f TO *( '• -'J4« £ * 'h> r ' «£, on t s zri'* Entrance Members of the GeneralFacul ty will meet" Thursday to hear a protest against Faculty ,Council lowtjring admission requirements for high school graduates of low wilt-beJiald jet 4:80 p.m. in, Garrison Hall 1. The revision, which was passed March 19 by the Faculty Council, would allow applicants in the low er half of their high school grad­uating class to enter the Univer­sity without being placed on scho­lastic probation. They would still be subject to minimum. quality standards. •Twelve voting faculty members have protested the revision. Under the rules of faculty legislation, if ten or more protests to an action are received, then the issue must be discussedand voted upon by the General Faculty. The protest to the revision ar­gues that lowering the admission requirements would not be consist­ent with the attempt to 'raise the minimum scholastic standards for first-year students, which called lower than those existing in , The objection to the recommen­ jection says, "there would appear dation questions' whether "increas­to be little difference except to ing the .number of bad risks who shift the same or a larger number will eventually be flunked out of of probation cases to. the second college or placed on probation semester or the second year,"would .he any real.improvement in The twelve protesting facultyjpublic relations." members are. Dr. Robert H. Wil­Another reason given by the Fa­liams* Dr; Aaron Schaeffer, Dr. culty..Council In endorsing the O. S. Powers, Max Fichtenbaum, measure was the reduction of ad­ Dr. J. Alton Burdine, Dr. Howard ministrative costs which the elim­R, Williams, Dr. Ernest F. Haden,ination of scholastic probation for Dr. W. S. Stone, Dr. Leo Hughes, first semester students would ef­Dr. A. B. Swanson, Dr. F. A. Mat­ fect. ' sen, and Dr. Lewis F. |Iatch. the protest states. Information Flow Is 7:30 Topic at *Y' Two foirnalism professors will \ discuss "Freedom of lnformation" as the "World Relatedness Com­mission meets Tuesday evening at T:80 at the University "Y." -~»«wd3iy DeWittReddipk will delve into theT^^tHpal-Agpects of the free flow of information and the philosophy involved therein. Norris G. Davis will tell of the attempt to establish the United Nations Freedom of Information Commission. The main difficulty in estab­lishing such a commission, as Mr." Davis sees it, is that different na­tions define "free press*' in dif­ferent,ways./ , Davis will present the views/of Carrol Binder, editor of the -Min­neapolis Tribune adfitorial page, who was United States delegate to the commission. A discussionwill follow-the talk by Dr. Reddick and Mr. Davis. Refreshments will be served. Frank Gimble, member of the World Relatedness Commission, guests, including people not con­nected with the University," 'i 3 The committee heads of the Varsity Carnival will meet at 3 p.m. Tuesday in Texas Union 815, announced Harry Webb, co-chair­ / 5 man of the publicity committee. Each chairman must turn-in a $20 deposit for his"organization at the meeting. Also, a written description of all sound equip­ment to be used must".'"lie-turned in to the Carnival com^nitte# at that time, Webb added. The Carnival, to ba held May 8; is sponsored by the .Inter-Fra­ternity Council and Panhellenic. •Although a queen will not be -chosen this year due to the effects Doily 5 o u I h Kim i 1 ie of the reasons the Faculty The facially protest Irfater thatCouncil gave for passing the re­inquiries have indicated no case ^VOLUME SI Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS. TUESBAY. APRIL 10 vision was to improve "public re-where mora than the employmentlataons" by accepting students who of on« secretarial assistant would. ould, l|i; I * had been "lazy" in high school but b.e changed. were capabiaof passing Univeiv ^'With fe^ard to the mecha; met Michigan sity work. of the probation system," the ob­ most comparable stale Tiaftersfc i~~* ties. / By JOEL KIRKPATRICK "Despite" the fact that high What happens, in tfee long run, Dr. George Snell and Dr. H. J. school standards vary greatly, to a city of human beings who are Muller here at the University did rank in gr&duating classes does serve to some extent as an index exposed to % ''critical" amount of some of the earliest work on the fruit fly to discover the effects of probable success in college," atomic radiation? /••• of radiation. These words were not stated at After his hour and fifteen mm the lecture by Dr. William L. Rus ute talk, Dr. Russell talked-infor­ •sell, principal geneticist at the Oak mally with students and* profes Ridge National Laboratory, on sors over coffee and cookies. "Mammalian Radiation Genetics" "The seriousness of the radia­tion mutations is something that last night in the Biology Build is determined only by human val­ ing, but they hung like a pall on ues the of and extremity thethe minds of those present. changes," he said. ' Dr. Russell, & tall restrained Dr. Russell giave:a similar lec­ young man with thick-lenses glas­ ture at A&M and will go from ses, spoke in a factual .monotone here to talk at Rice Institute! to­about the effects of radiation on day, and later will visit Tulane. mice. He said mainly, that mutations were speeded up in suceeding gen erations by radiation, and was concerned with the. increase in mutations; or the change in ani­mals, or humans, generation by generation, brought about by ra­diation.-"Pan-Americanism is a two-way highway," said Dr. J. Lloyd Mech- As Dr. Russell flipped,~fbr'-pa» ges of his closely scribed notes am, "professor of government and with. his large-veined hands, he acting director of the Institute of outlined some of the forms of mu Latin-American Studies, before tation that affect the mice" being the Pan-American Round Table studied at Oak Ridge:. Monday in the Georgian Tea Room. Changes in genes produced mice "Latin-American countries have that were albino, that had oddly to give of themselves as well-asshaped heads, and short tails, short receive." . ears, pink eye, sterility, semi-fer^ "Pan-'Americanisra is satisfac­ tility, and fertility with undesira­ tctfys^fchem becaose it recognizes ble-characteristics. But the unspoken emphasis was.on .human .bein^^ In spite of Hiroshima and Na­gasaki, he later mused, "We know very little about the genetic .ef­fects of radiation on man at the —extendedaspeeial-invitation^..present time." : . are Austin • cartoonist Windy that the campaigning has on Winn, who will be on hand Sat­ studies, a mystery melody contest urday afternoon, Sunday after­ "Our estimates at the present time are based on animals not closely related to man—the fruit fly—that is why we have changed to mice; they are mammalian and more closely related to man. Still, it is too early to make an estimate of our work." x '• in Texas! firttt annual Arts and Crafts Fair will be held April 21 and 22 at the Austin City' Coli­seum. ' /• The doors wiir©peji from 2 to p.m. each day for th.e colorful and entertaining indoor-"Sidewalk Show." . Among thtf features planned all their political objectives. Now they want to use', it for economic and social ends to attain economic and social equality as well." "Latin Americans are heartily in favor of the Point Four Pro­gram' because they are the reci­pients," he said, referring-to Jthe assistance given by "the United States to raise their standard of living. But the principal obstacle to the full attainment of the possi­bilities of the program are mutual misunderstanding and ignorance, Dr. Meecham said. "There is a need to understand the other fel­low." ''An organization of American Proves Billiards Exhibition Motch Af Univeriify. Club Today ^it 3:30 A. D. Moore* professor of elec­trical engineering and.dean of the Collegeengiwtering^ at the Uni­versity of Michigan^ will attempt to prove that braihs.and billiards go very well together. ff — By FLORA BLANTON In about ten days the University should /know how much money the Legislature will appropriate to it. i Spending for normal budget activities is in the final stage °f decision.^ Tl^e big bill has been advanced to conference committer which will write the finaHiraft^ ^ of the committee was held Monday night. ; < 5 V Senator Howard A. Carney of Atlanta, a member of the At 3:30$ p.m. Tuesday, at the! committee, said in an interview Monday that it should take University Club, he. will try to ' about ten days to complete their work. Higher education make got»d his chaHBHge to any-and appropriations, tM last item in the4>ill, will be the-last item every University faculty member that the committee will take up. They began work Monday to a three-cushion billiards exi­ bition match. / The University Club has accep­ ted the challenge but has declined to reveal the identity of its entry. Dr. Moore is an expert player with a scientific zeal backing his game.. Upon seeing a group of repetitive-flash pictures of Bil­ liards Expert Wilfie Hoppe's game in a national magazine, Moore secured the entire photo file on the story and analyzed them in ..— By JACK .WEAVER ... . a th walk, ree ru and ns to a. hit put the batsman game on for ice. batters, walked two, and -allowedand an Analysis of Willie Hoppe's only three bits Monday as the Stroke" was then written by Longhorns won their third straight Moore. He has given the paper Conference baseball game 5-1, atseveral times, and appeared with Clark'Field. Hoppe and Trick Shot Artist Charles C-Peterson. With his blazing fast ball riip­'ping the corners and with a tricky Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock in change-up pitch, Ehrler struck outGeology Building Auditorium, every Bear starter except catcher Moore will speak on fluid map­ Larry Isbell, at least once. Heping. He will explain the intricate fanned seven ?jf10ie Bruins twice. mapping aids in solving difficult While the Baptists were being problems involving magnetic or handcuffed at the plate, Eddieelectrostatic fields, heat-flow, air- Burrows, Steer shortstop, blastedflow and similar actions by repro­ -» tnps to knock on. three runs -ducing the patteffis' Bnch" ph^3?i^ a.