I ★ Variety Show Plays Tonight The m ystic m usic of the sitar, an Indian stringed instrument, and romantic songs of Turkey and France will be among en­ tertainm ent typical of foreign lands at the International Club Variety Show Tuesday. The show, a part of Inter­ national ‘Week, will begin at 7 p m. in the Main Ballroom of the Texas Union and end at 8:30 p.m ., before the sec­ ond perform ance of the Royal Scots Guards. Six acts will he presented hy students from the Far East. In­ dia. the Middle E ast, Turkey, Europe, an Latin Am erica. a include The show is open to the public. Other International Week ac­ panel, tivities ‘‘Courtship and M arriage Around the World,” at 5 p.m . W ednesday in Texas Union 315-316. Dr. Henry Bowman of the Sociology D epartm ent w ill moderate. Thursday Roland Dahiin, pres­ ident of the Students’ A ssocia­ tion. and a group of outstanding faculty m em bers will discuss the international student's role on the U niversity cam pus, at 5 p.m. in Texas Union 315-316. Ex-Students W ill Drop Some Round-Up W ork By PAT PURCELL A<.«istant Nfws t.ditor | John A. McCurdy, executive sec- 1 ret ary of the Ex-Students, wrote 1 A policy com m ittee Monday rec-: to Dean McCown, saying the re-i om mended that the UT Adminis- sponsibility of these activities had oration accept responsibility for all* been curtailing efforts to promote student activities during Round-Up. | class reunions, m eetings with club The com m ittee w as called by officers, and the annual luncheon. include t h e services, after he received notice Round-Up R evue and Ball, t h e j ^ that the Ex-students’ Association Round-Up Parade, sw eetheart elec- 1 is planning to discontinue sponsor- bon the barbecue, and the west- j ship of all distinctly student af- J ern and square dances. ' H. Y. McCown, dean of student A ctivities involved i *a ’r s- , j * The first question the com m ittee : The com m ittee also provided for I considered w as whether to con a Central Round-Up Comm ittee to tmup Round.Up at all< There w as ; sot ail policy pertaining to those general agreem ent that it is over- Round-Up activities not s;>ecifieally em phasized charged to the Ex-Students As so* j «.j ^link theft1 are several facets elation. It suggested the Commit- c jr Round-Up that need considera- tee evaluate each activity as to , ^ori and change.” said Jack Hol­ its worth-whileness. land, dean of men. WEATHER Amo Nowotny dean of student life, added that public relations- the m inuses of Round-Up wise. cancel out the* pluses. “I would vote for continuation,” he said, “ but I don’t want to see students tem peratures The US W eather Bureau pre­ dicts widely scattered showers, with gradually dropping f r o m w arm to cool during the late afternoon High I com e crying for cuts ” will be 84, and a low of 68 is expected. Dean Nowotny pointed out that i Round-Up is scheduled in the mid­ ; p resid en t, One dle of m id -sem ester exam inations, i Information Service, and th e dl- ' Is it w orth it?” asked Dorothy rector of buildings and grounds. G ebauer, dean of w om en, T h e * To be appointed to the C om m it- tee a re two s t u n t s , selected by eom m ittee agreed thai Round-Up, as a trad itio n of hom e-com ing by! the presid en t of the S tudents’ As- is w orth w hile. But se ria tio n : and tw o faculty mem* e \ -students, it w as charged the Parade h ers, selected by the U niversity is m uch o v erem phasized. that of "I the The elected com m ittee reco m m en d ed said Mon/.on Law , j Gf (a m t quite concerned w ith that mit tee begin the p re ssu re to build floats, assista n t professor of d ra m a . stu den ts ton G reek groups) m ust be an independent, and one the faculty m em bers* will be m ade ch a irm an of the C om m ittee. the policy co m m ittee w ere the C en tral Round-Up Com- A rturo B atres, president of In te r­ functioning before Co-op Council; Em ily B ea$ | U nion the y e a r p reced in g j activ ities ch airm an . Ja ck Steele, rep resen tin g Roland D ahiin, p res- To be rep rese n ted on th e Round-! idem of the S tudents’ A ssociation; ; Up C om m ittee as ex-officio m em - Jan e H ardw ick, presid en t of P a n - b ers a rc the p resid en t and score- hellenic Council; and Ja n e t Hold- t i r y of the S tudents' A ssociation, er. s e c re ta ry of the Students* As­ tite se c re ta ry of the E x-S tudents' sociation. I M ay 15 of Pvound-’ p. On I A ssociation, ed ito r of The D aily , Also, D ean Ja c k H olland; Mou- /0 n L aw ; J itte r Nolen, director of T exan, the Inter-Co-op Council, the I n te g r a t e ’ nity Council and Pan- T exas u n io n ; D ean N ow otny; D an Smith, p resid en t of In te r fraternity hellenic Council. Also, th e d ean of m en, dean of Council; Jim T errell, president of w om en, T ex as Union d irec to r, di- APO; and D anny McLarry, c h a i ­ the publicity co m m ittee re r tor the D ep a rtm en t of m an of of I D ra m a , d irec to r of the N ew s and j of the Election Commission. T h e d a r snEXAN V OL 55 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1955 Six Pages Today NO. 68 First C o l l e g e D a i l y in the South UT’S IN TER N A TIO N A L SET ge*- together Tuesday nigh* fo r a talent show, an d here s three good reaso n s' fo r attending the event. Left to right, the reasons e -e Britt Tudgren, Cvnnove Vcis, and Ann Von Zw Agberyk, who will have parts in the show, which begins at 7 p.m. in the M ain Lounge o f the Texas Union. Its all a part of Internationa! W eek. Each country repre-er^ed on campus is expected to p a rtic :pa+e. Photo by Glenn Arden Old South Faces Conformity, But Won't Conform W o o d w a r d Terms History of Region ‘Social Revolution’ By MARK BRALY The time is coming when the S o u l hom er will begin to wonder if there is any reason for c a llin g himself such, pre­ dicted C . Vann Woodward, professor of history at Johns Hopkins University, in a cam­ pus address Monday night. No Chemists In Draft Call? For that w ars behind the By DON KRETSINGER time. Professor a “ C hem ists do so much to win J ing, One of the program s to publicity, and a higher social stand- in­ is I duce more people into the field of chemistry', and being carried on in w aste to use them at the I ™ * - 1 ch icago.' is a "speakers bureau” sends to various and organizations ' such as Kiwanis let people know things In an interview, the V ienna-ed-! like "why Congress won’t act (on a n d W o o d w a r d suggests e S o u t h s o w n u n iq u e h is to r v a s , ^ nf W n t lf ir 0 ll com p oun d-L l the reason why the Southern d g com pany tradition will continue even _______ in t h e f a c e o f t h e e n c r o a c h in g ucated scientist em phatically stat- exem ption e „ n f r ,r m itv o f I n d u s t r ia lis m e o m o r m i t y o l industrialism. : b o a r d of S cientific Oil C o m p o u n d - j tbp L ions, R o ta r y , an d techmr|nns and h,,akfrj sporlivp chcmtas. im in n n h U t n r v a s 0tt(> Eisenschim l, chairman of the «1 ‘I™1 "th* who!'’ o rg a n iz a tio n - thine* to do the They must be exem pt' to encourage pro- lines that chem ists) . u t * speakers that (,lub Monday ;aid Dr Iuds Inc. of to it , , , 4 Assemblymen Set Up Council For Problems Course Evaluation Is First Project For BBA Group A Business Administration I Council has been organized and will hold its first meeting I a t 7:30 p. rn. Wednesday in }Waggener Hall 201, L arry 1 Steinberg, BBA assemblyman, announced Monday. Steinberg and three other assemblymen from the Col­ lege of Business Administra­ tion — Jerry Pre wit, E ddie1 Sharpe, and Elleanor W alker —set the council up. O n Honor Plan EISENSCHIML P rofessor Woodward's idea of washers- should be exem pt, We’v e I ^ ^ ^ troublp or the rom ance t0 gR)p drafting ch em ists.” spot Southern history is not “ a Shinto ln worship of ancestors, a cult of tile •Tost Cause ; achieving m axim um use from our the plantation legend, but the col- sd rn tis(s js Congress, “ Influential iective experience of the Southern th . nut am i 0^-ciajs are a fraid to act on such people exemption because of Congress; Congress is afraid to act because of the voters; and the voters won t it because they are never allow important chem ists told just how are.” He distinquished Southern his­ tory from national history by point­ ing out its lack of continuity and hom ogen fry. It contains the only real “social revolution” in the history of the nation as a whole. It s construction, “ not reconstruction,” of a new w ay life represents a social break of not found in other American his­ tory. Professor Woodward said that he did not regard the traditional at­ titudes of the South on r a c e ss a factor the “ South­ erner.” in preserving He said thai he thought racial feeling would linger on, especially am ong older Southerners, hut t h a t . th . younger g e n e r a ti o n ,v a n .'to he railed Southerner* if it m eans only "the. last Cl,rh SU,rn! j underpaid Dr. Eisenschim l believes that , trill not »'eo- f r e s h m a n e l e c t r i c a l e n g i n e e r i n g s t u - integrity and responsibility.” said First Freshman Coffee In said w ill have to face c h e m i s . T h ey, the U niversity D isciplinary Com- Tom Fotheringham , chairman of dent for a “ride” will have t o face i n t e g r i t y and responsibility .Ute ,,try and becom e chem ists. They are given a highet social position , and consequently get higher pay and other reward*. In the r n ,led The ^udeM s w ere row ded up Monday I tegrity reaches beyond the college j The Freshm an Council will spon- omdenK were* rounded up classroom into the b asic values of sor a coffee Tuesday from 4 to 5 and SIH ,, m in •• Staler we can t do thai. He produced a scien ce bulletin j atty official* / , . . , McMinn was jumped by a j he able to leave an exam ination for Clan •— “ U n d e r UUUCl mr Flail, t h e plan, atudenta w o u ld ! Theme will be v ; .he "Freshm an United States, 75.(XX) m asked gang of students shortly before midnight Tuesday when he reiu nieu lw Ui3 ™ returned to his San Antonio Street rooming house from a cam pus lee-I classroom —as decided by the stu- Lyon dents. ture_ breaks w henever they desired. Pro- The top five freshman beauties fessors must be accessible, but will serve refreshm ents. Entertain- in the ment will be provided by Roy I* red Whitaker, guitarist : j juggler ; P a tsy Silverstem and Mar- He told police ae thought he rec-j The signing of the pledge would th a Hall com ediennes, and M u x in “We draft ours as privates the Army. Are w e crazy or bl md?” jjr. jiiisenscnimi is convm ceu uiiu Dr. E isenschim l is convinced that the United scientists. for more scientists; ours is for fe w -J He said he thought the gang was professor’s office er. States m ust have more ognized one voice as that of a he required and unless done “The Russian trend is classm ate in a trigonom etry class, j the student would be called to the rho Council' Ureas freshmen o to explain. He attend the coffee which •will be lou t for revenge because he m ade | must be absolutely s u ie he saw the first freshman activity of the ................... .m a y or m ay not rem ain Ellen \\oodrurr, vocalist, “ How can w e increase the num -;]0t) on a recent m id-sem ester exam 1 cheating it ho withholds his signs- ^ ______ _______ Group Plans Safety Program N A Campus Citizens’ Comm ittee, formed to carry out a cam pus- wide traffic safety cam paign, met Sunday its o v erall pro­ gram . to plan chem ists? Scholarships? ber of Fellow ships” No! They a r e no for the rest of the class. The next The last clause of the pledge has the most objections, but good.” He wants to see an es- highest grade w as 45, he said. the com m ittee believes that the tablished “W est Point for Chem- ists” with m ore pay and more stuffed inoperable prestige. into a large sack, McMinn | honor plan would he w as taken eighteen m iles south of without it in the course, ruining tho curve ture. After tieing tied with ropes and j raised The only w ay to get more ch em -1 Austin and dumped from a car. He , (J J M a n R e c a l l s M a n R e c a l l s C AM PU S CHEST lo t al* crept toward the $12,000 mark M onday rig h t as workers began to ta lling up the last few dribbles o f change to come in. Chairmen Lloyd Hayes and Betty ^em peton expressed confidence the goal would be reached— maybe even with a ■tew dollars to spare. Meanwhile, Freddie Harkavy, voted UT s Ugly M an,” took time out *o meet a co-ed who also played a b g par* in making the drive a success. Shes Miss Campus Chest horses — Elaine Kaplan. ll R O I C Sponsors G e t Honors Today T ic k S ir. "The realm of actolaatic in- Tuesday in Texas Union Ten co-eds chosen by the Air Force ROTO and one chosen by the ROTO band will be given honorary com m issions as Air Force ROTC review sponsors at cerem ony Tuesday at noon on Whit­ aker Field. the annual Chosen by the ROTC band, which ; is com posed of m em bers of the Army, Navy, and Air Force ROTC ! units, was Jill Adrian McMurry. She will be given the honorary lieutenant colonel. com m ission of The tf*n chosen by the cadets are May merle Shirley, colonel; Sheryl Ann McKelvy, lieutenant colonel; Sharon Henson, lieutenant colonel; Shirney Ann Gore, major; Jean Sue Zappe, major; Dorothy Bur­ gess, major; Annette Morris, ma­ jor; Gayla Craig, m ajor; Leigh Ann Haskins, major; and Patricia Ann Pettway, major. for Tile annual review cerem ony was scheduled last Tuesday but was postponed because of the snow. , Approximately 550 cadets will par­ ticipate. AWOL'er Guilty' is m ade up of the Students’ I ^ The C om m ittee representatives of A ssociation. Alpha Phi Omega, Orange Jackets, Mortar Board, j__________________ Spurs, Interfraternity Council, Pan- hellenic Council, M ica, Wica, Spooks, and U niversity W omen’s Council. In Mock Court Dr j;isenschim i is convinced, .g tQ ofjer tbem more m oney, more — -------- Also The Daily Texan, The Long­ horn Band Association, and Fresh­ man Council. Other participating groups w ill be announced later. The cam paign w ill begin Mon­ day and continue through D ecem ­ ber I. The City of Austin will be holding its Safe D riving Day cam ­ paign during the sam e'period, but the U niversity cam paign w ill be held separately, Jam es J. Dorrough pleaded to a I “ guilty” Monday night charge of AWOL. He w as sen­ tenced by a general court-mar­ tial to three months at hard lader and forfeiture of $40 pay per month. interested The m ilitary court’s decision, obtained, accurately although It w as suggested at the m eeting w as just a mock one, however. that the cam paign be turned over The court-martial w as staged organization. to one for the benefit of three cla sses ___ _______ ______ _______ t However, the group decided that it should be run by organizations rep- of Air Science III students Mon- the Architecture resenting the cam pus as a whole, day night A plan w as outlined and work rii- Building assem bly hall, vided between m em ber organ iza-1 aegis. Air Science III classes a r e i presently studying trial proc** in “lf you saw a man steal an- walked to a farm house and got a j other’s car you would have no hesitation in giving authorities in­ ride back to town. formation regarding him. Honor violations are m ental thefts and Injustices and should be reported in the sam e spirit that civil of­ fenses a re,” Eva Buchanan, presi­ dent of the Women’s R epresenta­ in 1924, tive Board of the Union said. Personnel dure. Colonel I >a. id 'ITnom is pro­ fessor air science and tactics, is the instructor. in the mock trial were Jerald Jackson, assistant trial counsel; Bum my Jary, trial counsel; E d w a r d Carpenter, court reporter. Others w ere Jack Cox, assist­ ant defense counsel; Ronald Bart­ lett, defense counsel; Joaquin Fox, Jam es Bartz, David Ben­ nett, Ira Dolieh. JC S, Johnston, and Robert Davenport, m em bers of the court. Liumboldt Mandril; w itness; and Borah White, air policem an. The com m iff ce believes that stu­ dents are challenged to cheat, under the proctor system which is non­ being used. It believes that many “ m arginal” cheaters would not do j so under the honor plan. “ Mar­ g in a l’ cheaters are those students who see others cheat and fear that j their grade w ill be affected by the curve if they do not cheat also. One com m ittee m em ber observ ed that the purpose of the plan would be to put the University back on the level of learning and get aw ay j from the negative attitude of pro­ fessors which tends to build re- i sentiment among student*. White of Red Swing Fame By DANKE MILLER Te xan F eatu re Kdltor The eighty-four-year old gentle­ man sits in his living room atten- sive and alert and says “ Yes. I knew White knew him w ell.” He pauses. “ In fact I w as his private secretary, m uses Goldwin Gold­ smith, professor em eritus of archi­ tecture. He was referring to Stanford White, the famous architect whose private life w as filnuzed in “The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing,” showing now at the State. At the tim e he knew White, Mr. Goldsmith was an apprentice at the architecture firm of McKern, Mead, and White in New York City. “ White w asn’t a very easy man to work for.” Mr. Goldsmith re­ m em bers, “ but he taught me a lot.” Professor Goldsmith talk* of the many tim es he took dictation from White late a t night w hile he paced the floor talking as fast as possible. T h at was back before 1906 when the took place which gave nation-w ide pub­ licity to the b ia n g u la r affair be­ tween Evelyn Nesbit, the tycoon Harry Thaw, and White. famous murder trial “No, thank goodness. I didn t in the trial,” Mr get m ixed up Goldsmith says. H e’d lust as soon ; forget about the scandal now, he the emphasized as h e’ relighted j cigar which had just gone out. He wants to rem em ber only the good things about .W hite. and White ’ for the American In­ stitute of Architects publication. He is working on several pro­ jects. among which are the print­ ing of short stories written by hi* wife who died three years ago. "To date. I vc conv inced Harper’s and Surburban Life that hers are the best ” he say^ and sm iles as he blows smoke out into the room. The latter publication accepted some of the late Mrs. Goldsmith's work A member of the Columbia Uni­ versity chapter of Delta Upsilon, Goldsmith is interested rn the fra­ ternity’s activities. Now Mr. Goldsmith is retired and lives at 1902 San Gabriel where he “ has all the tim e in the world Since and then again not enough he retired he has written an ar- i tid e , ”1 Rem em ber McKern, Mead, Last May. a com m ittee of friends composed a book entitled “ A Tri- but of Friendship and Admiration,’* in which ss bound letters of appre­ ciation students and col­ leagues. from GOLDSMITH Dr. Gruber Says Europe Remains 'Power Balance’ A m bassador Talks O n A ustria’s Role In W orld A ffairs By JOHN ROGERS Europe remains the balance of power between East and West maintained L r. Karl Gruber, Austrian ambassador to the United States Monday n ig h t The diplomat spoke before an audience in Batts Hall un­ der the sponsorship of the Public Lectures Committee and the Committee on E ast­ ern European Studies, He spoke on “ Austria * Position After the Conclusion of the State Treaty and Her Role as a Stabiliz- i mg Factor in Europe.” Dr. Gruber em phatically said that Europe wfas definitely the bal­ ance of power. He said “ China has existed for a long tim e,” but just recently has it becom e anywhere near a world power.