irt P4 VivI Stf*# -*$PI ' •dSr >hJk4m fp *, g # O n 11 rfr -g — -a,^-r Juis- VOLUME 51;"3SH5f1Price Five CmH? AUSTIN, vti * -*™>.«sijs i^fe ~-s^- ^PSip ,^4s~ p*i rrera -a 5#^%S.* I tfjlLt \£k I \^ .V V^: rr*sT * *&u *1. tfAJS r y. ^ * 1 V y5! ^ ^ j^ ^•J'h-c, ,"* & •*#•*••&>'}*&>,•+•>£( M'V# The Phi Sigma Kappa an3 Phi: By KELLY CROZIER --•--8«Sji» T«aron AnociaU Sportt Editor Kappa Psi water-splashing and Saturday afterawn at 2 o'clock the Texas taghorns will be a three-touchdown fav see "only limited action the rest of the year. He is definitely out Saturday^­ iBi Davis and VFayne Cox teamed up £SU;lost i^plain Elfeft "Van Bureiv with a broken thumb beforertKe Tulafie.^m |n the Phi Sigma Kappa caaoe. week and during the game lost Harold Voss, defensive tackle. Both were standouts i»T A They w&e selected from twen?. the Tiger defense. . , « . J ty-six team competing for the best Saturday the Steers will use a combination of-backs to filL the #5 display of" canoe artistry and fensive team co-captain Bub­ _ sportsmanship; The fwo taamnf l ba Shands and Bobby Dillon eacK consisting of a man to pad-wf •S3®! f will share the right half post dle-and one to—joustr-will-battle H f j—^vaeated by -Levin©^-fialey's it out each night of the first three place at defensive left .half Mm1! nights of the annual Aqua Carni­ will be taken over by T Jones. val beginning Wfednesday. A tro­ The halfback problem ,has beenphy will be awarded to the winner. anticipated all year and Bobby Retiring^ coach Blair Cherry Dillon, Bubba Shands*-Bob Raley^ Although it was the Wit sehe#/ " The canoe tilt contest is oftly Bill Chanslor, and Dick Ochoa are told 350 students who attended rfbled pep rally for the sei&nt ,, one of many presentations to be PLAYING for the last ticne in Memorial Stadium Saturday will tht last-pep rally befre the Cot­was one capable of running, at either half. and Cherry, it only of Phflto fcr Trunk Wither* made by the seventeenth Annual be Longhorn c6-captain Bubba Shands, one of nine seniors on the ton Bowl gnme Friday night that She many future ralliea that ^ia^ V1 Ochoa also plays fullback on de­ Aqua 'Carnival. Christmas with Steer squad. •" .. -: fense and offense. Gib Dawson the University had given him the coach-elect Ed Price will' attend|^| the color and trimmings is the opportunity to realize his ambi­ runs only from the left half por Both Cherry and Price empha# -|i a "great" foot-, theme thiB year. Ten co-eds will sition. ' tions as coach of sized the seriousness of the LSlI';^ vie for the title of Aqua Carnival k U team. Friday afternoon head coach game. Cherry told the student^^ Queen and ten more will compete Coach Cherry said, "I twsure Blaii: Cherry attended the-thort "We have tittle.,to. win.aiid,.AVgry&i&y in modeling the "Suit of the you that the support of^the stu­ limbering up exercises and said thing to lose in the game tomor%*x^"j5 Year." dttnt body and the school news­ that he would * direct the game row.'* He compared the T6xa»-. paper played a great part in the Parrell Williams, UT cheer­ from-the bench Saturday after­1SU gar... to the reeent ArmSrf'^ success of the team after the leader, Skippy Browning, national noon. "I like what I see," coach Navy game in which jtop^eankii^; criticism following the T^xas-Ok­ diving champion, and Bill Scott Cherry said as the first two of­Army was upset. * lahoma game." will be aerial artists, performing fensive teams dashed up and down By BRUCE RpCHE mere six The nine seniors who are finidh^^^ in a trapeze act forty feet fibove Kappa advantage is a the.field. With Mr. Cherry on the stage and RUSS KERSTEN pounds. mg their college football cajreeri­ m Gregory Gymnasium were nine the pool. — Coach Cherry has been unable are Bubba Shands^ Gene Vyku* That most coyeted of hock-shop Cheerleaders, e x p e c t e d to to attend practices this week senior members of the Longhorn re­ Jack Tolar, all-American diver, articles, the original Powder Bowl whoop it up in the usual fashion football squad. The gfcme, with wal, Dlek' Rowan,, Ben -Procter, cuperating from illness that Roger Tolar, and Milton Davis will trophy, goes, on the line Sunday Satur4)|jf.. night and at halftirte LSU will be theit last in Me­Bud McFadin, Kenneth Jackson^ caused the d. stunts on the trampoline and afternoon at 2 .o'clock on Fresh­Sunday, have named. For him to miss A&M George Gentry. Ltwis Leviue, been game morial Stadium, The Cotton Bowl mtMmJSk tower. Clare Masterson, also an man Field'. •• BIB Porter.., £4 gfeme wilL be their.Ifwt for the -Ifac 5 head cheer rmLio&am;&!b^T^ at tbe game and the weather man university." ' ' • " ,c featured girl diver. . — Kappa Kappa Gamma and Pi , awd Jeau Fountain. --Most of these seniors begmn presented' •• lmndsome "Jock. t», (||A clown diving act will provide Phi camps rqport heavy daily Manning the megaphones on the the skies partly cloudly and a their college football careers the Coach Cf^rcy as a gift from stuir lbughs. ; •-workouts in preparation for the opposite side will be Jill King, slight variable wind. . same year that BIair Cherry as­dents of the University. Money".rr* sixth aSttual^Ferty^^ Aci^ :birw^ Jean Mariea Edge, and Betty Leading the LSU attack that sumed the position of head coach for tiie gift w»&":fi»|lecte&.