The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 06, 1948, Image 2

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>v A fc'^Z'todav’-Sugust'the 6,1945, ’Want-it has not rtlvaaled its final course,
three years agt> toclay.j*ugu_ ^ ^ , Men m fighti y te an y
powers. Greed and just, rear and < intol
;e Anniversary . . .
kirosbima-. exactly % In the three years We have observed the
. . .. n -t r\ j >- ( • n 1 »4-n -PiriQl ortivrcto
year of
lame
nevl^ era.
the first! day of the first
w ^ I* rm.'ff*;'':
The Atohii < Age was born.. r
, The world that conceived it was a
nick world.'B was a world made feverish
bv thosel anci|eirt primordial illnesses of
mankind-strife, hate, fears and para-
t;
doxes. :j ~f j
The sickHarent
'feiii down on its
child and was frightejief astonished and
glad. It Ivortdered i^|itsi child would in-
j '• V •11-. ; T4- rlrhT'orl I'f TflA
herit those
atomic at
. t _ d .hlHfP ^ ^
nourishedi that it might grow strong and The moat am brtious and inspiring effort
^ ‘ ; agfe hB
throw o£t tnei om, i^g cursea of its j n hjgtory has been imade to preserve
heredity.! \ j i ■ ., 1 peace and abolish^he sword. The United
Could/this lusty babe grow and develop Nations is a monument to that endeavor,
beyond- ifs inheritance? Could, this child Though its failures aife painful and tragic,
Sw whole and string without the de- jts achievements are ^reat and portentious
foitnations of its parents? Would it be a of good. ] , t ,.
l j stupid,land dull, more vici- Man has two bright futures. He may
v . - l^arn to love and woiik With man . . . that
erance still curse the earth. It is evident
that the Atomic Age will have difficulty
growing into a balanced adult. Its parent
has terribly abused a^d frightened'it. The
atomic age is alreM^ revealing neurotic,
unhealthy traits whijch wilLcurse it till
it dies. ' j i 'j; • i > M 'i ■'
Fortunately it hasj shown potentialities
in its nature. Medicine, Chemistry, Agri
culture—all the physical sciences have do
me ills. It wondered if the ve i 0 p e d under its guidance. Even the so-
would bp—*or could be so cjai and political scieinces have benefited.
<lljinri)pw . TrampKng Out! the Vintag
All But Passerby
Self-Made Baftei
pi-
,.'V
■
m
■j.'fi
By JOE HOLLIS*
I
Battalion Forum
Ibis Coin mu is open to all Battalion readers
Should the Dixiecrats Bolt?
monster, more
; ous than its ancestry? ^ . ..
iMen Vere astounded \y the poSsibili- would be gloriously Ibright. He may not
ties Life and'hopeWere not impossible; ^fearn. In 3 years he:has not learned. He
tolerance and understanding could be has rushed back toi those battlefields
found • liberty and justice might be achie- where the Atomic Age was conceived.
^ Men werk also tightened. The lusty Three years of cold wiar have taken him to
SSI mij ht develop into am atavistic that poii^t where he may destroy himsSlf
Suturei mor! terriUk jthaii the parent m the iristant flash {of art atomic flame.
Sh-foatered AttiiT.fi® -and Nerp, That woild be brigl* too.
The Great Congressional Spy Probe
'' ■i President Truman! as much as admit- munist Party leaders, proving that it w^
ted yest^day - that he was hurt bjtthe
atten tion his special session ot
Dr. A. B. Nelson, of the History
Department, slays the split in the
Democratic Party is the climax of
a movement Wb.ch has been dls-
cernaole tor a generation.