- Europe still rem ains a technological and indus­ trial center. The am bassador told the audience in our tim e that “ foreign affairs is important, to everybody,” not just the diplomats. He later said that he was glad to see the inter- I est shown and that it should be continued. He said that he believed that Austria could squelch attem pts at the Soviet Union. subversion by Any limited m ilitary aggression could also be stopped by the sm all Austrian arm y. In regard to Austria * position following the State Treaty which restored its independence he said that it was highly nationalized and iem ocratic nation despite the in­ fluence of ten years of occupation, i He said the Communists which occupied East Austria were not able to seize political control “ of a single town.” He pointed out that Austria is influential in European politics de­ spite the its size because since State Treaty it stands as an inde­ pendent, dem ocratic nation. Another personal observation of Dr. Gruber’s w as that collective security * will not work now (for A ustria!.” He went on. “It is a necessity it must be shown to be practical first. idea of collective He said, “The is basically security, I am sure, right,” future,” but in the In answer to the question, “ Is Austria a member of the Schumann Plan?” Dr. Gruber said, “We are not a m em ber, but have great in­ terest it.” He added that he thought eventually Europe will be­ come united. in Tuesday. N °v- 15, 1955 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 2 -JUST OVER- Swink May Return For Another Bow By VERNE BOATNER Associate Sport* Editor Don't fall in the floor with a spasm now, but one James Edward Swink may be back this way a pain before next fall rolls around—and vying against the Longhorns, too. But perhaps Swink won t be quite as proficient on a basketball court as he was on the Memorial Stadium turf Saturday. The greatest halfback in these parts since Doak Walker never was scouted by TCU on a football field! during his high school days. Ile ended up coming to the Purple on a basketball scholarship. J as did All-American footballer Dickie Moegle at Pace B u t it didn't take qualities once he hit the campus, and you know the rest. long for Abe M artin and Co. to notice his pigskin-lugging J Asked if he would perform on the hardwood this season, the Rusk Ram bler answered that it might hinge on whether the gridiron team played in the Cotton Bow l, If the Fro g cries make it into the New Y e a r s D a y Classic, he went on he may not have enough time to work out with the hoopsters. No one can take anything aw ay from that 62-yard jaunt of Sw ink’*. He did it with a minimum of blocking and a maximum of his famous change-r*f-p&ce running. But at last fifty per cent of the credit for his two fourth period dashes can be attributed to the brilliant faking and ball-handling of tall Charles Curtis, the Purple man under. Curtis faked the Steer defense— especially the secondary'—out of their socks as he slapped the ball into the fullback’s belly, then with­ drew it and banded off to Swink. Both times he cruised around end and galloped unchallenged to the goal line while the Longhorn defense converged on Pollard who was taking a beating in the line. Since Curtis had used a minim um of aerials in previous games and had f*!;cd to connect on half. Texas didn’t expect much rn the way of an ove**h»ad game. Thus when Swink started running wild and the defensive halfbacks moved in to counter, Curtis sent his flankers deep. Ends O ’D ay W illiam s and B ry a n Engram were able to get behind Chester Simcik. Fondren. and then Curtis Reeves, and each time the roo! sharpshooter hit them on the button. WILKINS MADE BAD CALL Since it seems to be the popular past tim e for sports writers to knock the football officials, we thought w e’d get our two-bits worth in here. After viewing game movies, we found that Sw ink’s galloping up and down the field hadn't turned us cross-eyed after all. The fact rem ains—even in color and wide-screen—that referee Taylor W il­ kins made a lousy call in ruling that T C U fullback Vernon Hall- beck had intercepted Joe Clements pa*s on the Texas 29 in the fourth period. Hallbeck jumped and tipped the ball into the air, made a stab at it a? he was falling, and fielded it after it had clearly hit the ground. Although it led to ano'hc- T D run for Swink, it was hardly the de­ ciding point of the game since the score was 40-20 at the rime. / Swink Could Set Two SWC Records 1,302 yards in l l games. F O R T W O RT H , Nov. l l <.P* Jim Sfrink, who even uses the other team ’s blockers further his ground-gaining ambitions, has two games in which to set a new South­ west Conference ball-carrying rec­ ord. to Swink, Texas Christian’s bid for All-America, may not need that many. He won’t if he performs against Rice next Saturday like he did against Texas last Saturday. The TC U halfback rn a d e 235 J yards in the Texas game to bring his total to I,OSG for the season and that’s only 216 yards hack of the record set in 1950 by Bob Smith las of Texas A& M . Smith got A H a r d W a sh ed , Va* rn C leaned C a r W ith Tires S te e r C B a - e d A L L IN 7 M IN U T E S AT JOE'S QUICK CAR WASH 12th St San Ja c in to Texaco Courtesy C ards Honored Swink has averaged better than 133 yards per game, which is about 15 more than the Smith average, They were still talking about the 185-pound runner's great d a y against Texas and marveling at the w ay he did it. One of his touch­ down runs - and he made four for the afternoon was for 62 yards. No Exira Charge for Fast Service ai ti HOUP r n m m k the most rn DRY CLEANING O p en 7:00 a.m. ho 6.00 p.m. M onday through Saturday ESPECIALLY FOR A full year’s subscription to any one of these three great weekly magazines a t these reduced prices . . . for college students only. Take Tim e, The Weekly Newsmagazine, for less than 6* a week . . . or L ife , Am erica’s favorite pictorial! for less than St a co p y . . . or S p o rts I l l u s ­ t r a t e d , the first national sports weekly, for less than 8* an issue. T he purchase of one magazine does no t require the purchase of another; your special student prices are good for all or an y of these t bree weeklies. Sign up today with your student representative in th e lobby of the Texas Union, USE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS - COOPERS JOCKEY SHORTS AT T A K IN G A H A R D O N E from the rifle arm of Longhorn passer -e Clements is lanky end Menan Schriewer during Saturday’s Ra / Taylor moves in fas4- to S W C s leading pass receiver, s on in -he background. J. Fi 3 on Charles r urn co C e halfback Schriewer, ti e game ma KO as ou AEPi, Grove Triumph Buy Your Coopers Jockey Brand Underwear at B y B O B G R E E N B E R G T e x a n In tra m u ra l < o-ordinator Phi K ap p a P si, P h i D elta T heta. and Alpha Epsilon Pi, led w in ners sn the opening night of in tr a m u ra l s y n o d s ii enland 709 CONGRESS i i f e presents merchandise gift certificate 1st prize $ 2 Q °° 2nd prize s ie°° merchandise gift certificate basketball play. The P h i P s i’s downed Sigma ; Alpha Mu, 21-16. Bob Floyd w a s ; high pointman for the victors and Leonard Goltzman matched him ’ with eight points. Coming from behind in the last half, P h i Delta Theta won over j Sigma P h i Epsilon 20-15. John led the scoring as he I Jennings compiled nine points. Lam bda Chi Alpha led for most j of the game but couldn't stop a last half ra lly by Alpha Epsilon! j Pi, as the latter won out, 20-17, It for j was Lam bda Chi, that kept A E P I sn tile hole until the last minutes. long shot artists the | Oak Grove, taking up where they left off last year, rolled to J their first- victory of the year. as 20-14, tho Grove's defeated they Ja c k ie Boston scorers with Theleme loci ten points. * 12 K? Ch! P h i 2S, D e lta U p silon 24: P h i Gam m a D e lta 14, P h i K a p p a Sigm a 13: A lp h a E p s ilo n P l 20, L a m b d a C hi A lpha IT D e l' l K a p p a Ep s ilo n 29. D e lta Stg- ma P h i 12 K a p p a S ig m a over P h i K a p p a T a u by d efa u lt: Sigm a ‘ “hi 22. B e t h Th>-a P i l l . D elta Tau D elta 21 P h i S ig m a K a p p a 19; P h i D e lta Th eta 20. Sig m a P h i E p s ilo n 15: P h i K a p p a P h i E t y j-, ------- P s i 21. Sigm a A lp h a M u 16; B O M 18: H udson 30, C ard en I Cheek ors B ru n e tte 29, lh H a rg ro v e 13: H em p h ill IO: N a v y R O T H 25. W e s t­ m in ster IO ; O a k *G ro ve 20, Th elem e 14. I l;m B A m e ry IEI Sig m a A lp h a Ems lion 30 P l K a p p a A lp h a 6 A lp h a Tau Omega 14. B e ta T h eta P l 12 D elta K app a Ep silo n 29, P h i K a p p a Sig m a 6: K a p p a Sigm a 20 Sig m a C a l IO , P h i G am m a D e lta I i , C hi P h i 4. T U E S D A Y T O I C H I-OOT UA LD Cia*-* It 7 p rn,, P H M vs. Brackenridge 8 p.m ., K a p p a S ig m a vs. K lt l* y House. < lass A 7 p m , S ig m a A lp h a Ep s ilo n vs B ra ek e n riiitm H all. 8 p m ., H arg ro vo vs O ak Grove. T E N N IS S IN G L E S C la ss K 4 p in., B o sto n vs. D a v id ; B e c k e r vs, J ones. Class A 4 p.m ., K y le vs. c’osner o r F o lt lk ; S ta n le y \ s Knagrs- G O LF S IN G L ES 1-1:30 p.m ., a ll golfers scheduled to p laj' th e ir firs t round las* T u esd a y will p la y th e ir first round today due to the ; bad w e a th e r last week. Tennis Schedule No more* matches w ill be* scheduled I I this fall, but all the players are ex­ pected to come out at the times they designated. AU interested in obtaining P .E . credit St e the manager this week. I J lf YOU’RE REALLY STUCK! TRY THIS . . . YOU CAN'T MISS . . . Save 15% Cash I Carry . . Ho me :cam nj. ana eJLaundru an d a can pr s 14th £ Red R iv e r Ph. 8-2586 The Daily Texan Lucky 7" Football Contest H O W TO ENTER I. S a la d th* w in*ar* of tha gam** ‘‘tied balow by placing an X ta the b aik re ar tha tarm you choose. Po- tie! p -ice a' X n both b erin, Also predict the score of the gam# no-ed at the bottom. 2. Fill I " ‘ he en try blank o ' O' e of your own. Turn rn to Reynold* Fenland, 709 Congress A van e before 3 a - Saturday, pr I p.m. P 'lp a y when Friday n'ght games are noted on ba c f . 3. AU re g e a r staff members of T-a Da y Texan and employees of Reyno ds-Pfniand are ineligible to enter. 4. Entries are limited to one per contestant. W inners will be announced in The Dally Texan on Tuesday following each week s games. W inners wit a so ba pcv’ r-o a* Re*- no-ds-Per- and the same day. 8. Decision of the udges is fine'- In case of ties, prizes will ba shared. Neatness co .-'*. Place in box af Reynolds-Penfand, Address, 709 Congress before IO a.m. Sat­ urday or by 5 p.m. when Friday games are listed. Mail entries not accepted. Name C i t y . . Phone. mmmmm -Texas A & M Fish . . vs. . . Texas Shorthoms- -SMU .................... vs. ................ Baylor- -Arkansas.................vs. ................. LSU- - T C U ........................vs........................... Riel -U C LA ................ vs........... ............ USC- - M ich lg an ................ vs................Ohio State- -Notre Dame . . . . . vs......... ....... lowa- PICK THE SCORE: Texas A&M Fish . . . Texas Shorthorns .. 2270 G U A D A L U P E JockeyBrand SH O R T S — A T SH IRTS 9/fe n ' ¥ orwoocI 2548 Guadalupe min Ibuys his C o o l e r 's Jockey brand I Mi underwear Next to Austin Hotel 'Mural Schedule II CADET COLONEL ii 611 Congress “College Style Center of the Southwest'9 Mil IIMlMIIilllllinilFlll I I i i I CADET COLONEL salutes Jockey brand underwear Clausewitz M cStru t, r o t t generalissimo, is a stickler for obedience to commands. "W h e n I say, 'at ease’ I mean 'at ease!* ” he says, "and Jockey briefs always let you be at ease!” You don’t have to be bucking for commendations at inspection time to appreciate the comfort that comes from wearing Jockey briefs. B e tte r stop in at your dealer's soon...buy a supply of Jockey briefs and T-shirts, and feel as good as you look! it’s in style to be comfortable . . . in Jockey underwear made only by Inc, Kenosha, Wisconsin James Swink Swells'*Steer player oftheWeel< * S W C Rushing Lead Steady Steer renter Johnny T a ­ Abolutions By Alray MAN IT'S CRAZY! O f course this coo! cat is talking about the service you get at San lf you want to be the B. M. C . this semester, you'll have to look sharp to those Freshmen beauties. Ja c in to Laundry, The best way to get that collar done right and those creases pressed in their with “ cool" precision is to send your laundry and dry-cleaning to the people who want to see you go places laundered and (wearing clothes that have been Bright-Fresh No-Glo cleaned.) SAN JACINTO LAUNDRY 1600 SA N JA C IN T O — P H O N E 2-3166 Pickup & Delivery Jim m y Swink, the TC H back who! made a shambles*of the red candle jinx at U T. rambled for more yard? last Saturday than his next five rivals put together, figures releas- j cd by the SW C reveal. Swink, who ran up and down the green of M em orial Stadium for 235 net yards, outdid the combined to-1 tai of Henry Moore of Arkansas, j W alter Fondren and Delano Wom­ ack of Texas, Ja c k Pardee of A&M and John M arshall of SM U by 27 yards. rocketed His performance the to 1,086 yards, 403 Swink total ahead of Moore, his nearest rival who has been in one more game. Fondren, although banged up badly, played Saturday, gaining but maintained only 22 yards third place behind Swink in rush­ ing. Wom ack is in fifth place gain­ ing 67 yards. leads Joe Clements still the league's parsers, but was good Sat­ urday for but 7 of 24 tosses for 87 yards. John Roach of SM U is 22 yards behind Jub ilo’s boy and has been trailing closely for the past two or three weeks. Another Longhorn leader Is end Menan Sehriewer who tops the pass catchers Sehriewer, who grabbed two for 19 yards against the Frogs, ; leads Henry Grem m inger of B a y ­ lor by five receptions and 90 yards. W ayne Wash caught 2 for 33 yards to move into fourth place here. j Swink leads the scorers in the conference with 107 points, Fondren has 41 points to m aintain second place. In team averages per game, TOU | leads in rushing and total offense, | and Texas in passing. Defensively, I SM U is the most stubborn on op- I ponents' rushing, while the Aggies are the toughest team to complete a pass on. SM U leads in per game ; defense. The Aggies have the most yards • lost in penalties with 675 yards, I Rice has lost the least with 319, i proving, perhaps, that nice guys i do finish last and vice versa. Contest Winners Sports Notice Pick Seven Right T u e sd a y Is th e finn! d ay for bow ling in to the I n tr a ­ e n trie s to be tu rn e d m u ra l office. A . A . R o c k e r Tuesday, Nov. 15, 1955 THE DAILY TEXAN V g e 3 ’ Podre* Up for Draft Sunflower* In Row! A L B A N Y , N. Y „ Nov. I i (J)— G U L F P O R T , Miss,, Nov. J I P — j An Army doctor went to the "bull- San'An jelp Junior College of Texas pen” for aid Monday before dcmd- meets Mississippi's Sunflower .Tun­ ing whether World Series hero! ior College December 3 rn fhe first football ' Johnny Podres is physk illy fit to nnual Hospitably Bowl he drafted for m ilitary service. I game here. RENT L - L : TUXEDOS s a oo Comp!*!* w ith ti* stud* ihir+i cuff links *usp«nd*ri Cumm erbund CROWN TAILORS 408 loft Sixth Street 7-4703 th in K -5 0 short*, rcftj!«-f long* end t**r» Ion-* tum was voted the most outstand­ ing Longhorn performer in Satur­ d ay’s loss to TOLL The D aily Texan Sports Staff named the Lubbock senior for contributing a fine of­ fensive game plus being in on ten tackles backing up the l i n e . This was the first week Tatum attained top position although the letterman has received two-year votes every week for his consistent play and leadership. Delano Wom ack, Gerald “ H eap” Petersen, and W alter Fondren also received votes. (Jam es Swink drew some con­ sideration since he spent most of the afternoon in the Longhorn back­ field s J O H N N Y TA TU M READ THE C LA SSIFIED S Patronize Texan Advertisers What yo u n g people are doing at General Electric ' J r I M P S i p f c 's 4 # v mm CHARLES N. CLARK joined G.E. in JOJ9 M f M after terming hi4 B .S and M.S. pf§||l (in F. T.) from the University of V V isconsin. He fterwd two years with the Navy during World War ll. » l l p laj] | Young engineer decides what colors are best for G-E reflector lamps W h ich color of light m akes people look nat­ ural? Should a blue light be used more often than a red? \\ hat kind of effect does a violet light have on m erchand ise? In recent years, color lighting has b eco m e so im portant in stores, restaurants, th eaters, and displays that G eneral E lectric developed a line of new easy-to-use eolor-reflector lamps for this m arket. . T h e man responsible for deciding which colors are most effective for users of these lamps is 29-year-old Charles N. Clark, Ap­ plication Engin eering Color Specialist for General E le ctric 's large lamp department. Clark’s Work Is Interesting, Im p ortan t In a recen t series of tests, (..lark m ad e a critical appraisal of literally hundreds of color-filter materials to find the ones that produced maxim um results but were still suitable to high-production techniques, p ra c ­ tical stork in g and simplified selling. T his experim ental work also had to take into acc ount all the inform ation on human per­ ception of color. 25,000 College Graduates a t General Electric W hen ( lark cam e to General E le ctric in 1 9 4 9 , he already knew the , ark he wanted to do. Lik e each of the 2 5 , 0 0 0 college-grad- uate employees, he was given his ch an ce to grow and realize his full potential. F o r G en­ eral E le c tric h i s long believed th is: W hen fresh, young minds are given freedom to make progress, everybody benefits—the in­ dividual, tile com pany, and the country. Four contestants picked all sev-, en games correctly in the weekly I D aily Texan Lucky I Football Con­ test. There were only two upsets but most sports fans strung along with the red candles to hex T C I' j loss to J and the SM U Mustangs’ I Arkansas ruined many a good slate, < W. E . Jones of 2912 Cherry Lane j won first prize, a $20 gift cert!-; fieate f r o m Reynokls-Penland : picking all games correctly and I predicting TCU over the Longhorns, | I 26-20. Sam M, Durso, who lives at the A-Bar, took the second prize of $10 in clothes with a perfect card i and a prediction of the Froggies winning by 27-14. Since the Longhorns are idle this week, the U T freshmen have been installed the upperclassmen's position. The Yearlings play host to tile Texas Aggie Fish at Memor-: ial Stadium Saturday. in Alston Chosen Best Manager I N E W Y O R K , Nov. 14 LF W alter ; Alston, first to bring a world eham- ; pionship to Brooklyn, was voted i i the National League's “ Manager- of-the-Vear ’ Monday by members of Baseball W riters' Association of Amens a, i The 44-year-old Ohioan, who sue- j j reeded where eleven other mana- i gets faded, received 58 of the 99 ' votes cast by m ajor league w illers rn annual poll conducted by The ?o< lated Press to lead the rest field by a comfortable the rgin. d a n o Smith, who in his fresh- m season piloted the Phiiadel- j ia Ph is into fourth place, was anet* - up with 30 votes. Leo irocher, who resigned at tile end the season after his defending ampion New York Giants wound a poor third, was named on ie ballots to land third place, ie Note each went to Birdie Teb- tts of the fifth-place Cincinnati 'ds and Fred Haney of the last­ ing Pittsburgh Pirates. Haney is replaced by Bobby Bragan at e end o' the season. W I N S T O N T A S T E S G O O D ! L IK E A c i g a r e t t e S H O U L D ! H • APPLICATIONS _ . are now being accepted for - - . ‘ . 