^ ' Tickets for the Carnival are Dancy. : Cowboys. „ -f tassle. , '/*r , . ''-v;. Coacl^ Gus Tinsley has devised-— of the Longhon team. They are on sale at Hemphill's, the Uni­Sam "Redhead" Callan, coach The Downtown Betting Club, re* which includes the T, and a short ending' their collegiate football Bintliff. said, "Webster nevi r:: versity Co-Op, and the .C arid S of the favored Kappa's, runr his fused, to quote odds, sayihg, punt spread—will be a lad from fcareers with him also—in tri­had the words to express ... _, '±-. Photo br Fiaiiik WJUierg Sporting Goods Store. Admission What's de use?" See TEXAS', Page 2 umph. thanks to Blair Cherry.'1 -^ ^ TWO MORE OF THE TEN Aqua-C^mival pufean contestants charges through this daily rou­ imM, for Blanket Tax holders is 50 who jvill be prasdnted each night of the show are blondes pola tine: 1% hours calistbentics; 1 cents. Swimming coach Hank WSA^i Ellts~(top|—and June Tolar. PnU is tKw«preset^ Varsity Carnival hour.' 4 minutes' passing; 2 hours ,-'T"-r—--v- Chapman says that those who blocking; 2 hour* scrimmageand ' Queen. June Is a aister to AH-American diver Jack-"" ' "" .want to be sttre of ..getting seats Jc~Tolar. '(Photos 2 hburs eating and sleeping. 1 by' Frank Withers), ' • ' * should buy them early. i•% > ' This Spartan schedule"is exA pected to round the confident No. Player Pos. Wt, Class Hom« No. Player /< \ Pos. Wt. Cl&sa ' Homo KKG's, intramural champs, into shape-—although these scribes 10 Hunter, Robert ; RH 185 Sp. Los Angeles 10 Bible, Bill ' -SP. ;T3f like their shtfpe as it is. • 12 Labat, Leroy 11 Shands,* Bubba RH 185 Sp. ' , . Reserve r&wjtj/-. In an exclusive interview (try 14 Bagget; Billy LH 175 Sr, Beaumont, Tex. 12 Mayes, Carl % to find 4t in any other paper), Kappa co-captain . Laura Woods 15 Freeman; Chester LH 185 StM Baton Rouge 16 Ochoa, Richard boasted: '"It may be freezing, 17 200 Sr. 20 Andrews, Bunny Jbut we'll "burn 'em up with our Van Buren, Ebert FB Metaire 0; QB By CLAUDE VILLARREAL f drink cm Sabu,'-wh€n accompanied Hie campus was one big'".mon­terrific passing and running." 20 Hedges, Lee v FB 185 Jr. • >•' Shreveport 21 Jones, T. '!QB > -and WATTS DAVIS by twenty cents. ster rally" Friday, as drooling can­Yawning, 'Laura • flexed . her It^iras ^Sabu" by a lmre chest .Pledges, and members, collected didates were unleashed by their muscles and added, "Nobody 23 Stevens, Norman QB 175 Sp. Picayune, Miss. 23 Tompkins, Benct' QB w Friday, when" Beta's Myron Reje-coathangers , wherever they could keepers and allowed to roam long stop' us." can 25 Cole, Jack QB 185 Sr. . Bastrop 24 Page, Daff"^,v;< jQ^ veretts Cha enough to convince enough people y each, and cleared .$50 for the cam­five easy ones without a loss this Aian won over thirteen other "offi­get them, sold them for half-a-cent they were ^fit" for "Ugliest." (Note to Pi Phi's: KKG won 32 Adams, Jerry FB 175 Sp. Ruston 30 Townsend, Byron' r jd Odi cial" candidates and several write­ paign. Other donations off the Last year's campaign cleared fall, says Luscious Laura). 33 Martin, Jack RH 160 Sp. " ", Hayne^ville 31 Honffeycutt, Bob £ ,*' FB SP Gladewa ins to win the fourth annual campuBcamefrombusitfeaafirms, . $1,200 for the Campus Chest, In quest of the homeless tro-?1-35 We$t/ Billy -^ 195 Jr. -83 Price, Glen 190 JSP. FB Natchitoches ."Ugly Man'* Contest Friday. alumni,:and the chapter. which has been discontinued. , > phy~the game laBt year was a 34 Levine, Lewis •: ,;l; FB jjaylfyig i The contest brought In about scoreless tie—KKG -will field a 3£ Copes, Charles , FB 195 Sp. Tylertown, Miss, **j $1,000 for APO's campus emer­starting offensive line-up averag­40 Shirer, Joe LH 165 Jr. ] New Orleans ^0 Porter, Billy , -C!•-r5 Ty ing ,126 pounds. Paced, by Pon­41 Raley, Bob gency fund, Jac^ Steele, chairmaii , of the Ugly Man Election Com­derous Peggy Powd, 100-pound 41 Barton, Jimmy QB 165 Jr. • Marshall, Tex. 42 Dillon, Bobby . ' HB center,. the 123-pound forward mission, told the Texan Friday. 42 Konz, Ken * LH 185 Sr. Weimar, Tex. 43 Barton, Don wall clean the way for a bruis­ • ini|Si|^iip;r;- ing 130-pound quartet of ball lug­44 Opolko, Mike LH 185 Sp. ^Chelsea, Mass. 44 Simmonsr^edJ^HB Wichita F "/•Horrible Hilmar" Lassberg gers. 45^ Jtoshtor Jim « FB 185 Jr. -; Bato] Dawson, GiB ^^HB scared enough people to come in Elusive Ell Fondren, the quar­ 50 McDonald, Bill 205 a weakMsecond. H. E. Branson terback, !completed 50-yard 51 Smith, Charlie J C 210 Jr, En3orado, Ark. passes "too numerous to»mention" 51 came in third, as he did In 1949. 