ZPsis^0WM ^Cf®W5W* • t» -if'ij WCBES A -> •u' x *4& %• 1 W" -* 5 - « \t\ •-«•» vA , >. &.t posed matter is nieasur-ed-and the parking regula^ons. ^ ^ ^ -"The, Monster** is -the nickname amount of absorption at paribus The Council's request fbr a re­ given to the" new neutron ma­energy levels can J?e calculated. Dr. Thelma . A. Bdllman, asso­ followed by discussion periods. port from its committee on Health chine which has taken three years : . .Dr. Little feels that by observ­ ciate J»o|essor of curriculum The afternoons are taken up with service and hospital was made to to build, its true title is the Cock* ing the energy changes in the nu- and-instruction, College of Edu-problem work. , \ " provide lairi answer fo a questfoh­ roft Walton "L^ ".v• " ' clelTr structurie of the exposed ^wi^|say^"she is very pleased The workshop is divided into naire from the local chapter of and |)r. R. N. Little, associate pro­atoms, they may be able.to creat with th6 Texas Workshop in licon-seven resource groups, which the American Association of Uni­ fessor of physics^, hopes that' it new theories in nuclear physics onpiic Education which is now in work on problems established by versity Professors Concerning the Vill provide the background for whicli will be more complete than pfbgress , at' Lutheran Concordia voting on suitable topics. desirability of faculty use of the new nuclear theories, present day ones. L • " ' ••; •" -• College in Austin. \ . . Dr. Bollman says anyone ^ho f\- student health center. Under the direction of Dr. Lit­ Dr. Bollman, one of the ten wishes may attend the lectures """* ; tle, graduate students in physics ftr. P«w«r« Called by Navy-staff, me^bers in charge of the each" morning -at 9. Also two Dr. James C. Dolley, vice pres­ have created the machine with worktop,' ^a'ys there are about lectures are open to the public. ident of the University, told the [ some special adaptions of Dr. Lit­Dr. O. S. Powers, associate.pro­80 superintendents, principals, and Dr. Edwin G'. North, Washing­ Faculty Council that work tle. Alan Onus, Norman Schaef-fessor of classical languages, has teache^> attending the sessions.-ton economist, will speak Thurs- on the University budget is not yet far fer, and Henry R. Dvorak are been recalled to active duty by the-All' of-these are from Texas; day, June 21, at 7:15 p.m. in', the doing the finishing touches. Navy with the rankrof lieutenant The members of the workshop chapel at Concordia College. Dr. enough .alorfe for a report, be-» cause of the late date at which the1 —By -measuring the energy -of the commander; . . attend lectures in the morning, North's topic will be "The" Prob­ legislature passed the state ap­ ' neutrons sent out from the accel­ lems in the Preservation of a Free propriations bill. He said he would erator before they are absorbed Enterprise Economy." report to the Council on the pat­ by the nuclei of a substanc^ am Mr. H. Van Cleveland, deputy tern of the budget at the next subtracting the energy of the neu­ director of the European program meetifig, /scheduled for July 16. trons 'after passing through' the of the ECA, will speak on Fri­ fhe budget is to be presented nuclei* it will be pOgsible to mea­ day, June 29, at 7:15 p.m. in to the" Board \)f Regents for ap­ sure the amount of absorption by Recital Hslll on the University proval at its next meeting, July the nuclei of various substances campus. Mr.. Cleveland' will speak at different energy levels,1 Dr. Student sections pl.an.ned on America's role in the wolld 13. sized at.> work conference for ; for smaller "sessions. "r ­ Little said. recovery. * youth counselors, scheduled June 100,00ft volts DC are created eakers at the large general, The workshop will gq on a field 18-22 at the University. "V*"".7' ~ by the transformer from thQ 220 meetings will be Dr. Berniee trip Tuesday afternoon,'June^"9/ Co-sponsored by the University volt AC wall plug in the room •Moore, hwnemaking consultant for Dr. Bollman said. They will visit and the Texas Association of Deans above "The Monster." This elec5 the TgxSs-State Board for Voca­several business houses in Aus­ ^of Women, the meeting./will be tricity accelerates ions of deutri- tional Education and the Hogg tin. Offieers of the concerns visi­ attended by high school counselr nm ^hose nuclei are a* million Foundation for-Mental Hygiene; ted -will-lecture-to-the workshop. bins, college and university deans times a million times smaller than Dr.; Lesteir Beals, professor,of edu* The ^workshop is being financed of women, residence hall, directors; Dow Chemical Company • has an atom. •• cation at. Trinity University, San by contributions of-business and •riesident hostesses and sorority given the University a "$10,000 The, accelerated ionized deutri- Antoiiioi Dr. Howard A. Lane, labor leaders all over the sta chaperbns. . ; gi-ant for further research on the um particles then hit a-"target," professor of education at New General and group meetings will .Schoch electric discharge process.* a metal "saturated-" with-either York, University; and Dr. Don This University-owned process more deutrium or .tritium, which Morris^, professor of psychiatry is a ^industrial method for making is three times heavier than hydro­ and direCtol' of the-Community .Guidance -Clinic at Dallas. chemical -products from—natural gen; Super accelerated 'neutrons l)r. Imogene Bentley, dean of gas, related petroleum products and helium then radiate out from women at ' North t.exas-State Col­ and other gases. the target "which is at the bottom, lege, Denton, is presiaent of the Drv E; P. Schoch, Bureati of of the glass tube. -v,t S Texas Association-of Deans* of Industrial Chemistry director Some of these neutrons, which J. Alton Burdine, professor of Women,, . .. — ••• who developed the process, said, government, ha& been appointed Deadline for applications for "We will use the Dow grar$, *to the -regional committee on the foreign student tutfcon scholarships to-continue our basic investiga­ faculty fellowship program-of the is. 5 p.m. today. Applications may TwoStudents Awarded tions of the electric discharge Fund-for the Advancement of Ed­ be picked up in the Internationa] process for making other c-hemi­ jgiliI»ri9 ^clwl^rsh1|»s ucation. Professor Burdine is a Advisory Office in B; Hall 2fcr cals." ' '>. > ' -'­ former vice-president of the Uni­ An applicant must be a foreign, Fulbright awards for foreign versity. studentj"must be 'registered in the Klesel Appointed Ni^bt Editor study have been awarded to two . The purpose of the fund is to Fifty "University ROTC cadets current summer term for at least graduate students at the Univer­improve instruction, in under­Mildred Klesel was appointed at Fort Eustis will be' among the four semester hours, must have a Summer Texan night editor Mon­ sity, 'Joe Neal, campus Fulbright graduate work, " especially in the 30,000 spectators at the Saturday C average for the 1961 spring se­ day by the Editorial appointment program advisor, announced. liberal' arts and sciences, and to launching of the largest liner-ever mester, and must show financial Walter committee. —v ! Langridge Robinson of hold promising young people in built in the -United States, wrote hardship. . 'Arlington. has been awarded a the teaching profession. Fellow­ eel;Kirkpatrick, University stu­ scholarship at "the University of ships will be given to young teach­ dent andmemberof the group. ApplicationsNowOpen Innsbruck ' in Austria. Robinsdn ers who show the ability to con­ Mrs. Tom ConnallyV wife of Tex­ will €tudy German literature. • tribute "to en^ching the under­ as Senator* Connaliy,-will wield the For Union Assistant Melvin B. Jaschke of Victoria graduate curriculum in their col­ cre$ traditional' champagne bottle. Sen­ has bjeferi Awarded a scholarship to leges and to. improving theinselves ator ConnaUy Will deliver the ad­Applicants for the post of sssuk the University of-Madras in India. as teachers. These* fellowships total dress at the festivities. , tant to the director'of the Texas: He yill study<-in ecdffomica about $2,200,000 for 1951-1952. By RUSS KERSTEN The liner, to be named S S Union, are asked.to apply to Brook • "•. • '• t ^ Hf , f I * <* -J ^ moay, June f5r*f95P* THP ''r*^**M> •••'•j['rt-:,'iii f—Trr~iii n iT**-— !3?!»?S!5!yi58Sfi5 h&rw, K ^vfi> <• J FT~ •\gs&V Jv. * • ffuesday, JuiW l9, >951**" THE SUMMER iTfaAl^'•?*<»•%, r • m m,"' " • M i.. " ' *IW'-—--• >•' HA jClub Triumphs V-3 m .—' « J* V •fli r m ^ J lm ue Summer intramural Softball go.t underway Monday-night with foujr games being* played; Three Were won by .large margins,. . 