iv t WViyA' wwtp 1 fcs VlfintKar .. .•WW®CwlwHT / cooler Suncf H. T—-3 ~ '"•""* 'WW"1 JJ->>•"•'»-^» -jitiiitfs £*,&AUSTIN* TEXAS. SUNDAY,, MAY !8t I^2 tight PageiTbdoy ro*r& ­ yfcSBM ^KmU >:• ' "' gVvP The' baccalaureate sermon on nominatibii in m'i^'capacitiea and Cr&a. ..,-f,r Br CAROLYN • • . •,:•» '• BUSCH • • _ of Hi* students left the The was diacoverf^bar Arfi»5-rt»,i--'4.--K-'-• " Oftf blaxe sceni of the accident* reportedly CharHe a s. a prominent local civic leader. Kay 25 will be delivered by Dr. Areon charges were filed Sat-Robinsoh, operator of Granville T. Walker, minister of He is paresident of the Fort WorthW'day afternoon against four Uni­saying he wanted to save the fishing and boating camp across the" -University Christian, Church Kiwanis ;Club, ,''a member of tiui. versity students and one *on»stu-. driver embarrassment from his the lake;from the park. Firemen in Fort Worth and nationally, Ministers' Association, the local dent involved in the burning of parents. He was picked up by made the 17-mile, trip to the park famous religious "figure. board of the Tarrant Coimty Red »Hsnt^:«*«?ebea*'' the 130,000 City Parte bathhouse Fire Department Captain C. W. in about 20 minutes, but by the "" ** at Lake Austin City Park early Webb, who wag returning from time they arrived; the bathhouse Dr. ^Walker,,*twice vinfler of -" P-m.ontheter^ Wednesday morning. Mansfield Dam. was completely demolished. the Gough Oratorical Contest, is- Eleven University students; in-Webb^jrfter learning of the fire This bathhouse, built in 1641 by a summa cum laude graduate of eluBing three girls, were impli-next morning, contacted Assistant tfie Civilian Conservation Corps TCU where he is a member of mencement exerciaea Iftihrei#^ the'board of trustees-and Execu­officials and>'fiKtUt^.im^lH^#l&'/;' eetedin a rowdy drinking party Fire Marshal Leland Priest. at federal-exponse, had; a. replaces ba^ hosta to tiia Tuesday night, which, it is priest, joined -by City Detec­men* value of $30,000, but waa tive .board. He' took office at TCU For Summer graduate*; thair charged, resulted,in the burning tives "S. L. Cantwell and Barney insured for only $500 becaue* of soon after receiviitg his doctor'sv. p*re^ts,ai)d itien^i^:i^re6e#tiii^ _ «< th&,bathhousc. _ -• " • Priest, checked the wrecked ear, high premium*. t degree in 1948 from Yale Univer­Begins June ^ on the patio >ef TkAi.liN; The arson eomplaint, filed by finding aletterwhicfc led the in­, For several days" priorto the sity, where be was-awarded the : City Detectives B. L. Cantwell, vestigators to one of the injured fire,workmen had been making Two Brothers Fellowship,for aca­n No sooner will the final grades Barney'PriesVwith Justice:of tfie students in the Health Center. repairs on the bathhouse, which demic Achievement in 1941. of the spring semester be put on;~ Peace Frank McBee, charged the taster police got* several state-had been closed for several years. In recognition of his -Veeord in photostats than registration fox;ments concerning the beer parly The building was scheduled tojbe was five men with 'Unlawfully and Biblical studies, Dr. Walker the-summer sesion will begin. willfully"setting fire to and burn-and the fixe. reopened this summer. presented the annual Society of ifaig-the~ City Pairfc hathhonsa~-A& 3iblicaL„Literature' and. Exegesisf Re^strftion day for'tiie first lr# were released from Gity Jail Vite, also in i941. ~f———-^c?ilrJg.Ju"® *-On this day, MuHenfi~"^ho-^ave--notLuibtainjBd. ' wider bond df $1,000 each. He has served as state and in registration materjlsl by mail cantThey are James Ghenoweth, 21, ternational organiser for his de­ of -Pampa; Joe Hayhurst, 21, an nsurance pick it up at the Registrar's of­ r, English major from Killeen; Wil-fice. Ham MiilhoUon, 19, anthropology Texan Seniors After receivingtime assignment student from ^raybnrgr^ -Gene and course cards from the Regis-' Wells, 24, a drama student from Sign ''30* \ trar's office, students will, then Bajrtown; ^and Jimmie Bigger have to see advisors to have (non-student) of Austin. For most University em-pus are covered* ­ ployes, the workmen's compensa­For on . courses approved:' From bere they* To Years' Work employes Injured the Conviction on an arwm charge will go to Gregory Gym at the carries a sentence of not less tion insurance which recently j o b,' hospital and medical ex­' " On the masthead of today's time specified on the time ticket. than two more went into, effect, is regarded as penses are paid. If an employe is Gregory be nor than twenty Texan on the editorial page, the In sections will years imprisonment. Sentence on very advantageous. disabled so he cannot work, he number "30" appears after sev-checked and fees paid. :"" an areota charge.may nbt be sus-, Although Texas has had a work­is temporarily Removed from the veral names. FOR WINNING-THIRD PUCE in the national NROTC rifle This is the^ journalists' way 5. You'llhave to decide Whether pended. . man's insurance law for several payroll and, aftef * jveek. given ,N. -•• ••• -r--Photoby R.Kn4tx Classes begin Thursday«' June Statements taken from students years, it was changed to affect1 a compensation ujf to $25 a week cornpe+rtion,, PreMrfeh^fainter presents the W. R. Hearst..trophy to saying or Involved described a beer-drink­the University only during the in lieu of a salary. : of ending a story* -of not you like your classes^by; DR. GRANVILLE T. WALKER ing party which began early last session of the Legislature.;' Any employe hired after April Midshipman C. R; Fag^who receives it on behalf of the University "that's all there is." -t Friday, June 8, the last day for Tuesday night and ended in the A. Workmen's Contpensation In­1, 1952, is required to pass « unit. Annual awards to ^standing members of-all three ROTG For the seniors signing "30,". adding and dropping courses#. this is their last issu«l of The total destruction of the bathhouse. surance Bureau has been setlup thorough physical examination be branches were presented aK Honors Day ceremonies Friday noon , Those who~have to register late Daily Texan, the climax of four, The party of twelve arrived at for, the Umversityand itscom-' fore he is eligible for workmen's • on Whitaker F^eld,•« : ' * can get course cards in the Reg', three, two, or even just one year the municipal park 17 miles west ponents with Joseph C. Kennedy compensation. Others were re­istrar's office, see an advisor, then of writing headlines, editing of Anatift aboot 7 p.m. and began as director. It will operate under quired to have a physical examina­pay fees in the Bursar's Office. copy, pounding out news stories drinking a keg of beer. According the Vice-Chancellor. • gf tion and sign a waiver for phy-All former students will need and editorials, and staying up i» reports by the Austin Ameri-Except for clerical workers'and sical defects. a photostat of work at the Uni­ ^ can-Statesman, a locked door was rbfessors and administra­Mr. Kennedy said the Work­until -tbrep" o'clock each night versity., An, undergraduate > w h o 'broken in to turn on the. lights tors, most of the aeademic and men's Compensation Bureau has "putting die paper to bed." has attended another institution Groduoto cill hugide the bathhouse. non-academic workers on the cam-no jurisdiction in keeping "em­since his last registration in the' Hoars jProposal A bonfire was built from drift ployes who do not pass this exam­Today's Texan Last University must have a transcript wood about ten feet from the ination trovn being hired, but they of his record in the Registrar's A proposal giving tte Medical ^ bathhouse. A broken door was put sign a waiver so the University >, 'r;By BOB KENNY received a thumping affirmative For Spring Semester office before re-entering. Without on the fire a!nd later others were Sunday's Texan is the last for Branch voting representation m) won't be held responsible. The Student Assembly' passe? majority by studenK voters and the transcript, he may be forced torn off and added, the Statesman rr^~r-the spring semester of 1952. _ the Graduate Schopl The University hlres mariy peo everything presented it this year will go Into effect "in £he fall to withdraw. " ^ kid. pie on a weekly payroll hasia and except f6r two proposed constitu-Publication of the Summer Tex > Students entering the;Univeri^ referred to a special committee ' Abdrut 11 p.m. two of t^e girls Another, proposed by\ Donna an will begin June :4, the first day these people have no sick leave. tional amendmehts. ty for the first time fnust ftibmit »t Thursday's (May 18) meeting^ and one boy left the party, nine of registration for the summer If these people should be injured CaMeronVand Margaret Endress, an application blank/ Freshmen of graduate faculty members. remaining to eototiiHue celebrating ?:A total of 2$ bids, insolations, was paused on December 13 call­term. It will appear twice a week, , The University Discipline Com­ tii# near end ef the* school the 'job, they received neither and proposed'<#»nei^!ments to the on Tuesdays and JTridays, for entering from >high ^sehool must Graduate work within the mittee'< lias;beard ^ eight canes, compensation nor pay. ing for a special election on ^ie file an application for admittance semester. three, Involving cheating, during Student Constitution were given question of appointment of futu^l 24 issues. ' " •. •' • ical Branch is now directed t&'iig He stated that in setting up the and complete official transcripts. The remaining girl put out one the go-ahead 1$y the legislators in Texan editors. the Main1 University^ the* Medic^'vf the counter and the spring semester. bureau, the University was ac­managing Th4 Final examination for the first Are started on For cheating,one sophomore thirteen meetings. ' change from an elective to an ap4 Fine.Arts-. Election May 21 Branch not being represented,i ^ two smaller fir^s inside withbeer, tuary insuring itself. An amount A ma«s meeting of th'e"students term -will be given July 12-July second offender was suspended equal-to two per cent of an The two measures which failed pointive*managing editor was ap^'f and faculty' of the College lis. the second The motion to send the 'propoi|| started of Registration for Another fire was behind were an amendment proposed by proved Also by a heavy majority| al to a committee was made b$K aa overturned Ice box, for,a yeaf and a half, a junior employe's salary is set aside, but Fwie , Arte will r take place at 5 the party left the bathhouse, it 'or two semesters, and a senior a insurance is»no.t taken out of AAS Assemblyman Sidney Siege! Cesare Galli's Sweetheart sucfr p.m. Wednesday in Recital Hall, the following, day. H. M. Burlage, dean of the Cblif ^ calling for new qualifications for lege jftf Pharmacy. Dean Burlagfe^was still the transfer-lost credit in tile course the employe's salary. cession' b'illj which set forth rea­ ablaze, Statesman and was placed on disciplinary associate justfces of' the Student sons for disqualifying a Univer­said that Pharmacy and other prolylreported. Court, and another.sponsored by -i fessional schools should have inl >S Students' sbatesmeotsallegedly probation for one and a half sity sweethea'rt and a method of MiSs Siegel and J. K. Taylgt, Law 'years.