52 Reid, Joe : ^6 215 Sr. Meridian, Miss. Reeder, Hugh 205 ,«P. iM^d punter Betty Beasley aver­ 53 Menasco, Dop E Rejebian will be ^croyrned at a aged "over 35 yards"—according 56 \Zl'C 190 Sr. Biloxi, Miss.. L"pawty" at the Cliff House Satur- to a Thurtxlay Kappa press re­5o4 Rowan, D 210 SR. Zakrewski, Clem G 195 Sp. Little Rock, Ark, potion Pfday night at 7:30, Steele said. He lease. 55 Barton, Ja< 200 }«P. 61 Walsh, Ewell^G 200 |would net disclose what sort of a Acrow "iosi^at^another Secret Jr. _ . Tempe, Ariz. 60 Arnold, Joe % underdog Pi Phi's are "'crowning^'f ceremony a• 62 Lansing, Bill G -206 Sp. Magnolia, Miss. 61 McFadin, Bu_ , IMS ',*^1 grooming Margy -Crosby to re» fplanned. ^ placv the departed Pat Peyto^|64— Rous§^^eorg^~-,0 200 ..Sp, Santa Ana, Cal. 63 Cunningham, D^iP? G 190 |R. If -Rejebian recovers,. Steele 64" Piil»n|BHSip^iBH^yf-^€r 495-:«L. . G •» 210 Hamilton, O. |said, he can start collecting fanme- I'SSiig?iSmSSS^Baa^^. .65 „.SpweU^j(^l liately ftom Austin merchants lettemwj, Is handling the pout­67 Shoaf, Jim eenmrg;Vf: |who have pledged $15(X or move ing chores, 66 SeweU, Harley as 69 Modicut, Joe 216 * rorth of goods and services Deedo Bering, fouisyear letter Jr. ^ Baton Rouge 67 Fleming,-Gene 215 JR. ^consolation" prizes^ v man with'great pass-snagging ta­70 Dry# Jtonald 215 Sr. Fairland, Okla. 68 Datfis, June t 210 **., lents, teams with fullback Gail Wm 74-Vosis^ Harold. .225 Ik. 35 Baton Rouge A bite contribution was a bex Campbell, another stalward of 7Q. Lansford, Jin» »t.24 engraved Texas Christmas other years,, to give; Hill Cocke's 75 Potter, Rar'v-;j w 225 Sr. Peabody, Mass. 71 Naylor; John -'$3' ird«, by Hemphill'B Book Store*. upset-minded crew a strong run­ 76 Coyne, Ed 200 Jr. ^jj-k Bemis,. Tenn. 72 Milburn, Bill sfijS Sabu won the contest, his Beta ning attack. , 74 Jackeom Ke$ rothers elaim, by a campaign con- m Operating off double-wiflg for. 77 Miller, Paul* w 210 Sp._^ Baton Rouge H Jjj sting oil house-to-house persons! mation, JSv outweighed Pi Phfs 75 ' Gentito«r, '• 'CSteirle^^ir 210^' 78* Sanford, 212 Sp.^ Covington ppearance "frights," contribvi* vifIII fcive away twelve pounds per 76 Taylor, Charles " ' " is from bnsin«8 firms, free ad man—oops, girl. The difference 80 Lylej Jim -E in Sr. El Dorado, Ark. 77 Wilson, Bill 'T'A.V­ ' ing, and campus donations. is especially marked in the sec­81 ' Bullfard, Ed [•Turban-attired Saba and hiarefcv ondary, .where the light but tricky E 185 S».' St. Martinville 79 Yykukal; Ge«e m* le of bear-ch^tte'd slaves coiilf Golden Arrows show a deficit of 82 yeager, Rudy E 202 Sp. Philadelphia, H, 80 Williams, Paul 205 JR, led their campaigning to sorori- seventeen pound* In the line, the 83 McLeod, Ralp^ E 195 Sp. ' Bellaire, Tex. $2 Adams, John . Ma --*'• •• -cMfo-'r Hjia — houses, on the theory that m 38 Beife. ppoaites attract, so, might thfe Plant 85 Kitto, Arman4 ' New E i® R - ttltoug® Ow •• -ffilvilIiHIFl m 87.. .3Tate$."'£MB« r % Bock, 4rk. W aft shoe dancer to entertain the M are requested to he atOfemoi^l Brown; Jack *190 Sp. Lake Providence ^'hetas, and Pete, of Pete's Myr^Re|nb«i^ shows wlnn at 12;30 o'clock Satur-mj %rs©tt, BillI vimm. ^ joun^the-Corner," pr^ed,-» lytc^'ky Lfht it%. Ffklay%|re«*fcw'^ f I tOOO raised-^ . B.'T, .i ?te:33S^lilK < Quponf entitling beams to a free /j|D fortha nfe •mmsm i ~ r<­ *1$ t. WPMtf S:#b v3l[ SB&nSS^ ' s REASONS tha Texas Coft^hoHR 225-pound son hasjbeen that they have been'; rence tackle, Jim Lansford, 235-pound de­ ere favored over LSU Saturday are these line-Conference too aggressive. fensive tackle, and Lewis fflud) McPadin, 245­''^American gyard«­ nghorii8 are, highly favored to win their third straight game over LSU by this weeks guest experts. ^The copaensua ranges from a 7 to 21 point victory with bfm of the experts taking any chances in predicting the bayoo teamto win. , TEXAS 21 LSU 6 Smx&ae Farrivelementary education major from Del Rio, "I know we are going to win. It will be a real good item#,and I am sure it will definitely be a good win." TEXAS 28 LSU 14 Virgil Dillon, business administration major from Inde­. pendence, Kansas, "I think the power in the line will 'T "r ?,#nakG the difference." ? <, ' ^ -i_-_ i • ---fTEXAS fo;TT7"'-LSU O —-—••• ­Mary Muiaret Wiley, Plan II major from Austin, "It will be a very good game. LSlTwill just be outclassed by­ ^f-5 . I?, iTEXAS 21 LSU 6 Hoinur#;'Dl^s,' architecture major from Miami Beach, Fla., "Texas is finally up to a good game to finish the season. They outclass LSU and have the advantage of playing on their home field." gSr TEXAS 21 LSU 12 BeUjr Pates, elementary education major from Haskell, "We have a lot better team than they do, especially in the-line where the power counts most." , gfj| TEXAS 27 V_-.ll ; LSU 12 AWul government major from Kabul, Afghani­ •tan, "I know we are going to beat the heck out of 4i J4 • J|||^EXA^':2d'-_'*" LSU 7 ' E)e!or*s NeJioto/nursery education major from Austin, "Of ;«course we are going to win and because^we have the