'Walks plagued TLOK and Sig­ma Nu, thus playing a large part iii the losses of both teams. TLOK S r. ; ' ,Jta»fd on Associated Prei* -• ^ The Cadets used four pitchersOklahoma's diamond Sooners, in their attempt to.stem the tHah joverlodk)ed at the beginning of tide, the second of whom, Blantonthe National Collegiate Athletic Taylor, was charged with the loss. Association baseball tourney in They were • also handicapped by Omaha; swept through the meet seven misc-ues afield. C without a setback?;and knocked Saturday the Tennessee base-off the Tennessee Vols 3-2 in the finals -bailers, taking the cue from their TexaaA&M/'Kvontes in lasttallb^ soaring ' unheralded to near the nation's carnival along with Southern Cal­ top, eked out » ninth-inning 5-4 ifornia, .were pushed to the way­ victory to eliminate the Utes. side by Utah 15-8 Friday. Pre­ viously, the Aggies had lost to Billy Asbury, left fielder, doub­Springfield (Mass.) College, 5-1, let! pitcher-first baseman Sid Hat­and had beaten the Ohio State field home with the winning tally. Buckeyes, 3-2. ' Oklahoma downed Southern Big Dave Cunningham, a top California 4-1 Saturday to remain passer on the gridiron for the unscathed and to earn the right Utes, led a sixteen-hit barrage of meeting the Vols in the finale Tvith a pair1 of towering homers to Sunday. sink the Texans. ^ Tall Jack Shirley held the A&M pushed across three runs mountaineers to three hits. Af­ in the fifth to take.a short-lived ter a shaky first inning in which lead. Doubles by Guy Wallace and they got two safeties, Tennessee ^Sfale Lary, a Utah error, and a tallied two runs inTfKe fifth on i •ingle by Hank Candelari account­hit, a walk, and two OU errors. ed for the trio of tallies, The Sooners then came back "to' In eighth,' behind by—seven -rack up one in the sixth, another runs, the Farmers marked twice singleton in the seventh, and- more with Joe Ecrete and Lary wrapped it up in the eighth on a coming acrOlJs on A1 Ogletree's Ray Morgosh two-bagger and a v triple. , Charles Pulgsey single. If Figgers By KEN TOOLEY Texan Sports Editor 'If only the Longhorns had been the Southwest Confer­ence representative at Omaha, we would have aiiother na­tional baseball championship." That's what several Longhorn fans have said since Oklahoma won-*­the NCAA title last week. lost their first game to Springfield, But it isn't all that easy. The w•" _ ' : easy and the Steers managed to SPORTS SHORTS: Jim Ehrler, grasp two bingles from the arm of the number-one Longhorn .pjtcher lim Waldrip. ; who signed a professional contract " This; is what the sideline coaches with,the Boston Red Sox soon af­ftrfe -basing their theory on, but ter the season end|e.d» is now play-they sometimes forget that statis­ing with Scranton, a Class A team tics cannot predict tjie~ outcome in the Eastern League. :, Pi any game, especially baseball. George Sa'uer, head footballActually, the Aggies went fur­coach at", Baylor, and the 1950ther into the playoffs than the coach of the year in the Southwest pre -game predictors -expected. Conference, has been chosen on They-went to Arizona as the un­ the coaching staff for the all-starperdOg and took two of three football game at Soldier Field in games to win a berth in the NCAA Chicago August 17 when the col­ tournament at Omaha. There they legians meet the pro champs, the Cleveland Browns. He will serve with Herman Hickman, -head Louis Wins Over Savold coach, of Yale; Bob Voights of!With Sixth-round Kayo Northwestern, Andy Gustafson" of V . >•. Miamif and'Bowden Wyatt of Wy­' Looking at times like the cham­ oming: |>ion of, old, Joe Louis knocked put the veteran Lee Savold in.2:29­ •f the sixth round in the sche­ duled 15-rounder at Madison Baseball Scores Square Garden Friday i^ight. . The aging ex-king of the heavies AMERICAN LEAGUE Ifought his best fight,since he began Cleveland 9, Boston 7.­bis comeback. -(Only game scheduled.) <. i * Oddly enough Louis .had pre­NATIONAL LEAGUE dicted the sixth round knockout Chicago 5, Boston 4. , . ten days beforST New York 5, St. Loukr'4. ­ (Only games scheduled.} «<«ri^jirBSC-Sur-­ XEXA^EAGUE allowed Hispanic American Club seven runs in the third, while the Sheltered Boys' took vsix runs on walks frbm Sigma Nu. After two good innings, TLOK pitchers D. fx, Martin and Charles Arnold went wild and'•began walk­ iftg in tuns for HA Club. The HA's got only a few hits but they whipped TLOK by a score of 9-2. HA's J. P. Martinez allowed seven hits in the six innings played. W. C. Orr paced TLOK with two hits and accountedIfJfcig1. two runs. • — Truman Smith also got two hitiC scoring the last run for TLOK j-wtth -a—fifth -inning homerjust ­inside the third base line. Lambda Chi Alpha -stomped AEPi,-13-2i Pitcher Robert John­son, Lambda Chi, gave up only mmmrnmm three hits, while AEPi's Irving Pozmantier allowed 14. Lambda Chi scored in each of the five innirigs, six coming,in the third. Ss»M Perry blasted out threff* hits in three -times ,at the plate, DARROW HOOPER collecting a single, a double, .and; a homer. H; A, Sellinger and Louis Shlipak came home in the fifth ,for AEJ^f's only • rlins. Poz­mantier. $truc1<; out two, and John^ ftmnfii'sbcv'...1''11; "" ' The Shgltered Boys got six hits from Sigma Nu'a HaTlan Smith, 0 vic- SEATTLE, June 16.—n at the 220-yard low hnrdles was not gotkl finals but later fell to Ethel Nor­ Caswell Tennis Center.. • "> enough to give him a finals berth ton and Harold Folks of San An­ Behind a yicious oyerliead and in that event.: net game, the Houston high school tonio, ^7-5, 6-2 fo; the champion­:. In a Friday final/ Arkansas dis­ace turned back ex-Longhorn ship. v;: tance man James Brown took : Clint Nettleton for tbe men's sin­Former National Singles cl fourth-place laurels in th« 2-mile; gles championship in five long ancT pion, Wilmer Allison of Austin run; :4 ^ , -. torrid sets, 2-^, 6-1, 3-6, 6-^3, 6-iS. teamed 'with. Bernard Clinton of Neither Longhorn entry; Char* Giammalva, who still has two Dallas to win wie veteran's dou­ley Meeks in the broad jump and years of /eligibility left in,the jun­bles title from Lawrence Ilfrey Ray Marek in the icrelin throw, iors, forced tjte net continually and John Hoff by a 6-3, 6-4, 6*4 managed to qualify for Saturday's = finals. Marelc barely^ missed, pla­ where he volleyed or smashed for score. . i ^ ^ cing eighth with seven men qua­ clean winners. lifying. His throw of 204 1% was Ken Crawford, Southwest Con­Graxiaao KO'» Lott less than 2 feet short of the last ference. champion, ..fell to the BALTIMORE, June 18.— Phi Epsflon va. Delta tlpsilm Cleveland, .30 26 .536 SVi TENNIS AND HORSESHOES -Sat. 11 ajii..2a.m. First round scores are due in the In­ Detroit 26 26 y ,.500 10% tramural Office Wednesday. Players are 912 Red.River vt: B-7735 ­ Washington -21 32 ,.396 16 responsible , for reporties ' their scores. -' . St. Lonis ,„18 37 .327 20 Philadelphia 1^ 37^ NATIONAL LEAGUE C -v ^ i «• 1' W Pet, GB -Brooklyn „^.36 19 .655 ­ HAVANA ^17 New York .. .33 27 :.550 St. Louis =.29 28 .509 Vjjfr romantic Cube. Enjoy gayCincinnati —27 -28 ' .491 Latin nijght life. Shop in quaint old* ^ „ Boston 28 30.. .483 world shbps. See historic Morro Castle. «&«• Philadelphia 26 30' .464 ' * • •• •' ' • .-SSJsv-' Chicago 24 2£"1 .453 4and ft day staysin Havana Include Pittsburgh __21 /;388 \Buropean plan acconuno* » TEXAS LEAGUE. I I take a dattons at first class ; The Brooklyn Dodger^signed Mon­allas^S;' s$an day Bob LilliSf. shortstop for the Houston 3, Fort Worth 2: Houston .1 43 28 .606 tatibttfrom 4dfqp>ee^^ihotiBla®^ ^University of Southern'California, Beatimont 5, Oklahoma City 4. Beaumont ^__37 3a -529 for a "sizeable bonus." Lillis was BIG STATE LEAGUE San Antonio 37 34 .521 FREE Vacation '51 Polder, b" As low as Signed to a Mobile contract and Gainesville 14,Waco 1. . Fort IfifoFth 33 36. .478 Describes manyotheralt travel' KU$ U.S.TAX ON MS FAftk signed^ by that Dodger farm to\ Sherman-Denison 4, Austin 3. Okla. City 31 39 *442 tonrs. Ask for your ^opy. leblo in the Clas« A Western Temple 4, Texarkana 2.' Tulsav. 30. 42 .418 M411 • Or OA Ymt 1ravel i e . v: v. " Wichita:Falls-7^Tyler 4. ShreVeport __29 0 .Sit — *r >M £?,i»vray ^general election forecast Monday ""iDaniel said The strohgly opposed As saying the island's gamblers and '* government considerably farther Attorney GenerST Price Daniel a change of venue. > to the tigM Chan the otd one* JT . Unofficial r^Mifiisfor 592~fl>jfthe won a temporary injunction Mon­business men blamed the shutdown "I think the case should be of Maceo clubs, on Daniel's politi­ &§f-4v .®kfc" middle-road parties wnfcn 625seats in the assembly gave this day against horse-race gambling heard in Truvis County, not trans­cal ambitions.