9 More Aspirants Enter Assembly Race N in e m o re s tu d e n ts have a n ­ nounced for Stud* att A ssem bly an - « - • «->« « “ «■ ^ lo * cs; xlosers. A b lis terin g sun shone w ith o u t piue, g re e n and white, and black ... , , .. ., m . t. f r a U r m U T hT, . m L .h f, f h “ S h o *,i' « th * ’ t u f f o f which ■■..spite „„ tho . - . r n , a v , I 45,1.00 r e p .,-cd a i d . by side Ii looked whl1* Pla >"’« S tn k e 1 p !h*>" th e r n n n , hr a t t a c k . t l e f t halfi M e T p ^ t e n d t v C annefl cham pions a r c made, th e T ex a s fans. H W , school h and m e m b er-, hk,- what h ap p e n s win i a ca rt lo : B a n d ." musical th e m e f o r th e day. '•«'<. d o u b le d .a s the d e fe n siv e & & * " ? • b uckled d ow n to n o tc h th e ...OOO strong, ................. rho n o rth - a r h a t bobbies his t i t e r p a y i n g th e .Arkansas . . . n a ' ^ e T ^ p p T h T l/ba’ck scored th e r e f o r m e d into a U T #* o f the R o u nd-U p P a r a d e c o m m it­ w in nin g six - p o m*te r in the final e a s t c u rv e to t h e r ig h t of t h e • I t w ould be u n.a.f a i r to leave o u t : m a t e r st f o r T e x a s fro m l l y a r d s o u t te e la s t y e a r. He w as also a m o n o g r a m and played "T e x a s w hen he w e n t th r o u g h a g a p in g “ small g r o u p ” le ad e r in th e f r e s h ­ F ig h t.” f hole in the A r k a n s a s line opened m an o r i e n t a tio n m e e ti n g s e a r lie r T he 1 12 -m em ber A u stin High up by M cF a d in a n d V y k u k a l a n d this fall. School band, co-host? for th e day c a r r ie d tw o s a f e ty men o v e r the C h a rles B. R obinson h as a n ­ w ith th e U n iversity g ro u p , snap- g oal line w ith him. n o u n c e d for a se a t on th e A ssem ­ pi Iv p a r a d e d o n to th e g ridiron Q u a r te r b a c k Ben T o m p k in s di­ bly f r o m the S chool o f Law. He is a m ! the two b an d s f o rm e d the r e t t e d th e a t ta c k well on th® Hare* a s e n io r law s t u d e n t fro m P ale s­ le tte r s B A N D betw een th e 20- to u c h d o w n m a rc h e s and showed tine. poise a n d calm n ess n his pass­ \ u r d lines. He a t t e n d e d V irg in ia M ilitary ing. I n s t i t u t e fo r tw o y e a r s a n d r e ­ U n iv e rsity dads took o v er th e Lloyd H a n d , s t u d e n t p r e s id e n t. R a ym ondv ille, f i r s t vice-p re sid e n t; L ate in th e second q u a r te r , a f ­ ceived a bach elor o f busin e ss a d ­ c a m p u s S a tu r d a y m o r n i n g sp o rt- i H and told t h e dads, “ T he U niver- H a r r y C. W ebb o f H ouston, th ird t e r he had been th r o w n f o r a 12m in is tr a tio n d e g re e fro m t h e Uni­ y a r d loss bac k to th e A rk a n s a s i n t “ b e n t A rk a n s a s ” b a n n e r , s it? o f T **“ is “ “ « h » « “ » *« v ic e -p re sid e n t; Bob A rm s tr o n g of v e r s ity in 1949. ... , . , it is ours. A u stin , se c r e ta ry . 4 5 . he p is s e d a g a in on second T h e th ir d a n n u a l m e e tin g o f _ He is p r e s id e n t o f th e U niv erdow n. He w as r u sh e d b adly b u t A f t e r the b usin ess m eeting, . a . , i i - t . rn l , , I., T-x a. . ,. .I O ff ic e r s o f th e Dad s A ssociasily M e n s Glee Club, a ca det i the D a d s A ssociation w as w e b , i Sec T O W N S E N D , pag e 2 and a j corned to th e U n iv e rsity ca m pus tlon electt'd S a tu r d a y a r e J o h n j 1 e^ n i ,. uj es officer in the A rm y ROTC lo w er l o u r by s tu d e n t guides m e m b e r of B e ta T h e t a Pi fra - : in speeches b y C. R ead G ra n b e r r y , W. H a m p to n of W ichita F alls , . . . , . . ., , ,; . . . . „ , who poin te d o u t v a rio u s ln tc restte rm ty . J a s s is ta n t to th e p r e s id e n t, a n d p r e s id e n t; Dr. G eo rg e B e n n ac k o f ing c a m p u s sites a n d explained the B e fo re the k ic k o ff the L o n g ­ U n iv e rsity b uilding program . A f t e r th e to u r the dads re- h o rn ban d m a rc h ed o n to the playt u r n e d to the Union building vng field and fo rm e d a huge Lots of Misses Were Near, But Not on the Scoreboard Dads Get New Officers, Beat-Porker Spirit at Meet ROTC Cadets, Band M ark UN Birthday UT Pharmacy Gets $18,600 in Grants T he U n iv e r s it y P h a r m a c e u tic a l Inc , p h a r m a c e u tic a l m a n u f a c t u r ­ F o u n d a tio n h as received $18,600 ers, f o r an in v e stig a tio n of fu n g i in g r a n t s a n d c o m m itm e n ts f o r an d its a n tib io tic p r o p e r tie s . ad va nce d r e s e a r c h . T h e C lay to n g r a n t will be paid O b ta in e d by the U n iv e r s ity D e­ over a th r e e - y e a r period. I t will velo p m en t B o a rd , in stitu tio n f u n d ­ be su p e rv is e d b y H e n r y M. Burraisin g a g e n cy , th e g r a n t s inclu d e $15,000 from th e C la y to n F o u n ­ lage, d e a n o f th e College o f P h a r ­ dation, estab lish ed b y B e n ja m in m acy, in c o - o p e ra tio n w ith th e C la y to n of P a s a d e n a , C alif., f o r- J Biochem ical I n s t i t u t e u n d e r Dr. D e a n B u r la g e m e rly of H o u sto n , f o r s p e c i a l ■R o g e r W illiam s. d ru g a n d chem ical s tu d ie s ; a n d will also su p e rv is e th e f u n g u s $3,600 f r o m S h arp* and B o h m e, studies. By M A R IA N P E N D E R G R A S S T he second in a series o f foldE xec u tiv e C ouncil m e m b e r s o f f e r s c o n c e r n in g this p r o g ra m will tiae E x - S t u d e n t s ’ A sso c iatio n ap- be s e n t to e x e s a r o u n d N o v e m b e r proved a m e n d m e n ts to t h e Stu- j I, a c c o r d in g to J o h n A. M cC urdy, d e n t s ’ M e m o rial L o an F u n d Char- e x e c u tiv e s e c r e ta r y o f th e E x-S tut e r which Win ten d to M U em- d e n ts ’ Association p h e s i . fro m loans to scholarships e t its f e l l m e e tin g S a t u r d a y . I .n ill now, t h e c h a r t e r h a s provuled f o r loans exclusively. The a m e n d m e n ts w e r e r e c e n tly a d o p te d by t h e b o a rd o f d ire c to rs of th e S t u d e n t L o an F u n d , and | will go into e f f e c t a f t e r th e y have ! been r e c o rd e d with t h e S e c r e ta r y o f S ta te . | A t t h e S a t u r d a y m e e tin g , the E x ec u tiv e Council also discussed t h e a n n u a l g ivin g p r o g r a m inaug-1 urated this sum m er. where they wen entertained by o r a n g e a n c vvhiti cre5 I S. h e th rid ■ -.... - . Loan Fund Emphasis On Scholarships '"Jor Iii assorted b a c k d r o p s on th o U n iv ersity student.-. T he p ro g ra m b a n d ca m e -:x R O U cadets, Fearw as sponsored by the Union Tai- in g a folded blue and w hite UN j e m C om m ittee. P ersis H opkins Hag. : a n d T e d d y P rim e a u x p e r f o rm e d a T h e a n n o u n c e r e xplaine d t h a t sp ecialty dance, and Bat P rice th e fla g w as displayed because L N san g and played th e piano. D ay is T u esd a y . He th e n rea d an ★ j e x e r p t from the UN c h a r te r , To D a d s H e a r Gle es te rs sav e su c ce ed in g g e n e atioris fro m •he sc o u rg e of w ar, which tw ice 0 f Hogg A u d ito r iu m sometim es a d d spice to o th e rw ise rou^ine le ctures, F or in sta n c e , a m a r k e tin g prof w as i n te r r u p te d th e o th e r day by a co cker spaniel, lu r e d o n to th e j i a g e bv a lu sc io u s b ac kdrop of big> th ic k .t r u n k e d trees, in o u r life tim e has Brought u n top ld sad-eved u p m a d e th e , and t o re­ rf unds o f «... all the f a k e -f______„ o re s tr y in v e s tm e n t of the fund can b e W il li a m s Takes BO W spe nt. More than $1 million a n ­ T h o m a s W illiams, new d irec to r so rro w t o m a n k in d nually is availa b le fro m th e P e r m a n e n t F u n d , b u t a lm o st $15 milV k ^ f "' ^ ! ; ! , ' » ! rild * - o i l m e n *ami w u m en a n d of w ^ de the Pr o f a n d 400 s tu d e n ts lion is r e q u ir e d to o p e r a te t h e 1 ' * J f ’ < , ' ' * 1 ..-.I a d mal! ” w aited in aw e. t h e te nsio n eased I n , v e r i t y a n d M e d i c i School, a » » o r n - tm t o n , la rg e a n d smell. ; w h , „ th e cocker tossed hie heed T h e Tercel E x F u n d , a p ro g ra m l e t t e r to T e x a s exes r e p o r te d . „ d for U n i w s i t v da(Js. ‘ w e r 7 , " a d e t " c o l o n e l Clemence J th r o u g h which alu m n i c e n give to l , « . t .veer legislative a p p r o p r e A p p ro x im a te ly 75 eerly -b ird j B a ld w in S e e Antonio a n d C a d e t the U n iv e r s ity , was r n s t.tu te d th is lion s a n d th e a d d a b l e m o n e y d a d s assem bled in the Union to , fe u t e n ; n t C o lo nel D e l m a , V s u m m e r by th e E x - S t u d e n t s ’ Asse- from the P e r m a n e n t F u n d l e f t h e a r Mr> w illia m s lead the glee‘D u b lin 1 e latio n to b r in g u r g e n t l y needed the U n iv e r s ity s h o r t a b o u t $1 mil- fste a rre * in “ B ro th e rs In S o n g ,” I * 1 in M idshipm an H e n r y A. P erry . m on ey to th e U n iversity . | lion of th e r e q u ir e d o p e r a tin g **W a k e the E choes,” a n d “ T he Dallas, a n d M idshipm an L ie u te n ­ To help a d m in is t e r th is p ro - cost. E y e* of T e x a s.” g ram , P au l T ra c y , B J ’47, M J ’49, A t the S a t u r d a y m e e tin g , t h e Club P re s id e n t C h arlie Robin- a n t W. J o h n P e r h t z , A ustin, rep-] beg a n his d u tie s M on d a y as assist- C ouncil r e - a p p o i n t e d A n g u s son spoke briefly to the au dience, r e "e n te d th e N aval ROTC. a n t to Mr. M c C u rd y. I W y n n e of Dallas a n d L on g v ie w r e m in d in g them th a t the g r o u p R e p r e s e n tin g the A ir ROTC A lth o u g h th e U n iv e r s it y ’s P e r - l a n d Hines H. B a k e r o f H o u sto n will be open f o r c o n c ert t o u r w e r e ( 'a d e t L i e u t e n a n t Colonel m a n e n t F u n d has m o re t h a n $100 as E x - S t u d e n t s ’ A ssociation m em - e n g a g e m e n ts in th e spring. Robin- Michael B. M u a g lia , G eneva. 