•S '•-•I^l \-w'v. #5 r% •WkMiiMfiiii V **' i'fe &)» /ftfVJ W5>iW «& :3v?>f «^:*v?to l.J *S? i» iA ^v"Sis ^ W" *ftt: jU «' & W¥&&r-n&afc WWU>> tWO'iBeMOWfct-"^' tt*> s T*mtm8porU Stmt/ % "'""J tr-* ;##nnert;start«ed ^ht'lanig.'b^-^ tX)TTON BQWL, DALLAS, NovemW*. >i. . » ' • • ... ."i. , ». j. rr*.-?' \ • V » .• i . re-enter after idsfirst six spirals && LMSJmSmmmSS^ (Spl.)--T?xas knocked the props from un­ onlyJLt yards VOL. 51 Price 5 Cents ? AUSTIN, TBCASrSONDAYrtiOVEMBiR A, 1*51 Ten Pages Todays ^-r -NO. 56 . .der SMU's ffem$d aerial circus this %ftej&pon one setting tip A Longhorn sciW^, and unlocked the Pony defenses for three ending in a €0-yard payoff run # Interc^s^ touchdowns in the first 20 minutes to throt­tor Bol) Raley. m' Dow Intends 3 tle the impotent Mustangs 20-13. Succeeding SMU passert ^ffecte r>' ? t . ^ -vi' >> «• i -^ ^ i ^ * A chilled homecoming crowd of 72*000 completions in 23 attempts for $8 yards watchedin disbelief as the Ponies' fabulous Texas' 6-man secondary blank^ To Abandon ^hometown passer Fred Benners failed,to and intercepted 5 of the aerial%tW.^ . • .-"^*-'^--,K • ;--?.. v • "•' ".•-.• ' •-. -t >•:•*<*.• • .u-*c,' ;'* .­ wield, the magic wand that has meant so ' Meanwhile, Texas Quarterback Dan Plge -many-yards, points, andyictories in the past was pushing the buttons which had Assembly Ht^es _ ^s^rs'"powerful rushi chine meshing foir Says ligal Fight ' and three TD's. ^ u Wallace Reaffirms --Has. Made Office Substitute fuUback Bick Repugnant to Him Ochoa, subbing for jByr6n! Townsend Bernie Dow, Alpha Epsilon Pi candidate for the Student Assem­muscle running back the opening^ bly, announced his intention to kickoff, returned "to the her«*M* withdraw his candidacy Saturday Malcolm E. "Mac" Wallace, US plans are indefinite. His vacation role for the firtt time since ••th«| economist indicted Thursday for from the Department of Agricul­North Carolina game. Ochoa. and said that he wouldn't be able to defend disqualified independent m the pistol death of University stu­ture in Washington, D. C., ends nothing -but green among Ted-elad| *' ^candidate Bill ^Wright* because of dent Douglas Kinser October 22, Monday. Pony defenders as his h«ad-ilowtt| "lack of knowledge." reaffirmed Saturday charges he "I-will probably go back soon, running, particularly: through £ made eariier that he received mal­but I don't know"yet," he stated. 'vulnerable SMU middle, nett wrangling new . "Legal and technical treatment in the city jail. ^ Friday • Wallace posted a him 129 yards in 28 carrie*. has made, the possible, acquisition The former Uhivwi|y student $10,000 bond with Sheriff Ernest of. the office personally distaste­president made the accusations at Best. The bond, was set by Judge With SMU primed for Dful to "me,'*'said Dowv'who would press conference Thursday. He Charles O. Betts. and Barton on the wide stuff, anre denied criminal term on November 19, Ochoa gained over center...yirta by the Student Court bim, Wallace added. but actual trial of the" case may ly all afternoon. PreviouslylDowHa^saidthat, Friday, Pete Weaver,-homicide be delayed:-~~ "> " The Steers'- ironclad defensir^ he would defend Wright if the bureau detective^ labeled Wallace's shone throughout .the game and! c'­"question is one of intent, and charges as untrue. kept .-most of the Pean Criticizes Texan involved only minor infractions "He (Wallace) talked freely Ponies' end of tha field. -Forced, under the Election Bill." with us about ^everything but the For Wallace Interview to resort to * sputtering..groimtiM "The real issue," Dow paid, "is case," Weaver Said. "I asked him game when their-passes didn't go,Arno Nowot^y, dean of student whether or not Wright's violation the next morning after his arrest tfie Mustangs earned only on* ; is serious enough to warrant dis­if he wanted .to have, his finger life, criticized the Daily Texan solid penetration diirinyl-me;iiilmi^| qualification." ' treated;. He told me, 4No, just Friday for arranging Thursday's that coming in their third quarter forget it'." press interview with Malcolm Wal­touchdown drive. They didn't grt ^ f Election Commission Chairman Weaver also stated.that Wallace lace, and for holding the inter­past their own 49 in the firsts 0 Jerry W©hiford had no comment . Phvto k/ MmI Dtnihii •' l$m was not harmed in any way. view on the University campus. quarter, reached the^«M;-;4j|^^g Ml to make on" Dow's intention to * SPINNING ACROSS for Texas' third touchdown is halfback Don the Longhorns' right tackle spot. Lending a hand are Longhorns Saturday morning Wallace re­He said the action made it ly in" the second^ and i*coverie(if; withdraw. "The commission will Barton. Barton scored In his second try from the Southern Metho­Jim Lansford (number 70) and Hugh Reeder (number 51). Defenders joined "four of seem that the University was bak­ abide by any, yuling made by the that attempts John Adam's fourth-down fumble < dist 2-yard line early in. the second quarter after Texas had taken are tackle Jerry Clem (number 71), linebacker Dick Hightower coercion were made0 against him ing the part of Wallace, and that on the Texas 11 just before the ~ •i Student Court on the validity of B.il) Wright's disqualification." oyer the ball on downs on the Mustang 28. The Steers used only (number 51), center Bill Fox. (number 52), and back Bill Crawford while in custody as a suspcsct in this would hurt the University in half ended. Their chance fizzled "f»ve-playi-irt ^isr^heir^Ia^;r«;oring,vdjuv«,.Jai;tpii»i^knax®iijt fi>vjr r (Ounjber_IJ). ^ ^ -the shooting.' sWeMlways.especiaUyitschan' on the"latter as Rusty fBus^'i5?; Wohtfoyd said. ' fWaliacaalsQStatedthatrjBgard-desperation pass found Bobby Oil* ,'v .: \^The action of the Election less of the results of a paraffin tional amendment to broaden in-Ion iiTthe^rf'iohe^iW'HST —Ill ..:Commissioji if -both1 highhanded test-any-chemistwillcertifythat vestment of the Permanent Fund. interception. and unconstitutional," said Zeke such a test is not necessarily valid Editor Rus's Kersten, Day-Edi­Zbranek, who is leading the pro­Police reports show that a nitrate tor Flo Cox; and Editorial Direc­The-anticipated air-ground diitl test against Wright's disqualifi­test taken of Wallace's hands by tor Harrel Lee met with Dean didn't jell-since SMU's passing cation. • tha Department Public Safety Npwotny Friday motnlng to dia-didn't, but the Steers were' .jUI''' 'We ari~~di&nitely going te the day of his arrest was positiva. ctna the Dean's cxiticicm. No of­that they were'expected tehee* _ " •fmwi 'ight the ruling, of the .commis­, WMlace < nid that his future ficial. action was ,^roiMd. Dan Page quarter­sion," Zbranek said. backed almost the . entire game "Monday* we'll file papers with \ for Texas and stayed on terra-'f Student Chief Justice Morgan ma except for 5. token passes. . Copeland which will protest the SMU appeared to be completely. arbitrary ruling of the commis­By ORLAND SIMS ly on the long touchdown runs by planned Homecoming Parade from a Mustang, stampede} a-ciu*d out of the ball game until 'the sion," he declared. * Texan Sport* Stall . . Gib Dawson and Bob Haley.' ' floats came on, and drove slowly picture of the Queenf'V. Lee" third period, when they climbed After the protest of the com­COTTON' BOWL," DALLAS, At the half, the Longhorn band around the field, "They were all for jDr.-Lee; "Peruna" to signify back into striking distance with chipped in to help out the obser­clever—and most carried out the the famed SMU fighting spirit; two scores. After .recovering' a">mission's ruling is filed with the Nov. 3.—(Spl.)—An . overcoated and a picture of Dallas Hall with Texas Student Court, the Election Com-crowd of 75,000 filled the mam­vation of Homecoming Day. They •'Beat Texas" theme. "The the These masses of illiterate people Steer fumble on the 42;/~ formed Dallas Hall, the most fa­The SMU Homecoming Queen "Varsity" written across the top. only way to save they advance to the 13, chiefly on missin will have a 48-hour period moth Cotton Bowl to the brim world today is to Dr.. are hearing two voices. Commu­ 1b* which to file an answer. this, crisp Saturday mous building on the SMU cam­— Miss Pat Mullarkey — was The general crowd, which had lift it;" nism is /teaching them hate and the hard running of sophomore afternoon— Members of the Election Com­ pus; a map of Peru in honor of crowned by Dr. Umphrey Lee, been prettysilent during the Tex­Frank C. Laubach, a missionary Jerry Norton, and Russel, *found and were well-rewarded for their four SMU president. \ and the world's foremost' practi­revolt, telling them that their mis­ mission are JerryWholford,.chair­efforts. distinguished. Peruvian as first half, came to life in the Musslewhite all alone in the end , ery results from their governments man, Flozelle and Sabin guests; and a "UT," honoring the Card stunts by the SMU flash third when Rusty Russell cal literacy expert, said at a city-zone with his pass. , Jones, seeing thrilling period Aside from a University" and its various card section (the,first such sec­passed for the first SMU touch­wide meeting Friday night in the and foreign capitalists. Later in the same ^period, Safe-"^ Marshall. ball game—in doubt down" to the The other voice they hear is branches over the state. tion in the.Southwest) followed— down. , University Methodist Church.. tyman Val Jo Walker took 'A.dams* that of Christian -missionaries.­ welt---deuicting at-UT-steer suffering---"-Pointing out that more than 46-yard punt against5" thfe * to a gala halftime display. The ,*^'T3>8rr^^e^^f'"i¥''lminuteror This voice tells them they need was cov­60 per cent of the world's, popu­ and ran 32 yards for a counter,. display featured Homecoming play, the field entirely knowledge, and the way to bring lation is destitute, he said that The swift hurdle-champ received, eek at SMU.. • v •f ered by shadow—giving the game this about is to learn to read, con­ the masses are determined to rise. the kick on his own ran to his vercoats, leather jackets, a weird appearance. tinued the literacy expert. right down the sideline, then cut ' "If we don't help them they scarves, high school football jack­ As the . final seconds -ap­"These people are easy to win— over, the middle behind good will blow up," he cpntinued. ets—all were in evidence as the proached, the. crowd began to if you help them," said Dr. Lau­ For Baylor, TCU blocking and broke clear at-the v Longhorn.. cheering, section, tried chant off the seconds—hi Cotton "These little people used to bach; •but you have to win them midtfttripe to go all the way. -Slim ­ ^li^ii^^^olSKfirmay"draw to figure" out some way to beat Bowl "custom" for winning teams."? have the impression that a man with deeds. "America is frighten­ Stdlenwerck made good one one, ­ tickets..foi. both .the. Baylor .at>d the -expected cold -weather. -It- ., With the filial pistol shot, ;the should be like his; ancestors, but ing the world with.reports of new his bonus-to make -the ; of kicks Vetoedby Board ^ CU games beginning Monday, didn't turn out to be as cold as band swung onto the field to recently they have changed to a secret weapons, and the Commu­score and announced Albert Lundstedt, as­expected, and anyway, the game "Texas:Fight," and the crowd fled grim determination to better their nists say that America *i? trying 20-13 bring presstttf. back into the game. , sistant ticket manager. The ticket By JOEL KIRKPATRICK conditions." to terrorize. the-world. »' was enough to warm anybody up. for the exits. But the Mustangs, despitewindow at Gregory Gym will be Spirit seemed lethargic before Kahi Nouri's appeal to the. portation proceedings, they, main-: gambling passes from the end open'from 8:30 to 12:00 a.m. and the kick off, but as the-game pro­Board pf Immigration Appeals has tained. zone and fourth-down fake-kick­ ;from 1 to 5 p.m. gressed it. got hotter and hotter^— been denied on „ the grounds that affd-runs, remained ineffective the jBpth sets of tickets may :,be "The suit will also contend that reaching its peak in that last fren­"confidential information" used rest of the game. Benton Mussle­ drawn Monday through Friday to deport Nouri without a proper zied quarter. ' -/-to initiate deportation proceedings white, Jerry Norton, and A1 Han­ and TCU tickets will be available hearing violates the declaration of Livening up pre-ganie activities had nothing to do with the case, sen carried the offensive load ott through the-next Week. Students human rights accepted by the ~ wishing to draw for the Baylor Was a "mieeting" betwen Bevo, the and he has been ordered by immi­United Nations, the US and all its See LONGHORNS, Page 2 Longhorn mascot, and Perun^— gration authorities to surrender game only should specify that fact agencies," Weatherly said. the black Pony that's SjMU's "ani­to them in San Antonio Monday at the ticket window. It will also contend immigra­ mal friend." Bevo snorted a cou-3 p.m Tickets fox the Texas-A&M ameffalonc&y, graduate students, are competing November .19. A Friday deadline1 ° amazed to see a "hoss" that small therly, said that he would file an a fair hearing by refusing to dis­for'the f 1,400 R.hodes Scholarship -r-decided to adjourn the meeting. suit enjoin ORTY for drawing is expected to be set, injunction to immi­close the confidential information which offers two years of study f| but a definite announcement will jrAs Longhorns /began to gration officers from arresting iS .which is essential to fair con­at Oxford .University in England. be made later. General admission score in the first half, the lagging Nouri as soon as the court clerk's of case, that sideration the so They will enter state competition tickets. t&¥ the ^anksgi^iijt .Day spirit began io pick up—especial-office opens in* San Antonio Mon-Nouri could prepare a defense and -in Houston, where they will, be •day^mimring^"''*"1'''-^^-;' game have "been sold out since pfbduce"'e^Hdert'ce to 'refute that questioned'by a board "headed^by By BOBBY JONES August 1. The injunction suit will review information. j .i Dr. GeOrge Stumberg, University For the Baylor game next week M^squite the whole deportation proceedings a :<25,000 Jamaite on 1 Ni»uri filed professor .of .law, their attir At one of tlie Drag theaters,enr.„ end, a few tickets on the east Nouff~hSs suit.June 22 against Hearst publi­tudes toward academic work. thralled students sat rapt in at* side are still for sale. Ticket; are Leaves Campus never been given a fair hearing, cations for "false and misleading There they will also explain how tention while. > thirty-minute available for the TCU game on or-any hearing on, the alleged they would use the scholarship. reporting of his deportation trial." ' what to the east side on the 10-yard line "confidential information." short on do when the The San Antonio Light pub­Nineteen-y e a r-o 1 d McKeithan ArBomb comes dragged itself out. and a few on the west side behind "If .necessary,' I will .also file story made the highest grades of any One the goaL End-zone-seats are avail­Another "native" Texan on the habeas corpius proceedings," Wea-lished a on April 21 that young critic stomached it campus is gone: the twisted old "Nouri admitted at his -hearing boy in his freshman class, and is rather well until the courageous able for both games. therly continued. he has associated with the Com­a. member of Phi E$a Sigma and father in the short-^struck in the^High school bands from all over mesqulte tree that leaned across "The government will be per­ while in Phi Beta Kappa. He was a Rhodes face by the mall between Texas Union fectly safe, as I see it,%and since munists the U.S." The radioactive mist—said, tSe state will dril}..in a special 21-year-old student came to the candidate last year. Receiving his ; |"All right, children now watch „ Band Day program, adding color and Main Building. Nouri is already under $5,000 to the half-time activities at the J. Frank Dobie wouldn't have bail, I see no reason whyJmniigra-United States in 1948 as a visitor. degree in government at the age i closely while I wash off my face*" TCU game.