ha the t o ep- o f 5ns ley i d ­ ol- n g urt e x ­ tra o f -it- of- ?or er- he >nt i e - :er IS O i e - >11 - !i- tr - ‘P- n g h o lly lat ns Weather Report Continued Hot and Dry Char Skies The S umA r Texan Truman Sees Peace in Berlin Congress to Hear Truman Wallace Parley Opens Today See P age 3 Vol. 50 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1948 Ticket Requests Doubled As Stadium Grows Bleachers Planned For AAM , SM U Games Only E v e n t h o u g h t h e c a p a c it y o f th e sta d iu m has b e e n in c r e a se d b y h a l f , t h e r e q u e s t s f o r t i c k e t s h a v e d o u b le d , E d w i n W. OUe. U n iv e r s i t y b u s i n e s s m a n a g e r o f i n t e r c o l l e g i a t e W e d n e s d a y . a t h l e t i c s s a i d H e did t h e think i n c r e a s e d s e a t i n g c a p a c it y w o u ld be e n o u g h f o r s t u d e n t s w i t h o u t r e s o r t i n g to b le a c h e r s e x c e p t f o r the S M U and A&M g a m e s . T h e sc o r eb o a rd is b e i n g m oved back a n d will be raised 15 fe et so t h a t it m a y he s e e n e v e n wh en p e o p le t h e b le a c h e r s are st a n d in g . The n e w sc o r e b o a r d will a lso be e le ctr ifie d * l a t h e r than i m a n u a ll y o p e r a t e d a s b e fo r e . s i t t i n g on Students Must Pre-Register By Five Today Schedules Ready August 9; Advising Is August 10-11 I' r id a y is th e f i r s t s t e p s last d a y to ta k e th e f a l l p r e - r e g is ­ in t r a tio n , H. A . C alk in s, r e g i s t r a ­ tio n s u p e r v is o r , w a r n e d T h u rs d a y . the F o r m s m u s t be d e p o s it e d i b o x e s p la c e d a r o u n d t h e c a m p u s in f o r t h a t p u r p o se by 6 o'clock. O f f ic i a l f o r m s m y be o b t a in e d a t th e U n i v e r s i t y C o-O p, the T e x ­ a s B o o k S to r e , H e m p h i l l ’s B o o k S t o r e s , a n d a t B e r k m a n ’s B o ok I S to r e . A c h a r g e o f IO c e n t s will | be m a d e t a c o v e r the a v e r a g e c o s t I o f h a n d lin g . i l o c a t e d D e p o s i t o r i e s f o r th e f o r m s are in the M ain B u i l d i n g r o ­ t u n d a , g r o u n d f l o o r W agge/V 'r H a ll 1 1 9 ; S u t t o n H a ll 1 1 5 ; E n ­ g i n e e r i n g B u ild in g 1 6 7 ; Music B u i l d i n g 109; M ain B u i l d i n g 1 2 1 ; I L a w B u i l d i n g 1 0 6 ; a n d C h e m istr y l l . S t u d e n t s m a y put , B u i l d i n g in a n y o f t h e b o x e s. > t h e i r f o r m s t h a t n o t i c e s in had b e e n s e n t o u t to be r ea d c la s s e s , a n d th a t sig n s ha ve be e n p u t up. Mr. C alk ins said N a m e s and a d d r e s s e s sh o u ld be p r in te d p la in ly fo r m s , w h ic h a r e to be p u t in e n v e lo p e s . l i l t 1 e n v e lo p e l e f t u n ­ is s e a l e d a nd u n sta m p ed . to be t h e on A d v i s i n g d a t e s will be A u g u s t IO a n d l l . A s c h e d u le o f c o u r s e s b u t w ill he a v a i la b le A u g u s t 9, c la s s e s will n o t be d ism iss e d f o r a d v isin g . w ill p ay P r e - r e g i s t r a n t s f e e s b y S a t u r d a y , S e p t e m b e r 4. F a ilu r e f e e s by the n w ill c a n c e l to p a y a s t u d e n t ’s p r e - r e g is t r a t i o n . Solons M a y Debate Ceiling On 18-Year-old Volunteers i n c lu d e d E i g h t e e n - y e a r - o l d s T h u r s d a y f l o o d i n g r e c r u it i n g o f f i c e s w e r e in t h e in a r a c e to be a 1 6 1 , 0 0 0 w h o w ill be a l lo w e d in m ili­ o n e - y e a r v o l u n t e e r hitch t a r y se r v ic e t h e 2 1 - i n s t e a d o f m o n t h perio d a la t e r d r a f t w o u ld m e an . in e s t i m a te d 1 , 2 0 0 , 0 0 0 t h is ag e b r a c k e t t h a t t h e y a r e b e i n g d e ­ nied a c h a n c e to v o l u n t e e r m a y g e t a c t io n f r o m t h e s p e c ia l s e s ­ sion o f C o n g r e s s s t a r t i n g J u l y 26. t h r o u g h 25 w ill b e g in a b o u t O c t o b e r I , 3 0 a f t e r S e p t e m b e r 18, M ajor T he d r a f t o f m e n 19 r e g i s t r a t io n A u g u s t C o m p la in t s f r o m o t h e r s o f t h e , t h r o u g h Guards Can Take Postponed Finals S u m m e r sc h o o l s t u d e n t s g o i n g 1. W i t h d r a w f r o m t h e U n iv e r ­ t o N a t i o n a l G uard s u m m e r c a m p s s i t y w i t h o u t p e n a l t y . o n o r b e f o r e A u g u s t 13 w ill be a l lo w e d to t a k e p o s t p o n e d se c o n d te r m f in a ls . The A d m in is t r a t i v e C o u n c il o f t h e U n i v e r s i t y m a d e t h is p o s sib le in a c tio n it t o o k T h u r s d a y . B e ­ s i d e s p o s t p o n e d e x a m s t h e f o l l o w ­ i n g a v e n u e s a r e o p e n to G u a r d s ­ m e n g o i n g to s u m m e r cam ps. f in a l e x a m w ith 2. A u d i t w i t h o u t c o s t th e sam e c o u r s e s a t a f u t u r e d a te , a n d ta k e the t h e c o u r s e c la s se s. T h is is to be d o n e b y a r ­ r a n g e m e n t w ith d e a n . N o f e e will l a b o r a t o r y c o u r s e s a u d i te d . 3. T a k e st a n d i n g e x a m s in a c c o r d a n c e w it h e x i s t i n g c a t a l o g r e g u la ti o n s . a d v a n c e d Students Criticize Indictment of Reds R e f e r r in g to the r e c e n t in d ic t- j h ar d ly th e p la c e f r o m w h ic h a By J. E. M A L O N E Y G e n e r a l L e w i s ti o n a l s e l e c t iv e a n n o u n c e d . B. H e r s h e y , na- se r v ic e d ir e c to r , R e a s o n s g i v e n f o r th e c e i l i n g on 1 8 -y e a r-o ld v o l u n t e e r s w e r e : I. C o n g r e s s h a s $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 t h e o n l y y e a r t r a in in g p r o g r a m , a n f i c i e n t a m o u n t te e r s. a p p r o p r ia te d o n e - i n s u f ­ f o r m ore v o l u n ­ f o r 2. C o m b a t s t r e n g t h o f th e a r m e d f o r c e s w o u ld be c u t i f m o r e r e g ­ ula r s w e r e n e e d e d t o train an i n ­ c r e a s e d n u m b e r o f v o lu n te e r s . 3. D r a f t e e s can be s e n t o v e r ­ s e a s w h ile th e o n e - y e a r t r a i n e e s m u s t s t a y in th e S t a t e s e x c e p t f o r sh o r t c r u is e s or f lig h ts . S e c r e t a r y o f D e f e n s e F o r r e s t a l has b e e n a sk ed f o r a r e p o r t on p o s s ib le c h a n g e s in th e S e l e c t i v e S e r v i c e Act. ★ To ta k e a d v a n t a g e o f th e on e - y e a r ba r gain o f f e r , m a n y w a it e d all n i g h t o u ts id e r e c r u it i n g o f f i c e s . F ir s t i n d u c te e s m a y c o m e fr om 2 5 - y e a r - o l d s , G e n e r a l H e r ­ t h e s h e y said, a l t h o u g h this h a s n o t b e e n d e f i n i t e l y d e c id ed . P e n d i n g , to o, w e r e d e f e r m e n t rulin gs, hut th e d r a f t c h i e f h in te d t h e y will be t h a t o n ly lib er al. He p r e d i c t e d 8 , 0 0 0 o f 1 , 2 0 0 ,0 0 0 m en a g e d 25 wTould be d r a ft e d . $ D r a f t e e s will he s e l e c t e d e it h e r b y a g e g r o u p s o r b y lo t te r y . G e n ­ said. T his will he eral H e r sh e y , M e a n w h ,I e > f*r a D m a c h i n e r y w as m e n t s f i le d a g a i n s t t h e n a t io n a l sp y w o u ld o p e r a t e , ” he c o n t i n u e d C o m m u n i s t P a r t y le a d e r s , W e n ­ “ I p e r s o n a l l y f e e l t h a t t h is is ^ H e d next w e e k . d e ll A d d in g t o n , e c o n o m ic s s t u d e n t f r o m L ub bo ck and s e c r e t a r y o f t h e A u s t in C o m m u n i s t P a r t y , said the a c t io n o f a f r u s t r a t e d T r u m a n .dmi„istration lhat wi„ attempt to pu sh t h r o u g h r e a c t io n a r y legi T h u r s d a y n ig h t t h e s e c h a r g e s are la tion in the sp ec ia l s e ss io n o f m an. s- j a l r e a d y n am ed by P r e s i d e n t T r u ­ im p o s s ib le to p r o v e in a f a i r c o u r t , C o n g r e s s , ” said A d d i n g t o n , a n d are b e i n g u s ed to i n f l a m e the T h e o n ly o t h e r a v a i la b le cam - A m e r i c a n p e o p le to a n e w “ Red J pus C o m m u n i s t, e n g i n e e r i n g stu- den t, r e f u s e d to c o m m e n t on the sc a r e i n d ic t m e n t s . . “ I f t h e s e m e n w e r e p r o v e n to b e sp ies t h e n a t i o n a l p a r t y w o u ld r e p u d i a t e th e m a t o n c e , ” A d d i n g ­ t o n said. “ The C o m m u n i s t P a r t y , as it is in this c o u n t r y t o d a y , is Todd L o w r y , a lib er a l le a d e r on th e c a m p u s a n d f o r m e r l a w s t u ­ d e n t, said he t h o u g h t th e ind ict- ‘Greeting,’ Soldier, It ’s Not That— Not Yet Anyway borne v e ts w e r e A s th e law s ta n d s , the 1 6 1 . 0 0 0 s t u d e n t ’s w o u ld he split w ith the A r m y tak- t h e be c h a r g e d in ; in g 1 1 0 , 0 0 0 . N a v y 3 0 , 0 0 0 Mar- t h e Air ’ F o rc e ! in e s 6 , 0 0 0 , and 1 5 ,0 0 0 . Six Pages Today No. 13 Politicos Close Tours For Saturday Voting My Th* A sani tated P r tt* Political ca n d id a te s h e a d e d into the last d a y of their ca m p a ig n s Frid ay b efore v o t­ e r s start p en cilin g n am es at the polls S a t­ urday. U. S. Sen atorial c a n d id a te Coke S te v e n ­ in son y e s te r d a y m ad e his last go-round * Local Demos See Feud in North Central T exas. O p p o n en t L y n d on Johnson h elicop tered his to H ouston. C an d id ate G eorge P e d d y cam - p a ig n e s amid the p each and m elon fe sti­ val ce leb ran ts at DeLeon. ca m p a ig n i In an early-m orn ing broadcast, S tev e n - j son p r e d ic te d v ic t o r y w i t h o u t a s e t o u t on a the n r u n - o f f . H e h a n d s h a k in g t o u r o f S t e p h e n v il l e , Hico, M erid ian, C l i f t o n an d V a l l e y Mills. In a b r o a d c a s t fo r m e r l e g ­ isla to r Tom B u llock H y d e r o f l is t e n e r s to “ t a k e D e n to n ur g e d t im e to see or t e l e p h o n e ” f r i e n d s to v o t e f o r S t e v e n s o n . Can Raw C o u n t y ’s g e t a c h a n c e T ravis v o t e r s wil to s e e in raw t h e t h e ir P a r t y ’s f e u d S a t u r d a y n ig h t a t th e p r e c in c t c o n v e n t i o n s w h ic h will he held r ig h t a f t e r th e p olls close. S o u n d will c o m e o v e r a new lo c a t e d on At 7 o ’c loc k v o t e r s are e li g i b l e to a t t e n d t h e s e c o n v e n t i o n s , hu t pu blic a d d r e s s s y s t e m are the p o l i tic a l ly hardy o n l y top o f the p r e s s b o x. T h i s idea I l ik e l y to last. T h e s e n e ig h b o r h o o d f o l l o w s the N o t r e D a m e m e th od , j c o n c l a v e s will tr y to a n s w e r o n e and w a s u sed b e c a u s e it w a s f e lt the T e x a s q u e s t i o n — w h o will t h a t t h e sc o r e b o a r d w o u ld be to o D e m o c r a t i c c o l l e g e e le c to r a l far back to be he ar d e f f e c t i v e l y at m e m b e r s su p p o r t in th e N o v e m b e r all p ar ts o f t h e st a d iu m . e le c t i o n ? T he press box i t s e l f w ill he a tw o s t o r y s t r u c t u r e w ith f a c il i t ie s for c o m p l e t e press, radio, m o tio n p ic tu r e and t e l e v i s i o n c o v e r a g e . D o r m i t o r y f a c i l i t i e s w ill also be a v a ila b le a t e it h e r e n d o f the .high sta d iu m sc h o o l te a m s , and tr ack te a m s . N e w rest r o o m s a r e b e i n g f o r v i s i t i n g t e a m s st a lle d , wh ic h will t r ia n g u l a r c u b b y h o le s n e a r top o f r o o m s are b e i n g r e n o v a t e d . s ta d iu m . Old i n ­ i n c lu d e s o m e the rest the H. A. Lott, s u p e r v i s o r fo r the t om - T h e fig h t will c o m e in th e o p e n w h e n d e l e g a t e s t o th e c o u n t y c o n ­ v e n t i o n to he held a w’eek fr om S a t u r d a y a r e c h o se n . T his n e xt c o u n t y c o n v e n t i o n p r o m i s e s to he a s v o c i f e r o u s a s last sp rin g . T h e f a c t i o n s t w o D e m o c r a t i c are t h e S o u t h e r n D i x i e c r a t s , w h o the T h u r m o n d - are s u p p o r t i n g t ic k e t, W r ig h t p r e s i d e n t i a l and s u p p o r te r s , th e T r u m a n - B a r k l e y wh o are tion al p a r ty line. f o l l o w i n g t h e o ne still th e F a r n s w o r t h C o n s t r u c t i o n B oth o f th e e l e m e n t s w a n t to pany said t h a t w ork on t h e stad- c o n t r o l the p r e c i n c ts , th e c o u n t y t h e S e p t e m b e r ium is g o i n g a c c o r d i n g to th e con- j c o n v e n t i o n s , an d tr a c t sc h e d u le . S t a t e C o n v e n t io n in to he held F o r t W orth. T h e r e will be s o m e By R AY G R E E N E Te-ran Aanociatr E d ito r D e m o c r a t i c | certain w a y , h u t an u n w r it t e n ob- liga tion h a s a l w a y s held s w a y . This s e e m s to he th e 1 9 4 4 f i g h t o v e r a g a i n w i t h alm ost t h e s a m e c a s t and plot, and th e s h o w for ind iv id u a l vo te r b e g i n s a t 7 the o ’clock S a t u r d a y n ig h t at his p r e ­ cin c t c o n v e n t i o n . ★ Coats, Long Tell Platforms At W oodridge S p e a k i n g a t W o o ld r id g e Park, Travis C o u n t y ’s c a n d i d a t e s in the fo r t h c o m i n g D e m o c r a t i c p r im a ry e le c t io n w o u n d up a se r ie s o f p e r ­ so n al a p p e a r a n c e s w ith a c o u n t y - ' wide rally T h u r s d a y e v e n in g . More th a n fo r t y c a n d i d a te s , i n - 1 e lu d i n g t w o U n iv e r s i t y s t u d e n t s , w ere on hand f o r the m a ss ora- torical e x h i b i t io n to ask f o r pub- in S a t u r d a y ’s c o m i n g ) e le c t io n , c li m a x i n g t h e s e r i e s o f s p e a k in g s w h ic h began J u l y 2 at th e c o m m u n i t y o f K im b ro u g h . P r e s i d i n g o v e r the p o litic al “ c ir ­ w h i c h p la y e d b e f o r e an 1 cus, a t t e n t i v e a u d i e n c e m e a s u r i n g in th e h u n d re d s , w as J u d g e J. M. I P a ter so n , c o u n t y c h a irm a n . n a - | lie s u p p o r t “ Ask them to jo i n t h e rest o f t o s e n d in g M is t e r T e x a s in us W a s h i n g t o n , ” he said. J o h n s o n in H o u s t o n , P e d d y ’s h o m e t o w n , p u n c h e d a t S t e v e n ­ son bu t had no c r it ic is m o f P e d d y . O f S t e v e n s o n , he r e m a r k e d — ■ ‘‘T his o p p o n e n t w h o s a y s he h a s is o l a t io n is t is c h a n g ­ not b e e n an ing his t u n e in the c lo s in g d a y s o f the c a m p a i g n . H e has ta k e n a f o r t h r i g h t sta n d on i n t e r n a t i o n a l q u e s t i o n s . ” F o r m e r G o v e r n o r Jam e^ V. A ll- red a n n o u n c e d f r o m H o u s t o n t h a t he an d fo r m e r G o v e r n o r Mrs. Miriam A. F e r g u s o n w o u ld g o o n the air fo r J o h n s o n tomorrow', A t D e L e on , P e d d y w a r n e d our m ilitary r e l a x i n g a g a i n s t S e e P O L I T i r S , P a g e 6 Over 21?— Here's W he re / l l \ i | O U l l V O f P L o c a tio n o f A u s t in v o t i n g boxoa fo r S a t u r d a y ’s e le c t i o n w e r e a n ­ n o u n c e d W e d n e s d a y by M iss E m i ly L in d b e rg , c o u n t y c lerk , t o be as f o l lo w s ; S e c o n d W a r d A — L i t t m a n ’s r e s i­ d e n c e , 5 0 0 Rio G ra n d e S t r e e t . m a ter ia ls . ss Job Services for B B A Grads Succeed 85 Per Centof Time An e i g h t y - f i v e p e r c e n t app li- j s e r v e d by the f a c u l t y and a d m in - c a n t p l a c e m e n t r ec o rd is not to ^ ' r a t i o n o f th e C o l l e g e o f Busi- s u n f o r t h e e l e c t o r s to v o te R i g h t now' are th e *May c o n v e n t i o n p l e d g e d by the in B r o w n w o o d “ p a r t y n o m i n e e s , ” wh ic h are Mr. T r u m a n and Mr. B a r k ie r . But t h . , c a n b< in 1 944. t h a t a p a r t y ’s e le c t o r s m a y said not be l e g a l l y b o u n d to vote a n y L . » t I n a c o u r t f ig h t, a rule Tom , A m o n g s c r a m b l in g , *tat<1 c h a n c e l !« t h e y w e r e j WCT, th e f o r r e p r e s n ta t i v e . p la c e tw o, J o h S e c o n d Ward B c o n t e s t a n t s S e c o n d W ard F ire S ta t i o n . fiv e the p o s itio n o f M a t h e w s S c h o o l. C— W o s t e n f i e M A d d r e s s i n g s h ir t - s l e e v e d a c*>wd. C o a t s p o in te d o u t t h a t a p la tfo r m c a n n o t c o v e r e v e r y t h i n g Third Ma i d ( West Austin Fire Third Ward C o u rth o u se . A — T r a vis C o u n t y Third Ward B A u s t i n H ig h S c h o o l a n n e x . that c o m e s up in the l e g i s l a t u r e , ” I but did urge c o n s e r v a ti o n o f re- Third Ward s o u r c e s a nd a c le a n s i n g o f st a t e prison s y s t e m . S t a t io n , Sc h o ol, the ! F o u r th W ard A re ­ Coats a l s o ur ge d a co st o f I iv-! Y M C A . -B ryker W o o d s — U n i v e r s i t y B — Wooldridg in * s a | . r y I n t r ™ . , fo r a t * ! , om- F o u r th W ar d ployes, and a sk ed v o t e r s to m a k e the b a c k g r o u n d t h e y k n e w n e s s A d m in is t r a t i o n . Its g o v e r n - ! o f the m e n w h o are r e s p o n s ib l e f o r i n g bod y is the p l a c e m e n t c o u n c i l, a p p r o p r i a ti n g the m o n e y g o i n g to c o m p o s e d o f f a c u l t y m e m b e r s ap- ; th e u p k e e p o f s c h o o ls and road p o in te d bv th e c o l l e g e ’s b u d g e t c o u n c il The task o f a c tu a l op e r a - . stan d an d F’ire S ta tio n . S c h oo l I-'Ong i C h ristian Church. : F o u r th Ward C— N o r th A u s t i n | F o u r th Ward D B a k e r S c h o o l. F ourth Ward E — H y d e P ark f i n i s h in g work b e i n g d o n e a f t e r S e p t e m b t i I, he said, b u t t h e st a d iu m sh ould se e n h e a d i n g he t u r n e d o v e r to t h e U n iv e r s i t y I m e n t s w e r e a fr a u d , a s the basic sam ‘isrzs: I S e S H S 1- 1 r i 7 ^ 4 “ f o r th e tail t im b e r this w e ek w h en by t h a t tim e. ti- Br. Tarzan to Crash Open Air Theater With Elephants a n d o th e r j u n g l e n o ise s a s “ T a r z a n an d the H u n t r e s s ” m o v e s a b r ie f g a g e m e n t . f o r s e v e n t y - t w o m i n u t e e n ­ in C o m m u n i s t P a r t y . I am in f u ll a c c o r d w ith the to m ail e n lis ted R e s e r v is ts a I t c t j v , s * r v i « " w o r e horn* used let- _ T u e s d a y e v e n i n g th e O pen A ir c a n d i d a te H e n r y W a l la c e in w h ich on I s t a t e m e n t m a d e b y p r e s id e n t ia l t e r c o n t a i n i n g v a r io u th e R e se rv e T h e a t r e b e c o m e s m u c h h o w lin g , r o a rin g , th e s c e n e o f he s s p la s h i n g Were p a J't o f th e T r u m a n a d m in i- ' s t a t u s . 