•' 'vS'a'V'*^;!;! wm -wSfcSst Student mrmmity fiS),t A VOLUME SI niiftViinirft i#' Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 5.1950 Ten Pages Today ''-"W.S'Sfe" &i,i •~-1^SM^ff*!*i asaas r'*T LY ^ V iK »*w» a», -'\2prisai -3 SrQriod, willed the ticke.t window at Gregory Gym was the creator of the Buz Sawyer •; One; young boy wais converged 1 what wquld have been his twexttyV comic strip, Roy Crane, who hails opened and the, sale of-approxi­upon by three .men who each first straight conversion,and Tfa»*' mately 600 tickets not picked up as led, 21-20.'' from Orlando, Florida. wanted to.buy the boy's two tic" by Blanket Tax holders* began. kets. Tompkins had booted all three t Stuart Symington, chairman of When the bid reached $40 the National ResourcesBoard,and, . TOWNSEND BACKS OVER the Southern Methodist goal line ber 20; Pat Knight, numbef-*35; I. D.' Russell, number 40; and The line of more than 400 tension increased to the point of' conversions straight up the mid* -for tire second Steer, tquchdown in a 23-20 victory. The score his host in Texas, Senator Lyndon people had begun forming prior violence and a, by-stander'.inter­die for Texas. • Johnson, were bubbling with en­"vwas made in the second quarter of play. Townsend is directly Dflvid Powell, number-88. Longhorns watching.are Dick Roweri, to midnight Thursday. The first rupted. tp save the tickets' from ' Bat this time there was no lutH • thusiasm when contacted late in in front of Mustang guard Neal Franklin, number 61. nyrnber 54; Bud McFadin, number 61; Tom Stolhandske, number boy in line dropped „ouebecause Jbeing torn to shreds. minute, miracle finish in the hooka of illness, but the second l?oy told >the game. ' Tickets for-the Baylor game will for the Mustangs. The Steer elev* Identifiable players include Mustangs Va! Joe Walker, •num­ 85; and Ken Jackson, number 74. reporters that he had been in line go on sale Monday morning at -8 en dug in and. thwarted all scoxv A bit of Voodoo lay behind "this since 11 pim., Thursday. o'clock and continue from 8 to ing attempts." -'"''2win. It was the"red candles of The line extended from the tic­ iS.jMid from 1to 5 through Friday. The SMU pUght was so desper­ Texaaversus the lucky plane of ket. windows .almost around the No shortage of ticket* is antici­ate in the fading minute* that.: SMU in this tmusual clash of gym ftyor. Six students near the pated for the Baylor game, ac­Rusty Russell Jr., was caught i& superstitions. end of < the line were so involved cording to Miss Alice Archer, tic­his own end zone for a safety The University's red candles, a in a card 'game that' they almost ket manager. after taking a pass from Kyi*throwback to an old (!tiin«w good-Rote who was even deeper in tjj#­luck device, burned brightly this danger land. , " week for the second time. In1941 Coach Rusty Russell discovere^f^ • 'Hprn fans had implemented the candles tor early ia the first period that hia break the Kyle tfiigd team couldn't run against tite Week End jinx—and thel' Aggies went dowriT 23-0. ' ' Jutwhat good came'of it at last?" Texas line. In those opening mitt* utesr On the other baud, there was BY TOM TONEY Austin, mostly in the business dis way was jammed for hours with Austin Police Department 15 Quoth little jPeterkin. his All-Americah halfback, Rote, wassmeared for minus yard- Old 881, the chartered Mustang You -can't call it anything but trict, until past midnight. . >' long lilies of ears decked in red years. "Why, that I cannot tell,'* said he; school spirit—-a new, unrestrained, ag« before having « lock blocked plane which heretofore had never Snake-dancing up-vand down' and blue ribbon, the SMU colors. Carried a losing team. Tod, Cap-exuberant University of Texas Congress Avepue, more than 200 And estimated 88,000 j&oured Accidents didn't show an un-"But 'twas A famous victoty.'* • '' " in hia laee. .^ brand that 'rocked Austin this big .students stopped' traffic in" froftt taiji R. B. Carlton, head man on pliJftT^d bus football week end. —^-none of them fSatal and only one the big,DC-6, had never piloted a of the Stephen F. Austin Hotel at from, all over the country, many losing eleven. : , It fiared in full force Friday Seventh Street and Congress Ave­ requiring temporary hospitaliza­It seems a sha'the to compare the glorious Longhorn vic­Texas line. Of them to find all roptn reserva­ .Long before, at 1:16, ioisy night at the mass pep rally of more nue Friday nighy * ^ tions longtalcenr^ ~ tion—-occurred in city limits from tory over the Southern Methodist Junior Ponies with So the Mustangs turned tu tha than 10,000 students who cheered Saturday morning the SMU fans 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday. This passing arm of Fred Benners to Mustang, rooters, seated in the "It was about as big a football week end of the Purdqe garne Eobert Southey's Battle ^>f Blenheim. S in front of Main Building like they streamed Into town. as I in keep them in the game, and they Three special crowd can remember choice lower west stands, started never had before. Spontaneous trains arrived from Dallas bearing Austin,'' asserted Lieutenant Otto here. Twas certainly a famous victory—^-hard-earned by thift' chose a good weapon*. For three -heating up their lungs. Next their cheerleaders brought out an 8x12 yelling sprees broke ~out' over Mustang rooters. The North High-: Ludwig, who has been with the SeyeiL.Life magazine photogrra^ team,;the coach,.the fans. It should rocket the Steers quarters,, the lanky Dallas youth § pKers and Writers roamed the cam- matched th& Texas scoring, touchy y ^jsanvas ^ that, WBAJ only.slightly higher up the national ranking Taddfer and put direct -PfWL,ftnd:Jthe rest of Austin Friday down' for touchdown^ despite M. ^ tunny. It.depicted a cringing steer and Saturday taking pictures and pressure on Army and Oklahoma to prove they deserve Longhorn line^that l^ept him duek-[ Inches away from a branding .iron 1 preparing life's game-of-theweek their positions. ing and dodging on most alland was labeled "No. 1 Brand article which will be oirthe news- his 39 attempted passes. in the Land." But what good came of it at last^. quotft little Peterkin, stands next Friday. A whole swarm of light»foftte4 Sevieral businesses * closed up if no allowance is made for Monday's"recuperations? Steer linemen bore down on the Methodist passer every time lit Saturday morning.". One owner President T. S. Painter-was not available for comment said: '4We didn't want to ge^ tied faded, Paul Williams, Bill Wilson, ?bout a U» with custoWm .n4 *H. I Mondfty holiday Saturday night, which Indicates June Dsivis, and Bill MiUburn ^th customers and miss t^e that he> too> mifht find one timely. ^ ^ game.. were outstanding ttr depati»; Four churchea will observe Focus n works part-tiitfer Jfe ship committee of Phi Alpha Delta, Board-of Directors,' Union. Ex­ ; John Thomas (Topnny) Blake, Peeler, and Murray Wesley Wall, -A .veteran of one year and nme Longhorn'jf first touchdown. Ht November 4-12. '> npceived the " Admiral Nimitz legal fraternityt ari . (1 Texas equals 7 SMU's). We Judging from the highly audible ' then : inteoducg more data, .vw«v«Johnson,t also a 22-year-oJd vastflwia alrwfd''-®^ hnweweni announownent* made at the ate-senior law student, isJiQia Sosen- SMU's 6-0 record and Texas' hewawl Siilf foetbafl dium, the man at the Arkansas herg. He is past pr^idetit and .4-1 .record..V' •aid |mi Ugjwr«4 S«tary­ son "from tibe public-address sy»« candidate for the editoriiQ thoard equak"^.26/0.r Cross-multiply* * T-jt 4U. fff*.-•• — t n i ili-J.H • akilee .fiwaa' Caerge*^ of the Tewas Law Reyiew this fall. and 26Y equals zero X's, or 25 tawa. (Ia .Asseeialail Ptmum wf "isj " --Johnaon is past treasurer of Pi' A ­ farta^T7 • Texaa equals sQ SilverSUv€t Spurs,Spurs*honorary, service Note to the felKws at th» PHA honorary tKrw" '_ thematicBlly J tm f-^ ody «• th* wiaew , JKbe Stildent Grievance Committer SMU ia win. Not ik stklghtextra poi|to;##. wrftP 9t<0bftndBln ttta Pmt# )*tte plrifts inthethird, q* blowing oat of the North at game liams on the SMU 2l»Jk>et the • " Tefcas failed to gd after tatting tip the big yardage—# . »nd #2 »oct»r tarnd 1*1, ii ^tAwf-time. The.wind put tlw Mustangs oii/downs.. 3£-; 'tS$" %$£? aaithqr ahead near tbe end^>t the. the kickoff and it looked like SHU jrml frtpecttw4yi# /T^|i p V Br KXWr CROZIERfdisplay of pan catching—hi« in * bole lit once after Texas de* Tt*a» £eiil all t& W & fir*t .quarter," ., , / *-would come rightbaekto score Tompkins kick '-was *nd ^ 1 T*x** A*&i4t4 Sport* Editor cided to kick off withthe breexe. their tbvd »erie« of downs. They Ee kept tossiiig again. They got to the Texas 84 l««iiekM» *»4 UIM» ®»4» br T«» ... tldm Jfd} ** the, facoi^d ijLJf® is peMj^jilJn. a,^eei.qidetRoller fctath*«tUk»h«Iping 4o *tt *p-tfcaj-Roteto^ took o*ero»theSMU 81, Smashes «f beforeBenners' tosses wer4. bro­... . W» w— . -»-, I ^rjkmgbwa «*>«». deep in the. end same and made by Townsend and Lew LeVine and the Mustangs scored. Benners hit; ken Up, ? • R to tlie Texas lionghorn dressing room Saturday afternoon^ wa*ee lack of it b*ct to the 10. Bote wesdrop-passes _from Tompkinsto-Proctter-lfear ofsixar&empt^tn moving ""She Longhorna tfyqp demon­with * long pass to Pat Knight "It was great, just great, I can't believe it yet," SS&F intheSteeratUck. *«d foir 1$ and 6 yards moved the ball from the SMU 4U $he elincher strated tbewill to win by watch­good. foi< 12 yards total before Procter was saymg^atandirMrln the middle of a pile of "•nwmiMH* bandied ; Wll from ocrimraake—-sigwulhjjf the to the fc, Townsend bulled werj'waa * 22-yarC heatf* taken b^ ing 80 yards.in 11 plays. Shands bouneed hhn out on the Geo* Roberts^the „Tex*rr4, _ Townsend score^froni^the fourf 7., Don Barton, intercepted the dirty gear with the arras pf two Longhoms^and several ad tffeMwwiflw spot a»d wma extremely sharp with Ma passes. ^ Roberti wss hlt but he; Isteraled after. picking up 19 vital yards Iifxt to!R« to kffi the threat. -*& miring exes around his shoulder*. perrfd. to Rote who romped across un-during the drive. A ten-yard ' It was the same. Benfters in JBtt Longhom junior hit 10 of A life photographer' wasf ball much in these first minutes— SMU by this time gdfe up the touched to tie the game^ ?*?» after' burst by -Levine, added a needed the second half. The first timejhe :H attempts for 189 yards. coaches* and, of' course, we Texaa faiKng: to1ake advantage running game. Benners b*g*n his Sullivan .'kicked nineteenth first down. Passes from Tompkins Mustangs ^ot the-pigskin they poping flash bulbs at the And for the second week fan a wanted to win.* ' marched 89 yard? in 0 plays.-A wildly-happy Steers -when cW, sot «W* did *1» Toxm tows 35-yard Benners pass to Johnny Ken Jackson, giant Steer tac­ lose the ball on fumbles or suffer Hugh Reeder broke *from Champion put SHU on,-the Steer kle, was chanting, "JPfcey can*b#«f THE , -.A.*n offsides penalty. S, from where. Rote roAred over. the group, went into the beat, can't they?" as a Life pho4.The SMU team, on the other Sullivan's kick was good and other room, grabbed Coaeh tographer was Mapping pictur«k ':R^la*^;l»Bw«r* Jwdcfif'^oise «ftw~­ **NBt-I titdtft havff tlwplay fir * Blair Cherry by the arm and being manhandled by the Texas ;v Texas didn't score immediately gured outt J was just in the tightline «arly .ixuthfe..g»jae: __ but they moved into Mustang led him .into the Inain dress-place -at -the right^iime,-" Paul SltU receivers dropped^ pama; u>ry whete -»^B%joite» • •where h»; Ik the dear» but this nnfortanate "" SMD h6l» question about the play on which • » "» "" '^boosted onto the shoulden, trkk of fate was perhaps equa- 8-y*rd iifte. A shovel pass to he threw Riisty -Russell Jr., for Jtead by the fact that Texas pasa Champion moved ^ the ball to 20, ,of the boys for, yet another safety in the fourth quarter, lender* dropped aemal -but on the next pay Bubba Shand near "William* all?" blocked"tt punt^ interceptions — one with a clear reached low on the 18 to inter­Greying, modest, afld victory-off the toe of Kyle' Rote early, jfield and the goal line^nly ^n^ cept Benner's tosa and ran to happy Coach Cherry told a. group in the first quarter and played a t1 '" yards away, "" ^ " ^is h e > 0 . -of newshawk^ ''This was strictly a good ^11-round defensive game. A holding penalty moved Texas a team victory. All the .assistant .Don, the Tiger, Menasco, hob­ back, to the 25, and on third ^ Xkm-lintr P©int« coaches—Ed Price, -.Eck Curtis, bling on an injured ankle, de* down, Tompkins faked into the Bully Gilstrap, and J. T-Kingr^i scribed the kind of defense that' #W TEAM »TAT»T!CS line, fftked a rev^rse, and then , SMtJ deserve a lot of credit'for getting a team needs :to . beat the Mus­ passed to Procter for the touch­ ! JTiMt Sows* -: "••; a the boys realdy. All of boys you need is good down, It was a carbon copy of our tangs, "All a touchdown play used against Rice were g^eat." pass defense. They really get th*/t iast week. About the SMU ball club Coach receiver* down the field;. Several-., Tompkins kicked straight up the Cherry said, "That boy Benners times I saw five or more down." r«MMAttmpui - F«»« Cwwptotad middle and Texas led, 21-14. kept me scared all evening long—• Line coach Ed Price praised all Fuiri Right back came the" Metho-really, out side of that, it wasn't Jthe Steer^offensive and defensive ­„ (lists: "Rote ~oh"His IjeW' run of too"much of a ball game.