«• * «*> "• / »it ^ mmm imms ffc?>r!' v' "*$&$<* W* ii»M%g i { -*4^*^ ^ .1^%, t^T^ri' ~~~1J By JOHN OHENfcALSKl. major function of *.stateumversity" bf[ ..^••SfejftMiW ^,;.W-~^ Charges-that ilir IJniv^wijty is and publication of research projects, phasizing research-and paying too 4ittle over-emphasis Jithtf: This on ' Vesearch^t* attention to teaching ability of the fa culty charges continue, prevent utilization of thfr --^ were refuted j Monday *by thje deans of the faculty^ teaching ability by limiting the time devoted to teaching. " '' " -f adioola^and-c^eg^^^#^g: •>..* ..-•; . v-. . ....r -. ^ • • n general, the deans said the Univereity*a The charg^i. they'; refuted werethat the t>rniight. o^t th^ beat in*ftc>ioiarly administration "is failing to perform the arch, teachings and administrative duties of the individual faculty membw* Dr. C. P. Boner, dean of the jCollege *(f' Art* claijns that "the vitality of re* search is a part of good teachingsCreativethinkihg^hichre^are^ ­brings about is vital for any m#• joe, university.". Dean W. -R« ­ College ; of Engineering alseApproximately 1,500 students courses'by 4 o'clock Tuesday aft­thinks of research aa 1^, funda«ernoon to complete pteVegistra­ who ar«~«nroiled lor V cQuxaea mental Hart of •& tJniveraity'a tion, Mr. Shipp added.­ are expected to finish pre-regis- functions,N>ut'4oea. not.belie*e it A-student -wishing to tako eny should be used as tfee primary tration Tuesday afternoon for the second-term courses aloni? jpith' basis for promotion.. ' t\ > ^ " second term, Registration, Super­ the "w" courses which are already -Artf' awistant * "f profe^sor^'lbivisor Byron Shipp said Monday. , entered on -the course car.d must pointed out, is expected to^t^cl^­order to leyen the crowded seeafacuity advisor frrbis college do research for an advan€eS?dfl^" conditions inGregory Gym on July before 4 o'clock Tuesdays-"jtk gyee, and do «3i'er'.^re8ear^~ fot ioto ty Bettit 20, regular registration $*y, stu­If publication. • • *' TURNING THE OLD ice creamSceezer Isn't so bad. Inf feet it's a student wishes to continue i- dents registered for "w" courses Before the v r^nt^Geiierid with all "w" courses, he can finish , much better than^the more mordern method^ of ice-cream malting and'law students are given an.op­pre-registration without seeing -a ] faculty ruling, the assirtant pro* j^svhen you have a pretty co-ed like this 'tonfetayop. The lucky boy is portunity to register early. t : lessor wa* expected to 'finUih-^is faculty advisor, Mr. Shipp saicU^i * Bob Roenigk , . . ana the la^s perched onNije freezer is Jay Students registered for one or research within fotfr yean; at Mr. Sbipp announced that "w" : Guinnes (2-3452). "Wanna gat on a picnic?^^ more "w" courses may add "-a" which . time he 'W)uld eitiier b« 'students pre-registering must clear promoted * or dismissed' from tha fees with the Bursar's Office by faculty. • ^ ipon Wednesday. They are re­ A. recent General Wculty;able. *'£ *» i" " u4 „ % ever, must be approved by tht Law students should obtain s«e« I-See COLLEGE, Page 6 ond term course cards by 4 o'clock •• t' ^t;;; ¥'B Tuesday in Law Building 106. Students who. completed fee $0 in Running; first, step in pre-reglstmtlon wW P* finish on July 20 at Gregory Gym For Chancellor VOLUME51 AUSTIN; TEXAS. TUESDAY, JULY II, 1950 8 PAGES TODAY ^KO. 10 if not completed by Wednesday, Mr;-Shipp • explwnedi'?s|?^rtf^|^' Any Ideas? k Other students wishing-to regis­tfer for'the Second term" beve filed vAround 60 meft have" bee€ witliM^e Registrar's Office. Sat­nominated for the Chancellor* f urday waa the deadline .for de­ship of The University of Tex­positing the"pink cards, which will as, the Texan has learned. authdriee courae^ cards and' j^gj?-.Tltys facfulty-admlntstrative tration time • assigimynta^ committee which Vwill make «rA% recommendations-to the Re»Course cards and ttme assign- gents will meet this week, Shtwa ments will-be sent by maHv.some« •J • • -•• * '• " „ By GUY HUSKERSON, JR. serit only prepare for an official field. -4-time-before July 20,. Mr, C;^P,k Boner, dudnpan, saidt ^ Although the: Department of announcement io begin drafting s The,^Marine and Navy, Recruit­concluded^ Registration will ' Almost every outstanding Defense has asked the Selective by increasing the number of ing:.Service. has not noticed any completed in Gregory Gym, v in $ a. " ' V" year, Joe Neal, Fulbri^it advisdr, assistant cheer leaders at a meet* Stated 'Monday. :->w ing in Texas Union Tuesday ,^jDr.\R, R. Blake, assistant pro­night at 7 O'clock. n Jr.; fessor of psychology; Dr. W. P. . Acting president David Raine|r Lehmann, associate professor of said the meeting has been moved Germanic languages; Dr. H. J. up from Thursday because of Leon. pr man. .. MacArthur now. flies a UN Hag sonal friend of many of ite dele^ ing research in political psycholo­ "And what Americans should over his office and not a United ^gates., Dr. Hoffman^ native^ of gy. Dri LeMi^will stiidy arckaeo­ realize the UN 1s fighting States_ one.' „ "®V#; I^.tAustria, formerly worked with the l<*y in Rome. Botit Dr, Lehmami :JUeague of .Nations in Geneva. „ -and I>r. Rosenquiat wUl go to Nor A few aoiMBCM.afO-tta of Architecture was the S4^t of Hoffman explained tliat, way, whers Dr. Lehma&n wilLdo : ^jSouth Korea actually got its' in research work oa G«rmanie l#n movraaent Iff Pro-Red,PoopSpread mal«s from the stodgy ependence. tihcroogb the United guages and'Dr. Rosenquist, in so- of wearing l<>ti«Tp|M»ts 1 Pro-Suasian leaflets catting for Turiutd ftxto 4 Great Yictjory for svauner ' v . ^•Wlifcn th«f ^prevention of World War,III" Peacef' and "Prevent World War The tfaivwddtf-wiSi graatlMves v 8ine« thaavthe asdl^teefaf hai out of.Korea two years ago, the to at JXL»" ^ 1 6f absence to the professors who were distributed housed upheld their heritage*of ~ neral Assembly voted to hold a Brackenrid^e '> apartmetits early do this study. They are schedule* This Labor Youth League, dis­ institutionalise in lir* 4 supervised election/in Korea. So Sunday morning: to V&ve the United States in the tributed .leaflets-"last fall calling but thsy soem to have metually, the Korean situation is latter'part of August or t The paper, called Challenge, % for the organisation of a student their er9Mdfi4» liheiral^ a United Nations child.'* September, Mr. Neal said. " w printed ata New York addressalso labor union on the campus. Wen­ gams, r ­ Approximately 80& awards for Dr, Hoffman knew that the sit-connected with the. Labor Youth dell Addingfcpn, who received a ­ > taatioQ ih ' Korea, was dangerous League; described by the June 21, A. degree in economics at the Uni­sixteea ^countries were g»nted, in rebuke to this bac We, Heal staMv h^r |«.yer a year ago When he received 194&, Daily Worke* as "the.new versity in June, helped oi^anize little boy toddler went i a wtter from Dr.Egen Rinshafem, Marxist youth organization." mt Is th* , Azehlteetiira 0 c¥^|g. hi W«dtt**d*y er principal " •" " " *1 •#?, ***:*!' tmm »hh «»-ZTJZ porches«bf -Th;e liouse» audi carried The p«i^went oa ormer Austrian mer will meet in Texas Union 115 iKitiiior had piaa; m such beadlines as:"No Gunsj No American boys tof be vrithdrawn Nation^;; Wednesday evening at ? o'clock. study ae^iteetux«HlM»r<^ v •* Planes, No tT* S. fiives for. WaU from ^Dirty and criminal co-9^ede Rogerson, president of the event, we might r'M thetforisr | V, •jgsrana « Pem «1 •K *$ i" wants 20,000 young American boys immedi , * r^OOffie^ventually-^yolunteers ifthere ate J V 4H Texas wants a championship football team this fall* as By FRED SANNER SMlfc Arkansas, mid every other collegein the country, 'Hi ^ X >*•«*#» ?9*ru sun «?