£<* tv \ •4^* j'JSi UMplMcGuttCII |'| -A *'*•::B SSSW ' UJs-sMr; Ifi • • -'SS®' ;••'Jfcjfcsl'•• " ' . , • ­ >».f-'?' • r.; 7:"£s*f73 M»*\."&vS?. 't<5. SS^N • Jlfei* ^SfS Flrtt Cof/toi o u f h * 25'th" • Six Pages. Today "HCW3N By Mildred klessel . . . "Mr. Method'' who has served i* * Kit cretary of the General Faculty i * #tired lam week. Dr. Milton R. lutsch, chairman of theDepart; of History and professor of X ;* glish history, signed the "fate­minutes last Tuesday for the time. .•' ' F. Lanier Cox,, professor of The Selective Service has extended the deadline ten days business law, was elected to serve- test date, Thursday,. July 12, has been set aside loathe x as secretary from September 1, Ann Courter for submitting applications for its forthcoming college apti­ lnation. Brig. Gen. Paul L. Wakefield, state draft director, ' 1951,-until September 1, 1952. tude tests, the Associated Press said Monday. Chosen Ranger emphasized that it is not necessary for University student* "It is difficult to give a char­Maj. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director of Selective Service, to return to their home boards to apply for the test. Applies^W.-, acter sketch gf Dr. 'Gutsch be­ * Managing Editor said all applications must be postmarked riot later than mid­ltms are now available at the Austin Board, 304 East Fifth7 " cause he ,ia so enormous," said 5 W -* night Friday, May 25. The previous deadline was [Tuesday. •street. , Brad Byers, graduate journal­ Dr. W. P. Webb", professor of .Along with'the application extensionr according to ~Asso= a ... ism student, was named itnanaging history. Dr. Gutsch has a genius ciated Press, the agency , announced; "the booKs have been for administrative details, for he editor of* The Daily Texan Mon­the country. Hogg Auditorium has Sen deS^ated* afSe closed' for the first test which will be given on May 26. Re­Austin testing center. - ' ­ can go into a list of figures and day. Ann Courter, junior journal­ maining applicants, will be tested Saturday, June 16, or Sat­ complicated details and put them To 1^ eligible for thetest, an applicant must: ­ Dr. MILTON GUTSCH ism major, was chosen managing urday, June 30. To .accommodate persons whose religious : into perfect form and not miss Dr. F. M. COX , J> aLregistrant who intends to request occupational'^ editor of the Ranger. beliefs prevent their taking the test on a Saturday, a special is&id. deferment as a student. anything important," he • including 'ahs,' 'uhs,' and various their football team—even through „ , The positions are for the 1951-52 As secretary of the faculty he pauses to enable students to take the rocky seasons ,of the last de­ 2), 3e under 26 years "of? ^ has systematized and put the pro- school year. Selections were made notes," he stated. cade., Dr.,* Gutsch in his jovial ag^ at the time„ he takes cedures of 'faculty meetings into "During the last lecture before manner does not mind the teasing by the non-editorial board of Tex­test.. r / the form attempted by the late the Christmas holidays each year he receives as'his old school takes as Student Publications. 3) Have already" entered ^ President & Y. Benedict. Min­Dr. Gutsch told about life in med­its • weekly lickings every Satur­Texan managing editor is a new college, or made plans to cottf ­utes have indexed so perfectly ieval universities and sang Bongs day during football season. position which Vilue'college education. ' that it is possible to find th^ written by students during that > r-Included in his good tastes is replaces the pre­ (The applicant heed not b^ in a / made—even sent associate editor. Byers will be day « motion was period," said Mrs. Coral H. Tullis, hfs manner of. dress. On the hot­ four-year college, but hia entire 'JAf it was ten or, fifteen years responsible for staff management assistant professor of history. test July day he remains cool and course 'must be satisfactory. for ­ news boverage., He is at pre­ ago. The spirit of the University fresh in his perfectly blende^ and Bated on Anociated Prett iting ifc'campus, but that alumni, athletes at member schools. transfer credits a sent a news edit9r and has served The faculty committee of the Of to degree-".;; He maneuvered faculty legis­of Wisconsin, his alma mater, has clothes—and gives-students and such as"the Ex-Students' Associa­The only putside aid an athlete gninting institution,) ' as night sports editor and editori­Southwest Conference Saturday lation and planned the agenda not been lost by Dr. Gutsch. He chancc! to call 'him tion or Longhorn Club, or friends receive is from his parents,• associates no al assistant. revised its rule on financial aid £o may All students who. are eligible * for.'each meeting. Opportunity to remains an ardent follower of a baggy-looking prof. of the athlete outside the school guardian, or any other .person up­ Miss Courter, now Texan edi­athletes and voted to retain last can do so. ^ . are urged to take the.deferment present ideas at the right time only those on whom he is dependent for sup­ year's rule allowing was given by Dr. Gutsch in the torial assistant ' and book editor, It also prohibits "try-outs" by port, .according to the ruling. • test. Local boards have been ad« football games/jWhich are sellouts methodical way in which he man­has been night society editor of vised by Selective Service headrS to be.televised. ipulated the program. the Texan And a contributor to the quarters to defer collie students Ranger. The. committee, also abolished TSP Denies Breach Parliamentary rules have never all pretense of the athlete working who are either in;rthe Upper portion ' Russ Ketsten and Bobby Jones Dead Week Is Here bothered Dr. Gutsch,. who has ior his keep, reported the Asso­ of their class, or who make a grade were chosen last week ae editor of kept faculty meetings t very or­ ciated Press. the Texan and associate editor of °f 7° or better on the test. Tliii derly. In Stahl Contract During the Rainey dispute, Dr. the Ranger, respectively. Rowland The Conference rule has been rule has not been made manda- For Party or Study Wilson was unopposed for Ranger that an athlete had a definite as1 tory, but the majority -of local Gutsch exhibited great skill in All charges of breach of con­on thfe 1950 Cactus.'. editor in the spring elections. signment of 'work although no boards are expected to follow it.; .