mmm? mM'^% 1-S-, 'mt ss?•.p.•id •^-\ * h-jt^W? -— n*3h^-r--u-T"r '^h4f 0',•*','a %5gSr" Tj„ , ^ -y? ;;«j ' .-«*?»£$>>. isy> ^ k 7WWW?"'-'4 ••"; , , T«*w», Sports Editor > * \ * l» ' £AFAY£TT& Ind., Sept. 29—(SpUt-~. It.was a Fir g y tf&T Ifrf k WE * Halfback Gib Dawson paced the Texas Long­ horns],to their second straight victory ofthe ^Jpawson's first, barker <^e !iate in the VOL SI Price 5 Cents AUSTIN. TEXAS, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30. 1951 Ten Page's Today NO. 32 season here Saturday, as they tripped the* first quarter to climax a drive that begui 3y,f fv i •u Purdue Boilermakers 14-0, before 31,000 on the Purdue 30. T Jones replaced Dan Pag*Peron Hits Hard chilled football fans. • -> --'•*»*> at quarterback, and pitched the ball out to * Kf With the sun shining brightly, but with a Dawson, who went around his own $> A sharp, cool breeze blowing in from the north for the touchdown, making, it W) when h* t ti «>? diplomatic immunity. . t ^ Gloria Oil Corporation. • The plot, which Peron said in Also Ralph B. Thompson,. asso­one reason why there was no more * ..scoring." aimed at the asiwssination of him­The University's own "atom operates on the principle of a con­that reservoir is used to accelerate ciate professor of Marketing, Al­ Purdue actually threatened th* . self and his glamorous wife, Eva, beginning show veyor belt. Electrical charges are these particles ~ down a vacuum len Cain, Sales training manager, smasher" is to Longhorn goal line one time. Cen-: seemed to have strengthened his signs of a shocking life-—about a sprayed on a whirring cotton-belt, tube inside which the particles Western Reserve Life Insurance ter Clinton Knits literally took the. hand for re-election November 11. million volta worth. . and the charges are carried up to form a high-velocity stream which Company; Hubert Foster, Hubert ball Byron -Peron was nominated for;asec­More than a million volts was a dome-shaped metal terminal on is controlled and focussed. " " Foster Company, food brokers, and out of Townsend's hands at the Texas 42 in the , ond six-yeartwra at a mass dem­produced In a test by the four? which they are stored. This ter­This stream, Dr. .Hudspeth ex­W. H. Purdy, lecturer in adver­ period. The fourth Boilermakers onstration of .the Peronista Par­teen-ton cigar-shaped machine, minal serves as an electrical reser­plained, is shot, at a target made tising. ' ' , • "• GIB DAWSON began a drive that didn't end uns 7ties and the Peron-sponsored Gen­said Dr. Emmett L. Hudspeth, di­voir, and as the beit continues to up „of. the atomic nuclei whose Also R. H. Guelich Jr., presi­til they had reached the Long*;eral Labor Confederation (CGT) rector of the Nuclear Physics Re­bring charges to it, a high voltage structure is to be investigated. dent of Guelich and Boebel, In­horn 6. The bombardment will cause the corporated, realtors and commer­ ^ I last month. search Laboratory. A capacity of is quickly built up. „ The strong forward wall, along -But he had not, formally ac- Atomic particles, which are the nuclei to disintegrate. With the cial developers, Buffalo, N. Y., and four million velte is expected when with linebackers Jack Barton, Tom eepted the nomination. The delay k^fifeiinir.. •• -few.-machine's ammunition, originate completion of the machine, the Dr. Davis W. Gregg, dean of the Stolhandske, and Don. Cunningshad raised questions. Did hVreally educational institutions haveJiucR insiaethedome-iiJcrterminai.The range. oi,these important nuclear American College .of Life Under- ham, brought the drive to an end want to step down now and avoid a machine* .which, ia technically electrical energy accumulated in studies "will be extended. writeri; Dr. McGinnis and J. An­ whw^PiiirdraQuarterback "Dale problems caused by mounting in­known as the Van de Graaf Eiec- derson Fitzgerald, consulting-dean Samuels faked a pass and. tried| flation, shortages of foreign ex­torstatic Generator. of the College of. Bustiness Ad­ to run aroiand his left end. ministration. Alpha Phi Omega's mechanical real game. It's just like beingchange ^ndjpoor yields, of Argen-:Four University students help­Samuels sparked the Boilermaker Dr. H. K. Snell, Hwrding Law footbftll game made the Texas right there." ^ ing build the instrument are Wil­rence, vice-president, of a haven for football .fans attfcck, netting 114 yards on = 1 liam B. Rose, X. R. Spearman, Traffic, Union Anothw,,ian, Earnest' Salip^ a dosan eompleted passes in 22 the Pioneer Air Lines; 0. B. En­Saturday afternoon. ' > 0 said, "I always see the out-of-Robert L. Scale, and'Norman Bos­attempts. However, four of his troni. . : " - glish, prMident of Red Ball Mo­Longhom supporters watched tiwrt games by Grid-graph. It's f $46 Contributed throws were intercepted by the tor Freight Lines; T. P. K«%, the game play by play while mani­ When in normal' operation the fetter than the radio." ^ : Longhorns. superintendent of freight.produc pulations of wheels and ~ lights » generitor" is enclosed in a seven- . The APO's operating the Graph One of {Samuels' throws to" Ber­ T. Finley Robihson, 24-year-was unaMiB to get in. It was then tion, merchandise; and station ser-showed where the ball was at all o J lofi presiure vessel into which 'Werr^ Ken cWillis, AlJeiiT Tyler, nard Flowers, one of his favorit* ­ old music student from^El Paso, that he and the landlady entered viee, Southern Pacific Lines; and times. Also shown at a glance were freon and nitrogen are.introduced Kent Mellyar, Dick Adair, Charles targets, just missed scoring coun­ The Crusade for Freedom drive to prevent the machine from was found dead in his room about room and discovered the body., Robert F. Rader, vice-president of the number of downs players in Becker, Jerry Rackley, John Low-try in the third period, when 6:20 a.m. Friday. ryor was quoted as sajring that Xykes. Brothers Steamship Com­action,, yards to go, the quarter, drew to a close Friday at 2 p.m. throwing off artificial lightning. ry, Bob Brown, and Henry Easly. Flowers stepped out of bounds atwith a total of $46.41 contribu­A nuclear machine of this type Justice of the Peace Travis Robinson had seemed extremely pany. . ' , what'the play was, and the score. Most of the hunred students the goal line, just before catching ted by University.students, Arno Blakslee returned a verdict of sui­despondent recently, Also, James P. Bass, District Most of the observers of the present agreed" that the Grid-the. 26-yard heave. It had to be Nowotny, dean of men, said.. cide late Friday afternoon after Mrs. Bouchard told police that Sales manager of. the American Griif-graph were very enthusias­ called incomplete. paraffin tests by the Department Robinson was a quiet, studious Airlines; Ed F.erree, assistant to tic and loudly cheered the 'Horns grMil­lis Martin, cadet captain, afRi oRb-car ac6identj>-^^ v to-get in. and 12 in Hogg Auditorium. All tfew appointments to the ceives about 75 telephone calls Corps, most key men have beeit ler, cadet major; Richard L. Win-ert B, €armichael,. cadet captain. Miss SariSers was injured when -fyi ' Jim Alexander is president and Students writing scripts or mtt Steer Here Committee will be an­from employers. . appointed. born, cadet Captain; and Joe M. Supply officers are Thomas D. the^etfr in which she was riding,Bob Cox is" vice-president. House sic for TSO: must have a first act nounced in the T^xan :tiext Fri­Students who have field ap­ Many advanced-course students Badt, cadet Captain. i j-dfiven by University student Paul. managers are" Barrel Cox,, Ray and synopsis of the rest of the day, Kent Mcllyar> chairman, of T. Woodson Jr., cadet major, Dixon October 15 \ plications are urged to check are still being considered for jobs Administrative and staff-offi­-deGraffenried, cadet captain^jKicf C. Wagner, was in collision with •m Palmer, and Corwtn ^nderegg. play ready by the. committee, announced Satur­telephone numbers given at the as platoon' leaders and instructors cers are William W. Spurlock, ca­Weldon H. Carter, cadet -captain. a parked car on the Dessau road, gifday. Mellyar, summer chairman bureau.-Several have missed op­ for the basic students. det major; Frank G. Moody, cadet Cadet captains and company Also injured was an Austin of tii« _committee aitd recently portunities for-jobs because of Charlfes H. Morgan was appoint­Captain; and Lowell C. Wilson; are Sidney Far­man, Johnny Dove, who 'was Veappointed, stated that all appli­ comttuaiderjS B. giving incorrect numbers^ rar A. the parked car^ He cations for membership are "wel­ (A), Wilbur Foster (Bl, starfding near r-"^. WU Goes-on ^J4ere but must be turned in by "Last year part-time jobs Howard Turner (C), Allien D. was reported in fair condition Sat- come were obtained for 4,290 stu­ urday .morning. ' •" ^ / jf4' ^ ri Wednesday. Applications may be Chandler (D), Ben F. Meek (E), dents. This year the Bureau has Dove was working between two made at the Student Association James D. Smith (F), and Alvin O. secured position for 85 per cent cars stopped on the road when the Sandajr. ^ ••• • n 4:45 — Waleii Madden to speak the Freshman Council, expects; time basis. , • Theadorne -Covon, and a business Also -jCenneth W. Haun, William S — Housewarming, Powel House, to. Campus League of Women more than twenty-five -freshmen Pictures mil be taken a specific L. Hughes, J.-Lehman, to session. Milton308 "West Twenty-sixth Street. Voter's, Women's 0ym. s-applicants to work with the com­hqurs each day during tlte rest of John £. Murphy, Fred W..Patter- Mica will sponsor a mass meet­5^ — Gamma'Delta business meet­ • ? ing, St. Paul Parish Housed 5. — Home Economics Club, HEB mittee. the week, however. The photogra­ing Wednesday. jiight at 7 o'clock sojn, W. C. Thomas, Ralph Villa- reading -• New member^ of the committee phers -say that . tb«-additional in Garrison Hall . auditorium^ franca Douglas Walked, William • 5:45 -— Westminster Student FeJ­ 5 — Ballroom.r3anc? cliMs, Wo-will"work a^ .assistants' to r-egular schedule' has not, yet been decided Speakers .will be Ariio Nowotny,' W. West, and-iack E. Youpg,. : lowship stewardship dinner, Uni­ men's Gym, ^ , members and will remain in .this but will probably calP for two' Dean off ^^Lif^isr chief Cadet secon^^ftutenants 'are uThe fraternity Clique will bold •versity Presbyterian -Church'. 6_-^ HP Committee, YMCA -probationary status untilthey pass hours-daily*-*-— -^ —— founder of Mica on this( campu^ B, RUSS KERSTEN Douglas Anderson Jr , Reuben D. the KappaV — Buffet supper, NewnTaj) An­ Alpha house tonight at 11 o'clock, 7 Directors of IntejrnAtfonal an examination on health and BaiVr Students who -hav'e their pic­fiftfien' .years', ago;' and ' Bradley Cook", Leon Dodsonj R*.„ S. Fer­nex. Friendship Club, 3TMCA. itation and assist in the regular tures made after the two-hour per jjourland, ex-preside|it of the.stu­A female freshman 'taking ris,' William D, Fairchild, Jes\is*I. Bob .W h e e1 e r, chairmap, an-^ 0cBO — Talk by Jfifc Rev. Ray-] 7 . -r-Institute of-Aeronautical Steer Here inspections of local nounced, Saturday. .. ^ ,fl day schedule is closed .will be dent body and-ex-president of Spanish commented late Friday Garcia, Robert W. Roberts, Mar­ mond Taylot, cx-studeht, Wes­ ley Foundaticnv Sciences. Engineering Biiilding eating establishments.. * charged' a service fe^/ " ' Mica, now with the Attorney Gen­that sh<* was "tired from Spending tin L; Shanken, James J. Sme-Wheeler said business on' tli# 137. The Steer Here Committee v^as eral's office. • . the -day in the Romance Building" tana. and Fred W. Stolte. . agenda of^ tJi i!;» organissatibtial7:"0 —' RosU Hashaiia services, 7 — Ranger staff meeting*-Jour­organized for the purpose' of rat­Bar Exam* Are Mondajr / During the week'«£*October 1 , Also D; H. SfeVsft»,r Kimball'S: meetingihcludes el^ction of a new rHiHol PounJation. x nalism Building. local H. ing businesses according to {Stemle, secretary of the through 6 bpth groups will havei One of the Longhorn football­Wltsqn. William T. Welch. Wil-chairman and a Steering Commit-Y* 7:3& — ASME to hear Carl J theirs prices, Mtonitary" conditbns state board <>l bar examiners, has booths on the campus to inform' ers, not|ng the scant ^endoff turn-liam T. Wheeler, and James' Wil-tee for. thTs school year; -" student* ab0ut ^Mica. Wica. and out.:Friday at the airport,' wryly liford> Although he indicated ibat .eivlly Co-Op, jfiven Monda^ at 8:30 a.m. in the ss^ppftiwtgfi^^det^ijtstructorR^ate. there would be other business h* J. *J. Hoffman, Pat. Noel, Jerome addiboin^to the -el^fiOnsj" "* " ~ J " fused direct-comment-on the na-' '•! SLFEWFVJW laJiwitoat itiwI *V« WBmll *~i®? $£{*••-;vt', v-' t '-JSiV'X-l jL ?-»n f i^f,'P,0>A pT8 •<">i\ ^ V,V »is* ^vJr^ -^nVT "* C-^ ••** ? /CS^m R . -.", -nv* > > A\ £ r'T?w iww 13r§^^ xi j*K V % w{« Circus '$*$ 2s *-j. COLUMBUS, O., Sept. 29— fo Second Vfcfoiy finish third ittthe national eol-completed. 21 of 31 paseee for AUrAmerica Vic Janowie* Aba­T: HOWARD FACE ; Longhorns feel athome. stands {or • while and >e]ajv" fumbles," despite fiie Steoza' mi»­ no acore. an Ttm— Sp*ru sun Cherry added. v'w FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. Sept, ^|egiate football scramble, received 211 jrards. hut sed incomplete pass, bat on Among the Texas fans present Coach takea. They fumbled four timaa, the next play quarterback Tony, . LAFAYETTE, Ind., Sept. 29— ter coaching the Longhorns to an Purdue"* famous "All-Ameri­ three of these during poesible 29—(J¥)—Heavily favored Arkan* le scare of their lives today as A crowd of 80,78*, biggest ;they opened with a 7-0 victory opening day throng in Ohio Ma-Cjnreillo, operating from the T, (Spl.)