Entries 26.09 Per Cent Longhorn Miss Texas Could Be I of 6 UT Cheesecakes B y JO H N P R A T E R More than on e-fou rth of the entries in the Miss Texas contest are University co eds. Included in the list of the twenty-three talented beauties are Pola Ellis, Jackie F arris, Mary Esther Haskell, Billie Hintz M argaret Sue Sommers, Gwyn Wilson, and I atsy Lou Arrington, a 1948-49 ex. The girls will be judged on beauty, talent and, personality Friday and Saturday night a t luanda Park near New Braunfes. Governor Allan Shivers will crown the winner, who will represent Texas in the Miss America Contest a t Atlantia City, New Jersey, in September. Miss A rrington, a member of Chi Omega Sorority while on the Campus, is from Midland. She will be Miss West Texas in the stifle contest. Miss Ellis, a Delta Gamma from Alice, is Varsity Carni­ val Queen, a member of Newman ( lub and Tumble, Dirt of the Week, M ariner’s Sweetheart, one of the Ten Most Beautiful, and NROTC sweetheart. Miss F arris is Sweetheart of the University and will repre­ sent her home town, Del Rio. The bro\^n_e\ed beauty is A junior education major, member of Alpha Phi sorority, W est Texas Club, Spooks, Campus League of Women Voters, Blue­ bonnet Belle finalist, and Varsity Carnival Queen finalist. Miss Haskell, a sophmore from Austin, won the Miss South Texas Contest at Seguin. She is a member of Wica, A ir R O IC , Most Beautiful Freshman, one of the Ten Most Beau- POLA ELLIS See SIX, Page 8 i MARY ESTHER HASKELL G W Y N W ILSON / T he S um m er VOLUME 51 AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1950 8 PAGES TODAY Law Honorary Taps Chancellors, the highest scholastic order for law students, tapped five new members Saturday, including the U niversity’s Chan­ cellor elect, Justice James P. H art, making him an honorary member. The organization is limited to those law students who have the highest scholastic averages and have distinguished themselves by work on the Texas Law Review. The stu­ dents tapped were George W. Wilson, George W. Owens, James P. Bailey, and Tad R. Smith. Wilson, 22, book review editor of the Review, is from San An­ tonio and graduated from Brack­ enridge High School there in 1946. A fter a year at Tulane U niversity, he attended the U ni­ versity and entered law school in 1918. Wilson expects to receive his bachelor of arts degree at the end o f this sem ester and his bachelor of laws degree in June, 1951. Elected to the editorial board of the Review this year, Wilson is a quizmaster; historian o f Phi Delta Phi, honorary legal fraterni„ See CHANCELLORS, Page 8 _ ortu su cres JAMES P. BAILEY GEORGE W. OWENS B y C H A R L IE L E W IS Oh, for the life of an electrical en gin eer! Technical Staff Assistant James H. Mitchell w ent down to the County Court House Thursday, took the inner sanctums out o f two confiscated pinball machines, and returned to the campus with a fresh supply of “research'* ma­ terials for his students to “ experi­ m ent’* with. The EE boys are the only characters we know o f who can play the one-ballers without peril o f fine and without the expendi­ ture of one thin dime. 'i',, ★ O v erh ea rd a t a D ra g fillin g s t a ­ tio n as tw o a tte n d a n ts w a sh ed a CMT I TAD R. SMITH GEORGE W. WILSON “ L iste n , H en ry , !*▼• h ad d i­ a r r h e a , a n d I’v e h ad p y o rrh ea , b u t I su r e d o n ’t w a n t a n y o f th a t Korea.** MARGARET SUE SOMMERS Friday, August A,1950 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page? North Cagers Score i 6th Victory, 34-27 M,nus " ' e' rn rn • I By J A M E S RECH Texan Sp o rts Ed itor The South will operate offen­ Two evenly matched North and sively from Munn’s combination South elevens take to the grid­ A crowd of 4,368 listless fans homa AAM, the North scored their f By HOWARD P AGE iron of House Park Friday night -of the T and single wing forma­ f Tstean A ssociats Spo rts Editor watched the orange-clad "Y an- sitxh straight victory in a game at 8 o’clock in the 16th annual tions with Donnie Smith, a 180A pair of “ mighty m ites” — J a c k Bell of F ort Worth and Joe kees” build up an early lead and which was typical schoolboy bas- all-star game in the T exas High pounder from Kerrville in the A bbott of Canyon— helped the hold the advantage throughout the ketball in August. Play ranged School Coaching School climax. vital quarterback spot. Tomie Ward, a rampaging 195The teams will take to the field, favored North to a 34-27 victory 32-minute contest in ovenish Greg­ from excellent to ragged with pound fullback from Galveston, thirty-eight personal fouls being however, minus the coaches who over the South in the sixth annual ory Gym. Roy Pace, a tricky speedster from have guided them through their kinder the coaching o f defen­ called in the all-star contest. all-star basketball game Thursday Temple, and Max McGee. 195practice paces for the week. sive-minded Henry Iba of OklaThe South, which had a hard night. pounder from White Oak will In a surprise announcement time breaking Ib a’s shifting de­ round out the starting South back­ fense, made only nine field goals Thursday, Biggie Matin of Michi­ field. out of 53 tries. With better or­ gan State was ruled out as coach Five of the South’s starters have ganized play, the North cagers of the South team because of a implied they’ll attend Texas. They Big Ten rule made in 1947. were able to sink ten of 30 field are Ward, Smith, and Pace in the The ruling came from Kennth goal attempts. backfield and Ja m e s Gist, 190(T ug) Wilson, commissioner of Bell, whose defense and ballpound end from Marshall and the Rig Ten through the Michigan Stanley Studer, a 18s pound handling was one of the game's State Director of Athletics, Ralph guard from Austin. few bright spots, scored nine points Young. The other South s t a r t e r are while Abbott, voted the outstand­ Bud Wilkison of Oklahoma and Robert Knowles of Waco and Sui ing North player by sportswriters, hit two field goals and three free mentor of the North eleven im­ Ramos of Beaumont at tackles, mediately withdrew when he Sam Ward of Laredo at end, and throws for seven markers. I heard of the ruling. The b *8 | Don Cole of Gladewater at center. T ex a ran a’s Je rry Norton, the Seven has no such rule. • The North attack from W Ikin* outstanding Southerner, was the The game will go on with Carli son’s split-T formation ac 1 11 be "b ig gu n ” in Coach Adolph Rupp’s Price of Waco, chairman of south paced by Ja ck Newby of Amarillo, attack. Norton aided the South’s selection committee, coaching the Jo b y Witt of Hughes Springs, and losing cause with nine points be­ Rebels and Abe Houston of! Bill Waggoner of Wichita Fall*, fore he fouled out early in the Brownwood, chairman of the Waggoner, 175-pounder, w i l l fourth period. North selection committee, hand handle the quarterback role, while Art Flinders of Thomas J e f f e r ­ ling the Yankees. I Newby and Witt will work at the 160son tied for high-point honors J There were still a few goal-line : halfs. Witt is a little with a total of two field goals and tickets available late Thursday f o r ! pounder, but is an excellent and five free pitches ^or nine points. the contest that has been captured speedy runner. Frank Gibson of Flinders’s long set-shot with thirty by the North eight times and the Rising S tar will run from tim fullseconds remaining brought the South five. Two games have end­ back slot. The only North starter who has score to 34-27, the closest the ed in a tie. It was a 6-6 tie in announced he will attend the Uni­ Beaumont last year. South came since the first half. versity is Jo e McDonald, a 176The North piled up a seven pound center from Sherman. point advantage before Richard Je rry Fouts of Wichita Falls Mencha&a of San Antonio could and George Kendall of San An­ break the ice for the South with gelo are the starting ends; while a two-hander with five minutes Don Goodwin of Arlington gone in the first quarter. Heights and Ja c k Archibald o f Highland Park will be at starting Norton sank a free throw to cut I tackle positions. The guards are the "Y a n k e e ” lead to five points j Lased, o s th * A sso ciated P r i s s before Damon Miller of Early i Detroit, behind the pitching of Je rry Cotter of Littlefield and —Photo fey B sttis beat the New ~Don Goss of Sunset. added two free throws to give the j Art Houtteman, GIB FORD York Yankees, 5-2, to take a two Co-captains for the game are a North an 18-11 halftime advan- J and one half game lead in the Smith and Darrell Lafitte for the tage. American League race Thursday. South and Goss and Newby for Early in the final period, Gor­ The idle Cleveland Indians went the North. don Weidman of Birdville scored into second place while the loss on a layup to give the North a dropped the Yankees into third. 31-18 lead, the biggest of the New York’s only runs come in the n ight. fourth inning when Hank Bauer Gib Ford, Amarillo star who walked and scored on Johnny The abbreviated meeting did plans to attend the University, Mize’s 12th homer of the year. T hursday’s meeting of the Tex­ aided the North cause with fine In the only other American as High School Coaches Associa­ not discuss the plan fo r making backboard play throughout the the annual school a six-day in­ League gable Randy Gumpert tion elected Grady Hester of Cor­ SINTON, Aug. I — UP)— The Al­ contest. needed only one run as the Chica­ pus Christi as president fo r the stead of five-day affair. The plan it pine Cowboys won the Southwest will be heard at the meeting of the go White Sox defeated the Phila­ coming year. State Semipro Baseball Tourna­ NORTH ( 3 4 ) delphia Athletics, 1-0, It then over-rode the recommen­ board of directors in Dallas in De­ ment Tuesday night when they ft tp pf Chico C arrasq u el’s sixth inning edged the Plymouth Oilers, I O. dations of the nominating commit­ cember. At the same time the 1951 SH Bell (P o ly ), f ...... _ 3 I 3 single extended the rookie Chicago tee and elected Herbert Hopper site of the coaching school will be The Cowboys will meet the Wei­ Bryant (Crozier shortstop’s hitting streak to 22 decided. a f Freeport vice-president. mar Truckers for the state title 6: 4 3 I Tech) f ... games. A suggestion for malting base­ The president appoints three of Ford (A m arillo), f I 2 3 4 I In the only game played in the and a place in the national tourna­ j the members of the board of di­ ball a summer sport was intro­ W iseman National League the Boston ment. rectors to serve on the nominating duced by John Tomlin of Port A r­ Knobby Graves, young Texas I 0 I 2 Braves moved into second place, (Birdville), f ... committee and they elect a chair­ thur. The plan would extend the Ohlen (P asch al), c 2 0 2 4 Christian University hurler, passed man who selects four from the baseball season beyond the school j Miller (E a r ly ), c .. ... 