jm.wf c Doewabar Ti said. <£ey wili be.com­ YOL5t AUSTIN. TEXAS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER20, 1951 Ground hu been ,cleared and TfcagwM ; ..I'B'n-aj1",•',?» foundations are being laid for tha W.D.Ande»oiL. aadCompany of construction of three .new build-, Austin, ia for $278,650. The Application for residence there bp to Iww* aix I»ny sad heating contract will bo through co-op units rather wo­men's co-op units, a& 2610 Whitis. mat to Fox-Schmidt Company of than by individuals, Dorothy Ge- AuAia, ai $31,822, and the electri­bauer, dean of women, said. There kwr« been added to the cal contract to Dean Johnston: of are now six womens' housing units of eomtempleted university build­Austin at$17^01.>. using older ^buildings. Knew the ing*, C. D. Simmons, vice tbmtetfc The Hew buildings, to be located buildings will be partitioned to on the west side of tfce 71-year-hou|e two co-op units, there will tin S^-p • y-: *<,,»* old Driskill House, will consist of bt in, eaeh side" aT cohabihatlon V-v Contracts for the tile roofed, iix units each to accommodate iving and dining room, a kitchen, • fireproofed buildings were award-16 student* per uit, or. a total three -bedrooms dowMt»irs,and ed by the Board of Regents on of 96. students. "It is hoped that six bedrooms upstairs* ; :i\ i« BetWeen the jutting sides of .imms-•ft i* the double-wing buildings wiH be terrace downstairs and a porch 1 \r By GILBERT PHILLIPS|| ^ led both, in total votes cast and in percentage of group of \ journalism students who favored , i ^ A <« , upstairs. The courtyard which the The managing editor of the Daily Texan will affirmative votes. A&S students cast 166 ballots, amendment. || ^ MM wildings will, surround is to be landscaped with grass and trees be an appointive position in the future. The con­with 107 in favor of the amendment and only 68 , As a result. the student consiftunon wil or shrubs. nate the associate editorship of the Ti^ah i stitutional amendment passed in Wednesday's cast in the llfSS When the final"tift-ee buildi elective position. A managing editor wfll bfe are added, the' Driskill House election with a light response of only 438 votes, Every group favored the amendment ertcept pointed by a non-editorial d^mmittee of the perhaps be torn down. F. C. Me 252 ballote were for the proposed amendment and Pharmacy and BBA. The smallest turn-outs were After the first round »of the Connell, director of the Division of directors of Texas Student Publication^ School of Law's lWl-MHilde* Sdward ^ Finch Jr. and Willie of Housing and Food Service, pre Architecture with'eight votes and Pharjnacy with which includes three representatives of gtodei brmnd Competition, 24 of the 54 Bruce Alien*' diets, however, that ttejone-time With the Wlots Separated according to the thirteen votes. The* significant majority in Arts government including the president, three froi jmtrieft were still competing. Sec­John E. Bailey and Sari B. Austin showpiece, which Ia comr h,. TaIU.. ia. '.«j c.;aM.a. ......j u.. « i..M ond round argumfenta wilfcfca*om-Stover. f ^•'v •!;' parable in ageto tbestate capitol various colleges, the College of Arts and Sciences and Sciences ivas probably caused by a large the journalism faculty, and two faculty meml pl^ted after the Christmas holi­Max Corbett and Uoyd~W> Per­and the Driskill'Hotel, "will not tfrom other departments)^ day, Brantly Harris, chairman of kins. * --' be removed during our lifetime. The managing editor now will the Board of Stadent Managers, Jack C. Haselwood and James |The Intoximeter'll announced. ... ......... It. Meyers. 1951 DECEMBER be in charge of staff1 and riewi Two-men teams are preparing Henry W. Sebesta and DonaUl Get' You If You • coverage, as .proposed by; ^the., briefs' andpresenting qral argu-W. Howaer. " tooBfd ef directors ot~T8Prt ments to obtain practical training Kenneth R. King and David SUN Fool With Spirits,! l-The editor of the ' Texan WiB. in tryingv cases on the appellate J. Krea^er. ­ Jay Frank Kinsel and frank D. remain an elective /poaitiot*, f level.: flRie present competition, k Christmas -spirits ate flowing which began inOdifcober, will end Masters. again, but Austin golice are the amendment effects" only with a final argument next April. Charles E. MeDonald -and giving fair 'warning to those-managing editor. * -/ • -; Last year this argument was heard Dempsey J. Prappas. who over-do it. They, have* an- The amendment missed the fWlby the full bench of the.Supreme A. D. Moore Jr. and J. T. Nam** Unverified, instrument called the intoxime­election through an error, for it' Court of Texasandvas wonby Moore Jr. ter, once known lqps .politely as. had already been scheduled by thei: Warns President a mid-l^w teiun. < David B. Owen and James E. the driiikometer/ that. never? Summer .Assembly for the-fallThe following teams suryived Boss. 'I Bawd n lAi Awociatsd Prtsi fails to get its man. Monday election. A petition circulated in' the first rounds; Aivin M. Owsley Jr. and Harold The. number of Texans named night the contraption succeeded November caused the Assembly to W.Young. Carl Evans Abramson and Bart on a Communist prisoner of war in proving.the intoxication of designate Wednesday as a special list moved well past 100 Wednes­three men accused of drunken, election day, * '^}day night as checking continued. driving, The slim balloting'could Wte* The Reds hsd released the nsmes The department-expects a resulted from a number of to the tJN high commandTuesday; steady rise in this type of busi­causes, said Alpha Phi Omega of­ President Trtiman warned the ness until Christmas day. Then ficials in eharge.of the ^election.' nation that the list of 3,198 pri­they expect a temporary lull Lack, of interest was termed the soners is entirely unverified and until a new peak on New Year's chief reason, with an excess of Eve. . . • -• . •" should be treated with skepticiihi. Christmas' spirit over school spiritMeanwhile, the Defense Depart­contributing some. But the. By TOMMY THOMPSON ^ "Bacteriologists have j^duc^ thereby^ diiablinf more titan one ment said the .Comniunists' action amendm'ent peeded only a"simple- makes no change in the old-un­majority, and in spite of the slight an ounce of poison so potent that person,"he said. certain procedure of getting mail voting,-the-majority waa-clearly Science Grants it could wipe out the population Indicating that the" ideal dis­to nien captured fin Korea; drawn. ^of the United States," Dr. O. B. semination agent would be one The list given the UN and the Vs/AHOO! The tabulated results are:' i? Williams, professor of bacteriolo­which would respond quickly, home towns fitted to the names Y« gy revealed in a .talk Wednesday causing a high rate of sickness, were subject to revision. . Arts and Sciences 10night in the Experimental Science The bacteriology professor pointed • \ . 