—Purdue's Hred-up Boiler­waa Blair Cherry,'who retired af-can" band performed "1>efore the scoring drives. • -, -saa fumbled and stumbled for-4 sver the Mustangs of SMU. tory, witnessed the contest. tossed an serial into the end xone makers gava-Longhorn fans some SWC title last year. Mr. Cherry game, then sat the half otit, after "Mentally and physically we half but came back DpightiljuA' tha The talent-laden Ohioans stcuck The Ohio scoring play VH'ft anxious momenta here Saturday, attended the game with his Mo­welcoming Texas with a S{nwded< were ready;" : said Coach Price. third to batter Arizona quarter A touchdown in the second sensational one. Tht Bucks picked to Bob Joslitf, a sophomore end. but Texas' strong defense and first ther, Alton, of Dallaa. > : up • version of "The Eyes • of "We have some boys who are rug­ period on a 21-yard pass and then up the ball on a pass interception Janowicz edded the extra point. half scoring thrusts eased the ait* "Glad to aee Ed (Price) get­Texas/' ^ ged. They're not afraid. Yes, they State of Tempe, 30 to 13, before •fought with their backs to the wall on their own. 32 yard liner and, SMU could have duplicated its nation. ting a good start. He's doing a •' After the game, the band re­yielded yardage, but they dug a scant 10,000 fans here Saturday. . of the remainder of the aided by a roughness penalty, 32-27 victory*"of last year bat The Lone Star State was well-' grand job," said Mr. Cherry. peated the school song as the team down in the clutch.'* ^ ^ The spirited Sun Devils fromrepresented with a scattering of Mr. Cherry agreed that the left the field, 14-0 victors over a for sonSe butter-Angered ball Coach Prica added that he the Border Conference built up a student*, axes, and T«ans in the Longhom defense looked better good Purdue team. handling. Four times the.Mustangs thought both quarteii>acks (Dan Is. Indiana vicinity, fitting as s group this' year, and the offense about The weather waa perfect for Page T. Jones). did better 18-6 halftime lead and it remained ball fumbles and big surrendered the on on the east side of Bosa-Ade Sta­the same. He said he iraa pleased football-—temperature in tha low for Lamajr McHan, a blond and four passes were intercepted than in the opener with Kentucky sophomora triplp-Un-eater, ta' pull dium. with the team, especially two so­clear and slight Job Opportunities to halt other drives. 60's, sky; a last week. With University pennants, rebel phomore ends—Hub Ingraham breeze. , it out of the lira for the razor-^ ip v \ Moat disastrous of the intercep­Saga, Stetson hats, and cowbells, And Gilmer Spring. -Coach Ed Price felt good about Line coach J. T, King said .. backs. tions came in the 'closing minutes. the line -waa batter from an of­ with the Texas delegation made the '•.51 "It feels good to aft in the the outcome of "the battle of . McHan, operating at both quar­ The Mustangs had stopped ' ah fensive point." terback and fullback in Arkansas' fh .Ohio surge -on the. one-foot line Gib Dawson impressed coaches and tremen­ touchdowns helped allowing the bueks only four yards Prica and King with his timely dously to set tip all' of the other Humble Oil & in four downs. Benners opened a running on pitchouta and. quicks Razorback scoring, including an pass attack from his own end zone openers. 11-jwrd fifld goal by Pat Suir« r-in a valiant'attempt to square the Harley Sewell, Paul WUlianw, all. ^He also threw the key hloek RefiningCompany score. .•••'•y-Jack and Don Barton, and Bobby on a touchdown play. . . \ . . Eight times the sensational hur-Dillon received praises from the Arizona Stata covered foui1 Ra- Isr threw the ball, and eight times coaches, aa all agreed the "double­ 20-7 zorbatek fumbles in the. first half. he completed the-play. Aided by duty" boys turned in a fine job. a roughness penalty and one fop DALLAS,KEPT.29--<^-^TEXAS det backs could;holjd; the -balLlong naldi strolled through gaping holes Purdue's head coach—Stu Hol-They got one bobble on tha Arkansas 10-yard line in'"the open­ offside, he moved the ball from AAM carved out a 20-7 victory enough. :a ' in the left side fo the Aggie Hae ing quarter and scored quickly on ­ his own one-foot line to Ohio's over just made too many mistakes to Texas Tech Saturday night, 17.. " A much smaller crowd than ex­and a 12-yard jaunt by Turner beat a team likeTexas.-"Boy, they a pass from Harold Self to* end but had to work every minute pected—a bare 27,00-—turned paid off with?" the score. X 5 Johnny Allen. With 28 seconds to play he hit (Texas) hit hard^ don't they?" Henry Stollenwerck with a pass against one of the toughest Bed out to see the Aggies and Tecli­Elmer Wilson fumbled the pass- added Coach Hdlcomb.. ;. •1 Tom Sanson kicked the point; ­ Raider teams it eVer faced. Engineers sters play their first game in Dal- on the lfc-yard line, but the Mus-j back in *the try for extra point Errafic air fcinves. -but -briliiant-4as>—They—had been meeting.._an­ who will receive B. S. degree in Jinuary tang receiver fumbled when tac­more often, the Aggies scored and-Vernon • Whitakerr-stubby kled and Sherwin Candee of Ohio nually at San Antonio. Raider guard who waa to kick, both on land and in the air. How­The Aggies rolled 66 yards for recovered to halt the threat. pulled the ball out of thcs air.and ever, a combination of fumbling a touchdown the first time they ran end conver­ -Advanced Engineers, around for the and a rough, tough Texas Tech had the ball and, neyer were be­ sion. ;„ •; • •team that never* quit' kept tha hind although the Kaiders tied the Chemists, Physicists AAM scoring dowQ. * score late in-the second quarter. AAM smashed 79 yards for an •»ovomroYou»Y apparent touchdown the next time got a . holding penalty of 16 KRUSER'S on tha Dr«? Once AAM a touchdown, Even it got the ball, but as Aggie Sax who will graduate during 1952 but lost it with a fumble-in the yards couldn't"' slow the Aggies went acroM from the Tech tswr, 2236 Guadalupe Tech end sone. down on that drive, climaxed when he fumbled and Arterbujcn-^fecov- Bob Smith, the Aggie*' heralded Dick Gardemal passed from the ered for Tech. Geologists iyXT7" ~ six-yard to Charley fullback, showed greatness in Tech line ir > £ who will receive B. S. or M. S. degreei in January spurts,-but' spent most of the Hodge in the end zone; Darrow With just^^f^seconds left ^ the half,' R^ Graves slanted 63 game on the bench with assorted Hooper converted. yards tor the second Aggie touch­ You are invited to an assembly on job opportunities wrfhtha injuries. Little Glenn Lippman Tech scored on a 44-yard surg^ He to pass, bore the brunt" of the Aggie-rUh-' down. was back Humble Oil & Refining Co., Houston, Texas. Company repres­ set tip by a brilliant punt return couldn't nd a receiver -and . ran ning. game* that ground put huge by. Junior Arterburn |o the Ag­ entatives will-discuss and explain opportunist 1h all phases of around 'right-end. H&oper missed chunks of yardage when the Ca-gie 46. Jim . Turner and Pete Ri­ the Company's operations. ' ' N - the point. ­ A'msm'vji* AAM got its final touchdownDate: Monday, Ocfober 8 early in the . third, period on a mir i**ctttTv*YtvArcH hwuo 96-yard ramble, helped/along by Time: 7:00 p.m. HAVjwt e/uuuio ntfs mm a roughing penalty againat Teeh. Lippman gained 42 yards in the PmOLMTCHM&tlMOSHT Location: Inquire at office of W. R. Hudson, ' drive which wound up with Garde­ m mmBUfm/rn, Executive Assistant, College of Engineering. mal sneaking through center from Answer the two-y^ard line. Hooper con­ HtuHvwMeowm PERSONAL INTERVIEWS: After the assembly, personal inter­ verted.' —~ ' views will be scheduled for those interested in Applying for. now available. V, -NEW YORK, Sept. — Ten),, .which .long has professed sry*o&MTH K»iut,tT College campuses rumble with talk its purity in the conduct of ath­ K/mA&Mcomeo placement with the Company. \ of de-emph«$iaing football, but letics. there is no stampede to get into College organizations, rocked ;• NOTICE mmtcLewuysirm by a series of scandals, called for Additional (ports naw*—in- Humble Oil & Refining Co. the act. mH/tmiBY msumwe For every institution wanting to an "end to undesirable trends in clading Saturday's big football msmjM a« AthUtie Cotiiieil. "W«'r« Vessels; for .another. X as eUan as any of lh*M, and •NMOSKCIN* OHI REV SERVICE cUaaar than, nost." BeiS of the PLAINS Bernie Moore, commissioner of the Southeastern-Conference, said he saw no reason to get excited. Moreen Rally Toppl«s j Beaumont High, 32-12 On the range or in the city this "M. Led by elusive Delano Womack Stetson is distinctive and authen­and hard-running Richard Halli­ burton, the Austin High Maroons tic. Best of all, it's styled to keep its climbed ba«3i:...lrom-a 6-12 half­ time deficit to score more than a / good looks throughout its long life. poin^a-minut^ in the second half and liang a 32-12 defeat on Beau­ mont High at House Park Friday: 110°°'»*100°° night; Womack's effectiveness oh the •»«* wide stuff and „172-pound -Hallio burton's power through the Jnid­ m* dle accounted for 256 of the Ma­ \ > I V ---! '• At this low cost, why go ta* roon's 302 yarda gained rushing. &*s *^ Womack registered 144 from his other day withoot the convenience tailback slot with Halliburton ge|^ ting/^132. They „each scored twoal;your pirn checking account? No iouchdowna -to divide point hon­red tape; just drop io here tomor­ors Austin started the first-quarter 127 East 6th row for 5 minutes and buy a book scoring,|Womack climaxing a six­MM ty-yard?; drive with a 15-yard of JO tluiftiCtMdu. No chargc for sprint and the Maroons grabbing 9?? ah -early -leadj. 6^0. But the half«lcposiu or monthly s'ervicei ended 12-.6, Beaumont leading; Students—Youj Before they wealed, the Beau­« I7 . *1 " ira^keitt' Austin fa: ; thi8r_ Wata aa quar­brrison-di FRANK PACK . a gambling, uhpredictable offense £ * Head of Bible Dept. i;' * a f ;Ablmen« Christian College .. , raJlfe!* Speaking: Today At ; LOW,COST -CHECKING ACCOUNT "pli' UWVERSITr^VENUE -:%Mb 'W OF KRUGER'S JEWELRY BAR Allercreme Cosmeucl Y-»• f> > * »v% -iSTrfe*"* ferenee penalty in the tod sotte. ^3% A' vf£^«X ^ 5»u,4 v *-•* 3f ,cSrt^ a SSPifcx^ -r£r But this break^was erased'en tin Wt y-iif* 'Mural Musings second pl^y of. the second quar> s£>E_l i v . Ss®i8S 5 i-*_ 1 "J1 "1-1 _> """"""* PS^I^ ' $MW That w»s when (juarterback "llfl^"45#5? 4^1-Skv • $#:,$$&&!*>% i, tar. If O "• 1" % * v.i ^^ AEPi's Penetration Johnny Bordogna fumbled the t ? ball on the Nebraska eight. The ball rolled backward into the end j sons where end Wayne Martin of i TCUfellon itforthe tieingtouch­Hvf**Va ^ i's « 4 > hi u'%t Beats Kappa Alpha: H . %r «r * y *.H» * *rt 4£ j. down. H •?, OA a i H 4 -^.vW „ / 7 By JREFT HANCOCK ^ •-" 4h^ fa J • tilmM•<:.Pi iriimtar .-.:y:;--.;.* • ^ TCU eame 'right back after a ^ • * 1 short Nebraska punt with * 46­Clan A teams were evenly game. ATOscored the only touch- 7*rd march ending when Bobby maftahed fat Friday night's intra-down op s pass from I* V, Taylor , £loy4 ow from the three­ mn1football program, bat elaias to H. W, Pilgrim. yard-Una. i B iavoiMd a pair «f ran-, Sign* PhiJEpsllon's MB" team SI Before the quarter ended, TCU f'tWH'a >• away*. r*n wild Friday night to beat Phi scored for the third time after r ^ * i V i 4 % ^ t Alph^EpsQon Pi and lEapp* Sigma Delta "B", 61-0. Barclay blocking a-Tom Carodine punt on Alphatied,6-6, inaClaas A thrill­Dismukcis was the big gun of the theNebraska 29.0ntheT«ryne^ Sportscoat ^'pm er, AEPi winning the -contest on SPE attack. Dismnkes paued for play, the TCU star, Malvin Fowl-| penetrations, JWL AEPi's seore tiuree touchdowns and' ran for er, passed to end Bob Blair for the] eame on a pass from Milner to another. Thomas Thomas passed s?3«fe' seore. Keith Flowwc kicked all] I f . ' •. v'" • . rj'." . • ?v>5v Glased, midway in ilia first half* to Blanton for one acore and ran the extra points. rt. • D. D. Chandler threw to C. P, for two moce, one on » jrant re­But the fourth JVog touchdown IHadaon for the Kappa Alpha turn and one on .^n intercepted in the test period was the only one Slacks ;pass. aeor* in the second half. that really gave ' crowd ftsl Dan Wagner'led Sigma Alpha Sigma Alpha Epnlon beat Phi biggest shsra of Uujghs and-sobs. Kappa Sigma, 46»0, in the second Epsilen to a hotly-contested 12-7 The-events leading up to it atarted| victory over Phi JLappa Sigma, one-way -game of-4he-night, -H. when liebraska iumbled and TCU SAB'S first seora'cams on a lat­R. Gilmore connected for five got „ball on the 28. TCU eral and a pass. Wagner pitched touchdownpaases promptly fumbled it back to No-V'cV *£ I out to Bart, who was to the left The Dekea overcame a l2-point braska on the 20 with Nebraska From Austins several yards behind Wagner, and Phi Delta Theta half-time lead, to almost immediately fumbling it Hart hit Jones with an eleven beat the Phi Delt* in a Class 'B' back once more to. TCU on the 28. yarder for the 1*.D. The winners thriller, 13-12. Bill Clark!pasiwd This time TCU went tha distance. scored their second touchdown on to Hammon Hopkins and Robert Nebraska played without Alt*L 0-yard pass from Wagner to Armstrong for :a two-touchdown America Bob Reynolds, who waslouston. Phi Kappa Sigma scored Phi Delt lead at the half, but the sidelined with a shouldsr in jury. on i 60-yard aerial from A, M. i' came baek for two touch­However, Nebraska showed noth­ Lloyd to B. Jones. downs and one extra point in. the ing in the way of the kind of an second half to edge the Phi Delta. The C. O. Lancaster to B. W. constantly broke Reynolds into the Eugene Green passed to Mal­ Bowman passing combination was explosive offensive line that so colm Bullock, for the first Deke good for two touchdowns and a open last year,, and it ia doubtful [ score and Cliff Goldsmith pissed s. Phi Delta Theta victory oyer Sig­ that Reynolds could have staved| to Jack-Turner for tite second six ma Phi Epsilon, 14-7, including a off this licking.. Camo-Lite Sport Coat 4750 .points. With the seore tied; Gold­ safety in theirscoringr* --— smith passed^bBoHLiC fflhWiM Schtvifah Cr Shown 50% Camel Hair -50% Shietland Alpha Taa Omega beat Delta Dillon/is Du(m«H o« Pant* the winning extra pointsSigma Phi, 7-0, in a close Clas# A Phi Gamma Delta beat Phi Bobby Dillon, star punt return-1 Kappa ;Psi, 7^6, on a runbiack of er and safety man for the Orange an intercepted paM on the first and White, returned 18 punts for] play of the second, half. Jack 365 yards during the 1950 RENT mrke stole the ball on the. Phi son. " J...-; Psi's SS-yard line and sped down the sideline for the_ tally. Neff TYPEWRITERS passed to Godwin for the winning 'Mural Sclieduli point. The Phi Psi's also scored on an intercepted pass run baek by 1 month .. 2.50 Curtis in the first half. MontUjr 2 months 4.75 Acacia *'Bf' defeated Sigma Nu Touch Football 3 months 7.00 "B", 6-0, on a 12-yard pass in the ' CIMIB first half from Nemir to Fred * --S • ^ v 4 months Phi' 8l(iu £vc» Sien*'-OU. Dishong. Sigma Nu failed to ma- 7 Pi Kappa Alpha «. Sisma Alpha >p«l 11.50 -5 months -terialise a se r io n a offensive Ion. Delta Tan Dalta Kama Mirwtb .6 months .. 