^getting each faction presented. I Tie conducted the matter with tract in a $46,600 damage suit filed In the answer and cross action, school was required to make him By HANK GILLIAM day when it starts Tuesday. Some -Students qualifying on both Publications denies • work more than the time he might by Ottis .Stahi Studio against Tex­ Student that standards, cla^s standing and toafc such fairness and objectivity that In case you haven't, been told students s%y that the main advan­ as Student Publications, TnC. Were it ever breached the contract made have away >from his studies and yet, time tage of Dead Week is that it im­grade, strengthen he gained respect and admiration with Stahl and says that, on Summer Texan athletic participation. that-unique known as will their from all concerned. described Saturday as.:being com­the Dead Week has arrived. presses on them the fact that chance for deferment. lie chief pletely untrue in an answer and, contrary, it fully performed all The work rule was the point on final examinations are only counsel lor Selective Service-ia seven "Dr. Gutsch has done all in Dead Week, many cross action filed by Coleman Gay, the obligatibns' of the agreement. ing Issue which the Southwest Conference to students days away. Finals start Tuesday, emphatic in stating that ai^at^4 ^ his power to aid the University will just mean more time to party. TSP attorney, in Judge Charles 0. In the cross action, Student Pub­ differed with the National Col­May 22nd. dent qualified for deferment, bat "i and proved his interests during For the conscientious student how­ feetts's 98th District Court. Date lications, which publishes the legiate Athletic ^Association's now refused it by his local > the time, they were needed," said ever, it will be a boon. Dead Week wasi set aside'by for hearing the suit has not been Daily Texan, the Ranger, and the To Be June 5 extinct Sanity Code. should immediately ' appall' Dr. W. J. Battle, professor emeri­ This week, dreaded by most stu­the University in 1904 as a week set. • • • • Cactus, supd for recovery of The Committee's ruling on TV board's MflOA.'to. classical welcomed "to give students an abundance of tus of languages. Dr. $250.46 in unpaid advertising fees , The Daily Texan will put out dents, by some, will Gutsch was one of the v leading ,Stahl Studio . filed . the 'suit is not in line with the general celebrate birth-time to prepare properly for their its forty-seventh figures in organizing thes Faculty against Student Publications April owed it by Stahl for ads placed its last regular issue. Sunday with NCAA ruling which .provides that finals." Since then it has become Relative scholastic standing' of M .18 and alleged that TSP broke pro­in the Texan from February, 1950, the Summer Texan to begin pub­each school can televise one home a period for relaxing and "getting students will be determined by th« Council and haS served as secre­ visions in a contract made with to February, 1951. ; • lication June 5. game and one away, but the NCAA in the mood." grades made in the. first and sec­tary. since its organization^ the studio June 2, 1949, to da work, Mr. Stahl alleged in his suit The Summer . Texan will be has specified that special dispen­New Bar Officers ond semesters of the current Most ex-students remember Dr. A student who really wants to ^hat. an article published in the available on an Optional basis for sation may be obtained in line with demic year only. Gutsch for the lectures he pre­"catch up" will, have the oppor sented in History 4, His. elass Texan, which said that excessive $1 for both terms at registration local conditions. " tunity during Dead Week, for pro­ met tmce a week in regular ses­prices were Jieing asked for re­for summer school students, Ken The faculty committee's new fessors are prohibited from giving prints for Cactus . pictures, led Roberts, circulation manager, said puling on work for athletes states Bill sion and the third meeting was hour quizzes, make-up exams, or people^ to believe Stahl Studio was Monday: It will be a tabloid, is­a boy can have .room, board, tui­ in the form of a quiz section. tion, and $10 • • Incoming' officers for . 1951^52 assigning extra worlc for studenta. When the classes grew to about charging excessive prices. sued .on Tuesdays • and Friday? institutional fees, were installed by the= University Qirl PT students trill , be. al­•mifr per month for incidental expenses 735 in the early '40s it was divi­ Since Mr. Stahl had been adver­through August 24. such as laundry.' The individual Bar Association Monday evening lowed to attend • "Good Listening m­ ded into three sections—which is tising in the Texan as t)ie Cactus -Deliveries will be made to Uni-' in Texas Union. Hour," a program' of recorded mu­ school is to determine if he is re­ photographer, his suit alleges^ he the procedure now being followed. versity dormitories and offices quired to work for it. New officers are: W. T. McNeil, sic at the Women's Gym, each figures his reputation was injured and hoarding houses in the area Thursday and Friday, They will, e Department of Botany "Dr. Gutsch's History 4 lec Salary Petition Teeth were put into the com­president; John Bevers, vice­ tures were very complete and he to the degree of $10,000 by the between Nineteenth and Twenty-mittee rule on athletic recruiting president; Bart Mauzy, secretary; be allowed to miss regular classes opened tta*J new experimental •: outlined the -course so perfectly To Be Considered Texan article. seventh Streets-and San Jacinto by declaring a definite penalty. and Jerome Johnson, chairman of in order to hear these recorded greenhouse and controlled-envir> that every word was important, • Mr. Stahr also figures he was arid Rio' Grande. the honor council. sessions. onment labs Friday. Many .species, The College Classroom Teachers The recruiting rule, the same a* said Dr. Joe B. Frantz, assistant injured to the extent of $20,000 Students who will npt be at­NCAA's, prohibits a school from Two , resolutions were To aid in "keeping. the boys of grasses and experimental plant*'' passed. professor of history. "His lectures Association will meet Tuesday at because .of the alleged use in the tending the summer session /but paying expenses of an athlete vis-The first one unanimously com­awake," some fraternities are hav­were exhibited at an open house > were filled with so mueh .back­4 p.m. to discuss ^e appropriation 1950 Cactus of pictures he claims who wish to have the Texan mended the outgoing officers for ing free coffee for their members ceremony. . ground that during the years he bill on higher education. Jerre were of inferior. quality taken by mailed to them may take subscrip-Work done .during the 1950-51 each night during Dead Week and . Whaley, ehairman • - developed y* method of delivery Williams, professor of law", will other photographers, which seemed tions for $1, the same rate as for school year.' The second resolution Finals.v ~ of the Department and director: to reflect on Stahl's skill as a Aa usual, the movie houses, Bar­ residence students, Roberts said. °f the Plant Research Institute* " present an analysis of the bill. commended Dean W. P. Keeton photographer. ton Springs, night clubs, pool For those who live in Austin and1 of the Law School, the faculty, said that. theVe is not another " Sunday's . Texan erroneously halls, and drive-ins are preparing But other points'are not item­wish xnail subscriptions the rate aifd the administration officers for unit j of " its kind in the United iaht Awards stated he would discuss the loyalty ized, the answer states, and "the will be Jft.50 because of the dif­Will Pick Sixty their cooperation with student ac­for .a sharp increase in business areoath pending before the Texas defendant is 'unable to ascertain ference of in-county postal rates, tivities.' afc many