SHBlS^roi ^-'"^ %-ssSf^^'emmiikz W£Mm. vm ,-^TT IMS© nww a ss. •? V*' t 3TN jy?* vvM Talea Madden and Joan Rags-Wale* Hadden and Women Vbteri, 1 Debate 1 Squad, V IP wt 5§ d»*a ware chosen "Best all-round" •aa '"best all-round," Campus Chest, and Pi Beta Phi .(/NI ­ •O?-; boy w*i g&i at the annual Dad's the Dads dhoat two of the inapt sorority. She,ia past pxesident of VOL.51 Price B Centi Pages today active students on the campus. the Orange Jackets, and is nowIt/5 D®y gathering in the Texas Un-Madden was elected president of president of UTSA. She was chos­ $i£r ion Saturday morning and given a,1-' the student body last spring. In en aa Outstanding Studentin last Jo^jpST caps bearing their names. r addition he is past president of the year's Cactus. * The special day started with an c. Iitter4fraternity Council* a mem­Madden-spoke for th, studentinformal breakfast 4n the Union ber of the Cowboys, the Friars, in his welcoming address, saying,building, followed by an address and Phi Detta^Th^ta. He has been "Dads *nd mothers, don't" ever . by Chancellor James P. Har^ and. a Goodfellow for the past t#o forget that'this is as much your Mm years and was an Outstanding'Stu­university as "it is ours, and youI The new president of the bads' dent last year. He has been a are welcome, here every day, not Association is Harry Webb Sr., of member of the University wrest­merely on Dad's Day." Houston. Other officers are H ines ling team two years and is mtra-After a short business meeting, lUker of Houston, Ted B. Brown ihural wrestling champion.* * the dads adjourned to Saturday's m m Joan Ragsdale holds football 'game and to be fchown ."VVAlec.-'-'.l of Dallas, and Ifeoger Boftnsoik of ship in the Orange Jackets, the around the campus by their ,stu­\fs\jp-y»4*. 3 ^ ^ "* I ^ 3.^ Raymondville, Tie e -presidents; Mortar Board, Campus League of dent offspring. ~ By AL WARD W4 they went,down for their sgcofttl defeat, 18-6. second . place jn the: Conference, leaving ~ Dean W. D. Blank of Austin, see-^ i-VTi -if/ft Vl * T* v ? /'* SKlT—» 8pm» BUtt ^ ^ retary; and Bob of ,v A Bad's Day crowd of 5S,000 watch4d the gaine with two defeats and two victoHes; Armstrong r The4 Baylor Bears mixed the ball-hahdlinsr ma­ . Austin; treasurer. Steers skim to a 6-0 lead late in the first half, with a 3-0 marled ' pjjjjjj Awards were given'to dads with fific of-Quarterback Larry Isbell with the crisp then succumb to. the Bear's 9-minute 18-point TO ~ With Texas anticipating isbeil'a aeriai unusual backgrounds. Otto Schle-AWSTC-S & .j IT"' running of its two halfbacks Saturday and the second half barrag^. ' Baylor quarterback discovered early-that meyer, 80-year-old farmer from brew proved too strong for Texas' Longhorns as The defeat knocked Texas from its grip on ners could through the Steers' 54-3 < Axle, was the oldest, dad, Three dads tied as having the moat chil­sive alignment end so access dren in the University. B. E. An­ to the ground: most of^l derson ofManor, J. R. Hunnvcutt Dads from over the state shbwed Saturday morning, said^ey were" game. He tossed only; of Austin, and J. P. Williams of " " stin game Sair^An^fl iOTr 4hi^-eee*^$ba -theirpgeasiiga »ud~hposting totha aerials, most, of them-sew ^™ie^n^,„MLthit...they..w§jft most" typical" 'dad award giv®n J. A. Maxwell of Houston, campus Saturday morning. Onrin.L. Hil^rd of Fort Worth, ^1. « 4 ' 2 l i • most tvnical" dad was Dads' Day festivities held on the not University exes themselves. passes or fast serves to the ~ and J. Kendrick Noble of Yon A surprising number l>f dads, vice-president of the Dad?s Asso­ kers, N. Y., was considered the middle,-and completed picked at random from the erowd ciation, who was working in, the dad who traveled-the-greatest dis*. y«rds. , milling around the Texas Union Union ticket booths Saturday morn-' « , 'i tance ing, said' it was the first game », The strategy upset the ' In his official welcome to the he had seen in Austin $ince last US and Texas defenses—an dads, Chancellor Hart bragged a year's SMU battle. ^Halfbacks Jerry £oody a _ _ little on the University students, • Mr. Hilyard-said that since tha Carpenter, along with Fullbadc ? saying, "I believe students of the first DAds' Association meetini Dick Parma chipped the. uisuall University of Texas, represent the he 'had observed ''changes >ys'y.: %JSf rockwall-Steer defense .for cream of the crop of the young erything" about the ci yards. «ear forward blockea m people in the State of Texas.'VHe Mr. Eugene Sandera^nrst sec­turned in as effective « job J Decision Saddens ;exas and California are at the (the Longhorns) for 81 yearsj Texas' ground game had its' . iop of the list in educating stu­even though I'm not an ex-stu­-usual power and consistency, b)gt; -H 2,000 Students ? dents from their own state. He dent."-.runners couldn't solve the aft ^ added, believe'this is indica­-There were-2,000 or more dis­e .related, that he grew up of hanging on to the ball, ttfa tive of 'the high regard in which 'down near A&M." His son, Phil­times they lost it on fumble#; four' ­ appointed students on the cam. • the citizens of our state place in as T. S. Painter,^jnresi* ip, Js on the Longhorn tennis of these coming in the second Friday the University of Texas." team. half. Two of the thefts started, dent, stated that the Thanksgiving _1 "We are convinced intellectual Some dads, such as W..F. Fer­Baylor scoring drives and on* holiday could not.be.«huiged from an scheduled erased the Steess' initial payoff ^guson of GVahamrslid tlfe Baylorindependence is necessary to the November 29 to game was the first game they, had threat which had carried 83 ya«r-""i^ American way of life, and this November 22 seen in Austin. to the Bruin eight. . %Sluniversity shall not merely be a ApproJtifiiately one-fifth df the Mr. Ferguson added, "I have to The opportunist,Bei^Mw...w factory for sterile minds," he as­students had signed a petition remain pretty neutral in football. to tackle the ball as often as tha­serted. . asking" for the change. —-­ One boy graduated" from SMU, earner—^a legal tactic* x whidtll ^ Explaining why the jhange r and the other is going here." -But served them well. "" / could not be made, Dr. Painter he did say he hoped Texas won. . Athey, a 215-pound granita I said, "I recognize the awkward-Mr* and Mrs. E. E. Burkhart of OFF AND RUNNING is Longhorn halfback Don Barton (43) in his left end for a sizeable gain in the Steers march to the Baylor junior guard, w*« * particuWIness. Of this sitiiation, httt the de-Corsicana said that it was the first •firsfqtfarleraction-Ogainsl-fheBaylorvBears^nMemoritflStadium five-yard line. Baylor-defenders,-tackle Ken Casner479) .and-line?, .ttyiaance to^ Longhorn' effortai oision was made by the Board of game they had seen this year. The .Saturday afternoon. The quick-starting halfback has just broken off backer C. O. Brocafo, (54) are in pursuit of the fleet halfback. Playing double • du^,r Be #is~lfi(: Directors of Texas A&M and the last gamer they saw in Austin was •. -• oyer the field on defense^ recovers ^ Board of Regents of the Univer­with SMU a few years ago. ing the two fumbles that led i£ M sity last year, After this year we touchdowits, making stops on both ng for student tickets to won't have this conflict." sides of the-line, and starching the UT-TCU gitme will continue The late Thanksgiving holiday Wednesday Is Deadline Dan Page so hard on the Bear five onday-through^ Greg­ :w&s ehosfD„t« coincide with the att-< that he fumbled to end ilia fftmt «m fcy Gym from 8:80 a.m. to 12 and On Oak Grdve Bidding nual Turkey. Day game between Texas threat. from 1 to 6 p.m. Students picked the schools, scheduled for Novem­Athey was inserted Into the ^ up the bulk of the tickets at the' Deadline for bidding on the Oak b e r 2 9 t h i s y e a r . • fense when'his team moved to double drawing last week for Bay-Grove Hutinents #111 be 11 a.m. Friday afternoon a «ub-comonit> within sight of the . Texas goal "h\ ler and TCU games. Wednesday,. when bids will be the Faculty-Student Cab-and helped open the safe-door ^ —Approadmately 4&,006-ticketa tee of opened .by. Jack Taylor,...business inet, which studies stiulent griev­holes which Baylor backs followed ? for the TCU game have already manager, in Main Building 102. "" been sold or drawn, Ed Olle, tick­ances, also opposed changing the Sale of the hutments was an­By JEFF HANCOCK Saturday'and hopes for a South­A Jolly Good Fellow." y. tion of being able to sit back and lo pay-dirt. ' " r«MMt sport* Su.11 et manager, reported Saturday. holiday date. Wales Madden, stu­nounced Wednesday by F. C. Mc-west Conference title went down -Both Baylor and Tex^l im^owed enjoy the halftime ceremonies Texas' Harley Sewell ttiatche^'^* Plenty of seats remain in the ten-dent body president and represent­Connell, University housing divi­While slowly flling out of Me^ the dram. great offensive promise the', first with -a.six-point. lead. ;. -1>."J-. A t h ey's performance, being ative of the sub-committee, said: counted onT 25 tacklesr-Hmsists and yard zones, the north end, and the sion director. Probable sale, price morial Stadium Saturday a disap­In pre-game ceremonies the new time they got .the ball by march* The half-time show cited Dads' individual.bleachers. j-"We feel that to enact a change' is $100 to $500 each. The ground pointed Longhorn fan was heard president of the Dads' Association, ing.nearly the length-of the field Day and -WomenB' :Enlistment ... Isbell. brandished the seal ofBlanket Tax tickets remaining at this late date would impose is to' be cleared for the new Law to say, "That lousy vblack dog Harry C. Webb of Houston, father before faltering. But the defen­Week. The 543rd Women's "Air ail-American before the hag* in „the revolving barrels at 5 p.m. unjust hardships on those students Building. Bidding is open to any-jinxed us." ^ Force Band from Lackklnd Air of University studftit Harry C. sive. units held and the game set* c^owd—largest ever to watchjgte 5 Friday will be sold to the public and faculty members* including •one. >•' Webb i was a^ hilt rock-em—sock-Force Base in San Antonio joined the ^cas Whether it was the fatilt of the Ji„ presented tied down, into a series—keeping leery at:>$8>®Q' each. Two tickets are the Longhorn football team, who with the Longhorn Band and Bay­ Regulations and other informa­black dog who trotted on and off by the COwboys. ^This climaxed em affair for the rest, of the defense off-balance all-afternoon allowed each purchaser of left­had already made plans dependent is avail­"Golden -Wave" band for tion concerning bidding the turf during most of the game Dads' Day activities as the L6ng-firfct half. The HOrns tallied just, lor's with his deft faking, mechanics,over tickets. on the current schedule." able at 2610 Whitis Avenue. or the fault of the tall-tackling horn Band formed a-< pipe, and before the half-ended to give part of theis field entertainment. then mixing in a.pass or two to To wind up' the ticket business, Only The University of Texas, Baylor Phone is 7-4-122. Baylor Beafs, the Longhorns lost dipper: while playlnfe ''T^f.^He's Longhorn 'supporters the satisfac-The and . Texas bands keep it that way. --, drawing for A&M seats will be Texaii AAM, and Lamar College formed a pennant around a BU' His cool maneuvering ' while "wjg held, at the regular hours Monday, will celebrate the holiday on No-and played "That Good bld Bay­hunting a perfee- November 10, through Friday, No­•vember 29 in Texas. formation. receiver was Most Outstanding Men lor Line," for the first tion. On the last play of the first'" vember 28. •; r -Under present circumBtances^ Next tlie WAF band foitned a US See FOURTH, Page 2 y \t " A heavy line of general ticket Dr. Painter is the only person and the two school hands spelled buyers to the Baylor ^ game with the power to order emergency out WAF, WAVES, WACS, and swamped the office until closing alterations in University holidays.' MARINES. In this formation the time at noon Saturday, totaling The ciamrbign to change: -the Baylor band played "The Caisson 4 New Ugly Men. Can File ^ftbout 60,000 tickets, officials holiday date was supported pri­Song," tlren the Longhorn. band said. Two hundred left-over stu­marily by students who will miss playe^ "Anchors Aweigh," and dent. tickets were grabbed up family reunions and trips whith the three bands combined to play at quickly Friday afternoon;— > ar« ^ scheduled on November 22,. "The Marine Hymn." " Other students have said it would Texas student card section did ^ffiling of candidates* names fof7^^ be easier •for them to attend the six half-time stunts, presenting the "Ugly Man" contest will begin game if it were scheduled on a a Baylor Bear, a/pipe with HELLO November 19, in the Alpha Phi school day rather than at a time IfiSls a waving US ,flig, an Omega office, national" service when they would be .scattered orange and white replica of the fraternity, at Texas Union. across the state. Lone Star State^lhe numbers 42 Any organization -entering ^4,1 The petition campaign was orig­and 68 honoringxexas co-captains candidate must place a $5 en« inated by Barbara Rubenstein, stu­Bobby Dillon and June Davis, and trance fee in * box in the APO* With just a week left before dent: in journalism. One of the a "Vote for Amend. Two," to re­office. The $5 will be Valued as the TCU game, the Rally Com­{foints set forth in the petition mind;fans of Monday's permanent 200 votes for each candidate. ^ ^ mittee began preparation FridSy was that under the present setup fund vote. • Election ;day will be November «j||for its final 'operation of ihe year. many*fetudents will cut the Vreek 1 The WAF band left the field 23, and.the trophies will be award-J after playing the "Air Fotcb ed Saturday night 'at a party forf1; enth; will be -presented.^ at half-be with their families. This would time at.-the TCU game, according mean cutting three days instead intricate drill movtefhents set to Rejebian, to Randall. Dodkyry-, committee of the one required to see the m u s i c. Sixteen _ pretty-limbed year's winner, will present th^ chairman. Whiie all plans have Aggie game. Texas Stars were the next attrac­ a,wardo. • A candidate^ .who wins^riot been completed, stunts hon­tion while ti^irlin^ their batons a? three. times, in oring returning University athle­Jthe Longhorn band played^ the not necessarily succession,.may keep the tfophy.' ^ tic lettermen, the bands. that/will "Gloria", march. The 'Horn musi­Proceeds from the contest:be here for Band Day, the visiting cians then formed TU with the go, to the Campus Chest fund; Horned Frogs, and a turkey for HENRY GORDON BRASWELL LLOYD NELSON WAND DONALD LEE KLEIN MILLER WILLIAM MEREDITH Baylor band and played the " Thanksgiving are already set. ^ of Texas. The TCU game will mark the Henry Gordon Braswell, Cleyd Campus Chest .'representative; and founded the student book^ ex­dent of Lambda Chi Alpha fra 1950 Longhorn quarterback, Hotrod Owners Plan disbandment of th* Rally Com­Nelson Hand, Donald Lee Klein, chairman of several committees. change and the cabinet system. He ternity, Attorney General, a mem-, Ben Tompkins, commented at the Club Meeting at 2ilhmittee until .next September, He is on the advisory boa>rd of By RUSS KER5TEN and Miller William Meredith have has been named. to -Goodfellow bpr of the presidents oibinet, and half that /'the game could go ckery' praised the long, Ward the Student Christian Association, and Outstanding Student posts in either way." According to Texas Sixty-nine' hotrodders, in been tapped by Friars, honorary a . jnember of Inter-Fraternity work of committee members. secretary of .foreign relations on a number of University st senior men's organization, as the Cactuses. He is a member of Cow­Council. . fans, it weni the wrong way. "Dockery •said few errors were A representative of one of the four most outstanding men in the the president's Cabinet of tKe Stur boys and the Athlettc Cbuncil and, He is a member of Beta Alpha Baylor's^ black bear mascot had signed up Saturday as, made at the SMU game, with the pleading cigarette companies met v : dent Association, and • a member members of the Austin University this fall. an honorary mefnber of the Arab Psi, honorary and profession^ ac­seemed to be satisfied that the exception of mistaking red for his match Satqrdsy moraing in the of Cowboys. ; ''' " ^ Students Association. game would .take care of itself Club. Its organizational counting fraternity, ^Beta Gamma maroon, and the University stunt Union. * y . ' ' Selection is made. by those Hand, a senior government-ma: J Klein is a . senior pre-medical Sigma, honorary business frater­the second half as. he escaped his is «• at the ZUker Park miMatut»l section could be called one of the Scurrying among the dads giv­Friars still in^jtchool, and is. based jor from Houston, has been presi­plane airport at 2 o'clod(v$ajii3ay1 student from Shet4nan. He let^ nity; Phi Delta Phi, honorary legal keepers long 'enough to jump up Jbiest in the «tate. ing comparison tests, the salesman on interest in the University, in­dent. of the student ;body and afternoon. tered in basketball and track, and In North 6nd tegrity, scholarship, honesty, lead­fraternity; Chancellors, Cowboys, the zone and give The Committee's sponsor, the thought he spotted an easy mark chstirmati' of the Union Boaftl of was vice-president of T Associa­the Boy Scouts a diversion from The club was forme and the Baptist Student Union". He1 Texas Book Store,: also . drew seated comfortably on a first-ership, activities, and character. Directors and the Univetsity Cru­tion. He: is president of the game. that members can "sou that or­received his bachelor .of. business praise from Dockery.: The store floor sofa.