13.75 throat. Class A 7 pjn. 20.50 Delta Taa Delta v». Kappa Sigma. 12 months 27.00 ~Dorm_B—M. _Uarincrt CJafc, Automatic T AIM? •». Oak Gro»«. • ~ »• 8 p.m.' • . Al Iste models—Royal Ram- Phi Gamma Salta •». Delta Kappa Ep*l> | Car Washing Co. Ion. ingfon, end Underwood. P«lta Upailon ••. Alpha Tan Omntm. Chi PW v». I«inbd* Chi Alpha. . + -*:T­ 1U~K Fast Service twkt Vaccnsmed inside — SidawalU m ™Greg Scot' ' ^ Ball Room Dance S fudio / w '% i y * . * GRIME TO SHINE 205 West 9fh Dial 7-44II Above Texas Theater SSI Soath Lunar pk. 2*11(0 & Ai ^ ' c«^ 4m * <&<*} ^4 • I .J:r ...W; Added comfort yo« con't Mayfiild TwMid Coats McGregor Cord Coat g«t hi m ordinary skoe Gabaridiho Slacks Flannel Slacks IXtRA FtKXISil SOtff 5Sli These are just a few from our stock of \ hundreds of sport coats and slacks. 1 tf9 is. 're sure to find exactly what you want at the price you want to pay at— -— Jw=r L ^ < vr -^r2 mm Vr » , •£ * -' > " s, * ^ f h*1 V ) 4 ft* ^1 ^ ^ ^ V. t i rc* ^ A i I f S? ^SF-^rr-« i y £ — X » Herringbone Shetland Coats TJfa/Uutt Sdwsfah & Shown V ' *1'' » ^ , -• •* ~ '.vsSRval^jjfaft-4 *HlpHugger"Slacks "V . " J 611 Congt«M . ** i * •? -* ^'v ^ ' iw , V""VV K -By McGregor , >i"v yf s 4 -y i a t *. * v JS % ~ T.ft-,^.r •jj-«®sC t -^? r-.>­ f y«SR.50 §§8i H j\Yi .*, ,»­ * t jmrnmrn m iHfiiiyilii tfiiCcmtpM jo _ 1 „. rumpeti W. "' ' », ~ £3$ '"' 52w©eki in the year some used that editorial "we" during tbeif. these National Weeks get lost In the lives t William Allen White, Joseph Pulit­-• ";'v ' *'" "-•• zer, Ernie Pyle—more than we can men* luffile... ? an tion here. And they've done some better' -L . ,A-_. . .. •• *Hiis next week, for example, is Na- By*USSKEII3TEN the only memberof than average work toward bringinr the . ional Independent Studenti Week, Reli-Tmm J«#or ... _ tee. W« are, of course* very ton... Student life's first such act, ~ lous Emphasis Week, -and National news to you. ~ v Drawing tlw imaginary to bATo ali sach drives dafr would probably be lew aartou*,* where studentgovernmentautJ*^ the regular school yea* " ­ fewspaper Week; , What we'd" like to This isn't meant to be a loud trumpet r 5f "t°% SfiSt cit*xtdn first by you^eom^it-^ T«o» Student' AssMfe. talk about here is-National Newspaper call in praise of the fine task which news* «._ -d "Pi*?" *f fitwkrf| Week, which features the striking theme paper# have been doing. It isn't a rough job, t^ytheleast. JtaawurWag ttet h* was Life shall have the power to task, but a dad-gummed hard one, and Oltenstadentlit staaent officials brf«**. ful ,that the Student Assembly tawA repeal, temporarily, «ay "your newspaper lights the way of fhetar interests afcdi decision* aren't—g»w-fit to create such a committee provision in the Constitution or *-freedom." one that doesn't receive much thanks. at all respeeted. On the othffft because it .will take a great bur­Laws of &e Students' Ait»ocl»­ r. some hand. officials, some­from members oar There's something a bit unusual about Newspapermen expect hard University den the of tion, when In his'ophiioa the In­ times have a valid reason for tak­staff," the Dean reiterated that terests newspaper business, The publisher knocks, however, when reporting the of the Ifwversity xeqaite' ing a long-range vjew of things. during the long session all drives it, but this action shall ha valid „ ,.|Tthings you run £ paper for profit; the news and distributing some knocks of On nearly an matters, there is would be cleared through the com­only until the next meeting of the f^T^dvertiser thinks ~vou iun.it exclusively their own where they're needed—in'the no conflict. mittee. % r<< Board of Regents." The latest Of these tiffs be­ Friday, ' »v 11 _ for his business; the press agent looks " governmefit or the community^——_ Rodman commented V * * ^ ^ tween Dean Arno' Nowotny and that "the situation that exist* in "'^Ib Cleveland, Ohio,' thfag* are on it as an organ tor publicizing his Those knocks have been hard and fre­•^eomolalninr representative oT a school whose student body »• getting tough for school teachers. ^clients; the clubs and societies want to quent enough, especially in recent years, fttudeint government came "Hit supposedly sel^goyertrfng"becomes——Several dayr ^o-a 8^7~year-oId-— week M an outgrowth of the tfiree- deplorable when official has use it for their own exclusive benefit. to irritate government officials and, in­ ; diy fund-raising Crusade for Free­one housewife Was convicted of beat­ autocratic power over matters ing a junior high school prineipal: AH keep on the look-out for their names deed, to often bring reprisals against the dom, It's not a major argument, that should-be' student«ontrolled. with his own paddie because he of course, except as a matter of. (correctly spelled) in print. a press, , "I feel that my not being con­'Iti pi^^e-^ereii . that area, Somewhere 'in the middle of all that-, Each gag rule, security officer, im­ some people will argue that, it's tacted was a slam to student gov­f Tnorkish peopl|, ;. have we have the editor and pot major; ernment and, should not. go over* who the reporters pounded official record, secret meeting, ^ foughttte: Bnnltfns . thirteen In brief, here ia the story. trying to print the news fairly and ac­and tightly-regulated governmental press times in 'the.250 years since Peter­ ' Dean Nowotny, who -fills the the Great, are said, tof.sum op curately, and usually with valid inter­1release pushes the free press one more different.slot of contact man be­ Russiai^-motives in .this-eontemp­ pretations-fitting it into this complicated step toward the near-extinction,of com­/'Say, pal, how'j about a sample of yer iiandwrifing? I flunked-tween student government and' phrase: "No 3°i> -tuous Muskof jever a bourse last .semester on account of the guy sitting next to me tlnxversity^ Administration, was scheme that civilization has made of life. plete federal control. told even a half-truth, anywhere,' wais a"poor penman." asked by persons outside the Uni­ at any time." 'Until now, we (and we'd like that edi­Such controls as! listed above taken in versity to allow.Crusade for Free­ortunitied A Turk fore^gn office official dom collections to be made on the torial "we" to mean the newspaper busi-total, eventually could conceivably wipe told an. American reporter, "Your DEARGENE campus. li—nes& as ^ wholel thinkjve've been doing out the right of the people to keep in­ He agreed. Thi CWil A«ron«atie< Airoinl«tr*tlon President Roosevelt went to Yalta I -* ' about.as fair a job as possible. There In so. doing, he by-passed the need* ' Airway* Operation* and beileved hajf of what Russia formed of-the activities of their govern­ (Jtadio Operatorand Bcdio M«dut«n-said; he was therefore half wrong.. have been some pretty good men who student Campius Solicitations COm-aae« Te«ll&iei«aa to op«raU nd wto ment. That right can only be preserved thB—yeder*! XirW«r« Stsum* ta Truman went to Potsdam and be- mitteera\thre«'member ' by the unified protest actions of the vot­ up pass on ^ST^dSr —•l»Ved—«l thlyyi-citf _-Wh*t the Bus- to all canipus fund-. sians told himi that made him one­ ing public. raising drives. * ttbrjr of |J,M0 pj, Ml# JCsia-third wrong; Never believe a Mus- Since two members of that com­t«nance «3,480 V-m. So you can see how your letters, whe­ Teebnician* Ap. kof." • mittee are on the As­ ptlcsnta acleeted for employment re- no longer caiv* 12 w««k* lndoetrin*tkm training uielet \nloff ther agreeing with us or calling us un­sembly, though, he actually by­«t tb« CAA Aeroujiutieal CmWar at By BRAD BYERS It began several years ago; The passed a lone-member committee. Okl»hom« City, OkUu exp«iu« to Don't' know what , this one Is 4 principled blackguards, help carry out Oklahoma CItr *au . dance for couples only. cars from 2 ' -"Ahhh-well," continued the Bfrvfrwci -nAiOTJ jl a • • unishing a.m. to 4 edl: of them were waiters; All of them • _ Circulation Manager This, then, is my nomination of a^|n. only. / .... third president of the United not quite all,,. as low if Notjthat'B Beginning the a form of student life States, "Perhaps an editor . horns are a "buncha smoes." tor! "y'. ®*yb«-*o, Tbm' .'.thot)flckl:lBji |i»ind. Was the . Monday office houra Observance of these regulations and check the accuracy of a of the Unikersityto Advisoryi «na nmService, will lower the' female •m not as line by skirted group will once again might. • . divide his paper There being no law to re­ bo from 9 a.m. to l and 2 to S.tiitn, few more newstories. (Na­ It was, and they were pleased. chapter strain. sports from J)irector 2KV into four headings, fans as­tional Newspaper Week, Oc­ The group included the presi­chemistry, and law profs who do Who was it that said, ^ThTo^T the first, Truth; 2d, Probabil­saulting sports writers, the tober 1-8) dent and vice-president and others The Parahellenie, Council meeting has not allow smoking in their clasaes. qthLnj, cne can be sure of when a *Sick cjCidt ities; 3d,s Possibilities; 4, poor, guy would probably in student government, as well as been poatponed -from-October 1 to 4 about Monday. October 8, at ROBERT Gi CANTU JIU ^ woman gives a hand signal is Lies." write his next column from a Now question-sug­ p.m. the Kappa Harold 'Ernest Brehn, .Jean .Marcel the free student workers of the Alpha -That* honae. Except for economies and hospital we gestion number three. Sounds Virginia French, P. P. S. Four out of five doctors the window is down?". bed. Sorry, have Douy, Lee. George Union. ' ' MARGARET FECK, AssiaUnt like a good suggestion—one Garderte, Mollie Susan Gee, Edward Mor- Dean 'of Women do not smoke. , : ' FRED COFFEY Rilmore,. Sofi Edwin» >Jean They didn't complain, or eVen which newspapers are already ris Hashim, Hawley, John Ryan Knaggs, Kveiyn Kun-think, about the hours of work i carrying out. Take chapter ur.. uiccnow, Jack Kdwin .Miller. Also Mary Peters, they had put into that dance. As THE DAILY PRODUCE QUICK THE one of the -daily newspaper, Alice Richard Lee John Wendell RESULTS Rice, _ Herbert. Roberta, the floor became filled, they knew TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS . ' True. 'That would include all 'Carroll Schorlemif, Carolyn Ann Smith, Joan Lynn Smith, Charles Lee Sowell, they were going to be well pftid. the straight news stories—or, Jerry Leo Suggs, Sally Elisabeth .Tuc­•• Four hundred students Were The Daily Texan, a ttudent bewspaper of The University of Tekit, la ker, Towery, rather, the provable parts of Robert^ Lindley ajid Cecil publubed In .Auttin every morninv"except Uonday and Saturday, September Lee Young. having a good time. Apartment tor Rent Furnished Apartment Music to >une. and except, 'luring holiday and examination perioda, and. bi-weekly the straight news stories. No -a^van«**«^MMsMM«aMaaaiMaa>aaaaiiiMat«aa OB nnfumlehod. One Wrd-094 W. 19th Apartment No. 2. Living-y Tueaday and Friday by Tex«» Student i'uhlicationa,me. — room, larse. lieing-dinint room. Ul« roont with fireplace. Dining jootn RECORDED MUSIC -with lato reeordf, Newa contributions wiil b* . accepted by. telephone t'J-a473) at at the chapter two, probabilities, can. Daily Texdn Crossword Puzzle liitchen, liath,,4 eioaeta. Centrmt beating, Hollywood bed. Small .bed»oom. bath -P. A, Systems, for all occaeions.-Ra­ editorial otfxe J.II i oi at the New, Laboratory, J.B. 102. inquirio attie typt fait. Besdix.-Playsnmnda. All dios, Amplifier*. repaired to satisfaction. and kitchenette. Bills paid $85. Several cOrt^ernmB rdellven-anil od\<>rti»inii ihpuld be made in J.B. .108 (2-2473) be said to include'all informa­ACROSS DOWN 23. Superior of utilitiea pai(L ^Oeeorator furniahed. other apartments Free pick up and delivery. S-1210. ^ ' •• Opinions oi the l'estin arp tior np~c*««rtlv >>o*e of the Admhiiatration tion involving the opinion of -attractive in thia • ' 'hi' " i , ,l»i .leiiy i— . or other University oificiais" t lilPurpished ItPlatform • a monastery 8-JH9. fted RlTer at E. SJnd North-btfldln*. 271S5. -with latest reeords,'­ RECORDED MUSIC wood Torraeo. Kntered a> »econd-cia»f inalter Uc.tv0vr 18 i'J4S ai'.the Poat Offiee at experts, Ijt this case the paper with shoes 3,. Urticaria 24. Western . -NEAR MEDICAL-Center, stores, bus. P^. systems, for all occasions. Ra^„ Anotin. Texan under h* Act of March 8, IBi» labels them—"Joe Do'aks, 5. Hastened 3. Coin1 group of the- • LOCATED NEAR University. Small ef-: Colorfully redecorated sma.ll duplex's. dios, amplifiers repaired to aatisfaction. : -ficieney apartments • ASSOC IATED PRESS WIRE SERVICE . I'oremost pool' player, said 9. Novice (Sw'ed.) Society Answer Is for boys or cou-' Coaplea,' $45. $55. Utilities paid. 'Also Free-pi£knB..s«ddali*ery,JL-121<>.1 plea. All billetpaM *40 and $50. Phone-upper furnished • J . " t he A**ia.'iuUo Prem. is exclusively entitled lo the uae toi republication u Islands larger duplex, or tin* .'. ' ' t'uesdayi" YouMl find many (var.) -, 4. Note of in the days: 2-5447; Might ; farnished. ' 8.701 •. RECORDED MUSIC with latest records,' «li new* tli»ii»tcl!«» eixdited. i. .i*. oi not oUierwise credited thia 10. River ri|{iri pubU«Krr)' herein Riphti o >£ this kind of label in a news- Classified MEN:. Lait* bedroom, kit*' FOR two dio,a amplifiers repaired to satisfactioni: Duulicatiun of ail othc mattci oprejp.aUo -e«er\cd-. . upe'r. • i ll^BsstqjKed.^ -51 Auction ^ unit Dianetics chen wnd tath. Bills pntd. 811 West Free pickup and delivery. 6-1219. . • . 12. FUrnfsh 6. Antedating (Latvia} * * Ads 6th, Rear. Benre»fr.ted (nr National AHvertialng b? N»tjonal Acivertiaing For possibilities you'll find DTAN^TICS. " IJrocessinr. or-co-anditing Servu-e. Inc. Ollt-v'j I'liHHuher* Representative with 7. Finish , 26. Tie classes by ez|>«riancad certified Hub. 420 Madison Ave. New York. N.V even better labels—"Observ­feathers > 8. Molder'is 28. Blows upon bard auditor. Phonei 8-7*15 e*enin*». Lost, and Found Unfurnished .Apartment ~ Chicago — H:>«ton — Lou Angeles — San Francisco ers said there might -be'.... 14.Grow old. small trowel 31.A pointed WOMAN'S Mae 'I'Wltltg ROOM unfurnished' mpnrtment. We predict .... It was al-15. Vehicleon 11. Fuel arch . 39. Game at For Sate XOSTt plsstie passes. sUver trim, at Kentucky-Texas garae. .