Vt f Texan T he C o 111 g t FIri t VOL. SI Price 5 Cents Da i l y In Th# South AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, MARCH 2, 1952 Eight Pages Today NO. HS Shivers Pardons Aggie Geologists For Rock Prank JGXC2S HOUND DOG MAN F r e d hat- g e t s a c ’r d c o g in GI psor boy Linen from Reoer* ★ Voyies Claud< Texas (rig h t) as Sixteen Forgiven For Rearranging Sui Ross Design Pho to b y R. K n o u t with c o w ­ front of the Da'e on. Robertson, G ipson is a Texas UT ex Stars from and Cowboys 'OO* Mason. By W ithout fear of “ stone-eroded” military can Okie Rides Again For Newsreel, Crowd Exes, UT, Celebrate Independence records, now study peace at “ The sixteen their Aggies geology in Rock P ile” in Col­ lege S tation. Full pardons were g r a n t e d to the Aggies T h u rs d a y by G overnor Allan Shiver*. The sixteen had ★ a it Alpine officers Ross College rock design by of defaming Sui rearranging the “SR” on a hillside fire, s tir rin g m ilita ry airs, and the echo of m a rc h in g f e e t will add pomp to the ceremony in f r o n t of the M ain Building, R O IC bands a nd precision drill team s a re added to this y e a r ’s event. The celebration was begun in 1897 by a g r o u p of law students. Speakers M onday will be W allace Lawson, A u s tin e x ­ stu d e n t p r e s id e n t; Judge Ja m e s W. McClendon, m em b e r of t h e 1897 law class, and Chancellor J a m e s P. H a r t and W ilson Forem an, stu d e n t president. * T he celebration is spon­ sored by the E x -S tu d e n ts ’ A s­ sociation and the A u s tin Tex­ as E xes Club. Giving 35 clubs in T exas and Louisiana a f i r s t ­ hand cam pus rep o rt will be al­ m ost an equal num ber o f U ni­ versity s t a f f m em bers. Classes to Dismiss Monday At 11:40 for March 2 Salute q u i e t l u n c h e o n in t h e A u s t i n H o - t o “ A M O . ” t e l , t h e t w o g u e s t s filed t o t h e Param ount Theater where they The S tate Board of P ardons and m a d e t h e first o f t h e i r f o u r s t a g e P a r o l e s r e c o m m e n d e d t h e p a r d o n s E l e v e n o ’c l o c k c l a s s e s w i l l b e a p p earan ces. A lthough Gipson ap- a f te r investigation. T h ep ra n k was p e a l e d n o t q u ite at ease, R o b e rt- pulled last s u m m e r on a g s o l o g y j d ism issed ten m i n u t e s e a r l y Mons o n w a s a t h o m e a n d h i s a n s w e r s f i el d t r i p t o t h e B i g B e n d c o u n t r y , d a y . At three m inute intervals h o w old C a u g h t in t h e a c t , t h e e i x t e e n th at, U T ' , tw in c a n n o n s will to a u d i e n c e q u e s tio n s c o p y o f his b o o k . A n d t h e n e w s f i r e s i x b l a s t s In f r o n t o f t h e reel c am el a g r o u n d on. a r e y o u , w h e r e is y o u r w i f e , w h a t h a d t o r e t u r n t h e “ S R ” d e s i g n Building, honoring Texas A f t e r t h e y h a d h a d a r e l a t i v e l y d i d y o u d o b e f o r e y o u w e r e a w h i l e t h e S u i R o s s h a n d e n t e r - Bl a i n I n d e p e n d e n c e Day. m o v i e s t a r — a n d h i s p r o g r a m pat , - t a m e d them. The hand played ter w as as sp o n ta n eo u s as th a t of “ The Eyes of Texas” several T he Texas-Ex Club's barbecue, a n y old s t a g e h a n d . tim es as th e A g g ies w e r e m a d e usu a lly held on this day, has b een postponed until T hursday, M arch A f t e r each of the s ta g e sh o w s, to s ta n d stone-still a t a tt e n t i o n , 13. t h e c o u p l e s i g n e d a u t o g r a p h s in front of the theater and each time Texas Independence Day has it t u r n e d i n t o a n e a r - m o b s c e n e . been observed a t the University However, nothing was torn and since 1899. T h a t y e a r a f t e r r e ­ I w o h u n d r e d a n d f o r t y p e r s o n s t h e y w e r e s ti ll in fine f e t t l e w h e n quests for a holiday had been re ­ I n o r to t h i s e q u e s t r i a n es* ah i p ie g i* te ie d to t a k e this y e a r s th ey m a d e a su rp rise a p p e a r a n c e fused, som e law s tu d e n ts m oved pade,R o b e rtso n an d Gipson h ad b a r e x a m s , w h i c h b e g i n M o n d a y . a t t h e T e e n a g e B a l l Ht t h e A u s t i n J U C O VV IT C C W ' » c a n n o n f r o m fi le C a p i t o l g r o u n d s been w e l c o m e d in f r o n t o f t h e T h e a p p l i c a n t s wi l l m e e t a t t h e C l u b where eighth arui ninth to t h e c a m p u s a n d p r e p a r e d to Mam B u n n , ng by C h a n c e llo r H a r t , H o u s e o f R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s on th e g r a d e r s w e r e d ancing. A g ain t h e y Visiting historian*. Dr. W illiam g r e e t the day with c a n n o n fire. P r e s i d e n t P a i n t e r , a n d o t h e r I ni- s e c o n d f l o o r o f t h e C a p i t o l M o n - w e r e m o b b e d a n d a f t e r a b r i e f B e s t Hesaeltine, University of P r e s i d e n t G . Y. W i n s t o n s t o p p e d v ersity officials. B o th received ten l a y m o r n i n g a t 8 : 3 0 , w h e r e a s e i g e t h e y m a d e off t o t h e H a v e n W. 'ii ss cc oo nn ss ii nn,, Rn er dd Dr ionnnanlM R Hw oo ff ff ­. t h ' * , h u t a f ew h o u r s l a t e r h« d B. g a l l o n h a t s t i th t o e ( ow n y- a n d b o a r d o f la w e x a m i n e r s will p a s s p o r t r a n c h w h e r e , w i t h m a n y o f h eard the gun firing aw ay from man, national secre ta ry -trea su rer \ t h en th e pro cessio n m o v ed d o w n on t h e i r q u a lific a tio n s Texas’ most famous authors— I t h e a t h l e t i c g r o u n d s , now- C l a r k to th e Union. t F r a n k D o b y , M o d y B o a t r i g h t , H a r t o f p h i A1P h * T h e t a , w i l l s p e a k a t F i e l d . _ r,xams are scneduled as f ol ' T h e r e , G i p s o n w a * p r e s e n t e d a ;ov vs . Stillwell, C u r t i s Bishop, J e s s Ar- the U n i v e r s i t y thi* week. j j)r K in s to n ordered the canh o u n d p u p , w n i c h hi s t w o s o n s y ,* * d a v 8 : 3 0 - 1 2 : 3 0 — c o n - n " 1' 1. Small— and other T exas * non hack to cam pus and d e­ immediately abducted, and Robert- tracts, H a ggeennccyv* R n d p a r t n e r s h i p s , g r e a t s General Wakefield, head pi -. H e s s e l t i n e . S o u t h e r n his- d a r e d a h o lid a y . U n t i l 1 9 3 5 no .on a l n . . ; T m . , h u g ar,,! OVi , p , „ d i n r , nd p , . ctic,, of T exas Selective Service they tory a u th o rity and U niversity of classes were held on T ex as Indek l , , f r o m T o , a . .Star J e a n » e l - , „ d r e t i n a l p r o c e d u r e . I - S U O — e n j o y e d r e f r e s h m e n t s a n d e n t e r - W i s c o n s i n h i s t o r y p r o f e s s o r , will p e n d e n c y D a y . h a u s e n . _______________________________ J t r u s t s , w i l l * a n d e s t a t e s , e q u i t i e s , t a i n m e n t a la m o d e . speak on a Public L ectu res pros h o r t , p e e c he* will be m a d e by real p ro p erty . S u c h is t h e p r i c e o f f a m e . G i p - g r a m T h u r s d a y a n d w i l l a d d r e s s Chancellor Ja m e s H art, Wallace ___ — - — W ednesday, 8 : 3 0 - 1 2 : 3 0 — c o n - s o n m a y n o w t a k e al l t h e t i m e h e g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t s a n d h i s t o r y m a _ stitutional and a d m i n i s t r a t i o n w a n t s t o r e c u p e r a t e h u t R o b e r t s o n j o t s F r i d a y a t 3 p . m . in t h e E n - H t c k s r m a n t o S p o a k o n C o r r o s i o n l a w , c r i m i n a l l a w , n e g o t i a b l e i n ­ h e a d s f o r D a l l a s a n d t h e n N e w g e n e C. B a r k e r T e x a s H i s t o r y C e n The fundam ental reasons for strum ents, and corporations. 1- O r l e a n s f o r m o r e o f t h e s a m e . t e r . ' corrosion wi l l be the subject Tw a n t s t u d e n t s — t w e l v e b o y s 5 :30— c o n f R e t of laws, lega l W h e r e v e r he goes . h o w e v e r , he M r . H o f f m a n will s p e a k a t t h e d e a l t w i t h b y D r . N o r m a n H a c k e r a n d e ig ht girl* h a v e e n t e r e d the ethics, torts, personal p r o p e r t y , wi l l have difficulty in finding regional m eetin g of Phi Alpha m an, chem istry professor, a t the N\ ii m o t D e c l a m a t i o n C o n t e s t . . P r e anddomestic relations. c o u r te s y a n d hospitality as T e x a n s T h e ta , n a t i o n a l h o n o r a r y h istory a n n u al m eeting of the National l i m m a r i e s will b e held T u e s d a y T h e e x a m s wi l l b e g i v e n i n t h e l a d l e i t o u t . I t \ y t « t r u l y a “ r e t u r n s o c i e t y , a t a l u n c h e o n S a t u r d a y i n A s s o c i a t i o n o f C o r r o s i o n E n g i n a r 7 :3<< in G a r r i s o n H a T h e -ix H o u s e o f R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s . of a Texan. a e r * i n G a l v e s t o n . M a r c h IO. the Cnion. w i n n e r s w i l l e n t e r t h e f i r al c o n *e*t w h i c h w I b e h e l d M a r c h l l , a t t h e s a m e ti m e an d place. T h e c o n t e s t w a s s t a r t e d in 1 9 0 5 by E dw ard F’, W i l m o t , f o u n d e r a n d f o r m e r p r e s i d e n t of the A u s ­ t i n N a t i o n a l B a n k , a n d is b e i n g c o n t i n u e d by Mrs. E liz a b e th W il­ m o t R o h e r d e a i in m e m o r y o f hei f a t h e r . T w o d i v i s i o n in t h e c o n ­ test, o n e f o r m e n an d one for w o m e n . T h e f i r s t p r i z e in e a c h d i v i s i o n is $ 2 5 i n c a s h , c o n t r i b ­ By J O E L K I R K P A T R I C K a legal h o l i d a y at t h e U n i v e r s i t y , -aid J u d g e J. W . M c C l e n d o n , r e - ' Since that d ay , he ad d e d , M a rc h u t e d b y Mrs . R o b e r d e a u , a m i t h e I he cl a s s o f | 8 9 , g a v e t h e ad - M e m b e r s o f t h e c o m m i t t e e w e r e t i r e d m e m b e r of the S tate C o u rt 2 has been a recognized holiday, University C o -O p gives $15 in and has com e to m e a n a day w hen b o o k * t o t h e s e c o n d p l a c e w i n n e r s . m i n i s t r a t i o n o f t h o s e d a y s q u i t e J . VS, M c C l e n d o n o f A u s t i n a n d o f C i v i l A p p e a l s . a shock. t h e l a t e G e o r g e H. C a r t e r o f M a r “ Im agine how we felt w hen we m en and wom en the world over Slid* R u l e C l a s s M e e t s M a r . S T h e n e w p r e s i d e n t o f t h e U n i - bn, fo u n d the c a n n o n w as spiked ! W e w h o h av e a tte n d ed the U n iv ersity I a.I B o t a I - n o n -cl e n * s l i d e v c t - i t y w a s G e o r g e I" W i n s t o n , Pi e v i d e n t W i n s t o n t o l d t h e s t u - i m m e d i a t e l y s e n t f o r a b l a c k s m i t h g a t h e r t o r ev i ve old m e m o r i e s , ruie coui-will ho l d i t s w e e k l y w h o h a d r e c e n t l y c o m e t o t h e d e n t s t h a t it. w a s r i d i c u l o u s t o a - k t o h a v e t h e cannon un-aptked,” M e m b ers of the (lass of loll? m eetingW e-ire a y ni ght , in Ce- U n iv e r s ity fro m the I n iv e r sity of fo r the h oliday, since T e x a s lo d e - rem in isces t h e s p r i g h t l y f o r m e r w jj| h a \ e t h e i r 5 5 t h r e u n i o n c h ir ­ o l o g y B u i l d i n g 14 a t 7 : 3 0 . T h e N o r t h ( a r o l i n a . I »ene n e a r Capitol whereG o v ern o r Shivers the bus s t a n d in f r o n t o f t h e C o - m a d e R o b e r t s o n a n h o n o r a r y T e x Op and t h e n r o d e it u p t h e s t e p s a n . G i p s o n , so as to k e e p t h e A F ■x - . M o v i e t o r i e s h o w f r o m b e i n g l o p s i d e d , p r e to the Mall. purred, th e r e n t e d G o v e r n o r S h i v e r s w ith a newsreel camera c r o w d c h e e r e d , a n d h a d a n insurance man been nearby he would have fainted. D a l e R o b e r t s o n h a, ! a r r i v e d o n c a m p u s a f t e r b e i n g m et at the airp o rt by U n iv ersity S w e e th e a rt Frances Schneider, Austin city d ignitaries a n d F re d Gipson, U n i ­ versity ex-student whose book, “ The H o m e P la c e ” was the basis for the movie “ T h e R e tu rn of the T e x a n , ’’ s t a r r i n g R o b e r t s un. W ILTON HYDE F ro m Austin to Korea, U n iv e rsity " exes” will renew th e ir loyalty to the U n iv e rsity and to the principles of freedom today. R eunions in more th a n IOO T exas localities and g a th e rin g s in o th e r sta te s an d countries will observe the ann u a l cerem onies held on Texas Independence Day th ro u g h o u t th e world. The g a th e rin g s of th e clan is M arch 1 - 1 3 this year, F r o m l l :45 a.m. to 12 noon Monday, the th u n d e r of cannon L a w s o n , p r e s i d e n t o f th e local E x - ' S tu d en ts Association, and Wilson I* o r e m a n , p r e s i d e n t o f t h e S t u j dents’ A nociation. Ka,lie H o o t * will m a k e a r e c o r d i n g o f t h e c e r e m o n i e s f o r r e b r o a d c a s t by local 2 Great Historians I H } Week Speak IThis stations. j,-(| p r j c e ^ e a d f 0 0 t b * l l c o a c h C a n n o n s wi l l b e s e t u p n o r t h accepted four invitations to o f L i t t l e f i e l d F o u n t a i n i n a SP * ‘ «n p . i , a » u r f l i r t u h s i n H n u a t n n el al / .one w h i c h wi l l b e p o l i c e d .A ,. L n , ™ ” ." A T E » urn-,' Huntsville, New Orleans, and Lake by the Rang! Army pre- C h , rl„ , u c i s i o n d ri ll t e a m . Tom Rousse, professor of s p e e c h , w i l l b r i n g U n i v e r s i t y n e w ’* ! t o e x - s t u d e n t s in N’ewr B r a u n f e l s a n d T e m p l e . A u s t i n m e m b e r s will j hold th e ir “ F ro n tie r Barbecue” j M a r c h 13. T ex as exes are a state, national, and international order with chapj t e r n l o c a t e d in a l m o s t al l p a r t s o f t h e w o r l d . M e e t i n g s will t a k e p l a c a in K o r e a . M a n i l a , H o n o l u l u , P a n ­ am a, South America, and th ro u g h ­ o u t the U nited States. hole Quoyeser Voted Senior Law Head Mosor, Neinast Givon Other Potts W ilm o t Prelim inaries Set to Begin Tuesday Came the ( 9 7 ) Revolution; UT Got Independence Holiday V WU QaesOn Olere Grad Uses Geiger In Isototope Tests i..Koan>v«> ‘“ '• 'r t * '' k sity P r * - b y t e r i a n ( huron. D r . I r a I - c o e t o Ii o v i c t i m * wi l l b e g i n Moods af 7 : 3 u p . m . iii B i a c k e n ridge Nurse* H om e aud itoriu m . T h e T ra v is C o u n t ) C h a p te r of the N a tio n s . F o u n d a t i o n fo r Infa)ip a aly si* .* *por,-onrg t n e two-hour course through March 21. M o m iav an W e d n e s d a y ria* Id p . m . ; F r i d a y **■% m e e t c i a *»e* at 9 a m i . contact M Applicants may t iv*' s e c i e t a l v i Fiat ch, e v e I t r av * ( o u n t v P o l i o chaptei of a* . 2 . MI o r *> 0 9 o l i . W o i k e i * vet,I n e t i n l i ed t o a d doctor*. n u se*. a n d physic! therapists, a n d wi l l work only with co n v alescen t patients. to H e a r F . r | u , o „ P h arm acy A d m inistratio n class in t h e C o l l e g e o f P h a r m a c y w i l l h e a r a t a l k bv W a i t e i k . F ' e r g u Risk w o r th HoadsC om m itto o su i, g en eral sale- m a n a g e r of the Thomas I). R i s h w o r t h , d i r e c t o r S a n A ntonio Drug Company M o n d a y at I o ' c l o c k i i i t h e P h a r of Radio House, has been renom i m a r y Building. f i s t e d t o h e c h a i r m a n o f t h e Ha dio and T\ C o m m ittee of the Mr. F e r g u s o n has been a-*oN a tio n a l C ongie** of Pa cut* a n d elated »;'h tile w h o l e s a l e d rug W . F oster search. KkflUI ELLIE LUCKETT ™ * rm m c y re­ I field s i n c e 1 9 3 4 . Pete Quoyeser was elected p r e s i d e n t o f the L aw School class in r u n o f f e l e c t i o n s H e l d F r i d a y , Con M o s e r w a s ch o s e n v i c e - p r e s i ­ d e n t a n d Bi l l N e i n a s t w a s e l e c t e d to the H o n o r Council. O t h e r se n io r officers se lected W e d n e s d a y are M arvin Lewis, sec­ re ta ry , and J a m e s P ete William* and Dan Phelps, H o n o r Council. Mid-law class officers a r a R o ­ bert C. Maley, president; Tim Driver, vice-president; Jim Mast, se c re ta ry ; and David B e e rb o w e r and Ja s o n S m ith, H o n o r Council. F r e s h m a n class officer! se le c te d are Ed Cogburn, president; D on­ ald C. Gladden, vice-president; F ranklin Spears, H onor Council; and B arbara Jordan, secretary. DA U! ,A S , P M a r t• h i * 2 5 u ,(t on of *i Construe S o o t h u e •st el n Me r il eal School b u i l d i n g b e t e rn a y b e g i n w i t h i n t h e n e x t f e w n i o n t I" , D u d l e y K. NN (ion w ii T J r chai i m a n of the Reg e n t s of the DniverB o a id o s i t y , sal cl S a t ii r d a y n i g h t . Mark LemH e - ai ii a i c h i t e c t m o n wa c o m ; d o t i n g t ' i a n - f o r tile n e w b t u lei i n g f o r w ► uch the State Legisiat e ai r e a d y h a - a p ) r e p r i ­ a t e d f u ne W o o d VV.a r d s p o k e nt a m e e t i n g o f s e v ei a I bulm i r e d f o r m e r T e x a s s t u d e n t - d u r n ig a n ai n u a i T e x a s I n d e p e n dc • n e e D a y ir e u n i o n . W o o d vs a i ti h U o ?