By A. B. NELSON ,
The present division within the
Democratic i'grty is tne climax of
a constantly growing movement
which nas neien discernible tor a
|
DR. J. H. BASS of the History
Department says Dixiecrats con-
stiiote a sectional party with a
pj^t but no future. These are his
ivfews: r y "
[ By j. H. BASS
I The threatened dismeihberment
;of one ot our major political par
ties, the Demoeraue, into splinter
'groups, and the growing number
ty ties and allegiances is signifi-
groups leprbsent aivlrgent lines
of tnougnt regarding such funda
mentals as fivnat constitutes the
cant tor the nation. This analysis
of the party situation, by request
Patrons of a Los Angeles bar thought
that something seemed inconsistent with
the ideas they held concerning saloons. In
stead of being asked to pay, they were in
formed by six bartenders 3thal everything
was on the house. Being people quick to ac
cept a free drink and slow to question a gift
the non-cash customers drank heartily.
During the consuming of ten cases of
beer and more than one hundred bottles of
wine, the party livened up considerably. One
frustrated Dizzy Dean pitched a beer bottle
through the front window which had the
misfortune to strike a passerby. The beer
bottle did, not the window. (I certainly wish
that the bottle had struck two people for I
like the term passersby. It’s got a certain air
to it. However for the sake of news accuracy
it must be passerby.)
: Said passerby, being a kill-joy, ran tattl
ing to a policeman who came to put a halt
to the festivities. He too thought things were
slightly inconsistent. After sleuthing around
a bit he was so certain that he summoned aid
to run in the bar-tenders. The self-made
drink-servets, it seems, had desired a party.
Finding the bar locked and empty they had
kicked in the door and started the free drink
policy to' various and sundry passersby.
(All good things comes to those who wait,
even passersby.) '! !
★ i ■ ; .,
; (I T ; . “ ■ • i' * 1 • ;
Some people are never happy no matter
how fate treats them. A perpetual-mourner
of, this type started complaining long and
loud. He was unhappy when a well, which he
had believed contained water, exploded. Up
on investigation it turned out that from
some unknown source gasoline had seeped
in. . | 4 ;
i The sad one reports that he has pumped
some six thousand gallons of gasoline out of
well ii iihe
pure thht it |
irm maq
it they
they hail 1
period cf
Personally I
pping Aboutw
luting ih well
len? The cheerful
>ly purchasj hir
and st irt a
More i n< I mo
aft the youpger
to outsta »d ng
foung meifi . uat thi
feat when ficed wi|
tfder overwlielminf
Late i i jin aft
found a s n nge? ii
which ih * woi
^bw he get here tl
‘ at heihad >valked|
whose h or ic it wa
idolph Hsai_,
itended burglar
)r me!”
three months; gasoline
ejetively be used ip his
ineries are near by,
Id definitely knbw it
itities in that ihott
i
‘‘ . i
what the
tht if the seei
threatening his gar-
olutibn would be to slm-
i jcap, build a rest
he stuff.
★ I ' '.i i . l,.\.
lews stories relate how
len tion is. One today is
>e of how so many
jf> their arms ih de
task which they con-
n reccatlyr a i^aid
foyer of the house
-M
u
*• j J’
en she asked
ap brightly coni
him
ided
irst’s.j
police
othe
feelink tHit a man
hooking a fii
hey quizzed
• • •
ead^rs
not reluctant to indict! people when enough
evidence had beep pmassed.
4or
lack of r .- 7 . ... .
Cohgre s $ is getting’ while it is playing
second fiddle .to the Senate’s popular “spy
, ■
Senator Ferguson), Michigan ^Republi
can and head of the jsenate investigating
nr^e ” fcallmb the wlhoje investigation a committee, wanted tbje investigation mov-
herring ' the President sought to di- ed to Washington becimse he thought New
le|t some wdnUeringj public? pttention to - 1
CongresP where he isi tiding ,to get some
only new cars, Carson
action on inflation,
j .. While thebe is no question that any
suggestion of communistic infiltration in-
' ' ,6 government should be investigated,
, •{*. ; i j nliyswxT
• it !does seem
hat the present show was
, York jitry wasn’t ropking any progress.
'Rlepreseritative Thomhs]'chairman of the
house un-American Activities committee,
sdid the same thing.
