- -Kfc. * 1 " • -• -. • W'<-£ vv':'"• •" J. ~. : /..Tn. -• Xu-.:. -r *^ine. more*-students' Have tute in the Wednesday.edation^of Association *>t City Planners and w* nounced for • Studertt Assembly TtoiJailyTdxenK*\$r served on the Round-Up technical Associate Justice. : John Becker, fourth year archi­committee. Earlier this fall Beck­ -i J?* deadline for submitting tecture student, has announced er was appointed, to the Assembly platforms and pictures has been for ; engineering assemblyman. until the elections:1 . •xtended to Monday at 6 p.m^ Becker is past treasurer of Alpha Also announcing for engineer. ^Anyone failing to turn in his pic-Phi. Omega and a member of the ing assemblyman is Gerald Brand*, 'S&platform: at JounuUinn Disciple Student Fellowship. fourth year architecture student ipt Building X08 will not have his pid He tsamember of the National Brands is a member of Newman ar Club and Is social chairman of »•• ffteip frl LambdaChi Alpha fraternity. He >4^0is also a member of the student r t-' * £ I ' chapter of the American Institute 4 Wmfeef Architects* ~ ­ , , Harry Webb, junior business ministration student has an­ nounced for associate justice. 1944 Webb is a member of'the Disci­ pline Committee and Cowboys. He By GENE EHRL1CH VV^.i "yards to score ana then remained an?ad to win. was chairman of the publicity com­W , , Ttxan Sport* Staff . „ iiW' again cris|>, Hard blocking by Gene Vykukalrl seccoidl • of Campus League of Women quarter* Voters, Radio Guild, Cap and iGown, Reason Litefary Society, opportumSucand is publicity chairman for the % football when they'furned~aii 3f| Charm Committee. intercepted pass on the T«xai « This is' Miss Whitesides' second GERALD BRANDA year as production assistant at into a touchdown. Until ^ Radio House. Last year she' was * ^tiiat. moment the Razorbwdu had ^ one of the producers of "Invasion ^nmr gotten a drive going deepfrom -Mars"end* was assistant pro­^into Texas territory; ducer of The Daily Tetfhi 50th Top ground gainer fotf the af-^ Anniversary special broadcast and temoon was Byron 'Wg is a member ofAlpha Epsilon Rho, Towjisend. The rampaging full- national radio honorary' back blasted through the. heavy . t Prior to .entering the University, Ozark line in top form*. * she .attended Trinity University. .v. •.••Lata in the -€ourti>-quarter She has had two. years experience Townsend cut loose with a' SQii working at KTSA, CBS station in ft* -9 * *" X} yard run on third down with Texas San Antonio. This past'tti needing two yards that enabled ~ she-did publicity for the sta the 'Texans to control the ball tit tite end.of the game* t Dick McDonald, law student, m ^asannouncedforlawassembly- pn Out particular ...aarjes o#; Sfeh/ ^8fl * ^horn^ first touchdown. Dillon tooif « handoff from ^arterbaclr' ' ^ downs Louis Schaufele, Hog ftiH­man. McDonald. is-a-graduate of ' Ben Tomghns and roared trough a big h$le dpehei B>„g&ard "aTO't*mfske ^xtaftrng-iaJrom the.left to o^Cef Assistances .­ West Texas State College with a back, hadK punted out on the Texas i bachelor of arts degree in govern- "J'LI 4" 10 and Texas needed. , to keep a • ment 'and a businessminor." drive going to run out the elodk. * Also announcing for law assem­ The "Ssntone" poweriiouse blyman is Don E. Box. He is a ground our 144 yards In 25 car-Ufit graduate of Abilene Christian Col­ries for an average of 5£ yarda Were a try. * . -;.-;• BONNIE t. EVANS lege frith a bachelor of science in McDONALD >t\*« bucked and chuna^f for good' Announcing for a seat on the • It rJl *5 « ^ n * minutes. It brought smiles to the University cheering section. the .prettiest of all—the new yardage. The 21r»ArH>ld wnios^l Student assembly fro# the Col-. -*Day and Band Day faces of the highly-partisan crowd. The violent, incongruous clash orange Longhorn 'football pants. starting • his fourSfe, consecutive lege of Engineering is%ee Aldet--University. From all over Pregame-fanfare included field of colors was something that had Porker faithful were but game, was good fttr 69 yards in W Be seen to be believed. There plenty loy(L ,A|id,. they t all iiad dice, senior mechanical engineer* the State, hij^i school bands and presentations of neW UT "Days few -eaaing tho bsli y? timeSr-forvi iathera had come to see a victory . i»g student from Austin. Alder- Association officers and the gift were 8.2 bands and no teHing how •not a. near miss. And of course dice is a member of the American of a new Stetson to John W. (many colors. Garish red, bril­ ttie AP„ poll forgets two^time .Hampton, new president. At halftime the Longhorn Band Society of Mechanical Engineers. liant yellow,: pale blue, d^ap pur-starting his firat>otffensjye gaime losers. -• formed a huge "A" at midfield •ma ^ ^tl^ first for Texas from II yards out "small group" leader in tea fr§sh-monograpi and played "Texas when he went through a gaping man orientation meetings earlier hole in the Arkansas line openedthis fall.. • "• , The 112-nre&ber "Austin High up by McFadin and Vykukal and PIPPIN CHAR! *S Charles B. Robinson has an^ School band, co-hosts for the day, carried two safety men ,ovar tha^ OBfNSON nounced for a a^at on the Assem­ with the University groupssnap-goal line with ym.-;^;;.Cf' r'£'*Ww bly frogi tbe School of Law. He is m -A m :?}':)• pily paraded onto the gridiron Quarterback Ben Tompkins a senior law student from Pales-and the two bands formed the rested the attack well on the three . tin^f • letters B-A-N-D between the 20 touchdown marches and showed • He attended Virginia Military yard li&ea, poise and calmness in pase^SInstitute for" two *yes&a and re? ,,,, • ceived' a' bacbelor^of business ad­ Raymondyille, fiist vice-president; !;-•;: L«^:^?:thifc^S«^ campus Saturday, morning s|>ort-Hand told the dads, "The Univer­ ministration degree from the Uni­ Harry C. Webb of Houston, third ter he. had been thrown far a versity in 1940. in'fe "beat Arkansas,' banners. sity of Texas is as much yours as vice-president; Boh^Artastrong of yard' loss back to the Ai^ansaa the Univer­ Austin, secretary, " ' ; He is president! The third annual meeting of 45, he pissed again on second sity Men's" Glee Club, a cadet DadY Association was wel Officers of tbe -Dad*s Associa­Afte* the business meeting, down. He waa Band Mark the rushed badly .officer in the Army ROT(J, anda corned to the:University campus tion elected Saturday are John •dads were taken on the unique See TOWNSEND, page 2 v TK , J member ntof -BetaRaf. Theta Pi fra-m in.• speechest ,by C* -«Read Granberry,. W. Hampton of Wichita Falls, "Tower Tour" by student guides ternity, 2 who pointed out various interest­ ^ UN Birthday asdstant to the president and president; Dr. George Bennack of m ing1 campus sites and explained the University building program, . before the kickoff the Long­ -After tiie tour the dads re­horn band marched onto the play* turned to the IJnion building fng field and formed a" huge wh
up .owde"
tiie Ex-Students' Association ap­be sent to exe* around November nuaUy-is.available from the' Per-Thomas Williams; new director sorrow to mankind «,U and to re* 
rovinds of all tine &ke

proved amendments to the Stu­lr according to John A. McCurdy, d|imaiit Fund, but almost |15 mil­of the Men's Glee Club, led the affirm faith in ; .T. the e^1 1 r1-' '• 	.• .'••-•it'­
f advancea resewrch. r 	z s... vided for loans exclusively^ awrtnaar %the|}x^tudents' Aaao-tro& the Pennanent Fund left Lieutenant. Colonel Dehnsa 'flfcst
.. 
x

Tha Ciayton gttint.win be paid 	hear Mr. Williams lead
The amendments wA-e recently riatioa to feeing urgently needed tta Univerrtty short about SI mS.
Obtained by the University D«-o*»r a three-year period. It wfll adopted byihe board of directors money to theUniversity. > 	to Song/'
felopment Bo«rd, institution fund-be.»*q>er*ised by Henry M.1 of the Student Loan Fund, and he^> administer tlda pro-lion-of 	;.and*tThe Midshipman Hen^ ^. 'Whfir, 
ntising agen^r, the grants include 	-DaBaa* w»d Middiipman, Lieuten­
will go ihto effect after they have 
Splfpi' Satw-day meeting, 	the 

•n?-XS&
been recorded •­
Cbuncfl^-sippointed Aitgtti

iWKsyi lite 	sop spoke briefly to the audience,
Wynne jut Oaltis.a«d Loi^viaw

Clayton ®f 'Pasad«a4 Calif., fo*« Bioch^akal Institute under Di% At the :Sitl^lay „ 	reminding tiuau that the group 1 Representing the Air ROTC
X][Bhrandty*a Pees and Hines H. Baker of Houston

marly Houston, for' special Roger Williams. Dean Buriaga Executive. Council also dtecussed 	will be open for ,eonc«rt toti w«re* Cadet • Oolraal
manent Fusd has more than $100 as Ex-Students' Association men
drug'and dwjnicaT studies and 	engagements in the spring. Robin-Michael B. Mirsglis, Geneva, m
also mpaonrisa fao«tia the annual giving progrsfe wffltat, the Conatitution provides beta on tiie Vnfo
tUa 	son re5-, 9, j<* ^•s^w'Wlii?!?iM ^"Ssw'K 
25 
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JfJI *57^*,

fwim^ Plfi'-M fe*'Sft]>. Iff 'when they broke through to down Pat Summerall, -j&Und end, iIm' $6 sli&nds ''left lit thev first guard to twtfrif' >*.>• v |il.. ,
.... pzJ*lwS*^l*0 Saseirbacka who it& ;•*•>» Sfi* pwl ,ta^esv.were .• on* Schaufele's bo$t onthe,Arkansas Vas a thorn in t^Longhornsi-side quarter. Arkansas putted and T Arkansas ran two consecutive **> \ 
ky JACK WEAVER

^ -<3>cir beads on trim and tossed » f£asott tfaa Hogs pjayed without &.t *" " * " " ' ' all afternoon. Jones, Te*a* safety man, returned first downs and had to punt. Texas Ttot** Sport* Stmttf^'ttajwr'-ta 3hSWH* wtoa fara 
the Krikti of Ray Parka, left i; Outstandingplays and players * I The Raxorbacka wdrt the tow to tiie $og 49^ got the ball on its 80 and wouldn't .. In. Jth» teramped dressing room.Rogers, Hof left half, said Lonf­
* behind thedafcnse 
liaffba^ i**tMaa quarter*. On Stood out fofr the big, battling And received on the south end. Levtrle and Townsend tndved »ove forward.'Porter kicked. Cole 
afforded the visiting team, the horn rootex congratulated th«­

^W?'i^,lfett::|Al|i.^««|^at*g; the firstpJayafter Texas* second, teams, McFadin aitd Vyku&al piled Sogers returned thp kick to mid-the ball down to the 3S| and gathered in the ball and eluded a Arkansas Raeorbftcks were any­Arkansas team after the game and JM* bands.; --< i-" ' v;"J*]<#% 
touchdown Parkstook a pitchout up the entire defensive right side field but a clipping pehalty brought Tompkins hit Levine .with a pass mast of taeklers, cut sharply to thing but gloomy after their de­their, efforts were appreciated byeorapfeted S of f arouad his rifbt end arid Ioatfour of the Arkansas line when Town-the ball back to the Arkansas 6. to tbe ll. Dillon went over left his right and r;;<-T>-.-.-.::-'i>^;5!?tiir.v'!-''..-•' ... and Townsend bulled over left 
TkcLBnir' ^oinft ball and didn't give us a chance The Texas line, whieh swept the! with their driving line," he coa* Hogs off their feet in the last! TEAM STATISTICS tinued.: 
half,-lived up to their press clip.!
OT AIUC.

msmm KA— fBiwrA nnt dev r, . i i i 10 made many pings according to several of the
mm it dCWna . ; nr-i'i-18. -. "We too mistakes
f-—Y«T<« »ui .
kanias players,

T»«l» 
p«puaing 116 Twcm «t Puiei att«m*ted stronger than any other elub we Dave Hanner, 282-pound Hoj
PM^e* ~e»inpl«te(i . 
have faced—the whole line was tackle, said the Texas line is", i

Pai«M bitite«|4«d
Punta good and that is what beat us." good as has been claimed,

Puntin* «T«r«Ke 88.8 the the hav
32.4 best Razorbaeks

Fumblv* lest 2 1 To his team he said, "Let's for­
Yard* Miulbd J6 SO faced all season.
get tiiis one—Vanderbilt is next. 
Harbld Stockton* senior cent
UNfuKT . You played hard, but you made a 

I> .. .ARKANSAS '• and the only man from Texas <_ ,
few mistakes."

L« iftdi-JarMy, Sumxn^rtlL Tfcom*­
the Arkansas squad, remarked that

' »oB, cue-balled Hog quarterback,-re­
Steer line .can hit wHe« it want

lUsbt en<»—St«ndeU Richards, Fischcl. 
marked that Texas will probably

Qaart«ri>aeka—Rinchart, Lotu«: to. 
Laft kalfbaoka—Parka. Prjof, Britt, lie win the Conference crown. "They 
. Farland, Croat, Temple. 
are as good as I've played

Hlcht halfha«k«—R^ars, Furo, Pritch­
m$rnm 
_ awl, Stttton, Cola; . against," he added. 
mmm ^ Fullbaeka—Ballcy^Cagtnler, St^tAufcle. 

The Top Ten
Louis Sdtaufele, who handled 

sax 
V" Left anda—Stolfcandlake, Procter, Menaa-the kicking chores for the Hogs,e«. and who laid some crunching
t»*t taekl«a—Vjkukal, WUaoh, Qeone« 
2^^ Xeft sruarda—McFadin, Sewell, SowelL blocks on the Longhorns, said the 
Here is how the top ten tea:

* "Vt't oF^dinl Cantera—'Rowan, Barton, Reader, Rifht suarda—Arnold, Davis, Pake«;ham, in the nation, as rated by the
game was rough. He added that 7% Mpisfotd. he thought the Steers were run­week, Saturday.
v 
last fared

RiSht tackiaa-~Jack«on>' Milburn 
m 

Right anda—Adama, P, Wlliiaini, Allrad. ning in players from the bench on 1. Army had a field day or<
Quartarhacka.—Tom^kina. T. Jones. Page. off-tackle plays. , 
Harvard, 49-0.

Left halfbaeka—-Dillon, Bartbn, Raler. 
'i-Right halfbacka-^beTine. Shands, Ochoa. End Biil Jurney, who set up ^ 2. Oklahoma routed. Ka:
• Fnllbacka—ToWnaend, Ma;^«. 
m 
the second Arkansas touchdown State in Ncrman, 59-0. The Soo; 

A. SfcbRfi PERIODS by snagging Rinehart's pass
Jim ers Used 49 players in the masi

HT ArlcAnfaa a 7-7 0^-14 
and legging it to the Steer .two­

T«x*»-„ „• .', r„ 6 7 0 «-*-19 ere. yard line, was a little disappointed 3. SMU whipped Rice, 42-21, 
_ • SCORING 
about the'game. "I sure would 

, T«a»i Touehdow»«—Townsend 8, Dil-a wild tilt to stop Owls' winni 
ien, rehit after touehdown—Porter. haye liked to beat 'em>, he said, 
streak at twelve

AittaaMi Teuekiowna—Cole, Lotus. 
but then remarked, "Texas has a

Point after teuchdewn—Thomason i. 
A. Kentucky had an easy tiifine ball club, and they will go a 
INDIVIDUAI^STATISTICS with Villanova, 34-7. WZ*
long way."

_&aser 
RU9HINQ 5. California blanked Oft 

„ Mayer Att. Gain Av(. 
The. University student body

Townsend. Texaa 25 144 ».g State, 27-0. 
Levine. Texa» __17 69 4.1 came in for a bit of praise from 
6. Stanford, pre-aeason R
20 g.g

J Rogers, Arkansas ' the men. of the Ozarks. Buddy
I** -<•* Dillon, Texas 14 , <3 4.g Bowl favorites, were surprised
PritcKwd, Arkansaa. h 24 4.g 
UCLA, 21-7.
i 
my. 

Parks, Arkansaa 4 "1* v4.5 
u* ^"•/* -Purdue Beaten Again
Rinehart, Arkansas 4 18 -4.5 7. Texas had real dog fight bi 
msH^m 7.J, 2 HP yI PAsIlING IOWA CITY, Iowa, Oct. 21.— fore subduing fighting Hogs 1
7 4 
•tt cat int yds 14, ' 

il (&)—Iowa shocked favored Pur­
Tompkinl, Texas _« r« <7 Rinehart, Arkansaa _8 a 1 2« due 33-21 Saturday in a Big Ten 8. Maryland defeated by No ... . . ....—~~Z7r~ i. Arkanaaa —2 1 (f » thriller before a
football home­Carolina State, 16-13. 

•Phot* bi 0(tn Hinldt Page, Texaa —a 1
't-K BOOTl^G^tNG' ^roynd'left end 5s Texas' flen^.' handoff to fullback Byron Townsend and caught the 14
Jine throughout the game is exemplified by the pile-coming crowd of 51,521. The 9. Ohio State ran over th< 
PASS RAeivinG

rnTompUns, ih&m as h» 4pp«>aches the.'ArUnsw, tJ0K|I Razorback defense asleep by keeping the ball. up at the right Where guard Bud McFadin and Hawks shot into a 7-0 lead on punchless Minnesota Gophers, 48'
as-_ Catchas Yards To 
-a 17-yard tun to the one-yard line early in fhe.-Procter, Texas 1 24 0 Glenn. Drahn's 33-yard fourth 0. , ;. ^
Townsend plunged over on the next play for Texas' , sociates knotkecT the right side of the Hog line out •Turney, Arkansas 1 17 
n down pass to Don Commack with

second quarter. The Longhom querterbeclc faked a second touchdown. The sharp blocking of the Texas of the play. Levine, Tiaf 1 0 n 10. Washington was whipped,bf 
Stendel. Arkanaaa ? 12 
Illinois, 21-13 

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appy Steers 
" " KB , _" ' ­

Praise iHom Line 
By KELLY CROZIER ;
T««m» Awtociat* Sport* Editor ( 	WACO, 
A feeling of sheer power most bf the plays 'went Well. 	^*wy I*b«ll, who throw* righ^ Baylor took the Wckoff on ita
•urged -through the. Leghorn ."We just whipped them down. HOUSTON, Oct. 21—ther words, they didn't score. Pat Knight and David Paw-, Tech, which has dropped -five j^layastrove 4$ yar—Texas A&M Satiba|sy m »t-bp.mdj-.djHtssr.M0B. «»* by —fought back and furnished tgsfc ' Baylor kicked off to &e 

Townsend the beat back on the T Jones, who intercepted a unleashed the fury of three year* sun-drenched,crowd of 20,000, the passes to scamper 3d yards for th* wayr Val Jo* WaHcer inter-of the game, It wa* 4S4-i»4­field." RazOrback pass to set up the of impotent Southwest Conference bruising game turned into a piti­the fourth Aggie score in this cepted another and raced to the a 76-yard touchdown run by Bob-ireat touchdown run. Hatch failed 

About the RaasorbackB and the second Texas touchdown, de­football, stoCTning from behind t» ful rout. wild finale. next seore.' hy Close, who broke over tackle to convert. 
Steer offense Coach Cherry snid, scribed the Porkers as, "A rough smother Texas Christian Univer­.Spotting the Horned Frogs a Homer Ludiker had shot Texas The Mustangs' final tally came in a quick opener and scooted to Baylor got the baK onl 
"They have a good ' club, you bunch of boys." sity, 42-23. ' first period field goal and a-second Christian ahead just before the as Gene. Roberta, climaxed a 76-the Bear gtfri line like a jack son's fumble on its 15-ysrd

know it. They'll beat somebody "They have good blocking and 	rabbit. . ' to end ia 44-yar/ Red
: Two bruising backs —r Bob quarter touchdown, theAggies first period ended, kicking a field yard march with a smash from the
in the Conference. f)ur offensive tackling and not everybody is go­Smith and Billy Tidwell—* sharp-stormed back from a firsThalf of goal as the ball rested on the Ag­seven. -Tech dtew first blood With ft drive, and from here roared V thft 
ground game went well, but they ing to beat them. They didn't shooting quarterback, Dick Gar-fumbling frustration. They sent gie 16-yard line. • 59-yard touchdown march In the last touchdown of the game.'Dick

George Glauser

completely crossed us up on our 	Fullback ' was "•
throw enough passes to really tell demal, and panther-like alertness Billy Tidwell sweeping 1$ and 25 Less than three minutes after the big noise for Rice, scoring on opening period, but Baylor quicfc^"Parma'— dove* " over '*ttom Hie Ted*
passes." 	,, 
anything nbout their air game, brought the . Aggies' six tench-yards for third period8 touchdowns, the second quarter began, Frank quick opening plays of 17 and 68 ly tied tiie score, went ahead oil three and Dickerson kicked the 
. Bouncing, Ben Tompkins, direc­but they are good on the ground;" Parker's second touchdown, and extra point,

downs in the second half—rfour then Gardemal tossed.two touch­Struska, lumbering 213-pbuhd tac-yards. Quf^terback Vernon Glass
tor of the Steer offense pointed he concluded., -^ in the quarter—and their first down passes to Andy Billhouse, StrUBka, lumbering 218-pound passed for^-49 yards to end Bill
out that the Longhorna worked ' Around the dressing room, join­conference, victory singe 1947. Smith raced 38 yards for another TCU tackle, snared Ray Graves* Howton ofr the other Owl tally.

all last week for the style of de­
ing in the Steer festivity . were 	pass and heaved his bulk 48 yards SMU scoring —-Touchdowns,
fense used by the Hogs, and that 
such Longhorn ex-greats as Wally for a Horned Frog touchdown. Rote 2, Hawn, Powell, Walker, FOOTBALL SCORES Scott, Peppy Blount, and Perry 
Texas Christian stayed in the Roberts; Conversion*, Sullivan 6.
Trqiners Meet
OLD SEVILLE HAS NO COVER Samuels. 
GIRL . . ITS SYMBOL OF SEX IS 	ball game until the last 20 min­IJice scoring . Touchdowns, 
SOUTHWEST

THREE PIECES r OF LETTUCE Samuels pointed out that al­	utes, Wilde taking a touchdown Duke 41, Richmond 0; 
FURLED ... NO 	Glauser 2, Howton;' Conversions, tWilliam
FALSE CLAIMS 	Texas 19, Arkansas 14k" £ mty
NOR FAT BRAVADO .. . INSTEAD though Arkansas looked like a m on 'pass from Gilbert BartOBh. And at 
SEVILLE OFFERS YOU A SWEET good, rough, ball club, the Steer thg .ead, thei Honied ITrogs boosted SMU 42, Wka 21. Tech 0. -; 

AVOCADO. , ( line was .great. ^ "What I liked 	Texas A&M 42, TCU 23. Furman 21, The Citadel 7. 
BE SEVILUZED 	Phases "of physical, education physicdT training, in the Trophy their final margin, Jotui Btarville 
about the Longhorns today was 	Ditching Machine Nearly Baylor 26, Texa^ Tech 12. MIDWEST * 
Old SaviU* 1601 Guadalupe St. 	will be discussed At the fourth making a brilliant catch o^ Dex-
the way that they went out and Rcom from 10 to 12:30. 	West Texas State 39, Sam Hous­Oklahoma 58, Kansas Statte^/ > i
annual meeting"of Southwest Con­er Bassinger's thVee -yard pass' Ditches SMU-Riee Tilt 	Indiana 20, Notre Dame 7,
got that touc.hdown when 	they Lunch will be at »the Commons ton State 18. " ^ Ms
ference physical training person­	just nine seconds before the game
were behind and needed#it." 	East Texas State 85, Midwestern MicMgan 26, Wisconsin IS. "~"y
Annex at .12:30 p. m. After the ended. • HOUSTON, Oct 21-^«—Rice 	II
nel here Monday. 
27. 	Michigan State 84, Marquette 6.

Goodyear Shoe Shop Joe Afnold, Longhorn guard in­	meal, each member school will be Darrow Hooper kicked six athletic officials Saturday were 
jured in the fourth quarter,. was Registration for fee conference called onr a extra points for A&M. Ludiker thankful tiieir ^game with SMU Ariioita State at-Tempe 28, Utah Kansas 40, Oklahoma A&M 7. •g ® 
offers still being x-rayed Saturday even­will be in the Trophy Room of to give five minute 	was a night ^ffair. • State 0. • Missouri 20, Iowa State 20 (tie)*
booted two-for Texas Christian. 	; A
Tulsa 18, Detroit 18 (Tie>* " 

ing' and Frank.-Medina reported Gregory Gym at 9:30 a. m. Seven­discussion of its problems^ or.in­? It was a fuirible that set up Lu-' A ditching machine at a $1,000,-Southwestern 19, Howard Payne 
-1
Cash Rebates that it was too early to .tell any teen staff of teresting sporting events.' diker's field Milton Farmer 000 field house. project adjacent 18. < 	Iowa 33, Purdue 21, ' I , 'MSpi-i
members the De­	goal.
thing definite about his injuries. 	Berry Mi. Wkitaker,. director'of recovered Glenn Lippman's bobble to the Rice'Stadium at mid-morn-Abilene Christian 26, McMurry Ohio State 48, Minnesota m-p
' each'semester partments of Physical and Health 	Northwestern 28, Pittsburgh
men's intramurals, will lead * on the Aggie 24-yard line. From ing cut through a telephone cable. 14. 
GUARANTEED 	Indiana Whip# Notre Dame Education, .Physical Training for discussion on sports^lubs in the All radio, television .and press Lamar 15, Louisiana "College 7. Cincinnati 48, Westeni
here TCU went tfc the six, and 
Xavier 84, Loui»ville l3.

Shoe repairing,, djre-NEW YORK, Oct. 21.—(^R)-Men, and Intramural Athletics for Trophy Room from 2 to 3 p. m. then on fourth down Ludiker cftme fcox: lines--to. the 70^000 seat sta­Del Mar JC 89, Victorial JC 8. 
Wichita 17, Drake 14» v*

ing, resueding. 	Once mighty Notre Dame dropped Men will participate. Dr. Lynn W. McCraw, assistant through. dium were knocked oujt. INTERSECTIONAL EAST/ Sto.its second game of the season, Following registration there wflf professor "of physical education, Smith, the conference's ieading Emergency telephone crew men •Wwhlngton 18.
405W23rd 7-0132 	Army 49, Harvard 0.
Navy 27, Southern California 14*Saturday—bowing to Indiana, 20-be a discussion of the service pro­will lead' discussions on teacher scorer, gained 146 yards on 24 completed repairs in the late ai­

t Vz block off Drag) 	Kentucky S4, Villanova 7. Pennsylvania 84, Columbia 0». ;
•7—and. upsets again jarred college gram of the meeting led by L. training in the Trophy Room from carries. Tidwell picked up 69 on ternoon. A day game would have 
Cornell 7, Yale 0. ^ ' Fordham 27, ytwst Virginia 28.

football's first ten. T. Bellmont, director of men's '8 to 5. ' , , , ' ten attempts. 	been over by theh. 
Princeton 34, Brown 0*Nebraska. 19, Penn State 0. 
Colgate 23, Bucknell 12.
SOUTH 
Rutgers 42, NYU 0^
Tulafte 27, Mississippi 20, \ 	•rr^rn 

v v 	Temple 26, Wayne 0. ^
LSU 18, Georgia 13 (Tie).

YOU'LL SAVE 	ON FINE WATCHES AT KRUGER'S! Florida 81, Vanderbilt 27. Lehigh 16, Dartmouth 14 
Maine 16*. ConnecticutGeorgia Tech 20, Auburn 0.

liCTic U 	Rochester 26, Vermont 12;
Wake Forest 18, George Wash­

50 
Bulovd • ' Elgin * /iAr Hamilton ington 0. Syracuse 84, Holy Cross 27. i • ' WBST" •
Tennessee 14, Alabama 9. 
UCLA 21, Stanford 7.„,; ? , .

Le Coultre ic Longines • Medana 	'North Carolina State 16, Mary­mt 
California 27,-Oregon, State 0. -4
land 13. 
|Wyoming 58, Utah13.
Virginia 26; VMI 13. " Denver 42, Brigham Young S.

Universal • and a host of others!
Weekly 
* And now at your own Campus(Shoe Store t ' * ^ -On the Drag ­

i 	ow/fu//y 
»atch. E: f^ntion ba~J Sm
±9nd $37.50 

CHARGE IT! NO INTEREST! i-SiJ if NO CARRYING CHARGE! 
/ 
st3 
ft 

SHEAFFER DESK SET PRESS YOUR TABLE ^ wjp^TREE fmmmwri* ELGIN POCKET 
WITH TCDOR PLATE PLATTER JJL v UGKRE
Ideal writing' companion
(or Dad, Sen, or Brother. jComplete 54-p!ece service Styled In durable sUve^^W Initialled as yon wi»h at 
Charge It ... at KrngerV for 8, chest included! New ' te; well and tree een-Do extoa eeet! ^ 
v*

' pattern bridal \matk Is ,
$1200 	$22w
$"W50 

a sajaoic 4.-? 	*°*h.
7 
-K­
fay We Weekly, 
Pat 7Se Weekly • 
trie. 
r 
1k< i t-% 
% 



FLORSHIIM SHOES 
kefo tM$$ beoolite 	they wear fengerf 
m 
>'5^ Odti**ltW9 

' jalopies, th«a tfee food car is amore 0^; itaam diamond fjur4" MOLLIAMCEbrU 0IAMpMB^> PHONE purdbaae * •, and »wn» la true ofahoq*.
gtnaning fuhtatl. design la 14* Rue beauty and swkleat mod* 	fishtail stellar In 14-Karat 
karat jeWW £Urd4ieaded buttnees men have feond that Compare! -IAA m .-A
^Aastin's 	TO?£S»^ 
Pay nm Weekly 77,3V 	JFloesheiitt Shoe* actually cost fasti in^
^Sf»wHU;,25O.Q0 
¥ 

AAnn, 
#.•«*« f 
& 
«fia 
GuodolotMi 
?r • 'ft 
Mm

M 
jpfil 
raw 	iJWSfi? 

m 
wMS** m •V Anna dye are "Wica, Mickey Little And Mary Delta Pi and Delta Delta Del 
tntrammu 
Morris;.|*i Beta Pi, Shirley Bake^ Other teajns placed ln"tKe oraPasse*, punts, and the big-thrill Deedo Bering, Gail Campbell, Mary bracket are Chi Omega, Alphatouchdowns witl be huthd.*ir Mon­Shear, Dail Cofa^ran, Barbara Gib­Omega I, Zeta tau Alpha I, A1 day afternoon at 6 posit -when the 

bon, J. Gross, Ann. W[$tafre, and Gamma Delia, Delta Delta^l$lt «-V5h .women's intramural touch football 
Susan WAtertky-J-yii^f^V'^ Gamma Phi Beta I,-and Delta tournament

By BRUCE ROCHE . li^jWrii,,. r"knows riiles onl£ 	begins.
, *«»m {utrnwrai Cs wtftmdr 	Also Kappa Kappa Gamma, Seeded in £he first four p: 
• that he waa given -what werfe -per-	officiating lntta'
The 'ten men (Sames Will be played Monclay, 	of the while bracket are Alp
A little over dne year ago, ha bapa the, two mbst importaAtgames mural grid contests are doing e* Peggy Dowd, Betty JBeasley, Mary waa one of the least experienced to date to' referee: ' Phi Gamma cellentwork^At this time last year, Tuesday, and Thursday at 6 p.m. Ma«celle Hamer, Clare Ownby, Chi 0meg*TII, first pliCe; -y 
officials-calling intramural games. Delta vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon and about ten complaints and five pro­this week. The games Will consist 	minster Student Fellowship,
Jean Richards, Jan Scurbeck,

But in the past two vreeks, Con 	of four quarters of six minutes ond place; Zeta Tau Alpha II, t!
Pem Clnb -n. 'TAaSdclatioa, Tbofli tests had Jteen filed. But this year
•ell Smith has officiated two of Class A tilts. with two-minute time-out# between Laura Woods, and Martha Thomp­place; and Alpha Delta Pi the most important football games no protest* aind only two com­quarters* and a five-minute time­son; and Alpha,Delta Pi, Dolores fourth; place.
The Phi.Gams and S^E'swere plaint^—both oddly enough from 
Derigo, Louise Eeds, Patsy Kirk,

id ha played this fall. so Mtfisfied with hil officiating winning teams—have come to the out at the half. ~• ' Nanty Nichols, Betty 
Ann Theo-

la the summer at 1949, Conwell that they congratulated him on his attention,,of the intramural office. Each of the'26 teams entered in 
balt, ahd^Virginia Beth Taylor.'

given only unimportant and fine work.
was 	the tournament this year must lose Two new outstanding players are
minor games1o call. But he learns Conwell is only one of teii of­Golf singles entries close Wednes­at least two games to be eliminated* 




FREE...
Martha-Crosby, Pi Beta Phi, juid

'fast. And this spring and summer 
ficials who call intraneural footV day, , ; -J: ^ therefore giving every team a 
Ellie.Fondren, Kappa Kappa Gam­

Conwell refcreed important. sWt-	x 
ball games. Originally there were -And intramural office suggests chance to play two games. ma. 	thJt'> 7 •'clock of the game thoroughly; but just Twenty-eight matches will be
Aetei* vs. Deit* JUftp* £psltan.

Phi MU ThsU Vs. AKPL ' " as important, he must control the played tomorrow. Chi Phi vs. K*pp» Alpha. . ./ game and the players. When he Meanwhile, intramural tennis • o'clock 
makes a decision, he must make it-singles continue, but several weeks
Sicm Nu vs. SitM Chi. 

SPB vs. Kapp* Siena. ...... stick. must pass before' finals matches Clus A Club So the best official is not the one begin. ~
>SiC ' a o'clock , • 
Ttj»* vs. Little Csnipus. 
Claw 6 Fraternity

i o'clock 
Stzma FkJ EpsilHon vs. Thtta XL 

PW Kappa Tau'vs. Phi Slams Kappa.
Phi Stfcma Delta vs. Phi Gamma Delta. 
BADMINTON SINGLES 
.. .V'V:7 o'clock . 



RAMODS... 	$> 
WfflttH Jack Christi vs. War. K.^oater 
Harold Bob Hanm vs. Patar C-Quoyoser
Jerry Lynn Malm* vs. Tarval G. franklin 
William R. Arehac vs. Paul H. Smith 

made to STAY Beautiful! 

i; yrjfv -'ft 't H 'IT ^ ^ 	Arthur Fereeraon vs. Micky P. Thomp­
1 son -' 	SARAN PLASTIC
GOOD*" signals referee Conwell Smith of one of Pem Carl Kandgan v*. Ifafvla Goodman 
...mTvmr QUIIIS
Robert & Noimant vs. Oaorga £* Fran,

J" passes agarrttf "T* 'Association last Wednesday. Pem eiseo • 	INSTALLED FREE 
7:48 o'clock. 	. e-^ ' By JIM ELDER ' 
Clubber Ed Burrows watches. Smith is*one of ten officials calling 	S. Prod Boyd vs. William £.'Dicketson ' Texan Sport* Staff •CA^TY? Lasting, colorful beou-
Knox Millar Jr. vs. BoBarirfi. Wolff ty Is built right Into Suskancf

intramural football games this fall. * 	Ftaddy, Staphans
Biehard F. Lova vs. 