«•: Suitable • for office, shop or studio. iege'd." To be/ically safe, you ' runners. : 12.Soared aloft 32'. Plsentangle cards Reward. Call Non$a Harris, 8-8(04, Very good business location. Will rent 16.Tantalum 13; Bird of prey 3?. AfBrmatlve 40. Watch ZENITH PORTABLE—Black plaatie or lease. If necessary will fU3mish phooO jKySfesfc.. Associated Collegiate Press MEMBER might include the editorials of (sym.) 15. Merganser ^vote pocket . case. 1950 model. Phone il$$5, aad persooal aasisUnee. XBTO. TALK • Aii-American Pacemaket known fanatics in the "bare­ Speciet Service* BUSINESS. Mn. Tbaraw T*ybr. M 17i Bast Indian 1$. Irregular 38. Poker • 42. Masurium REMINGTON NOI8ELS8S 8 -standard. Auto Share Exponse Burean, 1806 SUBSCRIPTION RATES ly-possible" category. herb 20. Prattle stake... (sym.) . high number, *oj0d eondition, eh rORTUNE, HOLIDAY, National Geo­ ' Minimum • Subscription Three Months or will trade' for ana, air* or tak araphie, E»r* mo,--per mo. . v ( .75 -per tant part-of the newspaper. king Journal and pocket book editions 10c, Rooms for Rent 1 MATCHED SET of 8 golf irons, with » tor SSe. Comics Sc. * fer Z5e. All comic Sl.Fresh PERMANENT STAFF The page. There you » leather baa.'Used. 1 reasonable for kinds of magaafaiaa sad books for re- MEN rooms Editor-in-Chief .1 RUSS KERSTEN can find all the lies you may 32. Appendage aoick sale. Phone 72515. search work % price, We also trade; STUDENTS; Two ' with kitchen facilities. Across jboin campna. Managing Editor : BRAp BYjERS require. Then again, .you 23. Permit ARGUS C-8, 88mm. Camera and acces­Open tfl lit alrbta. A-AQ Usod -iiigt­ 917.80. Ill E. 19th. Room, private til#siaee and Books. ISOS Lavaca. 2-3338. t ^ Editorial Assistant ... Mildred Klesel might check the political 26. Book of - sories—new." Total--ralue |B0—eellina bath—$21. 8-79M sacred for $50. CaU Dick Carney at 6-2381, rsa. News Editor Marjorie Clapp - way. Dallas. rRIVATE GARAGE rodxn. Knotty ybi speeches which frequently 4. A-Bar. Fort Wwrth—$4. Corpus, Abilene, An- writings walls. Qoiet neighborhood. 8hower, in­ *2«'«y ntajn lies. _Just_riemember. f SCO >i>. HooitM—Loe Angeles. nersprin*. Gentlemen .preferred. Near -27. Ray . " Furnished Apartments Now York City—ttS. Gars and passen-Roeedale bo*. 2-4021. ' • > Amusements Editor —....... »ers to all yoor car for tntramurals Co-ordinator jeff Hancock lies. burtKe pfper iff tellm^ process a Free pickup S lJeligiwus News Editor T-'—" ,wthe-*—truth—allil-—they aaid---,J re. modertu two & Johnnie Human was 29. Greek new. For <;T Personnel Coordinator i.- t three>^boys. Urn MNinint ' room. Sidney Siegel" thftt he said something* letter With Ames and sectional furniture besu IXfESl^ClSD .XX II riu i r....... Flo Cox, Johnnie Human, This may . serve as some 30. A. variety tifully arranced. Asroek . waxed floors. able. . Mrs. Davis. 8-1237, ot cat rTubs and-Shower. $85. 2-7155 Mpunce' sort of a guidepost to reading KtlS crS $4. Cry of Wl-Jj'O . ^ k DISSERTATIONS, (Electro 1915 NUECES. Sereral attnuctire apart* Night Editors ^ Olan Brewer, Dorothy Campbell, your daily newspaper. By paid. Open r«rif;ia fiiyuis matic). DMatfcm. Coaehins. Mrs. Pot. pain ments near campus. Bills macky, 58-2212. ' -If], J° Ann Dickerson, Gene Dow, careful reading, noting qualit for inspection. If interested. Call 2-7155. 36. Disembark sttmmim-tV4 -Anna Chambers, M. E. Dars'ey fyiiig signs, you may-arrive 37. iflerry USa WHr3S ilL' TOWN AND Country. Nice modern may:-; Wanted STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE. . at the correct view of "what 38. Claws freshly decorated two bedroom aeart-•;=!£ amra W'SMmi 'tnent fpr -University boy*.-Dni»««sity 40: A^numbe.r ^xm ^.i:_"A2y-vvL ^,— --'.-•I—i CLAUDF MOiiisirF happened" that the paper is [approved. Ml E. $4th, -Miss o^jjive y &i v'sT^y.i • Man efifoWtolt T Plans.Pledging J,A­ '*?' r*TM Thompson of Alpha Delta Sigma, national .... ^ . ... . .. . profession*! advertising fraternity, Mote ftiB half a million pic-and down Chi Due sine* vVatirfjji"' ^ To Kill Tfme on it* • -2&V?* fill meet ft 7:^5 Monday night, turas of students Jn^Oielr natural hkbitat, namely at parti'es, picnics, he sewed In the Air pentf;-A$ m : Flans wiU be made few acoffee and dances, mean n lot of student ut -enlisted -manj he was sent Wf. BET** SEGAL at 7:15 Wednesday night,' in the scrapbooks fQled to overflowing through photo school, and opoifS^hhmI''JbvllAV' weU Men's Lounge of the Texas Union with reMitnbrances Of *'^te good graduation was chosen for tr*in-<;p^i timestartc^ChttM president of Silver Span. »Uni« for prospective pledges.' " :old .-tfaift:'* ed tigH ing as * photograph officer; Then ic on the Cactus when venrity service organisation. Go- Retirements for admission in-Jackj of Jaek'i Party Pictures, btit 'the' aa an officer he had to'go right W** * freshman. Now be'* a in? into hia'fift$-*etnester as « to the fraternity ere a "C" aver­took his ^A600,000tii" .ctodent pic* Oklahoma AA1 back through the »Mne photogra­ and editor-in-chief ofifce Spur, Charlie considers tiuf or-se and an interest in advertis­tare at the VWrsity Carnival < last phy school. scnrerat.i^i ganisstion the finest on the cam-ing. • ' , df ~ "That's the seMce lor you," inch routine da* pas. Ha says there is no group 'be Officers of Alpha Delta Sigma Although everyon* has heard type of work," ^ ^he said. "They don't take any­ ' ties as typing and checking, Char-would rather work with and be. are Hal Copeland, president; Will ofJack,fewpersonscangivehis thing for granted." i* pietows Be first came in contact with the lievaa that titer* are tremendous Toohy, viee-presidSnti'Gene Dow, list naine. Sis fell nem€ is Jack friendly: atmosphere in the Cac-potentialities for the coming year, secretary: A1 Thompson, treasur­Rutledge. ^ After" the war he returned to ing lots, ^ ' ' to* office It kept hint coming f'Looking forward to the best er; .and Lem Porter, public rela­'*Although few people }aiow my the University to complete Ids my work." vr; back, as evident by his receiving education, and began" following ^ I ^ ^ year of co-opentionamong mero- tions man. name, I think my best character­•WMil.Sii.-j I | | , f, t&e.annual award -.for the put. beta of the band, Cowboys, and Tlie Paul J, Thompson chapter istic is remMnbering the nsmes of the, students' around. aga~ standing first -year worker, HI# Sliver SporaTn the wsy of"service wpn .third prise in the President's my customers,"Jacksaid. his camera.' • Having aparty : second semester at the University to the school, Charlie foresees Ad­Cup Competition at». the national "I meet such a large-ntimber Among the nlsny caught i>^ itIfevagtjr K«Miir'R|sa)H).>v^ : Charlie was assistant editor of the ded color to the school spirit this coW«tttidn"of~Alpha Delt^.Sigma -of-atudents in this business that I Jack's camera aw Doris Day^ Tohi* , •Hflhow|p|hMMim ;.j, ""*Certew^r-a«t honorary section. He was aditor year. ttis" summer at Falmuth, Mais. actually have So 1dea~how tninjr my Dorsey^JBob Hope, and J>en­ of' the fraternity section' for two The award was for a tabloid news­really know/ It surprises' me nis Morgan. ( J You can readily see that Char- I years before .becoming editor-in- paper put out by the Chapter how many, probably in the thou­"But when we rfo to tafte pic­JUSTIN.NOVaiYCO. He likes to work with people. He chief. ^ stressing the theme "Advertising eoow.»t> "ftfHoa|r was a. freshman sponsor at, the sands," he added. x tures where there is a visiting Charlie alio joined the ROTC "Y," on the program commission Builds Austin." Jack has been in business up 'big name\ we don't-go primarily mrifla team and Westminster Stu-at. WsF, and a-member of Dr. to take pictures of the celebrity,dent Fellowship when he was a but to' get pictures of the stu­ freshman. "While he was Hewitt Reddick's Century Class at co-cap­dents with them/* Jack said. ,»?, the Presbyterian Church, Student­ tain of the rifle team last year Faculty APO, Music of Tower Bells "Our kept , with Larry Scott, the University's Comjnittee, and negatives are for Tejaa Club.„ * eight years. After that we" don't fourth place in a na­ 1:1; team won Charlie will be commissioned by have any room for them," he said, W&A tional competition^ ThreeUniver­ the Navy in June, ^52,when he because we get pictures -of the , l*C " Ipt ^ aft v"1"1 Rings Again Monday Jamar, V sity students, Boh Tom. will receive a business adrftinistra-student in so many phases of his *y A May, and Charlie, were among the tion degree in management. Monday ^t~~12^50~th«Ticamptta -Ift-WeafcmlflBtor A hhey. top ten individual scorers in the When Charlie was elected to the will Resound with the mbsic of Cast by The Old Meneely Bell 5 national match. editorship of the ^Cactus, he says- the bells in the University Tower. Foundry of Watervliet, New York;' Foflles Auditions Evidently Charlie still bad spare H0PHf a From a little room high above the b,elis were installed in the time. He became memberof ^.had xrat a yearbook. He came to Aua- the Clocks on the Tower, David Tower in November, 1985. Set for Sunday Phi Eta Sigma, freshman honor* tin this summer to learn his job "Anderson, senior music studentary for men, an served as secre­ from Frankie Wilbum, Cactus from:Manor, will operate-fche-ped-, . The first auditions for Mica's This list suggMjji the wife tary and junior advisor of the group. manager, whom Charlie considers als and levers which cause the Forty-Acre Follies will be held p™* range of China stockad. the "brains behind the Cactus." 40,000-pound carillon bells to ring Sunday at 3 p.m. in the Interna­ Last wee Charlie was elected The 1952 Cactus Charlie calls a with melody. $6,000 Grant \ tional Ballroom of the' Texas Un­"rainbow book" since it will have ion, said Bob Cox, Follies direc* YE QUALITYE SHOPPE Dr. Esmond E. Snell, Biochem­ Debaters Make much more color than this year's. last Anderson, year, can who playplayedanything the from bells tor. ' v •• . / 'f m A Tower theme will be carried folk songs to classics on them. ical, Institute professor, has re­Mostly musical talent will be Mason's Ironsforte Blue Viit* out in the '52 Cactus. It will be' CHARLIE PISTOR ceived a $6,000-grant from Sharp needed for this year's show, sched­ Tentative Plans " '-h He said, however, that he-has.not ' incorporated on the cover and on yet decided on any of the num­; a^rd Dohme, Inc„ pharmaceutical uled for November I.® «>d 17. in most complefe open stock. many pages as background pho­ according to schools as is this editorial assistant, carry about the : The Men's Debate Worl bers he will play on his programs manufacturers; for studies of nu­Singers and dancers for solo, tographs. It Will riot be divided year's book, but will revert back same weight. " every Monday, Wednesday, trition and body functions. ' num­ 'will hold its first meeting Tnea-to a more formal style. a personal philosophy and group, chorus, and special Place Setting 3.7& For day at 4 p.m. in Speech Building Friday. Sharpe and Dohme gave the bers as well as students who can Charlie'4 decisions for the Cac­Charlie thinks that your should 201 to make tentative plana for Since there are. only seventeen grant to be used "at Dr. Snell's play musical instruments, will be Pink Bristol tM, tus ahd those of Gene Myrick, as­ "never undertake anything unless participation in'six intercollegisite Merchants Back bells, there are only seventeen discretion in support of varioua used in the Follies. Especially sociate editor, and.Julie Lockinan, you're really fired up to do it." requirements of his program." three good trumpet Syracuse Shell-edge 4.65 tournamenta.'These events are notes, and Anderson must trans­needed are the Southwest Invitational (Aus­ Speech Activities pose most of his music. Dr. Snell, on the Institute staff players, a dummer, hula dancers, WedgewoodEastern -"s­ tin), Baylor Forensic (Waco), ;/,ivi^/-^rei»si«Aspeew",.'-contest room contains from 1939 to 1945, rejoined the Latin dancers and singers, and Flowers The which the m.6.75 Miami Debate (Florida), Missouri program for 1951-52, largest in staff this fall after teaching at electric and standard guitar play­} , keyboard.for.the bells is at the ers. "• Valley Forensic (Lawrence, Kas.), the University's history, will in­the University of Wisconsin. " . • base of the columns in the north­ Four Daulton Patterns 6.50^ Southwest Conference, and clude intramural, Inter-speech so­besides Sunday's auditions, Cox corner the above ciety, intercollegiate, and private- Women Voters Monday west of tower Round-Up (Austin). the four-faced clock. The' lqrge Graduates Receive Fellowships plans, to hold try-outs Wednesday And on up to Bone Chine and ly sponsored contests in debate, from 8 to 9:30 p.m. in Texas Un­ > E* Stationed in Le«leta«ifc * extemporaneous and impromptu keyboard fills the small room ..Ghalib Alani, graduate student Lenox'at 27.75 Wales Madden, president of the committees, and the gdals set for leaving just enough room for the in petroleum engineering from ion 809. 1 Harry J. Dalton Jr., second speaking, interpretation, oratory, Students' Association, will speak bench Anderson ^ It;, USAF;" and an ex-student of this year's organization. on which sits Iraq, received the Shell Petroleum i ^d dTwlitination. .... on.student government at the first Mary Ann Sanders, president while playing. Fellowship for 1951-52. The fel­— EXPRESS BUS SERVICE China It a fascinating subject the University, Is now Public In­ V About 1600 will he given by In­meeting of the Campus League of formation Officer the of the League, will be itt"charge. : The bells are played manually, lowship amounts to f 1,200 plus tu­ of Lake dividuals and campus business Charles Air Force Base and'super­concerns to., winners of speech Women Voters Monday at 4:45 The club~wil meet on first and but the chimes which ring the ition fees. " ~ to HOUSTON Come in and let us tal^ ­ p.m. in the Texas Union Building. Call 2-TiTS vises the Lake Charles Skyway contests. Trophies and medals are third Mondays of every month. quarter hours are operated elec­Stanley Winthrop, from Mon­4 Hours paper considerable Maden and .Jean Wesley,. Stu­«• Girls may join the League by trically. At the hour, the bells to you. y Times, a of awarded intramural and inter-«o-dents' Association secretaiy, -will treal, Canada, recived the $1,250 : KtrrviUe Bus Co. size. . •" attending the meetings. Dues are play the famous Westminster Peal; Cheirtistry t Hours V to l • ciety winners. graduate Fellowship 1104 Colorado discuss the fu'nction^ of various 91 each,term. copied frdm the peal of the chimes from Humble.Oil Company. 