•ninMPR^ «*> a>riis ' fcEStW* 1 Pilal 85** ten, Oxford, as * Rhodes scholar; professor at Chicago University, and receives * doctorate degree Stanford, Tale, and Academie de VOL 51 I'ric® $ Oni IN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1951 duateof the University, will give Tocteyf from Colombia in 1928. ; «, Droit International, Tbe Hague. their opinions of the United States At .present he is editor i»f tile His books indude'The Responsi­ in the United Nations Wednesday Annual Review of United-Na­bility of States .In International ',^r night at the Great lames course, tions Affairs and president of the Law, Analysli of the Problem of Anmriean branch of the Interna* War* and Forces That,Shape Our they are John Hickerson, assis­ tional Law Association. He is plso Future., \ 4n tent secretary .of the state^Jfor United Nations Affairs; and Dr. on the executive councils of. the »A consultant to various govern­i£ * American Political Science Asso­ments in past years, Eagleton Was ^ Clyde Eagleton, director of the 1 I Graduate Program of Studies in ciation, American Society of In­a legal expert for the Department VW h*.4t mr ternational Law, Commission to of State during the %ar and was i « United Nations and World, Af- Study the Organisation of Peace, a consultant to the United Nations -faire st New York University. In i * & and i^ secretary of-the Boferi of Conference at San Francisco in Although the Great Issues Directors for the Woodrow Wilson 1946 and the International Law series on American foreign policy '~4 Foundation. commission in 1949. --— Incrtdii Planned are usually limited only to those JIM WILSON iaPiliiMp enrolled, others may attend this ynzsmlLi In Parking Spate So far as \'.v meeting at a charge of 50 cents* The Faculty Council voted dawn plans for a trimester -• The lectures begin at 7:30 in the By Health Cintir ... that the majority favor the two six-weeks Summer Term*'J Monday afternoon. The plan, which would divide the year University Presbyterian Church; because this arrangement makes it possible for each Member1 . C, .: Preliminary work for the-paving into three semesters lasting four monthB, was refused after This seventh in a series of eight of the faculty to teach at least one Summer Term. Witt " of the street between > the Home topics will not be conducted as a Henry :Y. McCown, Chairman of the Schedule Committee, Economics Building and the high cost of living, this is an importaqt corisideration. > debate* but-Dr. Eagleton has told Narrowed to 31 Health Center was begun Monday made-his report to the Council. >, ^ v , -f !• "Furthermore, this schedule allows some vacation timt the Great Issues committee that „ „. . , r" ^ s£»4 -\ morning. 1 "Under present conditions," Mr. McCown. reported, "the he knowsof several points on gw? those who teach both Summer,T6rmSk.5^-J p . Carl; John. Eckhardt, director' of , which he and-Mr. Hickerson dif-Thirty-one quarter-finalists for Schedule Committee does not consider that a change is de­ "!"" reta Nissen, Dora Bell Scott, ti»e University Physical Plant'and ''From the standpoint, of tiie student, 'the two 'Summ^p „" f«r. His speech will primarily in­Aqua Carnival Queen were select* Clare Masterson* Mary.,Jean RushM professor of mechanical engineer-sirable in our schedule. OurXorig Session aiid two six-weei^s Terms make it easier to arrange a program, This is parficw?1 clude those-points. , ed from 190 entries Ifbnday night. Beverly Besoni, and Noli Duggan. that etveet iniR; "aid when' this Summer Terms appear to meet the needs of both faculty'and These quarter finalists will re- Also Linda Rowe, Virginia Nich­larly true for teachers who desireto attend...summer school Hickerson, ?>• who received a was paved it could possibly make bachelor of arts degree from the tarn t6 Gregory Gym's swimming between and parking students. This arrangement permits a flexible schedule for ols, Charlotte Carlisle* Diarie San­90 100 and for students who find it necessary to work part ef the University in 1920,is a native of pool Wednesday night gt 7:30 ders, Jan Scurfock,; Elois« Frame, spaces which are badly needed at staff and students. --^ , summer to defray their expanses. Crawford. After graduating, -hr p.m. fdr selection of twenty semi-Barbara Kelley, Martha M[oore, the University. immediatelyenteredthe United finalists. On the same night.the Sue Henslef, ai(d Liligene Pace. This street, is being made into the -Long Session tffef 2^ States diplomatic service and' be­top ten will beselected. 'Judges for. the preliminaries a boulevard, allowing parking BibU Answers twelve-weeks Summer Se^J came vice-consul at! Tampico, The 190 entrants were judjged were Lloyd Hand, Phii Ransopher, spaces on both sides of the street. sion during which a stjident-f Mexico. Later posts were in Bra­on th» basis of beauty of face and Don Klein, lUn. Hank Chapman, This paving project, located be­zil and Canada, but in 1927 he figure and poise. Their only iden­Skippy Browning, Mrs. Skippy tween Twenty-fourth and Twenty-can earn fourteen, semester || returned , to the department at tification during the contest was Browning, Mary Esther Haskell, sixth Street on University Avenue, hours of credit give us. in ef­£.««! Washington, D.C.,and threo years a ' number. The thirteen judges Wynant Wilson, Milton Black, is the lSst of four projects on a r.f fect an accelerated program M later became Deputy Director of were riot told names or affiliation Bobby B^odnax, Bill Hoff, Eddie $112,000 contract given to Collins for those who are striving to com­ the Office of European Affairs. until after the contest. Humphries, and John Crawford. Construction Company. : i plete as much work as possible, • Hank Chapman, swimriiing Professor Eckhardt pointed out I before being called into service;'^­ Until his appointment 'as Assis­coach and director of; Aqua Car-the possibility: that the paving jobs tant Secretary of State, Hickerson could be completed by January of Mr. McCown pointed out that nical, said Moriday night that aU Ragsdale, Jones specialised in US relationships next year if scarce materials are if there,was an all-out emergency -' 190 of the girls entering the pre­ with European countries, serving* liminaries were "real queens." available when needed and if the Which would niake twelve months • as Chief of British Commonwealth contractor is diligent through ition and fees, and $10 a month nien come vu prepare j as By M. E. DARSEY to-college to employment desirable for the UTSeveral of the judges also stated Affairs, Deputy Director of the their' approval with such exclama­the coming months as he has been A new York judge blasted col­for incidental expenses. for what they will have to face 8 *Q accelerated program'-J Cup Offiee of European Affairs and tions as "Wowf and "Hot Dangr' since he started ;the projects. lege football and basketball as a "The schools offervthe same op­in -future life; There's no better necessary for UT students, the. ill finally as Director of that Officer The 81quarteftfinalists selected Joan Ragsdale and Flozelle Dr. Eckhardt gave a probable sotdid-; big business Monday and portunities to rprospective players laboratory thanj^the athletic-field;" Committee would favor considers-4­ W |i5'§ In his present capacity, Hicker­Monday night are Myrlene Ander­Jones won the debate contest and order of. the completion of the sentenced a gambler an d five and the final choke lies in the ."Football players of today are tion for a triiriester i>lari -siiiiilar ||P son represents the Secretary of son, ; Pat McGinn, Sandra May-took the gold trophy cup in the jobs. First in line is., the comple­former players to prison terms. player's preference of schools/' he studying in every field, are much to the orie in effect at the Uni­w State in all matters relating to tion of the paving of Speedway The University,of Texas, Texas said.. smarter, and are very serious-versity in World War J. if em-% field, Ann Chipman, Jean Powell, i UnitedStates participation inthe Betsy BeU, Betty, Wright, Jean senior division of the fourth from the Experimental Science A&M, and SMU were among the Ntfr are scholastic requirements minded," the veteran of 29 years bodied, in effect, three,four-moritij ^ international agencies. This means Amsler, and Sunny Guest. annual Woman's Debate Tourna-Building to Twenty-sixth Street. eight schools singled out for criti-eased for athletes, Mr. Bible noted. of coaching added. -. semesters. heading four offices—those ' of Also Ann Wells,' Dana Howe, merit Friday and Saturday. Next is Twenty-fifth Street be-|cism. . "Of course, if a boy is behirid Mr. Bible conceded .that -ih er '' United Nations Economic and So­Pat:Galloway, Mary Ann Edwards, In the junior division, Central tween University Avenue and ' General Sessions Gourt Judge in his work, and asks for; help, we American football program "may F. L. Cox,-secretary*%t 'ifca r3 cial.Affairs, of United Nations P: no favoritism. aca­of -1952 and,.the Long Session of Publications Win .and took five opt-of six debates. Ife sentenced gambler "Salva-with Weeding out the gamblers * -: ^ 1953". persons. At Detroit lieef "The second team of the University Last would be the street paving tore ^Sollazzo to ^ight to sixteen demically for athletes. • who prey on college athletics." Hiekerson has attended nuiner-junior division, Sara Abrego and begun Monday jfhoihning between years in prison for -bribing-col­"Instructors, are not supposed Judge Streit suggested that col* .He -also _ said' that for', the*^ ous international conference*, The Ranger and The Daily Tex­Mary Lojiise Ivey won four out, of HE Building, and the Health Cen­lege players. Fife former basket­to treat athletes any differently lege presidents and faculties must 1962-53 Christmas holiday season served as an adviser to the Secre­an were presented with certifi-sifc'rdundsip" ^ ter.. '\L..: ball players were sentenced to than other students," Dr. Painter assume "direct control" of sports the students and faculty,will-have tary of State at the Conference of an extra day vacation. The Uni­ eates-of a^rwd at the national eon There were 30 debate teams prisoti terms and nine et|ier» were said. "So,far as Ikri^'there^feave? .eliminate "all outside inflq- Foreign Ministers in London in •..been v^fsity. will be dismissed after ventiori of °Sigma Delta Chi, na­represmt^d this last week #i}d :giv^:*sa^ridOd^swterices^~i' ences," and said that gambling in , _ ,1947, andparticipatedinthe for­tional professional journalistic fra­with 9o participants in both the "Uriivfel-sity Athletic : Director Mr. Bihie^^nyirig lhat college collegiate sports^ was"^'™e«-December.23r b*t will-not mulation of the North Atlantic Male# Tour of Campus X. after sports strictly cbmmerciil have to "be" back to school until ternity,-which was held in Detroit 'individual and debate team events. Dana Bible, reading is a coaching staffs. Treaty in 1949. ^ November 14-17. The^.debate question was: "Re­Winthrope W. Aldrich, chair­Judge Strait's charges, said, "Peo-enterprise, said that athletics are The -judge's comments brought January 6. ||gj Eagleton, a native Of Sherman, Bobby Jones, associate editor solved, that the federal govern­man of the Chase National Bank, 1*1® have been throwing verbal a means, not an end, a • Wave of protests and denials m.Also in the .meeting President is® AF Atmittira Meets Today of the* Ranger and UT's Sigma ment should' adopt a permanent and several other New York bank­brickbats at college football for "Football has a definite educa­f?om' coaches and college officials X, S. -Painter was authorized to.'IPSM Delta Chi treasurer, attended the wage and price ers in Texas to visit investmerits a long time, but