^.ou^ie an^ singles in mena make when a stone slab and lead the Longh,orn„ attack; is placed against plate glass" and holes 6f desired position and alhnt For five innings, Ehrler "and Bruin"starting pitcher Clyde Rob­ are bored in the 'slab through which water is forced. , inson hooked up in a tight pitching ... , • -A duel despite some loose playing afield by their teammates. Each The team made three errors.' The lone by placing potassium permahgan Baylor tally was unearned while ate chrystals in front of the hoIeB. the Steers had to make four ofAs-water passes through the holes, their markers the hard way. the purple crystals flow but and In the sixth inning, Robinsonform purple lines. which . creates was sent to the showers as the a pattern or "map." These pat­ detail. Big Jim Ehrler, displaying mid-season form, whiffed 16 Baylor "The. Mechanics of Billiards fades sWSS c­ w night 6n judiciary appropriafions. m W^appr^ti^fes in tiie biff md the order-^ which they will be taken up ate: eleemosylmry^ Statfr del I. partments, junior colleges, vocationareducation, Omitr. \ higher education* . Representative W. R. Chambers of Ma?;*llso a of the conference commiittee,^was not so optimistic when their work would be completed. or to $104,269,851, are 12,224,573 greater than ift the Senate fbill. In the higher edtication quarterback, then blasted a double The Bears, still rankling' from to left field, scoring Parker withtheir two humiliating losses to the Bruins' only tall for the day*the Steers last year at Clark Field, The Steers retaliated in the setf: 22-1 and 22-8, started off their ond inning when they tied thehalf of the first inning like they score on three hits and two errors." meant business. Stout defensive play on'th^part After leadoff batter, Ken Wil­ of Baylor shortstop Harry Davis liams, third baseman, had fanned, cut off another Texas run.'James (Buddy) Parker of Bear Chili Bigham, Longhom firSt football fame, worked Ehrler for sacker, started the frame with a a walk. Ehrler then snapped a sharp single to right and went tothrow to first to catch Parker second as Charley Price let thenapping, but threw the ball yito ball get through him. Wallace right field. Parker raced to se­Jarl, rightfielder, bounced out cond on the play. See BURROWS' .Page 2 In SW Press Meet Hal -BoyJej'?v*orrespondifflt**fbr Associated Press and Mary Horn aday of the Christian Science Monitor were among the speak­ers at the Southwestern Journal states under .the program means with his administrative duties, The conference is for staff!offi­statements from the press rep­an American League of Nations, and when classroom and lab work cers at division, corps, and army resentatives of the various deleall equal , in the attainment of are temporarily suspended, he can levels, ... . '• . ' Rations, and from the interyiewscherished ambitions," the asso­be found at the Ann '< Arbor city ciate professor said. Mrv Cory is expected to return with the, delegates themselves. hall. He is also an alderman. Sunday.. ~ These have to be coordinate< i for Valor -it. :•! Longhorns combined two doubles, terns indicate the forces affecting, lam Congress at the University of the flow. Resulting problems, can Oklahoma last week .end. tSen 'Be s^velTlrf^hteftllyj^^^--—L iJT English Instructor Spefcking-on-J<:¥our~Stakeln The technique of mapping was At Army Staff School Korea," -Boyle said that he be­ first developed on a practical basis lieves the UN has gained the enc by-Dr. Moore. So striking are the Arthur M. Gory, instructor in for which it has fought in Korea. patterns that. the Photographic English at the University and We have stopped aggression and Society of America* has included lieutenant colonel in the Nintieth have served notice that we .will seven pictures ( of Dr. -Moore's Ihfantry AffhjF^Reserve Division, fight for peace in the future. work in the 103 prints accepted is atending a conference of staff Miss Hornaday said the. reafor its 1951 -Exhibit of Photo­ officers this week at the Army's problem in -covering the UN jsgraphy. • • Command and General Staff to draw the fullest moaning from When Drl Moore is not busy School, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. the mimeographed handouts, the Bears Larry Isbell, all-Conference the world. f There Jure vpermanant cor­respondents, and 160 radio men representing 38 of the 60 member 'notions in the UN, Miss Horn­aday said. She also stressed that the UN puts human freedom be­ fore peaces ®f the delegation. that in the Ho^aT^;^; Claude Mounce,' Jerome* 'hSfita&> found a normal nndergreduaW hashi, and Jim Elder 'jrere the teacher's load to be 18 full-ttme; students who,attended. J'i " students. Also, they found that instructional costs; parEx'* Rural Paper Study fried 1288 d yea*, and ftnaltt Although the white flag flown double cast as Claqdio; Barbara trayed by George Germany, Pat rived at the conclusion that UnU ~|r:Diskms; was;~ wrm1 publisher' of the Wellington "1 thin)? Ve' (Texas) Leader, spoke on ''Com­studying our bfll than pensations and Tribulations of mittee evtr haa. Wb havei^ii Small Town Journalism." Other pattern by which we beH^ speakers were Walter S. Camp­have established order ©Otr bell, research professor of English chaos, and thia bai,^beH« at OU; Jenlcin Lloyd Jones, edi­will serve aa • model iti y««ra.come," 'said Chambers. -­ tor of the Tulsa Tribune; Harold Keith, director of sports publicity Whan Senator ^Cara^" for OU; and Bud Wjlkinson, head asked if he thou^t tiie Senate football coach of OU. would accept the House posal for appropriations r;V ?Wi m?, Miss Amy Jo Long, teaching fel­ or may not, bntjw* wift certainly low in journalism: last year; and c«udder|the. JbiB very <*rfftiBhr = Norris Davis, assistant professor before any action is taken of -journalism who was in chanre RejHeaentativ^ paint,' Charles Bakery end light, will take its place among the tra­noon and-evening to make carica­signifies the fact that "Much Ado double as Beatrice; Eleanor Light McGregor, and Ed Reynolds* , Johnny Ohendalslci, BJ '50, was Ariene Kay, ditional events. The melody will About Nothing" is opening, it also tures; eight attractively furnished will play Hero; Posey Smiser ap­• Kathryh-Grandstaff will play . . awarded the Rural Journalism be, played on the Tower chimes signifies, as on the battlefront, rooms, carrying out the theme of pears as Dogberry; Bob Symonds Ursula; Angie Eskin is cast as the Award, offered by the Texas Gulf and from a phonograph record on the injuries" sustained by cast "Art:in the Home"; and processes, will play Don Pedro; Charles boy; Gwen Boehl and Jane Melin Coast Press Association. The the Carnival groundst demonstrated hourly, on how to members during rehearsal. Baker will play Berges,'J. D. Bon-are curtain boys, and Jo Perkins Payne to Gjve presentation was made in absentia A deadline of April 11 has been "Much Ado About Nothing" paint a picture, how to tool lea­ n» will appear as Conrade, and and Jane Mansfield are ladies-in-during the Association's thirteenth set for concession and show en­ opens Tuesday at 8 p.m. and will ther,/-make-pottery-, aketclr por­ Charles Myler «ill play Borachip. waiting. Pop Lecture ^ annual convention at the Sham­ tries. Scripts for shows must be run through Saturday/' r. r~-± traits with charcoal. ~='AJso, Martin Gal will play Don- rock j Hotel in Houston, submitted by April 16. • On Saturday, fifteen nuinfites Bill Rdberts-is-,theAssistant-di­ The Texas Fine Arts Associa­John; Tommy Jones' will appear -*01»en4al#l^L;,unable to attend bpfojre" dress rehearsal began/ rector, and Jack Ashford is stage tion, sponsor of the fair, has as Antonio; Ed Chavez .and Dan because he is la the arrajv will someone called and said that Bob Wager,» f brought ' such nationally known Foster will double as Balthazar; receive^ a, gold make-up rule and Burleson, who plays one bf the Crew heads'Include, stageand Friday Last Day people as C. F.>HeaTtman, New .Fred Smith will be Friar Francis; How "Much Ado" compares watchmen, had injured one of his Braunfels bookman, who will dis­ Dick Russell will' appear as Sex­building, Ed Chavez; costume, with other plays oJT William His entry waa a study of edi­ arms and would not l»e able to go play rare books and maps in con­ton; Chuck Taylor as messenger^ Carol Lang; properties, Jim-Cli-Shakespeare, and something of its torial practices of Texas weeklies, on. Mr. Payne, the director, or Grading Profs nection with the Antique Room-The watchmen, are, being por­ history will be the topic of a Pop [f was ba*ed on a term report turned tp Bill Roberts, the assis­ mer,*1 sound, Marvin Xtendrum; above Hogg Auditorium primarily Berman and Margaret Grant will Horrigan, Harold Klein, Stuart house and publicity, Pat Gibson; Receives Press Award one of the display rooms. tant director, and said, "Bill, you Faculty evaluation has been ex­ There is no admission charge, will "have to do the part."1 Where­ tended through Friday, Nawton but a small donation to the main­ upon Bill had' to learn the part in Schwartz, chairman of the faculty tenance and building fund for fifteen minutes for the dress re* Evaluation (Jpmmittpe,, announced entrance will be used to improve hearsal. He will play it again Monday., „ t ; ; t|»e Association's two Art Galler­ Tuesday night, and, possibly Two reasons were given: sev­ies—Laguna Gloria and * Ney 1 Wednesday,, ^ ' a; eral departments did not obtain Museum. Fat Cook, wlio plays"Margaret, forms until late last week, and also suffered an arm injury, and Round-Up week