r rPS AFTER LOVIN* o’clock— the cat's been put out, the boy friend's gone home, studies have been forgotten, and this chick prepares for bed. Both sleeping and lounging comes easier for UT C o-Eds like Loie Vick, if they garb their frames in one-piece units like this tommy coat. For more of both Loie and tommy coats, peek at page 6. 2nd Term Registrotion— Lines to Form Early Monday By J I M T A Y L O R T ex a n E ditorial A s s i s ta n t The regular procedure will be jsed for registration which begins Monday morning a t 8 o’clock, H. \. Calkins, registration supervis­ or, has announced. All form er University students hould have with them their record of work (photostat). F or m er s tu ­ dents who were in attendance during either semester of 1948-49 or the first term of the 1949 sum­ mer term may use the same photo­ stat used f o r registration then. Other fo rm er students should have a photostat of all previous work. Every fo r m er stu den t should present this record of credits at R Hall 101 Monday f o r the first step in their registration. Prelimin­ time ary registration cards and tickets to Waggoner Hall will be secured there. These cards must be filled out and presented a t W agg en er Hall at the time indicated on the time ticket. At Waggener Hall the s tu ­ dent will obtain an admission p e r­ mit, tentative course card, advisor information sheet, and admission ticket to Gregory Gym. The time ticket to Waggeher Hall constitutes an appointment, Mr. Calkins said, and there is no reason fo r students to congregate there until the period indicated on the time ticket approaches. Students should go directly to a leaving faculty advisor upon Waggener Hall. A tentative course card should be filled out in a d ­ vance and the st udent should make sure th a t the necessary pre-requi­ sites have been tak en before a course is entered on the tentative course card. Engineering students go direct­ ly from Waggener Hall to Gregory Gym and law students go directly from Waggener Hall to Law Build­ ing 106. Candidates for degrees in the College of Arts and Sciences in August, 1949, and J an u a ry , 1950, will go to the Main Building 113 from Waggener Hall. Students f o r “ w” registering courses who did not pre-register on July l l or 12 and were re gister­ ed for the course in the first sum­ me r term will follow separate in­ issued structions which will be when they re por t to R Hall 101 Monday morning where a permit may be picked up which lists the “ w” courses the student is taking. taking a “ w” course wishes to add a “s ” course, he must see his advisor. Otherwise, stud ent taking only “ w” courses may go directly from R Hall to Gregory Gym. If a stu den t Students entering the University for the first time must have a phy ­ sical examination by the Univer­ sity Health Service, located in B Hall, before may begin registra­ tion. New students must have a complete trans cript of all college or high school wrork completed. New students mus t present vac­ cination certificates from the Uni­ versity Health Service a t Hogg Auditorium, where preliminary re­ gistration cards and a time assign­ men t f o r securing an admission permit will be issued. A second step in registration the new students will go to Wag­ gener Hall a t the hour indicated on the time ticket. Immediately upon leaving there, new students will see their advisor. The final step in registration for all students will be to go to Gregory Gym. Students must have their tentative course cards filled out in advance and to make sure they have the necessary pre-requi­ sites for the courses listed on the cards. The last step in registration a t Gregory Gym, includes sectioniz­ ing, checking, physical training advising, fee fixing, and payment of fees and tuition. section Working students who re gister must have a lette r from their em­ ployer stating specific hours em­ ployed. No special choice of classes can be assuerd. A freshman or a student e n te r ­ ing an un de rg ra du at e college or school by t ra n s fe r from an oth er institution may register fo r n o t more than six hours. Veterans attending the Univer­ sity un de r the GI Bill must regist­ er fo r a t least f o u r hours to r e ­ ceive maximum subistence bene­ fits. 'Miss Austin Title in University organizations may the Austin ent er candidates Junior Chamber of Commerce | Miss Austin contest. Entran ce I forms are being mailed to Univer- j sity sororities, fraternities, and : other campus social organizations. Winning the contest could lead some comely University or Aus- j tin girl to the coveted Miss Ameri- ca title in September at Atlantic City. Miss Austin will en ter state eliminations for the title of Miss Texas at Port A rt h u r August 5. Contestants mus t have been residents of Austin for six months unless students of the University or a local high school. They must be not less than 18 or more than 28 years old, and cannot have been married, divorced, or have had an annulment. Preliminary eliminations in the Miss Austin contest will be held in the the Crystal Ballroom of Driskill Hotel July 26 and 27. Finals will precede a baseball game a t Disch Field August I. S t ylim met• S t a t i c By LIZ SMITH Hollywood & Vine Has Noth­ ing On Us D ep art me nt; W h a t about tha t well-turned out gent we ran into in the air-conditioned corridors of the Music Building. He war wearing green suede shoes. ★ The new magazine Quick, which jus t fits the palm of your hand, is designed for busy people who their way don’t w a nt through Life, Time, or Newsweek. Reading time on Quick is so fast, you pan t when you finish. sift to „ T h e Sum m er S t a f f P h o t o — W o t v i n XAN VOL. 51 AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, JULY 17, 1949 No. 17 UT Budget Increased I to August 31 with emergency funds appropriated by the Legi­ slature but the new budget was any not change in existing salary sched­ ules, President T. S. P a in te r ex­ plained* to permit sufficient A number of merit raisers were made possible by trimming lump sum appropriations for mainten- ace and equipment, and teaching fellows and assistants, Dr. Pa inter raises will be said. The merit available, for teaching and non­ teaching s ta f f members. The 1949-1950 budget includes $7,996,610 for the Main Univer­ sity and $996,632 for ex tramu ral divisions as compared to$7,505,- 998 for the University and $884,- 278 for e xt ram ura l divisions in the budget as originally adopted for this year. It is expected tha t the only about $8,700,000 of money will be spent f o r the c u r­ rent year. Self-supporting activities such as intercollegiate athletics, Com­ mons, dormitories and restricted funds such as those supplied by the federal government and other agencies for research and other specific purposes were excluded from the budget. Among new agencies appearing in the next budget are an office of Government Sponsored Re­ search to supervise and s ta nda rd ­ ize the handling of special r e ­ stricted projects financed wholly by the federal government; a De­ partm en t of Geography in the Col­ lege of Arts and Sciences to be headed by Dr. Donald Brand; and a Graduate School of Social Ser­ vice authorized for professional workers by the Fifty-first Legis­ lature. Conviction Impossible, Says Jones- ' Th e Board of Regents Thurs­ day approved an $8,963,242 bud ­ g e t for the Main University and its ex tramu ral divisions for 1949 an d 1950. in­ The budg et represents an crease of 6.7 per cent over the budget for the fiscal year ending A u g u st 31. However, basic salary Schedules f o r teaching and no n­ te aching personnel in e ffe ct now will remain the same. The Board had hoped to con­ tinue into 1949-1950 monthly sal- ry supplements given as a cost- of-ii ving ad ju st m en t from April Dallas Is New Site For Medical School M ed school, med school, who’s got the med school? The University Board of Reg­ ents came up with the answer Thursday. They unanimously se­ lected Dallas as the site for a new million dollar branch of the University School of Medicine. A fte r hearing new pleas from Dallas, San Antonio and Temple f o r their cities as locations for the school or some f u tu r e school, they went into executive session and followed the recommendation of the House of Delegates of the St a te Medical Association and •elected Dallas. During the hearing, A. J. Lewis ©I San Antonio conceded tha t Dal­ las would be awarded the school the Regents to keep b u