Hc«t/' A •» S5, jpww C oi!• g i S out Br KEN combined to VMM UN that professors were more The all-out campus drhre M hy minimum." lant and that therefore lew stu Price 5 Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1952 Mortar Board to re-establish acho-Dr. Lewis F. Hatch, associate denta tried to' cheat. * * ! a-i Four Pag^s'Today laatie integrity aa one of the high­professor of chemistry, reiterates "However, I dont think that we er and more popular moral pedes­Dealt Nowotny's finding*. In con­hare changed human nature this i';; half time. preme Court; explicitly ruled; John Thompson explained that the de Eyes of Texas" will be sung, of three GOP presidential possibili­ in Waco, he attended Waco's Paul launders Chase, 25-yeiar old Aus­A pair of Baylor substitutes^ -j, Students selected for special ficiency is an inability to taste guard Bill Fleetwood and forwara­ ties Pat C. Miller, director-of These permit holders must ob­ Quinn College, and Tillotson Col­tin architect; and Horace L. Heath academic awards and scholarships, the carbamide compound, common­lege in Austin before entering Bill Harris, threw a scare intorthek including graduates under­in the club,said Tuesday^:of.-serve the following rules: ly called "p.t.c." The percentage of Waco. / Shunning the Steers' clustered d*J?il aind Sam Huston. -O. L. Thompson enrolled .the graduates will be honored at the The club will also hear Jack 1) Arrangements for parking of persons Unable, to taste p.t.c. game as the third quarter faded»' \ A veteran of World War II, Mr, following long semester. program. Supporting -the notion that Porter, leader of the Texas-for-the car must be made with the varies in different races, fense, they . began hitting from •" Also, members of honor socie wherever Americans, are they are Eisenhower movement February control station-officer on each Mr. Thompson found'that the around the twenty-foot markKi tils; members of nationsl honor stretching their necks to seesome, 19 at 7:80 p.m* in the St*ph*!) F eecasion. 5 per cent of the Negro popula­scoring twelve points between'' societies which require a B aver­thing new is the 1961 report -of Austih Hotel. •; • V 2) Holders of restricted park­tion studied had the deficiency, & them in. six minutes to pull th« Mrs. B. L. Ffazee, supervisor of compared with 30^, per cent in Bruins, to within four pointi ef age for membership; students and Porter is on the Republican ing permits may park their cars r,M:: the Tower Observatory. American White races. ' organizations who merit recogni 3tate Executive Committee 'ahd is within tbe> .restricted area . only the Longhorns. . ? ; f ti Mrs. Frazee says that 1951 tion for distinction in citizenship currently rateii as the number after 12:45 pirn. "The genetic importance of this In the hectic ladt period, Fricer maintained the average of 25,000 discovery has not been estab­ Dowies, and Scaling shot Texaa *nd scholarship; and undergrad­two inan-in Texas Republican poli "'3) Parking permits are not W uates in all"" schools and colleges people who have visited the Tower tics^r ''n "I• transferable, lished," he pointed out. "We don't to a, commanding 52-44 lead with yearly since 1945. May was the ;.• . ^ If ownership cl^tn "who have distinguished themselves ges, permit is revoked automati know whether it's good or bad; six. minutes Jfejft. Then the Steew best month, drawing 3,918 visk Three teams^ wil participate ^ in it's just a characteristic." the tempo. Ice-man Leon>­ during the two previous semesters a three-cornered debate in Siittoii cally.-* . They're "gung-ho" at The Uni­The NROTC pro-am offers stu­slowed tors., and June and by being*in the upper three per April came versity of Texas. Statistics seem dents a choice of regular or re­Black subbed in. and fans wit-' next with 2,742 and 2^705. Mrs, Hall 101 at 7:30 p.ipi iDrag mer­. 4) Permits will not be issuer cent of their classes. to indicate that the University is serve commissions in the Marine nessed a fine display of dribbling1 Fz«zee attributes the large mim chants donated two igold cups for to one individual for two cars. I: Tillotson College Praised as he, Scaling, and Ford traveled . Members of the studentrfaculty winners. Dean Jack Holland car windshield re­supplying more than its share of Corps or Navy. ber of May guests to visiting high the a is sold or Honors Day Committee are Dr. C By Chancellor Hart US Marines. in circles with Baylor defenders' schoolclasses. will make the presentations. placed, a new permit will be is­ E. Ayres, Dr. C, B. Bredt, Mr. B. Recently published Marine at their heels. • sued only if the remnants of the K. DeFord, Colonel F. A. Henney The Tower, which was built in John Kromas and Nancy Howell old are returned' ^pith James P. Hart, chancellor of Corps statistics show Texas rates Aggressive defensive play cost decal tHie Dean W. Page Keeton, Captain 1936 at a cost of -three million Will represent Eisenhower; Ed Na- the University congratulated Til­at the top of the list of 52_ Baylor the services of Derrei Da-: 20 Offer Blood dollars. ha^ had guests from every berhaus and Eileen Berry, are Rob^ application for a new decal. R. A. Knapp, Colonel E. E. Mc­ 1 lotson College January 27 on its NROTC colleges. Eleven senior vis and Harris as: the game waned state, and from many foreign coun­ ert S. Taffs, team, and Arnold 5) The owner of a car bearing Seventy-fifth anniversary. and horseplay from the bench. - Kesson, and Mr. T« D. Rishworth midshipmen are to be graduated Student members are Georgann tries. During the past s$ven years, Peter and Nancy Sue Allen will a' parking permit must assume Chancellor Hart jpoke for the from the University this year sent two points Texas' way att Beene, Flo Cox, Jackie Keasler, there have been 178,767 visitors speak -for Harold Stassen. complete responsibility for every University and other state-sup­with commissions in the Marines. ia Case Dowies and Scaling meshed tech-,, Julie Lockman, Bill Penn, Charles Besides the view from the Tow­traffic and parking violtaion which ported institutions. He stated that The Marine Corps has found Twenty stand-by blood donors nical foul tosses. ^ Pistor, Joan Ragsdale, Ann Ran­er, Mrs. Frazee says thit people Cactus Editor# M«tt Widntidtjr involves-the can there are "56 state supported the Southwest to be fertile re­have responded as volunteers for Texas' next game is with thef kin, Kim Watson, and Jerry Wohl come because the structure, has Cactus sectioiii: editors will, have . 