-• n, ' kave governed -France for five distribution^Communists, 103; De information in Galveston. He de­ ferred to Galveston County—not ^years emerged with a majontyin GauU«U (RPF), m; Center par-nied that political ambitions lire The priest,' Monsignor Dan P, ;L 1^:«wew. National -Assembly. :||f§ tied to the crackdown of Galveston any part of the case," he told re­O'Connell,-rector of St. Mary's :: porters immediately after -the Catholic^ Church, said many Gal­ Bat ttii combinationcovers The division of these center par- Monday court hearing. citizens veston believe 'Daniel .-"OTA a wide spread of economic* ties was: Socialists, 98; ^Popular Ten prominent Galveston men He issued a statement replying ~ wants to run for gpvernor "on a «jd-sodd views that it probably Republicans (MRP), left-of-center were ordered po appear^before the to a Houston Chronicle, story record as the man who cleaned up T111 k*vfe to Texas Cnrime Committee June 26. > !«•» to the right to Catholics, 03; Moderates (right 'which quoted a Galveston priest Galveston." . |; artsy in poweg; ^ ^ |g At Houston, Police Chief L. D. ng, mostly Catholics), 97; Left j£? 88 though Oe ldodir Republicans (right-of-center radi-Morrison and Chief Deputy Sher­ iff E. B. Williams warned Galves­ v.: Munists would he down to about cal Socialists and the Democratic ton gamblers to stay out of Hous­Summer Texaii Crossword Puzzle ! .110. seats from the 183 which Union of former Premier Rene r. Vs ton and Harris County^'; • ^ •••'• they and their fello# travelers Pleven), 80.* * The.t'.em po¥ aryinjunction, ACROSS 5. Trimmint 21. Sunk fence t yhad in the old assembly. De Gaulle '' De Gaullists had 18.5 per cent granted; Ity^ Judge Jack Roberts, 1. Youngs scissors _ (E^ig.) probablyhas improved his standing of the popularvote, Socialists 1S.7 applies^ to the Macea Syndicate, oyster 3. Trouble ~ I 32. Appearing from about a dozen seats to 115 or per cent, Popular Republicans 11.2 - Southwestern. Bell Telephone Co., 5. Brittle ~ 4. Abound asifeaten Toclay's more in his first general election. per cent and Left Republicans 8.1 and Southwestern. Associated,-Tele­w cookie --8.Coin >. fresh men •ta^'j Triangle country, 17 to 29 miles vestigating-the case of a former 48. Runs before Newsmand Observer, said Mr. Tru­ north of the 38th parallel. * Reconstruction Finance Corpora­man is determined to "fight back" the wind . tion official accused of working for / (Naut.) against critics of his foreign poli­ The MacArthur inquiry commit­an RFC borrower while still draw­cies. -V '-V ; 49. Joutney tee voted Monday to wind up its ing $10,750 a year from the Gov-y "50.. Listen! "I think he's "going to run," hearings oft the firing of Gen. Mac-eminent. . -;' Daniels said. "I think the more .. DOWN -Arthur; Senator Bridg^ (R-NH) :..:.;W. RFC ad-hisrforeigii policy:is_attack6d, tlie 1. Odd f . protested that six. pro-administra-ministrator, identified the official more he'll fight. He fights with •: tion witnesses have alreadybeeh as Aflen JE. Freeze, 52, of Dallas, both hands all the Way." ^ heard against' three on the other former assistant comptroller of the i side of the great controversy. ^ C -RFC. Freeze flatly denied the The General will' have a chance charges. • for rebuttal if he-wishes*. Symington told a news confer­ ence that Freeze accepted a salary A -US M*rine»ergeant and a from the Texmass Petroleum Com­ Cuban .night watchman welre shot pany of Dallas at least five months to death inthe United States Em­before leaving RFe and "carried bassy early Monday, putting doz­„o£ business with and Jor (Tex­ ens of Cuban police and secret mass).from his office at the RFC." ; agents on the trail 'of a first-class In .Dallas,' Freeze . said the . mystery. charges are "absolutely untrue." •'.-" 7 He said he had given RFC several Fall''impact of a nationwide months' notice of his resignation, maritime strike was felt when the ^effective last September 28, and , CIO Maritime ©*airJ Theater. exhibit, Ney Museum. Wednesday ^ /_ 12 —' Sigma Delta Chi, Com­12 — James Land to Sddress ' mons Annex. ~ . -m: University Area Kiwanis-Clubr 3 — University Symphony Orches^ : TWFC Building. •c tra invites Musicians, Music 2 —t NAUD bridge group, 1108Building 200. .. .. '1East Thirty-first. Street. /B -— Deadline fdr" foreign stu­ 3 T-Movie, "The Quiet One;!' starter dent tuition scholarship appli-, sponsored by Workshop o)i Hu­ set v .. cations, B. Hall. . v man Relations, Hillel. Founda­ 6 -r-Dip Hour daily, Women's tion pie -only true china of ultra-modern design]Gym Pool. 6 — Counselors of Youth^group Choose modern colors: Parsley, Green, 6:45 •— Bible Stucfy, Lutheran meets at Littlefield Fountain Student Center. Avocado Yellow, Oyster Grey, Nutmeg 4 Saucers to go on boat ride. • .; 7 — YMCA-YWCA. meeting, Brown, Sugar White, Ice Blue. Just say 8-10 — Obeservatory op6n, Phy^­ YMCA. ; "Charge It!" Open; your Kruger account! 4 Luncheon Plates sics Building. ­ 7. — Informal get-together for young people, First Methodist ' *• Thursday •* '*" > DEPENDABLE JEWELERS FOR 45 YEARS! Church. ^ — • University-Symphony, Or-. ;7 Alba Club, Texas Union $16. chestra, Music Building 200: 7:30 -— Dr. Bernice Moore to 7:15 — Swing .and Turti, Texas hmissm Jtwnem ft* 45 YEARS address , NAUD, Texas Unioii Union Patio. 315 -7;45 — Sing-song, Zilker Park. ; 7:3{jL,asSft^l!Q8&f?"Head to speak toI; Aosllb Library Club, taguna ^air Theater. . ., c Gloria. 8-10—-Summer reception-forfacul­ ^JSL:30. -r-American Association of _ ty and administrative staff, on the drag | Architectural j. Engineer* tq el-home of Dr. and Mrs. T. S. !ect of^cersj Architec t ur e ^Painter,X"' lO& West Twenty­ 36 Guadalupe Building 105. - seventh Street. II x FMA..JL J«s*i fijulm i^l ilffifcj IW fflJ.lffi "* -m, te'tgs zH&fVP* * At "•> 5?" m&K ' '5fu0«iAY». fcfir! ; jjh *i'£5 sa&ss Id n'I ?_ JdLjgg i%r tii c s.T'T^y-tr. Page'4 jL ^ ^v fF*/ •WWiV •' ^7v f r^ft* . «* / ^ r Just when ~a victory for the coastal states in the tidelands dispute seemed *rQund the corner, President Truman •aid Friday he would veto any measure taking clear title away froin the federal government; ; -^ 7 •'. " The administration fes steadfastly op-.. loosed transferring these lands—offshore Texas, Louisiana, arid California to the states, contending that they belong to theentire nation.That policy confornis to 14st year's weird Supreme Court rul­ . ing, rather than leaving the matter in the hands pfthestates. And a two-thirds vote in both, the House and Senate, if nothiiag happens to the present House subcommittee-apv proved bill, may be tough to muster. But;; that's what it will take, How that: the President intends to ignore the wishes of E*3j» the simple ihajority of Congressmen. " responsible for perpetuating the injustice of the 1950 Supreme Court which decided (four to three) by some peculiar process of reasoning that Texas js on "equal foot­ing" with the Other states and that the annexation agreement was voided when Texas seceded in 1861. ^ ix Such arguments are baseless, in the light of history. ----"'• "Equal footing," as Justices Frank­furter and Heed pointed out in a dissent­ing opinion/has never been construed to mean the taking away of properly that a stateformerly owned. Under theformal treaty annexing Texas to the United States, Texas agreed to pay its'own pub­lic debt in return for permanent clear title to its public lands—including, spe­cifically, tidelands. . • The highest court in the land, however, inferred that the intent of the treaty is no longer relevant. ::r~ •. „ iz:z The-"conquered-province" doctrine, which holds that Texas has only those rights given it during Reconstruction, is fallacious, also, since in a number of decisions the Supreme Court has decided that legally the states that attempted THE S TEXAN The Daily. Texan, student newspaper of The Umvefrsfty •f .Texae,, is. pujjlishe^, Jn.Austin .jeyery morning exceptlloniiay diid Saturday, September to .June, except duringholiday and examination periods, and\ bi-weekly during the summer session, under the title of The Summer Te^an . on Tuesday and Friday by TijSas Student; Publications, Inc. .•-"•'•.•.• .... News contributions will be accepted by telephone(2-2473). at the 'editorlal olfticeB jn J.B.-^lt Jttr at the 'news laboratoiry in J. B. .102^ Inquiries concerning delivery and advertising should be. Made in the business offices of TSP in J.B, 108 (2-2473). Opinions of the iTexan are.not necessarily those of-tfie Administration or othef University officials.. Entered as second-class matter October 16, 1945 »t the Post.