' T r . NO -RETRE/ ON CfVjlL R|GI , WASHING1 Democrnitic cHnijI carry J*rc!'e state coilq ford on! its otvp. The ' regioi|a| educational 1 ] calling for-bjptjh white And n schools,' worftj become effne however,. undUi:)is ratified bt* least sik stales Volume 47 S': t:4- I r •'ri; K i: i ih! I in If m r' ■ -*! ■■ |- ABILENE,I' fW., Feb. 9 p> Two escaped |c(mv|iets, object < f a statewide ma|hu|nt since carl^ 5at- urday, • were h*eik| behind bivi's to day aftdr beilg captured last ri ght by three Wjpdt leians "ijirme< ’ rith one .22 palibor Ir f c. IJ—■ A ..IS icaHhlr le/olveh. was U ken from one escape >. 1 •' A jjiird ednyic from the Bar rington |priso| fi r h, near Hnhfton, Texas, was bfidt: iunted| tn % water, Tex. Itoficci said everw oad ^ out of the city Urns blockadojl. Orttr qaptuited cjonvifct: wasi i len-' tified as •lohp, r '4ni RfllWliPtfs. 21. The second w|is-i bought to b<[ (ml Chester i Davife, !!». Jj | [ / Sweetwateij : oltfieers ; idoilt fidd the escripepi le-fad huiiterl thlf as Harvey ;Lee ijas*, 24. t . I Alii three ahj i|ider"l'9iyeak en- tences ijor- thpft i , | j 0 | wakUixa Is BRINGS;! Feb. 9-4-liPl.--Southern gov| pushed aside politics: long ehdti&h yesterday to ,stei up an intejrsitate College ^lan ivh ch they hai|e; the mofet im|phitjant dbvelopr of the fast (tehtiiry in !high|r ucation.l f } f They i sigmfa: h nine-state <$nv pact .calling fpi the joint on of south'i ide top rate tnti federal coi capped th Truman'.a. i resolutlo it:ee to stud lean do ah > rights progr jlliiim PrestonIli|ne, i:!-' approved by ftp* The gover sentment of sal by adopt] ing for ja coi what the sodt proposed civ Chairpion' Jr.; of Maryland named Gjb Strom Thuri|icjnid of South .?C \lina. author |of 1 the resolut|f): ‘ head the conimittee. Other jrrjt bers are gd«?r nh -s Beaufor ter of Texas,] E ojn T. Laney i>t" Kansas, ] Grc|rf [C herry of Carolina and!;\fi|ll am TijcK rjf ginia. • | MOSCGtW Hf;Al> LINES L'. S. 1* H!CE|B Rt)l*S DIJCATION le ’'islat f i ia png nal ures inf is i sk- just the ; aders got la iast wleek’l Moscow;! ,’sparfe account todajy |of ■in U. i . -cortn iiijty prices jar broad Hint t|a, tpe Ann(drjcpn ptession forder s. omists- may .hoi '‘'The i MoscinT p,: ' v .tot 9 IT., i by Soviet c re. ] ! iress j gavjp •Cconoms mjor crisis j ( i •* i 4-j " ■ ' IT ' : .1 : T * lx r*f-1) /I ]£«*» Winners among; ASABAB were BARBA beautiful witch w^ho too winner MAXINE SAUNDERS, tjie saintly r ' _ A jl , ilLklLr « A GROGAN, the hotrifyingly first place, and sfecorid place miss. Cannibcd^ pitefe Win First Dance ; m l'Y4 r»/f w 14 m AR\ Cxlh tu! 15 |! ? I ■ :t i/VT ; ■ T,- : ^ n A GREATER A&M COLLEGE MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9 .1948 7 Fantastic! Aren’t!they? But fantasy was the rule rather than the exception at ASABAB. JACK CROOK, / dressed as a mechanical man of the future, took second place honors. The cannibalistic creature on the right is SAM LANFORD; first place winner. , , ■ f. I 'j If; gi jf I ; I f M j j ■ j By ■ HAflRIf: S^N|)ERS ! Charles Jackson’s “Lost Weekend’’ couldn’t compare i with the weekend climaxecl by’ the Architectural! Society’s Annual Beaux Arts Ball on Saturday night. Wearing costumes of their own. making, architects and i their guests taut the gamut of icrfca- dired 4 fropi daijcest Africa to the robot mati. Witches, savages, mechanicial med, monks, angels and many I fan tastic and imaginary apparitions ,vti J. : matje their appearance in fiSbisii p|ro-j Hajj. ' • i ill to! i VJf’ith Mardi Gras as the theme n- for the ball, Architects converted js- Shisa into a miniature Nev.’ Dm %r-| Maris v Guests entered the danqng rth -floor l.y traveling through the! Tiff ki^kpj) have joint'd Jth|cf fir- jaws of a huge paper inachfei jmon- tifij’ department of wildjifei ■ i w/. <*<> it<« > r •t f Additions pe to Wildlife Management Staff Ir. Leonard W. Wing and Franli j Kiiipp have joined]thio staff of! .J J-A L a ' . i r t .1 i I (V kis- full s dec I ith ster. The dancing floor w;: a la New Orleans \v covered sidewalk cafes wheels, cold diink stindi, ;■ and a multitude of color. Artists worked overtim 0 p : tach tempera portraits of lift Je-i ■" '.o-s '<1 vmvtv^i.sj | ■ ■\ \ V . I « % V • 1,4 W \ ■'.II 1 t k , on i t f dispatch did mftj indicate that (the j t'd as newspapers dekqtid any spici to 1 tired i T L' S. Economists with 'ojipikite ■ Bu : vijews.lf j jj •• ( . I ' 1 •"» s Editorial jContds ; , 1 I . 1 ■] .1 . ., , manage ment,; effective February jl:. Dr. W.! rated & DriVisj, head of the idej.artment, I tijivriingj hi|is a|inQ|uneed. • ' \\ fenjis 'jDf.iWipg comes here frtim Wash-1 ! lighjs i;i|gtoii| State Collegqj, where he ser- ! . vpd as assistant professoif of wikt- lliife, conservation fmm .September, | , , tcHitric- ;; |ii;{9|jlmfil his transfer Were. Pre-! faculty members to the yiouslv he served as biologist for I bodies of dogs, chickens^ stages] jjL. ’jf> nnPSReP v a li t . , AdthoritV.! and wildmen — all done op ijaper | #j n Jj has a BA degree from : with tompera colors. | t’he , l|niversitv ^of ! M ichfgan. He! Prizes for the most original} (jos-;j j n graduate- svoiik at the ; _ f , , _ , , i.-)iies.tvy•School and was con-1 he i Sam Lanford. Banbara camej dress- the degree • of Doc-tor of •he j *4 »s.a witffh and Lanford wa^ at- ^hilolophv bv the Inivleitsiiv of] as a jcarunbal. ■ , . WiRcdfisip in ’l937. I Runner pp honors went tp Max-! r „ •[> .J, . j . . ■■!,, ine Saunders, who came droSsod as | H «Rl W* 0 w f k m th< ! flt ; < s - • 1 , rtnl J ornithology, ecologjy, and wild- . *8- by 1 Airlcitban ! lumes went to Burba ru Gro^'iiij bml ’ yltlorl!,,! On Alccdidl Ope iollliUergA 111v_ oetumit*! >i \viiti uaiuu um a TrAppist iponk and Jack Oqol ‘'who-wore the costume of a me j chanical man. Crook stole the show tat last year’s Architect’s Rail when ! he wore the uniform of Gbpejal. Running close to the Winners in arid tfill lUndejrgraduajtc bepn inyitpd) .tb contest | Sponsored lejfiate I AssqciAt;' the Alcohol . Pjo ora for Sti|d! short editorjalp ilm to :d “Applying PreVoptive MedM ri i Altoholfifyn.”'- ..i| VJ - rc< Ptazes being Joftfe edltoriails,--Dmijted range from a '?2(j)0 a $10 jnonthly rri torjal |:oIol'ted f ir th^’ Infernatio la iine. The subject of v fleets a grow ng 1 development of mjedaca), p>y trie and educat|ioi ia)l means to (n-e- vent alcoholism. A bibliogi&pjhy • medici prepare sociatio gether iwith otHqri'< fttn; studgntsif j 1 |i an thp si a post*carderique ik Maynard,' coil Webster Avq,, jCttl' j. .. ..... . , ...... ijnWjrSOhhj}! |P r— -r- a—n-— irticmatef u a ■ il{t>(;! Poi) . EyC( Willie pjeiui who]!: University Hamilton,: iy the IrfteJjL’ol- i n ip^,- S( ^ na ted Daniel Bodhej and Qptriirio, Canada, in iNolojry in 44. red for th * ^est I to 800 iwcid-v! grand prfzji to | m j ww - ill' “ u nP'' 0 ^™ er ^ avors Studgnt nnig: he contlst [ re interest be.obtairiec oritesit hcilpi by I ^ IER % East Texa&rl F iir ana e cold this aftojrnj»(jn and Tuesday ffiir, nrirtheily win* minishing tdni West! Texas: cold t|iis‘, afte rnh