hard-working students ; from the alligations in the peti­ v ' go out to "take a. break" from the E x perimenta conducted Legislature. he explained. Applications for membership in Among the unfinished projects with many types of range grassea, " tion, how much damage, if any, — trials and^tribulations of" English -Go fo Two UT'ers They will also consider whether plaintiff (Stahl) claims to the .'51 Rally Committee were discussed were plans for a student Composition or Analyt. legumes, a*d other plants to find' ­the executive committee of CCTA have given out at a meeting Monday in fund for the Bar Association. Stu­better strains for stock feed apd, The names of two University pt sustained from other causes," Summer School Students Waggetfer Hall 401. basic agriculture should petition the administration Which would total^ $46,600. " dent' help in 'making suggestions different eli« Texas students have been added to B. R. Barfield,"chairman, an­mate in other regarding salaries for the next bi-To Register June 5-6 concerning the new Law Building areas Texas and " the < list of those receiving Ful- ennium, Dr. David L. Miller, CCTA Further, the TSP answer states, nounced that ail students inter­Were urged. The group decided to states. Many of these experiment^ . bright Scholarships. They are Miss the only breaches of contract were Approximately 4,000 applicants ested can obtain applications at president, said Monday.. made by Stahl Studio and not by continue; current policies,, and to *re conducted tivous^i the plant Marion Mitchell and LeRoy T*- for prerregistration were received the Student Association office in invito all students to submit writ­research bureau in Chicago. HM Oehler. Miss Mitchell will study Student Publications. by the May 10 deadline, W. B. the Texas Union. He said that a There was agreement ing? to student editors for the Abnormalities are produced' oy no that fjn France and Oehler at the Uni- Shipp, assistant registrar, report­meeting would be held later m the Texas Law Review. f Versity of London. " Stahl should have a monopoly "on ed. week to begin actual plaiis for treatment of some of the planta to Pick • ; all pictures of every 'kind" pub­ Although a ligle better, than m their infant stage. Such tre^t^Jf, The scholarship was established card tricks at the first or second Studenta will receive hecesary ? lished in the i960 Cactus or that Girt* Ead P.T. May 18 hanfway through, the cohstruction ment produced abnormal growtik' jby the United State* Goverment football game next fall. ' . informatieh by. mail giving, them in "the first few generations. no pictures should appear in the of the. new Service Building On Ifor graduate study under, the Ful- Membership will. be limited to ifay 22 is the last day for girls a time assignment to register at Ibright Act of 1951-1962. yearbook except those taken by 60, ai|d will be decided by infor­to clean out lockers in the Wo­Twenty-fourth Street near Waller :; • Many • varietiesv>of ;tradescant^i|i him, the answer states. Gregory Gym, June 5-6. mation given on the applications, men's Gym. -After thait time, ar­Creek is slightly behind schedule. are studied in the laboratory Those students who are award­ Entries in the annual Miss Aus­ After contract* was "There will probably be about of reasons of increased the first Barfield said.-. ticles will be ' confiscated."„ One the is that the cAuse the chrome^'"" ed the schohuphips will receive tin contest, sponsored by the Aus­ made, a second . was drawn up 7,000 summer school students," Plans are being made'which will P.T., classes will continue underground springs that hindered some size of this plant, and Jt' IS,609 tax-freefor the scholastic jrear Df study abroad. The stu tin Junior Chamber of Commerce, which amended )>erta of the first said Mr. Schipp. ^ • create a more efficient planning of through May , 18. The last two construction last fall have cropped is considered a classical plant la are still being taken in the lobby and allowed Cactus editors a freer Last year thtere were'approxi­up in a new spot, aaid M. A. Jen­genetics and cyUh>% lents, however, will have to pay card tricks. Also, the Committee days, designed as "Good Listening the study of of the Driskill Hotel. -< (travel expenses and tuition and hand in the jtse of pictures, TSP mately 9,000 students enrolled hopes to have improvements in the Days," will programs of good sen, construction superintendent. logy. ' . IMaiihin month, Miss Austin claims in Jt* answer. • during both semesters. "We'should have it cleared up |wi}l have to buy their own books. manipulation of the cards. music. Experiments in genetic and ^ will be crowned at Disch Field, as by Saturday," he said, adding that cytology are carried out undnr ^ a special feature accompanying the . building will be completed J the ^direction of Dr. Walter- ' an Austin Pioneer baseball gainer Snores-— as scheduled on September 1, Brown, cytologist for the Plaxitl-P She will enter competition for 1951. UT Regent Miss Texas, and the right to re­A shortage of bricklayers is present the Lone Star State in holding up construction slightly^ Panhelieaic IdtoU F«ad . the Country's top beauty festival* he continued. There #little ac­ ']>:.3Pinap.-the",secohd: (Dies in Houston^ the Miss America Pageant at At­ tivity late Monday afternoon. Council hB8ivot^;,tO-jte»^''-t||i^i • lanticCity, -September 3-8. Designed to increase efficiency Services will be Held at Hous­ moneym»de from:^-V«ari^:e^»# To. the 1901-52 Miss 'America of University operation and main­ ton Tuesday for Dr. Walter H. Daily tTexan awards'were pre ; Also Grossman, Herby Betty Willett. '• ' , Bud Howe, Wayland nival in ii fund for » '6rs^P and thev; sixteen other finalists Joan ' < Pilcher, tenance, the Service Building will Scherer, 70, former University Rented at the annual pally. Texan Herbsleb, Johnnie Human,' Billy amphitheatre. Tim will be addw -'' will .go $26,000 in. scholarships. Certificates of Service' were Dorothy Pinkerton^ Elliott Pooley, Kouse offices and agencies of the Regent who died in Houston Sat­ picnic mt Green Shores , Suhday. Jenkins, Boboy Jones, iennilu Jean Rembold, Shirley Riley, Bar­to th«s $7,590 profit made ; Qualifications to compete in a given to Ray Alford, Jerry Bish­auperintendent ofutilities, storage, urday night. He had been pro-Special e'ditor awards were pre­Kelly,, Mildred Klesel, Marianne yeftTa: ^ local, key city, or state congest bara' Itubenstein, Walter Rundell and garage facilities. Composed of . fessor of oral medicine at the Uni­ sented to Ronnie Dugger and Morris, Howard Page, Pat Pig-op, Sam Blair, Carolyn Busch, Jr., Bob South, B«rt Tippett^ connoted with;the Atlantic City three floors, the building will eost versity's school of dentistry in Charley Trimble, Daily Texan ed­man. Louise Cole, Alan Dabney, Watts tyanda Turnley, W. B. Wallace, -Perma­ contest are $760,900, financed fTom ^Houston for 25 years. 1. Contesunt mfst'lje'a resident itors for the year. Evelyn Rheubush, Charles Rich-Davis, Jo Ann Dickerson, James Jerry Wilson,. Joel Kirkpatrick, nent Fund bond proceeds. 