^ " : -groups as units; "ft would just the day returned the kickoff from The Cowtown lad, Ben Tomp­be impossible and unfair to pick; his 5 to the SMU 4K Again it kins, was happy, but probably the out ^ny single individual." | was Benners passing, passing, calmest man in the stadium. "They • " With" a handful of applet, JBy-J 5COKS »y WERIOM and passing. After WiT&on and^il-different kind of defense, Townsend for : used a ron headed theliams had combined to drop Ben toan we had expected, but things •'door of the dressing room where " . new for ah.18-yard loss theon worked; out all right; Now we 'mar# than a hundred cheering ;Texas 26, he caiiie back to pass •>nly have the next three to worry Texas rooters and the Longhorn •;to Ben White in the end zone for about;?' he said in answer to the band were milling around and(MU: ToMk4«™—Rot*, 1 Wttfc * no Sullir»n *» ; the -score. White made -a diving praise of fsisti «ftcr TW«MO«II a fan who was kidding Waiting to praise their champions i> catch back of two Steer der him about how long it to<^k the in person. . ^ | fenders. • . •/" Uh S. S^r—eMirS . . But Sullivan mi^ed the all-im Steers to really show their stuff" As soon as he got out of the i ­in Conference play. portant extra point, and Texas led, QOOX he was hoisted onto the y AL STATISTICS Dick Rowan explained simply, 21-20 with 14 minutes left. shoulders of the fans .and it was HUSHING ~ V,: J*;-'..' "We played this one for the The Steers added' a safety only after much persuasion that Att, JLmw •Ortlr^l after marching, from the. Texas they returned him to the ground. { . f«H *t 1 • -,t «•"" SWC STANpmCS 46 to the SJ4U 2. Texas failed to Needless to say, they didn't try * •23S&*. score, but they used 7 valuable tiie same stunt with Bud McFadin J I minutes on the drive. and Ken Jackson, although they ' HU.M. T«M _ w.aw Rote trying to pass out of the giive voice to acclaim all the vie-s Baylor — hole hit Rusty Russell in the end tors. • • _ " >. A&M zone and Williams tackled the Outside of Menasco's ankle, of ;; ^ ' xk. i SMU ball carrier for a safety"with* Mil- which nothing will be known for L ' TCU » . Att. Coats. Int. Y4i. bum's help. , 24 hours, and several minor cuts, ^ — *# I# 1 t» BARTON AND BARTON BOUNCE Kyle Rote down for a short screen pass from the arm of Rusty Russell Jr. and reversed J . The Steers had themselves Arkansas the-Longhorns came out of the J T4wririM.7«KM— H 1* ' I HI ut i two .yai^J loss early in the first quarter. Role Had just taken a his field wh^jrthe two Bartons, not,related, applied -the pressure.: (ballgame, th"e score—23-20. Rice 0 2 i^ame unscathed. K ' , V, -"7" .)1 -;a44­ •t *• >* C-W?,>" : 11^' V&-' THELASTING rr. GOODLOOKSOF &> u L ^JPIC ' JL (J i t ^-v' 1 4?; '' 'SV, •» • " ' R ' < [Vf.1 ~~! - \ j -p. ^ t N ^ * W .** fHYi1 ' » >>• r? . • , .. .3# x -* * A i" 4 ' •* A < <-1 »+i> ^ *r-^i t t iFf-«•, :%%4 3/£,.,& . %, , •> f 4i -« \h ^ / " . • C4~v-\ i % rw< ^iZ p. ^ ^ ,'g.j -> * >*' iU. . I# > "­ (.) ^ -t ^vWS-% ^ A1-' £r ' •? *s 1"'" **-i^»V-*,*•• m *> • Wr**~ I.' T r i>"7 -r-Th* momtnf you louth r" »• V ' • » /:%-x '' ^ w ... r r.... ^ t... .i. r../* c-v^m C^Mj£x ' tthh fabric you'll know *• f 'TJT^TTT^xs, p & ift&k;-;-1) . r, ^U'-***?!•«?^4^;^ , Quality!" Quality 1 -A vy J *rU A? m v •* i * 4 i •« Ft* i I $P> ** A f Js.1 iZ&ef -w Ji'clkf Jr 1 w#0f anj 0 porfotf fit i.«U8& 1} j&&> My. ^ Co1l0g9$iyl* t 4 / A -4 * try ,¥ jfor th* lib to® tSUL& -"Ui / of iht Sovthwst At&sib* KiSiS# th* \^ * :T^ M <4 ; Congrats 'W"'H 'A s m /•(>* \ m m ' m m * i < . I UfrAp > # t 1 h 3 ASBBtJ ir'ar mmmm mmmqimpjaiNipM we Caaou and rowboata wcwt ,-for rent llAO^jr^ote B ;& rii Russell: took the blame Ha-D&*J9ickers?Ji'B good on his first try for extra'* ,\7~]'^sTces"Hiem good.*'' conversion for Te^ ^lkmg"thelwQ^ points point, but missed the next. X5rover Alexander/Dies " Iffck was a&od.' Tfi5"Beart^Sa ir k ^®patn.... • ... ... Strangely enough, the Mustang late in >he final period. He called Lary* subbing for the --players-were not dumbfounded by again with more than eight min- the pass play hoping tb cross lip ST^PAtiL, »5v; -4-*#V*Gro­ tites left in the third quarter* as Billy Tidwell, ground out tondi^ inse anTjfet oEITeF L* K1^«3T^ma"puiiged ovflr from down runs of one, fifteeen» and Mo$f Excellent if the" pressure .of being a marked th# d«ep hole the Ponies, were in. ulous major league "pitther in his., the one yard. line. sateen yards. He snagged aTS- team lessened the burden of de­ "The Texas Une Was great,1* he day, died Saturday of a heart ail­ HOUSTON, Nov. 4—(/P)—Cidp-Billy Wright kieked yard papa from Gardemal for a feat. Instead' of moaning about Then TCU drove back 71 yards added. ment. ~ • pled Ritie muff fed- fourth score. their ioes^rconversaiion immedi­ Tem^iae jxtti point,-with end Dick Death came to the «8-year-old J1* jSyS^ Tech threat in the closing seconds : Schaeffer romped Juicy K.C. Steaks ately shifted to the homecoming MtoivimmATtii 2* , Floyd counted for the back and still an all-American, baseball immortal in the one rent- Saturday for a 13 to T victory ganie with the Aggies next Satur­ Horned Frogs, He knifed and Smith ran seven yards ,fo(r thi" was completely stymied, as were ed room he;occupied in a' private over the Border Conference team Tech dominated play through­ day in Dallas. — plunged 14 yards in four plays to «ther Aggie ;C the other Pony backs in trying to home here. He had been living of Luscious Sea Food,* The Longhorn lihe, which com­ climax the drive. Homer Ludiker's ffter speedster Teddy Riggs had out except for the two quick Bice A&M, upset by Baylor 1m&« run through the Texas line. Rote late on a $150 a month baseball given the Owls' a two touchdown touchdown drives. The Red Haid­ pletely dominated the Pony for-kick for extra point was good. week, stayed in the running for: singled out Jim Lansford, Steer pension. _ first "half lead. • ers ran up 312 net yards rushing Special Accomodations' the Southwest Conference eham« tackle, as 'the man who gave him /Alexander had been in ill"health Just three and a half minutes Lofecr Must Play Rice took over the ball on to Rice's 174 and led in passing, pionship on this one-sided victory. For Parties the most trouble. . , in recent years—-^e lost an ear to gone in the fourth quarter Baylor Loser of the football game be­ roared back, the payoff a 23-:d6wns"on its three-yard line with 71 yards to 61. It came out playing for keeps and "We wish them best of luck (the cancer—but friends who saw him' tween the Silver Spurs and Cow­Longhorns) and hvpe they finish yard dash, by halfback Buddy Par­ten Beconds to play as a 17-yard, .. Otherwise,' Rice did not get kept the-ball all the way to pay Friday said he mentioned nothing boys Sunday will have to pay for the remainer of the season un­about feeling ill. ker. Dickerson again-kicked the fourth-, down pass was short by inside the Tech 38 yard line, while dirt the, first two times it gained * the • picnic afterward at Bull extra point. two yards for a Tech first down. Tech twice lost the ball on the possession. <> defeated," he added. Alexander got his lastbig base­ 1330 S. Congniu ^ok.' Pat Knight^ a defensive stand­ball tribute in 1938 when he was That made it Baylor 20, TCU 7. After a fumble and a fourth-Rfce three and once on the Owl Arkansas—until its «eo Phone 7-3269 jPhe game will be at 3 p. m. out for'the Ponies from his right voted into baseball's hall.of fame Then the Frogs went 90 yards down pass interception had ended eight. \ efforts—had penetrated deep in-" on Whitaker Held Sunday, end position, said that Bud Mc-at Cooperstown, N; Y; in'ten pl^ys.to score, the payoff threats-inside the. Rice ten-yard u Riggs. a .member j)f the ^ Rice to Aggie territory "only thre« • a pass of 11 yards from Bartosh line, Tech got back in thfe game track sprint relay iiieam, got his times;-Jt reached the eight, 21,! to end Wilson George." Ludiker's in the third quarter as fullback first touchdown on ihe initial play and 10 yard lines before boggingkick was .good. S J. W. Thomjwon seored from the after a Tech punt had been re­down on three scoring matches fit / There the scoring ended. Bay­one to^^ climaXja i&yard drive.. turned to the Tech 31. the first three periods. lor 20, TCU -14. But about eighfc minutes of .the fourth quarter was left, and both teams tried to make 'Mural Musing* The Top Ten those minutes count. Baylor mixed •Passing and running to reaich the Here is the way the top ten teams in tine nation, as rated by made a try for a field goal, but the AP last week, fared this week;.. |failed. 1. SMU. Reached the end of tike undefeated line at hands of Texas ; Longhorns, 20-23. women $ Intramural 2. Army. Defeated a tough Caleiidqr 'By BRUCE ROCHE Pennsylvania eleven, 28-13. l|T"r .v • Ttxan intramural Co-ordinator ' 3. Oklahoma. Established * By n&ict Thuwiday night,at 9 o'clock all intramural ... MONDAY modern record of 27 consecutive . B :00—Man»ger*sm«etinff and eu; «r in Boom 8. Cactus picture, BuketlSff c*p-visional football champions will be decided. ? victories without a tie, stopping, tains' meeting. Colorado, 27-18, , ,[J _ T«uefc Football One diviirional tiltist has already been crowned'. In DDD v§. OPB I; AP vs. DG. ' 4. Ohio Stat*. Rolled merrfly-l AT YOUR OWN CAMPUS SHOE STORE ON THE DRAG Glass B Church, Westminster defeated Newman Wednes­ 6 ;00—for second round • deck along in Big Ten play, trouncing tennis. TUESDAY day night to take its throne. Northwestern,'32-0. • • • , Touch Football 5. K*nt«cky. Stomped Boh- 4i00-V-ICKGj vs. ZTA I. \ Here is a minute sketch of the playoffs this weekt »:00—ADP I Vs. DZf ; BPE vs. AOP. Woodruff's Florida, 40-6, to re> • 6:00—Deadline for fourth round table • CLASS B -- main undefeated.. tennis singles and tennis singles. -Swimming Preliminaries Fraternity Division day. The CJourta get a bye into 6. California. Took one mota^ "1:00s—Wica, DG. PBP, KAT. the finals. "A" *>'/ • . step toward Rose owerfal 7. T«iu. Took* command of Intramural: Schedule Sigma plays . Phi Gamma machines tangle as Sigma Alpha Southwest Conference by beating Delta Mond&y nightl The Epsilon meets Kappa Alpha and SMU'a Mustangs, 23-20. ' <= ­ 'MOPTDAY Delta Tau Delta runs into Phi S. M i am I C F1a.> .Whipped . TOUCH FOOTBALL winners of these games tan­ • i. Ciass A Mica Gamma Delta. The winners of Georgetown, 42-7, Friday night. . 7 o'clock gle Thursday to decide tiie Tlieleme Co-Oi>'vs; Oak Grov* these games square off Thursday . 9. Princctoa, Won sixth' FLORSHEIM can touch vou .. JARMAN $895 to t]§93 Ch>< A Club • '• 8 o'clock Pem Club vs. Dorm -H. . • Class A Fraternity>...u.. .• j'T o'clock ' Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Kappa Alpha• -"±—S o'etock -Delta Tau Delta "vs. Phi jiinmt Delta. Class B Fraternity.7 o'clock Phi Delta Theta vg. Delta'Tau . • . . 8 o'cloeb Kappa Sigma>'s. PhiJjamma Delta. TENNIS SINGl£S • .Class A 8 o'clock Winner of 3. A. St. John-Carrol Lewis vs. winner of Bichard Atutin-Bob Martin. " CUss B Winner of Russell Harwood-Jack Mc-Master vs. winner of Henry Rech-Qardy . -.—-IjO<.—-——— ;BADMINTON SINGLES .. : •• 7 o'clock wUITam donnam vs. Peter Qdiyeser;—­William Archer vs. Knox MUlar. Tom Ramey vs. F. P. MeCowu. , . Joe Willianks vs. Richard Hodges.J. A. Rickard vs. H. S. Harden. , ChacleaSmith vs. Donald AmicrsoDr ' JFack Kiatt vs. AHen-Decker---William Jenkins vs. M. R. Digors. :• 7:48o'ciock Leon McGuflSn vs. C. L Andress. W. C. MeOtillan vs. Leon Cole. Walter Shur vs. John Hall. Walter C. Wukaseh va. John Moonv Robert Coekrell vs. James Sannders. Fraternity chiampion. Mica Divieion Theleme Co-Op and Oak Grove match passes Thursday night at 8 o'clock for thr Mica champion­ship. . • ^ Club Division A complication clouds the pic­ture here. Pem. Club defeated Alba Club Friday to -earn the right to meet Cliff Courts in the Club finals., But Alba protested the game. •• . So the winner of .the Alba-Pem game-^whicfrwillbe deaidedSl^n' day—meets Cliff; Gourts in the Club" finale Tuesday night. " CLASS A ' Church Divieion No activity here until Thurs­day," when BS0 and jJniveftity Christian tangle in what should be an exciting battle. The winner will ascend to the Church throne. " Club Division night for the title. ~ 7 "~r~.T"" Mica OUvlaion * The Draft Dodgers are inactive Until Thursday when Chey play the winney of the Theleme-Co-Op-Oak Grove game, scheduled Mon­day night. Incidently, a look at the pair*ings suggest that if you can get a team in the play-offs Jn one class, you can get one in the other. Six organizations have teams in both Class A find C.lsas B play­offs. Delta Tan Delta* Phi Gamma Delta, Theleme Co-Op* Oak Grove, Pem Club, and .Cliff Courts; are these. *" ~ ~ ' -After divisional' titles are de­cided the fight is on ^pr intra­mural championships. A Class A champ—which is also called the Intramural Champion—is named, as is a Class B titlist. straight, this season by wallopingColgate, 45-7. 10. Illinoi*, Shutout Michigan'sWolverines, 7-0. m May Dm But Hmr cW CALL §M­7-6133 MOST STYLES Jack Pew va. Rosco AT OLD SEVILLE IS GRAND.;..IT FITS RIGHT INTO YOUR JPLAN...SO GALS Pem Club's high-flying" grid­sters meet once-beaten Dorm H Monday night.' The winner of that game runs into Cliff Courts Thurs-Playoffs for these? ~ intramural crowns begin Monday, November 13. Finals are scheduled for Wednesday, November 15. FOOTBALL SCORES RADIO CONTROLLED CARS RENT TYPEWRITERS , ^ r->jw ^ i mf }, -^' ' * Aft*# *» ja. ..because there's a double ^lidqaessr of it under, oyer, ca<]1 m A** * i V4J i fs *St ^ , ftm: to wa!k in tiun this hndsonie wing tip pattern. It's JarmaaV own interpretation' V/^ontinejrtal" styling-Ht aboe approved by the Men's BE SMART.. .TO CMJD SEVILLE TAKE YOUR MAN. TO BE SATISFIED BE SEVILLIZEDI BE SEVILLI2XD Old' Seville teoi Guadalu|>e St. mm 5EIBERLING . It Costs Less Than You Think Rent'a-Ne^ Car ^m§S04^Brcaot'­ f SOUTHWEST Te*as 23, SMU 20. -Baylor 20, TCU 14. Rice 13,Texas Tech 7. -Texas A&M 42, Ai^ansas 13. Daniel Bnker 6, Texas Lutheran-0. Midwestern 23, Sam Houston State 20. Loyola (Los Angelea) 21, Hardin-Simmons 20. Sul Ross 34r^terph«nF.AuStin 7. Panola J. C. 34, Allen Academy 14. Southwestern 27, Austin College 7. Southwest Texas 31, East Texas Baptist 14, West Texas State 40, Texas ^Western 12^ HIGH SCHOOL Woodrow Wilson (Dallas) 9,^-u Croxier Tech (Dalas) 6 (Tie). Army28,Penn 13. , s, Columbia 20^ Cornell 19; . ?:«}/Pitt n,West Virgina 7, V Princeton 46, Colgate 7. ; fPisim Staid 2t),Boston0e»efel8iSaoaaontl.