngs of the four HiU Halt­which will be saiidwiehed in be­ « chai«e Berkey, program ers. For them h*said the "Kap-twe*n the regular minstrel jokes ^director, «aya *»\ the ««* ^peninnies" had "agreed to per­tad songs. teat form. He described the *fKapanln-SHe .iMd: ^t-lw^bsd ';Mred Mx Id boy «n .advance ticket from nies* as being "three luscious girls of the best end men in the south one of the Cowboys who will be Who «&n sing a lark to sl*ep." to crack funnies during the show. aelttng them «k tfca Mall during ^For those who want a taste of They are Blsekbotfcom Berry, Ga­ "'IliY wwk ' -'•""•-w*' v "' '-' p;r ••:•••• dancing 2B their minstrels, Berkey ter Bait Potentate, Hattie Hada­said that Ty Cobb should fill the eol, Sharecropper Birdbrain, «9k* feature teli hi this jwrt biH. Cobb, he says, is not quite Vom^ and H*ity S-Highpockets. •how. He said that he was pro-an Arthur Murray, but the for­He said the loudest member of hstty proudest of at quartet known mer head cheerleader is still a tip state legislature bas agreed as the Varsity Fbur, composed of good cheerleader. to serve as interlocutor for the Longhorn footballers Sonny Se-^Mtfisic for the Minstrel# wfll be wsH, Byron Townsend, Jsck Bar-provided by VanKirkpatrick and Then or course there ww be jfc«ar and Jo* Arnold. his orchestra. High class singing the boys in % chorus. Berkey v "Some folks seem to think this will be provided by baritone Paul said they have already been work­Is a joke," Berkey added. "But Hickfang. -V-ing for about a' week to learn tfeeee' beys can really slog; That Sex will be provided by Lanell some co-ordinated movements to Green, who does a number called go along with their co-ordinatedSantone luw more appeal in his voice than anybody since Frank *$fae West, One Better," the Tex-singing. But he said they could Sinatra began laying them in the annes, who Will do a precision use this week for a little more attea." boogie-wqogie number, and sev-practice. win% flByCHAIO^ j«»w«'1 .r \ rated while the creations were suit named the Alot of campus beauty And a shown. A Li'l Abner strap across one little bit bf swim suit were seen First) a family-^iaed ensemble shoulder offend-its support, at the Texas Theater Thursday was shown by a.well-rounded set -;An ensemble in blue silk shan­afternoon. The' beauty-belonged of models ranging in age from tung. followed -by—another was t*j a group of 1950 Aqua Queen about S upward to the Aqua-can­group picture. This time it was contestants. Most of the ^ swim didate age. They Wore Tartan "gardenia crisp" in a pale yellow. suits belonged to Bae Ann's Dress plaids in a design said to have The little girl hid apparently had been inspired by^ a sun tan lotion the situation thoroughly explained -v The first item was a bit oftech-bottle. Upon being implored to to her and so now condescended nicolor cheesecake en -"i ; silver walk across the stage, the 8-year-to take her trip* cross-stage. aereeaentitled "Beauty at tiie old, who. wasn't too sure about the Jwhet Lee threW a red-orange Beadu"r It wac fall of "bronsed propriety'of that sort of thing, stole .to the winds and reyealed flesh and frightening revelations. rebelled and left. ' a suit which caused me to draw My position, at the side of the . This was followed by a tor-, on. my pencil and take'notes' with auditorium gave the bnonsed flesh quoise nylbn lastex thing called the bot end of my cigarette.-It a tall tiiin look emphasising some-, the "suit of one thoussnd compli­lis# of white nylon lace inesh. It thing they called the "long stem-ments.