* . Braswell, a mid-iiiw student sade for Freedom Drive. He was ear motors for fuel ganization,. He also is a Lieuten­administration degree with honors furnished all the instruction and He gave him what he termed from Paris, Tex., has served in vice-president of Rusk Literary Ex DlM of Polio greater speed, and & ant (j.g.) in the Naval ROTC, a in 1949. eratiojti and try .them without color cards for the,committee. -"the famous nose test" and asked:. student government t>n. the Stu and—Debate Society, officer of member, of Alpha Epsilon fyelta, Itol --• ... -• *, Past members of the Friars still " especiaU^want to~«9ia» Bernard W. Shaenfield, Upiver-endangering traffic; icmmett m iiiy;-Appreciation for tftir co^opefca= +polio^;in few Jv# tion during the Baylor half-time regular ,AntoS«> -oit Octobef-g «m^?K^Ra1rWiLn ST^Vaw Meredith,-"a senior'law student ter^ Koien7"9teilirig^Strand Shaenfield was "28.years old and a rack where fin^b "7her* "The answer: "Hell, no. 1snrofce Gartiival-, Hahd^also was an associ-from been Sail"Durham ap, Corpus' Chrtati, /has Marlin Thompson. They 'have n an-'member of Sigma Alpfca Mu fra-their 'caw under s ateiiUstiee of the"" " ^Sitor of.ThCjj* ---• : ally other. Everyone was swell.' to sell that" toom«t fpr the Daily Texan, . a JHe-waa an army While in. student gdv^ment he ew, ^ce-prosid'^iit^and pres: new members Sunday. , • ' 'tenant: ^nmr.n'-t-If# tenant during. World War ^1? IFSm. MftigpWiSEBiiW^ijCTS fmm •f; 6 -'Win % a •« -4 * v * »^V * ... -^=—1 Nv.'*g« 38Mv R SSISS B '52 Orange Bo ;.pp Bear ll^^'svi,, * ^ vjssif JFew SWC T.om« at fullbiiek, ^urrfe^^ghe X««gfce#» «ij;p*g;ctia A*U®2 1 two-yard -line just before the «ec­ ^•x^vHh-' $p** sj^Wf terbaek, we* tackled before he iAmong 10 Chei«M. t?;$C-IS"! K^'iW i^iefy your . .., ond Baylor touchdown. could handoff jthe ball. 4ftTC*SAv Miy," Dr. W. JE. White,' "It'll the first time 'MIAMI, Fla./ Kov. 10—W— ^ . " Anyone of the.three men could Georgia Tech was signed Saturday £«£ sSUBSfft,B«yk* University, on a Baylor team tliat beat / ||v!! Aottted to * whooping, yeMingj make tile tackle when the shift as," Williams said. "I play to play in tjbe Orange Bowl gam Bfettrai& i&ir dressing room. IMIM1 tied the Texa*; Yearlings, Stuart W. Fatten, president of , ^No" jscaettea Monday," Coicl? Stan Williams, left offensive fcngh^MflM i;»S the Orange Bowl committee, said. -;-#801^' Sauer told them. Cheer# end, was particularly pleased 'With negotiations had been completed "Texaa Is Hie nest-VeVe it jmd trior# *cheers greeted these his ,blocking when Richard Parma, ^7^7. fhe'y'reVlot better Thursday with the approval of ; two announcements. Crach Bobby -Dodd and membera Arkansas, TC0, and AftM," be * The Baylor Bears^ after twelve of tie Orange Bowl schedule *9°^ ' said; ®#vtem years, *ere enjoying wafer? Larry label], Baylor quarter" mittee. . •> ' Y -\k'v first triumph Over the Longhorns since 1939 by hearty handshakes, -> Thm adbeti«» waa mwdm uri^T^l & .Plamination terrifio back slaps, load whoop*, im th« Georgia Teeh-V.M.1. were pointing * Dawsbii fs ' pleased" with the performance of loat to Tal*» 26>12 in 194S and | the best runneiiin theCoirfePf hi* team. ^Everyone had a good b«at Kumi, 20-14 in IM®> | •ence," Isboll continued.. "'J day," he said. He wouldn't pick out an outstanding performer for th* *•'.••• "You can't beat *that Dfcvii Georgia Tech will be given a| Bears but Indicated recovery of (June) for a. defensive player and guarantee of $90,000 for the< game. Patton said, that when addi-f Texas fumbles had a hand-in the Williams (PaulX*r|a. v- receipts the t outcomc of the"game. -.. ". '«»-aU;iO»r -THE SCORING PUNCHjb*fjbut the, Longherm.tnto the lead Jack Reid (17 teammates Sale Gal^yjio^dS^^i^ tionai are divided, defensive -^-^osjmo Brocato^ ti^efoiy^Hnef team will get approximately f­ "We had a special 5-0, Iwith opiff HT5 remolnmg trt TB^TlSf^ half was this pass that . houn (6Q} loofc $4,000°more. The Orange Bowl" -for^Fesasi-SpliW^^iuar-: Kt>id^wonkM the randdd^inended in ffio arms LortdHorn dnd Tom Sfoihondske (851, who . . ffie'orws of Lort^hofn ind tomjWolhondsjTe (85)/who had "SFomaridste scatch was oneofthew^ea^0mp^etedby, seats 05,OOO spectators. ^ _ terbaek—three men on either aide f cleared "himself behind C. Q. firocoto (54) on the Baylor 2. Racing Longhtfrns, the other two being tossed by.J. jonps to Gib D«w*pn, bt line shifted 'to the outside of beat men offensively for the Long* Patton said the committee did i JuiileiytJo.. bceak„up ,tbfl fesjufrom. Don , whSay w^sTtKey-cW^ ** ' ,"Jjorn's." „ i } vi "f*\. * /MJk t.-'-x. said. • /' '^That Sewell (Harley) ptayed opponent .for "another week? or, >. He was referring to the several -COACH GEORGE SAUER "J lils:heart out,4or Texas,'but going ^two.'':>-5-v" Y' ; double duty , like' that really is 'xA, Tech will be the southern repr#-v if fsf rough," he said. "V sentative and the committee is JerryCoody, hard runiilnglialf­ looking at a number -of other Football Scores back, for Baylor, had nothing teams the country as an J acrossbut praise for the Longhorns, |i opponent. «"They were sureJ good sporty SOUTHWEST Boston University 85, Oregon 6. t T * ^ The -Orange Bowl committee alwurs helping you up, pattmg you said it had narrowed other teams Baylor 18, Texas 6, * Penn State 32, Syracuse 13. . on the back, and just being, gen­down to ten. They are: Y SMU 14, Texas A&M 14. Army 27, The Citadel 0. - erally, a tough, but clean team," he. said. Maryland, Clemson, Oklahoma, i Abilene Christian 50, Austin Col-: Maryland 40, Navy 21. Those fumbles hurt Texas, but £kin Francisco, Holy Cross* Villa-1, lege 33., Ohio State 10, Pitt 14. those are the breaks of the game nova, and one of four teams frtyn , Rice 6, Arkansas 0.-(Continued from Page 1y -cepted to begin the ilrst' Baylor, Baylor •recovery fumble They drove to the > Texas 49, "• Jforth Texas State 61, Midwestern VUlanova 26,-Detroit 7." and the fact that we cashed in on half, Paul Williams caught him touchdown thrust. Jones was more stopped the. march. from where Isbell punted out-of-Texas—Texas, Texas ' Christian,^ them shows we were determined Baylor and Texas AlcM. 0. ^ .' SOUTtf before he could . thro^p and' effective in the air, trying three Barton contributed 35 of the bounds 'on the Texas 11. Two r v Clemson 21, Boston. College 2^ to wins Steers' 44 yard drive to the"Baylor plays later, Page letl Dawson too West^exas State SO, New Mexico dropped Itim for a nine-yard' loss. and completing two for' 32 yards. ' A&M20. Virginia 34,( North Carolina 14. That statement typifies the at­Isbell shook like a hooked fish in Don Barton completed a 16-yard 15, then tossed a running pass to much with a pitch-out agd Athey Okie Sqaeeae* By Pitt, 16-14 ; JJast Texas State 21, Stephen F. William and'jMary 28, VPI 7. titude of the Baylor Bearsr al­the big. end's arm*, showing dis­pass to Tom Stolhandske for the Stolhandske in the end zone with recovered for the Bears on the PITTSBURGH, Nov. 10—(/P)— i though no one player said it ver­ only Texas score,/ 1:1S left in the first hsilf. Davis Steers' 10. Isbell loosened things Ohio State made good on three of* Austin 19, Tennessee 60, Washington and lee batim. like for what-is to him an un­ missed the conversion and led at up with an incompleted pass, then four 'scoidng^ opporitinities !Satur-f ? Southwest. Texas State 2fl, Sam familiar role. Gib-Dawson and Barton paced 14. ­the half, 6-0, as Isbell's passing Coody drove to the one and Parma day to beat Pitt, lflrli, who haa4 Houston State 20. "But -Laughing Larry Had the the.Texas running attack, Dawson Wake Forest 10, Dukel3.^ attack fizzled. punched it over. yet to win a; game this year. .The g MIDWEST ; 'M§~1 Illinois lists Passos ^ ^ last jaugh for that was the only getting 66 yards in nine attempts Georgia 7, Florida 6. pass that didn't" g$ Away, and and Barton, playing double-duty, Using Coody, Parma, and-Car­Don-' Barton rushed through deciding points'of the jtcap Came*" Oklahoma 34, Missouri 20, . Georgia Tech 84,«VMI 7. To Dofoat Iowa, 40-13 gaining 82 yards .in 18 carries. penter, and a timely Isbell-to-from right end to deflect his in the third quarter on a 20-yard| while he kept the Longhorns busy Nebraska 34, Iowa State 27, Louisville 85, Houston 28. j Michigan State 35, Notre Dame 0. Alabama 40, Mississippi Southern 7 CHAMPAIGN, I11.7Nov: 10— looking for the next one, Ms off* Isbell' thought Dawson was the Harold Riley passV B aylor fourth extra-point kick for the field goal Vie Janomici:. | : Illinois-40, Iowa 13. _ •_ ^ UP}*~S1,0 p hom o r^QuarterbMk the-hip ball-handling was spring­"best runner I've ever seen." uautSfined a drive Ihat reached the season and the seore read#^Texas Texas five, after the second half, 6j Baylor 12, ing Baylor runners loose for yar­Jim Lansford,. Bill McDonald, "5s*^ Minnesota 18,~Tn^ianaT4. ~ ~ " Mississippi Sffp'Auburri T4. ^ Tommy O'Connell wliilaed^^^^^^^^^^ opened. Another great defensive < -Purdue 35, Northwestern 14. . v Sewanee 3, Centre 0. . : . first-half scoring passes to end Joe dage and the ball game. He also and Stolhandske led the blocking Williams took the short kick- punted fiw£. timea for a tidy, 42,'4- stand,,with^ off and returned it to the. T ' ~ Wisconsin 1(5, Pennsylvaniai,;fcss; Kentucky;;a7, Tulane Q. Vernascoasunbeatenlllinois.-the^ -? Mississippi 27, Nation'^ number two 'average., Davis, Bill Georges, Sewell, and the way, snuffed the threat. After 35, where Jackie Reid's neat theft Kansas 34, Loyoli^ (Los Angeles) State Memphis team, 36. -;• State 20. chopped Iowa, 40 to 13, to Page directed the Longhorn Jack • Barton shining defensively. Bill Georges and Sewell leading gave Baylor possession. The 1>»s LIKE NEW AGAIN! three plunges into the' line, Adams' line held and Baylor was forced "'t-"Tulsa 42, Kansas State 26. --Vanderbilt 20, Louisiana State 13. strengthen -its Big Ten title and split-T for all but the last six The opening-phases of the v •• .7MHKS 7$ S*MT$Me punted to the Texas 26. to punt. •" '" '"«V Cincinnati 40, Ohio University 0. FAR WEST Rose Bowl chances Saturday^ , ' minutes. r H i s hand-offs were game predicted; a great offensive 9*yCl£**M$f v Drake 14vWichita 7. UCLA 7, Oregon State 0. -The seventh straight Illini vic­rushed by the hard-charging of show by both teams. Baylor took Another IsbeW-to-Riley comple­Texas worked from the 20 to opening brought the scrimmage CAST t Colorado 54,'Utah .0. > * ^ tory—and their fourth Confer­Baylor's Luke Welch, Ken Casner, the kick and marched tion line the 31 on Barton's hard-running -^ < Ilutgefa 28, Brown 21* -r -WashingtonStat&.fl,JdaJro^v—" ence-win—also-l*fcrfttde •• run, the Steers reached theJBaylor With T Jones under, the deter­47 in four plays. But Red Donald­mined Steers fashioned a drive to son intercepted Page's pass, in­the'Baylor 88 where another fum­ mm tended for Spring but too short, ble punctured any comeback and Baylor took over on its 37. hopes. . * Finer Points L^i; DEEP IN THE HEART OF TEAM STATISTICS .Baylor fnw ga loasaet m 'ewt First Downs . .... tr. 12 D. Barton «2 » " TEXAS • Yard* Ruahins 208 .186 Dawson .«•««« :-«r ' • Yarda Pasting 69 47 ^ Oehos 20 S 20 P«»a«a Attamptcd ....: .18• « • Page". •' M :S IS Passes1 completed 8 ,/"• a Pace .. •2 0 Your Sorts Wiff Look Lib Now Tool Own Passes Intercepted _ 0 1 T Jones e s. -sPunts | .1 -B . 5 PASSING ; e Colon sparide.-oHdlrl r«m«v*d •jd (0b, ^ ~ . .. > , , 42.4 att carta* iat yds 1 Puntine. Averas* • '82.2 ;" > IM>» hwltlwi iRnmbles Lost ..,.t. t ^ , S IsbetT, Baylor. . IK / 8 ' 0 .69.. Yard* Penalised ^. 26 y' .13 Jones, Texas ^ I.-**!'."-'a .'•St--' . a Nrfect imsrlwto tongw LINEUPS. D. Barton, Texas ... 1 '1. 0 IS.. • hMa niiptMW sofJt, tlfce ww fa«l\, Page. Texas" I 0 " -X-' S ^-••2 TEXAS. FUNTING -/ "7iy'"Oar MmgU Strrh* 1p4*rIl*(t ends-^-WilltamSc Stirlnr. Ceortre*, . . yuots avg. U*naact> . ... Isben. Baylor .u u„._6 42.4 Left tackles—Lansford, Petrovleh, Wil­ Adams, 'Texas ' r 32.2 son •• . . Kelly-Smith PASS RECEIVING Lfft jcasrds—STUder. Flemln*. Sewell •i' caught ydsCenters—J. Barton, McDonald, Reeder CunntDshan. Btsht guards — Sowell, Riley, .-Baylor s:.r.•.. 4 48 Cleaners Davis: ' 'Dawson, Texas . ..... . 2 32 .« Stolhandske, Texas • "• 1 16Right tackles—ifilbnrn. Swholm ' jit Right; ends — Stolhandske, lncr»ham, Williams. Baylor " -Z „ • 511 W. 19th 2-3131 Coody,'' B»ylor ' • •. 1--4 Adams * . ; ~ £a)UVaftk Baylor .1 4Quarterbacks—Page, Jones'. Dillon Left.halfbacks-r-Danraon, Smith, Raler Bight halfbacks—D. • Barton, Pace, White Hi IFaltbaeks—Oehoa, Price, .Branch i BAYLOR Lefti llliams, Black. Broom • Left tackles—-Knowlee. ^felch Compare Prices 7=® Left guard*—Athey. Bates Center*—Sia«o. Galloway . / Right tickles—Dowden. Casner " Right enda—Riley, Troat Quarterbacks—Isbell. Donaldson Left halfbaeks^-Carpenter, Joaea--— ­Right halfbaeke—Coody. Glen Jones, Rent Typewriters Sullivan, Schleuning. Sherman Fullbacks—Parma. Brocato SCORE BY PERIODS " -1 month Texas 0 « 0 ft— 8 Baylor , . .. 0 « « 12—IS 2 months . • -T 4.75 SCORING Texas; Touchdowns—Stolhandske. 3 months 7.00 Baylor: Touchdown—Coody, Parma. -Car­penter. 4 months ILi.A 9,25 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING ~ 5 months.....„;... , 11.50 BAYLOR / ti gn lossnet 6 months 15 72. 0 72 10 67 '4 S3 9 months 2 -20.50 16 8« 64 6J8 0 SS 12 months ..i... 27.00 1 1 0 tl * • -: ••• •••• •. By -coming downtown (or by merely* picking up your »• -. i pnone) and renting fromus—you practically J 1 / , , SAVE 50% ^ . V /. Delivery and Pi•' ' tSMS* .VnMBjte-i x; 'M'. m gfaBfr" iM MB I® • rel m JCTBfflK 'Jf§ Ve>^ Qi* -A ^draftsin/ " * **•% ^ * ' sEasses ;1 X-* > * NEW ORLEANS, NOT. 10.-^#) ST*tatnp& bltf ^line^7*eputWtty ParttU's magic -Tight passing' wghi^wilted under the steady EAST LkNSING. MichV^ov. *sent Kentucky xooming to • smashes -l^-.-SeiWd^r'p--jriciduf ST-0 victory over 10.—Big Dick PanhTpoured befuddled Tu­forward*"" ^ through the d^ree tomakehis game total. 13 and a tie with Ed.Ford of Hardin Jerry Norton, a gangling sopho-A crowd of !i4,506^-&i6 'sS^t' ing in the half. It was on a pass scored, three toufthdown* the first ture anda bright sun;'' 5 ; of 18 for172 yards. Simmons. more, smashed and crashed the lest SMU has j>layed before ip which Smith took on the SMU 25 four times it gained the ball »nd Michigan-Stat*, years—cheered the great fight of slammed down Notre Dame's at­ crippled, limping Mustangs into and lateraled to Glen l>ippn||in. nationally and aiming for the what •waa regarded aa an. upset. the Methodists, playing' with the Hooper again converted. • -V r~f-1 tack so hard that not until the presented a bewildering array „., The Aggies were heavy favorites power of their defense on the • The-tying touchdown w«6^als<| last play of the third period'did backs ^ and a puverising ,Um I towin the game. v < • sidelines with injuries and with led by Norton «nd stretched ; 52 the Irish get to midfield. " V headed by Don Coleman, ttie Bat Southern Methodist ex­pasting Fred Benners handicapped Bill. Barrett's punt" that rolled Negro tackle. . r, ^ i weary yards. A 25-yard > run by celled even in the statistics. The by a sore hand. Norton set it up. A1 jSansen diVed dead ,on State's 12 set the;-stage Michigan State Scored SMOKS FOR MIH Methodists ground out 158 yprirds SMU |odlt to the ground far over from dhe foot out and StQl for fanin's spectacular run. The the,first peridd and ^nce in tiMOf on the ground -with the great its two touchdowns—also' •onto* leriwerck again converted. " 187t-pound fullback almost fum­of the other periods. .. bled th^ ball on•handoff from — • • I.I— i .i ;i..' ii »i ' \ii Quarterback*A1 Dorow and' then broke -Notre Dame's closdly- SALE! SALE! bunched seeondaiy.~ before anyone LITTLE DUTCHMAN DON WEEDQir SERVICE STATION sutprfsiifgly potent .TCU Frog^ hop into Memorial 'Stadium -Sat-. j„ v Aaaauac— W>w r>a««ll»a ; urday afternoon fbr-a crucldl WUta «r TratRe ' Mtfe ~ HOUSTON. Nov. 10.— ter rammed guard for two more miued on a field jroal attsmpt. By Tennessee Vols Rice Snatched a 6-0 victory from and then that second penalty— It was almost eveh-steven in ; Southwest Cqnfere'nCe "bitHeT­ " WUta SMa W^OTiraa . Arkansas' burly Razorbacks Sat­an offside one—put the ball-on statistics, but Rice's yardage came with > T^xis5 , ' r : Longh'orris... The KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Nov. 10— urday night and Billy Burkhalter's the one. Burkhalter wiggled over. in Arkansas territory while the (fF)—Tennessee's mighty Volun­' ;Sar®EBiSr'-sw- Frpgs' are current league-leaders goal line plunge made up for near­It made little difference that Porkers got only .as far t(s the teers, unbeaten, and. the nation's STO. A tn -_^-.atiS§­ ly 59 minutes of fumbling frustra­Bill Wright missed the °extra with a;3-0?f»'c6fcl:s >'.f ,4,''r S4» A IS IITJI; Owls' 26. Another drive—in the • -I • •. ijiri 1•. >" -.*i1• f'' ii*11 't-t -j-VV-.; ' v No7 1 team, rolled on toward ,a; ' ',v UtkCondltteM) ' : i ..aji tion for the Owls, Po«t. > , vSjj-third quirter—ended when Pit :**' '''' •*, ^ • post-season bowl game Saturday Six times the Owls hftd been in Twiee earlier in this final"perl-' Summerall's field goal attempt Baart Win in 'Daa, 37-28-.vj by crushing Washington andj^ee,scoring position, but each time ed the Owl* had knocked at Ar­fell far short, from the 31. 60-14. , •BERKELY, CaHf., Nov.10—(iP) Newly Decoraf*&g'' fumbles or a granite Arkansas de­kansas' goal. A fumble by Daniels -On the ground Rice m&de 151 Hank Lauricella touched off the one threat —California's Bears, coming from a ASAovnmstDM fense'had chilled their hopes. Un­stopped on the seven. yards, Arkansas. 