fT 'm ? I f i l i i T e x a n VOL. 52 Price 5 Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1952 Six Pages Today N O . 64 F i r s t C o l i e g e D a i l y i n t h e S o u t h Ugliest Man Voting Ends Today at 4 p.m. B r R O B E R T K E N N Y j polls will be maintained on the campus from 8:30 a.m. to 4 A final day of madness on the Mall Wednesday will end p.m. Wednesday for Ugly Man voting. The polls will be at Campus Chest’s Ugly Man contest, with prizes from 26 Drag Batts Hall, Hogg Auditorium, w est of Waggener Hall, west of Geology Building, and at Texas Union and the Engineering businesses awaiting the winner. This year’s Ugly Man contest has been one of unusually Building. Candidates will also make free use of the Mall for sharp competition, said Fred Hanson, contest chairman. Ri- personal soliciting. th e v f ! r y b e t w e e n D e a n “ J a c k the Ripper” Holland and J itte r 1 Candidates are forbidden to campaign within two feet of in to a w o r k i n g Nolen has been particularly bitter, Hanson added. any of the six election polls, Hanson said. Both will be on the Mall Wednesday soliciting votes. Six i Nine candidates paid $5 registration fees to run legally as U gly Men. They include Hol­ land and Nolen, Dave “Bongo BarnsmeU” Barnhill of Kappa Alpha; Doug “Cool Ghoul” Dapper, Beta Theta Pi; Mon­ roe “Moaning Mongolian” Northrop, Sigma Chi; War­ ren Krams, Alpha Epsilon Pi; Johnny “Hayseed” Hampton, d e n t li f e ” h a v e n o t b e e n aatiafac- j p h i Gamma Delta; E d “Cas- t o r y can \ W edn esda y on the dea n s of those tw o d e p a r tm e n t, o f e a m p u , life. Tears, Blood And Meringue Flow Today . . . . . W l l s o n “ W i l l i e t h e ; m g Head Cag Cogburn, Ae- A nyone w h o se “ m e n ” or “ stu- t r o u b l e s o u t • _ t a k e his . ’ , , i \ Jack Holland, dean o f m en, and ^ (tep Foreman, Mica. B e t a Theta Pi can d idates have the prominent w on the U gly Man trophy in th e la st tw o contests, and a third win tw o o f A m o N o w o tn y , dean o f student life, are ta rgets in the C am pus Chest pie- throw ing c o n tes t, to be staged in front of T ex as U n io n from 1 1:15] until the 200 p ies h ave been hurl- j ed. Cesare Calli w ill be master o f ceremonies. w o uld gra n t p erm a n ent possession o f th e cup. P rize list, released T u e sd a y by th e A PO U g ly Man c o n te s t co m ­ m itte e : G i f t certifica tes Other cele b r ities scheduled from U n iv er ­ sity Co-Op and T e x a s B o ok S to r e fo r $ 5 , J o r a c e Men’s Shop fo r $4, Ed Minor P h a r m a c y for $2, and to be harrassed by th e seven-inch, ^pie-shaped p r o jectile s loaded with deadly lemon m e rin g u e are Rush Moody, S tu d e n t A ssociation presi- d en t; T e x a s E dito r A nne Cham- S m i t h ’s V a riety fo r $ I A $2 50 tie fro m Norwood and hers; and cam pus politicos Tom- m y Rodman, Gray Evans, and Son> ghoe feso le job a t L on gh orn y Davis. T h ey volunteered S h o e Repair, a dozen p ralin es as ta rgets a fte r persuasion from fr o m L a m m e’s Candy Shop, and Ted Price, chairm an o f the pie- a h aircu t a t the Longhorn Bar- th ro w in g c o m m itte e. I ber Shop. in ] tw o hamburgers The a m m u nitio n w as baked A pair o f argyle socks at Dacy*! the Alpha Phi kitch en under the C am pus Shoe Store, fo u r drink* fr om D irty leadership o f Greta Nissen. Miss and N issen r e m a r k e d sadistically, I M a rtin ’s, a bottle o f a f t e r s h a v e lotion from Home Drug C om p an y, “ T hey are se v e n inch p*?s and will f r e e portrait a t Gilm ore S tu - a fit right in a p e r so n ’s f a c e .” Also w o rk in g on th e Alpha Phi dj°» $ 3 .9 5 shirt from th e T o g g e r y , from Varsity Shop, roll o f from ’varsity Shop, assembly line w e r e J o d y Wilson, film s at Capitol P hoto Supply, Mike Gillespie, K athry n Johnson, U b m s at Capitol san d w ich es a t Frances Smith, P a t Milliken, and ’ two m alts and tw o M ik e’s University F o u n ta in , Carol Grimes. record s from William C harlet M usic Shop, and two suits clean ed Dean N o w o tn y , w h en told he was b ein g co n sidered as a target, an(j p ressecj a t W ess Williams, r e m a r k e d , “ I p r e fe r chocolate.” He that a lemon m erin g u e barrage would not be too d is ta ste fu l. in tim ated, how ever, T w o malts at the T o-T am , tw o lu b rication jobs at th© 19th an d G u ad a lu p e T ex aco S e r v ic e S ta ­ tio n , ten gallons o f g a so lin e from th e Hum ble S erv ice S ta tio n a t 19th tw o and Guadalupe , and m eals a t W ukasch B roth ers C a fe. C a ses o f drinks fro m P e te ’s on th e D ra g and Lido L o u n g e, and h a lf a case from J a c k ’* A round the Corner. 8 Colleges Enter Women's Debate U G L Y M A N C O N T E S T A N T S H o p -H e a d " H olla n d and frie n d (J itte r Nolen) g et in to the spirit of the fe s tiv itie s o f the C am pus C hest cam paign. Issues' Panel to Hold Mirror Before US s i ty s t u d e n t s f o r ' t h e u a ti o n . te n s e t h e n t h e i r v ie w s o n i n t e r n a t i o n a l s i t ­ R e s u lt s o f a S u rv ey o n r a c e r e l a t i o n s w h ic h he m a d e in 1 945 w e re p r i n t e d in th e M o n th ly S u m ­ m a r y o f R ac e R e la t io n s in 1 9 4 6 . f r o m th e A m e r i c a n U n i v e r s i t y o f B e i­ r u t in L e b a n o n . Mr. A l - H u t is on le a v e H e h o ld s b o th b a c h e l o r o f a r t s a n d m a s t e r o f a r t s d e g r e e s f r o m th e A H B , A m e r i c a n U n i v e r s i t y o f B e iru t . T h e U n i t e d S t a t e s w ill be •viewed w i t h a c r i ti c a l e y e T h u r s ­ d a y n i g h t w h e n lo cal a u ­ t h o r i t i e s on i n t e r n a t i o n a l f e e lin g s view’ us “ A s O t h e r s S ee U s .” t h r e e T h e p a n e l will give t h e s e v e n t h lec­ in a s e r ie s o f G r e a t Is s u e s t u r e s a t 7 :3 0 in the M ain L o u n g e o f T e x a s U n ion . O l c u t t S a n d e r s , e x e c u t i v e s e c ­ r e t a r y o f th e S o u t h w e s t re g io n a l A m e r i c a n F r i e n d s S e r v i c e C o m ­ m i t t e e ; Dr. K arl M o l t e r e r , v is it­ in G e r m a n i c in g l a n ­ g u a g e s a t th e U n i v e r s i t y ; an d M a h m o u d A l- H u t, v i s i t i n g l e c t u r ­ l a n g u a g e s will in R o m a n c e e r m a k e up t h e pan el. i n s t r u c t o r be T h e i r d iscu ssio n will th e se c o n d o f f o u r on “ T h e C itiz e n a n d P o li ti c a l A c t i o n ,” s u b t o p ic of to p ic , “ T h e g e n e r a l th e y e a r ’s C itiz e n a n d Civic R e s p o n s i b il it y .” A d m is s io n is 60 c e n t s f o r th o s e w’ho do hav e m e m b e r s h i p c a r d s , F o y C le m e n t, c o u r s e c h a i r ­ m a n , said. n o t till S e p t e m b e r , Mr. S a n d e r s w as in E u r o p e fr o m 1961. He J u l y s p e n t t h r e e m o n t h s d i r e c t i n g a n e i g h b o r h o o d u n i t o f t h e S e rv ice C o m m i t t e e F r a n c e . H e also visited E n g l a n d , H o lla n d , B el­ i n c l u d i n g B e r ­ g iu m , G e r m a n y , lin, A u s t r i a , Ita ly , a n d S w i t z e r ­ lan d. in has Mr. S a n d e r s b e e n a c tiv e a r o u n d th e U n i v e r s ity f o r se v e r a l y e a r s . In 1939 he w a s c h a i r m a n o f a c o m m i t t e e w hich s e n t o v e r t o U n i v e r ­ 4 ,0 0 0 q u e s t i o n n a i r e s His th e s i s w as on “ M y t h o l o g y in A r a b i c L i t e r a t u r e . ” S o m e M o s­ lem s c h o l a r s s a y t h a t th is “ m y t h ­ o l o g y ” d o e s n o t ex ist. Mr. Al- H u t u s e d a s s o u r c e m a t e r i a l a n - alant m a n u .o r .p t ., the Koran, and , wi„ j , „ six fro m addition to m aterial prizes, Debaters will attend the F ifth W om en ’s th « U g ly Man will have a d ate w ith Speech T o u r n a m e n t being held S h er y l McKelvy, 1953 B e a u tifu l j F resh m an , at the d inner S u n d a y a t here N o v ^ n b e r 14 an d 15. for can d id ates and c o l l e g e s 1 T he co lleg es to be represented s t l t , S ou th w M te rn b(1 C lif f House th eir dates. 1 th e b a n d p la y e d “ A n c h o r s A w a y .” T h e A ir F o r c e s o n g w as p la y e d as th e A ir F o r c e u n i t p a sse d in re v ie w to c o n c lu d e th e ce re m o n ie s . O t h e r m e m b e r s of th e r e v i e w i n g p a r t y in c l u d e d Col. Ben L ieh ty , c o m m a n d i n g officer o f B e r g s t r o m F i e l d ; Col. W. A. S m ith , c o m ­ m a n d e r o f th e h o sp ital u n i t a t B e r g s t r o m ; D e a n A. P. B r o g a n , D ea n VV’. R. W o o lrich , D ean L. L. Click, D e a n VV. R. S p rieg el, Mr. C. R. C r a n b e r r y , D ea n J a c k H o l­ lan d , D e a n A m o N o w o tn y , D e a n P a g e K e e t o n , a n d Mr. C arl B r e d t . Also J o h n F o e h t, J. A. F i t z ­ IL VV’. J . S te p h e n s , g e r a l d , G. T o w n s e n d , E d B arlo w , C. H. Spar- e n b e r g , J o h n M c C u rd y , a n d A le x ­ a n d e r Moffit. A d d r e s s i n g his r e m a r k s p r i n c i­ p a lly to th e c a d e t s he c o n t i n u e d , “ You will find, I believe, t h a t th e t r a i n i n g y o u r e c e i v e in t h e R O T C I C h r i s t m a s g if ts . will s t a n d y ou in g ood s t e a d , no m a t t e r w h a t o c c u p a t io n y ou m a y f o llo w .” T h e i n v o c a t io n w as g iven by R E V IE W IN G THE C O M B IN E D units o f the R O IC are C o l. R o b e rt E verett York, U S A ; James P. H a rt, cha nce llo r; C a p t. Francis Johnson, US N a v y ; James C . Doliey, a ctin g p re s id e n t; and C o l. E. E. McKesson, US A ir Force. M o re than 2.000 students, fa c u lty members, and A ustin resi­ dents the A r m istice Day c e re ­ monies a t the Intram ural Field Tuesday. tu rn e d out fo r 2,000 Hear Hart /A t Armistice Parade T h e c o m b in e d R O T O u n it s of t h e n a t i o n a l a n t h e m b y th e ROTO a i r s c ien ce a n d ta c tic s . t h e U n iv e r s ity p a r a d e d in m i l i t a r y b a n d . re v i e w T u e s d a y m o r n i n g a t W h it- a k e r F ie ld in h o n o r o f th e w a r d e a d o f W o rld W a r I. W o rld W a r II . a n d flict. Col, R. E. Y o rk , c o m m a n d e r of th e In- th e c u r r e n t K o re a n con- e lu d e d o n th e r e v i e w i n g sta ff w e re C h a n c e l l o r J a m e s P. H a r t ; Dr. J . T h e A rm istice D a y review w a s I C. D olley, a c ti n g p r e s i d e n t o f the p r e f a c e d b y a n in v o c a t io n , a s h o r t U n i v e r s i t y ; C a p t. F r a n c i s J o h n s o n , a d d r e s s by C h a n c e l l o r J a m e s P. p r o f e s s o r o f n a v a l s c i e n c e ; a n d H a r t , a n d th e p l a y i n g o f T a p s a n d Col. E. E. M cK esson, p r o f e s s o r of th e A r m y ROTO u n i t , w as th e d ay . r e v i e w i n g officer of ^Novem ber 19 Deadline For Bonfire Entries f o r E n t r i e s t h e w o o d - g a t h e r - , N o v e m b e r 23, a n d c o n t i n u e u n ti l t h e b o n f i r e p re- J th e b o n f i r e N o v e m b e r 26. i n g c o n t e s t f o r c e d in g g a m e a r e d u e in t h e D ean o f M e n ’s o f t h e p r o j e c t, h a v e s e n t a l e t t e r ; c o u n t r y ’* d e s tin y o f f i c e by W e d n e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 19. G a t h e r i n g will beg in S u n d a y , T h e T e x a s C o w b o y s , s p o n s o rs th e T e x a s A A M fo o t b a ll j t o p r e s i d e n t s o f m e n ’s c a m p u s will th e w isdom o r g a n i z a t i o n s e x p la i n in g h ow t h e i r s t r e n g t h to k e e p it free, g r o u p s m a y p a r t i c i p a t e in c o ll e c t­ i n g wood. a n d WU (J, O n O r e l 8 -5 — F i n e A r t s F e s t iv a l ex h ib it, Music B u il d in g lo gg ia. th e l l — D iscu ssio n o n h o m e, Hillel F o u n d a t i o n . J e w is h 1 1 :3 0 — H u m a n a u c t i o n , in f r o n t o f T e x a s U n io n . I — C o lo red m o v ie s o f th e T exa*- B a y lo r g a m e , M ain L o u n g e , T e x a s U n io n . 4— S e rv ice s e c t io n , C a c t u s O ffic e . S y m p h o n e t t e 4— S a n w ith A n g e l R e y e s , v io linist. M u ­ sic R ecital H a ll. A n t o n i o 4 — Dr. D. M, W il li a m s t o a d d r e s s S p e e c h C lu b , 5 2 0 2 S h oal C re e k . 4 : 3 0 - 5 : 3 0 — B e t a B e t a A lph a c o f ­ f e e , W a g g o n e r H all 101. 5 — C a m p u s C h e s t T e x a s U n io n 3 0 9 . c o m m it te e , 5-6— F r e s h m a n C o u n c il p u b lic ity c o m m i t t e e , T e x a s U n io n 301. —G rie v a n c e C o m m i t t e e , T e x a s U n io n 3 1 1. 6— C lu b I n t e c a , T o b in R oom , B a t t s H all. 6-— Dr. G r a n v il le W a l k e t to sp e a k fe llo w s h ip d i n n e r , U n i v e r ­ a t sity C h r i s t i a n C h u rc h . D riskill H o te l. 6 : 3 0 — S w in g s q u a r e (lance L o u n g e , T e x a s U n io n . T u r n bisson, a n d fr e e Main 6 .30- W S F s u p p e r a n d d iscu ssion , U n i v e r s ity P r e s b y t e r i a n C h u rc h . 7 — R ad io G u ild , T e x a s U n io n 809. 7— M e n ’s (Hee C lu b , r e h e a r s a l a n d C a c t u s p i c t u r e , T e x a s U n io n 401. — D in n e r C li f f H o u se . f o r T e n M ost H a te d , 7— T r y o u t s f o r R if l e r y C lub, r a n g e a t S a n J a c i n t o a n d T w e n ­ ty - s e c o n d . 7 — F r e s h m a n F e llo w s h ip , Y M C A . 7 — S o u th C e n t r a l T e x a s C lub , s i m i l a r u se d . T e x a s U n io n 3 15 . nalism room. 7 : 1 5 - A lp ha D e lta S ig m a , J o u r ­ c o n f e r e n c e B u il d in g 1 initiation b a n ­ 7 :3(1 F o r e n s ic s q u e t, T a r r y to w n Restaurant. 7 :3 0 -1 0 O b s e r v a t o r y o p en , P h y s ­ ics B u il d in g .. 7 :3 0 S w in g anil Turn, M ain Lounge, T e x a s Union. 