The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 16, 1948, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    iff 1
«
....
, jk
fji
•
/
! : ‘
2
i
75 Years of E
On June 6$ Te>^sXlji ist
I
+H
a tt a l i on
: :
If"
I :l
‘V ’>ol lifaiStatesman, Knightly Gent
rence i lull iian Ross, Pounder of Aggie fradi
Since) its c|*eati<)n 75 ^ejrjilajgo the Fort Worth sjchopl has ipdKhed through the difl'icul-
schools pphcy seonci
in Texas.;-We (iiouijdi
guam. VVt) would iil
; i With our-:ovvr
r. X. u. on itJ jsejv
ties of growth ihd fcwo cUtnp
fticuity of mor| tin h 20<)i i"|M
i | A : I '■ ■ • M
Founded #ri^i tally i
school moved |o W ico in
nient increased 344 perceiit si
I An ajnnou|iced (biiilding p
crease in the u|iive isities
a new Ailditorjum ^nd P
house, a s)tudet|t‘ ujnaoti bu
recondituhiijiglof twrrentj bu)U
' ; T. C U : . if alls]
President! Sadler isj
brfng the| schools eij
In aij address
n- f
JA1
ication
i ■ >1 ] i .■ i.. |
University will celebrate iljs dl;
► • = •
IARY 16.1948
-m—i
ions
v.S
ntoiwi abtiiversary.
iwvements (until |t njow has ah enrollment of 6,500! and a
I i'
I : i
mi!
AT THE CHANCE
11
;
H
f.1 at Thorp Spring by
its; prjesejit
pjrc
■ j ' • |
Addison and Randolph Clark, the
tco in 189S|ja|nd then to its prfeseht location iiii 1{)10. There the, enroll-
L;U>4 1941 to roach its present! level.I n i ^ ' i
_ _.r a rn of $8,085,000 has opened the wiy to a tremendous in-
actUi J educattonal plant. The fund will provide a new Science Hall,
ne Am Building, a he\y major ycadeniicj building, a new field
klijnri enlargement of the library, an apartment dormitory, and
bujk <n#fs. . ; . j ,j j j] 1; I I j I i i no
shewing
now
dow
f ds
fitife
:omrriprh
rningf its
Very
away iil the endowment ofi scholarships,^and fellowships,
officials! and! supporters of the school for sufficient funds to
sburces to $17,000,000!. I * * 1 L) j} if ffl
: ■ ; n r • g- ! ; 7 I I ■ | •
jrijttmg. the schoiols 75th anniveirsary. President Sadler gave tl(ie
....w.fj,... rij) id growth. 'j. 41 (Wie have no desire tp becjome the largest school
iT do ill ijf we) Wanted to. (Oiir 1 supijeme (i^- s irc if?' to" build a quality pro-
e to bl'cc mi' nbt a big school, but 4 great school^” j
diamond ijniiversary. oiiily '3 'yeajrs away, wei offer congratulations to
nty ITftli .'se<jif of education in th^ Soutn\
j Since lieiiig th target ,(|f
as game jast flill fc
Conipetitijoii ill the
I Lashing c|ut a
selytiiig,’; si*4 J
Southwest (|o|ferc
J As a resist of
Texas Sports IVritj rs A'sjsoqla
Rotary (•jlufcislind
as have been |unfi ig their
But! Mil jSiscc
to have overst|eppe|
Spe2 king]UVe(
stated that softieth
coath when rtj
t'irtid if he permits
.business man,]won
| in view:(ft *th(|
or anytiipe jnjrece jit years
of U coach, tlere an l>e lifctl
But does! Mr. Sisco halve his
|e«jii’ of cducatibii in thh Southwest, i
ii!J 3- I !! j
)
!