6) Parking permits, will not be schools in Texas, of which 21 are cruiting-grounds. Texas and Okla­4-year-old boy suffering from SMU Mustangs at Dallas this Sat-\\ a "ford. Printing and publicity chair gained-fame as the orange-lighted a meeting Wedriwday in Journal­honored unless the decal; is pro senior colleges, as compared to 63 homa Universities are among the acute leukemia, Dr. Walter D. urday night. "mai^i* Flq Cox'. . .; .• victory sign of the University, af­ism Building.304 at 3 p.m., editor perly affixed to • the lower left private colleges, 34 of which are top four NROTC schools in total Roberts of the Student Health ter sport contest and in commem­Charlie Pistor announced. hand corner of the windshield. senior colleges. marine officer candidates. . BAYLOR <46) fs ft Center, reported, Tuesday. Stat* L*a|V* Convention Meets oration of certain memorials and Johnson', 1 • S X » These twenty donors will take Davis, £ 1 0 a ^ The. Campus League of: Women holidays, as well as a University immediate of Starkey, O ...-e \ s . '4' 6 care of needs the Voters will be host to -a state­ landmark. , 5 of 8 Custodians Say child, even though several of the Mulling, ft' 1 ; I 1 »: wide League convention Satur­.The busy ToVer elevator, takes Fleetwood, * ....... 8 1 4. T volunteers knew only that their day. TSCW, SMU, and the Uni­visitors past the first fifteen floors, blood was Harris, t * 04 0 1S ' S type AB, Dr. Roberta W imp, c 1 L. versity will be represented. Judge which are -occupied by library StrasburKer.y -0 0 4 ,e said. The rare Wood needed is Sarah Hughes will be the main stacks, and . the sixteenth to twen­ Brown, s 1 ' 0 -e 2 type AB positive.-It is probable Cole, gr 0 0 e e speaker. The convention will be ty-seventh floors, which are the that several ,of donors who QulAen, c , 1 0 s the l gin at 9 a.m. wjth a welcome cere offices of language professors, to don't, know whether their blood Total* \ 17 15 IT 4C mony" and entertainment. in -the the observatory. The ToWer is es­ i is positive may not be able -to International Room of the Union. pecially popular with camera fans. TEXAS :'9 4 2 22 The appeal for volunteer don­Klein, f --9 5 0 a.m. ' ; . in diameter. The seventeen bells Price, e * " « 8. ors was published .in Sunday's IS in the belfry, weighing a total of Viramontes, g 0 1" 0 1­ Texan and repeated Tuesday. The 40,000 pounds, were purchased at Ford, K 2 1 1 s child is reported to be at a Scaling, e 1 „ * * 4 -J» the cost of a dollar a pound. ..-By FLO COX a job all right, but I just wouldn't "I wouldn't report anybody if Another said he agreed with the Powell; e 1 0 2 2 they critical , danger', point and may Black, f .. _o 0, ,* :;deLihing^^^ -o 0 The Tower lights are. 230.alters .r^O^ei^tl^uilding ^ustc^anSi; rulef but was .not hired to "enforce Moritaii, i -e nee^rseverakitranafusionswithi ; any kind of rule or report any-, a short' time. . • -r---­ 1,000 watts each, with 30 bulbs of they would not report professors have to be hired over here to that kind of fellow. And my part­/ Total* 10 ' 18 17 ss Score by periods: 60 watts in between. The Tower who violated the no-smoking rule. empty ash trays. They've been do­ner and I feel pretty had about body." Baylor .... ....0 >,lt 9—IS has been lighted on special Occa­One Mid'^ he would report;ohly ing that (using ash trays) at B. being called Junior G-Men. We're "I don't know, there might be," Texas 8 18 II—SS Free thtowi 'ihisieif: Baylor—Johnson building custodian replied when sions since October 20, 1937. major infractions of the regula­Hall for quite some time, and. 1 not." . a fo 2, Strashurger. Wimp, Starkey 2. Texas understand that it works pretty One said simply: "Nope. I'm a asked if more maintenance service —Dowies 8. Prrce, S, Scaling 2, Ford( Orange and white became the tion and two said they would re­ Powell 2. University's colors in 1885, when port ahy violations. well. : -janitor, mot Junior G-Man." would be required to empty -ash Officials: JThite, Baccutj and Cliff 11—Talk on teletypesetters these were the only colors of rib­All but trays. "I agree with the law; some­Shaw. " . . one said they believed Granville Price, Journalism thing was needed to cut down on bon availtthle to a group of stu­ the janitorial staff could empty Evolution Proof Benish Resign* From . Faculty '> Building 212. dents who were attending i ash trays with the present man­Plants, Shrubs In Greenhouse smoking. .*• > "Experimental Evidence for A. A. Benish, assistant profes­ ,12:10—University Area Kiwanis Georgetown football game. power. One was notsure. "I don't consider it my place to Evolution" is the first of eight sor of civil engineering, recently Club, TFWC Building. During' World War II, the Tow­A building custodian in a three-report professors. In/'fact, I've outstanding. American botanist's resigned from the faculty of th4 3—Section editors of Cactus er was more than a picturesque story building said he heard only only heard one persdn over here Lead Quiet, Sheltered Lives lectures at the University this University Mr, Benish has. takeq' Journalism Building 304 landmark to Austimtes. It housed one of the staff say he would re­ say they would report anybody." spring.' The speech, open to the a position with -the Sun Ray Oil> estminster Student Fellow an air raid siren. port violations. Everyone else he :• • By PEGGY LORD ^ •••• inost University functions are One building custodian said he will be ^Thursday 8 Company in Tulsa, Okla. '* public, at ship tea for Dr. John A* Mc­ had heard comment, objected to grown there. -Plants get all the breaks. When favored the law and would report p.m. in Experimental Science Kay, University; Presbyterian the enforcement procedure. . Mr. Attebury, who has been any violations he saw. "It's a rule Church. Ex Co-Op C0thi«r Hald it's too cold outside^ those in the Building 223. . , , Mouzon Law, assistant chair- working for the University for like anything else,1' he said, "and Dr. G. Ledyard Stebbins Jr., of 3-ft-^-Typing "examinations for than of the Department of Drama^ University greenhouse are. kept eleven years and was appointed Under 1950 Indictimnt I'd help enforce it."* „ the University of California, the shorthand, journalism, and-r* said that the "butt cans" used for in a> teamperature of about 65 landscape gardener,ih 1949, ex­ Waggener Another custodian in a three-speaker, is author of "Variation dio students, Hall A formei-Uniyertity Co-Op the last five years in the Drama degrees. In hot summer weather plained that life in a greenhouse story building said he favored the and Evolution in Plants." He has 216. • cashier was in county jail Mon Department and X Hall would no the plants. are sprayed with is not as' protected as it might rule, but now had to"aWeep the been studying . California forage ORTY 4-6~-Univerpity Ladies Club tea day under ,a two-year-old embec^ longer be used. The cans had suc­water. y > sound. For even there the green­ halls almost every 30 minutes." grasses, in addition' tb' eyolution. ; University 'Club.'J zlement charge; cessfully prevented cigarettes be­The landscape gardener. of .th« house keeper has spray for to He said-he would report violations. . Eacfr. speaker,.