111., million, the C o n s titu tio n provides hers on th e U n iv ersity D evelop- son r eq u e sted th e d a d s ’ assistance a n d C a d e t M a jo r William B. Benthat only the in terest on the m ent Board. I in arranging b o o k in g * . I bow, Inc*. , “ a " d U* '" d ° O v e r h e a r d a t th* g a m e : “ T hat field m u lt h ave d e o a terised .” beet The te le p h o n e rin g s , . . “ H ello.” “ Hello, how w ould th e loveliest blonde in school like a d a t e ton ig h t?” “ F in e!” “ Swell, tell y o u r r o o m m a te FU be by a t e i g h t,” S un day, O e t o b V 22. I?50 THE D A 1LY TEXAN Pana 3 Townsend, Steers Hip Hog Line , r e t i n u e d f r o m Tse* I ) e l ud e d two Razor back* wh o had el u ded two t h e i r h an ds on him a n d tossed a p e r ' 4 n throw* to P r o c t e r who had maneuver. behind t he d ef ens e onl v to «oe t h e hall bo unc e o u t o f hi? hands. To mpki ns complet ed 3 of 6 passes f o r 47 yards. r»*#-n«iv*lv tho Te x a s t e a m was ' -fii/ s« on o f f e n s e The . M o to p a ’n on*' 131 yar ds rushi ng and 35 passing. Don M e n . s c o , l ef t L u c k , ! , cr a shed t h r ou gh again and again t o t a ck l e Arkansas backs f o r a loss. w h en t he y broke t h r o u g h t o down Hi? t a r r i n g tackle? w e r e o n e S o h a u f ete’* hoot oil t h e A r k an s a s J * . . ■•* reason the Hogs played w i t h o u t *’"• (he services of Rav P a r ks , l e f t O u t s t a n d i n g play? and pl a yer s bil!fback, f o r t h r e e q u a r t e r s . On stood out fot tho lug, b a t t l i ng t he f i r s t p l a v a f t e r Texas* s eco nd learns. M c L a i n a n d Vy k u k al piled tou ch d own P a r k s t o ok a pi- tho u t uT t h e e n t i r e d e f e n ? -ce right side a r o u n d his r i g h t en d and lost f o u r of t he Arkansas line when Townya r ds on a br ui si ng ta ckl e by s e nd scored t he s e co nd touchMenasco. P a r k s s u f f e r e d a k n e e down. To mp k i ns b o otle gged a ’- njurv on tho play and w a s un ab l e r e e d e d I . v ea r d - to th e Hog or e to r e t u r n to the game. t o set u p T o w n s e n d ’- first score. A pai r o f sophomor es , g u a r d Buddy Rogers, left hal fback, H . r l e y Sewell a n d c e n t e r .lack w a . a work hor se for t he I t . z o , . B a rt o n w e r e responsible f o r t h e b a c ks as he c a rr i e d 20 t imes a n d only blocked kick of t h e g a m e n e t t e d 65 yar ds f o r a 3.3 average, P a t S ummer s! !. 225-pound end, wa* a t h o r n imthe Long hor ns sida all a f t e r n o on . , Hie Ra zo r ba c ks won tao toss a u d received on the south end. Roge r s r e t u r n e d the kick to midfield but a clipping pen a l t y br ou g h t t h e ball back to t he A r k a n s a s 0,1 A r k a n s a s couldn t move a n d Sohaufelo kicked o ut on his own a n d 50 s e conds l e f t in the f i r s t o u a r t e r . A r k a n s a s p u n t e d an J on e s , I oxas s a f e t y man, r e t u r n e d f aq *• ** L e v ne and l o w n s e n d move d t h e hall down t o the 35, an d T o m n k i n s hi t L ev , n e with a pass t o t he l l . Dillon went over l e f t g u a i d fot t he score. l n the second q u a r t e r S c h au f el e . a t t e m p t i n g to r u n out a n a t F o u r plays l a te r the S te e r s t e m p t e d p u n t a f t e r a wide pas s wer e on tho A r k a n s a s 6 b u t t h e f r o m c o i f e d was d o wn e d on his: d e f e n d e r s s t i ff e n e d a n d T ex a s lost 18 T o m p k . n , pulled h,» - j ewel t he hall on d ow n s on t he 9. Texas a bootleg play, down to t h e one first score c a m e with f o u r m i nu t e s a n d l o w n s e n d bulled over left guard to score. Arkansas ran two consecutive first downs and had to punt. T exas got the ball on its 30 and couldn’t move forward. Porter kicked. Cole gathered in the ball and eluded a mass of tacklers, cut sharply to his right and raced 75 yards for the tally behind a wave o f block­ ers. \ r k n s a s w e n t into t he lead a f ­ ter a Da n P a ge pa»s w a s i n t e r ­ c e p t e d by Cross to p u t the ball on the Texas 36. The Razorback scored in nine plays Best We've Met,' Razorbacks Agree By JACK W E A V E R Tern* S pa rt a Staff In the c r a m p e d d r es s i ng room t Roger?, Hog l e f t half, said L ong the a f f o r d e d t he visi ting te am, the hor n r oot e r s c o n g r a t u l a t e d A r k a n s a s Razor back? wer e a n y ­ A r k a n s a s t e a m a f t e r t he g a m e and t h i n g b u t gl o omy a f t e r t he i r d e­ t heir efforts we r e a p p r e c i a t e d by f e a t by t h e Lon gho r n s . The boys tne N°g** f r o m the. Friendly S t a t e wer e not Rogers, al ong with J o h n n y Cole, s m u g o r cocky, b u t t h e y se eme d the boy who electrified the cr owd pl e ase d with t h e i r t i g h t s c r a p with with his 75- yar d p u n t r e t u r n and t he Steers. p u t the Razor bac ks back i nto the Otis Douglas, r o a c h of the * a m e in the second q u a r t e r , both d ou b l e -t ough Hogs, said the Long- a * r e «d t h a * T ow ns en d is a “ p r e t t y hor ns played h a r d , dr ove h a r d . ” Food boy. “ He nailed me pl e nt y, In the se con d hal f t h e y k e p t t he ‘ ° ' ° a d d e d * bali and d i dn ’t give us a c h an c e ! The T e x a s line, which s w e p t the The Finer Points with their d r i v i n g line, ” he con- Hogs off t heir f ee t in t he last tinued. hal f, lived up to t h e i r press clip­ T EA M STA TISTIC S UT ARK. s e ma de too m a n y m i s t a k e , P in*s a c c o r d i n g to several o f t he in IX Fir* ! d o » n < 111 2«1 Var da r u s h in g offensively,” he added. “ T e x a s is A r k a n s a s players, SR . 51 Varda p ar s in g Dave s t r o n g e r t ha n a n y o t h e r club we Dav# B a n n e r , J -2-pound Hog X ft Pa a nga a t t e m p t e d . 4 4 P a s s e s co m p leted . h ave f ac e d— t he whole line was tackle, said t h e T ex a s line is as P a s s e s in t e r c e p te d good a n d t h a t is w h a t b ea t us.” good as has been cl aimed, and 4 Punts the bes t the Ra zor bac ks have 32 .4 35.8 Pu ntin g average To Ins t e am he said, “ L e t ’s f o r ­ faced all season. Fum bles lost . —— Sn . 35 ----l a r d s penalired g et this one— V a n d e r b i l t is next. Har ol d Stockton, s e ni or c e n t e r •a You pla yed h ar d, b u t you ma d e a a n d the only m a n f r o m T ex as on L INE UPS ARKANSAS f ew m i s t ak es . ” the A r k a n s a s squa d, r e m a r k e d t h a t Loft. end*—- J ti m e ; ., S im m or al!, Thor nsThe A r k a n s a s pl a y er s praised t he L o ng h o r n s will go as f a r as L o f t t a c k le s - —H a m n e r , Kckert. t he L o n gh o r n s as t he best they a n y o t h e r club in wi nni ng t he Co n ­ L e f t g u a r d s — R u s h in g . Milam. h av e f a c ed this year. Bob Cross, f er en c e cha mpi on s hi p b ec aus e the C e n t e r s — Griffin. S t o c k t o n , S m it h R ig h t guar ds — R n h r n . Iviederc-. Ward. cue- balled Hog q u a r t e r b a c k , r e­ S t e e r line can hit w h en it w an t s R i g h t ta c k le * — F. W il lia m s. S im p s o n m a r k e d t h a t T ex a s will p r obabl y to. R i g h t e n d s — S t e n d c ’, R ic ha rds . Fise h e l. Q u a r t e r b a c k s — R in e har t. I o g u e L e f t ha lf b a c k * — P a r k s , P r y o r , B ritt , Mc­ win the C o n f e r e n ce cr own. “ T h e y a r e as good as I ’ve played Farland. G r oss , T em ple . R i g h t h a lf b a c k s — R oge r*. Furo , P r i t c h ­ a g a i n s t , ” he added. ard. S u t t o n , Cole F u l l b a c k s — B ail e y, C arpente r, S c h a u f e le . Louis Schauf e l e, who h an dl ed TEXAS L e f t e n d s — St olhand lske, P r o c te r , Menan- t h e kicking ch o re s f or t he Hogs, co. a n d who laid some c r un ch i ng L e f t t a c k le s — V y k u k a l, W ils o n , G e o r g i a H e r e is how t he t op t e n t ar d run t o t h# o n e - y i r d » v ;v 'n Ch® r cmd q u a k e r . The Lonqhcnn q u a m e r b a n k f ak e s a h a n d o f f to fullback Byron Townsend and c a u g h t lh© R a z o r b a c k d e f e n s e a s l ee p b y k ee pi ng t he ball . Townsend p u g g e d r~',. e r c~ m e p p c t a / for Texas’ 5®c o n n +C u en dow by O li n H inkle na t h r o u g h o u t ‘he g a m e is e«e mpl i fi e d by t h e pile­ up t he r’qrC w'-®-® g , a r d Bud Mel a dm and a s ­ soc i at es knocked t he r>gb» side of th?