The Thresher (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, September 22, 1933 Page: 3 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Rice University Woodson Research Center.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
: ,V ffi { ■; ■ \' . ■ ■ ■
frw*i v
'' ' '•; ''ti* ■
C.LJ U
• ■&>'"'- i^vuv
T i
Lil
.„.,..,. wffll
188 Names
Registrar's Office Releases
1932-33 Honor Roll
to Press
The registrar's office recently re-
leased the following list of students
, who made grades sufficiently high to
place them on the school's scholarship
list. Those who made the honor roll
are as follows:
Junior cholarahlp List
Scholars with special mention: Mary
Lee Aahburn, Anthony Andrew Au-
coin, Sara Lenoir Bowen, Ernest Dell
Butcher, Martha Jane Claypool, Eliza-
beth Anne Duckett, Ormond Earl Dun-
lap, Walter Eckman, Wesley Clarence
Eckholm, Hazel May Graf, Peggy Hall,
Ralph Jefferson Hallman, Raymond
Dale Hamill, Leonora Thomas Heyck,
Sanford Wilson Higginbotham, Laur-
ence K. Killersberger, Mila Landau,
Mary Elizabeth Loggins, Doris Long,
Mary Aiko Nagai, Bernece Imogene
Neilan, Mary Jacqueline Oliphint, Al-
berta Jean Riesen, Roy Beverly Scott,
Emily Stalnaker, Sarah Virginia Tay-
lor, Genevieve Verlander, Jack Clarke
Williams, Milton Williams, William
Joseph Williamson, Margaret Wall
Zenor.
Scholars: Fred Cunningham Alter,
William Darwin Andrus, Jewel An-
toinette Bauer, James Paul Boone, Wil-
liam Jefferson Boone, Floreine A.
Borgstrom, Leslie Raymond Bowling,
Alice Lynn Boyd, Vas Hubert Brogdon,
Jr., Hieodore C. Campbell, Jr., Mary
Elizabeth Cavitt, Ruth Marie Connell.
William Oscar Cook, Dorothy Moul-
ton Daley, John Jerry Dvorak, Elliott
Galetin Flowers, Ethel Madeline Free-
man, Donald Bockoven Gillett, Corinne
Elizabeth Hall, Martha Louise Hall,
Raymond L. Heinrich, Robert Lee Hen-
son.
Elizabeth Katherine Hornor, Allen C.
Hutcheson, Jr., William Jennings Jes-
sup, Edgar Henry Lancaster, Tola Lan-
dau, Margaret Rose Lawson, Floyd Lee
McNutt, Tommie Grace Mansfield,
Pauline Julienne Meyer, Milton Stan-
ford Mosk, Otto Melvjn Naphla, Vin-
cent Lee Nealy, Mary Eleanor Norris,
J. C. Dudley O'Fiel, Jr.
Eppie Quicksall, Dorothy Dean Rich-
ter, Sigrid Roos, John Ralph Shurtleff,
Eleanor Stanfield, Emily Lyles Tarrer,
Ludan Minor Wilkens, Fred Talbot
Wilson.
f.trt
Scholars with ipeoMI mention: Wal-
ter Good* Appleby, Samuel Knox Ban-
ner, Earl Bower Barnes, Philip A. Bel-
leggie, Esther Irene Beman, John Hen-
ry Crooker, Jr., Katherine Dionne,
Margaret Modena Elkins, Elizabeth
Lour Everett, Deborah G. Goldofsky,
John Willie Green, Jr., Bill Myers
Harp, Edna Leah Jacobs, Helen Eliza-
beth Johnston, Robert Narvaez Little.
Margaret Rose Lodge, Mildred Roset-
ta McDavid, Eby Nell McElrath, John
Oliver McReynolds, Wille Eunice Ma-
gee, William Henry Masterson, George
Edgar Pike, John Shepard Rasberry,
Fred Terry Rogers, Jr., Clarence
Scheps, Mildred Louise Selkirk, Mar-
garet Soule, Luolin Elizabeth Storey,
Marjorie Claire Werner, Kathleen Mar-
jorie Wilson.
Scholars: Arnold Block Aronson,
Mary Louise Ballard, George W.