-Bcheduled-.b.y |hel. 4—rListerting-Hour with-string The ex-employe, Richard Pierce ing thrown on .the floor, he said. University, T. F. AttelAiry .?r^ j. ^'If^hey're^ " se^ette;:J^MM:^Reeital HalL Morgan, -was indicted in "April, "1 agree''with the ruling," Law says.the plants grow itr a special ^e Jftrtility of the" specially" tanicsil laboratories, %fll"~deiiv#. Czech Club .to elect officers, 1950, after being charged with continued, "and since-we're under formula prepared for them. Each made soil tis ^bown by the case of like Op ahmrtaga waa diaeovared. wouldn't spy on people. -I want mental about it." The planta for on Um apeeial aoiL the smoking. itar in "Laura." s> m 5 tifrr rgirfririt intra-squad games, >n *We Save % Wolfe out of pass Olympic Tuesday by Co*«h Ed defense personnel, since we lose '?C*iJrice, will Insight the.1952 most of our secondary—-Dillon, #ASBlKG10Kt Veb. _ labors of the Longhorn grid: AJfeur DICK W1 Baylor feld flpikw * A'tortgrearional conunittee decid­ fi§U*iK|pad.'The drills open today. Cunningham, and Menasco. ' * .. f«M» Sport* Butt points and a stellar defensive job. attempts aeemed to be jinxed. 14*12 edgi^ and. neither team ed Tneeday to try .,4o bare the |'„,V:^ The dates slated lor the full-"We've got to find out who's on Baylor's smooth-working 'Cubs Most efffttive armmd the hoop, a real advantage. BaBey talfied.9 Olytepie medals Jim Thorpe, are February 16 the squad and place then? where jumped into * first quarter lend Bailey was the difference between Cab lead fluctuated between 5 and of the Cab points scored in tiie the great Indian athlete, restored '^"knd 23 and March 1, all~Satur-they-will do us the most good, and .nursed it along, for a hard-the two dabs; < 10 points, with a "keertlag sport inittel^quarter with three ftield to him. , t''lays. The game* will be open to "We have to align OUT quarter­earned 49-44 victory-over ihe er­Shooting from the earners, ihe in the last five B&mtee narrowing goals cominr on aaajr, layupe Thorpewon tb»medal* in Olym­the general public. backs and give,, them lots of ratic Texas Yearlings Tuesday inexperienced Kidd was well-nigh the margin to thatwbieh pre* throngb tbe ponna Yearfing de­ptc gtunea afc Sweden in 1912, bat; night In Gregory Gym. "?j Price, beginning hi* second work." infallible. He seldom 'miase* * vailed at the Una} wWstte. fense. they-were taken frost him when %%earat the helm of the Steers, ex­T Leading candidates for the im­ With the exception • of one shot from the right or left corner. Supporting Murray Bailey bt it was leaned he bad played baae­ pects 60 to 65 boys oat for the portant man-under slot will be T bright spot—the surprisingper-Playing wigi only a few days' the Baylor scoring column were MAUtCDM(«) ballfor money. /drills and has issued a call; for formance of new-comer Phillip practice, he quickly beeame part ft Jones, starter in several games B3J Dalton of 8outh Sea Antonio e The Houae Interior Committee'a all students interested in trying fall, squadman An­ Kiddr—the Yearling* showed little of the team, both offensively and UmhwM, : i on affair* last Bunny High who had10 pointeand Bren-i enbcommittee Indian KEY MAN in Texas' new of the remarkable shooting ac­difertaciw^-44 AIM The PIK-NIK ArkailMa_ „42 1 .600.833 Friday, Fob. 8 at 3023 Guadalupe is NOW Rice ,5, . .167 B»rlor .1 : 6 .167 The University of Texas Sports Tryouts for OrchesiS, mo­mentals of taoibling are Reeded' Association will hold its spring dern dance club, will be at 7:16 for membership. * . _ ' , Bogin 9 p.m. OPEN ALL NIGHT p.m. in the dance atttdio of the Turtlf Clnb will hold ita tryonts RADIO tryouts today-and again February ROBBIN'S BODY SHOP 13. Any co-ed"®is eligible to .try Women's Gym. . T for swimmers at 7:i& p.m» at tb# SALES iSERVICE Featuring: Barbecue and Hamburgers on Music by Jay Leutwyfer Out for' Bow" and Arrow, Canter, Racket Club tryouts will be held pool in the Womn't Gym* Wi M.WaM.Chmw. v ^ Our Famous Poppy-Seed Bunt ''CempUt* Bed? and F«nd«r Riptlr" ' 7-3«4« Poona, Ofchesis, Racket, Strike at 4:80 on the tennis courts Ten­Dee Pee Wintara, leader of . Couplo $1.59 * PAINTING * SEAT COVERS and Spare,,. Tee, Touche, Tumle, nis skill is the club's requirement. Canter Club, iraa recently' elected Also the finest curb service in town # GLASS * AUTO REFINISHING or Turtle clubs—the clubs which Strike and Spare, the bowling treasurer of the Unirerat^r of 1305 Lavaca Ph. 7-4973 compose UTSA. " club, will hold ita tryouts at -4 Texas Sporta Aaaociation. mmurn Bow and Arrow tryouts will be p.m. at the Bowling Center, 3409 held* at 6p.m. in the indoor ar­Guadalupe Street. Members will Today It Latf Cham* f The Besf Mexican Food SHOESchery range. Membership will be be chosen from those having the with Fast, Courteous Service based On -archery form and score. highest scores. '•of Girl# Pf S*ction$ The Canter Club will hold try­Tee Club tryouts will be at 4:30 Sectionising for women's phy­RESUEDED ' sical training classes endaWednes-; outs at 4:30 p.m. at the Hobby p.m. on the athletic field behind Nfwly Qocoroffd day. All eo-eda who miu|t tsicePr also Horse Stables. Transportation will the Women's Gym. Any co-ed in­ and have, not aa^tionised abonld be furnished from the Women's terested in golf may try out. go to the Women's, Gym between Gym at 4 p.m. Horsemanship is Touche, the fencing club, will Smooth Shoot 9 a.m. and 12 noon or 2 p.m. and the main requirement for mem­hold tryouts at 7.:15 in Women's * p-p- ':• bership., Gym 39. , • RE FINISHYD Late Tuaaday afternoon; 1818 604 CAST AVL Tumle tryouts will be at 6 p.m. Poona, the badminton club, will girla had seheduled elesses. The hold tryouts at 7:15 p.m. in Wo­in the Women'* Gym 30. Funda- Phena 7-0253 number if. expected to rise to be* men's Gym 135. Membership is tween 1600: and 1700 by the end "based on a knowledge of the fun­ anJ on IroJe,*, • of thetlreek. -• :• • damental strokes. . Claaaea will meet Thursday and (Ad».