7)J.; ,1 V v ' •> '-* "p Jf^affw a^ufei1! ' i ' C/^ RONNIE DUOG Tmm Sitter the key position to BP. C. P. Bone^dudrwr r * ^ «(-r ^ " S * !• ^ v. W*W i thirty educational big" shots are man Of a commt datione totheReyentai. didatea for the new positicm of Univeraity ^ *That committee hasnotmetsince Hsfc^ Chancellor. ' m ill8!* wlien MJlPji **> selected XbrlBoner, dean of-. But ripthing is Settled., Scores of rumors ' the-CoUefe ^ Sefenee*,;. a» JJ>|4, »u$ V "8ure''||appointments*.. are^nsub­ cbaifman, «w4{ %V,r J *-. stantial. -• -•,T. V. Sihith, University df Chicagoeduca­ 5 Students, ex-students, faculty member#, tor, politician, and now professor of politics^ y, jind poetry at Syracus^p. >een invited to submit recommendations W£ ^ SEPT, Page 10' r'. i .i jiii-tiu i i ifil. ' rtirmrifurt fJ%w infjH-ii „.,iL.rllf,1i ,„?. ?„ 1, t i'. ,!•<«. 4 c»^ J*j VOLUME 51 AUSTIN.TEXAS, FRIDAY, JULY.7,1950 12 PAGES TPDAYr®» r.rrfjr r^-jtapHI J® '"iv * istratiah . Students wishing to'regjater for _^P^Senta,:-are instructed t» the second term should file with Without-seeing optara second term course cards the xegistrair'8 office not later ill Law Building lOS' on July 10 than Saturday, July 8r announced and 11 at 8-12 o'clock in the course wishes to tal^one or more morning and 2-4 o'clock , in % -.2? ^M&^aon mr~ *'s" courses, he is ifestrUcted to afternoqn. Instructions will beMMBf. HASKELL beanos proudly foi5 early in August"she -Cou»e!'*carlE# •anil'*regis^ation see a faculty adyi^r In his col* issued them with the course ""will-compete as .t„„ ^Ul.I I OAa> |II I HO IVII55 vlBXQS TlflQlS. lege or school, T M SoutRTexas m Tffe MTss^lexirs •i t »™——sali ^sent by cards." i f-i 1 <* '"t ,;W of that title wlllrepresent ihe state in the Miss Ameri mail before July 20, the Regular tCTf " 'MtahA Atlantic. City, '"W%-•registration day. All registration Sfr ifgg will) ha , completed in Gregory A Gym., •.shfyx,, ju.x.. ;.;?.-ft .+• ' i-4>rder .to.le8asjB.jthe jpon^OK ^Negroes tiort in Gregory Gym on July 2Wt -—m' •-&»>. students registered for ^''w" fe courses and law students wjll be able Nto .finish-thek registration v.-fw * "'•? -T . VJ5? "fit * *Tr^>^ ^ '••-1 §i BATON KOWE, L*.^ July i(. University of Texas under a recent " •j 4-* \ —Nine Negroes asked Thurs-Sj^tes Supreme Court Mary Esther B&skell, University for Aqua -Carnival queen, tor fK.pSfife'Sfil 'day to be ac«iepted as Students at; ir' for one or more "w" «N»uxees c^n a^phomore, addedthe title ofMiss •which contest .Max Staroke of tiouisiana State University and " *' '' -­ secure a coupse card July 10 and u ."'We feel we're all citizens of South Texasis to hear long'list of Seguin was a judge. Mr, Starcke, 11 in the ground floor Rotunda said they would sue for admisslon, rLouisiana and we're entitled W fe honors ,«t Seguin July 4. Miss at whose park theMiss South of the Main BuUding. These if necessary. -tiiis,' said one of the applfanta Haskell won the title over con­Texas contest wss heldf Temember course cards will have the , It was-tite first tiiie Negroes 15.. George Hogan, 84, of Shreve­testants from fourteen south Tex­ed Miss Haskell and asked.Austin course already"-entered. jlf the had soughtradmission t6 LSU since ^ho acted as spokesman. M" officials to send .her-to the,revue. student --4s •' continuin^ ^su c h Negroes Won admission to the "We don't want to embai^a. as. pities. the state with a lawsuit," headded. Jw —The victory placer Mf&Hagketl "We'd prefer, vte be allowed to ^ ^ a step higher on the ladder leading fX ' continue our education-but wa $$$? WHEN THINGS don"$ seem to happen just to the Miss America title..She'will will go to court if necessary." °, J^pight, when the qa'^es nearly TUn you out of , compete neit in tlfe Miss Texas " President Harold W. Stoke, in* ^your-head; '-whee-the Heat becomes more than|^' > eontestat NewBreunfels August foraged of, the move. told a reporfcfl ^ou-can stand, just take time and make a trip?5 or: ,v4 ;?Qt».one e admitted to LSU beauty .moe^'tftoied last ootest place" available anymore but Where -elsefp under Vecent 'Supreme Court decisions, wUl be placed before f spring when"she wis * finalist the LSU . Board, of Supervisors m at thp.3aeximeeting." s i it' , creA ned " JJL iutni',trv»g • I" "•••< ';AitWecationprof^was explain? Next Term to* the jm <4 % jeamel's hai* |ftr and dean of admu * Iff Ihov^^djwttttpAftW classvj£ ttarsday two new . g||^»t^ >H de^rtel^ to r wened to qualivNegroes tiie sefend suaDu, term. Mrs* Mabel La^gr^mC^ootett wai enter tb* CoUe«fci ^itebegin oa : Jm ©!|#a®w^^ dff 4 f% w eJemoati^y educatfoiv ' .-vtiti # ^riwite in*w«'xphit: iljkii -fak Nathaniel Nelu^, a teacher for bis JPh. D. in e4ucationj: ^ ..Students wiltwrobsbly Jbe*&<>» ' n kistoyy v*ik ,* <# ;st^dy , in §o?ioJog3fe/ a» ^ *$•> -^glisfcix^the^arrfiturfi.r the '^og^»r"-4iqr^ 'n^r^'vwhi«f'Wt ai» M60own Indicated. Qne teg a doctor degree ih the dei artment of .physicai ,aad heaMu m educa«on Is i^ttl being eonsidewficti Two othev Negre«» a»e t ' •quilibrinm .ftw a friend mHk a&nfesvwi to the greduate i 20>20 timoo told fclm' that iHuit K sociaj worfcatadli; ,mm h® thoacht WM the [These new fiel4», herel |ttlc« of the blM# tNwfcr «W> med to Negte students. <* emati», and law hav&flffrftady been AHaiuul 4oar n 1 -sr &;<*»: ll^^Miifliattiii^g MP mmS w ^* r^'-rrsrvrj "national ft pion Longhorn baseball nine placed three of its members -on the AH­ MS Americaa' squad chosen fay ' the American Association of College ^aaeball Coaches, * harder, Tvaa named to the first team for the second straight year, «m4_ aon^airJiuM«C^iarW^^ in and centerfielder Bob "Broc|rwade the second team. MURRA* WALL CHARLEY GORIN Other Southwesterner!* to rfcte the mythical selection were-oufcd Ray ¥an.Cleef, Rutge*^oufcfi«lder on this year's first team selection. fielderGerald Jensen of SMU, who' Was named the outstanding TISCKaJRoundy leads the hittera T?ho was placed on the third tef^rn, player in the eight-Watt NCAA with a.4S8averi^re but Nebraska'a and catcher Bob Murray and first tournamentr at Omaha. Cerv belted out a total of 87 bases,baseman Tony Morales of Arixona. ^Rounding out the first "team iAludittg ten doubles, three tri­ Murray made the first team and with Wall, Murray, and Van Cleef ples, and nine -home runs. ^ <­Morales, the third. are Fred Taylor, Ohio State, lb; The ieeond team* '• '{^The Longhorns were the only Charles Teague, $7ake Forest, 2b; William Andririg, Washington, leap to get three men on the William! KilKriger, Lafayette, 3b; lb; Albeit Cummins, Michigan Ail-American selections. Wake John Hrasch, Ohio' University» ss^ Forest, Rutgers, Arizona.NYU, Jay Roundy, UHG, ef* Robert Stat#, {Sb; Eugene Hooks, Wake Wisconsin, and runner-up Wash­Cerv, Nebraska, of{.and Thomas Forest^Sb; Nicholas Moreno, NYU, ; ington-State each had two men. : Casey, NYU^.y»L.. , I , n;£d White, Alabama, of; Brock, — All of the thirty ipen on Hie Wake Forest's Teagtfe" *i tlie Texas, of; Don Pahlke/Iowa Sfato squad are * Seniors ^except junior only other repeater besides Wall Teachers, of;Hardy Peterson, Rut« m *ers, e;J»ori5» Texas, ,p; and Thornton Kipper,"Wisconsin, j>, J The third team: '' Tony Morgues, Arixona, lb; Dott [k>dson, California, 2b; Don Paul, _ Washington State, 3b; William Skowron, Purdue, , •»»; -Jensen, SMU, of; Bob McGuire, Washing­ton States of; Leo Koceski, Michi­The field of eight-teams for a triplaand single. Dick Hoerster gan, of; Robert Wilson^ Wiscon­ the summer .intramural poftball was the big gun for ATO with ^n, e; Arthur Raynor, Buckn championship tournament was a double and single. " p> and Seymour Miles, Tufts, p. eompleied Thursday night as Lam­'Appak Amgia turned in a 11­bda Chi Alpha and Appak Amgis run, 3rd-inni^ splurge in wlueh won playoff victories. 