t urged S a n Antonio in mind when a n ­ other medical school is needed. told the offensive and By ron Skelton of Temple went ©u the Regents t h a t Dallas could not de­ the Funds o f Southwest liver M e d i c a l Foundation free of strings. He also said t h a t Dallas Could not enroll 164 students. The Regents, in selecting Dal­ las, apparently disagreed with the contention of San Antonio and Temple t h a t the law requires IOO more students than the sixty-four enrollment of last fall. Brown Charges Dropped County Attorney P e rr y Jones said Saturday he will drop negli­ gen t homicide against Ellis Brown ‘ because no ju r y on earth would find him guilty.” charges Brown, student body president, Rare Books Were Hot, But Not Enough to Burn Momentary iii excitement was caused the Rare Book Room Tuesday noon when wa ter boiled out of a hot plate and caused some rags being cleaned to scorch and smoke- The two or three s t u ­ dents in the Library thought that the place was on fire, but the em­ ployes, lunch, knew exactly what was wrong. A spokesman for the Library said that there was no damage either to furnishings or to precious vol­ umes. re tur nin g from w’as charged in connection writh jfatal injuries received by his close friend, Robert Elmo (Bob) F e r ­ guson, vice-president, in an au to ­ mobile accident May 24 in Austin. Ferguson and he ran on the same ticket and platform. Jones tried to drop the charges fr i d a y and Saturday morning, but Judge Mace Thur man of County ( ourt-at-Law was not available. “ We will drop them as soon as possible,” he said. “ I do not be­ lieve I could get a conviction on the available evidence. the “ Technically, city police were right in filing charges,” he told the Texan Saturday. “ But Brown’s fine reputation, the wish­ es of the dead boy’s parents, the circumstances surrounding the ac­ cident, and innumerable ch aracter testimonials we have received for that no him have convinced mo jur y on earth would find him guilty.” F e rg us on ’s fa th e r wrote twTo letters to Jo nes asking that the case he dropped. He explained that his son and Brown had been the best of friends and had planned to room together. A police stat eme nt a t the time of filing charges said that “ con­ flicting evidence” had been com­ piled. The charge alleged speeding. A m o Nowotny, dean of student life, said th a t Brown is an ou t­ standing st ude nt and respected by the faculty and student body. Mr. Jones displayed a series of let­ ters from University officials em­ phasizing Brown’s character and I the friendship of dents. two the s t u ­ Brown, severely shocked and slightly the accident, in was persuaded to re tu rn for the first summer term. injured He has withdrawn from sum­ m e r school during the second half . to rest at his home in Corpus Christi. Wngay, July 17. 1949 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page } Followin' Thru— . Can Doak Fill Bill Without GU? . By BOB SEAMAN Texan A mot tat« Sports Editor I t s going to be mighty interesting to watch the success or failure of the Southern Methodist Mustangs in the Conference fooball race next fall, now that Gilbert John­ son has decided to try his hand at the play-for-pay game. For hardly had the last gun sounded to end the 1948 campaign, before the "experts” pointed to Matty B ell’s Ponies as a shoo-in fo r th e ir third stra ig h t title in 1949. How could th ey miss? True, in the Rice gam e— two to McKis- sack, and one to W alker. they w ere losing men, b u t Dandy Doak W alker, Dick McKissack, Gil Johnson, and Kyle R ote would be back, and w hat m ore could any coach aah fo r— even M oaning M atty? B ut now Johnson, who took over the reins from the m ighty W alker more than once last year to pull the M ustangs o u t o f the fire , has come to the conclusion th a t a college gridiron is no place fo r a 25-year-old m arried man. Paging W ai hor— So the fo rtu n es o f the defend­ in g champs will faH squarely on th e shoulders— ra th e r well devel­ oped, to say th e least— o f the boy picked as the best m an to put on a college football su it kist year —-W alker- We re not one to inanimate that W alker isn’t all h e’s cracked up to be. Nobody could a fte r seeing him o p erate the la st two y ears • A man th a t leads the C onfer­ ence by scoring 88 p o in ts; has a p u n tin g average o f 42.1; a punt re tu rn in g m ark o f 16.9; a ball c arry in g average of 4.9; com pletes 26 of 46 passes fo r 304 yard.?; and catches 15 passes fo r 278 yards a n d touchdow ns, m ust be good. th ree In fact, he m ust be great- B u t when it came down to those •‘clu tch ” plays, it was th e incom­ parab le Johnson— stan d in g erect, ■with everyone stadium know ing he was going to throw — com pleting passes with uncanny reg u larity . the in by completing 73 of 128 attem p ts f o r 1,026 yards. However, it was the occasions he picked fo r com­ pleting them th a t made bim spec­ tacular. touchdown play He passed to Walker fo r a 74- y ard th a t gave fa n s something to cheer about as the Mustangs to Missouri, lost 20-14. Oil tossed fo r three scores A gainst Texas, it was ex asp erat­ ing to see him com plete IO of 17 tries, b u t his real value w asn’t fe lt until the A rkansas game- W alker was stopped cold on the g round— having a m inus ten yards on seven runs. And the razor- backs held a 12-7 lead w ith only m inutes to play. The ball was on the M ustang 16. Johnson entered the gam e, and on the firs t play Rote scam pered 35 yards. T hree Johnson passes— to Rote, W alker, and F ran k P ayne— moved SMU to the 21- A five-yard penal­ ty gave the M ustangs the ball on the A rkansas 16. With fifteen seconds left, Gil of the end zone. Unperturbed, passed to Zohn Milam just out Johnson then passed to Paul Page for the winning marker as the gun sounded ending the game. Hi* greatest exhibition came in the last minute and a half o f the TCU game. The Mustangs, trail­ ing 9-7 owned the ball on their own I -yard line. With Johnson passing and running— on his bad leg for a neat gain— SMU scored on fo u r plays. The clincher being a 35- yard aerial to Milam. W alker’s conversion tied it up. Who Made W ho? Now the question th a t pops up is did Johnson m ake W alker g re a t or vice versa? There is no doubt th a t Jo h n so n ’s appearance in a gam e gave the o ther boys running room. Also, W alker made several catches of Johnson passes. is unlikely th a t W alker’s to Johnson will ever be known since Gil will have to sink or swim alone with the New York Yankees. B ut as we started out, i f s going to be mighty interesting to watch the M ustangs this year. And in particular, to watch Walker. I f s a fine opportunity to prove th a t he’s the g re a test ball player in the country. for Doak I t He led the Conference passers j value I Snead s 203 Leads Dapper Dan Tourney Mid on the A m o c rated P ress Slamming Sammy Snead of iVhite Sulphur Springs, W. Va-, jailed into a five-stroke lead at the three-quarter m ark of .he ieventy-two-hole Dapper Dan Open to u rn a m e n t a t Pittsb urg h jolf Saturday, adding a three-under ^ar 69 for a total of 203. Lloyd M angrum of Chicago is lecond with 208, and Bob H am ilton )f Landover, Md., and Tobby Lyons of W arren , Penn., are tied lor third w ith 209’*. ★ champion Defending Pancho Gonzalez advanced to the finals of Ike National Clay Court Tennis tournament at Chicago Saturday, eliminating Vie Seixas o f Phila­ delphia, 6-2, 5-7, 6-4, 6-1 Sunday. Sunday Gonaalez meet* Parker for the title. Parker defeated Herb Flam of Beverly Hills Friday, 6-3, 1-6. 6-3. Phrtty baseman Eddie fir s t Waitkus, shot last month by a m oon-struck Chicago stenograph­ er, plans to leave the hospital Sun­ day and fly to Philadelphia. He hopes to see his team m ates play Monday. L O A N S W e Loan Money On A nything of Vahie Bargain* in unredeemed din monde — save up to 50% on watches, consisting o f Elgin, Waltham, Gruen, Btilova, and Hamilton. CROWN JEWELRY CO MS E. 6th St. P lm u 1-1 AVAILABLE SECOND SUMMER SEMESTER ROOM A BOARD AT THE Air Condilioaed Campus Guild ROOM ANO BOARD ABOUT $4* PER MONTH DURING 9UMMER EATING ACCOMMODATIONS FOR SECOND SUMMER TERM IONS FOR SEI AVAILABLE FOR ABOUT SO.OO PER MONTH I ABOUT SO.