light blamewhen'in illiterate;yardman cuts-the< ma*/,. ttpm*th# *_ w t&f'the.pro>tam facing fw*r members of th* law-faculty • '"wfi&h they viaduct • model ait-gunfento'f an appellate case at 8 An ftnderdog Kansas University giate debates in which he has par­still more comment to .his mag­<)clock tonight in Geology Building 14. 1 ' 1' • • , TOKYO, Thursday; Ded,: 1— Changjin Reservoir—hut disclosed the niain objective. Jfta ate-' teamwiH t*y Thursday ticipated. .Besides.. winning, the. nanimous statements of Tuesday^ —Trapped' U.S. marines and only Thursday. „ Commanding of­east coast center Professor Gray Thoson..trill be the attotneyfor the appell upset a vastly superior University above mentioned Miami Tourna­"We.now know, the truth/' he infantrymen, fought fiercely rfir ficers-did • not want to' tip off close: by the port of ment, he wtfn the Nation&l Cham* iflt, and Professor Gas Hodges will represent the appellee. The sisting Chipese Reds in a blinding approaching reinforcements of Tenth ftam and thus^. win the grudge said.'^'Midd'e-western isolationism pionahip at the National Tourna- court will consist of Professor C. T. McCormick and Dean W. snowstorm-Thursday in northeast Chin^:R^:|^ ttte—tKathajs--been gro^wnr If Uni. all-Vfm Marine and PigeHectpn ot ^VX«-gJjchpolrsp^ j^ C&rysjUoughei^yrformer Korean with , some ^meriea Already some elements have steadily,between the two schools 1848. versity's oppoaihg^^d^Gommun-breaking through onrtrap-.- Atmy XHvflrien et ist international organization is Texa»assistant attorney-general, ? t ~ traversed"' the: six T>lo6^'istainedt, for the past few days—or s vaays Showing great impartiality and for nre reeervoii. plateau It was a savage fight miles of? road from Hagarij at t&e __ihe coach, Edgar Sfretton, Jr. . nothing more than sickly parloiv Several law jwhool students are expectedxto^listen to Jtheir by the-forces,—launc to Koto—but ere ughtiar -—'Two^ debates.will constitute ie profs put ijato practigrwhat they've been teaching Wednesday at the south ^tlp of more Rea^stilr^r^the ly. There was no: •• pish of hattle. The first, a pr$­ to whether-thi* meant th« --liminary—will matcbr Jack.. In­ from Hagaru all the way to Kotol gram and Joan Ragldale'of the University against Kansas repre­Chinee Reds kept pouring iffta sentatives on the subject, "Re­North Korea from Manchutisu solved: lPha€ the American people building up to a 1,000,000-mait IfltfSSi should reject the welfare state." force. Already the Reds havfe. Texas will take .the affirmative.' forced .United Natiomr troO|ia ^aL The debate will be held in Speech northwest: Korea to retreat more Building 201 at 1 o'clock. than 120 miles and have the UN aiwationr1n the northeMt Eteadliner will be tKedebate be­ into a flight fw surviyaL -. tween Lee Turner and Vuy Wood-g «;-cO oily ism,of Kansas and third stringers In the Changjin Reservoir sec« Kleber Miller and Bonnie Bug­VOLUME 51 tor, US marine* on t|te west fdtdhr Price Five Cents ger of the University. The Texas AUSTIN, TEXAS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1950 jSix Pages Today NO. 82 and Seventh Division WantiaroMttr on the east side earlier had battie^:^. team will take the affirmative side through Red traps into. the^tew»':>® of the question, "Resolved: That of Hagaru at the sottth tip. the -non-Communist nations should form a new International organi­There they had halted-whQe zation." ttuion B. Brown, Texas Marine, NaVy, and Air F«ni. pMea raade dawn-to-dusk attacks debate lettermaii, willbe chair­ man. on men of six Chin«» r^imeatA on mountain ridges.. These Red* That debate, to follow the Ox­ sought to turn the toad aouth W ford Union parliamentary style, Koto into a "death valley.*' will be held tonight at 8 o'clock At 6:30 o'clock Wednesday in Garrison Hall 1. Under the morning the break-out attack feek Oxford Union r»tyfe, the audience By W. B. WALLACE JR. gan at Hagaru. At 7x25 Thunei may ask questions and toay make c By CLAUDE VILLARREAL _ Did you ever eat any baklawa? sity extension 553. The price is day morning it was disclosed that short speeches after "the main Or kubla? $1.75, and the deadline i& 5 p.m7 Wan-Friflnyf -ymi ,.-J. APO?^; poHjr speeches a|re 'finished. Speakers i«acned"'K6t^^^^;2^^^iJ-' Ara­today. Also a ticket booth will be will be anyway. booths Friday from 8:30..a.m. to may he-i1 by questions,-cheers and jeers. bic; but the Arab Students Asso is will be located rty-eight—miles--«oyith ciation will give you the chance Thursday morning.. •Hungnam across the Gulf of Cho» Miller, a I senior law student, is Man" contest comes off, and any­in front of the Texas Union, west to sample these delectable dishes Baklawa is a dessert made of sen, the American garrison begaft a three-year debate lettennan, a thing,is liable to""go" in the cam­of Waggener Hall, south of the pulling out from the port of Wo»i at.,its ajmual dinner at 7:30 o'clock cake ingredients and assorted spi­ Law Building, west of the Chemis­ v member Sf {Delta Sigma Rho, hon­Thursday night In. -the Crystal. ces and is only one of the wide pus between fourteen (ugh!) can­ ssin, presumably by sea* •/ '% s, orary spfecjh fraternity, and since try Building, east of the Main Ballroom of the Driskill Hotel? Variety pf exotic Arabian dishes didates and other write-ins. The garrison, believed entering the University has been Building,-and in front of Hogg There will be two desserts in Ara­that will be served, said Moha- The contest, held for the past Auditorium. ^as covered b^ South Korean ma* in sixty-eight intercollegiate de­ bic style, and a cinnamon drink mood 'Hamandi, a club member. rines still holding .Wonsan and I • , bates, wirihing fifty-eight of them. three-years • for the benefit of ; Votes will sell for a nickel each, that is typically old world. Other disheB included on the menu. fighting off Red guerrillas, in tin*. Last year he and Dugger won are kubla, a batter of 1 Photo biiFrttnk Witktrt Campus Chest, will-raise funds Steele said. Bonus votes will, he 'area. >;Sf&gi : : : : in Tickets for any students or fa­ ground / nine out of ten debates to win this year for, APO's campus emer­giyen for block voting of one, five, culty members and citizens of wheat stuffed with meat, almonds, •ANOTHER OF THE TEN finalists in the race for Queen &f tfie U.S; Eighth Artay headquarter* \the Miami Rational Tournament. Austin who wish to join the fun tomatoes,, and raisins; fried rice gency fund, which" will-be used ten, twenty, fifty,, and one hun­said", the South Korean marines Aqua Carnival is Janet Le.fr of Austin. She,'.along with nine others, Dugger is a graduate and editor at the dinner are available at the and eggplants; erfa, the beverage dred dollars. Block voting of ten would follow.. The American and will be presented ieach night of the show, whicfi opens next Wednes-' for worthy causes to be decided dollars ;or more must be done in of the Daily Teffan.-He is a three-Foreign Students Office/B, Hall made of cinnamon sometimes South Korean forces will * he day for a four-day run. / • by a student-faculty committee the APO office, Texas Union 305; year ietterman and has won forty-21. Ticket reservations may be called Arabian coffee,-and moved to , another point on one out of forty-eight intercolle­phoned to Joe W. Neal, Univer-laba, a jello* made with milk -in­|" Austin m easteoaat. — — stead of gelatin, said Hamandi. added to the list:of prises ^o be Sent to Bleacher* , Mr. and Mrs. Sahia Gorushe will giveri: the '"USrliesf Man.";The new prepare the kubla and Mr. and donations are Kruger's, identifi­n Mrs. Fadhil A. Al-Tai and Mr. and. cation bracelet; Garlin Jewelers, tous Experf li Mrs. Mohammed Bassam .Will aid tie clasp; Home Drug, bottle of in preparation of the other food. men's cologne; and Texas Book The baklawa and kubla eame Store, Week-end kit. Prizes are es­from New York and the other-timated to amount to more than After 4-year Wait Issues' Guest ingredients were purchased from $150. Dr. Toyohiko Kagawa, Japanese local dealers. Each dish represents The fourteen candidates who to bring the renowned . A6lM Game Seat At long .last George Cvijano-offered a scholarship to pa^ his the fpod of an Arabic country. religious leader, who wUl give here. -­ 1 be ballot are vich, 29-year-old Yugoslavian ref­non-resident tuition. will on the Don For example the kubla represents By RUSS KERSTEN Menasco, Sigma^Phi Epsiton; HiU two lectures Monday before Uni M ugee, will Tie allowed to come to . .George three sponsors— author has ^ Versity j^udiencea,. » of Syria and Lebanon, the mahalaba the University. -: ^ Elwin -F, Ja^nonV^eg^»kmr, Jar^on*«.; poar Leesburg, Chi .Phi;. Joe A. Ax^ng gives pi clear insight into,, -Phi Kappa^ Sigma, the Episcopal and baklawa represents Iraq; and more thirn sixty books, a social ttjtf jaittoiephy of "Japan^i gtilkt^ - It.has been. 9. long four year Student. Group, and the Disciple student, has charged that lie was •worker, -lab©?' leader, economic the erfa represents Egypt. •«* '»• ^ilSSt&SSfJ^iSSS «t Christian." Shu u-evei^SngH wait for Geiorge, who requested a Student Fellowship of the Univer-denied bia seat-in the student sec^ game .herfi^ previously, I entered evangelist, peace promoter, and The entertainment will includc Rejalwan;-Beta.