Tuesday fair i nc i; J partly; dot least wftH th' nqort southeast ature 25 to 2fl r>32 in the interfoi 1 tonight. Tuesday so cold in northerly win mm 5 th? ngs it to Edjvii seerctar . ago, :14, fll. | MM f tlijariagement. Hi is] mantied, lias four children. His family remain at Pullman i until - hi 1 ! (•cures a home here. ! „ , ' Knapp will handle pork in fish- oi igihating costumes were GMiv! |Hes l jbiofogy and niaiiagijment. He Brooks who came attired as anl 1 1 A&M front theflranbrook fi Angel, Mrs. Al Peerv who Wils ; Mti^itrix of Science.; Bloomfield; dressed as Cleopatra, Pat Spillmaidi IMIs; Michigan, where he assisted who was dressed as an ,ordinary h Urthfljlogical^ research, program. lVt ‘ bum. Doug Grogan who ijnpersoii- »>P i^ceived his jdfegl'-ec from li New Orleanis had : nothing on A&M when itectural Society;s Annual Beaux Arts Ball got underway jat Sbisa Hall Saturday night. ( With the virtual theme Anything Goes!” the' above female contestan costume contest 1 prove that anything did. -HU dllege Speaks’ Presents he Arch- Tronbadour Jl 1!,W To Sing Her if- Military Adds ^ wboy , S# " § f 3 Officers To S P'”* uals P mlr It 'i ..li t-; 1 i i ■; 11 I ■ L. i! uesda Teaching Staff Three more Army officers have arrived ori the campus -vr ti - ■ on for assignment as assistant ienc tom Scott, the “Amc Town Hall Tuesday evemr The Kentucky-born vfl of folk songs, has pubhshe * irj|l g— ments used by chor professors of military science and tactics, Col. G. S. Meloy, commandant and PMS&T, an- nouno The master d today, new head of the Qu Corps Section at A 4 arter- &M is Lt. ColL William P. Scholl, a grad- The Citadel, Charleston arolina. He >s ijs also a graduate of the Staff Officers Course, the Coast Artilletty School, and the Quarter master Advamied Officers Course. Col. Scholl, who I wears the Bronzm Star and the ETO ribbon with five battle statay was pre viously] assigned to thd\Schel tady Q|d General Distribu pot. A veteran of the Phillippine ca'ln- N paign and the occupation army o Korea, .Major Charles F. Ostridr has been assigned to the Field Ar tillery section. Major Ostner, a graduate of the University of Florida, was cadet colonel iof the ROTC unit at that school and a Military Honor Grad uate. He received a commission in the Regular Army in July, 1941. The third new officer to be'ad ded to the college. staff is Cap tain David J. Morgan, a graduate of Boston College, arid u veteran of the Seventh and Fourteenth Ar mored Divisions, Captain Moran, Who has j just returned! from the occupational duties in Europe, formerly ilirec- o Military Governirient! De- |r * S, m !* * < X v/v authority ic nittM ono hundred arrahge- iroughout the United Stutea. # His first appearance on Broad ly came in 1938, after which time He joimkl tfee vFrcd Waring Glee Jlub. Since that time Scott has een sirjging in stage, screen, ami idio [petrforrnances. He is 'currently heanl over th; alumbia Broadcasting System ek-day morning from 7:30 TST, 'j ..jmiKsion to the event for all persons not holding Town Hall season tickets is ff for the gen-- era! public and 60 cents for stu dents. His prj)gr>m for tomorrow night U ■ Will be ijn fopr parts: from the “old Country’!’ 1 l from the sen, from the iountailiis, and from the level mds.' I] ! , * 1 Song4!from thd old country 11*111 elude dKitty of Coleraine,’’ “V^ee ooper o’ Fife." “Unfortunate Miss Iriiley,’ und "Bonny Earl .f-«•••••••••• ••4^' 4— D Age of Enlightment Phot Display in Academic Buil “The Age of Enlightenment,” a photographic *:xhibi prepared by the w editors of Life maigazine, is now t n dispj in the architecture department. ji | The exhibition, based on the article which appeared recent issue of Life on the development of Western cult] —Ir 1 — r -..