< INQUIRE AT CAMPUS GUILD MCfTS COOPERATIVE M A J M n l /V » TT PM. 8-OBV3 Williams W in s at S A I t took an even dozen tries, b u t perseverance finally won out F ri­ day fo r M orris W illiams J r., the m idget-sized Longhorn go lfer who has been having some tough luck this year. W illiams finally cap tu red his firs t tournam ent, the State Jn u io r Golf title, a fte r finisher g in the Baseball Scores NATIONAL LEAGUE C incinnati 7, Brooklyn 6. Philadelphia 4, St. Louis 2. Boston 9, Chicago I. P ittsb u rg h 9-7, New York 0-6. AMERICAN LEAGUE St. Louis 4, New York 2. Boston l l , D etroit I. Cleveland 7, Philadelphia 3. Chicago 5, W ashington I. TEXAS LEAGUE Oklahoma City IO, H ouston 4 B eaum ont 6, Dallas 5 F o rt W orth 2-2, S hreveport 0-4 Tulsa 4-9, San A ntonio 1-4 BIG STATE LEAGUE W ichita Falls 16, Waco 7 Temple 7, Sherm an-D enison I A ustin 3-7, Texarkana 2-2 Gainesville 4, Greenville 3 ru n n er-u p position five times. He tu rn ed the trick by d e fe a t­ ing B ert W eaver o f B eaum ont, th ree and one, a f te r th irty -fo u r b itterly -fo u g h t holes. A birdie on the th irty -fifth hole closed out the m atch, b u t only a fte r W eaver had repeatedly come from behind. W illiams led by one hole a f te r the fro n t nine in the aftern o o n session, b u t W eaver tied it up on the tw elfth. Finally, on the sev­ e n teen th hole, W illiam s’ second shot p u t him w ithin inches of the hole, and when W eaver missed a p u tt th a t would have given him a Booker Directs Intramural* A. A. “ Sonny” Rooker will the serve as acting d irecto r of m en’s in tram u ral d ep artm en t d u r­ ing the second sum m er term . H* is now w orking on a m aster’s de­ gree in physical education. ( ■ ■ ■ I . *. m f birdie, Williams calmly tapp the putt that meant the title. ★ Bob Watson, captain o f UM 1949 Longhorn golf team, was up­ set by Dean Wood in the Okla­ homa City Invitational tourney. NORCO ARMS Air-conditioned throughout [Meals you'll Uke at a price you can afford 2505 Rio Grande A IR -C O N D IT IO N E D R O O M S available for Second Summer Term Summer Residents may hold their rooms for Sept. Semester ROBERT E. LEE HALL /- R O S S FROM LAW BUILDING SMITH-CORONA Portabie NOW 2 0 ' ^ OFF Plus Rebate n/versrti*u co-op t » 4 » > < M f.M <- o w n - « T ♦ » " I •- - ‘ Sunday, July 17. 1949 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page I A t Fomily Homestead— Shivers Takes O ath W orld News in Brief WOODVILLE, July -6— (ZP)— Allan Shivers of Port A rthur took the oath Saturday as Governor of Texas. Shivers, tall, handsome, and 41, became the thirty-sixth individual governor in a fifteen-m inute cere- All Make* O f« C E MACHINES f O . r f * I ' n p f * ' » * * » » • f * . M *41* AnHm T tic i S O L O • R E N T E D * R E - W O R K E D mony a t Magnolia Hills, the 103- fam ily home­ year-old Shivers stead. Here he spent his boyhood before he began his meteoric rise in Texas politics. He finished his oath to uphold the Constitution and laws of Texas and the Nation, and then made an eight-m inute acceptance address. Grouped about the new Gov­ ernor on the small platform east of the Shivers farm home were his wife and family. It was 9:49 o’clock when Shiv­ ers lowered his hand to end the oath taking. He paid a warm tri­ bute to B ea u fo rt H. Jester^ who he said, was a tru ly g reat leader, a man whose life le ft many mem­ orials of “good will and good deed s/' WASHINGTON, July 16. (ZP)— Nearly a dozen Senate Republi­ cans seemed likely to vote with Sen. T a ft (R.-Ohio) against the North Atlantic Pact Thursday. Inform al checks indicated more than two-thirds of the p a rty ’s 43 Senate memers will support the treaty. Sen. Connally of Texas, chair­ the Foreign Relations man o f Committee said he doesn’t think there will be more than 15 votes against the treaty. Ratification requires two-thirds. ★ WASHINGTON, July 14. (ZP)— President Trum an m et fo r twc hours and 33 minutes tonight will top cabinet, m ilitary, atomic am congressional leaders on a m at te r so secret none of the partic pants would discuss it. Senate Armed Chairman Tydings (D.-Md.) of the Services Committee who left the meeting about midway in the special ses­ sion held a t the Blair House, told a rep o rter: "You wouldn’t p rin t it if you had it for the good the country.’’ ★ KANSAS CITY, July 16. (ZP)— Charges th at Representative Leon­ ard Irving, Missouri Democrat^ and two other men had diverted labor union funds to th eir own use were made Saturday in a pe­ tition fo r an accounting. Irving vas elected in ^resident T rum an’s home district. ★ last November CLEVELAND, July 16. (ZP)— jath came Saturday to A. F. Whitney, labor leader and politi­ cal liberal a t the age of 76. Ha had been president of the Brother* hood of Railroad Trainm ent since 1928. GREELY, Colo., July 16. (ZP)— Henry Jekel, 76, was undressed by a bolt of lightning Friday af­ ternoon. The lightning struck Jekel as he was walking near his home. It knocked him down, shredded his shirt, split his pants from tho pocket to cuff^ blew o ff a shoo and melted the zipper on his pants. Jekel was burned and the hair singed from the left side of his head. His condition was reported good Saturday. NOW YOU C A N BUY DECCA ALBUMS • CLASSICAL • SWING • JAZZ • B E-BOP PRICE SALE PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, July (ZP)—The Communist party 16. called Saturday fo r a no-quarter fight to crush the Czechoslovakia hierarchy of “our greatest enemy — the church.” "W e want to give good Cath­ to the opportunity finally olics get rid of the elements which are damaging us,” a party mani­ festo said. “ It is not a question of liquidating churches entirely, but of liquidating the church order. / It's alw ays play* tim* in Havana... I swim, sun bath# and relax in th# exotic atmos* phere of gay Cuba. 5 Snjoy jai alai, races, casf* ’ nos, night dub^ old-world shops, historic landmarks* Round trip air faro, sight-s eein g, groun Iran porta ti on and cious air lino meals... Included at S i 5 2 . 6 0 * from Antrin cabf*o'*,''0!'V ...» W»9 Lo®' 'CirI * # * ?*'\ •*P*0*V,o - ~.oo Phono or Wrrfo for From Folders no* Hill • amst* now// Smdty, 'My \7. IU 1BWW Jaftt'A J joIm CUahm Conservative Robert A, T *ft was alarming Friday night. Speaking from his Ohio stronghold, the Republican Senator warned that huge government spending is leading the United States into a totalitarian state. But that was probably a more alarming accusation than is needed for a situation that is more than disquietening. Taft was critical of President Tru­ man’s $42 billion budget outlined to the people in a Wednesday “fireside chat.” Conservative Taft didn’t like the idea of deficit spending. His solution: Cut every bureau IO per cent; cut taxes. Cutting taxes in time of recession is wise economics, all economists are agre­ ed. So is Harry Truman. There is even some logical arguments for paring of administrative expenses, but nothing as alarming as an over-all IO per cent cut is warranted. The proposals of the Hoover Com­ mission— which Mr. Taft and the Sen­ ate approved unanimously earlier this year— do a much more effective job than the slashings proposed by the Ohio Senator. By combining duplicating agencies and eliminating excessive red tape, the Administration reform measures will go a long w ay toward correcting mistakes like the $30 million clerical error which w ent un-noticed in a previous budget. With a budget the size of two telephone bilks to w ade through, indiscriminate cuting by Congressmen could be disast­ rous to needed governmental projects. Approximately one-third of the bud­ get goes for national defense. A IO per cent cut here could be costly. Thinking Congressmen— Republicans included— have seen fit to pass needed housing legislation and are expected to approve Federal aids to education. Mr. Taft himself voted for the public hous­ ing. These are necessary expenditures that should be slashed. Other needed items like the Columbia Valley Author­ ity have been shelved. Lessr-needed pro­ grams like V eteran’s pensions would have looked better on these shelves. We hope most Americans will shrug off the negative approach of Mr. Taft. His alarms may help most to encourage more positive action like that outlined by the Hoover Commission. Mork Batterson: It s Tough, Fellas, But i n the i t We w ere trav elin g between th e D rag and the Journalism Building the o th er day, pick­ ing our way around the packed cars (them as drives’ em) when a, you should pardon it, fellow tra v e ler had a thought. t h i s c r o w d e d “ If i t ’s B u m m e r , ” h e g o i n g t o b e like n e x t fa ll? ” s a i d , “ w h a t ’s It wa sn’t what one would call original thought. Several