* H o g line ou* of t h e d a y . ^ M E R R IT T SHAEFER & BROWN SHARKSKINS.. 611 Congress \ Your Best B uy J Bv Far... J lf you demand full value for your c lo n in g dollar, then we suggest that you choose this suit of sturdy worsted sharkskin. For here is a suit Merritt Schaefer %, Brown designed to combine long wear and quali­ ty in a handsome manner. A t our low price this suit is easily your best buy in town . * . # College Style Center o f The Southwest / Sunday, O ctober 22, 1950 Hog-happy Steers Praise Horn Line TH E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 3 Rote and S M U Pass Defense |!be" .L e a J ds Over Raiders, 26-12 Break Rice Streak, 42-21 WACO, Oct. 21— (IP)— Young never wa? in danger thereafter. Larry Isbell, who throws right, Baylor took the kickoff on it* kicks left, and thinks down the 33, and in IO plays had the tying A feeling of sheer power most of the plays went well, interceptions got a pair of quick For Rice, starting defense of its middle, teamed up with fleet, ebul- touchdown. From the Tech five, surged through the Longhorn! “ We just whipped them down HOUSTON, Oct. 21— (AP) — to 21, Saturday night before scores. 1949 Southwest Conference cham- lient Buddy Parker Saturday to Parker, in two smashes, went dressing room Saturday the same! I hat is the onlj way I can set Undefeated, untied Southern crowd of 70,000. The victory was the fifth pionship, it wras the first defeat send Baylor to a 26-12 victory over. Hank Dickerson missed the Our bnf SMU struck for touchdowns the way that a fine Texas line had anybody beating them Methodist, powered by hard charg­ first two"times it had the ball, then straight for the Methodists, the j in 13 games, its first conference over Texas Tech. extra point. torn through the biggest and was great,” Ben said. ss it h ing Kyle Rote, and protected by Isbell, brother of the immortal Baylor scored again a minute most publicized line in tho Confer­ Reports all last week from the ; alert pass defense, knocked beat off a Rice comeback and nation’s third ranking team this lo** Smet October 1948. week. Rote scored the first and third Cecil of Purdue and professional J before the half ended. Isbell ence a few minutes earlier. j Porker camp stated that Coach Rice from among the unbeaten, 42 rolled along easily as two pass— ..... ....... ............................. J SMU touchdowns, and paved the football fame, passed for one ( passed over the line to Parker The feeling of elation was in I Otis Douglass was displeased with way for another as the Methodists *touchdown, set up two more, and on the lo, and the little speedster the robust humor and congratu-1his offense. June Davis, who calls relied most of the night on power dict an excellent job of general ran down the sidelines for the latory shouts of a tired, happy Texas defensive signals, described instead of their anticipated aerial g^jp, Parker scored two touch- score. Dickerson converted., group #of boys. “ Great game— the Porkers as a good club with The third period was a wild one show. downs and made runs that brought swell blocking— you sure looked i a great line. with three touchdowns b e i n g Fred Benners, the pass magiccheer to the crowd of 12,000 scatgood on those returns.” Every“ Their offense was good but ian, connected with end Jimmy tered in the big, new yawning scored, two by Baylor. The Bears body was happy about everybody Bulldog Cunningham and I figured took the kickoff and in eight Hawn for the second Mustang Baylor stadium. out that the way the quarterback else and with themselves. dropped five ; plays drove 45 yards to a counter. Tech, which has score. Pat Knight and David Powwent was the way the play was Well pleased with hi boys ell teamed to start the second half straight games— all it has played Dickerson missed the try for point. Coach Blair Cherry saic “ Th* going, in other words, they didn’t With lightening suddenness to tally, and Yale Lary intercepted rout by returning a Rice pass a l l Baylor kicked off to the Tech fought back and furnished the COLLEGE STAI ION, Tex., Oct. group up front played a terrific have much weak side stuff,” conTexas Christian supporters in the one of Dan Wilde’s desperation the way. Val Joe Walker inter­ biggest thrill of the game. It was 24 and from here, (Rose made bis 21— (A P )—Texas A&M Saturday game setting up gains that made tinued Davis. passes to scamper 33 yards for T Jones, who intercepted a unleashed the fury of three years _sun-drenched crowd of 20,000, the cepted another and raced to the a 76-yard touchdown run by Bob­ great touchdown run. Hatch failed the Townsend the best back by Close, who broke over tackle to convert. Razorback pass to set up the of impotent Southwest Conference bruising game turned into a pm- the fourth Aggie score in this next score. field.” wild finale. Baylor got the ball on Thomp* fill rout I touchdown, de­ football, storming from behind to The Mustangs’ final tally came in a quick opener and scooted to son's fumble on its 15-yard line About the R zorbacks and the second Texai Homer Ludiker had shot Texas Spotting the Horned Frogs a the Bear g^il line like a jack ckers as, “A rough smother Texas Christian Univer­ mch Cherry said, | scribed the P< Steer offense C 99 first period field goal and a second Christian ahead just before the as Gene Roberta climaxed a 75- rabbit. to end a 44-yard Red Raider sity. 42-23. “ They have a good club, you bunch of boys quarter touchdown, the Aggies first period ended, kicking a field yard march with a smash from the drive, and from here roared to the Tech drew first blood with a Two bruising backs — Bob good blocking and “ They have know it. The* ll beat somebody seven. stormed back from a first half of goal as the ball rested on the Aglast touchdown of the game. Dick 59-yard touchdown march in the in the Conference. O ur offensive tackling and ut everybody is go- Smith and Billy Tidwell— a sharp­ Fullback George (Hauser was opening period, but Baylor quick- Parma dove over from the Tech fumbling frustration. They sent gie 16-yard line. s h o o t i n g quarterback, Dick Garthem. They didn’t ground game went well, hut they jng to beat Less than three minutes after the big noise for Rice, scoring on ly tied the score, went ahead on three and Dickerson kicked the tp on our throw enough passes to really tell demal, and panther-like alertness Billy Tidwell sweeping 18 and 25 (I completely crc second quarter began, Frank quick opening plays of 17 and 58 Parker’s second touchdown, and extra point. the anything about th* r air game, brought the Aggies six touch­ yards for third period touchdowns, passes.” Struska, lumbering 213% -pound tae- yards. Quarterback Vernon Glass then Gardemal tossed two touch­ pumpkins, direc- but they are good or the ground,” downs in the second h a lf—four Bouncing B Struska, lumbering 213-pound passed for 49 yards to end Bill in the quarter— arui their first down passes to Andy Hillhouse, offense pointed he concluded. tor of the St TOU tackle, snared Ray Graves’ Howton ofr the other Owl tally. Smith raced 38 yards for another ighorns worked Around the di e. si g room, join- conference victory since 1947. out that the SMU scoring —- Touchdowns, pass and heaved his bulk 43 yards teer festivity were the style of de- ing in the all last week Rote 2, Hawn, Powell, Walker, ifor a Horned Frog touchdown. Hogs, and that such Longhorn ex-greats as Wally fense used bv Texas Christian stayed in the Roberta; Conversions, Sullivan 6. Scott, Peppy Blount, and Perry Rice scoring — Touchdowns, Duke 41, Richmond 0. hall game until the last 20 min­ SO UTH W EST tarnal OLD S E V IL L E H A S NO COVI R William & Mary bl , Virginia utes, Wild* taking a touchdown (Hauser 2, Howton; Conversions, | TexaR lg Arkansas 14. ( .IR L . - r i b S Y M B O L OF S E X IS that San THREE PIECES OF LETTUCE Tech 0. pass from Gilbert Bartosh. And at B. Wright 3. SMU 42, Rice 21. FURLED . N O F A L S E C L AIM S I like rkansas Ii Furman 21, The Citadel 7. the end, the Horned Frogs boosted Texas A&M 42, TCI! 23. NOR F A T B R A V A D O . . INSTEAD the S h th, ball cl S E VILLI O L F E R S YO U A S W E E T MIDWEST their final margin, John Harville Baylor 26, Texas Tech 12. V\ . I Iii A VOCA DO. great. line VV rf phys I educatioi physical training, in the Trophy making a brilliant catch of Hex­ Ditching M a c h i n e N e ar ly West Texas State 39, Sam Hous­ Oklahoma 58, Kan-as State 0. Ph BE SEVJLLIZED was about th Longhorns the fourti Re cm from IO to 12:30. be (Hocussed Indiana 20, Notre Dame 7. er Bassinger’s three -yard pass Ditches S M U - R i ce Tilt Old S e v i l l e 160 1 G uad alu pe St . ton State 18. and the way hat they w uth vest Con a1 rn :ing of Michigan 26, Wisconsin 13. Lunch will be at the Commons just nine seconds before the game East Texas State 35, Midwestern they grot that touchdow ii HOUSTON, Oct. 21— (ZP)— Rice physical ti rung person Annex at 12:30 p. rn. After the ended. Michigan State 34, Marquette 6. 