«aui c o n s t r u e (i e n : a I s c h o o l for a i e t i o n bi d i n H o u * t o n w 111 b e 1t a k e n iii s i x t y d a vs to C o r p o r a l J a m e a M. C a r u t h e r s , a fo rm e r geology m a jo r a n d m e m ­ ber of the University track team , wi l l s o o n h e r e c e i v i n g t h e R a n g e r a n d T e x a n in K o r e a . His p a r e n t s , Mr. a n d Mr*. A l ­ fred FU C a r u t h e r s , r a m # i n t « su b s c r ib e to the pub licatio n * F r i ­ d a y a f t e r n o o n in r e s p o n s e t o t h e i r s o n * d esire to learn t h e latest a b o u t U T athletic event*. C o r p o r a l < a n i t h e r * i* n o w w i t h ,i m o t o r t r a n s p o r t d i v i s i o n o f t h « NI a n n e C o r p s a n d h a s s p e n t e i g h t M o n t h s in K o r e a . H e is e x p e c t e d t o r e t u r n h o m e in J u l y . A* T e c h n o l o g i it to L o c t u r o D r . T h o m a s K e r r , D . S. D e p a r t ­ ment of V g i i c u l t u i e f i b e r tech* m d o g - t, will d i sc u s* “ T h e S t r u c u r e o f C o t t o n F ' i b e r ” in a t e r i e * o f l e e tu i es, M a r c h 3-7. A p u b l i c l e c t u r e wi l l h e g i v e n M a r c h 5 a l 4 p m . in F ^ x p e r i m e n tal S cien ce Building 223. ORTY ACRES By R U S S K E R S T E N It *i* r e p o r t e d t h a t a p r o f a t th e U n i v e r s i t y o f O k l a h o m a ha* h t u p o n a reliable t e s t i n g device Taylor to Begin Series t h a t m e a s u r e s , o f al l t h i n g s , b o r e ­ dom. Altrusa Club Talks K n o w n a - t h e NS i g g l e M e t e r , o f fi- t h i s h a n d y l i t t l e g a d g e t w o r k by Ja p m i d real estate m ean s of wires s t r u n g a lo n g th* n a n ,. . . .anet, for the ach* of c h a u s . Every tim e a a lid .n v e s t m e ? o f f i c e r U r n ct s i n , w i l l l o t h e f i i - t -| c a k - s t u d e n t y a w n s , s t r e t c h e s , o r w i g - Of c r i n a - cl u s o f t a . k ,-punsoi c d by the A .trusa ( lob of Austin to . He will e d u c a t e w o m e n in (it from the spit I r t cav U n i v e r s i t y w io w i l l l e c t u r e a i e Dr. J a m e s ( H o l le y , vice p r e s i ­ d e n t o f t h e U n i v e r s i t y , H e n r y T. acce, and O w e n , p r o f e s s o r o f ii Dr F k ai M, *(, n n - p r o f e s s o r e f l aw a n d r e a . e s t a t e . g l e s . t h e n u p u . - e is i e c o l t i e d o n a graph, O v e r h e a r d on an A u s t i n b u s : D r i v e r a>ks li ttle b o y L o w old h e is, a n d h e a n s w e r s f o u r . D r i v e r tells lady, " S a y , I bet I k n o w w h a t h e ’l g r o w u p t o b e . ” She, e x p e c t a n t l y : “ R e a l l y ? ” . ‘ \ e a h , eith er a liar or a g ia n t." Sunday, March 2, 1952 TH E D AILY T EX A N Pag* 2 Froggies, C adets W in D e S D C r a t e H O G G o a l ^ rounce UH Final Conference Tilts - — ~ ~ llJ# Opener A“ In T“ Track lr (Aa A n o n a t e d Free s S ig n s W ith R e d s k in s W A S H IN G T O N . March I — ZP) — C harley Ju stice signed a oneye a r contract Saturd ay to play football fo r the W ashington Kod­ ak ins. Ju stic e , who wa* an allAm erica halfback while at the U n ive rsity of North Carolina, played in eight games of t h e W ashington pro team of I 'J50. I. I 4 7 w. I I 8 6 SM ! T e x a % A A* M B a y lo r A rk a n s a n R ic e b 7 7 8 8 5 4 4 Wish p c t. .917 .66 7 .417 .417 .417 .333 .33 3 «b 3 6 6 6 7 7 en (A« A sk e w , w h o ha* resigned. d ay w as " P r e s l e y A sk e w in F a y e tte v ille . Freee onds a fte r the final buzzer gave over Arkansas 46-44 victory T exas’ Longhorn* Sa tu rd a y night in Fa yette ville. Tyron Lewis, a sophomore guard for the P o rk ers, fired the ball from just across the center hne. The buzzer sounded while the ball was in the air. ters, but faltered in the fourth period, scoring ju st eight. The I/onghorns, starting smooth­ ly, eased their w ay to a 12-10 D o * )# * f F o rd , t first-quarter lead. The clubs Fries, t M o rg a n , f even in the second period KUHn. c 12 each— and the Hogs Po*r# )l, • The last-second basket climaxed L e w is’ big night of the season. In all, he dropped in nine field goals and a free throw to pace all scot ors with 19. Texas’ attack, which faltered , only in the fourth quarter, was sparked by g raduating senior Jim Dowies, who flipped in four bas­ kets and seven fro* shots for a Longhorn leading 15 points. The game was the Conference finale for both clubs. Texas ended the season in second place in Southw est C onference standings, boasting an 8-4 m a rk — the same S W C record that won last ye a r’s Steers a share of the champion­ ship. The R azorb ack*’ final ConI ference record was 4-8. i FINAL STANDINGS TCL Ten* I « mi( Hooper, Blest Pace Defending Champs Sa tu r«• JC Ju s t ic e Downs UT. 45-44 ee SC T C X finished the regular sched­ ule of their best basketball year in history Saturd ay night with a narrow 64-60 triumph over S M I, a t Dallas. A fa m ilia r twosome, George M c­ Leod and John A b rid g e , guided the Frogs to their l i t h victory in 12 Conference starts— the one loss being to the cellar-dwelling A r ­ kansas Razorbacks, Ethridge hit f o r 18 points, while M cLeod was dumping 16. The Toads now begin work in preparatfon for the forth-coming N ational Collegiate A th letic As­ sociation tourney in Kansas C ity this month. Their first opponents in the meet will be the Bib Seven champ— eiither Kansas or Kansas State. T C I ' was in the driver's seat a ll the way Saturd ay night, but a tenacious bunch of Mustangs gave them a good run throughout the contest. Fo u r of the five Frog st*rte* made last Texas appearance, along with a host of reserves. O nly B r y ­ an K ilp atrick w ill be back next year fo r the Fort W orth club. Bow ing out were M cLeod, E t h ­ ridge, Ted Reynolds, H arvey From me— all of whom have been mentioned on all-Confcrence selec­ tions this year. Number-one tub, Jam es Knox, w ill be gone, too. * H O U S T O N , M ar. I — iff ")— Don B in fo rd hit a jum p shot with five minutes rem aining and the Texas Aggies froze the ball the rest of the way for a 56-54 victo ry over Rice Satu rd ay night. The lead changed hands 13 times and was tied 13 times, but Binford , who scored 19 points, broke a 54-54 deadlock to give the Aggies their seventh v icto ry of the season. Don Lance led the Owls with 16. Rice last held the la id a t the -tart of the fourth quarter, 45-44, before W a lt Davis hit two straight banket* to send the Aggies ahead in the final period. Davis scored 16 points. A tight Aggies defense p erm it­ ted Rice only nine points in the fourth quarter, and M aurice Teague scored last for the Owls with six minutes remaining. Rice mi*«ed Ralph G raw und er most of the day. He drew fo u r fouls in the firs t 15 minutes, played only b rie fly in the second half, ami le ft the game early in the fourth quarter. * it T E X A S (44) *« ft 4 % H « a llftf. g V if a in o n 'c * Hiaek, g * • a * 0 IS 4 t e 4 e 4 a a tp af 2 7 • I • 4 a I % 9 0 I e e s * 2 I I q u arter, 36-36. t • I Texas went into a stall during I* 44 IS 17 the last few minutes, try in g to T o ts !* A A K A N S A S (4 *1 ft p ro tect a one-point lead. The t* pf «• a 0 a 4 J^ rn hn rr. f Longhorn "fre e z e ” worked well Fmith, x 4 2 I f a • 0 e until Lew is tossed in his after- A d a m *, f S 4 7 I E lk in * , f the-buzzer goal. I * 2 K # a rn * . e 2 I 4 • 4 In addition to Dowies and Klein, S a g * lr . g I 2 9 19 g a third senior— Viram onte*— made 17 44 his fin a l appearance for Texas. T » * a l* IS ie S r o r * b r p a rio d * The Longhorns had 19 fouls * — 44 ll It Tout ll 9— 4» called against them, A rkansas 17. A r k a r ,* * * 12 14 IO Tree t h r o w * m l* *# d — Dowfaa t . K !# (n , S a tu rd a y ’s game ended the ArV lrm m o n t# *, K U In*. K aatrn *, S c a lin g S. S a g # !? 2. I^ rw l*. , ... C O L L E G E S T A T IO N , March I — OP)— Texas A A M opened the track season S a tu rd a y with a smashing 115-21 victory over the U n ive rsity of Houston. The A g ­ gies won or tied fo r 15 of 16 first places. Houston managed to snag a first and second in the 100-yard dash as Sam m y M c W h irte r and L a r r y M cBrid e came in one, two to g ar­ ner eight of the C ougar’* point*. Houston’s R o b ert f arisen tied the Aggies’ M a rv in Sw ink at 5-10 in the high jum p and gave the Cougars fo u r point* for another share in firs t place honor®.. Aggie star W a lt D avis did not jump. High point man for the meet was Aggie B ill B l* s a®, he took first in the 220, low hurdle.*, third in the IOO arid ran as a member of the winning sp rin t relay team for 13 ba point.* Harrow H ooper, ti e. Cadets' g i­ ant weight star, took two first i places in his fa vo rite event®. He won the shot w .th a heave of 522 K and the discus with a toss of I 56-5 . Track Picture Bright As First Meet Looms S a tu rd ay nights’ nip-and-tuck a ffa ir saw the score tied nine times, and had the I/onghorns in By A L W A R D man sp rinter, bolsters the dash field, as do Ralph Person and An early sounding on Texas' Jim B ro w n h ill, (lib Dawson, who the lead at the h alf by a 24-22 track arid field hopes for 1952 in credited with tremendous high count. . w ill b t taken F r id a y when Coach school m ark* in the IOO and broad ( aptain Don hlo ni, snottier Littlefie ld takes a squad jump, has indicated that, be w ill thinclads to Laredo join the squad Monday and cornLonghorn playing his last game, 0 f Romc oq The U n iv e rs ity swimming team scored 13 points on six baskets j Qr Border O lym pics Fiesta, pete in the Laredo meet. H e is its and a ch a n ty toss to rank next universities and 14 col- variously credited with a 9-7 hun- experienced split success .to Dowies rn the Texas scoring ^ m tJ|# ^ , n. dred , nd , 24-foot broad ju m p — two-meet week and--topping S M U | column. eluded are C onference champ while in high school. Frid ay 44-40, then * ny to a rrv........... strong, well-balanced Oklahoma The free-throw line, Lhowever, AAM , SM U , Oklahom a AAM, A ll in all, it shapes up as one proved the d ifferen ce in the hardteam Satu rd ay, 49-35. Oklahom a, T O U , A biline Uhris- of the finest batch of dashmen in fought battle. The Steers sank just The v icto ry o ver S M U wha er.tian, East Texas S ta te, Texas the U n iv e rs ity ’s history. IO, while missing eight. Fo r A r ­ ~ , , v, »> o , „,« i _ couraging to S te e r title hopes in kansas, it was a d iffe re n t story— R I T I K . Jro u n r f fleet L « tU rm a n BiI1 M ilburn a p p e a r * , ^ S M U thls ve a r has developed . ,h ... r.f *a ker.* Bolstered by a group of fleet to ^ the Longhorns only serious the Porkers hit on 13, missing just sophomores, the lo n g h o rn s ap- early th rea t in the weights. He five times. in the school’s history. Team su­ eon, pear on paper to have more depth ^ag keen tossing the shot pass 46 The Longhorns offered a periority w ill be decided more and balance than last year, when yeet j n pra c ticc and is also adept *, r definitely d u rin g the C o n firene# th ey copped second-place in the discus. Jo in in g him in meet which begins March 20 at C onference meet, though almost the shot jg j T Seahoim. Translapped in point totals by the ger M onrj g L e v y adds discus and College Station. In the m eet w ith Oklahoma at strong Aggie team. jave lin atrength. Norman, 'Texas' 4 10-yard Tw o of the fastest young sprint­ Don K le in and Jim Dowies geom team swept to a new pool record ers in the nation assure the Long ­ sure pomt-winners in the ja v e lin . * * the q u artet o f Urn M angantll , horns of good showings in the Jo e Carson and Jim C a rlto n W y n a n t W ilso n . Roger Tolar, and ~ „ ,, . ... short events and relays. T h e y are I Dorm G-H ra m , through with c h a r | „ Thom „ nnd Sm ith( join regu lars M arvin G ustafson B ill Hoff sped the distance in and Bob Eachenburg to make the g-,4 1 .5 . an overtime Class B victo ry over who rocketed to national acclaim miie-relay foursome, which should T he Lon g h orn s’ 300-yard medA lb * Club F r id a y night, 29-28. as freshmen last year. surpas* the clockings of last y e a r ’s jey re iftV team of M ke S h irle y, Phi Delta T heta combined a S m ith ’s tremendous start car- j t Buddy H art, and I.ou M anganilio free scoring offense with a tig h t, n#d him to n a r r o w victories over ‘ . Nails show* turned another first by xp.a-bing zone defense, and the result was Thom as in the IOO, w hile Thom as’ r a n ,r c > W illi* UT Tankers Down SMU, Lose to OU Texan Si>or-.» Editae goodluck. to Sergeant Nun loon of Vermont Rifleman, US. Infantry -ancf 54years o/cfhis. next birthday/ P r e p C a g e P la y T o O p e n T h u rsd a y illv llliin 111 vl»t* w iu ic A It U IIIO e ! _ a I rf » I . i ' S IM S rn the annual Je x a s Interscholastic school student*.’’ League high school boy's basket-1 D u rin g the thref-day to u rn a­ ball tournam ent— to begin T hurs­ ment, eight game* w ill be played day at 8:45 a.m. in G reg o ry Gym d aily, beginning at 8:45 a.m. — have been decided by bi-district O th er games w ill be at 10:10 and and regional finals over the week 11:30 a m.; and 1:45, 3:10, 4:35, end. 7:15, and 8 :40 p m. S a tu rd a y '* fin al rounds w ill ba Representing Class 4A in the state meet w ill he Borger, P o ly broadcast over a statew ide 35 toe second ha,f. A t one point, the Reds led 7 to 6 hut a 56-vard scoring da«h by Q u a rte r­ back Benton M usslew hite of the B lu e* broke the game wide o p e n , sent h i team ahead and from that point on, the Blues led. OFFICIAL SAFETY INSPECTION STATION W # Know Y o u r Fort! B e st" SW EA RIN G EN A R M ST R O N G Ut St Colorado Pb. 83457 Campus Guild suffered no pain, he tied the Olym pic record in t h e . l.nu:_hJ " _ ‘ * n ‘° r ;_yea/ x wh,l(' . Soo.n * r . hoard a rtlsU took taken third-place in the 1951 MCOnd and th ird , no strain in breezing past The- lOO-metur with a 10.3 clocking. O tis B u d d ’*early mile Other Texas places w ere: T o la i In n * Co-op, 34-18, Jo h n Shell of \ C a rl Mayes, tw o-year le tte r- meet. showings (4:30 S a tu rd a y ) make ( a«Cond in the 50-yard d a s h ); Campus Guild scored 14 points, him a contender in the event. Bo ff (third in the *5le and «per-i*l *<.ft cushion tread rubber beef. CLEANING COM PANY MONDAY give the! m*kn» you walk with a bri«k young »tpp It gne* you (he added corofisrt of (he Jarman (> Hue in Uni ay Fir Jarman * fneodfcoeea of fit.** V a r s it y C o u rts 2 :9 0 O a t* * v* p .m . S I. Jo h n Saunders v* F i * h * r B a n d e r a v * . IC I Ii H a n rs tta v# l*ruatt Harm v» G FEATURING: 3:30 n m vs. A S m it h S t . John S p r in g e r 4 30 p m Ba ii drtsr* a Springs S T U D IN T F IN IS H S E R V IC E Oat#* A Him * I l l u d w o r th v» G r r h a r d t l 'u i l # n VS. B r # w # r F ir .h m a n C o u r t * 2 3300 rn rn M « C » m p h # !l v* f unkna ii f l o w # * v * . H a y < i* n W h it# \ *. W ii'l# r 3 30 p m. I a iit# r m # in v* T a tu m Your antira bundt* washed sterile clean, com pletely dried [DAvCYr slO r ^ *— O K f " end nettly folded. Towels, sheets and pillow cases are ironed. ell for the economical price of S H IR T S finished, eeeh, additional P A N T S finished, tech, additional ............. ... ........... 