Robert P. Lands vs. Ja««i Rosenbloom 	Saran! 
Hanry X. Baaeus va.Tbomas B.Baraay One writer was so naive as to comment recently that six 
Gi*m Wm Beat* Ola Mis* James H. Worran vs. CareW McFall TRIM HT? No shrinking, stretch­

• NEW" ORLEANS, Oct 21.—-<£•) VernonC. Mayfiald vs. Stanley Rosan-plugs, a spoon, aftd a spinner-minnow rig were sufficient ing or 	Suskana
sagging ... 

—A massive mauling Tulane line •' 	• v. • for the average tackle box. This doesn't m£an you shQuld Saran Stays trim.
S:3K> o'clock £

RED BALITAXI 
held Mississippi's great John Dott-Nie E. Tensa Vs. 'Bead Collins • discard your dark floating bait such as the Shakespeare
Bank Lunar QUlam va. John O. Murray 	IASY CARS? A whiskyof a damp
ley in check Saturday as the 
Bobcrt O. Judkins vs. Frad P. McCtnrn

Green Wave to a 27-20 vs. Carl W. Wilson mouse and the new real-artificial minnow trolling device. cloth keeps Suskana Saran look­
rolled Praston H. Dial 
Franklin Spears v». Henry D. Lindslay

Southeastern Conference victory. 	• The real-artificial lure is*similar to the live minnow rig­ing like new!
John Salman vs. Barry L. Cott 	\
w&im ma &8Sm fjj|g|||p Dottley, a hard-hitting 198-pound Eddie Jack 'Sharp*'--Vs. Robert A. Sha-ging. A 'ti^dein^~tmatii>M^'''fo^ DURAMUTYt Age and hard 
w fullback, entered the game as 4be ; mans •. c _ . • the minnow with a plastic covering wear do not affect the beauty

%gr% 	• ~ v~~l . ett'a •'dock
leading ground gainer among the Danny Chaster vs. Albert H. Cox gives a realis^e bate. We caught When he has an idea for « par­	r
of. sturdy Suskana Saranl

nation's major football teams. Leonard Kirottb Jr. vs. Pete Coonay two twb-pound blacks on the 	Sun­ticular type gun he buys the stock 
RADIO CONTROLLED 	John C. McCullers-vf. Harrall S. Haydan day after the Putdue game. model, tears it down and builds a* KONOMYT You get more for 
Alphonso Ragla'nd vs. WilltartH. Dapper

Frank S. Warner vs. WUliain M. Brown stock and grips to suit his 	taste. your money In Suskana Saranl 
; Classifieds Ross Blameqtritt vs. Charles A. Smith It should be a natural for whites After gazing at the' window dis­
JoMbk S. Imuii tt, Charles Caaniaxhai at night with a Coleman-lantern. 
• TENNIS SINGLES play for half a day, it waa decided

6-9194 
In trolling, the rig has an enticing

Players should check tbe"downstairs 	his.hobby is not for the. average
Bring Results bulletin board in Oreaory Gym for match wiggle to it which even a tired 
schedules. 	school boy.­
black bass should notice. We ar'en't * •* '
' *' 

selling them, just like them. 	FOR THE 
We understand a University stu­
Incidentally, there, are some who 

dent bagged an antelope the past TRADE-MARK M
RECORD ALBUM SETS say "and write that the word troll­
season. Must ljave been an engi­
ing is a misnomer for trailing. 

neer. Who else could-find the time
Trolling, it seems, is used by some 

without the use of a slick slide
to indicate the reeling-in of the < 	il 
rule-?

bait after a cast. As -would seem * * •logical* trailing m^ans-pulling the ON EVERY MUFFLER
o 	Kerr County Wildlife Associa­
line and bait behind a boat. It will 

tion and the Kerrville Chamber of less Back Pressure! More
be interesting to know what you 	Bn{ey cool driving eom-
Commerce * announced a turkey 'Power! Dual exhausts for
trollers, or trailers, have to say 	fort and a minimum of
DISCOUNT about this, . 	shoot to be in Kerrville on Novem­Ford and Mercury. Single wn glare with thisber 12. .It is presumed .to be open replacement Mufflers and Only 
. Mr. Kenneth W. Jurgens, aqua-	Dochen Bros. Special Sun
to all who have the entrance fee Exhaust Accessories fo»
biologist lot the State. Fish, and 	Visor!
and a desire for the«.bird. Reports 
all cars.J;,'^.;/J
Game Department on; Lake Travis, 

from the state game commission
\On a large group of albums and single records forecasts the seasonal change of show the coon to be on the prowlthe lake water temperatures to come on Halloween. That is-the for the' wild turkey. -5IREAHUNED FHIOtt SKIRTS 
Weather the 	_
»m oven You may find the record you want at..; -1 _ time th COVXRS. Chrome­

'-'"get, tv v The Austin Laundry & 'J 	Modela available rer most can. Beauty and protee­
ttoo are combined In this useful aeeessory. "Just
imp 'em •a." ,; 	™. • 
pry Cleaning Company Present 
$AU 

A pair and up lighter
40,000 
BACK-UP







ihfiPMISftlF Oltt
(
^ -r -'t rt ' *» > = ^ ^ " ond 
Mi

h \ Far aiiy two people 	STOP LIGHT
m 
Chroma finish back up and . ¥4 •top light. Installed in IS; e • m minutes in all cars. 6^^ 
M 	each

or'iDRISKS 	\
fS 	Chrt»me
JiiSs 
TWO SERVHIGS forI the 
J.ICENSE PLATE­

'4 >1 •/ 
I 

PRICE of ONE en a Soci .Can 	{BRACKETS .. . ..49c ea. 
^"Vt t 	«/»
r:±r'~. rtit m 	mm
Lead to a Beautiful Friendship F
een 7:30 ond 9:30 in the evening NON-GLARE ? Mondoy through Fridflyw; v%f& ' * -4 ->: 
'(A ^5
'Wi

Ww Embarrasing situation?'Not if you tell that Ta^ly in distress^, *;::tuPKe-py«ii<: 	1
.SIDE

ipecial prices inside service "only •bout the Auytln Laundry's thorough and rapid dfy deaptftg J Wjt fw twvieer In fact« beautiful friendship may fesul^j .;^ ^ ISTEERINGWHEEL Keej» our phone numb#r handy tor our quick-free pick-up end MIRRORS
Bring a dat* and you can both *at for, tho umo jprko 	<>
delivery Wvleai. 
4 INCH

.COVER 
21C 

DIAMETCR 	S'i 



3AVEP5V. 
j-' •'hVST-?' 
• Su 
^iefcita 
•mm. 

CURB SERVICE 4 to 12 

mandsanjacintorpgm
w.-.n 


r ll 	ii|tfRiiiiiieiD ' 
Lavaca at Hth 	Phone 6-3566
•fi 
. , \,r * t 
am 

I m 	11 

4 ** 	jpitsspT'^W; '"W i ;«i 
£iSi 
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•V'5M? «JF«/ 380# ?| ^ 	«$* 



Frontier Atom Scientist 
'C.1 A ' 
as mw
of.Lanqson Sought *bi 
^ 71 	W­
51Britisher Believed
SAIGbN, 	_ a gradual 'from border.. ward to the northern fringeaof
(ff1)—-French abandonment of the positions, ended French chances of the rich Bed River delta. v jTd Be in Moscow
headquarters fortresB:f Chi Minh regime, how has the corvo, who arrived in Finland, the Sukchon-Sunchon area about To"ky& headquarters, as a routine 	milte ttorOs > of, Pyongyang;'"1 
area some ?8,000 Reds wet«

and "no further withdrawal of our time. The French defense line in 	space and means of preparing a September 2. That *» the last 40 miles, north of the captured supply operation. ~ lieved trapped..
troops i* foreseen." North Indochina is being, shifted 	full, scale offensive against the official word of him. He was with Communist capital of Pyongyang, A joint American-South Korekn The trap for. the 28,000 Reds, ^ ^Nimsg irThe evacuation of Langson, part an average of about 75miles south' principal French }strongholds far­his wife, Helena Marianne, and said a report toU.S. Eighth Army task force also was knifing north­nrst set by 4,100 paratroopers in
his thrpe children* v" 	Xt& Ma* Cvnta*; toMfan m
ther south. The purely guerrilla All Borneo Hewspkpefs except 	Headquarters. ward from -the Sukchon-Sunchon ! an air drop Friday at Suachon 
_ 	27 miles to the

phase of the' four-year old war. in 
those of the CommunUb' line c&Tl
Indochina has ended. 	itampo
ried under their blackestheadlines
SPECIALIZING IN 	The turning point was The
marked 	.
a 'report that Pontecorvo skipped 	' 
this month bya-eeriw^atunning ^Poland^aiL_waifeLjfiMoscow. 	?i«apr Ml s tmfr;
l*aVai*SD(l TA» 4-VIA 	_ 1 • 1 • TV•. — -:i •.
' • Steaks • Salads reverses for: the" French frontier 	Some said he got out just ahead v«j:| the west coast to one
garrisons. In two weeks/the French of Italian police and British in­
My ac^eis from ~~~ '

• Sea Food 	lost more than 8/)00-first line telligence agent*.
troops. " 	The task lote* racing
The British "Foreign Office and 
Big Five:Peace Talk Confab
Open 11 a.m.-9 p.m.-—Closed Monday During their, first successful en­	Scotland Yard indicated theys had Kttjang was seeking * trs&iloadl'^^ 
• 	' v^-.. ' • . i''.. • • ; • •v.V.V.^rT^ nranwoM nM*»U «... k. ujjJl? '•
gagement with major French no interest. His father; Massimo, prisoners reported to be MddW TARRY TOWN RESTAURANT forces, the Vietminh disclosed a in Milan, said he had not reason LAKE SUCCESS, Oct. 21—" r^J||«
The Security Council got nowhere

nish border control post. stubbornly attempted to have the 	not to get its. hope* up. He has again Saturday in its attempt to That «rmy, onee *nitlilMa,"!^repeatedly emphasized that Russia agree on a secretary-gwueraL Ai-ttet^eqniped 4trv*«rio» font* im! must-he Judged by her deeds, not tual selection of a secretary-gen­160,000, now ia estimated by GN&ilwords'. eral is up to the Assembly, acting eral MacArthur's lieadqnartert 4#" 
The Syria-Iraq proposal recom­on recommendations of the Securi­68,000 men—iunsupptied and vh|^' mends that the five permanent Se­ty Council. able to gei «et anjnrhs^a it* w curity Council , members—China, In the Political Committee, Vi­United States, Rtissia, Britain and shinsky repeatedly utged the com­Nations forces. 
France—consult together on their mittee against an "ostrich" policy
differences. It sets no date for the of refusing to identify the Com­22 Flavors of Ice Cr*mx&,
PRAGUE, .Czechoslovakia, Oct. isters of seven satellite nations at talks. -­
munist Peoples Republic as the

21—(ff)—A group of Communist the Czerain. palace in Prague. 	.Combination Simdait " 
The Big Five, however, agreed representative of China.
nations headed by Soviet Russia It called 	for: CMSS-RBIS
after a Security Council meeting "Let's not he like ants,like birds, sail
called on the Big Three Western 1—A proclamation by the Soviet' 4 
powers Saturday night to join' Rus­Union, Britain, France and the -or like ostriches, who seeing ap­S.4' 4i23Gn^Ul«t^ $ 


til»Uthat 
proaching danger. hide their heads

sia in a four-point plan for estab­United States "that they will not 	Hie JERSEY
r-vIfiT•> y
under their wings," ha declared.

lishment of "a democratic, peace-allow remilitarizati&n of Germany
loving, all-German sovereign gov­and her being dragged into anyernment." aggressive plans. L A communique set forth the ideas 2—"Removal of all hindrances in We wilt Mive two family'iftyii mi Y TO adopted at a two-day conference development of a peaceful German 

the!... 
economy. .. \ 	Sunday, Oct* 22. 1950,^
of .Soviet Deputy Prime Minister 
WA^INGTON^ Octi 21.-- employes while would-be rescuers the speech Will serve to sharpenlooked on helplessly" The' truck WASHINGTON, Oct. 21—(VP)— the dilemma developing in' the driver, Thomas D. K6ch, 28, of The Communist bloc's new call for policies of the western powers^as 
The 	San Antonio, died later in a San measures to unify Germany and the Korean war draws to a close. 
Produce Antonio hospital. end its occupation; was initially —Informed diplomats in Wash* .The truck driver's clothing "was regarded here ^Saturday as a po-ington feel now that Russia is try­
Daily Quick 	ignited when the engine cut in two li'tiial and propaganda counter-ing to take advantage of the Ko~ 
the gasoline loaded carrier. The move against Western European rean^development to lull the world 

Texan 	crash derailed and set fire to 10 defense plans. v; ' ito a false sense of security.
Results 

cars and the locomotive. The dead Diplomatio offiiciala said, how­trainmen, all of Smithville, were ever, that the new proposal wottld Tuck Reeder, engineer; Gilbert have t» be studied in detail before

Ftirnished Apartment 
Nursery Johnson, fireman.; G. 	H. Erlich, a final estimate of Soviet inten­

SEIBERLING
brakeman. . 	­
-• -1108 WEST .29th;. iowfir two bedroom 	tions could be made, -
apartment with private patio Sntrincg. 
THE SAFETY "PEN. Individual esra for 

TIRES
Bills paid. $66.00. Upstairs one lor 8 your children. Monthly, hourly rates.
persons, carpeted floors,, new electric
UNIVERSITY MBNI ' , refrigerator. Bills paid, $65.00. Lower Special service for football games. News Briefs 
Meals family style. Homo made rolls one bedroom-with . small efficiency Pickup—delivery. 8-0468—5-0696. . 
and-pies a specialty. 
•kitchen, private entrance. $66.00. Owner 	h'" ? PER MOKft 
> MRS. HOWARD PAINE 6-3720. 	v DOWNTOVkN KINDERGARTEN, 400
2402 Seton 2 blocks wist of campus. 	Eaat 2nd. Phone 2-8668". Day care; 
Auto Sales Said Hardest Hit
Phone 8-9171 kindergarten, new equipment, certificated 	Pormfment Anti>Freeze—^
20l8 B. RE JDRIVER; Beautiful large teacher; experienced supervision, reason­
lower apartment for three or four able weekly, monthly rates. 	Car Heaters and S«at. Models 
• 	persons. Airock ftobrs, Eames chairs,
modern furniture, Hollywood beds, tub children my 	By New Credit Buying Curbs Covers—Brake and |
WILL CARE for in home
and Shower. Everything new and in ex­1216 	22nd hour, or
W.-St. by day. $120.00 for 4. See manager in 2015 A Phone 8-8196. . BaMd on th* A—oeiat*d Prtw , force, organized for Korean duty; Wheel Service Remington
cellent condition. 1110.00 for 8 or 
Coaching Red River or telephone 6-3730 or 7-7953. Automobile salos are bjsing hit . .Battery Service 
hardest by the new, tougher curbs -; Recapping

Room end Board 	Genoral Lucius D. Clay, who or­
COACHING in Spanish, Experienced 	on instalment buying, according
teacher. Near 2 	For Sale
Univeraity 2-8662. 
LARGE southeast bedroom for 2 boys; to early reports in Washington. 	ganized the Berlin airlift to 
MATH. B. M. Randle. SI09 frrandriew. 	. available No*. 1st. One-half block " Motor company representatives break the Soviet blockade,..is fly­
Phone 2r8090.

8-1168. REMINGTON "16" typewriter in excel­block from campas. ^ 	ing back Sunday to help dedicate
lent condition, Late 	said there was talk in the industry
$60.00. model 
Royal, with magic margins, $106.00. See 	that sales may well be cut 25 per a "world freedom bell'' in the 
city, SPIRES TIRE CO. 	Typiwr^%M«(
Dancing .WeekJays a,t 612 W. 6th. 	Typing cent' or * more £ggn the recent German the State Depart­
Pl>. 83-1221 ^3810 Guadafepe
FIRESTONE REFRIGERATOR. 9 •record pace of more than 8 mil­ment announced Saturday, .T"'.. ~ 
months old. 8 ft. with dooble size

LEARN,TO DANCE freeiing compartment. 	$826.00 box will ACCEPTED MORNINGS. Theses, papers, lion ne^r cars a year. 
University Ballroom classes. Monday and 	Red River dissertations. 900 W. 81st. 2-9444. There
seli for $286.00. See at 1957 	were expectations, too,"
ThOroday 8—9 p.m. 1 hoar class les­after B o'<3ock. • ' 
sons. 60c University (iris free. 	THESES, reports, dictation. Electromatic that the new terms*for cars will 
#r

ANNETTE PUVAL DANCE STUDIO '49 INDIAN SCOUT, excellent condition 	typewriter. Mrs. Petmecky 68-22*2. cause a shift in buying from the A 
10th and Congress ' ­
Phone $-3961 or 2-9086 ( throughout, with necessary extras. • typing 	middle-price to the .low-price,
ACCURATE done 1b. My
Call 6-2164 after t p.m. 
home. Call 63-8646. ^ makes. 
furnisked Hous^ 1948 TRAVELITE trailer, 24 ft. alumi. • ELECTRIC «.Export typ-'"7".V

-	TYPEWRITER. 
. -Bum. Prieed for nuick sale, jgee A.i C. 
Smitbey, . trailer ,No. 26, Unfversity insf. Th^tss, reports. Phonele 2-6646. Henry L. Stii^son, 88-yeai--old 
WILL RENT my furnished tome to four' Trailer Park. S400 Lake Austin Blvd. TYPING: th^es, themes, notebooks, out-statesman who seized as a cabinet1 

or five men-etudents. Will make two 
Hnes, etc. Phono 6-8169. officer under four presidents, will
apartments. Quiet neighborhood. Car FOR SALE: Portable Smith Corona 
necessary. Phone.2-7881. . typewriter, sterling model. Purchased 	TYPING. kind*! be. buried Monday in the family
All 8-1191 after «
March.1960. |75;00. Call 6-9086 after 
8 p.m. •• • • weekdays. Mrs. Wjitt. plot at Memorial Cemetery at Cold 
Furnished Room WILL TYPING ,t my Spring Harbor,'N.Y. -/

DO home. 1208
STUDENT OPERATED business for sale. Palo Duro Road. Phono 6-1248, „ 	• " ' >­
Well established.. Includes new truck
2422 SAN ANTONIO: Two fcacea in and all • equipment; neccsaary. Will con­	TYPING: 2X08 Swisbar Street. Tela-Rpber| Carr, San Angelo oil 'V ^ 
sider terms to responsible party and aid phpne 7-8205. Miss Webb. 
man, haa given TCU $125,000-to
in operation until wall started. Phone 
$26.00. Owner 6-3720 2-0609. TYPING; Neft, work. WU1 oall for and build a worship chapel, President 

deliver. Phoffe 2-4868 or t-9606. M; E. Sadler announced Saturday.
OROSLEY SEDAN, A-l condition, radio,
lka like new, runs like mad. -$360.00. 	• it *
feather Goods 4118 Avenue C. Call 	6-9476 after 6. 
-Csituida's first troopa for service
Typewriter Rentals 

COWBOY BOOTS, hats, belts, holsters. 	with United Motions forces in the f 1 T" "'i t
"i-tSs' ( ? , m ' '-T, ^ . ' i 
mad* to order. Everything Western. 	port tit embarkation. * ^ f* r ^ J
Capitol Saddlery. 1614 Lavaca. --	The troops V1 i . 4*' <•;'
LOST* Brown Evaraharp fountain pen. REtfTAL TYPEWBITEM THAT 	ate from a Canadian Army special >} ^ j
^Tuesday night near Journalitm Bldg. PLEASE if; HTriVWrn " • r" I n,' u"
.... ... • v • -v-v-'.w -­

For Reftt Fleato call Harvie at 7-C837 or 2-2476. 
Late models of an mal(#*. ^ 	v -' v ^ i-'lj Qf course it wili rot# 
liOSTt Vila yellow oat, ^VipiAlty _ 	m
H0OM FOR BENT tcr-wwMn jaOm* • 	^tow^pickjy^eharees. 

Hoy 	. 
Student, 1$00 San JaciB*«n>j»i»wnA>tt| •*. wflfflU-. 
J?8StUL_
With owner.. Kitchen privilege* -if d»> 
jfijitwMflirsia
sired. Phone 7-4648, „• . . ' • •* : ; -sis 	nothing less than 
FOR RENT a lai^ge aouthAkst rootm Professional
• Across the street from > campus. In 	HOUSTON 
nice bout. $25.00 month, ^hpne (>7UI 	3 
7 P-m. . 	Unfurnlshecf Apartment If EXPRESS SERVICE & i'Glomi 
QUIET ROOM for two men. Private Good workmen. Stacys Barber Shop, 
bath,bath. $20.00 eaeb. Space tor-one with • „ Batbwa " 	daplex —„ .faerly
another 
student'4% il2.60. ,lS07 Whitis. i ; 	2808 Guadalupe n two „r ..!• fcfto^n and lit. Hcmstvis 
6-8844, 	th. « aUto (aa. Near It30 p. im,
•«. ; 
buisli Noy.. let. Pboae 4t30 p, Ss30 f. in.
7-6TS8.

Furnished Apartments 	liS'SiS 
•UliLli OlDUU 
A1K CONDftlONEO^SUSES .
I40LUJ UOHW
1916 "NUECES, for bovs. Apartment No.-	A 
eimojr. apiirtmcat HDCIi W0300QIS 	Wanted 
!:.«a4v" oh ijoara nr.! "Um
N 	"7 Other CoiVsnlMt
»V'<"!*«4aaa HHH 
UollyWood ~bi5T $4£.^l^'(oif , 	WANTED BUY
* fe!,r-J 	jttek*
21 Also one rear. npartm«fct Ntt, 	z9­
Jsapatlpo S*0>a. C»tt 7-t08».

lar room, bedroort), kitchen. Both ap*rt-l 	1306 Colorado 
ments share batb. |4S^i>. Am sapors 	•O HL3LSII3E 
WANTED Sor I chfldrsm tofceijB dnfatr 
or telephon*| iiiiiB mtiurjidau 	;BUS
tho day. Call OT-moT ^ ™6^»720 1 
MH ['ir.Hiu i:i(4 
. ; WWBKOtY SERVICE
•LinHHO EDBEQi JU^uTBAPB SO mr 	ro-ro >trtn«»r-«)tt*
rWBTWS*N UNIVERSITY-and CapttoV
1" 	14UL1R OKUiii i .*, »*« *">ount o#' money Yor. two non-4 If East'lOtb St. P|u 24198 r . cial morality) depends » ,t uponffitism. It is enough lot me to con­theRepublicnn Party, General tMOD 18 THE intelligence of what sort of procedures do actual-.^ template, etc." "<• ,
4 	E^sen­
loessjr acandal 	IA New' 
jTiw. «w mnh*. ** b~i pi?mot* **P ™Wwbr$ 	Millikan did no¥^r«ia>iifniself
^That seems t^bewhatMilKkan .. That » a question of science on .fterlife or an anthropom­
»*<»«> wtok Joe Hwfcjr h» 	^ 
teeant 
*or knowledge 	pure and ' , r/orphio God. 
t }*|$gK

he miu* for the *ov| 1 	• The distinguished Nobel Prize-
he said. , 	;He did sa^ that the question.

winning ph^ieist opened the 
Thus he would substitute science <, "Do you believe ito 	God<" requires

Great Issues; course Thursday
:Jf y®8 	for the church as the element * an education rather than an an-
1*x.«£fi 	night with a somewhat elusive
exchaage -'ESS!?himaid# * deniai of 	anything crooked in Hanley's which should decide what is jK^:s^ and that altruistic idealism
statement*,' j
According tetter IfejJley him agreement to withdraw from the gover-CcJ, 	cialiy right or wrong. If your pta-can not be followed divorced from
But i^ seemed that he'meant
tngements sonal interests do not conflict with the conviction that there is "Some­-U~ t-^-• Vi^->'»*«'.• ^# tf! , W* race in ^change for specific pro-lhat God Is the order and the co-Ihe larger good of your,fellow tneir -thing with *Capital S| which gives
$nt ofaH 	Jierence of the universe.
Pe*80 "settlement 	"as you see it," he-said, then you significance and meaning,, call it 
, tiowever, unTiicy niayr;ftI 	Overlooked .hy many wBb Teft • 
may do as 	you please. "If there* value if yen prefer, to-existence

E

of debts/ 	the lecture eillleiaiiig Dr. Miliikan ^ uu culutlvv
haW meant .would occur through the 
*" Perhaps It 	is that Taft is a little -' v-for his "middle-of-the-roadiBh-my own inclinations, But he did .say: 
^

maturing tiff, ait Insurance policy#^ 	ne^s" or "apology" was his briefly
peeved at Dewey for backing Eisen-	At the heart of his lecture was: "I myself need no better defini­
v
...'' • --' V ' ' 	mentioned condemnation of thte of than
/ 	the tion God (Einstein's)."
hower when the.strange-voting .Taft is \ 	"crude superstitions," of many his definition of -essence of 
religion as .world loyalty, or the So the famous physicist and

.theologies.
Ing a little campaign in ./ 	altruistic idealism ,ot Jesus. philosopher^ *left the University
We-found this same idea, more
>% /*t 47 J 	leaving unanswered' 
questionsSuch altruistic idealism is not,

expansively 	explained, in a piece '

0om Heeded 
about what he meant when he con*however, altogether the basis of

:e New York Times, which endorsed 	he wrote in 1934 in "Living Phil­demned the "crude superstitions"
many of our present churcb atti­osophies."

Hanley and Dewey before the scandal 	of many modern theologies. .
j. LET'S 	HOPE a resolution to find He wrote sixteen yfears ago: tudes. Altruistic idealism implies 
We also felt that Dr. Millikan

moice iebs for students doesn't go the broke, Ignored the demands of Dewey's 	"If you and I lived in some sacrificing personal welfare to the come grips a
larger good; yet -much ot religion had not to with 

? usual way of Studfent Assembly bills. opponent, lynch, for a criminal, trial 	countries today,1 I have no doubt is based on doing good for the re­fundamental science-religion is­
that we should be in anticlerical
Lewis Martin, BBA Assemblyman, ing*by a Federal court for violation of de-" • • "Can't you type your lecture notes after class?" 	ward' which is to come-in the sue: does science's ever-expanding
groups . because we thought encroachment on what "has been
: troduced a biU at (the last Assembly, finite penal statutes. Said the'Times: 	that these essentials (of religion) hereafter. regarded as religious dogma tend 
had become so buried under ex­Fihally," Millikan referred to
meeting directing the student employ-, • 'Ueut. Gov, Joe Hanley's letter giv-V 	to demand a basic change in hu­
Einstein, "one of the wisest of

crescences ...that the net result 	man values?
ment assistance committee to look into ing the earthy details of why he changed ­
.was harmful. "The excrescences, modern men,"...When he said:i ' But it's a rough question to

Racial Barriers Going
persuading th6 University to hire more his'mind 	about running for Governor .he says, are "crude-superstitions.* .^ "It is enough for me to contem­answer. 
mystery of

student workers. proves once again that politicians should 	^fle. said in 1984 that?-duty "has plate the conscious 
life, perpetuating itself througn all

nothing to do with what somebody
resolution dtedStumor that the telephone, 	not write . , . The Smell so In Amusements 
eternity . .. and to try humbly to

else conceives to 	be for -the com­
FfiCommons "makes it a point to hire non-: far is not too pleasant..> but. ... per-^ 	comprehend an infinitesimal
mon good thai is, with morality in even 
-By ESTES JONES ., ., spacious gym floor in bet#een the 
part of the intelligence manifested

• student labor/' which, if true, is la situa-haps'the only fair thing to do is to wait • ' Tncan Amtements Editor tw'o groups empty. B , the derivative sense of' the jnores 	tCi!? JLtd
"in nature."

^ tion that needs .Immediate correction* a. day or two . . ' 	Cultural Entertainment Com­But when the beautiful horn of a "people." It*. ^ This statement from Einstein is
This was-interesting, because 	St. David's
|# Student interest has also been-slow 	mittee—made up of five students, work of Mr.. Armstrong began, taken from this sarae^i^f^Hsook,
Mr. Hanley and Mr. Dewey may be 	Thursday inight Millikan also sep­Joanna Lee Cruse, Katherine!
a staff member, and a faculty ^ad­everybody made '"a* mad dash for
materializing regarding an offer of the waiting longer than a day or two before visor—rarely has to make decis-' the center of the auditorium and arated"personal chchces iof moral­"Living Philosophies," on page-6. Sue Desmike, Milton Bradford Ful^
Preceding the' quote which Milli­

^Austin Jaycees to take in Student mem-they explain away this prima facie evi-ions more significant 'than how the color line was forgotten to the ity from the church influence. kan used, Einstein also says: ler, Jeanie Hornsby, Martha Rutls 
"The primary idea in religion
many artists they can bring-to. tune of "Basin Street' 	and other Keller, Kenneth Gale McCann Jr.|
%% hm at .half-duwjgl^al^ dence of a cold promise of a state job 	lies in the single word OUGHT," "I cannot imagine a God who. re--and Bill Marvin White. _ 1
the campus and 	still break.even. famous Negro classics. 
. H student leaders are genuinely in-from Dewey-if Hanley lost the Senate 	• he said, "while that duty, th$t is wards and punishes the objects of — ' r ''Seton*^
But. this week they found on • Such a thing will hardly be pos­	his creation, whose purposes are
what particular "line of conduct is 	Ann Edward
ter^iwd^ ln persuading Austin business­race, plus 	even less savory possible ar­their docket two questions as hot sible Thursday night, but there is Shirley Cooper, 
one actually best for society," as a modeled after our own—a God, in Seaver Gilbert, Dwight N. Kohl-
lb men to Mre UT students, they -would' rangements. _ and unavoidable as, say a flaming certainly 'no evidence that whole, THAT MUST BE DETER­short, who* is but a reflection of hurst, and Sylvester Lee Mat­'cross on the campus;--Essentially, ^should expect trouble. For this
not hesitate before joining the down* 	MINED BY SCIENCE. human frailty.-Neither can I be­thews.
they are: 	summer Negro University students 
"Individual personal morality, lieve that the individual survives , Bracko'nridg*'
town Jaycees. 	Maybe ifs too close to. (1) What shall the APO ushers attended Department of Drama 
•;A COLLEGE of Europe has opened 	productions unsegregSted, and of which each one of us must be the death, of his body, although ; Stan Sawyer Studer and Richard
electiona for most,of them. 	say at the Oscar Celestin dixie­
judge, has 	little feeble souls harbor such thoughts Rodriquez Teniente.
• land. concert Thursday when 'a-there were no complaints. his own 	to do
'One of student fepvernment's func* classes in Belgium. 	< y 
Univ^jty of Texas Negro student'
tions is to. try„to open up the__ market.. for 	men his "ticket
_ . _ 	Its object is "to form a cadre of presents sixty-cent
jt s I ii . « "5-. . • • . .
?that haft of 	the student bgdy which whose thought and action is directed to which he purchased through his 
blanket-tax?; ' V. ..
finds it necessary to work part or full the 	service and leadership of European 
Should the usher ask him if he
inity." 	e» ine 
-wishes to sit with the colored sec­
Working students need all the help Sometimes, listening to the Dixiecrat tion or the white! section? Or 

should they avoid the mutual em­
•aw««.geb 	^• -howls,; one wonders if we don't need a barrassment by simply ushering NQ JOKE The.paper devotes four editori­ing former members of the Luft­cials, who were Responsible direct­
What say* student representatives? similar College in, the United States. him to the Negro section? Or" To the Editor and John Phipps: als to. this affair, and three days waffe in the universities of the ly and indirectly for the death of should they assume he wishes to , If there are several letters in -af ter the. occurrence the symbols United States, but rather by an thousand*, does not Show any erst 
iv* k"* y 	sit with his fellow students, as he the Texan protesting the cross-KKK continue to decorate the enlightened strict policy of occu­while attempt to democratize 
j. has a right to do under, the recent burning affair in front of the front page . .. pation,-which has not yet bee country whose population was' -Oklahoma decision. ; ~ ~ ~ . carried out, which may make *0mi
.Law Building by "boys of small The cause of racial equality at 	sponsible for the deaths of mi
the German min<|.

