k. ' I l> 'Kr-'-'i NEW PI TAKES LIMA, group of oyer the .erbmpnt bloodless. Gen. Majr sumed off dent yest acts was ly deposin the midd who is no Bustama; of his six chart a ml of the le wing Apr the unsucel early last , l Gen. Bustamanti ment of lejft will carry eral electidij. The rebe pa in South Peru Tiiesi Bustamante jthe country pTOsauro of swung to t it i M I GW) JP I JJVIA ER G fni, , ung military ‘ration of y after a olutio) el Odiia of as provisi^ i“ad rdecr, Jose Luis B| _ inter Pqru’ tin Volume 48 P \ - ’T’W i'i ^ \ 1 M ' ■I ;- • ■ 1 » - • Iv’ .1 f. 'K* .1 i ! m [4 (\ A m u L,i • ec w f-thei-road ■ P pre2ident rgeptina. an exile in cr «ifi MtS. die way between forces and Vight.j The i left- party was blamed for Bsful revolt! at;Callao n ionth. i ] i j. OtTria seVei-ely cHticie for alleged j forces. His )h unti[ therb f rted Hrl ! ; if • t ; i pvnusmo IN THE INTEREST OF 4 CHEATER a &m college ini.l.w;F STATION- .AimM-mi. TEXAS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1948 Spring Socia During Life 'I. - Il; a i; Js*|l •' . j ■ r 'i l rS . . r: ■ f ill It f'., ' \ f : ■ W t r li •: • Number 69 m- T spread to Lima cijn its (third! t KM £m a was Friday he Lijnu ib side of on its ^ .™... i forcell i to | leave night pndc|r . ' m ih v : i • : -.l PI % GUARDS^ EN W|THDi FROM LOUDON AR1 LOUDON Tonn., Noy National (tuartlattion |wit®id rejit' l from this Twiddle rust!: 'IfnaeMe* • town' yantt «lny 4fl«r tlijir f com /'rnnnder rouortatl 'fthat I'tlio Kltu«* I/- tlon In undur control" I M J ‘ Tho (roopi cftihe herb dnUiiduv • Jim ;lttCo Henry McDonald uiiu WutklnN i*((pot*i,»Hl U;|n• 4 H' AV mmm l by on loin wjicn Hliorl Mayor K. I* hIoh was I0< •t The tensin viotmico gift' bilo death In i villo hillbil) Sheriff aL. Clifford, Htjjhei, responsibili They are pending a lOfUMl toil 1 * high for naifoty. | (Ojii’d imhi SLIGHT R LITTLE LUFKIN ami.thn'atojiW out of tni'i apto letohyr 2;i J singer Bay liijuWHtar (Donald auia lifpuiy- ro dtttjgni will In Brcvrstafa deaah rjeo uttder 4B,0o!Oi boaci [•and jury heHt'ihK. i IN OFFErt$ 1 ■ i RE RELEAF! , Nov. 2 -4jjLigiit rain-fell initthe southeast area bf Texas Monday morning giving uje- leif to somp forest fii4 figHterf . However,; ifficials ofi the .Texas Forest Sen ice said ho definite check as tci the actual 1 fipre situa tion would life poswble - until laUr ■in the day. 1 ' j jl !■ j p ‘. h- The report frm*r Wobdville said 13 more will-be Wady for use this early in thejmorhing but. that 20 fires were I puming jri | Ijordln County. A light mist fell at Con roe, the other trouble spot, bijit some new fif’es Were i eportpd- I \M. V. Diirtmire, assistant chief of fire pi J o ection, said 12 fiije fighting je^p units went tjo the rH f ’ -J y.i y iv*- Wm ifk : / m iM-. 1 M M hr;.- # ff Us- ri IS ■y U MlftSl- JOAN CANTER, third from left, was chosen Sweetheart of the Fifth Regiment Friday night. Mi** Canter, B Engineers nominee, was escorted by Allen Landry third from left in second row. Otljeri nomineea and their esciorts were, from left to right. Miss peba Sitton, Harry BUfkhalter Miss Thala'Atkinson, Ed Haaker; and Miss Sally Kilgore, Terry Anderson. .i i Eligibilily in t)oubt fire,A*feas bier the weekend arid.aptry for this jyeaifs Vanity Fair, orewil) be raadv fo ruse thjs sat contentedly muhehing a quar- week. This (ydl! put ja fjotal i of £|G ter package o| Beechnut chewjmg field, ' [ibni ac bighorn Editors Question Prunella 9 s Legal Standing By I)kVE doSLETT T ] 1 Prunella ipiljrierciutch, the first units in \h)e| fieljd, on^ to’ abmit tobacco as 4 ioijighoni Editors and each half thillion;'acres, higher ups 4i ithe Student Activi- Sunday’s ! ^report showed four ties Office sdanched wildly through fires destroying 210 acres in the their beauty contest files today to if:i in and nea)- Kirby- ville aud th^-de fires bdrnbjg 1,53I5i Acres in the 4on^oe district |'--v'*d H'HlV*—h le Cashing dis hrbe! acrejs; Hoiinljy,' 1‘2! (stroyed ijn; stu