-The bands will occupy approved of the tree's removal. tion officials should interrupt his Nfturi's damage suit alleges that of 18, he entered the School,,of. the northwest-stands.-When the University began schooling further until his case is he made no such admission, but Law in September. " ; At this. Mme theater, unfor­an extensive shrubbery-planting finally determined" the < Attorney Repeatedly denied under oath that If he goes to Oxford; he will tunately, • there wasr—earlier this Qoi«t 40 Wmtch Grid-Graph campaign in 1936, Dobie ob­said. " • • ' ; /•:••••• • " . 4' j-he had ever associated With Cwn-study general jurisprudence, and 'ED SMYRU JIM McKEITHAN week—a billboard picturing. * Approximately^ 40 people gath­jected because the workmen • Certain "confidential 4nforma-" -munists or had been. one. > might enter the field, of interna­rather scantily clad yOung lady of ered in the Main Lounge of the were planting juniper instead of tion" has been mefttioned often at } His stay'was. extended to July tional law afterward. ~ Smyrlj 23-year-old; graduate in _ came interested iii while working endowments decorating the "now Texas Union to wa^ch the grid-native Texaa mesquite. Nouri's hearings by immigration; 14, 1950. In early July he made : He is a member^of Phi Kappa English,. holds down three a.obs -.?n a degree in "history.' He^ex-playing" blurbs. From the theatei,' graph and listen to the "SMU-Tex-"They didn't see fit to giant officials, but has never been cla-application, to have his time ex*. >Psi fraternity and a past member and still finds time to study. He-J plained that there is s wealth ; £he fast moving game. * ened out sid^alk. had nothing to do with the, de-},part from tht US within 30 days. Colorado RiveV Authprity. medieval law,, a subject he be-law as a-.profession thif.'*. '-SSi u-f 7ii -i . it .VJrw 7 i Tennessee 27 ^5 So. Cal. (m AraW­ >ir' F If T-? *,• bytyef r-.'+'y . 'iys'tr Si s. ^ wV i ^ T&trTfu , \ / T< ^ ^ i 1 'y k' 1 »3**3r A'» Sr&L :h -~S~ I—* Vh1 MM V • 1M'"* wf, B1 sttjj v.» * K / Nov^bw 4; Wfi" "wIdAILY TEXAN' Page 2 -'v V«, K i,,*/»\> > * A ? l»lhf** *• -it"* **" V --ft-»•**-£ W1 .^,>u-.."i ^ . % ,i_« . . -> \ * St *** £t&sl VTrHardest Tearn We've Met Richard Ochoa, Who %alk£dr6&' By HOWARD rA< • By BOB HALFORD -Ttmm SforU Staff with the day's leading ground * s-A'^s , *Nf* gaining title, w|» the subject of No* g-*t£plWtf« the tea* fired op as Will at par­ PAULAS, Nov. 3—(Spl)— (Continued from Page 1) a steady flow of J congratulate »*•"'« fine bunch of Hds who ing extremely good games. .-,. jaeoliaefew.. "The. Longhoms have a good 'de--Glen.. Price'*. defensiv«_play—was-, wicss -booted •-. a 14-yard fourth OX^'lWte^ the times the spot was open, and fense," he commented. "I don't suc­ quarter field goal Saturday to give the key to the Longhorns* . 'Mustangs' fullback. "He runs very brushed through jthe arms of two know if it was better against cess in stopping the Mustangs. He Ohio State a 3 -to 0 victory over |fe"*hard and keeps thosi Northwestern in a Western Con­defenders to score. He missed Benners or not, but we just said that Price's job was to!watch '/(.|lng all the time," he added. ference viewed kick. couldn't work against it." Benners, and when tile Mustang game by 71,089. O i"« "OurVttl offenseVAJtVIWC was. hitting «in all v Texas kicked off and the Ponies the. sec­was W»B IIIVVH'K ^>(1 e»a* j Losing Pat Knight on slinger not in the game, to \t Weight, d«f«nsjve ft'A* ball ond-play the game hurt watch the fullback. •$> and otirour defensive ?«• vin "J "** * g^e ^toiaaed. op. moved the to the mid-field of the • ^fdary was all over the field" Was (^unities and .futile offenses by stripe, Raley then intercepted the SMU cause greatly," he said."Any The Longhorns and Coach-&he way Longhorn head coach Ed'lboth squads and (in 18-mU^wmd last pass Benners threw in the team that loses Pat haa lost a lot. Price were unanimous in naming UTrice-explained Texas' 20-13 vie-wa»th* biggest defensive factor game and ran down the left side­ I don't know how badly he's hurt, for each team. Jerry Norton as the outstanding ^tory over SMU. line £1 yards for his counter. but we sent him to the hospital back of the game for the Mus­ Bobby Dillon, Bob Kulcy, and Five times Northwestern surged Davis made ' his kic? good and for x-rays." tangs. Dick Hightower and Bill • 'Don'Barton were covering poten-deep into Ohio's territory but Texas led 13-0 as the first quar­ missed field goals from the 17 Val Joe Walker, the Mustang Forester "were the most popular ' ;,tial pass receivers and were com- ter ended. safety who returned a Texas punt the defense. Coach in fast to stop plays up front. and 12 and the loss of the ball selections on SMU " took the kickoff and 90 yards, praised the blocking on Price Was high on end Bob Hooka%'Jf Coach Price said much of the on downs on the 12 and two moved to their 42, where Texas ]hi* return^ saying, "AH I could see who refused to be turned on Texti 'leredit for winning this game should wrecked the Wildcats' chances. held. On fourth down Norton was Texas players on the ground, as pitchout plays. I j$o to Longhorn captains June Da-On the other sarge, which car­ tried a fake-kick-and-run but so I just took off and eut back OVis and Bobby Dillon. ried to the Buckeye 21, the Wild­ Fk«t« br UmI Dn^m The "wind and injuries to Pat "They Sewell threw him back to-the 28. to the left for the goal." t f turned in great games in keeping cats wound up on their own 40 Page and Ochoa carried to the 2, JERRY NORTON RIPS over right tackle-for a Jack Barton comes in from the front.. Other Knight and I. D. Russell probably as_. jaEftrterback Bob Burson -was and Barton wriggled over-in-two iho'rtgainand afirstciowninihesec^ndquartef fen in the action are Pod Price of Texas "Ochoa's the best back I've hurt the Mustangs considerablyLonfhsrn Pictures in P«at thrown for" losses on attempted tries. Davis' kick made it 20*0. of the T«xa»-SMU game in the Cotton Bowl in {number 33), and J. T. Seaholm (number 69). seen this year," he commented^ but they never gave up and pro • . ; and, "Texas has about this best some anxious Pictures of the Texas-Kentucky aerials. Dallas S^^ay iftefrtosni juna" Davij; Taxas line­The SMU vided pretty mo­ Phi Beta II >i. Kappa Kappa against Baylor put the ball on the 9 months ... 20.50 Gamma 11. ST Y LI Factory Method Managers' meeting—room S. one. * . 12 months 27.00 Basketball Captains' meeting—room 4. LOW COST CHECKING A RECAPPING TUESDAY of the year TOUCH FOOTBALL Texas Christian 0 7 7 6—20 All late models—Royal Rem­ Bargains in new and trade-,4 o'clock Baylor 0 7 0 0—• 7 Delta Gamma vs. Zeta-Tarn. Alpha I. ington, and Underwood. S o'clock Scoring: Touchdown*— in Tires—Brake.-and Wheel TCU S o'clock J arm a ii MclKown, Floyd,"Fowler. Conver­ Service—Seat Covers PJ Bete Phi II vs. Alpha Delta Ft I. BSU vs. Alpha Chi Omega I. sions—Flowers 2. Car Heaters DECK TENNIS DOUBLES Baylor Scoring: Touchdown— S o'clock . Member Federal Deposit Inturance Corporation Bonus point deadline for second round. Isbell. Conversion—Brocato. TENNIS DOUBLES S o'clock TCU Baylor Austin, Texas spint s[§SQQK Deadline for third-round matches. First Downs 11 " •. TABLE TENNIS SINGLES, e o'clock Rushing yardage "91 SPIRES TIRE CO. Deadllne.for all third-round matches. Passing Yardage 144 M7-4411 MIXED TABLE TENNIS 7 o'clock Passes Attempted 18 Passes intercepted Punts Punting Average Fumbles Lost . Yards Penalized " TmnwiM Extends Win Straak "'•".Ii'' CHAPEL HILL, N. C., Nov. 3— Ufyr—Hank Lauricella, Tennessee's On Austin's Largest Selection of Fin< Hsr potent little butcher knife, passed and flashed North Carolina into Beginniiic Monday for one week only, we wUI have an END <0F SUMMER CLOSE OUT SALEVDISTINCTIVE WALLPAPERS In submission 27-0 Saturday to ex- an endleaa variety of beautiful, exciting patterns at SURPRISING. SAVINGS.-, 1 jten.d the winning streak of the nation's number one football team, to 16 gamesl You can buy outstanding import* for one week only arid whila selections laat AT A THIRD OFF—a diacou^h>f 33 1/3 per cent. Smooth side in, rough sideout, this smart suede styleis hand-Xou can find beautiful food quality papera FOR YOUR ENTIRE HOME, suitable for every room aa low as FIl^TEEN CENTS (.IS) Oeaed to furnish easy give for every step you take—has stout wdH x Faculty and StudoMs per SINGLE ROLL. v . . ^ ° Cor your protection throughout long wear. ^ "We Know Your , COME EARLY WHILE SELECTIONS ARE COMPLETE. BE SURE TO BRING ROOM MEASUREMENTS. NO SA! GIVEN FORD BESr' ON SALE PAPERS. NO RETURNS. ALL SALES FINAL. . y Purine this ^«*ere is a SPECIAL PRICE ON WALL CANVAS, tbat alio makes BEAUTIFUL PRACTICAL CURTAINS ifH&ey t -Genuine Ford Ports " ana Ford Trained Personnel "Aer.ruffled pr jlain. Decorator coiuultant advice, even durinr this sale, arratia. MM ihotsil • Don't miss this sale on Austin's Largeat Selection of Imported and Domeatic Wallpapers. Handprinta and murals. ion'^$1.00 CER SERVICE IGEN- y f 415 >T 1 ARMSTI .-. 2348 Guodalup*— Onrtifl Hrnj r" 1 I mssek< sksi -; v:—• . _ r S'-W.y *{., .™ WM'®%*y* J fcWS 1 uWrtmfc * Ktattaii. ua»toi« * testa-js v % ku*£* <" wt / HHHl m Sunday,. *riw\ DAUAS, NoV. S^P)—L. D. Burnett: said hi* ^ ,(little Dutch) .Meyer was fired manager would.be n^^ dhtting sSa®P«®. !i« Saturday as manager of the Dal­ ^ItJili mmb the bwebril conyention at Cojftin­ las Cltfb in the Texas' league. Ark. NOT. 3 paydirt first against an Arkansas jouxMijr -'by Lippman Bashing yardage 196. bus, O., next month, ^[e said Be 1 Meyer, who piloted the Eagles V-—{flPO—Lamar McHan, a big soph­team which had four first stringers But McHan jmd tSfce" Passing Yardage -188" wanted to tall With Hank Green--i^d >l«n» to fhml place and a Shaughnessy omore who didn't think tie would Out-of .action with injuries. A,41-life* which was opening the holes Passes Attempted 49 berg, general manager of fteve* Play-Off berth the past season, make the varsity in September, yard punt return by Yale La*y were far from through. They be­Passes Completed -ff| *• land, with whom, Dallas, has, a waa given his outright release by did everything a football quarter­set it up and Glenn Lippman went gan the fourth period by march­Passes Intercepted^ working agreement. ,^ ^-,.,1 owner Dick Burnett. ^ *' ~ Burnettiiaft back coald do Saturday afternoon over from the one. ing 58 yards, with Sutton scoring Punto f . ' -f'-®i# -ft The Dallas News said J as well as be Meyer said from bis home in to lead Arkansas to A stirring touchdown from the Panting Average |»j|;*187.^86 were reports Darrow Hooper made theVfirst his second had" lastaeason. Fort Worth that he had no im­33-21 victory over Texas AAM. of three conversions, but the Ag­three. Arkansas used up the last Fumbles lost s Jss-2' mediate-plan* for the future but sc The 190-pound blond from Lake gie lead was temporary. eight minutes with a 77-yard drive Yards Penalised-;' **><» ISC a job with the front might get s Village, Ark., ran for two touch­McHan startedpropelling Ar­capped -by. McHan's . two-yard office of the Cleveland Indians. How They Hted? downs, passed for another, netted kansas downfield. Before the first plunge. New "T" F*r»«tiw»7^^7 * He indicated he might work with 190 yards on 26 carries, completed quarter ended, Buddy Sutton The victory evened Arkansas' NEW YORK, Nov.'' CHAPEL HILL, NtC.^ ftov/a. DICK .GCHOA played the Indians* farm director. foori of'six passesfor74 yirds, drove through right guard for the Southwest Conference record, at one Here's what the top ten teams In ,Y, «.-v £•)—The tea formation!, madeits of the finest-games of his career Burnett aaid he was releasing Duke,14tol4.. panted for a 36-yard avenge in a tieing score. 1vv-two wins, two defeats. It left Meyer in order to give the next the Associated Press' weekly foot­8, Princeton defeated strong wind and ran the Basor-\ Then McHan, whp was • des­A&M, a pre-season title favorite Appearance at the ..University-of against the SMU Mustangs in ball poll did , to 0. general manager a voice in select­Saturday: * backs split T attack flawlessly cribed by A&M coach Bay George with a tie and two losses in loop North Carolina press box Satuiv the Cotton Bowl at Dallas Sat­ing the skipper. He alfco said he 1. Tennessee defeated North -7. Southern.. California^ from start to finish. > ; " as "terrific," simply terrific,H ishot play. urday. His 28 carries netted the day. eight/British' and to Meyer enough -. the lad aaked Texas A&M 7-7-7-0—? 21 With wanted give Carolina, 27 toO. , J Aray»S*t©«.i; This was who a 33-yard touchdown pass to an­Scotch newsmen among the 70 Steers 128 yards. ' * time to make a new baseball con­8. Baylor was defeated by^ T| Arkansas Coach Otis Douglas two other back, Jack Troxell. The next Arkansas 7-13-0-13-^-33 2. Michigan S^ate, idle. 1 covering the Tennessee-Nortb Ca­The Laredo junior "has de­nection. as Christian, 2p to ?^ months ago to let him drop oat ttiiie he got his hands on the ball Texas A&M Scoring: Touch­rolina football game, • the Uni­veloped into a fine splft-T full­Bobby Goff resigned recently 3. Illinois defeated Michigan,,;? 9. California Josfc to UCLA,. J of the University for seasoning'at McHan electrified the crowd of downs, Lippman. 2, Hooper? Con­to 0. to 1. versity. of North Carolina, always back and with Gib Dawson will as general manager \to take a simi­a junior college. 20,500 with a-58-yard run. that versions: Hoopfer S. the perfect host, served tea toits ; figure prominently in 1952 Long-, lar post with Wichita Falls of the : 4. Maryland defeated Missouri, 10, Wisconsin Douglas talked the youngster pushed" the Baxorbacks edge to Arkansas Scoring: Touchdowns, overseas guests at halfthne. horn backfielch plans. ' Big State League. 35 to 0. out of it. MeHan earned a start* 20-7; ^Sutton^,-TroxeH, McHan 2; Con­ing role-in tfle fourth game of A&M tallied just before half versiofts-Nix 3. the season-and Saturday made a time on a 10-yard pass from Bay * • strong bid for all-star honors, Graves to Hooper. The Aggies • ^ Arkani. As they ha^ ,. To help get jrour w*ms V 708^1?^ end, ER^C SIMS CLEANERS, ais6 of HARBY PILAND ick-up and Delivery toJ>em,.yoa-^ »tu4ente of ttie_Unl3reraity ol_ Texas. Come & nnd wafcli for the newllTgns of dCbiM ffaiffrni MfcyyiMj MMm WmmmWm r wm^u^m PfPpsp va"-^ m?s ffva^ Soitte 19,000 fans sat 1n sunny, But Teddy Biggs sparked that Sic#, Ha fumbling force* for twe frigid weather and watcher Rice last grand march with nuts ef > •&p.