the fact remains tional value," he said. "Young over the country. appoint a committee of five .to'^1 Th« Air Force Association-in its program of con­ • —-: L~ convention and brought back the trol." ' ' . T' in the Southwest, toured the Uni­that the good points in collegiate appraise the present Physical first general meeting to&ty in certificates for the 1950-51 school versity Thursday and made a spe­athletics far outweigh the bad." Training requirements for irathHogg Auditorium at 6 o'clock will year. . ' cial call to the Department of The judge said in his 41-page men and women. discuss the budget The budget in­ "' ''"is1'" " i -' ^ of the Time cludes funds forthe Military Ball, ITie lunger won second place in Petroleum Bhgineering. attack that college athletes are tiie non-fiction articles division ^In a speech to the Austin Cham­sold to the highest'bidder; labeled C. P. Boner, Dearisof the Col- sponsors, Round-Up float, and Cactus pictures. with the feature by Jerry Bishop ber of Commerce, Mr. Aldrich the attitude of many coaches as lege of Arts and Sciences, gays about the'Department:of Geogra­stated that at the moment the despicable, and said scholastic du­thfc reason for this action. -i ­ in Aggie Game phy, which appeared in the March economy of the United States is plicity is used to keep star players In a report to the Council he issue. • not subject to strong inflationary in school. explained,» "With the retirement Signs, of every kind^ color, and ably-be entries in the Aggie Sign . The Texan won third place in Lt. Col. Harold L. Wilson has pressures, but-that the present "i have never known of a ca$e of Professor L. T. Bellmont, Di­ shape will soon begin popping up Contest sponsored annually by the the feature divisiori with Russ lull should give no cause for com­ rector of Physical training for s at (joed been assigned as senior area in­involving the bribery of a college in front of the houses of many Silver Spur Organization. i Men •':'! Kersten's full-page story of B. placency. player in the Southwest confer­organizations. They will all prob- • • 'it will be necessary 'to Hall which appeared November structor for the Army Organized ence," Mr. Bible said. The contest, designed and car-appoint a successor. The Dean 30, 1060. Photos for the story Reserves in the Austin area. He Only Oho Entry So Far "W(3 ^;are. . restrained in' the ried on for several years, is to (Boner) arid the" President should were by Nblen Bbrden. succeeds Lt. : Col. Kenneth R. Southwest by strict TCU Man Again Beads 1) show the Longhoras that-cam-have the current thinking of the Conference On JJ.ere articles by Mathers who has been assigned to pus groups are behind them all general faculty as to the role of • Other entered the In Woodpilo Contost regulations as to the aid we can Texan in the feature division were district headquarters staff. Musicological Society the way, 2) build better school physical-training ih the University Acacii fraternity was the only give athletes," Mr. Bible said. "Women in the Profession" by , Col. Wilson, whose permanent code spirit before the. traditional Tex­program before nominating-the 8:30-12 and 1-5—Drawing for organization entered in the Cow­The-conference provides Dr. Michael Wiriesanker from Dorothy Asch and Murdock Dar- home is in Pine Bluff, Ark, recent-' as-Texas Aggie football game, and new director of this department AAM game tickets, ^(Gregory boy woodgatherihg contest. Mon­that athletic scholarships may TCU was re-elected president of sey; Ken Gompeptz's interview ly returned from 12 months of ser­'3) win a nice big loving cup of-The new director should be guided Gym. day afternoon, aecording to the furnish only room and board, tu­the Texas chapter of the Ameri­ with.-New' Zeafander Peter Cole­ vice in Korea. In addition to over­fered by the Spurs to the winners.! in large measure by the wishes of 9-6—Faculty art exhibit, Music Dean of Men. can Musicological Society, at the Building loggia. man, teaching fellow in history; seas theater ribbons, CoL Wilson . The contest begins Saturday, Gr«*t Inoei Invite* InttruUd organization's business: meeting, The entry deadline has been set, general faculty, as to a pro­Bill Razo's feature about engineer­wears the Bronze Star Medal with for Monday, November 26. En­gram which will meet the degree 1 and 6:30—Bible study, Luth November 24 and-all groups plan­The Great Issues course will announced Homer Ulrich, profes­ ing student Charles Davis and three oak leaf' clusters, Belgian tries are made by calling Jamie requirement4,0* *>• eran Student House. "" ning to participate must register haVe an open meeting today at sor of chamber music. " how rhe ran his car with Butane; Croix de Guerre, Combat Infan­allot­Clements, head of the committee, , , "ie Department of2-3—Campus Cheat auction, Main arid M. E. Darsey's personality try Badg$, and nine campaign so that they Will receive,an 4 o'clock in Texas Union 316... All Winford S. Cumiriings of SMU at *7-9476. t Physical Training for Women js, Lounge, Texas Union. ted space to stack the wood. The Who interested in was elected students are secfetary-treasurer. story of /Ed Barlow, UT physical* stars. • • Freshman the There are very few ,raiei\aridMe/®^^!S^^ °" whet.hcr! 8—NROTC-AIR ROTC game, In training director who writes fic­wood will be placed ?" Texas Union, 316. fessional labor will be disqualified. for Men will be determined by the 4—Last meeting of Rally Com- The Spurs have also asked that a degree requirements in that area." miteei Waggener Hall 401. minimum of highly inflammable 5—Air ROTC -Association,. Hogg material be used in the construc­Auditorium. tion. NROTC Stqff Confid«nt S-^Religious-Emphasi^ Week book Trophies will be awarded to mess. Of Football Victories displaty committee,. Lutheran first and second place winners. n Student House. First plac«; will receive a large ' 1 Smarting from Wednesday^'" 5—Turkey dinner and -bazaar, loving second place a Sold ..One Dean Nowotny!i>»1 at S p;m, Monday, Howdy Clark, APO office, .Texas Union 305. cup', and 25-0 defeat at the hands of their -Congregational .Church,. haircuts'to several gallons of gaso-pus Chest Talent show-to be held smaller one^ Un-member of APO, stated that-the|^ This year APO decided that the ine. * . . ' -' ' were mjdshipman studentsTtW NROTC S 5—Mutic Committee, Texas Campus 'Chestv will shout Tuesday deadline has been exterided to 12 proceeds from the election will Wednesday night 6ut down TheraJA-no entry fee required staff has challenged both Air and i Merchants making contributions twenty last ion 315. afternoon at the Chinese auctidri. noon Tuesday." Entries be go to the Campus Chest. -University to in try-outs held Judges of the signs will be Dean^ Army-ROTC staff is to touch foot-L^-< S^Phi" Delta Phi initiation and can Pete's On the Drag, Sunday. A o-day auction^^ill-be held made at the APO office or by Carl Bredt, Dean Jack Holland. ball games Jn a desperate effort .banquet, Commodore Perry The election willbe held ^Friday, Typewriter Exchange, "Of twenty chosen : in the Main Lounge of the Texas Norwoods the entries ­ calling Clark at 2-4161. The en­ November 23 from 8:30 -a.m. to and Sons, John's Idea, To-Jam, Dean Dorothy. GebSucr, C, Reed for victory.* . Hotel. Union between 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. try fee is $5. for the show, nineteen are from Gran berry, and Jitter Nolen. The The challenge was accepted.by 8:30—Intervarsity Christian Fel­ 4 p.m. Voting booths will be set Hemphill Book Stores, Otis 'Stahl, on Tuesday and Wednesday. T judging will take-place November the Air and Army units promptly. fraternities and sororities, ;the lowship supper arid forum, Cam« "Bdth people and things will go handsome As reported, gents here-thst are have the been six the up in Union, front the of Law Hogg Building) Auditorium, Wag­Shop, Capitol Longhorn Photo Supplies, Shoe Varsity Repair, other is Swing and Turn. " 127; ' ' '• The Navy-Air«»ROTC-game is pus Cafeteria. '.?Zxi 01*. scheduled jOhly peo. for' 3 p.m. today, and 7—Girls' Glee Club picture to be pie will be on auction/Dean Now­entered: gener Hall, the Engineering Build­Texaco Service Station on Nine­The taleiit shtf'w will -be held in For further information, or­the Army game, 3 p.m. Wednes­ . made, Music Recital Hall. otny, Dean Holland, Wales Mad­Happy;Harry Norris backed by ing, and on the east side of (be teenth and Guadalupe Streets, and the Main Lounge of the. Texas ganizations ritay call Jamie Clem­day.."'"' --' ' iSigma Phi E'psilon. Main Building. Ed Minor Pharmacy. J--—r ents, Clay Fulcher, 8-2268, Buddy 7—Vesper service for DSF, Uni-den, Bill Simpson, and Charlie Union beginning at 8 p.m. Despite the tough schedule, versity Christian Church. Horrible-Harold Cartis, Lambda At the end of the lorig. "mud Also The Night Hawk, Humble Nott, 8-3491, Howdy .Clark, Pistor will ba at the disposal of Chptain R. A. (Bullet) Knapp op­ Chi Alpl^t.' slinging" campaign lie many prises Station on Nineteenth knd Guada­Wednesday, November 21.-2-4161, A1 Quinn, 6-5522, or Ran- 7—Faculty finance drive meeting, the highest bidder. timistically predicts victory for JS; Bashfril Bobby Waldron,-Cam-t for the victor. .. , lupe Streets, Wukasch Bros. Cafe, del Dockery 7-9476. ' 7:15—Cap and. Gown, Barker His-Wednesday afternoon are Chan­pus Guild. The organisation backing the University Barber. Shop, Texas wttl be collected as admission. All "Look at' wSat the Wavy.vdid to r! YMCA., Among the -articles on auction • - Fifty cent Or more donations .the Navy. > ^ .tdry Center^ cellor Hart's-ash tray, a football Jack "The Hipper" Holland,' winner will receive the traditional Book Store, Austin Blossom Shop, Neal Attend# Aid Meeting v \ ?\ donations will go Army last year," he said. Tri-Chi.H . : loving cup and any group -that Foyt's News and Supplies, Home to the Csm&us •"W '• 7:30—Eolenspiegelverein, MLB autographed "by.the team, and the Joe W. N'eal, director of the In­ Chest Fund. a'" 801. football* nsed in the OU game, T. S. Painter, Prohibition Party, wins the"cup. tor three years niay Drug, University Co-Op, Lamb's ternational Advisory Office, will ^30r-NJWD^'>v:t0cWie«: Korean signed by the co-captains. v Rip (Jerry Lewis) Hunter, "The keep it. Sigma Phi Epsilon has C*nd> Shop, and Gilmore Studio. Winners of jthe talent contest, attend a meeting of the advisory Monkey Man,'.' Beta Theta Pi. atieady won the -contest Also .-Lou's. Corner, WiUiam which will be .judged by the iniovie*, Te3tas;U«ion, Dates with the twenty-five fi- twice. of receive committee to the Emergency Chi­, international Igoifa, day aC the Avalon, starting at iield each year. " . third place winners. ; / Lido Lounger Jack'sT AHyin^ 'tlW" iiiifing—the,show.^Sill:be. Mouzoit {Texas Union. 830. ' • As in alh crooked elections, the . A '"wheel" party will ba held ^Corner,-The Hitchin'' Post, Rey-Law, instructor of drama; Dr. MsJ-Partly . Aairerd-| ^by dlouCff^it hAL U s, t votes will be sold. The price of Saa^y^^^jr'i^and his riolds-Penland, Wess Williams, and coiro-McDonal^, assistant j>rofes-The'weatherman predicts partly Br RU3SJERSTEN votes ar$ 5 cents for one vote; $1. date at the Cliff House with all C*9 Sportmg goods. Wr;of government; Joe D. Farrar, ti'M—Intermediate Club bridge cloudy skies'today with a sloWly-g'f: 7 linn, 11 j * "m 1^.1 , Vote Go on Sah Friday for 25, for 150, *10 for 326, expenses paid. ^ A police^ escort director of the Student fhnploy­ arroup m, 2502 Tower Drive. rising temperature trend through How about the joker in Section ampviUgl r and on tip. Clark pointed out that will lead the ugly man's party Griiktt Squan Dancers ment Bureau and Wilson Foreman 36U Saturday who leaped to hil : Wednesday. The lowest tempera­8001% Six' of the ugliest men on the afrken».anly.