Texan W oafhor Warning Just two moro days for grado shopping Six Pages Today AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, JA N U A R Y 15, 1952 UT Favored Tonight Over Rice in Houston Connally Tries ForceNewS,uden,s For Tidelands Vote I S i ? ? Council Announces Orientation Plans Starting Ja n . 31 2 0 0 Sign Scrolls In Integrity Drive By K E N T O O L E Y Texan Sporli Editor Trying to stay in striking range of the Southwest Confer­ ence-leading TC C, the Texas Longhorn cagers will be out for their third league victory in four starts when they meet Rice’s Owls at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday in Houston. The Yearling five, after a surprising 72-55 victory over Tyler Ju n io r College, will engage the Rice Owlets in a curtainraisef at 6 p.m. The varsity contest will be broadcast by station KA h I at 8 p.m. with Bob Kinnan bringing the play-by-play. Coach Thurman “ Slue’’ H ull’s Steer quintet is on the Firing Line Rules Changed by Board Search planes awaited clearing; weather early today to resume scanning the storm-tossed North Pacific for the freighter Pennsyl­ vania and her 45-man crew. Hope for the crewmen, who took to life­ boats during a howling Pacific storm last Wednesday, "us fad­ ing, but the ( o a s t Guard ordered a thorough search of an a lia southeastward of the last position reported by the stricken freight­ er. Tartakower Defends Collective Living Plan By D D. Z I N K Darrell W illiam s Chosen New Head Cheerleader ents and Morris Teaching Technique Is to Dramatize Law Lecture mg.-, however, covers various as peeta of the law of torts. These have appeared over a period of twenty-five years in the hading law reviews of the country. From a legal standpoint Pro feasor Morris is intere ted in l aw as a social instrument, an anti­ authoritarian philosophy which views law as nothing more digni­ fied than a means to ethel ends. That is, aw ■ - one of the wa; through which the objectives of society are attained. M r . Morris has few hohoies and says that his main interest besides teaching is entertaining small groups of friends in his home. He likes to engage in iiv< con­ versation, an art in which both ■en s concert by Alii iony Orchestra, Coli hour, Intern ona oral group mi th, Home UT Weathermen Use Teletypes Instead of Pins ie and hi- wife, Bul, excel. Al so, the professor said, he raised a pi .ze-winning cocker spanif I named Brandy. “ Of course, the dug was named after the Brander kennels in San Antonio, not after the beverage,’’ Mr. Morns added with a smile. Arriving a? the University as a -ummer teacher it- 1939, Profes-or Morris wa asked to remain. And, except for thiee years in which he served us director of ground training programs for ad­ vanced aviation cadets, he ha- al­ ways pursued the career he likes be-’ teaching. His 21-year-old son is a second-yeai law student. at Va ie. The old joke about the blind­ folded weatherman sticking pins in a chart to predict the weath­ er doesn't go at the University Meteorology Department. The weather map posted on the giound floor bulletin board of the Main Building is compiled from a master'analysis weather report which is received by tele­ type at 6:30 every morning. The map contains current po­ sitions of high and low pressure arras, a s well as those of any warm or cold fronts in the Unit­ ed States. Weather conditio: «, temperatures, and wind condi­ tions in many l a r g e pities a!«o arr* given. The 4-year-old map proje< t I* being handled by Betty Jeanne Reynolds, senior aeronautical engineering major from Pampa. Weeks lo Assist Charter Revision O 'e Un '.cl 11 y student a* d one faculty member were appointed to a citizen- committee r urged v th drafting amendments t<> A istin’outdated City Charter Friday by 14,000 Exes Help Provide UT Buildings and Facilities By D E A N J O H N S O N “ Those w-ho belong to the ExStudents’ Association have a sense of responsibility for their L r iversity.” Ti.esc words by John A. Mc Curdy, executive secretary of th< organization, appl; to about 14,OOo ex-students whose dues, gifts, and services have helped to pro­ vide the Texas I nion, Hogg me­ morial Auditorium, nod two g rn na»iums. The anociation, born in 1*34, also sponsors Round-! p. It coop­ erates with the a t h l e t i c program of the University. It ha* created a loan fund for ex-students, and it works w-ith the Development Board in e a rrin g on a gift ann endowment program, Flies of exes and students is gover limn t at I Ed Ida:, state 1 American GI h r Lynn L. V de ; rector of the I nive of Public Affa Weeks, c a ment department. The eommittei private sessions. Bill Drake ex j > that the group needed re amp nj charter. Miss Vera W Gillespie, instruc­ tor in journalism, will leave at the end of the semester to accept a po-utmn a'- a -■-’a t professor of un nadsm a* Ohio University, She will serve as chairman of the Radio Journalism Division o f the S hoc] of Journalism and as sponsor of Theta Sigma Phi, national honorary fraternity for women in journalism. She will also d vert the radio news programs on the ur iversity station, V the University of Texas, Miss G iespie - sponsor of the Xi 1 bapt*’ of Theta Sigma Phi, v I f. - the past three years has cen c O'cn the most outstanding e apter, Along with this award, M " Gillespie has bern selected outstanding advisor. Atheletic Banquet Moves Movie Date to Tuesday are there for any student wishes to use them, Mr. Met “ We appreciate student4 exes coming n and gl\ ipg formation so we can kee; files up-to-date,'’ he said. Letters to each degree date call hi* attention to t s nihility of joining the a ti on: Letters also are sent t who are r o t members to i them in becoming affiliat Many exes wish they hac. when the> were graduate . they would not have lost with friends and cla*smp said. The E x -Sstudents’ As* provides the means to in* • ng a body of people who sense of responsibility I University.” By RUSS K E R ST E N Tuesday. January 15, 1952 THE DAILY TEXAN PageJ Austin Sports Leaders Tri-Deits Capture Im p r o v e d F r o s h F a c e Mustangs Upset Nine UT Athletes Farmers, 10-34 Net Doubles Title Q w |et s in H o u s t o n Among ’51 Champs Razorback* Defeat t e n n i s double* c o n so la tio n ★ By B E T T Y E R A W L A N D W o m e n ’! In tra m u ra l W riter title. By Ann M cNeil], Kappa Kappa G a m m a , t r im m e d F r a n c e s Atk in s, non, D e l t a D e lta D e lta , d o w n e d G a m m a P h i B e ta , 2 1 - 1 6 , 2 1 - 1 8 , B a r b a r a L y n n M iller a n d B e t t y i c a p tu r e th e tab le t e n n is c o n so la ­ G ra y , A lp h a ('hi O m e f e , 9 - 7 , 6-3, tio n c row n . ♦ S u n d a y a f t e r n o o n to win the t e n ­ nis d o u b le s tr o p h y in the w o m e n * In the b ad m in to n sin gle s t o u r ­ intram ural tournam ent. ney B e t t y G ray, A C hiO. will m eet T r a il i n g 7-6 in the firs t set, R o s e m a r y Bone, Gam m a I hi, in the T r i- D e l t netter.o u t p la y e d the s e m i - fi n a ls , w h ile Jo t ■' th e ir o p p o n e n t s fo r the n e x t thr e e f row , A C h iO , will play E lean o r g a m e s to ta k e th e set 9 - 7 , in the Harris, Kappa. ___ s e c o n d se t W e b b and A n d e r s o n e st a b l i s h e d a 3-0 earl wk ch the A C hiO pair w e r e n e v e r able to Houston, Dallas Seek overcom e. Pro Football Elevens if HOUSTON, J an . H . — OP)— J u d y F o rd and P at K e n d a ll, Chi O m e g a , w on a 6-3, 6-1, ; jct./*ry G lenn M cC a r th y , H o u s to n oil and o v e r J o a n R a g s d a le an d Shir ivy hotel m illio na ire, -aid Monday tha* B a k e r , Pi B e ta Phi, for tho ter Leu Haskell, in su ra n ce man and nis d o u b le s < 'in solatio n tropr . J o a n W e b b and S h i r l e y A n d e r - DICK WILLIAMS Texan Spar** S ta ff C o m p a r a t i v e score* — w h ich b y a t r iu m p h o v e r W h a r t o n J u n i o r m eeamn a m c a■»>/ lly n o t h in »g a f t e r C o l l e— g e ,- a t e a m t h a t s t o p p e d the m yp ir «• S a t u r d a y nigh t's -Y e a r l i n g v i*c t o r y j " Y e—a r **----l i n g s 5, 4 - 4 9 . ra t e tn e O w let* aligh t favor._te< 1 T h e Y e a <5. 3 f o r w a r d o f ro sh, o “-o7, in a h a r d - fo i g b t c o n c o m p l e t e s th e Y e a r l i n g b ig t h r e e ARKANSAS ( M i t h o r S t e w a r t t h e t i t l e o f A n a t t a ’* t h e L o n g h o r n b a s k e t b a l l t e a m , ’*•&. l r it p i ip w ith 3 5 . 6 4 6 15 b e s t h i g h s c h o o l b a s k e t b a l l p l a y e r . w ag s e i e c t e ( j 8s t h e c i t y ’s t o p c o i ­ S p a r k i n g t h e O wl e t s wnl be La ntert. f B illy B a n k s 6 - 6 tip in an d re I I 3 3 K 'eir e, f b a s k e t b a l l p i a v e r . He w a s seM onte R o b ic h e a u x , : doub '•* New York T h u rsd ay . I .1 I -• is ■ • had t w o . D e a n S m i t h and C h a rlie post. W i s e a n d G e o r g e G a g e will 13 IS I* 34 “ f c e r t a in ly w ou ld like to se e o r is s la t e d to ta r t a t t h e o t h e r Total* c h a m p s r eta in e d their tit le by d e ­ T h o m a s o f t h e U n iv e r s i t y s s p r i n t m m . J K U M K w r i U o f * c a « . ' C O A C H M A R S H A L L H U G H E S be i n a t t h . B A Y L O R O S ) MIIIIV/I I v r v v i l j i v i ! I r e ]a y t e a m a r e b o t h e y e i n g posif e a t i n g A n n B o w l e s a n d -T a n Hoi. tor and D alla s in the b a g ie, I t ll pl IP 0 2 * 2 E t h r id g e , A lph a Chi 0 '-■“ on t h ' O ly m p ic * ' "A I i 4 ll ward. N o r m a n Baroi .cr a t 6-2 fo r T e x a s.” 6 -2. . 0 0 0 o T h . e n t i r e a t h l e t i c p o l i c y o f t h e w ill be p o i n t i n g f o r t h a t g o a l t h . , Mot ar thy h a s g iv en up a n y den fr o m D e c k e r , I n d i a n a , is th e o t h e r 4 * 4 0 Eloi.se M oore and Anr M cN e ill, . 0 0 2 0 U S M il i t a r y A c a d e m y is u n d e r re- BPn n ” o f b u ild in g his o w n sta d iu m , a* f o r w a r d . K appa Kappa G am m a , 'ill play . 0 0 0 0 v i s i o n , b u t t h e r e is n o c e r t a i n t y T h e O w le t* h a . e a n o t h e r lr a d v a n ce d at tho pro fo o tb a ll m e e t 2 4 K a t h r in e Grar ' a f f arid M a ry I- at 4 5 2 f o u n d o n e solid s t a r t i n g p o i n t fo r l ea v e s J a n. I o pe n. th e c l e a n u p p r o g r a m , t h a t is, a ________i » i i i» 40 fe ta l* - ri_____ On o u t - o f - s e a s o n p r a c t i c e , t h e ii . *i>> m ■ r e S M U 1 8 , A A M 13. n a t i o n a l s t a n d a r d o f e n t r a n c e r e ­ d e l e g a t e s b e a t do wn a p r o p o s a l to Y re** q u i r e m e n t s a n d s t r i c t u n iv e r s a l ban it and i ns t e a d a d m •* I ar ll #>- 2, MiK*ch 4. USV i*. KHIM**.,h , Miyri-» 2, Ka»tm»n, Holm c o n t r o l o f a t h l e t i c po licie s. a m e n d m e n t l i m i t i ng sr r in g f o o t ­ . F r r r m t n 4. 