find if the splfjrStyled, self-entered Vanity Fair contestant is within her rights. j! C. G. “Spife? White,' director of activities, was not able to any contest. t T- cast too much light on the subject. •[Splike” did suggest, hoiwever, that if Prunella isn’t eligible for Van ity Fair, she might\try to hold a rum-off with- the winners of last weejk’s Pet and Mutt Show. Gjlady Elms, assists of Student Activities, _ or jess noncommittal o i the ques tion He did say after first looking at Miss Gildqrclutch tt(at she was ‘he Itvoe of woman who would def initely be in a class by herself in nt director Was nlore [M I? • ‘i m I . JTOHN EJMcCAW, national di-> rector of stiident work for the Christian Cihiurck is v siting the! Campus today.u During his ^.visit he aftj his wif^ wijl be! guests of JAMES M. MOUDY, minister of the A&M j Chri ?tian Church. | 1" "f'ljirr School 'Architect ■Sisas I Battalion Poll Shows General Aggie Political Inclinations By GEOI CHARLTON M. E- student from Houston. -• i- r -John L. Reid, Califo architect, will speak ool Design!” baf' rnia school in “Publii A , ore the .Archi tural Soeiety at 7dJ0 tonight tr e YMCA iety rejjorter, said. Associate professor 0j ure at the University ia and M.I.T., Reid has a book “You Want School.” He has writ t articles bn school f fessional magazines. Reid received hi* B.A grees at thje Urtiversi rnia, an additidfal Ml. M.I.T., and di tlainebleau School ■.France. Reid will be e: informal dinner by la gro Lanford| A • •' 1 in U- \vovk! a Pin, litects, memt . «wture faculty, ail A' members of the so< HK-iA ft architect of Califor- co-author-t fb Build en mimer-i antiiag, in, an4 M.a[ of Cali- degree ; Fon- e A*) 8 ii|' at an of local archi- and b c i ertaiiiied '' 1 ■ :■ ri'. -A P tcers i exas will ytote Democratic tp- day\if a Battalion poll taken On the c\mpus yesterday is represen tative nf btHerj parts of the state. The poll showed that 79 percent of the sApdjpnt* interviewed be lieved that\|exjHs would go Demo ^ratic. Seventeen percent belie via \tlmt Texn* wqiild go Republican and 4 percent believed Texas woulc go\Stutc's It|gHts. Typifying onto of the many of us whq hayeibqon brought up with live Dehxoernjtici party ns the only potentiah>ak^ in Texas, Arnold Schmitz, Prii'-Med student frdrti Houston, brbjbbing asked to make a statement iqjwhich party lie was for replied ‘‘fUy grandpappy was a Democrat, n y sjappy is a Demo crat, and rn(i a Democrat.”' Ninety fiv» percent of the per sons contacted believed that Dewey would win thelelecfion; 4 pejrcent believed that ’J'ruman Would I win] and 1 percert believed thatf hur- mpnd would w&i. ' I ■ j To the, question of; who he thought woi Id 1 win the election,! Roger Coslett, iPhysical Education major from Bjlilps, Texas, answered “I would say that Dewey would win because people are ready and willing to vojte t for a man who is forceful in foreign affairs and who has proven h mself a capable exe cutive;” Jack Cole, Chemical Engineering major from Ranger, said “When Truman madi His statement about Civil Rights eariy in his campaign, he lost his pily chance in the South for,whining the election. He won’t carry the election in the North because a majority of those states have* ahyays been Republi- “I think 1 “P- because of a ocratic party would have chance if he State’s Right* : -rho poll also showed)that fprty- seyfqn percent of . the students who wiii’p interviewed wanted Dewey for president^ 36 percent wanted Tr|iinnn, 7 peijcent wanted Thur- moind, and 4 percent wanted Wal- |ui|i\ and 7 percent were undecided. Dick Kelly, Pre-Law student of Rnjnjger, *ai(l in . regard to his chbiioe for president “I personally do npt believe that there is a can- didn|te capable for the job. Either Dewey must shave off his mous tache, Or Truman must throw away his! jonne,’ One of the! more profound ami inhered j| • from Bland Lake, Texas, who said “1 think that Dewey Will be the next -president of the 