Is Freedom; The Cultural Entertainment minds,"-then I hope that there is " the University has b$en apprecia­> inroads on lions during the last war.Committee was unable to.decide an equal amount? of letters prais­bly undermined by your sacrifice The last war was more than a In conclusion, let me say. that 1and will meet next Tuesday for ing the action. of journalistic integrity to sensa­mistunderstanding ' between no such complicated procedure infilial judgment; " I also hof>e that the KKK takes tionalism . , . friends, as some people seem to getting,letters to the Eastern zone'
think; rather, it 	was a fight-for

IS * 	' (2) Where should the'non-Uni­offense at the na.sty remarks made PAT HOLLOWAY of Germany is required, as de­
• 	the survival of human dignity,
versity Negroes*—and-there may by the editors of the Texan and --­
scribed 	one (the German

^ By HENltV BAEB Or is it? "t# t' ^-"*£ 	be as many as 1,000 ^present to s«* that the next cross is burned, in A KIND NOTE . . . ^ • freedom, and racial tolerance, all by of 
i* more 	students)^ 
igh%^to "majority, but belligereirf; . gon sang in Gregory a group of in-	tainly ...expressed the state we nism. The only love of the majori­•
ROBERT G. CANTU JR. 

h-f.Ax* you 	a Communist? Do Communist party or the Eu ruentiat^%7P^ ftade-^ orgau-arein »X>i|a's tfiiy, moved."i^'.»•-ty is that of "Deutschland uber -INSIGNIFICANT, HE SAYS 
In many the minority 	-*r­
you believe in capitalism? « Klux Klan; to 'vote Bepubli-cases^ " *• ized call on the Board of Regent^ REPULSIVE YANKEES "• " ... . I might, also compliment 'SUesTT To, the-Editor,* brieve in democracy. !\ can of Progressive; to use su-' retaiths.too much power. A and arranged for a Special section To the Editor: you on your timely article, "Are The fact that democracy.under I just finished^ reading "The But.^democragf is capital-gar or cream in my coffee. pointy in case is the-United, for them on the first floor. They ...NAACP"Defunct rnia« except MomUy aod Saturday, to the majority. A mi­	DERED TO APPEAR 'AT THE . It seems to me that the Texan': 
 or at Um, Nnrt bontorji J.8. X02, Inqofriea 	held in a allowed to virtually shape student poetry prosti-' "HEIL HITLER1" tions does it promote prog­
uni and «dv«rtiatac ebonld b« made |d JJfc 18* , 	ress to. take of
Jang. 	No attempt on the part of the a couple unin­
stance, -the sponsors could decide policies into nothing but a dis­tute'what sonie of us have held as
toe editor and aMocteta edttor dof&u^ ' 1 I am not of 	the opinion -for themselves .if. they wanted, occupation forces was made to ap­formed children's acts and make
gusting carbon copy of repulsive-requisite to poetry-r*-hn appeal
that minority elements should segregation. 	o the This example ap-; prehend and punish the parties re-it rumble with nationwide organi­
I

\ Yankee ideas. 	senses.
be forced to accept the ideolo--	v
-sponsible 7i". ^7^'r.. zation, shrouded in sheets and •

gies of the majority. My mind ^ Two years ago^ when Louis . . . unthinking students of the pealed to one of my. senses-r-the is my own. A man should be Armstrong played in Dorie Milled.' University are being taught to ' sense of sinell. f : Secbnd, the freeing of Use Koch secrets. . judged by what he does, not Auditorium there was a surface hate SoutherA ideals and tradi-One thing that "his generation and other high-ranking Nazi'offi­
. a»e for (WDbUea.; . -by what he thinks. The ma 	attempt at segregation by pui*i tions which have been cherished and he" are not bound fpr and tin* the first few Negro arrivals ^fought for by the people of
I 'ori^n ptibita|he?'t>are{n!' -jority has the right to legis-. . . ^ ^... that is to be poets—perish the Daily Texan Crossword Puzzle""— —lag reaarVed. -•: -Jv••• tfttV-late physical' matters for the"-™°ne a°d mThf*Z of ^ei&the South for generations. This thought. ACROSS 7. White linen 20. Win
v.-
tm MatioaAi AdvertiaiBK by National' Advertiateg whole./It does not have the' white„audience, on the, „ other,.. . -ap^. . ^.menacemei . * . must not be allpwed * 	m jl.Mutilate .-vestment— 22.Weight £ _
MAVATtflNV MM 'lilMMtMka
8«*le«r Collese PnblUhera BcPMseatative 
right to tuppress civil liber-parently ftlAVIMlMMplanning on, leaving ..th^r^to.• •UjiS™;;:/-. continue unchallenged, but 5. Fish (Ecc!.) (Anglo­fcB^must be terminated for once and * ... ---PURE BRASS? 9. Ireland 8. Apportioned, Ind.) Detnociracy means I caa |||ifor all . . .,we cannot afford to To'the Editor: 10. Colorless ' .AS 24. Footway " C^Uegiate l*ra»a Amerlewvlhiceewltiw-write my ideas' down in-an* ' fallow a fifth column to thrive In . , . I sincerely hope (the Ad­11. Cripple -. cards 25. Frugality
26. More r

English theme without fear-| Qlliclkt * '4^our midsC.) 	ministration) has seen last week's 12.Seaport 11. Peopleof ' Answer Is 
(Africa)-. Lapland painful ­

log expulsion. Democracy 	issue of Life,' with its rathfe? can-, in the
14. Roman 12. Plate . > 28. Throw . • 

not outlawing communists 	did expose of the status of foot­pound 13. Negative 29. L^ng, * Classified
from attending state-support-1 	ball ..The fact that practically,^
-, suBsaurnoN IUTES /N, 	15. Hoarfrost vote * -feathered

;flqticeA
tKioiauin Snbecriptioa-'tbree montba) ed schools. Democracy is hear­the'KETONE ' everjf major football star must . 16. Music note 15. Fabulous scarf ' Ads Mm tn to«ro *.«• ing all sides and then, coming ' the' Editor: perjure himself . > . to continue 17. End birds 30. Memberof);%
#*l»i oat of tan to a decision. ^ " « Monday,October 4> ia the deadiin»?4c-those that act but have little* to play amateur football should 20. Pigpen 18. Quantities ^Turkic . 37. Crowd UndMr»democratic govern# •y. for applicationi for Paxwer Sebolarahip*: thought behind their actions . lie 1 heavy on the conscience of 21. Deliver, as of paper people 38. Metallic 
, tor vtudy in Mexico.. Tferee a^holarahipf ' their deed* by ;using 	a sermon rock „
|P£RMANEtfT STAjPP feent I can belong to any o'r*^ " are available, each 9I.S00 tot aia^' cover the every college administration, 	19. Language 31. Twincrystal 
no church «s X please.. If I teontba atudy. Applicat -x 36. Dutch nam® (Chin, 
lEditor ' . KOIIMli DUGGElf choose to be an atheist, so be -12 dally. «-	iWhat is going on down.here^at their heads i^bove the shame jf • stamps for writtsfs& / tq/r John name)
-CBASLES TB it.. No opinion should be sup-. J	 % ™y alma mater? I'm too proud of pure brass, and gie Act that th%~
"t'hi Oean jot AdttUaiooi, Emerito*' . ... _ 	... . packages
«***.'Clmr2ie Lewis. Jim Gallaway^ heathy wtion can t ' 1 ... w;.} Obatrman, tAward Committeaj:-"' it—'love it too much to ttt by and University , + . htfS singled out a-	9 V*
liter ... James Rech 	84. Rod's /
j— urrtu^rb.ir.TiTi 	flproup of students "guilty" ot 
27. Music note

Editors .... Olan 	Brewer, Claude Villarreal,. Marian m. 
PendeiYrass, Jean Upacomb, June Fit*g«a*ld, Bett* strong central government tfiit 	S57u".i^1''who"uitjlfho tStTX lendiiqr their blanket taxes ' > 28. A figured ^ 
CifdWra . also accept the theory that j t a a T ^ O • ' W t h e v e r y t h i n g o u r U n i v e i > is brass beyond belief. nSt* cotton . 
• 	Tom Teiwy. Bob Sadler, John Baser, Mary essential human liberties and ; -Anyone r»gi»ure< for «u«k a -coorM y.sity and our country was founded It has also been msdie practi-"* #> -fabric 
Beaumier, Jennllu Kelly, Simon Rubinsky '^dignities of the individu#^ p»»«« cally a capital pffense to have 29. Public 

' vehicle

must be preserved. •Job. . ^. 	ik|ftfe:'.-happiness.-Proud of our country? forged pictures on a few of these 
........ 

3UBuU fighter

^•6 i?i m.i.Mi.iin,,/ .i. i (-,r-^a4» iV&Biwi ...A nation can remain demo*£p 	'* Sow can w« he when such" medie­tickets (Which xWthjeqf ifiniittda 
32. Ounce (abbrA

; PMfen* IKitar . JoanGrossman. cratie even with federal aid 	val tricks still exist—e^ist at the one of the dUf&enee bemeen il-' 
_ Carl .fate, penonpel fttanaipr 	S3. Beat to a: _. ' 
'"Ik 	>••• education, federal 'health jrinty i VI |MHI0W11» WUJ DV4DB « ' •' • place where education . and legal speeding, and speeding with,
:; 	Foley-a of BUmaioa, wflJ be on very T*.-.wwvvvvaVP* . 
one eye on the rear-view,.mirror);/ 
34. (sym.)

la this minor forgery anything 5. Downcast
• Editor 
-BETTY CARDWELL %eeds its Ranking" And Brow-, bufc chUd's play fiompared to the TyTract of
Report*taj • to ^ow w3te»e tte good#' j3nnent Batww|^ 1 •©VgltPlAYEjpi forgery of professions! football wasteland 
T°. ,,.on the amateur athletic statiUh°ol 59. Nobleman


mi 	'A 
Wt system is n 	the college football game? ... 40. Shape
-41.Leg Joint 

Sport* 	3o^ no.perfw^tt—hB^ ifi 
oft* th« job well. With evoiufc • 
lon «f thne, changes may %me» Of the c^llege dailies. A> * 'IAtBI! r.Wetgli m—U -V'* ' ' ryijM* Btadton »•.• In &ttf years we to 1:80 at fl en bour. ' statement ojt idea this may hive§^or;;il»;^ditor; 2.Point
Ten to rrotam
j|$M)^e; SoiMp sooialistic, ^WW ir# deeded 	tor Workl* ffMIB : its^mejribr;.^ on outright claim i%'§£ In regard to your article *ot nMtcmmuey
r«» Ton^r 
fZfrC-vj-V*1 U j ^ 
ml 
mpww™itft.'.ii
Wj -{ .4-<5* 

* ^ •» 	us VW f
3 ^-^SSSas^i 	e$
t ­



in 	m
fek f fl; 
!•*> 
m**i Jh* ma* contact H*n
Wi 
Grossman hetwMn.Sand 4 Mon­
Ing 
®aich hour from 2 to 4 >m, Mud day afternoon,in the Journalism ttjjfcin, about 160 girls will Building..basement to make «r­rangement* to come at torn*other 
m*.i.% 
how?. iQjhould.b* a* th$ Internatk&al Mi* Growman trill also luive * 
r.iw;'e£in 	bgsa u^casf-ai^oiM has #>rgptt«*
|ITO|apWf5iana ^ *iayiitirt in not P* hasanyjother{«»* %,%•>%*W&« 
wno&m*' -%i ""' * 
lae, she will automatically be 

,Jn&rw»vJiilk be.* IWDiwp *IX
eliminal"* 
H^'VV-v.S'V. 
_ „ „ axfl efitafl &fi^tjjn«dlast weel& jnakl$g_ it Impossible Loren Wim^ljp,4Lt5^*r4i1" *» 
iaiy11« Way? 	to rwtl^oTSi 
before jtfdgug is resuta

loads' of Panl 
in Te^a# .Union Sll at ? pjau Girls umbered from 80i?.to ,40(5 will ,v
' eompwiiment. >t*«j», i» Tu^ayv.. ^ -• ^ '
L	•  it^MiOkjflrtfc.A» ,• i.y,-. . i ruw > ti * : % a Bebea?j»lj| for. the.F«apts:;A<^} ^fCNte-. pj#a;^ibeiv.^^dtcfe b'» ipm*,!* fLrn^sfi Wndyof
f Get yours lodtyTBt pishing' to>' 
FoUtea.be^n^Ffidw night and>liw ^b, ^eir t sjpnbolic j«r in
* morrow! Select here frotii *wid« 	. ilcombines pho­
qpnljioue-uevery j^ondgj;,;.|^r^i gan a^-^nge voodoo uril^al«, tography with a lecture presenta­S low prices. Friday nigh^t in ih$ Neyn^«^tClub apd sp^ln^b?^h^ h^^and xil« tion. Admission is free* «« a lMtes ,»yji Ameyicft^ jungles 
v«* m will^ rbe «4iown int a ^re?|fetoui: coastal swamp*, to nach ^ h|dTthe price win 1». 74 cents. : . T^edne^day night at' 8 :16 o'clock den interior of u£per Surinam CandidaAesJu s |he . beauty cqo? in Itecii^il Hall, ,v-lliver-where he made fnends wifh 
-	ap hou« 0"Flame In the Jungle" Kfng Dendurl^d fi|tee» yeariiW, ehief,.
rillo.'. '. 	:-'-v Wilhelminajs blrl3i.' /»> 
Is The for Making Your t t intment For The 
4 ~ «.<; 

l~
ri t'4 ^ <. 
t • T, ( r.'
K" S'K*$ *4i
i \ ^ ^}V; i5T 
* ^ ^ ^ 	j*. i. j. J} * •? f pyrt#"
4r £,\Ac<*r> 
Make youf appointment and poly' 
" %%' 

iy:y^-4nAr^* 	, , 
Kt
/ a"iu RESERVE YOUR COPY OF THE 
CACTUS'NOW IFiSTOU 
W::'. 
SO AT 

'-V) 

REGISTRATION 
r -VUiW 
vU' \ 	iMA 
-1$ 
k JW'Zf&S '•frM 	W 
" Miss &ue 	•fte Atae il bJing
:w*^!&%$!professot of drama, has helped from * _ lent bxtought
ftadj»ni»vasu«>e^\^tjn04l £to *spm m>,w w»PB»^c^ibft 
war, will go on tour Snndsy—^pd faba* sbwn .^Uted for television production^ v. . 
t The «aat witf leave.Sundayv.»t 

11.a m..for, T«mpk whem the^ 
and Punc

Will i^erform /ai the .MeCloske? i'iir ff Tmi A General Hospital. TheXadies Auk M
o nmcfhtier -to
i^ary of (he VFW if sponsoring designing, arton ha*

the trelu.. . .* ^. 	0t-t
forra«ch_IIni­
v3MGuk XEYL Jn„ 8iiSi Ait^lo will present "Hipsy-Boo" in 80­minute; IntivlH^oii programs be* 
?f?#lori tor^TW'
tinning CJ6tob*r 2»*, 
Laney.
Most of .the show, directed, by. 

Knid M#
.. .. "De%
Tommy Jones, will remain".intact ; , Itliri**#* 
for Sunday's performance in Texn* li^^ihe .^nsiflo^ «ft« 
pie, CharHe. Baker, Curtain Glu)> ^o?ld f§r t*$en 
president, said. He added, how­ttssswi 
ever; that thesatirical "Guadalupe
Boulevard'? scene, which takes off to ana altwr tne penoa are seen 
on the movie "Sunset Boulevard, in -^f?e costumes. ­
, 
will not be done. . •. 
Baker said the trip will neces­bu^r for many weeks^matang «o»­sitate leaving the brigina} scen­tumea from Mi^a B«rton> sketch­ery, but tlie actors will perform in e»* They hay^ adapted lm p^­regular^«»tume^£ * •» v terns working Jfrom several an-
The Dail| Tex§ijin an,editorial thenjtde garments which they will 
last week,invested' that f'Hipsy c°m 
Boo|V be held, over, those. wh? 

??4$
misled ii>.would get a chance. /& 
I" 
see the show. 

-^ '-il.v'.. . ij; -4fM ^'"•. '. »-l ,'s® eriL It will be worn ^ Jam FoleyV Man to «Speak !olcom1» itf the role 6f Mrs. Pur­
, A lecture on "Merchandising^' die durUig Act IL • ,
will: be given hy Carl Fuess, per­,M> a forest scene,.Marvin &an* 
sonnel manager of "Foley Bro­drum Jr«. who pl«» the part of 
thers of-Houston, Wednesday, Oc­l^h.jCoade, wiH wear a Tyrolean
tober 25, in -Geology Building 108 outfit,' which consists of a pqiroj 
from 4 to/5 p. m., said 5oe D. short . pants with suspenders 

mm von con be a goot Ameer

Farrar.'. .trimxoed.in bxaidL. 
mH|8IHflriW^ 
, w.««v , -C, '» 

• Areypttbavjag^s njuclnfun^

Gold Hills' Delights
ifi 
you should? Don't let good tunes ­

Opening Night Audience 
goaj darifcers have the most

^nearly 80 teamed to make a show • Japning^ dancpjbe Ajft'replete witfi , pomed^,. innuendo,
^i^i^x&^deeaaUmalljr throw# 
mj-ayJVajrbfoej^y.tdd;

and story interest. Lenell Green
Ing peanut shells at the villain and to bis tested methods. So
appropriatdy cheering at^tearan­or phonfe nowbejore.thie winterc£s .of ,tiie hero, an^ interested 

the au^ence with her barrel-house
audienceof^>out 250aettledback 

rendition ;6f old-time favorite
and , enjoy^ii .the show. .Friday 
night at Saengerrunde Halt songs. 
It was openings night >f<«rthe .The; intermissions,.were. notice-
Austin Civic.Theater's.-".Gold> In the. ^pecialt^, acto 

l|st:^^ |eason*ii'

1^ie Hills," an 1890 tear^-jerke^ 
subtitled,. VChe Dc^ad,Sister's, ;ow, bat tms was i»rdbably an 

opening nij^it condition. "Gold in
cretf' and ilyly termed oj^th^ptot 

the" Hifls" wfll ^lajr 4verJ Fridaygram a "drama of ^reat, moral 
and Saturday night at 8:15 until 
further notice.

The plot of "Gold in the HiHk" 
directedjndtb b^Mel 
Pape, carries on the tradition: ' 

BLUES

"The Drunkard" and "Dir^ .Worn FfSS? 
at. ^e oS8rx>ads/' produced hf 
tiie Civic Theater last season^' 

4 J 
villain wbo inveigles th^;he|^l^t 
O&eaf-'Pa^kCetestm
firmer1* mdr^age. and ttare^i^is 
ip tate &e pMpe^ for iJie oil 

lVnf'Ori. * 

which lies under it. But JacJc jbal-and SI 
ton, "a heroic Bon oi the ^oil," 
with the he|p or Hawkshaw -the' 
Defective foils the vehement vil­
lain and saves the day, i£e oil, 
the 
the rest df "defenseleiw wonianr 
'SOQ^-r^^TVV^^ fiittai the New Orleans Jazz Classics 

v; Ja^^Men6«^^|fi»hero 

w>>
and«#ame», Klj^penbrmk as tiie He Helped Make FatiiSai 
villal^ RicbaH Murl^troyd, eas­w 
ily toted ofJ -the ^ laurel for act­
ing. .W^sehberg evoked aKouts.gf 

THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS

audience approval with hi* ^^Ui­tone yofce^ sijQgiag of jnich «^np tural Comnytrei 
as '*#hen You Were^ Sweet ^x­teen" and by warping villain ttl^­ppn|>rock ,thati Mbeneath his gtqg­
^ 6cl. 25-8:15 P,M.^3r^ Gym-$1.20
ham shirt there beats •&;Honest rr 
heart." fobperibro^^ ind fliH Cav­
, Musk Cor-Unrv»n%
nessj who plajed "Sam Sladej," iKe

,,l-llai»i»« • * • •* . . i-. "» * • -K •# ^ C.45 	[Qflfcij, 
•
villain's shadow^ pantomime^ 

theircloSilc-arid-dBgger scene* toiir •fe. 
terfufly. ' y «s x 

,To i^n^B ti(p # %r«e Ctiifiwt petiotmers senjesy onI*'v*f t com­parison, however^jfor ue -east.*} mwm. 
MM

Mms&m susM 'M
'#a 	3 
'CULTIM. 	cciiifinii'' 
Kl r£W*ir 
-rv!cr4;4 ,;a mij|ui NUA«te 
;J SUl Ma 
Mi 
' 
^'A >f,
V» A * " *> t
^pfilny'Orch^ 
+ ; 7i± C^'
(ack^Chorus 
Rutsa d® Monto C«rb^;;^: in SympKony Orche»fra 4 herald and Mildred Boidj Twin 

The Four Piano fbsamble 
Werfmlnster CKcwr 
'0rm• Hawthorn* 
J* Mason tower, 
Mi "n University GU Clubt 
;#4anry Sco», 

wl^
u 	*/& * -Ay 
— -rauuvm SHIHIHtW 	-I\ -".. t;

M OicucSfrwC >an-Antonio Symphony wfth ^scar. jytvafit, Pia««t *•
p.in, Wednesday ia tha )C4A at tha Texas JTfcfa. •' 
adstfssien chargawfll br80 cent*. Tickets wltt1 be sold sat tha ^faXHS, ^ <*5 ^ < < -'f 
Efitielfeoftik,* aeidor'fettsic Uta­
»r WARY AHN BKAMM1ER 
'CtnSd Assembly in vhlch jrau ^ky to-be avpzanideiii to « 
; la its of sat* liHwxo^tha Aasraihly acta as a coordinating; said administrajdva body^for the groups on tiw cam­pus composed only of women stu­dents. ,U , , wf'3^t 
OmH the perposes <^ ^arA|i 

. dent, wfflyrifcg daring intermission, sembly ft to stimulate the right
. v A i(*ari*r staid#* from North 
" > Models for'the show will be Betty kind i of • leadership among stu­
Tsxm* Stata College to Dentota, 
Anderson, Mitay Angwin, Shirley dents. The Co-Ed Assembly haa
^tts tt'&arifc* wsnwster at 
Baker, Lunelle Brooks, Lois Brown, been particularly interested in da­
Tfoversity.The 19-year-oid bl 
w 	Matjr Pratiees Chupick, Dede veloping leadership among ^ta In-
Tb trwn Pelt Worth, *»d 
Italic Borothy Ann Edwards, dividual and to stressitog what real
;*»«* took »©^ npon *wi ^ 
Jackie Farris, Jane Flinn, Mary leadership is. 
campus *w to enroll' In 
Freund, Barbara Friday,; Dorothy 
the past yeara, the Assemblyhas sflmnliited this lesdsrship

assistant dm*-Mtaar Aba Doris Hall, Aim.Hefner,
losenone of two Umtim through 	Leadership Training
Virginia Irwin, Pat Lamb, Janet 
Workshop^ aQ^ programs ou tha

„,ts, she mi then named fto> 	I»ee,> Honore Lo«b, Marian Mc­
sun/ect. ^ 	I

tha port after trying oat befar* Curdy, • Lola Margaret MeMiflen,
attadent-facntty iMgb* aonrtsfc. M*Tgie Nell Parker, Jo Parteo, As a major prpject this year,

\ 


Novelle Ponder, Joan Powell, J«6 Assembly ja placing to spoa* 
i* &!** Other mo^ds will be Nancy sor M surrey on how tha women 
».-«powd Is,not *am to Peggy, Simpaonr fietty Staricha, Mina stu^nts are spending their time. 

" iead«Mo» *•*» 	Stein, Diane Sweatman, Margaret THfe survey will be conducted CO-ED ASSEMBLY Execu+iva Council (left 
iurarj Patti McCarthy; Carotyrt Grissomi*An<

JWfc Wfflrtli'a Polytaetinlft 	Sue Sommers, Ann 7erHll> Kay wough Panhellenic Council, the 4o right) Mary Ann Beaumier. vica-president;
School,, sind beldthe *®st 	Thomson, Mary Ann Tucker, and House Chairmen* Upperelass Ad­Hitl, president. Not-pictured are Maiy Lofi
Lanelle Brookes; Mary Marcelle Hamar,,Carol.­
Myrtle Watkihs. 	visors, and special Committee:
sw-tt-KTS^.--i 	a Clabaugh, secretary;,Betty Ann Allan, trea^ Wilke and Vagina Prickyl, ; ' 
Kftft-^s«m atadenta ha** *afc" 0* jc,v£^di£;-# ^V-«^ ^ * f *" ' %. 	for Austin girls. In this way, a r.ecord can be made on what an Allen, treasurer. The six repre-, campus. In an October, 1942 is­
mM, **but they just dont *go 	-1 they required. ,
mdmdual•j _• is domg on the eampus sentatives ---m Lou Wilke,'* —""—•-the Texan front page 
* Uni#HitfClub, , •• • as • 	are May • ~r — • »————y stto of a -'-i
Wild* like students do at a smal-	i. i_x ., r »_--i ™ When:; class 'officers? %i
wti»f 	i
and 
what she is interested in. Regina 	Prickryl, Marcelle Hameri4 Article said '/in a precedent-shat­elected, the memhers of th$| 
dancing of \«fr Has Halloween ' Last apringa similar survey was Lanelle Brooks, Carolyn Grissom, tering move Co-Ed Assembly sembly decided when the _ , Peggy Is a M* member of taken on a smaller scale with the and Patti McCarthy. heated up the political pot to would be heldi Fetitions to
Masquerade Ball 
Texahnes, and specialises In tap. of; the 'Dean of Women's ' A central filhig system for mem-boiling point by its • Unanimous bad to be submitted to the? -«&**}; ya#r A*appeared in a #*Ses Members of the University Club Office. Lists were sent to the her organisations was established vote to request every wmnan seek­sembly. . president of the clubs of the girls two 'years ago. by the Assembly ing office in election to file a
«f «lx student talent shows yto-gave a Halloween masquerade 	die Assembly was instrum|
who 'were interested in their or­because many organizations did statement of -her qualifications to
j daeed H» fcort Worth tala-dance at 2504 San Antonio Street, • » 	in limiting the activities of
ganisation. • v not have permanent jriaces to keep hold office : with the Executive
channel. She aaid tntfon* *t 8 p.m., Ssturday.> In charge of 	man students .in 1936. Th . Free coffee is served for members The offices and six representa­	a ftCn 
&*. has Moi teased aboiit being At H.P. Bypee giwats-each day -from 4 -to tives 	chosen from membership . It has been published every eighteen points, and with BEAUTY SHOP
yeax> since except one. At the same average twelve points.^ The offi­
.vr , . I 6 p.m. groups form the council. 	3St« GUADALUPE
time it started the Handbook, the ces. Were divided into groups ac­
% ^ftasn fittj^Miind i»«rk> The Faeulty Wives' Social Club Frederick Adams, Mrs. H. A. Cal­Officers for l950-51 are Charles Officers for this year are Ann 	to of time -r Frea Parking |a Rear
Assembly was ' 	cording the amount
Sag iot^y-'hem«e«ik at held its first meeting of the year kins, and Mrs. L. E. Dabney." E.' Sparenberg,' president, T. B. Hill, president; Mary Ann Beau-	instrumental 1 in 
getting the column "What Goes
Capitol National Bank, Peggy has Tuesday in the home of Mrs. H. P. McNeely, vice-president, and Mar-mier, 	vice-president; Carol Cla­
Flowers were placed in the re­	On Here" published in the Texan.
little time for actbitlea outside Bybee, 	1046 £nfield Boad. Mrs. tin T, Todaro, secretary. 
baugh, secretary; and Betty Ann

 	k YELLLEADER.
-J rwioe, Terry Holtz, Jerry Bates, The Alba Club will meet Mon­The preceding year Sally. , An OUis Staht <<* >\££% • Tudy Leuders, Midge Ball, Ckmnie day "at jT :80 p.m. In Union 315 to then treasurer, and Unda Bsx^Ob Portraitplw:m$rw-^ Chstanedp, and Nelda Million. discuss plans for a picnic-party to 
attended the National Conference
The style show will be preceded h# held* after the UT-SMU ^foot­
of Intercollegiate Association «f
by a Wica business meeting, at ball gam& ' 
Women Students, at the-Universitywhich the Wica sweetheart nomi­of New Mexico in Albuquerque.
nee Will be discussed, in Texas 
The Assembly hopes to send aUnion 816, at 7 p.m. „ * Debating Society delegate to this convention, which
The meeting and the style show will be held again this year, so
will -he attended in informal*wear. Adds Members 
Everyone interested in Wipa is 	that ideas,.from other ' campuses Photography for Tho Unweraity jif %exa* 
• .ilw.ws . . <»".? !,* -i-SJpL5,' 	can be brought back. ~ 
... 	TnTittd^yjyv v -J . "New members for Athenaeum 
In the years past, the Assembly 	2814 Guadahipa
Literary Society, senior debating 

was quite active in politics on the
MMsM 	A program of semi-classical organisation for men, were tappedsongs will be presented by Mr."and Wednesday asthe re-activated clubMrs. R. Paul Fulwider at the first 
monthly meeting of the Music began a drive for 50 members.& Group of the University Ladies Students tapped were Norman Club Intermediates Tuesday at 
Black, Earl Rurridge, John David­7:45 p.m. The group will meet in son, Bernard Dow, and Ed Landry.

the home of Mrs. G. H. Sanderson, 
1410 Alameda Drive. -Athenaeum was re-organized on Mm Raphael Levy la In charge October 11 when installation cere­of tha program,* 
monies were held for Joe ColweltA workshop meeting of the Arts 

Vanual,Culp, Leo Donovan, Ted

and Crafts Group will be held 	. * 
MiUer,$||pwton Sehwartx, and J. K.

Monday at~9tSQ a.m. in tha home
-OlK 	Taylor.TMartln Todaro was chosen
of Mrs. W; Wr Patterwm, 4800
'A* 	faculty sponsor.
Caswell Avehue. 


META'S
^'iTheodore Miller was voted tem­

Members of tha Sewing Group 
porary chairman for -the next

will meet Thursday at 2:30, p.m. 	f.J-'ri
?irW®T-	meeting to be held Wednesday,
in the home of the chairman, Mrs.' 
October 25, in Law Building 105.

Alfred L. Seelve, 8401 Claarview. 
An informal debate will he held * ' 
HATS
CoH-hostess will be Mrs. Gilbert 
AyMs, \ i o ntha subject, "Resolved: That A T •4^1'V i^the Welfare State Should Be Ex i. ikt' •> *4
An ^vening of dupHcat«i bridge 
tended in Our Economy." -yhas be«j planned for Bridige GroupSix, meeting ^.Thursday , at 7:45 

She. GmAus Com to DnPont

p.m. i|i the home of co^ehairinajj 	are; litti^
is6 it
Mrs.. Kannatli„ Jdin, Ml^Eaft. tor. Henry H. Goodman Jr„
Fariy-aavantirifcwtf;-HiD. In organic chemistry *50, has 

m

%fdgw Grotip l*oitr"#i^^(t joined, the research staff of the to M9e| In.^ha h«mia-«f, Mnu 0. 2* Dw Pd&t Company's polychemicaiPdilJwr, 25200 ^nlcMay, Fztd|y.at department, experimental station,
9:80 a.m. 	-in Wilmington, Delawari. v 
m fas 


himmer andthins 
m 

^hi^^iie tolov$d to Wm4 your m%o

J -mmm.w mm f ;30-1^46 whan taxas playv at Horn*. r I

etaJ 

I ' 
M 
m 	llli 
•MMW 
' ^7£V .•.1 ""V if ^\ 

"jmm'm jsqiSft«i 	W 
Ikjiiji miiiiiTi mi 

*• -I 
V Afc 
«? AT) 

<*«*The "little** people:of the Tkxas that 
£|»* wT|p didn't taketime to soothe I
frontier intrigued Ltml* Grace wrong. W.'v feelings, Instead* she submt ^ i

:j?'The Edge of Time" depicts two hooks en Texas, one of them scrapes with agents and publish* 	*
Dr. EngerrMd ' 6f 	per will Se served. •
tfce pioneering stage that divided written by Dr. W. P. Webb of the ers« In 1947 shfe wrote "The 	Prance and was educated in Eur­*Ye Are the Light of the A* representative
University. " --. ,
the ranch and the' farm frontier, Years of the Locust," and her 	ope. He holds * bachelor of *ei-World" will be the Subjett of the holies-Anonymous will address the
•he explained to friends Friday at "The Edge of Time" wirscfted-agent told her it wftsn't fit to etice degree from tin University sermon by the Rev. John Barclay group this Wednesday night ea. an autograph party et theTexas. oled for publication in September, print. On her own, she submitted of .Bordeaux and received his doc-at the 10:55 a.m. service at Cen­
1	the facts of drinking.
Bookstore, , . . but her publisher^ reset publica­the novel to Redbook and won 	tore degree from The University tral Christian Church Sunday. 
Anyone interested may

the magfczine'4 first-place f l0,000
Mine Erdman believweach plo^ tion for 1962. They gave hee ftix 	of Texas. |h „ ^ The Christian Youth Fellowship A 26 cent charge Is made"for til* 
neering stage was different, and months to soothe her feelings, six contest prize lar that .year. She 	He h«r teerVliPBttSer 8# the will have * supper meeting {Sun­meal. Twm
-».

she tried Ub depiet the last pi©-months to do some thinking, and now has a. new agent, University staff since 1920. Be-day at # p.m. The DSF will have #m 
neering-transition? Btrt -whew-W one year to rerise the story. & o|.Esm£ forathat time he taught in the an installation service for the 

.The Rev. Koith Bardin, ­

publishers sAw the wbrk, they said 	Miss Erdman, flaming angry, Miss Erdman drew many charac­University of Brussels, Dilgium, newly aleetedoflfteerfc— yf|) 
^ ^

1 ters frortr true life. 	aJ 1*.^' J 1.1. _ net. . .«• *4 *Tt
The farmer 	the University of Mexico, and the The speaker for the" junior .and charge of 11 a.m. services at St.
; « ' ^ " ' * who traded a horse for a .piece of 	University of. Mississippi. senior high groups will be Guil-' David's Episcopal Church. Hisland now -harvests 50 bushels Of lecmo R. Padolina, Filipino stu sermon will concern the eotteg*
wheat from each acre. 
A series *of four weekly meet­dent in the University. work of the church. 
Miss Erdman feels that the rea­ings to discuss the nature of ef­son she first wroUK her ; newest fective group worship begins at We8t«iin*ter Student Fellowship The Rev. Gray Blandy, directorbook so poorly was that she feared the University YMCA Tuesday, 
New Rocks5 Added 	•', 
of the Canterbury Episcopal Bible

To Costume Jewelry the Panhandle people might be 	October 24 from 4 to 5:80 o'clock. 
Chair, will preach at All Saints4 -offended. Now these people are Mrs..T. L. Clemons of the Uni­Episcopal Church following morn-f&J
• Gold, bleak Labrador may put said to have revolutionized the very satisfied wi^h the book,.' .jV

"yyrtif:I* < 	.mil 
wMFx

jTl^Sc, 'V' -fj, 








mM 	toe* 
* n\*i 	"5 / V/
^•gf 	MSK 
r
, • •••••*• . iM>.i..<< 1 r n r II. in.,).'!.. nLj...f j,i)!!!iX.^ljlgSuSWj^'||,j^;!g>/|yaBitiWifi!8^8W!lf>l**^>*gg*'y'jiSij8 
Sing-Song lis Set 	p 

*H '«; 
To 

'Thefitteenth «aw»l «ta*S«« and women's divisions. Each group thorough .investigation of tures had been replaced1; or student constilution. t bdnrve that Pre-Regisfrafio 
jm been scheduled for December • allowed to slog two Songs, fad SlankeVTax violations found at ' mated over the originals. ' -all seven cases can be heard and 

To Bagin Mond6y^fe:7­

tin G»«wttojW| i**®"* the titles of these songs must ac­	the OU-Texas game in Dallas will Some 50 other Blanket Taxes fairly disposed of in one after­' 
•ad Hank *e**y, Sirig-Song *e* company the^ flfi filing:" ifou 	begin Monday, Kleber C. Miller, Were taken -at the game -also. noon," he said. < Monday and Tuesday axe pr«­
These cases were handled by the -If the students believe"that ac­
chairmen, announced. Groups «te xkot allowed to com­student Attorney general,, , said 	registration-dates for gtudenti v
Saturday. 4 ^ 	Athletic Council. The Coundl de­tion taken by.the Student Court
Entriee can b« made Uds week pete against one Another *ith the 	w^phlng to attend the twelfth an* s
cided week 	or-unreasonable, -
ia Dean J*ck Holland'* office by same wtttg^ Hank £erry »*&•/, . 	Meanwhile, students apparently last to temporarily is unfair they nial Texas Personnel and Man* 
all fraternities and •ororiti« who "Besides the competitive spirit 	hteded warnings of misuse of their suspend the-Taxes until $he A&M may appeal to the . Student-agement Conference November Sf« ­
game* „ 	,« Faculty Discipline Committee, the
Blanket Taxes. Mr. Ed OIK

ph» to putieipaia in thia#pro-of Sing-Song, there's always a spe­
Dean Nowotny said-he had con­Dean aaid, -Thi« action, will be
business manager" ef Intercol­

gram. Sponsored by Inter-frater­cial unity built op among people 	fidence that the Student Court final, however. •• Any. student~may pre-register,
nity and Panhellenic Councils, who come together to sing," Fer­	legiate Athletics, reported that not 
will handle the present situation * Dean -Nowotny said he didn't and thus avoid the regular $5 
Sing-Seng has become A ry said, in urging groups *•' W-	a single Blanket -Tax was taken
highly 	i n *•> mature'manner.• think the violations were''serious tee, Keith Davis, chairman*of-re­
up at the Arkansas game Satur­

skilled §n4.competitive event. ticipate. , , . 	day. "I hope they don't, get tangled enough to-warrant suspension or gistration, said. 
Thi* yearsix trophies will 1»" ~ Lkit year KapfcrAJphaTheta 	up in legal technicalities of the dismissal from the University. Faculty members are also urged
The investigation, will determine

and Beta Theta Pi won first place
awarded, three each in the men'* 	to register before October-25 for ­
if evidence warrants a heating'

Honors, with Chi Omega an4 Delta
^a-lJS 	a reduced fee of $8.
by the Student Court of the seven

Kappa 	336SSr£!p{£-:
•tafHftntat Tyhofle Blanket Taxes 	rjpree; ftdmlnnldp for student* fli .
Delta Pi and Pi Kappa Alpha 
found altered and useJ~By 	­
third. This year & number"df or* were 	a way of encouraging attendance. 
non-students. 	fl) J ST| The conference will enable t^iem
nisations havealready started 
"This is a chance for student 	to associate with businessmen, see
practice.'*' ••' -J"
Mian Dances 
Tentativeftor Sing-Song government to prove ithat it is how they work, and hear some ef this year are as follows: TEN-GALLON HAT end a-western welcome were given vt? capable of handling student af­theirJldeas, Mr. Davis said. Indian dance* will be given at X.-Each group shall sing one' Otis Douglas, coach of the Arkansas team by University Cowboys fairs," Arno Nowotny, dean of Some of the speakers for the "Wie first meeting of .the Austin fraternity or sorority song and; wKen he arrived, in Austin Friday-for the Arkaosas-7exljs game. student life, stated. conference will «be Ernest H. Reed, 
Architects fail to integrate build­iod of rapid change, where no mo­
Cerebral P*lsy Treatment Cen­one song of their oWn choice. TraditionaHy, Cowboys present ten-gallop hats to a visiting coach "So far not much has been 	manager of education and train­
ings to immediate surroundings dern city remains the Bame for ing for the International Harves­
ter's Parent Study Group. The There will be no duplications playing UT in Austin for the first time..Fifteen Cowboys met the done by the attorney general's 	S
dances will be presenfed by the of songs. 	office since ^ we will'work closely today, said Carl Feiss of the Fed­mor^ than twenty minutes, Mr, ted Company' of Chicago; Alfred
.:i: Arkansas players at the' airport 	and escorted them downtown..
Boy Scouts of the Order of the 3. There will be no mettteyk 	with Mr. Olle,1* Miller said. "How eral Housing Authority, Washing-Fiess said. J Morrow, president, Harwood
Presentation was made by Wales Madden.
Arrow Monday at 8 p.m. on the 4.' Mo solos will be permitted ever, |his week we willrstart~the^ ton, D. C. Mr. Feias spoke ata Mr, Feiss is responsible for the Manufacturing Corporation, New lawn of the Center. with the exception of a few ban 3s# investigation in full." meeting of University architects re-dev^lopment of thfe Housing York City; and John Ben Shep-with background singing. ; There has been no date set for Friday afternoon. , ^ Act of 1941. It is, v billion and perd, Secretary of the Stato of
"t TKe group has been acclaimed 
throughout the United States'as 5. There will be no accompani­the hearing yet, he said. That The modern architect , jqust half dollar project to clear up Texas.