7 :30 M a r in e r s , L i t tl e f ie l d H o m e. W h a t T h e y g — “ T h e y K new * W an ted ,” X H a ll. g — “ G r e e n G ro w th e L ila cs,” A u s- tin H igh S ch o o l. , 8 — l h . K. M. D a lle n b a c h to f i v e lec tu re, U n iversity . fo r w oo d T h i s y e a r th e C o w b o y s will ad- j v e r t i s e p ro v id e t r u c k s a n d d r i v e r s f o r h a u l i n g it. j T h e f r a t e r n i t i e s , co-ops, a n d m e n ’s g r o u p s will su p p ly m a n p o w e r to p u t t h e wood on th e t r u c k s . a n d J u d g i n g will t a k e p la c e a s l o a d s 1 o f w o o d a r e ta k e n to th e f r e s h m a n f o o t b a l l field. J u d g i n g will be on q u a n t i t y a n d q u a l i t y o f w ood a n d t h e m a n p o w e r c o n t r i b u t e d . F i r s t , s e c o n d , a n d tr o p h ie s will b e a w a r d e d to g r o u p s w ith th e b a s t p a r t ic i p a ti o n . All t r o p h i e s a r e p e r m a n e n t . t h i r d p lace R e s e r v a t i o n s t h e use o f I t r u c k s c a n be m a d e by c a llin g th e f o r o f f i c e o f th e D e a n o f Men. Moot Competitors File More Briefs law a n d th e o t h e r on T w o m o r e b r i e f s , o n e on c r i m i­ n a l land t i tl e , a r e d u e W e d n e s d a y a t 5 p.m. f o r la w c o m p e t it io n , H i l d e b r a n d M oo t C o u r t , said Bob M c L e a ish , q u i z m a s t e r o f th e c o n ­ te s t. th e a n n u a l T h e tw o b r i e f s a r e a p a r t o f a in f o r s e r i e s o f six b e in g t u r n e d t h e c o m p e t it io n , w hich also in ­ c l u d e s p r o b l e m s o f t r u s t s a n d pro- t u r n e d t r u s t s b r i e f p.m . T he is n o t d u e u ntil in T u e s d a y a n d is d u e T h u r s d a y a t 5 p r o c e d u r e b r i e f N o v e m b e r 21 sa id M c L e a ish . th e t h e i r T h e y e a r - lo n g c o n t e s t , w h ich b e ­ g a n in 1949, o f f e r s law’ m a j o r s an o p p o r t u n i t y lega l to a p p ly t r a i n i n g in a re a listic m a n n e r . Law f a c u l t y m e m b e r s f i r s t r o u n d s w hich beg in te n d a y s a f t e r b r i e f s a r e filed . L a t e r j u d g e s will in c l u d e s t a t e a n d f e d e r a l j u d g e s , th e T e x a s B a r, a n d m e m b e r s o f f i n a l l y m e m b e r s o f t h e S u p r e m e C o u r t o f T e x a s. j u d g e th e T h e sin g le e li m i n a ti o n s y s te m , is t h a t o f a t h l e t i c s , to High Schools to Invade UT for Convention R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s f r o m all C e n ­ t r a l T e x a s high sch o o ls will c o n ­ v e n e 22, w h e n t h e S t u d e n t A c t iv i ti e s C o n ­ f e r e n c e will be held. in A u stin N o v e m b e r C o n f e r e n c e , by T h e U n i v e r s i t y T h e s p o n s o r e d j o i n t l y of I n t e r s c h o ­ T e x a s , T h e U n iv e r s ity la s ti c L e a g u e , a n d S o u t h C e n t r a l include T e x a s High Schools, will f i ^ O - - D i n n e r f o r J o h n \ \ . R ichey , c e d u r e . T w o o th e r s w e r e Foremost Authority on Pope Back at 8 0 to Begin Book Dr. G r i f f i t h ?aid the on ly un-1 Dr. G r i f f i t h began his stu d y o f ume which he pla ns to write will to r e t u r n e d is p r o b a b l y A m a n who tile w o r l d ’s f o r e m o s t a u t h o r i t y on A l­ th e e x a n d e r P o p e U n i v e r s i t y f r o m his in O c t o b e r f o u r t h v isit to E n g la n d . R e g in a ld H a rv e y G r i f f i t h , p r o f e s s o r e m e r i ­ l i t e r a t u r e , s p e n t tu s o f E n g li s h m o st o f his in th e B ritis h M u s e u m in L o n d o n a n d th e O x f o r d B o d le ia n L ib ra ry . f o u r - m o n t h s ta y u s u a l th i n g h a p p e n i n g on his t r ip u h s a c a se o f m i s t a k e n id e n t it y . He w as m i s t a k e n f o r G e o rg e B e r ­ n a r d S h aw , E n g li s h p l a y w r i g h t w ho died la s t s u m m e r . Dr. G r i f f i t h h ad let his b e a r d g r o w a n d a lady v is i t o r to th e B ritis h M u seu m k e p t in s is t in g to a g u a r d t h a t Mr. S h a w w as in th e place. th e n he has P o p e in 1902, S ince c o n ti n u a ll y s e a r c h e d in to th e life o f th e p o e t - e s s a y i s t - s a t i r i s t w hose k e e n - e d g e d c o u p le ts a r e a m o n g th e m o s t q u o t e d bits th e English la n g u a g e . be a b ib l io g r a p h y of P o p e ’s “ q u a r - , o ’clock T h u r s d a y e v e n in g re l l i t e r a t u r e . ” c h it e c tu r e B u ild in g 105. Dr. G r i f f i t h b elo n g s to P h i B e ta P re s id e n t o f th e Council, Ray in Kappa and t h e M o d ern U n g u a i " K‘ r ‘ d“ '' “.j11 pr<;8lde “ the m e r t - mg. A a n o c ia tio n . th e p r0 ‘‘ r ” ’ t i n t b o o t . " S i r '"*■ He w ‘" " ” -*k of the F reshman Council co m ­ P e r e i v a l o f C a ll e s ,” w as p u b li s h e d mittees and ex p la in how freshmen in 1 91 1. H e has c o n t r i b u t e d a r t i - may g e t on th ese com m ittees. more than 8,000 volu m es, the old. cleg to the “ Cambridge B ibiiogra- in phy o f E nglish L iteratu re” and ext o f which was published le arn ed journals. l i b r a r y c o n t a i n s H is p e r s o n a l I I : , A r e c e p t io n will be held in th e I n t e r n a t i o n a l R oom o f T ex as U n ­ ion a t 8 :3 0 p.m . F r i d a y . W in n e r s o f in d iv id u a l e v e n ts will be a n n o u n c e d a n d th e a w a r d s will be p r e s e n te d . th e R e g is t r a t io n will be given F r i ­ d a y m o r n in g in T e x a s Union. The t o u r n a m e n t will e n d S a t u r d a y a t noon w hen and f i n a l a w a r d s will be p r e s e n te d . re s u lts Frosh Council to Hear Campus Politicians The th ird m e e t i n g o f the entire F re s h m a n C o u n c il will start at 7 in Ar- Dr. G r i f f i t h is b e g in n i n g a s e c ­ o nd h a l f - c e n t u r y o f s tu d y e o n c e r n - the sh a rp-to ng u ed Pope. He ing -I ■ • ch ami jou rn alism activ ities. plans, a f t e r ano th er trip or so to D e b a te s, colloquies, and lectu res E ngland , to b egin w ritin g what he 1 on th e drama will be included in calls an “ A n n o ta te d Bib liography Phi, S an g erru n d e th e Sp eech ac tiv itie s section o f o f P o p ia n a .” A lth ou gh he will be in February, Dr. to h ave no p la n s life tim e 80 y ea rs old N ew sp a p e r workshops and an G riffith see m s for for re tir em en t from his c o n c e r t , Gregory a n n u al clinic will be held the program. J o u r n a l i s m e n th u s ia s t * . I p r o j e c t . i l l u s t r a t e d C lub. 8— P hi D e lta Hell. la co G y m . rn b ; i i A n t o n i o S y m p h o n y Or* Dr. G riffith had n ot shaved b e - 1 1640. The bulk o f these books deal m a n y resu ltin g lea v in g for England, good Pope. Most o f th em are con d ition , having cau>.e o f an a ccid e n t he su f fe r e d | j u s t b efo re IVhat he th ou g h t w as only a small I b indings rather than cloth bind bruise in to so m eth in g tu rned o u t to be a f r a c t u r e o f a sm a ll bone in 1 925-27, in the Pope hip s o c k r i. A w k w a r d n e s s a r i s in g Dr. G riffith has heen r ecog n ized in ternational au th ority on f r o m th e 18th e en tu ry a u th o r, T he vol- s h a vin g . in; H e w a s instrum ental in b u ild ing leather . ^he U n iv e r s i t y ’s Rare Book C ollec- tions. In 191 8 he helped p er su a d e to Major G eo rge W. L ittlefield p u rcha se the choice private library o f Jo h n H enry Wrenn, C hicago f i ­ n an cier. He was named cu rator of th e 6 ,0 0 0 -v o lu m e Wrenn Library in th at y ea n from bum ping *nK* ** m ost modern books do. injury p rev en ted his as an the publication o f his B ibliograp hy” Sirqw this A fter sp e ech es on student g o v ­ th ree S tu d e n ts’ A s ­ ernment by sociation w ork ers, the Council will sit in on a S t u d e n t Assembly m eetin g in the U n ion . Freshmen will be served c o f ­ fee and m e e t th e n ew assem bly­ men. Three su c c e s s fu l cam pus politi­ cians will speak to th e Council on atudent g o v e r n m e n t su b jects. Janet Lee Hits a W ool Jackpot Worth $2,000 J a n e t Lee, 21-y ear-old T ex a s U n iv e r s i ty beauty, has added a n ­ o th e r title to her g r o w in g list o f h on ors. She was c row n ed “ Miss W o o l” at the clim ax o f the S ta te W o o l Fashion R ev u e in San A n g e lo , Monday, and won a $ 2 ,0 0 0 w ard rob e with the title. field o f eleven T h e black haired, brown ey ed , from A u stin beauty w as ch osen a finalist*. T h* e le v e n had previously been s e le c t­ ed by photographs su bm itted to J o h n Powers, New York m o d elin g a g e n t . The ten runner-ups com ­ c o u rt of p osed “ Miss W oo l’s ” “ T e n P retty Maids.” J a n e t was sponsored by th* ; A u stin Junior Chamber o f C om ­ m erce at the 37th an nu al c o n v en ­ tion o f T exas S h eep and G oat { R a ise r s’ A ssociation. J a n e t is a junior m a jo rin g in h om e econom ics. H er p ast honor* | in clu d e Aqua Q ueen fin a lis t, Misa B erg stro m F ield o f 1 9 5 1 , V a r sity Carnival Q ueen, one o f th e T en M ost B ea u tifu l, and a B lu eb o n n et B elle. She u a m em ber of Delta I G am m a. T H E D A ILY TEXA N We'dnes'day. N o v. T2, 1952 Pag# 2 * M u r a l M u t i n g * Handball Entries Due Wednesday The 'for deadline handball ’doubles entries is Wednesday. All matches w ill be scheduled at night in Gregory Gym. Victories in cia?? A count six points toward the all-year trophy. In class B it is three points per victory. Wednesday is also the fin a l day fo r both class A and class R vol­ leyball entries. Competition is alated to begin Monday. Reservations volleyball practice may be obtained by call­ ing the intramural office, for In class A, 15 or 25 points w ill be awarded to the winner, de­ pending upon how fa r the com­ petition has progressed. ( lass B victors w ill receive 5 or IO points. F e m a l e * W i n C o n t e s t * B L Y T H E V I L L E . Ark., Nov. l l — T P)— Football fo r the boys. Who says so? F o r seven W eek i this season the Bly th e v ille Courier News bas con­ ducted a football forecast contest, top college and high using 24 school games every week. A ll seven contests have been won by females. The International League has been organized for soccer com ­ petition with the first matches scheduled Wednesday night. The league is a round robin a f ­ fair, each team playing every other team once during the sea­ son. Turkish Club, Campus G uild, La tin -Amencan Club, Phi Delta Theta. Taj as Club, and A ra b S tu ­ dents Association are the six or­ ganizations competing in the tour­ nament. Only experienced men w ill he allowed to play because of the number of injuries suffered last year. Although a winner w ill be de­ clared, no points w ill be given for all-year trophy com petition. (2 ) lim it; For the most part, N C A A rules will apply in the matches. The ex­ ceptions are ( I ) there w ill be a one-hour time there will be no playoff of tie games; (3) there w ill be a drop ball at the penalty kick m arker when the goalie falls on the ground to recover the ball; and (4 ) the ball will be thrown in from the touch line. Longhorns 9th In AP Ratings Virtual 3-team Tie S W C Tie Saturday Steers Can Cinch First-place Honor N K W Y O R K . Nov. l l — (Ah— Michigan State, Georgia Tech, and Maryland, running all by them­ selves as the 1-2-3 teams in this week’s Associated Press poll of the nation’s best, face assignments tha* will either keep Saturday them far out ahead or drop them down into the pack. All tangle w ith tough teams, A clean sweep by the big three would push them even further in fro nt than they are after the ballots of 139 sports w riters gave Michigan State 1,193 points, Georgia Tech 1,135, and M aryland 1,128, Michigan State , caner in all ex. cept one of the poll's seven weeks, faces Notre Dame. The Irish jumped from 10th to sixth in the poll on their 27-21 upset of Oklahoma Saturday. State’;! 35-0 trouncing of the Irish last year w as the highest score ever run up against a Frank Leahy team. Revenge ab o is the background of Georgia T e c h ’s traditional clas­ sic with Alabam a. This time re ­ venge is in the big team’s favor, however, for it was Alabama that ran up a 54-19 count against Tech two years ago rn the Engineers’ last defeat. The top ten 5 cord in parent he? s I; 'w ith season re- I. Michigan State (7-0) — 1,193 Georgia Tech '8-0) t 7-0 > ......... 8. Mary land 4. U C L A (8-0) 5. Southern C al (8-0)___ (5-1-1)... 6. Notre Dame ____ 7. Tennessee 8. Oklahoma (5-1-1)..... ... 9. T ex** ( 6 - 2 ) 10.Purdue (3-2-2) ............... 