-Office -at Austin, Texas, under' the Act of March 3, 1878i •• ASSOCIATED PRESS WIRE SERVICE "The' Associated Press is 'exclusively entitled to t)>« «*e for republicAtlon of any news dispatthes credited to R or' not otherwise credited In this newspaper, and local items of spontaneous origin published herein.: Rights < of publication of all other matter herein also reserved. ' , y.;; . • Represented-for Nationat Advertiaihg by N»tio~nal Advertising Service," Inc., * " College Publishers Representative / 48JT Madison Ave. „2 New York, N. Y. Chicago-«i-' Boston —-Los Angeles •— San Francisco ' ^ MEMBER ' Associated CoUtfUt* Press All-American Pacemaker , SUBSCRIPTION RATES •. , " (Summer Term Only) One semester, delivered or mailed out-ef town . -$ .75 Two semesters, delivered or mailed, out of town '$1,00 One semester, mailed inside Austin -fl.oo Two semesters, mailed insidfc * Austin •' »1.&0 PERMANENT STAFF E4itor-rn-a»M RUSS RERSTEN Managing- Bditor ~-r.—.BRAD BYE.RS StAFF FOR THIS ISSUE Editor MILDRED KLESEL stant.Night Bditor^BOBBY J ONES Night Reporters WarlwJRic^ey, Dorothy secession' were never out of the Union, Imperils Georgia U. a single day. Texas was annexed into the Union by an. act of Congress which ByRUSS KfcRSTEN r«m Bdifr ' ^ '/ ­ has never been repealed. .The University of Georgia » That annexation treaty should be fol-gambling its. life tgftinst the ad*­lowed. ; './•" '•*•-)' -' ;V mittance j>£ a young Negro, Ho­race Ward. The United States government did not ~~ Ward, seetang entrance oa hk own, was never granted, and has no basis qualifications alone, last week was for claiming any land belonging *6 any denied -his eight-months-old re-; quest for admission to the state;: state which entered the Union—regard­ University at Athens. -Chancellor less of the. time.' The Supreme Court Harmon Caldwell said rejection! failed, to satisfactorily explain how the was "the ottly decision that canbe federal government could^gaiti a title it made under Georgia's constitution and law." never, by any stretch of the imagination, £ Ibiom^Wardiscarrying the fightheld. ,. Vv:';':\vjr • "'v ~>TV to Federal courts, and Georgia's - Now narrow the dispute to Texas land. hands-tied educators are worried. Unless the legislature hacks down Texas' shrewd treaty-makers, for pur­ from its arbitrary ruling,; higher poses of the" ^annexation agreement, der education in the. Entire state uni­Star versity system—-sixteen colleges and 20,059 students—-may be• com-' State at three leases^ off? "" r: ^ v :: pletely shut down. ^ r . . \ /~: • ^e. There was nothing in the treaty Georgia's constitution requires Paralyzed1 from the hips down, 9t racial segregation, in . state-sup-for the past nine years because ofSrotfrffiaff,'Wall Ukeimo^, vrilMHT ^ prjrted schools, but fliatY not the , a car wreck, this amazing 24-year'­ So we get to keep!our property; thanks -—— Campbell,:Ed Brooks^ / To t^bihk' that' the elected leaders of Copyreaders Nancy Torrance, Bill Hallma;n, ' our state should, succumb to the mass-Alan Dabhey, Martha McCarty, hysteria~iappeal\of the melodramatic 4 Peggy l>ordf Wayland Pitcher speeches of a lttan fired from public. Night Sjp Editor Pat fiomar af blow hard to bear. istarits Ken Tooley, Joe. Mosbjf, Mr. MacArthur ^3efems to lie Gene Farmer, Bob Halford . tte "thetey.ight Society Editor Sidney Siggel in Korea" s^ot one of whom -woiild, I ight Amusemiente Editor ^Jo Aim^ickerson . • believe, give4iini a drink if he (Mac), ight, .Telegraph Editor — Jerry Wilpon ' istant i..-. Tom teen schools in the university sys­ tem would be void. -$ ' »A11 federal court decisions t* date have made mandatory admit­tance of Negroes to white (graduate) schools where separate hul equal facilities do not exist. So seven southern states, includingTexas, have admitted or agreed to admit graduate Negro students/ ; Georgia legislators, flushed with "Southern paide/1 fail-to. compre­hend that the march of progress has at last.com* thdur way. , '•'• : •• :,-4~Up in Madison, Wisconsin, edu­cation took another , peculiar fcwist* -' ' " Frank Huettsier Jr., a Phi Beta Kappa .who has never sfcen the inside of a college classroom, gra­duated with honors from the Uni* of. Wisconsin School of (i -* ' " ' V-'-W.' only hitch. In' case any Negrro old has "attended" college seven to the Court find the Pre^iderft, but lc^e were admitted, even under federal years visi telephone. Our mineral rights. That's because ststte -court ruling, the 1961.legislature Phone wires*connected his home has provided that all state funds with eighteen classrooms. He ownershipstands in the way of the "para­ for that schooL automatically would ask his pfofs-questions and •A­ mount rights-' of the United*States gov­cease. take the lectures on a wire record­ ernment. ; • Then, hitch number two: if the er ,then type complete and careful courts find that provision in the notes on all he'd heardi The Great Robbery is thus perpetu­ budget act illegal or. discrimina­. Exams? Nothing to it. He'd dic­ated. •,.v". ' ' ••' tory, the appropriation for all six-tate the answers to a stenographer. C7 Jl Great Service, Mac TO THE EDITOR: ^ ­ Our ironic laughter stems not only from the fact that your line of re*-­. soning is illogical, but also, because you obviously are so blinded by the . /traditional love of the Democratic Party, headed by the "Missouri Mule," that you fail to get the true picture. Such loyalty we deem ex­ tremely valiant in its place—heed we' add this is not the place. Perhaps you. just overlooked the great service MacArthur has,done us / * in the past. Needless to say,' regard­less of his well-founded and . well-, expressed views of our present politi­cal machine, our military strategies < and successes in these •strategies would hardly. have been the same without him.; Does it not seem fair v and hoiiofable to «giVe credit where credit is duet It does jiot seem neces­sary to ifemind you that MacArthur like all huijp^n beings has his failing^. . v. As you recall our country is found­ed,on the Four Prefedoms. One beingFree:doth of Speech. It is dtir-as^uirip-" ' tion that MacArthur has the perfectright to say just what he pleases ­about our ^present administration, ju^t as Truman> rhas ttie ,right to-make > such fool-iiardy threats and' state­tnents to the critics concerning Mar­ garet. v.. ' " As for* the statement concerning : the MatArthurs' breakfast (Ed-note:­mentioned in Managing Editor Brad Byers' column, last Tuesday) you arpobviously ;biased and prejudiced' on — the subject of MacArthur which made -oijr stomashis dp flip-flopsi'Perhaps it" ;/ just-didn't dawn on you that we're < not piaxtticularly coiiceirned with, whe­ther you have u weak stomach or not. , Maybe by now you are getting the •• general picture-thajt-we; don't like-you ~ ; Either. -.I'.... ' . If you are hinting that JklacArthur . has not accomplished:anything while being in the United States, perhaps we .might touch lightly otir the fact' that catching fish'-, is n4t.pertinent to«. governmentAffairs. Do^ Truman^use his political scalawags for bait? ­Perhaps MacAfthure phrase might. . be returned with much more signifi­cancel "Old. politicians never die-^-i" '.they just fish away;" ^ M. J. B. %• B. A. M. Mass Hysteriq TO THE EDITOR: -^ . fixpGiifi* Douglas. MacArthur spoke .. this^ fair city' and .made a foot"of himselff as>welr as the Texas *•; Legislature sitting^ on the front rows ine lie criticism, and neatly deposits, the whole Var on. the critics' door step and acbuses them of starting it. The. only hope in sight to keep this gentlehian (who has been »ding away all over the United States)from plunging us into another World War is that there are .enough edu­cated and cool-headed people in this country to, save the rest.of us from damnation. Fall to Shame --• TO THE EDITOR: "The Rise .and Fall of General Douglas MacArthur"—OR "The Rise to Military Fame and the Fall to Political Shame.'^, This is the story of Douglas MacArthur.;. It is indeed unfortunate Hhat a man of such great military stature has let himself , be so shamelessly "used" by cheap publicity agents(Gene Whitney)*;and pressure groups ' as has Genl MacArtliur. Vanity is indeed a foul thing—-•especially when its satisfaction de­mands the prolonged sowing of seeds of disunity at such a crucial time and at such a great cost; No true-Ameri-" can challenges a " person's legal right : to express freely his political views, but I^think. most Americans view with . disdain the^.harmful.effect on national inotale which Gen. MacArthur'? par­tisan "sour igrapes" campaign has festered. . \ /• Vengeance drove a man., named Heuiiy Wallace into the hungry arms of the Communists. A desire .for re­tribution and vengeance hgs caused,a great' A'mericanV general to succumb to the sympathy and indulgence of • rightist groups and political parties.—" NORMAN W. ECKHARDTi . , Missing Address Edi. Note —r The address of Charles Windsor, .whose ietter' ap­peare4 in the last Firing Ianef^is 14 Courtfield Avenue^, Harrow, Etig- Jand.) 3°b 'pportuntttei ••• >t-:-.'...-!—.