< _ jft. "-'• Pfmp .' ^^liKkWiat 'touchdowns in, tibe lust foot mia-late the ball on fumbles six time. and S3 yards and Bill Howton's WfWiiWp; cf an ordinary Middle Western Sandburg Is a musician well *\3if,'pl»f Sitorday Md licked In almost every instance, the fum­key block paved the way for He* burg" Tuesday at 8 o'clock Is the Town." known for his singing and re­ >urgfc 21*13. ble hurt and as the game waned Curry's touchdown, Then Daniels Main Lounge of the Union haa > Sandburg expresses the culture searches into American foik song. ripped through the demoralized MtiTwUling MWr, it looked like the bobbles might been announced fajr the Forum of the Middle West today in his Although his poetry is technically Panthers.for the..clincher.•:>v ' ^WS matched 61 yards 1* Just four break Pittsburgh's Victory drouth* Speakers Committee. work. It ,was this country thathe described as free verse, Miss West vf$ays with Dat» Drake parting the * Pittsburgh yoared-r back after learned by heart while working points cut that his lines will toot The twice-winner of the Pulitzer final _gfi. to Sonny McCurry. Bill Pittsburgh 7 0 13 Rice hud moved 80 yards In Seven Prize will lecture and play a gui­at odd jobs during his youth. reveal their music unless they ar« Wright kicked Mir second extra Rice 0 0"14 '1 plays -tor its first touchdown* read with a Middle Western ac­ tar. Blanket tax holders will be --He was -born of Swedisb paren­ point and this one pat the Qwlk Pittsburgh Scoring: Touch­sophomore Bob tax­ cent, which is slower than SngUsli admitted free, and the admission tcge in Galesburg,.111., in 1878. in front. Just 26 seconds before downs—Cimarolli, . ynolds; Con­ing it in the second period from /^mSONNY MeCUR*%g speech and fives time for the var­ tot other* is 26 cents. *v-: JA:p< •• At 13 he left school and began the two. ; the game ended, Billy Ed Daniels version—Blanda. iations of rhythm. the Owls cut foose. Their final Students who wish to meet Mr. driving a milk wagon. He subse­ broke off tackle and ran 26 y*rds Scoring: Bill Adams, snared Garbrecht's Sandburg personally may attend a quently became Pulitzer Prises cametoSand- Rice Touchdowns— a bricklayer and for the score that sealed Pitts-Garbrecht, McCurry, Daniels; fumble and the Panthers took over touchdown came on the first play reception in the International M wheat harvest hand iu Kansas, borg in two different fields. .The 1 §te Jburgh's sixths straight defeat '.his Conversions—Wright 3. on their own 34. A 80-yard pass, after they had stopped a desper­ a hotel servant ra first-was for bis poem, "Ccrn­ • ate Room of the Union immediately Denver, a coal­ ' season. . ^ PITT Bpb Bestwick to,,Chi3s Warrjtoer, Pittsburgh passing attack. huskers," in 1918, and the other " . RICE following his lecture. An informal heaver in Omaha, a soldier in the i®|pThe Panthers ; had used 'Bice First Downs 15 18 ate up most of the distance ;to"tha Taking...over on the Panther 26, banquet before tha program win Spanish-American War, .and, after was for bis biography, "Abraham ^'fumbles as a springboard for Rushing Yardage m 195 goal and Cimarolli climaxed the the Owls exploded Daniels the noted writer the that a journalist. Lincoln, the War Years," in 1939, honor in M" 'touchdowns in »tid Yardage 72 145 eight-play drive. through the middle, . the second Passing Home Economics Tea House at 6 tltird quarters, Lou Cimarolli scor­Passes Attempted 14 29 In the third, Joe Bozek pounced o'clock, ,' ing the first one on one yard line Passes Completed 5 15 on David Johnson's fumble to give Fallback R*a I* llacoveriag Carl Sandburg haa' received . plunge and Bill Reynolds the sec­ Pitt the ball on Rice's 35. Here it Passes Intercepted 2 . . 1 . _< r l-j « .. Charles W. (Ike) Rau, 20-year-much recognition for his biogra­ ond one from the two, Punts 6 5 took ten playr befor* R«yni>1drl-oId'Shortho#i» fullback is able to~ phical prose and his work with cracked over. CARt SANDBURS i.T »Wright kicked three extra Punting Average 34,8 38.4 attend classes. He received a frac­folk music, bat be is best known faints and Paul Blanda one for Fumbles Lost 0 -1 That lead held until Rice got tured back in scrimmage with the for his poenis vrhich depict Ameri­Rebecca West in the preface of Pittsburgh. Yards. Penalized 21 100 the ball with 4:34 to play. Then varsity recently. ' can life in all of its moods. a collection of Sandburg jpoems wrcte, "He can describe the inner The James P. Alexander Con­Issue—^Submission of R«s Ipsa life, v the not too bad life, • that on Loquitur and..Discovered lies behind the shapeless skyscrap-ference Toyts and Procedure, Peril." oon, with Judge— ers, "like so man; Robert W. Stayton presiding, Gus ca'a, and the dreary timber houses School of Law, will be held No­ vember ? and 10 in Hogg Memori­Hodges of Austin will speak on ^ "The Role of al Auditorium. -*: : Trial Judg*—Pre- The Alexander Cdliference is Trial and .Summary Judgment." .• o^e of a series for practicing law-Judge Clyde E. Smith, -Texas Su­ Management Jobs ! yers and the judiciary of Texas. preme Court Justice, will speak on. Members of the District and Ap-* "Power of Trial Judge to Regu­pellate Judiciary, the fe*|S Asso* late Trial." Overseas elation of Claimants, and defense A cocktail party, 6:30 to .7:30 p.m., will be held Friday evening attorneys of Texas submit sub­A Junior Management Assistant Perry Hotel. examination will be offered colldge jects to be discussed. at the Commodore Mid-law classes will be dis­At 7:30, following the cocktail seniors and graduate students with missed1 during the Conference. party, there will be a banquet, al­backgrounds in foreign affairs and so in the Commodore Perry Hotel. related fields, a recent. State De­Friday morning Albert P. Jones, Houston, and R. E. Rouer, On Saturday morning. Judgepartment release announced. Fort Worth, will open the confer-Ben Connally, Houston, will spThe fourth Foreign Affairs In- fern . program will offer nine enee by speaking oh "Special Is­on "Contribution and Indemnity months training at the State De­ sues1—Avoidance of Duplicity a*»4. Among Tortfeasors." TKraff Eid^ partment's Foreign Service Insti­ 'Reduction of Number." Neth man and Fred Parks, both of Leachman and Russell Baker, both, Houston, will have "Slipping and tute, Periodic conferences and seminars, and both observational of Dallas, will speak on .''Special Falling Cases" as their topics and work assignments in the De? partment bureaus. It begins in September, 1952. Fifty people will be chosen for the fourth Foreign Affairs Intern Program by a special screening-process. Approximately 150 addi­tional trainees will be selected for a six-to nine month trainings well as hand grips, but Anderson From a tiny cubby-hole just be­program and then a permanent low the Tower Chimes, David An­seldom uses them. Although he assignment, r , • derson plays the seventeen bells isn't particularly muscular, ho Salai-fes for the foreign affairs at 12:50 Monday, Wednesday, and has enough sitrenafth to play each interns and the trainees are $3,100 — note with one hand. Friday afternoons. {grade GS-5) for those with un­ The bells were supposed to be Anderion, a senior music mSjor dergraduate degrees and $3,825 heard as far as twelve miles away from Manor, is playing the Uni­ (grade GS-7) for graduate degree when they were installed, but the versity carillon for his third year. men or the equivalent. steel skeleton of the Tower ab­ The chimes,Jff^ :.?P«rsted .electric­ Applicants for the'Forei^rn Af­ sorbs much of3hir VibrationrThejr ally to strike the hours by the fairs Intern Program must be in* weigh from 300 to 7,800 poun mechanism which runs the tower terviewed and then^ nominated by apiece, or a total of 40,0^0 clocks. a board established by President pounds. When Anderson plays the caril­ T. S. Painter and meeting about The idanual for the chimes is lon 'he pushes a series of pegs the middle of November. arranged Uka a piano keyboard about the size of bicycie grips. Students should see Dr. W. S. and has a range of an octave and Sometimes he wears gloves to pre­ Livingston in B. Hail 303 imme­ a half. vent blisters on his hands. diately and file application? by Anderson choOses the piece each November 13. The console has foot pedals as day. He plays "Happy Birthday" o»-request. Playing partly ..from " a music and partly /from memory,On the Campus Anderson whistles the" melody as Class Picture Appointment . he plays. Although every note is heard by thousands, there Is no chance for: practicing these concerts, To. rehearse, Anderson points to the.;iiotes^.aa.JJ>ja intenda to, play and counts the time lapse.. *Dr. B. F. Holland, associate pro­Rescrv* Capt Jack C. Elrod, ex-psychology, student of the University, was fessor of educational SALE! SALE! named commanding "officer of aand Dr. L. B. Ezell, assistant pro­ new "electronics" s q u a dr o n fessor of educational administra-formed by the US Marine Auc Re­DON WEEDDIV ' ' ; • • -S" • tion, are contributors to the fall serves at-Dallas Nayal Air station, SERVICE STATION recently.^isunitcanbemanned issue of the "'Texaa Jouinal. oJ 3400 Guadalupe _ PIwm S-SS20 on a 24 bisis to furnish radar pro­ Secondary Education,'^ a Univer­ . " • Anaoaaca* N*w GaaaUaa ' WUta-ar Tialflc ' • 1SH«5 sity publication. > tection for this area of the South? frlcaa ptf t«L west. Good Gulf or R«a. SZc The issue will have , other ar­r.ffpt, Klrod rfcalved his degree Praoltim or Ko*Nm • ^clerby'Misa'Martha-eastieberry, Whlta S^ wiTTSST" jjj in electrical engineering from V? N«w H«e>pa UmJ ; Univer^ty -Junior—High-School;; 32258^ —snrc>3dt snnxin 1950. your appointment Brothisr John Fos, St. Edward's #70. a fliM ' Jligh School; and Miss Mattie (M * IS 917M UscotAtionri Qocnirtiid Ruth Moore, Texas Education EXPRESS BUS SERVICE Agency. ~ ' 1ttt HOUSTON 4* , Dr. Jo« P. Salerno, associate fee in 4 Hours Call 2-1135 Wh«n You'r* Hungry professor of gynecology, and Dr. Mavis P. K«Uay, professor of: . For . Kenville Bus Co. clinical medicine at the Univer­Goldan Brown Frlwd Chickan,: I18 E, 10th ' sity School of Medicine," Will JuJey Staab, or a daliciduscom­ ak Monda^^at 7 p.m. and 8 ; a -oavtrago vv^vv^-v. lOl. Their speeches are contribu­^.AUSTIN tions to the Austin chapter of the WELDING A com© to the ; :^,RAI>IATOR Texas Academy of General Prac­ WORKS tice, which is presenting these CLUB CAFE RESERVE YOUR COPY OF fHi W w.Stk StT«L M7» OPEN 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. talks in connection with a ten- week course for local physicians^ ."s. .* 1807 San Jacinto William B. Saundari, member of the staff in the office of the SPEEDWAY supervising architect, received two rib fractures, a broken chest CACTUS NOW IF RADIO *• I bone, and minor cuts Tuesday SALES & SERVICE * St aboout 5:30 p.m. between Waco W M. Walsh, Ovaar FAILED TO DO SO AT WlatcuMAty and Austin in "an auto accident. 2010 Speadway 7-3846 Saunders was not hospitalized. The Most Popular Dr. W. R. Lloyd, associate'pro- Placo to Eat fessor of pharmacy 4s the: author REGISTRATION ROBBIhTS BODY SHOP of a copter in the third edition Mexican Food "CeeipIaU Ba4]r u4 FfJar Kapalr" of the ."American Pharmacy," vohime one", .just off the press. •k PAINTING *SCAT COVCXS -i 604 EAST AVE. . * GLASS * AUTO REF1NISH1NG t Dr. Lloyd's chapter is entitled Phono 7-0253 "Purification and Clarification," I3QS Lavaca Pk. »497l WlUard Carl William* has been appointed as audio-visual librarian for the Visual Instruction ,Bu-RE C UAL IZ IN 6 IN He is teplacing Ranlun L. " * Catering% ;«k«rp, v%)al it *—»• for M h ^ & HoUia KriagM* was appointed to Rooms For Private parties,pf-proje«tloirte6h­ideian an4 soperrisor of campus wito A shows.' I^riegar is 'succeeding torn-Restaurant, ftf fq1 :<». a..* rig|>'/^ r< •«^h;r8: ft •*,,*'ii­' .VH-' j§KI >W * * .V * ^ ^Vts4L V) -A , «*>• UttfaMoii m imCmmrar r w , „ -< ap"" r ** --5-j V4? Vi otspol JFFELLHE AUSTIN * POLICE IMS* dowa,' souped-up .curt thai operate en- 9*: 'V w.,,. * - PARTMENTi iireiy Within the law. Not many, this -"4X1/ ^®r ^crackdown on "hot, £nw howeyer, is A factor ill ^V^T, , TV-tJEU/^ rodder," «d tfctfr •mp.rehstjid on.ttTcurimt drfv. CJto 1thedty's I , * ; A long-tim^ menace to alltraffic, the Streets safe for wdioaiy* driver*. II Y%^ Br FLO COX sttiddfcd highw*yj '%e Looking orer th« platforms of agr«* with Ogdon apigram; " nooning ptot xm piaworms or wiui ugaon«*in « «pigr«m s^a^ue «iit in ratinortiWi ~C "k^^^ders" ^*ave recently' repeatedly parents fail to retard juvenile wildneas, %*rt *** L\„ tome of the •Assembly candidates ul think that I shall never see i ** ' T!" \rTJntZT ^demonstrated an "attitude .bordering ^ then ifs up to the police to take over! * t in this week's election b!rotight to billboard lovely as a tree; and un«^ ^ ^ * rt®0' mind, the frequent lambastings lew the billboards should fall, I !«®?VernW^t .. „•* , utter contempt of the law.:. •-' ' ••' -And often local parents have shirked this one hears against advertising. think I shall never Me 'M Ijee at j^place restriction* u|Km Sj They need to be clearly shown that responsibility. What brings on distortions and aH*" ,«.democracy js »afegw»dw!LAustin's streets were made for orderly -The^program is as sound as it ist^o»:f exaggeratidns of individual pow-After spending almost three In describing their xrodatite. ers? The_aame thing_thatjpromptii andana dol-dok ' ^ •»' ^ W era; ine same twng tnatjirompts years several thousand .-Hrti,nr- "the murder of the" English kn-l«rs of ou^fathe^hird^rhed^TS^ f , They need to be, shown—as will un-them for defects, see that drivers have guage by superlatives of which money to learn to write well farrtce. Scotch, t»pe hfs mate'} doubtedly be the csuse—4hat people who licenses, and see thai motors lure regis-advertising is accttsed-^-a desire to enough to land a $45 a week re-' in« e!8ier by tolUng^ lcor*iJ , show oneself or one's product in porting job, out patient are minding their own business cannot tered with tibe state. "•> ­ the best possible light." to homicidal limits when we see that product;be attacked without incurring -a stiff •>-. No penalty will be too rigid"fo?, opera-staring at us from magazines: "e °««ed bousewjve* fei m\ Critic? of advertising—-the pro- penalty. # tors of these dangerous machines and fessional and those of us who just "You, too, can be « successful J°Pe8 f** * ce^H SHS^ttjL^U plain.get ^re(|^f.;hearingr the novelist-in three short weeks,. Just '­ Of course there are some stripped-' for parents who permit their operation. Advertising is biased in jfar-i King's Eriglish Juperlatized >way take our writing course and write •raise cries in-every direction. ... three best sellers the fint year." . ucational function, critics • Surely, but so'a all edneatlon. Outlandish, biased, misleading,„ You feel the same way? ' after all,who can really »ay-wfraudulent—every, adjective ;foY '! -But there's ahother side that . product IS best the publicthink twice before' ob­ £lxam5 at even a.m.f deception is employed. And leave makes us that light through ita buying jit it to Phillip Wylie, the sire of the jecting even.to the ads that say' Seven o'clockfln the morning is hardly quizzes is firmly entrenched and-barely^ iconoclasts', to find a new angle of "Eat all you want and get slim on er, and that fits in with cratic process. the time to take a quiz, yet some depart­legal. % attack—-the ever popular sex an­our candy." We're convinced that . Tsfi-C " i» has im-7-" •-..