The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 19, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 23, 1954 Page: 3 of 4
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rs°nalities ]
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March V' -
Hiding fa->
:unsh n
liious -
, and ar<*
1"" on
IT
a. •;
isor an.w ■:
tival is schc
■redbuds
I urn ( "llegt* in Ro-
have received
too, are up in
„ )r student council.
,,.,jng as the fellows
so they cir-
:,:.i asking for a new
ir,« «,ms open meet-
v. !n say, the com-
ing considered.
r,a. (aeh new semes-
• v a long, long line
t . ut side the Dean's
« ,i. his turn gaz-
. sign "Students
I \V tire consider-
r,n<i the cause (of all
..•••her. According to
ndar of activities,
stival is scheduled
But the buds are
•:h!y to the pleas-
Th>.> girls are most
i.."•,t if they bloom
ne by the Festi-
The faculty
"Tjlie Redbud
-i uic.fi •"■for March
>r not."—The girls
i sank lower in their seats and mur-
| mured against the weatherman.
"The Baylor Lariot" carried the
following ad in the classified sec-
tion recently, "Need help in math?
SI.00 per hour." What, a price to
pay for poor figures—wrong for-
mula, and misplaced points.
The city of Waco is proud to
j have Baylor located there. Recent-
j ly the business and professional
men voted not only moral support
and cooperation, but added an an-
nual contribution of S60.000 to
$75,000 to be added to the school's
operating fund. These funds will
be paid by the Chamber of Com-
merce—no restrictions. This consti-
tutes a vote of confidence and ap-
proval for the University and its
entire program.
Boy, they go all out for realism
when they produce a play at East
Texas State. When the script for
"Light Up the Sky" called for the
female star to wear a new diamond
ring that would "choke a horse,"
nothing would do but to get such
a rock—she wore a two-carat dia-
mond ring. (Insured, no doubt.)
Shears Vacancy Filled Brother Boug Speaks
Following the vacancy on the i Council of Religious Activities,
executive committee of the Golden Student Council, Method'.st Stu-
Today, when all about us there is
! fear and frustration, despair and
i , . „ . ... . ! despondency, it is rewarding spir-
Shears created upon the Januarv dent Movement, Wesleyan Singers, „ . ' .. ».
wit January, . • j i itually to walk among the youth
graduation of Dr.n i Chl Rho> anfl Student Ministerial . .. , . ' .
* a iimiioii ox uon lX'ach, Jack! . ... .. . , . of our college and observe their,
Sanders has been elected to com- ! ? ""iL !'S 8 80 '* nrum er j courage, faith, and determination, i
Mete his term of office. j °' " Du°dec,m' , On the whole, the student of today 1
The executive committee is res- L . , , , .
Jfck is a sophomore majoring in j ponsible for selecting the weekly haS a kP<n mim!' a qUick w,t' anr!
wearer of the Golden Shears. Their
regular meeting time is Monday
afternoon at 1:30.
Fine Arts Score
BY DORTIIA BI.AIR
History. He was graduated from
Grand Prairie High School m 1952.
is a member of the Student
Trinity U. Student Gives Seciets
Of Successful Bachelor-He Says
Af
By I. E. Scapedum jyour guard at all times; (2) Al-
Men—is that woman breathing j ways act indifferently when girls
too close down your neck? Do , are around; (3) Take a shower a-
you have nightmares of taking that ; bout twice a month; (4) Choose
last long walk of freedom to the^ the most popular girls to go with;
tune of some march by a fellow j (5) Hint about all the other girls
named Wagner? Well, fellow j you have gone with; <6> Look dis-
fighters for freedom, step in a j interested whenever they wear
little closer, and take a few hints something new; (7) Ogle all the
a maturing determination to bring
about, a better world. Upon the
shoulders of these vibrant, happy,
youth lay great responsibilities. I
believe history will prove them
equal to the tasks. So may
give heartfelt thanks to God
the students of this hour, for in
their hands lies tomorrow's world.
—Douglas Morris.
Sigma Alpha Iota held its form
al initiation Sunday afternoon in
the Fine Arts Building. At. this
time five pledges became members
of S.A.I. The new members are
Betty Dickson, organ minor. Fort
Worth; Fran Brown, organ major,
Fort Worth; Lillian Lit tip, vole-
major, Decatur; Alice Redmond,
^ voice major, Fort Worth: and
we | Hf.f>n McCombs, organ major, Fair-
for I fk-]d.
Ileen McCombs was chosen best
pledge of the year and presented
at this time with her pin. Con-
Mrs. R. E. Harding Sr., Iiirector
of Dallas Symphony; Mrs. Boad E.