27. wei» behind and nee< athletic officials Saturday were Monday, Kansas 40, Oklahoma A&M 7. Darrow Hooper kicked six Arizona State at Tempe 28, Utah meal, each member school will be Jc Arnold, Longh* n gu I io­ M i s s o u r i 20 , I on* i State 20 (tie). tration for the c y ie t.ri.1 JC 6. Education. Phi I n d i a n a W h i p * Notre D a m e GUARANTEED Wichita 17, Drake 14. I I,ox l i n e s t o 1 .. . 0 , . IN T E R SE C T IO N A L then on fourth down Ludiker came Trophy Room from 2 to 3 p. rn. Men, and Intramural Athletics for Shoe repairing, dyeEAST 21.— NEW YORK, C Lvnn W. McGraw, assistant through. | dium were noc < * i Illinois 20, Washington 13. Dr Men will participate. Army 49, Harvard 0. Smith, the conference's leading Emergency telephone crew men ing, resueding. Once mighty Notre Dame < 9 s \< k cv PQni'0" b a n d $ 3 7 , 5 0 CHARGE IT! N O INTEREST! N O CARRYING CHARGE! / Most Styles S H E A F F E R D E S K SET Ideal writing: com p an ion for Dad, Son. or Brother. Charge It . . . at K ru ger ’s! D R E SS Y O U R T A B L E WITH T U D O R PLATE Com plete 54-piece service for 8, chest included: N ew pattern bridal wreath. D IO -E N T R E E P L A IT E R S tyled in durable silver plate: w e l l and tree c e n ­ ter. * 1 2 oo ‘12 * 3 9 95 P a y 50c W e e k l y P a v 75c W e e k ly ra y ELGIN POCKET LIGHTER Initialled as y o u no e x tr a cost! to w ish at 22“ $ 50 90 Mo"’sp""9 * *33.7 j 50c W e ek ly F L O R S H E IM SH O ES cost less because they w ear lo n g e r! I f one good autom obile will outlast two jalopies, then tile good car is a more economical EIG HT D I A M O N D PAIR Stu n n in g fishtail design in 14karat y e ll o w gold mountings. Com pare' 50 0 C A P ay $3.00 W e e k ly T / . J V B R IL L IA N C E O F 14 D I A M O N D S Rare be a uty and sp ark le at m o d ­ e st cost! See h o w K ru ger s otter Au stin's G reatest D i a m o n d Values! A O P a v $4.75 W e e k ly A J w . V V SIX-DIAM ON D V ALUE N e w fishtail sty lin g in 14-Karat Y ello w gold. Just say ' Charge P a y 52.50 W e e k ly 50*00 SOLITAIR E S P L E N D O R E x qu isite pair of s im p le beauty. D iam ond is V* carat! Pay $2.75 W e e k ly ’ 160.00 PHONE 2-2485 purchase . . . and the same is true of shoes. H ard-headed business men have found th a t Florsheim Shoes actually cost less in the long run , . . because fewer pairs will go tho same distance. Therefore you can enjoy Florsheim Quality and at the -ame time S ale practice sound shoe ecououi) . 7)% tm the drag 223 6 (iu a (Ialii d o w n t o w n 722 C o n g r e s s 2348 Guadalupe — On the Drag Sunday, O ctob e- 22, 1950 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 4 10 Top. Officials Keep Mural Football Going i football for th e f i r s t time. B ut he t h a t he w as given w h a t Were p e r ­ A little over one y ea r ago, he h a p s th e two most im p o rta n t g am es w as one of th e le ast experienced I to d a t e to r e f e r e e : Phi G am m a officials ca lling in tr a m u r a l gam es. I D elta vs. S ig m a P hi E p silo n and But in the p a s t two weeks, Con- 1 Pent Club vs. “ T ” A ssociation, both well S m ith h a s officiated tw o of j Class A tilts. th e most im p o r ta n t football gam es The P hi G a m s and S P E ’s were j so sa tisfie d w ith bs* o f fic ia tin g to be played th is fall. In the su m m e r of 1949, C-onwell th a t th e y c o n g r a tu la t e d him on his w as given only u n im p o r ta n t and fin e work. m inor gam es to call. B u t he le a r n s Conwell is only one of te n o f ­ f a st. A nd this s p r in g and su m m e r ficials who call i n t r a m u r a l f o o t­ Conwell referee d im p o r ta n t s o f t­ ball gam es. O rig in a lly t h e r e w ere ; m any m ore officials, but th is la rg ball games. This fall he began o ffic ia tin g ; et g ro u p has been cut to a s m a lle r i and highly efficien t crew. Besides S m ith , th e re a r e C, B. S u m ra ll, J o h n Y ates, W a y n e Roye, Intramural Schedule j Roger T o la r, B uddy B e rr y , C, EL K oeninger, P a u l Colley, Angel Gon­ zales, and J a c k T o la r. MONDAY T O U C H I OOI B A L L An o ffic ia l m u s t know th e rules C l** * A F r a t e r n i t y >*f th e g am e th o r o u g h ly ; b u t j u s t 7 o ’c lo ck A c a c i n v* . Delta K a r r a Jyvsilon. as im p o r ta n t, he m u st c on trol th e P h i D e l t a T h e t a va . A t , P i . gam e a n d th e players. W h e n he C h i P h i ' S . K a p p a A lp h a . S o ’c l o c k makes a decision, he m u s t m a ke it S i g m a N u v*. S i g m a Chi. stick. S i ’fe. v* . K a p p a S i g m a So the best official is not th e one C U * * A C lu b By B R U C E R O C H E Te tra rn In tra m u ra l C o-ord'nator S o ’c l o c k L ittle C am pus. C l* * * B F r a t e r n i t y S o ’c l o c k S i g m a P h i E p a l i o n vs . T h e t a XL P h i K a p p a T a u va. P h i S i g m a K a p p * . P h i S ig m a D e lta va. Phi G a m m a D e lt a . B A D M IN T O N SIN G LE S 7 o ’c l o c k W i l l i a m Ta ck C h r i s t i va . W a . K F o s t e r H a r o l d B o h H a n e s v t . P e t e r C. Q u o y a s e r J e r r y L y n n H e l m * v t . t e r r e ! G. F r a n k l i n W ill lam R . A r c h e r va. P a u l H. S m i t h A rth u r F e r g c r s o n v s. M ick y P. T h o m p ­ son C arl M e n d g e n v*. M a r v in G o o d m a n R o b e r t S . N o t m e n t v s . G e o r g e C. F r a n ­ cisco 7 : 4 5 o'clock FL F r e d B o y d ' W i l l i a m E. D i c k e r s o n K n o x M i ll e r Jr. v s . R o b e r t S . W o l f f R i c h a r d F. L o v e v a . F r e d d y S t e p h e n s R o b e r t P. La o d e v s . J a m e s R o s e n b l o o m H e n r y L . B a c c a * v s . T h o m a s B. K a m e y W a r r e n v s . Ca rev* M c F a l l Jam es H M ayfield v s. S ta n le y R o se n V e r n o n (J berg 8 13 0 o ’c l o c k H i c E. T e n g g >». R e c d C o ll i n * H a n k L a m a r G u l a m va . J o h n CL M u r r a y R o b e r t CL J u d k i n s v s . F r e d P . M c C o w n Preston H D ia l v *• C a r l W . W i l s o n F r a n k l i n {-p ea r# v a . H e n r y D. L m d a l e y J o h n S elm a n v s. Barry L Cott E d d i e J a c k S h a r p e v*. R o b e r t A . S i n t mang 9 : 1 5 o'clock D a n nj C h e a t e r v a . A l b e r t H. C ox L eon ard K arotkin Jr. u . P ete C o o n ey J o h n C, M c C u l i e r * v s H a r r e l l S. H a y d e n M p h o n a o R a g l a n d v* . W i l l i a m H . D a p p e r F r a n k S . W a r n e r v » . W i l l i a m M. B r o w n R o s s B l u m e u t r i t t %a. C h a r l e s A. S m i t h J o s e p h S. B r a n d v * . C h a r l e s C u n n i n g h a m who know’s ru les only. T h - te n men o f f ic ia tin g i n t r a ­ m u ral g r i d co ntests a re doing ex­ cellent w ork. A t this tim e la s t y ea r, about ten c o m p lain ts an d five p r o ­ te sts h a d been filed. B u t th is y e a r no p r o te s t s and only two com­ plaints -both oddly eno u g h fro m v. inning t e a m s —have come to the a t te n tio n of the i n t r a m u r a l office. Golf singles e n trie s close W e d n es­ day, A nd i n t r a m u r a l office s u g g e sts t h a t you pla y y o u r q u a l if y in g round ( a t N o r t h Side M u nic ipa l Golf Course. Old C o u n t r y Club) early th is week to avoid th e ru sh a n d —- p e r h a p s —bad w e a th e r . Y o u r q u a lif y in g score m u s t be su b m itte d when vou enter. B a d m in to n b egins M onday. T w e n ty - e ig h t m a tch e s will be played tom orrow . M eanw hile, i n t r a m u r a l te n n is .‘-ingles continue, b u t s e v e ra l weeks m ust p ass before fin als m a tche s begin. Wica Gadders Seeded First B y ANNA DYE W o m e n '* In tra m u ra l W r it e r P a sse s, p u nts, and th e b ig-:brill to u c hd ow ns will be in th e a i r M on­ d ay a fte rn o o n a t 5 p.m. w hen the women's i n t r a m u r a l touch football t o u r n a m e n t begins. G am es will be played Monday, T u esd a y , a n d T h u r s d a y a t 5 p.m. th is week. The gam es will consist of fo u r q u a r t e r s of six m in u te s w ith tw o -m in u te tim e ou ts between q u a r te r s , and a five-m inute tim e ­ o u t a t th e half. E a c h o f the 26 te am s e n te re d in the t o u r n a m e n t th is y e a r m u s t lose at le ast tw o g a m e s to be elim inated, th e re fo r e givin g every te a m a chance to p la y tw o gam es. W ith t h e fin ish of th e prelim i­ n a r y g a m e s F r i d a y the te a m s w ere placed in the o r a n g e and w hite brac k ets. Seeded f i r s t in the o ra n g e b r a c k e t is Wica, with P i B e ta Phi I, second; K a p p a K a p p a G am m a I, t h i r d ; and Alpha D elta Pi I, fo u rth . Those f i r s t f o u r seeded te a m s have 25 r e t u r n i n g m em bers. They a r e W ica. Mickey L ittle a n d M a ry M o r ris ; Pi B e ta Pi, S h irley Bakof, Decdo B ering, Gail C am pbell, M a ry S h e a r , Dail C ockran, B a r b a r a Gib­ bon, J . Gross, A nn M cGuire, and S u s a n W a te rs . Also Kappa K appa Gam m a, P eg g y Dowd, B e tty Beasley, M a ry Marcello H a m e r, (Mare Ownby, Jean R ic h a rd s, Jan S curbeck, L a u r a Woods, and M a r t h a T h o m p ­ son; a n d A lp h a D elta Pi, Dolores Derigo, Louise Beds, P a t s y K irk, N a n c y N ichols, B e tty A nn Theobalt. a n d V ir g in ia B e th T ay lo r. Two new o u ts t a n d in g p la y e r s a r e M a r t h a C rosby, P i B e ta P h i, jmd Ellio F o n d re n , K a p p a K a p p a G am ­ ma. It is expected th a t th e tw o g irls will m a k e a good show ing. T u r n i n g back the pages of h is­ to r y to la s t y e a r, th e A lp h a Delta Pi, seeded f o u r th in the o r a n g e b rac k et, won th e f i r s t place. T hey won over the Pi B e ta P h i’s in th e f in a ls , 18-12. Semi fin a l gam es w ere p la y ed between Pi B e ta Phi and Z eta T a u A lpha, and A lpha D elta Pi a n d D elta D elta Delta. O th e r te a m s placed in t h e o ra n g # b r a c k e t a r e Chi Omega. A lpha C h i * O m ega I, Z eta Tau A lp h a I, AloJra ^ G am m a D elta, D ilia D elta D elta, G am m a P h i Beta I, an d D elta Z eta. Seeded in the firs t fo u r places o f th e w h ite b r a c k e t a r e A lp h a Chi O m eg a II, firs t place; W e st­ m in s te r S t u d e n t Fellow ship, sec­ ond p la c e ; Zeta T a u A lp h a II, t h i r d place; and A lpha D elta Ti I I , f o u r th plac'L FREE NIGHT DELIVERY P hone 2-0045 3 0 3 W . 