—:—— $ D« "•»» ir*-v«v-r«<®­ M ^ Nsa^ * "t? siMKsl *-& * J> *vw Av c<&, '»* SP *j^l>*'jij^fe«, tr^ ** JCi ae first, step , in pre-registra-able ne who want* to dules which are unsatisfactory to 1W; Jf inf Celligi Do r K • S ouf/i familiar acquaintance of up-reach you during next semester. students and causes many of the •• ••••• "•••iW•• 4'i&wT lassmen and source of confu-The -only...important difference adds and drops at the beginning • to freshmen and transfers,. between pre-registration' and re-of each semester, Mr.. Shipp said* VOLUME 51 Price Five Cents 12, f950 AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER begin Monday and will last gistration* is that the student is Pre-registration* advising will ifei. i -^ijV.'iSlWii-'Jff jP!iyj i '? *"V ^ee days. -not present to adjust his'schedule be done Wednesday, December 6 &%*?&£•« < V ^ )fficial envelope's containing to his liking, says Mr. Shipp. ' end classes will be suspended that 5? preliminary forms and instruc In pre-registration, when youg__ day. Engineering and pharmacy E>irsfor completing the first step requested—eourse or section clu* majors will; be sectionizedas well ly be obtained at any -of the co^bfi given, officials: must guess as advised December 6. Bills lot bokstores. Ten cents will be your second , choice. -This, guess­registration fees will be mailed Jj&> 'W ' *^p­ ffrV f*A 4-1 S *'•*' * * ^ sarged to cover the cost of all ing naturally results in some sche­to' studehts in January. %t%« 5^\s\tff, *.^4 m tailing in pre-registration. By HOWARD PAGE 27-20, before 35,000 fans lit 50 yard punt on the Texas 16-yard the key blocks Around the Texts Only an estimated 65 to 70 p^r 1 ' -T«on Sport* Staff' degree weather. line, cot to his left, and raced ,30, and Dillon wasn't pursuedpast fent of the students now enrolled WACO, Nov. 11—(Spl.)-Facing a disasterous 20-20 tie down the sidelines behind a wave the mid-field strip. the University will take ad-amic Bobby Dillon thundered 84 with fiVe minutes remaining) tht? of white-shirted Longhorns for the Until that scintillating scamper, Mitage of this opportunity. By-"yards on a punt return here Satur­Longhorns broke the backs of the touchdowns* surprising Baylor wae elearly^the 'Tts­ an ' Shipp, registration supervi­day late in the fourth quarter to spirited Bears with -Dillon's tale-Halfback Gib Dawson, guard better football-team Saturday, -White' quarterback se estimates approximately 750 enable the University of Texas to telling touchdoyn. The"defensive BudMcFadin, tackle Bill Wilson, The Golden Bears blocked bird completing H of ,26 posses t& &00 of those v^io ^bi^n^ pre-urn -back-Baylor University, halfback took Lary Iabell's 46-and end Tinmj ftiy and Buddy Parker and full* , id consequently suffer long lines The relation of. the people to the . fourth in the Great Issues back'Dick Parma g^ud !$&!• / regular registration* — ; the StaTe in'ASh^can democracy, course series. The meeting will net yards. Most of the Baylof The official envelopes contain as interpreted by Dean Paul H. be in the Main Lounge of Texas yardage came on off-tackle slaihe* and end sweeps against the Longv Bet of instructions and five cards Appleby , Tuesday night, will be Union at 7:30. horn five-man forward be filled out. One of the cards Described by Dr. E. S. Redford^ Texas* line had the better build*: an applications for a course |professor of government," as being IBBWSiypiMyi up and eatperience, but "That 014' Erd—you^ admittance ticket "to a man "especially well-qualified to Baylor Line" more than Hved up (e remainder of the pre-registra- talk about the^ problems of gov­to previous Golden dear i>n process. ernment in our"day," Dean Apple­ Tackle Ken Casner and Guard. by is director of the MaxwellThe remaining cards, when "B*yce"|{eia~ were outstanding laSchool of pitizenship and Public lied out and turned in at the the Baylor forward wall that held Affairs at Syracuse University^ proper place on the campus by the Longhorn backs to a net ^onHiinc, WedtiPuflny—at & Itr1r"(S5^SefeS~dhe of She outT of 77 yardsJ;standing graduate centers ' for 'clock, are to be used for infor- But Dfllor people wanting to enter govern­ jition in making your name, ad- to be. the difference and Texa% ment service and also offers ress, and telephone number ayail- now leads the Southwest Conftt^ general courses in citizenship on ence fight with four consecutive- an undergraduate level. victories, The defeat was the te* Dean Appleby's background is ond suffered by the Bears, and one of divergent interests and AAM's triumph over SMtJ knocli experiences; F6r twenty years he ed the Poni< •wlW*a newspaper-published an4 far.the titled • « editorial writer in the Midwest. ' Trailing 20-7 midw»i*4«t He has spent fifteen years in top third qvuorter, the Bears., caught government posts, MIAMI, Nov. 11.—(Spl.)— fire and rolled for two touchdown# He served as assistant to Henry Daily Texan Coverage of two to tie the score at 20-all in tha Wallace when he was Secretary of npressive events during the fourth period Agriculture. , Between 1940 and , [949-50.school year won faational clutch pay. . , ,, MR. NIEBIESZCZANSKI 194.4 he was Under-Secretary of ecognition here Saturday night. Texas made good advantage of Agriculture. * 1 |. Sigma Delta Chi, professional break on the opening Idekoff an4 His list of public administration scored with only two minutes gonfjurnalism fraternity, awarded duties includes assistant director Polish Refugee In the contest Center Hugh SeediR T___ Texan certificates for the o£ the Committee on the Budget. recovered Parker'* fumbled Johfi fecond best sports* story and the special assistant to the Lend-Lease Adams' kickoff on the Baylorthird best general news story pub­ Administration and the Secretary r.\ and the Steers sent Byron Town- To Soeak Irii lished during the last long term ALMOST BUT NOT QUITE down Js Texas fullback Byron Town bw Nttim Awjuw of State, and membership on the send over from the Bear one-yarA The Texan was. the only publi-. contributions committee of " the • send. The Odessa boy was almosf tripped up by the Baylor Bear, "this was a 'fKirct down play from ihe',16. On-the next playtTown< Adam Kaiimierz.Kiebieszczanski line on the fourth play for tit* leation to receive two awards. United Nations. on the ground behind him, but managed to regain hi* feet ahd sand made a yard and a first down. Texas scored its second will speak on "Poland Today' touchdown.-^' The prize-winning sports story Friday evening a£ 8 o'clock in During World Wir II he was move on another fouryards to the Bruin 12 in the second quarter. touchdown four plays later. r But Texerlepaiii­m written by. Sports Editor Building 14. ap­chief of the food missions to .• r imm seven Geology His ', ;* '• -s * ment minutes later wheat tames Rech. It reported a hair-pearance is being jointly apon-Great Britain and chairman of Arml»tic» Day TtfwW ^ Quarterback BenTompkins fumbKsising Longhorn basketball vic-the International^.Wheat Council. sored -by the Department of ed on the Baylor 9 yard line. lx »ry in which the University Aside from governmental posi­ Government arid the-Public Lec­ seven plays, the Bears tied th« lipped A&M, 48-46, on a late go^l tions, Dean Appleby has worked tures Committee. The • public is score on Parker's two-yard |y Joe Ed Falk. prominently with the development •invited. over bis right tackle. End ; of the American Society for Pub- Judged third best general news . Mr, Kiebieszezanski will be here -Dickerson duplicated Tomi iie Administration;--He i»^vice­ (overage was a story by Horace under the auipices "of "the"National #feint-aft« im 'Been ^Ainsworth, editor of last year's Committee for a Free Europe Inc. president elect of the American V&****if: fiftieth anniversary Texan. The He is a member of the Polish Political Science Association. * .|[eaJDILLON;#^«* •'Big Democracy" and ^'Policy story included mforw»tie» ^ Political Couneil, an organization * thered, by several members of the -Krhl^h in. Administration" are two of his the interest -of a publications. Texan staff aad concerned the fr«« and democratic Poland, fn eide leap from the tower by this country. "Both books are designed to Exchange Refomfr understandable discus­ Jraydon Grounds, Longhorn Band Monday Mr. Niebieszczanski, a provide an By RUSS KERSTEN the year—certainly season, wis taken from his trailer lol^ of :• ^oohs^'and' ''M^is^^lrotB. sion of the problems of democracy lembef. /fought." and led around the field afoot. the appreciative crowd. A darkling half-time show and, The University SDX chapter re-refugee from Communist con­for the general reader," eom- Anyone who saw the inspired Nine Silver Spurs rode herd on the ' The combined bands presented a ajvard for placing the to Dr.bnented Dr. Redford. suspense-crammed cym­ fleived an trolled Poland, will speak a game frisky mascot, just to make sura pageant that commemorated great; ' ?enth greatest percentage of its Edward Taborsky's; Comparative Dean Appleby will-meet with bined Saturday' to royally treat Bruins behind the master-magi­ he remained a gentlemen. wars in American history, using as; Books arid moniy still rer nduates in purely journalistic Government classes. These lec­leading state, municipal, and fed­ cian, Isbell, evenly battle the per 85,000 chilled football fans Who 'At'half time both bands marched the theme song "When Johnny ing in the Student Book Exc ^positions. tures are of en,only to class mem-eral officials Tuesday morning for will for berSi; • Mr,-Niebiesssczanski is a conference. He will be hon­alternately shivered and cheered tent. Longhorns vouch onto opposite ends of the field and Comes Marching Home.' which waa recently disbanded, •Texas delegate te the.conven­ that. • stood • at attention while Baylor be returned to ownars Tues tion was Charlie Lewis, v Texan currently serving as Vice-consul ored with a luncheon by the De­in Baylor's new stadium. In rapid succession the. bands partment of Government Tuesday • President W. H. White of Bay-Big Tom Hamilton, hero of dads were introduced. Each wore Tommy Rodman, chairman 4­ editorial assistant and vice-presi­and Director of the Polish Min­ formed the years of the wars and: a number on his back that corres­ dent of the University chapter of istry of Interior's branch in New in, the Queen Anne Room . of I6r termed the savage SWC tus­countless Steer baseball and bas­ snappily played contemporary mu­Book Exchange Committee, ponded to the. number of the the journalism fraternity. York City. Texas Union. , , . sle "the most thrilling game" of ketball wins, was all smiles as he sic. Starting with 1776, the Baylor' nounced. t 1 Ji ;>» player he was sponsoring; in about The Exchange will be opeii: band played "Yankee tioqcOe"; summed-up the~ attitude of'Horn a dfezen cases, they were fathers 1865, Baylor band played "Battle 10 to I, o'clock Tuesday in Texas"; fans: "Boy, it was WONDER-of Baylor^'grMderiiT Hymn of the, Republk^-and fee l Union 208. Cards have been FUt." Next" the Longhorn Sand,splay­Longhorn Band, "Dixie"; 1918, ed to all students who have booli And' . wonderful it. was, • al­ing "Texas Fight,"..marched to­Baylor band, "Over There"; and in the Exchange^ Books o* ward the -motionless Baylor bandi 1945, Longhorn Band;,"God Bless will ba returned to them >f the yellow receii most made nervous wrecks of the formed a huge-T in front of the they were given at the tima In.cohclueion they combined1 to whole Longhorn cheering section University section. Baylor did the form a sprawling USA that books were left4n fha 1 —especially in the last quarter same; grouping into-an interlock* reached from 20 to 20* A bugler Members of the Book. _ , when they pulled up into a 20-20 irtgBU. sounded "Taps" from a perch near Committee^ are Claude Gtoldsmitifajpti,e, with the try for point to £aeh band playedita alma mater the flagpole in honor of American Bob Jolly, Bill Sands, John-1 v" Chancellor8r the highestLschotos-William B. White," and Allan C. ages and who have distinguished degree here In 1949. He is a mem­come. * » " \j m this position^ , ar dead, and the-bands closed the 1&, and Bobble Priest, Newman' CJub and Delta trc honorary for law student^, has Durham. . < tUemselves by work on the Texas ber of Visions of other one-point tosseei r."Hien followed fa-"precise,, well-program with a rousing rendition 'man working on,"* Law Review. Fifty-two or more Tau Delta v social ^fraternity. A tapped five new members. They Organized 38 years ago, Chan­ flickered . but gplden-toe;Dick-diracted( performance that drew of "Stars and Strides JForevpr^ are Dan Moody jfr., Wavne E» cellor is limited to law students hours credit is required for mem­Quizmaster in the School of Law, erson flubbedt _y/'. vh__ V; ' 4 * * * •»» t* r Editor to Talk Thomas, Henry G. Dalemte Jr.f with the highest scholastic aver-bership in the society. exchequer of Phi Delta Phi, Dale-; Miss Sallie Hill, editor . Jjiat before the opening Idekoff,' Moody, 21, from Austin;;en­b.ite isSa candidate for the Texas: women's department of The a Baylorite in top hat,vdresii 90aV Law Review editorial board; , gressive farmer, will speak to tered the University in July, 1945, and loud rediflannel, bottoms for­White, 24, associate case-note lornly strolled around holding aloft journalism claia in Writing and Law School in September, Women Monday at 11 a. editor on the Texas Law Review; assign that read, "I bet my pant# 1948. He is a member of Phi wm discuss thr duties of e< on Texas."* is from Como. A member of Phi, « . Beta Kappa, Phi Delta Phi, Phi the women's section of a < Signwork at the half was grimly In Kappa Tau, Pi Sigma Alpha, and', fcine in Journalism Building 21 Eta Sigma* and 'Sigma Alpha Ep- businesslike, however/ The Baptist he 'has silon, social fraternity. He is a Inter-fraternity' Council, cheerleaders, displayed this tad m Jam: "What from disgruntled Texas sup-ship between its component parte, co-ordinate operations. tralize and co- associate • • a'tt S get ^Dalehite, 22, is from Galveston justice,School of. Law; t; Chsas **Ha'tt •to Justice Hart has announced. MOOD* £. THOMAS and received * bachelor of arts assemblyman, and worked wife lolt Hka 1 Music Jby the Longhorn^ Band the Student Evaluation and Fi-: 1. It wasn't a will:open the ceremonies. The nance Committee. He spent, four*, funeral wreath. ia announced1 th};#>» TWf-trAlLYTSXAN *y & ¥ ,? *4 •I 1 fc v^( cf?1 'WW T -... 4? ki bell to Parker behind two Stfeer »m the Baylor 24* Bears; »• «M#f lefWtid* tfsfend ' ' -< ' tying teuOhdown, Parma and Par* % ts Totrtpkins-to-fownsend Longhorns went, 5S yar$i;I$#-itljiitfjfc T«tf&raia ably gsin «*e y*ird« ker did the damage on tile ground, >• f'wejrtf laitray iaek to-the 6$ _— second touchdown midway of the it'thr«« -plays and Billy Poster with Isbell's pass to Harold Rileywhere»ndG* qtttrterj vHalfback -Gib for 29 yards climaxing the drive. George Cookj second ptlnted to the Baylot 14*?ard line,'Dawson, who picked op 46 yard* Then the Steer*got another break Riley caught the pass on the Tex­Ik nin# carries, and Townsend, Wfcen Don Mewwco intercepted as 15 arid broke loos# from two <#$e fcj$ek*d veil atfday, gained Iibell's jfkss On tlte Saylojf 31. But Longhera defenders '„ wg . -8 .500 Fadin, and Paul William* rushed ?T ond half kiekoff in fourteen plays SMp .. .1 , 2, < ,M$ label! hai$ on tho third-down pass­ for their third touchdown. Daw TCIT 1 2 .833 ing attlfiipt.ionlTlt-jribd WB' «n*a Toiny*--itie e& ldas-t^L«wis .tevine pasi ffdtigt Arluuisas field goal formation wet* th« W§:faetors in the drive. On fourth down frotn the Bay­lor 18, With the Longhorns need­ing six yards for a lityt, Tomp*Idas called a ftka field goal afr tetapt and passed to Levine behind jlscreen far M yards. After^thres: tries by Townsend, Tompkinssneaked across from the one for the aeore. Tomkin^ kick was By KELtY OiOZlER it 20*? midway of the third period. * V. Am**/ appru em* •• . , SIDEUNE SPRINT carn« feet bloclttng enabled fhe a and a 16-yard penalty' featared tfrdly weary group of Lot^horns were struggling out-of •safetyrnan to etud6 the Baatth the drive, A-iS-yard pass from la­ ^ ^ 'jc* **'>)•? * sweat-drenched orange pants and heading for the shower#. = _ ' Th;*# waa m^iMflay» tather B«cir racfs a feeling of complete satisfaction sented to the w!nning*'4&am. 