Hensley, Director of Harmony
Club; Mrs. E. Brinton Ingram, Op-
era Guild; Mrs. LeFay M'Oasland,
Euterpean Club; Mrs. J. C. Neal,
Euterpean and Harmony Clubs;
and Mrs. Anne B. Terrell, Music
Study Club. '
Tea Served
After the initiation, tea wast
'served in the faculty lounge of the
Student Union Building, honoring
the new members and patronesses.
Guests for the afternoon were:
Mrs. Lee Brewer, Mrs Fred A. GU-
from a successful bachelor.
•After many courses in Campus-
ology and a careful observance of
the situation, I have arrived at
some definite conclusions. These
are the DO'S and DON'TS I have
successfully employed: (1) Be on
other girls you see when you're
on a date; (8) Run if all else fails.
Now, let me explain the purposes
behind these rul^s.
Be on your guard at all times.
Watch out for that girl that smiles
(Continued on Page 4)
Editor's Note
From "The Bat," school paper of
The Paris Junior College, comes
the guest editorial of the week. It
is timely, comprehensive and yet
concise. It would be well if each
student read it, studied it, and ex-
press an opinion on the general
subject.
"Secrets of a Successul Bachelor"
was taken form The Trinity Unj^Cfub; Mrs. Leslie R. Elliott, Euter-
'The Trinitoniaf
gratulations, Ileen, we are proud o* lette, Mrs. W. Robert He*<nf, Mrs.
Grace Lankford. Mrs. T. A. Mit-
chell, Mrs. Edwin Thompson, and
versity's paper,
you. but from watching you in the
dining hall, carrying dishes, etc.V
we can see that you deserve it. Mrs. Law Sone, all present patron
Patronesses Initiated
Sigma Alpha Iota also initiated
at this time, thirteen new patron- |Lou
esses. They are: Mrs. O. C. Arm- j
strong. Euterpean Club; Mrs. A. ,
M. Campbell, president of Worn- j
an's Club: Mrs. Hollis O. Childress, i
Euterpean Club; Mrs. W. Glenn
Darst, Euterpean Club; Mrs. Trav-
is B. Dean, president of Harmony :
esses. Also present were Mrs. Sale,
National Executive Secretary; Mrs.
Botefuhr, Kappa Province
President, and members of tha
Fort Worth Alumnae chapter.
pean Club.
Phi Mu Alpha is having a party
February 27. in the home of Don-
ald Bellah, for the sponsors, mem-
bers, and pledges. From the .sound
of things it's going to b* a won-
derful time.
ick Demetruk Presented Paper at Thirteenth Annual Convention of Alpha Chi
I they f'.* .'
have be
Issia they
1 they aiV;
great or
Konfom::-
Martin
lee in a n> v
picture di"
In banned fr
[Quebec, v.tv
Brer do not <
(Starts on Page 2)
[en irritating his fellows by not
foking as f!v:y think and doing
Many non-conform-
?n put to death; in
tiil are. In this coun-
ut out of jobs. Yet,
r.nators «have been
Jesus Christ was
Luther was one—and
.spaper that a mo-
jiicting his life has
<m public showing
here conformists" in
want the people to
Iexposed (-• non-conformity,
the stirring American exponent
|se!f-reiiarc<" the essence of in-
liduaiism—Ralph Waldo Emer-
was an unorthodox Unitarian
jnister, who said:
I wish to write such rhymes
S shall not suggest restraint, but
ntrarhvise the wildest freedom,
iciety everywhere is in conspi-
icv against the manhood of
[very one of its members ....
he virtue in most requests is
jonfomiity. Self-reliance is its
[version. tt, laves not realities
pd creators, but names and cus-
pms. Whoso would be a man,
Bust be a non-conformist. Noth-
ps is at last sacred but the in-
Tity of your own mind. . . Tis
irious that Christianity, which
I idealism, is sturdily defended
ly the brokers, and steadily at-
tacked by the idealists.
It is curious also how in this
country calling a man a J'contro-
versial figure" is tantamount to
calling him "subversive." Mr.
Dobie maintains that forced or-
thodoxy through death, svyppres-
sion, exile, derision, banning of
books, atara.yation and all the other
methods of self-righteous and con-
forming respectability has never
tieen the answer. In the words of
Harold Taylor:
' To be free in the sense of be-
ing able to make independent
choices means that the free per-
son must know a great deal,
must be sensitive to a wide va-
riety of experiences, and must
have enough confidence in his
own judgment to assert it and
to learn how to correct it through
further experience. It also means
that he must have learned to re-
spond to other people and other
ideas, different from his own,
rather than reacting against
them, and that he has learned
to accept differences as actual
rather than as a threat to him-
self and his style of life.
With regard to academic, Alan
BarthVin his book, The Loyalty of
Free Man, said: "You can have
perfectly sterilized minds in schools
and universities, or you can have
(good teaching, but can't have both."