-1 • •". yr The Fourteenth XI." S.. Civll Service has '•aMoanctd continnous openings for engi­' .neers fa twenty-seven fields. The pmy range /ht from fS,100 Jo f6,400 per annum. Appli­ cation „ forms may h« obtained mad fiHed m /with ihe Regional Director; Foiirteenth U.S. •>Ci*iI Service Begioa, ilfi i Sot^th HSrwood . Street, Dallas 1, Texas. • . , , Open competitive and promotional «x­., >»mina,Uo»s for clerical, secretariali and vari­ BSPlBS.SUSSSfl'S&'S: 'bdnj; «n a Mntinuous basis ^ntil farthtt notice; • Applications and informAtion are availabjle Kix on A's^nd B's i ; TO THE EDITOR! Siiice Johnny Bryson's expose in the Ranger aftd in Life five years ago we've been reading and hear­ing about cheating at th^ Utiiver­sity. Professors and.Texan editorial* ists have issued' miles of comfhent calling the students' behavior dur­ing quizzes deplorable or disgrace­ful. And' now they tell us that the Situation hasn't changed materially,that students cheat just as much to-, day as in days past. We agree that it is a deplorablesituation, even though we'll admit-that we have on' occasions fudged" our way through quizzes. But we don't agree that the stu­dent is altogether to blame. The deans and : the entire University set-up are just as who-would, copy guilty as those their "neighbors . paper. Here's why. The accent on grades at the Uni­versity has * completely . dominated : and . overshadowed the. -accent on . learning. We aren't claiming to be : originators of such a -statement. Forward-looking men in the ptfsthave , pointed out that the grading system is out of date. But Univer-v sity official^ have consistently clos-i ed their ears to such noises. i " ' , R. B. Will the following people please contact the Oltite of thp Dean. of Women (M.B 196 M) and give .their 'Austin addresses Mrs. Idell'e Frierson •'. Mary Jane Harris Mrs.' M«rKfet 'Lett lohes Hir»ie -' ••;•? Helen-Schreiber , • " '• -Nina Annice Verser •-' • Oma Eckols Voydenbaum Mrs. Msrgot Wetiel •. ... Lillian Ritfi Garcia , JESSE EARL ANDERSO? Assistant to the Oeao of Wom< Kotices' from" the University. Library •r any of its branches -are official Uni­ - versity '.communications ' requiring -im­ mediate attention. Students irhQ 'fall ^ respond to Library notices wffl be re­ ferred to the Office of the Bean of Stu» WT'M /ient Life. • ' A. MOFT1T, "Librarian ^e-examinatipns and Postponed and Adv«rted Standing Examinations' will be. givra JuHe 25 through July Z. Petitions to take examinations in this veeies must he. in the Registrar's office not lattr than Jane Ifc —' ; H. Y. McCOWN, Registrar --Will the following people please eon-tact the Office-of the Dean of Women' - (M.B. 106 M) and gi*e their Austin addressr . ,, Hrs. ldelle FViersoii , .. '' ••',:, Mary Jane Haixis • .. - -« Mrs. llatgigt tee Jones H%bw , Helen Schreiber w-v ' ­Nina Annice Vefsei; . Oma Eckols Voydenbauas. . Mrs. Margot Wetxel . . Lillian .Rita Garcia JESSE EARL ANDERSON,' Assistant to the Dean at Wojnes ftymai MM mm wgm 5 -2 ----' -^"T­ ,.. ,.™«. ,f, jsip ||w « \ '*U^ mmm k. h£& reary, lien Wed W-*; H'iy •4 «{ *"• V, ^v>"* Cef< . R»t« Virti.U HcCr«<7 was ence and bachelor of business ad­ * married to H. K. Altar in a gar­ministration degrees from the s' den* ceremony at i^r parents' University and has just completed'^iome in Temple recently. work on a law degree. He was Both g^daate^cl in June from a member of Delta Tau Delta fra­the University. . ternity, Cowboys, Texas Athletic Mrs. Allen . was r member of Council, Student Assembly, and Kappa.Kappa Gamma sorority and was a varsity football letterman .Canter Club ancf serred as chair­and a Goodfellow. man of the Teztts Union Charm . •.••_••• ' •' Committee. She was a Bluebonnet Mr. and Mrs. Elliot John Bil-Belie finalist. . hartz have announced the engage­ Allen received bachelor of sci­ ment of their, daughter, Elisc Jo­iiuiu JlilhajBts, to Russell J. OR. EUGENE H.DUKE si-!?; •-1* Russell C. Hinote. OpfomeHki Both attend The University of Texas. Miss Bilhartz is a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, Tumle, Canterbury Club, and is retary of San Antonio Club, he was San Antonio Rose this -year Hinote is the-president of Tau Kappa Epsjpon fraternity and a member of the Inter-Fraternity Gouneily San > A«tenio Cliibf Can terbury Club, and tfce American Marketing Association. Mr. and Mrs. "William M. Ford­tran of Stockdale announce (^the engagement of their daughter, A* net Fordran, to Jack Ellsworth Barnhtrt, son of Mr, and Mrs. C. M. BArnhart of .Refugio* • NOW! Miss Fordtran attended The University of Texas where she was PRESCRIPTION a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority and represented the University as SUN GLASSES! a visiting duchess in the Corona­tion during Fiesta week this Eyes Examined spring. _';. -." ' • ' v ; Barnhii^, who also attended the University, is a member of Theta Duplicated • Xi fraternity. Glasses adjusted at The wedding is .to take place next fall. ~ ' • Optometric Clinic Jo Beth Walling became, the bride of Hugh Wilson Heflia May 2228 Guadalupe Phone 28634 25. Both are graduates of the University. . " GO CARRIBEAN...with win one of 25 thrilling all-expense paid vacations to romahtic Carribean . . . or valuable cash prizes! • /' —W~-— wmtmsnmssmmmssm *!£$*¥• Oiw;thiScU|l r -•s--f' * S*. " i­ f ** ^ * » i . Su at - t»fsr5 n£ ,-jr I tup. fTI.? it Plans for the suminer activities at Laguna Gloria. — NeW officers of the National As­ He ifill Suggest ways inwhich sociation of Univwrsity D^m«s will ;; c C-TV. of the YMCA and YWCA wiU get meeting in the Student Christian spectators can* receive more* en­be elected Tuesday, at their regu­'i ^undecway .tonight at a 7 o'clock joyment from pictures and will lar business meeting in the Texas discuss paintings now on display Union at 7:3i«s$S?> f4<5­ i^. «?&> SFT,<.i?'! Dr. Henry Kash Smith, former quarterly publishing literature ami „<> Eleven midshipmen from the H.T. Corning C. E. McKissack Carroll Appointed folklore of the Southwfest. Dr. S. G. Croom J. K. Mania UT professor now at the Univer­ ""University' $j$OT£f unit who are J. L. Dittert R. W. Mathawa & To sity of Minnesota, will receivj the Smith, has been president^ • Marine Gprpa candidates have re-B; C. Eppes K. jr. ttfeMB the Texas Folklore Society,^* and E. y. Gilb«rt_. C. E. Mount® Colombia University1 Bancroft ' ported tq %he Marine Corps A. IS* Halff V. S. Feikins * " 1>r. H. Bailey Carroll, profes­award of $2,000 iat ha book pub-was made an honorary member 4 School at Qiiantico for eight J; W. .Hampton C. H. Pistor sor of history, has just returned the Mexigan society. He was al^* y' 0. P. Harris \ L.W.Rebmejrer lished last year. weeksof training. ' : ,,.-rr-^ J.:E'Hir»?-3.T. Tannc# — from a meeting of the American ... Dr. "Virgin parewsa^ n Smith's volume, -Thirty-four senior students will T. M.Hart D. D. Terry Association for State and Local corresponding membership in the .Herbat G. A. Tattle Land: The American Wes^ aa Sym­ embark June 21 for a cruise of EL-Hooper J. A. Vlek History in Delaware. National. Academy, of Science in _ and Myth,**" has previously the Caribbean Sea. Theywill visit M. Johuon W. H. Wella Dr. Carroll was named to the ffejrieo.^;^1:^y.. ­ M. D.Johnson J. C. Zbranek been awarded the Dunning prise Kingston, Santiago* and Guanta- K>r R*(ukr Maiwaal MpliWMn editorial^ board of two«of the as­During the ftainey controversy, of the American Asso­ -aamo, and will return <»ly;* 13. midihipata mm Atlantic tretot sociation's publications while Df. Smith went on leave of ab-i. fW. B. AJlmon ciation for the "best book on^ a Fifty-nine senior and sopho­J. P. BauerC.E. Blwdworth-R. B. BOM there. They are The History News, sence" for two yeftxs, teaching ajt\ ^ subject^jteting to American his­ more midshipmen will leav<^ Nor­ 8. P. Ifoswell a. A. BiaekcH -a monthly publication, and The Harvard and doing research at the ^ .. folk August 3.< They will steam K. H. Canon -W. R. Ceona tory.*' Smith combined the histori­I ~3. A. Davia C. D. Frtaby ' Bulletin of the associatio; Huntington Libraiy in California. cal'and fictional approach to, give to Halifax, Nova Sc.otia.then re­ D. A. CHHey C. P. Hanrla v. ;t . Saturday the South-Central Later, he resigned from the Uni­ turn, stopping at Bostonand N$W XL X* Hinea R. J. Koekne a direct and calculated impression J. F. Kutxer «. L MeVay award for excellence of its his­veiniity to «£ee^pt-a teaching posi­ York, before proceeding to Guari-on the reader. ——+­ H. P. MiMll J.' W. Pancooat tory program *fas made to the tion at the Unfrezaity of Minne­ ' tatiamo. Their coiirs^-ends Sep-W. W. Parker. R..L Polunaky Dr.