'fHi of having hasten a good team-. ­ tiiise it wsin't the ball 'that %ad Surrounded by fans, footba}! been .: used , during moftt if ^e plsy«r% and newspapermen, Bliir Was game. When Texas iuidc'its-last \T ^ H j, Charry was smiling and calm. touchdown—Dillon's great 86­ "Baylor, ^wif high for tit)* game, yard. punt return—the ball lust and that Istiall is one sweet ball vanished after the conversion./ plsyer," h* pointed out. y <' Somefanjust" keptgoingwil, M*' •> -H* turnad and ssked the pity* tha , pighide, and as Jim Mlid,avs, "Who threw those key blocks "ThOy just happened to haVe'tl^sthat shook Bobby DiUoa kosa on ona around.^ that punt-returnt" WACO, Nov. 11—(8pl.)-^Ali , , Byron Townsend was the happi­ was qniet and aiirn in the Baylor It was agrted that gib Daw-est"man in the dressing room; and > m. dressing room after drtpping the fcdn thrsw' the block ihat started his face showed signs of hB busy J-Point decision %o the Texas the run, and then thft rest of th« day's work/ There were skinnod ^Xtonghorns. Th«r« #ak no bOiiter­Steers got into th^ iCfc v: • marks from his forehead to his ras shouting and yelling, last the One Of the outstanding lihe-chin. backers, Jack Barton, "Was tugging wint sound of the shOwers and Sitting on a truiik reji few mambling .of the playcte, at Jersey number 65, and just was. Don "Tiger" Menasco*. His "«« th«y* changed from football, grinning. lie crimmtnted, "Bay­liead had a band .of gauze going' Ofiiftmna to street clothe*. ..4,; lor sure has a good team, lots bet­two ways, and there was a we«ry ter than most people thintc. They grin under his cork-blackened -f ItNaaa "Dnd'a Hay" at Baylib aur# liave a bunch of j(»ke pass *ye»­ jm& ea«Ji^ playei'j-fath«r wan and--T^-plays that-tn«ke it hard When^asked-about h» interceptataiiding by his #o%!a ' for* Knabacker ^o figure out how tjon of a Baylor pass,that g^nedft,/; to console him and1" to plnt.'^ ^ ~ V... Texas poSiBesSion of tha ball iifltbe »ir%vy.+ * hard gaase to Joey* The director of the fttser de? important fourth quarter, he said,Head Coach George 8au# wil fense, and running main of Bar* "Isbell is sura hard to figure;. I :roving awuad th# Iroom, patting ion at the other linebacker post, couldn't teflnfor fturo when he was cadi player on th* haek and «el£> June Davis, pointed out. that Bay­going to pass, but it was won­fcig him he played a good game, lor had a great variety Of plays. derful to £md the ball there." :•. aaked to >«hoese ^adu^i H» agreed that Isbell is a great Menasco -was the only Long­^pyuttS .fate® r:y*N6^?1i^pK^ quarterback. As to what pads the horn injured in the rough andand AiM, thf tall mentor re-plays work so well, he said of the tumble play, although all thepUad, 'KTfeere's not rtuich to choose SCINTILLATING SCATBACK Baylor backSj "They have a bunch Steers showed the wear And tear of r batwraan them. The Texas team Buddy Parkw.' who scored two of feat little hacks, and they are the game: The cut on Menasco'shas mot*, versatilfty, and A*M Baylor touchdowns, predicts all good." head was not serious and did not didn't appear to be as strosg in "that tha Longherni will have a Jim Blaylock, equipment mana-requirestitches. . ;fha. ,airas; ^tpufb time boating Texas A. ker, wis standing in the:corner All the boy; agree that there;y^:A?Ml^>n«wap.^awfir' it M, The team that gets the with the game ball which is pre-are "just two tough ones left." men on any one s^uad in my life* braalu will win that one, Parker , axeluding pro footbsdl," Saaer -said. The Bear ooa^ Vss aBkfed ^0 stated 'James Park BtuW lait Bears Win Here; But.. he thought was tha most useful halfback who scored two of their man on the Longhorn sqpuad.' • three touchdowns. He maana tkaf TEAM STATISTICS -1 l*tt h*Ifbaek»—P«rk«r, Joaa*. CarV«a­ ""That Stolhandske looked good the team who gats the most breaks t*r. Shannon, Curtia, Jl ­ ftot 0»mi« Blcfat halfback*—J«ttr«y, liott. Bur. and Procter is a line" boy.*lone will:win the Texas-Aggie game. luktlf ii s 1 PuUbatka—Boydatun, Parma. . Brocato. Putiai Davis was the best defensive Quarterback tarry Isbell, the JP*aalii«. . r 1 i SCORE B^PSRIOOS ' man," ha replied* second leading aerial gainer in Yards Stulif vJt _? .S t ' He said his boys played ft good tne Southwest Conference, didn't f::s issxff. ytr-|,7. f j f—20 jam*, and he couldn't find any have too much tt© sty about the lntere«pt«d by. Ywri* . T««mi Touchdowna*—Jowmtnd. 8tol~ fcwk spots in his defense against WP'-' .' • V hahdake, Tompklna, Dillon. Points after ^petas 'T-formation. Fumblea Loit. -S4-,|louchdo«rn—Tompkina S.-, He did say, "They (Texas) haVe Panto -; Baylari Touehdowna—Park«r . J, Hilay. Coach Sauer concluded, "It was a good ball club and a bunch of Punt' Point*, after touehdowii-TDtekeratfa 1./ Pmaltle* a: haartbreaker to lo«e4 but I'll 40od linemen^" INDJVIDUAlfSTATISTICS take my squad any day over the Isbell was'asked to say which RUSHING ,>^axaa team." v V';' •: Vr • " Texas player was the best defen­^ •any II m •«.;s^::^i;.S^||a. ^>*;:way tO1 sive man, in his opinion.' ut* „, .fitter, fame. Bnrlor — ,—IS 77 74 W hm Baylor , ,, , 10 11 SO 1.0 lot«e/' Wflped Jim Jeffrey, right to single out any Let* , «S S.S, "Jt'a hffd Towaaciut. T«xu ;'„:M <0 II® halfback who picked up a lot -• a*r. Oawaon, Texaa ^^9 49 49 4.4. one nyin, but that Bubba jthands, Lift cuutl:—HeFadiB, SemlL ' . Pwrkor, Baylor „, „,11 SS , St t.i ef md#gf for the Bears «n the •defensive halfback^ ^ras pretty ' gewaa; K«*d«-.-*3?'nw#^''' label], Baylor i i ti 21 l«;f ground and catching Isbell's pas-good," he replied, Ki*ht rtMcrMimW,, Ppk»nh»*, D*»U. LotIbc. Twcaa -IS 4 • .S7 t, Sh«nd»r Oebo*. "Their passing was more, dan­ lik# J just can|t gtt on * team Poilbarka—Towns«U, Port*r, , _ 'JWJWT,inc. .iy0'^v^u, gerous thaa their-running, and puttt yit. mvg.that can heat a team' out of rheir Mocking was not as good IiWl. Baylor _5 ;18i SS.t Left • 'h?;IM«k#raon, Portor, (T«ti .#»•'*» Austin." •* •• a# other teams I've met. A&ll had Lift UtklMh-ftm, Cms0, ' "Texas played a pretty cleih L«ft iwMtaUi, FIRM, Ather. PASS X&EIVING a better blocking team than Texas. Centers—Coefarsa, Galloway, Slice. -jr4»*T4M <*me. TheyTJ have a rough time ^ , am*li« 1 X The tiling that hurt us most was Scfc •n*r4s—-B.' Ijriij, Ctlkofii) H»»-Hiler, Biylolf ^„4 S* , *ith A&M though, and it will be s Tompkins' to Stolhandske/' Boyd* tfce breaks that will win the game/* •"n, Mid-n#w*», hit»ioi*h,<£*ftrlyi "wiTviniT' a ;*•; S I -•^wa ,T.»>W Ty»«a. • • v. SO . 0 OuiVMkwkir-bWl 9*r Pro«t«r, T«*aa II ~0 , TSf FOOTBALL SCORES Mw SOUTHWEST rf>3 "J**? PW&m *8,^Tennessee Xa«^i 14. 80. J •£•1*11 m Hm IHttjr Tuts, a fai*«nH|r ef obSikid WaJcaFonst M.Dukw?, Th, .a*«ra»*p«rpar of Tha DnEvvraHir of Ttsaa, la SMU SO. (?eorgia 6, Florida0.,bi:: ^ e*«» SHnraias UMM M«b4|s> and 8*»irclay, § flam Baustoa Jf»iEST1 HfiifoU 21, Iowa 7. Hi i I at W at-^astfa, i :7f» d-* ^Bi6ei4tEfr#|»wjs1^—— -• -jJ­ 86, Iwa i ib»«aiiMi el iiu 2#,fr ' Ok^hoata Kanaka jsjA iMGrtm Sf^wlMi^Kaiwsa «iwieiaatoe^ Z-7 Missouri 21, Colorado . ••MilbiAlMLaiariaMai^aaaMrifeiaMaiMaiMM Ohio State 19, Wisconsin m MHIfcm OMwaa — tnmlMt .** 1 Pwto# rf-..l^a J}teWwn80,lndia»* 7., . _ -«Waa»o — Bostoa •*.1 Lt» jbiMte WiaiWataJST* ™^Wo»lgstel<. ' 1 "'• ' III Itl|..trihu.iij.uij.r )| , .itujg/.­ sssss? fc 7t\ Csl If,UC3L WaAington 27, " 1 suMatfirrio 39®! Wit* mgRSBgm * SPSS 1 - SHtol- Theonejacketydu canwcar Warn pwrii Hft*4 |mM f*r fc|l|»|M»n MHUA WfVIVTf WvwnWf WW| •vi>^ *» •< fillI Ml R UalMdl Murt iwf mil* WN1M1 W^VFi CONVERTIBLE JACKET W4. MT. N*. 244tttl For ony we'erite^ anywhere, McGrggor*t Tripli; Threot-jacket. For, the coldest days, wear the fOfii­plete jacket. The shell is wind and water repellent, for your casual use indoors, just flip off the outer jacket—the inner jacket is rich -100% pure wool.; For in-between days wear the outer jacket alone, you wear it, you'll enjoy it! ^ fv>'i" ; jm. ^'7i CORDUROY ^ V Mi,, ; %V& mi ~ik$ %r H#nV« REAL BUY in a f&if H)«t looks twice Hit money ,•,»imortly " -m Nflored in full easy California model : % P I liar potch pocketf f|n«|~^ 'If f" ilhf pinwalo cdrduroy ^it^ f«lhh«w»f,{iw ' ^V'» "I '' ^ ^ 1 wH m iRAV^ • HAW M aim MAK00N SSk13•or *»*«. ^j^aTT^Sn • >l-»*%?&* :-W mow*™® mmsm isp^^w^te Y''' w11 ytftV* 1,1. kli, »> .1, ViWr .•mmx mm . ..... f ... • ,...-.,j .-, h championahip.) The result jit SMtJ out *tt uprod?. PiremajrFtw! Benhers, big Methodist wingmati trotted,thefeatf and it wa*o« tk long rtm but Darrow *amfclefey*ote id It wtf DALLAS, ... . „. „., '., i -fc ^ -,i , • _• fr v.'.v'. •* ,t_-t-a v_ • M' ! . • :;Te*a» A. ft M.'b grinding ground Twice tiie mighty fuWback of of the chamuionBhin running and, the migbty ^MU bomber, almost over .to give SMU a 20-19 lei^_ more, than Wty«rd* 4sv«iag*<. / missed the tary for point. f Aggie touchdown early in iuu fame, with the great Bob Smith the C tn all likelihood, out of a bowl I passed tijeriMetbodfcta to victory, _ A. A M. roared to .881 yard* . SMU too*a' 7-e iead late i» the The Aggie* went ahead eany In period. Kyle dropped the ball first period with a 2%-yard pas* the second period with a 62-yard the SMU 17. In four plays the J pounding a thunderoua rhythm, rani, oike ibr 74 yards and a»$ game* It sliot the Aggie* into *ec-""** ' Mf T'tf-g.".".11 ; r «n the ground and"only 32 in the •'.•• v ? i'n'w»w."ay" from H. N. Ro«s«ll to Kyle Rote punt return by YaleLary carrying gies had tbe seme. \Fbwt Southern Methodist into the other—the game's ' clincher—for ond plac^ in the Conference cim-the game in .th^e bag when 'witl. air. SMU picked np 228 rushing and 298 passing. setting it up on the Aggie six to tbe SMU 36. The pay-off W" SMU itoa rttnd •#*' Cotton Bowf turf 26-20 Saturday 7% as the Aggies shot down * txdgn ^ * less than five minutes ta go Ben* Bote in two tries got the score. an il-yard dash around end by 83-yard touchdown drive with Bote and kepi the Aggiea in the battle Southern Methodist team that The laafc^ quarter of Saturday's ners stung a 58-yarder to Benny Smith gained the astounding, €%enfi fappuw^ ^gcoting on a oae-yard lor the Southwest Conference tried everything, and failed battle had a crowd of 76,467/in Whiteont&eAggierfiveandtfie total of 297 yards running withy \ Smith then wicotfced his Jlrst <-£ V—>• v t —.v.:.1,,!1,.'(» " -!r few* ^ " -*­ 1J / p. , « A " A k m* . < > .-!• i v--. * "Vt •*£ A * ' A i ^ S&Hi IN THE GRANft MANNER OB INFORMALLY FASHIONABLE " * 1 1 ^ ", J* ^ • * -v s 15-V 1 <1.. j"*• v %'•§ t„. T. . »..Agj i 'i I Hr ' irt-' tA? ' »'$ •4-J -'f1 Al* v \ t 5*-\ ... i-« N'gCT ""7^0^ Here is a tux$do you can feel natural in! Roomier, lighter-weight," more flattering,' yet feiiS completely correct for. your formal .occasions, the double-breasted peak lapels with satin flattering, dressy, smart! facing add a smart elegance to the midnight Made of all-wool imported tropical.worsteds, blue of the suit. Regulars, shorts, fontjs. Men's \ » » ^•^tJa-T^K'3 :-T<&-t Jt Clothing, Second Floor. T •. ., t'Y >r,m r.f ^If ' * ! " vi* v, jrisa^wSS* AJ '* •y « V we've laid out everything, complete to your < '-V ^ X> «• / ^ ^ V ^ i~rU&* i.\W ^ • "* -jK^^ i J£» N v t< "J "*<" smoke pearl buttons! informal clothes with »v.. ­ "*7 i ~ JB » FORMAL JEWELRY, 3.50 plus tax.'Cuff link end stuls in smoke, jet, or maroon. ft-4at-home comfort in fit WHITE SILK MUFFLER, 2.95. Pure, luxurious * ~ silk with self fringe for pooler evenings. -h K hANDKERCHfEFS, 1.00. White .sheer cord ..SILK TIES, £50. NM^ coiisJirislKs" \ sn nade in Switzerland: Hand-rolled hems; » - •O'.-v terns in pure silk foulards to wear with your ^ - , .' r BLACK HOSE, M)0. Regular or ai^et length in easy-to-care-for nylon.,^ , ? - A n-•jfe J ,/ Hf , dark suits for informal occasions*,,.' v * " 'Miv SHIRTS 1.95. Fine count white broadcjpiK with French euff*, modified spread or reg-„ M s 7r WHITE GLOVES, 5.95* In-spotless capeskin to dramatize the dark blue of your tuxedo. i \ 1 « ^„ Mm& VV''^--^^'Fboffe', type collar..Men's Furnishings, Street ' ' •* • . f «? SUSPENDERS, IJ0. is with •, ; / ' Ml < ||S-y . tip with regularla>nstruction,'the perfect com* THE v3LCAU» OXFOROt M95.Stj|f /*! lilt; /j-i ^|?5SC * MP tsached. Smart, comfortable formality^.,, y,;,y M«ns Furni5hingsl .Strwt^ rfopK^rf.,: ^ : ^ — -jaiatss--#. t 1 * ; : , *4 t^i—t 1 \xT 'vJ? ^ &£ mr* - panion for your dark** dressy informal suit*. Men's Shoes, Street Floor* )t$!h.S.&1 « " -'V: BLACK PATENT 6XFORD, f0.00. Correct for f^xedo or tailsr lightiyrbuilt fof -dicing # «v 1^* •:.t. • "\: • Itfef \ comfort. Sizes A'/j.t* 12.-,Men's Shoes. Stre^f ^ w-"kllfrIh r ft* /11 pt^.rr,^ ; <•4 •4i" t.»5: i * i&t! ;\5« -tfk ' •sn.r M i ansas, fitlf . Howlon Scorn Spectacular TD ®t$WL • Swpwv-f J«% By BltUCS ROCHK ^Mr. Whttidcer fosterfd ibe intn» The first en< -^ffi|kr&4 who fhy^t tod m i, 9mm imwOfrt C+,«t4toM» , time you meet him he"^ mural idea, from -absolutely doesn't have to say he's glad tar* SO minutes, fired the Rice Owls to "• for two months we have been nothing in 1818 to a point where meet you. Wham1, That smile *"JH& Southwest Conference fbefc doing an injustice to one fine indi­11,897 students -participated" in steps right tip and says mpr$i,­ Mil victory over hot and cold Ar- vidual. 1849. I' *'> , than words ever could.^ - kansas before 20,000 WihsppS Until a friend"told ^tos of our % Basketball, handball, wr^Clittisr; When you are pushing'an ift** >utfcttmecomer* here Saturday; 45 -f mistake, we had referred to the vack, and cross country attracted tramural program big enough -• 3 Howton, weighing but 1?? field where intramural. football, 800 entries in 1918. Today a stu­put every man in a sport, you at^ "founds, wade »n unbelievable softball, soccer, etc..are played as dent can enter 22 sports. to meet opposition of som#~ catch of Vernon ' Glass' 31-yard Intramural Field. Building this impressive intra­sure nature somewhere, people who say \ pass for the Rice touchdown in the But, no sir. It is Whitakeir mural set-up. has • been no easy the University has neither money I first quarter. Near the end he Field*. naSmed in honor of the task, for Mr. Whitaker had to nop "pace for intramurals, | caught another long throw by founder and present director of overcome obstacles caused,by war Gltss deep in Arkansas territory the intramural-, ^program, Mr. And it takes a lot of determine I and business crises. J "to set up a safety that rounded Berry Whitaker. reason tion, plus the ability to smile, to $ The for his Suc6ess in out the Owl scoring. An«T it is a fine name indeed to keep your program moving afce*aclc Byron Town-third Texas touchdown, which quarterback Ben Tompkins sneaked liminaries Which have begun'SM Beta Phi^ with.. 15.1 seconds. A lot of people think of Mr.