16 batters came to Che plate, to mms The first round of the tourn­defeat Delta Tau Delta, 14-7. AII-StarGame mmmm ament opeiia Friday evening at Tommy Murray, Delt hinder, o'clock whffi Phl;€amma Belta; "limited ^he App«y AmgU League A champ, faces the~Heat to seven hits, but costly outfield Waversi -League D, rurtners-up. errors and his own wildness elim­ BOB* BROCK Lambda Chi Alpha -and Appak inated the Delta from' the champ­ &i»td -'H* AM*ei*te4 Pmm SUE& Amgis, both turned in runaway ionship picture.' Scott Sayers hitSfigSS vS?1"^ A victories Thursday night." ^ •a triplo and doublo-ior the. wine, The starting lineups chosen by • v *:-v .,;;;,-;v— •,.......mm. g The Lambda" Chi's eliminated ners. the fans, and^he pitching-staff# Alpha Tau Omega, 18-1, for the In other Friday night games. and alternate, players chosen b® KarowtMay Coach runner<-up spot Xhio State Jonrnw^^-until after the trUSt£eB*~meeting New:York, c; Ted Williams, Bos-! sb: in Columbus, ^Ohio. He implied he Browning|fTakes Title 'ton, of; Hoot Evers, Detroit, ofjj wduld take the job if he should. iA and Larry Doby, Cleveland, of*­ 1>o appointed.. Stengel chose Tommy Byrne^ US JetJuo Sets There was no official comment . V-In Oklahoma Diving Raschi, and Reynolds • Vic Allie from A&M officials. of New York, Bob Feller and Bob i pr. O.v W, Williaros, facultyi%2 ieAd of 'athletics at the school liongMrh divw, iStippjr Brawn* golfer^. Morrjs William» Jr. will Lemon of Cleveland, Art fioutte­ head a fteld of 200 Monday In man and Ted Gray -of --Detroit*and president of the Sotithvscest ing, vfon" the 1-meter divinfc chain- 9*jk* 4ionship of the Southwestern the, iwenty-fourth annual Texas and Hay Scarborough of Chicago for his pitchers. asked his jiermWsion to negotiate AAU swimming meet at Norman^ Junior Golf tournament in San * In the longest doubles matdi Okla-, Monday.' ., ^. Antonio. /.'Williams, Texas ama­National League..,j5tarters ares Wimbledon, with Karow. He said no action on a ever seen, at the Stan Musial, St. Louis,' Xb; Jacldo United States duo, Budge Patty successor or successors to Ka?ow Browning scored -358 points to teur and PGA ,champ, yfiU be a Robinson, BrookTyn, 2b-"Marty­ strong favorite to repeat his 1949 and TonyTrabert, Thursday beat would be taketa until after Ktfgow outscore Louis Neunev of Nor­ Marion, St^V^Lonig, ' Willi* victory.­ Frank Sedgman and _ Ken. He' uul resigned officially. man, who"had points^. Last Jonesj. Philadelphia, 3b; Enoe GregO* ofAnstrali*, 6-4, 81-29, Athletic Director Barlow Irvin week Browning jffifts named to th^ Slaughter, St. Louis^ 6f ; "lialph - ,7-9, 6-2. The quarterfinals match was on vacation at a ranch neax all-star.\college swimming team. Rees Leads British Open Kiner, Kttsbiirgh; of;~Buke Snl«| took four hours andflve minutes. San Antonio and cotild not be Skippy is"also the National AAU der, Brooklyn', of; and Roy Cam- B* |W MM JV*. 12| reached for ^comment. 3-meter diving champion. . * !_» Trabert, 19-year-old collegian pattella, c. . ] Three Americans—Jontiny Bul­ from -Cincinnati, Was the decid-Shotton'picked Don' Newcombti] #NeM«rWin*& la, Frank Stranahan, and Art ing factor in the endurance test and Preacher^ Boe-of .Brooklj ashe won 14 ot the 16 game* lie , , v®**' Clark-—clattered Into the "final Robin Roberts'.and Jim Konstant WaU-Pouefed Unseeded Jim Saunders of the half of the British-Open -cham-of Philadelphia, Warren Spahn University of TeXas won the men's Boston, Bob Rush of. C^icag §2^Brough $M Ife^^Har" pionships Thursday, but Dai Re«r, singles championship in the Ax- Caret DuPont won EweB Blackwell of Cincinnati, an h 'Majors' the women's nsas Valley -tennis tournament a Welshman led the pack witi* a Larry Janaen, of New Yorl •inflei semifinals matches. MIM Tuesday.' Saunders beat toft-two-round score of 71—68-—139 Brough, defending champion from Muriay W«4^;.i>r|io wail "ofi^alr seeded Paul Hurley of Oklahoma Beverly Hills, Calif., beat Doris |y added to the Boston Braves ros­at Troon Scotland. « A&M) 6-8, 6-3, 6-4, 6-2^f^4; Hart of Florida, M, £3» and ter last week when pitcher Dick Mm. DuPont won from Mxii. Pat Doaoraa wfcp optioned to ~ Mil-Saundeni and Clinton Nettie-BrownsWarned Baseball Scores II ton, another Longhorn, adyanced M, 4-«, wa^ee,saw his*first major league to quarterfinal play in menu, dou­NEW* TOftfc, Inly «n4ier 5Ph«*»4*.. action July Fourth* NATIONAL LEAGUE ,TRR bles before bowing to Rick Green •matched' from the singes eonso-The two^me Texas,AH-Atowi-Commissioner A. B. Chandler ,b|s and BUI.Hall of" Tulsa, 0-6; «-4, Biwitlyn 8, Boaton ^ -' S iation ^ round when he learned his ean came on fo~« relief perfojrm-told ^he St. XiOtkis Browns politely 6-4. Philadelphia 9, New-York mother was seriously ill In Cin inee against Philadelphia's Phita. that if they wanT*to talk abeut St. Louis 15. Cincinnati 1. #i einnatt He had reRerved a seat In four innings, Wall gave np six •Sk implim®: moving;4®ffir fmndiiaetibey should Chicago 4, Pittsburgh S. m on the ® o'clock plane for New hits and five rui^s. The ear-Long-• ~ r Bs© " AMERICAN York, but "after the doubles match, horn righthander staaick out two do it during the off-Beaaon B**i A.in«eiat»4 JT»»» New York 5, Philadelphia 4. k* said he would "stick around. widked.%» l^e Conamissioner's 6ffi641 in f^red Wantpler > of Birdue do-Cleveland 5, Chicago 2. DuPont ICii* Brough, ^ne>ftfor._..rt;--Cincinnati joxade the disclosure .4feated ,Colgate's Bob McCall 2 Only games scheduled. time doubles prbim^ wil ^snd l to win ijie NCAA golf ^edneadayhafter Fnrnk Stfeugneg-: •Sflajr Satttrday for the WimWedon Tf^rpcks ' «rown.^ Saturday at Albngn«r^ae< j^reddent' ofjt^i® international «rowa. for .the second consecutive DETROIT, July «.--WPMVir­ lnttomiircil Sclteduki gsl fee) Trucks, big riighthand-McCall^ a football player who Leagftc^' fiad lodged W '«rm';,|HPo­ er who #on tv games for the iys golf only between May and */ 2U ^ f iMl-ritSirtV n moi i^«cted Detroit Tig&*' • ]^st year, has Angs«t» waa, l-wp #t the end of ^SSftbaU. : the first round, but -slipped,"two Xttof BronA and i*:e lasir'li }ioI Trucks has been -off the jietive m shut 1-jHnnw , *•*<£&* 16 m WW' ^V fWdV^JWVtiTrW^ r- 111 infniiill i "i'Tf i»s-&,.yVJ< "f.* 7 . ' _v toff it to ^ S S.'ff.WT MMMpHlWi W////MM W////////, t A homm .owned institution «f 611 jCoflgmt w wmgz&ms-mm*&mfMx&t&i X^ §W 5* MKSM ( •-. iA-^5ww»fw %b.n ^ W^T-D-r^ -fai^^sraawsa^HIS vi'V J^T iSMisai ?4l ' S®88S?|P!Si lii* lillStIP w1 i ft -"—VHU I/-j&tetf t«r» lb|Phil org* ZPJfecJ'lL jrra, " ° t !%ii Bo#» oft ? v^nr"t*«'gt;yrt MP1'^' WMMMNMMt \7)T ^ rkif>:v&£ P*i w$,t <* /'fk $r&2 mm m in'iMi"tfp Mem on Campus . $tMm,wmmntm«maam leai m *' & -ft -w sgg&§tasr* TommyRodmatt, dbaitinfttt ^the."­ *haage this 891^^,jind LI Essentially, the sound: let students put their used texts up for saleat their own price; then* f<^»f PS feXlbOO& ft tea-cent fee, sett them to other students* *~**'•) •'i'Vf _ A BtUe moneAww saved. The Boolr; J Exchange, $92 inthe hole last spring; THE TEXTBOOK1 ua should 1*^ has smeeraads 134. About 300 books havethoroughly overhauled. ':uJ/R l>een handled this semester* But a change But these days, non-vet students, .are-jn the book store's policies and the sale lagfdigging deep into their p< * for ev of the exchange make it useless now. ?Y85PUL toHus'iat « course he took in English lot which Mnt RwE 2v^ m« Wk ** 3 .*jf_yi ?5 thy'Dra? offer the same 50 per cent r V _he said, WGro ftvsilsbiB itt ~tfae hb^"/' immoa—-withnnt'. n» **• (»U4 w (d it ' ''iktnhlA xdifh 'V. t .doft1^ mind, them making first and ten every, time, buH 'can.'t^ijrv M» "£' ' v' -' • ,.0•.wyy-r..1..iw^rr.. 1 • • *aee> ..j. I1TT • • lillwlf'• 'vAw^Jr fli V' vl>vl||vvll JLwJL: A' 5SWS$P^Z-^ % < stand tiieir dangedattifude.','. gp anaj^ia and statistic survey tirthe ama^|. specific need and then are not abolished ss*or rang; unnecessary turn©ver .of textbooks wh^n the need ceases. The Student Book ^•w^Ssavr |mi )i 'r fev,r* iW/J7±sP which may be very profitable fo* the " Exchange has lived a useful life; it is now Jh ,r if t« authors and publishers, but which is de^ too much trouble and tape for the mini- b " 41 ,, ^ *-«l4 Get ag2ood^Sedl r teen feet deep along the road Wednesday night the stone win-yc» people come over 1,000 miles vrfitm Bdfrr , ^ > nolished Hia and overpowering the peak... dew seats outside Hogg Auditor-to see it—but the fact that it is «» laSej "We ski, dance, party, hlk^ Battalion are always Cindy -Chamberlain writes swim, and row.. ters—and other Hke myself, who^.<«*JT that the project 4bas dene m noted for the strength of their fn>m Moirat Lessen In CaB» ; Poor Idd.?