™ *~~£7wliS£iM ments persist in scheduling exams at that gle. advertising cbntributed . That advertisingrT-0 There may occasionally be times when The incorrigible "Wylie says in measurably to our high standard „ ^ borne out by.tbe fa<$a. j the giving of^a departmental exam at an "Sometimes 1 siispact Processor Snarf isn't always lair wUh Ciflnflrfltiivna nf Vlnrtu" Business Bureau and owfc Who, after all, can do gooa worK while unusual hour is justifiable. That prac­students—he always seems a little edgy after exams." vertisers. not only make a living to raise it. bodies constantly are on the from promoting sex, but they do Only by being made aware con-' to protect' their profes^on still partly asleep? tice, however, cannot be condoned when so in a manner that frustrates the stantly of the existence of the clamping down -on,.those wha j." The legality of such a practice is not it iscustomary. average girl because, she cannot abetter things in life are we , ac­too far. . -"* live up to the ideals of desirability tionized into striving for improve-* Statistics show that one-e: quite clear1, and perhaps only mass pro­Student rights are paramount. When insisted upon by everything she ment. Keeping up with the Jones­of one per, cent of the e: tests to department heads involved will these are violated, the students should reads. es? Maybe, but we're glad' the advertising has been found frau|bring action. Certainly the rights of stu­seek remedial action through protests to Wylie goes so far as to say that -Joneses live .next door; otherwise, uleht. And those feel the preset this deception of the ads is one we might sit back and be content of the standards committees.^ dents should be considered at all times, professors and department heads* ­ of the major problems of our so­with a "manana" philosophy. Case histories, bear out ihe.#; even if the" practice of giving out-of-class ciety. The rest of his. treatment In constantly endeavoring to claim of the advertising profesi&i By RUSS KERSTEN Roberts said Friday that "it you can read for -ypurself; here find a new "talking point" for that products that don't live tt Ttsan Editor ' it serves to point; out the limits their products, manufacturers to the claims of the manufacture} was one of the best meetings I've re s\now to which the atjtacks can go. send some of the mOBt brilliant It's always a real treat to go to The approach just don't survive./ ever attended. to What is the true story of ad­chemists in the country into lab­ Denver, Colorado, police are still hunt-the Dean of Men's office—when problems was on a sound basis—» These are' just a few of fhei vertising vs. truth and facts? oratories, where millions are spent- it's voluntary. -very practical. Problems presented icisms and the defenses and; intf for a man who ripped the Russian Actually, the real objective case developing small improvements A thought well worth keeping in mind Thiat chance came up"Friday,~ were the very core-bf student-per* supports advertising. T" that add ..up to~Big~changes. The" fits of advertising; flag before it Was hoisted with other sonn?l problems." That the profession,' likfel^J is this quotation international edU" since he and four other Univer- True, we get pretty disgusted evolution of the T-Model into the. director of the Stu- others, is constantly-achieving, cator Dr. Frank Laubach: flags during UN day. ^ aity representatives had just re-.Joe Fari?arf -when-the sonorous voice of our smart convertible didn't come be-*. dent Employment Bureau, called higher ethical code"is apparentif.| 'turned from a state convention favorite difik jockey suddenly cause Ford couldn't sell T-Mod­ ? "The only Way to save the world from Wonder what would happen to anyone •of male student personnel ad-the conference "a real inspira­turns into a rasping, grating, ter­els; it was through a constant Although you probably dtyftfi totalitarianism and revolution is to go-who even tried to fly the US flag in miniitrators. tion." He had nothing to add rifying warning of "social out­effort to find, improvements with realize it, you've never fcee^!<| about his personal part in the pro­ out and give >* hand—^not ft handout." Russia?^ Dean Jack Holland, who "had cast unless, you use FloWers-of: which to convince buyers their woman's face in a liquor ad. Whe,| ,] been elected secretary for a three-gram. * the.-Valley breath sweetener.'-' car was best. the manufacturers of televiaio \ year hitch at the Lubbock gather­Arno Nowotny, dean of student Driving down the billboards The educational benefits of ad-sets ran a campaign of "don: c Dear 6«m: ing, told how the 50 deans and life who had a very-active part in make your child feel like an oui t personnel men from 31 Texas-conference activities, said the cast because he' can't invite bit schools -went about discussing mu­gathering was "very successful" friends over to watch television,!I tual problems. "We were looking and he was grateful to the Tech , authorities clamped down, an^-fi at these problems from a student folks for the excellent hospitality. stopped. *?|j jCiine point of view," he said. "We con­Besides being iii charge of the The next time the Big Game' s sidered firs^wBgTTTi^e^'^al-"question, "box,,Cession, "be" "led ''a" intejsupted with the ball-on thu' a right to expect from a prof or panel in scholastic integrity that" Why didn't we"know sooner? Has -:50-yard line to bring you '.'a w^or..„ Holidays dean.'' -• 'included tw:o Tech students as from our sponsor," don't obey lba .... it been-jumounced publicly?.Aa-tp... — Four-ma jor"topics were handled wefi "as' fdur^"~fiye""ttiSns. TO THE EDITOR:' taking cuts after the A&M game, Impulse: to toss""'4" Coke ^JOttit' By BRAD BYERS 'Did you say operate?'' we We shuddered, but we were In panel discussions at the confer­When they sought the student I don't imagine many students' towards the voice of the sponsor 4 ^ TCZ«N Managing Editor I am in agreement with the arti­ . asked. We were certain he brave. We,walked into the op­ence, held Tuesday and Wednes­view, they didn't settle for second grades are high Enough to allow a Try to remember-—it's probata 3 cle "written had said he would have to op­erating room under our own day on the Texas Tech campus. hand information. That forward by Flo"Cox, concern­ pretty good gasoline.' to two cut. should "Doctor, iwill you have ing the holidays that the Univer­day Why they operate?" we repeated.^ erate. power, assisted by only the They were: 1, role of religion in attitude, coupled with vigor and want to go home the week after And if that doesn't work yoi' sity is observing for Thanksgiv­ He looked at us with that "A cyst is a ... (he used doctor and two nurses, who student personnel work, a relative* intelligent discussions, makes for a four day vacation? It doesn't can always-turn off the radio. ing. In the opinion of the majority merely carried our shoulders ly new aspect; 2, student-faculty a more broad-minded and tolerant make sense. kind, benevolent look doctors medical tenna much too con­ of students more Would cut classes always use. We picked oiirself fusing to repeat.* We substi­and feet. The rest of our body fellowship; 3, Scholastic integri­group of student personnel men for three days to observe the first I may not have put over my up off the floor, sat down iri tute Webster: A pouch or sac we managed alone. ty; and 4, dorm maintenance. throughout the state. Thanksgiving (November 22) to idea so well in this letter, but The doctor obviously did Then, just before the closing ban­And because of that progres­I hope you can. arouse some con­ the chair again, and tried to*, without opening, provided be with their families, than would with a distinct membrane and not know his business, for ini quet, discusion was thrown open sive spirit, UT and the others will cut classes for one day to go to cern and have the holidays look him squarely in the face. be a trifle better places to go to changed. containing fluid or semifluid stead of putting us on an op­at a "question box" session. the A&M game. After all, to most • "Just what is your trouble, morbid matter, abnormally erating table he made us sit Holland, unable to recall any school. students, a holiday with the family TOM BOYNTON WHAT GOODA],1 young man?" he asked. developed in one of the na­on a stool. Then he sharpened good printable yarns, evaluated is more important than a football DAVID RHOLES "It's here, behind our ear, tural, cavities or in the sub-his knife and walked toward the meeting: "the biggest advan­game. Most of us are rabid foot­O. T. MAY doctor," we whispered. 1 stance of an organ,") he said.' us. tage of the conference was meet­ball -fans and believ# -that, thia ' • : 1 He probably did ntit mean "It ought to be pierced," At that moment a nurse or ing these other deans and getting sport-is an integral part of college |S what ha said then. Probably he added. . someone administered the to know them. Now, when a prob­Official life; however, the administration At Last! .. he was just mtimbling to him­The word "pierce" always gas. They were very sly about lem comes up,-I'll feel free to should realize the importance of a TO THE EDITOR: self arid did not intend to be recalls to our minds a movie. doing it In fact, we never write almost any of them to ask family's celebrating Thanksgiving I have just read the November hard at all, for his words came The setting was in England knew they had any intentions how he'dshandle it." together, and the confusion'which • 1 issue of the Firing Line and the out something like this: "It in the days when knighthood of putting us to sleep. If soj Across the hall in the basement fjoticei arises from the difference in the When" section was "Back to my must be behind,.yout.ear, for was in flower. A boldj cur-we would • have forbidden it, of B. Hall, Dean W. D. (just call holidays of a University student THE U.lt? I and the are s^ep^ll^^ffinlc^ien^rusiastidally' The Medlcat College Admission Te»t those of the other. members. mind what rains to a there's ageous, and chrvaTfousTcnigh^^'fbr be Auditorium it's obvious nothing by""lliSS^m^"T^lKew will given in Hogg on desert. At last! At least one man* between them." finding a fair damsel about we were brave enough to go backed up the remarks of his col­Kovember B, beginnintt at 8:46 of the family. the objective a.m. in University is not ac­to be abducted by villain) through the ordeal in fuy con­league, adding that such meetings Only those -student* who have ticket* MOLLY MOFFETT -A We're sure he did for admission to the test at thi* center about the race situation* Do you tually say that. Instead he paused only long enough to sciousness. are "a wondferful chance to get to will be allowed' to take the test. For have to make a mountain Out of . ' -I find out her Hooper rating know the right people." further information you may call ' at ' I said, "Let's see." When we awoke we were the Testing and Guidance Bureau. V. Change Wanted a mole hill just.because a Negro • ' ' . ' • • ^ | 1with the King, then mounted slumped over ..on the floor, Dean Blunk s^id he was in Hall 206. . or any American football player He looked. his charger, leveled" his lance the evil deed'was done, and charge of the extremely interest­an opening for TO THE EDITOR: break jawbone? Assistant Secretary of State j An Oil corporation, hae happens to his "I'll have to operate," Tie and ran the villain through. ing panel on the-*ole of religion, a-person with a degree In Library ' behind our was a six- Upon reading your editorial Ihformation of this nature should speaks frankly in • said. Then, holding the dying vil­ear something that often' has been Science and Secretarial Studies to begin inch bandage. ; work immediately. "Students Protest Holidays Week be handled with only the keenest "Operate? Did ^ou say ojr-lain high above his head, be neglected in the past. He pointed of see "Are you through, Doctor?" A reorescntative Standard Oil of Late," I was burned up. You see I objectivity. You the Negro is erate, Doctor?" remarked: "I say, I jolly well out that the systems at the two New. Jersey will be on the campus we gasped. • November 7 to interview Business Ad­didn't know that they had been no longer a minority group and "I said it's a cyst," he said. pierced the old boy, eh wot?" types of schools, tax-supported and ministration graduate*' interested In over­changed and neither do most of-should be allowed (he anonymous "I'm through," he said. church, are sharply different but seas careers. Further information on both of these the other students. It presents a existence of any other American "What kind of anesthetic intriguing to study. job* may be obtained in B Hall 117. problem to me, and I .imagine it citizen. JOE D. FARRAR, Director THE POCKET NEWS MAGAZINE "did you use?" we asked. . .. Also on his panel: TDean W. L. to students. had is to know Student Employment Bureau does most I It refreshing that Penberthy of A&M7~TTean~Roiltn FOR BUSY PEOPLE The doctor laughed. "Ha -of College, Faculty-Student meeting planned to be home the week of Mr. Reid has the backbone to '«•' Ifttil Tech, -and will be held Monday, November 6. at ha," he said. Rolfe Austin Robert The Cabinet the 22nd since most of my friends defend the men that have given J. Decker of Texas : Th« Daily Texan, • (tadaot n«wip«p«r of Tb* OaW»r«Jtjr of T«x*». to "We didn't konw you used 4 p.m. in Texas Uriidn 316 instead of in other colleges will be home the Negro "on the average" the re­ to Jaa*, and axeapt duricf bolida* aad examination period*, and bi-wackly cent memorandum. pablUtacd in Aaithi «T«ry moroiSK mxctvt Monday and S»turd»y. S«ptemb«r laughing gas as an anesthet­. Charles Roberts, University co-or-Friday a* erroneously printed in a then. In-all I_don't like the "more best place to live "at the present." during th« acaawoa ondoi tb« titi* of Tb« Sommar T«xao on ic," we .commented. The doc­dinator of religious activities. C. J. ALDKRSON, Chairman or less" unannounced change. JOHN D. GOLLIHAR Tueaday and Friday by Taxaa Student Poblleatione, inc. Now* contribution* «rfli acc«pt«d b» talapbooa /Z-MIS) or at tba tor looked at us in that editorial office J.B. I or at the Newr Laboratory. J.B. lf)2. Inquiriea strange, vacant way , of his, Daily Texan Crossword Puzzle concerning delivery, &nd advertiains ebould bit mad# in J.B. 108 {2-2473). THE DAILY PRODUCE QUICK Opinion* of' tbo Ttxan are not oeceaearlly tboca of tha Admlniatratlon poor man.'-• TEXAN RESULTS CLASSIFIED ADS "When do we come back?" ACROSS 4. Thin, 20. Make AdatinrTaxaa, under 'ha Act of Mareb t, '818. ^jpaasjosSiafiaEa defile cookie 24. Savory Found ASSOCIATED MUBSS WIRE SBKVICE ^'Tomorrow ten," 5. Milkftsh (pi.) 5. Public 'tii. Split Answer Apartment for Rent Lost and Piano Lessohs "Tin A*soeU>ta3642. appointment. all, how many of the other 18. Mexican 12. Cripple 33. Long, . ANNETTE DUVAL DANCE STUDIO Music EXPERIENCED: THESES, peasants Waiting there had dollar 14. Open (poet.) loose Pholta 8-8961—2-9086 10th A Congress ete. Univer­ 40. Water sity neighborhood. Mra.' Ritobiia. MEMpEK gone through an operation? 