0 2 0 2 over the rained-out Brooklyn 12 batters during the game, but Dodgers, on the right arm of Vern term and through the summer. The membership-at-large. Abbott (Canyon), g 2 3 3 7 Brickford as they beat the St. was able to stop the Oilers when A feeling that since the vice­ plan was also refered to the board Mullen (A ustin), g 0 0 I 0 Louis Cardinals 5-1. it counted. president is always elevated to of directors. Horry (K erm it), g .. 0 0 I c Three new directors also took Flores (M a r fa ), g ... 0 0 0 0 president, this left the way open f o r a clique to come into control office. They were Howard Lynch Jam es (Vernon), g . 0 0 0 0 o f the association caused the of Amarillo for region I, Johnny McNeil (L a m e sa ), g 0 0 0 0 Stovall of F ort Worth Tech for — * ■“ change. region 3, and I. B. Griffith of Sils­ T o t a l s _____ _____ IO 14 15 34 bee fo r region 5. Weldon Phillips SOUTH ( 2 7 ) of Harlingen was re-elected di­ fg ft pf *P rector for region 7. Flinders (Thomas Hold-over directors are Abe Je ffe rso n ), f ____ 2 6 I 9 Houston of Brownwood fo r region Cole (Corpus 2, F. O. Scroggins of Monahans for I I 5 3 Christi), f ..... region 4, Buck Prejean o f Lufkin Dickson (W aco), «... I 0 4 2 Eight players, led by Ray Garza for region 6, and Jewell Wallace Mosher (T exas • n d Allen Farlow, moved into the of Thomas Je ffe rso n (San An­ C ity), g ................. I 0 3 2 OUR ENTIRE STOCK second round of the Intramural tonio) for region 8. Norton D epartm ent’s summer handball of M en’s B O N D S H I R E (T e x ark an a), g ... 3 3 5 9 singles tourney this week. Thomas S P O R T and D R E S S SH O E S 0 0 0 I Farlow, two time singles cham­ Charley Gorin Sold (I^ampasas), f pion and runner-up this spring, Menchaca To A tlan ta Crackers fo rm erly sold up to (L a n ie r ), f ...... .. I 0 0 2 turned back Frank Hafernick, 21B ased on th * A sso cia ted P r e s s 0 0 2 Miksch (W aelder), t 0 6 , 21-6. Garza, seeded number $ 12.95 p e r p air Ex-Longhorn southpaw pitcher Johnson (C ay u g a), g 0 0 I 0 ©ne in the tournament, had an easy Charley Gorin was sold by Mil­ Tipton (Milby), g — 0 0 2 0 time in ousting Charles Varnell, N ow a s low a s 21-1, 21-0. Farlow is seeded sec- waukee of the AAA American Bond (T e a g u e ), g ... 0 0 0 0 Association to the Atlanta Crack­ Kilpatrick ©nd behind Garza. ers of the AA Southern Associa­ (F rench), g ------- 0 0 0 0 An outstanding Southwest Con­ tion Wednesday fo r an undisclosed ference track performer, George sum. T otals ..........................9 9 23 27 K ad era of A&M, moved up by de Score by periods: In his la st outing, Gorin struck 1eating Richard Gonzales, 21-3, 5— 34 out six Columbus batters in order NORTH _______ IO 8 l l 2 1 * 10. SOUTH ......... - - 2 9 7 9— 27 to come within one strikeout of In other matches, third-seeded ..Officials: Tommy Birdwell, Gorthe American Association record. Don Smith knocked o f f R. B. Cun­ dofT Bailey, Carl Bredt. ningham, 21-8, 21-3; while Charles Burke beat W illiam Kenedy, 21 Intram ural Schedule Pro Hall of Fame Picks Baugh 17, 21-8; and Henry Beltran Based on tbs Associated Press H A N D B A L L S IN G L E S blasted Jim Upchurch, 21-8, 21-7. A professional football hall of j M atch es are to be played M onday, Two players won by default— A u gu st 7 a t 7 o’clock or a t a a earlier fame has taken in 25 "c h a r te r ” date. members. Only member from 'Andy Pumphrey from Ted Huey, Ray Carua v s. C h arles B urke. the Southwest was T C U ’s Sammy G eorge K adera vs. Andy Pum phrey. who was seeded fourth, and Isham Allen Farlow vs. Henry Ileltran . Baugh. Coward from T. N. Thompson. Don Sm ith va. Inhaul Coward. Houtteman Pitches Tigers Over Yanks High School Coaches Elect Hester, Hopper Alpine to Play Weimar for Title Close-Out Second Round Set For Handball Play Sale!! Friday, August 4. 1950 World New s Briefs— THE SUMMER TEXAN Page ^ British Plan $9 Billion U N F o r c e s R e t r e a t Defense if u. s. Helps y 0 N a k t o n g R iv e r few A m e ric a n s to visit N o r th K o ­ r e a a f t e r th e C o m m u n ists took over, said T h u r s d a y in W a s h in g ­ ton we should have g o n e to w a r w ith R ussia as f a r b a c k as 1940 if n e c e s s a r y to com pel the S o v ie ts to ab id e by a g r e e m e n ts . ort tk a A aaociated Proas B r i t a i n a n n o u n c e d T h u r s d a y she p la n s a $9 ,5 2 0 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 , t h r e e - y e a r p r o g r a m to build up W e s te r n de­ f e n c es a g a i n s t So viet Russia, if t h e U n ite d S ta te s will help pay the bill. I n r e t u r n f o r U n ite d S t a te s f i n ­ ★ a n c ia l aid, B rita in o f f e r e d to s u p ­ S e c r e t a r y of D e f e n s e Jo h n s o n ply h e r N o r t h A tla n tic P a c t p a r t ­ a n n o u n c e d T h u r s d a y in W a s h in g ­ n e r s w ith f r e e m ilita r y e q u ip m e n t to n t h a t N a tio n a l G u a r d s m e n a nd m a d e in B rita in . R e serv ists in c ritic a l jo b s will be ★ d e f e r r e d te m p o r a r ily f r o m active F d w i n W . P a u l e y , one o f the m ilita r y duty. A h ea d o f th e m T O K Y O , T h u r s d a y , A ug. 3.— I p ressed lines. (ZP)— A m e ric a n tr o o p s T h u r s d a y : w ere A r m y r e i n f o r c e m e n t s which fell b a c k on th e c e n t r a l f r o n t to had a r r iv e d e arlie r. O n e o f th e critica l s e c to r s was m a k e th e N a k to n g R iv e r th e U n ite d N a tio n s d e f e n s e b a r r i e r f o r ’ w est o f P u s a n , th e m a in su pply m uch o f th e n o r th a n d w e s t sides p o rt a t th e s o u th e a s te r n tip of K orea. F ig h tin g r a g e d only 40 of th e K o re a n b e a c h h e a d . F ie ld d ispa tc he s said th e g e n ­ miles to th e w est o f th e city. M a rin e e q u ip m e n t, big P e rsh in g e r a l w ith d r a w a l w as e x p e c te d to be t h e la s t m a jo r U .N . pullback ta n k s a n d flame t h r o w e r s w ere u n ­ o f t h e w a r. B a ttle - r e a d y U.S. lo aded f r o m ship to s h o re th r o u g h ­ M a r in e s s tr e a m e d a s h o re and o u t W e d n e s d a y n ig h t a t a n u n ­ s ta r te d im m e d ia te ly f o r t h e h a rd - specified s o u th e r n p o rt. U.S. ta n k s and va r m y tro o p s w e re e n g a g e d in bloody fighting a f t e r th ro w in g a c o u n t e r a t t a c k th a t s to p p e d a p o w e rfu l K o re a n Red d riv e 40 miles w e s t o f P u san . P e r h a p s 6,000 M a rin e s w ere in ­ volved. Profs Dig Bones As Deadline Nears Ba th a When Y O U graduate you’ll hove a complete record of your years at the University-!F- you tell the Fee Fixer N O W that you want a CACTUS O v e r 6 0 0 Pages and thousands of pictures of Y o u and Your Friends A C o m p le te R e co rd of your School Y e a r The N a tio n 's Finest Y e a r Book A sso cia ted Presa F o u r U n iv e rs ity of T e x a s a ri ch a e o lo g ists a r e m a k in g a last I se a r c h f o r r e m a in s o f a n c ie n t I n ­ d ia n c a m p site s a n d e a rly s e t t l e ­ m e n ts in t h e S o u th w e s t T e x a s a r e a to be c o v e re d by th e Rio G r a n d e F a lc o n D am re se rv o ir. T h e N a tio n a l P a r k S e rv ic e c o n ­ t r a c te d w ith th e U n iv e rs ity to su rv e y th e 100-square-m iIe a re a f o r a rc h a e o lo g ical a n d h isto rical m a te ria ls . T he dam to be c o n s tr u c te d a b o u t 72 miles below I,aredo is sc h e d u le d f o r c o m p letio n in a b o u t five years. A r c h a e o lo g ist J a c k T. H u g h e s of D allas he a d s th e field p a r ty . A ssistin g a r e R o b e rt H H u m p h ­ rey s of H o u sto n , H e r b e r t Kiosa of B e r tr a m a n d J o h n C a rro ll of B ry a n , U n iv e r s ity s tu d e n ts . U n i ­ v e r s ity a r c h a e o lo g is t Alex D. K rie g e r is su p e rv isin g th e w ork. M usic Building to Lose Cool ‘A ir’ of Distinction W ith in a y e a r th e Music B u ild ­ in g will lose its d istin c tio n as th e only a ir-c o n d itio n e d b u ild in g on th e c am pu s. T h e Music B u ild in g lib r a r y m ay lose som e p o p u la r ity w ith n o n ­ music m a jo r s who stu d y t h e r e on h o t s u m m e r da'ys. W h e n co m p le ted , th e new e x ­ p e r im e n ta l Science Building, th e H e a lth C e n te r , th e classroom bu ild in g s, a n d th e J o u r n a lis m B u ilding will be a ir-c o n d itio n e d . be sure to check it for you, Tell him to check The Ranger, too! UN Votes to Talk Korean War First L A K E S U C C E S S , Aug. 3.