1 t h o u g h t th e in d ic t m e n t s j q u e s t io n n a i r e ^ str a tio n s «tr»lMrv t n * a f i is i n f o r m a t io n p r o g r a m and a th e ir c o n c e r n i n g b- f o r s u c h a g a n i z e d a need s e e k i n g e m p l o y e e s fr om U n i v e r s i ­ ty s t u d e n t s and g r a d u a t e s . A l t h o u g h the se r v ic e is p r i m a r ­ f o r g r a d u a t e p l a c e m e n t , u n ­ ily for d e r g r a d u a t e s m a y p a r t - t i m e the p la c e m e n t p l a c e m e n t s e c r e t a r y in W a g g o n e r Hall 115. r e g i s t e r with b a b y -k i s s in g , f o l l o w e d C o a t s on c o m m e n t e d the th a t he th ou gh t t h a t the public w a s “ tired o f f l a g w a v in g , t a l k i n g p o l i t ic i a n s , ” and d o u b le poin te d to the .seventeen s p e c i f i c in his p la tf o r m , s a y i n g p r op osals t h a t a c a n n o t lim it e d p la t f o r m c o v e r the w id e sc op e o f t e n t a t i v e leg isla tio n . I n clu d ed in L o n g 's p l a t f o r m w ere an ap p ea l for a tax on n a t ­ tax. ural r e s o u r c e s and no sa le s He c h a r g e d t h a t people in C h ic a g o are b u y i n g n atu ral g a s lo w e r r a te s p r o d u c e d in T e x a s at than c it i z e n s the P a n ­ handle. liv in g liv in g in O ther c a n d i d a t e s w h o sp o k e for that o f f i c e w e r e J o h n n i e B. R o g ­ ers, who p o in te d to his pa t e x ­ p e r ie n c e as an the H o u s e o f R e p r e s e n t a t iv e s , J e r r y J a c o b s, and J a c k C. S h e lto n . e m p l o y e o f F o u r th W ard F — R o s e d a le B a p t i s t F’ourth Ward G — R id g e t » Church. School. F o u r t h Ward II— R o s e d a le S c h o o l. F if t h Vt a rd A- L ittle C a m p u s Re­ c e p t io n Room. Fhfth W ard B U inn S c h o o l. F ift h Ward C U n iv e r s i t y J u n i o r H ig h S c h o o l. Fi f t h Ward D — A n d e r s o n f o o t b a l l field . E a s t 12th S t r e e t . S i x t h W ard A — G o v a lle S c h o o l. S ix t h W a r d B — D o n e M iller Audi* to r iu m . S t a t i o n . S i x t h W ard C— Fins: A u s t i n F ir e S ix th Ward D — P ic k i e r S c h o o l. S e v e n t h Ward A — P a lm S c h o o l. .Seventh Ward B— M etz S c h o o l. E a s t F ir st W a r d - S > u t h Alist n F ir e S ta tio n . W e s t F ir s t W ard— O ff ic i t ire ot the P e a c e F i ani 16 1 0 S o u t h C o n g r e ss . West S e c o n d Wa; i - Auf or T r u c k C o m p a n y , JOO Tan.ar. J; in Mot- WU (. On JJ, rocs F riday -In t e r C o -O p 6-1 2 picnic d a n ce , old B o y S c o u t Hut. a nd 7 : 1 5 — D u p lic a t e b r id g e , T e x a s Union. 8 - 1 2 — F r id a y F'rolie, T e x a s U n io n . S a tu r d a y sta r t 2 — S t u d e n t s f r o m W e s l e y Foundation f o r picnic. 8 : 1 5 - 1 1 : 3 0 — U n i v e r s i t y b o y s in ­ v ite d t o d a n c e a t Y W C A , 9 1 6 Br azos. S u n d a y 2 — A lp h a Phi O m e g a , Y M C A . 2 — R a d io H o u se sh ow , “ R e v e r i e ,’* K N O W . 3 — P ic n ic f o r f o r e i g n stu d e n ts , Phi G a m m a D e l t a L odge. 8 : 1 5 — S i n g - S o n g , B a r ton S p rin g s. T ueaday 7 — C lass in f o lk an d s q u a r e d a n c- in g , W o m e n ’i G ym . UT Zoologists Brave Snakes, Bring 'Em Back A I coho led T w e n t y - t w o U n i v e r s i t y o f Tex a s z o o lo g y s t u d e n t s h a v e r e t u r n e d f r o m the firs t s u m m e r field c o u r se e v e r o f f e r e d , w h ich w a s held t h e S ie rr a V i e j a r a n g e | c a r M a ria T h e y b n >ught hack rare " s k u i k th e z o o l o g y the in rat for s t o r i e s o f m e n s o f s n a k e s la b o r a t o r y , w o r k s , ” t e c h n i q u e o f c a t c h i n g a a live trap. R are and a r e v e r s a l on the s n a k e s c a u g h t w e r e D a v is M o u n ta in k i n g s n a k e , o f w h ic h t h e r e p r e v io u s ly w e r e o n ly f i v e k n o w n s p e c i m e n s , and the T e x a s ly re sn a k e , th e f o u r t h -uch t o be f o u n d . Dr. W. F r a n k Blair, . . T h r e e s t u d e n t s w e r e m a k in g a se e a n y m o v i n g o b j e c t a t n i g h t— m e n t s w as a s u r v e y o f p o p u la tio n the and so h e lp e d us f i n d t h e s n a k e s ! ’’ d e n s it y o f n a t iv e food habits a n d lif e h isto r y o f the i n c lu d in g m ule d e e r; a s t u d y o f the lif e his- t o r y o f the rock ’sq uirrel and an- t e lo p e g r o u n d the t e c h n iq u e o f u s i n g “ l i v e ” traps. - t ud. r eq u e st B y u n sp o k e n sh un ks. _ th e y s e t up th e ir o p e r a t io n s sev- apect- e r a ] y a r d s d i s t a n t fr om the c a m p o f m a m m a l s , sq u irr e l, an d r o d e n ts ; in S 1 ‘ e x c e p t B lair said, o p e r a t io n s ‘u p w i n d ’. ” “ In the ‘l i v e ’ r a t trap the t e a c h - Al! w o u ld h a v e be e n w e l l , ” n iq ue is to blo w t h e rat o u t , ” the t h e y s e t up p r o f e s s o r e x p l a in e d . “ It w or k e d j a ll right e x c e p t o n c e , w h en a stu- W h e n c a m p w a s o f f i c i a l l y dis- d e n t blew p a r t i c u la r l y hard and the k a n g a r o o rat r e v e r s e d e x p e c - th e te d r e a c tio n , a n d " c a t c h ” o f ve r te - fiv e w e e k s la nd ed on th e lf»0 s p e c i e s (b irds, m a m m a l s , ban led in c lu d e d brat es lizard", fied , and 2 , 5 0 0 in pared f r o g s, the s n a k e s , 1 s t u d e n t ’! f a c e . ” i d e n t i - I t o a d s ) , all All g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t s or ad- s p e c i m e n s , p r e - 1 v a n c e d m a jo rs , the st u d e n t s w e r e field and b r o u g h t s t u d y z o o lo g y , g e o l o g y and b o t a - ny. T h e y w e r e q u a r te r e d in old A r m y bar r ack s b u i lt in 1 9 2 0 f o r p r o te c t i o n a g a i n s t P a n c h o V illa's tr oo p s. ’ sh a rp p e n t r ec o rd s o f f a u n a o f th a t r e ­ g io n . p r o f e s s o r rn c h a r g e , r e p o r t s . T he back to the U n i v e r s i t y as p e r m a - g r o o v e i ly r e sn a k e has t e e t h in place o f the u s u a l f a n g s , a n d he b ites his v i c tim , Blair said . A l t h o u g h p o i s o n o u s t o r e p ­ t i l e s su ch as lizards, th e s n a k e is n o t f a t a l ly d a n g e r o u s t o h u m ans “ Our b e s t s n a k e c a t c h e r w a s a b o y w h o was c a u t i o u s l y l e e r y o f s n a k e s , ” Dr. B lair said. “ He c o u ld c o u r s e w a s p a r t ic u la r ly ' a h i a t >* b e c a u s e .students le a r n e d fr o m fo u n d t h e m s e l v e s , r a th e r than fr o m o b ­ s e r v in g a pickled s p e c i m e n in a j a r , ” Dr. Blair said. » t u d e n i live s p e c i m e n s a c c o m p li s h - A m o n g “ T he th e y S t u d e n t s are e a g e r to h a v e a sim ila r c o u r s e n e x t su m m e r , Dr. I a B la ir s a i d — that c o o k can be a w id e r k n o w l e d g e o f d i e te t i c s than red b e a n s an d t o m a t o e s ! is, pr ovid e d fo u n d w h o has I Jensen Moved To Brooks Hospital a e r o n a u t i c a l S o r e n E. J e n s e n Jr., 2 4 , s o p h o ­ m o r e e n g i n e e r i n g m a j o r f r o m P a m p a , w h o w as i n ­ on j u r e d in a c a r - c o w c o llisio n t h e P a n - A m e r i c a n H i g h w a y last Tuesd ay m o r n i n g , has b e e n m o v e d from S a n a t o r i o Isab e l H o sp ital in N u e v o L a r e d o to B r o o k s G e n ­ S a n A n t o n i o . eral H o s p i t a l T h e r e c e iv e d w a s T h u r s d a y a t D o r m A o f t h e P F A fr o m th e in j u r e d s t u d e n t ’s b r o t h ­ er. in i n f o r m a t io n A f o r m e r A ir F o rc e f i r s t l i e u t ­ e n a n t , J e n s e n o r g i n a l l y w a s r e ­ sp r a in e d to h a v e had a p o r te d l e f t k n e e w'ith l ig a m e n t s , b r u is e s , c u t s , and sh ock as a r e ­ s u lt o f in w h ic h his f e l l o w s t u d e n t R o y N. B e n e n s o n , 2 6 , s e n i o r e c o n o m i c s m a j o r fr o m N e w York C ity, w a s k ille d . t h e w r e c k tor n s t u d e n t ’s b e l o n g i n g s , J e n s e n ’s b r o th e r , a f o r m e r U n i ­ v e r s i t y s t u d e n t , w h o w a s in A u s ­ i n ­ tin T h u r s d a y to pick up t h e to ld j u r e d I f r ie n d s at. t h e d o r m i to r y t h a t d o c ­ to r s h a v e n o w d i a g n o s e d t h a t J e n ­ s e n ’s hack and a n k l e a r e br ok e n , an d t h a t th e P a m p a s t u d e n t will f o r h a v e to w e a r a a b o u t f o u r m o n th s. b o d y c a s t T he in j u r e d s t u d e n t h a s a s i s ­ L o u is e J e n s e n , w h o is te r , c h e m i s t r y m a j o r a t sity. t h e U n i v e r ­ Play writing Contest Ends September 15 f o r D e a d l i n e t h e m a i li n g o f s c r ip ts in th e se c o n d a n n u a l play- w r i t in g c o n t e s t s p o n s o r e d by t h e H o u s t o n L itt le T h e a t e r is S e p t e m ­ b e r 1 5 , 1 9 4 8 . E n t r y b la n k s a n d r u l e s m a y be to O rigin al o b t a i n e d b y w r i t in g P la y C o n t e s t , o f M are e c a r e S h a f f e r , 7 0 4 S t e r l i n g B u ild in g , H o u s t o n , T e x a s . F ir st a w a r d S e c o n d prize is $ 1 0 0 . W i n n e r s w ill h a v e t h e ir p la y p r o d u c e d b y t h e d r a ­ m a t ic g r o u p , r e c e i v i n g n o r o y a lt y , l ig h t s but r e t a i n i n g all t o th e ir w'ork e x c e p t initial p r o d u c ­ th e tio n o f t h e plays. is $ 2 0 0 . Texan Still Delivered In Campus Zones T h e S u m m e r T e x a n is d e l iv e r e d to s t u d e n t s l iv in g b e t w e e n N i n e ­ t e e n t h an d T w e n t y - s e v e n t h and R i o G r a n d e S p e e d w a y S t u d e n t s w h o do n o t S t r e e t s . liv e in th e d e l iv e r y z o n e c an call f o r t h e ir S u m m e r T e x a n a t J o u r n - lism B u i l d i n g 108. and f o r t h e said W e d n e s d a y s u b s c r ib e d M iss F r a n k i e W e lb o r n , b u s i n e s s t h a t Tanager, th e itudents w h o e x a n f ir s t s e m e s t e r o f »e s u m m e r te r m c an still r e c e i v e ie p u b lic a tio n d u r i n g th e s e c o n d fo r 25c b y p r e s e n t i n g s e m e s t e r ’s r e c e i p t a t s e m e s t e r ' h e ir J o u r n a l i s m B u i l d i n g 108. first t o HERE’S O N E O F THE NICER T H IN G S a b o u t e d itin g th© Texan— h a vin g this sm ling U S U c o -e d a: p e rso n a l gu e st tor a fo o tb a i week end. This '5 Borty Pfefter of N e w O rle a n s re a d in g her in ­ vitation to be the Texan s G a m e G o e s * ” a* *he Texa-.-LSU tussle in M e m o . 'ai Sta d iu m Se o - te m be r 18. F r i d a y , J u l y ? ? , T 94-8 T H E S U M M E R T E X A N P a g e In This Corner Tough Schedule For Steer Cagers Olympic Team Hears Sportsmanship Talk By ROY E D W A R D S T e x a n S p o r t s Editor L ONDON, J u l y 2 2 — W ) — A me r - J a c k a c k G r a y s p r o s p e c t s f o r a s u c c e s s f u l b a s k e t b a l l s e a - t h i s v e a r h a v e n ' t b e e n e n h a n c e d a n y b y t h e s c h e d u l e ^ " ' / t o d a y wh. l e Mr.,. L a w , , D o c - } Koul - ot Vi a l l n t h i s y e a r h a v e n ’t b e e n e n h a n c e d a n y b y h e h a s l i n e d u p f o r h i s 1 9 4 8 - 4 9 L o n g h o r n s . Klas» wlfe of G r a v ’s n e x t t e a m w i l l p l a y t h e s t r o n g e s t s c h e d u l e a n y baaaador, told the A m e r i c a n am- t hey h e a r a t he m in t h , g a m e . s t e e r t e a m h a s e n c o u n t e r e d ' i n y e a r s . O n l y o n e o f t h e j' ' (mave r „ p o n , , b , l , t y L o n g h o r n o p p o n e n t s . N o r t h T e x a s S t a t e C o l l e g e :n the maj or-c ollege cia i s n o t | JA C K G R A Y homa City a t ;nd o f ti , the :-t in -he c o u n t r y last year. I t e a m was one o f I C h r i s t ma s Holidays. too, Ot.h r high "pots on t h e sched- will p l a y A r k a n s a s both > two a n nu a l road t r i p s — ett evil le a n d This y ea r , t he L onghor n. in Fay- in A u s t ’n a c h a n g a t o u r : in S o u t h w e s t C o n f e r e n c e policy i ,. f l R a z or ba c k* f o r me r l y played Th each C o n f e r e n c e o pp o n e n t twice a t home one y e a r a n d twi ce on t he r o ad n ex t year. i i The complete Iv>nghorn s c he d­ Ll sneed 1 ' s t a n d i n g Pioneers W in Again From Spudders, 11-2 t h e m as She a d d r e s s e d t he y st ood b a n ke d b e f o r e the m e n ’s living q u a r t e r s a t U x b r i d g e f o r a fl ag-rai si n g c e r e m o ny . r e m e m b e r e d lose will he thi s side of “ The m a n n e r in which you win f a r or l onger , on t he A t ­ lantic, t h a n t h e n a me s or f a c e s of i ndi vi dual s a m o n g you who will r e t u r n home with hi ghe s t h o n o r s , ” Mrs. Dougl as said. “ You huve a g r a v e r e s po n s i ­ th*- A m e r ­ bility - you c a n prove ideal o f a u n i t ed world of ican f r i e n d l y people. Y o u r mission is a thri l l i ng c hal l e nge . I know it is in c apa bl e h a n d s . ” a l o a d d r e s s e d Th e a s s e mb l e d a t hl e t e s , i m p a ­ t i e n t to be o f f to t h e i r p r a c t i ce , w e r e by Lord Bur ghl e y, c h a r i m a n of the G a m 1 Ave r y o r g a n i z i n g B r u n d a g e , p r e s i d e n t of the A m e r ­ ican Ol ympi c C o m m i t t e e , r e j bri efly. c o mm i t t e e . l a t e r T h e c e r e m o n y c o nc l u d e d with t h e pl a yi ng of the S t a r S p a n g l e d B a n n e r by an B AF hand, whose in br i gh t i n s t r u m e n t s gl i st ene d the a t h ­ sunl i ght . Mi nu t e s to letes s c a t t e r e d t h e i r v a r i ou s t h e girls by bus t r a i n i n g site'*, ba c k t o t hei r c a m p a t Wi mbl edon. The m a n w ho e n j o y e d t he show mos t was Wa l l y Ris o f t h e I ni­ vers i t y o f Iowa, Unc l e S a m ’s bes' j u s t He wa s J li st eni ng w h e n — pop— his “ f oot ball k n e e ” s n a p p e d s w i mme r . t h e r e ule : r> 10- M- 16- 1 8 - 27- L S I ! et a* A u s t i n l i m . in Ri m**1 a t N e w O r l e a n s a* N o r m a n I T u l a n e O k l a h o m a N o r t h T e n s * N o r t h T e x a s a t A u stin N Y T »t N»w Yo r k J o s e p h '* a t I ' hl l a la! S t 1 O k l a h o m a C i t y T o o 4 O p r n S M I ) a t Dal l aa T C H a t F o r t W o r t h K i r a a t Ai i nt f n (Intr a t A ob t in o k l a h o m a a t A u s t i n I 6- l a Ha yl o r FVb. 3 phi * r n a m e n t I Ii T e x a s AAM 7 — A r k a n » a » at A u s t i n a t Co l l e n * R tatii F a y e t t e v i l l e t i n a t An 12 A r k a n s a n at Iii T e x a s AAM 1 It — Mb yl o r a 1 W a r o 2 t RI* a a t H o u sto n 2 6 - T C L ) a t A u s t i n S M U at. A u a t i n M a r J a c k son Sh i ne s Q ui t e a f ew ex L o n g h o r n - are pl a yi ng pr of e s s i ona l basebal l this y e a r h u t none a r e e n j o y i n g J s success as R a n s o m muc h J a c k ­ C o n f e r e n c e son, a l l S o u t h w e s t t h i r d - b a s e m a n in 1946 and 1947. t he S t e e r s for t he Des Moines A rooki e with the Class A We s t e r n Br ui ns in Lea gue, J a c ks on .831 is h i t t i ng and r a n k e d sixth in the l e a gue in the l a t e s t a v e r a g e s . He go t o f f to a had s t a r t bot h af i el d and a t the pl a t e f or the B r u i n s a n d was be nc he d at one ti me, b u t a f t e r a weeK of t a k i n g his ba seba l l f r om the d ug ou t , J a c k s o n b r o k e back into the li ne-up a n d they ha ven' t g o t him o u t since. He ha* played se ve r a l g a me s in t he ou t f i e l d a n d filled in a t first base f o r a few days, but J a c k s o n is now back at hi- old t h i r d base position. J a c k s o n has a p p a r e n t l y o v e r ­ c ome his e r r a t i c t h i o w i n g a n d Des Moines s p o r t s w r i t e r s h a ve t a gge d him t he mo s t - i mp r ov e d pl a y e r on t he Brui n squad. H. K. Allen Signs With L. A. Rams The Aust i n Pi one e r - a t ook f i r m e r g r i p on s econd place in t he Big S t a t e L e a g u e s t a n d i n g s r i g h t - h a n d e r T h u r s d a y night as Eulis Ros s on the chal j l engi ng Wi c hi t a Falls S pu d d e r s , 11-2, with a five hi t t er . s t op p e d sweep of G e o r g e E s t o c k will pit ch t o ­ n i ght as the P i o n e e r s go a f t e r a c l e a n t hr ee g a me s er ies a t 8 o ’clock a t Disch Field. Fol l owi ng t o n i g h t ’s ga me , t he Pio­ neers leave on a s e v e n - d a y r oa d trip, r e t u r n i n g J ul y 31. t he L e f t y R a l p h G e r m a n o , who took a 1-0 decision fr om Rosson in his i last a p p e a r a n c e here, s t a r t e d for I t he S p u d d e r s T h u r s d a y b u t d i d n ’t the fi rst inning. He ; last t h r o u g h i wal ked t h r ee men a nd g a v e up | t hr e e hits, i nc l udi ng Nelson Dav- triple, ami l e f t f or j is’a t h r e e - r u n an ear l y s h o w e r on t he s h o r t end of a 5-0 score. E a r l P e r r y ★ rel ieved G e r m a n e r el ieved with two o ut a nd l as t ed unti l the b o t t o m of si xth b e f o r e a t he t h r e e - r u n o u t b u r s t c has e d him. 1 Rosson s c a t t e r e d five S p u d d e r hits, wal ked onl y one, a nd st r uc k in a s p a r k l i n g mo u nd out e i ght perform ance. He mi ght well have had a s h u t o u t but f or St e ve C a r ­ t e r ’s a t t e m p t e d s h o e s t r i n g catch of J a c k B r a d s h e r ’s s i nki ng l i ner to C enterfield in the f our t h. f a r t e r missed t h e ball rolled to the C e n t e r f i e l d f e n c e f or an r un. F ra n k Pawlik, who had wal ke d s cor ed a h e a d of Br a ds he r . the cat ch, and ins i de - t he - pa r k h o m e The P io n e e r s w a s t e d no ti me in t h e fi rst led o f f thi rd t o se wi ng- up in inning. Eddie Wodzicki with a walk a n d we nt t h e g a me n Dave S a r v e r ’s si ngle to r i ght Gra .'eft good the s u b s t i t ut e this season, f a n s ’ vi ewpoi nt t i n g qui nt et h u t will a ga i n be h a n d ic a p pe d by r e s e r ve s t r e n g t h unless % of ie une xp e c t ed l y .n a basket ball wav. : he s fire the schedul e {rightest spot on the is rn a g r e e m e n t with ne n i v e rsity which will oners ’o Aust i n Feb- the a nn u a l I nf an t i l e 'id benefi t game. < >k- long- T f x a s have a h o t ilrv in all sport« rn- ha ve n' t ha d an » the Soone r to arf ion h° ro in •am (1-hoi ia F a> I teal a n n ua l l y c ome up t e a m a n d this y e a r exception. s t r o n g be no T e x a s - N e w Mexico the West L e a g u e h u t will to play in the a n n u a l Chi c a go Tri b- f oot ba l l g a me . He jric t h e Chi c a go B e a r s o f will th* Na t i ona l P r o f es s i on a l F o o t ­ ball Te ague thi s fall. all S t a r oin leave soon Mrs. Thayne, also a U n i v e r s i t y ex, is ' h e f o r m e r Carol A n n K r u e ­ ger, d a u g h t e r o f Dr. a mi Mrs. J. T. K r u e g e r of Lubboc k. A u stin G o lfe r Reaches Tri-State M e e t Finals J u l y A M A R I L L O , 2 2 — (ZP) — B. F. H o l me s o f S ha m r o c k a n d Red Gober of Aust i n won t he i r way t h e T r i ­ s t a t e S e n i o r Golf T o u r n a m e n t here. fi nals o f into the 1937, o u s t ed Hol me s , c h a mp i on of the e v e n t ’i 1935 a n d t h e medal ist, R o y Allen of O k l a h o ma t v , on t h e 19th hole, while Go­ < b e r h a d a t ough t i me with F r a n k Day of Pl a i nv i e w b e f o r e w i n ni n g I up. Go b a r L s e e k i ng his f o u r t h t i ­ tle. He won t he m e e t f o r g o l f e r 1 o v e r 50 .'