wA|iest.team.M ' —r**" , -* '"TEXAS 27 • ,'v" LSU 13 Lawrence, business administration major from Baytown, "I think they have a good team, but I be-Ttleve we have $ better one and it ja capable of scoring Iff?TEXAS 14 1 f LSU 7 * Mti Pearl Ghormlejr, Texan night supervisor, "With two |^A11-Am6ricans on the team and such a powerful line, ;the Longhorns are sure to win."" , , ' fl ^^gTEXAS 34,^/0 LSU 14 : V» Texan sports staff, "This will be the last t: ;«ame in Memorial Stadium for nine of the Longhorns Coach Cherry. They should stampede over the jfc-JMtf tfir AtHm' § i?r l' ^8 fpBWMUltr i?rl -Sticker* SunbeeterCepf By JAMES RECH ' Snh969Hl and gastouml making er on Coach Edw&rds the Starting |ive* has been seeing more Dowler. however, suffered an more action in each game year's victory over"Texas #nHe fiijury recently and may not an^^ai'pi'Atmbly rep; wasn't a fluke, the high scoring be ready for full Service. He hi in the startingjifteup. Te*as Wesfcyan ^ams-take > on probably the best (irtfens^e play^y Coach Jack Gray's starting line­ Coach Jack Gray's inexperienced up was not definite Friday. The Longhorns Saturday nightaat8­ ^Zastoupn ^has^ii^Wf^ira surest bete were Falkland Dowies o'clock in Gregory ,Gym. scoring. Against Baylor he drop-at forwards. "TtwrRaims, who-* pe dropped two narrow games, to has also been potent with his cil Morgan, or George Scaling will I SouthweStConferenceo will field a starting five thqt aver­age six feet, three inches TWC -dropped a 58-68 tilt W •6MU and lost a 66-64 'setback to the Baylor Sears,' while winning. Stephen F. Austin, 64-89. Led by an ex-Texaa player, Lou | Zastotqnl, -the Ram?' are an ag­gressive, point-making team. Pos* 'guard, Ken Jackson, 250-pound all-sihly their {nain trouble this sea* E3wards' main worry." Too tough stuff cost him three starters -—out via {he personal .fotil route ; i—in the late minutes of the S|iU ^ game. . . " . Things didn't improve against s Baylor as four TWC players went| out of the game on fouls* ' But Coach Edwards can count/ on lots of points .while his first! t^am is still intact—a department.: in which T^xas has been lacking yard averjtge—?and plays safety in losing two games and winning on defense. one. S At the right half slot will he : Billy Baggett who has gained a averaged nearly 60 points a tilt,total of 753 yrds in 28 tries to whilte Texas has averaged only• 45 lead the Tigers-in-gFOundgainmgr points-a gamer ---— He is tied with Konz in touch­Coach Gray -has been shiftingdowns. his starting lineups to try and hit ""At; fullback will be'I; i a potent starting five b who has been a consistant per-so far forward* Joe Ed Falk jmd; former all year. The quarterback Jim Dowies have been the oftly post will be held -down by Jim consistent Steer performers.Barton, a converted halfback. Bar­The Rams, started put the year ton has passed 59 times, completed with hopes of bettering last year's19, and had 6 intercepted. record of 19 victories and ^ 11 . Manning the offensive line for losses. the Tigers will be Ralph McLeod . Their squad is built around and Warren Virgets at ends, Ed three seniors, three juniors, and Coyne and Ewell Red Walsh at four sophomores, with forwards tackles, James iSShoaf and Allen Joe Prater and Moe Rowler,; cen­Hover atr guards, and Joe Field ter Sam Rascoe, and guards at center. -..'C,. With Voss due to see only lim­ited service, Coyne will have to do double duty at a tackle posi­tion, iyhile Shoaf will be the only other player scheduled to start on both offense and defense for By JACK WEAVER ; 7*«pcm fhtort* Staff the 'Tigers. The Austin Maroons advanced Hover, an all -Southwestern to the quarter-finals of the state Conference guard is a standout schoolboy football playoff Fridayin the LSU line. •• by edging the upset-minded Tem­_ When-the Bengals take_ to th# ,nle Wildcats. 18-12. in a spine- air, end Virgets wiU be the man|tjttgling at Houke Park. to watch. As LSU's leading pafs receiver, the Baton Rouge junior has caught 25 passes for 469 yards and three touchdowns. f Incidently 26 of the 53 players on the LSU squad are from states other than Louisiana—rfice are from Texas. Posbibly counteracting the logi­cal letdown feeling' that envelops a team after it "has already won the Conference championship and landed .a bowl bid will be the fact that the game will mark the last appearance of nine seniors in-. Me­morial Stadium. Bubba Shands, Lew Levine, Ben Procter^ George Gentry, Ken Jackson,_Bud McFadin, Dick Ro­wan, Gene Vykukal^ and , Bill Porter are the seniors-on the Texas Bquad, 'but all may not play. j JLevine—ijr^dsfinftely^' out with his knee iHjury. Gentry a substi­tute end, probably will play only briefly. Porter also will see only limited ..service as the Steers' punter.'