-, cho6sing her' successor^ and -his dependent representation ott': th^ v ,told of stoping on a hill to watch the glow of the burning building. In the other cases, one fresh­assemblyman, which would have bill establishing the "Eyes of Tex­Truman proposed governing body, ^Th#^| l On the"way back from.the park, man"was put on two-semester dis­granted power' to the Election as" Copyright Fund and Scholar-measure now gives Pharmacy joinf Commission to disqualify candi­ 4ne f#bnv week. Assembly include a constitutional cents per tax would. be ^available the people," Truman asserted, he wiU veto the bill on which Con­ 'diately released, the girl in the tiie general faculty wiU "select-i amendment sponsored, by Gradu­for other activities.^ "we will act to rob them of this A student-committee set up jb gress completed ." the; education will be conducted May Saturday the themselves. ' ^ Chancellor Monday. ; ' , :,^{ of the stuiits during perform­.'.piaced^.w^^js';-.Ballot.-in Americans for Democratic Action, about A Faculty Council meeting spring .ele.cti<>fif ''the . amendment 26-30. * ~ "Talk corruption. Talk Four nominees,, all from withi# ances. Old members and new are the President declared the oil Monday will hear summary. re­invited to apply. . The Department of Physical that lies under-thp off the about stealing from the, people the; University system, are i»|' ^ sea ports from, the parking and traf­Salcctiv* Service-Teat Thur»«Uy and Health-Education and This Would be robbery on a colos-' eluded in the report.*Thr«e of • the coasts of this country belongs to sal scale." fic committee and the absence to Clo«« ObMmtorjr .• The Selective Service qualifica­Division of Extension will conduct imen are on the • main c^mipusi federal plans have been completed for rules and regulations committee. : Dri Erwin Ji^ Prousepvassistaht tion test will be given in Garrison the , coiirse, designed to prepare the government. That the annual TexTasJtJnion Activities means,.-he said, that it belongs * The meeting will be at 2:30 in profess^ju of applied matmynatics HaU 201 at 8:30 am.?on Thurs driving instructors; ' Council retreat/^fcti will be held to all the people.* He said owner­ Main Building 202. The first sum-jtndT^Mtr^omy, .uniMneM^tt. Maiy 22.>The test-will be ad-Enrollment ie limited to1>0r and re­ at the LCRA lodge on Lake Bu ship has been affirmed and iqer mieting Of the Faculty Coun­the observatory will be closed^ ministered by the Testing and registration deadline is May 26. chanan May 28-29. affirmed by the U.S. Supreme at oed OnJker& cil will.be June 16. . ».• — until May 29^ Guidance Bureau. ; At the retreat plans will be The fee is $10. Court and the rights 4o the sub­ made by the Union .committees for merged wealth may be worth as Sanday fall activities, such afe the Orienta­Outlino»y BluO Bpok«y Ink, Study much as 40 billion dollars. -free'movie, "Molly and/-M«^|.i Main Lounge. -" *' tion Dance to be held September The Supreme-Court has <$et«d 8—Omicron Nu breakfast, HEB ,1$. An all-s£hool dance is planned that, as the law now stands, the ; patiO. --Tawday:. September 20 with a nationaHy federal government has, "para-9—Phi Mu breakfast', chapter -v 9-5—Last showing of stui known band to play. * r jjiount rights" to the submerged house. .exhibit, Y HaU and^ Mufic I Newly appointed chairmen lands, and full power Over them, 1 i>. ing loggia. at-11—Newman Club honors day, tpftding the meeting were Charley but has npt said the federal -gov-7:30—-AlJ>ha -Gamma fUeJta Newman Hall. sors cream .Banston, house committee;J3hir-mmm ice social to 1:45—All-faith picnickers meet at fi^ Cerebral Palsy Center, hoi ley Klein, publicity; Charly Jos) ' By JOYCE JACKSON the examination. If you" get sick is foK undergraduates-only, A re-from the time the previous final YM(M to" go -to Pease Park ­ , rat; Betsy . Madden, • (for film At 9-o'clock sharp Tuesday while an examination, a Best Three Advertisers of Mrs.. Charles Sandahl, I4d taking wasgiven> n ^ program, Union Gaston.' Chairman Kay SCcKnight> j> 0hars exam n^Be taken at a.tinSle set :*-— 2-7—TV Texas . • morning, Dead Week will blossom letter from . a tJniversity physi­Application for and cohduct of i^drded^y^TSP Staff _ ; {Sftte Carlisle, free dance; John forspecial-postpohedexamina-. 40U .. / /' ' V ' -' '' Wedneadey • ' flfP^ into Exam Week, and students will cian, permission' from the. dean, special examinations shall be unr Anderson, fWmum s£eakMii i Mary come alive • once more to begin and approval of the instructor can tions or withx^ later class, but,; der the supervision of the Regis­(Awards for outstanding work in 2-5—Lag^una Gloria open. N 5r—Mass meeting of fine ara .dents and faculty, MusieR Knotts, studenWaculty; Rusty the first of their finals for the get you a postponed examv. says in either case, within four months advertising by members of Texas 2-5—Texas Memorial -Museum trar. ^ : Cobb,^ chararljarcia Fine, music spring semester. the^general information catalog. Student Publication staff were an­open. , * Haili ^ . Molly Moffett, UAC secretary; and i Course outlines^ Blue books, ink,' -An examination which is official­nounced Friday by Mrs. Mary G. 2:30—-Alpha Omicrom Pi senior Thurtday Jimmy lAsk, UAC ehfirman. Also and aspirins should -be the best ly^postponed ihay be taken* within grazier, advertising manager. The tea, chapter House. 8:30—Selectiy^ -Service df art nine-day period when students re­prepared for that purpose; The dofte between September 15, call, all the knowledge poured into^ exam may also be taken^with the 1951, and April lS, 1952. 5:30—Wesley Foundation party, . ly Fearing's special^ home of Dr. and Mrs. C. W. junior high gtudents* ArtBi them since February." ' „ iiext class in the same course, pro­And Read:During FUMJIS The Gold Award will go to.Hal . ­ Mock. Domo Convention . The sale of cigarets may decline vided the .student petitions the ifJopeland of. The Daily Texaai' HaU. / s. -ing.; 3 t April 15, and them usual on the campus. 9-5-—Student art exhibit, Y Hall t % 2 p.m. in Texas Union aOl.^tn-will especially need aspirin,' for Jtine 25. An emergency serie» of The soda fountain, Commons, ^Today's ia thejast issue of The Paul Danrier, also of thte Daily, aiid Music-Building loggia. . . Saturday l^ii' dtnta are invited. it's too late to apply, for.a change one-day only is held, August 14. and Commorts Antiex will be open Daily Texan. The semi-weekly Texan staff, will receive the'Sil­2—Parliamentarians of ' Texas, VVarieties," ACT* yst The "Loyal" Democratic fac-of schedule. The last day for this This would be helpful if yon want­at regular hours during^ exams Summer Texan wilt ver Award. A junior pre-law stu­a?"-Tfexas Union 801.' ' May tion, promising ^ to' fight for a waa May $3, 4he beginning of ed to get the exam over befoi^ and between semesters, Mrs. Eva day, June 4. . , \ o dent, he has: been working for 2:S0—Faculty Council* M a i n 9—Baccalaureature evening ; lo$al^r^ oath and a-piatfoni| in-Dead Week. . \ a the fall semester. For the place Tiroff. CommoM^directo^ has an­; ll|e.girla who want-to s^im will student publications since June Building 202. addrese By, Dr. Granville • nounced. \ Walkte ofjfti* t.-i -eluding -fair employment, prae-If you mias an eiamination b»-and time of the ex$m, check ,with have, to head toward Barton> be^ of l&l. 5-9:30—TY program, Tttft Union >tices, will be led by AJ Quihn.-cause of illness or, other impera­the Registrar'spffiee. ; The Chpck Wagon will be open cause the women's swimming' Betty McBrayer of the Ranger 401, Those supporting.-GovT'lUlan tive cacsetf, all is not lost.' By ask-: ^ If you really bust th* fi^al, you from 8:15 a.m. to 6 p.m. during ^ill close Motitiky to be staff 'will get"the Bronte Award. 70—Delfolays invite *P«tudent ivers and hia;-uWinstructed del-ing permission of yogr dean yand may .apply for a re^Rxam if,.Sou exams, bat Closed June l-3. Post and will reopen June-2^ The„ gym •>She is -a^ophomore-advertising .members to meeting,: Scottish egates" will ba led by Robert getting the ajq>roval of yotir in. iv» a C average and permission Office,and book stoces en'tiTe Drag iitelf~wlljM»e open during-fxaus .Jb* jUMM 4PINMMNMM'' 2smt mm "riB" &\>f~ "V l"*»*& '**t 7«r"\V>Wfc. Ifsw: **f v ^ -•;'' -A'~ ">^V{ curtsy ttliiwpj itcherBob Tanker-to first but Firmer xaeed hom« from last place with a brilliant of -a second off their own CaK: Charlie .Thomas was a close sec­Waa Hooper's second bOst, being buret of speed, circled his field on fprnia Relays record at Modeston f .«Mjl%'<»ii'the outtome, tha Texaa sley, and substitute third baftemrfh With the tyin£/run,'. Britt §A* ond to Manhittan in. a dazaling an .Inch and half off hia I^ngborns, chfcmpions of the Jerry JjifUllA. vancing^io third. Ha scorad «•«-ih« final bend* and bounced home Saturday. .The LoHghorns were tMa-a-weelc «|o. 40.7 chase. In the SS&-yard baton rt VSotttfewtot CoWowoce, do battle, itejr took ov«r with two ortds"' liter-whan ^ Lastelick slam­ urtth jockey Con McCreary to cap­flocked iii <0.7 juirt two-t«ntha •vent, Texas could manage but Other Aggie performances miiuu^>n~ base, one run in# and med a sharp single to left can­ ture the $113,270 Preakneis of a second! of# tha world irecord .fonrtb, atUixing the crow, * fodtth by Bobby. Rags^ale ' inS same ftcial Border Conference tltUhold-'oat in the first iimiftg, ter. stakes Saturday at Old Pimlico of 40.5. ' the broad jump, a tie for second|;; except,for Brownhill, who was re-, l>; anr, in «three-game.fefte* in.Aua-api scatteredseven hits the rest The" Lon*horn* retaliated Ja< Race Course. The Longhom foursome^ wn»" plaeed by Ralph Person. Manhat­at 6t6 1/3 by hi^h jumper Walt <• the their half of the fobrth for a The strapping bay, owned by made up of Dean Smith, Carl the ex­Davis, and * third by their mile tan also. won half-mile the White Oak Stable of Arthur relay team in a S:1S flat sac*wwirl •life The lint game wiil/be * nil Texas Capitalized on Aggie aingW run to tie th« seora again. Mayes, Ralph Peraotf *ad CharlM change in the fast time o&l:24.4. starts Ernie iJohnaon'a inability Robfraon helped jtia own causa W. Abbott, Ryne, N. Y., thus Thomas. by OccideHtaL. :**$ffifir at Bisch fldd with USC and UCLA finished ahead of • :• -l-. --•• -* • .. '.g'sfa'i atoned for his third place in' the to find til* plate to connt its with i double pi dw cliff in laff • second and, If need m, the iird In the open sprint medley, with Texas. •;;; Kentucky Derby two weeks ago.. North Texas WIm AD-Cellee» first run. Johnson walked leadoff center scoring 'jfarry Bengtaon ;'at^'8 |wou on, Clark Field Simon ma* Jimmy ^ace onvfour pitches Who bad beat oot «n infield bit. The Preakness is ona-third of Bob running a brilliant Darrow Hooper turned in the ' COMMERCE, May $jie series marks the /second racing's triple etpwtu.Z last j«ile, Stanford Ifnirer-b«at, Sonthweat Conference, per-North Texaa State scored 65 then managed to get dVer iiilr . The winning >yun came, in the |?y ttrttelta tbree years that tlie.Long-one strike tci Bob: Tower^ IrtiloW sixth after, two were out.!. Britt In romping undw-rae wire with Ivasi, .victorious in 1,0:01,8. forniance^ Uiough he placed,third pointa to win first place ia the ,*»'v*1 ior^ havf met Arizona /to deter-SSn^was unofficially clockcd In in both Ida weight specialties. He walkihg him.Rightfielder I Roy walked to l«ad off the frame but three and A.half lengths to spare All-Texas colltega Uack and field' mine1 the. district 6 rfpreaenta-Kelly, the Longhorna leading RBI Lary bunted Unto a Bijssenb'ath .to over the seconcf horse, Max Kahl-4:llTor his leg of the victory. got off a ahot pot of beat moot here Saturday. Following,' tq th«TNCAA pttisWffc The baum'a' JampoL Blue Man also At 1:45 a.m. Austin time fur» of his care^, but «raa nipa ineha NorthTexaawere,AbilanaC%ria^4 • tangborns%ad man, then belted a two balls* nb-f Mohr double play. Roberson then to take two straight, atoned in a measure-for some of ther results"Were unavailable. shy of sacond-placa Parry O'Brien, ttan College' wth 88 points, East^; strikes single down the third base passed Ogletree who raced all the -.in 1950 after they dropped the Hooper's tJSC nemaria. Jim Fotti line to bringin Pace^put Texas way home on Lastelick's line dou­the thing* done to hia father by *' Texaa' Stai*?witit S6» 8onthweafe ­ one the 5-4. grabbed ' first to Wildcat*, in front, and-1!send Johnson to an ble to deep left. W; ^ the gr#at Count Fleet in 1943. -Longhorn tar*ckmen a won the avant with 674M. Texas 9, MeMurry College with 8 ^> -Tiixas went on to win itf second early bath, • ' Lastelick, trho sutHbed in for the Fof, in winning the 76th edition pair of seconds aiid a fonrtb plact Hooper twirled 169-10% in the pointa and Hardin-Simmons/f. straight national title. \ of this Maryland turf classic Be­Friday night in tht-Loa AngelesNeither* t«am Was able to break injured Bfanic" Candelari in theLast year Arizona extended the fore a ncreaming crowd of 29,34S, Coliseum Relays, hailed by booat*the scoring column again until aeries, was in the Steer's haid all\:iTexaa Aggies to three games be-he . soundly thrashed nine others, era as a preview of the Olympics. the top of this fourth. A&M's Bob­afternoon. He handled six chancea fore bowing, allowing A&M to re* including Sub Fleet, who ia the by Farmer drew s:walk to 1* Irrclxrding a double play ball per- present the Pistrict. off the inning (much' to'the dis­fectly in addition . son of Count Fleet. -diishman, T placed second in the ; Texas will 'carry an 11-4 re-to driving in ^(Bord.into the series compared to may of an anti-farmer faction two-thirda of the Aggies' run out-. BIBBFALK Sub Fleet, second to Hill Gail 100-meter-sprint, running against back of the Aggie dugout). Then put. flye, but his effort wasn't'quiti chok«_in; the nation'a best. Arthur Bra|^ * 16-2 marlc hung tip Arizona. the betjting, but could do no bet­ Dare Britt Angled tor right to T„he, gamfe Was a pitcher's dual enough. Negro flash from Morgan State.The natiottaJ-tournament'is sche­send Farmer to second. thereafter with neither team The portly Tankersley, who beat ter than fifth place. won the event in 10.5, some two-, duled for Omaha June 12-16. The Longhorng ended.their re-Yale Lary ctrne up next and, seriously threatening. Texas, in the final game of the tenths of a second off the Olym­ »TH«T after working pick Roberson to It was a tough game for Rob­season last year to give A&M a Dallas T^xans Sigh pic record, which waa tied by nker*ier, P 4SPEEDWAY vy ^ Mr. Dawson's long spurt off-tackle. bur Evans will jump off the tower. to « Total* S 27 18 Messrs. Halford and I shall pocket Bud Wilkinson will say that RADIO k TEXAS the bucks, dial Kern Tips, and be Oklahoma "logically belongs in the Vr po Television the sorrier for it, Southwest Conference." Paef, St> 1 Tow»ry. Ib 1 Oklahoma A&M's Wilbanka SALES a 8ERV1CJT Yeah, $16.30, and it buys you Od«n, if 0 Smith will shoot Ja«lde Robinson Kelly, *t 3 PICKUP AND the right to a wooden number, Tanner, •• * DCiLlVBRY and J. B; Whitworth will say it the right to, purchase short cokes Eekert, If -1 2010 Speedway Dial 7-3846 waa "unintentional." Bl, ',Your clothWi_ Hot only get ,t,h. ume hijrh qu^ity DRY CLEANING ^they Itavo^alwaya gotten, but they are alio MOTH , ai*m .PROOFED tor Six MONTHS while they are being cleaned.1' The nation's' finest and best fV i.S-'V'V. ^Ms mothproofing ia INSURED Vnd actually backed by an '|^ ' ' i INSURANCE CERTIFICATE which will be-returned witb each* 6WNEP f^gWtment. But best of all this EXTRA SERVICE comes at NO Luggageand Personal Leather Goods fjpfcTRA COST. tev--ru v -AND a * ' V *t $ p " " ^ % V V\ *' r? ,^1 J-W _ 1 ^S SUB-STATION ol 2ttl & WICHITA * All at naHofwIly advertised prices U\.OPERATED H. 1 % f¥-*r t* .W •» OTY-WIDE PICK-UP «J)EUy|inr i« DRAG itX'-'h-XSli > h. *• <&&:c & .h •^V'iajiKSat m •Hi b#m Bts PI ££ it ,p&v. £ -M-^,ur;Ot*.3$ ^>i 4^ t ^ runners- with the bi-district round. n: "-,1 f,. i&i ~^>£L, By JIM MONTGOMERY 4ajMiauia i>reHFn Highland ' fjiak TDiIHij;~:» x ~ , pecti.*e4y,are among the thirteen Tha 1951-52^ intramural sports C. B. SumraU,"Mr. 'Murals" «t Trophy, presented toianuRganiiThe eight winners of * bi-dis--Gbta'M district winners thus year ended on,* festive note Fri­the University. Sumrall, a met NottiutM tion went to Phi*Delta fheta, andtriet round will play in Austin far certified. *»•*'. . $ * day night, at ih£ annual Pow her of Sigma Phi 'Epsilon, hat ThoHkpson and Jimmv Babb ^n the W. M. (Bill) Jdhnsott Sports- at the aniiual tournament Jane ' Others are Austin (El -Paso) J Wow. " Awards to organisations proven bis ' playlhg •-abilitytimel Mi^t^sloA, Leeuittert and hianship Trophy was presented to WWt * A-?»t . • . Wichita Falls; Wa^o; and indivduals were/ presented, after tiifee, and he is now recog­Bob Raliy, in. Club 'Division, Ken* Moneyhon -v House«ats^^#^^« -ifm'" Abilene; *nd those present found tijne for nized for his sportsmanship as Conoley %pd\Tipf,o&, Murrell .in i £ 3.,/ Winners '*re «l9o being*certi­Sherman; Bryan; John t .. % ^ fWV-v ^ Three, Senior Intramural Man­wmwm Tyler; fied in Clasa A and Class B. How­ * banquet,beside*. well. Oak Grove' member* 8 Church --©ivision^a n d Mack agers for the year Irene recog­ ever, these classes do' not' play Reagan (Houston); Austin; Lsre-The Frank Evins Memorial Tro-nate several athletes on tha basis Stoteltje andSumrall in Fraterni* nised and presented with varsity to a atate championship-.-Qlass A do; and Edinburg. «y=?^ ^ "T" sweaters. Carroll Collins, John Hampton, and Paul Martino 5-« received"1 thj^i highest -award a manager niay get.' • l v THE &* H? Madison Weaver/Jack Ka^ildn^0,ft' Ifel and Aubrey Gearner were pro-1 C * ' mote ^^ *" i v .•&; s,!»% er Junior Managers included Jitn m ^ ^ «2. ' «• s&r-nM < m By TOMMY THOMPSON will be married on May SI. ter medicil school, but the Navy Gray, Alan Bean,, and Gregory ia r«M* Sport* SUM Luther Scarborough, ace UT has Other plans. Catlow. if Tha ominous phraser l^enB of pitchef, expects to return in the Carl Mayes,, track captain and Twelve Assistant Managers re­JULIAN OATS" '"a "V ' ^ S f 7 eligibility," has been written by fall for more work on Stis BBA football lettfcrnian, gets his'diplo­ceived sweater awards; and' pro the names of nnother group of degree, draft board willing.­ *fk it W ^ ma in June but hasn't decided on motion to Junior Manager effect DespifoJinxet Longhora athletes this year, '•-• is®# Bernard Gerhardt of the tenniB hi^ future plans. Other undecided tive next fall. They were; David With tlie shadow of the draft Squad. gets- an Army ROTC "com* trackmen are Jody. Runnels,and Alter, Robert .Coughlin, Thomas If. •mz looming over mds1^f5m€~St7 TnisSion in: May. but hopes to fln* y-Womaelh—— Fuller, William Baker, Willia i -& ious to complete as much work as ish work on his degree next fall. Nordyke, Bill *Gibson, WilliamE! Oates Another long list of Texas ath­ possible toward their degrees'. -Richard Robeii^oni baseball letter-letes wiQ enter various business Rattikin,. Neal Davis, Ivan Knob­Av^ong those are dene Fleming man, Kastsimilar plans.-4 • fieTds. let, Richard Adair, Richard Lit­and BUI Milburn, Steer linemen.' 0 Trackmen Ralph Person, Robert John Adams, 6-5 football. end tle, and Tommy V. Thompson. Fleming will return next fall to Eschenburg,and; Phil RanSopher and baseballer. has nailed down a Kappa Sigma won the All-Year rophy in the Bv PICK WILLlAMi lis. Fnf-*ext-iaHi»--Per8on-4ob—^with­ fpraiht Milbnrn expects to graduate-in Was recently'elected vice-president by-a margin of nearly 400 pointr. , • T*x»ft SporU\iSt*tt' ' he has. encountered ttie schools as a coach and thapirer; Heavyweight Julian Oatea, who witter JackA Tttrpinr^Oat^i' Rice 4v*-£. January, at which time he will en­of the UT Students' Association. Phi Ganima Delta waa second in Don Barton, ^ ter the service, scoring, Delta Kappa Epsilon looks more like, a Wrestler than a has emerged ^ with"• a'victory/o^3y ­ Marvin tjustafson, Longhorn ball fame the hard way—sans the top-notch tennis player,' hrar« or.twice. One of A quartet of Longhorn cagers quarter-miler, has his eye on a usual: athletic schblarship-^-has third, Delta Tau Delta fourth, sparked,Texas to a trfo of South­once thosie^ip-" who have completed their;eligibil­coaching job, though he is unde­ and Sigma Alpha Epsilon. fifth* tentative plans for the pro grid ity will* return'to the UniVersity. cided on the details. Sigma Phi * Epsilon, which .won west Conference team titles dur­tournament when Oates^dnqu*S^ popped will be in school next year, Dowies this summer. He had hoped to en- The -Mica Division 'All-Year Football co-captain June Davis lias Trophy went to the -•third consecutive NCAA net play­whenever-.the, hefty *Lohghorn Blomquist iaccepted a position/with an Aus­Swedes. The Swedes piled up off .this summer. ~ faced the Oklahoma Sooners., In tin automobile aigency. commanding lead through, t h e •; Unlike many current nation-three years of play, $at«s.^haa i^SPICf A LIZ I NG I N AH-American Bobby Dillon is first three quarters, then held on ally-ranked .tennis stars, Oates beeirr unable to capture'"a-' sihgl«;'^| if® trying to choose between the lure td top. a^fastrfinishing team of does not respond to a linesman's set from "the northern rivals. Not V Stocks • Catering -of professional football and an Moneyhon;Hpuisecati;'by only 200 bad call with .a. show of Holly-even a change of playing aurtace'i^. accounting job in Temple. He r%-points. The Whitis Wildcats were wrood theatrics.' *' has fazed the hex, for the tipatche*^ • Salads ceives a business degree in June. third, the' :Menic Depressbres Dr. D. A.' PenIck,'who has coach' .have be^n conducted \ on _ • -J •. Sea 'Foods:•••••*.' Texas' first pro football team, fourth, Bruftette House fifth, and ed Oates for jfour years, says crete, clay, *and hardwood.J / • Rooms For Private Parties the Dallas Texans, has announced Shoalmont Arms, sixth. of him, "He is .dependable and In the fall of 1948, Oates"«f^ neVer loses his head." rived .at the University as •v^ro« ­ the signing of Jim Lansford. Oak Grove's balanced sports End Paul Williams, who made program gave it the Club Division Oates has always followed Dr. time winner'pf stat* high^gcwS&$4Tarrytown Restaurant All-Year Trophy by V a whopping Penick's motto, "You will never championships. In 194T^heT..an41 his number "80" feared and res­ control a tennis ball until you Bob Alexander,twho went.to Rice^l pected in the backfields q{ Steer margin of yearly 1200 points 2429 Exposition Phone 84652 opponents last fall, has already over Air -ROTC. Campus Guile learn'->to control yourself."