n -ft 4 -J - IIP to 1)he power hiiouse$ ait |>ni i some of thelRentriito^s r * ri f ”n n!d aidlM GHT NEW YORK,jfDec., S' 'ff'.-t- Louis risks His IjfeavyWiig it piojnship for the;24tH t yeirs JtonigJR. 8ut if Jetser '! ll , Walcott can take it away froirn aihil' it wilj j be one oi the t" 1 ; MiatiK 5 | lift n j^^setjj. *■ “36 MILt® WASHINGTQN, Dec The Mexican fobt anil m eaise slaughter rlorgran) \ lk 5(l .‘la^ja^OOO.OOf)’m reitnke lay|by Ben Wjfliamfj pf \riz., who saiid Iwe opento i in the iUnitefl Sfates jafid I *n.t vas L, CONVICt 10 N ^UER^BERC GERM|ny| rtei: •ff :ei m 31 erf Dowg an. rabc le^jj iates jajlid Me:tient on an Au^trian^ttwirpeTilleicit treaty. He accused : 7 ttnitef States, Britiin knd FiraVi :e of try-: ing to end ive |Austi ij* wit^ dcQ nomic aid PpeaS|ires. paRiR ^m u p.loyje$ began walking o f jthfe ob The first immjediate |ffeq{ va: do blackout dlef|lHc pjpwfjerl hlilting factories, stopping dhe fsultwiiyt and choking, offj coirmjwtjichUonJ Sailors and mehlle, gjuaptlp ipoyei HUH ag^in* but Parife 'crippled,,, | ji, I qj -]■ LOUIS FIGHTS t^N GltT )RK, b u v Volume 47 :i i FF ’T i' *1', r L A - ■ ■ in \l Akis < f. r Others! A’fpe a^ii 1 ; c^victed b^ a J bmaJ yestejrda j'. ffpf 3 - i \ I'^ASON if.WACQcl lafp'^t' crpw|d cd|TexasJM isoni e ECT „ m Dec.j^ lAif'KS 4 Jj Fnne tpal constr Lodgi* Mer t. U. rpVtses tpjfapertd ItHe Afinual wrijuu Meebfhir inj Wsjbo. ieleicti d Ifipraitaj Kl JaJksph of; Gati^v lie jtl.e j jji*abd / mastjer. 1 i! • illnder ddcks n’s fqadi rship, ai- (jtiin of file Y r ad 1 risp Temple at g qoHt; U of $il/.716.0fllO 'oft a site; f icing (fif -j unibus Avdnuej betvffei| Scpm i| and Eighth |Str|ets, will >e stiiricr hjite student AUSTIN] TEXAS,' Dijc. 5 {4<#< -*rThe Univet-sity of Tcj as ypsle' dajf refused to |dmit ty. i Sstojij Ki of |Marshal3, aSNegrei i s a jgifa lent of politic il stfiei lirk stated t|iat h<| vantpd i ^tufly in Texas; and thiat the ‘i i. gtate Uniyers; ty foij! I legre i Houston does ;not offei grdd Wolrk in po|itic^|l scieipce, | J l NEW PALESTINE AaTTLeI l / JHRUSAiLEM, Detl f -(fiUA I /ifioleht street battle pa ed desjtwr , [ day.an tbe Arari towitlol Raij-hf An (' i the TH AiViv-jlerusajlt'n R EGFjO I! T Arab fun- n-'ojmted hisTf > n ^t jpanih i ; ;i titjon of Palesjine.. i 'Us approval. 1 ian ijibinittid j t H'Ut* opportunities are 5 as ! gi-eat Defcjijse Treaty tp* yjth 'oil companies ak anywhere j The pact, signed kep j. .2 jin f)e Janeiro, pi edges j|9 natipn ? the Western Hemiiptu re |o- jointly (pgginst any i agi rresdio •the'hemisphoie’s seejurit-y [; [ stretching dro n Poly t( i Pot from Hawgii't) the Falk lands lisebsp iyef t ASK C ATTLE i tl EA’ WASHINGION. Ree, 5-k'fPr Renegotiation f with : jM< ?cico cattle 'slaughter proiTa: i to out t Foot lanq Mm* h rts “- that counfry -ji’ 83 uifgei by a ljvesfock[ indus :py spojljei before a Hm|se aji-iciiti icommitteej ' I i ' , j ] Albert Mitcndll of! Albert.jNr chairman of Secrpfirj] ofj Lf culture Aindersan's ilNsponkl 11 visory CoihmiitOe.onj jthi cattle ease, assirtel; the |;rei ientilj,’ * tef p -oinShtril : 'll P.L R. Tumlinson, freShm haujtical en Rryjan, and f ..Architecture If ire itTTe wifime^rs 6^ this yearna slide fuki contest. '! Thmlinsdn was the pll-rouijid win- ■per in the slide rule content/ for ^hiph he received an appropriate plaque. * | j «f Tjumlinson won the content hqld for,lstudehts with no prior college iwork. Feigenspan is the winner ipf l!he;eontest held for students: wpi ipriur coRfege work. For,winning the contest ahioiig students in each of the two najsses, IFunjilinsoh and Feigenspan r ‘cpived Log Log Decitrig slide rules.; ij Tumlinsoip, also first in thte pero- ; v|iautical engineering depakihent, ’hndi Feigenspan, first in the airchi- jteetjure department, each rpepived |ah. additional plpqve... j ; ( Second place in the regular or fretihman group went to E. (R.lFlU- Icin^er, electrical engineering - ntu- from Houston. Richard dent M. Oil Companies Use Engineers for Key Posts, CE Asserts I|y IVAN YANTIS iBattalibn Roving Correspondent PARIS, FRANCE. (Dec. 5, 1947 (Spl.)