^ Mississippi State 27, Auburn 0. LSU 40, Mississippi 14^ ' ,MlpWESTl^;;S , . Oklahoma 27, Colorado 18*." Nebraska 40i Missouri 34.",ic tv Iowa l3, Minnesota 0.^ Illinois 7, Michigan 0. T ^ v Michigan State 3S, Indiana 0..' ' Notre Dame 19i Navy 10. t Wisconsin 33; Purdue 7. Ohio State 32, Northwestern^0. -Kansas 3&, Utah 26. Arizona 88, New Mexico 0c ~ Mttmi (Ohio) 89, Wichita 13. Tulsa 27, Oklahoma A&M.13. Drake 42^ Bradley 14.;C Cincinnati 28, Ohio University 0. Ifo*State13, KansasState % ^ w*s*>x •Uwm California 14, Washington 7/Stanford 7, USC T(Tie>*.Wyoming 14;Idaho 7, . * San Francisco 24, Denver ingfon, end Underwoo^ ^ j Lower charges for periods ex­ceeding on* month. 205W(wt*H» 0^7^411 W Hew Hampshire 21Connectictct 7. Dartmouth 1,Yale 0. , BuckneU 41, NYU 0. Boston U. 16, W&M 14. W«PlekUp th# B«H*r Factory Method Temple S9, Delaware 0^ Maryland28rGeorgeWashington 51r» Rocappiay Holy Crosa2ft, Harvard 7. .Rntgera 18, Brown'12. Wuhiogton and Lee 25, X|t Tech . 4, Jpip; Virginia £4* Citadel J ip 2348 Guddcdup* SPIRES TIRE Duke 30, Ga. Tech 2 Alabama 14,Georgia aS3-1221 3S10 Gaadaltip* iM SW"!.,!!1 r»x, «Sw. 4 »• AitJ'.1' 4J,ik^.-l<'HHP*WI!!'i' m*—Republican &eadef Harold Asiatic policy under our present E. Stassen chained Saturday night peasing the areh-Communist Mao ST. 'if' Mr.;^Vuman: mid 'ijolatio SBOtnU Sundiy, Nor* *—(*>—' other-Red fortes had limited, «Ue-mated that six brined* Communist ^bat because th« Truman admin-JTse-Tung/1' leader of the Chinese ident Trtiman denounced his Re­ 'm1»U, HatrJ^; And "greater strength and pr e North K«m« army, now re-cesses Saturday in operations divisions had entered Korea from titration Mcoddledw Chinese' Com Reds; publican critics Saturday night interrupted-t^e President at one p'erity" are the major c«mpsr to includ* from thfee lab south o'f the Chongchon in the Manchuria to oppose the UN munists, American troops a^e now Stas^en, lB48 GOP presidential and declared the .Democratic par­point. ; # . ^U«l. { V , (St* Chinese Communists division*/ Kunu area at a point IS miles eaat forces^f'-xtm-. ws suffering their highest casualties aspiraiit, also lit into the home ty "has done more to defeat Com-; >£ K°Np be came bac|^-, Depjirting hip prepare^ .ftjasawad ! *«w strength today in and slightly horth of Anjuj At­The statfelfflent & of the Korean war. front policies of the Democrats muiiism in this «a»untry than -from }r>front i"*t«n boundary and perhaps national administration. ^oiri .iiwu— th *verr morning axoapt Honda; «nj) Sttnrday, September to Jan*, mwii, . 'ft''' except darins holiday and eMtniristioo parlodt, «od tHk«cekl; duriok tb* inniMt l " were unable to assess the resultjC strike from their present loca years of undermining General built up to" the campaign climax'< dress. Student Publication*. Inc. -^ r ~T Planes also spotted the truck Col. Oliver K. Jones, Uni­tions. MacArthur, five years of snub-Tuesday,-etectioirday^ The heavily-guarded President New»_ eontribation« *lll b« aee«pt«d Bj tel«phon« (8-9418( or at tbe editorial versity graduate in production en- J.B. t. oy at tha N«r» Laboratory • J.B. 104. tnqtiirlM concerning delivery ^convoy, moving aouthwestward cut the cheering, clapping, and •nd adverthlng ahoald be made in J.B. tOS (8-2413> frem the Suino reservoir on thi giueering, h|is been assigned com­ bell-ringing short with the remind­Students are invited to Wait" the -editor.* and aaaociate editor during tho j oaorninit .hoara mand of the^Twentieth Weather " Yalu river. There was so repori er that the.Democrat party was Opinions the Te»m are not necessarily tboee of the Administration or other, : of air atacks onthe convoy. * i Squadrbn, on duty with the paying for his radio and television ODiversity officials. : > K' - Entered «• seeond-claa* matter October 18, IMS at the Post Office at AastlSb! United"Nations Forc&kjn Korea; ;V' Key to the new UN defense time "at so much" a mmutel" Texas, under the Set of Mardti 8,-1879. After graduating from the Uni­ , , line, set up after withdrawals oil He drew repeated applause ... . ASSOCIA1ED PRESS WiliE SER.-• versity, Col. Jones received it 4*" ; up to SO miles, was a bottle-neck from the crov?d, particularly when The Aaaoclated Prb» is exeiosively wititled to the use Tot republication _ gree in meteorology from Cau* ilews dispatches credited, to it'or;.sot otherwise credited In this*-neWspaper, i *.. bridge across the Chongchon river' fcrnia Institute of Technology in hi declared . American leadership local items or spontaneous origin t>uU|iihed herein. Rights of publication at Anju. Late Saturday, U.S. rein-i to repel aggression in Korea is other matter herein also reserved. „ ^ I1.,­ forcements checked a Communist 1949, * NEWc^YORKf Nov. 4-^-^— While the United States sup-Reports from Madrid.-have de­the greatfi^ Step toward.-.world...^juprese&ted ^rMational -AdveWiUw br^a^tiStYdveHlsIng Servieer lne^ ^ attack only 10 miles northeast He has.'bad almost ten years of The United, Nations^ Saturday ported:the-resolution,Pre8ident scribed -Spain as showing en­peace that has been taken in my College Publishers Bepresentative no 420 Iladlson Ave. New York, Ji. fa? .of Anju. •...•• " . •< ! active duty with' the. Air Weather lifted its"four-year-old diplomatic Truman" told a news conference thusiasm about joining only spe­ Chicago Boston Los Angeles San Francisco • i wv ••v The Eighth Army reported! Service. blockade of Franco Spain. Thursday that it will be a long, cial UN organizations. The Span­MEMBERSweeping aside Soviet protests, long time before this country ish press has clamored for full Associated Collegiate Press All-American Pacemakar the UN also voted to allow Spain sends an ambassador to 1 Spain. membership x>r nothing. . to join UN specialized agettei)— An army call fojr 40,000 draf­speak ori "God's Dangerous L T. IT. SPIRIT Chinese troops swelling the Red tees during DecembeiMs I for themselves whether. to se.nd ranks in NortH Korea may cause lective Service headquarters some dist Church. their top diplomats back to Ma­ the US Army to draft" more men time ago. This December quota 2:30—^Tryouts for "Another Partdrid. Similarly, it leaves it to the special UN agencies vote on' during the first, three months of appears unlikely to be changed of the Forest," Ferris Hall, 2. OUR QUALITYto next year than the 140,000 it has in view of the time required to \{Seventh and Colorado Streets. Spanish membership. planned to call. carry out a call." 2:30i~-IZFA, Hillel Foundation. 3—Cowboys-Silver Spurs football This would depend on whether Any increase in the pace of the the Chinese action results in pro­draft is expected to be applied game, whiteker Field. 3. OUR PRICES 3-&—-PictureslyyElizabeth Keefer longing the conflict. during next January, February, Tibet's Fall Seen Boatright, Ney^Museum. ; As news of intervention by sub­and March, when the army intend^ 3;30—Austin Symphony Orchestra stantial Chinese Communist for­ed to take a total of 140,000 draf­ v", t with Walter Coleman a: 4. OUR PORTRAITS ces poured in from correspondents tees. If Ruler Flees- J Mylecroine, Hogg Audits: Elegant simplicft/ in :ii; in Korea Saturday, the Pentagon This figure means an indica­ 4—^Graiw Roots -Club,:" 303 i-xe diamond! and wadding NEW DELHI, India, Nov. 4 refrained from apparising the sit­ted quota of around 45,000 men For ChristmasGifts Thirty-second Street. (jj>)__A swift collapse of Tibetan uation publicly. An army spokes­for each of these months. The •fx ring sat fihat reeks with 4—Benefit showing of ^Hipsy opposition to the invasion by man told reporters that he could -army could boost thiB to a much Boo" for Whitehall Co-Op, refiinement and qualify. Communist China's trbops was make no statement '*until we re­higher rate based on its indicated ---TexaS Unidn.— '• States­ceive confimation of Chinese ability to-handle more trainees; it 7~" Mounfad in white or yel­A DMAMONB forecast by the Calcutta 5—Cactus picture to be made of man Saturday on the basis of bor units from General MacArthur's is drafting 70,000 this month Lutheran. Student Association, low gold, or platinum if der reports that the young Dalai headquarters." alone. WHOM < Gethsemane Parish Hall. .you choose. $295.00 Lama has fled Lhasa, his capital. But a well-inforn^d official, The pews of substantial Chinese 6r—DSF to discuss "The Atom in A dispatch quoting the Tibetans who declined to be quoted by forces in Korea comes at a time " War and Peace," ; University in Kalimpong, on the India-Tibet name, predicted that the -army when the administration is already r Christian (Church.- frontier said the : 16-year-old Will have to raise its.draft sights considering a -broadened draft to 6:30—The Rev. Glen Olds to earthy and spiritual ruler of Ti­for the first quarter o£1951jf teach and maintain the 3,000,000 4; speak "Our Race with Dis* on bet's 3,000,000 people had left Chinese reinforcements drag out man. military fowe proposed by " aster," Wesley Foundation. for an' undertermined destination tiie Korean conflict. President Truman. 6:30—Dr. Rheinold -Niebuhr t<> with, his elderly regent, Talcta V speak on "The Christian. Faith Rlmpoche, and other" Buddhist v in'Secular Culturei" Unurersity News Briefs priests. » i . 1 Community Church. Auhtorities could not. confirm 7:30—James-Langl&y to lead rer the reports, which first, reached 7 vival service, University Baptist Kalimpong through traders who Johnson Scores System Used i Church. had trekked through the 16,00Q* 9—Recreation for young people,? ^ *i\r At foot Himalayan passes by Yak, In Defense Contract Bidding 'First Methodist Church, v 4 2346 Guadalupe ^ pr«u\ Phone 8-7067" 5-^>Fine Arts Festival exhibit, ifm—d Pmm president of Southwestern Univer­ . Music Building loggia. Senator Lyndon Johnson' (D-sity, will be formally inaugurated rfr 8:30-1 and 2-5—Baylor game tic­ Tex) Saturday sharply criticized November 14 at Georgetown, Dr. kets, Gregory Gymnasium. ;; DOES YOUR DANCING the system for awarding contracts Finch assumed the presidency The2^^in^%oundry & 1:16—Spooks picture, MLB st6ps. tinder the multi-billion dollar de­when the president, Dr. J. _N. R. 6—Dinner for Dr. Hunter Blakely, HAVE THE NEW LOOK? LEARN THE fense program In Washington. -• Score, died in,September. TFWC Building." . Johnson, chairman of, the Sen­ Dry Gleaning Cgmpany Present^ • 7—'ASHVE to hear A. T, MosesS} ate Watchdog Committee on De­"Survival under atomic attack .. on 'fPractical Problems Con­ F*mi fense, issued a statement saying fronting the Engineer," Bngi­ will be the subect of .Governor many 'small business men com­ neering ^uilding 138. /V Allan weekly plain that invitations to bid on Shivers' report to 7—-Entire cast of Micar FoIlies m the people Monday night in Aus­ contracts reach them too lpte. / rehearsal, TFWC Builjding. tin. *." / 1, One invitation, Involving $200,-7—Dr. •©. H. Power and Professor 000 worth of ration contaiiners,: , Phil M. Ferguson; to address was portmarked one hour after U. S. Ambassador Walter freshman engineers in convo­ Jysi'(,yr. the closing date for' receipt of Tnurston retired from the iiplo-< cation, Geology Building^ 14. 1—Tryouts for Aqua Queen*Greg­ „ , 5>~& bidB, he said. matic Service Saturday In Mexico ory Gym po6l. He said he would hold a hearing ambassador, Wil­ City. The new 7:30—Free movie, "Henry VIII' i on Jthe subject unless corrective if ) '< '3 liam O'Dwyer, former mayor of with Charles JbaugMon, Texas *lLi§u1 Sm$ steps are taken. & j-% ^ New York Qity^ is duf!, to arrjY^ i Union. A -S-ri '•» *£ 7:30-*rNeal Jotiesjto; lead revival, J >^r-« v , 7:30—Preliminaries in Hemphill 5V, A fieauttf^-PlctOTe^feSfil •• Sea Food freshman Reading Contest, SpeechiBuilding 201. ®(Optn IT p.m.—Closed Monday 7:30'—Dr. Kar' Dallenbach to bver tbiSae speak on '^Psychological Horse-it'a not i bad idea. Nevertheless, it's just like magicfeathers," University Club/', bin ,f«»r aoiM 'and rumpled 'garmefata away"' TARRY TOWN RESTAURANT 7*.30-r—ASCE to sea fiM 6n "Jn-frosa you . . ,'and whisk them back In eleaa^as-itew ^ dustrial Development in Texas," ettaditids loofcfag pretty/ a*^ yoa-know-what. For­ fei J425 EXPOSMOI atticMi^Hg»e«oBdwFcaL omS4M01 H«i.1%t 710 Bsaiol, S872* Phone 6-3560 mm-'z -Thi Tempi* University Newa ttw| Poetry Sociat* of Texas £J*jk fearful Joyf the totalis n«|«' Jim racommewied * %sq[Qia^t hae announced its annual and el English ftoy«^!