9c lb. V _ xStHrOrE u IiuS TJOLR E> I V /yX 20c ........... W h it t in g t o n 2348 Guadalupe — On Hi# Drag bond pays $66 b b . And so on For your security, and your cm atry i too, L 9 :1 5 V illa r r e a l v * before Th ii mean* that tfie bond you bojgr,; tor %. h " } £jn return you not yurt S 2 j — but aa much ss $33 i ” p .m . Sig m a Alpha Mu vs. Theta A ir R O I C vs. M a n n e rs Class B Summer Job Opportunities Specs vs. Green Dragons You can learn "S p e e d w ritin g ," 8 :3 0 p .m . the rn o d e r n, nationally-known shorthand in only six weeks, at F iji* vs. G ully Diggers Durham's Business College, here in Austin. V isit or w rite D u rh am ’* at 600A I^ v a c a S tre e t — or telephone 8-3446 for fu ll inform ation. U nited States Defenie Bond for them — trxiiv? now titty There s a quick, easy way for you to get a good-paying job. p .m . Delta Tau Delta vs. Kappa Sigma Thelem e Co-op vs. T L O K B S I vs. Newman Club 9 :1 5 F f u r W o rn p .m . Phi Gamma Delta vs. Alpha Tau Omega Blom quist Swedes vs. PT 'n (.’am p u l Guild vs. Be ta Alpha Psi TYPEWRITER SPECI ALI STS Can Do the Job Better We Pick U p and Deli V C T Phone 8 -4 3 6 0 Don’t Forget th# • IF SHOPPING DOW NTO W N SUBSTATION AT 21 *t A N D WICHITA (Cesh-cerry discount! given en above prices) I n A u s t in 't it CITY-WIDE PICK-UP A N D DELIVERY SERVICE The V S. G a m y m eat dot* not p a y for this mdtori, ting Tho I r e t s u r \ D ep a rtm en t th a n k a, fo r th e ir p n tn o n e donation, the A d ie r t m n g C o n n e d end The Daily Texan S R T iM ? K M IBth et Lavaca—>21it et W ichita Phone 6-3566 610 C O N G R E S S AVE. 0 Sunday, March 2, 1952 I led by Billy Qui nn, T J o ne s and j Bob Raley, r allied to tally thrice A pass-happy Whi t e t e am s t r uc k in IO mi n ut es a n d k n o t t e d the f o r f o ur t o u c hd o wn s t h r o u g h the c o u n t mi dwa y in t he final stanza, a i r lanes in Memori al S t a di um I t r em a i n e d f o r t he i nj u r ed Gib S a t u r d a y a f t e r n o o n b u t such dazz- j Dawson to set t l e the issue. Res­ ing aerial e f f o r t s proved fut i l e t r ic t e d f r o m full-scale action be­ s s a sc r a pp in g O r a n g e c r e w cause of a h an d i n j u r y , Dawson s n a t ch e d a 27-26 victor y in t he handl ed e x t r a p oi nt duties f or L o n g h o r n s ’, final grid a p p e a r a n c e bo t h teams. His f inal conversion of t he spring. a t t e m p t was successful and t he Whi te Q u a r t e r b a c k Bun ny An- j O r a n g e had a o ne- poi nt t r iumph. drew* flashed the a cc u r ac y of a Th e Whi te s t r u c k ea r l y and fast. la t t e r- da y Daniel Boone as he hit Li ne ba c k e r J i m m y Rosser stole t he b ul l ’s eye with IO of his 13 J o n e s ’ pass over t h e middle and ov er he ad shots f o r 141 yar ds a n d r e t u r n e d to t he O r a n g e 24. Antwo scores. T h e j u n i o r s q u a d m a n dr ews hit Massey f o r 18 and conwas given able assistance by fresh- nec t e d with S t ol ha n d sk e two plays ma n Glen Dyer, who came o u t of l a t e r f o r t he score. Dawson cont he bull-pen in t he thi r d period to ver te d and t h e Wh i t e led, 7-0, with c o n n e ct on all five of his a t t e m p t s 5 :40 gone. f o r 104 y a r ds a n d two mo r e t o u c h ­ Mixing passes to Gilmer Spring downs. a n d Bill Geor ges with a s t r ong This passing magic coupled with r u n n i n g at t a c k, J o n e s engi nee r e d the br illi ant receiving of En ds a 75-yard O r a n g e dr ive which Ca r l to n Massev and Tom Stol- st r uc k p a y di r t with 2:30 remainhands ke to give t he Whi te an a p- ; jn g jn the f irs t period. Quinn set pa r e n t l y s a f e 26-6 lead deep in t he s t a ge with a 13-yard s campe r the third period. Bu t the O r a ng e , a r ou nd l e f t an d to the Whi te 6. i T h r e e plays n e t t e d 4 yards an d then J o n e s slipped into the end 1952 SCHEDULE InSe pt . 2 0 — I .SIJ ut B a t o n R o u g e ( n i g h t ) zone on f o u r t h down. Hub Se pt . 27— N o r t h C a r o l i n a a t C h a p e l Hill g r a h a m ' s kick mis fir ed and the O r t . 4— N o t r e I ) «me at Alantin ; O r a n g e still trai led. O r t . I I — O k l a h o m a a t Dal l as Oc t . I *— A r k a n s a s a t Ana t m 1 A n d r e ws a n d St o l h and s k e comOc t . 2 5 — Ri ce a t H o u s t o n ; bined on a 15- year p a y o f f pitch N o v . I — S M U a t Au s t i n N o v . *— B a y l o r a t W au<> j 2 :00 deep in t h e second period to Nov. 1 5 - T C C a t F o r t W o r t h • climax a 10-play, 74-yard Whi te No v 2 7 — T e x a s AAM at A u s t i n Texan Sparta S t a f f BILLY Q U IN N Burke Two Strokes Back in 3rd Round D y e r f ir e d a 10-yard st r i ke t o Massey in t h e end zone to c o n ­ clude a 67- yar d su r ge in 6 plays. T he n ca me the O r a n g e r e j u ­ vena t i on. J o n e s tallied first, goi ng t he f inal t w o ya r ds of a 50- yar d drive with two m i nu t e s left in t he thir d. A weir d, u n d e r h a n d pass f r o m Raley to Gi l mer S pr i n g a c co u n t e d f o r 26 y ar d s a n d the n e x t O r a n g e score. T O M ST O LH A N D SK E Ed Kelley launched the final, sc or i ng t h r u s t , s pr int i ng 37 y ar d s with a p u n t to the Wtiite 29. Dick W aco to Host 4-Team Wi ld i n g pushed the ball t o t he IO Mad t h e n sn ar e d a toss f r o m Quinn JC Tourney M onday on t he I. Raley t he n p u n ch e d t he WA CO , March I . — (ZP)— The middl e f o r the to u c hd own and D aw s o n ’s toe added t h e e x t r a s t a t e j u n i o r college basketball point to provide the ma r g i n of t o u r n a m e n t will open her e Mon­ victory. day n i g h t with Lon Mor ri s of Jacksonvil le me et i ng Howar d O rang* (2 7 ) W hit* (26) ID F i r st Downs IS) C o u n t y J u n i o r College of Big 150 N e t Yards R us hi ng 178 149 Y a r d s Ga i n e d P a s s i n g 274 S p ri ng in the first game. IS) Passes Atte mp te d 21 D i r ec tor P e t e J on e s a nnou nc ed H Passes Completed 17 P a s s e s I n t e r c e p t e d by 6 t h a t Allen Aca demy of Br yan will 0 O p p o n e n t s ’ Fumbles Recovered 0 m e e t So u t h Texas J u n i o r College 1 f o r .29 Punts I f o r 45 85 Yards Lost Penalties 114 of H o u s t o n in the second game. drive. Dawson’s e x t ra point att e m p t was wide, a n d t h e Whi te held a seven-point a d v a n t a g e , D y e r took over t he con t rol s of t h e Wh i t e machine with t he opening of the second h al f a n d p r ompt Iv eng i nee r e d a 62- yar d scoring m a r c h , climaxed by his 16-yard toss to Massey. Dawson con ve r ted j a n d t he White led, 20-6, with five m i n u t e s gone. The White moved still f a r t h e r ) a h e a d f ou r mi n u t es l a t e r when Popular Little Viramontes Hangs Up UT Cage Uniform By BOB HALFORD T axon S parta Staff When t he L o n gh o r ns m e t A r ­ kans as in f a r a w a y F ayet tevi ll e S a t u r d a y night, it m a rk ed the end of the col legi ate c a r e e r o f one of the mo s t pop ul a r ca ger s ever to w e a r Un i v er si t y of T ex as colors. Little J i m m y Vi r amo n t e s , who wo n his way i nt o t h e h e a r t s of T ex as b as ket b a l l f an s as an ineli­ gible in 1948, played is last g am e mor e t h a n 600 miles f r o m G r e gor y Gym wher e he had gai ned his p op ­ ul ari t y. Although nevei a high scorer, and m a n y time* r o t even a s t a r t e r , V i r am o n t e s n ever took G re go r y Gym c o u r t t h a t he was n ot gr e e t ed by the cheer* of hi* m a n y f o l ­ lowers. c a me to the Univer sit y in ?949 a f t e r a successful y ea r pl a yi ng as a f r e s h ma n with New Mexico A&M of the B o r d e r Conf rence. Of the five s t a r t e r s f r o m t h a t f re s hm a n t e a m, t h re e ar e now regulai s on the Ne w Mexico Aggie te am c u r r e n t l y involved in a hot bat tl e for the Bo r der Co n fe r en ce cha mpionship. J i m m y ’s decision was not done on the s pur of the mome nt . He pl a nned to e n t e r Te xa s when he was dischar ged f r o m the N av y the y ea r before, h u t n ee di ng a little e x t r a school work, he chose to st a y in his home town of Las Cr u c e s and g o t to school t he re . He had first become i nt e r est e d in Tex a s while in the Navy. As a hi gh -s c o ri r g f o r w ar d on the We st J IM M Y V IR A M O N T E S Coast service champions, V i r a ­ mon t e s had d r aw n the at t e n t i on of UT-e x Ferrell Kline. Kline spe nt long hour s ext olling the vir tues of the school an d of S t e e r ba s ke t ­ ball m e n t o r J a ck Gray. A t t h a t t ime— 1947— the Long­ ho r ns had j u s t expe r i enc ed one of Cheir hest seasons in history, los­ ing only t h r ee g a m e s all year, and those by only a point apiece. Thre e of the s t a n d o u t s on t h a t team were Al Madsen, S l a t e r Martin, and Roy Cox, none of whom str et ched a* high a* six feet. This had no small p ar t in the 5-7 V i r a m o n t e s ’ decision to play hi* college basketball f o r the I niversity. Since childhood, one of J i m m y ’* f ir s t loves has been baxketbay. H p played his first g am e in 1938 as a m e m b e r of the Holy Cr oss Ca t h- ; olic e n t r y in the c o u n t y t o u r n a - 1 merit. In t h a t first g a m e , J i m m y — i who wa.* not much bigge r t ha n the j b a l l — scored six points, a n d in sub- • s e q u e n t games helped the Holy j Cr oss five to the t o u r n e y title. P l a y in g high school f o r Las (’l u ­ ces, J i m m y made all-stat e as a sophomor e. Whe n \ ' i r a iii on tes final ly a r ­ rived un the F o rt y Acres, lie be­ c a m e a me mb er of o ne of the f i n es t gr oups of p ot e n t i a l Long­ h o r n cager s ever to g r a c e the UT ca mpu s. Two of the classiest j u n ­ ior college players in the- n at i on — J o e P al a f ox and Br y an Miller— j oi ne d J immy to give Long ho r n s u p p o r t e r s g r e a t hopes f o r the f u ­ t ur e. U n f o r t u n a t el y , P a l a f o x and .Mil­ ler n eve r got to play a g a m e for the Longhorns, falling b ef or e the scholastic burdie. F or c ed to play with a much glower t e a m , Vi r a­ m o n te s was never as use f ul as w’as hoped in hi* f irs t var si t y se a­ son. Nevert heless he won his let­ t e r a n d was i n s t ru me n t a l in help­ ing the Steers to a t hr ee - wa y s h a l e of the C o n f e r e n ce title. This yea r Ji mmy ha* been a r e g u l a r most of the season. Against LSC ear ly in the year , he scored 13 points, although usually be scored only four or five. His t r ue w o r t h is shown in t he assist col­ umn w h e r e be i mor e t ha n double his neaic.-t t e a m m a t e . fags 3 Bolt Takes Lead Ellis Holds Lead At Baton Rouge In Golf Tryouts Orange Clips White, 27-26, W ith Surge in Second Half B r SAM BLAIR T H E D A IL Y T E X A N By MURRAY FORSVALL , fir st day 75 for a 149 total. Jay Wesley Ellis held a one-stroke j Garth is still in second place with lead over Lee P i n k st o n a f t e r Fri- I 77-78— 155. The l ast t wo r ounds, Monday B A TO N ROUGE, La., Ma rc h I. d a y ’s second r o u n d of University — (/I1) — T e m p e r a m e n t a l T o m m y golf te am t r y o u t s as the Austin I a n d T ue s d a y, will be played a t Bolt fired clubs an d a n g r y words Co unt ry Club. Bot h shot three-) j t he Co un t r y Club inst ead o f the Au st i n Municipal as originally over - par 7 3 ’s. and b el ow- pa r golf to t a k e a twoPinkston over took Ellis on the planned. str oke lead in the $10, 000 Ba t on f irs t nine of F r i d a y ’s r o un d but) Ellis, Pi nkst on, Blackm ar, and Rouge Open T o u r n a m e n t ber e Ellis regained the lead with a one- Mo nc r i e f will represent th e U ni­ S at u r d ay . His third r o u n d total u nd er -p ar 34 on t he incoming versit y in t he Border O lym pics nine. Ellis’ two- rou nd total is 70- n e x t week end. T h ereafter the was 208. 73— 143. Pi nkst on h a s 71-73— f i r s t f o u r men in t h e fin a l qualiJa ck Burke, w i nner o f t h e San 144. i f yi ng xviii play as a team until A n t o n io and Houston Opens, shot A brisk wind s e n t most qualify- a f t e r t he f i r s t C onference match even p a r in third r ou n d p la y to I ing scores higher t h a n the first- when challenge m a t c h es w ill be r em a i n second with 210. day effort s. Only f o u r var si t y held a m o n g the six m e m b e r s o f Bob Dud en , P or t l an d, Ore., shot con t e s t a n ts b et t er ed th e i r firstt he te am. a sensati onal f o u r - u n d e r - p a r 68 to ! r ound scores. Re ma i ni ng var sit y c o n t e s t a n t s couple with a 145 for a 213, and Lef t - handed F re d Bl ac kmar al­ an d t h e i r scores a r e : W alter G u n ­ moved into third spot. so had a 73 f or the day and moved ma n 77-77— 154, P et e W haley 77Shelley Mayfield. C e d a r h u r s t , into third place in the standings. 81— 158, Dick F o r d 82-80— 162, N.Y., and Felice Torza, St. Charl es, J oe Bob Golden, third place P r e st on Moore 80-82— 162, H ar­ 111., sma shed par to finish the Th ur s d ay, dr opped to fift h place old S a n d e r s 82-83— 165, Murray r ound in a tie for f ou r t h position while Bob Moncrief took over Forsvall 87-80— 167, and J oe with 214. f ourt h. Bl ac kmar now has 75- Brock 87-96— 183. Bolt fired a 37- 34— 71 today. 73— 148, Moncrief 75-74— 149, • O t h e r f r e s h m a n a s p i r a n t s and Going into third r oun d play, he and Golden 73-77— 150. Barnard; t h e i r acorea a r e : J o h n J u v e n a l held a one- str oke a d v a n t a g e over Riviere is in the sixth position 78- 79— 157, Bobby D ew ar 78B ur ke in the 72-hole a f f a i r which with 74-78— 152. 7 9 - 1 5 7 , Dick Oden 80-79— 159, ends S un day on the rolling 6,411Roane P u e t t e increased his D a t us S h a r p 80-88— 168, Dan yar d Baton Rouge C o u n t r y Club lead in the f re sh ma n field to six Davis 83-82— 165, a n d S tew art course. strokes with a 74 to 90 with his Wa llace 86-84— 170. — Kruger's ON TUE DRAG ort so sure thot Hits is the finest precision fountain pen at eny price under JIO, that we give you a . . . 10- DAY M O N E Y - B A C K GUARANTEE * BRING IN YOUR FOUNTAIN PEN ANYTIME FOR A FREE CLEANING ON OUR NEW MACHINE C it ... 2 S’, i .7 FILL YOUR PEN FREE ANYTIME IT NEEDS IT PARKER NO MONEY DOW N m * §*' * L O M O NEY D O W N 50c W **kly I. Soper smooth O d o mum point . . . resilient, durable, WEEKLY I VVednesday 4 . 