— — In a b i t t e r session sc a r r e d b f c h a rg e s o f blackm ail and s la n d e r , th e S e c u r ity Council rejected T h u r s d a y n ig h t a Russian a t t e m p t to h a v e th e council c o n sid e r a d ­ mission o f Red C hina a h e a d of the b o r e a n war. I n s te a d , th e council a p p ro v e d * U n ite d S t a te s m otion to k eep on d iscu ssing N o rth K orean a g g r e s ­ sion a n d to t r y f o r a w ay to c o n ­ fine th e w a r to K o re a alone. T h e vo te to s u b s ti tu te tim U n ite d S t a te s p ro p o sa l f o r th® R u ssia n ite m was 8 to I . The S o viet U n io n voted alone a n d th is did n o t c o u n t as a v e to s in c e a g e n d a v o te s a r e c o nsidered a s p r o c e d u r e a n d n o t m a j o r im p o r ­ ta n c e . T h e U n ite d S ta te s , B r i ta in , F r a n c e , N a tio n a lis t C hina, N o r ­ w ay, C u b a , E c u a d o r and E g y p k vo te d f o r it. In d ia a n d Y u g o ­ slavia a b s ta in e d . T h e U n ite d S ta te s p ro p o sa l w a # to c o n s id e r im m e d ia te ly “ a g g r e s s sion u p o n th e R epublic o f K o r e a .1* T h e R u s sia n s s o u g h t to m a k e ti item r e a d “ p e a c e fu l s e t tle m e n t th e K o r e a n q u e s tio n ." T h e y wei v oted d ow n on this. The co un cil r e f u s e d to p u t th e C hinese q u e s ­ tion on th e a g e n d a . A Korean Fantasy By B O B S M I T H T e ra n To be sure o f your c o p y of The C A C T U S — tell the FEE F IX E R to T e n N o r th K o re a n divisions, possibly 100,000 m en, flung t h e m ­ selves a t U .S. a n d S o uth K o r e a n s tr y i n g to hold th e line u n til U.S. M arine a n d A rm y r e i n f o r c e m e n ts can a r r iv e a t th e f r o n t. T h e d e f e n s e p e rim e te r, shrunk* en to 150 m iles o r less, w as m a r k e d by flam ing tow ns, f r o m C h in ju on the south to Y on g d o k on th e e a s t c o a st 80 miles n o r t h of P u s a n . A m e r ic a n an d Sou th K o re a n T ro o p s w e re being p ush ed b a c k on th e n o r th a n d west. Five im ­ p o r t a n t d e f e n s e points have b e e n yielded within th r e e days. L a te s t to fall was K u m chon , 35 miles n o r th w e s t o f T a e g u , p ro v i­ sional ca p ital 60 miles n o r t h w e s t of P u s a n . G e n e ra l M a c A r t h u r ^ w a r s u m ­ m a r y e a r ly T h u r s d a y id e n tifie d IO N o r th K o r e a n divisions a i o n # the f r o n t . E le m e n ts o f th re « | U.S. divisions and S ou th K o r e a n divisions w e r e ta k in g th e shock* E d ito r L ike th e b lin d m an, he fails t® b re a k th e stillness, while a c tu a ll y a c c e n t u a t i n g it. “ C heez ahs ho keeyo. Chee* a h s ho k e e y o ." T he fis h m o n g e rs Y o k e f lo a ts t h r o u g h th e m o rn in g , a n d a so ld ie r fr o m t h e W est t h i n k s he h e a rs a c o yo te how ling, a n d su d d e n ly r e m e m b e r s he is n o t a t home. T h e m o r n in g calm is over. T h e tro o p s a r e a w a k e n e d , a n d t h e y fu m b le in to th e ir g e a r, g r u m b lin g . T h e y m ov e on to w a r d th e f r o n t . T h e e a r ly m o r n in g sun, risin g alniist im p e rc e p tib ly a m o n g th e h a z y clouds, s trik e s th e b a r r e n hills a n d t u r n s th e m d a r k yellow, le a v in g the v a lle y in a h a lf dark ness. A s th e tr o o p s p ass th ro u g h th® village, a child, d ir ty , ra g g e d , h u n ­ g ry , holds o u t h e r h a n d n u m b ly a n d peeps, “ C h o o n g gum . C ho on g gun* give-o m e .” O n e o f th e G Fs, a g e n e r o m boy, p la c e s a piece o f g u m in h e r h a n d as he g oes by, a n d she s t a n d s g a z in g a f t e r him. T h e t r o o p s a r e aw ake, and be­ gin to sin g , u n h a r m o n io u s sin g in g , b u t s in g in g n e v e rth e le ss. As th® little g irls s ta n d s by th e ro a d s t a r ­ in g a f t e r h e r soldiers, she h e a r* th e m s in g in g a t u n e she has k n o w n all h e r life, th e tu n e which w® k no w as “ C l e m e n tin e :” “ C i g a r e t t e , C h ocoletto, C h o o n g gum -o give- me. in * wooden pack strapped to H a v e no m a m a , have no p a p a , his back, comes down th® road. H a v e n o o ne to give-o m e .” T h e y o u n g soldier s tir s f itf u lly in his sleep, d r e a m in g mixed d r e a m s of his hom e to w n w ith m ud h u ts in s te a d o f the h o uses to which he is a c c u sto m e d . W h ite -g a rb e d people f lit in a nd o u t o f r a m s h a c ­ kle b u ilding s on one side o f the s tr e e t, while on th e o t h e r s ta n d the people w ith which he g re w up. He a w a k e s writh a s t a r t , glances a t his w a tc h — 4 :3 0 in th e m o rn in g . He re a liz e s he has b e e n d re a m in g , a n d cu rses. He is in K orea. T h e y ’ll b e g e tti n g us up in a m in u te , he th in ks, a n d he rolls o ver on his back to t r y to r u b the sleep o u t o f his eyes. He looks a r o u n d th e c o u n t r y ­ side in th e false d a w n , b r e a th in g th e b risk a ir o f the m o r n in g calm . B row n, b a r r e n hills, o v e r c a s t sky, a h a lf - d a r k n e s s ; brow'n m u d h u ts ju m b le d h a p h a z a r d ly in to a village, so m b re people, m o stly w om en, go­ ing a b o u t t h e i r e a r ly m o r n in g ta s k s ; th e whole c o u n t r y a s tu d y in brow n . He sh u d d e rs. He is n ’t used to such thing s. A blind m a n fee ls his w ay alon g the d u s ty ro a d , th e long, low m o u r n f u l w histle e c h o in g b a ck to his e a r s to w a r n him o f o bstacles, th e c a n e ta p p in g in th e d a r k ­ ness; th e only, a n d t h e r e f o r e g h o stly so u n d s o f th e e a rly m o r n ­ ing. A f is h m o n g e r , c a r r y i n g his fish Friday, August 4, 1950 THE S U M M E R TEXAN Page 4 — by Boffs Bevo V cann 9 < 2 deserved ^ Jidefan ds would give leases are fighting for federal ownership. The lease charges are expected to be equal. The evils cancel each other and do not change the ethical questions. The bald argum ent th a t “ I think, on general principle, the central government needs the money more,” overlooks the fa c t that Texas trails the nation in a hundred vital human services, and that a fight for a higher natural resources tax in the next Legislature won t be as sig­ nificant if we are losing the natu ral re­ sources. Here is the basis of the “historical e r­ ro r ” motion for rehearing : 1. On March I, 1945, a Congressional Resolution, sections one and two, was passed by the House allowing Texas to retain its public lands and pay its own debts. The Senate then added a third sec­ tion which provided th a t the P resident could negotiate with Texas for cession of Texas lands on “equal footing” instead ★ ★ of subm itting to the first two sections. There has been some talk that “conser­ vative oil interests’ are backing state ow n2. President Tyler decided to act under sections one and two only. President Polk ership. This is true. Obviously, operators to which agreed later, and so the treaty was nego­ will give development leases w ant Texas tiated —with no “equal footing under­ to retain ownership. By the same token standing. and this is usually overlooked—oil com­ 3. On December 29, 1845, Congress panies to which the central government said in a formal resolution that Texas was adm itted on “an equal footing." Texas contends th at the first resolution was controlling. Justice Douglas erro n­ eously cited the March U resolution as con­ taining the “equal footing” clause. G E N E R A L M acARTHUR S recent ed“The decision as it now stands rests on L't th a t no criticism of United States an alternative provision which never went poops in Korea could be transm itted out into effect— a non-existent tre a ty — but f the F a r East Command by press cor­ of this historical error the court seems espondents smacks ot Asiatic face s a \unaw are,” the Texas attorney general ng.” said in his motion for rehearing. Reports trickling into the United States lave told how high officers had to stay »t the fro n t to keep some troops from ligh-tailing it to the rear under fire. he exan 3ther reports have said th a t the troops arriving from Japan were poorly trained T h e Da i l y T e x a n , a s t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r o f T h e U n i ­ v e r s i t y o f T e x a s , is p u b l i s h e d in A u s t i n e \ e r y m o r n i n g and in no condition for lighting. e xcept Munday a nd S a t u r d a y , .September to J u n e ami e x c e p t d u r i n g hol i day a n d e x a m i n a t i o n p e r i o d s , a n d bi ­ While this lack of tra in in g may reflect weekly d u r i n g t he s u m m e r se ss io ns u n d e r t h e title o f T h e S u m m e r T e x a n on Tue s da y a n d F r i d a y by T e x a s partly on General M acArthur, a frank re­ N e w s co n trib u tio n * w ill be a c c e p t e d by te le p h o n e S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n s , Inc. port to the American public might help ( 2- 24 73) o r a t t h e e d i t o r i a l of fi ce J . B. I , o r s t t h e sell the public on more military prepai ill­ News Laboratory, JU. 101. I nq ui ri es concerning d e l i v e r y a n d a d v e r t i s i n g s h o u l d b e m a d e i n J . I L 108 ness as a general policy. (2-2473). S t u d e n t s a r e i n v i t e d t o vi sit t h e e d i t o r a n d a r o m a t a Criticism is healthy. No man ever be­ e d i t o r d u r i n g t h e m o r n i n g h o u r s . _______ ____ came so mighty th a t he could shroud him­ self in past and present glories and forbid mention of facts which might not speak Represented for National Advertising by National well of him. A d v e r t i s i n g S e r v i c e , I nc. , Co l l e g e P u b l i s h e r s R e p r e ­ sentative. M v It is true th at military security in time 420 M a d i s o n Ave. N e w Yo r k , N. Y. C h i c a g o — B o s t o n — L o s A n g e l e s — S a n h r a n , i sco of w ar is essential on such m atters as SUBSC RIP TI ON HATES troop movements and numbers, battle lac In A u s t i n by M a i l : $1. 60 f o r t w o s e m e s t e r s ; $0. 76 tics, and so on. But if the nation is unpre­ f or one s e m e s t e r . I n A u s t i n , d e l i v e r e d : $1. 00 f o r t w o s e m e s t e r s ; $0. 60 pared, the nation should be told the tru th . for o ne s e m e s t e r . O u t s i d e A u s t i n : $1. 