Brown, Jr., Ralph Dewilton Bryan, Er-
nestine Kone Cantrell, Raymond Au-
gustus Cook, Richard De Young, Jr.,
Thelme Fay Dixon, Dorothy Louise
Eckel, Harry Haydon Fouke, William
Howard Francis, Dorothy Glyn Gilpin,
Donald Miller Gready, Hugh Lowe
Grove, Jr.
Henry Kirk Harrison, Mele Dee Hat-
field, Marguerite C. Hayden, Frances
Nell Henderson, Luther Edward Jones,
Jr., Tom Reid Jones, Clyde Chisholm
King, Chas. Edward McCarthy, Chas.
Vincent McKeen, Harry Lincoln Mauzy,
Albert F. Metzler, Jr., Ragina Esther
Meyer, Lamar Miller, Seth Irwin Mor-
ris, Elizabeth Neathery, Edward Oppen-
helmer, Jr., Roderick Beltron Perkins,
Craton Guthrie Pitner, Edna Irene
Pratt, Shirley Winifred Rauch, Robert
Gordon Rick, Joseph William Rose,
Anne Evelyn Ross, Odell Kenton San-
ders, Virginia Katherine Smith, Frances
Sara Souza, William Lyndon Storey,
Laura Lee Washburn, Welton Wors-
ham, Constance Ruth Worsley.
Freshman Scholarship List
Scholars with special mention: Paul
H. Cauthan, Jr., Gladys Marie Deer-
ing, Winifred Joan de Waal, Nanine
Howard Ferris, Marshall de Motte
Gates, Barney Mack Haley, William
Harold Lockhart, Simon Miron, Mary
babel Mount. Fan T "i|«* Nielsen.
Donald Eugene Norgaard, Charlyne
Louise O'Fiel, Charles Mel vin Sander*,
Edward Johnson Seats, Nevenna Tun-
off, Denton Belford Wise.
Scholars: William Paul Blair, Nor-
man Bruce Blake, Henry Clyde Boll-
man, Jr., Lawrence Douglas Boone,
Albert Henry Braden, Jr., Margaret
Lynn Brosius, Edward Treadwell
Clarke, Jack Woodrow Comlsky, Em-
mie Craddock, Mary Elizabeth Crain,
Dorothy Angela Dean, Ruth Selkirk
Dishron, James Karl Dunaway, Wil-
liam Robert Eliassof, Arthur Wilson
Epley, Jr.
Nancy Lee Estill, Robert Richard
Fitzhugh, Mary Malinda Gordon, Roy
B. Greer, Eddie Christine Hall, Thomas
Jefferson Harling, John P. Hildebrandt,
Wayne Segar Houck, Earl Ewald Hue-
botter, Jaene Humphreville, Selwyn
Rice Hutching, Robert Kimpton Jewett,
Sarah Nancy Jones, Ernest Wilbur
Keating, Reginald Paul Kottwitz, Ber-
nard Albert Kreiter, Charles Edwin
Ladner, Gertrude Anita Maas, Har-
riet Coit Malloy, Tom Polk Miller,
James Henry Morgan, Ella Campbell
Meyer, Joe La Rose O'Rillion, Grace
Joyce Page.
Joseph Harold Palmer, Katherine Red
Parker, Miriam Adel Pomerantz, Nat
Harman Prade, J. P. Radoff, James
Emsley Saw telle, William Morgan
Sherrill, Milton L. Talbert, Margaret
Bell Tufts, Charles H. von Rosenberg,
John Edwin Wallace, Henry Clay Wa-
ters, Annie Ray Watkin, and Ruth
Wright.
Dr. Mott-Smith answered the urge
to Chicago, and also went to Dayton,
Ohio where he visited with Capt. Stev-
ens, with whom he worked last sum-
mer on cosmic rays.
Dr. Chillman recently returned from
a vacation trip in the East.
HEBERl'S
Beauty and Barber
Shop
3 Blocks from M. L. Bldg.
1717 Bissonett H. 0437
CHECKING ACCOUNTS
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
SOUTH TEXAS COMMERCIAL
NATIONAL BANK
SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES
TRUST DEPT.
■ v IVgr 'V I
SICA THRESHKE
, i. " ■ >' ' ' ' • 1 :
• fV ■ • • o , ;
w
Powerirlant
ater
School's Water Supply Pumped
From Two Private
Wells
Rice's power plant furnishes all the
power used on the campus during the
school year. It generates the steam
used for heating ' the building and
contains the refrigerating equipment
for the purpose of cooling drinking
water supplied the instruction build-
ings In the basement of the kitch-
ens are two refrigerating machines used
to cool the food refrigerators and
drinking water in the four dormitories.