21. Wet earth 18. Poke overcoat barriers RECORDED MUSIC. P.A. Systems, for 2-4945. ' AiNdaM Cailarlata ftw' .AM-Aanftcaa all occasions: 6-1210. .-Have we ever :, told you 22. Behold! 17. Femaledeer 34. Encountered 44. Snake For Rent ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER — accurate / , SUBSCRIPTION RATES 23. Burst, aa 19. Hard beef 36. Man's name 45. Eggs (bio!.) 2-6387?i 6-1743 after 6; week enda. about our operation? You see, fat 39. Entice ATTRACTIVE bath and Special Services ' Sobacriptioa Tkraa Maatka a volcano . 47. Yard (abbr.) ROOM, private it was this way . . dreasicic room. Quiet and pleasant TYPING SERVICE. -2108-Swisher. TO* Delivered Mailed ia Aoctia Hailad out of town a teacher sraduate . pbone: 7-3205. Kliaa Welch. 25. Cereal grain woman stu­ for or J'.T$ par no. fl.00 par no. I .7( par no. HAIK CUTS .75c 26. Greekletter dent. 710 Wdt 24th. -. Stacy's Barber.Shop -2502 Guadalupe THESES. DISSERTATIONS. (Elaetro. Sc37. Turn to the PERMANENT STAFF matic). Dlctotion. Coachins. Mrs. Pet» right To" ATTRACTIVE ROOM, for one woman NAflONAL GEOGRAPHIC. 25e; Better -la private home. Private bath and mecky, 58-2212. E£tarH»Chitf ^ RUSS KERSTEN Home* Pocket Hook, editions. 1 10c; 29. Wager ' antranee. Pour, blocks west of Uni­Comics, 5c: Mnuasinci. books for re­ Miugiai Editor ^ BRAD BYERS 31. The breast-' 1 1 1 versity. 710 West 24th. search work pfica, . 1S06 Lavaca. ACCURATE TYPING. Pick-up and de­ Editorial Assistant Mildred Klesel 2-3333. ia II liver. Mrs. Erickson, 6-2048. bone TWO ,APARTMENTS. Private bath and News. Editor Marjorie Clapp 35.Gold (Her.) 14 entrance. Neaf University and biis. DALLAS-KORT WoIlTH—*ftj00 EXPERIENCED M.-A. sraduate. Reason* Bporta Editor ....—..—....... Ken Tooley SICK LIST Also private rdom', bath and . entrance . able. Mrs. Davia. 5-1237. Night Editors 84.Corroded in private home, Phona Houston, >3.50: Los Aneeles $25.00. t-8855. Anne Chambers* Olan Brewer, . Dick E. Atchinson; 37. Not working 2 42. Cars and pnssengfers, all, points. A-Auto . ELEC'IKIC. THESB6. dissertations. 90SJo Ann Dickerson, Dorothy Campbells W 19 2o 31 Share Expense' BureaO. 1808 LavaCa. W. 31st—mgrnings. 8-9444. Margaret Carrr Robert Dove^ 58. Wound rope ,2-3^*8.. • ; M. E. Darsey For Sale • Photographer' Vernon Lee (Julia Ellzaveth Galbraith, around^ 25 25 TYPIKGs NEAT work. Pick up aervie#., i Society Editor a——Betty Segal Patrick Helen Hagan, Hargis spin 1 CONN CORNET In excellent condi­-2-9606, 2?4853. . . . r.. (naut) r -> tion. New—$165; used only aix 'Amusementa Editor' ~ Ken Gompertx Patteann,' Betty Jane' LiUle, > tnonths. Bottoms prita $35. Call 6-8028 THESES, REPORTS, etc. . Univarait# (1. Street * Mrs. Ritchie. 2--494S. Donald Lee McAlphine, Janet after 6 p.p. neighborhood. STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE (abbr.) il Lee McKjnney, Williain Mc< >; <2..Mongrei dog "S4 ••am 13oil Day Editor' BOBBY JONES Furnished House For Rent aQLian mo aa uaosB USE. JDose to XJniverr UBHE. -family -Uandinr iioa# J°e :.«vaar: . mv autii phfc«is t-96<5 aft«, ' 2«4'2M>"r 0$J^lfjaWcfc Allen Usbor..D, S p.n»tfriday • y11.1 M i —• 'i.jails•dn.-nn,s .j -,jits • • rtWisM mi 1*.+, \ai. i • •oa' Esau-COIXJRED" tADY. wiahea to •a* i*. •i-' i < J* ii- Y< i^M ST& 3ft* w*3{ssk " 5,v-i %! " 'as ow tf»T-cup* • -' -* •sXlA "*A7"r'­ jpsK^^awifc *1^1^'C, THE COHGJtECATKWAL CHURCH t m —^Mwrtfaf CoBuau. S$D:» £*%. *%r ;&• '# f&pMp 4. V-4$r '?•: ity Life" Ami B«r.-Bertram ?r?r-c.J>-'#crl-yT'^­ „ cipi^iilc fid^wr «f «» -'."Tbi Ibvr* Ernest aSUB^Ii«*r»e-ttroagk Friday. l f$b$fr*?ih*nan f*e ***** for la Slavonic languages, will "> Theme of the bteimiei.confer­ ir piKtmsirr omismii »<«e mountain J^e:** show * movie on Us travels tn ence, sponsored jointly by ti»e tiUrSbtfr ©eWit^r,'o>pj8dato for ^ • CHURCH f business fraternity, will eelebnrta _ r J**& preMhtafc Europe at the Newman Annex Methodist Student Worker* Asso­Gtr Cootkfl laat year, ^peak • a-m. — Dr. Frank UM The Unhrersifcf student chapter the Radio House faculty wf& pro­itt «a-"«6«awq*M* fa Pw»-Sunday after a buffet Supper. ciation and the Department of to'^ W«#iey ifciwBdat$on Sanday . will speal^ of the Kmmftom, Society «| Ciffl vide the entertaimnent. the 43rd anniversary of ty«n«i founding witii a FcmndeM* * Father Zi*W« Benedictine motile, College and UniTeraity Betigiotu 100»0 an. — "The Chnreh's •Mr* win have its regular «**«*** «* la teaching Czech at the Unferer-Ufe of Methodist Board of Ednca-wt ^'«-* , Greatest Hottr^—the Brr. Law­meetings Monday at S p.». in Ar­' Recent pledges to Alpha U^-Day banquet Monday at 7 P-JU. j»-,^W"iaat» to deliver aer- •The program will be arra®®ed by rdiy^aid " -Netherlands will deKver paper 7 p.m. in Joum^sm' Buildihc good-sized, kitchen. One of the Radio Gaild will honor new entitled 'Research in The Nether­212. (306 Colorado 2-2567 Opp. Capitol Bldq. rooms has a wood-burning fire­members with. an annual recep­lands on Criminality." Main speaker at the elinie will. place. The upstairs is rented to tion Friday from 7:30 to 8:30 * be-Betty Segal, Texan society edi­students. p.m. at Texas Union. Members of * Delta Sigma • Pi, professional tor, who wiU-explain methods of writing stories. She will accom­pany attending reporters on • tour of the Texan office, foUow­ing a typical meeting story from the typewriter to the printing presK— —-­ R^ts Kersten, Texan editor, wiU welcome, reporters. Members of Theta Sigma Phi, clinie spon­sors;-win answer questions and advise on particular problems in club publicity. ,to herald your entrance at the seasons 'outstanding occasions Exciting formals that look forward te a foil winter holiday calendar. The beau-; v •ifu! ball gown of nylon net over taffeta, wearing a cascade of tiny rofRes at the * shoulder and walsiv—with a full, full ilcirt to gtve ft that unmistakable new ln addition to feminine air. 45.00. The short Cocktail formal with an irgedescent taffeta apron SIX EXCLUSIVE SILVER X- over a separate skirt of nylon net. Th» « PATTERNS *A»aag^>wtona^aiH! the diagonally cut -bodice.' 59.95.. For-*. ;• from TutHe. . -» from Frenk Smith, • from 6eorg Jensen (the let­ (nals, Second Floor. Exciting too, the . - /S-' ter sold on drder) look of a gleamtog baguette rhinestone . The Shop is now offering necklace and matching earrings, so light as the dazzling focal spot of the v : SWEDISH new decolletage. The. necklace 17.00%?^ sarrings 8.9$.? The final touch of-per-• STAINLESS fection—Directoire perfum^.i^r'' Charles . .STEEL:;;-. of the Riti. A rare, exqlnisite Iragranca Th« comes Tn complete fable '--feef from a distinguished collecfran, Thre»* settings of Six JPieces at Eight >ighths ouflte size, 10.00,* Do8«^ a^plaee set^ng. It is 4 ".Jr* . .. s" " , -r -, , 1 smaif, it is in good taste, H is fti 't practical, and It requires no £^ •&*** •.!>-\ poKsMng whatever. f\* V Special matching serving ptebes ean be l»ad. Drop-by— tern ^ •s,< -t»l yo« may wfcnt to start a set -f5-­ 'or buy a set at onee* ^r»V -l J. •rsw.wvataa eShoppe ^\ "fa « .J,. r 1104 Coferado V K r v •(. n -v r „ L' 'I'vii-n * * i A ^ « -^MjJfijMJfajjji iMjijlB 8ffi88S8®B®88B !®SS|JSS3$§$ Hlf iSfSsaSA > ovsmfor i*»SS«Wb 1 aroara moworaes -»f»» «** miwmju .wmaaenng in just to talk for a feWminutea. im*k Iter second-sy^r-v ai: elide H the This, Barbara says. Is what keeps Dick Carney became the favo.~ Students Association, loves her herwork from becoming routine, ite Lil Abner at Wica's annual Job «*en though she sometimes 1 love meeting and talking to Sadie Hawkins Bay dance Satur-... . . % < , ­feels like * one-person student in­80 W diffwint people," she — -— — -----—»-| uimiibu ui» vewuw ai io bachelor ox. •]"nrnyti The .engagement of Jane Caro-was married on October 27 to mhe waa presented M tfc# formation bureau; '*& f#s®f3 «ys, and I feel that Working lyn Carlisle to Lt. Robert Cherry John Calvin Smeck Jr„ of Phila-th» Phi>j»Mt*­ 1951 sweetheart of the indepen­ h.« W« .nnAn«^ Urr delnhi* in Ir0m. yith the Students' Association lias has been announced by her pair-delphia the Bering. Memorial ' Barbara, a junto# dattffris. ^ ^ ,| member of Theler Si|M* ftfven me a wonderful opportunity enta. Agraduate of the University, Methodist Church in Houston, jor from Corpus Christ!, works tional The 81-year-oldgraduate jitu* for.this* „ Miss Carlisle was president' of Miss Leach attended the Uni­ 10 hours a week as secretary to dent from Longview is five-feet, journalism^ / Barbara's Workafcdh Orange Jacket^, secretary of the the president of the Students' As­ten and one-half inches tall versity and the University of. sociation. ~ ~rr-* five Her a full schedule. Last student body, and was named an Houiton. * has hasel eyes and medium brown spring, geta Taa Alpha Awarded outstanding Student during her -High Sthodl and ieryift_ T.' ""People call us every day to hauvThe presentation Was made i ^ •'.Sj-,. '•.'•A­ her the Patricia Hbinehart Me­junior and senior years. Her sor­Joaii Frances Armi^er from US Air Foree in '*«k all sorts of questions," she W Theo Luders, Wica president, morial scholarship. . , ority id Chi Omega. Lt. Cherry Overbrook Hills, Pa., is to, marry Both of them m lays, "and some of them become to approximately 800 guests in Twenty-years old, With Mown attended SMU and the United C*pt. Sam CroaweU Holliday of by the Austin very inVkA -1-1-.4 . . Union is the hub of many cam­Methodist Un iversity this conii' school, but she is, interested in while I finished shaving," he aaid. Austin. • of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. pus activities. . • semester. The bride-elect receiv obtaining a secretarial ""position Since Dick just came to the.Uni-Mrs. Manglesdorf, while attend­ "the office sometimes gets like!) with the civil service in Europe. Betty Jahe Boggus of Austin, her secretarial; degree frwoi S versity in September, he knows ing" the University, was enrolled Grand Central Station during, po­She feels that this should be therford-Metropolitan SchOc^ very few people here. About the in the College of Pharmacy. She and John Lynn Gidley of Ly/e, litical campaigns," Barbara says. both interesting and educational, graduate students, will be mar­Business in D^las. only giris he had met^ Be found is a graduate of Austin High "However, the amount of excite­.and adds, "Even after a -person School. -ried December 23 in the Harris * out, were members of Wica Coun­ ment usually depends "upon how Clair* Gomperts and VUx finishes school, there is much, to cil. Sue Lawrence sold him his i OICK CARNEY "if Memorial ChapeL ..of the Univer­ aroused the politicians are." be learned ahout the. world—and •el 'will be wed lometimo in Nc Mica membership. Sue Henftlee JOann 'Martin and Roger E. sity Methodist Church. £ven when nothing Is happen-the people in it." would like to teach at a unfversify tricks for the boys and helped yember. Miss Gomjtelrtx will- and Dick had both tried out for Lewis will be married November Miss BoggUs was a member of after he gets his doctorate. them work out after the show. In ceive her speech degreO fa Fel cheerleader, and Jane Kniep was 16 at the. First Christian Church Gamma Phi Beta, and Gidley is ruary. Maisel is a graduate ttuj in the same swimming meets '.as At Vanderbilt-he lettered two Longview-he is an assistant scout of Wichita Falls. The bride-elect a past president of > Omega Chi master. dent and candidate for hiS> Dick last summer. ' > years on the varsity swimming attended Midwestern University JEpsilon, chemical engineering so­ team and was a member of the degree. t-. • • r.. Dick likes hunting, fishing, and and Texas Tech. The prospective < _ Personality; of the" Week -•, Even though he knew three of ciety, • and a member of Phi tumbling, team for two years. He king. He is interested in pho­bridegroom is a University grad­ the seven Council members at the L|tmbdaJ.lJp^ilp4jj|^ ,Tau Beta Pi, was president sOf the Vanderbilt Frances Elizabeth McCoy, preliminary interview, Dick could­tography and has a collection of uate and a member of Sigma Phi honorary fraternfl^sr Gidley re­ Hiking Club and vice-president of EpsHon fraternity. wed Lt. William Burton Cnii (Disk QaAmu n't feel very much at easewhen scenery pictures from all the pla­ceived the Dow Chemical Com­ the German Club. He was a cheer-' December 22, it the Cotamfou. ces he's been. • ' the girls started throwing ques­V ' pany award in chemical engineer­ leader at Kilgore Junior College Air Force Base Chapel Jn vColvanlN tions at him or when they ajriced Being chosen sweetheart is „ The 'engagement of Elizabeth ing. and also at Lon • Morris Junior bus, Miss., in a double-ring cerel him to walk around the room. He new experience for Dick. but right Anne Mtion to Edwin Rudolph .4 ...: . . -­ College. He attended SMU one mony. -• f-1 now he's wondering, "What's my Baiiman Jr., has been announced thought some of the questions Announcement has been made summer, but was glad to hear the Miss McCoy has been employe^ were "a. little silly," but he Aiust Dad going to say about this?" by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. v Texas football victory Saturday. of the engagement of Alice Rms-by thes Austin Athletic Club fo^ have givep the right answer. James Homer Mason .Sr. of San sower and Samuel E. Bruton, both Here at the University Dick ii Antonio. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin R. the^past year and a half. ' s "We walked around the room of Austin.*The couple will be mar­ like girls parade in bathing suite, a member of APO and MiCa and Engineers' Wives Bauman Sr. are parents of the ried December 9. Lt. Connie was a distinguiiiheir is working out with the tumbling intended groom. military graduate of the UniVer«?. but we weren't wearing bathing club. With the Gymnastics Club Miss Mason attended -Trinity Miss Ramsower' received a sity ROTC. , k suits," he said. To Meet in Blanco Dick took part?in. a ,show.f.or the University, for two years and was boy scouts Thursday night at graduatedfromtheUniversity. long enough to become active. The Travis chapter of women's „ im _ „ . _ _ ,, _ Gregory Gym. They demonstrated She is a member Delta ru MX > In fact, the first time he was in auxiliary of the Texas Society of amember of Delta Delti UNIVERSITY STUDIO various types of exercises and ,-Wlt the Mica office was tiie night of Professional Engineers will meet ^ ^ n?®' ?^°^ uated -,a#. in Blanco at the ranch of Mr 'rom the University. He is the sweetheart finals. Mr. and JBluford Heitir to Teach Clacit v a member of Phi Delta Theta fra-: ->' The other sweetheart finalists Mrs. Arthur Nelson for a lun GUADALUPE at 21st ternity. 'f : are Ford Nielson, George'W. Mil­Bluford Hestir, interscholastic cheon meeting Nov. 21. ler, Bill Nichols, and Bill Shemake. journalism director of the Bureau Mr. and.. Mrs. Qlin Culberson B«»»!o Jeanne White, University OPEN THURSDAY EVENINGS Zeke Zbranek is last year's sweet­Of Public School Service, is teach­ heart. ' ing the Century Class at the Uni­€olLe-Cti°Vf Dres-*T» of X I?