1 956 graduate student summer employment program tot,. Experimental Physicist! N uclear Physicists Theoretical Physicists M athem aticians Metallurgical Engineers Analytical C h em ists Inorganic Chemists P h ysical Ch em ists M echanical Engineers Electrical Engineers (Electronics) Summer employment opportunities Rt the Laboratory are open to approximately IOT) graduate students majoring in various physical sciences, and undergraduates receiving their degrees next June who intend to continue their advance studies. The program provides for well-paid summer work with renowned scientists in one of the nation's most important and finest equipped research laboratories. Summer employees will become familiar with several phases of vital scientific research and development activity related as closely as possible to the individual’s field of interest. This experience will enable students to appraise the advantages of a possible career at the Laboratory. In addition to interesting work, employees will enjoy delightful daytime temperatures and blanket-cool nights in a timbered, mountainous area, only 35 miles from historic old Santa Fe. Interested students should make immediate inquiry. Completed applies! io applications must be received by the Laboratory not later than February 1,1956, in order to allow time for necessary security clearance. Applicants must be U . S. citizens. M ail inquiry to: Department of Scientific Personnel I q s alamos scientific laboratory 0 » TMI U N I V ! i i ITT Of C A l l T O t N I A * IO ) ALAMOS, NCW MIXICO C h i l d r e n s b o o k v v e e K November 13-19 Wonderful Books fo r,Boys and Girls Play W ith M e— M arie Hall E h W h a t's Your N am e— Zhenya G a y G o o d Night Moon— M argaret W is e Brown Crunch Crunch— Ethel and Leonard Kessler H arold and the Purple Crayon— The Borrowers Afield-—M a ry Norton W a g g in g Tails— M argu erite Henry (an album of dogs) The island Stallion Races-—W a lte r Farley Philomena— Kate Seredy San Francisco Bay— Leis Lonskl A Dog Comes to School— Lois Lenski Charlotte and the W h ite Horse— Tam the Untam ed— M ary Elwyn Patchett Ruth Krauss Quest of the Show Leopard— Roy Chapman Andrews A Little House of Your Ow n— Irene H aas Parsley— Ludwig Benkelman Frog W e n t A-Courting— John Langstaff Da ncing in the M oon— Fritz Elchenberg The Illustrated Treasury of Children's Literature— Edited by M argaret Martiqnon! Guns for the Saratoga— G e o ffre y Trease U p the Trail from Texas— Frank Dobie Crom well’s H e a d — O livia C oolidge Poems of Praise— Selected by Pelagle Doane Columbus— Ingri and Edgar Parlm d Aulaire C h ag a— W ill and Nicolas O n Beyond Z eb ra— Br. Seuss The Boy W h o Discovered the Earth— Henry G reg or Felsen H old Fast the Dream— Elizabeth Low The Silver Answer— A Life of Elizabeth Bar­ rett Browning, Constance B. Burnett Hostess in the Sky— M argaret Hill Rosemary— M ary Slolg Marsha-Margaret M . C raig . A Wealth for Boys of Reading and Girls flfrogress Is Our Most Important Product G E N E R A L ' ^ E L E C T R I C W IN STO N Or baeleto^ ///vers/ii/ co ■ College smokers all over the country are welcoming Winston with open arms! This king-size filter cigarette gives you real tobacco flavor. The full, rich flavor really comes through to you because the exclusive Winston filter works so effectively. In short: Winston tastes good — like a cigarette should! W I N S T O N t t e e a A ii-z fr tflii'ifq ISM ciqaiettz! * j n * c a , w i w « t o i i * a . LITTLE M A N O N CAM PUS By Bibier Academic Meditations Tue»f rg, G o e t h e , Gi H annibal. H ertz, Leon in d , M ach i­ i da V a v e ili, Mio ne! m gelo, N apoleon, N ew ton. Pa? le a r . P r a x ite le s, Stint P au l, Shake 'P eare, S o cra tes, and Van Gogh A, VV gon e beyond the of Of cou rse >me p< ' v >ns w el e prom inent iv 'Sing. Y ogi B e ir a , in (to test C lark's for in stan ce I v a rdst.i< k : the a v era ge talent a v e r a g e c a tc h e r , an d added to the body of in the field p erm an en t k n ow ledge of ii lad lin g p . “ G e n iu s,” the presu p p o ses a w riter h a s * continuous fie ■re it ive thought d B erra, Mr. and a c tiv ity C lark m ust r ber, caught 139 ball g a m e s. ’hr: A TROOP strolled at re of ain i rocKen ■ IU n i e heart >r the scou ts t h e of sin gin g top of tings. is too m uch sop h istication . ivory tow ers, snu g in U h erald in crea se in our the “ I lavy the lr T h is A nd w e st crim e. J . C GOU L D F N\ a ffe c tio n a te ly la b eled “ M pssbaek" by rh> lib eral co llea g u e, step s down as m a n a g ­ ing ed itor t.ottfay. He h as been known on-ca rn pus a s an hon est c o n se r v a tiv e , around the p r e ss e s as a n ew sp a p erm a n 's n ew sp a p erm a n . c o n fer e n c e s The m id n igh t at H ank's on how to ex p o se the latent p o litica l m o v em en t cr how to m a n i­ pulate a reform w ill su c k , In this h ard -tack s g a m e , Goukien r a tes a s a pro. So th e y 'v e doled u s out m ore than our sh a r e of h e ll. M oss, but here w e a r e , still kickin ', ★ JOAN C RAW FO RD w e under­ stan d , d rew a b ig g er f ‘JI; *2* ( on* unequi lib riu m : a “ 30" The b e s t— and w o r s t part of this job is the people one m e e ts. T hey brilliant to bizarre, range from o grating. And sin ce ' from, great F eb ru ary. V D I. w hen By J. LOI LDF V I ’hp to irst ap peared iv T exan story, quite top of a Dai ent p erso n a g e s ha? r few diffei a >me o the < rossed this m ore n otable, and notorious p a il , . , the beered-u p P olish c o u n t, w ho bab bled for hours one night about lo c m in es and buried tr ea su r e s, w h ile a rep orter on his first a ssig n m e n t sa t on the ed ge of tho bed and kept the old boy from trying to m ak e a sp eech at the T e x a s U nion; , . , R egent C hairm an Tom S ealy, in T exas look any m an in the ey e , and does; w ho can straight . . . the sta te sen a to r w ho reeled drunkenly onto the floor one nigh t as a c o lle a g u e 's filib u ster droned on and on, into the foyer and w a s sick so ftly on Sam H ouston s statu e; staggered then , , , Ly ndon Johnson, w ho w as the picture of health as he sid e­ step p ed q u estion s at a m id su m m er later in terview , but w a s dow ned by a h eart attack ; th ree w e e k s , . D ean J ack H olland, w ho lik es stu d en ts, and v ic e versa: . . . the U n iv e rsity ad m in istrator w h o can look an y student on c a m ­ pus straight the e y e and be through his teeth ; in , . , F ou r Sig F p s, w ho had stolen a bear and did n’t know ju st w hat to do w ith it; . . . M ary D an n en b aum . w ho w as so e a s y to kid, and w ho did re­ run k,tide th in gs on no one knows of y e t; this cam p u s . . . ii. M alcolm M acdonald, w ho fine (God b le s s vou, d id n t sue fe llo w !); . . . Phi D elta T heta, w ho said . . . B yron F u llerton , w ho a lm o st had h im self a p olitical p arty; . . . B ob R ylee w ho did h a v e h im self a p olitical party: , . . Jerry W ilson, w ho “ tried " ; . . . and a hundred oth ers w hose n am es w ou ld stretch to the bottom of this p age. + A ND TH F N COMUS a shocking r e - e v a lu a t io n of v a lu e s an d a c lo s e r look at w h a t is im p o r t a n t a n d w h a t is t r i v i a l in a U n i v e r s ity com m u n ­ ity and you shudder. A fo o tb all c a p ta in , with a few In a r tic u la te , p r o f a n e p h rases, d r a w s a m o r e e n t h u s ia s t ic ro u n d of c h e er s ‘ban do ' h e b e s t efforts of A dlai S tev en so n , said b y m any to h r in fo r e m o s t A m e r i c a s p e a k e r to d a y . 'he A stolen c r e a te s m ore gen u in e consternation than a stolen elec t inn steer U gly Men ca m p a ig n harder and a ttra ct m ore atten tion than Student A ssem b ly m en . And do just about as m uch good for the U n iversity, t on T hose th in e 1! you learn in 'h e last w e e k you a r e in a position to do anything about them , and you w ish little you had b e e n co lleg ia te a cooner, or had m ore time. in .which to he collegiate. ★ THFI T R A G E D Y of the T exan is that it isn’t a p p reciated in hom e cou ntry. F ar too m an y U n iv ersity stu d en ts heap u njustified c r itic ism on the h ead s of unpaid volu n teer w ork ers w ho put out the h est col­ le g e p ap er in A m erica, bar none. T he m ira cle of the T exan is its con sisten t 'superiority to other col­ lege p u blications, and a few pro­ fessio n a l on es. At best, the T exan is com p osed of v e r y unex­ staff (this perien ced people, At w orst fortun­ doe,sn t happen too oflen . a te ly ! incredible in com p eten ts. is staffed by it journalism The salvation of the T exan, as p rofessor m ost one aptly puts it, is an ab ility to roll w ith ad m in istra tiv e punches and shut up w hen the shu tting up is good. T h at’s the w hy of D aily T exan f r e e d o m . C om prom ise w ithout co w a rd ice, givin g an inch today to tak e a m ile tom orrow , and ed i­ torial m aturity far beyond the call the a v e r a g e c o lleg e student - of those q u alities w ill keep the T exan fr e e. Sophomores Should Heed Case of Dinosaurs Fate f l l e continue our terre f “ A c a * d e m i c M ed itatio n s" by D r, Robert i t , W i t I irons, p r o f a o r o f R om an ce la n g u a g e >. Today he to so ph o m o res, a n d future articles u ill address u p perclassm en and g r a d ­ uate', D r Ii "illlams n ill sum m arize hrs op inion s sn a con clu din g stu d y, **C o n cep t o f a V n it e rstty,”— Ed, speaks B y R O B E R T l l . WI L L I AMS P ro fe« e.« r o f R n m an re L a n g u a g e * (R espectfu lly ad d ressed to sop h o­ more*.) the lf you h ave su rv iv ed first learning by c h a llen g e of h igh er flunking out or being p laced not on sch olastic prob ation , .von ai>e now in a slig h tly m ore p riv ileg ed c la s s A m ong your p rerogatives, for e x a m p le , for is G overnm ent 610 and H istory 615, I hasten to add that th ese c o u rses, o rig in a lly intended a s a req u ire­ m ent of e v e r y student w ithout re­ gard for his p reviou s know ledge and ex p e r ie n c e , w ere not im posed by the faculty, registration N o m atter w hich d ivision of the U n iv ersity you h ave ch osen , how ­ e v e r . ’ m ost of your su b jects are if you have still prescrib ed Even not decided upon a p rofession o r field of sp ecialization , there w ill be little d iv ersity the kinds of in know ledge to w hich you a re e x ­ in posed. To put c a se you spend only tw o y ea r s w ith us w e should like you to he a* least h alf-ed u cated . T his e x ­ plains w bv the term “ soph om ore ’ in d eri­ is sion. so m etim e s em p loyed it another w a y ; B U T YOU ar$ d ifferen t from fresh m en in se v era l r e sp e cts, and the distinction is to your cred it. Y ou h a v e m atured to som e e x ten t, not only in a chronological sen se but a lso in your attitu d e tow ard w hat you a te doing The novelty of cam p u s life has worn off. you h ave a d a p t«h1 y o u rse lv e s to rou­ im por­ tin e ap plication and. m ost tant of a ll, you h ave had a ch an ce to m easu re your in tellectu al c a p a c ­ ity with that of your fellow-;. P e r ­ h a p s you h ave adm ired so m e of you r instru ctors and d etested oth­ e rs (let us p a ss o v er for the m o ­ m ent, w h at they m ay hav e thought of you *. As an individual, not as a m ere enrollm ent sta tistic , you ought to ju d gm en ts and form Independent ' cu ltiv a te d iscern m en t of qu ality, W e are all d ed icated to 'h e ideal inscribed o v er the en tran ce to the M ain B uilding but it w ould tao w e ll to keep in m ind also a c o n v e r se sen tim en t: IF YOU KNOW ON LY THAT WHICH YOU ARK TOLD YOU W i l l , N E V E R B E F R E E , If you are an excep tion al stu ­ (by this I do not m ean on** dent retarded b e c a u se of p h y sica l hand i­ cap or I u rge inferior a b ility ', you to take ad van tage of sp e cia l e x a m in a tio n s w hich are prov ided to en cou rage m ore rapid a d v a n ce­ m en t tov a u l a d egree. H our cred its are sim p ly a con ven ien t d e v ice for keep ing up w ith your p r o g ress; they should n ev er take p reced en ce o v er d em on strated k n ow led ge. The Mirror . . . from our files the N o v em b er 15. 1929: “ Dr. H arry Y andell B enedict th e first a lu m ­ nus to be ele c te d president of the U n iv e r sity , one of first, siu- d en ts, its first honor m an, and the v a led icto ria n of h is c la ss, a tutor in instructor, a p rofessor, an exten sion d irector, and de “'n. cele b rated his six tieth birthday T hursday aw'ay from the U n iv e r sity that has been an im ­ portant fa cto r in h is life since he first c a m e to T exas the U n iv ersity , an in 1876. . . . D r. B en ed ict w a s ch a ir­ m an of the A thletic C ouncil from 1904 to 1908. w a s president of the Co-Op, one of the o rg a n iser s of the U n iv ersity C om m on s, w a s tw ice president of the E x-S tu d en ts’ A ssociation , and serv ed for m an y y e a r s on the d iscip lin e c o m m ittee ." in co u rse FO R YOUR ow n sa tisfa c tio n keep on strivin g to , im prove your u se of E nglish, both oral and w ritten , the long a fter you h a v e p assed req uired com p osition . And read w id ely beyond m in im u m a ssig n m en ts. W hether the m ed iu m of n ew sp ap ers, m a g a z in e s, radio, or telev isio n , try to be aw are of wha? is happen­ in the rest of the w orld and ing w h at think­ foreign p eop les a re ing of the p rob lem s that w e ca n ­ not avoid sh arin g w ith them , inform ation be “ D octor, la w y er, m e r c h a n t , c h ief , . . "—w h a tev er j o u a sp ire A Student Voice rem em b er the la te of th* to be that behem oth w hich d in osau r, o n c e roam ed over p aris of th is continen t m an y hundreds of thou­ sa n d s of y e a r s ago. B eing la rg er and stron ger than oth er a n im a ls, it could usurp tho ch o icest v e g e ­ tation thai .the earth afforded. But, a la s, the sm a lle st part o f its a n a ­ tom y w as reserved for its think­ ing a p p aratu s; and so the brain this m on strous creatu re a tr o ­ of the sp ecies ev en tu a lly phied and perished b e ca u se it d id n t ha? a se n se enough to g et out of the w a y of a glacier. I lie I iring Line . , . Democracy Via the Soapbox T h (tic e d it o r . e. cl­ an e x c e lle n t job running the T exan and th e r e f o r e think you m ight be in terested in a su g g estio n . thought in terests to the stu d en ts of Ii se e m s to m e that a great d eal is not being of o rigin al properly utilized. T he id ea s anil b e lie fs of n um erous individuals on this c a m p u s w ould contribute in no sligh t w ay to tile stim u lation of they w ere but la te n t if p resen ted the U n iv ersity . ! a m of the opinion that you a :e in a position to p lace the forem ost o f id eas before th ese the stu dents, facu lty and staff of this cam p u s. You could ach iev e this end by en cou ragin g students to subm it to you a rtic les on an y top ics they m ight so d esire, and th ose a r tic le s you by publishing b e lie v e im ­ portant e. to he of param ount - ‘R O B E R T P R A r r -* To the E ditor: for the I wrant to e x p r e ss m y a p p r e c ia ­ tion se r ie s of a rticles w ritten by ou tstanding m em b ers of im portant the faculty and oth er people of our com m unity that h i v e ap p eared in Tile D aily T exan dur­ ing few w e e k s. T h ese a r tic le s have been w e ll w ritten and tim ely. I m ay not agree w ith so m e of the opinions ex p re sse d , hut I am very* happv that I have had a ch an ce to h ear th ose opin­ ions. tile past r have been putting off w ritin g to sa y thank you to th ese people until today w hen I read the ia le st a rticle, w hich first of a is new* se rie s. T his a rticle by Dr. W illiam s u h s so fine that I had to pick up a pen and s a y , “ T hanks, I en joyed it.". the --W A Y N E H E R R O N ♦ To tile E ditor: If does an “ old grad" (1949) to read of th e spirit w h ich good lias been gen era ted u n the F o rty A c i e s this f i n e fo o tb all s eas o n . And b e in g a T e x a n - e \ , a n d a vid read er c o lle g e d a ily n e w s­ of is with a it paper in the nation, thai I cla im g r e a t d e a l of p ri d e the Texan h as had a to do w ith boosting this spirit the hest lot 'Voting ti reg O lds had w hat I be­ lie , e w a s the sm ooth est and m ost e ffe c tiv e a n sw er to B aylor's g rip es that h as sp orts colu m n ists fyp eu rifer. e v e r g ra c e d a is And w h ile I arri rn the congratu­ latin g fram e, let m c add that this f a ll’s T exan 'he hest read in g and best m ad« up o f an y I ha? a seen in m an y a y ea r. Your edit- torial-featu re page has had son * cra ck erja ck a r tic le s w o ll-w r t^ r t on tim ely su b jects. it Of cou rse, the con sen su s is o f se v er a l o f us w ho read you r it R ound-Up colum n is one read in g colu m n s the e a sie st of the d a y s of in the T exan sin ce follow ed M ark B atterxon. and he H orace B u sh y, K eep it up, Mr. .Morris. that — RAY G R E E N E T exan E ditor, 1948 T h e DA®§y T e x a n T h e P o ly T e x a n s tu d e n t n ew sp ap * r o f ’t h e U n iv e r s it y c f T e x a s is p u b lis h e d lr, A u stin d a ily e x c e p t S a t u r d s v M o n d a y , a n d h o lid a y p e r io d s. S e p te m b e r th r o u g h M ay, by T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b lic a tio n s . Inc. N e w s c o n t r ib u t io n s w ill bo a c c e p t e d by te le p h o n e 12-24TV) o r a ' ’ h e e d ito r ia l la b o r a to r y J R 102. I n q u ir ie s c o n c e r n in g d e liv e r y o f f ic e s , JIB 103. o r th e n e w s s h o u ld h e m a d e in .IR 107 a n d a d v e r t is in g J R 111 <2-J750> E n te r e d a s s e c o n d -c la s s m a tte r O c to b e r 1.8. 1943 a t t h e P o s t O ffic e a t A u s tin , T e x a s , u n d e r th e s t o f M arch 3 I STO. 4NSO< IA I K l) P R E S S W IR E S E R V IL E T h e A s s o c ia te d P r e s s a1! n e w s d is p a t c h e s c r e d ite d t o p a p er . a n d al! p u b lic a tio n o f a ll o th e r m a t t e r h e r e in a ls o r e s e r v e d is e x c l u s i v e ly e n t it le d t o th e u s e f o r r e p u b lic a t io n of t h is n e w s ­ ite m s o f s p o n ta n e o u s o r ig in p u b lis h e d h e r e in . R ig h t s of it o r n o t o t h e r w is e c r e d ite d lo c a l in n e bx N a tio n a l A d v e r tis in g S e r v ic e , — *-------------------- ——-------- *- Ina. 120 M a d iso n Av** New- Y ork , N . Y. Chicago B o sto n — L o s A n g e le s — S a n F r a n c is c o C o lle g e P u b lis h e r s R e p r e s e n ta tiv e A ss o c ia te d C o lle g ia te P r e ss AH A m erica n M FA IR ER s i UM R I P ! ION K A T E S M in im u m S u b s c r ip t io n — T h r e e M o n th s' vi red In Au* n ..................................... ............................. .. ............ .. led . in A u s tin od o u t o f to " n He' Ma! M a x 7 5 month ?? on m o n th ? .7? m onth ................... Editor M anaging Editor . . N e w s E d i t o r ............. E d it o r ia l A s s i s ta n t s P E R M A N E N T ST A F F ............................................................ B IL L IE MORRIS ................................................... J. C. LOI I,DEN (30) Carl B u rgen .................. .................. Carol Q uerolo, Jerry H all S T A F F FOK THIS ISSU E Night E d i t o r ......................................................................................... J . C . O O I E DEN ( 3 0 ) D A N E L M IL L ER D esk Editor ................ A ssistan t Night E ditor ..................................................... Mark B raly C op yread ers ................................Jerry W ilson, Conoly C ullom , Carl B urgen N ight R eporters .......................................................... P at P u rcell, John R ogers N ight Sports Editor ................................................................................................ N o r m a M ills V erne B oatner, N ick Johnson, E ddie H ughes, A ssista n ts ................ John K n aggs. G reg Olds N ancy B a sto n Night A m u sem en ts E d i t o r N ight W om en's Editor ...................................................................... Shirley ln sa ll ........................................ Arnold R osen zw eig N ight F airch ild O p e r a t o r ............ Give Joy a jingle . . . . at 2-2473 FOR Q U IC K A C T IO N O N DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS CLASSIFIED DEADLINES CLASSIFIED KATES 20 w ord s or le s s A dditional w ord s ........................................S .95.........................S .02 I d ay E a ch additional d a y % .85........................S .OI ............. $1.35 p er colum n inch C lassified D isp lay In the e v en t of errors m a d e in an a d v e r tise ­ m en t, im m e d ia te n otice must, be given , a s the p u b lish ers a re resp on sib le for o n ly one in cor­ rect insertion. T u esd ay T exan ............................. M onday, 4 p.m . W ednesday T exan .............. T u esd ay, 4 p .m . T hursday T exan ............ W ednesday, 4 p.m . F rid a y T e x a n T h u rsday, 4 p.m . Sunday T exan .......................... F r id a y , 4 p .m . Special Services For Rent Typing RED U C IN G . V ei Hi! ta n n in s b o d y b u ild - SIN G L E ROOM f©r gen tlem a n in stru c- n ,P!M ' ing as low a s 84 p'-r m onth . M assage j$2, s t e a m b a t h s S t. P h o n e 2-9334. M u r- d o c k s. 12th a n d L a m a r tor or gr&duat# stu d en t P riv a te bath, to r or g r a d u a t e s tu d e n t . P r iv a t e h a th , A n t r a t * a arn w » « t yo th s e p a r a t e e n tr a n c e . $25. 301 W e s t 29th . P h o n e 2-8719 . u ____ I * - J?1' r’!,'k*up a n * I* L E T M R S. A lb r ig h t d o y o u r E x p e r ie n c e d , e f f ic ie n t . 53-2941. 