^fta^Mtirialiori^l 2-.v; V vice-president 6f Students'-A«so ture win be-87.degrees and-,the feet during a tense' 'Italt v about ^350or |400 worth of votes ^MSpthaT To Vw in TaUnt Show ciation^— ~ 1— -high will "be 66 degrees. Low and screamed:' "Impede tliemf cerimwrnirsjirilh' be high „f?s.v*M^_day wjri 34 and Hurl1obstaclestlm'ilfVf /* 5 W Br fooO»Ul: «atf tennis single* jrAtETTEVlLLE, Ark,, Nov. 3. C. Hudgens, A6M; 4. Temple T«m« /< VP) Arkansas won the Brown, Arkansas; 6. L. Lowe, alter Shur of the Hillel Foun­ The Texas Yearlings and, tb* points in each division are Siggpf fi dation is the 1951intramur41 -Southwest Conference crow cow SHIT; 6. Rick Jleber, Arkansas; Texas A*M fish tangle Saturday ehamplan in badminton an^o. Phi Epsflon the fraternity di-^ 'try championship for the second 7. James Bean, Arkansas;"®, C» A. at 2 p.m. in Memorial Stadium, 4n Shur defeated Smith Monry of virion, Manic's Depressives in the £the fijfth and tie-breaking xiiMf ^e*r to a row here Monday." Rundell, Texas; 9. D. DeRoven, Phi DOte Theta# 16-12, 16^, in Mica, division, Oak Grove in the of the. annual Shrine benefit se­ The Razorbacks compiled a win-AAM; 10. C. Gabriel, A&M. the finals Thursday. dub division* and UCC in the ries. ' ' The Intramural Department w ihtrlow-score of 81 points, "fexas church divMbn. TJ "'*• *« * ''' Since, the Shrine began spon­leased figures concerning «rganix- K««iaaiir. G«t» Muw*ll Award A*K was second with 34, Texas soring the game in behalf of their ' ational ail-yesr trophy points in The next-three^spbr^s tm this A: ' thh-4 with_73, MdJMUJaatjvith crippled children's charity fund# ' year's Intramural calender'are , -PHILADELPHIA, Nov, IS—; -bowling. Volleyball entries elofee $vi«, * *7" (&)•—Dick Kazmaier, Princeton's each freshman club haswon twice, Cowboys Rain Spurs; •nlley bell, handball doubles, end S^h. The Conference's other member —Texas in 1047 and 1960; the one-man team, was chosen unani­ s»>^ ichools—Baylor, TCU, and &ice— mously Monday by the Robert W. Fish in '48 and '49. Gallop to 21-6 Victory ^ Monday, Kowmber $16. Entries in 'doubles lit did not compete. X -Maxwell Memorial Football Club A crowd of some 20,000 is ex* Hiding the stout right am of handball ? elose the same time as volleyball, " ; James Blfine of AAM finished as "the college football player of pected for this final football game , Billy Penn inra stirring rally, the Of Cowboys' splendidly-conditioned Monday, November ?6. Compel-\j the 2.3-mile run first, in the time te year." Kazmaier,. the nation's theMemorialStadium season* tfon he ^ef 12 minutes, 27.6 seconds. leading-ball carrier in total of­If that many-do attend, it will be aid galloped -roughshod.over an will conducted on • itelaesed Sptir' footfohll crew straight elimination basis. Entries t a record for Southwest ConferenceOthers in the first 10 finishers: fense, is the 14th player honored freshman football. The mark is ; Sunday afternoon, 21-6,, in their are limited to four in Class A and « ' tv James -Yarbrough, Arkansas; by the Maxwell Club since l937. two in Class B. ^ 16,000, set at the 1949 Yearlfng- animal fall battle. After the Bevo Boys chalked Class A entries will receive 150' • Fish clash. -c Last -year's 40-0 Yearling tri­up a si»>pointer in the opening^ entry points for two attestants •jMm quarter,. they wilted -end were and six points for each victory. '•5 ijSv umph wias the largest score ever never again in contention as' the Class B teams get the same num­ recorded in the-series that started Cowboys effortlessly grqund out ber of entry points "and three in 1937. several miles rushing and passing; points for each triumph. , . The Fish stand to be favored in Coach Dor Klein used 46 Cow­Ifural bowling will be conduct­ Saturcfay's battle, if comparative boys, including several who were ed on an open tournament basis— ­ scores mean anything. The young not on the program, in a futile entries elose Tuesday, November Agffiea heat Baylor's Cubs 40-20. WmWSW&wM,, attempt to hold down the score. 27. It will be condpctal trader the The same Baylor team whipped the ~ at Texas frosh, 25-7. Lubbock, Ysleta at El Paa* Congress. However, the Yearlings' stock LUBBOCK, Nov. 19—S» Right! A The varsities of The Texas Longhorns get a two-handling.trickery in 605 Trinity Uneee4ltieHaI Cearanteedl. both Texas and gether" and work as is unit against the Baylor day holiday from practice Monday —TOOTSIE ROLL A&M will be idle Saturday, pre­Tulsa this week. . • SMU game Saturday. and Tuesday. Coach Ed Price ex­ is delicious .... . . paring for their annual clash No; Assistant Coach Dick Humbert, Scout reports and films filled pected air players except Fullback tasty . . . chewy yember 29 in College Station. .who handles the Razorback de­the entire practice session Mon­ ... with a chocolate The game's'sponsors are the Ben Byron Townsend to be ready for fense, growled-that if his players day. Hough work resumes Tues­1. Pill 8ke*dy* Switelied to Wiliroot Cre««-0il 'v! their clash with Texas A&M a --flavorall its own* In Hur Shrine Temple of Austin and "don't play football on Saturday, day. : ... week from.Thursday. Because He Flaakeil Tbe Fisger-Nail Test » the dorm, on the Bryan's Bfatos "Tallejr -we'llget^^out-of-ihem^during-ih*] Coach Rusty Russell^showed tt»e .Townsend hurt a leg miiSde on grounds, elsewhere Club, * week." He followed up-his remark Mustangs films " o":£~TSsfc year's the first play of the SMU contest, « ... enjoy a . Tickets will be on sale at the by sending them through a long, SMU-Baylor game and gave them and the injury has not healed. TOOTSIE ROLL. Ben Hur Temple in Austin all rough defensive scrimmage, which scouting reports of the Bears' • Center Jack Barton has re­play against Texas Christian andweek, or may be purchased at the covered from a pinched shoulder is unusual for Monday practice gate." sessions. He promised more of the Texas, muscle and Halfback Carl (Red) same for Tuesday and .' Wednes-" • Mayes will take the: east off a The Texas begin Aggies willbroken hand this week. workouts Tuesday for the NOT. There was doubt whether Frank 20 game with Texas. Fischel, • senior defensive end, TCU Monday neared peak phy­ Coach Ray George gave themwould be able to play this week., sical itr«A|tli for iU fSitardajr He suffered an a holiday Monday. j ankle in jury in ^ football encounter .with Rice a* • Tackle Bobby Dixon And Full-the SMU game.: .../ •'• -• no a/erioua injuries resulted from .. v. HOW MANY TIMES A DAY Jback'Bernard Lemmons_were the the Texas game and starting de­ only casualties of the Rice game. Baylor turned up With St* long­fensive guard Herbert Zimmerman Both are expected to resume Work eat injury Hat of the season Mon­reported for duty. \ cfiBts this week. day., v i i . Zimmerman, an all-Conference Coach' George Sauer lilted tlxchoice last year, did not play player* on the "doubtful partici­ again*t Textf. TCU'* offensive pation*" Hit for Saturday's gameplatoon opened preparation for with SMU. Defensive Halfback 'Mural Scores the Owl* with a live scrimmage Red Donaldson, who ha* inter­ againitthefreshmen. -­ cepted six passei, ha* mn ankle • MONDAY injury that may keep him out of Coach Otis Douglas Monday cri­ : >5*^Jl'lr i iifjy­ „ ^Sipeqer Score*. ticized his Arkansas Razorbacks the game. Glen Johei, another de­ WHINIVU ftttllBY gave a gal the thi she turned up Phi Kappa Psi 3, Kappa Alpha 1. for failure to play as a team in fensive halfback who milted the her sooqt. Poor Paul took pea and oink and wrote a litter Sigma Np 4, Sigma Alpha Epsilon losing,.47-7, to'SMU last Saturday. Wake Forest game With a leg home:*Tm sty-mied. All the gak think I'm a boar. Toget 2. / • injury, ha* not recovered. Guard a date isa pig's feat!" Hismother wroteback:"Even a dull- Delta Kappa Epsilon 3r Sigma Al­ Walter Bate* still favor* a knee lard like you should know enough to borrow his room­ pha Mu 1. ' injury, and Shelton Broom, re­ mate's Wildroot Cream-Oill It'a non-alcoholic. Contains Lambda '-Chi Alpha 4, Alpha Ep­ serve end, ha* a cheat injury. soothing Lanolin.Removes loose,ugly dandruff.Helps you silon Pi" 0. Halfback Mickey Sullivan -ha* a pass the Finger-Nail Test. Makes your hair look neat and Kappa Sigma 3, Alpha Tau Omega bruiaed leg. '• well-groomed.-That was 'the pig-me-up Sheedy needed. • o. •_: ' : • Sauer said he *till doesn't knrow Now he's imporkant...hogsand kisses all the girls.Better whether John. Hancock can get Phi Gamma Delta 3, Acacia 0. try Wildroot Cream-Oil yourself. Get it at your favorite -Foreign grapplers take over the Theta Xi-3, Delta Sigma Phi 0V drug or toilet goods countcr—and a»k for professional permission from the team physi­ City Coliseum Tuesday . night^s Cht^hi 2; Phi Keppa Sigma l. «% applications at your barber,chop! cian to play Saturday. Hancock,Rudy Valentino "of Limaf Peru, regular ?ight guard, has been out Phi Delta Theta 3, Sigma. J'hi tangles with, Sonny Myers and since the Texas AAM game be-Epsilon 0. • . *0/131So.Harris HillHtL,WilfuimitMt,NY. Australian-born Fred Atkins faces cau*e of an appendectomy. , 1.. --7" * > powerful A1 Lovelock in the fea Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N.Y, ture matches. ^ 'Miiral Schedule The Rice Owis came out of The American .. . , South sensation their victory over Texas A&M in TUESDAY \fith the same name as the movie good physical shape and, as usual, ...J v--• SOCCER idol locks' horns jvith the drop^^ook thing^ easy in Monday's prac-. S o'clock Phi KaPtm Sigma v*. Theta Chi. kicking Myers in the best two out tice »». Sigma -Cbl Beta Thcta FL of .three fallst5,0-minute time lim­None of the players who saw Tejaa Club v*. Th«]«m«.' 7 o'clock it main event. . : extensive service against the Ag­Mtrfniui vi. • K­ Y«i, 200 times every day who observed him in action. Aus­won by the.Frogs, 27-14, Monday. Ford Hubbard v*. Ed Choice. -Seventh Flight tin wrestling will get a chance tp v«'Cf«lg Wcmd^OBv, your nbseand throat are determine if,the uncomplimentary The Southern Methodist AltM Wallace vs. Jim -Pyrse. ~ , • Eighth Flight ' ' > ­ title is desrved. tangs ' got a warning Monday R K. Steer vs. Bill Christie. > -3-P Kowalski and Whiskfers Savage exposed toIrritation... 1 Not since the days when Killer 1 c ' 100 GOOD REASONS WHY notched Jong victory strings in Texas wrestling arenas have fans aBEnER OFF SMOKING been as impressed with any mat GOING man as they have with big Fred Atkins. He has victories over A1 .PHILIP MORRIS! Lovelock-aanijRav Gunkfel that t£b CITY COLISEUM THAKKSGIVDIG? him as a dangerous jnan in any Every Tuesday Night 8:30 p.m: ring. Atkins came to the -United THE WORLD'S GREATEST HEAVYWEIGHTS If you'ne heeding home for the Holiday States' with the championship of mete -the trip eboerd e modern Missouri PROVED definitely milder . . . the British Empire firmly in his ———— TONISHT Peeifie train. Our ticket office will be gled grasp .along with the Australian PROVED definitely less irritating than lo help with your plans. Convenient, time- title, but now he has his eye on n 5 any other leading brand . , • ? the Texas state titles-,-MAIN EVENT saving scneduias. Smartly scheduios. appointed ...coaches *nd restful Pullmans, PROVED by outstanding nose ^ Rudy Valentino w. \ Sonny Myers 'arid throat specialists* V -195 r -v 224 THE MOST m Lime, Peru St. Joseph,.Me. m 90-Minute Time Limit—2 out of 3 Fells YIS, DISTINCTIVE t f v % you'll bo slad SERVICE IN tomorrow,.. SEMI-Rj^AjL m ^Trains NorfK Studknt Pants 240 ^ ^ ^ 220­ »MUP Shurta ^^Mftt^vrne, Au»treli« -s' ,. Houston, Teuir ' 3 Trains Soutfi ^i*4', ^ «>!