> m Unknown Amateur Friday, for annjpsncements and a -(0^ and greater was my thirst canoe-aafety demonstration by: USED & NEW-BOOKS Miss Jane Schoonmaker.. f Tennyson: Holy Gr*U Kon-eredit conrsfs may not >e added after February 15. EL PASO, Feb. 6— FOR A GOOD JOB % Goosie, a young amateur from Attend Auatin's most out­ Lackland AFB, carved a seven-BUS SERVICE standing and progressive busi­ under-par 64 Tuesday to lead lO0t » , ness college. Approved by the The farther you go the more REBATE hopefuls shooting for places in the to HOUSTON State" Departmentof Education Bags of all Good in trad* anytime $10,000 Open Golf Tournament. 4Houn CaR2-tl3S aa a• Business Junior College. during MBMtir Fifty-nine qualified with a 77 you need refreshment. That's why K«rrvill« But Co. Approved for Veteran Trains required to get into the Tourna* SCHOOL SUPPLIES materials 1: ing. Dsy and aight claaaea. you'lLhear folks say, "Let's have merit which starts Thursday. lit t loth FOUNTAIN PENS DRAWING SUPPLIES There were 83 players on the PGA I 6re« Simplified and Re­R«flnish«d and a Coke and get going/' It's one DESK LAMPS winter tour who were exempt vised Shorthand, Typewriting, Ropafrodfrom qualifying, thus 142 will be . Accounting, Coitamereial Law, way to get somewhere* ALARM CLOCKS in the field. SALE! Office Machines, Applied Psy­ §P"—'Sc* ART-r-ARCHITECTURE KEYS MADE chology, Filing^ ete. All of the bijg^haaiiiVof golf ex­i"-Berkman'c cept Lloyd Mangrum, Sam Snead DON WEED0N -TMI . Ala* SPEEDWWiTINd, the •omeo UNDn AUTHOBTY or THI COCA-COIA COMPANY W and Ben Hogan are in the field SERVICE STATION femona system of shorthand, in AUSTIN COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY expected, and Mangrum is ttudng nrnMSHi rix weeks; no signs or symbols; o re«Mere -Savo On All Your Noods at OPlNt 7 A./M.fo I A. Mi ington 76. Toledo 577, Western Michigan 84 Oklahoma City 48, Tulsa 46. 2230 we Sports Notice All candidate* for varsity and frnh­ wan t«nni« temaf. and ail tennis tran« fera^who wirt to work oat, tbottld ««wC in GMitor; Gym, 210 at 4:80 ».nu to­ day. Important. '. Tennis Coach. AU men who made the all-Intramural soccer team (firat or lecond team) aire invlt«d to • attend a meeting ot' the UTSAM Soce«r Club Thuraday< at 7sl0 "It's a pleasure," says Tom Frye to Ann Laughlin, Salfy Jojtdtin It's so convenient to do your banking on the Drag at the TEXAS p.m. In Gregory Gym 210. . 'and Sidney Howell. ,Curb service is one of the many free STATE BANK, 1904 Guadalupe. Here, Don, Porter serves Hal SONNYROOKBB, AsilitantOirector. "extras" you get at KELLY-SMITH CLEANERS, 511 W. 19th. Bogardus and Carl Abbey. . . - Hen> Intramural* the Texas Book Store Having a party? ­ • Norelty Robber Mask* • ,H«lhai hhW BiHytii . •Cwtimii Bar We have NoralUea o( all tjryea AUSTIN NOVELTY CO. REE DELIVERY--1\ soow.sth -pke-assr AUSTIN WELDING* OR $15.00 RADIATOR •WORKS A SEMESTER SOO W. StfcSt. sw TaL e-S7SS MONTH r i fho-Toxas Book Sforo alto •i. f 1 v J ' v $•11$ and Repalrt Typvwritert ., . t » rt OM y ' V ' Wh»n Mddicihes ^ Are Needed... , " * "Will Friday be all right?", Bill Snedeker asks Ann McKnighf ,—V* •J*r . « C4» iliwl IM-MrjMI MMi t ^% foore and 'arrd Sue JoKnson. Most students know thev place to go to make It paaiftte to arrd Johnson. $+udeftts +he . is BUR- SB preaerit. DM la 1Bitte ftf nhalM. •Bihn. This » TON'S LAUNDRY, 615 W. I?tbv "where you save 15% cash * uphoister! and carry. , ED-MINO^ Pharmacist two GaUv* XMal UHI 4, 'MMi m WtwiKmm mm llitl*Man onlK# 3®K5w» •* e conrmitteeun* sooner did the House Judiciary /"fcwtr* on the spetific chsrgea it, has, Committee decide to investigate the?Jus-perhaps thert wilt lie a solution to this By tice Department thqn President Trtmtscn Question": Why did President fruman, disapproved. the i&v^teA'Jg Tim* KNtor r oJ*» didn'tteke sides.' ­ handed the same Justice Department the after plainly showing hehadno faith in £? job of cleaning up federal government Attorney General McGrath's ability to jgriStaJrat .nd Oo»M.Uow ^..JrohW()M mMt , M d?rniption,t^^^f5"ftfdean up his own department, hand " *sto are turning-into afarce. -^mwt 60 pw cent of thoM polled «#», the'Imswati* ... -., ' » -, A4iJ The committee didn't"make any wild McGrath the tremendously more impor->-"With thedeadlinefot submitvjsaid they disapprove, while*frae-' *Wfc. tfeniratlr-' ­ting name* fast approaching," he tifln orer one-third endorsed tha bite, ofeo' charges that the department itself is hea-tant chore of weeding corruption out of •aid, "less than fort per cent of oath. Men expressed slightly Itrsi,: vily corrupted. Instead, the committee is the campus organisations' 1wre stronger opposition than women a m< 'fShmm sr named candidates for either on tills campus. j a person's confining its probe to "specific aUega-fi' f? & honor. Consequently, when the.-It might be in indication"'»f million ma: 1 selecting committee meets on B*eb4 • something or other that, nation-1,948,W& tions and complaints leased upon credible ;r J ^ ruary 18, they cannot possibly ally Speaking, only freshmen, ap­M RK FORTRA* evidence" rather than "mere rumor and "own select from a representative co­prove. The anti-oath percentage ; (Joing to .Alaska? verage of the stlident leaders."|with each passing year,"in'this To trarel suspicion/' It claims that the investiga­TO ALL JUNIOR G-MEN: '* Then What; happens? ' v *• manner: freshmen, 42 per cent;, by private .car* tion will be "nonpolitical and non^isctzr* ' Be on the lookout for cigarette butts .-The Cactus head man |i^lamed«! Sophomores, 46 per cent} junlori,. ha^e a dxttrar^s' II© 66 per cent; seniors, 58 per cent; tires, $100 to "cai* sive." f'Names are picked out of the air and coke bottles. Do not throw'them and graduates, 78 per cent. '' dent, policy.-"'V\ with the. aid of the members of It would certainly be laudable if the away, but save them. The first of each "You would be 'pledging* the most popular sorority on the campus the committee. > Yet these -people Some striking deviations' fromAlso,says',tiia Na so nominated will have no qualifl-the opinion pattern were recorded, p"hic Society,, to refuse fcalp, house group, acting as it does fn an elec-month, everyone will count up what he's••*•• -ask the telephone company." A«small military, college in/the .strmndiil al< cations other than those which the someone stranded albstg'"tiie tion year, can keep political blckeris* out collected and list the people he's turned meiftbers iejm personally supply on South, for example, is 82 per i«.a the spot." . • :7V, ®-' " cent in favor of the oath. A uni­Yvkon law, of the business athand. Significant is theft, and the high five men will be given versity recently Involved in a bit­' SORORITIES As far as Pistor knows, there fact that the committee acted only after shinysilver badges.