109 Others receiving votes include: (6-1) Baylor, Houston, B r M U R R A Y F O R S V A L L Texan > r o r < # Staff The conference leaders meet j the defending champs Saturday when Texas plays Texas Christian in F o rt W o rth ,. can The Longhorns cinch a berth in the Cotton Bow l and at least a for the conference crown by Frogs. beating the Horned I tie the In T C U Longhorns are meeting a team that was picked by m any experts to repeat their conference championship of 1951. The Frogs are still undefeated in league play but have two ties with Baylo r, 20-20, and Texas A & M , 7-7, to mar their record. B y defeating Texas T C U could climb into a tie for the league lead with Texas and possibly SM U , depending on the latter's contest w ith Arkansas Saturday. lost The Frogs their scoring punch early in the season and were blanked on successive week ends by two of the nation s top teams. Kansas won, 13-0, and the nation’s t e a m , fourth-ranked U C L A , turned the trick, 14-0. T C U then got on the victory 13-7, for trail with Arkansas, their only conference victory to date and ( ollege. little T rin ity 47-0. La st week, after the two ties in a row, the Frogs heat W ake Forest, 27-9, with a determined defense that stopped the Deacons within two yards of h score when T C U was leading only, 14-9. The Frogs then touchdowns the game. E a rlie r in the season M ake F o r­ est had held the Baylo r Bears to a close 17-14 victory. scored two quick ice to Ray M cKo w n again this year paces the T C U offensive. He is ably backed position by Clinkseale. up at the speedster tailback Ronald McKown is third in total offense I in the conference with 951 yards I for an average of 4.4 yards every time he runs or passes. He is also third among the conference pass­ leaders with 51 completions ing in IOO attempts for 667 yards. He has two excellent pass re ­ ceivers in ends Bob B la ir and Teddy Vaught, third and eighth in pass receiving in the confer­ ence. B la ir has caught 15 fo r 307 yards and four touchdowns while t aught has received 17 fo r 195 yards and one score. M alvin Fow ler provides the power in the T C U double wing and spread formations. He i« the league's leading ball-car- tenth rier with 287 yards in 77 tries. The Horned Frog defense is headed by such stalwarts as Don M artin, Morgan M illiams, Jam es Glenn, Mal Lambert. Claude Roach. Jo h n n y Crouch, and Don­ ald F raley. Four t.mes in the 1940's the Horned Frog* upset the Long­ horns. In 1941 they won 14-7 to knock the Steers out of the con­ a possible ference crown Rose Bow l bid. The Frogs won again in 194 2, 13-7, to put the only blemish on an otherwise un­ defeated S W C season. and TCI* kept the Steers from a title tie with a 14-0 victory in 1946 and came back in 1949 for a 14-13 upset victory. The Longhorns last year turned the same trick on the Frogs. The Steer 32-21 triumph was the only blemish on the TC C conference record. if the Longhorns win Saturday, leave only S M U with that w ill a chance to tie for the title and TEDDY VAUGHT . . pass receiver that would be possible only if Texas fails before the Aggies in the last conference game for the Steers, A Texas victory would cinch a Cotton Bowl berth regardless of the outcome of the Texas-Texas A & M encounter because the Cot­ ton Bow l officials have made it a policy in the event of a confer­ ence tie to invite t c team that has defeated the other play. Texas owns a S i ­ eve- SM U . \ Steer lo - would leave the race wide open w.th the possibl- ity that it would not be decided until the final week of conference when Texas plays the Aggie? and T C I’ and SM U would face each other, in league I “ pressure I trium ph j Pi In Phi s Edge Alpha Delta Pi W om en s Mural Football Alpha Delta P i’s first touchdown B y J A N E T T E D A N C Y T e x a n S p o r t « S t a f f Orange Bracket finals next Tues- d a y . tion quarter final game played Monday, Delta Zeta beat Alpha Phi, three first downs to none. of the season was the first to be semi finals, Kappa Kappa Gamma Neither teams ever got in scoring scored against first-!|fieded Pi Beta defeated Alpha Chi Omega. They | territory. took the Phi, but it wasn’t enough. The Pi in the first half, scoring two first down? and then P h i’s edged bv on one penetration in the semi-final Orange Bracket a touchdown on a run by Elb e Fondren. game Tuesday. On the Delta Zeta offense, Mary Frances W atkins and Ann Collette were outstanding. Star* for Alpha Phi were Carolyn Burton, Carol Grimes, and Joan Stevenson. Pi Phi w ill meet Kappa in the In the other Oi auge Bracket lead « Sims to Me... B y O R L A N D S I M S Texan Sport* Staff “ Ironic” is an overworked word, as far as sports writing is concerned. But there are a few occasions when ifs about the only word which describes a given situation. Such a situation arose in the Texas-Baylor game last Sat­ urday, when the Longhorns came from behind in the minute to edge Baylor by the paper-thin margin of two ♦ extra points. I r , . , , , The ironic part of the whole lateral fourth quarter. deal is that the Texas margin 1 !:at if,fi io the f,na Savior touch- came about when Cos! mo Another was when quarterback Brocato, the great Baylor r Jones fumbled while trying to place-kicker, missed a pair of r,ltch out t0 Dawson during the last drivc* Daws0n managed to re­ h i* fiv p o v trn n n in t o f f p r in t * ins m e extra-point attempts. cover the bal{ in time {o nm jt His missing the two was doubly the way it had been planned— by IO unexpected. passing to ' j down. .— ----------- in the I irst, no 3 exas opponent had yards and a B illy Quinn for first down, a attempt missed against the Longhorns this sea­ son. (Count ’em up. t conversion Probably the key “ sweat-er” of all came on the play before Tex­ as’ winning touchdown. toward The same Brocato who, Second, this was the same Bro­ Quiun took the ball on Baylor’s cato who had been so brilliant 6-yard line and drove through the under fire for the past year and line to a point just short of the a half. It was the same Brocato who kicked a field goal lo beat £oal* A lmost immediately, the of ftcials began waving their arms Arkansas, 9-7, in 1951; whose two and pointing the other extra point attempts against S M U goal. (W hich can mean a fumble, beat them, 14-13, last year. recovered by the defensive team.) this the Baylo r squad was year, had kicked a field goal and fooled— t h e defensive platoon two conversions to heat W ake Forest, 17-14; had k i c k e d a field started onto the field. And Bay- goal and two extra points in Bay- l©f partisans rn tile press box be­ lord 20-17 loss to Arkansas; who K»n to pound each other on the had kicked the three extra points back. that the Bears edge Texas A & M , 21-20; and who had kicked a couple in tim 20-20 tie with T C L . few seconds passed (when you're not breathing, a few seconds can run dam long), it was cleared up as being a T e x a s time out. Saturday, A fte r a Even let it seemed that the player” was Texas’ Gib Dawson, who methodically planted five in a row where they hail to be, thereby increasing hi. season's scoring to 57 point?. And it was Brocato-Lfor a change— who had to face the reak ization of “ the big 'un that got aw ay.” ★ Athletic Director D. X. Bible va as talking about the Baylo r game the other afternoon. He said it impressed him as about the most the 1939 dramatic game since Arkansas battle. the Jackrabbit ’39 game, Ja c k Crain hoofed 71 yards in the final seconds to tie the game; then kicked the extra point that won it, 14-13. In The difference in the two, aside from the score, is that the Bay- lor game seemed to be one where — as Coach Price phrased it— “ Everybody helped everybody.” that Especially o n last-ditch march. That was the case of a team acing certain oblivion if it stalled. They didn’t stall, and as a result, gave Southwest C onfer­ ence football fans a game to mull over for years. Longhorn far ? almost panicked a couple of times Saturday. One was when B a y lo r’s Jim Speer grabbed Dick Ochoa’s would be Austinites who heard the broad­ cast of the game heard it dis­ tinctly announced a? a Texas fum ­ ble. ‘ And mighty was the weeping and wailing and gnashing o rv teeth , *«” ' Mural Schedule W E D N E S D A Y TOUCH F O O IB A L L S E M ! F IN A L S Cia*# R 7 CM Oak Grove v* Btomquiit. Cl*** A a pm B m nett# Ho- «» vs. Six ma Alpha Epsilon. S O C C E R S I’ M T u rk i i i C lub *». C am p ti* G uild. 7 P.M. war-.n-American < I sh vs. Phi D#!t* Theta. 8 P M l e a* C l u b v*. A r a b i M u d e n t A s s o c i a t i o n , 24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE SWEARINGEN- ARMSTRONG Phone 8-3457 a printed w * will b e p l e a t e d to t**t your in )u*t 30 **cond* cmd watch •how y o u record, telling it* true condition —• all rn 30 second*. W# m a k e thie otter to a c qua int you with o u r a dvanced , ecien- hfre w a t c h im which a ll ol o u r work ie checked electron ically on our r e p air *erv>ce For THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY travel, your best '"dish" is CONTINENTAL TRAMWAYS For T r a v e l Inform ation Everyw h ere, C a ll CONTINENTAL BUS CENTER 1001 Congress 8-4655 CONTINENTAL TRAILWAYS EXPERT WATCH REPAIRS PROMPT ECONOMICAL SERVICE KRUGER’S O N THE D RAG 2236 GUADALUPE Della Dei ta Delta won over A l­ pha Delta P i by one first down in the W h ite Bracket semi-final game Tuesday. In their Monday semi-final game. Kappa Alpha Theta ll won over Delta Gamma, two first down? to one. In the Orange Bracket consola- 100% Wool GABARD IN E SLACKS 10.95 Dress U p Your Car They cost so little Add so much to your Car's Appearance Hand tailored Seat Covers Convertible Tops Door Paneling Repair Work Leo Roberts 319 S. Lamar Phone 6-5840 Between the STATE it PARAM OUNT WHATTA CANDIDATE OUR <; SILVER- TONGUED ORATOR! j AND WHATTA CAMPAIGN^ ’ w e ' l l ^ S W E E P THE c a m p u s ! A N D ! 1 PROMISE M A Y B E h e 'l l WIND UP GOVERNOR. OF THE ^ J r-7 s t a t e ! i d i d o t e a c i g o r t i m e * r time a cig arette ve it the test ot p a r e t ic as your . 30 days and *ce .Vile C a m e '* » re steady A m e r ic a ’s va >ke. Sm o k e o h o w flavor r * * * k Van Heusen’t new Snowflake patterned aport shirts are really in a class bv themselves— they have plcntv of # razz I e-dazzle. Thr neat, Colorful pattern*, adapted from crystaJMike snowflakes, are creating a flurry in colleges from coast to coast. Van Heusen ?(\led the-e shirts with the new sportown collar that college men favor, In comfortable rayon poplin . . . a Aum of bright color combinations. $ 5 .9 5 HOW CAN THEY T E L L SO SOON ? HE HASN'T < EVEN SO T A p l a t f o r m t o STAND O N ! ■t— n t ii 111 i V n r r f r i l l ' i . i i . . . . r UNIVERSITY T I) (I (TUY 2310 G U A D A L U P E Austin's Only Van Heusen Dealer AC hiO I I will play Alpha Gam­ ma Delta Wednesday at 5 p.m. on women's intram ural field. W in n er of the 1952 mixed vol­ leyball tournament is Baptist Stu ­ II. Defeating Delta dent I nion Delta Delta the Thursday in I finals 24-21, they won the first- place trophy. In the consolation final? that night B S I I won o\ or Sigma Delta Tau 23-22; they will play runner­ up D D I) I for the second-place cup at 7 p.m. Tuesday. all Form erly trophies were awarded at the T banquet in the spring, but this year tho Co-Rec- reationa] Committee will present them at the close of each tourna­ ment, permitting the men to see the trophies they helped win. Sixty-eight students entered tho mixed table-tennis tournam* nt that began Thursday: from Chi l l lo from B S C ; 8 from Omega; W ica-Mica and W esley; 6 from Newman and H illc i; 4 from A E Phi; and 2 each from Z I A , DDD, AChiO, K R G , DG, a; d Czech. The j thirteen groups w ill play the quar- finals j ter-finals, semi-finals, and at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Women’s Gym. 1 In the final? of the mixed table . tennis doubles Shirley Stei nberg and Bernhard Gerhardt of Hiliel Foundation defeated Mary Hugh Colley and A lfred Cho of R SU , 21 13, 21-18, first award. ’I he second award was taken by Collej and Cho, who defeated ("aro’e Newberry and R i­ chard Roberson of Kappa Kappa Gamma 21-15, 21-15, to win tho In volleyball Delta Delta Delta defeated B S C I I 28-20 for second place. use th• New MICROTOME — t h * A b s o l u t e l y U n ifo rm D R A W I N G P E N C I L • Absolut* uniformity rn.in* drivings without ” **»li *pot*"~ dean. legible detail F*mou* for »mooth, long weiring [«*d* Easily du*i« |ui*h*d by bull * *y* degree stamping on J lid** Of pencil. Al yen i I ut, iff. Use The Classifieds Faculty Round-up Get Profs Of Liability UN Blonde Says Reminder She Is Russian Statutes jaSS SM SS M G S K ' ii;. ^ . v t : . -, n y , 1 r .th ii- , fr^t.n , ^ . i- t fr-i i . - . tit lia » l f T H E D A IL Y T E X A N W ed nesday, N ov. 12 1952 Page 5 SALE of Sportswear a ll w o o l SPORT COATS N 4 VE7.OO! 'Mi fresh' new Fa 52 styles a nd ■fab'rics! C o a t s in t he po pul a r 2- but ton, pa t c h- p o c k e t model with bl uffed e d g e lapels. In solids and p a t t e r n s of brown, tan, blue, or gr ey. R e g e a r s , 35 t o 46; shorts, 37 t o 42; longs, 37 t o 46. LIMITED QUANT I T Y . . . AN D EVERY O N E A CERTIFIED 29.50 VALUE! Worked 6 Years A s an American NEW YORK, Nov. \ l — VPi— A pretty blonde typist told an aston­ ished Senate subcommittee Tues­ day she awicted her allegiance to Russia but worked for the United Nati ons as an American. “ She was charged to the US quota a t the UN while holding a Russian passport and USSR cit­ izenship — thia I cannot u n d e r ­ st a nd, ” said subcommittee counsel I R o b e rt Morris indignantly. “ I am not disloyal,” replied the witness, Olga Michka. “ I never did anything against America.” The 33-year-old- Amer ic an- hor n Miss Michka testified she aplied for a Soviet passport in 1939 and actually got in IO ye a r s l ater . In j her opinion, she thus s u r r e n d e r e d her Amer i c an citizenship. Miss Michka, at tr act ive in a d ar k green suit, said she w a n t e d t he pas sport to go to Russia. “ But I haven’t been there y e t,” she added. “ W h a t I would like t o k now, ” I d emande d Morris, “ is by w h a t p r o ­ cess a US citizen, wi t ho ut any t h e Uni t e d States can become a Russian cit­ izen. I am in f or med t h e re is no pr ecedent f o r this a c t. ” I open disavowal of In Wa s hi ng t on, a St at e Depart ; merit official said he didn t t h i n k Miss Michka aut omat i cal l y lost her A me r ic an citizenship when she r e ­ ceived a Russian passport. Meanwhile Rt the UN, officials t h a t Miss Michka was in denied the U S q uo t a of employes. They said t h a t of the 2,000 A mer ic an nat ional s employed by the UN, only 37 7 a r e hired according to the quota basis. Miss Michka, who lives in New York, said she w e n t to w o r k for the U N in 1946 as a $3, 500-a-year clerk and t ypis t in the Radio News Division, p r e p a r i n g scripts f o r UN Russian- language to the Soviet. She was suspe nded by the UN only last week. br oa d ca s t s In 1946, al though she di dn ’t have her p as sp or t yet, she a p p a r ­ ently consider ed her self a Russian because she told the s u c ommi t t e e : “ It did not occur to me to tell t hem ( the UN) t h a t I was a Soviet ci tizen. ” A U N said Miss spokesman Mi chka’* a c t ua l citizenship s t a t us was cloudy. She applied f o r and got r eb a t e s du ri n g the p a s t t h r e e year s on U S income t a x e s — so me ­ t hi ng she w o u d n ’t even have to pay in the f ir s t place if she were Russian, University faculty members ; were somewhat jolted this month ; when they found a copy of one of j the state statutes in their pay en- j velopes. I t was a reminder th a t they are liable for the loss, de- j ^ru c tio n , or damage of property entrusted to their care. ] * stat* Fifteen scientists f rom the Uni- ; versify of Texas Defense Research j Laboratory will be in San Diepjo, I Calif., November for a Navy symposium and the Acous­ tical Society of America’s 44th meeting. 