«> «m 2iUm Delivery ,* , (*(Tidwta—Reaerratio»f—Informatkn*"«•i^-mMrrttioai—Informatkn* J­:OPENEI^ MISSOURI PACIFIC STATION ontaiMr Boulevard i­ ^^ ?«!«• Dept .,Al Szasz AlWlHiaim .FULLER, P*« Agonf—OTTO GREIN, 0«pof Ticto Aof. JsA98i.;ji • CJplioae..9-775S m* 7-609(5 ' ^ •^p «£_, 5=ssk^o--;^wsaat *i im'imn t sem sw pst » * — -V' A C I ^y r Of SERViCE i" ' ric;."'>^5*-J/-j*7' '.x.,7< >M'\f THE DAILY TEXAN u mm 1 ss yM,w 'tff fSSSPS 99BM $f s§• is •'J to '^xki |< ; y / •­ fttwiaMW « fis t)M£ DZ'a Ann Maryland iM « *• mite (M pass ia the second f^DALLAS» Nov. ^ The Wildcats record for the sea-structors ailhe gigantic Texas i jootbdL quarter from Carolyn Cauthen to NEW YORK, NOT. 19.—W— Olful Kentucky Mon^ay accepted »on i> W#iTvictories \n Jo starts Coaching School. His all-star hl^h • oiuid»^^&&&$& L %f 4 hm i-^ i V Zeta seared its fint touchdown Pat Co*^deadlocked the score. Navy's Coach ; Eddie Erdelats, an invitation 4» play whatever but all-the defects wer« by close school team won the big game at iBi the first quarter after. Betty whose proteges'have lost to some team the Southwest Conference *jwi. O H«5W» w ra»i»-vgo6d neW8."-,a ^ ^9 StT $11 Fmwm piiMd to Lou McGee Marianne Forrester, quarter-of the beet teams in the country* puts in the Cotton Bowl Jafe. 1. . scores—6-7 to Texas, 17-21 to the coaching school. ^U8 did Longhorn Coa6h Ed Price express Ids bach, iM'the DZ team, whileJoan The selection of Kentucky Mon­ for a penetration, (hi the next Stevenson, pass receiver, and An-said Monday he'd rate Maryland Kentucky, famed for winning Mi»iss!ppi, *ndl 7-18 to Georgia day was something of a surprise. on the Cotton Borwl's choicep&y * Fergfuion pass m *d»i number one among those , he's the Sugar Bowl last Jan. l when Tech, .Kentucky hat beaten Ten­ gie Strassman on defense "were It had been indicated there would visitingr team for the K*w Ye^« toy , fleeted by Zeta'a Kayniee Eads ift-Alpha Phi's outstanding players. faced with Princeton no better it stopped Oklahpma's mightiest nessee' Tech^'"Mississippi .State, be at lekst a week's lapse before to the heads of Mazy Morris* who thanfourth. . • , winning strealt in college football Co&cli Price, who«e chaicges ' * Vilanova, Florida, Miami, Tulane, any team was jpicked when the scored * Zeta touchdown. ', . A Kappa Kappa Gamma II '"Maryland has plenty ><-©f and boasting' one of the greatest and George Washington, i ' Cotton Bowl section committee after clobbering TCU, bad just 4la the third quarter Ferguson touchdown on a psss from Evelyn horses,", the Middiementor told a passers"to -come along in Babe met Sunday."" * ~.y , trip (where, he said, JidnV 1 ,v plated to 1*Verne Clifton for 18 luncheon meeting of New York Parilli, got the invitation with still The Wildcats were-brought to Pickton to Jane Arnold defeated catch anything .. . but g eol^y yards and another six points. football writers. "They have a, a game' t&play on the schedule-^— the Cotton Bowl under much the But the comnilttee decided.. nent reasons. |V> Alpha Omicron Pi* 6-0, in the and *hadn't heard anything*about Eads, passer; LaQ CaxdwaU, re­good running attack and plenty with mighty Tennessee next Sat­same circumstances as Tennessee Monday to (p'^fthead and get it (1)AsCosch V&evtiht White Bracket consolation sem^ over with. ^ tha selection until we told him ceiver; and Barbara Bauknight on ; of depth. urday. , last Jan.1. At the time.Tennessee three big teams-^Marylaad, defense were Zeta's stronger f i n a l s . . „ ; r ^ "Their big back, Ed Modxelew Just who Kentucky will meet In was picked, it had a game with Coaeh. Bryant said at LwIb|< about it. mssjK^ , a«d GeorSia "With Maryland and Tennessee Kennon Keithly and Martha ski,; is one of the finest players the $120,000 (per team) gridiron Kentucky to play. It won that one to that "I co&aidor It a groat hon. bowl-bound. , * -/ Thompson, receiver*? Carolyn going to the Sugar Bowl, and we've seen." travaganxa in Dallas won't be and made the. Cotton Bowl look or. I am confidant tha team will (2) Other logical cholo^l Doraeton defense; and Peggy Col- Georgia Tech to the Orange Bowl, "Delta ZaU advanced to til* After Maryland,-Erdel^tx said own for two weeks. The South* play ia a way that will inatlfy tha as Princeton, Michigaii Sti^< I don't think the Cotton Bowl White Bracket finals by trimming lier, passer, were" outstanding heandhisteiyp rated their oppo­west Conference, whose champion Now the Cotton Bow} undoabt-••lection. 1 am really proud, of nois, Stanford, and Notre;! _ Kappa 'players, Jackie CaMer, those boys." could have chosen a more logical Alpha Fhi in overtime yardage. nents this way: is host team, has five teams still «dly would welcome with graat or. competitive team Kent* either are forbidden by Confer^ At the end of the regular playing passer; v Gloria -Bornefeld, re­, • 2. Ric*—"Spaady aad scrappy." in the running for the''^evoif a jojr a victory by Kantuclcy over Athletic Director Bemie Shively than «»* vidA' io piurtld|ptfb^' ^ time the seor« ww tied, Mi hot ceiver; and Carol Cannon, center, 3« Notre , Dame—-"Tremendous share of it. TCU, Rite, Baylor, Teaaessae Saturday. Tannassee al­of Kentucky, in'accepting for his tucky," Coach Price added. Already committed to scten».-bowl^^!| led the AOPi team. Texas still can "Parilli is the greatest . in the overtime period DZ gained power even in the mud." and win ii Mind ready la In the Sugar BowL . said •; the were (3) .Of the.three jumoted.•'top^Sfl - school, . Wildcats real major leaguer." • -­ four yards to Alpha Phf• nothing. Kappa will play Delta Delta Del­4. Princeton—"A well-coached SMU can tie for tt.-} S l Cotton BoM. choices"' ^Virginial^.fl •.' .It will be Kentucky's third ap­ .Kentucky, whose players voted ta in the White Bracket consola­team but they didn't do-too well . Keataelcy already has played tfar€|] pearance in a bowl game. The Oklahoma, and Kentucky tion finals Tuesday at 6 p.m. -against us. Kazmaier hurt us with «aa of those team»—^Texa*—and unanimously to accept the Cotton Wildcats were the heft hft. OWsk;;f|| Wildcats lost to Santa Clara, 21-13 Bond's invitation, was well- MNtwfy Q§corat*l his. passing but gained only five in the i960 Orange Bowl and beat ference." homa had been beaten, by two '• I regarded in general by the Steer The 0*ange Bracket finals be­yards on theground in li triqiu" Southwest Conference t«ai^s^ Oklahoma in the Sugar Bowl last President L. M. Green of the mentor, whose club edged the tween Kappa Kappa Gamma I and Navy was tied by Yale, 7-7* then Virginia, while boasting a good'^1­ Atehia Delta Pi I will be played lost successively to Princeton. Parilli's Posses. Jan. 1, 13*7. ^ -Cotton Bowl Athletic Association, same Wildcats, 7-6, In the Long-record,' is not the "name" School ^! Tuesday, instead of Monday as ' Baylor is very much in the run­acting for the Southwest Confer-horn season-opener. a big bowl-need*. I 24-20* Rice ii-li, Northwestern ning for the Southwest Confer- f-ttink he- -n m w a *«a*oa—i* relatively small t«*a>' f J t. i » football coaching, will be honored TEXAN PRODUCE QUICK one of football's foremost passers. Coach Paul (Bear) Bryant of -twice h£re Tuesday. Stagg and 1Bowl running— pared to the chances of TCU aad ' <| »ntlll^lfW 1« liana L!m t. ^ X -Baylor). .^'4^1 CLASSIFIED ADS RESULTS Neyland has reason to be wor­Kentucky is wellUTaII VllAWflknown here. HeXTa Ml • , .. ^ Rice» ®ayi°r» and Texas. - I his wife will be guests of the _ «• added, that ia the event the ried about Tennessee's air fortifi­had his Kentucky team here year (6) Jn the ^event Baylor Midi, !| Washington Touchdown Club at a LoBcherns get a bid to the Orange Board cations. The Sugar Bowl-bound before last, to play SMU and last the, Larry* Isbell-Parilli match ; !l Lost'end Found Typing luncheon and of,the University of Bowl, It » not certain that they Vols have yielded nine touchdowns summer was one of the top in­ might be thaltop such duel of titlel* Chicago Alumni Association. THE CHOICEST fcome-eooked food—-LOST: A small brown IaatW purao to eight opponents this fall and could accept. A certain "•oundiag-year. Alt yoo e«a eat tor only 75e a aaV— eontaininc a pair 6f (laaxs. if found, ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER — aecuraU ^Ut" procedure must be followed, Visit Mr*. SuIUtmi's Place. 1404 Coa-pleai* eontact, Barbara Smith at SRD.-2-8887, 8-174S after 5, week!end«. seven resulted from pasBes. including Athlotic Director D. X. imi AT*. .'.— <->131. '-'V'-V'ii... .... ' , "Babe Parilli is the finest pas- tfSPEEI)WAT® the Athietie Council,' the TAN, LEATHER. Zippar Notebook. Bib!. LEI Ma tjrpa rour thai**, tbemaa. serin • collegiate football,'.' Ney-. ®*hle, ;For Sale. ; notes. (3-8642.' . team, and Price. ographictl file Card* and Claaa notaa land continued. "We. are well -?| inside. Pleaae return tp room 208 MLB (However, an Orange Bowl bid RADIO TOT^ BtST bay! A Mad Kinv "Haat-r or call «-JJl4. EXPERIENCED: THESES, etc. tTnlver-aware of what we are up against. ANY Southwest Conference w -Hodrf* tenet, s«M msg«t for SALES & SERVICE •Hy "• aelshborfaootf. ltra.< Ritohla But we"are hoping to strengthen welre Mtton. |7». Cell 7-82S7. 2-4948. . SOUTHWEST CONFERENCE FOOTBALL STATISTICS team, if such is to ,be the case, W. M. Walsh. Owner * Musie all our defenses—especially our (Throujrh G«m«> of Nov. 17) i Speadway „ , 7^hI must almost certainly wait until a TYPING SERVICE. 2108 Swlahar. Tale-pass defense." Fir.t Rusb Net— -Gain-Fwd.Paa* For Rent phone: 7-820&. Mil* Welch. Gam«* Down* Play* RqahPa** Total Puat week from .Saturday—December Att. Compl. AygC BECOBDSD lfUSIC. t'.A. SyaUma. for Parilli's latest. record, set last A4M 9 120 487 S B.R. cottage. Ideal for 4 • all oeeatiooat <-1210, Opp. „ 123 1970 1066 2026 164 69 86.8 1—-when the Southwest Confer­ 1987 69 ;«oya or alrts. ST( ««r neath. I20« San THESES, DISSERTATIONS, (EUetro Saturday in hurling three scoring Arkan»*» 446 743 2780 144 85.4 ence winds up its schedule. Antonio. 6-007Z. Awo fnraiakad mp*rt* matie). Oietatioa. Coaching-Mrt. Pat* tosses in Kentucky's 47-14 rout Opp. _ 461 1576 998 2(78 198 80 "87.8 mint for X gliU, 141 yet wontk. mecky, 58-2218? v 420 * 1062 1108 2166 167 72 86.7 (Right now, no less than FIVE ot George Washington, is-60 Baylor 126 899 1499 1190 2689-180 91i 89.1 73 Ljwr.ni ACCURATE TYPING. Pick-up and d«. Opp. 889 1067 787 1804 162 63 85.0 teams have a crack at the SWC COMPLETE Services c BH13UU liver, lira. Erickeon, 6-2048. touchdowns for his three-year ca Bic« _ .90 426 1866 748 2108 120 44 85.8 honors-—TCU, Rice, Baylor, Tex­ reer. This shattered the old mark Opp. _ 118 414 1386 777 2162 171 68 R SMU 109 .808 774 1467 2231-84.« as, and SMU. The one that gets •An ctr»..Ti« r-vj'j rjya ay N EXPERIENCED M.A. gradnat*. Reason' of 48 held by John Ford of. Opp; -9# 898 1077 880 1967 285 117 86.7 the Cotton Bowl nod vrill, of MEALS 87.8 au**»» Barb«r Shop .liM Gns4alap« O ayaa:-ji;H HBH able. Mr». Davis. S-1287. Hardin-Simmons.- TCU 115 326 1166 1247 2412 166 60 S Opp. _ 120 42 S 183 97 87.7 course, be eliminated from any u«n s ELEC1K1C. THESES, dliierUtiom. 900 1443 1060 2498 68 Texas 147 87.4 NATIONAX. OEOG&APHIC. t»e; Bettor • s W. 8Ht—mornlftBs*. 2-9444. Opp. lie 80S 20S9 402 2B21 70 se se.4 possible Orange Bowl speculiu v «v f ^A 126 1228 Veefcot Book oditioas. iOe; I-10M EXPRESS JUS SERVICE 421 82-8 2066 -186 86 87.5 tion.) .... 50c w LEADING BALL CARRIERS » .. Comle».« Sa; jitpufaw, book* tor ro- V TYPING: NEAT work. Pick up service. acareh work H priea. ISO* taT««a. o lil'JH 2-9606, 2-4858/ -,to in avg Would the Longhorns like to up ii[-1 iikh E to HOUSTON IJppman, A4M 99 628 6.9 LEADING PUNT. RETURNERS --'X' *-• S-^SSS^' iiflil-iNU RIBS*. Rice 672 play Kentucky again? fYes," said R MffldUfi 102 6.6 4 Hours Call 2-1135 Dawaon, Tazaa <• • 79 SI 3 e.S yda avi Mr; Price, "when we felt that CLUS CAFE DALLAB-TORT WO) D matiHU laniiy1--! Wanted Ocboa, Texaa 99 482 4.9 Walker, SMU r** 186 9711 oe. Barton, Texaa .lie 4SO 3.9 Lary, A*M 20 366 , 17.8 ^a^r?