* Walter Prescott Webb, pro- R. E. Post Jr. H. J. R«ta -3E ;.c. Historical Association, sota. Du^ng tiie summer of 1948, . tember 14. t • :fessor of history atUnivfrsityi I. A. Sthrirtr . U B. Seott >•? llie South-Central urea includes Dr. Smith was one of the twelve -Special -intensive trailing in O. Speed •a. H. 8«ittv«a ^ 'r^^^^Virs^na«:Md<»e- W. C. Swadley X. W. Wilaott i fcfissiseippi, Arkansas, Louisiana, American professors iehosen to Ei aviation will be given 28 regular textured, straight exp<»ition.' Con­ T. O. WilaoB T. T. WoodaH , Kentucky,: .Tennessee, Alabama, teach in the Salsburg Seminar on julftoTs who report to the .Naval Sayln « Atkatie crtrfM sidering the weatth of faciual ma- R. D. Anderson • . Oklahoma, and Texas. American Civilization^ Ate Station at Pensacola June21. f' nfsn** terial involved, Ihe bwk is n|pst L. L. Beoaoa ' The American Association for They Ieave PehsacoUi Jaly l5 for j c.' w. Be«k H Ji«^T A. Da*la „„ readable. Its appeal. 1 think,--will C. A. Dyer C. A. Edwwda State and Local History compares Little Creek, Va.» to be schooled be primarily to the literary critic :K. P. Finch C. W. G. Fulchar with the United States Chamber President Foreman In amphibious warfare methods. kf;TCHat3§rr™~ J, K. Hirrtw# ' of the American tradition, to the of Commerce ih that tt is the cen- The course ends August 3. 8. T. HolloweU Jr 5 M. Jones : pi»y' Appcli^ C^mitteemeii R. E. Kravet T. L. Lanc'«rd Jr. tral co-ondinator of the local his­ Regular students are required R. B. LMter J. P. MeKinaer of ide^is. a each C. T. May Jr.' M. D. Murray tory of Americaj Dr. Carroll said. -'Student Assembly edmmittee to make cruise summer. B. 0. Nott A. H. Oirke Before coming to the University appointments last Friday Contract students cruise only be­K. G. Patton J..P. Pittgaaa in 1841, Dr. Smith taught at SMU. i V tween their junior ' and senior J. H. Pruett C.. C. Rlee Ex-Prama Chairman by acting prefide^t Wilson Fore- R. S. Robertson J. N. Smith 7 While there, he Was editor of the man veifKieo&ttee to investi­ & years. .. i' P. J. Withera f •• , V' -"Southwest Review/' a. literary . Rtfiltf jwUrt receiving aviatieii^and On ROTC Duty Here gate campus, coke marines, Tom^ -Midshipmen making the cruise amiritiUwf tniabf R. K. Bryant Major Frank L. Winship, ex-my Rodmn, lehiUnnan, Carolyn follow: G. E. Brooka MfakklpwM In Maria* Corp* TiaWai J. S, Bullion C. G. Eaton chairman of the' Department of Two Proleaaon Pabliah. Busch, Fnunk Dunham; committee J, s: Edwairds C. K. Facc \ ;: •t Quaotk* 1>. Gray Drama who was recalled to ac Two University professors, Dr. to icfheck past assembly* biHsr 1). L.Upshaw s. J. JL Underwood KTP.*TTpiimlc ­ C.. B. Thaanes W. R. Henley W. C. Grindstend J. R. Harvey. tive duty in the Air Force this Howard Wr Townsend, assia^nt mer Jackson and Hamaed Al- H. S. Harden L D. Jeanea : v -— W. H. GUmore ~ T. R. Abernatbjr J. H. Jones past spring, has been reassigned professor of speech, and Dr. J. G. Qaysi, Sam; Brewer• cdmmitteie on " W. R. Brown C. J. Sprint D. C." Johnson H. K. Sneir-R. L. Van Winkle W. M: Kimaaons F. I.oyan • to the Air ROTC, with the offi­Umstattd, professor of secondary legal forms, of bills and resolu­ T.peg T. Maldonado 8, M. Albreeht " "crirrpeif#6tir— cial, title„ .of administrative offi-education, havev recently pub­tions,.Ellis Morris and Roger Rpb-» Contract *enior student* on J. L. MeAlpin -Caribbean cruise D. G. Perwein * 1. A.. Petry cer. ' lished articles in The HighrSchool inson. :• -~p••• w V. L. Schmidt «. A. Adam ! R* S. JobiMwm -T. Rocha -•-• P. M. Suarex Major Winship has been special Journal,, a publication of the The Summer Assembly meets W: E. Blumbew f D^li. Klein — 1^. T^ Smith , K. h. Chaney I «• W. Kotsebue H. D. Williams E. D.'Yoea services officer at Randolph Field School of Education at the Uni' on the second and fonrth Thurs^. since his return to active versity of North Carolina. : ..sday, New House trumpeted The Produce Quick Texan Results In^. B,: n'gylftr, known-to1-regular watch on the temperature For Rent Rooms For Rent Typinguntil the thermometer disappeared many ag "St. Peter,'' is sure that AVAILABLE for business and profes­ during examination week. TWO BLOCKS FOUKTAlN. 1904.B Uni­THEfeES, DISSERTATIONS. Electromatle his -three-by-three office, on .the sionalwomen and>-students. Private corner of Twenty-fourth. Street Asked,if he needed another, Mr. versity. Room" with 'sleeping, porefe. bath, air cooled, maid service, every day. typewriter. Mrs; Petmeckys 63-2212. % Private shower, entrance. $30. Kennan, except Sunday. 2312 San Gabriel. Tele­ and Whitis Avenue is the hottest Taylor said that it would do no 7-5898 or6-8371 Ext. 339. phone 8-2744.. ~ THESIS, themes; and outlines.'Evenings and Sunday; Satisfaction guaranteed. place on the campus. good. "It gets so hot in the gate 6-9S51. . ONE OR TWO STUDENTS or working house that the thermometer won't girls to share two bedrooiu apartment Last winte* someone gave Mr. register it/' -1 ^ . sFor Sale near University. .Call 6-3673. THESES; THEMES, and outlines. Even- Taylor a thermometer-. ^He kept , ings and'Sundays. Satisfaction guaran­ teed. 6-9651. In front of the gate house is a FOR -SALE: Twp girls' bicycles, very weather-beaten umbrella used as good, condition. $15 each. Call' Helen Special Services TYPING WANTED. Call 2-4976. Stafford at 2-4806 after *2 p.m. a sun shade. Mr. Taylor says that "LOOK'' .. •-TYPING SERVICES Canning Processes he hopes, the University Will buy -V BY OWNER Whr Pay more, when you can get your 2108 Swisher '* 4sIEAR UNIVERSITY hair cut for 75c. We specialize in "burr" Telephone 7-3^206 him a new metal shade like those ' ' 11 j AfA xjcbi Miss Welch­ 914,950 cuts.. Cllis Hays and Paul Randall, BOB'S jiol nvue SH at the Someburger stands, lie gets --If a ^ievly r«-»»v[>Ku^decorated home ""OP, 409 W. 24th Stceet. " iK the ^Univeraity area, "with » beautiful DISSERTATIONS and theses. Eleetro­ blistered sitting under the pres­yar«iople, -with a nice creek at' rates. 6-12137. . Jtypist. y Tabulations.: Mrs. ' Moore^ the rear, ainil' many trtee* overlookingr a 7-60H8. . v V-: ° been proven ineffective in prevent­fight. Every time it rains'" he gets nice cencrete patio. Oive ne a call and EXPERIENCED typists Thesea, themes let . me show you this liome, and you ing completely the growth of the soaked.' 7.... ' . -• ''•/ are sure to be pleased. Owfeer 2-1106. etc. University neighborbood. 2-494,5. FAST, EFFICIENT typing. I:B.M. Blee'­ 7: tromatic. Excellent copies. 7-6825. • * • bacteria Which.causes it, Dr. Q. B:. Mr..Taylor has to walk out in TYPIST'S POOL: All experienced typist* Williams, University of Texas bac­6-474T evening*. * , • • EXPERIENCED T Y P I S*T : Theees. teriology professor, announced re­the rain to, talk to anyone driving ' FurnKhecT Apartments • themes, etc./ University neighborhood. on the campus. " 7 2-<»4S..a ' -• cently. . ;pr J He says the solution, to all his REFINISHING. Furnished three rooms TYPISTS'S POOL: AH mature, itxperi- Other resfearchers recently have eniced typists." eningg. discomfort would be a gate house „ bath. $50. 2607 Salado. Apt. B. advocated that the treatment Call 2-3084. •••• •••u right-on the curb.* Then he could c would prevent, canned-food spoil­••QOIQ oaaciQ talk to people through the win-R Wanted age, cut, canning-cpstsi and allow Furnished House •tnaraa andjvpuld not haye toigo out O an onnii an the food to retain more of its nu­WELL EXPERIENCED colored lady in the heat, the cold, or the rainT BEAUTIFUL ^ three-bedroom concrete "sm CiriU •DBQGCJC! %*ntS"*'br^»*&o t University Students* tritional value since it is cooked John Malone is the guard who -house, fiyrnished, alt conTeniences, dou-anna bbdd s laundry. '1608 Singleton; Phone 8-6114.. only briefly. ~ • • 7::. bW traratre. for rent starting Jfnly. JLo-s rjnaun ••••» relieves "Mr. Taylor at 3;t45 p.m. ®*v*d walkiflg disUtnfe from campus. Call oncss nnnn w TUTOR In Applied Math 326. 