|3Se Davisttraffod the ball. i7don:';;.bp«tted . stop Jim_trpchurch missed'catcher ,y*m* -^fcwawiQoojey of ATM^ aet the half-of the alghth with 4 yylfc, George Toafoda*s peg to ond on *>\i Phi Oams down hitless, allowingFor thefi*st fall-sinca rWorld stole second, Je>v-_ —jl .Huf^ tooktiiird on an attempted steal,^ and* ' only one walk meanwhile, but a •War IItlsys, veterans will *ej«re-i { nin^s'a infield';,'i^iB^?|%^ rman brottight Mm with a dottbla iS»" walk, a st^len base, an ^infield N! aent a very, very small nyriority scampering in aa second baseman down the right, field foul.line. V',f;'<• '6ut, and ia Texas Leaguer to right ? group onjke Texas squad. Mostly Pat Wilson's Ttxils League^ fell Pem Club iced the game in the field in thr eighth inning enabled the Longhqrns will be a youthful safely in right field a few -feet fifth. Bob Clark singled past third V the Phi Gams to defeat AIMS, 1-0, , group, molded straight from the away from the clutching ffcgers basd and iveiW; to second.when'Don ^: in-an overtime thriller. Wmkaof Tesiui hlgiw schools into 8 of AIME's Howard'Bradley.7 ; S Smitik, wbo bad previoudy mado la .the evening** 'w. ' ;•> *r •% Klill With one away in the second in­Clark tbdk lBird: on Frank "Haf eiw %|wL Oak Grove Sjjuhrrelt only two bits .* Naturally, however, there will ning, Harold (Busxy) 1 Bryant nick's infield out, and scored oa * and an-nnearwed-MM a> thc Pem Hjbo returning a few vets, a vital Jerry Balsch's single ihft bikth#'1;^^ walked, attempted to steal second. ff??611! 8 3abber« edged Oak Grove. i-1. 4. -I!**? •ndmd^hnportant went tf^lhird as .catcher. Danny ^*«Md «n^ Aimoat faultless pitching was' .case. Among the vets there will the -StAtie efrtanV < Wolf*-'overthrgw b***. Stone struck out nine.Squirrels* the order of the night as the four be Oleic. Rowan, starting center • •> — £.. hurlers doled out only nine bits headed1for " all-Southwe»t honors' . ^n*ST BOUND 2COII£$' and four runs among them. tor sure; Bubba Shanda, co-cap- Kenny' Gilbert of Oak Grove Intramural idnduit^ Oak Grove 4, Lambda Chi Alpha t "1 tain and jus important «of In and Jim Jennings of Phi Gamma 1 vh _ Coach Blair ~ Chert's , backfield Pem Club 8, PI Kappa Alpha 0. Delta each turned in three-hitters. s' ft WEDNESDAY -0^ plans; and Ben Procter, ac« pass* :jornuu. FINALS Pbl Gamma Delta 7^,.Heat Wayera However; Jennings was saved; catching end, who is looking for­1T • •,cWdi twice by the strong right arm of WiwMr M»f Genu* D*K«—AIM* *a. wardto anothfer ntatwdiai talph Harper, Phi Gam le'ft winner.. fmm C3vibrr-0*k Oret£ Ai*f isfhi&tsgFr1*^ 7 J lelder, who threw two..men out ;:p|i:iras,;; tfceae'veterans wUlbe 5 r mighty important few. ' lllUBiA^SWA^ at third base, tossing -out Pant ""I^Prr Fly la the"third inning when he PS triedto go from first to third on Don't Underrate Kids « Boger Lewis's single, and thtorw-m \b4" don't underrate the** iag the next two months that ihe ng J. A. Summers out In the sixth •Tads." They may not know the Texas team will have little Id when he tried to advance after a THE eiainfiHali• 8tlf duty orwhat to wpfiyworry about. mmOnce w»« ooya are v-t _ ^ ii^.mtLwwnw W aoouc. the boy* « f>lrt field, of the 24 m.W' V they cannot be drafted until the Phi Gams who faced him, getting fbat guard out of position, how to end of thesehoolyear.,Cosch good support from catcher Lewis, drive under * play, and hoito Price pointed out. who beld on to eeveral hot foul 1^9 play it rough whentfce occassion Even so, a number Of TeXas tips and threw out at second the calls. „ players would,. b« exempted on only Phi Gam to reach base 'In MOCCASIN The situation is UmNpm «11 another count — the University ;he first seven" Innings*—catcher ever the nation—the ROTC's. Gene Vykukal, and Woody .Drydon, the man who was %£W; have graduated. Some Gene Fleming, for instance, could » seore the winning run. authorities have raised the not be drafted until they grad­ AIMS had men on base through­ i *e^ thatgrade of football play during uated since they are members of ^nrppi'rfn^r out the game, but m each crisis the coming: years will fall off be­ tteROTC. the Phi Gams tightened their cause of this. Who can say,. but other Xionghorn players defense. In the first inning, with ' >1 at leaat'all the schools willfind are members of. the Army and Sill one away and Bill Wjratt on fnrst, themselv&all in the same-pod> Navy reserve, juid the National fS?Ct Jennings grabbed Carter's pop ^°IU-*---" XiUard—subject to unmedlajEercjilt m^sps >unt and doubled. Wyatt bff firat; -4if the.need iajsnt, but protected Bade to the quratien* E, r Harper came to the rescue In as far as the drift is concerned. How^srifi the draft effect the, the jQiird andr sixth. Jennings Sunaming-the • l^tuatioir up, 1"" ioungsWra^who -have „l **taken struck out.the side in the seyenth -• jffoj Coach. Price said, "Off hand, ! saver."" after Charlie Varnell bobbled SHI don't believe the draft vHll affect Bernard Moroz's lon£ fly to The answer is that there will us to any great extent, iii probably be little, if any, effect "Of course, if we lost B; •n the Texrfs plans for liSO.™ Townsend or. jgjid McFadin, Coach Ed Price, Longhora line blow awould "he greater than if a wmm:, mentor, believes that unleaflthe third-string back or a second-­ draft is drastically increased dttr string guard were caHed.^7/??. i Longhorns Due in 1950? ? ow good will the 1950 Texasfirst in the C6nfereneeC -The ru­intramural tennis summer be? • '• • •• " -v mors .from N«wl^afk*'we even aingles "and ' he 100 Coach Price said the possibili-Sying concerning picks on the isVreSc i'e finals it programs\reach' Hes for a great team existed, ac­ national .level, and Texas isn't too week with -Jack .^Chxlder and tually—and comparatively.! In far-down in the prognosticators' Richard Hoerster to d^ for ten­«ther vrorA, Texas performance outlook. — nis.honors and^ Sh*" will more or less depend on the You can't pick winner-in * and Don Smithto1 pitct Strength of the opposing teams. July, and for that matter, you horseshoe crown Texas might have ^ts greatest ean't pick a winner in Sentem-ChiIder xepr^M^i rear, but SMU might have a team ber, but theyll go on doing it. Grove,-moved in bettor than Walker Incorporated, In fact bdfore the summed bows finals by erasirig Wallis Ander­lie iald.Wb«ra ^oi^d ihst Jsave out,titis writer will ^obabl^ jgot son, independent, 2-6, 9-4, C-2 <£* " %»• Steers! • * #, .' la his two cents wortii on the ia the semifinals. $P,L.7h» ^otban seasofl is more coming naes.: Al His opponent, Hoerster of •iSSt^ ; than two months off, but already pha Tau, Omega, advanced by -the rtimors. are buzzing a^d the injury to a Byron Townsend or defeating'?bhh Selman; Lambda fdiscussions^ are humming. a Kyi* Rote mteht change the Chi Alpha, in straight sets,. 