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Nam* Engraved— Frat 50 V-*4— fsA S W KUGERS S ' (ini S. . v...: ,. .VV.. $1 TRADE-IN On Any Old Foun­ tain Pen Regard­ less of Condition (This offer g o o d for one w eek on ly I Sunday. March 2, 1952 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Papa 4 — B y B ib lo s Little M a n o n tKo C a m p u s W J J .en One r e m a r k a b ly honest, fa ir-m inde d, a n d s t r a i g h t f o r w a r d m a n stepped out of t h e s t u d e n t p r e s i d e n t ’s c h a i r T h u r s d a y n i g h t a n d a n o t h e r s t e p p e d in. W h e t h e r y o u like y o u r p o l i t i c i a n s q u i e t and re tir in g as W ales M adden and Wil­ so n F o r e m a n a r e , o r n o i s y , v i t u p e r a t i v e , and hell-raising, as some would have them, you c a n n o t find fa ult w ith the in­ t e g r i t y a n d i d e al s o f t h i s p a i r . Me n of F o r e m a n a n d M a d d e n ’s c a l i b e r m a y “ lack t h e d r i v e t h e p r e s i d e n t ’s j o b t a k e s ” o r m a y “ lack t h e g u t s t o s t a n d u p a n d hol ler f o r s t u d e n t r i g h t s , ” a s c r i t i c s have c h a n t e d since th e da y th ey took o f­ fice a s p r e s i d e n t a n d v i c e - p r e s i d e n t . P o s ­ sibly, t h e i r s u b t l e a n d u n s p e c t a c u l a r a c ­ c o m p l i s h m e n t s h a v e e s c a p e d t h e not ice of t h o s e w h o c rit ic iz e. A t ' a n y rate, they have sincerely be­ lieved t h a t s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t is b e s t which go v e rn s fa i r e s t t o the m a j o r i t y , a n d t h e y ’ve c o n s c i e n t i o u s l y w o r k e d f or b e t t e r g o v e r n m e n t w i t h a m i n i m u m of f a n f a r e . O f t e n , s uc h w o r k is s l o w ; occa- (f^eal orem an an s i o n a ll y , s u c h w o r k d o e s n ’t p r o d u c e r e ­ s u l ts . C ritic or avid su p p o r te r , you m u s t a d ­ m i t t h a t i t is p l e a s a n t to look in h i g h p l a ce s a n d f i n d t w o m e n w h o pla ce s e r ­ vice t o t h e U n i v e r s i t y a b o v e i n f l a t i o n o f p e r s o n a l e go. P a r t, m a The proposal of an in ad e q u a te p a r k in g t i c k e t bill in t h e S t u d e n t A s s e m b l y p o i n t s u p t h e o b v i o u s ne ed f o r s o m e s y s t e m w h e r e b y t i c k e t s c an be r e d e e m e d . I t is f u r t h e r questionable w h e th e r stu d e n ts s h o u l d be s u b j e c t e d t o d i s c i p l i n a r y a c t i o n b e c a u s e o f p a r k i n g v i o l a t io n s. All in all, it is e v i d e n t t h a t s t u d e n t p a r k i n g p r o b l e m s ne ed a t h o r o u g h a i r i n g in t h e A s s e m b l y , l f t h e p r e s e n t s e t o f r u l e s is t h e f a i r e s t s y s t e m p o s s i b l e — fine. B ut if s t u d e n t s a r e g e t t i n g u n j u s t t r e a t ­ m e n t , t h o s e f a c t s s ho u l d be b r o u g h t t o the a tte n tio n of a d m in is tr a tiv e a u t h o r i ­ ties. In ael ec t i n f r t h e i r p r e s i d e n ­ t ia l c a n d i d a t e , v o t e r s w a n t a n eyeopener, not mere eyewash. Po li ticians ha ve long been a w a r e of this public s e n t im e n t, h u t have c o n v en ien tly ignored it. I n t h e m o s t r e c e n t G a l l u p Pol l , v o t e r s a g a i n e x p r e s s e d their overw helming discontent w i t h t h e p r e s e n t s y s t e m of choosing presidential party nominees. Seven o u t of ten voter* pol l e d o v e r t h e n a t i o n sa i d t h e y f a v o r e d a law s e t t i n g up national primaries to pi ck party candidates for president a n d vi ce p r e s i d e n t . M o r e t h a n half felt they do not have e n o u g h t o s a y in c h o o s i n g t h e m e n w h o will a p p e a r o n t h e N o v e m be r ballots. O bvi ousl y, v o t e r s a r e fed up with the p a r t y c a u c u s sys­ tem of picking candidates. T h e y ’ll no l o n g e r he s a t i s f i e d wi t h t a k i n g a c o u p l e o f h a n d me-down pr esi den ti al c a n d i ­ da tes tossed at t h e m by the bi g shot s. De s p i t e “ G o d , h o m e , m o ­ t h e r , a n d c o u n t r y ’’ s e n t i m e n t t o t he c o n t r a r y , American pol i t i cs lins s e l d o m r e f l e c t e d t he pe ople 's choice. H i s t o r i a n C h a r l e s H e a r d wr'>t,. t h a t “ t h e I t ’s t h e b i r t h d a y o f the; S t a t e o f T e x a s , p a r d n e r , a n d w e be li e ve i t still h a s t h e g r e a t e s t n a tu ra l resources, the p re ttie st g a l s , arid t h e b e s t d a r n e d u n i v e r s i t y s o u t h o f H u d s o n Bay. O M e m o t o 'I'. S. P a i n t e r : t h e S t u d e n t Assembly T h u rsd ay night unanimously passed a resolution u rg in g construction of a F a cu lty Club on the c a m p u s — and soon, a t t h a t . Di tt o. l e g i s l a t u r e . By I R I 8, e i g h t e e n P o l i t i c a l p a r t i e s d i d n ’t d e ­ velop until a f t e r W a s h i n g t o n ' s second term. When a succes­ s o r h a d t o Ire c h o s e n , s t a t e and national party leaders m et arni p i c k e d t h e i r r oan. T h e p r e c e n d e n t has been p e r p e ­ t u a t e d , with some d i f f e r e n c e s in t h e m a n i p u l a t i o n s . A n d r e w J a c k s o n tried to p u t a c r i m p in t h e p o l i t i c i a n ' s s t y l e. In 1 8 2 4 , t h e p a r t y l e a d ­ e r s t u r n e d h i m d o w n f o r p r e id e n t ; f o u r y e a r s la te r, by g o ­ i n g t o t h e p e o p l e , he w a in. Ol d H i c k o r y w a s so m a d a t t h e b o y s in t h e h a c k r o o m t h a t he u r g e d C o n g r ess, in e i g h t a n ­ nual messages, to set up direct p r i m a r i e s t o l et t h e p e o p l e pi ck t h e i r c a n d i d a t e s . Congress tu rn ed him down eight times. T h e y ’ve since t u r n e d down r e q u e s t s of ninny presidents, including Theodore R o o s e v e l t a n d W o o d r o w W il­ s on . T h e n , in 1 0 0 3 , R o b e r t LaFollette, twice d efeated for governor of Wisconsin by bossed state conventions, go t a p r i m a r y law t h r o u g h th e < a l i f o r n i a , Ohi o, a n d O r e g o n r e q u i r e t h e d e l e g a t e * t o he pledged to a certain candi­ date. The p r i m a r i e s o f these six­ teen states are a conglom era­ tion of widely d i f f e r e n t o r ­ g a n iz at io n s, aims, and de g r e e s o f l e g a l arid m o r a l t i e s on t h e d e l e g a t e s c h o s e n t o t he national convention. t e x a n I he Da i l y t e x a n , a s t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r of t h e U n i v e r s i t y of t e x a s , la p u b l i s h e d i n A u s t i n e v e r y m u r n u * e x c e p t M o n d a y s ni t S a t u r d a y . S e p t e m b e r t o J u n e , a n d e x c e p t l u r i n g h n l i d a v a n d e x a m i n a t i o n p e r i od* , s u d b i - w e e k l y d u r i n g t h e s u m m e r s e s s i o n , u n d e r t h e t i t l e of Che S u m m e r T e x a n o n T u e s d a y a n d F r i d a y bv l e i s * S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n s . i n c N e w s c o n t r i b u t i o n s will be a c c e p t e d by t e l e p h o n e < 2 - 3 4 7 3 ) or a t t h e e d i t o r i a l of f i ce J.Lf I or a t t h e N e w t l a b o r a t o r y . J.II. 102 Inquiries c o n c e r n i n g d e l i v e r y a n n a d v e r t i s i n g s h o u l d be m a d e in ITI I 0 S ( 2 - 2 4 7 3 ) . O p i n i o n s ut t h e t e x a n e r e not n e c e s s a r i l y ' b o a s of r h# A d m i n i s t r a *i on a r o t h e r U n i v e r s i t y of f i ci al s E n t e r e d aa a a c o n d - c l a a s m a t t e r O c t o b e r IB 11* 4 S a t t h e P o e t O f f i c e a t A u s t i n . T e x a s u n d e r be Act of M a r c h 8. I 8 7k ASSOCIATED PRESS W U U SERVICE T h # A s s o c U.leO P r e s s is e l u s i v e l y e n t i t l e d t o t h e u s e f o r r e p u b l i c a t i o n of all n e w t d i s p a t c h e s c r e d i t e d t o It or not o t h e r w i s e c r e d i t e d i n t h i s n e w # p a p e r , a n d l ocal i t e m s of s p o n t a n e o u s o r i g i n p u b l i s h e d h e r e i n R i g h t s of publication of a n o t h e r m a t t e r herein also r es erv ed R e p r e s e n t e d f or N s t i o n a i A d v e r t i s i n g by N a t i o n a l A d v e r t i s i n g S e r v i c e I nc. C o l l e g e P u b l i s h e r s R e p r e s e n t a t i v e Madison Ave Ness Y o r k . C h i c a g o —- b o s t o n — Ixia A n g e i e a — n a n F r a n c i s c o 4— N. Y. .t MEMBER Associated Collegiate P r e s t All-American Pacemake* S U B S C R I P T I O N H A TEN M ini m um Subscription ( b r e e Months Deli vered Ma i l e d In A u s t i n Ma i l e d o i l o f t o w n S .75 p e r mo . *1.00 per mo S 76 p e r m o PERMANENT STAFF E d i t o r - i n - C h i e f ........................................ RUSS K E R S T E N Managing Editor ... B R A D B Y E R S Editorial A s si st an t M i l d r e d Kit- el N e w s E d i t o r ... Jo Ann Dickers n Society E d it o r .................. ... .... B e t t \ S e g a l S p o r t s E d i t o r ........... .......... .................. Al W a r d Assistant S ports Editor Orland Sims A m u s e m e n t * E d i t o r ....... Kenneth Gompertz D a y E d i t o r s ...................... bl o l ox, J o h n n i e H u m a n , D o r o t h y Camp be ll, A n n e C h a m b e r s , Jo e l K ir kp a t irk N i g h t E d i t o r * ...... Barbara Rubenstcin, Robert Kenny, B o b b y N e w lin, J i m I o e k r u r n ST A FF FOR THIS b o y s ’ l i ne w h e n y o u r a i s e ail t h i s Tom Connelly T o d a y is no d a y f o r m o d e s t y . P o s t o n t o w n m e e t i n g , so c e l e ­ b r a t e d in h i s t o r y f o r its d e ­ m o c r a c y , fell i n t o t h e h a n d s of a cau c u s long be fo re the D ecl ar ati on of I n d e p e n d e n c e . " T h e *D a ^ H , B irin a rjCim e Eyeopener, Not 'Eyewash' In National Primaries? B y F L O COX * I I fiw /j/W J u f/im w i the e r r a n ts A c u r r e n t highly-publicized movie of­ fers an illustration of why m an y “ stu ­ p e n do u s , colossal, m a g n i f i c e n t ” c l a i m s of p u b l i c i st s m u s t be t a k e n w i t h t h e p r o v e r ­ bial g r a i n o f s al t . Beat the d ru m s , beat the d r u m s , beat t h e d r u m s l on g e n o u g h a n d p eopl e will e v e n t u a l l y beli eve t h e line, p ub l ic r e l a ­ t i on s m e n say. B ut the fact rem ains th a t spen ding mil­ lions of e x t r a d ol la rs , u s i n g t e c h n i c o l o r , r a i s i n g p ri ce s, a n d o t h e r d e v i c e s d o n o t g u a r a n t e e a m o v i e to be o n e i o t a b e t t e r than average. A n d e x c es s d r u m b e a t i n g i s n ’t c o n f i n e d to mo v i es , is i t ? (20 ■ you r e e d ' d e e p Ord re W o n — why d o - t you go bach ** your classes for a few days. ’ ISSUE JOEL Day E ditor KIRKPATRICK Night E ditor ................................. BOB K E N N Y A s s i s t a n t N i g h t E d i t o r ..................... — G en e E h rb c h N i g h t R e p o r t e r s ............. ....................... — Ken C o m p e r t ! Copyreaders ......... M a r y Be den S p e a r , F r e d Ka- ell, ( laude Mounce Night Sports Editor Joe i f osby Assistants Al Ward, Orland Sims, Bob Halford, Sam Blair, Bill Morgan Night Society E d , tor Bettve Rawland N ig h t A m u se m e n t* E d ito r ...................................................... J im E a g e r st ate s had followed suit. P r i ­ hue a nd cry a b o u t the d a n g e r s of Com m unism . Those jingoes are c o v e r i n g up t h e i r filth by po in t­ ing to the neighbor's trash. TO T H E EDITOR: Whether or not Tom formally ac t u a l l y had the w e l f a r e of the e n t i r e U n i t e d S t a t e * a t h e a r t , as o pp ose d to tEa t m e r e l y of Tex as , i t I* i n t e r e s t i n g t o n o t e t h e i mp l i ­ ca ti o n of Price Daniel, s u p p or t e d b y y o u r e d i t o r i a l , t h a t t h e sell “ do w n th e r i v e r ” on t h e tid e la nds c a s e is a1! 1 o n n a l i y ’s f a u l t the appoin tm ents of the f o u r S u p r e m e C o u r t justices ig n o ra n t enough to d i f f e r in o p i n i o n f r o m D a n i e l a n d t h e T e x a n e d i t o r — w e r e all s u p p o r t e d anti a p p r o v e d b y h i m. O b v i o u s l y it is a s e n a t o r ’s d u t y , w h e n c o n s i d e r i n g a m a n ’s q u a l i f i ­ cation for a judicial appointm ent, to de ci d e n o t u po n a basis of how c o m p e t e n t he is o r h o w f a i r - m i n d ­ e d he m a y h e h u t u p o n w h e t h e r h e is s u f f i c i e n t l y b i a s e d a n d in w h a t direction. . . RAY P A S T D e p a r t m e n t of English Texas AAM Y e s , w e a r e in d a n g e r r ea l a n d g r a v e d a n g e r ; b u t it is n o t from a ny foreign power or any s o - c a l l e d s u b v e r s i v e g r o u p . I t is o u r own c o r r u p t g o v e r n m e n t boys an d th e s h e e p who follow t h e m t h a t we s h o u l d f e a r a n d f i gh t s to pre serv e o u r fr ee dom a n d even o u r lives. HA YNE WARING REESE L W i l l i a m P e r r y m a n , J a m * * P i e r r o n , M. It < i h n . ( a r t W e i s e r Mont ie .-"ie B a i n , /.ahi* G ous he . K > W u e ( . t i ll # G r e e n . f i r ! *, M a r v i n Mi i b- r, T A. A h o i l i a br ) k y / i4 5 L 21 ■ 22 I-' 2S> 27 : is I , ll 31 34 #■ r [/; 36 i41 AO A I T F N I ION S K N IOU PHARMACY STUDENTS W o n d e rf u l b . sines* o p p o r t u n i t y . D r u g s t o r e in F o r t W o r t h , good bua i ne s * in i •* n e i g h b o r h o o d . E l d e r l y c o u p l e r e t i r i n g w a n t # t o sel l . C a l l M r . Bo b L o vi n g, 7- 94*1 — 7- 60 23. 30 33 ¥7 39 a t t e n t io n 4Z 4* CPZDT ,’;v % OIT H CRZDD CY Y H T ’C OIT H OFYHU P Y F T — K Q F Y H. Re - e xarii i n a t i o n * and Postponed and A d v a n c e d S t a n d i n g T ^ a m i n a t i o n * will be given Monday ( F e b r u a r y 251 t h r o u g h Monday ‘ M a r s h I ! f or t h os e s tu d en t * a h o p e t i ti o ne d to t a k e t h e m prior to F eb ­ r u a r y 14 The schedule for the examination*. w h i c h a r e t o be g i v e n in G e o l o g y B u i l d ­ i n g I 4. i* a* f o l l o w* M o n d a y , M a r c h J — I p. m. — B a c t e r i o l ­ ogy. biology, h i s t o r y , h o m e economic*, sociology, l o o l og y . o t h e r s u bj ec t* O n l y o n e e x a m i n a t i o n a d a y m a y be t a k e n , a n d c o n f l i c t * s h o u l d He r e p o r t e d t o t he R e g i s t r a r a Of f ic e b ef or e S a t u r d a y , F e b r u a r y 23 H Y MCCOWN. Regist rar Payr oll check* a n d w a r r a n t * for t he m o n t h o f F e b r u a r y wi l l be d i s t r i b j t e d t o U n i v e r s i t y s t a f f m e m b e r s on M o n d a , March u 1952, d u r i n g t h e h o u r s f rom 'I t o 12 a n d I t o 4. ( H S P A R KSHURO A uditor S t u d e n t * i n t e r e s t e d in s e c u r i n g p os i ­ t i o n * a# t e a c h e r - o r a d m i n i s t r a t o r * sn p u n . lie ac h o o ! * , j u n i o r c o l l e g e * , o r u n i v e r s i ­ ti es in J u n e o r S e p t e m b e r . 1952. s ho u l d att en d th# sp rin g regist rat io n me eting o ' H e t h o u g h t Se n . E s t e s K e f a u v e r ( D - T e n n ) had c a p t u r e d a “ lot o f t h e public i m a g i n a t i o n . ” H o w ­ ever, Shivers wanted to talk to K e f a u v e r a b o u t hi s “ w o r l d g o v ­ e r n m e n t ” ideas a nd his a t t i t u d e on t id e l a n d s o w ne r sh ip b e f o r e d e ­ c i d i n g w’h e t h e r h e w o u l d h e a s a t ­ isfactory presidential candidate for Texas. V olices T e a c h e r P la c e m e n t Ser vi ce on T u e s d a v , M a r c h 4, a t i p rn. in A r c h i t e c t u r e B u i l d ­ ing 105. Te a c h e r * and pr s p e c t r e t e a c h ­ e r * s h o u l d h a v e i e t ’ er * o f r e c o m m e n d a ­ t i o n o n : >er maner , t file, a* we l l a s t r a n ­ s e c t s . photographs, and o th e r i n f o r m a ­ t i o n r f i nt e r e s t , t o p r o s p e c t i v e e m p l o y e r * * for p r e - e r * and f u t u r e use. HOB GRAY, Direc tor T e a r per P l a c e m e n t -service .since Mar ch 2 fab# on S u n d a y thie • a r . t e t r a d i t ior .i! c e r e m o n y in n h a e r . a n c e o f t h a t d a y will b e o n M i n d s , f r o m l l l'i a r n . t o 12 muon in f r o n t of the Main B di ng. E l e v e n o ' c l o c k c a»*c* wi l l be d i e m # cd a t ll 40 t o e n a b l e s t u d e n t * to attend. T PAINTER. President Ma i n U n i v e r s i t y A pp l i c a n t # for *dmi ««i on t o L a w School . I n d i v i d u a l * w h o pl a n t o e n t e r t h e S c h o o l o f I j a w in J u n e . 1 95 2. o r i n S e p t e m b e r , 1 9 5 2 . a r e i n v i t e d t o Di e a t r a n s f e r a p ­ p li cat ion pr ompt l at the R e g i st r a r s ( i f ­ f i e r . ' Ka* . aprication w l l er.ah e the v chee. m g tobe d o n e soon 7he a: • - a " ! ’ wil t • a d v . s p r i ■g o f hi * s t a t « a * d o f ( r t e , c r n e e d # , if a n y , MAX F I L I I Th . 1 . U M Associ ate R e g i s t r a r Y H T ’C FZUIR. RITQ CPZDT : b e a u t if u l lots N E E D S O M E O N E t o s h a r e s u p e r fine a p a r t m e n t 2*02 W h i t i s , bet we en Kir by a n d S R O . P h o n e 7 - 9 2 1 9 a f t e r 7 p . m. or come over lf F G E R H A R D 2 21 2 N u e c e * St. — good running condition, radio Wi l l f i n a n c e $ 3 9 6 . A l o 1 9 5 ! H a r l e y D a v i d s o n < 1 2 IS * m o t o r ­ c y c l e $7 7 5 W r i t e B o a T M , U n i v e r s i t y S t a t i o n . Call 2*2143. C A MP U S . Q u ia ! a p a r t . at . d e n t . U t i l i t i e s paid. *• d y - b e d r o o m w i t h p r i ­ $-5588, Special Services H A I R C U T S . 