23/ Available Soon Graduate . „ ,1Building. out that the agent should be easily /a Law 4 28 Dr. Williams pointed out that ailable for use and should not IIT Ex Indudtd Advanced Students Architecture .. , _biological warfare csn be an agent I stamped out by immunisation. OILY SVi Engineering. of great importance in war, but Dr..Williams, a graduate of the On Red POW Litt TO St Givtn Praf«ranc« ,1 Fine J^rtapeople shouldn't fear the possibili­University of California, illus­ First Lt. William J. Wright, -Applications for the National Education . ties of this new science, because of trated the inost eff active methods BBA, '50, is listed among the re­-ALMOST AS TEDIOUS AS pulling tho. petals elos fof ihe intended studies during vacatiorii Academy of Sciences National.Re­. Pharmacy ­ the difficult methdds of applying df spreadi^ the agents: through cently named American prisoners off-a daisy is counting the days till the end of* the student takes off for home. Twelve days later, search fellowships are now being Business Admin. . : " jtioningsyifeiims,JL^^ of war in Korea^ — -tchoot .ana-lhe beQinnma .of the Christmas holi-offered in the agriculture, biologi­ .. Widespread lingering skkness sonihg, water contamination, Md th» studeftt returns, loaded, down with books, His wife, Mi£. Iris P. Wright days. Two more class days loft-—one moce left cal^ engineering, mathematical,and death can T>e spread ^by bio­through the air. is living at 1405 Kent Lane with pencils, blank theme paper, and a slightly bleary medicalj and physical sciences, to logical agents if properly dissemi' He also brought out the fact —then, wahool Loaded down,with books pencils, "her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy G. head and bloodshot eyes,,. both predoctoral and postdoctoral nated/' he stated. :Dr. Williams that-biological warfare Is opening blank theme, paper, -and a clear head and bright Patterson. While a,ttending. the students. showed that sickness is a better up into a large neW field in University, Wright was a inemb^er The aim of these awards is tomethod of disabilization than science and is beginning to be of Sigma Iota Epsilon, honorary promote the progress of science by Oak Ridge Award death because when a man dies, well developed by the nation's Some Dolls Take 'management fraternity. He is offering opportunities for furtherjust he is outpf the picture. scientists. from Corpus Christi. study to large numbers of students : A University of Tcbcas student, "When a person is very sick, he "You can't'vaccinate everybody Years to Change: S-y". Lt. Wright was called back into of outstanding ability in the sci­Frederick H. Kasten, was one ofmust have people to attend him, against a disease," the.doctor em­the Air Force in October, 1950*,' ences who might not otherwise be nine Texans awarded an Atomic phasised. He furthermore pointed — Jheir Minds h while-attending the University. able to fulfill their desires for ad­Energy Commission-sponsored 'fel«;$:gout that some new -agents cannot His plane was shot down over vanced training. lewship by the Oak Ridge Insti« ' be checked by immunization. , After eight brilliant years,as Korea August 24. The tenure of a fellowship is tute of Nuclear Studies at :Oak Dr. Williams claimed that the campus leader,;pne of Ridge, Tenn, December 18. He had been declared missing a UT's: Food at the Commons, the, com­goes, was stated. The best, defense • against biological profit it for yone year, and they will range more than.four months ago. most worthy accepted member­Two Texans received post-doc­ warfare would be the interception plaint that the library often "can­fund provides any,money needed from $1,400 to $1,600, plus.tui­ ship in Mortar Board .in a for­tion and laboratory fees. In cer­toral fellowships and seven were of planes which carry poisons to Dir. Hadlejr Heme from Hospital not fill needs for books, atid the for the upkeep of the cafeteria spi-ay the countryside. Dr. William Moore Hadley, as mal' ceremony Saturday night. tain cases grants will be' made awarded pre-doctoral fellowships, faculty questionnaire on final ex­and is not a profit fund. two of which were renewals. * Tell Santa all you want for "Biological warfare has not yet sociate professor of educational Although she made Phi Beta for dependents. amination exemption were ?e-Although the Grievance Com­Pre-doctoral fellowships were Christmas is a'nice warm coat, for been outlawed by the rules of administration, has returned home Kappa in her freshman year, Application blanks for the fel­to Thomas ported on at the Wednesday meet­mittee was unable to do anything awarded Campbell chances are youll need it. The war," the doctor said, "and there­from Seton Hospital where he un­lowships for the academic year was tapped by the Orange Jack­Cartwright, Bryan, for study at foggy warm weather that pravail­fore it is essential that the public derwent an operation December 6. ing of the. Grievance Committee. about the taste of Commons food, 1952-1953 may be secured for ets after only one month at the Texas A&M; Jerry Power Conner,^ ed ; since Tuesday will be broketf realize the potentialities of this He will remain^ in bed, several After talking with -Floy McCon-suggestion., was made to; the any of the programs by writing Houston, a renewal at Rice Insti-, i;-™[when a norther blows in 'late new and important science." days.; University, and was stopped the Fellowship Office, National nell, director of the. Division of management. "tute; Manus Read Foster, Canyon, Thursday night. *; from donating a fifth of blood Research Council, 21-01 Constitu­ Housing and Food Service, a Alexander Moffit, Univ'ersity a renewal at~ the University of ^ The low Wednesday was 84 .dfe-Kqjiipq Psi Wins Cup to Korea only because-of being committeeman reported that the tion Avenue, Washington 25, D.C. reported to Kansas; Hugh "Grehville Leclair, grees. The temp^mtu/e is expect-librarian, was have TInaeF~ ag$=^^ Gomm&ns doet not pay '«nt, It saidtlpir^fipercent-oftiie-re^ Amarilloj-Harvardt Leon Herbert ed ta rise to 70 degrees Thursday jyiortar Board because she felt does pay "its own-maintenance ex­quests for books were filled. Upon Meyer, Navasota, University -of before tfco norther comes. Campus Blood Donors penses, however. the complaint that the faculty Illinois; Joe Strother Ham • Jr„ " \ she didn't deserve it. The Commons operates a self-eeps books out of circulation for Beaumont, University of Chicago? --iHowever, Egyptianella, an Paving Underway — sustaining fund into which any bng periods and often does not and..Kasten* Orange Jacket mascot for a/ return -them, the librarian said Mary Louise Alexander *of En-*; thinks To Expire Dec. 31 On University ^v«nu« number of years, now one nis and Calvin^ Lucian Ward of that only six hundredths of/that she has outgrown the. per cent of books checked out by Yancey received post-doctoral fel. ^ With cement curbing nearly Still 2,819 pints short Of its organizational award to Kappa younger set. She plans to get T h e Veterans Administration White Forecasts not returned at completed and leveling processes 5,000 goal, the "Blood for Korea" ,Psi, but Barbara Gaston had her third PhD soon and would the faculty were has declared December 31 as the lowships to study the pak-^ = Mr. Moffit -Ridge national laboratory. under way, the continuation oi' drive closed -Wednesdsiy, at 12 bare Kfc-point margin over Sue like' to associate with an older The report quoted -date' of expiration for Veterans' were Home Economics^ BoQding -to tions;' » fcoweveri. have: not yet requests not filled is due to the. study at 70 American.Jihd seven -^3University Avenue north from the o'clock noon...Several organiza­Hastings in the Bloody Mary race group. : ^ as saying the 25 per cent of book Guidance services on college cam­Fellowships awarded for over the large Hum When the OrapgerafeSBS^!