-Twill’ Gilchrist Named Chairman of State Engineer Council ' A i ts in the Harry Smith, who came 'bin I a tuxedo sans' trousers h] ^Vl ing 1 long, handles. attired i ipt w> Ivear-i] ” ’ Deadline Feb. 11 For Junior Proi Fr<|m. 1944 to 1947 he pursued cjiiaduato work at the University! ttf Tih'onto toward ;thc Fh. D. de- ] grcc,i which he expsects to be con-j fbta-cd upon him :t|iis summer, j H jHW special field is limnology and i I risheifies managomentl. He is mar- j I tied hnd has two childrien. They: ||re lijring at Rjyari Annex. I, i < This Week’s Programs Range From ‘Earth’ to ‘Business’ President Gibb Gilchrist was named ^Saturday by Governor BcaiC ford Jester as chairman of a com mittee to develop engineering con- l trols for state arid local applica tion to external conditions causing j traffic accidents, j The committee’s rocorimienda- j lions will be presented to the Gov ernors Safety [Conference at Dal- ! las March 19-20. The committee is cxiiccted to ] consider speed zoning, read Way dc- ! sign and constnaction, traffic con- ! treD devices, pedestrian controls, remain om display Ontil Fe 21], Joe Meador, assistant} fossdr,,! announced. ! * Many of the ideas nnd imi tion.4 in which 20th Cera Airy ml so confident were not a ways t for grunted; Life cditoi s say. can elriirh the ideas today bei of a; small group of s holars; lists; and scientists livinjg in Ff duriilg the 18th Cenfury. specjHatipns so advanted , . knowledge of himself, land sj such); ap j intellectual glory • theis age that the Gorman so Au pht-f Immanuel Kant C u fk 1 a rungszcit—the A •alleii iit lightenttvent. ^ r II i ijiP 1 II eserve Officers Deadline on ordering riavpH and ‘ Hp 1 Mil It I •it’: 1 0 programs for^e JuriioUlb^ wjll|j! |]0j]|Jear Hubhard p. m., Wednesday. Pebruiaiy ; )\ | ! tb . W. Robinson, chairman of tl c 7 : *; 1 .' L l.i’'L 'I system. ij : - | sales- committed has an-.-1! Maiqr Edwin W. Hvbbard of the; Kent became interested in' as- ' f*. Foi-t ai—sl- . i ,. .. I .. r J3 ■ .R w,: . \ : be 5 _ on .{preyeT live' Ui, ■ .. . for rjlcMlismi bap iecn tickct **'**■ committee, by thi: I ill ercollegiijite r \s- nou.nced. ‘ U [ The price of the favors \vdl 1 H. and the programs will be $;50 dae Tickets to the .prom and hancpi gptj i will cost $5 per couple,] while tii- e 1 2 By JAMES E.TNBLBON I V j ^ I• I / ■ j , . j ’ | ! , I ’(|;j ' .'j| College SjpeakvS, program heard over WTA 'through Friday afternoop at *5:15, .will presenit ; ranging from “Mother Barth” to “Working Ca ! week. J. TriKent, professor of mathematics, will sieak today n “Mother Earth." His talk? will + W Monday subjects tpital” this eal with the rclationi of the] earth been head of the department since the other planets : in the 9olai 1944. | j. j 7 Wednesday’s progtaun will fea- W qi-th Flight Service Center i tronomv while attending the Uni- ill address the Brazos County Re- kets.to'the prom alone wjill be ^2.S I per couple. ! Ticlfets, favors, and prograi; 1 which will be on sale until euve _ -Officers Association Tuesday $ni»g at 7:30 in? the Petroleum firieering Lecture Roojiri. -AllanfM; Madeley, iecrctary-treps- nh*R 'announced. ■ I .15, may be ordered from! any ofl i! Thd lahnual election ot officers | his jpoctora dCgJ-cc. •J fnllowirig: Will!take placeiat the i