«t.i|ldiMt Caj£, monthly contest rules for 1964 is Jtaok to tfeoM who t*aeh. It i*"The is receiving notices to equal those & recently-diitnljUted' pamphleti .Art of 'Teachin*/^Gilbert of Mr, Cary5# earlier novels, in­Highat, professor of the latin Twenty-one annual contests and cluding "The Horse's Mou^j," Mtr TH? HUMAN USE *>F HU­t^nguef# and Iiteratjira cmxi* seven monthly contests are open *Cary, who has become as popular MAN BEINGS. By NarbartWaf­%t Colombia Univeiaity, ;-td members of the society. in the Ufaited States as he is in ncr.Woafhton Mifflin Co. 241 pp. , Mr. HighetVbook deal* with the People interested In the society England, is known as one of con­f3^0f¥C@ 1 beaks question: What i» a good or ite contests should write to temporary literature's most de­Life as we know it.will not con­ teacher? What must a teacher.he, Mrs. Hilton R, Greer^5*Q 4* lightful non-confopsjstsa&d tpmic tinue indefinitely and unless man %l '* * > ' f* -\ « ' * % |\\|\\ *. - You'« ««n* $Wm of. low»i"8oeiety can only be under­ stood through a std'dyi of the mes­ sages and the communication* fa­ iaiBth* $***" cilities which belong-to it. bury,Dallae 5, Texas, stakes fullest use of his inborn powers and intellectual possibili­?5^s' ties, his span On earth will come •0i to an end within a comparatively V , *->' '' * "1 " "* ' " ^ short length jof time, brieves far. i v ?iiv . -v * '* i*>-. r^i& X <»' -A 'tpl » «.: -S ^ Vu \. y / \ \ Y S^ Norbert Weiner, professor of %*" ^ ^ ^ 1 * mathematics at.MIT and origina­tcr of a new science, cybernetics. • -— T " "His science/' reports J,' h. Vanderslice in Mathematics Ma* gazine, ''seeWto^i^elop aineory I * which will embtace^'the common elements of the automatic and machines willi eiuphAftlit oh c^ntrolandcoinmunication.'' "-•'in IsIb ~isstefnlly•"written;,book, Dr. Weiner states his thesis as fol­ "(pajthiDfly J; rt,""* StOW ItXAS Noven*®®'. *«&«*.^ ioOK«noK " 8 • I „-xttC V 8 ^ thfr Hte, p,rk «* ** V*™Mn.P Lot ."J k,!'j£*o4ied[ doff 01; l&uif'-' Western Storied parallel^ Dr. Weiner says. Each book in plea of the ^'taman use % $, movie by one of ^ be. sensory percenters which pick of hil^tan behigs." W," Told by Teacher up stimuli from outside and' each .> Freedom of ^dividual opinion THE BAD MAN OF THE is made aware of the consequence and advanclsment is being crushed '•Pathway to 114'Mr jrl of ite performed action* «o:that today, he writes, by two rigid ele­WEST. By fia«r|« D. Htsdrkb. story based oii the tlsiii&tft mbi Saa Antonio. Th* Nayler Cm. future action may thereby**&e ment* in our society: the Com-01 John McDonOgh, of -titfI P*»y. 208 par**. $2.98. greatest landowner*'.&be modified And corrected. ..--.v* munist Party, and the Catholic Perhaps the best description of %»uth, and onf of thojtetefe iThis awareness of performed ac­Church. Each'group has Its. in "ITie Bad Man of the West" £t mood men Oftion is described by the author dividual dogma, he says* which that of William MacLeod Raine, as tJi^, "feedback principal" arid seeks to curtail man's powers of one of the best known authors In ifew Orleansr McDeno^b setis developed so bj$rhly in newer thought so that the individual is th® field of American literature: '» ajnasa a .^ftirtipe.. £g-*'!" computing ^machines that instruc­essentially merely an effector, tak tad a orders a "Though the bad mqn is the galleried Prenehtions given io the machine can be ing frqm dictatorial hero or the villlan of a thousand home, servante, the mannered modified1 by it without human "brain." "booky nobody else has d'oiw with ganee of-tli»'tiite» and'>^» k If thft f MUltg of Oroffr "fifm « . what lft« Hendricks: oi half the SHgiHe girls in :SW| instructions prove to be in«yf-teacher's oaths and congressional does .. The wprld was McDonogh'amodified irad corrected. —f-5-committees" has taken the place Exactly "what ha» Mr. Jjftni suddenly and atrangeli1 jBecause of this rapidly develop­of the old Inquisition in limiting chicks done? He has not attempted his back on it and crystalBxeding ^eapaefty ef the maehine to man's inborn right «Nf free thought tt tell the story of any one "bad energies into, a driving act wiUiout human instruction in and logical action, he says. man" but has indulged in aome for even greater weslth. TMs" tervening, Dr. Weiner sees 4he The question asked by the book scholarly research in analyzing tile story of McDonogh'e coming within ten or twenty years and left unanswered is how shall the bad men of the West and put life, the women who broke of a Second Industrial Revolution. heart—and, finally his society use the new and powerful it together a« a novcpl. AH labor performing lower judge­The purpose is admirable. Very ing'triumph anil system of machine communicationments and decisions would be re which is developing? Will it be little real attempt has-been-made* f velopment, or.'Will it be used to tme story o' the early peace Book Store. He was there in ^ enslave human , thought into a officer. Guide to autograph copies of "Bride mere.effector of plans made by a In li divisions Hendrickji at­ Fortune," Mrsr Frank Finley, fantastic machine control? tempts to explain the motivating of the fiction departmeiat, Although the book expressly ex­factors in the bad man's behayjor, Mr. Kane w*ft born In Kew; cludes direct mathematics and his philosophy, his technique, his leans in 1910. He was is written for the understanding description, and his paBsing. from Tulane University, wheat ' tries and has spent considerable of the layman, feome oftentimes • One division is devoted-to a jylfo did. graduate work.. Hetime at Geneva,w Switzerland, detailed knowledge of physics and fast listing Tof who ths bad men won Rosenwald feflonwhere he studied the praei^tl ergineerlng would be necessary wore. Actually, the whole book is two tor Southern Stadiea. Besidei work of intei^ational organiza­to the reader in order for him to a fast-^listing of names. -While ing recognised as one of the itions. get the full context of Dr..Wei-not (entirely unreadable; "The Bad novelists of the day; Mr. Katfe ]He has used this knowledge In ner's arguments. , * -* Men of the West" could have been also gained fame as n lecturerj his analysis of the United Nations His whole theory may ^appear much more interesting had the au book' reviewer for national joand conditions in the world con-somewhat abstract 'to ttfe layman, thor adopted a mure liesurely style nats, and a contributor to ^C®1{dusive and inhibitive to world but/Dr. C. W. Horton, assistant andlnot skipped from one name to lier's," "Reader'4 Digest," " unity under an international or­professor of physics at the Uni­another with such rapidity. ican Mercury/' and other ganization. Mr. Levi is not a versity, says his work is "thor­"Bad Man" is an expansion of hazy idealist. Neither is-he a pes­oughly sound and satisfactory.'' Mr. Hendrick's thesis written for Mr. Kane's oth«r "boofct! simist,convinced that peace iS/ini' The theory-of, ^cybernetics bas the1 master's degree. Receiving "Queen of New. Orleans,"possible.. '•',. ..s..,v / v • gained wide respect and accep­both his BA and MA at the Uni­ Che? on the^MiasiBsippi,1* He attacks the nation-state sys­tance among scientists and mathe­versity, Mr, Hendricks has taught Orleans Woman," "Plantation tem based on sovereignty which maticians, he continues* _ _ both at hi£'alma mater and at the rade/^^Bayou's pf ^ouisiane^*1 robs .the UN of its effectiveness. Not for readers averse to con­Lniversity. of California. Ke is "Louisiana Hayride^jmcli It gives every nation discretion-centration and studied 'thought the m-w an English instructor at Ausk tional best seller. ; 1 '' js dvance or destroy a hook offurs challenging^ tin Hiah School. Described by jwtte»tfii§ ;jt#4 decent world order. in many fields, presented authori< As a scholarly paper and per­"genial wad energetic Ixiehmu He blames laek of a world tatively by an author who seems haps a key-to Western movies, at thirty-nine Mr. Kane is a jjpsfl opinio^ on the sovereign nation to be well versed in anthropology, f o>-wiikb_the_right8 were sold in met, "fcon vivant,jl freijuent-ti state system and says formation economics, biology, engineering, 1943 tOuDit%btor-i{^ry Sherman. veler, and m*U of many or expression of a world public philosophy, history, and physics, th« work has, merit. But as a nove He Is now at work on two opinionisunlikelyasjhongasthere tarwell as in his special form of it will probably have no great books, one of which is a novel 0^ is. a nationaT public opinion infl^ mathematics. success.-' (, enced by national interitets. And ANN COURTEE CHARLES TRIMBLE entitled "Tha Qeneral^ iRffa* a nonexistent world opinion ca»> not deter any government from pursuing a given policy, Mr. Xevi Th* Produce ,T'i points out. He'sllso points to-the vagiienecw Daily of suc^ phrases as "essentially domestic" in. the UN Charter. In­Texart terpretation usually depends < .on political expediency ud whether the member's own or some other Board For Sate Musie member's siffairs are at staket liw* The individual's part in inter> BKNDIX WASHKR. 8 montha need. RECORD MUSIC standard model. Small Friffidalr% ao# for all oaeaaloaa. sulks? nationalism is clearly presented. anit and roarantee. Phone 8-8107. vice. 8-8418. People may aim at one goal and CTNIVCRSITV MEN I reach another because they fail UmIi twvilr «tyl«. Horn* mad* roUa Help Wanted «>4 plm t apeeUlty. V W-f Nurcery to realize that they produce the MB& HOWARD PA1MB very results they dislike through •trtl 8*ten * block* w»i.d o»mpu». Pboa« «-817l their own separate actions when quick; cashi "Yi'y?£" THB SAFBTY PEN. IndJvfctaa _ your children. MaatWy* hourlySataamea wanted 'far beauttfttlly &£• they do not take into account-ihe: Srxfial ««rtk« tor football^ atened CluMaa*-.wi;-'jriauiit|:. «*taa>"'T dellvi-y. |M "" accumulation of effects. , TEXAS UNIVERSITY TOWER. CoSta DELICIOUS ai«ah.jMMfT0 to 6:10 p.a. UfK A. B. Cnnr, «wBH as well. People have valued 207 K: 22nd. Ph. S-8848. right, justice, liberty, honor, and Leather ©eod m&fm Roomsfor progress higher than peace. < The Coaching conflicting and -complex objectives COWBOY BOOTS, kata. balta. faaMata. 2428 8AN ANTONIO: Lam badraaai of people ipake planning and mak­MATH. B. X. Bandla. *199 Oraadviaw. ' aAddlea. bridlee.' AU leatherr: -«ood* tww men. Innarspritt* mattraa 8-lt68. made .; to order. Kverythlna Waatern. petei floor*. % block from , ing predictions extremely difficult. Capitol Saddlery. 1814 Lavaca. Electric refrigerator CuraiahedL.' OOAOfilNG. translation*. Fmehk Service. Utilittoa pakj. 828.0Q a«r The failure of international or? Garmaa. Siltoa 2808 San Aatonio. Inapeet room or taiagpfeona ^fTll ganizations lies as much in failure t-%m. Lost -«nd Found to use .machinery available as in QUier BOOK, brata • Drive . tee COACHING VBENCU osporianead. Tola-820.00 mmA. Alio «"««•*** shortcomings in the tool itself. phono 2-2160, 6—8. for bay at tlMOm LOSTi t camera* in we Jarca tea This book is a guide to help the AV^cnyvvr roimssnED carryln* oaae, approx. Su*l9HxM", Dancing average man understand the part with (hoalder itrap. with^ hatK Oradnat* atadcat..-m he (plays in internationalisiA and 1—Graflox, camera, with M LEARN TO, DANCB Iom. why world government has been-UnlTanlty Ballroom eiaaaea-.Moodair and 1—16mm. .Cine, Kodak. Movla. earn- Thurada/. %—•» • p.m. 1 hoar «taa« let­ unsuccessfut in^ the past It ek« •oat. 60e Unlvaralty iWa'ftoo. alt* Typiiw „ I v plains why it may or may not he AKNKTT8 DUVAL DANCE STUDIO t4*kt N«tar ..I i i * i ijBr i "ll'l'rfnllfm successful in the future. 10th and Conaraa* I--Po«ralt Lena .'•t THXSBS. r«a«rta. 41rtavUa8. Pho&a 8-8951 or «.»0S« ' typewriter, ifriu Petme^y. I8-W1V It is an excellent book. . Time 1—fiky filter" 1—Special tea* spent in several re-readings Left ander firat. row eeata In Would not bfe wfsted. Furnished Apartments Ifemoria) 8tadiuin. Bast aid*)of; Said, MARIAN PSNDER0RAS8 between north 80 and 4ft yard linea MS* A SAM ANTONIO i 888.00. Bilk tn Longhora Band Section, nodef mM. Living room, kitohan, bodroom, almse call Moton &, Crockett it. at ^How Maeh D» W« Car*?* for two man. Shara bath two other man. 9-4202. A, aeneroua reward. wlB i>o BLBCTWC TTPIVnia; >$1 The Rev.«Tom W. Bra] Blectrio rofrisarator. Priva^ aatranea. paid, with .no aaeatlona aaked. laa. Hxaant'topwrto. Miimr. Sao Mr. Inman, auperviior In 1912 pastor of the Central Methodist San A«tonlo, Ajpartmui aatobor t« TYPING: «mmwT Ulaphona MU0. Bnaa.^.JPhoaat-lilO. Church, will speak on "How Much -—!-•11.. 1-*! I ^-Pfl^LLlLUUI.1 '11 i«PMI.Ln Do We Care," for Communion TOWN AMD COUNTRY AjMrtmaaU. Va­Trrmo, «b -t^Sr Meditation Silnday -morning. cancy for 8 or 8 bof«. Mxk. PlakatJ. awaMWfc Mra, Manaser, 801 East. Ilia. Phone 2-7166. MtO^llllIt Ardent footbaB £an. auto­ acxxamwKt, iiANipGR^nr mobile driver and money aaender till NUKCBS. Llvinf room, bodroom, anahle to do any of theaa talaga. klt«h«nr ahare bath 2 othar man. For 5F-two man. Sarvel rafri«arator, private BiBAfiOM.: -»all«*|(it6ii igM''.'www's antranea. $45.00, Mil* fetid. Snparrisor. Wantcner BaB laet ' iday ooatain-Mr. Oaip«r i) apartment ao. 1 or tele­int hlaaket tax. edt , ellerd phone •-tTSO. . _ _ . audltora jfwtrt!. .lai-WUX DO TYPING vortaat pa»«r»vj -Para ami. X91S 0 RKD IUVCK. New modern avart* A jb reported by Publiahara* Weak­. »ant fox boy*. I bloeka from camfaa. SOLUTION j Keep tfce ^asoney tmt TYtINO; Neat aaBJoc ly*, ^ i Kamea fnrnltnr% Hollywood M,Soo-mm aaB I or tioaal sofa. 8110.00 tor 8. >120 for mm 800 Wtrt 27th or eall MtilT^ . FICTIOIf f. Owner 6-8720, Acroaa th« River and Into SOLUTION 4Tf t&Mrofrarigiaa For Regit „ Tree*. By Ernest Hemingway. 1 -Seribner. $3. m Tha A«hr*ntar«r. By Mika Wal­tar!.-fotffiprTWr^; ICottenk Robinson. Simftn and Schurter. i-8084 ,i22tvl.(iB«ulaiiiaa $8.60 and |1. se-, a. Dak* «W *#«> " ')»• U[" Tba Spanufi Giffiwir. 0y A. J. Apa VACANCY for oae maa at Wangle H Little. $8. Court. 714 W, M* B^rart. Private bath, private aatwee-CmforUble yuuLj Misuu; ON-F1CTION audd aerviea. M«f^ •HSKia oiiwuti L11SS13 HllUIlim Rapd. U. , " • llii FIHLldi iilKi:. For Sale Hoa lamna Look Twngor, By uafflosao mown Gayelord Hauser, YOtTLL pay *ore at «tw atw*a ttan •.nauMni UM&ium Co«Mrtiro«m. By Queni3» 1Hiauu -u'­ " Parrir." J3,®. « ' MUU11' DU!.