^:' ^ -r , came by for a look and couldn*t -^ot to break up the cliques thai , „ eonrtctions. A new high in edk fornia that she has been doin' V, _ leave. Vt'once ruled the town—just gener­ torial courage was reached Jnne stuff like: And then, last but not least,-We've seen a tot of plays around^ l*"' ••erybody together, whMl «*• ^ "Urti^W* h'mpr there ww the professor who the ^p5* since"our first daye^-A project of this sort might be^ saented: forgot te write a $8.50 text-here in 1945, but never •••'••• •u**•••-* . -^ x , brought skis and this morning ' • ' "* • Jl* • *• ^ anything^* te "keep 'em down ea We leek forward to mete half a doxen «f the klde went book to sell to Ids *i«ut. Suf-like "The Corn Is Green." No mat-^the farm," and eld folks in Al­ and »°re farpet grass en ^e, up tiw road and swooshed ov^ tering from some sort of mem* ter what we may think about some1': >,hM»y say It's doing1 a lot to streng­ campus. Although more trouble «ie snow, (which) is about fif-ory lapse, ^a^ ^^^*V®ct» of theWversity, thefact^then ties between.Albany and its....1 t© cere for, it presents a pleas* •••, ••• • •." • > '' ' n" ' remains that the campus has mor& <. younger generation; m ant sight on the hot dry day* -• -' talent per square inch than ,anyand cooler evenings of the sum* ether place we know about. ,?,r /ymer and fall... THEi Texante&r^>r ^ This may sound a little bn®-T//%|^?£M -C- After some hesitation, t the V \y '' gardly, but we must have talent—fV.TV ;r-;~T 1 < ••« • nooung as goog as the. Texan agrees, i-' -•• •' •<'" ,* or«r nothing nanhalf furgo?4 '^(cm. > 7 y .> i vi?z£.-v |^"rren^ Ir 2^4*-I^Or. MWS1M»» »t Shm tTtihrentty «f T«iwi'."li of the , D^mst 1m Au»tiil *rr*ry nomins «XMpt Moada* *nA S«turd«r, S«pt«mb«r to JuM* «ad .M9epartment COuld gO Ott aroundjTr ^Temmy guns and machine* it»c«yt criod». mni U.wetidr 4wriscttw ratnmmtK ;|^ • in nests are "beingT set up mm ^ around Anch Xaffee.-rtt was,,.the-directionf~5B^^^^S Woyd Band, Jim MoU has yet te i»rn out i stinker—but It could be the sim« ''tirSW*summ „ "The town actSis th^i^h were at our doorsteps.,,, fur­ longs have been cancelled'. -, b*%u^] w -^Mk-*^e I>«PWtmeat prides _ 4««» jougns nave cee» wnrenew..» thesoldieni areall wearing com-* ^^lf o# having one of hest ~ Chta^ bat uniforms." "***': -s-'*• j --»«w schools in the country^ As long as fmdehi^o they, continue to turn out spinoff ^^ ifW.hn?r , _ <^n far ttt Student government—is ft yi^•Pi -^.r • ';V*r tingling work like "The Corn Is " otK£ ot W«m«_ (Maim Green" no one should argue. Net " ^ 1^^%, *»*. »4­ .worth it? ' . c*r4a Dave Rainey, tt» .acting being any Wnd of drama criti^-fi5T^l5a^t,*tkm Resident, thinks so._He took M** I wouldn't attempt to point out *», ^Jrite b«bb«-. Mr*. Gteniia Us office secretary, a lovely SUBSCWFriOK BATKS young thing named Barber* ..... OaUMt -An«tln U.M feir two MaMftenf eootig^ Kta^w. y^«y .M for «m ««u«at«r !!««{«*•« im«tm >-«r­ for ,«M MmMtor l H.lfil,.'%.UA j," in Thursday aind me of wild West"opus •ftMrnwIii'-'siWiKf' h ril li ' •f-llifc mmmrn ff«ii llnH.•• ***-- ~ (mtlM>iii»«l><>iit«lielwlfut nu akunm tmaFT*?;•>:" Ihftlr ^10 in KOWft to .• '**"> • wrttiiere^^?the m^quite trj^a &^rjTlfe*rk^l5t2iHlt5fc M othertowns in T^xaa liiight n-„ BONNIE DVGGER ^ ^ ' P»w>U>r Pwrn of Wwwwt x t „ CHARIJEY TBIMBLE Stf i ihnum' »ttt* «Q W «ff«r*4 ^ie Mend t«M» wf. •omnar aebool' at it • -•«%-.&:.-tu:.•a&riaja. stopped Associate 8toe*f* „ , , 'f, r ,^1 Howard p *14* *»a Sl#k. W lMV« gerea h«A riw , fri'fr'LVifJKi ! £•} OlenBrew ^y not attending. A^.v'a June Fitsgeral ^4 h W* >( My Brother, *• Boy, saUed to Society Editor Pat Pigma ^:t%xAw]mx ,,,. « Yokohama tw^ iireelui «^o i tif 'V the US Jx>toWoly&Ei C^ess.|u>4 cT ether foUnt, Cr> f-*sri , r.< On,a ^«rlndi«M summer day^ . — -. r,.-... vv •. .. i* i ?W4< mpjAwr:tQ*rmnt&$u \r t ARLlE l4EWi$y *' -t mtBxnfooM trip near Stinnett, Texaa^last "*u • 'ifsfiffaiSsy P m there •?# men ^ia| w# you booksand. turn 'tm loose int V«*r -dr^er*Bi#p!r^le^:'Wit feats «»fe Mowii dewa; mm «wlstaafe^#^I » r­ iiW ap: Hawl^ «»re E^iU»t flora Blanton -if Ifhut^»"n» s«ipei.Seipel ^ ^jR—j, M,'® *T the reptiles and mammals col- 4awn (A hoolkjl Me9 were lost -when water . June Fits$efcal4/<' i^iai emotes Naming' H 7t ByhookWhy rept throughthefc specialtettfc inght Ei k"A' JMMt "W *ent» wiU act soonon arecommen-west. After the same period, an _ _ MW eiation assistant professor punk be ad- tit* just below the S7tk. •fUp-or-Out" irale $rota a four-to vanc6d t» associate professor, If parallel which cannot bet< tocat*2' aix-year qualified by publishing bisresearch oh available < maps. Ansonf it * about ten miles east of Pyongtaek^ If thg' recommendation ia ap-^rea* *nds thefirstfour- southern invasion. a key defense-point which report* ' **^ve(i,proved, a*number of assistant pro­y«u neriod. and instructor* will , * We H< e^ly fell fessors Will begivenanndditioual be promo; or ^dismissed. Bufi* *The communique Mkmim .'%vro years to qualify tw associate proposal not affect the trial The.gen^jral estimated the combat strength oC the fif­f^nt had stabilised somewhat al«professor rank. If defeated, the teen divisions at betweeft 75,000 and 90,000 men^1 * though field reports * coiifim U assistant professors may be given change provides tbalthe ^ y*W{|(i II I)ijim>l iniliilHlliliiD 'I "ft Ill h North Korean claims that ad­ a terminal appointment immedi­four-year trial period for assistant TOKYO, July 7. — stand was around 'Osan where vance Red units are perhaps IS ately,. ^ _ professors shall be extended to first Americans in the Korean war someAmerjcanswerecUtoffwliett miles farther south along the mai# ,=. The rule provides that after hiotiMSir six year»jf.the Budget Council spotted the Communists eight to theJReds broke through.^He «dd four years of teaching, an assia- . •• "'"' S ™ one in numbers and.forty Jtanke th» action took place Thursday, r W ^ individual must 'serve six years in equipment foufefct them to TS« CPs he said to^twcfconTybefore lie can be promoted The M standstill for six hours. General when their, ammunition was ex-20Yanks Dip, 80 Hurt 1 change will give ih# non-qualified com­" . V MacArlhur announced la a 'haus^d.MoraDraft Board* ones an additipal Jw* ye^s .if munique Issued shortly after noon The Amerlcaris numbered less InWar's Firit Ten Day* Ordered to 'StandBy' *1 passed, mmm, Jajuui time (8 p.m. Juiy fl C.S.T.) than one battalion and had tihe Argument„ againi_ _ Despite the.heroic performance support of only one battery of *awontkorea,Vriair « CORPUS cssigrkJaiy that some assistant professors «f tha^Jrst doughboys in their field artillery, / The stand was Associal^ Press waa •—The selectiveservice directorhas have demonstrated their ability baptism of fire, defense forces made about eleven miles south of informed that American dead soordered seven more draft board* to think creatively* but have fell back further Friday and were Suwon.^Americans removid fat-lija" Korean fighting total be set up on a "stand by" basis not bad time to prove it by pub: hastily regrouping more than 60 sights ahd breechblocks fromin Nueces jpounty^Frank McGee, lishing, Teaching loads, graduate miles' Setyth of Red-held Seoul. their guns before withdrawing. tvrenty and tha wounoed are foar draft board'chairman^ saMTbere studies, administrative duties, or Three-North-Korean infantry or five times that numbed. ' MacArthur said the valiant five Thursday. . ~' ' -Ueveldgfagriii^ i3h ajg*8:; TwndreCleia 9? the best Com­ The units ate' presently in the from necessary research for pub­moving again, were rolling south munist division, commanded by a losses were at an identical figur* process oforgani^ation, he said. lication. 5. ; ' >%f "•/ *:'*>$} behind their cutting edge of ar­resourceful leader "who skillful­of twenty-two planes each through • & The one draft board in the Advancement of an assistant is mor. T* ly applied frontal pressure with tiie first ten days of the Koreatt county presently in operation will recommended to the president of MacArthur said the first GI envelopment.", ,-y: v aerial fighting ending Thursday.continue to l>e the only one func-the Budget Council of his depart­ The American, commander in This was announced Thugsdajr, pv<3 |^ tioning, unless an emergency arises ment. The president gives the rec­r-yi *-" action. ^ , Stratemeyer, Commander of tits '•=rV* '>*/•* tigate® the individual's publica­ .W MacArthur's latest r communi­Far East Air Force,, saiti in the ^ No'.daitibMpmion»el'wmbe tion and submits the findings to que said the North Korean line communique that thf time for do* added to the selective service, of­the president. The Board then acts UN Hi WU£ now run& apprdxima&ly from An-fenle in thti aerial operation .'wai'"' fice force here, McGee said. " ~ on those findings. •' lake success/ juiy e—<^p) song, about 20 miles southwest of at an end. vr 1,1 —Russia's Andrei "A. Gromyko — '11 •'« &&&$ World News Briefs-** served notice on Trygve I4e Thurs^1 6W i day the Soviet Union w^ll do no­As Cold War Allym^w^m thing to help the United .Nations "'•1 •" "iSi wi reper Coffimunist North Xorea^s invasion of South Korean' , US Rejects Spud Bugs _ No one here expected the kus-, sians to do anything, but it was' WASHINGTON, July 6—~space in . lite Russian press witK " Kills Nine, Injures 75 considered significant that the So­The United States denied Tlmrs-Premier ^.Stalin's pronounciamen*viet Union ever replied to a: tele­day that it has signed up the po-tos-on Philology. ; , gram from the U. N. Secretary-tato bug as an ally in the cold # The State Department, didat ~Buse1 on ih« Auoeiatei Prtm. its vast Iending powers was killed Two high speed Santa Fe Sail- General asking all U.N.