118 £ 10th SOM • And you are tfie star.,. at the Union, at open houses, on the dance floor, • this is your shining hour. And here are ^our propsi «** * .-T • . , " __ .* * The full skirt, voiced by rayon-taffeta, with top billing in rayon velvet. Black, sizes 9 to 15, 16.95. "M . From our cocktail collection, College Shop, Second Floor. Supporting cast, the rayon taffeta petticoat, stiffened by crinoline, 5.95. Also other1 styles assorted colors, S, M, L Lingerie, Second Flogr. f ^ The wrnglng stole, soft .wool knit in white or navy, 4.98; others to 8.95. The velvet clutch, only 5.00 plus tax, v in black or navy, tobacco pouch stylo* > ^ , •Accessories, Street Floor V ' / Take a break (and get a lift) between classes,/ Si"* € r -and hurry down today.. .for •j.. • -'53' f k. — tsss**­ : rv:; ; - • ;V'* Vi. ' r "T ' • ' '' * k . ­ r :v -.' *' / ^ * I1 -J nil, iff lA7l gpjj MMjjtgi s»stefgg^^^ MMM^P *•*•» iA\ i y i. t„3£V-'-. it At tfce QiwAm Sis^ Old Czech Books ¥ -4p#v « Seen at Seminary" 'fStewarashrp }• Banquet,. Anexhibit atSO religions books from the personal libraries of Mrs. AlMna Barton, widow,of the late >-&' ^ -IIIliSPW-Ti CTo $e?Helctby,WSF;„. The Bev. Josef Barton of the eryone helped her. Tit she I. There waseome unr Caiech-Moravian. Brethren Church **t *«ir tfo^'Burorll happiness becaose^ of economic " tt#.wii ft Interesting-^occasionally had difficulty finding at Granger, and of her son, the 9be Wes&ilnitar 'gtiidint Fel-of the American disturbances, but there seemed "to Rev. Josef A. Barton theran Chureh, tiie building of a m^M Marian B. Davl* «*-the art that she wanted* Many of lomddp wffl have its sixth an­Kttt professor «£ sirt* last M?m-the museums were closed-for re­be less unrest In Italy than here ville, Is now on display in the li­nual stewardship banquet Sunday new mdssion in Burnaby, Canada, , *$!*>" *' ' '*:*,-, pairs, and some paintings were at home—possibly because the brary of the Austin Presbyterian at 6:45 p.m. In Fellowship HalL complete with chapel, parsonage, Italians are used to difficulties." Seminary* not on exhibit She got special Guest speaker will be Dr.Sam pastor and equipment. I'PJ^V^IENb. Davis traveled through permission to see them. The hotel in Milan had been The exhibit will continue JoekeVprofeasor at Austin Pres-A special Luther League ,Choir, England, France, and Italy dur-One paintfbg she had to see was destroyed In both World wars, and through October. 12, during the byteria&Seminary. ^ under the direction tha new* so is The Celebration of the Guests *W1 be flie choir-director, Mrs.^Olivia John-' $ ''lug her research leave in which In the Louvre. As she had to ex­now completely, new. Ceq&ei^ial Board of son, will sing the anthem, "Send jtfcfe fit to study the Venetian amine another icene painted on area around it had been leveled by Presbyterian Church in Texas, Oc­ Presbyterian Student Work and Out the Light" by Grotmod. Bur- i5&traiture of the Fifteenth Con-the back of the picture-, Dr. Davis blockbusters. Most of the^ railroad tober 8-12. ^ , interested. friends from tho cam­ ford Westiund, organist, will play tury. She left .in March and re­had to obtain special permission stations In Italy are new, since The list of boofci oa display fi). eos; Church, and Seminary. Guilmontfs ^Trayei^ as a prelude, turned la early September. to visit the gallery on the day the the others had been destroyed, but eludes several bibles* hymnals, and Ralph Persons will be naster of ceremonies, andjClaiborne Bell and wQl offer spedal organ rendi­ Still busy catching up with the Louvre is closed. t ' -the French have some open air commentaries printed is original tions at the offertory. mail that came daring her eh* She said of her trek'through the stations. She said that it seemed Czech, all over 100 years old*-', will conduct a worship service. * Mary Ann MeWhorter, steward­ liencertffr Day* laughingtyd««-4eiHr-«aie«cjriHLJby6. guide*, "It that-Italy was rebuilding at a A 1613 edition of the large ship chairman, will present a pro­ fscribedher trip. was the funniest experienceT^ ^uch-fast^ rate-than.France. e-Tdlume Kraiice Bible is 838 posed budget. |f "I traveled by plane, train, bus, —usually the long gallery of the '/The first time you see the years old. The*hook had^orijjttlllte > In charge of committees arc .^tmwn, horse carriage, boat, and Louvre is simply crowded with devastation, it Just makes you ly been printed in six' volumes' In John Clarrr walterst Joanna Gen- ermond often by foot, hot I didn't try the people, and there I was, the only sick,'' the small, blonde woman the 16th century at Kraiice. try decoratlons; Tanner-decorations; Helen ' bicycle and scooter," she said. guest."' said. "Occassionally the devasta­Among the commentaries .Is hill, printing; Dinriid Bran, invi­ These are common vehicles on tion has one advantage for an art. Postylla Czeska (Commentary for UNIVERSITY METHODIST museums Many of the Jmallex THE REV* SCOn FIELD BAILEY tations; .and Jimmy Biggs, equip­ i'i the street* fa Italian towns, and were closed except on special student In that It enables one to Youth), by Jan Sspangbert, CHURCH ment. i•> ftnake walking hazardous. days, and on those days, visitors see art which has not been vis-Preacher of Northaus, the Emper­ 11 a.m.—Sermon by L. D. Has* This wasn't her first trip to had to ring a bell to gain admit­ible before, but that is hardly an or's Town, with a special fore­ " %... kew, dean of the University "The Logic of Sclenee" will be in 1929 and Education. .. Europe. She went tance. Even with these .difficul­excuse for the bombing. word by Martin Luther. The book Rector Fits discussed by Dr. Karl Dallenbach, College of , f again to study in 1937. 5:45—Wesley Foundation supper ties, Dr. Davis managed to see In her quest for paintings, she was written in 1542 and dedicated distinguished professor of. psy­ -and meeting. most of the paintings she wanted had many interesting experiences, to. Princess Elizabeth of,Branden­ chology, at services of the Uai 7:30—"Mustard Seed People"-— to, and to make copious notes such as nearly being stranded in burg, but was not printed until ted Charch of Fetlow^hlp at the Bob Breihan, director of youth • Grey Scott H '•which will take weeks to sort,"" a email town because of an over-1653. • To Student Needs YWCA, 914 Brazos, at 10:30 a-m. activities for Wesley. Founda­ she grimaced. • :• ; T3*Dwdedbusrand getting a ^free The Rev. Barton is representa- Sunday. : In his soft-spoken; manner The ber 1. Besides being director of tion. • . 3o// Room Dance Studio The people all seemed oBliging ride back-to the mainland from ve oi hlJchnrcfcrtm-^tfc Bailey^new,iec-Episcopal student activities atSte-* UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN delight­Board of the National Council of All SainU EyUcopii! Chnrda was CHURCH and friendly. "Italy was an island church in a motor boat .tor of AH Saints' Parish^ har tal phen F. Awtiii College, he was riW, Above Texas Theater ful," exclaimed Dr. Davis.1 "The instead of engaging n gesticulat­the dhurches -of Christ in the kled his job as director of Episco­assistant rector of St. Paul's granted permission ,eni9 a&d 10:50 a.m.^—"Is Jestis the eople seemed to be in.good spir« ing Italian's gondola, United States. Council Thursday to block off 150 pal student Work with a clear con­Church, in Waco before the war Son of God"—the Rev. Law­ feet of Whltis Avenue for a street ception of the part religion must whe#e he worked wijkh the Baylor rence W. Bash. . dance October" 19, play in ** student's life.. student group. He also is a mem- ST. MARTIN'S The church, located at Whltis ^Students live in * very artl'-l her of thf,Board of^Christian Edu­ EVANGELICAL-LUTHERAN and 27th Streets,, .will hold the ficial type of existence which they cation for the Diocese of Texas. CHURCH dance in connection with a church ^ didn't know before coming to col­Mr. Bailey, a native of Houston, a.m:—^"A Prayer for Wisdom festival. lege and which they won't know received his JEtA degree' In liberal and Knowledge"—the Rev. G. ^Aanclv . .• after graduation," he said. "It Is arts.from Rice Institute in 1938. G. Roesener. The ReV. F. G. Roesener, pastor our job to show them that there The next year he attended the FIRST ENGLISH LUTHERAN of St. Martin'* Evaagelleal L«­ is a place,for the church In tiieir University School of Law. CHURCH theran Chvrch, Fourteenth and —college lives." 11 a.m.—"Did Jesus Rise from "TFiPTa V"« ft nf 1*imre. Congress Avenue, will speak on "A Under the new organization .of the Dead?"—Dr. Lewis P, ness about getting an education at Prayer for Wisdom and Knowl­ student work, all activities will be Speaker; highlights from our booklet the University in those days," he edge" Sunday morning at 11 a.m. directed through the parish, and FIRST METHODIST CHURCH commented. "Now there seems to The service will be for Lutheran not separate from as in recent 10:45 fLm.—Sermon by the Rev; be a tense of urgency." students of thsi University, nurses* years. ' Wood Patrick, superintendent . After graduating from Virginia training schools, and business col­ "Most of our young people come of the Austin District of the Seriilnary and serving at Wpco, lege^. " from the setting of a parish church Methodist Church. Mr, Bailey spent three years in and we feel that while they are * • 7:30 'p-m.—"Nabath Had a Vine- the Navy as a chaplain. He was Dean L. D. Haskew of the Col­ here they would like to continue yard"-—^The Rev. Charles Wal­ stationed |n Connecticut, New lege of. Education will speak at in the same environment.". ton, associate pastor. York, and New Guinea in the the 11 a.m. service of the Uni- All Saints', stablished in. 1899. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN two wonderful by Bishop Kinsolving, originally Pacific. / M«thedi*t Cbarch Sunday. CHURjCH , was meant, to serve the University "I am delighted with what I Dr. Haskew is chairman of the 11 a.m.—-"The Future Is Now"'— additions ta your community, so the parish empha­have found here in the way of church's committee on evangelism Dr. John Barclay. ' . sises not something new, but an student enthusiasm," he said. and evangelistic missions. 6 p.m.—CYF and DSF supper and fall wardrobe. attempt "to put things in their "And I hope the students keep program. proper peripectivi," as Mr. Bailey coming in the overflow propor­! Charles Probst, pre-theological described it. tions they have been coming.". student at Texas Lutheran Col­ Coming to Austin from Nacog­. Mr.Bailey, his wife Evelyn, and lege, at • Seguin will speak on Ceramic Hobby Shop doches where he served as rector their two children, Louise, 6, and VAmerican .!MiMion»--en 'Open for six years, Mr. Bailey assumed Nick, 4, are residing at 1603 West Door," at a youtii service Sunday Everything for th* CaramUt his duties at All Saints' Septem­29th. morning at 8:15 a.m. at St.; Mar-and China Palntar tin's. Lutheran Church. rium* T-rorr "Tho purpose "of this service Is 2308 SonA Lamtr" to promote the project of the Cu ^ Try one of / A limited number of season tio-|munity Concert jieiles.. Our Delicious kets for the Department of Drama Membership is limited to those productions is still available. Sales purchasing season ldcketg, and tic­will continue until. October 20 kets will not be available for in­Home Cooked or until the remainder of the ori­dividual concerts. Tickets for the ginal 1,750 tickets are sold. season's four concert are: $6.00. Blanket Tax holders may purr Meals: at 'cjiasei the tickets; good for four-Ticket sales are zooming, the wen plays given by the Depart­Austin Symphony Orchestra, of­ ; j65c , ^ ment of Drama', for only f1.74, fice reports. a saving of nearly |4 for the • The season ticket sales had year. " " ,, passed the 400 mark on the fourth YOU'LL BB BACK FOR MORE Non-blanket Tax holders are day after the campaign opened. similarly benefitted. With the sear Seiuo'n tickets can be had by son ticket, which costs $4, each WE PREPARE ORDERS TO GO OUT University students for $3.60. performance costs less than 29 Included in the .season tickets cents> considerably less than the are "Tosca," October 15; Monte80 cents charged for a single per- Hill Davis, pianist, November 5.; fowwaSSerr •• V-«J^estj»L ciwicei^t.November 19; Lous I The season^^ticket »»sure» ttort holder of admiwion to al Ipro-ber 10. Yehudi Menuhin, violinist, ductions, some*of Which ure pres-January 14; orchestral concert, CGMEr SAtiDWfCHSHOP ented in theaters Of imited seat-February 4. Walter Caasel, baril mg capacity. Ticket holders may tonet pebruary 25: Ezra Rachlin, "hfhutot $Md3>Juiind& TTbirit" obtain^esei^ati^MiflapJy X7 mg the box ofite#: of the Music l aTUand} nomnfhv Kinten, Dorothy soprano,* Building. ' March 31. Some of the productions that may be seen are "My Sister Ei­leen," October 17-20; "Junoxand. the Paycock,'-November 7­ 'The Madwoman at Chaillot,1 December 5-8; Dance • Concert* February 13-16; and a Shake TIME AND MONEY gpearean production, April 22-26. Increased membership In*"the Coftimunity Concert Association's fall concert series at the, Uni­versity is the goal of a^eoently appointed student committee, an­nounced Miss Lois B. Trice, secre­tary of the Association. Committee members ire "Bob" Mickey, Annetta Clark, Georg€f° important! Lacey, abd IJoyd Hand. • " ­Solomon, renowned British pia­nist, is slated to open the Com­ 1 1 1 1 • . ' V '."V ' ''' • . '' 'i Health Center Adds Two Staff Members 'Compare Our Prices' t>r,Joseph Phillips and Mrs, D. • S^;­ W. McCavick have been added to the staff of the Student Health j Center. . . ' • Each Washer Huff Dried 30c •• Shirts Finished 15c Dr. Phillips is a general prac­* 8 lbs. (soap furnished) .30c • Khaki Trousers „....30c titioner. Mrs, McCavick, widow of I 1 > athe late director of the Visual Ed­ t 4 ucation Bureau, will replace Miss] Ludma Kopecky, .veteran aurse-of 'There Is No Ecfual; to Our 30-min Service* 25 years sembV Center. . ~7j ^ ?KA»'' r v-f' 3h mm ASSEMBLY j *•MATTHEWS' IOF GOO /. Bendix Automatic Laundries MlIlM 'V.iiUAUL: a V ^ . -.v.