-...Ihatft-.Pi.J_ jtndt visa in Juli. 1946. bat could not tion at the A&M game—the first " philosopher. be­ sity Christian Church. the stadium from the north end. dinnermusic^playedfrom^record-J^^n^^"^^^1*^^!^^ 'Guerry Strong, Tau Kappa Ep-lieves. , •come. During the last war George was ings,„ the music of violinist ZagJW^ C®86 of thi™tu«. A gatekeeper directed me to the silon. -' • , Sponsored by the Religious Em-, Byron Oven,' a personal friend condemned to death by the Com­Heman ;Sweatt,' best-known of west side of the atadium to a gate phasis Committee, Dr. Kagawa: 7 That Christianity a the most of George who attended School munists in Yugoslavia. He later lool Yousif, and the dance number the University's Negro students, on the Southwest^^ corner", where Al^o Lt. Commi W. K;' Coker will talk Wonday at 4 p.m. at the admirable ind wonderful achieve-of ,. Sherry Trad. Yousif and Miss (by "loyal NROTC students") and in the whole story of th*.^, with' him in France, andiBivow-^a fled the country only to be thrown commented that he had no siich another'gatekeeper .requested that University Methodist Church in ment Trad into -a .slave labor camp by the performed' at the Arabian trouble. ; • • ---I -exchange my student ticket Paul H. Rigby, Lloyd Hand, Dean human race ia the basis of DfcL University student, has lead the Dance Festival at Friday Frolics. Jack Hplis;hd, Dean"'W. D, Blunk, an open meeting. At. 7.:SQ . jpon. Kagawa's life philosophy. four-year sjearch for a sponsor. Nazis. He was liberated by • Ed Olle, business manager of (Section 47, Row 5, Seat 5) with that night( he will, address the American-troops-i-——~—— Joe W. Neal, foreign students Wales Madden, and. Mac Bintliff aerts that "when we discover "He says pa rXI^rg^Ms^ertafnly athletics artd boss, of the Memorial a white man who h$ld a non-Great Issues course at a place a3yisor, wilPgive «in-addft>M~«m fhv "friends"). ; : • ' V;r: ';: truth in God through Christianity,1 been pushat ,-ayund, and that he Stadium ushers," said that if any-student ticket-calling for a seat to.he designated later^-Tha-Fublie deserves" to come to Texas and .."JFive of Progress of Arab Stu­one had barred Jarmon-fxom his in the non-student bleachers on , Write-fy votes are not only le­Speakers Forum ia co-operating we "Rave^scovere3^e~tnrth fttr*^ become a of United dents on the University Campus". the south end. gal Jack Citizen the seat he did so in violation of the -but. expected, Steele, The purpose of this Arabian Ban­ States. printed instruction sheet issued "This gatekeeper explained that chairman of the Ugly Man Elec-If the doctrines of fihrijrt hav# quet is. to promote good wil} be­ The" difficulty of*entering the all University ushers.-r --Lebuld-not-use-the^aeat callect^for-•tioh '•Comtefwion, said. so place in economics and in* to Light tween Arabic nations and the US, country lies in the fact that • No official complaint was ever by the ticket I held fo,r Section Steele told a Texan reporter ctusCry, we cannot truthfully say said Mr. Neal. George has |no citizenship in any made, and when contacted Jar-47, that it must b%I-«xchanged. He that anything in the fofm of cam­our culture is Christian," Br. country*^ but is a resident of Only three of tha seven NSA Fla^s of sev6n Arabic nations, mon expressed surprise that the said that 'they' instructed him to paigning was "legal," as long as Kagawa told an audience of 5,000 'Freedom' Torch U France. His French residence kept committee members were present Arabia, Iraq, Egypt, Syria, Leb-story had leaked. --Adding "I in­do • this, without specifying who the University administration, did in Gregory Gym during his 1$36 him from coming under the at the scheduled meeting Wednes­lafton, Transjordan, and ' Yemen, tend to try again Saturday (LSU they' was. n6t object* to it. "The commission visit to the Univerwty. Governor Allah Shivers will \ United States Displaced Persons day night. representative of the members of game)." Jarmon. explained that "So I sat on the bleachers at asks that no active campaigning be open the American Legion's state­"The cross does not stand for, Laws and beftig admitted as a In an effort to get a quorum the association will be displayed someone must have overheard his the south end of the park in a done within two feet of the polls, death, but for a method of pttt-f' regular quota immigrant. in the lobby. wide Fire fors Freedom program together and reach a decision, on conversation with the usher. segregated section." though," Steele added. gress," he believes. "The law* Thursday by^ lighting the first However, the State -Department the question another meeting ~will and codes of.the world, half Chris­ tcrch. has issued 4 special visa now that be .held at 1 o'clock today in tian and half' P*g*n, . Chancellor James P. Hart will George has "a-sponsor, • and the Texas Union. Christianized; We must, have eo^^ give a briqf talk on education^ University has accepted him and "If we are going to do -this operation among nations and peo*; part in keeping the ilames of li­ thing at all, we might as well do Pie." 6 , Cherry Blair Honored by AAM _ berty burning high. • % it right, even if, it hangs over -A nA _r£heo"y jjljpiY queen of ^1950|untH°^ifter the Christmas holi-The Cowboys and Silver Spurs Public Relatioiu Gmp t* MNwt Via AquarCarniVgl, has been chosen davs"days," FredFre1 1 t the crucial test of the United Na­guarantee of action by member that such action would change ization and procedure of the UN,: _ 11 1111 11 1 ii' vyii tions, Dr. C. A. Timm, professor .nations, he said. the'-nature of the UN. . Dr. Timm listed possible ways that of government, said ih a Pop Le^> Asked whether a penalty should "This would, make rae the veto power _may_ he skirted. ture Wednesday afternoon hi br Imposed upon natioiis that re-federation and, bring .up These are: Campus Chest Fater Texas Union 30S-11. , > 1. Amending the charter. This m The United Nations probably . Is impossible because the veto will use every effort to dodge-act-- power would block any effort to To Be Decided Toraght; ing on the issue at the present 4o so . The celebrated English, brother writing in English.^Sir Osbert ie time, Dr. Timm isaid; ^ i; 2. The abaencife" br abstinence of The fate of the Campn* Chest _ Sam^lSr^iiw^i^aduat®. apd sister poetry reading team, equally famous as a novelist, poet, * iWhether ojp not this is appease^l „m. permanent member. Dr. Timm will be decided Thursday-night. a resolo-' Dr. Edith "ftnd Sir Osbert Sitwell, essayist;, short story writer, and blyman, will introduce ment, he declined to say. But he The Campus Chest committee will" Will gfive a joint recital Monday biographer. pointed out that it was under such tlon for tim erection of a flag pol« did state that "to the extent that copditions that the UN voted to Report to the Student Assemblyat 8 o'clock in Hogg Memorial The team has been the recipient i falls short of-putting Chines# take action in the Korean situa-when, ft meets at 7 o'clock in the UN flag. This reaoiutaon wiU ; Auditorium. of many honors and awards. "The troops out of Korea, it is appeased . tion. This sent Russia hurrying Texas Union 316.. The commit* be preeested to President The duo is sponsored by the Scarlet Tree," second of Sir Os-ment."- ^ back, to the Security Council, be tee's recommendations will be and the Board of Regents. Forum Speakers' Committee of bertV autobiographies, won the -Because < the United Natip®!^ said. Now she is attemptfcng to heard, and the bill to abolish the the Texas Union and the Cultural highest prize in JEnglish letters, Sterling Stev*»» student success or failure rests primarily ^ teislt whether the UN will take sp^h Chest will be voted on;^ 1 Entertamment^cmiinittee.-""—-the-Sunday TimesHtward^alJ.tflOQ'4-Ufion J&e voluntary «o>ope«at)on Also scheduled to come before president, told a Texan _ forceful action against a perma­ Sincechildhooddays,-thefab-pounds. -1 ' of all its membe«;^Df;vTFrffifi" i^p:r nent J member—China—and. with the Assembly is the report on-the that hewiliTiatroduee .ristqr,1 foam s the Russian delegate present., ^4 Hare Proportional voting system, bnckiqg. unique role in British contempo­first visited the United <$tates in —S^~ ^Tho-: -Ache»on program, now used at the University^ The AAUP reaolutiona 1 rary letters and in th? English 1948. The^ created a sensation in According to^this plan, eases of ; iich he strongly supports. cqmmittee will suggest a new sys­ke,t Mriy hl^ei for the fiicufty, cultural and artistic scene. Dr. the literary World with" their joint aggression would be referred, to Beeause lack of unity is a ma-tem, Jean Dalby, committee mem­faculty dub, medical care, and in*Edith ig universally recognised recital of poetry readings at New the veto-free General Assembly" jor problem of the UN. Dr. Timm ber, said. --erea*e$ *etewaaeafc+ hesefita.n • n, • as one oi the finest living poeta York's Town Hall, after failure to reach an agree* M n T., 1 favors regional organizations that ment had' removed them from the would strengthen member nations.Security Council * agenda. The The Atlantic Pact, he believes, is General Assembly may then pa» > a good idea and should have been V-' Dr. W. H/Bull' Elkins Speaks a recommendation on the question started sooner. •jrortu cred mim-wM by % two-thirds vote. . ' v -' Comparing the UN with its pre-, [Tonight at Education Meet mm, This would in no way vfolattf-W'" decessor, the League of Nations, By CHARUE ^EWIS K the UN charter, he points eot^f which faile4 because of lack of since recom*^ US rapport, Dr. W. H. "Bull" Elkins, the Ahead in Education," «nd discuss General' Assembly Dr. Timm said.