3. T h e N C A A e m e r g e d from b all dri l l s to 2 0 s essi u n o v e r a 3 0t h e c r i s e s s t r o n g e r t h a n e v e r , d a y pe r i o d a n d b a s k e t b a l l t o 20 E X P R ESS BU S S E R V IC E s t r e n g t h e n e d b y th e s u p p o r t o f s e s s i o n s in 2 1 days . t h e (ii - i d e n t s o u t h e r n b lo c w h ic h to H O U S T O N O t h e r h i g h l i g h t s in c lu d e d t • a y e a r a g o p e r p e t r a t e d t h e d e a t h v o t e t o c o n t i n u e c o n tr flied fo< 4 Hours C a ll 2-1135 fit th e s a n i t y c o d e . T h e S o u t h and ball t e l e v i s i o n and t h e m o v e 'N’ S o u t h w e s t h a c k e d th e N ( A A s o l ­ t he f o o t b a l l coach'** to “et up ti * i Kerrville Bus Co. idly in its r e f u s a l t o be s p u r r e d o w n c o d e o f e t h i c s an i po e 118 E. 10th into d r a s t i c a c t i o n b y th e p r e s i ­ t he i r r anks . den t com m itte*. ★ West Point Seeks ‘" - . ‘TS........ AHI Ptir KPVKinn NCAA Still Strong For Bowl Games RADIO ;. F — E SiTYlcdamohDA Rooms Available thrown AAM MrUow-n for HOW MANY TIMES A DAY Spring Semester ROBT. L LEEHALL Across from Law Building Substitution, Roughness Concerns Rules Group IOO?) 1200? IE YOU’RE AN AVERAGE SM OKER THE RIGHT ANSWER IS OVER 2 0 0 ! Yes, 200 times every day your nose and throat are exposed to irritation... 200 GOOD REASONS WHY YOU R! BETTER OFF SMOKING SFI*” ,t« ' P h ilip M o r r is ! PtOVED definitely m ilder . . . PROVED definitely lest irritating th an any other leading brand . . . PROVED by o utstanding nos* and throat specialists. VY* EXTRA ! ATTENTION ALL COLLEGE STUDENTS Every Sunday Evening over C BS W H ITE SU L P H U R SPR IN G S, W, V a., J a n . 1 4.— (Af*) — “ T h is I R u le s ( o m m i t t e e is g f|in g to tak e | u n d e r s c r u t i n y the u n n e c e s s a r y r o u g h m ss whi ii h a s c r o p p e d u p in tile g a m e , ” IL (), ( F r i t z ) Grisler, c h a i r m a n o f the N C A A f o o t b a l l rule* c o m m i t t e e said M o n d a y . Cr. h r reported un necessary r o u g h n e s s a nd the lib e r a l s u b s t i ­ t u t i o n rule are the t w o m a in c o n ­ c e r n s o f t h e c o m m i t t e e w h ic h started th ree day m e etin g M on­ day. “ Com mitt c e feel tim rule ami penult;* on u n n e c e s s a r y r o u g h n e s s is a l r i g h t , ” ( ’n lei- said. Basketball Scores A r k a n s a s 5 4 , B a y l o r 38. S M U 40, T e x a s A it M 3 4 . K a n s a s S t a t e 6 5 , O k l a h o m a 5 4. M is so u r i 5 9 , D r ak e BO. S o u t h w e s t e r n L o u i s ia n a 7 1 , C e n ­ t e n a r y 60. A p palachian State T ea ch ers 93 , T r o y ( A l a . ) T e a c h e r s 67. W i t t e n b e r g 7 1 , O hio W e s l e y a n 6 6 . N o r t h C a r o lin a 78, D a v i d s o n 77. W p o V i r g in ia P l , W a k e F o r e s t 57. O hio S t a t e 8 5 , P u r d u e 69 . M ississip p i '94, G e o r g i a T e c h 64. L o u i s v il l e 9 3 , W illia m a n d Mary 65 . I I o w a 7 8 , N o r t h w e s t e r n 64. A l a b a m a 6 I, V a n d e r b il t 44. M iam i 8 8 , S t e t s o n 57. D U R I N G Dead Week # C o m e in and browse around. All pictures taken at parties this THE P H IL IP M O R R I S P L A Y H O U S E tall, as previous Presents an Outstanding College Student on well as years, dispay in ar* now. Featured w ith Famous H ollyw ood Stars in the P H I L I P M O R R I S Intercollegiate Acting Com petition TStSL* CAU FOR PHILIPMORRIS Vt / Ja ck J PARTY PICTURES 2264 G u adalupe W herever you live in Texas, the oil industry is your neighbor. For the Texas oil industry is the bread-and-butter, the opportunity, the daily work of some 190,000 Texas men and women. The girl who sits next to you in the bus; the hearty-looking man who waves as you pass on the highway; the family behind you at the PTA: in Texas, they all could be, some certainly are oil workers. Bookkeepers, stenographers, executives, drillers, roughnecks, stillmen, geologists, salesmen, pipe liners, petroleum engineers—the oil industry supplies the livelihood of all, and many more. Neighbors of yours these people are, folks who pay taxes like yours, spend their money in the stores you patronize, drive the same kind of automobile, send their children to the same schools. . . . . The oil industry is more than a balance sheet, a set of statistics, an investment in derricks and pipe-stills. In Texas, it 's the family next door . HUMBLE OIL HUMBLE PIPE * REFINING LINE COMPANY COMPANY ^ Tuesday, January 15, 1952 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3 Move UT' Said 1921 Group Fleming and Lansford Top UT Scholastic Footballers B y O R L A N D S IM S Texan S p o r t* S ta ff Ap proxim ately 400 Longhorn athletes, fans, and frien ds attend­ ed the annual U n iv e rs ity Athletic Ba n q u et in the Texas L n io n Main Lounge M onday night. The a ffa ir, sponsored ye a rly by the Ex-Students* Association, paid tribute to members of the 1951 Longhorn team, and tingled out fo r special m e rl on the foot­ ballers with the best scholastic records— Gene Flem ing and Jim Lansford . Flem ing, 215-pound senior left guard fo r the 1951 Longhorns, hails from Mount V ernon High. He stands 6-2, and w ore number JIM L A N S F O R D y O N E D AY Cleaning and Pressing 67 during the past football sea­ son. His m ajor is business admin­ istration. Lan sford , a 235-pound "double d u ty” tackle fo r the 1951 Orange and W h ite , is a native of Carrizzo Springs, where he was a fullback. M a jo rin g in physical education, he was chosen on most all-Southwest C onference squads this season fo r his aggressive play, making both platoons of several enemy "allopponent” teams. Lansford, a senior, wore number TO for the Steers. Trophies were exhibited M on­ day nignt, records of the S te e rs’ first-place ties in basketball and baseball, and championships in swimming, tennis, and golf. Llo yd G reg ory, form er Lo n g ­ horn tennis captain, wa* toast­ m aster, and C a d u s P ry o r, K T B l program director, acted as master of ceremonies. The program opened a- the Rev. J a c k Lew is, a form er U n iv e rs ity cheerleader, gave the invocation. T he dinner was then served, a fte r which members of the U n iv e rsity athletic council and toastm aster G reg o ry were introduced. G reg ory, in turn, intioduced each Longhorn coach, who then introduced athletes perform ing in his p articu lar sport. Coaches introduced were T h u r­ man (S lu e ) H ull, basketba:,; H ank Chapman, smitten rig; ( lyde L ittle fie ld , track ; Bibb Fa lk , base­ b all; Dr. p . A. Pem ck, tennis; H a rv e y Penick, g o lf; and Ld P rice , football. + A fte r all introductions had end­ ed, P r y o r took over with en ter­ tainm ent that he and Jit t e r Nolen d irector of the Texas I nims, had planned. No E x tra Charge LONGHORN CLEANERS 2S3R G u a d a lu p e Ph. 6-3*47 SHORTHAND IN 6 W EEKS S p a B x iw h iiin q TH ERE A R E G O O D .P A Y IN G /pi D IE G O , ( a l i f , Ja n ll Fo rm er heavyw ieght boxing champion Jo e Louis and twm other Negro golfers showed up Monday to cha.lenge w hat they said was a Professional G o lfers Ass iciation ban on non-white players. T hey appeared fo r pre-tourna­ ment q u alifyin g testa in the PG A sanctioned San Diego Open, start- JO B S W A IT IN G FO R YO U T h e re ’* a quick, easy w ay for you to get a good-payir g job. Y o u can learn “ Speed w riting,” the m o d e r n , nationally-known •hortaar.d in only *;x weeks, at D urham 's Busine** College, here in A ustin. -*$ "* 3. RATES ' A re Now in Effect at Arthur Murray * Yes, you can learn with your favorite partner at no extra cost. But don’t delay, call today "S p e e !w ritin g ” is en tirely un­ like the old shorthand methods "S p e e d w ritin g ” use* the A B C ’s— it ju st turn* your lo n g 'a n d into shorthand. V is it or w rite Durham 's af 600A L a v a c a Stre e t — or telephone 8-3446 fo r fu ll Inform ation. D urham ’s is exclusively author­ ized to teach “ Sp eed w ritin g ” in A ustin. It is the only business college here bearing the approval of the S tate Departm ent of E d u ­ cation and fu lly accredited by the A rre r.ca n Association of Com m er­ cial Colleges. (A d v .) “ M ove to the dam-ers” and to ry of The U n iv e rs ity of Texas,” “ Dam to the movers” were the key said Dr. Vin son when the story w ords at the U n iv e rsity in 1921. broke. It m ay have been. I t was in Ja n u a ry , 1921, when pro-and-con discussion H ulon B lack of Temple (then edi-1 The to r o f The D a ily T exan) signed w ent on fo r weeks. F u ll page edi­ his name to a petition that read: torials were w ritte n in the Austin "M e m o ria m to G overnor N e f f papers. P ro p e rty owners hit the and the Thirty-seventh L e g is la ­ ceiling. And the Texas Legislature ture, (signed by students of the was called in to act as referee. T aking the Brackenrid ge tra c t U n iv e r s ity ), petitioning fo r the mm rem oval of the U n iv e rsity to the Brack enrid ge tra c t,” The Brack enrid ge tra c t, It turned out, was a 496-acre tra c t , of land hard by the Colorado R i­ ver, "g ra n te d , donated, and con­ veyed in tru st . . .” to the U n iv e r­ sity in 1910 by the late Colonel George W . Brackenridge. The crux of the m atter was , that the U n iv e rsity , in need of ex­ pansion, was casting longing glances toward the Colorado R iv e r G E N E F L E M IN G area for a new home. The idea of moving the campus Acts included C laire M asterson, was initiated, strangely enough, Aqua Queen nominee, "sin g in g '' by the U n ive rsity president— Dr. to Don Klein, voted U T ’g Most R . E . V in so n — and the Board of Handsome A th le te ; A n n Donahue, Regents. It was supported by w no sang “ I t ’s a Most U nusual 2,409 students— signing a 73-foot D a y ’’ and " P II See Yo u A g a in ” ; long petition. Dodo McQueen and J it t e r Nolen, "T h is is the most radical an­ fo rm er cheerleaders, who did a nouncement ever