—Paris is a city chock- full of foreigners, jail of whom speak an excited cross between French ah« sign language. Scientists believe that France will eventually evblve trt a nation of Venus de Milos in which nobody wilj have arms, because ajjl the arms will be flung off if debate on world affairs gets any hotter. Paris ini the spring is the bread and butter of cobntless tin Alley inmates. If anyonei wrote a song about Paris ini the winter ould ea at’s that. could easily starve On thi royalties. Paris in the winter is cold. Pi! By ZERO HAMMiONRS ‘ Oil companies are hllir g tjheiir , 5 exjvutive positions with enf|inR>rs l|hcy’s| subject for the leveling I colljege work. Feigenspan placed 1 0 H:]|'waif “The Civil Engineer and the ; firsjt .and Adams placed second in cajttle'; slaughte be! Renewed, j i pended ihould be FINt) liC-6 TttoilBRfe WASHINGTON, Dec j 5 T. P.. WHghL Civfl , crormafii^! Administmtoij, said; yerteijiay art; Investigation jihows jovetfloi} fMp- line running ipto thijea jin jleil rjg (system causep fireifi aboard !Ppif| ■p’ (type airpljine^ whiclj rej^entlh’lajhrAj grounded IvolyntariH ds]pA> :ck]y SA ! WASH Undersecretary said , yestirdah" someth ji^g tin TON, liW ^y of {’Stite nature of! panic buying’ is jilace in Sovifet RusRa ROW Hfe XX 4 1 ^ mi|t« bopt H oic ; America "i nroaacafct; Wet nflf lay pight that rjumors ! of jim| eth iiig price incieasps andiia (Rvjilua ipr ii'pf the Russian RubSie i id font } off the buying wa m r Lovett the! gint< ifien Senate Apprnpru. iqlns SC°r i • ■ when queltioiied al America’I bpoadca: imors! of |jm| ig wavje. I FRENCH (STILL T ; PARIS, Due. 5 I" imment, armed with ^drastic anti-sitrike-1 iw, ‘ents today in tnie iTbm ronagated strikes whi ,dally strangled, FijeniR ^ out confronted fre: jh ji the fashionable Rivijer*. | i A mob seiged thtf pi nt o Cannes. Anoljher thmni ’ sack by rifle: butts fom Mobile Guiards at tHe n Nice where the ommittee ejalled a >: panUm treaty vR 1 WASHINGTON, Rbc. 6 President Tru dan Inter-American . . ^the senate jyesjerdayjan| aslfeij ijon’j eW” G. H. Lacy, chief kipil ; en- ^a : s Dbn Grubbs” from'Dallas. Sec- J jjgjneer of the Gulf Oil Cbmpany, j ond place went to John C. Stand- Tjjj Raid at the bi-monthly meeting ofj a rd from .Houston, pi' the local chapter of the! A$CR j A separate Contest was held for Tumlinson won the contest held for aeronautical engineering stu dents. Second place went to Sam uel S. Molinary of Santurcq, Porto iRifo. r Winders in the architecture de- partment were John E. Conner of Dallas and G. E. Wallace of Dallas. Conner placed first and Wallace placed second. First .place in the contest for chemical engineering stridents went to Wescomb R. Jones from Humble. VVallace Hooper from Fort Worth peind. ]l j ' Harold L. Haraldson from Ccr- Christi, made the high score long; civil engineering stud; u ‘- r elvin W. Parse from Tulsa, ahoma ; made the second -|f ’ BpplrC. i lr 1 1 'k- : J. B. Newton from Houston plac ed first in the contest for manage ment engineering students. No sec ond place was determined. Flukingbr (was the high scorer among th| electrical engineering students. $econd place In this con-; tepit Went to Albert W. Rollins from ijlaHaiu | jj j -j j j for placing first among electri- ca (lengiiieerirg students, Flukinger received a $5 check. > A- D- Morton, d r - froni Dallas won high honors ip the mechani cal engineering department., Char les Qjrr from College Station plac ed second. Wipner among the .petroleum en- and ( geology (students jriueeirLng was Don ( 7" i inuj iuuai uiia|»u*. yA] Tuesday evening. situdehts who have ihad some prior _ 1 ^ ? n ! t ^j ; Oil; Company.’’ He told of jthe dif- thip contest. V. W. ‘King, electrical i ferent types of*work. that {he diviL engineering student from Alpine en^ipeer is c‘allied upon; to placed third, in this contest. Bran- lido, i chiefly mapping, surveying, Ion B. Blount made the fourth ; anq [construction work.. Of jeixtr^me highest score in this contest. B|r)u|hf is a geolbgical 1 engineering ht from Houston. There is a total ofj three political parties for every (two French citizens. It’s all part of b check-and-balance system that got; completely out Of hand. Congressmen here are called deputies, but I dm not sure that sheriffs’ .assistants are called congressmen. The French people modeled;their government ever so slightly after the American govern ment. but (several of the Signals got crossed with the resujt that only the president is called thp same thing in both countries, and in neither country can what the president is called be printed in a fpmily news- paper. j ' 4 |i L ; - • j , | { If possible, the Friench are even more initial-happy in govern mental circles: than Americans. In addition to initials being given to all projects and agencies, the political parties are known by their init ials, such as RPM and RIR. The famous XYZ affair in American history alsovhad to do with Frar Over two-hpndred of the world by virtue of oared than two-hund ce. ’ ' ; j ' years ago France was the cultural center Louis XIV’s finery and power, apd for more ears how people who have aspired to seem erudite in Gallic accents and consumed mpgnum after 4.™,) 0r tj on to one’s Y and cultured have spoken magnum of champagne. The idea’s merit is in direct propo: ability to contain himself. Paris might brighten up for the Christmas season, but of the red find: green holiday colors, I fear that the red will be predominant. Therefore I am going to lOberammergau in Bavaria to see; the Passion Play. A- 1- 11-i it m r-/- I'i Number 79 41 li (' 1 Young Players Show Talent i Study of Renaissance Arch By VICK UNDI4Y Dark shadows of the Italian Rennaisance i sional actors flitted across Guion Hall otag^ last night as | audience the the National Repertory Theatre presented when the rm John Webster’s “The Duchess of Malfi.” was “ After a fumbling start ,the young profes- r s \ Staff, Student Heep Awards uirectoriet Gj ven to Seven Now Available Da j -J J ludents The fii-st directory of| faculty^ . \V J : j “ ' , staff members, and (students published since pre-war days is Roland Bing; manager o^ Student Publications; stated. The 128-page official directory, effective until June, 1$48, was supposed to have been ready for publication by the 15th of Oc tober. However, delays held up publication until , this wefek, Bing said. Forty-foiir student Briewns ap pear in the directory, induding four Charles Browns. Smiths lead the pack with eighty-five stu dents, Included are si* James Smiths, with middle initials A, C, N, O, R, and W. : | Fifty - rix Williamses run through Pages 124 and 125. The center-spread of the Stu dent Directory is a Classified Section, printed for the conven ience of students an<| faculty- members in contacting business firms in the Bryan aniji College Station. , woffe,: Of je|xtrtnie ( I n importance, said Lacy, is {ijie map stjajnjp; 1U1( | survey work. The engineers are) called upon to check and rerun many old surveys (and beiqusej of the; value of oil land it is in that a high degree of acri.raey 1 be obtained. ' ; . Following his lecture Lai y show ed the group movies thni jjwrel taken in the coastal areas ’- v Jl k ll RaeHt, 16, rs national ofj the Allis-Chajmm 4-] cohtgst,. While Wiest. also oqt tops in Wpstinghouie _ , betwr nAthods "electric com petit on. Each qy will receive! ijf $200 liolarship. ii 1 ' jAnother Floyd]County boy, Jael: ie] G’Cne Brock, (has already been announced as i* national {cihner thf) leadership cdptest, ..... ! " ? I winner gardien l^i, cajne college ];-■ f ques were awarded tq all 65 phrtiicipants, all of whom were portauit chosen from the top 10 percent in L J L ‘ each class