111 . * t y p in g . So our fling is over, and we promise to be quite C o lle g iate C o rral academic again—at least for a while. todays Giiest Editorials . . . from The N e w York T im es November irs the aging year, a woman whose spring­ tim e children have grown and cone their way hut whose hair Is often spar,clad, whose gray eyes are of­ ten alight, and whose dress of grays and browns is neither dour nor dov. dv. November is a lithe hemlock in a green lace party dress, and a clean-limbed gray birch laughing in the wind. November is apple rider 'Aith champagne beads of authority; it is a gray squirrel in the limber top of the hickory tree, graceful a? the wind; it is a doe aud h er fawn munching wine sap ’• indfails in the moonlit orchard. It is a handful of snowflake? flung over a Berkshire hilltop, and a woodchuck sniffing the Mind and retreating to his den to sleep till April. November is a rabbit hound baying the hillside; a farm boy in a canvas coat and a red cap, the 16-guage in the crook of his arm, on the hill? of the upper pas­ ture; a grouse bursting from underfoot with a roar of wings and rocketing into the thicket. And November is the memory of the years. It is tu r­ key in the oven, and plum pudding and mince pie and pumpkin and cream ed onions and mashed yellow tu r­ nip. It is a fear! and celebration; but it is also the re ­ membering and the Thank You, God, and the under­ standing. T h at's the heart of it: November's m aturing and understanding. McCarthy Raps Harvard; Harvard Raps Student B v R O B B B U R L A C E • H A R V A R D CHOOSES R O B E R T , JO E F U M E S . . . R obert Oppen- h e im er , d e c la r e d a se c u r ity risk rn a 2-1 v o te of the A tom ic E n erg y sprin g of ^ 1954, C o m m issio n th e h a s b een ann oun ced a s 1937 \\ il- lia m J a m e s L ectu rer in P h ilosop h y and P sy c h o lo g y a? H arvard U ni- v e r -ify , the H arvard C rim son re­ pel IN H ours a fter the ap p oin tm en t, e x p e c t S en ator Josep h R . M cC arthy de- r.ounced the d ec isio n a s w hat you m igh t a m an of 'D r . N ath an P u se y , pres­ P u s o y ’s ident* of H a rv a rd i r e co r d .” M c­ C arthy w a s sp eak in g at a public in B oston a t th e tim e , rally from . ★ ★ * • K E E P IN M IN D . . A lso, at H arvard , o n e of the old er stu d en ts to a p rofessor w a s co m p la in in g that h e had been a sk ed “ e \' T y ­ thing from th e a g e o f m y p aren ts to the sex of m y unborn children , I w a * a sk ed fe w e r person al q u es­ for a job tions w hen I ap p lied w ith the S tate D ep artm en t in W ash­ ington," he sa d “ T hat m a y be tr u e ,” replied the prof, “ but you m u st rea lize w e re a m uch old er organization ’’ ★ * ★ . • MOVE O V E R , YRC . . C hicago U n iv e r sity not only has the Young D e m o c r a ts and Y oung R ep u b lican s, but has a v ery a c tiv e Young So­ cia list Club. A rece n tly form ed L ea g u e for C ivil L ib erties h as a lso spru ng up on the C hicago M aroon w rites, the cam p u s, for T opic the Young S ocialist Club at the last m e e t in g : “ H istory of t h e A m erican C om m un ist P a r ty ” by V ictor H ow ard, a w eek ­ ly colu m n ist for the Indiana Work­ er. if it ie • C OLLEG E POLITICAL FORUM . With th eir fir st AT H ARVARD . . the B ricker d e b a te sched uled on A m en dm ent, r e p r e se n ta tiv e s of the H arvard “ y o u n g ” p olitical clubs Awll square off at the In si of their s e r ie s at “ C ollege P o litica l F o ­ ru m ," th# C rim son rep orts. “ T he F o ru m ’s s u c c e s s can g i v e n ew d im en sion s the p r e s e n t bou ndaries of the C ollege s p olitical clu b s," s a y s the C rim son. to O f I T I I I I V / / / K ' l W * f J \ o t I C T S .x ” x x * ►*-'%■'■«-* — — T h e Q u a lif y in g E x a m in a t io n fo r th e Ho* to r o f P h ilo s o p h y in E n g lis h " i l l he h e ld on M onday an d T u e s d a y . N o v e m ­ b er 21 a n d 22 to la k e in te n d S t u d e n ts " h o th e e x a m in a t io n w ill r e g is te r th e ir n a m es an d a d d r e s s e s in a d v a n c e in (n e E n g lis h O ffic e M ain B u ild in g 1802, an d p ay a te e o f o n e d o lla r for P a r t I. S t u d e n ts w l l a ls o th e E n g lis h O ffic e a n o f f ic i a l trans* r ip t o f th e ir a c a d e m ic r e c o r d s . le a v e in t e a c h e r s M r A W S h a n n o n , a s s is t a n t s u p e r ­ in t e n d e n t. B ea u m o n t P u b lic S c h o o ls , in t e r v ie w p r o s p e c tiv e e le m e n ta r y v illi a n d in T e a c h e r s e c o n d a r y P la c e m e n t S e r v ic e . S u tto n H a ll 209, on W e d n e s d a y , H e is e s p e c ia lly in t e r e s t e d in Speec h a n d S p e c ia l E d u c a tio n te a c h ­ If you a r e in t e r e s t e d in s e e in g Mr. e rs p o s itio n s . S h a n n o n a n y m a k e e n a p p o in tm e n t bv c a llin g or d r o p p in g b v th e T e a c h e r P la c e m e n t S e r v ic e o f f ic e . A p p o in tm e n t* s t a r t a t 9 a ra. c o n c e r n in g J O S E P H ’S C A R S e r v ic e . W a sh , p o lish an d w a x , c o m p le t e v a c u u m , $10. F r e e pick -u p a n d d e liv e r y . 405 W e s t 39th . P h o n e 5-9131. M R H O U S E : B a b e s T a lc u m P o w d e r r ig h t isn t q u ite T h e C o lo n e l snort unities W A N T E D —-Girl to share c o m fo r ta b le B ills p a id . R e a s o n a b le . a p a r tm e n t P h o n e 7-6942. Wanted C -A -S -H fo r G -U -N -S O ld o r N e w B U Y — S E L L — T R A D E L a m a r S p o r t in g G o o d s 913 L a m a r F U R N I S H E D fo u r - r oom d u p le x for R E T I R E D C O U R T r ep o r te r . 15c a p a g e c o u p le T ile b a th , s h o w e r . 606 E a st i-ll aftr.i* X tin nil its\ tsatnrdnv 2 0 q . 2-1043 a ft e r 5 30, a ll d a y S a tu r d a j a n d S u n d a . s le e p in g porch B L O C K C A M P U S . S tu d y , k itc h e n , hath fo r m e n . Q u ie t, c o n ­ v e n ie n t to Law a n d E n g in e e r in g . U t ili­ tie s paid . 2618 S p e e d w a y 8-5588 2-5667. T H E M E S . S p e llin g 2-6569 — ■ — —— ------------ ---- T H E S E S , D is s e r t a t io n s — c o r r e c tio n * . a n d g r a m m a r R E P O R T S . T H E S E S , n o te s . G u a r a n ­ te e d F r e e p ic k u p d e liv e r y . 6-5810. E X P E R I E N C E D t y p is t . P h o n e 53-4023. B L O C K F R O M C o-O p. F u r n is h e d a p a r t­ $55. flo o r sp a c e. m e n t w ith lo ts o f --- - ----- ---------- W a te r fu r n is h e d . P h o n e 6-0072. — A V A IL A B L E N O W — B e d r o o m , p r iv a te j ZLZ—Z _____________________________________ , s e r v ic e , c e n t r a lly R K P q R T 8 , T H E S E S , d is s e r t a t io n s , E le c tr ic ty p e w r it e r R e a so n a b le . T w o a ir -c o n d itio n e d w in te r ■- s u m m e r . Q u iet U p p e r c la s s m a n o r g r a d u a t e s tu d e n t . A p- b lo c k s froTTl fo u n ta in . 8-8113. ply 1 8 0 1 B r a z o s . I n it 3, A p a r tm e n t 18. 1 T B E S E S. d is s e r t a t io n s , m a n u s c r ip t s , t e r m p a p e r s . E x p e r ie n c e d . P h o n e r--------------------j W.T401 d a ily m a id bath - ■ , )pa D IS S E R T A T I O N S , th e s e s. E le ct r o m a n # U T n e ig h - s tty m e n . R ig h t a t c a m p u s. R e a so n - j b o r h o o d . 2-4945" a b le B ills p a id . P h o n e 6-8176. READ THE CLASSIFIEDS A L L T Y P E S w o r k d o n e by e x p e r ie n c e d I tv p ist. 2-6359. E X P E R I E N C E D s e c r e t a r y . B B A gr&du* i a te . Air*. B a k e r . 5-0197$. U n ion ’s ‘C o s t Si Bon’ To Close Friday N igh t The Texan Union dance com­ mittee will present Hie closing night of " C ’c'.l Si Bon,” French night club, Friday from 8:30 p.m. to 12 midnight in the Main B a ll­ room. The program will honor International students. Members of Alpha Phi sorority and De,ta Sigma Phi fraternity will Bob variety present a Barb’s combo will play. revue Admission is 50 cents a couple. ‘Dona Barbara’ to lie (Hiown "Dona Barbara,” starring Maria j Felix and Julian Soler, will be ,hown Thursday at 2, 4:45, and I 7:30 p m. in Batts Hall Auditorium a , the fourth of the Mn, -lassie, r , s‘ * _ Sherwood Dies Of Heart Attack Four-time Winner Of Pulitzer Prize N EW YO RK, Nov. 14 LP,—Robert E . Sherwood, 59, whose pen won I him more Pulitzer prizes than any | other American, died Monday. The ; six foot, seven inch playwright and biographer suffered a heart attack I Saturday. . * J S , , I , A plg Shp™ ™ ! , s^ e d w a* the g' p' ’ c h , . three P u l l e r p riz « for drama. Sherwood won a fourth! — j prize in 1949 for a political biog­ raphy based in the papers of the late New Deal presidential adviser, j Harry Hopkins. THE R O Y A L SC O TS ’n Gregory G " Scots Royal (juaras Give Fling Today Sherwood's memorable plays in­ cluded “ Idiot’s Delight,” “ Abe Lin­ coln in Illinois'.’ “ There Shall Be the No Night” —all Pulitzer prize win-1 Royal Scots Guards wall open its nors—-and “ Waterloo Bridge” and million dollar tour Tuesday night “ The Petrified Forest.” He had a in Gregory Gym at 7 and 9 p.m. new one about ready for Broadway with “ Fanfare” by Rhodes, production. i The band, which is part of Queen Sherwood also ventured into the Elizabeth's Buckingham P a l a c e Ilrgii < P-md lh. regimental band, comprised of tall, scarlet uniformed musicians with bearskin bonnets, will play quick march “ New York Hippodrome,” 'Bonnie Scot­ “ National Fantasy land’,” and “ Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2,” by Liszt. household troops, will also play the grand march “ Rakoczy, bor; overture “ Montana lace: “ ll Bacin,” by Arditti; “ Id; and Dot,” by Bosey, and selections march “ Kirkhtll.” and march from “ Pagliacci,” by Leoncavallo. I gus MacKinnon The world’s stellar pipers will by Ber- then present march “ The Sfirling- by Wa I- shire Militia.” Strathspey “ Maggie Cameron,” reel “ Sandy Cameron," An- V . i U i l l l l l j speeches, shaping some of the pun- dirk Are Your Glasses Up-To-Date LOVELY FR A M E D ESIG N S to f’+ every personality DALLAS HOLFORD OPTICIAN TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS IOO Eat* 19th a* Wichita; Ph. 7-1 88S Ck Bldg; Ph. 7-7742 0 INTERSTATE THEATRES • Now s h o w in g! 9 J FIRST S H O W 11:30 A .M . I-J A M E S DEAN— rn rn rn 9 C • WERNER Bees C i n e m a s co p e WawnmCoco* NATAL IE WOOD 12:00 STV RAY J O A N FIRST SH O W MIRAND COLLINS GRANGER FA R IC Y i ■ir j) V. ■ I "* * * movie field and in 1946 won an Academy Award for writing “ The Best Years Of Our Lives.” lbs lat­ est movie script, “ Main Street to I Broadway” is being filmed in Hol- ! Iywood. j A close friend of the late Pres- I ident Roosevelt, Sherwood helped prepare some of his dramatic gent phrases used by Roosevelt. Known as the tallest dramatist in the world. Sherwood set off a rugged face with a small mus­ tache. His mien was serious, but he was an articulate man, with lit­ tle trace of shyness The Pipe Band, wearing full highland dress of blue doublet, feather bonnets, highland sword, and pipes emblazoned with the crests of the different com­ panies, will play “ The Highland Jo y ,” Wedding,” “ The Fiddlers’ “ Duntroon.” “ Kirkwall Ba y,” and “ The Dundee City Police. ” Sherwood's death (’ame less than The Highland Dancers will leap to the tune th*1 Massed Pipers for “ The Highland Fling,” and “ Solo Sword Dance.” The highland fourteen hours after that of another “ Solo S with its intricate steps Pulitzer prize winner, Bernard de dane)ca mating floor patterns, is Voto, 58. He too, died of a heart and la one of the most < elebrated forms attack. De Voto won the 1947 prize for an historical study of the Amar- . of folk dancing in the world. High- land dances have been handed ican West. down from generation to genera­ tion, ami many of the featured learned the steps dancers have fathers and grand- from fathers. The dances best known outside Scotland are the two to be performed. Fried Chicken — Special — their Following the intermission the 3 pieces with french fries 49* J M OSLEY’S CAFETERIAS Allendale — Delwood I The University of Texas Cultural Entertainment ■ SPEEDWAY RADIO & TELEVISION SA LES & SERVICE ?h. 7-3846 2010 Speedway J u s t S o u t h ot t . r e b u r y G y m * * >-* cm. T he Girl In The R ed Velvet Sw in g f Stotts TOMORROW J BUHS WITH SUSPENSE ANO EXCITEMENT! Committee and S. Hurok honor the « H T H ANNUAL ^ _______________ t h e G O O D “ • - D I B S k i VO UN G RICHARD GLORIA BASEHART * GRAHAME • IRELAND JOHN VARSITY STARTS TO DAY! 2 P.M. W e e & * * * * * % £ & , FINE ARTS FESTIVAL tihen THE PAGEANTRY of BRITAIN COMES TO AMERICA THE REGIMENTAL BAND THE M A S S E D P I P ER S THE HIGHLAND DA NCE RS 4b val J U A 'R T T S ■SU/ m :• QUEEN ELIZABETH'! luckinghom Poloce Household Troops I open and shut case of Lefts! LAST D A Y! O PEN ?0*h Century-Foi, W ILH A M H O LD EN , J m i a c D O X O F F I C K O P E N S 6:06 A d u l t ' .'die • < h ild f r*>«* TVt-nas*1! (12 to 17) 25c T a o iiiB iB f of simpRist | Ifs ALWAYS tHMWWHfit ’Til A L S O ! A ll the Brothe: r>re V aliant” Bobet* Taylor T O N I G H T 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Gregory Gymnasium S IN G L E A D M IS S IO N : Adults — $2.50 $1.00 opens Box Office, Gregory Gym, Juniors thru High School B O X O F F I C E O P E N S (EW ) Adult' 50<- • < hilt! t ree Trenage <12 to Ii) 25f Tall Man A v AUSTIN FIRST S H O W 6 P.M. # rn % $ % rn VIOLENT SATURQAV : •#' 'iMWpf ' fiCtOT MATURI Stephen MCNALLY Richard EGAN CHuMfcScotfi 6:30 for 7:00 P.M. Show 8:30 for 9:00 P.M. Show R £ iu < Pele Smith Short A L S O ! P L IN D E THE s r w o rld J g r e a t e s t m e t h o d o f s c ie n t ific SPOT REDUCING . . , w ill slim h e a v y t h ig h s , b u l g in g hips, p r o t r u d in g t u m m y . . . in o n ly THREE WEEKS! You Can Lose Up to 5 inches . . . ’ Results Guaranteed’ Call 7-5097 for free treatment ^ Ii bf ach Stjslcni Kay Wolff, figure analyst 213 E. 26*/2 7’5097 FREE INSTALLATION MUFFLERS (Stock or Hollywood) D U AL EX H A U ST SYSTEM S FO R A LL M A K ES O F V-8 C A R S CENTRAL AUTO PARTS Phone 2-3303 3212 E. 1st St. MEXICAN FOOD AT ITS BEST . 't'V ’'*'y ’ y" -* ' ^ y Served 7 Days a Week From 8 A .M . to 2 A .M . * 1 •< , • is ' '' p I L M A T A M O R O S .504 East Ave. ' Phone 7-7023 ' ^ Tuesday Menu af Scholz Garten 3 Large Pieces Fried Chicken O'* Hamburger Steak Mashed Potatoes Combination Salad String Beans and Creamed Corn Peach Pie Hot Rolls and Corn Bread Coffee or Tea 65* Scholz Garten 1607 San Jacin to W h a r a Y ou A ra Alw ay* W e lc o m t NY Art Curator Speaks Tuesday Fine Arts Festival Presents Rousseau Theodore Rousseau, Jr., distin- ; guished curator of paintings of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, will he guest speaker for the third pro­ gram of the Fourteenth Annual Fine Arts Festival. Tuesday. Tile program, which is admission free, vs iii be presented at 4 p. rn. in Recital Hall. Mr. Rousseau was educated at the Lycee Henri TV in Paris and at I-.'on in England. He graduated from Harvard University with honors in 1935 After World W ar II, Mr, Rous- i seat! was sent to Europe as a lieutenant commander in the US Navy and assigned to the art lost investigation for the Strategic Sor- vice. In 194K Mr. Rousseau took over I his present position with the Met­ ropolitan Museum, where he has modernized the picture galleries by liking a new arrangement of pictures by historical periods, in preference to conventional group­ ings by the national schools. ’Hr. Russeau is in “ Who's Who ! in America” and “ Who's Who in j American Art.” He is also a form- i or assistant curator of paintings at the National Gallery in Wash* | ington. PANCHO Square Dancers Plan Jamboree The Mid-Tex Square Dancers As­ sociation Fall Jamboree will have Guitarist M, R. “ Pancho” Baird ot Santa Fe, N. M , as master of ceremonies at the City Coliseum Saturday at 8 p.m. Practice sessions will be held from 2 to 3:30 p.m. for dancers who wish to brush up on some of tile dances to he called during the e\ "ming. An advanced session will follow from 3:30 to 5 p.m. when tile instructors will present their new calls. Tom Pennington, presi­ dent of the dance association, will first afternoon session lead the and Mr. Baird the list. Tuesday, Nov. J 5, 1955 THE DAILY TEXAN Pag* 5 T S O D a n c e rs S e le c te d ; Rehearsal W e d n e s d a y The 28 dancers for the *how are Dancers cast for “ Time Stag-, Margaret Brous. Liz Bigelow, MarV gees On ’ will meet Wednesday j lee Dunstan, Kay Dyche, Elaine night at the University “ Y” aud!- Fisher, P at Gordon, Martha Hill, torium at 7 p.m., Joe Bill Hogan. Janeil Hooten, Judy Huff. Mariam Lass, Barbara Kr;ck. Nancy Led­ j assistant director announced. better. Mary Ann Lehman, Dolly Marik, Norma McCombs, Donna Ordway, Pud Payne, Sadie P a l­ mer, Barbara Rosenberg, Liz Rowell, Sib a Schlumps, Suzanne Story, Carolyn Tull is Sonny Wills, Fred Weyrich, Tom Hester, Tom­ my Ada in, and Danny Danford. Faculty to Play Wednesday at 4 A Faculty Chamber Music Con-, I cert will be the fourth presentation j j of the Fine Arts Festival Wednes­ day at 4 p.m. m the Recital Hall of the Music Building. Participants include Anna Ja ck ­ son, piano; Alfin Pignotti, violin: Albeit Gillis, viola; Horace Britt, Joseph Blankenship, obie; cello; and John McGrosso, clarinet. The ensemble will play Mozart’s “ Quartet, K. 370” for the oboe,. violin, viola, and cello. Their sec-. end presentation will be “ Trio, j Opus 114” by Brahms. rtPoDp., H . 'I • . , DINE IN AIK-CONDITIONED m J COMFORT I H s T l ' v " , ' 1 | | | t V off Campus at * Just a few blocks . . . EL TO RO —FINE MEXICAN FOOD— 8-4321 1601 Guadalupe ESPECIALLY FOR YOU The pipers and dancers will join for "Foresome Reel” and “ Argyle Broadswords,” and the Regimental Band will conclude wadi introduc­ tion to third act of “ Lohengrin.’* by Wagner and “ Heilan' Laddie.” Marking the first time that this historic regiment has been in the western hemisphere, the present good-will tour comes as a result of over two years’ negotiations with the British War Office b\ the noted impresario, Sol llurok. Tickets will be available from 9 a.m. to 4 p rn. Tuesday at the Music Building box office. One Day Service At No Extra Charge Longhorn Cleaners 2538 Guadalupe Phone <>-3817 Bridge Group Will Meet I The Intermediate Club’s Tues- ' day morning bridge group will meet Tuesday at 9.30 a. rn. at the I home of Mrs. Karl M, Dallenbach, 2 ICI> Me adowb rook Musk* vail be by J. M. Tidwell’s “ Cripple Creek Ram h Hands.” Ad­ mission is SI pc:' person for both afternoon and evening sessions. Spectators admission will be 50 cents. AUSTIN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA EZRA R A C H L IN , Conducting ALL-ORCHESTRAL EVENING Monday, Nov. 21 — C ity Coliseum R O S S I N I : O v e r t u r e to “ L a ( fn ^ r e n t o la ” H A Y D N : “ S u r p r i s e " S y m p h o n y C O P L A N D ; A p p a la c h ia n Spring : Suit*- SN A G N E R : P re lu d e to Ar-t I I I . Darner of
