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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 26, 1948)
: f ■ i ' ■ Page ¥■ Hap little c pean $1 ■ . U' i4 f:,. brief v^hiile aftfer fall u: liter C The onej iisland of fhe '(iron cijiri Hr- •ii r I Battalion ■. j ' 1 ' • LL vti : ■ ■ TORI AiL S ! THURSDAYv IjPEBRUARY —-—U ^:—um—h-4— Lr 1 '/er, Statesman, Knightly Gentleman” 26, 1948 2$ MH ■U '?• 3r of Aggie itions i Czechoslovakia Gone Again V. m zechisloVaKia “l|ia4 it’* again ? 'The ) imtry thit was deserted by its Euro- ’ ies at Munich tinje^emerged for a he" trieu the end p# the war, only to oiminUmst coliirc i ?o • resistanpe |jb iajn’i is gonsp. Wh|ait can We (iq pbouj rol this, week. Marxism east ’•U What liberty the /Czechoslovaks retained apboared to. be displfpearing. Movements in and out of the nation" were sharply curtailed. Tlje western border' 1 was tightly sealed; Czechoslovaks were forbidden to leave the country “under any circumstances,” the U. S. t f-iiii. xtr Army at Frankfurt, Germany said. How ut; if p Nothing. The many Americans Were stranded there was Marshall Plan/will be tk^late, much too unknown'. i|| / | i 1 late, tp jhelp. Elut the mto t>f Czeehosldvakia I The Social Dernoicraitic Party, a balance is warning ofj \yhatt ina|liappen to other of. power group Which has swung back to countrjAs;, unlejssj we dre to make the thp Comihunists, issued a proclamation deny- Marshitll.planjmbre than jMt talk; ing a split in its ranks. The pro^Communist Frail Pres inept Eji lar \ $enes has finally Zdeneck Fieri inger, who was premier before capitujajted to pressUie irpm Communist Gptiwald, iemerged as bead of the party. Premier Klenrenjt Gdtfwj l|i and accepted a The interior nlinister announced for the v # of 1 Commuihists third time; it had discovered a revolutionary 11 ^upportefijHei had be e n plpt. The opi/ositipn iSlovak Democrats were ith a general |trike if he rpfiis-l accused; Opppsitfbh newspapers were being throttled or placed in hands of Communist new ciibihet ccjmppsed maihly ol' Commuhists and left win - threatened wi cd. I b Twelve aijitiCorngimijiiy mienibers 1 quit sympathizers. Copiirriunist “Action Commit- the. Cabinet in protest a^dihst Comnjunist' tees” barred opposition ministers from their grasping for j stjpremb ilqWfer. Benes Until offices, ran their newspapers and helped the yesterday had refused tojl^ept their resig- secirrity police clatnp! control over postoffices nationsJr i 1 i III I telephones and telegraphs. f Ilf . : '• : T . : | ] ! IMAGINARY OR NOT, •S FRISHTENIN® ■ Mf. J i 1 ij’ '*1.1* ’ . <• v ; \ wm$® M if '% W MS - MM " ■'’it | /'•i* . e - ^ I jj; ' ' 1> I. 11 ; M I “A Vision of Greater Things . . .” ■ v : sv-.—4^ H— national-.j j| ij i^i Thbf' the j strategic ladll- joined Polland, /dll iilMkA /•»••• /\ /~»i *■ telephones and telegraphs, ^ r , . The police fished arms, raided and ar- via, Albania"and!!former enemy rested. However,; no street fights'were re- ! ' ' 'jania, Bulgaria and ported. . j [Jil.i N, . RfOmmunist realm Russian newspapers prominently publi- Stet|t(iji|il to Trieste;; cijzed evehts in ;tn0'Jand|.l |. |\ •• CzjcjhosloAfakjia, the HekH^nd of the |bld 1 t -fit: continent, wj/s created ifpm jAustna-jHiinr , When Venice, jong - time republic, fell gary at] American insiste^e after the first to the Austrians imore than a