^a^,l:i®J®id-seai^n.ionh.'i; Kernrille But Co. NeiTata, Rico _ rCum Mj pMMsnr*.aO petel ArAuto Smith, A4M 17 276 IS Wny was Kentucky chosen: by OPEN 6 ajt». to 10 p.m. Cole, Arkansaa „ Sbaro K3Q>«bso Barwo, ISO Utm MeUan. ArVsnnaa .119 14 J210 18.0 GIRLS, BOYS and family laundry dona .. Dtrion, Texai 379 " "3-SSfS."' .V --V — ::-- lift;i«h * Parma, Baylor 90 13UI the^Cotton Bowlf' -•>-;=• v at home. 1406. Cedar. Phone: 2-4291. Coodjt. Baylor .... Raley, Teiiaa 12 1«S I3J ^~i807 ^San Jacmto ^ Held, Baylor^i » 11« 12.6 There seem to be several perti- Troxelf, "Arkan»«i LEADING PASSERS . LEADING SCORERS att comp yds (At Lea*t 4 Touchdown*) Bennera.—SMU 17fl_ ,8L -1112 _ --• —td conv ttl label), Baylor 173 86 1095 Dawson, Texas g s 8S MCKQKIV. TCU _____ 87 60 672 Howton, Rice ' S 0 86 MeHan, Ar^an9t> 124 47 . 627 Floyd, TCU : k (i »n Let Your Dollars A4M _____ 46 A4M Gravea, 98 621 Llppmati, - Do Thsir Beit Drake, Rice 72 88 588 ' McKown, TCU Gardemai, A*M 49 22—395 Parma, Baylor In th« Campus Chest • Fowler, TCU 61 28 331 Sutton, Arkansas LEADING PASS RECEIVERS Williams, Baylor . caught yda Hooper, A&M S2< 28 William*, Baylor 83 648 Hodge, AAM sdvesacase wltlf -the pipe­ 1 .25 Howton, Rice 22 628 . LEADING PUNTERS Musaelwhite, SMU »o 428 . punts yda tfiat startsSMtfcIH9I •v# White, SMU 17 306 Norton, SMU 22 862 #9.2 lummerall,. Arkania* ___21 299 Isbell, Baylor 51199S 89.1 Riley, Baylor : 23 " 291 McKown, TCU ' ' 23 870 87.8 Journey, Arkanaa*-_______16 269 Lary, AAM _;X7 x x .. Appointments May Be Made and ' X?:', • ••'•'j;: v, . x... 'x .... „ . Fees Paid In Journalism Building ..Xi RX EXTRA VAlKW>tK£Mt MQKES TMAT HM0VS mUbtUM.fOU® 108 Until Friday, November 23 -x mm xJ 1 t • ^jy-• r f. . v ». . «1, *1.50, »2, •:fsi Ainnportrffcto Amsa doesn'thare toheadstectne Office Hours: 8:00-l :00—2^X)-_5:00 to' deduce that Yello-Bole'g lAe pipe m hie smoking plessum WhMever your Crrorite »tyle mty. be* Yello* jj[ot it. And Ypllo-Boles make Mi is i v* »/' ^ j y ^ v ^ " ADVERHSING OFfJCI **8C,t.zh gt "s * * VI.­ ' ,v.. mm ... — — — mm# ! ' .VW'i v< * i'*» -• V--&T Jfg. ;'TRATEN ica," the story of Unrrereity stu­ School within the past year. "In dent Toshiko Ichinami's experi­•i^ringa, Aricansa*..;^ \ Dr. Eugene C. Barker received the the past two yean there has been ences on this campus. 1 "There, to no doubt in faifoi^ned In a recent New Orleans speech, Sena­ only violation/' pointed oat-; one Summerfield G. Roberts awards, also for Five pictures, three of which circles that U>ey wiQ carry «nt tor Taft gave a strong clue on what Jerome Johnson, chairman of the! $1,000, for of Stephen F. Honor of * were taken on campus, along with their plan, unless they can wrest his "Life Student Council Law Republican vote-getting strategy would a letter from Toehiko to a friend -Austin.* , • School, and W. T. McNeil, ptest . the kind of candidate and plat* k y in the Japanese capital made tip *5' *> v be under his leadership., dent of the Student Bar Associa-' tons they want from a Democratic the spread. Dr; Walter Prescott Webb was named He safd "it;is' not worth the time tion. .: convention controlled by Truman- Before winning a scholarship to an Institute fellow, which is the highest To show the eonsistent worth; appointed collectors of .internal wasted to get after the independent the" University, Miss Ichiniami-­ of the Law School .Honor Code/ revenue, postmaaters,"*U. S> mar­ . honorary title bestowed by.the organiza­ vote." Remarking that only a fraction of Johnson ferreted some striking .known simply as "Ichi" to many shals, and leas important benefi­V tion. the nation's eligible voters bother to, vote figures out of postwar files.' of her American friends—^waa em­ciaries of federal patronage." ployed for two years at the Armed "From the spring semeter of 1946, -That'll bear plenty of watching In addition to the noteworthy accom­anyway, he said Republicans .should seek -Forces Education Center in Tokyo. through the spring semester of from this angle, ain^e Allan Shiv­ plishments of these scholars in the field the "uninterested vote." 1951, there have heen i,OW gtmd* She ia a sociology graduf.te of ,«rs ie a leader of the Southern fac­Christian University in Tokyo. £. nates from the School of Law," tion, Johnson said.' In her letter, ahe spoke of how • >. •'" -:,_^'Thejre ^haye^been three convic-well she enjoyed living with girls CAMPUS CHEST tions of scholastic dishonesty dar­from widely scatterei places. Her frmpos! niiserir "Men—this is our fast chance to win a game this teaion—-together," 11;M? ing this time, and one-acquittal. campus home, a sorority, has 20 Chest are going all out this week "This is a percentage of .0013 American girls and exchange sta-in an effort to get the laggingEncouraging note from Washington f ' of the graduates. Figures are un­dents from Colombia, Venezuela, drive, dose to the $8;000 goaL Through Campus Chest. ~ -As Aqua Carnival time draws near, a Democratic Senator and a GOP Repre­available for the number of stuf Bolivia, India, Brazil, France; As an integral part of this dents actually enrolled in Law ^Egygt; ^exicor7^^Ceyloh, j»nd the week's on-eampus • solicitations, students have a right to wonder if they'll sentative spoke against President Tru­ ? T-v:" School for this period of time, but Philippines. /' ' t chest, workers are spoiiWing a I i be iimong the people fortunate enough man's apparent plan to ask for more chances are that the numbe* of jOne excerpt: "I feel quite at variety of stunts: 'Coffee Day tosee thebig water spectacle. ; *. taxes when Congress reconvenes in graduates is about half the num­ease .. . and have never felt I (which was yesterday), a talent ber who actually enter Law am a stranger here." diow, a pie-throwing contest, and Each year, hundreds of people are January. -­ School," he coftfcluded. , a Chinese auction. 4 turned away from Gregory Gym pool be­Perhaps the time has come when the • They'll need a lot more student " *•* • cause the seating capacity is limited. . elimination of nonessential government GOOD PUBLICITY SOUTHERN VOTE co-operation than they've been v -It's heartening to see the Unl-Columnist Ray Tucker, in the getting. : '•f Thia yeftr.will probably .prove tg> ,be no spending, rather than "the sky's the •* transferred to his hor-" the ..By. ANNE.CHAMBERS exception. * . * limit" taxation of working people, will Young Donnie Bfarid jr. wasFt" 'tocal lissecistieji would-even p»f >' Since additional seating space cannot be uppermost in the plans of Congress. spoofing at the opening of high for his transportation tne»e uy school this fall when he told his ambulance. . be provided* why not continue the carni­People have to.^iave a few dollars left parents that he wasn't feeling $1,500 has ben allocated to.the val one.extra night if a sellout is assured? for groceries. good that morning.. It was Mon­polio*association by Campus Chest day, and he just had a headache. this year. Half of this will be By Thursday night Donnle was in spent here in Travis County to Neighboring Newt the polio ward at Brackenridge ^ perform the work described above. side and the big powers on the cheer about, or when the team Hospital, and by Friday noon he' The other half will be sent to Treaty of Alliqnc* other side resulting from the-im­needs enc'otiragemnt? If ao, the was in an iron lung. the National Foundation for In­TO THE EDITOR: s perialistic, unjust, and inhuman spirit at Texas is truly strong. » After a few desperately criti­fantile Paralysis, which uses the policies of. the latter. We saw that JOHN HARRISON I should like to state my com­ 'WSmCommittee to cal dfcys, there' followed * month money for polio research athd epi­ one reason why the United State* JOHN PITTMAN plete agreement with the two ar­ %S§8 of hospitalization—a month of demic aid. ticles on, the Egyptian situation of America at the time of-Presi­ recovery made possible by special This past summ'e'r Corpus Chris- dent Wilson had boycotted-the that appeared in the columns of On« Mors nursing care, regular physio-thera­ti received special, help from the the Texan on League of Nations After World the 15th and 16th Chicago U. Press Scandal py work by trained specialists, National Foundation to fight its War I when she failed to convince .of this month, written by Count TO TlfE EDITOR: and use of expensive equipment. epidemic, and three years ago the colonial powers to stick to the Martyn de eBaumont. .; Just a word of warning and/or By JOE L. SCHOTT sponsible Campus newspaper tive of the administration, Nowj just a little over. two it was Austin who was helped na­-ideas-of-self-determination for all ".""T~ISiFth»i,. ••TOlTla^"'f<§H5SW a reminder-—the X^ottghoras still A Campus Newspaper Com­as might be feasible under the and. four members-at-large months since that first headache, tionally when the local association nations. Later on the whole organ­ onian and Englishinan, but be-' have a game to^ play, and It's mittee "to examine the ^rob-present framework of the front the University campus. Donnie, son of Dr. D. D. Brand, ran out of funds to treat epidemic izaton collapsed and the main cause the facts of the disagree­ enough of a game to scare almost cases. !em of maintaining the i&teg-. Stattttie of Student Govern­; : , SCHO-PRO chairman of the department of reason was colonialism. Today the ment leave no other cou.se. Since anybody. rity and journalistic freedom ment . . . such proposed, so­"Approximately 25 per cent geography, is almost completely The only source of income for free;eworld i|^ facing several criti­ there may be some controversy on of a campus newspaper while lutions as might'be feasible, of the freshman class at Tan­' recovered from his attack of bul­this great service is the Founda­ cal disputes all over the wofld; Lefs hope the' tendency isn't to the subject, and since Count de insuring its repsonsibility to but which would require con­as A&M is expected to go on bar polio, a type which usually is tion's March of Dimes. The money Egypt and Iran are good exam­say, "Look at tha Aggies; they Beaumont did not dilate at length from. Campus Chest is this stu­ ain't won a Conference game yet. stitutional changes in the bas­scholastic fatal. the University , community" probation at mid­ on the facta, I should like to men­ples. Who created these tensions was created by-the Student-. ic covenants of the Student term, announced Dr. John R. ;•-< dent -body's contribution....to. the in these pia.ceful lands? The an­W^'il stomp 'em." tion . Government Assembly at the Government . , . ami . . . Bertrand, dean of the Basic Such quick and thorough aid to March of Dimes. thefti here. * swer is simple; it is mainly the " I'll be willing to make a pre­ On October 8, 1951, the Egyp­ §|s*j University-of Chicago at a complete records and views Division there. polio victims,hM been extended to The whole Campus Chest quota British colonialism. diction right now—that the Steers tian Prime. Minister, Nahas Pasha, r ^meeting early in November. obtained." The committee is a slightly larger over eleven students'or their fa-is $8,000. Significantly enough, have one of the toughest games of -The bill came, to the assem-' This ;miiies to members of the Polio. Association placed-before the Egyptian Parlia­/ Being here at the University of may also submit written opin-and seven has already the season in store for them come. . number than in previous years ment draft legislation designed to Texas, where only an academic