. ' But the rest of the' Steer Sen­iors will be starters, a brood'hard to handle when. they play their last game before the home folks. The offensive Texas line, rated by some as the "best" in the na­tion, will have Procter and Tom Stolhandske at ends, Vykukal and Jim Lansford at tackles, Jackson and McFadin at guards, and -Ro­wan at center. -For all practical purposes J6e Arnold will be ^ starter also. He will alternate with Jackson at right guard and Jackson in turn will alternate witK T^imfonl rignt tackle. Belts and Buckles "T" Shirts Riding the strong right arm of their 15-year-old sophomore quar­terback, DoyleTraylor, the Wild­cats made a game of it until the laet 40 seconds when they missed a field goal attempt that would oe Bradj^jr 4s the most im-probably open at center.­ • ONLY SENIOR'ln the statHng Longhorn basketball lineup agamsf Texas Wesleyan Saturday, night/will be Frank Womaclt, tworJetter­ mari _expected to be the Steeris' top floor man this year. 13-12 have put them into the' lead. direction,, was 4©w. That was the ball-handling little guards Jimmy' The cagers opened the Viramontes, has been slowed by a Reason last week, by taking Sam Sfouston State, 51-44 before1 not keep him from starting. Qther Steer cagers scheduled to ing to the same team, 55-54. Then see service are Dick Harris, Lu-met a powerful Oklahoma team: fher Scarbrough, Leon Black and and lost, 49-85. * Lamar By HOWARD PAGE •Tfg«e Sg»rta Staff A former Longhorn star— Thurman (Stue) Hull-—brings his speedy and experienced Lamar Teeh basketball team to Gregory Gym Saturday night for a 6 o'clock meeting with the. Univer­sity of Texas F^feshmen. Boosted by the return of Charles Shoptav, % flashy forward who led Texas collegiate scorers' with 447 points last year while at thb Univeraity of Corpus (Christi, Coach Hull's Cardinals from Beaumont rate the favorites Despite -two losses to ^forth­western Louisiana, the Cardinab are expected to win many of the games o^, their 1950-51 schedule, which includes several senior col­legesr Sam Houston's Bearcats* the team that dumped thi Texas Longhorns, 55-54, Stephen F. Aus­"tin^ East Texas -Staterand-^outh­vest Texas State are included OILthe Cardinal schedule. And Coach Hull have seven other lettermen to go along with Shoptaw to give the up-and-com­ ing senior college an experienced squad. Eight promising freshmen jure counted, upon fox talented -reserve strength. ' Heading the 1951 Lamar team is Verlon Bobbitt, a 5-11 play maker, who has won three basket­ ball lettenra'"L»mar College.' At the other starting forward post is Shoptaw, the 6»f©et sophomore who played two years at Lamar Junior College before transfer­into Georgia, one of the; most de­ring to• UCC last year. " fensive minded teams in the busi­An Austin product—Bob Fre-ness,. in the American Legion's Presidential Cup game Saturday. derick—is the starting-Cardinal center. Frederick stands 6-4. Marvin Wills, a 5-9 French High graduate, and Weldon Bond, who lettered as a freshman in I960, Lamar Tech's starting guards. Claude Gife|en>va 6*6 center from Wyoming, and Ed Kilpat­rick, another French High School product, are Coach Hull's front­ li . reserves. f, With a 37-3h viatoiy over Whar­ton. Junic College behind jfthem, the Yearlin„,i_will play their fi­nal-game-untH-after the Christ^ mas holidays Saturday night. / Thear next game will be with Baylor'i Cubs January -8»_ _ Coach Marshall Hughes said Frida. thet Gilbert Ford, the 6-4 Amarillo boy, would start at~cen­ter, along with Billy Powell and John Caldwell at the forwards. Powell,"the 6-5" San Antonio" pro­duct,' has been most impressive­foi the Yearlings to date. ^ -Donald: Moore*of Lockhart and Don 'Lowery of Stephenville will staTt at guards for the Yeiarlings. Billy McCurry, 6-5 center, BilJ White, 6-guard from Denton, and Paul Mohr will see plenty of action.. .i A&M, Georgia Vie Today In Presidential Cup Tilt* COLLEGE PARK, Md., Dec. 8 —-=(2?P)~«-Texas A&M, with one of football's flashiest attacks, bumps .'rXn Austin fake field goal at­game as the Maroons ran only one Statistics show it should be tempt and pass play backfired play before the final gun. strictly offense vs. defense: As was> the case early in the' The Aggies have rolled up„304 Football Scores Ihte in the last quarter when season when the Maroons defeated points, while Georgia has bad toj Bobby Farrell, Wildcat guard, in­ Temple, 14-7, Austin's bruising settle for 158. The Bulldogs have tercepted Mike Huggins' toss, and C|TY CONFERENCE line, and thunderous backfield allowed but 66 points to be scored! moved the ball to the Austin 18­ rolled up yardage in • large Sunset 14, Reagan 6. up6nthem,whtletheAl^ yard line. Two passes by Ttaylot ^ AA B1..D1STRICT amounts, But the extra point givenur 186. failed, and then the unexpected Austin 13, Temple 12. booted by Mike HugginB after Teams in other post-sea«on happened. With thifrd down and Austin's second touchdown in the Harlingen 25, Alice 0. -games may have gaudier records,ten needed, the Wildcats elected third quarter was the difference. Baytown 13', Port Arthur IS (Bay-but it's doubtful if any will be to try for a field goal, and Don­ald Berry's kick, having perfect Sunset Beats Reagan For CC Crown, 14-6 DALLAS, Dec. 8—(JP)—Sunset new AAAA Conference. "r~':r of Dallas won its first state school­The first Sunset touchdown boy football championship Friday came in the opening period on a night, defeating John Reagan* of 43Tyard drive. after Houston, 14-6, for the title of the kicked out from the John ReaganCity Conference. -. 