end^tfnterrupted Fulbright Applications although she, will have to talce it many classes. For Awards Due Apr.15 easy during the performances, she Preliminary checks by the com- will nevertheless be able to go on. April 15 has been set as the , mittee reveal that more so Although tiie crew, members deadline for applications for Full- per cent of the University pro­ have not been inflicted with any bright Awards. Applicants are ex­ fessors have used, the sheets. , arm injuries recently, they have pected to have teaching experi­ Schwartz anticipates an increase been *having their own little trou­ ence at the level equivalent to to 80 per cent because of the un­ bles. —; : -' ' iOj 9;; that for which application is several - expected co-operation' of At the dress ' reheamlf the made.t • reluctant colleges, Aotably Phar­ stage waa sfiddenly plunged into macy ahd Engineering. < The JHilbright Awards^re for darkness. While the light crew lecturing and, advanced research head waa screaming for lights, Ram Predicted 'J , in India, New Zealand, Australia, Jack Farmer, who is working on • Thunder late yesterday after­and the Philippines. One academic them, discovered that the light noon which brought a acare of year is the average length of the control wheel had come oft and rai.. inay mean something thia-aat^ awards. Australia i» offering slx­ be was'Tibldin* it in hia hand. iternoon arid evening when the teen positions for lecturing and The cast for the Department of weatherman expects thundersbow- research; New Zealand, eight) the Drama production will ' include ars. Temperature will be mild and Philippines, eight; and India, thir­ Charles-Lane, in thepart of .Bene­ the sky will Da partly cloudy *11 teen. Thailand, Pakistan, and dick; ]Pat Hines ** Loeriato; Rea GRABB1KG A FAST puff s «n^ a quick snifi between acts of Shakespeare's "Much Ado' About Nothing -am Charles Una, and Bafmort>;.Tha piay.o, Tua$day-jiTiah^ J" * Lecture by B. Iden Payne prepared ior * course cn the small Wednesday at "A p.m. in'the Mfin dty daily taught by Olin Hinkle, Lounge of the Texas Union. aMociate professor of journalism. >' Mr. Payne, Shakespearian scho! OhendaUki waa also listed en the lar and protege of the late G. B. School of' Journalism bono? roll for the fall semester. . Shaw, will also discuss technical' aspects of the production of jtheplay such as costuming, maintain continuity, and'scenery, ­The dramatist began his career 'TO Shakespearean drama more IJiatt 60 years ago in Englandwhen be recited a passage from "Henry IV" for Benson's touring company. « 1 ' -MMt, Payne, who his become an feternatfooally-lujpwn authority on Shakespeare,! came the Uni­versity In 1949 as guest professor6t drama. . . * . , Mr. Payne believes that a per­formance of Shakespeare must be a vary" bad performance not to bold an andience. Believing Shakespeare should be accentu­ated by the actor, Profesaor Paynerefrain# from the modern tenden­cy to altar words of the play which destroys, to a large detfre«, the -r-r Professor Will Take Social Meet Applications to iflietested in the sixft annual Social Work dent Round-Up in Houston should contact Charles . Laughton, Jr., astdeiate professon of sodU'work. The conference wiR be held at the Houston YWCA Aprif'12­M under the auspices' ef louston Community Council, Southwest Texas., Chapter of .Unerica^ Assodation' «f Workers, and the Harris County appropriations, however, th# Senate's proposal calls foi»5 $110,717 m o r Hojuse's proposal, it C The Senate bill $&fls for slight increase In the 1953 higher? education ap^opriatiOna OVe*i the| crease fat 1963. fWim i Both might have soma bearing1 on' appropriationa to higher eduoi^l :t^n. , ' • ^ i-f|| . "Thejaaore atttd[en^%^^^ ^ .igoney* said Carney/ .wJB--;'|sl^^reaeh some :Uniyewity will': ^erate 'as-ec "We couldn't believe! tint Baylor threatened briefly JftiBOblttften n» mewabfwa ^wftb••*% of games w » puiled a mild uwet Monday, frjftd telhvt rfft |Uuu|to)ditt| tbSr half of the second on*single{pitched btiy Then EHriw smtcbed tg the Tixaa Aggiea, aMninijtl< _**" ,->2",lV>? >, • „ :s '"'^ by Ijsft flakier Taylor WHloughby a doubtfc.torirtrt eenter,s|drifcg; Coll _ Station. At the same ~ ~' * Jarl, sending Biesenbach te third, and an error by Kena,bat Ehrler J Ttoufc SMU's Mustangs banged thrpe bouriceti OQf) to Davis whd tightened up and fanned twro and amd Robinson" to the showers. ««s, (.«* peowi^i^Mkiftc» Mitem t& tMffl. Bigham, wfefc got Williams to bounceinto* field* in Houston. ' to oil the, ptay. choice to end thq frattfou TiinrjHujigeaoist elev­ ana took a '-,"1" 'l' I "V" f'i 11 'J-J 'i'"*1 " SW[U exploded for two three- r SSKf^ft W«n"ick, it run innings to club the cellar-Hmcir> cf dwelling Bice Owl#, '9*8. Fred Kfloft) 8b > immii (([Ai Bennfers, of football fame, was Blftent. lb1 JMU rf -w the winner, though allowing eight Biesenb»efa.e Rhi,D HI EdS&SAJVf4-3- Phiup Morris cMie^ hits* The loser was Walt Deakin. Bkrhr, p Southwest Conference standinfS Totals ,^JLSe ( 7 87 »;• * through games of Monday: •— Popped up to Itcat for MOm la vtk. 1 op Mural Softball Game any other leading brand T«u 3 0 Scora by inninscr BATLOR „JL .100 000 000—1 SMU . ' . 2 far1' . \ TEXAS'' .010 0l« OOx—S Texas A&H 4 2 2 Rons tatted Ift V lsbell. Burrow "8, Wo- yy.:Bf J«FF HANCOCK runners across the plate in a 3-2 James Ross limiting Tejas to three 1 to suggest this test mwek, Khri«r. 2>b»se. hits: , bbell. Bur­Baylor l j, r-Wttaa* tutrunumu Csorimsrter -defeat of Kappa Alpha, Kappa hits. ., •••.•••... ••'.•••. row*. EhrJer. Stolen base: Burrowi. Sac- TCU 2 8 riftce: Hrucir-lnt 1 II,. Hit by pttcber: Biesenbaeh ^Robin­ Chi, but .won the game, 9-6, by Earned 0, Texas son). runs: Baylor 4. easier drove In ail four of the four runs behind, but rallied for several balls Based SMOKERS, who tried this test,} virtue of bases Jon Losifl^ pitcher? Robinson. Umpire*: Teek on tbt Asseciated Press Doners* wan*. a tie, and then went ahead with from the Sigma Chi pitcher. ana Lyons. Time; 8:05. . The Texas League opens its V Winning pitcher Bob Armstrong M.—I : Delta Theta Pi Ipst a freakish fifty-sixth annual "run for the report in signed statements th^t fanned ajot SAH betters to five i»* ball game Monday ni^ht to Pra-Undefeated Longhotas money'* tonight aa Houston ip at nings.,The Sammies overcame an Cubs Edge Frosh ther Ha?l, 16-3. Delta TheU got Beaumont, Fort Worth at Okla­PHILIP MORRIS. IS DEFINITELYl aarly two-run lead only to lose it more bite and walks, but stil Blank Baylor Netters homa City, San Antonio at Shreve­ the fifth? >""X-T came out on the' short end of the . ••, .•%••••• --..J port, and Dallas at Tulsa. IMS IUITATINO, DEFINITELY & . The Longho^n tennis sqifad .WM&*-Btaeatei^ andI fiyw final score. Prather scored one r 5-4 blanked Baylor's Bears . in •» Wlypi9^9i iUipIWlilMJIT to see the Baylor ^Cubs come from lead and were neVer headed. Phi whipped David Telford, 8r4, 6-0. ar«)*ed brlor imperted behind and . win an eleven-inning Sigma Delta scored one of their Men and Wome# . Bernard Qerhardt thrashed tiie Fnm(*. lteal b««e born», (less ball game by a"5-4 score.' runs in the fourth inning, and the «y*s b»4 a ,,srfM siaer'*'. Complete line of Bears' Larry Goldbeck, 6-1, 6-0, I^aL' m-'-i+l * : ­ r The Yearlings were ahead from other in the fifth. .. ^PJwWWa $e#uty Samca by in the second match. ' the second inning until the ninth • Pilar, tofet atft. Charles Bludworth continued § collector's lie* MAE WOLF, R.C. when Baylor tied thescore at 4-4. MpW c»rved «t*ei the rout, finishing off James La 1...ilghl up a PHUF MMRI5 '-jt.• m*V|» y»»» s»in«l j£«0RNEns * itt The Cubs went on from there to Tennis Schedule •hape — eely II.SO. seors the winning runjfa the bot­Nevue, 6-1, 7-5. Bill Harris wound Just takt a puft-w-DOHT iNHAif—qnd ,'De exactly the some thinQ—dqh*T up singles' play with a €-1, 6-&r tom of the eleventh frame on TUESDAY s-l-o-w-l-y let thesmefcfcome through inhaic, Notica that bite, that itingT " Varsity Court* triumph over Morris Weis. Wakl BW* §1 three soeeesaive singles and an your nosf. Bo«y# Unt h? And NQW.„ Quit* a difference from PHILIP MOMUSl 2:30 o'clock In -doubles bates and Harris jwror. _ „ _ 1 Austin v*. §tU*s. Brewer fit. Cook. teamed up to whip Telford ; and Other bxands merely make daipis-but Pmup Moiuris invites you The loss was the second straight , John. A"©. »"•<$"Vn' 3? ^ G. Wei,as,:6-4, ^-2., v *<*> pfr' suffered by the Yearlings by a one-»:»6 o'eledc' tocompare,tojudge, todecidefor yourself. ibrris run nuuyin, and both of them have IfficUwtv"'s«*»to. k mm « Try litis simple test. We believe th^t you, too, will agree * * * been charged to--relief pitcher Bonh»tn>*«. Hw*trett». Intramural SchedyUi Freshman Courts Pmpp Mokbjs is, indeed, America's FINEST Cigarette! -^ Ridiard Freting. Preling was 2»30 o'clock hurt week by St. Edwards ViUeraal vs. EUSff- TUESDAY Softball O'Mealy vs. Welch. University in the ninth Inning on 8 >a. ....... A. HAJMNS S CO., 3*7*m Sprfsaw v*. Alliaon. * squeesed-ip run. Today he 3;45 o cloclc Stems Alpha Mu vs. Alpha Epsilon PI ' Htm mmf jdtched only toa*y Ortfar Cask Assoc. v ':^:V-r M4 IS# ler stilpptat oa oriws im I Amery House vs. Thelem*. ._c I".sniiimn Snookums vs.-S.A. ^ub. ' (lOPSbom Banjd vs. Roberts Hau. about plaidI * Tsanls Doubles 4p.m, Ruebel-Tboma* vs. WarrenrWaldron. Saikin-Rosen vs. Walker-Boswell, >A.' Fryar-Gre*ory vs. Cobb-Pew. " Warner-Dean vs. Quoyeser-Harris. CammUuc-Besley TSf Baceos-ViUenr*al. "Klelmnan-Rosnet v*. Aaou«-Ar*cher. • -efanrk«RoebeUe -r*."TSWtr*a-Tip*t­ mm Saled-Bodam V Hoori*>>l(oon vs. Thorntot-Laey. y v Keff-HsCai« vs. Bejennett-Cox. 6 Alcolrn«I/lpscomb vs. Williamson. Bauman-Sbelmire v%. Barshaop-Kline,Prtraeisco-Lummis vs. Barber-Roger*. McCown-Stephens *s. Friedlander-Sitber. BRAINPOWER Hart-Kilpatriek vs. Shoptaw-Kipp. Relyea-Dickersqii vs. Graner Spear*. «. Perwein-Perwein t». Powell-Brannen. 