^ Iniversity footiball and basketball new trends in vocations, and will mendations on all matters not on r>lj ^The UN is in effect t^t Glee Culb Director Thomas Wil­Thero W m he * the Security Council .agenda -ax**'^ another league.of Nations. A liams (quite ah athletein hia day) star who not only made Phi Setf explain, some pbfses of the new bften barks order* at his men Bice **«th, 1* it, hat rumor WIt pa, but went to Oxford op Gihner-Aikin laws. ' ' ^ specifically provided for, f '-k§ league can be wefek and ineffective by any other name." the maivunder at a football game, ?ia Rhftdes Scholarship, will returh Dr. Elkins has been interested psychology is * [to his alma mater Thursday n education aU his school life, as BUajMt Tax OaaJKm Todar ^ CentmiM)* 3ay for thefr enoKtigter tit -m the chief _ , e^-M-fa ttprta. Kov mrijasl I#i$j)pportunltf" f ^at%i^;p|ed^;co^4­ |the, All-Education-Convocation at of Texas Western at £1 Paso, and for students to have Bhwk^t iuUir ireatiMr-fo*. Auatin much taller singer, broke ranks b't "-4V ' opportunity to be-closely «sioeM-> from ? to 5 p.m. at the Uni^eWitl^ tit* Put early part,of "Sen coach, put me to! ftuffingthe Dr. XUuni wiU «WI«t?« led witfe OkKOjk. TlfcjJ <%3 imMI ' fitr ft m 0t 7*'19S0 lift©(AN;Paa# ^ ^T 3> *f »• f" )U",i-imi-..'.i! rT?-r,-t V ^ f-pt / .,; _ • iUto* Man oh Campus Ey Blblir IS *& ;.V. 3m* ..., v,.,.„, agpisiiii...,,^.. . - WW*/Vo/ewareXkLofROS£NQUlSTSnetofom mam tax to ;fce* piiid % ftri erif-"ployee wilt'be %T% per year; byn fW ik* Two . self-employed person," $108. "This fThb k Aifatrt ia a rtriwJ«f ... •*••••-• k-.m, -aeems W£e 4 -good deal of,money, f"r *Twm ° .i TL W. may well ask can ^e afford p.yer. health reaches 27 billion dollars. ^^'4,2) for advancing medical re­ " Not all this could"be saved by ^dearth "on diabetes, heart disease, better medical care, but a good >i:%rthr»tis and otber diseases; could b(?-J , mf^r'" extending", Vospital ^ . , ,r ~""Tl,..LI.llti!.r' |ii 'jhjiiij .f We spend more than nine bil- * fiv fftr Wilniiw'rural and other 1'on dollars-evety year on alco-«S57»d~for assisting *olic drinks; nearly four'WWort on '^.Sarmer's health co-operatives; tobacco. Can. we afford any-%$ (S) for expanding.state and lo-thing less than the best of medial ^'Ical health sftrvices-care? 0f ^et against all this the AMA ^states to maternal health, child its stand< saying among ...,, would It be fair to ask the AMA to keep medicine out of pojiticK? In conclusion i wsmt to give you . » „.. the.real, tbe ..compelling reason why I am f tfTTalional lieattK iff." »ura«ce. And in saying what J liavei^w each one of you individually and pe^onall^. Presumably none of you ^re really poor; probably none is rich. You are all in of you m very the group I have now in mind i^U Then let u§ Suppose that next week or tomorrow you do.not feel so well and you go to a doctor, He examines you ahd finds that you need .an operation and after that six months of complete rest. 0i' -vou tuin out to Havo TB-or d*­ abetes, or a suspicion of cancer, 0r any one of it hundred poten­ tially grave illnesses. / _ Will you give m# one guess as to the? firit thought that enters your nnnd after you have absorbed the shock of the doctor's diagnosis. Hdre it is: You will wonder, how -Jlltealtii, and crippled children; and "othey things that it wants to keep .much, as thi^ illness going to cost ^S|iv5f7Vt -for coverage of individual Medical "bills through national IM^iealth insurance. ; ;•/• ^• About the only-changes imme­?#gdiately noticeable to the consumer s^Xrill be the increase in his tax lt |l»ill and tlie complete disappear* j«l*nce of his doctor bill. He may "fStill choose his doctor and his hos I iyitaL^The"doctor may still refuse pC 'sa»rd«,'even to the question of how ../fthey *re to be paid. " Like anything else J^hat requires inumaxi skill and energy, lijiedical jSarvice cosU money. National 1health insurance is not a. device tfor doing away with, the coat of fc • . ix» .• • _ Imedical care; it* is only a means politics out of medicine, In 194.8.. rae and how am I going to pay for the House 6t Delegates voted to lt? assess all members $25 in order to That is the question that haunts rai?e a "poli'tical war chest" (iii the mind of every middle-class the words of the A^IA) to fight" person,when he is seriously111. The "socialized medieine?v (also 'the doctor tells you not to worry; it words of AMA). ' . . U'H interfere with your recovery. Now they have hired a firm of How can you help it, when you professional propagandists to con-think of, the -sacrifice you and duct the figljt More than * million y0ur family will now have .to the^ m.».»T». ;se" iUf.« stuP\'rirfc^7W Da® Texan IttlliSlif Tbv DaUy r«Eun, a student Mnr«paper of The Unlv«r*it]> of Texas, .ta pubtifbc* In A.u«tin «very morning except Monday and Saturday,' -Mtitonbci' to -June, pad except during ' holiday and examination • period*, and bi-w«eklj duriotr tbe summer iMaioni under the tftlo of Xhm 8<2BM«r' Texan on Tuesday aad.'Friday by Texas Student Publica­ ifions. toe. i-; New*;«an«rfbutt0ba irtU-..•&» accepCrd oy telephone (2-2473) or at 4fae «ditoria) offie« J.B 1, or at tbe New* Laboratory, J.J3. lOS. Inquiriea •w coocernios deliver* and ^dvartising sboutd be made in J.B. 108 42-2413». ..t.S:#' ; SUjdoota w*invited be visit tlu editor and Maoeiate editor durinar .Jtfcw too*rfn# boara­ .#m -Opinions of tbe Texan are not necessarily those of tb* A,dntni*tra­ tlon or nttier Oniversily officials k-r Entered as «econd-class matter October 18, 1^49 at tbe Feet Office at Texas, under the Act of March's. J878. ASSOCIATED PReSS WUIE SEKV1CE Tbe Aaaocjjited Press is exelosi*eiy eofitied to tbe use tor republica­wjivjfwi of ail nevs diepatebea credited to tt or aot otherwise credited in • -W newspaper. «tid iocaJ item* Of epontaaeoo* ortcin published herein. *, Btfhta of publication of ^aU otber matter herein also reserved. cf doctor bgfauae thev-a«»-afraid of ..^4^ Ehv. Profnnnnr moVp }n rhamhar* nf the cost of what they fear the doc-tory and Philosophy of Education, cowmerce, Rotary ' Clubs, and tor might tell them. And you can agreed: alumnae interests,'than they have never be sure but that you may That the State's higher educa-to a rational system of state insti­be next Or, if not* you, then sortie tion is .somewhat muddled ahd tutions to take care of our educa­ . . "V • ii: _ . • . / • .. , . .. . . -.. ...v— member of your family, even a in need of co-ordination; tional needs," he said, "We do distant relative for whom you the present situation not have a system—we have -must assume responsibility. grievously wastes State funds; rather a large number of indivi- That changes were made in dual institutions irrationally lo- Z^Z secondary i?chocfls similar to cated and without discrimination of xh'm^ {ov there is no earthl-v changes now -needed in'colleges; of functions." . of estimating the'exDense It And that there is a character-•-' ­ w*> «3t®at.ng the expense. It may be small, let us hope it w|il -istic lack of planning which clouds Dr. Eby .foresees, over-a long! be, but it may take everything you own and all you can barrow be­sides. National health insurance pro­vides an answer to the question; the AMA proposal does not. Thai is why I am for national health ^%aifcncfc is concerned. The maxi-keep politics out of medicine; insurance. Out-—Nudes In %A$ Harvard Loosens Up . are -being junkedv- Represented for National Advertising by National Advertlsinc 8*{,*iee, tn«u,. CoUey^ PoUishers ftepiMeatative aippt a majority of the graduat­«• M»" „ New York. M. y. ing students has voted for an ; j. Chicago — Boston — Ia>» Angeles — San Francisco ' informal picking up of their mm .. diplomas without ceremony; * MEMBER JKi institutions, will en\erge as Wednesday appeared likely to get strong rivals of the University in an 1 emergency $38,000,000 UiS. quality, _ staff, and range of of; loan. Committees of both the Sen­ferings. * nte and House have approved the Decrying" the motivations of measure, which now goes before-some Texas educators, Dr. Eby Congress. ^ icia The Student Employment Bureau, B i o have Refund Orders within two - Hal) 117, ha* openioffs for the following v«eH» positions: a full-time experienced drafts-MAX F1CHTENBAUM, max, two surgical technicians to work Associate R«Ki»trar from 1.1 p.m. to 7 a.m. and'front 3 to f JOE D. FABRAK i lay, December 11 and 12. • Director Section I of the Examination will be offered Monday December lt, 2-4.p.m. Sbtdettt* who have net. been regis­in V Hall 209., For this test the y tbem, as explained on -fare For. this test' V Stat* Daily -has' deyised a 30 of the.^General Information Bulletin. student will need a pea and a l*rge mass Unique set -of'definitions for In ord«r to receive this refund, the Wue-boofc. the 'desitr­ , football non»enclature. In­ advanoa of SUBSCRIPTION j" ' eluded in-bis repertoire of new meaning ara-V -. oum Subscription—three month*) meamngs are* t XJ**--aioato • ••••• . -•••: •• •••'.., .» .