If /
We wonder, howi
have been better to
to continue its inves
ley’s charges until
$r, if it would not
ve allowed the FBI
tion of Miss Bent-
ough evidence had
Aggieo that those currying,only one nan
m- any- Were ^he best sources of rides,I a nd
to licerisefi
By HARVEY J. CHELF
i Whenever a group of
gather on an Aggie corner
whenj i»f Texas or the neighboring ears with out of st*
state, a “session” gets undemay fered the best c ha nice for a Jctyj
as they vie with each other in, re- ride. „ . v
lating stories of past hitch-hikjnR Having selected a pir jfor ti
experiences. These stones are in-*mg, Caison would hold out )
Variably concerjied with extremely naming the city Qf
iuSt a hfee well, timejdl I., . . . .
Vest Wv, wc
lev since 1944(when sfie repented and tokl them. In that way, (the guilty men and
S Agents hdWbeen quietly.working on women could have bpen just as easily m-
Lr charges ejv'er since. A federal grand dieted, arid the innocent men, who may
iury ih New [York his (been working on weir be ruined by thje present investiga-
the case but had not made any indict- tion, would have beenlcleared without hav-
ments as a result of her charges. The jur>-. ing been exposed to!the glaring light of
however indicted the 12 top Com- the congressional “r|d baiting” session.
MacArtiur ipP Correspondents .1
f j
laqArthur is up to
ewi reports are com-
fell of the General’s
irrespondents Trom
; - “Dugout Doug”
hiS old tricks Jigain.
ling from Japan that
orders i^Dhiliiting < v
obtaining and seiidirigj nort-military infor
mation to their paper! in pa.county.
The latest report 'of the General’s
handiwork coijnes froi a correspondent of
the Chicago Daily NCwsgKeyes Beech. In
an effort to ; find ouh the costs of army
[occupation anjd construction costs in Ja-
wjent to Major General H. J*,
ICasey MacAilthur’s chief engineer. Casey technique u^sd in Mpscow
i and each
time the Genieral accuses the cor-
■ • il . |-.-j—
|ii'.
i (• :
)'
The Bkttuliw, o
[City ot College Station, Tex»
[Friday aftiertioop, except^dm 1
I talion *3 ppblishi id tn-w<r
[ V pof. Advei tisiig rates'
I Goodwin Rail.
[Office, Room,
|pan* Beech went to
Casey, MacAijthur
suggested thaji the pe<H?l<} back home were
not interestet in^ociupat^ion costo, but
IwhUn .pressed asked Beech: to submit a
written list ft questjons. Beech iUbmlt-
d the. questions and hasn’t seeri or heard
nhem since I J I y
'•Qther: incidents have been reported
respondents involved: pf “sensation mon-
gering, incoherence, and professional in
competence.” It seeite improbable that
all the “incompetent’; correspondents are
in Japan. Y ' |. i
The Supreme Corjimand of the Allied
Powers in Japan seejms to take the atti- :
tude that the American- people should
know only as much about the American
people’s expenditures and operations in
occupied Japan as SCAP decides it is
best for them to knew. This is the same
r;; y «« p*f,y ana ob W . Z
| Ih, ,n,.p !.t at Ihc c.u«,et ! U '
of the na.ion«l Oi-sanuatioii at the : th»l the ..ontl.tu!™, ;h, pro - • ,Sa<ia of A Thlllllb
P- 1 represents Iwge- ^pvisions lor li .r relerence to ponti- i U1 ^ I nilllllJ
1> the nor'hern wing, tne oig cay ca i parties. y e t t i, e development
bosses organued labor and tne so- b ^ of , »’ aTty government"
cai.eu liberals and Communist Par- j i( f an ^ senlia l feature of our de-
^ 4k " JS 4 S ° re * mocracy. In a dem'oeracy, where
k anU?W l fr <* elections are held among an
boosts (.both Norin and South j w|»o .exveiibive ^leiitoraie, poiiucal par-
asuad> coniml the local party or- Ries arc inevitable, necessary and
gaiiizanons. ; < | • r - . _ v
The Southern Democrats or
‘ Dixiecrats ' hoid (o the .‘•states
iftfifnts" tneorj’ ot the constitution
as, did Thomafi Jclferson and the
original founders oi the JJemo-
crauc Party and represent a more
.agricultural economy tnan the
fngniy inoustnalueil iNorth]
At presfent the two Wings of the
party use ,a fundan4mtaily differ
ent approach to the question of
party loyalty, which is being hea
vily stressed by tne organized par
ty bosses. Those remaining faith
ful to the nat|onal ticket define
loyalty-in terms of allegiance to
the national party organization;,
those swinging to tne ” trotievracs”
fhinJf ol loyalty in tenhs of ad
herence to the principles on which
jthe party was founded. Th.s giouip
does not believe in loyalty to an
organization or a mati but to the
fundamemal principles and rights
the .national constitution and the
party were formed to, protect. They
also believe that the people, aiid
not the organization, are the party.