6-21, ^Bfrrt ao .donK abo»t£. ebampionfchip plftrik 4»< «ny-tehm. 6-2. • W Jtj[tt»e sports writ#*, the Uxm, a«4 •Our,hat'a 'offto the f^low who Childet and Vtt, the vfootbaU; "vtopto'ty *** igan loiok that far into the future to battle Tuesday for ihe summer '? ^dt'T^tas & come out and make his choices accordingly, tennis singles championship. tme devefopmenf : • r~:-ttr; In the horseshoe pitchinSf ^diVl­?r-l slon, semifinal matches saw Mc­ •faMApvJtott) all Sale f f ft* . . , Grove, Eliminate ^.^T, Farman, Sigma Alpha-E|«io«,. SWT, 21-^. Me­ aPWitP1$49 ' Guire and" Smith at$ also 4>.V* •• scheduled to play for the horse­ # V ilSMKlpiBW shoe title ^u«fcday.^?i'rM' ^ ih& &,< aon^letA Itabalatimti. foothaH w. Awociafion, aim Univ. ticket «a^«u o|; n^S ersity facjulty members. \ tediea6, Hi „ alw# mm*,,-** las* year. public will b* permittedto «wingi3Mr Bocky ?M«uncian»' ~ •w * M.fdm!»M*a^ro '«bi» fHison lleb«t|, 'wUfi'-* Bmk|iQa,v dropjped GtnJBT BtronvinoJST*f •>* ' * * ' of " ' four tickets to any one game< : it: --efei,. Howler,^ ^rson maybtfympfe mivWM th'^A#" knockout victory over tha invader Monday night bl ^stimated ?,500 crowd m Bftives oftohomo games'againat PurdueIKeld.; IfefoVee lde^pustdab«l^ I'&fad' Septott»b«r liO/alfcepr ;!6viiaviBioftft.. Lufal '0: +1TT MlSUMMgftlScA |"u'» r v* *v%m 14 *v *, s ' ,•»•=,, '1( i,|'ftL"l,n^, Hl»1W« Ii>itnii(i .muni Iiir.i iii^iiitfillti1! vin.-n^i. $8^ ^^WF&3. wte ctmiiji.,!.* k and Raschi IIS ?s£3 Saw, "the p^ples' choice," will occupy center lield for the Nation­al League Tuesday when the Phils' Robin Roberts faces Yankee Vic former with the Longhorn golf that hewould go on a winter Rashi in the 17th All-Star game. degree, is tentatively scheduled to team for %e past three yean, A capaeilq^crowd of' 49,000 will imt beginning with the Los An-asSttnpe his duties with the Mid* *" «a assistant profes-Open next January. , lend Country Club around August jam Comiskey Para site of tiie »ona! at. the Midland Country»4 He also disclosed that fie 1. originai AU-Star game in 1983, and Pro J. C> Hardwicke will tator ..jOMJOhkMminJ^S^ ^ Millions more will watch and lis­ £ M\m ShJrleyCross of^usti$j>lan Williams. \I'V;.Y " —.... lit mar' making the announ&ment,* to be married sometime ja July; Williams's ebitf job Will be ^ vm, a 20-year-old ton df an iWMIianu, who lackod * *ew -55H& _ After opening his winter tour m .Los Angeled the going lift, the Player^ ^Pension -•vi gi^ng4rt«» lwon*-W«n«L Aft*,. «n»«s«w ki. 12:30 o'clock (CST)^With receipts former Longhorn will play in the Fund. ^ -PhoenixOpen, Texas Open, Har- Manager Burt Shotton of thelingen Open and f|p~ Houston Nationals will find himself' in hos­ jtneet. ^ „ a. < :' Hile surroundings because of the"4l. Conaidere&^aa pwhtpe^lthe. Sauer controversy. That didnt sit state*;most promising professfcn-well with Chicago fans. ,'. al prospect,. Williams recently Shotton, finding himself with­ won *the Texas PGA, defeating out a center fielder 4n' the fan# such yrtays as Byron Kelson and vote triibd to sideline the Cubs' . >• Raymond Gafford. He also won Sauer for his own Dodger X>uke-—¥»«» ptfit" ftmnt^f'* frfrw Snideri First the officials'„-Said- j Here are the -batting order, an­meet Buddy Weaver of Sice nounced by Managers Shotton and edged Williams last spring, and Casey Stengel {batting averages i-jSSSSSft ' in 1949 has teammate. Bob Wat- and pitching records in parenthe­'son, defeated., the slender golfer" ses):ai®M tot a. «r.w<:5:l J: ^£-%atiohal^»I » Willie • Jones,, Philadelphia. 3b J ^ " morris wiuiams OR, California StarBreakt (.322) ­Ralph Kiper, Pittsbnxgh, lf,(.279) World Hurdle Record < Stan Musial, St. Louis, lb (.350)HELSINKI, Finland, July 10.-— Jackie Robinson, Brooklyn. 2b, •*»>«•«». wiinfviwi mm -Dick. Attlesey of Southern i.se&)(.«66) ,v \ a-***.,atg-'uvk.';!*, record for^-the 110-meter high „ U26) . v {^-;, hurdles with a time of 13^ Mon­Hawk Sauer, Chicago, cf, (.29S) At"ETempleiSaturdaysl day night Roy Campanella, Brobklyn. e, , „. ^"ho Woot 4-inch athlete bet-(.300) 1 ^-&-v awarded on the basis of winners tered the world mark by two- Marty Marion* St,Louis, ss. (:2«S) Amateur 8tate golf chanypiondiip fa. the various flights. The vet: tenths of a %econd. It is held Robin Robert^ Philadelphia, p, tournament" 'will get under^aF erans tourney will consist of 36 Tomfly by Pred Wolcott of Siee Saturday at the McCloskey VA holes, medal play.' -^ '> r1 and Spec Towns of Georgia Center in Temple. The entry feej* $4 and entires A, crowd of 7,000 saw the . (,ls) Veterans ©£ bo13k wrtear. -< Billy Maxwell, on* at North Over fgOO lB prises Jhe Texas State's brilliant golfers, Ttxan defeated Marion* ' Pfluger, the 491% Longhora, cantain^ t and g Hf^P Wdirf»4 . ,, Kflgme^ wo> to ««# turn#***-«teak In the semifinals, Pfluger edged _ srt^ »«.••. *«tat* im n tso.es. Mwnraa, Msaaswnfc'^c^--~ • hie Joranwte,. Wesley JilUs, 3 and B*«StIfnl w*hiut so& ta « sewetaiy («• n«r KotsI S-1SSS. ">"1 '• ^ •• •»• ouive tfUXUOf.MOtt X.. 9 BKCOSOS, It*VfS.Sf.saeh. ZAutg tournament opens Tuesday at taWt radio, itl.M. Do* Munhif Aastto, Tex. 'Aii Brackenridge Park with en 18-, " NJ'l'i'l'l I II I 'JI u >W-WS'.. '""RlUUVki-CLLm».. hole qualifying round. That there ivoomc ror RWT wJH be e new iitle-holder became «MD Kddr. 7-4SIS. mat''m aiale ji certainty Monday when It was 1 M **rn* Morris Wtottff of *-im,« V Austitt^ 'itiie 1049' ^ Winner, has, rufviiKiM Aptftmemt turned professional «nd thus can? art Arf&li|«' crdlliu'-*5' ' LJ sssr-isa^ a th. QUlCLSEmE! uro Avoiniv aas^,«rina.tanas 'ir mill ii a HI jyjiwm i» irrn^iiiiun nm ne». ri;Vic Rashi, New York,^ (10-6).t,Joe DUtaggio, picked for rth*^ l^h ^ theonly ailing SquadC> mefiher, „ut day hut will make the trip to pew-as a pineh hi^nr.; , u « Neither inAttsg«r was dure atMMrt^ ber, Joe pulled a muscle Sun«.i his second and " k^fa,*^ Jf**** team—A»»eri«a»iLeaf ««,' Pkct—Comiilttjr Park, Chic«c*» Tw»—12iSO p.«. (CST)4ay "Jely 11 (fat event «f rafa^wi yarn* will he played WednesdayJ*Iy l2at 11 tun. CST). ^ E*UM«t«datUndanc»---4»>00tt. » Eatia»e«^i§^reeeipto-~$10MO« zzxxm I^agwe 11-7 at Brooklyn, 19ni«i-S(Mj|tt|—et*a " «-« L«*fwi 11 ^ victories* jNatlowdl League 4> ---3^, " . . •• v; 'Btttisi odd* -"A-m triean l^eace* M faviM-lte, A • _ Radio B r o a d c a *%-~Miit«aI Brokduitiai System (12tl5 pan.«£.) . Tlevi»loiS^—Natloiial' Brniifnit»; in. System (17:15 p.m. CST),. _SUrtinjr pitchers—Vic RamU, NS»w JTorfc Yankees, (J0-6) n. Robin Robert*, Philadelphia INbil­ lias (10-3), lefthanded Preacher Roe of Brook* lyn (10-4), Larry Jansen, of New York (9«5) is his choice. to finish up but Ewell Blackwell, the lean Cincinnati whip, (7-8f probably will be in there too. Roe and Wa*> ren Spahn of Boston (9-10) -ftreirll the only southpaws. He also has" righthanders Don Newcombe of Brooklyn. (7-5), Bob Rush of Chi­cago (9-8) and Jim Ktastanty, th# FhBs reliable relief man, (7-8). . Stengel says-he will have Cleve­land's Bob Lemon (12-4) and New iM York's Allie Reynolds (8-8) wamv ing up in case Raschi gets off bad. ^ For the middle three it may. be 53 a Detroit pitcher, Art Iffouttet^iu (11-6) ov lAfty Ten Gray :(10-3K_C«#jr ulso hi*'available Ml 1T«k<® kee southpaw. Tommy Byra*'(»|p®) * .Cleveland's Bobby Feller Ti ??