-members war against Russia apd her Com­dignify, the Russian not6 with in Washington „ t>y , the Senate Way streamliners, streaking east­how much help they could givey; munist cohorts. ' '' * I direct repl^^M Thursday. ward side by side, bumpeid mid­The Russians are boycotting The Soviet charge that tf. ? S. Instead, it a & sections in a freak collision Thurs­thirty U.N. organizations, but lceep planes had peppered the potato precis which concluded that it * day that brought crushing gefcth their delegation here manned and fields of Eastern Germany w|tb must be Communist Coleoptent pf Dallas^ died Thursday in the to nine persons and injuries to the hungry little varmits was de­ maintain close contact with tf.N. not American bug^ which are sinl^jfiery craut of a Chance Vought about.seventy-five_ near Monica, nounced by the State Department ing their fangsinto the Soviet of. jet plane 'near the Port Worth- as a "fantastic fabrication," whol­satellite spuda.' / v h' Dallas Highway, two mile# north­ The crash came-at a stretch of ly absurd and ridiculous. -% There have been potato bugs east of Grand Prairie. tracks, near Monica where daily _ The Mo8cow Foreign Office iic-in Eastern Cermahy for' a long &?rr\ the ninety-mile-ap-hour El Capi-r>\ v t. t«,*r y » r-w t toally had lodged a formal note of time, the Department said, and tan flyer from Los Angeles passes S«matort w«r* told Tharada/ protest in the matter. The charge beside^ American planes havathe seventy-mile-an-hour Kansas tr Washington that the pld A1 In Slate Race that western warmongers Kad been flown over that area during City Chief from jKansa* City. Both Capone gang—the notorious "sy­loosed six-legged wreckers and the period the Russians chargedtrains were bound foe Chicago, ndicated—has revived and est* Preston Smith of Lubbock has confusionists ia the Marxian .pota­our potato bug battalions hit tha ablished tie-ups with mobs of rack' to^patches.has been competing for silk. /iasi that he running for -r 3 f -, n •>»/«-w a t lieutenant governor of Texas. His cg&w '' t k »')"[' ""v11 pve Secretary of Commerce Saw-J platform includes proposals for a Simmer TexOn, Crossword Puzsfei-j .„ yer supervision over the Recons-capped Thursday after 'Touring1 complete Texan irrigtftion system, *»v V 'J,V^ _ 6 j|?. truction Finance Corporation and and. flaming for twentyfive days. better soil cowerrtdion, a live­-*CMMf '% LandE^. y% stock feeding program for the -iHigh rank. aM measure v' vote ~ . in^ official Mix, as ^.M^st state, and' a »ne-yariety cotton in the station's fighting forces im­growing plan. ; _ (Turk.) ^ cards „ " serious FOREIGN*DOMESTIC mediately was issued Thursday in • 5 ^ "riff.Garment^! SS.Gkttnan. ~ ImaaadUte Mod .for offi«a 1»1», Mr. Smithy a graduate of La> " *i! Canberra by Prime Minister border meas(*s -vwr.ng todnqtwi, imglat««ra. £tfti "MB, sldQ * warfcm Robert G. Menzies. The' -Prime mesa High School, received bis' > , dull paisfevf 9.Public , „ ti.Fish • Win Iffnna-rsfa » aresr-F«ija^United Nations' Korean action.. ftlooil* Bnilr F«mt noncrtif 4m cimtr»ct* mmI $Hg?Mjgr's w~ M-Willing 8.Glut . (slang> 0 Mud Jt2-00 mlHu: tot The National -Guard bits organ 15. Dried grapeSSlim MM fafortyaUo* CNMT. Dwt ^^•vwbot • Allan :Sbive^|?s^eking xsed a state-wide blood bank re­ 16. YoutDiafc) 12.'Foxy P.O. BM 4, BiwIdbH 40. Mm*. election to bis *f$st full term as gister. Each member will be typed 17 Flsh-dryini 13. Tree 1 .JgR governor Thursday mid he fayor. aad registered'in owier to be im-platform ^ 15.®— r acoat animal "a fair and medtately available as bloo4 don­assisfca&ce nmtem. —_ • ors in cases of emergency. «ot*c#";Wty. Eftclosura*! &$hb*ttotigSK? » iO.Drairia for • '"J . . Indian ,«t-8ank . antm^ %SS; ^-^4 kpv-n SS -mmj-raR » I 24. Theater ^9& /«.» m y itmh IS »9.Jewish elevat l|uo|4 ty glossy St.Greek let^ if Hk w 33. Velvet j m. frames ond |hOMritirigi » tt 55-Send fortfcw Jjvaitebl#, Regutar, $18.00 , asrays •npi f *i„Choice$mfc US 2* u ^otue single vision glosses 38. Non7workin|& male "" "*** nt». tdk7ii iwiH ri^fct u11 y t, ^ *• />*?•> w St $ "-unmit +"% . ^ ?> *$£&•>* t •.<)«».a. j'j^ \ »• M m •f *v ViAS^-"•' *•fc-"^-* wt?*& m •'^ ' ~ \.*Fit v tf^v -.v v«jw UT Couple at Home s ," 't ASi*' >1 bc> ' ^ v£ > A "i f« % V4v^--f J *sk4 ^, *&!?*>>? Funeral services for Dr* «n«l f^\ ^*7^1 Mrs. Washington Bail were held r i 7 -f i **' Thursday afternoon at the Hyltin-4^ «nw Funeral JHome. The JEtev. Edmund Heinaohn ofihe TJniver­ ;* ''^ . ^ •;si'r »»ty Methodist Church officia«H. t/* 11 c * ^ ^ -i ""•.•^•>'.1WJH: «.\;':,' vrtir-.h »VM'"'«;±-;i4J-».V ': '"TV I,«.~sr»/*«!•':>£ W&L& * Dr. jsnd Mrs. Ball died of heart j"^ "X rj _>;;\f/: |(jv;.itteek|i within a two-hour period 4--.\ •* •» . .. ** j««.fSiaf: r^f •* ^e*1" home ?00 West Thirty* m r-Sn-^r When vou eat L Tne8^a3r T.-0f S?*4^, ?'r?et„morning. £& **-®r« Hall collapsed _ about 11 nrr-^ts'-:y^w-v,-.-•....-, •; :;-'.^n? i—<,5591.. " '^»i X^vt * Dr. Ball, 73, is survived bjr a brother, J. E. Ban of Danvilte Ark. v Mrs. Ball, *16, is survived bjr three nephews; Everet Burns of t ^'t:: -Fort Worth'; Maxwell Burns of Mason €ity, Iowa; and—Donald -plsrj^ t Burns of Milwaukee. •;» V1»lA*f » * ?''i?,'" j '! 1 ' ~ 8 Vote Ends July It I iTvi -~. ': j% f^-CTL-'t1 c For Absentees V 1 LUNCH 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. July18 is the last day for voting s ty absentee ballot. The Travis : County Clerk announced Wednes-Ice cold fresh limeade, orangeade £f£ j® . day that an absentee ballot may be Sardine Coidplate, potato salad, tomaloes or pickles ....... 35 * voted By anyone living in Travis Baited Beef h&sb Creole sauce 25 County who will not be here on Enchiladas with chili 3Z \/—election day. Roast Veal and Dressing Anyone-living' outsfde' Austin Fried jumbo shrimp heiqz catsup who has paid a poll tax to vote in Fresh frozen Buffer Spinach Travis County may send the re­ Macaroni -and Cheese ceipt tor the County Clerk's Of­Fruit Gelatine Salad .. fice. He will be sent* an absentee ballot. Apricot Chiffon Whipped cream pie Baked Hamburger Steak Standard voting ballots will -not be sent out in Austin, but any­ one who is ill and has a doctor's certificate to that effect will be ff i'' t ^ |Tiven a ballot, the clerk said: f : Those who have paid a poll tax XL inttTravis,County but who will net j* to 8:30 p.m. DINNER 4:00 p.m. y ^ be here electioh day may go by the County-Clerk's office,-show a poll tax receipt and vote by ab­ Ice cold waterme!lont per slice 15 sentee baBot. ­ Goose liver cold plate, potato salad, tomatoes and piclde 40The clerk's office Is in the Fried "Cod Rsh tarter Sauce County Courthouse. , , ,; •Breaded veal cutl«t~'and cream gravy.... V' \ 37 Baked diicken phr with fresh vegetables-. 