m and not sir co ! Louisiana j jClijx dy this a [ter- (}y. colder ir the lowest isenper- the nortl ‘ to of south po tion artlycloridy not [temaou,} Ht-esh n the .coast )orm 10; George L D. Selman, Dor je. Edward#, 11; and A Robinson emphasized banquet will start 7 :30 and no one will after that time. the j Hi Alnapi n approved by This announcement is being m^de proving agencies andl the for the benefit of those who he ye the]l dates that will arrive on ■ ock train, he said, ilk , N] Major Hubbard Will discuss “US K ^an 62 and flight (Service-, 1 versity of Arkansas where hq re- ceiveid his Master’s degree. Before attending Arkansas, Kent went to Lambuth Colloge in Jackson, Ten nessee. Upon finishing his work at Arkansas he studied at Ohio State University but was* uriable to complete enough [work to! get i i l ions Schools tty VA^ TOvihg a^ Likriinistration rans under { Uw 16. : T “ i i ' mooting. state ap- Veterans training and I Bill and X J. Woolket, head iof the mod ern language department,, Will present “News from Utin Anier ica" on Tuesday, reeci jWoolket received his B,A.-De gree in 1924 and hi A Master’s in 1925 at Oberlln CollCge with ma ges. He has cdmplet- jors in languaj ed all the work for his doctorate i nation at Qh^ except thf JPHHHH State, Texaft!l|nivertit|y, and Berry School of Languages in Vermont. He has studiwj Spanish in Madrid, ture Kent discussing “The Tri section Problem.’’ pie will at-/ tempt to provC that an angle | cannot be trisected *)vith a com- jtpaas and a ruler. On Thursday W. Ml. Dowell, as sistant professor in Physical Train ing, will discuss the “Needs of Organized Recreation Programs in Communities.’’ He wi 1 make sug gestions on how to (rganize such a piogfam and shoul< be of inter est to leaders of rufajl areas. Dowell received his B.S. Degree in 1929 from Shm Houston State and his Master’s/n 1932 for George Peabody College. He: Has completed one and one half yehi's toward his doctorate. He spent five of bis eighteen years of teaming at Goose Creek. He was head of the physical training /department and French in He come to i l&M in 1925 and has ®! I! 'Mi I Christian for eight fears where he was chainnan of Xe City Park eaHonal - r ^ Recreational Board ; r : w (See WTAW, fi IS ti d : Ji m j I ; .l at Abilene le spent two ’age 4) one-way streets for congestion [re lief, modern street and highway lighting, uniformity f in roadway signing, signaling, and marking, and highway-railroad grade cross ing protection. Committee members includes. Os car Burton of- Tyler, Gergory F. Moore of Corpus Christi, Tom K, Eplen of Abilene, and Gene Howe oFAniarillo. Gilchrist also serves as chairman of President Truman’s committee on engineering. ■ Ai It is this intellectual 1 and ferment of 18th Century Fr that is revealed in the exhibit! Age of Enlightenment. Orgahized'under three mainM*-? tion* (Versailles, Phril, and; I gi of Crisis) the exhibition presets a pictorial analysis of one of i hi greart; epochs in the histhry of tenv Culture. In thd first sectiorii ’ VersjjMi stands forth as a symbpl of R|}l|p bon glorV: vast and corrupt: still powerful. / The second section present: resisting vitality of P^ris in philosophers—n bourgeon in ity that made that beautiful the intellectual capitol qf the Wi Volatile, Rousseau, Didie Voltaire, Rousseau, Didierob; ,Mi esquieu. Lavoisier all, af thOrnjii tributea,|o the systemiitic ekj! Eco Club to Show 2 Movies Tuesday “Wings Over Latin-America,”, and “Round Trip,’’ two movies on foreign trade, will