mm Jm villsSi li #3i8s«; $&&&. i a i K®8 ®wEHHl lyttBIWlu^Ay'44i| »:-Ii M.M'W SPPlg VOLW Price 5 Cants «S#53tjS NO. 2% illilifii liiii Hwa>w4 Sk IP v*mk ; #5ffe^ mS Stealing a march on some »••• b' elal dozen other campus organise Whenaskedfor the narte bf "">J-r •<* \> fc* tions, Editor Rowland Wilson an­the winner, W^son smiled, "That nounced the completion of the would be tilling." ByME.DARSEY year's first beauty contestMon-i;iv^pnel^rthes to. meet the judges at a tea..in phi Omicron Pi; Delores Derrick, Testae Union 301/Fifteen of the AlphaPhi j'Maiy tiou Moore, iJfu & 4* > i .Roger Robinson, chairman of the Blanket' Tax committee number of students registering Tuesday tiearsu eighteen sororities on compos ret^ Omega• Beverly Bihn, Delta Delia ponded, said Wilson. "There was of the Students'. Association, said^Tuesday night that the predictions that fall term enrollment will. be around i r«o0 '" " probably a delay at the post of-AUo -Eleanor Waldman, Delta . present tr^d^shows a-fabulous amount—maybe up to 98 12,500 mark, JByron Shipp, assistant r^jiatrar -K fice," he explained. "We weren't Phi Epailon; Mary Lon Lyncy, Del­per cent" will take advantage of the Blanket Tax. . tion supervisor, said. ~ ,r~^• " * discriminating." * ta Zeta Myrlene Anderson, Gam­ Ken Roberts:, Texan circulation manager, said that more The regular registration period through Dean Jack Holland and eight ma Phi Beta; Lynne Lovinggood, - ~ staff members of the magazine Kappa Alpha Theta; Ann" Donog. • put the figure above 12,i served as judges. The representa­hue, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Elea­K -JP-Undergradafttes tives were observed from the view-nor Greer, Pi Beta Phi; and Betty point of beauty, personality, and Harold, Zeta Tan Alpha."'"" -: mimI., "in Lm, i i"," K ruLuLa Theta Sigs Seek renter only wdth.approval^ Registrar., GradvCate studen^ , In Deportation register and pay fees, until ber 5.1' MR > ™™. Scripts for TSO >uy « \ By RUSS KERSTEN sioner (Washington)1in the Varm student at a half-dozen U.S. uni­^ Tmmh Kditdr .. 'i case after, he had upheld .the San versities from coast to coast, was If you've got a gripe against national fraternity for women in . In two. deportation cases in­ket Takes' as they register may Antonio Immigration Office's de­temporarily taken into custody your classes, your profs, your journalism; the show is a take-off volving University . students, the get them at: the Bursar's Offfgfc;? cision to, deport her. last ^December by San Antonio friends or just the University in on some phase of University life Board of Immigration Appeals in. until registration is officially1 After his ruling against Miss immigration authorities. general,, try getting it off your or activity. Scripts and Ideas for I Washington has ruled that Ta-closed; C.' Lewis lindahl, burtftpr, ­chest find down on a sheet of pa-scripts for th« 1952 production, marar Varm ttay lrimain in this Varm in July, the commissioner _ In early March Texaa » . Anybody can,get in on the Money from esch year's proose- of thtf .board's notice and the^ date will graduate," stated Weatherly. other.tbsfe the oii« to whicfi tfcey * or Yell Leaders there is n6 .plaee-.tlt wWch s^e ^ wholes#le aqetions on State-own-tion goes into seviaral Kholanihipt pf t^e hearing. He Reived Jthe Th« 21-year-old mechanical engi have v fA* dent alien of the U.S.j Weatherly Former studSiM vehicle*. t planning %^s«idy journalism at Priee and;his staff will be present . The boa'rd -eaflief. this month tive of. Russia, holder of several said. and received registration n$a| day: night' at 7 p.m. in the' T-As­ the UttivsWwity; a 9200 award to and" that the Longhorns will be reversed the (mriiigfation commis­American' college degrees, and a by mwU will follow tN The auctions are the outcome sociation Room of Gregory Gym­The attorney stated that Miss ||! ' * gi^dournaliam major for use introduced. GpYern^r Allan.Shiv­ outlined . in the mail^i insi of 'a rider tacked on the appropri­ Varm. asked. hia ,advice on appeal: nasium/ Twelve of the hopefuls ations measure passed in July djirtng h«r j»nipr year; a donation ers is tentatively scheduled to lead proceedings and later showed him tfons. Former students Yfn^nrfiwy '^ will berejected for the finals and the Msjorie-Darilek Scholarship the parade which will originate at graduate students) who did 'ndt ? which called fo,r sale of all State her clearance papers but that he then in tu/n, six will be chosen to Fund and ah annual gift to the 24th and Guadalupe and make its automobiles by October lilted v lias never legally represented her. get mailed instructions shdoid#'r, Rusk, Not Athenaeum serve premanently. ,ri;.'"-S, Jonrnallsm Library. * way to Gregory Gymnasium. Shiv­ prohibited, the^pwrchaw/M new Both students have remained in * — The fraternity also recognizes "Selection is based tentatively ers will also speak at the^ep rttly Present a-photostat, or tocc^ > •nes. ' ">-^r ^ „ school throughout the deportation The original meafure w«* Modi­the outstanding girl in beginning on judging," Simpson stated. for the Longhorns and all their proceedings, and both are ex­of credits at' Hogg AuiUtorfuinH fied, howevsay^tate last inont)i journalism each year by presents pected to enroll during the cur­Wednesday and Thursday froja^v-.'; I*. .However, student reaction and fans. Oldest Says Petitions id-.H?PM!*8e ..wiJX.aJso.ie.4^®^ into to 12 o'clock or from 2 to^ Danielktfoeked out the provision adding her name to %.plaque in consideration. The winning con­people running for the six yell It's finally 7 The decision" came"about one" -o'cloekv and pick up Jpr w V^nlip^ar^mersS^Price i»g ber an engraved bracelet-and . There. &M, apjixo^in^tel^ lortyL rent registration period. testants urill be picked by a*-pgnel: after dealing with ear sales as uneon-the Journalism Library; leading1 positions which are open Literary and Debating Society is week Rusk ' petitioned the registration and time cards. i^rrational. The second clause In June df this year, the local of -judges-on the basis of form, They wll meet again arthe Texas the oldest organisation on the Chief Justice for a temporary re­Report to'Waggener Hall 1155, ' prohibiting purchase was render-Thj^a Sig Chapter'wsp:recognized poise, and ability to handle the Union on Wednesday night at straining order to halt Athenaeum at time indicated" to" have cards/| campus. The Student Court, by Wk «d valid because it is % "limitation as the outstanding undergradnate situation. 7 o'clock for a.^inal work-out be­ Literary and: Debating Society checked. Then go to Room lOlif^r.;-, a vote of 4-0 with one justice «n spending" of the appropriation* chapter in the nation for iU TSO At the workouts for the pros­fore the judging Thursday and the from publicly claiming to be the course card, tentative course curd, |/ ~ BAt som» state agencies, de^ production and use. of the funds pective yell leaders Tuesday night torch, light-parade Friday, which absent, handed down a decision to oldest organization' on the campus. advisor information sheet,v Xn4'.'£ 4 elaring that they, wished io com­from the show, ---on the third floor balcony of the twelve of.them will lead. that effect on August 8/ The temporary order was grainV time card-to-Gregory ipays ten per.cent of the total. If ed a portrait ot the late Ed How­chita Weekly-Times, and in 1907 Howard was appointed postmas­director of the School of Journal­lic statements to. publications to 7 •— Yell leader instructions, Tex­1952. was host tSr is property right be-; Gregory Gym, < 1928, and an FM broadcasting tion fnr the gift was the luncheon. a valuable ^Melton, 21, died in Brackenridge _ It;was he ,who insisted that the which re­-linging to Rusk by its claim and Hospftat Sept. -2 of Poiio.-Tfe^ SSK^^SmioX^ajIPecial couhsel by Athenaeum's admission by fail­ was the year's first polio, death University Protect the University's inter­ ing to defend itself. ests when he became convinced Sin Travis County. -r that the institution was not get­The opinion was written by C. Melton,of 112-D,: Brackenridge ting its proper return from its oil J. Copeland and concurred in by . Apartments, Lake Austin Boule­ associate justices Theo Lueders, Tard, was admitted to the hospital , , £ When the special counsel filed George"Crowley, and.Jack Strong; Tuesday, Sept. 2, with a disease suit to recover the money to which Associate Justice Mike Wheeler which was diagnosed as polio. This "the University was entitled; the was absent. • " -was the 12th case of Polio in the defendant. oil companies soughtbounty this year. a compromise and; the institation was reimbursed. f ' The portrait, pitted by Emil | Rally Committee Herman, Wichita Falls artist, will 4 hang"in the new -Journalism Build­ Wi cred ing, scheduled for completion Asks for Helpers abont February 1. «• X By BUSS KERSTEN Howard, who difd January ,13, _ Students interested in working 1948, was founder and president on the Rally Committee, the or­t Some people are. asking about of the,Times Publishing Conipany, ganization which puts on card * ¥ u rW'-Ss' V^"S;'the younger generation. -publishers of the Wiebita-Daily stunts during the football games, -t ( * * -At-adoWntown-movisSiayarsretiTixnei.And.W.ir-lut^Jga.lUJLpgard. are urged by Randel Dockery, was-made, is starringin "My-First Born Sept. 30, i8iS6, in Tekes« ' " Love."'" . see. Howard bepame a printer's Union from 1 ^to 5 o'clock any apprentice it th ag of 13 and afternoon this week. ^ ' *|r"At the Freshman ,Orientation later was a journeyman printer, , About 70 students, are needed 1 tfa»e» • -Toeeday.< night, • the t&eme He worked ih Chattanooga, Mem­for this, year's. committee. Old . .v^.yas "Heaven on Earth."-.. phis, and Nashville before' com­membent as -well as new appli­ 1 * One oir^ully-lettered sign ing to Texas in I88v7 to help his cants are i'rfvite'd." "" " ' "TP .read: brother, Will toward, publish a Last year was the first time ;. "I dreamed tiiat l died ssd to newspaper in Hnnt County. card, stunts* in the grandstand ^heaveii 'did go were introduced • * in the home \} I-rang the bell g^itly and UT EsAMdaf ^Vatisa Army Shames, There was less than 2 per BROCK PEARCE HESISNS his post «$ diraic^r 01 Mbowed very low, :: cent errorC *s '7^:-:"; ' A' fprmer Texas ch'eer, leader, after fourteen months in that position bordor to$0,tatKe Utviv»fJ*-P ^ "I saidr ^'M from TESAS'-aHd Charfar Graham/^far-no Committee.members ar^'needed ;,how they did stare ileft ^jifljfet AOiPLlsn the^display^work out de­sity of Minnesota to compile graduate ^orju Hls .tesigni^n as' educational advisor ' to the tidy surfr of money he saved the University* U­ •Caine in? said Peier, ypuVe tBe Paul J. Thompson, T, S. Paint^rr Gov, Shiveb, tails orj. the flashing of the'eards, accepted by the Union board fast week. NfO' action tias fakeH.^ American Army of Occupation \n. presented to tfee school in tlie form o? a porlreit pjrUn^; Rkea Howard. and take charge of the stunt duiv. to call a new director,-but Wales Maddent prestdylpf - "3S5^ *>TSV rjti^-Af-"-?' MMUm sS7" IP $ HANCOCK •tuWvivBf F "4. *A . forewtfy and-:s^mmSlj|^'?,4iHtKoQt' for every man .a sport" That Is bag any of tte _,_,_^...„_r.._ _ expressioncollege ^ the motto of the University of compine aaBy OKLAND SIMS <» »«; twehdowns, pound s«nior nfhornswerererting " The iorward*pMS ^ong^iamed as * Southwestern football weap-' But ParflH, ^master that lone fetter); or Jones' twin, Lsr* Guards, Barley Sewell and Bill Iritrimurais, the^ tXniversity's ^v^An regu]arIy-enrdIied; men stn­weeks ago with the Texas Aggies and the m :*»4 *eiglrtj}t<«Be on—retums to the Southwest Sat­way be, isn't the whole story Milburn., sports program "within the walls," dents in tKa Unfrexsity shaS be­ -,'X"->•. 'f>;. : .-if ' HorBeat* being touted to the top of the ning in the com-urday, but in the unfaiaijlar blne for the Wildcats. Only five of* -•Center;'to WtoiP, ; affords yOtt an opportunity • to eligible to compete in intiamural ^ rl^l^o^mipoiifcrenechftttlef Ht# and white colori of the University tensive regular# «re gone from ''' The oddjMm starting fullback Quarterback, T. Jones Imp-Das compete is erganfted athletica. athtetic* ^tiNf^ lfoSowInt w of Kentucky Wildcats., tire Sugar Bowl championship i^ Bill Leskovar, 6-2, 195-pourtd p*tf» r«'<2&7 VV A JS you are a new student at the eeptions; *-th* Hit ten ye^w have the Longhorns boen Wie Cats, who snapped •Wd. On defense, the Cats lost University and are of the majori-Men students who have beeif; steamroller ««nior, a two-letter­ ,loirehtoeacapc homa's 81-game winning streak jbqt •igmstarter «nd.may i»ot be able Don Barton. •> ^ ty which does not have the ability recommended for a Varsity--letter man^ Leskovar's running shone ionshlprttin*,Ial»4*Ind® the Sugar Bowl last New Year's to Iquat their 195X) mark of .four equally .with Psrilli's passing Fullback, Byron Townaesd. to be a varsity athlete, but at* (qualified or. unqualified) from : theSt&ra wire day, bring a team to Austin, a straight "shut-outs." against Tennessee Tech last week. A couple of men who might still intereMed hi'sporte for recre­an acceptable senior college* shall team already experienced in IM!' Tlie Kentuckians will be able grab some well ational activity, intraraurals is for be ineligible to .compete in the tofin^tMrdlteM^ The '"Wildcats will be led by headlines, as as r VM ptey. A 1\ to pick from a 75-man roster for Pant "Bear" Bryant, head coach some Parilli passes, are Don Me-you. j, _ ' "Vv'% *? sport or associate spert in which > w l R 5 The Wildcats opined &nw fit*; their travelling ftfuad. Tbe Wild' nasco, Associated Pre» "All-The latent of ^be prdgram is they were recommended for a let* •5 tfJ at the Wildest school, who in five rAnd.now,witb the openinggame son last week by "edging" a weak cats can field an all-veteran team American" for 1950'; and Bobby described in the 1951-52 "Hand­ter. years has piloted Kentucky clubs Jl^dfta; i#*y» the 'tTniveesHy Tennessee Tech ' squad, 72-13, for the first' battleL-with Texas Dillon, whose long runs save,d a book of Intramurkl Athletfcs." Men students who have repre­ a iejien is being picked, to succeas- And, as usual, a Babe named Par* in their^ history1. . , to 40-won, 13-lost, 2-tied rec­couple of ball games.(TCU and Tbf handbook says that intrarau­sented The University -of Texas in ord. Bryants Kentucky clubs fin "fend ^e'l?50 e>ow illi was the big show, •At'Mfltffl fhe XV{\A+*l-MBfi glj|4 rals are intended for the' majority a Vandty contest shaQ.be ineligi­ ijthed eighUi, seventh, ninth, sec- B*ylor), ParilU, who was All-American Bob< Fry, a 6-4 junior; and Paul Parilli has had only Itwelve of less skilled students^ .and fat" ble to' compete In that sport or , gdi'"-', ond, and first in the Southeast­ Hii eH,foron tMng, ten oflsat quarterback on»j»*5:y 1950 "All" Jones,., a 5-11 senior Each has ern/Conference^ '"k passes intercepted in twelve games ther to cultitete Skiils which en­associate s^ort for the remainder of that school year. 