'v Brand-Zobel vs. WiUson»Hu«hes. Taylor-Hubbard vs. AsbbF-Franklin. : Poster-Kdminston vs. Snively-Jaeksoa. Knowp the world over for Its Greene-Reese vs. Snowden-Diinean. j.,.r Horseshofs froduct ability to design and manu­ ^r\ Scores dne m Intramnral Office for round. The followinar men ara in facture fine aircraft, Douglas " on* i ,-i5 ^ Quick reunu o 4 f James Walter, Rich Towne, Frank Ho- and also pioneers in other fields. H."/1 '*"• CLASSIFIED ADS Alfatn Kline* John Davis, >r Chart)tea Schmidt; An example is the Analog T«xon Resulft * Golf; Doubles , ..... vi nh • . Last day for scores on second ronnd Digital Converter shown at ^**eond • and third flight*. . First day for> play '' —comj^ctdly washable and eaay-weariog. Sport 'em k a f -!'»?• i tmnmmsHStn two Mnm housa. UBKBAL aBWARD for Htam «f ftefc- Still the ttfifid \ow, WW NAIt GJCOORAyHia ^ Holiday, widerangeof piaid combinations...long orehort sleeves, .-»,*# , • tie—6 for IX. Pocketbook srs _ e» ••61"i p«. arreen with a|lrer im. eall s-llto.' Lost vieinity Union or Koale SM«. prlct for th« blod«ft i&l inui.SaieQcaTf otMtti:Baad­ Crtton-S4.50 JT. Adatns. lUtOt, ,. a iriwat,. Fasbloiu aad Bat* " iJS.50 •r* »l«aat,_ IMFF Ihrnuwirmai*^ Hone*—lo»->a for 25c. ComiM,. 6c. tar Hottaa- , Help Wanted 9?u or 5*** Ualr«wl»r aampoa I ' torreaeaeehwark tApril^Tth, atttiane broaeh, larf* «mf» ; 10*2 fn gold. Contact libs. MOM SHAVES! p.m. T» Ns" or Johi Worrafl. ttli Bis p r'-J57* Grande. Phone 2-2$«f, Reward. BABra "t»alt)ln» ehair," Saealtoat a«h­ 1 I BETTER SHAVESI t s' V* y#nti**"8tieahU»ie Ride Wanted I 9VanHensen if 'ii ''' • #«•»>. m. Booka "" ' 7-T-f WAKT A RXDXT Paata M fMf Statolae* mt I HOLLOW Tfyq ' for 2Ja»dkf*ehtefs Stwrtav A A«to h< it, Y. j»h» eomptsaion,, Hbaral| 2002 Sneadwajr. bmil&B'Pmm COKF..;l9SW yOKJK -'dlscoeotoo «tora pur^ase«. -~ 1 A* v • i ' »AOKPg"PWUbty gl«etilc Oryan.-In-*?m -*s ' i"~* «b ilSROUNDtr ' 4aT wa*k atraeUon §png folio. Phone Roomsfor Renf xnmsao jSMtth-Canma ^ortaUa. Bar­ *As kcontinue* to advance in 14666*; , psia. PhUap radio record player for BXSMMm TERM. Booms for twf DOUBUE or Alt ftal&iif iwtlintifi ttd Prlva^^ entrance. Bath, twin Inner, aprins beds. Also, upatetn rooms. 1204 iiA. deleted iei^nees^ D»s|l«i JBsa Aytonlo. 7-»4S9 or S-74S1. ' 'miitH SINGLE *M?°S OBO comajcroBS : " . . J • n> .»<>NW^fffiiwwa^aawaa#"-'.'' rocord-ehanfer with ^Snuaval -"otja** jtaftorM. *14. SSp5® ( Special Services of hi^h calibre i»n». wmemmm-.i ... training Many *AOIO AMATEURS] Want to Hat ** t i.^%," " ri eal» nkadiii^eaVdtoetrkala^l /, ,v ( *H. 4sjr wsak* -' r »yp^«nwnr.in typisii Thaaaa. Itirfrrr ' < *4' " -+ r* ^ r\ I dear- J si« '""iriyQl'.Jl PMlf UW WTM yy iihij'Ji.; u\* 2rt^ggSai'-m frf lalailnr italtt ncoiiii'-i bans'* " -.i^peaniiWe aapaiviott '4MM««_vjt m&m JU'ikJ •,i n. i . iiiiiiw^a^i^wi.w.Mi^.ia^s f ai|i I i;.|IW:.« -ns.w*SKa HHSJM UtltMHU thm 4^0, Hw»_ • dnMnMf 1JL-.10OU11LIM t:«te'» goalofff4,60D ff»; $25,000 a y**r+ Jfccsllent. clinical kcfifc*£ £«** A. *2 „ * Its backers kept it alive bjr nils ^onaati4 cubic feet on Sin Angelo,^ *t ^ r* . ,, decided increase over last year's Bseraatien'ai *94 athle&e to Jute. row margins of one and two Votes Speaker Reuben ^e'ntwmt said ii_uiu r\. n >_. ._ .' ; ContributionsnnnMhtidnnii amy etill Be mailed \ ^.JSepreseafcaiW tJim! X^indsey of last week in tfe# Senate «ft^r jwr-i»P«d for State Hoi®itali jBrltts*. Dormitories on cam* .h*n t. _.HaJ total, Dr. SfcATlister stated. through all sorts of maneuvers to con«tltutk>Bal amendments would Special Schools •***<&****• pus. Approved for Veteranifc to »r. McAllister i* Waggensr Special devices are being used get it killed. Finally at 8 p.m.t be taken up first Tuesday. Ten Texarkana, author: of the omni. •ivint m ^ Hall 221, i, thia year to experiment with the Monday, the House voted t*-«l to proposed amendments are topped but measure, said,his bill-contains opponent* % A-^ Job of running Hi# ittaiitatiMa until Tuesday, miN*. cite*ic stTM# • "I beli«v« this indicate* a fart­recess off by the-one to;remove the ceil­a flat ten pur cent raise on the t The Hooi»: i»i6 imymmago, ^nd hm CHICAGO 14. ILLiHlOt! ing of 'social consciousness and a *&s§3$ That left the natural gas tax ing on old age' benefits. An antt-taxes that have been in^the mfea-with witnesses, at least half a Willingness to assume social re-A long page-length letter TO* still breathing. idot machine lull is set for special sure since 194i. He estimated the dosen of whom were yrepgrM to »ent to approximately half of tbe The Senate passed #" bill to consideration tomorrow. < < increase would brix»g J82,000,00ft testify against the measure. Sj!h faculty and staff. A abort two-bring deaf and dumb children un-Representative H. A. (Salty) more in two years, ' Opponents made no objection sentence letter was mailed to the . The comptroller has 'estimated as the eommittee took up the other half). The results vera sur-that state would need $110,000,-measure and sent it to subcom­ m prising* Dr. McAllister said. 000 more revenue in the next two mittee "for further study" in less years to stay out of the red.;^ In March, the shoVt letter re­World News in Brief Hull said.he,"believed that f|£ sponse heated the long letter va­ riety, obtaining $060 to $960 for Battd^oi) th* XwMdM frtm tion against General Douglas Mac-are wottlB change to 79 or 80 mil­for reporting lions. / «v , the saine number of replies—188. Mtabm of tk« Houso Armed Arthur that vtoutd affect MacAr- trons were te report afc lit eaD Sorricas Committee rewrote the He said hUnatu«iWlilW of the chair. To date recipients of each type thur's status as Supreme Com­ Universal Military Training sec­ mander in the Far East. would r^ise J4 to 15 mUlion a That meant ItwwMUrtati** letter .have contributed exactly the lazy man*]# OlVSi vHOn RICItllt COlOKt . same amount—$1,066.60., One tion of their draft hill Monday in The President stil could public­lan Graham of Junction, chairman hundred and fifty-six "longs" and an effort to ease its passage ly or privately rebukfe the General tU, nuyk. of the State Affair* Committee, Itoci(,rcnv Brawn, Blue,Oarictctfi/' 148 "shorts" have responded. Do­through the House. for his open split with the Admin-minor tax, we will find the money could wait as long aa he pleased'A t /*T, # The new-version provides for we need to make up the state's" to call for the .report., ^ with Na­ nations from anonymous .souxcc#' lstration—«nd United season! /bKtfru) Mahogany,and Neutral account for the discrepancy be­ the appointment by President tions .policies—^-over the conduct deficit, I do believe," he said. -Graham told witneoes they Truman, with the advice of the A bloc of rural road backers could make, statements and Hie tween the, total and the amount of the war with the Chinese Com­ Senate, of a civilian commission munists. in the House Remanded that the them with the subcommittee. Op­ KlVUfl MtH illVV •rOllSf to draw up a teaining and opera­omnibus hill be delayed to" give ponents, apparently pleasedatthe "shorts." tion plan. ^ rsnlSiSSlSLSL them time to prepare amend­aetion, said they would do thai ~^ The latest reminder, sent April W * ' ~ day to permit introduction ments* The Hohse voted 78-80 to Named to the subcommittee WXh„- 2, has stimulated good response, " Commntiiata take it up. Monday. Chiaea* opened bill to outlaw punchboards., wet* Representatives Peace John Dr. McAllister assarted. More than -iS •M ®# <^tVV/dE^ Korea's third largest dam Monday ; Senator George Nokeg of Corsl-ambl $200 has been received in the last .*:: . -# «> ,ii<• few days. in a vain attempt to flood out ad* cana offered the measure. It > */ vanoing allied forces on the cen­^ould make possession or opera­si'' I 'AAgS «*?„ & tral front. tion of punch boards a misde-It looked like the spectacular meanor»-,., ?,%t,jf ,N ovei^to SAVE CASH & CARR Red maneuver failed. The Chinese opened too few gates to create i. A projoctad pipeline to Cali­MLthf deluge they plotted. fornia was discvisaed Monday at a j> , -« Texas v • » .. Federal Power Commission hear­PICK UP Cr DELI ft'-fct ^ ^ Senator Douglas (DJ11) came ing into natural gas operations of iff * oat Monday against abolishing the Phillips Petroleum Company at SFPVirF % 1 ^CKYIwfc Reconstruction Finance Corpora­ Bartlesville, Okla. Store and tion he helped to investigate. To The hearing is to determine if loll the agency at thip time, he the big oil producing company is 9-10:30 — Student-faculty cof­ fee for Department of English, said, "Would be like'throwing the subject to FPC jurisdiction!init*, A f « NlSCtfl mateebffee right...this minute/ baby out with the bath," * gas deals. , ~ ^ -^ ^ see about International Room, Texas Un~ SUIT | 1 a^H»ivn u„* , n 10»« ;» ^ ^ ^ .* « "The RFC, 'with all its faults, * ' t' ^ J* vi , Get set pl«y host*,,at *ad stir.Bvery cap's good...- has served many useful functions Lower Grand*' WMZiSmsiB ­ to Rio Valley a'swanff notice, ur time sad Jrttbl Ho pot. No I -» Trip tiirough the Governor's •—especially in filling a gap in our apokaamaa condemned as ridicu- '<• s f of dayor night! In the mc-gonads. No brewing. Mansion on "Know Your Aus- i ^ credit 'structure," Douglas said. TUXEDOS getting^ onds it take* to start:a bnH Buy on the allowance,too. in," KTBC. lnus and terrible Monday the sug­ Ioo, mm// coffee cac he Even the +«. sue make* He added that it can continue to gestion that laborers from Mexico rX mm 3 — Carnival -chairmen, Texas ready for the gang. as many caps as s pound serve the public if it is properly are not needed on their farms. i" &»' ^-4'- Ncscafj* faskes roister: Of Ordlasry coffee, ytt Union 310. conducted, ' 5 . . . 