d. lack, But.. j
jot ball! of
SoutkV
wpat ‘he
donJjm
ice. ! ! ' ■
his chisk
it low famous b ottle-thjrowing party after the Oklahoma-Texr
idiat Jack Sisco has bjeenj blaziiig a trail toward cleaner athleti^
4stj C onference. , „ ,
tinned.“evils of sportsfsuch as! ganjbling, dr hiking and pro-
jto further the cause;of up-and-above-boanv Sports in the
iq i
hrough iiu
vkpapers has helped bring to light in evil that people in Tox-
•k bn for, only! too Ipngj j !, j] ,i !
as it the .uslum 6f people suddenly broughtfinto the limelight, seems
I his cburs bn at least omei poijnt.j I I • ' !r. i h ;;
nestbiiy t R it at the annual Wucoi Higdji School Football Hanjquet, Sisco
tigpshyi'pqg with a'schoojl whichjihbwS tjhc alpmni to hire and fire the
g should be do
I.
izle
Uhlrke the fai
\ Sisco was named ‘TouthWesterner of the Vear” by the
'
ibn for 1947. His campaign,
'!•!
1 • A ■ ’i
Trampling Out the Vintage
“~—
French Ouarler Barker B
1% Heuse But It All On
Police patrol cars received this call from their difficulty makji f
radio dispatcher in New Orleans recently:
“Investigate immediately a man barking at.the)
j Dog House.” ’ [j: j It!]
j 1 Officers found the report to be found on fact.
A man was barking—and loudly—out front of the
French Quarter nightclub] known as the Dog House.
The man told police that his job was to stand
on the sidewalk in front of the club and mark catline
notices to attract the attention of potential parlous.
“I’m a barker,” the man said.
NOW DON’T GET ANY IDEAS
A. freshman student at Susquehanna University
has been charged with setting [lire twice to the |b0-
y ear-old college administration building to avoid
going to school.
A fine on Nov. 3 caused $100,UU0 damages to (the
historic building known as “Old Kelinsgrove", wl^Je
the second blaze resulted in slight additional damage.
Justice of the Peace Fred M. Machmer identified
the student as Joseph Sladk, Jr., of Wildwood, Ni: jj.
and said that he pleaded guilty eo the arson charge
Letters to the Editor
from the banquet table, before
by the president. “Thij preijklerit the one’ who should be
■■ ■ — i ■ ■ - »-.■
•TOO MATERIAI.IS>TIC”
Editor, The Battalion, i
. In your editorial ‘The Too Too
Narrow Path” you assert that the
blame for the existence of our pre
sent condition of too technical edu
cation lies with the student: I agree
but what are the reasons for this
antagonism to a “libeHall educa
tion”? It is difficult for I one just
beginning college work t<|> agree
to go five years instead of four
and yet receive the same; degree
and the same job he could get for
four years study. Most students
seem to cotiie to college in a ma
terialistic state of mind and think
only of how much n|i()iiey they will
earn after graduation arid not <»f
how much enjoyment! they will get
| out of learning.
1 Peisonallly, 1 did not appreciate
] the literature courses in high school
at the time I was e\'jiostHjijto thebn
probably ligeauHe I was too im
mature to understand fulliy the ma
terial. The saint’ holds fdr frtMh-
man and sophomore English. The
system of post-graduate kUidic.T of
fered through eorrespoiijilence by
the school to till those ' who have
1 graduated from A&M is an jid-
a home to them. A home that js
inhabited with Ijoys vlhp love, ap
preciate, and defend the rights of
his fellow men. I j j
Aggieland is a place where hoys
raise themselves, cdnipgljed entirely
by their own initiative! ability, and
days hold any serffli
in lease th ?y dp 1 A
Desk
py birth,
dollars.”
BENCHLEYB
1 iS f)
noted huimw ist, once has
become Y writtr. A friend told bin
fftii aiibed was tiu sit down at a t w
Title!, h| woixldrtbe" oit a sheetjof pa]
tnchlcji
U Mi
at a hearing.