's starting defensive team Is teams; led the Wildcats in setting one fetter. and Saturday's game stands to able them to carry on not only Texas' defending Southwest during school but also into recre­A student who has been roeom­ , ., -fling fitos a nfamber.of offetK three all-time collegiate marks, ' At tackles,> it mighty be.»Jlm Mc- be an offensive battle, wftJi the Conference Champion Longhorn^, ation periods of later life, mended for a freshman numeral «sb» backfleli! performers, Texa«r, in 1M0. _ ; , ^ Kensie^ .6*1, '220-pofind, >enior;• 'Steers generally conceded a "$­ mninwhile, are making their first 'at The University of Texas shall all-around, depih in personnel First, Parillli led the natldn in or John ketoskie/ S'O; 183-pound point favorite" role in the expect­The handbook goes further to start under Coach Ed Price, the be ineligible to compete the fol­ Seeftisto be another "rewwn. •..^•'-i touchdowns accounted for (in4 senior; £ach hes two -letters. ed scoring battle. say that one of the aims of the K L successor to oil man Blair Cherry. lowing year In the sport or asso­ e of the dean* of sportrwrit* eluding touchdowns scored, and ;Gu^i^coulAibe&^o-let^ Game time at Memorial Stadi­department Is to make participa­ I, ciated sport in which he won hi* f in tile Sototlweit, Dick Free-touchdown passes thrown) with' John t^iarsi, S-0, 202-pound sen­The Steers'"new-fangfed" Split-um SaturUay is 2 p.m., and stu­tion in the Intramural Pro-am Sffl fnan of the Houston Chronicle, de­28, one more than Ole Miss' Char* ior; and Bill Conde, 5-11, 190-T formation will -probably .be dents will be admitted upon pres-as attractive and desirable to a numeral. • Men whose tkatnes appear on an ley Conerly in 1047. manned by Longhorns like these: large number of the men tfudents cided oh Baylor earlier in the fail, piuiid seirme 200 off series of three games. The Church division will consist"Nevertheless the ,Qrange ,>:l»ai» writers elevation to" the top spot. members of the, organization. of teams organized from the mem­Baer will be honored at the bership of a church or.a church •Greg Scott • annual meeting of th^ association Baseball Scores youth organization belonging to to be held in conjunction with the the Inter-Church Athletic Associa­8a I l^o.oj||Donce StudioNational. Collegiate Athletic. As­1 . TEXAS LEAGOE tion. "T'T.':"-'" ' omrnees sociation convention in Cincinnati Houston 3, San Antonio 1. (Hous­' A student desiring to compete At>6vt-Texas Theaterthis January. ton ieads-final series, 1-0.) DON BARTON in individual sports, also track . ."There ,coulda,'t:,have, ibeen a v6ULF COAST LEAGUE , ^ finer choice, than Baer," com­Corpus Christ! 5, Brownsville 4. mented Knobs In making the an­(FinaK series tied, 2-2.) H^GHICAGO^ , Sept. 18-^--nouncement. "He brought his team WEST TEXAS-NEW MEXICO One well placed baseball source jor League Baseball owners to the College World Series at -• LEAGUE said that it looks like a deadlock Iwt. assembling here Wednesday Omaha, Neb., as a decided under­Abilene 12, Lubbock 9. (Abilene In the hope of discing a hew com- between Frick and Giles. The nine dog, and then went on to win. He wins series, 4r3.) W»io$er, The names of Warren votes Giles received are from the |SiIes and rord Prick are heard same clubs that supported Chand­ f^ost prominently. ; r'-r-^6 ler, said this persom ' Wfms Thursday's formal meeting > is Jf<* deadlock develops, baseballie first, legally empowered to re­ mayt turn to-^darkhorse^sandi­ place A. B. -Chandler in the date. One possibility baseball men|t68,00Q job, the two previous have discussed is former Senator fissions in New York having been James Mead, now chairman of the 1*1 Id d merely"to cut down the Federal Trade Commission. An­ other is Ben Reset who -retired as '-.v! Numerous ballots were taken at managing editor of the St. Louis l^piihese meeting l>ut nine-was the ^ .s_. ..We Deliver _ _ Post-Dispatch and who has at least^pjnost votes anyone received as one ardent supporter among, the about the — L |)g|against 12 needed to elect. Giles owners. LfT US CLEAN ANDSERVICE YOUR TYPEWRITER' !Jt^«a the'msn who got nine. 1 Bm?|, .« The 'sentiment for^ Giles and . ADDING MACHINES —CALCULATORS The five 'major names left on Frick comes from the baseball s-'|he list are Giles, president of the BWKMANS owners who feel that the g^me m.s Cincinnati JRedu Frick. oreafdent M-A' "V/riCk' Pr^d*nfc W *». needs a man who"knows its inside Cafeteria's 'W the National League; Milton s%jwwenhower,IfEiser -workings rather than a famous -t-M prtsldent -of P'enii national figure who might take ^,{ College} James A. Farley, months or even years to learn |||?hairmant of the Board of Goea the intricacies of the Major ands^Cola Export,-and Gov. Frank tau- Deposit Plan Minor Leagues. V ON THE DRAG , yj?y.°^ GWo. l^ausche, however, KfTwitharcwj / ^ it?>' . $tw Holc^mb's Contract1 8 Outstanding Features mExtended Tin Ysari IfJ,ASAY®TT15' Ind" **pt 18— Cloeonass to.tKe Campus ­>1f)~furd«e University disclosed (tMcams Sionui Students Here's How It Works: '-SA ;• Jwat bakind the VarsityTheeiter Kiven Head Foot­ -ball Coaeh Stuart K. (Stxi) Holr "v: h comb a 10-year contract as a step Serrmf Hours • Pepojlt say $30 at the beginning of the month. -toward solving the problem of ov. Breakfast 7 to 9 , at BRACKENRIDGE •wwiphasis in intercollegiate atht Mi' '--k Lunch 11(15 to 1:« • Eat as much,«« often, or at little at you pleete. Dinaer5to7 < ' — *•"». Frederick L. Hovde, Pur­ ~ and ' fu« President, disclosed the con­ ^ Varietyofitemi • Then make your adjustment either way by the"tenth of the fol­ ffr«t, asurjng Holcomb a 18-year lowing month, ^ . Plaaaiaf Tariety of ^oodb, tamptiafly * snore. N t; 3?, .. prepared. V Br. Hovde said Holcomb'a orig. ^ DEEP EDDY , ial five-year contract was ex- • You only pay for-the meals you eat. • ^ HmmbI Atmosphere, mor* t^,n Mnak » year ago: At that time, the Purdue' presi-+ LOW PRICES leiit said, the University felt it £«* a personal matter between Accommodation fee institution and the coach. He Adjusted Dopoeit Phin lded that he decided to disclose OR Pay by tlumeal le action because of the growing -JWofelem of oyer-pmphasis in inter.J ml' Open Thursday ims&SZa Wwt* ijualtfied Who „ has ' demonstrated WW? iealdership and teach Your Oak Farm Dairies Milkman ' ability, and then give him the enjoyed by other OTE: Open daily starting today, for tbosa who wish to ForlServicef Call %«»t»««l»;Mk mara artangaments fer the Adjusted Defrasif l^an^ r 4v tor.say meal aer^od» t»e|ti.r; ' CAM. tJP 5-55/7 ^ rs* iSs«^pj— .Club Tues­ teher Steve the company, er Bill Shar« iU ledgers m WM» gjxil» Mipif . ' . Ifgi Withemphmfci* ©npaaa defense, the Longhorn yridaters, now a six­ ] point favorite over Kentucky Satavday, wm% farther into |pW&anlot the Wildcats before their final test in; Memorial Sta­diflmi Ontd:?rieinid bis staff I spent nost of the afternoon Ainerica quarterback Vito (Babe) ParillL ppfp Slt'T *"'| .^l^t Mps| MMR 4f isis§ ?V»\ * ^VCt? #4 t> «SF M\ I, HI IFYGFI v. V Vv"?§^f f »'4 ^, •'&&,--i .-.•«=, ** ' •# -' v'V"­ •::••••-•• ] ITELL THE FEE FJXER jWHEN YOU REGISTER *'jr« ^3 ^ M A' *f d ± 'A. For av«r _8 Ifai. of - •>j ^tj • * !> qualify, color, pictures, action, views,, class­ . . ^ ^ 'M mcitof, adivitios^ iand -= *. <• # NATIONAL LEAGUE N : w « .1 Pet. (b Brooklyn •».' 90 52 .636 — New York 89 57 .608 8 St, Louis > 76 68 ^26 15 Boston 78 71,,508 18 Philadelphia 69 76 .4f8 22% / Cincinnati 62 84 .427 80 Chicago ^ ^ ^ 360 85 .411 31% Pittsburgh, " 160 86 .408T 32 AHERICANLEAGUE ' -•i V \: -W 1 ret. gb New York ^ • 89 54 .622 — Cleveland, 91 56 .619 — Boston -. 86 56 :60ft • 2% Chicago^:/; 77.68 .530 15 < -Detroit ..68..77 .4,67 .22. Philadelphia 64 82 .438 26% •.Wfllhington -• 56 87 .391 33 St. Lqp97 .317 43 WEIRING* r# tife nationftl i**;the, »-'^ -^r c." **rr-i pft championships "Will ^ N-Sl, i'1 -r' Donaldworked throughout theaf-, Badeill) the uniform-Tuesday. t&i Friday .^Jndiibltion/ teraoon oa aerial '$efew;;:'r The defensive line-up in the sder and Larry Fagan at tackles, .*fchd J. T. Seaholm at guard in the-­ scrimmage was Bill Georges and Hub Ingraham at ends, Stan Stu- five-man-line. The backfield line­ up stood as usual. -— The Longhorn* arebeginning *to look more polished since their * tntrasquad game Saturday and „ with two days, of'workouts undei , "their belts. Coach "Price saidJhc would probably 'send (he Long* horns through one'tnore stiff prac­tice^session and begin to lifter up Thursday1 plays imtheir final preparation for the Sugar Bowl champions. Aggie Fullback Again Factor In UCLA-Gam# . Sophomores' and' juniors May take, mdst of the 'glory Piiday night, as Kay George's,Texas Ag­gies tangle with IfCIiAin Los An­geles.' ' ^ '/"r -'. ' j; • The gam«, first''between tlie scKools in eleven years, finds a star fullback-, again the Aggie standout, as was the case at'the last"previous meeting in 1940.:: Then, that fanbMk'WM'^JIuhHii' Jawn" Kimbrough, the All-Ameri­ean-grouna-gainer from Aggielan Around the turn of the fbrties. Now, of course, "Bruisin' Bob" Smith is 'the All-America candi date and is one of the reasons the Farmers are odds-on* favorites' to defeat tite Uclans Eric' Miller,1 a sophomdrSf' may start > at. one end,' itnd Darrow Hooper;•-m former quartei^ack, may be the other wingmari. . Coach George has been drilling llEADY FOR ACTIONh Don Menasco, a-l 80-pound'-linebacker the Aggies'' quarterbacks-^-Dick wtfo won all-America honorshonors^-as a junior last season'forMhe bong-Gardemal, • Bay : Graves, rD^liiiier horns*. Menasconasco J teams with June'Day^i^rf|Bi|l?McQbnalcfc'«ts)irWT: Sikds,-apd'Jtoy D^ar^to^ttViAbp a passing-attack td-i^piile^ifrfth balkers on the Steer defense. others. in the pass-happy 'South­west." -•" GAME SCHEDULE CHANGED- Buffs Tag Missions ARLINGTON, Sept. 18--WR)-* The. Arlington State College-De-: catur Baptist College football game originally scheduled for Friday night will be played Thurs­HOUSTON, Sept 18.—W— bit by a tipped 1>|ill. However, day night. This will permit ffns |Houston's' Buffs sprinted into the Fusselman's injury later appear to see-the game And the Arlitig-I lead in the Texas League playoff. unlikely, to keep him from cat< ton-Irtring High School • game at tlfrby-beating-.San-AntimiOr^'l, ing. Wadaesday night. ^ Irving^riday.xugh^,^_i__­ |Tuesday night as A1 Papi notched For TL Play-off Lead hU24thvictoryoftheBeasonwith « neat four-hitter and Larry M^-:\v |gins bit his 29th -homer, of the i year. It was the first jgame of.-the final playoff. Uu'U fikd your heart's desm ammg but Injurie# struck at both clubs as |Jack 'O'Donnell of the Missions STERLING SILTWpattems collection of fine •offered what was feared to be |'a broken:ankle atttf'IifeN Ftisselman of the Buffs had to leave the game I with a bleeding hand after ^eing Irish, Musfang Tilt TV , IFlans fpr '51 Aiwounc^d The 1961 Notre . Dame-SMU football game.-on October IS.will be among twenty ^ames to-be tele­ _ this year by-.--the>«National Broadcasting. Company. The -bat • tie is th^ only one of the list in volving a Southwest Conference School. • The Notre DAnte-SMtl series most recent history dates' back two years ago when orie-of the WBSSr Irish's greatest teams had to come mik tw biearaniilso Tan -Mustenr j «leven 27-20.. Tlie Ponies, led by [Kyle Rote had played the huge |Notre Dam»s off. theix" feet for and;steength of numbers overtook them in the waning minutes. ­ . *MNE IUOOUI vcmwenm ' MAMS COIOHIM 'nunvui -tautomf The Staridings "" " • . U9.60 -. f32.«0 $82.60 .|40.0® |27.9i . Outstanding in our collection are these five^fchird^Dimension JBeautyr* designs created exclusively by ... WALLACE SILURSMITHjS *i| .7 • Com* \n oni Uf m twists' aNu OLU alike1 are randi9al®rf<^pbsftions'ori^ihe 1951 Longhorn football team. Walter Bond (left)," 19,"a 190-pound, 6 foot, ,1 inch sophomore end from Gorsic^na, i$ the youngest mem­ ber of the squad. The oldest gridster is Don (Bulldog) Cunningham, '|right) 22,'a two-year senior letterman frpm Graham, Cunningham, Ttlls_his 5 foot, 10 indvframe with 190 pounds^and is the starting defensive halfback. _ " T_ ... ' ­ AL Race fioked on Auociat»4 Pn$* '• dowi^the Phillies, 7?4. Three is the margin in each niia-The Detroit Tigers edged Phila­jor league as action goes into the delphia's Athletics; 8-6;-as §tevehome;stretch, v Souchock and Hoot Evers banged; The Cleveland Indians whipped home runs. Johnny Lipon gathered the Botiton Red So*, 6-4, Tuesday in five straight hits,for the win afternoon in Boston, capitalizing ning. Tigers. / ­on a four-run sixth inning..They In that Cleveland-Boston <]game moved to within three percentage four runs in the sixth inning off points of the league-leading-New d • ^ } h an lost, 7-1, to Chicago's White Sox 20th victory of the" season. A twoin a night game. run ninth-inning Red Sox tally fell . In the National League the New short. York Giants continued % late drive The White Sox stopped Vic Ras and onoved^ to within three ^ames chi from reaching, the. 20-gameof the Brooklyn Dodgers. The mark with six runs in the eighthGiants edged Cincinnati, 6-5, as inning in a Yankee Stadium nigbtBrooklyn fell to the St. Louis Car- game. dkialsr^Tlr-both in night games. The St. Louis Browns swept a twilight-night doublebill from the Washington ^Senators, 8-0 and 3-2. Drawing Sets Tommy;.ByrQe' and .Ned • Garver were the winning pitchers and the Savi on ourlarge second game went ten innings^ used selection *' Ralph Miner's 41st home run at lowest prices led the Pittsburgh Pirates to a mmoum 6-5 triumph over the Boston Braves in a day game. ­ "ore ^.