-rrr^ • ter fight over the oath, however, -Pro-6r anti-sorority; aippinfyd simply isn't any way lb gather • is 88 per cent against.it. representative list for the use of : oy the Buffalo tfniVersiiy studying nunwrous specific cases of Bring your material by the collecting On that same twelve-question 'Why1| 's six reasons "Whythe committee. The present sys­ (The followiag , editorial. -mp> >of speech and press. It points out Associated Collegiate Press poll, shady acts^QMtt suppressed or delayed station,at my office upstairs in the Main p*ar*d rMAntly the tem isn't .working, yet the old ia Dallaa that the present difficulties of the students were' asked if they felt prosecution. The allegations they studied Building, where everything will be. Morning .Narwi,)Vv' colleges and universities arise 'system (ab61ished the past Russia and the U. S> can settle 1. 1wanted to do as I included, besides ihe well-known tax checked forfingerprints. ~ The, Federal Government li largely from the taxes de^hded j!^^^ ^differences peacefti]lly. Few and ttink for myself witiwiat w reaching again toward our public bjrthe tiJend toward socialism.se^i^r criticised ' <*** ^a»i»d cases* incidents involving antitrust, im-' k --" The Chief achools, our/colleges, our tiniver-> 017 new subsidy calls for more Only seven per cent said they' /.sorority"sisters^­ last spring, had the inevitable re­ sities. It is offering bait that taxes. thought _ chances for a peaceful­ suit of overloading the Cactus 1 atrong|y tempts some educators. . If the colleges and universities settlement are good, while 81 per men's clubs andi^ oitaatiatidma Opporfunitlf honor sections, with the editor's It offers handouts of "money to are to maintain their present 'y., V.' cent said "chances are fair" and fore' I came in collide, and •# friends. underfinanced schools. It off«ni ;freedom, they will have to,spurn 45 per cent replied "chances are didn't wan! to start , The perplexed yearbook chief subsidies to medical schools. Now, offers of federal subsidies. They poor." One out of eight inter­8. I had naval1 danced jrigfc ~m . would like to.know what impetus •-with a shortage of engineers, it chn do that 'more ea«lly if they viewed said.there are "nochances'* man in my life and1didnt want -Is needed to get organisations and proposes to help finance training can get better support from their for an agreement short of war. ' to. . " » / individuals to help the Cactus in this fifeld. present sources; ACP poll computers |n Minnea­4. I didn't like the idea in the engineering pro-' The big need now is.for better why. have sent-the having to room vrtth tbe «aatan -Many staff learn*who's outstanding and polis not Texan hl^ fession see the dafcger in this can­support of public schools and col* AnyideasT . answers, to four questions.' Re^ all semester. died bid for federal control. The leges from local. and state taxes suits-on the queries dealing with 6. 1 didn't iflll out * iweat*^ LOYALTY OATHS magazine, Product Engineering, and for bigger .contributions to the drafting of college students and <-1 didn't look -very a^aativa iD.o you approve or disapprove By MILDRED KLESEL and other* won't do much calls the proposed cure worse than the private^ institutions by indi­ and the 1952 presidential.cam­in * sleeve-less, low-cut fawn; many Jobs than students to of having college, professors take T«m»; Editorial AmiHant worn. the sickness. It views this more viduals and by industry. That sup­•ii oath stating that they, are not paign are due soon, and will be -I am amale. fill the positions," said Paul College graduates this year as a big step toward statism, sec­port would, remove most of the The expanding defense ef­J. Thompson, director of the members of . the Communist can practically, take their pick ond onl)< to the loss of freedon). present'temptation. of jobs with" engineering stu­fort has put a premium on school of journalism. There ^ Party? Students. in 68 colleges T/engineers of all Idnda as well are shortages in every branch and universities replied that they dents getting as many as 10 as chemhrta and physirists. of journalism — newspapers, disapprove, with the opposition. to 20 offers. "Nationally, there will be These graduates g«t in aver, magaiines, and advertising. being' more pronounced in liarge 9. only 20,000 graduates tUs age of 10 to 20 offers to Mr. Thompson believes there telai schools like. the University. . r . fiv ^ « choosefrom. will be a demand for the next Nationally, 89 per cent condon­ year to fill the 30 to-40,000 three or four years. ed the oath, while 47 per cent of fobs," said Dean W-. R. Wool-In tiie Collefce of Busineaa rich"of the College of Engi­Admiiristration accountants In the. "UP survey tiie Uni-yir»t-«em#»t«r frohmen atid Mcond-The Oeneral Culture Teat, r^qulred fot the more than 8,000 students in­ aameatcr fraibmtp «a »«hoIiufMe pr«)»a-admisaion t» tb* Graduate School of LW neering. Next year there 'will are most needed. Sunning a vetsity of Kansas said it had tkm will not >o ©n tha th»a*nliht ra-brary .Selanea, will be itdminlstered' oii be about 12,000 graduates close, second are positions as 25 jobs for journalisrn grad­rulatiaa Watii Snnda^, Yabraairjr. 10; Thursday. February 7th, Main Building . Sii. from 1:80 to 6 p. m. Ail prospec­ and the following year about salesmen/ with general busi­ uates and no one to fill them. '• •i.-e: nonOTHY C|B*Ain5R MEET MR; *• Dean M Woman tire1 applicants . for admission to tha 8,000 idth tbe same number ness gradoatee coining next.' "The demand for pharma­ school are invited to take tha .teat on of job opportunities still re-,f! Tl» ScKool of library Sci­cists has increased since Applications for . Unlvanlty Seholar-the abeva date. AM who expect to do so ahipa and Fallowihlpi durins ocurement efflders for the Air Force, United Press of colleges across pani•; • " ' v ; Kon-resldent Graduate Schblarshlps for Wednesday, February 27—1 F.M.-~' . Thursday and Friday, .February 7 and t '• ' " •' .. o(V*r-Bupply in any field of the,second sameiiter. wiU be awardad to Education, Journalism, mathematlca. 8, to interview graduate students %iFor He gives you a clear; business-like record of " 4 teaching for many years,. Al-^tudanU who do not hold teaebirirfallow-Thursday.Februaryas —1 P.M. —• various poations. A group InterWevywill ahlpa thla tans Saturday motninir. reb* -All foriiign languages, Bible, Bust-be conducted Thursdsy night at^7<80 all expenses:s;tells whan yon paidyour rent* most any type of high school ruary-9. At thai time a list , of awards Quotabfe (a^uoted will be poatad at Main Bulldinc 131. All ness Administration, drawing, phar­I>.m. job is available. macy, Can by B. Hall 117 to. make appoint-telephone, taxes, electricity or insurance' non-irMid«Rt craduate students who a^t j Friday, February 2S 1 P.M. ~ menta for any of these Interviews. . "The call for architects has teaeMnr fellows durinf tha second sem* Botany, chemistry, economics, geolo­JOE D. FARRAR, Director ivemiums s « i teDs when and where evety •st«r hare been awarded » non-resident ^ . been onfy normal*" said Har­ gy, music. < Student Employment Bureau •cholarship. Monday. March 8 — 1 P.M., — *ac- Senny was spent; He pays Vm all and brings "Hold on with a bulldog was my last cigat." 