| and Norman "Price and took the send (30) is In qrdtap of eager Baylor, Bears* Townsdnd Jhad to over for from the one on the next piay.Jdentifiable Bears are < ended, has set the pace that com­Mardie . Moore, Kappa Kappa Whitaker as Mr. T.tj. One person| down. ball away from -* them ^-rfy for a touch; struggle thusly for,every one of the 40 yards* he gained'Satur-petition will have to njest in the. Gamma, completed the 28-yard pnt it just right for all who know Z j fullback Frank Boydstun (35), guard Dick Calhoun (60), and half. -F? s day. On fhis,particular jptay he picked up one yard to set up the back. Buddy Parker (2Q)V „ Tuesday .and Thursday night back crawl in 18 seconds, and the director of men's intramurals:" Bill Wright converted, and dtr finals this week*. • V.; .;, HeienBlountfDeltaDeltaDelta, "You are indeed an asset" to-; tually, that was all Bice needed.1 Ten teams competed in th6 pre­crowded tor a elose second in the' University-^-and I hope yt, v Arkansas finally carried a goal-Women's Sport World ,x— , m- 19.7 seconds. will have many more years here.' lims of the seven-event meet. Six ward drive all the way in the third teams were placed in orange Norma Dolley, Kappa Alpha quarter after sophomore Larry bracket, and four ih white bracket S§ft*£* Theta, placed first , in form swim­ Hogue, a third-string quarterback, for the finals. ming. Evelyn Oglesky, jw Beta Wpmen's Intramural took charge Jriaf"" tfar In the. $5-yard free : style Basketball Ctiriic^ei^fofcliMonday ..... . Phi1 placed second, tod ' Jane Hague's sneaks through the mid­ Cynthia~«35andahl, "XM "tRn^PTfMood^lK^pa^^ Kappa ^iSn^ L Calendqr dle and Off tackle accounted for: LOUIS*, r and will continue until the pre­must have at ieast two practices^et.'will play Ann Collette, Delta ^ -third. i . 2?^ fVomsn'tlntramural Writer liminary tournament begins Tues­"~v MONDAY most ef the yardage as the Basbrv to be eligible to participate.. 'Zeta, /IP backs went from the Owl 46 to A multiplicity of sports requir­28. Each player Basketball is 'Austin High Advances In the 75-yard medley relay the TOUCH FOOTBALL - day, .November one spoi$ which Deck tennis is going into the with a S o'-clook • ii-v. ing varying degrees of skill and . Chi Omega team wais firit FWd 1 ZTA' n vs. KkG U ' the four/ Baddy Bogers burst can take care of as many teams fonrth round with no upsets. By Beaming Bucs, 21-0 scant 59 seconds, and the Kappa FWd n Dg V*. PBP Jl d through for a touchdown. George coordination* but .aimed to. dey as will enter, space is not a prob­ Basketball rules clinitf tot ttuttm 1^5* * The Austin Maroons continued Alpha Theta .team came through and eaptalns ln Gym l-36. ; ' Thomasson's kick for point ms veiop both; are 'constantly going, yhS' The Top Ten lem* The dormitories and -board­ Touch football is entering the their drive for the District 14AA in one^ minute. . no good. on in the! Women's Gym, which* ing houses as well as the sorori­championship Friday night as they The 100-yard novelty relay, CI' With less than four minutes left is one of the most complete gym­Here is hqw the top ten t^ams, ties and church organizations are semi finale in both 'orange and JXT»S MEET AT OLD ALL SE- lo play, Glass passed. 30 yards to nasiums of its kind in the •> coun­as rated by the AP last week, urged to enter at least "one team white brackets. The play-offs be­defeated the Corpus Christi Buc­which involved carrying a ping • HAV£ YOUR MEETINGS caneers, 21-0, at Hpuse Park. pong ball in a tablespoon, was OR EAT YOUR FILL ... MAKE'SHowton on the Arkansas>11. Riee try. The sports range f rom indi­fared this week end: consisting of ten members. . tween seeded Wica, who • • • • " fi?st The Capital City eleven teeth NO.DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU D gave op the ball on downs-at the vidual to team play in pfcysical 1. Army ^mangled • J •r ' • -;;T< > won by. Alpha Chi Omega in 2 .JUST GET--DOWN THER'c ^'iv, . weak New • meets third seeded Kappa Kappa two more victories to sew up minutes, 12.8 Seconds. Kappa At QUICKER HICKMAN'S THROUGHl six. But, on the next play, Aikan-training, intrathurals, and tJTSA. Mexico, 51-0. i , ., Tennis and table are tennis Gamma, and second*seeded Pi Phi their third straight championship pha Theta placed sec^d with 2 . BE SEVfLLIZED sas shifted froni the T into *deep " In the' intramural division a 2. Ohio Staia took advantage in the quarter Hnals. In ten-®»eets fourth seeded Alpha m as ms^ j^years. The minutes. 17.7 a«eowH«, „ OLD SEVILLE. teoi Cuailaliv* St. spread fonnation and Center Har­basketball clinic will be held^Mon­'of two Wisconsin ertors to edge old Stockton snapped the ball past day at fife o'clock in Gym* '186' |he Badgers, 19-14, nis. Mary-Marcelle Hamer, Kappa I^elta Pi, will determine what Antlers of Kerrville, however, Akb Bowles placed first and Kappa Gamma, was aeeded first loom as the biggest threat to the Hogue and oat of the end zone for for \thei manageri and captains, 3. Okhlran*, trailing 13-7, teanut will play the final game In Maroons. Sally See second in the diving and she will meet Mickey little, event. . an Owl safety. ms well as interested members of scored four touchdowns in the last the orange bracket. Wica, seeded.second, Betty Gray, V'Y.Arkansas drives rangingup to the teams. Rules with special em-quarter to down Kansas, 33-13. The teams placed in the orange Newman, who has had Httle com* bracket were ACO, CO, DDD,yartfarsssbedilse pfcass*,»:L,foulsajid violationa-wilj 4. K«mtuckjr poured over fear petition so fax,"~winTffay""S^®r UTSA-news-Mickey-isittie, KAT+ KKGf eight, 15 and 18only to nm out be discussed. second-pleriod-touchdowns to' 5 InMmvrat Sdmiult and PBP. Tfiose^ of ~ ' " Jane Weeks, .Zeta Alpha. president, will-^hgld, a special ini-the white bracket are ADP, DG. "uUtynitiiU- Tau Basketball practice has begun swamp Mississippi State. 48-21. Rbsmarjr Sone, Wesley, has' been' tiationserviee-forthosewhowere nn \ ZTA> ... . ' MONOXY ~5. Texu took the measure'' of seeded third and will play -.Bon­vnaUe to attend the October 25 TOUCH FOOTBAU.Baylor, 27-20 ner Baker; Pi Beta Phi. The initiation. The service willJbe in Class A ­ 7 o'clock . :• • hfrr-y. -i: WE HAVE PLENTY ! ! e^CiiifornU wrapped up Rose "fourth seeded June Knox, Garb-the Reception Boom in the Wom­0»H Grove ri. Pern Club. . Bowl honors by « ^f,-i UCLA/35-0. slaughtering ma fm Jfetiumeets Page Wilson, en's Gym at 5:30 p.m. Wednes­Pbl GaokBML Delta vs. XJnlversfty Cbrls-FREE . . . Factory Method rZeta T|b Alpha,.; -^ day, November 15* • , , / tUo. , „ 1 7. SMU 'lost to terrific Bob RRESTd'NE Smith anjf^ In &ble tenuis *it wfll be "first _ J« 7 o'clock ecappmg^ •> /' the v Texas Aggies, seeded Gay Zedler, Alpha l)elte Ruth Fulcher won~ttRT Racket Kappa 8i£tja".w«:Clltf Court*. -NIGHT 20-26. "• "" * 'i/Jpj'frvfctVi-r.r.'f,.),.-­ e.,\ * ' j§ Pi vs. Ann McNeill. Second seeded Club progressive tournament. She Oak Grove, %• Westminster. 8. Ftlacetoa ran up the biggest June Knox, Gamma Phi Beta, re> was awarded a silver racket pi*. BADMINTON SINGLES - Seat Covers-HCar Heaters ANfj^.R.EEZE :I score against Harvard in history, 7 o'clwk DELIVERY &' 9 ceives a default. Third seeded Racket Club is holding the AB Peter C. Qooyeser vs. Fred Pi McCowen. winning 63-26. Margaret Chadwell, Alpba Gam­which highest Donald H. Anderson vs. Jack G. Klatt. ' '• 9. Miami* (FUu) was held to a tournament, the James £*, Saunders vs. EuKene Banspaeh. k £k" ' Chote's Sinclair Serv. Sta, ma Delta, will meet Betty Gray; ranked meinbers are ' partnered GOLF SINGLES . SPIRES SftinfiingM3-13 tie by Louisville Newman. Fourth seeded Betty with the lower ranked girls. The Last dar ior second -x>und of third, MOM'S CAFE Friday night. fourth, and fifth flight*. Score* midst b« Ittt St. end Sw Antonio PH. 8-7482 Beaaley who was beaten by Bob­winners of this tournament will in Intramural Office not later than 8*J0 .. Gvadalnpe Phone 10. Hliaoi« stayed in the Big Ten bie Jean Burch, Westminster Stu­receive trophies at the T night a.m.Tuesday. « •••:<' 4117 SPIRES TIRE CO. race, beating. Iowa, 21-7. First day for Mcond' round of ateth, 839064 dent Fellowship, in the first up-banquet. seventh, and eighth flight*. The>« >nay Ph. 63-122] S810 Goablop. be ' played Monday, Tuesdays and Wednesday. >Tht following m"en are 'mSM- scheduled t« play: * Sixtli Flight William IU , Adams v*.--M. B. Tomme. s <"*' IT* J '3 Robert • K. Steer v*. James H, Haerlson. Frank Karaffa vs. K. t. HalL Jim Youngjohn ve. Bobby Hai;ser. :i V..S _ > -Seventh' Flight ' " • HOLIDAY HOUSE R. 8. Weatherall vs. Don Meek: • <• '' Bernard Sklbell vs. Btch Carlos talker. CXJKB SEHVICS > Robert Parr vs. W. S. JJoomis. . v Allan Rosea vs. BilKBonham. Eight flight ^ Fountain — Steaks Hfll Ctieker vs. R. S. Nonnent.. Edwtfrd Gipson vs. James Franc!*. 'Robert Roper vs. Charles Craig. Henry Dalehite vs. William F. Buwh. SOCCERI? ^ • • a O'clock 45.;, , "fiS t&vf ^ V Alpha Epstlon Pi v*. Phi Sigma Kappa, 1005 Barton Springs Road v ? o'clock ­ -* £ Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Tau Delta Phi. . a:-o'clock . Phi Delta Theta vs. Sigma Phi Epsllon. i ) 'i' ' „ <, /?^d"pMS2 if 3-1 ' SHf li ' h > i<2 fl-J , 4-- %-f > fete h.\ JLsVh 4 fV **-StylerRighti jV) r* K\ ,% i *4- V V** 4? km 4f,v 4 &•> itmm§ JU& TUXEDDS ft# m. * • "V (Wmm*P by West Mill Ta8oj*cl by West Mill, these rfylisM # I ^ stylish tuxedos are tha Fashion ^•<> C ^Academy Award Winners of 1950. "Year-rourttl weight ^ives year^-ound versa- Luxury that Barns its Keep with Many. ., ^lity« Tuxedo prices begin at lavith rif -wS ik ' 'Lrv ,, f ^ve A Tfioosends ef men eonfeit addiction to t|ie luxurfoif/, comfort df tbi« Nunn-Bush full leather lined ihoe,. J;'1 :/44" * one of the finest Nunn-Bush he* ever ,-mede. Al-1' tbbugh lt costs a titt)# mbre, the full leather lining! Accents for nd the .treated rooiiture re«stlng upp«iL.can be that "Besft ^®S»«rf on te retwn every cent In the form e Iwfra of telkf^ng wear*' ^0" -Dressed Slylt 80} 5r> 'Ms MosfWmn~Bu*h Styles$16.95 ta $2i.$0 Air! axm •Edgertm Shoes from $t0.9£ ii ,4Leedbtt4tin#dJ^ •*ta«ti«pi fm$n au collar Irat-I •winaj^ rj aa l *>*3 TliuxlShirts Only f* aW > ytiv m /fj£c •iir-.y­ WRjn&a A; »•) % • tr*.. IT». r .. r.••: . i".! jtu'nuua*)! * m * ino m n *«? m* * K oiwFaith draws to |t-close Sunder a^rnoon, 6$ wiU •C • MSS.V3* after two weeks of inter- w»nd; the-;in«#ly-fonnipd • {fan An­ inational ®bservance; Peek's coffeorum tfhich will b$ ' SEOtJL, Sup4*L tonio Friends meeting with Dan '4' V-Allied troops attacked" ^»rtl>. > denominations, the Austin held ,in theMain Lounge of the W&i-.... , ^e Pe^ _ ^ *• ?cJ i*a£ nda Meeting and the Baptist Stanislawski and Olcutt Sanders, T ex a s ' Union Wednesday at .ward from Mr Chongchoit RW dent /Union* will hold services members of tfae localgroup." 4 p.m., Bob Biumenthal, chairman lakesuccess, Nov. tates sjQ^MsItin* against.Ofatoa. U Wednesday in voting4ot A# bridgehead in ; northwest Korea tiott^sainej ia a hyoad^ftilgr of the »Student-Faculty Relations —Communist, Chii^ notified the 2.' The Chinese Communists, in Saturday, gaining four miles In -pins, radio, » m^sag« froB* M inritation to the Chine^ R^it that Two services of the pampas Committee, announced. United Nations Saturday she is ac­mother communication later to three hour*. ' • u jg ; Foreij^i Minister kgl fremie* ederick Woodhouse, London >r and director of the Intl-for Crusade revival at; the Uni­Speakers for the discussion will cepting W Security Council invi­2M, sai^l tiMy r«l«eted a Security he had a'number «f qaeitions to. Chen E^Lai to ^fwiettojrversity Baptist Church will be led include Dr, C. E.Ayres, professor tation to present her own case Council invitation issued Novem­«ik ^heir; r^pmeiitatives if and We aa^ kte Opera Company, will tajik 16-& ut Friends organizations in by Neal Jones. "One will be at of economics; Dr. George W. charging the United Nations with ber 8 for Peiplng t0 gend * d«3*-when they 'came|g|-m ' The-Siivane# irdlce a five-day Council President Ales Bebler.) • t, Hoffman, assistant professor of aggression but is rejecting*. aimir. «ation here to talk Hbout Am«tt* A fMoIution before t|ie UK tfir Ut* opean countries at 11:45 a.nv 11 a.m. and at 7:80 pjn. Jones Since the' Chinese Cffihn utists^11* ' om 26 ot the "Y." geography; Stuart* Long, news lar bid by. the council to discuss can chiwrg^tha^ ifie Chines* Cota-want to talk about American Ag-. In' the period of quiet, Chinese auunds that Chinese Red tror> troops had pulled back to far north are not, the alSeaTHE BOWERYCLUft "Focus" has been an inter* .Free coffee will be served.. All eign Minister, Chou. En-Lai, aiw < ,3. The Chinese Coihmunists pro­tunity tor ask* Ms questions. out war against ~ 'EntMftalunMit •nd"-''' 'h'< denominational emphasis period, interested Students are invited; nounced the decisions in two sept*, posed, in torn, that the Security The. Ua^Mtt Division «n4 ^ : Choti's first telegram to Lie was Dancing Nightly in which ntaje religions groups arate cables to the UN Se<*retary-Council consider togethei their -Whether the ^Keds Withstand British Brigade' struek foar miletmerely a short noticB that bis dele- Special Partiea Incited *-?• participated, it was sponsored by Vets Receiving Benefits General, Trygve Lie. charges concerning Formosa and »nd fight or continue wi^dr»win!ft northward en the West end of Hm gatioa wotild leave November 14. 407 E. 6t)r '4 " the University Religious Workers The situation, in brief, is this: was the big question, of other American aggression in 100-mile allied line acrOM tii« It wiU be headed by. Wd Hsiu» ?or Reservations, Call 70484 Association and the Religious Must Tell VA of Recall J,. The Peipitag regime notified Korea and air attacks o{i Man» (The Chinese Communist gov-waist of North Korea. The# M Chuan. Be has Been identified as Emphasis steering committee. Lie a nine-man delegation will de-churia. ernpent rejected Snnd&y the invl-almost no oppositionu -In Hartm chief of the Rvaisi&n seetion of tation of the United Nations to y>t~i-tTi rntrtils hail m response to a Seourife^ Cotin- officials here, on the basis.of the "geipter^oreigr: ftfflc*. His aiscnss Chinese fted intervention reached the approaches to Pal^ should notify their local VA rep- cilinvitationextended^wsptember commiinications receiyed from , ": 2438 'Guadalupe w^at it ift for, and date of return Ike to service. DALLAS, Nov. 11. — (&) — tional situation in the second of General Dwight Eisenhower said two Dallas speeches. Earlier, he Saturday "Russia knows the told Columbia alumni the average United States cannot liv^ by itself American knows too little of his $lone." :• . ,• heritage; that "we haven't even' "They know if they can break given our young meft a concep­us away frooj the rest of the, tion of America and what it world vre a« beftten without a means/'. / ~7_ -• war," he said. The United States' needs a mili­tary force of 3,000,000 Eisen­ The Columbia University presi­hower told his City Club audi­dent told an audience at tile City ence. He said the problem ofClub the United States needs to A n«5?' raising national strength brings increase its.military strength. Up problefas in itself. ^ One of the reasons for In­creased strength is to hold sup­ vBSiuX port of "some allies who are with us only so long as we are strong," 4^F Draff Asked Eisenhower said. The World-War II commander of allied forces in Europe ended a four-day visit to Texas Satur­ By Army Surgeons day. NEW YORK,. Nov. 11—<£)— He touched on the intern*'' Drafting of men now.clasidfied Freshman Engineers recommended by a committee in the office of the US Army* Sur- To Be Tested Monday geon General A YEAR Sttr^SfColonel Wartfi* BoweiS," cUef ing convocatiaiL.will be held Mon­surgical consultant for the army, OF THE WORLD'S FINEST day at 7 p.m. in Geology Building disclosed the proposal ti> half out­14, W^ R» Hudson,, executive JUr right rejections at'S session Friday, ess*?