-Chicago's Cubs exploded 14 hits off three Philadelphia pitchers to F... f: golf-clinic which is to be held at the Austin Municipal C*olf iCoutse at 1:S0 o'clock Friday. Miss Jtawls­is, a member' of the Wihfon' Advi« •o*y Staft.and will represent them r inthe 9-hole match. |r A native of Austin, Miss RajWla.will be honored'with * homecomw ing ceremony at the municipal-links course. Also, she will b« hoitr ored with a luncheon at the Tar* rytown Cafe at 12 o'clock. Thin will be under the direction of thi* Austin.Women's Golf Association Harvey Penick, pro at the Au^> tinCouhtry^ltrtj-and^Toadr-of^ the Longhorn golf team; 'will serve arf master of ceremonies;wi Mirt Rawls rounded out theKlisti of Texans who capiured all the , .AUSTIN'S nationargolf titles this year. Ben -will Friday Hogan. of Fort Worth won-tfai; winnings thr Hational W,omp " National Open ' golf" tournament and Billy Maxwell of 'Odessa and Amateur Golf Tournafnent.i^­ -$ Ti*5 £-f "J & V THE CORNER SA^pWICH SHQ "bJJuiju ^oad jMttds ^ f v* ^ f- Weprepureoursandwich«»mnd lodutoplMUMt: yourtuto 9 > „ _ V i * * \'"*i r* ; f^ & TRY-OUR DEUCIOUS-LUNCHES AND T ? HOT-PLATES TOO; : > Telaphoa* S-0452 2354 GmflaUp* >V TffS T • -F >*. * -I FOR THE ENTIRE -, SCHOOL YEAR % -4R­ , /I The besf bargain you ever had. X.V' J5on!f fail to sign up this year. ­ Wonderful fe a t u r e s, beautiful S fA:^, ONLY girisl s ACM e e When you register just tell the fee-fixer that you want the Ranger. The small cost will pe added in with your otner activity fees . .. Or, you can sign up for the Ranger at Journalism Building, Room 108. You will be given a Ranger card just jik? the one pictured (right). X" The numbered stubs will be removed one at a' time as you pick up each month's Ranger in the Journalism Building, Room 108, at the Co-Op, or at booths in the Law, Engineering and Union Buildings. Individual-copies 25e • • . Re­member . the $ I Subscription savfcs you 75c. Pick up your Ranger Card as you pay your r ^ >* faes. ^ .-R* • Cartoons * eatures 1 ihew jwi how IhtAflfld* *** 1 «?* * rj* *L\ V> wroupht fatlforinad -beautyef KtrfphirHiaf Beautiful Girls Short Stories oror .bc#vt-cophifitf ' odaiop* \v; X. finoSOvarbyWAlUCe ^ ' Mad«r CraftimM. • A Top College Magazine fprgtexanjj. XXAOlATOa mMi: sporfs. ^7 —X*' •%u " J-J •OO W StirSt. Id. > T«L •47tt:: ^ % s s ". w i Wmm flM littlagoodii| r. » , jifSSi:;#?S§lfef v« *£r»s wots™ Texan Editor, wrote from Wash* leading bureaucrat issued * rfiie» i^"lt^^*a4ppHnrf ^to i»* LoyJJkmai^ wuM? «***» tf * W* aUka J* *•ttMaads ington last Weak ttMflfc afcd wife torn, it was bettered. In other l^lS*dod» of a«ing indifferently, although at time# they r+> wrangi* in bowUn* "dilatory were all a«t to safl for England words, we had a feeling that mea •iderel2nm*tt«» In^^ftise to sign «f «.matter of prindpkfc tactics" at Hi*-other these day*. N«w of integrity were talking. They te ii the subjects of 4 Communists or Red sympathizers pro-' Well, ft may b* hard ta yet tiie •ft. r felt tlte same way in Enrobe, valffi. finger ^jatii partly stymied bably never,hesitate about signing, since, bat somebody ft, Late la the fiaias w«r* narried In Washings. "Today a foreign newspaper* .iw-oenerai this trick thevery act of going along with thenew . toer all tbe reports from ton la law aad hm been in tha man or United States reporter wh«r law would tettfto give them a shield tqn «tM saying tha* final jM' iff Manur, where Bomde accepts more thita ten per cent of Mil riders cannot be individually Except fcpr citing the Comnmsiiii was imminent. At timea tha**-readied himself for foreign study official statements on their face •&*** ** the national culprit, something pttfi grew optiatfStie enoughto by writing: iaagaala* ftafearw and value is in need of a psychiatrist." name the time, ttaafly jast a ito* < neiripapai axtklas for-tisa Harte-.. ' If you're interested in drawing Inadition the ruling eliminates the all good grammar-school children know days off. . JBanks diahi of Texas. ^ a' parallel, think About the old nrohable injustice that might have been anyway, this rider accomplishes nothing, But, except for mflHona-of 1Mb at Oxford for a year on high-school world history eouna words itlBst through tb« air la' a Botaiy Fellowddp, Bonnie will and its discussions of the Roman w to - sharp editorial and congressional write • weekly calama-entitled • wm^v)~r Empire. r • v res whowithin thepast^en Y^*»ve (' Kid*# exchangee, the sad fact is that "A Texan Abroadw fbr thirtesw ' Sometmng about gorernm#nt members of the Communist Party UOWWMfWWt r^tHCr tidelands legislation is effeethrely Texas f&pmuy-^ „ .Vis. decay, tied in with decline and -•ii throttIed-+probably for this ses­-r * subversive^- Bit address* , % ' • fall...ltope Hot. " -ft sion—somewhere in themireof Rendering the new oath comparatively Governor Allan Shivers' jus®®® Senate committee. ^ Oxford Unlrswity, -m* without its Illegal retroactive fea-concern over "government by rider" has Nov for the dilatory angle* Oxford, turet his decision leaves the state's ^paid off handsomely now that Attorney- . The latest andperhapsthe most absurd chacge Jeweled at states* eommentary on today's fc-oremi 32,000-plus employes with merely one General Daniel has had time to study and ^firing-cJCiine Tighten, who have done nothing 4 meat to Fattea Lewl^ Jr.^ ........ rule on the more than 200 riders tacked rmore scrap of anti-communist paper to but work toward a quick congres­"Today nobody ean treat oar onto this year's state general appropria­ sional return of their landsi Is gvvairamatt^a word. And by gov­*&• sign.?,. Hake Mayan for .psychology, he lefs his daises out ble - thatleveledby the Department ernment I don't mean th< thou­TO THE EDITOR: sometimes doesn't even come, ulef Prof Thornton i» sp ofd he doesn't of Justice, dilatory? Not hardly. Ini the .jrommCT edition oT The Legislative groping for-power and sands of honest federal employes ^aka roll m English 60f. ProfUalcor just got married, so ha wel^r_ body.. 19 the part of the opposition. ­ school. So until surplus of Jobs available on a first-come-Some of the things unsuccessfully Congress reconvenes > i By BRAD BYERS end of a pew. Front four feet! next year, oil development la the Here is the story of how tha tried in riders this year are undoubtedly first-served basis. v Ttziv* Ua*aff(*4) Kdltor away a boy slid toward us. oil-rich lands remains in tha Longhorns got their name: : It doesn't matter who you are or what topics worthy of general legislation, but Exciting, Isn't it? ' "My name's Bob," ha said. thumbs-twiddling stage. And to policed > < In the fall of 1903, ten. ye We mean the beginning Senator O'Mahoney: brldfbats before the blanket incident, your skill is^-t%y probably have a place for the next two years the state has of Bob hi a freshmsn. We couldn't Alen Weisbtarg, afterward a very school. tell, from taikinig to him whether for the champion time-waster af 5for you. J-neither rider nor general bill. jug gf|||| „ prominent'lawyer of Dallas^ but On our way back to Austin we he figured we were 'lonesome sit­••n. s trmf «T A la »iaa*k recently..deceased, was Editor-in# 'rode with a chemistry professor ting there alone or whether ha HMtat of the 1WW1 Mwlgjy »• Chief of The Texan and the writor who spent the summer working at was just typically . freshman—* ISSt iWMr fWv^Sr1* J* take Mm «Nhl Was athletic editor or reporter." Oak Ridge. He had gone through friendly. »r»Ma«i» seih. Thm vwi** 0t iU« wataMw wtt,» One day Weisburg said to ms^ eight straight years of school to We talked to him a bit, enough or a wttl five the rtMwt July Was Hottest wrtt for "D. A., 'et's name the Texaa team* get his PhD before he started to learn that he's from a home-= ~ rn*. Tito estttfaattoa Witt .** XnaHffcSOl gMltr, SMMikw S4. at S It has j^e on a long time with* teaching, and hg rfimi town neighboring ours, and that •namer'" bis iirsfc-yeer oBt^f; our roommat«(.. .What do you" have in mlndl" orlunllte He missed Wve excitement, ha. And enough for aa to feel like Iasked. said, of starting back to school, in • something of a snob for not fpeak- By MILDRED KLE9EL : SEMBLY .unanimoualy July 16 ~ The Faculty September. : Ing to strangers, " ; v Tb« Un!t«d StBtM CivO UniM CM*' "Let's, name them the *Long-- MImUhi he* aaneniietd « a*ir eaaailae* horns,'r he said. jK*Jtaly was.the busiest month adopted a resolution urging Council approved a hew five-It does sort of get in your Upperclassmen aren't so hot, 4tion for flDias Mettioaa In all lma«lMe "That's a good • name," I ra­ year plan for PHARMA­blood. And, if you limit your stay are they? They've spent two or of cnsltsMrins. ularlM fun:frow Jthwt mi. Tke iwUImi H««d, Bmjt rat _ .plied. rpassed the'new budget» new. dent . employ** . th»..federj4„ CISTS. The plaft gives the to foor years, it begins with a three years in college, and yet aro JoeatKl. In WuMBitmi. D.C., ,aa< "From now on, every time you •department heads were ap­Minimum Wage (currently 75 first-year iTtudeiit a chance to thrill and ends with a thrill." SSS&S!&£ 'writey an;article abo^.t any ativ*; pointed, and .several Univer-cents). ~ take required general courses. There's, nothing like; being sT of them.ean ten you l^te easiest )OEAT^ THRONSKABT«IR WL. .'1iUic.'rgawie,*.7c»M sity -beauties 'were crowned Aft INTERNATION­The uwet four-professional-• freshman during the ifirst couple-Cbursea in their..department, but .-^Longhorns. *' -AppllMBto^ Witt BOt Dt-rMWN to w« queens. One' of AL HOUSE BILL by Assem­years would be set aside for of weeks of school; You're in a' not many, could tell you who" is " a written t«»t. Te enaSfy rntto . - seniister IMS# 0*«u, /oha rraa«i« I agreed, and in your file of school ended and another folr blyman Hameed Ai-Quaysi pharmacy subjects, thus tak­new world that is strange and mayor of Austin. They " could give > Jobi, tlMi1 ant )wv*;t «rperl*nce., 8ta• tell you who the "new Secretary of months ramf apply. Tot ttf klilw Bailow, K^tlMriiio, .. when X succeeded to tiia edito: (ndw<: iiUliloMl profetaiona) «xp«r<> 2i place in Texas and some even foreign Student newcomer*. director of the University senior. You conies back to the v defense is. i.'-';.. one« it r*quired. GAdaat» *ta OOaOON V. AKDXKSOK fv-said the University had the July 13 — DR. ROBERT ^ Health Service/ effective Sep­campus in .September after a sum-: A senior girl remarked yester­tinoorlnr-in«r b«' aatxtitatod for pert or ... Aiibttat JHtootor . stractipns.. He was editor, 1905­ the - day all (d«p«iuflnc tho crad* tor which >hottest'\profs in Texas. h:, LECRANDE STONE of tember 1. He had been acthig mar at home, and presto, you're that she thought she knew on faoMag sad Coidanco Boraao application 1* mad*) of tho profMaienal -' i' 11 • ; j i.' 11.i • • -06,'and continued the instructions. 'X' To keep students posted Ohio State University was ap­director since the -death of :i somebody big. You feel like you more when she was a freshman •xperlence. Tho mutmam at* limit for •)1 bow atodenta who ro*ei*od thoi* • -I do not know when, if ever, pointed chairman of'the De­ tho $3,100 joJt» i* W yaara (waWod for aaay here-are some of the main Dr. George M. Deeherd Jr. on • 4 > really belong to the campus. You than she does now. She referred pernon• -entltlad to Vlt«w jwrf«w(t). phyatcal agnminationa u< wedMM. the name was made official; but^ imimMm lyo*a -tboir gataotial partment of C.«rsmi$: Engi­; March 6. . „. -.... ^an't help being conscious that tha:. to knowing ' things about regis* Tk«r« no tnaxtm'tfm ItoiH for tho eiaaa wffl wort to tho Stadont I do know that, in. later years, oijrhcr Brad« po*itlon«. ^ V STEER HERE neering. July 19 — The University freshmen,look up to you as some--tratioii. We've had the mum) ex* -~ Cantor 8optaaah», "lg to H for nan John Townea, a prominent lawyer COMMITTEE hung a map July 14-18 — FINAL EX­V-T«r«on* who havo JM^olvW,-o^clbla •host x-r»yo*M»in**lo»»> entered into a contract with one who knows what the score is. perience. When you're1 doing rating, sine* January-1, 19Sl;" i» ear tavl'U mora: K.O. Of Houston, now deceased, and showing eating establishments AMINATIONS for the first the COCA COLA and DR. Or maybe you've come to the something the flrst'tiine you keep MfliiNr omnhiaiioB anaouncod tho Ditootor. Hoaltk Cmtrnt I took some sathrfaction to ou»> passed or failed by the com­semester. Cammtialon'a central offle* n««d mittee in the Student Asso­« — PEPPER Companies of' Aus­campus early, before riish. You alive to what's going on. Bat tha apply for this B«W «xamlnaUoo toc tko »«rpoM *( i>>aByias a a>iQl-selves for carrying out Alex Weia- July 14 The BOARD OF tin to provide vending ma»-can notice the excitement steal-* third or fourth time you taka it aainM trill bo combiood with tho»e fcram «f foor aishta yor w*A for otudy. burg's idea. ciation office. REGENTS authorized a Main tha ncw r«sin you with tbe trickle of so much-as a matter, of course Full InforntatlOB asd app]<«ati«B Ami of thotr ato-The files, of The Texan will, -DOVER Univarsity.budget of campus. The contract is a • cars into town. The* rush Is over may b« obtatiiod from tho Coamiafloo.'a tfost iMlataiii -after" s«te ».«». Tbo . bear out my statemrat... \ . ,7 ROAD, major. production of 804.34 for the 1951-62 fiscal thafe^ottystartrtlu^ghs itmechan-total SMrcUryV Mr. A. X. S«vi4 lo««ted weak kwstM «a Soad«r s»d aoatlaoM one-year non-exclusive pact. and the trickle has become a flood. ically and discover somewhere in' at Main Po«t Offlca, ^niiln, from «i?tl threnak Saturday. Tlda kMiI* will f' By . the • way, •' the name "ClarEthe Depart of Drama, year beginning September 1. *July 19 — T. H. SHELBY, New faces are everywhere, new the midst that you don't know •ervlce r*tlOBJd officaa, or froiB 11M ilatt S«a4ay, Soptomhor *0, 1911. Field" originated and was perpa. .«as held at Hogg Auditorium. This: amount, an increase of and excited faces. New students, tJnlted State* CITD Stfrhi Commteston, UBlvaralty wdailaM ar* Mas «k* : July 9 — CECIL E. ftinu 8280,000 aver the 1060-51 dean of the University Ex­ where yo,u're going at all. ^ WaihbiKton 28, D.Ci Applications, wfil MTMi Wosaoa'a raaidoaeoa wlB aloao at tuated in iramewhat the same way;: e«a- tension Division, announced and the old ones who have been -College is confining...You learn ht accepted in tho Commiailon'a tMrwavkur kow.' > •>. D. A. FRANK NEY of Corpus Cfcrist},; tJnl*: budget, .includes expenditures tral 'affie* In Waahinfton. O.C^ vatil DOOTHT cwaainsa -varsity graduate, b eca.m e for extramural divisions and he would go on modified duty ' *Way for 4he summer, rush about Whit you find in books, but unless (nrtkw notie*. . Doaa of Woman • '03-'05 president of the Texas Bar .central ^administration. September 1, after 80 years asking questions and jabbering you're exceptional you pay little Association at a Texas eon--?fh» Regents also by a 6-4 of continuous service. ' about the changes since they left attention to what goes on around ^•ention in Dallas. motion asked Attorney-Gen­July 24 HARWELL in thej^in$~ ^ •. you. ' -. f-V Product School lias1 started. , day July 12 — M1S3 AUSTIN eral Price Daniel for a ruling HAMILTON HARRIS of Lop -* Yet one near the end of finalists, included four Unl-on* the controversial LOYAL-Angeles, one of the nation^ . You learn a few things, too. your college"career you realize versity studentsr Anna Lasa--TY OATH rider pwedJteJha foremost architectural design-You remember what it .was like that you don't know very much, •burg, Janiee Ray, Betta legislature. "ertrWsaWOin t*bea freshman, to feiel that you andthatJfchere'raivoridofiaiowl--" T«xan Results Woods, arfd Jo Ann Hyltin. SALARY INCREASES of the School or A^hitecture, know no one in the > world and edge waiting for you. At the mo^ ' Bubbles Welch of Austin wac from |100 .to |600 were effective Septeihber. watit to meet everyone. • > ment of that realisation, we think. Selected as MISS AUSTIN. granted all Univerrity faculty July 28 785 REGIS. We want into church alon> Sun-is when you have-received your Music Aparfmant lor Rant Rooms for Rent t-^^fe^^'5imTHB^liA»^HambarS-i ni«ht--*nd^id^^^arfthav^college education. in iTimit rAitunn . ... .j. x.j i... »d— -' BISOiFmart fdrr the second -• ~r„ , ..... . , * thieo*room .apmftai*ati W. mpoaoxor MUSTO stac latest »eteds. RELATIONS COUNCIL,, ap^ adopted by the 'Regents. #500^ misrk *W0T OR PJL systems, for all oodaaions. B»> Sainted last year by Gover* July 14 — Two $20,000 semester of summer school. - vata Imwo. lira* floor. ReeenUy n. dio«,> amplifiers repaired to aatiafaetion. NICELY FUBNIBHED larca doable finlahad. Nicely fumlaked. PH*ato o«-, rte» fWi aa4 delivery. f-ltlO. . or Shivers, met at Hogg GIFTS to the University, one July 24 — PHARMACY trance, free telephone. Price ISO or rooms with large closets;, yor hoys. |(S. Adulta XjMd servtM. 