00 f o r t w o s e m e s t e r s ; IQ.oO f or We should be more concerned w ith the ___________ one semester. reputation and future of the U nited S tates T H E SI M M E R T E X A N C A N B E P I C K E D U P IN than th a t of M acA rthur or the Defense J O U R N A L I S M B U I L D I N G 108 A T T H E S A M E R A T E S Al l F O R D E L I V E R Y BY P E O P L E L I V I N G O U T S I D B D epartm ent. __ T H E D E L I V E R Y Z O N E . _______________________ LOGIC AND JU S T IC E will take a severe beating if the nation’s Supreme Court denies the Texas request for a re­ hearing in the case which turned over tideland rights to the central government. Justice Douglas based the m ajority decision on the idea th a t Texas entered the Union on an “equal footing with other states which have been ruled (in California and Louisiana) to be subser­ vient with respect to tidelands dominion. He relied solely, as indicated by his footnote on page six of the opinion, on si provision in a Congressional resolution of March I, 1845, which was not negoti­ ated. The four-to-three decision wa# chal­ lenged by Justice F ra n k fu rte r, who said how Texas has lost the land “ remains to me a puzzle,” and by Justice Minton, who said that Texas owned the m arginal area and it has not been shown th a t it lost it when annexed. Oh eOr" Ill J 4 urts T S u M fiiR /T . . . . (O llie d la iv S ( o d I t will cost the taxpayers of Texas quite i bit for Austin and other Texas residents x) find out legally whether they can coninue to buy groceries and patronize other establishments falling under the Texas ‘blue laws.” At a time when state money is so scarce that worthwhile projects can t be under­ taken, it seems particularly foolish to waste both time and funds in search of r decision which m atters relatively little either way. The Legislature can easily and inexpen­ sively reject or continue the “ blue laws” when it convenes in Janu ary. S tate government m ust become penny, as well as dollar w ise. - - - ■— — .I -— - 1 PERMANENT STAFF E d i t o r - i n - c h i e f _____________ R O N N I E D U G G E R A sso c ia te E d i t o r — C H A R L E Y T R IM B L E E d itorial A s s is t a n t ...................... Joh n O h en d alsk i S p o r ts E d ito r .............— -...... J a m e s Rech A s s o c ia te S p o r ts E d i t o r ------------- H o w a rd I a g e N ig h t E d ito r s .... C harley L e w is, C lan B r e w e r A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r , — ............... J u n e h i t z g e i a l d S o c ie ty E d ito r ------T at P i t m a n T e le g r a p h E d ito r .................. R e u b e n S tr ick la n d P ic tu r e E d it o r ...................; Jo!™ C o l v i n S c ie n c e E d it o r ------------------ — — ...... T o h S m ith S T A F F FOR T H I S I S S U E N ig h t E d itor ........ C opyreaders CHA R LIE LEW IS P in c k n e y J o h n so n , Jo A n n D ick er so n , Joel K irkp atrick. Mild red K lessel, Bob S m ith N i g h t S p o r ts E d ito r s Jim R ech, H o w a r d P a g e N ig h t S o c ie t y E d ito r .................... F lo r a B la n to n / Oh! Oh! I think I see tf)' Tower! On People A la sk a n Lake, Bears Lure U T President By RONNIE DUGGER J . raw E di t o r W E R E C E I V E D th is c h e e r f u l g r e e t i n g from Lloyd H and, th** c u r r e n t s t u d e n t p r e s id e n t w o r k in g d u r in g the su m m e r in A la s k a : “ A cou p le o f oth e r f e l l o w s and I h a v e h it a h d » a n za up h ere at a n ea rb y lake. W e have m a d e frie n d s w ith an old R ussian tr a p p e r who h as cab in s and m o to r b o a t s , b oth o f w hich he has p u t a t our d isposal. L a s t S u n d a y I c a u g h t one o f the m o st b e a u tif u l r a in b o w trout y o u ’ve e v e r se en . We plan a beat h u n t in t w o w e e k s . ” H a v e n ’t heard f r o m bim in three w e e k s , n ow . H o p e he g o t th e bear. S ib e ria , S ib e ria, b eck on not, S ib e ria . A A J a m e s H art, C h a n c e llo r -e le c t, f a r fr o m r e lu c t a n t to m ix w ith hoi p olloi, is a t B a r to n 's b a s k in g in the sun a lm o s t e v e r y w e e k day. Mark B a tte r so n , e x - a s s o c ia t e ed ito r, padd ed in to jr h e o f f i c e the o t h e r d ay, g a r b e d in B o h em ia n dark b lu e lin en sh o es, and p an ted : “ S o t h e y d id n ’t pick H a r t S t il - ‘ w e ll. . B u t h e w as k idd in g , no less. Ar if JUDGE IR A GALLAW AY r o u se d u s o u t o f ou r slu m b e r T h u r s d a y m o rn in g . T h e y o u n g f o r ­ m er a s s is ta n t to C o n g r e s s m a n T h o r n b e r r y w o n h is r a c e for C ole­ m a n C o u n ty j u d g e by la c in g his t w o o p p o n e n ts, in c lu d in g t h e in­ c u m b e n t , w it h o u t a r u n o f f . Got 91 p er c e n t o f th e v o te in h is h om e to w n area. “ T h e p eo p le y ou and I k now in th e U n iv e r s ity n o w — f i f t e e n y e a r s f r o m n ow , w ho k n o w s ? ” J u d g e Ira w ondered. A ve, who does . . . ★ ★ P a u l S t r a w m a n , w h o le d the b la n k e t ta x f ig h t a g a in s t t h e A th ­ le tic C oun cil a f e w y e a r s a g o w it h ­ o u t a n y p r a c tic a l e f f e c t , w a s back in A u stin a f t e r g e t t i n g Jiis eco M A fr o m C olu m b ia U n iv e r s ity . H e ’s g o in g in to the C o m m e r c e D e ­ p a r tm e n t. ★ ★ T h en oT c r u s a d in g J. P. P O R ­ T E R , t h e P u l itz e r -P r iz e n o m in e e w h o a lm o st s in g le - h a n d e d ly cau sed t h e a m a z in g u p h ea v a l an d im ­ p r o v e m e n t o f the T e x a s s y s t e m o f m e n ta l in s t itu t io n s , has, by g r a p e ­ v in e rep ort, g o n e to w ork for t h e St. L ou is P o st-D isp a tc h . Carnival at C oliseu m Tonight C lo w n s, c a llio p e m u sic , a n d p ret­ S e ip e l, J o h n y e H u m a n ty g irls are to h ig h lig h t th e a n nu al N ig h t A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r J u n e F it z g e r a ld B e t a S ig m a Fhi C a rn iv a l a t City A s s i s t a n t s ............... Tat B o m a r, B illy J e n k in s C o lise u m , F r id a y e v e n i n g , *t 7 o ’clock . A ll p r o c e e d s a re t<| go N i g h t T e le g r a p h E d ito r .. R e u b e n W. S tr ick la n d to G ir lstow n , U S A , h e r e in Te^as. A s s i s t a n t ------------------------- -— — L e o n V . B a n on A s s is t a n t s .......... Mina \ C a n d y Luck**tt, d arlin g o f m a n y a b e a u t y c o n t e s t , WI ites from a su m m e r ca m p that she s g a in e d f i f t e e n p oun ds. H m m . . . A nd th e n t h e r e ’s W a lla c e E n g le w o r k in g in th e H o u s e G a ller ies in V\ a sh in g ton. B a r e f o o t S a n d e r s le ft fo r E u­ rop e th is w e e k on an A m e r ic a n , not a R ussian boat. O r i g i n a l p la n s called for th e R u r s i n s k y < raft, b u t it w a s all a m ista k e . if A My b roth er Roy w e n t to T o k y o on le a v e fro m Y o k oh am a and sa w G e n e ra l M a c A r th u r le a v in g h ea d ­ q u ar te rs. H is a c c o u n t : ‘‘E x p e c t i n g to se e a b o a s tf u l ar­ r o g a n t look, I w a s a sto u n d e d a t the h u m b le sm ile an d slo w w a lk o f th e g e n e r a l. I cou ld s e e he w a s m uch o ld e r than his pictures. Me w a lk ed by, g o t in to his car, an d s lo w ly d rove in to the h eart o f t h e city. T h e J a p a n e s e re vere him and all b ow ed or sa lu ted . . . T he th in g I ’m b r in g in g o u t is th a t a t 72 y e a r s c f a g e , he had w ork ed S a tu r d a y n ig h t an d all d a y S u n d a y fo r you.'* if if O L D -T I M E R S w ill a p p r e c ia te this. Liz S m ith , f o r m e r a ss o c ia t e e d it o r o f th e R a n g e r , the sta id U n i v e r s it y h u m o r m a g a z in e , is a t la st r e p o r t p la n n in g to take on a job w ith a S o u t h e r n B a p tist m a g a ­ zine. ★ ★ TOM A F F L E C K , the le a d in g c a m p u s p r o p o n e n t o f all kind s of r e f o r m s , ( s i c ) , e x p la in s ou r c o L lim n a b o u t lib er a l p r o -T r u m a n trend in so m e o f the c o u n ty c o n ­ v e n t io n s w ith h is c h a r a c t e r is tic b r e v ity : “ W hy, t h a t w a s pest p olitics. D o e s n ’t m e a n a n y t h in g . ” Travis E m p loy m en t Ri s e s T h e T e x a s E m p lo y m e n t C om ­ m issio n e s t im a t e d th a t e m p lo y m e n t w ill rise to 4 4 , 6 5 5 in T ravis C o u n ­ ty by A u g u s t IO. U n e m p lo y m e n t in t h e c o u n ty d ropped to 1,5 6 0 J u n e I. T h is is a d e c r e a s e in the u n e m p lo y m e n t f ig u r e s o f the t w o p r e c e d in g m on th s. O ffic ia l Notices r « r t l l o f t h e doctors I q u a l i f y i n g e x a m i n a t i o n i n E n g l i s h will be g i v e n I* r»* tlay, A n g u s t 4, f r o m 8 t o IO 0 in the e v e n i n g , in Ma i n B u i l d i n g I T h i s is a d i s c u s s i o n e x a m i n a t i o n ana requires writing materials. S t u d e n t s w i s h i n g lo t a k e t h e e x a m i ­ n a t i o n sho ul d leave t hei r n a m e s a t t h # LnKlmh office. moDY c BOATRIGHT friday, August 4, 1950 T14E SU M M ER TEXAN News Must Agitate in U SSR Millions Are Working to Sway Red Public Opinion P U B L I C O P IN IO N IN S O V I E T R U S S I A . B y A le x Inkele*. R ussian ^ e * e « r c K C e n te r S tu d ie s I. C a m ­ b rid ge: H ar v a rd U n iv e r s ity P ress. 3 7 9 p a g e s, in d e x e d . $5. Few informed Americans need to be told that the agencies of communication have been made in Russia the tools of the Communist Party for the propagation of doc­ trine. But the adjustment in think­ ing necessary to enable one to see how controlled stimuli are the basis of Soviet thought and action is sometimes difficult. How can the Russian say his press is free and ours is not? That his radio and movies are free and curs are not? The answer, of course, is that in Bolshevik theory, the commun­ ications agencies are the property of the people and serve the people by pointing the way to the ach­ ievement of Bolshevik ends. But the American in his totally dif­ ferent ideological climate, smiling sadly at the Leninist “error,” often misses the full