13-18 Basic r esear ch pr ojects will be r epor ted by C. P. Boner, Br uc e H. Dea t her age , Otto H. Hill, Claude W. H o rt on, Lloyd A. J e f - fress, G, T ho ma s Kemp, Richard N. Lane, Charl es E. Martin, Ma rk V. Mechler, J os e p h F. Mifsud, E. Eugene Mikeska, A. Wilson Nolle, A. Ed Sobey, Re uben H. Wallace and George W. Wood. I nvesti gati ons to be pr ese nt ed at the acoustical meeti ng will in­ clude studies of aud i tor i um d e ­ sign and actions of sound waves. Addresses a t the Navy symposium will he on nat i onal defense p r o b ­ lems. * A school buildi ng designed by R. G ommf l Ro**»»ner, associate pr ofessor has been selected as the o ut s t a n d i n g arc hi t ec t ur e, of contemporary school In Texas. The building is the Raymond- ville High School. The plans were shown at a recent meeting of the National School Building Service j Conference at Peabody College in Nashville, Tenn. the Judges complimented Mr. Roes- logical and well- sner on studied site plan, the building plan, and the freshness and logical integration of the design. ★ ★ B e r t K r u g e r S m i t h of the Hogg F o und at i on has w r i t t e n a series of f ou r t e en on T ex a s ’ s ta t e hospital syst em, t h r ou gh the Universit y of Texas Hogg F o u n ­ dat ion f or Mental Hygiene. articles Dr. H e r b e r t O l i v e c r o n * . a Swe­ dish specialist, will give the a n ­ nua! James Greenwood lecture in neuro-surgery at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Gal­ veston Monday, November 24. Dr. Olivecrona is p r o fe ss o r of n eu r o- su r g er y of t he Karolinska I nstitut e, Stockholm, and received p a r t of his surgical t r a i n i n g f rom the late Dr. W, S. Hei s t ed at Johns Hopkins Hospital u nd er a Swe- dish-American F ou nd a t i on fellow­ ship. A ft e r his he will meet with neur o- su r g e on s of the Galveston- Houston area. lect ur e Th# N a t i o n a l Municipal l e a g u e ’s annual conference No- vemher 17-18 San Antonio in will have two University of Texas authorities on state and local gov­ e rn m en t on their program. They are D r . S t u a r t M a c C o r k l e , Insti­ tute of Public A ffairs director, and L y n n A n d e r s o n , assistant di­ rector. Warford Heads Small-towners Harold Wa r for d, senior jo u rn a ­ lism ma jo r, was elected president of the Grassroots Pre ss Club in T u e s d a y night' s meeti ng. J o Ann Dickerson, j u n i o r j o u r ­ nalism major, ivas elected vice­ pr esi de nt , and Jim E a g e r , senior j our na l is m major, s e c r et a r y - tr ea s - u r er . I n t e r e s t in small-citv jour nal ism is t he only r eq ui r em e n t f o r m e m­ bership. Student* i n t e r es t e d may see Wa rf or d at the Daily Texan offices or Olin Hinkle, associate p r o f e ss o r of j our nal ism, J B 207, or Cal Newton, business director of student, publications, J R 109. Dr. S. J- Rogers Dr W B Pry at #1 Dr. T W ill.o n D r D. L. Akin O P T O M E T R IS T S . . . M A Y NEED GLASSES rind out TODAY whether you need glasses . . . through a complete eye examination by Texas State Optical'* expert registered optometrists. R e gu lar $20 Value Single Vision Glasses A S LO W A S * *13 IN C L U D IN G E X A M IN A T IO N ROWH and WEEKLY T E X A S S T A T E O P T I C A L 90/ Congress Ph. 8-4668 44What is General Electric\s policy on em ploym ent in light o f the draft ? ” • . . J o h n C . B e n n e t t . I i m e r s i t y o f Rochester, 1933 The answers to John Bennett’s question • - excerpts taken from the panel discussion • • are given below. . , . R . J. C A W I N G , Business Training Deportment Ba r ea l ly , the Company is interviewing and considering college students for employment without regard to their draft status. W e' re n o t passing over men because they are eligible for the dr af t— we’re hiring them if they have the qualifications we want in our employees. We are looking at the area of employment on a long-range ba,«is, and we t hink we are going to rarry a perpetual inventory of men in the armed forces for a considerable period of time. I t ’s true we lose some men, but we get many back, and with this in mind our policy is based on personal qualification*, not on draft eligibility. J . I.. M I C H A E L S O N , General Engineering Laboratory . . . We are experiencing a growing appreciation of the importance of an adequate supply of well-trained pro­ fessional people to this country s immediate and future welfare. Although this situation creates excellent oppor­ the t unities for you students for future employment, the leave you plagued by u n c e r t a i n t y , for draft may present, But, r emember this, we are not only considering college people for employment entirely for the year 1952. U e are also thinking ahead to the years ’54, 55. and 56, and if we find a good man now, knowing he is going into military service, we will still make long ranee employment plans for him. We still would like to have him come with us after he has completed his military service. M . M . B O R I N G , Engineering Sert'ires Dit'iaon , . , W h e t he r or not you are called into military service you can reasonably expect to follow y our profession for approximately 30 or 40 years. Your solution to the many problems, such as this one, which arise duri ng your entire productive period, will be a lifetime undertaking. A period spent serving your c ount r y in a military way will represent a relatively small part of your total professional Iii#. The wav you handle a problem such as thia, and the infor­ mation you get to help in its solution, will determine to a large extent your ability to handle fut ur e problems. Now', where does General Electric stand in regard to this draft situation? This is our policy. Regardless of military status, we desire to interview all students who are interested in o u r e a r s . All p e r s o n s i n t e r e s t e d , p l e a s e c o n t a c t t h e Offi ce of N o n - a r a d e m i r P e r s o n n e l, M ein B., 204 or p h o n e 6 - 8 * 7 1 , e x t e n s i o n 551. THE DAILY TEXAN Wednesday, Nov. 12, 1952 Page 4 1 % O n ,*, H o U ¥ Little M an on the Campus — By Bi bier Utile** students understand full worth and possibilities the only grievance the Grievance Committee might observe this afternoon at its first m eeting is that it has no job. its The com m ittee was established in 1948 to hear and act upon com plaints of unsat­ isfactory U niversity conditions. For tw o sensational years it treated each grievance that it heard w ith enthusiasm and in teg­ rity, investigating and then directing the complaint the proper U niversity channel. into It has been influential in getting more telephones for the dorm itories, clearing up housing conditions and house rules, presenting organized complaints to the stopping housing Health Center, and unit® from raising their rents at mid-term. Last year the Grievance Committee al­ most hit rock-bottom in popularity. Stu­ dents w ith legitim ate gripes either didn't know about the com m ittee or w eren’t in ­ terested enough to act rather than ju st talk. U n satisfactory conditions are alw ays present; no U niversity system is perfect. Likewise, the means of awakening the U n iversity to its faults are som etim es complicated and incomplete. The Grievance Committee is an e ffe c ­ tive short-cut to solutions, but it will be cut short this year if students aren’t, in ­ terested in m aking the U niversity a better place to live. -An other U Senator Pat McCarran's in­ vestigatin g subcom mittee helped to win another dubious “victory” yesterday. internal Close associates of T rygve Lie, who ju st resigned as United N ations Secre­ tary-G eneral, say that he was not only fed up with the K rem lin’* attacks, but also the sniping ones made by McCar­ ran's comm ittee. An able and beloved leader in Norw ay, Lie had tried to be just, patient, and fore­ sighted as the co-ordinating head of the U nited N ations. By not relinquishing his personal convictions on many problems, he was made the brunt of disagreem ent by both Russia and the United States. nered investigations of which the United States had a great part. Ca rn era --d ic t io n ! Tim e— 1951. Cast— 12,000 students of the U niversity Object— to raise $8,000 for the Campus of Texas. Chest. R esult— a little over $7,000 or not quite 60 cents per student. That's the story of w hat happened to the Campus Chest last year at the U n i­ versity. It may be the story again this year. H is resignation is certainly a loss to the world. It is also, however, a sad commen­ tary on tactics and ill-m anaged and m an­ They say charity begins at home. The U n iversity of Texas is home to us for four years. 3 More G iving P ays Campus Chest Allots $ 1 5 0 0 to Palsy Fight c a n c e r B y W A L T E R H O G A N “ C e r e b r a l p a l s y m e a r c h ie r e s e a r c h t o d a y w h e r e I>r. w a s 26 y e a r s a g o , ’’ s a y s W i l l i a m G. W o l f e , a ss o c i a t e p r o f e s s o r o f e d u c a t i o n a l p s y ­ c h o l o g y a n d d i r e c t o r o f t h e p r o ­ f e s s i o n a l s t a f f o f t h e A u s t i n C e r e b r a l P a l s y C e n t e r . S t a t i s t i c s i n d i c a t e t h a t a t t h e p r e s e n t t i m e o n e o u t o f e v e r y 7 0 0 c h i l d r e n b o r n is s e v e r e l y h a n d i c a p p e d f r o m c e r e b r a l p a l . ■y. M a n y m o r e a r e s l i g h t l y a f ­ f e c t e d . A d j u s t i n g t h e lives o f a f f e c t ­ ed i nd i vi d u a l s is t h e j o b u n d e r ­ t h e C e r e b r a l P a ls y t a k e n by is d o n e by C e n t e r h er e . T h i s t h e r a p i s t s s p e e c h a n d p h y s i ca l t h # c e n t e r a n d e m p l o y e d by sp e c i al i st s w h o t h e i r t i me . d o n a t e F o u r U n i v e r s i t y s t u d e n t s a r e n o w r e c e i v i n g c o r r e c t i v e aid at t h e c e n t e r a n d a r e in t u r n help- i n g t h e y o u n g e r m e m b e r s . T h e y a r e J o y G r e e n , a s o p h o m o r e s p e c i a l e d u c a t i o n m a j o r ; J e r r y C l a r k , a n e d u c a t i o n m a j o r who d o e s his p r a c t i c e t e a c h i n g a t T o m Mo r r i s o n , c e n t e r , t h e s t u d y i n g c o u n s e l i n g a n d g u i d ­ a n c e , a n d V i r g i n i a R o g e r s , a g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t l a c k i n g o n l y a t he s i s t o re c e i ve a m a s t e r ’s d e g r e e in speci al e d u c a t i o n . O u r J a c k ” H o l l a n d ’s “ D e a n o wn d a u g h t e r B a r b a r a is r e c e i v i n g t r a i n i n g a t t h e C e n t e r . T h e C e r e b r a l Pa l s y C e n t e r is t r a i n i n g t h e s e s t u d e n t s h o w t o he l p t h e m s e l v e s a n d h e l p o t h e r s . T h e C a m p u s C h e s t will g i ve $1 , 5 0 0 o f its $ 8 , 0 0 0 g o a l to t h e C e n t e r . Th i s is b u t a small p a r t o f t he C e n t e r ’s $ 1 5, 00 0 o p e r a t i n g e x p e n s e s e a c h y ea r . A n d thi s s u m is b u t a sma l l p a r t o f t h e a m o u n t o f se r vi c e g r a n t e d b y t h e c e n t e r . I t is only a m a i n ­ t e n a n c e su m. b u l k s u p p o r t o f c o me s f r o m t h e s t a f f o f o r t h o ­ pe dists, p e d i a t r i c i a n s , c o n s u l t ­ i ng n e u r o l o g i s t s , x - r a v s p e c i a l ­ ists, n e u r o - s u r g e o n s , a n d eye, e a r , nose, a n d t h r o a t p h y s i c i a n s who d o n a t e t h e i r ti me. T h e t h e T h e C e n t e r also has t h e s u p ­ p o r t o f local civic o r g a n i z a t i o n s a n d t h r e e s o r o r i t i e s — Z e t a T a u Al p h a , A l p h a Chi O m e g a , a n d The Da® Texan T h * D a ily T e x a n , a s t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r of T h * U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s , in A u s t i n , da ily e x c e p t S a t u r d a y a n d M o n d a y . It p u b l i s h e d d u r i n g h o l id a y s . P u b l i s h e r is T e x a s S t u d e n t Pu b l i c a t i o n s , Inc. is is n o t p bl i a he d N * s c o n t r i b u t i o n s will be a c c e p t e d by te le p h o n e ( 2 - 2 * 7 3 ) o r a t t h * e d i t o r i a l J .B . 10S, o r e t th * n e w s l a b o r a t o r y , J .B 102. I n q u i r i e s c o n c e r n i n g d e l i v ­ offii e r y s h o u ld be m a o * in J . l l 107 a n d a d v e r t i s i n g , J B i l l ( 2 - 2 4 7 8 ) . o p i n i o n s of th* i e x s n a r * n o t n e c e s s a r il v trio** of t h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n or o t n e r U n i v e r s i t y officials E n t e r e d a* s e c o n d - l a s s m a t t e r O c t o b e r IS. 1941. a t t h * P o e t Office a t A u s t in . T e x a * u n d e r t h e Act o f M a r c h 9, I£79. A S S O C I A T E D P R E S S W I R E S E R V I C E T h * A s s o c ia te d P r e s s to t h e u s e for r e p u b l i c a t i o n of all n e w s d i s p a t c h e s c r e d i t e d to it o r no r o t h e r w i s e c r e d i t e d in t h i s n e w s p a p e r , a n d local i t e m s of s p o n t a n e o u s o r i g i n p u b li s h e d he re in . R ig h t* of p u b l i c a t i o n of •ll o t h e r m a t t e r h e r e i n a ls o r e s e r v e d . is e x c l u s i v e l y e n t i t l e d R e p r e s e n t e d for N a t i o n a l A d v e r t i s i n g by N a t i o n a l A d v e r t i s i n g Se rv ic e , Ina., C o ll e ge P u b l i s h e r s R e p r e e e n t a t i v # 420 M a d is o n A ve New Y ork . N.Y. C h i c a g o — B o s t o n — Lo s A nge le s — S a n h r a n c i s c o A s s o c i a t e d C o l l e g i a t e P r e s * Aii A m e r i c a n P a c e m a k e r M E M B E R in A u s t i n D e liv e r e d M ai led M aile d o u t o f t o w n in A u s t i n _ _ _ _ _ S U B S C R I P T I O N R A T E S Mi t i n , om S u b s c r i p t i o n — 'I b r e e m o n t h s ) __________ ___________________ — .