-.­Jg>-* a ,/->uji... - " t :tsnsate ;ilV, $Ab >*Vf»" j Kis&wa;:** » sssft « f^.'A+t, i&mii mm?mM stu va ^^ HelpsHerd * ""' "•'•# , v'»f r ^heteus O'"* v^tjG ^t^a.^'5*x"-^-AaSss. • d*JT» and Leland Antes Jr., senior "n1fey LBM:'#CHITEIt advertisers, agencies/and the con­ '• «*lism'lM|or, has been *ork­ **** square dance.taryj Nanoy 4..,, J% was * warm Saturday tnorn-sumer." " "1 Gefcr, treasurer; De- for the last two weeks?te see club, witt have a guestcaller at tore# Kosberg, sub-dean,' Connie in early October and most "Standard Maript Data for mmi their members of the advertising class Austin", a survey of the Austin k&0.1?n. _ Texa*, were in Dallas for a big football aariflrt by Mr. Sharpe* has bean Antes belongs to both the Cir-o'clock. msuL published by the American-States­ H" man and the Austin Chamber.of «t» Fans Association, and the Cir­rjpS, lyn Colemani scholarship chair-vice-presidentj fnd C. R Couidl The young instructor looked cus Model Builders", both organisa­caUsr** and instructor jof i wan. The Junior tndjSenfor^pito over the nearly-empty room and Commerce. He is BOW workinj on tions of circus hobbyists, istructor pf square to the club andeouple dances* will teacKthe hellenic, representatives -are 8on-{% * biography of the lata 6. B. vAlt Stude^-, jw Said to tiie small group,, "You •The circus officials knowAjitea etUb dances which she learned this die Lottman said Ruth H^ndler. are the faithful." :v< Dealey, longtime publisher of the both for his miniature circus, and Deli* Nu Alpluii transportation clnb-i^de^i^B^y Dallas Morning News. summer at the Serb GrWgerson > * v > E TcEte.'S He then passed out bags of Ms kinshipto Bill Antes, and his Sehool In Ruidoso, N. M.» and at ftratemity« h«vt its 6*gantaK The Univeni^f' Dttpiieal*Bridge salted peanuts among the "faith­Mr. Sharpe received his bache­wife, both 'executives with the Dr. Uoyd Shaw's School in Colo<. Club meetsjsaeh Friday evening, tional meeting Tuesday at 7:30 lor of journalism degree from the Brothers Barnum p.m.r in the main lobby of Texas , ful." Rlngllng and Sjffiagik,;J9hf ilt,Instructor of at 7:30 l^Teus Union'8:15. Any s afternoon for visitors to University in 193», a BA in Engw Union*" , ' After the nuts were distributed, end Bailor combined shows!-./?' Heejl ind Toe, Austin round dance student-who can play bridge is -one of the lish in 1940, and his master's de­, club a&d assoeiste editor of Foot k **«> ^ • he said, 'The moral of this deraon-gree in journalism in 1941. He be­'Antes' miniature, circus xepre* Invited to come. « pjn< Monday men's Thatwasin 1848 whenJSrnest ma. He is sponsor of theUniversi­eireus uses In daily routine, and students and faculty; ^ pair event. (October 1), in the office bf the 9'^ck. A. Sharpe was beginning his ty 7 p.m. in Journalism .• 'lit tisingstudents,be«idestbeu»ual War H, Mr. Sharpe was attached discus thrower and tennis player, plicarOf the old-time circus parade ion 40JL, Monday at 7 p.m., Ever­Glenru; Brooks, member-aMarge; Building 105. . . Cfiury Bon«ld to. the U. S.-Embassy in Lisbon. he has little time for sports and ---> ~ M*gae of F- grades. .that no longer exists. ett & McCrum, president,-has an­new transfer members, and Arno. Nowotny, faculty a distinguished sfryice award at the is to promote and recognise scho­ from TSCW, will bo introduced. Skinner of Denver, vice-presid pense-paid tours of ad agencies trol Commission in Budapest. his tattered dictionary. , ]centered on the circus. H^ usw meeting. 1 lastic achievement among fresh­ * «nd Jim Martin.Cljirkt.Pleasan and newspaper advertising depart­models,,movies, and reedrds to -Officers for this semester, in A discussion forum will follow men men*, • secretary-treasurer. A] new-i ments to selected studente. Later, addition to. McCrum, are Edward the regular weekly buffet supper tion to th# pJ«dge;cI«BS hj Rir in 1949^ he introduced to the Ad­children. H. Naberhaus, vice-president; Ray­of the Newman Club at 6 p.m. • Strike and Spare, UTSA bowl­Jules Brussard of Bem^nont.. Frdm^^ tte vertising"Federate of America, mond Janieek, feoretary; John O. Sunday in the Niwman Annerf, ing club, will hold try-outs agin The chapte^ had* as, Itii sp of which he is a director in the of the circus train discharges its Lange, treasurer; and Allan S. 2010 Univeriity Avenue. Wednesday at the' Bowling Cen­guests last #eek-iend "tise visi Southwest District, an advertising load of people, animals, and wa-Quinn, master,of ritutl. . The regular Sunday meeting of ter, 8409 Guadalupe, Jo Ann officer, Dilleif Wood, and ft dWM job clearing-house. It was de gons, Antes plans an entlrst day -1'"' '.Si: .'" v the Newman Club wi^be held at Wright, secretary of the club, has Go 3, 'Deep1 sional inspector, Sam'Fields. Plimil at East.First and. Linden, where German known 11 a.m. in the Texas Theater. signed to previde-jobs rf©£ adver­The club, " on announced. for Upsilon's hew hpuge were isg-i' he will undoubtedly get new ideas the campus as Der Eulenspiegel­ tising graduate*. A 8,700-inile Sunday afternoon services witt Prospective bowlers must make proved in a meeting held by the through the caves and cavern sys -verito^jiiriU hold its first organi­be held' in St. Austin's Chapel at , After serving asJSouthern vice-an average of 100 on two games Austin alumni. , "i, h zational meetihg~o£ the semester president of Alpha Delta Sigma, tems of mid-eastern states has ~4~ o'clock*--to qualify; for^ the club. Univer­ w > l on the lot been completed by the Universi­r y » ^?,U? circus, contact Antes Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the Texas professional advertising fraterni­were Little Wyandotte, Jug Hbld, Tuesday morning. sity, girls are'eligiblr for ifte~or= Thr~InsUtute of Aeronauticallty, Mr. Sharpe was elected presi­ty Speleological Society. .New River, Trout, Mystery, Mam-—: Union. •" ' " ' " " * r Informal French conversation ganization, wh|ch meets every caverns, All students of German and classes will begin. Wednesday.-at Wednesday from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sciences will meet Monday at lit- dent of the national organization The-extensive field trip was moth, Spendwell Dead .. persons interested in the language 4:80 p;m. in Room 2B of the Uni p.m. in Engineering Building 187*14 is summer. He is a, past presi-made by two parties under the di­^.Mammoth Onyx Great Onyx, tX-Student SoilS are'invited to attend." v'Msity YMCA Building. • • . Organization plans will be madef^ lent of' the Austin Advertising rection of Dr. Jean Lowery, state Cathedral, and Buchanan. at that time.. ^ j > ^ . . • * V ' ^MUe. Dupuis, who came to Aus ,The Panbellenie Council has Club, and is on its board of direc­geologist for Virginla. Roy For Job in Beirut v Delta Uptilon fraternity last postponed its meeting originally * > tin this summer, is teachingtors. • . • * . Pietsch, president of the organiza­ week elected Irvin Nelson of Am-classes at the downtown YMCA scheduled on October 1 to Mon­Joe Belden of the Belden Two years ago, Mr: Sharpe sug­tion, Bob Hudson, and Bennie Friendly People William: W. Webster Jri, BA* arillo president of its new pledge and at Austin High School this day Miss Margaret Peck* assistant will speak at the first meeting t gested to the*"Ad Club that an ad­Pearson composed fhe first group '40, recently sailed for Beirut, class. Other officers are Don fall. dean of women, has announced. th^ campus chapter of the AmerM vertising clinic be held for Austin and John Riggs, Carroll Slemaker, Caused Professor Lebanon, a small country on the Bishop of Dalhart, vice-president, The meeting will be held at 4 pjn. can Statistical Association -Jnf^ retail merchants to aid them in and George Shelly, the second. Mediterranean Sea, where he will atod Charles Jones of Austin, se-at the Kappa Alpha Theta house. Texas Union 315 Wednesday at 8^ Moise Axelrad was chosen pres­ an instructor in biology at the t succesfully. The clinic was one of Crystal cave, the .group covered ^tnggitxg TtxMii Signal Corps •" ". ; Alpha Epsilon Pi. Other officers Mr. Belden will discuss the sta-Ispending advertising dollars more In Kentucky's' Floyd Collins To Come to Texas be «»• UIOVI. uvuwr JII VlVlUff cretary-treasurer. ident of the new pledge class of • p.m. | Jamie Clements is the new presl the many projects ,of the club in some 10 of the 40 miles in the men and the need for m At*™* . appointment is a jpart of The Dilplec'ed Person* Commit­elected were Stan Schreiber, vice-dent of Phi Kappa P»i fraternity. tlstical side of poll-taking. ^I%e? building better relations between lower levels, straddling 40-foot professor brought Roger H. Cilley the program of the Near' East tee. will meet at 6 p.m. Monday president; Sid Moran, secretary-Other officers are Edmund Notes-meeting is open to 'the general^ public. 1 . »! crevasses, which varied from two to the University from New York College Association, which repres-at the "Y." Members are urged to treasurer;and Morty Ravkind, so­tine, vice-president; Henry Gilliam, City. ents the largest American educa^ attend. ;' •' ;• •' to three feet in width, and cross­cial chairman. corresponding secretary; Alfred Paris Student ing 80-foot pita, the deepest of Mr. Cilley, a former instructor tlonal effort outside the United •• Ruebel, record in g secretary States. The association has col­ whichlwaalllZfrfeet;;—-of drams at New York University, Alpha Eptilon Ph|, has com­The fall: organisation meeting "George. Cunningham, historian, ONE DAY Gets Scholarship Also explored was the Wyan>-joined the faculty of the College lege members in Greece, Lebanon, pleted its election of officers. of the American Association of Barry Bishop, chaplain; Jim Ed Qcaning and Pressing " Turkey, and Syria. v-r;^ dote caive in southern Indiana, of Fine Arts as assistant profes­vThose-who wilt serve in the Architectural Engineer* will meet Miller,, sergeant-at-arms; George No Extr* Charge Jean Douy, University chemical which Is reported to be the third sor of drama last week. . While at 4 the University Web­coming year are Diana Gerson, Tuesday evening at 7:30 in A. Br Crowley^ rush captain; and-Georgeengineering student from , Paris, longest in the world, and to con­While serving with the signal ster, was a 'member, of Phi Beta president; Sonia Frenkel, vice-105. Officer^ will be elected and Crowley and Clay Fulcher, Inter-IONGHORN CLEANERS-France, has been granted a Ful-tain the world's largest limestone corps from 1941-46 Mr. Cilley said Kappa and Phi EtaSigmtf. president; Beverly-Brand, secre-business discussed Fraternity Council representatives. 2S3S. Goadalnp* Ph. 6-3S4? bright scholarship' for study at column.. the friendly attitude of the Texas servicemen made him. first the University of Delaware. The most difficult cave in the want Douy, who is a graduate of the country, Schoolhouse Cave in to come to* Texas. ^Phe native New Yorker admitted:niversity of Grenoble, worked West Virginia,. was tackled by • "There is a vitality-and "vi­at Baytown this snmmer for the Carroll Slemaker and John Riggs. the re­brancy here in Texas that youHumble Oil Company. He Was at Exploration of eavern just don't find in » city like Newthe University last term. quired lowering down great York. This is where I would like my son to grow up." ^ A graduate of New York Uni­ versity trith BS and MA degrees, he also has done advsinced' work on his doctorate. From 1938 to 1941, Mr. Cilley was among the six who comprised the nucleus of the famed Wash­ ington Square Piayers which Btarted with Catherine Cornel. The nucleus of the Players, he ex­ plained, were mainly N.Y.U. fac­ ulty members who took leading Arthur .-Munrqy can teacK rolls in the productions while the students took lesser parts. In this you any danc« In 8hours way the faculty had a chance to fate the footlights ar well as hold teaching positions. EVEN THE RU^BA IS AMAZINGLY SIMPLE Although not particularly inter­ ested in television and radio, Mr. ^wrrn^Aira^uft-MJSRAr METHOD Cilley has done work in both for the benefit of his students. Just learn( the "Magic Step"—-Arthur Murray's. "I did it mainly to see just what my student? would be up smasing shortcut to-dancing skllL It makes learning against when they went into those so easy that you can actually go dancing: af^r only fields. In this way I feel:I can better, prepare., them/?, he said« one hour. • So stop wishing and start dancing! Enjoy the Friendship Club popularity you've been missing. Let Arthur Murray give you Plans Constitution Writing a constitution, and ifW '/// free proof today that learning dreamipg up an agenda and nom­ ^ ' to dance Is easy! Phone or inations for a new name for the Texas International -Friendship come in right away. . •. • just arrived. Here is the Club will be the chore of the five member Board of Directors of the club when they meet Monday at pride of ^ icoitan 1 P.m. at the University Y. The.new foreign and native stu­dent group, which held its first planning meeting to vote on the consti­fling... sheer luxury for sweater tution, and to consider new names. cottfioiseur8 by Peter ScotTof Scotlaiut. CAUTION . Joe Neal, foreign student advi­ "X I sor, tossed a hand grenade into Cosual elegance and exquisite hand* v. Ho>y to Select a Dancing School the last meeting when he'said that fashioning to make this the sweater foreign ^student clubs have been Anyone can operate a dance studio. No examination, no used by some campus politicians set you'd rather have than any other .•...» license is required. Even a person who knows nothing to get their, pictures in the "Good­ about dancing—or teaching—rcan hang out his shingle and Eggshell green, coral rose, como blue fellows" section of the Cactus,profess to te&h. dancing a "new way." So be careful— ask these questions: and not for the benefit of the » and ivory,sizes Si to 40. The short foreign student. : 1. Who is the actual owner of the school? What ex­sleeved pullover., .16.95, the perience does he hiwr^ in teaching dancing? 2. Will you learn simple, easy stieps -that you can do cardigan 22.95. . 'on a crowded floor? ^ '3. Will you. learn.the fundamentals of good dancing or waste jrour money learing novelty routines? WJ?9R_ Facfo&MeftiM Arthur Murray's teaching methods are those developed through 1 RECAPPING Sportswear, Second Flftcif his 35 years-experience. Only sotislly correct steps are taught. Bargain's in new and trader Your dancing wiB look expert end smopth wherever you go. in Tires—Brake and Wheel Service—Seat Covers Car Heafert i 2116 Guadalupe r . 