.ears in 3 944, 1 945, and 1946. You Alway* Receive . . . QUICK! COURTEOUS! COMPLETE! SERVICE at the Home Steam Laundry | 120 L. loth Phot!* 3702 O L Y M P IC AC TIO N for rry TI Dmpson will be- 31 wher he com petes f the two 5,000 meter urteen men w I qualify na's 'n *h’s event to b e ist 2. I 1 f t A b a r k w h e r e out of j o i n t l a s t S u n d a y . it b el onge d. I t w e n t T h e A m e r i c a n Ol ympi c t e a m buss ed into c a m p W e d n e s d a y and f r o m Mi nneapoli s a w r e s t l e r na me d V e r n e G a gn e p u t its s e n t i ­ m e n t s in a n u t s h e l l ; “ Boy, i t ’s a thrill to be in E n g l a n d . ” G a g n e and his s e ve r a l h u n d r e d t e a m m a t e s c a m e up b y bus f r o m j S o u t h a m p t o n , vA.ere t h e y a rr i v e d l i ne r A me r i ca , r u b b e r i n g the on The P io n e e r s g o t a single run in th e sin g le d With h o m e on M o n c h a k ’s 3 6 7- f o o t d o u ­ f o u r t h w h e n L a w r e n c e j two a w a y and rode! ble to l e f t fi e l d . to t he line t e r ’s si n g l e S a r v e r l e d o f f i nni ng wi t h a t h r e e - r u n single s i x t h to c e n t e r , took se c o n d when P e r r y balk ed , and w e n t to t h i r d on C a r ­ r i ght. P e r r y cut t h r e w wild o f f as G arter w e n t into second, a nd S a r v e r s c o r ed . G a r t e r sc or ed on L a w r e n c e ’s s h a r p g r o u n d si ngle to le f t . L a w r e n c e moved to second on thi rd, sacr ifi ce, M o n c h a k ’s s c o r e d o n Ha r ol d S m i t h ’s t hr ow- i n h u t stole t he : and sin g le t o right, i The P io n e e r s got t h e i r l a s t two s e v e n t h on C o l a ’s in sin gle , W o d z i c k i ’s double, runs third and C a r t e r ’s s i n g l e t o right. the S p e c t a c u l a r f i e l di ng by t h e k e y ­ c o m b i n a t i o n of Wedzi eki s t o n e and M onchak helped Rosson keep o ut o f t r o u b le . A f t e r Van W i n k le the g a m e w i t h a single, o p e n e d into l ef t - c e nt e r - W odzick i <>ver-the-shoulder field c atch o f P a u l B r o t h e r t o n ’s s hor t fly. T h e n M o n c h a k r ac e d f a r to base, his k n o c k e d d o w n P a w l i k ’s a p p a r e n t hit w ith a b a c k - h a n d e d s t ab, a n d it into a for ce a t second. t ur ne d r ig h t b e hi nd r a c e d am second fo r C r omwe l l p r o n o u n c e d a n earl y t h e U x b r i d g e village. v e r di c t on “ Really g r a n d , ” he b e a m e d . Ve r n Mc Gr e w, 18-year -old Rice I n s t i t u t e high j u m p e r , r e c o n n o i t ­ e r e d t h e j u m p i n g pits b u t did not don his w o r k clothes. A t e m p e r e d s t i f f b r e e z e t h a t s u m m e r the mild a n d s u n n y w e a t h e r . McGr e w noted t e m p e r a t u r e s a r e c o n s i de r a b l y l o w e r h e r e t h a n a t home a n d sighed, “ I j u s t hope we g e t h o t t e r w e a t h e r . ” O t h e r t r a c k and field s t a r s by the score u n k i n k e d t h e m s e l v e s in easy w o r k o u t s . The Standings BI G S T A T E L E A G U E W L 37 55 Sh r mn . - D e n . 40 52 Aust i n 42 We hi t a Fal l s 49 45 48 Wa c o 50 46 Paris 48 41 Ga i n e s v i l l e 51 40 T e x a r k a n a 52 40 G r e e n v i l l e Pct. . 59 7 . 56 5 . 5 3 8 . 48 4 . 4 7 9 . 4 5 0 . 43 9 . 434 N AT I O N A L L E A G U E GB 3 5 Vi IO ’4 l l 1 2% 1 4% 15 ...... W L Pct. GB 61 34 Bos t on 43 39 B r o o k l yn — . 43 4 0 St. Loui s . r 43 4 0 P i t t s b u r g h . 41 41 N e w Yo r k 41 4 6 Phi l adel phi a Ci nc i nnat i __ 39 4 7 36 5 0 Ch i c ag o . 6 0 0 . 6 2 4 . 5 1 8 . 5 1 8 . 5 0 0 8% . 4 7 1 . 4 5 3 1 2 % . 4 1 9 15% 6% 7 7 l l AMERI CAN L E A G U E Cl e v e l an d Phi l ad e l ph i a B o s t o n N e w Yo r k D e t r o i t W a s h i n g t o n St. L o u i s Ch i c ag o % I W L Pct. GBI . 6 0 7 . 5 9 3 2 . 58 1 2 % . 5 7 6 9 % . 4 9 4 . 4 4 7 1 3% . 3 8 6 20 24 . 321 . ••—a 61 33 54 37 50 38 49 3 6 __ 42 4 3 38 47 . __ 30 52 27 57 T E X A S L E A GU E W L Pet. GB . 6 1 6 61 38 Fo r t Wo r t h ......... __ 54 38 . 5 8 7 Tul s a .56R 54 41 H o u s t o n S h r e v e p o r t __ . 4R0 1 8 % 47 51 13% . 4 7 8 45 49 San A n t o n i o _ __ 42 53 17 . 4 4 2 Da l l a s B e a u m o n t ~ __ 43 56 18 . 4 3 4 37 57 . 3 9 3 2 1 % Okla. Ci t y 3 % 6 Four Equal Course Record To Tie for Reading Open Lead The hrs w a y th r o w -in c o u g h t S a r v e r on e q u a lled a c o u r s e r ecord s e c o n d bu t s e c o n d - ' m ade o n ly o n c e to in R E A D I N G P a., J u l y 22 F o u r par b u s t i n g pro _(/P)— j he t h e onl y t h r e e w a y p u t t e r in g o l f e r s ! pro g o l f — l e f t h an d e d , r i g h t h a n d - o f 6 5 led a nd c r o w h a n d e d — a t t r i b u t e d the 26 ye a r s ( his f i ne g a m e to b o o m i n g ^drives and sharp green shots. Munday went out in 31 and came home in 34. t h e Los A n g e l e s R a m s o f s c o r e d , Allen b e c a m e the s e v e n t h , b a s e m a n F a t M c N a ir th r e w wild in h isto r y o f th e B e r k s h ir e C o u n t r y r u n d o w n p l a y , S a r v e r w a s C l u b t o d a y t o h e a d a f i el d o f 146 a n d W o d z i c k i p r o f e s s i o n a l s a n d a m a t e u r s in t h e f i r s t r o u n d o f t h e $ 1 5 , 0 0 0 R e a d - i ng O p e n H. K m e m b e r t h e 1 9 4 7 L o n g h o r n f o o t b a l l t e a m t o t u r n p r o f e s s i o n a l w h e n t o t h e N a t i o n a l L e a g u e a n n o u n c e d t h e y h a d s i g h e d j f i r s t , b p t Al L a w r e n c e w a l k e d a n d W e d n e s d a y ’ h a t t h e y h a d s i gn e d h a t s a f e w en s p e e d y h a l f b a c k . t h e h a l f b a c k . Al e x M o n c h a k w a s Al l e n p l a y e d wi t h S o u t h w e s t e r n s h o r t s t o p Ri p ^ a n W i n k l e b o o t e d ft0 d M u n d a y , Y o r k , p.. J . D u t c h H a r r i s o n , d e f e n d - j n g c h a m p i o n o f L i t t l e R o c k , A r k . , ( P a . ) C o u n - t h e I t r y C ju b F r e t j H a a s j r > N e w 0 r _ S t e v e < a r t e r t h e s a f e IftnHinir s e c o n d , p o p p e d o u t a t _ v_i ------- 1 U n i v e r s i t y a s a n a v a l t r a i n e e h » \ ] i n a d o u b l e - p l a y ball , { 19 4 4 a n d 19 45 , c o m i n g t o t h e b a s e s . Da v i s U n i v e r s i t y in N o v e m b e r 1 9 4 5 . He I f i n i s h e d o u t t h e 1 9 4 5 s e a s o n wi t h ‘ he S e e r s ’ S o u t h w e s t C o n f e r e n c e a n d C o t t o n Bowl c h a m p i o n s a n d f u l l b a c k , Al l e n t h e a p l a y e d w i t h S o u t h w e s t e r n In 1945 S u n B o w l g a m e a s B J l e t t e r e d I . t h e n p o k e d o n e o u t t h e • ii j u s t . . r i g h t l i n e . . . . f i el d f o r a i ns i de t r i p l e a n d i nt o f ou l t h r e e m o r e r u n s . D a v i s s c o r e d o n C l e m t h e C o l a ’s t h a t b r o k e a f i r s t o f p r o l o n g e d b a t t i n g s l u m p t h e f o r P i o n e e r c a t c h e r - o u t f i e l d e r . line s i ng l e t o c e n t e r , t h r e e hi t s ESQUIRE C lu b . C L O S E D S U N D A Y S JAM SESSION EVERY NIGHT COME SII IN rn cora c h a m B E V E R A G E S 7 1 5 E. M il S t . P H O N E 2-0002 Haas, who learned his g o lf from “ pop” hack in Portland, Ark., was the third of the trio to give wide­ eyed onlookers a momentary thrill. He chipped 40 yards to the edge on the same 18th o f the cup g r e e n , m issing an eagle and a new record by the thinnest o f mar­ gins. Palmer carded the sam e neat 65, covering the front nine in 32 Bobby Locke made onlookers b l i n k with disbelief as he missed a four putt on the interesting 18th in j ho l e to wind up with a 66. l e a n s , La. , a n d J o h n n y P a l m e r , B a d i n , N. C , al l t o u r e d t h e 6 , 4 3 8 y a r d c o u r s e i n s e v e n u n d e r p a r . T h r e e o f t h e b r i l l i a n s h o t m a k - a n e w e s t a b l i s h i n g e r s m i s s e d c o u r e e y e l a s h . H a r r i s o n d r o v e 3 0 0 y a r d s t r a p i n t o t h e 1 8 t h g r e e n , a j u s t o f f p i t c h e d o u t p o o r l y a n d is o w n w o r d s , “ m i s s e d t h e n t h e b e s t I Bantam Ben Hogan, Hershey, I h h i t p u t t o f mv l i f e . ” H e h o l e d o u t Pa- *triving to overhaul Lloyd f o r a p a r f o u r a n d a o n e q u a r t e r | Mangrum as leading money win- t h e $ 2 , 5 0 0 n e r » carded a 67. Mangrum, o f t e m p o r a r y f i r s t p r i z e m o n e y . H e s c o r e d 34 (Niles, IU., played in 69. o n t h e w a y o u t a n d 31 in i n t e r e s t in SALES • SERVICE Convoniontly Located M u n d a y, a n a t iv e o f San F r a n ­ cisco, C a lif ., c a m e w it h i n a n inch o f f i r i n g a 64. His 14 f o o t p u tt on the last h o le r o lle d to t h e lip o f th e cup a n d said no. T h e 36- ye a r-o ld M u n d a y , w h o c la i m s to L O A N S W e Loan Money On Anything of Value in u n r e d e e m e d dia­ B a r g a in s t o 5 0 % on m o n d s — s a v e up w a tc h e s c o n s i s t i n g o f E lg in , W altha m , G ru en , B u l o v a , and H a m ilto n . CROWN JEWELRY CO. 213 E. 6th St. P hone 2-1060 light, Medium and Heavyweight Indian Motorcycles. W * S e r v i c e A ll M * k « * o f M o t o r ­ b i k e * , m o t o r ­ s c o o t e r s . m o t o r c y c l e * , a n d t a k e a d e m o n s t r a ­ C o m e b y e n d r i d e o n t h * S e n s a t i o n a l AH I n d i a n M e d i u m - w e i g h t M o t o r - t i o n N e w JACK O’LEARY it Service Indian Sale* 1 7 0 3 G u a d a lu p e P h o n e 7 - 4 2 0 0 Texas-Rke Game Sold Out 5,500 Reserved For Student Body AL As Race Bosox B ourd oi» th e A e e o r ia tr d P reen Tightens Move Up T h a t A m e r i c a n L e a g u e r a c e be-1 with t wo o u t a n d t h e ba ses l o a d e d comes t i g h t e r e v e r y t i m e t h e t e a m s in t h e t w e l f t h i n n i n g to give C o n ­ te ke t h e fi eld a n d T h u r s d a y pl a y nie M a c k ’s n i n e an 8-7 v i c t or y o v e r Wi t h 50 p e r c e n t o f t h e ^ rn* ' p roVed n0 e x c e p t i o n as t h e N e w t h e Br o wn s , f o r , York y a nke e g d e f e a t e d t h e lead-1 f o u r t h pl ace T h e D e t r o i t Ti ger * j u m p e d i n t o ing Cl e v e l an d I n d i a n s to close t h e a 6-0 lead in t h e f i r s t i nn i ng b u t ga p b e t w e e n a n d ' the W a l l i n g t o n Se n a t o r * cum® f i r s t to a m e r e t wo a n d o n e - h a l f b a c k to b l a s t t h e B e ng a l ace, Ha l N e w h ou se r , o u t of t he box a n d ga me s . go on to a in a F o r r e s t t we l ve T h o m p s o n w o n t h e g a m e f o r h i m ­ sel f b y d r i v i n g h o m e E a r l W o o t e n wi t h r u n w i t h t i e - b r e a k i n g on e o u t in t h e t w e l f t h . T h o m p s o n wa s t h e f o u r t h W a s h i n g t o n h u r l e r . t h e t h e N a t i o n a l L e a g u e , l e a d i n g B o s t o n Bra ve * w e r e r a i n e d ------- „ ---------------- t h e y still se c o n d - i n i place B r o ok l y n D o d g e r s w h o l os t T h e r e d - h o t B os t o n Re d Sox o f J o e M c C a r t h y t o o k o v e r sol e o w n ­ e rs hi p o f t h i r d pl a ce b y s w e e p ­ ing a d o u b l e - h e a d e r f r o m t h e l ow­ ly Chi c a go W h i t e S o x f o r t h e se c ­ on d s t r a i g h t da y, a n d t h e se cond place Ph i l a d e l p hi a A t h l e t i c s a r e only a ha l f g a m e b e hi n d Cleve- t h e bi g b a t f o r t h e Re d g a i n e d g r o u n d S t e p h e n s o u t a t C i n ci n n a t i b u t t r i u m p h i n n i n g g a me . t h e t h e 9-8 on In t he s u n - b a t h e d En g l i sh c o u n ­ a t t r ysi de . l un c h B e f or e t h e y mo v e d into t h e i r slick l i ving q u a r t e r s a t U x ­ bri dge, a n R A F s t a t i o n t w e n t y miles w e s t o f L ondon. v e r s i t y ’s al l ocati on s e t asi de t h e At h l e t i c Busi ne s s s t u d e nt s , Office r a n out o f Ri c e - T e xa s f oot ­ ball t i c k e t s T h u r s d a y a f t e r Busi­ f i ni s he d ness M a n a g e r E d Olle sale c a l c u l a t i ng his f i r s t d a y ’s All t h e e x c e p t f a m o u s f e l t well J o h n Brooks, a n a l t e r n a t e on Ame r i ca ' s f o u r - o a r e d r o w i n g c r e w, w h o got of t he 1948 season. o f f the ship r u n n i n g a m y s t e r i o u s f ever . He w a s t a k e n by a m b u ­ l a nc e t o a L ondon hospi t al b u t soon w a s d e c l a r e d f i t a n d r e j oi n e d his m a t e s a t Uxbr i dge . Th e U n i v e rs i t y r e c e i ve d 11,000 in H o us t o n t i cket s f or t h e g a m e t he m O c t o b e r 23, a n d 5,500 o f f o r s t u d e n t s a n d wer e r e s e r v e d t he L o n g h o r n B a n d , l a r g e s t the p r o p or t i o n e v e r s a ve d f o r a st u- de n t - b o d y trip. T h e r e s e r v a t i o n f o r s t u d e n t s is 300 m o r e saved 1946, e ve n fall e n r o l l m e n t is onl y 15,000 as Sox, by h i t t i n g a h o m e r u n The w o m e n a t h l e t e s w e n t in s e p a r a t e buse s to t h e i r bi l l et s a t Wi m b l e d o n, t e n n i s c e n t e r . T h e r o w e r s a n d y a c h t s me n c a me on to Lon d o n by t r a i n , a f t e r th** m e m b e r s OI inc t n i v c i a u j f ^ t he m e m b e r s o f the U n i v e r s i t y of t e n d e r l y | c o m p a r e d wi t h t he 17,000 s t u d e n t s each g a m e T h u r s d a y . D e n n y Gal e- C a l i f o r n i a ’s “ bi g - e i g h t ” 1 L . _ _ _ L . . i . .. I *L n WI L. ! A _ €?—.«» IM . , I • ! h ouse s h u t o u t t h e W h i t * Sox in d e b a r k i n g of I VI I IL -- - - A m a x i m u m of f o u r t i cke t s wa s *be 0 p e n e r, 3-0, on five hit s wi t h i 4 4 / . J p e r m i t t e d t he “ p r i o r i t y ” sale I S t e p h e n s ’ f i r s t - i n n i n g h o m e r w i t h o p e n e d J u l y I to T e x a s l e t t e r m e n J s t a n Spe nc e on b a s e gi vi ng hi m a nd r u n s he ne ede d. 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Vie Raschi r e - I N i p p y t h e b a s e s l o a d e d i n n i n g J o n e s t h e a r e t he e n- sales p i c k e t r e m a i n d e r of t h e g a me s , uuv m c c - ceived c r e d i t f o r t h e t r i u m p h b u t e l e v e n t h Me a n w h i l e brisk t h e f o r to b r i n g W h i t e y K u - i xi ngnor ns l o n g h o r n s ’ g ame s , b u t la r ged s e a t i n g c a p a c i t y o f Aus- ; it w a s a f i n e r e l i e f p e r f o r m a n c e r ows ki in w i t h t h e w i n n i n g t al ly, t i n ’s Me m o r i a l S t a d i u m a n d C ot t on Bowl in Dal l as h a s c o n s i de r a b l y t h e s t r a i n t h a i exi s t ed I H a n k Ma j es ki , A t hl e t i c 3 r d b a s e - j t h e f or bi g g a m e s ga me . j o n g g a m e b u t sc or ed six r u n s in s e v e n t h i n n i ng b e f o r e a m a n r e c e n t years , ma n , c a me t h r o u g h wi t h a si r r l e ' w a s p u t o u t . She l don J o n e s al - L o u i s b u t se ve n hit s i irs* t he by T o m m y B y r n e t h a t s a v e d t h e T h e C a r d s t r a i l e d 5-0 in t h e sec- A tot al of six of t h e I x i n g h o r n s ’ j -------------------- — ------------ | lowed St. e a s e d in in in e i t he r Lit t l e All • A m e r i c a n e t A A M the ope ne r . g a m e s will be p l a y e d Me mor i a l S t a d i u m o r t h e C o t t on t hos e sites will Bowl, an d b o t h a c c o m m o d a t e m o r e f a n s this year. t h a n 65, 000 ma(3e J a m e s Boswell, w ho will pl a y jpft h a l f f o r T e x a s A AM t hi s fall, t he Li t t l e A l l - Am e r i c a n a Ma r i n e f oot ba l l t r a i n e e a t Oberl i n College. t e a m whi l e F a n i m o r e Quit* P r o Rank* O K L A H O M A , CI T Y, J u l y 22— (TP) — Bob F e n i m o r e , Chi ca go a n- Be a r s h a l f b a c k, f oot ba l l f r om pr o f e s s i on a l f o o t b a l l a f t e r one season. The f o r m e r t w o - t i m e sel ecti on fr om O k l a h om a A&M Coll ege a t St i l l wa t e r , said he was q u i t t i n g f oot ba l l , mer i c a c a ppe d him l a s t season. BI G S T A T E L E A G U E A u s t i n l l , Wi c hi t a F al l s 2. S h e r m a n - D e n i s o n 13, P a r i s T e x a r k a n a W a c o l l , Gr e e nvi l l e l l , Gainesvi ll e 6. T E X A S L E A G U E I. IO. F o r t W o r t h 3, H o u s t o n I . T u l s a 17, B e a u m o n t 5. Sa n A n t o n i o 6, Dallas I. O k la h o ma Cit y 6, S h r e v e p o r t 3. in J o h n n y Mize h o m e r e d o nc e each g a m e f o r t he Gi a nt s a n d S t a n Musial hit his t w e n t y - t h i r d h o me r u n f o r St. Loui s t h e s e c o n d tilt. in T h e P i t t s b u r g h P i r a t e * c a p ­ f i r s t g a m e o f a d o u ­ t u r e d the b l e - h e a d e r f r o m t h e P h i l a d e l p h i a Phil*, 5-3. Th»> s e c o n d g a m e w a s i n n i n g t h e s t o p p e d a f t e r t h e s c or e t i ed, 1-1. 