■- r: ■';r E DI ’age 2 . y . ; f' V B a t mmmrnmmmrnim /! 1 • 1 i 1 if full house wep: ) diet, ^latqman, Knightly Gentleman 1 rH R° S V I’ouifder of A^i 1948 Traditiic jisenhower?... MT .11 Yesterday the j-itjief pblfticul leaders of Texas cdme out ^)]' “Ik ’ Eisenhower as . pemocratic Presidf ri tial c ui didate. Perhaps they thought thujt witr (len. MacArthur avowedly after tlic itepiit lj< an ncmination, Gen. “Ike,” npw pata ident 4l Coluinbia Unt- ? 1 I know of no man with suth potentiali ties.” i !■;; ; 1 Earlier, during a discussion of Gen. Mac- Aggies to see .Arthur and Eisenhow>r, Jest^h said, “I’m confused Presi- with the Gl's. I’d take Ei sen kovrer over the H^ve talked to, so other man.’ 1 1 v | ! j ' Bob Cal /ert, chairnian of tH State Demo cratic Committee, commenting oh the gover nor’s, statement from jAustin, declared that Eisenhower is the strongest candidate that could be available to Ijhe Democratic party the Pemocratic at the preset time. "Eisenhdwer fAdadlhgl u ...^ r .. , ,. ..... ticket would imijnpasurnblv improve the Calvjert said Eisenhower needs to make • changes bf electing! i Dem icratic president,” an even stronger statement thab he previous- Gov. Behuford H. Jestersuf yesterday. J.V made abbot running! to stop all speculation Jeslfdr said this is p* rtticuluily true iii in ^i^^jtion. _ + L -• , View of jthe RuA threitT-, C4,vert ! aMed th ^ ^ faVor ^ f,rst - a Askejd at hjs iprsss cdfuereiicb wfiat he . 1 tihought | of Eiseni|i(|wer’s election chances, delegation instructed for Eisenhower and secondly an unihstructed delegation. t i-j. >i i t p r ’Senator Qlin D1 Johnston, South Caro- Jester said: Lt i il lina Democrat. .il -T think Eisejiihiwev-^yith the confidi : _ ocrats organic Vnce the people Have in h: rti-i-anq with Rus^ ‘ ‘ - - - 1 i sia posing a .threht-i-I'thbj^ Eisenhower on any: ticket woiild 1 jx hare ft® lick.” ‘‘Would-you fpji'or a T ekis delegation in- structedi to vote;; for Eis‘nljioweil’e nominal : itiop!?” d reporter)linked. * r i at,; proposed that Southern Dem- nizh * sdlidly behind Eisenhower for the prusidehtial nomination. , Johnstpn contended Eisenhower is an in dependent, not a Republican. Johnston called the retiree chief of staff the best drawing card‘anti-Truman Dembcrats could pick to win nationwide support 1W. hi j* Cotton Discussion Pro To B« Held in Wes : j r i i [ • j .. •.4. j 1 j | .;j The Texas towns of Sinton, Taylor am, be the scenes of cotton discussion programs March 22, and April 10, Fred C. Elliott\A&M ton work specialist announced yesterda; 10, Will fe»lui»v* & The meetings are sponsored by the Wton uroc committee of the^ State-Wide Cot-'tf~—r- i Pd—f— * - -•* W, will! feaui^UST Means ito West lexas,’T jUbbimk will Marltli 19, tension cot- u ition BETWEEN THE BOOK ENDS .. ‘One Fine Day! Is Story Of ‘Perfect Village in Aspic’ !ii ter-Downes. Little, Brown. f Out of her keen awareness of the undertones and overtones of human behavior Mol lie Panter- pownes has fashioned a warm and {ikillful story of a day in what was, before the war, the ‘‘perfect village jn aspic/’ | The book is an account of a sin gle day in the life of a cultivated English woman nowj thirty-eight years old. She was brought up in p house with plenty of w r ell-traint*d FeSnew go#4s at l Mye ever re- told. Thejlastj two speakers wete good, «o w Cpy "IrriLgl/ld’VS! a' J eeived the atten ijb i giVim fp the (.rent Is- long as they could be kept on the subject ma tter of course, & devoted old ij sues class. An efsb' rimeiiivthe first in this and refraijned from name-calling. Cost $750, nurse for her little girl, a skillful ‘ • 1 ’ jaim;of the first «n I am told;. , I j? M , , |jk4rdeher for her rJsles, a cook in ojleavors to giVe The cldss can expect a'quiz on the speech- “ “Sc IS i "SS es at any jtime between now and final exam butcher . s boy t0 briRR in