»orn mm i lfJta *SSw ,, lllre uSur g entries 1WM K »" m Contest are University co-eds. .^; /: ' Included in-the list of the twenty-three talented beauties * <& arePola Ellis, Jackie Farris, Mary Esther Haskell, Billie *4,, I] ,1 Hintz, Margaret Sue Sommers/Gwyn Wilsod, and Patey *?>! M |x>u Arrington, a l948^49 -ex*v . 7 ,; wife , The girls-witt be judged on beauty/talent and,p3M0fcality« POLAJEULJS ' Friday andSaturday night at Landa Psyrk pear New Brftuii* Vfe]i fm* Governor Allan Shivers will crown the winner, who will |Sgjra represent Texasinthe Mts$ America Contest at Atlantfe *k|$3 -,s 11 i^-®h the Campus, is froir «»----«« «~ *«--«»--4 Texas in the sfcfte conta % Miss Ellis,.* Delta Gamma jrom Alice, is* val Queen, a member of Newman Club 'and -~ , of the Week, Mariner's Sweetheart, one ofthe^Ten Beautiful, and NROTC sweetheartv "* *' $ W .Miss Farrisis Sweetheart of the University and will i sent herhometowri, Del Rio, The brown-eyed>beauty #^ w«. "*T-V XMWMOV, ituu T»n»vy v^aruivHt v-Miss Haskell, a sophmore from Austin, won the Mis*SoutK Texas Contest at Seguift. She is a member of WicvAi? ROTC, Most Beautiful Freshman, one of the Ten Most &eaa* am « r®*® '1% m&mrnmmmtmim s -WWa" GWYN WILSON-^W J V* &''%* MARY ESTHER HASKELL J " " -fc. t i Wl# *: :ffiW * v­ •" M • ' *• A 5| M i tVv t«l M £8, ' • • • «„-fflfi •4g.-p.iiS M& w^Mwm V:3 rr* :ci W!LUME«I . AUSTIN, TjXASj FRIDAY, AtlSUST •. I9S0 -l' PASES TODAY '•f NO.I7 •'••3 * ^ .. 'fl 5? « • - -m m s&iktts&. ?:.fe 'if " t^*v*v •r"?4 ' Chancdlore, th^ highest-scholastic drder ^ The 6tgaAax&i& U fimSI to those Jaw FW tor law students^tapped five new members (Undents who have the highest scholastic t' a ^ Hfir Saturday»~ihcluding !the University^ Chaa--averages and hAve distinguished themselveei sfefS^' cellor-ele^t, Jusl^lce Jame^ P. Hart, naaking by work on the Texas Law Review. The stu« him an honorary member^ ---w-dents tapped were George W. Wilson, George W. Owens, James P. B«ley, and "•$ "Wilson, 22,-book review editor ' of the Review, k fro® Sail An­ tonio und graduated firom Brftdcr enridge :High Seheol -there ia 1946." After -« year at TuWe JsfW Uttiverrity, he attended (hi tUtoi* $*\\ p Varsity and entered lavr school in j1 ' 1®48.. Wilson expects to receive fSSBliS MAR6ARET his baciieloi' of «^; defflree: Kt'$^e v *?Z*i ehd af1 this scHA&ter *iid hii bach«lor of laws^de|^ in J^ *Wl»l ^ mmm • Elected ty^e 'tutorial froard ! -of the Review ^ ye^ Wiltwn is * quiimaaker^ hiatoriftn of P^i 1 Wtt Htf, honorary fri^egrid* -See CHANCB^I^ Pife fS m ^ Ji"" mgffimz &$E0lt6|W.dWB« By, CHARL1B LSWtf : 'Ikl •' -Wiiii»n f01% for the'liff pi . W^mm. engineer! .. k*i< r.Te^hnieal.Stiir Hi Mitefcelt ( went down ^ W the County :Conrt Hoo^e Thursday, tookjthe inner iwiMtttttui oat ft two confiscated pinball roAehine^ and retarned to tte ^ampmi ifijAi • ftMUiii eutKfklw t\ t' Hes •• •> t. Aff «^L,r a f reih supply of ,.t! • H rm. Hjm, aimingM|j,ij ®bs&& I P 0<• r ^ i $ej f'fe V m sp'-vs ••••• • -J.iFOltD . . • ^* «\T . , _ Iteirf^ School Coacbea.Aaaoda-Grady Heater ef Cor­,_ Chrirtl aa preaideat lor the Itttenover-toda the (msmwo*IB# IHrfll1IIlH||gTWlBIwlV^ mfyeetori to aerva on thenomlna^ngeommittea and tb^y «leet « d SMM'Wlio selects fo»^ »om A1 feeler t£»l yveslient alvNgw dmtM M jWt fN^.c$#a ior '£ efifde to eo»a Into control •f•1 '^wsoflUitioi;'::eii8Bie4:f'','4:th wu ww smd AUen Farlow^ mo^ed into the rS^'ISSSl: to«^«r tibia two/time'Snd-teniw'^w "" 'iMM. w ng St personalfouls beta* U Okla-The South, -which had % hard ]•vfbw'breaking iba** drifting de­fense,.made only nine. field .goats'outof 'S'S-'jtdaa. Withbetter or­ganised play,. the North cagers Igj,Bell, whose defense and baB­iMtttdling was due of the game's pm bright spots,scored nine pointsyhil# Abbott, voted the outstand­ r ing North player by sportswyiters,Wt two field goals and three free throws forseven markers. ^ Texarana's Jerry Norton, the outstanding Southerner, we* the **big*gun" In Coach Adoiph Bupp'sattack. Norton nided the South** losing «auae with nine points be­fore he fouled' out early In the |wrtt period. •' ' . ' •'" Art Flindesg «! Thomas Jfefto­eon tied for-high-point honors with a total of two field goals and &&»'+ • < k + not diacoas tbe plan for testingthe annnal achool a ri^day in­stead of five-day affair. The planwiUbe beard at^ie meeting of the board of directora in Palla in l>e­aanber. At the same time the1951 iite of the eoa^diirlehoor i^ir bi deeided. , , " soggeatlon fCTP nxttn'boty. doeedby JohnTc^n ofPortA^ thor. Tba plan iir^ald extend the " *" beyond the acnooi ^Hhwexar-directora nkd^took fice. They were; Howard lynchof Amarillo lot region 1/ JohnnyStovall of Feet Worth Tech for Bto&ever^ #reetOoekf«i.S" m top#* pitchy Omewr iSftia mk sold by HU­ waukee 'itf^.AAA America* ewof Soutiieni Associa^ Cfive frea pitches for nine points,{ the contest feat has been capturedFlinders's longset-shot with thirty] by the North eight times and the seconds ^remaining brought the I South five. Two games have end-score to $4>27, the