38 Jock Lewis s Six Club Steak American fried potatoes 45 - Juicy T-Bone steak 55 Hove to Struggle Roast prime -leg of Beef Au Jus 51 Boiled Cabbage Bacon Flavored Into Scottish Tqxi Pinto' beans Potato SaladPotting two ftdulU, fjm ehiki- Pineapple pie *en, yd twenty pieces of luggage A' into wetHe same taxicab is a joi for Tea a cool, calculating, mathematical toind, says the Rev. W. Jack Lewis, W r^ITT "for the University Presbyterian Church. ^£V£p-f.J4T \ Mrs. Lewis are known by Univer­ sity students, have encountered such problems on their trip to -i - Take Advantage pf our CONTINUOUS SERVICE 1 Scotland where he has jpst begun fx^f " ,P a 27-month, study at St. Andrew's from 6:30 a.m. to 8:30p.n|. •" ' V' s» Vniverwty. ^ &%> , -<\;<&. «# -• -<• •'t/ "v On the train to St. Andrew's a including Sundaysstranger aceosted jack with the question, "What ,is. your handi­l •> i-i H£»f» V " itr* vv ? " cap?" He writes that he did not jS" r1 ty Al J> know whether the man meant viK^r Mary^ |he four children, or Shis I rtS'jr"'* <•» i>rain. He was relieved that the i tnan ^iought him to be a golfer ' en route to the International golf tournament at St. Andrew's. ; ^rr In lflSe Jack was a cheerleader for the University! From 1946 to ~ —4iay,1550, hfidirected thejPresby­terian student work. He" was also ^ president of the University B#li-afe --giouj^ Workerf' AsjOpiatioarp— WWti" -SMv A Ranger Associate fid Candidate* Are Sought for Hanger , aiso-wMm ite-_editor witt accepted by NGRESS VfiiSxi 1 ®k mmm mmm V>."'s', „ Ta,tan-Americnfi J3tadies,hfis JES­leesed "TheEpic bf the ChacV' TTHT «xvi.un in.,, memoir* of the Paraguayan army RUSSIAN CONSTITUENT AS :; captures the spirit „ Mind eowmaa^ itt the war between -SEMBLY OF 1017.' "By Oliver of the Russian peoplein IttdHu* AsSeventh VoL ^Paraguay and Bolivia In 1932-35. Henry Radkojr. ChambridfOi Ha*-tic governmental change;-, yet a revolutions. " w-;5Wi • • I 111 • • i i ii K i ||IIP.'W||>^«|"-'V"'-J • •> *-•'4'The-,.^nfed^t^Ststat^s^lt''; *The_ war Was fought to settle ^•» K, .' *. -v "vyj yy^ <*> V? America," by E. Merton Coulter, > century-old dispute over the Dime Novels ete Pattern '/ ' willl be the September Botfk-ofb - Chaco region. The writer of the Any study of modern political the-month selection for the His-* Marshall ^oseUJfl" Russia would profit by an exami­ tyry Boo*k dub. The choice of this Estigarribia, was acc&imed naQon of thi election tQ the*Con­ ^eM jrablished volume li major Sooth American milr stituent Assembly in^Petrograd. "History of the South'/ ^ A full understanding, of the ^e>^im%;J|iaovei knd* 'tonishing detective coups—<*11 for leader for hie part in thinlgtft. ww lnnouaeed by Dr. Mereus ^ father's considered •• lwH(its dime. present one-psrtyaystem of the day, ii a ij "TheEpioot tee Chaeo" || lame a threfet to youthfoi Wilk^^n,-directOr~'df-;'tlie^li«ii^Tf^^^^_ Soviet state would! not be com­and,somewhat of a ,bl»t upon t lamr StoM Univen^/ Pk#?W plete. without a consideration' i»f >» 'now "Y%e ^tei^volume^ this period of Tsar!st~overthrow The Volumewas edited by Pablo and the subsequent Five-Year published jointly by the Littlefield " Ynsfran, associate professor j£n "" 2** 3'00® ?«"> "H««re»Mtorlw Fund for Southern History of the in reading habits wd cul-The remaining were reprints of •4§ t. — -—•» on tural w A' leave from his associate profes-v the marshall's death half of the nineteenth Century. 1 sorshipin history at The Univer­received . his papers were available This is the conclusion of Albert & sity of Texas. M>me Infttanc^cis given different elaim in the literary journals. IK only to -liia family and Professor Jobaniisfou whose two-volume his­authors. In addition, the firm Ma appeared m .the "Books lR/m legation 4s Washington. yam of-revolution and hence Cap-Adams publications of the lSSO's "the leading books on the COftfo* Itisrcieased by -Oniimi—['iifTirnTiiMiiii^ in •• "i,n— 4o the 1890's asevmucli in de­deracy, so7 recbgnked at tii tured fin inflamed aiMevariescent or OHahoma Kesfc , r ­ moo£ ~ mand and collectors pay as high moment cf publication." • f Stwfcmt •* RocUa's *Y' Staff Johannsen, whd says^he Is dW . A clear statistical picture of enough to have read dime novels as $60 for a novel published at The three other published Vol. ,, . David Anderson, iunior from five cents — perhaps the mid- the returns is present^dj barring when they were^fn their heyday, uines el "X History of the South'-^ Manor, has been elected for the century predecessor of the teS possible ballot fraud. The'reader are "The Southern Colonies in tRe ^comiT staff of the,YMCA of the Roekies, begaii the survey nearly twen^ ^day's comic bookor |iulp-inaga> .Is made to realize the weaknesses years ago. The .result Is * chart Seventeenth Century, ^607-1689,Estes-Ftek, Co. Active in this of the. election" and the possible of the times and customs 6f a Volume I. by W.v Frank Crfcvenwork on the, campus, Anderson Is areas, that were open tq coercion younger, less disturbed America, of Keyr, York University? "The one of 130 student YMCA-YWCA by the many political parties bom fessor emeritus of petrology jn "Ol­ which thrilled to accounts of boy* TT . _ .. --. Developmen* of Southern See- leaders from colleges and univer­ of the revolution.•' • j '.v.'. : -F* " •* j.v-of the norels, magazines, and pic-ni, by PhUip M. Hamer; "The A.rat-'A. LIII'M AT ' tVa an^VAiMi Iiawa 'UAAM •_ • A» •.•••.?, tures bf. the authors, have been South In the Ndw Nation, 1789­ ' -"S.• -: -"rt' ^ w." ,a4 _ included. rt'i rt Tht Plymouth Advenfure Ernest Gebler 5^ t / p 1819," Volume IV, by Thomas P. Abemathy; and "The Growth 4 Hie to the Hunters Jesse Stuart:'" --~ of Southern Nationalism, 1848-, J§ er Mahfy A Renger Roberta McConnelf, £ 1861," Volume Vlj, by A.4t*f O. I Embroidered City *:• ;1SAl®|§' Craven.-, --3| The TurquoUe Tre^ Shirley Seifert;!1 •• I Editors of the series are Dr. A Texas Cowboy Charles A. Siringos s Coulter, professor of history at As r Weekly;\ the ITnievrsity; of Georgia,, and 'h i: Wendell Holmes Stfephensow, prof­s-WM essorof southern history at Tulane Rustics in ^ebeRion ^„ George Atfrecl—Townsend ' w "1™ C V" "Jj. " € -THE1, CARDINAL. By liinW \. University. . , ' The American Mind ~+.-Henry Steele Cbnvndngerv* :Jlc'-'-< • Morton Robinson. S. A S; $3.60; The Lest Cruise WiHiam J, Lederer^f 11. Three months a best seller} John C. Cettioun Margaret L Colt',;. OK in the last two heading the fiction list. ' v -' , •••• Courts. on Trial Vvl VIMO I'lvllfW Jerome Franks STAR MONEY, fir Kathleen Vj«nnevar,,Bysh STORE JJpEinsor. Appleton. $3. Being re­ ordered heavily. More than Henry: Ladd Smttb* aUthor of ># ^AirWfys" (Jp»opf, 1»42># > hw­ 'ii --V"­ V»°£ Written-for"t^e UAtvsflHty of * Knopf. M' lh Its fdurth inOftth Wisconsin Press the first complete S ®' •» leadingmuuig best seller, of air nw seiier* history global routes." K ' w , HOMEWARD BORNE . By "High. Frontier" provides sin ae- ProdtK^ Ruth,Chatterton. S,. A & SS^ SI. count of the expansion of world Summer^ JUBILEE TRAIL. By Gwen *ir routes; from the early days Quick --'"tw.v CroweD. ISinTotal of (when one nirplane flew eommer-:?y G»H~*MS 4 >0 eojries have beeif printed, over ninety miles of open "SfS *4* «P1»M Results includingJ— book ^ • ^'jS v—^ club. ^wsta^inm*ey Weil to L %?? * -' N(»f-P|CT10N into one xrf thf EWorld11# biggeet 1*1. MATUJ^MSW^F businesses. '•4":V >aHmenf for Renf Furnished Apartments Riders Wanted A. Overstreet-•-ISoijfceHfo. Selling* /about . 2,000 eo of: A DANDY: Air-eon41tion«4l P«m»Q TO J>tNVia—H*T> room copies a Hdu«llsm~-the etory . 5JT atwrtM«nt for male studMtiu Maid week. V. BLOCK fitwtt C«mpu«. Convenient nut* Mrvkw. r«afconabI«. 17fl« Oon«r*t«. J**. to share nttniM mnn -<*? Trippe's Pan-American,^Airwayi ment for graduate u&tu Ala*. larc« 1-7097. , i LAvln* 'u1' THE GRAND AIXIANCE.^ By is told in detail-how fos, ate­ maa-vwr stnlT-tor ">% aonth wobmb. obt^ed routwi ncroes fof^ Winston S.^ Churchill. Houghton, men " tete rcfritfMtor, «ri!L 8-K&88. Hafc W«nt«J Room. For RWOl A «on»{ «%n ^laiidSL.^ir^eceountf ARAft«lnCNV H«* For Sal« ; •M to Co. *14 Wttt »th. Willard PanncQ and Trank it Wagnalls. S3.S0i the subject TYPING: Neat work. Will call for *aa4 ^Uv«r. Phone 2-f8fit or t-#80«. SCIENMRRC TYPING i.. fU>P1H«."J iri l«>k«»U dt«tu -r° ituMtitive work, SSWI ood pay. <>89?S. > 4^ A(|dre|» Box. ni««rsltr Button. t+jSib ^«%:Tex. ^v.»" fairfjiniiiJ •assr^ut• UUHCjU THKSKS. «MteaS;:;!S5 e HUUrt Knarant**0» Pbox#^ For Rent t-iwiimc! r-iwfjsiN ygyWQ my JtOttM* Odl'MlW SMIHI3 WFJUWilfl " '""" •• I ]'.ll.