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FU R N ISH E D B U N G A L O W f l u o r e s c e n t N e w b u i l d i n g a r e a , s p a c i o u s b u i l t - i n a a n d l i g h t i n g . S h o w n *11 d a y a n d e v e n i n g s u n t i l 9 p . m . 616 N o r t h L o o p B lv d ., o n e b lo c k e a s t of C h i c k e n S h a c k o n D a l l a s H i g h w a y . L O S T B L A C K P a r k e r g o l d t o p ; n a m e A r t P a r k e r in g o l d ; 1 9 09 W h i t l s ; 2 - 5 8 2 9 . '61 F o u n t a i n P e n , s t a m p e d P L A N a h a y r i d e 3 W h a l e s * . 2 - 3 8 6 5 . f l a t - b e d f o r y o u r n e x t s o c i a l : t r u c k * ; r e a a o n a h l e r a t e s ; c a l l Elf L O S T , G R U E N p o c k e t w a t c h i n s c r i b e d on f r o m D a d , & l * t J r . " G e o r g e f a c e : B i r t h d a y , 1 9 4 0 ” ; p l e a s e c a ll 8 - 0 5 8 7 . Music T H E C A M P U S M U S I C S E R V I C E S u p e r b r e c o r d e d m u s i c f o r d a n c e s o f a n y s i t e f o r o n l y $ 1 0 . I n c l u d e s P . A . s y s t e m , o p e r a t o r a n d e x t e n s i o n s p e a k e r * a s n « e d - ed. A l s o e x c i t i n g m o v i e s i n t e r m i s ­ s i o n s . C al l J a c k H o o d a t 8 - 6 5 0 1 . f o r U N I V E R S I T Y N E I G H B O R H O O D n u r s e r y s c h o o l . H a l f o r w h o l e d a y . E x p e r i e n c e d s u p e r v i s i o n . P l a y r o o m , s h a d y y a r d . B a l ­ a n c e d j u i c e , n a p . A g e s 2 - 6 . 7 - 8 7 1 2 . l u n c h , i r u i t C A M P U S A L T E R A T I O N S H O P 2 3 2 8 G u a d a l u p e a n d f i t t i n g s C o r r e c t C o s t u n . e s , r e n t . S u m m e r h o u r s , 8 a . m . f o r m a l s a n d h o o p a k i r t a h o s i e r y m e n d i n g . f o r t o I p . m . c p. o s s w o R D A N s w E P. a n a H U Q IS U13&LJ S an a aatara i an an a saanaif l a c s a a a □an a g u a an auu u a a a i L i r j u an a l-juu an an a anna a E - i r i a n c j u L i n a M o r a a a waaa unman niuun amnia a j a r i B u r n a Professional A p p o i n t m e n t O n l y A N A F T E R N O O N O F R ID IN G A N D P I C N I C SUPPER FOR $ 5 . 0 0 D R IP P IN G S P R I N G S R A N C H 17 m i l e s w e s t of A u s t i n f o r m a k e r e s e r v a t i o n s w e e k e n d S e e F R A N C E S B E A T Y 2 0 0 0 W h i t i s - P h . 8 0 6 ' lyping DR. H . B. PARK S F O R N E A T 7 - 4 3 2 1 ; p i c k - u p . d e l i v e r . s u d a - c u r a t e t y p i n g , c a l l G E N E R A L DENISTRY N E E D T Y P I N G ? F o r f a s t , a c c u r a t e t y p ­ 6 2 7 W . 84 P h o n e 2 - 1 8 7 6 F O R S A L E : E x c l u s i v e 2 f r a m e 3 b e d r o o m s , 28 f t. l i v i n g r o o m . T a r r y ­ t o w n ; r e a l f a m i l y h o m e ; c o m m u n i t y c e n ­ t e r : 2 - 2 7 0 7 . s t o r y Radio Service GUARANTEED RADIO 8 - 1 4 1 3 n i g h t s . $5 t o 60 m i l e s p e r g a l l o n , 6 0 m i le * c r u i s i n g s p e e d — A b o u t 60 e n t h u s i a s ­ . . a s k o n * o f t i c o w n e r s t h e m . a n d c o n v e r t i b l e s s t a t i o n - w a g o n * in A u s t i n a v a i l a b l e S e d a n s , t o d a y . . R H E A M O T O R C O . T a i . 7 - 5 0 8 6 2 3 2 6 E . F i r * t B R A N D N E W ; ' 4 # F o r d T u d o r ; w il l t r a d * f o r e a r l i e r m o d e l c a r <1 9* 0 o r s e ll o u t r i g h t ; p h o n e 1 6 4 7 . l a t e r ) ; a l s o g o o d c o n d i t i o n , 1041 H U D S O N 4 - d o o r S e d a n , 6 - c y l i n d e r , c o n s i d e r t r a d e : o r 7 - 7 4 8 7 a f t e r 5 o r w e e k e n d s ; 9 1 5 S t o - b a u g h . cal ! M r . H i p p c h e n , $ 7 7 5 : w il l 2 - 2 4 7 3 19 * 7 O L D S M O B I L E C O A C H , c l e a n , g o o d t h i s w e e k ; f a n : P e o ­ 7 - 2 8 8 8 . t i r e s a n d e n g i n e , m u s t s e ll a l s o 4 0 0 0 C F w i n d o w e x h a u s t ple*, S 90C D e e p E d d y A p t s . ; L A T E M O D E L ’47 C r e a m F o r d T u d o r s e d a n f o r a a i e . c a l l 7 - 1 8 1 1 o r c o m * b y 8 6 1 6 W i c h i t a . 4 - R O O M H O U S E f o r s a l * b y g r a d u a t i n g I . • e n i o r ; p o s s e s s i o n a b o u t S e p t e m b e r 6 0 8 8 - 5 9 9 5 o r a e * p h o n e a t $ 6 5 6 0 ; U p t o n . Us e D ai l y T e x a n Classified A d s REPAIR W ORK RADIO-TRONIC! 2608 Guadalupe For FREE ESTIM ATE and immedia+e pickup DIAL 8-9455 Riders Wanted W A N T E D R I D E R S t o F o r t W u r t h - D a l l a s l e a v i n g F r i d a y 1 2 : 8 0 o ’c l o c k . R e t u r n - m d t r i p 6 6 . C a l l 8 - 0 7 7 8 a f t e r S u n d e r. '■ 6 o ’elocU. L e a v i n g f o r F o r t W o r t h F r i d a y m o r n i n g 7 a rn.. C a n c a r r y 2. C a l l B o b C., 7 - 1 9 1 8 . R E A D T H E C L A S S I F I E D S in g cal l 7 - 1 5 0 6 . E X P E R T T Y P I N G , p h o n e 8 - 0 9 3 6 . r e a s o n a b l e r a t e s , t y p i n g c a l l e d p r o m p t l y w h e n fo r s u d s p e c i f i e d : d e l i v e r e d p h o n e 2 - 4 3 5 3 . E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I S T w a n t s w o r k t o d o a t h o m e . N o t e s , r e p o r t s , t h e m e s , ______ _ e t c . C a l l 2 - 1 5 0 2 . U B A G R A D U A T E , th e * * * , in tr r e p o r t s , D ote#, e x p e r i e n c e d a t e . C a l l 7 - 9 7 2 1 . i n t y p - t a b u l a t i o n s * _______ _ F O R E X P E R T t y p i n g c a l l 2 - 8 6 7 1 d a y s ; A L L T Y P E S o f t y p i n g d o n e ; t h e s e s , e t c . c a ll 7 - 7 6 6 0 . E X P E R T T Y P I S T d e a i r * # t y p i n g s t h o m e ; p h o r j* 5 7 6 9 . ________ _ Typewriter Rental T Y P E W R I T E R S F O R r e n t . Ail m a k e * S t a n d a r d s a n d P o r t a b l e * . W e d e l i v e r s a t i s f a c t i o n g u a r a n t e e d : o w n e d ' b y U, v e t e r a n p h o n e 7 - 2 1 5 9 . W anted to Rent S T U D K N l A N D f u r n i s h e d e m p l o y e d w i f e d e a i n f u r S e p t e m b e r a p a r t m e n t cal l B e r r v , 7 - 6 4 1 2 a f t e r 7 p m S T U D E N T V e t e r a n , s u m m e r , d e s i r e * t o b e m a r r i e d f u r n i s h e d 1 s t . C a l l . - 8 6 2 4 t h i i j s p a r t a n e n ! a t t e , f o r S e p t e m b e r 6 p. m A C A C I A F R A T E R N I T Y w a n t * lea* p a r t i a l l y f u r n i s h *1 t o 2<) b o y s ; p h o r t o u n f u r n i s h e d o r s u i t a b l e 15 h o u s e L o u i s . 2 -9 7 4 9. M A R R I E D V E T E R A N w i t h e n t l y n e e d * 2 a p a r t m e n t o r H o u s e u n i v e r s i t y ; e n t e r i n g * ■» a i i , b e d r o o m c h i l d u r g u n ' u r n i s s h e p r e f e r * n e . in S e p t e m b e r ; *» Iv ’ Ac rn T E m a r k b y t h e proverbial! and the back nine in 33. Buy a N E W C R O S L E Y a n d s a v e Real Estate Congress Hears Truman Today p r e s i d e n t I r o m a n n e x t Tues-1 f o r a sp ecial session by th e Presi- v i l l p e r s o n a l l y a d d r e s s ?ress h e h a s b i t t e r l y cri t i ci zed ly do wn his d e m a n d s f o r nnt i - t h e dent . l a t i on a n d housing: laws. ■l r . T r u m a n said T h u r s d a y t h a t 1*1 woul d not det ai l t h e i n t e r n a - in his me s s a ge . iotial s i t u a t i o n l i t . T r u m a n al s o sai d all sor t s 1 1 D e m o c r a t s w’ill f i g u r e in his •St c a m p a i g n c o n f e r e n c e s . lf** t h i n k s s ome o f t h o s e c o mi n g O'[the W h i t e Hous e will be S o u t h ­ e r D e m o c r a t s . He a d d e d t h a t all n t m e n t s o f t h e D e m o c r a t i c p a r t y rould be we l c ome . in Mr . T r u m a n wa s t o u r i n g c a m p a i g n . i n de f i n i t e t h e b o u t poli ti cal i r c - i de nt i a l As ked f b e t h e r it would be c o r r e c t to call fids a " r u m p sessi on, ” Mr. T r u - l a n said d r y l y t h a t t h a t is u p to i n g r e s s . B o t h H o u s e s will m e e t j o i n t l y t 10: 30 o ’clock T ue s da y m o r n i n g o h e a r t h e P r e s i d e n t . Mr . T r u m a n ’s m e s s a ge , cover- i g a t l ea s t n i n e o t h e r p r op o s e d ills, will be t h e si gnal f o r R e p u b - Cfin to eci de w h a t t o do a b o u t it. in bot h H o u s e s l e a d e r s T h e Re p u b l i ca n - * o n t r o I I e d l i ghti eth r e c o n v e n e s C o ng re ss fj jnday a f t e r b e i n g ca l l e d b a c k 'larch Holds Rally )n Capitol Steps Ca.'O M a r c h t ook his c a m p a i g n sri t h e g o v e r n o r s h i p to t h e C a p ­ el s t e ps W e d n e s d a y . W i t h the d of a s o un d t r u c k he s h o u t ed Lozenges t o G o v e r n o r J e s t e r to '>me. d o w n a n d e x pl a i n his s t a n d .SIOO a w a r d i se v e r al issues. T h e G o v e r n o r dill n o t a p p e a r . i ha d I ft a n h o u r e a r l i e r to in- f i c t a s t a t e i n s t i t ut i on. A cr owd of s ome 200 w a t c h e d a r c h p r e s e n t a to a r vi \ W. W ren o f Pa r i s f o r s ub- if r t ng t h e b e s t d e f i n i t i o n o f t he Un " u n - T e x a n . ” W r e n defined it as " a n y o n e who •esn ’t w a n t o u r v e t e r a n s to ha ve i n t o t h e r s a r e g e t t i n g ” a n d " a n y t e r a n who votes f o r J e s t e r . ” t h e G o v e r n o r M a r c h a c c u s e d t h e s a b o t a g e t o a t t e m p t i n g smocrati c p a r t y at t h e n a t i on a l B vent ion a n d c h a l l e n g e d him tell his s t a n d on a p p e a r a n d i f i n g t he ce i l i ng o f ol d- age p e n ­ to s h o w w h a t he h a s done i s tell w h e r e v e t e r a n s , a n d to m o n e y will c o me f r o m to ful- in his f o r t y - s e v e n promi se? 1 it form. M a r c h i n t e r s p e r s e d his speech th the que s t i on, " C a n you h e a r Beaufort!?” in Congr e s s , t h a t m o s t o f P r e s i d e n t i a l S e c r e t a r y C h a r l e s G. Ross said t h e bills Mr. T r u m a n w a n t s a r e p e n d ­ s ome a l r e a d y i ng pa s s e d b y o ne H o u s e o r t h e ot he r . T h e P r e s i d e n t , Ross sai d, is n o t a s k i n g e n a c t m e n t o f t h e R e p u b ­ li can p l a t f o r m . T h e W h i t e H o u s e h a d n o c o m ­ m e n t on t h e i ns i s t enc e o f C h a i r ­ m a n E a t o n ( R - N J ) of t h e H o us e F o r e i g n A f f a i r s C o m m i t t e e t h a t Mr. T r u m a n tel l j u s t h o w n e a r we a r e t o w a r . Mr. T r u m a n r e c e i ve d a b o o s t f r o m J a c k KrOll, d i r e c t o r o f t h e CI O P o l i t i ca l A c t i o n C o m m i t t e e . ★ Truman Puts Welcome M a t Out for South P r e s i d e n t T r u m a n a n d J. H o w ­ the a r d M c G r a t h , c h a i r m a n o f D e m o c r a t i c P a r t y , p u t o u t the we l c ome m a t f o r w a y w a r d D e m o ­ t h e S o u t h e r n e r s w e n t c r a t s, b u t a h e a d w i t h pl a ns t h e i r own c a mp a i g n . f o r M c G r a t h a n n o u n c e d t h a t a s e ­ ries of s t r a t e g y c o n f e r e n c e s wo u l d be held a n d t h a t all e l e m e n t s of t h e p a r t y w o u l d be we l c ome to a t t e n d . H e a d d e d t h a t he w a s c e r ­ t a i n G o v e r n o r T h u r m o n d woul d be w e l c o me a t t h * Wh it e House. t h a t G o v e r n o r T h u r m o n d t o o k a lot of t h e s t i n g o u t o f r e v o l t by l a yi n g st re s s on s t a t e s ’ r i g h t s a n d n o t on wh i t e s u p r e m a c y . P r e s i d e n t T r u m a n is sc he dul ed to t a k e p a r t in the s t r a t e g y c o n ­ f e r e n c e s . t he S o u t h e r n M c G r a t h said In the m e a n t i m e , t he S o u t h e r n c a n d i d a t e s will m e e t in A t l a n t a S a t u r d a y to pl a n t h e i r o w n c a m ­ paign. G o v e r n o r W r i g h t , t h e S o u t h ’s choice f o r v i c e - pr e s i de nt , sai d he did n o t c o n s i d e r G o v e r n o r T h u r ­ m o n d a n d h i m s e l f " c a n d i d a t e s ” f o r t h e o ff i c e s of p r e s i d e n t a n d vi c e- pr e si de nt . . t o “ W e h a v e n o t be e n n o m i n a t e d by a n y political p a r t y , ” t h e G ov­ e r n o r de c l a r e d. " W e w e r e r e c o m ­ m e n d e d t h e D e m o c r a t i c P a r ­ ties in t h e v a r i o u s s t a t e s as me n s u i t a b l e . . a n d in a c c o r d wi t h t h e p r i nc i pl e s o f t h e s t a t e ’s r i g h t s m o v e m e n t . ” Wh e n t h e e l e c ­ r e m i n d e d o f tor a l vote, he a d d e d , " E l e c t o r s a r e f r e e a g e nt s . T h e i r pl e dge s a r e l egal a m o r a l o bl i ga t i on, n o t a o n e . ” Your Complete Jewelry Center KRUGER’S — ON THE DRAG Electronics Now Helps You Keep ‘‘On Tim e’’ the b e lie f th a t th ey had a chance o f su ccess. M arshall ruled o u t a n y b e llig ­ eren t act by th e U n ited S tates but added: "W e w ill n o t be co ­ erced or in tim id a ted .” It is know n th a t high o ffic ia ls in W ashington rece n tly have b e­ com e concerned about the "sound­ ing o f f ” — as th e y call it— in G erm any. su g g estio n s M any o f the fo r proposals fo r action by the W est­ ern n ation s to overcom e th e Sov­ ie t blockade o f the Germ an c a p i­ tal, such as the dispatch o f arm ­ ored truck c o n ­ train s or voys to B erlin , have origin ated in G erm any. fo o d Peace Prospects Excellent In Berlin Believes Truman tion al S ecu rity C ouncil, he ceive d a first-h an d rep ort re-1 from G erm any W edn esday to dis- lock over B erlin b u t also indicated good from jcu ss th e situ ation . P r esid en t T rum an exp ressed b e­ lie f T h ursday th a t p rosp ects fo r peace are e x c e lle n t. H e th rew his supp ort behind fu ll to w ork o u t a p e a cefu l se ttle m e n t o f th e B erlin crisis. e ffo r ts T hen, in a m e etin g o f th e N a­ G eneral L ucius D. C lay on condi tio n s the in j A s a n ew co n fer e n c e th e P resi- the pro- d en t n o t onl endorsed Soviet-blockad ed g ram 0 f S ec r e ta r y o f S tate M arsh­ fo r ex h au stive use o f d iplo­ all m atic oth er m easu res to tr y to break the dead- n eg o tia tio n s and Germ an capital. G eneral C lay, the U n ited S ta te s C om m ander in G erm any, fle w in Russian Fighters Over British Air Maneuver Corridor in T hree R ussian Y ak fig h te r plan es en gaged in a ta r g e t prac­ tice m aneuver T hursday the B ritish A ir Corridor, B ritish au ­ th orities said. The air lan e is used by the R oyal A ir F orce to supply Soviet-b lock ad ed W estern B erlin. t r a n s p o r t si ght ed t h e t h r e e f i g h t e r s t r a i l i n g a s l e e v e - t owi ng ai r craft . — a c o m­ t a r g e t p r a c t i c e — in mo n c o r r i d o r t h e B e r l i n - B u e c k b u r g A f o u r - e n g i n e Y o r k t y p e o f th is m orning. "T here is no evid en ce th a t th e th ree w ere sh ootin g a t the sleev e a w hile th e York w as n earb y,” B ritish o ffic ia l said, "but th ey probably w ere sh o o tin g .” as airw ay The S o v iet p lanes en tered the B ritish A m erican p la n es roared into B erlin w ith a new record haul o f food and fu el. Me a nwhi l e, t h e Bri t i s h Mi l i t a r y G o v e r n m e n t r e j e c t e d T h u r s d a y a Small Plane Bombs UN Headquarters R ussian o ffe r to supply e le c tr ic pow er fa c to r y In W estern B erlin. j to a ,, . , W edn esday talk o f sen d in g a n . linked d ire c ti C| I y . , T h ese proposals have n o t been arm ed colum n through the aealed H ow ever, it seem ed lik ely that c e T e T . . . ' A t the sam e tim e B ritish o ffic C'ty _ . , . r e p o r t e d in L on d o n ials t h a t a n e w W e s t e r n p o w e r not e p r o t e s t ­ i ng t h e b l o c k a d e h a s been d r a f t e d a n d s e n t t o W a s h i n g t o n f o r r e ­ vi ew b y high S t a t e D e p a r t m e n t o f ­ ficials. C o n t i n u e d b r i g h t w e a t h e r a i d e d t h e A n g l o - A m e r i c a n a i r l i f t a g a i n . In a t w e n t y - f o u r - h o u r peri od, 271 t h e A m e r i c a n f l i ght s c a me i nt o t o n s o f s u p ­ a i r p o r t w i t h 1,558 plies. in 202 f l e w T h e Bri t i s h pl a ne - l oa ds . y I Clay w ould he urged to co-ordi- in J nate his in form ation con trols t h e G e r m a n y m o r e c a r e f u l l y a t s a m e t h a t t he n o n- b e l l i ge r ­ e n t n a t u r e o f A m e r i c a n policy is st ressed. t i me of t h e T h e m e e t i n g se c u r i t y council w a s held in t h e of f i c e o f Mr. T r u m a n , w ho is its c h a i r ma n . A f t e r w a r d , W h i t e Hous e press s e c r e t a r y C h a r l e s Ross tol d n e w s ­ m e n : " G e n e r a l C l a y s i mp l y t a l k e d to t he g r o u p a b o u t t h e s i t u a t i on in Berlin. T h e p l a n e b a n k e d a f t e r its dive a n d h e a d e d th e d ir ec t i on of N e w Yor k . N a s s a u C o u n t y police in its T h e U n i t e d N a t i o n s h a d bi t o f e x c i t e m e n t T h u r s d a y w h e n a small p l a n e di ved on U N h e a d ­ q u a r t e r s a t L a k e Suc c e s s a n d dr o p pe d a n o b j e c t whi ch a Na s s a u C o u n t y de t e c t i v e sai d w a s a h o m e ­ m a d e bomb. T h e o b j e c t fell a n d L a k e Suc c ess Poli ce b e g a n t ^ e ' X m a h u r r i e d s e a r c h f o r f r a g m e n t s . G e n e r a l Cl a y will hol d a pres s c o n f e r e n c e F r i da y . H e will leave by p l a n e f o r G e r m a n y F r i d a y night . , U n d e r l i n i n g t h e m i l i t a r y se r - i o u e n e s , o f t h e G e r m e n . i t u . U « _ {Clay w a s m e t a t t h e N a t i o n a l Air- t r e e s a c r os s t h e A r m y ; p o r t by S e c r e t a r y of „ „ . , G e n e r a l O m a r B r a d ­ UN b uildings and exploded in an guard and form er U n ited S ta te s . iow ed up th eir o ff e r t0 fped rpsi ! lioyaM and o p e n e xpl os i on w a s h e a r d a mile a w a y bu t did no d a m ­ age. M arine said it w as .dropped f r o m | d e„ ts o f the W estern secto r w ith co n tr o l|ed an altitu d e o f ab ou t 150 fe e t He hints said , , a m ortar shell. d r o p p e d t h e obj e c t , t h e a r m y a i r ! g i v e to Fiel d re,fueeme pri nci pl es w h i ch w e as T e x a n s will not a b a nd o n either