^ puses. foreign universities "and research ­Twenty-fourth Street is impidly turned in • *U of their pledges, ber of votes by. which the dfive tiation breakfast was held sev* factjthat some are In branch lir • Henry S. Schieffer, adviser iri. Healthy holidays on the campus institutions, said Dr. Russell S. ''1 bebig made ready for pobrhig of said Bill Simpson, co-chairman of fell short, Bill Simpson' stated era! weeks .ago; *he wai ne­braries, about 2,000 are in the charge at the Veteran's Guidance. concrete.' the ;drive.:;> are expected by Dr. Paul L. bindery, and others are mis-: Poor, chairman of the Institute's ^y; that he thought between 4,000 glected by friends and left on Service in. V-Hall, sak^ihe-num­university .relations division. Reinforcement steel is being Kappa Psi, the honorary phar­and 5,000 pints would be pledged the. table. A thoughtful Mortar White, director of the Student shelved. .. ber of veterahs has diminished tolaid at the Twenty-fourth Stfeet macy fraternity, captured the or-, When they accepted the quota, Board invited her home until Health Cehter.' Also discussed was a question­a point thBit it is no longer.neces-Buite* to Be Run at Needed J intersection, and according to Lee ganugational award, and their the drive sponsors did'not know the tapping Saturday nighty . AH patients now in the hospital naire on final exams to be sent to sary to continue these guidance IChe' ^GrOyhound Bus Company ^ R. Kirkpatrick, foreman, the com< candidate, Barbara Gaston, took that 17-year-old* could not pledge The Orange Jackets were per­will be able to leave b> Sunday one'out of every ten faculty mem-services pn college campuses. All 'vi4':rj^r:0;pttn-as many buses apyT pleted street should be ready for the Bloody Mary eontest with 371 blood. turbed at the happenings, but probably, said Dr. White. When bers«" alphabetically chosen. The further work for the University are needed to provide University " >,i;traffic in the latter part pf Jan­votes. "The students could * have re­Egyptianella, protected by heal­all the patients are released, the professors Will be asked what pet will be conducted through the re­students transportation home Dot' ^ uary. A total of 500 pledges gave the said thy Mortar Boards, resisted hospital will close for the duration^ cent of .their grades ate based on gional office at Waco. cember 21. ^ .rtl , sponded better," Simpson. their pleas. After all, a doll of the holidays. the final, whether they believe "The percentage of students who sometimes can't move fast No patients n in "A" students should be exempt T>iedged blood^ however^ waa far enough. P-m-ironi finals, and what school, ig greater than the number of the wheii school officially; closes. most represented in their classes. faculty who offered their bipod," l^JkaL Cjoei 0« "If someone happens t cards has already passed by; a Postage Due letter. the first time, stopped lecturing ^ Coffee, Internationa) Center, B, Caroltti 3/1'N HalL . » , * '^ ' — theTexs:sUnion-officerorthe widen im cial delivery by air and, didn't a matchT aheventur^ _ JUUle caroling. Uniycraity |31,000, will 4 xr~ Martha'Ann JJarthiTsoprano, 7 Alpha Epsilon Delta to see Students Association office. west, as it seems to do now. have far. to go, it might get ihere Curious, he boardid' "the', bup He didn't batWeye, byfpulled^ in reeital,-Music RecitaPHalL film on skin grafting and treaty Sim|>son advises all students to Ttie project, which will cost the Long playing-reeords of Charles by. Christmas,'' says A. H. Benney, (round trip price> 20 cents) and a matcJj out of his pocket, .strolled^ 4-41 'T'exatines, International ment for burns, -Texas Union geffiwir perminion slipi before Universiyt $31,000, will widen Sickens' "A Chri»tmi« Car6F will -postmaster of "-the 'University went dowQ to get his mail put of down" to .her desk, and' lit tta Room, Texas Union. 401. ^ they leave for Christmas vacation, Twenty-first Street from •be heard atr 10' o'elock Thursday Branch Post Office. ? hock. . "V: cigarette. Next he .:waved • hWv^^. B — Public Relations Co^nnsJttee, 7:15 — Longhorn Band to play so that they can retutu them as way-to c Guadalupe and. repaya. :mo|ming in ^t|e; ^ J^un^ of According to Benney,'.'this is It was only ntf? unstamped matches in the air ,and asked wit^'^"^ Tjtxaa Union 301. .X"...". ,-Clpristmas iltusicwfrom -Tower. *oon as pt>«lWeu Speedway from Nineteenths to tho„ TfSIP_. Union, _ Henry Moore, the slackest, holdjiay season--)je Christmas card. >• t surprising q^ainete,J.tWould — Varsity Carnival Committee, 7?30 Rune and Ath< ^W main tfilnrW Twenty-fiist; The^ «tst side; : ... . one else like a light before" wit gHhi ...iSif'A.-u :*• Texas Union £11. . x Literary ^oeieties in, all those who 'did pledge to bis Speedway, by (the * Intramdfal has :*tory' ^s^asteiSit: ______ _ i — Talent Commitee, Texas . Texas Union dOl. > sure to give the blood," said the Fieldi; will be pevied for angle tni Texan had , . theT^k^of^rJsemjw^saae^^ ^oaanM: . tUnion-315. ^ 7:30 — Student (^roling party other drive co-chairnjan, Sidney parking;• tor, that # filrti of this title would tivitlw. is;^ any ipdication ;of ;^the tt^ Red-CrossBloodmobilewill said thje University won t lose sny ; Carols will allb J>e' played Fri-Benney• thinks many' jpeople; Will i^riitermedte^ not'iecisive.^eiic &* s. ??** * m&mm. ^Thursday tMY TEXAN >> •»$&/•> Vfc£< StallnMust^Jot Have Been Told, MV\V3 ^T-£ W 1*3 i * V*S 6 > • WASHINGTON, Pee. 19U<^ Moscow |etailing the Buasians i that tha lTnited States has taken^ «p two new portal holdingbreath axni blind baslrethell. TYLER, sas Stale made the fabulous offer paid off |80Q on Beal's car and and asked.him to stay for his fi-A Soviet domestic broadcast :wwn't Dan Page and he didn't go in 1949, but Beal decided' to stay paid the boy $125 a month dur-nal year at Tyler Junior Collage." ported Wednesday by US govern*# to Texas. Otherwise, the story of Us final year at Tyler Jtmfor Col­ ftjg the summer of 1950 whila be ment monitors included tiieseS Wagstaff said Beal had discov­ Ralph Graham, former Kansas lege, never went to Texas buten­ was attending-Tyler Junior Cot One of tfcce&orte ia "lying dewti^ State coacb, ifcnt a Tyler Junior tered the service,Wsg*taffsaiacked tha, 1950 very populararebeing arranged, •aid TsM(Uy that the eollof* Sorter in 1950. Porter finished sas Stat* Tyler College team to a confer­it went on. "Women boxing whicl^ •prntdb $100,000 a year on etb­ last year and is in the array-Fage "I knew noth-ence championship-and, victoryin attracta crowds. of q>ectators, i»"iatia scfwIarAip* lmt a sell played the pest season and gradu­ingthe situ-the Texaa jtose BeM gwna> • being developed in the US. Wrestl-, •hipplae lMM»t#4 «aiI> foiled to ates next spring. «... ation until a day ing where the wrestlers can t>Ke»fland a certain Tyler JC football Neither,' said Fajfe,.' ever was' before fall |>r*e-kiek and gocw each othera eyeel BlalktoSe^at Georgia;Tw* star who eventually laadod at tha made «m offer by Kansas State. tice opened" said and even use weapons, is alsos I---Usivmitjr of T«xu. The fact that Graham said the W a g a i a f f. Army*#; head coach to popular in the US. Coach Floyd Wagstaff of Tyler boy wasa fipe paaserpointed the I found combine bushten with "The American sports businesa" ­Junior College cleared finger at Page because Page was PAGE out I talked with in MiamL Ha will watc^ his son men have' arranged basketball mystery Wednesday. an excellent passer although Por­Beal" and told play is the,Att»Stair Colh«i» game games in 'the dark when the play*' It was( Alvin Beal, whom Kan-ter was not. .... j : him*W« were counting on him as Christmas night and then seont era cen nse all forbidden mq^hodsWagstaff said Kansas State our quarterback for the season^ .Georgia Tech January %, without ptinbhment. Nal Did Not Givo Up Offer for UTr Says Dad WACO, Dec. 19.