hundred years Wbrld War, Siijice the lasfcl war, the United ago, William Wopdwprth wrote a sonnet |hat States has poiirod a fetal »« ?24”,603,t38 in- poignantly expresses our feelings today, to the country ijn the;foM;6f the American reading the newd of .Czechoslovakia’^ capitu- share of *UNRR|k, lend-leji^eiand loans; from lation. the E qkirt Impprt Bahkim] ; J j • The Gernharf Chancellnr Bismarck once commEinted that the natii ijn which controls Bohemia, wh/chlis a^pari; (|f Czechoslovakia,' contnls P, u rape Ij i 1: j si f ; ■ j Si enjee appeared toi fe descending on the lanijl, whdse Jseizi re {)ji |he (lermanls nine Ingenious Devices Used In Advertising ‘Hedda Gabler’ ^ By iXlIES J5. NELSON Those little posters you see Over the Campus are not po litical posters. Hedda Gabler "is not running for Mayor of College Station. H I if ; fj \ These ingenious little remijhderH are the work of the Publicity committee of thp Aggie Playprs. John W. Lnufen- berfr, chairman of the commfttec.W ‘ yelrs ago wajs aiicurbiin World War. | L . u |[dw only pine againja cehtjer of te^sionjin Europe,” said P?rencjh Forejgnl Mir'ister ifieOrge Bidiult in Parifj “PerhKtpj, there isimbt much time. It is tirrie that 1 h(f people ■tW; the world [return to pe^cjei making, to iconi/horation, to filling Once did she h\>ld thr <jor<jems East in fee And was the svimua^d of thi West: the \ I'-vrlh - 'it : ■' ] . r Of Venice did not full heloir her birth, Venice, the oldest child of Liberty. She- was a maidni (iity, bright and free) djiser; to the second No guile seduced, no force could violate; And vdien she toofa unto herself a mute, She must espoifsei the everkiMing sea. And what if she huft sCcn those glories fad&T .. Ill: f ■ I yeajff] later, Prague is was awakened one, night by thCi vis ion of greater things to be d<jbe in the field of public relations {qi the Players. These signs were one of the visionary methods of putting the productions in front of the 'pub lic constantly. , Many other steps to further ad- place would be needed. Two mem bers of the \onwiittee, H. Darwin Hodges and ('tiff Hodges, set out imbiediately to'construct the fire- ! Vintage ’—Mi’ 01 • 4 You might have guessed it hi fhc course of paste driving experience, but in case you haven’t heard,f 'professors—college professors, no less--are among the worst drivers on the road. j| r [At least that’s the report of Ken McCaw, field representative for the Ncraska State Safety Council. (; “We find two kinds of poor drivers,’’ he told a college group. “Those whose IQ’s indicate they can’t '! the road signs, ahd others tkhose IQ’s are above . Klc «®l CoUege Professors Amon; On the Road According (o By LAKRY OOOD^^ ri' r. rriiiii ^ ^ “College professors are in the latter group. In vestigation indicates the professors at the steering wheel permit their thoughts to dwell or matters other than driving.” M • < I HUMORS ARE DYING mim rup ings. [Clayton, N. M., An autopsy held here to deter- ifc the cause of death of Ben Dayis, 65, was inter- ted " " ' ' " ‘ when Davis himself walked into the proceed- :8tahdi| 1 hapi 1918, DUNK n|(Mv for dy The body which was the subject of the autopsy .was found in a snowbank yesterday near Clayton. Authorities believed [the man had frozen to death while trying to get help for his stalled car. First reports said Davis had been found dead by Gaston