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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 17, 1947)
r • .•i t- r* r- I CONGRESS OPftNS WASHINGTON, Nov. 17^ —President Truman was scheduh to appeal to iCongress ip pei^son t day for aid to -Europr and -strong-' er controls over the cost of livinigf at Hme. : 4 ( g t- Ir 1 R SIAM ASSASSINATION BANGKOK, Sian, Nov. 1I7.-W —A j spokesman for the militaify? which agi?ed eoijtrol of the ! government in a bloodless regime Sianiese coup) last week Warned today that a would-be assassin is en route Lausanne, SwitstWland, where Kin 1 Phdmpiphpn Aaulet is . TO ASK HOUSING ACT; WASHINGTON, Nov. 17-<>H The special session of Congress! convjning today will be asked bj! "Senaltor Sparkman - (D-Ala) to authorize the Federal Housing A mini itration to guarantee fr $1,5(0,000,000 to $2,000,000,00(1 home construfttion leaps between mid-December and March 3t.-. i i H( )LLYWOOD,Nov; 17— W ^ The Screen AetxrrR 'Guildi called ori i\ party i J now. study-1 : ACTORS BAN REDS | ‘Stay at Home’ Plan Advocated By Aggie, Ut Groups Thursday .i its leadership last night to Disa-f j£Ow Communi&ip, and elected Ron-* aid Heagan as'Uresidentf I j The Guild by resolutpn decreed that no ,-one; shall be Eligible foif offid; in the ofgahizaxion unless he signs an affidavit stipulating that he is not a membjer of th»j "•f: END HUGHES HEARING WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 — The ift-stormy hearings into Haw,, ard [Hughes big aircraft dealings with the governmenf «rrtded sudj- -denly Saturday. The inquiry closed, with Hugbej accusing a senate war ipvektigat^ ing c^mmittpa of '“keeping th publiefin the: dart'L^ytdnlbrmatioij: now ip its~files that wopld *provo r ; Hughes said, that he fs telling thf. truth about how he get; hi^ $40,^ 000(0)0 worth of war contracts built] two types ot planes. , A ^ ! stAssen praises warren; DENVER, Nov. 17—(dPl—Hart- old K.- Stassen, announqed candil- date for the Republican I pre'siden- tian niomination, declares he “adt- mires r the frank and ferthright ’ statement of position)made bjy Gov. Earl Warren of California,' who announced he would seek the Gpl? presidentian nomination. 1 ( t j Warren spid he would iipt enter any primaries outside of Califor nia, and would not accept a vicr 1 -presidential nomination. /J t , FIRE HOUSE BURNS BETHANY, 0KLA., Noy. 17 - r (A*)—The faces^ of Bethany’s.. Iff volunteer firemen are. as fed afc kerosene got together to) burp down the $4,000 • fireheuse ar^L nearly destroyed a new truck T.Jr- 1’!^ •: ■ i '■/ 1L - X Volume 47 -<• ' i ' \ I ■ w'f-' • / \ . .u. W m 11-- , Wmi The T.-. w- •''i! ’ ; ,\1T alio PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF CHEATER A A M COLLEGE < ■ r.; .• | i^.j :,\T COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1047, Freshmin SBderuic (<nii»i Curtain Rises Tomorrow ScheduledatFiveWednesday„„ .o..^ j. iThe ^nnual Freshman; Sliderule (Contest Will be Conducted Wednesday afternjoon ‘ at 5i, J. p. .Caddess, chairmim of the contest, anno Staneously i one in the auditorium of Uikiing T-180 at the Anpex and the other »om 303, Mechanical Engineering; Build- “Stay at Home Week” was the theme of the meetihg Thursday afteijnoon between representatives of A. & M. and the University of Te^sjs in the Texas Union at Austin. i The eleven Aggies, five'of which werp members of the Welcom ing Committee, heard officials! and student leaders of the’' University derirj the vandalism and wanjton.destruction which has marred pre- vioutj meetings of the ifoojsball | j H — r, r-~ ; teamP of the two schools. 