< nnu u!3wu »ii:i DUnetica. L.. Bon H«bb#rdv yujitiiiki norrjij not*!4s-i Cm«. v--: .-.'-j.-yclULl.i^~ "In the future development of these facilities, messages between man and machine, between ma­chine and man, and between mar FUNDAMENTALS OF WORLD ORGANIZATION. By W «r n « r OmWWltjr'"#: Minnetota PreM. 207 pp. $3.* Peoples of the world long con­cerned and loudly -proclaimingtheir, desire for peace might be jarred into awareness of how theyand other factors contribute to the postponement of achievement by reading this book. Mr. Levi, associate professor of political science at the University of Minnesota, has studied at uni­versities in five European coun­ iwriutiaiiiMfliM^ •tfBWSlWil WtMQm fiWMmi vT»* V'V f'f L iir-f •fmmw­ 'VCw^;Ysj!» y* *5*" <=!W THE DAILY i r&. % v sV i'V^ * * ? " * , ^ *jM >7* 7 ^ i ^ **K ^t, MS&S jwiiiewlie** In &ei^ ftljr months ago that the Educational hysteria, but General .EisenpgPolicies Commission, of which the two mJpolttmbU and a^|:mea were members, took this position: ....... . . .lai^atto pre^fiiw^ • •' • Whiie^iipi&Bhouki have the oppor-_ _ I 18. Conaat,, president of Harvard1 tttnity to* learn about communism aftd *w' ^ ^ o-. > , 4, , ?£ ftdNNIfi DUGGER /, *re agreed that state laws other forms of totalitarianism, the ad- walked right thhmgh feUNDREI>S ^ wefcartfcula# Alitor >v r^T jaliing special loyalty oaths of teach-* vocacy of shuch doctrines "should not Wte. PoBe. U«.twmt Otto t,J.rin. -riding -aua..• i. « 4 f-.v'.:.'-"-.'./ seolw out to be 1 •>%. morning turned wild v, About this time, Lt Ludwig had teachers.' "7,4* ! intention*of becoming Longhora^ _' T-A-."*•' hares. • • ' to race over to apprehend a cou-. held aloft the same rectangle ad-h / (HU Citizens should be especially Even l^arc Moorfe; th« six-foot* pie of OU students who had scaled justed to read, "the Steers Stan*->, ,, ;... „,«* »»this time to defend the essential; three4inch yell leader Of the the wire fence. , " fecedditu pede." .7 * 1" wlmsr^^r-need of their schools for,freedom of Schmoos, said at the pep rally Whereupon both Houston men welcoming the SMU band in from raced behind a couple of trees, . * * # ^ ^ IONS .' ioi *"**>* *nd lemming. Dallas by train that he under­hoping to elude Ludwig. But nay; &:Al6 ftjN, cent for romance I "State laws requiring special oaths stood "Texas was supposed to the long arm of the, etc. j-Dennis Morgan with an orange'& surely is not teachers, or laying down detailed r blockade us." •*«. tie, Glen (bad-boy) McCarthy,­'* policy in any conscious way—but prescriptions for the school curriculum, But nay, nay, the plans fell as BLAIR CHERRY was hoisted with a blue one « < . SMU's mas*, flat as a petunia in a snowstorm. atop the cot, two-and-arhalf-year-old ira»-or establishing uniform tests and cri fans' shoulders in in­Mu*' /•/; The' caravan1 was supposed to sane wtyrl on the field after the tang Peruiifa, neighing and buck*. tena or loyalty,-iMf*sftF"t6ir vigor ©f^rf^­ v3t is natural and necessary-in stu­'dttft cOurtehipthat coupiesshouldseek local school autonomy and thus do at Dirty Martin's, tlx -or seven -pantry ... , ; citing..,Jack Kenney, as a Spur« ~ ^A jbit of privacy for a bit of romancin' harm to an important safeguard in edu-blocla north of the University, makihg movies from the field ..>•" caation, Saturday morntng. Instead,-'some-THE OLD UT. tradition of Sterling:;Steves, student vice-pr«Dk r *'* '^"v-r-' : " . .Anxieties that accompany hair-brained idiot led about 150 orange lights on the Tower after ident, bussing Barbara Paul, aebtf'the guy doesn't Have a car, what students down there Friday ev«» -a football vietory^wasn't violated retary of the Students' AssQCift*' sense of danger must not be permitted alternative does a couple have? Com- nirig. expecting the cavalcade th^n Saturday; itipiAijust extended;-tion, when-si-requested by a Life to impair civil liberties or to lower our •»* and confusing the picture. , pete for one of the few loving benches, — The lights went on in broad day­man (a request he needs) v . « When the time came Saturday, and, if loser, huddle on the girls* steps, efficiency.'* light, .the instant the gfrtpe was Quite a game, this football. there we stood—newspapermen, behind a campus bush, orsit onred bug-This is substantially a position paral­ Your pack slipped." photographers, Life Magazine over . . . ' Quite a game. lel to that taken by President Truman ~ hargoring grass (which can* it is. pre- representatives, waiting for the with regard" to the McCarran "anti­ ikj^oaed, be rather nice at times, how- blockade. We almost blocked it Communisflaw that helped the com­ourselves. Nobody else was there. Then, too, the rumors went munists and hurt loyal Americans. ^^J&^^sir'feuildings ever infring-', — 3 J!iine that a water hose was to be wait- General Eisenhower and President on courting grounds (witness the ing for the SMU people from the iction of the sloping Law School Conant are therefore counted on the roof of the A-Bar. Life had six RAH, RAH, RAH AGITATION? - side of the antipathy toward useless _jnen waiting to take pictures. The lawn, complete with trees To the Editor: To the Editor: By RUSS KERSTEN [ $ears the University election sys­c&fs went past und^mpened. id shadows)V? the administration loyalty oaths that communists sign School spirit is good in its place, Why do you want to agitate > WANTED: AN ELECTION tem, by its very nature of incom­"• Gad, man pause from its daily chores of without compunction and some con-^ but some consideration should be people with your writings in the SYSTEM that everybody can un­petently failing to clarify .proce­ • • ice and commotion to consider lov-scientious profs fear might lead even­ dure, has* bred inefficiency, "3Cnd THE lined given'to the serious student who Texan? • • -" ' , ­ derstand. . .MUSTANGS up L benches for romance and emotifha. tually to thought control of any minor­That's the cryof^many stuaentis some commissions in earlier years about 100 cars in front of the is here at the University to get ~ If you know that , something is his degree—not just to play. coming, why don't you be quiH ity viewpoint; these days, because they qui ieenfar_mbreJndefihitejl»a State Hospital before barreling IA few here, a few there... none too and»rlet It slip up on people If " turally cant solve the legal hocus-r 1:950 group. into town. The "§MU ^ftfpufl,'"^ I&llies fCT -foekball games are together... you like it. Equality between Ne­ pocus inherent in the Hare Pro­, Hare Proportional was institu­the student paper," said Friday:-* . good also, but do they have toAnd the students could transplant "There will be a large sign groes and whites is coming eco­ portional system. And in this elec­ted here to insure "minority keep up the racket and cheering eace an< groups" Student Assembly repre­marking the mental institution, nomically, politically, and educa­ Ihe appropriate shrubbery. P> tion we must, to be fair to the to 1 a.m.7, I, for one, was trying, system, point out that the Elec-sentation. . lest students mistake it for The to prepare for an examination in tionally, of course, and it doesn't A FEW students would like to have, . tion Commission mishandled sev-Dr. 0. D. Weeks, professor of University of Texas." \ a graduate course, but was hin­need agitation and fqree en a Hah ... 1 eral aspects. government and faculty sponsor, dered from accomplishing my goal napperd one of the University libraries open on • • Southern People to bring it about.. A nine-member committee'' is of the committee, warns that a due to these inconsiderate stu-. Sundays to provide a quiet place for change of systems may kill minor­DURING THE second quarter, In regard to your articles on the * studying the problen) to see if the dMts on Thursday night. Why not fdtJBNAPPING Aggie*. study.-", ~' . v. fault lies in the system, the peo­ity representation. He contends Life Photographer Loomis Dean try to set a deadline of 11 o'clock United Nations racial report, I It does not seem too much to ask. ple running the election, or the that Hare Proportional, carefully went out to Gate Seven to see for the closing of rallies.? This want to ask you if. you wouldn't -v The playful little children down at politicians. If they feel that a and correctly run,, is a good sys­how many people didn't get in would still allow for some cheer­reconsider to the contiiary/of the College "Station recently swiped the_ Perhaps the beautiful Barker Memorial tem for an electorate of-this size. the game. UN decision anne day wish to ZATION. SOMEHOW majority of voters stay away from study, too, so let's see if We can't. What say, librarians? -r One thing is sure to be clari­MADE A MISTAKE.)J;3Nture generals. *•' fied:" the committee' will codify the polls. ' — Then,~at the gate proper, two follow the golden rule—of doing Are half-breed* superior? Have In an issue-less fall: election Houston businessmen became vo­unto others as we would have you ever seen a .mulatto withelection procedure, particular bal­ lot counting. * where there is also little clash of ciferous when told they couldn't them do unto us. ' light pink spots? If this iSn't ham, personalities, it's possible that the come / in without tickets, J. B.. it certainly isn't facial improve­ ELISABETHA. C. ORTH-The Election Comthission went world's best election system Malone, an attendant, said he was ment. If intermarmg* comes on nor P.S. Teh, to one you probably wrong in at least three respects wouldn't make voting one whit offered $20 to fidmit one. a large scale between races, then this fall: won't print this. more attractive. In spring cam­While Malone, was talking to your progeny Will-someday look ONE—where was a copy of the paigns (examples: student presi­the Life man, the Houston guys Ed'i note: W*nn» b«t? to the better past and the unmixed rules under which our fall elec­dent and . publication editors) blondes with their light skin and tions were conducted? The stu­widespread interest is always in Caucasian features and then look CHAKLEY TRIMBLE K >5^Longhorni rooters rather really began to believe that dent constitution specifies that evidence. " at their own amalgamation. Will such rules must be "drawn . up" The committee—two fraternity •tiiey be unhappyl­ »:,Awwtfgfa^jEiteiwv •Si ,|£'.-Jthan down-in-the-month poor-with proper student BUpport by the commission. If there is a and two independent men, two icia loosers. '"We could whip the Mustangs—— Now about your slam on the would Hke to "copy71t^ ;;_7tw5^ind^endent--­ supposedly number one teani American Medical Aisociatioiu I a mistake on!the',^ ".No mo^ will Texas alums example, it couldn't be produced women, and Dr. Weeks^^BTthree page today. We made a4" and griping students demand in the nation. for some candidates last week. alternatives. It could recommend Lilted below the «tt?dent» for Kufus 'Bayborn Bush * personally think and am sure ill resignation. As Coach Cherry told ten (and w* b«ve Den Gerald ScaUorn Americans get good medical care, «rrcr. last *y«ar—in Coach Cherry's These candidates weren't retention of Hare Proportional or whom no addrew. TbeM »t«-•• Bobert Ray Schiet 1_ and I dont think socialized n&edi­isnwcence, but t^is on^ No more will students mumble thousand cheering fans Friday still are not) sure just how bal­changing to either a place sys­dents ara requested to come fay tha Charles Claude Shaw improve' something that m have been desperately when asked about the Long--night, "with all this support Dean of Student Life _ Office,, Uai» Charles Bay Sturman citte can lots are tabulated under Hare.1 tem or the common-at-large meth­ John A. Toline laoa!; horn's chances—for they now behind them (the team), I Without written rules, how does Building 101-M, aa aoon a» po*»ibla. William l^e Tomblln. has no fault Other countries have . od. ' ' Jerry 01Ua.Viktorn . tried it and we know from their JMlreg iSift+hr*-know fchat only the students, don't see how they can let the Election Commission hand In the 'latter system, the indi­David Eojrene Anderioft Bicbard Wstsnabc Bofaert Newton Andrewa . ^ experience, that it brings poorer Holiday lor Monday." themselves, can insure these you down." "• down its procedure? Orally. . vidual's vote is' strongest>*ih the Naair Mauid Asdi C. A. Westeiman : Grundy WiUiama service and dissatisfaction. Of William Daniel Bonis % flnstead, we are cotatenting chances,, And it was true. We were TWO—The system of ballot place system, weakest; in Hare, ' • • , -'V, C. V. BREDT, . Jacob Hudson Carruthers course, people who argue for it with' a plea to the * Without a strong rooting behind them—and they didn't . counting in current use was called somewhere in between. Bark Ho Chi! Assistant Dean of tLife against private practice say lt ie to recognize section, a.school is lost. Te*aa let us down. , Hare Preferential by the TDlec-. -The place system provides a Edwin Donahde ^ The last tyo meetings for the inter- V Wade Franklin Dorsett- different from that of other coun­ firdlation for thesis and dissertation enthusiasm of tie student has been lost But something; • rr--: "• o( Tim, Hare Proportional inethod..-The,. place goes to the second highest well on? the .way to being, Kaymond Howard Moor* «zeept Mead*? and SatanlaT. error was in setting up a quota John Warren Morgan 9. Happen bread 29. Acts:as in named the NUMBER ONE -total, and so on down $he line I^sH# Fi»ld Munson again 6. Mouth part Answer k court reeordi that exceeded the correct quota, with no shifting of ballots. teaigi in the nation M krS|Irr>Tt^^^Ti>tJu °rITM iit"* 01 tba AdminUtra. could have been the difference be­support their candidates deserve . noun shrub 35. Donkey Several years ago .Dr. 15. Bang 13.Tibetan IS. ma «t tin tween a near miss and a hairline to lose. As things now stand, the .36. Armadillo 42. Decay tiia Aet of Msreb 8. 