3-4. hr, University of Texas resiearchers Malone graduated from the Uni­*»*Vl?r4e.' o auacnoB ••• -—• " $1 h*. Call «-lM!l' submitted* approximately.30 types versity in 1948 and is now work­R •• oarao nm . ;E Iwtructlon of bacteria to the new treatment ing; on his master's degree in phy­D ••••• ••&••! Unfurnished House DBHaD B3I5BB Kunder a wide "•^i^""7of"^i«Stiff€' sical education. BNGLISH^all^classer^ Btpert tutoring QQISQ [DOQSi GRANITE» .thrfee-bedroom, -tile kitehen, conditions, but some bacteria still ' py^f3cjferi«need teacher -with masin*! iiewly I^ re-decoiit^. Kar^ce, from U of T., Proofreading. I»h; auryived.j, ;':/7 2a138S« fruit trees, .chicken coup. Available im­ mediately. Phone: 7-3768. ! "Results of three to five differ­Re-examsSchedu ent experiments dealing with each scientific condition w$re in elose agreement," Dr^. Williams' said. e^examinations, postponed, and advanced standing examinations will be given June 25 through July TexansSI^^Approval 2for those students who have peti­ tioned to take them prior to June Ferment Exams 18, ,H. "Y. McCown, registrar^ has The .deferment of college^ stii? announced idents w^io pass the test of general The schedule .for the examina­ abilities ik favored by more than tions, which are to be given in uhalf of tiie Texans questioned in Geology Building 14 atrl pan. is the Texas Poll recently complete as follows: June 25,vart, jengineer*­ K±/;h «d. ing (except drawing);/ English, ,lc: V&> .speech; June tmthropolgy, dra-« Classified Ads -The examinationV whicfi thous­ ma, government, philosophy, phy­ ands of students just took, 1s~api sics* psychology; June 2V, educa­ proved by 62 p^lcent of the Tex­ tion, journalism, mathematics. i ^ ans tested^ opposed by 36 per Oh June 28 all foreign lan­ ^ . cent, and not commented upon mm guages,.JBible, business administra by 12 per cent. tion^ drawing^ att3vji>ha^macy will be given, and June 29, botany« Meyer* at MicliifaK Stat* ~ utsafv. chemistry^ economics, geology, and . ^T^Bdf.rFjrederie"Meyers,.associate music; Bacteriology, biologyrhise p jprafessor of economics, is teach-tory, home economics, aociologyV"t Ing at Michigan State College in -eoology, and other subjects wit • £ast Lansing, Mich. be given on July 2. ** 3f. Srfe"itijiir'; -& ^'-AW-­ •*ifr -~ ^ * y m. r«W-= " rmm •f'm-I t->m «§t£ • IftllltilPli ins Fifth Award v*4 ^*5 V*4* Winning writing awards seems titled "The tJnconquerables." The liar# become a habit^ with Miss script will be produced over radio ith Hunnicutt, Radio House station &EYS in Corpua Christie^ :ript writer. During the last five It is the story of Ralph' Ogden|years, Miss Hunnicutt has been and' his wife, Ethel, two people »«• recipient of five top. writing who«ouldri't be licked Four times rl \m rizes in major contests. .Ralph Ogden saw -his «fortunes She received her latest award at wiped out. -.• < ; f: '. Eighth Annual Sotttiti#--She is now working dn a" series Friters Conference-held at Cor-of twelve scripts to be produced >po8 Christi. Miss Hannicutt took by Radio House , for -the Texas [top honors ii* the radio script wri-School of the Air program this 'ting contest with her story eii-fall. Violinist de Saint Malo Gives Modern Music Concert • By CHARLES R1CHEY A quiet, rather academic audi-with the' adeptness of a compe­ enc& klmostsfilled the RecitalHall "of " the: Music Building _ Sunday •seVentng to hear. Alfredo iie Saint Ifalo give a concert composed of music by, three of .the. best of l^tin-American composers. Saint Malo, accompanied -capably C by, Karl Leifheit, set a par excellence standard for-the College of Fine Arts recital schedule. The artist's personal acquaint­ance with the composers of. the evening, coupled with his ability and the fact that lie.was playing for an audience of fellow musi­cians, caused him to forget the ahowiness popular today and play EL TAXCO CAFE Famotu for Mexican Foods offor* •. DELIVERY SERVICE ' • Plate • lunch ^Oc includes 2 vegetables, drink, and dessert i Sa ndwicHes •JFried Chicken 2701 Guada]ap« 7-016* Just ocross the street tent and feeling* expert; The first it$ml f?n the-prograih, Sonata in D Major,! by\Narciso Garay, Wasin^ the ^^yle of Eighteenth, Centtiry Europeans and served as an excellent fron­ tispiece to the remainder of the concert. The Andante mesto movement was. played with seem­ ingly superior feeling After a brief intenqission the program was launched into the midst of modern music las Latair tina of Roque Cardero. And it seems „to know it "rather well. Though the artist himself did not seem quite as;at home in thisme-/ diumas in. the others, his rendi tion was technically good. Desnit< tibe excellence of both mustciara, however, there seemed to be in Ibis Sonatina a few momentary hesitations that bothered both of the performer^. , v > ; The Sonata in B. flat, No. 4, opus 39 by G. Uribe-Holcquin showed once more Saint itilo'i talents at their best. The excel­ lent color that pervaded the en­ tire work brought the normally sedate audience, to the point of eqthusianm. > UniversityCcimpus! AH Proceeds Go; For Scholarships "Time Staggers On," but jt has to have « script to go by. Scripts anf8 music for this year's TSO will be considered-when school opens in September. Members of Theta Sigma Phi, national.fraternity for w^men in journalism which spon­sors the show, wiU judge the script. Scripts should be submitted to Journalism Building 1Q5 in „thif fall. The, annual musical comedy. a satire on some phase of campus life, will be produced sometime in December or January. The last TSO netted $1,500 pro fit and played to a full house at each of four performances. Tommy Jones and Harvey Schmidt col­laborated on words and music, and recordings of bulstandirig songs in the show went *on sale at the Uni­versity Co'Op late in May. Proceeds from each production go to several scholarships and funds set up by the local chapter of Theta Sigma Bhi. Scholarships of $200 each go to an outstanding sophomore girl journalist for study for study in journalism at the Unir verjnty. 100 gift to the Journalism Library, a contribution of $50 to the Marjoriei DariIek Scholarship Fund, and in award to the out­standing^jgirl in beginning journal^ ism also come from the TSO fund. •r at • MKon-Tikii,^ -the dayAo-day story of a daring expedition tin­dertaken by a group of Scandi­navian .scientists, has been la­beled by mojt critics as a mentary film of the first/class. The ,.film, narrated by Thor Heyderdahl, author of the best­selling book of the same name, was taken by an amateur photog­rapher with a home-moVie type of camera. As. a result, realism of an unusually high jdegree--is"!"in evidence.-. }---nfe picture begins Friday at the Texas Theater and will run the entire week. n?54|: * DRIVE-IN THEATRES BURNET wfcwrA •road * THREE HUSBANDS" Eve William* Evick»on Ar«l«n "TO PLEASE A LADY" BARBARA STANWYCK You'll find i*t easy.ecooomical ancl satisfyingto eaf often atHotard's. Box Office Opens 6>45 • Good Food! ''Moiiyme is xxider • Generous Servin tho» betli Mee West end ione Kvisell." • Quiet—Restful! -Waltar WINCHttt, Mfrrdr •-Air Conditioned! • Moderate Prices! • Easy to ,Get to! MMas. j&L-* 'm C* % I jkpsteiri s Speechms C v:"'-v : ••••• •• ^•-. • ­ Other cast membeni of "Dover consternation -of the two sisters, Carlota^ played by Jane Boulter, atid Luisa, played by" Agnes Da­vid, was most convincing in ..his part. The boyfriends, Manuel ami Al­fonso, played by Stewart McGre­gor and Dan Foster, added to the action of the plot by "getting into 'a fight over just who was to "make the bear" with which sis­ter. . \ ' •The set was very Vealistic, not­withstanding, the difficulties of presenting a play in Recital Hall d(ie to its limitations for a thea­trical^ production. / Road" find in mu«li ­ the same position. Jane Boulter, who was the stylized "campua_ chest" girl in* TSO and shy timid Laura in the "Glass Menagerie," now has the role of j»n eloping lover; . -r;v^ On the other hand, Rae Hooker, as ctheioper, had a Similar pari; in "Much'Ado About Nothing," whicb show! that actors don't have to change characters with plays. Other members"of "Dover Road" are Barbara Pechacek, Claude Latson, and Fitank Harland. The production will run in Hogg Auditorium July 9-11. INTERSTATE THEATRES •CTttOtS DAN DUKYEA 6AU STORM A AC*l(04Ot0wvMJ«AtC« PKIVm HELD OVER! STARTS TODAY Raadolpli SCOTT THE LEMON in DROP KID FORI; WQRTH STARRING . With P>AV|0 BRIAN BOB-HOPE nusTin 7^00 FIRST SHOW 2 P. M. FIRST SHOW 6 P. M. "HIGHWAY Evelyn Keyes 301" THE KILLER THAT Steve COCHRAN STALKED-NEW YORK Virginia GREY TEHH5 STARTS TODAY fj|l li > 'ij i'ill " ' -X' * •• -• in 'jplui 1 IN "PRETTY BABY" VERDI'S DENNIS LA TRAVIATA H MORGAN . , T-OLD IN ENGLISH • r21ST AND^ICHITA Urn OMc« 0pm 4:41 THfSTS fRfelbNE YOU HAVE BEEN ASKING FORI ti »< v. , " ' " • •--'"•-"''••gwiBai'i*" ...a. 1. VI \ • '.•• ••ife.ggfeiifiiif"'' in"unwTillliit r. June;ti:mf fpp ,;1P® St? mm as vmm •g&MMCtfff ihm f-T--^rC% PC' "v* / iBai% K!g„V V-,-' •' i. ? '• ... . ( Vj' State Bar examinations .will be Jbeld June 25, 26, and 27, H.'P, Steinle, Secretory of the St$te Board of Bar Examiners, has an?