for party h a r m o n y o r for policy. Surrenderi ng states rights lyi ng d o w n is not like Texans. T he r e will be more of this— you Y a n k e e D e m o c r a t s . T h e pity is t h at ther e are m a n y p e o p le in this state t h a t can sit in their chairs, eat t hei r good meals, s leep in their c l e an beds, and close thei r e y e s to injustices and hatred in their front streets. , . , deci ded It’s a c om f o r t a b l e p hi l os op hy . If w e shut our eyes w e can put a w a y ma n y o f the th i ng s w e wo ul d rather not see or tal k about. But t he p res ent De moc ra ti c Part y to do s o me thi ng . Its l eaders de ci de d t h at t h e Uni ted States Constitution is superi or to an y s tate constitution. T h e y felt th at w h e r e violations o f t h e Uni ted States Consti ­ tution hav e b ee n ignored for d e c a d e s it w a s ti me to step in and stop them. In this peri od o f t he w o r l d ’s history t w o political p hi l os o ph ie s arr b attl ing for s u p r e m a c y and for n ew converts. Communi sm promises e quali ty and social justice. W e st e rn D e m o c r a c y promi ses the s a m e e q u a l ­ ity and social justice but wi t h o u t w h a t we b el i ev e are the evils o f a totali tari an state. W e shall not provi de a very conv inc ing a r g u m e n t to the sal ves th at c om mu ni s ts a p p l y to w o u n d s of intol­ er anc e by u p h o l d i n g a stratified phi l os op hy. T h a t p hi l o s o p h y shoul d hav e been des tr oy ed, as the (Constitution pro mi sed it woul d be, l o ng ago. social W e are l iving in t ime s of hold actions and rapid strides f o r w ar d. The th eor ie s o f Marx and E n g e l s are partly r es po ns ibl e for thiR n e w and strenuous w a y of I j ^ Y e t if w e f a c e the issue we will re ali ze that o nl y a s tr en uo us and vi gorous d emo c ra ti c spirit will be able to me e t c o m m un i s m and c on que r it. W e s t e r n d e m o ­ cr acy w a s horn o f the French and A me r ic an re v ol u­ tions. A spirit o f progre ss and our f o r e f a t h e r s on to a t r e me n do u s u n d e r t a k i n g — the f or ­ mation of the d e moc rat ic state. h u m a n i t y pro pel l ed T o d a y w e need less o f the f e a r and love o f t he past t h a t is found in the South and mu ch more o f the v i gor ­ ous spirit t h at the Ame r ic an Revoluti on e v i d en ce d in our c ou nt rymen . ti (baht With ih& JuJbuM Will t o m o r r o w be j u s t a n ot h e r el ec ti on d a y to T e x a s voters? Will the junior s en at or el ec ted t om o r r o w be j u s t another sena to r? T e x a n s ha ve s een “j u s t - a n o t h e r ” el ec ti ons and “ j u s t - an o t he r” c a n d i d a t e s before. But t o m o r r o w is not the d a y for either. Voters must c hoo se wi th g re at er care this S at ur da y than ever b efore. T he world is at the crossroads, and there the Uni ted States S e n a t e is h e l p i n g t o d ir ect t h e traffic. As S e n a ­ tor Raton r e ma rk ed this we ek , “ W e are at t h e most f at e fu l m o m e n t in the history o f ci v il iz a ti o n. ” T h e S e n a t e ’s d eci si on s in the n e x t f e w mo nt hs will de te r mi ne w h e t h e r the m o m e n t g o es for A me r i c a and for p eace . T e x a s c a n n ot n ow risk s e n d i n g a man o f o rdi nary stature to t h e Senate. Once a c a n d i d a t e mi g h t hav e been d e e m e d qual ifi ed if he w e r e a good b us i n e s s m an or a g ood l awyer . But the hour requi res a g re a t e r t a l e n t — the t a l e n t o f cos mo pol i ta n c o m p r eh en s i on , t h e t al ­ e n t of one w h o can gras p the s i g n i f i c an c e o f s h i f t i n g forces, w h o has the vision to act wi th wi sd om. In s e l e c t i n g such a man, me re e xe c u t i v e e x p er i e nc e and legal k n o w l e d g e can hard ly be the only criteria. In c h o os i ng a junior s en a to r t om or ro w, u r g e n c y dic­ ta tes th at the voter shoul d c h o o s e t h e c a n d i d a t e w h o has s h o w n t h e wi s dom, t he c o u r a g e for action, the in­ ternati onal a w a r e n e s s so vital to t he hour. T e x a s n e ed s a ma n in the S e n a t e w h o is n ei ther afraid to s p e a k out on w o r l d - w i d e as we ll as local is­ s u e s nor w h o fi nds it nece ss ary to be c al c u l a t i n g w h e n he shoul d be “ p e c u l a t i n g . ” T he S T exan Th* l>mlv Texan, » student newspaper of the University of Texas, is pub­ lished in Austin every morning except Mondiv and Ssturdsv, September to June, and except during holiday and examination periods, and twice weekly during the summer session under the title of The Summer Texan on Wednes­ days sud Fridays, by Texas Student Publications, Inc. News contributions may he made by telephone (2-24731 or st, the editorial JOI. Inquiries concerning office, J. It. I. or at the News Laboratory, J. delivery and advertising should be made in J. B. 108. (2-2473.) ll Entered as second-rlaM matter October lh, 1943, a t th# Post Office a* Austin, Texas, under t h e 'A c t of March 8, 1879. I h*> Summer Texan is published bi-weekiy during the summer semester on Wednesday* anil fridays. ASSOCIATED PRES8 WIRE SERVICE The Associated Presa is exclusively entitled to th* use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in thin news. paper, and loeal items of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of repub­ lication of all other matter herein also reserved. Represented for National Advertising by N a t i o n a l A d v e r t i s i n g S e r v i c e , In e . . College Publishers Representative 420 Madison Ave. Chicago - Boston New York, N. Y. . Lo* Angeles San Francisco M e m b e r * a J /*■» ll • a D A S S O C IfltG Q v eOllC Q IdTG r f f i S S . . . A l l - A m e r i c a n P a c e m a k e r glJBSCRn>TION RATEg For the Summer term the Texan will be delivered in Austin for BO cents provided the place of delivery is within the carrier limits. Subscription rate by mail anywhere outside of Austin is BO cents for the summer term. P E R M A N E N T S T A F F E d i t o r - i n - c h i e f ________________________________ W I L L I A M H. S M I T H A s s o c i a t e E d i t o r --------------------------------------- .----------------------- R a y G r e e n e E d i t o r i a l A s s i s t a n t ------ ------------------ - -------------------------M a r k B a t t e r s o n T e l e g r a p h E d i t o r ------------------------------- B o b H o l l i n g s w o r t h S p o r t s E d i t o r ___________________________________________ R o y E d w a r d s S o c i e t y E d i t o r ___________________________ ..________ M u r i e l K i n g A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r ________________________________M a x i n e S m i t h S t a f f P h o t o g r a p h e r _______________________ N i g h t E d i t o r s _________________________ B l a k e M i l le r , L a r r y I n g r a m , T r a x e l S t e v e n * STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE N i g h t E d i t o r ______ B L A K E M I L L E R A s s i s t a n t N i g h t E d i t o r _____________________ M A R K B A T T E R S O N N i g h t R e p o r t e r _______________________ J i m B o w m a n T o n y G u e r r a . J . E . M a l o n e y , W e s l e y C o p y r e a d e r s ................. E llis, J o A n n E i d o m , M a x i n e S m i t h ............ ....... .. ...................................... ......Al W i l l i a m s N i g h t S p o r t s E d i t o r A s s i s t a n t s ----------------------- D ic k M o o r e , L o u M a y s e l , R o y E d w a r d s , B o b S e a m a n N i g h t S o c i e t y E d i t o r ______________________ ______ ___ __ M u r i e l K i n g A s s i s t a n t s N i g h t T e l e g r a p h E d i t o r ................................... G e o r g e W y s a t t a , V e r n e n L i l e s .......... ......... J i m T a n n e r . A s s i s t a n t s ....... —.* ..................... B ill B r u c e , B o b H o l l i n g s w o r t h Balloting began on April I and ended J u n e 30th. Two slates of candidates were ru n n in g fo r o f ­ fices— the ank and File Caucus and the left-wing faction. of Six bus loads of Com munist P a r ty mem bers who were also m embers the NMU w ere the Galveston police checked by e n terin g the island shortly a f t e r balloting began. Police rep orted they had been se n t from Houston. Fightin g broke o u t a t the union h ea d q u a rte rs on T w enty-first and Mechanic S treets between the two factions and police en tered to p r e ­ serve the peace. in R eports of guns and concealed the union hall w ere weapons local police and investigated by some pistols a n d knives were taken. Two men w ere arrested f o r ca rry in g concealed weapons by po ­ lice offic ers on gu ard in f r o n t o f the union hall during the ballot- ing. B e st Se llers — Summer Reading Mr. Noble includes a pamphlet which su bstantia te s the facts of the novel with excerpts from le g ­ al docum ents and state papers, including Congressional reports and the papers of William H enry Seward, s e c re ta ry of state under Lincoln. Carl S an d b u rg devotes space to Miss Carroll immense history of Lincoln, but otherwise she seems to most A merican historians. little known in his T h a t Miss C a rro ll’s life was not all public adds to the inte rest of the “ Woman W ith a Sword.” And the fact th a t th e o b je c t of her private thoughts was Ju d g e Evans of Marshall will inte rest Texas readers. The Ju d g e , a Union sym pathiz­ fo r Texas er, was secret agent an d Mexico, employed by the S tate D epartm ent. And as Mr. Noble depicts him. he has R hett B u t le r ’s s tre n g th and charm, la ck ­ ing only his ruthlessness. As Judg e E vans and Mivs C a r ­ roll’s work became entangled, so did their interests and affections. The love story is intense and e m ­ otional. Miss Carroll did not m arry . The a u th o r blames t h a t on h e r ca reer and h er psychological make-up. She had a form o f hero worship. She attac h ed herself to prom inent m e n — p re fe ra b ly h o t m arriag eab le m en— and gave all she had of loyalty, stre n g th , mind, and con­ them politically. ta c ts B o b B a i n F irs t came h e r f a th e r. Ohers included H en ry Clay, Millard F ill­ more, Tom Hicks, who was gov­ e r n o r of Maryland, Ja m e s Buch­ an a n, S ecre tary Seward, and f i­ nally, Lincoln. to b e t te r F rom the repetition of h er ac­ tivities and attac hm e nts, Mr. Nob­ le deducts an em otional f e a r of m arriage. th e use th e novel N otw ith standing of m uch fac tu al and historical b a c k ­ ground, is very r e a d ­ able. Mr. Noble’s characterizations are strong, and, if Civil W a r mov­ ies are still profitable, this should make a pow erful picture. As reported by the Pu blish ers’ W e e k ly ; FICTION P I L G R I M ’S INN, by Elizabeth Goudge. Coward-McCann, $3. T H E N A K E D A N D T HE DEAD, by Norman Mailer, R inehart, $4. T H E G O L D E N H A W K , by F ra n k Yerby. Dial Press, $3. P E O N Y , by Pearl S. Buck. John Day, $3. T H E B I S H O P S M A N T L E , by A g­ nes Sligh Turnbull. Macmillan, $3. T H E F O O L I S H G E N T L E W O M ­ AN, by M argery Sharp. Little, Brown. $3. R A I N T R E E COU NT Y, by Ross Lockridge, J r ., H oughton M if­ flin, $3.95. P A R R I S MITCHELL OF KI NGS R O W , by H enry and K atherine Bellatnann. Simon a n d Schus­ te r, $3. E AG LE IN T HE SKY, by F. van Wyck Mason. Lippincott, $3. B RI GHT F E A T HE R, by Robert Wilder. P utnam , $3. NONFI CTI ON P EA C E OF MIND, by Joshua L. Liebman. Simon & Schuster, $2.50. CIVI LI ZATION ON TRI AL, by J. Toynbee. Oxford Arnold U niversity Press, $3.50. S E X U A L B E H A V I O R IN T H E H U M A N MALE, by A. C. K ins­ ey and others. Saunders, $6.50. T HE G A T HE RI N G STORM, by W inston Churchill. L i t t l e , Brown, $6. HO W TO S T OP WOR R Y I N G A N D S T A R T LIVING, by Dale Carnegie. Simon an d Schuster, $2.95. M A L A B A R by Louis FARM, Bronifield. H arper, $3.75. JIM T H E S T I L WE L L P AP E R S , by Joseph W. Stilwell. Sloane, $ 4 . by Ja m e s A. Farley. W hittlesey House, $3.50. F A R L E Y S STORY, A G U I D E TO C O N F I D E N T LIV- INC., by N orm an V incent Peale. Prentice-Hall, $2.75. T HE MEMOIRS OF CORDELL —. CLARI S GUCK HULL. Macmillan, $10.50. . Five uni­ police arm ed form e d with a U nited S tates d e p u ty m arshall, tw o dep­ u ty sh e riffs and two city detec­ tives rushed to th e scene of the shooting. J o e Chaileton, R ank and File caucus balloting chairman, said the shooting occurred when a group of disputers th r e a te n e d to ‘b ea t u p ’ Ranieri a f t e r he had come o ff th e Ss. L o v ett.” ( R a n ­ ieri the Rank and in File Caucus.) is active McCausland stated t h a t Ranieri had shot a t him when he was driving aw ay in an automobile. On J u n e 29th the Rank and A Knotty Problem Has Been Posed By Woody Hair-do Bu Th* A**oeiat*d Pre** Woody Woodpecker, inspiration fo r the c u r r e n t song leader, re­ cently inspired a new haircut for the kiddies. The W oody W oodpecker coif­ fu re , has ju s t come o f f hair styl­ ist Al T a t e ’s idea-production line. All you boys have to do to sport one this sum m er is to have your b a r b e r trim yo u r hair so it brushes up from y our ears. F o rm a to p ­ kno t like W oody’s. T a te says it’s as cool as a b utch or crew cut. the woody cut involves th e same procedure, ex­ ce p t th a t the to p k n o t is form ed of soft curls. The h air m u st be brushed smooth in back. th e girls, F o r If the to p k n o t keeps slipping forw ard, be nonch alant. W oody’s h a ir does that, too, when he r a t ­ tles his beak into a pine knot. Ho, ho, ho, ho-o-o-o, ho! Phi Sig Hearing Set for August 2 The h ea rin g in a $4,050 breach of c o n tra c t suit, b ro u g h t against the T heta T riton ch a p te r of Phi Sigma K appa the U niversity by Mrs. Kathleen P r a tt, has been set f o r A ugust 2, 1948, a t 10:00 a.m. in 126th Dis­ tr ic t Court. f r a te r n ity a t Mrs. P r a t t alleged t h a t the f r a ­ te rn ity failed to honor a c o n tra ct a f t e r J u n e f o r boardin g and housing a t least tw e n ty members the last f o r f ir s t sum m er session. long te r m and the I As a resu lt o f this, she claims to have lost $4,050 which she is asking in damages, plus 6 p er cent in te r e s t on th e m oney fro m J u n e | I until a ju d g m e n t is e n tered by th e court. O fficial. T b lix jL i. S t u d e n t s i n t e r e s t e d in ­ f o r m a t i o n a b o u t R h o d es S c h o l a r s h i p s to t h e U n i v e r s i t y of O xfo rd s h o u l d c o n s u lt ll. J. D. W h i t e . B io lo gy B u il d in g Dr. 319, 10-11 o'clock daily. in o b t a i n i n g T h e r e a r e v a c a n c ie s f o r a pp li ed m usic i n s t r u m e n t s . A u d itio n s th e s t u d e n t s will be held daily a t IO o 'c lo c k M usic B uild ing. in ail in F L O Y D T O W N S L E Y . A c t i n * D e a n of t h e C o ll e ge of F in e A r t s in in t i m e , T h e Civil t h e p o s it io n of S e rv ic e C o m m i s s i o n a n ­ n o u n c e s e x a m i n a t i o n s f o r fillin g v a c a n ­ cie s l e a v e en d p a y roll s u p e r v i s o r w it h v a r i o u s fe d e ra l a g e n c ie s t h e s t a t e o f T e x a s a t e n ­ t r a n c e s a l a r i e s of 1297 4.80 a n d 1335 P. A p p lic a tio n f o r m s m a y be o b t a i n e d fr om t h e p o s t office o r re gio na l d ir e c to r . 1 4 t h U. S. Civil S e r v ic e R e p ­ ton, 210 S o u t h H a r w o o d S t r e e t , Dallas. * f r o m t h e P A U L H. FIGG R e g i o n a l Directer S ti ft ui fs T re t i a ox TI be gi ga ba fa bl 3 ti • e * • jv u n q . d u rn * SU R P R I SI N G To t he Editor: I w as both shocked and sur prised a t y o ur naivete in yo u r a r t i d e on conditions on the watei f r o n t in Galveston. You frankl: a d m it th a t the police and righ w ing unionists asked you to w rit them, b u t you don’t question thei position. W h a t you don’t say, Bill, th e T a ft- H a r tle y Act t h a t w recking th e NMU. The unio f o u g h t hard to g e t d ecent livin8 conditions and good food aboar th e ro tte n tu b s the shipping con panics used to insure heavily an then send to sea. In law to w ard brea k in g The T a f t- H a r tle y tak* aw ay the h iring halls an d is ti basic step ti union and driving these men bat into the g u tte r s alo n g the watt f ro n t. the guise of heir ag a in st C om m unist leadership, J< C u r r a n an d th e R ank and Fi Caucus in the NMU is prepared give up the m a jo r gain of the union. T h a t ’s th e w ay to for sailors to follow C om m unist lea ership. The mine w orkers fore* the owners to sign a new con tra ignoring the T a f t- H a r tle y bill ai made it stick, b u t Jo e C u r r a n a' his R ank and File Caucus bt th e ir heads and r e f u s e to defer th e ir union f o r f e a r o f interferi with the Marshall Plan by a wale f r o n t tie-up. the spread T he Marshall P lan provides f exports o f food, etc., to E urope co u n tries to stop Communism, allegedly. We a told th a t a full stom ach and Co munism are incom patable. A c ’ ally, it provides a partial m a rl f o r the over production t h a t I A m erican people should be able consume. The Marshall Plan 1 is adm inistered by an Amort, who has the r ig h t to decide wh industries the needy e o u n ! can be expanded, curtailed, which can started. U n fo rtu n a te ly , Ameri* cartelist* are well re p re se n te d this system, a n d these counti a r e b eing forced to become e nomic an d industrial depend ent or colonies of the U nited State? exchange f o r w h eat paid f o r of ta x pay e rs pockets. industries new in th e re O ur f ig h t to stop th e spread Com munism is best illustrate d Greece where is a de p en alty fo r striking, and wh we seek o u t all the Nazi collab* to rs and fascists we can find i arm them with A m erican mach guns in the nam e o f democr* T h a t's w h at Jo e C u rran an d Rank a n d File Caucus dele a g a in st th e in te r e st of his un — TODD LO W R ’ Cd. Net*: I h o l d n e s p e c i e ! l o v e f o r s u p p o r t i n g is I b e l i e v e C u r r a n . Ho I b e l M e r s h a l l P l a n i t i s t r u e . i n t h * M a r s h a l l P l a n a n d i t s | p o s e s . T h o R a n k a n d F i l e C a i h a s d e c i d e d t o a b i d e b y a f a d i n j u n c t i o n , i n ab it b y f e d e r a l l a w s e v e n t h o u g h t anay n o t b a w h a t I s h o u l d h o t h i n k i f a i r l a b o r b i l l , b u t y o u d o n ' t c o m p l i s h a n y t h i n g b u t a brr b e a d b y b u c k i n g t h e g o v e r n n w i t h d i s o r d e r s . I d o s o m e t i m e s . t h a T a f t - H a r t l e y B i l l t h i n k I C u r r a n i n a s t a t e m e n t dec!