|.ri W, Illicit I I niHi.nu.r WK uRurji^ mi ACCEPTED Tfrm^ papar* WriHPil fJKili •feSte'jteSESi^it& OPEN July It to UPJ12: WISL-H4 «t •matt n fMpomibU Ol! LTtWL'JIJlR DK «X*OB« f.SSOS. mm 3 P-' iini?w m 30 1909 SanJacinto Blvd SIS1 :'-k -.t T-U .'J->:!»". V * flaarter-ffiM-th coats feHnf _____ -qkiiftk'^-aa'rlonff-MMS^, bvkfmt of nation ax»^ & Mew ... arslndl<^^ , „r*I jttst love Barbara BkMfak ^ " i? <*>** v * khm Ik* ^ * s. i\ ns for the future* IkflAnd anyone «fe» ««a Mill W that after teaching Aw«nt7 four anti-poetry minded Austin High students the wtiues and Mutf.tt •'"" _86C8|)ft 'itT :• ^ --., ^..v-, ' "Practice leaadftg,:was ftol&fil S then that teaching was for me,w •wd^Nr­bar*. Now she knows ah* wants to g« into high school teaching «* 1 \ iw ft^tiselllUE; ^ ^ * ' it I# Evidently Iriar pupils^just loved Mi#sRtchard^"too—judgittgfrom the orchid «toe received on thelaait 4ay sh# taught. She adroitashi %f« a Jltt-te startled when a florist delivery boy Sirtemgiled 1MK vlMMt ^^*nd:handed Jve* * dressed to her. The male pupils were especially interested in her­ iC&. welfare, »nd inquired to make, MS w , Tttfi-e she to wear It. ^ --•* r> T? •< j& An Jg&glitfi major, Barbara willJ mm . receive her bachelor's degree in writ** August. She plana to get a mas­_ ter'sdegree, whichis required for , counseling. fe^TS _TC [jT*S° Br* Barbara his worked ift the DeaS ' »s®»i of Women's office for the past^, two years, and' it was there she ,. first became interested in coun­ J/V* seling; s 2%y&p M^/iS33 "Seeing the introductory inter-BARBARA RICHARD^g ^i«w»with thoseJ^^^ed^^hp close contact with the pqpibt and aboflt 20 mHcafrom Atratin, fa V<»T men made me want to counsel, the background that is necessary home, and she takes a lot of jteap­too/* explained Barbara. She en­in counseling," added Barbara, i ing about being for Dripping joyed chatting with them while First entering the University in Springs, ^ ,lw ithey waited to talk to one of 1&44, Barbara left after two years . The funniest, Barbara stofts, is 'J:^-^: dean*. ~' • -v "" * *—;' -•the deans. and spent the next .two years in when her Pi Phi sisters summon I '*T» sorry so many girls goIC-X through college thinking the dean's California working at £ bank. 4^ her to a l6ng distance call from Bp her family and yell over the loud office is primarily concerned 'with *n4» years considers-the three junior face, public criticism to acquirecolleges in Brazil, whose eonatruc­ an education." MOII 911# iUyiiVpO% w-i^iiipjor " Slven now, life for the young achievecneafc . adult la quite different hi Brasil, . Miss 6rm mel«e^ ^4«cielor She said. School is in Session from of arts 'degree' frdm the ^nivei^ March until December. There are p •i^r, -cSmpleted "gradate work i^ie»?educational schools, 'aitd^K** 1M4:' be^e ^nrtiir dai Hfe for the y\ SSL'S* , «loa 'Mi*!' Brpc %'Mw B*f*a sioa schools,""Mis* Brown said. " iX"T>J She *erved on a building commit :t"*" «• BrmriM.B twra.»t «... ,... • % **r' ' J* -*m '•'•''rf'l' ,,:j wMHL ntO«ML VT*\3V,•" . F ^*rz • -X­ A sixteen-millimeter «ound Jslc> tMiifgeft ^y."TTTT^«ehor«sses» sm^ coats, aadf«ver *nd win appear in jackets .. fweepr skirts baVe been designed with and dress 'top* as well • as^-te: lower w^stlinee and narrow tkirts skirts. There'll be jackets and to make, a slender ^Ihouette, W«"kits aplenty, but they*P?i d«K , Suit lengths and lines remain aSgnisd td show more of the man­ •bout the same as last year's, nish-blouses with the wing col* averaging in length from thirteen lars and French cuffs. to fourteen inches^ from the ... Fall millinery hugs the head, floor. -Torsos will be trim apd with emphasis on small Shapes very fitted to emphasiM that,I that are set neatly on close-to­small wsUrtlipA Therell be low­the-head coiffures. Mannish sil­er necklines with long at*4 large honettes like the derby, the cfcufc* W1*. ker hat, and the visor will b« On waistlinet have extol-smart. They'll be ferni* been, lowered from one-half to nllker too, with -all kinds of veils* Skii^^aarvtng dosely|;—1%e dlcver -girl will around hiplines, will he relieve^ shod. Most any style "will" be from too-straight look by good, but c*Jf, Suede* and reptiledrapes, pleats, godets, panels, will predominate the leathers. tiers, and pockets. Sleeves will Suede • will he ^ast ff*J^« he smartest at above-w^ist Calf and reptiles, qr a combina­ lengths. This will call for 'lofiger tion of calf and sue^ will come gloves. , Necklines in dresses, too, later in the season,' ' '' are scheduled for a drop£??; , ../Colors' are to be considerably Short formals will stfll be good, brighter this year. The fabrics but the trend is toward pje-war them^v^iFehd the ^or.^rafeysidays of the long dress^.*The full tweeds^^j^afds (big dnes)^ flan­skfrt will predominate over the nels^ v and corduroy are for narrow with collegiates. The casuals -and:iSuit|.bare top will he veiled with new reds, royal blue, and d^ep­ drapes,* petal folds, and jackets. • toned hi^es of - Unless-you can afford a fur, bWwn will be ^exceedingly popiiV the casual at4jome:anywhere coat lar. Velvet and black are abso­is"the biggest ides lo this line. jLoose .epats will be back again, Sundity-go4»raneetin' 'dress. -Most hut they will look narrow because aa the hats wil will have a touch ofT they will be flatter in the back. velvet.:f ^ '"•§§(« "H'grl Is Episcopa MBe sure yoa spell it with an eral director of .student chtifch V. It's A-n»n-E.w work and the Caftterhtuy B Getting hef name spelled cor^-Chair: _ ^ rectly has given Mrs. Gray Blan-"Church wofrk fi what youdy, hostess at the Episcopal mighfc caill a family affair," ihe Student Center, a new nickname. said. -. She is known around U& csnter snow AagaHwitlititn^e. womei^ aV Caiap Allen, EpiscM»al Mrs. BJandy, temporarily re-camp near Houston, and she has placing Miss I^tcy -PHUips^attended Phillips^ t^mmep-eSi . &/ vi* -si 'US •% She was graduated at ^b* ~ Academy In Massachusetd. • tf t aAI cxmot^ HfteSt* BLOUSE m (Continued "from page 1) Wiggins, president of Texas Igjgj SATURDAY j :MainB.£01 Tech; and Wilson "Bull" Elkins, Ed. C.f362L:Recital Hall prudent of Texas Western Col­wi AM. P.X.f0O«^mH.2t His.f468Lb:M Hall 201 lege, UT ex, aad Rhodes Scholar, Sd. C. tmUrniKm. -z Bet.f469:W, H.210 m M—tittt Monday tkrosgh -WAmmxPhr* B.201 aretypiealof the Ed. C.f28S:Mus. B.106 Friday ®-10) li|considered. Ed.P.f855:A. B»105 Sbe.f3l0.Sl;J.Bi £12 Ace.f811a.Sl:W.H.301lp§ 1.4 *L" Ed.P.f876P:S.H.208 Soc.f249sW.ai0 jr.f024a^aBk3212 Acc.f329:W.H.S16 Gov.f610a.51:G. B.14 ^'Bwir fid.,^,yt^tgrafly^-fc yy« SLfl22TJSliMain B.202 Ace.f268: W. ML 11$ GOV. f61t)a.52: G. B.14 ^ lot of the names %• get are in Sp«.f305.51:Sp«ech B. jroi^r S.f342;A. B.805 Ant.fS01.52:W.H. 306 s & - common." Got.f610*.53:B. L.1S Spe.f31S.51:%eech B.201 Man.f265;W.£L 112Ant f245: W.H.10 JI Th e preliminarjrteommittee Gov.fQ10a.64;ai*12 ^e,fSSOj%eeehB.208 Mu^f22U:Mna.B.10« e^whleh will make its suggestion* A. M.f04:Eng.' B.118"! Gov. f6l0a.55:Phy. B, 201 S6f. f432.52rW, H. 201 Jlus.f672b:Mus,B.105 |to the Regents includes on- A^M. f308:J. B. 201 M Got.f610a.56iPhy. B. 201 Tr.f260:W. H.2; > r\itunpa« professors Boner, Dr. C» Phr.f202:JPhar. B.810T" A.Jt.fSlSb.52:P. E. B.$07 -3 G«r.f610b.51: H.E.B.105 m ms SS«o.f92S:B.Ha&^ iV '.pB. Ayres, Dr. J. Alton Bardine, Phr.f466a.52:a B.3 A. M» f322L:W« H.8 J v Got. f610b.68:H.E. B.1Q5 . «>' '• 4and Dr. Byron Short. Members Phr.f407$CL B. 821 A.II, fS$5.52:Jft B*. 213 . ^vlj MONDAY ;«l#o inchirf* ^representatives of Go*.f610h.53;G.H.1 ^ 1240:Gt B.108A-M.f326.51:J. B. 212 jother University branches and two Gov.f610b.54: G. H.1 f&3-|My 1% M PJI. P. Ed.fS68;S. H.110 A. Ml f265K; C. B. 321. gex-students. Ins.f276:W. H. 101 m (Classes Meeting Monday tlurovihi Phy.fftOons Phy, B.208 If,a man (for perhaps itis safe Are. f348: A. B. 807 ^ :| L. S. f322T.52:Main B. 201 fr -^.'^rWay 14-1J Phy.f335^: Phy. B. 80M, ;to assume that the Chancellarwiil Are.f462a; A. B. lOS V "i-I L. S.f322T.53:Main B. 201 w _.~ibe a man) ia not selected by;gep» Arc.f469a:A. B. 305 . ^ <. i Ale. «fll».62:W; H. 801 Phy, f380:a B. 313 S^SRW.—" • L._S^f386: Main B.Sllgl^fl temberl, when the officeJ>ecome£ s Artf331:ArtB.11$ -~ Ant.f302;W.H. 306 M. E. fS85:Eng. B, 116 ^X:.v<5 activated, Dr. T. S. Painter, XJni­P.MUf013»:W.H.5 Ant.f264:W. H.23 B^c. f629:B. K 301 ' -_ . " I »JfVTennty president, will assume the Mus. f225J:HUB. B. 205B P.M.f646x:W.H.3 T B^c. f362:Phy. B. 203 A. M.f325.53:3.B. 201 ^ -• pfRce perfunctorily, Mus. f3j62P: Recital Hall ^0 B.E.f478a:W.H.2 fe" — ftnurars"have been numerous. -Sijb. f302:Tonnes Bible-Chair—^ ArtfSOS: ArtB.119 Mus. f682at hlu3.B, lO^r^^^^es- Soc.f220:MHa&101 For example, several sources Bio. f(I07a:H. E. B. 105 Ksc. f310:B.X* 36l Miis. f283;Mus, B*106 W Soc."f271;W. H.310 ::sald Dr. Smith and Dudley K. Ch. f391:C. B. 316 ^1-C. E.f281M:Eng. B. 31 Phr.f269a;C. B.15^;^ 'Woodward, chairman of the Spn.f612a.52:M. L.B. 201 Eco.f312.53; W. H.210 C. E. f810a:Off-CampustResearch Phr.f269b:C.B,l&^ •VBoard of Regents, had lunch in SpnJjPSf94Lr M.1>. B. 8011: ® Center Soc. f275K: G. H. 217 'if , Eco.f313.52; G. B.108 , Dallas the other day Spe.f305.52:Speeeh B. Si ,E. f273: Eng. B.137 . , , Eco.f265K: G.B. 205 Discussing Mr. Elkins at a re­Spe.1319,62: Speech B. 2(Drm. fSl2K: M. L. fe. 203 s MONDAY Ed. A.