19th. THE TODDLE HOUSE T e J a » va ’NO G O O D " £ ana 5 C lu b 's passes aga'n st referee O on w e ’i Smith o f one of Pern T ' Association Ast W edn e sday, -em C lu b b e r Ed Burrows watches. Smith Is one of ten o f f i c i a l calling in tra m u ra l f o o tb a ll g a m e s this fa! G r e e n W a v e B e a t* Ol e Mi** RED B A L L T A X I N E W O R L E A N S , Oct. 21-—

— A m assive m a u lin g T u la n e line held Mississippi’s g r e a t J o h n D ottley in check S a t u r d a y as the G re en W ave rolled to a 27-20 S o u th e a s te r n C o n f e r e n c e victory. D o ttle y, a h a r d - h itti n g 198-pound fu llb a ck , e n t e r e d the gam e a - the le ad in g g ro u n d g a i n e r a nio n, the n a t i o n ’s m a jo r f o o tb a ll team. RADIO CONTROLLED Classifieds Bring Results' 6-9194 TENNIS SINGLES Players should check th e d ow n sta irs b u l l e t i n h o a r d in G r e g o r y G y m f o r m a t c h schedules. RECORD 4 A L B U M SETS ^ 9 RECORDS 50% g a lo re / i n s t OI On a l a r g e g r o u p o f a l Im m s a n d s i n g l e r e e o r d s C om e in and look them over. You may Ln d the record you want at One-half the regular price P o p u la r . . . C la s s ic a l . . . semi-classical .. . O ld Favorites . .. Folic Son gs Children's Records . . . Hill Billy . . . Specialties . .. pm* 9:00-5:30 J.R.REED J flu u c ^ c m p a titf 805 Congress V A R am * # m a d e to STAY B e aSARAN u tifu l! PLASTIC iii INSTALLED By JIM ELDER Texan II y/iMp hods... i • j J Sport* Staff One writer was so naive as to comment recently t h a t six plugs, a spoon, and a spinner-minnow rig were sufficient for the average tackle box. This doesn’t mean you should discard your da r k floating bait such as the Shakespeare mouse and the new real-artificial minnow trolling device. The real-artificial lure is similar to the live minnow rig­ ging. A ta x id e r m a ! t r e a t m e n t t o * th e m innow w ith a plastic: c ove ring W h en he h a s an idea f o r a p a r ­ gives a re a listic b ate. We c a u g h t tic u la r ty p e gun he buys th e stock two twO-pound blacks on th e S u n ­ model, te a r s it down a n d builds a day a f t e r th e P u r d u e game. stock a n d g r ip s to su it his ta ste . I t should be a n a t u r a l f o r w hites A f t e r g a z in g a t th e w indow dis­ a t n i g h t w ith a Coleman la n te r n . play for h a l f a d ay, it w a s decided In tro lling, th e rig h as an e n tic in g hi* hobby i* not f o r t h e a v e ra g e w iggle to it w hich even a tire d school to v . black bass should notice. W e a r e n ’t selling them , j u s t like them . W e u n d e r s ta n d a U n iv e r s ity s t u ­ I n c id e n ta lly , th e re a re some who dent b ag g e d an an telo p e the p ast say a n d w rite t h a t th e w ord tr o l l ­ season. M ust have been a n e n g i ­ ing is a m is n o m er for tr a i lin g . neer. W ho else could find the tim e T rollin g, it seems, is used by some w ith o u t th e use of a slick slide to in d ic ate t h e reelin g-in of th e rule? b ait a f t e r a cast. As would seen logical, t r a i l i n g m e an s pu llin g th e K e r r C ounty W ildlife A ssocia­ line a n d bait behind a boat, I t will tion a n d t h e K errville C h a m b e r of be in te r e s ti n g to know w h a t you C om m erce announced a tu r k e y trollers, or tr a i le r s , have to say shoot to be in K errville on N o v em ­ abo u t this. ber 12. It is p resu m e d to be open Mr. K en n e th W. J u r g e n s , aqua- to aJ1 who have th e e n t r a n c e fee biologist fo r the S t a t e I-Ash and ancj a d e s ire fo r th e bird . R e p o rts « r f t ” ’. : . *>> art® * » '* Verne * * out of *ar J Forces roo! air in Chrotn* CBP pair Tel. 6 - 3 7 3 3 6 00 W . 5th St. BH H tm WINDOW GARNISH MOLDING 4A ■ "# WINDOW GARNISH MOLD TWH MEALS for llm PRICE UP DIVE T h e Austin Dry Between 7:30 and 9:30 in the evening Monday through Friday Special prices inside service only Bring a date a n d you can both eat for the s a m e price C lea n in g C o m p a n y *4 j u s t p l u g it in to r i g a r e t t e lighter. P u t * out 4 0 , 0 0 0 c a ndlepower beam. 19th and San An tonio C U R B S E R V I C E 4 to 12 f Chrome^ 15 A p a i r a n d up BACKUP and S T O P L IG H T C h ro m e finish back up and s t op l i gh t , i n s t a l l e d in 15 m i n u t e s in all car*. T A IL P IP E e x t e n s io n s each Vip!* N°,,d chrr r —Product** D eep M e T o n . - « •« • » M odel*. W hen a Social B lu n d e r Can Lead lo a Beautiful F riendship Em barrasing situation? N o t if you tell that lady in distreis about the Austin Laun d ry’s thorough and rapid dry cleaning service. In fact a beautiful friendship may result. K e ep our phone number handy for our quick-free pick-up and delivery service. SAVE 15% CASH TUFTED-PLASTIC STEERING W HEEL COVER 21 C Cr C A R R Y AUST!ll LAunDRY Lavaca at 16th IN G ' C O M P A N Y Phone 6-3566 SIDE M IRRO RS 4 IN C H D IA M E T E R DOCHEN BROS * Substation - 21st Cr Wichita m.1 : 1 » ■ » ! : LICENSE PLATE BRACKETS 49c ea. NO N -G LARE as you can eat alone. TALLY-HU WAFFLE SHOP COVERS. 'W M odels available for most cars. Beauty and protec­ tion are com bined In this useful accessory. “Just snap ’em on." Laundry Fur any hut |iuu|ile Any Order... - PODD or DRINKS TWO SERVINGS For the PRICE 11F ONE $595 al! cars. AUSTIN W E L D I N G Sc RADIATOR WORKS Mr. S. 0 . Y a r b r o u g h loaned the A ustin S p o r ti n g Goods sto re eight of his custo m b u ilt models of s t a n d ­ a rd ty p e g u n s for c o u r te s y display. Mr. Y a r b r o u g h , A ustin c o n tra c to r , feels t h a t his g u n s are m ore of an in v e s tm e n t th a n hobby. ^only Sj{}95 FREE 5TH AND SAN JACINTO FACTORY OUTLET STORE ★ PHONE 2-6813 FREE SHADED CUSTOMER PARKING ★ Sunday, October 22, 1950 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 French Indochina Frontier Atom Scientist Two RO K Divisions Head oughtmMy m Manchu rjan Border Lost W ith Fall of Langson S Britisher Believed w ard to the northern fringes of was tightened by Sukchon and Sunchon were area, trying to find a train report- and Sukchon, S A IG O N , Indochina. Oct. 21— I of a gradual retreat from border To Be in Moscow s e o u l , k o r e a , Sunday, Oct. the rich Red R iv e r delta. edly loaded with U.S. prisoners of two moves. positions, ended French chances of taken F rid a y by 4,100 U .S. para(/p) French abandonment of the R O M E , Get. 21. - m - The 22 . - ( A P ) - J - - South Korean French troops began Wednesday tropers. The parachute unit was war. One was a linkup with the paraheadquarters fortress city of Lang- j a decisive m ilitary victory anytime whereabouts of an Italian-born division* Jumped off today toward Its objective was K u jang , 40 brought to regimental combat son was announced Saturday, sig­ soon in the struggle for domination the w ithdraw al from Langson. troops by the British Common­ British atom scientist, reported by the M anchurian border from U S. team strength by 800 more men miles north of Sunchon and 63 wealth 27th Brigade, reported by naling the fa ll of the Indochina- of this gateway country to South­ Yielded to the Vietminh is a near Rome newspapers to have le ft | paratroop-established bases remiles from the border of M an­ China fro ntier zone to firm control east Asia. impregnable mountainous base area Ita ly for Moscow seven weeks ago, inforced by a second air drop yes- — mostly service units— who land­ air observers to have been F iv e French posts had been churia. of the Communist-led V ie tm in h ; ed yesterday. w ith good trans-frontier connec-j developed into an international ter day. Behind these United Nations achieved at Sukchon, about 30 yielded previously. The second a ir drop was de­ nationalists of Ho Chi Minh. ti oh.