be shown to; members of the Economics Club Tuesday night at 7 in the Assembly Room, second floor of the YMCA, J. T.' Miller, club president. An nounced today. Filmed by Pan-American Air ways photographers, in color, “Winks Over Latin-America” is a four-reel plane trip over the south ern continent. “Round Trip,” a two-reeler r de picts the part of foreign trade in the world economy. ] [ ‘ / No business will be conducted during the Tuesday meeting. On February 17, dub * ‘ will be discussed. .iPPP W . . jflvv j| nation of man and his surrdi ‘W iTF m ■)! The third section impact upon “the Rime, j The exhibition the Oath of the TenniACourt »S includi /Natl tu le Jgune, icourt,- Greuxc ire, and Soufflo „ ivings, prints aijid photographs, are invited to $ei the fourth floor Building, Mlfiadd; lei H isitor exhibif “•eb. i 1 , v .. r ion, has Aggie Ramblers ] [ j - Chester Chambers and( The Aggie Ramblers will play folk songs Monday and Tuesday hon oring the Town Hall appearance of Tom Scott. The Ramblers on Monday will [ appear in Sbisa Hall at 5:45 p.m. /and in Duncan Hall at 6:30 p.m. \On Tuesday The 'Ramblers will plaVaif Sbisa during the noon meai'and will play at Duncan [during! the evening meal. !!i| li i . ! I and Drummer and t%i! Cookie," “EddystOne Light.N. .A Kentucky balladkxThe Night-] .rigale," [will: he among Sbqtt’s^numf hers from the mountains. Others iii the greiip are “Froggie We/t Ai courtin’ r and “Go ’Way FroriMM.^ Wiiidowj" i ; . > Level land tunes Will bo “Foggy Foggy Dew/ “Rye Whiskey," “In My i Father's House,” “The Story ] weilve.’l and “Set Down Ser- |of ;vant cons bov, |shio Artiii : st ]df\ii midwest ballad, 1 a cow , and three Negro spiritualij. Si jttj [is currently touring the Unii fd $t?iteK under the sponsor- ofj ithe Ni^tiorifiil Concert anil ts Corporatjon New York. n laviori FieiinXmii Association Meet Scheduled Today 'k T steir rua: the c den Tl a hi for repri acti 194i said a tej t his] lust group, of songs ian e annual meeting of the -Friesian Association of as v ill be held on the campus, Pel 9, Gi G. Gibson, secrctarf! of Association, has announced, M. McWhorter of Paris, preiti- will act as ehjairman. 1 e pi-iogiam for,the day includes liness session at which officers the (year will' he elected arid rts made on the associationy itien driring 1947. Plans' for alsO wpi he discussed, Gibsj n ic afternoon will bo devoted o (ind-table (liseussion of interest rs, led by Gibson, who e hr rebde.o, isl ektcnsHri dairy husbandman fot •ollege. !| || , Members of the college staff who participate are: R. D. Turk, finaiy parasjitology, ik. V. e, dairy manufacturing, R. R. Htof. extension pasture spCc- P. T. Montjfort, agricultural neering, “I. W. Ru[>el, hejad af will 1 conclude the program'. dairy departmentMand E. A. Griijlt, extension ve crinarian. visitito: the jcol ege dairy herds the 'artificial j preening- rientor Engineer Society Honors Member \A\ Dr. A. C. jHftUjM A&M graduate huh been honored by Nu, Pr« ejge department has Announced of 1936, hah been honored by Eta Kappa Nu; national engineering society, Professor N. F. Rode ,of college; Jlr ^ ’ the lectrical engineering is announced. Hall, originally from Tulsa but the 1946 Rbcogn award ia given Kappa Nu to th ition Award. The annually byi Eta the,.electrical engi- to have contributed profession,. Rode said, ized work was in the IjPefvO-mechanisms B ■ W. Boehne, a 192ft Aj fie who now heads the Cooperate Engl- 1 rieetring vioug honrirabl a pre- ippa Nu tiention, Rode said; L .... -