closest the|ed in a tie. It was a 6-$. tie-in South came sin seven ^^x^ifSffjoufleiiiaR Pitches break the ke for the South with1*IWMI,VW,W" 1 ,,W,V4 a ^tender with five minntes!fcila­ . . Idelphia Athletics: 1-&. .. Chieo Carraaqpel'a ^xth Innin g ^edged tho Plymoutk Oilers, 1-i ext«ided the rookie Cbkiago The Cowboys will meet the Wet* a * ,1abortstop's hitting atretic tTls mar Traekers for the atate titla i~«nW game played in tbe ^ National Leagtie the ment» B«#ei moved into i^eeOnd^ |dac% Knobby^5ravea,y«ungTexaa ow the rained-ont Brooklyn Christian University kurler, passedH b«^M^ dor^v^ gamer b^ waa" iWe lb attqp iteeunted. ( 4 It 44 CNT1SE STOCK BOMD9H1RE Sj&rtevl tl^p^'frSir tiona wtthtDonnie Smith* a 180­posftllr inn Xtarville In th*im «po-, »• % '<®M»le Ward, a rampagirisrl9l . pound fullback from Galveston, »«r *»ee, a tricky speedster from Temple, and Max^McGee, 196­potander from White Oak will rotfnd out 13ms starting South back- n' <$r„ lx>Vf $r fiveoftbe iSdutti's i^va­iapBed they'll attend texaa, They are Ward, Smith, and Pace in the bacfcfteld. and James Gist, 190­ ponnd end from Marshall and Stanley Staderj #5a88-poiindguard from Austin,'1 T& other SooS; starter are Robert Knowlea of Waco and Sid Samoa of Beaumont^ at tackles* Sam Ward of l*redo at end, and Don Cole of Gladewater at center. The Noirtil attack from Wilkin^ aon's ^plit-T formation will bo paced by Jack Newby of Aiqarfllo,Joby Witt of Hughes Springs, and Bill Waggoner of . Wichita Falls, Waggoner, 175-poonder. will handle the Quarterback role, whila ,Newby and Witt will work at th» balfs. Witt is a little' 160* pounder*., but is an excellent and speedy rroaner. Frank Gibson of The only North Bta^r Mo haa announced ho will attend the Uni* versity is Jorj McDotiald, -a 17S-pound center from Sherman. „; Jerky Fouta of Wichita Pall* ami George Itendall of San An> g«3o .are the starting ends; white Don Goodwin of Arlington Heights and Jack -Archibald of Highland Park will be at starting tackle positions. The guards are Jerry Cotter of I4j$efield . jtodL Don Goss of Sttnaetfc _ Co-captains for the game are Dk Smith and Darrell LaAtte for tha the North. >TlV SlNTCN*Aug. 1—(S>>~-TheAI.^Ehe Cowboys won the Southwest State Semipro Baseball Tourna> nent' Tuesday night when they mm flUam Kenedy, 21­ out six Columbus batters fa ord«r etrikaout ofmm. 1 1 jSf war-, **! iV it 5 m -••-• '•••••- « K'VjMf Ts. ~T^y%J! -•£*! iMS .' •• I!®® s ' ' * 1 Britain •»«»»»cadThursday ahe «»* IM20,000,0(>^K5^Sf ogram toS&Ud np Western 5­^SETS .^iiifter «*«fr M^l Thursday toi' IbAik «i +m' M Xohnspn announced Thursday in Washing- Ion that National Guardsmen and ltawihrtstif in critical joba will be deferred temporarily #rom peflve United ft&ow defense barrier for mtteh ofthe north and westaides r«tf the Korean beachhead^ Field dispatches said th* gen­ ral withdrawal was expected to Jthe last -ggmfor U.N. pallback the war. Battle-ready V#. Marines streamed ashore and started immediately for th* bard s'IFn >5 W => <£»<*•• §^!i?,*• ,i^,<-1>^¥^ 1 v 1 J >c •*£&*-* &} % \I' *t^'V .,s, ^ W £» s%"* A •%«, r L W "h1* "Vg 5# W&3&&5& Pv CTKW Jrou^eors at the;Universitr-IF^ you " ' * ­ #»fe* ^ _ -. U, s »•**» tell the Fee Fixer NOWfrhat you wdn J * x S _r^ J<*• J*1-* _ i,w 7i*%£< * -S ^« t-^4* , ­ f-^vt rtfxi&l CACTUSX >£& t -&> %r. ' . Over % < /• -~" v< i:A Complete Record of your School Year '-i ?-® ^ ...... • ^'rjk >&i%& To be«ore of your copy ofTKe CACTUS--4eflHie FEE RXERfa i**' .^s ^ ^ t i . _ be sure to check ft for you. 'jk a i -y>-'-i^ j.'"i!i •. 4? iiT.rrr-|fT' .•.wbj2>^_ v !Li*r-s v-/*^ ' r i< £. ) J -5 i a^rrp-trwr^-!-^­ ' '' ~ J®!!*1 , -. •• ,• ,-p, _ .­ b«4 «crf»ied etrii«r* , . One of the critical ,»ectora was west of Pusan, tho main aupply port at 4h« sotitliMwtorn * tip of Korea, -Fighting raged only 40 miles th? west, of Hie city. , Wm* equipment. big >ershing tenks and flame throwers were un­ loaded fjrom ship to shore through­ out' Wednesday night %t «n un­ specified southeria port. -' U.S tanks and %army troops were engf^cd in. bloody fighting on the north and west. Five im­ after, throwing a counterattack portant defense, points have been a that stopped a powerful B^reloi.-yielded within three days. • V: M Bed drive, 40 miles west of Pusan. Perhapii 6,000 Marines were in­ volved. • t- Profs Dig Bones As Deadline Nears B» itti Aythtil >tm* -jijtjl&i Four University of fwu' ar­ chaeologists are making a last *e»eh tor xeuainji of .ancient In­ dian campsites and early settle­ ments in the Southwest Texas *»«;-to be covefred by the Bio Grande Falcon Ban reservoir* The,National Park, Service con- with the_I?nivagBity__ia »orvey the~"100-«<|uare-mile area for archaeologioal and historical materials. -The dam-to be constructed about 72 miles below Laredo is scheduled tor completion in about of Dallas, heads the field party. Assisting ar* Robert B. Humph­ rey* of Houston, Harbert S3os« of Bertram and John Carroll of Bryan, University students. Uni­ versity archaMlogist % Alex D. Krieger is supervising the work. Music Building toLose ^ Cool 'Air* of Distinction Within »S»t the Music Baild­ i»? will lose its distinction at the only air-eonditjtotted hoildinf on tho <»»mprty'l*" rW?