4k A . 4k 4 . 4k 4k 4# 4A 4 k 4t. 4L 4k 4k 4k 4k 4k. A A A ESPECIALLY FOR YOU A full year's subscription to any one of these three great weekly magazines at these reduced prices . . . for college students only. Take T im e, T he Weekly Newsmagazine, for less than 6< a week . . . or Lif e, America’s favorite pictorial, for less than 8< a copy f . . or S p o r t s I l l u s ­ t r a t e d , the first national sports weekly, for less than 8i an issue. T he purchase of one magazine does not require the purchase of another; your special student prices are good for all or artv of these three weeklies. today with your student Sign up representative in the lobby of the Texas Union. Tuesday, Nov. 15, 1955 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6 Friday Deadline For Note Book Contributions to tho Trvan Note Book should be subm itted by Fri­ day, announced Bobby Jones, edi- or of the Texan's sem iannual liter­ ary supplement. to form This deadline applies free­ lance m aterial, which m ay be in the original sketches, short stories, short or long poem s, essays, or book re­ view s. of articles, 8-8 — Pho’oeraphy Exhibit. from Sam Houston State Teachers Col­ lege. Texas Union Ixrbby. 9-12; 1-4:JO — Drawing for Texas- tickets, Gregory A & M gam e Gv rn. 9-5 —- F a tu ity Art Exhibit, Music Building lo g g ia , 9-5 — Drawing for “ Royal Scot?. tickets, Music Guards Band" Building Box Office. 9 IO — Interm ediate Club bridge group, 2106 M eadowbrook. A rt which may 15 — Annual A PROTO review' at 12 - Showing of Texas-TCU gam e pictures. T e x a s Union Main lo u n g e , include photo­ graphs and selections prepared with the knowledge of the Note Book staff m ay be turned rn later. The Texan Note Rook, first issued 3 - - Men’s Housing Association, last spring, is conceived a s an out­ Group I, IOO East Twentieth St let for the creative, com m unicable ideas of students in all parts of 3-5- D. P . F eldm an, “Collection of Contemporary Texas Art, TFWC the U niversity. 3 specially sought are contributions with interest and m eaning which t r a n s c e n d the bounds of a department or a dis­ cipline Whitaker Field. Writers and illustrators m ay sub­ mit their work by m ail to the Texan Note Book, The D aily Texan, Journalism Building 103, or in per­ ron at the Texan O ffice Anyone seeking more information is asked to call Bobby Jones at 8-0559. Phi Sigma Kappa Holds Open House tapped are Marianne D ittm an. M ary Jan# Downtain, Janice Greening. B ela Gyure. Bar­ bar# Ann H artley, Judity D avid­ son M oyers, N ancy Wallace Per- D oris Petrusek, and Patricia ,%jai-g$iret Robinson, Phi Si gnu Kapt»a social frater- mi tv. held open house Sunday a.^er- noon tional Moonlight Girl Contest. in connection with the Na- New* juniors pledges are Lynne The winner of the local phase ^ nn Harrison, Elizabeth Collins. Virginia Diam ond, Shirley le sse n , of the contest, who will be eligible v,jary R ui/ and Doris W sedenfeld. in the M argie Harrod, graduate s t u- for the finals to he held Spnng Glacier National Park next fall, w ill be presented a trophy at the fraternity’s form al dance Sat- wilJ ^ urday evening at the Austin Hotel, , ;n .......... P ledge service for the honorary W ednesday, 5 p.m ., Home Econom ics reading w as also tapped, I room. Teachers Adopt Mental Project A number of U niversity faculty m em bers will work with the re­ cently announced Austin m ental health project. Qualifications for m em bership in Omicron Nu include senior or jun­ ior standing and a B average or Couple to Attend Black-White Ball .journal- Included are Dr. O liver H. Bown, Dr. Walter I. F rey, Dr. Wayne ism m ajor, w ill represent Austin ira Iscoe. Dr. as princess at the Black and White H. Holtzman. Dr. Carson McGuire. Dr. Harry Moore. Ball in San Antonio De* em ber IO. Dr. D ew itt Reddick, and D r. Philip Her escort will be Kenneth Pape ® m em ber of Beta Theta Pi fra- Worchel. Jan Tinsley, freshm an The project, expected to en com- tem ity. The Black a C en tral Round-U p C om m ittee to set all policy p e rta in in g to those goneral ag re em e n t th a t it is o v e r - (M ay 15 of Round-Up ac tiv itie s not specifically , Round-Up. charged to th e E x-S tudents’ Asso- . c la ion. s u g g t.s e f e e , ut a a a tinue R o u n ( j . U p a t a l l . T h e r e w a s I m ittee begin ta< i a< iv iv a s ° j tion em phasized. ie .. and ch a n g e,” said Ja c k Hoi- hers a r e the president and ^ “ I think theft* a re se v e ra l fa c e ts, To be rep rese n ted on the Round-! ,o m m i- l f Round-U p th at need co nsiders- j Up C om m ittee as ex-officio m e m - ! secre- ta ry of tho S tu d en ts’ A ssociation. I A m o Nowotny dean of student the s e c re ta ry of the E x-S tu d en ts’ added th a t public re la tio n s -1 A ssociation, ed ito r of The D aily the m inuses of Round-Up T exan, the Inter-Co-op Council, the the pluses. “ I would In te rfra te rn ity Council, and P a n ­ life, w ise, cancel out vote “ but I do n 't w ant to see stu d en ts I Also, th e d ea n of m en, dean of w om en, T ex as Union d irecto r. di- for continuation.” he said, j hellenic Council. D ean Nowotny pointed out t h a t ! re c to r of Round-Up is scheduled in the m id - 1 D ra m a , d ire c to r of the News and the D epartm ent of te m p e ra tu re s The US W eather B u rea u p re ­ dicts w idely sc a tte re d show ers, g rad u ally w ith dropping f r o m w a rm to cool d uring the la te afternoon. High ] com e crying for c u ts.” will be 84, and a low of 68 is expected. W EATHER On the elected One of students m ust he an independent, and one of the faculty memfiers* will be m ade ch airm an of the C om m ittee. the pplicy com m ittee w ere A rturo B atres. president of In te r- Co-op Council; E m ily Beall, U nion activ ities ch airm an . Ja c k Steele, rep resen tin g Roland D ahiin, p res­ ident of the S tudents’ A ssociation; Ja n e H ardw ick, president of P a n - hellenic Council; and J a n e t H old­ er, se c re ta ry of the S tudents’ As­ sociation. Also, D ean Ja c k H olland; Mou­ zon L aw ; J itte r Nolen, d irec to r of T exas U nion; D ean N ow otny; D an Smith, president of In te rfra te rn ity Council; Jim T errell, p resident of APO; and D anny M c L a rry , c h a ir­ m an of the publicity com m itted of the Election C om m ission. Dr. Gruber Says Europe Remains ’Power Balance’ A m b a ssa d o r Talks O n Austria's Role In World Affairs By JOHN RO G ERS Europe remains the balance of power between East and West maintained Dr. Karl Gruber, Austrian ambassador to the United States Monday night. The diplomat spoke before an audience in Batts Hall un­ der the sponsorship of the Public Lectures Committee and the Committee on East­ ern European Studies. He spoke on “ A ustria * P osition A fter th e Conclusion of the S tate T re a ty and H er Role as a Stabiliz­ ing F a c to r in E u ro p e .” D r. G ru b e r em p h atica lly said th a t E urope w as definitely the bal­ ance of pow er. He said “ China has existed for a long tim e .” but ju s t , recently has it becom e anyw here n e a r a world pow er. E urope still rem a in s a technological and indus­ tria l center. im p o rtan t The am b a ssa d o r told the audience th a t “ foreign affa irs in our tim e is to ev e ry b o d y ," not ju st the diplom ats. He la te r said th a t he w as glad to see the in te r­ est shown and th a t it should be j continued. He said th a t he believed th a t A ustria could squelch atte m p ts a t the Soviet Union. 5 subversion by Any lim ited m ilita ry aggression could also be stopped by the sm all A ustrian a rm y . In re g a rd to A ustria * position following the S tate T re a ty w hich restored its independence he sa id that it was highly nationalized and in­ d em o cratic nation despite the fluence of ten y e a rs of occupation. H e said th e C om m unists w hich occupied F.ast A ustria w ere not able to seize political control “ of a single tow n.” He pointed out th a t A ustria I* influential in E u ro p e an politics de­ spite the its size because since S tate T re aty it stan d s as an inde­ pendent. d em o cratic nation. T h e D a T e x a n First C o l l e g e D a ily in the So u th VOL. 55 Price Five C e n ts AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1955 U T ' S I N T E R N A T I O N A L S E T g e " t o g e t h e r T u e s d a y n i g h t f o r a ta le n t show, a n d h e r e ’s three g o o d r ea son s' f o r a m e n d i n g the e v e nt. L e f t to right, the r e a s o n s a re Britt T u d g r e n , C y n r o v e Voss, a n d A n n V o n Z w e i g b e r y k , w h o will h a v e p a rts in th e show, w h i c h b e g i n s a t 7 p.m . in t h e M a i n L o u n g e of t h e T e x a s U n i o n . It s all a p a r t o f I n t e r n a t i o n a l W e e k . E a c h c o u n t r y r e p r e s e n t e d on c a m p u s is e x p e c t e d t o p a r * ' o a 4e. P h oto by G lenn Arden Old South Faces Conformity, But Won't Conform W o o d w a r d Terms History of Region ‘Social Revolution' Bv MAUK BRALY The time is coming when the Southerner will begin to wonder if there is any reason for calling himself such, pre- j dieted C. Vann W oodward,: professor of history at Johns Hopkins University, in a cam­ pus address Monday night. No Chemists In Draft Call? By DON K R E T SIN G E R the s u g g e s t s “ C hem ists do so m uch to win is it w’a rs behind time, Professor H w a ste to use them at the front. For that W o o d w a r d t h e T hey m ust he e x e m p t!” said Dr. S o u t h 's own unique history as ° « ° E isensehim l, c h a irm a n of the I b oard of Scientific Oil Com pound- the reason v\h\ the Southern! jng C om pany, Inc., Monday, tradition will continue even in the face of the encroaching conformity of industrialism. In an lines th a t sends publicity, and a hig h er social sta n d ­ ing. One of the p ro g ra m s to in­ duce m o re people into the field of ch e m istry , and being c a rrie d on in is a “ sp e ak e rs b u re a u ” Chicago, th a t to v ario u s sp e ak e rs clubs and organ izatio n s ' such as the Lions R otary, and K iw anis clubs things like “ w hy C ongress won t ac t (on exem ption a n d to en c o u rag e p ro ­ things spective chem ists. let people know chem ists* ” to do to of He said interview , the V ienna-ed­ ucated scientist e m p h a tic a lly sta t­ ed th a t “ the whole org an izatio n — ch e m ists, technicians, and b eak er w asher* should be ex e m p t. We’ve] got to stop d raftin g c h e m is ts.” spot in | achieving m axim um use from our scien tists is C ongress. “ Influential officials a re afraid to ac t on such exem ption because of C ongress: C ongress is afraid to a c t because of the v oters: and the v o ters won t allow they a r e never I I told just how im p o rta n t chem ists it because tro u b le the a r e ” C hem ists them selves a re also to 1 I out of blam e, he said. “ They don t com e talk th eir k itchens a n d When a housewife pu ts on a new j p a ir of nylon hose, does she know that she has them b ec au se of the ! w ork done by som e ch e m ist? No! D oes the a v e rag e person know who discovered v ita m in s? N o ' Nobody e v e r h ears of the c h e m ists and of the th e y 're do- j in g .” im portant w ork Dr. E isensehim l believes that w ith such a lack of in te re st in the field of ch em istry , c h e m ists a re : u n derpaid and h a v e little prestige E I S E N S C H I M L O n Honor Plan Integrity Council Mulls Problems “ I h ave n eith er given nor re-] eeived aid on this exam in atio n nor h av e I seen anyone so d oing.” is This th e sta te m e n t stu d en ts will be signing if the honor plan th ree-fo u rth s m a jo rity receiv es a rec eiv e sa three-fo u rth s m a jo rity vote in each c lass a s w ell as the p ro fe sso r’* app ro v al. in o ver 30 classe s L ast w eek a subco m m ittee of the S cholastic In te g rity Council began w ork ag ain on the plan w hich w as in itiated la st sp rin g . M em bers of th e subcom ­ m ittee m et to d iscuss th e ad v a n ­ ta g e and the d isa d v an tag es of the plan and to discover w hy stu d en ts d isa g re e with the plan. 4 Assemblymen Set Up Council For Problems Course Evaluation Is First Project For BBA Group A Business Administration Council has been organized and will hold its first meeting at 7:30 p. r n . Wednesday in Waggener Hall 201, Larry Steinberg, BBA assemblyman, announced Monday. Steinberg and three other assemblymen from the Col­ lege of Business Administra­ tion — Jerry Prewit, Eddie Sharpe, and Elleanor Walker —set the council up. Tile four A ssem bly m e m b ers an d re p re se n ta tiv e s of the tw elve de­ p a rtm e n ta l organ izatio n s w ithin the college w ill m a k e up the council. S teinberg said the council is be­ to study problem s to m ake ing organized w ithin th e college and rec o m m en d atio n s to the faculty. One of the council is planning evaluation, he said- first pro jects the is a course / ^ P ro fesso r W oodw ard's idea of Southern h isto ry is not “ a Shinto w orship of a n c esto rs, a cult of the the rom ance of 'L o st C ause ’ o r the plantation legend, hut the col­ lective ex p e rien c e of the Southern people.” He distinquished Southern his­ to ry from national history by point­ ing out its la rk of continuity and hom ogenity. in It contain* the only veal “ social revolution" the history of the nation as a whole. It * construction, “ not re c o n stru c tio n ,” of a new w ay of life re p re s e n ts a social b rea k not found in o th e r A m erican his­ tory. P ro fesso r W oodw ard said that he did not re g a rd the traditional a t­ titu d es of th e South on r a r e as a fac to r the “ South­ e r n e r.” in p rese rv in g He said th at he thought ra c ia l feeling would lin g er on. especially am ong o ld e r S outherners, hut th a t the younger g eneration will not w ant to be ra ile d S outherners if it m eans only “ the la st ditch stand of Jim Crow ism .” R h eto rically it (the .Southerner’s identity* be sw al­ lowed up in the rush of getting and spen d in g '’” Will “ this heritag e be p re se rv e d ? ” P ro fe sso r W oodward, auth o r of “ O rigins of the New the optim istic view. South,” to abundant South­ ern lite ra tu re , and its prom inence in recent tim es. took He pointed asking “ Will “ The S ou th ern er not for burning . . . not y e t,” concluded P ro fesso r W oodw ard. Group Plans Safety Program A C am pus Citizens* C om m ittee, form ed to c a ir y out a cam pus- w ide traffic safety cam paign, met its overall p ro ­ Sunday * g ram , to plan is m ade up of The C om m ittee re p re se n ta tiv e s of the S tu d en ts’ A ssociation. Alpha Phi O m ega, O range Ja c k e ts, M ortar B oard, j Spurs, In te rfra te rn ity Council, P an- hellenic Council, M ica. W ica, Spooks, and U niversity W om en’s Council. Also The Daily T exan. The Ixwg- ; horn Band A*st>eiation, and F re sh ­ m an Council. O ther p articip a tin g groups will be announced late!'. The ca m p a ig n will begin Mon­ day and continue through D e c e m ­ ber I. Tile City of Austin will be holding its Safe D riving D ay c a m ­ paign du rin g the s a m e ' period, but the U niv ersity cam paign will Fie held se p a ra te ly . It w as suggested a t the m eeting th at the ca m p a ig n tie turned o v er in te reste d organization. to one tile group decided th a t it should be n m by organizations r e p ­ the cam p u s as a w hole. rese n tin g A plan w as outlined and w ork d i­ vided betw een m e m b er o rg a n iz a ­ tions. X H ow ever, McMinn Accuses Seven Abductors O ther announced purposes of the council would he the creation of a spirit of unify w ithin the college and m ore com plete organization The subco m m ittee p lans to work w ith professors and stu d en ts to ex­ plain the value of such a system . L ast y e a r n ea rly IOO ap plications of classe s. w ere received from pro fesso rs ask- ing the plan. The four o rg an iz ers h ave m et in form ation about w i t h D ean W. R. Spriegel and gained his ap p ro v a l for the new th at such a plan j group. F a c u lty ad v iso r will be D r. A shhurne, assistan t profes- accounting, will c re a te a m ore m eaningful classroom relationship and stim u- sor late a pro p er sense of in te g rity and resp o n sib ility ,” said first Freshman Coffee “ We believe individual ] for m ore cused of Seven U niversity “ People stay aw a y from science a c ­ professions and e n te r instead fields tak in g M onty M cM inn, of law and the like b ec au se there s m o r e m oney in it'. In R u ssia p e e - 1 fre sh m a n elec trica l en gineering stu a “ ride ' will have to face * pie can be forced to study chem - dent. for a is try and becom e ch em ists. They j Ibe a re given a and consequently get hig h er pay H olland said M onday, and o th er rew ard s. In the U nited S tates w’e c a n ’t do th a t.” T he stu d en ts w ere rounded up late F rid a y by police and U niver­ sity officials. I niversitv stu d en ts - -* - • • h ig h e r’ jw cm l' (josition I m ittee T uesday. D ean of M en Jack. SIC. "T h e realm of scholastic in te g n ty reach es beyond th e c o l l e g e classroom into the basic values of thp individual.” D iscip lin ary Com- Tom F othoringham , c h a irm a n of U nder the plan, stu d en ts would Tuesday in Texas Union The F re sh m a n Council w ill spon­ sor a coffee T uesday from 4 to 5 p m . in T exas Union 315 and 316. the “ F re sh m a n T hem e will Fie He produced a science bulletin la st y e a r R ussia showing g rad u a ted 115,000 scien tists The U nited Slates. 75,000. th a t by jum p ed M cM inn w as a m ask ed gang of stu d en ts shortly before m idnight T u esd a y w hen he re tu rn e d to his San A ntonio Street room ing house from a cam p u s lee-1 classroom tu re. lie able to leave an ex am in atio n for Clan b rea k s w henever ihey d esired . P ro ­ fessors m ust be ac cessib le, hut the m ay o r m ay not re m a in as decided by the stu- j dents. in He told police he thought he rec- j The signing of th e pledge would ile req u ired and unless done so, . j the student would Fie called to the to explain. He The top five freshm an b eau ties will se rv e refre sh m e n ts E n te rta in - sponsors m ent w ill Fie provided by Roy Lyon, g u ita ris t; F red W hitaker, ju g g le r; P a ts y S i l v e r t o n and M ar­ tha H all, com ediennes; and M ary E llen W oodruff, vocalist. v The Council urges freshm en to unit the coffee, which xviii Fie She atten d fre sh m a n activ ity of the com m ission of p ro fe sso r’s o f f i c e m u st he absolutely su re he saw The first cheating if he w ithholds his signs- year. tu re. th e class. T he next raised The last clause of the pledge has the m ost objections, Fait the that UT M a n Recalls A fter tieing tied w ith ropes and th e com m ittee Fieljeveg stuffed into a la rg e sack, M cM inn honor plan would he inoperable w as tak en eighteen m iles south of w ithout it “ We d ra ft o u rs a s p riv ates in the A rm y. Are we c ra z y o r blind?” D r. E isensehim l is convinced th at the U nited S tates m u st h ave m ore ognized one voice as sclent mts. “ The R u ssian tren d for m ore sc ien tists; fairs is for fe w -J He sai(i he thought the g lh g w as out for revenge b ecause he m ade e r - in c re a se the num-jlOO un a rec en t m id -se m ester exam the curve th a t of a is c la ssm a te in a trigonom etry class tim course, ruining “ How can we in for the re st of h ighest g ra d e w as 45, he said. tier of ch em ists? S cholarships? Fellow ships? No! T hey a r e no good ” He w ants to see an es- tablished “ West Point for Chem - is ts ” w ith m ore pay and m ore p restige. The only w ay to get m ore th e m -(A u stin and dum ped from a c a r. H e, ists, D r. E isensehim l is convinced, w alked to a farm house and got a is to offer them m o re m oney, m ore J ride back to tow n. C A M P U S C H E S T to ta ls c r e p t t o w a r d the $ 1 2 , 0 0 0 mark M o n d a y r i g h t as w or kers b e g a n t o t a lli n g up the last f e w d r i b b le s of c h a n g e t o c o m e in. C h a i r m e n L l o y d H a y e s a n d B e t t y T e m p l e t o n e x p r e sse d c o n f i d e n c e the g o a l w o u ld be r e a c h e d — m a y b e even with a few U g l y d o lla rs t o sp ar e . M e a n w h i l e , F r e d d i e H a r k a v y , v o t e d U T * t o o k t im e o u t t o m e e t a c o - e d w h o a ls o p l a y e d a b i g p a r t M a n , In m a k i n g the d r i v e a succe ss. S h e s M i s s C a m p u s C h e s t herself — Ela in e K a p la n . II R O I C Sponsors G e t Honors Today Ten co-eds chosen by F o rc e ROTO an d one chosen by the Ann M cKelvy, ROTE band will Fie given honorary Sharon H enson, lieutenant colonel; necessity com m issions as A ir F o rce ROTO Shirney Ann Gore, m ajor ; A nother personal o b servation of th a t collective the Air M aym erle Shirley, colonel; Sheryl security “ will not w ork now (for is a it Joan m ust be shown to be p ra c tic a l first. id ea of collective is basically lieutenant colonel; A ustria*.” He w ent on, “ It “ The I am sure, D r. G ru b e r's w as fu tu re ,” but an n u a l the in cerem ony T uesday a t noon on Whit­ a k e r Field. review Sue Z appe, m a jo r; D orothy Bur- He said. gess, m a jo r; A nnette M orris, m a- security, jo r; G ayla C raig, m a jo r; Leigh j rig h t.” Ann H askins, m a jo r; and P a tric ia Ann P ettw ay , m ajo r. Chosen by the ROTO band, w hich tile is com posed of m e m b e rs of A rm y, N avy, and A ir F o rce ROTO was Jill A drian M cM urry. the honorary lieu ten an t colonel. The ten chosen by the ca d ets a re will Fie given in answ er to the question, “ I* A ustria a m e m b er of the Schum ann The an n u al review cerem ony w as P la n ? ” D r. C ru lle r said, “ We a re last T uesday hut not a m em ber, Fiut have g re a t m- te re st th at he in it.’’ He added thought eventually E urope will be- com e united scheduled w as postponed because of the snow, A pproxim ately 550 cadets w ill par- tic ip a te. for “ if you saw a m an steal an­ j o th er s c a r you would h ave no hesitation in giving a u th o ritie s in­ reg a rd in g him . Honor form ation violations a re m en tal th efts and injustices and should In* rep o rted the sam e sp irit th a t civil of- in i tenses a r e .” E va B u ch an an , preai- ] dent of the W om en's R e p re se n ta­ in 1924, tive B oard of the Union 1 said. In Mock Court AWOL'er 'Guilty' J a m e s J, Hoi rough pleaded “ g u ilty ” M onday a .night ch a rg e of AWOL He w a s M-n- tenced by a g en e ral c o u rt-m a r­ tial to three m onths at hard labor and f>cr forfeiture of $40 pay m onth. to The m ilita ry c o u r t’s decision, obtained, a c c u ra te ly although w as just a m ock one, how ever. The c o u rt-m a rtia l w as staged for the benefit of th ree classes of Air Science III stu d en ts Mon­ the A rchitecture in day night Building assem b ly hall. Air Science i p resen tly studying III classe s a r e trial proce- ;■! o- tactics, I Kl. 11 rho ( . <1m < Ct r.