—(/P)—Alvhi Seal's father said Wednesday night-his son did not turn down extravagent Kansas State football offers to go to Texas. A. B. Beal of Waco said the JINTHLATIN& SOPHOMORES -who wjil I From left to right are Dean ..Smith, Jim Brown- talented young quarterback didn't make their first appearance on ihe varsity relay F Hill, airdl Charles Thomas, Finishjng out the four?.; mention any fabulous football of/ .'team December 30 at the Sugar Bowl Relays. I. man alignment will b<^ Senior Carl Ma^ss. fers, and he said the boy would have told him about them if any had been made. ^ BeaT said hliriSon was"offered a straight scholarship for tuition just before his visit to Kansas State where he was entertained royally as' a football prospect. The elder .Beal said be talked his son. into staying at Tyler Junior College because the family" ' By BOB HALFORD arBowl track meet i^ New Or-Recently tied the World's "record had relatives there. Tyler is the T*Hm Sport* Staff • • • a father's home town. leans December 30. fin the lOO meters at 10.2 in Even though Coach Ed Price's Heading the list of bowl-bound {practice tun. In the Satiie race Pf. footballers are not slated for any Lotighorns are a pair of the most /Thomas was clocked at 10.3. bowl action, the University will W i u e 1y-heralded sprinters in < Last season. the slim Graham TCU Frogs Sm«hnevertheless be represented in Southwest Conference track an­speedster consistently turned in bowl competition when track nals. In Charles Thomas and Dean •times under 9.7 in his specialty. coach Cly4e Littlefield takes a Smith Coach Littlefield can boast Jn the Southwestern AAU meetfive-man squad to the annual SUfe­ of two sprinters who as freshmen at San Antonio, he tied the fastest tied or broke at least one major ttime ever run in Texas in the 100 DALLAS, Dec. 19—(4P)--TCU record apiece. meters with a 10.3. took the lead after a minute of ' Thomas,„ a tall • curly headed • In freshmen competition Smith play and pushed ahead the rest boy, set a new Junior AAU rec-. and Thomas waged friendly duels of the-way to beat travel-weary Zeta's Place ord with a 20.8^20()i meters at the all season with no other confer­Texas Tech 68-48 Wednesday National AAU njeet in Berkeley, ence,freshman coming especially night in a college-basketball doth On All-mural X Calif.-this summer.--"-:——— close. Smith's tremendous start ble-header. -' ' THURSDAY. December 20.1951 the Southwestern usually enabled him to edge It Was largely si battle of giant BrBETTYE RAWLAND IPtfjMmV Intramural Wril*r AAU carnival in San Antonio, the., Thomas in the 100, but the Thom­centers with Paul Ndlen, the 6-10 ~~ In kebping with-the-Texan tra-fleet Cleveland lad rail the 200 as kick, made him dominant in the Tech pitfot man, scoring tbe most 220. "-; 'v ^ dition of choosing a girls'* all-in­meter distance in 20.6. points but not having half as tramural basketball team, here is After his outstanding perform­In the 400-meter relay Coach much held as did George McLeod, — the1961 edition. ——-— -ances in AAU competitton this Littlefield plans to use both boys' the center of the Horned Frogs. - Firststring forwards are Betty summer Thomas was selected to Strong points to the utmost. Smith The two centers guarded each , L. Walter, Zeta Tau Alpha; Tom­represent the Unitfed States in the will run in'the first position, and other all evening and McLeod did :30a.m. to11:00a.m. my-Joy, Denman, Wesley; and dashes, on a tour of Europe under Thomas will run,the anchor leg. a little too tight a job of it—he Jane Borneman, Chi Omega. The the auspices of th'e National AAU. For the number two and three went out in the last quarter on guards are Freeda Harwell, Delta t Smith, a halfback on Coach legs Coach Littlefield has chosen personal fouls. Smell Glass ol Pineapple Juica ... Delta Delta; Elnora Noack, Wes-iPrice's varsity squad this year, still another sophomore and mem­Nolen led the scorers with 18 Dish of Stewedl Prunes ley; and Betty Robertson, Zeta ber" of freshmen sprint * relay points while McLeod got 13 and '/2 Chilled Grapefruit ^ — Tau Alpha, -........ group last season and a senior was tied by his teammate, Harvey Second team forwards are La-Vteck Turns Down veteran of two years varsity ,com­Froome. Hot Cakes, Two Patties Butter and Syrup w Verne Clifton, BSU; Carole New­$390,000 for Garver petition. TCU led at the half 33-25 and Twp Eggs^^ Style : s':. berry, Kappa Kappa Gamma; and The sophomore, Jim Brown-50-39 at thg end of the quarter. Breakfast Ham Steak .... Mary Kathering Brand, Zeta Tan ST. LOUIS,. Dec. 19^—— hill was a consistent 9.9 perform­It was Tech's fourth game on Fresh Baked Piccadilly Sweet Rolf Alpha. Guards are Cordelia President Bill Veeck of the St. er as a freshman and seems to a long roftd trip. The Red Raiders Fresh Hot Coffee Any Time of Day .... 5 Sprong, Chi Omega; Donna Con-Louis Browns said last Tuesday have improved noticeably this beat North Carolina State but *.< Ion, Alpha Chi Omega; and Betty night he has turned down a $390,-year. A product of the Houston lost teir next three including the Ferguson, BSU. 000 offer for his pitching ice, Ned schools, he was runnerup in the one Wednesday night. Forwards Betty Gray, Alpha Garver. State City . Conference 100-yard The Christians "had "a superior Chi Omega; Tynell Sanslng, Alpha He did not say who made the dash-in 1950. floor game and got more shots at "Phi; guards Joanne Burkhalter, offer, but repeated that the star The senior, Carl "Red" Mayga the basket—73 to 60 for.Tech. Lunch 11:00 a.nv to 4:00 p.m. ^ Chi Omega; and Marji Hanna, righthander would not be peddled is another member of the Long-They sank 26 and Tech 19. Zeta Tau Alpha; received honora­for, cash. Veeck spoke to a Lions horn football team. Mayes has . McL$od got 16 shots and Nolen ble mention. Club meeting. b een plagued with injuries It and each captured re­ Home Made Vegetable Soup 10 ... throughout his track and football bounds. Grilled Chopped Beef Stealr career. After leading the Long- •k Enchiladas ana Chili ; ... horns to a victory over Oklahoma SMU beat Nebraska 61.-55 this year he was injured in the Wednesday night in the second Chicken Pie With Fresh Vegetables ... next game and played little* the game of a college basketball dou­ Baked Halibut in Saute rest of the season. Swiss Steak ble-header. Derrell Murphy, cracks sK, In 1960 he finished"second to Methodist forward, flipjped in 21 Stewed Fresh Frozen Spinach Steer track great Charley Parker Stewed Carrots 3pdints in leading the Methodists in the 220 and third behind Park­to their victory, Ca>rot end Raisin Salad er and Perry Samuels in the 100. Mince Meet Pie He was a member of the relay COl* Prepa for Raiders team that year which set the Con­The CoHege of Pacific TigerB ference record. ' • -" got back in harness in prepara­ Last season he was out nearly tion for their Sun jBowl grid clash all season due to a foot injury Re­With Texas Tech January 1 ceived in football practice. Wednesday. . / The fifth man on the squad and an alternate in case one of the relay men should be unable to run SALE! SAWEi Seafood Gumbo is hurdler Willie Vails, a transfer Fried Cod Fish and Tartar Sauce from Laredo Jn College. DD1M WEED0N Breaded Pork Chop,and Creem Gravy ~X Vails will-compete in the 110 meter high hurdles • against an SERVICE STATION Roast Turkey and Pressing all-star cast of hurdlers including 3400 Coadalupa Phooa S-S920 Club Steak a"d American Fried Potatoes Announcaa Naw QaaoIlM world record holder Dick AtUe-• pricm pmr eit; Roast Leg of Beef. AuJus ' sey. Vails has turned in a very Fillet Mignbh WhU« «fif Traffic jfUt' Gulf Ray. creditable 14.2 tjme in the tegh Good or •'-'.