The power plant, the first building
completed on the campus was erected
in 1911. At that time, no electrical,
water, or gas connections from the city
L-xisted. Now, the Houston water line
runs through the grounds and electri-
city and natural gas are conected with
Rice's plant but the.ie are only used
in an emergency.
Three large rooms make up the pow-
er house which is connected to the
mechanical building by the machine
shop—usually it, is thought of as one
building. The plant contains 300 horse-
power reciprocating engines and the
exhaust steam is used to heat the
buildings. Occasionally the amcunt of
steam available exceeds the demand
for heating and. when this happens,
steam flows out of the building into
the air. The plant also has air com-
pressors and a number of water pumps.
The Institute's water supply comes
from the two deep wells which are
pumped by the air lift system. Dur-
ing the summer, pumping water for
sprinkling lawns Is about the only
duty of the plant. During school, It
furnishes lights for the grounds and
instruction building, and power for
the labratories and machinery in the
buildings.
Power, water, and heating mains ex-
tend from the power plant to the
separate building through long concrete
tunnels. They run under the north
sidewalks leading from the mechanical
lab towards Main Street.
E. J. Dennis who was foreman in
charge of construction when the plant
was built, is now engaged by the In-
stitute to operate it. He is one of the
oldest employees at Rice and takes
pains in keeping the grounds and ma-
terials in the power house in a neat
uondiiton: Mechanical engineering
students are allowed to take reading
on a few of the pieces of equipment.
The plant has its biggest load during
the engineering shows which occur
every two years. At that time all the
departments .are using Jarge quantities
of steam, electricity, and compressed
Dr. Tsanoff and family spent the
summer in Colorado.
WANTED
Boys to Room and Board
Large, spacious rooms,
three meals. Everything
furnished. Three blocks
from M. L. building.
MRS. J. H. PATTERSON
1912 Bolsovcr Phone J. 21501
Dramatic Club to
Meet Wednesday
Bob Talley, president of the Draa-
matic Club, has announced the first
meeting of the year to be held Wed-
nesday, the
Autry House at 7:30 p.
All old members are
present and anyoi
club is invited to
to be
in the
'fr/;'?::!*"1'
Henry Holden has gone -to Cam
bridge, Mass., to enter the Harvard
Law School.
We'll Be SAouting for That 1933 Owl Team
At Rice Field
Parker Bedding Co.
310 N. Main
P. 4161
¥
Authentic College Styles
BOSTONIAN
SHOES
arsity-town
C L O T H E S
Furnishings
1 m'l IT ■ESBESaF
*0UE-J|EWETT&IKK
811 MAIN ST. 813
Houston* Largest Exclusive Mens Store
DISNEY
HATS
COLLEGIATE
NIGHT
RICE ROOF
GARDEN
Fill. SEPT. 22
Old Songs - New Song's - All Star Rice
Institute Songs - and Songs of
Other Schools
EARL BURKNETT
and his famous Biltmores
vv
RICE ROOF
Of the Rice Hotel
ill W ir,':1(;*vvaii
.
lilliSllii
Aii"hr :W
SB
m
ALWAYS
thefinest tobaeeos
thefinest wbmmanskip
ALWAYS l Ukll S PLEASI
.
Copnlcht. 1988, Tht American Tobtceo Company
Why do we say "Always Luckies Please"?
Well, one reason isl that every Lucky is
made of choice, ripe tobaccos—the Cream
of the Crop. Aipothler reason—Luckies
are always round, film, fully packed—
with no loose enlds td sputter and spark.
Careful examination and inspection by
over 60 precision instruments and 17 alert
scientists guarantee unfailing uniformity.
That's why Luckies draw so easily, burn
so evenly—always mild and smooth. And
that's why—"Always Luckies Please!"
"it's toasted "
THROAT PROTECTION- FOR BETTER TASTE
*
VT'* j.
.'. :V- « I .J:'''' -';'
■'ft:-,*
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View six places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Thresher (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, September 22, 1933, newspaper, September 22, 1933; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth230272/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rice University Woodson Research Center.