the bes t week. j j ” i j ‘li .1 J I'i Iquality meat for thejaaily fare of My owjn suggestiQn.is that; the course be ;her family, used as originally intended, used to stimulate . N ” w , al ’ t {] at wonderfully effi- thought.Jtml here-is jan outline that could |S'y^l^a/^S^mJn By MRS. WILNORA ARNOI.U ♦i' ' ® ea ^* r8 ^ v ' 8 * r 11 . don. Holding down her job as The ONE FINE DAY. By Mollie Pan- Yorker’s London correspon- ■dfent, she commutes to the city njuch as does Stoil’ien Marshall in ONE FINE DAY. She was bom in London in 1906 and married Clare Robinson in 1927. Is Great Issues Course Clicking?.,. hive ever re- -told. Thejlastj two speakers wete good «o 11: Ip the Great Is- long as they could be kept on the subject mat tcr of course, a devoted i h ! • jiart of the courilry and I the nation, this jeourse graduating senior s/ sbrje ; background m ! world events. I |. ’.j ■, !■ - As i f whole the coursjliii a siicce.ss—that j is toLsaiy, enougliji itere^t lad been aroused to 1 show the nee Ij and iniij crtancje of such a i class. But the following ejttter, received by The ;Bktttalion, ip li cates a wiy in which the j course might be improve ft | j; 1 Up ito this tutu I ha'ie ppt token the op- jpprtunity-. to thjan c yoi Tbr jypur part in ■bringing the Great Issuesiepurae to the cam- .pus. I am a memi er oil fhjajt and felel that I jam HonortiU|f tfjf ;excusej for the fvVhat-tli.e^hK'ir a titude that Mhei Gre at Issues. re; is' anything we imore constructive |siijieS,t hat face the eipuptrj there is no heed alt this tihjie it ; thinkirlg about the Grea world today. Aim in thin [excuse; for the generailly prevails abou '; The Great yisues- coiibfe can be a good 1 start toward uindorstai dittk] the impending S !. .issues.j It can bo turned into a thought pro , yoking course of (he htoie|Kt qu ility; so far it has; done.very little As originally con ceived; the course was td lie a thought pro- H i ^vokifig mstrumiejKit{. bu,t ijt) has |e\|olved intoi a • . ro]te-niemory c ! I . materjial does dersUjtnding: of I that it doek hot induce th tions tasiked oh a *’ ‘ 1th ; of some of ouf[ pjoten fear the class ii ‘ of narrow pres ThiuS, far tl lemls^r jon the) to eakdto be followed", l.f i • ! j, j j who occasionally does a little clean- 1. Have speakers present eiiich side of the t ing—the garden is rieglected. The question. Imported bjj domestic speakers will mistress of this British home, used to a gracious and dreadily existence, must overcome numerous handicaps to learn in middle life! to do for her self. This is the background ojf the sthry, yet it is dot a narrowly housOkecperish book. Both the au thor and her chief character are fine, intelligent, and attractive women. The author's picture of one day in the life of tlii^ hard-pressed homemaker is not mere tea-table do. One period eacIf Speaker. Question periods after speejehes if possible. 2. Members o(f the claps Stage a debate on the subject. Oneipehiofl. j ; , 8. Instructor jsum up the question and ask for questions. One period. 4. Each member of the class write a short paper on his own; thoughts about the sub ject. One!period. ‘ j: will be c tion. andjlboth sides will! be presented. Ini picking t lw ' i “- : — — of view course w stances, HAKTRAMFF’S VOCABULARY- BUILDER. By Giistavus A. Hart- rampf. Gros.set & Dunlap. If you would like to attain the ijiiaktery over language which every intelligent person strives foiv—so cially, j professionally or commer- Cially4-you will not find a more valuable tool than Hartrampf’s Vo- cabulairy-Builder, One of the most i ‘famou^ standard word books evei publisped/for years it has been a ■pasic source hook for professional j ’writers and speakers who must de-; yclb their power over words. ■ h addition to the thousands of illuminating words and phrases Which haVe always comprised this hook, this new