*1 N^?fcsb ¥7 sistant to the dean of the College of the Aisociation of Militsiry Sur­ >N TRAINING IN of Engineering,'said. ' geons. .v; -^ Scheduled for the frosh engi­He said the committee recom­Xr" ,, U. S. AIR FORCE Selective neers is a test over the whole mended ' that Service course. v quit disqualifying lairg^ numbera Yes, air—it takesa lullyear'straining as an Aviation Cadet The purpose of the Convoca­of npn who fail to meet generalto earn your commission as an officer and pilot in theU. S. tions, held on each Monday night eervice requirements. lDsteid ^f Air Force. 8in<5e %e beginning of the semes­classifsning thfem as^F'and^cut-SCHOOL 0 ter, is to acquaint .freshman engi­ting them off from any army,ser­neering majors with all the fields vice wlwtsoever, they should be m Austin. Texas you can be sure that you've had the finest instructors and of engineering, so they may choose, classified for limited duty accord? training equipment that any ifyiagJfian ever h^ .^t that the field that suits them best. mg to their capacity^ ' ^ you are ready and aUe to cany out any mission assigned. For the Air Force be&evee being a good fiilot is just one News Briefs of the qualities necessary •«« yon must make a good officer as wed... and subordinates alike .. . capable of assuming and dis­ charging the responsibilities of your office .•.capable of being an officer of the U. & Air Force: Albania Legation in Belgrade Texan rf- m-W! So*** ogWAU mma™ In jet-pilot language that means ;:; GET GOING AND GET GOING FASTI Your take­off point is the Aviation Cadet Selection Team which will soon visit your own college campus. See if you can qualify. If you can...you're on the way Up to the top. First stop.;. aviation cadet training school. First pay .. <. $105 a m aw Battd om Ami——* , ^ Yufostavia broke off all but token ' diplomatic relations: with tiiiy neighboring Albania Satur­day in a feud touched;off by the Russian-led Cominform'si quioretwith Premier Marshal Tito. A Yugoslav spokesman said the Albania legation in Belgrade has been "closed and sealed." He made ptiblic a note handed Al­bania announcing the action. • • • Company official*^in New York reported telephone, service virtual­ly normal Saturday, but union sources indicated a nation-wide strike of 33,000 telephone equip? ment workers v-i> «sd vha a BOWAUP PAOT 2SCS Coaching mi IL SaaAfc: 1149 Grsndr{«w. OOAOHlNti.-tnmtlatiea*. rrenota-O«mM. aUt«a .U0S ttra . Antosio.7>S7I1. OOACTOjo rgiafC^ ^riweed. ToJe- For Sale yojrix pay pore «* tb« atores thaa m Mldnc for my late mode) Smttb-Coroim portable typewriter. Will eotutf}«rteadfns for a itandard eaaehloe in jrood8** Tom at 1708 Nuecea or pbooe7-lltT. KELVINATOR refrlserator. 1 enble feet,•wo T«*r» old, Exeelle&t eowiltiou.Pr<«* *180.6°. W*» IS80. Ura*. CM!6I-03S6. IJ08 Bentw«od Road. TUXEDO « BaUroomTO OAMCB TYPKTS' tOOhi A nwUI crom «t well,tn^tewd typJati at yow . Call•t*T *•«&»»*• and iml aadf. Lo«t and F6und "7^—,... r -fJ Gtl on Top..-.Slay on Tip... with th» UiS.Ah Force i«R : entS TYPEWRITERS -S :''^11 isttS&pt Da^*k--Monit> NEW..si® 1950 •K* AND TWO BBPBOOM • U 1 . I IV, i sr ? I. • EatMMAuni' A«ariirnt«TVM/\parTmenTt TOW* AND £.t*M ;\PWl|la.' «*.ledalvjfcH# ttm. M«tw.L^-l'oirtxatttoiM -L. ' ' TS-Vi•MlMietWak ^ m YoMU.SAIrfprt. SalMtien Upm will m PER MONTH b'l v >'; : •' '• 1 ntialylMtd. a)a« vtUtte*. Mum f*4i«t WW"! Nov«nb« 17 IV""1""'" MHOW:! . n,Vtth%. i'J.m Moffllhw KM1IH1U MtH. ML1UU UUUWHLi m you[rn orirjON ;JIIH awis cmio T«l 111!! (IB unoutiki ouiiy C-iWt UI3K p filiiLMi UKIdlHIT! * um ur- MiJi:: VMi£i j<.i EAST 6ib ST iiyiiLiSi a a PHONf 6260 3 z-.rezj* ^ S mnr msm } Kii^tt;^ tHB amY/racAW "/ "T ^ *<»•*• *V"5 UfH«r Mdn on Coittput iA ^^IWglgfWi {& '>r^. " V ' vf% iifA,m is the date questions About NE&l •pit . . ijection doesn't seem 1*>standany­deftts* Association—and the Texan hopes Because VT something comes of it this time. ^< , ^more, At ft convention in Illinois in Au­iatt, th6 e6m*jf_ gust the delegates unanimously backed By CHARLEY THIM«Ur;:! lie has ' perhaps seen more sh Stan Hickman, chairman of the e the pressure to wfn, win, T*»m dmrttm Jtotter * " * ^4hittee appointed by Lloyd Hand to in*i; UN action in Korea, condemned North by thi» criticism because WHY 18 CHERRY resigning? fit* alone, / vestigate the feasibility of joining. ttfSty Korean agression, and supported stu* i;, ' Motte tells a atdry about f Most new* stories and papers ported to thfe Student Assembly Wednes-? dents, in -countries "now struggling for || Hi* hair &as tamed eriy whieh illustrates wte--pfe»»! ltave dismissed hit resignation with* hi« wS ml? day night that not enough information? independence and self-goveraing status.** Wre point. Chewy and hto wife* a brief Motion of press handout S2L i had been gathered thus far to warrant'V -And students should realize the opjpioiv . Information without making any ^this bettw than •«ut for a ride, weht past the ^ &e a deciaioiwbut that information will be tUnities gained by joining. Its projects. serious attempt to analyse the anyone else. And it 5s probably tal hoepital at (through her efforts that the eoaeh fS^Slcomplete by November 2£>. v;'annation at their December 7 meeting, and change, summer study, travel and work atery than has come out of Wllbftjif , ^i^iormer CDach'nubV'hB' Wfid-. Svoif the Assembly believes.the question/projects outside the U.S., an economic Evans' publielty office. And it it* ttere' Wy be Other reason*. ^ Cherry 4a far from the "hail-fel ' hie wife replied seHouslyi -^.-'^warrants a student referendum, it will assistance program for stddents, and » this story we have attempted to,v , low-well-met" type, and there are ®i*ir, you joke( but if you don't put before the students before the ifresh ideas for student government from uncover -„ to know Who get out of this business it's going ' 1 ^ Christmas holidays. , 'other colleges, are just a few projects of those in a position Coach Cherry told the press eay he does not work well with to ruin your health completely. •v « The committee investigating NSA has NSA. -v Thursday tha^ or some time t iS™-< * those who are. When he took over It's not worth it." -'f-'toetk working. At present they are wait-The Tekah hopes that on Necember 7, . Kave had Intentions of entering the Texas coaching duties, he ^ yw might take the view tfcst i .. to letters written to ^the student assembly will see fijt to put-private business and the decision; « the University is losing* Coach ;i^!ng for answers shuffled his staff—notably Bully . / -jtnf?mh».r Universities—such as Harvard^the NSA program before the students* waa finally made some time ago." : Gllstrap. Blair Cherry it is because of us, ­^ Tiitnnia .yorth* . and that the students will aeefittn.maka_... Mrs. Cherry aaid she didn't know the fana.­western, California—Masking the University a member. 1ieTO made up his ml -though not by the players-—for y \ I'm;glad he'# getting out, It's.too his lack ttf intimacy with the team. —-The time seems to have passedmuch of a strain.The fana demand when students attempt to identify Comparison hasv been made with too mu6fc." Rusty Russell at SMU who serves football players as their fellowNettie While it might possibly be true "as a "father-confessor" to the clattttnatesi The time may be pass­that Mta. Cherry did not know tbe ing when a good coach will identi­ team on a etrietly professional ba^ exact time her husband _decid_e_d_ himself overzealoae IKE HAS PUT the verbal finger on " you "THEY'RE READY, but 81S. fy withv an fKinIc they1 re wise to our eSrly-morninq-to end his Ooaching career, it is etudent body. preventive war advocates; fighting a war to make the world safe duck-hunt—*They wanna know if were Are those criticisms valid? We doubtful,that she has been entire­ *When people speak to you about pre-tor democracy aiid then wie fought a war can not say. * _ ly ignorant that he would resign' ventive war, you tell them to go fight ; to end all M&ars, ever since the war to in favor of the oil busineas after But one thing remains pertain. g it," General Eisenhower told Rice In* I-end all. wars we have wondered about thft ieasen. . "T ' Blair Cherry has been an apt and stitute students in Houston Friday. .when the next war will come." — She hat had to answer the tele­ofteft brilliant coach at the Uni­ s "After my experience, I have come to Many people—who perhaps feel that phone a€ odd hours of the morning versity.-The most often stated hate war/' an Associated Press story starting war to prevent war is like.eat-after'a losing game—and has had evaluation of Cherry is that he quoted the former World War II (Su»"; ing arsenic to cure cancer—will find it to bear the letters and other in­is perhaps the most brilliant stra­ tegic coach in the Southwest Con­ preme Armed Forces Commander as hard to disagree with the Columbia sults heaped on a coach and his family when things do not move ference, but also the least emo­ saying, "War settles nothing. Before versity president. 1 Requests are Qoming in for part tional, one. along smoothly—when the team time sales jobs in Austin during By FLO COX is not winning. • • the Christmas holidays, Mrs. Mar­A readfer wants"to know the dif­A strong stand against the mod­Outwardly, Mr. Cherry shows no; -Glyde La Motte, Houston Post guerite-pillee, placement secre­ •3L 3, feeze or (Jo JJroL? ference' between CHRISTianity ern trend to adjust religion to the emotion. It is a good attitude—* sports editor* Writes that the resign tary of the Student Employmentand religion, Aren'tiJ^ey synony-changing times was expressed..?®-, developed o? natural—fdr jfccoach -nation of.Cherry offers a sad ai\d Buraen said Saturday." " lUl:ii\ "THERE ARE NOT enough-blankets" in any of t¥ beating against it." snug. . / -t stripping in these hutments—of at least Religion and politics are not me 'Hie buildings can be kept warm—at-provide the materials for occupant in­sanctioned by Emily Post as din­ ner table-topics. So When a preach-, Focus on Faith ends Sunday, a price. There are no natural gas lines stallation. ~ ; er enters politics, it's news of Although it came at a bad time, SOME HOPE YET But did you see the Rice game ... editorial "Big Business Wins." man-bjtes-dog caliber. during mid-semester quizzes, and To the Editor: or the SMU game? What more Your uninformed comment on Re­ in the November 9 could you want? —­voters had observed the political not accomplish the desired ends, Daily Texan about the election re-I think Blair Cherry has done pVedictlon that the worst may be antics of the Rev. Bill Alexander "Focus'' waa overall a tremen--"tfutta begins with tiie words, '*Face a fine job with this year's team. yet to come struck, in my opinion, 4 Oklahoma-^&ity in his Senate ' dous Buccess and the resultstriftwld^r It," and therf the ^ditoria^mi^f^j|^ ^ftQid• like tO;aay/ re^Srd-a particularly asinine view. k t 1 1 race against Representative Mike be felt by Christian students a tinues in a manner that would coh-" less of how the Baylor garne came ^JOE N.FISHER -MonrOrtey. Democratic. nominee • long time. •' • •••••••• .• • vinee people—they njhould^end^"it Mojironey won. -At the University Presbyterian all now. The writer seems to think coach in the Conference, and on* THE VOTERS SPOKE. Like many brilliant men; Mr. Church, Rev. Edward Brubaker the Republieans ar«r«ctive in poli­of the best "T" coaehea..in the tv the editors , * Mf CLAUDE VILLARREA1 "necessary -for"* good " cross-tfometf"ijr~<»ch classification, Alexander is profce to un,:i -P«»cew of planning^ and pre-veteran students, and the the questions to be used and billy"show and tent revival.' They.-power of history and man's great­if they were, so what? No person, who think that a community aing^ -t. Leaders of pressure groups>z~{ Paring the poll, doing the in--breakdown by classification words them ir> the -best possi­are out of jjlace in politics. est weapon against disaster, Rev. Unless a defeatist, alarmist, or song is great, which i« exactly ean "educate" their people on how pessimist could . possibly believe what, the program consiated'of up terviewing, completing saio-• fpr all University schools and ble way to avoid ambiguity Why shouldn't a preacher enter Glenn Olds told the University to vote, but in "the end the voter that the Republicans could or until the eighth number. m-4 pies, anil tabulating resulta. colleges. or possible misunderstanding politics? Most , are well-educated Methodist Church members. will vote as he thinks is right. .. : Studen-Opinion Surveys, Working with these figures, by the person being inter­men, better qualified through would completely repudiate the I was One of the unlucky ones *•' stands -they already 3. A Far Eastern foreign poli­ the Uitivenriiy'a Independent the statistician compiles the viewed. Such discrepancies in study of economics and other sp-' And the'Rev. John Kftowles sat have taken who saw the show at dresi re* cy is wanted that does not change and completely reverae^the foreign etudettt-opetated polling. samples that will be taken off < .wording could invalidate a cial sciences than the average the University Christian Church hearsal the night before it opened. with the wind. ~ and domestic policies, they.: them-. •8T«ncy» «oe» through about a the basis of three per cent of polL *-Congressman. " • put the bee on the Christian's back It took them four hours to put it eelves have helped set up. , 4. The voters ate not ready week of planning and^ prepare the student bodyt'V^e-'-#^- After* the poll has • : 1' when he"said they don't follow the together. , V taxes to.fall -. . >Hon and-at least'another twa trary figure used by Student' drawn up, it is distributed to IS fundamentalism losing in the Scriptures because they don't Of* course are going to v I, for one, think the reviewer-, even for a "democra­ tized" form of Socialism. weeks of polling before it can Opinion Surveys to get a the member* of Alpha Phi S-eligious fieKR We the know enough about them. Where­-tneirttuie.!.. yeit ,^iift'-^lit-4>a^ei—v;«jr=a«-i---v think and not pay for them . . . m1104 cntlclze lt cnou®h--Things are not so bad as Thurs-. even be tabulated,t which »• sampling of the total student ^ Omega and Campus League ti'®^^(;indica.te it is; others believe -as Christ says, "Where the Scrip­ J. L. editorial, "Big Business -not. V.'r' r 7™-"-"; • Small business will receive . .day's ' the bardeat part of the job. population. of Women Voters who do-the tures speak, we speak; where tbey maiiy government contracts in the Won1' would lead naive persona to V Just to give you an idea The -total sample must interviewing. . v The saying*goes that when the • are silent, we are iilent/* Chris­1 of what woes into each survey match the proportion «of men The first time the question­tians. are often silent When To the Editor: hard-shelled Baptists come.around, coming months so ihey shouldn't PARTISAN SISTAND? believe ... > too suffer too ftiuch*. . , % If the worst is' yet to eome,. • • ­ • taken tfy SOS, here's an out* altjjf womeB in each school or the Rattle's won. the-Scriptures speak, he said. naires afe distributed, the in­ If the statement about Senator -Since when has TheDaiiy Texan then it will be far better than the : .line of the technicalities in­'college. But since no exact terviewers are told to inter­^ In the biggest Protestant toieet-: Taft and his ilk being in-control taken so: partisan -a stand op na­worst would have been had the volved with each one: data' i& available as to the view any student, regardless ying ever held, the Eighth Congress' ' tThe Baylor students At the Uni­of Congress refers: again, to.