University and city officials who have been thinking about it a re also beginning think tha t their letter openers make awfully kari knives. Bnt it’s a problem t h a t ’s going to be solved, to have and pretty soon. inviting hari to Oh, find a they can few more nooks around the campus where people can park cars, and they can get a little more strict about parking, but that sort of thing isn’t practical on a long range basis. Much as everyone would to solve the whole mess with some kind like of half-hearted measure tha t it's not going to be done. like Th ere’s a solution, of course, or even a couple of them, but however i f s done, some people aregoing to get mad. And for some reason, it always seems easier in crowded agony than to anger some people. Afte r all, w h a t’s practical comfort and effici- struggle along to T he T ex a n T I* D aily Texan, a stu d e n t n ew sp a p er o f T h e U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s, is pub- in A u stin e v er y m o r n in g e x c e p t M onday and S a tu rd a y , S ep tem b er to ttehtsi J u n e , and e x c e p t d u rin g h olid ay and ex a m in a tio n p erio d s, and tr i-w e e k ly An ring th e su m m er s e s s io n s under th e title o f T he S u m m er T exan on S u n d a y , T u esday and T h u rsd a y by T ex a s S tu d e n t P u b lica tio n s. In c. N ew s c o n tr ib u tio n s m a y be m ade by te le p h o n e ( 2 - 2 4 7 3 ) or a t th e ed ito r ia l toff ice J. B. I , or a t th e N e w s L a b o ra to ry , J . B. 101. In q u iries c o n c e rn in g B elivery and a d v e r tisin g sh o u ld be m ad e in J . B. 1 0 8 ( 2 - 2 4 7 3 ) . E ntered a s s e c o n d -c la ss m a tte r O ctober 18, 19 4 3 a t th e P o s t O ffic e a t A u s­ tin . T ex a s, under th e A c t o f M arch t . 1 8 7 9 . T he S u m m er T ex a n is p u b lish ed tr i-w e e k ly d u rin g th e Su m m er S e m e ste r aa S u nday, T u e sd a y , and T h u r sd a y. _____________________________________ _ A SSO C IA T E D P R E S S W IR E SE R V IC E T he A sso c ia te d P r e ss is e x c lu s iv e ly e n title d to th s u s e fo r r ep u b lica tio n l f all n ew s d isp a tc h e s c red ited to it or n o t o th e r w ise cred ited in th is n e w s- paper, and ite m s o f sp o n ta n e o u s orififin p u b lish ed h erein . R ig h ts of rep u b lication o f a ll o th e r m a tte r h erein a ls o rese rv e d . ___________ _ lo ca l R ep resen ted fo r N a tio n a l A d v e r tis in g b y N a tio n a l A d v e r tis in g S e r v ic e , Inc. C o lleg e P u b lish e r s R e p r e se n ta tiv e MO Mad iso n A v e. - C h icago B o sto n L o s A n g e le s N ew Y ork, N . Y . San F ra n c isc o M em ber 'Associated Collegiate Press — All-American Pacemaker term --- -------------------------- P er B oth t e r m s __________________ M ailed in A u stin , both te r m s E d ito r-in -C h ie f--------- A ssociate E d i t o r ------- Editorial A ssistant — Night E d i t o r s ---------- Sports E d ito r ------------ Asociate Sports E ditor T elegraph E d i t o r -------- A m usem ents E dito r — S ta ff P h o to g r a p h e r ---- S ta ff C a r to o n is t--------- S U B S C R IP T IO N R A T E S PERMANENT STAFF _ 6 0 c S I . OO S I . 6 0 ............ DICK ELAM , MARK BATTERSON ________________________ Jim T aylor _______________ Maxine Smith, C harles Frandolig, George W ysatta Abe W einer _______________________Bob Seam an Leedell H orton John BuBtin _______ John W olvin ________________________ Bill T aylor ______________■ _ STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE Might Editor - — ---------- A ssistant N ight E d ito r — C opyreader ----------------- Might Sports E d i t o r ----- A ssistants M ight Society E d ito r — Church E d ito r -------------- Might A m usem ents E d ito r Might T elegraph E d ito r - GEORGE WYSATTA ___________ SIMON RUBINSKY ___________________Naomi H ag ar ___________________ F red S anner Abe W einer, Bob Seam an / H erby H erbsleb . Jen n ilu Kelly R obert M. Johnson OU a B rew er ______ ency com pared sardinish m isery? to giggling, The tru t h is this: our Forty Acres are just too small to take care of everyone who is here and who are coming in later years. This place is growing, and i f s not going to stop- And no one’s going to add soil to the outskirts of the place. So here is what is going to have to happen: the University is going to stay, but some of its occupants are going to have to go. They can go in a couple of ways. Either don’t let peo­ ple come up here when th e y ’re ju s t freshmen, or tr a n s f e r one of the schools off the campus to a new home. think The fi r s t idea we don’t like. tha t freshmen add We something to a university th a t is hard to dispense with. Cynics to the contrary, freshmen and upperclassmen lean* a lot from each other, w hether or not they realize it. The suggestion, though, which has to do with uprooting one of the schools, is fa r more if only fo r the yells of anquish it can look it doesn’t provoke. B ut bad from w here we squat. interesting, s e c o n d We m ay be peering a t this problem w ith blinders on, but we can ’t see too much w rong w ith tak in g a section like our law school and shifting it to another p a rt of the F riendly City. A ustin is a beau tifu l place, and th ere are p a rts of it which are very uncrow ded. ★ We pick the law school not because we have a dislike fo r law students, b u t because more of them are com pletely uncon­ nected w ith the doings on the hill, n ot counting spring and fall elections, than are mem ­ bers of any other group around here. If someone has to go, and apparently someone does, then the law students seem the locic- al ones to make the move. Law school can be com pared w ith the UT medical school down a t Galveston. T heir s tu ­ dents’ studies are unconnected with the hill, too, and th ey ’re coming along handily. There hasn’t been a com plaint from one of them about missing the facilities of our ra re books col­ lection in years. Law students would be mis­ sed around here fo r a lot of reasons, i f s tru e, b u t th a t’s the way it goes. Much as everyone would like to have everything perfect, b u t ju s t can’t happen, Aloha. "W e ll Worthal, how 'd you come out in th a t French final you said you had "cold ? ‘ Prof Take* Puerto Rico Job Dr. Felix A. Nigro, assistant professor of governm ent since July, 1948, bas resigned to go to the U niversity of P uerto Rico as teacher of public adm inistration. Ingram Joins Temple S taff la w re n c e W- Ingram , B. J. ’49, has resigned his position as news w rite r fo r the U niversity News and Inform ation Service to accept the position of city ed ito r on the Temple Telegram . 0 ($ k ija L TlotuccA. f o r J u l y 19. 1949 sal es m a n a g e r of i n t e r v i e w i n g m e n g r a d u a t i n g Mr. G e r a l d C. Boyce, a s s i s t a n t Ren- e r a l t h e C a r n a t i o n Mi l k C o m p a n y will be on t h e c a m p u s on t h e p u r ­ T u e s d a y . p o s e of in A u g u s t wh o h a v e m a j o r e d in m a r k e t i n g , r e t a i l i n g , m e r c h a n d i s i n g o r g e n e r a l b u ­ s i n e s s a d m i n i s t r a t i o n w h o h a v e an i n t e r ­ e s t in n at i on a l sa l es work. A spe c i al t wo t r a i n i n g p r o g r a m y e a r will be o f f er e d t h i s c o m p a n y . A n y o n e t a l k i n g w i t h t h i s r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s h oul d c o m e by W a g g o n e r Hall 115 a t once a n d m a k e an i n t e r v i e w w i t h Mr s. a p p o i n t m e n t f o r M a r y K a t h e r i n e B o r c h e r s , p l a c e m e n t s e c r e t a r y , coll ege of b u s i n e s s a d m i n i s t r a ­ ti on. to m e n a c c e p t e d by i n t e r e s t e d e x e c u t i v e sal es in T h e f ol l owi ng s t u d e n t s a r e r e q u e s t e d t o s e e t h e L e g a l A d v i s o r to t h e R e g i s ­ t r a r on T u e s d a y or T h u r s d a y a f t e r n o o n , b e t w e e n 2 a n d 4 o ’clock, on off icia l b u s i - : B r a d l e y . H a r r y Mo r r i s o n H a l b a r d i e r . Mrs. B a r b a r a H e n s l e y Ku r / . we g , B e r n h a r d F. T h o r n t o n , Mr s. G e o r g i a n n a V. F. L. COX, L e g a l A d v i s o r t o t h e R e g i s t r a r 260 F r e n c h ( E i g h t e e n t h - C e n t u r y F r e n c h C o m e d y ) , n o t li st ed in t h e c u r r e n t S u m m e r S e s s i o n Bull eti n, will he g i v e n by Dr. A a r o n in t e r m S c h a f f e r , M - F 1 2: F r e n c h 371 ( F r e n c h P h o n e t i c s ) , t h e c u r r e n t S u m ­ in li st ed m e r S e s s i o n B u l l et i n, will n o t be g i v e n . s econd t h e l l f r o m T h e co u r se c a r r i e s P h y s i c a l E d u c a t i o n 2 1 3 T . open to b o t h T u e s d a y m e n a n d w o m e n , will m e e t t o I o ’c l ock. t h r o u g h F r i d a y P l e a s e he p r e p a r e d t o g o i n t o t h e w a t t Ic ■— a t t h e f i r s t m e e t i n g T u e s d a y , J u l y 19. t w o h o u r s c r e d i t f o r s a t i s f a c ­ in p h y s i c a l e d u c a t i o n , a n d t o r y c o mp l e t i o n o f t h e w o r k S e n i o r L i f e ­ s a v i n g a n d W a t e r I n s t r u c t o r s c e r t i f i c a t e s w'ill be a w a r d e d . P r e - r e q u i s ­ i t e s : s o p h o m o r e s t a n d i n g a n d r e a s o n a b l y in w a t e r ski l l s. h i g h a b i l i t y S a f e t y C. J . A L D E R S O N I n s t r u c t o r . t o t r a n s f e r S t u d e n t s w h o t r a n s f e r r e q u e s t a t to p l a n t h e L a w Sc h o o l in S e p t e m b e r s h o u l d filo tho R e g i s ­ a f o r m a l t r a r ’s Offi ce, ti led i t n e e d n o t be d o n e d u r i n g a g a i n now. E a r l y a p p l i c a t i o n will p e r ­ mi t a c a r e f u l c h e c k i n g of t h e a p p l i c a n t ’* f a c i l i t a t e r e c o r d a n d will lf s u c h r e q u e s t wa t h e s p r i n g , t r a n s f e r . t h e R e g i s t r a r ’s O f f i c e G e r m a n 3 1 4 K will be o f f e r e d t h e s ec o n d s u m m e r t e r m a n d G e r m a n 3 1 6 L will N O T be o f f e r e d . S t u d e n t s w h o w a n t 3 I 5 L m a y t a k e 31 4L. in V. V. P O I , L AR D . C H A I R M A N D e p a r t m e n t of G e r m a n i c L a n g u a g e s P a y r o l l c h e c k s a n d w a r r a n t s t h e f i r s t s u m m e r t e r m will h e d i s t r i b u t e d t o U n i v e r s i t y s t a f f m e m b e r s T u e s d a y . J u l y 19, f r o m 9 to I a mi 2 t o 4 o' cl oc k. f o r C. I L S P A R E N B E R G A u d i t o r Texan Crossword Puzzle ACROSS I. Claw 6. Neglects l l . Rub out 12. P ath of heavenly body 13. Finger or toe 14. New Eng­ land state 15. Wise person 16. Masculine pronoun 17. Stitch 18. Silver (archaic) 21. Blunder 23. Province (Can.) 27. Undeveloped flowers 29. Declare for score ( Pinochle) 30. In addition 34 Help 35. Having pores 37. Copper (Rom.) 40. King of Bashan (Bib.) 41. Fish 44. Heavy shadow 46. Craze 47. Mother-of- pearl 48. S-shaped moldings 49. Covered with ink 50. Diminutive af Theodore I. Spreads DOWN 20. Kind of cap 21. Subside grass to dry 22. R egret 24. Argued 25. River 2. Melody 3. Loiterers 4. Variety of willow 5. Seine 6. Instigate 7. Constella* tion 8. W ading bird 9. Cover the inside of IO. Boil slowly 16. Female fowl 19. D epart (Russ.- Turk.) 26. E x tra 28. Slight taste 31. Fated 32. U nit of w ork 33. Therefore 36. Custom 37. God of fire (H indu) 38. Brilliancy 39. Short stocking Today's Answer Is in the Classified Ads 42. Told a falsehood 43. Not difficult 45. Coin (Swed.) 46. W itty Baying: 2 I 4 I i V IO 5 i 4 rnIS I 14 >4 14 lb wI IS IL 2« IV J / / / 21 2o i ( 7 r n $ 24 2 b 24 yA I s s JO IV i i 1% III 2V i i Si l l I 14 V4 4 0 41 4% W. 44 41 42 r n I i I I l l Jo 44. 47 4S I S o Story Need of Man Points of W orld Union ’Greasers Betrayed By Anglo Boss, Spanish Snob Sunday, July '17, 1949 T H E S U M M E R T E X A N Page 5 E P IL G R IM A G E O F W E S T ­ E R N M A N . B y S p r in g fe llo w B a rr. H a rco u rt, B r a c e a n d C o m p a n y . 3 5 2 p«Ke l $*• Stringfellow Barr, former presi­ dent of St. John’s College and cre­ ator o f the Great Books course, recounts the story o f western man from the time he first developed dis-satisfaction with the city of God to the present. In the Thirnteenth Century, man began to lose that “sense of direction so strange to our modern temper.” The authority o f the Church was destroyed, and w est­ ern man, with new energy set out for Eldorado. First the Portu­ guese, then the Spanish, French, Dutch, and English, all seeking the Orient, succeeded each other in control o f the N ew World. Mr. Barr, having established man’s search for secular paradise, devotes the bulk o f his closely New Texas Brags Found al Big Bend W E C O M E A N D W E G O . A H a n d ­ b ook fo r th e B ig B e n d N a tio n a l P a rk . B y B e r ta C la rk L a ssite r . S a n A n to n io : T h e N a y lo r C o m ­ p a n y . P a p e r , 6 0 p a g e s. $ 1 . August and September will be the gest months for travel in the Big Bend National Park and hun­ dreds o f Texans will travel there and find new wonders about which to brag. If Mrs. Lassiter is to be believed, they will be justified in bragging. And who is to doubt the word of a ranchwoman who has w liy^d in the shadow o f the Chisos untains since 1906? Starting with a carefully land- marked automobile log o f a trip into the park, Mrs. Lassiter moves on to description o f scenic w on­ ders and historical lore which ex ­ giyes places plains names and meaning. She is careful to keep the reader straight on conflicting names. accommodations. Being a native, Mrs. Lassiter neglected to tell us about food and lodging But probably everyone will think of writing the State Parks Board in Austin before embarking on the trip. — ARTHUR HAYES •sFaculty May Add New Committees A committee on naval scholar­ ships, an honors day committee and the Student Union board are proposed standing committees to be added to the present list of standing committees of the Univer­ sity, Dr. M* R. Gutsch, secretary o f the faculty, said Friday* They will be presented to the Faculty Council for action at its meeting July 18. If the committees are accepted as proposed, the committee on na­ val scholarships will be composed o f three faculty members who will make all scholarship to NROTC students. awards The honors day committee will be composed o f three members of the Student Life S ta ff and seven members of the faculty, including the senior officers of the Navy, Army, and Air Force ROTO units. This committee will plan and as­ sume responsibility for the annual Honors Day program. The Student Union Board will be composed o f one ex-student, two members of the Student Life S taff, the secretary of the E x-Stu­ d en ts’ Association, and the Union aei rector* Each year a special committee on committees is appointed by the University. It is the function of this committee to go over the list o f the preceding year’s standing committees and to make recom­ mendations as to changes in per­ sonnel or to the addition or dele­ tion o f committees. t written, fact-crammed volume to the political history o f Europe from the mid-Sixteenth Century to the present. He tells the story of each succeeding epoch from the point o f view of the ruler who for his time embodied the dream of unity o f western man. Phillip I of Spain tried to re­ mold Europe on a chivalric pat­ tern. Then Charles V of Spain, who dreamed o f Catholic unity of Europe, was thwarted. Henry IV of France was the first o f the new style rulers. He made religion serve politics. Riche­ lieu, who followed, carried that idea to an absolute monarchy. The Louis XIV embodied the state. in his own person. Thus the Span­ ish dream of a re-united Catholic Europe gave way to the French dream o f controlling Europe. England evolved landlord government, which set the pattern for Europe and the New World in the Eighteenth Century. the In America, a new Europe was being born under George Wash­ ington and Simon Bolivar. In the East, Frederick the Great showed Christendom a cruel caricature o f where it was bound. In the to Nationalism, The First Republic of France gave birth the first great force of modern times. latter chapters o f his book, Mr. Barr follow's the flow ­ ering of these forces with their crash in World War I, the long Armistice, and World War II. Mr. Barr resists the temptation to twist his facts to f it neatly in­ to an argument for world union, but western man’s pilgrimage speaks for itself. A governed world becomes not only possible and de­ sirable, but necessary. W. H. TAYLOR, JR. N O R T H FR O M M E X IC O b y C a rey M cW illia m s. N ew Y ork: J. B . L ip p in c o tt C o. 3 2 4 p a g e s. $ 4 .0 0 . The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidal­ go ending the Mexican-American War in 1848 guaranteed the “na­ tive” population in the territories “conquered” by the United States the right to retain