'a. Ireah coffee ...right la the at least20« less. Make a 4 —* Karl Selig.to speak-on forum cap.Simply i«laa tesspoAa* to geta jar today,. ,/»rpmr* programs, Hillel Foundation. it . A -'r~ President Truman's migratory faU add piping hot wstStf Praaident Truman was reported labor commission reported Satur­ 8:80 — Boys' tap class, Texas Un­ Monday to have ruled out any ac-day that migratory labor from More people drink ion. other countries is not needed on PILLOWS RUGS • DRAPES ftm • — Sigma Alpha1 Iota, Hitchin' U. S. farms. . , t %i w*Wi 1 ' ; t i- Post, -ani>«a,»**•- V ^ «. 'yt *-* *jis at open meeting of World emin, Pat Baskin, Bob Blumenthal, f V Relatedness Commission, Robert (Buster) Dickerson, New­ rM YMCA. -. ^ ton Schwartz, Clara Ann Tayltfjr, •rtv Warn f> *, . .» JiV „ % 8 ~ A. D. Moore to" give public Bill Wright, and Gay Zedlcr.. pm YOUKNOW.,^ ^ '***>» i". "Engineering The contest is sponsored by the TTHM uf row m * lecture on Can »sas^5 Battle of the Flowers Associa­: TVUWM. 'wVVIVIVIi.B(;'OnwnNCOw Hw ,' v. •* < ^ THE DUPGN Be Beautiful/* Geology Building • ••. 14».. tion of San Antonio and judged Mw U.S., In ihars of Ifee 'iV% $ "Jtei 8 — Beginners'' ballroom danoe by some of its members; The As­ class, Texas UnSon^i: 'I sociation. offers prizes of $100, . f4 vcsm. Mim one te ^Ussnwolar wl,V»W/ ;skh 8 — Department of Drama pre-$75, and $26 for first, second, and f \ J I? QMBtsJ^luch Ado-Ahout Noth-respectively. v. ^ <2* third places respectively jl A ' * ing" tinder the^direction^rIS. -yThe-subjTCt-matter-of the ora­ -Hr^4^ Iden Payne, Hogg Auditorium. .cfl V tion for the contest should deal i -•> >~x J* -j u 8;15 — University Glee Clubs-in with character delineation of Tex­ ans, historical events, or institu­«V.'-. piano humorist, Gregory Gym. v tions and.should be original, ap­proximately twelve"" minutes ii cohcert with Henr^ J*>Jcott, ii-'3--,--•••• 3 TCU Students «On Carp.tfv-'> . length, and delivered from mem ll|3! PORT WORTH, Aprit 8t—(JP) ory. The Brains Behind the '* ^ if'V.'i'-vC ,Vs. V H ,-<«s —Three Texas Christian Univer­The winner will be the guest of sity students, one of whom was the Battle of the Flowers Associ­ fchot in the foot in a week end ation at its'annual luncheon and. ow Du Font Rttcordt "tan thBplKit iSS&ui • campus disturbance, faced dis­ will deliver its oration to the qiem­ , «n8inHrs apply tl«ctronlc« engineers were aware of tiie.teporv. ciplinary action that could result berg of the association and its in .their dismissal from the school, guests. He will also broadcast his chvnaical m«nvffactui« r, v tanceofdetoctii^accidental oontam-• oration over radio station, ,WOAI .awntirtwS^ ^tionrfth.coding w.tg.fafcrt. Vt.W . ^ " in San Antonio for a diemical company, it's natural v WW '..aTAJJP > assume he Is a chemist. Oddly . y™"1 enough, tiie Du Pont Company em^j • aealjQg wifch ptofct <^HxenM. , ploys about as many engineers td-Thtmlfal slsitrnrila wtrfiiln• WwM» 1Mb mmQri&ry ZfjCewmSj#­chemint, teaofmal techtucal WOTfc' O™ u,,onlyw,, t» .ft*.. / ^rW^W»PKjpfc2» ' !>tV IH'l' instrumentation*** very important Ob the luxury liner S.S. PRESIDENT CIEVEUND * .V activity—both dbaniatsand dwaiij| firom^utoavirfet gas oft* f MM*a ftm Smfiwdu,Mk W»Im Kigiu Mt M -^cal smgizieeanBr «ace xa tibe inlziorlt^.' sniitivexlttbk xeedttorU nybm ^ m r. ^ lids fundamental work is largely deoier gagea~|day a vital pert ia '5^,-"l, l«ani «rf five this suihm^r in a combination "Floating '•? methods ^•%anied out la a' labalMtory of tbf >V :(-S •• ' r-.x •« i Classroom-Country Club." Earn six universkyeredits while tybe«W*> l^nginoeiitigntiiiartuiOH^wlwimelao. . yp« enjoy lectures and seminars *t sea in the mornings, „ tiff vHb hfa this Officio/ Ring of Hm .tricalengiraera, physic^ ifef swum sun-bathe and nlay dcck sports in the aftcrn w+z dlw and.dance under the stars in the evenia^/. ^ ^ tKaentists ax* deadly tnvdved teVr toarthfag rf" w- University of Texas alternate programs <4 44 and day» duration^ laseewfc snghisersiyf —i'•**% is atHonqr TKo Soauty of ^osIfln, die cutting and workiftein* „, |uai«sting devicee iQ their credit-Hie*, r 1 ' • ' , . 74 « 'nw. fa»m ^mwilllll! hf • lulu,. Hong Kong and Manila—-depending on which pro* •hip It unexcelled! Gold Ofr silver .pith choice of , Vicesfor xocmitozingindtu^riaiopera«, <; lbewiyAisa]ws»? ^ -i' M to an dectranks in Hawaii. AH-expense fftres, inpluding minimum First Crttn Onyx« Sttfdbny* ««d.B)ue jf> 8w>bof tiiFir ideasare(punedljjl ' •: -•-• :• -* • • •-'• •-* v-ji : dass steadiship, 11295,jvt #1309 or plt» *32.40 tax, mused In «I»^ ftrt &&< x. ' '• -f * « #*ti ,A > • r « * . £ ' ' Ask yesr tvml age*t (no ( ^design, _ of Sk_ ndw \ V-A ™ VaLWlTH flfiiwO mmM -pBuit?ii|iBD.|iaE^/'Sull the Unlversffy down to the level tipiqjecial regularconatitu-tijat *&» university1 shall be entirely *«• thai makes nil of JUs" effort* y,**r on® ®* Legislator* urged of just an average oonegeTwii^. , seem to be worth while. You who that Texas, establish a univeiv , must be'constantly on "the alert to -wife 'Hf pledjpbof ofallpolitical reipects the'^tmey--higrhestt ln:Jw^ ^ . Jtatffar this Unwersity who by your ef­^ The mstter csme uj> for more *rything elw.» Tjxana cqieet te^ifjm forts have demonstrated not -only ' extended discussion in the Legis­be the best. 'In reee^i years thel||< fh#§ ^oai&tit&lionaj pte^pft, ^ ^ " not signing the 04%tibt must petition tho your high ability but also yotir lature in 1857 and 1888. In (), to fill thi* ff oar life. H Would be ironic, «r«f: It^d,"''would be to *ppryfe tlfiat wMcb your are not only willing to sub­# *O a t eiducational desideratam ' 4n*t more than that tt wrould ba^ "While thiscourt ismindful of thefact SiSi":the banning of our' Government mit to being .educated, but also Which now exists, a Uaiveraitjr tragic, if in this day .of t»nparal-| that the action of the regents was at the are actively ;desiro*e of «ontri-> leled material prosperity and ex-' 'Of tike first order iba»U be bvlttheufbeen denounced uthe most effective outset motivated by^a desire to protect ^iThuting affirmatively your full by the State, and it should •w; pension tiiere» should be a stif-s lay which one special brand of share to that process. Like a good phatieally be a first class on*, ling of the growth of ont edu­ -the University from the influence of sub­ or economic philosophy can en? many other relationships, th»t of and should occupy (round «a high, cation institutions, and particular­ versive elements dedicated to the over­I thought 1 told ytitir boy*# NO jam sessions, in. the practice teacher and student has to be one ly this University. The consequen­ %esel|^ and; perpetuato ifself to tbe and! a position as commandiiif, aa threw of our constitutional Government, rooms. n^ef mutual effort to be success-Influence '« extensive, «i 'any ce^i of such a' policy1 would be eseclusion of all others; the itti- ; fuli When I have the good for* in .the «ldar states. Oar bfrmffll today, but would not be' we are also ^eenly aw&re that equal to.^j means > -*?) tuna -to address a-group' of stn-; «upl« tlukii *n< the facultyand the administrations looked at this tabject for a mo* do -not want any aiich policy and , '. j oven if it is for their own benev it is my earnest hope that the / tling away and the resulting disintegra­ nent, and who has (sinsd wl4»; •L fit as well as oitrs,, I feel that dom bjr reference to the efforts people's representatives in* the ' ItOOND-WP, Ihx^Kuper cofa»sal pub* tion of the very pillars of our freedom."* m -. . NO POIHTw ?• .. " , * NICE, BUT.\/yj>:/J i a proper occasion to say. of State* this legislature will provide adequate V v*; To the Editor:, :*r? it is elder in behalf, yTo Editor: V ^ lie relations event of the year, haspassed ^.Although the court said the regents ; • -Maybe Bob Jones enjoys thrown "Thank you." We are grateful for that ijt giving to aa lastitatio^ support so that this University v > Nice dance. I hope .^though that the very substantial contributions, kind will not fall* behind in the ever- its twenty-first MrtMay successfully. ^|1bad complete authority over professional ling rocks at airplanes and barking of this its proper nseful­ -at the moon," But frankly we c^n the committee cleared enough on that you have made by your high • nass, the higheet possible good forward-moving" procession of in­ >$&> Msi» caa^uiUt the man-hours dtf-. personnel, it added that this authority scholarship, .toward making this stitutions of higher' learning. see no point in it X. ... -r 'this shin-dig' to buy a can of wax •hould be aimed at; liberality of ited by University students and staff ceased when this authority was abused. .Neither can we see any connec-1 for next year's tussle. > 5 a real • University of the First feeling, sentiment and; endowment But we must not assume that >ward making tbe rpund-np t>f UT exes Educators* almost without exception, ition between Jones' likening of Class, for scholarship, in the facul­,, should characterise every effort insdaquate financial support, basic --EARt GILLliS |ft memorable tasei ".A bigger production have expressed an opinion that the re--y... Nasiism and, the,Ktt Klnx Klan to ty and the students, is-the pnme , made In the accomplishment of and essential as it is, will guar-: .i j ;; RRH'S such tnrial matters as quality of such a, University. this end." < antee that this University will be ^ . & v whether Ruek or Athenaeum is the Yon have no doul»t heard thai ' , _ m the special loyalty oath. It isheartening '^oldest." We think arguing over phrase "a University of the BHrat "Speaking to the same bill, of the first, elassi Those of as g^C^CiC^get tA» bigt ^ Should all; that the.'courts have not submitted to "whether Rusk orAthenaeum is the Class" many times. It appears ft* Senator Wigfall said:-jnihe University have a heavy -older is analogous to the two far-the present Constitution 'of tine responsibility resting, on us. We %-^MiMtaib^ thfttlfciaaot iKimarily a com-prevalent nation-wide hysteria, but-have i ' "To establish even one Uni­ ' men that were discussing whether State of Texas, which was adopted must do our job well and, mora •• versity, which will be of any prac­ venture*but a tribute to those reaffirmed the principles on which great f''a certain watermelon was male or in"1876. The actuai establishment " than that, wa must conduct our­ tical benefit to the people, the •^fSWho havfe mad# ^i^veraity great. educational institutions have been built. :female—a question that would be of a University of Texas was outlay must selves so that we will inspire: be large; What is '.of interest only tp another water*, Opportunitie6 then only a hope; but the phrase called economy is often extrava-the. confidence of the people of m*+-thst was employed by the con­ganca in disguise. Parsimony is this State. We must be constantly • • Obviously the members of these stitution-makers in 1876 was an oh the* alert to avoid doing, or always so. In addition to the lec* two societies will not.be able to expression of the thinking of two even appearing to do, anything ture rooms, which should be large, Filipino Student Varias "settle'their'personal controversies — C. J. 