'H s 803 Congress1 SPIRES. TIRE CO. 'W$ r: I m wm MM MV* sas*** i ••*•• mm •? i '<*••'• -—' „ CURB SERVICE TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY the season at the City Auditorium Nine GREAT Concerts contact prospective contributors October 15 at 8:30 p.m. Pasture Start* at 7. P. M. Fountain—Steaks to the symphony. Target of the Reserved Seats The student and general ad­ Please Reserve Seets et .......—. Each Sandwiche*—5odas workers is $20,000, of which mission tickets are for an .unre­ Sfeber Featured . Season Tickets DRIVE-IN $12,000 has already been pledged^ •Check or Money Order Enclosed ^ served section containing approxit23 mately-2000 seats: Reserved seats, Contributions, may be made by I-LJ Will Pay on Receipt of Tickets " | 'A YANK IN KOREA' caUing the Symphony office at which may be ordered at the Mu- In March Concert L«n McCallister 6^8811. 1 Name ——-General Admission "WINCHESTER'73" Eleanor Steber, the soprano - star of "The Voice-«of Firestone" |Street —....i.. s» Shall** Winter* Radio Repairing Students and and* fhiTTIetropolitan-Operas will ^JSoude Home and Autp Wilkinson Selected (City be featured with the violinist Sy»­ Enlisted Servicemen DRIVE-IN 1005 Barton Springs Road Radio Service Co. mon Goldberg*and the British pi­1508 Red River anist Solomon in the 1951-62 "SHOW BOAT" By Curtain Club group conceits given by Ava Gardner—Howard Keel Phone 7-2904 of the Kathryn Grayson Austin Community Concert Asso­: Gordon Wilkison, drama major ciation. "INSIDE WALLS OF FOLSOM PRISON" from San Angelo, was elected ,to Miss Steber, who will be heiSL David Brian % the board of the University Cur-' in Hogg Auditorium early InN^ tain Club at the first meeting of March, has also sung in concerts 1 MONTOPOLIS the. organization Thursday night, and on television: She recentlyThe meeting was an informal won first place as the woman sing­affair in which new and old stu­er regularly heard on the air in 'EXCUSE MY DUST' dents,got acquainted. The organ Musical America's fourth 'annual r R*d Sk«lton - Sally Forest • , ization has a total of 114 proba­radio poll of serious music. "LAST OF THE tionary members. Molly Moffett. A Sir a divari u s preserved BUCCANEERS" social chairman, was in charge of through fourteen different; Jap- Paul Henreid-—Jack Oaki* the program. a'nese concentration, eamps is the The club had previously held a story behind Syxmon Goldberg, THE 1 Stern Wheel YANK reception for the new'students in whose concert is in January.Riverboat Commodort the Main Lounge of Texas Union. While touring the Far East, he Ittf ^TAKEXAHE OF* J ... Every Sunday. 2:30 p.m. _ Pat Hines, Arlene Kay, Bob, Cox, was captured in Java and interned : MY LITTLE GIRL" Two ITAtir Bide fl»SO-p«r_Pj»*«SB Bennier Hipper, Erank Harland, until 1945. After the violinist's JmiiW Crain—-Dale Robirtion I/««v«a Rfverbont Landing on We»t SM« and Pat Cook appeared on the re-appearance in Carnegie Hall in . "SADDLE LEGION" Of Lak* Auitia «ero»» Iow-w*t«r brid«« ception projframr 1949, Olin Downes in the New Tim Holt ' Frew Coffee «nd Doqfhnati ALSO CHARTER PARTIES " The Curtain Club is a dramatic York Times wrote: "He played a Commodore'* .PuRrr-JBP to JIO Per*on» program that only a musician and orjjanization. wfhich_|^y Hernahdea ic interests. Officers are Mildred Solomon, toij&wn in this [countoT Barnes, president; Pat Hines, vice-chiefly through his longliit of"re­president; Marilyn Bemrer, secre­cordings, has given concerts t ; TYPEWRITER SPECIALISTS tary; Bill Cook, treasurer, and the United States only during t&e Miss Moffett, social chairman. last two seasons. ^ Can Do ,th#?--'Job.r A fourth artist will also give . s " " I a concert at the end of the sea­ We Pick Up THE TOWER son. Three artists are engaged byWfa-] %Pi • and Deliver Favorite Rendexvoiii of the Austin Community Concert ft' m - : Phone 8-4360 Texas U. , Association at a fee which can assuredly be met, and all subscrip­ Best Music in Town tions over this minimum require*Cell Johnny et 2-6382 ment go' toward a fourth to bePictures are to be made at tlie Koen Studio selected later in accordance with thi success of the membership campaign. • . _ 2346 Guadalupe must be bought to hear these eon- IN 1 certs, can beSecured by sending the money to the Austin Commun­ity Concert Association, Box 1520, University Station. Radio House Schedules STUDIO Hours: Additional Auditions Color bjr ^ecimiMior "Take Car# . " ' .-"X 0 Additional radio auditions will "Showboat*^­ of My Jbte;held at Radio House Tuesday Ava Gardener from 3-5 p.m. No previous broad­ 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Howard Keel casting experience is necessar^ Jeanne Cram Audition material is jtvailable-fc la Technicolor Milt of plus those who do~ not~ wish to nse their Ckn.diat. Pacific own. HomoM Randolph Scott Jane Wyatt Jaaet Uiik In Technicolor Box Office open* at S' Bem of Hce open* at e zK~ •MGreg Scott. f'All Appointments Mint Be Made Through 1 BUY AN EXTRA KEY Ball Room Dance Studio M LONE STAR SHOE Above Texas Theater • Sorority SERVICE, INC. SHOOlTifflE AT IIOTRSWOl THEATRES SAVE MONEY AT THESCHEDULE yVf ZrttH(fifi^ ALPHA CHI OMEGA Mor:. Oct. I thru Wed. Oct. 3 own ^svoude ' ' MM • " JWtf ALPHA DELTA P! Mon. Oct. I thru Wed. Oct. 3 DAIM A LA CARTE MENU mmwB ALPHA EPSILON* PHI .... Mon, Oct. I thru Wed. Oct. 3 Boneless Ocean Pepoh 75e ALPHA GAMMA DELTA ... Mon. Oct. I thru Wed^Oct. 3 Fried Select O^stfers 95c Smothered Veal Cutlet 95c ALPHA OMICRON PI.... ....... -Tue«. Oct. 2 thru Thure. Oct. 4 I /Grilled Pork Chops 950 ALPHA PHI ..s. Thurs. Oct. 4 thru Set. Oct. 6 Fried Breast of Chicken 95o Grilled Boneless Ham ' 95C^ CHI OMEGA Thura. Oct. 4 .thru Mon. Oct. 8 WR &J ee rigjnc:ipi ¥> i*ro&. Breaded turkey Steak . 95c DELTA DELTA DELTA ..... Thur*v Oct. 4 thru Mon. Oct. S. All-Chicken Pie 1.10 —­ JON HAU. la ^ he; storms the seas OF THE WORJLD (all & la carte orders served DELTA GAMMA ..... Fri. Oct, 5 thru Mon. Oct. 8 "HURRICANE ISLAND" 'f-ri-Fv S ' la Color GREGORY -VIRGINIA with crisp green salad, fresh PECK , ; MAYO ct. 8 thru Wed. Oct. 10 . friedt potatoes and.all the SANDY SADDLER^ "Captpin Hofotio homemade hot rolls you want) DELTA ZETA • -cHAHflgwrsHiPFtcHT— -I I — nonioiowwT f: ' GAMMA PHI BETA .... Tue$. Oct. 9 thru Thurs. Oct. 11 best that money cahlmy* KAPPA ALPHA THETA ...ir.,.r.—Tues. Oct. 9 thru vThurt Oct. 11 *J> ^These rich desserts dailyi , F»RST SHOW 2 P. M. , w KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA........ -4. V/e •> £4. ... ading, »eli ft'^beitt-Action Indicates tioning nnit and tin instal­istry andFhysies Buildings on Corps fixpanstoi jplfc TEXAS SHEEPMAN. By Ret- woman-like handwriting^ lation of the genetics division* the Twenty-fourth Street; is one of art Maudslay. Edited by Wini­ thejargest campus structure*. It ^WASHmOTON, Sept. placed them among It •ble. >tmr Experimental Sdenc* Build­ fred K«ppe?t. Avstitit The Usir books^ ,wher%tJheyi>sJ is primarily fo^ research wort and —rThe Marines for the fir«t time me ing -will be nady for*all occu­ Willy ef-'lTeiia^ Ftom. •3^"?'-; • miny-^ears.^­ classrooms above the sophomore are seekirigmore draftees-than the pation. Chuwrooms areelready «•* -• --Robert Maudslay c a m e to Inl938 anol^ert^ece, ^!Si{ $ Army in ^he comparatively .small America from England in' 1880 Kupper, wrote her master's.thesis copied. Financing December call of 16,900. to. make his fortuh# in the coun­*t The University of Texas. Mrs. . The Biochemistry department the us4 o* $8,133,185 «f the Uni­ f»*The Defense -Department an­ try to which the Texas Land Of­Kupper, wife of * San Antonio moved to at the beginning of the versity's ; Available Funds-and fice had lured 'him with its glow­ doctor and teacher'of English in cummer, and as soon as the labs $882,895 in local funds. . r*• nounced loday the Marines want W», eontii«» ing descriptions Of West Texas. the sehools there, was born en a H jure finished, the bacteriology, so-"The five-etory, three wing 9,900 men from Selective Service original letterl; There he found himself drawn sheep ranch at Bandera. She wsselogy, and chemistry departments Pr* structure isv equipped with eleva­ in. December, the Army T,000. to the sheep business,, for, which |p^ taught to work with sheep by her trill move in.' ' tors, refrigerators, air-condition-f IW WILSON 'FOREMAN, Students" Association vice-president, L; It also announced the November the land was so veil suited. uncle. ^ ' IKlv.^ --The buildingwas scheduled for ing, ventilation, and latest labors AM didn't mind at ell when he Was asked wait tables at the first call has been increased from 83,-After many years of roaming With the recommendation and IfeWr completion fat time for all depart­tory equipment. It has concrete tike addition iliMi lfe-S, ments to be housed before the frames with light-exterior walls, "couples only" Friday Frolic. He had no luck trying to get tips from 700 to 89,000 because of requests with his flocks through the dry under the direction of J. Frank Icmmt to %tia atotfev, West Texas hills, suffering Dobie, Texas"history and folk lote fail semester, but shortage of-ma­ creamstone trim, and red roofs to this table, though. The lady on the'left Is fis wife. The couple shar­by the Marine Corps to boost its tHe removal^ droughts and blissards, Maudalay expert, she used her uncle's let­ terial delayed the project. harmonise with other campus ing the table are'Sarah Roehr,and Vern Krtartin. About 200 couples total for November from 4,700 to was prevailed upon by his nieces ters as a basis for her thesis. This He voifis thatifceyaw wmplet^ bniWtHft: "attended'the fiee U.nion danee^ ly accurate tad unembellished, 10,000.-It wastht second month to write his memoirs. Between his result was so good thfct Mr. Dobie though not by any means a eonf» in a row the Marines had increased 75tK and^th~yegr-1ra did-<^ries4-called-4t^-'ono--of,the most inter! g** Silver, Bronz« Start original requests. of letters .to his niece Mrs. Frank eating and literate frontier naira-1«^ Gregory to Direct M. Jones, the "My Dear, Amy" of tives I have ever read." Afi-Englishman^ he -«iy#^«»rl5These developments were taken essentially honest, if he is nothinjr "? "Texas Sheepman." , Some, time later Mrs,; Kupper by some' as an indication the Ma­ elsej and thi*iean;h not ^»at It is a, %&• .& sports editor, has been appointed yond the presertt two divisions. Lt. Francis .J." Maloney, holder him, he wis 17 miles into entfmy ter the last rites.. and important sheepman pi "iFexss-state chairman for the 1952 Such a plan is known und$r con­ Southwestr Bobert Maudsliiy^ of the Silver StarBand two Bronse territory. on th'e road to Seoul Although the medics first March of Dimes". sideration. not find the fortune he. fiftd, Mr.. Gregory, prominent sports Stars, iii-'t^'jJI^^orwn-yeterilf' when the lead tank ran out of thbujght^~'_lhiit2l^6niy'r''#oaU^be to seelc. The real worth of |ge;| 54 Texas Tomboy Admiral William ; Fechteler, writer; • and: newspaper executive, to enroll at the University. He gas. Lt» Maloney had just left his blinded permanently, particularly book lies in the, true account s Chief of Naval Operations, told a . was graduated froin the Univer-jeep todirect the removal of the since the lens of th€ right eye gives of an occupation not quit*;4 . sity and' taught in the University news -conference earlier this On July 20, 1950,: Maloney was tank when, he heard an explosion. had been destroyed, he waa eva no widely-understood in this coun-f,School of journalism. landed near Yondok, Korea, where His jeep had run over a land cuated by air "to'Japan for treat­month "we might plan to go to tn-«.a»rn He headed the Associated Press his regiment, the Seventh Cavalry, mine "killing the driver and cripp­ment. Now with his glasses, which three' divisions." -; ^ —The description 'ot the;Bureau in Austin for two years went into action immediately. His ling the radio operator. Severely must be adjusted for something However, Marine headquarters PURSUIT OF GENTLEMEN. By Drusilla in a irterry muddle. She life is so vivid that the f ind served withthe Marine Corps outfit, like many others at that wounded in the right arm and legs as far away as a football game, Saturday said the increases are a Katbryn Craven*. New York: becomes a murder suspect, spends easily re-lives with the' l&eejw^i^fduring World War T Through his time, wis'under-rosnnedataif"oc-and~temporatily-biindedr-kt^Ma» heJms^recoyjered the use of both result of President Trumans au Ciwtrd-McCiBn. , 307 page*. time in jail, forces a confession his trials and hardships, and feeb.' influence the Battleship Texas was cupation duties left little time for loney was removed to an aid "sta­eyes. Back-in the U. S. by Octo­~CSrpl "to~go . -. with him the beauty -^3 cal condition about a week ago. just about run out. lies for "wrecking" the talksx on a two divisions recently Visited Ko­for its-humor. It-eatches. the.spirit carefuL-she. will wake up to find NON-FICTION 'He is a student at Austin High At this time he was one . of Korean armistice. rea "for a first-hand survey," the and language of frontier Texas a united front of military dicta­The Sea Around US. Thi^ enrollment at the Univer­ Rachel" 'School. three junior officers left out of broadcast charged. and "metropolizing" New York, The broadcast was aired while sity of Houston may exceed that torships among nations to the ' Carson, Oxford. >8.S0. ~ ^ Gen. Omar N. Bradley,, chairman Bradley an;d State Department of the University of Texas this and pleasantly combines a history south headed by General Juan Kon-Tiki. Thor Heyerdahl. BaAf,f of some Texas settlers with health- Adviser .Charles Bdhlen^ an ex­ falli according itf -popular rumors. Domingo Peron. Both Peron't will of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, ful wit. , 'M. •' ^ pert on Russia, we^e briefed by But that probably wiKT true, said be running for office Nownber White Man Returns. Agnes NeWfconferred with Gen. Matthew B. RidgWaySaturday in the first of Walter ,B. Shipp, assistemt regis­The first hundred pages are in­11. ton-Keith. Little, f 4. — Ridgway in' Tokyo. . JL geries of conferences on Kdrea trar and registration supereisOT, teresting reading. D.rusilla's '4The Allies had no immediate growth, Texas pioneers, tall tales, There was speculation In Tokyo "• Wr~had--11,880-students.. comment on the Red assertions; . wjd almost everything-for which Hill Book Bindery* that Bohlen might remain-in Ja­rolled here Saturday, but regis The .broadcast Rtdg- Texa* is famous, provide a wry PURSUIT OF GENTLEMEN ignored ~ pan after Bradley returns to the tcation ,i&.not yet complete," Mr., way's proposal that the truce talks US. It was thought Bohlen might Shipp stated. immor^^-Fights with Indians^ = by K. Cravens be resumed immediately in a vit- serve as an adviser to the United No official enrollment; figures drouths, posses and frontier c<" age in no-man's-land. preachers, anth a tortuous trek to Bookbinding and Rebinding An amusing romantic story of a . Nations command delegation have yet been received from the the throughvboorii towns, \Ci coast blonde Texas beauty who storms The broadcast alleged two Na-should the truce talks be resumed. University of Houston. are live and imaginative scenes. New York In the I ISO's. 3.50 The next 150 pageslsre still amusing but the situations ? Reminiscences of ROBERT MAUDSLAY fruits; they have their own lan­Leland B. Luchsinger of Beau­guage and their own stir in the You've never seen such a selectionl edited by Winifred Kupper' heart and mindt" mont has joined, the Industrial —M. E. DARSEY Here are |us^a feAryou^llfind ef and Business Training Bureau of the University Extension Divi­ -the Co-Op: Texas Sheepman, Robert sion^ specialist in industrial pre­paratory training. •-.