* totem'**Ray Seeribdrqu^^ Produc* Quick "'* I •m — Rlditt9 vefJEJMIMWi ­ Room^ndBoard r _ >' -"r ' J-'" *, "X psmujarfo» -*0®* AUtt ioiUMI .mtfm* " • mwua A 4.T-.* TtrnJC: )#eat;:W(lb'1^Ta 4e»hr«w, Pkoae Mil* «Tmil aunort*UFH||C:LE:A p**miM bj'.'NMpj 3PIUU m thw," SHIRT-^^4 I5M-fi.TlfiHii 3LV,1!1 ^L*asv.' ?• esr nurr DKY. nuwaanu ?JU DAM' DPY . PtTjOki 0 APERS^.H^ mmm, Cits-""" Al­ '''tV* ft-16 SUMMER TtXAN -• "H m BS SSKMs it M ommonA, sJiWS • --------•-• -^ ... . .-. -. -... ... ----.--.v-• . • • * -/• -", :.--^ff,e->v^o '.*. The Commons got a whitewash But the $850,000 surplus is melting A*student committee tracked down ru-awtfy with . surprising rapidity^ Miss jfeTora of a. "S&60TQ00 rfusti fund" and came Anna Janzen, 'director of tne Commons, up with a verdict of not guilty for tfie is spending $85,000 for an air condition« pfficial University cafeteria. .Aing unit and; $6,000,*ftornr music-sound • 'True, the committee said, the Ckii^ona vfeyst^pi. 'These are both worthwhile, but X50 does have a surplu* of $350,000. BaMtW.%* is hoped Mias Janzen will notftnprove>^| not a profit surplus Mnost of it was made s ^e suj^plus to notmpgness. 3 hen the Navy rented facilities during ^ When plans mature for total tJnion^ le way. " 1 --^expansion, it will be the fair and equita-ss ^ ' What profit does the Commons make? "Methingto expect the Comiaons lo turxi About $11,000 a year on a $500,000 vol^iover a good portion of its stirplus to the; ume, or about 2.2 per cgnt, the committed .expansion program.: ^ jj­ reported. ^ The Ex-Students* Association began '&>? ^ Jour reputable ^tedente ^ignfed W -quiet eampaign for Union expansion JMsggJJ udent committee report — x>ni .»»»«.»*summer • — Bill White, with literature solicitingTj.fun^.f^wf siuoent commnxee vyniKj chairman, Dave Rainey, C. P,Garcia,jmd__^_^®® the result of,long Rick. Bobbins.SfAnd they agreed that .tion. Witli an enrollment of 20,000 stu^T^ prices are not out of line with costs. » stt61! ®*P®cted m a few ye**3i the entire^ So far, so good. ^^VrAon, built for one^hird^M number^, * , needgprarfiw W0BL$yj^&< s,^fjf¥' -tt z> v. ^ A good Commom—and a &oIa Xtyioii^fg "!are legitimate objeetive^ that should gOr-r, *S rgfg-gfI j£ 7-t ^ va -A > iKV r% ^**£-^ ?>•>£•'* V ^ f "i '' „ & C t< *K ? ?* ''"T' *jj* *«3 * * -t J* R T ^ ^ *' ^ i.r$/A trial balloon was sent upfey the DcK, Qn sanitation, the Commons has also? -r sAw fense Dep>artment Monday. ^ .^. ; ^r„been whitewashed, UnfortunStely, hov^­ rvk v<"i''fgd . . * Department asked for Volunteers-. Only ahead of-time that the University cafe-»'.And jusi think, Bevo, JS liffle boy fpr me, ond a'glrl Tor youf* in the event of a call for about 300,000 , tena would be inspected, leaving timc for . ^f.,.,and now we have advance notice that the,. year-old age groups. ad 'Hill of Pins' msmm? 1 Home Economics Tea House is to be in*' wmmgmThe -choice—whether to volunteer or spected.-. f ( ­ftot—is an individual one. For the time Ordinary Drag ^merchants receive no t being, until, a firmer war develops, such advance notice: Perhaps the Steer / I: Foot Off ;ud^nta would be better preparing committee which an Here — has done ;JS_fdr their :nation by continuing their abundance of good work-—-should play educatioii|ftaii!li|iS« its cards a "leetie beet closer to ze chest.­ Brown Quits Politics CS% •• • a! .•Ik­ l5kn-il By RONNIE DUGGER Jutions written for the Assembly ; " u?«' Through tK«Mail—t •fexon Editor •>,' condemning the oath in varying J , degrees. _ • _ _ THEY'RE BOTH has-beens on ELUS: The chief controversyt* the campus now.—Outside, ihey'ro j ran into was with l>ickHBlam NAMM Our Midst just opening up; but on campus, and his viewpoint. He thought only-memories. the .Texan owed little or no duty y. K'' By CHARLEY TRIMBLE ; -What do two student presidents to the school, and I disagreed, stuffed in anybody's' mail box over this discussion of some of think after they've had a little v j he ran ^ Negro issqerecently is-one from John L the .matters relating to Amer­ jcV -/-'IN THE MAIL: Mortim^ US Steel public re­ican business and the national time to back.off and iook at the into the ground, aroused preju­".i-y The Hon. Ben H. Guill, Re-, lations director for the South­economy." frequently farcical critter called dicef achieved nothing. The , •'^Aijublican Congressman from the-" west district. -Enclosed is' ran --The term "relating to AmV * student government? ~ transition is occuring now. The ?*. Texas Panhandle,made a speech address made by Benjamin F. erican business and the national ~ How did it affect them? ' Court decision was inevitable, and|#in-Washington the other day* Fairless, president of US Steel, economy" is a little vague; but Ellis Brown is a-little more the referendum was a fluke* "fcepresfentative Guill thinks that before^ the Baltimore Associa­after leading Mr.. Fairfess's cynical. Barefoot Sanders .stilt Then there Was the criticism the Trnm6n Fair Deal can now tion of Commerce, in whieh-he "Mdress, H becomes clear that thinks you can t yoorBelfyouTBeit Hook Exchange, and th» ~ taite o£the_BookE.xchaithe officially, and permanently he blasts the whole federal gov­the phrase should have read too seriously^ ^Brown is thrpugh Tl^A question of Negro-Entrance.r ||taHed.*he deal ernment—not any person or "US Ste^l and its size.** ^ with politics/-'Foot well, he What did th« job cost yo« ia» ­ While we go along with hiiti party in particular.-. If Mr. Fichtenbaum is re-isn't sure, ' ^ -({m, hoalth? \ hjs stand on riie Tidelarids ease (he's for Texas), we can The subject matter Is nothing_ commending NAM propaganda, Other night' about midnight . FOOT* Six weeks in summer* hew, but how it got placed in we hardly know where to look -— they sat side by-aide and remi—flnv kind of irov­ >°hardly agree that seis'ure was, fate^ty mail boxes is. Mr. Mort-next lor other "bad",readteg i nisced for a while. 8Ch°° 1 7 ^ ^ madfe by a "vicious and total- ernment is fonr-lifihs^ wasted imer says he is forwarding the Which supposedly lurks an;ad««»i3teation wh»ch address at the suggestion of academic circles. " * Birefoot is piannTnsr Sd j£»"? 5 which falsely calls itself dem-Max Fichtenbaum, associate re­As one faculty' member around Europe fyx twor -months . . . ?;>?||ocratic," < r * • • j nwe gistrar of the University. "Mr. (name Withheld on request) Starting • August 8. He's going ' Bot lie makes one very ad* Fichtenbaum felt that you put it:,v„ "What's_ ycur , axe, over on a Ru«sian boat. Ellis ha« * kbte 'point: If Simtiiemers might be interested in reading MtaxT**" come back sunburned from --j ,„ don't like what the Democratic a month of harvesting wheat in **|d, yon have to-Mend diverse H,v;'^2 party 'is doing with national- the open field—-"from 6 at dawn interest, -Ellis said. ^ government, let -them "follow t1 to 10 at night"—and he's getting <1 don't know* don't-think ''thelead of the panhalndl^ of ready to barrel out to Miatm for-it pays off much to sit around THE S TEXAN jrote ,'Ja' M few weeks now.