1879. Pfouse in the. Phyrics depart^ 17. Not many priest 37. Cleave 44. Matt an -victory* ---* 1—^--Clique. minority„.ruEs:things with­ ment requested electric" 18. American; 16. Hawk's 39.An aborigine erage in defense of the Election Com-out interruption. > j motoi* to mechanically rotate Indian leash (Borneo) 46,Exist * 1 . , AMOCIATEO PRESS WIK£ SERVICE mission, we "look to history-j-for Enough of this hocus-pocus! -»: j?wi» to *oUU«d to Uw km tar rcpobliea. the dome on the UniVersity 20. Bossof a M att ««w» disiMtebM cr»dlt9d to It or not 0tb«rwi(« credited in shield telescope. The dome is ;now ­ •P«SJ«woMJ»rt*la published herein. Little Man on Campus 22. Idlard 1 « PuWloitteB «f «a other mmtter trnia uUo hand operated, and besides; By Bibler ^24, Comrade . using a lot of man power, it aeww^ torJUtlwsl Ad.ertU.fa* by N.tlott.i Adrerttehx • 28. Scandinavian • 8«rVt AUSTIN HAS ITS crabs.-f . §0. Half an eml Jo . (.'Hand, the Austin Police De- frnd, another full-time opening for Specter' i& — partment the Austin Chambe * male for two or three months. -|I3.Measure Of &»n»«w«» and Hm length F«i^iafr STTAFP .; American-Statesman receive4 Five representatives from the , 45. Flavor5 sasftie RONNIE tHJGGMt f:'a|% in the middle of. the fright-Patterson Air Force Base fgM.Large .CHARLES IrRIIdBjLE ^wiek" complaining that %e-will be on the campus November .bundle*^, m $ HI. Network Bob Gailaway eause of University pep rallies, James Rech ....^ i»te.. Austin tmn W y.'w Uiaude ViUwreal,, Mart cal, mechanical, aeronautical, and , DOWN Uv&omb, June ffta^enJd, Bet irA polygon ^ It's takeh a long time to build Aim* 111 trophies, the length end formation ^ Qm words are alt hinti> MM C up this spirit, and we eee no »Mh d«y the eode letters we dUTweat W. B. m*• ?»-dispay through No.; will be bythe University Sym^ cajie and topper tn ilditiion ta Mb < .. • \ . phcfny Orchestra'; with Alfio Pi-^^e^TiR winsiiw" y*' formal dreSij and the old famlSy VkMi-Mdt ^ Tempo of the festival picks ufr IPJotti, violinist, Sunday, Novfm-opens in X Hall at S o'clock friend, Desmond Curry, played by uildlng or by wiHing Monday with the opening of "The K? 18,,. at 4:80 p.m. in Recital day 'niggtt toy %• jtwehr%di^ Qbarti* I^ane, waartng si «atavNqr Winslow Boy*" Also on Monday, Hall. A ttrooglioat ^ Admission is-frse,; but by the pUy, make your reservations early, He ie a iithe Horace Britt Trio, with Helen ticket only* Responsible for the Mkracters' ofTexaa Haupt, pianist, will present a re­ modern comedy wtitten by Te^­ .' Tickets for all performances dress is Miss j^ucy Barton, as$e« cital. , rence Rattigan, contemporary may be obtained from the Music date pfofoasor of dramit 'Consul­ Eileen Borweli, soprano, will be playwright of England will bring Building box office. Patron tick­tations on correct drett 6f the t^Jbrikjf mm Beethoven*#**1!rio o«nutia«r; presented Tuesday. ets are $6 each. Special seats will back fond memories even for a periQd were made with B. idea Iulmu . •ate: . Wednesday, Flor Peeters, or­few of the older observers.aOne IWI' DwQ m1 Belsdusft. and be reserved Iqr patrons at all vim then living In Eng* ganist, will play in Recital HalLat e _ scene incorporates a dance jrou­land. The cast 8:80rp.m,,Tickets axe 60 eents. r tine-^he bunny" hugwthe 'erase will ba dr^lsed it of Jjoot exercise are given to The remainder o{ the eastragtime music each 4ay in Mo­Detroit, . . eludes Dorothy Marshall, portray-,, :L "HetU7 .Vm," ft«TlM Ob»rl«i dern Laufuage Building under the several -Teaat .dtlee alwaya I^ughton, wftl be the fine meri. direction o| jraden "Dougjas to \n» Mrs. Winslow;-v Poyle IU-, Society of America's an. in the Main Lounge of Texas Un­Dan Foster, who plays -Dickie Smith; Pat Cook, as the lady re* ^ MvtiL ^et*tfe V her critics, nual national meeting. ion Monday night at 7;80 o'clock. Winslow, and Jan Kaderli and' Ei­ported} -Jane Cochran, -playing —Ske-luui feeenguest |3iKBistM[|ii Ik* the maid; and M.Reynold*, The University of Itaxas String famous ensemble m>onsbred Friedman, as leen -double-cast photographer. HAV1N(6u A MINOR FUSr« his father M noife Qnartei and the Britt trio, and Catherine Winslow,. The routine -~ k t' * i*' Tickets are on sale at the more * that.machine" makes Is nothing to tKe trowWe Dickie Winslow,' has appeared jointly wjth her Foundation, At l^e Un£ is dona while Dickie and his sis­ -mm® S» PRICE'S HAtl^ Building box office at 85 eents played by Dan Foser; v4-ill eventually find-himself in after he is' former teaeher, 0#lies Fra^t^ fonnded the" Brjtt Trio wlrich' the Winslow ter discuss latest IMor ^ domint io Texa*, sh* atn»ady made mnsiealf hlilM problem* for Blanket Tax holders and ,70 accused of n theft that ftaets a whole nation I talkina; Her -4 studied with Guy Maier at the Cen^nT *B«iaa. Be also is:-i m*# eents for adults Tarvef and Dorothy Marjhaft, thV~Winslow grants, look While this effectively *epre-. J,'.. .t M' University of Michigan and with bet pt m m out-40,Dallos Hi-way mM.. ",i" y "«J r % — — ; j . ' . • • . n_•>..1 •. '.'&3!:;-"j-r--^"r'r\ •• S«nts the period when tfie stoit Bmest Hutdieson at the Juilliard Striiaf/'. takes place, the characters them­School PCuid&T/|M^£.^M2 selves will be" adorned with pre--Known hoth as "itit Werld War I fashions,making thet Player oi chamber aii»i«, Mr. InfersfatcTheatre n audience conscious that the trend Pignotti was concert master of the BAR DANCE' is near related to &e present-day San Antonio Symphony before ha '%u , ^ trend. * joined, the faculty «f the Gollegt CUCZiNov, 6th Hobble skirtsjbulky hats, point-of Fine Artat at /fee University. f. v«d shoes, and high waists filled A former member ef |he fik)rdon| milady's closet during the time, String Quartet, he, studied at the 'IHWHi'Ii ilfDlnlljj. |j»,i,j, 1 «iM1 while striped trousers, high col* The works of Aaron Copland* iarly Olin Downes, 'Near York Times r— .g'-^IUO.i6RANM^:: lars, cutaway! and tails, and frock one of America's leading com­phony. music editor,, has said, "Few Jiv­ eoats made the man. Mr. -Win-posers, \rill be featured in the "Concerto for Hute, Harp, and ing composers eould expect such Borweli Holds JOHH WAYW* slowu, pbiyed by Bennie Tarver, second subscription 0/ the Orchestra" by Mosart will intro^ wide representation of their pro*wears a fashipnable froek coat Austin Symphony Orchest ; ; an- duce Walter Coleman and Mary duct within such a short time in DONT MISS and striped trousers in one scene, day at 3:30 p.m. in Hog v dj-Mylecraine, two young, artists of a 'birthday year. This indicates Directed By and appears in a blue and mwroon torium, under the, direct, pf the orchestra. Both are important -circumstances-— Mm fewI smoking jacket in another. Ezra Rachlin, ' Copland's brillidnt advance as a Sileen Borweli, loua African .. Copland^'AppalacMan Spring," grab a go! that's; l^wrence' JBecker, cast as the composer within the period of X lyrie soprano, will give a concert written originally for ballet for STATE Winslow Boy, appears clad in the The program will open with years and the development vrithii Tuesday ia Becitid Hall at 8:80Martha Graham will be the orch­ ocut» and pur+y military uniform of Osmoiid Na­ estra's chief offering; the "Dance of the Sylphs" from the same period of what eoulc p. m., as the second musical pie- val Abademy and later comes on "Damnation of Faust" by Berlioz, be roughly resigns**! as a dis- The program will onep with *tm of th» FW Ml Festival and come on out in an Eton suit. His brotiier^ Dic^ and "LBS Preludes" by U*st. tinctive school of modern Ameri. Bfaydn's '-'Symphone in D," famil. -Wfr P&t; ­ kie Winslow, placed hy Oan Fo»* On November 14, Mr. Copland can Composers "through whietT he Although bent fe tondon, die about 2;30 •< ,. ter. is an Oxford member of the will celebrate his 60tb birthday. has contributed significantly as a lyric soprano spent molt of her family, wearing a loud array of His works will be performed by composer, teacher aiid propagand­ life In South Africa where she clothes; later on his wardrobe is Cellist lo Treat the Chicago Symphony, the Cham, ist. conducted private singing lessons, subdued. * berg Festival in Washington, the .Unreserved general admission and worked as editor of the mu­League of Composers in New York tickets may be obtained an hour Fashion-plates-of the period sic, art, drama^ dance, and radio fo hear Austinifes Again City, and the Philadelphia Sym­before the concert at the box pages fn Johannesburg.phony, office. Prices are $1.20 and $2.40, 'or her Austin audience Miss Student.Art Displayed. P^tigorsky will pa-,, 4'ifiin 'iifii n ryinp SI Novemer 7th a« an opening attraction for ^ the University Co-Op and tile one of the five girls selected la& hilarious* I960 musical wfjji be l r • P.-I\ 'i * Music Building. week in a series of judging con­shown Sunday at 4 o'clock in the ^Apoav-ANNii:iir m***9"*B«nb»rs, the PALOMINO CLUB will present ipm tests. They are SUier Luckett, K# .jUrtOr^ ' rvrtfia wnw Main Lounge of the Texas Union' Book an Cettea Fiber Ready thryn Crandstaff, Loi^ise Randall, in a benefit performance for the Latest trends in measuring cot­Nina Lee Jones, and Lucianne 28 girls, of Whitehall Co-«p. TEXAS «.5MU FOOTBALL ton fiber properties are recorded: Knight. The lucky girl this yea* "Fifty years, fifty songs, fiftyIIMIfeiixjHl'in a publication issued by the will replace Deanie Windsor New* stars," is what Charles Baker, tUniversity Cotton Merchandising by who ym selected as Miss Fresb-president of Curtain Club, Said tMkSMil jESK iteseafghDi^sion. man last year. about the show when it iras pro­Dan Daw# w*f BLACKtmw*. The booklet contains, written Bill Horn and his tweta$?jeef duced three weeks agot VANfSSILHOUETTES proceedings of the University's orchestra will playgj Jgggfi' ; :A11 profits from the show, will lilM third annual Cotton Merchandise "We have not planned # ^ go to the Whitehall girls, Bakering Clinic, held last summer ggam of original music but have said. Tieketa will sell for $1.20 MEL ABANDONADO^y'­ in w New Orleans. Copies will be selected the most popular and beet each. There will be no reserva­mailed free on request, v '>% liked familiitr songs and tunes,!' tions. The doors open at $ o'clock. The show will be complete, from the first act in which the cheru* gM^dattce around singing "Hipsy­ 5-17td % 'The Ragmop Kid' LAM FOR'^ DovleDayGordon MaeIU« ' SwrtJohnny Lee Wills Tomtty Sonee's takeoff 09 Lotf "LUST W>*:| WDERSIH %r ^tts-^pwpns,iiriint^mblr therfor » Day," Kowis Domingue, Ida Lupiae ssiii gana His Boys the; idAMdiftn, 'all (?«ny Matt' Clean Ford 'Iatest mm % •H _• --— TEXAS vt. Tuesd Appearing nightly axcept Mondays for « art Coast Iwrtels and dubs in the country. W* thin! yw'H like their suave lmtrumental and vocal IM fO SHOWS NIGHTLH -.' |RHm If^^P rmm .|.m a faulftiirtmnaw.ttsna BE AVAIUMJ TO WjMIm •sS "W • IVBLIC AND T(AY W ENSASEO; «Y RAATERNITIK. SO«»RRIS, 0W® ORGANIZATIONS TORHUVATE LUNCHEONS OK BAN9UETS. SEAFOOD m Vttt CQNTINUE TO «RYT TMT MBS itt PKEPAFTED TF OUI «sase tm. »-COtLbEN S»OWN 'MM W RESERVATIONS.: ' JFR1ED i-rsy-r,.»rr vtV. lew wm ;i£: 92W m M * n|irf ^ ii| hnin iftniii 3i> £'-'M- -'.'V ;" Li'"-.'''S-frI E 11m lull* nia Ann Arnold^ freshman nMM »4 »MMWt from Qoree, is the new sweet­ -jm fraternity ^ •—• heart of TLOK Co-op.This dark-haired, 16-year-old girl will preeide a* official sweet­ heart of the co-op this year, at­Maltin formed The bridegroom,' *©n at Mr*. Ai^Hlgh tending it» parties, having her vice-president of the, student Albert T. Horii and the lafce Dr. the University two years, *4*mWa Wednesday afte*-picture on its -watts,. add rooting bo%) and Miss Enun Burgdorf, Bom, graduated from Austin Higb Mr. Combs is a graduate of.for the toys at intramural games. former student, were married Oc­ f School and received & bachelor of Brownwood High School and Bay­ -»:«»-;• w?": ' Virginia Ann was elected sever* tober 6 in * formal ceremony in arts degree from the University. lor University. fpiim&flm t at weeks ago at a TLOK house atris Memorial Chapel at the Uni­ in Texas schools. Charter meeting. She Vas chosen from Seis now doing graduate work versity Methodist Church.? ; , .tiia several girls who had been* invited Mrs, Thompson is the dctpghter Mi«» Jolyn Ferguson and^Jfoh* i to the co-op for dinner. Charles V,# 't Walter «: Caldwell, of Mr. and Mrs. J. August Burg-'i^ik * ex-studehts, mmm Arnold, her brother, lives at TLOK d«rf of Giddings. Jhe is a graduate Charlye Beth Jjahnson and Con­were married recehtiy in Hous­ and is a graduate stu4ent and 1 of the /University andhis now em­rad Combs were married in the ton. Mrs. Caldwell was a member sttevtogtoUi 3^yfe»» «§3 teaching fellow in applied math. and BPii student*. ployed by Southwestern, Life* ln< Austin Presbyterian Theological of Kappa Kappa Gamma, and One of the girls who lived in _ _ • Seminary Chapel October -21*— Gsldwell was a member of Kappa ——-• fr&t. Faculty member* of the f»- Whitehall Co-oi>, Virginia Ann}8"***1106,The bridegroom is the* son of Miss Johnson graduated from :SigaM^/^|^!