'United' Statics because I believe! more peo ple will vote for him than (6r any one else.” i '.IT' ■ 1’ . ' tH4- r-rf . ^!' pomilered upon opinions -came from Joe A. Bodine,, a Pre-Law student can.” j Ex-Battalicn ieditor Allen Self of Corpus Ch is|i, gave hisi, opinion of the situa ! ion when he stated The people < f the U. S. have tost faith in President Truman. Dewey promises new! leadership. Prosper ity usually bhitigs a reaction against libcrall theories of govern ment.” l.J! If I • ; eydtes” will win k up in the Dem- think that Truman If a much better adn’t brought up said Joe Akagi, Command and Stan Courses Initiated The Command and Genera) Staff College has initiated its second special course in Texas this week at the National Guard Base oh the shore*, of Eagle Mountain Lake. .Colonel Jameb V. Ware,' instructor in enaree. announced today. The Eagle Mountain Lake course is the second to be held in Texas, the first having been conducted at porf Sam Houston, San Antonio, from 4 through 16 October. Mji j The purposp of the course is to | provide instruction and modern de velopments ar d to prepare student officers for duty as division com manders and general staff posi- tlonOWare said, i "J /! 1 Senate Committee! Meet Tonight , _.,e Execut ve Committee of thie Studkmt Sena c will meat tonight immediately after yell practice in ie Senate Room in Bizzell, ac- to Joi n Orr, chairman. Roland Bing, mapagpj' of Stu dent Publications, i mteinw h i 1 e, searched until he found a pertin ent item underneath a “ITeddy for President” poster on; his d eB k. The piece, evidently a portii nj of a law regulating A&M beaut^ contests, i-ead, “No contestant :»iay be of the type of young wonia ihood com monly referred t® as a flapper bojr may she be known to h ave fre quented at any time ; speakeasies or similar dens of it iquity.” A short cbnsultatioh with other mem^ bers of the publications) staff con 7 vinced Bing that the rule wou not apply in the case o:’ Miss GH- okrcluich. ’ / '!! .L i'i Seemingly oblivious t) of activities which he the Vanity Fair contest ‘ ed, Prunella calmly distlosed sev eral facts about- herself and her relatives. , H M j j This is not the first time that her family has brpKenj into the limelight through btmufy contests, she beamed. Her mother was elec ted “Miss White Lightnln’ of 1904”. in n contest held nt liome place known ns Nigton !m Trinity County. / '1 Miss Gildcniutch { al*o claimed to be related to IdtaiiiHlilus (jlilderi* clutch, th<‘ famous inventor of the Might-Mit* Cherry pit Processor a small gadget which deans un< polishes cirferry n|ts, jmaking then fit ammunition for chilnren’s bear blowers. When questioned conberning hef own background, the mushing six foot four, bottled-in-binid blonde shyly adjuste’d her hup and said that she had won the greased- pig race each of the 16 yelrs She had spent in grammar school. She then reached iitp a tow sack and brought forth Some pic tures of herself. The first, a rath er faded tintype, was a photo show ing Prunella as a babv, complac ently ripping the slatp from her crib.' ! 1 I j : ' | She shuffled through others and then produced what was obviousl; her proudest shot, a bathing beaci pose. “Don’t you think thet thar suit is perty?” she queried. “Pm gonna have to get a pew one this year though,! for that Uns agettin’ a hole in the knee” ' And with that reply,. Miss Gil- derclutch climbed back into her shelter tent in front pf the Long 3 in Contest Gene R. Summers oij Bryan hd Robert L. Palmer of Dal- as, two A&M architecture tudents, won second and ’ bird prize respectively in Rn xhibition for designs of ; a West Texas rural schobl, Wil iam W. Caudill, professor 6f irchitocture said tb4a^. Sum mers won a prize of H25 arid Palmer won one of IT 1 ®. First prize winner wim-Clifford Launmec of Houzton, Rite Iimtl- lute NtUdent, who wa* nWarded! u )riN of fISO. CumiH’tltion wna in coiin'' < ’^9n vith a school acmlnar which ilo iponrorad