1 well Harris, director of til? \.. " H. RANSOM . terlology, biology, history, home Full-time permanent positions now grip, and chew and smoke as —W. C. ROMMEL ,' -Assistant Dean aconomics, sociology, soology, other available on The University of Taxas ack a signed receipt for each one; He makea * /• Sehool of -Architecture. aubjaeta. campus-together .-with.a" brief description mncb as possible." "The scatterfarain, to bfc-Draftsmen with college trainr ,Tl(*se who missed tbe Pre-encineefinr Only ona examination a day may be of tne minimum requirements are as fol­it easier to stick to a hydget; —ABRAHAM LINCOLN :o. Yet a man of no converisa- lows: ing still head the demand list Inrentory on January SI ahould raport taken, and conflicts ahould be reported to Clerk-ty>>ist—(8)—Not over 80 ysars He'll take orer all your blll^)aying eiranda "The ashes that are left ion should smoke." . though. for a special make^ukt which haa. bean tha Regiatrar'a Office before February ;, scheduled as follows: of age, typing ipeed of at least 40 words behind, may serve to put thee 1ALPH WALDO EMERSON In V"Hall 201 on-Friday from 6:80 to It. Y. McCOWy, Regla^rar per minute; college baokground preferred the minute you deposit a few dollars—any • Even the.secretarial field still in mind that unto dust —RALPH W. EMERSON 1S:80 p.m. tha first, half and on Satur­ and the ability to meet people. amount convenient; A few centsa cheek paya is wide open. Most girls can day from 1:10 to!p,m, tha second half There will b« a meeting for all, frater, Draftsman—.(2)—Completion of col­ return thou musU thus think, "With what a genius for of tha tests will bf slven. nlty i house managers at the Phi Kappa lege level courses in engineering and for everything; month then drink, tobaceo.'^ administration we. rearrange get about $200 a to Thosa taking tha m»k«-up must: sttand Fat house Thursday at 7 p.m. All house some darfting experience . . start as secretaries.' both sessions: .The offering of the make­managers pleas* attend. Questionairsia Electrical' engineer—(1>—Registered YOU'RE ALWAY8 TfKLCOME AT —GEORGE WITHERS the rumbling -universe, and up sessions la a special concession to are to be distributed about tbe meat engineer, considerable experience in tha "It waa iay last cigar,;it may the couxiM of man's re­tesides the 'defense effort, thosa who did 'not report at. the regu­problem. ' operation and maintenance of electrical selective .service was adding larly ^caduled time. Studenta ahoruM not ' , v SANDY KATZ equipment. was my last cigar; I breath'd generation, over a pipe." request-further concessions except for . President ^ Key. punch jwerator — (1) Prefer If ^ >A to, the surplus of, jobs by over a aigh to think, jn,. sooth, it —WILLIAM E. HRNLEY reason officially ;recognised by University. someone with' experience, not 80 r-TTTn-i'-'-frf r^-"-- <""Pr«[lioeiE!rrApt dallvarr sad (dwMai ahnld be tsJJfc J0J All persons interested in working full- Opinions of tb» I«na ara act amnirll, ftaw of th« Admlaistrat)oi> and March, Joe D. Farrar; di­Doily Texan Crossword Puzzle time on> the campus please contact THE n otbar OoiTacsitr offfadala rector of the Student Employ­ OFFICE OF NON-ACADEMIC PERSON­Use the Texan Classified Entered M •Utter Oatoftat It. lilt M tk« Paat Offlm ait. ment Bureau, At NEL. Main Building 204. phone S-8871. said. this Agjitta, T« »t March t, ISfK ^ ACRO80: 4. To 22. Invalid's extension 661.'. time last year, only-twelve 1. Asterisk route > food wmasEntiCK £<^paBi$s~iiad.j^ , 5, A.tab .aitotherj r.#k ili&cvi. _ _____ nM aad mat itanu of tpootanaatu arisia |AlkM IwnU. Mights •) TEXAN RESULTS pabliotionof iB otbar nattw bfUi alao imwi ; • • ' A PERFECT DATE 10. Rows Hjht bells in the 12.^orce -6. Raise .. . . 24. Oriental : The ^Hastings Collegian* ...' v.„. ISHWMtii foe Kaffesal AirtetMmt hy'Natkoal Advartiates < •'"' 13. On fire * 7. Keel'biUed 25. Large worm Cleuified fcwh*. iMt. wllw riWrtw JMwwwIaUw " Hastings College at Nebraska, 14; Land-cuckoo • 26. Doves Apartment for . Rent For Sale Typing 43« lUdiaoii_ATaL. .. . K«w Tork. M.l. asked some of the co-eds what, Ads CMeaso — Boates — tm dagalaa — tmm VtraadsM . measure -• 8. An amulet 28. 0tn'a they considered to be an ideal SACRIFICE — tlSS Neiman-Mareua ori­ 15. Malt kiln 9. Small nickname QUIET APARTMENT for a ssincsttr of ginal formal for" 840. . sise lt.^Also 18 TSARS > EXPERIENCE, theseai , dwte. Some of the answers: 17. At home ^ quarrel; ; 30. Periodsof intensive studying. • Two |6G—Three short summer formal, $5. Can 7-9188 sertations. etc. 6-4747 Evenings.^ ^ "The iddal date doesn't 18.Thrice "i"..., .11. Btcames tiihe Yesterday's Answer' $60. Three minutes f«»m. campus. S-0289 .after'4 p.m. • . MEMBEa have after 7 p.m. : TYPING DONE at notta. Fast. sMomtaw to be good looking or (mus.) aware of -3l. Rugged 35. A Chinese 1850 PONTIAC. 8 Convertible, hrdrama­Pbonar SS-8971. ^ . have a lot of money to rate 19. Expression 16.Mature mountain dynasty tic. radio A heater, good top, one own­ auBscairrioN BATES with I think it is 20. Alc PERMANENT STAFF e low should by all means be 23. Make skirts, dresses, and formats. PK 2-2588. Music i X 7 TYPING: NEAT wort, pick eervlea. Edifor-laXUef RUSS KERSTEN friendly and good manners resentful r-f"Pr"a . T-RECORDED MUSIC, P.A. systema, for S-SS0S. S-48SS. are also important." (colloq.) Rooms for Rent all occasions: 6-1210. Mtotfiai Editor ^ BKAD'BYERS 20. Gaspscfor 9 iW VT TYPING t DONE . tn, aty kemai CanEditoriali Assistant . » Mildred Klesel r " .f. One who is a good breath ; NEAR CAMPUS. Slnfle garage room. (8 68-8646. Society editor w. Bet^r'Sega) mixer, a good dancer, a good 27. Comfort ; n windows). Private entrance, slower, Board: UCPERIENCED Anoseolents • Editor Kenneth Gompertz r '% telephone. Maid sarviee, quiet. Reaaon-sity . looker and preferably a good 28. Apple seed aaighborhood. iitahie, Exchange Editor 19 .able. 1607 San Jaeinto. <-«701. EXCELLENT MEALS. Family stylo. S-4S4S. Joe L. Schott athlete." 29. Beast of . i4 17 • Reasonable prlees. Weekly or monthly. News Editor JoAnnDiclcerson . " Someone you can be burden *1..... • A-STUDIOUS, hard working student to Blltoo Boarding House, 1811 Colorado. BIBS BETAT10N8. Sports Editor Ai Ward . . oeeupy room, and bath in privato bojne THE8S8. (BeetW. it iff. ST matte). Dietatio«.