-^ ' ainf ealeulate, and figure th«/in every «lection.'*:l|^;,^Sp! ±£S,SJC£<-« ,y ;„•.•••• . ••'•angles" Foot said. "You cfta** , There's just one hftcf~Bt^; To the-same • questions, they affofd to take yourself toother Guill blames the, who^ The Dailr tcnn, a atndwt . this way— responded "way—Barefoot ously." agg* ^ thing on Russia-^" fa Auatin ««er momli •xcejtt Jurhn; holiday »i ictitou tote tk« tttl* ^Thl mort ihteresting letter 8tx,dest Pubii»tion», ine. .. .. Kewi eofitributtoi will ;b« accepted hr tdephMif (M473) ct *t to« eaitorfta fHd the office ch«»*« yoitt-v probably back -to TeXas^ efficc i.B. 1. or »t""tbe" New» coneerninsr delivery idea* or philoBophyf" -Neith^r OPe b&« ,-4st's ^ during V,.. FOOTS I didnt have anvany statsstartseyes/' •nd "hmocUiU editor tb« POOTi aioritinf hours* in in> eyes to start.-You get ST^^urned ojit-rWorWng ^hard jn . ­ Bepre«ented tot >7at!ona) AdvertUInr by National AdT«rtisins S«Tie«, & i Collexs P li«hcra Bepreaentatiira-. -stuff when four-fifths oflt doesn't 4/fs ^ 420 Madison Atfc; New York, H. rfmount to a hill of pins and you San FraneUeo . „ Offici :r-*u Chteago know, it* "' v' I got-disillusioned—not with ordinary students, but with the ^ 1/J/l ."big"" people., You" come to ad-, §• tj~ v. -mire people -With responsibility --, #2 A REAL FRONTIEfci, ?«• ^nd also with guts—it's a rare |ZL^-5 To. the Editor: ., *» "& Malted—11.150 tor^two scmMtcrs*•' for t*» aemMtjra .««>"' PoAtilA with vour kind of con-' .76 for OM «em«t«r 1!^%'' *8® people mm_J^T^ma»i svn 1>ttttvwad^.$1.40 fy* two «iemeat«ri ELLIS: Maybe I'm a little more f«r«a"1n,, victaon aci independent of praise .so for on* A -a .1 ofT cynkfil, l>ut I'm more tolerant of ggSSt*^ S^t^JTSi&•r criticism. Consequently, 1 Y-relr feel divergent viewpoints.; People are MM IN M.LJB,. -4#IA. -V ­ iel ca to render my TH* SUMMER TEXAN CAN BMT PICKED OP W '0UBNATKM BUJ^D^ viewp< , m rarety ei ^ ' >N " IO« AT TOT SAMB RATES^AS FOR DELIVERY BY PEOPJJS I,IVMO OUTSID» too-demanding, C.JT, P«Hart appreciation lor tneir PGUVERY ZONE. , •'" ""* —•-«-— Chairman. J»wtm«ni of G«r«taa liumblf THJB 1 Hm ublic officers. ^^ t > i*nay ~ T ~ ', t PERMANENT STAFF I. »*»« vidi'sc. This time—no matter how wfc RONNIE 0UGGER sity AdmlB4»tr*"tSw»Bf did . yoa'-' i«> tllk w«l o*#jod tto • may he IpKtor- aeeoi term of »umin«p achooj at 1* ^•erftupus W f y w o n e A r a o c l a t e E d i t o r ^ ^ -, . . : CHARLEY TRIMBLE find Holpfiil, tolorant, or John Ohendalski in the lig^it o*. -*— oju.uiT - i in 'H ii l)' " \<\ ' ii •vu» V»V«ii»HJI»» ^ cond««eondlngt 7T5--L^i-f LJS1 r James Rech ^ FOOT; AU three e'ha^e ^ Howard Page .Jot-to learn about them, and they dwirinsthu eonr«t form advocated in ^On 'Lo^and %*»!< ,r'"V <***<* w.a ^t~y. >oi.U»D Tol««W." Too SLMBMm,nto. Editor yourself on a ftontt«r?as realhw Society Editor , ,7, '11 ^ "' StaShSI."eanMftanff.^..-»n *tee%) ?*** ?£ <*-—1 •1"C mw thai country relegraph Editor — btriCKianafijf; ,>% Attention.* Tcaelwr liae«in«nt SwviM •nd I look forward.to following Pic^re Editor ^ohn ^*»gi«t»wt»t Public toraftomonov^ yolir Wipahm, ««alnat iiawtie® Science Editor • crigM of vo«7ro.bao? ckinpQt now and l «ad tli« ignorance from $ y... - i c.« y»,iw»trtygy >w-ISF Congratulations. ^ S"»° HENRY'BRASWELL Wy Worked my appointment ^f Site * liberal. Jack Suramerfield, to ViLtt«|i«kta, * •yite "' " --— -new Night eovorfos SMiai M. •ViCUFIfVlrtillId IWill •«,?> W . '• » m 0|S U M TOKTO, Mr 11—fflV-TTnltod "kUoh toolcslM* d»rW *»«,*» Ftt.twtai roaring into action morning. . Th The North Koreans sent three A call tor 20,000 army dx'aftees , Hexighey mid it will take about at the army's speedy use of the >th of Seoul. columns thrusting southward to­"at the earliest possible-date" sixty days to start delivering men draft despitean apparently bright^iGeneral MacArthur's communis ward, the Kum River line. Their went out from the defense departr under the draft. He said his agen­er trend in the battl*,o| Red*in^ )e said the North Korean invad-only gain,-reported -during the ment Monday, j" ^ cy could—if necessary—furnish yaded South Korea. tobk an unmerciful pounding morning was a five-mile advance Major General Lewis B. op to 300,000 men 'Within^i£nety tfeat.vo ire in tMs _ tho air, loosing «fa estimates onthe east flank, the communique shey, director of Selective Set* days. / y ' * r h#ve to have the men totanks ill fighting which still said. This sector is defended"by vice, told newsmen that»25'y«ai>-On Capjtol Hili» lawmakers gen-theoperationsuccessful," com« r­ sd Tuesday, • • South Koreaniorces. ^ '" ' IS?" mented Senator Taft (R-Ohio). [North Koreans kept up thepres-The Northerners on the Ameri­ 's "I had hoped they could ho ob*re on the American sector, the can front were last reported eight World Nm BrWb-. tained on A volunteer basis, but if*|mmunigue said, frut no decisive road miles north of the Kurt lliver they Can't the draft will have to Kajjii" and 20 air milej north df Taejont mue$: American headquarters 90 air :'The Defense Department Said in : miles'southof fallen Seouk i:, IS, SFstatement that the Theker forwarded ple^ for assistance of the Security Council in putting GefteralTHoyt S. Vandenburg. alr I The Soviet declare tionwas c6n-jo, J50 air miles northea^f of Tae-in stopping bombings of .Negro mm forces in Korea under General chief of staff, would leave Mon­ lined in a reply to a massage |on* changed hands twice and MacArthur and the UN flag was 5pft TJ,. N. Secretary-General weuhd up in the possession of the a "shameful fared" played out day night for Tokyo to confer Northerners. »chmdw1ut House leaders hoped to have Defdnse jit said that in view of the ab- circles of the United States in it Trunin's nouncement was issued that if th0 |nce of the delegate from (Com- order to justify their, criminal on President desk The aerial pounding the invad­ this week. ^ The huge measure draft call goes as high as' 300,* •mast) China at the Council meet- role as gendarmes in Korea and ers weretaking apparently .was representing the second install-000 men, he believes they can be ^ , the resolution could not have other nations of Asia." forcing the Northerners to bring nient of weapons designed to found without dipping ibto the * Eil force. "Thug ^there is being formed I Th*reply fulrther declared that their air force out of hiding. under the"flag of the UN a coali­bulwark defenses of non-Com Three Russian-made Yak jets munist nations already has passed k Only men aged 19 to 25 inclii^ solution had directed the use tion of imperialists dhd beasts of the Senate 66-0. he 0, N. flag to cover up "di-Were reported in.action. prey for the bloody suppression Bive may be drafted under,.the . aggression"-'.of the United ap^This was the first mention of of the Korean people," the paper present Selective Service Act^. W"tm. ites against7®B€ Korean people, jets m far hr the war. But it-did ' ' by Congress. The la*_"1 ' Westex iqmborei not spare