7 5e S t a c y ’* B a r b e r S n o p - 2 5 0 2 G u a d a l u p e Lost and Found q u a O s s w o R OLDSMOBILE FROM for g-aduate Also c o m f o e abl e vate bath. Phone Houses for Rent BLOCKS U N IV E R S IT Y — Furnished c o t t a g e , r e n o v a t e d . L a r g e ll v it - . groom fireplace, b ed r oo m , t wo sleeping p o r c h , l a r g e k i t c h e n . I o u . {‘h o n e 2 - 0 9 8 S . R OW N H I P h o n e 8- 7974 BLOCK I c - I i e ,7 *12 0 ft. e a c h Wi l l ae i i o n e or both A g o o d i n v e s t m e n t if y o u d o not build ow P l e a s e s t o p a n d l oo k a t them. Easy term* can be arran ge d. licit PRODUCE QUICK RESULTS Apartment for Rent Rent Typing L O S T : 3 m o n t h ol d col l i e pu p . F o r i n ­ f o r m a t i o n l e a d i n g t o hi * w h e r e a b o u t * . $1 0 r e w a r d . P h o n e 7 - “ 7 1*. F ro n ti n g East Big Oa k Tr e e* on T h e m 44 y4 a n d R e p u b l i c a n s as y o u r d e le g a te s to t h e De mocratic nat.ionay c o n ­ v e n t i o n in C h i c a g o o n J u l y 2 1 . ” S h i v e r s r e e m p h a s i z e d h is o p p o ­ sition to T r u m a n . He sa i d h e did n o t t h i n k T r u m a n w o u l d ask r e ­ n o m i n a t i o n , and hop ed he wo ul d n o t d o so. 'N ft B ock N o r t h of U N I V E R S I T Y 5 20 2 s o d 120 4 G r o o m * S t r e e t A Cryptogram Quotation EHL B A N D ■- H O R T W A V E b r o a d c a s t c a r rad o S g h tl y used. List price 1130. S. ll f o r I # 1, i nc luding a n t e n n a . Cal l 2-1 50 5 a f t e r 2 p . m. TWO I Su b tle em an ation RITQ 4 44 DOWN H e - a i d his s p e e c h wi l l b * “ th * o p e n i n g g u n o f t h e f i g h t t o e le c t Dem ocrats rather than Dixiecrats O ffic ia l For For Sale ' 24 29 ■52 Ru s s e l l is a “ B l i n d f o r t h e Di xsecrat Movement.” “ Oh , o f c o u r s e not,** s n o r t e d S h i v e r s . “ Mr . D i c k s o n , I ’m s u r e , ough* t o k n o w b e t t e r t h a n t h a t . J u s t b e ca us e a m a n w a n t s to r un a g a i n s t hi s ( D i c k s o n si f a v o r i t e c a n d i d a t e is n o r e a s o n t o b r a n d h i m s o m e t h i n g h e i s n ’t . ” ( Sh iv er s has d e sc ri be d the f a c ­ tion h e a d e d by Dickson as “ T r u m a n c r a t s ” , h u t Dickson has in­ s i s t e d t h e L o y a l D e m o c r a t s will support whoever the party nom i­ n a t e s , w h e t h e r it he T r u m a n or Russell.) D i c k s o n s a i d S a t u r d a y h e will b r i n g w h a t ho c a l l e d t h e p l o t o f the Dixiecrats to c ap tu re the T e x ­ as e l e c t o r a l v o t e i n t o t h e o p e n in a statewide broadcast Tuesday n i g h t at 7 : 30 p . m. CLASSIFIED ADS T H E DAILY TEXAN 24» 76 SS He s a i d it w o u l d t a k e “ v e r y u n ­ u s u a l ” c i r c u m s t a n c e s to fo r c e him into such a mo\e this year. W h e t h e r T r u m a n ’s r e n o m i n a t i o n would be e n o u g h to m a k e T e x a s b ol t, he w o u l d n o t p r e d i c t . H e s a i d S e n . R o b e r t S. K e r r ( D - O k l a ) a n d Gov . A d ' a i S t e v e n ­ s o n o f Illinois m i g h t be a c c e p t a ­ bl e n o m i n e e s if t h e y w o u l d q u i t waiting for permission from T r u ­ man to run. S h i v e r s s a i d he p e r s o n a l l y f a v ­ o r - f l u -.soil's n o m i n a t i o n , b u t he still w a n t s a n u n i n s t r u c t e d T e x a s delegation to the National Demo­ cratic convention. “ If y o u s t a y u n i n s t r u c t e d , y o u a r e f r e e t o do m o r e t r a d i n g , " he s a I at a pr e?* c o n f e r e n c e . A s k e d if h e c o n s i d e r e d t h e n o m ­ ination of a southe rner im prob­ able, Sh iv ers replied: “ I ’d a y it m a k e s it m u c h m o r e d i f f ic u l t — b u t not impossible. C e r t a i n l y , it h a s n ' t b e e n in t h e realm of possibility in many years.” “ S u p p o s e R u s s e l l g o t all t h e South and a few of t h e other states. He m ig h t g e t 2 50 to 300 ( c o n v e n t i o n ) v o t es , f o r i n s t a n c e . T h a t ' s p r e t t y sizeable bloc to go t h e r e w t h , ” he said, r e ca ll i n g t h a t th e n o m i n a t i o n has be en won by men who had few er votes than th a t to s t a r t with. A r e p o r t e r a s k e d if S h i v e r s s a w a n ; t r u t h in a c h a r g e b y Hagan Dickson, executive director of the Loyal Dem ocrats of Texas, th at Its ■j i& i7 IO H e a d m i t t e d it w o u l d be d i f f i ­ cult for a so u th e rn er to gain the n o m i n a t i o n , b u t said Sen, Ri ch a rd B. R u s s e l l ( D - G a ) is o n e o f t h e men w h o could t u r n the trick. % IO % 11 ii “ H u h , I c o u l d n ’t e v e n t e a c h E n j f lish in a h i gh - s c h o o l a n y w h e r e i n T e x a s — h a v e n ’t h a d e n o u g h E D U ­ C A T I O N courses.” LIBRARY P E E V E “ I ’m s u r e t h a t n e a r l y a n y o n * wh o u s e s t he U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s l i b r a r y ha s at least o n e c o m p l a i n t to m a k e a b o u t the c a t a l o g o r t h e s e r v i c e o r t he c o n d i t i o n o f s o m e o f t h e books or a b o u t a n y o ne o f a h u n d re d other things,” began a l e t t e r t h a t c a m e in a c o u p l e o f days ago. Som e of them are u n ju s t criti­ cis ms a n d some a re p e t t y , said this g r a d u a t e student, b u t m a n y a r e w o r t h a good c he c k up to g e t a t the r o o t of th e problem. Hi s p e t p e e v e : “ The library ‘r e q u e s t s ’ t h e u se rs o f the stacks not to r e pla ce books which they have r e m o v e d f r o m t h e shel ve*. T h i s ‘r e q u e s t ’ is o b v i o u s l y b a s e d on t h e a s s u m p ­ t i o n t h a t t he c i p h e r b y m e a n s o f w h i c h t h e hooks a r e k e p t in o r d e r is i n c o m p r e h e n s i b l e t o u s o r d i n a r y h u m a n beings. P e r n a p s th is a s ­ s u m p t i o n is v al i d. P e r h a p s I r e a l l y am unique, being the only nonl i b r a r i a n in e x i s t e n c e w h o c a n r e ­ place v olum e three back b e t w e e n v o l u m e s t w o an d four. “ The user must place the book o n a t a b l e a n d Iv pe t h a t s o m e o n e w i t h m o r e i n t e l l i g e n c e wi l l p u t t h e b o o k w*h(*re it b e l o n g s . T h i s o p e r a t i o n takes from o n e d a y to o n e w e e k . If t he u s e r h a p p e n s t o ne ed t h e same vol ume f o r a d d i ­ tional research the next day, c h a n c e s a r e t h a t he wi l l b e o u t r>f l u c k . S o m e o n e ha s c o m e a l o n g w i t h a small cart, sn a t c h e d u p th e b o o k , a n d w h i s k e d it a w a y t o s o m e r e m o t e p a r t o f t he l i b r a r y w h e r e , s o m e t i m e in t h e f u t u r e , s o m e o n e wi l l n o t i c e it a n d s a y t o h i m s e l f , “ O h ! T h i s is v o l u m e t h r e e ! I t g o e s r i g h t in b e t w e e n v o l u m e t w o a n d volum e four! “ T h e n , a n d o n l y t h e n , is t h e hook returned, according to th* rules and regulations which g o v ­ ern th e operation of the lib ra ry a n d w h i c h d r ve g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t s , at least, nuts.” 6 s ¥6 ■ p7 I sso .filed } ' - m Sidney Lanier is an h onorary G arza, vice-p resid ent; Adel a sh o rt hair is here to sta y . A t president o f the newly organized Monday a t 7 p.m. in Union 3 1 6 . j English organization fo r Univer- M arta V illarreal, se c re ta ry ; Ed dy le a st from the predictions o f h a i r , . Nominees fo r the position are P a t j sity women who have m ade a B T alam as, tr e a s u r e r; and V irgin ia stylist Edw ard Denney, who has j " * * * * • " Smith, Edith O’K ru elich, and Ro- j in English a t T exas and have an R eu th in ger, historian. elected w ere been giving consultations a t I Other officers chtlle E stlack . j all-around B average. ★ By BRA D B Y E R S B arry Bishop, vice-president, and G oodfriends this week. Council m em bers are asked to j ★ M embers of the Law W ives T e x a n M a n a g i n g E d ito r M r. Denney believes the re­ Ja n e W h eeler, se cre ta ry and tre a s­ attend a business m eeting in the j Dolt* Sigma Pi will have Fran k Club o f the U niversity g u ests a t Pick a man: any man, so long n o w n e d poodle cu t should endure u rer. W ica office a t 6 p.m. | S tew art, advertising specialist and C luef of the U niversity w ere s e he is worthy of respect. th rou gh the summer, m ainly be­ A I owner of radio station K T X N , as guests a t a bridge p arty W ednes­ The purpose of the club, as Give him a ga l ax y of friends, cause it is com fortable and easy explained by th e sponsor, L . S. New officers of Sidney Lan ier j its gu est speaker Monday a t 7 day a t the Home Econ om ics T e a and then put him in a position of to m anage. Because th ere a re so F lores, in stru cto r in Rom ance L iterary S ociety a re Diana Ger- , a.m . a t Old Seville. The new House. responsibility. m any variations of the poodle, L an guages, is to create an in te r­ son, presid en t; E lissa Berw ald, |pledges will form ally pledge imH ostesses were M esdames Hu­ Now pick a political party, one from one inch to two and a half est on the p a rt of the students in vice-president; B a rb a ra T urrel, re- i m ediately following the banquet, b ert Hudson, Wilson F o re m a n , which has all the usual had traits inch length locks, tightly cu rled or Spanish custom s and language. cording s e c re ta ry ; Norma Je a n | ★ F o u n t R ay, E ealy H. C avin, and •of a political part y. subtly w aved; he feels th a t m ost Anyone is eligible to attend . Morris and H a rie t H aynes, coresNick Sales was recen tly elected C arl O. Bue J r . Then have the pa r t y a>k the girls can w ear it. Those with very The n e x t m eeting is scheduled ponding se c re ta rie s ; and Ruth jpresident of the L ared o Club. M rs. J e r r y Lemond held high man you pick to run f o r president. fine h air should be carefu l b efore March 13 a t 7 :3 0 p.m. Hendler, rep o rter. O ther officers are L eo n o ra de la score fo r the day. B in go prize I magi ne then t hat you r man re­ deciding, he added. ★ was won by Mrs. M ary A a a fuses, hut fi nally c o ns e nt s to run He agrees with Life M agazine Dr. H. W arren Dunham, o f the M oore. when his fri ends have convinced in thinking a horse’s tail looks d epartm ent o f sociology and an ­ him that he must do it for the it good only on a horse. He believes thropology a t W ayne U niversity good of his country. Allen Knight and Hugh Ja m e s it is a style for children, and is in D etroit, will discuss com m unity And now, if you can, imagine Smith represented the U n iversity unflatterin g to a person over 17. fa cto rs in m ental disorders a t a his saying as he ac c e pt s , “ I think a t the A re a F o u r m eeting of the dinner-m eeting of Alpha K appa t h e party should be abolished I” A rdeid A ir Society on the SMU Delta, sociology' fratern ity , 6 :3 0 And yet imagine his winning with Phi E ta Si gma, national honor-Kobe, J o h n Carl Lan da, Duane cam pus in Dallas Satu rd ay. Mem­ Monday a t C aru so’s No. 2. n e a r l y double the votes of his ary scholastic fratern ity fo r Eu gen e Landry, Kung Hsing Lee, bers o f the John H. Payne Squad­ Dr. Dunham has been actin g as freshmen men, has announced 49 C arl Theodore Laven der, Donald ron , they were also guests a t th e closest opponent. consultant fo r the state of New new members. Those are the unique condi­ G eorge McDavtd, M uckleroy Mc- ROTC bali a t SMU. U N IV E R S IT Y York in its m ental hygiene pro­ ti ons under which W a l e s Madden To be eligible f o r Phi E ta Donnold J r . , Gene Lewis Naegelin, gram . He is here to consult with Sigma, one m ust mai ntai n a scho­ E rn e s t Virgil Nau, Sherrill Aubrey b e c a me president o f the Students’ CH RISTIA N C H URCH Association. Thu r s day Wales reIO a .m .— Discussion on “ Redis­ D. Ivan Belknap, assistant p ro­ lastic average o f a t least 2‘.5 Neill, George Edw ard Nowotny, aigned and turned over to his vice­ coverin g the Bible” led by fessor of sociology, about sta te points per sem ester hour in a t Charles Richard O tey, W illiam president the political position C harles P etit. hospitals in connection with the F a r r a r Pipes, Dan E a rl P olter, least thirteen hours of work. which he never want ed, but for 1 0 :3 5 a.m .— Coffee hour in the |U niversity In stitu te of Public The following students will be Leon ard William Raif. I affairs. which he always held the very S tu d en t Lounge. initiated March 1 7 : George Clif­ Also Robert Nelson R obertson, it hi ghest esteem. 6 p.m .— DSF supper-m eeting with ford Anderson, W illiam Augustus Je ro m e Charles Robinson, Kendal “ When I was elected presi­ skit on “ How Not to Win Mem­ Girls who a re interested in tr y ­ B erry , R obert M yron Bigelow J r ., T. R ogers, Kenneth G eorge Shaw, d e n t , ” Wal es said, “ Lloyd Hand b ers fo r the C hurch.” ing out f o r T asann as but w ere Jo rg e M. Bilbao, Gerald Lynn C harles Jo e Stalm ach J r ., Philip told me that you come to feel A L L SA IN TS’ P A R IS H unable to atten d the try-ou ta B urton, C harles Hylton C allery M ayes S tark, Jaco b H arris Still­ a b o u t this o f f i c e like a child of 0 : 3 0 a.m .— The Rev. S co tt Field ! Satu rd ay m ay still call B e tty J r ., Chester A rth u r Clayton, John m an, Jo e l David Toole, David Ro­ , Bailey. j Bunch a t 2 -7 7 9 8 for a p rivate V ictor Cline, J o h n Michael Col­ b ert Webb J r ., Bob Jo n W hite, R. Mc-1 audition. lins, Ben Milton Cummins, David j Cl aude Finley Williamson, and 1 K in s e y . The T exan n es will m eet Mon-, Shelby Dale, Bail ey E uge ne I Kendall Cole Wise. mendous opportuni ty to benefi t Photo by R K oan s 7 : 30 p.m.— The Very Rev . Gray day a t 7 p.m. in the In ternation al Daughterty Jr., George Tho­ A ny student who feels th at his t h e University. No one can hold WALES MADDEN M. Blandy. j Room with the rest of the c a s t mas F razier, T hom as Ross Gam­ n am e should be included on this Now On Exhibition i t and not he awar e of that opC EN T R A L for Round-Up. brel!, Richard El s i nger Goldsmith, list should come by the office of port uni t y. ” vote f o r candidates as persons, erwise. C H R IST IA N C H URCH R ob ert Fon d a Gribhle, Don A r ­ the Dean of Student L ife, MB In spite of the successful na- J not * * G r e e k * or Independents. He “ For a w hile I was academic, ” j j a m “ j h e Impo r t anc e of C o-Ed Assem bly needs nam es th u r H art J r ., Douglas H art, Ri­ 1 0 1 M, to have his record checked torran ce associates ^yPtfre of W a l e ’s t e r m, he feels that d emons t ra t e d his sincerity in this }ie savs “ j thought that was the S y mb o l s ”— Dr. J o h n Bar cl ay. of all new officers o f cam pus chard H ernandez J r . , George Ran­ as soon as possible. he is leaving a t least one very im- directi on when he told a ™e * Dn g j)i(r thin{? Hut then I learned t ha t i 6 p.m. -Famil y Night. women's organizations. The presi­ dolph K artzenis. A “ get-acq u ain ted ” p arty will 3004- G u a d a l u p e p o r t a nt j ob unfinished. of the cl ique last April t h a t he C O N G R EG A TIO N A L C H U RCH dents a re requested to come by * l. t*he ’ r e were some *wa> ut- won lf! run mf not JE %•» . Also Jam e s Howard Keahey, be held in the R are Books Room “ It wish wouiu run for i or president., Iout nor IV i. OU co ll lei lTlfikc pro * tty . *TO O (I’ l l a . m. — “jar*** Rationalizing Our Sins the Dean of W om en’s office as Gordon Paul K irton , Donald Holm W ednesday aftern oon, March 12. I could have impressed on people as a cl ique candidate. grades and do ot her things, too. j A w a y” — Rev. A. B e r t r a m Milsoon as possible to fill out new the need for knowing w h a t’s going And he has had no connec t i on His being academi c paid o f f in ler. cards fo r the spring sem ester. on. I f a student d oe s n’t assume, with the clique since then. He and his freshman y e a r with selection I 7 ; 30 p.m. “ T e xa s ’ W a t e r Fam★ responsibility now, the chances Wi lson F o r e ma n , an Independent, to Phi E t a S i gma , freshman schoi ne ” Mr. Roy Bedi chek. Ginger Hendricks was recen tly ar e that he won’t b t inclined to have been scrupulously c ar e f u l in lastic honorary. And even a f t e r FIR S T EN G LISH elected co-o rd in ator fo r Powell a f t e r he graduat e- . And college ‘keepi ng appointive positions i n j h e stopped bei ng “ academic, ” his LU T H ER A N C H URCH House. gr aduat es are goi ng to have to be 7 :3 0 p.m .— Luther L eagu e, co-op rep resen tative, Sarah R o e lr; ha s been to t ry to g e t people to things a b o u t Wales as s t ud e nt Alpha, gover nme nt honorary. ; 8 p.m.