«# ?at month, ntfltr istowtf . Football-nan -inflated Sphere " . 4»0 Par month, mailed xmt at town- . .60 , Resigned ior fumbli^r on the 5-yard i>£RiklA!NENT J^TAFF g&m-sEdtfaM-rHt-Cbtaf j,-. X RONNIE DUCGER ability to look dejected after ' ,Aasociate Editor CHAELEY TEIMBLB B,ofe Sa4^?ri Bob-Gallaway, -X j£Cb*r)«» Jjcwis. ^Uifi, M»ptf^ motlon«-Lt3ie1 referee iitort.^. , Claude Villarrcal, ^ean X4p«combv ^^IWter,tSerj»me«-".,-:-:i,rv^^* Olan. Brewer, June Fitzgergld* Cljarles » Lewis, Marutn -irendersraes iMv^rrojTTMis .issu^,;.$ • ':^mr' MARY ANN BEAUMIEB .Night.fieportew, v Claude vai»rwl, Evelyn Rheubush, Bruce Roche, Jimmy Lu«k i»t«inte Kea ^ooldey, Bot>b S«ajn|i^ FitBfir Bu«>JC»*U3l|. * ^ Order Prepared. Those e*pecMn« to take the examin*­ If the Bursars Receipt i» left at the tion should sign the sheet on the oweii. Washington, Dee. E—{/P)~»^ by giving them aceeA to-FomeiM President Truman and Prime Min­or 8urrenderi»g Indo-China to Rsd conquest '• ; ister. Attlee served notice on the ths jgfiatrtti powers will ^ move urgently and "with energy" gently plaiiii aj\d program# devel­ xt; .* a j in building up Atlantic defenses oped by the North Atlantic Treaty against Soviet aggression. .: .. -orjganigatiqp# ±tb# zWhi^Umm said. ' . "~"r": '. T" A White House communique "They agreed they-would gosaid the President §nd the Brit- forward with energy in buildingi«h leader have reached "full up the. military strength 'of theagreement" on that phase of the Atlantic community." world crisis. ' Press Secretary Stephen T. Ear­ It was thc first real pronounce­ ly, said the two chiefs will prob­ ment of the three-day talks aris­ ably meet again Thursday—and ing from the intervention of a -V'1" —i—— Red China and pledged his coun­try will fight beside the United States in Korea "in fair or foul weather." Officials said President Truman is also bent against Korean ap­peasement. They said Mr. Truiuan firmly believes that if there are any negotiations to settle the Ko­rean warfare, they must be limited to Korea alone. They said, for example, the United States government would turn down any suggestion to buy off the Chinese Communist regime News Briefs LAKE SUCCESS, Dec. 6—(/P) ——Andrei Vishinsky attacked Wednesday a thirteen-nation ap­peal toi Communist China to stop at—the 38th Parallel in Korea. His opposition and reported ob­jections by. Red China's envoy ap­parently doomed the desperate plea of Asian and Middle East countries for an end to the fight­ing. V . K , Diplomats said Wu Hsin-Chuan, ambassador .of the Chinese'Com­munists, countered the, peace apT peal Tuesday night with an unoffi­cial demand to know why it' was b6ing sent only to his government; He wag said to have* insisted it 5hoald-W-se*t--al»0~ te the Unitad States. Red China and Russia both charge the US is the. aggressor in Korea. • No ward came from Peiping on the peace appeal. The General As­sembly went ahead in an extra­ordinary session with plans for a fast airing of the crisis. The As- See High 1951 Quotas Bused on the ABMOciatBd Preta forces which would defend Eu­ s. Draft law change* to "make rope against aggression. more men available are expected * by the state board of selective Texas' Supreme Court Wednes­service ficton after Congress re­day ordered the State to refund 11 p.m., *• hostess for a local restaurant The' Qualifying; BwminMion for the -Phone 6 P. M 83-4164. to worji from 6 to 12 p.m., and a foll-Ph.D. in English (Fall Semester, 19&0­ FOR RENT 8-room fiirnished house at 604 East 17th Street. <76.00 per tiwe key Punch operator. .; i it) .will be given on Monday and Tues-JX)ACHING: French'; German;-RuMiatt. month. Phone 8-7858. >, - convenes .in January. $123,360 in tidelands rentals to Texas now has available for two oil companies that had paid wider—protest—payments-—had young men who haye passed their been made while tidelands were physical examinations, and there in litigation. rrc 40,000 others eligible for phy­• sicals. Rent control law extension The February draft call for scught by the administration Texas has been set-at 2,559, which gained new life Wednesday, when Is 522 higher thaii the Jarraary the fferas& Ruies Gommittee^j quota. versed a previous decision and sent a 90-day extension measure. France haav called a meeting of to the floor.for debate. 1 the-Western-European nations in -The; Senata,is already debating Paris next month to draw up a 60-day extension,. with the vote pians for a European army. due Thursday. * ­ France has agreed tb imme­Under present legislation, the diate formation •of"West German rent control will expire this combat teams in Atlantic Union month. ' Texan Apartment tor Rent For Sale BLOCK FOR 8A3UE—Lionel.-Ttairi..Set: t loci -mft^are -wonuiou-Also quiet motives, switches, track, accessories. convepleht apartment and^ room iot ATl~excell«Bt comlttion. :0e7 guag«te Bet­men. Utilities^ Phone 8-5688. • ter than $200 value.'.. only 1125.90. Phone 8-1555 or 60-482 fon further in- ROOMS, 'community kitchen.: Apart­formatlotl. v . 1 ments. 2101 Sau . Antpnio. Block' cam­pus, Experienced teacher. MA.' Guaran­FIVE TICKETS to LSU.ghme. On goal tees results tutoring math, English, . ~ line, west side,-row 46. Regular l^atin, Spanish. 7*4560. Call 6-5704 or price. 7-4086. BOYS BICYCLE,'' good condition. Look* Coaching practically new. Call 8-8587. SILVER ; FOX STOLk, practically nfew. 0 O A C H I N 0. translations.. •' French- Luxurious. ' Very reasonable. PnoneGerman. Silton 2809 San Antonio, 58>4121. •-" '• 7-2711. ,.. : '•... t MATH. R. M. Handle, r S109 .Grand-view. Foif Rent 8-1168. . COACHING t French. German. Russia QUXET.desirable bedroom.' Private hath. Experienced teacher. Phope 7-1409. -Private entrance. University neighbor­hood. $22.60. M-4870. ENGLISH coaching hy PHD-candidate. JMraetmrat <-<839. Experienced teacher. Phone 3-166$. leather Goods Furnished Apartments doW BOY BOOTS, hate. 6elu, boUters, saddles, bridiea, AU -leather go^ds made to -vorder. ^ Everything Western^ BLOCK UNrVBRSITY~,Boys. couple, Capitol 8addta«v. t6U tavaca. ' ' r practically new garage, efficiency • wpartnijent: tile bath, new Frigidaire; „Jilso cottage; twin JMds; bills paid. f?«.9«4. i^^J:He!p;wante^^ NEED _ CHRISTMAS MQNE¥t Sell your Raleiglv hoys 28*' hicycle if la -good 8!wW:-Sair condition, Telephone -Ext. 827. Romance lA^gua^e office er 1-8816 af­ter 6 p.m.:. . , . '• FOR SAXJE: Beautiful antiqued mapleGainshorougli chau with lovely ftp­holstery 195. Two solid walnut Louis XVI chairs with peach sJUc upholstery Music­ $75 each. Phone $-39$l. FOR SAjLiEi lS46 Cushmaa'inoior scoot-MUSIC aad P.A. syateme • *t. In good condition. $96.00. Rhone for ail occasions. Campus ttusia Ser­ 7-290< or see W. G. RuW at 1«0A vice. $-841$. -* Bractrenridge Apartment*, , -. S A V JB, National Geogra^liie,'-SSc,6—|l.06, pocket-hoolt editions. 10c, c A 21 w ft & Ust.and FOUND; .Cigarette Lighter In VttUnu m*y same, !hy calling _JO 7 :00 *.m, BRIGHT GREEN corduroy Jacket (oy ' •hirtX, Phone John' Jiowfii. $^£4)1 pouibly several more t^mes—hb#­f. ;Jutiaa.~Call 6-8628. t ^ TYPISTS'' POOL: 6xpert typists, these^'" ^ ate. 6-4747 evenings. * I1"111,1,1 111 1 1 " ' ' .1""' ' ' I",'1 l 'i'»l " TYPING t lbMSS, themes, notebooks. -Unes^ etc.-Pbone 6-8869. • -fi"?"---* TYPING SERVICE. 8108 SwtsW 7-8206. MUs Welch. ? »^.,1 " -» EXPERIENCKD -typUtt _ #Hfc n*m I4M at S-9C0li, ™ k iDstin acuity Gru 1 Bi-distrfct honors^will be d** Coach Johnny Kitchen'* Ma-ML. IJp Jk 11' ' iB? ' • , r if eided between the Austin Maroons roons/ "If.T •f • finsiTO"'' *k v>«*; ball feason has just begun. • ; grid contest in th« } *» f, The Maroons won the 14AA favored ever the 18AA cham­ 16 Captain A. University. "v "district championship ty defeating pions. jf'iAj, mAhm^M Prttt _,N aval Robert iui,eato. Ififtonestfer of Northwestern at Bob Ward of Maryland at nounced.Ihathis chargeswould facnlt*^^^*!*^jit district 15AA,. •" \ L « tilt However*, only a ^delg*q,cogntee3 & the m&ny alK . v. „ , . ' 1' ' ; —— gu ards; and Bitf Vohajflta Vai> laft elevens named two" Texas , otTBntiVC TMUHJ—.uz-* . nnh «t mmfii1. . mMt fimitv non-confer­while Wednesday—guard Bui McFadin ^7 ^ W«wr;;; . ClaMAflfe Hft. Wgt. The defensive team'wa^ com-gartre a""26-6 defeit «o this mldsiiipni«ki tickets hive not been purchased. --•,« poied of Anderson and Menasco * ence tilt at House Park. on.the offensive platoon,and end students Jn the annual Ar ™ E.. Folberg, Army Sr. 22, 6-1 185 at e'nds, A1 Carapella of Miami Expr«ss-N«ws j&tnquet llawl elaatfe played Don Menasco on the defensive Wahl tff Austin Maroon cagera will meet platoon* -T'' Weatherall, Oklahoma Jr. 20 . 6-4 220 •ad .A1 Michigan at The Anchor Bdwl -waa? 1 AUSTIN San Jacinto of Houston in their *Tsxas, Army, Oklahoma McFadin, Texas Sr. 22 6-3 tackles, Les Richter of California To Honor Baylor's Souor. tuted In 1949. It ia a apirlt^^and G 248 and Ted Daffer of Tennessee at SAN ANTONIO, Dec. 6.—VP) grudge game between the NROTC the Rea­ WELDING * first basketball game of Were" the only teams in . the na­Vohaska, Illinois* guards, with two linebackers to son Thursday night. Two games .Sr. 21 . 