— .TA m o n t h I 11.00 m o n t h .76 m o n t h I P E R M A N E N T S T A F F E d ito r in C h ief A N N E C H A M B E R S J O A N N D I C K E R S O N M en a c in g E d i t o r E d i t o r i a l A s s i s t a n t W a y l a n d P i l c h e r N e w s E d i t o r ---------- K o b e r t K e n n y R o b e r t K e n n i S p o r t * E d i t o r — ............ ............ ....... ......... ....... ....... .......... Je f f H a n c o c k - ....... - ......... Dick W i l l i a m s I n t r a m u r a l s C o - o r d i n a t o r ........ S o c i e t y E d i t o r M a r i a n n e M o r r i s ----------------- D o r o t h y C a m p b e l l A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r _______________________ William M o r J s ...................... E x c h a n g e E d i t o r P i c t u r e E d i t o r --------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- _ J o h n G a i n e s Wi r e E d i t o r --------------------------------------------------------------- J o e L. S c h o t t „ ....................................... Bill M c R e y n o l d s Book E d i t o r Day E d i t o r s .......... .......... J i m E a g e r , Bill M c R e yn o l d s , N a n c y T o r r a n c e , M a r y H e l e n S p e a r ............................. B o b b y N e wl i n , Bill M o r g a n , H a r o l d W a l f o r d , P h i l i p Hall, G r e t a N i s s e n , P e g g y C o c k r u m N i g h t E d i t o r s S T A F F F O R T H I S ______ ___ ______ N i g h t E d i t o r A s s i s t a n t N i g h t E d i t o r .................... ............................. N i g h t R e p o r t e r s ....................... N i g h t S p o r t s E d i t o r ................................. A ssistan ts ..... ................... N i g h t S o c i e t y E d i t o r N i g h t A m u s e m e n t s E d i t o r ....... N ig h t W ire E d ito r ....... ....... ........... I S S U E M A R Y H E L E N S P E A R W A Y L A N D P I L C H E R J e r r y R a f s h o o n , Bob K e n n y M u r r a y F o r s v a l l O r l a n d Sims, J eft H a n c o c k J e a n R e m b o l d .................. . M iilirent Huff ........ —* — E l l i o t t P o o l e y .................. I th 5 em ph a sis on 'sweater-and-jkirt' n ever c e a s e s to b affle me. ‘ Stars in Our C opy Backstage Crew Cuts, Knuckle Pops - Shakes, th ea trica l By J O A N N D I C K E R S O N T e x a n M a n a g i n g E d i t o r It has a lw a y s been a big thrill to us to Ive back stag e at an y kind o f production. The thrill is the s a m e — the e x c it e m e n t o f b ein g on e o f the privileged fe w th a t have an in sig h t into the in ­ tricate w o r k in g s that produce e n ­ te r ta in m e n t. F or the p ast tw o y ea rs, w e ’v e p a r tic u la r ly e n jo y e d w a n d e r in g a rou n d behind the big cu rtain s a t G reg or y Gym , lo o k in g fo r color to add to our o f bands, d an ces, or a S w e e th e a r t p r e s e n t a ­ tion. review s for these T he scen e is ne arly a lw a y s th e sam e. P e e r in g out from behind the side cu rtains, you can see the alm ost d isin terested band m em bers, t o o t in g a w a y or d r u m ­ m in g a w a y , or w h a t ev er th e y do to make the noise the people s h u f ­ fle around to on the floor. The band lead er looks sm aller than you had im a gin ed and a lit­ tle less rom antic th an his p ictu res had p ortrayed. Ray A n th o n y ’* happy under th eir band looked d is in te r e s te d n e ss ; T ex K en ek e’a cre w -cu t looked bored. orch estra j u s t I f a S w e e t h e a r t or A M ost B e a u tif u l is b eing disclosed th a t night, the a tm osp h er e is e x t r e m e ­ ly tense. You can fe e l th eir ti g h t­ ness, their e x c it e m e n t, th eir l o n g ­ in g for the whole th in g to be over. In b e t w e e n their hoop s k i r t s a n d t h e c u r t a i n s , t h e y fi nd r o o m f o r a w a l t z w i t h t h e i r t u x e d o e d d a t e s . T h e n t h e y d a s h b a c k to a n u n d e r ­ s i zed d r e s s i n g r o o m t o c h e c k on t h e i r m a k e - u p , do a f e w l a s t - m i n ­ u t e pi n- c ur l s , r e a r r a n g e c o r s a g e s , a n d c o m p l i m e n t ea c h o t h e r on h o w well t h e y look. T h e b i g g e r o c c a s i on , t h e t h e q u i e t e r t h e r o o m, t h e g r e a t e r t h e n e r v o u s n e s s . T h e g i r l s p o p t h e i r k n u c k l e s , t w i s t t h e i r h a n d s , cr>mb t h e i r ha>r f l u t t e r n e r v o u s l y a n d t h e i r s k i r t s a r o u n d — a n y t h i n g t o k e e p t h e m s e l v e s f r o m s h a k i n g . f u r i o u s l y , C o m e s t h e a n n o u n c e m e n t b a c k ­ is g i g g l es , s t ag e , a n d e v e r y t h i n g n o t - q u i t e t e a r s , si ghs, c o n g r a t u ­ l a t i ons , a n d a n o v e r f l o w o f n e r ­ v o u s n e s s . W e b e g a n o u r b a c k s t a g e v e n ­ t u r e s b a c k in g r a m m a r s ch o o l , b u t w i t h a m o r e i m p e r a t i v e p u r ­ pose. W e w e r e c a s t as t h e I n d i a n g ir l ( q u i t e l ogi ca l l y) in o u r f i r s t grade c l a s s play. It w a s a m i n o r t h e s a m e it p r o d u c e d role, b u t k i nd o f a s d e s c r i b e d s e n s a t i o n ab o v e . I t w a s n ’t s t a g e f r i g h t , b u t m e r e ­ ly a m o u n t i n g e x c i t e m e n t . We h a d a l i tt le o f this t h r o u g h t h e y e a r s a s s t a g e h a n d s a n d m o r e m i n o r c h a r a c t e r s in m i n o r p r o ­ d u c t i o n s . A n d thi s little m o r e i n ­ st il led in us t h e love f o r t h e b a c k ­ s t a g e , w h e r e t h e ma g i c o f a w o n ­ d e r l a n d is f i r s t b o r n . C R O S S W O R D 2. 3 A 5 to 7 a i i Fo u n d a t i on 43. A jewel 45 Sh e l t e r e d side ■ : : i9 rnv4% 2 ? 2b 2 4 A C R O S S I W e a r y by re pet i t i on 5 A w e i g h t 26 Color, 8. Viper* IO. C h a i r >1 A met a l r i ng 28. Si f t i ng utensil s 16 M o n e t a r y a s fabric I A n g l o - I n d . ) unit ( L a t v i a ) 3 1 . Pviver ( E n g ) Is c o n c e r n e d 19. Cove r s wi t h 9 Ma n a c l e s l l 12. Not t r u e 13. F lo w e r 14. I n s ec t 15. E n t i r e 18. No t t a u t lard 20 S t r i p e 21 O p e n i n g s ( a n a t . ) n i c k n a m e 25 Old m e a s u r e of le n g t h a m o u n t 22 Gain 17 L a r g e w o r m 24 G i r l s 18 Booth 20. Deep dish 23. P l a g u e d 27 Melodies 20. Sincer ely 30. R a n k a n d sour 32. T a k e o u t < pri nt . ) 33. Ship b o t t oms 35. C h a r t 38. L e t t e r of t h e a l p h a b e t IA 12 9 i 39. W’eep 42 Se mb l an c e 41 Gr e e k l e t t e r 46. Keeps 47. Lines of j unc t i on 48. No a h ' s el d ­ est son 49 Scott ish- Gaelic D O W N I. A b l o w ( s l an g ) 2 Verbal .poly 3. 4 Half e ms 5. T r i b u t e 6 Voided e s c u t c h e o n f , W r e a t h e s ( H a w a i i ) y/, 20 27 3 0 4 2 A b 4 8 1 1 2.2. 34 M a r s h y m e a d o ws 35 Fail to hit 36. Orient al n u r s e 37. C o v e r w i t h a s p h a l t 39 Ma s t 40. U n i t s of electrical t c a p t a n c e i 1 8 3 3 4 3 % % IO 4 H 13 , f lb I S % 2 ^ / / / 29- l l % 31 3 2 % 3 4 44 4 5 W f . U i % % f A l p h a G a m m a De l t a . T h e A u s t i n C e r e b r a l P a l s y C e n t e r is t h e o n l y o n e in t h e s t a t e whi c h h a s b ee n a b l e to c o n t i n u e s u p p o r t e d o n l y b y lo­ cal f u n d s a n d aid f r o m l ocal o r g a n i z a t i o n * . I t is looked u p o n as a mo d el by o t h e r c o m m u n i ­ ties. C a m p u s C h e s t it one o f t h e s u p p o r t i n g local a g e n c i es w h ic h k e e p t h e C e n t e r o p e r a t i n g . AH o f t h e C e n t e r ’s ser vi ces a r e o f ­ t o s t u d e n t s . U n i v e r s i t y f e r e d e x - s t u d e n t s h e l p e d it. It« d i r e c t o r is a U n i v e r s i t y p r o ­ f e s so r . to s t a r t A c o r r e c t i v e speech g r o u p o f six g t u d e n t s is s p o n s o r e d by t h e C e n t e r . By s h a r i n g t h e i r i n d i­ v i d u a l p r o b l e m s t h e y a r e a b l e to h e l p J o y o t h e r , G r e e n , o n e o f the s t u d e n t s p a r ­ t i c i p a t i n g in this p r o g r a m . e a c h sa ys t r a i n i n g o f H e also is a m e m b e r o f t h e Y o u n g A d u l t G r o u p which h e l p s t h e the y o u n g e r m e m b e r s o f t h e c e n t e r . T h e y also g i v e p a r t i e s , w i e n e r r o a s t * , a n d p l a n c e l e b r a t i o n s t h e C h r i s t m a s , E a s t e r , a n d T h a n k s ­ g i v i ng hol i days. f o r C e r e b r a l p al s y used t h a t t o be s o m e t h i n g j u s t h a p p e n e d a n d t h e r e w a s n o t m u c h to do a b o u t it. T h e v a ri o u s t y p e s o f p alsy a r e ail c a u s e d by i n j u r y to the m o t o r c o n t r o l a r e a o f t h e It m o s t l y co me s b e f o r e , bra i n. d u r i n g , o r j u s t a f t e r b i r t h , b u t an in a d u l t s. a c c i d e n t c an c a u s e it T o d a y c e r e b r a ! palsy is b e i n g t r e a t e d . Y e s t e r ­ d i a g n o s e d a n d d a y ’s h o pe l e s s l y lost a r e t o d a y ’s u s e f u l c i t i z e n s . U n i v e r s i t y s t u ­ d e n t s a f f e c t e d by it wish t h a t t h e y e a r l y h a d is n e c e s s a r y t o t h a t t r e a t m e n t be m o s t e f f e c t i v e . Thi s t r e a t ­ m e n t is a v a i l a b l e to t h e c h i l d r e n a t t h e C e n t e r now. had t h e T h o se s t u d e n t s who r e m e m ­ b e r J o e y G a u l t , who g r e w u p rich in c h a r a c t e r , b r i g h t in p e r ­ in m i n d , s o n a l i t y , a n d q ui c k r e m i n d e r o f n e e d no f u r t h e r w h a t c a n he ac c o mp l i s h e d in t r e a t i n g c e r e b r a l palsy. d 35' Sh 37 d 39 % % 4 0 41 V e n t e d T H E D A I L Y T E X A N C L A S S I F I E D A D S "nxSJS"* Lost and Found Special Services Typing *10. 00 R E W A R D — Gold in vic in ity ol G r e g o r y . E n g r a v e d . " J * c k , s e n t i m e n t a l v a lu e . 1 0 - 1 - 3 4 , ” fo otb a ll l o s t F - P - H - S , Cal l 2- 3 2 5 8 . L I G H T B L U E G A B A R D I N E t i p p e r J A C K E T S P O R T - f r o n t - e l a s t i e b o t t o m . in pocket *. L o s t P a i r black d r e s t g lo ve s on c a m p u s N o t i f y Van B e n d a 7 - 6 1 6 8 . H I G H E S T P R I C E R FU R U S E D c i v ilia n a r m y c o w b o y f u r n i t u r e , m is c . Will c o m * o u t . c lo t h i n g , sh o es . a n d ho o ts , P h o n e 6 -5 9 8 4 G U A R A N T E E D S E W I N G BY S T U D E N T 1105-A B r a c k e n r i d g e A p a r t m e n t * . P h o n e 2- 6305. J o e C o le m a n . W I F E . M rs. s i t y 2 - 4 9 4 5 . E X P E R I E N C E D ; THESES, e tc U n i v e r ­ Ri t chi e. n e ig h b o r h o o d . M r * . P A R T Y - S M A R T n o v e ltie * . ta b le d e c o r a t i o n s , a n d P i n a t a * ' m a d e t o o r ­ d e r f o r a n y p a r t y m o t i f . M ad * by C r a f t Sp e c ia lis t. P h o n e 7 -8 9 6 4 . fa v o r* , H A I R C U T S — 76* S t a c y ’s B a r b e r S h o p 2502 G u a d a lu p e . S E E O U R C O M P L E T E M E N S A N D W O M E N ’S C u s t o m t a i l o r e d a n d r e a d y - t o - w e a r c lo th in g . W h e r e to buy A L L n a ­ a d v e r t i a e d m e r c h a n d i s e di r e c t , ti o n a l l y ( l i e r S A L E S A G E N C Y . 100. 000 i t e m s . S T A R 18. 50 m o n t h E L E C T R I C , T Y P E W R I T E R S r e n t r e b a t e on S a v e th e a ia p a p e r a nd c a r b o n . B e r k m a n a , 2234 G u a d a lu p e . 6 - 352 6. W e de l i v e r 1 5 ' , f or T Y P I N G — 21 0 8 p h o n e 7 - 8 2 0 6 - S w i a h e r S t r e e t — T a le - - Mi s . Wel ch. T Y P IN C ; d o n * in m y h o r n # : Call 68-8 6 4 6 , Mr*. Don H u n t e r T H E S E S , D I S S E R T A T I O N S , ( E l e c t r e V ^ m s t i c ) . D ic ta tio n . C o a c h i n g . Mr*. P * t - m e e k y. 6 3 - 2 2 1 2 Use Th# Classifieds 2011 S P E E D W A Y P H O N E 7-7 6 6 4 T Y P I N G , THESES. O U T L I N E S . E v * r n » « a n d S u n d a v a . 