their language, religion, and culture. “North From Mexico” is a de­ tailed, documented account of how Spanish-Mexican culture was re­ tained despite the impingement of Anglo-American culture and insti­ flagrant viola­ tutions and tions o f the spirit and intent o f the treaty. the the innumerable McWilliams carries us through a panoramic view that takes in the first Spanish explorations and set­ the tlements in the southwest, the Mexican-American War and racial ensuing decades with hatred and clashes between “gringoes and greasers,’’ the years of the First World Wrar which saw a resurgence the Mexican minority in this country, and the more recent years of the Second World War with the Pa- chuco race riots in Los Angeles f o ­ local press and mented by law enforcem ent authorities there. is not a pretty one, particularly the period from 1870 to 1910 characterized by the re­ mark of King Fisher, famous T ex­ as gunman, who of the notches in his gun said he had “Thirty-seven — not counting Mexicans.” The tale the of It is primarily the story of what McWilliams calls a “ dichotomy” o f the glorified, blown-up legend of the Spanish Conquistadores and the more routine accomplishments of the Indians and Mexicans who the fed, sheltered, taught and Buy at Exchange To Save M on ey Students who want to save their nickels for cokes, shows, and dates can do so by trading with the Stu­ dent Book Exchange, in Texas Union 208, which will be open this week from Tuesday to Saturday. located Designed to save students who buy and sell books money by cut­ ting out the middleman, the E x­ change is one of the newest ser­ vices o f student government. It is a part o f the committee on fair business standards. Most of the books available are for basic courses such as English, geology, history, math, and foreign languages. But a few textbooks for more specialized courses are available, Miss Betty Treadway, director o f said Saturday* the Exchange, The procedure for trading books is simple. Stu­ at the Exchange dents who sell books the list amount that they want for them. Those who buy them pay the E x­ change who then gives the money to the owners. Close at hand are the latest lists of textbooks required for summer session courses, and a list o f book prices at the University Co-Op, which enables a student to check his saving- “ We want the students to know' that the Exchange is for their ben­ efit,” Miss Treadway said. “ We believe that if they will co-oper­ ate, they will see that we can be of service.” The Exchange came into being last semester because of the Uni­ versity bookstores inability to suc­ cessfully cope with the used-book situation. Low-spending students could neither sell or buy used books. In the short time that it wras open last semester, the Exchange handled $890 worth of books. More than 800 books have gone through the Exchange* that Miss Treadway said the Book Exchange is not intended to be a competitor with the book­ stores. They favor the Exchange, she says, since it is a lot of trouble for them to handle used books. D r. H * d en C a lled lo A id A rm y Dr. E* F. Haden, professor of languages, who was to Romance have served as chairman of his de­ partment the second term, has been called to California to be language consultant for the United States Air Force. Dr. Aaron Schaffer, professor of Romance languages, will be chairman in bis stead. N e w F r e n c h C ow rie T o w fh t A new course in Eighteenth Century French comedy, French 2GO, will be taught in the second summer term by Dr. Aaron Schaf­ fer, chairman of the Department of Romance Languages. The course is open to senior or It will meet through Friday at 12 graduate students. Monday o’clock in Main Building 304. A D V . Good Jobs Quickly For Student s Wives The fa ct that only 6 weeks are required to learn the revolution­ ary modern “Speedwriting” short­ hand, has attracted a surprising number of students’ wives to Dur­ ham’s Business College in Austin, where this nationally-known short­ in hand this area. is exclusively available An amazing record of immedi­ ate graduate employment testifies to the skill attained by students of “Speedwriting” at Durham’s, the only business college in A us­ tin approved by the State Depart­ ment of Education. and Full information about “ Speed- writing” commercial all courses, can be obtained by writ­ ing DURHAM’S BUSINESS COL­ LEGE, 600A L avaca Street, or by visiting the College, or telephon­ ing 8-3446. proud Spaniards how to survive in the arid regions o f the south­ west. “ By emphasizing the Spanish part of the tradition and repudi­ ating the Mexican-Indian side, it has been possible to rob the Span­ ish-speaking minority of a heritage which is rightfully theirs,” Mc­ Williams says. “ One of the first in conditions to an improvement the Anglo-Hispanic relations Southwest is to give back to Indio- Hispano citizens the heritage of racial pride o f which we have robbed them a n d ^ o teach Anglo- Americans to respect and honor this heritage.’’ in McWilliams proceeds to give the Mexican minority credit for lay­ ing the foundation o f the horse, cattle, sheep, Irrigated farming, mining, and other industries in the Southwest. By outlining the minor­ ity ’s part in picking cotton, chop­ ping beets, mining copper, gold, and silver, and building the rail­ roads, he identifies them as pri­ marily responsible through their work in bringing about the vast agricultural and industrial empire which is#the Southwest. Along the way he destroys the false stereotype which paints the Mexican as a dirty, lazy, knife- crazy individual. Also he scarcely disguises his contempt for the in­ themselves dividuals who “ Spanish” but whom he calls “a quisling-like, upper class ‘Spanish’ elem ent.” call By ED IDAR, JR. Navy ROTO Ready For New Recruits The University Navy ROTO unit is now accepting applications fo r its contract program for the coming year, Lieutenant Com- Master's Urged In Ceramics The Graduate Council approved the addition of ceramics engineer­ ing to the ten other branches of engineering in which master’s de­ grees are offered, A. P. Brogan, dean of the Graduate School, said Friday. The University has offered a bachelor’s degree in ceramics en­ gineering for several years, and it is the only course found in any university in an area bounded by the University of Washington on the Northwest, Missouri Mines on the North, and Georgia Tech on the Southeast, said W. R. Wool- rich, dean of the College of En­ gineering. Further approval must come from the Graduate Faculty, the Faculty Council, the faculty, and the Board of Regents before the new degree can be offered. It is expected to be offered begin­ ning in September, Dean Brogan said. mander R. E. W agstaff, executive officer, said Wednesday. Each year a limited number of single contracts are offered freshmen men. The exact number available for this year has not been determined. to Under the contract system, mid­ shipmen are furnished necessary naval textbooks and uniforms each year and commuted rations of ap­ proximately $28 per month for the last two years. A three week cruise of active duty is held in the sum­ mer between the third and fourth years. Upon commissioning in the Navy or Marine Corps Reserve, midship­ men are subject to two years ac­ tive duty if the Secretary of the Navy declares that they are need­ ed. Students may apply for con­ school tracts up until starts in September, but the quota may be already filled by that time, Commander W agstaff warned. the day Contract students, as well as others, are eligible to compete for the Regular Program Scholarship offered each spring. N avy’s Students attending college un­ der the scholarship program are furnished with full expenses, i n ­ cluding texts, supplies, u n i f o r m s , etc., plus a subsistence allowance of $50 per month for a regular four-year course. FICTON The Girl on the Via Flaminia ... Alfred Hayes Stranger in the Land ............. W a rd Thomas N o W all So H i g h ............. A one Powers The Flying Red Horse .... Frances Crane The Track of the C a t ... ........... W a lle r Van Tilburg Clark Love in a Cold Climate ...... Nancy M ilfo rd The Fires of Spring .............. James A. Michen^r Opus 21... ......................... Philip W ylie Nineteen Eigthy-Four............. G e o rge Orwell T E X A S B O O K S T O R E Sunday. July 17. 