-took the doubles title. After AImbsJ accepted a position with Humble was third, Theleme Co-op fourth ander's'graduation, OatW%^it'th(»'.'Although he played both ten-1948 state single crovnu 0U Company. Mariners Club.,fifth, Dorm-G-H •nls and basketball in high school, The Turpin jinx seems'to | .Odessa's star, fullback, sycth. and tne Tejas Club seventh wrapped Oates often finds them too strenu on reverse English when. he' and! TYPEWRITER SPECJAL1STS Townwnd, is^now atwork In Ten-Newman • Club the ous for his easy-going .{ideas about Oates compete togetherf;They at­ r*:f-nessecwith *pipeline outfit. Base Church Division All^Year Trophy. Can Do th* Job Batt«r bailer Harry Bengtson' hopes biBsting Baptist Student Unioji by sports an^ turns; to golf, v ' a tained the douhles finals i£'&| to ""Julian's, better golfer than National land.#job with a bank or savings some 800. points.. Wesley ^gtin Boys' Tournament -in We Pick Up-*, •t*hiiiii^li^eif,'Jsiiii3^; Assistant Ten-1946/ ''«.v rr-W^m' firm. / •' : y'-" dation came in third, with' Univer­ and Deliver ; jiif. Coacji Wilmer Allison laugh­Oat^ CRarles Bludworth, a top Steer sity Christian Church fourth and ingly. \.' ' Junior Tournament at Kalamaxoo, ' PHon<> &? , , 1 , , board, Skippy Frdwning, hopes to Edwin Palmer Gumming of Hoi»» ••f" 9 »•$?> this; year-withja, sparkling il. Not Oates will join tha -roster of . I '• VMA, crown his career with competition 'ton^ Richar4 Johnson a l ro " of- bad for a beginner! j| / ' « < *4 G I11! / 'K. at the £Uympic games in HjftHinki Hou8ton was second in balloting, Penick's ex-pupils which inclu+>" .. & wmmmw& & y ' W$m. i in mm ie* msMMbi *>t-M 971phrn $1 WKKLY, \ If you do not plan to be in Austin in Ne Merest eiiaffM \ September^ ^rhen the 1952 Cactus tomes off the press, please come by : . _ w t •• if _ -• T-: •>;•-' •••7­ mmbefore June 1st to check your m • , address and pay the mailing charges \ r 0 The pacemaker for summer... •' to have thebook $ent ta you. IK >r '-MA iNsm,tolightweight it floats. Wlf in style, comfort and vjtlue. , Handsomeeider.prew fabric with •/.•f-'.v: •'-• ;• ••••• ' Come in. We have a that lush, thick platfoem sole— i •' -41 it'scork and crepe rabbet—really1 • » *,2s ^Eeds , tion of Winthropa in y< "airy" walking. Scientific Foot-t fitting Lasts please Dad and Bring Your Auditor's Receipt Son. •athable. Popnlar colors Ittr yonr easoals. " ' 1 * , * . (;}^ Showing Payment of l $2 WMMLY lj. ^ '* ; $6.n ­ f\ h u" Vc MAILING. CHARGES L3C3uO DRAG "1^ ' ? ir' 50c ip Te*as; li75c Quti>f S 1 135-^ ^^4. w W^M 3 , x-' ' -1** 'V ­ '-I • ce .5 '• >« SHOE 234i Guadalupo — Qntho Drag • -V •'••••' '• • '•':•• .J-i 2236 Gujodahii -Sit* ^wv Phen« f-6426 234# Guadalupo -Oh M drag'-*v; w* >•~W* u } v V.V ^yijr h: ! -tJ' £w.a-0 :'UM *T |5^r? [fvr 1&.S9 JSSL pP# Man «*MwJtempwi Ttaw.c since It didn't <^tniss!i^w».2^F™r '•jr** ^%«m£ J«hn MeCbrdy *cfcg» iatwday aetiriUes and as much campus . j.^K4? *ot «oft* all the bills are in jret. •• •» Wtw*rt for attaining TEXAS TECH ' this faraway place of long; long ago, IW&gKg'M ££1 ilTM» hslpfcensd * W W ®* the ahove objectivea and for My­The Texas Tech student news­One of the b*st of these was a achool. a; f-iK1L€those years when tba cost «c-lar batter community life on the paper, The .Toreador, had thia(^ouniMing.'—r^_ M* >r;ceeded income," remarked the wfcfriww^possiWa.::^^ headline «a ita load story follow­ Srather large and well-known school, I alumni secretary, who has always ,THINK TW! ing the recent Conference meet­ i'wWch contributed much to the city and Student counseling is a vital phase of maintained is—: . > that Jtound-Up you peek vp to go heme, ing: "SWC IS UOSER." i^^atracted batlittle, -1'" ° -•' campus life that-maynot be getting the • over the year*—an mn break tkiiifctwiee before tMrinr away, Ortr ***** inches high, tiie financially forJht sponsoring Eft­ tions to be attention it detarves. Many i^eople are ftoytbliig. headline ie of th« type usually gtudents' AssoSatiM. for presidential assassin­ ^ found Is print, byt considerable was the keenly aware that the counseling process The complete statementafpe— ations, atomic bombiags, Sind the IgfiW-lflge space given the piddling dfe-as set up here is a superficiai operafion. at (Jte bottom ol this column, , inadequate for your personal use. end of wars. tractions—fires, for example. The easy With current limitations on staff and TMMWi Tam Hi your extra ^tonegrapli ^ HTHANKS STAFF This poster was «een at a #&• thin#td do. §IX5] '\y -bankroll, it is not necessarily true that I'tcorda, 'nMMEaxbua, ~ eoem*tics, ^S^HiidnK of tiie «nd.o<'ti^igs,; was the clucking of er^" 'lege grill by one of o»y obsenrant bright colored elotifdng, and other T I6i» iaaoe—aa <£&And iirfdespread the setup could be instantly improved. you know-marks t wmiS-. ^imilar item* to; 'participafing the end of -the year and toy iaet There ia even a school of thought which "Silverware and -glaaaetf are noi campus living adiiti or the APO Once upon a time. believes that, regardless of personnel and medicine; therefore, do: n<^. take-Office, Texas Union SOt. •. Bemetntmnces axe tamof* < twae * them after meals." . * good, some fadlities, counseling should not include NUDIST COLONY bad, aome worth no­ , ^" . UN(ON EXPANSIpN ' Somecoe trrooght this brief Aa-thing more than a ahrug of theserious anddangerous cases. A gmft deal hae been written aociated Prm itoqr by and jhouldera. But the most pleaaani If Others insist that any /University stu* aboat onios expansion and what dropped tt on the deik: MI*odon . recollectiob of all Is that tite staff rimurteA "I don't think I should dfstyrb her—iho'* hdping Professor Snarf • it would mean to the average —Rritiah nudiata today (Fridiy) has been splendid. dent, no matter how badly maladjusted, make out an examination.' atudent. invited the' public and preaa to , To all those who helped inaifcat Estate-senator Jimmy Phillips has an-is the full responsibility of the Univer What ia the baais for opeca'ttng attend an 'o>pen day* attheir Korih thia what I consider a successful • s thia living room o^ the eam^oa. Kent 8nn Club near Partford May year for the'Texan: tfaaftk you. • thia experimental [center, thia Ail the angle's are not quite clear. It x'W­ the tiext Legislature to put presidential . public-relai mm?­ does notseem obviousatthisearlystage primaries intoejGCectin Texas Texaa Union has of>erated under Rsumi-Up Finonjciai StateiMnt —; In the investigation, tharmore counsel­ , On the i&ce M it, without carefully bal­ theae four beliefa: OnftmSEMENTS ihg and more public information about l.„ It serves Sk an informal ancing all t|^e possible political aspects, Is Name for Dunn educational medium • for, aupple-JUrnw mm! BSU IMtlJt e ^^^caiuiaeling facilities are the duty of the Bsrbccu* l.WS.t* Jatv. of * SmiHi * seemg menting and formal aiding Loneh»e»i m4 MIm. , ste.ee fmr «eu* "BjnJOHNNIAWf30)­ give the peop of Texas direct power in University. A constant probing for bet­ T«imWr * wtwlilt Con««s«l(m* Food . ter methods is necessary. A world citizen might be the Job .of finding the names of the 2. It makes poselble, during , a situation wheie they now haveonly par- Mitiit awl tNtin beat term to apply to H. E. Dunn, largest colleges and; universities hi leisure time, individual and group , Total* IMJMS Ill tial control, theVest being decided at the University students deserve -^he best self-discovery and expression PoMtetty who hat 'taken* it upon himself the United States and sent them 11.1! counseling service the budget will per­ through atude'nt-intereat pro­ whims of a few qehind-the-scenes manip- In the paat few years to spread, a pamphlet urging them to take • Total . ... . "/ W.07S.J8 » ulators. j mit.. . . • .democracy by sending booka to part in thia movement. The print­gramming. >-• •* «/V *r*r ttxf&itat 3. It curies tfut the literal needy people around the world* ing of the pamphlet was paid for 9JIMS* • f / • II;If, Weird convention and pre-convention Believing that sending books to by an intereated Austip business­ 1 Mi ijditir and splinter jroups and ballyhoo rand foreign countries is the most£ef-man. ,.h. Adracitt Man / would be greatljl minimized, in all likeli-tfective cheap. way ..of showing The pamphlet describes Mr.' oiher people the way of life In Dunn's jpian of gathering the two hood. That, in elf, is a telling argu- Co-ed Assembly has been doing a good America, he ' hascollected . ind or MSiree jmHllon Books, lying ment. job in laying the groundwork for orient*-mailed -over 326,dOO Jwoks from around uiiuked in.Atherica -which 'Luckiest Guys in fhe World' tion of girl transfers next fall. Peraonal his little office under the stairs could be-of ^#o" much .value to of t^e MSitJV Building, *rhtch he those 1!fkhonie^He «s of the places where they are tie MeL Are Dr. |;f-fothe University amily: is constantly on the lookout for to tyr aent , * ' -, By BRAD BYEKS • around goodness, and whose every Ing nnder one of tha greatest guys 0, Here's a reflectionn after a year ift office Such programs aa this are highly bene­ways-to 'help? other£ When he |Xou might see Mr. Dunn almost / tctmm, MtMfflnf JUUaf] action is intended to make-some-v In the business." .; ficial, -for they aid unsettled students at hears of a family which has lost anywhere picking tip twine or H« aloM is worthy »f appella­ We can be thankful for a man of the one else's a little happier.^ That'a Dewitt Beddick. . a critical point in their careers. 