-a to supply sources and tra in ­ The South Korean Sixth and m ystery Saturday night. Abandonment of the remaining scribed a t General M acA rthur's forces in the Sukchon-Sunchon miles north of Pyongyang. A French communique disclosing ing centers in Red China. The scientist is Bruno Ponte Eighth Divisions punched on from French positions, at Laokay in the routine area some 28,000 Reds were be­ The other was a southwestward this development, asserted the This means the Soviet-backed Ho corvo, who arrived in Finland , the Sukchon-Sunehon area about Tokyo headquarters as a west and Moncay in the oast, is lieved trapped. Fren ch w ill assume the o ffen sive 1 30 miles north of the captured I supply operation. thrust out of Pyongyang by the Chi Minh regime now has the September 2. T h a t is the last i The trap for the 28,000 Reds, after regrouping as mobile units regarded here as only a m atter of space and means of preparing a Communist capital of Pyongyang, A jo in t Americatw-outh Korean U .S. F irs t Cavalry Division for official word of him. He was with first set by 4,100 paratroopers in and “ no furth er w ithdraw al of our ’ time. The French defense line in fu ll scale offensive against the said a report to U .S . Eighth A rm y task force a so was knifing northhis w ife, Helena M arianne, and North Indochina is being shifted an air drop Frid ay a t Sunchon 27 miles to the seaport of Chintroops is foreseen.” H eadquarters. ward from the Sukchon-Sunchon principal Fren ch strongholds f a r ­ his three children. I nampo. The evacuation cst Langson, p a r t 1 an average of about 75 miles south- ther south. The purely guerrilla A ll Rom e’s newspapers except The U .S. 24th Division prephase of the four-year old w ar in those of the Communist line car­ ried under their blackest headlines viously had driven up a road near Indochina has ended. The turning point was marked a report that Pontecorvo shipped | the west coast to one edge of the this month by a series of stunning to Poland en route to Moscow. bay aero-- from that port city. reverses for the French frontier Some said he got out just ahead s The task force racing toward garrisons. In two weeks, the French of Italian police and B ritish in­ m Steaks • Salads K ujang was seeking a trainload of telligence agents. lost more than 3 ,0 0 0 firs t line # Sea Food prisoners reported to be hidden The British 'Fo reig n Office and troops. , . o in a tunnel. The U .S. Eighth During their first successful en­ Scotland Y a rd indicated they had no interest. His father, Massimo, S U C C E S S Oct 2 1 — Chi nese Red regime listed as one Saturday to meet some time bef or Arm y also received a report that O p e n l l a.rn.-9 p.m .— Closed M o n d a y gagement. w ith major French N A ^ m b ly 's ’ Po litica l; of the big powers, but after two; Tuesday to attempt to solve the 60 U .N . war prisoners had been forces, the Vietm inh disclosed a in M ilan, said he had not reason to believe the physicist would not * ®. ‘ * ‘ „ irnougly endorsed rebuffs voted along with the com impasse over the s e c r e t ? , -gen- found murdered at Sunchon. striking power that for this early a S y ria-Iraq resolution j mittee in the rare U .N . show off eral s expiring term. The once powerful North K o r­ date was unforeseen. T hat was the return to B rita in a t the end of a galurd power peace talks, unanim ity. j Such a meeting would be t C M n *vea ic u u tru to w* disorean Red arm y, reduced 2425 Exposition most significant aspect of the 5 iet- vacation he began in Jul> • Tin- ; cajjjn„ f or nish police said that, although ‘ ‘ , 59# in la n d ’s W h ile United States Delegate firs t session of the B ig r iv e ut the ganjzed remnants, was making no i minh victories. they did not know the whereabouts absent. Jo h n Foster Dulles approved the spirit of the Syria-Iraq resolution. stand anywhere. of the srier f a t , he am lihi,.fa m ily 1 ^ y _ v is h in lk y i proposal, he has warned the world The Security Councili g o t■ *> » £ « . ^ irmy> 0Bt# , ru th le * , Sohad not passed tin >ugh a > ... attempted to have the not to get its hopes up. lit* has again Saturday in it- attempt to equiped" iBTBsioB force o f rush border control post____________stubbornly attem p t^ .----•------- , ntedly emphasized th a t R u ssia 1 agree on a secretary-general. Ac* 0()ft nQW ig Pstimated by G enmuat be judged by her deed* not taal selection of a ^ ^ t o r y - ^ n - . • M a cA rth u r\ headquarters a t words. « a l is up to t h e fi8)00o m en-nnsuppiied and unThe Syria-Iraq proposal recom- on re^num i , • , able to get set anyw here fo r a mends that the fiv e permanent Se- ty Counci . stand against overwhelming United cu rity Council members— China, In the Political Committee, Nations forces. United States, Russia, B rita in and shinsky repeatedly urged the com* F ra n c e — consult together on their mittee against an ‘ostrich policy 22 Flavors of Ice Cream differences. It sets no date for the! of refusing to identify the Comta|kg i munist Peoples Republic as the Combination Sundaes Czechoslovakia, Oct. b iers of seven satellite nations at PRAGUE C o n e s - P in ts The B ig Five, however, agreed representative c f China. 21 — (AP)— A group of Communist! the Czernin palace in Prague, “ Let’s not be like ants, like birds, 4123 Guadalupe afte r a Security Council meeting nations headed by Soviet R u s s ia ; It called for: or like ostriches, who seeing ap-; I —-A proclamation by the Soviet called on the B ig Three W estern the JERSEY preaching danger, hide their heads powers Satu rd ay night to join Rus­ Union, B rita in , France and the under their wings,” he declared. sia in a four-point plan for estab­ United States “ that they w ill not lishment of “ a democratic, peace- allow rem ilitarization of Germ any loving, all-German sovereign gov­ and her being dragged into any W e will serve two family style meals aggressive plans. ernment,” 2 “ Removal of all hindrances in Sunday, O ct. 22, 1950 A communique .e set MX forth IBF rn the xnv ideas peaceful German adopted at a two-day conference a I persona, ca rp eted floors, new e e ctrn re frig e ra to r. B ills paid. $65.00. L o w e r : one bedroom w ith *roaH_ e ffic ie n c y : k itch e n , p riv a te e n tra n c e. $55.00. O w n e r 16-S729. U M V C llr f IT V M E N ! M eal# fa m ily s ty le . H o m e m ade ro lla an d pies a sp e c ia lty . M K S. H O W A R D P A IN E 2402 S e to n 2 b lo ck s w e st o f cam pus. P h o n s 8-9171 1 2 0 i 8~ b, K E D R I V E R : B e a u t ifu l la rg e low er a p a rtm e n t fo r three or fo u r persons. A zrock floors, K a m es ch air-, m odern fu rn itu re , H o llyw o o d beds, tu p and show er. E v e r y t h in g new and in e e lle n t con dition . $110.00 fo r •<_ o r I $ 120.00 fo r 4 See m an a g e r in 201 A Red R i v e r o r telephone 6-3720 o r 7- Coaching M A TH Y*. M. S p a n ish . U n iv e r s it y R a n d le . 3109 For Sale Ex p e rie n c ed 2-8652. G ra n d v ie w . _ ss.-1158. R E M I N G T O N " 1 6 ” t y p e w r it e r in e x c e l­ le n t co n d itio n , $5u.OO. L a t e m odel R o y a l w ith m ag ic m arg in s, $105.00. S e e w c c k d a ys at 612 AA. 6th. Dancing F I R E ST O N E R E F R IG E R A T O R . 9 m o nth s old. 8 ft. w ith d ouble siz e I,EA R N TO D A N C E fre e z in g co m p a rtm e n t. $3 2 6 . 0 0 box w ill U n iv e r s it y B a llro o m classes. M o n day and jaoli fo r $-185.00. Bee a t I9->7 L e d R iv e r T h u rs d a y 8— 9p.m. I hour clas s lea- I a ft e r 5 o 'clo ck. to n s . 60c U n iv e r s it y ’49 I N D I A N S C O U T , e x ce lle n t co n d itio n A N N E T T E D U V A L D A N C E S T U D IO th ro u g h o u t, w ith n e c e ssa ry e x tra s. 10th an d Cong ress C a ll 6-2164 a ft e r 3 p.m . P h o n e 8-3951 or 2-90S6 1948 T R A V E L I T E tr a ile r . 24 ft. a lu m i­ num. P ric e d fo r q u ick sale. S ee A. I . S m ith e v , tra ile r No. 26, U n iv e r s it y T r a ile r P a rk 3400 L a k e A u s tin B h d . Furnished House W U I, R E N T m v fu rn ish e d home to fo u r o r live m en stu d e n ts. W i l l m ak e tw o a p a rtm e n ts Q u ie t neighborhoodCor ne c e ssary . Ph o ne 2- 1 381. __ FO R SALE t y p e w rite r, M a rch , 1950. 6 p.m. . Furnished Room •M22 S A N A N T O N I O : T w o Spaces^ in a t t r a c t iv e bedroom s fo r boys. e a r­ th e d flo o rs , in n e rs p rin g m a ttre sse s. sh ow ers, m aid s e rv ic e . A ll u tilitie s paid. $25.00. O w n e r 6-3720. _________ I ii W H 0 1 saddles, BO O TS. bridles m ade to o rd er. C a p ito l S a d d le r y . P o rta b le S m ith C o ro na s te rlin g model. P u rc h a s e d $75.00. C all 6-9035 a f t e r ! S T U D E N T O P I R A T E D business for sale . W e ll estab lish ed . Inclu des new t ru c k and a ll e qu ipm ent n e c e s s a ry . W ill c o n ­ sid e r te rm s to resp on sible p a rty ami aul in operatio n u n til w e ll s ta rte d . P h o n e 2-0609. Leacher Goods hats, belts, holsters, All le ath e r goods E v e r y t h in g W e s te r n . I G U I * V C *. For Rent 7 P-ro* ___ Q U IE T ROOM f o r tw o men. P r iv a t e " hath. $20.00 each. S p a c e fo r one w ith a n o th e r s tu d e n t a t $12.50. 