However, even this disagreement
over fundamentals df belief would
not, in all probability, have brought
about an open break if it had not
lieen for constant and purposeful
disci immation against the South ^
on a sectional basis, plus a long ^however, inconsistent
serious of vicious attacks, in con- -
stant violation ot the rights guar
anteed to the states by tne Federal
Constitution. These stacks have
been on southern social and poli
tical institutions.
The attack on the poll-tax Is
destructive of the fundamental
right of each state to set its own
requirements as to voting qualifk
canons and the attempts ot the
present national leadership to force
poun|
a sus
is innocehcfe. All
b that tank
n yen. Ever since
w-abiding citize
bowed ae is}. The
he arson ;h tree.
n ariri questioned Mr as
. The reply;was William
Up Mi hearting that the-
d 1‘0h, this is too big
Such tjctlon is ieplbrable. What indeed
; happe le I to th i ol<|i time perserver&nce
that gave )akt geneffitiojna the determination
tjo never fijajl die?
; Japam
tod a fire tl
r
useful. Furthermore, the most
(healthful cohuition exists when
there are two major parties of
^about equal strength.
I History proves that rampant
multipai :yisni and its consequent
i chaos and msuniiy among voters is
jag destructive of parliamentary
^government as is one-partyism and
dictatorship. The Weimar Republic
in b;rmany was a victim of ex
cessive multj-partyism. the insta
bility of the 'rrench and the Ital
ian governments today grows out
'of the absence of any major party
capable of harmonizing and com-
; mantling the loyalty of a suiticient
;number of voters to create party
] goveinment. WucVl party iragmen-
ttalion nurtures dictatorship.
? No one cohtends, however, that
(minor and third parties have no
- useful place m a democracy. They
xlo have a distinct role to prevent,
inertia within the major parties,
;to act as protest groups, and to
serve as sotinding boards and
1 whipping boys tor the major par
ities in gauging' pubhc sentiment
Ion dormant and on new issues. Nor
(can mere be unqualified censure of
' 'the “mugwump” voter, who for
neither whimsical or for serious rea-
gowl jrides or extremely poor rides; thumb with the ot ier haqd * fid ^ nj ro
flash his “Personality smile^at tjhe
owner.
Other equipment included a
folding campstool which he us4d
r jfor than b-
1 out a Hi tn
destihaR in,j
the norm has rto human interest,
i And in these sessions, sooner
or later, the feats of (he Paul
B u n y a n o( Thumb-wavers,
I A&M’s World! Champion Hitch-
! hiker. Keys F. Carson, ’42, of
Cuero, Texas, ate brought up
and retold. 1
Keys F. Carson got into his
hitch-hiking method of locomotion
While a istudent at A&M and wound
up as organizer and president; of ,
the' United Collegiate Thumbers By CARROLL TRAIL
Association, with 4,000 members, Dear Sir-
including 2000 Aggies. t have heart! ^confirmed U
, He elevated thumbing procedure orts that 0hm , 8 6 (I ^
to a professional basis, with such E/R) is not ^sojutdy co ^ ct
newTlangled equipment as creden- vn ,, ^ ’
Hal. and rcfleitors. As president Can ^ “‘'SfeK,;
he Rave association mombera a Elertncflly yours,
Army Secretary: Royall intervened
once in behalf of a fMe press when it be-
came clear that Mat Arthur was withhold
ing information about, non-military mat
ters. It is now evident that the General
iUd not heed the hintj
\ It is time: for Sec notary Royall to tako
action.