&69;SL H. 227 ;-' porter's request, Dr. Painter said WB.4" Spe. f326; Radio House Drm. f329:M. L, B. 205 •"4. t ? Ed.H.f369K:B.L.12 Tthat he Is "thought highly of «by July 17, &-11 A.M. Spe.f371:Speech B. 208 v people in the History-Depart-* Drm. f355:M. L. B. 202 V -' i-fc3 Ed. P.f377:S. H. 210 s (Claim Meeting Meaday throocli ••tTfirr.-UESDAY „fmentv and reviewed his acbieve-Eco. f312.52:C. B. 15 ' \ J Ed. P.f381K;S» H.110 i Friday r t "ments. <; Eco. f278K:J. B. 204 , ^ E.f364L: MainB, 202 "&i 1«, 2-gpjL Dr. J. C. Dollejr, University Ed. A.f461Hb: S. H.101 y Acc. f326:W. H, 401 : ' r ­ Fr. f612a.52: Main B. 300 (dUk*MS MMIui' Monday —•ice-president, THnrad^y wight Ed. A, f46.5Ka.51; S, H. 2M Acca460;W:H.ll6 ; TP Ger. f3l4L:M.L.B. 301 Fri«kylO-ll> naid that "I know Mr. Elkins ex­ Ed.A. f372J:Phy. B. 301 Ace. f464:W. H. 31r " His. f6l5a.59:C tremely welL" -He reviewed some Ed. C. f621:W. H. 210 Ant; f301.51:Phy. B. 810 ? His.f615a.60: Phy. B. Ae.E.f210PiJS.D. HaU lO^'l^S lof his background. Ed. Q,f361T:Speech B. 204 Ant. f229;B. Hall 331 r-. " 1 'I His. f615b.57:J. B. 212 A. M. f28lL:J,B.202 ft***­ Ed. C. f278T:S. H. 203 A. M. f305.51; P. E.B. 800: An outside, off-campus -source J.f3274J.B. 204 A. M. f295:J. B. 204 Ed. P.f314;S. H. 210 A. M. f307.51:J. B. 213 * ;8ays that Mr. Elkins helped map Man. f236:W. H.101 Bot.fS21;B:L.801 % s-f~ Ed. P, gl4Q.51: M.L. B. 201 A. M. f309Q.51:C. B. 313 .out tfae plan for the Chancellor­Mus. f302L»:Mua. B. Ch. f873:C.B. 313 Ed. P, f3l4Q.52: M Hall 201 A.M.f613a,5l:Eng. B. 31T ship. Mr. Woodward is credited Mus. f612a:Mns. B.106-Drm.f3O2KtM.LvB.10r Ed.P. f320K51:Main B. 201 A, M. f613b.51: J. B. 202 Mus. f330J; Mas. B.10 ^Beo.£2.641*; W. H.10 ^ . ~ wife starting the idea. Tlie Be- Ed. P.f375:S.H. 110 A. M. f240:Eng. B. 20T Mus. f266K:V Hall 108 Ed.A.f461Ha.52:S. H.101 ->V gent chairman is no longer ^'lead­ E. f312SL52: Main B. 301'' Arc. f323L:A. B. 307 Mus. f378:Mus. B. 201A; Ed. A. £287; S. H. 208; v, . iing candidate for the. post, reliable f312K.53:M Hall 102 Bib. f301:Towne3 Bible Chair -­ N. Ed.f442;S.H. 208 Ed.Ci f234;S."H. - mIMWiMTiS.' sources indicate. .. . , j £4%. B. L. f423.61:X Hall 101 . ~ , E.f318.52:G. B.108 Phr. f436,52:C. B.15 'Jid.Rf248tS.H.110 V" •ki:' '^7' 11 E.f228:S.H.208 * / , J B. lu f424:Phy. B. 203 " Phr.f466b,52:C. B.813-i;'A Ed.C. f254J:Mus. B.105" *• few. rj The function of the Chancel^ E.f268L:Main B. 302 x B. W. f221.51; G. H. 215 >X& 7 a"' Phr.f673a: C. B.319 Ed. C.f862K:M.L.B.103 :%^or,. stripped of all. the ramifying E. f282K:Main B. 303 " Ch. f801a:B. L.12 P.Ed.f333:S.H.206 Sid, P.f326D:S. H. 203 IplfSP |terminology,. wijl "be to represent E. f289K: Main B, 306 Ch. f810a:H.E. B. 105 P.Ed.f372:S.H.204 Ed. P.f259Q; S, H. 210 -the University to the State; the Fr.f428La: M. L. B. 304 'Ch. f821a:C. B. 319 -. . Phy. f318: Phy. B. 301 Ed. P.f272K: S» H. 227 Grg. f275:G. B. 301 £ j Ch. f460;C. B.15 * ^ Legislature, and the Nation. P. M. f304.53:W. H.8 E.f258K;MainB.800'i Ger. fS15K:M. L. B.802 -i'-» Ch.f372:W. H.3101 11 -I ;; His job will be to conduct high-P.M.f307.52:W. H.II -JLf270:Main B. 302 Gov. f660x:Eng. B. 217 £Tj C. E.f263:Eng. B.130 ­ level pubHc relations and protect P. M.f645x: W.H. 2 '• w-_ E.f289:Main B. SOS Gov. f471a; B. Hall 881 -J Dm. f310?M. L. K 2ra"'-^s-'s 1 P.M. f280:W. H.14 w E. f296K:MainB. 304-^^—^ interests of the University lis.f615a.53:Eng. B. 301 Drm.f34l:M^B.2p|^pmtt,1~ ~ f260:Q. B.14 Fin.£270: W. H.112 hen and if crises arise. Eco.f312.51: W.H. 301 |#?^ K,% ^ Bus.f406:W.H.112 Geo.f601a: G. B.14 As enumerated by the Board of His.-f615a.55:"S. H.2M Eco. f313.51: B. Hall 333 ' Gov. f239;C. B.218 Soc.f310.52:Main B.801 £'®^r®nts, his duties will include His.f615a.61:Speech B^ gftl Eco. f332:Mam B. 201_ Soc.f311:MainB. 208 J Got. f245; G. B, 301 ^execution ** to «k tho Regents Mkif285:W.BL 101^ J.1333;J. B. 202 *&&&»&$* Ed. H.fS25L:S. H. 2i TUESDAY ^to ^do. in all probability, a list M. B.f376;Eng. B.116! J.f372;Phy. B. 801 Ed. P.f259:S. H. 210 i^possibilitie. ^fll be s^bndtted, SKfLjti 3mIf 1^ Mus. f411a;Mus. B.100 Ed.'P.f371;S. H.110 priority indicated. E.L.S. xop»; auua«.v| E.M.f315tEng. B. us. f233J:Mas,B.-20iJP"--:;-— ~ FtMSJr 7^^ Thursday night, "if *a educa. Man. f425:G. B.14 E. f312K,51:EL E. B. 127 Mus. f254J;Mu&, B.105 tion^ messiah cornea along and ~ Mnn. f472;W.H.810 E.f3l8.51:W. H.306 Acc.f375:W. H. lir~ Mus. f202.52;Mas. B.Green Soaai m chosen wdl Ei f237; M*in B, 311 Ace. f282;W. H. 316 by acclamation, well and Mkfc. f487:W.H.101 Mus.f465a:Mus. B.103B good, well recommend only one; Mkfc E.f360K:B.L.30I Mkt, f262: Phy. B.: 310 Adv.f340:J. B. 212 Mus. f681at Mus;B; 200-aubut it would M. E.f379K:Eng. B. Ae.E.f222P:E.D.£t«2ll02 be a miracle." E. f283:Main B. 806 P. Ed,f378;A. B.105 m ­ • Mus.f605a; Mus. B.106 Pin. f454:W. H.112 Antf220:W.H.lO Psy.f862K: Phy.B. 310 Mus.f413a:Mus. B.105' ^fpry^ Pin.f203:e.B.316' ftp ^ A. M.f305.52;J.B. 213 Phr. f613a.52:C. B. 218 ^ Fr.f406:MainB. 802 ; A. M.f307.52:C.B.315 Psy. f272:S. H. 204 Phr.f466b,51: C.B. 313 Fr.f228K: M. L. B. 30* A. M.f613a-52:P.E.B.300: P. M.f226:W. H.3 ~ PhL f310:Main B. 202 Grg.1303: M.HaU 201 " A. X.f264Kt'J.3. 02 ?P. M* f686x;W.H. mM P.Ed. f310; W. G. B ^ Ger. f400.51;M.L.B. 302 B.W.f2214>2:W. 210 Spn.f 282Kf M.I.B.801 P. Ed.f342:W. G. 4 ^ Ger. f406.52>M.X^B. 315 Ch.f812a:C.B.16 Phy» f812a:Phy. B. 201 Ger. f407:M. L.B.301V Psy.f232K:S.H. 227 f Ger. f612a:Eng.B, 2l9,> WEDNESDAY Vs Dr. Smith -Psy. f271:Eng. B. 1414 Ger.f314K;C.B. 821 ^ Eco. H.E. Psy. f489Lf Eng. B» 215 Gov. f244:M Hall 102 Eco. H. 301 d^rtO, 64t:AH. likelihood of l\" 7-5 xat trft (Ct»s>#s Me«tin|> Monday P. M.f301.52:B.HaU 83! His.f604a; W. H.8 x IT*JL O *** Russia at this time said ^ M. f221K: W.Bt. 28 f His. f615a,51:S. H.204 o.f264K:B.Hldl 225 Friday 7-0> ^ V. 3mith, soldier, phik«o- PvM.f322L:W.H.2 His. f615a.52:P. E. B. 30 Ed. A.f312L525:S.H.203_ _ _ Pber, and writer, in a speech at P.M.f297:W.H. 5 His. f615b.5l:G. B. 301 j^Ed. A.f462A:S.H. 227 Becittf HaH Friday noon. R. E. f478b:E. D. HaU 115 L5b.52:Enr,B.301 Bw 1' A.M.f204.61:J.B:2ei : $peakfo* on "The Ideological SMrftSSrlMLtt -His. f420Ma: M Hail101 204 ,3heue. -With Russia," Dr. Smiths Spnu f406.52iM-U B.801 His.f255K; W.H.101 Ed.af317.52:& H.210 Ed. P2f311.51:S.H»103 tbe continuous situation Spn. f612a.51:MainB.3ll His. fSO^S'iMr;Kill Ed.C4f320Xfc51;&H. JML BfOil.52; A.%it Spn. f426La:M. L. B. 312 J.f312K: G. B. 205 Ed.C. f320f*52;S. H» Spn.f280K:M.L. B.315 3.f320;J. B. 204 latherftan the, prewsnst crucial •vents engaged his attention be- Spe. f387:Speech B. 203 Latf311:MainB.S04 1*S»p28Q:l|aliKJu 201 L.S.f334:MainB.80 Ed.P.f820K^2:C.B. 21t§ JkS.i307:K»iiiB,Sl^ W.H.2S1 !ftn.f467:Ei!£t& Ed,P.f271K;8.M. 206 p.jc.mtst Zoo.f311K;B. Xi. 12T M. E.f374I»tEng. "" Af874P:S.H.101 -Wh P, M.f23ft:W.&3b*/ ^tien ideologies because we Zoo.f424K:Phy. B. 421 Mus.f228J;Mus. B.1 12K.54;J.H.201 '•*%, u«Bd • to b^ieving what we Zoo. fmTEng.B. 207 Mu&f464a:Mas. B.106 E.f31fr.53:!C Hall101 WEDI9BSDA1 and feel th«t the beUefs of K. Ed.f857s|ft. I*-Bv205. E.mi:MainB. 208 Zoo. f36^;C. B.810 flgwjr Fhr.f419.51:G. B.14 S.f266K;Main B.311 ? stated.-1^,-^ -SATURDAY Phr.f466a.filt E.D.Han11 .mm Am Althou^i. «|t* religioua,tene PhL f312:3.B. 201 E.f287:lIainB. 306 Mmtj tlr M PJL sp-^Friday 1«2> EE«Lf383$«.S.2 E.f295:Main B. 802 "mth communisin and the econom­ "/GlakaiMk'''MMelfai* ||M|4ji« flkwurih' Phy.f401:Ph*.B; 201] Phy. f801»rl^y;B. 20, !c differences in foyernmental w&tem w* jptrfnte "of Phy.f825:Eng.B.217 eonmet, Dr. Smith i&m no* con­ms&kuSeettasi of Cww Gov-*223Q:j sider either of Hunk ar^ldbl., "'fioa«»d 6i<*> m Gov.f660yj* /•Wo ean't afford P.IK. ISB01.51:W^H. '<**& (Gor.f406«$1 Kitf304.61:Eng> &|j :mf015M0$W. f* ^•jfW7.555 «i«yga. jurtwuur * Atifo-ijfcS m llllfllislllp ** * 'v^W^'A 1 S sJ M• AtsistontUodinf^ Tl lry Mq^ B»EI«cted11 ^ nnf if hopsv *¥f esistanl cheerleaders will fte cin­ dered a* JH" AsM»mbty meetini By KELLYCROZJE* ' it week.< Introduced bf. Jfceeu **V r -t ,* ^tr .4/^. ' -!"**> >z -^ \ , ^ .illiam, the bill #£s approved la ( f&f&'sgthk from olausta** & p principal fcy jfilMdl Cheerleader •55'WISSWi phobia jehefcjtaking.Jfo efcvator? Then your ablution toay be a<*n • "a#»•• •.w»»*f. • w*»;'-**'.1?* -•^v:* If passed, the bill win call for the new Science Building—an binder so you w*te jin «rnLM TT «««Olectiottof Miibgi cheerleader* open-air ^etytorj^fj ||||||gk you are on the platform vwith Instead "of selection by volume of firm grip en the overhisadi'-wowir-r »ofee at 5peprally as ih the past Ifytftf wcwSorn thefear Mgee yon "fflntter *wing.!