*"* Asheville, North cfarolina" UNTIL 8:30 PM Dick received a BA in German versity Presbyterian Church. ?ranSPOr" willn}aE5r Novem in ...ber at Cox Me with a . minor in—-Spanish from Van•».. Mr. **vwv»*Hestir took v thebite class tation will be pxpvided — W|—...w../,—»».• ' VVVA over V CI, V10P9 morial Chapel of the Highland derbilt University ip 1951. He is ^rom:©r.-D.-G^Reddick,-professor MAKE APPOINTMENTS NOW Fbft Mr. Nelson, a coneulting-engi Park Methodist Church.. --­ ** fViA doing graduate \york in physical I of journalism, whowhn ^oifvnajresigned at the neer, is a former professor of PORTRAITS FOR CHRISTMAS ' education at the University and close of the spring semester. ! mechanical engineering. ^r -UU. 4, a full satin skirt..; ;;-;Vvuv; •f- add 4 taffeta blouses... . " v;: • ^ *• " •fr-. '•% l.'.'-V ' presto!- •. . I ...with more variations in your jewelry box! m •/ ' * ^ The skirt: full pleat-gathered rayon satin to pouf out with petticoats,* 10.95, t. •r 4 ^* m In antique gold, bliie smoke, black. A myriad of blouse changes ' '-, s * in black rayon taffeta, modeled "• V i i'i ...... t by our own College Board member, Janet Top left-tailored, with rhinestone buttons, a stand-up collar, 3t98. Lee. ¥ Center left, lantern sleeves1} a perky boiv, 4.98, ' £ Ai r Lower, the shawl collar blouse, 4<98. d • . 1 i.. ,. • • • . • -• -. • • • •« V "K­-v Above, the scoop neck and leg~steeve8, 4.98. . " chicken­4 v. " —,.,C , , Front the glamour separates,collecting in our Sports Shop, Second Floor. ~ < - jra.~ir,v.rfs7B« s rw .. • 1 y< 'kr ^'vEAri —' <>?• Sccarlbroeqlh & Sons "4 ie' 'i^' "" )k SBSSt S "-I in1,rni'' iiirniiwitifr iii.mr»i itt^nairfi^i.n-ftfiimfttfiwuiiiw*i.wt,mii-ift­ 8 1 4 •<— \if ^^wvt^E: *« » -« / * Jl^yirtV * DAILY TEXAN ^ro «>r M» ^frCJ ^T -SU * 14,4 /At VX ^ tf>"v**5 of|America • *$*<* % Tr IrJ W Mte t|M«# Hill Davit .v-, Finds+ Places4in v T -UV'jSg* «l» Gutft Pianist Hi ­__ COMPERTZ® aboutVUI> toW have am baby. , inhibitions of true Vrr*. " A programof morejhan twenty?; Richard Rodger* ftrst gained Ma gether onto Larry Hart's death in composers as Jerome Kern, Sig-The Austin Symphony Orchea­** In scenes that a lesseriKtress hit* Bodgers-Hammerstein . V mund Romberg, Rudolph Friml, W» k*iu*«M **&# t When all attempts fall to get from fame as the musical half of Rod-1948. , ... tra, conducted by Exra Rachlin, rid of the baby, George decides muslcala wilt he presented Tues­' 'Oscar SEammertfytgp Jl, an old a%d Vincent T^ttniana. < I .., Ift ihe motion picturt industry's (night have "melodramatised," the gen and Hart, a collaboration will make He second appearance^%Hrlutbig search for material, an to drown Alice.. .When thi time day evening at 8:15 in Gregory frland 0? Sod^'lud;. already ;^f^iwa.erB(wift jr comea 1 bf M4s this seaaos at the C^li«ttni,|Co»­ restrains herself and emerges with which started while Rodger* was achieved his position as the fore­wsat^. tafente naturally. obvious and natural resource has comes, George hesitates. Alice, Gym. The eong-ehow include* day evening sensing *omething» rise* in the an1 intense role too painfully true selections from "Oklahoma," still a freshman at Columbia Uni­most American lyricist before grandfather '"was an important been the novel. Some "transla­ i&IaAa" hare been absorbing studV boat they have rented for the of too manjr lonely persons. < "Carousel," "A 11 egr o," and versity. Together they wrote the joining forces with Rodger* jpiro-op ties. Their remarkable character .smartly-paced 4maginativB;.script^ out'the nation, bers the §5 studies make it possible for Drei-Jaddertosoeiety'*F00'^elsUfV"--—i State Newscast of orchestr* and-~tbe fit and unprepared for.the tran­Had a few of the supporting Rodgers and Hammerstein, two conductor were delighted 'vith her ' Ifif ser's classic to become alive and sition and. as he falls," he carrjes characters been up to the stand* •Of theater's most successful hut Stuart -M. Long, well-known performance, and they claim ahe to keep intact so much of "his un­ derstanding. of with him not only the intimacies ards of the acting, scripting, and retiring men, are far less known. Capitol correspondent and played to perfection and in pe^--• contemporary radio of the life into which he was born, technical aspects, "A Place in the They both regard^ themselves,as feet harmony .with the other .. ^America's dissatisfactions, miser­ news commentator in Austin, will ies, and tragedies. but also the entanglements ot Sun" would have been a cinch for just working people who, after a players. , & 41A' Place" is the story of his brief and unsuccessful venture picture Of the year. As it stainds, good hard day, prefer the quiet air a state-wide fifteen-minute j Single admission tickets for stu­George Eastman (Clift), son of "upstairs." • t • ' it can only win Oscars for Best of their homes to the gay night OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN II weekly news*' program"beginning dents are 60 cents, half the next religious parents,-who finds "work Clift at last has been given a Actor, Best Supporting Actress, spots. RICHARD RODGERS this week. lowest price of $1.20 for general .role which deserves -his talents. and Bust Screenplay, Directing, m at his uncle's factory. His relatives Locally his broadcast of Texas admission for^ others; A special are rich and snobbish and suffer The mental-anguish he undergoes and Photography.' 'I new* events on the level of state chartered bus will take stodenta in his decision to murder his his preftcence.,His first job is on • government can. be heard over to and from the Drag. in assembly line where he meets sweetheart, Ihe dilemma eaused radio station KTXN at 12 noon, oa Liniment Rubbing Alcohol by conflicting loves, anrf his final Sundays. Sponsor of hia program Alice Tripp (Miss Winters) who • falls in love with him. downfall 4ft which he is a .comj is the Insurance Company of rationalized being, is Texas. . They have an affair which nleiely one , -Mexican Consul mar­of the finest screen roles given would have led to a happy His commentary wOl be broad* by a young actor. riage had it not been for Angela cast .over 16 stations of the Texaa Is Vickers (Elizabeth Taylor) whom Miss Winters jtakes her place A girl in Houston ia searching Any spare China Poblana cos­chard II, Merchant of Venice, and State Network. Is UT Studenttumes that can be borrowed for Hipsy Boo. This'past summer he , he meets at a party given by his in the sun. too. Shorn of frills and 'Tis a loVe tale immersed in the feed stores for raffia; four -Mr. Long is also continuing his uncle. George falls for Angela and make-up, her pathetic characteri­"splenderiferous" c 01o r an d girls in the Department of Drama the Follies will be grately appre­directed ten shows for the Austin regular broadcast.over KTXN at A Mexican consul; is a atpdent captures plight ciated by Alice Gardiner, who is Recreation Department which her society strata and decides to zation the of a breath-taking fantasy. / have been practicing draping 5:16 p.m. daily. here at the University. discard Alice. But Alice traps him pregnant, unwed, lost girl, left by themselves with sarongs; a group having . troubles locating enoagh were staged in Zjlker Park: He Mr. Long received his bachelor Juan Antonio Merigo-Aza,' vice­ 'Tii the much-heralded "Tales of of the colorful Mexican dresses. also directed a musical for the when she discloses that she is her lover to face shame of the Hoffman" now playing at the of dancers have been making of journalism degree from the consul of Xedco and third secre­ Bob Fqx; dir'ector of the Follies, Travis County Medical Associa­ great use" of liniment and rubbing University in 1*943, He is a men, tary of the diplomatic jervica, haa Texas Theater. Harriette Bengston, pianist^ and tion and appeared as a singer for alcohol to relieve aching muscles her of Sigma Delta Chi and a )een lent to*, the Mexican con­ m Except for "The Red Shoes," Dario Valencia, tympanist, have the Austin Civic Theater. He is a sulate. • from lifting their partners over put the finishing the former member of The Daily and a few black-and-whites -by their heads squarev.,dance touches on senior drama education major Texan staff. ...^ While here, he is taking sSx­ in a Jean Cocteau of French_ films, Spanish numbers. : from Beeyille. SHOUITimC mrasMTE aumber. teen^ hours at the. University, in­ fanti^ni|»^a"lTe>fir1ifCJ,^<»ffr' Thmrole of Diamond Lil have Harriette Bengston,.-.freshman " Before entering the service in eluding''. aome in cotton eoursea imam It's all for art-—the actions will, been taken over by Jaynet Catter from Austin, has had several of WorldWarllhewaepublisher AT INTERSTATE THEATRES man" makes the imaginativeness marketing. A jmtive7ofjrera Crus^ of its predecessors" seem prosiac. be combined into a composite ton, who is replacing Charlesa her songs c.opywrited. Although of six weekly newspapers in the tie studied 'engineering at the Uni-1 whole-for .the .Forty A®*® Follies, Permian Basin area in West Tex­ Wolfe. . Yet those who were entranced she has written nothing" for the versity of Mexico, and laW at the to be presented November 9-10 at Bob Cox, director, has appeared Follies, she has done all the ar­as; He began a daily news cast on by the "Shoes" may be disap­ UniversityofGuatemala. 8 p.m. in Hogg Auditorium. in the Department of Drama's ranging and transposition for the radio station KTBC in May 1945. pointed.,Where.there.was a.po,tent In the consular service for ten The raffia will tje'xised^by the one-act plays -for l&40j King Ri-ShOW. He also oper«tes a.capitoi jn%ws Montgomery LEO CAR1LLO love story in the first Powell-Press- -•-years, he-has held the~ offier of' costume crew to make, grass skirts bureau for fourteen daily, nejrs­ burger dash into "art" movies, civil attache at the embassy in the papers. ' •­ CLIFT "PANCHO VILLA their second adventure is weak in for Hawaii Calls sequence. Guatemala City and in San Salva­ Joan Blodgett is the crew member Eiizaheth plot. And where the dancing of dor. This is his third consular Annual Faculty Art Exhibition RETURNS" who is so diligently searching the "Shoes" made ballet for the first post in toe United States, previous >; ——PLUS—- feed stores. The dancers of the time seen a possible outlet in of Pointer ones being in El PaSo and Albu­ LAUREL and HARDY Hawaiian-number,--Carolyn-Wood­ IS® mass entertainment, Moira Shear­ querque. • "PACK UP YOUR ruff, Geyla Anderson, Frances ^iljBeSh©w» Nov* [ToHanginUhion " er, Robert Helpmann, Leonide "The I*tin-American, Inatitute Berryman and Johanna Carothers, TROUBLES" Massine and company are left are trying to find a safe and se­The annual faculty exhibition ham, Charles Umlauf, Don Win-J jp. TjlCffi'S RQOfVl of the University has created much i with one or two pirouettes and of drawings and paintftigg spon­gren and Julius Woeltz. good will and ia very highly raeog»>' Whirls and a few graceful poses. cure way to wear the sarongs The exhibit may be seen from i niaed in the Latin-American coUn­ while lounging around on the arti­sored by thfe University Art De­ John ..A, McCurdy, executive The ballet stars are further 9-12 and 2-5 on week days and tries," Dr. Merigo-Aza believes. ficial grass which is to be used partment, will be shown Novem­secretary of the* Ex-Students' hamstrung with "vocal" chores. 9-1 on Saturdays. There is no I Most Mexican studenta study tech­ as at-background. Association, Thursday Each has a recorded voice to which ber 5 through December 1 in the admission charge. said he nical subjects and Latin-Ameriea^ " • Sun 4". Benny Nipper, also, a member hopes a wood-carving of Dr. FIRST AUSTIN SHOWING T«np«aiuou> he must mime the words. It is dis-Mus>c Building loggia, Loreq Moz- economics here. ^ , Drama of placed soon Lov# and Intrifu* concerting to see Miss Shearer, of the costume grew, has been ley, exhibition chairman, an­St. Edwards to Hare Review Painter can be in A delegate recently to the Mex­ "" Robert r~~"' "'Av* ' doing-research -for-the-pinaforfes nounced.— A^.Msiopt.njong^ hon­ in the few moments she is given ....-Th«-Press-Club-of St;-Edwards4 ico City conference...that-led-io~ ~ LORIUL Mitchum Gardner for square dancers in the Bandera oring preceding University pres­ to show her supple ballet form, Members of the art faculty who University will hold its annual the new' international agreement, "MY FORBIDDEN Stampede scenes. idents. * trying to follow words of a sop will exhibit work include: Reese talent .shdw, "Squeaks From| for migratory workers, he took PAST" one rano', often< unable to open her Costumes for the men have Brandt, Kelly Fearing, Seymour Freaks," in the university gym­However, since no more pil-charge of the consulate when Con-. : CASPER CARTOON FRANKIE CARLE ORCH mouth quite wide enough to let offered no problems—blue jeans, Fogel, Constance Forsyth, Boyer nasium Friday. lara tfke those-which bear the sul Alejandro V., Martinez waa the appropriate sound out. boots, white shirts, and blue haffd-Gonzales Jr., Robert Graham, Gay-Every year the top St. Edwards plaques of thepast 12 presi­transferred to Houston. HALE kerchiefs for the Stampede, and len Hansen, Paul Hatgil, Paul performers compete for cash pri-dents aTe available, the work on Before each "half/' Milton Kkbed GRIiNE nusnn s tux trousers, red sashes, and Hatgil,_ . Paul Kelpe, William Les-zes. The contestants are judged J Dr. Painter's plaque had to be-ACT Tryotit Deadline Today JSepss~ gives.—a^-summary„..of Final readings, for tryouts will come. Tne lifst olf TI . Jlrit Show 2 p.m. opera to a numbers. ' Eugene Thent-and* students.* Tie" held "SunHay at 3 p.m. infiEHe man's three loves was magic, ' Everett Spruce, • ' •' All of the carvings which ar# TOM and JERRY DANNY KAYE- Playhouse for Austin Civic The­ "OP IN ARMS" life-sized doll. He makes love to around the moulding of t h e ater'a "Blithe Spirit.'* Yef can beat the A-Bomb Color by Technicolor her, but he ^realizes his folly and foyer, except that of Dr. H. P. then sees the puppet destroyed. Rainey. were ^»ade by a Swed­ Having si party? Opening of Journalism Building ^ Miss Shearer, as the doll, is as> ish wood-carver, Peter Mans> beautiful and graceful .as she was -X bendel. After the wood-carver'a * NereUy Rtkktr Hulu if Haitaai taflatad lillmi in "Red Shoes," and this impres- death, Raymond Everett, Uni­ ' -k Cwluaii Buy er Rwrt " .siye-opening onlj serves to make versity professor of freehand hero thwitfat ef Ijpw By Next Semesfer Is the dearth of dance in later scenes ^drawing and painting* d«signed more glaring,. and executed tha Dr. Rainey AUSTIN NOVELTY CO. Better, more efficient w< point is security from fire. Jour­for the use of radio news writers; aoaw.atk -Ph.«-4ssr •Visually, the technicolors1 of plaque. THREE conditions, greater safety, and nalism has been taught on the For better communication with "Hoffman" could be .no more, re­ easier access; to information-are campus for 37 years, but never the campus, warding; but had there been more University the newSHOWS story arid dancing and a m j>ro- ROUHS&VUfcE- Color by Ttcknieolor room. set- LUDMILU ANN room. _ coior oy TCHERINA • AVARS Doorway A tmrt riimt Up In Arms The library will have an in­ TICHNICOLOR with Roilart Tajrlor Danny Kayo creased capacity of 2>000 books. Ezra Rachlin, Musical Director and LmiU Calnarn 1 M * i. !