social and economic equality on the
southern Suites have precipitated
a struggle, tor the very existence
of those fundamental rights of
self-determination upon which the
republic was founded. |VP ,„ V „ WJ
The aouthutrt plea for jtmticc at [heir own
tlw recent 1 Democratic ^National ihc appnn
Cdnvjgnpdh Was received with con- by the m
/Ilews i«i{itr^ut^^^^O!^ , ^b|adOy^lophone^(4^l^)^^^tb^
The Associated Preas is
^ Jited to jt’.on not oi
3djterein.r .Rights of
I jjotewd 'secow lcJ*» At
bffie* * C«lle«e itmtloa. < Un.
|tte A 6 * of OonxrcsJ of 'Marcb ^^70.
pNNiTH BQ^D, LOUIE MC
Ic C- Hunros T ..^i -ir'’-
Arjifal '■ fna ( oi ly
? c J .
Billy
ce. H<
.■ 1
Vi •
r.Iiicoar
ys and exentination periods,
y, Wednesday and Friday.
on request, X, . '
allege of Texas and the
every Monday through
; the summer The Bat
on rate $4.30 per school
—
ixclusively to the use ior
3d in the paper and local news of
all other matter herein are also
, itiorial office, Room 201,
at j the Student' Activities
i J -j •• •. ■
4k
—
r “ i ■
Member ot
Associated Press
of all. news diapatches
taneous origin publith.
ed - sateb
* j ■' • . ~ '•-jf- 4&vor . or rttinority
ShS MtkiwUy tar Nittaul Al*.
wt^tlnk iffc- ^ ork c ' iv ‘ > This year will see he*
! Oen venue
tempt, Uiid the present spilt is the
result.
W. K. HENDERSON, an A*1
istudent, bvheVes the Solid Sout
should break away trom the regu
lar Democratic t arty. These are
his reasons: f
I By W. K. HENDERSON ,
There is htuc doUbt tnat the
Republican Patty will be the Vie-
tees in the cording Presidcntiil
election. a
The moat profitable action for
the Bouth at tn»a time would be
the establishment of a two party
aytltem for electing .President^.
Following blindly behind any can
didate that the National Democra
tic Party chooses to thrust upon
us will only earn us the contempt
of both msjortparties. The Tnnnan-
Barkiey crowd, feeling assured of
the habitual,support of the,s
states’-electorates, have
to unbelievable lengths to
the favor of ; minority groups in
sons, ekereiSes his right to cross
party lines. That does not mean,
however, inconsistent as it may
(read, that the American people can
irisk the disruption of the -major
itwo-party system by encouraging
rebellion against party discipline
.upon issues that may be at best
transitory and superficial.
It ought to be emphasized at this
time that political parties are hie
rarchies and organizations not rab-
jbles of ideologists and doctrinnir-
ires. While political patties do pre
sent platforms of policy to be
guile the voters, they are composed
of men and women who must be
possessed of a high degree of com
promise and reciprocity.