7. Jack Hayes passed to David Mc» -The burly Bisons led all the r fair­the Reagan one-yard linev way. Their big, mobile-line theiri"1 and John Marshall hammered overoughly outplayed the Houston for the score. Buzz Cherry added t e'lm while a crowd of 8,000 the point. .looked on. , The Reagan touchdown cameThe lone Reagan score pame on early in the second period, and•li 87-yard run with an intercept­midway in,that period' Sn^set goted pass by fullback Bob Easley. ~ its second score. Marshall returnedSunset Jias been in the finals the kickoff to the Sunset 42 and three times. In 1942, the Bisons lost to Austin in the Class AA from here the Bisons, mostly on finals. Last year, Sunset lost to Hayes' passing and running, Thomas Jefferson of San Antonio^ pounded down to the two-foot line. in the City Conference finals. Marshall went over from there. This is the final year of the Cherry again converted. City Conference, which next year Joe "tissue 'missed the attempt combines with Class AA in the for Reagan's extra point the DA® Texan TM Daily Twnn, «. atsdrat Mwnpapa* of OnW«»*ity of Tuu, l» pnWtotwir ia Aaitin cvary moMiing *ze«pt Uonda; *n gZ. iElkhartrOr^ Austin 46. Oliver Bradshaw, er 79, Fort Hood 6. Rodney" Williams Alternated at smashing the Wildcat line, and in ten plays covered 64 yar3a for the score. Williams, with the ai( of a. key block by Monte Joe Reedy, swept right end seven Oklahoma A&M 66, Arkansas 68. yards to knot the score. Higgins Baylor 67> North Texas 59.. missed the extra point* Bradshaw East^Texas 55, East Central Okla­accounted -for 37 of the 64 yards needed on three carries, homa 44. S. F. Austin 46# Centenary 43. Late in the same period the Maroons stopped a Temple threat Houston 68, Sam Houston 57. Trinity 383, Howard Payne 67. when Womack ^ intercepted Tray­lot's"long pass .on the ^Austin' jtix Alabama 75, Florence State 67. The Maroons started a drive Miami (0) 58, Findlay 42. which canfted to their own" 88 TCU Frosh 55, Arlington State B2. only to have a long pass inter­South Carolina; 67t;Newberry 38. cepted by Freeland Thornton Chicago Loyola 54, Wisconsin 51. "Wildcat safety man. Illinois 74, Oregon State 51. • Herbie Hargis, Austin'enU, was Princeton 76, Buclcwell 64^ in the clear waiting for the loop­San Francisco 62, Los Angeles ing pass from Bradshaw when • Loyola 44. Thortiton came from nowhere to Arkansas _ State' 67, Mississippi htake a one-handed catch on , State 61. ' , dead run. He reversed his fielt East Texas Baptist 68, Midwestern and was finally dragged, down on 58. the Marnon 34. Brooklyn College 0.9, ?t. Francis FREE NIGHT DELIVERY ^ Phone, 2-0048 . 303 W. 19th. THE . TODDLE ' HOUSE }emoz Have Christmas ' Portraits madd SPECIALIZING IN eats on a 60-yard sustained drive, climaxed by Traylor sneaking over • Stsaki ' *4Salads% " the double stripe from 'the one. Berry's try for point Was blockeS . mm The Maroons cam* roaring back >.m.^Closed Monday from their own 1$ to wore in five . Vm£TTM plftys. Dujrwood Watkins swept right ind for 37 yards,' Morris TARRY TOW^ RESTAURANT Nelion made 1# over tackle, Wp> ck ncooted 28. yards around left end toth•> - WwSBSW V-tTu 1 «,stim. tfissJ m MM Ufidl* YMI« CO ..jHWi;,, -V-«V ag Gifts Twice WASHINGTON, Dec. 8— is i gentleman compared to ar acceptable peac& fleet. ; ' ­ same corner in order 'thai; they nist leaders of the Soviet Union ' /'HitS-T." -you. Yon can take that as more of On may be run through tfce cancella The leaders pledged their coun He agreed that thef United Na-jygd-^hin>, ronhij Ihey eheaet White. House confuanad an inmilk than as a< reflection nn trotr^w^^8 "aet~; tugvlhei with tldfti thOUld cohaider" the • ftnal modify their conduct in appeasement -thatyjePreBidenthad^written your -ancestry^* —-i»«— --j—to * *• disposition ofFoiroosa. 8:30*4:30 -» Orchesis sponsors Jie also recommends 3-cent stamps resolution »»d unity" njeet way as to make these ftgengfj#** Hume, Hume said the letter he received* tp greeting cards. This will in^ Communist threats with-"no PrevioUsly the British had in­parations unnecessary." " Dance Symposium, Women's Neither feould give the text of was '"similar to but not identical Gym. sure preferred handling and may thought of appeasement or of re­dicated 'it tfhould be handed*over Attlee promised British armed Although tiie letter,-but the Washington warding aggression." to the Chinese Communist regime. with'" the text as published in the mean that cards-will arrive several forces would continue to, fight na 4nd the 9 —-Legal Institute, Hogg Au^ii- Daily