5-11 182 George Sauer of Baylor will be faculty and their students. TIm| tion to place two men on the flrSt RADIATOR will be played. The fh*t between Ward, Maryland Jr. 23 5-10 185 make up the second Hn.e of; de^ honored at "Coach of the Year", •game has been jokingly referred teams. _ . ... WORKS fense—-Stout and Irvin Holdash at the football banquet of the to aa an °«gency for the zdhaMT; the two reserve teams at 6:120 Tackle Jim on ' 21 230 of North Carolina. Associa­ !«.<•«» ' Weatherall the Gain, Kentucky Sr. 6-8 Express-News • Athletic of student frustratiotos." Aa yet^ p.m. "and the second between the eoo W stbst offensive allignment and end Stonesifer, Northwestern Sr. 23 6-0 194 For the three defensive back tion December 18. H4 wHI'speak, the faculty teats haa never won 4 regular-squads beginning, at 8 Frank Anderson on the defensive Heinrich, Washington field positions on the first team The All-Soiithwest Conference game from the. younger, faster^ p.m Jr. 20 6-1 176 team were the. Oklahoma players, backfteld of Kyle Rote of SMU, men were selected best known for harder-hitting, midshipman. ' i while Alrri^ ptaced end Dan Fold--^eynoldj^ yt;brjtak»-Soi -19MM1 17& Byron Townaend of Texa^._Bo]^ ........ . .. 1ast Y'i* -v berg of Dallas on the offensive Gradndelius, Michigan State Sr., 21 6-0 195 theless were pillars of strength on Smith of Texas A&M and Larry eleven and linebacker El: defense: Vic Janowicx" of Ohio Isbell of, Baylor will be guests. : Kazmaier, Princeton 20 5-11 170 Stout on the defensive-group Stated Wiitd)«ute";^!ay»r7M^ 5EIBERUNG Geographical distribution of , whom his team's defense was Defensive Team first offensive and defensive built; Eddie Salem of Alabama, intramural Schedule teams shows that no one Bection ; Name Class Age Hgt. Wgt. as skilled at stopping an opponent THURSDAY of the nation has a monopoly on Anderson, Oklahoma as in directing his team's attack SOCCER Sr. 21 6-0 200 the game. The Midwest placed and Bob Williams of Notre Dame • • S d'eloclc ' PW Delta Theta. Y». PM CUmflw six, the IJaat three, the-Big Seven T Carapella, Miatni Sr. 23 6-1 210 a master quarterback always Nu v«. D«lto Tau Dvlts. three, the Southwest two, and the G Richter, California Jr. 19 6-2 capable of taking the field to stem Kapp* 8i*nia vi Sitm* Alpha Mu. , 220 VOIXEYBAU. Pacific'Coast two. an attack. LB Stout, Army Jr. 20 5-11 18tf -L-7 --f 'Vv ;-V The offensive 'backs who stood With, so much emphasis on of­.DrtU Kappa , Epsilon •». Alpha T*a Omega. Bttiw & WjwflSaniM out during the year and received LB Holdash, North Carolina Sr. 21 6-1 195 fense, it was only natural that Phl Sirma Dalta *». phi Ounma Delta. Factory Method R*ca{»jpi»| Prathtr Hall y». Little Cantput. . All-American were Don Heinrich, G Ted Daffer, Tennessee Jr. 21 5-11 185 All-America nominations should BloomquSst Swedes v«. T)ak Grove. Washington's tricky passer and flood in for Such men as Francis AIME v».-Dorm. H. » -. / field Bobby T Wahl, Michigan Sr. 22 6-3 220 Bagnell Pennsylvania, Phi Delta Theta tb. Beta Thata W. general; Reynolds, of Bill . 7:4S o'clock " E Menasco, Texas Jr. 21 6-1 sensational Nebraska sophomore 185 Weeks of Iowa State, Steve; ^adi-K*PP« Sigma v*. Delta Sigma Phi. Alba Club ve. Air Foree ROTC. who led the natibn!s major schools B Bob William, Notre Dame aV of South Carolina,.Fred Cone Sr. '20 6-1 185 Campua Guild vs. Draft Dodrere. SPIRES r" KTIRES in scoring with 157 points; of Clemson,' Bill Co* of Duke, Weilejr Foundation v». L8A. Everett Grandelius, big Michigan B JanowieZj Qhio State— -Jfr 20 5-9 186 Bob Smith of A&M, Bobby Mar-w S^O o'clock Theta 3U Sigma Alpha £tn(lcm. State back who gained 1,023 yards B Salem, Alabama __ Sr. 21 5.10 189 low of Alahama, Johnny Karraa Sigma Phi Ep»Uon v«. Tau D*lt» PhL snm TiRi (crd. Ctech Club y». Pim ClulK and Dick Raklovitz of Illinois, Galveaton Clnb y». Latla American Cluh. Ph. 83.1221 3516 Gnadalop* . • . i Byron Townsend of Texas, ckuck BSU v». Newman Club. Ortmann of, Michigan, and Hank T 9iIB O'clock ® Slafaa Alpha Mu •». Phi Kappa TwL '• Lauricella of Tennessee. Kappa Alpha y«. Slrma Chi, Minors Seek Radio Ban South Central T»x*» *«. 7GHff -<%nrta. Bud McFadin, the 246-guard HANDBALL DOUBLES ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., Dec. ing the majors, who control the sure thing that the much-debased and the biggest man ^on the Texas Cla»* A »SERVICE Strum-Kteinman > •»».' Croom-RaglandJ'" 6—(fP)—Baseball's minor leagues rights, for relief. bonus rule will be abolished *by an team is termed by Coach Blair Warner.Water* r«. Cobb-Barnes. 4 have taken their radio problem to In I960 the broadcasts were overwhelming vote. Under this Cherry as a "great offensive Berry-Johnson v». Morgan-Smith. Lirette-Baccae v*. Roper-Collin*; Washington. pipfcd into the minor cities except rule clubs were sharply restricted blocker—energetic, fast, big, and Wunderlick-Hart ve. Hodgec-Harwood. • George Trautman, president of when the minor club actually was in movement of players who re­a great competitor. AbeU-Sheinberg •»». Baaird-PfefFer. br \ Weil-Blumenthal vi. Yongc-KeLoughlan, the National Association of Minor playing at home—or 40 minutes ceived: more than a set sum for The defensive first team has a Hopper-Inge v*. DafTey-Clegg _— Walden-Robl Baaa-Randell va.... ... Robinaon. , Leagues, said Wednesday he con­before game time. signing as free agents—16,000 for pair of mighty ends in Anderson Marehall-JefTera va. M cFall-Spatdina: ferred for 30 minutes with the a big league club. around whose flank opposing T.»4S o'clock­ • As most minors played at night, Thompeon-Bootoa ve. HtadmeMIMnk U. S. Attorney General last Week The their teams seldom gained, and Menas­ this left the afternoons wide open minors polished off Cunntftehtm-stied va. Archer-Waime*. * . the spot that is about baseball broadcasts. for the big league games. "delayed" draft by selecting six co;"Who -ranged up and down the Hill-Templeton va. LindelaT-Forreater, linn on Hofwwuw. .. ~ Silber-Friedlander ve. John«oti-Halb«rt. the MAN'S SHOP in Trautman -and his executive -The high school rule, under fire more None Blumentritt-WilliamavarAnderaon* players for $9,800. committee talked with Commis­for some time, probably will be The Texas line coachj Ed Price, „ ?a7e*ih v ' . ^ t Dali^ariaa to jrour the TEXAS BOOK involved Texas teams. The final v1.r i.-fr. . ' Godwin-Friek va^_Agnew-Pumphre]r. ­ sioner A. B. .Chandler and a major scrapped when the contract runs says of 'Menasco: "He s conscien-. ciaaa b ' .prompt and efficient. league committee on radio. The out, December 31, 1951. Many total of the three-dayselection was tious, spirited, aggressive, hard to Loue)| K#lf>, 7:48 •'•lock STORE. —-— va. Moncrief-Davli. solution still' has' not been an­baseball men want the right to 154 pliers for $345,700. block, and alert at all times. Williamson-Miller v». Cox-Blackmar. S':; ^ nounced. high school players before they There was little action in the Notably absent from: the selec­Smith-MighWl ta, Wood-Pamphrey. \ , 15% off caah-c*rrf Meeerve-LIewellyn vi. Tueker-Perrjr. The minors " claim widespread graduate. Under the present rule, player mart. The Chicago White tions was SMU backj -Kyle Rote Walker-Rountree vi. FraneU-WaJdco. 'broadcasts of major, league gabies no high Bchool boy can be signed Sox peddled outfielder Johnny who made the second team, the BOWLING ' li liaat day.for-aeorea to be turned It Homo. Steam Ldry mainly caused their 19 per cent until he or his class graduates. Ostrowski to Toronto for an un­only Southwest Conference player at Intramural Office for round one attendance decline. They are ask­It seemed to be pretty much a disclosed sum. Score* for round two are due in Iiitra-Ph. S-3702 W ' .102 E. lOtiK. who did so. ­ mural Office en or before December 14 1 i /•­ College Style Center* at 611 Congress i ^ (liilianliiio r -V'> s* •& *y J* w1 «. 5*. mm k--^SSr 'T'.v­ •r'^ ^ ir^Ss, " \V7* -v vt ^ 4 15.95 Here'i a fine washable gabardine Broadcloth Pajamas &%•> robe with his monogram on the 1 Tailored by Manhaftan in fine flap of the pocket. Just the right high count broadcloth. Solid col- A gift for the personal touch. In 1 ors wifh contrasting trim. blue, grey, or tan. f'r'! 3.95 'M'' ' "v-S 1 V2 * j: * ! f '< -A 'V > ^ .?. mm *-VS. Hi6 sm& / I ^ ' * • Lounge Pajamas Jl v t -v\3-«vr' Knit top in solid or strtpe" wiffi 4aS^ s®., ^ •ft I, with pleats and elastic waist b &**<< A* * 4 ^ -1 ^ band. Six colors. * x e r > i a o -t *•& r ^ »-i r* ' r ' . -<%* % , fys* ' ->;? <1 > f c' v t laf y f -Trf? t 4.95ei AH-Wool Loafer Sox * ^ '.k-K rh v. . . •i ~v !rt,'.ViW'&s m BHgh#WMi wool U^per witfi 0&HJ' • ti 1 u X ^ SfeS" 4:r„ -' t,\ „J ( ~ » ^ < ' i>• soft leather foot. ,»v he.® * it • -• i—* -? \L tJ-SV-r ft ifJr ' *W :4a < ' . «, , / , _i'.. jT 2.50 M ; \T3TJ5SL—• -& \ £J ' i » •* •£ '» " „ ^ > '«.!J rK " urf • ZhteZf ­ MS v" •Aw# -$§»PX1CYTEXAN . ma 3^? "' 'hAH m­?MT* Scrirftmage for Tigers HI!n«ar-fraedngf wihd.