< fessor a ir science and is the in stru c to r. in P ersonnel the mock tria l w ere Je ra ld Ja ck so n , assistan t tria l counsel; B um m y .tary, tria l counsel; E d w a r d C arp en ter, court rep o rter. counsel; O th ers w ere J a c k Cox, a s sist­ a n t defense counsel; Ronald B a rt­ lett, defense Joaquin F ox. J a m e s B art/., D avid Ben­ n ett, Ira Ixilieh, M. S, Johnston, and R obert D avenport, m em b ers of the court. L ium boldt M endel I? w itness; and B orah White, m r policem an. j tieing used T he co m m t# e e believes that stu­ dents a re challenged to cheat under the proctor system w hich is now It believes th a t m any “ m a rg in a l” c h e a te rs would not do so under the honor plan. “ M ar­ g in a l” c h e a te rs a le those students who see o th ers cheat and fea r that I th e ir g rad e will be affected by the cu rv e if they do not c h e at also. One com m ittee m em ber observed I th a t the purpose of the plan would Fie to put the U niversity back on j the level of learn in g and get aw ay fi-om the negative attitu d e of pro­ fessor* w hich to build r e tend* sentm ent among students. White of Red Swing' Fame 11 ■ ■ I a t * J* By DAN E E .MILLER Texan feature Kditor Tile eighty-four-year old gentle­ m an sit* in his living room a tte n ­ tive and a le rt and say s, “ Yes, I knew W hite knew him w ell,” He pauses. “ In fact I w as his p riv ate se c re ta ry , m uses G old win G old­ sm ith, professor e m e ritu s of a rc h i­ te ctu re He w as to Stanford re fe rrin g White, th e fam ous a rc h ite c t whose priv ate life wa* filnnzed in “ The G irl the Red V elvet Swing,” showing now a t the S tate, in At the tim e he knew White, M r. G oldsm ith w as a n ap p re n tice at the a rc h ite c tu re firm of M cKern, M ead, and W hite in New York City. fam ous m u rd e r m any tim es he took dictation from W hite late a t night While he paced the floor talking as fast as possible. T hat w as back before 1906 when took the place w hich gave nation-w ide pub- licity to the tria n g u la r a ffair Fie- tw een Evelyn N esbit. tycoon H a rry Thaw . and While. thank se x in e ss , I d id n 't “ No, tria l the the tr ia l," M r get m ixed up in G oldsm ith says. H e'd just as soon son,*> forget about the scandal now, he i w or*- em phasized as he* relighted the c ig a r w hich had ju st gone out. He w ants to re m e m b e r only the good things aFiout White. and W hite” for the A m erican In­ stitute of A rchitects publication. He is w orking on several p r o jects. am ong w hich a re the prin t­ ing of short sto ries w ritten by his who died th ree y ea rs ago. “ To date, l vp convinced H a rp e r’* and S urburban Life that hers a re tha he sayst and sm iles as he beo into the room. blows sm oke out la tte r publication accepted The lh** l*t* M rs. G oldsm ith s A m em ber of the Colum bia Uni­ versity c h a p te r of D elta Upsilon, G oldsm ith is in te reste d in the fra ­ te rn ity ’s activities. I .ast May. a com m ittee of friend* com posed a book entitled “ A Tri- but of F rien d sh ip and A dm iration," iii which is hound le tte rs of a p p re ­ ciation student* and col­ league*. from i* retired “ While waxn t a very easy m an and byes a t 1902 San G abriel w here to w ork for ” M r, G oldsm ith re- he “ h as all the tim e in the world taught me a and then again not enough.” Since m em ber*, "but he he re tire d he ha* w ritten an ar- lo t." Prolataor Goldsmith talks at the , acle, I Remember Melvern. Mead, Now M r. G oldsm ith GO LDSM ITH Tuesday. Nov. 15, 1955 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 2 -JUST OVER Swink M ay Return For Another Bow By VERNE BOATNER Associate Sports E d ito r Don’t fall in the floor with a spasm now, but one James Edward Swink may be back this w ay again before next fall rolls around— and vying against the Longhorns, too. But perhaps Swink won’t be quite as proficient on a basketball court as he was on the Memorial Stadium turf Saturday. The greatest halfback in these parts since Doak field W alker never was scouted during his high school days. by TCH on a football Ile ended up coming to the Purple on a basketball scholarship. as did All-American footballer Dickie Moegle at Rice. B u t it d id n 't; take Co. to notice his pigskin-lugging j qualities once he hit the campus, and you know the rest. long for Abe M artin and Asked if he would perform on the hardwood this season, the Rusk Ram bler answered that it might hinge on whether the gridiron team played in the Cotton Bowl. If the Froggies make it into the New Y e a r’s D ay Classic, he went on. he may not have enough time to work out with the hoopsters. No one can take anything aw ay from that 62-yard Jaunt of Sw ink's. He did it with a minimum of blocking and a maximum of his famous change-of-pace running. But at last fifty per cent of the credit for his two fourth period dashes can he attributed to the brilliant faking and ball-handling of tall Charles Curtis, the Purple man under. Curtis faked the Steer defense—-especially the secondary—out of their socks as he slapped the ball into the fullback's belly, then with­ drew it and handed off to Swink. Both times he cruised around end and galloped unchallenged to the goal line while the Longhorn defense converged on Pollard who was taking a beating in the line. Since Curtis had used a minimum of aerials in previous games and had f-iied to connect on half, Texas didn't expect much in the w ay of an ove~h#ad game. Thus when Swink started running wild and the defensive halfbacks moved in to counter, Curtis sent his flankers deep, Ends O 'D ay W illiam s and B ry a n En g ram were able to get behind Chester Simcik, Fondren. and then Curtis Reeves, and each time the cool sharpshooter hit them on the button. WILKINS MADE BAD CALL Since it seems to be the popular past tim e for sports writers to : knock the football officials, we thought w e ’d get our two-bits worth j in here. After viewing game movies, we found that Sw in k s galloping up and down the field hadn’t turned us cross-eyed after all. The fact remains—even in color and wide-screen—that referee Taylor W il­ kins made a lousy call in ruling that T C C fullback Vernon Wau­ beek had intercepted Jo e Clements pass on the Texas 29 in the fourth Swink Could Set Two SW C Records F O R T W O RT H , Nev. l l * r Jim 1.302 yards in l l games. to games in which to set a new South- Swink, who even uses the other team's blockers j west Conference ball-carrying rec- 183.poun(1 j orc,> Swink has averaged better than further his 133 yards per game, which is about j ground-gaining ambitions, has two 15 more than the Smith average, They wcre still taiking about the runner's great d a y against Texas and m arveling at the Swink, Texas Christian's bid for way he did it. One of his touch- ; All-America, m ay not need that down runs and he made four for if he performs J many. He won't i against Rice next Saturday like he I did against Texas last Saturday. tho afternoon -was for 62 yards. | Tile TOU halfback m a d e 235 I yards in the Texas game to bring this total to 1,086 for the season and that's only 216 yards hack of the record sot in 1950 by Bob Smith of Texas A & M , Smith got his A H a r d Washed, Vaci ..rn C if * ?d Car W ith T>e* St.'am C c v e d ALL IN 7 M IN U T ES AT JOE'S QUICK CAR WASH 12th & San Jacinto Texaco Courtesy Cards Honored E B B No Extra Charge for Fast Service at H o u r I ffWRTMUM the m o st in DRY CLEANING J Open 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday 510 W est 19th St. Corner Nueces SCIENTIFIC WATCH REPAIR Cert ij^'tctl I I a tch maker No 3680 FREE ESTIMATES ELECTRIC TIMER USED 2268 Guadalupe “ On the Drag" ’ ■WBS® I distinctive jewetrt ll H H ,— HBM ESPECIALLY FOR YOU A full year’s subscription to any one of these three great weekly magazines at these reduced prices . . . for college students only. Take T i m e , Tile Weekly Newsmagazine, for less than 6* a week . . . or L ife, America’s favorite pictorial, for less than 8* a copy . . . or S ports Illus­ trated, the first national sports an issue. weekly, for less than The purchase of one magazine does not require the purchase of another; your special student prices are good for all or any of these three weeklies. Sign up today with your student representative in the* lobby of the Texas Union. - USE DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS - COOPERS JOCKEY SHORTS AT 611 Congress “ Coliege Style Center of the Southwest" T A K IN G A H A R D O N E from the rifle arm of Longhorn passer Jo e Clements lank/ end Menan Schrlewer during Saturday's game with TC L). Frogg'e halfoack Ray Taylor moves In fast to make the tack s on Schrlewer, the S W C s leading pass receiver, is quarterback Charles Curtis looks on in the background, AEP] , Grove Triumph Buy Your Coopers Jockey Brand Underwear P«riod- _ H&Ubcck jumped and tipped the ball into the air, made a stab at it j Texan intramural co-ordinator . B y B O B G R E E N B E R G s basketball play. The Ph i Psi's downed Sigma as he was falling, and Phi Kappa P Ie v- S ta n le y vs. K n ag g s I'o sn er or F o ltik GOLF MINGLER 1-1:30 p.m ., a ll golfer^ scheduled to play th e ir firs t round last T u esday w ill Slay th e ir first round today due to the ad w eath er last week. Tennis Schedule N o m ore matches w ill he scheduled | this fa ll, but a ll the p laye rs are e\- I ported to come out at the tim es thev designated. A ll Interested in o b tainin g P II c re d it St e th# m anager this week. I IF YOU'RE REALLY STUCK! TRY THIS . . . YOU CAN'T MISS . . . Save 15% Cash & Carry rome Steam c J a u n d r y a m i C (ca ne rd lith A Red Wiver Ph I tm H O W E N T E R 1. S#’#cl th# winners et th# g#m#* b#l©» by p * cl - 9 #n X in th# bank r.#*r th# t#«m you choel#, Ro- ti#*, p ac# #n X a both blank*. Alto pi*d’ct th# *c% U p f o r D r a f t ALBANY, N. Y., Nov. 14 ( f t - ’ G U LFPO R T, M iss., Nov. 14 V— An A rm y doctor w ent to th e "hull- S a n 'Angelo Ju n io r College of T ex as p en " for aid M onday hefore dec id-; m eets M ississippi’s Sunflow er J u k ­ ior College D ecem ber 3 in th e firs t ing w hether World S eries hero Johnny Todi es k phvsi- ally fit to annual H ospitality Bowl football he d rafted f o r m ilita ry serv ice. I gam e here. t i* i t u d t shirts c u f f li n k * s u s p e n d e r * cum m erbu nd TUXEDOS C R O W N TAILORS ACW lo*t Sixth Street ’• y S * i m 3C-S0 short*, re fu ta ls long* and ext?a long* I • IUI jy> ./’I •'a ;. S-. .ft:. .. .i-.- CHARLES N. CLARK joined G E. in 1949 after r e r a i s i n g his BA. and M.S. fin E.E.) from the University of Vt isro n sin . H e ser v e d tw o y ears w ith t h e N a v y d u r i n g W o r ld W a r II. J O H N N Y T A T U M R E A D THE C L A S S IF IE D S Patronize Texan Advertisers 1600 S A N J A C I N T O — P H O N E 2-3166 Pickup & Delivery T u e s d a y is t h e f i n a l d a y f o r b o w l i n e I n t r a ­ t u r n e d t h * tm t o in *ntri«*s m u r a l o f f i c e . t o A. A. H o o k e r psi S y r f j * it A 3 U 4 ? - - < ! | ‘if. VC *,-<< APPLICATIONS are now being accepted for,.. 1956 , graduate student summer employment program for. * > Experim ental P h y sic ist* Nuclear P h ysicists Theoretical P h ysicists M athem aticians M etallurgical Engineers Analytical Ch em ists In organ ic Chem ists Physical C hem ists M echanical Engineers Electrical Engineers (Electronics) S um m er em ploym ent o pportunities a t th e L ab oratory are open to approxim ately 10b g raduate stu d e n ts m ajoring in various physical sciences, and underg rad u ates receiving their degrees next Ju n e w ho intend to continue their advance studies. T h e program provides for well-paid sum m er w ork w ith renow ned scientists in one of th e n atio n ’s m ost im p o rta n t and finest equipped research laboratories. S um m er em ployees will become fam iliar w ith several phases of v ital scientific research and developm ent a c tiv ity related as closely as possible to th e indiv id u al’s field of interest. T h is experience will enable stu d e n ts to appraise th e advantages of a possible career a t th e L aboratory. In addition to interesting work, em ployees will enjoy d elightfu l d ay tim e tem p eratu res and blanket-cool nights in a tim bered, m ountainous area, only 35 miles from historic old S an ta Fe. In terested stu d e n ts should m ake im m ediate inquiry. C om pleted applications m ust be received by the L aboratory n o t later th an F ebruary 1, 1956, in order to allow tim e for necessary security clearance. A pplicants m ust be U. S. citizens. ^ V* L i W Im) M ail inquiry to: D ep a rtm en t of Scientific Personnel scientific laboratory ! u n iv I • * i t t o f c a l i f o r n i a » IO* ALAMOS, New MEXICO C h i l d r e n s b ook w e e k N o v e m b e r 1 3 -1 9 W o n d e r fu l Books fo r,B o y s and Girls the SMU M u stan g s’ F o u r c o n testan ts p icked all sev ­ en g am es c o rre c tly in the w eekly D aily T ex an L ucky 7 Football Con­ test. T here w ere only tw o upsets but m o st sp o rts fans stru n g along w ith th e red can d les to hex TCU and to A rkansas ru in e d m a n y a good slate. W. K. Jones of 2912 C h e rry L ane won first prize, a $20 gift c e rti­ ficate f r o m R eynolds-P enland, picking all g am es c o rre c tly and p redicting TCU o v er the Longhorns. 26-20. loss took Sam M. D u rso, who lives a t the A -B ar, the second prize of SIO in clothes w ith a p erfec t c a rd and a p rediction of the F ro g g ies w inning by 27-14. Since the L onghorns a re idle this week, the UT fre sh m e n have been installed the u p p erc lassm en 's position. The Y earlin g s play host to the T ex as A ggie F ish at M em or­ ial S tadium S a tu rd a y . in N EW YORK, Nov. 14 P W alter A lston, firs t to b rin g a w orld c h a m ­ pionship to Brooklyn, w as voted j the N atio n al L eague s “ M an ag er- of-the-Y ear” M onday by m e m b ers of B a seb a ll W rite rs’ A ssociation of A m erica. T he 44-year-old O hioan, who su e -. field by a m an season piloted ree d ed w h ere eleven o th e r m a n a ­ g e rs failed, rec eiv e d 58 of the 99 votes c a st by m a jo r leag u e w rite rs in an annual poll conducted by The A ssociated P re s s to lead th e re st of com fortable the m arg in . I M aryo Sm ith, who In his fre sh ­ th e P hiladel- i phia P h ils into fourth place, w as I ru n n er - up w ith 30 votes. Leo I D urocher, who resigned at the end of the season a fte r his defending cham pion N ew Y ork G ian ts wound J u p a poor th ird , w as nam ed on I nine b allots th ird p lace, i O ne vote e a ch w ent to B irdie Teb- b etts of th e fifth-place C incinnati I R eds and F re d H an ey of the last- j p la ce P ittsb u rg h P ira te s. H aney J w as rep la ce d by Bobby B rag a n a t land to the end of th e season. W hich color of light m akes people look nat­ ural? Should a blue light be used more often than a red? W hat kind of effect does a violet light have on m erchandise? In recent years, color lighting has becom e so important in stores, restaurants, theaters, and displays that G eneral Electric developed a line of new easy-to-use color-reflector lamps for this m arket. T he man responsible for decid in g which colors are m ost effective for users of these lamps is 29-year-old Charles N . Clark, A p­ plication E ngineering Color Specialist for General E lectric's large lam p departm ent. Clark’s Work Is Interesting, Important In a recent series of tests, Clark m ade a critical appraisal of literally hundreds of color-filter m aterials to find the ones that produced m axim um results but were still suitable to high-production techniques, prac­ tical stocking and sim plified selling. This experim ental work also had to take into account all the inform ation on human per­ ception o f color. 25,000 College Graduates at General Electric VI hen Clark cam e to General Electric in 1 9 4 9 , he already knew the . ork he wanted to do. Like each of the 2 5 ,0 0 0 college-grad- uate em ployees, he was given his chance to grow and realize his full potential. For Gen­ eral Electric has long believed this: Vt hen fresh, young m inds are given freedom to make progress, everybody benefits —the in­ dividual, tile com pany, and the country. Play W ith M e — M arie H all Et* TH© Borrowers A fie ld — M a r y N orton W h a t s Your N am e — Zhenya G a y W a g g in g Tails— M argu e rite Henry G o o d N ig h t M o o n — M a rg a re t W ise Brown Crunch C ru nch — Ethel and Leonard Kessler H a ro ld and the Purple C ray on — The Island Stallion Races— W a lte r Farley {an album of dogs) Philomena— Kate Seredy San Francisco Bay— Lois Lenski A D o g C om e s to School— Lois Lenski C h arlotte and the W h ite H o rse — Ruth Krauts A Little H ouse o f Your O w n — Irene H a a s Parsley— Ludwig Bemelman Frog W e n t A -C o u rtin g — John Langstaff D ancing in the M o o n — Fritz Eichenberg The Illustrated Treasury of Children s Literature— Edited by M a rg a re t M artign on ! Poems of Praise— Selected by Delagie Doane Colum bus— Ingrl and Ed gar Parim d 'A ulaire C h a g a — W ill and N icolas O n Beyond Z e b ra — Br. Seuss The Boy W h o Discovered the Earth— H enry G re g o r Felsen n Patchett R oy C h ap m an Andrew s G u ns for the S a ra to g a — G e o ffre y Trease Up the Trail from Texa*— Frank D obie Crom w ell's H e a d — O livia C o o lid g e H o ld Fast the Dream — Elizabeth Low The Silver Answer— A Life of Elizabeth Bar­ rett Browning, C on stan ce B. Burnett Hostess in the Sky— M a rg a re t Hill Rosem ary— M a r y Slolg M a rsh a -M a rg a re t M . C ra ig . A Wealth of R e a d i n g for Boys a n d Girls WINSTON TASTES G O O D ! LIKE A C i g a r e t t e S H O U L D ! T ig re ss Is Our M ost Im portant Product G E N E R A L I E L E C T R I C n /v e rs/L u co ■ College smokers all over the country are welcoming Winston with ^ open arms! This king-size filter cigarette gives you real tobacco flavor. The full, rich flavor really comes through to you because the exclusive Winston filter works so effectively. In short: Winston tastes good — like a cigarette should W I N S T O N r is e (!ClA(j- d A £ lw il'jrJ I 'jj .c i a q w e t t e . ! Tuesday. Nov. IS, 1955 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 Opinion* expressed in The D aily T exan are thn I’N . we \ c u a>V>. MtVpg an excellent job running the T exan and th erefore think you m ight be interested in a suggestion. if to thought the students of inte rests to It seem s to me that a g rea t deal is not being of original properly utilized. T he ideas anti beliefs of num e rous individuals on this ca m p u s would contribute in no the stim ulation of slight w ay they w ere hut laient presented the University. I a m of the opinion that you a r e in a position to place the foremost of ideas before these the students, faculty, and staff of this ca m p u s. You could achieve this end by encouraging students to subm it to you article s on any they m ight so desire, and topics those articles you by publishing believe im ­ portance. to he of p a r a m o u n t —'RO BE RT PRA T T ★ To the E ditor: for the faculty and o th e r I w an t to express my a p p r e c ia ­ tion series of articles, w ritten by outstanding m e m b e rs of im portan t the people of o ur com m unity, that have a p p e a r e d in Tile Daily T exan d u r­ ing few weeks. These article s have been vvell w ritten and timely. I m a y not ag re e with some of the opinions expressed, but I a m v e r y happy that I have had a chance to h e a r those opin­ ions. the past I have been putting off w riting to say th a nk you to these people until today when I rea d the latest first of a article, which is new series, 'Phis article by Dr. Williams w as so fine that I had to pick up a pen and say, “ Thanks, I enjoyed it.”