Wy floolr after being submit--ipns weighiiig BdvanUges and increased require-faculty families at the University spent-$6,000. on student polio atmosphere should prevail, I did November 29 in Aggieland. because of abrogate the Condominium Agree-­ ted to the Student Govern-disadvantages of the proposed fince 1951 began. -cafses alpne thm year. . n^nts set up by the Execu­ not have the intention to deal with Ddn'tget me wrong. I'm^no Ag­ " ment of 1899 regarding the Su­ ment executive council by solutions. tive Committee, Bertrand ex­If a University student were to dan, and the Anglo-Egyptian politics,. However, an Englishman gie-booeter; I'm just being a lit» tepreientatives. » — --. tJhder the biHf -members of . contract polio, the Travis County plained^ Treaty of Alliance of 1936. has finally spoken to give our tie careful.. \ ( It calls for a thirteen-man committee will include the Bertrand estimated that Polio Association would pay all Under the first count, the Su­American colleagues his views re­ -Why* group empowered to hold pub-president of the Student Gov- except doctor bills. icia from fifteen to twenty per lating to the Egyptian problem in dan would be united under the Kc" hearings, solicit written ernment A lL;"" of . the freshmen This, might include hosiptal bills and Several reason. To wit: (1) Th« •—* UK* three had Assembly, cent opinions and proposals, and members of the-. Assembly ap­been missing the study hours and seEvices, amounting usually to; Egyptian / Crown, or in other particular the Middle East Aggies haven't won a game dur­ -in general. Hia explanation 6t the otherwise seek relevant infor-pointed by the president,;the to attend dancing lessons, $65 to $100 per day; aid of spe­words, Would be annexed to Egypt ing Conference play, true enoughs British non-co-operative policy -Station sfor use in drafting a editor of the Chicago. Maroon, home town meetings, and to cialized"equipment such ''a* iron without reference to the wishes of anywhere as far as preserving A11 of which means they'll be boil­-report to be submitted to the University's paper, and one •take part in other extra-cur-lungs, costing $2,000 each time the Sudanese people. Egypt has ing when they gdt to us. LookM world peace is ^concerned . . . they are used, oxygen ,tents, and 'neither the right nor the power so like they ought to win 'one some# „.,Assembly by December 19. other Maroon staff member, iricula activities. ^ Aptltud# t«*t* for post off ica opan-Count Beaumont has a concept of — The report will include two members of the faculty to packs, Aside from physio-thei'apy Inss'ar* now beinK sivan in B. HaiJ, 117. to impose its will on the Sudanese time; (2) The Aggies always eon4 INGENUITY tba opanins people. . freedom and democracy quite dif-eider tying _ AMERICAN treatments, which are provided as The .thift with most la • " ;'.i beating or Texa* '."such proposed solutions to be selected by the Council of from•o'on until 5 p.m. fereiit from thait of "the illiterate, ^if&Stratlng It Sat there is the problem of a free yet re-the Senate, one represents-long as the patient needs * them' JOE D. FARRAR. Dlractor Under the second count, Egypt makes a successful season—Re^ "drama in everyday life,"" a —in some cases for the rest of Student Employment Buresa would deny the treaty rights by poorly housed (if housed at all), . member 1948* the Aggie team soft-spoke® professor*of crim­ and disease-ridden" Egyptian their lives^the victim will also AIR FORCE ROTC Association will which' England maintains in Egypt that never did win a game, but inology at the Uniyarsity of receive braces, crutches, and , meet Tuesday. November 20. from 6 a military base which is the key­' peasant. That illiterate, poorly that tied Texas, 14-14; (3) Ifto 6 p.m. in Hogg Memorial Auditorium. ^ California gave to his class as housed, disease-ridden Egyptian ^ TWEDA^ TEXAN wheelchairs free when needing All Air Force ROTC' eadcts are re-stone of the Middle East defense. Aggie Coach Ray George is on the O-"the most terrifying experi­them. . Quested to be present. . Under the-terms of the treaty, has a deeper meaning for free-^^l^fter" "seeing" "Saturday'sence" he had ever had, the / MARVIN. E. GHOLSON dom than that of the Count. -, If" a student wanted his case .CapUin, USA? Egypt has no power to do this uni-" Hero," I must presume he is—a story of being locked in a cell -Wterally; .the • trefcty^olfi good What would happen if the Brit­victory over Texas will go a long •-isfifisaiii'i Tfc# Daily Texan, • student newspaper of Tha Oniyarslty of Texas, ia with a maniac who had a until 1956 and thereafter can only ish troops leave Egypt is definite­way to saving him; (5) We are ' published In Austin every morning except Monday and Saturday, September homemade knife in each hand. Daily Texan Crossword Puzzle =be modified ^y' common consent. ly none of the Englishman's busi-playing them at Kyle Field, with vto June. and aseapf durfniTlrolidky and^RanainaUon parlod», and bi-waaklr during tbe summei sessions undet tha title of The Snimnar Tasan on The prof quieted him down .or. failing that, as the result of , ness if he really had a democratic all them durn Farmers .around.; Tueaday and Friday by Taxaa Student Publications, ine, by slapping him in the face ACROSS ~ 2. Artificial 18-Told a arbitration. and free way of thinking.-Tha WeHls^m^d^^obabili^ be UJir (6) >: NewsN«wi eontributiona will b* accepted by talepbona (M4TI) or. at tha with wet ^ towel,, thua body falsehood that the Egyp­favored going into the game, and •dltoriaJ-office J.B. l oi at be tha a«captadNawa Laboratory. talafibona J.B.102, lnquirict a cold 1. Native of •-19. Ancieiit Today's li ii most regrettable that the Count predicted _lItorial-offlca J.B. 108, Inquiries W aonearnint daiivary and ad.vartUlng ihould ba mada in J.B. 168 (2-2478) upholding th§ American rep­Scotland o' :-••• Egyptian government hai seen fit tians Would revert speedily to a you know what that means thisOpinion* ol [hi Tras ara not nacataarily »boaa of-tha Adminlatration 8. Bleat water 20. Mineral id es­feudal society.utation for ingenuity. -Answer Is -/ introduce this legislation, primitive form of year; and (7) Both our other long ar pthar Univaraity official* , DRIVE EXTENDED spring Entered a* *acond-#laa» nutter Oatobar IS. 1041 at tha Poat Office at 9. Burning 3. Grampus pecially they 'well knew pro­Is this true? The answer would Conference victory strmga—Bay­ in the as 4p»tla, Ta»*»-under 'ba Aet of Hwch », Ig'ifl. , ^ The Com­»ght ... > 22. Scottish-posals were follow immediately if lor and about to be made to Cpllege Station 4. Letter T the Count Arkansas-—were snapped 10. Kingly -•s Gaelic munity Chest drive at Taxaa 12. A red < " Q. Boaats 23. Showy ^ Classified them in connection with the or-, himself would .be land enough to this year, and this could mak'x : /'14. Polynesian: 8. Asteraceous 28. Female It should be noted that Nahas the colonies" to create in each as they were, agin them Frogs Sat­ , , .Hecreeented for -National AiivertUIYig by National Advertising " Goal for the dylve ii^s been drink pliuita pig 35. A girdle .Pasria was also Prime Minister in colony a ruling class which-is rep-urday, go out to the pep rallies, " / Sarvlca. Inc. Collage Publiihare Representative set at $10,000. Only 7J per 15. Past ; • ' 9. Ravel 30. Struggle! (Rom. xesented in Egypt by the 1936 when the Anglo-Egyptian now and go to the game. Then, maybe,11. Rents ;420• Madison Ave. New York. K.T. cent of this"total has .been < 16. Samarium with Antiq.) Treaty of Alliance was made . . ^ wealthy paahas . . . This is the we'll plow under them Farmers !! . subscribed t6 date. The Com­(syni.)-under -31. River 38. Before ~ w? --'.Obiea#O — Boaton — Lot Angalaa — San Praneiaeo. - ' 17.Turns lease " (der.) 39. Outcast On October 8th of this year, when handle by which the British crown (By the way, I think Ed Price munity Chest committee has Nahas Pasna introduced" tht afore­directs the colonies toward, disas­and the resti of tie Lonp^ I. • I.'— : a . -' -' vyellow 15. Hole-32. Particles class (Jap.) decided to continue the drive ^S0.LltUegirU piercing 33. Female . Haul with, mentioned legislation abrogating ter and backwardness, so that they. coaching staff, should be giveniriorderthataH citizens of tool sheep, «r^ras6^^^^^hg7~li^uncedl^an be.easily controlled . ^ plenty of credit for the bafl club 21.Sick difficulty the area may have an oppor-22. Fencing : that this treaty was signed tinder Egypt; cannot ^get her natural theW deyeloped this year. it took -tunity to contribute. * < sword sj 5 *> duress. The falsity of the latter' rights unless tbe British leave the a lot of work, and so far it's paidSUBVERSIVE LIST 23. Measured i V 7 statement is all too well demoii-^ country. There is no incident in off welL) • • mpfi. -­ % Use of the. Attorney Gen-i (Var.) 1IO u strated by the Preceding quota-%istory.where Britain left a coi­ORLAND SIMS MEMBER 9 ^eral's "subversive list" as one 26. Crtitde ... tion, ony without being forced to do so. ^^"'Aaaociatad Collegiate Press All-American Pacemaker . -/• "of the criteria for approving .In bed il 1 y4 IS v', Finally, I should like to stress The American colonies did force .Distress or ban.ning on-campus speak­E -again the fact that the 1936 Trea-" the British to leave in 1776, so signal IS SUBSCRIPTION RATES ers at the Univorsity of Cali­C f4 ty expressly allowed arbitration the Egyptians are forcing them to 29. Rodent x­ ir fornia was verifieti by Dean by the/Council of the League of leave in 1951. Minimum Subacriptloa Three Montha . of Students H. E. Stojie, last S0^A socialget te A. AYOUE :'4 Nations (the United Rations. ha*r 84. Partof ft.w Delivered Mailed in A"«tin Mailed.out of towg Wednesday. -' naturally inherited the privilege) par mt>. >1.00 par-mo. t .76 par mo. "tobe" % it v Speaking before^crowded \ 25. Bovine S;.; 22 -if the parties were unable to reach Und«rcurrtnt Executive committee meeting. animal . '// (an agreement on any matters. 2b Opportunities • ..^PBRIWANENT STA^F Stone said that "although the 96. In what 23 That the status quo should ba TO THE EDITOR: E«lhor-in-Chief RUSS KERSTEN list is subject to revision or -minner 1 . maintained until a decision is giv­ Having just read David H. ' MaMginc Editor BRAD BYERS > J7.Wool. '{ 27 A 28 mil time pemanant positions _ may. be thrown out by court en would, seem only reasonable^ Stauffer's letter in the Firing avsilabla on tha Dilwiitr" of. Taxaa g-;;Editorial' Assistant Mildred Kleael action at any time, it will be bearing csaspoa together a brief daaerip- But, as Count de Beaumont, aptly with * LinW and agreeing fully with hia minimam %30 Hz MarjorieXlapp^jea Until"a'Vetter'soUEffe for animala ai i jtion of tha raquiramanta ara Sports Editor. ..— pointed out, tea»>n s^ems to have Mntiments, we feisl that talk of Ken Tooley is pa followa: -' # determining 'subversives' ®9.Choice . Clark typist—exparienea, „Uni*ersity, of Sbjeiety Editoi* Betty Segal group' u 45sr deserted the Egyptians, both Gov­Texaa not having spirit is poppy­background, tjtpia* speed of at discovered." Taxaa • Amusements' Editor Kenneth Gompertz 41.Battle . ernment and'people, in toto. cock. Thotigh Texas does not show least 40» words par minute. d ^tntnmurels Co-oxdinator .. Jeff Hancock , • formatioii' %39 4o -' W. J. M. SHELTON regimented, puppet-1i ke spirit Craftsman I >-drmftin* R^Iigfcus News Editor Johnnie Human • such Aggies, a strong (tsdnstln from • atandard 42. Prickly • • • • ' ' . • • ' -" - ' / Y.v. •' ^ as that of and preferably supplemented by aitors Flo Cox^ Johnnie,Huraan,i ' pears 4i 41 Egyptian Revolt ^undercurrent of emotioil is evi­plation Of eollesa lerel eoursea te «m* *aaygemgoi£^>.,-4;3e;PlaCea , dent te anv ob*ers*nt petaon in finaonas. •• :rf:-• . • • Elaetrical en*lna«^-re«Utared ansi­ 6 . ^ V.