-Co x Asdstai at easewith and not be afraid 30. Oscillate -in Enfield. Very reasonable. Ph. 7-7638.. macky, 68-SSlt. itant Sports.r Editor. Orland Sims 31. Astern ftwf^Editors-Tt^— Ho Cox, Johnnie Human. Dorothy Of hia --iakinff •, ssd&ari?. % Special Services 34. Lieutenant 21 W For Rent EXPERIENCED tt-A! gradu«te. jartiea „ ... ^ -----Campbell, Wayland Pilcher, Joel Kirkpatrick a Ma.' Mrs. Uavia. »-12>7.. ' '* Night Editors Bvbara Rubenstein, Anne Chamberr, '{abbi;}) RAM CUTS .lit ,a..i.a III »n.i nuwnaamii mi unnw MT j aft-u-lllL .®WO»NICELY furnished two-room apart-Sta&s*« 8arfeer Shop .J60S (isadatupe . ttLECXBIC TYPEWRITER -Mesq*t* • Robert Kenny, Bobby Newlto, Jim Cockrum has big ideas about what "Ee*^--M rr,-. •- ; ^=^£^U£Stii@l»af^eate-fM^h^AeroM'Stmt >-Tir •-rn' V-|-|-r-r~iijtfia>t»'-|.«i-* I II • it 1-4887 or S-1190 anytime. , from Unirersltr. 846 and «5S. UtUities ' ' i j V i -"if 'IT mil vlijia'i wants to do in'life and^works / vwlVd * . . paid. 801 West 21st or call 8-8S40 nfteir STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE hard to.reach those goals. I 39.Mountain .v-r • e. .••• UtiFJIU Ull'JU ;:; W«M. DnyEditof JOHNNIE HUMAN like a felloe to be changeable, r nyinph COMFORTABLE BACHELOR apartment, G HaaaH riDBani-i A that is to say, one who switch-; 41. Imbibe-uaaau UUU^M Night Editor. ... BOBBY NEWLIN , . •prlrsta entrance, bath. Alao attractive R ^ASHING AND ironing—doha^aw room, private entrance, bath, Jn «ul«t II aonably. Well Mperieoced. l«flll gisigle^v^ Assistant Nig Rob Pierce es from on^ moodto another."' 42. Ftill Of nuts' 14 3* 3b o 'JU!j d'JfiiLi •• jht^Rep -private l^>iwe.-ConT«iitSft«s, b^». Univar-aina r^ar.SlWMi 4^8114. -I ' I .-. r —Obb — s *sr ill lllll .1 "i Ullilrj UUIJ14 AGGRESSIVE LAW 8TOD1 _ .«nfl.at. ST w w 40* -lSXtO LIVINGROOM. One orHwo b«d-s ;-juMaa uauun iNight Sport* time ishow you he : 44.Observes • room*, bath and kitchen. Studio *pmrU nam uau w/' DOWN W meat — 20s£0. Solid north light. bad-'J'JLJ U'Jti Cter. For further 4«Uila, write Teftaoe fon. Good, 'looks, • 4T room, bath, kitchen. ' , S' t' •w Publishers, lne% 8t» MwivM St. 1.Beach Sirar Blair-^Qney^aod reputaaoahSljLta *• * Ona room, dressinr room and ttth. lalt< R nn it* Flint, Michigan. : staff, or graduates. 714* HiJLJnU UUIT-IK < Nigfat Society Editor e Rawland wake a fellow a perfect date." W vr w. »4tt. Phone 8-W7, D >jLjaua racjUHrj R PRE-MED STUtUtNTfor «aygan tbetamr - Assistant '' ..Someone with a^super 1 mm mm • and ambultfeea servfea. Living attartera Night Amnsaments Editor personality ,.V' J-CAR GARAGE for rant. 80IS Guada« ts lupe. Phone 8-9179. ' •' " -*v ^b«N> ! a " s-^ ^ ft. A* J • 6i' * s ir3Sa4fi sr» wSii- M V ­ * ^ ^ r tj ggp^gli < »*?•­ I ••-•••••-.. .. ..., i&*^;2y«f;.jMri/elaritjr of t&fc'.playi lections from "La Traviata" by of a recent article in "Time," Mr. on a tourof principal,cites of the unanimously elected Mr. Kurtz as of the Boy Scouts of Ameri­ ffif-J'" ' ' '' 1 J Kurtz brings 28 years of exper­ Dr. John McKay first meeting of the semester in Verdi and the ,suit« from Russel's country, holdinig auditions of-4n-musical director and conductor. ca Wednesday at 12:10 p.m. in the Admission & free to Blanket ballet and ience in conducting symphony or­strumental During Te*« Union 89 at 1 p.m. Wednes­ ,._ax arid .season ticket holders. Ad-"Bacchus Ariiene." talent. three The debut of the reorganised TFWC Building. They will also play the prelude to chestras, opera, and ballet to the weeks Kurtz grossed the entire orchestra on November 1, 1948, •missioiuio others is 60 cents for childrenand $2.40 f6r adults,. Wagner's opera "Die Meistersing-podium. country three .times and listened also heralded the world jnyndeiw To Speak to WSF er." He does not confine himself to to more than 800 musicians. ; ' performance of -a new work by The Usiftriity U£m Ciab Will GREG SCOTT* , Edwin JFadiman, who lint di­ veloped*the four-piano style, dl-The story in Tuesday's Texan strictly serious music. One of his $Sir Thomas Beecham,, famous the contemporaj^r American com-* Dr. John A. McKey,,president honor the'University Dames at its erroneously reported that the con­most popular pieces with Univer-British, conductor, called the or-of the Princeton Theological Sem­February tea 'at the University lets the four artists. 1" ^ poser, Aalron Copland. Club from-4 to 6 p.m. Recordings of the iqrmphony inary, will speak to the Westmin­ DANCE COURSE One metropolitan ieritlc says 4hatthe audience it challenged on conducted by Kurtz consistently ster Student Fellowship in an in­ ' Alpki Delta Sigma,"j^ofearion­ v'three lWels when listening to the rank as "best-sellers". Kurtx's un­formal session at 3:30 p.m. PRIVATE af advertising fratondty, >N will Wednesday in thtvWSF HalL Hi* FPQ. It is fascinated physically Basie, to Get canny knack of "discovering" elect new officers at 7:1# p.m. DANCJE by the spectacle of forty flying classical selections whieh lead the topic is '*Chrultian Belief." ^Wednesday in the Men's Lmsi*, fingers; intellectually it is busy "hit parade" of the better music One of America's ieadlng theo­LESSONS Texas Union. Plane will be made comparbig the new arrangement® disks, led to the discovery of the logians, 'Dr. McKay was brought for Spring semester"ple'dgingr'Cof­ with familiar ones; esthetically, it 1Jived Up 15 "Saber Dance." to Austin for the mid-winter sem-SENSIBLY PRICED fee and cookies will be served. isdelighted with the many safety* The assistant conductor of the inary lectures as the first lecture AT 14.95 and unusual effect* achieved by orchestra is Andor Toth, Raphael sponsored by the Thomas White 22SS GuaMupm Mb 7-943S Two and a half hours of the the top aggregations in nation­the band of Earl Hines. He formed . Swlag aad Tarn wQl meet at this new medium. Fliegel, a native Texan, is coh-Curry fund.-Besides his seminary Ak«r» Texu TbnUr hottest-music in the U.S. will re­wide polls. his-own jazz crew in 1944, .'but eertanaster* talks,: he is 'bringing a series of 7j30 piiii. Wednesday in the Main Lounge of the Texas Oni^n, Jo ?jT* l-Xs*" sound in .Austin's City Coliseum Given his first piano lessons by soon decided to' abandon it in fa-tj lectures on "Christian Belief" at *0•fv beginning at 0 pun. February 16. the late "Fat»" Waller, BMie sky-vor of a solo singing career. -String Quartot fto Play 8 o'clock each mght through Fri­Tldwell, secretary, said beginners rocketed to fame in the early. 