101Z W. SSrd 'Auditorium; approximately a private endowment and tlte FOUNDATION received a «Bly. l«reU Driro Juat off laaor hoaaa. Fiirnlshtd Ap«rtm«ri¥ 00 people attended. other an »»vv» fiant uqid wo way- NEED Offg boy Share room with UKTVEB81TY MEW. AportmeBt for > rOUM aU>CK8 'wort-: cuss^/Clsaa aad stadent ih i>rivato £dma. rour hloekr" July 18 — STUDENT A3-were accepted by.the Regents. ton Foundation for further .to 4. Utilities paid. 8tV Weat ned. Maid' aenrioo. -orateC CoavenleBUy located. One July .26 — DR. EDMOND V 4 and aball Block off «ca>hpua. 1 or I meals. Mill kloek 'DM' eaanoa. WD Mcomodate UPSTAtas—ATTRACTIVE dartnc 1 asinfat Slasa 27. Resort -SfT W. UOu . ' fovtw rkoMi S-1UU . doable or • single rooms, in private "tiorft Private JXiMtday exaa 6ttrdaB»PabUeatloos.ine. E. 3NELL, one of the nation's as.Atie x 10.Exist .• 28.Stete katkr and entrance. Central heating. Tele­ N*wl leading biochemists, rejoined ArntACTIVB SOUTH room, adjofaisi •ditorlal ,_ -t>* by talephoaa (2-J47S) or at tbe 17.Sun god 14.1naides (Max.) hath with ahower, aeati-nrtTato OB* Fur^lsiMd Room phone. Baa. Phone: 8-5528. J-B. l /W it tu i(im UkiHMMV, J.B. 102; Inquirioa the University of Texas Bio­ _ l««rr aaS adv«rttolBS aboaldlMi madoin 4.B. 10S <2.347*). lO.French IS. Birdof prey 30. Woodman trance, twitlaM. Private Bosia. Cot. SIMGtB UPSTAIRS room for bar la ar^Datty^fflSir « th* Adwinhtratioa chemical Institute staff. article . 18. Likely voai^at to tho CBlyeraity.^PhoBO 7-lllt. IDXAI^ VOa koya. Two-Booaw, Bath. private homa west;.of SI.Agile campus. Qnlet, «siot, elos« atadima. B«s. sapitol. July 28 — The Student 20.Location ideal place for studying. Phone: 2-814S. BnUrod m aoepnd^taM aaaUo* Ootohor 18. l»4l at tho Poet Offleo at 20. Identical 33. Charges 40.Mbaigrcldof COOL MODERN a«miMwrtM«at Towm. Alao fnrnishod two room apart- T«xM,aBdn'h«4etof MarebS, 1S7«. Assembly unanimously passed 21. Conicalroll 21; Achief 36. Jargon ~ 41.Spain — Maid service ili Y«r *">nth. 8*w »aat(M Typing -neers. The five finalists were A't-JjfcChum • Wt rURNX8H«D gwou roow maW at»­ Sue Henslee, Janet'Lee, Fat • ' -33. Young horae ri deat or lUff member. Quiet, walkhm . DISSERTATIONS, (Electro, . dlstaneo University, bus. 9>0 month. matie). Dictation. Coaching. Mrs. Pet. trieia Gray, Dorothy Butts, —.-^84, Greek letter i 4* •04 X. 17tlu Mr. Jokasotl at^-MU'— »OaTOff*._ BOUOAT. Mlllsml QaO' BMcky. SS?2212. and Miss Haskell. , ^ 85. Hewing too! 20 Ext. 49? or 8-3890 evenings. • for fl.Bet. / 88. Coal truck " mw •• s»'-' tsr Gardes. raahioB, Ladies TXttttQ: M. A . graduate. Theses, tan* July 29 ate. . Auatia Mailad out of tows ~ 86 FORilGH VEaT ATTRACTIVK apartateat ' for papers Reasonable rates. Mrd. ^Sl-Ssasr w. •1.00 per mo. I .75 per mo. -STUDENTS arrived at tha , (Brit) tt n :t eonple or two. -Two-blocks UBiveraity Mnmal aa4 hook oditioaa. lOe— Davis. 6-1217. a foe lie. **, • far tU. AD -week .S7.Bv«dnr - *«5. BiUs paid XS12 Saa' Aatonio. / Uad» ef aad hooks far rs­ ~*unC-g»d,. u_ _ search Wo also tnda. Opar-tUt ie v» •> A • VSs • • • . . •B.-IDENTPAYNlBr^^^i 1 M'^ir PERMANENT STAFF internationally Imown Shake­40.Card,aa avartaaafr private OsB T^V*L *WI frieBdly way. ... RU5S KERSTEN spearean a atb o r ity, waa wo<4 fort War111 It Carpus, AhBene. Aa- SAtor — BRAD BYERS li M Lo« Aasdea, EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY for ata. elected chairman of the De­ -41.Meager : u N1CTLT FUBKI8HZD Saw Tark a&—|ss. Cara ^ and p«iaca--dent to work, part-time—llb« a-8#48. iso* istm.nwtts-sia Avwnoa. tyA-_ , Ken Gompertz mental chairman, received a w* C FZilZl -SCCB-Z Bobby Jones, Jim Cockrum. Lem Porter Fulbright Fellowship for Stft-.. , oowk *i -• Furnished House 4 ^CCBGC I-.:. t Sports ' ^rosier a]rZLTH Mr5~E" ccat ?yaJp t^nd- . WOEXmO MOTBtEBSr-aota: WIS can ^°i^N o oole;?/4 LAW, Instructor 4« ^ ^ >m *JU™U« §m. « V­ ;'-wcsr^t:s:"£i::ar2 wi bi assistant S.Haidens CLiEccrtnc Betty Rawland, Bob_Halfor<-' ru*tJSSt.W^earda ata-"Wai-*.*. jawiMirk.. man. > way. Eiocirie; rtnnatwi tiataaa. aaa.^ mm DC EGGS ;E03I l)lPa^l>aa£E'GntL stu&mt trftk ... Martha McGarty Hiptina privileges. No Childrea. SclOlO. aoorsaa to T mL Q d *, IL » Wwilj y, tUA« MTF LI — ;— A room and board,^',^ r—-1—C S? ­ *— r•fr ML vw [—. p. r-" ««*»nea for Private , &k iBffii mmm mm gis$>> ran_ x bermn student counselor, v#d ill the nnt capacity; other universitiee; gfefefe pomtng to the University .. tember %},AMfiag in Austin'% ;|W degree Weather/her fini comment on Iter new location «m Ttha Texas hospitality^ is even ^ Bom in Spokane, Wash., Miss tBockne graduated from Concordia .College «t Morehead, Minn., with m degree in English and speech. ^After teaching these two subjects »high school classes, she entered her present type of work with the National Lutheran Council fa 1947. Hiss Boekae'i firstassign­ments were at the University of MinneaotaandtheUniversity of Oregon before coming to-Texas. Sha succeeds Alice Otterness who Baa taken a job in Chicago as ractistaat to the central regional secretary of tha student serviee division of the Council. _ < > , Miss Rockne's two goaltf in ad* dition to her proposed summer trip to Europe, are to start foundation for Che Lutheran Council at v,the University and then to have a house for the stu dents. " • v.. ^ The present offices ' of the Lutheran Student Council^are at 104 W«t 24th Street g--K < ^TH| GLORY, THAT WAS GREECE end thagrandeur -that was our fraternity last year ly sKown seme wida-ayad rushees by a few DUV"Now hwa's what we did bade In W8 . ."'This picture wiB prpbabiy wind Up In a scrapbook too, and be used next year daring hbJj season* * v ; -Y. LJpGn Welcoming " all new students especially, and inviting all for­mer students, tit* combined YMCX and YWCA will throw-open the doors of the YMCA Building at 7 o'clock-Wednesday night for an evening of recrea­tion,designed to pleasa every type .Students of all faiths, or of no church connection* are invited to share the activities at the "Y" which Tons a continuous: program during the year. Director of the "Y" is.W» A. Smith, one of the Ovt the Kup Two OT Co-eds Head Two Texan girls, active in the University of Texas Hillel Found*­tion, were elected to offices at the nation*! contention of B'Nai B'Rith Cirii in Chicago this sum­mer.JRenee Romick was elected 'resident and Sera Lei Ungerman sycreiary. Botn irom uaLias, they are affiliated with/Delta Phi Epwallon sorority. iz./v -•••':-i" :i-.. ~~ ": 3 Miss Nancy Bessley, district di­rector of Alpha Omtcron Pi soror­ity, has been with the University chapter foir rush week. Miss Beas­ley, Virphifi Malohey, president Mrs. A. ,B* Swanaon, senior alum­nae advisor, and Alice Whitmore attended the national convention in. Glenwood Springs, Colo. Pi chapter received second pace award for exhibit of chapter; etivities. honorable niention for the JWH cup, and third place for philanthropic work per capita. Miss •ir* BarbaraFroat 6t Austin is a new pledge of the group. Initiated Sep­tember 10were Gwyn McCullOugb, Austin* Veronica Morel, San An* tonio; and Beverly Toney, Dallas. The informal style show planned 'wiping girlswiththa • evcr­present problem of "what to wear" will be tonight at 7 o'clock at the Texan Federation Of Women's Clubs Building. The show has been planned by five new members of • ScarboroBsh'i CoUaga Board. The newly reorganised > Co-Ed Cta»» of First Methodist Church in­vites college students who prefer a home-town atmosphere to attend their Sunday morning sercice at 9:30". Coffee. and fellowship pre­cedes the^worship ,service, /New counselors of the group are Mr. and Mrs. Edgar .Burkhart. .. ^' waa^rtsdfried': to:, R»b*rtE*rl< Her in SanAntonio., ^ p LuSf, -Miss Tolar was Aqua Carnival Que^n, one of the top five la the University Sweetheart, race,, and American Magaaine Co-ed of the Month in Jane, 1991., The juniorphysical education major belongs to Wica, Turtle Club, Pem .Club, and ia an exwllent swhnmer.', " Cone was on tha University svnmming team. Thia fall he trill enter the University School of Medicine'at Galveston. The couple "Mill live in Galves­ton after * honeymoon in Colo­rado Springs. ^ Janice Dorothy Kalker became , the bride of Donald Edwin Lm in a formal double-ring ceremonySeptember 8 in Austin. V A sophomore at the Univttsityithe bride is a member of a Capella; Choir and University Singers. Lee, BJ '$1, was on the advertising staff of the, Texas Ranger M*gf^ sine and a member of Alpha !>«!• ta Sifema,' profeasioiaal advertising fraternity. While a student at Southwestern University, he be­longed to Pi Kappa Alpha' frater­nity, • Lee will work in the advertising department of the Dallas Power and Light Company until October when he will enter active service a> -a Marine Corps reserve offi­cer. , After a wedding trip to New Orleans the couple will live in AuDtin. Mary Lou Holmes and Choree Byrne Murphy Jr. were married August 18 in a double-ring cere­mony. >v -The bride attended the Univer­sity and for the past six months haa beenv employed as a hostess with Thins-World Airllne. ,The a of I^c4ewirom C^eWS |i^of Wooster Jn Ohio where she..^^^ tMn ffcl eo^pl# i was .a .diembtte1 '.at;tha national mmdc honorary. fci kappa.&kmb­da. While doing graduate work at the University yfte 1s a teaching assistant in violin. She. will be associated with the Austin Sym­phony and the Austjn'. String Pride is completing Work on a bachelors .degree .at the Univer­sity. He served 45 "months with the US Air Forte during World HowrdCkarW .War U. -v veteran religious leadens ^ the campua,> -. |.C --Jenny Warner will greet the guests on the main floor and see that each ia tagged with his name. Introductions will be informal. . Upstairs, Franklin Spears will be in charge of a peppy sing-soiig to open the program. The old members of the organisation will recognise the main event of the program as a take-off of last year'* activitiea and personalities of tie The skit wiU be di­rected ^y Henry Braswell and Amy Johnson. • • Mary Pat Dowell and TommyMiller, co-presidents of the "Y," will explain the activities of the coming yea*, pointing out -that the Freslimin Fellowship will meet each Wednesday night and the Upperdass Fellowship each Thursday night, The auditorium will be decorated with posters de­scribing "Y" work and fun. Anita Runneburg will have charge of refreshments, after which a break will be called in the evening at 8:80 o'clock. Hugh Echols, associate director of the "Y,M will superintend' the bridegroom, a UT graduate, is « dancing and recreation program member ofi Sigma Chi fraternity. w h i c h w i l l b e g i n a t 8 : 3 0 . " • s — — 1 1 ' • " -He is now a first lieutenant ln ,rMRS. ROBERT,CONE JR.' US Air Force stationed at Brooks Jleld, San Antonio, _' _ . *•'V-An Octobet weddiner is planned for Mary Kineajr and Lt. Wade c. Rtdiey. • The bride-elect belongs to Kap­4>a Alpha Th'eta at the University. Ridley, a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity, is stationed at Quan­tico, Va. ' • The wedding will take place in Washington, D. C. • France* LaVerne Cornelias and Lanrle Janet Eaell became the bride of Thona* RVIHII* Mela* tyre in a semi-formal, double-ring •eremony August 25 in Austife ^ A member of Phi "Mu sorority,the bride did graduate^ wort at jJkfLjISfrersity after deceiving a Bachelor of arts 'degree from Southwestern University. This fall she will teseh school In Hetnp^stead, * The . bridegroom received a master's degree, in business ad­ministration from the University where he belonged to Kappa1 Al­T»ha and the Marketing Club. He served for two years during World War,II-With the U. S. Navy. ' In a semi-formal, double-ring ceremony, Linna LouWe Crow and Capt. Wjlliam H. Alexander Jr. were married August 19 in Gar­field. The bride attended.the Univerw flna.«et«»n4my «»« Univaiai# ICaOiadllt ~ Gtridtiatiiit:' radio toM^teast&|» IfnC': wag'towflwiofr fevetH' jsiwwe withhiw ac^ts^Mlrlmi^i tlw1 ##t*f, jHani toajow*. or tibe Longhorn Band. %« M }lueb<^4tB«Ui^^h«^e^#^S| fellow^ and inMiber :af r Gown. , \ Charles M. Meeks.exchanged mar-aitvTr lvZ tv,® UniVTS^ABfMt 85 «!•>*­Both ate seniors at the Univer-ul's^fr FoJce!4*110116'1 ^ *** sity. . The bride is a member of Zeta Tau Alpha sorori^r. Meeks be-Margarot Birdell* Yoakam be­came the bride of Darrell Ed»4l Fashiion Editors. Survey Styles iongtf to the "T" Association at Al",1°f, , K**1 the ITnivflmitv • ?"-Aigust 16 in the Cen­tral Christian Church in San An tonio, ' . . Both are former students at the University '• ' .. Mada»t a Virginia &aal Vld Jaw— Fred Jtffrtf Jr. wete mar­nea AugustWlnUiSalofe. The brid«a Trecitived: a bachelor of science' degree from TSCW September 28 has been set for the wedding, of MIm JacquelineMorrta and Woodbury Freeman Pride. The bride received a bachelor ' V .'SsV T"heJRangwr's new fashion edi­tors Gitta ^Lockenvitx and Betty McBrayer, girls this year there's a happy var­iety..in ^Uooks'V-riUim.s • sveltej whirling adventurous/ tweedy,down-to-earth; or juat plain dra­y";-\• With a group of Austin girls and summer school students, the two editors set out to.fill three, pages in the first' istfue of the KaWgfirifiif^air^ of interest not only to the/co-eds but also aimed at -pleasing the fellows on campus. "To subtley background their dates' sparkle, men just need to look handsomely tailored and comfortable," they s a y . . J . u . . . . v . . . If some of the men don't agree with si regimental atrip^ aU^ tie, that comfort and ties go hand-in- A suit's the thing for church or /­t-fy.'