•^Il', doesn't know if her clothes were Mr. and Mrs. Martin* N. Thomp­ badly damaged in the fire Friday. son .Sr. of Cleveland, Texas. He DuBois, associate They were water-aoaked and WW the"* deaners. Virginia Ann, department of theory; staying "here, there, and yonder" » mid-law student. GiadysSorrells, instructor in He a member"of Friars and at present. ---^ = «dl ARMY ROTC sponsors: a™ left +6 Hghtt 1 totte Carlisle, Marilyn Hamptoft. Kneeling Silver Spurvand is past president ana Kx.;ll»iy Mylecraine. One Of ^e things^rescued from GIRL t in harp. Mesdames Blond, Aiicemarie., Meyer, Patsy Car -the Whitehall fire was a two-of Inter-Co-"p Cn' Alexander von Kreisler, Bernard ' Jcxfy Edmpndson, Peggy weeks-old orchid that TLOK had «nA Thorn** WilllMtis, given Virginia Ann for an open Mr. and Mrs. Melbourne Jaek of the ty wim, are also member v ,1i < 'tv* house. It was in the refrigerator, Martin are at home in Austin national fraternity was ar­From the Pulpit which was brought out. It Was after their "wedding • in Houston ia 1903 at tii* University fr *>V Virginia Ann's first orchid. October 28. Martin, a student at of Hfflde in : Attn Arbor, Virginia Ann is majoring in the University, is a member of Mich. It Iws 92 «haptew. Plan II. She likes to participate Delta Sigma Phi. Mrs. Martin was Will Give Membership la ®P«n to women in sports, her favorite being vol­thfe forineir Wilmfc Kathleen Kas­mnsic majors Who maintain a ley ball. She also likes to; cook; per of Houston. Madeline Karchmer la snttii Clasiriffcation m*y_ be Sophomore or junior and a junior from Lonsn^iew Sarah liee Kabors.»»a married ning-­ 4s detennintd Individually by each uneers majoringlnr-4-speech» to Thomas Al^rard Flanagan Jr., education. ­ inVa hoifie' ceremony Friday, Octo­ A cottage in the artists* colony V^Hie Rev. Glenn A. Olds, pro* four vestrymen 'E. E. Hale, professor of eco­Will See Madeline , is a member ber 27 at 6:80 p. m. in Houston founded by Mrs. Edward Mac-fessor of philosophy of religion 1981 budget. nomics, will-speak at-the Hillel of Alpha Epsilon Phi with, only members of the two Dowell, wife of the composer; is and.. ethicS at Garrett Biblical In­" It Founda ndvstriax . ueyelopment -in Sort>rity, Ritualist, _maintained by the fraternity for stitute in Evanstoh, I1L, will be ^Casting Out Devils" will be the ics in Tins Changing World" Tues­Texas," a Bureau of Mines film, families present, Chairman of the Charm mnsicisns who enter the -colony ipiest speaker at the U*uv»r«ity subject of the sermon of th* R*v. day at 4 p.m. will be shown to the American The T»ride and groom are both Attr OtUs StaM Rice to -atoily. _ Matkodist Charck Sunday at.Xi ^|aryin S. Vance at tiie 10s65 Sun* r^v;. ' ir----—'-; Society of Civil Engineers at their graduates of Institute and Committee of the Texas Portrait *' Jus International Music Fond i* a.m. His subject will be "God!s day morning worship hour of the 'The Bole of the Social Scieri-meeting Monday at 7*30 p.m. in Mr. Flanagan" received"°t& mas­Union. and member of Fiwt M*Utodi*t Chtaifeli. : ter's degree at the Univewity. th6 Campus League of Women Voters. Madeline is mtmA by 'tj^fcmtew&jr 4ft 10» Dangerous Friendship." ' , tist?,; is fee Subject for the meet-Engineering' Building 801. .. building,, maintenance, and re­r Dr. Edmtind Heinsohn's sermon The fourth in a series of 'Tam-ingtof fe* Interdepartmental Sym­Trigg Twitchell, member of the also secretary of the National Students Association habilitation of musical depart­topie for the evening worship ser­Qy Kights" will begin wife a.aup-posium Group to be held at the United States Geological Survey Patricia Ann Beck and James Information Committee. ments and enterprises and is oe-vice at 7:80 will be "The Triumph per and an "ajl-together" period University Community Church, and contact representative to DeHaven Horn were married Oc­ llfeadonally wed to reward individ-of Sacramental Pain." at B :15 p.in. -in the„Co-Ed ChapeL 804 W«Mt Twenty-third Street, ASCE, is furnishing the film. tober 20 in an informal ceremony :'^ttal musical. achievement. At Adult study coorsSs, youth group Tuesday at 7:80 p.m. _ -Wives and dates are welcome and in the All Saints' Episcopal Mr. Olds will also give a series pceseiftt patt'..isi* use in of talks sponsored by Wesley meetings, and children's aessions Sam Gibbs will be .moderator. refreshments -will. be served. Church. " £t*wo* Korean school*. Will be held at 6:20 p.m. Freshmen are especially urged to Daughter ' of . Mr, and Mrs. Photography for The University of Texas Foundation in observance of Fo- Jim Muaik will discuss psychology; if' The fraternity s pinVa jeweled Evening Servicips will b*' con-R. T. Gliddon, government;'and a|tend. The society will discuss a Austin, the bride 2514 Guadafup* €00 on Faith period. His first will tees' Henry Beck of j.*wiT eneirclingtbe pipe* of Fan* ducted by^r. Vapce, beginning be Sunday morning at 9d0. in icted l^nird CiSn, ^ioTo^^ "r" "piarty and setup a committee sys­graduated from Austin High |$&# Creek letter* «f the inganl-Fellowship Hall of the Education at 7:16 p.m A question and answer period tem, Jack Goodman, president, School and is a sophomore art Open Thuntdoy Night* Till 9 O'Clock The nursery will be open to take Centex on "The Challenge of the will «o»clttd* the program. said, "v; • major at the University. " '""' . Honorary members of tie grofltp care of small children during, oyf- Campus/' |wW' havie'rbecMne' well-known in ningprograms. Sunday evening at 6:S0 in Fel­ imfL • , lowship Hall he will apeak , on E^wiftK*astfflC.!M Monday Manny Tannenbaum. Istercol­at 8 p* he will spoak on "Ouar legiate Zionist, Federation of zvcantly with the Austin Sym­ Faith In God/' and Tuesday at f America field woriteiv wifl ampU<­ phony Orchestra; Patrice Mnnsel, pan. his eobject will be "Our fy the problems of the political Lfly Pens, Gladys Swarthovt, Rise structure of brael at a meeting of Fatthi*M«l-" ^SteMMsb Dorothy Kirsten, Iran* I2EPrA: at HilWi Sunday November se, and Djeanna. Dmrbin. "Writing Your Biography" will K, at ?:30 o'clock, ^How Muelt Do We Caret* be the sermon topie of the IUV Tannenbaum just finished •' Th* Rttv. Tom W, Brabham, Lewis P. Speaker Sunday at 11 yearns tour of" American colleges Cffiatral Metiiodist a.m. at the First gagBeSi Lutheran in connection with IZFA work. He Church. has spent 21 month* in Israel andOmwA, will apeak on "How Much J0o Wo Care?" for Cemnaaion A called congregational meeting plans to make his residence .there morning. will be held at 7:80 pan. to elect soon. mMmMmmsmm i 1"* TVU-> n}$h86& 1/ r V W 1HHH imivtti ' sj­ ' i?X • '0V J % J r *t > -5*' „ 5 JfX ./• t r. fa ­ mm M mssm IK ? * XI J «•»*>> v> 1 Wmmmrn r^v •f X j: turpris ai 'Tt % w, a wayi 'W.TSi EKA*W' tr SWiTS, TQ' SUIT* 4 "j rv V WP^andiM In , suit with 7 jumper droit trfrrfmed In ottoman m; 25.00 ../» V worn over • itwoWd-tauchgd pobbfc ijOf'T"Smr«H »kSr+, 17.91 itKAm4iivi4 uo«; ? is'm m Sf^ViSaAh iVJi" ow «> n.. w-t ForelgntStiKienti,, * M # Stranded inUS^p Says Joe Neol * V e jMs* students andex-stodenta and 800 the Re^. Edw%rd Brubaker, -piP *At 2 $ strmndsd pr of the Central PretbyUriMf • -—— towf,** ew, j^be guest speaker at tb» Unlversi­ mented Joe W. Nesl, foreign stu­ Presbyterian Church November dents advisor. Mr. Neal recently "S, « returned from a' board of direc­ fulfil aad'-oiita*' Madeline Karchmer, chaiiiman Mr. Brubaker tit tors meeting of the National As­ of the Cham* Committee, is asociation pt Foreign Students Tin co-operation with Focus 1 on- «harming person ^herself. , •> [Fldth week. He will talk at 7:30 Advisors. r jagT-S -^Aiter '".gvadui Problems* of Chinese ind Kwfean Born in Chicago, MadeKiie lived ^pants to te%dbu L-__ a speech, Marcst*** feach evening. 0^.^11? v •tery campus students-stranded by the Far East­m four other cities before, moving which she feel* is a relatively na^j. „ Topic* in ordefif p^entalfon will be "Education, Threat or ern ^risis were discussed at the to Longview where shs has„lived fm :and-e# -.efpecial;;i*te*ep|a.^ Advisors' meeting in St* Louis for the last six.years. She entered demise?"; "The War and Me"! t J'5,°.^<*a* WWhata rff>i October 16-17. *he University on her sixteenth ''The Christian Understanding of 1« 184^, Madeline i»y» the Sex"; and "The Most Dangerous % Hr.. Neal said. these Chines* birthday, February 2, after finish­was originally organised to clw-­Of;the two.,SMI? cfcapteb. Thing You Can i Students are restricted from work ing high school in three years. a spring style show, though ^Is fe^ifet Saturday by tb^ Uiiited;States immigration Now18, Madeline is a jtmior. She year it was held In Ute fall. Tb# _ Following the Arst talk Sunday informal niartv lawp. tT4 *»p " is scheduled to grauat* in June committee also formed the char?i: hight, a discussion will be' led by 111 1 " 1 ; *• ­ • "They have little money and •1m 111 lf ' • school which consista this '' |laffair from &*».{*^*2^1 Mr. Brubaker in the student union. can make only a small amount," seven lectures. Madeira ^ Oal|Cfwr«^^ had' He is past president of Thetfi , he explained "It is politically un< Orange Jackets^ on "Conversations -• -rewnoii this week end. FeetfcriM [ Alpha,-Phr,-Tice-piesident -of Pi ; ttea were dtmaxed irith.1^ai^riLkl The Charm School ls new and Kappa "Thlity, >nd~"wembgr ^of " forn»a dance at the fittephenstion— Alpha Gamma Sigma, and the Wurl Korean ^ students in the United l>ers inuBt do Tlfheplisnpj^^ f sity swimming team at Maryville REV. EDWARD BRUBAKE# States is somewhat better," said With Initiation work themselves, thus gaining ex-M TO—rT-p '-TT wy 1 "VT»SIWCil P He also did honors work • College. 1 theme .while floppy Mr. Nesl. is" - lin-^lAilosophy^and-^grsdtiata — "There-a Chance neri^nca and aatinfagtw. Orange, Jackets, who attended white jrili decorate Tin ^violin. /-n /-11 \ ^ *n I m ^• that Economic -Co-operation Adm— who have atten" th^Jnlversiry betw«n l923 «r4 lffeetings~seem vLld.l vQICliUQl inistration funds earmarked for f~18j0y WW ICaytpa Ta«*a had a , Mr.' Brubaker .received his 1950",.met classmates and friends, ' Korea will be used for their sup­ think it was a great idea. ;)|bachelor of arts degree from Mary­soihe for the first time in years, SUNDAY port." Aside from the Chann Com­ Policemen at the door made «tis»: ville College and his bachelor of 2:30-5-^—Alpha Epsilon • Pi1 dessert Recommendations for action' on at a reunion coffee Saturday mittee, working at the Union takes that only those who had the pikss r theology degree from Princeton ' party for Alpha Epsilon Phi. • morning in the Rare Books Room. Theological .Seminary,; where he-these problems are: to be made By up Madeline's timeout she says word were allowed to enter. „ 3-H-«-Czech Club hayride and pic the NAFSA to federal and other "Weren't yoii in my class?'? she loves it A ^ack-of-trades, aha fonr-piece Dixieland b*o& |:won the Gelston Winthrop"!Fellow­ ship for graduate work. : nic at Coxville Park and Robt. authorities, Mr.-Neal added. tf'She has two children," and does everything from desk-work vfded music for the coetwne * Hejl's Ranch. tt • ^ "What is your name now,*' were to errand running, but she calls While a chaplain with the Mar­4-6—Theta Xi Fraternity open Pounc«y-Selc*r Ritc« Read f|1The Delta Upefioti'* ary popular conversation' topics.^ it more play, than. work. Other' ine Corps during the war* he Was house. ;v:; x Mary Cherita r«une*y and Wil­ only ones who entertained with? The "reunion will continue Sun-interests include Alpha Epsilon awarded the Bronze Star, Upon 7-8;3€—Alpha Epsilon Phi dessert/ liam Henry Selcer, ex-students, a formal. It was held along wit& Jsy morning from 8 to 10 o'clock Phi Sorority, of which she is Rit­ 'l1 Day -was tho: mwr^om-tftelseryicerMr. -party for Tau Delta Phi. were married at St. John's Epis­ Founder* and at irtibaker studied two years at the 4-6—Alpha Chi Omega informal copal Church in < Brownwood, Oc­with an initiation breakfast at ualist; Campus League of Women Utawm Federated Women'a dok s Voters; and National Students UniomTheological Seminary. affair for Sigma Chi. ,. . tober 21. thf Texas Federation of Women's A banquet preceeded the dance : Association Information Commit* Club Building. Twenty-one Orange PlMipi Jackets who were tapped Thurs­tee. V Si-i t . ' Madeline has afco day night will be initiated. of Lassies Petite, a member of 'Atte'Npw At your Own Lampim ShoeStore On The Drag _ Mrs. W. L. Smith (Dorothy Ann Women's Varsity Debate Work- MADELINE KARCHMER Fisher) of Dallas who organized shop» and a pledge of Forensiea eon at the TFWC Saturday and a the ..original group was at the cof­ Her taost recant hobby is writ-eamstpnees may Wg| " :• ^ Speech Organization. She modestly buffet supper at the house fee with her husband. Mrs. Smith ing poetry, and her favorite ac* Personable Madeline has early says she was a Bluebonnet Belle night for alumnae and teent! I •was the head cheerleader in 1923, Nominee because "almost every charming girl is one who feels brown hair and green eyes, and is Wica had a Sadie Hawkinaand explained th^t the idea for only five feet tall, "Say five feet, girl that belongs to an organiza­pleasant, is poised, and looks at­dance at Texas Union Saturday Orange Jackets beg4n as an ad- one-half inch tall," she laughs, "It t -.f. tion will eventually be nominated1" tractive no matter what the cir-Right for Mba. A sweetheart v»o»y group to further co-opera- makes me feel better." picked from a group of ten. n t:on between facultj and students and to promote better co-opera-ViA 1"* K. »• I• The SPE'» have hit upon aa original idea for a costume p«r|y.' tion on yells and stunts in the r Women's® cheering unit. •1 h -avK% and entertained their alumnae aqd ^ < • pests with a peon party. Any old,: autumn's Orange Jackets became the nu­ tattered and torn rag waa suitable' cleus of the cheering squad which as. a costume. •waa composed of -5(W--^irls. V-SCftfTT' J" i TJ Initiates-45 j^Elects^Officers' Twenty girls were chosen for ^^^^^^br.