— Vespers. recording se cre ta ry , Sally E n g ; pres i dent has been his dislike for F IR S T M ETHODIST C H U R CH He naturally found satisfaction corresponding secretary , M ary havi ng himself credited with a c - ! in belonging to three dif f e rent j 1 0 :55 a.m. -W orship service. Going; alum nae secretary , B a r ­ compl i s hment s or his name print- scholastic honorari es, “ and yet, ” ] 7 : 3 0 p.m.- Evening worship led bara C rippen; rep o rter, Lolly M or­ by the Rev. Wood P atrick . ed in the Texan. “ I j u s t di dn’t as he puts it, “ you feel like there ris; historian , Mary Helen McRosem ary S l a u g h t e r and Robert like r e a di ng that Wales Madden, is a need f o r you to do something [ C urdy; p arliam en tarian , J e n e tta T . W ollebak will he married April s t ud e nt body president, did this else K ennedy; house relations co m m it­ 5. or t h a t , ’ be explained. “ T h a t was Tha t “ s omet hi ng else, ” in his tee, G loria M acRae, Sarah R oeh r, Miss S l a u g h t e r attended the the t hi ng t ha t kept me from want- case, included bei ng forema n of and John ie Cowgill; in tram u ral Universi ty. She is a member of t ° t ak e this office, but it was the Cowboys, president of Interm anager, R ita Sheppard; social i Omega. s ome t hi ng that I had to a c c e pt f r a t er ni t y Counci l , i ntramural Sunday j com m ittee, Diane Cocke, ch airVollebak received a bachelor when 1 ' va* elected. wrestling champion, and finally 1 0 - 1 1 : 30— Sigma Chi b r e a k f a s t j man, D orothy Denard,co -ch airo f science in j o u r n a l i sm at SMU. ‘‘I t r u t hf u l l y feel that I could student president and Best All-. f or pj Bet a Phi. ' man, B e tte Stephens and Joh n ie it never he in politics, f or t h a t re- round Boy in the University. 1 2 - 4 : 3 0 — Si gma Alpha Mu d e s s e r t : Cowgill; p ro jects and special inM argia Ja y n e W o rd and Joe s on. ” Now, in his last semester inpa rt y f or Sigma Delta Tau. teresta com m ittee, Ann Rankin, B u rto n Dibrell will be married F o r a person w ho dislikes per- law school, he is once again turn- 5-7-—The t a Xi open house f o r Tri jchairman, Liz Jon es and G erry m m rn: April IO at the Har r i s Memorial sonal gl ory, Wales has made an ing his att ent i on to things avaDelta. Bates. Chapel o f the Uni ver s i t y Method- out s t a ndi n g record a t the Un i ver - demic, in order to receive his de- 6 : 3 0 - 8 : 3 0 — Sigma Phi Epsilon ★ is t Church. sity, both scholastically and oth- gree in J u l y . dessert party f or Alpha Phi. I The election o f a tre a su re r will 4 9 Freshmen Q u a lify For Phi Eta Sigma D,i e S.erm ond Sculpture By Jim Garner M iss Slaughter, Wollebak to Wed Social Calender —CjvdA&Uip®— tw en ty-th ree th irty-eig h t guadalupe d re s t L o rn our b e a u tif u l, t o 1 9 9 .9 5 . These f r o t h y Prom o ur w o n d e r f u l c o l l e c t io n gowns w e r e chosen es pe c ia lly fo r y o u r formals a n d R o u n d - U p . S k e t c h e d ii i c pmk nylon tulle w ith f l o a t i n g p l e a t e d p an e ls ; b o d ic e and skirt s h i m m e r in g with silver l u r e * a p p l i q u e d flowers. Form a S e c o n d Flo or choker 5 .0 0* 149 .9 5 t h e a d ju s ta b le rh in e s to n e a n d th e sheer r u f f l e - c u f f e d nylon g l o v e 1.65. Both f r o m o u r A c c e s s o r y Shop, First F o o r o f c o c k t a il dresses b y Be a um e lie o f C a l i f o r n i a — this lovely silk o r g a n z a in '©af g r e e n w ith s t u d d e d rh in e s to n e D 'o r p a n e ls 49.95 Sunday, March J, 1952 THE DAILY TEXAN Page “ B T L isco® Jo Discuss Problem Parents' Tonight Ihr. Ijh U coe, assistant prof##■or of psychology, “ Problem P a re n ts " w ill discuss a t the H ilU I Sunday night aupper F o u n d a t io n a t 6 p m. R eservations may he made by catting 6-2695. Sr Roy Bedichek, T exas naturalist and author, w ill discus- "T h e T exas W a te r F a m in e " at the stu­ dent lounge Of the C o n g r e g a t i o n a l C hurch Sunday at 7 :30 p. >. M r. Bedit •hek achieved his lite r­ a ry fame a fte r hi* retirem ent an director of the U n iv e rsity In te r­ scholastic League. a Religious Em phasis W eek will b e evaluated at the B * p t i » t S t u ­ dent C enter W e d i e-day at ,mv,v at T rin ity U n iv e rsitv in San ( y A n tonio, will give a Bib le study fo r W e s t m in s t e r S t u d e n t F e llo w ship Sunday night at 7 :30 in the U n iv e rsity Pre sb yte rian Church. IL * talk will be a sum m ary of his w ork on the W Sp Bib le Study R e tre a t Satu rd ay afternoon at C a rrin g to n ’s I/>dge. T he chapel service w ill begin at 5:15 p.m. in the S a n c tu a ry, and upper w ill be served at 6 in Fe llo w sh ip Hall. ♦ Color Slides of M exico and par­ ti- jia rh of the new Episcopal school at Ad ejandra w ill be shown at C a n t e r b u r y C l u b Su n d a y even- ing a fte r a buffet supper at 6 o’clock. The meeting w ill be at Gregg House. The slid<% w ill be explained by V irg in ia H an e y who presented the A le ja n d ra school as the annual project fo r the United M ovem ent of the C hurch’s Youth at the N ational Yo uth Commission m eet­ ing in N ew York. I t was accepted and w ill he the project for all the C h u rch ’* youth this year. The R ev. (/ray Blan d y, dean of th* Episcopal Sem inary of the Southw est, will preach at even.ng pra ye r a t 7:30 in An S a in ts ’ ( im­ pel. An open house will follow in Gregg House. Brilliant Colors in Stage, Costumes ToSplash and Blend in 'Fledermaus' B r B IL L M C REYN O LD S Colors, tunes, light*, and costam es will splash and blend together when M r. von K n eeler brings hi- baton down to start the tech moo I erred production of S tra isa’ " L i e ir iederm aus" next Tuesday night. Each act w ill emphasize one dominant coins : ye llo w , red, and blue, rn th a t order. Joseph E . Johnston, assistan t professor of drama and designer o f the sets, got, the three-color idea from the Greek Gambits > p .m . Phfsig New Initiates Honored W ith Party n (Presbyterian Campus Group) Program For of MONTH SUNDAYS March March March 16 March 23 March 30 AT 5:45 P.M. How To Study the Bible By Carlton Alien "Th* Christian In The World Struggle” by Eleanor Foxworth. " A W o r ld In Conflict" By Bayed Ruitin "H o w To Express A Jo b At Home” " W h e t’s Up Your Sleeve?" S U N D A Y S AT WORSHIP ll A. M. M am bo in the University Presbyterian C h urch March IO Wednesday March 26 Wednetday March 28 Friday C lu b to b a Vocations For Christians" By Eleanor Foxworth "National Missions” By Laurence Lange "Education And You” By Hunter Blakely WEEKLY STUDY GROUPS M O N D A Y: March 3. 7:00 The Witnessing Community (second session) TUESDAY: March 4 2:00 Witnessing Community 4:00 Christian Vocation as Teacher 4:00 Prayer Cell 4:00 Bible Study (Revelation) 7:00 Corinthians Bible Study 9:00 SVM Study Group. W ED N ESD A Y : March S. 5:00 R E W Evaluation at B. S. U. 7:00 Race Relations Study Group (grads) 9:00 You Name It Study Group THURSDAY: March 6. 4:30 Hope vs. Power (study group) 5:00 Prayer Cell 7:00 Christian in the Military Study Group 7:00 Grad. Bible Study 2203 San UT Ex Ritter Returns For Austin Stockshow Lig h tin g is closely coordinated with the staging, and Ralph McCormie, assistant professor of dram a and in charge o f lighting, said, "we are using the lights in ‘Fled erm aus’ to c a rry out the e f­ fects of fantasy and to play up the different set*," " ‘Fled erm aus’ is not bound by realism, and the lights ase more these effects is usually done by variation in intensity, such as is done in the second act, which is a com bination of farce and a ro­ m antic air. whole problem of a pro­ "T h e duction is to get u n ity from th* standpoint A fte r hi* indigi.ant departure, the girl learns of his intentions to propose and fra n tic a lly send* for him. M ore quarrels fo llo w , the cou­ ple gets engaged, an*) the quarrel cycle continue* through the play. \^ o u ^ J ia u e Lom ov, the suitor, is enacted by John B a fta . The fa th e r * p la y e d 1 by Trick K irschner and the daugh­ ter by Bruce N eil HGerman. *ljse 'd im a t U o'own u /n C jo o il d e n t s ai (}'M uhxlupl Antonio J $ B oneless Ocean Perch F rie d S e le c t O y sters Soothered Veal C u tle t G r i l l e d Pork Chops Six Hi et Ray Miltand Jan Starling B ill W illiam * Adel# J argin* I ° MONTOPOLI S Feature Star*# at T p.aa. “ Tho Blue V a il” “ Little Egypt” Jo na Wym an — A lta— I — Alga ■ l.**h Larue C H I E F 11 ' On H*e Drag ‘Cornin’ Round the Mountain’ B u* Abbott I Doori Open 1:45 pm. BURT L A N C AS F ir it P A M tE N R E M ^ k CMM OLCT Gold Mock Monogramed .95 Q uilted skirt, raffic-twisted belt .......................... 17.95 Tailored blouse with c re$ted pocket j. 12.95 C assie skirt, raffia belt, fly fronted .......................... 11.95 (not shown ) .................... N a tu ral only — IO to 16. rn rn m 10.95 Jl. ja IM V Mark Slovan* Rhonda Flaming in Tadmirator ------ Plus------- in “ SIERRA” Audio M u r p h y Wanda Handria in T e c h n i c o l o r i ' ' 1 F ir s t S h o w in g * 4* rn - m i I I n ^ P l W itt FRIMAN ■ iN V fE K flO N “ -100IS CHHEM — ~ u n u s IT V 'I n u s T in / rI . F irs t S h o w 2 p.m. ANN P0WER-BLYTH ■Q* war,Mg *6^ GARY COOPER . ‘Little Egypt” Drive v er'i.av ( J \ i J C fIH C i f f i t Continuous Performance* Price*: Mat.— 90< Nit#— $1.30 Children 50$ Pa** Li*t Suspended k . . , iw w k m h fad Speed a tune **vmg gad toe Teaching speech, innate • Record arg radio program*, epeetai rvema • Preparing aermocM, choir and rehearsal* « oude G r i lle d Boneless Baa Breaded Turkey Steak The A ll-C hicken P ie A burlesque of toe wedding march from Jacq u es Ib e r t’s “ Divertisnm ent” provide* the back­ ground music for the production. I Sound and music are m der the control of Bobbie Dawn Bone w it h 1 titles and special effects prepared by O scar M cU racken. TAPE RECORDER .? designer, of a meadow. PENTRON A play by Dr. E. P. honkie, U n iv e rsity playw right and drama professor, is represented in the forthcom ing “ Best One-Act Plays o f 1951-62” . The play, “ The Least O ne,” Is set in a western pioneer town about 1862, “ The Least O ne” ha* a cast of six children and one adult. The setting is “ Dead M a n ’s C rick ,” where the youngsters are “ prosVectitig ” for gold. director, derm aus’ and any other produc tion free to achieve the effect of spec­ tacle, and we are stressing v isi­ depends on how well the-e ale b ility over mood. The problem is fu sed ," he Concluded. The costumes are ail differer t to emphasize one thing, such as a p articular costume, and still colors. "T h e y range from aqua : have the actors lighted so that and peach pink, to no telling I the audience can see their faces," what,” Mrs. M y le r rema ked. ne continued. "F le d e rm a u s " w ill be here for "L ig h ts also have to conform to three perform ances, M arch 4, 5, ! the musical mood. In ‘Fled erm au s’ and 8 in Hogg Auditorium . T ic ­ the music varies from farcical kets ma. be purchased ia the qualities to the rom antic. G etting M uSiC Bu ild in g box office. Technical director of the show Washing dishes at S .R .I). and turn* to hi* old stam ping ground* is Gordon W ilkinson and art di­ leading a parade down Congress M arch 3-8 to perform in A u *tin ’i rector rn R a y S tew a rt. M arilyn Avenue M onday at 2 p m. are on firs t annuai C apital A rea Sto ck ­ Rupe and Dub B e rr y have charge Tex R itte r's agenda when he re- show. of costumes and make-up and The cowboy balladeer w ill ap­ Ralph Coleman, How ard Bd hrey, pear af 8 p.m. each evening with B e v e rly Schw artz, and Ed C an­ ‘Harvey’ to Play SS hite Flash, his horse in 70 W e st­ trell are sc en isis. At Tillotson College ern picturea. M erle T ra vis, anoth­ “ H a rv e y,” M a ry Chase’s Pu litz ­ er guitar-playing h illb illy artist, er Prize w in n in g drama, will play w ill join R itte r, his guddy of March I " at. th*- new Tillotson C ol­ C a lifo rn ia days. lege A u dito rium . The play is co­ O ver 700 contestants from sponsored hy the Austin blanch eleven C entral Texas counties w ill of the N A A< P and the T ravis participate in the d aily livestock County V o te rs League. contests. Reserved seat tickets to T ickets are on sale at the J R. see the stock and evening shows Reed Music S to re , ami th* Uni- are $3.00, general admission i i v* i ity Co-Op. Reserve seats are $1.80, and ch ild ren ’s admission is f LHO arui g eneral admission tick ­ 60 rents. ets RU! $1.20. W a y back in the late ’20’» the U T campus echoed nightly when H itter in an enthusiastic quintet helped to elect Sam Johnson edi­ tor of the Texan. R itte r o rig in a l­ ly came to U. T. to study govern­ ment and law. He earned part of his tuition w ashing dishes at S . R T ). A fte r he hail been at the U n ive rsity five years he kissed his law books goodbye and began the career which eve n tu a lly land­ ed him in New Y o rk and Holly- i wood. Since then he has had an p t c y s b i d i im outstanding career a* radio, screen, and recording star. W IT H L IF E - L IK E Q U A L IT Y Ploy by UT Professor In ‘Bs*♦ 6f 1951-52’ of and lighter. The success of ‘F le ­ stwitty WESTMINSTER STUDENT FELLOWSHIP L O r g a n is e d A Mambo Club w ill he organ­ ized T h u rsd ay at 7:15 p.m. in the M ain Ballroom of the Texas Union. In addition to the Mambo, other L atin - A m erican dances w ill he taken up, such as She Sam ba, Rhum ba, and Tango. “ MEET THE WHEELS” House, is directed by E. R. N orris, assistant professor of dram a, as­ sisted by Helen Snook. Eve lyn Sm ith is production assistant and C harles Ham ilton is studio manxger. "T h e M arriage Pro p o sa l" is a story of a shy, hypochondriac land­ ow ner who comes a-courting. In ­ stead of winning the favor of the g irl he has come to woo, he q u ar­ rels with her over the ownership Houston. * The new initiates of T au D elta Ph i fr a te rn ity are Joe A lp h a C h i O m e g a ai nouneo ir e staged over station H E Y L , San Antonio, S u n d a y a? 8:30 p.m. pledging of Helen Robe rf*, B r is ­ The show, produced by the De­ tow, O k la .; Ellen Yeager, Yvonne partm ent of D ram a and Radio Rogers, and Corinne Cow an, all r M etrop olitan O pera a recent production. M r. Johnston believes designing for an opera is more com pli­ cated than for a regu lar play. "T h e r e are usually more people in an opera, and there is more and bigger scenery needed," he said. “ In a fantasy, such a* ‘Fledermaus" the scenery doesn’t have to be v ery re a listic ," Mr. Johnston said. " I n fact, we designed this production more for effect than fo r realism . Sunday, March' 2, 1952 e x o n s in 'Return' traightforward THE DAILY TE *A N New Hero of Confederate Cause? UT Ex Vandiver, 25, Shows How Gorgas Gave South Its Arms Page 7 ’Eidolon' Prodigy Bom Not of Man EIDOLON, By J. David S te rn ! published b y Julian M essnef, KEN GOMPERTZ j old ex-T«xa* R anger, B re n n a n 's L O U G H S HA RES I N T O , eral Lee, was responsible f o r the ’49, Ph.D., T ulane, ’61, follow's adequately supplied with arms. b u t conditions becam e too s tr in ­ Inc., New Y erk; price, $3. 