Or, as Alexander Meikeljohn, of the
University of Wisconsin, put it be-
fore the 38th Annual Meeting of
-the American Association of Uni-
versity Professors:
Anyone who submits, under
pressure, to receive control over
his thought or his speech, in so
far ceases to be a scholar search-
ing for the truth, ceases to be a
teacher, leading his pupils toward
honest and fearless inquiry and
belief. He becomes a hired man,
thinking what he is paid to think,
saying what he is hired to say.
The story of real Ajnericanism
is the story of independent think-
ers—not the story of men of one
opinion. A former great Chief Jus-
tice of the Supreme Court, Louis
D. Brandeis, said:
Those who won our indepen-
dence by revolution were not
cowards. They did not fear poli-
tical change. They did not exalt
order at the cost of liberty . . If
there be time to expose through
discussion the falsehood and fal-
2 lacies, to avert the evil by the
processes of education, the reme-
dy to be applied is more speech,
not enforced silence.
Or, consider for a 'moment the
words o?/Justice Robert Jackson:
If there is any fixed star in
our constitutional constellation,
it is that no official, high or
petty, can prescribe what shall
be orthodox in politics, national-
A ~ B - C WASHAMAT
Laundry Dry Cleaning
3122 Avenue I LA-9001
ECONOMICS PROF: Which is cheaper? A dog
license or a haircut at Wenzel & Williamson Barber
Shop.
FRESHMAN: That's easy. A haircut at Wenzel &
Will
iamson Barber Shop, of course.
ECONOMICS PROF: That's right! Besides you get a
BETTER haircut at—
Wenzel & Williamson Barber Shop
ACROSS the CAMPUS on ROSEDALE
delicious
MALTS
AND
SUNDAES
AT
^ASHBURfTS
3012 E. ROSEDALE
The Opening
OF
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DRIVE-IN
• Hamburgers .
• Malts
• S teaks -
..• Sea Foods
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eat in our
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OR
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TWC Students*"
m ALWAYS WELCOME
WHISTLE-STOP GRILL
3712 E. ROSEDALE
PHOTO BY TRI-FOTO
jerry buck,
Student Body President
The PORTRAIT
Only YOU Can Give
This portrait must be a very
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3311 E. LANCASTER
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ism, religion, or other matters of j
opinion, or force citizens tofcon- j
fess by word or act their faith
therein.
In the second of his courageous!
Appearances before the Foreign ]
Relations subcommittee investigate j
ing the charges of Senator McCar- j
thy, Dr. Owen Lattimore of Johns j
Hopkins University, pointed out
the implications of t^e assault on
his character for the academic pro-
fessor |n general in these words:
Gentlemen, you cajinot, you
must not, permit a psychology of
fear to paralyze the schojjijs and-
writers of this nation. In a re-
markable letter to me, the great
Professor Zechariah Chafee of
Harvard—an expert on this sort
of suppression of freedom —
speaks of this McCarthy attack
as un-American as the evil to
which it is so ineptly addressed.
In the foreword to Mr. Barth's
book, referred to previously, it is
urged that political leaders who
are constantly invoking the name
of Thomas Jefferson would do well
to read hirrt;>occasionally. They
might then stop undermining the
magnificent ideal 'which he^held
out to prospective teachers at the
University of Virginia when he said
to them:
This institution will be based
on the illimitable freedom of the
.human mind. For here we are „
not afraid to follow truth where-
ever it may lead, nor to tolerate
error so long as reason is free to
combat it.
The thesis of this paper has been
that traditional scholarship is now
being vitiated in ways dangerous
to the welfare of mankind. Fear
—and a diminution of faith is our
institutions—has led us into a con-
dition of panic threatening self-
destruction. The condition is de-
picted in Shelley's terrifying image:
'Tis we who, lost in stormy
visions, keep
With phantoms and unprofit-
able strife,
And in mad tranc^ strike with
the spirit's knife
^~lnxulnerable nothings. . . .
IF YOU NEED A
New Chevrolet
Or 1941 to '53 Model Car
Save $1.50
SEE
Ted Spencer
Mulkey Hall ,Mf9498
"TIME, the careless laundryman, shrinks many of our
' ideals."—Bess Streeter Aid rich. .--•>■•■.
.A POETIC THOUGHT—BUT HERE'S A PRACTICAL
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service that is never careless or half-way done.
quality Plus convenience
UNIQUE CLEANERS
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Deka • Sakkara
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CORSAGE
from
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—B. J. STILES OUR CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE—
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Authorized Dealer for Selmer, Buescher and
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Jesse French Pianos
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ii
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The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 19, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 23, 1954, newspaper, February 23, 1954; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth772159/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas Wesleyan University.