1 j; . Ralph Rothman, chaiqnan of tho Aggie. Welcoming Committee, explijined Vie functions of the ppiEpittq'e arid pointed out; the steps! which, were to he taken that wduRl insure Texas fans a j pleas ant ptay onj the campus. i ; J. IT. MlneP, another member of the Committee, requested that* the students not bring a steer th Col lege ! Station. He remipded 1 them that'Aggies were expected to find suitable quarters for the Baylor the jmasqot before the Aggie-Bruin * - L gamfi and that the little maiscot had paused a furor by bathing, it self-in the bird bath in front of Sbisw Mess Hall. Cq|onel George E. Hurt, director of the ’ Longhorn Band, expressed the inope that since-, students; in both) schools were “bi^ people from big schools”, rivalry between the two institutions wopld. be leff to foot^gll players, rather than; to thei^ j student bodies. Joji White, editor of The Daily Texiipi :asked A. & M. representa tives to send information about the Campus, including mess hall faciliities, to the Texan for,, tiis- iribijtion to all university^stmlehts. ! ) At the end of the conference, Jim Nugje.ht, .president of MICA, the hienfsf independent, student akso- eiat^ejn, gave tickets ^o “Fbrty Follies” college musical ’to each member of the visit- 4 '* members of the Aggie e, Jr, their jbfte good fire engine- j part|y(, included A. D. Bruce, Jr., A welding torch and ,8 (tani «f; ^pre^iflent of the Student Senite; kerosene cot tocether i tai burh' Asa jHolleman, head yell leajer; Elmlo Livingston, president of 'the -f Sen; dr Class:; James Tittle, corps I adjutant; Billy Vaughn, corps jex- JESTER SPEAKS TONIGHT . , tecutjive officer: and the remainder AUSTIN, Nov. 17 'A 5 *—A statqf | of t ip Welcoming Committee, ,J. H. wide radio address hps been sch4- f Riel ardsofT, Neal Galloway, and J. duled for, tonight by Gov, BefiufoAl rT; Roole. Grady Elms, club ad- H. Jester for a report on the recent f visojri, accompanied the group, sgld .of tideland leases. ‘r j j Rjejpresenting the University: of r — j I; l Tcxtos were Bradley Bourland, dtu- < FOUR SIGN AFFIDAVITS l .deni .president; Barefoot Sanders, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.,;Nov. 17 head! Vheer leader; Judy Ebeling, —'-Ri—The.four top officers ofptbe i PaHhellenic; Julia Tutt, studient CIO United Auto Workers annaujiii-i secitjtary; Jitter Nolen, prefeidient red they had signed non-Comunist of APO: an d assistant yell leader affidavits as required by the Taft- Fmf Chandler, vice-president of hartley Act. " V [ r| 4 the Student Association; !Kerry i -| 4 Memtt, formdr president of the ATLEE DAUGHTER MA.RRlBS I Ex-Servicemen’s Association; Wal- PRINCES RISBiDROUGH BUCK-iJterj’Hamilton, president of the 1NGHAMSHIRE, ENG., Ndv. 17-i~Sil#r Spurs; Paul Cook, Univer- (A 5 )—Jantrtr-Attlee, daughter) pf sity 1 of Texas Bar Association Director of Ag Commission To Visit Campus commission A. G. Brown, the agricultural of th,e American Bankers As sociation, will visit the cam- pug today and tomorrow. D. W. Williams, vice-president for agriculture, announced Friday; He ^’ill be accompanied by V. S. Marett, president of the First Na tional Bank of Gonzales and chair man of the agricultural committee of the Texas Bankers Association, In making the announcement; Williams said that the visitors would confer with officials of the college on extension, research and teaching programs relating to ag ricultural credit. On Tuesday at 6 a. m. Brown and Marett will be guests on the Texas Farm and Home Program, over WTAW. He will speak Tuesday after noon at 1 in Room 411, Agricul tural Building. All students and faculty members are invited to attend, Williams said. Prime Minister and Mrs. Atfld® PHsjdent; and Jack Neff, prejsi- was married Saturday to Hajrojd derjtj of the Cowboys. Shipton, an electronics engirieqr^. Director Brown Tuesday will ad dress a graduate course, “Public Administration in Agriculture”, of fered this year by the department of agricultural economics. He is one of a number of leaders from farm and government groups who will address the course this year. It is expected that he will- dis cuss the scope and importance of sound agricultural credit and ser vices offered farmers by i)anks, having served as president of sev eral banks in the midwest before accepting the presidency of the Federal Land Bank