• give your SCHOOL isiUMir h^i hand, one look at the outfit;of levis and a blue jean shirt topped with a western hat -brings com­fort to the fashion picture, s The handsomely tailored side of the story is shown in Jim Biggs' sin­gle-breasted navy suit he wears to the Palomino Club with JodyStancliff. She wears a taffeta date dress 'with a crinoline petticoat. Her' rhinestone bracelet opens into a watch that actually runs. Gay$ Senford combines an or­chid jersey blouse with a velveteen skirt and tops it off with a jewelled bdlt to make, the perfect costume for dinhlr-dating at the Hitchin' Post. Her date, Charlie Morgan, weafa ,a^ tailored, sport coat to blend with his slacks. On to a, football'game, converti­ble and all, Pat Folmar.chooses a gray rayon flannel two?piecerwith a red leather belt and sporting the still-popular Peter Pan collar. As She crosses camptfs^ on her way to the big ,game, she'll see couples around the Fortjr Acres taking* in the sights. Lucianne Knight and Frank Frazier pause in front of Littlefield 'fountain while some friends snap their pictured Again we see gray flannel, this time in a two pieciB outfit topped' with a perhaps a jersey, dress, the (TWO fashion editors^suggest. The gold jersey * dress modeled by Carol Grimes is topped by a purple v^­veteen dufter. Suaie Kerr prefers has a solid color skirtr and a cop­per and brown plaid jacket. While the boys drool oyer Mary Esther Haskell, the girls have dreamy looks at her evening dress. It has irridescent sequins sprinkl­ed over a strapless bodice and stole. Sterling Stevea,shows that he too is style-conscious. His light­weight tuxedo of all wool tropi­cal worsted has satin-lined lapels. Dr. Witb New Director Dr.JWilfred D*. Webb,,associate professor of government, became acting director of the University Institute of Public Affairs. Sep­tember 16. The director, Dr. Stuart A. Mc-Corkle, is on leave of absence to serve is executive director j>f thjB Texas Economy. Commission. Lynn F. Anderson. McCorkle's assistant, served as acting directOrr"befdie being, called to active" Navy duty, and Charles T. Zlatkovich, asso­and a' ifiaster of science' degree from the University. She has been teaching home economics at Uni­versity Junior High School .for the past two years. , Jeffrey received, a bachelor of |dfen«a>d$grae -and a. master-,of degreesfcom the University. He has-been employed as counselor at Baker Junior High School. , Vv-* ' Carol Jaait,Clabaagh "was mar­ried to Charles Conrad Nelson in si forinal ceremony August 25 in Dallas, Both are University gra­duates. The bride was a member of Delta Delta Delta and» Mortar Board. Nelson belongs to Delta Tau Delta fraternity. They will be at home in Beau­mont,.. ­Parker la no%aaccdo»'#' tecture and is a member of-tha Central jTins American Institata «f , Walte* Si-Davis an^-IM^t«#il Lege were married in August 81. Both ar4 gradoatea the University. Thefc -are , liibm ** 1206 Ait* vwa while Um Davis is working toward*a ftfasfet of journalism degree. an Alpha Phi, luid ^ a member of Bet* .TfcctiHptfraternity^... 1 "'''1' Mary Msr|st Snther Mm Oscar W. Stafuve were miuifal in Austin August 29. The hride ^ attended .tha University '"M ia».^ employed in tha Oepartatett $ Civil Engineering. , C«r«I Rose 'bweiaa an^?Jwis^.^ William Mays wera-maniad w tember 1, Mr. Maya is a graduate ~ of the University School of The bride alao attended the Uni­versity and U a member of AKpha Delta Pi sorority. The couple wiQ m live in Jackson, Miss; \\H • -r Mary MarceU*^ .Gene ..H. Hwll were married in" ,; Austin on September j; BoihJpai § ggadttattt of the Bni'yejratty.y^ at the University Km. Ham^wa# a member of Orange Jaekatft Bluestockings, and Kappa Kappa m Gamma sorority. Mr. HnU it *J member of Phi Kaj^a.Pri frate**J hity and .is -it.present :cpmpleni&f« work on a master's degree at tfea ?! University: TM ::: What's your ilka GOOD fOODfjM ® Greg Scott lj| Ball Room Donce Studio Above Texas Theater Com In and fry '* • JOHN'S /DBA ^ John Has: # Fried Cbidtan' . ^. ' ~ " • Hamburgers — * -~i • Lunches -•-Salads • Cold Beverages -*-}* -­John's Idea .Opsn from 7 aJt^-H pjm. i! 1 ' -, Johmty aooth. rOw«r 2MftG«^ihip* Pk. a-MTD t* HSlll Htt . .» -_ date professor of accounting, has rugged emblem belt. Prank shows been director on a temporary bas­jyff^iiis'7%^M'o^ll|aijittP:'iiTif^F'i^mt'Wlince " I * is V" p, ' X ' \ i •.-"T..... . *• * fll Faculty^ Stud»nt» 'if|«11*'CO* r O T10« s-gj . Colorado at Seventh .;s ... - «• • .h ••.. '..x.-'­ • V • _• Summer ^ : -' .fijuumii . N" •«. »v•" •" * >" * / with i ® \r m y,'-: 7 ^ v 1 ^ t i TEXT;1 tvfsi-..., -.msM , rnSAVE 'IS •• a iMtiriif 3 if year fworite Hd^ne of JalywowLBras! It siyli Vacationing in Nassau, Bahama Islands this summer were Miss Maebess Matthews, administrative assistant in the, business v office and Miss Dorothy Ayers, adminis­trative assistant in the office of tha dean of the College of'Busi­ness Administration.'! • Hisses Lucy Rathbone, Eliza­beth Tarpley, and Bess Heflin, pro­fessors of home economics, at­tended a convention of the Ameri­can Home Economics Association in-Cleveland this summer.•'»•."•••• -­• Mr. and Mrs. Hi N. WisnieWiky recently returned from Ifexieo City where _they were studying art at the Mexico City College duringthe summer. • fraternity spent the summier tour­ing Europe. They were Bob X;,.••• ' Attending the first national summer conference of the Disciple Student Fellowship at Camp Holli­ster, Mo., were Annetta Clark, Clarence Doss, Kathryn Smith, and Neil Guy. , . ' . . .. Mr. and Mrs. WilUam Viavant spent their vacation mountain climbing in Colorado. ^ Sally Messer and Louise Kami, sar toured ten European countries this siimmer with the University of Houston, Study Tour. Both are members of Alpha Epsilon Phi so- A Lovely Collection ^' •-of • . . ' • Fall Cottons-N --' U So Tjijiely 1 To Wear To CLASSES DATES • V *7 Your choiceof Heletfe's flattering daytime or deeper pltmg»model8,in nyL.. i/ , -y or cotton broadcloth. Three famous Helene of Hollywood bras-are in each' "Beauty Text** box, value-priced at a laving to you of 50c per briu- FLOWERS fi -4:.-®01Selene's MBeauty Textwoffer is limited, so hurry! Don't miss this wonderful ft to get pop^r Heleneof'Hollywoodbras at theselow budget prices. N—­ AND GIFTS *.V -.'! rf"m** *»«-fa« Stvea 10 to )6 *- - ^ •A **• -*«ieift Charles DeLoss Atchison, Houston; Xinden, Austin; Wayna Wallace lleiUlaa; Horace ChasSsa Tabor, Bob«t Wentwdrth Axub Falls^DoB|laa Watt, ..tan Aitosk fWj.Jia WaM^;Cldik, PleaaaxitaB; to Alpha 48frBar im HeCosnell, Dallas; D. Ford Nefl-tin; Larry Beid Hensarling, Hous­AJae' Joseph. ML Hesioeksr, Daniel Nicholas Bailey, Dallas; Davia Manning Tay­ D. IWBey, Coral Gables, '" Dntgl J?S» Bet® ThetaJPi 88, 0ene -C a r r o 11 BartiMMnr, •en, Liiton, Iowa; John Laidley ton; Dixon W. Holman, Fort Gfeanjrflle; Baagan Trawaek Ho<9-Wa.) Bm I. Dcrndfiager, MISSIOBI rfirS.DeltaKappa *&Wle£ $*mrhmk Totaa*- -^ c lor, Corpus C^riatit and David Worth; Douglas Wistaf^ HowsQ, Brownwood; John Robert Sell, iqr f«ns4 £ t^r'>Sailf:Atoto8fte|. aci^G^aeft-' mm Biako Hays,, Delta Wigm WA !>•»• *•» Palestine; Thomas Eugene Black, DELTA TAU DELTA vi^Ml iwmji Bninif ^•(•ea.'fit Sd- Wichita, Kan.; Ronald Wayne . _ -llcAppi SIGM^ , 9W|s; Bernard Wilfred Miner, Jonea, HoiurtMj Cnarlea %rdnsr, -matt' Bna^>.6atmodii-tad Bridges Corptu Christi; Bobert id. #^k'$00S. 45S4 • --Fort Worth; -Jay Clark Nowlte, Oden, Houatoa; Bob«rt ;U« OB> dwel Allea tiukin, Honda. D» Adams,* Houston; Fort Worth; Je*s Newton Bayxor, ver^ San: Antonio; Marshall Bock- Bruce Carruth, Austin; Thomas Kauai, Hawaii, and Pari*, Tex.; IWMi Anthony Cull!nan, DaUa*; Douglas William Gresham Beskln^ Auatin; Geoiye Avary Uma| Houston; Houston; John Md Rochs^ Aes-man Peters, 'Bsywi; ladt FnmeEa Shultc Dapper, Waco; Milss La-James Eastman Gerhardt, Ban Joseph Filmore ; Baldridge, Fort tin; John Jay Thomas,-Kerrville; Bitter, Austin; John H. B. B»-tmW^mmer, Wm Kappa Tan 10. FM Sfriw mar Ealy, Austin; Balph Emerton Antonio; John Gfidden> Worth; Donald Lae ' Barnhart, and Richard dark Webb, Hovs-berts, DaQas; Hoaier;Jinmiie |«fe Brymn Fort Worth; Ritbard Lacy Bour- WaMe^Bwmiebtr vf»fDelta 18, Phi Sigma XtogM'J" Fair Jr., Boerne; John Blcbard ton. ^ ser, Cld>ume; Craig Barron Sim­ gK®gS«&fcappaAlphe IS, SigW Alpha Bp-Houston; Dewey Jude Gonioulin, land, Fort Worth; Charlw Sim- M Wayni W^b, Ft Wwth; Hftl Gowan, Dallas; Robert Griffith Houston; Robert Taylor Herrh* mon*, Memphis, Tenn.; aad John B6& aildn »» Cht Mt Sl#SJgnU^Mph*Sigma_ NuJO, Stem* Greer, Houston; Richard Smith mobs Buckley,Boyd,DaHas; Houston; Ed Lon O. Choice, Martin Mk < tW GAMMA DELTA Francis 8wllhra^.giw»^^^y -II il •iIMJIMII n i l" <|'|C||-' Jr., Houaton; Joe .Tipton House- Hitt, Lubbock; James H. Lauder-Wright, San Benito; John Xewis Ray Carl Arnhold,' Wichita FhiEpijion 1«» Tan Delta PhiJ, Dallas; William Aldridge Cline, dais, Mercedes; Frank Longoria Immel Corpus Christi; Robert W* Falls; William Charles Baker, m SIGMA FHIEPSILOM »**. F»~ f»rr». Bmflkml.andThets Wharton; Larry Connelly, jBoor **< • Jr., Brownsville? Denneth Burns Jackson, Beaumont; Thomaa Pat­ Port Arthur; Skippy Hi E. Bohn, J'Waii^-'5t:Alten«^ ton; Thdmas Hoen% Connelly, Marttn, Fort Worth; Mack de­rick Lamb, Houston* Austin: Farr^§to?4 'JtoL ler; Samuel V a u gh n Stone, Garth, Houston.'. Alvin Perkins, Fort Worth; Nor* lin, Corpus • Christi; William C. N.-'Keller, *E1 Paso-Marttep. -r-< ;m^iaANbr^^ IfeTeeF'Weco; DenniaEugene . Leon Glenn Taylor, win Gene Ray, Dallas; Cifrtls ^ Also Bob M« Grirten> Hous­Do»her, Waco; Lum C-Edwards, man, Houston and MjdHk H. .,.v ^Dallia^C!y* %Newport, McAllen; Hnbert Smith Tyler; Roman Sterling Waldren, B|dh Roberts, Beaumont; William ton; Cameron Lpe Hoover, Waco; oveir, Fort Worth. Beaumont; Robert Penn Fowler, ^ ^ 0:Jt Smitii, fiouston; Frank Diu fe Ratliff, Colombo City; Jack Tid-Corpus Christi; George LeBoy Waldron Satterwhite,, Lamesa; Willianr Franklin Hopkins, Fort Austin; Warren Goehringer, San Also Gerald Shur, NewTork^ lT. #<"' well, Abilene;, and William, J, Wright, San Antonio; George Mer­Edward Robert Simmen, Galves^ Worth; Orville *Kelley Jackson, Antonio;' Eric Sterde Greenfield, Y.; Richard V. Simon, Ft. Woft|i; N.> 7 . ~ £L"t"WN Aniediet WaKhbist, Dallas; Stan­ 1§'; Whitis, Austin.* r e . rill Woodman, Dallas; Randall San Antonio; Bfienry Keller, Fort Venice. Fla.; George. L. Hawkins, Saftford Eugene Smith, Houston; ton; and John Panhorst Wymer, lw Dtey Wsuftorton, Freer; and ALPHA EPSILON PI Nile Yearwood, Nashville, Tenn. Houston. '7 Worth; Earl Edward, Lee,.Hous­Besumont; Warren C-lay to n Walter Witlfaim*, Tyler; and ,eS-Mattfiews Wise, Hpustog, sear ,^~CHI PHi^'y,;, • ton; JerryLynnfLester,Marihall; Hemphill, San ^ngelo. -[/ aid ?B. Zodin, Big Spring, , ' ? , "DELTA UPS1LON Wr-|Iiose Arnold Axelrad, Houston; William H. Lit**, Victoria; Bruce TAU; DELTA PHI ' ; Also Simon Wood Henderson, ;; ' > SIGMARichard Lee Berger,.Dallas; Julian H-f Tom Irvin Alexander, Houston; Richard F. Adair, Havana, Barnett Miller; /Victoria; Muckle-Lufkin; Larry G. lies, Beaumont; ,*j > f, L ­ T4 Brongtein, Galveston; PaulMar.|Henry Monroe Anderson, Hotj^lCuba; Hal W. Atkins, San An-roy McDonald,? San Antonio; George H. Kolb, San Antonio; -Lamar Robertson Baker, Hajf-ISaoi fsail^ Drohntesr Dallas; mmmi ton; Cecil Redding Couch, Dallas; tonio;: Robert Paul Baker^ Free- Jasr Diamond, Port Arthur^ Larry *———•* --George Martin ^Newman, Waco; 8tm Neaman^ San Saba; Balph Judd Miller, Austin; Thomaa At-lington; Edward Morgan Benne^ 'baum, Arery Theo- m Wayne Feldman, Dalian; Bennett Perry Johrt Fulkerson, Dallas; Wil* port; Donald M. Bishop, Dalhart; Joe (Buddy) Patterson, Victoria; Dallas; Sam Charles Bradeba^ Milburn Ellis Nutt; Wichita FWls; ^ Greenfield, -Governors Island, N. Edgar Erwin Plnnlman, Dallas; egal, and Fred E. liam Joe Graves, Uvalde; Walter James Arthur Blackburn, , Wink; lee McCampbeD, Corpus Christi; Kilgore; Jerome Templeton Brit«, £ Y.; Filton Stanley Lipttlky Galve^; Paul Hoffie, Houston; Frederick; Charles R. ^Ruffler, Austin; James Leon Powell, Sen Angelo; e, DaHaa;Z'Bldiard Abe Wil- Jack McGregor Bansom, San An-Pleaaanton; Clyde LemiMl Br^-Ls Clings ton; George Rankin Milner Dallas; Richard Jones, Texas City; Tho­David S. Bichardson, Galveston; Charles Erie Jones^uatfer Ches- tin; R. Datus Sharp, Madisonville; thems, San Antoniof-Bebert Ever­ Sidney Stuait Moran, Tolsa; Mor-mas G. Kelliher Jr., Houston; Tho­ter Dwight Lamb, Austin; Jerry J1oe E. Itusso, Houston; Robert EPSILON gelo; Robert Wniiam "Shaifer, Atis-ett Canonr Odena; Patten How Beelar, Houston; Robert William Austin; Julian Mike Barron, Jr., William Albeit Bateman, Amaril­send Field, Temple; Karl B. H Barnes Chanc£ B«utmont; Mihof LAMBDA CHI ALPHA bf-^aiHe-ttaj^ndLEanoM^Jkafe Calloway, Wills., Point;, Morsaa Houston; David Blake Barnhill, ' oL io; Robert Mason Billings, New ver.: Baton Rouge, La.; Rob Beckett Cn^er, Beaumont tiA;lAte S. Fountain, San"Antonio% Jefferson Divis, Houiton jXobert Bry«fi; Kennsth C^ fiibbr San An-„_RanaldzFrftd; lankehghip. Fort BflUhliit, Jvhu 1/AvId wltottf man, Dal t>ertMaxCumfeiB Amarilio1.Frederick Leon fDoche, Denneth Lamar Fulmer,.Nacogdo Lee Ball Dewar, San Antonio; tonio; Thomas Andrew' Bradley, Worth; John Be )ertBonner,'*San Hay^ Jackson, Baton Bougir JamegDroll, ^rtiif;John K, Gray, ches; Joe Jefferson Guest, Fort Borger; Howard Eugetoe ColiHIlle, Travis Ray Dickinson, Odessa; Wichita Falls; Carl Wilson Burn-Antpnio; Mayna: Josept Haddad, 31es F. C/Ladd, Cuero; S' " Austin; WilHfltt. f. Harris, BW-1 Worth; William Douglas Haden II, Ewing Kalteyer Evans, San An­ette, LaFollette, Tenn.; John Vio-El Paso;_6iiea£:Carl Hamilton, Amarilio; William Dee bertLewis Rieger^ :ett; Je»JCi fingleton, Luf­ mt Also Lytt Womack Mahone, Haynes, Odessa.. Mathis Harwell, Dallas; Walter A. lin Jr., Baytown; Charles Mayes, Monroe Neely,' Amarilio; ftSaylon ton: Rouge, La.; Richanl Edw kin; Frank H< ivik. Corpus "^lirshall; Bobert Arlen Nickel, Also GUpin Hunter, Dallas; Ro­Hog«nt Hearne; Cfcuirles Louis Calallen; Wayland Pierce Moody, Arhtur McLaurin, Austin5 Jeff Schleicher, Dallas; Bryaiit,Peari Christi; Percy liee Smith, feeau- San Arigeld; George Henry Saner, bert Kenneth McMordie, Fort Hughes, Atlanta^ Tex.; San ^ntonlor"W0nam °ParEer, R. Overton, Boi^eri^illiaJu: Ket^ Houston; Russell: Layton Seitz, Donn Stewart Noland, Jackson^ Lartdo; George E. Keel-Houston; Sam R. Perry, Rockdale; ny Ryan, Fort Worth; Frederick Hoqjiton; Lutcher Bladen Sinl- Ban Angeto; ton; Bruce Parker ;Pike,-Fort mo^e, Mason;.; Kenneth David burne; Robert Travis Schwara-Thorn; Wichita Falls; Bernard Worth; Murphy Towfliend Scurry, Dalla^lWilHam^aniM tjkera, Snyder; Walter Edward .... ^ . ... L«#is, Bodger Stone, Dallas; Xlfred A'. [ bach, El Paao; Deninif ,0. Scrog- Williamson, San Antonio; Everetf Houston;' Tom Flnley Willison; Lipscomb, Forts, Worth;; Tynus jfin, Heletes; Bay Bryan Stewart, ford GIjA'Slay, Harlingen; Wilton Eric Waghorne, Wichita Falls. ­ PHI KAPPA SIGMA DAILY: TEXAN i i Benjamin T. C. Baty, Jr., Hous­ fx-l-n> r«­ ton; Herbert Lionel/ Blomquist, ^ £' Austin; Ronald 'Lmrft ' Bouchier,: Post; James Edtntrd Brilly Hotts­ ton; James Haney Collum, Tyler; CLASSIFIEDS rft*. Jerald Dion Copeland, Austin; £ f " .»