News said it "goes like this": news. A White House source also ' toriu'm. days before third-class mail, he A 2,000-word eommunigue, is­The indirect appeal to Moscow alongside American and other gh«e are relucUnt to let the . "I have just read your lousy -'v r sued after the final meeting, said to end the present worldrwide ten­ed Nations consider FomnbUft said the President's letter waS of 9 — Texas .Commission on Inter-says, United Nations forces against the review buried in the -back page*. Mr. Truman has promised Attlee sion came in one brief paragraph Chinese Communist armies. ture, "consideration of this , the same general tenor. Racial Co-operation, University Cards with a S-cent stamp Wijl he will be kept "at all times in-in the communique which explain­The formal'announeem«mt men­SOT bir the United Nations Hume, 34, weight 165, does not Baptist'Church. t»»; forwarded if the addressee has formedM of . developments that ed the reason the Western Demo* tioned these points W agreement. eentribut#'1 io peaee aad imt&bggstM np with the flg 9-10:30 — Alpha Delta Sigma ad m< ved or returned,to the sender might caw? jbha United States to • , "^very effaiff' must be 'M«i| year-old Mr. Truman, whose phy forum, Texas Union 309-811. if the address is incorrect. IX a decide use Bomb, Newt Briefs , w •tot 'tweirTd^ to the atomicsician has a hard time keeping 1:60 —-Broadcast of Texas-LSU 2-cent stamp !a used, only one at-, The statement emphasised the peaceful meamr but ento: the President's weight below 180 game, KTIjHp. tempt is made to deliver the mail, basis ^ ; President's "hope that world con­ pounds. ' '• ' • 2 Tex#S'£SU football game, then off go the cards to the dead­ditions would never call for theMemorial Stadium. letter office. | Hume said his attitude is: "A use of the atomic bomb." "Complete <4preementM on Yanks 40 Miles '•i Have Portraits man suffering the 4oss of a close 5:3Q-8 — Phi Gamma Delta Bu|-To insure safe and early de The ' communique showed the need A»r immediate action by . fet supper, . . T. friend and harrying the terrible livery of gifts, twc, address tags President and Attlee had 'agreed twelve North Atlantic Pact tty|> '' 6-12 —. Acacia dinner datace at on ought to be indulged In an occa­* house, dress should'be attached 4o each munist -threats throughout-tite parations. _ sional outburst of temper." 4 8-12 — The Mariners formal shipment, the Railway Express world, hut they failed to agree oh The two nations must dance at Driskill Hotel. Agency advises. . . a common stand toward Com­bastd on th* Prttt administration may. crack down arms production galek$jr and burden of the present world crisis with the correct name. and ad­positive steps to counter Comis flat a good deal of the 8:30-12Delta Zeta formal naval blockade of the Red China East coast! It still had 4Q miles the request was "impractical" and needed, to make sure eatdi time," his review continued. dance at Texas Union. they 'should be well packed and coast. " ' . to-go. One fres"h "large'* enemy were "disturbed^ that it had been am oouatry gets the basic xa*r "There are few moments during 8:30-12 — Phi -Sigma Kappa mfarked "fragile1," the agency ad­British officials said Attlee op­force was moving to cut off _the directed at them. * '• ;• materials it needs fbr military her reeital whenone «a&relax and --claSfidJlfiuse. vises. posed any such mo^e on the United States troops from their * '' " civilian ptodnction : I"II JUiU«J^ •he cold, the helpless WfJfM GOACHIKGr Vranett* earaaai MttWh For Rent Bwperisnced taaober. I*b OKB OR TWO IwCM to *1 «jrouatt#^eWn^^fHD eaadUaU. CARE's new Standard Food Fackage-—~22 tsu£ pounds of nourishing food. ...».... .$10 30ACHIMG. rrcneb, man,' Furnished Hou** lExpcrlatioad taaeliar. hbM s-isis. ' CARE's new British Food Padcage......$10 . ^ARE's new Kosher Food Package-—«p-Furni^ied Apartment* i, proved by the Union of Orthodox (km* BLOCK QNIVERSITV—Bor*. SK. ;gregatidns, „$10 ttpmnnitiiii iu* Mito, a«w fpfMiiNt **rd-»100 wonth. also «oVta««? twin bads;.-faQta seid. vm CARE's neic Food Package for Italy ted fl-9444. Leather Greece.....»...........,. .no 1141 WKSt S9th, Wast law* mvrt. Badroon, kitchen with alaetri* refricaritor, new Aardwiek »n««. fihara CARE's Japanese Food Package .$10 bath with on* workine eoupie. .JMUa patdi «4».0«. 6->7201 , CARE's mw Baby FooAfaeksge .$10 1101 WEST JMb . rear. iUwIy jMaeor* I IS14 CARE's Layette Paekage • a * • «"T» i * * i $10 ; ated parage apartment, living-bedroom, kitchen, and bath and garage. HoUy. Wood bed. carpeted 1 floors, • -Mr Servel He^> Wanted CARE's Household linen Package... u .$10 refrigerator, abower. On baa ltpe. tUU# '11 i"i ji. 1 '.i... " •-1 ') . 1 r -pQ-s* CARE's Wool Suiting package# $10 ••Hu RIVER. UlMXpeeM W .'tanejr in new npartment itauae foe CARE's'Blanket Package .$7.75* University bora. Sanaa furniture, bollr. ?. y" > &i*!p 4 ^ h ./•. CAMP, japuo* »M%— •1. CARE*. Urd PmIuw.. .......M.00 £' CAREV wfeitf Thrift Food Package.v.. ,$5.5Q-;; ts Mu^ . . 