Program /
except for strike of 	will the in­work with otKer technicians—soc­the .existing slums Each pre-registered student. Will
one of the best teams to attempt ment a a 	be determined when some of ind 
pitch. 	vestigation is complete. iologists, economists, and engip-. badly congested areas in the coun­receive a conference badge which
»• reconstruction of the .origional 
m 6. The participants must be 	.In previous years students who eers—to solve -the t problems of try. There are 283 citiei on the will admit him to the meeting
Indian dancer 
city planning and desigi in a per-
members or pledges of the organ* To Afd Administration were caught violating Blanket Tax 	present program.. . • • Thu badge tnay be picked up a!
V The Austin Order of the Arrow 
ization and ,students at the Uni­rules 	the* the
Is composed of students from Aus­	were handled by the Dean student desk in Main 
versity. Incompetence or lack of ability Dr. Alvea was named -director of. Student Life. The usual 	Lounge of the Texan Union frojh
tin Sigh School and the Univer 
• 	«ty. Joe Gault, head chief, is te-?% The maximum number in among public school officials in the of the program by University' punishment was a temporary sue-; 8:30 a. m. to noon on the first each group will be 60. President T. S. Pafnter Septem­pension of,the Tax and a fine, the day of the conference, November
; ceiving treatment at 'the Center 	Southwest is definitely ,not the 
: 8. The minimum number of ber 80. He will join the faculty as money being donated' to the Cam­	on ere
for a spastic involvement, one of 	spark which ignited the five-year
participants will"be'18. a professor of educational admini­pus Chest, Dean Nowotny said 	Students wishing to attend the
: the ">"« types of cerebral palsy< 	Program School
Co-operative in stration.
Each member of the group 9. Participants may dress as v This is the first time it has been .luncheon or receive the confer­
; makes his own costumes which they choose. Administration, Dean L. D. Has-Dr. Haskew said the current handled by .the student govern­SUNDAY 9:30 — Intermediate Club's arts ence proceedings may do so by 

• are the last word, in authenticity. 10. All entries must be in by kew of the College of Education move for improvement in public ment. > ' 1 -r-AROTC cruise, Lake Austin. and crafts group, 4300 Caswell. paying $2 and $1.75 respectively
j

Igoftday, November 27. asserted Thursday. -school administration began'about are at thing,
won first 	r "We going the 1:45 —. Southwesteni Geological 9:30 —Southwestern Conference to the registration attendant whei^
The team prise tins 	11. In case of withdrawal after three .years ago. and is being slowly and easily/' Rollie Koppel,
year at the national convention "It (school administration)' at 	* Society meets at Geology Build­Physical Education Meeting, badges are picked tip. > 
November 27, the entry fee will 	reflected in tegiopuj. programs justice of the student Supreme
of the Order of the Arrow. They present, is not at all lacking," 	ing to go on picnic. . Trophy Room, Gregory Gym;
be forfeited. 	throughout the country. , Court said, "so that there won't
< have performed throughout Tex 	Dean Haskew said. He explained The desire for better training be any unfavorable publicity to 2 —-Lenscrafters meet at down­lunch at the Commons; meeting 
Freshman Engineers

' as and many other.states. that the program,Aimed at helping 	at 2 in Trophy Room.
of administrators does not mean any _of the students who are. not town YWCA to go on picnic.
Prece4ing the dances, a color public school administrators im­	To M^et Monday Nigh
BBA Graduate Enrolls 	school superintendents, principals, guilty nor to the student govern­3-5 — Tea for all sorbrities, Pi 5 -r-Veteran* to hear explanation
~ ffl™ showing the treatment given 	prove their-methods, for running 
or trustees are lacking, Dean Has­ment. 	-of expenses on theses and dis-
the patients at the Center will be In Foreign Trade School schools, grows out of a widespread! 	Beta^ Phi )iouse. „ The fifth in a series of eight
kew pointed out He added that "We also want to show the ad­	sertatiohsi Sutton Haft' 101.
shown. Dr. William G. Wolfe* and "sincere desire to get better 	5 — John Vogt to discuss'exper­freshmah -engineering ^ *convbcfU
the co-operative programs is not ministration that the students can 	Physical education delegates,
associate professor of educ&tiotial Thomas <3; Herndon, BBA '50, educational leadership." 	iences in Europe to Lutheran 6 — tions * will be held Monday night
planned to replace present admini­handle their own affairs.
psychology' and director of the has enrolled as'a member of the 	Stndent Association, "First En­-Hitchin' Post. from 7 to 8 o'clock in Geology
Dr. Henry F. Alves, MA '28 and strators with better ones, but Koppel said ne had nothing to
.Center, will give a brief report of June, 1961, class of the Ameri­	glish Lutheran Church. 7 — Delta Sigma I^i smoker, In­Building 14. F. ,K. Pence, pro­
for 15 years director of the Dm rather train officials now .work­do with the matter -at present and
the Center's activities. The child­can Institute for Foreign Trade 	5:30 —-John Cofer to speak at ternational Room, Texas Union. fessor of ceramic engineeringi
sion of School Administration for 	wouldn't have until the attorney
ren will have'jppportunity for play at ThunderbiriL Field, Phoenix,. the US Office of Education^ will ing. general decided a hearing is war­Wesley Foundation. 7 —» Professor F. K. Pence to "will, speak to freshman ceramic activities and refreshments dur­Arizona* open a -two-day discussion of the Society Will Hear UN Topic ranted.' 6 — Disciple Student Fellowship discuss ceramics at freshman majors. Either W. R. Hudson, exe­ing the film and talk. Specializing in Latin American program when he arrives, on the -How to strengthen the United The seven violations were Blan to hear Bob German discuss ex­engineer convocation, Geology cutive! assistant to the deian of Future programs include talks |trade, Mr. Herndon Is taking the campus Monday. Dean Haskew Nations will be,the topic for the ket Taxes taken ^t the OU game periences in Moscow, University Buildiiig 14. the College of Engineering, or K. . by experts in cerebral palsy, child school's intensive training course said Dr. Alves will meet immedi­forum period of the Society of because of altered and replaced Christian Church. 7:30 — Free movie, "Once Upon H. Jehn, assistant professor of (psychology, educatonal psychol to prepare for a Career in Ameri-ately with about 8$ members of Friends Sunday after the 11 a.m. pictures. Several" non -students 7 — Delta Zeta flounder's Day a "oneymoon," Main Lounge, aeronautical engineering, will dgy, physical therapy, and medi­can business or ' government the faculty to lay out specififi worship service in the University were found possessing Blanket banquet,^ Hitchin' Post. Texas Union. speak to the other freshman engin­
cine. 	abroad.' projects. .. YMCA. Taxes belonging to students whose MONDAY . 7:30 Alba Club, Texas Union.' eers. 
^ ON CONGRESS NEXT TO AUSTIN HOTEL 
mm 
Wm 
mm 
Reynolds Penland Presents 
One of the Season's Handsomest 

•3 IT y 
-

_ Sport Shirts' 
Wd®?'l­
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f-; i­
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% W&: 	| i-fr ^ ^ 
5 * f — • ——

i-'2'A­
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with hand-picked stitching 
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\ r 'A* ** 	r* "rSL
\ <2 M 
/ ­
% i 	J r r > "v &/-J Mi 
^ iv.

Her#'« « viry ^uni«i tal»' L-
great pride in wearing^Tailored shirf-jacket ~ 
,'N 
kf style with hip-hugging Jtnrt+ed waistband, ^ i -fise m 

tHe jbutter-fmooth fabricfeels ** good next • 
as H; lo^'|odd on you. Finished 
hand-pieced stitching in smooth tones 
of kiggage, cream, grey. 
i' im 
ft' 	m 
"SP^8Sk 

'mW 	w
(ds. 
wir 
z&m 	V 

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Mf; •esfesv®-si3?s is&js ...J 	: -sssifes $r §®$S
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••••••• 	f * ** *" ......y
w> y 	r 
VOLUME 51 	jVic« Five Cents 
AUSTIN, TEXAS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1950 J 
?<#<&?£ 	-^ T .
$** /t^iff ^ts+i^jL,
K > ' ^ 1 ^ ^ 
»-, J.-WA 'x c *#"

'• f 
*& ^ 	lip 
* vaV r?J*5 ^TfttT^vvA .,.1
V-a, sep-mr*
~,V 
r ' -	i#CE^ 
Ind petitions to Hugh Williamson of the Austin Rotary Club..sdred. |
Freedom will

lij+ 	DaUas headquarters of the state campaign Monday for
XTOSK 
of the scrolls. ^^XTT' \

feioner and Tra­
$ 	ass* THE TEXAN 
A special appeal was made to the Cowboys and 81h&tI the Texan late 

' ' *i C^V,., 1 ,
. Jn.l, > 
to circulate Spurs Monday night to help circulate the petitions. ft wiirmeet with anyone else interested in the ^euut office
October 22, 1950
:.£&k begun similar 1:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon and begin circulating tfisi petitions. '' ;•••i-, :'•
\ 

§®?II8 Lloyd Hand, campus chaifisi II 'TTn manofthecrusade.and^iatii^ 
« 
de^. 'Sirii 19,D00 Crusade for Fre#­
dom buttons will
isti 
handed oert The camwuim ;
will last through this w®'*^



fijl 
Tower Chimes will ring . 
^*y pl»T to New York. rTH

J^on on selection of being formed, Lloyd Hand, stu­
|j|i physical educa' dent president, wid Monday. B. R;
1 	totJPrtedom is.%,;;.
fAlderson, assist-
pt rfiysical and .Barfield, who has been appointed , believe |n the sacredness«H|' I' 
'W*-* .-• • I" . 	ioutlihed for the chairman, is now in Dallas where dignity of Ae inditfdto^ |eraity'8 Employs he will,confer with the SMU Ral^
'V*V

i,*^Ss>fe *»y« 	Bureau which ly Committee about its orgianiza the right to freedom-equally ' 
^

'fc >4 < **&•* 	location graduates G°dr ' -„ ' 
tion and methods of dperation^

i. IJmiBRtiQst proceaa 	"I Pledge to'-rMftik aggrein^S 
* & 0, M 	*: ?ht sjtudenta has TheUTRallyCommitteB will bt 10id^^Bhy)whexwej'lA^»Mp1^^ 
:: •>:«:
M:	F ; cause of the scar-composed of 60 members select­on earth... titat thtt»:world, * 
f 	i#"; W 4 the physical edu-ed from written applications. At God, Bhall Mva # JWW birth
ieast sophomore standing and % 
/ -i />< |.

4 itfL 	W. aers represented demonstrated desire to further To signal £he fact that the ~ 
student activities are required to

*^ 	the meeting. •age of freedom has beeti sooiic
>v 	be a member of this committee^
Jv 	Mderson, T. E. behind the Iron Curtain^ b
Hand said.

nont, Joe Bowl­Srs-51' ji'ce, Hand Chap-A secondary duty of the Rally join 'in.: thepeaiing ~btn:ttin"TYiMtilf 
»haw, Mr. Ek-Committee is to greet visiting dom-Bell rings. <• * teams, arrange for their comfort , "The Crusade for Frei»dU^.>^iiwl|§^

and to promote good-will betweenford Di6$ „ schools^ junctionwith the UnitedNatio^f 
mmmm

%ZA4 ~i1 \V 	rlllnets It i* planned to, have the card Attfezieant are, aakad to *>ffar%;,f"
section in operation for the Texas-prayer for the United Ni 

. ,A. '^>5.*.w} «t.* 23——D. A&M game here November 30. ' when the bells ring ou^ asei Va* fother of Dudley and member nations wQH be d 
-J? 	fhatrman of the throughout the worid,
%•'ji iii*.'• 
of the Univer­

i i 	m
londay after * Mica Beauties ^ k^V>l\/ -K ||a tlw <*• i, m UN FlajFliiltfjs
A*'*?15 	' 
esldent of LuS­
eighteen years. Deadline 	• ' p, >4M 

|was formerly as-° >" ' V. * 

Over Forty Acres;

|e Radford Gro-Six o'clock Tuesday' afftfnoon 
nt Abilene, and is the deadline for all entries in A different flag flies today
ns in Dallas and the Mica freshman beauty contest the pole usually bearing theSeventy-seven beauties have al­
ready-entered. 	Star emblem. It's, the paft bh 
background and white polar aThree sessions of judging will embraced in^ twin olive branet
be held for entrants.' The first,

• v ^
1 'f*. r m. 	the flag of the UrUted Nations.
£m1 ^ ^ 
with girls in bathing suite and

f ? 	The tag was adopted on Oct
tigh heels, will be held in the

JxCt 	ber 2% 194? by the UN ~ 
."Ji* 	Union Thursday afternoon at 2 
AswanWy. at Mushing M.
o'clock. The second will be held -*ew York, and was flown &e1Fridsy from 6 to 8 o'clock with Ibrst time October 21,1847 at I

x' if-. 	the girls in date clothes. Final Flushing Meadows and Lakejudging will take place November
6.
ii **» V; #. s * <0$* i >« drib* fraternity, or indi-tho UJf 4ag has b««Bt nsed

• -~W' 


w* 	vidual may sponsor a contestant at UN meetings or at UN
vVi 	to^ qualify i®. 
iSntry blanks are available at the sored occasions,or sn equiva-
Mica office in the Union. Winner

/ TheJChancellor,and His'Son 	Kome eligible hjr *f the contest will b* presented ^pDn|^ 
A ^ at least in Forty Acres Follies. 
-.,. 'for their first Seven of the ten judges for nor of tha

T *v. 	the contest are ' Lloyd Hand*
' A'~'­
the equivalent president of Student Association; The dirtribution of

f-wmm^i| 
«s of worktlf" Barry Slu^er, vice-president of aQ o^r tho eo^st

•• SSPiP^SIwfe, 	organised here Mica; RegfosjprikryV Jfotfdsnt of csiiaod a-4hxeM\$t p»tes«t
• many achiev»> Wica; Miss Gloria "Se^is» of the the VFW. whkh Calmed Ml

5? -u^y»" nmmr 
-. —'ittident-"arygnEft Sigml.P^^o rMUei j'mm w me Housing Sigma, probably Department of Physical Training Department of Agticqlture \.. opinion-poll will -be circulated Pennsylvania State committee, stated that" student the best known is the distribution for Wpmen; William Blunk, assis­trying to "flood tho country* wl 
conduct a model ini* 	as tant to the dean of men;»«m» Jack UN flags to t^e th« plseo|^
TuesSay to explore student Ideas m• 	delegates will b> housed la fra-of such booklets "Hints on "•;; *• f* #«;*
"Got.' let's ft to the rwrti **J >^ight afr 7:30 for visiting tiation before the entire cpnveo-ternity houses and co-ops.' Glenn How to Study".and the "Hand-?^!*nd» «•« of"men; and Joe Gfoc$* * ..^.. . ' *..{.. i ^ reading room tcmight.H --'C-Jfb» petition asks for a pott on delegates, new members of the tion at 9:80. Offices* of th? local B*ooSi is serving as head jpf Took for Freshman Men," Another D: ?*****> «Mi»ant to tha deiw Th:0
«Mav; rvs g«t «» etwly^ three questions: Ideal chapter, and Texai freshmen ^chapter 'will take part. Th^. am enteiiafinment committee.  M I Shotud stadent Blanket Taxes who scored in the top 10 per cent Billy tenn. president; Glenn Phi Eta tais is ssoc^kr Fund, established in 1984. First 	take Itjtejy
«Why did they pfnafte Bob?" I. Remain non-transferable? 1 of Jfte freshman examinationi|, LjBirooks, vfee-president; Charlesr*eeshtt«n toon who 'in the fint designed to help, candidates pay ME itajltria Clilea«o.^
' * ti»e c«Ni4.;at Hi* lattao Be transferable from -on# 	•.•ir-Js
semesUr or theegniyalent ottheSr

*tud«nt to ancttijer? "«o» ^ *** 	denied that the B|#
freshman y«ur, maintain * echo­

"F« holdingi" her frxenet sn? -r^f, f( tramsferablo the 9^30. AH 'meetings will be held in A banquet for all 4eleg«tM^| 	ope _ !««wra«Ml asa&mtiii-would sui>ersed«
taW® «f at toast S.S per 	sssort respectively, of mechanical
student to *ny other person, 	held in the International Room Muester!» at ls«it^iii<«in hoW
jI "6h,„ fh* wm written . by Dr-Cf P. Boner, 	4ngin«winf aw, attending tech­
"dK isn't 	'4 
th# : — and women's division*. Each groupis allowed to sing two songs, and the titles of these songs must ac­company the #16 filing 1 fee. Groups ate not allowed to com­pete against one another with the aamescrng, Hank Perry said. ""'Besides the competitive spiritof Sing-Song, there's always a apev cial unity built up among people who come together to sing," Peor­rysaid, in urging groups to par­ticipate. Last year Kappa Alpha Theta and Beta*Theta Pi won first place;honors, with Chi Omega and Delta' %»:"faa *• #> -• • ' #»• Kappa Epsiloh second, and AlphaBoyScoutsto Give as .^r-asa^ss1 Indian Dances wo Indian dances «ill be given at first meeting of the Austin ral P*lsy Treatment Cen­Jmr*s Parent Study Group. The f;.-:fences, will be presented by the '' "Boy Scouts of the Order of the . Jkn*w Monday at 8 p.m. on the llpawB.of the Center. 4 The group has been acclaimed y.^throughout the United States as ^5»ne of the best teams to attempt ^reconstruction of the origional pltndian: dancefc. 'it.? .The Austin Order of the Arrow composed of students from Aua­?""tin High School and the Univer­" ---«• head chief, is re­f. Joe Gault, %::.eaiving treatment at the Center ^,"for a spastic involvement, one of £5!*he main types of cerebral palsy,Each member of the group j^imakes his own costumes which V Are the last word in authenticity. g'^The team won first priae this '"year at the national convention of the Order of the Arrow. TheyiAhave performed throughout Tex­^-• as-and many other states. s* r Preceding the dances, a color iff,, film showing the treatment given the patients at, the Center will he" shown-. Dr. William -G. Wolfe$ ^'associate professor of educational §p;psychology and director of the vS--Center, will give a brief report of ^'"the Center's activities. The child­. ren will have'opportunity for play Inactivities and refreshments dur­ing the film and talk. ' Future programs include talks Ji^by experts In cerebral palsy, child u psychology,, educatonal psychol­^ogy, .physical therapy, and medi­^ j^nixations have already started practice.* ;% Tentative rules for Sing-Song this year are as follows;. I. Each group Bhall sing otte fraternity or sorority song and one song of their oWn choice. 2 There will be no duplications of songs. •" •• 9. There will be no medleys. 4.; No solos will be permitted, with the exception of a few bars with background singing. 5. There-will be no accompani­ment except for a Strike of a pitch. \ 6. The participants must be members or pledges of the organ­ization and students-at the Uni­versity. 7. The maximum number in, each group will be 60. 8. The minimum' number of participants will be 18. 9. Participants may . dress as they choose. 10. All entries must be in by Monday, November 271 II. In case of withdrawal after November 27, the entry fee will be forfeited. BBA Graduate Enrolls In Foreign Trade School . Thomas C. Herndon, BBA '50, has enrolled as a member of the June, 1951, class of the < Ameri­can Institute for Foreign Trade at Thunderbird Field, Phoenix, -Arizona. Specializing in Latin American trade,' Mr. Herndon is. taking the school's intensive training course to prepare for a career in Ameri­can business or government abroad.' TEN-GALLON Otis Douglas, coa< when he arrjved ] Traditionally, Cow playing UT 5n Aus Arkansas players Presentation was r Educal To Afc Incompetence or * among public school Southwest Js defir spark which ignitec Co-operative Progr Administration, Det kew of the College asserted Thursday. "It (school adm present, is not at Dean Haskew said, that the program, ai public school adm' prove their methof schools, grows out c and "sincere desire educational leader; Dr. Henry F. A1* for 15 years direct sion of School Adt the US Office of ; open a two-day di program when he campus Monday, said Dr. Alves wil ately with about the faculty to la projects. ~ ® Reynolds Penlart One of the Seasonj Sport SI --X. , \ • 4 • 6 • v. • • ; with hand-picket «^ + / > v *$£ 14^-r 2"*" 5 \ t \ K| ., vJ. ^ i V W Here s a very unusual «i»rt great pride in wearing. Ta^ style with Hip-hugging the butter-smooth fabric -M. b p , . + V Jl ^r—  JACINTO ' INN tetb a s«» jtthis Try onr File! Mixtion Enjoy our Sizzling Stealca The Bcit Fricd CbickeH in T«wa QUICK SERVICE THE HOMESTEAD GOOD FOOD Open 5-10 ^ SMORGASBORD AFTER THE GAME SATURDAY No Reservations R»q«ur«<} 7436 Dallas Higlrwar! Phone S3-90S3 s.-ipj''­rmr Savory -Treats In Mexican Eats Bring Your Sweets •o EL MATAMOROS Famous for Crispy Tacos 504 East Atom Il Costs Less Than You Think Rent a New Car • from HILLARDS 504 Bitizos Phone 7-3441 "W« Msjr Km Bat N«r«t CIm*" . Don't Walfc l CAU 7-6133 OWL TAXI RADIO CONTROLLED CARS FAST SERVICE ^ VkciinW inije, SMewalla -Steal etsMed WHITE. • 91.00 MM.RFR tkm Thnrs. (| Frl. thru Sum. $iJtS " ' "Grbae to Shkte^ ^• Auto Cor Wash Co. *21 Lamar iSERVICE Delirerifa to your domr, I v pron^t and efidentif^ Home Steom Ldry' -,r—i rtiirmp v:. .-, Ph. 6-3702 102 E. 10th  pictures had been replaced or pasted oVer theorifciTials. , " Some 50 other Blanket Taxes ytem takeii at the garire also. These cases were handled by the Athletic Council. The Council de-A thorough investigationBlahket Tax violation* found at the OU-Texas game In Dallas will begin Monday, Kleber C. Millar student' attorney general, said V* ' . 1 -5-. . .M ^ J 1 student constitution. 1believe that all sevm ctuses can be heard and fairly disposed of in one after hoW he ttid. ' . If the students believe that ac­tion takeh hy the Student Court is unfair^acuta*! r«vT\^* ' dear GtrUs* Registration To B4gin Monday ;;; J Monday and Tuesday are pre-— registration dates for studenta v-Wishing to attend Jhe twelfth an-i, ? j p"'"* *lraw'""" at ^ cM*«.. Tl...,. «"• 1°" r w« w-i" W «->»• ™" ,*, .•, D u r ii#' 1900's HaUo­mamm ture" semors . gave a costume party while the roudy underclass­men satisfied themselves with mov­ing benches, soaping up classroom Vindows, and. frightening co-eds. Hallowe'en of ,1912 found three co-eds doing. atittle spooking on their own. Dressed in the tradi­tionaT white sheets,-ftey hid he-hind the(bushes at 24th and ^ind. afuffe.-9^eets to -moan an^ #roan', and shrieked at paasefabj^j'.;>>£ v After several hours of ghostlyactions, they heard thudding,dragging aounds slowly comingtoward theia through the dark­ness. jyfath " real, -moans,, groans,and shrieks,' they fled into the University: Methodist Chureh, ad­ding their voices to that of the choir rehearsal., t /' J . Upon investigation of the ^thud­frightened^ era Hallowe'en started as a Holy Day or*Hallow Day. The idea of witches, goblins, and jack-o-lant­erns supposedly -began with the Druids who some two thousand years ago held autumiT festivals at which fires were lighted: as a symhp! of Thanksgiving 'to the gods. The Druids»believed that during this festival Saman, the god of death, called together all wicked souls who for the past twelve months had liv*a::;iiaP^the bodies of animals. . • Eventodayin out age of en^ lightenm e a %, . nia n y .. students will cast an an­xious glance ba>. hind them a*' thay walk pastthe new Science : Building. A few brave, .soul* may venture to a haunted house, hut it's doubtful if anyone will be seen «roun^l a graveyard at 12 midnight exceptvampires and ghosts. " >< Every 'Hallowe'en some slucfenta go to . the library .ather Peeking refuge from goblins aftd prank­ters or for studious purposes. But even the libray isii't a spook-proof place. In 191S pranksters locked a long chain to the new grill work at the foot of the stairs la the old Library Building. Librarians, students, hooks, and worms seemed doomed to spend the night to­gether; but a janitor ahowed up and cut the chain wth hatchet. A' word to the UNWISE—Co on out Hallowe'en night aad see what happens to you. Here's bafe* ting en the hobgoblins. , we^en night "ma ZS55S1 2S38 Guadalupe tVirottt Nil —Try Thf» Antisoptic An-SRD freshman the other tinmrfng, in to au '8 o'clock class, grabbed the wrong from the' 'wtn-TURN IN YOUR NOMINATION FOR W •V "-".0 • r • -• . •.« •' ;• f .• .'-.ff. • • BLUEBONNET BELLE• • • .. arj....... SECTION OF THE 1951 CACTUS v i i , . i AR Nommarionf muct ba vumad M M official blahls w|iidt may ba obtainad m Jouraatism Building 108. Any approved * s fit* Ji" £t '9 -­f> \tp S > Ibi-t ? J f" „ 11 sjs;,,*-« s 4 .>4^" f . »* ; \ j ^ k r£r FOR NOMINATIONS IS m i 5V v r i&r&znr' $^AX-1cl & 15 s\\fa iv *3^  
t ^ » 'Si.  t  S riV MA  I1  
'11  •Hsm- V  
m  
m  s  mm  

•V 

fi-­

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Student

0Mk 	Comma 
Void Iw»
ft 	fini
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 j£5 V*1 ^ * \ *3^­
feg®
htws 
1 J ' ,4
? tx\4

It's Only A Chemlin 	f fTr^v\''wiSIP^ 
'A Vl*
fc 
^ 
MOtF-p.^J3f$£K* iGt 	mpus
.t _ „ rSWw?^#'?'-	%— • • • •^-•' 
d petitions to --Hugh Wifllarason of theAastifi t||uV j

English Prof Created UniqueTimepiece 
Freedom will 
Dallas headquarters of the state campaign Monday for 
By EOROmVASCH of^tlie scrolls..—"

He bad just finished a clock 	pioner and Tra-I .« -X
r

that runs backwards and has been 	A special appeal Was miadd to '€)o^bo^»r an^T
[ the Texan late

drying wood since before World 
to circulate Spurs Monday night to help circulate the petitiosi&< Th^fc,

War II for a clock with wooden 
works. Ih college he built a 60* will meet with anyone else interested in the ^exan.offtce,*?

by-CT-inch automobile. He is At* • 
thur M. Cory, instructor in En*< begun similar 1:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon and begin circulating |ft» • l»»h. .. petitions. "I got tired 'of "the monotony . Lloyd Hand, camjw» dag^ , of clocks that all run in the same of the direction/' Mr. Cory said. "So I 
dgt ^denlj isaid ifcttfc

.took the works out of an cAd 
cl^kjreadjusted them a bit, to«gg 

dom buttons will also bis ­

'ti'iiefi to fit, and a new case out 
handed out The carfpet&it

of solid "walnut" 
will last through thin wee|c£:-)
"First people-tell me it's wrong," Tower





iht Scholar

chuckled v Mr. Cory. ''Then they 
day morning at 11.o'clock In

try to stand on their heads to 
:laony with bells all over thftj.1

read it. Most of th&m end up by ecided to insti­ment from the Department of ringing at the sameresenting it, possibly because .it's 
lling for all boys State in order to begin his work 
Xne«day, the fifth annryeA'SMy

against the established order of 	20 years old. during the spring semester. He bf the United Nations, will ma
things." -•••• ; • . 
Jlowed to attend is presently conducting two.gradu­
the ringing of the Freedom B

Mr. Cory teaches -report writing 	purse, becoming ate conference courses in Latin,
-IT RUNS BACKWARDS?? Puzzles,Carolun Buschof Baytown 	in BerHn.
for engineers and believes that 	afterward. one senior course on Livy, and a
®s she looks at one of M*» Cory's "crazy" clocks. Mr. Cory ex­	The Freedom* Bell, -,T -9
this ties his profession in with bis 	Binm^th wrote on course on the Greek element in 
hobby. plains that he got tired of theirionofny of clocks all running in 	peace in {Serptany, wffl ifn»
|in the Athenian the English language.
He started teaching at the Uni­^e/s?me direction; so he did a little experimenting and came iter wrote a.long 	the first time as the world liber^ ' 
If he can mak« arrangements, bell. Signed freedom, scrolls

versity in 1935. In 1941, his Re­up with the dock pictured. . 	Sbhebate and Citi­
|m . . •: * Dr. .,Beii}muth will spend nine 	collie campuses will he «monrHi
serve unit was called for one year's 
floorboard, but it took him where 	months in Athens,; using the facili­those placed in the 1Sia"'ajriJia^
service. "That year lasted five," he 	"All of the first clocks Jiad ^s, Dr. Reinmuth 
belli testimony

remarked. He returned to the he wanted J» got. wooden movements," he said, "and Replacement' for ties ' of the American School of to &e 	fact 
"People all hate me" is the cry of the Chemlin. What is a 	the generation which, the ConM?
University in 1948. While he was in the Army, Mr. 	University. Too, Classical Studies there. Mrs*
I 'thought I'd like to have one."

Chemlin? Why, it is a little gremlin ; _ :Be-attended Denison University Cory increased his-knowledge of 	emporary defer-Reinmuth will accompany him. munists are trying hartfett > iat"-'­
Mr. Cory builds much of hfa 	"sell" is holding firm to its de**•V The two-inchhigh Chemlin messes things up in the Chemis-in Granville and received his mas­mechanics. In Army Ordinance, he 
cratic heritage. ,

ter's degree at Ohio State; While was' on the staff 	of a motor school furniture .^nd has made most id 
, try Building /whenever .the chance arises.-^ • 	In Germany special 4ea«0i%;^
still; an undergraduate, he bought and' collected.;photographs-of., eiu office ornaments. If !some of these 
. Did you ever wonder who put that grease in a buret tip or an did Buick frame, cut a chunk gines. 	lei^Sleed More service^ will be held «T 
are a little gut of the ordinary*who made your hand on the stopcock slip? Well, that is our out of the mid-section,' added a Before the war started, Mr. Cory he explains it this way: is installed in the Berlin Cifa r ' 
Model T engine and: one seat, and 	Hall. The mayor of BerHn wiQ aft*
planned an .all-wood clock move­
f»end the Chemlin. Substituting weights on the balance pan 	not at all unconventional. I
became, to his knowledge, the ment, patei'ned after an Eli Terry 	cept custodianship for his «iW 
turning the heat way up high so that things on the sand owner of the only square auto­clock of~1815. He will usie maple just bring into being some of the 	General Lucius IX Clsy, natio 

:tive Training'

bath evaporate are the pastimes,of this little beast. mobile in extistence. It had no and cherry and do all. the work odd notions that other people only 	chairman of the Crusade vnr-j 
itructor in phys-W — 	mm wm.m ­

h°od, no. body, jjclfgrwters, and no oh the lathe. 	• . dahl, W.• • E.• . Glaze, Marshall—— w •• —• Freedonv will dedicate Ute beQ &e
T 	•
think about," 
i2'Tr hy «;re»ii -Hughes, ft H, LemlM^a^ynn 5?. the cause of world free^m a«i hat more cor-McCraw, R. J. McLean, Bill Mc-then it will ring its first ea& ,..l t>r handicapped Clennan, .Albert A. Rooker, Da­Addresses will be made by Johtt 
Jin universities. vid Strong, and .Berry Whitaker. J. McCloy, United States |v fourth annual Commissioner for Germany' ani..^ est Conference General Maxwell Taylor, irf.-i personnel in ,A»f*tean forces in 
• Clay^ de4|eM®t 
|ining 	is needed priiy^r and the ringing «f'the-:feili|^^viU be broadcaat in
plio vietims are 
tutes of higher 	ceremony over all major petWori '


Being Worked Out 
hi explained as (except Mutual) at 11 a. m. < Jniversity phys-A committee . to organixe and i»l StandaM Time. This witt operate a card cheering section mediately.follow the broadcast President.Tnimanfs message
discussion was at football games is in the process 
t^es'^m ia New YoriK' 1 JpPf 

f on on selection of.being formed, Lloyd Hand, stu­The declaration of the Crusadephysical educa­dent president, said Monday. B. R. 
for Freedom is?
!Aldersoh, assistr Bsrfield, who has been appointed , 4'I believe in the-aacrsdnesaphysical and Pfachairman, is now in Dallas where of-the in

|loutlinedTor the 
°I believe that all men dert^
gersity's Employ-he will confer with the SMU Ral­Bureau which ly Committee about fts organisa­
acation graduates 
tion and methods of operation* aination process 

gfht students has „ The UT Rally Committee will»be and tyranny wherever they apgie££ fcaiise of the scar-composerf of' $0 members, select-on earth ,.?. that tins world, und«r 
ed from written applications. At God, shaQ have new. birth
lie physical edu-	» 
idr least sophomore standing and a. freedom." pers represented demonstrated dwire to farther ; to signal the fact that th« qu|^
student activities' are required to

tfee chic-little bolero 	the meeting, sage of freedom has been,sounds 
" • " .* ••" • '• •> ' r ' lderson, T. E. be a member of this, committee* behind the Iron Curtain, 1 ensemble so definitely influenced"by oont, Joe Bowl-Hand said, throughout the United State* ice, Hand Chap-A secondary duty of the Rally join inihe pealing when tbe f
the spanish buH fighter's costume. 
Shaw, Mr. Ek-Committee is to greet visiting dotn Beb rings. . teams, arrange for their ,comfort The Grusade for FVeedOTB i " 

velvet bolero in opang«~ ­
and to promote good will between moniea have bilk planned in 
1 

or gold, touched with black silk 	rard Diet -schools.-• ; r junction with the United Nat.,
v <, ^ ^ 

[illness It is planned to hsve the card Americans are. asked to offer^a braid: the blacjt slightly ? section in operation for the Texas-prayer for the United Nations ct. 2S—(dP)—D; A&M game here November 30. . ^ when the hells ring out* a$&tiati£tl
draped wool crepe skirt, as narrow ais ' 
other of Dudley and.meniber:nations'i^:;iMitl-d#lB6%3 aairman of the throughoiit the wo " *""" 

a bullfighter's escape, in junior sizes, '• -• 
of the Univer-


Mica Beauties

29.95. the small, flat velvet 	londay -after 
UNflag IU

envelope bag, with three ­
|resident of Lub­eighteen years. 