Wiley, ft turned out that the body was that of Wiley, a 61-year-old Mount Dora rancher. i Davis walked into the autopsy and said he w^s told by- a neighbor, that he had ibeen reported dead. He explained that he and a companion, Ben Black, had been stalled in their car during the snowstorm, but made it to their notnes safely. . » . HOTEL BANDIT IS CHOOSY Yoi iRcrs. do smartihlg all nourtcerifciit don’t put all w Don in pepeuct s throuiflout t patter: | :d ha jl.'be use( for the ilni|king : the Frank Stander, night manager, anil i Albert Pe- j, -“primjjilfy” hi« jilifikdy jbU n jjomlucted- hnd Stolja Sera up jn,. twilnty-tHm* 1 trupci, a guest, were Standing at the desk of the Village Hotel, at 4:25 a. m. when a man came >n and demanded their wallets. He got $45 from Mr. StaindcrV; and $6 from Mr. Petrucci’s, then demanded Mr! Slander’s wrist watch. He examined the watch earjefully, Mr. Stander told police, and then handed it pack. “It’s too cheap, he said. He escaped. SINGED SQUIRREL IS PROOF I ALLENDALE, N, J. When Hadley Foid told fripnds how a meOtipg of the local Boy Scouts of America committee Was broken up at his home in Brookside Avenue here because a squirrel charged outl of a lighted fireplace at the guests, he found hi^ friends looking at him with suspiciously raised eye brows. “Nice story, Hadley,” they said. Herbert Clarke Jr., of the Hod and Gun Club hcjre, reported it ac: hat :he tai PON pft re -exi R. Laki T ^ If. The lid 191 ER i.i >» i ms jouiig womijn take over t[y of j5iC(,0|)()| jicrfins oh Fidi. 27. T|iis Gei(|)ratiop Day here, A t Mhiply i'fljt' he dig hue h<| tors arW, cap be fii Mf silkl^tojjkiiags orioihe; profe||s)oc haji dejfidfd. A |o umiiii louc Of Scholarship Bj of Tehi. Reginald Hall Johnson ij 1 Vance the advertising department of fhe group have been put [into -the effect by Laufenberg and Those titles vftHasfu, dyd that strength decay if et shall some irimke of redret be paid When her long life' hath reached ifs final day; end of the coming week, acceding | rented. hlh as sistant. j ; • | OtheKgroups and eomniit.tees of the Playeys that have advanced in the methods used arid results ac complished \i( the Constriction Committee, l>Lhting Comriijttee, and properties cpmnifttee. || The constructimi conimittce un der the supervisiorh (if J. Hfiward Davis, chairman, has\already Com pleted construction orNthe set for Hedda Gabler. The set\has ‘been, set up on the stage at ■Xpsjebibty | »’«th speaking, parts have shown Hall and should be .painte<Hy the! th,fi much interest,’ Dillavou com- plahe; The* task is now complete today that he had found, in one of hisi cage traps, arid fireplace\is scheduled tola squirrel with fur singed off bis body and tail, obviously from recent contact with a fire, Mr, Clarke shewed it to Mr. lord’s friends, then released it ini thy woods. The eyebiows came down. ’ OVER-SIZED TANK be fainted soort. pa “Lighting facilitieX used in the Elif.abethian Era wcihild put the ope) in Assembly Hall to shame”, saiijl the members of tin! lighting! , _ ITT _ committee. With this, thought in , M LOUIS—The story about a map who built a mind the members of the committee M 1 * to ° l,1 K to get out of his basement.is no longer ami George Dillavou, direct^ set, fuhn y, to offlcl »ls of a St. Louis boiler factory, forth on a plan to remedy thiKsit-! * he company