* , ' ^r.­ A ma jor provision of the Sew ofheight^acro^obi^^these "W1 i« that there will be no cam* open-air |o1» are jwi for youu % > r panning allowed in connection . There ''^ttwi'^eyatoJifc 3fre tera' ave >.two elevators. The|by the todibrake and, as Beufora with the election., > •W *TV^p wt the leli or« west -rfde1 'B. Ingram, opfen^tar of..tiie WesU >wer VH """ rJu Candidates -for, tie' -•aix,-. peat* .< j4 eud tower says, "These things call ***** »« *•* #• tions will try out before 4 selec­thpop too fast so yon have to h# or east one goes114 feet i-:» ••• • tion committee, which will limit careful and see Ihatypu don^t huyi Theeljtfrators ate ruin by » PU*­ the number totwelve. These ley arrangement fropfthe top of finalists,Will thefiperfottn the towfilt with.the motor aftd tbe gama-peiMwJliea and at I operator on the ground at onebome game. The election will normally be held the following side. Th6 operators ara membess of our m-door drivers. Thursday Honday. ** *v^v " of the Hoisting and Portable Op­afternoon Mr. Ingram was setting! ' tb$m down as gently as landing, , • H the int 4tonw game ©ecurs erative Engineers Union, in thyi —•ficfftpfl .. j|lOfl^j|-ease Local 450. ^hey. operate any feathers.>v^; '* y*f, head }*M 4 '.4 cheerleader may designate ^ the kind of corotruction heavy-equip- Monday ^following the Second tnent such as drag lines, mvtv AIR-CONDITIONE0 HJEVATORS like the one above carry mety "Jife *"•**•!$£ the twelve finalists. When you reaci materials, and machines from the ground to the lop floor of the The first home game this fell floor, yon halt. After the operator is scheduled for September 30, Experimental Science Building. Of course* they «renrt4ob con-has set the brake ag^ipst a seyies placing the election on October 2 venient in the winter or^in ramy weather. J7^Sl7n^;r^^vrr,' of clogs so that it is impossible for > mmmt wm^i & f,^r"Vif' *,* »0*^Ss ^ ' fit%> f-k\ t--' 3 San.Ar ',|S. ^ f %;W JCFEiwM^Lf ;Definite plans and policies o| the newly expanded tJtliversitjl Prsse -f^e y^t p-.btt^eBt&blfehe^'3 " btrt a ,.Wfie4 asa ri»xtei»»lvsa pro* " ^ram jsf regional jmblicatL<>®, ftn4 the distribution and publicity of new books wilt be the futwti«fl# tof the Press, Frank H. Watdl»% ,, — ,— take jus. minute* fa summer­s­*41 •! « m fi mcir> •AjMmx m fc«« sr.irt, Jmmffi mWNc&M iie; do-theae Uni^raitypr 1. It can productivity the cam •54 scholarly «Meareh a^ailal^i |«Uurgtf group of teadara/« «« further Uie main obl^c^veref til#: pm fulfill an"1­' siting'the^MversTt^i name tdOiJ «eiii lii§i he «A I V Griffith oa chairman. Other'men»ii hem mm^rf !Webbt ;'pro%Bn| mm 1W1 ..,:i -( -v T^V ^ ­ • ... ­ ,ea orn is Green* est professor.ox^elut. ^C'-. ttlll ifloliivwiuiftre ncert Sunday ^geejien jhe, iftd iSO o'dock other timesrin CarH^e fcaiL Hj JUNE PlTZeKIULDj^ aclesconfrontffig SfissMof-Betty Readies MiwRonberry, has been guest soloist,-i'«m . AttMMMrtt. Editor • .,jgj||-'at, played by Mildred Barnes,"in a hopeful spinster, and Robert in Recital Hall of the MuSic Build­ ing. ( i> ^ • \ Philadelphia, the National, aww Pespite the hot, heavy summer her attempts to educate*>ythe Symonds;x sr Welshman, John New York Philhanrionic Sympho Lght,. the strong east of "The Welsh miners. Goronwy Jones, give strong sup­The famous Cuban violinist Corn Is Green" carried the audi-As the persevering* dominant porting roles. The blustering lie accompanied byMiss Joau r?.­ '.i^fence to tfie chilly Welsh country- Squire, ^played by Dick Russell, Ryan, teacher of piano. Miss Ryan rReyes A native of Cuba, character of Miss Moffat, Miss ide' and -into the lives of ita succumbs to Miss Moffat's charms studied piano with Rohtez$-Gasa^|xetv$d< ptiie in violin, Barnesgivea an impressive per gracefully in the second desuslnlFrance. highest hone of the. Paris Coi formance. Rea Hooker, as Mor­ ­ After a slow start in the first The singing otJ:' the Welsh v. .ff/Mr. R^yes made his American servatqry, whenlie was graduat gan Evans, an intelligent young; *-<«"*V * * lti *•> <*• •> V'v' :^f*cene,-the play plunged into the miners added, an effective touch, miner, manages his dialect change * * He later won high Tenors in" and the set and costuming was from Welsh to Oxford English International Violin Contest spor very. good. Excellent direction 'Roadside* Still Showing • • with complete ease. ^ Sored by Queen Elisabeth"^ Bb| made the scenes move smoothly Gamile daqsen, was outstanding and naturally. Sumvner W#ek Ends IW gmm,; as-the -loud—Mrs. -Watty.-.-The Ann Butler as Sarah Pugh,the He toured in France and Bel ''Roadside," first " professional scene in which she tells of joining postmistress; Valgene Axelrad as gium before returning to tub! tern the "corpse" and of being Idwal Mjorris, a Welsh boy; and theatrical venture to be staged in as guest soloist with the HavanJ "saved" is one of the high comev Jack F^ifmer as Robbart Robbatch, Austin, is playing-every Friday; Philharmonic." Eugene Onnandj a Welshtnap, gave good perform and Saturday .sight through the conductor of the Philadelphia Sj MOTHER WONT TELL ME Jane • ^Soulier makes Bessie ances. I ,y ' summer in Saengerrunde Hall, phony, described him "is "one Watty,'the girl who lures Morgan The-play, which* began Jtrty 6, the graatea^.Yiplfaists, liying,.to Tickets are $1.50. Reserva­WOMAN IN HIDING ^ Evans from his books, into, k be­Will run through Friday night. It telli tions:may be made at i^e Wel­ IP lievable" character who arouses, will start at 8 o'clock in * Hogg Th^ concert is sponsored by ^«E WIS both laughter and pity. come Traver Agency^ in the Wil­ KU Movl. B« Auditorium. WcBity Recital S«cies of the Col m "-n «rtp-¥ Thursday tfcra Saturday liam Charles Husic Store, 2350 lege Of Fintf Arts. AdmisSion free to the public.; The music for the show was written by Tommy Jones and Roy U.T. Ek I» Chief Pharmaent. Upshaw.-James ^D. McKinley, who too The play is staged by Group a bachelor of science in pharmac lO, composed 'of' University stu­at the TTftrveraty In I94«, h^ dents and exes, RK York'Woodwind QuiStet in Re-Produced the Wispy Pastorale. of Riggs, who wrote the script lor of science in hospital pharm« cital Hall Thursday night. The I Gabriel Pierne. 1 * the musical Oklahoma. from the University of Maryland program displayed five able crafts­. i V-> ^I men of the flute, bassoon^ clari­H V \ c ?\r net, horn, and oboe. The meatier portion of the C*.IY TECHNICOLOR program came liefore the inter­ mission with^exhilarating Hun­ % BETTY • garian folktunes of Bela Bartpk HUTTON ' KiEi ' as arranged by Ross Taylor. 'Wt"'' %rir& ^4 ^ Following came an early Bee­ thoven opus which was typical^ of the composer only in the rousing rondo finale. It produced fun for the musicians. --tMA A difficult but frothy piece was the closing "^Three Brief Pieces" by the contemporary Frenchman, Jacques Ilfert. A flayor of opera with its cast was portrayed in the Rossini S£V Talk During Finals "Jit CHILLSOF OKLAHOMA" ' y ' '"^"c "4ot Frowned On ­ '•CRT MURDER' In Drama Course r C/3F/TO£~ 1W& &M -•*** Here's a final exam that. BEn wiuuvnJOHNSON V-fev sounds like fun. - '^©.SSS s v. fa JToto FcnTi i s:V Students in Drama 329 (a ra- rM&Mt "WAGO'!MASTEfe r 4io course) will put oft a thirty^. mmutS broadcast as their final" Evangelandthe > exam. BAD MAM" SSI® Auditions for parts in the £' -Show will be held Monday after- MUnifM Show _ Iffpon from 4. to. 6 o'elo<9c ,at ?JT-. 11JOP" Radio House.' ' fGYPSY WILDCAT" The radio program, * comedy Ib Technicolor entitled. "The Kid From Tupe-ABBOTT AND COSTEIXO lo," will be broadcast over 1 1 "'1^ "ONE NIGHT IN THE®. KNOW .Thursday night at 11 ?<* TROPICS F o'eloc^S^<^V -^ ' SV 4* W w / * Serious Music Offered ^;} -'grf it Joicplr&oHn •Orion W«1b %3y>&%j£T'> Ov«r KTBC On Sunday * ValB BggSowi«M^^ HB0Ea^mm THIRD MAN" "'" A^progTam of serious music, In-1 ~ M8& stituted by Thomas D. Rishworth,J . HH diteetor of Radio Playhouse at j ^| 1 m the University, may Be heatd over •SONGOF Radio statibti KTB& oa Sunday SHERA2A SCHEHERAZADE" Ml nights fromHIO:^0 to ; THRILL TO THE MUStC &£ Rinhusky Kwtwkjw o'clock. -" \ . V. ­ n*>«l to the cultural side of Austin. the French BroadcastinrSystem Hi Wwk and da mmm hmj:tiat*• • VAN KIRKPATRICK . > HIS ORCHESTRA r ' i lifsfllTiTiM ITt^mi 1-^Tlif gf'Jinh'tfCt ~lf jFaii llillltMlili m fsATimDAr;"iAcai^« P. M..pAflLY S:W