152. In the air rout with-20-yard touchdown til the last two minutes of the Arkansas stopped' this other on the Owls gained 68 yards. Arkan-behind in the last few minutes, gappol three minutes ifter the game, it looked like their hopes to the four, f torn where Wright sas 48. ' • scored a' 37-28" victory over the game opened. Playing less than take-otfer second place in ihe Those Other Ribe'scoring drives eight minutes, the great little Ten­ 1 Washingtbn Huskies Saturday;on Southwest Conference was going Conference ^ Standings reached Arkansas' 26 yard line in nessee .tailback sprinted'54 yards a muddy field. California's"giant th« Most Popular in the'same deep freeze; the first period, the 20 and 15 for a second touchdown and set But in that final two minutes in the second and 23 in the third. allrAmerica guard, Les Richter, up a third with a 27-yard'dash to Placo h» Eaft! Rice traveled 29 yards and Burk- Burkhalter, Rice's workhorse, kicked a 22-yardrfield goal in the Washington and Lee's 19. Rugged Scotch Grain Leather halter made the last one pay off Baylor picked up 70 yards' on 21 carries, fourth quarter to put the b&ars In all, Lauricella ran with the Mexican Food 9 for the score that puts Rice right While Jack Troxell, who once ahead, 30-28. Then in the last two. ball, six tim^t and netted 114 -"504 EAST AVE.:S» behind Texas Chriiitiah in the Arkansas clipped off a 53 yard run, was minutes, sub right half Don Harris yards before retiring in favor of Phone 7-0253 championship chase. Arkansas' top (ground gainer with raced 39 yards for a Bear touch­reserve tailbacks Hal Payne and TWof penalties ? both against 90 yards. ' down. . : . i Larry Crowson. SCOTCH Arkansa»—paved the way for that So touchdown with 1:21 left to play. Enjoy the casual comfort of this Jarman"LeuuaT The first set .Arkansas back on • ~K,: < t. r~ «*yi#,ruggedly built of brawny, durableScotch its own one-yard line and Lamar "T gridnleather, and featuring thicksoles and rtocia McHan'slkickwassho^t. '4 1 Rice took over on the-Porkers welt You'll wear it everywhereI 29. David Johnson picked up five yards', then Dan Drake passed to Billy Ed Daniels for 17. Burkhal *\r?. • •X-S In Cross Country COLLEGE STATION, Nov. 9— (^rs-James Blaine ofTexas A4M sprinted the final 200 yards to nose Dale Imel, North Texas fresh" Qu«Mup« — On th§ Drag man, in a cross country meet Fri­ day. , Five Aggies came in among the first>l6 to give the Aggies first place with 25 points: Texas was |JQP RESENTS AT second with 58, North Texas third with 00 and. SMU last with 83 points. NO MONEY DOWN Blaine coyered the 2.5 miles in 12:15.0. He made the first two Time miles in 9*41. ' John, Garmany and Charles STMAS SALE Hudgens collected third and fourth places, and C. A. Rundell of Texas was^fifth. Ed Richardson w:as the first man in for SMU> .crossing m H0M0K OF (ISIN AMtklCAN'S 6§tJt ANNIVERSARY at the the line in eighth placer • 1 * K.'~ ^ \ Kazmaier't Pas»i Hel p Pfinctton Over Harvard CAMBRIDGE* Mass., Nov. 10— $P)—^Princeton's Dick Kazmaier continued his drive for another All-America backfield berth by passing, the Tigers to four touch­dovnu as they gained their 20th: jstraight football, victpry bx over­ whelming Harvard, 54-13, Satur­ day. Kazmaier's serials gained ,223 $1150 VFLLW yards and he added'71 more over-­ land to boost his seven-ggne over­ -qs$r Buy ,aJPopex. Popper at the Co-djp ^li total to"175W~belore 7retiring IXTRA 6IFT DURIN6 -early in the finale, during which THIS SPECIAL EVENT his high-powered forces bunched more than half of their points. and get a can of 3-minute . P But, despite the lopsided-score, -N. , .'Af ADVERTISED Princeton had a fairly hard task NATK>N-WTDE extending its streak to a new Three models to choose from... Popcorn and a certificate for a" Princeton victory record. • . TNs Ison# of the most seroqKonal values •­ Caci«U Clip Citadel hove over offered! WEST POINT, N. T., Nov. 10 Popex, Jr. $6.95 carton of Dr. Pepper—FREE! [ Christinas Rush begins—you can have' Fred .• Meyers, one big ; <-Single ttrontf Frendiline*. Hgfn American gifts for Hie price *•*; fawwtow dmlmH* leaguer onVa makeshift football paorfehyBgbi American— team, passed and ran the Army Model C $7,95 V * Purchase any Elgin American * datp tattrlth (•mini to its second victory of theie season (at $9.95 up) and receive—at an ,. . . diowowdtla baauBM fUt Saturday, a 27-6 decision ojust the , pruMaUse box. • * Mtirtr shimmering 'simulated • Citadel. 'V. Model A. $8.95 ~;Jr peoH necidoce by Bgfoi American. ' " Fed. Tux Included THE MOST \ Free Popcorn at the Co-Op Monday, COMPACTS »MJ|» DISTINCTIVE '" f f SERVICE IN lOfttcm CAHT-«» «MUUT» ruau. AUSTIN •Shwfart fJnUh ^, , fStaorso^iaM cr-iayw [OPilR _ Shirt# tSe eacS: > Ro«|h Dry te lb. , / ^ **•* * -v "iftjM. •#' i>Ay Wcfc-wp and Daitomy Stoma Steam Ml S mm83mr j aaafeaaia m m- v v . ;^ -i ^ ^.*v T •. t .. . -. rawy»g *fj ^W|(: jnM VW "4m _*'.*¥ -fl r 4 veMei m By JEFF HANCOCK * Caaaingfaam made • bristf aaalytta Olisi A and B intramural touch Bay Woaiaek-jfM VCCM _9*rUSt*H of the-recen«y-ended eonteet. football champions will be derided murker. ^ '" $mi, but wiser "Tb« turning point of the gaaie Monday nigfct on Whitaker Field . _ . . H entered the occurred when Baylor scored thnye la games that, will mark the dose Two titlists were'determined m lift* dMWing.rown ^Wr^^ , last, two touchdowns," b« eracJceunded and their 18-6. loss to won the class A titie by beat ; Sewell shook his bead in dismay the church division, and fraternity kylorV Bears had become #o­ and admitted "that good old Bay* tiUists Delta Tan Delta are Mickey Bowea of Phi Gamma \«t score ia the record books: lor line" was "not simply * gong matched for the daae B champion­taj6^,JkS' ^ ^Baylor's running game cer­ title, pig ship game at 7 p.m. At 8 p.m. John Knaggs of Oak Grove lygaveus a big wwepxU^ri Sigma Phi Epsflon, fraternity title the class B crown ever John FoS» commented Cojaeh Ed Price. "We were mighty rough," the blond holders, and OakGrove,clubdi^ tran> of .Phi ^jamma Deltas M, they could run but didn't r 220-pou»der testified. ''Thoae of­ vhdom champions will battle for Ssl§S0QMS0r:: they ware that good on fensive guards (Pete Zrben And too clasa A crown. iltho ground," he said in reference Cbatlea Driver) a great job Badminton singlea are down "til to'Bayloifr rushing totaj of 2.08 did Wesley advanced to tke fiasJa yards. The impressiveperformance of bloekingonthoM up-the-niddle Prkby alght by virtM «f a 1241 tike semifinals with Phi Delta of the Bear infantry marked the vletery ewer Wbltis Wildcat*, wf*. Theta Murray Smith scheduled fta play Palmer Camming of Kappa glflrft time this season that Texas' " Newsp*p«r meA w«r«' laxtiiii f aers of the Mca dhrfaioa.; Sigma and At£hnr Stiles of Shoal* loot soldiers were oatgained by • to learn whether or not the Long- Baymond Xanerd paeed the mont Arms uated to meet BIBQfc* heir. opponents, horns considered tbe ^ttartetfeacl* Methodists by throwing one scoiv son of Moneyhon Housecats Mon­ ing talents of bbell superior to ing pass to C. P. Warren and Pries explained that the Long- day night. ^ •" those of Kentutky's Babe Parfliy catching Bob Barnes^ toss for the defense was "set for (Larry) Also, Charles Smith of the Air ^shell's passes," thereby making HARUEY 5EWELL Bobby Dillon gave, the nod to other. 'A Force ROTC will challenge Blear* l^tself • more susceptible to. the the Baylbr field general. "I've al­ DtttaTau Deltii ivbin their, berth' the. play selection of the Bears' thought wag bitter do Molina of Alba Club and Wal­ JyS'iground thrusts of Baylor's speedy ways Isbell in the finals by trouncing the Air ter Shnr of HUM will contact -lifwcks. ,• f all-Americaa quarterback. "With than Parilli," tile"Jj«tai «o^l^. Force BOTC, 20-0, in the semi BSU's Floyd Wilson. a pair of. great, receivers like tain stated. "They are difffeutt' to finals. The Delta* Bill Penn threw Emphasizing that , Baylor's yic­ • > * ' * ' •?, abould be attributed to other Riley (Harold)and Williams compare, howiyeiv because Isbejl three touchdown passes—two to Intramural soccer starts Moifi* ifaetora besides the element of (Staii), Isbell was, expected to wasA'ttlwowingdeep^day.We Cruger Ragland, one to Paul Bock- day . night with play in the fra* K~V. surprise# Price termed the Bears throw plenty of deep passes., In­simply couldn't break up all thoee • ley—-for the semi-final victory. , ternity division. J stead, he passed infrequently and short, quick passes." "'-'a Hn* jUl-round ball dub that v'.^V Sigaui Phi £p«iloaV imiUt Assistant director -intramural threw short ones, thus making the ing,»filLXhey.ate _Th'e decision ^wae not so easy• ing ef fease esasthered Um class A Sonny Booker announced Sunday definitely the best-team we have for Paul winiams to raaSe. "Both KlSra tltwpii. tlw jl . .. ... ~8«a« plx>t»--V. W Jhai^^,^asulaJM^^.!ei6^^-: 'wmet this -year." The tutor of the Longhorn for-of them:are great ball playum/' •Ivm, #i4, la tdhrudai ttf the for soccer. He said all official* •3 "Isbell fooled us today," Line-ward wall felt \that his linemen was the dpinion of the end who ONLY INTERCEPTION in Soturdov's game of Gtlmer Spring whojs making a desperate fry finals. will receive $1.25 ,per game .andjCoach J. T. King commented oh "played good footbfil, especially developed a rather close acquaint betwejen Texas and Baylor was when Bruin Red .to stop him. Donaldson returned the ball 16 yards Led by fireball C» B. Sumrall, anyone interested should report to Donaldson took Oan Page's pets from the arms to the Saylor 37 as the third quarter ended. on ollFensei" . He crediied guard tance with both quarterbacks. the SPE's unloaded a passing>bar Gregory Gym 114., Hariey SeWell with a fine perfor­ Coaches and players alike felt rage on the Depressiyee that nev­-• v'-* 1 /Bowles Sparks AChiO mance. that those five disasterous Texas er faltered. Sumrall tossed two Sports on the intramural docket ft Tri-Delts, 12-6 General -concensus of opinion fumbles were not the result of touchdown passes to-Speneer Gar-for the remainder of the semes­ among the Texas players was that ball-tackling tactica on the {Mut see and William Adams, then to ter are handball doubles, volley* Stanford Nears Rose Bowl; 76 (Steve by defeating Indiana, 16 to 14. from behind in the final minutes The Trojans went further Mathias went to work, pounding champions UCC. UCLA Defeat* Oragon Stat* Dowden), was terrific." Asked to 'quarter defeated Kappa Alpha for its first. Big Ten" victory of Saturday to defeat Southern Cali­ahead a moment later when Ker­tiie line"for Your, four, and one Touchdown pitches were sent PORTLAND, Ore., .Nov. .10— compare the Bear forward wall 7h«U II, 6.0. the season. Minnesota's offensive fornia, 27-20. The victory gave korian was hit in the end zone to score standing up. Kerkorian's from Max Smith to Bill Slater, (£»)—A wind storm with gusts upr with that of Arkansas, Cunning­ -$$&§• Jen-Doell;.Branderger tsparked clicked for touchdowns in each Of Stanford the inside track to the and tumbled away six valuable kick knotted the count, 20-20, wit Joe Minor, Joe Harris, and John to 70 miles an hour failed to ' Patsy ham described. the"Baylor linemen the.first two periods. The Gophers Boee^ Bowl. . points. That sent USC in front, kick knotted the count, 20-20, Cox. -They made a safety wlien blow out UCLA Bose-Bowl hopea iPatterson. Loys Gandy, and Patsy as "faster'and more agile." . added the game>winning safety Trailing 14-7 aa the final quar­20-18, and. set the stage for the with about five minutee to go. UCC's Roger • Tola* dropped tile and the Bruins rolled to a M jmmm Zoch led the Thetas, Thoughtfully sipping a Coke, early in the third. > ter began to unfold, the handsome amazing finish. The Stanfords, a troupe ^of own goal line. Tolar passed to Coast Conference victory T-stylists, suddenly stouck again. snapbaek from center behind his Or««bn State Saturday. Linebacker Skip Crist intercepted ' an SC pass by Frank Gifford, and raced back 29 yards to the Trojan 12. Mathias got two, Kerkorian MONDAY Chaa. A. Smith Ta. Rieardo JloMoa. passed to Wes Laubscher for , TOUCH FOOTBAU. Waltar Shar va. Ployd Witmm. three, but aa offside put the..In* Claaa B Golf Siaglaa * attack Last 4mr foc aaeond nujM. dians back to the IS. Qalfbaek Wa*1«y Toan4atb>a •«. Delta Tan • fourth, and fifth fllfhta. Seoraa Harry Hugasian more than made Oaaa A ha in by 840 a.m. Taaadar. Pint day a o'clock (or iceond round of sixth; aevanth. and this up with one lunge to the one-Sisma Phi EptUoo va. 0»k Grova. aighth flight*. Seoraa will ha doa br. yard mark. He then added the SOCCER 8:30 a.m. Thuraday"fa tbaaa flighj a o'claek from tbe following man: 7F?V"" yard-M~#nd the winnhiff jwinfciu. Kappa: Aipka t*. Sicma A}pba Ma. „ Sixth Fifight :: . Ohf PM •*. Th«t» Xi. Torn Cofanelly va. Martin Bilk. T Bar Cummih'ga va. Bobart Kallar. D*1U Kappa Kpaflon Sterna Alpha Marvin Kaplan va. Ford Hubbard. CARS WASHFD Epalloti. Eddie Choice va. W..E. Atlanta. $]25 Ah>ha Eptllon PI va.-Phi Sigma Dalta. Seventh Flight a •'clock John Polndexter va. Kelly Jackaon. PU Dalta Th*ta **. Dalta Sistaa Phi. Craig Woodaon va. Geo. w. lohnatoa. LamMa Chl Alpha vi. Fl Kappa AIpha. D. J. Gonaoulin va. Altos Wallaea» . BADMINTON Jim Porae .**. Erie Becker. "GRIME To'cioek . Eighth Flight to SHINE" Karrar 3. Smith va. Palmar Camming. Alex Vanght va. Larry ConneDy. Arthur 8tBaa va. Bill Gibaon. R. K. 8te«r va. BUI Chriatla. Cleaned Insida and out Vacnnmad and Sidmlli -Staam Claanad AUTOMATIC CAR WASH CO. November 14 221 S. Lamar University Christian Church 21st and University "Across from Fountain" * Deadline for Making Your Invites you to it* mm'i: Picture^ Appointment I 5th Birthday Observance 2 identicel tervlcei—8:45 end 10:50 J choirs-singing Malotte's "Lord's Prayar" for the' , and "God So Loved the World" by Steiner. Tha Bast Equt To Serve K Sarmoih—"I Hava Chosen You." Your SHoe Repair Needs Lawrence W." Beth—Mfnlsfar >: CASH REBATES Oarenca M. Doss—Student Director mm 1952 CACTUS yffiT'VN'.? Goodyear Shoe Si Jusf off the Dreg on 23 •*T iri»Ai: TEXAN > PRODUCE QUICK RESULTS Make your appointment and pay Aparimont for Ront Music Nursery . i -1 --' . y -v-i.. ,>r> -fee in JOURNALISM BUILDING 108 ,4. . IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE. Lov^y new entatose and redwood two bed­room apartment. Slot Woodmont. Coaching BMGIJSB. ALL elaaiaa. Expert tutor­ing and proofraadin* by experiencedteacher with maiter'a desree from Uni­vmity of Texaa. Phone 2-lSKt. For Rent KXCOBDED XU8I0, PJL Byatama. for .aU^aacasieBtijI^IJlis^. Rooms for Rent OOMFOBTABLE. WELL fnraklwd Xooma; in private home for graduateat^deat. Shar* bath. Kitchen privilegeaIf deaired. >08 Harria Ave. 6-4420. DOWNTOWN KINDERGARTEir; 4«e m. -> 2nd. 2-8S63. Experienced day r«re f lst rrade: certified teacher; saw hooka. ® fenced; five Tdays t5.IO, I8B hourly. -tv Typing LET JUS type notea. SS-S642. your EXPERIENCED: neighborhood. theaea. SheeM^^ X, ola. (Mif t i4 , J „•< l^ii^ • , '-v * .«* RESERVE YOUR COPY OF THE cactCJS NOW:r if you " ' %.v, * Foe Sato ATTRACTIVE ROOM for on* woman ta private home. Private hath and «>• trance.-Poor blocka wwt ot UniveMity.71#.Weat 24th. . ~ ATTRACTIVE BOOM; private bath and dreasing room. Qutat and pteaaant for women teacher or graduate atudenU 710 Waat 24th. 2. B;R-. fursihed cottage. Ideal for 4 boya or girla. $7S per month. S20( San Antonio. S-8072. Al«a fnrniibed acart­ment for 2 girl*, (48 per month. HAIBCUTa.TSa^ ataey> Bazber Shop -2502 titaadfd^pe MJWIONAL GEOGRAPHIC, 2Be: Better f Hamea. Pocket . Book aditiona, 10c; > Camiea. Se; Magarinea, hooka for re­search work % price. ISO* Lavaca.Mill. --DALLAS^OBT WOKTH—S4.00 Hooaton, fS.S0i Lae Angelea 126.09. Cara add paaaengera, all potota. A-Aoto Share Expense Boreaa. XStf L«vaea. a-»m. ms- TYPING SERVICE. 2l#S Swiahan. phone t 7-320S. Mi«a Welch. ".f THESES. .DISSERTATIONS, (Uaeti*. ^ mette). Coaching. Un. Pet­meeky. 6S-221Z,, A ACCURATE TYPING. Pick>w ami 4^-I • liver. Mrs. Eriekson, C-204S. 'IN­EXPERIENCED able. Mra. Oavia. S-IZS7. % ELEClRia THESES, dtoeectatfcma. *H~i :,£feW. Mat '•morning*. S-S444. < • • K — t y * r ^ 1 " ' ' m* w {.'• H - • ." -'-.-OTS . ; .-v w Dam|AT EGlSTRAtrON " *•. * >. .jA, 15. ^ J?---V v* V? W ~ ^ " % ^ 2 iriX-u^fFl •? . «*v^ SiOeO raUea. 88 mSea ver galldn.of ga* at Cuahtttfa ^ HAVU^TOM dziftiBMi «r dnti«i kbit. In frirtgfeVHU, i^eitadMN «eMe:JDeev aookat. akthlt cloA and e.,'*snPnn6<, V. _P2,' Ti i J}' gi|® ,r*i m Thei^iniiusChest needa; NHU Wl»/ x W1V/.TV gVb «VU| V* ,,W* TMUlft •*» \V v a matterof personal convenience, most worthjr and most representative meditation* whe* they.hadn* hadi --it to protect themselves," one said. > *sffe distinguished here bstweeft Wbydo students cheat? , 70a need Campos Chest g? ^r®m '*• campus standpoint—that could Obviously, to-get.snsweri. But s, ^ r F»:vr professors* views sy&e*^r v»iue« As one student pat it: "I "-Behind the reasons tor cheat- Only timragh tike co-operation of-S be found. Carefully, screened. from considering the tremendous risfcs* "i»u *«*->•, hM.H«fr invmtM mNImZ? fnvolved-^-the -consequences of t***?stooag!*«fco haya a. fcfcad ii^;hur m basic -faultsIn our Aduca* Ijtadeot body will Ike MCWtey <8,00? much l«ger hBt, thoM W»W» «•_»««»3*. ^uTbi. 3 .«>• *•*>* I .w. S""1 •**••».»* v W* <• «A ike1good gradeand .took ft, 1 tt^wphasii is pat on the grade. feflfaw ctadi depend* fi raised by November 23, whim theones which would tend to be best sup^«t tetfgri'tyand the•*»»/Wd*°°k**•" fellow studente^thatb,-wi,d they1 Iliad taken crib ' All but one Interviewed agreed j This creates, a pressure on the drive will end regardless of the amount ported if their drives for funds "wrero^: of Btudentor^that>_ ove^oyer?}•*;«; •?*' **** *2 J? that a system with large classes student to get by.any.WV i*«*«» . _ ... collected. In past ye»r« chest driver, have ^dividual toewue tfJjHfcmlue to ttf, lJU tW.. andrcpns^enUj^n^peHonalre* and often ^scaot pi£Hlc'Qlaivft ~ Whin* ask»d" jbesn ruii overtime In an attempt to talse^ stedent body. 8,tteaa. i y, •* 1~ ^ ^ lationship between students and li|hv Douglas sees two chief Some studi "*w that cheating in schools in another^,-J$"£* awuuBununithe minimum amount, vmbut that flaw has .*4 *"?="Since this willwiu beue theuw ontywuy campus soli-f wCher8' 18 contributorJr *> chMt" fattitl in the system of -examina*J'., ... tlon that "put students "on the ; ^ Tbe o^oti ben. eliminated hy Ota year". Steering citation. drive of the year. atadent. are . .yyltotafen °< th. -.tio,,'. ^- % ,,% Dr.H.lch b.lL.v.. a, , •pot.'