the Communist ground says every American male must ^ |It said that' all this gnFes the pviet government a basis'to de forces from, a battering. g The Ho«m MONDAY in Wash­ fegiater on his. Id th birthday,jal- ScoiitsGet.Trij^ ire that the Security Council's It-appeared to be the first big ington killed President Truman's though he cannot be drafted ton* [solution was, in the first place, engagement for American forces. plan to create a .new department til he becomes Id. . As^tToSd$, Treotrf' Segal and, in the second place, Infantry was.s*jpported by tanks, of health, education and security. . , s l&fif V-At the time of the news' con* Instituted • direct -support* of artillery, and a withering aerial It adopted a resolution of disap­ENNIS.iiJuly 10—W)^-By ference, Hershey said he had j^o fmed aggression against the Ko-bannge froitti wairplanes which proval, 249-71,. That killed Mr. speculating in horned toads, two indication when, if, or how big i[an people. . knocked out numerous.Red tanks. Truman's plan to create the de~ Ennis Boy Scouts returned to­the draft calls would come. .(The U. N. resolution1 Friday day from the Valley Forge Na­ t* lived thei way for the appoint- tional. Jamboree with more _ 500 Post CardsReady of General Douglas Mac. money than they had when they A bur as commander of U. N. left. ,1 For Free Distribution in Korea. His appointment A third boy from Ennis broke Five «hundred post cards is Announced Saturday in Wash- even^ the trip, questing inforination on absented >n by President Truman.) ; When their supply of loads- voting from students'home, conn- Ml: & was -exhausted, Don Griffith,fties willbe -given aw*y tostu­ ^ * I ?4 |llanShivers Chooses . Bonal S?y. Jones and Garner den to -beginning Tuesday/^"at mass meeting" MavorHerbert Y. Cartwright of ------noon. < ' Dunkerley, Jr., bought from tj»e Economy Platform*^ Galveston, acting presidej&6£%f ^West TexasScoutsand resold at The campus^i&onservative far Property^Defense Association will [MISSION, July 40. ^ (ap)._ TPDA, said that the response to a profit. When the Westerners is sponsoring the postcards, Deo he held in the House of RepreK Tlconomy" •: will be. Governor the meeting indicates that a capa­caught on they upped the 'price Griffin, chairman, said Monday; lajp.Shivers'campaign, platform-sentativesi Thursdayt July i3, at city crowd willattend. Every coun* from 25 to &0 cents. Some toads but «»y students "r obtain the [ It will include ' economies-, of 10 o'clock to outline: a campaign ty is,expected to be'represented; resold for $2.50., -Ctt*dr an»e C&Op or*Hillsbetg*«, Hit major itemsi money, soil, to, continue the battle for Texas All school-superintendents,, coun? iter and human resources. ty judgjes?* membett of the legist tidelands. Goyernor JAIan Shivers, ["That platform covers a lot of lature, «nd mayors of Texas' cities Summer Texon Crossword Puzzle md,and I believe in it,*' the Attorney ^newd ' IPrice Daniel, were invited,>vernor . said Monday, night in andformer Attorney General Ro­ :if"The. peopk .of, Tex«» have 4® 'WacHOSS $Mealvaliies18.Firearmspeech prepared for statewide bert Lee Bobbitt, cl^irman of ,the awakened to the fact that theyi^dio delivery on the last dayof Tidelands Committee of the Slate have more at stake in the tide­ -y •? firatj?&rn». the Governor's ti 1 landsfi«^t tken just someoi^wells lAustr&L) languages „ unpr»cticc SToday't fticer ™; pal speakers. ; f 7;,; y, •1 • ' "~r— -m I 1 ±* « c_l> off the Gulf Coast," .said Mayor « Sharp Aleavmg 22. Hooked .. XWer !• S Cartwright. ''These lands-have b«->| _ spine ,• « ot • jt3. Malayan Itiifce lon^edto Texasformore than 10Q 10 A tusk 5. Affirmative ^tgather-",-;';^' -vote years, and if the federal govern­ment can take them it can take J? Small edible 7 Adrama^/ 25' Back; *• anything else in the interest of fish < 8 Reprove 27. iBefore national defense or whatever noi J»Prof. WV9*weff.* llpwWfR tioivhappens to strike the fancy -> e« -30. City fNe eommissions in the.Air For^e Re* 37 A day's M & serve may report to the S41rt Vol-march Jf®esm tt W W unteer Air Reserve Training Wing » Dispate! ,i* ^ wntation and ^Tiehof^ » ssr f ipfet. # mm "pi r% WiA.' ^ < 4 J --fs it Con •i-" fe'S Wt ftflUlV ' itWlh'Irttr of speed VA «b may eottt^t tientenit'^ .0Or \;«r lonel Nv'^he^«o«M»Mid^ ** i •»** ^' -i • J *r« ? , *±U p m „-m sfwl in mm R.'Svif aH K v\>.V sSS ' %*P i-*>T ^vT -s < WsSf#9a mpM•.sssi&t *^4i ;« &)&• FORMER UNIVERSITY SWEETHEART, Del Bradford bf Rbcfc ^rmgs is engaged to Edwin H. White of Jacksonville. The.wedding win be in early August. Miss Bradford is a senior law stuoent and. was elected Portia of the School of Law, Mr. White is a University III$dtoot of law graduate and a member bf Phi Delta Phi. V i *•• :•^r^irr^r-£ i'-— -jV-.t i 8 NewlStru<:tures ^ --flp. tip — -s» Boom on Campus The Univetatar'* building boom/The latest construction pro- - -going strong" this * week with Ject, a modern Journalism Build­weight permanent Structures—five ing, was started last week as workmen began preparing for ex­epartment buildings and three __cavation by S. B. Sticks Excavat­ ilassroom buildings—mushroom-Ujg'Compkny"of AusthT. %yky and ground leveling of the needed parking lot is ex-r <-wd to -be eompleted ia early iptember. Qrif^Jtfer* «nc«, Education Building, Uhi­ -Jle^odist *Cil at« h;meetings Mid, daily; through Friday swimming elaifees, ^ .Winnen'S "Gym.—Bayla Sheinberg In piano >~TexM Chtlatiaii u0\ . >Si»tton BaQ 81(>,f ^SO-~J>iseussiyoval can be gtfveh tiie building. Instead of metals, the soldiers la the armiwi. of Red China are awarded fountain pens. A soldier's heroism is recognized by the nam­feer of pens sticking up i« his VS ^"5*^7 heardofany aeefchittgaround t&e higher degree whUe Bott^l of Regents J»eforebecom-and doing the •i tW»«r ^ ing effective, for promotion at the ? stees, teaching research, d ad­ tfhe jux-yewr * ministrative ability?:!* A spokesman for th© Colte ,£:. '^fl^y-^-yly;K^it-frhftfc fftCtllll Jean Woolrich said,will especial-_ S A* $* ®*W», £eaj*. ^e 'dents, will register in Gregory'Gym, adults fa Women's Gym. Training for Women require* that each child be present for regis­tration.' Children must be at least Souhis program fails, It will not the climax, of educational pro­break up en the rocks of lofeal gress in this state, according to selfishness and greed, or upon the Dean L. IJ>. Haskew of the College barrier of sheer ineptitude on the of iJducation. -He spoke before parts of local school leaders," il-leaders Deatr Haskew said in speaking of he better if, the University had enough money to hire aQ men on the Gilmer-Aikin set-upr \ _ <<* -After the orientation a' the conference set up groups to stpdy'five pc^lenuu They aret 1. How has the Gilmer-Aildn UT gainstlpiel Dr. eluding round-TObia play versity associate professor termine Central Texas SO epponents « (2) Kriegspiel chess, ntithfO' simultaneously Sunday night in games," in which neitfa the finale of the all-day Central held In the Commodore JPerry 4 rnt. : ' " " • ot ^Te*si^ Df. St?phenson has been rated tops internationally in playing the game, by corres­ pondence. He will he the guest of honor at Austin's first major chess 'tournament, which Is ex­ ted to beeome sin annusl af• _ __ University players: arO eligible . Adults and t^vem^siudenlsttr Entries may 1»e for women, announced Monday. i»ith Dr,^ Peter Cranford, mm MM A "*0 OflSfVA ** --• -— phone 8-2579. ' Others on the tournament committee are Guiton M^ke, M<1 W£doa BpNren The tourhahitent Is free to hotii not ahaite the resentmt others who may object to promotions on research. Statements from other lte»bfthe faculty see: look upon fte argument as minor. ig^fi||| ­ • DeanBoner poihtea out the1 same arguments have peared at Harvard and M where the school president!nounced policies Similar to < of President P*int*r.Theycarried out these policies, he ties as a result Dfc!Painter and other men of • thee administration had Sommentr legislation worked in Its first]•of trial? What defects ap{ 2. What regulations atid ^ should be adopted to govern i transportation? . 