completed a steel tank; 60 feet long uatfiori. A draft of the materhils ami io feet in diameter. Then they found it was needed to improve the lighting w\s top large to pass over any of the bridges crossing ‘|v(e s a scHp ar a submitted and from latest accounts is meeting with approvaj. « ‘'This is the first time in the history of the Aggie Players that; the members of the organization not taking part in the production the ppipl betvpeejl the SnatiMiL \V^ want peace,. but hptj pettoe v|itho|dt 44J what Sun’s spelling qi happened Men’ A flbur-itoluinn 13he ujf ^ Valentine’s Day ict Men arc ive, avg inust grieve when even the 10 v ) “. v ' s ;. . [. - ■ shudi; <■ ; [J!, 1 j Of that which oj/ce Was great is passed away. the Mississippi Rivet' to the Illinois plant where was to be installed. After a conference of en.iftneers, two solutions w^ro proposed. The;' moved the tank Miskpellecir k f • ; .■ m j J • Hi Mif Wh^h a ityiipgraphic^! error occurs and a word[is rhisspellfcil, thif’s riot newk. But when' A; typogiaphical Iwrpr occursj and a -word |iA [spelled iporrqctlyl fhqt's new8i That’s fc.l;|ie Yiim* (Ariz.f Daily Jilumn editlv in a recent issue and He Is stijil aiswering! fhe phone, explain ing 4 4 1 - ! ![' ,|i-jl'l (■ ^ Tp create Interest in:ii|tprJihcoming spel ling co ttestj'for student^,]the; Sun has l>een printing a dally coluirfr| containing three word i, -r 4lhne through Rattlesnake country to find a reptile ahd hujulgtj in solitary communion with its poisoni j]| 1 , , I And it-has been noted, as one of the sen ators said in debate on the repeal bill,.that part of the exhibition is defiance of the law' as well as of the actual venom. They go sing ing to jail, Senator. Jasper commented, mar tyrs in the eydj; of, their fellow cultists, in the rare cases | when authority, prodded or taunted, bothers to enforce the law which says snakes shall not be handled in public. In short, a |aw Hf this kind makes snake- handling everybody^ business, gets the thing But £:; proofnuideiccbrirupted the misspelled * n ers^ creates eb audience. The word f the paper hit ithq i tfret and the phone audience isj npji ortty on the spot but is all one df,vjhich|;is)'r| i|$peHed staUOd ringing, T'ic Gorman (Te?;.) Hh'ogress. makes the Toint t lat everybody irv; ii| small town knows the r ews hut! reads)ith4 |AijOr to see*if *the aditok* gets jt printed right. ' Beal line it| N(!W Y : ( ijk Times; “ i|Vear Difop storj a in the lyale gh (Iff. (|.) Time||-“Rosesj are Red, yioletsl Are Bljiie; YepT lUs Valeijitine’s Day ’’ifth column ga ’(Iff. (ft.) Time Wreifk KiUk Two.’ -U Snake Ikiintlliii 4 greaii mjlny shov ed good .fensj? Jhj; handlcjrs Handle snaky: arreytJ This v< be, iffstr gent venture i| aj: plied Doubtless few perse clear ^yes a d j religious ritua fa 1 t in it i See No .(id a omkcolUmn I end in the same type Fifth column gave this effect in the If you happen to be* passing the. New set fixtures have beeijj ihi- Assembly Hall some night and hear provided by the coinriiittee. Jtj waKj the elammer of hammers, drop in discovered, upon reading the setNind join the memhers of the gtoup fixtures for the play, that a |fire- ! m^the basement. i ; ■ Outsider Puts ‘Eyes of Texas’ On Bistro Juke-Box; Near Riot «Jl Jit A ;■ ■ ;i By JEFF CHEEK \ Spoons dropped intojwarm coffee\Jaw's dropped. Never | before had such silence) roigned in Ye Old Campbs. Corner [ - Cafe and Coffee Shoppe. 