made in the his­ take-off on P r y o r ’s radio prog ia n i; M a rily n Bronson, Austin H igh School student, who sang several folk songs; and Leo H e r­ zog, form er nationally-known co­ median, who did a "S a d Sack routine F r e e Pinball Games out w ith a plan to donate 2,500 Mrs. F re d E. Burdette Is th# acres of the “ most b e a u tifu l” land fan who ordered. in Bosque County, and a modest The HOO p ro fit from the aalea one m illion dollars to supplement is earm arked fo r a $50 spring one drag m erchant, who said he The long-dormant pinball fig h t the grant. “ I f , ” said Ferguson, “ anyone semester scholarship and expense# is being primed fo r another round. had operated his machines on a ^can come out w ith a ‘better p lan ’ fo r a delegate to the national The Texas N o v e lty Company, free-game basis fo r eleven years and a more generous o ffe r, let it A D S convention. Austin distributor of t h * m a­ and had never “ received any in ­ he k n o w n !” chines, is circu latin g petitions dication from the police that they Ju d g e V ic to r Brooks o f A ustin over the city asking the Le g isla ­ w ere illegal.” The raids occurred championed the “ dam’ in the ture to amend the state slot m a­ one day a fte r W illia m Prescott I m overs’ ” point of view w ith an a rticle in the “ A lca ld e ,” urging Laredo publisher, had chine law to legalize "fre e gam e” A lle n , the U n iv e rs ity not to uproot its (N ationally Accredited) machines. called Austin "th e center of the 3g.year-old, F o rty A cre traditions. state ’s gambling activities and a An outstanding college serv­ The issuance of free games to ing a splendid profession. pinball players was the basis on disgrace to the U nited S ta tes.’’ O f eleven buildings described Doctor o f O ptom etry degree which tile county court d e c la re d , Several Austin merchants were ; by Ju d g e Brooks, six— B . H a ll, three years fo r students en­ the machines illegal gambling de­ fined last spring and the practice the Jo u rn a lism Bu ilding, M odern tering w ith sixty or more vices last spring. F o u r Drag store of allow ing m achine players to ! Language Building, U n iv e rsity semester credits in specified proprietors w ere fined by the J w in free games was banned. O th­ I Press, Law Building, and Old L i ­ Lib eral A rts courses. court Inst ye a r a fte r surprise po-; erw ise, pinballing is still allowed, b ra ry Bu ild in g — rem ain today des­ R E G IS T R A T IO N M A R . 3 lice raids. but Hugh W . Sanders, owner of pite new building drives. Students are granted profes­ The raids were criticized by Home Drug, says that his pinball The Legislature fin a lly solved sional recognition by the business “ has fallen o ff to IO per ; the controversy when it urged a U. S. D epartm ent of Defense E x tra plates had to be added The U n iv e rsity has received a cent of w hat it used to he.” compromise. This idea was suc­ and S elective Service. small piece of the original w ing at the last m inute to take care "T h e r e ’s no incentive w ithout cessful, w ith the U n iv e rs ity buying Ex ce lle n t clinical facilities. fa b ric of the airplane built by free games,” he said. 176 acres north and east of w hat of the overflow crowd, Paul T r a ­ A thletic and recreational ac­ the W rig h t brothers and flown On the other side is I L O. was then the campus, and thereby tivities. Dorm itories on th# cy, in charge of arrangem ents, at K it t y H aw k, N X . in 1903. T u rn e r, ow ner of H ank's B a r and solving — fo r a time a t least— the campus. reported. The original plans called The gift came from Lester D. G rill, who say* he threw the pe­ question of what to do w ith the C H IC A G O C O L L E G E O F fo r 385, ami about 15 extras had G ardner, leading authority on O PTO M ETRY tition away. sp raw ling U n iv e rs ity plant. to he brought out. aeronautics and founder of the " I t w ouldn't help one w ay or Less than a week rem ains fo r A n d that's the w ay the "d a m ’ 2312 N o rth C la rk S tre e t In stitu te of the A ero nautical Chicago 14, Illinois prospective teachers planning to another. I f the la w says they don’t to the m overs” won out over the Society. take the N ational T eacher E x a m i­ w an t it, I ’m not going to have it. “ move to the riam-ers” (a ll 2,409 In 1916, almost 13 years a f ­ nations to subm it completed app li­ I t doesn't make any difference to of ’e m ). ter the first successful flig h t, cations fo r tests, Gordon V . A n ­ me one w ay or the other,” he said. which lasted tw elve seconds, derson, assistant director of the | O rville W rig h t reassembled the Testing and Guidance Bureau, has Fe w Union A ctivitie s plane for public exhibition. He announced. found that the old fabric could Applications fo r ex am in atio n s1 T he only re g u la rly scheduled not be used again and he must be forw ard ed to the Prince-! activities o f the Texas I nion fo r thoug htfully saved some of the .ng Thursday. ton office not later than Ja n u a ry this week w ill bt* folk dancing and original m aterial, w'hirh w a s dis­ Horton Sm ith, the P G A ’s presi1H, and should be addressed to the movie "B o o m e ra n g ’’ Tuesday covered a fte r his death. It was d< nt, said the Louis case was not and Sw in g and Turn Educational Testing Service, Box night, from this original m aterial that closed ai d that he would present W ednesday. 592, Princeton, N . J . U n iv e rsity received the it to the P G A ’s national to u rn a - , the A t the testing session, F e b ru ­ fragm ent. m ent committee. He said he had G R FG SCOTT a ry 16, candidates m ay take the The small piece of fabric, not personally barred Louis. BA LLR O O M D A N C E SC H O O L common exam ination, and one or along w ith a picture of the a ir­ The question of the ban on O VFR T EX A S T H EA T R E 7 9439 two optional exam inations which plane, is displayed on the aero­ Louis and two others, announced demonstrate m astery of subjects nautics bulletin hoard in the by the tournam ent sponsoring in the fields in which they may En g in eerin g Building. com m ittee Sui day, became invol­ teach. ved in con flictin g interpretations. A ll candidates will receive a Me rn be i ; of the local committee We we# 14 Uke ticket o f admission advising them -.aid they w eie told by Sm ith, af of the place of the test. Ie write rear tor they had invited Ijoui* to play I Candidates for the common exan am ateur exempt from qu ali­ ut**** | am ination w ill report at 8:30 a.m., fication, that he was banned by a AUTOMOBILE Fe b ru a ry 16, and w ill take the P C A by-law. Dr. Russell Spurgeon Poor, test at 9 a.m. Candidates fo r opchairm an of the U n iv e rsity Re­ | tional exam inations w ill report to lations D ivision o f the Oak Ridge the Testing and Guidance B u reau Institute o f N uclear Studies, will at I :30 p.m. A p plications fo r examinations speak W ednesday on "E n g in e e r ­ ing an Atom ic E n e rg y ’ at a and inform ation describing regis­ F e rry -Breeks B lif ., M IW 6:30 p.m. dinner in the Texas tration may be obtained at \ -Hall Union sponsored by the College of 206. Engineering. ii JU\C 11 W ednesday Dr. Po o r w ill con­ Asked in Petition Chicago Collage of OPTOMETRY University Gets Fabric of Plane Built by Wrights Teachers' Test Applications Due Engneers to Hear Oak Ridge Expert LIABILITY INSURANCE McCall-SmithHibler W hen Medicines Are Needed . . . 8-6687 Arthur Murray C A M P U S ST U D IO 2116 Guadalupe Y o u c a n d e p e n d u p o n o u r Im * # c l o c k s to m a k e it p o ssib le to f i l l p r e s c r i p ­ tio n s in a m a t te r of m i n u t e s . ED M IN O R , 1910 G u a d a lu p e Today is The Last Day Pharmacist D ia l 2-5211 fer w ith Chancellor Ja m e s P. H art, Presid en t T, S P a in te r, and Dr. C, Paul Bon er, U n iv e rsity o f­ ficials in charge of defense re ­ search and other governmentsponsored research. The dinner is for graduate stu­ dent* arid fa c u lty members from the d e p a r t m e n t s in general sciences and the College of E n ­ gineering. Thursday he will m eet with st;d e n t and fa cu lty groups to exa the programs supported by ll 'itU te which give grants research. he U n iv e rsity of Texas, A A M ire, and Rice In stitu te are ,*.-’ sponsor* of the Institute, ai d some 36 other southern r*jtr©ng. N*w*on, B» -i«'ba'«a a-d B t' san H ts ' H e tr.impels - eve' y joss hor- tty *. B a t * Street • Pram M on day Oh f r a n k * end Johnny • W hoa the Sonw» d o M arrying Ie Sly•• W h it e or Good G u lf P r e m iu m or T r a f fic or Beg. No-No* — —■■ ■ ■ ■ —.....- — — lo c k rn 1905 va-’ad jo lt Mr ie i dreamed / tm- ("I p th# Mr a S**i.«» ta i n * 6 00 ■ t a — __ 18 u c • Gave Tho Be M e erie* t*l »»I«|J|'«M l l 7 95 the mid * o " es, when " T h * f '* n i; # d s h o w m a n s h ip jammed t*# dane* Ho m with co w ' as too *»c ted to donee* Is le - for that W hen S/dray i c ashy v tai ■/ on t~*ss to r sr jid e i. B t He* points 0 » tho Sunny M a of the Street • Gm for Christmas • B u n in ' fo un d With tho the be I of lei* sop ono so» o‘ •" a root, -obod/ tads bvt h rn. So I st*n *o lh# —a t’tr. Boo • Don’t Bo That W a y a J M n ' the Vibes • Shoo Shinor’I D rag S w e ar* Door • Tnt Comme Virginia Tho Mooch# • Strong# fru it • Poe# fo a m • Oh, Lofty bo G ood 1923, Cotton Hawk ns b:t « p t u t / on f- i I nor SO* E v*ry. o - i w o - ttd to be s an* on the -ew Horn. H e a r Si* who were High o* en Open M A # • Cotton Tail S w oo tho arts on 'arado • Tho Sol C ro ry fhythm Art e S h a * put siring* in a i j —p bond and the jo ie purists hooted, B-t his orrongeme-ts of beloved snow tunes turned the hoots Into whistles. Indian Love C a ll • C a r io ta • f a t a l* W hat ii this Thing Coded L o v e ? • Don­ k e y Serenade • So ftly, a t in a M o rn in g Sum s# Hines was the first lo Cut his right ho-d I s # . , . t o make the piano a solo Instrume-r. Twelve years ago a young singer nomad Eckstine came along. This is what they did together. Stormy Monday Blunt • W a ter Bay • I G o t It Bad and That Ain't Good • Some­ h o w • Jolly, Jolly • Skylark 25c SIS## U nconditional G u a ra n te e d Baby •foelr V e lve t W h i t e S id e W a l l T ir e * N e w — B e r ap* — l i* e d T IR E S P E C IA L S ATO. * I i My Anthropology Irvine* Ian#**! tim# id tm mmid S- S0 2 0 H a m p 's lA A r t t r s Sw ing • flo e lr Bottom Stomp A n n o u n c e * N e w G a s o lin e p ric e * p er g el. I tm * m ot r 7 * tM fA rr Original Jo lly f o i l Btu es • G o e r0 rn W E E D IN btrftkmpfa iGft&r The Chant • Ponte bertram • Doctor J a n SERVICE STATION • « l t a i t » * O " these h ttoric tides, you re listen* SA LE! sizes* 2* lh H i t h r u F . 