-~ A -S w The Music Builditvr library nay lose some popularity witli non­ music-majors who study ther* on hot summer diljrs. "' street, while on the other ptand thepcople with which he grew up. .Esscsirisss; He Is -Korea, : • They'll be gettin# n# u# in a minute, he thinks, and he rolls 5"1 hills, overcast sky, fMOi things,>F|.v A Mind +* U motnnful whistle echoing '• *hi i&«^fo!et Tea iNorth Korean divlrfotM| Pawibly 100,000 men, flung „ •elves at U.S. and South Koroahis teyin* to hold the line untU U.S. *«ri»»e and Army reinforcement* ««» «wi*e ,^t Jbmte1 / -J,, ygs' * ;Th# defeMM *•. >50 tkkfles or les«» wa| <#­ w marked by flambg towiyj, from Chinju oil the soutij to Vongdok # sSur1 /2y i-V' J3S31 Troops were being pushed bad; j» «liwKIUMW.,1, »* miles northwest of Ta^fu, ik^H. -.5­ sionai. capital dp mites n<»thwert v; of Pusan. j 5'^ • -vfe-Vi; General MacArtfcufg TO suns' maty early Thursday identifi ' 10 North Korean divisions the front. Elements ^ o U.3. divisions and South divisions 1 were taking the shock, U',ri«i„,i|.„ilt 'i j.'t i ,.n\i • mission of Red China ahead of we Korean war, r "i. Jtaatoad, tike council approved 4 united States motion to keep oa discussing ^forth Korean eion and to try for a way to cqiw fiwMiM war to ,Kow«*Jdoini.|k The vote to substitute United States proposal for' tlw Rus^anitemwas 8 to Jg&TM { Soviet Union yoted alone and thfc did not couht as a veto sinea a«e&da votes are considered aa procedure and not maior impofw tance. The United 8t«tea. Britain, France,:.Nationalist-China, ita* way, Cuba, Ecuador and $gypt***** ^^ J*** a»d Xw davia abstained. -_ . pjb ... ^ TI10 United States proposal mm to consider immediately Taggread "&£~ sion upon the Bepublic of Korea.* _ ^en conjpjeted, ^SnrSSf*''W^S'a^lement perimental Science' Building, the the Kot^an qu^on.'^W^J Center, the clft^oom T«ted down on this. The council ^lr>th# -agw^hu-. tr'>f ^ + M ,¥ •'; -v" ­By BOB SMITH •• r 1 Turaii MWftri The youn« soldier atfcj* fitfully , Like^ in his sleep, dreaming mixed dreams of his home town withmud *cco^u«tinr«%^ huts instead of the houses to which "Chees ahS ho^keeyo; Chee* ah»he is accustomed. White-garbed ho keeyo/' The fishmongers voico people flit In and out of ramshac­floats through th«r morning, and kle buildings on one side of the a soldier #he Wert t^ink» he hears a coyote howling, and k *mtiming enlm Is V||^ .WWV|U' —.mist imperceptibly among the ha*y clouds, strikte the barren hilfe and turns them dark yeBo^I^vint; th« l*ner in a half darkness. ingr after hey soldiwrti, she tuno which :60-*UU6ik\ M 4$ fX i^jga !<$£> *$in mr r ' V# r'jw,. ?«• ' m * Wm' it .jmmm &>* X. .. J *« **» * ^ould ^to.fe fighftMr for fedend •& veto betting if the nation's Supreme " ownership. TheleMech— -' Court denies the Texas request for a re-rpio be equal; XV 7i i£f"li i" J?".T ,tumed °IT ¥ The «ilB cancel each oU^wi^t^ ri*i?fa »»•ggduaw*theethical^Hom. '• j«k£ .yfty? a The bald argument that **I think, the Union on an "equal foaHn^ with the central government .. mneeds the mow more," overlooks the v' factTe *; SL^n^i^/r ™ traib<*«*• in C * hundred vital human services, and that au l^f Vient with respect, to tidelands dominion. fight for a higher natural resources ,tax |f>i He relied solely, as Indicated b£ his & $jp •• / in the next Legislature won't he as sigy''^.; WRA-ATVU. IAMIMM 4-1.^. 0 footnote on page six of the opinion, on * nifictat if w« we losing the natural T*r r r ,.-i $t provision ip a Congressional Sr^y*} rSv ^-^th^.^Bion was j ^ x ^ ^ ^enged by Jmt.ee Frankfurter, who said Keso,utiorii one ind tw0, >w Texas has lost the land "remains4­ passed by the House allowing Texas ,to ^?fh'L b % to me a puzzle," and by Justice Minton, < retain its public lands and pay its «wn -* A who said that Tex^s owned the marginal*^ debts. The Senate then added a third sec- » ^*«-V *-«w jireaand i^haa not been shown that it;•; ^^ ^^ r !» * ^ k^ 1,. Y $£> /. annexed. ^ a. -, . -" T ~ could negotiate with Texas for cession of * Hm » re ' V~ 1 Texas lands op "equalfooting" instead J# \ ^ H I'.1 ^Thfere has been some talk that conseiv , 0£ submitting to the first two sections, v' v vative oil interests'* are backingstate^wn-' ts-nfoAT , '"• 2. President Tyler decided to act under • ^ >•> ;i ership. This is true. Oh! Oh! I think i see •&' Tower! sections one-ftnd two only; President Polk later, and so the ti'eatyj^MJiegjPb^i , will give development leases want Texas On Paopla tiated—with no "equal footing'* under­to retain ownership. By the same token—• standing.-). *"A?*f %$* % and this is usually overlooked—oil com-' r 3. On December 29, 1845, Congress Alaskan Lake, Bears panies t# which the central government said in a formal resolution that Texas was admitted on "an equal footing."