••••• 23c Fluffy Mashed Potatoes and Brown Gravy Premium Wo-No* . hurdles this year.' or aSc -Whlu SMa Wall Tiraa Stewed Green"Beans • • Naj»—Raca Italian Salad Cocoenut Cream Pie TIRE SP S.00 x is ii— Sports Notice Unconditional Ciiaraataae Th«r«i-irlll b« a tneeting of both the v«r»ity and frcihman iwlmminc teams -Team Room, Januiry *. 19S2, at7:S0 p.m. . ' HANK CHAPMAN Swimming Coach from 6^0a.m.to8:30 p.m. rrn—T— Chicago Collogo of including Sunday! *' > a 1H -(Nationally Acpredited) An outstanding College serv­ New ing a splendid ^profession. = r QUALITY' -K-Doctor of Optometry degree PORTIONS three years for students enr tering with sixty. or more semester credits in .specified REGISTRATION FEB. 25 tpJiW.2 1 Students are granted profes­:'y>i 4 |sionai; recognition 'by" the or &' l *• 4ft*. G233S3I U. S. Department of Defense .A and Selective*Service. tarload SA Excellent.* clinical facilities. tKSC". v Athletic anirecreational ac­ es. Dormitories en the campus, v V CHICAGO COLLEGE OF " STORE . OPTOMETRY Mcag* 14,'Illinois' "'... .IS * a-Hi® mm i mm Aa^r »^fimv <• * ^ The^Grievan^e Committee, in Its role are ak>w to grasp facts on of sounding $6ax£ $te student basis develop—kefohi ^finala—a reaaona-AWottdn fl I#-* . lalntg, now jeekgfo determine amount of emphlusis prafsere placing final »3pannr Apparently the committee has some ideal percentage in mind, «Wne proportion that would work in ^l typ« **• ^ •** <~v»-.nrrrn: %m of courses. Reasoning behind any proposal to Emit the value of final exams to a stated per-centage is not clear. There is no doubt, of course, that in some courses a final that is weighted heavily, hurts some stu-dents. Emotional tension may be high, fcle grasp tf-eiiKi^l tote Itithtoit" sayhur dents will do well undar any :J Taking into consideration the variety and complexity of the University's thou-j sands of course,It is illogicaltolegislate to make aft courses fit a given pattern. 4 Any proposal—if one is formally made-^ to limit finals to one-third, one-fourth, or some otherfractionof a semester^ grade most be construed as peddling the student may havg a bad cold or some , with thebasici^htsof teachers. minor ailment that impairs efficiency* -Interference, however, does not consti­and the student has no way to know his tute the whole argument. Another point weaknesses in the material covered. Vet is that such a limitation would tend to in all but the rarest of cases damage is, provide a mental crutch-for students to done only to students who don't know the lean on.­ Crutches are fine for high schools. In material. _ On the other hand, ma«y students who the University, *">. . , ^ ^Jlelp £xperh $e UUrrong, tjpm m-M :-X«.'YC--i v " Experts in the Texas Department e£ causes, mostly fires and drowning. The experts want to be wrong. They Public Safely have estimated that over hopevthey*ve overestimated. two. hundred^violent deaths Will occur in Hefrthem be wrong. , taring the approaching holiday season* N. K. Woeroer, chief of the deiT partmerit's Statistical Division and a. ^ J^datio man with ah amazing kiaclt for correct predictions, made theestimate. Congratulations, University of Idaho. Of tine expected 222 violent deaths, itis You challenged our school to try to "estimated that 115 will die in traffic match your record of 88.8 per cent con­ "accidents over the state. Forty-two ^ll tributions inyourblood drive. ­be suicide or. homicide victims, and the We came nowhere near that figure, remaining 05 will die of miscellaneous Congratulations. NewWar By WAYLAND P11XHEX heat generated, by the blast, .the picture is the Federal ; The War between the it reaches one million degrees. . Civil Defense Act of I960 State# ha» often been called : Centigrade, eccounted for 20 -which makes State* regponii­ the last "gentleman's war."' to 80 per cent of the deaths, But aven in the last few, v while 15 to 20 per cent were months of that conflict, traces killed by radiation. of brutality to unarmed civil­However, we must remem­ians began to become evident. -ber that "Hiroshima, was to­ Today, the theory of de­tally unwarned and almost stroying "the man: behind the' totally unprepared for any . man" has grown to such, an kind of bombing, Snuch less » extent that it, coupled, with—atomic, bombing. Jf we are new-type weapons which ara ready, many thousands of designed for man killings, lives can be saved." has made the civilian popula­To begin with, a prepared tion of a belligerent and equal and alert public can almost if not more important, tanrot nullify a weapon which is per­than the actual armed forces; haps mtoe powerfnl tfian any As a result of this situation, of the ones mentioned above every American may find him­—spamely panic. _ r self an object of an attack "^ays "Platform," "Panic in the' unsettled and explos­breeds in the dark and airless ive w^orld which manifests it­soil of ignorance, and misin­ self at the present time. formation." Therefore, ona In view of thi»: set of cir­of the first steps to.be taken­cumstances "Platform," a in any Civil Defense program monthly publication prepared is education. by Newsweek's Club and Ed-. A fairly hefty boost has jucational Bureaus, hu tot already been taken in this di­this month's subject, "Civil­rection with the distribution ians: Vital Link in Defense.*' of • the" handbook, "Survival < Tbe monthly explains what. Under Atomic Attack;" This', helpers. So far only about a Chances the subject of an information has been circulat­atomic bomb hai' of living. At ed in one iorm or another, to Hiroshima, %e blast of the the tune' of about 20 million bomb was the cause of 50 to copies. 60 per cent of the dead. The Also on the bright .side of WamDj^ TV, Dal)* Tnu. ~ •f n» Orirmltr 'If Tens# is pablishad in Awtb «T •onlns t»S fctardsr.BtptoiW to Jao«. *ad fiMVt " itdl bt-WMkiy, Tasaa mdurinc tM miM . «MM UM at .'2ifvi fiOBtnotraosfI\llwui bM (S-S4TS) •V tb* •dlierbi oSie* i.B I « (t tk« X.8. lit. eonecrofata d«Jl*«rr md »dwtl»tos ilwold^b* m»M to J.B. .Oplntom ot tb« T«aw «M no* Mtwirty »fca— a* IrfateMtntiM or otb«r OaiTcnit/.oSleisfak Eat«n4 n —coaO-*t*— iWf OM«iwO* is» ' I9«s «t tka f«M OMm •« ' S.ISTS. a«ci1sUe« fhraa >hatk* Dalivarad MdM tot Ot tawa |.Tt par nu st4f pm aa r-S >7t par m PERMANENT STAFF. Editor-ua-Chlef. RUSS KERSTEN Haneignig Eiltar BRAD BYERS Bditorial Assistant Mildred Klesel Kews Editor Matjorfe Claw? Spoirts Editor ^'Ken TooleySopfety Editor . Betty SegalAmusements Editor Kenneth GompertzDay Editors. Murdoch Darsey. Johnnie Human, Kelly Crosier, Flo Cox, Howard Page. Exchange Editor Cntrammcals Co-ordinator _ Jedtf JEtoneodc Religious News Editor Jotonle Hnman •sw, STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE W Day Editor ^ KELLY CROZJER ^ Night Editor^ ^G£NEDOW Assistant Night £ditor —,— Bob Pierce Night Reporters .—— Helba Alexander, Dick WilliamS, ^^eoiiBKelson i^LGtoaEhrlidi< Assistants $r*nx4 Fag^ m.. Fie] ble for civil" defense with 7 guidance, coordination and assistance by the Federal gov-( ernment. To help carry out the Federal government's part of the bargain, the Federal- Civil Defense Administration g(FCDA) was created. Some cities have notwaited!