'its homeland possessions, he im-boxes which are needed in packing tion who either 4om great things, |rj/caliber of Chancellor Hart. Through his You never hear him aay a bad . He has written two textbooks, mediately shows his sympathy by, and •nulling the books. He lives •r^ teaches hew thejr may b* don*, integrity and higjvpurpose, along with a jjffmng cloth.es, pots and pans,-with thia consuming interest 'of word about ^f them «»e *learest and moat «r describes*thom with a suitablo you get the feeling that he never . . .. . ^ , • , .. / s.Wr common touch abd deep'understanding, and whatever else he may have wanting-to help others and doing interesting • textbook imaginable.WilAdint^ that they ne^^His garage is full Wotw whea h a•• Ikmii an, —wajo»tjr they tven thinks bad of anyone. Ton he is leading thi University system up^ idfnjf the tjnh He hss not written others only be­ come away feeling a littl^ better' of7sucE items, which he collecta the challenge his dad gave him: done; but thofo only »r« great stairs inthe educational world. • Twenty/oiie T^cas cities of,more tnan all the time in order to be ready "Everybody should love his coun-< things which tend to render life and a little kinder. / . cause no work 'of his own is ever -• Unity and help on the part of many 6,000 population went through 1961 with-with help when the need arises. try, but thfct isn't enough—^-we mora lwn>r, which in'craaaa tha in«~ • • '/ important enough to cause him to |f|ti people are essential to his continued sue-out a trafficfatality. . ' s Before Christmas last year he should do something worthy to eajoymenta and conforta We were at a pat^r one night neglect anyone who needs help. nocant C€n^ who he is teach­ W/ D. Blunk chairmarf of the determine the need of a stu­ on whether or not a person ing. ' / Committee . on Xjoans and dent? , Doily Texan Crossword Puzzle .belongs to a greek social or­ Core Curriculum ^ Scholarship Information. "All ^ "Needs range from undue You iei^rn this as you "get to ganization. Just becaXise stu­ three factors are considered amount of illness in the fam--dents belong to a fraternity »lm better. You .discover very carefully by a committee ily and dependent parents, or sorority doesn't mean they that hs'gives harder and longer as- of nine faculty members, and brothers or sisters to just are in need/' ACROSS 7. Sphere / 24. Mineral most other not financial 1, Float 8. A colonist pitch, signrftents &an any Delayed Until Fail without"* oi}^ of these joints financial, need without ques­ be­Dean Blunk said. 5. foil sudden­9. On^of 25. A size of Aiwri*f Is pr morning uetpt Ifooday awl Saturday, Sept«nb«( student who needs money to / _ meadow 20. Marshy force *-*xe*p^ iurfiis holiday «nd uaminatloa parioda, and bl-WMkJ> stay in school and continue 15. Chum meadow '32. Posts unless you're unusually caUous, hoped now that faculty members American, heritage. Numerous dnrnui Uw nauMt aaaaloaa andei tha titla at Tha Snsiaar Tana on 22. Proph' 38.8lri For ybil rrowdar and rrida* by Tim Studmt Pabiieatfona. »n" paying social club fees. 16. Negative 33. Sea yiu'll do that will use the three-month interim other leadibg universities have in­ \ ahswer 23. Projecting eagles 30. Milkflsh a Wfeoml osIm i W it ttft biwi.Uberatorj, J.B* 102. Isoulilw Does academic classifies find that he>«ccepts the excuse for a thorough study'of the com-corporated into their curricula 17.Rears tees oA 35. Cone^bear* 40.9Kpe fmmtav and s4v«ni»fnc"9boold b% madt In J.a 101 (2^47S). ',rt1' 'h0" ^ tb« AdB,nUt~U" tion enter into select! 20. Sign of caps' ing tree ^pportunlues for •' again 'is causing some hestitpmcy. But thies of the; entir« family. ments he pute on your, piper, you teaching fellowships, grading, 34. Cry Of pain the pressing vacuums tl^tt iaqiirtd feara, prejudices, or selflish in' realize that often he puts in more and other sch<5lars)iip8. 35. Abyaa ests that might block the program 1 it demand decisive If. , Fred'KaBsell, ose iR need ra scholarship, I buLhiiailruly.grea^ li'-r uoTuvny,\jnm.poeii,Dorothy Camptoell, Georgeueorge BonotBohot b'elieye it is important that Small mth ilineiaaaliim liiiifaflra •ft*— iMk t'm .T-,< K Jim^ Mptttgopery rVUJNW' UJI zn BFTL-'f OFTV, •11 undsxstand,^ ^ we recpgnixe the outstanding feel -fres^-f c i v r^T. vf-f|ehment, balance and unity of '.Att^b^nta...^.—Al WaSrd (30), Bob'HalfordjvOria'nd are tiie So So Ion* and good riddance, r f student. A scholarship should BFTL PJOF In that respect Dewitt Beddick S&idy~these ultbaiite 'Sfi W' (?• *I > ' Sims, Bfair, Joe Mosbyj Jeff Hancock. , UJL NPFIPFI* MF have, somexsignificance^nd a| 'Jls jfreat. When you talk =to him goals Of the new core curriculum. to Professor Townsend. % Betty Segal (30) 1.6 grade\ point Ayerage t UJI MHZU8 W P F—W NZUMKLUP-you are conscious that here is s ' Students have. wcognized the ETHEWENfD ALTMAN Asaistaiit^'irp..' .* >•* ...'..v.. shouldn't 'be too high a goal.* Lr< j-,. man whoae verj life is builf inadequacy of ^hsir educational Brooklya CoIlege Alumna ~^r-• W& *• % *}*?*§> t ~*y •oir m t " tf'fr Kl m 9laiiBBS w iwlllb yv^Wayie **• ~ j; 1 • ,:. itftJiJDJha1 n.'jw w™ was &'£m —*W WITNESS, Cki*. and the accompanying triali.Moie atcustr.andAlger Hiavtheae­Wr»'.N«wYevict Ra •H»u*. noticeably, It is th« personal dual sed.£ Jhamberswritesia aterse, orced C •: 0S* between two men. Chambers, the In ''Witness** there;is brilliant allstkj styI*. In "Witness," Whittaker Chun 4 The most moving munism* WILLIAM L. MeClLL theirpoijt ingv 1 hope, to the pttblic confi bers h*» penned % suspense autobiography concern Chambers calm. •bout Oomiptiftl ^Wittf^'is §9*efig* lea kas >••• upaa so, production f h the wirfi of lint desert fession, his apologia m #4 **v end the suicide of hi* brother eon* •ail of 1481 oe, the life of h wommu fn» tlu> twi«t el •vowed «x-Communist. It is the Reviews News V,Ak vey the theme of self-pi ***„ Communism tinned, the roles which % story of the HUfc-Chambers case persecution &J ¥«tf* ' '***-had to ptay ,were performed with 'Thoy kaow what to do) hew to V?." Won of min. •fctw^ktka ddie t» kia|l«nit valbr, courage, and devotion to protect tkoawelves} what, preeaa-Jap-American Outcast «TsrW-y 78* -31* t,e~«V •mm Sa.V« & '»ri iiiWattoi to oar homeland. the task at tend. fiaai to take. Oa a hill alx iniloa ^.teroifc eighfysars That Is a lettedt which we'too farther awayf -'wo had boaa 1 f' Mt«r* of raeh mere* magazine;, through • .V-_ a* *ha ataaele batak must come to leant, lr coached and trained aad taught T _ ••rials; andr their to his A* fliiM eaiaale la «Atk Tea, we kave to borne rify elosb how to kaop ourselves from harm. mmi daky*ar»; after# to some of these Situations before And in all that frightful affak, I oar nwirdkarioa. ' ** luinl* MM til— UuA|l te w« can accept them with any de-not one human being was seriously i "Witness* leaves ' result of the blast. ^ith «kaa*i sea tk« tf| . n'tiiM .I THE HIDDEN FLOWER" by white and colored races. Allen problem would exi for her child fr? . **? world. - tained a position with a newspaper Allen went to spend the Christ­Chambers minces fj r tFor a .week I cou mil Ite tha d—Uta waataa mi a Day. 308 pagas. 93.50. Josui spent a week with him, then But there is an answer to that in New York City. There Josui ine? holidays with his parents, returned to Japan with Kobori, for public^ confuwon< »>« Or John^HodscIl, director of chrtl Nevada d—art. " When 2d Lt. Allen Kennedy, on evil and—knowing that answer— kept their little apartmentpand in leaving Josui alone in New York. leaving her little "Hidden Flower" fereflce to Ms testiwot defense, training for the tfnited 'Beyoad a«a waa th* haiwaa' eave iroi? Tokyo, feaw lovely virtually lonelfness patched During" ChjriittnM) Xoeori« t forever. Mai* •#.'a baaiii we lieed not despair. complete loneliness^watched Allen During-Christmas', Kobori, on 'I fcions. Kingdom. -As vl plied him with Josui Sakai standing in the-en­ loMwa U aaa nti( a Maf tim .We are mobilizing the forces of in his unhappy struggle to adjttllt ibusiness trip to New-Yorlt called -Pearl Buck offers no aolutioiHo questions—how should we do this trance to her father's hospital at paik Nofr os tka lipa ^f Aaaari* America to meet such danger Is to complete social ostracism, on her, and seeing her "condition, the problem in this hooki She has spy novel—intensi,"&oWi and that and the other t» prpteet Kyoto, he knew he must meet her. caaa tkrwilhtBt da Uad that future time may brings—danger When she realized she was to offered his lovej ahd protection. simply taken the story of Allen er interest. Especially e: our people frota the barm which The-cleverly-arranged meeting be­ iiave Just might come to them, Sir John •tr*tdi of daawt^ia ksof^ by tha notonly from our human enemies, tween the two-and their subse­a chUd,*her love'for Allen This she refused!ii but knew'that and Josui and told it in her in­ing are th^.procfiedings. of-, but danger as well from natural wouldlook at me rather sadly and aama of Ya^a* FUt^ . - caused her' to' conceal the fact she must leave Allen forever. Go­imitable, beautiful style; if the myestigatilig committeeaUd ju d iaaa t e^—tojpoaade, hurricane quent romance brings out an age­ •ay, In his quaint -W*y, *'Ah, ,-we Tit «*gfbrtitli:aad'tki taa.foat from him beeauae thera wa? no ing to Los Angeles, she put her solution is there, the reader mtftt which c^rify thfe^ tactiol of learned that the hard way. ^N»'^filaata~-«faabaa traaa t&ay flood, explosion, and fire, which old problem of the military men place in their society for an Amer­baby up for adoption, find it. defen»e and Chambe^* testimony;ara.aallad aat thtr*—which may strike anywhere at any time -unoccupied countries. ican-Japanese baby; -the ~ same Allen made no attempt to locate ^ Within «wua INA MAYMcADAMS —-We—are • -working—out elaborate —Josua. Sakai was an American of the English people—from vajRitHd oa tha dawa of plans for the co-ordination of bur citizen, born in Los Angeles and ernel experience which was-^ife intrigueTlt¥]pages are filled^&O blic services for the effect{v from the battering ant' thi bea Uft. action in time of crisis and great Dr. Sotan Sakai. ; still-smouldering emotions atrftii ing which it was thew^t^t to hear, answered questibna. ^ ^ ^ ^ Aa aaaatiaM caaaa, thay wara need. Bat tha larvlca. of thoae from th* physical buffering and Josuo was an aristocrat. So was —BILL baraad to a crUp—-a white alkali public agonciot—fire, police, mental anguish which they knew, Allen Kennedy. His -aristocratic ixad wi|k tha daaart dust. health, aad all the rest—will aat they eme^sedy not a cowering, family lived in a white-columned I For in that brief s^n, an air* be enough. v--CTuahad-,maaa.-of helpless human liTrtna-hr-Virginia* ks baring are Ity, hot a people who will ba ae NcT cheap would suf­ had dropped on that spot the Wat Wo must have auxiliartoa, thaa-romance fine furniture at claimed for their courage, their terrifying missle yet made by man aaada upon thouaaada of volun fice" for these two aristocrats. MORALITY AND ADM1NISTRA. nately, even with the people look­tutions," he adds, "and.toattempt pa^encej, -their, neighborliness —an atom bomb larger by far toora—733,000 wo ostimate far Josiii's father objected vehement­TION IN DEMOCRATIC GOV-ing on. Dean Appleby cites Presi­to solve.-them in terrofs of he old The Hobby Jhek concern for one another; than that which laid waste to Tesaa alono-—who, With the apirit ly, and Allen's Colonel arranged a ERNMENT. By Paul H. Apple­dent Truman as ah example. New Englan4.town^leting would 'acclaimed as a people who, in the by. Baton 'Roiiget Louiaiaaa What we consider immorality 2006 Ea*t Firat fftraat^S Nagasaki and Hiroshima* killing of tha plaaeera who brought civil statewide leave for the young be like trying to use Simple arith­ face of great danger and devasta- State University Press.t 288. and bumbling are mostly the ef­for solving a problem and maiming. hundreds of thou isation to those lanA, /will pall lieutenant rather than give his metic in . Vlelt'wa" ta-^maka• .^tane^J^Pi ;tion and despair, remained on .the sands of Japanese and ending the dowa tha old aqairrol g(M> once permission for the marriage. pages. $4> • ' < forts of public officials .trying to calculus.". atarting-YOUR project. Hard-­ j#ob, at their posts,in tlisir schools, mora take placea Special privilege and graft have complicated system. woOds, plywoada, athar-wa*<|c: war in the East. aad their a* In the three, days before Allen operate in a The course of government leads ^^determined to carry on their work upon which depended victory for With th* light" of a hakdrad auxiliary firemen and policeman was to leave Japan, Josui broke characterized primitive end mod­We should understand the -theory through many twisting, murky, working auppliaa la atock.. their cause; stayed on to "fight •aaa, witk a barst af haat which aad litter-bearar*—manning the her engagement to Kobori Matsui, em societies alike. The United and practice, of our system so we tunnels. Dean Appleby leads the Open weekdaya 2:00 ' lIPv a tamparatar* of a million defrays ramparta in thia . new and even States, however,* has kept its gov­can see its good points and short­reader through these tunnels, un­ their cities" even as Valorous cap? they obtained her father's unwill­ 10:00 p.m.» Saturday 9:00a.m. caatigrad* wnid firm Witk a blut mora dangerous day. ernment; at a relatively high mor­comings, Dean Appleby believes. twisting some and throwing' light to StOO p.m. Telephaaa 2-5SS8. tains on the sea have fought their ing permission,. 