<«*'* -^4 • ,.{.vIS Claude Edgar Dobard, DaUas;^£. Jay Hall, Houston; James Roland Hicks, Tyler; Maury Allen Lloyd,AustlnrCliarlesLOTisford^Center; Don Doyle -Pevehouse, Corsicana; Russell W. McMurray, Austin; Wellington 0. Rothwell, Dallas; Tracy Prits Smith/ Big Spring; Warren Aylmer >flmith, Austin*. PHI KAPPA TAU ,.4+- Jim Bob Brown, Graford; Stan­1 3oJS*4»iAl»ry»,i ley Foshee, Tylert Robert Ray Gribble, Dallas; Johfi Jro«^>rMi? lanaphy, Houstdh; Jo« Marvin once eAAond Miller, Dallas; John Louis Murad, ON YOUR LIST OF "MUSTS Tyler; Robert Hul Basay, Dallas j m Jth& Ottis Etigene Beed, Tyler; CharlesXXi-Z Teddy Shaw, San > Antonio; and f--yjfy V ^ "T land this witt ptease your farhity) PHI SIGMA D^LTA * ! * Harold M. Eisen," Beaumont; Earl Jay Engle, Austin; Richard E. Goldsmith, San Antonio; Bon- N aid J. Hauser Houston; James H. OurlfttfrucfoftKaplan; Sioux City, Iowa; Julian (t*rm*Ar with s »«ti«aally IUMTS staA*) •: Kornfeld, Lubbock;John Carl Lan-s \ ' AnRndyToliKNiw da, Houston; George I. Lauder-stein, La Grange; Benton Markey, x ^ Your Daittngand Dancing I *Y i ALl fh# San Antonio; Gerald M. Rafshoon, ^ r''4' Popfltrity—At Mm Low«tt Pricw ' port's elV' 90 t0 basketball, basaball and other University'' Austin; Donald Bosenfield, Hods-PKu a 10% Kebat* . .• • '"-d: -..'"v, ; ' >-V-j ton; Cliftonl Jay Shapire, Hous­ 4 ton; and Harold Isadora Zweig, You II want the" Daily TEX/^N every day* -- GREGGSCOTTDANCESTUDIO TELL THE San Antonio^ v ^ "V^P, 1 >v PHI'SIGMA KAPPA Abov«Tex«s Theater sfl°ws +n?° *" ^hat the Cultural Entertainment Committee h br,n9s the University, and the.presentations of the Curtain Club: ' John.Robert Cromack, Austin; fEE FIXER John Reyburn Gaines, Austin; Kenneth Hall, Edinburg; Robert Leonard Hankal, Wealaco; Marvin [WHEN YOU If you buy tickets to the events Earl King. Houston; Bryaa Mor-. ris McKnight, Lnbbock; John Lee 'ki separately it,will cost you va.60(minrmum)["f ^ '4 McMillen, Amarilio; Patrick Hardy REGISTER! Abilene; and John Dudley Wataon s-jBut'by buyftig a Blanket Tax of Austin. .^ l^Kr T<­ (including'"if ;i y0U 9#f •v*ry,W«9 for only jov t tax; » ' 'X ^ 'Vi fp' A, So you save money Anthony Andrew Benish, Auk- tin; Kenneth Dean Dabbs, Freer; ^ Torfor j, extra«XTffl clothes, shows John Walter Ddbley, Austin; J. -~and fun.^ You (or mor^* Brooks Fraaer, Freer; Aubrey S3 K >\ ^ nitfd Hankul, Vttlaco; Marvin &irl King, Houston; Bryan Morris •n you ragtstar BE SURE to buy for ev*r 6 |b».:fiof McKnight, Lubbock; John Lee Jwfif McMillen, Amsurillo; Patriek Har I *> dy Reagan, Hye; Jerry Lea Suggs^ quality/ color, pictures, BLANKET TAk— ^ 7® Abilene; and John Dudley Watson, 1 Austin, iocfion,;^vi«Ws, class- you 0 CHK! -« lor off vfd tapo uy"t IGMA ALPHA EPS1LON ED minor, % wrvi mem, acQvHlM, ami James Marshall Adkins, Chic*­ DAILY —STAGE—GOVERNMENT11 g6; Eugene Leroy Ames, San An­vjS Jf C"!x*J tonio; Alvin Lee Borehaxdt Jr ^yeraoni-Bobert Gordon Brelsford, t fiiifirif Htwnnll— rt |»|B SMHB nil i U. 8. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD. M^rted $tim ^plnirta^iia QUARTERS, KOREArWednesday. Had infantry Uo the Sept. Allied .toxc«i center of the ridgeUtyi north efclawie sriaad a l key noimteiii peak oh Yanggu after nightfalL Reiiching WfldW. 4 ..composed _ Row, ^ "^XBakin* upon,the ode Lmdl Baba Winn, . . Misa , Betty iel«.•isio n :%ere ^««a4f ' Tucker-styl* "Heartbreak Ridge".in * bitted the ctest, th^liwepfr along the *esf flamboyant gestures and over- *tadwit» wd ^ortohop'a Jirat film production battle last nodnight and hurled wine of ^^•xa^eratiM,•*T?**; Nighta in m »niii'ii*iii > i T i i iiii&i ir.i i iijiilti" l^ ab»«ii^completed^®||i8 • & baclt two* heavy Red couhter-at-&*ough Communist ^elana^is««» %jt*r** "We played 'The Drunkard* bed "Qeartbraak Ridce.M ^ri9U glo-Iranlan wells. The-company .••f straight, deriving the humor from Allied assanlta in the steep-sl* !> the over-exaggerated gesture# ^XOver in Radio* House there are said it "will take euch action , as HeWho NeisrSaw narrow vallfcy'itctor^were. a' . f seen In the -silent.• movie day*,?; some complaints. Good natured of may .be necessary .to protect, its #1 •coldk f t Pape explained. "The technique' fl rights in any country" where con­ »urse. cerns or enter Cm one h®, 208 .Reds weir«t ment for oiU . «, fantrymen clawing up tiie -J % At the Playhouse, the audience v.-CARMEL, Calif.}-Sept. 18.— swept, muddy -slope^. • IVEI Aspiring'young television stu.cfenfs capture *watcher the ahow from tables as puppet show," r'H.M$. Pinafore. Readying' -for scrounges,' *'Wtoy the fterve of '"7" . ttK*—W-Gelett Burgess, 85-year-old hu­Moderate Commnnlst the oogly lines which are so rapidly becoming The Defense Department Tuj <•" they v are served refreshments. the big moment, these operators are preparinq them. To change the title Of my Tu£s-morist, died of a heart' attack was reported «0sewW-$| |"Audience participation" — the familiar to _> .mercans in genarai and people who day identified 215 more banle Tuesday.^,, to hold that line. ^ price Winning Dr. Christian play; Eastern Front \ .|, biasing of cheering of the 1890 own television, sets in particular. The Television casualties in Korea. A new list -He was known aa/'The Purple What war the matter with 'A Will OH the Central wu1 v f, theater days—^-is a popular feature (No. 400) reported 42 killed, CoW Man" for his famous verse: and a Way!? Now it's 'Amelia Has Kum^ong, tank-sufpported AHie^,' f of the ACTPlayhouse. 148 Wounded,''t8 ^i8sing iif ac­"I never saw a purple cow J v a Change of Heart'. I don't think patrols~repulsedseveral li^it prblw­ f "Ten Nights in a Barroom" tion and 12 injured in battie tone -I ,tteVer hope to aee one: — if# right." Ing-sttacln;-However ona |takes the audience to Ceaderville, accidents. < * " -t-But I can tell you anyhow, A Fair L'affaire Initiates § ethers are reformed, and a few By KENNETH GOMPERfZ and came calmly to a halt having tie' to worry me. Nobody ever eating tale of four men and a day to hear' evidence on which to Wednesday, Thursday, and Fri­mud -the mountain slopea thW't*just dieor aremurdered. : v**'. 7MM Amkmm**** Wttiw'V J raised no eyebrows, caused few woman, the sole survivors of the accepts mine.'' . ^ base an f order setting allowable day. fouiht ta .f Joe Morgan,'-a, villain whose ** ]. .. and so they Iive«in^ a grand Joseph R. Alden, 88, who with |after being struck from a beer stars Claude Dauphin and Anne ess as a meek i^ank teller' who $2,000 award. Ange Lorenxo composed the senti St^s -Sensationally" Tdrfificlf V : B ' |glass ih the deii of iniquity an< Vernon as the stiave lover and mental song hit ».of thev 1920's, takes his last holiday. As' c?eato?.;of the "Leather then caring for her father through the ensnared wife. Althbutfr cen­ "Sleepytime Gal," died at .his Breechea" children's radio:series, a „ night of the drunken heeves, sors seem to ha^^^tnt ihe "iexy''; home in Qrand Rapids, Mich; UT Sports .Writer Mn. Hunnicutfs work has been Reasonable Prices Large or SmaB Partial Joe reform*. He ends up as the scenes,-the 8tory, *ctlont and act­ UT Madicaj Schools heard in 17 state?. ; * * j You'ra "Welcome V.C £ wealthiest and most^ stable man in ing are hot exactly inspired. But The "Leather-Breeches" tales The Senate Interior Committee Itown. While there are no pulsating High Giv*n Ritaarch Money These superlatives are being used by University w;ere original stories and folklore resumed study Tuesday of the is­ Steel Pier Singer spots there are no drastic faults. students in describing the NEW roduction . ThB,.5outhwe3tern.^.Mji4jjt.aJ-of early-day texas aa told by; old-sue of Federal vs. State control Ifollowing ACT veterans and hew» Perhaps in a woMd-fali of hijrhi system we have at the TO »SiTWS^i^5»bme of the' oil-rich submerged coastal •eomers Bud Howe, Texan apo*t«i writer and lows, "L'Affaire." provides a Scliool of; the 'University at Dal­ TZ_T,"T . Recently honored' by a round? Hear and dance to your favorite orchestraI Joe Morgan, Glenn Payne and last year, is a. vocarist at the Steel restful time-out—where actors and las and the medical branch at a tajble of Austin writers, Mirs. jHan^ like you've never known x it before \ f Dick Brawner; Mary, . Barbara Pier in Atlantic City afUr travel­aadience can relax, have few Galveston were granted $9,450 for *• -i -4 * ' ' «a instructor in ^Leonard/and Esther Battle; Mrs. ing with several name bands dur­placid moments, after which they hcatt and blood research by the H! Greg Scott » r'Wy% YWCA's creatlve writing course. f|torg|^iJayneii^ Unti-^ return to battle reality. Am'eriCBin Heai$ ;• Attociatibn.^^ ' " ing the summer. She is also author of other Radio *^ersity drama major;. Romiane, Thir two Texas grants were Boll Room Dance Studio The Tower Howe received an audition with Housp serials among which is J Bill Lafamme; Simon Slade, The Texas Theater, in keeping among 60 which were announced and the Arthur Godfrey show earlier "Healthy Living in Our Country." Favorite Rendezvous of Texas University fjamea Westbrooke John with its policy of presenting mo­by Dr. Louis N. Katz, president Above loxas fheater For rMtrvatisna call 2-«888 -aiirfp«ek . V GARDNER V5J00.ttoFJS.tax. gram. Maria MMtM Kathryn < $ Informed sources said. Finance degh'a firebrand riiglit-haiid naii, IW« StOO Minister Mohammed Ah Varesti Htfssein Makki, will take thv lm- GRAYSON ittj^ resignation, follow-yortant int MONTOPOLI "KON-TIKI" "THE FROGMEN" owor Busy dayf theed ..time to rephice thst old peo that may Kkharrf Widaaark cause'troiibia. ThePacker Preview for Fall offer* your|all> Danii Aniriwi time widest selection of New Parker Pens., ; '. 4"SVNDdWNE*&» Downs : Parker predion and f)idio|ease will itrai|ht "A* "Chicago for you frosainow do. VUit your Hester todsy.Tha Msw Nrtw Dwdlin." ParkerPtnCompany,Janesville,Wii„U.SA' jTorbat^Csa. ^rogm«n Ttnut at its prim M."SriiriyinJ>4< mhminjr 4? vjtse taUir parts). ^ond th* "PRAIRIE BUCKAROO" SpttoliMkJ&wom. m *•/.-4oaUn.-..JUm" •Hawk" 'trahycapjtnJSJQ flifi j-V 4 ^ fr '.f wi*p*mU,ttJii m-hrjf ? "fit any Mr*t-Mml sVf* ..• iMHm&LiSM* 'NO F&'«k. t»>V*A4r. aKMMjfJuit A f mm® i&ssem -.4; 7t­ •mm?,? ISi CRT? m K M'-Jj \A|BWMK ' -'XUCTMT l&f *$ «*m m;r~ t^aTaxaar^ie. -" Grande, mettednWho died last fe»<*-more -eotirsea« delating to through d le»ee and onto huh- of the hamka thereSouth America than any other American university. Its 60,000­volume library |)» the largest of its llndeor «Mia 5jgi:, .5 "ttpdver smddirector of Uta tynfcrtrtv tor-of the Biipsnic Foundation kind in the world. > IromJwt^Tu*»ti*y2 , >r : J'. Vmx*, , iateriiu^loiial ' « of Latin-American In til* Library of Congress. He D!r. Hanke has done research Ik A hundred-yard wfce&HTof the boundary and water commission Hne to .* depth of aeveral && the late held thatjposition from 1989 until ICexfean -.fare* eollapsad .caisroaa ^igiiMMMy said mrntidm «3agbieef» the Spanish, Bolivan, and Mexiean The principal damage waa * \+he accepted the position at the ftvm, Loa lndioa h» ftuneron atarted cutting tlie lev^e naar SSo teble seedbeds"^ archives. Two of his main research w projects are Bactolome ,d« tea Coun^j^-:; R^te ehanael water Mo Lake -The"1econa-1aM cat -'R0W ft* « lit HfiXtCO viiy iiflHi'v.feriak Casas and the history of the^reat rectly by rain* or flood IffMj&glPp! *>*« We United State* representative silver mine at. PotosL He has ,Ta*aa ainee lut'. Fridayto theFirst Inter-American Cul­ spent-20 years on Las Casas and potted Tuesday. Chin 1. tural Coarifeil, but he will return is just beginning the silver mine *30, Rpbstown, was' hailed to Austin September 29 to con­ research project# replacing' electric lines da 1 iwaeotit ©f tinue work at hie new poet.;' . Besides these two projects, he by rwn near Agua Dolce, 18ovwhsment; Dr. DeWitt Reddick, He hasalready m special projects west of Robstown. " Denl ^Mournaiism;ana Carey and has spent his time learriWg for the State Department and has r slipped on soggy ground and; Thompstfo, assistant professor about the' University Institute of held numerous fellowships for re­ across high voltage line. a economicvwere introduced as Latin-American studies, which of-search and travel, Moffc than 60 ^ OTTAWA, Sept. other death occurred Saturda^te m'new membersofcthe Faculty Coun-scholarly works, including books, North Atlantfe Council hit the Rio GrandeJ Y?lley ' the Monday Afternoon meet-articles, and pamphlets, hav.ft.been first snag at Ita current s$ssion " fMSMngffiftaSSi "tAST STOPJ.