-big tional polities to make such ckus-; election gone the opposite way. ­First, of course, the statis­exact number of:veterans and of school, college or sex. of Baptist World Alliance, Bap­versity Baptist Chureh reasserted business having control, perhaps l;fc and omnipotent remarks in its' . DON MATTHEWS JR. tician must figure the sample#-non-veterans and men and When these pollers are sent tists _ came at < ]eaS$t halfway.' Dr. the fundamental Baptist doctrine |ihe writer of thfe editorial would feut with instructions to in* • Edwin T. Daibefg of Syracuse, . that salvation comes only through prefer having Senator. Taft's op­terview -classifications of atu-Y.y fomer''':twe|ritf#V of thf 7 belief Tn: the diviniftr of • Christ. ponent, Joe Ferguson and his{lk Northern-Baptist Convention, told Butva rational belief is not enough Fque Year Hljjfh ^School . dents. The process continues —•the labor unions-^-ih control of THE DA^ TEXAN " until the categories are «om-20,000 Baptists that what their they pointed out; ft must be a vi­Congress ... WW-faith needs most is a "modern, up-tal belief .that,demands daily duty- completed. / Perhaps we need a Democratic The times call : Certain rules of the game * to-date language. —. , .. .... . . . Paul-»»» Revere riding around the Plan Now Outmoded' !%• llMly.; t'ezav, * (tuduil MvaiMpM at irbe Clot versity ot lexas. Martin Luther of the new for a <* B«iW»h»4 fa Aastin every Morning except Itomiay end Saturday, ,* must be observed in doing the , September ' s , arms! The Republicans are com­ ^ Texsn 00 Tuesday and Friday by fexa*. Student Publiea> <1) Interviewers must not toric doctrines of the Christian berg at the Lutheran Church. The mg. -riag of ten exewrpt* frotn th* cine for instance, was restricted *X Z."i faith and re-interpret and re-state reformation is a continuous one, -University 'of Chicago hand-to young people whose parents Hew* wilt be tctqiM t>y iclepbone it-Wtt dr:;at'-' be acquainted with tbe people DAHANEY RYAtf, tke tditofUi «K1c« J.B l, m at th« New* Laboratory, i.B. 102 biquiriea" t|hey interview, whom they them "for the whole: Twentieth -he said, in. which man fnust ever », * • .. booh, "It You Want an Edu--could support them part way eomiwaia* 4eil«ery advertising •bonld be made in f.B. 19$ r /Century to read, believe, and seek truth. cation."—Ed.) , through adult life. -mutt-select: at random. " ^ RAH FOR CHERRY L ;g? «r* tntrt -obey." ! ^ "Truth is God," he said. . v' Even the conventional college tb»-' «®r iing:&ou««- (2) AU interviewing must'* •X .; ' • "f •'•-aiiii'V'fyr'v.;,r.''^ •" »v •; :-iit To the Editor: ' You can, if you are emotionally years,, with graduation at twenty, -^ OaiBieu ^ Uu iexa* are «M oeceaaarily tb. ' sible. I don't know whether "Blair"Cher­pletion -of the..sophomore yeas of to be a luxury. Many of the par­ ents anctmostof-the^grandparenta Fate of Hare System ' . AMucwia ipaesis wmi iexvlioir •? c ~ (3) Question# most be read ry is one of America's top ten high school. Hundreds Of students Tbe AaiMcttted Prese ia exclual*el» entitled is tbasoae jtpr repubilea. to the respondent by the in- coaches" (Texas won)', or "Cher­of the current college generations ' have done so, taking four years gg» «*»< diwatchw credited to It •» aof otbervrlte credited ia '^>egan life""at eighteen or even ***** ^P"' 01 *P<>ot«n»«'n» wlgiD oablUbed herein. terviewer; the respondent may . ry -couldn't teach a fish how to to complete their college educa­ BigbU of publicatioqB ol git other natter bereln gia* reeerved, ~ : not read-the questions, al- swim" (Texas lost). younger. The American college Still Hangs ink Balance tion, but winning their bachelor's was becoming the popular as AdfertiUag by NatteMi Adrertiaing though he can have them read' ^ What I do know^s this—a foot-.. degree two years earlier than they kff i. u(*» Otll«* Pnbttafcfre KepreMnUtire to him as many times as be Br ' *": *ali coach at any jscihool takes a "four-year loaf" and a device to RUS3 ItfilftTiN ' * A** / New tark,~tlL tt. postpone going to work. fc,/-iCaica«e «-gogi^ ^ AQgelee —«aan. Fcanieiaee,; >,'desires. .. Hare Proportional Cotomittee tem or the voting-at-laa-ge method, lot of criticism, most of it with-(-The four-year |tah'at Chi&gO t When eighteen-year-olds were MKMBCa L . (4) information as to rf*-' recommendations are Still pend-" 'Both are darkhorse possibilities out reason. And the University is A ^ a "^edup''or w 'S admitted into the armed forces in CeMegiate IPrwa •p o n d en.t'a classification, '-ng* ^ that until now1have had insuffi-no exception-^n fa«Jt, it's worte. #rated" curriculum. It was the re-' time of now war, and that they " kchool or college, and veteraa . Two • members, ^oiiliny West , cieht backini gieny? years wg. *** bf salt of pany?years of study and are admitted again under conscrip­ . or non-veteran,statun in ta-,'and Midge Ball, were unable; to )h Maybe when the dust Settles resigning thr^bgh "personal reai ^ experience. tion, the contradiction, always ap­' ken; but; the respondent's attend the last meeting, so no^' iafter next week's meeting the ver-sons"? That probably means he is at proba began to glare..Eighteen­ suasatfFTioN aares name is net recorded. ' . , •final; aojlion ,wiMstaicen onwbe^hier4 diet' will be:, no change; well quitting before he has a com­ (anfauig SebacriptiiQB—three montfeg) were qualified to *?ht­ -,t*r 'awinib • • wifil mj.n r ^)| All information must; ' to shake up the University eiec-stietc it.out with Hare Proportion-plete breakdown, brought on by Qn-tiie hattlefield,-hat Ptr isoBtb. mailed m'town™. lee al; regardless ot its shortcomings. the fickle football fans .YyflilS ear month, audled ^^ba^ojjpleted hefoni* the v'--;v'"S last two years of high school TheVj in the pursuits of peace, Hffl,. ni.yAju i if .This idea this year everyone hal"'"'!;## -i^-S^^wer*leaves res^^-.3"^ "why change0 has itarttinft on M^Cherrv Wjmwf «/ -[•& One v wl^o entertl th« CoUege " lioiffab.genemly widespread support among those having on Mr>Cherry because of "S^poor showing^flL defense." ^*ry ,(cl:i0o,» four-yeat high schqol^iafter high-school graduation, will agreed that the present election who contepd that the only fault When these.questionnaires r^R-Chief. RONNIE. JkUGCER system—like -tfny -system-^-biS in elctiona is the disinterested stu­ eiate Editor c^mia ha«k M the wwkeff/,.. may largely • becaosa the orghal ^eWoattC torobably in three years. (An ^ nmlts.. But some hesitate to sup­dent body. nofceo-hot In' the opening j^mes. OTltST||cud. who aort and count them, any wentary unit had been-set at eight occasional student has actually mb, Ota? port the movement for chattge be-Would the students'peck up and Brew«v June Fitzgefal e Lewie discrepancies ate noted 'and "' 1done it in one, and many of the no sure-fire substitute has Sifitora %i^om Towqr, Betty CardweU,'Mary Ann the questionnaires iaValidated^|: eauae take an active part under a iUnple, |f 1 / jD t^ens befor? they went lo work# »«re mature students, indudiny a hetn stt#geste<^ ' . , •» understandable system? t» tt po»* B^°nii*r' BiU* ^spread of the iwUor hig^^plete comprehensive examinatio MAiUAM PENtfEJRGRASft . :;J. up thia coromittee of campus po-LjJihe steady decline of interest in , Braun - JOHNBUsii fjponse*. . . and-tbe jnnior college Or he may epter at l^en tlM ara-wwi*' set opposite. Hge, WaUMr^&wid^a piled ^tor eiush category, l qfoif*-J{0m' Jacipi an overfall total of sip GOl^r, Nancy Joi|n Jary, Florence VI "T'f fa/tin 1»/J jBlosella 3*mh roonfea inn:. S&3S&1 w most certamly j^qtiire the fuH , Ann $^urt|»r ia theee totals S eliminate some Hare onidd«rable «Ha^irt.44^i»e, least resistance an'd^ RRACKENRIDGE tlti ' loaf, j ftat progress, while Ik U • It could be that the eomflaittee; jaffirms^£are or jgoes out on alim^ * «arl Raipf i«. : GtiA, ftathm. business-iike, isn't harried, -MBeulah XUsher ^hi8»ea»S (To Be Ceaeivdod) 'i' ­ •A'-r y Lenski,auther ofchild-dent* and have hetj Hal'Tmt, established Jjy, Herpor '• book*, will be guest of hon-autograph efepiea%f her latest It fWMUl e&tenee W writers, a*ko«*ees aa autograph party. in the book,~Texas Tomboy." ot its Mwiy4iw{Nk4 filWtUp to Book Star* Tuesday afteri s£»r CLAUDE VILLARREAL 4 ISim DtTiiita G«ttfri*i Mm 'i. ftwen Book tdtior n from 8i80 to 6 o'clock. Stui *LJL Gottfried, bora fa Honstoa, I* • what nfakea a critic a critic? JMJl; of^he WEEK Ellie Luckett la k in man from New Braun* fels, Tex&s majoring in Enfflieh. Bllie is a mem­ber of Kappa Alpha Theta. member of Cam­pus League of Women Voters and is in T,S.O. An PortraitOm Stahl (one of 25). Ellie is . tfie Air JtOlPC Sponsor and is THE MOST BEAUTI­ FUL FRESHMAN. \ Studio Photographv for Tlw Univertity of Texat 2514 Guadalupe. is the time for your child to-M K E Books Jt Baby Sees—Four Cloth Books­ ...$1.60; Here Am 1-rNell Reppy-Linen .75 Simple TKings—Dean Rag Book 35 The Great Big Book of Animals.: 1.50 Pat the Bunny__.. . 1.00 First Things' .: 1.50 Picture books For. the youngest fat WWi Hi. R«d Wh««li .$1^0 The B19 Jum|» Up Animal BooL__ . 1.00 Mother Cooi»»"Tftihe TtjiJor ? .2.00 The Qulef Nolly Boole—M. W. Brown r 1,50 The Big Book of Reef Trains . 1.00 jken . 1.7S Jhe Cireut Baby—Mead-jc Peterstran 1.50 Eesy to read:> ^9 Stories •eftw Hamas and •erden Story BL_.$2.95 Una* ami Cowboy^acH Holt li C. jtegglns ——:— ; 2J00 A Boot For Peppe—Leo Pallti 2.00 Noah and Ml Art—flfteorge Hafr r 2.00 I Ren 4f>e Zoo—Or. Seuss 2.00 Cinderella—As Three Dimension Novelty 1.00 Hfatojrx Can Be ,Fun—Jvlunro Leaf^ u; yi1* ^ F R I 1 N D S W I T \. H 'SSFT]: B yu& o s * t AW, ' JF!i1 » ­his objective in English shk is to formula 4hrougb wbieh yfc person,turn out critics as ho defines an average reader, ten attain the themr .'good readers. And the rank of the critic. But he attempts "good reader," says Mr. Sackton to set down principle* throughIs the one equipped with the which he can work towards that proper tools with which to analyse goal. >N f, .-+>< ­and judge what he .reads, pins The-bible for Mr. Sackton's much experience in reading. Car­coiufse, though he preffcrs not to rying the role of the good«reader e*U it a text, la "Practical Criti­farther, to his role aa a critic cism." by I. A. Richards, formerly setting down his. criticisms for Fdllow of Magdalen* College,others, another requisite of the Cambridge, who established the critic must be added: the ability unique method , of teaching a ^ express thoughts relevant to a course in criticism that Mr. Sack-good reading of the work being ton employs in hie cleat: that of criticized. \ issuing printed chests of poems or lifeSackton teaches no magio prose^nwdiene^ quested to comment freely in writing upon them. The author* MJbejyoAiJand with rare exceptions it ft not recognised* Mr. Sackton's student are given unidentified poetry and prose se* leotions to study end criticise. The class-thendiscussesthe selections fessor of English at the Univer from,the viewpoints of sense, feel sity, and his wife is reference li­ing, tone, and intention, which brarian at the Austin Public Li-have been defined in the book A* .. the four aspect* of ^.Meaning in literature. ' "We are delighted that we are able to launch our program with (Mr. Richards defines these four aspects in the following ways: this splendid translation of the ferwer itidnt of tin University 'm dui Gilmuut Daily News; Attpmnt she Um |tt SmUI*, where her h«sbaad i* Oft the faettlty of the y#lwr|jtt *t Washington. Lowell Thomas Jr., son of one of America's most famous' radio commentators, has written:jw ac­count of • the "'Shanfri-La" ad venture taken by the father and son in Tibet last yean The book, titled, "Out of This World,0 is sub-titled, "Across the Himalayas to forbidden Tibet" ASkinesr, hsi hit the best teller li«t» again, this time "Nuts itt May," which ihefr publicising on i lecture tour east of the Mititsippi to coailnue up to Christmas. •* Life" magasirte, has collected a thousand pictures taken during Worldi War II and compiled them, with a text of about 76,000, into its "PictureHistoryof World War II." The book is as complete a collection of pictures as cOUld be assembled. "River's Parting", Guild Selection "Rivers Parting,'* a new novel by Shirley Barker, will be pub­ lished on December 27 by Crown Publishing Company and has been chosen as the Literary Guild Se­lection for January. What does one have to do to be­come a critic? Is there any special training,* any sure or quick way, to learn to be a critic? These, in 'a broad sense, are Some of the question^ .that are being answered in a juniorvldvel course in the Department of English called "Practical Criti­cism." , But don't let this mislead you: Alexander B. Sackton, who teaches the course, isn't running a factory for tutting out.critic* pf the by-line variety. *Mr. Sackton pointed out that The first publication of the new University Press will be a trans­lation of the first great book to come out of the Western Hemi­sphere, "The Florida of the Inca," a history of the • thrilling DeSotO expedition, by Garcilaao de la Vega. Translated and edited by Drs. John G. and Jeaiiette Johnson Varner, the book will be published sometime »e*t Spring, announced Frank H. "Wardlaw, director of the Press. Dr. Varner is an associate pro* Horse and dog stories For all ages Born to Trot-Maruerito Henry $2.75 Skylark Farm—Joan Beckham 2.50 The Blood Bay Colt—Walter Farley v;V v" ...... 2.00 ,Will Rogers, The Boy Roper—D. Day 2.25 Jinks of Jayson Valley—F. I. Rech­nitzer.. 2.50 Lassie Come Home—Eric Knight Reprint— |.00 New storied For girls The Door in the Wall—Newberry Award . * $2.50 Texas Tomboy—Lois Lenski 2.25 Tomas and the Red Headed An^al . 2.50 Three Ring Circus—Emma L. Brock 2.50 St. Nicholas Anthology Vol. 5.00 Margaret—Janet Soring Lowery ... 2.50 The Moit Wonderful Doll in the World 1.75 • . •' :• 1 . • • *.J . • n n* New stories For boys ^ Benjamin Franklin I & 6—D'AuIaire $2.50 ^ r Teen Age Cowboy Stories 1.00 Indians, Indians, Indians—Fenner end lee ^ ^ ^ 2*50 - Johnny Texas—Carol Hnff . 2.25 TheTony Express—Samuel HopkJhs Adams ' ' .1.50 J The Shining Shooter—Marian Renick 2.25 • The Duck that Flew Backwards—Don Tracy & \ V9 Material which seems -iraaeccesery. 1. Sense is the idea w set of ideas' Hoese. San Antente. Nwbr. M first American classic," Mr. Ward- being presented by the writer, Fa««*.. |1.7i.^ On the adiole It la easy* .light law said. He quoted Ray C. Dovell, w reading. what he says. 2. Feeling is the president of the History Book Boyce ftouse bas rorteea'Iwit writer's attitude towards his sub­ . "Operation Cicero" was nam«ft Club, as saying the Varner trans- another hard-backed version ef the ject. 3. Ton* is the writer's atti­ •for the valet-thiet 'wheee real lation is one fif tile most distin­ books popular in railroad termi­ tude towards his reader; 4. Inten­ identity was unknown and iHms guished books ever distributed to nals, This time^ he stiff-armS Tex< tion is..the writer's aim, conscious Was nicknamed Cicero by the Ger­ the club's members. ans with what he concludes to be or unconscious, the effect he is sn- man Embassy. Cicero vsed ' The Press Aas made~att' agtee- thiL."Amasing Truth-About Ta** deavofing to promote."