1907 W h it t s . W I L L C A R E fo r 1216 W 22nd P h o n e 8-8196. ch ild re n in m y hom e S t. by h o u r or d a y. force, organized for Korean duty. ] being hit ★ hardest by the new, tougher curbs Ge n e r a l Luci us D. C lay, who or­ 1 on instalment buying, according ; Room and Board ganized tho B erlin a irlift to, to early reports in Washington. break the Soviet blockade, is fly- j L A R G E s o u th e a st bedroom fo r 2 boys, Motor company representatives, ax a : .able N ov 1st. O ne-haif block ing back Sun day to help dedicate said there was talk in the industry a “ world freedom b ell” in the block from cam pus, Ph o n e 2-80u0. I that sales may w ell be cut 25 per German city, the State D ep art­ cent or more from the recent ment announced Saturday. Typing record pace of more than 8 m il­ lion new cars a year. A C C E P T E D M O R N IN G S . T h e se s, papers, I There were expectations, too, d i -- e rta lion s, 900 W . 31st, 2-9444. that the new terms fo r cars w ill T H E S E S , re p o rts, d ic ta tio n . E le c t r o n :atle cause a shift in buying from the ty p e w r it e r . M rs . P e tm e c k y 58-2212. middle-price to the low-price G O O D A C C U R A T E ty p in g done in m y makes. hom e. C a ll 53-3546. ★ E L E C T R IC T Y P E W R I T E R . Ex p e rt ty p ­ Henry L. Stimson, 83-year-old ing . T heses, rep o rts. Ph o n e 2-6546. statesman who served as a cabinet r y P l N G : theses, them es, notebooks, o u t ­ [officer under four presidents, w ill lin es, etc. Ph o n e 5-8859. i be buried Monday in the fam ily a ft e r 6 T Y P IN G . A il kinds. 8-1191 plot at M em orial Cem etery at Cold w e e kd ays. M rs . W itt. •Spring Harbor, N .Y. W I L L DO T Y P I N G at m y home. P a lo I ' j r o Road. Ph o n e 6-1248. TY1 I N G : 2108 phone 7-3205. .Sw isher S t r e e t . M is s W e lc h . T e le ­ ★ t r o o p * for service I w ith United Nations forces in the F a r E a s t hav»* left the Seattle port of embarkation. The troops are from a Canadian A rm y special THAT PLEA SE L a te m odels of a ll m akes. No SM V K A L S 2 i s \\>*t fit h HOUSTON BETWEEN U N IV E R S IT Y nice 3 room a p a rtm e n t. and e n tra n c e . A d u lt* . and C ap ito l. P r i v a t e bath 1905 Speedw ay. EXPRESS Unfurnished Apartment T A P R I T O W N duplex ap a rtm e n t. N e a r ly new , tw o bedroom *. T ile k itch e n and i b ath. F lo o r furnace and attic fan. N ear b uslines. A v a ila b le N ov. l* t. Ph o n e 7-5738. W anted N s W A N T T O B U Y th re e non-student t ic k ­ ets for S M U gam e. C a ll 7-2069. Vv W A N T E D 2 o r 3 ch ild re n to keep d u rin g th e day. C a ll 53-1970. I L L T R A D E all * fa ir a m o u n t •tudent ticket* See Tom a t 1706 rnv yo-yo s tr in g * — plus o f m oney fo r tw o nonto the I T - S M l game. N ieee* or phone 7-9127. Lv. Austin 9 :3 0 $ :3 0 a . rn. p. in. DINING ROOM U S E 19th S t r e e t Aero* * f r om I n t r a m u r a l F i el d All hours of the day, you will always find something good to e a t at B O O T S $2*50 TIRES PER MONTH & All Late Models P e r m a n e n t A n ti- F re e z e C a r H e a te rs a n d S e a t C o v e rs — B r a k e a n d W h e e l S e r v ic e B a t t e r y S e r v ic e R e c a p p in g Royal Remington Underwood THE STECK CO. Dial 7-441 I S P IR E S T IR E C O . Ph. 5 3 - 1 2 2 1 Your Typewriter Headquarters 3 5 1 0 Guada l upe DEADLINE Nov. I BLUEBONNET BELLES Of course it will rate Glamour Poses by SERVICE 4 A r. Houlton 1 :3 0 8 :3 0 p. rnp . rn. AIR C O N D I T I O N E D B U S E S 7 O t h e r Co nv e ni e n t S c he dul e* KERRVILLE BUS CO. FRIENDLY SERVICE I 18 E a s t 1 0 t h St. Ph. 2-1 135 N SA D D L E. RENT TYPEWRITERS nothing less than TO P h o n e 8-3000 Furnished Apartments 1915 N U E C E S , fo r boy*. A p a rtm e n t N o. • rg e fro n t e fficie n c y a p a rtm e n t W ith SHK.:! k itch e n w ith S a rv e l and apert.- .I ra age. A zrock tile floor*. ve » e t.»r.a . H o lly w o o d bed. »45.0U fo r I , LiO.OO .o r 2 A lso one re a r a p a rtm e n t No. .. l i v ­ in g room, bedroom, k itch e n . B o t h a p a rt­ m e n t* s h a re b ath. $45.00. S ee auperv i* o r in a p a rtm e n t N o. I or telep ho ne 6-3720. ___ __________________ 4 HOURS de­ liv e r y o r p ic k up ch arg e s. Professional H A I R C U T S 7Se Good w o rkm en . S t a c y * B a rb e r Shop. 3 B a rb e r* 2502 G uad alup e fir.t BOOTS 'N SADDLE SEIBERLING dr Robert Carr, San Angelo oil man, has given T C U f 125,OOO to ; build a worship chapel, President I M. E . Sadler announced Saturday. C a n a d a ’* Typewriter Rentals T Y P E W R IT E R S Ro te d on th e A s s o c ia te d P r e s a A u t o m o b il e s a le s att: 1206 T Y P I N G : N e a t w o rk, W ill c a ll fo r and d e live r. P h o n e 2-4353 or 2-9606, REN TAL L O S T : B ro w n E v e r s h a r p fo u n ta in pen. T u e sd a y n ig h t n e a r Jo u r n a liim B io g . P le a s e ca ll H a r v ie a t 7-4887 o r 2-2475. Auto Soles Said Hardest Hit By New Credit Buying Curbs DOW NTOWN K IN D E R G A R T E N , 400 E a s t 2nd. Ph o ne 2-8663. D ay care, k in d e rg arte n , new equ ipm ent, c e rtifica te d te ach er, experienced su p e rv is io n , re a so n ­ able w eekly, m o n th ly rates. Lost and Found __ _ 6-3344. Results D IN N ER 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. I T H E S A F E T Y P E N . In d iv id u a l care fo r .o u i ch ild re n . M o n th ly , h o u rly ra le s KJf»\A/ or at the editorial office J.B I, or at the N ew s Laboratory, J.B , 102 Inquire ss king, concerning d eliver* and ad vertisin g shoe i be m a le in J.B. JUS (2-24731 I ain not of the opinion Stu d en ts are invited t< visit th. editor and associate editor during th a t m inority elem en ts should th* mer lin g hours Opinions of the le>fc r are not n e-es sari! y th ose of the A d m in istra­ be forced to accept th e ideolo­ tion or other U niversity officials gies of the m ajority. My mind Entered aa second-cla ss m atter O ctober 18, 1943 at th e P ost Office at A ustin, Texas, under the Act of March 3 1819. is my own. A man should be judged by w hat he does, not ASSOCIATED PRESS WIRE SERVICE The A ssociated P ress is exclu sively en titled to the use tor republica­ by w hat he thinks. The m a ­ tion of all new# dispatches credited to it or not oth erw ise credited in jo rity has the right to legis­ this newspaper, and lo-a I item s of sp on tan eou s origin published herein. R ights of publication of all other m atter herein also reserved late physical m a tte rs for the whole. It does not have the Represented for Nations! A dvertising by National A dvertising S ervice, m e.. C ollege Publishers R epresentative right to suppress civil liber­ 420 Madison Ave. New \o r k . N. Y. ties. Chicago —- Boston — Los A ngeles — San Francisco Democracy m eans I can MFMBER write my ideas down in an G so c in tM Coli**,ate Pre** All-Am erican P acem aker English theme w ithout f e a r ­ ing expulsion. D emocracy is n o t outlaw ing comm unists from a tte n d in g sta te -su p p o rt­ SUBSCRIPTION RATES ed schools. Democracy is h e a r ­ i the intelligence m anifested in n a tu r e .” This sta te m e n t from Einstein is taken from this same 1934 book, “ Living Philosophies,” on page 6. Preceding the quote which Milli­ kan used, Einstein also says: “ I c annot imagine a God who r e ­ wards and punishes the objects of his creation, w*hose purposes are modeled a f t e r our own— a God, in short, who is but a reflection of human fra ilty . Neither can I be ­ lieve th a t the individual survives the death of hi body, although surh thou ch ts HITLER” To the Ed itor: In re g a rd to your article . . . “ Success or Failure, I t ’s W orth a T ry” . . . The dem ocratization of G er­ m any w on’t come about by hav­ It But he did say: “ I myself need no b e tte r defini­ tion of God than (E in ste in ’s ) . ” So the famous physicist and philosopher left the U niversity leaving unansw ered questions about w hat he m e a n t when he con­ demned the “ crude superstitions” of m any modern theologies. We also felt th a t Dr. Millikan had not come to grips with a fun dam en tal science-religion is­ sue: does science’s ever-expanding encroachm ent on w h at has been regarded as religious dogma tend to demand a baGo change in h u ­ man values? But i f s a rough question to answer. _ S ,'< / ' S t . D a v i d ’* J o a n n a Lee Cruse, K atherine Sue Desmike, Milton B radford F u l­ ler, .Teanie Hornsby, Martha Ruth Keller, K enneth Gale McCann J r ., and Bill Marvin White. Seton Shirley Ann Cooper, E dw ard S e a re r Gilbert, Dwight N. Kohlhurst, and Sylvester Lee Mat­ thews. B r a c k e n r id g e cials, who were responsible direct­ ly and indirectly for the death of thousands, does not show* any ers while a tte m p t to democratize a country whose population was re ­ sponsible fo r the deaths of mil­ lions during the last war, In conclusion* let me say t h a t no such complicated procedure in g etting letters to the E astern zone of Germany is required, as de­ scribed by one of yyy. 5 im AA. i 24 I IS pronoun Foam rn i 38. Metallic rock 40. Buddha (Chin. name) 1b I i |6 rn A// rn ii IO OLU 19 i rn ZI IO SS// A p26 25 24 2S 'r n lo I ll 37. C rowd I 15 2> Point Anger Personal L on g-eared 4 Today’s