5. T o h t t p h a i r m a t b e tu l i n sh a m p o o s use L a d y W i l d r o o t C r e a m H a i r D n s s i t t + I ing to the -o n who o c^ a y cut the po**er-s for jozi. n0\ T. ’ J Even in the h a rd e st w a te r W ild r o o t Shampoo washes hair gleam .ng clean, manageable, curl- (m trslti/ coop Gordon V . Anderson, asbirector of the B u re a u , an• ! that application blanks *i prions m ay hp obtained in m V Had 206. T h e y m ay , ■ seq lired by -writing P. O. 592, Princeton, N . J. ■ p tests, Dr. Anderson exare given fo u r tim es a ;n colleges throughout the State*. Scores are used as j..,. ial basis f o r admission, i,g w ith previous scholastic rec- and other factors. SA LE! t m com bination o f the bist o f both. reau. rn BOO W . 5 th S t ^"(mustier LIQUID CREAM S H A M P O O in vitin g w ith o ut robbing hair o f it* natural oils. ■ Testing and G uidance B u ­ A U S T IN W E L D IN G A R A D IA T O R W ORKS iiouio cacao* M ore than just * liquid , more than just * cream . . . new W ild r o o t L iq u id Cream Shampoo is a will be available at Law S< bool admission tests w ill Rebate Slips at the S T * The RCA Victor "Story of Jazz" ,o given F e b ru a ry 23 at the Uni- To Turn In mm *UJildroofr Upon Release Law School A p p lic a n ts W ill Be Tested Feb. 23 t KC ADS Makes $100 of 496 acres as a base, the Regents I to the river was never made. A planned to buy up 400 more acres $500,000 grant toward a new For Scholarship g iving the U n iv e rs ity a 900-acre M ain Building and $300,000 aet aside fo r a new dormitory would campus, third largest in the nation A thousand miles can't a te f then. (W isco n sin , in 1921, had I have reverted back to the estate Bibler or the Texan. 1,000 acres; Illin o is led with if the U niversity had made the A t least th a t’s indicated in an move. 1,229.) order received Monday from an A possible loss o f $800,000 to A f te r the original flu r r y o f pe­ ex-student in Cincinnati, Ohio, for the U n iv e rs ity from the estate of tition-signing and editorializing, a copy of the Bibler cartoon book, M a jo r George W. L ittlefield was the idea began to slow down, le a v ­ A lp ha D elta Sigm a, ad vertisinf one o f the main reasons the move ing the w ay open fo r facetious fra te rn ity , which handled sale* jokesters to come up w ith little of the booklet Ja n u a r y IO didn't ; jew els like “ the U n iv e rs ity isn’t have a copy le ft by the tim e the a t the dam site by a dam’ sight.” letter arrived . B u t it persuaded W h e n the talk w as hottest, for- a member to give up one fo r th# ! mer G o vernor Jim Ferguson came sake of the cause. Louis to Challenge P G A s Colored Ban SAN T y p in g O p tio n a l N o S u m b o la (/• • • A B C ' * For Baun# ** a n d C .» H S e r v ic e DAY. KVF L o w C o it S e t h Y r S c h o o l * in P r i n c i p a l C l H a a C o m r O b s e r v e S p o o k to o u r P u p ila 'Not By a Darn-site' Said Others Book by Bibb Sold in a Hurry RCA VICTOR, records tuesday, January I S. 195? T H E D A ILY T E X A N Page < L it t le J k Texas i 7 is one of th e T h is state * fifth h a r d e s t h it h y p o lio . re p o rts — C am p u s B y B lb la r HST Defies Press On 'Security Order m o n th , e s t im a t e s in d ic a t e ly to A m e r ic a e n te rs th e it p la c e the P o lio , no re s p e c te r t h a t T e x a n s c a r r y t h e ir p r o p e r s h a r e o f s t r ik e th e lo a d in th e a n ti- p o lio fig h t . le f t 's be r e a d y . D im e s c a m p a ig n t h is t im e w i t h a n anyone, f o u n d a t io n on By FLO COX One thing vou’fe got to g v* T ru m a n credit fo r he never say* of a n yw h e re , p e rs o n s , at any m ay die ' Tram*.ated, that could mean tha* he doesn’t, know when to let we:! enough alone. S a tu rd a y , Tr-iman a p p o s e d a pine-man committee to de<-me w h a t inform ation federal agenr es ma r eiease f r puhimation. T-e committee • *r,e result of a ♦‘security o-der” enacted in S ep ­ tem ber to t ghten the hand .ng • f g ,ve nrr.ent nform ation by civ;.la branches of the g r>vernme Th*- order gave *•/»< n ag*"' r ■ he right, to o assify m f rm atior a* top secret, ret, confidential, or restricted. The committee now w ill pa**, on t-e inform ation hefor* i t s re lea *ed to the pres*. The original ord#r drew fir** from en ' it o, .ne h o u r* is on. WJetbacb.l add ed b u rd e n . M o n e y t h is d r i v e m u s t go t o w a r d n a t io n a l s o u n d f i n a n c i a l fo o t in g . T h e r e f o r e i t is o f th e u tm o s t im p o r t a n c e The M a rch of as c o n s e c u t iv e p o lio e p id e m ic y e a r , is v it a l t h a t ’ he g e n e r a l p u b lic g iv e s f r e e ­ and th a t t h e y e a r 1952 w ill he no e x c e p tio n . fro m o n th e W larcli o f , a n n u a ll y E a r ly M o n p a y in g o f f a s e rio u s d e f i c i t in N a t io n a l F o u n d a ­ t io n f o r I n f a n t i l e P a r a l y s i s fu n d s . W h e r e d id th e d e f ic i t c o m e f r o m .' " T h e d a y s o f th e w e t b a c k in T e x a - a r e The f o u n d a ­ n u m b e r e d ,” s a id Thom as tio n a s s u m e d th e d e b ts o f c o u n tle s s p o o r in p a t i e n t s - e v e n th o u g h a d e f ic it w a s T e x a s r a c e r e la t io n s . as­ a S a tu rd a y E v e n in g L. S u t h e r la n d Post a r t i c le un N u m b e r e d in •.‘ h a t '’ M i l l i o n s ? s u re d . • j r i r i n J 'me a p e o p le, s t u d e n ts a n d o th e r s , w h o a r e a b le T h e T e x a n h a s m a d e som e c h a n g e s in F ir ir g L in e u n n o t ic e d p o lk ’ th a t by re a d e rs Q IU r * L i to s h o u ld no* p a s * speak a u th o r t a t iv e ly on s u b je c t s c a m p u s - w id e in t e r e s t . A s a lw a y s , le t t e r s a n d — p a r leu at IJ o f c r it ic is m c o n t r ib u t o r s o f le tte r s . a re list a s w e lc o m e as th o s e o f p r a i- e a ru i th e le t t e r s c o lu m n F o r e m o s t a m o n g th e c h a n g a of is a rn-w W h is o p en to a ll c o n t r ib u t o r s . r u le t h a t r e q u ir e s p r in t i n g s i g n a t u r e s o f w r it e r s . L in e In t h e p a s t, m a n y c o n t r ib u t o r s a c q u ir e d r e q u e s t in g o fte n “ in it ia ls q u e s tio n a b le r e g u la t io n s w r it e r s a re m ust c o n j u n c t io n th e y nam e in is le g a l, but p r a c t ic e . Now, th e changed w it h th e g e t p r in t e d . cases, o n ly ” — a assum e w h ic h l i k e ly In so th a t T e x a n — fo r o n ly th e to b r in g a se co n d ary w hat s t r u g g le p e r s o n ’s The a m uch p o s itio n new spaper of r e p r is a l, w ill K u r t C a r l a e n ’s h e r o ic b u t lo s ­ t e r p r is e , p u s h e d in ra re s t of C a p t a in in g fig h t to s a v e h is s h ip , th e F l y i n g E n ­ ’eft* r r e s p o n s ib ilit y p r in t i n g O U Staff h ir in g th e h a b it o f m en fo r o f th e tw o c h r o n ic le d in e a c h new s in to w eeks, and h is li v i n g g a lla n t v ic a r io u s ly w it h th e c a p t a in c a m e w h e n h is s h ip s a n k . A n a m e be w it h h e ld . w ean T h e p u r p o s e o f th is a n d s e v e r a l le s s e r h e a d lin e w r i t e r d u b b e d h im " N ic e - t r y ( a ris e n .” c h a n g e s is to p r o m o te le tte rs fr o m th o s e Bright's Broken Jaw Caused Greatest Sports Fuss in 51 • Br JO E L. SC H O T T f t run Kzchnng* K'l’ior The blow wh rh mud* th# loudest im part in college < •irr!es during 1951 was that which broke ti * jaw of Drake U n iv e rs ity ’* N'Ptri'* football s*ar, J duin\ B rig h t, a poll of college opinion disclosed Su n ­ day. The ano ia! poll of the col­ lege anal vats’ Bureau of Col­ lege frate rn ity members d *< osed that a sampling of th# views on .'.OO campuses ndi rated college men were most a r anted of B lig h t'* injur.'. The fra te rn ity member* were asked whut one event d irin g 1951 provoked the most discussion in collegiate circles and the overwhelm ing response of the students polled was the Bright inci­ only two belong to college fratern ities, although a ma jo rity of first-string players were fra te rn ity men. E v e n rn the deep South co l­ leges were v irtu a lly unani­ mous in regretting the B lig h t incident. M any of the stu ­ dent* polled added the post­ script that if a player re le n t­ ed competing against r Ne gro he should have stayed out of the game. ID A H O V S . S M U dent Bi lght received the broken jaw n a game between OU la* boma A A M and Drake F o l­ low ing the in ju ry, Drake broke off relations with the Aggie*. D rake spokesmen charged movies of tile game showed that. B rig h t wa* hurt in an unprovoked m> id ant Asked to name the one in r blent they were most proud of, fra te rn ity men polled said it was the fact that of the oian\ students involved in college basketball scandals, T Th* H D an* B « I M a t t, * D A s tu d e n t ^ An a in .gant challenge from 1tip U n ive rsity of Id a ­ ho Will be taken un by So u th ­ ern Methodist U n iversity, a c ­ cording to football -tar B e n ­ ton Muaslewhite. The challenge iso t about football, though I t ’s about raising blood for out troops in Korea. The Idaho school, which termed itself “ the bloodiest campus in A m erica/ i -sued the challenge to S M I to heat •heir record on raising blood. P L E D G E R E B E L L IO N F ifte en fra te rn ity pledges lowered the Am erican flag from the post office at Rough and Ready, L a lif., recent : and i an Up the stars and bars of the C onfederacy. About half of the tow ii 125 population cheered and feted the "R e b e ls ," then con- j| new sp ap er T of e lh * x a U n i v e r s it y n of Io u , is pot us bed in Austin every m o r n in g except Monday sod .Saturday. . n>J™ to J .ne sud sleep* luring holiday «nd examination periods, and .owe*** y d u r in g -hr . IM H . e s , .on. ode, th * t it le of T h eS u m m e r I* .s n on T u e s d a y a n d F r id a y bv I n a * -Variant P u b lic a tio n s , ma . N e w s c o n tr ib ,,lio n s w ill be *• - e f e d b t te le p h o n e ( J -X 4 7 51 or • a d i t o n * i o ffice J . B I or st 'h e N e w * U b o r m o r f , L B . IO 2 none err* 11 g d e l i v e r y a n d a c a r m i n g a ho uld ha m a d # in J H •" “ 7 O p in io n s of th e Texan *>•• noi n#’ * s » a r llv tho## o f the A d m ln ia tr a ion l r o th e r Un* v a n i t y o ffic ia l* E n te re d a . tecnnd -g las* » » ' O c ' . ’O .r IS . ! « * * a t te e P o # ! O ffic e at A la tin T e t e * tin ier ha A ■ of M a r c h I . >6 <9 _____ ____________ A S S O C IA T E D P P t SS W IR E S E R V IC E The A aa oath to* P r e s * s ec cl ... ■ * title d tx) the u se 'o r re p u b lic a tio n of » . new s d is p a tc h e s -edVed ii cc o th e r w is e e r e d (ted ie this p aper, and "c a ite m , of str.taneo is ..r . r ■ B l a c k . l eon B o o th , Amusement- E d ito r Kenneth Gompertz Ma nu* ( re , A * u * t - C o le r a , Day E d ito r* ................................. M .rd< Da • . Jo h n n ie Human, W i n m W a ar n » ’« n , B a r n a r d l>el.p yv h .d ith J o y c e la lk . R o b e rt K l iv Cl 7.1c . F i0 Cox, How ard Page J . Jo - c e l.o r r a in e F la n g e r , Night E d ito rs ...................... Anne t •t m ti* i s , Dorothy Campbell, M ar x G ray . A sn W a v ne G ene D o w , Clan B rew er, Jo Ar n Dickersou Ham H a rry H a .