* t h a t “ t h e N e g o t i a t i n g C o m m * w i l l r e j e c t a n y o f f e r t h a t d o e s p r o v i d e c o n t i n u a t i o n o f p r e h i r i n g p r a c t i c e s a n d i m p r o v e r in w a g e s a n d c o n d i t i o n s . ” T h o m a j o r i t y s t i l l r u l e s . tw o steps F ile Caucus to took h alt w h a t they te rm ed “ commun ist activ ity ” in th e Galveston hall. On a vote of the mem bership, P e te Godwin, a c tin g p o r t a g e n t in the absence o f H. K. Deuchare, had suspended. DeudMire was gone to a N ational Council m eet ing which P re sid en t J o e C urran called u n au th orized and attended only by a com munist element. Secondly, S. D. (T e x) George w as elected p o r t patrolmaw until a f t e r th e ballots w ere counted. George has been associated with the Rank and File Caucus and r a n f o r the office of Galveston p o r t a g e n t on th e Caucus slate. Soon a fte r, F erd in a n d Smith, the union n a tio n a l s e c re ta ry o f and left-w ing leader, released a sta te m e n t charg ing th e Galveston and P o rt A rt h u r police of con­ ducting a “ reign of t e r r o r ” and intim idation ag a in st th e union h ir­ ing hall and its procedures. He called fo r a fede ra l investigation of practices of the police. Chief of Police Conway Shannon of Gal­ veston replied th a t no one was prohibited from e n te rin g or leav­ ing the union hall, b u t th a t police g u ard s merely were on the look o u t fo r persons c a rry in g weapons. Meanwhile the cou nting of bal­ lots of th e election of po rt age nts and union officers is being c a r ­ ried on by the H onest Ballot A s­ sociation. All candidates on the ballot a re p e rm itte d to observe th e counting of the 43,000 votes cast in the election. R e tu rn s are being totaled in New Y o rk ’s Tex tile High School, se venth floor. Th* The new officials will ta k e o f ­ fice as soon as the results of the balloting are announced. l a s t a r t i c l e t h i s s a r i a s w i l l d e a l w i t h t h e o r g a n i z a t i o n o f t h e C o m m u n i s t P a r t y w i t h i n N MU, a n d a n s e a m a n j u s t a f t e r h e h a d b e a n t a k e n t o a h o s p i t a l o p e r a t i n g ; r o o m s u f f e r i n g f r o m a b e a t i n g . i n t e r v i e w w i t h th i in Texan Crossword Puzzle 16. Seed vessel 19. Nobleman 21. W atch pocket 22. Jog 25. Young goats 27. Principal 29. River (E ng.) 31. Firm 32. The East 33. Large roofing slate 35. Ancient story ACROSS 54. Furnish temporarily I. Verbal 5. Sums up 9. A gam e played on horseback 10. Center 11. Expressed juice of apples 12. Barter 14. Exclama- tion 15. Drink in sm all amounts 17. Cheat (slang) 18. Goddess of m ischief 20. Pliable 23. Music note 24. Apex 26. Kind of window 28. FYee 30. Snake 31. That which holds 34. Slope 37. Land- measure 38. An orna­ m ental stamp 40. B om 41. Equip 43. Talk 45. Georgia (abbr.) 46. Feats 49. A city in the land of Shinar Bl. Claw 52. Ireland 63. Three, a t cards DOWN 1. Narcotic 2. Pole 3. Malt beverages 4. Slow- m oving lemur 5. Division o f a play 6. June-bug 7. Dull 8. Unruffled l l . Fellow 13. Arabian chieftain f I Z 9 ii IO 'ii. 57 O I OO si %sa 1 T oday’s Answer Is In t h e Classified A d s 39. Tag 42. E quipm ent 44. U nadorned 47. Perish 48. Cunning 50. Storage place ll ZZ W/<25 17 9 P ti I i % 55 50 36. kind of duck i T ~ 5 b I I § IO t i r n IO t i t IS M IO to I I IO a a SI t i EIO 14 I so I S i ll s t s i 41 A i i I 47 49 w / 4 * I 44 4 i 40 so I s i I * 4- I I A Cryptogram Quotation V O N B R N P U J D S T N N M N J , V L l E F J D N J N S L J, B S P J N E R L U J B N V Q D V D N C R I I X — V F J J N L . Grid Suits To Girdle M ay A dd Shortage Bjr STAN HICKMAN There m ay be g ro u n d fo r di­ vorce in m arried football players tars a p air— if you can get them. Since most women have forsaken homes all over the nation once the leg paint fo r nylon hose, there season starts. The trouble w ill be may be a shortage o f hose, too. over who w ears the girdles in the A f t e r all, football and basketball fam ily. A t least th a t is one problem th at w ill confront both glam our girls and glam our boys because football uniform s are now being made out of two-way stretch ma­ terial. A . F. W h ite , manager of C A S Sporting Goods Com pany, says there w on’t be enough m aterial fo r wom en’s girdles and football uniform s. T h at problem w ill have to be ic | t* , faced calm ly by a ll concerned, r | The problem m ay be solved by h I renewed rationing, i M r. W h ite pointed out th a t the girdle situation may cause m any e a coach a hard life, both in his r own home and in players homes. The shortage might conceivably a -» I be solved by charging an old worn girdle fo r admission to all home a n games. i’ Alm ost all football and basket- < V ball je rs e y ’s are now being manu- factured from nylon. A seat in the ' i bleachers < than * stocking up on hose at three dol- fa r cheaper is are national pastimes, and the players cannot play unless prop e rly clothed. The exterior covering has been taken care o f to the satisfaction of the natio n’s coaches. T here is a fa r more serious problem, how ever. Coaches have found a sub stitute fo r the heavy pads that their players must w ear. B u t they light sponge cannot get enough rubber the take place of the aw kw ard and cum ber­ some pads that burden the p lay­ ( I t seems that ers’ movements. m anufacturers are too busy m ak­ ing bigger and better bosoms.) to com pletely A s fo r m en’s swimming suits they w ill never get radical, Mr. W hite said. H e said there is a new type boxing tru nk out for superstitious fighters. The new type trunks have a little pocket fo r any teeth fig h ter might w an t to keep as a sou­ venir. that the The age of form -fit has even extended to the once-comfortable aw ard sweaters and le tte r jackets. You can lose those ugly bulges...without strenuous exercise... without electricity You {ult relax white excess pounds ore “motioned” away. FREE D E M O N S T R A T IO N ..J u st visit your local Stauffer System Soten for courtesy demonstration, bring a friend. presents pour wonderful gabardine casualI Pretty sharp, Isn’t If? Our Prima Donna by Donovan ii just the dress to win the fashion votes of young career and college girls. It’s young, it’s simple, and you’ll agree it is just wonderful. Lipstick red, green, tan, brown or black. Sizes 12 to 20. O N L Y 12.95 SPORTS SH O P— Street Floor W e ll Sixth Off Congrue — Phono 8-4436 ks Hold Su New Officers Named for Law School Classes W a lla ce Scott, Layto n A. Webb, and Gerald P . Owen have been elected president of their respec­ tive senior, mid-law, and first ye a r law class fo r the summer. Other seniors elected w ere: W illie Stark, vice-president; Ross P. H offm an, se cretary; and Otis G ary, social chairm an. Charles B r itt, V irg il Paul, and R oy D. Roberts were elected to the Honor Council. L . The mid-laws elected J . Moore, vice-president; A l Mullen- ix, secretary; J . L. H unt, social chairm an. Jim Heidelberg and P a t Lam bert were elected to the hon­ or council. B ritt, The firs t ye a r class elected B. A . vice-president; W a lt Toxey, secretary; P h ilip Campbell, honor council; and S. E . Purser, social chairm an. Over the T-cup Inter-Co-op Picnic To Hear T L O K Mock of Politicos T L O K w ill preview the W a lla ce P a rty Convention F rid a y night at the In te r- C o - o p summer picnic and dance to be held in the Old B o y Scout H ut from 6 to mid­ night. STUDYING AND VACATIO NING rn Denver, Colo., Lois Zabel, a teaching fellow and student of Dalles Frantz, is assisting Mr. Frantz in conducting his annual master class for the Lamont School of Music at the Un iversity of Denver. She has also found time to give two concerts and a fifteen-minute program over radio station K O A under the auspices of the Lamont School of Music. A member of Phi Kappa Lambda, honorary music fraternity, Miss Zabel received her bachelor of music degree with high honors from the University in 1947 and her master’s this year. Couples This Fall to Study to Go Abroad Mrs. Gene Copeland, field rep-1 j ah u * A ll but M r. Copeland w ill be and th„ , tory n t i A ^80 on the program is a ballet w The|eme resentative of the Hogg Founda- J enrolled in the U n ive rsity o f Zu- tion, and Mrs. W illia m B . Keeling, while he w ill study at the I rich it ’s name. to the director, assistant and their husbands w ill begin a y e a r’s graduate study in Sw itzerland Oc­ tober I. Federal Institute of Technology and continue work on re frig e ra ­ tion. V a rie ty numbers w ill be pre­ sented by Shangri-la, V alhalla, and Wakonda, Oak Halstead, Grove, Campus Guild, and H A Club. Finding Child's IQ Is Detailed Three-hour Job process, Students of psychom etry a t the U n iv e rs ity find that testing the intelligence of a child is a long, and detailed says Dr. Leigh Peck, associate professor. It takes at least an hour to ask little the necessary questions to find his intelligence quotient. An hour is required to tho papers, and compute grade the score. Then another hour is needed to explain the finding to the parents. Jo h n n ie all “ Pxychometrists who have per­ fected their technique, and who have had experience in testing, are professional enough to charge a small fee fo r their w ork,” Dr. Peck said, they certainly earn it.” ‘‘and A s the need fo r more clinical psychologists and persons capable of conducting psychological tests becomes apparent, the wider will be the field fo r persons thorough­ ly trained in clinical methods, Miss Peck said. Mrs. K eeling will take work rn Transportation will leave from sociology and her husband w ill tbe TeXflg Unjon ftt 5;4{. 0^}nckt study economics. Mrs. Copeland Dance n, usic w j„ be provided by will study w ritin g and literature. H ennig ’s Hotshots. the Mr. and Mrs. K eeling plan to I ( on- International attend gross on M ental Hygiene in Lon- presented don, A ugust 16-21, at which she fashion. w ill be an o ffic ia l Hogg Founda- tion representative. Mr. and Mrs. Copeland plan to ' in The mock W a lla ce Convention jg recorded on wire and w ill he listening party in a John W ildenthal, president of T L O K , predicts a Southern revolt the convention but a happy in Franco vis- I ending fo r everyone, spend some time iting persons who befriended Mr. j Copeland during the last war. B e tty Ja n e M ille r of V alh alla in charge o f the ar- ----------------------------- ! rangements fo r the picnic-dance. ; has been Future Fashions Predict New Look On W ay Out fly Th* A»*ociat*d t ’rr** U T Postmaster To Teach Dancing Square dance classes fo r the fall semester w ill begin in Texas Mrs. U. S A. can look forw ard Union October 5 under the direc- to a season of contented shopping tion next fall, as the new clothes now being previewed by the nation's fashion press are exactly what she ordered. Pro vin g that she has a*mind of her own, typical Am erican woman fra n k ly balked at last f a ll’s freakish new look, and announced the ()f A „ (R u c k ) B# nny postmaster of the U n ive rsity sta tion, and the first open square dance w ill be held on October 9, Mrs. Eug en ie Voss How ard, di­ rector of the Union, announced Monday. " I ’ll have none of i t ! ” The only dancing in the C ity R ecreation is the the Fre n c h j Departm ent and is well qualified ■ longer to teach the U n iv e rsity group,” thing rem aining of inspired silhouette skirt length— about eleven inches Mrs. How ard said, from the is chairm an of the time length— but the bulky skirts Union square dance committee, and padded hips and the pinched The committee, however, w ill not waists have gone the w ay of all be appointed until fall. unbecoming fashions. I --------------------------------- ig average day- B ill Read floor . silhouette The new stream lined, torian, and almost alw ays flatter- in*. ladylike, fa in tly « » / . Vie-! I wo U I W inners r-v i jln Koom Design is slim .- ^ - Suits are like ly to be trimmed in precious furs, fitted as to jack- et, slim as to skirt, accompanied U n ive rsity student from by small barrel muffs. A U n iv e rsity professor and a Indiana the Chicago B e tte r Room 1- j won $100 each 1948 “ (T rib u n e ’s r-\ ~ in — ; competition. S n r * i n l C ' n l o n r i n r JU U U l ^ U ie n a a r I Donald P. Stevens, associate professor of architecture, receive,! <1-12— F rid a y : Inter-Co-Op picnic, f V ° ° ' " ‘' T ? " * * 1" . ? ” 1*' Old B o y Scout Hot. . -______ * T « a H o u s e C lo s e d U n t i l F e l l "Wilmot \ ickrey, student from took a $10(1 The Home Econom ic Tea House award in the one-room home cate Indianapolis, Ind., , b e room division of the nation , wide contest. I w ill be closed fo r the rem ainder gory. of the summer. It w ill open at the beginning o f the fa ll semes tor, and plans are being made to the air-condition spring. building S o n B o r n to M. F . K r e i . l e * . Dr. and Mrs M. F. K reisle Jr by ex-students, have announced the birth of a son, M. F . Kreisle II I , Pricky, July 23, '1948 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page 3 Naomi Levinson Will Marry New Jerseyite N a o m i L e v in s o n , B .A . and B . J . ’46, has announced her engage­ ment to H e rb ert M a n k o ff from N ew ark, N. J . The prospective bride is a member o f P h i Be ta Kappa, Delta P h i Epsilon, Theta Sigm a P hi, and M o rta r Board. She was on the sta ff of the D aily Texan and was a student grader in the Departm ent of Journalism . Mr. M an k o ff received his bache­ lo r’s degree from Pace In stitute in N ew York. M ary C a th a r in e R e i t e r , B J . ’48, late August w ill be m arried in to B ill B la ck , who in Law School. is N orm a Peterson and G e o r g e W o n d lo n d t , both o f Austin, w ill be m arried in Gethsemane L u th ­ eran Church in A u stin Septem ­ ber I. W endlandt is a senior a t the The engagement o f Elisabeth A n n T h o m p s o n , form er U n iv e rsity student, to How ard Bouldin J r . was announced Saturd ay. The form a! cerem ony w ill be read August 25 by the Rev. Joseph M c A lliste r at the T F W C B u ild ­ ing. The engagement of M rs . D o r is S a w y e r R a m o s to George Step an­ ovich is announced. Mrs. Ramos is a senior student at the U n iv e rsity and is president of the U n iv e rsity Ballroom D a n c e 'G u ild . Mr. Step ­ anovich is a graduate o f Ohio State U n ive rsity. M ary P a t r i c i a M c C a n n is en­ gaged to John M. S c h u e l k e . T h eir wedding will be August 2 in E le c ­ tra. Miss M cGann received a de­ gree in business adm inistration in 1047 and is a member of A lpha the Newm an Phi sorority and Club, M r. Schuelke received his degree in mechanical engineering is a member o f Pi Kappa and Alpha fra te rn ity and the Newman Club. N a i l . W o lch , senior journalism student, w ill be m arried to B ill M cD o n a ld , in teaching chem istry. in Houston. Miss W elch is a member o f Chi Omega so rority and has been working with the Houston Com­ m unity Chest this summer. J u ly 31 fello w W E D D I N G S N y l a h W e s t to Jo h n Bell. Eddie Irene Sloan to E d w in L o u is S h rop sh ir e. E d w a r d in o C a t h r in e r tenant Roland Zavodny. to L ie u ­ N ina M c F a rlin to J o h n M arvin H a m il to n . Night Services A t Zilker Sunday Simms, and Mrs. Augusta Glenn, U n ive rsity. Sorority Delegates Attend Meets in Many States, Canada Bi-annual conventions of national sororities have been taking place during June and July at well-known vaca­ tion spots in the United States and Canada. Dolts Zota had Its convention^ 1 ■ 1 — — Ja n e Kallison, president of A lp h a Epsilon P hi, w ith B e tty Sue Bloom , rush captain, and M arilyn Fred , vice-president, were dele­ gates to the national convention at French Lick, Ind., J u ly 4. W h ite Sulp hur Springs, Va., wag the site of the Chi O m e g a con­ Ju n e. vention the last week in Delegatee from the local chapter were B e tty A n n Brad field , P a tsy alum ni advisor fo r the Te^as chap­ ter. it Z e ta T au A l p h a held its golden anniversary convention Ju n e 26 to 30 a t V irg in ia Beach, Va. Austin delegates were M arian Bragg and M a ry Lou Cocke. The B a n ff Springs Hotel in B a n ff, Canada, was the meeting center for the D e l t a D e lt a D e lta convention Ju n e 24 to 29. Local delegates attending included Bing Faulkner, Henderson, Dorothy M arg aret Ann Sandefcr, Don M arie A v e rin , and Mrs. F. L. Cox. Drag Officer Returns to Town's Best Beat C. B . McCullough, 5,000 George­ town Road, returned to his beat on the Drag this month a fte r fo u r ye a rs’ duty in other parts o f A u s­ tin. A desire to do his part on the home front during the w ar led him to join the Austin Police force five years ago. O ffic e r M cCullough is a so ft­ spoken, slow-speaking man with the touch of a u th o rity in his voice that reflects a b ility to command almost any situation. He likes to recall an incident that happened in 1944. " I broke up a snowball fight right at the crosswalk of the campus w ith just a w histle,” he said. The Drag beat is the finest in town, he think*. "P e o p le in the U n iv e rsity neighborhood commit very few law violations,” he says. from Ju n e 28 to J u ly 3, meeting a t Swam pscott, Mass., tw elve miles from Boston. Peg g y Crook, president o f local chapter, the w ent as the local delegate. She stayed a t N ew Ocean House. W hile there, Miss Crook spoke at an honor banquet representing M o rtar Board. K atherine L a aster was the dele­ gate to the K app a A lp h a T h e ta