244 Texan d«!»icm«iif» Editor S W O R D S : J O S I A H G O R G A S successes th a t the C o n fe d e ra te G orgas le t t e r by le tte r, docum ent W h a t pages. , ! a f f in ity f o r daer a n d tu r k e y the S ou th ern fac to ries g e n t and the fa c to ry failed. L a te r W ith all the hocus-pocus o f a ,. . , , , , , . AND CONFEDERATE ORD- 1 Arm ies enjoyed. Josiah Gorgas, by docum ent, action by action F a in tly rem iniscent of Philip couldn’t produce w as go ten in he became vice-chancellor a t the roller, publicity c a .r p . i g n blown P o a c h m g , . m a t c h e d only by h.a N A N C E . B y F r a n k E. V a n d i v e r . chief of ordnance of th e Con­ th rough those y ea rs of hardship, U niversity of the South, a n d a f te r W ylie’s “ G ladiator,” David S tern’* .w a y , “ R e tu rn o f the T e x a n ," now t , U ,n * U1‘ U l *5' U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s P r e s s . A u s ­ fe d e r a te Armies, had th e ta sk of a strain which u ltim ately lead to exchange fo r co tto n and th e like le aving Sew anee became p reside n t hero, N ew ton Muir, is another .laying a t th e P a r a m o u n t, reG ip s o n ', sto ry was ta m p e re d tin. 3 4 9 p a g e s . $ 5 . from Britain and oth e r foreign of th e University of A labama. superm an. tu r n in g ploughshares into sw ords th e g e n e r a l’s demise. lain*, its g rassroo ts deep, un- w Bh in th e usual Hollywood m anThe crimson days of A m erica’s sources. The d iffe ren ce betw een this and H ere his sickness took hold and — m aking the am m unition and Gorgas was a m an of power, ioved y e t swaying in the a f te r - T1*r ? ^ a )ov* *^o r y taking the Civil W a r have been Actionized To keep production a t full e f ­ the run-of-the-m ill science fiction lath of usual post-picture criti- worst beating. B ut as Gipson said, an d re ite ra te d in non-Action and pow der and guns th a t se n t the foresight, and initiative, and his ficiency, domestic arsenals, a r m o r ­ a f t e r lying infirm fo r somo time, f a n ta sy is its philosophy, its t r e a t ­ he died. G rays through th e ir campaigns. ability to g e t th e m ost from his jjj,m I “ Some of th e things th a t w ere reproduced in scholarly, historical As one of the m a jo r figures in i m e n t of the relationship betw e en A u th o r Vandiver, MA Texas, w orkers k e p t th e southern armies ies, and shops o f te n had to be ^ Based on I T ’s F red G ipson’s! c ut o u t I n a tu ra lly disliked; i f s papers, and painted and set upon moved; on th e seas it became a the stru g g le between the states, science a n d religion, a r t and lovel “ The Home P lace,” it is h» rd to 8«* som ething th a t you m a tte r of blockade running. Gor­ G o rg a s’s life was as full as t h e , sociology. lefim tely not a blazing “ w a s t e think is good throw n away. Yet t h e screen so o fte n th a t we feel An intrig u in g plot, c e n te rin g gas k ep t his m a ch ine ry r u n n in g y ea rs in which he lived. V andiver im ,” hut r a th e r a simple, som® the additions I feel are as if we know those Aghting years with every intimacy except for until the end an d w*as one of the in his scholarly, historical stu dy a r o u n d a genius “ born o f w o­ straig h t-fo rw ard story of a you ng T?o o d i I W),Sb ^ thought of their stenches. last to adm it d e f e a t, both personal is necessarily limited in his style. m an, b u t n o t of man, and en­ A widower who r e tu r n s home to find 'b e rn first, dowed with a body and a brr.in Yet for all the thoroughness, and national. A d equ a tely docum ented and w ith ­ unspoiled by hu m a n w eakness,” new life and a g r e a te r love. “ The R e t u r n ” is a b e tte r th a n this vast coverage has neglected A f t e r the w ar G orgas tried his Dale Robertson, despite s ta r ave rage movie. This m ight be tr u e o ut a d o u b t fully authentic, his hand in business— iron works— w ork should serve as a full r e f e r ­ keeps th e sto ry moving, and rilling, leaves only the impression only th ro u g h th e eyes of a T e x a n ; or ignored a man who, w ith Gencre ate s realistic a n d im agination>f having acted his role adequate- for it gives us a glimpse of a Texence on this p articu la r aspect of c a p tu rin g c h a r a c te r s: th e n a r r a ­ iy; perhaps with his “ fem inine a n ’s life as it really is, not as the Civil W ar. I t is n ot a book for tor, Sam Raleigh; W ade, the pub­ l a g n e t i s m ” he needs no th in g else. Hollywood usually makes it out th t av e ra g e fa n who reads Civil lisher who could have doubled for Jut alongside th a t old re p r o b a te to be. P e r h a p s if they held to W a r m a teria l fo r the daring ex­ Ja m e s B a r r ie ’s Lob, in “ D ear B ru ­ Valter Br enna n, an yone w ithout such veracity in depicting life of ploits and the personal conflicts t u s ; ” N ew ton Muir, th e haploid spark of acting genius m ight oth e r com munities, th e re would be of rly ’6 0 ’s. i prodigy. >ok only adequat e. As a wiry b e t t e r in te r-sta te understanding. \ andiver, son of Dr. H. S. V a n ­ Haploid, by the way, is the te rm diver, distinguished professor of I fo r a person with only h alf the applied m ath em atics and a s tro n ­ I usual n u m b e r of chromosomes, omy here, is only 26 and already , and is the key to the unu sualness has two books and dozens of ar- 1of the novel’s hero. M U R D E R INC. , T h e S t o r y o f “ t he and the set-up of one of the big­ The supposed deal betw een the All this and more came o u t I t i d e s behind him. As a newcomer j “ E idolon” is a book to rea d fo r S y n d i c a t e , ” B y B u t t o n B. T u r ­ gest businesses in A m eric a— FBI and Lepke w hereby the when 'Turkus took over the pro - 1 in the field of historical research, j its science fiction, or if y o u ’re of ku* w i t h Si d F a d e r . N e w York: crim e. “ F e d s ” w ould keep him from the secution of the syndicate. L a t e r ! F ra n k V andive r takes a positive a philosophical tu r n of mind, i t ’* Farr a r, S t r a u s , a n d Y o u n g . 4 9 8 Besides the m u r d e r convictions state, which w anted him fo r on, the K e f a u v e r com m ittee b e - j place as a historian and bears a book to be read fo r its ideas, page*. $ 4 . 5 0 . and o th e r minor tria ls re sulting m urder. gan its investigation, b u t Mr. T u r - 1w atching in the moving years Both a r e worthwhile, T he fine arts p r ogra m of music the College of Fine Arts March — K EN G O M PERTZ I — BOBBY J O N E S fro m the investigation, T u rk u s L epk e’s calmness and confidence kus disagrees with many of th e I ahead. When New York assistant dis­ for March will of f e r stu d e n t re­ 20-22. The tw o dep a rtm en ts will rev ealed many other things, when sen ten c ed to the electric findings. citals, ot h e r f aculty recitals, com- also sponsor the University S ym ­ trict a t t or ney B u r t T u r k u s took am o n g th e m : chair. H e got a reprieve from He also brings in findings of a s lunity concerts, an d the F irs t phonic Band in a concert March over his job. little did he realize Kid T w ist’s account of 86 m u r ­ death f o r two years th ro u g h the 1946 g rand j u r y which found t h a t 1 t h a t he would be par tl y responsi­ inn cal S outhwestern Symposium 30. ble for nine convictions of mu r der j ders in which he was personally c o u r t’s bungling. His final last- “ William O 'D w yer as District At- j Co nt e mp or ar y A m erican MuE le ano r S teb e r will be a g u est n the first d egr ee— including such j involved and* over a thousand m inute plea to Dewey to tell all to rn ey . . . failed and neglected [ MC. of the Com m unity Concert As to save his life wras rejected. to complete a single prosecution ] underworld personalities as Lepke oth e rs he knew about. The Austin Symphony Orches­ sociation on M arch IO. The almost-assassination of The alm ost impossible suicide a ga inst (A lb e rt) A nastasia . . .’’ I and Louis Capone. tra we.I f ea t ur e its eonductor-piIn the faculty recital series Thom as E. Dew’ey when Dutch or m u r d e r of S t a t e ’s w itness when he had a pe rfe c t case I Turkus, later technical advisor] Miist, K/.ra Rachhn, March I? and Floyd Townsley a n d Dr. Paul Schultz th rea ten e d to kill him, Reles while eighteen policemen a ga inst the biggest of crime lords. J for r adio’s "Cri me Does Not P a y ” ! rill present Dorothy Kirston, so­ Pish will p r e se n t an All-Strauss ag a in st orders of the syndicate. w ere on g u a rd 24 hours a day and I f s all in the book and it was ; MEET MR. series, got hot on the trail of the j prano. March hi . recital March 12 and Louis Zabel S chultz paid with his own life for making checks on him every 15 in the new spapers. You may w o n ­ national crime syndicat e when I First Annual S outhw ester Banke and W a lte r Coleman will disobedience. minutes. der why you d id n ’t see it. The I flashy “ Kid T wi s t ” Roles offered! \ympoM>:m C ontem p orary play March 23. reason was we w ere involved in to tell all if— a big if it was, too— ' lin e m an Music will Fe sponsored I \\ the war abo u t th e time the cases In the im m ediate f u tu re will be >y the Dep a rt me n t of Music and the Mu Phi Epsilon Recital a t Re he was allowed to go free for his broke. Even then L epke’s conI p ar t in the n ume r ou s mur der s he viction bro u g h t b a n n e r headlines cital Hall on M arch 7, revealed. in m any new spapers. The s tu d e n t recital series will Af t er careful consideration, the You w on’t believe it, b u t Mr. I include: J u n e Stokes, pianist DA’s office gave T u r k u s the go­ (Our Low-Cost Chocking Service’ T urkus backs his conclusions with Maroh 9; H ettie Garwood, so ahead signal and he began his e x - 1 , proof so th o rough ly th a t it c a n ’t prano, March 26; and David F er pose of the giant organized syndi­ Hilda Wilcox Phelps, who did 1my sketches f o r “ Texas Sheep- be overlooked t h a t “ M urder, Inc.” guson, pianist, on March 27. cate th a t controls, orders, arui the un u su a l illustrations f o r “ T e x - 1m a n .” T hen I realized I d id n ’t j does control crim e in the U nited stops mur der s across the n a t i o n . , as S heepm an,” doesn’t w a n t to j have a monopoly on sheep a f t e r I States. Roles and a couple of witnesses E ig h t Texas AAM “ ta le n t look at a n o th er sheep f o r a long — C. E. MOUNCE began singing and the song t h e y 1 amit*’’ and their program direcwhile. “ I would p r e f e r to he an Mrs. Phelps is in te reste d in sang was enough to put a t least >r, Betty Belander, chose th ree e a te r of lam b,” said th e wife o f ] N a v a jo c u ltu re and viewed it on nine rnoblords to sleep p e r m a n - ! :ta f ro m the U niversity T alen t Dr. Austin Phelps, associate pro- * 60,000 sq u a re mile reservation ently and several ot h e r s away for [how F rid a y night. Mary Alice fessor of zoology. ; in A rizona, New Mexico, Coloa long time. For years now, he's come to the rescue o f lac) C orrigan won firs t place T he illustrations show a s h e e p 1r a d o * and U te h - She »nd h e r sisDuring the ensuing trials, T u r ­ people everywhere who had wasted time and Itll her Spanish dance, “ Malae,nre P a n n i n g * N avajo g uide­ When “ C u r ta in ! ” is shouted at kus and his stool-pigeons revealed m a n ’s life from a siesta in a s u m - 1 »#r.a;” G ilbert K i l l i n g fo r his book of stories, legends and money paying hills with cash or high cost Compiled by Publishers Weekly. the big bosses, the oiganization, m er day to w orking in a b itte r rigina! m onologue; and Bruce the Round-U p Revue April drawings. money orders. The point is, he still pays 'em w in te r gale. “ ( huck W a g o n ” de­ FICTION llling^ey and Bill Slint, piano th e re will be lots of songs, dances “ The c o u n try is quite co-op«rpicts sheep herders re la xing at and rhythm . for a few cents a bill. Th* Ca i n* M u t i n y . H erman Wouk. let. lusk u nd er Texas s u 7 s 7 " “ T h e ! in b e| n* »ke^ h*d * i hc This year'* revue will he a Doubleday, $3.95. ase w inners, who were ehosH c‘ll help you economize too, by giving you Indians c a n t rem ain a* still. F or S h e a r e r ” cap tures t h e s tre n g th completa the Aggie Inter- all-musical show, planned and d the most p a r t they a r e n ’t mod- T h # Cr ue l S e a . Nicholas Monsara clear record o f expenses that will tell you an d skill of a man clipping sheep. r e d e d by Mouzon Law, assistan rat. Knopf. $4. >gikte Show w ere p resented ... iL ii j ernized and m a n y d o n ’t speak professor of drama. A ssistant d I he Drive shows a lone h e rd e r * » v*.... n u _i ___ when to go easy. IIe‘11 help keep your budget Me l vi l l e G o o d w i n , U S A . John P. f ift een o t h e r acts in t h e .English,” Mrs. Phelps continued. rec to r i* Molly Moffett. s u r ro u n d e d by endless billows of i M arquand. Litle, $3.75. on the right track. [ain Lounge of the Union. T u rn in g h e r ta len ts from sheep. Rehearsals will begin Monday P r e s i d e n t ’* La dy . Irving E xpenses will he paid f o r the sketching sheep and Indians, Mrs. ! T h e Put him to work for you n o w ! He'll pay T E X A S Y A R N S A N D J O K E S . By a t 7 p m . in the I n te r n a tio n a Stone. Doubleday, $3.50. uiients to go rn AAM on March lest t r . non shows a h e r d e r Phelps would e njoy doing sketches your bills while you relax. Wi l l i am Da vi s Gill. P u b l i s h e d by lintier a mesquite tr e e with his of do?g. Her inspiration is her M o sca. Sholom Asch. Putnam , They will r e t u r n the nex t day, Room of Texas Union, Mr. Law t he Na y l or Co. , S a n A n t o n i o , announced. S tu d en ts who want to y o u 'r e a l w a y s w e l c o m e a t herd n ea r-b y on a drowsy sumI G re at Dane. 3.75. id “ Mac” C o r n g a n , only girl Texaa; pri ce: $2; 7 3 page*. Rial day. A contrast is “ B lizzard” ___________ I______________________ NON-FICTION in: or. v .ll pr obably be escorted tr y out should contact Mr. Law “ Texas Yarns and Jo ke s, ” be­ w here the herder huddles a^ainrst "FisHinq Tackle Digest’ a r imber of Aggies while she or M iss M offett. T h e S e a A r o u n d U*. Rachel L. Members of the cast already- ing a collection o f stories with a a snow-laden tr e e w atching his ' , * , ^ , t he re , said J i t t e r Nolen, direcCarson. Oxford, $3.50. an nounced a re Bruce Billingsley Texas flavor, is a n o t h e r in the long flocks. “ S h eep m an ’s H o m e ” gives Fresh, Salt Water Guide Th* N e w Y o r k e r T w e n t y - F i f t h br of t e Cr i F lynt, Jaynrt C a tte rto n series of collections of stories with a rustic cabin resting by a peaceCharles R. J a c o b ’s third edition A Leap Year Hance, with music Bill Anniversary Album. H arper, a Texas flavor. ful stre a m . of “ F'ishing Tackle Digest” is now ly the Collegians, followed the Bernie Lax, Buck Wheat, M on $5. This particular one is no better, Johnson, L arry Lehmer, the Bet Mrs. Phelps has an a iry style, on the m a rke t. The magazine is A Man Ca l l e d P e t e r . Catherine rnt Show. and little worse, t han the others. lr h er pen anti ink sketches she a com plete guide to fresh and salt Q u arte t, the Q u i n i n e s , Han Marshall. McGraw, $3.60. Dr. Gill is a fairly interesting c re a te s the image by use of m any ; w ate r tackle. K erry, Nancy Teague, and Te S h o w Bi s. Abel Green and Joe ” 'alone to Do Drawings Pimeaux. storyteller, and if his stories lose sh o rt light lines. T h re e of the Divided into tw o sections, the I.aurie J r . Holt, $5. something in the process of being draw ings are in the sc ra tc h b o a rd j publication deals with the types The list d oes not include a Th* Gre at es t Book E ve r Wr it te n. it Laguna Art Program M em be r of Th e F ed er al De pos it I n su ra n ce Co rporati on the e n te rta in e rs. The rem ainde t r a ns f er r ed f rom .spoken to wri t­ te chnique, a black b ac k g ro u n d j of fish found in fresh and salt Fulton O ursler. Doubleday, ten word, he makes up for it with with the figures scratched ou t in j water, w h at so rt of g e a r to use Profess*.