of Louisville. He aso served as president of the Federal Intermediate Credit Bank and executive vice-president of the Farm Credit Administration of Louisville. In 1940 he was ap pointed deputy manager of the American Bankers Association in charge ; of agricultural credit. The following year he was made direc tor of its agricultural commission. mg- j ! ' ' - M .. ■ To be eligible for the “principle” contest, students must; be registered in ME 101 and have had no previous college work transfer able to A. & M. for credit. In consideration of veterans who have had their education interrupted by the war, a special set of awards will be made to students who are ineligible for the regular contest because they have 'completed college worjc prior to this semester. There will be first and second prizes fof the two students making the highest grades in the exaiq, Caddess stated. He added that there will be awarded first, second, prizes for participants from each school of engineering. Hence a student may win more than ope award. \ Among the contestants who are ineligible for the regular contest there wil be awarded first, second, third, and fourth; prizes, each be ing a large metal plaque. \ j ) Further special awards -will be made to those students making the very high grades. Every contestant will be given a small plaque which bears a commendation from the head of his department. Prizes Awarded Dec. 4 An assembly of the Annex stu-* dent body is scheduled for the sliderule award ceremony to be held in the Annex gymnasium De cember 4 at 2 p. m. Contestants from the main campus will be transported to the Annex for the occasion, Caddess said. The Dean of Engineering, the heads of the several engineering departments, and other officials will attend the ceremony. Winners of the contest will not be announced in advance of the award date. ' Grading will be divided between several instructors into groups of ^ i problems. The contest consists of a SjO-minute examination on si identic:, problems similar to the “A” quiz, Caddess explained. Contestants will be chosen by the ME 101 instructors from their various classes, Caddess said. Each teacher will be limited to 10 per cent of the total number of the ME 101 students in his classes. For the purpose of consultation, Caddess explained, as little-as three-tenths of* a man may be counted, if necessary, to include a competent contestant in the match. Selections will be made without regard to course of study or eligi bility ih the regular contest, but only on the basis of relative ability, Ghaddess announced. The plaques to be used for director of lire As the] Dive i f*" ■; v iJ m l M m ' : I] i EU : i jg ‘i m ^ PAT GATRS JAMES E. NELSON Moral Delinquency Common Even Among College Youth By ROBERT SUITS ST. LOUIS, Nov. 17 Col lege students indulge in the same juvenile delinquency offenses as boys aind girls who do not have the opportunity for higher educa- them ever in L. Por tion, but only a few of get into court, says Aust terfibld of the Departme nt of Soi- ciology pf Texas Christian Uni versityi. Writing in the ChrisRan-Evan- gelist, a national weekly publica tion of the Disciples of cites a study of, 2,049 ’ alleged de- Christ, he h, Texas, linquents in Fojjrt Wort and of 337 college students in three schools in Northern Texas. “It is a striking fact,” | says Por terfield, “that 100 per cint of the men and women in college reported doing at least one of the) acts that had been serious enough to get less fortunate boys and'girls into the courts, but instead of getting into court the former w^nt to col lege.” The average college man report ed doing in his pre-college days 17.6 per cent of the aclls charged awards are being made by D. W. against court cases, the average Fleming and M. W. Watson, in- 1 college woman 4.7 per cent of the structors in the mechanical ongi- | delinquent acts. neering department. Research Engineer To Discuss ‘Heat’ ‘(Heat and Pump Research” will be