! iition to full SLiffintage, by as," padded with iftfent. withvthe History Book C Utilising these v tools in "tite graphing top British secrSt for delivery of a special edition of form of the kinds of meaning in usust "big windies" for &e tour­meats and then selling nega­ ist trade. • the book later in the year. literature, Btudents of Practical tives to the Axis. Daring a «ftibd LcgislaturS-Oonscious Univer* "The Florida of the Inca,M 1writ Criticism attempt to judge for of more than% year, Cicero Btad­ :*ity officers may net like Mr. ten by the son of 4 Spanish con­themselves what is good or bad ed over stacks of secret informa* quistador and an Inca mother, was about what they' have read, with­first published in Spknish in Lis­out knowing who the author of bon, Portugal, in i«05. Despite the the work is and what sort of fact that it .hfts always been re­reaction has been registered garded as a work of u&usuftl in­towards the work by Critics and terest and importance, no com­Other, students. This analysis Of plete or otherwise adequate Eng­meaning, Mr. Sackton says (agree­lish translation has ever been pub­ing with Mr. Richards), gives the lished. ^ student an objective basis upon which-to form his opinions* The lliuveralty edition, contain­ though there is no such thing as ing more than 660 pages, will ap-, . . .. ,...A . •pear-in--y format deslglieit'iu i»e-•****"*» objectivity m cnticisnu Of Sixteenth and fievett=-­ It is the practice of seeking to teenth Century Spanish classics^ find the four kinds of meaning as There will be a frontispiece by ft-Jifraia iftr-. aL»**.«moTkr. which makes good readers out of Art Department. just readers and develops in reader s Critical attitude towards literature he may read in. the fu­ better withja copy of..tha Tea»s bow some of the elevewit esplo«&4 ture, Mr. Sackton believe*.—<• —4 In developing this attitude to­ wards literature^ the student is taught to hurdle such distracting Card Tricks obstacles as figurative language, poetic form, irrelevant associa­ SCARNE ON CARD TRICKS. By tions and stock responses, senti­ John Seunt, New York. Crown. mentality and inhibitioh, and doc­308 page*. $3. trine in poetry; ^Tbe readpr must "The inside dope" on 150 card also clear himself of technical pre­ tricks, by the man known as prob­suppositions and critical precon­ably the world's most famous au­ceptions .of a work in order to be thority on games and gambling, fair in his criticisms. . , can be, found between the covers All these lessons are designed to of this book. help shape the good reader; but Scarne has combined his vast when the "good reader*' assumes knowledge of card manipulation the role of the "critie," in the with that Of other famous ex­most common aertse of'the words, perts to give the lay Tender the and sets out to evaluate for others how behind t&e mysteries «f card something he has read, "he must tricks. Each trick is explained nn-utilize another important tool: der tiie headings of presentation that of expressing himself most and effect" and » advantageously.—The—criticism illustrations tossed in, just in case written by the good reader, if you still don't get the point. it is to be "good criticism," must Yoo probably won't be an ex­>e of value.-to others in reading pert after a fast reading of that work, Mr. Sackton tolls his Scarne's book, but you'll haye fun students. at the next party if you apply The good reader owes it to him­ some of Scame'e tricks. self, and the critic to the readers of .his criticism^ Mr. Sackton wiy tell his students, to learii to evalur ate literature for what it is, not by What it has been said'to be, or ell£r& by what others think it is, or by the. reputation of .the author. For after all, not only is the critic a As reported by Publishers' Week. good reader, but every good read­ Jf» _ _ er is,a critic. FICTION Across the River audi Into the Trees. By Ernest Hemingway. Scribner. f 8. The Adventurer. By Mika Wal­tari. I^itaam. $3.50. *n ^ The Cardinal. By Henry Morton 'MM A.** Robinson. Simon and Schuster^ "? > wl'l; $8.50. Flooddd«. By Frank Yerby. Dial $8. The Spanish Gardener. By A. 3. Cronin. Little. $3. NON-FICTION Keit.Tiki. By Tho* HeyerdahLRand. $4. Le«k Yeenger, Live Longer. By Gayelord llauser. Farrar. $8. N«ts In May. Cornelia Otis ner. Podd. $2.76. v :m,'^ M BeHea «» Their Toes. By C ' ^ and Carey. CrowelL $8. Behind the Pljting Saecer. Frank Scully, fiolt. *2.75. ' ~^N;|JAGihlTO TRY" OUR FILETS LUNCHES—3 VegetablM Drink, 'dessert" 50c *p ' SfeyjjAirS^^ > 'f 'f «ces.fS.71* tales from World War lI~~*om* grim, others humorous—have ran their course. Yet today, five ysarsafter AiJa'e Mttv render, a few straggling works continue to roll-exit of, lng houses," a reminder of #a*'s I* Tbrkey durtegjWetfil Wkt and by Sir Hugh* Awteliaa. BngetfiieB^ tfitiiffr*aittbatta4«ft >r-| w fet,f<^ aU itt authenticity, the pinions;... and; Moyrfseh, the attache, aia often Hanted sQiae t» »e«Mit tfee eet~ bassy officials in the best itthl. At ao time does he patfttkmseif *Wt eo-woikers i$ a*i vnfam able' perspective,, ; ^", after-effects. "Operation Cicsro" Is one of those stt«ggler»{ yet it But undoubtedly bad & b«ea is different front most written by a frenchman, or a »rito», or an American, he * v * -• \" have made no bones abent i "Operation CiceroM fif * fsctual himself, and ttose whomstory of espionags in Turkey. Its ptimmet as en« emyiaf aat lucid, adventure has not been a rightfitt dn^r fttr a eaosecolored with the dark mysteries which he believed. Perhaps this it common .to many pulftf fiction not a >^l^pS'.it^ Ie*^a m follies or the eerie seena* of «ot»e lf.ifi^9 TARRV TOWN RESTAURANT • 1425 txporiHon:^8356'" "T s ** v ;'Vii v/ f" x ~' *s j Drive Out Pot An Ordir Leslie's Fried Chicken "ir$ A TKiAT-fHAT CAN'T BB WAT" i : THE CHICkEI ,^!SS<4tpv, SHACK 'r S242 N. Lsntsr Phone 5-&401 a. "sbi Meet Lois LensKi, >"1 ; mam)*""* > "TEXAS TOMBOY It TEXAS BOOK STORE'S Autograph Party ®4UESnAy: 2r30 pjn« lo>^00 GIN'RIAS JIIJAB' aipHpl Wwl. Tombm have won Tomboy is the ito»f l&ys e •very reader ..i^, mmm®, m nitwit {Si ;?!•&>'« lsl» A «f*"S W*«_ ' '-»•<•?«•Wto -•»».*,«>• V ' ' S^}'-1** • • •• fill''. . .-'. • .. • WScfJWfciS Page 8 < ^ ^ 1 ^V/J *r •• • ^ ^4?* «v-£ T Fraternity >r V"^ , j&f it? A,. _'#!vi&wll; Spsil^n, national pro~ ti^^SalieK BxwaiScjr- Ha i|eiMdon«as;;^^e^ Peggy Shudde, historian-reporter; k#nHil#! Women, will celebrate founders' W^ta Jean Stnrgis, chapfada; and smm 5 B ' 1Tow' "Christian! hefc-e need to think day Marilyn Fischer, warden. _ • 'j WKf MSk * little deeper inte 'the meaning different shades of 'the situation Lrait Cullen is chorister '"Si I _ ^ we are prone to blame tham for . -Members and new pledges will •% JOHNNIE HUMAN of-Christiauity In order to see atid Julia Hill is alumni secretary. r modesty, and love for not resisting wholeheartedly in attend the University., Symphony the people behind the Iron Cur­ Mist, Mary Timmerwilke, clerk- standing up* for what they be< Orchestra concert Sunday after- people are the qualities evident W: tain as individuals and not as lieve, she commented^" noo»i alteor which the pledge ser­typist in the office of the dean of in the Freshman Beauty tills year.'' be held jtn the College of,Fine'Arts, is spos~. eonipromismg Christians who fail Since the amount oF Hrnltation vice will the Green Sfc« Is Ellie Luckett, & 17-yea*-J sor, { , v 5 V * to see political issues," Marie* for freedom of people is differ­Room of tite Music BuUSing. o.d from New Braunfels. ^' Jeanne de Haller, asaistantgen-ent • in different regions,' Chris* ~ The new girls, who were elected An annual tea for all women *Tm twy grateful for the eral secretary of the World'Stu-ti&ns there feel they have to take on tW basis of scholarship (B music students was given Novem­hinor,. and Pin sorry Quit the dent Christianfellowship and varied attitudes, she explained. .average), musicianship, charac-ber 8 at the Newman Club Annex. other girls couldn't win too," she World-wide Bible authority, said American Christians need to let MRS, K. K, KUTZ £ V,*-|ter* and personality, and with The group sponsors a scholar* said of the other entrants in the In an interview Friday. them choose for themselves the faculty recommendation in their ship fbr a deserving music studentyr* Explaining how Christians ~ in time when they "have to go to National Officer major subject, are Mary Francis each year, dives two recitals, and fwf the Western Hemisphere some­prison for standing up for Chris­AdanM,^ ,^ Carton, Shirley has a joint picnic with Phi Mu told Thursday she bad times think of Christians there tian principles. To Officially Open Van Cleave, Jean Evans, Joyce Alpha, men's honorary music fra­men Just before the opening of. as weak, she said in reality they If communism Is defeated by Gilstr&p, Juna An^ Hagood. Mar-ternity. The recital for Ihis se­ Forty Acre Follies, she was so are just human -beings Jurying to war, she doesn't' believe the dW New AGD House tha Keller, Lloyl D«hl Martin, mester is scheduled for December: aeasewillhavefa' 2& y- d<^^,jfMt^.i)L.Jthft-^.hflst servke­ for wheat fire minutes. they can render to Christ. "liot until the amount of misun­Oster. extension chairman and member derstanding of the pute simple "With mnscles in my legs like "Our only hope as Christiana is Grand C6uneil of-Alpha Gamma Following 4he' pledge a«erviee, level between people Ts cleared Wesley WitlHelp~ Charley Parker lmeaase of nqr to be human in our actiojjb to­Delta, will be guest of honor at there will be a dinner honoring many yean of ballet dancing, 1 ward Christians behind the Iron up. the official opening of the soror­the new pledges at living's. • Huston Students n really didn't expect to win," th# Curtain whatever may happen. At the,study supper in the Uni­ity's new chapter house Novem­Mu Phi Epsilon was founded in beauty modestly said. Our task is to be Christian and versity Presbyterian Church Fri­ber 19. 1903 to promote'musicianship and be able to recognize real people day night, Mist de Haller Stressed K Build Play Center^ "* After being judged in a.bathing A resident of Akron, Ohio* Mrs< friendship among women music suit,, a date dress, and * formal, on both sides—to do away with the way to study the Bible in KUtz will arrive in Austin Tues­students and graduates*of Ameri­' Wesley Foundation will work labels," she explained. .order to obtain the..greatest bene­ sue was fudged the winner, She day and visit at the chapter house can collies «nd schools of music. with students of Samuel Huston fit -­ first entered because she. had gofc-Christians behind" the Iron Cur­during the week. Its founders are Professor Win-College to bufl^ a recreation cen­ten areard in tie mail asking her tain who are persecuted are not "Students need to thiitk for The formal rei ion present^ throp S; Stetiing, president of ter near the Negro college, sai# themselves about the meaning of K.-to come for the first judging in alwhys the ones who are most ing the new house to the campus lletropolitan College of • Music, Miss . Lillian Seymour, assistant Christianity and then dig into the bathing suit. Althongh she will be held from 2 to 4, 6'to 7, and Mrs. John W. Fuqua. director of the Foundation. scriptures so that they will be thought it was a 'little cold to and 8:30 to 10:30 in the ^after­Sarah Hanover is president of The first work project erew* m able to answer the various ques­wear a bathing suit," like an 'Semantics' Topic tions that come up about it," she noon, evening, and night. -The Mu Theta chapter; Bayla Shein-will, meet Saturday at 1p^n. at obediant freshman, she went. University faculty and ata£:snd berg, vice-president, the Fotmdation. challenged the religious groups P w "The University is really not Of Symposium represented there. all members and pledges of each '.The other .officers' are Ch«cla S tir.d e n ts. should ~w*ar old |&?*uch a big world after all," she fraternity' and sorority will be in* Jennings, recording secretary; clothes and bring any spare tools Not only is the Bible a source i. decided.' "I like the way everyone Meeting Tuesday vited. 1 71. .••••• ••• •• • June Stokes, corresponding secre-available. of personal Inspiration „ but also help* those who need it—the 4 Semantics" will be the topic one for concrete issues we meet -' Whitehall girls, for example. It's iareijE day, she ssid p-almost like one bigfcappy family.* '7-4 tabbed, all \ began Friday."-afternoon; at 6 of America at Agudas Achim o'clock and Will adjourn at noon Center, Tenth and San Jacinto arounidandcrownedln Sunday. The Rev. Clarence'Doss^ Streets. The public is invited. the back with scatter pihs. University Christian Church stu­ Kafipa* Honor 7 Initiate* Mad* in Caprice Faill«»dent director, will give the Friday Kappa Kappa Gamma initiated Made, navy, devotional message; seven new members Thursday Lucia L4wis will conduct -the Antoinette Red. night After the initiation a ban­ worship workshop at the meeting quet . was given and Maxine Ru­ -x ., Sixes ^-15 & and Jack Tolar will direct a work­ dolph was presented with the ''rjw^ , est pledge Others attending from the Uni­awards./ ' ?! t i versity include Fern Haltom Kath-Those initiated were Sally Nor­ryn Smith, Ada Marie Sternen-man, Louise Irwin, Margaretberg, June Tolar,' Richard B. Jsa-Byrd, Eleanor Harris,-Mary Jane acks, George Wiley, and Don Stevens, Diane Thomas, and Miss junior fashions. Mould floor PADABOUTS Smith. Rudolph. * a.-,-?M go to? college t^-m r • it -"V t i *,«, 7$k rii .t4-r*' f4 WIM^0 {fa ft: SINSWEAR'S -DARING NEW J m •ft V MimsTngwear's new "Redafctnf ' you'fl love fhem . wi-rft UX fet­ finlkw soft b|if *fReiei^ and in U.T. color^. So per Qennenfs in bright, br/ght redl for your leisure hours. A For yomdf or very unusual . color of soft terry cloth! Christmas^grfts. Sixes 26 to 3U Z95 L^, jwnty glrd^ 4m Wghtr (^f^abbufs wifh your person^ § # brief riyie penty, 3^0, ^ fkmfak.kmm colo^ is M .^vjshiny $4tin. If youV# *hc m wmm & ft m d\'&. & ^ ^ m *wmw i^rnrnmrnrnmimmmmmmmimmmmm mmmmmmmm—— •ppp Li • ttm .-®-42SS3Bf MM University u ladies'/Croups IWitSt ' .w • 'S Will M l . •-: ••• : ,-.. • -' • '.'. ~[. iwSt e held Wednesday 1above fifteen nominees, from left to right, back row,, they ere m Kmght, AlpheOw Ome^ifeyl*Andifton^Alpha ^dotll^ ^^ Tab^^ • "Building 213. >—-— ^ are Lucianhe ­v$5«nny Sues*, Deltipi Delta Delta,;-Pat Cevin, Kappa Alpha Theta; , aration.for a Christmas pftrty to Phi; Mafgafoil Soromers. Gamma Phi Mev *~5horon t^of+H^wsrDelte Zeta;-Mitzl Afigwin, Phi Mu; Laura Roosevelt ^be given for a rural school. Austin Alpha Omicron Pi; Mary, Carol Grace;, Zeta Tali Alpha, an -W. B. Gardner speakiiuf oti"The witii Mr. Benes bf June, 194$, and 4 — PanheUetde Council, Alplt* • stores«which have contributed toys ./Woods, Kappa. Kappa GammaT Barbara Esgen, Pi Beta Phi; Barbara Surman, Alpha Delta Pi. Each sorority nominated one Holy Father's Dectocration bt the •• for the project are 3. C. Penney kHijdene .Senter, Cni Qmega; Dayle Hartlcopf, D^lta Gamma: girl to vie for the title of sweetheart. met. Winston Churchill. Assumption, of the Virgin Ma­Jfhihouse. rr Company*.8. H. Kress.ft.Company 4*6 — Dr. Eduard Tabonky to In 1986 Dr. Taborsky became ry," Newman Anne*.^ George Struts Sporting Goods, and address Campus Le«gu« of Over the T-Cup a law officer with the Ciech pro­ 6^0 Mu Phi Epsilon pi Women Voteses, Texas Union. Sears Roebuck ft Company. The Bailey Paper Company donated vincial office,, and in 1987 was service, Green Room^ Mt 6:30 — AIME dinner at Commonsappointed to tiie diplopiatic staff Building. 7 the gift wrappings.