1 j ; ! 1 ; - v [ \ An English prof sat chewing his “Ain’t that H~ ‘ Opens 1:00 p.m. - 4-1181 LAST DAY - “ThE Fabulous l exan” — with g - \. Win. Elliott Cat lie ri lie Mel^od John Carroll [Features Begin 1:30 - 3135 - 5:45 - 7:50 - 10:00 comnijojn.” SEIJI ime.! GAw il b(ull ma pirt' H aIjoard a barge, which planned ytipi en d ! 7 Ij'-f en; finccra over. 114 College by prorjlamatiop of. TERS at Well isca by proclamation ot * nt of tho College. The roien over and a buig - clauses/ when that frozen bver in 1934 L le ) ke haa j *|m|| ( -linfdikjtry [is gi iiig to) dh aomethiiig n|iit|i inmkelfs ‘111 ve appijrently been II well as oourttry djoimlt ca 1 i HrjreisaJ 'JKfe I’H || Yeqr I , Uurgaret Benson, tweiuy- MiUdlfftoil twenty, have been er, dMendirt gets |n (he teen )/)mqnj fire j: ii polit e liable to arrt ft 1 iil for tliie offen|e.|. j.| I [ | THE ERirrsOF SCHOLARSHIP 1 IRLS il{tler]the Efnily Post pro- l st [dunk, pli'ase, please, toff 1 • nnoiinces an abbreviation itribllin*. It says: [ “Bakers ill s(3>[n introduce a newly d dijiikerettc! which is Un u rpote of those lovers of , L'd tley mtwtjeomply viit 1 _ o| iu|w you, can dunk an 1 keep tip your iiofm., TOW N GOl # TO ^ MR0R|, til,; The this di * Tir is thd [fourth prim lerajjj four jnJud Diicoiiq e nominalted tfj |l>e«o rio mki|ok city clerk arid ti eUsur- oh the toljal nhmber of votes each dectlmi” Mdmla^ ancT Tuesday. Four- j Idirijnjen wi jl be* thosen, and a female (c iptptirtnilcillt wifi be set up. Men J led Ul Lhe nnjnapc 1 of Pif tiburgjf ifn; istry instruct n-. Ifr if. J™ insjori years n th<ii dctpiiftlim*)nt|j hi • Pitt, i yill bit ma Lowej, : pert ill ache if Collet <i. • |f. i[ ■fheir fil Pitt flapulty- over j|b >oks,. ’rofeshor J; ittll - feminine accessoriei) > HHijifti hAllUad [a 72-yeiir-j>ld retifod (j^rsify; witlt a ^d-yeurjold chem- ,: who rhtiiid inj lB4a after 30 itiiwjntj hi rnoderr) languages nt mod qajturjlay to Althea Ruth * at [M kiigaiff't Morrison Carnegie I Ng 1 Tlui;’vd kJ'* », \ Texas Vets Cost VA $380 Million For Fiscal Ye*r f \ ^ A ! ]]. v; j ■; WASHINGTON, Feb. 26 Vetcraris’ Administration etpendi- in 'IVxas totaled $380,1119,143 . „ , thumb, muttering, ^ . A bartered five year man did likewise, Cartoon’ - Sport Reel - News FRIDAY — SATURDAY “Brute Force” t; wilbjejid the State Senate \kiting to let snake- jwithout threat of (es us, is an intelli- „ v vchology. ris who w'atch with ispltfy 0f $bake-handling as a i i« bver the coprft -y, either gaping at the sight or,*,at every flare ,6f. publicity, asking how Kentuckians get that way. For their infor mation we should suggest that it is not an exclusive Kenfuckyi practice, but the mark ibf a universal humtan trait of attention-lov- iing. UiAil ! we get‘around to defining as a crime the persuasion of the emotibnal, the immature, the too-easily persuaded person, during the fiscal year cndfl last perhaps oblivion i,s Lhe best treatment. June 30. —-Louisville Courier-Journal | tha * a { ( ‘P° rt lb' 0 L agency shows, payrp>JitK or sbene- rence weiKs--10; my sorrow ftna ; A u *krv/,n thu T 1 T 5 18 wcre 128 -/ <8 Tex Bcnekes “Moonlight Whispers” A typo jn the,Story on the .Ly nbrook, L. I. Texas veteranTS^ to (tepMidents j .Ariy Hills’ “The Eyes of mad^i it appear in the Roches- of 28,218 deceased«x-«em^4 men. ~ ‘ ‘spinster Compensation pnu pensioiK bene- i.I ^ : fits to living veterans dur-ii||g the substituting t'ikn’t” for “aiiivt- Several Fish sneaked into the Port Office, lest they be caught listen ing, to such propaganda. J\ AH eyes remaineif fixed upon \ — the traitorous juke box, even after 1 . the record stopped playing. The juke box, blushed cherry red, hut j j ' K - thf* color changed to green Hs the! stag's grt*w darker. v ' A booted senior, fortified hy a couple of. haStily-dowijed dough,- — ^ (nuts, tottered over to.the machine, now turped purple, to verify what y* his ears refused to believe. Arid there, sandwiched between Law rence Welks' “Tp; My Sorrow” rind | ~t" NORTHWEST OUTPOST I'Vl ALWAYS LOVED (OU THE SWORDSMAN Watch Them with you it’s were living.” recluse sisters ter (N. Y.) Democrat & Chronicle, sinsters,” and i stt^criher wrote in: "1 agree totaled $79,101,977. andlto de i sint the way those spinsters From our Bandera correspondpbt came m tl [that is, -he im the iio[rt of thihg 1 haf il| greater bra vat p, vt herf c \ Inciting, are turn-d on. imagine olie df the sn The of Odlage Stati afternoon,. ex-eejiMtiifiring lishoU isemi-vvcel ly. Subsc :4riws contri wtions mi Hhll.' Clasalfieei aids r win 309, Cjopclwin ieriea Assoc ia ed .t* lit) or not i pigHtri of repub te ’* - liefHI as teconjj- * a( .College ^Utiot.’ |tex: lie: »f congress! o« lii M. 1 I 1 «ni Offlci the Act Mack R. L. If 2 111. ' the exhibitionism tb show off. It is hnrpened, given a is, either curious or t. Nopody could this little classified ad clipped fro newssheet: || “WANTED—Man with mash potatoes, PDC^. Bandera Cafe.” the local leg to Surge, The t- i Ogden (Utah) Standard-Examiner carried this ad; 1 . “WANTED-fFurnished apt. for veteran ||e-ciulti«ts prowling attending collegb aindi wife.” he Battalwg , »_l ^ U** , Battaliikn 1 , officlaliwwapaper of the Agrutulturat arid MechanicarCollege of Texas and the City c Static n| 1 exals, If;: published five times ri week and .circulated [fVery Monday through Friday j • i : •a.Llii j Lj j 1.1J. 1 1 _ _ 1 A 'A-.—* ran .euivionaay tnrougn rna»y idriys arid examination periods. During thei iummer The Battalion is pub- tioh’rate i$4.30 per school year. Advertising; rates furnished on resuest. be;made by telephone (4-5444) oi* at the editiorial office, Room 201, Good- r be placed by telephone (4-5324) or at 4he |^ud<jnt Activities Office, Room is; Ii TT 1 Member of [The Associated Press mm Until«y leh Nolen . [ingUey. 2krter Ted q. Muproe, B. Kuoso, liennt FIAT ! under 70.'| ■ ■he tUe ippH^H anid local news of . ercin are also reserved. for republicattomof all news dispatches credit- ©rigto pahttphati' herein. T7 NELSON.. ited (Collegiate Press ember -fi 7% ..... ■r s. .[Wird 1 Kdltdr nn Menesing Kdlton ... .feature Editor . .Feature Writer* Martin, 4 E. Nrtaon. Siagleurf 4.,, .RaporUr* H : ■ ! 4‘|: !■ ;/ Maurice Howell lb « ' ' Art, Howard •Anda. Andy 1 • i» «£.’.|». - .j_j_ resented nationally by National Ad- ng Service. Inc., at New York City, Loa Angeles, and San Francisco. — ..... .Co-Editors „ w . i a aAdvertUing Manager SB Editor '^■‘crrrc'yriste loward. - • i.. .1 . 4 i Sports Edl E ' * Andy Mktula. Zero Hamm * ^ •; • • • f {.