*• (Hi Ml IS RESERVED Dinah Short . —plus A .'morgUe of pictures and en­SHOWS TODAY •—plus— "Watch th* TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY gravings will be kept in the base­TOMORROW NIGHT Featnjrf Start* at 7-P. M. ment. : . . AT 2:30—5:30—8:15 Birdie Students "Koh Tiki" with Rod Skoltea .When.the new building will a be 8:30p.m.—CityColiseum and AHme Dahl ready for use is still unknown, Mendels$<^n, Fingai's Ca^e Over­ ra* PR'VE IN Box Of lie* Ombi SiOO Bex Office Opea* SsOO Mr. Thompson stated. He added Tura ' that it is doubtful if the build­GONTINUOUS..SHOWINGS. "WHERE DANCER ing will be ready for occupancy Dvorak, New World Symphony LIVES" by the spring semester. ;^Grieg,NewNyorld Concerto FeaturesStart at.. 1 <26-3:32. Robert Mitchum NOW SHOWING! Faith Domerga* 5:38-7:44-9:50 Tues.Nov.20 •THE PETTY GIRL" 'First Lady* Tryouts Monte Hill Davis, Soloist Robert CdtB«ia|c Joan CnficM Continue Today in MLB Studenijicketsr(()c :us» FIRST TEXAS PRESENTATION Tryouts for the Curtain Cluh»| University Cp-op^ :Music Building ONE NIGHT production of*"First LMdy," a play s. Campus Booth, Union Building hy Katharine Dayton, and George j S. Kaufman, will continue Sunday Season Tickets Available Monday "ALICE IK at 2 p.m. in the Modem Lan-WONDERLAND** guagea Building^ ^ MRAM STMVSa A Walt Disney Fittar»;# • -miS Only^.60i*fC;-^.01 The political satire wfitt he pre-'APACHE CHIEF" sented at, the Theater-in-the­ "c-wam Special Bus*^ampusto,Coliseum round December 1Q-16. Atoijssion, Driv Out for An Ordw Of Imcfca from Thursday Fried Chicken^ the tryoats Hedy La»*rr*Vlcto* Matwna m CAST Of CIMMHT OF II •"V. '"J'* H "ITS A TRBAT * . THOUSAWDS YANK THAT CAN'T BE BEATfl FllUd Make check payable to PARA "FRANCIS GOESMATINEES TRE^nJenCloeeeelfaddretiod mTj«USA<« V-THE CHICKEN ii |iwli.,iMlJ>l»l||i' Wif4'# mmm* pitWVV IBS®'' " "* . ^ t*«K & MMN txkm •*v rs f| ?*?•? r%*' - W^'V-d '"j***­ _ mmim* i 'J hmm ffl?s ies Varying Attitudes o upreme tot. ifantia Hodge, director of Jack Wernttt* are on the paint . Cftrttttoe fidil, jtfint tieris *Jtm knit Ifcir ffey&fcjt» ha* tfe. w«*. Those oa the light crew are Gray, Barbara Butnham, Jftnmy DUE 'PROCESS OF ^UiW, 1932-"In the minds-of the justices* a set of policies different from relations and likewise unionmem nounced the complete east for tile Phil Hopkins, Nevillyn Bobo and Cowan, Joan Hettshaw, afld ±nn 1M». By Vilrciaia WM4L Bmten the term 'due process* has some­those defended by the Court pre­bers in their Te&itions with 'non­But the ulge of,&ee speech ^ieuuti Dorothy Broodo. how become an all-incluKive viously. . pi®y» 1 ' -4rVv Weli*a*e on house fcnd pnblidty union members." -' a nenoer -«*• to ^oicpii^l Je»*l AdWns, B«be Cianer-?'*jr 4*xed. phrase involvingnotions bfreaton-"The legislatures have jbeen per­ The jtr*puC wfciefc detfets^he Oddly enough, it was the ardh­ "Due proeess of law*' it a letfal ablen«M and fairness, It haft come mitted to* regulate minimum end lives of tenement people in Dob* conservative Justiee George 1 Su­ to comprise the element* of social maximum commodity prices, and tin during the mith Revolution* Action which th« Supreme Court therland who in 1982 set/the new justice and liberty'—liberty to do rate-maldng has been brought of the-. United States has made trend in application of due pro*' Virgin .Weed, ft vrillrOrt til X Hall Theater No-and have those thingis which the within the price-fixing camp. •ember 1*1% fk part of the'Fine a fflftgt potent wokpoti fn its exer­ cess to less restrictive, meaning. Mrs. M. C. Hughes, ia 'A'iaSiAtiwi justices deem essential to the kind 'Price* may be used to promote of the fiaaty His opinion in Stephenson V. Bin­ cise of judicial review. Evolution of society they wish to preserve social*interests, to protect what ford (287 US 251) held that the Science ;DepMtnetti pi 'the " Juno iapUyefby luglit,. of the concept and the varying dr promote." the states wish to protect, or to Court would not override the le­Vetsi#1(f' Georgia.f W«04owwn around tk«eampusiae attitudes of the justices applying' The court has always used the make' < or eliminate competition gislative judgment of the neces­her advanced degree from'Ihdite>{ her lead spot in "Pom Tester-, it make a fascinating study, liot clau$e thus. The important fthift when deemed necessary. The states a given economic' policy. The volume is * h*ndsoine rtray Captain in the 1984 Nebiba case in which j Boyle; Posey Smiser, Joser Daly; While" the'^phrase itafelf is only the ruling was that insofar as due Ed Reynolds, Johnny; Jac Farmer, fcS found in the Fifth and Fourteenth process was concerned, the state Jerry; WIH Green, Mr. Bertham; Amendments, the foundations -of was free^ to regulate business in Chtteh Taylof, Mr. Nugent; and its present scope and meaning are ^Jexan if2ookt any of its^aspects. (BeitlSdierS to-be-seen in tiie social, eeonomic* Bob Burleson, young man. The Court differentiates pro­ Joe Bonno will double as the n «tnd political philosophies of the Reviews News perty and private rights, however. Compiled by Publisher's Weeklynine men on the Court at a given coal man and tbe first irregular. Generally it hat held that the con­of booksellers:^ . reports 56 time. As Miss Wood says:... • " Gene Price alio, plays two parts— stitutional system does not require •"FICTION gewing machine man and second HAPPINESS does not seem to be reigning supreme in this scene judicial protection Of a free en­The Cafne Mutiny. Bv Hfrtmn mover. Harold Klein is the' first terprise, laissez-faire economic sys­ from"Juno and the Paycodc," a Departmenf of Drama Production wouk. $3.95. . -::: > tem. But it has "indicated no ac­ . mover; Don Howard, .second IT­opening in X-Hall November 7, Left to right is Pasey Smiser as The Cruel Sea. By Nicholas.Mott Nun—Murderess, Dope-fiend S'*egolar; Agnes David, firstneigh-Savin erCaptain Boyle. -; ceptance of the idea tha$ protec­sarrat. Knopf. $4. bor; and Jimmie Hassen and Elsie tion of those^freedoms written From-Here-to Eternity, S^-Jawi into the First Amendment mightHaas as neighbors. Jones. Scribner. $4.50.. " be trusted to legislative prefer­ ; Don Howard; assistant director, Melville Goodwin, USA. By ja« ences." will head the production staff. X • P. Marquand. Little. $3.75, ' ' In Faulkner's Key to Peace The Court does not deem it Molly Moffett is stage manager; oed n Jlere The Catcher in the Rye. By J, necessary to explain this dual con­ Virginia Becker, bookholder; Pat • D. Salinger.' Little. $3«vi^ REQUIEM FOR A NUN. By Wil­abandoned. "Requiem (a mass for The preface to each of the three cept, but in 1949, addressing theHines, building and stage crew liam Faulkner. New York: Ran­the peace of a departed soul) for acts traces the history the town New York City Bar, Justice Wil­NON-FICTION. P .V ; head; Bob Burleson, paint crew • Samfcqr, -Hemphill ". Freshman Reading The Sea' Around Us. By Rachel dom House. 286 pp. |3. a Nun" is what it says, but the in Yoknapatswpa County from liam Douglas said the rights of head; Jimmie Hassen, prop crew 8:30 — ;Czech-Moravtan. Sundliy Cdntest, Speech Building ll'B With sodomy and murder tem­Nun ^ra's a Negress, a dope-fiend the coming of the glacier to the free-speech, press, and religion L.J Carson. Oxford. $3.50. head; Betty Lafferty,. costume J School,' Wesley Foundation. .5 — Delta Nu Alpha, Texas Un pered by the history of earth and who willfully murdered a six-final. 1951 jail scene, and in so are in a preferred position, as the Kon-Tiki. By Thor HeyeqclaliL crew head; and'Barbara Pechacek 9 — Address by Dr. Frank Lau-ion 311. ; . Randj $4. , man himself, William Faulkner in month-old white baby. -Yet the doing binds the relationship of bach, University ,.C h r i st i a n Delta .Sigma ini woven in charge of house and publicity 5:46 —•' Alpha ReqOiem for a Nun" hag dead child's mother.'.-pleaded with the play to man and his predes Washington ConfideniiaL By Jack! crew. Church. " tiatioh, Texas Union 301.. a* tale of beauty and compassion, the governor for. a pardon—her's tined purpose. Queen's Latest Mystery Lait and Lee Mortimer,'. Crown.1 W' Stage and building crew in­10:15 — Radio Listening hour, 7 Addresses before Post-Clrad but it is more than, a story. It is was a greater sin. If the theme of "Requiem" is V&f- A 'Calendar of Crime' cludes Jo Perkins Myler, Joanna Hillel Foundation. uate School of Medicine by Dr. an anjmer to theisuffering of man Told with the clarity of a play, the suffering of mankind, then Dizzy. By Hesketh Pearson. Shar­Carothers, William Knox, and Bob 11 — Newman Clitf,' Texas The­Joe P. Salerno and Dr. Mavis and a key to the everlasting peace the novel is in three acts. The the purpose is revealed by Faulk­Ellery Queen's "Calendar of per. $4. ' fjl). 'I P. Kelsey, Sutton Hall 101. ner to The Magnificent Stearns. Elsie Haas, Dick Kirsfih-ater. . he seeks. scenes within outline the.suffer­in that man was-doomed Crime," a series of twelve related Century,£;^By| ner, Martha Petraitis,, and : Mary 11 —Dr. Frank t>aubach speaks 7 — Alpha Kappa Psi to hear Theconfusion.oftime,sefluence, ing of three peoplg from willing suffer from the beginning—not stories which commemorate, after Thomas B. Costain. Doubleday.] Jane Scott will-serve on the prop at University Baptist-Church. talk by Louis N. Armstrong person, and title found in "The abduction to the Jefferson. Miss.. made to, but allowed to by the a fashion, calendar events of the $4.50. crew. Costume crew members are 2 —r Tryouts for Curtiain Club's Texas Union 401. Sound and the Fury" has been jail' and the Answer found there. presence of sin'B temptations— American year, will be out Janu­-TAKING A CIVIL SERVICE TKST7 Bill Larsen, Sue Henslee, and "First Lady*" MLB. i'—-Delta Sigma Pi, Home Eco-and that through suffering, man ary 2, publishers Little, Brown 3 — Tryouts for ACT's "Blithe . nomics Tea House. Junior Prvfewional. Huuctmwt • Marie Porter. could make himself purer, "that and Company announce. Such Agricultural AMliUnt tppHollw M Spirit," Playhouse. • ' ., .7 American Society of Chem little children as. long as they are •pen. Jobs gUrt MilU>H • rur. CaU*s« Kathryn Granstaff, Bruce Nell events as New Year's Day, Wssh-wnloi* apply NOW at city pott tiffict. R. Hoerman, Florence Luderus, and 3 —^Exhibit of works by Houston • icaf Engineers to hear "f1ittle«hildren,shBli'beintact,un-ington^"Birthdiy;™^rairdr^"Ineome ...Many : faiied. thea* tctU latt nar.. W»j artists, Ney Museum. ' Phillips, Chemistry Engineering effer complete caacbint material. I anguished, untorn, unterrified." Tax Day are remembered with ap­(pl>* paitac*) COI>, Montr bach H«l*f16:30'—Films to be shown by the Building J. Ih the final act it is plain that propriate Queen-style crimes, It's satisfied.'.­ Rev. Ernest Zilka after buffet 7:15 — Alpha Delta Sigma to hear Nancy, the murderess-nun has -Franklin IniUtiiU, Dept. D-lll. priced at $2.75. Explained by BBA Grad slipper, Newmart Annex. _ 1 ochester 4. N. V. Brad Smith, Victor's Italian suffered because of protecting *• 9 —. TV Fashion show by Univer­Village. 7 child, and yet she, because pf her YOUR HOME AND MINE. By explain such legal terms as war­ sity students, KEYL. 7:30 i— Free movie, "A Tree faith in the resurrection,' will find Frank Watt*. San Antoniot The ranty deed, quitclaim deed, trust Monday Grows in Brooklyn." her place in heaven, not with fine Attend the Autograph Party, Texas Book Store, Nov. 6, 3-5 p.m. in 8YSOrlj;;; and" l-B ~ ; Drawing Ol ^SOr^AlphaKappaDel^.nien'i Naylor Company.. 183 pp. $3. account, amortization, abstract, raiment and a harp, but some deed of trust, ^redemptions andBaylor game tiekete, Gregory lounge, Texas Union. This book eiitpiaihl eVHjjr' phsife JVhere^—fPE-Jake-believes that in Newton Schwartz and 'Bill Gym. * 8:15 —-Austin Symphony Orches-of home ownership from hoy 'to many others. ' heaven there will be worfc to' do Wright will represent the. Unfcer-8-:45 •—Medical .College'admission ,..traj, City Coliseum._, ; make a loan to howito make a He even points out how home through which she may atone and sity in two debates, and a ,discus­tests, Hogg Auditorium. foreclosure on a Mortgage; " • owner* and -home buyers:can save, suffer for her sins. sion hour. at Baylor University 9-11 — Coffee, Newman Annex. Mr.: Watts, a University BBA on income taxes. Items like mort­—WATTS DAVIS Tuesday. • i/V. Uf Consultants to Serve gage interest and taxes are de­ 9-5 Faculty exhibit, Music graduate, uses everyday words to ductible, he says. So are unusualThet two teams will debate be-Building loggia. P-TA Congress Nov. 16 By ESTHER BUFFLER ^ fore the Baylor student assembly 9 — Talk by Richard West of the storm damages which might netf-h Taesday afternoon on "Resolved: ---Dallas ~News, Journalism Build­.. When the 43rd annual conven­be allowed on the insurance ad­lllu»trat«d by CONSTANCE FORSYTH That the Southwest Conference ing 212. tion of the Texks Congress of justment.. : t •" sf'-V-*' GI, FHA, and conventional type should de-emphasize intercollegiate 10 Hillel coffee hour, Hillel Parents and Teachers meets in loans are discussed in great de­ Two /boys, a contest, and' a growing athletics." The University team Foundation. Dallas November 14-16, the JJni by Ulrich tail. In. connection with Gl loans, friendship are woven into a delightful wfll take th^jafHmative. 8 — Rally Committee, Waggoner versity will be represented by By Loan Library he brings-out and explains gratui­ The teams wfll parley the ques­Hall 401: several staff members. ... ' "Symphonic Literature/' a sur­story of the land, the people and the ty payments by the Veterans Ad­ tion "What should be the attitude 4 — Student-Faculty Cabinet, r . vey ?rom the Eighteenth'Century An important feature of the Texas libraries and county ministration. £» customs of Brittany. Esther Buffler com­ of southern colleges toward segre­Texas Union 310. convention, the theme of which is to the present day, is scheduled agents will receive Package Libra­/Home owners and potential gation of minority races?" in the 4 _ "The Catholic Mind," New­"Safeguarding Our Freedoms for release this spring. Newest bines her pen with the beautiful color man Club classroom. ry-Service catologs soon. The new home owners cannot help but pro­ discussion hour Tuesday evening Through Responsible Citizenship, fit by reading this book. book by Homer Ulrich, associate illustraiions of Constance Forsyth to — before the Baylor -student, body. &. ^ Deadline for registering for wilLbeiheiM^^ book is being distributed by the professor of chamber -music,., it —JOE BURKETT Schwartz and Wright will again Ag Station Gets Grant shops where specialists in many Univeristy.. Package. Loan XiBrary deals with 4;he concerto, the -over­produce, this appealing story. Ages fO take the affirmative at 8 o'clock A total ot $13,590 has been fields will-confer, with delegates. Bureau. Copies will be mailed to ture, the symphonic poem, and to 12. $2. * p.m. on ''Resolved: That all Ameri­given the Texas Agricultural Ex­Among the consultants from the women's clubs throughout the re-evaluations of major composi­ tions. ,, , G. S. Perry can citizens should be subject to periment Station of the AAM sys­University of Texas will be Dr state. conscription for essential services tem. R. D. Lewis, director of the DeWitt Reddick, professor of " This catalog includes a list of Mr. Ulrich also wrote "Chamber THE STECK COMPANY a-Con- during time of war." station, said Arlington State Col­.journalism,, who will be consul materials available through the Music," and "Education of cert Goer." The latter was pub­ Schwartz is a two-year debate lege, Prairie View A&M, and sev-tant for the public relations-pub-Bureau on current subjects. PUBLISHERS • AUSTIN, TEXAS Texas A&M Story lished in England .as "The En- H©^-worit8hop-^(}r^31iomaB one-year letter. donors. Rishworth, Radio House director to Parent-Teacher Associations, George Sessions Peri-y, Texas ~——­and national P-TA chairman of civic organizations,' -and other author, has completed his twelfth radio 'and TV; who will advise the groups. Individual^ may see copies book. This," "The Story of Texas workshops on audio-visual educa­at libraries or order through A&M," is scheduled for publica­tion. A summary of the workshops group organizations. tion in late November or earlywill be presented by Dr. Robert December by McGraw-Hill Book Come to the Texas Book Store's L. Sutherland^ director of Hogg Co., Inc., New^Y-ork, in the latter PRESENTS Foundation at the University. 