^One is the way ex&mfcia--sequences if caught, .being urged to contribute an amount ap­ look »t. their Elders in buM*'^7 ma -eoiaequonthr Omr I»J faculty rototlonAip I«M importMit tions ars givetof the other, the orations «re even inore ar The amount to be collected in thisfall's proximating what they'd normally giva ,-j no compusion tabe fair. than the the feeling of the stu- manner in which they're graded. Of S&ident Lif* %leven-day campaign is reasonable. It is to ieharity ia a year of bit>by-bit dona?.. Md politics and conclude thatritft^ DEPARTMENTALS dent thst u%s,teathei; has been 'There are ways to find .oufcf Votny gave threes, the thins to do. *• i_ &• ' ,v « *' * „ * wS&- Departmentals, particularly, en-r: .what the students know other.than i^seholaatie holies^.' lower than its unsuccessful predecessors tions. .. ' , .. Th®1_an^er Jcaii best b«\had -tered In here. One,student said "As long as 'the professor is un­the type of mass examinations weJH First, ho said, p^rfonil fat in lucent years, yet it is high enough to Dig a little deeper than usual. '<]in fcom the students themselves and that he and others who cheated fair, they (the students) often have now," he said. "If the-chwses'i'^y is involved. -i1; * require campus-wide support. . --, _ r Make this concerted drive a success* \ the people who observe studentsdepartmentals didn't feel they don't fe^l they're unfair when were small enough so that instruct*^ "You start'« habdt in action, professors. j-^Tiad a fair chanpe on quizzes com-they cheat.**'he observed. -"When tors could know their students fulness and r' '* , X-"V,'~T Qf the two classes of students 'Spiled from the department as • the, teacher is fair in 'giving {personally, discussion _ quizzes can now into a ladc^if ittt^o cheat, the Texan was Inter-%hole mnd cheated to "make the quizzes and grading, tiiere is much could be gi*en." •> in otfier -thin^.**.. y\rX~: ested in the usual one, students , oddg in'^y favor." less tendency on the part -of stu~ • This is done in some of Ithe^ SedOnd, cheating is ntit fkir to-y^ who cheat occasionally. The see--" «it'8 awful, going ju there with 1 dents to be unfair." Smaller education classes now and' other students.ond class, those who cheat their ^^j thousand people, and Dr. C. P. Oliver, head of the ill many graduate classes. There ia-"When a quit ia graded oa ' Before the new driver's responsibility • in brief, requires every motorist in acci­ Y*7, . * degree from start to knowing it's going to be graded on zoology; department, believes,that no scheduled final-of the written. Curve,* stttdeat wWo ^eataw^OT act ifckes effect January.1, every Texas dent* involving more than f100 or' pter* finish, is too much for us. . . £he curve," one'Spanish 406 stu-smaller classes would' improve the type, and teachers evaluate the only cheating the >rofetaetr' driver should learn its provisions.^ 1 sonal injuries to make a report to the Jr WE DID BECAUSE' dent said. "Besides, it's so easy. cheating situation. v .students by observations during, -himself, but hla fellowstudentit:! The. majority answer given by" and everyone does it" ­ J To familiarize the public with a 'torn* --public safety depar^aeht. Then, any mo-"No teacher lilfes to.4tand "up the term, when they get to know ! Well," Dean NoWOi^y"saicC;>';f;*| students who Bay they cheat is • ,Dr. L. D. Hatch, head of chem-in front of a cfass a^d be a ma­them ptrsohally, and by oral ex* £ Third, cheating lowers*""'! mon sense" veggioA of the state law, the torist or motorists not deared of legal that they weren't px%pared for , istry 905, in which departmentals chine. You don't feel close to your animations. value of ak degree from ^e Tens' Department7M^^THic S®fe^r~ is ^^bflit^ WW'be made to -show enough psaa .the.^^Are .giygB.^»id that contrary students. More III 1.1 I .N ,^lUtlMTrn' It -versi^­ course/ --­ planning to mate available millions of liability insurance or personal securities widespread-belief, the quizzes in­better understanding, which will mutual understanding anji mutual If the school gets avniiitatiui&^ One student said: "You might cluded nothing that had not been cut dpwn on cheating, is possible respect' between students and for cheating, it lowers' the confi­ explanatory leaflets at filling stations cover damage in that particular acci­ : say I needed hf^'^obo^jyofonfr'' discussed in every lecture section; in smtfl classes.'* — -" --teachers," Dr. Douglas said. "It' dence of peoplein the value1 of the througlM>ut the state. dent. h'Nv -r, teered; so*T Stole a little of it" "The quizzes are written by He ad'd^d that until more funds' can be compared to a small tbwn, product," he pointed oat. "If if*' . This far-reaching piece of legislation, • Penalties are strict. If.the law's provi­, Another commented: "I didn't one professor, true. But all read are available, smaller classes will where you behave yourself be-* " '' ' don't turn. out. the product tfeat kttow quite enough to paBS, and by be impossible in many courses. everyone knows you. In a sions are violated, the offender maiy lose them to see if there's anything on cause /has absolute integrity, yon might M cheating'for just a tiny bit more, them that hasn't been discussed in "Right now, there is no method big city, you're on your own and as well fire'your professon and' both his operator's license and his car I got by." • . every class..If there is, we take it Policed You ean go so far with name: -Sands consider himself 'la man of heads asking their opinions on the that she was a woman driver, Politics . . . 'Our worst :enemy explode this myth about the . with ACROSS 21.0p«iinga walked cotirage arid conviction . Teason for the application drops* 3. Edge Today's they got so seared they threw To the Editor: 4. Musical (anat) into the ^office the other day, exploded myth. worthy goals?" Five chief reasns were ;given: 1.Game of Answer Is nnirk' on Hen drivers, the article li-their cars into reverse and -In answer to the lettep^by Bill chance instrument 22. Encountersi aifevil, taiumphant We are anxious to hear Mr. 1. Students were alarmed by the Ij^is fat, flabby face. 'He car­belously claims, have 2.8 acci­caused a 38-car pile-up, kill­Sands appearing in the^November 5. Tailless 5. Bottom of 24. Uncooked ~ in the Sands' distinction between "de­State Department criticisms of ing fourteen people. 2 issue of. the T$x£n: It is true amphibian aroom 25.Devoured ried some papen in his hand.' dents for every million miles featism" (as he puts it) and real­ Classified Word got abound fast. Each that a candidate's platform states Senator McCarthy .and others. •.Typeof «. King (LO 26. Guided "Here," he said as he th e T drive. Women drivers ism. Long delays in .7, Portent 28.ToSlip Ads 2. appointing architecture tapped the papers down in have 1.7, And women taxi company hired one woman what: he wffl "strive to achieve BARBARA B. DENNIS men ^ho pass the tests. 10. Citrusfruit. 8.Spanish 30. Distant X /"front of us. "Read that, id-drivers fif Philadelphia -w r 3. Other branches of the govern­12. Fragrance painter '32.Becoine8 t'nt »» wonder why a eity would be in Philadelphia now refuse to eve." But, after all, what ac- ' Insipid 13. Daisy 9. DibWe, * We read. We grew red. We w 20. People 19. River suddenly 41.Permit Tb« Daily Taxan, * itadwt Miiwm Dbt Ddfmitr of Tou,fa jKAHslMd l«i Anatia mn aorsfais axeaiH Moodajr 8atord«y. 8«pt«»b«r miles. W^ch just goes tof , the Dean of Student Life. "In India and Pakistan hun-6. Low Foreign Service salaries, , o of Rome (Alaska) 37. Letitstand 43. Wine to Jao«. aad «ze«pt daring holiday and «r»m. j u st naturally have man who is trying to get his name ^ PUZZLED PROFESSOR guage requirements wd the small 9 i16 women 28. A ray Opiniona ot tha Tettt am oot iiatmaiOy tboaa af .tba *" before "The public."1 NGD of Does Jtfr. ^tumber. appointments, were —— • fewer accidents than men. 29. Crown of - Kntead aa\ae4d!^wroattat Oatobat IS. IMS at at OStea at After all, think how hard it given. . • ' the head \X %13 at»tta,T«aa. nadar 'ba S. 1879. would be for YOU-to have a Too, the replies from the col^ 30. Moved,as AssooATED raESs arms aaavicE. all the other cars lege presidents included what the astream 14 IS1.-b • wreck -if " «lM aaaorlatu Prass la sacalnafvety antltlad to Mte aw tot raimbBcatlon a< 81.Country official calls the "widespread and % an urnra diapatebea endltad co ft «r BW ittiljiliifa» thla news-drove off into the ditch when . and toeal Kaasa of epoetnnaw»a with pabHahad hwrsln. Blghta af apparently deathless: misconcep­. InBhtrope % %IS •9 Hob of aD other matter haratn aj^laaer»ed. : theyaaw you coming. 93. A^vandal tions concerning the . Foreign 36. Skill % y244%V> Bsprassnted for Hattnul MmUilst hy KsUoaal Ad»artlsing Service." Examples: only rich TO 21 az ^• ; 37. Observed Serviea. Im» CoDege PnbUshera BspiaasntaUve as vadlson Ave. T«Ht, M.T. lib* Deabotels of The Humbla OH tared .engineer, considerable experlcnee men, ate appointed, only grade of 40; Ring-shaped and will ba in and .-maintenance elec­ • ' CMeaga -Beaton ~ Ijaa Sngalsa — San Fmnelaro Refining Company on tha operation of 27 . %20 -eampna Wednesday^ .November 14,. to trical equipment. Ivy League (Yale, Harvard, et al) . coral reef ' V inter.vUrw young women intereated In Kay-punch operator—accurate typing schools are appointed, politics dic­42. Contrive beeomins atenogrmpher* with that firm. Quotabie rata Of at leaat 60 worda per minute; tates appointment and promotion 44. Mallet , Z9 A BBA degrae in (WcreUrlal atudles ia prefer someone with key-punch experi­ nacesimry, the decree exj>ected in Janu­ence. . •" of service officers, all Foreign 45. Abrasive %32. ary. The atarting aalary i« far above material, " 31 Aassilstli Canagteta fwis . rtll Hirtiii rarwwsliai are Hai/ttenanee be .an-appren­men areraga and working conditions ex­man-—to Service are sissiSs, and the tice to a'journeyman in the Engineering 46. Headcellent. -• , suascaonraoN bates I...,. 'uofed field and graduation from, a atandard service discriminates against wom­coverings %33 34 IT %3* %%S7 %30 man Suben IpHew Three Mentha _ Kiaa Deahotela ..will also talk to girl* high school. . . en. • '• . -K who would be. interested in being drafts-/ , 47. Vklue it l-M* Oelhcntl •Ullad te Anattn, , MaUed ont of town ' Secretary—typing-speed of E0 worda Regardless of political attacks, • y.^ . • %4x 43 .71 par no. SI-00 per mo. , 1 .TS par mo. There lies beneath this mossy men for the explo'ration department. A -par minute, shorthand speed of 80 worda 4° W degree expected in January in Commer-par minute, office -experience and soma « some observers believe that the • DOWN . stone... 'cial . Art.' or related fields would be I4S eollege training desired. -• PERMANENT STAPP naeesaary. Again this atarting salary ia* service needed to re-examine its • S. Warningery 44' A politician who ... Senior secretary—ibortfcand speed of ' far ftbOYA tYrKftfCii Edlter-iaXluof _ RUSS KERSTEN Touched a live issue ... - at least 100 words par minute,' typing recruiting techniques anyway. Ac-, («olf)^ Cotae io WSmll 117 to make an. ap­speed ot;-66 words per minute, college 2 Arranged in %47 M—«ghw ESUnr BRAD BYERS And never did-come to. ^ ^ pointment by Tuesday, November IS. training preferred, and-fiVe years of : * • Editorial Assistant Mildred Klesel . a row (poet.) '& —Keith Preston -A • representative of Toley BrotSera . work experience. Prefer someone not News Editor Marjorie Clapp will on the campus No­over thirty.. /• In Houaton be * Editor Ken Tooley. vember 16, Thursday, to Interview men . Statistical clerk—some «xperlenee In . Editors Anne Chambers, Olan Brewer, But the President has paid an& women. Interested in an exeeutlva statistical work, and grsaduation from" a DAXLV training with This • scbool by dear for hia Whits House. lt program that firm. atandard high supplemented A X TD L tl A A X I ""* * " Campbell, "* " " p..;art* , if,IE, ooaraaafa-*tatlstl«*. -!f­ yasgnmmoBly^^himaMhia ISX.O KQffLbftl »*& ' & STAFF FOR Night Editor JO ANN DICKERS0N Gene Ehrlirfi, Jeff Hancock Dorothy Campbell, Bill. MiftRiynoIds,AlanWiffiams. it*Sports.Editor Ngwim. w*r(t» .Ken Tooley Sam Bliir Here conies another of tha. Spell-binders! —William Cassias Goodl^e Whitewashad, he '^oita ^ollUcfiras^^t^Fe At ease in mind, witb pockets &£}&!]& £ ' ,tj * Student Employment Bureau ce <^ Nots-Aesdemic ^ersonnel^ Mafn BuHdingSW Fnl1.tlma,'perma«teiitpositlon»__.available on the OnlvaraHjr-Bf-faxaa earnpas together with a brief deserip­tion of tha minimum jequtiswenU an don ..Brack,-Robert Dovet Jfoe Brit* ,, Tha * Civil asrriea Commlssliia* an-" ' >•»*; . . „""-notnftOt* eiamnatfona for fllling Vaeaa-lodr Green.. . eies in the position Of Investigator, at r Elalna Herring, Macie Ann Habe. Mary entrance salaries ranging from <4,105 Jane Ingllsh, Patricia Faye Khocoleo, to K.810 per annnm. Employment wlll„JBartiara . Emiiie Lane, :and Warren Ed-be Kitb tke-fsortmth US Civil &erviee . ward, , r— , -Region, 110 Booth' Harwood Street, Dal-:; o: GenM Wrtke HeLeod, Charles F. Mil­laa;.hovrever. peraons .appointad will be :ler, -Franklin Moore. Robert A-Najiar, ci -^ronrtoat ^e^;-^-yWH»am Bamaget-AlbiRrt T.-8nelerk typists ; are Appucauon. forms and?"«ddftf0»f Infor-. vtn~R ,Shwfffi"=FrStt; A;--8ktdJin average apeed .. qiattim. Rtny Jk» aeeurad tram the po*f ' Roberi.Skinner, *eh-y -Jjei 8ogi-— "***— • -r from thaVRfglOHaI ,>I^®f%wfe H^ :E'. WUllamsi -'Claude Ttn J; Wtnabrinar, Ooiorea Yotinir, -.typist—two . ._ _ with jin average typing speed of i)iatiOiworda par minute U6i*er»ity of Tex» . office Civil 8«rv«e^ -mmriafgasiwrjiw^ m " " ' iJbuA p. for the thMt L'S, X for the tWO OS, StC. rD V M A.BI8 W-flt';' ti'Y A­A VKRIt Vs? SB|w mWW, I Mi; tmm i*­ 'H BMPMM mm i"^$&,iH&"tSJfe"< Ij&liji r N> fi.' . *mm§m Qv»r tfo T-Cup ^j£'^L~te::<:Z'-m^'m C-'-?V2Tm-i •Mi 'J«* «siii i^$££-,WS; v v*w,V rslf /V\ *W > jSPI ,* *#C|i&fe • Sett* ISifiM in, 'v^fmkwA Ha CM^C.IK ^n^Mi* liMftNft dkn«r Mi fdkl' _ loiw-wr^ ^jtat# (IkmW i* ^t^\r bo^icM frat^H^ witi l»va a 8panish stMenta am invtted*5to^{ Tiim*day at iSm HHchin' Poet. partment OfRcial" will be tiia Sod*ty far Advnneamant ^?,'sx th%-nlselim "L ' ^ • iw;-inofeum pledg* jrfeste 8on• ' When her sorority Mid lecture on "Latin-Americans in versity Cnib Wwineiday* ' bring Inuribanda and friends as ing 105. He will discuse the new chapter selected the good friend, EHie Luckett, Fresh­ New York—A New Problem in Honor guests were the follow­tiarir guasta^ lhtring the day reser­construction of and phases Cultural Administration/" at '« following officers:Hotffe A, Marr, man beauty of 1950, came on the vations may ba made by e#lUng ing woman, all of whom have been Stated multi-million dollar hoiqri­ president; Paul Smith, vice-presi­stage to present Ann with the meeting of 5iga*a Delia Pi, hon­8-2»?0. At night call Mr*. Ully ' H the club for 40 yearf tal building program for architeeta dent; iW Kennedy, secretary; flowers signifying the choice of orary Spanish fraternity, at 8 or more: Mesdames S. Xeroy V. Lane at 2-9508. Reservations p«m. in Texas Union 300 Tuesday. Ws Albert Quebe, treasurer; John, the Mica committee, it was one of Brown, J. W. Calhoun, £. L. Dodd, must be made by WednesdaySimpson, director of public rela­the high points of a very busy life Frederick Eby, 6. C. Endress, The meeting is sponsored by the tions; Raymond Janicek, director Central Texas Chapter of the that the young brunette has led E. W. Fay, 1, U Hendereoo, Ira A—cfailo* A»*hi- X ©{ production planning; Edward since coming to the University. __ Fiv6 Ad StUdlnt^ P. Hildebrand, J. M. Ealhne, W. --The Graduate Discussion Group Aawritu »f Talamas, director of personnel; A to Ann Mather, L W, Payne, D. A. of will discuss tactwral Ei»fln»«r«, All architects similar honor came T. the University Y and engineers are invited to Dhm Treat, director service when she Was chosen sponsor of Picked for Tpur t Penick, E. P. 8choch, F. L. Whit­the meaning of objectivity Mon­ procurement; PatPatterion, direc­ the Air ROTC Orange Wings. In ney, E. C. H. Bantel and ,C. D. day «t 7^l07p4a. ft tlur ?•* . 1 i -5-tor of employment and profes- Five students selected <4 the f that case, she was nominated one Biec.'-'A' , sional relations; and. W. R. Hud-basis of their work in advertising Frasfcmaa FaSswih^ officers Wires of University students day and elected the next. But Also Misses Mary Decherd, An­ ton, faculty advisor. courses will tour advertising fa-newly elected are: ara invited to a meeting of the Ann,-flnelen»intary^ucationjna- nie Hill, Rosa Penick, Anna Si­ .• >'» .^Membership is" composed pri-jor, should.be gettingpsed t® *och cilities in -San Antonio Monday monds, and Jet Winters;"" 1 YMCA—iM e lYl n Ledbetter, ffatieaal Association of Uaiv«*,a*ty students pursuing even hlgh'aehool «>d Tuesday. The annual tour |s Danes -Bridge Group Wednesday ^'V-. marjly of the in * president; Don Stearns, vice-presir honors, for ^•4 engineering route to business $d* sponsored by the Advertising Club at 7 p.m. in the Campus Cafeteria- she was winning beauty prizes. The Professional Group of Aus­dent. • ministration, but membership also in San Antonio in co-operation Besfrvatkms may be made bjr Last year,she won the Watermelon tin Branch of Aaserfcaa Aasocia-YWCA—Kathleen Kelley, -with the University School" of calling Mr» Travis Austin, 6-2091L Um of UalvcrMty Wnmb will be president; Hinda Grofler, vica* . if their major interest is directly In" this contest, she was one of bestess"at---thayHei»mbw-#ayigal]-^g«ida6t^;­ SgSSig-'.fT I.'. related, Th^ tour will Include visits to the representatives from 25 towns • The ehWf-purpose of the oir-Joske's -of Texas, the Express honorary, initiated thirteenXnew that vied , for the top spot Her ganization is to better aquaiftt in­prize for Winning. was a X$26J> Publishing » Company, Genera] members Thursday night. Dr. dustry With the curriculum re­N-eon Advertising, Mavericks Thelma Bollman, sponsor; Hiss wardrobe. Foreign ing Open quired for this degree arid to aid Clarke^ printing plant, WOAI-Irene Dickson, keeper of tha re-~ Ann, a : Kappa Alpha Theta in placing qualified personnel ANN CHIPMAN TV, and the Coca-Cola Bottling cords, and Winnie Williams, presi­ pledge/ has been very busy since Company. *• * dent, .officiated.