5*$JL*'r ....... •• •• • • • 6 •• .SMM-, + * > < , , f 1 ^ *t "T* ,/( O. ^ •0S i vlSfci S-S41S. •, ^ s —r'TT^aitiirriTiriVTiiowjiii VMM 176 each. Phone ft*?1 fim' -fr> „ :"rfaas .. ' ) 30 BROAD,ST., NEW YORK $, N. Y. Uaed Magasints, 200^ Spaadwagr. new* ?->S8I. •itr i J ~ * , M MSKD C'ASH QUICK: Safe* '%» Jjtmf 11 sell ear. make offer *48 ford. Phoae L?foJ ^ ' if-1 ± 'M m '*1 ,w: jas^ M'rl, S3? W? "SH-flS B.;«KTM0m$ Ttfff ' v" • THE MOST JOHJLAR nmm PttACE TO CAT fe riSip s. Throttgh tmderground pa*-ifate, w an ~ """ f"«r-isaS-iSS^spa. Ji)m _ •_ •"•-!'''^-° m ^ unheated room beneath ogre-like fashion. But Mont/ "He can rf-create the perfumes tocography, "Left Handj Eight said ''seldiom has there been such ,of considerable stature (five"feet the rubble of bombed-out)London ®fve8 day, as,all herbfes do. 504 of an era, its clotJws, its features Hand," appeared. His^fifth and an outburst of rage ,and hysteria • , a ^ ^ictun trains ^him to yaiik at eleven inches)." captive is led. For more than —everything but its significance," last* .of the series, "Noble Essen* in months a potential murdfawr « f an audience." §*ferv4taryark The two Sitwells will arrive in four a®d ao Juj*t befoA the end, wrote Gaorgo Danierfield in the «ea>" will be published during h}s gained-pspularity and Columbia Austin Sunday afternoon on the i ®^rer Monty traipses into the bathroomSaturday Review of Literature of current tour In tlie United States. Records made -an album of the Missouri, Kansas, and Texas at P , .lhete chained' waiting a"d yanks out the plug, sendingSir Osbert Sitwell, reftowned Eng­A collection of his poetfy,""Eng-19.48 performance in the Museum 3:2B o'clock: and will stay at the the time kill him and then the bathfull-of acid, minus our of Modern Ait in New York City. .... ^ " ",.r HI • 1 lish literary i| land Reclaimed and other Poenis" Commoar torium. _ ..... lon^llyjely^jquinty eyeg, a Plan-will be a reception in the Tnter-. audience to a rather unsatisfying inT^titftte -td. save him from SijK^Srm^^r^nces' sored jointly by the Union Forum tagenet nose, a red turban, and national Room of the Texas Union, ending. lei xor ail .thethe near-?dOse of piisoning-poisoning enamg. Yet for a^l neluy is a collection of word, portraits m$&i Speakers and the ^Cultural Enter­ cheapness of the plot, the movie wWcb New^P, hftd cleverly depos­ tainment Committee.* They ' will of persons he has known. R. Ellis is-prevented from becoming an-a theSmds^full of Martini. arrive in Austin Sunday afternoon ^..i. w iU& *_ . .. V « AfVinti ^-.IH--"! —1 j«f MAaW ^1— . Ttobertc, reviewing for the Satur­other "can of so-much celluloid" Newton sees the jig is up and _ _ J at 3:25 o'clock. day Review of Literature, de­by"•» the*Mv fine acting of vuo ux M.» »«.*Ww> «wu cool juia ... on* awaits his arrest, still *M*y wvvmi#. vx one of Bri vuw and ' **3 f* ^ ' ft '* Grace s*~ ~&* •/«& xiv•ciuib| the book tain's ablest actors, Robert New-fA« tr4ai^«i 4>Wa 21.. sx._ t __ <• Sir Osbert,vowvt »| auvniiknown poas <»a novelist, scribed «u as "beautifully cali». He goes off«to jail, wify poet, essayist, short story writer patterned. visits the victim in hospital and ^.u^. ^..i ,,,„„! ,yrrr:|,.T,— and biographer, ishest known for "When! read this work, I find UT Sculpture Room t»u remember as Wishes him goodby, ^and«»»«u may him ' Monty,wumjr, "Kis five volume serial autoblograi It luapowlble not to think of Uu> Long John Silver, the eye-twitch-reRlizipg his only true friend is and Tlie Melody Masters phy, the third volume of which great Italian1 frescoes," Mr. Rob-By GEORGE BURKMAN ing rapscallion " •!_in "Treasure" °"r vlCt»w> decides to stay' with him. _ Mr. Dangerfield reviewed. The wrote, Island." You may remember his Curious about.the physical char-I S. Reinach in his book on das> works have beenclassed as"su- first biff role in "Odd Man Out," ; The picture^ is saved only by \"Srrjr *\ ..-ruddy, friendly, and in­ V "**r '» from Taylor perior entertainment" but criti acteristics of Emperor Augustus? art entitled "Apollo" re-starring ,James Mason. -Newton, clever cinematography formal" is the way the New York­ .,£1^,1., . mirkn! Vim -• Bed for alt "antiquarian ap­er described Sir Osbert: during If you Wfltpt to satisfy tiiat cur- Veaos de Milo-is As the psychiatrist, which seems and unusual gimmicks. ffig: • SATURDAY AND SUNDAY his visit in this country in 1048. in.it* ih. »)«. #>» >«, nervous^nor'l*nor dreamy, nor p be neceasity for The movie $s^ proach. neither elegant, current iousity, the place for you to visit a „ suspenseful, ..It m^rder Fifth baronet of Renishaw and , Dr. Edith began her literary ca­is Matn Building 809 where many strong and serene i® myBtery. he plots to kill has -good comedy relief. The de­descendent' of the Plantagenet reer 24 when she r.vw« v* vi«»a«vai ovuiji^uic «*» "vwie oiuipucity ana cainv aigni-»h°? ^ ,^0 fair at the age of other pie