--.. . OZier: 44."Grows old 45 1 -i jpi flicytpgrapher -%44 Vernon Le'e DOWN * tioa a^ma^ntasjuea of alactxieid aquip­ % It-is time now for tbe bif . Xonghorri fans take their "foot^* v lvBondsman JTAFF. FOft THIS ISSUE Abj»«A»tviw> ^rW^ia^hi^-E:^Daifj^g^^ Pata Henda«on.f«bn BKHKT' 'Fit I H k . %X> R I or • O T F r O U •' . . ideas^ During the .past half* cen-is occasion for it. Who is to say pofltnu ffttbtM |do|t«t OK tM f ^litlit'.siwrts'ifdkiii' HmLi acre Athsuo ».u_ «• tury, two incidents have clearly that coordinated cheering is : <)UY?UM MRTLR "DUG ,L H P " 'indicated tKat all the efforts made ative of better spirit than the b*r l* *nd tO tor tiu porvoa* to «aintain_ world peace were ^ontaneou* cheering of Texas Mttlm•. Btuticf Roiit lUclii;¥^obmflfcCary there i» aometiung to j*ta4*fc*eetofiwat m* fw SSKV.J/: mi KP.-fe«av«si!.s: * S— ** ML 1wfy -•_ i HT«Wti»-• .-•i'—u.-,. ?« «» service in the univei^il Damea Tuesday at -7:80 p.m. in tonight'-C-S * #8, ^ semester honor roll will be hon­ will be h«ld at the University the second i®jif", ored Tuesday afternoon witjb^ a the Texas Union. Jesse Harris will Group"^ur wiB meet at'lfSs? Methodist Church . Thumday at 11 x cusdons on.J'Ll^ng show themovies. ^ - Sraarty Party given by Mortar a.m. Friday with |4rs. James Ed­».m., sponsored by the University lawi senior women's honorary 'J AH University students' wives a Time bf Grisjs"Jls scheduled for Religious Workers' Association. dy ?404 Oldham. Mrs, '*lfr$ service organization.. . •.<,* are invited and may make reserva­Tuesday evejing at'8 p^m» in ih«, The Rev. Paul G. Wassenicfi of LaGrone lii assistant fastest? , *• \ The informal tea will be held tions by calling Mrs. Frank Karaf-"l -* jfrip-jf -*"•'* the Texas Bible Chair will speak YWCA Administration. „ Building, -first. from 4:30 to 5:30 in the living Edward L. Demingy editor of on "This Nation Under God." 91ft-Brasos Street. •'" v Md«^\Cosn^t. Y-t«#ii&.< NAUD bridge room of Andrews Dormitory.^. * Hie afternoon Music Will be furnished by the _ -jf the Texas Druggist, official maga- , The topic will be "Fear"vs. _J" ItttiSi sine of the Texas Pharmstentkal University a Cappella Choir. The Faith." The Rev; Jack Lewis, re* Members of the Girls Glee Club Mrs. Jim Penson/ 3$6*D Deep •'•ol8>?:. Awtociatioa, will discuss the Texas offering will go ,t|ie Campus are asked to be at Recital Ball £d^?>Aii«r^entS^^«ine«d4y cently returned from Europe, will druggist and journalism in, phar­ Chest drive. ^ • at 7 p-m. Tuesday fito have the 2 p.m» Reservations may be made macy Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in moderate. The panel,, made t;p of t, Carryings . . ^roup picture made for the Cac­by calling Mrs. Floyd Cash, Chemistry Buildin* 16,^rf^ the 3t. Martin's Evangelical Luth* adults, young adults, gind Y-teens, theme will^the|il^^p9e.€^« tus, The girls should, wear white Student pharmacists * „ •ran Chureh will ofeserva Thanks-•will.include-Fred-Matheyr prinjei-•• M • WnftWh -'#• flia ' ftnv>nttiJ8hi v*. T *f* wivwt4i^m^uCfwiv u formal*. -' —s—.-. pal of Brykerwoods School; Mrs. A representative of Parke Davis givihg Day Thursday with a serv-tt^e. panel. The. discussion;^ "* t .*, J-5* I, ^"Vr* •*• : Bridge group three of the Uni- J. F. Grove, president of the to the public. &MJL Christian Fellowship on "The Life Ar% You .Observing", will be given of "a Christian Student at A&M" by the Rev. S« G. Roesener.Tuesday at 7'p*m> at the Campus Churchmembersandvisitors^are Cafeteria. invited. _s SAVE CASK * CARRY Everyone is invited to the sup- MOONLIGHT GIRL of Phi• Sigma Kappa fraternityI . "is Nancy-l^auv.y-'It * •W...— -W! , .IWMHU Wt VI III! y m, " per-a^6^30 p.m^ and.than Jto..thft.{. Baitey, ^reshmanrfrom-DaHotrShe was^presentecf-at'fherfraternity ? woitten^of^iifl-,-CwMtrata meeting on the second floor. PICK UP b DELIVERY {*»X: V' ',k^v formal November 16./Mary Ann EdwarS Moonlight "Girl of 1950-^strelt, 'will giv" a^JrUy Instructions in 511 presented Miss Bailey with a loving cup which she keeps for Delta Gamma will lionor their fraternity vhouse various -''folk dinner and bazaar at thechurch dances -will, be given at a meeting-the year of hfer reign. Miss Bailey's picture will be sent to the. na­Tuesday from 5 te,J? p.m. . province secretary, Miss Dorothy noon, a. metal box 'was' itisbeddeSERVICE of the International Folk Dance tional organization and the' notional Moonlight Girl of the 64 Phi A. £ee, and province alumnae se­in the stonei It eontained'je^eir, ­ Students are invited. -V Group Tuesday night from 7:30 Sigma Kappa fraternltiesLwill be chosen from the chapter candi­cretary, Mrs. fcarl Jones, with a of "Shield and Diamond,'*' ^>f|icla('v" John Barclay, cent Graduate Group of the Aus­four members of Beti TheU Pi of the Central Christian €hurcl^r '.-it church. * " Mr. Sinclair-! tin chapter .of-AAUW meeting at an alumni reunion banquet last officiated at" tfie' ce«moni^-tl%S> Tuesday night at 8 p.m. . A Thanksgiving program will be week. i .. " Dr. George Hoffman, a^i^anC' l EVENING GOWNS held by the Upperclass Fellowship • .. ,.v^v. . • « • . • r, ' The meeting^ 'Will be at the Those . receiving scholarships professor of geography, la ftwalty: ':M :T-hurSday«nli^^^O'^od£iSIIS^ were . BilU. Barber, best pledge advisor, ot the fraternity. house of Miss , Marion Keller, • gradeS; Jim McMullen, most im­ Miss Mosely Nov.17 PILLOWS • RUGS t DRAPES 3801 Vi Speedway.; • * The Religions EmphaiU public! proved grades; Howdy. Clark, fra­ Alpha •» ;.Ganimai>:: l^dhted|H*v;^| professorof^ociology,wili»peak rriarried to William Lee Sinclfir, Kappa Alpha Theta sorority._ tee! room of the Campus Cafeteria. The R. L. Carlock. scholarship to Cap and Gown Tuesday at 7:15 'p^m. on the first floor of the of Houston, November 17 in Dal­ _ Tlaris fdr the year'will be out­was awarded to the chapter as a Norma and las. Jean Bellow* Lt. whole and a new $200 scholarship Don.Bishop was Barker History Center. Charles A. Ulery Were married in lined, the tentative budget will "be WHEN YOU THINK OF LAUNDRY OR CLEANING He will take the place of his The bride attended the Univer­Arlington, Texas at the First submitted'and approved, and sub­wag (ireated by J. Porter King. Alpha Phi 0«m|» fled|«^e)ail wife, Dr. Bernice lioore, who is sity, Hockaday in Dallas,. and Methodist Church November 17. committees will be appointed. This V * president" Ot&erg 'elected THINK . will .probably be the lapt general New officers for Beta" Theta Charles Becker, vice-president; ill. - Monticello Junior College. She-is The bride attended Arlington Pi fraternity to be installed Tues­™d \ meeting of the committee until All senior women are eligible a member of Kappa Alpha Theta-State College and the University. day night »*« Galloway Calhoun, 411 E. PHONE January. to join Cap and Gown. Members sorority. ' vice-president; Erwin Cottingham, 19th 8-6631 DRISKILL » ;•• who have not paid their dues will Miss Joann Martin of Wichita Committee membehs are asked reporter; Gordon Harwood, alum The bridegroom also attended the pledging of the following stu­ be able to do so at the Tuesday the University, where he joined Falls aiid. Rogaf Earnest Lewi* oi! to notify Betty Segal or Flo Cox ni secretary; Bill DeJernett, social dents: Landrum Hickman, Charlea Dallas and Wichita Falls were at 2-4733 whether they can attend -meeting; ^ •-.. Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. chairman; and Rip Hunter, rush Odom, Jack Taylor, and Jint%Htef — v ------married Friday. November 16 in the meeting." " captain. gerald. Johnnie M«ri« Waggoner and the First Christian Church, Wichi­After • an -hour's discussion vof • ta Falls. Aaron Leland Sauder Jr. wer§ the plans, tlie committee will have When Pi Kappa Alpha alumni 'Alpha Phi announces' tiie ple'dgw married Saturday, November 17, The bride attended Midwestern a "Thanksgiving dinner" and talk laid the cornerstone of their new ing of Jane Grissard .of Austin. in the Fihit Baptist Church ' in University and Texas Technologi-over the plans that have been Wichita Falls. cal'College. made. , >' _ Texas, Book Store's gift suggestion . Mrs. Sauder graduated from Mr. Lewis was graduated from ' The Student Hockaday Preparatory School, at­The University of TexarHe7 is :i Baptist Union tended Mount Vernon Junior Cql-Pfeli iMftorijfra council will have a called meeting IT'S EASY TO BECOME THE ^^ lege in Washington, D.C., and ternity. • Wednesday night at 9 o'clock in graduated from the University. • the library of the student center. Irene McDaniel and Alex Etner- Sponsorship of a displaced per­She is a member of Kappa Alpha son were married November 2, in son will be discussed. Theta sorority. Dallas. * Sauder graduated from the Uni­ ... The .bride attended.Texaa State -Mankind'a failtire to find a cre­versity of Kansias and is a member College for Worilen and was gra­ative cause in matter was the sub­of Kappa Sigma. ' 1., . ; , .+ ;; duated front the University. Mr, ject of a1,speech by Walter S; Emerson attended SMU. Symolnds, C.S., of San Antonio to Mr». Virginia Williamt Yarbo­ the Univeriiity Christian Science rough and Pauf 'I. Rounsaville Thursday evening. were married November 14 in Organisation Gilmer. , Teachers Group Mr. Symonds, a member of the Come to Arthur Murray Board jof Lectureship of the Moth­ Mrs. Rounsaville graduated and learn to dance ^ from Stephens College and the Will Investigate er Church of Boston, stressed the role of Jesus as the master Meta­quickly Education Policies physician and God as the source Phi Delta Phi of all intelligence and right ideas They're a lot of lioliday parties x The College Classroom Teachers coming. You'll have a lot of iuii,? ' Association* after hearing reports ; be mqre popular if your dancing Polo Mallet salt and peppers'. $4.95 Holds Initiation from departmental spokesmen at y Asks Faculty is up' to the minute. Let one of %L~ Ceramic pigs in a wooden pen.. 3.95 a recent meeting,. decided to For 28 Tuesday gather facts and Arthur Murray's talented instrue-­ Blue Denim'place matswith more opinions F.or Financial Aid tors make you a sought-after on the jestrictions imposed by the red bandana napkins—4 for Initiation of the twenty-eight current appropriation act. The partner. It's quick, easy and sur­ new members of Phi Delta' Phi, The Student Christian Associa­ Rustic wooden fork and spoon effects of the-regulations are con­prisingly inexpensive. -Do it now! ' a honorary legal fraternity, will be tion has begun faculty finance English imports—the pair sidered serious in some University drive -to raise $5,200 to cover the Don't wait 'til it's too late. Thjr held afternoon Texas pottery plate Tuesday at departments. o'clock in the Commodore Perry. ,4 portion of their budget not pro­holidays will soon be here. Oversized wooden barbecue Following, the initiation will be a President Wendell Gordon, as­vided, for by endowment income, spoon cocktail"party at 6, followed by sociate professor of , economics, said' C. C. Albers, chairman of the the initiation banquet in the main will appoint a committee of five to YMCA board. J -ARTHUR MURRAY study "the relation of educational Members of the drive organisa­ ballroom at-8:00. Dancing will fol­ low until midnight. v policy to such questions as teach­tion will meet to plan the cam­803 Congretr 2116 Guadalupe j|ing load, teacher-student ratio, and paign at 7 p.m. Tuesday. The fi­ Associate Justice Jack Pope of Ph. 2hW6T cancellation of. courses after the nance drive is under^the AdvisorySan Antonio Court of Civil .Ap­ semester has begun." . : Boad of the YMCA. >"psalr, will speak to the group on "Lawyers." Honored guests at the banquet include Chancellor Hart, and Justices Smedley and Calvert of the Supreme Cburt of Texas; all are members of Phi.Delta Phi. Also Dgan Keeton and members of "the Law. School faculties of Wfc AKt Urtlll MtL UM( I hUlUUH I Texas arid St. Mary's Universities. . Initiates from Tuleton Inn; the chapter at St. Mary's. Univ^jsity, and the eleven new members^ from Roberts Inn, tfie UniversityfehaRr |ter are: Willie B.' Allen Jr., Da : C.. Arnold, Robert E. BarneS, ir feioan~"Blsrr^r^-Robert L. Blurai-1 cnthal, James W. Bowman, M: C« ii " ^ t Bradford. Jr., Daniel L. Colli«| m 4'i'i 1"'Zf PHI William M. Cotton, and Lawrence ^ -J ' '*«• • M. CoughUn. : -; Also Don Eastland, Edward R. p7inck, W. St. John^Gafwpbd .'ft*. Jhank&jgwma Thomas G. Gee,-Eugene Golden, /I v,*, Harry W.. Hugly, David J. Drea­!ge,r Jr., Christian W. Ladwig, jerry W. Lemoiid, Jerry Lyons, |Robert D. McGee, Carl G. Mueller, ! Donald D. Patton,. Billy D. St. 7 50 I Clair, and Harry B. Townsley. * Suifs *V Rally Committee _ *15" OFF * Coats, Meets Ah) The Sbi»dent RallyCommittee mmmSm mmm ".V r» mmM ^ aTT sal£'s7fTnal,please season .Tuesday* afternoon at 4 v o'clock, in Memorial Stadium, m Stunt cards -Will. be straight!en«id m i J out and arrangement made lor 1 1^1 a -file' of'this year's 'cairds and stunts he placed: in tiftT--$tu­ tUxt^rvnfrrr..VIP -y s} ^ U^ OUR PA^KI^ »OT AT;opap ^TOPP benefit of next year'| comn)ittee. S j As f Chairman Kandjt:-Dockery: a»aid •; A.' M was wdt ipii ,,_..43|cS Sv«­ iSiii mi, Zk. ' J I i cholarship ^ \\iV-v -^7 V > » «££Tc JQ 4'•^^.