discussed by Don Vestal, Re-1 search Engineer of the A&M Re search Foundation, at a meeting) of the Brazos Chapter of the Texas Society of Professional Engineers, | Monday, 7:30 p. m., in the EE Lee- | ture /Room Not one acknowledge than three kinds of delinquent acts. Specific juvenile offenses which got into the court records varied all the way from shooting spitwads to murder. Students, answering' question- aires anonymously, freely reported delinquencies of the same kind. “Moreover, the college stn- dents delinquencies, though prob ably not as frequently indulged, were as serious as tho^e of chil dren brought into cogrt.” These students in their pre-col lege days “disturbed church, turn ed in false fire alarms, tripped trolleys, threw rocks at cars, set off fireworks in public buildings, dro^e while intoxicated, stole automobiles, bicycles, money, shop lifted, burglarized houses, forged checks, gambled, passed slugs and bad coins, had ^remartial sexual intimacies, attempted (rape, and so oh.” Thirty-nine per Cent of the men and three per cent of the girls re ported drunkenness before enroll ing in college, Porterfield disclos ed, and 43 per cent of the men in dulged in drunkenness during their college days. One in 10 reported shoplifting before college, and one th 20 after entering college. Sixty per cent of the men re ported premartial sexual intimac ies, compared with nine per cent for women, the rate shown in studies by various other colleges and universities, Porterfield said. ' Chiefly, the children who do get into court are there because somebody complained about them. j ,, \ A great part of adults’ conflicts with youth grows out of what Porterfield chooses to call the pee vishness, impatience, irresponsi bility, and in many cases criminal istic attitudes of complaints. First Show oj Portray ‘Goo! The Campus Theatjre haslitjs “!‘H€ijnrY V”! The Queen A™; the Theatre has its “Forever Am hag its “Pure As the Driven Sii Opening tomorrow night i’ firHt appearance this seaso i. The curtain will rise a 8:15! eajch evening, November Ik through 20. on the otherwise- called “A Working Girls 'La ment”. 1 } Depicting the trials and tribula tions of a girl escaping the clutch es of the mustached vijliiii, “Pure as the Driven Snow” takas place in the lobby of a nqrthkiiti Vermont Inn. Members of the cast are: Milt Frenkel, president of the Aggie Players; Jban Kernodle; Bill lie Krause, vice-president; Sybil Clajir Bannister; James E. Nelson; Nell y M<f- Arhopulos; Tom Moss; Betty Mahan, secretary; John Laufbti- berg; Frances Beardsley; PhylRs Sibler; Dorothy Bryant, and Xerm|a Langston. George J. Dillavou is cltil sponsor and director of the proi duction. ' 1 \ ★ “Ah, the good old days of jtl: theatre!” A black carriage drives maje^-i tically to the entrance. Frpm emerges a tall, tuxedoed man With a handlebar mu&tach^ He stam s to help a slender wbman dressc 4 in long tight dress and ermire wraps alight from the carnage, an they walk arm in arm jhto !t! theatre. The house lights are dimrned the show is on! There is ft bea ful damsel in distress, cryi'^f, H ther, dear father, please come hCmt from the bar"; a villain—the i of the audience hiss—and a hprjoi The audience sobs, then boos, applauds: Virtue triumphs 0v*r villainy. Yes, these are the “■ old days.” gone IRrever. Raul Loomiq, noted author jaijd playwright, hajs taken it upon Him self to bring back the melodrin a of the good old days, but in an)en tirely different light. “Pure affjtbe Driven Snow”, or “A Worjkirlg •ftd in 14- ' J .‘l -J Number 68 1 i . i*' :r ”! ’!!. 1 „ t the Aiisembly Hall will be the tear-jerking, melodtamati|(! portrayal of the “gobd ol(l days” of the theatre to be p resent-1 r~yt—‘-j—tri 4 — f—h 1 *—~ ed !by the Aggie Players ip theit ie Assembly Hall Uj •• j elvfer, fmt: they are all in a spirit of fum TRcj journey of the heroine (Phylljis Sflber) through this croo- el, icrdo-dl j world are slightly less hilai to sen n • thnii hilarious, and the antics of ti; Villaijiii (Bill Krauke) and the lero (j.Taiiies Nelson) 1 are sure to lejp the audience in the aisle.' JT riiiR pH)ducti«fn offers a timely re ief froin the movies. Be sure to Pure' as tne Driven Snow.