. the —WAYNE HERRON ♦ To the Editor: If does an “ old g r a d ” (19 4 9) good to re a d of the spirit which has been g e n e ra te d on the F o rty Acres this fine football season. And being a Fexan-ex, and avid r e a d e r the best” college daily new s­ of it is with a p a p e r in the nation, I claim g r e a t deal of pride that the Texan has had a to do with boosting this spirit. lot Young G re g Olds h a d what I be­ lieve was the sm oothest and m ost effective a n s w e r to B a y lo r’s gripes that has e v e r g ra c e d a sports columnists typew riter. is I exan And while I a m in the con g r a tia latm g fram e, let me add that this fall s the best reading and best m a d e up of any I have seen in m a n y a y ea r. Your edit- torial-feature page has had som e c r a c k e r ja c k article s well-w rifftn on tim ely subjects. it Of course, the consensus is of several of us who read your Round-Up column is one it rea d in g columns the easiest of the days of in the T exan since and he followed M ark Ba P erso n H o ra ce Busby. K eep it up. Mr. M o m s . that —RAY G R E E N E T ex a n Editor, 1948 T h e d a i l y T e x a n T h e D aily T e x a n , s t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r o f T h e U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s la published In Austin d a i l y e x c e p t S a t u r d a y M onday, a n d h o l i d a y p eriod s, Septe m ber t h r o u g h M ay bv T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n s , Inc. N e w s co n trib utio n s wi ll bp accepted by telep h one <2-2471) or at the editorial offices. J B 103, or the new s laboratory JR 102. Inquiries co ncerning delivery should he made In JR 107 and a d vertisin g JR 111 (2-2750' E n t e r e d as se c o n d -c la ss m a t t e r O c t o b e r 18 1943 a t the P o s t O ffice a t A u s tin . Texas, u n d e r t h e a c t o f M a r c h 3. 1879. 888IM I t l l I* PRESS VV IRF st RI i< I T h e Associated P ress is e x c l u s iv e ly entitled to the use for republication of this n e w s ­ local Item s of sp on ta n eo u s origin published herein. Right* of all new s d isp atch es cred ited t o paper. and all publication o f all other m atter herein also reserved. it or not o t h e rw ise cred ited in The M 120 Madison Ave Represen te d for national a d v ertsiin g by National Advertising Service. Ina. C o llege P u b lis h e rs Represent a* h e N e w York. N. Y. Ch icago — B osto n — Lo* A n g elet — San Fra ncisco . . . f r o m o u r f i l e s the N o v em b e r 15, 1929: “ Dr. H a r ry Yandell Benedict th e first a lu m ­ nus to he elected presid ent of the U niversity, one of first stu­ dents. its first honor m an, and the valedictorian of his class, a tutor in instructor, a professor, an extension director, a n d de*n. ce le b ra ted his sixtieth b irthday T h u rs d ay aw a y from the im ­ U niversity th a t has been an portant factor in his life since he first c a m e to T exas in 1876. the U niversity, an . . . Dr. Benedict w as c h a ir ­ m a n of the Athletic Council from 1904 to 1908. w a s president of the Co-Op, one of the o rganiz ers of the U niversity C om m ons, was twice president of the Ex-Students’ Association, a n d served for m any y e a r s on the discipline c o m m itte e .” . M E M B E R A s s o c i a t e d C o l l e g i a t e P r e s s A l l - A m e r i c a n SI RXI H I P T I O N H A T E S ( v| i til in urn S u b s c r i p t i o n — T h r e e M o n t h * ) Delivered Malled In Austin Mailed out of t o w n in Austin .............................................................................................. . $ .75 m onth .......................... .............................................................................. 8t.no month ............................................................................ .. % .75 month P E R i f A N E N I >1 M I E d it o r ......................................................................................................... W I L L I E M ORRI* M a n a g i n g Editor .............................................. N e w s E d i t o r ............................................................................................................ C a r l B u r g e r ) E d i t o r i a l A s s i s t a n t s ............................................................ C a r o l Q u e r o l o , J e r r y H a l l J. C. D O I L O E N (SO) S T A F F FOK TH IS ISSI E J . C. DOI LOEN (30) N ight E d ito r ......................................................... D e s k E d i t o r ............................................................................................ D A N K E M I L L E R A s s i s t a n t N i g h t E d i t o r .................................................................................... M a r k B r a l y C o p y r e a d e r s ................................... J e r r y W i l s o n , C o n o l y C i l i i u m , C a r l B i n g e n .................................................................... P a t P u r c e l l , J o h n R o g e r s N i g h t R e p o r t e r s ........................................................................................ N o r m a M i l l s N i g h t S p o r t s E d i t o r A s s i s t a n t s V e r n e B o a titer, N i c k J o h n s o n , E d d i e H u g h e s , J o h n K n a g g s , G r e g O l d s N i g h t A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r .................................................................... N a n c y E a s t o n N i g h t W o m e n s E d i t o r ................................................................................. S h i r l e y I n s a l l ............................................. N i g h t F a i r c h i l d O p e r a t o r ............................. A r n o l d R o s e n z w e i g "THI HOUSEMOTHER THINKS IT’S NICE Of YOU m TO TAKE AN IH W SI IN GJK YARD University Tow n Goulden Signs ‘30' To University Town B v J. C. D O I E D E N (IO) T r v t n M a n a g i n g E d i t o r TYPICALLY ENOUGH Monday to listening m orn ing w as devoted to an elderly g e n t l e m a n who ex a m in e d the M anag ing E ditor s head s tr u c tu re with g r e a t care, then .solemnly announced he w a s n 't the student type. in the afternoon c a m e the this irate phone call, And inevitable tim e from a self- styled s t u d e n t w h e e l w h o s e s t o r y had been deliberately, m a- licously, pre,judi- ca My o m i t t e d f r o m Sundays Texan. .0 . rn rn That, in brief, is w hat h as pro­ duced t o o ( I > d a m n e d m a n y g re y h a irs for one of 21; (2) con­ stant g astro n o m ica l unequ ilibriu m ; (3) scholastic d is a s te r; <4t a “ 30” at the top of this column. r n from brilliant The hest and worst p a r t of this job is the people one m eets. They r a n g e to b iz arre , f ro m g r e a t to grating. And since F e b r u a r y , 1954. when By J. B O U L D E N first ap p e a re d at the top of a Daily T exan story, quite few d iffe rent persona g es h a v e a crossed the this path. Some of m o re notable, and notorious: . . . the beered-up Polish count, who babbled for hours one night about lost m ines and buried tr e a s u r e s , while a r e p o r te r on his the edge first a s sig n m e n t sat on of the hod and kept the old boy from trying to m a k e a speech at the T ex a s Union; . . . Regent C h a irm a n Tom Sealy, who can look an y m a n in T exas straight in the eye, and does; . . . the sta te se n a to r who reeled drunk enly onto the floor one night as a co lleague’s filibuster droned on and on. into the foyer and w as sick softly on S am H ouston’s sta tu e ; then sta g g ered . . , Lyndon Johnson, who w as the p ic tu re of health as he side­ stepped questions at a m id s u m m e r interview , later w a s downed by a hea rt a tta c k ; th r e e w eeks twit . . , D ean J a c k Holland, who likes students, and vice v e r s a ; . . . the U niversity a d m in is tra to r who can look any .student on c a m ­ lie pus straight through his te eth; the eye and in . . . F o u r Sig Fps. who h ad stolen a b e a r and didn t know just w hat to do with it; . . . M ary D a n n rn h a u m . who w as go e a sy to kid, and who did re- m a rk a b le things on no one knows of yet; this ca m p u s . . . H. Malcolm Macdonald, who fine (God bless you, didn t sue fellow!); . . . Phi D elta Theta, who said ■ v j . . . Byron F ullerton, who alm ost had him self a political p a rty ; . . . Bob Rylee, who did have him self a political p a rty ; . . . J e r r y Wilson, who “ tr ie d ” ; . . . and a hundred others whose n am es would stretch to the bottom of this page. ★ AND T H E N COMES a shocking re-evaluation of values and a closer look at w hat is im portant and w hat is trivial in a U niversity c o m m u n ­ ity. and you shudder. A football captain, with a few inarticulate, p r o f a n e p hrases. d r a w s a m o re enthusiastic round of cheers th a n do the hest efforts of Adlai Stevenson, said by m a ny to he in foremost A m erica today. sp e ak e r the A stolen c r e a te s m o re genuine consternation than a stolen election. ste e r Ugly Men c a m p a ig n h a r d e r and a t tr a c t m ore attention than Student A ssem blym en. And do just about as m uch good for the U niversity, too. Those things you learn in the last week you a r e in a position to do anything about them , and you wish you had been colleeiate a little sooner, o r h ad m ore tim e in which to he collegiate. + T H E T R A G E D Y of the T exan is that it isn t app re cia ted in hom e country. F a r too m a n y U niversity students heap unjustified criticism on the heads of unpaid volunteer w orkers who put out the best col­ lege p a p e r in A m erica, b a r none. The m ir a c le of the T exan is its consistent superiority to other col­ lege publications, and a few pro­ fessional ones. At hest the T exan is com posed of very unex­ staff (this perienced people. At worst fortun­ do esn ’t happen ately! incredible it incompetents. is staffed by too often, jo u rn alism The salvation of the Texan, as one professor most is an ability to roll aptly puts it, with a d m in istra tiv e punches and shut up when is good. the shutting up T h a t’s the why of Daily T exan f r e e d o m C om prom ise without cowardice, giving an inch today to take a mile tom orrow, and edi­ torial m a tu r ity far beyond the call of the a v e r a g e college stu d e n t- - those qualities will keep the Texan free. So our fling is over, and we promise to be quite C o lle g ia te Corral academic again -at least for a while. I adays Guest E li tor in Is . . . from The New Y ork Times November is the aging year, a woman whoso -spring- rime children have frown and cone their .Lay but whose hair Is often sparkled, whose tra y eyes are of­ ten alight, and whose drer-s of grays and browns is neither dour nor dowdy. November i* a lithe hemlock in a green iaee pally dress, and a clean-limbed grav birch laughing in the wind. November is apple rider with rh am pa gnu beads of authority; it is a gray squirrel in the limber top of the hickory tree, graceful as the wind; it is a doe and her fawn munching winesop windfalls in the moonlit orchard. It is a handful of snowflakes flung over a Berkshire hilltop, and a woodchuck miffing I he w ind and retreating to his den to sleep till April, November is a r a b b i t hound baying t h e h i l l s i d e ; a farm boy in a canvas coat and a red rap, the 16-guage in the croon of his arm, on the hills of the upper pas­ ture; a grouse bursting from underfoot with a roar of wings and rocketing into the thicket. And November is the memory ol the years, it is tur­ key in the oven, and plum pudding and mince pie and pumpkin and creamed onions and mashed yellow tur­ nip. It is a feart and celebration; but it is also the re- mamlttring and the Thank You, God, and the under­ standing That's the heart of it: November’s maturing and under* Un ding McCarthy Raps Harvard; Harvard Raps Student By ROBB B l ' K U b K • HARVARD CHOOSES RC BERT, JOE FUMES . . R o h e n Oppen­ . h e i m ^ , d e c la re d a secu rity risk by a 2-1 Note of the Atomic E n e r g y C om m ission the spring of 19;>4, h a s been ann ounced as 195? Wil­ lia m J a m e s l e c t u r e r in Philosophy ami Psychology at H a r v a r d Uni­ the H a r v a r d C rim son r e ­ v ersity , ports. the a fte r H ours a p p ointm e nt, S en ato r Joseph R M cC arthy d e ­ nounced the dm i*ion a s w h it yon a m a n of m igh t P u s e y ’s (Dr. N a th a n P u se y , p re s­ ident of H a r v a r d ) r e c o r d .” Mc­ C a rth y w as speaking at a public rally in Boston a t the tim e. exp ect flora U U U . « K E E P IN MIND . . Also, at H a r v a r d , one of the o ld e r students w a s com plaining to a professor that he had been asked “ e v e ry ­ thing fro m the age of my parent* to the sex of m y unborn children, I WHI asked few er personal q u e s­ job I appl ed tion* wisen tor a with the State Department in Wash­ ington,” he said * “ T hat m a y be t r u e ,” replier! the prof, “ but you must realize we re a m uch older organization ” * * • MOVE O V E R Y RC . . . Chicago U niversity not only has the Young D e m o c r a ts and Young Republicans, but h as a v ery active Young So­ form ed cialist Club. A l e a g u e for Civil Liberties has also spru ng up on the Chicago M aroon writes. the c a m p u s, recently for Topic the Young Socialist Club at the last m e eting: “ H istory of t h e A m eric an C o m m unist P a r t y ” by Victor H oward, a w eek­ ly colum nist for the Indiana Work­ er. e s * . • C O L L E G E P O IJT IC A L FORUM . With then first AT HARVARD . d e b a te scheduled on th e Bricker A m endm ent, rep re se n ta tiv e s of the H a r v a r d “ y o u n g ” political clubs Will sq u a re off at the first of ti series at “ College Political r u m , ” th* Crim son report*. X “ The F o r u m 's s u c c e s s can give new dim ensions the p resent boundaries of the College s political clu b s,” says the Crimson. to Official Notices T h e Q u a l i f y i n g E x a m i n a t i o n for t h e Do* t o r of P h i l o s o p h y in E n g lis h will he he ld o n M onday a n d T u e s d a y , N o v e m ­ b e r 21 a n d 22 t a k e In te n d l e g i s t e r to t h e S t u d e n t s w h o e x a m i n a t i o n will t h e i r nam e* a n d a d d r e s s e s in a d v a n c e in t h e E n g lis h Office M a in B u i l d i n g !8n2 a n d pay a I S t u d e n t * fee of o n e d o l l a r for P a r t w 111 als o t h e E n g li s h O ffice le a v e a n o fficial i r a n * ' r i p ! o f t h e i r a c a d e m i c r e c o r d s. in Job Opportunities Mr A W S h a n n o n , a s s i s t a n t s u p e r ­ i n t e n d e n t , B e a u m o n t P u b l i c Schools, in te r v ie w p r o s p e c t i v e e l e m e n t a r y will a n d *n T e a c h e r l e c h e r s s e c o n d a r y P l a c e m e n t S erv ice. S u t t o n Hall 209, on W e d n e s d a y , H e is especially i n t e r e s t e d in S p e e c h a n d S p ecial E d u c a t i o n t e a c h ­ lf y o u a r e i n t e r e s t e d in se e i n g Mr. ers p o sitio n s , S h a n n o n m a k e a n a p p o i n t m e n t c a l l i n g or d r o p p i n g bv t h e T e a c h e r P l a c e m e n t S e n ii« o ffice. A p p oin tm en t* H a r t a l 9 a rn. c o n c e r n i n g a n c tv. Give Joy a jingle . . . . at 2-2473 FOR QUICK ACTION ON DAILY TEXAN CLASSIFIED A D S CLASSIFIED DEADLINES T uesday T exa n ............................ Monday, 4 p m. Wednesday T exan .................... Tuesday, 4 p.m. T h u rs d ay T exa n . . . . . . . . . . Wednesday, 4 p m. F rid a y T exan .............................. T h u rsd ay , 4 p m. Sunday T exan ...................... F rid a y , 4 p.m. CLASSIFIED KATES 20 w ords or loss Additional w ords I d ay .......................................S -95.................... S .02 E ach additional d ay . . . . . $ .HT.......................$ ,01 Classified Display ............... $1 35 p er column inch the event of e r r o rs m a d e in an a d v e r tis e ­ In m ent, im m e d ia te notice m u st be given, a s the publishers a r e responsible for only one incor­ rec t insertion. Special Services For Rent R E D U C IN G , w e i g h t g a l n i n g b o d y b u i l d ­ ing as low a t $4 p e r m o n t h M a ss ag e P h o n e 2-9334. Mur­ $2. st M m bat fig d o c k s, l i t h a n d L a m a r . S I N G L E ROOM f o r g e n t l e m a n i n s t r u c ­ t o r o r g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t P r i v a t e h a t h , s e p a r a t e e n t r a n c e , $25. 301 VV es t 29th P h o n e 2-8719 . J O S E P H ’S C A R S ervice. W a s h polish an d w ax. c o m p l e t e v a c u u m . $10. F r e e p ic k - u p an d d e l i v e r y . 405 W e s t 39th. P h o n e 5-9131, MR H O U S E B a b y 's T a l c u m P o w d e r Un t q u i t # T h # Colonel r i g h t Wanted WANTED — G irl to s h a r e co m fo r tab le Bills paid. R e a s o n a b le . a p a r t m e n t P h o n e 7-6942. C A S H f o r G-U-N-8 Old o r N e w BUY — S E L L — T R A D E l a m e r S p o r t i n g G o o d s 913 L a m a r F U R N I S H E D f o u r - r o o m d u p l e x for co u p l e T i l e b ath , sh o w e r. Hob E ast 3 0U . 2-1043 a f t e r 5 30, all d a y .Saturday a n d S un d ay B U R K C A M P U S S t u d y , k u c h e n , h a t h s l e e p i n g p o r c h f o r m en. Q u iet, c o n ­ v en ien t lo f .aw a n d E n g i n e e r i n g U t i l i ­ ties paid 2618 S p e e d * av 8-5588 B L O C K F R O M Co < )p F u r n i s h e d a p a r t ­ lots of floor sp a ce, $55 m e n t w i t h W a t e r f u r n i s h e d P h o n e 6-4)072 b a t h daily m aid A V A IL A B L E NOW — Bedr oom, p r i v a t e c e n t r a l l y a i r c o n d i t i o n e d w i n t e r - s u m m e r . Q uiet U p p e r c l a s s m a n or g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t Am p ly 18o7 B razos U n it 3, A p a r t m e n t lh. s e rv ice F U R N I S H E D a p a r t m e n t * f o r U n i v e r ­ s i t y men. R ig h t a t c a m p u s . R e a s o n ­ able. Bills paid P h o n e 6 H476 ( R E A D THE C L A S S IF IE D S Typing I d eliver P h o n e £3-4856 i L E T MRS. A l b r i g h t d o y o u r E x p e r i e n c e d , e f fic ie n t. 53-2941. t y p i n g . RI l l R E D C O U R T r e p o r t e r i v a , « 2 5667 2-6569 D i s s e r t a t i o n s — S p e l l i n g a n d g r a m m a r c o r re c t io n s . R E P O R T S T H E S E S . no itM ~ < J u a r a m teed I n c p i c k u p d e l i v e r y 6-5810. E X P E R I E N C E D ty pist. P h o n e 53-4023. T H E S E S. d i s s e r t a t io n * , m a n u s c r i p t * , P h o n e t e r m p a p e r s E x p e r i e n c e d 53 1401 R I U H R I h 1 H E S R S d i s s e r t a t io n * . E le c t r i c t y p e w r i t e ! R e a s o n a b l e T w o blea k* f ro m f o u n t a i n . 8 8113. D ISS E R T A T IO N S , these*. K l e c t r o m a ' ie ( s y m b o l s ) Mrs. Ritchie. UT n e i g h ­ b orh o od . 2-4945 ALL T Y P E S w o r k d o n e bv e x p e r i e n c e d typist 2-6359 E X P E R I E N C E D se cretary BBA g r a d u - I at*. Mrs. b i her. 5-01975. NY Art Curator Speaks Tuesday Fine Arts Festival Presents Rousseau Theodore Rousseau, Jr ., distin­ guished curator of paintings of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, w ill be guest speaker for the third pro­ gram of the Fourteenth Annual Fine Arts Festival. Tuesday. The program, which is admission free, will be presented at 4 p. rn. in Recital Hall. M r. Rousseau was educated at the Lycee Henri IV in P a ris and ’ at Eton in England. He graduated from H arvard University with ; honors in 1935. After World W a r II. M r, Rous- I seau was sent to Europe as a I | lieutenant commander In the U S 1 I N avy and assigned to the art lost j I investigation for the Strategic Ser- J I vice. Tuetday, Nov. 15, 1955 THE DAILY TEXAN Pogo 5 TSO Dancers Selected; Rehearsal Wednesday Dancers cast. for "T im e Stag- M argaret Brous, Liz Bigelow, M a r t gers On" will meet Wednesday j lee Dunstan, K ay Dyche, E lain e night at the University " Y " audi- Fisher, P a t Gordon, M artha H ill, Jan e il Hooten, Judy Huff, M ariam torium at 7 p.m., Joe B ill Hogan, Kass, Barb ara Erick. Nancy Led- assistant director announced. Tho 28 dancers for the show are _ __ Faculty to Play Wednesday at 4 IT 1' 0! ’ ^la r~v ^ nn ^e*'rVan’ _ p °^ Y H an k , Norma McCombs, Donna Ordway, Pud Payne, Sadie P a l­ mer, Liz Barb ara Rosenberg, Rowell, Silvia Schlumps, Suzanne Story, Carolyn Tulles, Sonny W ills, Fred Weyrich, Tom Hester, Tom­ my Ada in, and Danny Danford. A Faculty Chamber M usic Con-j | cert will be the fourth presentation i I of the Fine Arts Festival Wednes-: j day at 4 p.m. in the R ecital Hall of the Music Building. Participants include Anna Ja c k ­ son, piano; Alfio Pignotti, violin; Albert Gillis, viola; Horace Britt, Joseph Blankenship, ob ie; <-phe ensemble w ill play Mozart’s "Quartet, K. 370" for the oboe, violin, viola, and cello. Their sec­ ond presentation w ill be "Trio, Opus 114" by Brahm s. DINE IN AIR-CONDITIONED j COMFORT . . . Just a lew blocks off Campus at E L T O R O — FINE MEXICAN FO O D — 8-4321 1601 Guadalupe ESPECIALLY FOR YOU PA N C H O Square Dancers Plan Jamboree The Mid-Tex Square Dancers As- cello; social ion F a ll Jam boree will have and John McGrosso, clarinet, ounarist M. R. THE ROYAL SCOTS . ’n Gregory G ” Scots Royal (juaras Give Fling Today The Regimental Band of the Royal Scots Guards wall open its million dollar tour Tuesday night in Gregory G ym at 7 and 9 p.m. with "F a n fa r e " by Rhodes. regimental band, comprised of tall, scarlet, uniformed musicians with bearskin bonnets, w ill play quick march ' New York Hippodrome, ' 'Bonnie Scot- "Nation.,! Fantasy The band, which is part of Queen land’," and "Hungarian Rhapsody The world's stellar pipers w ill ^ The Pipe Band, wearing Elizabeth’s Buckingham P a l a c e ! No. 2," by Liszt. household troops, will also play the grand march "R ak o cz y," by Ber- then present march "T h e Stirling- lioz; overture "M a rita n a ,” by Wa!