-- JLSsP, LttrdUT President Texas contends that the first resolution tjm ; ^Jlie ^Jrutk J4urh was controlling. Justice Douglas erron-' By RONNIE DUGCER ^ ' Candy Luckett, darling of many T«MK Editor —» * j * AIL7 *" ^ W a beauty contest, writes from a eously cited the March X resolution as con­ " WE RECEIVED this cheerful summer camp that she's gained .; GENERAL MacARTHUR'S recent ed-taining the "equal footing" elapse. greeting from Lloyd Hand, the fifteen pounds. Hmm •.., And then * ict that no criticism of United1-States current student president workup there's Wallace Engle working in "The decision as it now stands rests on ­ ^ ,4__-,, troops in: Korea could be transmitted out during the summer in Alaska: ?jL. the House Galleries in Washing­ an alternative provision which never went of the Far East Command by pres§ cor-, into effect—a non-existent treaty—but _ " "A couple of other-fellows and ton. I have hit A fedfnanza up here at m Barefoot Sanders left for Eu­ respondents smacks of Asiatic "face sav­ of this historical error the court seems nearby lake. We have made friends rope this wsek on an American, ing. unaware/1 the Texas attorney general with an old Russian trapper who not a RaBsian boat. Original plans has cabins and motorboata, both called fer the Russinsky craft, but'M? Reports trickling into the United States •J r^said in his motion for.rehearing. of Which he has put at our disposal. it ^as all a mistake. ' ^ ii have told how high officers had to stay Last-Sunday I caught one of the ?' ~ m 22&JZ& ^at.^_ironi„tO_,keep some troops from It# m°st beautiful rainbow trout' ' «y brother Roy went tii^Tokyi you've ever seen. We plan a bear ^®n leave from Yokohama and saw high-tailing it to *he rear under fire. ^.THE'SI iTexan hunt in two weeks."-' General MacArthur leaving head* , ^ Other rfeports-have Mid that the troops 5 Haven't heard from him In three ^u*r^®rs* accounts <« , arriving from Japan were poorly trained week*, now. Hope he got the bear. "ErpeCting to see a :,v Tb* D*ily Texan, •,student amptpa of Tbe Dnl­ and in no condition-for fighting. • ' » i v*r»ity of Tit**, is pDUtobtd b Austin ttey mttaiag . Siberia, Siberia, beckon not* *®kant look, I waa astounded at1 § 'V **c«fPt Hoadiy and Saturday, Septemb«r to Jotne, .Siberia. , bumble smile and slow wallfwf %i u While this lack of training may reflect >•:>-cxccpt duting holiday and •xamfawtion p«rioda, and bl-'v?; 1 4 »* ^e general. I could see be ,*a#f 7T »,<-weekly duxJn* tha muntt sessions under the title. #nu^n ,°ia*r MI"n aiB pic ,;fj"1>aStly.on ileheral MacArthur, a frank re-rf #f TheTh# SummirSummertaBTexan «a Taeaday JPrMay Texas' ~—frmer Hart. Chancellor-elect. fnucb, older than bis pictures. H« *» OM Tae*day and muij by Texa, .port to the American pubUc might help^i ^ ^ f«r from reluctant to mix with boi ^^w in£^ * > isell the public on more military prepared--il «r «t*iM editorial J.B. T. or at the poHoi, is at Barton's basking in ' beartoftha iiiMW as a general policy, ,« ^ .i&a «fc"3!Sr!K, ^ ™ *'m°f ?*** r;fCriticism is healthy. No ««««. .wf ^ 5 VI came so mighty that he could shroud him*Jg *>«»* ^ ^ _ other day, "garbed"in. BohenfUn^L^^^f,^^ mention of facts which might not speafc ' -well.OM>; T*ME«S appreciate ks. well XittiWnM fw KitkM) Adyartlahv* by Katienal But be-ww1HdiiW«»n ^ Smith, former assodata " ne was xidqjng, no less.. — e fOJO for .. two opponents, including the for-Vreforms, ««> THB DSTLVBR* SONS, PSRMANCNT STAFF Editor»io-Chiof , ROKN1E DUGGER r?"" ma m ue «J CstL Associate Editor CHARLEY TRIMBLE Paul a aui ownsoiuBn,, „wiiv ieu wiB »»w SvjfMz Employment ^ Com-' Editorial Asnatant John Ohendalski > S~ ~. MsS, Sports Editor Jam«s Recb blanket tax fight against the Atfc. nwssion^Stxmated that employment a It will cost the taxpayers'bf T^as at] Associate Sports Editor Howard Paga • r« «;656 In T»tl. C«mi- Night Editors Charley _ Olan'Brewer August to. Unemployment m bitfor Austin and other T^xas resfgent* Amusements Jiditor ne Fitzgerald getting ^i» eco^mthe county dropped-to 1^560 to find out legally whether they can con-Socjety r>i MA from Columbia IJniversit^ Jnaa^JU T&» Is m^^neaM PatHgman --jg tinueto buv igroceri^ and pataronize^other Telegraph Editor Reuben Stric H^S going into the Commerjsr De-Unemjployment figures of the eolation, at the apex Provincial and sector newspapers are at a secotyl level, 452 of them respons­ ible to the party through regional committees. At the bottom are "district and "lower" factory and farm papers responsible to sector committees. -? JAMES MADISON, Fi&or of tho Constitution, 1767-1800. Bjr Irving Brant. In(fi*n»polii, New Y«fk: Tlw Bobbs-Merrlll Com­pany, Iwt. 520 page* indexod. Jaffic* Madisoii. ilBffSlT, Bfrft­spoken statesman, was lost in the wenmessage of the party govteminentment directlydirectl; the to thep«©plebywordnf mouth. The job is hot all pleasure to the holder, Mr. Inkeles is.able to statffwhat with the demands oftiie paity impinging on one aide and the "grass roots" practicalities resisting oh the Uncertainty about veerln^ poi: itical trends and Unindictable local imitators and party officials