'and in ^ solemn ships to the fateful end. that aaalcae yaa fool jtob oro bo We must enroll in courses in Buddist rites the two' were mar­al level, writes P&ul H. Appleby, "Our problem^..today require on"others. tag paahad aataida iaj aad, with first aid, in home nursing, in res­ dean of the graduate school, Syra­advanced understanding of insti-^—DEAN JOHNSON Tbfe English paople learned, the ried. Two dayf.later, when Allen peril of fc>imic,;ihe folly of .fleeing aia'imcaadiato coaator-affoct which cue and in the fighting of small left to return to the seas, they cuse University, itf his latest book! at the ftrst alarm, the utter inu a»akos you aura jraa' aro being fires. had completed plans for her to Even during the last war the gqh­ taraad iasi«r< The 800 who came to observe something merely for the Con granted petty favors which de­$2.78.Ul» pages. casualty of any certain war. He it and 2,100 troops who partici­gress, or the joint chiefs of "staff fraud^ the government a little, Ranging from the Dunkirk is essentially weak. He deserts his offers throughr reported Publishers not a chore alone for the Texas An by Wife and marches to Alaska and pated in the test were the only Weekly: ' , and Webster went beyond the evacuation to college students, - human beings anywhere near. Rangers or the -National Guard ,j5 limits of moral-standards of his test-piloting, children, and love, into the ~ arms of a ^half-breed * fht If someone who eought to do But it means each aad every FICTION day. among other things, this collec­Aleutian srirL . us harm ware to explode such a oae of aa—oa campus, at home, My Cousin Rachel. By Daphne du Dealing mostly in the abstract, tion of twenty-seven short stories, But throughout the .novel, Mar­ bomb over a 'center of civilization or in tha;, marts of trade—giving Maurler, $3.60. the writer sprinkles in a few con­although written in very,.reada­EXTENSIOK* garet tries to ramain faithful to MOTH PROTECTION like New York, and the people 22lhoars to take a course in first The Qaine Mutiny. By .Herman crete cases ble language, m a n y ap­ to illustrate morality times Paul." She follows him to the Aleu­ were unwarned and unprepared, aid; agrewttg to serre in the gruel-Wouk,;$3.96. proaches the uvii vow cwmii-uni tMMotiiYi in government; tlie power and re­hafkheyed. . tians and saves him from the fe­DIVISIONr, ling, grimy job of Agnes -fi-***•«,• » >»«•• 600,000 would, be killed or hurt: a raaciia team The Oawa of Glory. ,By sponsibilities of men in executive, Cramming to get-everything in) rociousadvances of a bear.' If maana every Uaiveraity group, Sligh Turnbull, $3.75. legislative, and judicial positions, the author leaves little space toaervice organisationa, fraternity Do I tell these tales of horror The Cruel Sea. By Nicholas Mon the problem of pressure groups, develop the"characters^ 265 Courses to. terrify those who read what I aorority, and clab volunteering to . sarrat, $4. r-and the problems of a democracysa/? To the contrary; I-can bring do what moat needs to be done to Lieutenant Hornblower. By C. S. operatng on a big scale. The author concentrates on tell­SHORTHAND the demands af the new da: ing little incidents, many times -^Forester, $3.50. It means the 166 million people Millions of Americans are un-attempting a surprise ettding;—-^IN 6 WEEKS who form the mosaic which is NON-FICTION necessarily deprived of influence • . CorrespondenceAmerica, making sure that there The Sea Around Us. By Rachel L. in government, such as those in SURVIVAL OF LEGENDS. By '•?' Typing Optional No Sumbala. U*«a ABC'a. For Bualnus Carson,$3.50. is not a gap where they ought one-party states; those who can­Roaelle Williams Crawford. Sai) aad Civil Sarvic*. DAY. EVE. Low Coat. given by to be. Mr. Preiident. By William HilU not or do not pay the poll tax; Antonio: Nayler. 94 pp, $2. • . 28th Yr. School* In Principal CiUaa Coma. Obaarva. Spaak to our Pupil* As the University and its people man, $5. those in gerrymandered disricts; "Survival of Legends," which 145 Facultyhave in the years which have U. S. A. Confidential. By Jack those in states like Georgia, where tells the relation of legends to the Given Scholarship provided and voting arrangements make a mi­ Sp&dujAJJtinif " • ''y^ ' ''' passed example Lait and Lee Mortimer, $3.50. history, literature, and life of the The College" of Business Admin leadership in patriotic endeavor Adveaturea in Two Worlda. By A. nority victory possible; and those Southwest, does not 'piretefdVto THERE ARE GOOD-PAYING Members p to promote the public good I am J. Cronin, $4. who refrain from party activtiy. istration has been given a scholar­ be an exhaustive study. Instead, JOBS WAITING FOR YOU BURTON'S confident that through appropriate Under,the Sea-Wind. By Rachel L. Sometimes politicians show ship in industrial management by Mrs. Crawford's main purpose, in action of administration, faculty ^Carson, $8.50. their loyalty to others indiscrimi-' There's a quick, easy way for LAUNDRY Cil C. Chambers, president and and students they will once again writing the book seems to be to you to get a "good-paying jo"ob.1 general manager of Texas Foun­ 'stimulate interest in the customs, 615 W. \, ^ Call Us for estimates. I^ Electronic Design and Development Engineering l-r Store them at KeB^t Smith Ceaners Seniors and Graduate Students will be considered ' v MM for full time positions^ Sophomore end Junior Students lor tha summer «y only 3% will ^.considered for summer work leading to fill time wit n positions upon graduation. *of valuation next fall. -A* ' ^ A f '' •je' Our modem refrfgaratal vaults For Information Cell -" « rtiqhioy.-So 5 ,n !,«• 19thand . -x­ m: fy. 1"^ t A" * " c ^7* •?^T -ysr^w ^ mWra^SPWrcqft f Hr*Vrv y^:T IK & £> ^ . i^ , v < iW1"-ft f IP % */ *p| '• -./• r~ v? <= *s v*\ mg i atrons IfTRAL CHRISTIAN \t26F& -CHURCH ft 3a ne on '"a.m.'—"Things Money Cannot Buy':'--4>r,JohnrBa«lay, minis­ter. ?$n „ B«rbart8. Dick H vice-president; and and DSFsupjfcrand Rosenthal of Dal-, x Sanders, recordii^r seere­ 'lllpS worship programs. la» won the .two ITheForeign Btuderft SpeaW In Galvestonnext year to continue Department of State. ' nWIVERSITY CHRISTIAN highest awards' §s^4pfi^i topia of a >*ael d{»cu»-her wottlr.She ha* received a Ful-Shoahichi No«a of Japan, who at the® amniaW^-X>f Delegates aftetcd'toratta^i the TTlfi CHURCH , j? 'W'^oa given at the conference open? bright travel grant from the In-represents the Japanese program 8?45 and/IO^Cf a.m^-"Can One final banquet or " 'National convention on June 26 S-bag the Southwest Regional Office" stttute. *' of the Department of th«> Army, F1>1 SigMaDeHK areDickBdWoett, Be Saved Outside th« Church?" Institute' of International Alfred Dale'of ~EsHpland wai re­U sp,ecializing in the teaching of held Ssturdaf . and BilL Wheeler. . It XdticXtton in Houston Friday by cently awarded a University fel-Engl(»h.ju a seeond language* •^!Ehi«?Kev; l«awrenee"W. 8aih, night at tha Fan-^ RC^JJnfreisity faculty member and low»hip*for one more year of study All the students are studying at V TVl M Ht American 5 Tluta CM honored its gradu­m*m f{WHrtieidatT:he'HitchTn^ i'L_»as alwa_epe*ker at the confer- ALL SAINTS' EPISCOPAL ' Post FHday night. I * ~ Gloria l*drter of Lometa add Joan , CHAPEL t , -Hermann 8chmal, Germany, is Senior members w.^re lioriored. of Paris. CiroV tuxunoiir DA^&^R 0:30 and 11 a.m.—Morning pray­ 5 a participant in the Austrian-Ger-INTERNATIONAL PANEL MEMBERS, FIVE.I er and sermon. Cups , were awarded • to Ruth plus one other perfume *on of the Department Joe W, Neal, fnternatjonol Advisory Office director.l^^paJnHoustQn^^1: vHejidler^; .loutatanding memi ..has been elected director.' jse'—-you»'t choice of inistered by Eileen Friedman, outstanding sen­ vice-pre«ident of D^U*fTDp»iTo«i of State yhich is adromis Friday ^or a conference markmg the openipg -of thwett, the Institute; He ik ntaj won majoring in ior"; and Sue Kauffman, who to succeed Hank Baceus, wJ*Q Ms ACCLAIM * Regional Offica of the Institute of International Educlstfw^They cpil engineering, and plans to con* a p^n^J discussion the activities cup. Shirley Strum •been called into -the Navy. DER i* ..NEW HORIZONS , presented on "The Foreign Student Spea^-Four Dormi to Honor Sinipri c tinue his studies next year at the was presented the, scholarship Charles Jones is new 'treasdrer. Pictured-left to right are Shoshichi Nozu of Japan, Neal, Carlos^ ... or-REFLEXIONS, Stockv * University of Munich before en­Andrews, Carothers, and *Scot­award. ' ' - so '*yrY' tering a career in German indui-Janz,jof Brazil, Mi« Lelia Cachola of the Philippines, Alfred Date Grace ; -i;->, /••••:' if -up.now ' ''y ­ tish Rite-Dormitories and • Spring fall:^fk;«nr.i«r:.-B4Ui-'•V-v ii •**'-*'' A try.-of England, and Hermann Sichmal of Germany. Hail -will honor their senior# Sun­Phi Kappa Psi will honor the TlioU Pi fraternity are Galloway ' Carlos Janz, Brazil, came to the day with, dinners. > •,, ^ \ wives, sisters, daughters, and Calhoun, president;. Sonny Bar­ -University through Rotary District ' \_ ' • v--;: pinneeS of the Phi Psi's at a din­ber, vice-president; Ronald Cross­*187 after being selected for the A dessert jiarty for all the cam­ner at the fraternity house Sunday man, secretary; Adair Dyer, cor­ -•• •••-.