# * , T h o rn *# Ho.s n (,'h a ric# M a r i o n J o h n s t o n , a n d Exchange E d ito r .............. — ............. Jo e L. Schott I; r ce c K ru m m e ra ch a r, A i I h o n in * L a w - , B a n n i * G l e n n IS S U E ] ,- . L e w i* M a tth e w * . Ja n e t M cANNE C H A M BERS K in n e v , W illia m M illh o llo n , M ary Lea M itc h e ll, G a r lo n d M o * * - . M a r. .. Hat old W a l ford B K< >y. Bascom Ne.-on,g a r * 1 I ’ e l t v . D n m e l K a m e n t o ! . W a n ­ on K i t h Reagan, h, ir e n e Record*, •loel K irkp atrick - ,,o s# h a Said, Wi ’i#m S c h w n r t f ii N a n J o s t e v e n d . A l f o rd T a y ­ N u b t Sp o rt* E d ito r .... How ai d Page lo r . I. - ab e th H o y t S t n i d e r e * . RoAssistants Dick W illiam s, B e lt ' e Ka' land b u r' i- J nae S ce a I r e m a W i,.ia m » , N ignt S o cie ty E d ito r M artha M u arty .lame# R - e r i e r i c k W ilh», a n d Jerry J a m e i W lid e n . N ight Am usem ents Ed ito r ..................................... Bobby Jones STAFF N ight E d ito r Av-'istant N ig h t E d ito r . \ight R ep orters F O R T H IS H o e rI a se • c line to take advantage o f any op­ po rtunity to pa.-* the course.' Dr. Alderson pointed out that in many courses, failin g th# fin a l m car* fa ling the course. Th « goes along with w^hat stu­ dents had to *av re cen tly about w h y they cheat. Most fe lt they j ;.*• needed a ttle more to get b y ; so, a* one said, “ I ju s t # a little help.” On the other hand, H ’* been pointed out that less emphas s on hour quizzes w ould in< e a se cheat­ ing on the latter. And hour quiz*#* app aren tly are eas er to steal than final It s no easy pr< bb m to a swer. B at if a ’ y group can come up w ith p-gcT ca- “ solutions, we behav* tne F * c ilty-St .dent C abinet can. I.~Jirina alcine and his entertainm ent as criticized n an editorial appearing rn th* Th irsdav Texan. W e I vp in a di'/.lu* or cd ag* N am e Calling e a r h *T - ur ;a' that t r egro -r> screer g TO T H E E D IT O R : the news -no,IT concern itself I- a * *rti< ie it Frid a : ’* Da y en ,a ly With hr dir g up sec ir ity Texan Dean N ow otny warn* ‘'stu­ when men have disproved all gr d* row s and see g that other kinds dents to beware of classmates who and a., •teals (no S u n d ay ichool a •e pron rn i y cleared. feet the v might be tempted to solicitations de* red i . I his leave# T ie controversial issue pom 's cheat.” He also said that ‘Stu d e n t* nu ’ tne two w ays to look a' new*. a vacan cy to be filled .n order often fram e themselves by *-tt ng One group, puhhc o ffic ia ls are next to someone who w ill copy that man n ay pre* .me th at he * g enerally concerned v. th wr at eftheir w o rk ." more rn an existing organ s n . That ff> t. each release of inform ation the B it how can we beware eave* v e ry few outlets. One of m ay have on the public. I ne othch £At# F$ u n i es $ w ^ k r*ow w •re , ef w ay* is in that phenome­ e -ide i ewspaper mer s con w ed a re ’ W h y -n't toe Texan non *hat we i » culture. I or- e< t cer ed not w:*h the effect, good en is to pr.nt toe ram es o f a them even. to ■ r editor .a on the ground* Bv P E SS K E R S T E N or bad, but w ith conplete and a'The parallel query substitut­ ca ign* cheating? Tutu* Editor •na*. ro*hrng aho .Id he done to d:»f the news. cu ra 'e reporting E l G E N E H. T R '» ! TZ ing zoology departm ent for his­ U m v e t 'ilv students concurred •age ■. ,. f#.,» -en a xer * s of t ' • Most newsmen aglee that < entory drew approximate the «ame make their na r.e ar** w :* n the S.tidings of a national Culture sor«h;p should be imposed only res * over em­ the st a *e a 'H defense departme •* in the ques1 inn about history, it phasized. Those polled on > is have long ne n mder the -ecunty represented the ‘less necessary campus a so went along with toe ban, T r i m * - ’* w idening of curbs bracket. Once more closely fo l­ national trend in voting that or- ^ seem* superfluous. Ju s t w) at R ■#lowing the national trend, I nig a ni zed football is less necessary sia co lid do w ith , for example, versity Students (51 per cent) ti,an a history departm «nt and IC U I O P S news, is hard to *ee. also thought football lex* vita l ic** necessary than a zoology de­ At hest. Ti im an's se ru rity com ­ than a zoology department. A l­ partm ent. m ittee w ill *iow up the dispatch most a third of the student* un }>,.« . i , , f ; ho>e tm ee quesn y --e e te m n f ro m X He tr I T r «r dont# * k o pion ’ n w it h d r a w in of much f*f the news. At worst, a C H A R I K S R U F'.- K S S I i ; r e r fo e both levels, national and 1 L .lur -• den •-.* w h o PUM) to w i'h o r a w tioi ,, whit ti w ere asked along i # t e r a r .s AC y S e r v ire tigr t-lipp«d federal governm ent 1*1I * to ry end 'ho # - w h o do n o t plan lated football and a zoology dewith nine other question* in e a n y lo ret ,rn fo r 'h e #*, ond * e m e - '» r w i i might w ork to keep the publ -r'n* tor »-# Crndusie Rerord on rtment of ef j ii r I i rn po r ’ h •ic f . ft od it d e « ira h !e to re* -r, th e ,* B la n k e t De< ember, were recently sent to E x a m m a ' ion rr i« t he in P r m c e to t.. M ew from knowing all it is entitled to T h« •i r # e •« to ' he R e g i s t r a r * O f f ) (»r a (I uh t ■ *t u *i e n t *. d iffe r* d ^ r» r.v !« " or ' . i n o rd e r the Texan by the Associated ( "Inot la t e r th a n J a .a r y <62. if know. t , H. I, * * e;ig-K » *■> take tho sharply on ail c|uestions, O rily , .„ ,* * rn- in h « tirk e * >o Jegiate P r e Othei findings of B u t M> T rum an can rejoice. F*hr .V r.I * J. I '* "'2, edir mi*tr»*ion of aO f f ir e no t la te r th a n J a n a r r R eg ,** tw elve per * nt of th# graduates the first A* P N ational Poll of >’•.*** p h i ) ne* i ■ * I n f o r m e tu r n a n d et** he a i l! »-e e n tit le d to a ref .nd He ha* won his point. , ■ ,.i a sr* p i nil* ’ * f * ho considered football as ne* as­ •f th e S t u d e n t A r t l e i t j r Fee if Studei t Opinion are due soon. W H A T A BO U T F IN A L S ’ T»«' mg and G u id a n c e B > ir * e .. V - B n l l !* ret ,*oei hr'wrr* hehr’.arv s a r y ” as a history departm ent; Dick M argolis, A ( P poll edi­ 2"«. 6 th# re f nd w iii be oi * A com m ittee of the Facu tyI M» QI ,RDON v AN DF RSON 77 per cent thought it “ less ne< estor, said the second mass co. ego I I St .'lent < ab met is studying th# A » * « - » n ’ D ir e c t o r WAX F P H T ) NR A 1 W s a iv .” Seven out of ten graduate sam pling w ill be col ducted next T * » * « n d r. l i d a n c e R r e * i A * o r tate R eg -1 rter U n iv e rs ity ’* final exam ination students thought there is too month. He expect* 20o colleges to syKtom. T buroa re srarm m e n a I 'n i r e r t i t f much emphasis on football. tak e part, a * compared with 63 d o mr. m r . * fo th e - p rm g S o m e a te r. T h eir study e e rie r* around two , W r- m e n I * I. Ar <>*». <*■ i ( »• in the December poll. 1951 O D D IT I E S W o u ld it be feasible to po nts rot her# M e n — B m e k e n r i d f e. R o b e rt# , Jut Do you feel that football at its w ith top grades J .. . p . R u n < ■ O, 1 . i f f « ' Ma;, ne the old vear would be axe rn; * st T h» ion mo-’ colleges is over-emphasized, Vt, n *n! per cent of the 3,(UH) of H - r a n d F o o d S o t v e . 2 6 1 0 W h i* of poly life, w ert on a diet. in Fo rt *t •ne he C nm ittee, believes who head •* A * * « KH answered over-emphasised and md h * r I hornas, Ken* icky. In twei e exempt i o ns would encourage st ilf St ch** 36 per cent thing it is just about I * -io * i t t o rr • e t t he th a b ility but little amm» k t s r n r months sire worked her way down dent * wi - * e m e* ’ « rf »t rp • co m e ’ n e d 1‘ right. A* UT* m eanwhile, 51 per W nm * ’ f ' • p f • rt- l i e * ' « from 555 pounds to o4. bition to str;v# for better grades. * h * o f! cent I led over-emphasized and . nu : em It h e fr.r e J a r I W n fte o It se em * to us tha* the p int A New York toupee maker in­ W ill hp a to m a n t o f n t e n '- m to m en* «* h * 33 pei cent ju st about l ight. o f ro o m r * » # r v A t io n , er* ng rPj,»a on which finals will ca rry vented a life dp line of toupees en to r e relen t n o e t ic * ny J a n a ry I AH' • B R F ,P T , Seve ra l of the students in te r­ 15 exemptions i I* - » n f S ’ i d e n t I. e with built-in bald spots. A * Rf h w r i t t e n not » h» Fat r * to g e t viewed blamed o v e i-emphasis on W e ’ve taken courses in wi, h A 105 xeai ".d Woman received Ja n u a r y 16 in d ie s t * * h « ' 'h e etu d e fit I* tl* c h a * tn ff p r o 'c d *e fo r * e '« r iM sports w riters who "put too much ■ -ac in i r e ta rt.