6 -9 6 6 1 . I - ii I sr the Texan lllassif ieil Ads — By W alt fo lly Crossword Answer M O M /KH YOU SAY Y O U P /v r MlZ SNOOK UP AN' J SAW you WITH MY OWN M A C IS T Y * M v O F JEy £ M A L L , R a g g y - p i n e COULDN'T OF 9BSH AAM— 4 X M A r M S M P . t e Z R i F IM C X . LOO LY P O O P S ! J a u m * fb O L V k h o o p s . $£*?TH)*<3Tf?AN66£tt GrTTIN* YOU A BAP NAME. STMAUM C r\ J f f ! M W * ' G//ri$—you B B T J e s s AVOID A B A P H AM B B V GATCHIN' UP TO THE RASCAL IAN' YOU BITED OFF The. CAMPY \OF LOOLY Poop. * A S P * e e e y { K A \& e . V SS SM M U ....PAM AS M il 'MAM'SELLE I* COHCZZNBP, I C A N T 3 A Y T H E REPUT­ ATION WOULD B B A M ttJtP M N . Of i o u ii n a u h □□El a n n a □ H i i d F i n n a n b u Q u a c i n e H OM M E) U H U H Q O B H H C J a u m a il u a u m atJuaM u B e a t i B U Q E H 1 t i U M U U f t U U E J n u s i u a b u s j d f i jB D e a e u a a a u a s i a n ficthm ase: C^uotabie (piloted Pogo A d e g e n e r a t e n o b l e m a n , o r o n e t h a t is p r o u d o f hie b i r t h , is like a t u r n i p . T h e r e is n o t h ­ i n g g o o d o f h i m h u t t ha t wh i c h is u n d e r g r o u n d . — B u t l e r W h o e v e r s e r v e s his c o u n t r y well h a s no n e e d o f a n c e s t o r s . — V o l t a i r e N a t u r e ii o f t e n h i dd e n , i o n i c - t i m e s o v e r c o m e , »eidom e x t i n g ­ ui s he d. — F ra n cis B ae on *85 111* Gay and Lively'54 Symphony Plays Today Is TSO Theme Holmes's Works Included T he man who w ill w ave the baton before the S a n A ntonio S ym p h o n y O rchestra W ednesd ay has also w aved his baton before tl:e Chicago Sym p hony, the M in­ neapolis Sym phony, Italian Bro a d c a stin g Sym p hony, the D en­ v e r “ U n d e r the S t a r s ” series, the “ Pops” Esp lan a d e, and Boston the N B G orchestras. the li e is V ic to r A lessan d ro , con- f]ucto r o f the Sa n A n to n io Sym phony since the death o f famed condu ctor Max R e ite r, close friend and associate of A lessan d ro, in 1951. The evening concert w ill begin W e d n e sd ay at G re g o ry G ym . A d ­ tax mission holders w ill be adm itted free. No sm oking w ill be allow ed except in the lobby. is $1.50. B la n k e t A lessandro attended Eastm an College and received a degree in com position and conducting. N ext he studied at the Royal S a n ta C elia A ca d em y in Rom e and th# M ozarteum A cad em y in Salzburg. D u rin g this tim e he w as a w a rd ­ ed a special fellow ship to stud y music at the A m erican A ca d em y in Rome. Upon his re tu rn from E u ro p e , w hen he was 22, he became the dire cto r of the O klahom a C ity Sym p hony, where he stayed fo r tw elve years before com ing to San A n tonio. A n h on orary doctorate o f music in 1948 was conferred on him by the U n iv e rs ity o f Rochester. W o rk s to be played by the sym phony w ill be “ A d agio and A lle g ro ,” w ritte n by P a u l Holm es, a fo rm e r student of the U n iv e r ­ s ity ; “ L a V a ls e ,” a choreographic poem by M a u rice R a v e l; and R ichard Stra u ss's sym phonic poem “ K in H eld en leb en ,” which s h o w s “ A H e ro ’s L if e .” Reyes to Solo With Symphonette THE DAILY TEXAN Wednesday, Nov. 12, 1952 Fag® 5 Familiar Voices to Sing Leads For 'Old Maid and Thief M a n y stars from “ Die Lieder- j Auditorium . rnaus” w ill sing W o rk sh o p ’s production o f Old M aid and the T h ie f” Thurs- w ill sing the day, F rid a y , and S a tu rd a y at Hogg Todd. H elen Blo u n t w ill play t h i Pinkerton. part of Miss T odd’* maid, L a e tit ii, Genevieve T a lia fe rro , contra!- and D oyle Sm ith w ill be the thief, “ The to and associate professor of voice, Boh. M a rth a A n n M artin, soprano, lead role o f Miss w ill be M iss T odd’s neighbor, Miss the Opera in Trio s Chamber Music Delights UT Audience Jo h n \ d and B y J E R R Y R A F S H O O N Joseph Collins. L it t le known w orks o f M ozart perform ed the vocal cham ber mus- that have even been u n fa m ilia r ic that M ozart had done but fo r to N ew Y o r k ’s sophisticated music which he had never received much critics, w ere so uniquely re fre s h ­ recognition. They did it in such ■a way, adding humorous actions ing th a t th ey delighted the a u d i­ rich and ence of the M ozart T rio T uesday voices, that they made these w orks night in R ecita l H all. enjoyable to m any who are un­ fa m ilia r w ith chamber music. The trio, consisting of expressions th e ir Isolde baritones soprano, Sehm , and to Asked w hy they sang only the little known pieces of M ozart, M r. Collins said these numbers wore the result* of their research in in the L ib ra ry of Congress W ashington. W ritte n by Gain-Carlo M enotti, this one-act opera is a part of th* E le v e n th A n n u al F in e A rts F e s ti­ val. M en o tti '.- “ T h e T elephone” also w ill he p r e s e n t e d , w ith Miss M artin and W esley F lin n singing the leads. A lexand er von K reisler, profes­ sor of conducting, w ill direct the production, w hich includes the mu­ te of the U n iv e rsity Sym phony O rchestra and Chorus. The pro­ gram w ill begin a* 8:30 p.m. each night. Sem i-tragic undertones are pre­ “ The Old Maid sent throughout and the T h ie f.” A lonely old maid (M iss T odd ) and her maid ( L^aeti- tia ) allow art a ttra ctive tram p to spend the night. The tram p, an escaped crim inal, fills such a void in the w om en’s so litary lives that th ey prolong his visit, even robbing a liquor store to satisfy his thirst. The opera closes with the maid and the thief running off together, leaving Miss Todd to return to her deserted home. to th at favor music The baritone said that Mozart is the only composer whose works could ju s tify the trio's devoting their entire repertoire to. M ozart seemed is two baritones and adaptable to a soprano. “ The Telephone’’ is a du et w ith two lovers, Ben and Lucy, Ben is a nervous young man determined to propose to hts sw eetheart, but the in te r­ rupts him ju s t as he begins to ask these the big question. A f te r unsuccess- art had probably w ritte n numbers in his home and fo r his tele­ own enjoym ent. It was only a fte r phone, he retreats to the nearest extensive research that they were phone booth from where he makes uncovered for recital u se . Mr. C ollins explained that Moz- his proposal. H e is accepted. f u l l y com peting with telephone co n tin u ally the DANCE in FORT WORTH SAT. N 1 T E - N O V . 15 WELCOME TEXAS Gay 'Paris '90' lo Play in Austin A u s tin ’s second leg itim a te B ro a d ­ the season, w ay road show o f C ornelia Otis “ P a ris ’90,” w ill have a one-day engage­ m ent at the P a ra m o u n t T h e ate r N ovem ber 20. S k in n e r’s The p la y is a full-length drama centered around the co lo rfu l w om ­ en of the T o ulo use-Lautrec period of the N in eteen th C e n tu ry. Miss S k in n e r, ’90,” departs from her tra d itio n a l s tra ig h t roles and sings, several songs from a special m usical score. in “ P a ris This road show w ill be given ex­ a ctly as it w as presented on Broad w ay, an unusual fe a tu re fo r road sh o w s . M iss S k in n e r w ill play the same role as in her three-month engagem ent a t the Boo th T h e ate r in N e w Y o rk last spring. The show previou sly played in Boston and throughout the Ea s t. M a il orders w ill he fille d upon receipt of checks payable to the P a ra m o u n t T heater. T ic k e ts are $3.90, $3.25, $2.60, and $2. GREG SCOTT “ SEZ" D A N C E LESSO N S SH O U LD BE FU N the to dance at G R E G S E Z — le a rn in g G R E G S C O T T S T U D IO is a T R E A T and not a T R E A T M E N T . I f you need a R x see a doctor and not a dance studio. O u r business is D A N C E L E S S O N S A T S E N S I ­ B L E P R IC E S . The most a new student can spend is $14,95 for 5 P R I V A T E L E S S O N S . M oney back if not satisfied. GREG SCOTT STUDIO 5 P R I V A T E L E S S O N S 14.95 NM C A SIN O L A K E W O R T H Phone ED-9000 S o u t h w e s t ^ L a r g e s t B a llro o m The famed C uban violinist, A n g e l Reyes, w ill be guest soloist in a concert presented b y the San A n to n io Sym p honette at Music R e c ita l H a ll W ed n esd ay, 4 p. rn. The guest professor of violin a t the U n iv e rs ity w ill p la y Moz­ a r t ’s “ V io lin C on certo, No. 3 in G m a jo r.” In add itio n, D r. V icto r A lessand ro, Sym p h o n ette conduc­ to r, w ill direct w orks b y Purcell- B a rb ir o lli, Strauss, and R a ve l. M r. Reyes is a n a tive of Cuba and son of the w ell-known Cuban com poser, Angel R e y e s ('am igo. H e made his f ir s t appearance when tw elve wdth the H a va n a P h il­ h arm onic and won a fir s t prize. In 1932 Reyes g raduated from VICTO R A LESSA N D R O the P a ris C o n se rva to ry w ith the highest honor co n ferred by that school. H e made his debut in the the U n ite d Sta tes in C arn eg ie H a ll in 1941. As a soloist he has had extensive Eu ro p e an five C arnegie H a ll recitals, and been engaged w ith the Phila d e lp h ia Sym p h o n y O rchestra, N ation al Sym p h o n y O rchestra, and N ew Y o rk Ph ilh arm o n ic. tours, E u g e n e O rm andy, conductor of , P h ila d e lp h ia Sym p hony described M r. R eyes as “ one of the greatest violinists livin g to d a y .” ‘Follies and Champagne’ Produced for Bryan AFB “ Fo llies, Cham pagne and P a r is ” w ill be carried by the C u rta in C lub to B ry a n A ir Fo rce Base N ovem b er 21. Music by Texan Pleases Audience B y J A C K W A L K E R w ith exuberance and dem onstrat­ M usic fo r T e x a n s — composed by a Texan . . . . and the old adage that “ nothing interests Texans like. T exans,” was seemingly w e ll­ founded follow in g thr third con­ cert of the F in e A rts Fe stiv a l Tuesday. T he small group of music-lovers who m anaged to squeeze into the R a re Books Room now should have more reason to agree with critics that D r. C a rl V e n th , Texas com- poser-conductor, has been a lead­ ing co n trib u to r to T exas’ present cu ltu ra l stature. ed am azing volum e and resonance on the higheh notes. The “ Sonata in C M in o r” closed the Venth recital. ★ C a rl V enth has served as Dean of the Fin e A rts D epartm ent of Fo rt Texas W esleyan College, W o rth ; he organized the Fo rt W o rth Sym phony O rch estra; and he has w ritten grand operas with the theme on T e x a s . He died in San A n to n io in 1938. T uesday’s concert wrought to- The original musical was writ- ( g ather fiv e yo ung women musi- interpretation of th e ir jn 306 E . 6th S t. P h . 7-0211 I R I S 'La Ciudad Perdido' Martha Roth Roberto Romana tcn b y Jo e H o ffm a n , F r a n k Mise- cians man, B e r t W e d , and M a u rice Sehaded. Songs have been adopted fo r the show. B e tty Bu n ch , H elene Bo a tn e r, and G eorganne Shaw are Choreo­ graphers. W ise m a n said brass m usicians w ere needed fo r the show arid that anyone interested could call him a t 8-7385. 5601 0 A11 AV MONAY 6400 BURNET ROAD L~ . Cl U E E N NOW! DOORS OPEN I 1:45 * B U R N E X at v K <*eL T E L E P H O N E 5-6 933 ‘WALK EAST ON BEACON’ G e orge M u r p h y V ir g in ia G ilm o re —PLU S--------------- ‘Hotel Sahara’ Y 'o n n e D e C a r lo P e te r U s t in o v F I R S T S H O W 6:3 0 TOP-HAT MUSICAL HIT! J ® My Mutton "Te c h n ic o l o r 4* Ralph MECKER i m M ST On E U A M K MELODRAMA IF M TCK0CKS CAREER' ak Mojai im S gravl .OCKWOOO I A ’AUL LUKAS V V ax nm *mrm rn wrai araca* APITOL 25c till 5:00 UNfVfftfAt MsirttHATIONAi ftCH'tf ! ics, V e n th ’s more fam ous works. The program opened w ith a “ T rio fo r P ian o , V io lin , anti (e l- in ; lo.” T his four parts w ritte n by Venth a fte r he was inspired by the beauty of the N o rw eg ian fjord s. is an arrangem ent The cellist, Miss P h v ilks Young, carried the subtle melody of the pastoral com position with extrem e interspersions precision. V ib ra n t I of piano and violin added depth to I the theme of n a tu re 's simple beau- i ties. The S c h e r z o ( T h e W a te r fa ll) contained some o f the most live ly music of t h e T rio . j M iria m W agner and Ruth H ow ­ ell A u b re y , pianist and vio lin ist resp ectively, rounded out the trio, F o u r o f Y e n th ’s songs were sung by the in terp retive soprano, C lare A lic e Conner. She presented ; the only vocal p art of the concert Pryor lo Emcee IV Demonstration | S t a f f and student? of the Uni- I ve rsify television departm ent w ill j dem onstrate methods of a te le v i­ sion broadcast S a tu rd ay at 8 p. rn. in R ecita l H a ll a fte r the Fin e A rts F e s tiv a l radio broadcast. U sin g equipm ent from station K E Y L o f San Antonio, the d e p a rt­ m ent w orkers w ill show how and w here pictures a ie picked up and how they reach the screen. O ptical effects through video techniques, j such as producing rain w ithout w ater, w ill be shown by super­ imposed pictures. cast “ C a ctu s” P r y o r of Radio S ta tion K T E C w ill be m aster o f includes cerem onies. The B e n n ie N ip per, Ja n e Raines, Jo a n Sm ith, D ick K irsch n er, Ju lia B e a ll, \ M a rg a re t G ra n t, Oscar Met rac- ken, A n g ie E s k in , and Ben D iT o sti, pianist of the San Marcos A ir Fo rce Base band. Dr, J . C. Gtos- assistant professor of skreutz, , physics, w ill dem onstrate a fu n d a ­ m ental princip le of nuclear phya- Helen Snook is director of the show; l i e d Noble, assistant d irec­ t or; J u lia Be a l!, production m a n - 1 a g e r; and E . R. N orris, assi: (a n t professor o f dram a, producer. E d w in C a n tre ll, M artin B ^ k , I C harles aDunn, and M ary D anirel ' a r e in charge o f scenery; M a rily n Rupe, m usic; S h irle y M c B rid e , .Martha A lb ritto n , and M artha I S h illito , costum es; H ow ard Bil- brey, lig h ts; Bobbie Dawn Bone and Sid Sm ith, house and pub­ lic ity ; and Jo h n n y B a ria , P h il M ille r, and Ja n e t Green, proper- T H E D U P O N T DIGEST for M .E.’s Du Pont's manufacturing side offers opportunity to mechanical engineers The young m echanical engineer in ­ terested in production finds plenty of opportunity at Du Font. H is skills are in great demand because so m any of t his Com pan y’s products are made in equipm ent which must operate continuously on autom atic controls. More titan h alf of D u Font's M .E .’s are currently engaged in some phase of production work. There are three main categories. I. M A IN T E N A N C E S U P E R V IS IO N . R e ­ sourcefu ln ess and in it i a t iv e are needed in men selected for t his work. Among their many duties are the scheduling of preventive m ainte­ nance and emergency repairs to m ini­ mize down time, suggesting equip­ ment im provements to reduce tFie m aintenance load, and estim ating costs of changes or m ajor repairs. N orm ally, the supervisor estab­ lishes m aintenance procedures, d i­ rects transfer of personnel from one group or area to another, and assigns duties. He sets up office and field work methods and controls the sup­ plies o f spare parts and stores. T h e im portance o f this work is emphasized in some Du Font plants where more men are needed to m ain­ tain the equipm ent than to operate it, A t one plant, the division m ain­ tenance superintendent, a man with several years experience behind birn, is responsible for 1,500 pieces of equipm ent and IOO miles of pipe. He has 120 men under him , including IO foremen. 