Deadline Today 	(1 

^ compartments, fhe perfect compliment . 	J •kv,
1 	)was formerly as­|e Radford Gro-Six o'clock Tuesday afternoon 

Over Forty Acres

far this ensemble, $5.00, plus1 tax.
tr 	Rt Abilene, and is the deadline for all entries in 
A different fi lliwtodayas in Dallas and the Mica freshman beauty contest. 
the pole qsq tiie TiotM?'
Seventy-seven beauties have al­Star omblen^. If«. th«> paH hli^
ready entered. „ 
baclqEronnd' an4 white polar tyML
Three sessioniPof' judging "waf 
embraced in*-twin olive branched

-im.. V Jr 	be held for entrants. The first. 
the flag of tfce United Katfoik
with girls in bathing suits and 
Jag 5** on Oedt 

•; 	high heels, will be held in the 
ber 20, 1947 by the UN Gener#
*"> -i*-V4 
Union Thursday afternoon .at 2 
Assembly at Flushing Meadow^*o'clock. The second will be held 
New Yoric, and vraw flown for
Friday from 6 to 8 o'clock with first time October 21,1947 at * the girls in date clothes. Final Fluehin^ Meadows and Lakejudging will take place November 

ft," 	r f0 

w 	Front |hat Ihne
^ .•jC'SM' 
Any dab, tnttett^y, w'ftM-the UN flag hat been atwd
T * i. •»* «, **' 	vidual may. sponsor a contestant at UN meetings^

tSS8

.*r A ^Vf ^ 	Entry blanks-are available «t the sored 
?Wit-/ 
or-aneq^iva^ 

Miqs olfice in the -Union. Winner With'. NS''*L­> L ? * & « >me eligible by of the contest will be presented Korean war, tiie Sag took on »iwas? ofatleast fa Forty Aeree Folliea. -important functiona; as the 1
1 X. ^ k 
Seven of the ten jndige* for ner of the combined United

I . .-•'.••'s. •>' J. 
tX>\B 	fjbe contest' are Lloyd Hand* tions forces in K«rea^ 
* > t > H f J -,the equivalent president of Student Association; ^.The; d^hntioik of 1 * ^ ^11 V t, » * V*1 Th USmm of work. M laryy Slader, i^klKpreaideftt of wJTfWMpt .pft!ovar-..tiia 'ifrf&kfif'f t •*» v\ ~*h 5 c-'fs* ^ ft 1 »r-' organized b«l tic*; Regina Frikryl, pretid«>t of c»n»Mi a storni wot** „ many achieve fitMi Kiw, Oloria ftegba, of the tho WW^pMdtt drafted ttat A .;*-"«tudent^f--v --, r w oTfffEta iiU Sigma, probably Department-of Fhysica] Training i#ni of AgfieuHnro 
opinion poll circulated A ^noker will be held -in the chapter' of Pennsylvania State committee, stated* that student the beet known is the distribution for Women; William Blunk, asd»-"flood ttni counfary** *i&i <,%•£ It wis Aewtfwe at Groi^ Tu*»&ay to explow inato lounge of the Unitin Tburs-C«Uege,,wiH conduct a model int. dflegmtes will be housed in fra­of such booklets as' fHinte on tant to the dean of men; Jteck UN flags ^ taka plaet^f " ' " "Guc, Ut'* «• (ft Iht rmWr» on ^e Blanket Ttfx day night at T;8G for vlsiting tistion before the «ntire con*en-ternity houses and eo-opsl Glean How to Sjbudy? and thei *^and^ Holland, dean of men; and Joe Glory. -v­
tottlght." 	Pi_ Fftryvi fljiftfttiiifr to th> ifiin ­
< t The petitibn asks for ja p 	f&fo Offietx* vtHs*1oajt +ook for-Pr«*iniai Men,w Anotimr ,
"Naw, I've got to three questions: local chapter, and Texas ftwhrteh chapter will take part They are entertainment committee. wrvice is the Phi Eta Sigma Loan Of OMtU *" 	*¥M
paree^eiCi|J^vit­

-W Bta' Sigma **• 0isjg0 men equivalent of their *fce coate of Vitiation, it was ^ However, th« Agricoltani 
_jrtBM^4inied th»tt|» QK

^ 	_.-,vOe Fisher, mnai^fi, 
:*d»n«n year, mafet^^Melwi-. 	** •Uadt J»(fof«»or ai|d a^stiuat vooW «np«rM(ia r
'ox Be transferable 	fr«»n the 9^O.sAU,meeting* wffl he heldin kfA banquet ink aU delegates* wu* fW«» ** per «>ef*eimmf lp^ ftnul qmi to m)?
""" ***** " «M»r, respecthreJy, of mechanical Steipw and «|at«4 a n w««
patron. 5 Sf* j-. fceM In the International Boom Minuter la at'!««&'^£|«n'houra 	'o.r 
^nwarin* *x# attes^nf: t«eV fly to, * 	— •'amMeet

,i ^Boiwr, th« Union Friday night at 7 it mark, or.I pohttf per semester " 	¥
Ar»oN«w%toy,4e«ii^| ntoal -"*• 	•• it doe* over f
•b^dsteU4 Mhi Ktvfaw f'etoflfi yibmpma * ' t^konn " ' 	7r ~*W. M
i OctoUr 29*

if .'in i m&atmfAto <• kt, 1 
3.^*, 

c, AIC 4irf rt; \ *> is ,
•SO? J-'-1 
* r> ^ f a £*
> tL * « 

*15unday, October 22. 1950 ,THt DAILY TEXAN 

i ^•laksii'Awi '''i 
to 

honors, with Chi Omega and Delta 
Mimm.

Kappa Epsilon second, and Alpha^ feappa Alpha Utr By JOAN GROSSMAN see if you know these seven chosen where you have wen the Long-third. This year *' number <6f or-A; Though many would deny It, few.' * -""fltoriw yuu iiavf
-/A'* !>r. 1im.lHi.Tri m ^nizationa have already started Beginning ap the left, we first
there are some of us on this cam-young man in action. You foot&all
practice." come to a young lady who is a
Jhis who don't know our "wheels" fans specially should know himi^
Tentative rules for Sing-Song bi-sororlty president, a young lady


Indian Dances 
this year are as follows: -TEN-GALLON —an unforgivable commitment, to Wherever beauty and charm are
who~4s top executive of two wo­danceswill be given at I. Each group shall ring one •Otis Douglas, coa be sure. --•' * men's -organizations—namely, a found, there you will .find; thi#,. 
the first meeting of the Austin fraternity or sorority song and wKen he amvfid e-jpj, But, like -1 say, there are some social sorority and. an honorary next Texas miss. For example,;;;
Cerebral PMsy Treatment Cen­one song of their cram choice.. and professional fraternity fot
^ Traditionafly, Gov 5 * '•/ , :of us who don't know' them, and she has progressed from freshman''
ter's Parent Study Group. The 2 There wfll he no duplications playing UT In Au women, in journalism. 
v it's to those "few" that we dedi-beauty to one of the lj&t 'yeatffif
dances Trill be presented by the of sonirs. v <; >i 7-». ,• » v, .^v. 
Arkansas players. The next is a leader in more 
Boy Scouts of the Order of the 3. There will fee no medleys. , eate this corner "Ten Most." " \ ^4' 
ways than one; You see him often
Presentation was .

Arrow Monday at 8 pjn. on the #. Mo solos will be permitted * r For this first 'Vho's who" Irre've And in the last picture In the:
during football games, and he's a 
lawn of the Center. with the exception "of a few ban pide^d some of the better-known fan of.the, Longhorns from way row should need no explanation^.' 
T The group has been acclaimed with background ringing. •Wntenders, that is, (to deflate back .. ..just ask hin\copip next It's just of a guy who spends att. 

• gflferongfaoat the United Statea'aa 6. There will be no accompani any resulting ego), we've picked Friday, night.. * . his "extm" time doing othe* ••

Educa

fr-J-one of the best teams to attempt ment except for a strike of" a some people on this campus: Who Roses and white evening dresses things but student government. . ||§|reconstruction of the origional pitch. ' . ' Mfe fill positions one -would expect to are the trademark of ther next Need I say mor should say, let's Our next "wheel" has .been campus ••ed^eatic^<^;:
7. The maximum number in among public school
H^aity. Joe Gault, head.chief, is re-around ' the campus quite a long
each group will be GO T
|§|;5ceiving treatment :• at • the Center, Southwest is defi time. She has been the subject of
8. The minimum number of
"f for a spastic involvement, one of spark which ignite* quite a lot of controversy, to* say
participants will be 18.4
the main types of cerebral palgy. nothing of pranks, paintings, and
9. Participants may dress as Co-operative Prog)
> Each member of tfie group ,UT tradition: 
they choose* . -.Administration, De I
i?i> makes his own costumes which In Memorial Stadium, the Cot-,
10. All entries'must bp in by kew of the X)olleg»
fejb are the last word in authenticity. ton Bowl, Rice Stadium, and almost '&} I The team won first prixe this Monday, November 27; asserted Thursday. anywhere else . in . the Southwest 
II. In case.of withdrawal after
year at the national convention "It (school adn
November 27, the entry fee will
of the Order of the Arrow. They present, is not a
be forfeited..­
fff^have performed throughout Tex-Dean Haskew said §^as and many other states. _ _ that the program, a fe Preceding the dances, a color pi4>Hc school adm

BBA Graduate Enrolls
*' film showing the treatment given prove their methw 
.the pqtients at the.Center will be In Foreign Trade School schools, ctows out i 
shown. Dr. William G."Wolfe, arid" "sincere desift 
associate professor of educational Thomas C." Herndon, BBA '50, educational leader. 

has enrolled as a member of the
If; psychology' and director of the Dr. Henry F. Al« i Wi Center, will*hre * brief report of June, 1951, class of the Ameri­for 15 years direct gjfpfthe Center's activities. The child* can Institute' for Foreign Trade slon of School Ad? 
ten will have'opportunity for play at Thunderbird Field, Phoenix, the US Office of 
activities and refreshments dur-Arizona. open a two-day d]
the film and talk.' Specializing in Latin American 

progcam when he,
Future programs include talks trade, Mr. Herndon is taking the campus Monday;
by experts in cerebral palsy, child school's intensive training course said Dr. Alves wi)
(psychology, educatohai psychol­to prepare for a career in Ameri­ately with about >> 
ogy, physical therapy, and medi­can business or government the faculty to It 
cine. abroad;* projects* 

J !6 r •** 


-sewn moccasins . ... 
f
,-rs < 

for college 

m"  x<­ 
f, < 'j •< -t « -* Reynolds Penlai  *  
One of the Season! Sport SI  9t %  
£  
*  j*  £  
PJ5^  You Can Choose  
V  , • <•' u-i hz '<•,*>  ?­ e  with hand-picket ••• v. v. "" ^ H \ ^ .> 'SI, >• ^•;,4 i0$wtm Here's a very unusual )Ai N ts» vM , *f-4V ja great pride in wearing* Ta style wHh-hiprliiigging tKe butter-smooth fabric f to you as it looks good  FROM THREE GREAT .* \ sn, r -AW­&A HIMNORUS  - ~*rr ioafersl. Tlie. pride of campus ancLfeasual a ir iam Be A 11.. MlkA«J-. : .WAtAi nme «ts$embiea in a fall collection including such famous names as: Old Maine Trotter* SANDLER of Boston and Saddle Marfer. genuine  * *3 •?£>5si . -­•;' • I S'li'lTJ1 1 ,'av;W­ 

with hand-picked stitdiin 
. •


of lug^aga, crmm. 9W-1k mmmswM' 
t-Ik V-it
=. — tfj-y * n ^ 
«».r Wwf jif1 • 
4-iW('iiW,v
ft tf'i'Tii'-f.'uty-­
* 


& 
w?r>v« 
IS if 
m 

SfW.nf 
W" VOLUME 5f Price Five Cents 	AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24,1950 Six Pages Toddy 
4W0>;^  ^  giL^IS^ft Plicate , OdF^er 22, 1956  THE DAILY TEXAN- PagtfS^'  8- '  
>m< r  w  a petitions tofT Hugh Williamson of  tU Austin Bo^ry dub  

ArrAfternoon Spent at the ChartCellor's m 
•VM»L 	g ••• .1 .i..f«^.^nini iu|W l$j> jr,^|wn-to-earth 	family • will take special "judge.. of the Fifty-third who have the final authority. to circulate 
over as Chancellor oftheUniver-District Court In Austin in 1988. Mr. Hart platui to will meet with anyone" else interested in the ^ex»n.oil!eei,«ft 
*|ty on November 15. , He served as Texas assistant at­matters

lators informed of per­	1:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon and-begin circulating
begun similar

James P» Hart,"who will give up torney general in charge of oil and taining to the University, lie says,his seat 'on the Texas Supreme gas cases from 1939 to 1941 and and to let them know his opinions petitions. Court to become the first Univer­-theiuretnrned to private practice. concerning them. ' However, he •+ Lloyd Hand, campus ChaS^ sity Chancellor, is the land of a He was appointed to the Supreme has made no definite plans to visit \ y' man of the crusade and stu* man who likes to come home from Court bench in 1947 by the late dent presiden^Psaldhis office in the Capitol building, Governor Jester and the following The 45-year-Hold 'juriSt "-wfcsv' 19W Crnsadr for-Fv&h




Go to Greece

put on a pair of khakis, an old year was elected to the Court. ^ unanimously recommended by the 
." •V..-	dom buttons, will also 1

shirt, a pair of beat-up shoes, and ' Sri, Hart, also a Phi Beta advisory committee, the members 	' " 
handed out. The 

go to work in his vegetable, garden £appa, is at present working on of which were selected by all. thO 
or in the yard until dark. a doctorate in French at the Uni­faculties, ex-students, qnd the will last through this 
Mrs. Hart and the three boys, versity. ; She has completed all University Development Board. Tower Chnnes will ring

ht 

James Jr., 16, Dick, 13, and Joe, examinations and courses, but Mr. Hart was elected .Chancellor day morning at ll o'clock in " 
9, like yardwork as much as their lacks ber .dissertation. Mrs. Hart, by the Board of Regents the lat-v mony with bells all over the 

ter part "of July, 1950. 	lecided to insti­medt frdin "^l^tJeparCriieht , W: ringing at the samefather. Dick is earning spending who-is from Austin, was' the 
-money working by the hour, and former Miss Katherine Drake. She Mr. Hart is the second man "the 	ling for all boys State in order, to begin his, work ( Tftwiday, the fifth wmlMi 
20; years .old. during the spring semester*'JeBe

he keeps accurate records of Jus i£ot -her bachelor of arts degree University has called within re­	of the United Nations, will mark 
^time;" By themselves the Ha|ts. from Wellesley and . her master cent yeaTs from a state office to % llowed to attend is presently conducting two grldu-the ringing of ifa §&$#&* JN® of art® degree from Columbia..'. a position of educational leader­urse, becoming ate conference courses in Latin, In Berlin, * -> t,*jm
take care of 	their spacious lawni 
ship. Gibb" Gilchrist who is tjh6" 	afterward, one senior course on Li*y', and a The Freedom ^Bell, «ymbolwh»flower garden, and vegetable gar­
Parents Ex-Students chancellor of A&M was named 	inmuth wrote" on course on the Greek element in
dens. .. 	peace In -Germant, -{w0l
president of the .College while he 	in the Athenian the. English language.
In the Hart home there is a 	the f irst time as the world Mber^jfi
Mr. Hart's parents,-who live at 
was serving as state highway engi­	;er wrote a long
Spirit of family co-operation. They 2712 Rio Grande, are-also former 	If he can niake arrangements,' bell. Signed freedom scrolls front 
neer. ' -	hebate and Citi­
practice the idea that it's f-utf to students of the University. His 	Dr.. Reinmuth will spend nine, cnllege campuses will be
Mr. Hart is a Chancellor while

work together. Besides the three mother attended, the University 	months in Athens, Using the facili­those placed la %tibe base
still actually being the Chancellor-	is, Dr. Reinmuth
boys, who are at home, there are >m 1897 to 1900 and was vice-	bell, testimony to the-fact iiiiijf?,
elect, however. • Sounds confus-	eplacement for ties of the American School of
two daughters, Sherrtian, 20, and president of the junior class of 	the generation which ih.'
ingj but following his selection as 	niversity. Too, Classical Studies there. Mrs.
Kitty, 18, who are at Wellesley 1900. The eldfer Mr. Hart was 	muniats are trying hardt .
Chancellor t' 	the University, Mr. porary defer-Reinmuth. will accompany hinu^,­
College in Massachusetts, where captain of the football team and 	nsefi" is holding finn to Ha d«i#t
Hart "was named first honorary

Mrs. Hart did her undergraduate editor of the Cactus in his senior 	cratic heritage. • ^
member of the Chancellors, a so­

work* year^ l899. He served as secre­	In Gernuuty. flpncM.
ciety of" the" University" "Law

Sherman is'a senior history 1 
versity next year to do graduate member of Kappa Sigma. « 
Law School's 	top-ranking seniors Hall The mayor of Becttm wiQwork. Kitty is ia sophomore, ma-, The new Chancellor's office will 
and -members of the staff of the 	eept custodianship for Using in English. The three boys be in Main Building 210. The 
Texas Law Review. Although Mr. 	General Lucius D. Clay, KatiSiag^*

five

! "scattered all over town" at suite of rooms was originally de­
Hart attended the University Law 	chairman of tbe CrusadeAustin High School wtiere James signed as special reading rooms. School for one year, he trans­
"The Regents will meet in the 	ructor in phy«-dahl, W. E. Glase, Marshall Freedom» will dedicate the beH;
is a junior, at Austin Junior, High 	ferred to Harvard where he was
Academic Room. Mr. Hart's of­	42 physical Hughes, Cl H."£einba^i, Lynn W. the cause e&*&«& ttovjtim a]
School where Dick is an eighth-	graduated with honors., •
fice will be adjacent to theirs on 	at more cor-McCraw, R. J. McLean, Bill Mc-then it wir«afe i$s first ca&
^grader, and at Wooldridge, where 	This is £he first honorary mem­DRESSED IN KHAKIS and with Hoe In hand, UT's cViancetlor 
Joe i$ a fourthrgrader. the east, and C. Rear handicapped Clennan, Albert A, Rooket, Da­
bership tiie Chancellors ha^e given prepares to enjoy his off hburs gardening. The yard's appearance 	Jl McGloy, United Stati*
assistant to the Chancellor, will 	in Uni'lrer^it^es. vid Strong, andBerry -Whitaker.
since the society was founded in

White Colonial House have his office adjacent on the ~ that it's hod attention^. , 	fourth annual Commissioner for Gejrtna*»^aS3®1
1912. 	' v-

west : : est Conference, pfneral Maxwell Tay^&d c^-'C The Harts live in a. white ct>-Mr| Hart was one of nine men personnelin X»«i«an forcea iaBeijln,lonial-atyje houses ^frith green shut­from a fist of. 122 unanimously : General Clay1*, d i ters at 1800 Forest Trail. The approved by 'a-faculty advisory I -^af^-lnd tb^iiosiuc: oFtbt-'htii"'
ining is needed ^mam' «^ ' 

tworstory house and large yard are' committee for the chancellorship. 	be tee,ddi»t telidSh :^
lio victims ate

surrounded by a white Dr. Painter has been serving as 	ceremony over all major"
s 	utes of hi^ier
fence. On the front porch there acting chancellor since September 	(esc^it Mrtoal) at 11 a. teJ
.hi explained as

ia usually a croquet set; in a side 1. After November 15, he will 	A, committee tral Standard. Tltte.
niversity phy»> to organize and 	._ 

ard, a volley ball net; and in be responsible only for the ad­
ibV: "^,^5 operate a card cheering section mediatelyfollowthe'broadcast;

other section of the y&rd» a bas­ministration of. two University-	President IVuman's measaxa
discus«ion"wAi; at football games is in the process,

ketball court; 	units—:the Main University . at i: 
tbe inl in New iToxk: 

The two younger boys' are Austin .and the Institute of Ma­	on on selection of being formed, Lloyd Hand, stu­The declaration of the
getting a 'home of their own rine Science at Port Aransas* 	fphysical ^educit dent president, said Monday. B. B. to$ Freedom is* /
behind the Hart house. A dormi­Other University units include' 	|Alderson,assist-
Barfield, who has been Appointed "I believe in the aacredness < 

tory where' each will haye his own the Galveston Medical Branch (in-	physical and chairman, is now in Dallas where dignity of tiie indfeidwL ;
room is feeing built. At the same 	utlined for the "I ^ believe that aQ men „
time the Harts are extending their several hospitals), the Dental 	rsity's Employ-he will confer with the SMU Ral­
the. right to freedom equally ;

living room and adding a bay win­College and the M. D, Anderson •; 	Bureau which ly Committee ibout its organisa­
God, t&ftw

Hospital • for.' Cancer Research at 	cation graduates
dow. .• 	tion and methods of operation. 'I^ed#'^ _
Every once in a while Mr. Hart Houston, ; Southwestern Medical-	mlnation process The UT Rally Committee-will bs and tyranny wherever they
School afc JDallafl, Texas Western
likes to take 	that gun down and ht students has 
College at El Paso, and McDonald. 	'composed of 60 members select­on eartb,k.. that tbb world, xu*
go hunting I|e jaunts dove around 	ause of the scar* 
Observatory at Fort Davis (owned 	ed from written applications. At God, shall bavb-a -new birth
-Austin, but goes to the cpaat for 	fe physical -edu­
l>y the University* and-operated ' 	least sophomore standing and ar freedom."
ducks. During dfeer season he 	id.
with the University of Chicago). ^ 	demonstrated desire to further to signal tbo fact that Out,
• does most of his hunting |n 	§rs represented 
student activities' are required to sage of freedom has been soon

hills' of South Texas. ...... 	the meeting; be a member rf ^ behind the Iron Curtain,
Aside from his regular* Worlc as 	dersdn, T. E. 
¥»ad 
throughout the United Statea

Justice of the Supreme Court,. Mr After Mr. Hart beeomes Chanr ( ont, Joe Bowl-
Hart has been interested, in the cellor in November, Dr. Painter !ce, Hand Chap-A secondary duty of the Rally |oln In the pealitqr when the 

dom BeH rings.

history of the Co^rt. Ho.Imw.writ­and' the executive heads of. all aw, Mr. Ek-Commfttee is to gi«et visiting.; 
ten several articles-oil . early his­teams, arrange for their .comfort Tb* Crusade forFre«dffia» 

tory-of the Supreme Court -in J!rectly to him. and t» promote, good will "between nionlea have been pbulaied ba 
Texas and has had one publisher irdl)iesilf schools. junction'with the United Kai 
in the Texas Law Review and one ness office, and the -executive It is planned to.' have the card AWet£eaiif wtm. as*»d .to

Illness ?

'in the Southwestern l»w Journal heads of all University Compo­	p$i}¥ ^?• section in operation for tbe Texas-piayet for tbe tTnjited , 
Mr. Hart has been in the Uni­nents willcompose an advisory 	2S—(^P)—D, A&M game here November 80. ^ when the bells ring out, as 
, M Hf-+

its immediate shadow council which wiU meet on call of 	and"member nation* wS-lb#­
versity or 	titer of Dudl^r 
all his life. He entered the Uni­the Chancellor tor any three mem­	n of the 51 throughout fb« 'woilif'--"" ­
versity as a student in 1920 and bers. This council w£P co-ordinate. 
of the Univejfr

in four years made a name-for, the education and research pro* 

Mica Beauties
onday after a

grams of the 	several institutions.
himself on the campus. 
The Chancellor will make rec­
He was an active member of resident of Lub­
ommendations to the .Regents as
the college debate team, and eighteen. years, 

Deadline Today

to the general policy. He will
member of the State Champion-! 
was formerly as-

investigate the facts, make up his 

Over Forty

ship Debate Team in Austin High 	Six o'clock Tuesday afternoon
Radford Gro­

own mind about the best Univer­
School.-He also played , varsity t Abilene, and k the deadline for att entries in 
football for two years, die Mica freshman beauty contest.

la Dallas and 	the pole usually

In 1924 Mr. 	Hart was one of Seventy-seven beauties have al­
y Star emblem^

•ive juniors elected ,tp Phi Beta ready entered. >•'& v ',<£r -If*, the 
Kappa. In his Senior year he was Here Are Answers . Three sessions of jtidglng wlU background aft# v^dto prfar 

embraced in s> twin olive brant

one of jibe three co-chairmen of To Page,4 Contest r 	be held for entrants. The first, tbe^oftballiMIMtioik
.Varsity Circus, social event of 
with girls in bathing suits and ®b ftag wa* adopted on

'the year and forerunner of Round 
How many could you guess? 	high heels, be held in tbe 
bet 20, 194!? 	by tbe UN <

/"Up, and $ne of the Jtwelve.ottt 
Did you know that number 	Union Thvir«iaf-afternoon* at 2 
Aasea^: at 	flushing M.

standing ^student* In ,the Alcalde 1 Is Jean Lipscomb, president o'clock, the second Wfll b« held%^ He ran for "student body presl-of "TSO" Theta Sigma Phi; Friday from 6 to 8 o'clock with
•i 	:|;,''dent against Qtla Rogers, now a' Number 2 is Mac Bintllff; tbe girls in date clothes. Final Flushiar.<;pFort Worth lawyer, in 1924, and cheer number judging will take place November
head leader; -3
£$oat a close race. He was a member 
is Jackie Filrris, 	hat
of Friars and Kappa Sigma fra­of the University; number 4 la 4M?y |»t«n^';^p.Indi­the UN Amr hsii^b^^'ifKd^ the Aggies favorite, irtias the vidual may sponsor a contestant. at UN
to:quiafy

landy on the fountain; number 	Entry .blanbi are available at tbe sored occasion^; " 
for one year, and transferred to 
5 |a Ben Procter, left end;: 	ox, aa equina-Mica office in the Union. Winder Witb tba
Harvard Law 	Schoolin i?23>.-In 
ber'S is Beth Ann Wibdn.W 	ome eligible by qf tbe contest will be presented Korean:*Sa^!the flag took om
WITH WJNTIN® IN THE AIR, Mr. H«rt 	ceesoo f« 90 to If
1928 be was admitted to the Texas 
pua beauty; amd number T % 	b» Forty Acres Folttsa. • IJk, Important W.ltaii
oinedtbe 	i|i^nc«liQr'(iu^ aren't too-hoavy wfiwi he r$g»F& of atleaei *
" SevOn of tbf ten' jidgoa for of Hi# «MiwbbaBrt-<*'"
t&elr 
the .contest 	are Lloyd Hand, Gona forcesln Korea.,

40VwHvNMli 	equivalent 
presldsnt of Stodeat, AsaoetMtaagof work. ... „ annjy 8hid«r, ^e^pre^4«ot' of UN ifiags all over Ae 
organised her# Mica; Jtegl^nPtikryl, jirestdent of 
,iQ 

P 	many achieved Wlca; Mbtf 
Department of Phj^ca!

are «*pect«d to attend.T'tshan, advisor of I%i £ta Sigma vt vomo m, the housuif ments of Sigma, probably 
to "flood the eoantrv** *

student* 	for Women; William BSun^asste WW >t>w 
. A wnoker, will be held in tbe chapter of Pennsylvania State committee, stated that -student the best known is the distribution
opinion 	tout to tba dean. *i ,mmt Jack
delegates WU be housed jtn >fr*-of such booklets 
as 
fHinto 
on
m«^» lounge of the Union ThUrs-(.oUege, wQl conduct a model iitf-	auc|i 
Holland, dean of men* and

4^? aifffit ¥tfor voting Nation o^re conven-housos Glean  10 per cent^ Billy, Penn, jpresident;v Glenn ^fprw am TSWgHWLfll"# 4Qei«ft|r> iof established 9m ; SlUt f*»* *•* twphias will. be m tjlftHBNfcld, thiM Mdi Ift tin »•»'# 
% 
>t
^ 	-tf ill 
•SS* > 
* a&osred to sine two songs, find the titles of tit em eongs must ac­company aa, ~ft8: -filing iw. Groupsare not flloiwed to com­pete against one anotii®* the same song, Hank Perry said. 
"Besides the competitive spiritof Sing-Song, there's always a spe­cial* unity built op among peoplewho come together to sing," JPer­*y aald, i|t urginggroups ticipate. 
Last year 	Kfcppa' Alpha Theta 
and 8«UTh«ta Pi won first placelonors, with Chi Otacsga and Delta Kappa EpaJlonjrecond, andAlpba
«#PP». JVpwpfl wwau, ^u WW 
Boy Scouts to Givcl^jL"A.?,Tte^ ^ ,ganisation» have almdys&krtowi :• »*$»» ^practice.*Tentative rales for Sing-Song
ft Indian Dances 
this year are as follows; 
?s ',. Indian dances will be given at U Each group shall Sing one ^ %b first meeting «t the Austin fraternity or 'sorority Song, and X&rebral Ptfsy Treatment Cen­i* song of tijeir oWn choice. ter's Parent Study Group. The 2 There wm be no duplications ' dances will be presented by the of #on©£<; !j$1BoyScoutsofthfe Order of tfe 8. There wffl be no. medleys Awow Monday at 4J-Nq solos will be permitted .'Mfce* «f Sh« CMrter.^^fcf6fJ;.: with the exception of a few bars i?M Tbe group has been acclaimed with background singing. ­
5. There will be no accompani­
ougbout the United States"as one of the best teams to attempt ment except for a strike of a reconstruction of the origional pitch.
6. The t participants must be
Indian dances. 
members or pledges of the organ?
; ' the Austin Order of the Arrow 
isation and students at.the "Uni­
<>|g composed of students from Aus» 
vensity;, ; 	; ;
tin High School and the Univer­
7. 	The maximum number in,
sity, Joe Gault, head chief, is re­
each group wfll.be 60.
ceiving treatment at the Center 
" for a--spae1ic involvement* one «i: --the main types of cerebral palsy 
4 Each member of the group .. makes his own costumes which r are the last word in authenticity, 
r. The team won first prise this , year at the national convention ^ of the Order of the Arrow. They ;'have performed throughout Tc*­~,»a and many.other states. it! Preceding the dances, a " color 
showing the treatment given --the patients at the Centerwill ber ^;-i4iownr~~l)r.' William G. Wolfe,­
•' 	associate professor of educational psychology and / director of the Cotter, will give a brief roport of 
mthe Center's setivitiei. The child­
•: •' iimdl;;; i|cjed&e«wlua«n^ V • #fjng< tie film and talk. . ^ b"' Future prograM~incIude~talks p*hr expert*in cerebral palsy, child lil'^lpsychology, educatonal psycho^Logy, physical' therapy, and medi­+Ji. The minimum nuainber of participants will be 18. 
9. 
Participants may dress as they choose. •:.•:•••• 

10. 
All entries must be.in by Monday, November 27.. . *S 


11^ In case of withdrawal after November 27, the entry fee will be forfeited. 
BBA Graduate Enrolls 
In Foreign Trade School 
Thomas C. Herndon, BBA '50, has enrolled as a member of the June, 1951, class of the Ameri­can Institute for Foreign Trade at Thunderbird Field, Phoenix, Arizona. 
Specialising 1n Latin: American trade, Mr* Herndon is taking the school's intensive training' course to prepare for a career in Ameri­c a n business or rgovernment 
1 1 :
!!]&&&„r .' {abroad.* '• V-7* 
iSWt l
A \, * 
^ \ 	i
r V ^ 	*f / 
•w-t®ru v»^ ^ ^ 
h
k'. 
—lJ \ 
t * 
iilissfi
^=1— iU-sl^s
Wfl 

A thorough investigation of pictures had been replaced or fetanket Tax Violations found at pasted over the originals. the OU-Texas game in Dallas will Some-50 other Blanket Taxes begin Monday, Kleber C. Miller, v^ere taken -at the game also. 
student attorney general, said These cases were handled "by the ItufcmmlBOTi. 
^ ~ Tim r—Aa ­
*v
WtipzWSZWS' * ' , i > ^ ^ ^ » ^nday. October'^; <950 j THE DAtLY TEXA^' Fagb 6^ ; 
TEN-GALLON 

Oils Douglas, coa wKfen tie arrived f Tradi+ionaHy, Co*; playing UT iri Au» Arkansas players I r
i
Presentation was.l; 

Educa 
Incompetence or;-1' among public schofl0^^ 
a:­
&*>*% m 
pp» 

WM wmsmsm* 

||with hond-picM 
lfe^t
,A 
„ i* t 

Here's a very umisu^l sht greet pride in wearing; T< 
MmU 	wii^ hipohugging
Is 
fHe butter-smooHi fubrte to you «s it looks good with hand-pfefced stitchin 
&£%&I 
lb 
Sim S-M ML-L 
18.50 
«©aS#;a®!s! 
vm 