3. What shourd be the Texas" Education Agenc 4. What are tine next be taken to advance Texas tion£ — -5. What policies should teacher tenure In Texas? 8 players and visitors. Starting at asks that anyone who has a S o'clock, It is divMed into; four usual set for tiie dfarplay ca fNurtts^ _ at the Texas student Pi <1) SJliminatioa matches^ fat* tions office, telephone 2-24 i&Ut if Sto-S r * _ sees his oppcyient's board. (S) Rapid transit cue which moves must be made j a prescribed time limit, as onds or 10 seconds. _ ' (4) Simultaneous Dr. Stephenson against Dr. Stephenson ia the favorite among local eoAipewhich includes such playeDr. Cranford, Consulting psoglst, who -, was Georgiachampion in X94l, and Dr. Gar^_jph^sidan, who nta the top locally.^All TeXis Association members have mailed invitations. . t v A-special attra^tioa nabiic.M4hf ;e*Wbit of va and unusual ehess seta, whose major hobby Is chess Street ThttrMUy Ct«^>A8«l!dttcatio Uhion patio. m iCMS mmmm mmm call* the roll and takes j^tei <&&•wafly get tiiiigardoiu^S^;'. jhgagement Jatie should check /With Babs Haworth, < "lta important that Everyone be V San Antonio to Robert ICrawte attended Texaa tH-acting atodent bodjr »«retary *°* there each time/' she added. : thertgi College in Seguin. the summer^r''tf^%fe-i: »«$££» Milstead of Abilene has This summer besides her dutie* f ^anaduncedvThe wedding will a; as secretary,~Babg is taking gov­ Mwt EfiwIwA Barne*, Buda, , September fr-inth< few jobs like taping copies of the ernment ajnd writing her junior [?ian Theological^miwry and* ^^-T'J^wUtarigfc. nggnd. fnr nwtpblymen, keep-tutorial course. She la a Plan If si to Mich., were married June 17. ilng 4 , scrapbook, distriTbuting major from Housiw.'^'&^'^v'kwss V; in Austin. ^ sh. The hride is.*seiiior.at tibe Uni-copies of all resolutions to, theIM^h Simins^ompleledB«r ^anp. versityand a member of the Home Noi one to -W UUt Dther year at the University. She deans, Daily Texan editor, -and' squeesee in twetaty hours of Economics Club and Cap add "*6et others who need them. '• '• at the Veteran's Housing Bu^eatf!;^:;-? ent "Its ,fun, though, an4 each week. In line with her hecre* 0«Ww is an assistant pro-it," she said. - T; tarial talents, she does ssor of civil engineering at the ^People have been teasing hen mi out. ing, filing, and keeps records, fhelor of business administra* University. ^ 1 about the short duration of the • She was elected to represent t . havef ftdegree from the University Assembly meetings this summer, Assembly on the Board of Sttt-^ \ F-S Ir; and '• month. He is a member of KI t Miss Mary Hope Morgan and The first meeting lasted about dent Publications for the summer,; ^ ,< xn vi pa Alpha, Delta Sigma Pi, anclrw lagraaa and Robert La* DouMna. Uni-. ^ ,, , , --v.^ Ir.Waii and tNr. TtMrtw Kstt ObmlMk versity »-stadents, were married 6t **« kfad ******** tor* important Angust, mi. tineas administration degree in Jr., were married June IS is in Sherman June 24. &>s emational tradefrom the -Vat- 2" w '"* * -. \ ' uia married June 24. : l£}ss:Pa*l»,-&a»-H^lwa'of Dal­ rhe bride, an instructor in the ,. Mrs. Keeble received a bachelor las and J. D. Dan of Santa Annapartment. of Home' Economics were mairied 3Pune l7. The bride of arts degree in history and will the past three years, received achelor of science degree from is a graduate of Arlington State be a member of Stephen P. Austin Something new has been added Members of the summer steeR»,.:'\% !"•J*-' 1 College and attended the Univer­Junior High School faculty in Gal­fe the Friday Fr»lic, Tommy Rod ing committee for the "Y" are *?* University and a master's de- J* veston this faE. sity. Dunn.is a student at the Uni- man, chairman of the Free Dance 'Rhoda McKnight, Belva Buekneife in home economics from Co* Keeble, a chemistry major, is ibia University. She is a mem- Committee, lias announced. Ed; YVost;' and Alex Cox. Chait>l?v­ now a student at.the University \ V2f of Delta Gamma sorority and A floor show of variety acta man of-the committee will be a»* School of Medicine in Galveston. Junior League of Austin. Hisk Mary Jeanne Brooks, and using , campus talent will be pre­nouneed at the Tuesday meeting; ;" & ,'^lk Vs"! Emerson is a graduate of Tkma* Harris Sbu^ were re­ sented at the weekly Frolic Friday, A skit written by Ed Frost will ­ '. Ms^i%¥!^ro^l were' 'M " " p&fm l>y MS— C*tlwrittt P«e» and Ray attended SMU. The bridegroom is of•mm. the show. It will be presented ^ \r:y -•ijr;-.^ ^ r.'. . .. -. . cttyftg dentistry In Austin. • uw[fiife fre­affiUated wkh Phi Kap^i Si'gma Miss Luckett was «V New Oeeanquently, wear light or pastel col­and Tau Beta J*i. -• House, Swampecott, Mass, attend--Teaaa CUbflw' FaSewsh^iored elothen, and above aU, keep Duld be avoided. K-, -.« rf-w ^ national annual conveh-meet Tuesday evening yotir' mind occupied ho that you -A^Atiib^al#per. in Sutton Hf II-210. -. ^ , gk won't have enough time to be* M&S&G££IJSPS'SSASTTS * Ifoth^red ter ^he hwk.''1 = -4.V A Lk* j2L£SL»^*»-vm# >let» •$ they Ibave a ike some jpe^ple nauseated.; ' The bride received a bachelor MiMAfiHMricon of arts d«gr«$ from the U®i^er ring the summer as ihs hodjr tea much of its moisture due to rfei**liott» -ajj*; eon«nlie^ f *Sk* HftdenK hmm h** ' VPS**** X8A* *** iter should, he-cooV btot it Ctixtoun QM^l Ka^ K«PPa Gammf, Joan-Is hx onei of twwitybfour irMxen ctu- A%U Noll sai^ not to oterdo fanU-^in twenty. coU««ea ^ «e Hie nbathing, eicia^ttft ~ wjftrf-a.ta ,«lw «Mln4 1MIiMissWestJexq CEPT SATURDAYS _ Of "Mitt kidy AA-editoYid Wie Ha* featu^, GiM Swtf^ • „ «1Hy Mwentioii^; sesaiflu?: i etpamrhfa* /.!•-*—^ CmtM* ' 1 lad#- rfalied AwarAi, abo. w«ir given .nine ? tiretyiniaieAtilwni NIGHTS,* TO? Pi 11 i Yf r ? V> i yM« fAlbert Qillis, assistant profea-Symphony Orchestra,^ and • was strings, will ;giVir » vl«riU> 4ri oncert" Tuesday evening, alt Pacific String Quartet. t ^0 o'clock in Recital Ball of; ' Miss Harder^" instructor ; in " m-Bt PAT BOMAR ' 7^ Ifr. Norrla edntlhttedF^ e Music. Building. He Will be piano,, holds a G. Schirraer medal : "Life isi full of little problems," Oi course, in eaeh prodttctionaccompanied on the plana by for musicikQBhip. She received so the saying goes; and according there are many problems which,Verha Harder, instructor in her bachelor of music degree from to Bobert Norris, assistant pro­must be solved fw the rfyjw Jo j)e apisno. t£% ggfe#. Illinois Wesley&n 'University. Jj, ^ fessor drama, so is television pro* *success,' he |T Mr,' Gitlfe^W * member d'l^e She has studied under Gay Ruction.