2. P R O D U C T IO N S U P E R V IS IO N . ! >tlier m echanical engineers at Du Font their knowledge of mechan­ use ical equipm ent in solving production problems. They must see that raw m aterials are on hand, that maxi­ mum yields are obtained with m ini­ mum loss, and that the products meet Jo s e p h C o lle n J o a n F o n ta in e F i r s t S h o w S t a r t s a t 7 p rn. ‘SEPTEMBER AFFAIR’ — A L S O - - ‘Mask of the Avenger' R ic a r d o M o n ta lb a !! Jo h n D * i» k F i r s ! S fin w S t a r t s a t 7 p m, ‘A GIRL IN EVERY PORT’ G r o u c h o M a i * W i l li a m B a n c h a 1 ties. M a n * W i l s o n — A l . 5 0 — ‘Honeymoon Lodge' D a v id R iu c a H a r r ia t H illia r d I I MONTOPOLIS ° e d J i , i i M M = m ‘SCARLET ANGEL’ Y v o n n a D « C a r la R o c k H u d so n — A L B O — ‘At You Were’ J m S a w y e r W i l l i a m T r a c y F i r s t S h o w S t a r t a a t 7 p m. ‘Thief of Bagdad' starring S A B U Guaranteed WATCH REPAIR KRUGER’S 2236 Guadalupe PRO M PT SERVICE Production su p erviso r T . B. K e ll y (at l e f t ). B S in M E., Cornell, checks bagging a n d s h ip p in g schedule w ith o p era to r. J, O. McHugh (at right), B S. in M . E . , R ochester '50, a n d d ra ftsm a n d iscu ss w orkin g d r a w i n g s fo r p la n t eq u ip m en t im p ro vem en t. rigid specifications. In addition, they must train men in proper equipm ent operation and m aintain good person­ nel relations. One area supervisor, also an ex­ perienced man, usually has charge of from 125 to 150 people, including 6 to IO foremen. ((••p in g com pressors m to p ru n n in g co n d i­ tio n is a ty p ic a l m ain tcn an ce-grou p problem . 3 . P L A N T T E C H N I C A L . O t h e r M .E .’s at Du Fo nt are assigned to the teams of plant tec hnical mon re- kI>orisible for process and production improvements. In this work, they helj) solve problems on machine de­ sign, strength of m aterials, control in- strum ents, packing materials for high-pressure equipm ent, etc. A ctu a lly — in m aintenance, pro­ duction and developm ent—the pos­ s ib ilitie s are alm ost u nlim ited a t D u Font for the M E . who likes the m anufacturing side of industry . H A V ! YO U •ahrn " M e c h a n ic a l E n g i­ neers a t D u P o n t ” ? 32 page* of fact* ab ou t o p portunities for m echanical en­ gineers, Fo r copy, w rite: 2521 Ne rn our* B u ild in g , W ilm in g to n , D elaw are ZO n D 003'Z 7< 3H 7e3< U C 7& BETTER THINGS POR BETTER LIVING . . . TMK OUGH CHEMISTRY Liston to “ Csvalcsds of Am *net,'' Tutsdsy Mights oa MBC— S *t It Evtry Othsi w*da*sdsy on MBC IV • A Casting to Begin Tuesday at 8 liv e ly ” in how N ora “ (>ay and \ Lyn n G u rn ey, re c e n tly selected eomposer and d ire c to r o f the mu- lie fo r the 1953 comedy “ Tim e Staggers On,” describes the show. A fa ste r pace than usual w ill pervade this y e a r ’s production, sponsored fo r the fifteenth year by T heta Sig m a P h i, professional, journalism fr a t e r n it y for women. The script, com pleted except fo r changes the usual needed a fte r re h e arsa ls begin, c a r­ ries out a “ C in d e re lla ” theme in which a lonely co-ed suddenly becomes the cam pus queen. last-m inute Casting w ill begin Tuesday at a p erform ers’ m eeting in the M ain Lounge of the T ex a s Union at 8 p.m. Thus fa r only one perform er has been selected. is Bernie B ro w n , pantom im ist. Ile M ain ch aracters needed include a good-looking cam pus wheel; a vain, b e a u tifu l another p re tty g irl for C in d e re lla ; and the male editor o f the campus news­ paper. T here are also many other parts availab le, m ostly comic. co-ed; assistant professor “ Past experience is not abso­ lu te ly n ecessary,” said N orris C. of Davis, journalism and sponsor of Theta Sigm a Phi, “ b u t all members of the east should be able to sing.’’ H e also w elcom es any talented mu> cal groups fro m campus or­ ganizations, so rorities, and fr a te r­ nities the Tuesday meeting. to come to Rehearsals w ill sta rt Novem ber % \. The show, directed by M im b illa r d K in n e y, w ill be presented Ja n u a r y 8, 9, and IO. PARAM OUNT^ n * i intl I IT W A S A L L P A R T O F B E I N G F R I E N D L Y . . . U N T I L G E O R G E OVCRD/D rn UsrrWf ANNE MACDONALD BAXTER CAREY with CECIL KELLAWAY Plus G O O F Y C a rto o n & News S T A T E - RICHARDCONTE VI VECA LINDFORS wan BARBARA BRITTON HUGH O BRIAN PLUS! C A R T O O N N E W S “ Man W ithout a C ountry1 Varsity; raumtj F I R S T S H O W 2 P.M . A Return Engagement of ‘PETRIFIED FOREST” LESLIE H O W ARD BETTE DAVIS HUMPHREY BOGART — A picture everyone will went to tee again! I F I R S T S H O W 6 P M. R A Y B O L G E R "Where's Charley!" C O L O R B Y T E C H N I C O L O R T H E D A H Y T E X A N Wsdnesday, Nov. 12, 1952 Page 6 South Central Texas Club Meets Tonight in Union T h e S o u t h C e n t r a l Texas* C l u b will m e e t W e d n e s d a y a t 7 p.m. in T e x a n U n i o n $ 15. F o r e n s i c * will have a n i n i t i a t i o n \ \ e d n e s d a y evening- a t 6 b a n q u e t o ’clock a t T a r r y t o w n , “ Y’L T h e r e will be a p a n e l d i s ­ cussion on “ P e r s o n a l I n t e g r i t y . ” ★ f o r p l a n s F i n a l a n n u a l T h a n k s g i v i n g ' d a n c e t o b e he l d in H a r t s v i l l e N o v e m b e r 28 will be ma d e . t h e S t u d e n t s f r o m L a v a c a , D e w i t t , C o l o r a d o , F a y e t t e , a n d G o n z a l e s C o u n t i e s a r e i nvi ted to a t t e n d . ★ ♦ D e W i t t C. G r e e r , a d m i n i s t r a t i v e t h e T e x a s H i g h w a y D e ­ head o f p a r t m e n t , will discuss “ T h e I n t e r ­ r e g i o n a l H i g h w a y ” b e f o r e a m e e t ­ ing o f t h e A u s t i n A A U W W e d n e s ­ day at 6 : 3 0 p.m. in F e l l o w s h i p t h e Un i v e r s i t y M e t h o d i s t Hall o f C h u r c h . A l p h a D e l t a S i g m a w in I me et W e d n e s d a y J o u r n a l i s m B u i l d i n g C o n f e r e n c e Room at 7 : 1 5 p.m. the T h e S p e e c h C l u b will m e e t a t the h o m e o f Mr. a nd Mr s . T, A. Rou ss®, 5 2 0 2 Shoal C r e e k R o u l e - **A T r i p to the Ol y mp i c ( j a m e s . ” y ard, W e d n e s d a y at 4 p . m. t o h e a r a n i l l u s t r a t e d l e c t ur e , wi l l he p r e - an a d d r e s s bx Dr. D. M. W i l l i a m s , t e a c h e r o f Radi o Spe e c h. Dr. Wil - s e n t e d a t t h e U n i v e r s i t y C l u b by h a m s h a s r e c e n t l y corge f r o m the Dr. K a r l M. Da lien b ac h W e d n e s ­ U n i v e r s i t y o f Wi chi t a, K a n s a s . day at 8 p m, Members and guests a r e i n v i t e d . The H o m e E c o n o mi c s Bu i l di n g was t h e s c e n e o f a n o p e n h o u s e rn. S a t u r d a y for 5 0 0 F u t u r e H o m e m a k e r s o f A m e n e * . f r o m 3 : 3 0 l o 4 p. Miss L u c y R a t h b o n e , c h a i r m a n of t h e D e p a r t m e n t o f H o m e E c ­ t h e onomi cs. a n d c h a i r m a n c e n t r a l a n d s o u t h w e s t a r e a s o f the h o m e m a k e r s , said a b o u t 1 , 6 0 0 had t h e F u t u r e H o m e m a k e r s o f A m e r i c a W e e k in Au s t i n. r e g i s t e r e d f o r f or ★ A n d r e w J . H a n fo rd has b ee n chosen p r e s i d e n t of t h e E c o n o m i c * Cl ub. R o g e r L. Bow I My is t h e new v i c e - p r e s i d e n t . H o st s a r e Mr. a n d Mrs. F r e d A d a m s , Mr. a n d Mrs. L. T h e e B e l l ­ m o n t , Mr. a n d Mrs. L e m S c a r ­ b r o u g h , Mr . a n d Mrs. B y r o n S h o r t , a n d M r . a n d Mrs. E. J. P r o u s e . C l u b i n t e r * will m e e t W e d n e s ­ d a y a t 6 p.m. in t h e T o b i n r o o m o f B u t t s Hall. Th' g r o u p w e , eat s u p p e r a t Old Seville a f t e t the m e e t i n g . ★ ★ B e t * B e t * Al pha xx a c o f f e e h o n o r i n g t h e B BA f a c u l t y in W e d n e s d a y , W a g g e n e r Hall I O U 4 : 3 0 - 5 : 3 0 p.m., give f or t h e F i r s t t r y o u t s new Riflery C l u b o f I TS A will b e he i W e d n e s d a y a t 7 p.m. a t t h e r a ce a t T w e n t y - s e c o n d S t r e e t a n d San J a c i n t o . Miss D o r o t h y T h o m p s o n , s p o n ­ so r , a n d S t a f f Sg i . C l i n e will he at t h e t r y o u t s . T h o s e w h o c a n n o t mee c ome s h o u l d c o n t a c t C a r o l e N e w ­ b e r r y , 7 - 9 1 0 3 , o r AdeJe C r a w f o r d , 2-2471. G u n s a n d c a r t r i d g e s will be f u r ­ t w e n t y - n i s h e d wi t h a c h a r g e o f f i ve c e n t ? f o r c a r t r i d g e s . S h o o t i n g will h e d o n e with a .22 f r o m t h r e e p o s i t i o n s : a n d s t a n d i n g . k n e e l i n g , p r o n e , S t u d e n t s s p e e c h i n t e r e s t e d a r e i n v i t e d to a t t e n d t h e m e e t i n g and j o i n in t h e club. * Dr. G r a n v i l l e W a l k e r , p a s t o r of in U n i v e r s i t y C h r i s t i a n C h u r c h F o r t W o r t h , wilt be t h e s p e a k e r at a F e l l o w s h i p D i n n e r a t 6 p.m. W e d n e s d a y the U n i v e r s i t y C h r i s t i a n C h u r c h . at Dr, W a l k e r will tell o f h i s e x ­ i mp r e s s i o n s on a perience.- a n d t o u r o f E u r o p e in last s u m m e r c o n n e c t i o n with T CI ? c r e d i t t o u r in r e l i g i o u s hist ory. * Mrs. M u deva: C h e r t o f f xxiii lea I t h e Mi l l e ! discussion g r o u p on “ The J e w i s h H o m e " W e d n e s d a y m o r n i n g at l l o’clock. Hide! f o l k d a n c e g r o u p will me e t , u n d e r t h e d i r ec t i on o f M a r ­ t h a H a r e l i k . T h u r s d a y a t 7 : 1 5 p.m. The F r e s h m a n F e l l o w s h i p W e d n e s d a y , 7 p . m. a t will t h e P u b lish e r W . D. D i x o n , Form er Student, D i e s W e l c o m e D. Dixon, 4 8 , e x - s t u ­ d e n t a n d e d i t o r a nd a s s o c i a t e pu b - i.sher o f t h e V e r n o n D a i l y R e c ­ ord. d i e d a t Elida, N. M,, M o n d a y of a h e a r t a i l me n t . T n e p r o j e c t c o m m i t t e e o f t h e F r e s h m a n C o u n c i l wi l l m e e t W e d n e s d a y a f t e r n o o n a t 4 o ’cfock in T e x a s U n i o n 311. D i x o n s t a r t e d to w o r k f o r t h e R e c o r d in 1925 a f t e r a t t e n d i n g t h e C o l l eg e o f A r t s a n d S c i e n c e s h e re f r o m 1922 to 1925, 5 UT Scientists Attend Academy Fi v e U n i v e r s i t y f a c u l t y m e m ­ ber* a r e a t t e n d i n g a m e e t i n g o f the N a t i o n a l A c a d e m y o f S c i e n c e at W a s h i n g t o n U n i v e r - d y in St. Louis. T h e A c a d e m y is a sel ect g r o u p of 3 4 0 m e m b e r s , all o f w h o m a r e top m e n in t h e sci ences. Tile f a c u l t y m e m b e r s a t t e n d i n g a r e D i s . J o h n T. P a t t e r s o n a n d T. S. P a i n t e r , p r o f e s s o r s o f z o o l o ­ g y ; Dr*. H a r r y S. V a n d i v e r a n d R o h e r t L. Mo o r e , p r o f e s s o r s o f m a t h e m a t i c s ; a n d Dr. R o g e r J. Wi l l i ams , p r o f e s s o r o f c h e m i s t r y . Dr. B e l i e r W , B r o n k , p r e s i d e n t is of J o h n s H o p k i n s U n i v e r s i t y , p r e s i d i n g a t t h e me e t i n g . Dr. H e r m a n J . Mu l l e r , f o r m e r U n i v e r s i t y p r o f e s s o r a n d m e m b e r of t h e a c a d e m y , t e a c h e s a t I n d i a n a in B l o o mi n g t o n . A f t e r U n i v e r s i t y l ea vi ng t h e U n i v e r s i t y , Dr. Mu l ­ ler won a N o b l e Prize. T h e U n i v e r s i t y has m o r e m e m ­ bers in t h e N a t i o n a l A c a d e m y o f Science t h a n a n y o t h e r s c h o o l in I T exas. T h e n u m b e r l as t y e a r wa ? seven, i n s t e a d o f five. Br i t i s h F o r e i g n S e c r e t a r y A n ­ laid d o w n T u e s d a y New s Briefs t h o n y E d e n f o u r p r i n c i p l e s t h e s e t t l i n g for p r i s ­ d e a d l o c k e d o n e r o f w a r issue a n d a s k e d S o v i e t F o r e i g n M i n i s t e r A n d r e i V i s h i n s k y if he w o u l d a c ­ c e p t t h e m. V i s h i n s k y t ol d t h e political c o m ­ m i t t e e T u e s d a y he w o u l d “ n o t b u d g e ” o n t h e Communist d e m a n d t h a t all p r i s o n e r s b e r e p a t r i a t e d . “ Mr. V i s h i n s k y sai d t h a t he b e ­ lieved in t h e u n c o n d i t i o n a l r e p a t r i ­ a t i o n o f p r i s o n e r s o f w a r w i t h o u t s c r e e n i n g a n d , to q u o t e his w o r d s , w i t h o u t e x c e s s . ” s a i d E d e n . in hi s v i e w " H e d i d n o t , h o w e v e r , s a y w h e ­ t h o s e w h o g e n ­ t h e r u i n e l y l e a r f o r t h e i r li ves s h o u l d be f o r c e d b a c k a t t h e p o i n t o f t h e b a y o n e t . “ I arn e n c o u r a g e d by his lack of p r e c i s i o n on t h a t p o i n t . I h o p i , t h e r e f o r e t h a t he w ill e x a m i n e my f o u r p r i n c i p l e s a n d c o n s i d e r c a r e - ! fu l l y w h e t h e r o r not t h e y a r e ac-1 cep! a b l e . ” E d e n gax> his f o u r p r i n c i p l e s f o r s e t t l i n g t h e p r i s o n e r i s s u e : “ F i r s t : T h a t e ve r y p r i s o n e r of w a r h a - t h e r i gh t , on t h e c o n c l u ­ sion o f a n a r m i s t i c e , l eas ed. to b e r e - j “ S e c o n d : T h a t e v e r y p r i s o n e r o f t h e r i g h t to b e s p e e d i l y xx a r ha* r e p a t r i a t e d . “ T h i r d : T h a t t h e r e is a d u t y on t h e d e t a i n i n g side to p r o v i d e f a ci l ­ ities f or s u c h r e p a t r i a t i o n . “ F o u r t h : T h a t t h e d e t a i n i n g side ha- no t i g h t to u s e f o r c e in c o n ­ n e c t i o n w i t h t h e d i s p o s al o f p r i s ­ o n e r s o f w a r . In o t h e r w o r d s , a f t e r an a r m i s t i c e , a p r i s o n e r o f w a r I m a y n o t h e e i t h e r f or c i b l y d e t a i n ­ ed o r f o r c i b l y r e p a t r i a t e d . ” ★ T E X A S A G G I E G R I P E S T U R N E D D O W N T e x a s A & M ’s R O T O c o m ­ m a n d a n t h a s t u r n e d d o w n m o s t r e q u e s t s m a d e b y s t u d e n t g r i e v a n c e c o m m i t t e e b u t g r a n t ­ e d a f e w . a T o a r e q u e s t f o r d o i n g a w a y w i t h p h y s i c * ! i n s p e c t i o n s a s n o w c o n d u c t e d , c o m m a n d a n t , C o l . J o e D a v i s , r e p l i e d ; ’ ’P h y s i ­ t h e Eden Offers Plan to Settle Korean Prisoner Deadlock B y th e A r e o cm te ii Prs** T h e c o m m i t t e e s a i d i n t u r n e d d o w n a c a l i n s p e c t i o n * w i l l b e c o n t i n u e d s o l o n g a s t h e r e is e v i d e n c e o f t h e c o r p * o f c a d e t s . ” H a z i n g r e q u e s t H e “ B ” T r o o p o f A r m o r e d t h a t C a v a l r y b e r e i n s t a t e d . T h e t r o o p w a * d i s b a n d e d O c t . 