-; shire M ilitia," Strathspey "M aggie lace: " l l Bacio,” by Arditti; "Id a Cameron," reel "San d y Cam eron," march "K irk h ill." and march "A n and Dot," by linsey, and selections gus M acKinnon." from "P a g lia c c i," by Leoncavallo. full highland dress of blue doublet, feather bonnets, highland sword, dirk, and pipes emblazoned with the crests of the different com­ panies, w ill play "T he Highland Jo y ," Wedding," "Duntroon." "K irk w a ll B a y ,” and "T he Dundee City Police.’ The pipers and dancers will join for "Boresom e R e e l" and "A rg yle Broadswords," and the Regim ental Band w ill conclude with introduc­ tion to third act of "Lohengrin," by Wagner and "H e ila n ’ Laddie." "T h e Fiddlers’ _ The Highland D an cer. WAI leap I « f w p r n„ , TT. . , , ,. . In 1948 M r. Rousseau took over I . i ancho Laird or \t«7. Santa Fe, N. M ., as master of n, ' M u^ um where ho has reremonies at the C ity Coliseum his present position with the Met-j an a L0, V h * t ' picture g a n g e s I Saturday at 8 p.m. ' 1 “ by using a new’ arrangement of Practice sessions will be held in I from 2 to 3:30 p.m. for dancers preference to conventional group- who wish to brush up on some of the dances to he called during the ings by the national schools. M r. Russeau is in "W ho's Who evening. An advanced session will in Am erica” and "W ho's Who in j follow from 3:30 to 5 p.m. when American A rt." He is also a form -1 the instructors w ill present their or assistant curator of paintings : new* calls. Tom Pennington, presi- at the National G allery in W ash-1 dent of the dance association, will first afternoon session ington. lead the and M r, Baird the last. Bridge Group W ill Meet Intermediate Club's Tues- Marking the first time that ibis day morning bridge group will historic regiment has been in the meet Tuesday at 9:30 a. rn. at the western hemisphere, Ihe present j home of Mrs. K a rl M. Dallenbaeh, good-wili tour comes as a result 2106 Meadowbrook. ----- . n e g o tia tio n s I ........ — The over two years Music will be by J , M. Tidwell’s j "Cripple Creek Ranch Hands." Ad­ mission is $1 per person for both afternoon and evening sessions. Spectators admission will be 50 cents. with the British W a r Office by the noted impresario, Sol Ilurok. Tickets w ill he available from 9 a m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday at the Music Building l>ox office. <■- AUSTIN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA EZRA RACHLIN, Conducting ALL-ORCHESTRAL EVENfNG Monday, Nov. 21 — City Coliseum O v e r t u r e t o “ I . a < > n e r « » n t o l a ” R O S S I N I H A Y D N ; C O P L A N D ; A p p a l a c h i a n S p r i n g S u it e W A G N E R : P r e lu d e to Act III. H a n c e o f I h «» A p p r e n t i c e * A P r o t r u s i o n " S u r p r i s e ” S y m p h o n y of th e M ei & te rainge r f r o m “ Hie M e i s t o r s i n R e r ” R eserved Seats- $3.60. $2 40, $180; U nreserved: SI.20 (S tu d e n ts: 60c) A vailable a t ' A ustin S ym phony B usiness Office—>112 P erry-B rooks Bldg. T elephone 6-6749 J, R. Reed Music Co , U niversity Co-Op, Music B uilding Box Office A full year’s subscription to any one of these three great weekly magazines a t these reduced prices . . . for college students only. Take T im e, T he Weekly Newsmagazine, a week . . . or Lif e , for less than A m erica’s favorite pictorial, for less than 8* a copy . . . or S p o r ts I l l u s ­ t r a t e d , the first national sports w eekly, for less than 8< an Issue. T he purchase of one magazine does not require the purchase of another; your special st udent prices are good for all or any of these three weeklies. Sign up rep re sen ta tiv e t o d a y ’ w ith y o u r s tu d e n t th e lobby of th e in T e x a s Union. Union’s ‘Cost Si Bon’ * To Close Friday Night The Texan Union dance com­ mittee will present tile closing night of " C e s t Si B o n ," French night club, F rid a y from 8:30 p.m. to 12 midnight in the Main B a ll­ room. The program will honor International students. Members of Alpha Phi sorority and Delta Sigma Ph i fraternity will Bob variety present Kerb's combo will play. revue a Admission is 50 cents a couple. 'Dona Barb ara' to Be Shown "Dona B a rb a ra ." starring M aria) Felix and Ju lian Soler, will be j shown Thursday at 2, 4:45, and' 7:30 p.m. in Batts H all Auditorium as the fourth of the film classics series. Are Your Classes Up-To-Date LOVELY FRAME DESIGNS to fi+ every personality DALLAS HOLFORD OPTICIAN TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS IOO Lati 19th a1 Wichita; Ph. 7-1885 303 Capital Nat l Ck 8’dq; Ph. 7-7942 INTERSTATE THEATRES SIOW s h o w j N G ! FIRST S H O W 11:30 A.M — JAMES DUN Sherwood Dies Of Heart Attack Four-time Winner Of Pulitzer Prize N K W Y O R K . Nov. 14 Oft—Robert E . Sherwood, 59, whose pen won him more Pulitzer prizes than any j other American, died Monday. The six foot, seven inch playwright and biographer suffered a h*?rt attack Saturday. in A prolific w riter several fields. Sherwood shared with the late Eugene O ’Neill the honor of winning three Pulitzer prizes for | drama. Sherwood won a prize in 1949 for a political biog-; raphy based in the papers of the | late New' Deal presidential adviser, j H arry Hopkins. fourth Sherwood’s memorable plays in-1 eluded "Id io t’s Delight," "A b e L in ­ coln ;n lime ii " T ilere Shall Re No Night"- all Pulitzer prize win-1 nprs—and "W aterloo B rid g e " and "T he Petrified Fo rest." He had a new one about ready for Broadw ay production. Sherwood also ventured into the j movie field and in 1946 won an Academy Award for writing "T h e Best Years Of Our L iv e s ." His lat­ est movie script, "M a in Street to B ro ad w ay" is being filmed in Hol­ lywood. A close friend of the late Pres­ ident Roosevelt, Sherwood helped prepare some of his' dramatic speeches, shaping some of the pun­ gent phrases used by Roosevelt. Known as the tallest dramatist in the world, Sherwood set off a rugged face with a small mus­ tache. His mien was serious, but he was an articulate man, with lit­ tle trace of shyness. Sherwood's death came less than fourteen hours after that of another Pulitzer prize winner, Bernard de Volo. 58. He, too, died of a heart attack. De Voto won the 1947 prize for an historical study of the Am er­ ican West. Fried Chicken — Special — 3 pieces with french fries 49* > MOSLEY’S CAFETERIAS Allendale — Delwood The University of Texas Cultural Entertainment Committee and S. Hurok honor the 9 H T H ANNUAL FINE ARTS FESTIVAL u h e n THI PAGEANTRY of BRITAIN COMIS TO AMERICA WARNES 8RCS -rn- C i n e m a s C O P E NATALIE WOOD T S U * ' . TOM & JER R Y m S D I C ARTO O N IL\ i =1 FIRST S H O W 12:00 RAY MILIANO COLLINS J O A N I A B U Y 4 GRANGER -at • TUE GBL In The Red Velvet Swing ! f S t o a s T O M O R R O W ) BIAZIS MUTH SUSPENSE MO EXCITEMENT! ft*HU mu-rifiintiii T H * G O O D -7— O I E \ V O U N g -Jk, RIC H M D G L O R IA BASSHAM • GRAHAME * IRELAND JO H N STARTS TODAY! 2 P.M. rn _ t h e x Detegdww i t h J O A N G R E E N W O O D MA A Mi IA ll T O N I G H T 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Gregory Gymnasium V P al* I PETE SMITH AUSTIN FIRST S H O W 6 P.M. Pete Smith Short SIN G L E A D M IS S IO N : Adults — $2.50 Juniors thru High School $ 1.00 opens Bo* Office, Gregory Gym, 6:30 for 7:00 P.M. Show 8:30 for 9:00 P.M. Show ✓ I S * \ s to the tune of the Massed Pipers for "T h e Highland Fling.” and "Solo Sword D ance." Thb highland dancing, with intricate steps its and fascinating floor patterns, is one of the most celebrated forms of folk dancing in the world. High­ land dances have been handed ] down from generation to genera­ tion, and many of the featured learned the steps dancers have from fathers and grand­ fathers. The dances best known outside Scotland are the two to he performed. their Following the intermission the S P E E D W A Y R A D IO & T E L E V IS IO N SALES & SERVICE ?h. 7-3846 20t0 Speedway Just South ot Gregory Gym 1 1 R A N S * I E X A S A d u lt * . . . . . M r I h ild ........... 25c THE REGIMENTAL BAND THE M A S S E D P I P E R S THE HIGHLAND D A N C E RS i T - M J W . H LAST DAY! OPEN 11:45 20th Century-foa W I L L I A M MOLDEN J E N N I F f t JONES open and shut case of toffs! Q U EEN Suckinghom Poloce Household Troops i a n f l g B O X U l l i n O P K N S ti IHI A d u l t - 5H c • I I i t Id I r e c One Day Service At No Extra Charge Longhorn Cleaners 2538 Guadalupe Phone <>-3817 Don’t PUT It Off . . . TAKE It Off! w o rld 5 g re ate st m ethod o f sc ie n tific S P O T R E D U C I N G . . . will slim h e a vy thighs, b ulg in g hips, p ro tru d in g tum m y . . . in only T H R E E W E E K S ! You Can Lose Up to 5 inches . . . "Results Guaranteed" Call 7-5097 for free treatment ULI Su s t CDI R a y W o l f f , figure analyst 213 E. 26'/2 7-5097 FREE INSTALLATION MUFFLERS (S to c k or H o lly w o o d ) DUAL EXHAUST SYSTEMS FOR ALL MAKES OF V-8 CARS CENTRAL AUTO PARTS Phono 2-3303 3212 E. lit St. MEXICAN FOOD AT ITS BEST . . . Served 7 Days a Week From 8 A .M . to 2 A .M . is et * t*j EL M A T A M O R O S V ’ 504 East Ave. Phone 7-7023 Tuesday Menu af Scholz Garten 3 Large Pieces Fried Chicken o»’ Hamburger Steak Mashed Potatoes Combination Salad String Beans and Creamed Corn Peach Pie Hot Rolls and Corn Bread Coffee or Tea 65* Scholz Glu ten 1607 Sen Jacinto Where You Ar# Always Walcoma SOPHOMORES! T O D A Y , November 15 Is the D eadline for Making Your C lass Picture Appointm ent fo r the 1956 CACTUS Make your appointment and pay !l00 tee iin JOURNALISM BUILDING 107 OFFICE HOURS Week D a y s ................ 8-1 & 2-5 RESERVE YO U R C O P Y O F THE C A C T U S N O W IF YO U FAILED TO DO SO AT REGISTRATION Tuesday. Nev. IS, 1955 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6 What Coes On Here Friday Deadline For Note Book C ontributions to tho T exan Note Book should be su b m itted by F ri- j day , announced Bobby Jon es, edi- or of th e T exan s se m ia n n u al lite r­ a ry supplem ent. to form This deadline ap p lies fre e­ lan ce m a te ria l, w hich m a y be in th* original sketches, sh o rt sto rie s, short or long poem s, essa y s or book r e ­ view s. a rtic le s, of g„S — P h o to g ra p h y E x h ib it from .Sam H ouston S tate Ten*"hers Col­ lege, T exas U nion L obby. 9-1.: 1-4:30 A & M g a m e Gym, I 'raw mg for T exas- tic k e ts, G reg o ry 9.5 — F a c u lty A rt E xh ib it, M usic B uilding Loggia, 9-5 — D raw ing for “ R oyal Scots tic k e ts, Music G u a rd s Band * B uilding Box O ffice. 9 '50 - In te rm e d ia te Club bridge group, 2106 M eadow brook. Art. which m a y grap h s, and w ith Book staff m ay be tu rn e d in litter. 12 — A nnual A FR O TC review a t selections p re p a re d j the N ote 12 — Showing of Texas-TC U g am e p ic tu re s, T e x a s Union M ain lo u n g e the know ledge of include photo­ Tile Texan N ote Book, first issued W h itak e r F ield . 3 - M en’s H ousing A ssociation G ro u p I, IOO E a st T w entieth St. 3-5 D, TV F e ld m a n , “ Collection of C o n tem p o rary T ex as A rt, TFW C Freshmen Head BSU This Week Building. 4 D r. H e rb e rt C. Brow n to speak on “ S t r a i n e d H om ornorphs." C h em istry Building 319. 4 L ec tu re on th e “ E n jo y m en t of D ie B a p tist S tu d en t Union Coun­ cil w ill be in ch a rg e a t BSI! this Painting-;, ’ T heodore R o u ssea u w eek w hich h as been set aside as •lr., M usic B uilding R e c ita l H all. F re sh m a n Week. 4-5—F re s h m a n Council T ex as Union 315-16, 6:45 — R ainbow G irls C o f f e e . b anquet H itohin’ P ost. new ly Mike Sim pson, elected fre sh m a n council p resid e n t, will h ead an ex ecu tiv e council m e e t­ ing T uesday a t 7:15 p. rn. 7 In te rn a tio n a l C lub V a r l e t y S h o w ', M ain B allroom , T exas Union. 7 and 9 B a n d /' G re g o ry G ym . BSI 7 15 F re sh m a n Council of B aptist Student C enter, * “ C halk C irc le ,” X Hall. 8 — M en’s H ousing A ssociation, G roups I and III 1910 Whit is and 1909 D avid. B u rrel Rowe is to be in ch a rg e “ R oyal Scots G u ard s of the m orn in g w atch and v esp er .services and Eldon M eek will su­ perv ise the re g u la r F rid a y m ission p ro g ra m w hich m e ets at the B ap­ tist S tudent Union at 6:30 p. rn. Sixteen Tapped B y Omicron N u Sixteen new m e m b ers w e re tap- b e tte r. No m ore th a n ten per cent of th e ju n io r c la ss o r twenty p er cent of th e senior c la ss m ay be tapped. ped M onday m o rn in g by O m icron Nu h o n o rary fra te rn ity . S eniors econom ics hom e MINH M A N AUTO W ASH A u j t m I • q u p p e d A u t o W a s h la r g e s t a n d b e s t ► A F E A T U R I N G A U T O M A T I C W H E E L W A S H E R S ► A $ 3 0 , 0 0 0 e q u i p m e n t t o w a s h y o u r ca r R a t e s — $ 1 . 5 0 — S a v e — U s e o u r sh B o o k — 5 w a s h e s $5 .50 W a s h B o o k — 5 w a s h e s $5 50 221 So. Lamar ESPECIALLY FOR YOU la st spring, is conceived a s an out­ let for the cre ativ e , co m m u n icab le ideas of students in all p a ils of the U niversity. E sp ec ia lly sought a re contributions w ith in te re st and m eaning w hich t r a n s c e n d the bounds of a d e p a rtm e n t or a d is­ cipline VV ru e rs and Illu stra to rs m a y sub­ m it their w ork bv m a il to the T exan N ote Rook, The D aily Texan, Jo u rn a lism Building 103, o r in p e r­ son at the T exan O ffice. Anyone seeking m o re in form ation is asked to call Bobby Jo n e s a t (W5559. Phi Sigma Kappa Holds Open House ta p p ed a r e M arianne D ittm an , M a ry Ja n e Downfall), Ja n ic e G reen in g , N ela G yure, B a r­ b ar# Ann H artle y , Ju d ity Dav id- son M overs. N an cy W allace P e r ­ kins. D oris P e tru s e k , an d P a tric ia M a rg a re t Robinson. Phi Sigm i K appa, social f r a te r ­ nity, held open house S unday a f te r ­ noon in connection w ith th e N a­ tional Moonlight G irl C ontest. local ph ase The w inner of th e N ew ju n io rs p ledges a r e Lynne Collins, V irginia D iam ond, Shirley Ann H arriso n . E lizabeth Jensen, of the contest, who w ill he eligible M a ry ^ U1/ and I>or^ w iedeiifeld. for the finals t h e , Mat gie H arrod, g ra d u a te a t u- S prm g G lacier N atio n al P a r k next derd w as a js0 tapped. fall will be p re se n te d a tro p h y ai the fra te rn ity 's fo rm a l dan ce Sat,- u rd a y evening a t th e A ustin H otel. ! room . P led g e s e n n e for the honorary ^ h eld W ednesday, 5 p.m .. t ^ e H om e E conom ics reading to be held In —— jn Teachers Adopt Mental Project A n u m b er of U n iv ersity faculty m e m b ers w ill w ork w ith th e r e ­ cen tly announced A ustin m en tal h ea lth project. Q ualifications for m e m b e rsh ip in O m icron Nu include senior o r jun­ ior sta n d in g and a B a v e ra g e or Couple to Attend Black-White Ball journal- Included a re D r O liver H Bown, ism m a jo r, will re p re s e n t A ustin I>r. W alter I, F ir e r , D r. W ayne H. H oltzm an, D r. ir a Iscoe. D r. a s p rin c e ss a t the B la c k and W hite C arson M cG uire. D r. H a rry M oore. B all in San A ntonio D e c e m b e r 1(E D r Dewitt R eddick, and D r. Ph/Vp H er escort will be K enneth P ap a a m e m b e r of B eta T heta P i fra- W orchel. J a n T insley, fre sh m a n The p roject, ex p e cted to encom - te rn ity . is a p a ss a period of fo u r and one-half y e a rs , is sponsored by the Austin tra d itio n a l social function for the C om m unity G u id an ce C e n te r and m eeting of N orth A m erican and th e Austin-Trav is C ounty Society South A m erican young people, fo r M ental H ea lth . The B lack an d W hite Bali — — -------------- — Austi n, Waco, and L ubbock h av e U n iv ersity d u b to M eet been desig n ated a s control cum -! The U n iv ersity Club w ill hold a rn urn ties for stu d y , w hich will lie d in n e r m eeting S a tu rd a y . Hos»s the paren t- for g a m e night last S a tu rd a y w ere a im e d specifically a t child relationship a s p e c t of m ental M r. and Mrs. K J. P ro u se and health . M r. a n d M rs. A rth u r E d w a rd s. Why Chancellor Adenauer reads The Reader's Digest A full y e a r’s subscription to any one of these three g reat weekly m agazines a t these reduced prices . . . for college stu d en ts only. T a k e T i m e , T h e W e e k ly N ew sm agazine, for less th a n 6i a week . . . or L i f e , A m erica’s favorite pictorial, for less th a n Si a copy ! , . or S p o r t s I l l u s ­ th e first national sp orts t r a t e d , w eekly, for less th a n Si an issue. T h e purchase of one m agazine does n o t require the purchase of an o th er; your special s tu d e n t prices are good for all or any of these three weeklies. today with your student, Sign up representative in the lobby of the Texas Union. R e y c r e s t ta ilored DACRON and COTTON SHIRTS Lo n g W e a r in g E a sy to lau nde r shirts in regular collar collar or b u tto n -d o w n . w hite a n d solid colors. Easy-to-’aunder, always looks g o o d with a min‘n u m of c a re— luxurious blend o f 6 5 ° 0 D a c ro n for strength b e n d e d with 3 5 % E gyp tia n cotton fo r luxury look. Reycrest tailored w :th single-needle stitching, set- n sleeves, 7.95 Excl usi vel y at R e y n o l d s - P e n l a n d T O M O R R O W S FAS H IO I TODAY..,, VV# Invite you lo aet ike future of fashion , m o» foretold by Hammonton Park. N ew Interpretation* of color . , . fabric creation* thot m irror, the modern mood . . . the tempo of tomorrow, recorded Ie the rhythms of Animated Style®. Try on one of these forward-looking *uit$. Notice the easy comfort, the handsome slimming effect. This is the future of fashion . , „ end you can start enjoying it here and now. • 7 5 Hammonton Exclusively at R e y n o ld t -P e n la n d eynolds ii enland 709 C O N G R E S S " I n rny country more than SOOjOOO people read the Digest in (rerman h month. Anil they read not antv u h -ut the people of the I ntted States, hut about the fteoplr of att nations. The Reader*i Ingest tun J im ped a nett instrument for undem anding among m en." Sn October Reader’s Digest don’t miss: ALL ABO UT LOVE. How can we tell the difference be­ tw een true love and physical attraction? ( ’an we really fall in love “at first sight'*? W hat make* us fall out of love? Scientist Julian H uxley brings you a biologist's view of our moat complex em otion. THOSE C A M P U S M A R R IA G E S . lb>w do student mar- riag« a work out? Are young couples abl** to t ope with studies and household chores? W hat happens w hen baba* com e along? Report on today a col­ legiate* who promise to love, honor—-and stud y. 1V-PAGE C O N D E N S A T IO N T R O M S4.00 B E ST S EL LER : “ M Y P H IL A D E LP H IA F A T H E R " W hether blue­ blood Anthony J. Drexel Kiddie was teaching ju­ jitsu to tile Marines, singing a dubious tenor in opera, hobnobbing with pugilists or rawing alliga­ tors in the house, he did everything all out and then aomg, Here, told by hie daughter, is I he Laugh­ ing In' mg life of “America’s happi**t millionaire.” A M E R I C A S TOP LA BO RIT E: G EO RG E MEANY, f.tfe an d beliefs of the m an who m ay i»,-id 15 million workers when th* CJO and A F L merge. (Jct October Header s Digest at your newsstand today—only 2Si 44 article of lasting interest, including the best from leading maga7ines and current books, condensed to save your time.