** J it. - ■'Tin X 1 .r DHi A. 1). FOREMAN ' laptist; Speaker * Mii* 'i ister ouston Speak Tuesdays Girl’s Lament”, to be present*]! the Assembly Hall November 18, ll] > « holla ‘Pure as the Driven Snow” is luR Dr. well be U, D. Foreman of Houston iwiui uc ^jie principal spepkCr at a Rlrotherhi od [Supper at the College iStatiflin Fitft Baptist. Church Tues- ilay. eveniiig at 6:30, (he ReV) R» L. iBIrown ftjinoi^iced Saturday, t Dr. Fdi emap\ a former presulent of the Baptist General Convention, !is| one of the mpst distinguished and 20 by the Aggie Players,, is lft j (X ih.l far cry from the sob stories o^'oljdj. iatid out!: andfriglaymen of the »“ ^ s» *•-*.] I jspath. H? was largely responsible ny. The audience's hisses cheers are as much in ;ana.|Jior tm evidence as; Church. jfor the iPuilding of the iuditoriunji. Bajitiat : i i Yantis Can’t Find 1 In Mme. Tussau Parents do not bear the sole responsibility, however, Porter field observes. .;.4~ - APPROVE WORLD NEWS WASHINGTON, Nov. 17—Wi- ISigma Delta Chi, the professiprial journalistic fraternity, voted ap- i proval of world iwide distribujtilbn of news about the United States, but not through a , goverpmdnt i | news report. / j I Siiakespeare Would Have Approved of Modern Touch Ubiquitous Olivier Gets A round in ‘Henry 9 CLAIM SEGREGATION RIGHT AUSTIN, TEX., Nov. 17 — The state’s constitutional right!to provide separate educational/'facil ities for Negfo and white studiepts is claimed by the state to beikhe sole qu/stion remaining in : the suit of Herman Marion, Swpfttt, 'Houston- Negro, seeking to compel by, court action his admission (to the University Pf Texas. 1 , Based; jon tRat contention,) the neral Ijawrence Olivier should) claim sojjrie sort of record for hi£ wdrk Because of the popular demand for “Henry V” seats at the Cam-! state: pus Theatre Tuesday and Wednesday, an extra matinee will be given ip 11* HENRY V”, the prizewinning | daily at 5:15 p.m. both days, A. S, Nyary, “Henry V” representative, technicolor version of Shakes- announced Friday. I * Attorney [Genet 1 ( , filed the stafie’s answer in the case, Saturday itj l!he thin! Court of Civil Appeals where oral arguments have been set for Janurajy 14.• 1 ' '/j ) . UNi TO 1 MEET ABROAD' 'j ]NEW' YORK, Nov. 17 Tne Uhited Nations General As- sembly voted 32 to 17-today to Hold its 1948 session in Europe,' bjii! It still must appropriate',(th^ moiiqy for such :a session^ Paris, Geneva and Brussells have beetr. mentiqhed as the most likely candidates!-..for the 1948 meeting, l provided! (the —necessary funds, are approve*!J i 1 . r ■ • 'i f j “BATTLE OF NEWARKf’ I NEW YORK, Nov. 17 -(ANU-A pepreXplay at the Campus Tues day and Wednesday, November 18 anri 19. In addition to producing, directing and enacting the title ro|q in the film masterpiece; Oliv ier appears in no less than nine pajrts—but one has to be quick to spot him. ' ^Shortly after the picture opens a- young man comes to summon llardolph, Pistol and Mistress Nell. Thqt is Olivier. Again, in the first scene in the French court, a harrassed mes- sehger rushes into announce: “Am bassadors from Harry, King of England, do crave admittance to 'Ybuii Majesty.” Well, the herald off th|e tidmgs of the arrival of the Diiko of Exeter, the nefyejus i fel- lo(w j who gets his hands' Slapped l Seats for the daily 2:30 and 8:30 p.m. showings are now on sale in advance at the theatre box office. All seats are in reserved sec tions, although the individual seats will not be reserved. Seats for the extra school matihees to be given both days at 5:15 p.m, will go on sale at 4:30 the day ef performance, with the entire house scaled at 74 cents, including tax, for Aggies, faculty, members, and their families. But