2 4 b e c a u s e o f r e p e a t e d d i s c i p l i n e p r o b l e m * . it a s k e d t h e f e e l c h a n g e s b e c a u s e “ w e o u r r i g h t s a s s t u d e n t s , m e m b e r s i n d i v i d u a l s o f t h e h a v e b e e n It s a i d , t o o , t h a t “ T h e i n i t i a t i v e o f i n d i v i d u a l a t A & M i s g r a d ­ t h e is e s ­ u a l l y b e i n g c r u s h e d . T h i s p e c i a l l y t h e c o m m a n d ­ t r u e o f i n g o f f i c e r s a n d s e n i o r s . ” i n f r i n g e d u p o n . ” c o r p s , a n d L Y N D O N J O H N S O N U N O P P O S E D A n o t h e r D e m o c r a t i c s e n a t o r , T h o m a s C. H e n n i n g ? J r . o f Mi s­ souri. T u e s d a y e n d o r s e d Sen. L y n ­ don B. J o h n s o n o f T e x a s f o r t h e post of m i n o r i t y l e a d e r in t h e new Se n a t e . J o h n s o n a l r e a d y ha d t h e s u p - 1 p o r t of s e v e r a l o t h e r s e n a t o r s , i n ­ cl u d i n g Russel l a l e a d e r of t h e S o u t h e r n e r s , C l e ­ m e n t s of K e n t u c k y a n d F r e a r of Del awa r e . o f G e o r g i a , So fas n o o t h e r c o n t e n d e r has t h e post , Sen, Mc ­ a p p e a r e d f o r F a r l a n d ( D - A r i z ) , m a j o r i t y l e a d e r of t h e p r e s e n t S e n a t e , w a s b e a t e n I X"' I § £&*§* ■o J FU MU t " > i ta ■" b r ‘ ,f'T ' ' I «‘,;v: :>Dv\ ,-A ‘ I I ■ C W : i'y* ’ w w H r T H O M A S C O N G E R Senior W in s $ 5 0 0 Architect Award T h o m a s C o n g e r , s e n i o r a r c h i ­ t e c t u r e s t u d e n t , w o n f i r s t p r i ze r e c e n t l y in a c o n t e s t s p o n s o r e d by t h e T e x a s S o c i e t y o f A r c h i t e c t s . C o n g e r r e c e i v e d a $ 5 0 0 a w a r d f o r his p l a n s o f a b u s s t at i on . Also r e c e i v i n g a sp e c i a l c o m ­ m e n d a t i o n w a s J o h n A. ' Feli ne, w h o w o n f i r s t p ri ze in a p r e l i m i- n a r y c on t e s t . T h e a n n u a l c o n t e s t was h e l d in Bl Paso this y e a r . Two f a c u l t y m e m b e r s , R, Gom- mel R o e s s n e r S. K e r m a c y , o f t h e S c h o o l of A r c h i ­ t e c t u r e , w e r e f a c u l t y cri t i cs on t h e p r o b l em. a n d M a r t i n o f El Paso, Bal ow in N Ho u s t o n , a n d H a r l i n g e n , J u d g e s i n c l u d e d Ca r l J. Y o u n g \ >ung ot J o h n G. Y o r k o f t h e W o o l- T e x a s S o c i e t y o f A r c h i t e c t s , am! J o h n M. T e x a s a f r o m G r e y h o u n d Bits all m e m b e r s o f t ec h n i ca l a d v i s o r , D o c k e r , Lines. T h e F e a t h e r l i t e C o r p o r a t i o n d o n a t e d $ 2 , 5 0 0 f o r t h i s c o m p e t i ­ tion. Nov. ll Declared 1952 Turkey Day Shivers Chooses 4th, Final Thursday T h e r e a r e onl y f o u r T h u r s d a y * J in N o v e m b e r o f 1952, a f a c t t h a G ' o mi t s a n y pos s i b i l i t y o f d o u b l e holi days. G o v e r n o r Al l a n S h i v e r s h a s p r o ­ c l a i me d N o v e m b e r 27, w h ic h is the f o u r t h a n d t h e f i nal T h u r s d a y t h e o f f i c i a l o f T h a n k s g i v i n g D a y in T e x a s. this m o n t h , as In m a n y y e a r s c o n f u s i o n a n d m i x - u p s h a v e r e s u l t e d f r o m d o u ­ ble h o l i d ay s . R o o s e v e l t b r o k e t h e t r a d i t i o n o f T h a n k s g i v i n g b e i n g c e l e b r a t e d on t h e final T h u r s d a y . He m o v e d t h e d a t e to t h e f o u r t h T h u r s d a y . O f c ou r s e , t h e r e a r e n o t a l ­ w a y s fi ve T h u r s d a y s a n d t h e c o n ­ fusion t h a t g o e s w i t h t h e m . L a s t y e a r p e t i t i o n s wre r e c i r ­ c u l a t e d to c h a n g e t h e I n i v e r s i t y ’s f r om N o v e m b e r o ff i ci a l holiday * 2 9 - D e e e m b e r t h e A & M g a m e wa s p l a y e d, to N o v e m b e r 2*2- 24, w h e n m o s t f a m i l i e s w e r e c e l e ­ b r a t i n g . J, wh e n T h e s t u d e n t s r e a s o n e d t h a t t h e y ha d r a t h e r h a v e t h e f o u r - d a y v a c ­ t h e i r f a mi l i e s did a n d a t i on xvhen cut class on t h e d a y of t h e g a m e . In 1950, t w o of f i ci a l d a y s w e r e p r o c l a i m e d , a n d s o m e c it ies o b ­ se r v e d both o f t h e m . f o r r e - el e c t i o n . J o h n s o n has s e r v e d as D e m o c r a t i c whip, a p o s t e q u i ­ v a l e n t l ea d e r , u n d e r M c F a r l a n d . He h a s m a d e it p l a i n thai he to a s s i s t a n t i? a v a i l ab l e. it M E D I C A L A M E N D M E N T P A S S E S T h e I e x a s E l e c t i o n B u r e a u r e p o r t e d T u e s d a y n e w u n o f f i c i a l r e t u r n s s h o w e d a p r o p o s e d c o n ­ s t i t u t i o n a l a m e n d m e n t t o s e t u p f u n d h a d a m e d i c a l e d u c a t i o n c a r r i e d . T h e t he f i nal a m e n d m e n t w a s 5 3 1 , 2 4 8 v o t e * f o r it t o 5 2 7 , 3 2 9 a g a i n s t it. t a l l y o n T h e E l e c t i o n B u r e a u s a i d n o t t o e n o u g h v o t e s w e r e st i l l o u t c h a n g e t h e o u t c o m e . A n a d d i t i o n a l 1 4 , 0 0 0 v o t e * ... f o r t h e m r e p o r t e d t h e a m e n d ­ 9 , 0 0 0 o f m e n t H a r r i s C o u n t y T u e s d a y m a d e a p p r o v a l o f t h e a m e n d m e n t d e c i s i v e . f r o m T h e a m e n d m e n t w i l l e s t a b l i s h a l o a n f o r m e d i c a l s t u d e n t s w h o p l e d g e t o s e t u p offi ce* in r u r a l d i s t r i c t * . T h e E l e c t i o n B u r e a u s t i l l h a d i t s t a b u l a t i o n o f t h e p r e s i d e n t i a l r a c e . l a t e s t c o u n t w a * 1 , 0 9 5 , 69 9 t o 9 6 1 , 13 0 f o r n o t c o m p l e t e d v o t e s in T h e f o r E i s e n h o w e r S t e v e n s o n . I - r * • I - r I ypical I exan Chosen Year's Best Folklore r j W h e r e did t h e u n i v e r s a l l y a c ­ c e p t e d p i c t u r e o f t h e t ypi cal T e x a s c o wb o y o r i g i n a t e ? W h o w o r e t h e peo p l e t h a t m a d e t h e t al l , l a n k y , b r o n z e f a c e d c o w ­ b o y a s y m b o l o f T e x a s ? I e x a n , ” T h e s e q u e s t i o n s a n d m a n y like t h e m a r e a n s w e r e d in “ T h e T y p i ­ cal r e c e n t l y s e l e c t e d b y t h e T e x a s F o l k - L o r e S o c i e t y as t h e hook o f t h e y e a r to h e d i s ­ t r i b u t e d t o its m e m b e r s . t r a c e s the o r i gi n o f T h e n ov e l , w r i t t e n by J o s e p h Le ac h, t h e “ T e x a n ” b e f o r e “ T e x a s ” e x is t e d . In his hook L e ac h tells o f t h e p e o ­ ple who s e t t l e d a n d col oni z e d t h e t h e s t o r i e s of S o u t h w e s t a n d o f t h e v a s t a r e a whi c h m a d e t h e S t a t e f a m o u s . T h e s e l e c t i o n o f a n o u t s t a n d i n g book c o n c e r n i n g T e x a s f o l k l o r e is t h e p r a c t i c e a n d in k e e p i n g wi t h G O IN G TO HOUSTON/ Express Service— 4 H o u rs 9:20 A .M . 4:30 P.M. Kerrville Bus C o . i t * L. IO Ph. 2-113S in t h e s o c i­ !922, M e m b e r s w h o h a ^ t h e i r a n n u a l d u e s will r e ­ t r a d i t i o n e s t a b l i s h e d by ety paid ceive a copy. A l t h o u g h t h e b o o k se l e c te d t h e ca s e u s u a l l y th is p u b l i s h e s was n ot in 1 9 5 2 , s a id Dr. Mo d e C. B o a t r i g h t , p r o f e s s o r o f E ng l i s h at t h e U n i v e r s i t y a n d s e c r e t a r y - e d i t o r o f the s o c i e ty . so c i et y t h e A U S T I N W E L D I N G A R A D I A T O R W O R K S SOO W 5 t h S t . Ph. 6-3733 O N E D A Y C le a n in g and Pressing N o E x t r a C h a r g e L o n g h o r n C le a n e rs 2 5 3 8 Gun da I u p . PH 6 -3 8 4 7 Patronize Our Albertisers SOPHOMORES! SATURDAY, November 15 Is the Deadline for M a k i n g Your Class Picture App ointm e n t 1953 CACTUS Make your appointment and pay for the fee in JOURNALISM BUILDING 107 OFFICE HOURS Week D a y s . . 8-1 & 2-5 Saturdays . . . 8-12 . . RESERVE Y O U R C O P Y OF THE C A C T U S N O W IF YOU FAILED T O DO SO AT R EG IST R A T IO N 1 iii!) UHUH DU I i I Mi i irn lit 111111 Hi) ii!'! im M i l UT Profs to R e v ie w D e s i g n for W a r m Z o n e s E n g i n e e r i n g D e a n W. R. ri c h o f t h e U n i v e r s i t y o f will d i r e c t a c o n f e r e n c e N o v e m b e r on in W a s h i n g t o n , D. 18-19 h o u s i n g a n d b u i l d i n g in t h e w o r l d ’s w a r m e r a r e a - . E n g i n e e r s , a r c h i t e c t s a n d b u i l d e r s f r o m t h r o u g h o u t t h e n a ­ t h e m e e t i n g , t i on will g a t h e r a t s p o n s o r e d b y t h e N a t i o n a l A c a d ­ e m y o f Science.*, to r e v i e w b u i l d ­ ing t e c h n o l o g y on t h o s e c l i m a t e s , d is c u s s w o r k c u r r e n t l y in p r o g r e s s a n d in n e e d o f r e s e a r c h . i d e n t i f y a r e a s st i l l “ B u i l d i n g r e s e a r c h t r a d i t i o n a l l y has d e a l t w i t h d e s i g n a n d c o n s t r u c ­ t i on t e m p e r a t e zones, s u c h a* t h e n o r t h e r n U n i t e d S t a t e s , ” De a n Wo o l r i ch e x p l a i n e d , in p e o p le t e m p e r a t e - z o n e “ T o d a y , h o w e v e r , vast n u m b e r s h a v e o f to w a r m e r c l i ma t es . T h e .spread t h o s e n e e d t e c h n o l o ­ peo p l e has gical a d v a n c e s in construction f o r t h o s e c l i m a t e s . ” f o r c o m f o r t a m o n g f a r o u t r u n O t h e r U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s f a c ­ ult y m e m b e r s p a r t i c i p a t i n g in th e i ncl ude Harwell c o n f e r e n c e will H, H a r r i s , School o f A r c h i t e c t u r e d i r e c t o r ; W e r n e r D o r n b e r g e r , architectural e n g i n e e r i n g d e p a r t ­ m e n t F. D aw so n a n d J , Neils T h o m p s o n , ( ivil e n g i n e e r i n g departm ent; a n d Way ne Long, mechanical e n g i n ­ e e r i n g d e p a r t m e n t . c h a i r m a n ; R a y m o n d C o n s u l t a n t T a l k s a t U n i o n g r o o m i n g l e c t u r e o f th e T e x a s U n i o n Mr s, A n n G au le y , b r i d a l c o n ­ s u l t a n t at S c a r b r o u g h '* , s p o k e o n m a n n e r * a n d th e a t t h e C h a r m o p e r m g S c h o o l at la st w eek . Sh?- a s s e r t e d t h a t “ lack o f c o n f i d e n c e is a foe of g o o d m a n ­ n e r s ” a n d e m p h a s iz e d “ t h e n a t u r ­ al l o o k ” in m a k e - u p and g e s t u r e s . H e r tip * d e ­ s i g n e d t o b u ild s e l f - c o n f id e n c e . ta l k a lso in clu d ed S P E E D W A Y R A D IO & T E L E V I S I O N S A L E S & S E R V I C E Ph.7-3846 Jus! South of G re go ry G y m N e w l y Decorated The Best Mexican Food with Fait, Courteous Service £1TYlaJtanwADA 504 E A ST A V E. Phone 7-0253 Usa tliu Llassiliuils A c a p tiv e fo r fr e e d o m ’* sa k e ! This massive, helium -filled to balloon rises clumsily float, captive, 900 feet above the Coast Guard Cutter, Cour­ ier. Carrying powerful radio a n te n n a e , to b ro a d c a st th e Voice of America behind the Iron Curtain, This is an investment in neighborliness - for without the agreement of these neigh­ boring peoples in our beliefs of individual freedom, we cannot live securely ourselves. And so the big balloon goes up to carry our message. W’e can help to make that message a true one by investing in United States Defense Bonds, hor in bonds we are pro­ tecting the present and the future of our own families And we are also building a firm national prosperity as well. W’e are keeping America strong for freedom! So save with Defen.se Bonds today . . . and get them regularly through the Payroll Savings Plan where you work. Thousands gay it’s the one sure way to save—because it saves something out of every c h e c k before you have a chance to spend it. H IR E S H O W E B O N D S N O W EARN MORE M O N E Y FOR YOU! Now safe, sure IL S. Series F, D efense Bonds p a v a n ex’e n b ette r re tu rn th a n ev er before . . . th a n k s to 3 bra nd -n ew m on ey-ea rn in g fea­ tures a n n o u n c e d bv t h e U. S . T re a s u r y . 1 . Now every S a n e s E Bond you get begins earning in terest a lte r only 6 months. It e srn s 3% , com pounded sem iannually, w hen held to m aturity. It reaches full m aturity value earlier (9 years 8 m o n th s) end the in­ terest it pays ta bigger at (be s ta r t! 2 . Every Series E Bond you own ra n n o s go on earning in terest for IO more years alter it reaehea th e original maturity d ate — without your lilting a finger! 3 . During th o 10-yoar estenaion period, every unm e- lu red bond earn s et th e new, higher in terest (average 3% com pounded sem iannually). Your original $18.75 ran now repay you $3347. $37.50 pay* heck $87.34. And ae on. St ar t now! Invest more savings in b e t t e r p a y ­ ing Series E Bonds— th rou gh the P ay roll S a v ­ ings Plan w h ere you work o r t h e Bond-A- Month Plan where you bank! Peace is for the strong. For peace and prosperity save with U. S. Defense Bonds! T b s V. S G o vernm ent doe* n o t p ay fo r th u tub ortunng TK* Tr ta ta r * D e p a rtm en t thanks* for th eir pa t n o He donation., Thti A d v e c t i n g Connell and The Daily Texan