'Wilcox-from the person*, generations of Texans who .had -Jgill Jinpair_OlL destroy thatf enn-i. ~ it-will bemaiessajfy to erect an~ by writing notes to each other; nel department of J. C. Penney preceded them. What did those fidence. This IS it heaj^er hurde'n observatory, and' procure a libra­ mJ . ' A • hM* vsroBi. , so, we quote RRH, "Let them set­Company will be on the campus early Texans have; in mind, when than rests, on: the ordinaiy pri-. ry, philosophical apparatus, cabi­ tle it"in front of the Administra> Tuesday to interview students in­ fiasmn American Mission they thought of a University, and net of minerals, etc. What is iVate citizen, but we ocupy a spe-'tion Building." > C terested in working for the com? what does the term a "University cial position and we must assume . worth doing at all, is worth do­ . .. * < „ ,, >fx H.M. pany. Interview appointments may '» 1**\ ISKL* j ^ ' % . of the FirBt Class' include? the obligations, that go with that ~ 'oBewi»i> '-.IS ,y|he ' Mmi) dent organitation which ia nation to rbe from our pros* „' i-. I; ^ B.S. be made in the Student Employ­ ing-well—"niggardliness fir not 'it:'• good husbandry.' State pride for-position. It is unfortunately true MJm'Xtmm .teir'-iurtkiito ^ voted to providing oppor«$tltration, we, the Filipinos, b»« —i r'±* t --% 4t. JfrO. ment Bureau, B. Hall 117. .-t.-vA'-fe -w-i, -... "What.the early Texans thought bids the idea of establishing an that all sort* of rumora era * *«#•• fcy tlstlviiji'sitV llitanftiss tine campns to,toff eame on July 4, 1946, the floating around the State which . .^nities for the eampus about a university can be arrived • ;1?r*^l$am more about the Asi||i^.'first -full-fledged democracy institution not commensurate with are extremely harmful to the .. ihr Amsw'iClMUBlNimu-8 ifo countries. 'v'on the east side of the great _ i ' , ".>rt at in -part by considering what the vast resources of the State." kind of men they were. Their out. , University. We cannot afford to ' itJi&MnHr *t$BL i* This Is what ahe has to My^,' Pacifie-T ^ Although . tha Legislature in >13*# ^aboat democracy in the «The PhiUppine. are but an . offutj n standing trait dearly was a bold 1858 passed a law providing for shut our eyes or our ears to ' courage, for obviously if they what is going on around ua> We mines, which she terms "the infant republic, and the.Ame#. the establishment of a universityj 'latSiSg^TT*' American experiment.*^ ieans , with great^lititude, .jtittra M Ik* Gwidim C«r» DEM10 rSRSO^WSU Main BuHdJn* S04. had been timid or fearful men the Civil War and Reconstruc­must co,mbat such rumprs, fii^ by of America wUl b* on tl)« um-£ , -CSUB&BS T. CLASUC .so conducting ourselves thafc ttiere ' not if -f3? are like proud parents, xeal-pu» on ,Tlittr*d«7,"April It to kit j?K|- they would Have left their tion intervened to make impos­ -^EBESTWATfor-• undkUtM for MJI. ud BJS. in lasumrr. old homes where life was com­is no Just ground for criticism atiottt mgr ere is a piquant intei^'' etching it grow and sible the fulfillment of the pur­ iuM and ^ugaat ia fcranehM •( engri--The United Stataa Civil' Serric* Com-' paratively peaceful and secure. of what we do, and second, by' ­ far mm &* Hi the wSpWHppines, ^%^Si men »**ri»*. ,art» and baiinM* adminiitraiion, miasion announce* that a'pplication* are ose of this, statute. When the laUraaUd »tttd#nta ahould oomc by th« beinr accepted for civilian instructor po­They were adventurous; they people met again to write a Con­letting the people know the facts S|ad«at Kmploym»6t Bur«ta in B. Hall sition* in the Air Force Technical School about Eternal 'iSflm&km . -ay will more gladden th. ^^ t« Make /interview appointment*. at Sheppand Air F«t» Bu«, Wichita sought new < experiences in new stitution after the Reconstruction this institution. a ( JOE D. FAHBAB, Diractor • Beginning range surroundings; they were not com­ vigilance is also the price of -• th«Bthrt Falls. (alari«* from regime had ended, they gave the ring oat her ^wt % foreign sovereigns aft«r Hhti J-J*"* ®f .-. ^Student Sm|>lora'«Bt lt.100 to f3,828 p«r year with additional University's good „ reputation. - Igrant of Independence by the;d*Y *he« Philippines can • --;••• •-• • --• -• •-•\l "i • •-•• / compensation for overtime. A period of placent or satisfied with things Legislature a specific^ mand*to , * „ JH m m ' trlk^ Mk'y^gve'-.iaA mericans. -it st*nd *lone economically, aa tachnieal training will be given to all as ; they were. To protect that to establish and maintain a Uni­ ibMM' V SmSSwuiK.vwiftw. , persons who are selected. • t would like to "assure the par. rl/vaB 'nlRDCBI MtwW&tn . what they considered their rights ^»'» Xanb applicant! inaka versity of the First Class. Even so,; liTed on •» »r«b IS.... ^and April it. Applications Prospective should for tha following award* way b« ob-arransrements for: an. interview 'in the as free,men they even fought a •nts and other friends of the without S*^^B0HrW|F that few. terrible world war, which left economic well-being of-the tainadl «t thaoffiea: Tb« Kathleen Bland Teacher Placement. Offices, aecui* aa war of'independence against the} the able leadership of University here, and the people y?* «wy» i«gbn-'Hte nyq.to amaiw,^. vmMg ol tbe »W Vmi Dalta Delta-Dalta Seh»> application form, (Standard Form ST), Governor O. M." Roberts, it is larahin,-Mita SvaUon complete th* form, and take it with them v„ •, , of Texas generally, that the pur-. Sehoiar«)Up, established government. ; probable that the University would. ­ the jerry Hanmrford Sebolanhip, th* for tha interview vrith the vepresenta- Jerry Wilka SchoUrmhip, tha Fanhal-..••..ttvee^. fs' ,J&£* _ Bat in their boldness and' rest-not have been established. In his pose of those in charge of this 'to.. MOW »«f ia 1b4.H»4b.«. Th. tto« -«•*?.." I Aoeoontlng Clerks ($1(2) college de-Interested in becoming high school vocal at the seat of government, at and' account hare in Texas. Even in the raw assistant coaches, wilderness that was then-Texas, ' were set apart'for it, in a most abiding, loyal parent will feel' r.vnBBe of"ti»e 3Wini"",«« **<g* ^ ty^°g tor high school iwsitions-afeoifld register i each fwmly u8ua»y Preserved beautiful situation, in laying off, safe in sending his child Jj6re.reading. and Jiterature, librarian who some walnut or mahogany chair We tolerate no disloyal or sub-, in ttTrwent WJ^ow v^v * CltSrT^utT^iUB) typing gp^d of can teach remedial Teading, mathemat­ the city, indicating thereby the. ' ,7T recent War' very 40 to SO word* per minute, some ics, art, girls' physical education teach­or table or other piece, of iurni-voice of tha founders of our varsiva activities of any kind on" .f free *®H how we won our rodepfen-' College training and receptionist abSi-er who ia well auallfled in guidance. ture of fine craftsmanship to re­ the campus or in our staff.-We, • • Teachers are needed for second, thb^: institutions, as to where it should wflli the Americans chose tte iPUi. » " » Stenographers-Offlee Assistant ($184)' fourth, fifth, and sixth grades, arithm*. mind them of tha, mora settled make every' effort to guard the'' and be located. It would be here, nc, mnsic, auditorium. Jifa they had left, The pioneer moral!' of our' young men and are a : psychologist to where the members of the £egis~ acqUired CMiii^Ashe dependence ik renounce their, fwfi^# ' » »ord» *** ?>i™u,»nd »xeiativ* per-serve with ts-r Texas acquired ^theh« reputation of every; session women. If you hear any rumors ,uture at ev< convex* * anwjhMriMIlv Sn *hs IXiUinninmm M child of stress and storm, of , manent gtettis desired. aa a "tt more «bi.but ^hey sua pcopK Djr^fiiif1 ie»loU8ly „guarded cr.couragemTnV™and'"her»,' wot»?d-*leas*'1 be« vow. come one foreign occupation to an» la mathemattea. preferably CoUase r m n if* girls ( Algebra and Trigonometry. SWia^eSSSStK: ttS sotT' the form and substance of thc be congregaWd tha youths of dtr^y-to^^^re and getiw*-^ / »•? ' Kitj<;^^®r» i •. . %,-• ' Interested applicant* are tirged to HOB GRAY. PirecteT Common law which their ancestors the1-feai facts. If th^^"iom^ apply at tha OFFICE OF MOf Teaehsc Placfment Servica. the county to imbibe 1 common KON-ACA- Josle ^ *' * «Th^s, ImnOi^ wiih »nfi^4|^'SI"ce jweptionof had brought with them from Eng­thing wrong, wa will correct it;' ideas, acquire a love of our State,land. At tha same time they also its history and institutions; and if there is not, then an ugly' ^ Club, a aew internatio Doily Texan Crossword Puzzle 7* ingrafted on the common law > In whatever positions in life they rumor will be s to p p^-edfrom 4gtfmljbetw^n fear and faith, ha-v«i" certain changes which they took spreading aad harming this great . 