# ha* * * * .rre d a co th e final seemed essential. For a doctorate >n home economics » ..p p lie # he- h e e ti c h a n g e d . T h e p r o b e d re ing te m re # (d e n c a f nr stress on the g a m e '’ Others , .... a- f vt I in 'h e f i r # ! rlo y o f example, in an English routs# in fro m Jo h n Bro w n I l i v e r»ity. D U R O '! U N G RB AI FR r ia * m e t A o r* w i.I « n non ne e ’ o th e thought it was the fa u lt of the [ Ic, " nrr *n wh ch all the m aterial i* related. A woman in Bt. Pa il won ber v e te rsn # «h*' t e x t # * n d m n t e r i e i * will p kohl , which ‘‘rates colleges a c ­ he ired f o r t h e o .r - c l i m in g r ^ i t * th e re 1 e w f o r the f.nal give- a divorce suit because her husoand S e c tio n -m g fo r P h \ » f a l T r a in in g fo r t rat ion (,! »t d e n * * * J he g i e n d I cording to sports prestige W om en w<: •# h e ld n th * W o m e n a com prehensive picture of tile trained the fain y dog to bite her. c a ’ * t a n k l o f ’ he r e q i m i * io n f i r m . * sr C, w a*- rn Fehr »• # a r r 1 6 A p p o in t . Students were asked, ‘ Do you a rr h * o w l e r e a e t o f i n s t r l e t u . na The course that is absolutely essen­ T he Government, B u re a u of En m a n t a ft * a c t u , n m g *■ he » a .e d a t v e 'e r o n # t h e n w i l l c o p y in i i i p iin n t e o n feel that organized football is as had R e s r i* 'r a ' on g ia v iiig confessed the. tial. th * f o r m * th # ha* o f r e t ) 1, ir e d ite m # A N N \ H lr S. D - a r’ o r necessary to a college ax a hi** onea. • *h # oaf ru e to r A 't e r * a In other cmir-e*. a* chem istry nteu and passed o u i a few onef n e -a r* *' he c aa ad O’ -* n !’ • P> r i a n e * r a v e h e c ri a * 'e n d e d y e te ra r. * » tin y departm ent, less necessary, W om enG v rr a n d p a d lo c k # t rn e d in and math, ’n which "ne sui- ect dollar b i l l * with the Treasury seal t a k e l.o th o p t * * o f t h * r e q )i I a i t io n f o r m t o t h # m i ' r o n # ► A r t h in g oi more necessary?” On the na­ to \ H I I Ii 2 - e r e i* * ’ •# -’ n*, req I* taken up, comp ‘’ted, a quiz is do and signaturea upside down ’aft r 'n* IO .a** aft a* * t re e m a r a s r a in * ' o u r np> o f t h e a to h a a t io n tional lev* I. 5 I pet cent said less given, and the course moves on to h e c I * -rn ad a t t h * I t o m # '; # G y m Fa cto ry workers in T i e 7 & NORCO 2 50 6 R io % 15 % % rn W % to id >7 % C LEA N Va % % % % % % % 25 57 2 30 31 3fc> lb D A IR O F h o r n r im m e d g i* - * * ; t t l e f i e l d fo . n t a i r Ja n n r . apt fo r m en. 39 4. /, {' / s 28 29 REC O RD ED D W X A T A K E VRRD H 8I H W J OAK, 'S H K K G T A V D D FO R fro m Rent bov. IU cam p u # . per IS O ? m o n th . :y I'n iv e r » it y . g a r a g e c f f le i c r y — 15 5 . P h o n e F ir ’ • o r g r a d . a ' * #t . d e n t * - 380 Furnished Apartments tv at '2 819 A W i c h it a *6 5 . 42. F IV E - R O O M p * t a ir » T e n - m : r if# w a lk f r o m c a m p is 165 F a c u lt y c o u p le p r e ­ ferre d * ’ E s # ’ ‘2 3 rd Phone 6-310* f# ______ -— _ Help W anted K 8 H A J S A EW E N A V starting salary. Phone 6-9121. N V T L . R W T C A E I - M W M A Y**Utrda>’» Cryptoquot#: Y O U A L L D ID L O V E H IM O N C E , c a u se—s h a k e s p e a r e $ M )h M 4 bar KIM fb M M In iit ii# n o t w it h o u t LA W O F F IC E s te n o g ra p h e r a rri b o o kk e e p e r. No # h o rth » n d r e q u ire d . Low Special Services H A I K C U T S .7 5 c S ' a e v ’# B a r b e r '- h e p 2 60 2 G u a d a i u p e C H ’NA m ghr W a te n P A IN T IN G e m ..in V o r- ’n g c r c a*,# - . R e g is t e r at Q u ic k s a ll a Shop. I S O ! a n n Ja c in t o . a m p .* A l# # g; r.» pr a e 2 n ' '*W h i t l f F ). B R T -A R Y •«*h 'n _ W k Phone 'n R O f 'M fo r l ' r iv a r- '' c* 120 I ro m ho- 2 J •* r • H* ? day m an a ' .d e n ’ d rag —P I w it* or I I a •h. Snead’ P ’.ard J Typing E L E C T R IC T Y P E W R IT E R b o o k *, 'h e m e R e a s o n s Ie T ) eee* n ot#* ra*ee 18-2374. DO NE in my bom a. C a ll -------E X P E R IE N C E D - T H E S E S e tc .ity n e ig h o o rh o o d . M rs. 2-4945. ____________ RO O M FO R r e - ’ to K i t r h e n p r i v il e g e # T H ESES. D IS S E R T A T IO N S , E :e c t- o m a t t e ) . D i c ’ » t ;o n . C o a c h i n g M r # P a t- w iv a n r a d # tu d e n t# . i f d * » re d . 704 W ". U N IV E R S IT Y G IR L S , ro o m # — a rg # e v e n in g , _______________ y~T ~ b a 'h , f o r o n e P h o n e 3-1298. 53-2212— 11 E X P E R IE N C E D M A g ra d a te a b le M rs U a vt# 5 - 1 2 3 ". fro m ■KM IpTs p r iv a e R O £ a o a £a S T3TTI a a a a ia a a s s s is c a a a a ti s o a a s s n a a (a s ia a a t i u a ra u q h s a a a a a a a s B a a a a s s w Ba ess o BaDa a Q aB Ha a S B Iia n D R D B a s in s s n s f ia s a t jH B H H fflH S H 0 2 J4 W □a a a Reason* «cc .-s’a. sen.or# c a m p .* T Y P IN G A N S w DONE s Fa# *, a c - ; ra>e Phone 53-3 W anted VAI ANCY BO YS S tu d e n t H o m e — one h ock fro m c a m p o * M e a ls s e r v e d f a m i ­ ly s t y i e . P h o n e * - 6 ! 16 o r 7 - 0 4 0 ". c Pa (Jn ly e y . R it c h ie . m ecay, E L E C T R IC T Y P E W R IT E R 2-63i 7 o r 5-1290 a n y t i m e g ra d u a te # , c ,o » a t* , h a ’ n. m a u l s e r y i c e — b lo c k 6-03 11 — 3 n , W . 2 fi’ h. ; T Y P IN G .53.3 546. A IR C O N D IT IO N E D ro o m # fo r ir a # #• ad e n - *. E x c e l l e n t d a i 'v p o r ’ e r •*-v ia # A u to m a tic w aaher A d r cr 1709 C o n g r e . . P h o n e ‘ - 7 0 : . :. i arg e 40 : h o ra . b lo c - o f f * rn f " r J c o n d :’ o h in g fo r Rooms tor Rent RO O M * artm e n t N ear U n iv e r s ity , E v e r V t h 'n g f a m is h e d — 1«5. A j. o . n e w Get • y n 'e m e , P A. M U SK lf : GA R A G E b lo c k m a id - ar fo r 1-11 Co,o- D O W N TO W N K IN D E R G A R T E N . 4 E B R IN G YO UR ty p in g to 2\ - 8 w u n * r . 2 n d . 2 - 9 5 4 3 ; e x p e r i e n c e : , e l ; a ’ ed d# M .»# W a, -h. 7e a re ; new hook#, re c o rd # , to y # , c h i l * | .................. ...— .......... -......... — ~ d r e r - f i l m i - e . f e n c e d . a n d a • * I " r,u. T Y F I K G : N E A T w o r k . P ;c k up --------------------------------------------------2-9806, 2-4353. 6 I F O R G IR I.? S eat ho * * t e le p h o n e . * r ft-47 4 4. ro o m # . Si Dor# R O Y ?— RO O M d e s ir e d . 2-76 Nursery N EA R U N IV E R S IT Y , F u r n is h e d E f f ic i e n " y d u p i a x a p a r t m e n t . T o c o u p le — E V G C N E fa ll do . ’ a a 1 oci *.* kong ; ft-12 F. x p e r ie n r e d 2-*«5 2 . A Cryptogram Quo!* ti on W R •h H ig h t. GR ADU ATE M EN I . a rg # c o m fo r t a b le 24 A day Su n d ay, ro o m , in n e r s p r in g ' m a ttre # # . scre e n ed a f t e r 6 p .m . p o rrh . P r iv a te hom e one b lo c k fro m , ~ ~ r d ) on** O N E M C E ro o m . p r iv a t e B ,1g ' P h ° 2 - __________________ — p e r s o n - -12 -5 p e r m o n t h . 2305 L e o n . :■> i i L _ J AND Exce ant mea.* A \ A11, A B I ) c o n n e c t ! ng Music T W O N R hi! Y f u r n i s h e d tw o - r o o m a p a r t ­ m e n t * w th p r i v a t e h a t h . A e r o # # s ' r a e ’ fro m I'm e r - i’ 145 # n d 155 I t i l i t ie # p a id . 3 " i W a * ’ 21»t. o r r a ---240 a fte r 3^> 37 cheap D r ic e *52 ' Lost and Found 2-9*-J C O A C H IN G I? ' S p e c i* h te a rh e r. N e a r U n iv e r a t’ v RO O M b lo c * 3S 34 33 S L IT of w in te r t . f o r * » .* I n e x c e a n ’ c o n d i t i o n . S i x # 86 M T fo r c o a t a n d p a r ’ - I.e h n e r — Coaching / 24 23 d S8-0474 S IN G * ) m c* • * - 2 '6 2 C O M FO RTA BLE Phone i9 d M ’ h. Phone or i«a»' * at I JI W Sr hor for Grady rn 22. 20 w ith a p ­ fo r »* - A A RM 5 G ra n d e For 14 MO to t i t tir e * w ear a fte r 6 p m 13 IT N A M E R R A N I ) ft . 7 ' M S p ro x im a t e ly 2 .A h u m i. from r a t e d c o n d it io n e d Bv A p r i l f i r s t o v a r y ro o m * " ha -e , - a ^ r ig p r a ’ e d * •* u n it D oc • * w e i'* r •h i* s p r in g and - m m eM *-* re . c r . a * !, , r * -••** a f e w v « e n n c ie a fo r • p r m g la m »* ' a r H IO ) Room and Board For Sale Apartm ent for Rent 32 Pluck 34 Unable to speak 35 W ading bird 37. R iver iE n g ) 5 4 9 Today1! Answer Is in the Classified Ads P R O D U C E Q U IC K RESULTS CLASSIFIED ADS T H E D A IL Y TEXA N 5 D R A F T S M E N — M A L E or F E M A L E M ax A . # t in ' Our hom e— G e t fu ll t i m e p e r m a n e n t w o r k w : ' h t h e ( *y o f A u s tin . F R E E In * : r a n r # a n d h o ip it a liz a t io n . v a c a t io n a r r i a ic k le a v e p la n , r e t i r e m e n t b e n e f it .* App! a' P e r s o n n e l O ffic e M .n s c ip a l B l d g # th and C o lo rip d o . Phon» 6 - - 3 I! E x t. 201. E R W 'A S H I N G A S D ir o n ) - # d o n * v e r v r*a s o n n b iy . W e : * x p e r . e r . c e o . 1 6 0 * S i n g l e ­ to n . P h o n o . I- 8 1 1 4 . Tuesday, J a n u a ry 15, 1952 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 O ther o ffic e r s elec ted T hurslay to te r r e during 1952 ere Ned Jurr.s, v ice-p resid en t; R e m H aupt, ^ creta ry ; G loria W ilson and F r e d B e t t y J a n e W i n g a t e an d J a m s ! S t a n l e y O r b e c k w e r e m a r r i e d De­ 's to Hold 2-Day eachers' M eeting T h e s t u d e n t Y M C A a n d VV* CA t he S o u t h w e s t r e g i o n is s p o n ­ g i n g a conference for faculty n e m b e r s o f u ni v e r s i t i e s a n d coleges F e b r u a r y 2 a n d 3 a t F o r t jVorth, Miss Sallie Roll er, e x e c u ­ tive d i r ec t o r , a n o u n c e d . “ Christian Criteria for Analyz­ ing A m e r i c a n D e m o c r a c y a n d R u s ­ sian C o m m u n i s m — C l a i ms an d C o u n t e r - C l a i m s ” will b e t h e t h e m e of the c o nf e r e n c e. Dr. A l b e r t O u t l e r , p r o f e s s o r at P er k i ns S ’hool o f T h e o l o g y , will discuss “ C h r i s t i a n Faith Chal­ l enges C o m m u n i s m . ” Dr. W. E. b a r r . s o n , Dr. J o h n E u b a n k s , and b l c u t t S a n d er s , al s o will sp e a k . c e m b e r 25 a t F i r s t Engli sh L u t h e r ­ an C h u r c h here. Mrs. O r b e c k is a g r a d u a t e o f A u s t i n Hi gh School a nd a t t e n d e d D u r h a m ' s Bus i nes s College. Mr. O r b e ck is a g r a d u a t e of Cl i f t on J u n i o r Coll ege a n d t h e U n i v e r s i t y . T he N ational A ssed ation of will award U n iv ersity Dames PHTS (Putting t he Husband T h r o u g h School ) d eg r e e s t o m e m ­ b e r s w h o s e h u s b a n d s will g r a d u a t e in F e b r u a r y . A t it s m o n t h l y b us i ne s s m e e t ­ i ng T u e s d a y h o st esses will be Mrs, W e i n e r B a r t h a n d Mrs. R. E. C o ffm an . Reservations for t h e m e e t i n g , whi ch will he held in t h e U n i o n Bui l ding a t 7 : 3 0 o ’clck, >f Dr. R o g er J . Wi