'CTf | Dr Scherer was appointed to Receiving,gold awards for, their ey, Bruce, Roche, -Siman Rubinsky, Anna Dye, James Ejiger, Charles Lewis, Gitta ;Lockenvitz, The. building an of city, state, or territory in Dodd, covers area (the Board in 1946,, by Governor which local contest -is held six work as associate editor and edi­Betty Segfel, Sidney^iegel, OrlandJ and Jim Elder. Amy Jo Long, Pej»y Ldtd, James of 168-by-118 feet-wit^ an in­m -Coke Stephenson to fill a vacancy torial sissiatanta were RUM Ker-Sims, Al Ward, Jack Weaver, and Also Mary Glade,: Jeff H*ncoc& Lusk, Mary Let Mitchell, Bascom months prior to the contest. Thia terior delivery yeard 98-by-124 sten, Jim Bob Gallaway. Ann »r RUSS K^RSTSlt eaused by the death of Dr. Jud- Nelson, and Greta Nissen. -, on a "sloping site so rule is waived only for contestant* feet. It"-ia eon Taylor. The Senate failed to whose residence is out of city or Courter, and Bob Sadler. : The Sigma Delta Chi'award for that a ground floor is placed in Every Sunday Jack Grei •' Silver awards, for ap«eia! .edit­ eonfirta hia reappointment to a state, bufc who is a college or uni­the outstanding graduate jour­president of Twin Pinee ing end writing, went to Mary full te^m in ,1947. versity student in a city or. state _ . •'fr-W'V*--nalist for the year went to Charlie instructs all members' to wear Ann BeaUnuer, Brewer, plan -Lewis. AI Ward also received the Co-Op WIN Announce T^The first Texan to headAmeri- where, and .when the contest is Airt and tie-because r Warren Burnett, Brad Byers, Bet­ can Dental Association* Dr. Scher- held. She may-not compete in honorary journalism1 fraternity's to have 'gHests today for lunch.* ty Cardwell, Marjorie Clapp; June; , Marianne Morris and Martha $200 scholarship by^_the women's award for the outstanding begin" Rebate Percentage Soon ex; had practiced dentistry .in than official prelimi­ "•'.SV-* 'i -Several of the-gtqr* tedk*. more one Fitzgerald, Ken Gompertz, and honorary ' Houston..since 1900. He .was on -' McCarty were honored with spe­Journali^ ' fraternity, ning male journalism-student. Number and amount of rebates literally and wore only 4-bow nary contest each year. „ . Estea Jones. . cial awards by; Theta Sigma Phi an award that is made annually to Granville Price, associate pro* the Board of Directors for the Contestant must be single, are being; computed By th§ staff together with drea* Murt Also^'Jean Lipacomb, Marian at its scholarship tea Monday af­an outstsinding sophomore giirl in feasor of journalism and sponsor of the University Co-op: The laat into swim trunks. ; Houston Chamber of Commerce never having been married, .di­ Pendergrass, James Rech, Bob ternoon In thd Journalism Li­journaliam.g • and warf a past president of the vorced or had a marriage annulled. of Sigma Delta Chi, was presented day for' turning in receipts waa Feeling gay, the hoyi m ^American Academy of Periodon-Contestant"nVfist be high Seaman, Fairfax Smith, Tom To-brary. * Theta Sigmsr Phi recently pre­-a belt. Saturday. ga^> through the Capitol I a ney, Ken Tooley, and Claude Morris waa Awarded the o6l graduate.— sented itd -annual freshman schol­Other awards .of Sigma Delta E. C. Rather, director of the /down Congress Avenue, over to \ i.v .wi'iu; i|DT ) njj|in »|i li l IU'li'l'H U i in iV VillarreaL • . [tional identification brace­Chifor graduating*journalism stu­Co-Op, estimates it will take tiie Split «xid *& Uutifcto 4. Contestant's age of S^ptem« - Bronxe award*''"W«e/friap{e^ arship to Beverly Baker, high 1. 312K'a PaMisli T«m. let for bein^ tiie outstanding be­dents with ^national scholastic staff about a week to complete ft I* 1951, „-m»st be not les^ to Leoh Barron, Bora Blanton, ginning girl journalist. She was school boy r from Brownwood, average in the highest ten per Journalism 312k Studenta wrote 0»n 18 nor moA thin 2$ year* the figures on the gross value of J^hn Buaer, Dorothy Campbell, choaen on the basis of high grades* who will *Uend ihe University cent went tti June Fitsgerald, the receipts turned in and to de­what to do hi.case of a Jhold »nd edited this edition of The 5. Contestant must be of good Chambers, Jim Cockrum, attitude toward her journalistic ]n*xt year. Peggy Lord, freshman Joan Grossman, Jean Lipscomb, termine rebate rate, Students will "Whmym anaU aatolci* 0M4. Anbe Flo Cox, Kelly Crosier, M. E. Dar-wori^ and for j^witoiionfr Marian Pendergrass, Pafc Pigman, aa yow Inuftee '.aii.'era^l' to who zeeeiyed th*awiid laat receive cash rebates al scton on regular Stafdutiaa, *«y» Gene Ehrlich, and Sally Fi^ld-the Texan. -was vaonf the honorees at the Fx«d Sanner, and Walter Kund the resulta are deUHmQttd, he nierotii in«. -, Misa McCmthy waa given a ? • rjjffrv WraWrFts« mm SKNwfel..'i S DA1Y TEXAN ZH$£? gniinii.>uiiii.min. . .UUII ••» j i ! im.jj t> »**• MurttHmale— Bobbins BODY SHO£ J**!* Rap**" W;v¥f fewA JV .W/ AWIftHG -S';r-S *GLAM wm \ m i-4*n Steers Can Cinch Although &U intramural activities on the athletic field just finished SWC Titl# Friday cloaed last night the event which is looked forward to and m ^ By JEFF HANCOCK . -: Air Foxee 3ftC)TC were the out­sense .that he had stroke,',..Following Deaver and |AUSTiNj VMBO*. INIIWWW standing individuals in the swim* wa* Richard boihpeted for wiu be held Friday might, May 18, when team Delta Kappa Epsilon, perennial taking first in the freestyle race Giddena Towne of •»» ELDlftQl The Texas Longhoms ming meet. Each won first place when he had to swim the back­Little Campus-Dorm in thirdmanagers. Intramural naan-*^^^(Divldftd and intramural swimming champions, in two-events. Berry ^took the stroke. -?>' • place. Harry Sharpless of. Phi into, their final baseball games this RADIAtl 4gers; and Intrainural champ-sovHk by 24th and East and have done 4t again. The Dekes 300-foot freestyle and" 100-foot Second place In the 100-foot Gamma Delta was fourth. weelcend knowing, that they will at WORKS , will hold their annual Westfby Guadalupe.) romped home first Monday night bjTckstroke. He Won the 300-foot freestyle Beam, of •least have * share of flr«i.e***s banquet at the Campus Cafeteria, was Harry Runner-up to Berry in the 300-the South­ . Members, of a fraternity or re»-with 26 points to easily outdis­freestyle and 100-foot backstroke. Newman -Club, G. A. Berkley of foot freestyle event was George Ti 604 West 24th Street at 7 p-ra. west Conference crown which they idents of Univewlty operated vcU>r-tance the second-place Phi:Gamma, He won the 300-foot freestyle, in Delta Kappa Spsilon took third Anderson of Phi Gi ~ Hie dinner is the second part of initories and co-opt will not be peiv Delta team which tallied 12 pointj. ite.4666dlsnfc >e Things was -JiaVe RlOhopbllziec! for tbefpast four' gow.Wwm-IftlttWl U> W>tUp«Uifi'thia cRvl«ibii. ' 'S^Himintfirisrrasi Intfrdmuraf and the 100-foot backstroke in 19 Grove was fourth. In the 100-foot third, and Arthur Batson, an Xn-years. • •«. favo r^iy Attraction numbefcone will be Other importantchanges in next event of the year. Banquet and Seconds flat backtsroke Bill Blackwood of New­dependent, was. fourth. 