section. > ( The awards were presented yes terday aftprnoon in the Little Ag- gieland gymnasium. Cahinet Members Attend Conference A group of Aggies, members of •jthe YM0A Cabinet, will participate jin a South Texas Sectional Con ference of the Student Christian Directories may be purchased for; 25 cents at the Offit dent Activities t 4 if e of Stu- Association this weekend at Camp Idlewild near Comfort, Texas, ac cording to Don Hanks president of the YMjCA Cabiniet! and co-chair man of the conference. iNapmi Farbs, from TiHotson Col lege jin Austin, is the other co- chaiiinan (with Hanks. Rerereijd Bill Morgan, of t^je Wesljsy Foundation at Southwest epn Jniversitj,', will be principle speaker. • j' T ] 1 i All south Texas colleges will be representejd g> discuss Social Re sponsibility Related to Christian Faith, Racial Equality, Economic Adjustment, Higher Education and World Relatedness* • v ‘Y’ to Show Three Films Sunday at 4 [Three films will be shown in the “Y” Chapel Sunday afternoon at 4 (for the general public,, according to Gordon 1 Gay, assistant secretary 6f the YMCA. : ’ H-1 " ! “Pale Horseman” is a .film de picting Why relief is necessary in 1 ,r*tom Europe, “Texas" is a bout the al- h of Texas, i a western. 1 ' Kiwanians Donate Ties to Mexicans l •{* ., . j , I ;l The Interracial Comrji'ttee of the College Station Kivfanis Club is sponsoring a Christnias gRt of ties for the students qf the Teix- as-Mexican Industrial School at Kingsville, according to M. L. Cashion, chairman of the commit- tee. There are 312 ties for the lji7 Mexican boys/from both sides of the border. Many of the ties have never been worn, Cashion said.; According to Cashion, the pur pose of the gifts is to give the students the spirit of Christmals. He added that they would have a chapel program and exchange gifts after which the boys would select several ties apiece. The school is a craft school where the boys work half time and attend a trade school the other half. The whole plant,; including Thfe Henman F. Heep Scholarship Awards; for 1948 to encourage bet ter dairy production and better livestock brooding in Texas have been presented to seven A&M stu dents. The freshman scholarship ($200) went to George Warren Orr, Jr., of Tulia. ";!'1 j •' John Paul Benes of Houston won first place among spphompres, a $100 scholarship. ] Sjecond sopho more prize, h $50 award, went to Andrew J. Gotten of Granbury. The junior student (winners were W. Edwin Prather of WaxahaChie, first, $100, and Donalu Clark Kol- berg of La Grange, Second, $50. . - First place in the senior student division went to Robert Bruce Price of El Paso, 'setond place to E. Victor Niemeyer of Brenham. Price also won the Borden Schol arship Award of $300 for- having the highest average of any senior who has had two or more courses in dqiry husbandry. Chas. N. Shepardson, dean of agriculture, presented the awards on behalf of Mr. Heep. J. W. Ridgeway of San Antonio, south west area field man; for the Bor den company, presented “the award on behalf of his company.' Ridge way’ was at one timie head of the A&M dairy department. Herman F. Heep, ;an A&M stu dent in 1917, is the Owner of a fa mous Jersey herd near Buda, Tex as, his home, and iS president of the American Jersey Cattle club. tl! 1 , Her imj " j " j ,■ , ,i'C ri conveying to the Jy of the days jy her brothers and BARBARA BELDEN, here seen as the Hon., Gwendolj, in The Importance of Bei$g Earnest, is a member of the Nai pertory Theatre appearing at Guion Hall for the last time iloi Dr. Paul Weaver Speaker ji Religious Emphasis Week By W. H; 1 BEARDSLEY, JR. -fOr. Alexander is pastor Dr, Paul Weaver will be the speaker for the sixth Religious Emphasis Week, February 15-20. Dif. Weaver is the director of the Division of Philosophy and Reli gion at Stephens College. He will speak in Guion Hall during class hours with classes being dismissed as in the past, j 1 