„S?< J 
To Be Nov. 2-3 
. v.; ,y­
w*sr< • 
student constitution* I believe th*t Pr«-Reg1$tration 
all seven cues can be heard and 
To Begin Monday
fairly disposed of in one after 
boon/'he said. < . Monday and Tuesday are pre*

If tiie students believe that,ac­registration ' dates for stadenti
tion taken 	by' the Student Court
AlftrtadUTlili^ff ^ nMd **»» *MMthan 
(."W?VS«6 
r ® '.(A 
*4* 
4^ -s ^ v 
f V 

"kj&'WM 
>viet. 
isssaft 
' v * ^ ^ 
» , J v *^Hrt *<\\» 

s« 	S-Si: 
*&* ^ vi >l"i t *C 
-•v,.« 
JS* * 
t 'f ~ j i 'AO # liiS 

W 
vt&SJfr 2H  
^•fS  
'r  7 •  

M r'th« 
8as^^bfe8wa(ai^iTOgu^?»>JtA. 
t *--0 (l 

:^*i ' 
±isi 

^SSi
set 
„ 	BwSSti
9 	Studwitli 
* ,• ;$ ?R,s^^jjfi-jrt,'Xfe* 
AT! 
•#,i&k>ti sj.i'i. « 1 1 Fir 9} 	Co^lidt Daily 9«> 
VOLUME SI 
Pric# Rv» Cents 
^'iig|iiftjliif»ij.ii (i iiinnAi

USTIN.TEXAS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1950 
Six PagosToday 

' /• 

IWiSWSM
* •• -T -. ?J . ?Mit? *• fl "> f
&v-*


^tiT' 
fHfe^tt¥-TE*A# ,ft* 

••fcvr/i
"•v r-. 
sjrvsv-o: d petitions to 
Hugh WiHiamson ofthe Austin Rotaryijlub wired 
Freedom will 
Dallas

But It's Allin a Doy's Work-y* 
tetPJq
ofthe 	""-t[i'fi-''rirT"''in 1' '•'• 

By MARJOR1E CLAP* ^ 	loner and Tra­
to take away plate*""ind they are had sna 
ihetot-	A special appeal was mad6 to the Cowboys
Despite the fact that many Uiii-; 	the Texan Tate
still eating. It's gotten to be kind'
versity swains would like to take" 	•MfjaHBBw*
of a game now," 	its to eirculate Spurs Monday night to help circulate the ^petitlon^
8 gander behind the doors of the 	"She had four plates waiting
Berny stated that he does not 
. University's thriving sorority for her," Berny laughed./ 	win meet with anyone else interested in the ^ex&n d£fTc««ll
believe that girls consume quite
Abodes, the territory is slightly 	begun similar
the amount of food that men do. Both Berny and his* tfctiilnMi", 	1:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon and Isegin circulating tfi» 4
wit of range, for most of them. 
"I don't know how it happens, Laray C rook e—affectionately 	petitions. " ,And they must be content merely but the table arrangement always 'Sunset"—agree
to |>e curious about what actually known as that 	Lloyd Hand, campus cliafe^
copies out so that the people who 
goes on when they've left their the most enjoyable period around 	®8®;« the crusade.aiid'Stiaifi
eat the -m$Bt sit together and'
dates at the sorority, house steps. 	the house is election time-. SW W
those 	who don't eat much sit to­^ ii,
men the 	-have
But there are 42 on gether. You can tell at: first Larry states, "Yon the 	19,000 Crusade for fyrfi 
campus who can probably tell 
glance which table is going to keep idea that everyone m the sorority 	dom buttons Will also " 
you 'just as much" about life in a sorority house as any of the 1500 you hopping." is the best and the prettiest on handed out The cami 
• "When someone diets, I always 	will last throngh tfi^ ^
social club members. " 	the campus,, because that's what 
get a kick out of that. For weeks •'m t V • • VT 'j' • 	|Tower Chimes VwBl ring





hi Scholar

How do they do it? And what's 	every 
politiciannohtician sava.'*says.,, > ^. -•£. v
she starves. And then—all of a 	:^;;mornin»;*t li o'doek i
the catch? Well, they're known 
sudden—her " resistance breaks, Rowland Wilson and f Charlie 	inony with bells over th«­
as "the men in white"—these boys 	decided to Insti­ment from *tiev Department if
and 	with one quick gulp, two Morgan are two of the failow* at
who man the meal tables at sor­weeks of dieting gofs down the 	lling for all, boys State in order to begin his work ••i:^^da^;;;the:fiftli^A^I
ority 	homes in exchange for be^ hateh." the new< Alpha Gamma DelU 20-years old. during the spring semester. Be
h6use. Because this is their first 	' the tTnited KatioBg, wiIl ntiuflp
ing fed thrifce a day. 	illowed to attend is presently conducting two gftdu-'
Actually, grinned Berny, there year at table waiting, they do. not 	the rin||ing of tbe Preedom Belt
From these fellows' -points of 	aursu, becoming ate conference courses in Latin, in­
1. are just two real difficulties In­have as^ many vivid tales as Berny 	afterward.
view, their positions are both en­volved in the job. 	one senior course on lity, and a Ther Freedom BdU ^mbolti^fcl
and Larry to relate. But the im> 
inmuth wrote on
viable and advantageous although 	course on the Greek element" in
"One is when* there's some pressioiis .are rapidly piling up.
I there are drawbacks—and •em­	in the Athenian the English language. ^ 
place special you have to go and , : "The' first day I went to work, 	ir wrote a long
times. 	If
barrassing situations—at you can't until the tables are the girls pulled the old trick of 	ihebate.and Citi> he can make arrangements, .belj,; Signed fooedoii^awb^^itii^
But you can be sure as one bus-
completely cleared. When I first shifting desserts on us," voiced 	Dr.; Reinmuth Fill spend nine ^^e^campuaes.;win',:b^.^m^tll 
boy puts it, "it's wonderful train­
began working, I got greatly an­Rowland. "They shifted all the 	!«, Dr. Reinmuth months in Athens, nsing the facili­those placed:
ing for potential husbands;" 
noyed because there was always desserts we had already put on 	eplacement of bell, testimony
for ties of the American School

For instance, let's take Berny 
someone who ate just a little' slow­the table to one of those thai we 	the
Jnfversity. Too, Classical Studies there. Mrs.
Smith who feels that he's an old 
er than everyone...else, But I've hadn't jserved. I was fooled and 	temporary defer­try^r
Reinmuth will accompany hinu. r

hand_ at the'Jrasmess since he is 	$***<&
long_ since 
learned 
that 
it's just served some girls two 'desserts/but 	— * wM" ia
working in Delta' "Gamma
-the j -—, destiny—there's always one in a after I-had been around several 	cra^e heritage. , r ^
-house for TnaP tbu^.-consecuttv*: 
times,-finally caught on." "7'7
semester. 
' tem." v'\-; / "• A chief advantage, naturally"^ 
wtrlces-'#ili; be'^^^slsii:

quite shock,
It was a said . Then, too, when the waiters such a job, added Charlie, is that
Berny, .when he went to work for are in a -rush, it always seeriis the Waiters can always have ac­	h • • •. ia installed in the Berlin 
r ^e first time at breakfast, ex­	rfitv"j-''.Mi The mayor of Berlin wiB 
as though the girls want to sing. cess to-the check-out book. Of 	rs% >"•> .% eept cnatodiansbip f^| ^ 	fthl explained as . (ex(ept Vofoil) it 111to. r (l|
University phys* A committee to organise andltral Standard Time. Thfc."w» tSiil 
li. operate a card cheering section I »«diateJy follow the broadcast 11^3' 
3!runillLa'8

discussion:was. ft football games is in the process M ^|dn on selection of b.iw formed, Llo,d H.ad, «u. *1™~® 
^physical educa 
4«ot prwident, nid Mond»j. B. R. j for Frudon i»°*
Jderson, assist-

physical and Barfield, who has been ^pointed! '1 believe in the^sscredtteaea foutlined for the chairman, is now in Dallas where [ dignity of the indiyidqaL sity's Employ he will confer with the SMU Ral-L "r .b*1"™ that aD wen^il 
which 	tofi^Kjo,1S

t Bureau ly Committee about its organisa-
Bcation graduates 
tion and methods of operation^-j "T nWo^

nination process
^ht stu4«^ta has Tt.PT R^lly Conuoittee wil| btLd jSfft.y"'*1 causeof the.scar Composed of 60 members select-1 on earth,.. that this world, ana* iie physical edu* ed from writtenf^pplications. At God, shall have * tow birtht 
id. least sophomore .standing and a j freedom." W•—B beys representee demonstrated desire to further! 'to signal the fact that thm ^ 
the meeting. student activities are required to sage of freedom baa beenwiSS Iderson, T. E. 
H.nd S 	bon Curtain,
aont, Joe-Bowl j ttorotogfcout tbe Ujftited Stetea wfit,Hand Chap-A secondary drfty of tte Rally|join in the pealing when tbe 1MM *haw, Mr. Ek-Committee is to greet visiting I dom^ Bell rings; •. ^ teams, arrange for their comfort]The Crusade for Freedom««)»*
and to promote good wili between monieo have been planned in


ird  iday after 




Mica Beauties 
n 
•"•Si; 

UN Hag Fliin
lident of Lu& eighteen years, 


Today
as formerly as-Radford..Cro-Six o'clock Tuesday afternoon 
Over Forty Acres 

Abilene, and the deadline for all entries in n« in Dal]as ar
^ " ).> ai# ^ 
ready entered, 	Star oablem. ITS tbo pa»
j background and white jpolar w# 

H&-S' ­
>$m!£ 	o^cloek. The second will be held Jf 
Friday from 6 to 8 o'clock with 	^ ^^ 
a. girt, b .loLr 1!'!','?••«*>*<* "• 
ud»t», wffl Ufa p]«. N.„ml»r|Srla,[ "*^ l>sa 
, * I FWu ^ibfr tmlQ MewitrV'
" 

or indi-the mf 'flag has been «wd 
to qualify |$ ^dual may sponsor a contestant at UN auMrtings or at UN »oik" 
Entty Mania are available at the jawed oceadbas., , i
or an eqniva­
ttica 	qfficef in the XJnion. Winner f Witb tbe ent$*as|^"o| »

^ome eligible by 
?: 	b* Wanted Korean war, the fiag took «taaiw 
of at least to Forty Acres FolHes. . ^ ]im|»rtant as tbe

Iisfef 
for^heirfiftit 9«v%a of the -ten 	of ttmbteed.gtottid 
tbe' equivalent tbe contest are Uoyd Hand*{tfon* forcesin Kays*.. i df^^
of work. 	M 

—v fc 	organised bip: iKea; Beginspmident of «t»wa PwwTSwa.
^ ' ' 	' . -• ' ' • 
many aebiev^ 

^ ih. * < atndent-delegates s«e «^pected to attend. JTshan, advispr of m Eta *ssera* nuents of Phi Eta Sigma, probably Department of Pbyieai Tln^d|qg|^p#HKiMnft o# AgHetiIta«e was opinion^ poll will be circulated A, smoker will be held in the chapter of Pennsylvania State conamittee, stated that student tbe beet known Is the distribution :or Women; William Blunk, assist (trying to "iiood tbe country" wltb :
Tuesday to explore student Ideas main lounge of the Union Thurs-College, -will conduct a model iol^ delegates win be boused to fra­
of such booklets aa^ljiltnt* on ^ *5* ^te 	takethe
tel '*'<*«•. let's go "to A* raserrO day night at 7:»0 for visiting 	tistion before the mix* ternity houses co-ops; <3lenn
on the Blanket Tax situation. 77 	""'I!* ®"»won fieiore tne «aum conven- 
noises and 
co-opsv Glennl^ow to 
Study" 
and 
the 
"Hand-
Holland, dean of meal and Joef^mr* * -\ , ~i
rwjiat rogM twitfct." 	nalMMfia: aaw wimiL^ wf : mijl^ Bftw 
e
xi. mA* '« « Po» on ? ^ ^ ^^*t 8m Offi«rs of the loeri B^l^ is serving sa hiad^thitltookfor 	& Vamjr» assistant 'to,, T b^tw^s^'ii^Bi^^ -" 
three .questions: local 
chapter, 
and 
Tfeitas freshmen 4haiit«r f»nt WU 44>«. entertainmanfi 	mi ®u—
ytinw, I'rg got to sW^y.**"'' TIbms freshmen, chapter will take part They are 	Run ,„s, va Km•AifciafrrAi.-»»».i—t-~ rZSB8W 
* 	entertainment < «er*iee is the Phi Eta Sigma Loan of men. 
v Sbotild student Blanket Taxes who seored ln the ^op 10 par cent, Billy ^enn, p^ddent; Glenn 	tato precedenti " 
-v<"Why dfd they penalise Bob?" 	. Pbl Sta Sfna Is a ao^eS 'for Fund, eetablisbed in 1934. First
1. Remain non-transferable? l of the freshman examinational. 
Brooks,' Tko-prestdent; Charle» twebinan men who in tho first designed to help, candidates pay 	|embl«Ku"Inquired the eo^d at tib«':lntra-1, Bat transferable from ens -Formal opening of th# conven­fiimndet*, mad
•ibta&.tiMtld*-	semester or the aqnivalent^of their tha jcosta ef ftdtiaUon^ it yttat ex* .
' 
to tion will b^ Friday morning at 	i." Be««Ms^aad-#i|^M£
^ .f»flS61dln»w her firieM an> 	freshman /ear, walwtain a scho-pan^ i» %9U t» baeon«i-:M; 
iifered. 	liflie awilirWiit t«astc^| per
• student to any other person* fexa* UnioiL 	^25«8.iytS!" w
^ t, -"Oh, isn't that 	be held in ttte International Ramb mptar in at lemst thirteen hours 2? ***** ^U 
tfce eo-ad figgl«4 petition was mitten by of the tJmon Friday night jat, % 	«^ine«rag are attending tecbrlfly parallel to the US emblem Ji*
Las 9«ia» u4 Mnrtea 8«lra«fc 	studsnt_ aical society meetinn
i'doefc»wlkeceDeaa CrlU bw^ i]| twelve boon «f woriu 
' ' ••••• .

'i-tr • ;
* *. > 	^ 

*W*M?®>v  <&#•»  **w^  *88^"k^«»>*WiP  >4^WM<^''WWMU^uyff 1 ^h I'il11'l'l'"1 M'U}'.  '*!'  W A'JU'I  ikMVWF  
**£<.»< n. ^  
; ^ As «$K2i> ^fft^.i^.c^3''"• t L I" h 1"«"'h JS• iu|^ias^)jtetei  '*.. mSk-•. 'V • s» ^M,-,, -P . ^JBit'Mk  •<*%h rf*  



Is Se 
p/? V^«l 
l

A£> 	j^kiX-ih&J 
vi1-* ' xh;
\< 

the titles,of these songs Sa«(W ^ 
Grenip •&* ntt&wed to com­
% • >.". ».-i. Y -..• • :'y vVifrj-". 
pete atftfnst^ another thfl
* 	;,ahitti**^ ^,f«f® -— 
wm eong, Hank Perry Mid,
In Dmd lack Hollands office by "Besides the competitive qf^L fraternities and sororities wh* 
participate in this# pro-of Sing-Song, there's always a u 	Is 
nsored to Inter-frater-eialunity built up among people Panhelleoie Ootmote, who feoma together to ring?* .?«*•• has become * highly ry said, in urging groups to par­and «o*petitty® ~ ticipate. ^ ,-,,,,,, "t < • Last year Kappa Alpha Theta
M«r six trophies will ha Had Beta Theta Pi won fast place
,tb*r*achinm 
*=*. tow, with  
wn of flu best tewm to •»«>«>; «!"« Meept Im a «ta*» 

,mo« b. 
lndi*° 4"TL

nrf„ u„ i™,I membra or'Jedp. <5 «ie «»
The Austin Order of the A 
i.tacompW "* ""-•0,a" incompetence or|] tt' ygb°°1|,L^ The Mmb«-to. among public sch «ty..3oe^^^SrV«»to each group wUl be 50. Southwest is de
cemnK treatment at the Centerl
ceiving' t*ea^®®®^ 	„uiin their meth# Sr^SSf^ifSintwSVS1 in Foreign Trode 5choo| schools, grows outl ' 
and "sincere-desij 
SSt.SuS'S Tbo»» £ H«nd,n, BBA 50. educational leadel SSolo^and director Ad tie has enrolled as a member of the Dr. Henry P. A* Center, will give a brief report of |June, 1951, class of the Ameri-for 15 years dii 
the Center's activities. The child-j can Institute for Foreign ^Trade sion of School Adi; xen vrill have'bpportunity for play] at Thunderbird Pield, Phoenix, the US Office of) 
!•*'• actMties and re&eshments dur-j Arizona. open a two-day dj| ine tfee and talte*** 1 Specialising fcn Latin American program w^hen he, 
Future programs include talks I trade, Mr. Herndon is taking the campus Monday. )j hy «xperts in-cerebral pal^r, child|school's intensive training coiurse said Dr. Alves psychology, edttktonal .psychol-jto prepare for a career in Ameri-ately with about.^ 
ther*py» ^medi-ican busin«» or government the faculty to lf-
Ogy® 4*"^*# 
c yT* 
[abroad. 	projects. |
cine.' "•'£§&* A**f*r' -f 
•ASra^pa.^sii 
' » r 11 
Reynolds Penla 
> v-^ ^ 	^ ^ 
One of the Seaso Sport IS 
# " w 
-* 	f "-V *1 * "h
.'4^ *•;vi 1 
»' ' * T«\, 
pride in wearing  -tt-i 4 -fill!  
butfer>smooHi  
mfa fiend-picked of Hiaqaqe, cream,  

w J 



naay on t 
Pre-Registration
student constitution. I believe that

pictures had .heen replacedLjWf 
pasted over the originals, 	all;seven case#'can he heard and ^>To Begin Mondayfairly disposed of in. Qt^e after-
SomeSlome 60 otner'uiaunecother Blanket Taxes —J ,t--	,
du xhaw 	T}­
_ »• 1_ -.O.U

^jsr^AViMi «.l fha trsme wlwo_. 	noon," he said. -Monday -and Tuesday are pre­i«^m Avuwjrt v. — ­
These ^ases were handleri*by the H the sUdeHU-beMe^ that-afc;
*»*—* attnTOBTT Mn»ril^ai4lThe^e^as^ 
v ^ oYr 
'yt**:*,>•£ 
yAlLY TEXAN^ Pjiaa a J­

y,..October 22, 1950 THE DAILY TEXANfll Page 8 
What'* Down There? 

It a 
a, 
By TOM CARTER 

. t i> «"•>» A freshman co-ed confidently sits down to dinner at Little­bX || eld Dormitory; A professor stepsf calmly into a Main Build­
" Jr-^ \* ir-f*
Ar -» : ing elevator. A whistling student flips
K&>l*• *"• +#t # »i&t¥ * \-JP% * 
^ 	jacket atnd leans through 4he sharp wind toward the warmth jof Garrison Hall, • •
tik ' 	The co-ed's,dinner will be cooked, probably still hot. The
^ > . 7' K< 
professor's elevator will whisk him to the desired floor, and
^ 	. f v <• 
Garrison Hall will sufficiently; squelch the cold, They don't worry about.it. 
W~ .V-
But someone" hate to. And that someone twisted a gas valve or turned a.switch a remote.five hundred yards away that
jgMfi T»-X V* made all three possible—possible through a vastnetwofk of underground structure that tunnels under your most fre-' fluent classroom, your main thoroughfare to classes, or maybe 1 even your bedroom. 
*

V Ui 	^'If everything underground were suddenly brought to " J 
-r ^>*7, 
surface," sayS Carl. J.' Eckhardt, superintendent of utilities,|
3%-'; 

w
«* , W 	"we would have an amazed student body and faculty." ^ i 
i * " *; 
^ 
^v-i L1* ;H Thesie tunnels, undermining the entire University campus, 1 rt. y •* CA1< N * originate at^the University power plant, immediately east
'i:

'W 	4 % -•<* •«' i. 
of Engineering Building, st*eteh to-Brackenridge Hall an wmm 
capable of generating £35,000 pounds of steam per hour, considerably more thah the immediate n&rds of the Ufii-f -Varsity. ; , . 1 
^ ^ P i A program is now underway to install in these tunnels, <§• along with the heating facilities, a cooling system for cam­pus buildings. The coolingrwater pipes will run directly be­< v neatl1 the steam pipes. Sufficient insulation of the pipes will keep the contrasting temperatures from affecting one 
~ « another. ' " " •. Five-hundred feet of the cooling system already has beGn partially installed, Mr. Eckhardtreports. The,1,800-ton refri­7 geration plant is estimated to cost $592,000. 
WouldYou Care to Enter? .Suddenly coming into the knowledge that the University 
was situated over a web of tunnels, a student asked inno­
cently, "Why aren't entrances into all the buildings made 

the tunnels so students could walk td classes In them on inain^ diys?" . The qugstiori probahiy. never has been placed before the 7 tunnel supervisors, biit wrcumstances offer their own an­swer. " " . .With no artificial ventilation, temperature in the tunnels ^varies from around 100 degrees to more than 140 degrees. 
When the refrigeration lines are installed, the tunnels will 
be partially ventii^ted to hold the temperature arbund a 
constant 100 degrees, Mr. Eckhardt says. A long lQO-degfee 
Walk in a tight corridor would be preferred to wet feet by 

only a minority of students. 
; During rainy weather, the tuhnels themselves take in a 
nominal amount of water. Small drainage canals run the 
length of the tunnels to prevent water standing.

S: 

: j-Although most of the tunnels are six and one-half feet' nigh and six feet wide, providing ample walking space, they are reduced, to only four and one-half feet in height when < leading to §ri isolated building. This would result in much 1 back-bending and bjimping of heads for even the smallest 
of 	students. ; . .»«. t 

, • But the foremost obstacle to %tudent travel via the under­ground is the possibility of accidents. Although no mishaps-have occurred in the tunnels, they are not implausible. Ete­-ape hatches, like the one JRuth Hancock of Plainview Dick Waterman-are peering down in the picture to the left, w'dot the roofs of the tunnels as a safety precaution should a tine burst. If the line parted, says Mr. Eckhardt, it could be 
heard for four or five miles. •• „ 

'^The principal danger is^having unautfioHzed people in the tunnels," he points out. "Persons unfamiliar -with the tunnel machinery and escape methods would increase tbft 
likelihood of serious accidents.''" jrJ V 4 r, No one except authorities are allowed unattended in the , tunnel^. Chances are, you can't go'. So~to satisfy th^ curious and help acquftint ^students with the unseen providers of comfort on the campus, a reporter and photographer ac­
* of the underground sys^ ,Jt ,oircair7se6"^wrhat you're missing. ^ X' ' 
yrnwifn ^ ^ 
• *St% *• lira " ' ?*&&&&& " " 
.1#.^.^ ° -s 

31 	i 
• • -v • 	' m 
'mm® mi— 
fpfitRpiiii^ 	SI 

Mm­
fucfcnf 
Mole* 
— • ". 	\y-"­
M • 	fi?
f«# ,C 6 0,a If I j^f# n T h » South 
VOLUME 51 
AUSTIN/TEXAS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1950 	" r-SfcvJ^J "3 
fSS&wS 

Mm 	4^5 fV WT F)lf*
l^r© 

:®T-'­l) »A

Sunday, October 22t 1950 THE DAILY, TEXAN Page f t ** 
p#w "J vMfe.s^^g^' 
H *»«*«&ftrT* 
v& 
id petitions to Freedom will Dallas headquarters of the state campaign Monday for UO0 

r-^^W>:¥«2-3ksw ™s*Ka.._. *' S^$§HiP M
gioner and Tra-
A special appeal was macte to the Cowboys and SUvarthe Texan late 
Spurs Monday night, to help circulate the petitions. TSi^jf
to circulate will meet with anyone else interested in the ^exan;o£Kce>«t begun similar 1:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon and begin circulating I petitions, -r 
^ Lloyd Haifd, campus man of the crusade and stt^ (lent president, said thafc 19,DOC Crusade "l©*? ^Fr**.

$ 	Go to Greecei 
dom buttons wiB also ;b»'handed".' ^ ;? eas^: will last through thin week.* ' 
Tower Chimes will ring "ftfffc­
ht Scholar 
day morning' at 11 tfektik fa.%*.' 
-r 
y •> * ' ^ mony with bells aU .over':thf 
ecided to insti-ment from the Department of ling for all boys State in'order to begin his work %TttWdliy.' the fifth 
is
.20 years old. daring the spring semester. Be Of .the Ifnfted Nations, wfll attfkllowed to attend is presently conducting two grada« 
theringing of tBe Freedom J^5
>urse, becqmin^ ate conference courses in Lat{h* In v*ftgpinnafterward, one senior coursS^on 
The 'freedom 9M»$U
imuth wrote on course on the Qreek-element in peace in Germany, wiH ring|in the Athenian the English language. ' the first time as the worldlibarfgr .
jter wrote a long If he can make ainrsngeihentv bell. Signed freedom scrolls froiiK^lphebate .atod Citi­

•. ,; •; ;: ••• '• Dr. .'Reinmuth will spend mne college campuses will be 'faB** |s, Dr. Beinmuth months in Athens, asing the facili-those placed ia the base «f tfca 
replacement for the 	of b«Il,testimony to the ia^^iMf
ties of American School 
the generation which. the'
University. Too, Classical Studies there. Mrs.

*VKS> 
]bempQraiy..defec* Beinmuth wiU'accompany hinu ^ 

sell Is holding finiiito its &&&*•• % i3«Miiheritage»In German: wmm>: Services w3l be held the b^l
es Need AAof© 
** installedin
mmmmz 
Hall. The mayor of Berlin «i& m&:$: cept custodianship for his General -lAicitiSvlX;:Clay^l8«ti8nSH chairman _ of the Crm&* f5||Free^om^^ldedieate

s''.*> 	structo? in _ L^W.v E. Glaxe, M ar shall 
|42 p hirsica s," C. H. Leinbach, Lynn W, the. cause of world free«M0B-/aad 
that more cor-Mcdraw, B. J. McLean, Bill Mc-then it will ring its first call ^ 
!>r handicapped Clennan, Albert A. Rooker, Da­
'in universities, vid Strong, aiuiUBerty Whitaker. £; McGtoy* *jtaited Stats* wjMl 

fourtit annual • I I I in ; Ii'i'ij* jii II •rr*'"g '•*" '• nyfli^ii.ilii '*"•'»»*r^*;IV^-iWjT,.aifc Commissioner for Germany' and.
t 
Getra vest Conference Genetal Maxwell Taylor, personnel in. American forcesln Beriin, 
Kc c si^ CardCheeria^lan 
lining" is n&ftid

YOU CAN SEE Hie originating point of the tunnels with 200,000,000 pounds .of steam during the last >! Is conducted through tfte maze of tunnels whicK jlio victims 	L'Wfll,­
are,

without going underground. A complicated system twelve months. _^ ^ 1 j;* j ;; "stretch from > Bradcenridge Hall and Twenty-first-tutes of higher 	ceremony over all major
Being Worked Out 

^steam pipes mark the first leg,of the hertwork at This stieam, furnished by natural gas-fekf boilers ,Iri" ' Street on the souHi to Litttefiefd Oo'rm and the new 111 explained, as 	(except tfntnal) at 11.a. in. 
A committee to organise and tral Standard Time, This wit „

the power pldnt, which Has furnished the University the power plant, east of the engineering bgildings, Student. Health Center on th§ north. 	Jniversity j»hy»> 
I* operate a card cheering section mediately follow4he broadcast' 
President., t¥tiauai!steesnMa. !_«­
discussion was at football games is in the process 
tte vti la.New tbrfc
>on on. selection of being formed, Lloyd Hand, stu­The declaratian of the
>hysical educa­
dent president, said Monday. B. B. tor Freedom is;
Llderson,assist-
Barfield, who has been appointed "I believe inphysical and chairman, ia, nowjn Dallas wh«re diK>»tf ff the indi^duiO,mtlined for the 'I believe that all naanrsity'a Employ? he will confer with the SMU Bal­
i»^ ny"*4* ^ — ~ ^
Bureau which ly Committee about its organisa­feod,­
^cation'graduates 
tion and methods of op^r^Uom "I pledge to resist -aggrea*iers represented demonstrated dftsire to further to signal the faet that Outr m&* 
student activities are required to •age of freedom has been sounded^the meeting. 
be a member of this committee, behind the Iron Curtain#Iderson, % E. 
iont, Joe Bowl-Hand said. 	tbroiqrhoet the United State

% 

;e, Hand Chap* A secondary duty of the Bally join in the pealing when the FrsiJ 
»haw, Mr. Ek-Committee £s to greet visiting dom BeH rings. _ teams, arrange for their comfort / The Crasade :. and to promote gopd will betfreen tnonieehavjs bean'tflanaed

I 	B 
ird Diss • -schools. ^ 	-f L'T^V --i!m im iunetion. with Oie Visited Nattmpi
. " 	'r^xSh"
It is planned to have the card Americans ara. a^ced to dffer^it
Illness ;|
section in'operation for the Texas* prayer for the United Ks 
23— A&M game here November 30. when the bells risg out, ascii ither.of -Dudley and member nations wiK b^ throughout the
|tairman of the of the Univet­jtonday after a 
Mica Beauties 

n * v-' • •:*• •' ' evident of Lub­eighteen years, 
Deadline Today
iras formerly as* 
Over
Badford Gro* Six o'clock Tttesday afternoon Abilene, and is the'deadline tar all-entries in 
A diire^
in Dallas and the Mica, ff&khman beauty contest the pole Usually
Seventy-seven beauties have 	al* Star emblem^ It's, the
ready entered^ 
background and white|judging will

/ 	Three sessions of embrafttd ia'vtwia^oliviB baiushs
be held for entrants. The Urst* 
fl««r of tiM United NMioaa.

UOM 	with girls in-bathing suits and The Sag was adoptidr ^y--^in9tW0
, in the' pipes make-numerousr sharp" bends "to , i and 
-4^^-aUow,foc-fi^gnsion. The e^nsion system;t" jk

fBTeiBqulirsl 
president of Student Association r , The distribution of **wnry Slud«^ i|ee^r«^c|H|»t i^T Wltfbgt JlM: prif' 
anixed hen Eica; Regbui'Prikryl, prudent of tfi Morale ny achieve^ Wica;.Miss GloriaK«ns, of tha the YWWivim cmmn&vmt 

ments of Phi £t* Sipns, probably Department tit Fhysfcat Traimng Department «f 
trying to "flood thethe best known is th« distribution for Women; William Blunky assis­opinion poll wfll circulated

f be 	tant to the dean of men; Jack UN
It '',wm chow^me al^alt Girove. Tuesday to explore student Ideas main lounge of th6 Union Thurs-' College, will corifbct a model ini-delegates will be housed in fra­of such booklets, as ''Hints on 
3^. , "Gus^.-let's go tto the rW»t|*e on the Blanket Tax situation. day night at 7:30 far, visiting tistion before the entire conven-ternity houses and co-ops, Glenn How to Study" iind the ''Hand-Holland, dean of men; awl Joe Glory. 
ZreSdi®* room ^ j ^ ,.-The petition, asks for a poll on delegatea, tjew members of the tion at ?M. Officers of the local Brooks is serving li head jpf-tb* took for FrsahmanMeiV^wtS^ D, Fartar, • assistant to it».-jf«da -fearad that the VH

Of pOMUEk ' 

^Naw« I've got to staay. three questions: 	local chapter, and Texas freshmen chapter will take part. They are entertainment committee. service is the Phf Sta Sigma Loan 
take i^reeedeaces

Should student Blanket' Taxes who scored in the top 10 par cent Silly j^enn, president; -Glenn Phi Eta Sigma is a soeie^r for Fund, established in 1934. First 
MWby did they penalise Bob?'' 1. Bemain non-transferable? of the freshman examinatioii|^ JBrooks^ vice-president; Charles freshmen meh who ia' the first designed to help^ candidates pay ME ^sV'C^ka|» 
quired the co-ed at the Intra* $. Bf-t9rawi{«pal|a' frogf, aa« the conVen-' Sanders, secretary-treasurer; and

? Format 
opening 
of 
-the conVi Fidd. ^^;"ilailaatrW-:lMBtttl*erf |^tb*=%¥dB Friaay. {reainftaa 'year, maintain » idw* -.fessorsndassistaBt aniywesftda
tlo^will be 
Friday morning 
t holdinft" her friend aa» t. Be tftnsferable from the 9:30. All,meetings will be hebl in iWtje averM» of at least ^K iiiir' ^•i*«®cy"lea# fund open tb aiqr «wor, respectively, of mechankal 

Jwt U

f 	Uftl I be held in feeJfoternstional~Bw»r
.jnjpered. . student to any other person. Texas Union. . ' v i«BWter fnat l«ui 3drt*an'hours angineariaf 
_ ."Oh, isn't that iust ^ rTha patman wa« written, by Dr. C, P^ B$ij«r, dein ^r^e^lfiiion Fridsy; night at 7 of work, or S point* pgr semester Amo'Sfe it does over
tha «<^«d giggled. Lss Qgioa aajy^eytoa Schirarta. »:ftrvlirii.''a||d &Meacfl^3srill 

tim 

•MM 

Mm 

mm 

Pr«-R«gittration
A thorough investigation 
all seven cases can be heard and

Blanket Tax violations found at pasted over the originals. 	To BeginMonday -­
s allowed to sing two song*, and
been acheduledfor 	fairly disposed of In one after-:
the OU-Texas game in Dallas will Some '5d other Blanket Taxerf
LoisAgnor the title# of thews songs Knout #e­
begin Monday, Kleber C. Miller, Were taken at the game also. he said. 	Monday and Tuesday are pre­
«e-ewttp>ar US ^Hint *«* 
These cases, were handled by the If the students believe that ae-registration dates for studen
Groups an not allowed to com­
pete a|r»inst one Another withthe 
same song, Hank Perry said. 
fill frttarnitke aad sororities who "Besides the competitive .spirit 
pl»n to fWtfcipate i» thiypro-of Sing-Song, theieV always a spe­
•***«. IgwWKwad by Ittt^ftsrtw-cial unity built np among people 
?„•. *#y and Panhettenie Council*, who come together to sing," per­
Juui become a highly ry said, U urging groups to par­

Wi, competitive event ticipate. , , ' , 
Tkift yen «x trophies wiU be Last year Kappa Alpha Theta 

, awarded, three «wh in the men's 	and Beta Theta Pi won first place 
honors,.with.Chi Omega and Delta 
: Lappa Epalon second, and Alpha 
Delta Pi and Pi Kappa Alpha
third. This year a number 6f or­
"W^P Tentative rules for Sing-Sohj
Mian Dances 
this year are as follows: -WTEN-GALLON TMU" dances will be given at I. Each group shall sing one Otis Douglas, co* 
^fiat meeting of the Austin fraternity or sorority song and when he arrived! Cerebral. PHasr Treatment Cen­one song of their oWn choice. , Traditionally, Coi ter's Parent Study Group. The 2 There will be no duplications playing UT in Au,dances "will be present*^ by the 
^ Arkansas piayeri

Soy .Scouts of the Order of the 
Presentation wai|

Arrow Monday »t BJMB^. «» 4J No solos will be' permitted 
with the exception of a few ban 
IP tfhe group has beenwciahned With background singing. 