convention, which met from Ju ly 2 to J u ly 6 a t M ackinac Island, the Mich. Delegates stayed a t resort Grand Hotel, a hotel w ith the longest porch in representa­ the world. T w e n ty tives from the local chapter a t­ tended the meetings and visited spots o f historical interest. famous Old P o in t Com fort. Kansas, was the site of the Phi Mu convention held from Ju n e 24 to Ju n e 30. M a ry Lou P roctor attended the convention as delegate. A post­ convention tour of Washington, D. C. and New Y o rk was made by the delegates. A ttending the Pl B o t a Phi con­ vention at French L ic k Springs, Ind., as a local delegate was C har­ lotte Mickey. Nine hundred alum ­ Indiana ni and actives were from the convention period, Ju n e 27 to J u l y 2. in M arg aret Ann P ickett, presi­ dent of the local chapter of A lph a P hi, served as delegate the national chapter's convention held in (Benwood Springs, Colo. to Sun V alley, Idaho, was the loca­ tion of the K app a K ap p a G am m a convention. Besides M artha Ann Bybee, who served as delegate, seven other members o f the local Kappa Kappa Gamma chapter a t­ tended the meetings, rode the ski lift to M ount Bald y, w ent ice skat­ ing, and visited the kennels where famous huskies are k e p t I he D e l t a G a m m a convention from Ju n e 22 to Ju n e 28 was at Swam pscott, Mass. T in k y T ill­ son served as the local delegate and eleven other members from here attended as guests. Besides attending the meetings, the repre­ sentatives spent a day in Montreal and N ia g ra Falls. A lp h a D e lt a Pi had its conven­ Ju n e 23-30 at Springdale, tion N . J . , and B e v e rly Fram baeh, M a ry Theresa Marks, and W ilm a Robertson were delegates. G a m m a Phi B e t a held its sev­ enty-fifth anniversary convention Ju n e 28-JuIy 2 at the Hotel Je ffe rs o n in S t Louis, Mo. G lance local Sargent, president o f the chapter, and Esther Decker, trees- | urer, attended. A tlanta, Ga., was the site of the S i g m a D e l t a Tau convention J u ly 4, which several members from the Austin chapter attended. Among local delegates were Carol Fox, president, and Hope Silber, N o w T e a c h e r f o r N u r s e r y Miss M arian K elle r, U n iversity o f Tennessee graduate, has joined the s ta ff of the U n ive rsity N u r­ sery School. Miss K elle r worked with two- and three-year-old children as a teaching fellow while completing work on her m aster’s degree and w ill handle the 'am e age group here. She w ill also teach Child Development the Home E n . onomles Department. in E v e ry Sunday evening, from 8 until 9 o ’clock, a special "C hurch U nd er the S ta rs ” is held at Z ilk e r Park across from B a rto n Springs. includes gospel singing and five m inute readings, and the C ity is sponsored by Recreation Departm ent. The program Thursday evenings, a communi­ ty sing-song and concert, by the M unicipal Band the park. A v a rie ty show' is also part of the Thursday evening enter­ tainment. is held in Yar tag9s Final Clearance 150 Batter Dresses dresses to 19.03 60 Better Dresses 'Cottons • Bam berg! • Spunt • Crepes 7 dresses to 29.th* 60 Better Dresses • Cottons # Shantungs • Crepes • Eyelets dresses to 23.00 30 Better Dresses # Cottons • Crepes # Shantungs A $ 9 / $12 the Eyes have "it" -uiit/o FLATTERING Individually Styled Precision Ground Lenses Texas STUTE OPTICAL t non* 2 *703 I V I Z I 506 Congress \Street Floor P h o n e 7 - 6 5 0 7 TMM asm Men TIMO 406 W . 17th # A i r C onditioned Salon , I ' l C B i U C I •Mr. Benny has taught square ruah faptain I » Friday, July 23, 1948 THE SUMMER TEXAN Page ft H UBERT • - By Dick Wingcrc Politicos Await Saturday Voting Polio's Claims New Surge Barker Denies Text Is Biased 75 Victims W ind-up Cam paigns With Talks Today ( C o n ti n u e d f r o m Paste I . ) in Berlin. s ta n d B a c k i n g d ow n. he said, would m e a n to b ri n g all the o u r so ld iers hom e, a b a n d o n M arsh all P lan, a n d to in f ig h t a l o n e ” a g a i n s t the R u s s ia n s ’ the c o n tr o llin g all world. r e s t o f th e " d i g g o v e r n m e n t The f o r m e r co lon el in th e m ili­ t a r y in G e r m a n y spoke fr o m th e bed o f a t r u c k on a public s q u a r e while c e le b ra n t* flocked to to w n f o r th e th r e e - d a y festival. E a r l i e r a t H o u s to n , m illio n aire p h il a n th r o p is t H. R. C ullen e n ­ do rsed P e d d y ’s c a n d id a c y . I a t in F o r t W o rth In th e g o v e r n o r ’s ra ce, in c u m ­ b e n t G o v e r n o r S e a f o r d H. J e s t e r to o ff ic ia te was th e o p e n in g o f a new mill. O p p o n e n t Caso M arch c a m p a ig n e d ; in f o rm a l ly th r o u g h c e n tr a l T exas, w a itin g " a n x i o u s l y ” f o r a n s w e rs I to c h a lle n g e s h u rle d a t J e s t e r yes- ; t e r d a y f r o n t steps. C a n d id a te R o g e r Q. E v a n s a t M arshall prom ised to " b u r n th e ra d io g o v e r n o r 's b r e e c h e s ” a d d re s s a t Denison. th e c a p it o l’s in a fro m Civil Rights Issue To Be Discussed At NAACP Meet "To tell you the truth, I have a bit of an inferiority complex, myself!” Co-op Goes Musical; Jazz And Lonq Hair Discs Abound Disc houn ds, album fien d s an d | fo u r those w ho find t h a t i f s th e h e a t , lead in g labels, V icto r, C o lum bia, and n o t the h u m id ity , a tt e n ti o n I, (Capital and D ecca a n d In ad d itio n T he C o-O p ’s gone musical in t e r e s t i n g re T he Co-Op b a n d ie s the Noel C o w a r d ’s T he U n iv e rs ity C h a p t e r o f th e N a tio n a l A ssociation f o r th e A d ­ v a n c e m e n t o f C olored Peo ple will the V icto r reco rd m e e t M o nd ay, J u l y 26, a t 7:30 o ’clock a t th e U n iv e r s ity YMCA. Dr. J. H. M orton, p r o f e s s o r of c h e m i s t r y a t S am u el H u sto n C ol­ lege, will d eliv er a spe ech on " F e d e r a l vs. S ta t e E n f o r c e m e n t is f e a t u r i n g some cording* fr o m m ade in E n g la n d , such as e x e r p t s fro m " P r i v a t e L ives” with the a u t h o r a n d G e r t ­ ru d e L a w r e n c e do in g th e h i s tr i o n ­ ic*. A n o th e r r e ­ cording* th e Full F r e q u e n c y I ° f { ivd Right*. R ange R ecord ing s m a d e by Decca* G e o rg e R o b e rts , U n iv e rs ity s t a ­ in l o n d o n which re p r e s e n t a new d e n t, will give a s h o r t discussion te c h n iq u e in th e m o re f a i t h f u l in- I t e r p r e t a t i o n s of its re c o r d in g s. I y ear-o ld N egro, alleged t h a t he was a t t a c k e d a n d b e a te n a b o u t ( a,<' - • j° ^ n ^ ° e , in n n o v atio n in is ( fifte e n tim es with a pistol. M a n a g e r o f the new music d e ­ p a r t m e n t , J a m e s Young, say s t h a t s h o p p in g d o w n s ta irs a t th e Co-Op should p rov e c o m f o r ta b le a n d p ro ­ fita b le with th e six n ew a i r - c o n ­ d itio n ed bo o th s re c e n t ly in stalled . Lange Will Speak Here July 29 UT Ex Is Second In Writing Contest th e P a g e - | icology. He is the o r g a n i z e r an d j 0h n W. W ilson of SMU won j d ir e c to r o f th e A rg e n ti n e I niver- | f i r s t place in th e n e w s p a p e r ’s con- lib ra ry th e te s t a n d received a $50 0 f o r his novel C o n q u e r .” e x c h a n g e p la n n e d " H ig h J o h n an d c a s t g a r e t W e b s t e r in a S h a k e s p e a r e a n p la y ; " B a r b e r of S eville,” o p e r a ; D im itri M arke- vitch, cellist; J a m e s M elton, t e n o r ; a n d a s y m p h o n y o r c h e s t r a from on e o f th e T e x a s cities. O th e r p r o g r a m s will be Mar- | s '*y 8 I n s t i t u t e o f M usicology, an d has of an "b oo ks, s tu d e n ts , a n d p r o f e s s o r s .” T he G e rm a n - b o rn an d e d u c a t e d p r o f e s s o r po ints o u t t h a t an im ­ I n ­ th e p o r t a n t c o n tr ib u t io n of st it u te o f Musicology will lie the p ub lica tion o f t r a n s la t io n s o f E n g ­ lish hooks in to S panish a n d S p a n ­ ish a n d P o rt u g u e s e w o rk s into English. ELECT B l a c k l o c k * , Ex**, H a v e S o n I t ’s a boy f o r l i e u t e n a n t C ol­ onel a n d Mrs. W a rd T. B lacklock, f o r m e r A u s ti n it e s an d U n iv e rs ity g r a d u a t e s . Born J u n e 14 in D rexel Hill, P en n ., th e b ab y w as n a m e d W a rd T r u e t t B lacklock J r . fi y TA# A »»or\at«4 P r r ta P o lio ’* s u r g e t h r o u g h e n v e lo p e d tim* la s t week. s e v e n ty -fiv e n ew v i e - j T h a t to t a l w as a n n o u n c e d H e a lth th e S ta t e I W ed n esd ay . T h e n ew cases oc- Texas | curred in thirty counties. cases th a n ^ y j b o osted f o u r t e e n in cid e n c e, in f e w e r th e w e ek p rev io u s, th e y e a r ’s t o t a l ca ses to f j n in n in e t y - t h r e e c ou n- c o m p a r e s w ith 452 T h is in e ig h ty -o n e c o u n ti e s f o r in 1946, D e p a r tm e n t , d a te ties. cases th e c o m p a r a b le p e rio d th e l a s t h a d polio y e a r. Aureomycin M ay Be Cure For Polio T he H e a lth D e p a r t m e n t said new c ases o f polio s t r u c k as fo l­ lows la s t w e e k : A n d e rs o n I, A r a n s a s I, B ee I, Bell I, B e x a r 3, C aldw ell I , C a m - ; eron , , ... , « . - N E W Y O R K , J u l y 2 1 — ( C i­ A u re o m y c in , a new d r u g t h a t . , b e tn g tr ie d on in f a n t i l e p a ra l y s is *; in T e x a s a n d on a v e n e re a l disease C ity, was W e d n e sd a y . little -k n o w n in N ew Y o rk I, C o c h ra n 2, C o m a n c h e I, I, is Dallas 5, D en to n . E r a t h 2, G a in e s I, G a lv e sto n 2, w ii i c H a r r i s 17, H id a lg o 5, J i m W ells I, N a ­ 2, M ilam 6, M o n t g o m e r y I , v a rr o 2, N u e c e s 2, u n v e ile d Rusk I, S an P a t r ic i o I , S m ith I, T a r r a n t 8, T om G r e e n I, T ra v is 2, a n d U v ald e I. T h e r e had I, D uval fo r m a ll y R efu g io b e e n y ’ e ig h ty -n in e cases r e p o r t e d f o r th e w eek p r e v ­ ious. as penicillin j8> This d r u g is in a n d th e sam e class s t r e y to m y c in , js an a n tib io tic m a d e fro m ch em icals t h a t m icro b es p r o ­ duce. I t was dev elop e d a t th e Freder­ ic L a b o ra to rie s , N ew J e r s e y , and was discussed in a d a y -lo n g ses­ sion W e d n e s d a y u n d e r a u sp ice s of of the New Y ork A c a d e m y Sciences. C o lu m b ia U n i v e r s i t y ’s College o f P h y s ic ia n s an d S u r ­ g e o n s and th e U n iv e rs ity o f T e x a s Medical School hav e b een t r y i n g i t T h e im p o r t a n c e o f a u re o m y c in lies in the f a c t t h a t it is e f f e c ti v e a g a i n s t some v iruses. T h e se a re p e c u li a r " h u g s , ” u su a lly m uch th a n g e r m s o r b a c te ria . s m a lle r T h e v iru s h u g s inside tissu e cells, and t h a t m a k e s it h ard fo r m ost d r u g s to r e a c h th em . live on ly In polio t h e r e n e v e r has been a n y m edicin e t h a t p e n e t r a t e d in­ the the n e rv e cells w h e re side polio bug, a v e ry sm all virus, does its d e s tru c tiv e w ork. T he new a u re o m y c in has show n e f f e c t i v e ­ ness th e v iru s c a u s i n g a g a in s t ly p h o g r a n u lo m a , a easp re s e m b lin g syphilis. D o cto rs M u r ra y S a u n d e r s a n d Alson E. B raley , o f C o lu m b ia r e p o r t e d t o ­ d a y th a t is b e t t e r the n ew d r u g f o r this v e n e re a l disease th a n a n y o t h e r re m e d y in m o re th a n 20 y e a rs . th e y have tr ie d T h e t h e o r y is t h a t if a u re o m y c in a tt a c k s on e v iru s it m ay he ahle to d e s t r o y a d i f f e r e n t virus. T he polio virus is a d i f f e r e n t bug. T h e r e h av e b e e n n u m e r o u s re Foreign Policy Change Predicted U n ite d S t a t e s f o r e ig n policy j m ay r e f l e c t som e o f th e decisio ns | m ad e a t th e r e c e n t s e m in a r on th e i n t e r n a t i o n a l p ro b le m s, n a t i o n ’s b elieves Dr. J. Lloyd M echam , p r o f e s s o r o f g o v e r n m e n t , who r e ­ c e n tl y r e t u r n e d fr o m the m e e t in g a t S t a n f o r d U n iv e rs ity . P ro b le m s d is cu ssed a t th e s e m ­ i n a r inclu d ed J a p a n e s e pe ace s e t ­ tle m e n ts , eco no m ic a s s is t a n c e to L a tin A m erica, a n d th e veto p r o b ­ lem in th e U n ite d N a tio n s . T h e se m in a r, d ir e c te d by Leo P asvo iskv , f o r m e r special ad v is o r to S e c r e t a r y o f S t a t e C ordell H u ll, fr o m was c o n d u c te d by e x p e r t s v e n e re a l dis- g o v e r n m e n t, a c a d e m ic , a n d busi- ness circles, a n d r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s of se v e ra l le a g u e s a n d o r g a n i z a ­ tions. Walker Leaving UT After Summer A. VV’. W a lk e r, d is tin g u is h e d th e o f law, will leave Dr. W a lk e r has been on th e L aw School s t a f f since 1925. D u r ­ ing th e w a r he s e r v e d in th e U. S. Navy. R e c e n tly he w as n a m e d a d v is o r on th e p r e p a r a t i o n o f an oil law v olum e, sp o n s o re d by th e A m e r i ­ can B a r A sso ciation . c o n s e r v a ti o n an d g a s A f t e r te a c h in g d u r i n g th e s e c ­ ond s u m m e r te r m , Dr. W a lk e r will join th e firm o f R o b e rts o n , J a c k ­ son, P a y n e , L a n c a s t e r a n d W alk e r. Color Photos Aid Frozen Food Tests H e r e ’s a n ew a n g le g r a p h y : color p h o to s o f f i s h ! in p h o t o ­ fr o z e n I t ’s n o t a h o b b y , b u t a v e r y Record Review In the p a s t f e w y e a rs a n in­ te l li g e n tl y scored little show t u n e , " H o w H igh th e M o o n ,” h a s b e ­ co m e one o f th e to p n u m b e r s in the m o d e r n j a z z m a n ’s lib ra ry . times, tw e n ty - f iv e re c o r d e d no H a v in g been less r a n g i n g th a n fr o m T o n y M a r tin to Dizzy Gil­ lespie, it com es as no g r e a t s u r ­ sho uld t h a t S t a n K e n to n p rise give the d it ty a fling. Jo e K. Phipps, f o r m e r L n iv e r - portfi jn th e ,as(. wppk t h a t sjx tv j p r o f e s s o r sity jo u r n a li s m s t u d e n t a n d teac h - Tpxa(, po]io p a t i e n t s a re up a n d j U n iv e r s ity a t th e end o f th e sum ing fellow in d r a m a , r e c e n t ly won walkinR dup a p la q u e t e r m te r m m e r law t0 a u r e om vcin, a n d ' m p r firm . He will also be c h a ir m a n o f re s e a r c h in the oil a n d g a s division o f the S o u t h w e s t e r n Legal F o u n d ­ a tio n th e r e . join a D allas re c o v e rie s to to Join r v is n Tt . t . H e ra ld of Dallas. f o r s e c o n d place in a | s t a te -w id e c re a tiv e w r it in g con- r e p o r t a also havp c r e d _ to J ! f*8t s P ° " * ° r e d by the Daily T im es a n o th p r npW drU(r> th iazo ly l, a r e ­ g u a v a n m usic o lo g ist who a g uest p r o f e s s o r a t the U n iv e rs ity , will speak T h u rs d a y , J u l y 29 a t 4 o ’clock th e R ecital H all o f th e Music B uilding. Mr. P h ip p s ’s prize w in n in g " R e d O a k ” se r ie s also to ok f i r s t place r e c e n t ly in th e U n iv e rs ity c re a t iv e w r it in g c o n te s t c o n d u c te d by Ifr. Mody C. B o a tr i g h t o f the De­ p a r t m e n t of English. Mr. P h ip p s is now u n d e r c o n t r a c t to c o m p le te his se r ie s f o r p u b lic a tio n by F a r - r a r , S t r a u s A Co., Inc., n e x t w i n - ! In t e r - A m e r ic a n I n s tit u te o f Mus- ; ^pr Dr. C h a u n c e y L eake, d e a n o f the U n iv e rs ity o f T e x a s Medical School, six ty p a ­ ti e n ts had been t r e a t e d w ith bo th d ru g s . He m e n t io n e d no c u re s a n d to give an said " i t is too e a rly th e o f on j opin ion »* . lativ e o f v ita m in B -l. is p re s id e n t o f th e T he title o f his speech will h e : th e Sociologi- in clu de cal « nd P ra c tic a l A sp ects o f U t , I in -A m e ric a n Music, j " I n t r o d u c t i o n Dr. U n g e thp jted r e p o r t e d v a lu e thpae t h a t into th e in Rebuild 'Old M ain' Is Plea O f Grad in Alumni M agazine s e r io u s b u sin e ss w ith m e m b e rs o f f " e' rt fo/ th e U n iv e rs ity B u r e a u of E n g i- i n e e r i n g R e se a rc h w ho a re se e k in g th e m ost e f f i c i e n t m e th o d s f o r f r e e z in g foods. R e c o n s tr u c tio n o f the Old Main T o w er, whose dome w as fa m il ia r the to s t u d e n t s who a t t e n d e d th e Old Main in 1934, th e hope o f F r e d C. Morse, in U n iv e rs ity b e f o r e B uildin g w as to r n dow n is A ustin b a n k e r a n d g r a d u a t e '06. th e class o f Mr. M orse, w r it in g in th e J u n e issue o f th e A lcalde, U n iv e rs ity alu m ni m a g a z in e , m ak es a plea to T e x a s g r a d u a t e s to do s o m e th i n g a b o u t th e r e c o n s tr u c t io n im m e d i­ a tely , w i t h o u t w a itin g th e m o ne y to be ra is e d by s u b s c r ip ­ tion. f o r He t h a t e s t im a te s it m ig h t ta k e $ 5 0,00 0 o r p e r h a p s a little m ore, b u t t h a t " h u n d r e d s o f m en who g r a d u a t e d p r i o r to 1934 a re ty p ic a l " p r o g r e s s i v e T h e m a t e r i a ls o f th e Old Main able to hav e the jot) do ne o u t o f th e i r own p ock ets w i t h o u t a s k in g a n y b o d y ’s h e lp .” P r o b a b l y n o t w h a t S t a n w ould call j a z z , ” his v e rsion o f e x - H e r m a n i t e Neal is n o n e t h e ­ H e f t i ’s a r r a n g e m e n t less one o f th e m o s t p leas in g sides T o w e r h ave been p re s e rv e d , Mr. I to com e fr o m his h a n d in r e c e n t Morse s t a te d in his a rtic le . T h e y I m o nths. W ith J u n e C h ris ty scat- w ere s t o re d u n d e r th e e a s t w in g j ti n g la E lla F itz- re - J g e r a l d ) , S ta n d e m o n s t r a t e s m o re o f M em orial S ta d i u m m a in e d th e r e u n til exp ansio n o f the s ta d iu m b e g a n . T h e b rick a n d m a t e r i a ls w ere th e n s t o r e d a t th e m a g n e s iu m n o r t h o f A u stin . A lth o u g h Miss C h ris ty sings as too th e fe w miles m u ch f o r h e r a n d t h o u g h she is n ’t a b le to c u t E lla, she is still m o re