implication of this concept. The Alex Inkelcs study, done under the suspices of the Russian Research Center at Cambridge, so thoroughly details and documents the Soviet techniques and mach­ inery of opinion manipulation that the leader can begin to see why Russians are different. This is a thorough and complete exposition of a huge, integrated system of lass persuasion, with facts avai­ lable no where else in English. And completeness is achieved with­ out cost to readability. Different as are the newspapers of the United States, England, and France, they are of a single species as compared with the Russian. Lenin supplied the key in 1921: a newspaper must be a collective propagandist, agitator, and organ­ izer. He compared it to “a scaffold­ ing, surrounding a building under construction, which marked out the contours of the structure, en­ hanced the effective assignment of tasks, and made possible a clear view- of the results achieved by the common, organized efforts of The the builders.” The number of newspapers In Russia increased from 859 in 1913 to 8,769 in 1939 and dropped to 7,200 in 1949 because of war costs and destruction. Circulation in 1949 was 31 million for all news­ papers, as compared with more than 53 million for United States dailies. Organization is pyramidal, with 25 central all-union news­ papers with one-fourth of the cir­ culation, at the apex. Provincial and sector newspapers are at a second level, 4 52 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. Texan For Rent GARDEN TY PE N ew ly fu rn is h e d o r u n fu rn is h e d one bedroom ap artm en ts w ith larg e l i v i n g - d i n i n g r o o m , t ile k i t c h e n a n d b ath, am ple closets .suitable for fam ilies or s tu d e n ts . N e a r U n iv e r ­ s i t y . R o b e r t E. L ee S chool. F r e e u s e of B e n d i e s . P la y g ro u n d s. W indow fan s, c e n tr a l h eatin g . See M a n a g e r a t DOTA. E . 8 2 n d o r call 8 - 3 1 4 9 . N o r t h w o o d T e r r a c e 8 2 n d a n d Red River. Eat APARTMENTS Red DE LUXE R iver N ew ly com pleted apartm ents n ow ready for inspection. E norm ous liv in g -d in in g room , kitchen, bedroom a n d b a t h . A b ro ok tile. K r o c k i e r s e c ­ tional f u rn itu r e . K am es ch airs, H o lly ­ wood beds w ith best in n e rsp rin g m a ttre s s e s . F u rn is h e d for 8 perso n s. 2 % b l o c k s f r o m c a m p u s . S h o w n by a p p o i n t m e n t o n ly . $ 1 2 0.00 p e r m o n t h . O w ner. 6-8720. Fiction 1. T h e C a r d i n a l , by Henry Mor­ ton Robinson. Simon & Schuster. $3.50. $1. 2. W o r l d E n o u g h a n d T i m e , by Robert Penn Warren. Random S3.50. 3. T h e W a l l , by John Hersey. Knopf. $4. 4. S t a r M o n e y , by Kathleen Winsor. . Appleton-Century-Crofts $3. 2. J u b i l e e T r a i l , by Gwen Bris­ House 2 42 2 S A N A N T O N I O S T R E E T j B eau tifu lly fu rn is h e d 2 sto ry house, I Ii blocks fro m c a m p u s . L iving room , din in g room , k itc h e n , w ith new electric r e fr ig e r a to r and gas ran g e. 6 bedroom s an d 8 baths. C om pletely redecorated. C arpeted floors, D u n c a n P h y f e M a h o g a n y f u r ­ n i t u r e in l i v i n g ro o m a n d d i n i n g room . I n n e rs p rin g m a ttre ss e s. Fenced y a r d . I m m e d i a t e p o s s e s s i o n . Will r e n t to m atu re, adu lt group on p e rm an en t basis. Teachers, nurses, g rad u ate s tu d e n ts o r p rofessional types. U tili­ ti e s paid. 1 2 0 0 .0 0 m o n t h l y . O w n e r — 6-3720. F O R R E N T : N i c e l y f u r n i s h e d 3 ro om house. Close to c o m m u n ity ce n 'c r. C h i l d r e n w e lc o m e . P h o n e 7- 1 6 6 5 . Help W anted N E E D D E P E N D A B L E s t u d e n t w h o ca n sell p r i n t i n g to w ork on a r e g u l a r s c h e d u l e t o t o t a l a b o u t 5 5 h o u r s w e e k ly . Cook P r i n t i n g Co. 304 W . 1 5 t h S t . NEED DEPENDABLE student w ith s o m e a d v e r t i s i n g e x p e r i e n c e t o sell a d v e r tis in g f o r A u s tin G ossip D igest. M o s t wor k o n a r e g u l a r s c h e d u l e t o t a l ­ i n g a b o u t 15 h o u r s w e e k l y . 30 4 W. I 5i h St. Classifieds Bring Results N E W AND M O DERN A IR -C O N D IT IO N E D Block N o r t h e a s t S t a d i u m . I m m e d i a t e and S eptem ber reservations. c A R O S S E f f i c i e n c y — $ 5 0.00 t o $ 75.0 0 1 b e d r o o m — $0 5.00 2 b e d r o o m — $ 11 0.00 A dults only. 2 - 6 2 0 1 o r co m e to 23 1 1 R i v e r 4 to 6 P .M . Red N HuraiioH uumrj o (iran bes HGIC30 UUUE1QQ (anta a m u h r R M uons W HARRI SO N W I LSON-PE ARSON • REALTORS” Phone P H I L A N T H R O P Y IN A M E R I. CA . B y E d w a rd C. J en k in s. N ew York: A s s o c ia tio n P re ss. 183 pp. i e s Madison from the 1787 Con­ stitutional Convention at Philadel­ phia, at which he was the guiding j intellectual and technical author- j ity, through his service in the j tow. Crowell. $3. Virginia Legislature until 1800. Non-Fiction New B a n t a m 25-cent issues: Strangely enough for a man Till D e a t h D o U* P a r t , by John 1. R o o s e v e l t in R e t r o s p e c t , b v who was later president, Madi­ Dickson Carr. Did his fiancee John Gunther. Harper. $3.75 son reached the zenith of his pub­ fire the fatal shot? Dr. Gideon 2. J o h n A d a m s a n d t h e A m e r i ­ lic career ut the cpnvention. He ca n Revolution, by ( athel ine v a s the first to arrive, the last t i l l answers the question in this fiist published by Haiper Drinker Bowen. Little, Brown. $3. to leave; he attended all session* whodunit in 1944. 3. C o u r t r o o m , by Quentin Rey­ kept laborious convention notes, j ★ n o l d s . Farrar. $3.75. and virtually wrote the influent- ! Angel* C«mpf by Ray Morrison. 4. W o r l d s in C o l l i s i o n , by Im­ ial Virginia plan for the Con­ A young hoodlum rolls a lush in manuel Velikovsky. Doubleday. stitution, Leis Angelet and a counselor L i e s $ 1.50. j In spite of his thin, piping 5. T h ? M a t u r e Mi n d , by II. A. voice, the sallow-faced Madison to make him grow up in a few weeks a t .J-he state’s forestry Overstreet. Norton. $2.95 was unchallenged in scholarship ; camp. I t ’s earthy. First copyright­ j and influence. ed by Morrison in 1949. He joined Hamilton and Ja.\ I ★ Produce j in writing the classic Federalist! My S i s t e r G o o d N i g h t , bv Gor­ papers in favor of ratification, don MeDonell. He knew he should­ Quick j Then, defeated by Patrick Henry’s n ’t move the body but he did. She j opposition for the Senate, he ser-| was too beautiful to leave there I ved in the national House, w here in the alley. So they thought he Results he introduced what became the did it. A Blue Book serial of 1947, first ten amendments to the Con­ first published by Little Brown in For Sale January, 1948. stitution. About this time, Mr. Brant says, { 194 7 M - S Y S T EM H o u s e T r a i l e r w i t h 8x 1 0 room attached. B utane a n d Madison was also ghost-writing electric re frig e ra to r. Two evaporative Teenager Novel coolers. 15 1 8 B a r t o n Springs R o a d for George Washington. L o t 49. P h o n e 7 - 2 4 3 0 . A firm advocate of centralized W ill W in $2,500 KOR S A L E : B e a u t i f u l M a h o g a n y d i n i n g ­ authority at the convention, Madi room suite. In g o o d co n d i t i o n . S uite I J. B. Lippincott Company, boob in c l u d e s t a b l e , bu ffet, c h i n a c l o s e t a n d son by 1821 had become “an oracle 6 chairs. P h o n e 6 - 3 1 0 9 o r s e e a t 712 publishers, and the magazine Cl strict construction” and a S p a r k s Ave. states’ righter. S e v e n t e e n , in order to encourage Leather G oo d s During the Virginia ratification the writing of novels for young fight with Henry, Madison told people, are co-sponsoring a liter­ COW BOY B O O T S , h a t s , pants, belts, J h o l s t e r s , s a d d l e s , b r i d le s . All l e a t h e r a secretary th at “ when Patrick ary prize competition for the best, goods m ade to order. E v e r y t h i n g Henry arose to reply to him, a i maturely conceived novel with western. C a p it o l S a d d l e r y 1614 L a ­ pause, a shake of the head, or a modern setting, which honestly v aca. striking gesture would undo an and thoughtfully depicts the ex­ hour’s work before a word was periences and the problems of Pets uttered.” But Henry lost to Madi­ today’s teenagers. W A N T E D f* goo d h o m e f o r e a t a n d son’s methodical logic. I The contest will close March I, kittens. P h o n e 8-5175. 1951. Anyone, except members In fighting the Alien anil Se­ P E T S I Good h o m e s w a n t e d f o r f o u r baby k itte n s . Phone 6-9252. dition laws as the century ended, of the staffs of Lippincott and S e v e n t e e n , and their families, who Madison said: Rooms for Rent resides in the United States, any “ To the press alone, chequered of its possessions, or Canada, as it is with abuses, the world RIG H T AT U N IV E R S IT Y . R o o m fo r boys. N o w o r fall, d u s t off G u a d a ­ is indebted for all the triumphs may compete in the contest. lu p e, Bha rti o p t i o n a l . P h o n e 2 - 7 67 8. The judges are Helen Dean which have been gained by rea­ son and humanity over error and Fish, editor of Lippincott Books ROOMS A D JO IN IN G CA M PU S for Young People, Bryna Ivens, oppression.” S i n g l e a n d d o ub le. fiction editor of S e v e n t e e n , and Madison beleived in an enlight­ P r i v a t e e n t r a n c e , s h o w e r . Maid s e r ­ vice. Bus. Good neighborhood. ened federal democracy and in J. Donald Adams, former editor G a r a g e , t e l e p h o n e in r o o m . “ the protection of the diversityt and now contributing editor of S e lle r s As reported by Publishers’ Week­ ly: Furnished Apartments paid. Am erican History N ot Finished Yet Constitutionalist Madison Washington's Ghost Writer Furnished BLOCK F R O M C A M P U S . A p a r t m e n t f o r g ra d u a te men. A h o l a r « e co ol S o u t h ro om fo r w o m e n . E lectric r e f r ig e r a to r. Krill, a n d l i v i n g - r o o m . 