'In seeking their fifth eonseeti­ If1p, meetingfor teats managers Wed-year's program to be voted on are awards giying.will be the feature CASH FOR BOOKS Deaver. took first piece in the man-was' second, Jim Gerron of Delta Kappa Epsilon won-the tive championship, the l>onghorns lied . ^Jiiesday afternoon at 4 o'clock. The piece pitching and attractions of the annual Pow Wow The third, and 800-foot medley relay in 57.8. Oak tt honieihoe iO0-feot freestyle and the IQO-foot Things was Jim ^purpose of this meeting will be will draw on intra­will have to outscore A&M in one Tl water polo on a point-system basis, the curtain breaststroke. Deaver'* time in the Lacy of Sigma Alpha Epsilon took Grove "came in Second, Delta Tau Slide Rules, Typewritert, M'flto discuss and vote on changeS/-of. and to add class B softball to the mural activities for 1950-51'. freestyle 16.9. His breast* ;-*X Delta third, and the University of the tilts of the two-game series : Mtnusa Drawing Sets' was fourth. • fz"rules for 1951-52. Next year's present set-up which 'now includes Thomas Berry of Delta. Kappa stroke time was 19.4. Deaver's dou­Leslie Giddens of Sigma Nu Christian Church fourth. & Aggieland Thursday and Friday. f3' ,-^eam managers should also attend only class A competition. Epsilon and Jackie Deaver of the ble win the Was second in the 100-foot breast-The Texas-A&M contests are: was remarkable in Phi Gamnia Delta won the 400­ f^.this meeting as well a* ell Intrs-the . only .remaining games in Friday night's "heap" big Pow foot relay and recorded a time of f -mural managers. Wow dinner will be for the main-Southwest Conference play. 67,5. -Delta Kappa Epsilon placed -u tr .Some^ftf the suggested changes purpose of giving awards. Tickets If the Longhoms win the initial sedond, and Oak Grove third. •• .;>,o©f rules to go into effect next for this banquet must be purchas­game or the second tilt, they will Jerry Babin of Pem Club took 'year will be very controversial. the Intramural by Mtvance to the j NC(AA regional ed at Office first place in diving. Bob Arm­ «... One proposed change would dis-5 p.m. Wednesday. playoffs.. strong of Phl*Delta Tjh^a; v^as fc, continue Intramural boxing. This Robert B. Gordon, assistant If the Aggies win the final two second, Julian Horwity of Sigma --^esue will no doubt jawtse-quite-a dean 'of "student life, will be the games the crown wsll be shared Alpha Mu third, and Bill Porter • stir before the final decision » main speaker and make the pres­and a playoff will be necessary to By AL WARD of Pem Club fourth. ,' reached. entation of awards. Awards to be ened in the late innings. . In their big sixth inning, the decide legal representation to. the Ttpan Sport* Staff ^ A former Maroon hbnself, Ver­Freshman -led off with: a walk, a The first team sport of the yefer NCAA tournament.] &V Another change which will come given are the Frank Evin's Sports­The scrappy Austin High Ma­ f5f~ in for lot# of discussion is the manship / Trophy, the r: Cowboy dine cut into former teemmates double by Verdine, and a base-was football and Oak Grove domi­' .* roons pushed across four runs in '• '£ 'proposal to change the organi-Sportsmanship' Trophy, and th-s "for 13 strikeouts and led his clearing two-bagger by second nated that activity by winning the FOR the bottom of th.e ninth to edge i-: > s&tional eligibility rules|for the Bill Johnson Sportsmanship Tro­team at the plate with a double baseman Bill dewberry. Towery championship in both class A and Texas ;. ,... V,:;—. 1!. r. Mica divisilon. phy. the Texas Freshman, 8-7, Monday and a triple in three times up. reached first on Smith's wild peg class B. Kappa Sigma' won the j afternoon :'at House Park vand. A&M • ... 9 |. The new rule, if adofted, will Intramural champions will... re­His mates leaked afield for. four, to first from his third base posi­class A basketball title, Becks Boys LUXURY AT even the team's annual "subway 'won the elass B-basketball crown. TCU 5—^.8 ' , read as follows i This division' is ceive spring quarter medals, and errors, two more than Austin tion and Newberry scored during ^ • to consist of teams organized from the hest all-around intramural series" at two each, made. the.confusion. Towery stole third The; Rinky Dinks won the' Intra­SMU e .'men students residing or board-athletes will receive trophies. All-„ The fateful • pinth' inning # cli­Third baseman Robert Towery and came in on a fielder's ehoice mural championship in track,' with Baylor . 6 LOWEST COST battle ? 'ing (eating regularly t«-o meals year team trophies will also be maxed an uphill for 'the founijl his batting eye for a hom­Don Barton, who broke the broad Rice 3 Maroons, who were trailing, 7-2 a£ JWdb Kafy Chair Odiii * a day) within one of the four de-presented. er aftd a single in four tinies up, The! Maroons added singled jump record and tied the 100-yar'd the end of six innings. While hold­ and scored two runs for the Yearly runs in the seventh and eighth .to dash mark, pacing the teanu . ! ing the Yearlings scoreless and / AUSTIN to ings. trail 7-4 going into the ninth. AIME won the next-to-last sport CHICAGO COLLEGE OF for remaining • ;Oae - Two UT Co-eds Will Compete hitles the three Maroon outfielder Fred Odi-There they rallied for four runs 'of the year by defeating Brunette "/ V': Roiuii ; frames, the high schoolers regis­OPTOMETRY , War Tr^ otrie paced the Austin attack with on two hits, a.walk, and two Tex­H^use, 2-0, in the finals. And then * S.70 San Aatonio • l.SO tered six runs and three hits to three hits, including a triple in pi* as errors to -sew up their twelfth the Dekes copped the final event capture this series finale and leave Waco a.oo In Ohio State Golf Tourney Fully Accredited . -• s.ee times up. : victory in fourteen starts. Both* of the year Monday night with Pallas • • • 3.70 S.T0 the Yearlings with a season record Texas scored two runs in the their excellent swimming team. Ab Outitandini Collega in a sTwo University co-eds—Jo Jot who' Ms not won or participated of six won and six lost. losses Were at'the hands.of the Splendid Fort Worth -.£.70 S.T0 Profession • '7 Streiber and Sue Schropder—will in any major tournament. second1 frame when Verdine trip­Yearlings. ^ . • attend the seventh annual Inter-Coached by Miss Anne Pittman, Winning pitcher--was ~ Oliver led with' two away and two on. ; MfSTIN MAROONS (#) Entrance requirement thirty mb >• h po a £;'«ollegi&te Women's Golf Tourna­assistant professor of physical Bjradshaw, who relieved starter Robert Towery made it 3-0 in the Odiorne. * 18 1"" semester hourB of credits in • Diesel Pomrad sH the way > ef ment at Ohio State University^ .training for women, the girls prac­J. L. Smith in the fifth, . and al­third when he smashed righthand­Oaedea, a* ; „ .6. 0 l specified courses. Advanced on thj (imousT«a»S)>edal Uoyd, If 5 1 June 12-16. . ,; tice?at least an hour each day. lowed four runs and 2 hitq. Frank er Smith's first delivery over the i standing granted for addi­ ASIC ABOUT LOW FAfttS Brock was charged with the loss Anderson, 4b 1 Live for $40 a month! For the 'first time, the Untver-The tournament; sponsored by left field fence. • *Surke, rf » 2 1 15 2 tional L. .A. credits in speci­ Minster. Jb a sity will have representatives in the physical education department when he. allowed two runs in the Austni picked up two in the \-Br«d»h»w,. p « o o v Twin e Co-op, newest fied courses. BCTWEOJ INTERMtOtATE POMTS this golf meet. The tournament is of Ohio State University, had fourth when Odiorne tripled to Skipping, 2b ?