-.-•-•ii.» • Maudslay; Birth of a.World, Weld® As state sponsor of, the Voca­ Frank; The Sea Around Us, Rachel tional Industrial Club of Texas, Robert Maudslay, a young Englishman, came . . ' t • s more -#K . 'S. he will continue development 6f to the hign hills of West Texas in 1880 Carson; T^e Magnificent Century, Written by UT Ex student club work for vocational- seeking a fortune but found instead a life industrial students in Texas-high "Published by the Which "seemed to be inexorably tied up THE HOUSTON STORY. By Ed Thomas B. Costain; The Pavilion, Stark ,schools. ' He succeeds John W, ; . with sheep." His story tells vividly and Bartholomew. Houston: The Cut& who came to the University Young; The Conduct ofLi&» • University of with a sparkling touch of humor tlie spirit Frontier Press. 240 pmjgti. $3. ins in 1947 and who was responsible A -of the true frontier, fhe grandeur of the for "Organization of the Vocation­"The Houston Story" is a his­ Lewis Mumford; Melville Goodwin!•> torical novel written by a Texan limitless-West. .the reader lives with him al Industrial Club of Texas. Curd and published in Texas about the USA, John-Marquand; The President's through the commonplace Hardships of is now employed in the model- largest city in TeJtss. That's a lot -iha range which so seldom find expression in making laboratories of the Na­ Lady,Irving Stone; Requiem For a of "Texas, but then; Ed Bartholo­ literature ...the burning heat ofthe tional Council for Aeronau^cs at mew, the author, is full of Texas. Moffett Field, California. Nun; William Faulkner; The»Ma»i£ Loves desert sun, the bitter cold of the blizzard, Mr. Bartholomew is a successfulLuchsinger formerly was jndus^ .businessman, writer, bookseller, of Oobie Gillit, Max5hulman; and. n^lhe^ieepman's life." Beautifully-ifltistr _ • ah' mont Hi^b "ScfioolT with photographs and six unusu^f a^local sponsor for the Beaumont drawings.' 3.00 chronicTis'd the history of Houston trial „ co-op coordinator at .Beau during Texas' most eventful per­ mont, he was employed by the iod. •' ** . Cisco, Texas, Independed Schools. Throughout "The Houston state .sponsor' holds Tffe new Story" the author Recreates the B. ;S. and master's; degrees in in life and characters,'; ©#>-Allen's fltverst duritrial education ;from Texas Townsite,. Miidtown, and finally A Sf M CoHcge, and also attended ^Houston -Town -by .information Winona* State Teachers.-College gathered from newspaper records ijrj Witjona, Minn. He is a newiy- His d of the season, set the Phils down broke loose for threo run* on W>art», 20^14,,in Houston aatoni«|y sented by Radio House -'ovory tended that the program bo of in-w01 be interviewed. £ : with seven hits.*lie received sen­five shingles and a walk la the Tuesday at 1 p.m. beginning Oe. toraat to the regular &bnm of • An object of the program i» to t-;1-4 Mpa sational fielding support from sixth to beat the hapless St Lottie with tobar 8 for 26 broadeaata or»r the atation akow the diveraified elementa L'Mt4'; 3GMk Brook-Jackie Kobinson and Billy Cox as Browns, 8-3* -t * -j junior ^fpaxked Qemaon to two radio atation KTBC. On the acond show of the seriaa, fhich contributed to the develop­ |^r-'i4Ry«ftdo^Bf"tlto btg­ ap'Jyn.jBodgera scraped by Phfladel-well aa the solid backing of ten Rookie Jackie Collum-with lat*-tonehdownejn the firat peried^ Joe Murphy, script wxiUt Of ment of Texaa and the unified^ hit* by his teammates, including inning assistance from' Dick Bo- gitin' istiiia mueeh and JUa 1 *• vill into afinal-day anotherJi'the fhird, gainhig 84 &ree spirited the Radio Houso who writes tho strriea, whole which now exists. v eompl4»tiona a two-run homer by Andy Pafko. kelmann, gained hia second major t>f the. Tiger*' ,214 yards on the said the first seven of the pro-JFino Arts Associcrtkyi 'frikM jfflfc *!•' Sanday •**•»• Ofd*' Ant tooehidowi) jnareh. Student actors who will partici-? ^'^*0O£*« giunu will decid* the win­In other National League play, 'leagttf pitching victory aa the St. grama will deal' with the settle­Honors Uster with Too pate in the first program, are Dan ger-of this .jpnusual National the Cincinnati! Reds hammered Lows Cardinals defeated the Chi­148>through the tit. Jin.Sbfrleir and George gave ment of Texas by different na­ Love, announcer; Tom Collins aa Hair what aid he needed in. pick- Murry Dickson for 11 hits as they cago, Cubs in a National league tionalities. Mr, William L Lester, aaaodate an Indian ihief and New England topped the Pittsburgh Pirates, thriller. hr up yardage for Clemson, while profeaaor of art at the Univeraity, August 12 saw the Giants 13 fthnson and Riggs were most of A dramatization em the firit traveler; and Larry Jones aa; 4-2, Saturday. Hank Edwards hit £h« Cleveland Indians took 18 will be honored act the opening «ja, behind thePodgers with edge the Detroit Ti­.BpS'oJ program will toll of the arrival of tea of tin Stephen F, Austin. • ' BjroqWyniteg apparently run­his third homer of the aeasMt in Inning* to tef aker.jto , BUl Howton to^ buoy ; Bice missadf a chaoee to tie up Mra, Sam J..Smith of Auatia, who ciation whkh will be held at La­ jwe.mffttf'tfift Dodger-kill Blackwell to hia 18th victory scored |fy Harry Simpson Hrho afa^ tl|e hopai of the partisan 8B,00ff the game in the ,wanning mo­is directly descended from pio­gona Gloria Art Gallery Sunday ior* started whittling away at iZ*h«trl1$"*efeat*r-r gledT;-atoi«L secon d^reach«cL„tWr4 ments, taking over on "Clemson's neers who arrived wth Stephen from 3:00-to 6:00 p.a. Tho taa HAIRCUTS 75c fplrooklyn's lead the American League, on' aft (hrror, and made it to 'the The difference wis Ifalr, jplns -25*yar.d Hue-when flpjif Tittle jefe. opena a three-we«k,-on«-man ; the •¥; Austin, will be -intorviewcd-jai. •*« Experienced Workmen New York Yankees swept a dou­plate onr Paul Lehner's pinch sin­a recovered fumble and s 90-yard covered Fred KnoebeFs fumble. tho broadcast •... hTElr~drthrn«tfgnaiiy kiium n ai# Ojtyaw York scored their sixth Kneebel .chilled ble-header from the Boston Bed gle. - touehdown run on a^ pase.-inter-this threat with The laat proup of programa will iata'a works whieh bt«lna on Sun­STACEY'S BARBERSHOP spfafelglit , victory1 Saturday and • • :• Sox, to their . first-place >•,. . a'rfourth fdoWn, goal line pass in­current in day and will laat %ftugh October siheir 86th in 43 games as they add to ceptjon by Jimmy Quarlef. explain occupations 2S02Gvada{up«^ ill tapped Boston, 3-0. Sal Maglie margin. , THE.STANDINGS B^ir shot a 20-yard'pass to Otia terception. Texas. The first of these will con­21. The National -League' •;>&; Ket&pstfh the Cleihson The victory^was number 14 for TPfra® *• brilliant five-hitter fpljhis Chicago -White .Sox /;dia- for frtst • cern farmings A prominent farm­ OsSSfrd victory of the season. • U pc| GB totmhdovm and Quarles*broke up Clemson in 4 atreak^ otretching er of this region will. ) e inter­ N of 1949. The Giants solved southpaw viewed! "• ; vff Tarhool Game Admission Brooklyn -~ * 95 68 .621 «*c<^9di The third tally oame Only a tie last sea«M|t |i#h South ;WWai*en Spahn for only five hits Studehts in Austin' P'abtie ^lat/NDAY'S SCHEDULE " ®wrl B Wrightenberry : recovered Carolina mars the tteoraJ. & g^in eight innings, but broke To Bo by Blanket Tgx Schools in social studies elaaees ^through for single tallies in the New York at Boston—Jansen Davir^ (Kosse). Johnson's zupiMe Rice picked n|> 14# ymrda rush­from third through ninth grades SHOE Students will be admitted to the (21-11) vs. Wilson (7-6). . oil tjie first play of the third ing and 102passingv -r ;'*j»ftcond and fifth innings to whip will listen to the shows, Mr. Mur- TWs ClemsOn jttihe crafty lefthander for the Longhorns' gamewithNorthCar-Brooklyn at Philadelphia—Roe period. gave thie Hair completed '9 of. 16 passe* ' tthtime -this year: ' : olinain Memorialfltadium Riituf. (22-3) vs. Church (15-11); bill on fte Owls' 26 yard:line and iM Buefc:^«ge:a^ored^Ja^*ay Tbey'added an insurance run in day. by blanket tax. The Tarheels, 3 AUSTIN plaj: • * Cliff TOflifrTUcked two e*tn» ->the _ninth against relief hurler rated first nationally by At least noiu'Ca ';"fbrfor ClenisOn. Jind WELDINGA Clemson, and Bill one "system" before they Tost to Victorious Steer Squad: Rice harf moved 82 yardla in jtisit RADIATOR »4fy«r» Bickford. It waa Spahn's . Wright two for Rice.' H piays to score its first touch-, *\>14th defeat against 22 wins. Georgia Saturday, have -played Duo inAustin Today WORKS down,, in the second period, Riggs -<£>. The Giants and the Dodgers Texas twice before. soo w.ath St. scoring from the 18* In the third, Mallets, Prtu Plajr Teday T«U M7U Foco srfchare: equal percentage averages "in 1947, Texas' Sugar Bowl —-In—-answer-^ to—numerous quet- Wo Put a Now on the^ls'-got^theiirla»t^tolly,thia ^(.62iy,~ going into the final day champions defeated the Carolin­tions Saturday night,, the Daily ~TKe Molletsr thr Te*an Sporta-f one coming on « one yard plunge <>,sOf play. ians, 34-0, but in 1948 It waa the Texan has learned that the Texas by Johnson.?. Staff football team, is a heavy Your Old Shoos! rr-«­ y&" The thoroughly-aroused Brook* Tarheels' year, bty a 34-7 tally. Longhorns, 14-0. victors; over Pur­ favorite over the Texan Press Clemson Parted out like it wg» tlyn Dodgem crushed the Philadel-• • a ' due Saturday, will arrive at Aus­going td raft Rice out of its 70,-Misjftinters, in « touch football you gof ' '• ALTERATIONS ."phi* Phillies, fi?0, Saturday night Student tickets-to the Okla­tin Municipal Airport, .^t 1:30 game siehieduled today. The game at CAPITOL 000 seat stadium, taking the o^#n- • BAG REPAIRING behind big Don Newcombe's,fiery homa University game in the Cot­p.m.'.'^unday. . will be play.ed the North In­ ing kickoff 77 yards on 12 plays on . fast-ball pitching to climb back ton Bowl October 13 for Univer­It had previously been an­tramural Field, across from Gre­• DYEING and a five-yard penalty. Hpir's .into a tie with the Giants for the sity students are in the same sec­nounced the team would arrive at gory Gyjji, at 1:30 p.m. 1-DAY running 'and passing . accounted • REFINISHING league lead; ~ tions as in 1950-20-23, inclusive. 1:30 a.m.i but:it is now definite fpr 68"^*rds.- , —1:30 p.m. Sunday. : • LUGGAGE REPAIRING Quarles broke up a Rice march I"" that stalled on Ciemson's 23-yard' SAN JACINTO INN • KEYS DUPLICATED '-rVK si Hh.e afier a, shorty^^TigerJ>Unt Dan Finishing Th« Finer Points leth * v MX Drake tried a second do#n pass San JaciatD Gam* Sututre». ' fr.om Ciemson's 11 yard'ltifte, but fivorythii^ tor your Camera ; .Texas14, Purdue 0. -I Missouri 21, Oklahoma A&M 26. ' . UT-.. Purdue. ;jQuarIes g6t in the way. rir«t Down* . 11) 10 TCU 28, Nebraska 7. Kansaa 53, Iowa State 33. Ru«h)n)t J16 144 The Best" Camera Rental pa«»ing Yardage 0 ' • 11.4 [ N«*t to Ohio State 7, SMU 0. -; Paities 3 ' ' B'ood at Arkansas 30, Arioha State 13. Attcmft*d . 22 SPEEDWAY exftfl A&M 20, Tex PaiacK Completed ; o .• • / 2 Northwestern 35, Colorado 14. Panes Intercepted 4 i Better 8 and 16 mm Movie Projectors { Co-Op 't Clemson 20, Rice 14. Pnnfa \ ....: s ' Pricies and dims for rent . Holy Cross 33, Harvard 6. '., Average ( DIO f Puntin* 4 Duke 19, Pitt}4* Ga. Tech 27, Florida 0. Yard* Penalised . *6 >• 4S 1 J SALES *SERVICE Score By Period, VUit Our Rainbow Room Villanova 21, Army 7. South Carolina 26, The Citadel 7. W. M. Walab, Owner 7 7 0 0—14 Navy 7, Yale 0-. • Wake Forest 21,. North Carolina Purrfu# Q, o a 0— 0 2010 Speedway 7-3946 We appreciate your PHOTO SUPPLIES Guadalupe Californi&35, Penn 0. ' .State 6. . ToJtcBHb#rtjj#-S«>rken patronasre 8-5717 2. Conv»r*lon« : Dawson'.2.-• ' i 2428 GuKdalune Illinois 27, UCLA 13. Tulanp 21, Mlamf (Fla.) 7. Tennessee 14, Mississippi State 0. „ Georgia 28, North Carolina^16. Michigan State 25, Michigan 0. Iowa 16, Kansas State 0. Louisiana State 13, Alabama 7. Mississippi 21, Kentucky 17. Auburn 24, Vanderbilt 7.. Mr • On Congress next to Austin Hotel t A Jr W ft** AM# /«* ^5 h sligKt change in design, HattwTKHiloh Pa r]isurfs ma'ko mm a big difference in a man's appearance. * * The change^a simple straight line that falls cleanly frofn sHoul<3er to seat. The differenc)&-—you talce on a " . d • V 4:-\mr. trimmer, slimmer look. And as always with Osr Jhnazing ttffmst Kisi Animated Style, the flattery is natural ^ ammo and unarffectad. Tryrone on :. • V<, v.'.-.•••/ • f in twb-bvfforipafc^|X3c style * 1 ,-* 1 ^. grey.toast^ brown. E*du«Jve^y at ReynoWs-Penlewi A* i * ^ % * + * ^ -r ? i » tfiAuftin 3^ ^ i+.^ 3,^ 4 > ^ ^few.'*4 i » t ? i"1 ijf, <•' t v ^ \,&S V $£& ­ w r* T j 2T QtM? wwwaawothwi Aiiv ' ti s .if. " *" 'I „:G*2-.tss Jl 1 Jf <•' fj*.' l\ fy •rir«**v*5r^ T? • mmmmm .