5. There will be no accompani­
iiroughout the United States 'as 
Educa

ment except for a strike of a
one of the best teams to attempt 
reconstruction Of the origional 	pitch. 
«. The participants must*" be
Indian dances. 
®V To A?members or pledges of the organ­
The Austin Order of the Arrow 
ization and students at the Uni­
m '• Is composed of students from Aus­
versity, 	Incompetence
tin High School and the Univer­
7. 	The maximum number in, among public sche
jSty. Joe Gault, head chief, is re­
each group will be 50.
ceiving treatment at the Center 	Southwest 'is de
8. The minimum number of
for aspastic involvement, one.o ' 	sparkwhich.igni^
participants will be-18. _the main types of cerebral palsy. 
Co-operative

9. Participants may dress as
Each member of the group 
they choose. 	Administnttion,
makes his • own costume which 
10. AU entries must be in by kew -of the Colleare the last word In authenticity 
Monday, Novetaber 27. 	asserted Thursda|
The team won first pri*e this 
II. In case of withdrawal after
year «t the national convention 	"It (school ad
November 27, the entry fee will
of the Order of the Arrow. They 	present, is not-
be forfaited.
have performed throughout Tex­Dean Haskew as and many other state*, that the program,| Preceding the danees, color public school ad 
a„a »pw „—,11—.. a. Graduate Enrolls
film showing the treatment given prove their met thT^ient^t the Center will be In Foreign Trade School schools;-grows oulj Shown. Dr. William <3. Wolfe* and-"sincer 
Thomas C. Herndon, BBA '50,
associate professor of educational 	educational le 
psychology and director 6f the has enrolled as a member of the * Dr. Henry F. Center, will give a brief report of June, 1951, class .of the Ameri­for 15 years dire , Hie Center's activities. The child-can 'Institute for Foreign Trade sion of School A| ten will have'opportunity for play 'at Thunderbird Field, Phoenix, the US Office o| . activities and refreshments dux* Arizona. " open a two-day/. ing the film and talk. Specializing m Lat|n American program—when-h#: 
ifc&.v. 
. Future programs include talks trade, Mr. Herndon is taking the campus Monday.! 
> 	byexperts in cerebral palsy, child school's intensive traiiiing course said Dr.-Alves w| psychology, edqcatonei psycho" to prepare for a career in Ameri­ately with aboutj ®gy, physical therapy, and medi-ca n business or government the faculty" to 1 
abroad.* 	projects. I 
ON i

;V/ } >: 
!^cr. 	I 
' 'I 
>4 

A ^ 
* 1.2 
?i T> > 
i ''M 
u 

' Z \ 
V 
^4,'
i 	Reynolds Penlaj 
\VV' *
>H 
of the Seasoi 
"il.*>! 4 

F V 	Sp>ort
i.0
Wm 1&' u' 
$ K 


-• 	w, * \ 
It! 

V-*1 1 
it"--, 
t nl, , t A 
> "is 

m with hand-picl 
«v» v -<$<4 '• -< 
m&*Tr.z®x WMi 
sre'*.•#.:yery?!g?ii|^i^ 
l great pride In wearing, 
style with Kip-hugging 
•He butter-»mooth^al 
r 
yoa«r It lodct 
«t!f< 

of luggage^ jcreem, grc 
Plan II rounder Ends 
,r 	f£y-­
42-Year UTlCareer . 
f «rf .^MES„,4,^ v.;|)r..'Parlin'-haa ^ntetand kwtilie' to 
HOLLEY loiow every Plan II student and 

A builder has retired from the his family. ^ ^^v^^ 
administrative scene at the Uni­Although the present system of 
versity, but he-will never be far selecting students on the strict ba-: 
from the hearts of his Vbeloved sis ofl£heir high school record may. 

' bustees," Plan II majors, and oth­miss excellent candidates for Plan I 
er students whom he guided and II, Dr. Parlin thinks, it is the best ? 
—counseled during his 42 years of possible method., ' 
service. "Students who have good" high

Dr. H. T. Parlin has probably school records will almost always 
met and become personally ac­do well.here.'Agood high school 
quainted with more students than record is a safer jnd^e of ability 

aejsw

any other man in the history of 	to get aloiig atthe University than 
the University. For 27 years he 	are the tests we're giving," he be1 ; 
v

was associated with the office of 	lieves. " r. t. ^ '• 
the Dean of the College of Arts Although"Plan II was put intoand Sciences, 21 years as Dean. 
operation 27 years after Dr. Par­
In September, 194% Dr. Parlin lin came to the Universi^,^ the 

i

moved Up from position of -Dean 	nucleus of-the ide^ was probably
of the College of .Arts and Scien­born shortly after he arrived in , 
ces to Consultant Deah. Dr. C. P. 1908, v: Coming from' the Univer-* 
Boner was appointed to fill the sity o| Pennsylvania, he soon met 

vacancy. Ihr, Partin is now Dean 	those men .whom he believes were 
Emeritus of the College. 	the big men in a cultural sense.. 
He has left his impact on the They were Dr. James W. Battle, 
College of Arts and Sciences, on later University president; Judge 
the University, 'and on the state. iCharles E-Townes of the Law^ 
Dean Parlin is a -builder—a build­School; and T. U. Taylor, dean of 
er of educational principles, a the School of Engineering. 
builder of character -and intellect _ About_l,500 students-were~«»»3­
-in.young people. r,°U?d in _ the University at that 
. During his years on the Forty tiipe. The campus consisted of 
Acres, Dean Parlin originated an old buildings and no landscaping. RELAXING AT HIS DESK, Dean Parlin re­

of tHe.Cpjtege of Arts, and Sciences." A-great

academic program the influence 	As the years passed, specialization calls incidents marling his 42 years at the 
believer in tiberal education, 6r. 	Parlin has

of which is felt in all the colleges? increased, not only in the educa­University. Perhaps he is best known for his
tional field but inthe character 	long advocated cultural training and enlighten­
and universities in the state—-Plan 	of the teachers' themselves. : "beloved bustees" of Wan H„ but he has af/o rather professional specialization
. II.i As his graduates periodically 	ment than
served the students as a professor, as dean of
Then Dr.' Parlin's 	toward which he believes the modem college
„ ^get their diplomas and go out to xnen came 
nr. rarun s chance 

make their places in societyT thett?r^d,raHcemettfcr 	freshmen an^ sophomores. and fmally as dean is progressing. v -• ; ~
H.
Y. Benedict^ a later president, be­cultural influence of his liberal 

arts -curricula is being felt. 	came Dean of the CoUege of Arts Dr. Parlin made close friends sens. The only good citizen des­Western mining camp, his parents
and Sciences, and in the fall of 	of both faculty and students; he
This '.'small college. within 	tined by training at the state's 
were*from Maine. He received his

1913, he 	them
great university;." as . "the good offered Dr.": Parlin • the took on hikes, entertained expense for service and leader­
assistant deanship of the College. 	them at his home. They in turn bachelor of arts and his master of
Dean" is fond of referring to the 	ship in society is the enlightened 
100 students enrolled In the pro­The first innovation which 	Dr. invited him to their meetings, and and good man. arts degrees from the University 
of Colorado and his doctorate from-­

gram, is «trend toward the theory 	Parlin headed was the establish­he became^ one of the most popu­Dr, Parlin. does not-think the
ment and administration of scho­	lar speakers-and" "chaperons" oh the University of Pennsylvania.
of classical study and a broad edu­	fine grade of professional train­
lastic regulations. This resulted 	the campus. he Texas,
cation rather than toward the 	ing is justifiable in tax-supported When eame to he 
from a serious* attack by non-	says, he thought that perhaps
modern, thebry of professional spe­	When the offices of Dean of
fraternity men on the fraternity 	colleges and ' unhreiial^tes unless
cialization. Men and Dean of Student Life General Grant was as grea; a gen­The 100 Plan II students spend system. The attack proceeded to were( created, Dr. Parlin's duties accompanied by an even, higher eral as General Lee and "just
grade of liberal and cultural train­

their four years "taking courses 	the floor of the Legislature and were* "scattered.'! He rose from ing. ° possibly" a person couid vote Re­Dr. Benedict headed a major in­assistant professor in 1914-15. to
designed to give them a common 	vestigation. years publican if he wished. With a
After two of 	"If I have been anything to
cultui-al background. Candidates 	full .professor in 1923. In the twinkle in his "eye, he assures you 
are selected from the upper one-	tstudy, Dr. Parlin was" appointed to early 20's, he held a variety of the College of Arts and Sciences," tha£,„he. "was
system 	soon sti'aightened
itet up a scholastic that 	he said recently, "it 'has been to
fourth of graduating classes titles as dean, including dean of 	out rpn those points." j ——4--­
would effectively answer the criti­

throughout the state. 	the J u n i o r College, Dean of keep in the minds, of a few fat­
cisms. " --	Dr, Parlin has? always thought
The 'little*' college of Arts and 	Freshmen and Sophomores, and uity and students one great idea that a_ dean should n ev e r be
Because thejre^Wiut no. Dean of

Sciences at the University Is now] -fi' in those days, DrC finally assistant deari of the Col' —to cultivate the mind." Very far from his administration,in its fifteenth year, and Dr. Par. Stoat even the College 
For Fall Fun-
sympathetic guidance. Many went

eialization of recent years, he 	of Art& and Sciences was disap­
on to distinguish themselves in

jwys. rv? < . ( . , ^ 	pearing,
their respective fields. 

• One of his first moves as Dean was to write into the Catalogue Itaore. rules and regulations to raise school standards and atten­Cool evenings are the 
***$? * 
dance at classes. ,.*• 	time for parties and 
formats. Give your

4 Then he conceived, the idtea of party plans that ori­Mi saving the B.A. de^ee for the -^•-7 ginal with
tonch at­

%•' m prurpoBe Of pur® and simple liberal tractive invitations , education, with strong emphasis /from STECK'S, on wha| we call culture. The re­2--M1 sult was Plan ir. In this period, the Great De­
* 	* *

'%wm 
pression broke, with the result of a freeze : of the University budgetfor several years.. Progress was almost impossible and even pay 
v 
ifr1 

raises for deserving professors fNVITATIONS • ^ were held back. Despite these 
* 	~ ANNOUNCEMENTS

obstacles, Plan II wasadopted and progress was made. PROGRAMS ; ' ps. No sooner had the country re­PERSONAL , • ­
J. 
•V

/ 	covered-economically than the 
STATIONERY " 
i 

University undertook « new build­ing program. Dr. Benedict died f-i in 1®37 and 9n ad interim admin­-v -Sstration began that lasted for two 
ycar»> > Dr. Rainey had just about 	« , -s. • h 
\ "Jt > 	been comfortably seated when r ~ W-^** 
war was declared in 1941, Short­
ly after the conflict between the 11 f. 
president and the Regents started. 

By this time Plan II had been in operation for-some time, and writing on the subject, Dr. Parlin 
WITH A JOVIAL SMILE,17 

m 

^•> S * I
JgeX'M « 
$tud*ntgMS&j?1S&rt
5-3, 	J Jjf w 
voic 
5«c 	SW*1?
*"} f4

m:^>rr^w9^i 
S*
fiMsaseWetW 	ip
s* i.f 	v. . ?%£ ^ **.'-3 . li­Fir*
artSl 	fted 
i>s
VOLUME SI -,; -
TEXAS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 
Pagesjoday

n-A * ^#^<4. »
iMtiiSviilMt 
^#V:-vV<5 Sunday, October 22, 1950 THE.DAJLY TEXAN Page/!1 
Lindsay Finds: 
n 

Phone Your 	• I 
i&re-

Noose Is Necessary 
ihtf petitiong to Rugli WilUatnsoxt ot"the Austin Rotary Clufe wMi
Classified Ad .••' •••.•••.., I \' :• Fncdoro will Dallas headquarterg of the state campaign Monday for 4othe Daily Texan of"thescrolls. j ^ " 
sioner and Tra» 
speciiirappear was mad^ to the Cowboys and

the Texan late2-2475 |ts to circulate' Spurs Monday night to help circulate the petitions, 
For Week-end 'Date' 
By BERT* MILLER which has a noose on the end, he this way Lindsey learns 	a. great 
will meet with anyone else interested' in the ^exan

Did you ever hunt mountain easily and quickly drops the noose deal about their habitsi.
before 4 P.M. 
boomers? over the lizard's head, tightening Lindsey is also doing a study begun similar 1:30 o'clock Tuesday-afternoon andj^^ 1
Almost any week end you can it around* his neck. Then he de­in variation—that is, he studies petitions. -hmw-' ! r 'IMsM"and it will be in see Lindsey Gage, graduate stu­posits the catch into the sack the ..details of each Crotaphytus ^ V Xiloyd Handi ^iunpus ch^ii 
dent. in herpetology, set out in hanging from his-belt. collario (mountain boomer) to-def naaii^of .the;ja?iaiiw3fe::^^i|® the next edition his bright yellow hoopy for moun­' Lindsey has no' trouble with temine how they vary,in charac­dent president, «aid that v tain ..b p o m e r hunting grounds. anyone nosing about in-his room I9,t)0a Crusade for
ter. He measures the" black col­

Armed only' with a noose, Lindsey —too many lizards running 	dom buttons, will also he •
lar around their necks to deter­

You can come in .brings them baek alive—not for around on the floor and snakes 	handed out The campaisk 
a circus, however; fie wants to crawling out of drawers. But he mine the 	variation in width and 
through this .waefcf

study their habits and population takes ' great pride in his speci­how far the black collars extend " 
£ Tower Chimes will ring
ht Scholar

and pay for, it variations, , mens. up onto their heads. Lindsey 	"
day morning at H o'clock fit " 

. "v 
"When Lindsey spots one of the At night he leaves a very low-studies their head scales, the ra­	mony with Sells afl <»»«»• *^j,;' 
the next day. large, ugly lizards, commonly 	lamp burning in the middle of tio between their heads and bod­iecided to insti­ment from the Department of 7F$f]the floor, then climbs into bed ies, or their bodies and tails. " . ling for.all boys State in order to begin his work
thought to be poisonous, he goes 	Tuesday^ (he fifth annjirmijli
20 during the spring semester.

to with\n six or. seven feet, of the and watches his lizards come He has collected 130 mountain years old. 	He Unfted Kattens:
allowed to attend is presently conducting two gradu*.
lizard. Extending a long stick, warm themselves in the light. In boomers knd has about 200 others 
at his disposal for study. aurse, becoming ate conference courses in : Latin,afterward. onik.senior course on Lj*y, and a
Lindsey'3 studies are similar-to 

^inmuth wrote on course on the Greek element in,
those of fourteen other students 	peace in Germany, wfi
tin the Athenian the English language.
who are working -under Dr. Wil­	the first time as the wbtld „
ter wrote a long If he can make arrangements, belt Signed
liam F. Blair, associate profes* 

phebate and Citi­
sor oi zoology. „ 	Dr. Reinmuth will spend nine^ college campuses
Charg 
During the sumnfer, 26 students es, Dr.' Reinmuth months in Athens, using the facili­
bell,testi

Svfent to the .'Texas Panhandle, I replacement for ties " of thi American School of 
where they spent six weeks col­Tniversity. Too, Classical Studies there. Mr*. the generation whleh th*' 
lecting and studying "herps" and temporary defer­Reinmuth will accompany him. 

*'sellM is hoHling ^nb 't^ 1
mammals. The class was divided 
«*«c heritage, ;:^v. ,
so that. some students collected 
;-;;-:In---Gertt'wt^:i
the animals, while -others marked 
services "will b# held as the
and release® them. ­
£ ,|nsiflled

A record was kept indicating 	^ Berfia
Hall. The mayor of Benin wffl
at what point each specimen was 
cePt custodianship far his
picked up. Nail polish was painted 
General Lueius D. Clay,^ 
on the backs of the ''herps" for 
the ,

easy identification. Their toes 	chairman of Cruj^uv 
ictor in phys-d ahl, W. E. Glaze, Mar sh«l 1 ^'eedom» wiU dedicate the hrfl 
were also clipped so they could be 

42 physical Hnghwv C^H, L»inbachr-Lynn ^ of world s
Identified if the' nail polish* dis-", .. 
" »t -more cor-McCraW. "ft. McLean. Ritl Mi>. then-it will rinc
McCraW, -R. J. 
McLean, Bill Mc Will ring its ftest iMi
appeared. After being marked, 
handiciipped Clennan, Albert A. Booker, Da< Addressee>ai be omdaby;
the "herps" were released and

Your Your 	in universities, vid .Strong, and Berry Whitaket. J* McCloy,, United Stats* Htik
Shaw 	then picked up a second Ifime. 
fourth annual 	Commissioner fdr. GermanyHiSi

Today 	Lindsey ^explained that by this 
eest Conference 	general Maxwdl TaylorTlsl
.means the home ranges of each 	personnel in American forces in B«rli&,
animal could be determined. T&ese ranges varied from Very close to lining is needed ted the about 1000 feet, the range. of |oUp victims are be .-bmadM8t--|n.'ati$MHWtoli^A<: ­
toa'ds and terrapins. |tuies of -higher 	ceremony over all maior ttetwor^' 
% 
During the^.six Weeks the stu­'ihl explained, as (except Mutual) at it a. to.  
but' only f physicil educa-	fhe declaration of
Cugjtom fit—just for pom 	snakes, recovered one dent president, said Monday. B. R. 
for Freedom hi

Charge it of these. They 	were the first ex-. Iderson.assist­
fiarfield, who has been appointed

plorers as far as they knew, to physicaland 	"I helieVe in the «ai_ 
CoroVwide collection' of A juste necklaces to suit see a snake burrow. joutlined for the chairman, is now in DallM vrhere dignity of the individmd, |ersity's Employ-be will confer with the SBtU Ral­"^heMeve that ^S,,
your every -whim I To determine the 	density of 
Bui-eau ^i«^ 	fiie nght to freedom eq^aily

the population of the "herps," 	ly Gommittee about its organiza­
acation graduates 	God, t
they collected specimens over a 	tion and methods of operation,
jet. jet, crystal, metal, rliine-Charge it 	Imination process I »Iedgf;
period of time and marked and 

'^ students har v The UT Rally Commttter; will be and tyranny wberever they
stone and luscious colors iit moonbeam. 	releastai all of ;these. After a set composed of 60 members select­
cause of thescar-	«n earth., .that this world, un
time they would again collect 	ed from written applications. At
{the physical edu-	God, shall have « 
l-a-3-4 row uniform or gradu 	specimens and obtain the ratio -least1 sophomore standing and a: 
^edtnBK"'.f

of marked to unmarked. jers represented demonstrated 	desire to farther to Signal
--.,* • .'Juir . *r.

ated. Very flattering—because 	Their r camp on'Bugbee Creek# student activities' are respired to
the meeting. 	TO °1 f"ed°m hasbeeaKmndSjl

about three miles, from the Cana­	Iderson, T. be a member of this committee, behind the Iron, Ctirtaii^, 1
tHey fit exactly right 	Hand said.
dian River, was.turned into chaos lont, Joe Bowl-v 	throughout the United Statee 
one night» They were almost Ice, Hend Chap-F A secondary duty of the Rally join ln the pealing when the washed away in a floo4. The wind shaw, Mr. Ek-Committee is to greet visiting dom Bell rings. r teams, arrange for their comfort
blew; several tents over and a ( The Crtuade for Freedom tree .came cras'hing down on one <. toonlea have been planned in
ird Dies
tent hitting a student' across the rf junction with the United Na back. Several traps were lost, but. Illness It la planned to. have the card Americans are, asked to dffer 
the camp soon recovered. section in operation for the Texas* prayer for the United "Naj23—(ff)_D. A&M game here November SO. when the bell»,rii% out,as cit
It is a wonder some of the'stu^ 	y.*''r, ing fellow in the bassoon. 
a 	UN Rag FbiHel

trident of Lt&r 
O^i a moonlit night in the early -eighteen years.
spring when the weather is very ?. formerly as^ 

(her 	' 

damp, the herpetology ' students' ; Radford Grol Six o'clock Tuesday afternoon go forth with rubber boots, old -Abilene, and is the deadline for all entries in 
^dilf&t dagt^l^

clothed And flashlights -to cajtch . in Dallas and the JUiea freshman beauty contest 
the pole usually bearingSeventy-seven beauties have al­

th^se "herps" that only come out. 	Star embtaph* W*,
ready entered. 

your 	in the open under certain condi« ^ background and wl _, ,tions. Their destination may b» Three sessions of judging will embraced in^ twin* olive
ISs heMf for entrants. The iflrst,
Ezello Cave in San Marcos where ­
theiir^^ef Med M
*»th «irls in bathing suite and

they collect Typhlomoge, small -	win the t l&g was adoi^ed
high heel*, be E#d in

w^ite frogs^ These irogs, which ; 	ber 20, 1947 by tbe
Union Thursday afternoon at 2

are''blind, are found only in this 	Assembly at^Floshin
o'clock. The second will be held 

one place. \ 1 {-' 	New York, and was «
Friday from 6 to 8 o'clock with first time October iSMtf at|

To cAtctk otfeW if^ogs on tSes^^ the girls in date 	clothes. Final Flushing Meadows and take
nightly excursions, the student^ fl flashlights or headlights to \ 
;< * y * -i *reitt;-Jtifr -r.
*

f,**•' t** 	tempprajrly blind', animals, Any dull, fraternity, *r indJ-kmthen they ean pick them up liko , , ™ , vidual may sponsor a contestant
to qualify $| 	UN messing* er-aff UN

tmt'CniMmvs ^ V , 	Entry Wanks are available at the •ored oecaaiona. . ­
or an equiva­

i>v *T«* Included 	Mica office in*the Urflon. Winner
Lindsey1s from Fort Worth swl

sfcswnsssj o ^ 4 s of Christian rn 	eligible by of tiie contest wj01-.be presented
graduate Texas 
in Forty Acres Follies,

-•-•4-Univefaity.-He plans to teach " «E?5^*tIeast 	important1 
-rwemittlMPaBs68ie<|ter4ie een^> for their pietek Ids work at the University, 
the equivalen|; •resident of Student Assoe&tion The of work;
•j*' ^ 	twt a '*tfr the ««
«\ r 	^r ***-1 
organised here ^ . _____ awi 
•«at, many aehieve-Wlcaj Miss Gloria Ketos, of the tiM W, . 
petition for a student^ egates We expected to attend, j Tshan, advisor of Phi. Eta Sigma 'oel^SKeri head of the housing menta of Phi Eta Sigma, Department of Departmestofopinion-poll will be eircnlated-A smoker will be held in the chapter of' Pennsylvania State Committee, stated that student the best known is the for Women; Wiiliai, Blunk,"^
tit wa* ehowtlme at O«k Gnm, Tuasday to explore stadent Ideas' main Ipunge.of the Pnfcn' Thurs^ ^College, will conduct a model inl-delegates will be housed in fra­of such booklets as tant to the dean of men; lack
"Ga», let's ge to the reservf on the Blanket T*x situation: f 1 day night at I'M Sor visitingvtiation before the^ entire conven-ternity houses and co-ops;. Glenn How to Study" and Holland, d G.lory. > 4
|^flPhe* petition aste for a poll on delegates, new members of the «on at 6:30. <)fficers of tiw local
MN«w, rve got to three questions: local chapter, and Te»s freshmen phapter^will .take part. They are entertainment committee. service is the Phi JSta men. the 

Sbould student Blanket Taxes who scored in the top 10 per cent J^enn, president; 	feS»pr
Glenn Phi Eta Sigma la a aodaty fer Fund, established in 1934. Firat
Ir Remain non-transferabJet 	•mblem.
Inquired the co-ed. at Charica fresh^ifn men wlio in the. fbwt designed to help, candidatea pay MS Vtefs ln%• Be transferable from ^ one senders, ...and' semester«r the equivalent of their W* co^a of initt»tl9n» it waa es^ Hoi maMtein a echo-panded In, 1944 to become an 
w^d,iw<

tattfo average ot at least«.» per amergeney loan fund oj»n to any
Rodent'to any other person. Texas Unioif, 	#»or, raqw^vely, of meebanieal Str^ea
P'0& Isn't that just like lim?" 	attnester la attafct thirteenhoun
ti Dr. C. P. Bo»er, dean ot the ef the Union Pridty night at ?. 	dntteeefNp ^ attending tech-fly wwBrf
work, «r 9 palate per semester irieal society meetinge in Chicago

Collaga of Arts a«d.8eienee^rtriU tftlocit wham fiaaa all.Thott^ 
1
^ '* 

il' iJlill 
:-fe.¥5»V i fl\-^^'ii"^;..'» 
U^v"^ 
-,v«g , 
WS 
/*te£U

>% ;, >< -v*. *W ^t*» t' ?,'-Mif 
?' v t * ' ,1 %/* •:%**
»ecember3 
} »» t wr ^ .-Vv. -J.Wl
-—^ -w «.e-j^L^-^mltar-^at' -* t ~ *'• _ -* •* 
&r«-R*g1stration 

w»4>i Sing-Song i and r;^-/-fi-fl«ft ";/#4^*ftn,"i fot Dtseafawl to allowed to sing two songs, and 
*?fLf?™ announced. |Groups are not aUowedtotom-
Ik $ihtwi>lft*« «nd anirartttaa who] "Besides 6mb competitive «>iif|
W;
^jjTi _ i*t ti.iunm.1 •«# fltunlfiMw th«T^«fthmmtnie< 
:0t*&* 
$%Lf£*g k*Tbeca»e » 1^I *y "iaicU,%,!£*»»#,JP«H»» *® 
it^Tprs uT 
•••'II ill i I. I.'. I'll I 1. . y,Ljv --'-• ' *£yT'1 h<>Pora» with Chi Omega and Delta 
,j^te«TpftSd1 K^pTA?^'!"» third; This year « number ofor­
•»-•-«• Jdgeffly started -; 
[practice.Tentative rules 'to* 8
ian Dances 
* tola year are as follows*> *> 
I P TEN-GALLON 


Indian danceswill be given at i. Each group, shall •&&$ P-Sfev. the fiwt meeting «* the Austin}fr*termty or sorority son* *nd 
P

Srp» 
Kj^ 

~ ebrai Pkby Treatment Cen-{ one aong oftheir «iwa oholce^.^-. 
Pare&t Study Group-Thai % There w«l be noduplicatioks roances vffl be presented by the I of songs. .xw-vdis, W Sebata of the Order of the] $, That* will be no *adtatt<&£ >kIIoV at 8 p.m. on the! t 41 No solos will be permitted 
tft* ftewtav -1 with the exception of a few bars the • l«t Hond»yTNovember 27. 
The team won first pri*e was J Qf -vrithdr&wal after 
Sb.forfeued.­
-; ; ^"... .• '•' ,. '''•?: Preceding the dancee, a ^ _ 1BBA Graduate Enrolls 
In Fo»ign Trade School 
I" Thoi-C. BMoHrrai-W, psychology ahd director of tbe bw» ««^®d «? * ?^e Cebter. will give a brief Wport of j Jm»«» 1951, class of the ^»en­tbfe Centelrt aetivlttefc The child-j can Institute, for Foreign Trade ren will have'opportunity for play j at Thunderbird Field, Phoenix, activitiea and refreshments dur-Arizona. • • i W tbe fflm »d talk. [_ Speaalmng in Latin American ^^M^vtogtasn inclode taflai j^pade,TMr. 3EE^3on ia Skmg the by experts in cerebral palsy, child J school's intensive trailing course osychology, educatottal p«ychol-jto prepare for a career in Ameri­r, phyideal therapy, and medi-lcan business or government 
•abroad.* '•"" ••v--":-:'^"'--^-'.^-;•• 
tj. \f* 
fV^S '*5si 
r t v'( i\ 
*;\-r 
Smdttf, Octckm tt, 
C5
r'vij N \

i r '<"-'l MW »
»• •" -•>-ffrfc ' n"^'-•-r;"-•'-• •• 
. , 
, MP" >i' > \-> ;e^* ' i," > . ** -« ' , (*>*" "T i{
j >r vv*,"" * , ^ ^ --• «• 4 .
J. 
A" * V-' 
wssr^^ss"*4 
Blanket Tax yioUi4oi« found at pasUd aver the 6rigiiikls* ^ 
-Some 56 other "Blanket Taxes
the OTJ-Texas game in Dallas Will begin Monday, Kleber C. Miller^ Were taken -at the 1 game also. student attorney " general, said These eases were handled^ by the 
w
J,*~' " t^.w.rj'pMfratejwfrini •** MH+i-ft*tv 

~ " ~'m& " J" 
md ^?THE OAltY TOCAN4 NgiLja ^y-" ,1 -•-•. *.. . 
«#»• 
->v •• :•••• ... ..... 
^Otis Douglas, c# 

• . 
'.t.-. -
' when he arrive^ 
fo Begin Mondayr
fairly•„ disposed of m one aftet*­hoon," he said.. « ~ -Monday and Tuesday are pre­l^ the s^eflii beti^-i^ registration dates for student* 
tion taken by ^ihe Stttdent Court 
r

, > . , r >t 
i 
'•• • 
. . •••..••••:. ... • " 
' TradTttionally, C# playing UT in Mi Arkansas pleyef 

the busiest store 
Presentation we^. 

. -I s
' _"_ ^ *« -; "Vf • "" 
on the 

Incompetence among public scha| Sou^hvfrest is de| spark which" ignil Co-operative Administration, kew of the Coll 
asserted Tb "It (school present* is not % Defen Haskew a^ that the program,;, public school .a#, prove,, their metli schools, grows out and. <*sincei(e educational 
Dr. Henry F. for 15 years 4ij sion of School A| 
the US Office o| 

\ 
open a two-day e program when 1;| c^mpui-Uondayl said Dr. Alves vfc ately with aboutj the? faculty to| projects. 
Z£. -«• 

One of the 5easo 
{ * *">£< 

Class

f4 
" ? ' ,s 0" *<4rt 
"&1 c,< 
Sport S 
* 


•^;­
h5^ Supplies 
.5f5fi . . 
» *"fc" •' t "S: 
JT -V 11 *T -r1 -W« » 

d/'%% &'Z4>k& -^ 'fe ^ 
Mt \
-r -> f, ^ 1 * \<{r * 
with hand-pic xs. 4l^cs—
if ^
* iis-/,V?-' * 
4-sui^v ui, 
P>w

K-w) £-21 ^4^1-t. 
S^S^ww 
1

r?-' 
•fk 
»» i% ' J-'!?'£' 

s»c«.r ft 4,0^-Sl v +1*L
Here'i « very unusual 
" j} -r. «< <• 

great pride in wearing, STUDENT'S OWN R ! 
. ' . v 
style wilK hip4\ugging

m 
^butter-smooth fa 
to you as it looks 
m «f lu99«9*,crMm; 
i f \« 

rf>« aaaaa* 

m mmm 

Student 
m 
m i; i0'^k H
VOLUME 
USTIN, TEXASj TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24 

iSSsfeSS4 l. jlAieafa fa ' »,i! i 
fW 
wmassm 
mpus

-«^S11 *<> 
nd petitions to 
Hugh Williamson of the Austift 
Clubwired
Freedom will 

•^.spcpiM 
of the scrolls. 

sau
BEHIND the^TfLying history which, once in * while, Saucer has disproved, is that of ac­	stdlEfc
CER$, By Frank Seafty. New 	a
have Connection with(,'flyingsau-tually finding "flying saucer" Id the Texan late A^ spccial appeal was maae to the Cowboys !&? •-.—Brk* Henry Holt and ConpanTj eers." He also includes a-chapter and its occupants east of Attec, 
pits to circulate Spurs Monday night to help 	circulate the petition*
on scientific terms that are related New Mexico. Here is a sample of From the fascinating pages of to flyinafj saucers.;J-^^s^ludc th$s reportr^ , ; " WiH liieet with anyone else interested in the ^exan offfce^|>* "flying saucer" history comesvuutca a ; associated "saucer" begun similar
. 	terms with "The outside'surface showed no 
of P°wer 	1:30° clock Tuesday afternoon'and begin circulatisff
fantastic and unbelievable tale of a80,**"6®8 which he de-marking of any sort, except for a what Frank Scully believes lies be-scribes as originating from "mag­broken porthole.*.we looked Into petitions. , . rf>, *M 'I hind the., entire matter* «<,-• netic lines of force." * the interior. There we were able
. 
tmftLl0y?5*®% But rather than taking aln 'itn-Of the several tales which come to count sixteen bodies, thai 
biased view of the various ae-from pilots and scientists and men ranged from about 36 to ^42 inches ^president, said thaiand women in almost all walks of . . . They were perfectly normal
. counts that have been told the 	19,t)00 Crusade for-Freft»''f 
country over, as did Edward R. life, the one most incredulous, and in their t development. The only 
dom buttons will 	also fii

Murrow over radio's equivalent of one whose validity the US Broject trouble was that their skin seemed 
handed • ':oulv^6::;^e»^M^i
to be charred a very dark choco­Behind the Flying > Saucers," 

late color." 	last through idaia^M
Scully commences with the prem* 
Scholar

ise that there are really such ma­105 Authors' 	Works For all these.,descriptions of Tower Chimes will Hng xnea* 
chines as "flying saucers." He In 'The World's Best' bodies and ships, the oi),ly physi­'f day morning at 11 o'clock in haw! therefore Concludes that every cal evidence that Scully claims • decided to:insti-ment from the Department of n*ony with bells all over the wesrai Book-of-the-Month Club's book-he is able to produce is some rmging at the same time. * •
tale, proves his premise true, a 	|ining for all boys State in .order to, begin his work 
dividend for November, will be scraps of metdl ahd some strange 	|d 20 years pld. Tuesday/ the fifth annim*a«i

premise which could 	have been during the spring semester. He
f. allowed $0 attend 	of.the United Nations, wiB aia^fel
fallacious in the beginning. ?The World's Best," a collection gear cogs. And upon this he bases 	is presently conducting two grradu­
his whole book.-	.course, becoming the ringing of the Freedom
Also, in an attempt to prove of the best writings 0f lO5 living 	ate conference courses in Latin* 
; Yet this Eook is most delightful 	 reading. It is written in a light 	leinmuth wrote 6ii on
_ Scully reviews some second­Published by Rial, the 1200-word 	course the Greek element in
style. Its fantastic tales are cal­	Wace in Germany/ring'
er third-hand accounts, some of volume contains 	stories, humor, in -the-Athenian the English language.'
culated to keep you in suspense,. I 	itet wrote a long li»e « the world lib«H»
which have absolutely nothing, to drama^ biography, 	history, essays, Jf he can make arrangements,­
and even its strictly "scientific" 	Iphebate.and Citi-bell Signed freedom scrolls froin^
back them up. He says that they and poetry. The book was edited 	Dip;; Reinmuth will spend nine
explanations and terms written 	college campuses will be amoiw
are true because (1) 	After all, by Whit Burnett, editor of "This 
for? the layman lead 	yOu# in a ves, Dr. Reinmuth months in Athens, using the facili­«*ose placed In tiie base Of
Who is to doubt the words of Is My Best." 
wriggly line to * the 	conviction , replacement for the-American of bell, testimony to the fact
those who gay they saw "flying In compiling the. volume, Mr. 	: MOSES AND THE TABLETS ;IJniversity. ties of School 
that there really are "flying sau­	Too, Classical there. wMett the
saucers" and actually examined 	Studies Mrs. the generation
over ballots
Burnett sent 3,000 cers." 	i temporary idefer-Reinmuth will accompany him.
the contents.'of the crashed ma­throughout the 	, From 'In Our [mage* ­
to «authorities If~ you want to be led on an 	iSSt *• Ichines; and (£) the-US .Govern­
world, asking them to 	name "the ,earth-boundd Buck Rogers trip,
ment's -investigation; 	cSS. ihiS? ^ 1 
comewithj^ into the