-, for1 the Federal government to act, however. New York, Chicago, Detroit, Grand Rap­ids, and Boston have already taken measures to" protect thelrcltlrens. The bright spots in the pic­ture are bright, but the dark spots are darker. In general, . the surface has only been scratched ih tiuilding an ef­fective program. In general* our defense planning is too piecemeal to do the job and too unrealistic to. face .the facts. More specifically the need for volunteers is terri­fic. Present plans call for about fifteen million civilian million have stepped up. AWoKpwWtei "Platform," there is practically no reserve of surgical instruments, and certain drugs and antibiotics; there is. no civil defense stock of plasma and won't be .in the near future$ there are no adf? quate reserves of ebemksl -pteparatiomr to ptewflrtr or treat sickness from biologicalWarfare; stocks of radiologi­cal monitoring instruments are needed; and there are vir­tually no gas masks for civil­ian workers. < . C JSS wfe jMttvuu Aaciiaf I $ o « "But, Fjossie, this is, our fourth jdete" • By RUSS KERSTEN But the gem of all foul-ups 4;;TfVM S&itor came this past season. Bill Gable Student-Regent. Liaison, given of Wisconsin received a vote as the proper help 'by students, can the nation's Lineman of the Week, be one of the hardest-driving and an hpnor that followed, hii selec­most progressive groups on the tion on the pre-season All-Ameri­eampus. Given indifference, this ca of a national magazine.. committee which exists only to Someone, doing a~ little check­discuss problems with the Begenta ing, found that because of a pre­is capable of accomplishing very season injury, Gable hadn't ap­little. % / peared in a single game. Less than two weeks ago, the GRAFT AND GOP "Do you think there would be liaison committee met with a com­ mittee fit Regents sind exchanged more government graft and cor­ Information on a number of cstm-ruption if a Republican Presi­ pus issues or prospective issues, dent' were elected iri'I9B2, or do of which holidays, the Ex-Stu-you think there would be less?" a:­~. dents' Association, and installa­recent Gallup poll asked. tion of candy machines predomi* V Forty-five per dent of the vot­ers answered "about the same," iiated. „l. . X:-...p;; 31 per cent said there would beOther majoc sore spots exist, less, and ten per cent thoughtof course. Some of them might go "there would be more.__ FRIEND GLENNto chat to student government of­A man who could probably jus? ficers about them. , v tifisbly call, himself "the man ALL-AMERICANS farthest in the hole in Texas," Selecting an All-American team Glenn McCarthy, has returned these days is so ^ common Jhat *from an Egyptian oil search and some sportswriters started select-, Rohe to Guatemala. ing a pre-season eleven or, twen-Plain old coin is the object of ty-two, that is. Offense and de­his visit. He wants to make Guate­fense, y'know. mala City the gambling center of Everybody takes part—it's' the Western Hemisphere. with JT S&. Arrange, « as hanglnfi 40. Birds of peace < ^41. Unit of measur# 4T "42. Hebrew measure IS ^.'43.Satiate i 44. Rave 4 DAILY CttmOQUOTE—Here's how to work It: A X * 0 h BAAXK /isxoy cm l ' • it ow-­ ^aimnly stamlp fw^another. In this < •for _ trophies, the length and formation of the words We sll hints. Each day the c^de letters are different. v „ * -• y*- Quotstioa BALVri'N RJ 8 cao«i;^frtr^DTrLy« ;ixtK b>RK;V.FM: VA, ypK K AFIK— TT . UDI^.P,O. J. --; " y. Yent^rday'eGrypto^iotei 6 THEEMTOR. . ^ and lowers lyj i >< r Why not go "whole ._.we tfie^r.^( none-~-erther * person to logria and/ot "jL person Jfco Startling?—it should bef&st* ^Ycr&elow^jfc U topd). The.same ^ T.yt l l¥BTJtT jy h u ties Heading Room. In Both of .. _ ''j&SSTiaFa any rate, the "Couiit •top the book chedcera' desks areE n*» A person, referred to in Fri­afarce... J, ' fa'* P»P« only u "librarian" ~ In -a trrM ten*minnU period—f stated, "The,library I watched pereone paw ^/Peratintf under r decraas^,, x wa«cnea nineteen penous pm . .-r—• — yitc--*, >v ' * ' f by the little desk with its Ifttte^ T*1?J1" "Stop here for book inwi^on^kS .*°d ^SL ho1Bt4:4 jM«rked lack of -depth sign p«rdied;.ittop' £7 nes« and. Social Sciences Reading cerning affairs of nat4­ Room. these nineteen,r five !f* th* libraries for even a »hort fieance. .The atatenienKi passed de«k while the ^iine on Sunday is absolutely pw-K eStotials are^erslitiles < ^ras times two elsewhere. who never stopped, nor did the checker look up to see them pass; More efficient library manage­ two, prompted no donbt by the ment lies right around the cornef. sign and a certain Christmas spir-.—. ........w.«v.. why not cut that corner? it, made a point to stopping brief, , DONALD PETESCH ly and displaying their books; and . ... , . .. . -two briefly paused. Those whoK A Historical SolUflon ' briefly paused had big ^armfuls of books, but did the checker lift, the top books to examine those underneath? No, the checker* have rwnvkable vision! \ Tb. d..k I. tt. Hnmanl^M Room is slightly better when it comes to efficiency. And -this slight Increase in efficiency is nullified by the fact that the. checker in the Humanities Room, has nothing to do but check books, whereas the checker in the Busi­ness and Social Sciences Reading ;~3K>om "iBfb dsigapcstslogulrig and ^ library research;'During One test period,^the checker, a :gkljsat fOf v for twenty-five minutes talking ; to her beau; giving little mora than cursory examination to pass* •K iciat ing books. Someone should remove S.psv„ the Bign so as not to let the few conscientious people who pause, L distract her conversation..; . All antta of tha UniTarattjr library 1, .... .The:Raaacra taadlag will eloaa at I p.m. Friday. Holiday hoar* « eh*r5* fin hoata uaa Those who "check" at ,the Busi­until January t will ba obaarvad la ae-aftar 9 40 ip.m. Thora^ay tajbw ratvnMd aordanca with tha aehadula -balow with bjr S mm. Janoary S. ness and Social SciencesReading . all unit* baini eloaad Daeanhaf 24, is. Room checking desk (they change ~ about every two or three hours,. as also do the Humanities Room —checkers) are, as I .have .stated,, also'engaged in cataloguing and library research. But the people .passing by their desks are a con­tinuous source of disturbance. And, every once in a while, the checker thinks to himself that he should be -examining books and, as he is not, this puts him ill at ease (or should) and-he is fur­ther. distracted. 'And some people have the audacity to read the sign Mlmaofraphinf—Booklata—Procrama ^ Typing-andLithoprlntinff-l^ttarhaada • EnvalopM and Addraaalng AUS-TEX DUPUCATORS 400 E. lltb mus-ss2s ONE DAY Cleaning and Pressing No Extra Charge LONGHORN CLEANERS 2SSS Cuadalupa Ph. MMT -EXPRESS BUS SERVICE to HOUSTON 4 Hours Can 2r113$ Kerrville Bus Co. . M8E.I0th ROBBIN'S BODY SHOP "C^mplata Body and Fandar Rapalr" * PAINTING * SEAT COVERS # GLASS * AUTO REFJN1SH1NG 1S08 Lavaca Ph. 7-4972 SPEEDWAY RADIO SALES & SERVICE ; -. W. M. Wilak. Oiroar 2010 Sp*«222 Guadalapa ° * THE DAILY ~ TO THE_EDITOR: u students of the Universitj' been treated at various times ^thls year td-;^e writings of a nCotjnt have we ignorant Texana been informed as to the real ^acts be­hind the ^ international situation, but the Ranger supplied us with a story containing right jolly Bri­tish humor (?), , Now the Texan informs us that Economk Probkm; , TO THE EDITOR; '• The editorial columns Daily Texan on ^riday, 1951, contained a v«ry nent• comment on the* question inflation in tiie American eeot_ . my. You are certainly to be cook''t mended in recognising «ha to-P-r portance of this question ^whidt by the people as a whole, tt is refreshing to find that tha *41. torial colrimns of a student' paper Vould go into, mattenu ot ­thistype. , " .