-isndleduJar,jmr, Orange' Jackets who were out- m ri-huy-ride and ended up at the neW ­ ^ standiiyr i«j other organizations. Poona, women's badminton tion? way be made by calling Mrs. Boy Scout Hut for "a party while * held its regular bi-weekly meet­ Mrs. Smith .^recalled that the dub, recently initiated Frances Floyd Cash at 6-8409, r , the Christian Scienc*, Monitm* ing at. the Commons Annex Cafe­ freahmten parodied jVnngft" JFTP'l Berryman. Angie Caldwell, Dor- Club had an informal party i_ 7" * teria Thursday night, November kets with an organization named othy Daydault, Tommy Denman, JBamharrit'a tioifge. 1 manner0 «• • the Green Hornets. Mary EldS Dreyer, Shirley Fore­The Graurost* PrHi Club Will • ' -,f ~~ Among those fraternities meet with students of Olin E. Hin-Followitig a dutcK supper^'Pres­ hand. v -• ' *" ing informal dances ^. csrisfe their "They actually wore green kle, associate professor of jour­ident Jim L. Bridges introduced horns," she commented. Also fimily He'mmingaton, Linda ses* were the Sigma Alpha gpS-'' nalism, at 303 East Thirty-seeond the speaker for the evening, Mr, Mrs. Smith was presented the Kay, Carol Mottley, Phyllis Ions, the Alpha Taa Oauiu, aa4 Street Sunday afternoon at 4 R. B. Todd, Vice-President and first Orange Jacket and has car-Spears, .Cordelia Strong, and Joy thi Phi Sigaaa K*ppw. Lambda o'clock; . Trust Offieer of the Capital Na-tied it with her for 27 years, she Wade. , -tional Bank of Austin. Mr. Todd Chi Alpha, Phi Sigma Delta, YW . .At the informal reception, mem­ said. Her husband was a Mustang New officers elected are Jane spoke to the group on "Problem# Delta Phi, Sigma Alpha M«, and" bers will -diseusa elnh Activities of Snerter, and has their first jac­Wray, leader^Jean Walker, vice? the year'. • e# TrastiutodJELBiAlfcBS^ Dalta Taa Delta had eloeed ket., ^ leader; Rae Soker, secretary; smmdti&m' " Another one of the~"original Marilyn Sommer, treasurer; and , The dlub iscomposed of Jmirrjal-1 ' Chl PWi social f^tern^ty^ "" 1 ,|1" .lugjiinTinqijirfl;. HUM • ism students interested in careers Anne Lear, reporter. twenty, present Saturday morning pledged Charles Westerledge of La Atfea^en* SUsher E^s-. , ^ i --on small-town newspapers.*_* < % J ^ was' Miss Thelma Lockwood, ad-Marque and John Schuls of Three ministrative assistant to President The Ca»p«a Mental Health S»* Silsbee High School exea «»*ty will-hold-ita firsLmeetm* Karl-M. pallenbach, distin "Painter. been invited'to tha annual Be Tuesday at 8 o'clock in' Texas , The two laughed about the time cQaning Fridsy. FestivitiesUnion 315 to -elect officers and will speak op ''Psychological open house for Delta Gamma sor­ Jthfey "walked to A&M" in the fall to have a business discussion. Horsefeathers" at the Ualvaraity begin with a general assembly of 1923, -the year of their • organi­ ority Sunday afternoon from.4 to ,The speaker is a former Uni­Club Monday evening at*7;30 6 o'clock. the 1i3fck sehoo! andttearfoitt zation. Orange Jackets' made versity student who MU talk from o'clock. Dr. Dallenbach's talk will "thous^nihi" of sandwiches and piiii. Tilecelebration nHII end oft#; personal experiences "Mental common E* Get* .New Petition sold the concessions on-the train on concern misconceptions betwen^ Rehabilitation and Growth In Al­about psychology;. ^_ a foothali game to A&M. They ma4<> enough; Mad^ina Bynnis, *4®^ 3>a>. mm-gfendkmk A ».n> coholics Anonymous." money for their first jackets. University club members may resigned her position on the ioc-T^^. -—• — All students are invited to the bring guest*.^^ ;4 jfu ^^ coming Queen will 'Si ' Coming the longest distance for iety staff of The Houston Post to meeting by VaHie Sue 4>etweefthalve(l, Mr€' M> the reunion was Miss Gerry Fon-go to work in the sales advertising president. *• >'* BeU Alpha Psi, honorary and tein, who attended the Univer­ department of Humble Oil Comp­son^ehalrman of the »—^-^ professional secoiintjng fraternity sity in 1945-47, Miss Fontein any in Houston--4*^*^ fcommittee,^eaid. A. T. Moses, partner in Barley* oame from Denver, Colo., and is Moses .Engineering Firm* will be on her way to her home in Cor­ guest speaker at1 the meeting of pus Christi. She is an^urline. jpter. •the-American Seelaty ml Heating wardess for United Airlines and and Vantilatine Ettaiifr* Tues- has been ff^ng"to~ Alaska and day, at 7 p.m. In Engineering Europe. This is the first time she Building 188. haa been back to the University Mr. Mbses will talk on "Practi­ since she was a student. cal problems confronted J>y the Mrs. W. C. Sparks (Lyra Hals- n engineer." Engineers interested in n ley) of Taft was tapped lor heating, ventilating, or air-con v? chfc, crisp OrangeJackety in her senior year, ditioning are invited to attend. M 1925. • • » '*' • , "That was the year every con­Indents are asked to meet in vention in the world must have front of Gregory Gym at 7 p.». '0B n? J colorful ^«ome to the University," Mrs. S&tuiday for transportation to the Sparks said. "The m?st important .Alba Club picnic dance in the New ¥|§ event was the night the Orange Zilker Clubhouse. Jeans or sport Jackets got to sit1 at the table with cI6the» -pill" be -the'order of the the Olympic champion^ who were evening. Ths fee is 75 cents per here." „ person. Reservations may be made Mrs. Jayneth Stugard Williams, by calling' Oralia r' Maldonado, who was president of Orange Jac­kets in 1927, says she attended • \ *mim Flats school when the' little politicians, Mrs. Japk B. WUcox baa been ll M who are big one; now, were on tjie appointed chsirman of QtenMnsie campus. She mentioned A Han and Drama Group of the NAUD. Shivers, Tom Rickett, and Ed Goaf S^e will replace Mrs. VaU Ellia Hera are the Mm little lowtheelers that «nd Mrs. Barry Sludeiy «9ftSS£i ** r" V ' >1........ ^ keep you smartly dressed .'. . arid com-Mrs. Ajhf4CaiweH Allison, who was sponsor of'Orange Jackets YottBf Republicans will meet Ifeo^la forfable. Whether you love the casual until this year, was at the cof­Tuesday at 7 p.m. for a dinner In the basement of 014 Seville. Af­ prefer dress-up fashions,' you'll fee. She was an Orange Jacket in mood or ter the dinner, members will listen 1924 and 1925. The sponsors this find Flats to complement your costume. are Mrs. Buchanan to election returns. year Anna % Kort st Gay, .colorful wedgies * «'V pumps and Miller, former president, and Miss ' Mrs. Allan Wr Milt will giv* Louise Telxeira, instructor in phy­ straps on flattie heels • • , sturdy sport bridge instructions to the NAUD sical"education. WSSk |4A Bfiig* Gro«p at 7 p.m. Wednes­ shoesl You'll see them all at 1 own i,c,,,, day in the Campus Cafeteria. ^ , S^jirtsralPemaaents|^ Car/tout Shoe Store/ w Hostesses for the session lfi3' HAd Mmes. Norman Suares, Carl R. A ~ ---• -— — ii® '#l«ettat la'o^i S®M CUAOALUfS V-r/ atndenK -wivfa,' %M«r*a* 1 in Toil. W «6dttoii-oravenTntf entwiti* ? GIVE HER A F 4 * >\ • <• lir^rV. " the «om W*" ^Mr 4 ll T ^ WPwi' * fm? Sal: BWBTSSCS^SSaSR warn K :$m sevebteentbannuai Aqua' /srtJt takeanothar atopjompletion Monday Bight $U££3£2g+ig * * fW &-CStaistmaS a» Hi theme, an­ nounced Hank, Chapman, swbn­;*•&* fad director"$t Hi# 'Mm?'-. VWTwwgrroHM '^contest Girls sign19 Mpm t to t:80 o'clock Monday .ftmofa* at titegor? Gym pool " " * ~ be held from 7*0 ... A %W>phy Will be awarded the organisation with the most repre-Btation. |-?«afta, high heels, and bring their •aid Waliy Pryor letterman on th« swim- monies for the show. brewing K JTfclrty girls will be chosen Mon­:'-day to appear before the JudgesTuesday night at 7:15 at the Gym ""for second preliminaries. From these 30 girls, _ 20 -will become semi-finalists. /, 0? From the semi-finalist* Tuesday' ~ SaSsss^ ScFie . _ , « BMPMAUMRI An all-day program has bent ieduled for the installation care­ " announced 'Saturday. "T>S» Painter*-president qtUniversity, will call a convo­>n of. faculty jEtadents,and -J members in -Gregory Gym­isium at 10 o'clock. Classes will * dismissed from 10 tollo'clock for the convocation. Mtjtt-t»y *h4> T^nghnm _ Band begin the ceremonies. The r? Harry JL Moffett of tine •• • •• ~ *..*•• -• -. freshman Contest • W$ i®8 1 iine Mondaj Ifonday^koeni, ^e^eadSnefbr - in Hemphill's Freshman Contesfc Applicants may in Bp—ch BnQding 115. Ten eontestants have entered; it Many mote are expected to Ifonday.. Sefega} entxanta «ze eomposing their own material { end wis not be ready nntil Mon-Mrs. Jo MeGhee, secretary^tiie Department of tipeedi^ lid., ••* > _ t"& Hemphill smried &e isat ten yean ago to promote bet war eral reading among freshman etodents. He awards first and smt­ -«md prises for men and women, ^7-^. Fteliialnaries wiU be held Mon­>^ay at 7i80 p. m. in Speech Bnildi r''^W 201. FVeshmen with leas than wmester hours are eligible to formation concerning Qw of material may be ob-from the Department of Either five men and five wo­or seven of each wO!T)tf id Monday evening to particle In the finals. Finals will be rd? Thursday in Speech BuUdiog «t ?ao p. in. Judges for the are Itodin Jr., attorney; Gale Adkfos* itant director of Sadio Mouse; William Beery,.former speech ' >r; Mrs. Ors Bennett, in-in speech; Mrs. Alice ^rooks McGuire, librarian at St. Jtephens School; and Xn, Clara J-ewii, technical report* edftoft . Beseareh Committee, ' ' Yr >/*?&$ ^ * >> *J If ON CONGRESS NEXT TO AUSTIN HOTft JHUL Judges fojp «ie finalx selection , ,_ beaomin** for Aqua allowed, emphasised Mr. Chap­of Aqua Carnival Queen at theCwnlwl Queen «f m Aftli* man. Judges will be six members •bow wiU be six business m«n and m finalists wBrbe pictured In, the of the .swimming team and four from vatiotta schools, aww W» Mf f« Aqw Carnival. outsiders, whohave already bean "will be .by a different >"$* the preliminaries Monday sefeefeid. *;nies of Judge J. P. Hart as Painter WiU introduce Dudley K.> Koom from'11 to 12:45 o'clock. hancellor of the University of Woodward Jr., chairman'of the After' the open house, the Texas on November 15, C, Bead Board of Regents, who will make Chancellor will have a luncheon Cranberry, assistant to the presi- <--K an address and introduce the new for institution heads and Univer­ ; University. Presbyterian Church An open, house will be held by "to make sure that the show won't will give the invocation: Then Dr. the Chancellor in the Academic drag." Chancellor to the University fam­sity officials; and at 2 o'clock the ily ^ ^ ' day's events will close with a Judge Hart will ^leliver "an ad-Meeting of the Advisory Council. dress as Chancellor and the pro-The council is made up of deans, gram will ~ close with the band heads of departments, and -scKtfdfr ^FTDMATES^FORJ governor, Pnce Daniel, state attor-| playing. 4 Pj*&, contributors will debate # doing the plants was give^' amount each yew, " " ' •wdweh-board layout, home'to us by the Texan, We tw^10'irr immediately resolved to dis­ * were initia-continue the practice." Fountain Dyers weeks ago. . East Texan# know Mr. CplbertPromise to ^Stop-well. In recent years he has re^ stored ( his -home in Oakwood Doing the Dyeing where he and his family spendtheir vacations. ^'-john Fletcher might have had something to say'about the Uni­versity's painted sea—the one with the horses, sailor, and Law School Richer «™«ed „ , Old John said "Do or Dye." But the guys doing the dying By $1,000 Grant at Littiefield Fountain with «*«en sea-markerffi|»ve re­ "f The School ot Law has Received solved to refrain; * f1,000 gift from its class of ^ vThere has been a rumor that 19S6, Dean W. Page Keeton an­ tne Screen dye was the courtesy nounced, Friday., ;,T­ of ti»e Aggies or some football Kelly Bell (of Nacogdoches, and Ben Seweli.of Houston, class rep- Fletcher wxbte ''All your bet­reseatativee, personally made the ter Joe s deedsshall be in wfcter presentation to Dean Keeton. The writ*" and ittu^ns out thatsome money wiU go into the John UT joe's wens doing it all 'the Charles Townee Foundation,, an time.' * j agency to promote Law School The nee nwjktt c&Ter'selie^ activiti^. was. lousing op the fountain -The grant is one of the largest fauna. t ^ 3refc received in annual gift «» s /•*!*' i* )•» .}• |J> ( The Queen will receive a bath­a ing suit from E. M. Scarbrough * Sons and a trophy at the final performance where she will be •eleeted and presented. Cherry Blair, 1950 Queen, will Teign ovfer all. four performances. She, too, will receive a bathingsuit from Scarbrough's. ' The ten"gn:Is who are semi­ finalists and not finalists, will model suits furnished by various "suit of the year" will be chosen l>y the Aqua Queen nominees from these ten.* "TSrtte Ctob will"'furnish" tlie" A 7 r*^ ' fc«« - -\-is •ft alimonies J»eld Wednesday in !u» of i Texas Un> to ^slWBK. e Operations In *®*. & Mayborn, Theaddress wUl be followed pm m*jmm ©*ip hold ii* third monthly dinner by e motion picture of these etfofli members are B S5S3@ffi In Addition to Dr. Lowell, the efffeets and directors of the sub­ Mom «ng|ne«rfaii^ *ww |fc! section of the AIMS are W. H. ^Chemistry Building & 1%; ^JV^RR^ IfiilSl SL A."*:*. % *\ 4 * ,V-UJ Connection ~ Vl >• J-1­ St. "saA-'1* ^ 4 j . i&flriflar$andLong$ .^dtoaspe^ mmsm '? tfjjr i Hakht, sad ^T^ «>»v«ition wm^egin at participate -yL-^ eer' with the Hallj^ In the meeting, ». Power, TT ^VT&ii:'«*" ^°^ri w«ww Mit, weell Co > secr^­ L of ^^v^ieatloiis lit e directors WW*'1' neering taught at the "S«3SCte •*ey ;r* _ 4mimiwa&& the Magnolia -Pet the regular Mfrtey night troleum mpany ll^S %ili HuxAbl# lWtatar qomp­ftressorejany, Pli s iSSiB SH