I Bob
pirations
best, way
writer an|liwri
and'the riftrwoili Ijb| easty. ,,
Bencnky, Sw tit g to t»iy anything,
method t4'[expt>riiHiGi p He typed out “the” a
staring atf t foe tffP iaurs. Then he typed “Hell
it”—itnd cot Ulj ^ktiitl lie ft.
GOT A kPABi !‘BED”?
j -ill “ ,
k| Xjrnold, Hollywood \vriter,
^nd in Wris,i a m
led Secretary Mars
JnhL
, , The way Fra
the storvj from! 1)
little Sa:
$500,000
suvh « th’ if.” He is put) t here -to ruir Ing school and .should run it. No
;1 lef.-p.n ! f )!),^iider tell him how jo irtm hii^ ^ukiutss.” ' 1 j i;
fact tfufk&M alumiri \<rere the inly ojnes in the nation this past year— Vantageous means of obtaining tlie
njthe SputhwestJiQpnlereice—to enterihito.the hiring and firing history, .wonoimcp. and i litenjtui-e
■ doubt that Aiacp’s rehiarksj vvere directed at A&M.
. his fact's straight? The a'li^ji’er jis quite simple. He does not?
.in the fi|\st pjiice, t|he alj.irpni of A&M did not f)re Hdrper Nqrtdn from the head coach- it is often pointed out; nowadays
mbelr. Th[v! merelv made ft ;pfoss|ible fer the) athletic council to doj that formal education, itikes tm*
: - • -• - 'much time buj of a man’s life,
forcing him to put off inargiage far
District Atty. Horace W. Vought said Sladek,
who was voted “most likely to succeed” upon grad
uation from high school, made a statement that he
did not want to attend school and believed he cbuld
solve his problem by setting fire to the building.
BLACK CAT PLUS WOMAN
DRIVER EQUALS—?
There are some bus passengers in Atlanta who
now believe in' the black cat superstition.
They were occupants of a V irginia Avenue- jfcfc-'
Lynrt bus about 2:30 p. m. Monday when a black
feline haughtily pranced across the -vehicle’s path.
“This is it,” they shuddered several blocks later
as a head-on collision between the bus and an ailto-
coUrage, to the Tanks! of men who j mob ' k ‘ loomed, at the intersection of West Peachtree
are tomorrow’s leader*, ifiovs from 1 antl Fou »' th Stl r e « t - But the car crept to a slow Stop
all parts of the World jhive witnes- arul the bus ^ound to a halt, the vehicles’ inches
sed that “final review” then car-1 a P u rt. ^
ried that Aggie spirit with them “You’ll, have to move your bus,” the woman
liack to people who wanted to know ' driver was quoted as saying. "I’m out of gas,” she
more about the place cajled Aggie- explained. J _
land. ! | : (The bus drivers comments were not quoted by
And today, more tHjiij ever, that! the passengers.
Am,, spirit lie* tj. jbe . little ^ p¥ B|BXHUAY
your country?
single Cdmmupisit
said r
tihe me
i, 'ars:
frtjm
krj a
r
“Sony,”
give you
tDistifegSed, t
in the Itjilian g|i'
get $500|000 tp‘
inisfbr [1
ranall t
ibjtrts.the Coknujidniiit situabipiji I in
ked “(We haven’t fyt a
. said the San Marinan prpi
dSi tte jkll, “in that event we
obey 1
couple o
“Ha
A;
snortt* I
$500,000.il’m tryu j
Communist rve|g> »
i ‘ r i
j. ;;
$ao Marinan went to a mijifeter
cjnfnent and said, “I’m tryipin to
Marshall, caji you loan fr
Comma va t« ?”
thie Italian, “yiu’re’trying to
:i)i get $5004100,000! I need je
'Apparently, the suffering of the War has fail
ed ti> dampen the sentiments of Some ppople in these
Unitd Stats. Like the Spokeanc, Washington Police
thicker in this! cihaoijd world of
ours,
Though the going ; acts pretty
rough about thi* timejedery semes
ter, stay with it men. iThe world of.
today and tomoiridw h<i.j a respect-. 1 department, for instancb.
able place for every nwtr that.wears ] Howard T. Tustm wrote the police that tyday
an Aggh? ring - j' ] | upon my birthday anniversary, your honorable] de-
Siiaerely. yofir partmettt presented me with birthday greetings in
fellow Aggie' ' the form of an overtime paiking ticket.’