­aounced. '/ All persons whox plainr to take the examination^ r W . the House of Representatives at 8:30 a.nri. Monday, June 25. .;; ; The examination proper wHl« be­ THE SUMMER §$£ His recent assignment as deputy professor of military science and tactics in the Army ROTC marks his first tour of duty in Texas. Col. Henney of the Army Corps of Engineers will take over command of the Army units on the campus August 31 when the present com­mander, Col. Maybin Wilson, re- tires from 34 years of Army ser­iwe^CSl^^n8olf^h^:ir ' command here since 1947. A -few days after thel April Fool's Day bombing, Col. Henney wasr back pn -duty with his men. _, •. . vv:. V.' -V. '• '• • / E. W. Steel, professor of sani­tary engineering, announced-that he will leave July 1 with the Com­mission on Engineering Education that will visit"Japanese educational institutions. r This commission, chosen by the American Society for Engineering Education at the request of "Gen­eral Matthew B. Ridgway, iSuipreme • Commander of the Aliied Powers, represents all branches of engi­neering, Prof. Steel said. • Other, membersof the commis­sion are. Charles W. Beese, Pur­sue; Arthur B. . Broriwell, North­western; William R. Ghedsey," Illi­nois; Alexander G. Chrijstie, Th^ Johns Hopkins Ihiiversky;^Albert .Mi G. > H. Dietz, Mass. Institute of Willie Neans, "#eek-end^ watch­man at the ' new Experimental Science Buildirig, was cut by fall­ing glass Saturday.afternoon Mr. Neahs said that ; he was closing windows in the building . when the window r pane of' one window-,fell -and hit-'him^-on ~ the-top of the head; He was rushed . by ambulance to tke emergency room at the city.hospital and later confined to bed at his home *at\404 East Eighth Street. ­ Six DP's Find Sponsors For UT Long Semester Six organizations have agreed to. sponsor displaced persons, be­ginning next September, Bob Armstrong, chairman of tha^Dis­placed Persons Committee for the summer term* announced Thurs- A (/ Aiy."* ^ Mi ^ / v. - z "V* end of the summer. Chi Omega, Delta Delta Delta, and Delta Gam­ -. constitution and -ftdnrinistration law, criminal law, negotiable in­struments, and corporations will be given* " . . , ^;<3ontracia, agency and partner­ship, evidence, pleading and prac­tice and federal procedure will be given from 8 »a.m^ until -42:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 2Z» From gin . at 8 a.m.i June 26.. From 1 until 5 p.m.-of ,thex same 8until 12:30 the subject8 of stfay personal property, torts, do-equity, wills,, and estates, trusts, mestic relations, conflict, of laws, vSi't-, f and real property will be given. and legal ethics will be given,\Mr.§ From 1 p.m. ..until 5:30 p.m. Steinle announced. * The walls cracked,"theAground clearing a German mine' field iii shook, and through , the acrid North Africa. There was a msmm immmmSm mMm HI MSM. 'of saw h "k*0 wemiSBStewes«i1 A , , .. a girl at 0 Wichits) says> who live there this Placement Service she^TiSTlnmrt' work to dd, she* semester iare LaVerne Cornelius, means exactly that. Thjj/i# Hie Open'to Students^ \ j^Vadancies in elementary schools "this year farexeeed tfje nxrmber of college graduates in elementary education, Hob Gray, director of the teacher placement service, told a group of teachers who regis­tered fof placement last week* Teachers are most in demand for ibrary science, health and physi­ cal education for girls, and high school English and counseling, Dr. Gray said. High school positions are almost impossible to find in other fields. The Teacher^Placement Service, available to University -students aijd former students, offers an ef- Icierit way of'bringing prospective employer and registrant together. Teachers desiring positions place five to eight letters of recommen­ fumes the calendar ^e waOlthen blam. A mine'exploded and!^ dations, a transcript ° of grades, showed that it wras ^April Fool's the colonel was badly hurt. * ; and pensonal information on file Day* 1942. It Was the first time After hisconvalescence bade m in the placement service-office ac­ Col. Frederic A. Henney was the States, he Commanded the en­ companied by $2^ fee. This ent­ wounded. v gineering; department at Fort itles them to a"place in the active Bellvane. Later he was sent to the I >le until they are employed. TheThirty-sixth Corps in California to material then goes into the in­ prepare his men for the invasion active file until need for reactiva­of Japan. V-J Day came before em­tion. \barkation day, but Col.> Henney 1 / . went to Japan to take charge of . ix Edit% Missouri ?ap«r the e n g i n e e r a reconstructing bombed-out cities. He returned to Charles Stacey, BJ^'43, is now the tftiitfed Stat» 4n 1060 after co-owner and co-publisher of the threeyears of duty. Salem . News in Salem, Mo.-~ Born in Ohio, Col. Henney his. rmm States. He feels that he is on pro­ Home Management House of the University Home. Economics De­partment. Thegirls Bving_ H»»e are taking Household Administra­tion, & coarse in practical home­itlfiking experience*^;. . Z ­ '{ Household Administration Ss re­quired for Plan"I, Teacher Educa­tion, Home Demonstration, and Child Development majors, in the Home Econoniiihi fieldf Misa Can* Engebretson, instructor of home economics, directs the; sCveri girb wno live in the house for approxi­mately seven weeks. Each week the girhr have different duties to per-,form—manager, cook, assistant (Book, upstairs housekeeper/ down­stairs housekeeper, laundress, and guest,i.. j;; 1' • :r1:;J ' %. ^ * Three Profs Attending . Hague Petroleum Meef Three University of Texas pro­fessors are attending the Third World Petroleum Conference now in session at the JBfegue, Nether­lands. Reports on tMhnical studio wiU be given bjr Dr. H. H. Power, Pe­troleum Engineering Department chairman; Dr. George H. Fancher, Texas^Pej^leuiitlJteseafrch Com­mittee chairman; And Walter D. Rose,/ petroleum engineering lec­turer. . 'v>'^ Dayne Gau, Iralene .Hart, Rose*, mary Kokernct, Rhoda IfeKh)^^ Wanda Miller, and Ruth Mills. * JThe work is time consuming^ but tfie guis liave time "for fun to«u ~Each week they j>lan enters tainmextt isach as canasta and des* sert parties, last week. the' girl* had guests for a Mexican suppeit and jwyed ^minlatiire golf iftftex^ Wards. VHome work is never dull a^ the:Home-Mah^gament Housfe invite Godfre DuggerVWedding Alrfiiar Godfrey, one of 'th. inOst widely listened to men hk radio, spent" a considerable' Amount of time talking about Ronnie Dugger, fortpe? Texan ed­ itor, and The Daily'Texan on hia program last Friday.' ~ Dugger was a gUest on God­frey's program shortly before the end . of the spring' Semester and talked to the friendly funnyman for ,a while after the show; He sent Qodfrey -an U^vitation when he married Jean .Williams la Washington, Wedijciday. The let* ter, however, reached Godfrey two days after th«t date of the Wedding, bation ih Texas, but he is enjoying the prospects of spending the next THE BIGGEST "PtOS' JN dGARETTE HISTORY four years at the University. • ;•> , Steel to Visit Japan 1% Education Groiijp Otherar are Barnett F; Dodge, Yale; Homer, L. Dodge,r Burling­ton, Vermont; Rogers B. Finch, Massachusetts Institute of Tech­nology;. Harold ,L. Haze%.Massa­MPf% chusetts Institute of Technology; Alfred-L. Miller, University of Washington; John A. Sauer, Penn­sylvania State. College; llarry B,, .added to thd Walker, University of California. Also, Ford .1* "Wilkinson, R worlds most Polytechnic Institute; Robert S -'4 % Williams, Massachusetts'' Institute famousABCs iechnology. Catholic Official milder Blesses Umlquf's iiiilliii mm etter 5 K mk sororities, arid the„ Baptist Stu­The Clinic is sponsored by the ' > -a i dent Union and the Protestant University a'rtd the Texas Cotton BeHgioua Workeo-9 will s sensor Research,Committee and members thjese five. Cantefbury'tSub will £&"l?e3cS&~ A&M College, Texas anbnsor a Hispiaced person who is. Technological College, and the Statue of Saint A . crucifixion sculpture) b> Charles Umlauf, associate profes­sor of-art at the University, was unveiled and blessed Suhday ~hy the Archbishop of Vermont. The ceremony took place at St. Mark's Church in Burlii\gton^ Vt, The sculpture was commissioned last year as a result of a -nation wide ecclesiastical sculpture' com­petition conducted i>y Liturgical Arts, a magazine devoted to arts of the Catholic Church. For' the competition Mr. Umlauf did the now r famous St. Francis of As^isi, which was exhibited in New York, Chicago, and other US art centers. Life magazine featured the St. Francis work in an' article on modern religious art. The St. Mark's crucifix is seven and a half feet tall and will be mounted in a white walnut cross to be placed "in a panel of glass brick above the front of the \^eiv *1 ^ & & mont church. i tz m- Cotton Clinic to Talk )fl II Standardizing Research 'II . ~ A discussion of the possibilities of standardizing the operating procedures,of various southern and eastern research laboratories at these laboratories at a me June 21-22 at the;University. tasting • -j •' • • • -V.»! ooler vf. smoking 'v" v'% M m Chesterfieuj is theonly ciqareite at FT [re :r]f; • |tr of"ail-brbrtds tested in which laii members of our taste panel Ti u t found Ho unpleasant after-taste.'L tetvM nm the ;?&*•wtjUfrmm r—atth orgoaUollom ' .r^i-.vp7' i > * ~ ^' 4» , >3 ;» & CeppSjs tfei, iWrrft M^MToueooOk >r __ij -i. V t "^£<1 i y / * '•m^sre 1 ~ t-a *• ­