^ and meeting later hi Chemistry sec­ of the Cxech ministry for foreign 6 —-Joe Belden to Building 15. - i Two intermediate bridge ^ affairs^ Be-became secretary to tA Deltat Chi,:Lft Ta|>atia. 5 tions, will be held Thurfday* Group ^.Wfca^x^Cnkp^lf^--M tiie ministry in 1988. .. • • _ 6 — DSF to hut the fiinr, Pysl One wiQ meet at the home of Mrs. 7 — Phi Lambda Upsilon, Ch«otis- After tiie annexation; of CKech(K •; Wassenich on "Why -I Am in try Building 218. > ->•A. B. Cox at 2 p.m., and Group . Three at the home of Mrs. Lynne The third monthly meetingand, of Mining and Metallurgical Engi-ternity are invited to evening serv-the National Panhellenic quota sys-Slovakia by Germany Dr. Taborsky College/' Universify Christian 7 —-Freshman engineering ^ 1AA ttf A a'm!Anlr fa«M mm J • 21,. _.1>12 . escaped to Great Britain and be­.Church. y McCraw at 7:45 pan. dinner of the American Initiate ****** Austin-San Antonio sub-di­ice at 6 o'clock in All Saints' tem and its. relationship to the vocation, Geology Building vision will be-held at 6:30 p.m. chapel and to Canterbury House University of Texas campus. came secretary to Drl Benes. 6:45 — The Rev. T^dore^ Jack-7 — Cowboys, Texas Union Monday. • '° * man to qieak at supper forum afterwards.. After thewer he returned brief­7:16 — Phi • Members will meet in Chemistry \ Keith Bardin, Episcopal student ly to Czechoslovakia and in 1946 oii "The Situation in the Mid­Building 106. ;lA, An informal meeting for stu­ Building 15 after dinner at the chaplain, will preach on "We Live was made minister to Sweden. He dle East;" Hfflel Foundation. IX* — Free mov&^««I University Commons. • dents interested in a career in 7:80 — Neal Jones to lead revi-t .Lounge, % in Two^JKorlda" at_li»e_ evening resigned that post in June, 1948. a Witch," Main JLo The AIME student sectior^<|Nt$ church work will be-held-by Dr. -val,-Univ«sity-BaptiBt-' the Magnolia Petroleum Company Mrs.-H. H. Power, 'chairm&n of A meeting of the international Of Dallas. Motion pictures'of these tiie committee wttch untte's nil col­Conncil will be held at the Uni­ operations will follow the address. lege PanheHenic organisations, versity YMCA Monday at 8:15 * will speak to the Panhellenic Coun­p, m., Cornie Miffleton, secretary, Canterbury Club will initiate cil at its regular meeting, Monday announced. Sccirtiiiroigh & Sons Sunday night ^ new policy of re­afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock at membering a specific University the Alpha Phi sorority house. • All international students are invited as guests of the Council. . /"-ajfr 'SSk'WSJ organization in the church service. Mrs. Power, representative to Plans for activities during Inter­Members of Phi Kappa Tau fra-the Southwest region, will discuss national Week, December 10*16, lL'< will be discussed. ­ New senior class officers of Ml 4tiie^SchooL of.JBhaema^-are-Paul of the Malamicek, t president; Gerald Henderson, vice-president; and Susan Harkrider, secretary-treas­urer. |. ioVBel3en, director of the Tex­ke. Kenneth and Keith Cox will as Pol£ will disjeuss the taking present "A Comedy of Errors," Dr. William B, Gardner, profes-j and Betty Tieken and Jim Brau­ of>puiAie opinion 'polls at a dinner sor of English, will give an after lick will play piano selections. m<tog, of" the University Chap, oinner speech to members of the ter ol Sigma Delta Chi, profes­The group will go out to sup­Newman Club Sunday evening. sional journalism fraternity, Sun­per together after the show. Dr. Gardner's topic wil be "The day at 6 p.m. at La Tapatia res-"?-V: :'v Holy' Father's Declaration on thetatfrant. -Inter-Co-Op Connieil will elect Assumption of the Virgin Mary."Charlie Trimble, president of a representative and alternate to A1>uffet supper at 5:80 p. m. the-chapter/invites all members of th«: 1951 North American Student will, be held in Newman Annex Thet# Sigma Phi, honorary and Co-Operative lieague at its regu­preceding the discussion. All New­ jack kenney profeesional fraternity for wom­ lar meeting Tuesday at 7 p.m. in man Club members and other in­ en in journalism, to attend. Mem­ Portrait By Texas Union 811. terested students are invited. ,v bers of Sigma Delta Chi may bring University Studio ' * " L dates. * • Plans for a ccnop publicity pro­, '• v-.\V • * gram to send information bulletins Phi Alpha Delta, hononry legal fraternity, will meet Monday even­ to high schools and junior colleges Lutheran Association Open Thurtday Evening Till 8:30 r-iK-l Student will also be discussed*. ing at 7:15 o'clock in Law Build­ willjponsor;a talent show, Sunday .... "• ing 106, announced Robert An­ -:•* v',,;-.-flliSt p-nn in Gethsemane Parish " at derson, president. Hall, Congress and Sixteenth Derm Council to Show Movie f . -. I 7, " j..,, ' ' Projects the;fraternity plans to "tL Streets, little Campus dormitory As­undertake will be discussed. George Schardt will be master sociation council will present 4 ;SS; / •: •, -I'M® vr':; ; of ceremonies, and the program movia"Destry Tt.irfp« 4^^" ' Phi L^ibd* UptUon, national 2lstat&uayteri»t>,' be tbejtopi$ fora discussion led supper will cost 25 cents. ItVillbe Baptist, Episcopalian, Lutheran, Beta Th«ta' PI is holding a < by Miss Delia Cross at the YMCA followed l*y a short r^sveatiioi^ and Christian churches are co-op­ toyalty Sunday war be ob. the topic of the Sunday mornm* treat Saturday and Sunday «t Mo ft 7 pjhu Thursday. 'v. ^iiod» erating with the "Y" on the pro- sermon, of.the Rev. Lawrence Ranch at Hunt. , &•tJStftt Baah.at the University„ Christian £• Miss Crjwa is * Home Missions . II ~ "Our endeavor is lo determine Council worker at the Migrant La­K A native of Cusnittg, Okla., the day on which members are Church at 8:30 and 19:41 bor Camp in Harlingen. She ^rill Miss Crass attended Oklahoma how^ orgtfhized social groups ean to return pledge cards. -At 6 p.ml the Disciple show a film, "Children of the Har­A&M and received her degree in better themselves • and / provide law IMF. I#wi»Lewis 4P» Speakw'a Fellowship will hloda supper fol­ 11 be "The Magfc Touch."ft, lowed by reeteation, worship, and vest," before the discussion. v religious' education from Phillips greater service to their communis ttat An inter-denominational supper University. She has taught school left *«' »*» a discussion led by the Rev. Paul ties as a-vrtiole," says Forrest Ray will be held' for Miss Cross at for vQoe yea* in a one-room school, ject M«ue meetings on Sunday night Wassenich, director of the Texas Adams, leader of the'retreat. 5:45 at the University Presbyteri-with seven grades and fifteen pu­ in I »? %i« to the large number of young Bible Chair. His subject will be pils. With this in mind, the group » people of the are at-"Why Am t in College?" tending the annual youth rally at For two summers Miss Cross will participate in discussions led incl * * * worked the Missions Petet and M* ^'Religion pefined" w*ll beDr. Nefe®?'Club: for Home by Charles Gray Uttii Council in Michigan. She has held nor Edmund Heinsohn's sermon at the Blandy. Mr. Petet is director 6t Seggara-^wiH lm 11 o'clock worship service at the To See Collection her present position since October, ear student work at University Pres­1949, _ CM*!*!*** Of Bronte Works S She also teaches adult English byterian . Churclh and Mr. Blandy tha . -. , A reception is planned by the classes, serves as a den mother, is an instructor in Bible at the as ndEut Amia Club in the; at 7:30; Dr. Heinsohn's sermon iB-i'OniVersity Ladies Newcomers conducts Sunday School, and leads Canterbury Bible Chair.. The sub­I as 'Club will meet in the Rare Books recreation programs. nal Centefr as soon will be "Coming in on a Prayer,)" Room of the Main Building ject of. th^tse discussions will be ver finished, Joe W. Neal, direc* Miss ^rosB^s visit ispart of the "Thft Mfiftttlftjt ol iraternity and of the International Advisory Haifa Jean de Haller,^noted 1 isadfty&ftenioon. 04i-15plan for reeruitirigT-Home ' anc "Several of the Bronte' ihahu the Meaning of Service." Office, said Satnrday. lecturer and «lifioip leader, Will] Mission workers through the De­8l( scripts will be exhibited, and Miss Officers for 1950-51 arg CuH? give the Sund^ evening service partment of Work in Home Fields Sunday morning Mr. Blandy terffiJTadolma, Philippine Islands, at• -the . —University— Presbyterian Fannie Ratchford, Rare Books li­of the Woman's Division of Chris­will speak on "The' Meaning of Hideo Mitsuhaahi, Ja- brarian, will tell how these manu­tian Service.'' Religion." CharchS^.. A graduate, of the Uni- MISS DELLA CROSS scripts,haveibeen used-in research. pan, vice-president; and Jbsefina versxtyof Geneva, Miss Haller is Among the manuscripts will be the skS* Variae,.,JftiStgit*,J&lands, secre­on her second speaking tour of. '.18 writings the Brontes did in their tary# rp¥;vv V Students from Iran, Afghanis­being sponsored by tbe Student vv; childhood. It is believed by experts tan, India, Ceylon, the Philippines, Christian Association. that this is a key to the genius Japan, and Korea are represented Presbyterian students will have JACK KENNEY which was theirs. in the club which meets e*ch Fri-supper in Fellowship,Hall at 5:45 ... . -J ­-•iiia -day at 7:80 o'clock In B. Hall 19. prior, to the service.• Man of the Week ­ The ^est gift of all -­ 'VSK-^ e Store On The Drag Omega and was junior and senior ing at Cornell, and served two Panhellenic representative from jears In the United States Navy. her serority. She was ja Bluebon­net Belle and a ib» West and William Ri-Sa^^Antonio. X3ub d jr. will be mamed pus League of Women Voters! in Houston next February. -Miss Lt. King attended, New York West is a senior at the Univer­ University apd The University of sity, and is the daughter"of Mr. Texas. He was a member of Sigma ind Mrs. James M. West of Hous­ AUTUMN'S Alpha Epsilon ahd. was on the ton. The bridegroom-to-be is the tfack team. ^ son of Mr. and Mrs. • W. R. Lloyd lUXURfOU$ • . T of Dallas. . ­ 1EATHER Nancy Simmons and Hector Vela were married October 26 in Austin.'Miss Simmons ii a senior Dr. G. H. Fancher at tfe» . University and is a, mem­ ber of?"Alpha Omicron Pi. To Attend Meet Mr. yela is a law student at t. the University. * ^ Dr. George H. Fancher, profes­sor of petroleum engineering, /toll Mfi and Mrs. George V. Bear, direct the final conference on re­607 West Twenty-fourth Street, vision of US petroleum industryhave announced the engagement standards for determining perme­ and approaching marri&ge of their, ability •xclwively skiUed Chinese m Refilled Cbe» r 'RoeMi for Parties W&Jm' w+t w SSS CONGRESS' ;\-k,rz VI m m "m H " ens/on ourses p. a-j p -ffcV : wis:#: Still N««istcrty fa - esti with Englishsubtitles, open* Ttili* ••.«>VTC^f,vvv.v« irtffCof;iL uotetn. sMfesi fa® Say aWernment major^iTire- temf of He might select from the Uni­ "Carmen," an Italian movie contrast, W. C. Field's "Poppy." The Terrftnce Rattigan play Ss Bfigland,. be waa versity fine arta curriculum Survey based upon the famoul Archer- #a«ior Wn iyttgbont • of~Bacequ» 308, or maybe Speech m ghee cttO In England. Buring the OiAeataKf He f» weU k»6Wa to " Stage eiiiE­ ^iff~oT"lSWHr. XrcEer-Bhee re­ gntit «* > jfEe-asti 810K. But neither one would an- Gr6gorPiatigorsky, internation ceived newt that /his 18-year-old btiletr^wsi maaie iet i-jwer his needs. The finearts ma* son had ally known cellist,' will give a Te-Austin six seaiona ago, Is 4aid to 1029 ind has made'*concert tour ^fiaiei ^* UnivereHy f* been esnelted from the jbr with pre-requisites to spare citfcl Tuesday at $ have been heard by more people eyery year* until 101#, wfctfh. hi Royal Naval ColleWfor being ac­ isno letter off in one instance, HoggAnditoriu^,^'^! !V^-. than any wher-living eelliet Lead* toot « holiday. for even-be cannot study what Is cused of a five-steTlIng <$1.28> —Tha-j^rtist' la eporisoreS by.the ing critics call Me artistry seeond ^^bt and meabe* of the Britt thfft. ' fltis cello, wbich fee discovered Trio tta' the.Univeindty Sfarint potentially the most important art Community Concert Association,' only to that of Pablo Clsali, Though ail the circumstantial . **°nuon7--t in 195* had not;be«a :^iiii«et,-'wli • miu>» i..wv c- - idiom of Our time—the movies. The • Texas Chapter of the logy at TCU, president for the 'ajud is now making his twentieth Spanish cellist who iB jjQt Available •t evidence was against-his lion, Mr. P^yed for, more thhn 100 year* master with the 8«a, Antonio Several more progressive—uh, American 'jMusicological Society next two yea«r.l'Dr. 'Winesanker Archer>-'Shee refused to believe in concert tour of -t&q United States for conceit appearance* » Symphony Orebeatrik He was *Ja» Saturday elected Dr. Michael and Canada. In 2043, Piatigoriky'js jsrortrait r chris­ more experimental—schools such •ucceeds^ Homer tflria, aiiOciate in his gujlt. He retained a famous tened it "The Sleeping Beauty." w^' tte -w«U4o|ow». -finbMi, as the University of California Winesanker, professor of musico-professor of Chamber Music' at . . Opening his. program will be was painted by Wayman Adams British lawyer to defend his son. Stefef and tike R#dft«^s# offer a number of courses on mo­the University, as head of the The rest of the /play is a com­Eccles* "Sonata in G Minoi1," a and Is on exhibit -this week in *"I5ie lone was marvelous," he EMIMtfmonfv where be has played tion pictures. And Texas A&M, chapter. • ; • work originally written for violin Scarbrough and Sons department recalls, "but the ceUo was still mentary on the obstructionist but transcribed for cello. Brahms's 4tore. The picture is considered asleep. At eaqh concert it be­ • neve? considered a stronghold of Dr. Winesanker was a member tactics of government bureaucrats. eiM fiofitekt Albert F Major" Opus 99, of came * little mor* awaks witU it the avant-garde except in the field of the University faculty from The Admiralty was extremely re­"Sonata in one the finest portrait* in Of chemical fertilizing, offers 1045 to 1947. The Canadian-born luctant to possibility and the r':'Theme and Variations" America and has hung in many fina»y into Ha full admit any of von Weber will follow. museums including New . York's their students an opportunity to concert pianist-composer received tha| it might have been wrong in subscribe to a series of films pro­In Gym Nov. 27 -Two Spanish pieces faill be in­Metropolitan. . Reproductions' of it hir master of arts degree at the expelling young Archer-Shee. duced by men Who believe the University of Michigan in 1941 cluded in the second half of the have, been tisid for many years The cello goes with him every* cinema to be a legitimate art The Don Cossack Chorus, di­ program, de Falla's "Farruca," by the artist for .publicity^ pur­place, and.he ealls It "m much a »nd was awarded his doctors de* rected by Serge Jarofl, makes poses. • form. ' •" V and 'the "Habanera" of Ravel. He 1*art of me aa my hands." TraveJ­ gtee at Cornell in 1944;JHe also appearance number seven at the fHOMi) TalenJ Committee University students who;'take has a degree from-Trinily^tege wilj^lso play Schumann's "tan*: Although he is only 47 -year* i0* matlrtrt difficult University Monday, November their movies seriously must rely in London. • ' -v- tasiestucke," Opus 73, and the oia. Piatigofsky has been pftiying because rf ftt-^se, but'Had. i W&t 27, in Gregory Gyta. ' on the Texas Theater, converted "Adagio, Allegretto Grasioso, and the cello* for 40 years, beginning Texas concert manage# «rnmg«d Here 9«mm' ­ Co&sack concert One of his special fields of In­ with inter an art house this, fall, or th£ The • is spon- Show Presto" of Stravinsky. performances with '** emaU en ingenious plan for its trans-at spred by the Cultural Entertain­terest is .the English comifr opera )if ¥** Brol** J-v> University Film Committed, which The "Wait® and Celebration"-orchestra in his native