*furnished extent Of ihe injury Will not V <> j\ opposition for tiie > Longhorns as, determined until «-ray pictures they held a regular practice for pictures can be seen. Raley ha»^ • their game Saturday with the Ti-been running «t fint-string de-"• Despite this everlasting football season which finds two Mtt:frou LSU-in Memorial Sta-feasive halfback as,'Veil as tfseing. ^ if'fciore gamls remaining on the Longhorn schedule* Jack NORMAN, Okla., Dec. 6-£F)--led, 8-2, with fIve minutes gone. gtaned to want toride on the dimC •. • . some offensive service. S TheUniversity of Oklahoma Soon­ Texas closed the gap, 10-6, but lead and had his SooneTs stay out­ Gray's basketball men, more courageous than talented, Tiave "fhe.jcold weatiter hurt us -yes-, Raley joins two other Longhorn ­ — er® continued theirrwinning way* then the Sooners pulled away anil side without setting up any play. terday: (Tuesday)'because^ it came halfbacKS on the injbry list. Right Btarted work On what Tnigfat4 led, 26-16, at the half. Frelberger -was tield in check here' Wednesday night With a 49- np~ so, unexpectedly. We didn't half -Lew Levine has been lost for City University, Oklahoma A&M, 85~ victory over the' TsjCfW Long-It was Oklahoma's.second vic­during the, game on a masterful he termed a hard season. practice'fully, but we are'ifaain? ^« |fSirMmej^th alcMeLlpjuryJ Arkansas, Tulsa, Baylor,,Yander-horns before 2,500. persons. tory while Texaa his won job of defense work by Falk. The and substitute Bill C' jy'ft general opinion that j one tWnint^a^^Cherry's usual pro­ -M MM MI»M« unit fin^ It* Afnfmflr ibama will also play. J5e Ed Falk, Stfer torw8rd,-ied: and tost two. 6-ll eenter from Greenville count­ cedure and' you can aay • that the hand farljer.. iSteercagers willnot.T>e Among the top Conference teams when That get-together runs December the scoring with 12 p6infet colleci-ThejSooners were hot from the ed ;only two from the field and ^ r^t^urfour prepare­27-29. • r . ing four freld goals an'd fourfree field during .Hie Urst" half with a $dth of those were on tip-ins. tion,"' line coach Ed Price said Marines', Get Rice's Howton * tb* Jinal standings are in. And Texas, playing with an ^ exper* •"the" top"teams »are numerous— If you think lastlyear's cagers throws. 37.5 shooting mark *n4 wound Wednesday. :v.\ . HOUSTON, Dee. 6.—^^*. had a rough time, you had better up just off that pace with a 36.7 fenced club, found the Sooners' Rice fo,otball stir Bill I^oWton left -Arkansas, SMU, TGU, and A&M Sherman Norton and Ted Owens fast much The fiirat string "offensive" uttit £eing tabbed the most likely to think again. That 13-10 mark each collected five from the field average over the gami route. speed and break-too BOB RALEY was running plays against the Wednesday for-a San Diego Ma­ , BQCC^ed. might look pretty-good before to lead the-Sooner scoring with Texas was cqld during the ini­to. handle much of' the time. . freshmen with-the'stress being on rine-Corps camp. The 20-year-old this season,ends. " * .10 points.' tial stanxa with only 17 per cent ^ Oftahoma hit from the outside junior was a second team end on , Seenis that Texas will be in an the ground. game because of the V Oklahoma took a commanding of its players' shots hitting. But early in the second half to draw Rote, Boydstun to Play thi$ :yearrs.All-Southwest Confer­ fight for fifth with Rice cold hands. Even-a j)air of coal oil The mention of Madsen back lead early in the ball game, and they-did better in the second half the Steers' defense out and then ence selections. the Bears stoves -didnt help as the tempera? and Baylor, and even along the line brings to mind that and ended with a 24.5 game aver­worked its plays. " In East-West Game are apt to move up. ture hovered around ferezing. was the former Texas field general is age. Texas guilty of the most SAN FRANCISCO, Dec.*6.—(8) The "demolition" team wast run­MAGELUEN AND CORTEZ WERE •-' However, if tough competition fouls, being called aowi\ 19 times OLD ... trying his hand at professional Both" teams started breaking —The Selection Committee an­ning-LSU patterns, against' .the EXPLORERS OF t AND ' is a maker of champions, the while Oklahoma miscued 17 times. THEY EACH WOULD ItAVE basketball this season. ~ fast midway in the first half_and nounced Wednesday that Wilfo: regular defensive first team un-GIVEN THEIR WEIGHT IN GOU> langhorns. could fool everybody. Texas eonnected only -nine timjw Soon* ( Whiizer) White/utarhaifBi 1—... "With-lln'oa 'games uuiiei' limit1 with theAnderson from the charity lino-while the der the direction of Cdach Pflce. SEVILLE ..i YOU DONT HAVE ers, the dutfit which, was leading -ers were in danger of losing"three the Arizona "State, Tempe, Toot- TO TAKE A TRIP AROUND THE fcelte already, the Longhorns face Sooners connected 13 of The contact work was not heavy. ... JUST WALK AROUND 20. WORLD the Eastern -Division of the Na­of-their top men by fouls when ball team had joined the Western Halfback Bob Raley from Bowie THE CORNER. Bome_ rough teams, between now tional League through last Satur­Jim Terrell had four personals and Squad for the East-West charity suffered'a dislocated left elbow ... BEJJEVILULZED . ttnd the end of the football sea­ ' ton'—January 1. day. Charley Pusgley and Marcus Frei-TEXAS-(35) football game here Dec, 30. White in an offensive scrimmage. ;The OLD SEVILLE ; .1601 Guulalup« St. G F PFTP berger had three each. led the country in individual rush­ Madsen's best night so far this Thiij Saturday night at Austin, ITr—' 4 ft • Oklahoma opened the second Falk, f 4 3 12 ing. ' "''fee *Texas Wesleyan Rams, two-season , was against Waterloo, a a blistering pace. Frei-S 3 9 half, with Dowies, f 3 game which tl -Packers lost, 84- Others whose acceptances of In­ point losers, to Baylor Monday, 0 0 2 82. The 6-foot 10-inch guard berger hit.a tip-in, Stanley Gross-Scarborough, f vitations to participate with the $ry' to tip Texas for the second Harris, f —. .. ......—_{) 0 1 scored ,20 points .to lead point-Jinan connected on a long shot West that were announced Wed­ straight"year. getters and held his foe to'five. from the-outside, antl Owens hit Ran&opher, f _0 0 0 nesday included frank Boydstun, . Incidentally, the Rams ^re ,_2 0 3 Three other former Conference a one-handed push shot. Klein, c _—... 0 fullback, Baylor University. Kyle paced this year by Lou Zastoupil, Pricet. c — 0 0 Frank Womack pulled Texas Rote had previously accepted. stars are in the starting Anderson • boy who couldn't make the Tex­ Morgan, g __ __2 1 1 back into the game, when he drove lineup—Jamie Owens of Baylor, ts team during-the plush years of Womack, g 1 1 4 through the Sooner defense to Bob Kinney of Rice, and Jim Slater Martin, A1 Madsen, .and Viramontes, g 1 0 0 VI move the count to 30-18. Cecil lin< Tom: Hamilton. Zastoupil scored Cathcart of Arkansas. -, t. Scaling, g _0 0 2 Morgan and Ted Price both con­ fevJS points against Baylor. •. on jump shots for Cobb, g. _ 0 0 0 nected the i;-' Next week, a trip east is on Short Stuff—Pinky Higfixi* for­ Stedrs to close the score to 34-22. tap. Thursday, the Steers play mer Longhorn and big league^ Totals .13 9 19 35 Wrestlers ^©tWFALK • Terrell hit a jump shot and then ^-Ganisim -at Buffalo, and then baseball star has been signed to OKLAHOMA (49) 4. Don Klein-rebounded for "Texas move to New York's Madison manage Louisville of the Ameri­and Morgan drove through" for a 4 G F PFTP Square Garden to play Manhattan can Association. * Ken Sons, Sherman, Texarkana lay-up which moved the score to Owens, f _ 5 0 3 10 'ft ^Saturday. ace back who has scored 44 points, Norton, f 5 0 0 10 LSU, In District 5AAAA the closest point during the sec­0 December 22-23, Ala-was the only LSU Tiger on the Turner, f ...0 1 ond half, 38-28, with ten .minutes bama,and SMU will-participate first Con­DALLAS, Dec. 6—(/P)—Sher­: 0 0 three all-Southeastern Jones, f _0 gone. in a tournament at San Antonio ference teams .. the University man and Texarkana were. voted Grossman started working Crawford, f _0 0 0 Tl Oklahoma's pet play during the Ing. with Texas/ " Then comes' the of Houston, embarking on a Mis­into the newly-organized District Freiberger. c .. B—2 5 4­ night.* He passed tQ the post and Leoi —annual Oklahoma City tourney— souri Valley Conference cage 6-AAAA Wednesday, Borofsky, c __0 1 0 then broke just short of the" base ~wher$ such teams as Oklahoma career, couldn't have .had a Sherman had previously been Lynn, c __1 1 1 No wetter how liHte or how much time you have 4e get kome line for two quick buckets. rougher _begidtting. ' Had to play tentatively assigned to the district, connected a hook Grossman, g;— 3 1 0 and beck—Pioneer ket e fe*t, convenient flight to fit yoar Price with Bradley and St. Lovii,.and lost, dependent on the district commit-Pugsley, g __ 1 1 4 need*. Spend the holiday* where yo« most want k>l Convenient shot to move Texas back to naturally, r, ~ tee's'vote. Both Sherman and Tex­Rogers, g _0 1 0 connections to eN point* m the nation. Cel yo«r leoei Pioneer m 46-30 count, and then followed arkana, are just under the 850 Terrell, g -2 5 office for schedules end fares. with a free: throw. enrollment figure necessary for Angel, g „_0 0 0 emo: Oklahoma coach Bruce Drake admittance to the AAAA class. Fle^hman, g .._0 0 0 Phone THURSDAY & FRIDAY Both, however, will reach the re­ Sheets, g _0 0 0 §i> & quired enrollment next season, of­ ft r—rvatlmm*, feres ned sckedefes Have Portraits $5.00 & $6.00 -X fei ficials of the two: schools said. joub-,..---is-1317 49 cjetefro vTV "AETNA" SPORT 'The other five schools in the Halftime score: Oklahoma 25, *•*;> Made at district are Highland,Park, Wich­Texas 16. — dJiacfnajrit ita Falls, Denison, Waco, and Free throws missed: Texas— PIPE PIONEmyj^/u^ \ Tyler. ~ . Falk 4, Dowies 2, Klein 1, Vira­ SHIRTS montes 1. Oklahoma—Frieberger I TOBACCO FLYING PASSENGERS'/WAIL*PARCEL POST'CARGO Froga Beat Tech 70-53 Manhattan 71, Brooklyn Poly 33. 