^ > -j,; the aemcster started forking on On Grants • . school class for two years. field domitory. the Cactus staff and the.Steer -Students chosen tor the trip art New initiates are Mesdames Twelve Finalists \Ann explained that she Is the "Although I was so happy to Sally Fielding, James Maberry, Thada Kerby Bost, Billie T« Chac« Here committee of the Freshman Teachersiare needed abroad un­awards will dose at an early date, Council. Vv 1 ;.. only one of her high school clasf win the contest/ I was terribly t e^e 50V» Wary Browning, and' dler, M e 1 b a Jackson, Mary the Fuibright so should filed Meet Tuesday that came to the University, be­four C^s«. Alan Scott, associate der program. applications be Speaker, Lanelle Brooks Willig, Of course football is tops on sorry. that the other girls Jo'1" Greece, Egypt,' »nd Turkey need promptly.:Applicants should con­ cause most of the graduates went had to lose," said Ann. "Since the professor of journalise, will a«. and Charlene Stroud Williams; her list of interests along with trained and experienced teachers tact Dr. Hob Crray, Director, In Reading Match modeling, singing and swimming. to Baylor. .With the 'Baylor game final judging started I'd come:to company the gr^up.' — for the academic year beginning Teacher Placament"Service, Box and Misses Shalmir Duerson, on this week end's agenda, she know the other girls well and ad­Shirley Ann -Forehand* Frances.-Finals in the Freshman Reading After graduation she hopes to hoped to see many of her class­mire them *o much." September, 1952. , 2138, The University of Texas, Frees*, Mary Amelia Hutehi|i model before going in the teaching A minimum of" twd years of Austin. Contest 1 sponsored by Hemphill Book Stored will be held Tuesday profession. At home she has done mates. ) 'M ' The other four finalists wert St. Edwards Plans classroom Experience is required v Value of ' the awards varies in Eugenia Johnson, Martha Kalie s ofne modeling in local stlye Ann is'also a Bluebonnet' Belie Myrlene ^Anderson, Betsy Bell, and preference is given to those the . several countries; -payment atnd Joyce Milion^ .. ^ • at 7:30 p.m. in Experimental Sci­ Yearbook Clinic shows. She has taught( a Sunday roniinee and resides at LittleV Ann I)onoghue, and Pat GillaWayt withamaster'sdegrcr.Granta will be made in the ctrrrency of ence Building 137.. > The ~ International ~ Relations are available Qnder the terms of the^ country to which the grantee • Judges for, the contest will be Invitations have been 'sent to Group of American Asaadatiaa of the Fuibright Act for teachers in is aasigned. Salary will be suffi­ Gail Adkins, director of Radio 450 Texas high school yearbook the fields of social wellare, work, University Wonm will, meat at cient to provide round-trip trait* House; Carl Hardin Jr., Austin sponsors and their staffs to attend English/kindergarten, physics, portation and Jiving expenses the Tarrytown Restaurant at 12 Shipping Books, Delivering Mail attorney; and Mrs. Eva Cume, the first St. Edward's University matiiematics, science, and.nursing. while abroad. In addition, a small o'clock Friday, Mrs. Alma Thomas "? 3 speech instructor. , Yearbook Clinic, November 24, These awards are of particular grant may be available to help the will speak on "Our Stake. in the Finalists in the girls* division from 8 £30 a.m. to 5 p.m. interest to teachers who caii obtain grantee meet ineoma tax, iiumr-Pacific Islands." Cy are Molly Ann Titai^Alma C| Brdther Randolph Austin, leaves of absance for orie year anc« premiums, and other obliga-Reservations must be made by Occupy M. C Barnes's Time £ " Wright, Mary Jule Ross,"Marilyn C.S.C., Clinic director and moder­from the schools where they are tions that must be paid in United jioon Thursday with Mrs. T. G. if?' Feigle, Janice Harrison, and Sara ator/* The Tower, St. Edwards' -employed*.'-!' -States, currency. Transportation Clawson at 2-4987 or with Mrs* a i*-,-Jo Kline. A short, whiskerlesR Santa Claus ada, and Mexico than to any other new 116-acre farm and eat noth­yearbook^, said the clinic would be Competition for the Fuibright for dependents is not included. Graves Landrum at 2-6816. " "I with'a bounding^ lively gait pushes countries," he says. ing but hickory-smoked sausage," --Boys' division,.winners are limited to. a one-day conference s'^Ai Johnson, Dojiald Petesch, a book-cart instead of driving a Before coming to Austin, Mr. he added. .. but problems concerning year­ loi James M. Byrd, J. Barry Allen, sleigh find delivers mail .through-Barnes taught School in Bastrop _ But when . his vacation is»over, books would be answered tiurough­ (-. Benjamin 3atjr, gTrd ~Melvin BHun^-ou«-thorMain-JBUiiidiiig.Jnst^|uL,oi^,C^ he'll be\ seenTagain ^n™hirTroon^ out:t^^^arr^^eoTr^irr Be sliding down chimneys .with years ago, he joined the Jplice 'V-Wg. |ie?:t toJ HBr«y" elevator, failed monthly bulletins answer­ Chrstmas bundles. force before coming to the Univer­ equipped with gummed labels and ing yearbook questions. M. G. Barnes, receiving, dis-sity. ,, >£-£?• book cart, preparing the daily mail Group discussions, talk*, andtributing,",and shipping clerk of "I have enjoyed my work h^re ai delivery for the Main Bui ||Grfl Hott || the University Library, can us­more ' than anywhere else I've demonstrations by authorities in the varioua yearb^ok fields will be ually be seen with letters stick­worked. The people -around me Bali Room Dance Studio ing out of his pockets, squeezing suit me," he says. "They're juSt given at the conference. Yearbook Japanese bxinow i cart into an elevator already my kind of folks." publishing companies, engraving A hovn Texas Theater too full for comfort. The mailman comes from an old firms, printing firms, paper com­ With TV-in Tokyo cov- In his work at the University, Texas family. Ilis great-grand-panies, photo-supply houses, theTiftle^ "fatHeFca^e'to'Tiwg8^h"183gr'an. Cleaning and Pressing folks just address them to Austin says. in from our collection of No Extra Charge He .has written that he will as­ and let me figure out.where they "It was his horse that slowed sist in supervising Japanese cam­ LONSHORN CLEANERS gO." him; He was loaded dowjn with ic of Meeting eramen in covering the news. His Claire McCardell Dresses Mr. Barnes handles four differ­ammunition. Nowadays just about' USa Gaadaluiw Ph. 6-3M7 ent kinds of book shipments: ex­all a fellow hks t-• ature airport, Zilker Park; licity committee, music room of to the public. 8:46 |nd 10:16—-Fifth annivjers-3—-Fall exhibit of TeXaaFine Arts Baptist Student Center. ary celebrations, University Association, ElisAbet Ney Mu­3—Rally ;Committee, Waggener Christian Church. seum and liaguna Gloria. ^ Hall 401. ^ ' . ROBBIN'S BODY SHOP 8—Czech-Moiravian Brethren Sun­4:30—Concert by Britt C^Ho En­4-6—-Autograph party fo^ Dr. _ "Coe»pl«t« Body Wftite RafMir" day School, Wesley Foundation. semble, 'Music Recital. Hall. Philip? Crrahamrr t^^-ofi 9:30—Dr. Grady Parker to give ' "Showbofite,'' Book Stall; Guad * PAINTING * SCAT COVERS 6—Lutheran Student Association, * CLASS * AUTO REFINISH1NQ talk on faith, Wesley Fourida-Lutheran Student House. alupf.at Twenty-first Street, . tion. 4—?"The Catholic Mind," Newman 130i Lavaca ' Ph. 7-497S 6—Conrad White to address DSF, 10—Radio program, "The> Eter­ Club classroom. University Christian Church.: ^ nal Xlght," Hillel Foundation. 4:45—-Campus League of Women 11—Newman Club, Texas Theater 6—Murray Polakioff to speak on Voters, Texas Union. speedway;^; "1:30—Conversational H ebr e w "Economy of Russia" at Supper 5^—Campus Chest solicitors, Ar­ When Medicines class, Hillel Foundation. Forum, Hillel Foundation. chitecture-Building 105. RAO IO rm&r qsgs ^re Needicl^^ Utrlv«r8ttr 5 Building, loggia. . Chapel Yew can depend, -upon our large Congregational .Church. •"SSSiHKZ a-*"­ stock* to make it possible to 2—Delta Sigma Pi meets at Tex­Grady Hardin talk 7—Dr. Warrei M. Jacobs and Dr Speedway 74tS48 6:30—:Dr. to fill pr«*eriptiom in a matter .of as Union to go to Jlull Creek. . Robert Edwards to speak a$ on faith, Lesley Foundation. Buildipg loggia. . > Pojit-Graduate School of Medi' ED MINOR, Pharmacist 2—Duplicate bridge tournament, 7-—Sigma Delta Chi dinner, Hitch-cine, Sutton Hall 101. in' Post. Texas Union 315-316; > 7—Omega Chi Epsilon safety 1.010 Guadalupe. Dial 2-5211 2—Hot-rodders to orgariiase^ mini­7:30-—Regular services for Gtech-meeting, Chemistry Building 15 Moravian Brethren Church, 408 7:30—Graduate Discussion Group, ONLY FOUR MORE DAYS—THRU NOVEMBER 15th West Twenty-third, YMCA. 7:30—Film, "Israel Reborn," Hil-7:30—Dr. Grady Hardin to give ' " lei Foundation. "*"1 talk on faith, Wesley Founda­i-' tion. 8:30-12 and 1-6-r—Drawing for 7:30—Dr. Lewis Hanke to speak TCU tickets, Gregory Gym. ^ on "Latin Americans in New 9-1 and 3-5—-Faculty art Exhibit, • York" before American Associ­Music.;Building loggia. ,t /ation of Teachers of Spanish 9.-11—:Coffee, Newman Anpex. • a ltd Portuguese, 708 Wast 10—Qoffee, Hillel Foundation. Twenty-third. . 1:30^-Re-take of Alba Club pie-7:30—Free movie, "It's A Won­. ture for Cactus, front of MLB. 51 derful ' Life," Main Lounge, 2-—8igma Nu Mothers Club, Sig­Texas Union.. ma Nu hous*. .. 8:30—Webster Aitkita, 3-^Reli^onii Ew®hiiai» W«»k " • w|>i ^IWW^pPESTOi8p^ 0 •• •• A"v•'$-/v~/JJ ,: It Makes v-' 4 Difference," is the thane for the Wesley Foundationeeriee of tsflta II ** «<3»* Iter. H. -4Sr»dfr:-Bndiu . ^^5-' EliwVeth Rose Jamesoii became paster of Chapelwood Methodist the bride of Thomas YfcirHs Walsh *** Church fa) Houston, fat, tin Uni-Parker Roasman, national Chicago and W*Mnr3riftV HilWFo Novembet> 1 In Daltea. ^ «i? hopowHpy#®n'"" venity Methodist Education Cm* master of artadegree In #hydics The bride.attended Oott&y Col­ #*rSund«y, Monday, «tut Tuieday^ pirn of Christ churches, will at the University. He plans to. will Mion lege, the American Conservatory " Walsh^wa#pli ! WM icmnenj wo. mt 10 *•* Sunday 4oth* Student University where he was jk-metn­ <« Mr. Hardin was formerly «no> teach physics in a misaionecbeol pf Music, *pd Southe^i. Methodist Antonio. tfate pastor of the First Method at fa) India. . ,»nd bert of Antony ^ , University, wn%<" graduated — >aa Student A«*ocia> «| Bonrioi and -In CW*tbMs CkwA&-'L#,j 4-v^% tfNm Nott^j Texas State College. >4M ChuHeh of Bonriouft has electric#!, e))«fat«e«faigf|*twnlfir; _ „T he DBF group from Central i| Ho» will meet at 6 p.m. Sunday mniu IKMO Ml »huu«flk wrjb iwvi Koiwiln ll lili • I»'.'.B;'.jJi'l.H* 1.'.11'!1 .i.>'.IIJ been active in student work. Last Mr. y Christian will be guestsat the regu JI-'-jl|I'»I ffir. at the Lutheran Student House. June he was mi the planning »m-work exeeuti*e In the Department £• if?" -The association will study the mittee for fti American Friends ft Religions Education of the & '^*r, 4 Book of Romans at the Student Borate* Committee International United Christian Missionary So- Tickets for the Baptlit St«depV »' House Tuesday at1and'0:80 pim., bLX. boronty mouses :%:• Sk Institute. He received his bachelor ciety fat Indianapolis. He is a for­Ualon hayride Saturday, Novem* 'Jfawik and Wednesday *t 9:80 p.m., •f divinity degree at Duke Uni-mer associate executive secretary ber 17, will go on sale Sundsy the Mde e members will have a c fel versity iir1940. * • , of the United Student Christian at the Student Copter office. ; and discussion. 4| October 19 I Council. , *• r ' t ' / ^The Core of Our/PaMv" will Tickets are 85 cents and in­Roberts, Calif. Tbe kb. 8ntt.ialk.ia the Scout Hal]t A graduate df the University clude the hayride to city park and The: bride haa erohs ti30 o'clock Sunday Mdrriing.• At" of Oklahoma, he received his ba­a weiner roast. Cars will leave die the Universlty wher«t ^ 6:80 p.m. he wfllspeak on "Why chelor of divinity degree from the student center at 6:80 p.m. t; pledge of ftoha XSanmw Faith Is Essential" in Fellowship University 6f Chicago and has • i i' , a Dkisr guests without as a housemother.. " sorority. Pvt. Downey* *­ ""v + J,v ermond viting to dinner Hall, after which he will preaeh completed requirements for his The Pilgrim Fellowship, group . Mrs. George Pedigo is the neW of Odessa Junior Collie, i informing the cook are two of the the sermon for the Prayer Altar doctor's decree from Yale., of the Congregational Church wifi chapeifon for PtBeta Phi sorority, ing basic traininf , Service of the University Metho­* hay« a meeting Sunday beginning ?i,^THE CONGREGATIONAL main • problem* to which new after being housemother ' at dist Church. with *supper at 6 p.ro. Af ter the CHURCH housemothers of University soror­Hockaday in Dallas for two end The-Kev^Jlm Stoner, national a iireetor u .^.Monday and Tuesday night*' at the University Chris supper will be worship and a sororities which have observed ^-Wndinyv::^t|i--;;:;:|peeljsl Science" will be discussed by Con­11 a.m.—"No More a Chapel"-^ SMU in the spring^,? Get Scholarships per, It will begin at 6 p.m. «t the new chaperons, are. Alpha Epsilon morninf services at S:46 and rad White at the Disciple Student Dr. Edmund;Heinsohn, minister. Phi, Alpha Phi, Chi Omega, Delta Music Instructor sJHillel Foundation. , •? Fellowship, University Christian -Campbell scholawhips of' $100 10,:B0 p.m. The three choirs will Re­7sSO^iTOi—-The* Rev. Grady Har­t>elta Delta*-Delta G?upma> an4 Muriel J«au»ettf Cox and ^ each have been awarded to three sing t^ether for the first time; Church. Sunday evening at 6 p.m. A recording, "Stories to din, minister of Chapelwooc Pi Beta Phi. i|:| Attends Eastman H. North will be marripd-*t the anthem will be;"God So Loved Mr. White, director of yoiith member," will be played after the Methodist Church in Houston, First Presbyterian ChurcK ips1 University students planning to supper, and this will be discussed, Mrs. Fay:e Rubin, boas^mo^her • Clifton Williams, instructor in the World" by Stainer. work, for ^ Central t Christian to speak. las December 8, with the v enter the Methodist ministry. at' the Ajpha Epsilon Phi house, composition and theory in the>CoU Three „ University Christian , Church, holds*_ Jbachelo* of divin-The public is Invited to attend FIRST ENGLISH John F. Anderson offidn^ -The students are Wayne Odom, who has teen a housemother for Church members will dedicate] ity degree from the University of the supper and reservations, cost­LUTHERAN CHURCH lege of Fine. Arts; is being sent to Miss Cox is a former qtajdentj president of the Wesley Founder twelve years, is. from Madison, ing 60 cents may be made by cal­11 a.m—"That^OldMacedonian the Unlversi^f. , 4 / the Eastman School of Music in III .1 1 tion; James E. Carter, vice-presi- ling 6-2696. -„> * Wisconsin. l • 'nji J. Ill-I Spirit"—D(r. Leiris P. Speaker, -dent of Wesley; and Eay Anders • :'..;';.;Th»vnew housemother-fo# the Rochester, N. Y., to study the ad­ ' minister. son, who is training to ba a tnedi* The public is invited to attend 7:80 p,m.—>Senior Luther League Alpha Phi's is Mrs. Mildred ministration of the school. 2 Students Assist eal missionary. tjia showing of the movie "Israel UNIVERSITY Young. Mrs. Young is new to the While there, Mr. Williams will The scholarship fund of I^BOO Reborn"-Sunday «t 7:80 pim. at field, but she feels that she doesn't the American Composers' At PalsyCsnter^l CHRISTIAN CHURCH ettend was set-up in 1983 by • the late lack experience; she has three Two University 'studeiij^ ^ 8:46 and 10:50-—"I have chosen Symposium. One of his Major or­ Mrs. T. S. Maxey of Austin in daughters.. One daughter, Jackie, flicted with cerebri} palsy He You"—The Rev. Lawrence W chestral cofttpositions will;he per­ honor of her parents, David Levy Interest is a sophomore at the Uniyersity. entertain similarly handiCaj^ Bash, minister. formed at the Symposium by the children with « Hallowe'en Ctmpbell and Carolyn ^Margaret JOE BIJRKETT Social Calendar 10 p.m.—Student Sunday Mrs. Alma Winne came to Au»> X™ By School recently. . CampbelL John McCurdy is ad-Dr. Robert A. L^w, Shakespcar-article entitled, "The SMrit of ~'ClasiW~h^ tin. in-Julyito be the-housemother ^ The Young^ AduU-Gr , , J^Tnlstritor. of18p"fundi; ~ ~ ianLichoiar of Mny taients, cqn-Texas Folk."" J~" -—^ . SUNDAY.. NOV..11 J ^i.national: -director-of.'..\student for Chi Omegft. She is from Bev-Howard Hsinson, -Qrr "s Although the" fund is handled 2-4 . Phi Sigma .D^lta, deAaert . :.work for the Disciples. erly, Maii.i Where %h« Ww( hoiisfc Atisto), Cerebral' Pals# siders himself first of all a teacher. He was chairman of tSe Uni­ sponsored the piurtyil Joy'&&£e through the Ex-Students' Assecia party. • mother at -Eneitobe * Junior ( 6 p.m.—DSF supper tihd meet­ tion office, the award is made By So it is natural that he is proud versity Athletic Council in 1927, 2-4;80 — Sigfma Delta Tau, "des­ing—Conrad White* speaker. lege, Mrs. Winne has been M«t**rologi$u; Meet Friday president, and Tom Morrison,^ oiie of the stormier years of Uni­ Forecasting weather in the Cen­part-time patient* at the C«fil ; a three-man committee including of the eminence of some pf the versity athletics. sert party. ' -FIRST METHODIST CHURCH housemother for seyen>]^irs, , tral Texas^area-will be discussed, helped in leading games, tT* Dr. Edmund Heinsohn, pastor of 2-4 — Sigma Chi, open house for men he has taught. These include 10:66 ajn.—-"Where Is Your After being a chaperon at 3RD. bypanel including R. C, StijUqr, stories, terrific r^eApenis the Ifniyenity Methodist Church; , One of the controversiM during Zeta Tau Alpha. : ;'::Hope?"—»-the Rev. . Marvin S. for three years, Mrs. C. E. New­ the late Governor Beaufoird J^s-his chairmanship was wh«sre, the instructor in jpetaorology(. at giving.favors to fifteen chi" ^|h« l^ev, Wood Patrick, presiding •6 —i Delta Zeta, Duke party, Vance^ minister. ton moved to the Tri-D$t house ter; John A. Guinn, president W "By learning of the chil ^ 'elder of the'«A»8tin I)istrict; and Texas-VSnderbilt game should be "for all fraternities. -7:80 p.m.