by the Architecture Dje- 'Ai-tment and Texas Engineering Experiment Station. Erneilt Lang* ord, head of the A&M Archltejc- ure Department, was clmhinan of he committee on the school senii- inr, Caudill added. Fourteen drawings were enter 'd from five schools. Schools whith entered the competition wpre Riye Institute, Texas yTech, ] University of Houston, Unteersity of Texas, apnd Texas A&M. Out of three drawings j submit; ted by A&M students, two of the were awarded prizes while the third received honorable mention, Caudill said. T V T pr r Palmer, third place winner, has already accepted a position with Perkins and Will, Chicago archi tects, on the basis of the desigh he submitted, CaudilLkaid. Sum; mers, second place/winner, hap been offered a place with Ford and Rogers, San Antonio dWhi- teets. f J ; W Contestants i^io received honor able mention were Edwin! F. Re dondo of A&M, Kenneth E. Smijth and Wallace/Bate Thomas ’of Rice Institute; and Raymond Phelps of Texas University. ' | The drawing* will be on; exhibi tion for 10 days on the fourth flobr of the Academic Building, : Caudill saidy Kiwanis Guion P The social clalel ©mm ’.TT.k ’■H't , ,■ ■; 'l-il ! li -ii • 41SL -r ■ ;* I: 4 1:5 ^ Tf a* Awarded to Fish 1, afternoon. ByyUESNETH l for the Spring Semester \yas m ners were awarded free passes to/Guion Hall by f ,the St In a special “cRHed” meeti le group vbi Ruff, Puff,R# ^teff . . . tu a movie on the Cgmims and h^rd the recommendations from tKel Student ttma* M* W R suggntted c Semester v Elms, astl* t Activltltej irt, tho entire call ,« calendar l» .lid to allow id “Ptehf iume fe Commifclee ow the Kiwanis Pipe Smokers Preparing As Ni men in- m- ; Batt Piping Contest IVears idher* will be derlareil' the wlhi* i iter, andjh* will have rXcluMlin claim (o all the prizea that will b* offered. ' : | :• f Bi'cauzo of the ^ohgt' of bawl i*ea and shapes, llifrerf'at clnsw* By C. C. MUNHOB r hrlarll Unerate r lean out your cal a Brettk out yj your corncobI Ush, for ButtnlioiiV annuul nine smoking' contest I* fhia to get fired up November 10. ' Already/four tobacco Immpanlca havo nmiouncod that they will send tol>ucco/to help the adVaneomont of the/ stem ami bowl brothers in their/search for fame. In addition to the four who have promised to aejhl some of the hurley leaf, more an n dozen other manufacturers lave indicated interest ift the con test. P only commercial oroviders of smok er’s neeils that have offered their wares to The Battaltop for the Tobacco companies are not the pipe manu-fc r Bendheim, contest. Two corn cob facturers—Hirschl and and Buescher’s Industries—have offered to provide pipes for the com cob contestants. 1 ; Rules of the contest are sim ple and few. Each entrant will load up Ms stoker a mea sured amount of tobacco. At a given word he will fire up, and from then j>n he is on his own. The puffer that out-puffs all the y< *1 :b to 81 nate co] * Duke, itandar for tbh ia predentod ' ant director After hearir jp voted to foliowat 4' •/'J : lit i. s a-Newteai. Huh 11—Frwshman Da site* and (shape*' iliffetent daste* will be declared. Uat Tear thlTfl was n class for the standard, run’- of the mill pipe, one for the cttjUk* bash monsters, and one Tor the streamlined, metal radiator 'jobs that seem to require a/touch all their own. tlrj " This year, in additibn to if three classes already establisi a com cobidivision will be InktL.,., ted, and, u any unuiiual entrant^ anpear. additional clditees/will be allowed, j; 1 ‘iw - ‘ The prizcN to the first, second and thj winners have not yef li. ed .T o _ J a subscribed to, but whehYhey are, a list of them will be made pub* , lie so that all the prospective “King of Stokers’* wil| have an opportunity _ to see ^hat all, the “Holiday”, and “Edgeworth/' —r- — — Krirf* i 0'/ horn office to await! tHe dec in her case. Soph Society Membership November 4 is the deadline for eligible members of i tei Phi Eta Sigma, Sophomore honor society, to