th a n a d e q u a t e . ja z z th a n usua l, t e m p o w e re a lyrics p la n t little an d th e (a if a a r e T h e y a n a ly z in g f r o z e n fru its , v e g e ta b le s , m e a t s an d fish p r o d u c t s w ith a p o la r iz in g m i c r o ­ scope w h ich c r e a t e s th e color p a t ­ te r n w h en p h o t o g r a p h s a r e ta k e n th r o u g h in t e m p e r a t u r e tw o d e g r e e s below ze ro to k e e p th e food f r o m t h a w ­ ing. it. T he w o rk is d on e T h e sam p le s a r e c e m e n te d to slides, c u t th i c k ­ ness, o b se rv e d th r o u g h the m i c r o ­ scope, th e n p h o t o g r a p h e d th e d e sire d to You Need 4 Eyes In Musician's Job you n e v e r M ay b e t h o u g h t a b o u t to it, b u t m u s ic ia n s hav e r a t h e r a d e p t o c u la r c o n t o r ­ be tio n is ts — t h a t is, th e y pull som e n e a t tr ic k s w ith t h e i r eves. t r u m p e t O th e r b rig h t solo m o m e n ts come t r o m b o n e , f r o m M ilt B e m h a r t ’s f o r so m e o n e ’s D izzyish ( p r o b a b ly Chico A l­ tw e lv e b a r s v a r e z ’s ) , a n d A r t P e p p e r ’* fluid, hoppish alto. C a p it o l’s e ch o -ch am b -j e r device to j le n d an a u t h e n t i c b a llro o m so u n d j to th e p r e s e n ta t io n . is e f f e c ti v e ly used " I n t e r l u d e , ” th e ba ck in g , Freudiger to Give Recital July 28 D o ris N elle F r e u d i g e r , p ia n o s t u d e n t fro m L u lin g , will p r e s e n t th e R ecital js a r e c i ta l J u l y 28 in M e a t P r i c e * G o i n g D o w n N E W Y OR K, J u l y 22 — (ZP)— Balky hou sew iv es fo r c in g dow n th e re ta il price o f m e a t an d b u t t e r in m a n y shops, s t o re k e e p - ers say. C hain j u s t t h e i r in C h icag o an d pose s to re s a r e New Y ork have c u t prices f o u r to six cent* a p o u n d d u r i n g the p a s t tw o days a n d b u t- t e r is th r e e to five ce n ts low er. t h e i r m e a t J o n e s , p r o f e s s o r o f m usic ed u c a - 1 a r iRm d o e s n t d e t r a c t in Dr. J o n e s says tion in th e U n iv e rs ity . a n o t h e r p r e t e n t i o u s K e n to n p i a n o Wall in th e Music B u ildin g, solo with b ra s s a n d r h y t h m b a c k - 1 A s e n i o r s t u d e n t, Miss F r e u d i - O r c h e s t r a m e m b e r s seem to be g r o u n d . A lth o u g h c om posed a n d g e r h a s stu d ie d u n d e r Mieczyslaw' t h a t a r r a n g e d b y P e te R ug olo , it so u n d s M unz, v is it in g Po lish p r o f e s s o r a t a h it u n d e r s to c k e d tw o eyes m u s t serv e th e p u r- 1 c urio usly like G ille sp ie’* " N i g h t in ■ the U n iv e rs ity . o f f o u r , ' d a n m u s t look a t his m usic, a n d , | '* m e r e ly a single, u n e x p a n d e d " S o n a t a , O pus 28, say s Dr. A rc h ie j T u n is i a ,” b u t th is p o te n t ia l p la g -j Miss F r e u d i g e r ’* p r o g r a m will in G , M a j o r ’ a n d " S o n a t a in D M a j o r . ’ t h a t th e m u s i - ;, As the title im plies, " I n t e r l u d e " ; She will also play B e e th o v e n ’s in D M a jo r, ’ — I a t th e sa m e tim e , see t h e c o n d u e - I t h e m e - in c o m p le te in itself. Some j “ R e fle c ts dan* l ’e a u by D eb ussy, f i* u r e s a re h a n d s o m e j a n d “ S u ite , O pus 1 4 ” by B a rto k . A m e m b e r o f A lp ha L a m b d a D e lta , h o n o r a r y sch o lastic f r a t e r - n it y f o r f r e s h m e n w o m e n ; Mu Phi E p silo n , h o n o r a r y music f r a t e r n ­ ity f o r w o m e n ; a n d M o r t a r B oar, th e Miss F r e u d i g e r h a s re c e iv e d a n d all a re well e x e c u te d , h u t sco re s o f th is ty p e n e e d a s u p p l e ­ a p p r e c i a te d . f u lly m e n t (C a p ito l) in a lb u m sides by o u r boy t h e : includ e S c a r l a t t i ’s " S o n a t a Ids, t h e r e ’s r e a l l y Io f i S t a " ’3 J u s t a n o t h e r e x a m p l e o f V ic to r has re l e a s e d , B u t, bf adds, ; a c tu a l value. little p rac- it w ith a to be f r o m tor. A P O I n s t a ll * N e w P le d g e * A P O in s ta lled th r e e n ew p led g es n o th i n g to in a c e r e m o n y last S u n d a y . T h e y Gee. w ere Bill L a s tin g e r, Bill Rosen, I th e a n d C lau d e V illarre al. T he g ro u p s t a t e m e n t t h a t its all in k n o w in g will m e e t n e x t S u n d a y a t 2 o ’cock how. in th e YMCA. E x t o V i s i t M o t h e r H o r * AUSTIN STATIONERY & PRINTING COMPANY “Creators of Distinctive Printing” 217-19 W. 6th St. Ph. 7-6145 Mr*. J o W h ite , f o r m e r l y S a lly b and< A lb um Fox, B .J. ’46, will visit h e r m o t h e r , : M o n d a y Blues, Mrs. N elia F ox, h e r e t h i s w eek. SOn g plu* o t h e r old E c k s tin e fav-1 Mrs. W h ite is liv in g in F o r t W o r t h o r jt e s ( " J e ll y , J e l l y , ” " S o m e h o w ,” ; w he re h e r h u s b a n d , a f o r m e r edi- “ S k y l a r k , ” a n d o t h e r s ) . B illv ’s to r of T h e D aily T e x a n , i» w o rk - fa n s will fo r g iv e th e slig htly d a te d i ing f o r th e F o r t W o r t h S t a r - T e le - m a t e r i a l lu sty g ra m . to h e a r his J h a r i to n i n g . ( V i c t o r ) . t i tl e j u s t . The Tavern 12th it Lam ar A ir C onditioned “ Where good friends meet” f o r m , e ig h t B illy B e l t i n e r e c o r d e d w h en h e j ^ani,eilek7 c S c h o ia r s h ip ' w a s s in g in g w ith th e E a r l H i n e s ; _________________________ " S t o r m y in clu d es th e ti t l e is W ith over tw e n ty - e ig h t h u n d r e d alb u m s o f classical, semi-classical an d p o p u la r re c o r d s and e n u m e r ­ individual discs plus a wide able a s s o r tm e n t o f radios and su n d r y radio a n d p h o n o g ra p h accessories th e Co-Op d o w n sta irs has m ade an im pressive bid for music e sto re p o p u la rity . E v e r y t h i n g from B en ­ ny to B ra h a m s and T e m p le to n to Tchykowski can he fo u n d on its shelves. Scoff and Levant To Play Here Two m o d e r n pian ists, Hazel S c o tt a n d O sc a r l e v a n t , will give tho c o m in g y ear, re c i ta l s d u r i n g th e C u lt u ra l E n t e r ­ a c c o r d i n g to tainm ent. C o m m itte e f o r 1948-49. T he c o n c e r t series will also i n ­ clud e th e V ie n n a Boy*’ C h o ir ; the C in c in n a ti S y m p h o n y O rc h e s tra , a n d R ic h a rd D yer B e n n e tt , fo lk sin g e r, said Dr. A rchie N. Jo n e s, f a c u l t y ad v iso r. O th e r s in th* F r a n z P o lg a r, series _ h y p n o t i s t ; De I n f a n t r y C h o ru s ; Mischa P a u r ’s E lm a n , violin ist; an d S to n e Ballet. TOM E. JOHNSON A S COUNTY JUDGE A man young enough to be active A man alert enough to know the county's problems A man astute enough to handle the county's finances economically ( Pmi d Pol. A d v . ) Broadway Hit Play Will Be Here August ll F o r th r e e d a y s b e g in n i n g A u g ­ u s t th e l l a t H o g g A u d ito r iu m D e p a r t m e n t o f D r a m a will p r e ­ s e n t a Moss H a r t- G e o r g e S. K a u f ­ m an o p u s e n ti tl e d " G e o r g e W a s h ­ i n g t o n S le p t H e r e . ” th e m is h a p s a n d A lig h t c o m ed y, it is c o n c e r n e d w ith t r i a l s o f th e F u ll e r s o f N e w Y o rk C ity w ho b u y a in B ucks C o u n ty , P e n n s y l v a n ia on ly to th e y b o u g h t w as p r e t t y m u c h o f a w r e c k o f a s u m e r c o u n t r y h o m e t h a t w h a t fin d Officers Elected At Little Theater T h e sla te o f o f f ic e r s f o r A u s ­ t i n ’s L ittle T h e a t e r is c o m p le te. In a m e e t i n g h eld T u e s d a y n ig h t, J a c k H. S uck e, w as ele c te d v ic e ­ p r e s i d e n t ; Mrs. M a r y B e n ja m in , a s c r ip t w r i t e r a t R adio H o u se, s e c r e t a r y ; a n d W. T. M a y n e J r ., t r e a s u r e r . T r u e m a n O ’Q u in n h a d p re v i o u s ­ ly been e le c te d p r e s id e n t o f th e g ro u p , a n d a n in e - m a n co u n cil s e t up. M e m b e rs o f th e council a r e : W. T. M a yn e J r . , H a r v e y O a t m a n , J a c k S u cke , Mrs. O b e ra D owns, T r u e m a n O ’Q u in n , Mrs. M a ry e B e n ja m in , Mrs. J a n e R ish w o rth , a n d Mrs. M y r a W illiam s. f o r No d e f i n it e p la n s h a v e been th e L ittle T h e a t e r 's m a d e n e x t p ro d u c t io n , h u t Mr. T r u e m a n said it w o uld p r o b a b l y be a n o t h e r m e lo d ra m a . T h e r e h a s b e e n som e t e m p o r a r i l y talk, he said, a b o u t th e H ills,” in r e - o p e n in g "G o ld t he m e l o d r a m a t h a t d re w c ro w d s fo r m a n y w e ek s a t th e A u s tin S a n g e r r u n d e . Navy Flight Course Offered Graduates F l i g h t le a d i n g t r a i n i n g t o a com m ission as a n en sig n th e U n ite d S t a t e s N a v y will he o f f e r e d a lim ited n u m b e r o f college g r a d u ­ a te s b e t w e e n 19 a n d 25 y e a r? o f age. N a v y a n ­ o ff ic ia ls no u n ced . h av e in E i g h t e e n to t w e n t y - f o u r m o n t h s t r a i n i n g will be given a t P e n s a c o la , F la., a f t e r w h ich o ff ic e r - p il o ts will join r e g u l a r N a v y a v ia tio n u n i t s on s h o r e b a s e s o r on c a r r ie r s . M in i­ m u m s t a r t i n g p a y is $290 a m o n th . D eta ils m a y b e o b ta i n e d fr o m th e O ffic e o f N av a l O f f i c e r P r o ­ S ta t io n , c u r e m e n t , N aval A ir Dallas. F r o m h a b i t a t . it is a p lay o f w h o leso m e co m ed y a n d f a r c e . t h e r e on te c h n i c a l W h ile t h e title b e a r s little im ­ p o r t a n c e t o t h e p lay, it m i g h t be r e l e v a n t to p o in t o u t a lig h t c o n ­ t r a d i c t i o n — i n t e n ti o n a l w ith th e a u t h o r s , h o w e v e r, t h a t G eorge W a s h i n g to n n e v e r s l e p t th e r e b u t r a t h e r B e n e d ic t A rn o ld . Mr. L o re n W in sh ip, th e p l a y ’s d i r r e c t o r c o m m e n ts t h a t in su c cess f u l ly p r e s e n t i n g th e co m e d y se v ­ d i f f ic u l ti e s will e ra l h a v e to be ov erco m e. H e m e n t io n s such a p ro b le m as c r e a t i n g a s e t ta k e c o n s i d e ra b l e p u n ­ t h a t will i s h m e n t a n d y e t be fr e s h a n d t h e n e x t p e r f o r m a n c e . new He s p e a k s o f a s e t to be d e s ig n e d t h a t will a t o ne s t a g e a p p e a r d e ­ c r e p i t a n d p e r h a p s a scen e l a t e r t a k e on th e se m b la n c e of a h a n d ­ som e c o u n t r y home. A n d f i n a ll y he p la n s to o v e rc o m e th e p ro b le m o f h a n d l i n g a n u n u s u a l a m o u n t o f so u n d e f f e c t . f o r An T o solve th e s e p ro b le m s , Mr. is R o b e r t Mellen- W in s h ip a d d s, cam p , v is itin g a s s i s t a n t p r o f e s s o r fr o m t h e U n iv e r s ity o f M ich igan . i n t e r e s t i n g c a s t i n g n o t f o r th is v eh icle is th e a p p e a r a n c e c f f o u r t e e n - a g e r s f r o m A u s tin High S c h o o l’s Red D r a g o n P la y e r s a n d a n o t h e r lad n o t a s s o c ia te d w ith th e d r a m a t i c g r o u p h u t also o \ A u stin H igh School w ho h a v e o f ­ f e r e d t h e i r serv ices f o r th i s p r o ­ d uctio n . O c c u p y in g s t r a t e g i c p o s itio n s in co m ed y , Mr. W in s h ip sa y s th e y hav e th u * f a r p ro v ed v e ry c a p a b l e r e h e a r s a l s w hic h b e g a n M o n ­ in d a y a n d w h ich will r u n f o r f o u r weeks. C u r t a i n tim r " will he a t 8 o'clock a n d is a% t h e a u d ie n c e f o u r su r e d o f all g i a n t f a n s ca n p ro d u c e . T h e c a s t f o r " G e o r g e W a s h i n g to n S le p t H e r e , ’’ ind ue d.?: t h e cool a i r as T o m m y J o n e s a s N e w t o n F u l ­ a s A n n a b e lle ler, L ee O sb o rn e F u lle r, K a t h r y n B a x t e r a s M ad g e F u lle r, B y ro n T u b b s S te v e E ld rid g e , F r a n k C r a w f o r d as Mr. K im b e r , M ax R a n d o lp h a n d J u l ­ ius W a l k e r on a l t e r n a t e e v e n in g s as U n c le S ta n l e y , D avid T h o m a s as C la y to n E v a n s , J o a n n e P l a t t as R e n a Leslie, D olph S im on a s R a y m o n d , J o y c e M cC ain a s K a tie , Hazel M c B ra in as H e s t e r , Dick Russell a s L e g g e t t F r a z e r , Bill H o g a n as T o m m y H u g h e s , V i r ­ g in ia B e c k e r a s S u e B a r r i n g t o n , M y r n a R u f f as M a rio n W ilcox, J e a n n e D aw so n as Mrs. D o u g las a n d J o Y o u n g a s Mr. P r e s c o tt. S U M M E R TIME IS R EA D IN G TIME Yes, stay cool, relax and enjoy a good book when the heat is too much for you* We have the newest Editions in: FIC T IO N N O N -F IC T IO N SPORTS G A R D E N IN G — ALSO M U S IC ART PHOTOGRAPHY SCU LPTU RIN G AIR-CO NDIT IO N ED T o u s Bookstore ^ t h N in a< Iii I OI h« N o f lo fit ex hi! op K ll Ing the o f A s m e rn ei t c r sift Fee Big tior by caul not rig ) I d en si t y h e r , righ tion van* ties, l l gel civil govt ible, ei a1 hous he ii a dde I L inati d a y s t e p Ti t u t i o b e f oi lister W a r civil w i n g Hei Me WA Select B. He d e a f t o 25 dot t h e in g r a m . I t v a l t h o u j ivo u Id f d r a fro: ©ups H e n 0,00 utd s t 8 $ .0 0 0 o th e J’-one Replies to Attack On History Book t o w a r d In r e p l y to th e c h a rg e t h a t his I book, " B u il d in g o f O u r N a t i o n , ” j is biased th e N ew Deal, Dr. E u g e n e C. B a r k e r s t a t e d , "A ll we tr ie d to do is to w rite a simple, j s t r a i g h t f o r w a r d book f o r child ren 1 of t h a t ag e. " I t w as n o t b iased f o r o r j a g a i n s t a n y o n e , b u t s t a t i n g th e f a c t s . ” j u s t simply Dr. B a r k e r , p ro f e s s o r o f A m e ri- I can H is to ry , c o n tin u e d , " I do n o t see how th e book can be called biased t o w a r d th e N ew Deal be- j c a u se I am w ell k n o w n as a n a n ti- N ew D e a l e r .” th e T he c riticism o f eig h th i g r a d e h is to r y w as voiced by Mrs. j C h a rle s E. S w a n so n r e p r e s e n t i n g th e D a u g h t e r s of R ev olu tion Iow a, w h e re used. th e A m e r i c a n ' in C ouncil B lu ffs, I is b e in g 1 the book Dr. B a r k e r c o lla b o ra te d w ith P r o f e s s o r s W a l t e r P. W’ebb o f th e I U n iv e rs ity a n d H e n r y S. Com- I m a g e r o f C o lu m b ia in w r it in g th e book. Education Offers 3 Grad Degrees in c r e a s i n g In view o f t r e n d s ; t o w a r d e m p l o y m e n t o f c o u n se lo rs schools, colleges, a n d y o u th- in s e r v in g o r g a n i z a ti o n s , th e U n i­ v e rs ity o f T e x a s now o f f e r s th r e e g r a d u a t e d e g r e e p la n s w ith e m ­ p hasis on cou n se lin g . P r o g r a m s o f w o rk th e d e g re e s o f M a s te r o f E d u c a t i o n : w ith a m a j o r in e d u c a t io n a l phy- chology, M a s te r of E d u c a ti o n w ith a m a j o r in e d u c a tio n , a n d M a s te r o f A rts. in clu de M a jo r o r m in o r w o rk in e d u c a ­ tio n a l p syc ho log y w ith e m p h a s is up o n c o u n s e lin g m a y also be ta k e n by c a n d i d a t e s f o r D o c to r s ’ d e ­ g ree s , D ean L. D. H a s k e w , h e a d o f th e College o f E d u c a ti o n , s a i d . : " S t u d e n t s a p p ro v e d f o r p r a c ­ tice m a y o b ta i n v a lu a b le w o rk e x ­ p e rie n c e in o n -th e -jo b t r a i n i n g in th e U n i v e r s i t y ’s T e s ti n g a n d G u id ­ ance B u r e a u an d in A u s tin P u b ­ lic S ch o o ls,” he exp lain ed . " T h e d e a n s o f m en an d w o m en w o rk closely w ith th e c o u n s e l o r - t r a i n ­ ing p ro g r a m a n d will c o n sid e r a p ­ p lic a n ts r e s id e n t f o r serv ice as co u n se lo rs in d o rm ito rie s . Also in th e c o m m u n it y a r e in s t i t u t i o n s w hich f o r hig hly-sp ecia lized e x p e ri e n c e w ith th e m e n t a ll y ill a n d d e a f, o r th e blind, as w ell as w ith re c r e a ti o n a l a g e n c i e s .” p r o g r a m s a n d In a p a m p h l e t titled " P r e p a r a ­ tion f o r C o u n s e lin g ,” D e a n H a s ­ kew a n n o u n c e d o p p o r t u n it ie s f o r p r o s p e c tiv e w o rk e rs p e rs o n n e l w ith c h ild re n a n d y o uth . a p p o r t u n i t i e s social o f f e r Tower Moving Job Nearly Completed C ity e le c tric a l d e p a r t m e n t w o r k e r s w e r e c o m p l e ti n g a d j u s t ­ m e n t s in p la c i n g t h e 165-fo ot, te n - to n " m o o n l i g h t ” t o w e r a t T w e n t y - S t r e e t s th i r d lines T h u r s d a y a f t e r n o o n while w e re b e in g re -c o n n e c te d fr o m it to th e c i t y ’s e le c tric a l sy stem . a n d Red R iv er g r a d u a t e . W illiam A. D a r te r , U n iv e rs ity en- a n d m a i n t e n a n c e . . ‘ h* d ir e c te d ' the m0T ,n* Moving t h e to w e r b e c a m e n e ­ c e s s a ry w h en th e n ew p a v in g p r o ­ j e c t on T w e n t y - t h i r d S t r e e t a d ­ jo i n i n g M e m o ria l S ta d i u m w as b eg u n . I t w a s th e f i r s t ti m e a n y to w e r has b een m oved i n t a c t since th e u n iq u e lig h tin g sy s tem w a s co m p le te d in May, 1895. A U ST IN A RM Y Cr N A V Y STORE S U N G L A S S E S A r m y A ir F o r e * T y p e M e n '* o r W o m e n ’* $ 2 .9 5 W H I T E T - S H I R T S N a v y T y p e . P O P L I N S H I R T S A r m y O f f ic e r S ty le (A ll s ix e s I 6 9 f 0 ^ G e n u in e A r m y C lo t! ( S a n f o r is e d ! ) $ 4 .9 5 W O R K S H O E S O il R e s i s t a n t S ole* pr $ 6 .9 5 S ” B O O T S L e a t h e r a n d R u b b e r ( A ll S ty le * ) A C o r ▼ ' i N A V Y D R E S S S H O E S BUek Low Q u a r te r $ 6 .9 5 p r. A R M Y D R E S S S H O E S $ 7 .9 5 Yr o w n L o w Q u a r t e r Up S U N H E L M E T S A rm y S u r p lu s . . . 9 5 A R M Y C O T S . . . . ____ ee U s e d - P e r f e c t C o n d itio n N e w - H e a v y D u c k C o v e r* $ 2 .9 5 $ 4 .9 5 ea H A M M O C K S N a v y - N e w - c o m p le tc w ith ro p e * a n d clew * $ 3 .9 5 A U ST IN A RM Y Cr N A V Y STORE “ A e ro * * S t r e e t f r o m P o * to f f lc e " 2 0 6 W E S T S I X T H