-2 and best equipped Co-op now has a PHONE S-S77X ninth, Riley Verdine started on Pine Austin's -open to any undergraduate' woman about 40 entries last year. -the hill for Texas'and held Aus­drive in Bill Skipping and Tom B_Warren, 2b ' ' 0 few vacancies. You get the benefit Registration Now Open O-Brewir, 2b -_1 of an Automatic Bendix, electric , Excellent clinical' facilities.. The two Texas jfirlB will take to tin batters at bay until he weak­Curry. Curry, e... 4 iron inn^rspring and mattresses— the national meet a handicap, fig­Smith; p-Sb • 5 plus reduction' on cleaning,-laundry Recreational and athletic ac­ ... u SPEEDWAY . and flowara.^. .... -tivities. Dormitories on cam­ ured from scores at the home golf Totala 8 8 *7 ?5 -2' A-FIied to right field for Minater7 in fiith. pus. Approved for Veterans. course, Municipal, where par is 71. B-Struck ont for Sklppinsr in seventh. RADIO Par on the course these girls will : C-Singled for Warren tn ninth. * Twin Pine Co-Op 2313 No. Clark Str«»,t YEARLINGS (7) use is 78. ­ SERVICE ab r % Ph. 2-0231 2008 Necb«» CHICAGO 14, 1LUNIQS 2010 SMM!W«I 7-3B46 Sue is a seniot elementary edu­Newberry; 8l» • t Towery. 8b •• * K cation major. The left-handed Bosox Down Senators Bond, If golfer is a member of Tee Club. Based en Ataociaied Press sixth. Kelly, cf ,S': Southpaw Ed Lopat won his Horton, sa » i c"» ^ -A member of Alpha Chi Omega, . The Yanks clinched the decision Mohr, lb .. . • k Jo Jo is a (junior physical educa­sixth victory against no losses seventh. Knebel, c 6 Monday night in New York as the with four runs in the Mason, rf tion major and leader of Tee Club Two of the Indian markers were A-York, rf Yankees defeated Cleveland, il-4> She won the club's spring tourna­accounted for by Jim Hegan and Walker, rf rf(6) before 66,265 paid fans, the larg­Burrows, <9) ment and was runner-up in the George Stirnweiss who: hit homers. Verdine, p CHINESE KITCHEN est, crowd ef the major, league intramural golf tournament. With In the only other game of the Brock, p season thus far. Bobby Long, she won for AChiO 12+h & Red River ' day, the Boston Red Sox downed Totals 10 Rookie Gil McDoqgald started the mixed golf tournament. A-York ran for Mason in sixth. the Yankees off a „ two-run the Washington Senators, 8-7, in —! 021 004 #00—7 with YEARLINGS an 11 inning contest in Washing­AUSTIN __——ooo aeo 1x4 —8 inside thie p'ark homer in the first Runs ton. Senator outfielder Gil Coan, batt«N] in: Newberry 2, TowaiV, inning off starter Lou Brissie. Rally, Verdina 2, Guedea i, Bradahav, dropped a short fly ball that would Brown 2, Vba«e hita: Verdina. S-b«M Hank Bauer homered in the fourth I have been the last out and Fred hita: Verdine, Gaedea, _Odi6riie. Home with one ;on and Gerry Coleman run#i Towery.. Left on base::'Texas 9, Hatfield of the Sox scored from Austin 12. Base* on b*Us off: Smith 1, doebied across three runs in the. second. The Senators . couldn't Bradihaw 2, Verdine 4, Brock 1, Stolen basea: town, • Kelly, Horton. Uoyd. score in their half of the inning. Strikeoota Smith how to I Mullets Mired in Mud by: 2. Bradshaw 1, ev:; 'The .Red Sox had been trailing Verdine 18. Hit* and runs off: Smith, 8 and 2 in B, pradshaw 2 and t in 4, Ver­ As Press Powers On most of the way, but managed to dine 10 and 8 in 8, Brock 0 and 1 in 1. keep off the I GREEN SHORES, Sunday, May tie up the game In the eighth. The Earned runs: ' Yearlinjr* e, Austin 4. Don't test one alone Wild pitches Bradihaw, Winnlns pitcher; Senators made five errors afield, 13.—(Spl. to the yexan)—This Bradshaw. Losing pitcher:Brock.Umpire two of them by former Sox catch­Brinkley. Time: 1:45. was an unlucky day for Sports er, Mike Guerfa.. gag line... ...compare Staff Mullets as they ran head­ long into the wicked slants of Fireball "Hays'and the murderous READY TO MOVE? BASEBALL SCORES bats of a makeshift University * w» will Press crew. . V__, _ _ AMERICAN LEAGUE ,*• Pack yomr per*o«a] effects (er While the Mullets could muster Boston 8, Washington 7. ... shipment. .;but three scratch Singles off Hays, New York 11, Cleveland 4. 4r Pick up your baffafe, delirar it to bus atatioa or depot. . I the Press, led by such worthy BIG STATE LEAGUE Unlike others, we never Boaded: Warehouaa |«| sluggers w Bascom. Nelson,"Bob Austin 7, Sherman-Denison 6. > . ...' , Houachold Good Storage Bartay, Fjpd Barbe^, Jack Dodgent Gainesville 10, Waco 0. . and Del Kunyon was slaughtering Temple 10, Texarkana 0. Just, Call 6-1250 to test our bran "Pork Chops" WeinerVofferings. TEXAS LEAGUE .The game was called by Sports in San Antonio 8, Dallas 8. RED BALL compare PH11IP order to, catch a boat down the Tulsa 7, Shreveptfrt l. ns> river. 2. Transfer and Storage Houston 8, Fort Worth Van Tux and " • BOX SCORE , Beaumont 10,' Oklahoma City 8. eoe Sao Jacinto' Al Dyer, Owner Philip Philip Morris Prem GanS ^ Player( T) rt sr N«lBon> « ; -. * •> 1 y • >• •» |? against any oftw cigarette! Bartay 1H " ' -• Van Dress, *595 MiriflU 2b _. Dodgen, gjs , Kersten 3b . Barbae; If Then make your own choicel Newton, ;cf. Will you be the life of the party in these Van Heusen .Kunyon, tt.'. / ,* - -Formal Favorites?Well, not necessarily... but you Total* Sports Mulleta 2„t~ I |-will have that nice, confident feeling of knowing Player(7) TRY THIS TMTl Chandler, « ifei (• you'ye properly dressed. Van Tux comes in two Welner, p Take o PM1UP Sp*'-**? *0**I»-«I"I «ny MUltet No. 1, ll> . 1,;' collar-attached models—widespread and regular.[ Tooley, 2b cthir cioare'te. then, heref« alt Hech. 8b -Van Dress is neck band only. Both with snowy-white _ I Weaver, as — Mullet No. 2. If fy you ^t f " ~ 'pique frontsT , . Httliet No. 1, cf ?%%IMullet No". 4, ti ' 4[ light up either dgarerte. Take a Totals X puff-don'# Inhole—and »-t-o-w-l-y .. let the HnoUk co»«« thrpi^h your nose. '4% Now do exactly the $amf Waiting For • • MO, T. M 'fm with the other dfereH#. the world's m&rtetfl .Students' Wives NOTICE THAT PHIUP MORRIS PHILLIPS-JONES COPP., NEW YORK There's a quick, easy way for PALDIN |$ PiHNITSLY TRR*™!1!?' wives of student*-to get good* A tennis boll has been timed paying part or full time jobs fit 100 M.P.H. . . . a thrown DilllflTKlT X* in Austin. : whim bos* bail at 98.6 M.P.H. and At Durham's' Business Col- the initlffl velocity «f a drive Wl ijii leee here, girls can learn i'v T .^Speedwriting," the modern, in golf at 170 M.P.H.* mm nationally-known shorthand in *OoK MtL.«w mdiii^ tested 4e only six weeks time. •kcmi 2ir < ptt attmi |UMX •»;•­ ft* J . M 4 "Speedwritinx ie entirely un­ f M«) 4WthS like the old shorthand methods.. I "Speedwritinjr" uses the ABC's 'A , > 4^'^ —it just turns your longhand •nto Shorthand. mtatrS Visit or write Durham's at wT 60QA Lavaca Street—or telf-% gun ithone 8-8446 for full informa­ Pf tion. Dutham^i-tHE DAILY TEXA# swa& t •C'v'-ft ^75«wS^Hr=SwV V i>5i4 ' vpr rg? ' 2k -a( '««• ••. •r^K-^k -^V' < •» . i-\ :'• •• • .