*- J a me s \ alone, direc- will he announ ced later this week $3.95. his personal reme mbr anc es. white. Through trip s in the Big in catching them, and m ethods of of the a r t d e p a r t m e n t of To be tr ut hf ul , the jokes could Bend c o u n try she ca u g h t the feel- fishing, including bait and fly c a s t­ I vt • sit?, will coll­ ACT Wwdnwsday Begins V>e told better, and t he y could be ing of th e land; then com pleted I ing, bay and short fishing, su rf ude th.s year's artists in Ae­ Play ‘Night M utt Fall* f unni er ; the a u t h o r is on f umer the actual drawings in C alifornia. I casting, and trolling. ground with his Texas yar ns— on pr ogra m sponsored by the “ P erh aps the g r e a te s t surprise The f u s t half takes up fresh “ Night Must F all,” will be pre mostly about himself or his ac­ fem ; irt A elation at of all was on the jo u r n e y home, w ater fishing and the second half rented by the Austin Civic TI iv quai ntances arui t h a t is where I.. .rn ' i|| ii. ll at IO when I saw a bill-board advertise- salt w ate r fishing, ate r m -the-round Wednesda the book makes itself worthwhile. m ent with shearers who looked as lission will be I L The digest contains a m anufacthroug h S un d ay at the Playhouse -BOBBY J O N E S if they had stepped from one of tu r e s ’ directory. S tu d en t tickets are 90 cents. ^Jexan & ook News Reviews Recitals, Concerts In March Schedule Nationwide Crime Syndicate Exposed by DA and Stoolie ii* HI Bah , Bah to the Sheep Says Pen Ink Sketcher Acts Chosen iy Aggie 'Scouts' AN EXPERT ON THE LOW-COST OF LIVING! Round*Up Revue To Be All-musical /B est S e d e r s 'Texas Yarns' Have Fair Texas Flavor The American National Bank “A M ig h ty G o o d F rien d to H a v e Story of the South GREG S C O T T (DANCE COURSE 5 PRIVATE DANCE LESSONS • • I Announcing — Ploughshares into Swords Written by a UT Graduate Published by the UT Press by Frank E. Vandiver L i f e P h o t o s O n D isp la y •E N S IBLY PRICED!, AT A ctors connected with the Un versity are Mrs. Homer Ulrich whose husban d is associate pro fessor of ch a m b e r music; E dw ard W. Smith, assista nt d irecto r o the U n i v e r s i t y Developmen Board; Mrs. Mildred Arden V erdieres and Bill Cavness, stu d e n ts; and Mrs.* Helen Rudd whose husband is a student. 14.95 a o .*9»iup*—eh 7-MMii a M.. Theater kj An exhibit of enlarged photo graphs taken by Life Magazin is being shown a t the Austin Pub lie L ibrary. Plowshares into Swords The story o f how Josiah G o r g a s , C h i e f o f o rdnance o f the C o n f e d e r ­ by Frank E. Vandiver U t * * * * * a te A r m y , was able to supply the arms necessary for the a g ra ria n South t o keep its arm ies in the field a ga in s t an industrial fo e . lilt famousllota A biography o f G e n e ra l Josiah G o rg e *, the C h ie f o f C o n fe d e r * )* O rd n a n c e during th * C iv il W a r . FLASH" H o w the quiet organizational genius and d eterm in atio n of one man came incredibly clos* to equalizing th * Other Books on the South trem endously d isprop o rtion ate industrial potentials of th * N o rth and South. Th# O rd n a n c e D e p a rtm e n t never failed until the C o n fe d e ra c y d is in teg ra ted around it. M a y well prove to be one o f the d ecad e s most im portant basic contributions to — W oodw ard The C iv il W a r ( O r d e a l by Fire) Lee's Lie ute na n ts C o n fe d e ra te history Mardi 3-8 4 Nightly Show* I P.M The — Blue and G r e y — 4 PIECE H O LLYW O O D BAND A N IM A L ACTS A >/■t i n ’s La rrj( st Hook < allect!' TEXAS BOOK STORE Fletcher P ra tt Douglas S. F reem an — A n d Tell o f Time JU N IO R R O M O LIVESTOCK (Bast Steele from 11 Texet Counties! ta p H « l Are# Perm l a d t o u c h C lu b Reunion and R e a c tio n Com m anger — Laura K rey C o n f e d e r a t e L eaders in the N e w South — Hesseltine a/vers/Tthu coop ME S I U t i MT. ' J O W N S T 0 t I p Sunday. Mardi 195? i, THE DAILY TEXAN Page 8 UT's March Life jAristotle's Logic M a y Be W rong W on't Be Boring On 2 Premises, John Kirk Say: Time Writer McNaughton To Lecture Tuesday at 8 B r M URRAY U n fa v o r a b le by th e p u b lic ity p u b lic a tio n hat given him an e x c e p tio n a l u n ­ F IS H E R of d e rs ta n d in g o f the role p la ye d by caused the the tru th press a« a reg u lato r;, in f lu ­ ence on g o v e rn m e n ta l actio n . has in c ite d m a n y S e n a to rs to de­ “ I t is the press.’’ he says, “ tha* serves as the n a tio n a l c o n scien ce, as the re s tra in in g p o w e r w ith o u t w hich c e n tra l g o v e rn m e n t could have u n h in d ered rein to im pose an a u th o r ita ria n ru le on th e n a tio n .” n o u n ce the press, F ra n k MetS’au g h to n , v e te ra n C a p ito l re ­ p o rte r says. \ h e y h ave den o u n ced the press in v io le n t and p erso n al te rm s u n ­ d e r the clo ak o f im m u n ity he eta ted. M c N a u g h to n cite s as in v e s tig a ­ tions s tim u la te d by r e w sp a p e r T h e free-lan ce a u th o r and c o n ­ p ressu re the T e a p o t D om e c le a n ­ g re ssio n al c o rre s p o n d e n t fo r T im e up, the in q u irie s in to stock scan ­ M a g a z in e ap p e ars I uesd ay e v e ­ d als, the fiv e - p e rc e n te rs, the R F C n in g at 8 p.m. in an add ress, •issue, In te rn a l R e v e n u e B u re a u “ C o v e rin g VV ash in gto n fo r T im e ,’ f (irru p tio n s , and the q u e stio n o f sponsored b y the P u b lic L e c tu re s .shipm ents to Red C h in a . C o m m itte e . T h e w ild and v it r io lic d e n u n c i­ M c N a u g h to n ’s a w a rd - w in n in g a tio n s o f the press bv g o v e rn m e n ­ c o v e ra g e as c h ie f c o m m e n ta to r at ta l o ff ic ia ls o f q u e s tio n a b le in te g ­ th e T im e-sponsored te le c a sts of r ity , he b elieve s, is a “ g ra v e in ­ th e re c e n t K e f a u v e r c rim e in v e s ti­ fr in g e m e n t on t h e s a n c tity of FR A N K M C N A U G H T O N g a tio n h e arin g s w as the c u lm in a ­ press fre e d o m .” tio n o f tw e n ty ye a rs s k illfu l r e ­ It is a d an g e ro u s tre n d , he says, p o rtin g , eleven o f w h ic h w e re w hich m ust tie a rre s te d if the B ill a p e rt in W a sh in g to n . o f R ig h ts is to re ta in a n y su b -! A re g u la r member o f the “ M e e t stance, the P r e s s ” ra d io pan el in 1950 “ I t seem s to me. he sa s, “ that. and 1951, he has rep o rte d fo r if the g o v e r n m e n ts busine-- w ill T im e the w o rk o f the A to m ic E n ­ not b ear p u b lic ity and pu b lic e x ­ e rg y C o m m ission and the Su­ a m in a tio n , it ought, not to be g o v­ T e x a s high school stu d en ts in ­ prem e C o u rt, and has a u th o re d 36 e rn m e n t b u sin e ss.” va d e the cam p u s, M a y 1-3, fo r o f the m a g a z in e ’s c o v e r sto n es. A b le and honest a d m in is tr a to r s . the In te rs c h o la s tic L e a g u e tr a c k , H is in tim a te a c q u a in ta n c e w ith w ill tak e re p o rte rs f r e e ly i n t o lit e r a r y , and speech m eets. n a tio n a l g o v e rn m e n t and p o litic s H o w e v e r, at that, tim e s tu d e n t? .their c o n fid e n c e , w ith in proper lim it- , and w elco m e the m oat m ight not n o tice them so m u ch , S e a rc h in g s c r u t in y o f t heir s te w - ' sin ce fin a l exam s begin M a y 20. C A RS W A SH ED T h e b a c c a la u re a te ad d re ss fo r Itrd s h ip ." 3-5 m in u tes f J 25 g r a d u a te * w ill be g ive n M a y 25, “ N o p ro fe ss io n , h o w e v e r ,” he and com m encem ent, e x e rc is e ? are co n tin u e s , “ is w ith o u t its fa u lt s ; M a y 31. "G R IM E H o g o v e rn m e n t is p e rfe c t. B u t it G ra d u a te or not, stu d en ts w ill is o u r jo b as re p o rte rs to m ake to SH IN E' p ro b a b ly be p re tty glad w h en tha* •loth a s good as w e p o ssib ly cai .” tim e com es. “ It is to th is ta sk th a t w e d e­ C le a n e d inside an d out vo te o u rs e lve s , d esp ite the im ­ V a c u u m e d and S id e w a lls passioned p rotests o f those whose S te a m C le a n e d su b te rfu g e we e x p o s e ." Meet, Graduation, Finals, Fall in May Engineers Hear Weston Expert in ESB M o n d ay AUTOMATIC E le c t r ic a l arid r ad io e n g in e e rin g CAR W A SH CO. 221 S. Lamar Anna Hiss to Talk Ho Campus League M iss A n n a H iss, d ire c to r o f p h y ­ sical ed u c a tio n fo r w o m en , speaks M o n d a y to the C a m p u s L e a g u e o f W o m e n V o te rs in the T ex a s U n ­ ion a t 4:45 p.m. M iss H iss w ill also discu ss plans fo r a new p h ysical tr a in in g p ro ­ gram w ith 'p e n a l a tte n tio n to ju n io r w om en. ( J i l l s are in v ite d to this m e e t­ ing and urged to jo in C am p u s L e a g u e co m m itte e s w h ic h are be g in n in g th e ir w o rk in p re p a ra tio n fo r even ts on the sp rin g c a le n d a r. M em b ers a le req u ested to b rin g slues, e ith e r $1 fo r the y e a r or 75 re n ts fo r a sem ester. M iss H iss w ill speak on “ T h e P a rt That P h y s ic a l E d u c a tio n P la y s in the L if e o f a W ellR o un d ed P e r s o n .” W hen Medicines A re Needed . . . Y o u c a n d e p en d up on o u r la r g o a to c h a to m alta it po aatb la to A ll p re ae rip tio n a in o m a t te r o f m in u to a ED M IN O R , Pharmacist I BI O G u a d a lu p e OUI 3-8 2 1 1 The Bast Mexican Food with Fast, Courteous Service N ew ly Decorated stu d en ts w ill b e a r a discussion o f e le c t r ic a l in d ic a tin g in s tru m e n ts b y a re p r e s e n ta tiv e o f W e s to n I n ­ s tru m e n ts In c. M onday. T h e m e e tin g , a jo in t one o f the s tu d e n t c h a p te rs o f the A m e r ic a n In s tit u te o f E le c t r ic a l E n g in e e r s an d the In s tit u te o f R a d io E n g i­ n e e r?, w ill bp a t 7 :30 p.m. in Ex‘ p e iim e n ta l .Sciences B u ild in g 115. B y A N N A JA C K S O N lf you th in k e x tr a - c u r ric u la r life fo r th e f ir s t m on th o f the se m e ste r has been so rt o f d u ll, th e n y o u ’ll n o tice th in g s p e rk in g up a b it the n e x t fe w w eek ?. H ig h -school b a s k e tb a ll p la y e rs an d fa n s b y the h u n d re d s w ill be on th e cam pu s M a rc h 6-8 fo r the a n n u a l In te rs c h o la s tic L e a g u e Bask th a i! T o u rn am en t (b o y s ) in G re g o ry G ym . T h e e to pro ve th a t fe m a le s can p la y the gam e, too, high-school g ir ls ’ team s w ill co m p e te in the L e a g u e s to u r n a m e n t, M a rc h I l ­ ls . H o u se s o f fr a t e r n it ie s , s o r o ri­ tie s, and c lu b s w ill be tr a n s fo rm e d s h o r tly in to “ flo w e r ” m ills, a* the o rg a n iz a tio n ? s ta rt to m ake p a p e r flo w e rs to ad o rn th e ir flo a ts »fo r th e R o u n d - U p p arad e. A p r il 5. O f co u rse , R o u n d - U p w ill be topp ed o f f w ith the m u sical R e v u e and th e a n n u a l d an ce in G r e g o r y G y m A p r il 5. ASME Honors 2 UT Students T h e Y o u n g R e p u b lic a n s an d the n e w ly o rg an ize d Y o u n g Democrat..* d e b a te W e d n e s d a y a t 8 p.m . in the M e n ’« Lo u n g e o f the T e x a s U n io n . T h e s u b je c t w ill b e : “ R e s o lv e d : T h e D e m o c ra tic F o re ig n P o lic y is A d v a n ta g e o u s to A m e r ic a n * .” The D e m o c ra ts w ill take the a f f i r m a ­ t i v e side. Bobby B lu m e n th a l and Bob W h e e le r a re the D e m o c r a t ic %d e ­ b a te rs ; Jo h n K coma , a r r i a per-; son y e t to be decided w ill re p r ser t the R e p u b lica n s. T h e m e e tin g w ill be open to the p u b lic. T w o U n iv e r s it y stu d e n ts won a w a r d ? fo r te c h n ic a l p ap e r? a t the stu d e n t c o n fe re n c e o f th e A m e r i­ can .So ciety o f M e c h a n ic a l E n g i­ n e e r? held at the U n iv e r s it y F r i ­ d a y ai d S a t u r d a y . B riz e ? w e n t to H a ro ld G. Jin d rieh for his p ap e r on “ S y m b o lic L o g ic " and to Ja m e s J . S m e ta n a on “ G as T u r b in e s in A u to m o ­ b ile s .” O th e r w in n in g p ap e rs w e re “ T h e V o r te x T u b e a? a R e f r ig e r ­ a tin g D e v ic e ,” by ( barieVV. B e v ie r of S M I , “ U n d e rg ro u n d F r e ig h t .” by Ju lio - M G e rm a n y of S M C , and “ M a x im u m U n it E l i actio n o f W a t e r V a p o r and NatL iq u id IU d ro carb o n x fro m u ra ! G a s ,” b v I,. G le n n R a d e r J r . of A A M . A t the (lo s in g b a n q u e t S a t u r ­ d a y n ig h t at the H o m e E c o n o m ics T e a H ouse VV. R . V Voolrich, dean o f the C o lle g e of E n g in e e r in g , Ja m e s f’ H a f t , C h a n c e llo r of the U n iv e r s it y , and D r. T . S. P a in te r , p re s id e n t o f the U n iv e r s it y w e re in tro d u c e d a- h o n o rim c h a irm e n o f tile U n iv e r s it y c h a p te r o f the A S M E. O ne h u n d re d six ty stu d e n ts and f a c u lt y m e m b e r? fro m L o u is ia n a P o ly te c h n ic In s titu te , L S I. ’, A A M U o lle g , T e x a s T e ch , T u la n e , and the U n iv e r s it y a tte n d e d the c o n ­ fe re n c e . BALLROOM R O B B IN G B O D Y S H O P SC O TT * P A IN T IN G DAN CE SCHOOL A GLASS OVER T E X ls THEATRE 7 9439 taos # A SLA T # A U T O R E F IN IS H IN G Lavaca ONE DAY Cleaning and Pressing LO N G H O R N CLEAN ERS 2S36 PH G u a d a lu p e 6 -3 8 4 ? A H e liu m it C o e tu m e e — B u y a r R e n t t n ll e t e d B a l l o o n * W a h a v e N o v e l tla a e t a l l t y p e * A U STIN NOVELTY C O . 6 -3 7 3 3 6 0 0 W . S tb P h . 6 -4 3 5 7 Sell Things That You No Longer Need To Some­ one Who Can Use Them. A Daily Texan CLASSIFIED AD Will Do The Trick! RADIO SALES & SERVIC E W M W a ls h , O w n e r 2010 S p e e d w a y 7-3846 EXPRESS BUS S E R V IC E M e lb a DON T HOARD! No E x t r a C h a rg e P h . 7-4973 N o v e lty R u b b e r (too w . atli s t re t A b ra n ch o f B e rk m a r - C o lle g e Bo o k S t o ic w ill be opener! a t 1008 C o n g re s s soon, o w n e r I . E . Berkman has an n o u n ced . T h e n ew store w ill h an d le on!;, t y p e w r it e r s and those books w h ic h a re c o lle c t o r ? item s, M r. B e e k m a n said F r id a y . N o ch an g e s w ill be m ad e in the C o lle g e S to re on the Id ag , M r. B e e k m a n stated. CO VERS H a v in g a p a r t y ? A U S I IN W E L D I N G St R A D IA T O R W ORKS Berkm an’s Branch Store To Open on Congress S P E E D W A Y “ C o m p te !* B o d y a n d F e n d e r R e p a ir '’ G R fG GOP-Demo Debate Set tor Wed. at 8 w hether a ll fru its are y e llo w / A “ v a lid m a th e m a tic a l p o stu ­ k n o w le d g e ," d e c la re d K ir k . “ A r is to tle , a p io n e e r in log ic, said. la te ” is an e m p ty s ta te m e n t, Jo h n A r is t o t le 's re a s o n in g fall*- a< R. K ir k , in s tr u c to r in p h ilo so p h y, a d v a n c e d the p rin c ip le o f basin g told m em b ers o f O m e g a C h i E p s i­ a co n clu sio n on tw o p re m is e s .” in a n o t h e r in s ta n c e . K i r k sa id , K ir k b e lie v e s A r is t o t le '? id ea in s is te n c e on s y llo g is tic in f e r e i lon, h o n o ra ry c h e m ic a l e n g in e e r­ w a* b a s ic a lly so u n d b u t th a t an A r is t o t le ig n o re d p e r f e c t ly v i ing fr a t e r n it y . u n ju s tifie d co n clu sio n lin e o f re a s o n in g w h ic h c a n n o t ; In his speech, M r. K ir k .-wild th a t e n t ir e ly sy llo g iz e d . a g e o m e tric a l th e o re m , because it c o u ld be e v o lv e d fro m tw o a p ­ “ M o d e rn lo g ic 's m a in advanti is based on black-o r-w hite re a s o n ­ p a r e n tly v a lid prem ises. “ O n e m ig h t t r u t h f u l ly a y th a t he» in m o d e rn science b y the ing, is q u ite e m p ty o f k n o w le d g e a il lem ons a re y e llo w , an d all c re ase d f a c i l i t y o f re a s o n in g g ain ed th ro u g h e x p e rie n ce . “ I t is o n ly th ro u g h in d u c tiv e le m o n s a re fr u its , b u t it w o u ld vid e d b y n o ta tio n a l symboisc e r t a in ly be q u e stio n a b le fa m o u s A . B a n d C . ” in fe re n c e th a t w e a c q u ire new- m ost Phone 2-2475 T E X A S ST U D EN T P U B L IC A T IO N S to H O U STO N 4 Hour* Call 2-1 13S Kerrville Bus Co. I 18 E. I0th LIDO LOUNGE O N THE D R A G & WjcdbcurrwhoA 504 BAST AVE. Phone 7-0253 Dancing No Covar Charge THE H A R R IS WAYSIDE INN 'IfouhA foJi (D ining (pisuzAuAs? On Barton Springs Road I Block Vilest of Lamar EL CHARRO For th* bait in HOLLYWOOD smarter styling than ever SUITS for spring '52 • Choice Steaks • Sandwiches • Salads • Fine Cold Beverages M E X IC A N FO O D O PEN : Daily Sa t l l a.m .-l a.m. l l a.rn.-2 a.m. 912 Red River ' 8-7735 Tailored with the California flair for flat­ tering the physique with smooth stream­ S P E C I A L I Z I N G • Steaks • • i n 1 C atering Salads • lined lines that are natural looking, nev’ot at Reynolds P en la nd Sea Foods # Exclusively in Au sti • extreme, and always in good taste. Foe Rooms For Private Parties Spring we d like to show you the new two- Tarrytown Restaurant 242$ Exposition button model in either Phone 8-2652 flannels or muted plaids. 9 0 ) ! ( n jt f ir r g f i v e s t to A u s t i n (■(wilds ■anilii lid a t $90 butter-smooth