-S.Til,**•l" "S> V*'tf „ ** -•»> f ~t f \ » 'SB*-•: • -/WBBJ? « retina to Bo^rd fit i tpptovkiv*' Atadcni"sto-FREDERICK B. WKE. butak* rwging frpm «embly resolution permitting the "Die JTedermatta" (the flying-'gurofwin. ^ City of importance,,, In time, #fylnf Witt" «p«wd tin shares producer's choree with 1951 marks the 60tk anniver­the filt of bis voieew mouse ^ p&*> $200tisJ>eeemberl0* investment of tip/to 86 per cant or bat in Cermio). opens 1879 it opened at * New York on Broadwmy in 1912 as tiie mtwU Michael Kuttner. . ^ sary of the death of Giuseppe V«nv After his vocal attempts^> at 8:16 tonight on the stage of < of tjbe enrtmt property deposit#, theater ht German. In 1886 it eal "The Mere? Couj*teae." ' Dr. Elemer tfMg&Atiqm* paw-di, Throughout the world during one did "not regret that his theParamount, This operetta, scene .. iras ddeted.'Hia Un&afaied deposit* are Added whose' only peer is "The Merry was produced witfi an English li­'• Others in'the «8-member torn* fmor A.Yale, has designed'^sets -Ihis year, homage has beet» paid echolwfehipsw* financed to die fond four yeir* after the Widow/' was composed by Strauss bretto «nd at the turn of the cen­panj^aOfe Adelaide Bishop, Lloyd and costumes.-Harding Dorn has to the Italian master. Last nigh?* highs, when sang pianissimo, were staged the choreography. inoffensive but when projected Annoe! inebrheof *pp*oxi-student bite • left school. Any u*« in 188? and has helped him gain tury it" Was added to the repertory Th6mass Leech, Job* PeUetti, and performance of 'Othello/ present­ $4,600 on Invited yn-wwd money is £ of the Metropolitan Opera House William Shrjner., \ Reserved-seat lickete for ^ the ed by the "North Texas State Col­with, poorer jvere wobbly and his title as "The Walts King." V^riyfcptfb, £$•» performance are pn sale in the lege School of Musw: in Gregory strained, with distressing tremulo. t• The comedy is of a man who in New York. A light production, Dir«rting the production^ 5s ^ Blank *dd«$ thet-the number of rsssrJ^Sm4 spjccessffrily revived from time Jtunes Westerfield. Thomaa Mar­Paramount Theater lobby. , Gymnasium, did not in any way Edgar Stone, as lago, revealed is seeking revenge for having to is usaelhr,25 college education,, character, and succeed in honoring the eo^M-a well-schooled and pleasing voice,', walk in dayligfet, clothed in a; student?activities are the criteria •rtmemor^^^^ lackingr only in volume. His 1>est w, yiHU 4«fwjf bat's costume. The production fol­ proportion to the drop in enron-for determining the winners, who behoofW I***I WibTuaentsCi /asJ '.tV.vftV' effort was the first aet "BfindisL"lows the original version exceptf The reason was not a total lack frill 1>e announced January 20* It is difficult to judge if liis un­ for the English libretto by Roth of talent On the part of partici­ .... fifteen"scholarships ar« «wnl* 1 Because of tuition requirements and Thomas Martin. pants.. Unfortunately, 4 Othello, even delivery of the "Credo" was : his fault or that of the English«bl« for 'the spring semester. applicants must be Texas resi­The gaiety of the operetta has next to the last of Verdi's operas, Aboet 20 students elready have dents. A minimum average of 1;6 translation. To the role of -Desde­ made -It a traditional New Year's* is not a work which ca from eleve*n , Central Texas Antonio, also; attended the clinic. deur of tbe scdre. Only staging ^olii^een^udents chosen wUI meet 4^T"He-4wM^^ppeaTedin-Britislr The 'a'eapella li^oir led by Dr. •?' -iwcortad Brian*.' .. and costumes fulfilled their func­WWa • V«iftj of Toiwcoa TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY and U.S. movies, on the Broadway clihiciaif for the workshop and Jjones sang five tongs at tiie be-^ 11 Mincril Wells in February tions satisfactorily throughout the Feature Starta at 7 P. M. stage, and radio programs. He has professor of musie education. ginning of the study followed by with bo^s and girls selected from FOYT3 •opera... ' »ung^opvo8k^--®orothy-Kirstei This third annual workshop .. The carcful characterizatk>nS(,ofT-r ,1r^1rr— Gnadalo the Austin-High chorus; These two XM).Oflaldriffelen-Jep-gion VI of tRe Texas Musir Ed-groups were presented-feo 4henitu--Ijtidges-at-the auditions were| t}ie majoT-roles-created -by-com son, and Grace Moore. ucatofs' Association was one of dents for demonstration purposes. Ira Bodies, Southwest Texas State poser Verdi and librettist Boito First produced in Vienna* where eighteen clinics conducted in the Eight of the choirs Served in a College, Philip Knautz, Texas were wasted on last merit's pro­ it was sn'iimhediate success, "Die 'Alicein Wonderland' state, Clinical capacity, while the remain­Lutheran College, and Roy-John­tagonists. A different vehicle A Walt IHaaajr Faatura in T*Ouiic«Ior . Fledermaus" soon was in every Schools and groups, presented ing five observed. -' . son, music director at the Presby­Throw Away might have displayed the attri­Monday morning included the Dr. Jones worked with the terian Seminary. butes of both orchestra and solo­ -"Blue Lagoon" Austin High mixed chorus and groups, pointing out tone defects 'Dr. Jones said choirs p*i ists in more telling manner. JaaaSimmima—-Donald Houaton BRUSH g||UP g| COURSE boys' glee club, University Junior or interpretation mistakes made Monday morning ranged in site ' In Tarfinleoliir -The tilt role'oi the opefa is one v NICOTINE •OK I)A\('K (NSTPUC TO*' in singing. • from 25 students to 95 students. of the most difficult vocally in op­ a,™ AWD Af.WA,N(AO D A N1 F P ri Host chairman for the workshop eratic literature. sc (n i™ .was Dr. B. M. Bakkegard, assist­NTSC's Thomas Harliee, in Ws Austin Symphony Plays TURKEY DINNER ant professor of music education. portrayal of the Moor, jeopardised OVfR T f X AS THFATRf 7 9439 'Flying Leathernecks* He stated the-purpose of the clin-For Children Tuesday # • John Wayna—R»b«rt Ryan,.. is was "to bring high school young THANKSGIVING The Austin Symphony Orches­ sters 1!rom public fchools to .the tra ONE DAY"Arizonian" University so they can profit from ^xll "present -ctlief r«§«engv*Wfi? Proton Fotter—RlcWd B^»a PARAMOUNT expert teaching and choral liter­dren's concert of the season Tues­Cleaning and Pressing ature,. hear what students from day at 3:30 p.m. at the City Coli-No'iEatra. Charge MONTOPOLIS ? ON THE STAGE other schools are singing, and to seu.ii. LONGHORN CLEANERSbecome more familiar with the Doors will open at 3^15, The 2S3S Guadalopa Ph. S-3M7 TONIGHT AT 8:15 Jomn dwuAa University as-a whole." program is expected to lastt HINMNt aad Sixth at Lamar Floyd W. Savage, Interscholas-minutes. flkWky tl»niSunday 'Walk Softly, Stranger' tic League music director was on Tickets for this concert, de­JoMph Co«tar»—V»lli n* nmiMMmi mmam* hand to welcome the high school­ IRRA PETINA. signed foir children between the ers Monday morning; first and seventh grades, are 25 • 10MANR *Ti*u»r cents ^Marked for Murder* ' Terrifie Savinci en Students arriving Sunday after­each. Adults accompanying children may buy tickets at theT«* Ritter "" noon were invited to the final con­ DANCE door for 50 cents each. wbea fktter cert of the Fine Arts Festival in farowu-fat; Mcdico Tn*Auabo CMcTtieabe YANK UESSONS Hogg Auditorium. Monday night .The concerts are sponsored' by Pipe* or Cigarette Holders-tfuow ft EWH* 300 students were guests. of the the orchestra, the Junior League, away, with the nicotine, juicea, flato 7 Hour Groav Flu 'Where Danger Livesr —Katfe »a* T»atBi« !*»««« * Hear Private Cultural Entertainment Commit­the City "Recreation Department; aad tariH ha» trapped-laaert freahRobart Mitcbum cnnMiiY #r m • : Sensibly Priced 29.75 tee at the opera "Othello." and the Austin Public Schools. Whan Madicinaa r filter for coo/ar, e/aanar, dry*rKtwmitor muokhii. Imported Briar. & 'Texas Rdad AgenV Thla aauraa Mill alta-„ Ara Naadad . . . whara far H7.S0 KV* hr r "" $3.90, 3.25, 260, 2.20 ,VttM «uedelu»e — PHene 7*t4>t AUSTIN NOVELTY CO. ED MINOR, Pharmacist 130S .m"7-4»f3" •OO W. Stb Ph. S-43ST 1910 Guadaliipi ''"Dial Z-8211 *PROWLER"; 'I Was An Vw Hoflin Evalyn K*r«* American Spy- Ann Dvorak" • —>l«i— •. —Plui—• Mask of the X' -"A Ufa of Avenger",, Har Own" ...' John Darak ' *«• tjknaTurnar Jody Lawrmci .u Ray Mllland Flr»t Show e:4S ,, Flr»t Show Si4B ,0 .**{•&; .»*.! X 2|SHOUITimE AT INTERSTATE THEATRES Evening at Ease IqiJEEIlIT CHPRTOL f I I I . ' ' » . ' H ' H ' • / WOW I HRST RUN SINGLE FEATURES! ^ THE PICTURE THAT ^ wtll-drtsstd and comfortable • i.. Made the whqle ERROL CQONTRY TALK! , in our year-round Texas weightFLYHN X v --8 McMettk • '•;/ ADVENTURES Or Renwood Tropical-Tuxedo 1BH| CAPTAIN FABIAN • n*mtc HUMl ai URRSIT¥ itL / , :-bi. |fFlft»T SHOW 2 P. M. / FEATURES . ^ Botty'GRABLE N2t»i stie^ ALL " #Iij t7F <->,» f -—in— _ 2i07 e:SS „ SEATS 3:43 S:31 Exclusively 10»07 sot at • "MEET ME AFTER Reynolds-Penland Ml THf SHOW" Keeps you at your w«ll-groomed in TECHNICOLOR!| bast and feeling cool and corn* Macdonald CAREY S5 FIRST SHOW 6 P. M. . fortabla tha yaar-'rour^d in * J Eddie ALBERT MARIO LANZA WEm summar haat and in winta'r's haat-H A' Last Dayt Mario Lan^ajn .~ -ad hails whan you'ra dancing up "THE GREAT usTin a storm* Wa'va had our Ranwood. m , ..F,r#^s^f « p.m. CAllUSO" ' Jail / , Evelyn mastar stylists tailor these supar­ iii TECHNICOLOR! Cfcm4lir i „ Ktry»s "SMUGGLER'S ISLAND , —STARTS TOMORROW— ior tuxedos in tha smart new ^ , Color by Technicolor "THAT MIDNIGHT KISS'S-'' trend towards mora comfort in> s man's clothas. Daap midnite blua y with satin lapais. . MAUII apults 60c / NUW!CHILDREN 25c HttttST W1LB iNIULNfflUM SUTI Single t \ and deubl»pbreasted •MAVMT howaro ¥m,t - rtTTf• A«AIMJT " ---v'v4 iV J , ' n APRICAt MNI»NI , y 1 is * mum...*Mil > J 1 K * I />* • l.ty witjlj tr t 6To^n-:S...mWrM'~ _ end dosed November -29 for •>>** a V<: / ~ Th«nk*g|ving. This is in keeping ­ «. « 'S ^ •r.T -*«, a 1 % ,• i wifh our Pfo* Goofy Cartoon • News and "fig Bend Counfry" S-/W, ct Iskr*•<%>*••• i V_ „ r Wr «.'Pl jp­ if : /j1 Us for ike Meiiof " Tejbag '-TT -n- IP ' »* 'T** \i -•. ^ r w rtj£ -V 41, 1 tjji Him mijiwrr