As organizations, political part
ies identify themselves and adopt
procedures less through
he hppiuatui of the platform than
more elaborate machinery
f coirtmittcM, conventions, and
rinmi ics. it is through tho latter
hlnery that they must mahi-
identity: and continuity. Of
urse, parties may not coerce
mbers by positive action; but
must by thoiv very nature
Withhold froih disjoyul members
*nd ! independent (non-pnrty) vot
ers such privileges, preferment*,
they Mriisess. No
wishes to pre-
Answes:
E. E,; I will give you this In-;
formation in the strictest cor fi-i
mark} to shoot at by thumbing
250,000 miles in> six years—and at
an average speed of 37 miles per
hodrl! ! 11 j. , , y
Oafs on had (Already chalked up dence, and only ifj you promise
thousands of miles when he first n ^Y er to breathe a word of it toj
gained front page publicity by miyonc else, especially to the ehc-
thumbing his way to Washington, tncal engineers. .As you kn< w,
D.C., carrying a live turkey in a handbook is bpilt up arm nd
crate, which he delivered to Prdsi- P , s Law .Discredit their hand
dent Roosevelt for the President’s ' )0 ?) c where would they bt ?
Thanksgiving dinner, In 1941 he , But . lf you solenfhly swear to
went 1 international by hitching ^ Quiet, I will give you : he
to Mexico City with another famed straight dope, and who else is hpt-i
Cuero turkey, this one for Presi- ter 'quattiWaT
dent Camacho.
Even before this, hitch-hiking
had gotten into Carson’s blood.
Like some people played golf or
| marble machines, Carson was
addicted to hitting the highway
; at every opportunity for a trip
j someplace, just to see how fast
he could do it.
Pefbaps^hls
watt
According to Dan
matics professor, Oh'
lie iuui
Perhaps - his | gri
bh 'iti 1940 wpei
Hall, matfee
l’s law is pot
accurate. He says jthat I equils
E/R minus E/R times e to hej
negative power Rt/I, where o »
the base of the natural logarlthns;
-t- the time and L tlio inductance.
I queried Dan aboilt the induit-i
anec, but he bounced back Wijth
eotest triumph circuit doesn't have
m ho thumbed »mall inductanw?"
Well. B. E., thorfe you hato
Dfen’t let the word jwt armind.
at Hiroshima invesfiga-
daiy and had the same
ing for sunfish but
58 might have. When
hq loudly proclaimed
ht d done, he said, was
igt r last fall of a pill-
le Y ak been a completely
That -man certoinly
>ffi<:ers forgot all about
*
ridfs were alow, a Texas
B reflector sign which fould
i ?en |t long distances at
a^d a handbag wi h a
built in pottable radio. .
Cai ion’s career continued cvpn
after
uiid i
lieutie
hiker, but
terjty
ydiitih
his JndKiction into the army
uijttl the time' he g »t' tM”
anj^i bars. OCS schoil tie-
:he World Champioti litch-
nbt before he gay * pos.
mary : thumbihg recqzds at,
to ^hoot.
Amplificati m D apartment
.. A U»<\T I -TI, A II 1 1 r -X i 1
it8 4:
ts. . 1 j!
led by
public
.for a
ibbee-.: :
bougl . forty of them to give
cmplo ^ee» for lawn omamer
The other one was purchaiji
the b cal stuperintendent of
workt and given to his son
weddi ig j resent The son
quentjk' mJVed to California and
took iHic f^ojtprint with him
reporta, those bought
corjipany have been broken
ipped ito such an exten; that
Ibdt all their valu™ and
resemble li the pi inti of u
ir hodf.
yrltb tho one in Califor-
pne is BUpposedl
iwier, it’s not for|
er keeps ft os so:
fl
idh' in-
jrf sale,
it) of a
S^one, andf lets his guests
this; does hot 'completely
#n *tul
coun
mem
(hey
With
indtpeniknt (non
such privilege!, pjefgrme
and patronage as they possess,
•rgaiiization which wishes to i
iistimny give aid and comfort
its own destruction,
How, then,; should orte evaluate
the Wallace-Tuylor Progressives
fend the Thurmond*Wright Dixie-
f**
uev
Id _ ,
est realignmi
the
Clarif
itic ti
the I
crate? The writer believes these
new parties will serve as therapeu
tic agents in iorcing a more hon-
est realignment of
JorcingHhe two major parties to
Cleanse and Clarify their pc
’he Democratic ticket of Truman-
parties and in
ijor parties to
Jarify their policies.
ley and
of Dev
^—
4-,
r Wire Edilor
: Editon
■Si‘,
1 ■
— —
— | —
WlUcn. H. T.iWrlsht, K.