8- 5 6 8 8 . ______ B ills I $3.75. A summation of philanthropy from 1824 to 1928 and a shrewd look a t the prospects for the future make “ Philanthropy in America” well worth reading for anyone interested in raising money— and for the social science student, Hr. Jenkins dwells mainly on large scale philanthrope, but through the use of excellent ta­ bles and charts gives some idea of w hat can be and has been accomplished on a smaller scale. President of George Williams College from 1926 until his re­ tirement in 1935, Dr. Jenkins par­ ticipated for many years in inU-rnational YMCA work, and was in intimate contact with various o r ­ ganizations for social welfare. Looking toward the future, the author says that in spite of many disturbing factors, the American J A M E S M A D I S O N , F a t h e r o f tide of glamorous American his­ The spindle-legged little fellow people will probably continue to the C o n s t i t u t i o n , 1 7 8 7 - 1 8 0 0 . B y tory until Irving Brant, newspa­ described by Mr. Brant was en­ support with effort and money the I r v i ng B r a n t . I n d i a n a p o l i s , N e w perman and authority on the Con­ dowed with luminous logic which m ajor groups of philanthropic so­ York: T he Bobbt-Merrill Com­ was obscured in debate because stitution, began his definitive ; of his dry, unimaginative manner. cieties, and that movement forp a n y , Inc. 5 2 0 p a g e s i n d e x e d . ward or backward is within the four-volume series. “Father of The latest volume, written I control of the societies them­ James Madison, a small, soft­ the . Constitution” is the third clearly, but ploddingly (in what selves. spoken statesman, was lost in the volume. CHARLEY TRIMBLE some people call journalese), car­ Apartment tor Rent 2013 gives up on current affairs and falls back on published doctrine to fill columns, he can sometimes choose wrong and give offense, if he isn’t hauled up for failing to report the straight of the Pews. Mr. Inkeles spent three years studying the Soviet Union as social science analyst in the department of state and other government agencies. He is now lecturer at the Russian Research Center, a Car­ negie - spported institution at Harvard which has announced two additional studies to be published soon: “ Soviet Ideology and Power Politics,” by Barrington Moore, and “ The Challenge of Soviet Law,” by Harold J. Berman. V. E. EVANS Future Shown I For Philanthropy turin t CLASSIFIED ADS Sum m er MODERN Mr. Inkeles stresses the import­ ance of oral agitation, a less-wellknown "aspect of communist prop? agenda activity. Several million agitators have the job of carrying the message of the party and gov­ ernment directly to the people by word of mouth. The job is Pot all pleasure to the holder, Mr. Inkeles is able to state, what with the demands of the party impinging on one side and the “grass roots” practicalities resisting on the other. Uncertainty about veering pol­ itical trends and upredictable local agitators and party officials makes the lot of the editor difficult and Mr. Inkeles gives him a shred of symapthy. Even when the editor Page 5 D S W SJR UHLIK MHH E ranun rauHEi R iia m r a H MMMH rarawn in the faculties of men, from which the rights of property origi­ I nate.” Mr. B rant’s next volume will Typing carry Madison through his service 'i Y P I N G . O u t l i n e s , n o t e b o o k s , t h e m e s , as Je ffe rso n ’s Secretary of State etc. Call 8 - 0 7 7 4 . and then President himself dur­ I ACCEPTED m o rn in g s. T erm p a p e r s , ing the unfortunate War of 1812. T h e s e s , D i s s e r t a t i o n s . 9 00 W. 3 1 s t . T elephone 2-9444. But Madison was greatest in J the Constitution. T Y PIN G . S te n o g r a p h ic Service, M iss 'helping form W elch. 210 Sw isher. T e l e p h o n e If history has overlooked him, its 7-3205. most grievous oversight has been the little man’s role during those W anted ci itical years before the land had W A N T E D a c o m p e t e n t A M. 30 8 coach. a fixed, fundamental law. 2507 R easonable. S an Jacinto. $1.25" a n h o u r p a y . a n y t i m e a f t e r ft P .M . 6-9701. Phone 6-6330 T h e N e w Y ork Tim ex B o o k R e v ­ iew . This novel w'ill be an interpre­ tation of the post-juvenile, pre­ adult years on the emotional level on which they are experienced. Manuscripts will have the tone of the adult, rather than the “juv­ enile” or “ teen” novel. J. B. Lippincott Company and S e v e n t e e n will award the winning a q |h o r $2,500 for his manuscript. U T E * I* C o u n ty A t t o r n e y James Cotten, LLB, ’48, ha* been elected county attoreey in RONNIE DUGGER Parker County, Texas. Friday, August 4 , 1950 THE SUMMER TEXAN Paga 5 Austin Will Have More Foreign Films The policy of showing a great! many foreign films at the Texas T h e a te r will be resum ed in Sep­ tem ber, m a n a g e r Wallace Womack said Thursday. The English production “ G reat E x pectatio ns,” voted one of the best movies of 1948, will open today and run through Saturday. Based on a novel b f Charles Dickens, “ G reat E x pectations” won num erous Academ y Awards fo r the acting and directing in­ volved. Depending upon the attendance a t the foreign film showings, the Texas is planning on becoming ex­ clusively what is known in the movie world as “ a s tra ig h t art house” as soon as possible Mr. Womack said. It. is planned t h a t Jobs Are Plentiful - In Some Fields R E H E A R S IN G A S O N G for the Friday Fro­ lic Floor show to n ig h t is R a n d y Dodson, right. H is audience is C h a rle s Baker, master o f cerefrton es for the show, and Elizabeth Kirkpatrick. Entertainm ent for this week's frolic will be given v sa ....... by the Curtain C lu b. O th e r singers in the show are M rs. M a r y A lice Starr and Don Kirkpatrick. The informal dance will be held f rom 8 to ll o'clock. A dm ission is free for al! students. In ‘L a d ie s’ M u rd e r Trial to Seem Real Y ou’ll feel as if you have jus^ witnessed a m u rd e r trial, gone into th e ju ry room with the ju ry to , reach a verdict and stayed two days because one of the ju ro rs re ­ fused to change h er vote, afte r seeing “ Ladies of the J u r y . ” T he, D ram a D e p artm en t play is being staged in the Theater-in-the-R ound M odern Language Building 193, A ugu st 14 through 19. The reason fo r this is that in a Jfi.und production, the audience is no close to the actors during the play th a t they begin to feel as though they too are taking p a rt in the play. In a regular th e a te r, the a u d i­ ence, even f r o n t row seats, c a n ’t with the beginning of the fall s< rn e a te r - t h e th eate r will alternat* between foreign films and <>j American classics he e x p l a i n ^ ’. The large attendance a l th* movie “ La T ra v ia ta ” shown last spring p ro v es definitely th at p eo­ ple desire to see opera in the movies. “ We are planning ot booking a num ber of these in th* fall,” Mr. Womack said. “ Jud g in g from requests by stuj dents and fa culty m em bers,” h^ said. “ I feel certain t h a t a con, tin nous showing of foreign films will become possible in the not tod d istant fu tu re . O f course, thd adoption of this policy will de pend entirely upon the attenj dance.” The Texas w.ll open at I 4! in the afte rno on for the foreignj film showings. The V arsity T h e a te r will show English productions again this fall b u t will not participate in thd showing of other foreign films] Mr. Womack said. UT E l Is Midland A ttorney R eag an H. Legg, University Law g radu ate, was elected Mid­ land C ounty A tto rn ey in the p in Degree holders in pharm acy and m a n e s July 22. education had the easiest time This is the first time he baa finding jobs am ong 3,000 U niver­ run fo r political office. He pol-j sity g ra d u a te s of 1950, Hob Gray, led 2,345 to his opp o n en t’s 1601, te a c h e r placem ent director, r e - 1 ported. Dr. Gray said th ere are sh ort­ ages of elem entary, l i b r a r y science, home economics, and wo­ DRI VE - IN m en’s physical education in stru c­ THEATRE * * I tg m k tors. * 1. A R I S T TOWN ON • R 'i W c j P P L j to 0 0 p i n DAI I fl") MG4T rn * The College of P harm acy had HO g ra d u ates and received more “ Man on E iffe l T ow er” than *300 requests fo r p h arm a­ Charlet Laughton cists, the director added. All Franchot Tone physics and home economics grad­ u ates were placed and 70 per ‘The H atty H eart” cent of the Law School gradu ates Ronald Reagan found work in th e ir field, Mr. Patricia Neal G ray said. P aul J. Thompson, director of the School of Journalism , rep orted all fifty-four J u n e g ra d u ates placed. He added th a t six good positions a re open now. A spokesman from the College of Business A dm inistration said the n um b er of jobs for its large g ra d u a tin g class is keeping pace with last year. get n e a rer than ten or twelve feet j The Thing,” and “ Command Deci­ sion. to the actors. The play is a satire on the jury Also in a re g u la r th eate r, the system and courtroom procedure. stage is raised abo u t six feet from It tells how one m em ber of the the floor. ju ry of a m u rd e r trial saves an In a Round production, the sit­ innocent w om an’s life by refusing uation is reversed. The audience is to change h e r vote from “ inno­ higher th a n the actors and almost ce n t” to “ gu ilty.” One of the four lead roles, th a t in a circle around them. The ac­ tors are m ore or less in an arena. of Mrs. Crane, the j u ro r who votes “ This is a very light play, which “ not g u ilty ” fo r two days to save was our main reason fo r choosing the inn ocent wom an's life, is it. We w anted to get away from played by Ann Butler. The o th e r th ree lead roles are ‘problem ’ plays,” said Byrle ( ass, played by Sharon ( ornelius as Lily director of the play. P ra tt, Mrs. Mary S ta r r as H a y n e Mr. Cass has directed three Mixtet, and F rank Marland as Jay other plays since coming to the University in 