1, Grossman 1," Pugsley 1, Terrell SuUi'F TOBACCO CO 650 f S f Co • ANY SHIRT ODESSA; Dec. 6—(JP)—TCU Cornell 82, Rider 53. HtiNt'S TOBACCO CO Motv'ton O^'O 1, Angel 3. basketball forces staged a spirited Kansas State 60, Purdue 44. IMSTOCK J'J _ rally in the' second .half [Wednes­Princeton 56, Lafayette 45. ffchk day night to best-Texas Tech, Notre Dame 67, Franklin 44. {nejw fall colors) 70-53. Ohio State 72, Butler 50. The Frogs trailed for most of West Virginia 78. VPI 67. UNIVERSITY OUTLET STORE For Christmas Qie first 20 minutes before fi- A Christmas Gift BUZZA-CARDOZA VH O L. U V NK/-0 O D / U. S.Aw *2 For Guys and Smiles f ^ % jr-•V?.' 5" f' T * wmmsm • +V, vU r n givere£> r<[ «% (f he Jllces amusing Him J\ntsy Pa^ts—vyith biQ bright red anh printed aj} Styled iftamrrforfoble'boxer,short, Mf HP** 28.,1io-'4^. ?*A V tm AN ASSORTMENT OF CHRISTMAS CARDS ON PER BOX &. ito'' " BRILLIANT PAPERS Exclusively at *"BESSA* i r -•V-sify-'" Vjjr, £. i * "J- , ­ .J CI I AWHILE THERE'S,JSTlLt TIME .--i-..-.J • • T " SOS West Ninth " Phone 744I f 10 iU&l iffffliftlriililil v-i vJ-^VJ. !L?< • "t&f REBECCA CLAIRE LEONARD Fiiig To Marry Dec. 21 The engagement.and approach­ing marriage of Rebecca Claire Leonard to Lucien Routt Crockett was anouuced 6y her parents Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Leonard of 1408 West Thirteenth Street. ^ The marriage will be solemnized December 21 by the Rev. Marvin Gamma PhiBetas Visited This Week By Mrs.Hodges Mrs. D. E. Hodges of Bartles­ville, .O-kla., director of province five of Gamma Phi Beta, arrived jf-Wednesday to visit with the local undergraduate and alumna chap­ters through Saturday. She will fee honofee at several dinners and luncheons. Mrs. Hodges will confer with of­ficers of the active chapter on Thursday and Friday, with the actives at 7:30 the same eveningr University S. Vance in the Central Christian Church^ Miss Leonard is a graduate of Austin High'School and the Uni­versity, and is now working in the Governor's office. Mr. Crockett is a graduate of Port Arthur High School and the University and is employed by the Gulf Oil Corpora­tion in Houston. Delore* Balagia will be wed to Fred Arsamendi December 17 in St. Austin's Chapel. ... , Miss Balagia, a resident of Aus--hn, is a graduate of Austin High _ , . -_ ^ school and former student of the' ders' Day banquet Monday night. University. jjrs rpex c0ie> national philan-The prospective groom attended thropy chairman of Phi Sigma the University. Sigma, presented the gift to Dr. Dladys Fashena, professor of Henry Weltman, University pediatrics at the medical school. graduate from Fort Worth, will The donation, raised by annual marry Betty Smith,-SMtJ student, chapter, projects, will be used to February 11. purchase ACTH, aW new»'V.T hormone <>v*tv 6'i . W • • T">5fc ,, A1 joint'meeting: of the ball**, Houiten, ana Smn Anton»e CluVf will b« hald'Thursday. at 5 o'cldck In Tekaa Union 316,, Members of the Dallas Club will he hosts, and there will:be dancing and refreshments. AllTtotentTessr ideftta of caeh cl..tfae -three cities are invitfed. • ­ Dr. R. C. Stephenson, associate professor of English and associate professor of, Romance languages, will apeak to the Sidney Lanier Soewty at 6 o'clock Thursday af­ternoon at the Alpha Epsilon Phi house. • JlanjL,*^ riftporatinna forjJhft pharmacy Christmas "party Wed­nesday will be made at a called meeting of Kappa Epsilon Thurs­day at 8:30 p.m. in Chemistry Building 15. • A joint meeting and Christmas Party will be held by the A*hbel and Pierian Literary SocjeiiAij Thursday at 4:45 p.rh, inthe Zeta Tau Alpha house. it ' Sigma Pi Si^qta, honorary phy­sics fraternity, will hear a discus­sion of "Weiner's Cybernetics" Thursday at 4 o'clock in Physics Building 201 by Dr. C. W. Horton, associate professor of physics. • Two bridge groups of the Ui»i­ •eriity Ladiet Intermediate* will meet Thursday, and one Friday. Group One will meet at 2 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Hubert O. Med School Gets $750 for ATCH To Combat Fever Phi Sigma Sigma, national so­cial philanthropic sorority pre­sented $760 to The University of Texas Southwestern Med i c a 1 School in Dallas to combat rheu­matic fever. , The grant was made by Beta jota Chapter and the Dallas 'Alum-' nac Club at their annual Foun­ x vu„- VA«M. f*»r DeBeck, Si08 Speedway; Groitf Tferef .will 7;45 p»m. ill! the home of Mrs. A. B. lAQrone, 1507 KotnifLane. Irs. W. Lyiyi Brown.1412 Gas­ , and Mrs. Phillip Graham will behhostessecfor Group Four Fri* day%fe^a0 a.m. Ruak Literary Society Will make plans for its annual fall banquet and have a debating sesion at 7:$0 p.m. Thursday in Texas Union 301. • Upperclai* FelloVtkip will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. in the YMCA with Charles Petet, director of the ^Westminster Student-as principal speaker. He will dis­cuss "Who We Accept as Our Friends and Why." Instead of its regular meeting, the Redhead Club will see a style show Thursday at 7 p.m. at Chen-ard's, 2338 Guadalupe. Several members of the club will model. Dr. Ruth Bain, physician at the Student Health Centet, will speak on ''Women in Medicine" at ah open meeting of Alpha Epsildn Delta, honorary pre-roed fraterni­ty, Thursday at 7 p.m. in Texas Union 401. All pre-med students are invited. • . Frld Folmer, associate Univer­sity librarian* will speak at 10 o'clock Thursday morning in Main Building 325 to the observation and practice group of the Library School. He will discuss the Univer­sity Library in general.. Anyone may attend. • R. F. Brewer, personnel mana­ger of Scarbrough and Sons, will speak on human relations in busi­ness Thursday at 7 p.m. in Texas Union 315 to members of Sigma Iota Eptilon, honorary manage­ment fraternity. • Nu Alpha Chi Pi, city planning fraternity, will have its annual initiation banquet for new-mem­bers Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in the Home Economics Tea Hpuse. • Frank B. Skrivanek, president, will conduct the formal" initia­tion ceremony for students from the School of Architecture and Departments of Sociology, Eco­nomics, and Government Reservations for members and guests should be made by 5 o'clock I O", , l/ v VIVVIV . Weltman, who is working in found-effective in treating the J Tuesday afternoon with Johnnie Austin, is a member of Sigma Al-disease^ -— ,C.. Fields,. pha Mu. ive Christmas Tea University Ladies Club,—with Mrs. D. T. Starnes.as Head hostess, met Wednesday from 4 to 6 p.m. at the University Club for its an­nual Christmas Tea. Receiving at the door were-Mesdames C. P. Boner, Jean Neal, Nolan Barrick and A. E. Johnson. y Mrs. H. L. Lochte and Mrs. E. f P. Schoch invited guests into the dining room and Mesdames Darrell Hughes, H. P. Bickler, and Ed Olle, and Miss Rosalie Godfrey invited them into the dining rootrt. Supervising the dining " room were Mrs. G. W. Watt and Mrs. William E. Keyls, with Mrs.-Em­mett Hudspeth, Mrs. Frank H. Wardlaw, Mrs. George Decherd -and Miss Theljna Lockwood pour* ing the punch. . r, ­ Serving in the dining room were Mesdames Hulon-Black, Claud W. Horton, E. J. Lovell, Fred Morris,, J. B. Oliphint, Jack Scanlan, John A. Wilson, Glen Bishop, William Griffis, T. N. Hatfield, Josef Head, D. M. McKeithan, Morris Midkiff and W. L. Pondron. In the receiving Hire were Mrs. D. T. Starnes, Mrs. G. H. Newlove and Mrs. J. C; Efollfey. Hostesses besides'Mrs. Starnes were Mesdames S. L. Brown, A. B. 1 Cox, V. L. Doughtie, Joe Thorne, Gilbert, J. R. HolmVs, W. E. Key* [A. E. Lockenvitz, W. R. Long, W. >R. Long Jr.^ J. D. Matlock, Alex­ander Moffit, T. H. Shelby, F. L. Stead, G. W. Watt and Robert Williams, arid Misses May Brbok­ehier &nd Jean Campbell. Those in charge of the housed party were Mesdames B. H.-'Am­stead, Alvin L. Bennett, O. P. BrelKnd.JjrrsirChTite, L. L. Click, emm fpr^hris tolas' ade at L. f, Connell Jr.',~Xlvaries .Cyrus, Edward Dodd, E«. W. Doty, Samuel Ellison Jr., Stanley Finch, Nelia Fox, Boyer Gonzales, Marcel Greg, Charles Hackett, .Ernest Haden, H. -R, Henze; Norris A. IJiett, Ira P. Hildebrand, L. N. Jeffrey, Hu­bert wJpnes, James Knight^ J. M. Kuehne, Alfred La Grone, Gregory La Groiie, Gerald Langford, R. N. Little Jr., H. T.' Manuel, F. A. Matsen, J, D. McFarland, E, K. McGinnis, Noel C. McGuire, W. H. McNeill, R. L. Moore and L. 0.. Morgan. Also Mesdames Arno Nowotny, H. BT. Power, Royston Roberts, E. W. Smith Jr., W. R. Spriegel, Carl Swanson, Richisrd Tyler, Harry Vandiver, John Arch White, and O. B. Williams, and Misses Helen Deathe, Irma Deane Fowler, Dor­othy Gebauer, Rosalie Godfrey, Anna Hiss, Lucy Rathbone, Stella Traweek, and Lilian Wester. H. ^ Harry WUIiams Is New President Of Economic Club ' "Harry Williams was elected president of the Economics Club at its organizational meeting held Wednesday night in Garrison Hail 1. / John Fry was elected vice-president, with -the secretary-treasurer pdst going to Melna Jean Ball. C. M. "Rey" Reynolds Was selected: to.