1?^ 1 twaan doubt; and hops^ feel­ACROSS 4. Electrical 18. Languish^* might afterwards be placed, they institution. ings that were not without ba-x^Nonsense llfod,.y'f ( over from tha Spanish civil law. would be thereby predisposed to Engineer" 21. French ais, "especially on the very day (abbr.) military ^u A||au#j||a^ This had both the aspect of changS think and act .on a common de^ however, do not mis-of independence itself. The 9.Distress -5.The ' leaderand and of maintaining the' status sign, for tha prosperity and glory . ""dersUnd me. Texans are a free!-, •: Republic emisrged out of cha-signal (Old. Bng.) conqueror rfSTS» b quo: it was a change in the*com­Of 'their own State.**1 -. P*°P'*, and they founded thia ^' mon law bat it was. a'.' preservi the.. in^taUB# to pcMerva freedosc^. • fnfTmnlvro 3» ;ipbe*a;'4»f;; aad woman who ea» inspire and Oaatwioi even have people now, oar; vne-ef flie iQtfrk life, aad W danis dlraeted by-stlasalata tha mind* of oar sta-• Au,a^ Boston — ieg'usi —ftNi gtancfaeo «+* people, who gpeak ef " Texans hrov^t^rilh.fhem &o» the laan^aa «ad akin mt.^deats becaaaO they, (ha teachers, nresideat Republic in derisions? JLMattveadf Wr'WMf^ The Republic has Indiana v 1 mm 9 fcia^ anrvivad the StepMPpM# * a and »« y«ft *f8 Xfc»» thapowi; (tmA wn oeaepyH they ara give*': !;.#iaVto eontinua tite same fi-M Hii . aceemplishiirattta <• t'h•4^' >jk fair «w«Mtrft* 4* It?" ^ __ gars of speech, if the faculty ia; .. Thomas Jefferson regarded as TJiese words that1have quoted the lieart of a university, the stu­most fignifipinMn hi*.whol)i dents are its life blood. Nothing,are lis tewiirda deecqptive, iu&x *ible for the establishment of The I am sure, can be as discouraging :'.Mi'»I^^]uii^III»iii.^ssis.' >i WBR8 IP , . University of T«ua shew what ^to a teacher aa an apathetic or m ^ 1M» indifferent student* nothing can$TArtro*Tmsj$3M jSswL-.^, („ , .. ^... .-. ^ tMr jB4*« w-«to»a atimtilaeng than one $SMrk* Mtm eiit «pon Uie HoM' viltfc tha riawuH^ PI?; W •** A*­ -w*U,jSkW^ Uveswbm »i>* upofktfei* power, " Dodd, A1 Ward ? ' 11 %<(i f m» fiwfc class* mi you'do honor your^eiVesl jTemdhi Ke DOW* PfPH $& ^$eei«irlea of efe^ iSt JJSw ttSJTZffi eontributiw sa^n IfiSk*^ 4 wdvarsi^r aa good eT'lfce Krat^lass, I ws^Tto aaf ^ f* as '..H mm® * tyJEANHlEiACOM Barton*' beauties am bask tUa the latest In beseh accessories,•*>, yew bathing suit*: tfc fi* the accompany, the suit •' >ta Tan4 Alpfaa-tnitiata* mfmood and personality of the 351 <*»*» Jm. Taylor «nd «em While at the University she was ai-and ipsa readuated frcmgT Ahtao f4o«Wsj%my mMexican food Vsarer. -• \ - *ob#Pt •$ V?r t L . Wfctto* wift.he married Bluebonnet Bells finalist: And also Heights Ugh echooi in San Jo* JPranees Chopick, Knnoea .Aiw^i: t#e«b«ndIsfe* A trip to the store* on the drag b» JuBe 1§ in the S^qdiBt a ftnalist in the i hmw tonio. 8tew*t&, » gtadnai* of .Navra^^Maiflifcn# Ifc^ee.-JSN##^ ssmsH ^Seafood will prove that the Udy fin tbe »«• Choreh of fort ful giris contest. ^ -'Texas Military' Institute, is «fiM-EarKBertjtyBUk^CawlMettkff, beach this summer will be looking Mia» Taylor reeehr^ W ^ The bridegroom : -•ted witihi Tan 8«pp« £prikis «nd Chariotte JBrow% Do^tie Adken* even mora feminine than in pre* H* Jrl!*?ft. jcces in music froin thsAlniyfiiaity frera tJift lMYfim . ^gaia "pj, ; y .^•n, |l^.jad.JSa^tensr Rarfjisr «re *J86~in open lattice work. yiotts years. Suits are being sold where she was * member oif Kap-member of Sigma Alpha JSpsilon private parties "with a Variety of.frills and laces Thfc "Accent" suit is designed PS Alpha Theta Sorority. y ,, Jsaaaiss Y o*a«, -eihsM^Rt Alee, Bettie Si^th, Mmd Wm­witha two-way stretch making it m net* iody Boilon, designed to flatter the figure. Winkler also graduated from the from San Angelo, «nd tn^apber of WFiests* '' practical for both tall and short UnW^rsity and was a .miSinbe* of loan Porter became the' bride Delta Gamma sorority, wiH be ner, NoeUie jDnggan, mm-?•\ One of; the more interesting girls. TW "Anglique" has* wing-* Phi Kappa Psi jg-t$?-*,*> ^ of Robert M. Key March SI, in Simmons, Linda Row*, Ifaipuret T i «T married in August to Carl George, 806 R*d Rivar suits of the season is in blaek ny­like pannels from the top o| the , 4 * ,4 $ t **i » £ *' the Tate, Norma J«ab Biifctox4 Vfr­lon, the top of which is in white suit. -i< senior AAM cadet student. ^ ginia Halltim, Jody • McOancy; J» Ann former Uni­ lace oyer * natural color fabric. V• " v "The Velvet Touch" salt intro­ versity Btudent, was rtiarried to . ; The bride^ a ^omei' tj^^ttff ttlriw* tleJUwMn and J«n« jRo-Jean Jackson, a»4v..!Ma«i 4Ji» This suit has the Mnud# look." The Bnts. r* Use The Classifieds duces.,something new in bathing Theron B, Nicholas at the High­SMU, is^a member of Delta. Delta land Gauntt will be married June wearer may purchase, a lace *e-suit material, It is really a very land Park Methodist Church in Delta sorority. , Key is a former 9, in Dallas. '• HV»|« >Hnpiiiiilisis refined sort of terry cloth which Dallas Wednesday, Ma*ch 28. student of the University 'where * l*our girl» from The mm* mm* ''4B^MUSA ':JUUMjkd|LpMMt wmpvnv; ; Miss Mctaan; f graduate «t the looks and feels lik* velvet. While ai; t^ie 'Ui>iversity^ Mrs. of Texas attended the ^rovinoe Univ«r»ity> was a miember of Del­ •vtVWJf/w! One-piece suits in nylon and Nicholas was a member of Chi Epsilon. ta Gamma. conference of Gamma K*i BeMf Gauntt is * student y* 'J1 » lafttex are the.favorites and the Omega sorority. ;i*A&M*:aE^tfJ® 51 sorority the week end of March 3Q ^ cetofff*.» latest introduction in colors are "The couple will make1;helr home -P»tri«l* McCarthy, senior radio in Norman, Okla. They are Comi^ , . coral, green, orchid, and lilac, in Dallas after a month's wedding major, was married to Kay Ryan Miffleton, Agnes Tipton, tFrancesi /Holaa Giean D«les, Univezasifcy Bright colors are especially good trip to PhiladelphiA. atttd -New of Houston recently. -Mrs* Ryan Atkins, and Marilyn Whitson. graduate, and his bride, the form­ tmk-|eo 7 tjiis. year. York Citr. is a member and past ftooriigept , _ * v''l er Lucy Clementine Schwalenberg, The girls are looking for good */ of Delta Zeta sorority, J 'Plans for the district convent $$ W* i vill make their home in JMifts buys tb*s year according to one , Mary Jean DwU was married to after a brief wedding trip. r\ Hon of Kappa Atphm Th«t«. Ahmt->J , whI Mmtra/H* tmYm* store owner. They want something Richard Scherrmr Wymaa March The engagement of Katksrin* nae will be made Thursday' l«y Travel The couple mis married March both pretty and serviceable ?1 in the Higliland Park Presby­:l*Hit*r Batt* to George Frank the alumnae group at a at SO in theJDickerson Chapel of the local conservative prices. The most pop­ terian Church in Dallas. ' BaTbier Jr. has been announced. First Methodist Church- meeting scheduled for Il:30 a.cs. SHMNTnuVR ular price of bathing suit 'choice , Both are graduates of the Uni-•The wedding will take place in the , t - at^ 1Sh# <3»pter ho«se. • ­The bride attended Hebraeka of the-.co-ed "is about |14.96, at Yeisity where, the bride jsaa a Chris^.Enfacopal Charch. Nacoi wflsunttu member of Delta Delta Delta. doches, Te*as, jon May 5i ^ Teachers College And Dal­The convention will b<$ 1idd hi Divide* «l fnmtt tmuthough prices range from $8.96 to las College of SMU. ' Austin" June 3-6. The chapter $24,9.5 and up. * Miss Butte vras graduated from 4m.> Mr. Dales is from Bakersfield, The ittarriage of Jaast Vivian the University. pnd was a member; house will be headquarters for *he >• ^ ».-•!J ' ? Sehieb in Merchant Maria* Stenzel to Rodman Scott' Peddi* of Chi Omega Sorority. ' California. • district meeting^ • ; of Houston was solemnized March • •• * John Richard Scheib, former Si ai St. Matthew's Cathedral in The engagement of |Ca«l»eria« University student, is now attend­ Dallas. Ann kogas to Style* Collier Stew> ing the US Merchant Marine The bride attended James Milli- art has been-announced. -*k*t£Academy at Kings -Point, Long kin University in Decatur, lil«, Miss Hogan and Stewart are Island. ­ SMU, and the University where both students at the University. she was a member of Pi 9sta PhL She is a member of Pi Beta Phi Put theposleitnthe shade with flower-fresh •~ Summer Courses Over thewT-Cup— ;i j^y Bend bbuso. 'Pwy're.o-bloom with smart styl­ University of Madrid ing, come in a veritable garden of spring colors. '• *7 • *#«&• • • m > Study and Travel xV'jr-' 5\v:-ST* w 1 -'RI.' '/'vT'/V'V,'**?»"»*'J.-i.