1948. They were J, Pressly. Admission fo r S u m m er Activity “ The Male Animal,” “ The P la y ’s Ticket holders is free. F o r others the charge is 74 cents f o r adults and 25 cents fo r children. All persons planning to attend, both holders and non-holders of activity tickets, m u st m ake reser­ vations for the show. They may be made a t the Music Building Box Office beginning A ugust 7. The th e a te r seats only 175 p e r­ sons and no more will he adm itted to each perform ance, Loren k i n ­ ship, chairm an of the d ep a rtm e n t of d ram a announced. Moon Light Moves For New Highway oe J The moving of one of Austin s fam ed “ freshm an m oons” will be completed this week, D. C. Kinney, s u p e rin ten d e n t of the ( ity Light and Power D epartm en t, said The 165-foot tow er light th a t stood at N in etee n th S tr e e t and E a s t Avenue is being tra n s f e rre d to the corner of H aw thorne and Longfellow S treets to make room for the new inter-regional highway. . This is the second time in the fifty -six y ea r history of the to w er lights t h a t one has been moved. The first, in 1948, took a crew a day to move the tow er fo rtythree f e e t to provide room for widening T w enty -third S tr e e t b e ­ tween Memorial S tadium and Clark Field. ere N a tio n a l M a g a z in e Buys UT Student’s Article I — Cars leave YMCA for r e tr e a t a t B astrop Park. 8— NAYD bridge p arty , home of Mrs. O. F. Heimer. g— B arn dance, Newm an Club. R ob ert Robinson, g ra d u ate stu-j d ent of th e University, has been notified t h a t his article, “ Don’t Let Hidden H andicaps Brand Your Child,” has been accepted f o r publication by Today a Wo-j m an m agazine. I This is th e seventh article Robinson has sold to nationallycirculated m agazines in the pastj eighteen m onths. H e has been! w ritin g articles fo r two years. In addition to T o day ’s W oman, the, Redbook, Hygeia, and Your H ealth have bought his articles. SU N D A Y W esley F oundation Cancels Play FR IDAY g p,m .— P a r t II of doctoral quali­ fy ing exam in English, M.B. 200 2. g _ H — F riday Frolic, Texas Union patio. SATURDAY Wesley F o u n d a tio n ’s stage p ro ­ IO— Newm an Club, Texas T h ea­ duction, “ The L ight T h a t Shines! ter. 2— C ars leave N ew m an Club for in D arkness,” has been called off due to casting difficulties. Sue picnic a t City P ark. 8— Gospel singing, B arton Box, d irector of th e play, a n ­ nounced this week* Springs. M n STANWYCK Wenden COKY STATE JUNGLE PA TR OL alto MISS MINK 1949 MA AND PA KETTLE CO TO TOWN with Marjorie Main Percy Kilbride 12Z5S222 7 John Payne Rhonda Fleming T H E EAGLE AND THE HAW K in Technicolor Charles D icken’s GREAT E X P E C T A T IO N S with John Mills / 11/ST //V Tm John P ayne Rhonda Flem ing T H E EAGLE A N D THE HAWK Im Technicolor Friday. August 4, 1950 ip**- ^ Girl of the Week University Y H o ld s Retreat This W e e k End : Tw o s u b je c ts — th e f o r m a tio n c f a t t i t u d e s and th e i m p o r ta n c e of bein*? i m p o r t a n t — will be discussed by U n iv e rs ity “ Y ” m e m b e r s a t *hcir s u m m e r r e t r e a t S a t u r d a y a n ] S u n d a y . C a rs will leave th e *• Y” a t I o ’clock S a tu r d a y . A p p ro x im a te ly t h i r t y s tu d e n ts will r e t r e a t to B a s tr o p S ta te P a r k f o r tw o d a y s of discussion, r e c r e a ­ tio n . and fellow ship. Dr. Dewitt R eddick, p r o f e s s o r c f jo u r n a li s m , will lead th e dis«ussion S a t u r d a y n ig h t on th e in ­ fluences o f n e w s p a p e rs, m a g a z in es, a n d o t h e r p u b lic a tio n s, in f o r m in g a tti tu d e s . S u n d a y m o r n i n g small g ro u p s will discuss “ th e im p o r ta n c e of b e in g im p o r t a n t .” R e s e r v a tio n s should he m a d e by F r i d a y a f te r n o o n a t th e “ Y ” or w ith Ed F r o s t , c o n ta c ts c h a irm a n . O th e r s tu d e n ts in c h a rg e of c o m m itte e s a r e J a c k S lo an , p r o ­ g r a m ; M arion M c C u rd y , r e c r e a ­ t i o n ; and M ary M a rce lla H a m e r a n d B elv a B u c k n e r, food. S a m Gibbs is g e n e r a l c h a ir m a n f o r th e r e t r e a t . A n n e C h a m b e rs a n d Allen C la rk a r e aliso m e m b e rs c f th e s te e rin g c o m m itte e . «* Rhoda Keeps Busy Steering Y , Co-ops ' ’■ar« rn BM -a s R H O D A M CKNIGH T anJ / THE SU M M ER TEXAN A , H olist Graduates ORDER Y O U R A N N O U N C E M E N T S N O W I Even though no public exercises will be held, Your G ra d u a tio n is still a m ost im portant event in your life. Your friends and relatives will app reciate b ein g rem em bered on this occasion. (a ) W h ite in F r e n c h Fold. E m b o ssed co v e r a n d w o r d e d in v ita tio n e n ­ g ra v ed . 15c e a c h (b ) W h ite Kid F inish em bossed cover. F o u r in­ s e r t p a g e s o f th e T o w e r, the Main W a lk , T e x a s U nion, a n d th e W o r d e d I n v ita tio n E n g r a v e d . G e n ­ uine L e a th e r T ie - String. 25« each Ic ) G e n u in e l e a t h e r em bo ssed c o v e r in T a n , B lack, o r W h ite . I n t e r i o r a nd tie s tr in g sa m e as ( b ) . ta By AN N E CHAMBERS It d o e s n ’t ta k e lo n g fo r R ho da as a e o -o rd in a to r- like th e tim e Mc K n ig h t to w in f r ie n d s an d in- some o f the g irls in the co-op h a d flu once people. a c a t e r y w e lc o m in g f o r a n o t h e r F o r in sta n c e , she a tt e n d e d h e r girl a n d h e r d a te in the form o f f ir s t m e e tin g o f th e U n iv e rsity a c a n n is te r fu ll o f w a t e r o v e r the “ \ T” this mummer a n d w as imme- sc re e n door. The p a r ti e s who g o t b la te ly e le c te d to th e su m m e r w e t tu r n e d o u t to be the w r o n g ones.• O r th e tim e som eone acct* s te e r in g c o m m itte e . . ‘•I h o n e stly wish t h a t I had g on e d e n ta lly se t f i r e to th e house by e a r l i e r ” she said. “ I have g o tte n p u t t i n g a piece o f cloth over a m o re o u t of th e “ Y” this s u m m e r light b u lb a n d f o r g e t t i n g to t a k e th a n a n y o th e r o r g a n iz a tio n I have it o ff. “ T h in g s like t h a t h a p p e n e v e ry e v e r belon ged to. I ’m j u s t all fo r once in a w hile,” she said. it*” Also a n O ra n g e J a c k e t, R h od a I t ’s th a t kind o f e n th u s ia sm t h a t h e r has b e e n e x tr e m e ly in te r e s te d in w ins and in flu e n c e s all I th e i r p r o je c t f o r th is y e a r w hich frie n d s. A s a m e m b e r o f t h e s t e e r i n g i c o n c e rn s co-ops. In fa c t, she w as c o m m itte e , Rhoda helps t o plan one of th e s t a r t e r s “ L ast y e a r th e O ra n g e Ja i kola p r o g r a m s and a c tiv itie s, or as ^be decided to ta k e o n in v e s tig a tio n p u ts it, “ o u tlin e th e m an d give a nd p ro m o tio n o f co-op e x p a n sio n th eU m to onthi ve rI p eople to fU IU u VV/ do.” . a * 4*4 A. O ne of th e a c tiv itie s t h a t th e as a p ro je c t, she said.^ AsTa J >a^ “Y” s te e rin g c o m m itte e has e f it a b o u t seven O r a n g e J a c k e t s th is p la n n e d fo r th is s u m m e r is a r e ­ have been living in co-ops iiiiin n iH i i o r 0 1 1 3 p u u H iiv * , . .i t r e a t which will be a t B a s t r o p s u m m e r to becom e a c q u a in te d w ith S t a t e P a r k this w e e k end. I the problem s. W e w a n te d to k n o w T his is n o t a p la n n in g r e t r e a t , w h a t we a re w o r k in g tow ard s. •but o ne f o r th o u g h t, R h o d a said. R h o d a th in k s lite e x p e r im e n t “ T h e s u b je c ts we a re going to bas b e e n q u ite suc c e ssfu l, as th e d iscuss— th e f o r m a tio n of a t t i ­ B o a rd o f R e g e n ts o k a y e d a $460,• tu d e s a n d the im p o rta n c e o f being 000 b uild in g p r o g r a m f o r co-ops i m p o r ta n t — a r e on es t h a t s o r t of this s u m m e r . , ., . s tim u la te y o u r t h in k in g ." | T h e oldest one rn a family o f B e s i d e s w o r k i n g w ith th e " Y " , seven ish e h a s fiv e b r o th e r s a n d Rhoda iv also active in c o o p e r s - ] one s i s t e r ) , i t se e m s only n a t u r e lives bein g a m e m b e r of th e In- t h a t Rhoda s h o u l d m a jo r in c h ild to r Co-Op C o u n c il and co-ordina- d e v e lo p m e n t. R h o d a heart t e v e n t o r fo r W a k o n d a . She is c h a irm a n seen h e r n e w e s t b r o t h e r — who c a f o f th e C o -o r d in a to r s Council, an . b o rn lab! week. o rg a n iz a ti o n o f th e c o -o rd in a to rs She is a n a tiv e T e x a n , b u t i e . of all th e c o-op eratives . s p e n t a q u ite a lo t ©I “ W e g e t t o g e t h e r a n d discuss F lo re n c e , Ala., w h e r e h e r f a m ily co-op p ro b le m s a n d w ays to solve has a farm . t h e m , ” she said. R hoda w a n t s t o te a c h n u r s e r y T a lk in g a b o u t pro b le m s, R h o d a school w h e n she g r a d u a t e s n e s t h e s ita n tly m e n tio n e d a few t h a t J u n e - n e t a n y p la c e especially, she h a s faced o r b e e n involved in “ j u st so it s in T e x a s, she sa n . 75c each At the Churches h - “ Vt h en L a y m e n R is e U p for Loeb** SUNDAY. AUGUST 6 b y Mr. S m i t h . C e n tral C h r is tia n C hurch U n iv ersity C h ristian C hurch IO f>6 — ‘ M o re T h u n We Can E ven „ T h i n k . ” by t h e R e v. P a u l Wa* se in c h t*:46— S u n d a y S c h o o l . w h o i» r e p l a c i n g t h e R e v . J o h n h a r - 1 0 : 4 5 — “ T h e Boy W h o D i d n t L e t t e r s by t h e R e v. L a w r e n c e W. R a sh . clay, th e m in is te r . «-3 0—-D iscip le S t u d e n t F e l l o w s h i p m e e t # C e n tral M e th o d ist Church in t h e c h u r c h f o r s u p p e r , r e c r e a t i o n , 1 0 — S u n d a y S cho ol. a n d w orship. 