• . • • scholarship by the Institute* Spe- pus dormitory )»dvisors was held at 1 p.m. Approximately 35 are responding secretary; iiowdy , cializing in personnel management, Wedne^sd'ay by w#v^nan Hall. The ejected. . : • ->'--Clark,, treasurer and pledge mas­ *1 .cosmetics, first floor Jans has been awarded af travel, heads of dormitories a^d. the Dean The newly-elected officers' for ter^ Bobby Greer,' assistanV trea­jng.'fellowship through this coun­of Women's , staff wer^Nrepre-' Phi Kappa Psi, for the fall semes-* suer; and Tony Robertson, rush try by the International Telephone sented. ter are Ed•=•Notestine, pr«iident.; captain. Company, for which he works in Brazil. •• • • 1jn«f s A-fA •»}« O Graduating senior women who college woman assume a responsl­( -" Lelia Cachola, Philippines, is do* are interested in becoming mem ' ing graduate work in nursing edu­ ble role, anywhere she might-be bers of the American ^Association cation under the sponsorship of the Association' suggests qualified of University Women have been the Altrusa Clubs. She.will si tend women for important posts, it asked to go by the Dean of Worn* encourages them to participate inen's officfi^foif information and civic affairs, and speaks up membership cards. Ice Cream Social against unfair employment. I The Association, organized in As a part of the educational To Aid PalsyClinic 1882, is made up of college alum­ program,.the Association gives fi­nae numbering over 120,000 from nancial help to graduate women The Travis 'County Cerebral 313 colleges and universities. Plelmti in the United States and in for­ Palsy Clinic will benefit from an Their purpose has been described old-fashioned ic# cream social as "putting education to work eign countries. A million-dollar fellowship endowment fund is Tuesday night at 7:30 p.m. at the practically." • Charles L, Sandahl home;" 1406 Because ,an approved degree now almost ^ completed. Since 1800 512 awards have been faadeGaston Avenue,, <: from ah approved institution is AUSTIN to women to help them take^heh? Tickets for the evening «f en> necessary*for membership in the plMes among ranks of college ad> tertainment ind^all the ice cr«iun AAUW, many colleges have had ministrators, teachers, research in­and n'ome'baked cake one can eat to work to meet Association stand­vestigators, writers, and otherare" ft for adults and 50 cents for ards so their graduates could join. professions. -* Students. In this way, the AAUW has ex­ s Entertainment will ' include erted Vn influence on American 'CREATES square dancing, specialty dance education. fv All-faith Picnic numbers by Beverly and Lurline To meet the problems of educa­ . Smith, and a waiter ballet. tion, international relations, local SUPER- Today at Pease Alpha" Gamma Delta Sorority social situations, an^ understand! Is sponsoring the social. ing the arts, the" AAUW has ini c .VER OF Students attending the all-faith K stituted a "study-action" program[ * ' picnic Sunday afternoon Will meet In this program they inspect ah ' WSP Senior Dajr at the "Y" at 1:45 p.m. to go to W::.. situation then Westminster Student Fellow­study a arid d Pease Park or meet at the park something ahout it. ship 'will celebrate ^Senior Day at % p.m. Tickets are 35 cents. 4 Another part of their program Sunday with a day-long' program Recreation has been planned by involves the study :of the status I of worship. Calvin Koomey from Westminster mm I of women in-the world of today. At the morning service a spe­ Student Fellowship, and the pic* Always interested in seeing the cial section is^being set aside for nic supper has been planned by f* ^seniors. They^(are requested to Pftifftr Hudi Art Student* Maw Henson from the Baptist meet at the church at 10:50 a.m. Bert Pfeiffer has been ejected Stuaent " Union." Students may There will be a banquet in the president! of the Art Student's As­leave at 6:30 in time for their in* evening, free for seniors, and 25 sociation. Mrs, Fred Hart is vice-d.ivid'ual Sunday. -night church 1'2-3 : cents for others, Dr. D. A. Penick, president and Meg 'Youtigquist meetings.' chairman of .the board of student has been re-elected secretary^ Other committee heads, fhclude Not iust Any Diamonds work, will talk. treasurer. Carolyn Coe, Canterbury Club, Charles Petet, director1 of stu­At their final meeting they saw finances; Pat Dillon, Wesley dent work, and Phil Bell, presi* movies of Latin-American*art and nic as a whole; and Dorothy Jane BJJJ Diamonds With dent' of WSF, will speak during architecture. Foundation, in charge of the .pic* the dedication service in the The scholarship of $100 cash the Westminister Kreager, „ from HI! ///' 'J /i/t U< sanctuary Sunday night. will-be presented following-finals/ Student Fellowship, publicity. PI >4 I W u R L DBF A M 0 U S .*%?*>• r 100 J-L4!, ^ %t: i xc> #• • fife' ing beauties m t#. •k ^rt •: ^'i" * • \ % ° y** 2--4 illustrafions enlarge to show di"'*'!' A Wlde-awalce girl would ba wise.' tovchoose. any one of these Tom- shorties, or jdngies, for cool, ' i trim sleeping! Top figure displays! tK J a shortie , ip white, iron-fre® plisse, with/a short sleeve,, skirt-­ .- tail shirt-^gay in awning stripes, Assortea colors with white. 32 to. /• 36. Efottom figure wears long Is Tommies,*. with short sleeve, striped collar, tailored jacket to be worn in .'or out. White with. assorted/stripes, 32 to "38 (tiny to * tall). Each pajama malc^s^ grand . mixing,-matching. 4.95. A. _ _ _> 1 jasateZWm. x' VERY LIBERAL CREDIT TERMS IT TAKES JUST A FEW MOMENTS TO OPEN AN ACCOM r/-?­ Lingerie, Second Floor Sbiamattdi. :< •r»*. Tj.S. p«t. o«. M: mif a­ 2236 Guadalupe i T* fhont 8<-6426 m i MP* .­'AUTHCRiZFD .. .. Sapbrough & Sons '///, DEALER" M i; mm v. raVrVf.viiig & m M mm :%gp^ WW Literaturefor —, , • , talipri ­ if I is (19 acton Jadefritttn* ravacad Resolts of Course '* i/C 2'jL^m three more > Frank H. Wardlaw, direetoy of .-•jjrwu. Am*a*na»U';t4H»r the thiares andharIota and gamins nations. The movi* may be de­ British editions of land. Previously, the Nelson Com- To 3« DUp! "In 1949 IW$> produced an hoa« and thr-poo^ of Rome. Tha lead putising but the ^rreatness and stcvjstf University, Press books have been spany had published another Uni­the University Press, annoupced character, Lambefto MaSfiaraoi, universality of the story make' H published 'during the past six versity Press book, '-'Tha Florida that "Dearest Isa: Robert Brown­ Saturday -;«onelnded Attt-]fo»t hb iob soon cter eompietia* month^s series of weekly *rt iii-months by Thomas Nelson , and of the Inca," translated and edited ing's Letters to Isabella Blagden'," pii'toT h&nle, rii(. Showboats,'? by Philip lowing the finest i^motiott; j*c-ner of his movie role, Y -4--. Anstin artSute. -Th«i idealist^ , v m*i hjMtmanaged ifb sqaeate in ^ It &"an honest, unartificial n»o-: v 723 sistant profeasor pt art, has been .'JIIms Plays of Nathan Field,'" 6i^L Madii^ aBowtog. Throu*irtHree tarbn-•ie, in hainf this it peirhaps is a Violinist Angel IUy«i! givin*,class leasons .to. the junior edited by William Peery^aivd "The the overthrow of the Dia litAJa^alow. ihe-acting and Florida the are; torshi yean? ti»a film ha* lost none Bttt To Perform laCufek^S ligh children for two houra avaiy of Inca" ndw »rshto in Mexico •it«'Stpxfc tealhrtie potency-; : dJmtinjr lptaft io ,til« fore fin Saturday, -sine* last fall. Work being sold throughout the British f lNw Me^ca^ Iteroltri Aty ffie"dnd>, shabby, tiresome, chararUrUatiooa that land a feeI Cubajias inivited Angel Keyei, deee by the students will be on Empire. ^ Dr. Charles <5. Cumberland* i aspects o£ postwar ing of -immefese varjfty ana djus-$ue*t-profe»or of violin at the display Thursday, May 22 at the Flat sheets sent by the Univer» •This book CO vers;the firat aster't* the tfcoiywHA,^ -5s „ Art Library in the Aft Building. eity Press are bound by Nelson^s of the Mexican revolution University^ to play at that coun« • It ia» hard to u|tdAVID-ogATHSHEBJ cussion of tHis controversial top--­ '«#ttreiy by .members of the cl»ss. ing, the cultures.of the American equipment and to . have \onger I 1c over KTBC Friday night. jys? • TEtHNKOtOR The program was given as a pub­man of ten thousand, years ago. working periods*. In• addition, • the f Members of the-panel, shown lic service feature," Two aids have been jtrovided ^ classes were observ^iiy^Mtledfe ' Gregory PICK-Susan HAYWARO " ---' F.­ cation majors. C. McConnell, director of housing and food .services; Mrs. Barton- i ACT •Varittiis' Plays * Smith, of * the Austin^LeHtgue of SMALL T-BONE r Women Voters; Dr. Leo Hughes, 1.00 Friday and Saturday y moderator of the .forum and as­TELEPHONE 8-1710 TELEPHONE S-8S33 CRPflTOL LARGE T-BONE . .. sociate professor of English; J. Color by^Technicolor STUMS UKC ° • i.25 To ease the strain of exams next Leighton Reed, front the veterans' "BEND OF "YOU NEVER STICK CANDY! wiek, the Austin Civic* Theater ,, • Jmum CRAIN will give the second performance THE RIVER" CAN TELLll Privet# Parties byof "Playhouse Varieties", on Fri­Artists, Architects Jubn Stawart . .Dick Powoll RetervatSoh—Phone 8-3984- • fore—thi» divinely:-- day and .Saturday.. Arthur Ktnnadjr P*(cr Dow Win National Gantost -PIBj -PIlu­ lortshle, bckkly smartshoe ; The musical show will ~1>e SAN JACINTO INN Two teams of University stU' "THE SCARP' 1The.Raging Tide 'that foes almoet evdrywhere sparked with talent from Austin dents have won national recogdi' John Ireland SheUey Winter* ^ E. liMh A.San Jacinto..^ yoa do!The n«w 0*k 'nCrtpe and with emcees Cactus Pryor, Ridurd Conte Merce4e» MeCtmbrMw tion in fine arts-architecture com' ' soles mMn hesvewly walking.^ Homer Leonard, and Ed Gullion^ |FIRST SHOW 7i40 P.M. m FIRST SHOW 7>S0 PJM. • .Mnlti4tirip«« harmonise with | "QJaudta""WiH ^»pen at the ACT^P^i^0"• «!:W on May 28 and run through June The team of painter Cecil L. •oUd Uim in choice of. Casebier, San Antonio, and sculp­ 1, skipping May 31. faahio^Hnght jKimxier colors. tor James H. 'Green and architect Gordon L. Smith,' both of Austin, '.vine] f-hf: -^mify won first priz% of |250 in the mronsi contest sponsored jby the, Associa­MKmutm tion of Alumni of the American wmmsi Academy-in Rome and by the Na­ tional Society of Mural Painters. '%t itsun The team of architect Craig ^ • THEAT-RES^pMiAllen, San Antonio, sculptor Ed­ward C. Brown, Arlington, and No. AUSTIN gciid •SO.AUSTIN®C2Z2D"' painter Ginger Boyd, Tyler, won NO* it E X A S FEATURE STARTS AT 7 P.M. FEATURE STARTS AT 7 PJ*. honorable mention Jn the' (Compe­ • tition. "PASSAGE WEST" Bend Of The River Forty-two teams:: from 11 John Pejrne Arlene Whelen ENGLISH SUBTITLES schools entered thd cdntest based 1 -—Alao— „ Jibn Stewart. Arthur Kenneidl|p ^2348 Guadolupt O9 th# drag on collaboration Of artists and ar­ —Al»»— • "BACHELOR'S m chitect in the design 61 a com­ munity music library. The Lady Pays Off DAUGHTERS" QiJ|} *u»»ell CUlre Trevor Linda Dnrnetl Stephen MeNally Schwarts R«pr*(*nti UT ,Newton*Schwartz was the Uni-MONTOPOLIS (iMI DEADLINE1 versity^elegate to the Texs ciety of the1 Sons of .the American FEATURE STARTS AT 7 P.M. KIM HUNTER Revolution Oratorical Contest "ANNE OF THE . B«nd Of Tht River held in Houston Saturday/ His PLUS TOM A JERRY Junes Stewart Arthur JCmnidr INDIES" speech, an .'original composition, •—Also—- PETE SMITH « NEWS J«mi Peter* Louis-Jourdan was entitled "The Man Who Could "YOUR NEVER *^A1>0' • Have Been King." The speeches were based' on CAN TELL" "NEVADA" Americanism in an'issue involve* Dick Ptowell Penjr Dow ' Robert Mitchum STATE ' in th.esAmerican RevolutUnp. HMR FIRST PICTURE SINCE WINNING T^E ACADEMY AWARD INStarts THURSDAY "BORN YESTERDAY* STATE hunted white man,. Indian beauty,in the w fend of the '^White Madness"! jfcjSEOXCMN *OSi^^43S40 I. GUI10HAU. ' . . »|40 C WWTH) AHTKWiA $21.73 ItfWWaSflRST ^ *33,79 irtvifei jfou to ^hoe$e yoti^p irriit « DANCING FIOWOS $2«.7S eotUMUA »>£nm f. T«NCH.I»IAlSSANa $31M _P.MA*uoroo6H %3»M ,h* W°rfd'» ch«ri,h.d silverware K. »UROUNDY. ^ , $31JO aA pritei, per -6< ' ­ f£M&i to* ''.lir-yiL+S'r REED ? xfedejd. ANSCO ' STAMBNG r/ix,"'. YOUR STAR Of "XIRC SOLKMONi MmtS' txu«*r We're proud to present la complete line of solid-silver Nndni flatware and harmonizing holloware of sterling and TigwM o Writ* heavy silver plate ... designed by Reed & Barton, Hon*! CYD CHARISSE outstanding craftsinen^more than 125yearsii JEAN PETERS STARTS THE DRAG FOR 4 ^ !! BIG DAYS! craftedla beavywa^kt fUrerpUAT^r^mA ajBarfcm craft*.