+ RAMS opportunity to M^oy keroorabie «xpsriences la learning A m «*vK> BLOUSES and living1 For student*, teacher*, others yet to discover fascinating, r\•« AT BETTER STORES EVERYWHERE historical Spain. * Courses include Spanish language, art and" culture. To Banquet Tonight fwr' •. -v $1% University MedicarSranch in Gal­ Optometrist veston will be toastmaster. Speak­ers will be Dr. William M. Gam­brell, president of the Texas Medi­cal Association, and Dr. Dan C. Gill, clinical Instructor in surgery at Southwestern Medical School, f: • Tickets for the -banquet, which will be informal, are available now; for $2.25 from any AED member, or at the booth by the BiologyBuilding. .v' Profs to Attend •ChemicsLMee Six University faculty members will take part-in the American Chexnical Society's annual nation­ Spcotyto cunicularia"—Speo, for dtort, majort . al meeting at Cleveland April 8-12. individuality A Specialty A in tke classics. But In this case, he*» dropped his Latin leanings and slings Participating in technical dis­ cussions and lecture programs atNEW FASHIONS FOR American slang with the best of them. He comes right out : / Cleveland will be Drs. Non&an Thosespecial hanrft.». the guiding,teach4t^i dietetics; can a$fr kavse totwe«s NOWANONOWON Hackerman, H. X* Loehte; R. C. ing hands of the occupational therapist^ chaUengi^g careers as 'cum loudly" whenever he voices his opinion on th^se quick-trick,, 1 1 * f V"i 7 r ~Kt ••• Anderson, and G. W. Watt. ' ? I-or thenhvsical theramst...thestr«npth- «• ? ^ V^3 * ^ o \fficirs with £&nd tiav an Byes Examined -*| At a similar meeting of the so* tests. They're s snub to his high l.Qge a,(..jprascriptibns FjEHad'^' ciety at Boston April l-5, Dr. T. Heknowsfrom smokingexperience there's just one » ;:''Lenses Duplicated f J. Bardos, University Biochemical &>¥ Institute scientist, discussed the look to with admiratidn and respect,; Opportunities for Cortiber p; l^genliwrto judge tbe o>ildii««i of* ckarette. M'.. WtM , Glasses adjnstfd at Institute's investigation of sya4 Those;mending hands are hands tofljr i educationeducationaieals©alialso available, T" thetically produced folinia acid's -wlth.;».ithe skilled fing^s that bring the. •,$> ~ * * * t|JX4 Univ«rtity l . f-| molecular structure. ItowSfcfett 30-Biiy Ctfnel Mildness flying and supporting men of .the Al*r^ Dr. Gilbert H. Ay^es^ Chemistry Optometric Clinic JForce back to duty strong and bealtl^^i Wntetordetails,toiliebttigaan iviiich limply asks you to try Camels as a steady smoke -* Department chiirman, explained: m 2228 Gnadalupe Phone 28684 Graduates and prospective graduates method for.chemically analysing\ imw,t OR a pack-*fter-pack, day-after-day basis. No snap iaate^atei .i " i'i1 'mi rhodium, a platinum metaL in occupational or physical ii • i *ii i n.im 11 i'., 'i' ii I i r. „ i i Sw. judgments.^i^e^^sd. Alter y«w*'^R enjoyed Camels'-and oMf li'fe '' " Camels «*lor 30 days,in .your^T-Zone" (T lor Throat, Sr*** tet . Our Experts Put Yoaii: Car W0fllfN*S T for Taste), we believe you'll know why , in ,TUM With Spring Complete Motor T«ta»>)ap ; • Electrical Repairs All Mod^a ; • G*n*rator^8tart»r lUpafae " . ^. . He*% *1 'f 'cw W&Jp' i <», • notannounced his no* Juliard School of. Musfe in New bt& advance reports York Gity. She Is no# a senior -cities suggest that this voice major at theUniversity. Al- might be n popu-Miss lV>cht • Is worfang for VictD^j^w^te™' **&**. i* chemu&y, she has had voice training with who ahntfr I*c1q» them the Glee Club and several other choral groups. They will be ac­companied by three harps, played/V*^ 4C/70 TOPS by Mary' Mylecraine, Tommy Sewell, and Kathleen Haden. * "The epncert will open with the Girl's Glee Club singing a group of Benjamin Britten carols on the nativity of Christ Included are "Procession," **Wolcum. Vole,*' tter^Tmtfr --recent™ «ag~»resent'., f "You'll Never Walk Alone," "Comin* Through,the Rye^anA"All tlie Things You Art." The men will open their partof the • concert with "Swansea Town" by GusUu Hoist. Later they will sing "Truth Shall De­liver*' and "Brother®, Sittg On.* ' "Song of the Vagabonds'* will open the next part of the men'* program. "The House I Live In," "Gpspel Ship," "Blow, Gabriel, Blow" will, conclude that part of the program. Admission is free to season* ticket and Blanket-tax holders. General Admission tickets are ?l,25for adults and 60_ cents.„for "There Is No fcose,""Th* Young . . . -„ children under 12. Tickets"trill goChild," "B^sklow," £)ew|on ^Mil« *t T-.lSo'clock. » MsH t'Cvpefc * Glass Rubinstein Defeats »ft* itr tfc. ImU» •( O* «nv w ten HI SEAT COVERS «nd TOPS-i & ' THe"' Culttntsl Uo Roberts Trim Shop *4$ Committee might be assigned the Hi&•» Lmmr Bhi 4 task of contracting 8ally Band, Eddie Arnold, Stormy,. Hank SHOWTimE AT INTERSTATE THEATRES ik.MAN ». @1 himself ' • *mY YEAX (MT CRPITOL .TOM«ONWAYfa " „ RED SKELTON Sip V .»ua s& ",MI™ jBcwutir^Sp^nrfs -^IDEOTJI^RnAN»| "Watch th* Birdin." •*** >^«ar |? 4?SJk4t * tehos . NOW t F»r»t Show 6 p.txu Nowr3T"iK-«c iKKittr . vmt FRENCH blAUKiUE nusTin HSW3 nmSkws 'pmi '^0 X*s*Y pjmm 4fs. ' 'Emargcncy Wadding" LOUISA "LOUISA -outhag ^ $*?* '' ~ -'i . J--r. r "• ' {.!> '4't ^ "V h ^ k 6» f swum' ^M» Interpret ait win recipe for ditcrimtaftting American mi fa rwuH it #onlJerftii Umb Curry Suma4 tra^Here % «n aromatic, spicy dish containing *ppm,t woanut, fpepp®rf, celery andigen­ ^"OM4 ,^P,n9 0* iamb'-'dM skiBfuBy ccM-hbined ItfP&zsr1dW,w,lwtf you,, •nioy­ ' "" UbiiJh M B life X ' ' 'I S&t>%'ltid the Cat GM if the rec­ommendations—:-made tongue-in­cheek, it is hoped—of a fewUni-Tersity students were followed. These were some of the write-in.candidates in the preference list passed out by the Committee at the Jack Qwynn magician show March 14. The preference list con­tains 17 performances which will be available to the University for next year. Students were asked to choose the six acts they would prefer as first choicft. The results of this poll were Artur Bubenstein^ 842; LorigineSSymphonettfe, 299; Bodgers and Hammerstein Nights, 298; First Piano Quartet; -267t Marias and Miranda^ Spanish JDftncers,' 247; Houston Symphon^ 245; Polgar, 210; Don"Cossack Chorus, 184; Shankar 'Hindu Ballet, 178; San Antonio Symphony, 163; Norwe­gian Boys Choir, 162; .Vladimir Horowits, 142r Salzburg Marion­ette Theater, 140; Miscba Elman, 133; little Singers from-Paris, 90; New York Wind Ensemble, 67"; ahd the Au«tin Symphony, 64. . Another preference list will be passed out to-the sudienee of Henry L. Scott and thi Glee Club on Tuesday. Radio House Airs Mansion Visit at 1 "Know Your Austin," Radio House ' series 'produced through KTBC, j*ill take a trip to the Gov­ ernor's mansion Tuesday at1 p.m.' The .twenty-fourth show of a series, which has brought to Aus­tin High School children publicservice features such as the fire station, the police department, the museums," and the Forty Acres, will air comments from Mrs. Al­lan Stivers, the Shivers' house­hold, and Governor Shivers. In connection with thp series, the University College of Educa­ tion is conducting a survey to de­ termine the listening habit* of the A^stift children and their reactions to the show. -The series has been, used in con­junction with Austin High School's social studies program. After studying about the Various" fea­tures that make up Austin's civic life, the pupils take field trips to the organka%n» . You Austin" seines is Joe Murphy. .Announcer for the series is Jim mie Morrias,' producer is Jim Num my, and assistant producer is Peg­ gy "WJiiteSides. -?r / *.• /l^AM|TE/PASSi; ^ ft h I V I -> b' W V)i>l" "MYSTERY l$£. t iUBMARlNE" MacPonald Carey SI MONTOPOLI 3 ;fLpUI#A^ Roatdd duties C4mrfr "SON Z ^.it.-I..i. .i..,.V./K ,^..T". $-*•$ & . 5^ ' >>< S ^ s A~1 ,t -4^ \ V-I' "i ->$X $ f1 • * "{' > ">'» :J*­ *•----•>*•- 'W ..x^ii fTH "WTO 9iaif CoqH Sin9«rt f + The mevis vewloh of Gilbert and Sulliyan's famout 4,HMS Pin­afore" will be shown Thursday St 4 to 7 p.nf. in Physics Building 201 »nd«r the auspices t>f the University Film Committee. j Under producer Walter Colmes the California Light Opera Com­pany has put In sound and color the story of Captain Corcoran of tiie HMS Pinafore and his daugh­ter Josephine who preferred com­mon sailor Ralph Rackstraw to the noble Sir Joseph Parter, First Lord of the Admiralty. Vickie Vale will play Buttercup; Mary Patrick, Josephine; Tommy Glynn, Captain Corcoran; and Ar­thur Lane, Ralph Rackstraw. Other films .slated for the re­mainder of the semester are "Moana* on April 10, "The Btohe ^iiilr«i^i|«;;||-iiittKiii){M»^ "Lar­«nseinuw^ jpresent».pn^rain jp»rAll«gw^, ^n^;^A^fgro of works f6r brass and; woodwinds «Nud«K»,f Opus t8, Uo^.1,^ by Si­mon; "AUegreto-from* St.-Paul,'> by Mendelssohn; 4'Con moto ^Mod­ w.rtai ki.' erato,"fromthe BrshmsRequiem, mon, Mendelssohn, Brahms,, and and "Quintet fbt Wind Jnstru- Hkidemith will be pirformed by the University Brass Qufcrtet, coiSi m SSL®1 J* *&?* t Bernard Fitsgeisld, * .cornet; ; , The concert is spohsored.by t^e •. a *•' ' -i fs-* • •. -j. - James" Williams, James C. ^Williams, French horn, and Carl Lobitx, trombone; -and the University Woodwind Quintet, composed of Walter, Coleman, flute; John McGrosSo^ clarinet; Joseph Blankenship, oboe;. Ruth Morris, bassoon, and Lorene Grif­fin, French, horn. Charlotte Du-BoiS, pianist, will accompany, ­ Mi»« Halle# to Dwoutralt Loom designer of hand-woven fab* rics, Miss Estelle Heller will be the sixth "Artist in Action," pre­sented by th# Texas Fine Arts As­sociation at 10 a.m. Tuesday at r Laguna Gloria. > Here'* a good-looking casual that'll set y°u off right for sport-or siestas in the sun. A neat tut colorful print, set off by contrasting collar and knit waistband, gives Potpourri lots • • • & .. ^ ••••••. vof he-man. zest and sparkle. It's another tri- A t w Hl. ~ Jumph by Dennis of New York — unusual, but ' • sahe. You'll find your favorite in a wide selec­tion of washable colors. * >5.95 r ; fHOIpCRAniip " * * -—« 56-U, --: ''% c " "* V ' -5 * * 4-OHJ V" * r* +>*>!&• 14­ Why do we boast about our sport shirts by DENNIS of N& York? U$L £«& ... »-V i :y • * ^ man-styled masterpieces -like the Clubman X J r © perks «pr.tk^ colta s in a smart itriped insert of Durene Knit the neck underlines his design with a t6d wa|,tb.nd -.nd you h«, Clubm,, ' > -it ~ > » •: « washable rayon pullover +hat carries lots piping, — if ---y - #t%ou want it.Drop b| and talc* a look! m •'W r. Coll«Ke of.Fbe Ari»-Fafeuity Be^ cital Series and; is;fr^ ^ m TUXEDOS W FOR RENT, 'jv '• ^ i#: Ju«t M««lr»d iom* m»,' cool -whito dinnwr i«ek«U M^: bi»ck­ tropica) troawt*. for km»t elraica Ml "Mtyi jroiir ttouito'aaw I LONGWORN CLtANERS SSSS C«Ualup» S-3S47 %-,1 r i. -* A t" W * , r f-i ^ ^ f |rf/'w. ''4 . Ji *• _ j • -\ -k*. . > '•'> ' *K 'A . I ­ &lr ? * Vri m •« J&' A.'" 1 at r­ s^fesossiites sstss -Wfk' MAC irritated, accused Merrill of fatt­ing tosliovup a psrfor^nea, *nd of running off to Hollywood -tft'ttike-^movie the «Ve of ^• j^e^;,«|>riiw: tour, violating ... 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