The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 255, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 31, 1953 Page: 10 of 10
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BAYTOWN SUN. TUESDAY. MARCH 31, I9S3
Come To Them ~
COLLEGE GRADUATES DON'T
HAVE TO SEARCH FOR JOBS
War Bride Returns For
Husband's Funeral
"SjjftnMAN"
SWAMPSCOTT. Mass., March 31
—UP—The Air Force will fly a
German warbride here this week
to join, her soldier husband - at
his funeral.
Helalives of Sgt. Paul W.
By UNITED P*FJW from Kansas State College where mand wag less than last year for “obj a«SteM*sSdaV‘nea?
The job-hunting college senior SO firms are battling for 24 June graduates in specific fields. In Lackland Air Force Base, Tex.,
never had it so (food. graduates in mechamra each case mentioned, the opposite said they expected the arrival of
“Very few of them wdl have to mg. Engineering firms bought more irtherrnl his wife, the former Helga Hen-
hunt for jobs-the jobs are com- more advertising space than cigar- •true at one or more other col- ^ eHhep wednes-
lng to them," said a University of ette companies m the college daily leges. day Thev said ,he made arran«o-
Utah pUcement director, Harold newspaper during February and "The students—thank God-are merits for the flight in Germany
Carlson . , , . still buying opportunity,” said Vir- when informed of her husband's.
PUcement officers of some 50 Other ginl,.s Kauffman. -They are more dcath.
colleges and universities across the „ a bt 'or every interested in the company that is Mrs. Gaudet had been scheduled
country, spot-checked by United **7Jff?.;!*a, •___, _____. looking for the individual than the to join her husband under the
dAjjjfl —*------1 April quota.
f A CRAM- ANO ,
[ egesioi SUPERMAN.'
\ DON'T TELL ME
you rusted in
Press, agreed with him. “77L"‘ one doing mass recruiting.’
Starting salaries for their muen- equal demand with sales personnel ---
•ought June graduates average and scientists running close.
wlTwer «00 a" month, college of- ^
better toanTas^Vear and the huh- noted its state alone is short 3,MO
est in memoir. Some specially elementary school teachers,
trained students are considering Teachers, still at the low end of the
"bids" a* high as *600 pay scale, are being offered sev-
Engineers, accountants, sales cral hundred dollars a year above
irsonnel and teachers appear *o usual imnnriAj
m
I
a .
| I*
personnel and teacners appear -,o
head the list for job opportunities
But there’s competition also for
non-specialired liberal arts gradu-
'‘Business is telling us ‘You edit
cate and we'll train'." said C. H.
Kauffmann of the University of Vir-
ginia. Princeton University and
Dartmouth College, with large
numbers of liberal arts students,
report nearly as high demands for
graduates as the engineering
schools.
The colleges estimate M go 95
Several universities noted job op-
portunities for women graduates
were at their best since the end of
World War II.
Only five colleges reported de-
Warm Springs Clinic
To Expand Facilities
GONZALES. Tex.. March 31 -
UP—The Gonzales Warm Springs
Foundation for Crippled Children
Sr,.s „.v. s h„».s
with business and mdust^ recrUK- egtayj|h a permanent endowment
ers since Jbe„rl,' er:fund and disclosed that some gifts
of Tennessee reported ^ Per cent already had been received toward
Of them are willing to hire young { • d
men for wlut^tr Vaining^penod ^ ^ buUdlng wiU
i* possible before their draft num- ™ new building will house
berV come up. counting on their recreation and, outpatient activi-
retum to the job two years hence, bes. offices, a kitchen and dining
About 20 per cent of the colleges room- as well as provide additional
checked reported such willingness beds.
to ignore the draft, sometimes ill Directors reported the foundation
only a few special fields. admitted 45.3 per cent more pa-
Estimates on the demand for en- tients in 1952 than during 1951 and
gmeering graduates ranged from doubled its outpatient activities
Carnegie Institute of Technol- last year,
ogy's conservative two jobs for A total of $153,000 was spent for
every graduate to a frantic report plant additions and improvements.
Shepard Barclay On Bridge
A Central Press Feature
A TRUMP OBLIGATORY a diamond on the heart K, ruffed
SELECTION of a trump for » flrst heart and a second spade,
your opening lead Is almost ob- scored the diamond K. ruffed a
ligatory If the declarer and his second heart and then a third
partner had each bid a side suit *Pad* wRh the club 10 over West's
in addition to the one chosen for » and led dummy's heart 10.
the final contract. The "almost" East trumped that with the club
covers the few exceptions involved A and sent back the 7, which the
In the opener having a trump K won. South then gladly gave
holding himself which would be East the final trick with the
jeopardized by the lead, such as a dub Q. ,
eingly-guarded king or maybe 11 turned out that South had
three headed by the king-jack, taken six tricks with his trumps,
also those rare Instances when he eleven all told. If, however,
had available some unuau&l hold* We,t had led a trump, and East,
ing which offered a better defense, winning wth tbe A. had returned
*8
9 K1095 4
4 A K 6
*1064 3
4 10874
9QJ72
4 J9
*A<J7
.?♦.
4 AQ532
f A
4874
*KJ85
the 7, South would have had to
uae up four trumps on two trick*.