town, jort CaUink m airport, he ment Committee. Tickets will be Of the Eighteenth Century on Dnepropetrovsk, Bussia. At the last year bboked stfch historically The Talent Committee gave it£ fromT Aarqn Copeland'e suite, bought two tickets, one for Gre-"BREAXTHROUGH'* distributed free to, students and which he Wrote his doctor's dis- important films %s "The. Cabi-first Camp show of the year •'Billy the Kid," will .conclude the age of 15 he was appointed first tod one for Miss season-ticket holders. General ad­sertation. '*• Wednesday night in th^rRed Cross program;' This musio was dedicated cellist of the Imperial Opera in Cello Piatigocsky, so. the instru­ mission tickets will' be $1.20. The group Voted to hold its Club at Camp 'Hood. to Piatigotsky .by'the composer; Moscow. . . " ment had m seat to'itself. • The Don Cossack Chorus grew WE SERVICE AUSTIN April, 1951 meeting at North • Entertainers making the trip Approximately 100 tickets are ' ^pia«tlf«l;SMa^. out of World War I. These six- RAOIATORS Texas State College in Denton; we*e Pat Price, who did a still available to the Community WELDING & foot giants of the steppes former­ S The business meeting Saturday "Frankie and Johnny" number; Concert series. Prided at *6, theyRADIATOR ly sang< around campfires at night. afternoon followed a morning ses-. •Tex Schofield, who did western SMU ve. may be purchased at the William, "The Musick Master. Their songs of the homeland WORKS eion, at which three papers were ballads; Harold W.ood» who sang T '-'V'-v GHarle* Music Co., the University "T Tat. 0-3733 awoke the choral instincts of; Mr. presented. Dir. Fritz Oberdoerffet, "Temptation", and accompanied Cc-Op, the J, R. Reed Music Ce., BOO W. 8th St rjaroff, a diminutive young "Cos­ sack of 17. guest professor of musicology at the others; and Thelma Avant, a and the Music Btiifding, the University, spoke on changing Texanne, who did a tap number. Is Musical Success STAT£ f? After fifteen months of teach­ BMvn TTmVflifcity will | instrumentation in Eighteenth­ ing and organizing by Mr. Jaroff on a fifteen-minute By WALTER RUNDELL JR. i-the style of the English Bamqne put show for . , 7mm Critic the Cossacks emerged as a bril-Century chamber. . . music. He traced liluaiAio mdftarM.'masters. .flffalaliafi /7W£aA The—-tenor;—Stephen the patients in five of the wards Dining Out? Try liant chorus* whose fame ouieklv developmenta .in chamber music Reports of ^b^s^essful Tburth uManton, and Frederick Wood- spread."He has led the group for ts. the present; "Sunday ^ay> «ightperformance of tha in­bouse, bawj handled the(s>40l{«ik evening, Mrs. Ethel Forman, as­ 30 years. . Dr. Oberdoerffer came "to the Uni timate Opera must have brought turas expertly. • ' an­ Fish & Chips sistant director of the -Union, the larger crowd to the Saturday ^ :Mp> They have traveled more than versity this fall from New York nounced. Pergolesi's ."Every Maid Her Conveniently Located a .million miles to sing more than where he was engaged' in musical The entertainers will have sup­night"performance $n Recital HelL Own Mistress," better known per­ 6000 concerts. The group became editing and publishing. He had Again,; this, troupe gave the Fine haps, as "La Serva Padrona," is per with^the patients. Transpor­ 2706 Guadalupe United Staates eithieiis--left ~masse-& distinguished musical career in tation is being furnished by the Arts Festival audietice a most fn-the etory of a tyrannical maid who "We *Miy ft^e pm mm «*** • SEAFOOD seven years ago. Germany before coming to the Red Cross. joyable evening. . tricks bet browbeaten! master into Full-dress inspections are held United States in 1948. "The Musick Master," a coihic marriage. The slapstick of this op­ Shrimp a specialty ®Mrs. Forman said thatnac thewe Ta-—-. la- , * spite of before each concert, and -fines . . The-"r society's program . ended ,lent Committee needs more enter-JPe«. bV,P«*SColesi, in era buffa was effective. The mute ' jMJUP vviiiixiU'Mw n««uB moie • GOLDEN BROWN which range from $5 for unshined with the Saturday afternoon drsss taineri . to go to McCloskyJlosky, Fort dragging te spots,, had some mo-valet, played by Manton, drew Ik- Fried Chicken boots to $50 for'missing a .per-rehearsal of the University Sym Sam Houston, and Fort Hood .as m«n« of genuine charm. Lam* large shire of the laughs with his tihonv ' ftirhiwtaa'g .: Sunday ,-pro. tWo shows a week go to-oniSr of berto, the teacher, was effective expert psntemime. Keturah 8«r­ gram in d«W0tlBtrating-t0 Jliav^t0p^|lE^ anpran^ w^ii fjn pupil the qualities necessary to be­ maid. Her singing in this work War come a great prima donna. her best of the evening.. In the best-British tradition of "Intimate Opera/'*sfcid Pye^ert"Hail, Britannia!" the company's ick Woodhouse in nn inte#vie#»:'"True Blue," by Henry Carey, "will incidentally stimulate an in-was full of service to the king tereet in grand opera. But .more RADIO CONTROUE6 CARS -I' motif and flag graving. Not only important it will create even ; Bdl in the story, but also in music, greater enthusiiism for our own this piece1 is closely .aligned? w$th neglected field." He iikened the MA differeace between a grand opera; l7** trodpe to that of * string mut* ' r|«el M^a difference between bis grouprand a grand opera troupe to that ef a Feftui* Slarta ri ? string quartet anda symphony or­ chestra. "Both umatter ensembles WORPS" SMU vs, A*M Ple«Mr Scheduled Friday have a vast Amount ef work be* 7<4«.ii40 hind them. And yet, both hive to •V Th#-Houston Symphony Or­appear effortless. "A KI9S ]N>R chestra wi*h Conductor Efrem "InEhglend, since 1980, wben1 * CORLISS' Kurts will appear Friday at 8sl5 started the Intimatg Opera,* iaan Shirley T«Mple [p.m. in Gregory-Gym,-under the informal wayj, our company has aauspices of the Cultural Enter-^i» eomi(« m tmm¥­ achieved a great vogue. Our main tainment Gommittee. . activity1s in the provinces, where "TH*E • Blanket-Tax holders will be ad­ MAKE YOUR CLASS PICTURE we need only a sm} mil izing it, Mr. Kurt* has made it tiie firet Ittempt |o detoribe na­f' v4r>rf''i ^ •-£, > J* one of the principal concert Or­ture in a large opus, Kara Raeb-IPSt*'•n • -f ,1if » chestras of the nation, , *, lin» conductor, said-In it Bee-[ Kilt! -:#6aW' 4 ^ s , 1 WMV* , •*" • % s. ?'*'x> 1. ;" ^ - ; •• . ugv thovep .seeks t« tell one of the fionii— ># O'Brleamost beautiful stories of nature T I f X Clqrt Tth Major Play PrK •V Appointments Made And-Fe& Paid •4 rvf/ ;•. « To B# Glv*n WiclhifdUiy J 1 V ^ i ^ 1 *t 1 * s*le' Monday at. , *^AtAWI«y* J«M» C*«rilai 11 4ttfi"" . 'V _ # •». ' -' i ' t -i * f"ti $•>!,{%%>* '. S-v!* ^ » * S«4 "Tbfr Klti*'* the Golden Riv-Storer William-tharloe Music |P ' t0 ^ W»w second of three Clara Tree Company, University Ce-Op, and A tun 6i45 iM In Journdli Major Children's Theataw plays to the -Music Building box office. be sponsored by tbe .Aoeljin Tickets ara |}^0» -1 M^k4 Branch, of the AAUW, will be um i8.«o.^ ren Wednesday at .£ W 1 *5 Y Js^ v i callbig Mrs. rf. P, Bnrleigh At 58-2246 or may be hougbt at tbe box office, iPriceft; Office Hours: 5:00:1:00r* 2:00-5:00 SO cents, v r ' c5 t ; ^:r JrTOglrmBt v v.--' -Vrfi .mwm k vs" to Shine" * NoCoc ras nctiin i S®' • $ •':&P 1 'jy en# •# 5 m! •fi m >•*'rfi"»"*1 i «T,: ., W.CP?­ aHi ;UTO. J2I S. Um»f ^rrilr^srirs^ L iftW f3 f Ssfl IfcABO aarf*v ts**-'" S*® j£% u*'' i&sS -My' : * i i - • -vi v--jf/. f*totfv Health cine bottle." If the student can m/Pi ttt AAA —— •• wide program-during the week of find no suitable container, he may exhibited Lwby that Mr. Hillmer designed were dence, 'It was built in irrSan San Diego. ".*3-ble be burst by Head Coach Blair Center 187< All the student m&t who re-published in life and the Archi-Francisco suburb for Haynes Mr, Hillmer, ,»was in Austin November:12-18. C|¥v;' do !is-take a small saihj^e of get.oh# fre» of ^charge' from any Cherry's ahnotmcement that he eelved Ids degree i* architecture tectusal Forum in Septunber, 6«1L Wednesday en route to hit home The flist 'surv^-W^lti^d^ uririe to. the* laboratory, where it Brtig drugstore. : will resign at the end of this sea-the state, it is sponsored by the" . Best hour ".for obtaining the from the Unire»ity In 1M1, to! 1949.* Life carried two pngea of After Mr. Hillmer's graduation in Saa Francisco. ^ -TSC«*r^. will be tested.' If -results are 7,^e Architecture B*.II4i11g son? t Travis County Medical Society positive, the student wfil be in­sample is befon; bxeidefsst, said Students' interviewed Friday and the Americfth Disibetic So­formed either by mail or tele­Dr. JDecl^rd. If the student is ciety. Last year, such A ­ }£$!& -hoofer was. bJuf.asar .San don't think so. In facVttiey think tt* n *-> V? was carried, out euccearfiilly tiv* j«uJt mi3r fb«r obtained from •t' la tM-urine ^oer-nt>t Francisco for Fred Lttdekens, Sat- f> ^dill the bubble will "grow larger be* several small eastern communi­ the test. ;V ..:v „•. wday Evening Pest illustrator. t " V ! "the team win for ties. j tilways ihdicate diabetes,-said Dr. -Sampl«i5wai be atic Union resolution as a bseic step to prevent war Union In this' wotld revolution, he the ^ was made. They agreed that "the team SR«« tropical woods, «ueVia towards world govergmentandtfag """The immediate reason said, would b* to keep-the yevola^j will improVe bocause Cherry w :8l»ma vitae, are used through-prevention of a World War III, forming an Atlantic Union is that tionary . forces withm lpgical they* want ^,'mtk ffit house. African ebony and £ays DKEduard Tel ;bounds. It eould Mrs. Tobin Voted ciate professor of government and and world Communism halted," South American keloid wood are tive rather than destructive Don Langston, senior pre-med for sliding and folding,doqrs, former secretary to the late Pred-Dr. Taborsky told the ^mall gath­suits of the revolution. A US Air Force selection team ing to University students. ;They dent Benes of G«>chosl6vakia. j ering ni the Texas "Union. Judge agreed major, had a slightly different win be at the University five are:-.. Garwood that viewpoint on the situation, e said, days, beginning Monday in Texas Hr. Hillmer uses materials that He spoke to the Austin erid • Relations-with the So^et Union world goVermnent was ontnal rl. Applicants may name a date is capable of University chapters of "the Atlan-haYe reached a point where-send-" 1 -ito -u : , « . felt "I think the team recruit cadets--for j tip to one year in tfee fu an .October 28. Uni­ .* H-. *x»— i 309, to :Mnutes of need no surface finishing towards which work "but winning without the added incen­and navigator training. The versity Board Of Regents meeting other than polishing and sanding^ fee Union Committee Friday tight. ing notes and ambassadors and that at present it is impractical. the. Air Force will hot call them tive' of ^winning fdr Cherry1." in Houston show that Mrs. Edgar Other speakers were Judge St. arbitrating in the United hfations He said there must be more than program is open to qualifying before this time for this p&rticu- The house six- is lighted by John. Garwood of the Texas Su­ Students hadrVaried-opinions~ofj-ji<^ior8-«nch seniors, Tobin, San Antonio, made the mo­ ,and eight-foot fluorescent do no good, Dr. Taborsky said. a "fair weather" arrangement be­ iw-program. "'5'" tubes preme Command Don Yar-The democratic nations of the tween nations to .fight Commun­what qualities a new coach should The team will be' here to get tion to permit Negro members of one inch-in. diameter. 2. Applicants "will not be forced There it the Border Line Conference foot­ borough, University law student. world must show "Uncle "Joe" ism. liive. When they were asked whe-qualified men as officer trainees to renlain. in the service as eh- act an ordinary light bulb in the they they would a coach ball teams to play onJKiM Field While Dr. Taborsky agrees with that they have a "united front" Judge : Garwood said he saw prefer and to arrange for special defer­listed men if they are disqualified gjffwu^fee'aaid^,,^ ^ at El .Paso's Texas Westerlr-C^l­ thefundataental ideas of a world in military strength' and govern­no alternative for preventing war who was'best at developing char­ments, for them so they-may re­for any reason. They will be dis­ Ea Y Heating o# Ifce *eslden<» % leg^th^Associated^Press reports. government and Bees its eventual ments working together. other than-an integration of.eco­acter, or winning ball games, they main in college as long as pos­charged from service. f- done by electric wires spaced one inutelhv^f^fehe meeting show . heed he said he thought such a World government should be nomic, social, and military life.' split evenly with the majority of sible, said Major Arlyn S. Powell, 3. Applicants may withdraw •®vaanl one-hpdf inches apart in the girls favoring a who that Mr. E. E. Kirkpatrick, Broto*-. coach de­ s concrete floor. lids Is a type of world federation coSld. npt be the ultimate goal, Dr. Tabors^ YarboroUgh spoke on the im­ here to make advance arrange­their applications ahy time before wood, was one of the three regents \ put into effect at present.; •y .'J. said, but the start;should be made veloped character. Only boys ments for the team. : radiant heating;j There, are no portance of the American . youth being called to duty. ( who voted 'against the motion. a .coach '.gas connections. He is in favor of sorting with with Atlantic Union.... support of the Atlantic Union. wanted who could win Men interested in qualifying 4. UpQjn satisfactory .completion (The motion passed.) He was games• evwry Saturday, "no matter ^ a North Atlantic Union composed : Judge St. John Garwood told "American^ youth should be for pilot and navigator training of physical examination!!, listed in the previous!story~as vot­ heavily-wooded On a site on the meeting thafc-Jlcbolara and what.".v , • Hfefetttee Islanl ^«-im|^»V:N^^tlantw "given an active part in pushing can enter the aviation cadet pro-cants will be deferred from ing for the motion. Bay, the housebouse is 25 feet above Pact, powers and eventually ex­philosophers believe^-'ttis#*-the the idea of the Atlantic Union • Most of-the students inti^fl¥am""ffts of lft» sr.amyi Vfrt IS. W.;' 4 . >ouse dscigns In Ban Francisco, t&ljk*'"' ""' I 'L1.L' j'_ -J_ _ i il.Soeelf n H" euid mtilrtae i w ii Hucbfers to TOH( M.eariyeSaP1 % ~ , V Hp * 4 fr 26 Ur HOUNDSTOOTH the finest fabric for ^7.9erfam ^ , San Anlbnio Firms ' '• y s rfh^S f i ' ,-j. - \ 'i % ii SPORT COATS 1 fifes^nti^ng'st»-10 a -7f~~ » u dents will tour San Antonio a* 41. part ofalock guests of the San Antonio Adver-42. American 34 is ' 'i.'.'.'i thdng Club Monday «nd Tuesday . Indians' • • 41 jaad win be honored at the first ,:44-m^sning.si^, U Sf Wi 4S.workshard {J/JTa annual University <1 Texas mefct­ 4g.|nakeref the 4i " ;_ :lug Tnesday. • «• a 4 -. first Amer> i Hie student, Patsy Crosl, Efi* lean flag U 47 -• r; Olson, Mack Jacobs, GeneTin* c daB* and Ad Cppeland, will be SO. milkflsh Wi •ccompanied by AJan Scott, asso­ i l.of thrsea ciate professor of josrnalirai. ':i#» group will presettt a pro- to woA Hi; to the San Antonio Adver­ * m*&! V' VV'," AXTDllAAXXl Club at a luncheon In Ihe O NOFB tLOW J inter Hotel Tuesday. -V >v • • ••• • ... v ?-r. ^ The -group will be Uweheen guests of the San Antonio Eppress HAMM0NT&N PARK Qivtt You ANIMATED STYIINS Publishing Company Mondiqr. ft-'* r *v ^^ •>* _ They wfll visit the General Ne-Mne Austin Laundry & ; on Adverfising Company, San An- in th« gver-populflr Houndstoofrh Sport Coot... The Perfect Coot *3 • • »•' e. ' fonio l^preps and Stoning News 1 Pia®rfv tilw -Express-Publishing Dry Oeanitii C