1 0 : 5 6 — ‘ T h i s Is t h e D a y . by t h e Rev. U n iv ersity C o m m unity C hurch Tom W. B ra b h a m , m in ister. ll G o in g H o m e , ” by t h e Rev. A. w* * 1 C h u r c h of C h r i s t t r a m Miller. J IC 3 0 — W h a t D o es R e li g i o n M ean to U n iv ersity M e th o d ist C hurch Y o u ? ” bv M i n i s t e r R. B. S w eet. 7 ; 3 fl— T h e G erasenes,” by M i n i s t e r l l — S e r m o n b y t h e R e v . M s u ld w r n BAw a r d s g u e s t s p e a k e r f ro m B i r m i n g ­ Sw eet. h am . E ng la n d . D r . E d w a r d s is »h« F irst E n g lish L u th e ra n Church J a u t h o r of n u m e r o u s b o o k s on *h# 1 0 15— U nified serv ice and in stru ctio n M e t h o d i s t m o v e m e n t in E n g l a n d , period. . _, , , . , n— F r e e d o m of t h e C h r i s t i a n . bv **« i n — M e m b e r s h i p , ” by R i c h a r d S c h n e i ­ Hev. E d m u n d H e i n s o h n . m i n i s t e r . d e r . w h o is r e p l a c i n g t h e Rev. Lewis S t . L u k e ’s M e t h o d i s t C h u r c h P. S p e a k e r , m i n i s t e r , while he is on The Rev. M auldw yn E dw ards M I vacation. B i r m i n g h a m , E n g l a n d , will sp e a k S u n ­ 7:30— L u th e ran L eagues. d ay e v e n i n g a t 8 o ’clo ck a n d t w i t * o n F irst M etho dist C hurch j 1 0 : 5 6 — A c o m m u n i o n m e d i t a t i o n bv t h e M o n d a y . T u e s d a y , a n d W e d n e s d a y , r h # m o r n i n g s e r v i c e s will b e a t odor* R e y . M a r l i n S. V a n c e . a n d l h . e v e n i n g a t 8 o’clo ck. H is s u b ­ U n iv e rsity B a p tist C hurch j e c t s a t t h e s e s e r v i c e s wi ll b e : Th# l l — ‘W h at W a i t I F o r ? ” by t h e R e v . C lu e s to t h e K i n g d o m , ” “ T h e K i n g d o m I O t h e r O. S m i t h , g u e s t s p e a k e r f r o m ]„ P r e s e n t . ” ‘‘T h e C o m i n g K i n g d o m , t h e F i r s t B a p t i s t C h u r c h in C o n w a y , " T h e C h u r c h a n d t h e K i n g d o m . ” —»4 i A rk . " T h e K ingdom a n d L a s t T hings. ; ( : 4 5 — B a p tis t T r a i n i n g Union. rn See Us Today! Genuine engraving and proper wording. Special prices on enclosure cards from new plate. GIRL of the WEEK Khoda M cKnight is'a senior from A u s t i n , majoring in Child de­ velopm ent in H o m e Economics. Khoda is a member of Inter Co op Council, Co-ordinators Council, and also the Orange Jackets and Y. W. C. A. Social S t a t i o n e r y— S t r e e t F l o o r 205 W est Ninth Phone 7-44 LU A n O tt i s Stah l Portrait \ Ottis Stahl Studio P h o t o g r a p h y f o r The U n i v e r s i t y of Texas 2514 Guadalupe Friday, A u g u st 4 , 1950 THE S U M L E R T EXAN Page 8 Registration Forms To Be in Mail M on day they wish to see is busy, or t h a t they see an advisor who is free. He said this will p revent un due con­ gestion at th e advising points. Also to p reven t delay, Mr. Shipp asked th a t stu d en ts plan their courses and e n te r them on the t e n ­ tative course card. S tu d e n ts m ust hvae a photostat of previous work when they go to th e ir advisors. He emphasized t h a t students ex­ pecting section p re fere n ces b e ­ cause they will be working the By GEORGE KOSTOHRYZ P re -reg istraiio n form s will be mailed Monday to th e 3,107 s t u ­ dents who completed the first step s on July 27 and 28, W. B. Shipp, reg istra tio n supervisor, said Thursday. Enclosed in the envelopes will be forms, instructions, and a d ­ visor inform ation sheets needed by .students before seeing th eir a d ­ visors A ugust 9 and IO. ( ’lasses will not be dismissed on these dates. Mr. Shipp urged t h a t the s t u ­ dent r e tu r n la te r if the advisor R an ge r Stcrf M em bers Meet Tonight in JB TS An im po rtant m eeting of all p e rso n s interested in working on t h f Texas R anger s t a f f has been announced for F riday n ig h t at 7 :3 0 o’clock in the R an ger office. Bill Bridges, newly-appointed editor, said he will welcome b e­ g in n ers’ e ffo rts and creative con­ tributions. Speech P rof Write* Textbook Thom as A. Rousse, speech pro­ fessor, is the co-auth or of “ How to D ebate,” a tex tbo ok fo r beg in­ ners. This book is recognized a-; one of the best in its field. vised on o th er courses. Final announcem ents will be available a t the bookstores T ues­ day. The charge is 15 cents. Sche­ dules of classes and rooms will be printed later. V e te ran s m ay fill out requests for books, supplies, and equipm ent a f te r they know w hat courses they will take the firs t semester. This may be done a t V Hall 102 through A ugust 28. Requisitions will be ready by S ep tem ber 18. Six UT Beauties Seek Miss Texas Laurels New Glcss Expert On C e m ic Staff Expansion of the research lab­ o ra to ry and s t a f f will begin Sep­ t e m b e r I, in the D e p a rtm e n t of Ceramic Eng ineerin g, F . K. Pence, lab o ra to ry director and d e p a r t ­ m e n t . chairm an, announced T h u rs ­ day. T h e p resent la b o ra to ry * taff will l»e increased to seven m em ­ bers with the addition of Dr. J a m e s R. Johnson of Ohio S ta te University, a specialist in glass re s e a r c h and th e nuclear physics aspects of ceramics. first sem ester m ust have le tte rs from their employers to t h a t e f­ fect. Otherwise, p refee rn ees will not be granted. E ngineers will complete their registration A ugust 9. Time p er­ mits for the engineers to see ad­ visors in Gregory Gym will be available Monday and Tuesday in E n gineering Building 167. A rm y, Air, and Naval ROTI stu d en ts will have to clear at th e ir respective offices before being a d ­ Re-Elect Pamfei Atomic Director (C ontinued from page I ) I All American F reshm an contect. j South C en tral Texas Club. No tiful. and an Aqua Carnival final-j Miss Hintz is a sophom ore phy-j picture of h er was available for ist. This rom ance language m ajo r, sical education m ajo r from Co- publication, as was the case of also won second place in the Miss lumbus. She is a m em ber ot the Miss A rrin gton . j Chancellors Tap Hart, Four Law Students (C ontinued from Page I) ty; and a m em b er of Pi Sigm a j degree from Loyola < allege, BalAlpha, honorary gov ern m en t fra- timore, and is a m ember of Alpha term ly . I Sigma Nu, national hon o ra ry soOwens, 24, is from Tulsa and ciety of Jes u it Colleges and Uni­ en tered Law School in 1948 a fte r versities. He en tered Law School receiving his bachelor of a rts de- in 1948 and is a m em b er of Phi gree fro m the U niversity. He Delta Phi. During the w a r Bailey was appoin ted quizm aster in 1949 served with the 503rd P a ra c h u te and has made the honor roll each In f a n try and th e l i t h A irborne semester. This spring he was Division before receiving his dis­ elected to Phi D elta P,hi and the charge in 1946. editorial board o f the Review. Smith. 22, associate n o te editor Owens is m arried an d served f o u r ­ of the Review', is from El Paso. teen m onths in the Navy, receiving He entered Law School in 1948 and was elected to the editorial his discharge in 1946. Bailey, although born in P hila­ board of the Review in 1950. He delphia. is a T exan by m arria g e. is m arried and a m em ber of Sigma He holds a bachelor of philosophy Chi, and Phi Delta Phi. Miss Sommers is a senior voice m ajor from Dallas and will re p re ­ sent Austin in the S tate Contest. The twenty-year-old Gamm a Phi Beta is a m em ber of the Dallas Club, a B luebonnet Belle Nomi­ nee, and Varsity C arnival Queen nominee. Miss Wilson is a m em ber of Alpha Chi Omega from Cameron. She was one of the Ten Most B eautiful Girls and won the Miss Brazos Valley title a t Bryan e a r­ lier in the sum m er. Ju d g e s fo r th e contest a re Loren Winship. chairm an of the U niversity D e p artm en t of D ram a; E. M. K irkpatrick, J r ., fo rm e r president o f the Texas J u n io r C ham ber of Com m erce; Elizabeth Fow ler D raper, Austin a u th o r; Kindel Paulk, Wichita Falls; M a­ jo r Joh n E. Pickering, US AF, Randolph Air F orce Base; Ysleta L e i s t e r , Miss Texas of 1949 and University co-ed; and Mary Beth McDonald, Houston. UT Head A g a in O n O a k Ridge Board President T. S. P a in te r of P to a three-year lintel University has been re-eh^ted a th ree-y ear term as a director the Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclei Studies. The Institu te, a t Oak Rid* Tenn., is o perated by twentyS outh ern universities as an extf* aion of nuclear research labor. tories fo r the United StatTj Atomic E n erb y Commission. The board of directors consist of six members. Dr. P ain ter he been a m em ber of the board ainu the I n s titu te ’s founding. O th er Texas m em bers of the Is titu te are Rice Institute and Tgt as A&M. The In stitute conducts a broj^ program including a school of vanced study in nuclear s c ie n e l a g r a d u a te tra in in g program , a® special training p rogram s in si ^ atomic energy research technique as the use of radio-isotopes f i trac ers in medical and other f i search. . . • .. .inc!tv ii U niversity participation es tra in in g and advanced study Oak Ridge fo r U niversity fa c u l 1 m embers, assignm ent to certif j g ra d u a te stud en ts to Oak Ridge complete work tow ard advanc degrees, and obtaining radio-i; topes fo r medical and other search a t th e U niversity and branches Foreign Cadets Will Visit Campu: Aviation cadets from Switz* land, Italy, and P ortugal, sp< sored by the In tern atio n al Coun< will be on the campus A u gust and 15. The cadets are combining avi tion train in g , and a good-will to) while in the U nited States. While h ere, they will be th rou gh B erg stro m Air Field, t Off-C am pus R esearch C enter a the campus. / PRE-REGISTER for the RANGER Here’s an Easy Way to Subscribe T o the 1%, N E W Texas R A N G ER A L L Y O U D O is write “R a n g e r" and check it on the Bursar's C a rd as shown below, (The Bursar's C a rd is o n * of the cards you'll fill out and take with you next week if you pre-register), and the Ranger fee (one dollar) will bu added to the rest o f your fees, so you can pay them a's at the same time. Si Just check the Ranger. Check the Cactus Too. The TEXAS RANGER Seven Big Issues, One Dollar