B. Joe. Seale,!'iit | i Explaining that his wife got the ticket because
* ’ ! she! was buying a birthday "gift for him attul had
l MT—YliS, j 1 ^ • , : . ' | !—-r-4-i
Editor, The Baitulioig I 0
Lilt'd the tiftle'tluft (the Oqited
gamble in grain;
can be ]a mjll),.
Pauley. jFor eoi l j
Argentiri* deal
'Maritime Comp!
Our; satisfirij*
officers,] formet
people in and oki
money? Join tliji;
cost of lining.
and solve yduri
4 diterjtatd.tl>e hiring »»d firing wwsar> .
lion after one is matpre enough to
be interested in the material.
-the muney to close the
ing; p’ositjion i|i'' I)e
something it hud tjjjed to th l luj previous ye:tr. But 4n atje rney general ruling that state
fluids coluld Rot Ixf! used to bt vj but the unexpired. peiKtibniof a cotltratt, blocked the attempt
to [tay off Norteoikin 1946.1 ] ' „H | j \
So. juftei| the jfashion if jajrdeut alumni a grpuii of Aggie e.xjes offered to the' Athletic
Dej>artrnent-]-at| tlhe clpse oi'ja- rather disappaihtiijg 11)47 seasop
deal. . ' f ' M- ' I : :: I
It is ouriundei
which pi|it uiithe jif'jO.UhO. tjo:f)by off Norton specificklly j$tat
njonlt
(ItT a
the money tdlmakLit nossibU for tne aimeLio council to do what it had tried to do
,194 6.;-: j 'f.
* ; The paying c
uuthorizied bjbdy
• ‘ f , , j *;
•ifstantlThg jjhkt the money vvasjdffeired with no .strings attached. The group
a2(i.U00.to:j4y oft] Norton specificklly j$tated tjhat it. had ’no desire to
elsjl concerned with success-
irthri and were willing to pay
filter into th(ii hiring-of.ft nett lcoiich. But, they, like!eveip'ortle^elsi cone
iu! athletic tijaitfs ijit A&M. hipj had their fill of Idbing muipr N T ort(iri and
the money tdimakj-it possi nt for tne ainieiK. council to do what it haa tnea to do in
T )of omf cukch and the .hiring; ofj another wefe done by the properly
the athleLcj council, which includes alumni, students and faculty.
id roottjrs
j. j’ Thl
change'
- ] Tilt-movie caffprubktit
fhe’movement is 4 hdatet
danse to peiTnit.g listed n
qilests
Tlie exc
martial
V OtH
their ]preS'
udeq porl ion won
defepdan'
ilnce. T1
of Oklahoma U., vye aren't mgd at iMr, ’Sisco. We think he
expressed art honest obiinipni ]but spoke In ignbraneje of A.&M.'s athletic set-up.
1 Hi ' ■ I It '! : 'i‘
Court Martial Changes Welcomed...
Hoi|se A) "med SiiryWes: CoiumtUee yesterday uinanimou[dv approved a
he iirmyUourt!:n,-ii|,ijal System, j . j J . j Ij
bill to
lengthen them.
Amen to the ju-oposal ; to move
finals up to before (ihristihas.
Jim Morsel
★
“AddiE spibii”
Battalion Staff:
Men: ’ •). ! ]' 1
Whether nr hot this letter goes
to press for the “Baftaljitni”, makes
no gryat difference to! [he.