That would have made it impos-
sible for him to take more than
five tricks with his trumps. Those
plus the five high card tricks
would have totaled only ten, leav-
ing him one short of his goal.
If West's trump holding had been
as his spades were, or as East’s
clubs were, you might have par-
doned his leading something other
t.ian trump, despite the bidding.
But with his hand, it was almost
(Dealer: South. Neither side a bridge crime for him to lead
vulnerable.) anything but a trump.
Tomorrow's Problem
East
Pass
Pass
4 J72
473
4 A10643
*KJ4
South West North
14 Pass 2 f
3* Pass 3 NT
‘44 Pass 6 *
Acting like a man who had not
heard the bidding, West opened
the only unnamed suit, diamonds. 4 K10 9
His lead of the 3 w as won by the 8 4
A after South counted his assets, 4 J64
He found five tricks in view with 4 87
top cards—one In spades, two in *109 7
. heart*, two In diamonds—in addi-
tion to what he could get with
trumps. If he could score six
with them he would have the
eleven needed for his contract. What rather simple, but more
So on the second trick he led or less unusual play, is necessary
to the heart A, scored the spade to sound defense against South's
A, ruffed a first spade, discarded 3-No Trumps on this deal?
N
W E
S
4 A53
4 K 10 95
4 K52
*865
4Q6
4 AQ82
4QJ9
*AQ32
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
3. Garlands
24. Bulky
Roll of doth
of flowers
timbers
5. A slave
(Hawaii)
27. Lave
9. Fencing
4. Outer coat
29. Larva of
sword
of a seed
eyethread-
10. Wing-
(BoD
worm
shaped
5. Samarium
30. First fruits
11. Help
(sym.)
of a benefice
13. Tribe of the
6. Guido’s
(Ecci.)
Caddoan
highest note 31. English
Indians
7. Half
author
{15. Neuter
diameters
33. Mottled
KM
if
n
.
8. Coin (Fr.) 35. Moving part
11. River (Fr.) (mech.)
12. Basque-like 36. A climbing
plant
caps
14. Girl’s
name
17. Harvest
hemisphere 20. Pen point
23. Claw
.25. Capuchin
monkey
26. Arm joint
28. Of the poles
32. Breach
34. Vocal sound
35. Standard
39. Miscellany
40. Ventilate
41. Separate •
‘ sheep pas-
ture (Eng.)
43. Public
notice
44. Indian of
Yucatan
j 46. Expa«d
48. An Assam
tribe
50. Network
51. Afresh
52. Meshed
fabrics
22. Uprising
37. One of
Caucasian
people
(Indo-
European)
Yraterdsy’t Answer
38. Pile of
stones as a
landmark
42. Run away
45. Mature
47. Siamese
coin
49. Excla-
mation
DOWN
1 Brutal
2. Goddess of
harvests
1
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More Power to INDUSTRY.
Fittingly, on the occasion of Texas Industrial
Week, your electric service company announces the
placing in service of a new generating unit. Over
two years in Building, the new unit is one of the
largest in the South. It will produce almost 150,000
electrical horsepower; enough to supply the normal
electrical needs of a quarter-million homes.
Here indeed is power for industry-power to pro-
duce today’s defense and civilian needs, and power
to grow on tomorrow. Here too is power ^or the
homes, the farms and the commercial establish-
ments of today, and those that will come tomorrow.
With the placing of the new unit “on the line’*,
the company’s generating capacity reaches 1,000,000
horsepower. These vast facilities, as well as the
knowledge and skill of the 3,000 men and women
of the “Light Company”, are dedicated to one goal
- that of keeping your electric service ever depend-
able, ever at the lowest possible cost.
TEXAS INDUSTRIAL WEEK - APRIL 1-7, 1953
ELECTRIC POWER IS HELPING TEXAS INDUSTRY BUILD A BRIGHTER
FUTURE FOR EVERY TEXAN.
■«D MRS ELLIS Atiy
* than generous with
a shfubery. flowers an
E.■ ■ Just before he
Worsia, Lou Kingsley
i narap in the pape
"■■Bill Mangan says
that kind of pu
promises to
7 % and little 1
,, soon i
standing in ii
7* ... Ray ]
7“ and out of City I
• • ■ Jack Tho
ft?* hc's having *
5 and wishes he
‘Malcolm Jones gets t
fen u'' ' Mrs' Dave 1
“ her enthusiasn
fe.ii*hWay* wffl h(
or six years . . . Di
«s get#
k mil, a hurry-up ca:
Cbili °Ut °f 8 me*tln
& %ure. if he
today everything w
iunii,^6 ^reflchy" I
% L*.oved hack “1
wouldn’t b<j
»- ** about that
- ■ R- H. Turner
“ l0S!ftg Pace with
Sov
^onW !°Uth ^in
and Beulah L
Houston Lighting & Power Company
«iI£ikln8 of roses in
‘ayma
» g£inf way out y<
<t“,iechia
P visitJre Unclc Sam call
, '3fanpp{A_
DEPENDABLE LOW-COST ELECTRIC SERVICE
a mi**y
I?' s,i5<j4r(|I“e for car It
excuse for
tW° days
! ^ Coloradneii!d. plan
'himSprin**
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 255, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 31, 1953, newspaper, March 31, 1953; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041986/m1/10/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.