**'. • .. .» •• appeared transparent, and fit the lied^lhouette." Jo Ann Hyltw appeared in a body ljke the water in a swimming v ; Details of swim suit engineer­blue two-piecer which featured, a pool, ' ing and tile intricacies of padding diagonal effect which at first made An Egyptian cottoii^Jbrought were discloeed. It' was most dis-the girl look as if she were lett­out a little parlor trick called iHusioning, especially for such ing into a strong wind. But one's "deep see—no see," featuring the troubled times. ' ; • eyes soon adjusted. iUusijBn bra. The top was flanged , Next came tbe ^iece-de-resis-Claire Masterson wore a white somewhat like a funnel which led ta&ce. Our home tow& experts of lastex suit .with *,24 karat gold to wbat seemed like reasonable finer art of how' to wear a distributed roughly in the shape anticipation, but it's no go. boys. bathing-suit and bring out the best of the Arc-de-Thiomphe across.the A red" velvet suit with port of it weiw presented* Miss Kay front. holes (markedly different from MeNeQ, of Cole of California, nar-Ann White-wore a blaok lastex those found on automobile fen Sfflm """""" iftv .....J"; 'If!!!#! ."n >-•"'",! 7?/ L'1" -' ti " { £9 ,1 . ~ ^ ^ f y ' %• * 4 k Easter season is a good time r r \, * 1 ^ enish your shirt stock-with A Jli*^•dJ-'jtJ*' iSMtancmlM. a hJ-~* ~T& -.•A* U~ «R T V«I 1 «. V A "S-1 V"-V »>I Ingtniotif eonitructldn to spucificatloo* boktnr from iieUt 'itylinj fap&dfc, «nlnU^W fufl-oit comforf. Exploiting th# best of fihft cot­ jtofM. Excetlo ftyios * eolUr to 0t «v#ry f«ct. fr* * i„ r —») Z> •> » % e \ ^ » * Site' — ;; I, 1. o 11 ^ " » N'|A» • 'I'I''I'I|F|I»«"»II>>»» r "'"'/FS*R' VI IIVI^B r • • -,f v . /'I'* |^Hh «Hhir fnneh «r ^n<^e cuffs, *1 k W^hioounf of satiny pkn« broad* *Hh md fintfr 5.50, 6.95, 7.50 4>'> Eigitsiudents qua for the finals of the Wilmot De­ An annual speech eon freshmen, the Wilmot Declama­ clamation Contest, to be held to­morrow fct 7:80 p.tn. Jn Texas Union SIS. ' They axe Douglas Ann Johnson, Joyce Blackburn, Myra Johnson, Bill Wright, 'Tommy Halbouty, ,o*V** mm Judges for the contest will be Dr. W. Fage Keeton, dean of the tion Contest is sponsored by Mrte. Elizabeths Wilmot • Roberdsap, daughter of JE. P» WfimoV, who began the contest in 1910. * Hearsrrr oriPfeii dress of sVirim suits^ the evening than six minutes in length. . 3. Orations must be delivered Two borrowed^ suits were next without reference to notes. shown. They, were"hand made for ratter Williams to wear in wewit 4. Quoted passages may not exceed on&-tMrd ef th^ text;""— movies and were the property of MGM r Studios. ' Extravagantly flashy |n'sequins,' they were some­what the worse for wear. 1 5. Any regularly enrolled full-time student is eligible, provided he~!or~ she was under 25 as of March 1, 1951, has not won a The most expensive suit of those offered for sale was one in 24 ^rat gold , ($75). t grand prize in a national Hearst oratdiy contest, and is not re­lated to an employe of any Hearst There ware no bikinis. newspaper. 6. One entrant will be selected Five Students Elected from each school. . Winner of-the University con­ To Hildebrand Board . A. D. Moore,: Gordon Griffin, Jim Irion, Joe Dibrell, and Jim McCartney have been elected to the board of stbdent managers of the Hildebrand Competition of the School of Law., :; ','x< , This board, working in con­junction. with Professor ' Gray Thoron, its faculty advisor, h&s the function of organizing and directing all moot court wtork car­ test'mil compete in the regionals on April 14 at the San Antonio Municipal Auditorium. Any win­ner there has a chance to make an expenB&-paid trip; to zone fi­nals in, San Francisco in May and will receive a $50 Savings bond. Zone winners will compete in nationyal finals , in Los Angeles, May 17. Grand national prize is a $1,000 bond with other partici­pants receiving a $100 bond. A trophy will be presented to the J" A - * -* wide (.n^olwfd selection of smart all-stik repp neckwear to wake up you'r Spring wardrobe /• \ ried on at the School of Law* school sponsoring, the winner. -Ii> •, • I t. * * ^ ^ X L <&*>•£ w ™ ^ M, m j|>: 'J-,**-!..K?>'*iiaAV WfMW". mmizt WbL. Vs«e'A* " ty 1 BKKWSK' m' 11 ^Vi^rV - sfj&j.