-,• -:^m~ an HI WANTID $11,000 AHNUAllt Tuesday, May 15^— the S8tt» parallel and mowt than Af)— Red troops poured south-70 miles northeast of Seoul. Piedmont Colfeg* Light to moderate contact was rd in two areas of central Korea "iF-dVi Grant Row Rog«t , reported all along the front. The looking tora] |s: oday under a* driving rain, adding WASHINGTON, May 14—<#) Relations Committees in. his se­ited-war program. Reds were concentrating on the was the ambition to'mak% DEMOREST, tia, May H—W their buildup for a new offen- —Secretary of Defense Marshall venth day of testimony in the The Defense Secretary said that two points in the mountainous 123,0001 year. After oonskkse*^.' central and east-central areas. testified Monday he believes the inquiry into the firing1 of Mae-he knew o? nothing to indicate •Alumni of Piedmont Collega log die possibilities .on* vom^h, nation's top military men stand Arthur. the removal of Gen. MacArthur gave a vote of confidence to an The Communists might be ex-Allied trobns killed or wounded 1.6&) 1 iteds" mnaayTtfer"Efgl 1178(1 Iil0f VlH a position with us. He gutted war plans for Korea. Marshall safd commanding the North Atlantic a long time ago. He also declared avorable weather—ideal for con-Army reported. ' jecting .to Jthe source of a |.500­ t for their light trapspor-adoption oftKe MacArthur poli­Pact force$ in Europe, and Lt. he did not think the government •low the fint year^ earning Many allied commanders have a-month andowmnnt. ; ,tion system; .unfavorable for ai­cies might cripple the buildiup Geto. Matthew, B. Ridgeway, Who had dealt' with . MacArtjhiir at 13,000. But the next feat hi* led tanks and planes, , speculated that the Reds' would of Europe's defenses. ., succeeded MacArthur, among "arm's length."^ The little northeast Georgia earnings were upto $4,250.The ^ choose rainy weither to renew Marshall spoke before the Sen­those he believes support the Tru­The defense chie1P"ina\ifted tVe college has been in strife for Aird yeat he earned $6,500, The reinforcements were spotted their spring offensive. the grant from the the Yanggu and Chunchon ate Armed Services and Foreign man administration'.* present lim-MacArthur proposal to bomb and months over and tfeefourth ytar his inoooi The earlier offensive, opened Texas E d u c a t i o n Association, as, Chunchon is eight miles blockade Red China and use Chi­was over $10,000. In<(utui!« April 22, bogged down in a little headed by retired ^Maj. Gen. nese nationalist troops mightdraw teuth of the 88th parallel and 45 years renewals and in«ease4 over a week under the weight of George Van Horn Mosely, one­ aiiles northeast of Seoul. Russia into the conflict and touch volume will provide marited ia^ staggering kisses. It was staged time American. Firster and long Yanggu is seven miles'north of off a third world war. i cwne increases, and his reason* in generally clear' weather. Allied' attacked as pro-fascist. Marshall took sharp. islues with able expectation in the neat planes'and artillery made the most The in turn, receives Senator Bridges (R-NH) over the TEA, future should be $25,000. of that. „ . Senator's contention that Mar­its backing from an enterprise Despite bad weather Monday, shall's move in 1945-46 cutting of George Armstrong, Texas oil. TUXEDOS allied planes mounted.800 sorties. and cattle millionaire. It was off military aid to Chiang had HERFS THE STORY"* ARE YOU MTERESTED? They hammered at Red troops, helped Ihe Reds seize control of Armstrong who created a furore supplies and airfields. Warships * two years ago when he offered China. FOR RENT offshore bombarded coastal supply UNITED NATIONS, N. Y„ implements of war, atomic energy The; next witness Tuesday will Jefferson Military College at Nat-A strong Texas life insurance institution seeks the services of May 14.—(AP)—A global embar­materials, petroleum, and items six qttaMea young college men to serve asspecial sales represents^ lines. be Gen. Omar N„ Bradley, Chair-, chezj Miss., $50,000,000 if the Juit r«a«W«d »om« new, tool Allied artillery was turned on useful in war." tives-'The men we are looking fot ^dust luive exccptionslly £ner • whit* dinner jackets and black go on shipments to Red'China of Each country will determine man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. school would accept only white the Communists massing in the Christians. character, be known for their integrity, be sctive in school activi­ tropical ttou«er«. arms and war materials, including Like Marshall and MacArthur, he which commodities exported fall -. " (or beat choice Chunchon area. material for making atomic bombs, within the embargo and slap on also wears five stars. W. E. Bowen, English instruc­ties, and enjoy working with people. They must be industrious r**«rv« year tuxedo bow The Reds were trying to expand was approved Monday by the controls. Each Country will try to Chairman Russell (D-Ga) of1 tor at Piedmont for two years and have aggressive plans for the.future, yet be willingto maintain a bridgehead* already more than United Nations Sanctions Commit­the Armed Services group said and president of the alumni a proper balance bu j»,j tnaioy y»ur wrihfVrtMr* OTTOA-iONf tWIiftirCntrMii Col1*g« StvdantsI Discover the d d«M»yivr wrtlipc m«N)« oppdrtunify that is waiting for • WMnbii' (if you with, CnrLDatArr, America's n< rkk yt«ik lorrti STamoos Child-Guidance Planl Vow Con lenrn $1,000 or mem in yourMmmer vaoatien doing tibia easy, pleaaent woric—and youTl PICK UP & DELIVERY Ipiii profesdcnal selling e*pert-Testing Servicee&cethatwfflbeof pricelessvalue ' ' * ' s Aj f / to yoo inlater yearsI / ^ 1 Map IHIi Ywrt Vmii SAVE CASH & ' SERVICE •COlOttT*)|iirMii; PWmnlVi OT -.t^pvivpp fWPntii e f Yoo aaJ tcw Texas'qjwn HN jpl 10M yo* hstv* tamsd ftefir are cordially Invited so make foil as* of this jpaeattons Into h-• f > j* bf-L ^ Humble seryiee? it's esttngwigrlWettytoarra^for 5-* ^ 1' maintained to make SUITS -DRESSES UNIVERSAL PEN • yopto,wuikwhtrottr yoapwiep •yri mi* » 5' -« —lar away, ersight la yearown of vanaaa or I40SPITAL Humble EssSExtralea^tibepar*^ me u» •Ss . TI W««t WMUasnn St. of gasolines—iit's Texas' finest, ^sq Eatui' Kf- cu«»«7*DI. • • V-/ V. -T- Yosr fscctia in life depends gives you **#r» ^uick tmxtiag' iaA «*lr« Area TUXEDOS SEND THIS ORDLR BLANK 10: pleasure frpm every mile you In Ei» Extra will keepyour car's engine Wm Oh*Ym hwTrafntn«and" *» * tktt* free of-soot ana carbon ;..Esso ' ^«5».