—"The Rest of God"—-this fall. meeting Friday of the Are# branch .. -"V-W. A. Smith, secretary of, the 8*' Phi" Sigma Kappa, the Rev. Charles Walton, asso­we to un "* TSCW; Judge Meade F. Griffin played. Dr. Law maintained, over open Of the American Meteorological problems, aire' able of the Texas Supreme Court; The Delta Gamma housemother, Society. The meeting will be hel« stand otxr own difficulties b -V University YMCA. - *t; apd the objection of many Austin house for Moonlight Girls. ciate*, minister. Chancellor James P. Hart Of tw;Tjusineasmen; Mrs. Elma Johnson of San An-at Randolph Field, San Antonio. Green said:" ' < • University. * s be played in Dallas. He argued ___ -Conducted ^aw^listed in "Who's Who that „ the University belonged to in. America," has hdd »o .many alji of Texas, not just of Austin. On School Boards honorary positions, and has headed in" Dr. Law is in semi-retirement so many committees and groups .but teaches two classes in Shakes­Mt , With responsibilities growing in since he cam* to the University in peare. What he misses most is his the educational system, the Uni-1906 that it would not be feasible lack of contaet with great num­ •erwty Is conducting research op to try to list them. -bers of students. Texas school boards. . Although he never tires of Teaching, Dr. Law believes, The studies will cover 80 Mhool examining the intricacies -of should revolve aro&nd the indi­ systems. They will analyse oper-Shakespeare,, he is also interested vidual student. He doesn't teach —atingp methods,' relationriiips with ...in folklore.' He was UJIB of Ul( a class as a-whole, but the ihdivi­ one VA the < superintendents, and duties of the early presidents of the Texas folk-duals in it, . school boards. *—lore "Society" • and has written an Robert Adger Law 'grew up in Spartanbui*, S. C., the son of a Presbyterian minister in a family of eight. After graduating from Wofford College, S. C.,-at the.*g® of 19," he wondered What to do. "I recall very definitely iny father's sayingr he thought it was once a good thing for a man to teach for * time until he decides what to do," -v Dr, I>aw taught for two years in Spart«Bburg . public. schools, then .as® • • went on to receive his master's Duke University. He received his Doctor pf Philosophy degree from Harvard in 1906/ After a short tjrip to England, where he con­ tinued his study of Shakespeare, he accepted a position in The Uni­ versity of Texas English depart­ ment.: -• Four years later. Dr. Law mar ^.-TpMiittliatli Mill gault of Summervilie, .„v/ b*ve ,®ne »on and three daughters, all Universjty graduates-—two with Phi Beta Kappa honors. His wn, Thomas H. law, a Fort Worth ettorney^ is past president of the Junior Bfir of Texas. Dr. and Mrs. Law have six grandchildren. He particularly en­ joys going fishing with his 9-year­ old grandson. / A *«w of Dr. Law's more,recent activities include the chairmanship of the supervisory^ committee of the "New Variorium Shakes­ peare, '• sitting on the advisory board of ..the Shakespeare quar­ terly, contributions to textbooka, (left) luscious nylon tulle and acting a*,.* pronunciation ad­wor for a new edition of Web­ fn huge flowing clouds from this ster s Dictionary. Dr. Lew's private ^library iri-wonderful short formal 5n cludef copies of more than " W0 theses he;. has^supervised «outh seb cferal. ,. 44.95 and fifteen dissertations he hss directed, (right) biHowly silk organza with Typical.Of thi* nwdest manwho « huge pouf bow ood fullskirt iv haf sands at the university are these ^ """ " " ^ this dream of a cock-rt— ^ words, "Some of my best friends w> amoiig those Students whom I ,.,3,9.95. . iume itelled."-. to HOUSTON c^Mi: jtaSfeiK:a [ KtrrviH# But Co WPPfSP*! m mm *4*1 S'-u * 3-?y-is^ t .. »V :£ aeaa^ \:>Tha ''GMq^ni -diart empaSgn tila dMNra. talk ta Own-ftarda will %m 'gwan and * partyl«l^ ^"sSS will gat updev way. officially V«a. badhriduitlly. will be held for tha cltd. i I *5 ifv 5fj|owryfr» Pradfc* ^ M 4* ? Af 5-* 4 C. 2fi9t!S»r "J j^t&ft'sttidant awiat UA that ft Only one otnpii drfw iffl W >; ^BtialMdtEYNdLD! Drift £# the alta lotld «f 840 vegetabWW*te*ad|&; dbqr^at .Shs the campaign will last two weeks, i nity Hjjpt year's cup a -TiMf 'awiemid^iinBalc^«*>*• Association, Travis, County won as •ra;'1 announced boy Woodgathering Contest' wiB Entrant# are urged togwt per­and Dean Holland's office, Steele IMck McKau^fan, chairman of the paigp. wiB Im^sb on-the^amima tllaA Paralya* Cluster, Travis permanent prize because 1t-wa» said. -steering committee, Mid. The begin Saturday, November 24. mission before ,they 'tarty Wood drive. This -week tb» goal ia pri­Covnty CwAfal 'Whjrv CantKr^^ ' ' ^The.porpoiie of the competition Steele said any University organi­their third, win, Steele said. t away from most places. This per­The Cowboy bonfira eonteat eom^aittaa ia atmrittg individual marily to reach student* who do Wodd Student Service Fund, tha J """" give law student* practical sation may enter the contest but Only a first-place cup -will ba mission would eliminate incidents was started .six-yeas* ago. The giving, and no erganizationa "prill not live in University residence*, Uniyenity Y, Foreign StndMite ... _ In actual trials. Contes­must register in the offiee of D. given'this year, Steele announced. such as those which happened last 'Aggies annually try to botn'the ba approached. Thoaa adtjo leave contributed irill Advisory'Council, and the Spon#­ tant*'will work in two-nan teams, B. Holland Jr., dean of men, by Second-and third-place winners year, Steele said, when a frater­bonfire before it is, scheduled. In 'Mora titan11W individoal aolid. not ba aakai giva mgtki ^ sored Students Committee. Thesa reparing briefs and presenting & p.m. Not&mber 28., There will will receive honorable mentions. nity had to return as many as it 1949 two Aggies were hospital­tors will visit students .in their Stadenta ara encouraged to join organizatiotts have agreed not to arguments^ In moot court ized after being burned. by car*, living units la the ftrst week of the |S,tid |10 elubs. Itobcid^ aolidt fund* from th* atudanta S $% Jdaring' both aemesters. leanness with, gaaoline on..Freah­it year's final argument waa maa FMd. ^ ., ,' ; fm ' ai f fteard by the fail bench of the w" The complete liat of eonteat Journalist Can Win $25 in 1945 by w group of atudanta Texas Supreme Court. Jt was won ! '' rqle* are; ; •' * n vY r r" * ^4 c ^ K who wanted to put all of their V oikOuf Jlule by a'mid-law team. This year the 1. The eonteat bagin* Saturday, lS9: efforts into one drive. The Student Board of Student Managers plan November 24*.~r-Si Assembly voted not to have the ' %% to hare an equally elaborate pro- -y, 7" For Best Story oh Editor 2. Registration will be in Dean drive last year because the eamr V1k'! gram, beginning this month and 's-*. Holland's office, B. Hall 18, until paign had lasted four or %re 'ending with the final oral argu­ A contest for journalism majors Tbe contest, beginning this fall, by 6 p.m. TueMay, December 18, 5 p.m. November 23*. It fa abso­ monti)* and the goal ws* not t ment in April. A variety of prizes iPwelve fnstruetors have will offer two prizes of $25 each will be held annually. A donor who to Miss Vera Gillespie, Journalism lutely necessary to register so that intain hitter faculty will be awarded the winners, run­for the best feature,articles about stipulated -his identity not*be pub­Building 105, or Dr. DeWitt Red-a apace to stack wood will be adv^tced to tha portion of assist-The "up or out" jhda i* only This year "* group of students werg-Tip, and semi-finalists.- •nt profeaaor, fowr changed to a living Texas editor, managing licized, set up fofods which will dick, Journalism Building 303. All allotted for (entrants on Freehman effective it.flia screening proees* took tha msttter to t^ie Solicita­I Those entered in this year's ;speeial instruetors, and four have editor, or publisher. provide prize m'oney for the best junior and senior journalism ma­Field. tions is good, add Dr. Dolley. /?'' Committee, where the Cam*^ Sildebraad Competition are Carl received terminal appointments The contest was announced Sat­article by a boy and the best by jors are eligible. Length should 8. Tha wood-wih ba plaieel «o pua Chest campaign was approved. E.vans Abramsoh, • Willie Bruce for 1951-52; Nine others, some of Ah important part of the a girl each year. urday by Paul J. Thompson, direc-be from 1,600 to 2.000 words. Freshman Field in separata piles, Tommy Bodman, chairman of the : 3jd!ea™fe^ Stafford1--Br-Andrews^ whom were graduate student* fin­screening is done in the depart­ tor of tlnrliehool-of-Jousnalism*-—^Ail entries must be submitted "In addition to providing a good with each participating group pro-ishing their degrees, resigned. committee, than presented'i resdui y .Thorn** B. Arnold. John E. Baiiey. ment in which the faculty member JPhiflip E. Bargman," JofinIT.TRF" opportunity for Biudents to WritO ^ding watchmen for its pile, is located, ha continued. The d«-1ltltion to tha Aa^bly aaking ita ~ e -These-twenty-nine-University support. 4.^ttdtdagwiil be held at 8 a.m. vers, W. W. Byrd; Clifford Camp--Instractoga, aaroe under.t^|6 Mop partment makes its recommenda­,'bell,and Max Corbett. story, this contest will be of con­Wednesday, -NovemFer 28, "at pt out" provision of the tenure of fionl tos advaucetBent of facidty}'-^If we raaeh olr^roal of $8,000, Administrative Group siderable value in presenting some which time all wood to ba judged member* to the department dean, ovary *tudent must support-Vt* I'-J| Also William J. Craig, Roger J. offiee act .for tha faculty this of the outstanding personalities in must be on Freshman Field.' •> who then sends his recommends^ Mis* DoweH stated. "Student* who : f)aily, Joe B. Dibrellj David B. year, which marks their fourth Dickinson, Alejandro Duran, Do-Texas journalism," said Dr. Red-5. Due to fire regulations, no year a* instructors, Dr. James C. tiona to tha President, who in turn wanttogivemustdosointhese ' nald A. Edwards, Bobert 0. Fagg, dick. wood may ba accumulated any­'Dolley, vice-president, reported makes recommendations to the twa ilreeks, because they will not 1 I ' Robert L. Fairchild, Edward R. "We will preserve all entries in where withhf the city limits a* Saturday. Board of Regents. have another chance afterwards.* t-the Journalism -Library where cept on Freshman Field.!' Finck Jr., JSfin^B. Garrett, El-The portion of the rule dealingThe American Society for. Fub-6,000. words. Fpur copies shall journalism -students may read 6. The eup will ba awarded . wood Gaus, Billy H. Gragg, and a Wednesday night at tha Pep rally. with instructors provides that af­ lic Administration has announced be submitted,' accompanied by about these Texas newspapermten. ! William E. Hart. establishment of the Louis Brown-separate sheet carrying the au­With the passage of. years, we Any organization^ which wins ter four years as ah instructor a Also Jack C. HazeJwood, Tho-faculty member must either be ad­ thor's name, address, title of the hope-to develop sketches of most three times retains permanent pos­ : 'mas Hight, Jerry L. Hopson, W. low Award and the William E. vanced to 'the position of assistant essay, and the award for which of the outstanding newspapermen session of the cup. Elray Howard Jr., Donald W. Mosher'Award. There are of $100 a terminal professor or be given Houa'er, Vernon Kelley, Leonard each, offered for outstanding es­the essay was submitted. and women of the state. It is pos­Judging will be based on the appointment of one year. Texas Education some the -pile, but the type of Sjllgore, Kenneth R. King, David says on subjects dealing with Pub­2. To be eligible, essays sub­ sible that of the winning size of mitted for the 195? award articles will be published." wood (brush, lumber, crates, The purpose is to screen the lic administration. . * must J.' Kreager, Jay Frank Kinsel, be postmarked not later than Jan­• Further ihfoymation may be ob­etc.) and solidariy will also /ba faculty so the University may William R. Lumrnif-R. C. Malejr The Browntow award is open to uary"1, 1852. ' "" tained from.Miss-GiUespie-or Dr. considered. Hard-to»handla treaJr., and Frank D. Masters. all non-student junior members of A leader! Reddick. -_ i trunks and logs are not desired. ^ Also Bart D. Mauzy, James W. the society. Junior 'members are ' 3.sEssayg shall be judged'by a Small stacks will be consoli­ ' McCartney, Charles E. McDonald, 28 years Old or younger. The 3-member committee on awards dated into the main pile immedi­Gentry to Speak, James B. Meyers, A. D. Moore Jr., subject for this award is a bio­appointed annually.by the presi­ ately after judging. Members of •JBfe-J. T. Moore.Jr., David .B. Owen, graphical sketch of a successful dent of the society. tha competing organizations are Alvin M. Owsley Jr., Lloyd W. public administrator. 4. The ftrat award* will be. made •being urged to help in this opera­ Perkins, Demjwey J. Prappas, at the annual conference of the Today, Tmm adueatlon 1t faead wHfi UrQar anrpHmanft To Campus League The Mosher award is open to tion. Risher Randall, Gene S. Rogers, society March 7-9,1961, in Wash­ student pemb^^of the society. Dr. Elizabeth Gentry, of the and James E. Ross. These are persons attending a• col­ington, D.Ci city health department, will apeak •han bafora the war. To kaep a qualrfiad ^aff and satve .Also Henry W. Sebaata, George lege or university who have matri­6. All,Mpief,-•of each essay The Department of Psychology Bluebonnets? to the Campna League of Women Shelley, Franklin L. Smith, Earl should b« >mailed to*the Bectet&jr^­ culated for a degree and ar,e de­ iss^giving Alice in Wonderland Voters Monday at 4:45 in the e8 tha state, tha University of Texas and A&M Collage B. Stover, and Harold Young. voting a treasurer, American' Society major portion^ of their Are They? Union on "Public Health 1n Aus­ PuhriffA*dimistrBtion^^l3-E;^0thtime to study. The subject for trick-mirror field, withr1wowwaji tin." Street, Chicago 87, Illinois. must face increased costs with DECREASED income the'195i-award~iir"a-ca»fr«-«on­ (or is ..it... onerway.?).._. lookingr. Asks~ Yonk Visitor Dr.Gentrywillenumerateon .AUSTIN . cerned with' making a significant WELDING'ft glauses in Sutton Hall; . — -"fhOw tha health dejMotm«mt in:Tra» RADIATOR administrative* decision. Th© "looking-glass," which is Dr. Manuel Barker, iprofessor via County works-and co-operates "w»bs.YOO.r. Slill WORKS The rules, which apply to both on the wall between two--small-of art education at Ohio State in conjunction with, other health, W. Bib St. the Brownlow award and the Mo- examifling i^ooms, is constructed University, thought ha had seen education, and welfare ajgencles. ' •L 0-37SS sher award, a,re: •so that when a light is turned on everything. Dr. Gentry, who received her above it, it looks like-a mirror on While here on a three-day vi­ 1. Essay shall be 3,000 to . D. from the University of the side where the light is. How­sit to view regional art efforts, Chicago, has worked with public ever, for people in the adjoining UniversiOr and public school of­ With the holiday season just health for seven years. She worked W Tiesdaj, serves as ficials showed him around. Just ^ TYPEWRITER SPECIALISTS about here, the Student Employ­ room it a window. with' the sta£s health agency for This type mirror, of which there before he took a train for Dal­ ment Bureau is swamped with tem­ four years and returned to the iff' " Can Do th# Job Better porary -paVt-time jobs.' ^ "— •will be ia in •the new'btzildittg; Ska* aomeone ariced himr "What Travia County department in JuIy * ­is used to study the h^jbavior of do yjou think of all the local .We Pick Up " Mrs. rBess^:Jane--Duncan,-em­ after previously working for them Noienber U .. . clilffreii,'sald^^ Dr;'.i'lCa^l'^r^allefti-Ihluehonnet Qaintingii?" ploye 'at the^Bureau, ..said "Mon­ from-1942. to 1944. She..cficently. ~ and Deliver bach, distinguished professor of "What are bluebonnetst**1 he day that a job demonstrating elec- did pediatric work for two years \ ^ Phone 8-4360 M. tl psychology. ^ -'W^: v inquired. tric trains is open at a downtown at the Childrens' Hospital in Des Blushing slightly,: a Universi­ stores Another store needs a boy Moines, Iowa, and the Mayo ty official*-explained 'that they to demonstrate small electrical Education Professor,' grow around Austin, that almost tools for four Saturdays. In her'talk,' Dr. Gentry will ex­ every Texas artist had painted One store, planning to sell pop­To Attend Study Council plain what we ,mean by public them, and that the bluebonnet corn poppers in® connection with health activitiea. and how... these f» ia the state flower. ­ the holiday season, needs ten girls Dr. Thelma Ai .Bollman, asso­ activities tie in with other for two weeks to demonstrate ciate professor of curriculum and -Dr. Barker took the train . agencies. these poppers. instruction at the University, will without seeing any bluebonnet Other jobs open at the Bureau attend the annual, sessions of the -paintings. Perhaps there "are Track AtbliU Returns auch paintings in Dallas. include a butcher, piano player, Joint Council on Economic Edu­One of the F8F Navy Bearcat ushers, ambulance attendants, cation in New York next week. fighters which flew over the Uni­stock, boys, and a job for a girl Mrs. Bollman was co-ordinator versity shortly before the game of the Texas Workshop on Econ­ who can( type in Spanish. Saturday was piloted by a former omic*. Education-at Concordia*Col­ University student, Rodney Des­ lege in June. The Workshop was mond Kidd, a former four-year sponsored by the University. letterman in track who was grad­ or uated in 1949. f * x — •••­ -, V & T" •toe S^qrday to discuss future plans/Hesaid nothing definite;had been scheduled in tha way 4^, fu­ -w tttrt heazfngs.* • 1 • 18®$ ff/vers/ \ h ^ "\ Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation AUTO REPAIRING I ^. THAT LASTS! V \ Austin, Texas' We carl! for & deliver 4^Ti^5t4Usr«ie«ie / uvV mm x3fag^aaae|",w *4 M f­ l*Flf HMMMH *"* MSKMnnRMMreHK!^^ * (it ^ ^Aite ' '-4s»-*• $7,000,000, t **Y «l :•wsi*S a V &TL 23€P ,^..",..,-_r,.„.^^sS aslfeeifBRHB"?!!^®.' ---Sf£:3»teS3B &h-r / 4*®? I ) (i»>*.Afr » 1 => pffty-h v w^?, ? * ,--:'-, H-rf r *" H r " , «! « r » >v 3?Y ^ V?-V*>' f V15 v * " ^ . f ^ ' * * tU^ C \ r zr^spfi, ~.?r*: jf'sG S3* '4-'<-? €XO £ i •'$Mv-:i ^ •*>, ^ -\\ % f S Jf 4f. ^ In,. Fund for JiS" v v i <* I*'' cHfV** '^*r^ » r ; * ,t.rT ^ ^*1* t'^rf •f •. ^14<• > "1 is$? M ;r^r^ rw,v,W®»'.'°°0,U»'B5 ttil|iltt Vcfc^*4' H won't «•»*eo»*•*•»•I9" , , li »«,«ort»tOUl W%. £-£££t «0» z«.^ «*v ^ io »nc •s^ -" ^ji 1» '­ - 5$ sur/rJi-<-"".ej-* , "• 7 ^'>V v r^rw' "• .-§'-^T • "TT,-. :!.:*; •>*< rr -'•^v f4 t% •• . This advertisement paid for by}, /^•—fc* following friends of the — • "Tjhlfyersity of Texas ,t ™-and Texas A-cwd M..