pardon, gentles all, The flat unraised spirits that Have daFd On this unworthy: scaffold to %ring forth So great an object. Can this cockpit hold The vasty fields jof France? Or may we ,crarp Within this wooder] O the very ' * new rbund of -verbal sparring? in the..off-again oh-again “Battle;; of Newark” has resulted in an armis tice before the-war and a decision to postpone moving the decom missioned Battleship New Mfftico New York harbor , to • Jfy Newark until Tuesdayf. i TI' , d having ithe 'ft* r from New York harbor to .port ■ - j i' >i fjthe by Lipsett, Inc.,-salvage firm;/’be-; Newark has opposec New Mexico scrapped in its cause of fear it would je the $70,000,000 development gram for the city’s airport seaport recently agreed) to b: city and port |authority, a York-New Jersjey-Agency. 1 | | Casques That did affright j the air at Agincourt?” It is ofteft apparent in his writ ings that Shakespeare would have delighted in the opportunities given by panoramic cameras to Of 1,400 juvenile court' cases, 120 were the result of parents’ complaints, 1,280 were by mer chants, policemen, and schools, and were classes by Porterfield as petty, peevish and criminalistic. Porterfiedd concludes that pre college students do not suffer the penalties of these offensfes because they have plenty of persons who “go to bat” for them, friends in the home, school, church and com munity. Attorney to Speak To ASME Tuesday By IVAN YANTIS Batt Stftff Go Hesponi (In London to |oVer tpe LONDON. Nov. 17 (Spj.)—HollywooJ in its pictures of England — the fcjg. it was like coming down a ganigplank Groping in the pea soup atwos set out for London. Several four yip i 4 noy p Whyn y ■N A. .20 *u, V IF its V tevenson ax Museum ■ ■. \ ./; ont wedding) is right about qHC thirilr shift scenes even more often than he djd and to provide close-ups of his fc r /trying to help the foolish Chftrles look regal, is none cither than Olivier. |n different garb, the night) be of Agincourf. fcije the Battle of Agincourt, a ityi fellow appears to announce to suave Constable of Erftnce, Lord High Constable, i the ish lie within fifteen hundred pftetes of our tents.” That, ) too, is OJmer. But the final long shot of the biquitous star shows him) as \e foppish attendant who bows and scrapes before the French knights who are preparing j for the battle.' . These “bits” are all so cleverly disguised and so well done: that jeken the most discerning Cyfe can nftrdly distinguish Olivier’s omni presence. Vi ■ ★ If Shakespeare were alive today, tHe chances are he’d be working I ! LAURENCE OLIVIER (left) appears here with LEO GENN in one of the nine “bit” parts which, he plays in “HENRY V” in addition to the title role. “HENRY v” will be shown at the * Campus Theater Tuesday and Wednesday of this week der a seven-year contract—with options! And he’d probably be happier than he was in the days when the limitations of the Eliza bethan theatre cramped his style. One of his frequent complaints on this score is voiced in the opening- scene of the film adaptation of his historic dramaj “HENRY V”. Shakespeare has [his first character actors -at critical momelnts. Parti cularly would he have) looked to the cinema to chroniqlg properly such a story as “HENRY V” whicir is built around the famous battle of Agincourt where 10,0|t)0 English soldiers met and defeated 50,000 French in spectacular Conflict be tween archers, lancers, iand swords men on horseback. While the Elizabethan Theatre could only indicate with words and sounds that a battle was in progress, the film catches the full scope of the struggle and in technicolor. Olivier, jn the triple capacity of producer, director, and star of “HENRY V”, has t^iken full ad vantage of the cinematic Oppor tunities the play affords and, at the same time, has been faithful to Shakespeare, the dramatist and poet. While adhering closely to the original, the production 4 has been enriched by ingenious stage “business” added to