Every' Aggie Would uhijloubtedly
like to have a brief (leifijnition or
explanation as to the word “Aggie i
Spirit". This letter isn’t 1 for the
purpose of giving you an exact de
finition of the word “Aggije Spirit?.
For the past seven iponibs I
have been employed
cope, with any ^iti
might aiise, I’nivefSal Military
Training is a ba-ic iei|U rement for
our national sejl-tqrityj VVithout na
tional security,; vvb gar not. expect
or demand cooperation . or respect
froih any lawl^i.s iiatfihn. With na
tional j>ecurityj;we have! the me f ans
ago Air Force leaders had to semi ; and materially. ROTC jsja vita,!)
.. j , . i inert into combat who fired their ! part of, U’MT and men innui COW!
I ‘ ,ll "’ ns b r ‘ ll, ] s su ic|et t s repgtlm fj rs ^ mac hine guns attacking Jap leges usually gaiil frftm their ipilit-
to i op* • ' a,l > X'Ua .ion m y A .,.0 , s> Army leaders did not have tary training. These‘'ihen iare us*-
the few hundred thousand trained ! ually commissioned upon ,gradual}
reserves needed to save the valiant! taon from (College and are bettejf
gauisons on Bataan. And Navy j trained than any youth wHo; woUHJ
leaders had ho trained fleets to, get a years training undijr UMIf,
send to their besieged bases in the This typj* of pfAgram is ))plng’gxj
Pacific. Would you .like to learn to j panded. However, We sho^d. pjrcj-
shobt a gun with a man who had ! vide those not able to take oollegif
prist the age that nis forefathers ,p, support the promifjq Of a Lasting
who went into Omplojynujnt as soon
as they were physically able did.
We should he trying (Li shorten
the 1(> years of sehoj»l iviiMired for_,
a bachelor's degree; rather than
, 4 - = i , k. .i ex lie It training in arms and who! ROTC with basic militarf 1 knowjf
'r.’mV , .;!'',nci-S! .imo'l.r ll^mry
yoaifs as your target? jDd .youtthink ; years to come.
peace at
age when we mea.sure the time be-,
tween the woi Id's grtjat capitals Hi
hours, .-an we]] be like , an ostrich |
Yes, “The Silver Cord”
., . ; . e , , , your chances of wimhihg or even
.l 1 v '” ' ' '"j 1 ' 1 -tsh'jas am ea\e wou |,| \, Q good? A’et some | ing the youths to their hompp \voull
tip’ more vulifjrrabM darts of its
hifdy exposed ;.t)(i hoph for a lasting
peace? 1 say ; ‘‘no”;j only a* fool
would want il; natitiu to commit
suicide.
Military leaders s$y 1 T MT is a
"must” becau.se a feiv short yeprs
—i T q— 1- --
>. • Li i *
pedhle would like to infpose such ! be snapped and they would lean
a handicap upon themselves „• or
thejr s<hts.' ' . •
If tJMT is handled properly, it
would most certainly aid most
American youth mentally, morally,
See LETTERS on Paie 4
....
ei;
<o serve on eoijirt fnkrtiial boards ifi-aln ajccused enlidted man re- f '. , ' ri ] ct i:«•
t* (jAirmy also approved t-he bill, with tjhe (exclusion of one item, j p^Urtion
kifliive set the jukltfelaHvoleatw divisioii. which prosecutes court I here at'Fort Sill
, ■ : , ! | ,atij the mam
ojlly after two years of study by variqi|s groups, but even though .post exchange here at F<ut Sill,
uftf* it is in the ri^ht dirdctioiji. The htiiinjfeature of the bill is a Oklahoma. Day after day I deal
dial boards if lain ajccused enlidted; man re- ‘Erectly with some of the Army’s
:4 „ I best officers arid enlistgd men. • A
of tin officers
arc graduates of
jt, ( apUjrt| fj’dm .the regular chiiip ojf cojnmand. j m i ] |- j A&M. Almost every day 1 meet
er irfform4ti()n;(i)i|t|q bill is scanty 1 so far,. l)ut this portibn sKfund excellent. In the nK ' n that in. their former life filled
lar|?e Will bifilt upjbeUveejj] Jif listed men and offiejers) in I he I last \vtir, th.efchnrt martial sys
tem was one of 1 ijit]]bj jJKar Nricks. Report^ calue fijom qljl quart^tT of ind fference and ac
tual hostility frojiji'(|6mm|s|ioiied judging 1 panels in the cases j^f, enlisted men’s crimes
against the iU’niy ■BrohaliSymost of the claims Were exjaggeratefli. iBut to create so much
smoke, ther^ mudlj havjd aleqn sumo fire. 1 j ! > !