makes the lot of tile editor difficult and Mr. Inkeles gives him a shred of symapthy. Even when the editor tide of glamorcAis American his­tory until Irving Brant, newspa­perman and authority on the'Con­stitution,. began his definitive four-volume series. "Father of ttift .,f;oHStitntio«,' ig aifl third volume. #• ­ WM "" Kk :iSJierd tMk'W falls baek on punished doctrine to fill columns, he ean sometimes choosewrong andgive offense, if lie Isn't hauled .up for failing to report the straight/of the news. ' Mr, Inkeles spent three .yearsstudying thfe Soviet Union as social science analyst jto the department I at"^tha projects for tf>e of State and other government J future "Philanthropy In. -spported ,< 'institution ^t negie -spponea institution at i money—and for the sociai'Scien&a Harvard which has announced two Istudent. ' '< additional studies to be published l tw. through the use of excellent ta­uTrr Cf]?^ o£ '**** w«* charts gives some idea Harold J. Bemsn. ^ I of what can b» and has /been E* EVANS j accomplished on a ampler Scale. President of George Williams n College-from 1926 nntil his re­ PS­ tirement in 1935, Dr. Jenkins par­JEv ticipated for1 many years in inter* national YMCA work, and was Not Finished Yet PHILANTHROPY INAMERlV CA. ffe Edward' & Jwkiik|. 'Now • Y«^t Vfces$;"2ttt p*r* mn*; IllAt sumniatl6& of philanthropyfront 1824 to 1928 and % shrewd intimate contact with variow or­ganizations for social %elf»r*. v , Looking toward the future^ the Ghost Writer autiior says that in spite of many was otecured in debate because cieties, and that movement,for-of his dry, nnunagmative manner, ward or backward is within the The latest volume, written j c°ntrol of the societi«t thehiv« clearly, ¥ut~ploddingly (in what'0 some people call journalese), car CHARLEY TRIMBLE tries Madison from the 1787 Con­stitutional Convention at Philadel­phia, at which-ha was the guiding ill- Intellectual and technical author­ iMS:. mi ity, through, his service in the Virginia Legislature until 1800. -New ;9«%taagk: 25-cent Issues: S Strangely enough for a .man Who was later president, Madi­TiB Ooath t>o O* Part, by «toha Dickson Carr. Did his fiancee son reaehed the zenith of his pub­ fire the fatal shotT Dr. Gideon ic. career at the convention. Bte was the first to'arrive the" last I t1^5««tton in tbis to leave; he attended all sessions,|^^94J Publ^d by Hwrer kept laborious convention notes,! t?£v and virtaally wrote the influent-1 * -_ % _ ial Virginia plan for the (Jon-j * * 9alB£* ^ Morrison, atitotion. |1», W$M-IW&.-in VO,Ce' fcLallSe^ ^^-^-^ IW£ek* ^ forestry S ?'« e»rtby. Firs^ eopyi^ht. and influence. & .Jed by Morriso* " __ , >r..... . * 1946. He joined Hamilton and Jay in writing the cla&sicTFederaliBt ( My Slater N»*h*, by 6or­ l^ev\ ™ ®f Ratification, don MeDonell. He knew he should. Then, defeated by Patrick Henry's n't move the body but he did. jBbe opposition for the Senate* he ser-jwas too beautiful to leave, there ved in the national House, where in the alley. &> they thought he jbe introduced what became the{did it. A Bltte Book serial of 1947, first ten amendments to Uie Con-[first published by Little Brown S» stitution. Ab I Teenager Nwel: for George Washington. m A firm advocate of centralised Will Win $2,500 m authority at7 the convention, ] lhn^bi ion by 182J had become "an oi w « n . :Uaw 'It* An report*^ by Publishers' Week­ 1. The Cardinal, by ETenry Mort ton Robinson. Simon & Schuster. 2. World En^ * ' rurjisBP J O •sSmj. KBmifiSVJHrg 2^ or *tnd«aU. »«jur tTalw­ •»yTRok«t *.JU» School. True **• BendtsM. PUraroanda. Window t*m». ««tnd S*„**»((« at 991 A, K. «2n4 or «sll Noi^«i^o4 T«n9e« iaB4 an4. ?*d ' ! I Furnished Apartment* H0DEBK APARTMBNT8 : •rwady' ;..,;Ka4rn»oa» room. kltd>«n, bedroom OomI *nr»Hni MODBRH »<*» 8AN AMYOKK) 8TRSB* ti«aotifal)y fmbM4 S ttory lMtuw. 1)4 Uttk* town IOOU» . . rtfttcerator w • b«drooma 4nd S Soon, mr* >y fur­ attttnt Uvins_ room and' diali dininar .. XiutorapriDc Mttmiw. Fenced yard. Immediate VMieMloa. Will rent to nttm. adalt tmp on* permanent baaia. Teacher*, wnei, tndwt* student* or profeuional type*. VtUi* tie*' tM. •SS9.M Monthly. Owner— *-1780. FOR JUSNT: Xieely famished Sroom __ house. Cm** to community etiRnr. Children welcome. Phone 7-1«SS. . l Help Wanted NKKD DEPBNDAB1E atndent' who ean mO printfaw to -work_ on < recvlar aebedtita to total about If hours weekly Cook Println* Co. tf(W. 18th St." M8BO K>SSPlBlt&ABL^v *tftad«#t witb . ipn* • advertiainx experience to *eH •dvertisbar Jfor> Austin JMnrt. j*«ft wont on a regular tebodal* total* Hi rarsi'if.i tow. Crowell. 53. " > ,...... ^. ^ '1. Roosevelt in Retrospect,-by John Gimther. Harper. 53.75 ­ 2. John Adam* and th« Aaiefi­can -Revolution, by Catherine Drinker Bowen. Little, BroWn. |3i 3. Courtroom, by Quentin Rey* nolds. Farrar. f 3.757 4. WorlcU jof Collision by .lni' mantiel Yelikovsky. Doubleday. 54:50. ^ 5. Tlit Matwro Mind, by H, A. Overstreet. Norton. 