^£RYBOOY OFF." Broncho r«R.,Cr Cotner, assistant professor emies of Argentina, Colombia, campus clothes are becoming more that: rodeoing was a sport worthy Allied soldiers "invaded" the the council would have to wait Pierre Fontaine, says. ^ of lilstory; C. C. Thompson? and DR. LEWIS V. HANKE . Cuba; Guatemala, and -Uruguay. dressy—blit there*will"be a hearty Kaesong neutral zone Tuesday for the Danish decision, the dele­Fontaine replenished three fish at intercollegiate contesting. ' E. Watt, assistant professor of little band still favoring hate, afternoon. gates turned to a country-by-tanks at Scottish Bite Hospital mechanical engineering. boots, and Levis. They are the With only two1 .weeks prepara­While the" Korean armistice country review of re-armament, for Crippled Children Tuesday. , in April of 1949 the Texas progress. • members ;of ~tKe~Rddeo Club; tion talks were at a standstill for the He also haa set up 310 Yes, the old West may be dead, Club put on the first -recognized 27th consecttthre day, the Reds of fish -in Dallas Public Be! but the boys and girls of the club and approved N.I.R.A. Rodeo, Two aired their twelfth and latest King G«org« Is Feared where teachers as well as pupi Observatory Open Package may sometime get a eaae of-j will tell you that the nfew west is days of rain nearly / killed, the complaint of neutrality violation To Have lung Ailment ; still rbugh. . • f ' • by radio telephone Tuesday night. ters. vy'^v ;'^ show, but on thk third day teams LONDON,,'Sept.. l»—VPb~Kmg The message directed to the UN Fontaine said that IS yean a«a or m-' • • three wild horses at a. three-day from six Texas colleges and uni­bivouac area in Mtmaaii claimed day, "structural changes have de­his wife noticed: she could {light at 7:30 It's not easy to ride two George's doctors, disclosed. Tues­ • While freshmen and new stu rodeo—bruises and muscle strains versities put on a'fine perfor­that at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday «ffotor the crying of their baby^biughter veloped" in-one of his lungs, in­ •Ml depta are,"waiting for classes to. If you're one of those persons yersity and has worked for US add pressure. It isn't much easier mance for several thousand, Aus­of your military personnel entered dicating a serioua ailment. Queen by showing the infant a shimmer­ - Igl'nieet, one of the ways to" save who save clippings and can't bear Air Force. She to the to-run doWn and throw a couple tin and-University fans. 5, the Kaesong ljeutral zorre and also Elizabeth rushed back from Scot­ing boWl of fish. returned money on a heavely evening is to to part with that closet full of University in August, 1950, as of calves—not to speak of having The members of the team who Panmuhjom"—Red checkpoint i»b land to be with him. Now he recommends' sile^U^ climb to the top of the Physics to make the catch / the road to Kaesong. A London lung' specialist said gliding' fish not only-for ba^aa Building tonight and take ,a peak old magazines, you would consider loan librarian; at the bureau. Last represent the Club at the1 college The Reds asked that an Allied but for-nerves.. ~ * But the action-gets into, the |h® wording "suggests that *1m> the Package Loyn titbrary Btrr^ shtyWfr-must-maintain-a ^'average -Haisotr officer"; the momtftyougfi ood of a cowboy and a thVusand doctors who signed it are still not Panraiftjjon ' '#% the diversity's telescope. ": eau; in the Extension Building, Dimmitt as director, mile trip to test his skill against whbdi -is-certified by the team representatives -at sure,what is the whole trouble." Bridge at 9 a,m., Soeul time ($ .;>§£Boh Morgan, !n: charge, said the Ei^hteehth and Red River Streets, Now, director emeritus. Mite fellow youngsters is worth it to; {tpohsor-^a member of. the facul­ He said it'll certain that "struc­HOME DRUG p.m. Tuesday, ,.CST) t "to .settle observatory will be open every a gold.mine.;:-,''••• -^77 -: Dimmitt became known through­ ty. Last year it waa Arno No-tural changes" mean disease, but; this matter." " ' 7 _ Wednesday nigh.from 7:30 to 10 .' Materials at the library are cata­out Texas during, her long career And since the University Rodeo wotny. ' " ' The Allied delegation acknow­"there are «o many diseases -of • Student Lunches o'clock if there are no clouds. Ateociation — that's the official r Sometime this semester they the lung that it can inean any­ " Morgan is an. astronomy student logued and classified for ure. as director^ from 1917 to 1951. name of the club—is a member .will have their first meeting to ledged the message and speeded thing." •> ' . !ri are back the answer: "We will meet and will be on hand to answer Included in the library She continues to be associated of the National -Intercollegiate plan the ^coming year's activities. if Drug Supplies you." • j ^questions;,' about 5,600 packages on subjects with; the ^ Package Loan Library, Rodeo Association, the members This-wiH-include team trips "to dill ;b0t-..J0jtta.. of „ ,.K{ it visit now to the-feokotit ;on ^«imdtirh^r'intere^, some" 3^00 iit anadvisorycapacity,w—•> may.' attend' and ;contest'in any Texas-rodeoa sponsomt'^bjt-Hiiif'- the jprece^ing ONEDAY jtCosmetic* ­ fi^complairits have"been rejected ?e/K the-fourth floor of the Physics bound volumes, anil 6,500 club Altheugh. the extension bureau rodeos sponsored by the thirty-din-Simmons, Baylor, -TCU, A&M, by Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway's .Cleaning and Pressing Building will prove to doubting study Each has no direct contact' With its some-odd-clubs in fourteen states. and probably several others. Wt outlines. contains headquarters. The UN apologized No Extra Charge 2230 Guaadfupe .Thomases that Jupiter was a lit-about-twelve artibles>. all on the borrowers, it comes to know many In 1949 three'h^jL&^th'e^itt-. So don't laugh atv tbatxfellow for the inadvertent, strafing of tie greedy when moons were being same subject. ^ v of them through .correspondence. pus here decided to form a club in the big hat, boots, and the tight Kaesong by 'a light bomber on LONGHORN CLEANERS s PHona 63553' |§||handed out-—and took four, Mor-» Constantly building new 'fries One'woman wrotejn detail of her to join the Association that had pants—rhe could be a real cowboy. September 10. aasa G«*M«qw. n. e-sa«r ®«a* said. Various misfortunes In explaining and adding to present ones, mem­why she-was late in returning abers Of the. staff supplement the r Geology Grad Students package. Another sent clippings butreau subscriptions by adding and pamphlets back to the burfeauclippings from newspapers and Take 2R Exqm Monday when she made' a trip to New periodicals to which they sub­ JAU graduate Geology students Hampshire. " She thought they, scribe personally. Each has a spec- will be required to take an Eng­ might be useful. and they Were. ialfield of interest, .. / rlish examination to test reading , More than one citizen and sev­ and writing ability Monday 'from For .Miss Edith Bartleson, chief eral professors have cleaned out % to 5 p.m. in Chemistry Building reference librarian, it is foreign attics sending their or, offices, 15.,: v.; affairs'and economics; f orJRobert surplus items to. the Package Loan The test is .under the supervise Bodin, art and music; for Miss Library. A news stand operator &mofee Mqp ton of the Department of English Gertrude Brandes, biography ; for also sent some magazines. • Miss Jean Campbeli/ education; 5S-P& i&C,-the.„«Jid.^«idanc THE , > ,_-j ,*/ *v*t!rJ. 1\ 1 cWnpW r"i30c £ . I -»V ' V\\ •J[ <4 """"\ --1 $1.10 ^'<** *• fitter ; 'Sh'M *--*$• ­< 1-* N v $ J.~< -Ji "-, A i -> ri '• > • V '!!•'•• *' ' !/• '.-"V •'•••-ll'"' $i... itianf,^ • misii Here * * * _ •• oyer »« or»*9 t«WH v t "Texas ° ... **• PT b^bound,Treul"t *»&•**»• • • |i ; A • V -, \ \ \ 'ft J i V OQmy1' t <•'•%:" / i iir c,W« nurobj"! 90,1,9 W'" , JugeH0" • caurSe .n""*8'^ ^Vf ourSe hunvb^iH1. ,, you Vnow your C°U . ha**» ! > ••*»"4"%a**^ad **St-.«*.! ' *"*T ' • I ' s; > :. -J-rr^^'1"n» : V J _ .T, ­ ^ ' ' ''• •<<;m vwEU-*&**< iM i ¥. *£ -A 1 SllistS 7 Store* THE PA11Y TEXAN Page;^rt • ft>n nnr j -­ 1 » '~.Vr"-' "-'j- Admiral Combinat on Radi6~Phonograph (pictured left}, the| &.£} Sheaffeir Pen, and Pencil S«t; the Parker "51" Pen and Pencil! Set, orione of the. three $5merchand!se prize*. The!; rules..Jdr..|j •he contest ere•r-*4sy« ^^today. Gome into the Texas Book Store and deposit your entry blank in the. contest box. H <• . f L» >v W-v? «• •jj % n . /What makes the "Howdy Contest" SO Mity? WW« f'!it's based on the Texas• • i-i •• • » ' « rebate can be usused anytime^ ..eitherBook Store's Rebate is 10%. Also, the rebr Rebate Plan. We'll make it even easier to win by telling you that the Texas fe*T •SEsjrr® "Book Store Rebate h. 10%. Also, th rebaet can be used anytime either at the moment you make your purchase or later. Now read the simple rules PY.i r below/ and you're realty fo enter and win erne of the big prizes.' , j'i J -/ k-v* mm r4 / CONTEST RULES •181®*• &**-• r-& 4" _ -a>,fi ••i «vv*Ss v" ^ * V i 1. Come to the Texas .Book Store between now and September 2. Look; at the cash register receipt (cadi register receipt is NOW on display at Texas Book Store.) just like the one pic*' , hired at right and j?ue» the serial number (betweeni5,000 and '^54 ^J. '*r / ."4 .SB 8,000), and enter the amout you guess on your 3.' FiR out your'efltry blank, either the one here (belo 5WI "e bottom of 'the entry blank. -: 1 4. Deposit the entry blank in the contest box at the Texas Book !.;*?: ' f ' - ?*>»* :-W0f -i'­ Nothing to buy! Just fi8 out the entry blank , could ^ ea»er? Remember, contest ends September 29th-. Only cme entry per per >test bo*. What son. In cases involving duplicate winners, duplicate prizes witt be awarded. Decision of the Judges h final. (5nly students iand faculty of the University of ,* *LIexas are eligible SECOND PRIZE to enter the'contest. (Employes, their families, members„of the A Iveijtising Agency for. Texas Book Store are not eligible.) Winners will be notified by'le r^ I ENTRY BLANK * •* v -Nama X<1 Tr , Address ~Ur 1 >, ' ~ t &1 ' ^ 'l«'*'~y /-Guess the amount in cWfars' end cents appearing on the Tei as Book Store r$0^ vS f»Kv!a\,^3^ *> receipt displayed in ihfe Tews BookSfore (b^wteen $1.00 and! $10 the Serial Number^of (Ae cash register receipt (between 5f000 30). Also guess iSef al j Insert guesses hero: Amount: $. i Number, wt: Answ«ir these questions 1How much Texas Book Store's Re&atls? Answer iHwo mm Ji ts th* Texas Book Store's Rebate Good? Answer.. S*l On the amounf you guessed above, what Would your rebate be? Answer. s liWre and deposit this entry blank in the ContestBox at the Tens Book Stoce, - r> .i•/-. * 'Ssi ** r «3i "?*• •.'* iwij m V •II / TMut iyittY -u H f Texas Book Store Is Ce Of Service for Student / i riot haveMo be||sav6d until a This T«!>c!as ®ook Store KM been Typewriter ' repairman, oun­ specified timfe. A lapse of memory .*,next-dooir.neighbor to (Universi­ tain pen repairman, mime«| raph does not cause thte students to ty sfciidentai?^ 28 years,[and dur­lose ai all. iTlie each and priijt shop supervisor-:ing thW^'tt^ been ready profit on purclhasegoM to tlie student who these titles belong to Geo^to help in the ways a' neighbor is holds the receipt ft or that certain expected to do.. --ij'-f Greii (rhymaa witfi sricnd another on< the $2 purchase. Heljcari then walk; t mor, cartoons, art books j*nd University students. over to thej filler rpaper depart­ asines, evfcry kind of jacjhiool sup-, On ' both calendars, in'j&rint ment and pick upil two . 10 cent plies,j typewriters, slide, rules, since 1938, are'listed the f|«nta packages of notebodk paper, hand drawing sets, art Supplies, senior' ARCHER WILSON of /particular interest tt"® ,SEORSEA.©l the $2 receipt to. jthe clerk and rings and ; invitations, .and techni-schools or to tiie Universil • • J? . i j-. walk out with .his 'purchases, y * cal supplies—but it cap i^ipply the store sells $200,000 jp jfoerchan-braries all over' the state stockade took four ap4_ » sayed student's heed in every j phase of dise, students, under this 10 per Receipts may b from 6,200 of these calendars, yeahi to complete'.. It \ * cent tebate plan, receiy^i:receipts several different purchases and •Univirs^.life,;'' ' ; i; >; 10,000 are printed for tinivj All models and makes of good for *20,000. The|st«dents apply thje to per jcent discount ; Many' jspecial services ; help students. L save at the time they use their from the t«tal suw> jtO; a • neir pur­writers can be r6rtted,s^epai: 'ed , make the? Texas Book Store more The printshop also'cuts stencils rebate -tickets because ti»e tickets chase. '':u bought in the;, baser than just a business house—-there for mimeographing jobs. j rent for $4 a monthis a ifree,telephone, «j|w»ieatljr- Mn Greis — or just located at the front of jthe store library Service master, Mr. Greis mi "George" to book store patri for kny kind of call i. student ^airs/ as well as the is best known 'perhaps to the p 1 could evfer want to make—they fountain pens. The bif area.residents for his model: ' cash checks; they accept mail or­ old-timfe stockade, made en for cleaning typewrite) ders and fill magazine i j subscrip­of advertising pencils that h has every Other kif>4 #f tions. |. . Reriiember back in he sixth publisher is represented by sever-received from friends and can Jut 'mad^^ room r-r grade when you first read'."Heidi, chandiaers. Measuring 36­ Their rebate -plan fcj an un­"" al selections. . !• ' 1 and carriage alignment to ribl usual; one in that, you save more "Lassie Qoiwe Home,';;# •"Peter, by-18 inches, the 1,800-changes. ~ , TEXAS BOOK STORE at the Texas Book. When the Ban,''j and iriiybcf "T|| Littlej[; Peppers"? \./|t , (Continued from Page 3) _ A visit down to the Basement were noti forgott^nv ipe hired rof'the Texas Book Stare jjfiU bring them as salespeople.' he helped back memories of those tfavs. The them pay fheir wahr througli col-omethinfySchool Library Service $Ma.; fu» lege, he fli|ancf book^, Texan and Th^ Ranger for news STORE ^Something, ranging from pre-school. to Hi^h coverage, feature wjriting, editori­school level, line the waljls of sev­al writing, departmental, general',eral rooms in the basement, 'Every and front apagip ma^e-up| reviews, and sports: coveragk Th'e awards n were'in thfe form of $5 books for semester contests «|ad certificates Artists f ir for monthly contests. , ..Church activities;were not for­SOMETHINGEngineers! gotten. Donations were made to FOR theiii, so that their workp irt stu­«. EVERYONE!KiifFirs II Architects! [ifX dent life could be continued. .«6|K THE LA VAUANT Come, See FontfeneJUe Hosiei $1230­ (Made from Du-Portt Nylon) $1.9 Gothan Gold Stri Hosiery . > %1. SKAfKtllM ll.SS; andJ1.95. STATESMAN ELGIN AMERIC COMPACTS $WlK> The Perfect Suggestion Because , re ...always acceptablyEngineering —she CAij. ways use another compact .or exquisite-cigarette cfese Architecture the nam Elgin American ,wieanSv the lies at flte finest in esign. finish and craftsman TEXAS B(X>K FTORE p«eU froaa solid, and r ENGINEERING Scarfs bjr Vera SURFLRS 11 ARCHITECTURE designs, fljr polk AMNIKAl ? f : ' • SUPPLIES fl {: "GEMTONE" LjU E JEWELRY$5M A Complete Lt^! TEXAS BOOK STORE Earrings $3 lus tax M-'.- Draviaf httrommto Brooches $2. p plus tax $21.00'.w$si)JrJs SEtTEMIEI Earrings' (ISi SIM* Rule* $2jtS to 927 vmm« T Squ««*«—18" to **" 17 RONSON LIGHT Drawing Boards ClAfTSNUUI • 13 x l» ft 31 x « HJ5 ^ Tri«n«l«l '..>v Curvet ' OMPLETE LAMP SELECTION % Si^lu ' Protractor* , 1n.sat, 15c Crapbsx PM< n Bo»ri onderful selection of 1 IDS in ot T ranges of ^6.75, and $7.79 ISchrpdma STISTSj 3U 'PLIES LFC *M BE your UT P»ints-Otl .Ml W.tw^oiW, AND FOR ROOM . Cun Ckarcwb Putd / a ft 'Artt»t« Paper* "At Mat bMrdi .'Easels: ! • Large Metal Wastepaoer ets Galendar Can vms *>, iw $1.10­Paiatiat BMdiiuns G. E. Telechron Clocks f $S 451& StntcBer strips Sketch $9.95, 23.95 d up. Radios today; , Pen, $5.00,P**3.$5.75 Wind-up clocks $6.45 an ! ' g*Mxrt»d, 48.75 Book-ends Blotter pads $1.26 up« ' vim v -. • , 1TK * at the SHEAFFERS Fix up your room "co!i» lege style"4rom the com­ TEXAS AT THE TL plete assortmeftt of jroont merchandise at *" i, 6001$ Book Store, STORE >V.:V" ., i. S344 C« t 1 llUiTMlim, n if ,'iv • -i l:>: 1 ,r&;, ill »:4 muss *vM ""/ If iMtK -*¥' I Sfcrl b=^rfe: I' •*£&! 4p ?' '4SV*!&§&• t* -1 ,v' I mM t^iSSf^. ',.,•fe, * •"' • I jC°£CM* 1 '«iw5'^s £;/%;fi?* /•I -?c &**/•'*¥*k# ^ *1. t­*x^ v * >?^' -r * df * ,** ;•^ y* V <;.•j.-v'K. "•> < ?, fJo FROM .• . '-the Staff i * ^SSfX-K, of » his­ , 'M'Ai: _*$K* J u'*";M EMMT| vV 4S«, THE TEXAS BOOK f I . STORE * X ! t'Prlsfc.1 rl r ^:|» i'.I; ^!' -'v ft* / ^r4-f +. -• t, *T Ho*i'. th. wkol. ihft (alphabetically arranged for g~n«n­tion. Bo£ pin 4* •<> *"Jr «•"•• *"* when you need information about anythmgjrom Architecture wSpKoHo Zoology Textbooks. And remember, whe, you do • KuMms with Jke Texa. Book ?tore> ony one w •# of, ih doport­ : a 1 mefifif you always get ^ ..