* jack g. Taylor m Assistant Professor of Finance^ -the..i^lty„.ftt _3eauinoot^ia. gaiBg^J OZInBnranca.andJ^**< Dae. U. Dac. as DM.sr.sa i;-*:©•«. . Arehltactura Cloiad Cloaad ' Cloaad Cloaad Pfv t.lt; •f Art-Cloaad Cloaad «• -Cloaad **" , Cloaad BarkarHUt. .... 9-1 . -Cloari^ ~-Cl9a«i" ~:..ci«iad"£tu:'tnr: Biology^ ^ 9-l»_ 9-ia -"#•12 SilS——Sli.— -S-IS.... B *88 9-1 9-5 kw e-i -Chamlitry—— --9.12 Cloaad < 9-11r1-1 9-12 S-12;l-S ' Documanta , 9-12 9-12 9-12 • 9-12 •-1; MKdueation 9-1 Cloaad "I 'Cloaad 9-1 • BnginiarinKGeology . BumanitiaaJstintallam .Latin American Law Library School Main Loan •' Muiie— ~" KawapaparPhyaieaKareBooka -Raaarva BE . Textbook ' Cloaad 9-12 "9-1: r Cloaad— 9-1 9-1 Cloaad 9-1 9-H­9-1 Cloaad 8-1 10-1 Cloaad CloaM Cloaad . 9-5 Cloaad Cloaad . 9.5 Cloied 9-S . Cioaadr—•-1S 2-S ; Cloaad9-1; 2-S 10-1 Cloaad v Underrradaata j.l 9.1; 2-S AUSTIN WELDING A Ator ORKS SOO W. Sth St TaL M7» 9-1; 2-S -Cloaad •-li am 1-4 9-12 9-S 9-1 Cloaad --Cloiad »*l; 1.1 9-1: 2-S -9-1 9-5 • 9-1 . Cloaad ' '» ClAaad i«-m*. cr t-tW*­ »-i: 2-S 9 9-1; ^ Cloaad • Cli 9-1; t-» '4 9-1; 2-6 . S6-1 ?-« 10a >^10-1 10-1 Cloaad Cloaad 9-li 2-1 fJ-£ ; 9-12-^ . . 9-1-»-i: a-s FRED tOLMER - AjMocimta Uniyaraity Librarian Having a party? * Mwal»r Rahber MmIb * Halhna laHatad BaBnas^'^i -*Coatwnaa—Bay or teat ">3'" Wa ha*a WawlUaa at all typaa AUSTIN NOVELTY CO. ^ t SOO W.Bth Ph. MMR* Via pioinsm No matter how fittfe or how much lime you have to getfcome end beck—Pioneer he* e fe«t, convenient flight fo fifyoar needs. Spend the holiday* where you most went tolConvenient connection* to eil poinh m the nation. Call your local Fionaer ofrice ftp schedules end feres. Phone 5-6515 #er reservetlees, fere* m*4 tcktMn TEXAN * CLASSIFIED ADS ^RESW.TS Lwt end Found Services GRETEN_WALLET—Ut floor. Biology HAIR CUTS .«« THE .CHOICEST homa-cooked food-Bids. keep roonay and return SUey^a Barbar Shop • 2808 All you can eat for only %&a a meal— papara. l«a'va^at Union Loat and Foand VUit Mrs. Bulllvan'a Plaea, 1494 Cos­sraaa Ava. ,..r". Music MJ5CTRIO TtPEWSmtB — aoeorat*, 2-S887, 8-1748 aftar 8. waak a$da. For Ren* RECORDED MUSIC. PJL Syatama. all oecaaiooa; 8-1210. TWO-WCELY fnrnlahad two room apartmenta with prlvatar bath aeroaa lt| ' BTal Willie "i •-l-lfJMll matte), 8-8240 aftar,*. 1 nacky,,88-2218. _o_ ennas NORTH AUSTIN—Tary nlea.anfaraiabad yaaa.:»] ACQCRATlS TYPING. Piek-ap aad ^e* zaraea apartment. Larte room*. Lota ry flyar. Ura. Eriekaon, 6-8948. of cabineta and atora^e. Tub or ahowar. QHC! -V«i«tlaft». ft*. -604"' W;r Slafc-: • :* ynnMHH EXPERIENCED 81^. VMdokt*. 8ta»8jl">> abla-Mra. Uavia. 6-188T. •an waa FURJOSHfcD ROOM tor boya. 1004 H —™€taa4alape^z#Jto»e^-l-0U.V-» k\'f/f;.-?.^ft' W'4*ttW 3*~£ famous English potter, to San A prUe for the ffcaeet Throo Productions Antonio for > an exhibit of hit frith decoration best integrated . jethird *«i*tHi«t wriih those of content toJon®,Lw» tor p«ttef with Km Plcmnod lor April porary American designer*. best decorative color, and om for f« * fW ttoottarh April * iiiyttf The D^partznentofGannan will Cash prizes will be offered in pottery with utility as wall as MV. present three one-act eomodias in • ***!•», «•# the, March exhibit, including> One tistic valoa will ha gftren. its sixth aimtial dramatie produo-' S«tfi^,;b;jr W «**»* Residentaof (UdUth HaO, girls' erts, Korma Jean Steed, Donna planned, according to Paul Bein-ter HoSis, Hugo Kuehne, William for the .best in sculpture.v In textiles prixeswill beaward- tion next ApriL fee Submitted in eight classes, : " • iii-lii.-o/ijnTi-i ,H -,J i . 1 -. • ,! '•... ij! mi im .Him. boarding house, will present a Lewis, Irma Deane Curtis, Earline hardt, party chairman. Lightfoot, John Martin, Sam T. ed in napery and for the feast Th^r are a Sixteespt Cantury ery, ceramic sculpture, eera- Christmas program Thursday for Barton, Mary Lea Mitchell, Jean Louis Hubert will play Santa Middleton, Hisham Mtmir, Tighe on textile yardage, for silk James Gordon play in modern Geman, "Tha mfc v wr«y» jwuunei wetal; patients bi ,Bergstrom Air Base Welty, Jeannette Welty, and Jim-Ciaus. O'Neal, Rome, r appUed d«angn on t«ctilerfor tax* Horse Thief of Fuensing," by bfaxMea* ^a-Pgaaio;Qub MissMartin Sings tile ^accessories, andfor the be& textile yardage, applied ttttile do. The project, sponsored by tha companied by Mrs. Anne Wil­jnerican Club arranged for se-" "Wilson. -­ American -j-*' all-round textile. tury play, "The Silent Beauty," sign, *nd> original.,te*tilf acee*. Bad Cross, includes grouppartici-liams, housemother. ,, , laetion of the childreii. Officers of the Sphinx, i951­ An award will be presented for by J. E-* Schlegal; and 1» Nino* pation In ringing familiar carols At Recital Today 52, areRobert Laverty, president; the best ceramic Jewelry and oW teenth Century play, "The Rela* ' w'MlaWttlo ts.n'cai^ ft andseyeral novelty numbers by The Fu-Aaaricai 'Sludent Fo-: A movio en dnn gnifting *nd McCall Fitximtnck, vice-presi­ for beat workinenamelon metal tires from the Country," by Lad- sup of 20 artist* and crafts-Songs in German, BVencb, and thegirls.8pccisl features will in­wai will-moat Thursday at^T pjn^ treatment foE-buras will be ahown dent} Jin Washington, secretary; A prixe for outstanding pottery menwho organized twelve years English will be song by, Martha clude a tap dance by Thelma Lou in Texas Union 401* to Alpha Ep«il«it Deitm, pre-naedi-Oswald© Ruiz-Villarubia, treasur­ will be the Estelle Gray Purchase Dr. Wolfgang F. Michael, as­ ago. They also sponsored this Ann Martin aV a junior recital Avant and a twirling routine by Members and others interested cal fratemity, Th\iraday at 1p.m. Priie, and the irinning piece will er; Cy Wagner, sergeant-at-arms; sociate . professor of Germanie tiow in 1949 and 1960..last year at 4 p.m.-Thursday in, Recital GloriaOfreHchsi The px^pjgcl^am will in joining are invited to attend. uTTexaa Ujiiont-401. and Hob; Moore, reporter. become a past of thit^permanent langtuiges, said the department isybrought Bernard teach, the Hall.. ^ be presented in three wards. % *+ * Estelle Grey Memorial Collection MarhBS.Kermacy,aMociate hopes to stage the plays in the " "The first" half of her'program Others takingpart in the en­^*>>aei-Giil^-:tnlen?s-h-:-eo-bp-The Spliiax, a men'a architec­ oh display at tha Wltte Museum. professor of architecture, was new auditorium, which is in the will include selections from Moz­ tertainment will be Jean Bern-dormitory, will entertain 35 Aus­tural oi^ranization, recently in­ Each artist may enter foUr in­ elected faculty spoiuo,r of th e connecting wing between Batte A PRACTICAL art and Schubert After intermis- bold, Mary Alice Peters* Merle tin children with a; Christmas par­itiated sixteen members. dividual pieces. A set will be con­ Sphinx for the year 1951-52. and Me^'Halhu.,.:; :':^ CHRISTMAS CffT •ion, Miss Martin will sing in McDermott, Dixie Hpleomb, Ann ty Thursday afternoon from 3 to They are Bi^ph Ball, Tom 'Con-; sidered a* otoe entry. There is an Dr. Michael will direct two of Oiv» • eHt c*r«rtjsa*e French piecer bjK Duparc, Pals* Gray, Joan Taylor, Dixie Candiff, 6. / A Christmas tree, movies, ger, Benjamin P. Denny,' J.. B. - W, »s«w, iiWNW Iwpi dilhe, * and Debussy." Betty Jane entry fee of two dollars; no per­_"Posadas," an old Spanisrf re­the plays,' and Bill Cavness will centage o| sales is accepted by Mary Jane McMillan, Helen Bob-games, carols,-and a dinner ar* Hancock, Vernon Helmke, Ches­ ligions costom, is being observed direct the third. Costumes will be ffKv&S Steele Will accompany Miss Martin ** -rvss.