Saucer," failed to prove all stories, 	I^.-GermW^i^ia4!^
As a result of this balloting, the realm of saucers." But all
more than 800, false. 	wiH be held uTvbrbS^
Bible^Portraits 	Need"More
108 writers whose works appear that he says should be taken with
Scully's book-length "science-	v ,!nsiflled the Berlin. C%*
in the volume Were chosen. Each a grain of salt. Flying saucers or
fiction" story interweaves hearsay 	Hall. The mayor of Berlin wifi iX
author was in turn asked to name no flying saucers,-it makes a good
accounts, some of which he says his most representative work. In 	cept -custodianship for his city.
bedtime story for the' whole fam­

Now in
he has actually seen proof, with 
some cases the . author's reason ily. 	S2Hal nat^
interesting episodes of personal 	chairman of the Crusade tar'^
for his selection are " 	Guy Rowe's thirty-two portraits, unbound prints for framing
KENNETH GOMPERTZ l«»l II 3 jbriginally to ' ':TT1iUustmte•• IAmi fc • TL was * theil idea, of 	Structor in phys-dshl, W. E. Glaze, Marshall Freedom, wtil dedicate tbe bell^
* «

painted : The book 	Mr. 
42 physical Hughes, C: H. Leinbsch, Lynn W.
twenty-six Old Test«m«tit nam-HSrte, a WfelT'Texas newspaper i^that cOr^
more McCraw, R. J. McLean, Bill Mc-tte° J ^ its first ea&'

tives selected and. edited by Ho»-publisher and ardent Bible student, 
tor,handicapped Clennan, Albert A. Rooker, Da­.
ston Harte, were publishe4 to-Who thought the 	Old Testament -Addresses "will be made by iiW'
in universities, vid Strong, and,Berry Wbitaker;

gether as "In Our Image" in 19*9. be made more readable to 	r^cpl®^' United Stat«
fourth annual 
Commissioner for German*7^ 

'Now Oxford University Press modern Amei*icans if it were care* vest Conference 
^a sea-tjt General Maxwell Taylor^fca^l.J&&

has released-the four-color por­fully edited and presented in an 	personnel in 
American forces in Min. X 

poruouo in 
re- 
attractive book with eolor illus-
traits 
stonealone inin' an portfolio . JT ****** 
Qeneacal Clay's d edieatrisrA

sponse to thousands of requests for tr^tions and large type 
Aining Js needed 
The result was a modern classic bolid victims are 	!S?£ ^,e "a«^»«,^f tbe beU
inti be -broadcast-in a-fShMaftMlMa

read by thousands and Ideal as « litutes of higher 
certmony over all major ni>tsiiitl'

READ 	gift book for religious persons and iahl explained, as 
 :>v?y thairman of the 	throuKhouf th« wo*^f-• 1 W"-: 
heads, merry-go-round 	hones, ci­"Jesus did not teach' brotherly day.. Most of th« characters he Is Of the Univer­
gar-store Indians, Shaker furniture 	love: ]Bte taught fatherly loye," paiilted are people he met pn sub< day after a 
Mica Beauties! 

and Conestoga wagons and on and 	one-devotional by £. M. l4gon ways -ai|d in , restaurants *1»
proclaims. He elqplalna that al­
Flutters

on. FSed with beautiful pictures 	seemed to him to be a modern-day rresident of Lub^ m
though it has been Uiought hard version of some BiWUcal characters. _ (t eighteen years, 
Deadline Today

';-HMny;^li4l-fiMi «Mlor:\A\trftute; ;$ 
to loVe one's enfemies, it is eaqr Kent Cooper,,executive director. t was formerly as-
to our ancestors and abookyou'B 	™hk of an
to 4 Either taring of the Associated Press, in the ie Radford. Gro­. Six o'clock Tuesday afternoon 
OverForffA

treasure always. 	enemy's s U»ited Nations.
with girls in bathing 	suits anc

TfiXA S 	fection for Christ to ihat aH else commercial artist employed^ ' heels, wfil held the The flag was adopted on ~ 
w T C ^ A 	as a h«gh be in
2 \ ^ w , ? t t ' £ ft 	i trivial when, compared"^lio by advertising agencies. .Later h«* S Union Thursday afternoon at Z her 80, by the UK i !riendslup.'#-These r aiVk'^fJie'' did portraits Of public figures for -j J? 0 clock. The second will be hel< Assembly, at Mo^ng
O 
wordsi of C. ^nabaeh. ' -^ 

private collectors and Thae'coveiM-.' 	Friday from 6 to 8 o'clock with 
5 ^ *> s. / -'% -examplM) 	oi pict%»res. , t|ie girls in date clothes. Final Jrst time October 2J, 1947 at 1 
r''' ' j votionsl thoughts found in, '{Liv­	Flushing Meadows, and Lake
* 	£ .JL * Ife. Rowe is cn^ted with redi*^c,.,:. judging will take place November«y ing Joyously/' The book mar he cohering the ancient method o#:V "

J, family devotions rtf ia private |Ua-)>ool^ done j»-grease 	TON «ag has "fceett
tr iiv ,»Tsit«-4A\w 	indual may sponsor a contestant.
prayers; or illustrations and quo­are panted I'll rivy^fWA f to qualify j|t 
Entity blanks are available at the

1 t-f 
• A"--#* 4i tations,may b« used by ministers, 	or an equiva­
r 11 ^ ? « A-	Mic§ office in the Union. Winner 
t 1^ ** t s /t, F j.
•ft 	ome eligible by 
^«***, contest will be 	presented

votiobal nteetings. 	painting 
* 	fc Forty Acres FolM«|W^K
HUMAN •a* ^5 of at least important functions; as " t for their first °fth* ^iwd Ui 
« >Jl 	W«" contest are Lloyd Hand. tions forces in Kwrea.
nri
>^r tii -j > \i 
mvf .j ' I 
iurs of work. -•
Xi 

t-&>i -f mk 	Bsrry Slitder, vice^jresident of 
organised heri 
'ysftfod a. iw« «f 'parotiH^ 
•i

" petition '^for a ^itudentS lelegates «ee «5^d 40 attend-fTrimn, 	many achiev*-
Ments of Phi Eta Sigms, probably
opinion pel} will be circulated A nnoker will be held In the 'chapter of Pennsylvania StS 	-Physical Training
committee, stated that student
It was showtime at Oak flMri Tussday to explore stxident ldi»sz n^ain lounge of the Upion Thurs-College, will conduct a ini-	tlje best known Is the distribution for Women; William Blunk, assi^ t*a^r W. "Hood the country* with
w -"G«»» le**s go to the rescrv* 	delegates will be housed in &al
on»?e blanket Tax situation. y n,si,t ?!S0 	g ^ booklets as ^Hints on tant to tha dean of jaeii Jack UN flag* ta taV» fKf r?«Sit nf OM=­
_*^= HwHat room tonight." ;_ 	, tiation before the entire conven. 
-4Ths petition asks fpr ji pQll on 	Holland, dean of men; and Joe 
three queatioiis: Ideal °* t»e local 	Tf'
tssSil^S 
H 

Jfcotold atada«t Sfawk^ Taa?«i 	« is ^jbe Phi Eta Sigma Loan
vtny aiu iney penaitx^
*mrv 	v Sta.ffigma is a Fond, established in 1934. First lJ akepw<
Inquired the co-ed at 	th .Jf vice-president} Charies * JtX r*
•< 	wansxerawe ttotp ^ou* deseed .to ifeelp eaadldate* p«^**RH*UiAiT the equivalent of their teltiation, it wm
TfMhniii^ tMMaw -* 	1» B^entav
^ 	ST
v[« il^qaak foir all
^«ny-f«ther person,
'"<>!»» wt aat lost w»$tkr?
. Mm petition w*| by 	stmestsr in at least ^hirtesn hours student.
thasoradgigglsd. 
ltmtote* Kttrtti iekwar<& 	6N0 r»< *tt«i»ding tech-illy «• WB ^ 
**t fx** ... 
1 ^ * 
mssmmm 
B? 
WW. 

^^j^:«.;ws#iTHgDAIiY^^-^»0 
•••iiMMftMMMMitfi 

ir-tft" 
£ &' ^ 
la allowed to sing two songs, andha* been scheduled lor December 
the. titles of these song* mutt ac-
A in Ch»t<^/vlSjPpfl* )U»ii ^*®or 
compitty the $15, filing tea.
isa iGtenk ptm, Singing, «0­
•'-.••,—•—;v'-^r©BS£-«r®^natnl^ 
pete against oneanothet with the
grtrU eu ^'Ittade tMs:weel 
same song, Hank Perri^ said.
*£W3W5* office by 
"Besides the competitive Spirit
4ft fratemitiesand sororities who 
of Sing-Song, there>always.*«®f"
''Mm-t» participate, in this# pro­
cial unity built up among people
gram. Sp^wdjby liit^ln^ 
who tome together to sing," Per­
ri*T*nd , Panheflenic Councils,
SingtSong has became a. highly ry said, in Urging groups to par­
j^jLi and competitive event. ;, ticipate, X,! ; ' 

Last year Kappa Alph*" Theta
|§$M» yeair six ttophiea wil\ be 
and Beta Theta Pi won first place
awarded* tiu»e eaeh in the men a 
fceiKHS, mthChi Xfenega and Delta ^ppTlTparon rjw€ond, and Alpha Delta Pi. and Pi Kappa Alp*a 
«r» Jganizations have already started ­
Indian DflliCCS 	tentative fulesfor Sing-Song
1111111111 VWUVVi# . ^ 1thia ye4r are as follows: TEN-SAIL ' Otis Douglas,
Indian dances will be given at 	l. Each group shall sing one 
when he arriv

ifoi first meeting of the. Austin fraternity or sororit* song and 
Cerebral Pttsy Treatment Cen-j one sotfg of their own choice. TradHionaHy, 
ter's Parent Study Group. The % There will be no duplications playing UT ir» ^ 

dances Vill be presented by the 	0f 8oi«s. Arkansas ploy
Bov Scouts of the Order of the! $. There will be no medleys. Presentation ' Atlow Monday at 8 p-m. on the! 4.. No solos will be permitted town of the Center. I with the exception of a few bars 
hmj, beell acclaimed I with background singing.^ JTA States 'as 5. There will be no accompany
throughout the United States as . * 	strike of a 
one of the best teams to attempt ment except xor, a,_v reconstruction ^ the orfeunial part^ipants mustbe Indian dances.^;.. 4 -rkr; members or pledges of the organ­
rt"arata Ura-Incompetence i tin High School and the uriver-| 7< -fhe maximum number m. among public sch «ity. Joe Gault, head chief,ui t* ^ ^be 50> 
Southwest is di

ceiving treatoent at the Cen J g> Tlie minimum number, of 
spark which.ign

lor a spastic involvement one of| ^be lg Go-operative Pr
the mam types of cerebri! P*?* 9 Participants may, dress as 
'v-Y *T-"V' member of the group! "• *«* *• Administration, co8tttn^ ?fI
':^Siakes his own w'aU entries mtfst be in by kew of the Col: are the last Monday,. November 27. asserted Thui 
The team won fast pme ttos in case of withdrawal after 
"It {school

No«mW^7, the entry fee will 	present, is not Dean Haskew that the program
ia^ and many other states," •' . • „ ,, 
public school

Preceding the dances, * color i Graduate Enrolls 
prove their meSt --In F«*ign Tfad. School schools, grows 
and /'sinceretie* SSt.^of^r'Tf JLSS Thomas C. Herhdon, BBA ^ educational lea® 
associaw pr Hirector of the ] has enrolled as a member of the Dr. Henry F.,' 
ISLlS Sn XST™£rtTjI JU». 1961. d«. ot th. iumrir for 15 years din' kI u,. Center1* activitijba. The chUd-1 can Institute for Foreigft Trade sion of School J, «' yen will bave'opportunily for play J at Thunderbird Field, Phoenix, the US Office < 
open a

activities and refreshments dur-1 Arixona. . '' A. . . w two-day| 
^rSSnlefBm and talk. ^ — -Specializing m Lati^American program-"When w 
programs include talks I trade, Mr. Herndon is taking the campus Monday 
experts in cerebiil palsy, child { school's intensive training course said Dr. Alves * 

ately with about

psychology, educatonal psychol-1to prepare for a career in Amerx^ physical therapy, and medi-ican business or government the faculty to i 
-^flftects*

• ''abroad.' .
one. 
Ifcsew ^ -t cf 4 
;r 
37,s— 
wk* 
^ ^ 	* < -At 
J-i s ^7 ft fflr . y
,'-y\-v 	Reynolds Penli 
One of the Seasi 
v 4 — i ' 1T-* 
Sport

55^ 
-VS'r 
r:|vjiyov.y©-Sue
i."-i r t1 iiai
<•" M pf2 *,1 -f
1 tr~ '-t * r / XM-te ^ 
' » • -' y 
7 	j ^ *' ^
f& ! v 
iSSsi 
with liand|f>i€| 
A h?'\~ 
p-5hiC Vt? 
Hereia very unufu?] 
rest pride in weann 
^ 	. V 
the butter^smoom te 
to you as St.leokt 
£ ' of luggage, cream, 
— 
—§iut S-M-ML-L 
c
Hr'f 
'	^ 
-Vs-ndayfon Blanket Taxes 
#?s®, ymSs * 1 w " f i,s> ' . , 	^ t 
Pr»«R»0istrdllQn
student constitution, t believe that

pictures had haei1 'teplac*?!; ox 
ail 'seven case* can ha heard and To BeginMonday

Blanket Tax violations found_jtt 	pasted — fairly disposed of in one -after k "t 
^SonM> 60 other Blanket Taitea
the OTJ-Texa* gam* In Palla^wfll 	noon/' he said. • -Monday and Tuesday are pre­
vfere taken at the game also.
«r^-P.t« 0. Mfflg 
If 	the students believe that ac­

SlwwaiMi'ri^ 
' 	YEW 
THE SPOT 
f 

SLIGHTLY FRANTIC become the activities 
Rancher, stage manager; Dr. Archie Jones, 
_gf the. Culture!.Entertainment Committee• a 

faculfefr-advisor; Charlotte Tprupy, chairman;
few days before +he appearance of one of their 
Estes Jones, publicity directpr: Paul .Hickfang,
season artists, such as "Papa" CelestTn and 
display manager; Evelyn Blackmec, business

his. Original Tuxedo Jazz Band which will be 
here Thursday. Crowded into the diminuifive ' manager; and Jim 8uzbee, APO representa­
Music Building box office are left to right, Phil tive. ;'"I " 

!dr«';

Cultural Committee Says 
DANCING NIGHTLY 
Spacious Floor 
BETTER FOOD

To Boa 
For less money 

By FAIRFAX SMITH / out of a three^ornered arrange­scribed by Dean Moore as reasons 
Cultural Entertainment'Com­
ment between the Students' Asso­	for the committee's success. 
. jnittee meetings are often sparkedv 
ciation, die Athletic Council, and 

' Committee members are Char­
with unusual offers from enter­the division" of Women's Intra­BEST IN BOWLING tainers, not the least of which mural Athletics. lotte Tonroy, chairman; , Phil waa the re^nt publicity ^ Ransopher, voting -member;" Jim 1-ft:.Lanes^-MLatest Bannswlck
" Dtfubt was ' voiced' in atudent -• from7a Hollywood cetebrity.':He 

flrbvernment about benefits accru­	Qusby, -ushers chairman, Evelyn 
.was planning a tour with a variety 	Flooring
ing to the ticket holder from Blackmer, business manager; Paul
ahow which featured a girl danc­
blanket tax allotment to Women's 

Hickfang, display manager; Estes
ing with^-foiur.,v^• ^ ? >•-.' • «1K

WW ^£sPsr«ss»# 	iiftf5;t« 
vJ 
%fe 

VOLUME-SI 
frier Fiva Cants 
w* : notar'gpMv 
Vvp^f 
febster Would Sqyi §| 
iivu JV* % , J&, ,v .... 
\i 
. WILD ORGY HERE—-c&ntrary to the layman's opinion of }(»m sessions—-just Waif Lahman, a. conservatively 'clad lad who* ,-».-6iays good tromborie, taking the lead while is 'fellow bandsman listens attentively. Lahman furnishes the notes of a ballad that 
-»s smooth enough to lceef>-the dancers-dancing, yet-intricate enough to satisfy the jazz fans. """ 
PRESENTS THE ORIGINAL 

•vW»Sto4 
TONIGHT 
. By Public Demand the Rendezvous features 
the Dixieland Jamboree Don't Miss Itf . starting at 8 p.m. 
^ N^ver a cover charge 
^ _ 	m X 
Never a minimum charge 
refrigerated 'i'*).!oir conditioned 
jk* t „ 1 % j -kf 1 -/•"«)» >4 f ~
A' *" " " " 	* * 4 <.**&<£**-2 ^ ?tf " 
% 
t>-v---X.: jA£*•*£. •.^^vvfscj 
Jazzy to Define 
An lnftftul!wri3Ni1«^rtW^s{©r|tBe last* Wo~wer£"T&fcofdsa IflJt 
once quipped in his lighter mo­ments; is an association, custom, pir . relationship consciously ap^~ -••proved'-by a society and organized and maintained through prescribed 
•rules and agencies to fill a certain need, ' *> 
6. 1 

It would be difficult to guess, on the basis of this, exactly what ;he would say„ about the* Tower's jam sessions held every Sunday from 2 p.m. on, but some of the prtesent generation—notably Aus­. tin jazz, fans—think ^institution" is not too pretentious a term to, apply to the weekly: phenomenon occurring out on South Congress. 
; ^ The Sunday jam session "hag been going., on for several years, and-judging from the reception 
5-1710 
In Technicolor . 
' "A Ticket to Tommylta\yk" 
Dan Daily *: Anne-Baxter:-;.;^ 
"Under My 
-Skin" 
John Garfield . 
Latest New* 

' 
pt the Tower, It aeems that they will continue fdr some time. 
They tire a little~l5ss now than they were, say, three years ago when Hal Lobree, the local equivalent of jazz apostle Norrtian Granz, conceived the idea that since the. best jazz musicians in town were separated into vari-: ous bands they might like to get together "once in a while. " " 1 
Jt seems th^t he*was " correct,, and all the hot musicians b'egan1 to .gather at the .Club 81 fit later J burned do*m) to-play for kicks rather than polka dancers. , j 
Later the lads moved to the Tower .find Walt Lahman, present Sessions leaded-was much in evi­dence with his floppy polka-dot tie 
'Family Honeymoon" 
Cl*udet Colbsrt -Fred McMurrajr 
"Quicksand" 
• Mickey Rooney
Keanne Ci(ney 
LATEST H£W$' 

w 


2910 Gua 
Pat O'Brien . Humphrey Bogartr 
fhoni
C/1P/TOL. *-©789 
'THE BROKEN ARROW" . 
Jame* Stewart
ISXJ&S/TV ItSlgg
4TEA FOR TWO" 
.. 	DorU Dajr 
Gordon Mactta* 
PHONB 

*7-1964 FIr»t Show 12:45 Adalta 60c 
There fiev^r Ink I a motion picture 
COLOR tV 
>7UST/Af 
In Color TREASURE IStAND" ; Robert Newton 
CUM IN -VHIA1KKS 
TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY 
Feattare Starts at 7 p. A. 

"The Outriders' 
Joel McCrea ArlenebaM 
. „ "Treasure Island" 
BoU* Dritcotl Robert Newton
J 
Si
^'Rouirhshod" 
;*•,Robert Sterling 
.'Gloria Cfaba—e 

~r\9CA$ "MY FRIEND 
IRMAGOES 
Marie WU John 

-fv», 
"The Oua.w" 
Jake RMMII jelltoe Negro*** 
itj^V X
3mpus 
lend petitions to h^W _ 
>r Freedom will 

Didlas headquarters of the state campaign Monday for 2«> 
f
n* (>ti« 	" •-^ « .. • -•• ,
of 	the scrolls
Jsioner and Tra­
il the Texan late A special appeal was ma& io the Cowboys and Silvtr 

fits to circulate Spurs Monday night to help circulate the petitions. t^£ 

•' •I • v:--.•'•.>•.<-• ..<• /• . •-v. 
will meet with anyonef else interested in the ^exan oflSce jlf|Iy begun similar 
1;30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon and begin eireulatmirth*^ 
petitions. '.'/SK*
vTfS2-J. 
I 
ght Scholar 
decided to insti­
ment from the Department ot 
ining for all boys 
State in order to begin his work 
20* 	years old. 
during the spring semester. Re 
allowcid to. Attend 
iis presently conducting two grada»
Course, becoming ftte conference courses in r^wBis afterward, 
one senior course on ti*y, and a 
ieinmuth wrote on course on the Greek element in 
I in the Athenian language.
frter wrote a long 
If 	he can make arrangements,
Sphebate and Citi* 
Dr., Steinmuth will spend nine
!•"; v •v;v;v.>:. 
fes, Dr. Reinmuth months in Athens, lifting the facili­
i replacement for 

ties of the Americans School of University. Too, Classical Studies there. Mrs. ftemporarjMlefer-Reinmuth will accompany him. 
r 
ptructor in pfays­
dahl, W. E.'Glaze, M a r s ha J1 I^eedonv will dedicate the hdl & |42 p h yaixal Hughes, C. H, Leinbach, Lynn W; 
Swn?fU^l,°^W°rla **e&ap*Ba
Ithat more cof-
McCraw, R. J. McLean, Bill Mc-then it will ring its first caS. z*
br 	handicapped 
Clennan, Albert A. Rooker, Da-Addresses will be made bv iakirin universities; vid Strong, and Berry Whitaker. <1. McCloy,. United States TBAfourth annual 
Commissioner for Germakr^n^ vest Conference 
i 	General Maxwell••Tayloi' ' personnel• ia 
Atteriean forcer in ­
|ining is needed 
the ringing iarf ^bW netr
plio vietims are 
he broadcast in • ftv&mMtik |tutes of higher ceremony over all ma/or i^^2^S<
Being Worked Out 
explained, as * i <®*cept Mutual) at II« Jniversity phys-A committee to organise andjtral Standard Time. This wfflSl operate a card cheering section IMediate# follow the broadesst^f discussionwas it footbalT games is in the protm on on selection 
of being formed, Lloyd Stand, J A^Jeg.

J physical eduea­|Alderson, assist­' physical and ' outlined for the irersity's Empioy­| Bureau which lication-graduates imination' pisocess-­rht students has 
ause of the scar-> e physical edu-It • ^ ' V " |rs represented 
the meeting. Iderson, T. E. piont, Joe Bowl ce, Hand Chap-Bhaw, Mr. Ek­
irdDitts 
Illness 
pt. . 28—(4>)__Df pther of Dudley aeimwn of the 
at the Univer. londay after 
ident of Loh» 
eighteen years, as formerly _ Radford Gro­

lt 	Abilene, an< in Dallas'ant 
to 
» equiV^ 

wisn 	'ftej'telteome eligible :j§
Podro leant* 
of atleast
9* 

* ,0'tteir «rjit 
«ill 
man of the crusade and stu* 
tort praMmt, »id S? 
19^00 Crusade fori' Fre*.' 
dom buttons will^ also 
handed Qui Th<*. 
wiU last through thiS w^ ^i 

Tower Chimes *01 ring tmu day morning at ll o'clock la ikpiV ? Wony with bells all.,over 
of the tlnited Nations, win tnarlc ^ the rin^ng of th^ Freedom n$ 
fa 	Berlinr...^,;.yi41j 
peace in Germany, will ring t& 
oeH. Signed freedom scrolls ix&Ji. ­college composes win be •amdijr • those placed la tile ; bell, testimony to th^a^tS­the generation which the 
munwta are trying hardeet taL sell" is holding firm to fte : «rati« heritage. . 
In Germany social «wrvices will be held at the hell » installed in the Ber^|S Hall. The mayor of Berlin wi&ajL cept custodianship for his eit9.1 General Lucius D. Clay, J chairman of the Cniaade 
dent president, said Monday. ^ 	"** 

Bsrfield, who has been, appointed "I Wieve in the^Mcreai 
chairman, is now in Dallas where <««nfty of the individual, 
he will,confer with the SMU Ral-| believe that all men .d«rif«'' 
Iy Committee about its orgn^i^-^.^Wdjom egorily 

tion fcn'd methods of operation, °« section in operntion for the Texas-{ Prayer for the United Ni AAM game here November 80. } when the hells ring out, as ci1 
and' member nations wat te' 
Deadline Today®' • ^ ^ 

Six o'clock Tuesday afternoon 
de?d,i?e ,or
H 	entries in| trea«tir«r; and
to 	an tion will h6 Friday .morning-at semester or the equivalent of their tit initiation, it wiss ex-Mmm
loe Fishpr, historian. 	X. I, Begemsn anu rnT^ 
tn hscMMh te^tey ^ther jweittn. tmergan^ lwui fund ^to any, wwwll . 
I'*9S iw'i Jan jfa j&mi" 	& r>*?ld If .^ hrtematlonal Room Kmester leMtthirteen hours jwodent, • r • •**•> of mechanieal I
Boner,

1 *fh*d 	I1®! 0* the-Union Friday night at A «ngfe»e«fe(f tech-fly p*r*u
• ^Min^lklmajrtab COB«K« ^ id 
^ fa 	|H'^o<

;.Ufe(.<;is fSM^ 
vtSSSr.1? £WVr^*%f 
tWULYTBWM 
ing-Song Is Se^ 
V, * *> * • • t \ ., • 
V\

mai yftiiguganypMa ytatenVdfotriMui Each ggonp, „ red to aiog two songs, *nd ^ the titles of Dies* songs iaufct ac­
In Grefory Oyw. ^ A*nor 
Perry, Sins-Song co-company the $15 filing fee. 
Groups are not allowec 
pete against one another witfcjthe

Entriea can *te »*Ie «na weeK 
same song, Hank Ferry aaM. 
t#i OMa *a<& HoHaad'a dEBce b| 
nH fraternities and «ororftie» who . "Besides the competitive spirit 

*1trte aaxtteipata in tbis*pro-of Sing-Song, there's always •spe­S^l^oUdby lnt«-frat«> cial unity built up among people ity and Panhellenie Councils, who come together to ring," Per* ..fcaa become * highly ry said, in urging groups to pai> 
competitive event. ticipate. 
:\v ithi* few «« trophies wil* be Last year Kappa Alpha Theta 
,l* |vtrded, three each in the men* and Beta Theta Pi won first plaee

honors, with Chi Omega and Delta Kappa.Epsxlon second, and AlphaDelta Pi and Pi Kafrpa Alpha •third. This1 year •• a number 4£~axor • 
Iganixations hav«t already stw*t^d ^practice." ^ "J" ' 
Tentative rules for Sing-Song
Indian Dances 
TEN-G>

this year are as follows: 
l&dlia dances will be given at 1. Each group shall sing one; Otis Douglas 

the first meeting of the Austin fraternity or sorority song end wKen he err 
Cerebral P»lsy Treatment Cen-one song of their oWn choice. Traditionally|! 
£rt Parent Study Group. The „ 2 There will be no duplications ;playing UT \m 
dances -will b« presented by the of songs. ^ " Arkansas pi®
Boy Scouts of the Order of the 3. There will be no medleys. Presentation » 

Arrow Monday at « p.m. on the 4.; Ko solos will be permitted M' 
. lawn of the Center. • ' with the exception of a few bars 
with background singing. • ^

;'>*'.5Rhe group has been acclaimed 
5. There wffl be no accompanx
thrniigfaont the .United States as 
ment except for a strike of -a
one of the best teams to attempt 
pitch.
reconstruction ol the origional 
6. The participants iriust be
Indian dances: 
members or pledges of the.organ­
MW *Che Austin Order of the Arrow 
isation and students at the Uni­
pP|ia composed of students from Aus-Incompetenc
versity. : , _
ipltin High School and the Univer­
7. The maximum number iff among public
Svsity. Joe Ganlt, head chief, is re-
each group will be 60. Southwest is <|f
fft''ceWing treatment at the Center 
8. The Bunimufc^numbef jgf
rfor a spastic Involvement, one. of spark wftich~igp
participants will be 18.."
Ms-the 'main types 
of cerebral palsy. Co-operative R|f
9. Participants may dress as
§? Each-member of-the group 
Administration,^ • kew of the Co$»

s are the last word in authenticity, 
Monday, November 27. asserted Thursq|
lip The team won first prise tiiis 
11. fa case of withdrawal after
Wf. year' at tfee 'national convention "It (school ^ 
November 27, the entry fee will 
present, is not.;

|f|of i^e Order of tJie Arrow. They 
be |orfeited. „ Dean Haskew n
have performed throughout Tex 
that the program. •

pj'as and tnany other statea Preceding tne dances, a color BBA Oraduate EnroAs public school & <1f 
prove their meQ

showing the treatment given 
the patients at the Center will be In Foreign Trade School scliools, grows o« 

and Sincere d«t

"'Ao^ "W Wiffiian -©r Wolfe* 
Thomas C. ISerndon, BBA '50> educational lea^.
a^ociate professor of educational 
has enrolled as a member of the
psychology and director of th.e Dr. Henry F.|
June, 1951, class , of the Ameri­
Center, will give a brief report of for 15 years dii| 
can Institute for Foreign Trade
the Center's activities* The child-sion of School A 
at Thunderbird Field, Phoenix, the US Office «
* tan will have'opportunity for play 
.activities and refreshments dur­Arizona. open a twonday 

ing the film and talk. SpeciaiizmgriQ:.Latin American program' wheiri 
Future programs include talks trade, Mr. Herodon is taking the campus ' Mondaj 
-* by expert* in cerebral palsy, child scbool's intensive training course said Dr. Alves * 

psychology, educatonal psychol­to prepare for a ^career in Ameri­ately with abou* 
ogy, physical therapy, and medi­can business or government the faculty to 

cine. abroad.* projects.-. . ) 
Reynolds Penlq One of the Seasoi ' Sport SI  
2  , y  
with hand-picl  
X "V%;?Utnv-w .yr;fu i „  ^ -" & ~ ?-. > -<• r v! w f v';  »> k 'Wi•' Here's a very unusu^t great pride in wearihe V-' 'style with hip4iugg»r^ r ^@the biit+er-nneeth fel 'o you «s it leolcs 'with hand-picked sti ^r j-1-,, X-1 of luggage, creem  

M  
s  
^  hS£  
v  - S  m  B  
^fsKSLsSiS^  

v-wfs

ft."-jfc-JMSff >%| | * . • 11 
on BlankeOaxe 
* ^ r *•*)-y * t p.
Pre-Registrat»on

pictures 1iad been replaced or [student constitution,!believe that over the originals. * Utl seven cases can be beard end To Begin Monday:;:4 lome 80 other Blanket 'Taxes jialrly disposed"uf in one aftw 
unday, October 22, t95Q THE DAILY TEXAN Page r<£LJ± \ <"p l"Xy
^
•<%•> v 
• T ^ 'Tf V--

WfMi '4(V 
More 
STARTYOUR 
^TUJ>ENT*5 
f-lX^CNIC PANTR.T 

AT YOUR CONVENIENT 
y> 
29th & FRUTH 

YquII get going, more quickly with a "one-stop start" of your 
Drink Yo' Drink 

picnic at 7-Eleven , . ..where you get everything you need' for a 
Fry Yo* Chickeris:

successful affair. 
Stars Are Near " • 

You see, when youVe made up your mind, and when you've sold Friendship Thickens 
your picnicking partners on the idea, you want to GOI Then, and 
:..JColcj drinks and fried chicken is the "out of this world" 

.. . * 
quick. You don't want to be running all over town, looking for some­; picnic combination. Get,,everything at 7-Beven, ttie place 
where you get beverages packed in CRUSHED ICE in a

thing one place/ and something else,at another .-. . wasting precious 
waterproof paper bag . .. keeps icy-Cold for hours. 
picnicking time. You want to SO! 

-jYOUNGBLOOD'S Frosted ftyerst are ideal for pic­

nicking .. . cut-up and ready for the skillet. You can fryS-o-o-o-o-o, start your picnic at 7-Eleven where you can get 
them immediately ...or delay the frying several hours 

every item you want.,. all at one stop, all at one time. The 7-Eleven if that suite your plans. 
men really know aboiit outfitting parties /or picnics. They will see THE BIGGEST TIME, AT THE LOWEST COST! That's 
• a "drink 'n, chicken" picnic with all.the trimming's from

that you remember all +he rigRt things, and they serve ypu so ' 7-Eleven. Whether it's platonic or romantic, its more fun . promptly you'll be gone before you know it. 
and less* cost. Start your pichic at 7-Eleven, picnic head­
quarters. 
.... Get your date, grab your skillet, roll your blanket and "collect your wits. Drive in at 7-Eleven, the .Picnic Pantry,

Check These Picnic Items 
for UT Students for y'ars and ytars, and get ALL your picnic supplies at ONE STOP. Drinks, chicken, crushed Ice Cold Beverages *. ' _ Frankfurters ice, charcoaK ,.EVERYTHING ... at -one time and one^ . the '7-Eleyen Stpre.Crushed Ice Wieners • 
* 

• ­
Sandwich Meats Hamburger Patties 
. . * 

Sandwich Spreads Cheese, sliced or-packaged For UT Students 
Vienna Sausage > Pickles 'n Olives 
Wooden Forks and Spoons Cold Meats Sliced to Order 
SOMETHING NEW!

Paper.Pia'tSs and Cups l Mustard 'n Dressing
:: V ,:rv V v; . -~r 
7-1J Hamburgejr Patties are Just the thing for your Paper Napkins Ice Cold Beverages .picnics. "Frozen to keep the flavor in, you can cook them in two minutes—»-no need to let them thaw. Made fjrom
u:? By the case, to go ' 
ice Cold/Soda Pop . pure beef and beef suet*—no filler added. They're really ""out of thfs world." 
7-11 HAMBURGER PATTIES Open 7—Close 11 —7 Days a Week 
\ 

Convenience of Students &­
fe 29th 6; FRUTH|
•r * 

No. I —901 Red River Nl3-29thandFruft No. 5 —51st and Burnet Road^No. 7 — 3406 Jeffer?on„ 
f No. 4 — 43rd and. Duval No. 6 — .915 Lama ^|No. 8 — 1912 South Congress
No. 2 — (017 Barton Springs 
«-:srjtfw&.v

> Road <" K'"Vt ^ Vl'u -ts>s*
\ 'J St , f l 
"to1 jwyi 

^—-—. tii,-\r 
I 

u: 1 
H "T-$
4"ii si'& 
wmmm