\ '' ^i» --V tM*** 1 js^if*v >" |JfWi&M iP-4, w ? ' >v,j^ '3 H JS® a**?? 1 ' ip $$•& i%jse&s£i 4^" ^ r (» % --Si (yeit). But aside from the «mposs»Die or ne-r .n.™.w~ r--~ mlhv extra services for students and faculty which make them «>I*-­, %»* • i ,Tr * "raguiars" at the Texas Book Store. Why not give us a try?.t • » 6 -' r » i i 9 I JiVs.lf.«' ;4 Wsp 4?I * "IT 5i4 < i.'Ji'***1 Art T&V -' &,4 "* J SvTV » }' *' ^ ^ 'J H$re are a few of the "Extra"'$ervices jake it prdfitable io be o '•eijular customer at Texas Book Store \f •* m-m • Wrapand Mail Packages mIS -• • Free telephone in the front of }he store ' J5?i#!;•>*:. M ' '>'• '• .if; &? ' »«f. '*-' -> • We cash your checks ipp'mi si-T • Make Special Orders ','.-te<-r«-r: I r • I i • i • Help You Locate"Hart-to-Find,f° Merchandise "m & • pur10% (Oood Anytime)Rebate -.5vJ ife^l• • I • r'-% jriU" « v--» -|«,r'k', I '^r ^ I ,V{' %aNr^* 5sf t' ^.2SS5T"ci> f f»^V • 40% Discount on Used Books Your OldM< Books You think it bp! 1% I/' You a Problem that your Teacher, Deaii or Student jV ffei K»|a§•: Pi "t?-J Advisor can't solve? Let Texas Book Store 5 11 I ' ?S$" i' have a try! ! 1 P. S. Don't forget • ; -'' / • . *o come in and meet us ,'y y. (tip ;£7Jppvi'g v and enter our "Howdy C«p^e*t' with «nany free prizes (See f>«ge 2.) r f ^?-•'• *» lis ^tSferC'? BOOK feMlfl*:•*' fcCiM fs . "2244 Guadatup*. ..Just Across The Street From The Student Union M \ h/A i¥^r V J fencing Oytfits THE DAft-Y TBCA Made a date lately-to fight a duel? | > | • If. got -the first place to stop, t*ftee cocking 'with: your insur­ance agent, is the Sporting Goods . Department in .the Texas Book §tore. There you finti the most complete ; fencing, supply in the state. Julian "Judge" Thomas, head of the department, can show you, the latest models of Frenchj 'Italian, Belgian, or American epees/sabres and swords and face maska to outfit the most ardent do-or-die-er duelist or to comple­ment P. ,T. fericiiig requirements. Chest protectors ;and fencing shoes can be furnished on special order. ; But-fif you prefer the more conventional sports. ,lifr. Thomas can still fill your bill* Archery can be a? .dangerous sport if the archer-la not pro^­tccted by wrist "guards and finger gloves: to prevent the black and blue marks so familiar! to many amateur, shooters. ' S.tandard ar­rows are also available^. Mr. Thomas has /spectator seats, binoculars, and ? sunvisors for the football addict^. Of course, if you don't feel that you are quite, upj to these strenuous sports, a few sessions with dumb bells, exercise and muscle building equipment can put you in shape for most any­ x thing! The Texas Book Store is ex­clusive dealers for ; the modern dance costumes and cap furnish members of each' P. T. class with regulation unifonns. : RAT INSBtTMtl caxu. lOfD MS $N EACH MRTflfOM iji A complete line of expandirfg files, card indexes ata& < < ' •-lAv'1 •/ . -_l ' • 'Subject filesif••••v :;v:\.\v j If you are looking for grfod reading material for. for -reference b^>oks on any sitbjec^. from hojr to niake a sun dij|l to a discussion oi the time 'dimension, the 'Uni­ : '• ! "V-, versity-Library naj& it ; One of the f most popular branch libraries ofi the campus is tlje MflstC' Library^ in the air-con­ ditiOned Music Bujildirig. A 3^300­piece record collection is available t$ all students. % I For jwomen onljj|, usually, is the I^ome Economic! Library and unge on the .first floor. of the >me jEconomics |Buildmg.\ The Mallet Library in the Che­mistry Building .Kjoom -219 is the hime of pharmacy and chemistry stiudents yKo hav| adapted them­selves to the od|r of hydrogen sulfide. \v • • /; •; " |Physicists; some-of wnom are studying atomic|power, make tfteir studying headquart^s at the Pjhysics Library ift" Phy.B. 401. : i Geologists have itheir .library i|A the Geology Building, v . ! The College pt Engineering since it was organized in 1894, has -had its own library. It is now located in E.B. llSL ­ The School of ; Journalism Li­brary," established |in 1946, la lo­cated on the first floor of the Journalism Building. ~ j If occasional lt%al jargon does not throw you., the Law.Library, in Law Building j 205, affords 'a well-lighted, comfortable pi,ace for study. '1 > /•-, •. The Education Library> in Sut­ton Hall 325 is| maintained to serve juniors, sen|ors, and gradu­ate students in education and psy­chology. | i * The Architecture Library .in A.B. 205 was or^anired in 1914 tar encourage an<| inspire design­ers, students, and professionals. , The Biology Library is in Biolo­gy Building 312.| Branch librariesi are also main­ Languages. In the books of thes^ .various libraries, enough words11 -> lieet towritten on any .given • „ V give a complete backg in.d on topics that an fristruct| might assign research papers, i The reserve reading loom at 'the east end of the mair :orridor is usually filled with st'ijic its who wish to, study between c isses. It offers books which are re tired or suggested for outside riding in many courses, especially ||hose in Arts and Sciences. J If you are looking tot\ the home folks, the N& TYPEWRITI tained for the. Departi1: nts of Collecttoo-Reading S>M« Botany and Zoology, and lassical southwest end of the otis Shop and Sports De W* haven't room'toro to fKpw al in our Sport* Department and our Man's Shop. Com* in during our."Howdy Contait" and took 'o| 1.1.ea *kor• tAUNDRT BAG. Lute, dunUa «bit« or«i»« ' at««r hMd-, »l.*i )%. ^ •rlo* BADMINTON RACKET -'" • •i.W. J-V V V p v I.P. T.* SHOUTS, H»'i •i«M KUt. OitU* lies* : 10-1«. PtMd Mt to * front, coin pocket, hip • POck«t . . (TMI \ ; wUI« iinWt drill' w* • terial $1.00 and »*.7S 4. PUatie Raincoat. UtkW . waiftht, imail with kaMr; tutr lick !<•»! to <7.95 4. tU* XtUnd Sport Shirt— e Iioaf k)««v«, *in(r)* »«•>,; «m*truetl«|B, aolid*. i Mvr. sold, browta. *re«n j-, , m wide a^aortmant >. tt.9S m\4 IS.9S 'a. stack*. At) wool wor* : ittd. H*nd»om»ly tall­ * -orod. d««c pl«aUiIim ^4. tt-SB. Na»y kla« or light MM A taundry Malllnr Ct». Brown Itbroold , . . Metal; vaard eom«r*. Name and '• addrca* i>lat«t . . . web **•" Svl.Ckap»l«n Handball ' -GIovm .., Small, incdl-' , «n and Urjre altoc, 1 padded or unpadded • i * r: * MtMted ventilation. ^ |2.95 U»^ ­ I v \ « -s .v hind the Bursar's Offif papers from all over States' ' ' The wesfc wing of tl.e houses the undergraduate' ) room arid the documet Ml .Y TEXAN?V» r : Robmrnotes Ari Not' Expendable; Treat Them, Well A roommate is aii invaluTable possession of every Universi ty,stu­ dent. He (or she, as the cas» be) should.be handled wit^ t t y-. '• spoken to often with kind JVC ^ $ and, given an occasional I at on the head to ^1^ him khow tha]t he 2 $f- is appreciated.But the best sign ! , • • ' !''••• of app.reeia1­ -a '*' $ tion to him Would he-, a gift now and then—juit a small one, or any • size .that, could conform to the size of ^e ppckefcbook pf the buver. The Texas Book Store.has ciga­ B0OKS, BbOKS, AND MORE BOOKS, but a jpfH; of the seiec+ion from Mrs. Lifa Finiey s ir^ae these: are book't only­ ret lighter^ holders ?nd ligr­ meH^.in the Texas Book S+dre. ii- " RKEY un^eyWiade by fhe. {4;000 seictt©iWt The cardf for' the edl instfucfrpns if ere fur eases, personalised matches, com­pacts, earrings, sctirfs, ceramic ashtrays ; and figt demitasse spoons, fountain . and mechanjcal pencils that <^an hose, rijaes, pens Knows be / stamped/ with >the owner's .. Cards K&MAc Jriiiki^gr "• Santa Claus, a, .tiii*--i stud Tfey -giibblejv aii orange and white jlonograiTi, a smiling Bevo, potton -bowl, with an accom­question mark were all |p|]mil$r figures -last jeiajr during j|&e Mlf time flash card displays Manorial Stadium. • 'Metre • -itaui; to sftow. theik football and fidllege spirit ' by picture in additffih.' to .the usual ;j ^all thfe wiy"Snd "gig 'em!' yel^, filling groujM 'j confetti on toiichd^wns, rumbw if many thousands of feet on^tfi wooden standsjj and the wavinti white handkerchiefs ot^ name, sox, shirts, T hats, book ends, decorafive plates, and /stuffed animals in BOfOrjty .and fraternity colors. , "• ' j ,i Mothers aqd fathere are people that like to ^e^remenabere^! loo^ especially on birthdays and anni­versaries with a cardj, or a tie, belt, costume Jewelry, tie] sets, cuff links, biUfolds, a desk calen­dar, or a magazine subscription. ASpecialist is the only word that^ften describe Mrs. Lila'Fin­ley, head of•the trade books in the fjlexas Book Store—a' special­ist in|any field, whether it )be;gar­deniijyr, outdoor life, art, engineer­ing, jj^iidren; or/ 'bf any kind :j|nd one Who -can select for you 4he exact ,book. to fit any­one's Iparticolar interest. .• |M -fffjtfOOllstudents participated in the sfe.v-i .il .. during the eight4njnute. termission periods. llSh Texas® Book ' Store fur­itfhedthe colored fl^|h cards and T;jnimeographed instruction Jl'.-'tbat-enabled ; University; close ^Us. • ; ;i|. . Th«| Rlally Committeeto plan the fl§|h card displays was formed last floflfember after prolonged debat'Min the Student AssemBly. Chair||§m of the committee, for this Kr is Randall Dockery. a are ftooms No a Bare rooms need no longer be problwn to _ students whose In jier department are the most complete selections of books in any ^specialized field. Prom a group-of four' or five books that she c$h pick for you, any rdught f firorti home cannot be Relied on,to ^ake up students:: iii; time f^r those early 8 o'cloclfis. The oldrfi^hioned hand-winding -clocks or the, new store ; since 1941 and knows the special consideration and thought that must go into each selection. At market, she keeps in mind the books that Will be needed to.slip-Ya' Pays Your Money .• . " fhere is no trouble or fuss to sh^ppjing at the Texas Book S^tore. Ju|t walk in, point out what you want, and pay "for it. The clerks will wrap it and mail it to> any place you name. MRS. LlLA FINLEf plement the text books and hob" bies of all her [customers and customers-to-be. | Children's, toys| and games are also In her' department, and her experience with the four children of her owii has taught her what Would be tiie best buy under any circumstance. ; j i ' cloik-radios ] from , the ; ®exas Book Store are much moreNde­ >maa Co»Ufn: The Magnificent Century.j]|Vttnr(t K«mn« ia Brom field; Mr. Smith ..... j; WeUnMB: The Iron Mtotress . -_ "" 'vartt Kennedyw Lucy Carmiehael -— Irwin. Shaw.: Irottbled Air ~7n. Rachel Carson: The Sea Arptind U« ^Better Home* »nd Garden* GardenBook Hesfceth Pension: Di*xy...*~-... ... Pai»J FrisehaueriShepherda Crook —­Margaret Barnes: With All My Heart James Ronald? Mail Born or Woman Jamea Street;' Hiith Ca1Ifnit. - 3.50 • 3.50 a-!:* 3.50 pendable: ' . There is no use for your wast pa^er and cigaret stubs to J>i(e up in-a corner of a room. Tjh^. in­genuity of modern scientists has come up with a new idea in decor —a wastebasket that will hold tip to a week's discarded stubs. Franfc GilbretljVrm a Lucky, tiuy~-, l,i J. ». Salinieer^'The ;Catcher *in the.Ry^ /• J. . Me«de Falkfter: -MoottfteetU.'.^.^i;-'-^;-|l Josephine Law^enSe-The Picture Window. u>:Jan>e»' Fisher oft-I^owell Hawiey: A.' Few Butt ' Joseph Gair: fee-Lore of the Old Testamen jj. Fulton Sheen t*Three To det Married . Editors of FORTUNE: USA The Permanent Msk Shulman: The Many Love* of, Bovto Gillfl Frank Slaughter; The Roa'd to Bithynia... t Edit. }•' jN. Hoserfau: Roosevelt Treasury.,Elton Truehlood< The Life We Prise ...'. Mar'.tn "Qamperti The Anatomy of Happineeanl-. Alines .Newton Keith t' White.Man Returns Wtltiwn Styrcm; l^fe "Down m Darkness " Bradlfy; A . Soldier's Story ^ Missing olutioi) *3.00 M~ 3.50 4.'60 s.w. 3,75 250 <8,50 5.00 2.60 8.50 4.00 8.50 5.00 for our we have tnp j j I sensationew pen i ' %:-r fei CHILMEH'S BOOKS 1.1 ' COWBOY SMALL br Lot* Lenskf i TEXAS tTOMBOY by Lois Lenaki iPRAIRJE SCHOOL by Lola Xert$1«|' ft] „ AMOS FORTUNE. FREE MAli by .Elisabeth 6THE fiGG TREE by Katherife Mithou* FONCtfO ANa THE PINK HORSE by Theresa Ugalab Smith I WAMT TO BE A COWBOY. b)i Emilie an Pens for 00 and ylmQJi Ti ^'tV * -j v k / $f3.50 THE STERLING. Top performance :»t'imediui*j_price|r AU^t^e i-..'-.-.-tyix-'i'i** features of the clipper plus 3« position Paper £*» *n4 J"8"?. Jb Vf ^her features. -, •% A , 5SCRAP BOOKS!, fh ^ ' clippings, We programs," EXAS BOOK STORE notes., Scrap books • P«ced -fron) $1.00 up^ STORE '2244 Guadalupe . , . Just Across from tKo Studont Unioa pMl'' M8sm^M£, 5 iff •M i-tisMi -fcsr ,/% Contest Will Give 4 i Want sumthin' for nuthinj'' except employes1 of [the Texas Texos Book Sfor* K To Service Back in 1919, working way through college was; aa a'problem as it is n^jw. And, dents then were justi as ingiwibus as they; are now. One in particu­lar. He was a B; B. A. studentj look­ing foria way. to help pay his jwi* tion. He rented a small shack-like store in the block of ^Ipat la sow a^out 2j200 Guadalupe JSnd served imburgets and listened to jtha .intpla'ints of hiSy fellow students about prices of living, whether the past war was the one to end fall ; wars, and the girl situation. W. S. GATEWOOD But the biggest gripe was.at 'I * -1 * " rt \ it • " • " rthe cost of books. At featj tiiie,. He move^ his rapidly expand- the books had to (be'bought jdii 'ect ing*store down the street, began from a regular dealer and afttr a' buying and selling new books at course i was finished*,, the be oks wholesale prices, and stayed bn the bookshelves in the students' homes, gathering dfwt, , -Vftf _ mildew i and spider' webs. The student who own®#* jtha f& f • hamburger stand decided to do something about it. H« offeree) to buy' th«s used books wfcell them to students who 'would jbe taking ihe same course# the i^ext term. . Several bookcases w knocked together and! $ut up on one side of the store, i . Much to the studerit'« surpx be, his book business soon overflowed Into the eatery', part -of bis f»A sb­lishment, and completely PjW» his hamburgers out th^doou u O :>X t ? J 1 *» 0EPARTM : -H { ; -V4 BUiik Ch«k«° •"* SUtmMU P«t Owk' s UH«rkwt cl«rlcship and adver­tising /of W. & Oa^iwootf, ^ Tcy*s Book Store &«aii tci *un«r tion as part of the, life d |ewi^ «l * I* It*. , lkrg«d the »tow» tM» ti>« Uaijirewllf grew, and as wwr* and more sto* dents befan demanding " vices he offered until %. reached to the alley behind In 194$, the store w« ^ore enlarged, this a moan . eafed just'io tin continued ^'White "t" University iTowr ewibtfiB in upper left hand cinpfriM >'2» blue—60 sheets, it env^opes,Autogral Vellnm—vUU, jglrt* "hand,single^ ' kritials f I.TI >LOWgWWKOG|tl "rw NOTES By White and ~ > JO WedfjHBtppd Chaag SVcCU Attraetiva littie _ UNote# % I--fa mm p' ^