edition contains sev- ieral valunble new features. These include a newly designed vocabu- jlady-builtjjng section and a series of helpful tests Which enable you ;to discover and correct the weak spots in your own vocabulary. Whether you offer news, enter tainment, ideas* or merchandise, j ) this ingenuous hook fpiiejily and easily supplies the right words to best express your message. In it you will find words which describe every phase of human experience, words to make your conversation and letters more interesting, pet- tort Committee of'Texas, the A&M Extension Service, and the Texas Farm Bureau Federation in coopf oration with the National gotten Council of America, the Texas Cot- ton Association, the Texas Cotton seed Crushers’ Association, the Texas Cotton Ginners Association, and the Texas Cheniurgic Council, 1 as well as the Chambers of Com merce of Corpus Christ! and South Texax, and Taylor and East Texas. The meeting at Sinton, which will be held at 2 p. m., March ‘Id in the Court House, will feajturd ‘The World Cotton Outlook” by Read Dunn* of Memphis, Tennessee, di rector of foreign trade division, National Cotton Council of Ameri ca, and “Progress of the 7 step Cot ton Program in Texas,” by Elliott. Floyd Lynch, extension district agent, will preside over the meeting and will oe introduced by R, R. Gibb, county agricultural agent of San Patricio County. Th^ meeting in Taylor,; te bei held in the SPJST Lodge Hall at 7:80 p. m. March 22, will include' motion pictures on some of the most recent developments in Aiuer- ican cotton production and market ing, “The World Cotton Outlook,” by Read Dunn of Memlphife; Tenh.; “Interpretation of World ; Cotlpn Outlpok to Texas Productibn," by Tyrus R. Timm, extension econot miat,^“Economical Cotton PrOddci. tion in the Blacklands” by Dr. J. E. Adams, head of the department of agronomy, and “Soil and Crop Management in the Central Black- lands” by Dr. J. R. Johnston, chief of Blaekiand Experiment Station,. Temple. Elmore Torn, executive vice-pres ident, Texas Cheniurgic Council, will introduce S. L. Neal, extejn-: sion district agent, Us- presiding officer. The meeting in Lubbock at the Palace Theatre at 10 a. tn. April Spencer, agricult Crushers’ Asso- ‘The Outlook for ,h' Plains in 1948'’, l/subarintendept of ent/Substation in The Outlook for m Farmers’ View Fortenberry,; gin- f Monroe 1 f * ting eitensicb di-„ nan of the cotton ittee of the fitate- niittee of Texas, m w«te: d [will Conclude with » Mi*u*»»bri. pi>riO|i(i|n. j t ThereJs a [cdiistart fhteat of “pop quiz zes” hanging djver tin cfass. In my own. ex-* perietocei I hav^j fqund jtliiit|niemOrizing given ” lead to an mh- (The ivritei - 's earhe just the right words to command attentiorr and action in any situa tion. A handy hook to have around, don’t you think?; \ f. • ■■ to ' , DALA.CE ft I'MONn Z-B879 WEDNESDAY—THURSDAY 'm —Plus—j NEWS—SHORT—(\KT()() N 40c Tax Included 12c. j THURS—nU SAT J -Features Begin— .j , 1:35'- 4:15 - 6:55 9-an . aRdTrson Dagger' •'rjHNlODNEY Ai§H*SPER®Gl .****** iMdO by M* i f'Wfvcadbp ■ ' \ UNItED STATES PICTURES, jo* .WARNERS/ i A MONDAY who would Ibfe glad to s}jeak for nothing. Men could be found. * ti is knoivn to The Rat^ pie but of the material at hand. Mollie Paiiter-Downes lives in the country, forty miles from Lon- Letters t nects: m hiiu rec( polleie Station t) spual Classjhuye,fallen belojv ble etoimationj ff totalljv lacking ir indicated that be ‘of thb'terms he was Ctor Mexi(«n favopite’spot to 1T n " n j said [to develop . did thin:’ “Yoliseto belle^a del butjtio. ♦ I IN; ' : ■' - ie Battalion, ge Stat on, ■hr L V jii -j. h\ of C« after — Iisheh.]chairman of the com| mittee which operated tjhe Great Issues course says that; as a ktaie Idhool we are restricted ©NIONS AND HORSERADISHES in what speakers fnaAibe invited to the cam- .. pus. .ndilpnf of l^iTgj a Communist $500 to ^ »*?