#!Vi; ' For example,'nivep»ity String—Quartet, and MsleCt Httffh B«(fpy JT-y«iia 'wig be show* Ay*!* icfcVT^ Hoffman-Behrendt a n ^||Georg TV Sunday evening, July 28, fromfact that we,do not have the equip* •Bfeftram;T l«» appeared in, a. 7:16 ito 8:80 o'clock, there were .e&ncert. "TEe ' prog^tf -wiU include ment at hahd which we need to the problems - of cloqd* —.* . ^'Sonata in 6 Major," by Bach; work with/' he said. "It is hard ^Kj5p>> He was graduated from the and . shewing movements of the "Sonata for Viola and Piano to obtain naturalness s.in TV ~vsJuiliiard School of Musitf and JCfe raft o%the Mississippflliver,There Opus 11, Number V by winder showi" jfcceived both* bis ' bachelors ' and was also the problem of changing M, *.1 mith and f:* .i.ll, • I variations. Mr. Reyes captured the while the piano lias a most, fan- IS?0 Dr. Jones Elected beauties' and intricacies of this 4»atic rhythmic passage; Mrs. Joan THE HUCKSTERS _ toiie poem throughout the presen-Ryan accompanied excellently ~1ni Clark Gabl* ^ tation this difficult rolfel Fraternity Head •M D«bardb Kerr To balance the program, two Kfef numbers appeared. The Corelli G«org« Rait Virginia M.y. "Sonata in A/' known for the mid­and author, was elected national dle movement in an arrangement president of Phi Mu Alpha Sin-" for strings by Pinelli, produced fonla, professional music fratern­ Ma Sfieinberg SPTflKEB rOH EVERY C A a delectable first entrance on the ity, at the national convention in pirogram. Henn Barraud's "Sona­Cincinnati, Ohio,. Sunday.tina" displayed the Wwk1 -Composer of several choral com­ Iff In Student Recital young Frenchman who has easy positions and author of some Bayla Sheinberg, piano student melodic invention, veering away sixty magazine articles, and three from Fort Worth, will give a jun­from the slick, motorized Milhaud text books, Dr. Jones is also m ior recital for bachelor of music school of composition. faculty advisor for the University degree Tuesday afternoon at 4 -The violinist and his accompan­Cultural Entertainment Committee o'clock in Recital Hall. -• -ist received warm applause from a and is director of the A *• and has been Soloist with thej»ll-: played, the three-minute composi­made by the Rochester Civic; 0r­ j:hestra. ­sClty orchestra there., ' tion Tuesday, and the Chicago Symphony, Thursday. Guest con­•••"-A-group -of short -pieces-for ductor f at-both • concerts^ was violin and piano and..# piano pre­Tiyouttfor Play Engene Ormattdv. lude by Mr. Kennan will be pub­ tegin July13 k jW'J » * sources of the flute, "Night Soli­ Tryouts for "ttdies, of the loquy'^ is , recorded , by. RCA-M*. Kennan studied at the.Wis-, QUCC/V Jui*y/' Experimental Theater ,prod­Victor» with D% Howard Sanson consin Observatoryt the :Universi- Km ty of uction to be given ill the Theater-conducting the Eastman-^chester All th* PtnwUtiw tM *' In-The-Round August 14 through Symphony Orchestra, Made A* Twenties Romp 18,' will -begin July 18, Loren receivefr hls bachelor^s and mas­ |Mr, Kennan .wrote the piece in A March of Tim* Featar* Winship, chairman of the Depart-' ters degrees in music. He has fo weeks in 1986. /That ye*§ THE GOLDEN TWENTIES taught,at Kent State University Y ment of, Drama has ^announced. ^ aim • ^ fu Ohio and Qhio State Univer­ "Anyone Ih the j/niversity is PEOEMtAOENTAT sity. He joined the muinc faculty i»cv -eligibfe to tryout for a part in Hydraulits LabProject ':Of Hie |«ay/' said Mr. Winship. To B#on VakoAutHn ' *v V < _ J C'lPSTOC *mv Scripts fear the play>.%re avai­ C»»r|> Moetgoweijr able in the office of Deparfement ^i--plojeet-l«r fee developmentmse^AKmAJJL: of Drama Mdi of a hydraulics labo»tory, to be ivcolmr «• B«tldTtfg 208.— located on Lake Austin, ^s bten vgjggfetf 4Cartp-isw4r' has a fairly large cast. It will be Playingin E iS>7A'S/7~y directed by Bryle Cass, assistant tRatbboM professor of drama. the BQenery as the e' the raft and went ash -Making clouds )i background was the most 4i of these tasks to solve,-Mr, j&0m students to tmake clouds, ' various reasons mosfcof thei -noft'^e used. "Onemethod which-l^sd to counted was that of s tion, that is, taking moti tures of clouds and then ing thehi onto the back scenery in the studio. This method could, not 1 because they could -not fi* able pictures of'clouds. After trying several otl thods, the group finally to paint clouds on a large di a black background, and th< one of the two, cameras , jt A»VW* «• I* -| ii the/ characters. Later, the wiU fade out and then^bol er4s will be focused on tl J^This vslll nofcjbe notice the audience, as it will 1 fectly re|uu>nable for the pass from under the clou reach* a point,where the skj would be clear/' said Mr. , To give the effect that t was moving, Mr; Norris 1 characters on -ti»e raft ground. To provide a.change?when the cast goes ashoi parts' of the same' seen ide ba^kgrow^d scenes were moved. This fective without;confusing diettce, Mr. Ndrris said. By placing muslin raft and then catching pj it, the rippling effect of ^issippi River was obtai Norris explained.^. *fWe use music as a b« and as a bridge betweenl .The musjc is The Mi Suite" and the "Msri Suite,** he said, Student Group Nr Plays Wednes( A Wind-Chamber ^ Musi *e'rt will ^giver afternoon, at 4 .o'clock in :|btoESEliii Merftbers'of the group aire Nelson,flut^; CharlesWiley m Naomi Kilgore* clarinet; Waltrip, bassoon;-.and Scoggins Jr., Franch horn. Also Fred Ju^kln, alto hone; Marion Griffith, teno M|jjP phone; Keliton-Katx, *r William McCullar, -trond^oa Lowell Meister, .piano. The' program includes timento Number IS/' by "Suite for Woodwind Quin' Philip Jamesr ^Two Pieea Charles Wiley? and "Pie Pia^o ahd 8far Instrumen Leonard Roseman. . J! 4i! 'Roughtbod'toMox Skill flaynighi at j^e open-«ir the . \Starrilif John Iceland, Robert Sterling. it is. John Ireland, >fho gets son with intenjfion of * •* «' * *• ^ S2s Tirx/is yfr , TBfELMA JOftPQfj ??: aJife' Starts Wfdaeadavf MOON AND SIX PENCE : sitS&T//V a is nofcjbrted on the mer entertainment Progj»in,admission to "Ladies of the Jury'?will be free t^ anyone who has paid the summer entertainment fee. -+* •> .«j--t r speaks:a more univer­sal language tiian peac«. The Sikl" ' ~~ z*m _ ,es, 35 more than tbe raembdrsbip T>f the United Nations. It nftea 81 languages in the University, CoJl^re heeding, fii^t proposed the tory hi 1&46. Tent«tive plans call ss.'At,'^st^r dent of 4he association. Dr. Byyen *n* VM* Cottmgham is secretary-tri "Other. director* are J, Twt$jr > > and Marguerite Chapmar England. gfee&at theepen-air thei1 The >o invade; w**m *o'coHect ipiuiit^re Si wl spheroidal" dent.from Hastinai, . sdaughter, biit After ^erse« masters degree Su^da; their pj^in fail*. > ^^ i-; aX 4~**9mk tn> " ~ " * '** for $*m -*• , -^Ass&Tis® Igsjlll