pay their dues, L. V. Maslseh- gale Jr., chapter president, has an nounced.! Membership dues mdy be paid to James E. Pianta, Dotm 10 Room 324, or to'Robert G. Ransom, 9-B Law. The initiation date will be an nounced at a later date, Masaen- gale said, ^ f j m ision Ask !ees s m- ; MARTELL MOORE wak elec ted preaident of the Spanish Club for the 1948-49 school year. Moore, who lives in Waxaha- chie, is a junior in the Air Force. Brightwell Named Rural Recreation mk ' | A ■ Extension Worker Dorothy Lee Brightwell, iof Al vin, a former teacher in Rosenberg Schools and officer in the WAVE’s! has been appointed as a specialist) in the field of rural recreation, Dr. Ide P. Trotter, director: jnf A& M Extension Service, said, i, “Her position on the headquar ters staff of the Extension Service! is a new one, created to fill thel need of farm and ranch families for guidance iiv recreational activi ties," Trotter said. “She will work with boys’ and girls’ 4-H clubs and also with the adult recreation pro grams.” j ' Miss Brightwell received ia B.S. degree from Texas Christian Uni- verseity in 1937 and a M.A. from Columbia - University T e a cher’s College in 1948. Entering the Navy in 1943 as an ensign, she served as ass South’s One Party System; fe Threatened On Election Day Atlanta, Nov. 2 —South ' , mers today will determine in "ood measure the fate of the Democratic Party, perhaps for years to come. - ’ J - Long the backbone and cohesive force of the party, the south pro tested it simply could not supnort President Truman and his Civi Rights proposals. So the solidly Democratic South cracked Many observers hold that the result will be a major realign ment of party members; that many who have voted Democratic by tradition, while thinking Republi can. will now shift their allegi ance. The States Rights Democrats, the southerners who broke n\way for the oxnress purpose of en gineering his defeat, now claim 100 electoral college vdtel* for their canmdnte, Gov. Strom Thur mond of South Carolina. The Republicarts in the south have taken full advantage of the situation, even to the! do|nt claiming they will carry the for their candidate, Gov. E. Dewey of New York. The'real strength of the States’ Righters apparently is concientra- ted in Stouth Carolina, Mississippi Louisiana and Alabama.j {These states have a total of 38 electoral votes. . ' [, One high-placed' States’ Right- er, making an unofficial appraisal gives the group a good chance of carrying Tennessee and Florida, E. D. Department To Sponsor Local Drawing Contest * 1946 as lieutenant. j/ istant welfare and recitation :er on three primary training stations in tho United $tates d for the Fleet Air Wing Base Hawaii. She was disc Ving Base barged in She has been on the staff of the until of the Girls’ Friendly So- ty of the diocese of New'York. The Engineering Drawing nartment wifi sponsor the log vision of the national engirt drawing contest, according !to F. K. Mullins, department staff member and chairman of the com mittee in charge. Contestants may compete in any or all of four types of drawing; working drawing, freehand letter ing, freehand working drawing ahd solution of a descriptive geometry problem, Mullins announced, j Awards and prizes for first, sec-, ond, and third place whiner*.will be furbished by the Eugene Diet- zen Company, the Student Co-op, and thle College Book Store. Winners of the A&M contest wifi enter the national contest, which is sponsored by the for Engineering ■ r N v V i j ■A p'fi votes. ! \ i i.5 which cast 20 electoral vp n As for the Republicans, GOP leaders in Georgia actually around io warning against over- I/: li&-Rt. i-'-'C I 19-Are reh 4-Vs ■f- 1 Ion 19—Cal Dft 1— Ji 2- All 8-gophfniorr heart? Ball ; di Ball 30-All 7— All 8— Moi : ■ "4 I t ’alrnUne’* All •i.v pri » pane* PageOOt lege Dante iege Day. A’f .I'I r,*45811 llune 2/lr 3—F The Student Life ed to award “Agg pn-ointion” tickets of fFisK” numer