'SO'.s will be wekome to the sqwre Eckstine has risen a day at the University Presbyter­ % The kings of jump,-boogie, and to place the Classifieds Jh(bafiby <£onnqsi blues, Count Baste at the piano when he joined jazz immortal, among tiie nation's top vocalists, OnListtningHour "••• , ;: ; dance jgroup. . ; ian Church. % *rJ?4V rK , * \ . * , Benny Moten's band, in Kansas j New stadenfs wfll have the op-H. K. Naeseth, instructor in art, P&ir&-;Featuring,:y .;-••• and Billy Eckstine. one", of too'.m-City* Moten died in 1936 and winning popularity polls conduct­portanity Wednesday at 4 p.tn. Dr. McKay ie noted as a: lec­4^~ tion's top vocalists, will give Alls', £as!e was chosen his'successor. ed by Esquire^ Metronome, and to attend the first free Listening turer and author. In 19'18 he or^ Downbeat magazines. His fiigit ap­ tin jazz fans the tops injthe brass ganized the Anglo Peruvian .Col­ Ernii Ma* Miller The Basie group was soon ac-pearances at New1 York Cfty's Hour of the semester when the * fj%?**v music world. ceptea hy the nation's jazz fans Paramount Theater in 1949 /broke University of Texas String Quar­lege in South America and the Free Church of Scotland. .{|om*rly „ ef Dhity Moor«'») The Count will be making his and^4ts popularity has continued tet will give a recital at the Music that house's opening day atten­ f* Books he has written include I • A at (lie piano • . * y.. first Austin appearance, but his through the yeare. Featuring the dance records, in by Building Recital Hall; <"<• "The Spanish Christ," fame as a jazz pianist makes him "all*American Rhythm Section," BVank-Sinatora. set 1943 Assisting tiie quartet, to, make Other "and.at get your soon09 yon A iiii playing A singing a.familiar figure. Recognized as the band has shattered attendance up a sextette for the playing,of "That Other America," "Chrisr k** t jrovr,favorite •oagjr', •, one popular greats, records from "Body and Soul," "Caravan," Brahms" famous "Sextette in G-tianity of the Frontier^" "Heri­raise in"pay,we can be of music's Bop City:.in New next nightly "My Foolish Heart," "I Want to tage and Destiny," apd "A Pre­ # Basle's band ranks annually among York to. the Oasis in Lcm Angaries. Major," will be Robert Collins, rnarrie&lr • ^ Be Loved," and "I Apologize" face td Christian Theology;" \ cellist, and Elizabeth Phillips, vi­ Basie's. aggregation has also rank among the crooner's best­ 1706 San Jacinto GHFG SCOTT OllSt. • Last summer he conducted' a proven a worthy concert group, selling'records. : . ' BAILKQOM Dance iCHOOl The quartet%ie&lber8 are Angel specif mission to Protestant mi­ Phone V0441.— No Cover receiving critics' favor after two s The performance is sponsored OVf C If'/. A S THFATP.F s7 94J'J Reves, violin; Alfio Pignotti, vi­norities in the Latin lands of Eur­ performances in New York City's Ji by the North Austin Lions Club. olin; Albert Gillis, viola; and Ho­ope with major emphasis on the Carnegie Hall. Ticket prices are $3.60, $2.40, and race Britt, eello. r " studying of the situation in Spain; Among Basie's greatest record $1.80. Advance sales are being hits are "One O'clock Jump," and held at the J. R. Reed Mpsic Com­"Red Bank Boogie." » pany, the University Co-Op, Tel-Dubbed "the great Mr. B." by ley's News Stand, William-Charles, his followers, Ekstine is a former Stautse's, .and Tony Voh'a News-trumpet player and singer with Stand. * ; Down Tho Aislo P««U»r* StarU at St4S P.M. rMtar* tarto at Si4# P.M "Savag* Drums" "Tembo" EnlU»i wIMrale*! irfatur* Mna.w#ri •tarrine HOWARD HILL ALSO— "Wild Country" Come m to Arthur Murrey's Mini*" Qlw Ford Vtvaaa Lindlara The marriage last fall of Ange­day at the tfientral Christian NOW end learn •ha secret la Smith Luckenbach and John Church in Galveston. ARTHUR of good timet and popular- D. Crawford has recently seen;an­Miss Smith is employed in the MONTOPOLiS cnma YANK nounced. office of the dean of the College ity. Lenons ere fun and easy 2116 Guodalu| FMtwr* Sterto at ii4lfJ(« Mrs. Crawford attended the of Arts and Science*, frixon was too. . ;/ • ; "Mr. Aco" University is member of a senior engineering student at Phono 9*668? and a ADULTS OfftYl OMT|«4Ult Sjrlvia Sydney Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. the University last semesteiv; ALSO— She was a member of Spooks and "Marihuana** also Was an Aqua Queen finalist Concfuoit of and a Bluebonnet Beile nominee Ch«y«niie in 1951. Pindown Girl" BUI Elliott Crawford University. He is captain-elect of the 19&2 swimming team and a former president of the "T" A»r TONIGHT CHIEF sociation. He is a member of Del­ ta Kappa Eptilon fraternity and Cowboys. ^ bx T*€lmlcotor Badllm* for The couple returned February "An American 1 from a wedding trip to Acapuleo Bonzo* In ParU" and Mexico City. KAnald Raagan Gnu K»llr Diana Lynn Ompufi ^oob iWarfeet LasMa CarM Pltu Oscar Lavant Frances G. Monroe, junior SO Plu* "Double ciology student, and Dr. Richard T. Scott, who completed his doc­ "Africa Crossbonss" torate in zoologyl at mid-term, Donald O'Connor Screams" Halana Cartar were married January 19 at St. Abbott * Coatallou FIRST SHOW etSO Matthews Catedral in Dallas. Dr. Scott is now associated with the cancer research branch of the State Department of Health. H is a member of Sigma Sigma, and Sigma Phi Epsilon. •k '• :- SHOWTifllC Anna Frances Smith and' John W. Dixon will be married Satur- AT INTERSTATE THEATRES SIGNED*. PROPRIETOR r/7r/fir(ffftf Fort Worth Rector ­ To Preach Horo Tonight The Rev, Louis Martin, rector of St Andrew's Episcopal Church in Fort Worth, will be' guest preacher at evening prayer in All Saints' Chapel at 7.:30 this even- SHORTHAND qu£En I IN 6 WEEKS Typlns Optional No Sumboli. Vm, ABC'a. For Bualnaaa and Civil Service t)AY, EVE, tew Coat. 25th'Yr. S'choola In PrlncipaL CItlM Com*. Obterva, Spaak to our Pupil* SptuuAwJriiinq , THERE ARE GOOD.PA?lNG JOBS WAITING FOR YOU ^ Mmuumui BASEHART 0'SHEA EVANS There's a quick, easy way. f< CvdChorisM you to get a good-paying job. You can learn "Speedwriting," TEHns^ the wodern, nationally-known shorthand in only six weeks: *t w Durham's "Business College, here Firat Shew 9 p.m. in Austin. \ . * H ^ ^"Speedwriting" is entirely un­ f.' AKTHUK SANK like the old shorthand methods. STEWART GRANOEB "Speedwriting" uses the ABC's—r VALERIEHOBSGN it just turns your longhand >intci NO Visit or Write Durham's at 600A Lavaca Street — or telephone 8-3446 for'full information; AFTER­ Durham's is, exclusivel; 4% , jfiiwrr show « fM. PETECTIVE >fpitr^ MUM ttMicm Austin. It is: the only -business college here bearing;the approval'of.the State Department of Edu­cation and fully accredited by the American Association -of Commer­ "AND only chest ....m&iyt,« Zf i x*?* -TT-" Wi -mi if mmM msmt