-»FUIl AND WOOLEN STORAGE "iSfW-thia worieour wayand fail!So if Xm Extra gives every user Mine value la 1 mm. and eAte ... | l J'•""1:1. a-,'., .Ji i I << « " Ui rt * (4^ H j AMttk yott want to l»a $tjD0Q ec toon everv eallon. U ^ 1 travel tofoargwriwi. , »if-1! : ii IdMpk ef eooiask — ' TUMI tisii , ^""' ^ Stop at the gig# h.ytitit JfS WH04 -YpUJWNK LAUNDRY Oft;€L£AN)N& selling aapesi«M% writefoc tur. neighborhood and fill up with EssoExtra» { Wtwtid—ff | r Jwn?:771YIH thsr detail*todayI Addrtar iM the gasoline that give* you something Tomm jmxEC/1 « ' THINK ixtr* for your money Humble service I | (Gain) 1 JMt-" • Contiaeti' I »*m« w»< cMmi ploWy. If *n,| Is something txtr*, too^i J 411%, » ytM «M AMM#,rnmOtlht tm wM I Student Employment Bureau # If DRISKILl, piSS? »K HUMBLE OIl ft KfflNINO C0WPANY f f " J, "8" Hit! ^ , --• ( i ' . ' ' ' . !' Vt-5'JS <*» Ssl® • ••mm •'-*ss*Jey, May 15, mt -: . " ! '«•,»' '' " " . J-* • ' ''• ", -1' Jl '-, -"­MiMan on Camput—* By BIbkr LSJ ^ >v? jMfcf, -ifV¥ V.'j; am ^--^,V"> i* iJ---11--it.. -THAT COLLEGE professors mnd fctu-cess would cease. Also, the ai tr^y;y 1 dentaare becoming less and less anxious tion and Board of Regents of the Uni-' SSV1' r-tM to express their feelings and, classify versity has grown in.upholding academic # vr .-themselves in any way with the term freedom on the campus—with the pro­(Followmt ifc th. first m a Weapons, and that It was long 7. ^'ftying l&iyr hoth ,aeries ef articles . t>y Kalma* step toward defeating on* of the cally and. intellectually frota vision that both students 'and faculty "liberal" is fact. ... Seigel reprinted-front the New basic purposes oJL the university. association with the words, "llj V In a study of seventy-two major coir must accept the "responsibility" that York Timet on "Loyalty"" But at the same^Aliha it also al," "peace," "freedom," and IL *ihetk»t ive"Kt^'impetus"tS^siBSltTj® * leges in the Unfted States, by the New goes withlt. lege aad public officials, and growing resistance to conformity 8. A sharp tujrning inward social pressure* which have ­ J-• York Times, the Overwhelming majority Education without ideas is"valueless. and stimulated a new appreciation local college problems, to the theeked freedom of speech and of America's heritage. ^ elusion of broader current qu *>f members of these college communities Until campuses all ove& the country are' thought on many campuses.) i» v ~ Convinced that adoleseence was tions. A subtle, creeping paralysis of were wary and felt varying degrees of once more able to have a free give and a normal period of rebellion and Part-of the wariness and apal freedom of thought and speech is a time when the. young student —the Utter is a marked charact inhibition,about speaking out on contro-take of ideas, the creepin|fparalysis of attacking college -campuses in challenged accepted doctrines, tha istic on "many college campusei many parts of the country, limit* educators maintained that the stu­ versial issues, discussing unpopular con-freedom of thought and speech will con­ ing both students, and, faculty in dent's continued. exploration of is not solely a product of cepts, and participating in student poli-tinue. the area traditionally reserved for new horizons was "a normal symp­rent "hysteria," or a major the free exploration of knowledge" tom," a part of the process of of students and 'faculty puttical activity. and truth. growing up and of developing "the pressures generated by S These limitations in­the ability Wtaconsi Here are their reasons: on free critical faculties and Joseph McCarthy of quiry take a variety of forms, but to evaluate. The latter, in their • While1 this yas an Impo rincipleS net option, •contributing factor, the said, 1. Fear of social disapproval* jf^rinciple their effect is • a widening was a virtual "must" in tendency toward 'paasive accep.™ today's market of conflicting stemmed also from the time 2. Fear of a "pink" opCommunist tance of the status quo, conformi­ideologies. the probably inevitability Oflabel. ONE fcRAVE SOUL still lives. ty, and a narrowing of the area A little more than a fortnight draft, the fear and uhcertai: of tolerance in which ' students; ago, Earl J. McGrath, United in national life, and a fatali: 3. Fear of criticism by fegents, legis­In New York City the Board of Ed­ faculty and administrators feel frustrated conviction tl States Commissioner of Education, and latures, and friends. ucation is confronted with the problem free "to speak, ,act, and think in­told a group of educators in New little can be done in the coll 4 Fear of rejection for further study dependently* ' York: area to alter international devel of what to do about a teacher-veteran at graduate schools. A study of seventy-two major ^Education for life in'the" ments. of World... War II who refused to obey colleges in the United States by world community of Aatiohs ... a O t h e r contributing fa 5. Fear of the spotlight of investiga­iiion by Government and private industry an official directive to take part in" the • "Like I say Worthal--when you come in late you disturb the The New York_Times showed that begins in the Behoof and on the toward decreased liberal acti' many members of the college com­campus in which democratic res­were a mature awareness of ' for post-graduate employment and ser­city's welcome for General of the Army whole class." munity were wary and felt vary­pect for personal and social dif­ true; nature of communism vice with thearmed forces. Douglas MacArthur on April 20. ing degrees of' inhibition about fei'erices is nourished." the result that it. has lost speaking out on controversial The campus stu Secretary ($180). Experience, lone years old, and, still doesn'tr held a divine dictatorship backed bookkeeping, and • typing speed of Daily Texan Crossword Puzzle know what it is going to be 60 words per mihute and a shorthand ThaDiflf Texan, » student newspaper of The University at T«xu, 1* up with the semi-feudalistie loy­of vorda per or WjiiW la Austin every morning ompt Monday and Saturday, September .when it grows up? Right now* speed 100 minute alty Of his people.:;:::;'' "N more.o. ' . to Juna, and except datat holiday and eT*min*tion period*, and bi-weekly it appears to be heading to* Statistical clerk ($162), collegi* algebra utin tM summer *ea*lon* under the title of The Summer Texan on The writer was no less annoyed and trigonometry required. ACBO&5 45. Measure 7. Missile Tuesday and Friday by Tax** Student Publication*, lne. Ward ar total washout, I grant 7 Stenographer Office Assistant .($164), I. Unit of (Chin.) weapon New* contribution* will be accepted by telephone (£-Z4T3) or at .the j^ou, but that isn.'t a goal, than some of the Americans were typing »jpeed—40 to 60 words per editorial office J.B. I. or at tha New* Laboratory, J.B. 102. Inquiries confused with the almost enthusi­minute, shorthand apeed 80 magnetic 46. India {poet 8.Costlier of to-100 eoneeratag delivery aad advertJiing should ba jnadaiBJ.B. i«8 (2-247S). ^that's ail end;" ine flux density form) 9. Very wet Answer Is words minute, ability , Opinion* of tha Texan are not necessarily those of tha Administration astic emotion of regret of the Jap­per to assume «r other University official*., < ° ("Double etatendre intend* responsibiUty and some knowledge of (COS) 47. Search for 11. Point of an in the anese people that they have lost bookkeeping. • Entered a* *acond-ela*» matter October IS. 1»4I at tha Poet Office at ed?" we asked. -"Shush," he ; . NEW SOLUTION the military leadership of MacAr­Interested .applicants are-urged to 6. Cushion v 48. Happenings orbit Classified An*tin. Texa*. under