1949 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 6 W h at W ould Grandm a Say? Tommies Tops for Sleeping r By MARTHA TARRILLION summer are her preference. Favored over a yellow midriff of silk jersey is a simple tommy coat with little ele­ phants and rabbits on it. Rings on their Barbara Lubel > Is Married lo Sam M /i Bi­ M i s t E l a i n e B a r b a r a L u b e l and S a m A . M y e r , University graduates, were married recently* Myer is a student at the Univer­ sity of Houston. The current trend is to cut off the sleeves. Although Pat Kelly likes the conventional long tail­ ored pajamas of either pink or striped blue cotton, she prefers them without sleeves. M i t t G la d y * G r e g o r y and A r t h u r F r a n c i t R e illy , June graduates of the University, exchanged mar­ riage vows recently. They will re­ side temporarily in Coleman. M i t t C a r o l i n e W a l t e r t was mar­ ried to Harle Rogers recently. Sh® is a University graduate and is a member of Zeta Tau Alpha sorori­ ty* Short and tailored pajamas are sold more than any other styles because they do not make the girls feel too conspicious, says Mrs. Viv­ ian Stephenson of one of the shops along the drag- The college girls also like cool cotton shorty gowns and tommy coats. The shop has never sold any midriffs though they have been sold elsewhere, said. Longer Mrs. Stephenson M i t t J a n e B u r c h a m and J e t t e gowns and pajamas will be sold jn the fall when more girls g o 1 G e o r g e K e n n e d y were married Sunday in the First Methodist back to school, she added- Church in Austin- The bride is a graduate of Southwestern Univer­ sity and the University of Texas. She is a member of Zeta Tau Al­ pha social sorority and Pi Gamma Mu honorary fraternity. He at­ tended the University and now practices law in Austin. Teacher Control Topic o f Meeting special meeting A to assist school superintendents in establish­ ing teacher supervisory services in their districts has been called by State Superintendent L . A . Woods for next Wednesday, July 20, in the Texas Union. The meet­ ing will run from IO o’clock until 4 Wednesday. This meeting will assist county superintendents and superinten­ dents of systems with forty tea­ chers or less in getting teacher supervision started under provi­ sions of the Gilmer-Aikin program. R i c h a r d G r i f f i n and M i n N a n c y G r i e a h e m i e r were married July 14, at the University Methodist Church. Mrs- Griffin is a former student of the University. He is a junior electrical student engineering here. A rt Student's C ondition Better Sleeping these hot nights is no trick for girls with the ability to adjust the styles of wearing apparel to the weather conditions- Should a start ripping fire through a University girls* board­ ing house, a multitude of pulchri­ tude would probably gather on the lawn. The sight would be quite similar to the one *t Bar­ ton’s where the girls are clad in the latest bathing suits with a short, snappy beach robe. The long, shapeless nightgowns with a drawstring at the top and reminiscent sleeves, bothersome of Grandma’s Day, have been re­ placed or greatly modified by tom­ my coats, short length pajamas, shorty gowns, and in short, mid­ riffs. A little short of North Pole creations are the gowns Mary Es­ ther Haskell brought back with her from her trip up north. These gowns have a Chinese neckline with a design down front- Made straight up and down, they resemble tommy coats in appear­ ance and length, but have no sleeves. Miss Haskell likes short gowns and tommy coats prefer­ ably in her favorite colors which are blue and pink. the length. It Returning from town one after­ noon, Frances Gibbons brought back a pink batiste nightgown in the short summer is trimmed in white lace and gath­ ered at the neck and waist. Miss Gibbons prefers the short gowns but also likes tommy coats and short pajamas. Her favorite is a pair of blue nylon midriff paja­ mas gathered at the knees with a drawstring. The top has a white strap with a ruffle the shoulder and little blue ribbons- across s « ;> ■. svNvj^ > '3 Views' Sonnet Wins Poetry Prize That sonnet by Mrs. Jean H. Bough, graduate, won the June Mr3. Daniel McCalib, B.F.A. *49, students poetry prize sponsored by is the local chapter of the Poetry So- TAk4. J4# of T ex as- Dr R A Law TO M M Y COATS are |ust as cool standing up as sitting down. Wednesday at the YWCA from 7 professor of English’and president J® ^ o clock.^ Classes are open to 0£ the chapter, awarded her a boys and girls. the former Carolyn Harris, teaching ballroom dancing each ‘'short midriff pajamas and tommy coats" Photo by Wolvin ' B a l l r o o m D a n c i n g a t Y W C A Pert model Loie Vick laughs over her shoulder. C arolyn Barlow says ‘r > v ii- I Loreta Elizabeth McWherter! commercial art major from Kil gore, is recovering in Seton hos­ pital from injuries received when she was thrown from a horse. She was hospitalized July 7. The accident occurred at a lo­ cal riding stable where Miss Mc- Wherter was riding with a friend, Vivian Boyson, student from Houston. The horse threw her and kicked her in the stom- former portfolio with her name inscribed, ach- : - y y v a v k ;. ?• ft: Advisor/ Group Is Planned For Freshman A high drop-out rate among freshman students at the Univer­ sity has instigated a student ad­ visory plan in the College of Edu­ cation which Dr. W. R. Borg thinks will fill the need of addi­ tional counseling. Dr. Borg, assistant professor of educational psychology, believes most of the students who leave the University do so because they fail to make the social contacts and adjustments that they desire. The advisory plan aimed at this situ­ ation will consist of twenty upper­ classmen, selected and trained to help the freshmen and transfer student in education over his ob­ stacles. Although the plan was proposed last semester, it will be a basic students training period. The selected for this work will learn the fundamentals of counseling and a great deal of practical in­ formation on academic require­ ments, athletics, and fraternities and sororities. QUICK! COURTEOUS COMPLETE! * SERVICE at the Home Steam Laundry P h o n e 37 0 2 120 E. 10th U S E D & N E W B O O K CORRECT SCHOOL S U P P L I E S AND 15% REBATE BERKMAN^ At the Churches— Sunray. July 17, 9*9 THE SUMMER TEXAN Arkansas Minister Makes Friends Here B y J E N N IL U K E L L Y Anniversary Observed The CYP will have a vesper ser­ vice and a picnic supper at their afternoon m eeting Gregg House at 2:39 o ’clock for a picnic at Blue Hole, Wimberley. it observes ••Good Pishing” will be the top­ ic of Dr. Lewis S. Speaker’s ser­ mon Sunday as the F ir s t E n g lish its L u th e r a n C h u rch thirteenth anniversary. A congre­ gational picnic will be held on the church lawn under the direction of Mr. Walter Roberts. The movie, “Answer for Ann” will be the main feature o f the program held after the picnic. ★ ★ “A Questionable Right” will be the topic discussed by Dr. Edmund He insohn at the Sunday morning worship services at the U n iv e r sity M e th o d ist C h u rch . The Rev. Cal­ vin P'roehner, Associate pastor, will speak on “He Did Not Fail” at the evening services. Mr. Conrad White, associate pastor of the C e n tr a l C h ristia n C h u rch , will use as his sermon topic “Jesus and the Kingdom” at the Sunday morning services. The evening services will be in ser­ acordance with vices of the downtown churches. the union A A Dr. James W. Reynolds, pro­ fessor of the Junior College of Education, at the University will be the guest speaker at the Sun­ day morning services of the U n i­ v e r s ity C h r istia n C hurch. His topic will be “Today’s Greatest Prob­ lem .” The early morning worship service has been discontinued. “ Where Real Religion Begins” will be the sermon topic o f the Rev. Archie K. Stevenson’s Sun­ day morning address to the H y d e P a rk C h r istia n C h u rch . Sunday evening his subject will be “What a Protestant Believes.” The CYF and Chi Rho will meet at 6 o’clock. ★ centered The Rev. Joseph Harte will bring a message around “Christian Life and Action’’ to the Sunday morning congregation at the A ll S a in t’s E p is c o p a l C h u rch . leave The Canterbury Club will tr o u t te n d erlo in o f SU N D A Y , JULY 17 ...... Fried chicken and cream gravy B aked V irg in ia ham and fru it aauca ----- ------- F ried M eat loaf and sp a g h e tti ------------ ----- B roiled pork chop and apple sau ce __ Individual ch ick en pie ' .tr o t s and peas ......... . . . ............ " esh b la ck ey e p eas .................. 'V -ttered . .. .. ............... M acaroni and c h e e se ................... S tra w b erry sh o r tc a k e b an a n a cream pie ________ P ear and c o tta g e ch eese s a l a d _______ Wop salad bowl _______________ spinach ... ... . S5c 46 c 30c 3 0 c 30 c 35 c lOc . 10c 10c IOC . 12c . . . 10c 12c 12c . ... .... l f } t l a rn C ^ aieteriaS Hi'Serving the South's Finest Foods” 2 1 s t an d W ic h ita 8 th an d C on gra ss The Reverend Blake Smith is a gray haired gentleman with a warm friendly smile. And he is a successful minister. “Reserve Strength” will be dis­ cussed in the Rev. R B. Sw eet’s message to the U n iv e r s ity C h u rch For instance, the project that o f C h rist. In the afternoon ser­ heads his interest now is the new vice, he will speak on “The Watch­ $275,000 student center started man On The W all.” The young people’s group will center their j by the University Baptist Church table . as part of a three unit building program around a round program. He will preside at the discussion Missionoriet— Eanes Group Aided corner-stone Sunday evening. laying ceremony, “ We are proud of this build­ ing but we are not stressing it* importance. A fter all, it is only & tool,” says Dr. Smith. He was born in Arkansas, edw- cated in Arkansas, and married in Arkansas. “Now,” smiles Dr. Smith, “I am preaching in Texas.’1 Dr. Smith has four brothers a»d two sisters. His youngest brother is also a minister. Because of the varying ages of her children, Ids mother had never really seen all her children at once until last weekend when the Smith fam ily had a family reunion in San Bec- nadino, California. “Nothing could have pleased j taught Bilbie classes, and helped Lee, the church, He married Alberta Riley » 1925 while they were attending a little Baptist college in Arkansas. h ive 7 o o r M ns > h V me more than to see the way t h e 1 fix up children at Eanes helped in making I The church was refinished, their ramshackled church build- broken window panes replaced, in- jing into a plain but s p a r k ly s id e walla were kemtoned, and the j 'clean place of spiritual w.rsm p, windows were curtained. All this ! John said Dorothy Williamson who di- was done by the children sup-' •reded missionary work at Lanes ervised by the Presbyterian group. The next problem to be tackled Presbyterian Church. I The Eanes community is about by the Presbyterian group is the j 2.5 miles from Barton Springs little community at Pleasant Val­ just o ff Bee Cave Road. The com­ ley. Miss Williamson considers munity is made up of a group of that the situation will be more dif- people with initiative and ficult to cope with at Pleasant little less money. Trey live in a sort of | Valley because there is no pro- hand-to-mouth situation, in t e n t s .ject f or the children to work on, and huts. graduated recently from the University, will go to Yale next year. Riley Blake, who attended the University one yea*, is now at the University of Nea- chatel, Switzerland. Aylmer is a senior in High School and ten year old Denny is in the seventh grade. Dr. Smith’s first pastorate was a part time affair in the Second Baptist Church in Conway, Ark­ ansas. “What I remember most ie the good people they had there.” 1 he says. From Conway Dr. Smith went to Rockwell, Conneticutt, Mexico, Missouri (where he was president A group o f University Presby­ terian Churh members including of Hardin College for G irls), the Charlie Wade, Arthur Strickland, University of Arkansas and final­ Charles Von Rosenberg, Virginia ly returned to Conway as pastor Warner, Mary McIntosh, and Bert President T. S. Painter will be j of the big First Baptist Church Miller, directed by Miss William- an honor guest at the cornerstone there His “baby brother-’ is pan- son spent many hours during the , laying of the Baptist Student tor of this church now The Uni- at Eanes. They Center Sunday night at 8 o’clock, versity Baptist Church, in Austin past few weeks was his next and is his present pastorate. squatters ; -— ------------------------------------- Painter Guest O f Baptists At Ceremony squatters, and have rights to the land they live on. The land they live on is probably their most valuable possession. They are what you might c a ll. up with BiMe ciasseg „ ' aBd the entire day will be taken Summer The Texan CLASSIFIED ADS Produce Results Quick For Sale lu xe Portable. Only T Y P E W R I T E R . N E W Royal S ilen t. D e ­ 145.00. P e r fe c t th ro u g h co nd itio n. Call 7 - 1 5 8 6 Monday S a tu r d a y from 8 to 5. ONE, TW O. T H R E E S tu d e n t s . L arg e o I so u t h room, c o n n e c tin g bath, double closet*. Quiet home. R eason a ble. Gar ape. 8 -7 3 5 0 . ROOM FOR o n e boy. P r iv a te borne. 1-2 !. block from c a m p u s . T e l e p h o n e 8- ''' I R I D E R S Y< R id ers W a n t e d W A N i E D : L e a v i n g J u l v 1 8 t h . A n y o n e w a n t i n g ri de ber of Other honor guests will be Miss Roberta Lavender, pioneer mem- ihui’cll, and R. A. m.Wa hin ,\ - ! J • ‘ ■ -V,' * Austin Lass to Star Film/• \ -- — i u u UU., v - , wood or study d ra m a to become a film star. T h a t is the experience of Lucianne Knight, 17, who will r e p re s e n t th e University an d A u s ­ tin to the world in a D e p a r t m e n t of Sta te movie which will ev en ­ tually be shown in fift y-two f o r ­ eign countries and in tw e n t y -f o u r languages. Miss K n ig h t was selected to play the leading role in a pict ur e depicting the life of an American to be p ho to ­ teen-ager. Scenes grap hed on the campus an d aro und Austin will show real-life people, no professional actors being in the cast. Production will s t a r t in Octo­ ber, Hamilton McFadden, asso­ In te rn a ti o n a l ciate chief of the Motion Pic tu re Division of of S tat es D e p a r t m e n t Un ited the wi" uvi ----- ----- - — Miss K n ig h t, who plans to enter the U niv ers it y a f t e r she gr adu at es f r o m A u s t in High School in J a n ­ uary , filled all the qualifications f o r the p a r t, said Miss V e r a Ward of New Y o r k City, who is a r r a n g ­ ing the s h o ot in g script. Miss K n i g h t said she has never done any acting. As to courses in the Un ivers ity, she says, “ I h av en ’t decided ye t, b u t I th in k FII study la n gu ag es ." T. S. P a i n t e r , p r e s id e n t of the University, m e t with Mr. McFad­ den an d Miss W a r d S a t u r d a y m o rn i n g to a r a n g e shoo tin g sche­ dules. Dr. P a i n t e r , who had not seen Miss K nig ht, asked, “ Is she p r e t t y ? " He was as s u re d t h a t Texas would be well r e p r e s e n t e d A u s t i n ' s F i n e s t M a n s S h o p gar BLANCHE AND FLORENCE ZUCKER Tho use o f the twin piano media o f musical expression has been m o re closely associated with the pl ay ing of ro m an t ic a n d so ft m u ­ ffle. However, th e Zucke r sisters, Blanche an d Flore nce veere d away f ro m this theme so mew hat in the ir c o n ce r t F r id a y n ig ht to give the th e U ni v er s it y audience one m os t varied p ro g ra m s ever heard f r o m twin key boards. o f r a n g i n g The Recital Hall audience he ard fr o m B a c h s selections classic “ F u g u e in G Minor," to the roguish “ Largo a1 F a c t o t u m " by Rossini f r om the “ B a r b e r of S e­ ville," and including such g r a p h i ­ “ The as cally b ea ut if u l pieces L a r k " by Glinka and the blue- ti n t e d “Claire de L u n e " by Debus­ sy. Th en to add a few h o t licks f o r an endi ng th e sisters topped t h e i r p r o g r a m with th e ir own * J u m p Boogie," a nd encored with Interstate Theatre 7% /z a *n < ?U 'rit PHONE 2*5411 BOB HOPE Lucille BALL K 0 W F U L I ■EWES' STATE PH O N E I SKELTON ♦WILLIAMS 2-5291 ESTHER RED ^ssnszA P H O N S “Nile At The Opera” 7*1527 W ith M arx B roth er* A lso ‘C alifornia Straight Ahead" C/1 P f TOL. P H O N E 2-8789 “MR. BELVEDERE GOES TO COLLEGE” C lifto n W ebb 1//1PS/TV P H O N S “My Dear Secretary” 7-1786 L o ra in e D a y K irk D o u g la s TCX/1S P H O N S 7-1964 .^L . ^ L o r e tta V an Y o u n g J o h n so n ‘Mother Is A Freshman’ / i c / s r / at P H O N S 7-2900 P a u le tte F red Goddard M cM u r r a y “Suddenly, It’s Spring” A I R C O N D IT IO N E D • Tropical Weight* J # Celanese Lords iVow sport coals suits 0 Tropical Worsted Cooler (a ll • Celtic Linen $35 SINGLE BREASTED and DOUBLE BREASTED price 1295 IS ow 4185 rayon) 3485 ISoir 26” • On Congress next to the Austin Hotel