- ri**t Show men. 5*pt *et $UBt mstdhing tragr'IM; ' Mwioa 'i I ji ^ r ^ FINAL DAY; I -«r * BRANDO a, * aBarton tm Nte from fin. '0'ii Gt^adalupe Phone S4426 > •* :v,vv',' Sill it - . ' • "f? -Viyo€lipot(fA fii *»*»• %w,te Wis** ose Named S 0 '4! J^JUf 8prt«g, flew Jftef^lBMtsury Reflect Dn Battle's lUee&SML'' —-1­ Institute, Hoswell, end, the Uni­versity of Ttxa*. H« *m a World v?ia& M.it r«m Ba». ;, Wiir II flier with 48 coiisba* €fjr­ $hf» 'wut s&neuneed Iter Ifbjr ing missions in the European Th^ Force.,The Designation is •tw>" , in $<>&«,& 1st' Lieut. ?amss ** Wibh/Jr* ait force pilot, who killed when his Mustang of Biff spriii*:Jft*Jitter, plane crashed into He-L. Webb Sr., Htm at SHverton, kotaBsy, Bofekaido Islsjsd, Japan, Te*. Friends it tbr Vni*«»Hy' re­'v --A native of Nolan County, T«x-, called Webb as s student in '4Jf 'Webb Attended public schools in end e Chi Phiand Cowboy. &,g- EL • Choice SteakskM4' x • Sandwiches • Salads CHARRO O Fine Cold Beverages ;: « For the belt In 'fU f*' " MEXICAN FOOD OWEhk -Oeily II ».m*>I «.m. ^$J f -• J"""" "" V .. . ^ .. • is, there were three towers, two ij, J'M on either end and a larger, tall m : : NAME ' one in the Renter. Dr. Battle oc­cupied that center iower. the high­ • .t V 4 • 'est place on the campus. , f *£ u ADDRESS He founded "the G«-Op in 1896 H because students had been com­ TOWN _ STATE plaining that supplies cost too much. He loaned the original capi­ tal and was the Co-Ops' first man­ (Austin delivery zones are from 19th to 27th streets and San Jacinto to Rio Grande.: ager. For.dorms that have no boxes for students, delivery will be made to individual rooms. And once there were no student THE OA1L.Y PRODUCE QUICK TEXAN RESULTS . CLASSIFIED ADS For Rent RirRent SAVE $25 -$30 PER MONTH , LIVE THE CO-OP WAY CAMPUS GUILD offers you: . I. CARRIER AIR-CONDITIONED STUDY WALL priv»l« dosb. V 1. Comdaia pariodicalt collection, records, game room, launqry facilities. " I. ModOrn $85,000 structure, 3 blocks from campus. 1 Non-Profit, student-owned and managed Meansr * ROOM AKlD BOARD $43.00-$45.00 per month J (Work 4 houra a week or pay $10.00 labor change) FULL BOARD $31.00 to $33.00 per month ; (Work 3 hours a week or pay $10.00 labor charge) *ROOM-r-$15.00 per month. s ?*- •% SHARE IN THUS-UNIQUE GROUP-LIVING. EXPERIENCE x THIS SUMMER • -; ; Come by 2804 White, walk in and look .around-of calf 8^4673 (Applications for fall semester also taken till August 10, 1952) ^4 OBADUATK MEN, two larga eomfortable . room*—ona amall. Ona block from Law Building, Call 8-0*82. VACANCIES AT THELKME. ; Thara will b« a few opaninga at The)em« f i : Co-op for the .19(2 lummir eemaaterc. ; THeleaae oSara.'inaxpeniiye llring, excel­ . lent location, fine, food and fellowihlp *• • :: Current aeaeanment. Including room, board and ntllitie*. ia t4&'. For infnrma­ v Uon Titlt Or write Theieme-Co-op, 20« Kaat Stnd Street, or phone S-1777. ; NQRCO ASMS . ' 2*06 Rio-Clra.nd«T for ererr ropm a rafrigerated alf­ conditioning unit. Evary room'ka* an onuide door adjoining ptftlo: Be cool thia aummer. Booms for man, women and eaople*. • Mr». G. B. Laighty, Magr. . 8-2762 AIR-CONDITIONED gueet Mou*e. Unl- It veraity approved for glrl». PHtate, one room, two eloeeti, ehower, twin bed*. i«aali .optional. 1 block off eampui. 2000 W-hltia. 8-4744.: GARAGE.' BOOM, next iininter,'. klio ftimlehed four room apartment, suit­ able for four boya .or girl* or for-family. 2-27(8.* • Bfpt« fe-ff' APARTMENTS — ROOMS — 4»ir-eond.l- I ' tionad, shopping nanter, 'bus, private W*> entrance, hatha. Ill Weat l&th Street. Phon«B-7*7»; .— ^ — AIR-CONDITIONED rooms, with or with­ out hoard. One block from University. Brunette Student House, 190g Wichita, phone 2-4181, THC BRIDGEWAY SSI# Wichita • Spend^ibe aummer at the Bridgawity. Enjoy; theiool comfort of refrigerated air>coMUmnlitg. Private' batha. Two blocVa from the'-campus, $)0. Alto -several rooms" with window faos. refrigarators, porter aervlca. Slf to |2«. •••»: •„ .: Mr, Williams ,>• Phone S-847S SUMMER KATES—four upstairs room! . aad-two battia. Ideal for aix students. Kitchen privileges. Pfconei 7-4808. 2304 r Leon; One;garage >p*rtment. -BLOCK FROM CAMRUS. Large *ool cor­ ner room witb eooklng feeilHies. Also small apartment with' utllltiea paid. Call 8-1888. ' sl, -:: , OPENINGS fen Available for :th« llil aummer • aomeater it the H.A. Club. Current assessment is S45. Tor informa­ tion, wrIto H.A. Club. 2408 Gaadialupe or Phone 2-4T84.. 4 Fuffiished Apjirfmenfs 'SOUTHBAST. A ndltionad. Large rooms..Private. Wv2tH. Phona Aperfment for Rent •Mr S&XN'BftUtAKEX if fbjr W*f to^liegr% «bet»4. "If finals were abolished, r. Battle waa chairman of the Faculty Build itig CommiUee. Eren the Tower looks as: it does because of Battier It pr. >w' from -University. Phofl*: 6-4167. •CIJSHMAN MOTOR seoote*1—-',49 model. Second psychology Study Roomt for Rent TrMitmitsloa, dfivc» four )toratpowert large tire*. 885 cash. Phone 7-2898. Possibility,at UT Campus 1987 -PACKARD convertible. ? cylinders. Help Wanted PART-TIME ACCOUNTING AND OFFICE WORK Male itttd*nt th*t h*( e for aceountins major'a with dc'ilro to work. Foaltton to oj^on into, anothar job which iriyaa txc«Ucnt ateountins experianeo. Wrlta full partieulara In». madiataly to Dally T**an, Bo* T, 9-1, TJnivoriity Station, Aaatin. T«x-HA'LF-TUUS abaane* and grada dark. Dean'* offllea. P«rmMt«nt poaition. Mar­ ried woman profarrad. Typing ability 'haceiiary. Call ext. 20t. ^OMAK-JUNK GRADUATE Needed by Dallsia -businass jreMarchfirm for pannanant position with career opportunities. Write flox Tl^ Daily Texan, giving educational back­ ground. For Sale MKN, NEAR UNIVERSITY, garage 18 miles per gallon. Recent, engine job. room with ahowe.r. Private entrance. Very good con^itipn..Phone: 2^8787: Maid service. .Telephone. Cool, Reason­ able. On bus. 8-8701. 2607 Sail Jacinto. = •¥' "" " " AIR COND1TIOMED, single or double TAPE RECORDER room*, openlqg on patio, adjoining tile -Revere model^T-100. Biillt into beau­bath and shower.. Meals optional. TO#,W. tiful carryln* ease and complete with 2»rd. »-B144. —• B«niitivi miifropht^. PtrTMt condi­ tion. Uttd jfor only Xmonthi—m't PARAGE ROOMS for men students. In-. " T S T I — z i j i~rrT" «.li from n#w, urigineh,co«t*lmoit sulated. half block University. Drag. $200, will tell for lMfpthan J.100 eaeh. Every day maid* aarvice. 815-817.80. wul 2-S052 or 2-6**8 «ft«r . rent single. Call 8-7277. ROOMS FOR'!mALE atudents. Air-Condi­ . tloned. _Clean, comfortable. Good porter Typing service. Schoen House. 170'9 Congress. 8-7097. TYPING Neat work. FIek op aarvice. 2-8606 2-4858.T MEN STUDENTS. Rooms with large Closets,^lavatories. Venetians, excellent TYPING—accurate,-axparfmced. PtMma beds, insulation, attic fan. 8i& each for 6-8880, evenings. double. 1012 W. t8rd. 8-0&91. . ICXPERIENCSD M^a. graduata, Reason­ PRIVATE ENTRANCE and-bath. Air-able. Mra. Davia. 4-1287. conditioned and refrigerator. Tare, boys preferred. 911 W.. 22>4. Phone l-m7. EXPERIENCED: THESES, eta. Onlver­ sity ndighborbood. Mra. 8-4948. ;; FOR tilRLS—single or doubl#. Newly . decorated. .Kitchen privilegsw if desired. TYP; YOUR THESES, aianuseripta, etc. 21.0Q San-Gabriel. Phone: a-i»4M.^ ' Oatee, 6-8840. r ^ 807 WEST 2Bth. Lovely rjiiotns 'for girls TYPING DONS M my. hama. Telephone In new sorority house. «>o for aix weeks. Reservation^7:-being taken for r -. v".i .t r«SOm and board for falL 8-0442, 7-2718, T«t81 DISSERTATIONS. 6-8720. \ •• r ^nfette). PUttlBjM Coaahiag. Mn. mecky. IMill , SUMMER RATES—1-|8 to 812.80. men and couplet.' will consider kitchen priv­TRESES TROUBLES7 Trcmhla me-ta). ileges to aavaral..* Ona bloek" from cam­at«NHi. CaU gnytiaia. t-SSSf.. pus. 8-61H, 7-0400, T L-1TMK 1 FULL-' u. *"«»*• »** «le#» k manhlaa: : , CHOICEVHVIVO BACHELORJ»/» room*. Lajrge, cool, trie anhlaa; V-SfM. I»arfy»U.>® b«tha and entrancM. Also suite rooms andd . sleeping po^cb—iu»t reAn-TYPING, dictation, plefcup. servlea, ale*­ fshttbsJHock ock from oampua,. 6-46ft8. tromatic. Phona 7-*124, 8-4180. ACIOU pal,' homey duplex. Best XMrtgh V bloek of onmpas. U*ing Wented _ roo«n. .ldtchan, .twa bine •laaipnc verph. twi>/h«ths. ,-^wj #O0L0 Ull TO Wt «Mim.a«ui». c . mentt , " " atlniatuins. WW* K ul-JUI:-1! i & girln# f«II tfa to Box flLi'J :-IUH Jtl TM, University Station. Apt 7. Phona: 2-4909. O u:Of?uiLJu;i auw H s HIGHEST PRICES PAID fog 2nd hand laua ujja men's clothing. Khaki 9 afi< awll»A,Aly^^ ing W II: JL.J'jJ iUrJ J I i ilkWoau,adnha-o *f hU4t% J a **• ^ *. * LEAVING SCHOOL? tof ws move % star* your furnituf find pmrtonal J? '-J-vT r'AT-s*.' U\M: • fp r + TV r Crating ShippingPacking Bonded Warehouse 51 ^ ~ 1-1 RHbADES TRANSFER AND STORAGE CO Dial 8-5681 % free 1919 East Mi Street;, v ing the English requirements. He suggested the quotations on the ceiling of the main reading toon in the library and the alphabetsthat are on the main building. He even designed the seal the TJnlv. and a shield with the motto, "Die­cipiina presidium eivitatis" (aLatin translation of JCirabeau B. Lamar's "Education-is the safe­guard of democracy")* J After getting his doctorate at Harvard, Dr. Battlev$augbt a year at the University of North Caro­lina. He earae ta' Ths Universi^gof Texas 58 years ago, in 189S, sw «»­ He became a full professor, in 1908. -1 , His office-on the 27th floor of the Tower contains a good-sizedlibrary; most of the bogks deal with Greeknintl ij^tr^itures^anSTlanguages. ; In his office are many reminders that thousands of years ago people lived and produced beautiful cultures of long ago, sculptured heads^ broiize carvings, and many other momentos of other times. He has nevet> married. Several lil years ago heTremarked that "I pa beepmejett attractive and more particular each year." A ^former president of the University once described him as the "catch"* that was never caught." .••''-"'v Despite his imjp^stve achieve­ments, Dr. Battle is friendly and unassuming. Visitors to his office are always welcome. He makes Greek and Latin sound like fun hnd .the history of (Greece" and Rome seem completely fascinating. and Dr. John. Varner. : Bigelow took first place in the Cp-Op narrative contest with "Beatchhead" and Carol Jones' "Helpin' Hand" won second. ' Dr.„ jEferald Langford, Lavoisier Lamar, and W. T. Cokiin judged tiie Co-Op contest entries, i Miss Brown won first jplace in the D, A. Frank poetry contest. Although two prizes aire usually given, the judges considered her "Soliloquy" the only entry worthy of a prize. Poetry fudges were Dr. Frank Lyell, Miss Edleen Regg, and Dr. Annie Irvine. Peredes, graduate English stu­ dent, will represent the Univer­ sity in the Dallas^ Time»>Herald creative writing contest. His group of short stories "Border Country" will be entered in com­ petition with entries from col­ leges all over Texas. 7 to Study Land In Latin America •Dr. Dan Stciiiislawski,,.profes­ sor of geography, and six graduate ;or. senior students will meet in Mexico City June 1S to begin 1» ten-week field course iii Latin America. Most time will be spent in Nic­ aragua working around lakes oh problerns and history of land use. On ihe way by public m CWMAMON e'CHAMTASN8 m m '• vj sf'V' f S.4*s5>« •fer, m V , JIM & &