sports!. These tick< to eheso students tert^ after they wi All Varsity spoi have not qualifi canlt qualify becai of #|eir job will be Hall classes. Thesft * D a j Pro* .b f i ■ itl Ball Jinmittee vot- Activity iAp- all jWinnera is in varsity wifi be given 1 be given i of the nature granted Guion panes will be ... to these ^>*nagers upon! tlon of one -gear’s work. confidence, u In Virginiai Florida^. North Carolina and Tfl Republicans are fighti; victory. Thp four statesivoted fot Herbert Hoover in 1928, Tennqs-u see has gone Republican .twicer- 1920 and 1928. . ’ ] ; What really pains Ixttb factioht] . ..... . of Democrats, though J U the fact; tee Totod to acce that the;Republlcans feel-confident enough to make stronF* bids for, congressional posts, i ./i President,. Harry 3. iTtuman’i home state of Missouri';appeared to be leaning his waytllrtre-sloc? tioii survevn.-'- Ilr/r . "'If;' But most pofiticsl obifrvers be lieve it will be dose betjveen him and Thomas E. Dewey,’ A matter of 26,000 votes may .decide it. Missouri,: like KaniM/TtxMt and Oklahoma, is expected to run up a heavy; vote. - j • In Kansas, the Rcpublicihs have about as *uro a thing •; is thfy come. , : ;/S;n U. Oklahoma’s political . vampalgrt finale was highlighteda senate subcommittee’s charge that foritter Governor Robert S. Kefr’s cam paign expenditures forjlne; Demo cratic senatorial nomination Had overstepped the state iaarto limit’ of |6.000 by neariy 960j()00. Oklahoma is considered id the doubtful -column on the Presiden tial . race. The Daily Okmhonr which announced its jsiipport Dewey and Warren, has jpredk the Tniman-Barkley team wj carry the state. ' Friction over the Democratic run-off primary has kept the Tex as senatorial seat raej/redhot. Former Governor Coke Stevenson,; who lost to Rep. Lyndon ?B. John son by 87 votes and theni charged fraud, has campaigned actively for £.*****» J. Strom Thurmond, the States’ Rights presidential candidate, has campaigned intensively on his sec- ond trip into Texas l ona to swing the state from! J ! V- S|g After the com. of li ve to stndy dents who’ receive make! a report Life Committee of'this semester, committee is com White, Ray Cushion, Robert j Ketmeth Bond. The! group hea recommendation fj Senate in re; distributed egar the paniphtots recently enssion the Studenl Tau Beta Pi To Meet Wednesday datton of the Stu agreed that "Du) tainid as Junior was’decided also was closed as fatf! Life'.Commlttee Sid Loveless, Kiwlnls Club, as) for/the movie, ture, - ’ !l»o shown Halil Half of t thte- a . lent « to allow rn here provid ef the groas the student to Btodeat A group, in as a “sp hatf nf the profits: fon the benefit of group refui Chamber o: to present on the Cam are a funds woi I purposes, •gainst th< I k - ttee voted to awards, tier a committee It The special of C. G. k, M. L. , asom, and • a report and t the Student lo Duke, who n and gold After a dis- Lifo Coftimit- e rocommen- it Senate and should be re- lll leader." It iat "The case the Student concemsd." Went of tho 1 permission rlcan Adven- the Assembly irofits, Love- IS > used for n in College If would he idual* who t to film/ fi Committee , e movie be that 20 per* • tlea Office, motion, con- I caae” since ould be uaed ml children.! to allow the ommercc of “Grand Ole Since stage ie in Bryan not be Used committei re. lr Toi st prize of -of 1269 ' Submitted to adua ^by the li For Went I. In: The A&M chapter of Tau Pi, sociewl lor honor Stud? -ring, will meet Wedi at 7 p. m. in the Petrole/ a/:- i;;Z IMS ongineeriito.lwi ; . m. in the Petroleum Room, Dean; Howard W; ,7 . . . »w avwi announced Monday The qualification for election to met society wifi be T 0 ’ " li ■ i m ■'' M !/ wy't! Mm ' winning in the of Tomorro said, and j Will at the tot. [*' ■■ l « t .. . a* of the sent; to the coll; and a sec- best short »m by a col- been an- mafasine l.will be and, Jon* of- reg- announced § II 1 I ff Ua 1 si is for the contest. /]