*•»«= .... , k Onions and hoi’saradi.shes to the atirial. j And certainly speak here would certainly sfet off an un^ 1 Sp 0rts Editorslllli kibgj One of the ques- pleasantPolitical and religious debates Lot’s give cmijt, where-credit is ■nt? quiz was “What is are likewise 1 taboos hi a state institution. due. Contrary to pictures and stor- letbatil ’ ^ **.j • t r -t. '*--<•*-l- tp (the Great Isspes mark in my hum- le fitst toias a man who was new itf^kto ami his speech nogJkmnv the meaning using.'Coto, $500, I lam Issues. I might g “other’; (“Devil’? were chi views in operate reports that his r- tomtom folvseii, official tv Texas, Is lurirg 1 o Su )se( ip ions d ac s n a; Vick Handley r._T. Miller, Ken A*ck-T. Nolen . R. L. Billingsley. - Singletary Itoi: I ond. ■Y, . nwy .■eipebt is one for a pill bjat, It goes like joltefcn— para* la no othejr fr| eans are ; Available, we jt “de'viljs j advocates^' to telL the sides:, cf 1 'Controversial question^, advocates,” in toedieval practice, tichmen Vho presented anti-church debates.] i jl : :j ’ ’ . I ; . ...{ L rom the Lincoln County News, Daniariseotta, Maine) j •|n6tice'T1T I am hot engaged to anyone yet. !i ’ Ethel Burnham. ■ he Battalion i •. i : . : ■ . .' Tl'- ii I sfjapbr of the Agricultural and Mechanics five times a week and iirqulaticd j»|inade by telephone (4-5444) or at the editbrial offi . •> Ca College of Texas and the City every Monday through Friday During thej summer Th« Battalion is pub- c $4.30 per sfchool year. Advertising rates furnished on resuest. f n _ , q I - '■I'ii I-i —US—"IT-—l id examination periods. itlitled'exclusively to the use for rrpublicatic nlif all news dispatches credited in the paper and local newsj of *sppnt4ndi al^ | other matter herein are also reserved. . .j' j Associated Collegiate P^ss Member - NELSON.. Nell on Weynani a.-,- .j—t ...Wire Bdiior; nr an ...Managing Editors ...Feature Bdiior Feature WViteri . C. C. Munroo. Kunae, J. C. Fa ± — Maurice Ho Grady Gw Sam Lanfc Art Howai James De> Herachel Bob J oa j r 11 he placed'by telephone (4-5324): hr at the Student Activities Office, Room ' 1 . ■ 1 : : . . ! I : I ’V I to!' -TTT \ ' 1 1 Room 201, Gooti- Member of The Associated teous 11 heiys dispatches ■ origin published pics. And that map can run!!! ERNEST A. BAETZi, JR.. ’47 HAROLD H. EDWARDS. ’47 W. A. VON SCHOEI,ER. ’47 (Ed. Note: We are shippinR the onions and horseradishes to the reporter who covered (he Border Olympics for ihe Asso ciated Press. Much Confusion ap parently was | caused by the change in the; line-up.) MESS HALL FIGURES ;; : Editor, The Battalion: Now that mess hall costs are be ing discussed, .maybe you could supply us with a few figures. Our question is: What are the salaried of the people in charge of our mess halls ? Sincerely; F .(!. DEES,,’47 W. A. WHI TEH ILL, ’46 ^«Cinpl[BS-OriNII mm, Llrq UUKUDlIU III LI I LU I I - ISMr.lwio J •‘OfUCf McNUh • M»(RI H 8ARRM miniversai reuH.se COMING: Mk ■Han DONLEVY Man BLYTH 1 lam*, DUNN u i Plus - | : NEWS—C’ARTOOV 30c—i Tax Included 12 i "’fcb. H. DE KEYZER. ’50 I). R. BEAZLEY. ’48 TOM T. BEAZLEY,’45 I K. D. COLLI NS WORTH PAUL E. IRWIN " DALACX ( OMING IMIDN^IT SHOW’-- TUESDAY/ MARCH ?3BD ticket^ On sale now Admission 60c resented nitltmajly by National Ad- ig Sen-Ice, tbc,, at New Tork C|ty, 30. Lob Angela and Ban Francisco. - ell ; ^ I, I. ,|i .Y'Xm#- 1 *Ma la. Andy —..Advertising 1 ..Co-Editors 4- tos (Ed. Note: A complete salary schedule for the, mew halls can be seen on request in the office of Jay Peniston, $biaa Hall base ment.) i.A ffl — ^■iuZSp^ta Bdfe 44- Dr John SL taldwell jl Optometrist Caldwell’s Jewelry Store Bryan, Texas 44— Ml - j .11 L-li .' J W ATCH FOR THESE BIG O N ES THE BIG CLOCK IF YOU KHtW SUSH L! “GONE V.iin Tttr, wiNl/ “IHE BISHOP’^ VVITtl” , V , REX HW Rictiard bjr JOHN