52.95 Produce Quick Rtiiihi For Sale 1S4T *-SYSTKM Horn TnUer with 'SnI&y room .attached. Butane and etatrie refricentor. fwt, evaporative B"J«a Sprb»B» Boad Lot 49. Pb?ne 9>S4S0. Bprnikm Ave. •• • -. ' ­ leather. Goods COWBOY" SOOTS, bata. paata, Mta. holiter*. saddle*, bridles. AU leather *oods .• made to order. Srerythins westers. Capita Saddlery 1614 La« v«ca. v \tm i Pets WAirr»D a «ood hom*r for tat and kittto*. "jJPhone " ,3 V PETSl'Goid borne* wanted for fonr baby kitten*. Phone JM2S2. m 'rrRooms for Rent SI; tTOIMOvOjitUnes. aot* books. thMMS v} —rrr~~-i... v.....«ijwn'u*ii^ ci Strict construction" and ar ^ ^ states* [Sorowtoea, in orde? to eneoori«e j^urin#theN¥»|f^i r^^^ik>n j Hie writiii# of nWeis for'yobncfight with' Henry, Madison told people, are co~sponsoring a liter* a secretary * that "when Patrick jary prise competition for the best), Henry arose to reply to him* a)maturely conceived novel with pause, 11 «halce of the bead, or a I modern setting, which honestly striking gesture would undo cm j and thoughtfully depiets th* ex­bonr'a work before a .word, was4perience* and tbe problems vt Uttered." But Henfy tost to Madi-j today's teenagera. son's methodkal logic. \ I Tbe eontest wto In fighting the Alien atfl Anyone, ..except .members dition laws as'.the Madison f ^ •s_*'To" the "press alotte^ muk besides fn tiii United Jtate^ iui it U-with abuses;' «be "world l1* ^ possendons, ^r is indebted for aU the „triumphs ^£^.lH^& which hayf K»n st>n ^nd humanity'over: edaor of l^incott f00! icia^resrion/^ Iffli —Bri«a |r* -viltodisoii b<4ei*edik in inligbt^[ "thrv protection of the 1«« no^ the in tW facnlUes of, meny VCTCjf ­ "• j*. JalUJI'" ion ivenile, |*fBtt hi! »« aa fyUermm'9 S< !|a|fea i ^ ,4^%'iheiih.#re^di du: s^ny Muni*; UE hHr the *n ii I ssijon nyy in tol«hptoo,t.S444j, IHiJMflOU wocir^ l4 tj ' a. But llj»il.l)l.u.'.'u8CiiiLil||l 'Awmi" iH'JSI HK;-i «*» form th^ Jrtit ining HillFJI'J « history Irna overlooked ownih iifr T* .L lll I il l 11 u^iij ijMlijM U|.ii] mort Hi'WL' r.lMH ** V 'i i V -z yr^kiiir.] nwrns^H mm tljl fimle iMnfs tole ^tarisiijr U $+% Altera*^ U1' I1HMW UUMfi jri^ >%m9 mr I0I4S4H '•Juru'l r,jK&»Si?l ^ „kmm ?» 885? A: ** SB p^n? oreiqntiims w * **&' •* -2S & ,t with the beginning of l&e -falHa>|.aa«ter~the -theater,will ""' foreign between igntUins theater TO Ihr resumed in §0*1 merican eku American classics he, ( . W«3l»c«.Womack The large ettendst if m enid. Thursday* ^ ,1 i t tv« movie Hlm Traviat^" shown lssqThe English. production "Greet spring proves definittelythet pe \t: ,w& pie desire to see opera in . th« on* *£ the aotfMgL, ;«^e are 'planning ^0*; !;aiotlw''^(kM«!g;f./S^elMi--= ^ Texas is planning onbecomingex­evasively what is known in the m-:-witf:'"&eri*njt' 1:41 in the afternoon for the fo .motie World as "a straight art Sim showing*. 1 ' "&Xr2­ house" as sfcon as possible Mr. The Varsity TheatfewiH jAb* Womack said, fit is planned that Englishprbduetfons again this falL but will no| participate in showing of other, foreign Mr., Womack said. 1' Jobs Are Plentiful Fyk ' yA*| vN? s^^L-3^5 ©S5' tH" E* la Ati*rtt«y *•> r -Js^pl Reagan ^ Legg, OnivewitM -In Some Fields&&&• paw graduate, , was elected Mid-1 „t ' .land County Attorhey in the pri*| Degree holders in pharmacy and msries July 21education had tl^e -easiest time ./^-' iiV finding jobs among 3,000 Univer­This Is the REHEARSING A SON£ for the Friday Fro-by the Curtain Club, Other singers in the show sity graduates of 1950, Hob Gray, run for political office. He pot' n^ss^is^sfL Kc floor show tonight is Randy Dodson, right. are Ivjr*.-Mary Alice Starr and Don Kirkpatrick. teacher placement director, re­?e4 2»345 to his opponent's 1601 His .audience ts Charles Wwlrfrr ported. #*W*V. Ihe informs! dance will be heW from 8 M Alb *>% monies for tfie show, and Elizabeth Kirkpatricfc. o"dock. Ad»nts»on is tree for aH studenfsFtt are short- Entertainment for •Hws week's frolic will be given ages of elementary* library science, home economics, and wo­menff jphyrical education insfarae* %^I In 'Ladim' tors. , ** y* / ' " Mm' «#• The College of Fhaknacy had 110 graduates and received more than 300 requests for pharma­fpMa*o* Eiff«tT*w«r* cists, the director added. AU ;:Ckarl«« La«ckt«UXM|as to the actors. sion.»v found work in their field, Mjr. w^Cffl^f^^rltaiessed a murder trial, gone into Patricia NmI . Cray .aid. f§§| fte jury room with the jury, to Also in a regular theater, the The jplay is a satire on the jury Bsnl J. Thompson, of reach a verdict and stayed two stage is raised about six feet from system and courtroom procedure. st'fftKtB fOfi !V O »>!%v the School of Journalism, reported t It tells how one member of the fifty-six year history of the tower lights that one Jujs been movec The ffest, took f «ww_ ,-MUrJorl* Robert tP*1 FRIDAY Fer^r T""dent «f' ; # ~ * aottfted .^uit hie iartiele«^fDon't t//w%\y/tv Jfying exam in M.B,] Let... Handicaps Brant -2W2, ;r 8-11—i«day Ur pnblbiatitfn •by::|f^lny,f.; RlM>s^f3|«iu«ig' "'111 'fM «ssnS?<^ iE^ • 1 1X |Bf,A4h 'bffu yiS*-NAT0 bridge paHy, Home «f ^ilng^aiftcgea: zer twn yt Mrs. ^ Y.