l l i ams , d i s t i n­ g ui s hed p r o f e s s o r of c h e m i s t r y , will he t h e s p e a k e r a t t h e q u a r t e r ­ ly m e e t i n g o f t h e T a r r y t o w n Met hodi s t C h u r c h ’s M e t h o d i s t me n T h u r s d a y ni ght . He will s p e a k on “ H u m a n F r o n t i e r s ” . T h e Bl eat ing will be a t t h e c h u r c h . N a t a l i e N o b le and D o n a ld W i l ­ liam M o r g a n w e r e m a r r i e d C h r i s t ­ m a s D a y in an i nf or ma l , d o u b l e ­ will r i n g c e r e m o n y a t t he C e n t r a l P r e s ­ be s po n s or e d F r i d a y n i g h t f r o m b y t e r i a n C h u r c h of Par i s, Texas . The brid e g rad ua te d from the 7: 30 to IO o ’clock a t t h e W o m ­ U n i v e r s i t y in 1950 with a b a c h e l o r e n' s Gy m, o f f e r i n g s t u d e n t s a c h a n c e to t a k e a f e w h a r d b r e a t h s of j o u r n a l i s m degr ee. She was s o ­ c i et y e d i t o r of T h e Daily T e x a n b e f o r e finals. a n d a m e m b e r of t he W e s t m i n s t e r T h e p r o g r a m is op e n to b o t h S t u d e n t Fel l ows hi p. F o r t h e past men a nd w o m e n s t u d e n t s , a n d will y e a r a n d a h a l f she ha s b e e n r mo f f e r s wi m mi ng , b a d m i n t o n , tabl e t enni s, a n d voll eyball . C o - r a c r e « t io n a l U T Co-ed's PT Instructor Reaps Heavy Trophy Crop 2F0R1 , RATES a ctivities T h e e n g a g e m e n t a nd a p p r o a c h ­ i ng m a r r i a g e o f F ran ce* B lits to W yatt Thorn** N o r m a n ha s b een announced. Miss Bliss will g r a d u a t e f r o m t h e U n i v e r s i t y in F e b r u a r y . She is a m e m b e r of A l p h a Phi so r or i t y. Mr. N o r m a n is a g r a d u a t e of t h e U n i v e r s i t y , w h e r e he was a m e m ­ b e r of Pi K a p p a Al pha f r a t e r n i t y a n d Sil ver Sp u r s , h o no r a r y ser vice o r g an i z a t i on . T h e y will be m a r r i e d in April. Use the Classifieds Dr. R o n a l d V i c t o r S a m p s o n of O x f o r d U n i v e r s i t y will s p e a k to t he I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e l a t i o n s g r o u p of A AU W a t n oon F r i d a y in the G e o rg i a n T e a R o o m. His topic will he " P r o b l e m s of t h e W e l f a r e State.” Dr. S a mp s o n is a vi s i t i ng l e c ­ t u r e r in hi s t or y. O N DANCE LESSONS SAVE 5 0 % A r t h u r Mu r r a y s A g r o u p of m i d - t e r m g r a d u a t e in j o u r n a l i s m will be h o n o r e d wi t h a dinner S u n d a y , J a n u a r y 20. The j o u r n al i s m f a c u l t y a n d t h e i r wives or h u s b a n d s a r e hoing i nvi ted. A r r a n g e m e n t s a r e b e i ng m a d e by Kelly Cr ozi er . Arthur Murray C A M P U S S T U D IO 2116 Guadalupe Greek G am bits Use the Classifieds GO LUCKY! LUCKIES TASTE BETTER! It takes fine tobacco to give you a better-tasting cigarette. And Lucky Strike m eans fine tobacco. But it takes something else, to o -s u p e rio r work­ manship. You get fine, light, mild, good-tasting tobacco in the better-made cigarette. T h a t’s why Luckies taste better. So, Be H ap p y —Go Lucky! Get a carton today! L S./M F T -Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco Pi B e t a Phi s or ori t y r e ce nt l y e l ec t ed S a r a h J a n e Allen prest d e n t f o r 1951 52. O t h e r o f f i c e r s e l ec t ed a r e E l ­ len T o d d , v i c e - p r e s i d e n t ; M a r ­ g a r e t P e n n i m a n , r e c o r d i n g s ecr e tary; Barbara Kendall, corre­ sponding sec re ta ry ; Shirley F l e m ­ ing, treasurer; Nancy James, p l e d g e s u p e r v i s o r ; Loui sa B a k e r , a s s i s t a n t pl e dge s u p e r v i s o r ; M a r y E d m u n d s o n a n d N a n c y Nye, c e n ­ s o r s ; J e a n Ma r i e Edge, Pal h el ­ lenic r e p r e s e n t a t i v e ; S he l by Reed, s ch o l ar s h i p chairman; J a n e t Wheeler, assistant sc h o l ar s h i p chairman. Also P eg g y Scot t , social c h a i r ­ m a n ; C o n ni e Nel s on, act i vi t ie s c h a i r m a n ; Y v o nn e Lyle, hous e m a n a g e r ; s e ni or e x e c u t i v e , f r a n ­ cis S c h ne i d e r , j u n i o r e x e c ut iv e, Ga yl e G a r t h ; s o p h o m o r e e x e c u ­ t i ve, V i r g i ni a B o b er g ; s o n g di1 r e c t o r , Suzanne W a t e r s ; i n t r a Imural d i r ec t o r , B a r b a r a E s g e n, and assistant ii istori an, Marx A n n e Smi t h. N e w o f f i c e r s of A l p h a T a u O m e g a a r e D u b b y Powel l , w o r t h y master; Earl Wil son, worthy c h a p l a i n ; De nni s Mul li ns, hon-* manager; Ben Ward, worthy k e e p e r of a n n a l s ; Bill Mar s chal l . w o r t h y s c r i b e ; J o h n Wi l d, w o r t h y u s h e r ; S c o t t y B al dwi n, worth; , s e n t i n e l ; an d Mo nt y B a r b e r , p u b lie r el at i on s o ff i c e r. O t h e r s a r e J o h n S h u d d e , ct ail ma n of t he bui l di n g c o m m i t t e e ; G e o r g e F r a n c i s c o , social c h u n man; Jim Carlton, intramural m a n a g e r ; Vern McGraw, pledge master; Boh Waite, assistant pledge m as te r; Buddy H ayde n, rus h c ap t a i n an d s e n i o r i n t e r - f r a ­ t e r n i t y r e p r e s e n t a t i v e ; a n d Port; Fol wel l , junior inter-fraternity Bob St e e l y wa> r e c e n t l y e l ec t ed d ea n of t he S a m H o u l t o n S e n a t e of D e l t a T h e t a P h i law f r a t e r ? tv. O t h e r n e w o f f i c e r s i n c l ud e Dan Fel t s, v i c e - d e a n ; Ellis F. Mor t m a s t e r of t he r i t u a l ; Eon Mo«er, quiU an a And many A t t e n d A u s t i n s m o s t outs t a n d m g a n d p r o g r e ss i v e b u s i ­ ness college. A p p r o v e d by t h e S t a t e D e p a r t m e n t of E d u c a t i n as a B u s i n e s s J u n i o r ( ollege. U t h . cart®". A\ alway* * * i l l b a r . Coll«4* A p p r o v e d f o r V e t e r a n Tr a i l ing. ( lasses begin? .nu in ab s u b j e c t s F e b r u a r y Uh. Day a n d n i g h t classes. G r e g g S i m p l i f i e d ate! R e ­ vised S h o r t h a n d , T y p e w r i t i n g , A c c o u n t i n g , ( .mn.ere.a! La w, O f f i c e Machi nes , Ap p l i e d P s y ­ chology, Fi l i ng, etc. Also S P E E D W K I T I N G , t h e femou.* s ys t e m o f s h o r t ’ an i, in u x w e e k s ; n o si gns or .symbols; eas y to w r i t e a n d t r a n s c r i b e . W r i t e f o r f r e e c a t a l o g u e a: d f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n o r call DURHAM 'S BU SIN E SS COLLEGE 8 -34 46 cl e r k of t he rolls; Bill N e i n a s t , t r i b u n e ; Boh McLeai s h, c l e r k of the ex chequer; and L a rr y Ca rte r, bail iff. T he first, m e e t i n g of t h e f r a ­ t e r n i t y n e x t s e m e s t e r will he held F e b r u a r y 6. Phi S i g m a K a p p a f r a t e r n i t y has a n n o u n c e d i ns t a l la t io n of the fol l owi ng o f f i c e r s f o r t h e s p r i n g s e m e s t e r : E u g e n e T o d d , presi d e n t ; D a n S p o o r , v i c e - p r e s i d e n t: David Thomas, s ec r et ar y ; Jim P a t t o n , t r e a s u r e r ; J a m e s Dings?, s e n t in e l ; a n d W a y n e Cox, i n d u c ­ tor. The low-cut moccasin that R e e d e d up th* pulses of just about every fashior^jpditor of not# . . . end, perhaps, half the populace! So good, all around, that w e look for Bock Seat to drive right into the number one spot on the moccasin p a ra d e . G e t yours — M iss M a r g a r e t P e c k , a s s i s t a n t d ean of w o m e n, will di s cuss t h e place of s o r or i t ie s on a college c a m p u s a t a m e e t i n g o f Ci t y Panhcllenic T h u r s d a y m o r n i n g at D o ’clock in the D e l t a / . et a Hous e , 17( 4 W e s t A v e n ue . $15.00 PERMANENTS 2 For t ho Price of I I (Bring a fr iend a n d save 5 0 % ) BEAUTY S A L O N times a'wasting! 9.95 handsewn vamp hand lasted Tuesday, January IS, 1952 THE DAILY TEXAN Page A Hindu Ballet Dancers to TellDance Drama £ rowd N,ot Enthusiastic r . . . /i o z Cast Announced O ve r Rubinstein Concert Stones in Gregory Jan 2 o Concert to Be Februory 13-16 . The ma jetty, beauty, and bu“ Ko- pxampl*■, the -a !• * mar of Ind ia w ill come to Gregor • ‘Eterr.a! M elody’ our dam e must Gym at 8:15 p.m. Ja n u a ry 26. describe a woman created out of of tne moon th*' U dav Shankar and his Hindu Ba, the roundm let, iponsored by the C ultural E n ­ tertainm ent Committee, w ill I* 1 the medium of these unusual dances. P ra c tic a lly unknown to th • country, the beauty of the Hindu ballet will be woven by the Hindu dancer and I s com pan; to toe accompaniment of mimic from a n ­ cient instruments. The ballet had its origin in the religious practices of lr a arui iextremeiy forma . E v e iy move­ ment ha* a meaning. Each dance has a st© y told through panto mine, rhythm ic movements, facial expression^, and elaborate hard gesticuia’ r. <, k.r ow i a “ M ui ras." The M dras are capa nu- of relating complex legends with all th e ir Overton* Boston 'Pops' To Play in SA Selections iu d ‘‘uite from “ The Craftsmen Show Printing Exhibits k Elfle ft, “ E [at rifi” lu re to “ D i‘ F I n limbers from * w ill make up the Daily contributions to commun­ ity life by the printing business can be observed by Austinites this week. Members of the Austin Club of Prin tin g House C aft men have exhibits at Sear*, Roebuck and C om par’. , and at T a rin g ’* on 1 ongress Avenue The Austin club’s exhibit is part of their observance of Print mg W eak, which opened Sunday and will continue through S a tu r­ day. 'The exhibits have been a r­ ranged by A u stin members. Van C. W a l t o n , production mar a/er of T he U n iversity of Tpxax Press, is chairman. The grapi c arts display includes woi k of local printing establishments. DANCE COURSE N«w ■REDUCED,™/40,J 28 IVW* M n u w Y ou O d Some popular haddie,” “ Sic Syncopated C heard. These popular Elated w ith Pied * and the “ Pop orchestra. W hile in San Antonio, I boller w ill conduct a concert with the Sym phony at lA cklan d A F B for the m ilitary personnel. Tickets for S a tu rd a y nig ht’s performance are available ai t e ffn ’P Municipal Auditorium box H e rs will in San Antonio. M ail be accepted. lf VO* w o l l th Mi week: I* you an not h«v« * own ov«r t a * h o li d e z * he re > t h a n e * to Ia a rn l h . haw **♦[.. don I Forego *h» Fun of da ri n o a n o t h e r day Com* m TOO*V Na aa Radio H oum *. entabh.