Dr. W. H. Alexander, the speak-1 er of the 1947 Religious Emphasis Week, was forceful; delivering messages, which were practical, and colorful in nature. His popu larity was proven when the senior. Class requested him to be the bac calaureate speaker in May, 1947> B Composite Wins Last Week Review A-M Poultry Team Wins Top Honors a dairy, horticultural section, gar- djen,\and shops, was bui students; The A&M Collegiate Poultry Judging team placed second in the nation at the Collegiate Poultry Judging contest atf Chicago, De cember 3, according to a telegram received from E. D. Darnell, poul try husbandry professor. The team placed second in mar ket products, third (in production, and eighth in exhibition.' High point individuals from A&M were Henry Tays, who tied ’ for, first place in production and seventh in; market products. Frank Stockton, who placed sixth in market products and tenth' in exhibition. For the entire contest, the in dividual members an the team placed as follows; Stockton, fourth, Tays, eighth,;: and tenth. Company B Cbmposite, compos ed of Transportation Corps and Quartermaster Corps cadets, won first place in the corps review held Wednesday, November 26, in honor of General Thomas Handy, Lt. Col. William S. McElhenby, executive officer, announced yesterday. The composite company is com- manded-hy Cadet Captain Whitney 'Wilson, j ' j . . • Second place went to Company A Composite, made up of the Chemical Corps and Ordnance. A Flight Air Force took third place honors, while Battery B Artillery and Troop C Cavalry tied for fourth. As a rest It of the pre-Thanks- giving Day parade, A Flight Air | Force, commanded by Cadet Cap tain Ed H nkle, now leads the corps in military proficiency. A Flight has earned 32 points towaril the Moore Trophy! by placing in the fall parades, inspections, and re treat reviews. First Christian Churvh of homa City. j, Di. Frank B. Haljr thje 8, in 1946, is pastoh of the |! Presbyterian Church in St.( !Lo Dr. Hall was a serious-min speaker, conscious of th<^ splr|ilji||i needs of the students. j Dr. Wallace Bassett, paj4h r the Cliff Temple Baptist Church Dallas, was the 1945: speaker. During the war Religious I phasis Week was ditconuiniiied cause of the College spend-qp gram. The last speaker tyefore period was Dr. Paul QuRlian, ]»; tor of the First Methodist Chi of Houston. Dij. Quillian spoke in December 1042. He is the pa of the world’6 lUrg^st Met' Church. First among Southerri Bijptji and the first Religious Enrtph) Week speaker wais the lake George W. Truett. Di). Tl was one of the most] fapiouts IT! je]E uchess of Malfi” is ije Jlital jethain theatre, similar the pyW cs ofj Shakespeare,] who nmy ll (ivq lutored Webster in the of pls)y: vritirtg; The bro&l Eliz* .botht n HU nor ijnterspersed among ho dr imftt c sceines was keenly |ap- JCUciatied! Ihst night. Aggies ^Iso ipplaiji{le{l | the performances i ' ranagrii Kjhnellhal as the unfoMil" late Ridhiss of MaUi and Liim- jert RlassKas Bosoha. the villaijn whiose : conscience finally got the > better of j him. Other excellent per- formartcejs jjwerej given by Isabella Ward as Carioila, serving-wotnan thb dluchtBs; William Browder thj cardinal and Doan Nelson . thi< Djukb ofiArragon (brothers th^j duchess.]) , |(aSiellosj|as the duchess portray- " the change from a pretty young joVely to look at in a Re- Uaissilncd nlght-igbwn, to a harrnss- ed' womaln;! grown prematurely olo throuch (grief, willing to be mur dered without resistance. On y fopr of the fivh acts wer< pCesentejl:;lithe fifth being custom arily omitted sn production, be- cauSc thle i hading character is al ready d{a| j Because of the bob- tailii (fi i bpwever, the audience iis8i(d the full :dievelopment of the aarsetor of Biisola. tl apd he.g^'d brothers) In the omit ted (act. 1 Bosolia regrets his evil edg, willis bofh the brothers lurt- ilhii ’Jril v lichael | Grhvillel was CffectiW in] ( y’l . ..'