-AcL-aa^-repiirteEiL ^.Howard Dye, assistant^^ pro­ feM^trfecofiaro^j^Lapapey^ selected from his forthcoming booki entitled "Monetary Prob­lems of Latin America." k'JOr. Dye"reviewed the monetary problems of Latin America from the time of theiir conquest and 'settlement by Spain to-the pre­sent era, • (Tjr " A*. Walik Joins Los Afamoi Lah Dr. John M, Walsh, University aduate and former «g. BUYFM n 4'*>-4>£ AT BEALLY GREAT SAYINGS skirts and blouses skirts in many styles: itim and stfaight; fluid and full. In corduroy, wool jarsey, flan­nel, plaid novelty woolens. Sizes 10 to" 16. ; values to 10.95 blouses in both sports and drets types. drepes, wool jerseys and cottons. Siies 10 to »8-• . *> '. •.... ­ values *o~ 12.95 4.99 'Ft 1 jackets and weskits ..'t, * iaeket8 (Hid Weskits ^ gabardln»pwool }ai ^ ? -flannel. Si^JO to 16. Wonderful additions t* ,«n^, separates. wardrobe. vX fi0'i W* vafu«t fo 19.9$ t iTtPb ^ - ­ v\s,r ;,Jbis is a wonderful ppportunity te select CHristass ' " -v 4 v,^' ' v,. rGJftafews at realty greaf savings. '4 y -Tonight!* your tfyle4 nt ^ # ' J •• " m 1*' <1 §,T . v * 'k57" tm Guedatue* til- • k -..a® /J-v contours. Made of Nylon La ton taffeta in aque.magente,; - " -lime, or black. $16.95; • .v.A: M -t£ <& Is A I 'X, ' ** *Y4 T "j&n. TWENTY-THREE-THIRTY-MGHT^VADALUPB: *V,. tu>W." •Christmas stocking with gifts . from goodfriends • > a. Happy || $h« who fin«£a thli rattan-ring carry all bag (n her ' fri-M stocking. Supple cowhide in cream PIua tax or geld. 10.00 „ ^ '" % b. the catch! and a trick catch it Ht You slip the lip stick out qnd clitkl ' • (I, ..., >A the mirror on top opensl Cold fin-. Ished metal. 4.00 l>*«* tcfe (i-i-4" < \ ~r j -r ^ Worth It* weight in gold for the 1 ,.5 sparkle It gives her costumes . . ^ •• --r^ • —-r'w-^r fhis unusual belt cleverly made of v ^ • Siheraldic dongle. 4.00 „ V d. She will love the smooth feel of •these pure silk scarves with hantf* W rolled hems, jn unusual prints er 'A " : \ iwtid. cdfors. ,1.00. 4 "$s"v *-* ~ e. Pamper her with feminine dainty Cleud.Jjflht.flWd comfy with loft felt-padded sole*. Wonderful ^travelers, tooi Chantllly lace oVef . ••P$: satin with velvet trim. 7.00. Verf. f^et flocked taffeta 5.00 From selection priced from 3.00 fo 7.00. , Hret fleer sistant irt the University .physics _ rM.. department, has recentlyv jain«d li toty at the University of,' -Xi£. fornia. A native of Wichita I Dr. Walsh served as a communlca­ /Co the -^ tionn officer in the Navy ife., f ffil Wlfi wmmtM §S5§F 19&& (hjqTA-jW?: * t *i DBG*RI6M>7. T«0 THC.0A11Y (flu linn I ii iaAa+nwM • I»i"»ili)^TiW«'>1 M*'I'Ji')«ni>iir!•'»jtfi'i) Mill, i |ihi|i imiiil)i Swg&S's • ^sa$— y^ »*• mm Army Reserves" San Antonio Men to Speak -&,^r 4 ^sTif^'.'Kk'St,.-' Given Extension mm-w • m Admission Is Irti iis" /t •. . ! mM@® h ' Jn~ Its feet appTiuai*f-a^_th« Uni As a group the gjtfe m bette 4ay night at 8 p^clock in Texas Un? „ A con6i;ete ramp makes it possi? Products in Foreign Tratie Zone H1 »i»d 1p.m.*. in-Physics because the choral groagawtecteti ce|iyed_oyde^s to report for active versity MenVandGirls* GleeClub We^for aireraft^to^ landrand ^oia^ .$10^4.may ha.inspected .for sale ; Building: 201 ander^poivaoi^hipof sot^are#011815­ concert Wednesday night %t iMe ""The Eyejr^f Texas'* for a fipaJ cause thedr^songs:were picked for by buyers-and agents. the University Film Committee, authorized to delay their departure Walter Grisham, ma,nag^r .of Recital Hall. ei core. A siimmary of thecon-an "average college freshman to toeliminBteintermediate.'hauling ' Another advantitge of the tr«d^ . Admission &*ree. ft , , v.ntH January' 6, 1951, CoL C. M. Trade Zone No. 6, and Lon New­ understand. Tbe men sang much jicTd extra handling. zone is that many large U3 dis? ; Start of the film ve^ou aflT Culp, chief 6f the Texas Military born, ex-student and manager, of harder songs but with less feel­v The services performed;by the iributorsj who are not, imported* Wendy Killer and the-late Leslie District, announced Wednesday. the foreign 'relations division of ing than should have been put in ;"internrtional^ shtmld en-can inspect foreign products there Howard. ' Extended active duty orders are the San Antonio Chamber of song abli 'PygmiRon" nfraS" written lfr sich a as "Now :Let Every being amended and all Resecvists Commerce; will talk to thle -cltrb. don^stic, importers and' and"purchase them without red T TeXWjCriB!>68,,Wili be thC fiPal 'eIeCti°n ig A 189,000-potfnd cutaway of a full-size 1,500-horsepower diesel­ 8—'Texas-Kansas debate, Garri­ electric locomotive will be dis- T-son Hall .l.„ 17 to Participate playe^inAtetintijrSoutheEnPa­ 8—"School for Husbands," Hogg cific. Thursday and,Friday, T. M. Auditorium. . Spence, general manager of the 8—Delta Upsilon pledges enter­ In Chemical Meet railroad, announced Wednesday. tain representatives from other "The exhibit, built by General fraternities, Old Seville Wine mpNS Cellar. v Seventeen University profes­Motors Corporation at a cost" of 2-5414 sors ^ and graduate students $200,000, should be of value to Dec. 7. 1950 .8:30—Kappa Epsilon; J&hemij&ry will give research papers anil pre- Building 15. -JJ" students in mechanical and elec­ side at various sessions of the trical engineering," wrote J. D. American Chemical Society's sixth Carter, Southern Pacific official Public Relations Class southwestern regional meeting, to V„ L. Dougiitie, chairman of the j Thursday through Sunday, in San Breakfast 6:30a.m.to 11:00a.m. To Hear Ex Texan University department of Mechan- Antonio. : Jack Maguire, "BJ '44, director ical Engineering. The. University will have the largest number of program par-Large California Stewed Prunes ....... Advisory Association, an organ­ ticij^ants of any institution repre­I/2 Chilled Grapefruit Dsiste BETSY ization of Texas underwriters, will speak to Alan sented. Among those who will at­Two Link "Sausa^ Professor Scott's tend are as follows: Public Relations, class Friday at Two eggs any style you'like STATE 11 a.m."in Journalism Building Hot Cakes with 2 Butters And Syrup M. Roberts, Frank H. Field,^O $1.00 212. . Freslj Baked Sweet Roll Garwood, F. J. Broughton, F. A-. _ Wednesday Fresh Hot Coffee l&teen, Gilbert H. Ayres, BartHoI-" Editor in 1943 and 1944, will talk T] ome« L. Tuffly, Lewis F. Hatch. on ^Insurance and Public KeUp John Bieri, Galveston Medical tions." , Branch, S. D. Cooley, James A. LUNCH 11:00 am. fo 4:00 p.m. Lasater, W. A. Cunningham, T. .D„' E: McMinn, L. O. Morgan, J._ J; Mc- ETetta, and H. R. Henze. Seafood Gumbo arid Crackers .15* Car w#shc°- Dl i\t IN IHf ATRI S Auto Many other faculty members 221 S.d.amar Chopped Beef Steak 27 TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY and students will also attend thfr Enchiladas and Chili 38 Qvtr&rs fHONI Feature Starts at 7 p. m. conference. The University will Baked Chicken Pie with Fresh Vegetbles ......I ,39 7-1527 play host to th* seventh ACS \?GUN8 A BLAZIN'" "SATAN'S ' Fried Cod Fish and Tartar-Sauce .35 meeting in December* 1961. ,CRADLE" |" Walter Hntioa Roast Pork and Sweet Potatoes 45 I ^ • • Waltar Brmnaa Cisco Kid' ..'. .57 / Roast Prime Leg of Beef Au Jus jemo: "JUNGLE WOMAN" Pep Rally, paiice Planned Fresh Fluffy Mashed Potatoes .10 Evelrn Ankert^rJ. Carrol Naith l^btrtsiANA HAYftlDE" "" Black Eyed Peas ..........v ^ : jo Jttdy JCaboti In Union Friday at 6 Have Christmas Fresh Made Cream Slaw 10 Richard Lane "THE CORSICAN Friday Frolics this week will be' Fresh Baked. Lemon Pie [ .12 JMONl• BROTHERS" t/s4/es/rv a pep rally dance at the Union fol­Portraits made T-1786 • * • •iPETTY GIRL" Douglas Fairbanks lowing the "Auld Lang Syne" rally : ; >• P«M Caufield''••• *t GregorjrGym." Rnbort CnwwiimPHI'M'MM?* "FANCY Thedance at the Union wilt be at DINNER 4:00 p.m.v to 8:30 p.m. from 8 to 11 o'clock. W;. "A PANTS" RUK FOR YOUR Bob Hope A Lucille Ball Architect* to Hear Gutheim Vegetable Soup and Qrackers ; .".12 MONEY*': Frederick Gutheim, assistant Sreaditd Veal Cutlet .v ••*-••*"* .40 U "HARBOR OF executive director of the American T£:x/*S 7-1! ... A Briti.il Bsked Halibut and Butter §auce 45 Donald Htwton MISSING MEN" Institute of Architects, will ad- Stewed Chicken and Dumplings " 50 Meredith Edward* -Richard. Denning dress students of architecture ' Barbara Fuller Club Steak and American Fried Potatoes ...... .50 Ai/sr/A/ fHOKI 4 o'clock Thursday in Architec­7-200^ . i Ken Maynard 'J Jure^BuiWing, 105. He wiU talk I T Bone Steak ..: ;. "A LADY WITHOUT "WHEELS OF DESTINY" on "Decentraligation of Cities". s French Fried Potatoes ASSPORT*' M /' ^ Fresh "Buttered Carrots TODO UN . edjr Lamar Carrot and Raisin Salad IRIS ; CABALLERO; Fresh Apple Pie Jt' CAPITOL ^DULTS LAST TIMES TODAY T 'fty-' -.{•••• .V1&& .<« . . ' ' 60« "•4 Separate awl complete Shows' Take Advantage of our CONTINUOUS SERVICE THEATRE Startia* at 2-4:30-7-9:30 Thursday, Saturday 8.00#jD.m| ' 'J TIE (MEETS FIHT MUIM WW II JfcCHW f it jVJ jSunday*2:30 p.m. from 6:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. * -­ * . ; Including Sundays . • omumi : Mm Hear Hart^ Cc^bp^ Thi Lilt. J • PrrS* ^1 'ibMMiin Really playV M "k '.t j ' ira*finish o U-*vl mMleTaUtma _ • Cartef IK UUTUT nnHEIIII] -sy to ' h«ar h' .7 ISIImm 't',t».^Vi '.tyt; 'MM JESSE HART ;iSMrXki ihBHRAT I 1 , "CUNCA DIN" Syfe ono His mm CWjT'Craat VJrtw m iM refnger'ated ^ .* air. conditioned. PI T**e$ee&#; d BYES'* JSP™* Opt* **»'•'*u»* $m 801 CONGR^S 2910 QqMM CONGRESS \r-? Wrss ^ IM