— ^SWU J ;: '•• '^f^-^"' : -IMi Mi CUy Butm _ fL /*-!II ^Flan k s Be1f w • • urill 4 The Abel Stationers OFFICE OUTFITTERS Rae Ann Shop ' " ' 1 Austin Transit-Inc. No. 1 :"* No. 2 ' 209 W. 6thJt. Oppodts N«t OfFfo* 2532 Guadalupo. 2824 Gu«d«lupo ^ - ' -1£. ;-w«:i;v-,ov... • V' "" i Ed Minor, Scott Electric Service Fagan Dickson ^4> Pharmadtt % .» -' Ireland Graves Jim Tom Barton Attfrmy «t Law l1009 6-9714 301 LMMUM IMf. Austin, Texts 1910 &u«d«lupo 1V Phono 2-5211 -"1 <• , -i » . ' • Texas Book Store W. S. Diake, Jr. L. Novy , 2244 €huid«lup«—7*614! » < V ' :". ': '">i;."":, • '.;• ^'/K:.' '"'Zzr''-;.-!\ 'J"'•. '•'••:f-f.'IsS •? * *«" >< '•. * 1 * ^"T. -* , ... - >-if ^ . "A-. -n • "T "•' "' * * ' Wirtz v W-S-£&': ­ "'" " " • ••. . ^OBefr. >• j. , .:, ••-VZTZr. .. • # '. . IU*I E»t*t« S«lM-«lUAt4> James H. Hart, SI? -t *T^ET-^* -it p {/ _#_.i..-vi4;..-.tt.'.L a -. • -, .--vv•t'i if. f i vtv 4 liwuf wet Uiiw •'£i>MKC--v:y.',A -^ l ; AJ4AM*IM I-aik ­ »•" 5 "" -•'rftf-r-•••-- ^PF WiW as£i • »1HU{|_ Brown Building Tk |0SW«f»6Hi rV > -." . i--•' 9^ —. mssm KT'' rnmsm S&+A T J&fl vgr *r sftrt* '^•. • S lm . - m •: •<*'% ^1' SijJtJ-ij-Sfi?. M'-t ­ "iy^. < d <-Cv By KEN GOMPERTZ l&L \K Te***e WlHItr •4-. .J", :j Mi 5," I--'^ •>. iram 8ex education tihroogh nibi^es pictu« •"'be"' made available. It Britt String Group Curtain Club Set* will pay a brief but probMibly sfn-is better than many that hav< Mtiitaal vUt to Anstin. been, pisoduc^d and it doea mora , rZMfal-DiemilMr-Run' " ; *•-v-' "••rsr : ^§f,n-rt-J ^ :ncludesWork jrr^bg" -' ' " ' ml. ,"BWi of « Baby, good than h^cLf* *$W''30 minute doea-sistent The tale is, as. the title blocks taken out. This was prob­ , George S. Kaufman and Katharine nBggests, the care and develop- up by a piano recital by Webster tute of Technology. V y mentary program. /: ably; a three-hour show at first Dayton. m*f, " ment iof •-child from eaj^epUin cut .to _ . He firtt presented this aeriea "It Tolls for Thee," recording bot strengthen'the aims Aitken Monday at 8:30 PiPi. in through birth to life, a few weeks wy$ flaying Lucy, aspirant candi-!at Ha rv a r d University last man's sociological struggle to keep of the pictures. As it is now, it the Recital Hall. old. • ' '%&&! lor titlf of "First Lady of the a'lftumn. t, |Up with technology, is another.30-presents an attitude toward preg­ v liatid," is Myroa Ruff. Stephen The Fine Arts Festival, beitig minute show. Thomas Rishworth, • • A couple, a rather well-to-do nancy and childbirth. But mueh ' Tickets to ill ;^M!tiva| «|iintas this seven 4 Wayne,-her husband, will be held week, includes director of Radio Hot^e* is direc­two of pre-war vintage, learn information has been left out." concerts, a drama, an art exhi­may be obtained, at tine Mtisie - played by Bill Larsen. Carter Hib-tor. MSs Eleanor Page, staff mu­that they are*to be blessed and "Birth" is an educational movie. bard, Supreme Court justice, will bition, two radio dramas, and a Building Box Office, University of Radio House, is music turn to a physician for the wife's Don't go If yoa expect something ­ siciantelevision demonstration. telephone extension 444. No ad­ be portrayed by Mainer Hines, 4irector ,ior both shows, care and education. At the end sensational—you'll be disappoint­ his concert mission will be charged to . the v and Marianna Clore plays Sunday's will be the it. C. Norjris, Radio House pro­of the hour-long show, she knows ed^ If you want to learn, yoa can Britt Cello Ensemble concert, but wife, Irene., Kathryn Grandstaff first public performance of the duction manager, is. producer of decidedly more than the viewer. gain something from it. plays Emmy, Lucy's niece, and Britt Cello Ensemble. The group admission is by tieJfeV only. Tic­The mellow-voifced, kindly doctor V& * "Stop, Look, Listen," an exami­kets to the thtee Aitken recitals' 3im McLarty plays Senator was founded by Horace Britt, -races through explanation of just ' fThe morie tmee this week com­ nation of currents and forces Xeane. Sophy, Lucy'ssecretary, is professor of music and well-known are 60 cents each; *i§ */f •* -MEMBERS OF THE BRITT CELLO ENSEMBLE which have' shaped the times. "what happened and will happen," bines novel-based scripts, good played by Mildred Barnes. cellist. With Mr. Britt in the and his attractive nurse lingers adaptation, creditable acting, and James L. Reed is narrator and gufertet are Phyllis Casselman painfully on "how 16 prepare the healthy ^entertainment. "Red Others in the cast are Gamiie .Carl Tibbetti is assistant, produc­house for the birth." ^ Youlng, "Martha "Lee "Baxter, and; . Hassen. as Belle Hardwick; 8t§w- er. •* t' • ; . .--v 1; Badge of Courage" at the Texas Merle Clayton. Joan Ryan, harp- It is here .that the movie has and "The Desert Fox" at the Para- Beginning at 9:30 p.m., comedy, Jack Werne1 ^drs^*;",papfretr«^«hieational'th«o^ Opening the program is a Bach Gentry, consultant for maternal price. Coming up—"Streetcar ingr; Judy GalbraitU, Louella May ry, commercial and dance televi­ and child health for the Travis Named Creevey; Max Noller, George Ma­chorale for four cellos, and a sion will be presented by the Tele­Desire" and "Tembo," a, trio by Beethoven, which was ori­ County Health Unit,-was rather, technicolor feature-length adven­ son; John Clark, Jason Fleming; vision Workshop, with E. R. Mor­ ginally written for two oboes and emphatic about it. ture story of wild-animal hunting . Mary Harkleroad, Mary Ives; ris as director. = ~ English horn. The largest exhibition ever iwarded by the jury. for an oil, "The Switch"; the $50 "This movie is based on the in Africa—with bow and arrow^ ' J Barbara Pechacek, Ann Forrester; sponsored by the Texas Fine Arts Awards were the $450 Jodie Austin National Bank saVinff bond home-delivery theme. It is a mis­ i,-Bill Craver, • Charles and Bill The second half of the concert award to Charles Umlauf for plas­ will consist of a sonata for cello Association will open at 3 b'clock B. Roberdeau Memorial Purchase take to show this to the general ' Sickles, Sedgwick. ter sculpture, "Brahma Steer"; public because home-delivery is and figured accompaniment Selects Cast * Also in the cast are Jo Myler, bass Sunday at Laguna Gloria Art Gal­Prize to Julius Woeltz of Austin ami-.the $40. Capital National Bank United by Telemann; "Arfdante -Reli-lery and the Elisab'ei Ney~ Mu­ uncommon in the States Varsity Inn t # Nevillyn Bobo, Arlene Kay, Jo for an oil titled "Picnic"; the cash, prize award to Irviri L. Lynn today* In Austin it's about two gioso," by Florent Schrfiitt; and seum. Reagan, Jac Fanner, Gwen Boehl, three Spanish dances which Mr. $100 Mrs. Herman Brown Hous­of Dallas for "Limestone Gap." per cent; the average is just a The Friesidliest Place in Town Ralph Colertian and James Hemp­The oils and sculpture will be ton cash prize award to Williarii little highel for the rest of the Britt has • especially arranged for shown at Laguna Gloria, while Lester of Austin for an oil, Also, $40 from the Beaumont 6208 Dallas Highway country."" hill. ^ his ensemble's first performance. and Port Arthur Art Associations Phono 53-9012 v ' ''First Lady," Curtain Club's watercolors, pastels, prints, and "White Strata"; the $125 Mrs. J. The cast for the next.. Austin : "However, I think it's a good Thes^ include "Malaguena," by and Texas Fine Arts Association ceramics will be exhibited at Eli* D. Claybrook Memorial Purchase -fm^jor production of the fall se- trustees and directors in Beau­Civic Theater production, "Blythe Albeniz; "Nana," by De Falls, and sabet Ney^Museum. The Exhibit Prize to James. F. Valone Jr. of ;mester, will be,staged,and directed Port Arthur Spirit," has been selected. "Granadina," by .^pquin Nin. is open to the public. . 7 ? Georgetown for an oil, "Rococo"; mont and to Emily -by Anne Swart,hofit as a part of Ruthland of Robstown for an oil, Mrs. Bradman will be played by . fyer candidacy "for a master's de-All of the late piano works of The $951 General" Fal|. Exhibi­and the $100 purchase prize, by "•Browning"; the $25 Mrs. D. J. Jane Melin, a University drama gree in drama production. Beethoven will be performed by tion attracted 518 entries' by 244 Phelps and -Dewees «hd Simmons Japhet aw^ar* Noveltlu of all type* that a series of concerts devoted They selected 150 works by 10? Worth for a casein-oil, "Search the $25 Westem Reserve Life In­"Blythe Spirit,'' termed byexclusively, to Beethoven's last artists to be exhibited from No­for Knowledge"; the $50 Will surance Company award to Janet Noel Coward • improb­SENSIBLY PRICED AT $28.75 author 'an AUSTIN NOVELTY CO. new in eoow. Sib Ph. 6-4387 piano works is something vember il to December 3. Prizes Searbrough cash prize award to E. Turner of Nacogdoches for able comedy in three acts," will be Thf% eotirse soils «ls«whoM lorif the music world. Although a pro-amounting to $1,140 also were Raymond W. Witt of Kingsvilie "The Flying Squirrel"; and the produced in the round. It will play $57.50 (.TWICE OUR PRICE) WHY PAY MORE? $1D Mrs. _JBert K. .Smith cash at the Civic-Theater ..P_layhoiis®*. HURRYt"Offar ^ award to Christine Streetman of 2828 Guadalupe, November 21-25. 7-MS» Houston^„^ejiinMie-.aenlptnreJ, v "Pelican." ^ ' ';v,-r Honorable men€ion went to Ce­llil"''T3fcB'jr1"'CS&ibiW^' Austin, far LMU IS !H1\JI IS "The Effacers"; Seymour Fogel, TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY Color by Ttcbnleolor Austin, for "The Ruined City"; JFealnre Starts at 7 P. M. Up In Arm*" W. A. Reily Jr., Austin, for "Me­"Cottl* Driva" Daaay Kara tamorphosis"-; and McKie Trotter. Jaal MeCraa Diaak Shara y: Fort Worth, for a watercolor,» Data Stockwcll la TachaUalar "Mountain." , ' "CALL ME Honorable mention in sculpture ~ MISTER" went to lone "Franklin-, Commerce, —with— Big Gush«r for "Whither" and Paul P. Hat- Battjr Grtblt •Dan DaiUr PrMtoa FmUt gil, Austin, for "Sitting Hen." "RETURN OF JESSE Wtjriit MotrU Firltf GrtRf* Receiving honorable mention in JAMES" ri»* Sham Ii40 Fhrnt Sh#w «t40 prints and drawings were Charles "John Ireland • Ann.Dvorak Umlauf, f o r brush drawing, "Young Steer"; Selma Waidman, Austin, for charcoal and^vwash, "Mother a$d Child"; and Russell "CATTLE DRIVE" Vernon Hunter, Dallas, for :seri­ " -—with— graph "Off to the Fiesta." Joel McCraa •N. Austin artists Whose works were D«an Stockwell accepted by the jury and; will be "ABBOTT * COSTELLO AT INTtRSWTE THEATOESshown ip the exhibit are -Ruth-IN THE FOREIGN Blanton, Rees Brandt ($), Cecil LEGION" Lang Casebier (2) ; Kelly Fearing, Bad Abbott •. Lou Coatalio TCfffiM Uflf Louise Randall Field, Mary Fish, c Seymour Fogel, and Constance MONTOPOLIS -Forsyth (2).. Also, James H. Garner, Boyer "BEDTIME FOR -: Gonzales Jr., Robert I). Graham BONZO" -Jr. (2), Gaylen C. Nanaen <3), witl>r— vi'.< •• pipCOMfRichard Hardin, Paiul P. Hatgil, Ronald Roagan * Diana Lynn: Josef Head (4); Paul Kelpe, Wil­"GUNFIRE" -r liam Lester (2), Lyn Meyersii Lo-Don Barry ' HGIUNSI ren Mozley, J. Robert Phillips (2), v. Marvin Prager, and W. F. Pyburn, YANK •lit JAMES MASON (THARA Also, Mrs. Charles H. Ravey, W. A. Reily Jr., John Rotenfield, "BORN TO BE BAD" Margretha Roston, Don Snell (2), Joan Fontaine*Zaechary Scott "MARSHALL OF Everett Spruce, Charles -Umlauf HELDORADky' - (6)i Selma^lWaim-(4), land # 'l* ''*"' Jimmy EHUofr * -L6UIS HAYWARD • Julius Woeltz, First! >w2p.m. ill "LADY amt tht BANDIT' ; Broadway Comes to Austin PARAMOUNT-TUES. EVE. NOV. 20 ' "Criminal (Lawyer" la TECHNICOLOR1 A whole liltingly melodioaa operetta by tho man who . PAT O'BRIEN WBipei»d "Tfc« BI«a Danube/' It'a a Kandfnl of mnai­^^naiaMteiaaBMBaiiaBaaiaag IT'S GAY! CHANDLER KEYE3 ONE ONLY HH5 7t,^ NIGHT ^OW SHOWING FIRST SHOW 2 P.M. The All*American story all America Is Rnthing to see! MIIU HUX MIM2I •'!JfM' .THORfSI ALL-AMERICAN" ^ BURT LANCASTER • % ? Pepeye Cartoon —STARTING— Thursday, Novonxhwr 4*^^ .. FOR pNE WEE1£* IRRAPETINA. COURAGE *GENU1N iDMMII STKAU>S' ffm. GREAT!" J3 M..f I Ik '/ fT ' -CtntUmdfimim D—hr M tf•'^T-aoo J ¥hwk •— JLOKETTA JOSEPH MBMKMtSOP'UOTBTROMUUECS ; YOUNG; t I . GOTTEN CIMFANY BF IS ; & "Hqjf rAngel" Maticol Pfracfaw ^ C«l«j-Tacliafa-Blar • * filled accompanied by ckeck^ payabla to aSSwedBhiBaBBiiiSS Vfcc i,*-- •> |3_ ' .... .. c ^ f * ~ '*7 UAi>wr JSdl* m Wm mm mm isa •ssii m-M. 7 «&,>* Floatin t i , a, -* •% ^oHriion'S«V^"» J -i V -4s ...'"V-Jij ** ^' ,) * "5®*( vs» WIBUYOOiCOUI..*, SHOWBOA1^PT»^ ftiStORY at. the-University for course^ in summerbf 1831. He and his fai»i- yr-Jg-^ Europe In WW Ik QP AK AMERICAN INSTITU­American literature*especially the ly were America's first showboat , 1 T niiminirainntRU RAILROAD BATTALION. * TION. By Gnhtm* Tie South end its writing. He intro-family and were labeled «ri* The cover on this hooV» JtuuH Bt Millar. Dattasi *tlw "dnced the course at the Univer-tics as America's most re?nwk«ble jacket invites your ettention^but ****** DUm unuunflm i-.J&.:f l>ili PvtM*•* j»p. 93.S&4 sity entitled "Life antf Literature theater -family. Thly weve ali i °w way of thinWn^ ^i Ae the fl . Tfcli Is atory~ef Johnie ith a calliope &*t eQul<|>e ofthe 8ou«L" gifted,in dremallios and the other ; & |flrewnting the lUustrabon on the back ihstr^ljr luiTdte ttiss. ^v%dsau» u engineer oa the fbu|t* heard for eight miles and illus­On Monday en autograph party pham offte entert»i^in^t'*f/ his the keynote of Qferfe Price's W4A hetter.'MI-'ft-' r, BailroaA ft deals with Ids fri* trated handbills advertising *'A wiU be held at the Book Stahl that.,timetMf -.i® ^ latest suodMpM in High-olMS MubIobI Oomedieft kumor. * , , -; vuD^m eheer H'inil life Md th« life rf JhB An­Clean • Performance—-No Coarse f#om 4 to fl p.m. to'give theuublic Their hokt was crudely con*" De«ribing « cartoon, we »«vw, Mm,:**#.**, drews, who tells, the story. Jokes, Np Do1 * structed, trembling a large gar^ is fetal to any humorous qualities we knewthe >uble Entendre*, No-aehanee * "~ While on-his way t» Germany thing the Most Perfect Lady Will age set ydowu on a small b*rge^ r it might have hud, but we^Vt endthisreview^ resist trying: , <' for the second time with the Bail-Object To—A Good Show. A JBig "tSSU^l A peck of potatoes or.yams, twd v m* stmt *i • It's a simple drawing.of §scene of Salvitioi Army -> >o«4 Battalion, Jim tel]b h»» »S*ia-Show, A Moral Show," the &fife boats" is today. gallons of fruit, a side of bacen, -tan* Johnie'a story, -.."X.,.; ' x.7 . _ nment . palaces an. But.on with the show. , or fifty cents, preferably the lasV about midway dowp a sheer drop. beintf ogled by a pi Cau^t before your 'eyea are two Now Ludlow and ettVe e b«y*, and one • Jim and Johnie work out of arrivalte thew^ was the ususl ^rice of admiBsion, figures—a plummeting; confused* f«l gents;is whiapfrtng to, iEnnis, Texts, for the Santa Fo. looking «iule, followed closely by--Johnie is presented u s weak I* plummeting* righteously character wh* can be somebody 1ST None of tke" 8ho^So*t;4 ^oBir indig­ i® IC7 i'Jjf / ,nant rider. He is tugging angrily We'rt strain|ng their credp wken he want* to be. He is agoor travel under their own power, f St at the reins end stubbornly oriler-f~B088Xi engineer, but the story doesn't tell * r1 ^Jexan (Oooki They drifted down the river with • ing atthe top of his voice;"Whoa! -much of his work with the rail­the current, using "sweeps" to y^»pg 'v -g*H •**. f -. Damn it, whoil" -_ _ road. _ guide them into docks. A sjnaH, Tr»«lB^ HIOHtoWATER MtAfVXC OP* A very small portion of the Reviews 'i News tow was hired to push them back Confusion is rife in most of George Price's' cartoons, but itie is book is dedicated to the Railroad up stream at the end of a season; W » healthy sort of confusion which Battalion, which served in Europe rounding countryside in the late ciates were a group of players after a • "Captain" had made Compiled by Publisher's W somehow makes you take a sec N1ITD, NEUH mHINSTBELSY daring would have the Second been World interesting War, to It Dr. Philip Graham, professor who giving traveled performances down the wherever Mississippi enough bought a money tow to on haul the hiVnround. shows, he v, * twill nm, AIX^NEW. — ond pmsled glance that often 1880's. shows a' familiar situation beneath leern more about the actual wir of American literature at the Uni­they could secure a hall, an emp* Before the invention of the eel* Up-to-date Comedians, Wonderfal Daneer^l it alL . The Caine Mutiny, By. ^ experiences of Johnie and Jim £nd versity, has set forth in his book ty store, a commodiua tavern din­liope, advertising of the showboats. Wottk, Doubjeday. |3,&5« vOultivated Singere, Brand»Kew Speoi«ltie»r As Robert M. Coates said in less *bout their private live*., a record of the men and women ing room, or even a deserted brew* #as done hy sending an advapco The Cruel Sea. By Nicholas " the introduction to the book, —SUE WOBTHINGTON who built the floating theaters, ery. They used their floating agent to, publicise, by word of "Sometimes the mixups he depicts -sarrat. Knopf. $4, of those who perfonned on their b*rge »t first only for traveling mouth and by .handbills. One of Melville Goodwin, 1 Hmji Article 1b Fluurataey Mag . are fairly simple ones, in a good stages, snd of the thousands who and peeping, when they could find the more Simple methods was to" P. Marquand. Lit . Dr-William. Reete Uoyd, asso­ j tHiny; of-the others he goes-fur­ sst to their auditoriums. Jtimp-lodgings in j^ othcr place. . send the^ostoaatiat of tawn JVqm Huge-to ciate professor in the College-of tiaHTED BY EIECTRICHY. ing right into the midst of his But in Natchex-under-the-Hill in two piusea to the show. He ^rould Jones. Scribner Pharmacy, is author tf a< ehep- gladly post; a notice the post oi ideas as much *s incident* on -ter. •. entitled r i,IHiriiKiatfon end subject, he wastes no words in December^ 1817, Ludlow probably Nothinglike it ever seen belbve. Sweet dingers; which have somehow become inex­ne Catcher in the Rye. Bjr l» telling of the first beginning ef chose his boat for Vperforraance office bulletin board. ­ Clarification" in the third edition , Pretty Qirls, JUegent Oostumes and ^ tricably involved in our eockeyed Salinger. 