-Weimeif; "lasr" m rartwi^1 Ito* I /lUS7/fV . ition'j v; -i^ne^on, <^he • <:i • W& sSi for In itota^ ^been called off EA IEHA1 wmmt . %•* -v ' ilv*'' ' '•.f.J'i^CT-T 18V. nff-irnr-T^ r,< , mtu n fir In lull ITU,,. Gkl of ffoWeofc Sunday 4norning small groups , it," ^ m *, * \ " once in ft wttle," shesaid. ­ wfll disctisa "the, importance' of It's that kindof enthusiasm that Also an Orange Jacket, Rhod*^ being important." has been .extremely interested i%,. their project for tills year whichReservations should bo made by concerns co-ops. In fact, she waftFriday afternoon at the "Y" or with Ed JVost, contacts chairman. committee, Rhoda helps to plan one of the starters. ^ , Other students in chaise of programs and activities, or as she. i^Last^ year tite Orang^ Ja^ket^ Committees are Jack Sloan, pro­puts ft, "outline them and .give decided to take on investigation gram; Marion McCurdy, recrea-them to other people to do." and promotion of co-op expansion: " ' tion; afad' Mary Marcelle Hamer -One of the activities that the as a project," she said, "As a part, and Belva Buckner, food. ^ / I *Y" steering^ Committee lias of-it about seven Orange Jackets,. Sam -Gjibbs is general chairman; planned for this summer is a re­have been living in co-ops tikis *' for, the retreat. Anne Chambers treat which will be -at .Bastrop snnuner to become acquainted with, > and Allen Clark are also members State Park this-week end. ^ the probleifts. We wanted to know . {> i of the steering committee, mi V -RHODA McKNIGHT This is not a planning retreat, •hat we are working towards." 1 -t hut one for thought, Rhoda said. Rhoda thinks the experiments5 "The subjects .we are going to has been quite successful, as the „ wmmi discuss—the formation of atti­Board of Regents okayed « |4(K»^ -I ** *"at%£W 4 V* ^ tudes and the importance of being 000 building program for co-ops' important—are ones that sort of .this summer. , u *M + stimulate your thinking." > ^ .J^The oldest one in * family of Besides working with the seven (she has five, brothers and Rhoda-& also active in co-opera­one sister}, it seems only natural 1 tives, being a~ member of the In-that Rhoda should major in chil4 JSf ter Co-Op Council and eft natina-development. Rhoda hasn't eVen tor for Wakonda. She "finehairman -seen her neweSn>ro^er^who3i»ft--. of the Co-ordinators Council, an born last week. 4 _ organization of the co-ordinators phe is a native Texan, ,but has ' of all the co-operatives. .. , spent a quite a lot of time in vAjK SV> v> >\%> lw "We get together and discuss Florence, Ala., where her family co-op problems and wa^s to solve has a farm. t .* -­ them," she said. Jf>|thoda wants to teach nursery ORDER YOUR A Talking about "p?ol)lem?r Rlio< school when she graduates nfcxt hesitantly, mentioned a few that June—not" any place especially, I she has faced or been involved in "just so it's in Texas,* she said* Even though no public exercises vrift be, held, Your Graduation, V Vtv* I 5 'f. [; ' : « itil * worf Important event in your' life. Your friends and " fetativas wil appreciate being remembered on this occasion.--WMteW ^-Frenc#"-^!^^ l/ieiC/iurc/ief » mr Fold., Embossed cover and iViWiaSj wordsd invitation en^i SUNDXY. Aii«t»T e W»« *U« "Dp $», OOfi :g»*ed^^Att Ifc eidra JTIii1b|IiK (jimtli .Mr# " _ ­ -... , • -.. . -iAi'V-.'+p' t*:U—"HMt-tlw W« Can B**» Ckrhtiu Oinh Tbinlt,** by Um Bty. Paul;Wwjicnkk ^48^Sattd*ri«%s-"Tt. CTtaSelMwL^'' «to I* twIuM tU 3Uv. John Bu-m&rt wiw» i Wilis ekXi^kc aiiuigUr. "M . by tlw Rtt. Uvrme* W. Buk, -• " t,C«tr*I Chwr«k 4:80—IHwM* Student Feliowihip Mriwte , h th* clrareh lor «a9P*rr 7ecrtHttt«j|» ,, iy Whlta ju,.: wOMhla. 4I -^ UMiViirfiiy Mfliiur ^ embossed cover. Four Clwtik tf ftriit 11—"Goinr Home." by thm R«t. A.*«»• sert pages of the Towers UJfr»-"Wh»t XHMsi IUKcUm M*m* U> ,——7—r v ^^-Ft3br «he' Hain> Walk, Texas YowT^ Vy Mtetetec R> Jhwrt. J:M—"Th« OcnMeBM." fey Ktelator .Union, and the Worded -•• " < r 1 line Leather Tie-String.§ 10:18—Untflad Mtrkt and faatroetk*' Mtttr; «f «uwMu book* o» Shf Mr 9*rWU "7 ».<«fc irr^ 11—>T Btebari 4«r. who Ta nptwt^s th« ^ TV-"*-V. Stx*k«r. ainifaitwr, wfclW k I* •« ^ Si. Uk»*» KMlM«rt » tkmtion. ~~ , ; " ' n«v. MaaMhm SMIvwrdk 7>4l-^«tk«iw Iwiwi. Blnninctuun, ImIiuL «p««k' 8m» Ftrst MttMlirt Clnmlr d*y «MiBt at S oVRn%. m4 twi#e|^» 10 -.56—A tonndnlon mtAtitiW W tb* Vondur. (c) tGenuino ieatUer nrr. JMatvin S. V*n«». noraisc embossed cover, in Tan-•nd th« •,<• J»jy, -v *, \ y£X* & , J8& , A * * * ' ^ \ ^ £&Js w Tb'-B& in'AA -?if> m „three-year ^•By GEORGE KOSTOHRYZ they wish to see is busy, or„that first semester must have letters oil oflidr ^buxaeCr ., ." thiiversitir has been re-el« , ,, _ . formswill be they see an advisor who isfree^He from their employers to that ef­annoiincements a thre^-year term ks a director I swittti Monday to tin 3,1*7 «tu-said this will prevent unduecon*-fect. Otherwise, prefeerhceswill the Oak Ridge Institute of available at the bookstores Tues­ dents .who completed the first gestion at the advising points; < not