®% the Gdild. Judges will bo selected by Latia-Americaa groepa on the designed by Miss Julia Bolton. on.the*piano. >...'; -:'>K;:% v ; man™ VHm Mr from outstanding authorities and campuip during the Christmas « Walter Havist and Don' Dugost A graduate of Stephens Judior At Th# ChurchM College in Columbia, 4lo., Miss artists in fine and applied arts son. : . are stiLge managers. Eighteen stu­Private who will be announced' later. : According to tradition, people dents will be in the three plays. Martin transferee! to the Univer. Lesseat Entry blanks may be obtained gather at an appointed place and sity last year. She is aUK> sched' Tatal ul«4 to sing in "Die Fledermaus" by writing the secretary of the go to seven houses Uv4rgction &f R. Paal Fulwider, min­--BoardJe«ab^fe^|feS|«deafc will ^edanci^ and jipging. Those "THREE DESPERATE MEN" Church of Christ will go caroling ister of music, will sing the "Hal-Work. who wish ww"a®ena ^^chufch~at" -" " onlyThursday. Singers will leave the 11 o'clock Miss Betty Jo Glenn, church at 7:30 p.m. Refreshments younjg adult director of the Y, will be served during the tour. announced. «t Mm hew t mx-'d y\f zr/ff/f titi fg drive-in Mildred Baznea. ­ to $5 The regular Wednesday andSTARTS FRIDAY1 Ronnie Moskowitz, Edith Falk, Saturday dances will, not be held 'Th» Company ' and Doris Foreman were recently during the holidays. "rsOmAm Convention irg,iniacyL.ee appointed to the Hlllel executive ' • Sh* Koopt" • council. « Seven faculty members will at­The AETA is an association Tha Intarnational Club * will Lisaboth Scott BEAUTY SALON ..m. Doaalo OIM* . ••*. • tend the annual convention,of the of 2200 teachers of theater in the have its final coffee of. <1951 at qoEEn "Heritage of the Deeart" "Christmas Now and Then", an American Educational Theater nation's schools and those inter­3:30 Thursday afternoofl in the Op#a Tan. asd Tfcars. evealag Ev«lyn Vonabio „ OpnaM Wood* original Christmas pageant writ-Association in Chicago Decentber ested in the educational aspect of International Center of'B. Hall. •08 W. 21at—89432 26-29. tiie theater. These include com­A weekly affair desired to ac­MONTOPOLIS Texat Union Exhibits At the convention, college munity theater workers, staff-quaint the University's foreignteachers and students interested members in libraries, and memr students with their United States The Football story inal'e Photo Course Prints -bers of the' theatrical profession; TheUesf Mexican Foodchange ideas and set educational w- Never Beea Told Befora . Varie'd subjects—the;sun escap­TbiO®#!*! eonvention includes a Christmas theme, Barbara Brass, "JIM THORPE... ing from behind a dark cloud, a standards. general sessions .on "American club secretary, announced. with Fast, Courteous Service B. Iben Payne, guest profes-­ "SATURDAY'S HERO" All-Am«ricqh" row of arches, a wistful group of Theater Scene," "International .it sor at the University, will .speak Bridge groups and two of Burt Laacaator PkyUia Thaxtar small Chinese children—are Theater Scene," and "The Teach­one JOHN DEREK " "HOME TOWN STORY" portrayed on "Training for Theater Work in Appreciation of the Mass the Univartity Ladies Clnb'a in­" Newly decorated '• ; among "subjects in a ing of DONNA REED Marjoria RoynoM* DoaaM Crisp England and America" at the Media." termediate group will-meet Thurs­ photographic exhibit in Texas Un­ meeting. To demonstrate acting day. ^ ... . In addition.there are 20.section­ ion style, Byrle Cass, instructor of Group-one will meettat 2 p.m. uiiiisitv Lucky Duck Cartoon ... The pictures.were made by the al meetings on more specialized directing and acting will play Sir phases of theater teaching, snch at the home of .Mrs. David L. Whadtamoho& ? ^ students in Dr. J. M. Kuehne's ad­ I?1: Flnt Sbnr l r.m. 'M»Mt vanced photography course, Phys­Anthony in "The Rivals," an Eng­as acting, directing the movement Clark, 28d&^Robbs Run. 504 EAST AVE -' IwMm swaart Dimb TEHR5 lish comedy by Richard Sheridan. of the develop­two meet 4907 ics'314, last spring. actoft 'technical Group will at lik*• tUdwin! ... E. R. Norris, television instruc­ FmST AUSTIN SHOWING1 Afltr tht Show" J Because of Dr. Kuehne's re­ ments, designing simple scenery, Fairview, the home of Mrs. Ri­Phone 74253 Batty Crablo / v -„ tor, is secretary of the television "TH« COMPANY ' First Show 6 P, M. MacDonaU C«r«y tirement last September, and theater architecture. chard Maxwell, 7:45 p.m. Her­ at section of the convention. Dr. "DESERT GOLD" mann Romeike, teaching fellow in SHE KEEPS" Francis Hodge, of the graduate T Rabort Connlai, physics, is secheduled to teach the LIUBETH SCOTT , . MarthiJl Huat faculty, will serve as commentator JANE OREKR mmSm .course next spring. , . .. .„ for a paper on dramatic criticism. on the drag offers its. Other faculty members who Will ^|D f ousTiniv;; attend are Miss Lucy Barton, cos­ tuming instructor; Mouzon Law, First Show a mi complete line of COSTUME JEWELRY JOHN /DONNA instructor of drama education; MRU WEED "Secret of Pedple Will and Bruce Roach, head of the SATURDAY'S HERO" StKIMI a Carton* S Lloyd BRIDGES drama section of the Division of Convict Lake" Talk" Extension. TpDAY AMD FRIDAY ONLY Joanna CraJaCloaa Fard Cary GrantGoaa Tloraoy "The Cariboo INTERSTATE Trail at the amazing THEATRES Gunfighter Randolph Scott Goorgo "Gabby"-Aayaa In Color Reductions First 3boy StSO Fir»t Show 0:30, ON SALE A recording of "A Christmas Carol," by Charles Dickens will be played in the main lounge of the Texas Union Thursday at 10 a.m JiwikRajthbcne,^m!tmie Mwiio persdnality, will play the part-of'Scrooge. r—­ Henry Moore, chairman of the music committee, said records of traditional Christmas carols will be played until noon. Among them will be Fred Waring's arrange­ ment of "'Twas the Night Before For a magic gift. . . e Nothing held back! Every j» ' . . -• Christmas." Carols also , Will be y "ifim of costume jewelry played Friday from 9 a.m. until ; ;wiH be sold at these -Tibea tf(S noon. . • * amazing reductions. Perf ume-Ensemble 'Handbook of Texas* Was Compiled at UT \i JUST CHARGE A,^ two-volunie "Handbook of Texas," containing more than Tl ° >ih» set ^2,000 pages of"information, will be published in the latter part:.of4 1952. _ •" The-editioh represents ten years of preparation at the University. Students in historical writing If M Ensemble "Fabergette^pjjrsej-BjSplP< have worked four years on the material uihder<"the supervision of ——cater "ftllgd^wrth.. perfume. Sifi ^oxec} ­ Dr. Walter Prescolt Webb and L»r H.-Bailey. Carroll, professors of PAY with matching cologne. Sets available history. in Tigress, Act IV, Straw Hat, Woodhue, -, About 2,000,000 words written NEXT n '• S . • • ' V : by 1,000 persons are compiled in 6* YEAR and Aphrodisia. , ? these.volumes concerning phases of Texas history. The "%rork was • "Vv ' '' " J****"fZl completed last jnontii and sent to e • the. most beautiful gift .. 5.00 te 15.00 Chicago for publication. -, Since 1942, about 25 other*staff [ wrapping in the southwest is free members have worked on the pub­ v lication with Dr. Webb, editbr-in atKruger's, chief, and Dr. Carroll, managing editor.#