‘ ®SSSiSa"i^~i
U* Angeles, and San Francisco.
U
Jim
T. Rolan. Bob
Aka; Cbm ——
lisnrto Hnwall
- T j
. y
(Saak)
fr
•K
l
7"
UatMcar
■ ■
^jr. elements iri the House am
(See HENDERSON, Page 6)
Republican nomi*
ewey-Warren must recog-
the warding signals.
The propef procedure for the
Dixiecrats and Progressives is to
heir party organizations
ance with Texas laws re-
parties and present their
the voters in the
coast-to-coast (n 4 days and 20 ^ { ^ ,
hoursilLlfe magazine had dond a Dfetft let the word get
(featui*o story on a hitch-hiker who aasily cause tSIwi eiectricifens
m a muted to struggle across the J® gfet Panicky,
nation in ten dkysTwith a deriaiv- Hoar sir: J
laugh, Carson wired Life that he Carroll, .1 think you’re nuts,
could ,do It in half the time, and Sincerely,
then proceeded j to do so. In order R - V.
to prqve he was no fraud, he mall- Answatf:
ed in street car transfers contain- _ 1 “fil
ing tho hour fend date, from the Sir:
■major!cities hejpassed-through oh- • •* v y Bnt to.pu
route to the coast. •}
Another high point in Canionfs
career was the time in 1910
he saw A&M’s team off at
le Station as they left to
.’ UCLA in Pasadena, Cali-
forniu—and then met them on
the motion platform when their
.-train pulled in*
j'Cf
m
\nd
cvhaii t the supply. They can
be bo|ght on the market in! New
Chicago. However, since*
no high, I would fedviso
e: your money and] wait
depifeteion.
the age of one o|f the
iyoutigejit seems to be
buhdled aiVrl fifty 4l^ ion
I old. The old ones date fur-
tw|ec that far.
uy your track, the.
wilfl’be a prabWta.
t that you talk to
r Ei E-iMcUulllan’s
.
ther
I wc
the
hou»i
y«<
yni b
tn km
sugget
ni ovini
bring kiieab
osaur tracks, or shot
prints, tot tl
Would you please
them, and what tl
How, 6!d would
osaur track for sale
If Tam able to
footprint, how -
mend that I trar
November election.
.A .referendum or
«- fokos- (foma ,i .
rt the TrumaniBatWe:
would' be violative of the
endiim on whether iDem-
ocrate in Texas- should or should
not support the Truman.BatWey
ticket
simplest concept of party orgahi-
aiticn and affiliation. Place tho
• (See BASS, Page 6)
three of them had flats. te> yott?
wet and was never i , Sincere
. But this success } &• R-
Answer:
several d n*[
d 1 say foiM
my frier is.
mo who *< life
cost?
youngest din-
a dinosji “ J
you recc
it? Would
such a th
g pleasi
Oh,; wf 1
0^
Writers
ed
i* ho
ThJ! Amprican TechnicfelJ
pW iToyultie«. The pferp
than a matter of luck;
isult of hh
thumbing.”
matei faj-!
to li\
result of his system of S. R-, I hate to disappoint
Selective but dinosaur tracks,! like most i
» i to
meant flagging cars that tiques, are getting scarcer
to be potentially good mrw, and T am. afraid that
1 ignoring others. ■- will have quite a time finding
ttmg which care tnighf be ^ 1T
in a quarry
the Uceuse plate. Thumb- the local '
the highway at 'orlconilinB
tlie .ina^e. of car, tjhe
When tl
m
us
i influence
put ou
?h will facilitate Lifc-
. Education.
ission define^ B
ition as wit “which
H -Amerieen you h
and pn fitV -o
iberij, wferke^