clever and plausible interpretation of the text Shakespeare would have approv ed. Caso March, former prosecuting attorney for the United States Anti-Trust Division, will speak on “Corporate Control of American Industry” at a special meeting of the American Society of Mechani cal Engineers Tuesday evening at 7:30 in the ME Lecture Room. March, a candidate for governor of Texas in the last election, is now a professor in th!e Baylor Law School. Students and faculty members of the engineering and business departments are invited to attend to take advantage of March’s first hand knowledge of utility and holding companies, C. E. Lennon, president of the dub stated Satur day. Refreshments will be served fol lowing the hour-long meeting. \ e landyd in Soptha^nptoi into aj! Nirkiih bath. I phere,; I located rqy bicyqlf/ftnd ter I ] assqd a sign which/said “ fy-omegrlhalldefghovety af\ Gib hndhdadhniallao,” which jieasant explained to me meftrting “Welcome to les”, I lustily retraced steps to Southampton started all over ft gain, ain had started faujng by liter, but having come so on my t\vo wheelrf: (To outskirts of Soutbamp- t v- ■ir j luf i winting; I wouldn’t stop for any- torrfential c^>wnpour I spied a iig the rain wfts so fierce, I had to qaltj'h hi We pulled into Ithe stntib Scotland Yard one hears so ft>uic|t bboiitU: the narrow, winding streets. 1 jji'i Claridge’s, London’s b*jst Ijojt *1, bad up in a small hostelry off ug. Resolutely, I set out London again) This time K waft< with met for in the cas with the big city. However, yard! (wjlieh ywas, I presume, I! launched the yself into Architect Society To Meet Tuesday / icc|tdi|ly Cirri:? overflowing 1 I put The Architectural Society will meet Tuesday evening at 7:30 p. m., in the Architecture Library, Jack Huddleston, architectural stu dent, announced yesterday, Joseph Meador and Nick Holle- man, instructors in the architecture department, will report on the magnificence of California as sec \ on their trip last summer, Huddle ston said. They will have color slides to illustrate the beauty of the west, he stated. A report on the development of the student AIA Chapter will also be presented. , King Mihai ding.. Rumor has eyes at each other wedding. Deeming of R SRO sign out, so s. Every plac! is ful). to because oj the wedding; people 4Jeep/anywhere. I uiet one man wflq j trie I uj get arrested for a three- day I per od i! o he cbuld sleep in jail r til ['"hulsjak, • . x Wd ret lioto Claridge’s for dinner.: merns I here ait* printed in some gn angju ageJjjao I ordered the] it«*m the lotgeiil name and trusted ck. I cMjntt find nr/ything even >11 gjHtly res)* mbling blackfeyed peas alid cornbr«ji)3. What I gjot wps two ounpes of nn ashed potatoes with some ^ gie!n stuff k n to);/ And jf I knew the ^■cxrrency gxkhange rate/, I might get', downright aigry at the sum they re- me of for half ft ’spud, v \ ’ ,v * ‘ wed-\ni .tA\ ? I v -4 ]lj her. Mi it wfse / ! liftviTnw o^ffor half a’spud, lutftahia fle^ J oyer t}e otjier day for th* — , that hq and Pjinc!»s iargiret Rose] are rpaking b^ -k rjext y^ar ‘ aybe I 1 Westminister Abbey yesterday. T, the fire escajplec )m to knew the geogrtphy beforehand, I Visited 'Special j r wanted ftre loiiitedf Titue. ears withh ut burning, but one never thurch-like structure (they bclitye it ia a church), I cahd in my hat-band anti It i reftlly frightening td me stood several knows. To call it an a stuck my Ba had no troubl / .to know there iaije n* f ji Mme. Tussaud’s Wax Mus*um prov heard so much about the life-like) statuary for myself. Tasked one of the kttendjants statue of Coke Stevenson and got no reply, the attendant was also wax. Coty was nowUcre to be found. r i . ’ ‘ / l : )l ; ii . r ... ; i ; [||. -- ■ ^ ■' l ll) for another f\.( m to know /whe , the place has XI div* escapes, i d another diversion, I had that I simply had to see it ’ where I might fird the At length I rdncluocd that i i.'.l J 11 i / V'/i. it. At r