* • *i• •4 •'• • • i • v • « • * r|*f •••••••••• Ty £. R«a Shelby .a. Zero Hammond Sports^Wnters i •y ij i'.i 1 J i. •! i i ^ .. I t ■Photo Engraven pendents of deceased veterap^, $18,x 939,602. F ■ ; }| The report sho’ritjd that hJi last June there were Iri Texaijl these veterans of the various wars re ceiving compensation or pension benefits:: \ f| : ; World War II, 101,959; ZWprld War I, 20,911; regular establish ment, 2,333; Spanish-American W’ar, 3,552; Civil War, none/ (Tex as provides pensions for its Con federate veterans);! Indiapi wars, 24 * & ’ ' J. ii i. I There were dependents of 296 Civil War deceased veteraiis who received a total of $142,509 during the year; 180 dependents of Indian War veterans received $93,270, and dependents of Mexican War •veter ans received $3(080, (There wore only 47 remaining dependents of Mexican W’ar veterans, ithd no other state had more than/foUr.) The VA spent $1,056,617 buying automobiles for disable^ [Texas veterans during the year. Pistol Team Wins Penn State Match T j p ! ir. t • The A&M pistol team Won its first match this tweek. by defeating Pcnhsylvania Strite''College, 1250 to 1166, Lt. Col. F. R. Swog|r, who is in charge of the pistol td|m, an nounced yesterday. , j The firing of the match took place at the indrvidiial schools and the score cards (were sent here to be graded under National Rifle As sociation rule*. | ; Members of the team Were: Rob ert G. Cox, Dewey Ray, Slum W. Smith, Russell T. Cook, anjd Don- TVi.i Texas.” \ Always afjter a catastrophe has occurred, historians seek to; place the blame arid, if possible, bring the culprit to justice ln this in- ristance, it has been ascertained tha^ ah employee of the Bryan Music Company Committed the offepse. But Just which one is still a n)ys- tery. \ / Njl f There\s a general feeling that when the offender has been un-J earthed no class discrimination Wilt; be observed mi meting out justice; < It will probably on a first come), first serve basis as long as the supply lasts, with the line forming to the right f. k \ pALACE TODAY THRU SATY ii k: Bid R. Bering. *■ a&i j j j Rabid! Fox Found On A&M Campus Because a rabid fox was found depd on the campus this week, Dr. A. A. Lenert, head of the Veteri nary Medicine and Surgery depart ment has warned owners of pets to| be on guard. The fox was found by James E. Rose, Dallas sophomore, near the athletic, department when he was on his way to a P.E class. At first the fox was seen to be “having a fit” according^ Rose. Coming by later, 1 Rose saw that the fox wris dead. He brought the carcass* to the defcn of men’s office, which turned it over to the Veterinary Medicine hospital. The animal was sent away for analysis, and was found to be definitely rabid. Foxes have been reported to be over-running East Texas, coming into towns and up on the porches of houses. h .j,/) . SAT. NIGHT REVIEW •. JOHN FORD lilnttf tfcrttfk ■HUMhunt j jJL ■■■»■■** tied fogcthi si) sljm Ij. [INGS •s jj-hi (he! ndi yi u maljeju ■ I' I ' when both were on the - * ' L (ship often was conducted nsoti said),' i ^e explriineu. “phe is hjivc ir|uuy interests in drink in Hollywood )p(ic|il Cocklail. Two peclaclc of your- •|/i TOjllAY : t i I Through Indkswibabu; Dangers ToAGiri He HadToFind! !l! The gditty half all Triaco knew. The was a love story-wW at the end that he 1 something about!. humph***' w.„ it ANO yj A ■ ■ : i' 'I- r , 1 hi % ¥ -4 r J Ii \ |,r* i 1, J | . iij | f Tivjcw* 0 SEMnDT AGNES MOCWEAt DAnDREA;^'^.^^ /; j k;t ■ . L