-.I With nler^btirs o11h|s
least feel thit.hiij
the wartime!gap
could frequently
easilji- (isiorted. Still the ideja is igoojtl ibajsiualjy arid indicafes that the
breseht tyMem is nof what it? sjhoujld be.
the 4’i)u: t Martial bill congniss ; heard claims thijt the Army had been “us-
finds jjn :u improper manner jfqr propaganda activities supporting com-
jSuch tt suggejitioh is probably naiivjl, but if the Army would
a few more vetitures like the court mjkrtial revision] there might
ndkstermg to Secure ejnliplmems. fj |fj -j
j ;-|N;a[.T l-IA 1
ijtee hiii p e;
Even tljough (the Ar n
armed forces approved] o
tied plan cotlld bt
ahmy realizes its
/ Along With
ing goviernnjent
ptiisoi-y! milftrary
The
f afternoe
trainjjnj
give its genuine support
be no rjeed for s[Ktp b(|x
4*—
• An rank level on the jjurj; group Jn enlisted man Would at
iprobferls verv-understood if hot iv’mpathized Wi h. (With the breadth that
petwejof An isted and conjim issijotnfd sometimes hepched, a wayward P.F.C.
d fall on completely deaf ears,
has approved thejplun. we are ahjxi
( uite a few things jwhiefi they did (hot
i
4-
Battalion, pfficiai
tj
of Colle|ge Station, Texaa, is!
lished a)emi-Weeklyi Subscript$)ln rate $4 per
Nm
win Hal
209, Goodwin; Hall.]
Ml American
Thd Associaitecj
td] i)t or liot jot)
♦ i
f rpfublic
Entered an sdconjd-elii
Office *1 Coll (fee (SW
the Act uf Confre
Preiss is
<>US to s
t apply,
see a trial easty The
and the court mar-
Battalioti
Hid i Ti'.-i ,y,
:\t djjaper of the Agricultural iand j MecKanicjal {College of Texas aatd the City
published five times a week nnd circulated every Monday through Friday
n) e fcept during h«liilays and examination period
na;tion: periods. During the summer The Battalion is pub-
school: year.; Advertising rates furjnished on request.
a cotitribufcibns may- bh made by telephone (4-5444) qif at the editorial office, Roonvi 201, Good-
. Cliassifiel ads ma^ he placed by telephone (4i-j5324) dr at the; Student Activities Office, Room
dwin!Hall.| ; d -;j I ) . j - ' ! '! [., f-'i j - ; |h ! ; ■
CHARilElfui
Vtelt Lii
F»nfi» |]
Davi i
in iley
J ock.
I-
Louir Ml!
a. b. b , t .
lom Ca, ter, f,
G. »arUa
-v '
Nolen;]
rean, jf
tuce,
ij.
fc
if
UovKn*
B< ni
M-
Member of the Associated Press
.i.pj 1 N i 1- r ' ■
news dispatches credi-
publishcd herein.
Associated; Collegiat
Member 1
nlcd Nationally ' by! National Ad-
tvide, Inc , at New York City,
tngcles, and San Francisco.
NE1 ^SON —..
'
-Wire Editor
.Co-Editors
_ w IkihB, Arthur
Managing Editor* i Mauila. Zero Ham
iFeature Editor Sam I.an;ford. W. K.