'PyU-type' Writer Has part of A&M's 75th anniversary Mrs. H. G. Stinnett of Plain-year. ^ Humor-pathos Touch view, state president, will preside Other books by the Rockdale over the convention and make the Ed Savola, ypung1 American au­author . include "Hold Autumn," N kejmote address, assisted by Don thor of "Monday Follows Tues­which won the National Book­ BRICHI! IBLUMT! SEMTIFUt! Matthews, assistant superintendent day," released by the Allen Smith sellers Award and was made into of . Dallas schools, and students 0 Company at $3.50, is a writer of a motion picture; "My Granny Speakers prominent in educational of the Ernie Pyle type, " with spe­Van," which was converted into and Religious circles ^ill address cial capabilities at humor-pathos a stage play and enacted by th4< V the groiipr ~ --------fiction. His previ6us books are Dallas Theater in 1950; and Meet "P. S. to a Prayer," '"Normandy "Walls Rise Up,".which the same Ex-Stadeats Take AF Conrs* E Three former University stu­Beach," and "Talk with Abraham theater, produced as a musical last Lincoln." . ' year. . dents attended an Air Force pub­ lic; information course recently at M Fr ftodQt-'*. end Komr>(r',U-m are usually placed before graduation; *4 £X' T'V^ Qua/* Co-educational. Master's degree. Limited enrollment. Write Admissions' XJffice for BulletinC, &P 8:15 P.r v'r" MStAHCH BUKIAIf fQK MtTAIL THAI NINO ^ "'UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH • nttsbonh13,N. November 6tli AdultSingkAdmission $1.50 Childrvn undfr^l? ytdrt . SOc TYPEWRITER SPECIALISTS from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Teicas Boot Store Can Do Iht Job Softer Free to Blanket Tax Vflw b taking ov*r THE FRIENDS—A, delightful story by jW^EickUpi^ v l&J, •AustinjL-Own .Esther Buffler an^. colorful ^ aidgtf.to^en«ti^^FDPwtK--nwAe "**'* mm lis a choice book tor boys or girls. Published by the Steck Company^ mmm •f f j MirtsMiaNT^WwMwto f ( --5 wKvn'Tvv •t'tw '-V^> V>t> mmmm HY TEXAN; Page 10 «# wri'mr m _ ­ m ikfc ~m Get Flat-headed A On Bright: Lights A^fChcdgrsl^ f^r •Wiaakn.^t the ^atoil' acidseea mxe availably at the FeUowship* . Offiee, National Research CJoufc-­ ii t***r pseptagtotwat nem&ir M flietobh®*-^ cC " 21W* Ctftt*titi|ti«ii 4 xYtiidents^ 'WiiidowK, I ast .w*efc:. dent* is increasing rapidly." ! ec|it with the permission of the -• were-moths in search «f com­ Natural Sciencea Fellowship ,;;Aipplieatron« for the »«w W-'M pany and light The JameeF. X4»cotn Are ,Weld- Board they nay attend advanced loWships may be,addressed to tha w, * Ifcr. O. P. Brela*td,profawor injr Foundation his announced ha v^?-VL ?" >\ Merck Fellowship Board with tha-*^ of Soology, beKevee the nMson rules ahd conditions for dnde?),^"* •*£?* »(? f mi .BARBARA RUSENS121K by a local lumber company. Ranger, *t Id Hamilton; Drw I,, LNslson, MUd nwiiBt of .^earhingfijy.^ same address a* the natural uSr -there were so manymoths was graduate engineering awards aiid On July 8, 1941, 60 Guilders professor, of secondary education; tiampns Gnjfd win eelebrateiU that a great number hsd ma~ acholarshlpi in' a 24-pigWt»ook!et. ^. Merck Postdoctoral fellowships flocked to the -Whitjj Street site Ohthc invitation, list too, sn Mark Adams; and Stephen Lea Me- anniversary with a buffet tured at once. Their egg* are Sixty-three awards totaling $5,00Q itt ^he natural sciences are also and began construction. The sole Barbara Oster, president of Pan* Donald, assistant-professor of eeo­ wpper afterthe TCU gam* J*o- usually laid la the fall, hatched will ba made to eairanta uMng arc open to an^icants who produce outsider was a manual arts teach­ hellenic; Bobby Blumenthii, pres-nomics^f^Mfr'f^V!* er in theFort Worth High School* ident of Inter-Fraternity Council; ' 1 •« p K* in the spring as caterpillars, wetd&irJf tmr •videsca td taniping in chem&try w* ONE DA%^ ^|v.$tlt« officials, Uoiverlity ad-and reach the adnlt stag* about* or biology ef^kltst to that rep­GLcamag and Pxcsnag ^ The fellows did all of the work 4h« presidents of Mortar Board, Present Guild officers ax* Vic­ "/Sujiistrartrs officers, and campus how, . resented by the PhD degree, and themselves, with the exception of i, Friars, Cfp and tor Hohle, president; Pete Frank, '-^tkeals have been invited-_tp at- ^Most moths are night fivers^ Thrf National Research Council, «f «»msaal talent for experimen­ pouring concrete, plumbing, and Gown; Army, ^a^ Air •ice-president; in charge of hous­ "land the celebration in honor of They hide in garages and miter endowed by the Rockefeller Feon-tal research. These fellowships are LONGHORN CLEANERS wiring. Force ROTC colon#!*; the.presi­ing;. Louis Hoffman, vicerpresi­n> *4Mf " largest boys' co-op. aemi-dark places daring the dation, offers fellowships to pro-available to individuals for study The Campus Guild is the first dent of Orange Jackets; Wales dent in charge of -eating; Peter ':£)%Th» Guild was first organised men's co-op in the country to be Madden, student president; WU» Coleman, secretary; and Edward day. At nightthey are attracted mote fundamental research in the and research in this country or by light. natural sciences. These fellow­abroad. f . 'back in 16S7 when a group of built wth the sole purpose of being son Fonnan, student viee-presl-Landry, treasurer. "We hare learned to control ship* are offered in the fields of Rulea booklets for the engineer­AUTO REPAIRING , thirteen students who were dis-a co-operative house. ^ The bulld-dent; and Jean Wesley, student Executive councihnen are Don our impulses, such as the detfire mathematics, astronomy, physics, pleased with the poor living ac- ingis two-story, .with *"basement. secretary. • ing awards may be obtained by ' THAT.LASTS! .r ^ 'f Yeatel, Steve Powell, and Fred to throw bricks through plate chemistry; geology, geophysies, writing to the James F. Lincoln pcouonodatiohs at the University Recently, the house was given ja Also, Ann Courier, president of #nd were pressed by th^* high Coffey. Permanent Improvements glass windows,? Dr. Breland paleontology, physical geography, Arc* Welding Foundation, Cleve­We call for & d«Kver. new red coat. • ' . ' Theta Sigma Phi; Joe Neal, for­Chairman is Fred Coffey. Bob said. But the moth just bfcte his botany, zoology, biocBemistry, bi­land 17, Ohio. Application blanks cost of living rented an old, ram* Haity E. Johnson Garag* * V.' s"' eign'"•students' advisor; and the Waldron, social chairman, Ss in head against a light until he's ophysics, agriculture, forestry, an­or additional Information for the shackle house and maintained it Invitations have been extended Management Company,' consisting 605 Trinity St. ' Phona 2-2055 charge of the supper. flat-headed. thropology, and psychology. National Research Fellowships co-operatively. to Governor Allan Shivers; Lieu­'^"Through the years the Guild ex-' tenant-Governor Ben Ramsey; W. ~~7" 'vp*nded until it was seen that a S. Drake, mayor of Austin; Sena­llarger house designed for coopera­tor'Lyndon Johnson; J udge James iMMiiii tive living was needed* This was Hart, chancellor of the Univer­to May, 1941. sity; T. S. Painter, president of -a -V ;.:.•;•••-• -x--;• * ­ v. • • •'• ' '•••'• W "• 1 the University; J. C. Dolley, vice-V 7 president of the University; and .fs'rGIiffonl Tames, a local:archi­tect who had done his master's University de§ns. Also,-the presidents and vice­'thesis for-the University on co­presidents of the co-ops; Rowlandoperative housing, was engaged to Wilson, editor of "th e Ranger;do"the preliminary studies. They Russ Kersten, editor of the, Tex­had everything planned, but no an; Charlie Pistor, editor of the^raoijey. Twee enterprising' students wer^ able to raise some of the Cactus; Brad Byers, managing ed­Equally at home • itor of the Texan;, and Barbara 1needed cash in Washington and Rubenstein, feature' editor of thisilNew York* The rest was financed for work ...for dress . . . for play Round-up . The award, an-engraved plaque, tonservative, yetyouthful, andit can >•*,' I /w r <* -A " Students of the department of --'^iteehaniclil engineering leave Aus­tin Sunday for a four-day Visit of lowered as necessity demands. It is not mandatory for the local boaTds"to^j}J4he^riteria. industrial plants in Lufkin, Hous­itoni and Katy. They are being ^accompanied by L.'F. Kreisle^as- Myron L. Begeman, professor .of mechanical engineering,->vas iisUnt professor of mechanical*"elected president of the Texas -engineering, and B. F. Treat, as­sociate professor of mechanical engineering. Making the trip are Jafar A1 Block, Jerry—' Ward. Brougher, dean of the University Division of ^ Royce 'BrowTi, Jerry Xumir Cou-. fal, Harry Dean, Wayne P-. De-.-A-Behnke, Marvin Drews, Cecil Far­rington, Maurice Ford, Philip Franke, Robert Frias, and John Fuaaell. Also Daymen Graham, Charles SerVice during the next year.Gregg, Nat Harris, Jack Hazel, First prize will be $1,000. There Herman *Jack Jenkins, Harold will be five prizes" of $500 each,JindricK, James Kennedy, John two prizes of $250 each, and ten Knobelsdorf, Juan Laing Jr., Hp-prizes of $100 each. bart -Ledbetter, Douglas Letson, Thomaa Long, Gerald MeLeod, and Harvey Moore Jr. Itames Powledge, Charles RamSfey, Personnel and Management Asso­ciation at the thirteenth annual meeting held in Austin recently. •Himyary, , Lewis , Barns, Edwin Norris A. Hiett, assistant to the Extension, was elected secretaryT Five thousand dollars in prizes will be awarded to graduate stu­dents who write the most "inter­esting" theses by the. Writers' . The closing date will be Decem­ber 31, 1951. There will be no fees of any type; the only rule 1/ Also Kani Nouri, Hosea Peel, is that you should write to Writers.' . Service. 7 East . 42nd -«J,/*'* vtTfJlSc-v * ' $<• >' V!p* ' » ' T* J, • -V Jr^ rI * ^ 44 •'ft./" p •* -^ \* * * {• * '-x'^ ^ j ' * ^ " *Hf% John Bee*, Gilbert ""Robertson, Herbert Roehris, Sebastian Ro­hats, Bertlia Ross, Mary Jo Ross, and William Ruge. Street, New York, 17, New YoVk ; and ask for a booklet of rules and other details, • Also Calvin Simpson, Harry Richard West, editorial writer 8kerritt, James Smethana, Nor­man St. Clair, Walker Stuart Jr., for the Dallas Morning News, will speak to the Newspaper Ethics 'V Lawrence Vance Jr.7 Herbert Lee Vaughan Jr., Ernest Vogt, Ken­neth Webb, William Kenneth Wil­liams, and Luther Boyd Wilsou­ and Advanced Reporting class Monday 1lf""^"a.m.^n j-oufnlliinir Building 212. • A meeting of the 'Faculty­ .... -'• • 't. >% -'L •PP • '• -4" I * -Student Property Deposit Scho-­ilarships to be awarded next spring can be applied for now. About fifteen $100 scholarships will be available. Factors determining awards will be the financial need of the ap­plicant, his desire for a college education, Kis character, and de­monstrated participation in stu­dent activities. "» "Application -blanks may be ob-Itained from the' chairman of . the Committee on Loans and Scho­larship Information, B, Hall 15. , * Freshmen Reading Contest... ends Student "Cabinet Monday will in­clude an explanation of the struc­ture and function of that body by Dean Arno Nowotny and a dis­cussion of problems for considera­tion this Session. The meeting is to be at 4 p.m. in Texas Union 316. The representation on commit­tees as^ specified by University regulations will be checked at the meeting. Members will he intro­duced, and internal organization will be considered. • Dr. Kenneth A. Kobe, profes­sor of chemical engineering, has received an award from the As tailored by Renwood in fine, $uppl9 flannel, the grey flannel suit is the basic suit of your wardrobe. It's dressy, yet relaxedin styling, 1 %*> m. n,It ~ " { s \ 1• > . «, \ v ^ ,-f 1 1 \•*•• $ ^ rjp i* I? -s * :.5. '• r'r" • *'f ^T-.J ^ 4 ' yiK * «/• * 1 Wm, *-t i; • j »* -• Ned v Monday at 5 o'clock. Contestants was mad.e to Dr. Kcff>e for writing , jmust sign in Speech Building 115. the best technical tpaper in. the;•* <# .Selections are to be approved South Texas section In the preced­ be worrj almost anywhere in good by a member of the speech staff ing year. 1 ^,v "before the* preliminary contest ,, ' 11 *1..-U!. agj?j..i.; I' f ,' '}%­vTuesdiiy at 1 o'clock in Speech Ed Olle, business manager and taste day or night. Try one on "»( ^ ' " 1 ,Buildihg 201^ ' • A" ** T assistant athletic director of in­ }. ( *' " i.Stadpnt»..jvith fewer than 30 * » « -ix <• tercollegiate .athletics, has added iiemester hours are.eligible. Selec- tomorrow in single or double • to his duties those of ticket mana­ &;tions. niust be prose and may be v v 7­ ger for he Athletics Department. I~ ^original. Characterizations and He . has taken the work of Mrs. breasted models. impersonations, may not be used. Alfred C. Bull, the former Miss Entries should be from rfive to Alice Archer, who held that jobseven minutes in' length 'with a for 21 years. minimum of dialogue. Albert Lundstedt, who has been Finals will be held November working part-time with the busi­ ^8. An, "Emerson radio is first ness office, for*three years, has prize 'in each division, and .a T*„" Ji''1 been hired as &• full-time admini­ ||P*rker .51 fountain pen is second strative assistant. 1 ? s •> tifii Selective Service College Qua- Ah. A / iJification TeSts wili be given De- t (*>+*;* Jpiittber t3i Applicatiprts feff^the must be postmarked not later -I^lJry\than midnight Monday. '. Exclusively a ^Fhe cwtw|a^oiL.^fiatTm tfte qual .test or satisfactory rank in the When Medicines the freshman "* V upiwr two-^irds of the so- Ar* N*«d«d , . stocks !• ntk* it possible to \ma a graduate school 'must' stand >tj«»is ta yiMtte'r.irf;the upper half bf their classes ,)» score of 75 or better • -."4 foiir Favorita " < •» '' ;**sr * ta^gntduai^cgi^ols aavlSe f '' '»' . remaw ED MINOR, Pharmacist 'iSg&iiMtili