■li 1 if ■t'' ipters ever to preajch where he was pastor of Baptist Church in Da' 1 thousand Aggies hdaiid sages during • the, first Emphasis Week/ * * li the Fit) 1 asf.j raH' 1 clargctolr icjf Bbsola. ]the murderer, dir ■ ■ ^er |f{j\p|iin I hjiihaelif, sinjglie unit: set desigmfd by: iel j Greville was effective in] ijt^{j acts, iwhyn It was skillfully ; j in! tlhk' first setnes, due to erdightlng, .] the stage picture iwas : popri Rich costumes added cbloif to] te 1 ! * ' Jirrosion in 'ield Costs $10 lillion Monthly’ The (jorropioh; o^ oil field equip- ent rasujlts Irija ten million poipan tee: ; The new home of A. and Company, Bryan was opened for business at 9 o’clock 1 this morn ing, according to an announcement Wednesday by A. M. president of the men’; clothing firm. aldrop (Jr., and boys’ I L J l f 1 -4] ■ , ! , .j: J . The new story, local seven doors north of cation, was not sup] ened for several ►wevef, according the pressure of the holiday season made opening necessary. on Main « old lo-* to have ore days. Waldrop, pproaching ttpTwjuB: L'f.r l —4- Clyde Green, WOW! 67 Co-Eds The Texas University Girls Glee Club consisting of sixty- seven girls will attend a juke box dance Friday following their concert in the Little Aggieland Student Center, i The concert starts at 7 p. m. Admission for|lboUi the program and dance is 25 cents. Saturday night at 7:30 p. m. the girls will appear in a musi- tertainment plus the movie will cost 25 cents. - - '! Mid-Term Grads Order Invitations ne Senior invitation orders for mid- scheduled for DejceMbe SPEBSQSA Elects Hall President W. H. Hal! of the! electrical jgineering department last: nij was elected president, of th i 1 chapter of the Society for fpe servation and Encouragemen Barber Shop Quartet fing'iinj America. Incorporated, f S. C. Jones, student from Da was elected vice-{)re$5de it, an< M. Desmond of the elect rical c neering, department wis |na secretary-treasurer. ( - Students and facultjy mem terested in taking part vival of this ancient (art singing should contjact Stic Desmond in the Electrfca neering Building. The next meeting pf itfie cha to! tihp production. li • Oil IwtPitirs Jr.. Fo in a bill of more than, each month for rid iepljacbment, J. A. Clay W({rth^ tlold the all-Texas" mewting pf (he. petroleum division pf iAmdricaij Institute nf MS " ;a|u| MetajUurgical Fnq yesllerdiiy 1 at trie opening of a two j day] seflsipn. '! Li Ome snuri of Mining al Engineers, here e puree iof trouble was des- icribed, ly. 'fhp [Fort Worth man as stray efeqtrid Currents. “Stray Curj . rents", he siid. “have been found iih iiajm wt evCiry type of produc- l op eq< liument, yet they have been jdiislfegardeil by many operators be- phiilse ttiey were thought to he in- capjablej of -causing appreciable daijiiagt." To stop them, he said, all!of he knqwn circuits must]be bnjiken. lamiiiated plastic^ should belisui ahle to insulate oil field eiq|kipm|ent, he said/ he extensive research facilities .iwe off! A M. were told , the more thdf'i 200 registered delegates by Dii H.jWL, Mtjllloh, vice-dijrector of th^i engim^rihg experimept station qf • A&M,. He paid, “wp ahall eoni- tinjug tjo (give: preference to those projeetjs which are likely to be of the greatest (value to the college and to) the people of Texas; we I shall continue]ticed!foday by C. E. Moorp tudent Apart nentrf. alsks that tenants ui-e the cujtoff i iprovided and drain lies) by ppening the outlets in apairtmehls. li{ies jlfading to the anart- aiie unprotected and subject freezing, Iffpore said, necessitat- ajbr repairs andf inconven- ? r , manager of M )ore miin the pi the The m ?hts |in|g iepce imopnt >45.7 he itudjen the p; irt of all concerned. The fou kre f ees Payable t installment of fees able, the Fiscal Of-: “4 today. The total t this time is rp8 mw,lb « r8 of student body. Non-corf*; si to will pay $13.35. UN- ^ ■■ i ff -fit jj 4 fi 1 ; i r P rsj® L,..l v. <4 1/ ** R