Feature Writer* jjaarL HojweU
....... .Columnist* j, DjBarrott. Preston D !
* * ‘ tv., r
..Sport* Editor
--_
rj-—JS ports Writers
..Cartoonists
Reporters ' WilM
Springer
Hji Bewdbley,
Kiel
f •••■.
ling - Manager
ing Assistants
ition Manager
ligiou. Editor
the ranks in the Aggie Corps just
as you men an,- doing bow.
Everyone of these men ask the
sjame questions—“Is! my old outfit
•Still existing?” and ‘‘Mdai the eani-
ijats changed very much?" and “Is j
Sally's -tatuc still shitting?” Why
<jh> they ask all these questions? |
.'pimply because they aitp still very ;
deepy concerned anjl interested in j
A&M retaining its position as Oriel
of the greatest militjafy;^o(leges in
the world, And yes, : interested l>e-
cauxe Aggieland still remains as j
PALACE
W PHONE 2-8879
Today Thru Saturday
“It Had to Bh You”
with ; :i]! ■ b
GINGER KtKiEKS
CORNEL WILDE
' 1 1 ; "" M 'n I"-' 1
is-
QUEEN
Lb
ti
TODAY i SI
iATIKDAY
•[Riff Raff
' with
!r
i
:• ]
Pat O’Brien
! ¥f
-
—
: !
■; rd
m ;
GUI0N HALL
i! * j , r i
SEND A V — MONDAY — TUESDAY
Jarir
^ BROS.,
t:
0HCE
tree with the following liiL of
GOP SCORES
We fflay net
Republlcjin prop)• thijujla, but'we pass it along tjwfbne
of the puitktandir
lure. Authored bj KeprcitentativeiHugh D. Shit,
(Rep.-Prim.), iti 'vjiii pdretaented op the floor ((f '-ho
House of Reprefc t n ti i!tive$.
“Does your g ng imment smell!(differently h tdy?
Do high prices tiuhlihU: you ! Are ypu inflation (i;;ay?
Do you suffer'illt)n congestion (if unpaid bills? Is
there an] empty lid ing m your pocketbook?
You, too, cal l e » succes*. Joiti the hapjiy
of those! in the! Orid v. Get on the Truman' Ad
tration side—the n jade. Learn government sdcjrets,
s(p ;Culate tm thel market—you
e
ifiifb. For further details set Ed
Tiiation, ask Cjeorge AlleP la bout
Bpeciuli opportunities thf-mgh
i|[jiiip contr^cts^! , '
cjatomersi include, former ca
j^i my officers and other w^nlt
a the government. Want tolirva
-Administration fight the
ajtteir stilt, join the Adminusth ition
[iasonal prpblehis. Why worry?.”
"M-"'
T
! TODAY £ SATURDAY
BIG DOUBLE
FEATURE!
rr
turn 0*t*4 H {
UJMUND GWtNN • ZA5U Pim * MICHAEL CURTIZ * HOWARD UNOSAY l RUSSEL CR0US£
Qmu> Serf ; ^sdutto* • *»K h* Mai '.if• kaws at 0<<Jm S(#m0
WEDNESDAY
'
11
by
4-ri-
i
RANDOLPH SCOTT
ROBERT RYAN
ANNE JEFFREYS
—in— j j
'Trail Street”
NEXT THURSDAY — FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY
‘.4*
' I
‘The Unfinished Dance”
1 i
(in technicolor)
MARGARET O’BRIEN
CYlD CHARISSE
ARIN BOOTH
1 J l fi .1 '. . :
i f il:
utrini waw m wiir iaiimwniigi wiMm,
Saturday Prc
11:00 P.M.
, 'i ‘ I ' i • . ■ ■ 4
Sun. thru ^ed.
Here’s Another
First Run Picture
of&na of
\ I— P1 ^i
Merrie Melodies Cartoon