be granted. -* i Stodie«b day. The charge is 15 cents. Sche­ •tops oft July 817 and 28, W, fi. Also to prevent delay, Mr. Shipp T^'tiistitut|-at;oi®istration asked that Students plan their registration August &. Time per-minted later. ^ J 'en»L, Is operated by twenty rarsdky. /' courses and enterthem on the ten* mite for the engineers to see ad­outhefn univ^sities M an ^Veterans may fill out requests -Enclosed in tite envelopes will tative course card. Students must visors in "Gregory-Gym Will be, 'or books, supplies^ and equipment sion M nuclear researjeh ! be .forma, instructions,' and* ad­hvae a photostat of previous work available Monday and Tuesday Jtf afte* they know what courses they toritesf *!tcp VWVf visor information iheet? .needed when they go to their advisors. Engineering building1*7. s' will take the first semester. This Atomic Enerby Commissi^ by students before seeing tMir ad­ A 0^'V He emphasised that students ex­Army, Air, and Naval HOTC Uay be doneitV HaU 102 through The |<«»rd of directors" visory August 9atfd 10. pecting section preferences -be­students will have W clear at their August 28. Requisitions will lie of six members*. Dr. Pointer '^Classes will not be dismissed on cause they-will be working the respective offices before being ad ready by September 18, been a member of the these dates. -v * r the Institute's f< -Mr. Shipp iuged that the stu­ Other Tex^s memb^aa of dent return l^ter If the advisor j'L.*-;-'.'.iVj'-iiiJ-'" '."aij'. i:.n.i.iAi-•' .ifiaflt T " Mute are Rke lnstitute and ,T< mm 3-.as, AAM* ThO Institute conducte a bro program including a school of vanced study in nuclear sciehcj a graduate training program, a —->•',* Oil Cere^ic Staff special training progTams h»_,»u v-jt «BfeOTK£ ' " .. ' * ., atomic energy teseawh techniqi ^ The present laboratory 'staff . Miss Sommers is a senior voice graduate students to Oak Ridge seven mem-major from Ballas and will repre­ complete work toward advanc Johnson of Ohio S&ate mamm The twenty-year-old Gamma Fid topes for medical and other „ University, a specialist in glass Beta js a member of the Dallas search at the Unive|,aity/ and 3 ^search and the nuclear physics Club, a Bluebonnet Belle Nomi­ branches. aspects bf ceramics. nee, and, Varsity Carnival Queen * f~ ' • iMMp -c njMkiptee.v ­ , ... (Continued from Page 1) Ranger Staff Members ^•MUm , Wilson • is a membfflf of ty;'and a member of PI Sigma degree from Loyola Coffege,"Bal­ Alpha Chi Omega Jrom Cameron. Foreign Cadets MeetTonight in JB }5| Alpha, honorary government fra­timore, and is a member of Alpha She was one of the Ten Most An imporjtant meeting of all ternity. ;-V ^ Sigma Nu, national*|K>norary so­Beautiful Girfc*and won the.Miss persons interested in. working oim . Owens, 24, Is from Tulsa and ciety of Jesuit College* land Uni­Brazos Valley title at'Bryaif ekr- Will Visit Campus , the Texas Ranger staff has been entered JLaw School in 1948 after versities. . He entered Law School Herein the summer. J * ' announced , for Friday night at receiving -his. bachelor of arts.de­in 1948 and is a menjJ>er of phi Judges-for the Cutest. Mre .Aviatjon cadets from Switv gree from the University.'"He Delta PhL During toe war Bailey o'clock intheRaager office. >ren .Winship, chairman of ti» .land, Italy, and' Portugal, spe )$'v''^7 Bill Bridge newly-appointed was Appointed quizmaster in 1949 served with the 503rd Parachute aiversity Departeient of Drama; stfred brthe Inteniationa!Count |:"Editor, said he will welcome' be^ and has made the honor roll each Infantry and the 11th ^Aizb^ne E. j M, former ^itkpatrick, Jr., will b« on tfe« eampus August '"M ... ginnery efforts and'creative con,r-semester. This spring. he ; jgis Division before receiving his dfii-prraident of the Tetxais Junior and liS. i^Tp-i -toributionS(^^S2S5Jjutfyns^f • •* elected.to;Phi Delt* P^i and tiba eh^in 194^1%:, -Chamfa«r of Commence;-EHs^beth ,r^e'eaitoiBv;«i«i cwnbiahy sfi editorial board of tne Review. Smith, 22, {associate note, editor Powler Draper, Austin author; SWh Prof Writes ^Tmtbook _ Owens is married and served four­tion training, and d good-wift to of the Revifew, is from.El Paso. Kindel' Paulk, WieWta FaUs> Ma­ "*• Thomas A."Sonne, speech, pro-teen montha in the Navy, receiving He entered. Law_ School in 1948 jor John. E.-iPickering,, USAP, wlril^in the United States, j «Bfto^Ms..tSe co-author of "How and was elected to* the editorial Randolph Air Force' Ba^e; Ysleta } While ^ere, they will be mo\ Debate," a textbook for be^n-; . Bailey, afthou^h bonrin Phfl% board of the Review in 1960. He l i i.r, iji i'v ^BwiiaSaSTOlWTO-^iitfwl is h -.C X­ _ hM^m .J »' * mm Here's,,an <• * IX7m>r l -~ -413 A X. ', MLYOU SO k"wriik"Ra^gorrt a^S check |ft© BuirwirV CarJJ 'fe; BuSa?TCa«l allslio^ l^qWr ^rsarVGaril ^7orf# ©f i^d cards ydu'lf ^11 otxf and take with you next if you pre-rogister}, and the Ranger fee (one dpllar) -be added to the rest of yout fees, so you can pay them all ft the, some'time^-f !^KWk ' i VoU»t»ry •S •a — fiangsH S is£ m ^asiift