14tUe. $3. of "American Pharmacy," pub­showboats. since he hesitated to take the la­But on July 4, 1856, the nois? w;orld today-r-which means, J sup­NON.FICTION ­ lished by J. B. Lippincott Co. ! Dr Grahkm has been a pioneer dies of his company into tl\e sa­"steam piano" m«de its debut.. , (Gorgeous New Soenery. -pose, that he is as much a satirist The Sea Around tJs. By Baehii loons of the town. He never re­•The instrument after the; Civil I)on't be misled, wait and see the Largett, Cleanest, Safest Vloating as he is a humorist." L. Carson. Oyford* $3,|0, """" corded any river boat' perfor­War became definitely restricted Ken-Tiki. By . The* Theatre erer presented to the Amerieaa pubUo. T«u are eordlaUy Almost everyone, we iniagine, * mances as he was anxious to to the institutions of amusemens, invited to Inspect the floating Palace during the day. has see)t, chuckled, perhaps guf-Band, $4. • 'f^Ki make it appear that he acted only such as the circus, the showboat, Diwty. By Heaketh Tearso^.-J&j You are cordially invited in tiie best theaters of the region and the excursion boat. arrival of the boat. More than any r "Showboats" is more than a per. *4. -« H at a time when the boat-shows had Like other members of the cast, other object, the calliope became history of an American Institu­H. AlUn Smith's 'Mr. Zip' The Magnificent Century., ftp J none too savory a reputation. But the calliope was "doubled," In its the symbol of the showboat. tion. It.is written with^imagination B. Costain. Doubleday* $4.50^ I* WwtMit Movi* Sotir* it is altogether probable that they quiet moments, its pipei distilled Dr. Graham has devoted a large and an eye for the .more colorful Washington Confidentiil. By Jeck ^ to attend a party in honor of had given shows on the water be­drinking „water. Occasionally, the share of his book to tW French details of river life. The perform­H. Allen Smith's latest book, Lait and Lee Mortimer, &9W&. fore, to. sustain theitt, meager for­ttfnes were unrecognizable as they family-—Augustus Byron French. ers, the river-captains, and the "Mister Zip," will be published by 1 $3. , ( . i -, .iv vV« : J" tunes^ came from . .,rvJ...1 by the, Steck Company, the book . For the older group, Noel Steat-child's list of best sellers, said -S "• ^ Stressing the importance of relates Miss Buffler's sumlner ex­field's "Skating Shoes,""the third Mrs. Ethel Markely of the Texas Written by e professor of American Literature ^ fraphing Book Week, William Faulkner, periences in the home of a Breton in a series of "Bhoe" stories; Book Store. "Garden' Spiker," by University of Texes''and, published by the Universityli Nobel Prize winner', said "We can fisherman. James Daugherty's "Of Courage Mary Adrian; "Chariot in the • • ' titSky," by Arna Bontemps; "Life disregard the literature for child-Popular new books for the pa­ Press, SHOWBOATS is e delightful end euthoritetiv|H|' hood only if we consider unimpor per doll and cap gun set are Berta Through the Ages," by Charles / -"it• tant the way in which a national and Elmer Hader's 'Lbsf lh a ZoO,' Knight; and "The First Great In­record of America's showboats from ^tho first onnl Life's Problems ventions," by Lancelot Hogben, iisoul' is formed and sustained. Theresa Kulab Smith's "Ponch.Q Since a child's horizons change as and the Pink Horse," Leo Politi's a^e high on the h8lf:pint's enjoy­launched in 113^ to the lest, now tied up at « 'New able reading list. he progresses, the theme "Little Leo,"-and Katherine Mil- Louis dock. — • ­ Horizons With iBookb' is sfenifi hopse's "Patrick and the Golden ~ ln spite of the many new books The Texas Book Store rat­ /-w .'-X cant." Slippers," said, Miss Ann Malone on the market; the "Hopper LIVE AND HELP LIVE. By S. ing" of the old favorites, "Alice H. KarnM and E. S. Thetford. in Wonderland/' "Black Beauty," New York: Th« Macmillan Com­by Anna Sewell, "Little Mjen" and has a special collection pany. 408 pp. $3.75, "Little Women," by Louisa Mae Alcott, and "The Secret Garden," Written in stripped' language, TEXAS BOOK STORE Frances Burnett, is minus two-bit words and in a by Hogsen is Still high. ' of books just for children. too-helpful tone. "Live and Help v Live" is another problem-solving —GRETA NISSEN book in the vein of Dale Carnegie, * "The finest words fall flat in the absence of example," say the PRE-SCHOOl. AGE authors. Intermingled between the The Important look Margeref WHe Brown bits of their ideas they have in­ The Sleeping Beauty ..Reepihow Book Read.. serted islands of true confession Breve Little indien...Jiil and Bernard' Martin type case studies. -• She*, for My Pony_.l .'...Margaret Friskey The:' Friends'" — "Live and Help Live"suffers the Tenfgran's, Night Before Chrlstm«s..............-by Esther Buffler way of most problem and answer books; steps in solutions are smug­ Clement C. Moore illustrated by Constance Forsyth ly listed 1, 2, 3. Too often the November 11-17 Giant Golden Book of Eives The story of the friendship of two Breton authors drive straight toward a Geiden Book Series boys secretly working on boat models to point jrithout realizing that their Greet BS^r Wild Animal Book. 'i£jig£ enter in e big contest, and the wisdom solutions might run out of gas or 3* Golden Book Series bog down. end understending they follow wh^n one The authors represent a realis­ E of them is prevented from finishing his tic idealism in-philosophy as the model in tirrue. . " For the Youngest ' When a Child.Can Really Read AGE SIX TO NINE best formula for man who should ;W' Ages 10-12 $2.00 meet life steadily and courageous­ Beta's Uttlo Star. .Carolyn Heywood ly, "facing all facts without over-The Family Mother Goose. " * Miriwof the Mississippi-^Hollihg C.Holling Hidden VeBey of Ox. Rachel R. Cosgrovo or undereihphasis on any aspects Wait Till the" Moon is Full—M.W. Brown •- The Apple and the Arrow—Mary and On Indian Trails wHh Donlal Boone..... Poncho and of; man's own nature or that of H Conrad Buff ~ Enid LaMonfo Meedowcroft The Summer Noisey Book Tho Pink HorM the world." „ The MetcMock Gun.._ .WeHeir 0. Edmonds Man, as the final product, then Our Friendly Friend—Louis Slobodan 0 Just Like Dayid-r^M. De Angeii efc Meud and Miske Petershem The gey,, light-heerted it-, worldly. He will be aware of the The Petershams Silver Heels—Paul Brown Joe and Andy Wanf a Boef. mosphere of fiesta time in c.o m p1 e t e inter-relationship of Stddlo Joo Johnson Senta Fe is captured in the body and mind. He will be able Me and the Bears—Robert Brighf 1 Child Life Story Book .* ' ~ ~ to face problems as parenthood in Dinny and Danny—Louis Slobodkin Petunie .Roger rDuvoisin full-color illustretions and in Johnnie Texas—Carol Hoff v Z , . a proper perspective; not. over­ -• • • Kg Book of Reel Treins Georgs^J. Zefo tlte delightful "story of Pon­ ­ whelmingly god-like bat' by shar­ ; ' ."VTiTT cho end hfs discovery of how ing in a mutual respect with his Easy to Read Books 0 Teen Agers " , * to be heppy. w offspring. . AGE TEN TO TWELVE ° Ages 6-9 • $1.50 •N "live and Help Live" probably Reod Little Leo—Leo Politi Skating Shoes—Noel Streatfield Cowboy loots .^hennon/Gerst does not give a panacea for all Blue Willow .......Doris Gates problems today in living; never­Bear Party—William Pene Du Bois ;S Prairie School—Lois Lenski..-" '•>r;v­ ' Saturday Heroes Ben-Joe end Grey. Eagle. theless it does outline ideas which, Easy Reeding—Ellen W. Walpole The Red Roan Pony—Joseph W. by Curtis Bishop v. • v--• . if followed .will undoubtedly, make I label McLennen MeMeekin Pepa Small—tots Lenski . .. Lippencott for a more balanced life; Dogs, Dogs, Dogs „ PhyMis R. Fenner Larry Baker, finished with professional W Unlike Twin's Stories—Charlotte Be^k^r-Spiderweb for Two-—Elizabeth Enright, s|^ " —BILL MCREYNOLDS The Friends Esther Buffler football, finds .himself turned down £ Gipsy—Kate Seredy Amos Fortune—Freeman Elizabeth Yates The Jaek TaUs J. Richard Chase es e coach by his alma mate(. A 1 i, Famous Pointing for Young People. new opportunity presents itself, and Patrick and the Golden Slipper— Moon Ahead—William Pene Du Bof$ £ff "•f-tAJtee BnbethCheso Larry's Squed in e Rose Bowl bid Katnerine Milhouse T Prima.Ballerine—Malvern • ^ ,4 faces e teem of his forrfter coech. Thp Island Stallions Fury-r-Waltef Farley' H Showboats ^ Filled with excitement, this book For the Child Who Wents to Know AGE TWELVE UP 1li» mek0s every character alive end reel by Phillip Grehem ml £ ^ ^ t'SSawdustSewdust In His ShoesShe ...Boise'Jen^ McGre# for young football fans, ,«V $3,75 ^story Can Be Fun—Munro Leaf Spring Comes Ridii Betty Cevenne Teen-age $2.00 s * ' ?gn!6Wf»v«wi^S^^^iorfS»Green#f ^very fiHed^with interest, *est »"A Child's Geography of the World— * ? Aircreft ; ^Hemet Huntington RODEO By Dorothy X. Bracken ^ ,$2.00 and imagination. _ • Hillyer Read. THE LOST ELEVEN By Curtiji Bishop $2.00 r Don't fail to get.e first. Rocks and Th'eir Stories—Fenton ' -. C iomhiw*:' A?W? Mai Sherp T: Patterns in.th*Sky—Maxwell Reed • C Famous Paiotings—An Introductiorf tg'Arf :A 4* ^or Yeyng People BOOK STOR V ^ J t ^.--;*^< ?~ t:':Vgs-ii&t^ i^lH--:»r?>>v •ulfflyh^igi^tljp JlN fV 'S't13 iKbstSl ~kf llgpl3i< pi __ "***£ fr* •Tf, ,W _«v |$fef «*'. ji^? •£ A aie _ t^'i _ ' yellsd adequate reinvestment, Inedm out,""Altfckeirto opin. bidding; from the' fund will jump lodelingantics 'faN&m* taU TaiiStr in *%e­ ,800,000 »«»**. th« lostartkles ««. <«!)» *°m* °* the WretoqMWiiTee& ebiI election and decide the fate lost­ •J iir tin?on VrjiliT dtocd lookingarticles. Sandburg or J. Frank Do. The resolution whi«4i put tha •w.••vTT *"^1"V e3 *w»t!dfli«Rte^to *.f i ^ T . As the two-hour auction 4*«w bie alone is a reporter's delight. proposed 'amendment on the bal­ ..._***»•. . the Texas Constitution, among near a close, the items for sals Together, they're. overwhelming# lot passed both houses of the Fif- Groups of etudenta stopped no-Ilfcrrotred down to; afew *tray #r-While the white-haired "vole# tfi«m one directly affecting^ the ty-second Legislature without an A.V itatfly t» witeh, #HIe others, of the American people" was in opposing vote. However, some op­ king for bargains^ took town, him seats "genuine imitation silver tie wq visittd with at position has arisen over the state the shade of the Architecture clasp'?, an empty' glrisesc!§•»:*• Dobie's horn*. We came, we saw, the supreme' law of' t lje state to the proposal. * -.^Building to watch ^proceedings. blank check-book, and three would allpw the Univ^rsity to in- we were conquered. Two former regents, Edward J1^1ckl«< auctioneer Tommy Rbd wooden:drum-sticks wenirtoth* •est its $120 million Permanent Most of the time we were eon-' Crane of Dallas and Robert L. Itarit in stbeks of prftrate cornor­ |wffiS Mtf liis assisfcgpta, Howdy highest exchange stu- Charles Young of Philadelphia. , Our sense of humor came to which, except for bank and insur­ 1881, was niade up of a star in­ Both were highly amused over said: "They say Steinbeck is de­and compose a 39th," he afaiured dent from Argentina and member our rescue, and it w'as confirmed scribed within a circle,' surrounded Dobie's observation. 1 clining, and I don't like it. They us, "But why don't you just take tf the University swimming team, ance stbeks, are listed upon an by a quick smile from Sandburg. exchange registered^ /with the Se­ decorative design of leaves. The conversation turned to au­never mention that he gave five one of those down and say 1 told members of the Austin Lions Sandburg' added seriously: "I've curities and Exchange Commifc^, iVjsThe Latin words, "Univen»itatas to be in tomorrow thors, most of whom were good writing years to winning the composed it here and now?" J Club last' week that General Juan i ;1*4 got Houston sibxi. . . . ^r'^Texana," and the motto, "Non unfamiliar.' We asked Sandburg war.'' 'V'. The one we chose: "Poetry is Peron will remain as president of. night to sing cowboy songs and Furthermore, say supporters of • •^Vsaine ^ pulvere palma," were in- to talk about people better known -Dobie remarked, "He's not real­an echo asking a shadow dancer Argentina after Sunday's elec­ play the guitar for.a.lot of prim, the proposed; amendment, it does W ^ecribed around tlie circle. stiff-necked people. I've got to T>y students. ly old enough to decline, is he?" to'be a partner/' tions." not require'the Board of Regents "However, the seal of the State Recalling Fitzgerald and others, ' When we asked Sandburg if he Yriart said that Argentina will give '§m the works. I'm preparing He then requested that we tell r fillof Texas was mostly used on offi-The Better Business Bureau and myself now for that." University students "I recommend we asked if age necessarily was a thought of the Gettysburg Ad­litical 'parties are controlled to to invest the fuhd in stocks of pri­ have free balloting. However p<*-vate corporations. Instead, they factor. " Sandburg % Dean Jack Holland have issued a Not until later did it occur to Edward jR. Murrow as a great re­and . . Dobie dress as poetry, he nodded gravely UT Won'tOburve porter, a current historian, and chuckled. Leaning back and look­and said t "It's poetry." For once such a degree by Peron that there ekplain, the Regents are given the yarning to students against un­us that the preparation might " to do so when they deem jrill' be few candidates. powerauthorized magazine salesmen on consist of "giving .us the works. something'of a statesman." ing like a stern prophet of the we were sure he was serious. -~ Armistic* at Holiday Old Sandburg ; are two proper. •' the campus: and the Drag after Carrying off the whole thing as Comitig after our request, our TesUiment, said It now was 7 o'clock, And, rea­Elections held every ; gravely: "Dobie ' Any increased iiicome fesulting The University has scheduled several University co-eds had giv­stage, drama, Sandburg pirty unanimously felt Sandburg and I consider lizing -that we .had taken 20 mi­years, %nd parties without candi­ a mock from th e proposed-femaadment ^ no special program for Armis-en one orders. J sat down comfortably, spreading was being derisive. But he sKot'a that we have. our greatest work nutes of grace, we prepared to dates must be abolished, Yriart ^ % tice Day. Austin banks and post The BBB said the salesman, was out his knees and crossing his stern look at one smiling looker, ahead of us. We are going to pass depart. We were already tho­continued. Parties cannot place a would be handled just as \he cur­ tJ-s* offices will close Monday.Pick-up not an authorized representative feet, when requested to pose for and when her grin had faded satis­ttvay,. like Victor Hugo, saying, roughly delighted with the charm candidate on the ballot until they rent income is. By law, two-third# *service will continue, but only spe-of a company as hie claims. He has a picture. When Dobie was asked factorily he suddenly burst into ^ rdie ^th^myTljest" bdolft ufiwrit-. and wit of. the man, but Sandburg are active thrjee or. mor^ ."ye*rs. of the' income goes ~ta the iMi­ *cial delivery mail and perishables a term to sit closer to him for good laughter.. ten.'" did himself one better. Peron's' government has helped versity and one-third to " * will be deliviredT U8¥d^rt"tKis~m6ga2hriflbu8ine8stcr -cartrera-range; Sandburg-puHe#-his -'-That-sobered-Dorothy^:didn't Sandburg pealed off unex-Drawing his tall, spare frame the country by improving the wel-A&M. . . r/r.. v....:; . v<: ^"ahk?"*will renfein "oVin "TiTeg?' aiMribe^Isellfifg^1mapii^Ss~6tt "tltii: ^ssirieg^oW^'^W.WirKpsaspsar ana aaaea: "That up,' tilting his head 'to biti&"*id*,: ^*reof^O'rker»%and;ieasii^^SEe; An increase in income }would *day, November, 18, which is streets. This is, not permitted by his arm around his ofd.friend, and Next, Sandburg recommended jjn't like your . great step-grand­and leaning,, back, he assumed an housing situatiou, he said. Prob­"oriT 6e f estate election day. les^timatemagazineagencies. got chummy. After separating "Against, the Storm," a daily father, is it,Frank?" air of benign concern. He clasped lems in the country from lack proposal is accepted at the polls. * ^The Buccaneers, NROTC drill "he BBB started investigating iim a feiw^inchesrour ptolSin?'"*'cig^refcle" -opfcig"' to students. When we inquired; abcrut the our1^^hattd^softaj^ind^lM^^ of industrialitsttiOBi water power, A year-will pass bef£H»^ny iin^.ii km, did not march downtown when 'it discovered th*t he was pher got the picture "Drama students should know great step-grandfather, Sandburg ever gods there may be, may they and coal. ; crease in revenue will bei appar-' * Saturday as scheduled because the not registered with the organiza­The conversation of authors for about ,Sandra Michael (the hero­declared gleefully: "He ain't tel-rest you .well, my child." The people of Argentina are ent, And several years may pass |American Legion Armistice parade tion or with the Police Depart­which we had comp started on a ine) as well as Ibsen. The Show ling!" -The same to you, Mr. Sandburg. well fed, he said, because of the before the fund's top income will was called off. ment house had passed their ' uses cheap " tricks, The climax of the visit came The same to you. huge, quantities, of beef there. be realized. . fri'-vtyr IN AUSTIN NEXT TO THE AUSTIN HOTIL JT . -^ • A. McGregor luxurious Fjordsheen Starlight blouse tailored with hip* hugging waist and full shoulders. In grey or tan with check match sport shirt, 18.95. 6. McGregor Fjordsheen Starlight in the lining of the blouse; 6 95. .p....... —... _ , vt,— N « -^ C. Manhattan's ever popular^white oxford cloth shirt with button-down '' collar that's equally well worn with ° sportswear or business clothes, 3.95. *• ' t D. Those great wardrobe stretchers, 41'1­ luxurious all-wool gabardine slacks*. V5 ^ -V ' / \ i7 «"V * in brown,'tan, navy, grey, blue at a F 'r j" ^ "£.?!%• ? >} t '< ^ " very modest price that makes them >ye-» . ^ VJ tf" <• a trwnendous btiv, I-3.95F i ! ~ * r E. Musts for ail sports ensembles, 1 , \'>c "^3^ I Interwoven fine^argyfe sockf in s • j T \* ^ ? Jjn -l brijght color contrasts, 1.50*^%^^ ^ / ' We^wiH b« op«it November22an4^dosed November ^for-.Tkanksgiv}n9. f-^ , , , Tfcfr k lit keeping with' our policy in past years. -jf Ji * iif­ s: fiia v 4 ito pv -Jj Pi * i&SfisasiSxemSk • 1 r'r"iV fcaaa &