-hed a* part of the I niversity in 1919, was the first complete complete radio production in visin g naadart the Southwest. a r c h ite c t; Thoma- A. and *’ r T O N IG H T ‘House on Telegraph Hill Richard Ma -hart V*l«*nt.na CortMi “ Three Guys N a m e d M ik e Phd.pp ina*” Tyrone t'xwrr Fir it Show 6:30 SfcOI DAU AS HIWAT CSS s h IHTu s u a l It m m r b I ow t im e AT INTERSTATE THEATRES “I H E BEST SEASON FOR FOOD IS HUNGER. Their Request W as Couched In Simple Terms FOR DRINK, THIRST.” Score one for Soc. He s absolutely ri c h i . , . thirst knows no season. I hat s w h r a n y tim e is the rig h t tim e for C o k e. Schubert, will be included in the Ex Teaching at Syracuse third in a series of concert* for .Hid H offm an, U n iv e rs ity rnchildren bn the A ustin Sym phony student, is now professor of a “ ro- j orchestra Tuesday from 3.30 to nautical engineering at S yracu se! 4:45 p.m. a t the < i*v Coliseum. U n iv e rsity, Syracuse, N Y. The program w ill open w ith house into a mod* rn broadcasting “ The S ta r Spangled B a n n e r” and l,n' t G R F G SC O TT T w o s t u d io s , a c o n t r o l r o o m , a n d | with T c h a A o v a k y ’ “ Ita lia n lA U H O O M D ANCE SCHOO L four offices became the produc- ( apnce. Tick* tn are ^5 cent* for OVER TEXAS THEA TRE 7 9419 turn end of the voice of the Kni- children and 50 < versify. The building was a*r-conditioned ami sound-proofed. R o ­ mote I Ors w ere run to the impor, buddings j. . on the campus, lo* ' c a l radio station*, arid the T rip [.hone t om pany’s test board. R a n lo 1 Corporation of Am erica made the ■rn equipm ent. »omrn uwoe* authostty or THf coca eotA cowRAe/Y ar A U S T IN C O C A - C O L A BO T T LIN G C O M P A N Y CHESTERFIELD - U K S i s r R a flin Hou>e’s motto, “ To ex-J tend the boundaries of the campus ! t*. tile borders of the state,” was ready to be fulfilled . In spring, I I !i H), the firs t “ Texas School of th e A i r ” broadcast, was made. The -erie* wa-* to *ear 500,000 child ren n almost 3,000 sch o o ls regu| la fly. stum ! # 5 1 , ’ H f C O C A C O IA 00/1/.M W M J Jw . 2 S IG N E D PRO PRIETO R Seven re g u larly scheduled P ! °grams from Radio House w eekly include news, music and cduca- j i tio ra l programs, totaling 150 m in ­ ute- at the point of origin, but thousands of minutes if multiplied by the number of stations c a rry ­ ing the programs. C h estein e • F irs. ■■ I H I A ll I S “ Double Crossbones" Donald O 'C o n n o r Dou glas Uzabeth Robert F a ir b a n k * H e le n C a r t e l .lr G ly n n i* Jo h n * TV RYAN A Place the Su n ’ M o n * fo m e rv C lift F ,liia b e th S h e lle y W in t e r * T a y lo r “ Bashful Bachelor” louis CALION • LESLIE CARON S I T V Meet top munc (tar* playing real-lif* role*! I T E K R “ MILDNESS L u m a n d A bn e r M a n with a c l o a k M O N T O P O ilS S HELD OVER! “ P IC K U P ” Sho- 5 Hugo H aai B e v e r ly M ic h a e l* ‘W y o m in g W ild c a t’ Don Coto* i y “ Red” B a rry ....... YANK liPHNlCOLOI “ M a rk of the G o rilla ” R U S T I N LOOT AM tTVO NG MKkM TU#* CO LO R CARTO ON F ir a t W illia m B h ip p * Show 7-2900 6 p m Su> *n D o u fla * “ F IV E " Jo h n n y W 'e . a m u l l e r T ru d y M a rth a !! “ Renegades of the S a g e ” Char!** Starrett r- W S **W T e i e s i t m in m / m ic t s c o u n t s 6 CCS", Broadcast time from Radio j House ha* grown rem arkably d u r­ ing the t w e l v e y e a r s of its exist­ ence. From 1939 to 1943, the broadcast time increase almost IOO per cent. From 1939 until now. says Thomas D. R is h w o rth i i director, broadcast time from the campus h a s increased about 3,000 per cent. IM Q N • r o q n to r o J tro d * m a rk . D R IV E -IN CAPITOL T E L .. 2 - 8 7 8 9 ARW R . Ckw * “ The G reat M a n h u n t” scon he r ffe d Socrates preached: TW O S H O W S N IG H T L Y Feature Start* at 7 P M S H U IIY WINTERS RICHARD CONTE STEPHEN MCNALLY CHARLES BICKFORD MITCHUM program , 13 Cast in A C T Melodrama 'Nellie7to Open February I Sonata Recital Set For Faculty Series l^ | \ ( RAGING A D E Robert the Stable Becomes Home For UT Radio Center Houue wan converted from a table and carriage-house. ll,. I P. Boner, pm To -<>r of physics, Robert J,. W h ite ..m er. uper- 4 H O U R S FREE A bo v# T m a t T K m <-h* its a, lebrated a pers Muniv night. 'ne. a ta ” Music,” by Pro* , , Over- The Rod on ‘ I under the balon • *\ rth ur h iif 23 4»«J imusicians n c iv il la u n iin ii a to strum on a mandolin f,r Hihes, light; D orothy Broodo, program of music fo r solo violin and stung., w ill perform in Hogg ** * " older brother, procured by pro pert ; Jo h r Dent, costume; A uditorium Tuesday st 8:15 saving coupon*. Wher his ta le n t a n ' ‘ A n c r e K a y , house and puoiio’elock. In the program, Goldberg was recogf zed, he was aer.* to c r.y. W arsaw , where he marie excel, ent tither member* of *h.ecrews a e a .11 appear simultaneously as soJoist and conductor. progress ,n study of the viol ill. Poeey Bm iser, K a th ry n G ra r d st aff, ■ ------i W illiam K n . x, Mand.v Hoover, Barb ara Burnham , Ju d y G il­ ls aith, Richard Thompson, U har es Sh irle y, Ann Feans, Paul R*:nnardt, < arni lj»ng, G enevieve I ;rnac, B e H y L a ffe rty , Ann W ells, Jo a n Henshaw , dwMMlioi| wk,ch once adorned the base­ self to w riting an*) teaching since rb# ment. of the Journalism B u ild ­ he came to the U n iv a rs ity from ing, returned there im m ediately. his native Gernsany in 1950. T h is Theta Sigs commandeered the vill m ark his fu s t a p p a r a n c e on Children’s Concert Set relic fo r u-e in T S O last week. : a F a c u lty Recital Series program. .Said spokesman of the more Mr. I ’ignotti began his musical Tuesday in Coliseum ment, Jim Gockrum, “ The couch training at the Am erican Conser­ The overture to “ The Bartered has the aroma of journalism vatory o f M u s h , Chicago, and was about it. Unless it t* retu rn ed ," B rid e ," bv Sm etana, part of “ The he added, humming, “ we have Sleeping B e a u ty S u ite ” by T ch a i­ nothing to rem em ber so fa.” kovsky, and “ M ar h M iiita ire ,” by work on CC Shankar says tha* the H in d i ballet dance has a unique ,f guage, capable of conv*- ng ->ib tie nuances. • o .n t m e n t UDAY SH A N K A R ( arothers, M a ry C orrig an, M ou­ ton l aw, Claude Latson, Ed R e y ­ nolds, H a rve y Schm idt, Helen Blount, R a th e r.ne Blom berg, La ,o Canales, J na C lark, Glenn Gartm anfi Ff to* Mudras a- u It a ss Will f nd the art of Shankar and the H indu ballet an adven­ curve* of ‘ he creepers, d in g in g and the most seductive beauties— Miss Sh id ee Dodge, U n iv e rsity of the tendril*, the velvet o f the a blend that makes the troupe flower, the quick (fiance of the a* popular are) a* entertaining a* ct> , r l m i instructor, w ;.t a -eel faun, the softness of the down, any rem otely comparable rom- the Third Annua! Dance C oncert • e hardness of the diamond, the pany.” in Hogg A uditor -rn F e b ru a ry 13 cru e lty of the tiger, the sweet of Admission pr. es as e $2.40, 16. honey, the chid of snow, the poi- $1.80,, a d $1.20 on the lower The cast md! include Va! Axe!tor. of the snake. VV* ran convey floor and balconies of Gregory a.I this in our dancing.” Gym. Children under 12 w ill be rad, Barb ara Herman, von# 1 och.1 hr. M artin , N ew York Times admitted for 60 cert Blanket- ran, Jam es d im e r , B e v e rly K.rkdance critic recently wrote, “ Here Tax and seasonticket holders w .1 land,and G eraldine L u te r. are the liveliest spirits, the gayest be allowed 60-rentreduction* on Also Denny McGee Alton R iff , hum or, the most, misehievoua w it all seats ______________ M a rv j a re Brao d h o t t, Jo h a n n a B y C A R L T O N S P R IN G A r tu r Rubinstein, rated o re of •ttributed such action to a through the most d iffic v A ^ pa*attitude ^ M ,{ mQre concerned ,b o u t the world * great pianists, was re- com m ercial a ttitude among the reived bv a m oderately en th us: aa- " b °y » *n Trp f ror-‘ o ffic e ,* who tk m v, . tic audience in his G re g o ry Gym feei compelled to ca ter to pop. ar hia “ -*** appearance than .. s jn„ taste. O f the many movies he has terpretation of the music. He concert Su n d a y afternoon The c a p a city crowd c f about m ade, he sa d or “ Mer. and Mu- bounced on the piano bench, w ith 5,000 ra ile d the pianist hack fo r **c m U ntam ed the dignity of tf e b;g head shaking vio le n tly and his on ly one encore. The auditorium mJSfiC* hands w aving over his head— *uswas rap idly em ptying when he Rubinstein wa- a t * best -Sunled fo r a second before they ram# back for his only curtain day afterno* n when he p ayed crashed down again on the key# ra il a fte r the encore* “ Toccata in C M ajor bv Bach. a. d. B u t fo r all this emotional B u t Rubinstein's playing Sun- The “ A d a g io " of th* “ T o c c a ta '’ display, the “ S o n a ta ” sounded as day, altho ugh not tis best, d id n ’t was pla d With * sens :t:v;ty m a t if the great pianist were tired of i a b y associaU d w ith the playing it. ju s tify the coolness of the auuithe fie ry piai -t, arid in i he delicacy o f the progiam ence. A t times he was not up to ue” his te d n;q -e wa.? was his light, romant ic touch in tne Rubinate n f a r which haplaying < hopin and “ TV*' Maiden earned the pra.se of rn J sic critics ior.ata So- and toe N ig h tin g ale,” by Grana* au over th# world. A t other times, th** m ajor dos. however, the brilliance which earned h,m tr.,« prs *e was evident in h playing. \\ en questioned d •• ing the inte rm i1 <*son 1 of the c* his ro! e o f a d o * . p.aru ca! ad viser in Hollyw* R I bimstem answered, B raw n e r. ( .emmie F re.q , Deitip movie!s are marvelous Toney, Jim R a d liff, and f rank t j nate Hollyw ood Rom. en*>d m usic.” W ritte n by A lic e W se, who ) a He explained I** entered in the cast,, the play fo Pows a contracts w ith mov < ■produce c ir c j s therm?. This theme V. . . he :eving he could make some .n the theater a* well r*on tribute on to th* popular aceep J if as on the et age T h e e w ill he tan ce of serious rn is.c. saw dint on the f I OOJ -, s de- 4how “ B u t before tee movie*. i o u Esi mu i ai* on th e wal!«, and a cal. o,. • f ’ *ied, the mu “ ic was 'c a p J a for music* atrr.‘ sphere. NO UNPLEASANT AFTER-TASTE* ♦From th * Report of a and only W e ll-K n o w n Rese arch O r g a n i z a t i o n C hesterfie has