Answer Is In the Classified Ads M 40 ,. Shape Al . Leg joint 42 . Comply DOWN I , W eigh / Stan Sawyer S tuder and Richard Rodriauez Teniente. ing fo rm e r members of the L u ft­ w affe in the universities of the United Slates, but ra th e r by an enlightened *trict policy of occu­ pation, which has not y e t been carried out, which may make some inroads on the German mind. The last w ar was more than a m istunderstanding between friends, as some people seem to think; ra th e r , it was a fig ht fo r the survival of human dignity, freedom, and racial tolerance, all of which w'ere vehemently opposed and suppressed by the Germans. The G erm ans are a t the m o m ent atte m p tin g to play the E ast off against the W est, being n e ith e r lovers of democracy or com m u­ nism. The only love of the m ajori­ ty is th a t of “ Deutschland uber alles.” The f a c t th a t democracy under present occupation policy is not making any progress can well be illustrated by two o utstand in g fa c ts: first, in F e b ru a ry of last year, Jewish families in some towns of the W estern zones re­ ceived postcards with the follow­ ing message on them : “ YOU ARE H E R E B Y OR­ DERED TO A PPEA R AT TH E CREMATORIUM (nam e) — FOR EXTERM INATION ON __ ... (date) — . “ HE IL H IT L E R !” No a tte m p t on the p a rt of the occupation forces was made to ap­ prehend and punish the parties r e ­ sponsible . . . Second, the freeing of Use Koch and other high-ranking Nazi o ffi­ ACROSS I. M utilate 5. F ish \ I Si ll I Va 41 A . 42 lh if 54 ll 40 /// rn iS PP Sunday, October 22, 1950 S' Ten Most Beautiful Judging Begins in Union Tuesday 'N {PH o n { A c to n / W IT H T E L E V I S I O N A N D RADIO STARS! . - . T R U M A U K E HipsyBoo'Goes' B r u t u s ' C o s t u m e s ° i " aY H i s t o r i c a l l y A c c u r a t e Mica Contest For Beauties Attracts 74 Ea s y to Pl ay! Loads of Fun! Coast to coast on the air waves, en* t e rt a i n e rs have t u r n e d to the ukul e l e — po pul a r no w from Holly­ w o o d to B r o a d Gct in o n the fun! Play the m e l o d y , or strum the ac­ companiment. Jungle V oo d oo Film In Recital Hall S h e Harmony * J knit It 111*: .'rated Other* t* $20,00 Get yours today! Be playing to ­ m orrow ! Select here frow* a w ide variety of m odels atthese extremely low price* JA. R E E D , ) Alane C otnpantp ' ^ Pa$g 7 to complete the judging in the appear, she may contact Joan three hours originally designated. J Grossman between 2 and 4 Mon ­ ^ f Od I Miga Lucy Barton, associate The costume is being copied t tffeta which bas a puff arounc Each hour from 2 to 4 p.m. and day afternoon in the Journalism “ Hipsy Boo,” hailed by many professor of dram a, has helped I from a garm ent brought f r o m b t ae waist and a low-cut back. It* 7 to 9 p.m. about IOO girls will Building basement to make arI rangem ents to come a t some other students as the best musical to j produce the ultim ate in costumes Switzerland and loaned to the > b lack-sequined shoulder straps be judged. _______ ____ ;-r*r. the for “ j)ear B rutus,” __ m opening ^^ ^ v - i ^ 4for m H An a rn on \f D r a m aa hby v Cr a v O OUI Departm entf rof Dram Gay o ftfpr net th theo sh shoulders are merely for appear on^ the campus c* since Girls with num bers from I to j hour. Zedler. |* Mect war, will go on tour Sunday— and a f o u r_day run in Hogg AuditoriMiss Grossman will also have a IOO should be a t the International In copying this outfit, all e m -1 A bluish-pink smocked dress is Room of the Texas Union a t 2 list of all the girls and their num­ it has been slated for television ; um Tuesday night. She has drawn ! her ideas fo r authentic represen- broiden,- is being done by hand, i m rom by Kathryn G ranstaff, who o’clock. Judging w i l l begin bers in case anyone has forgotten production. The cast will leave Sunday a t tation from old issues of The Sat- To complete the costume, Lam p lays the p a rt of M argaret, the promptly and if any girl is not I her number or has any other 11 a rn. fo r Temple where they j urday Evening Post and Punch, drum will wear long socks and a d ream child. present a t the time her number question to ask. is due, she will automatically be cap adorned with a feather. From the m an’* point of view, Judges will be William D. will perform at the McCloskey an English magazine. Blunk, assistant dean of men; Dr. General Hospital. The Ladies Auxeliminated. newc0mer to historic cos gold-sequined oriental-style probably provide f iT O I l v T» V WA A *A it fjf} V I \-4 O v L j W l t i v V * * k l th ie clothes will Girls with num bers 101 to 200 I James Robert Roach, assistant pro­ iliary of the VFW is sponsoring tume designing, Miss Barton has drape dress with a harem skirt is • m any a chuckle. Mr. P u r d i • . designed costumes for such Uni- one of the more spectacular cos- pl ayed by Stanley W. Pitts, sports will be judged from 3 to 4 o’clock fessor of government; Frank the trek. S tation HEYL in San Antonio versify productions as 1 Green tunics in B. Iden Payne's produc- j a pair of “plus fours” and Pat and girls with num bers 201 to 300 Loren Winship, associate profes­ will be judged from 4 to 5 o’clock. sor of drama, Mrs. M artha Palmer, will present “ Hipsy-Boo” in 30- Grow the Lilacs,” “ The Merchant tion, Myrna R uff wears the cos- H hies, taking the role of Matey, A break will be taken to allow advertising m anager of Scar minute television program s be­ of Venice,” “ Moor Born,” and tume in the role of Lady Caroline is seen in a motoring outfit, compl Ste with a linen duster, plaid “ Romeo and Ju liet.” Laney. the judges time to rest and have b ro u g h t, and Sam Thielepape, the ginning October 29. Most of the show, directed by supper before judging is resumed “ most average m ale” student at The setting of “ Dear B rutus” ; B arbara Berman, as Joanna, ha i, and motor goggles. Tommy Jones, will remain intact is the transition period after ; carries out the theme by appearTickets are on sale at the Mu­ in Texas Union 315 a t 7 p.m. Girls the University. The 50 Texas beauties selected for Sunday’s perform ance in Tem­ World W ar I, when the advent of ing in a sleeveless dress of fuchsia sic Building Box Office. num bered from 301 to 400 will appear between 7 and 8 o’clock Tuesday as semi-finalists will ap­ ple, Charlie Baker, Curtain Club short, short dresses had not yet and those numbered from 401 to pear before the judges again at a president, said. He added, how­ arrived, b u t clothing trends prior j 520 will appear from 8 to 9 later date. A t th at time 25 will ever, th a t the satirical “Guadalupe to and afte r the period are seen be selected as finalists and their Boulevard” scene, which takes off o’clock. in th e costumes. If any girl who has registered pictures will be sent to Hollywood on the movie “ Sunset Boulevard,” Seventy-four hopeful freshman The costume crew has been where a movie star will pick the will not be done. as a contestant will not be able beauties havoi been entered in the to come a t the hour she is due to “ Ten Most B eautiful.” Baker said the trip will neces­ busy for many weeks making co s-, Mica freshmen beauty contest. The { sitate leaving the original scen­ tom es from Miss B arton’s sketch­ ery, b u t the actors will perform in es. They have adapted 1918 p at­ final date for subm itting applies-j tern s working from several a u - : regular costume. tlona is Tuesday. thentic garm ents which they will The Daily Texan in an editorial Prelim inary j u d g i n g begins • last week suggested that “ Hipsy copy. Thursday, and the final judging One of these “ originals” is a Boo” be held over so those who will be on November 6 . W inner of missed it would g et a chance to white lace dress over a w aterm en j the co n tec t will be presented in on-pink skirt of the firs t World see the show. the Mica Forty Acres Follies. War era. It will be worn by Jane The Djuka tribes of D u tch , Koch’s films is a new kind of F o l e y ’* Man to S pea k Rehearsals for the F orty Acres Holcomb in the role of Mrs. Bur­ ! Follies begin F riday night and will Guiana with their symbolic p a - ! travel-adventure. It combines pho­ • A lecture on “ M erchandising’ die during Act II. continue every Monday thro u g h ; gan art, strange voodoo rituals, j tography with a lecture presenta­ will be given by Carl Fur ss, p e r -j In a forest scene, Marvin Lan- j Friday night in the Newman Club] and palm-thatched huts and vil­ tion. Admission is free. drum Jr., who plays the part of . Koch penetrated 600 miles of sonnet m anager of Foley Bro- Mr. Coade, will wear a Tyrolean from 7 to IO o’clock. Tickets for lages in South American jungles; thers of Houston, Wednesday, Oc- I the show go on sale October 28 and will be shown in a screen-tou r: coastal swamps to reach the hid­ tober 25, in Geology Building 108 o u tfit, which consists of a pair of den interior of the upper Surinam Wednesday night a t 8:15 o’clock j the price will be 74 cents. short pants with suspenders And you ton be a good dancer overnight River where he made friends with from 4 to 5 p. rn., said Joe D. trim m ed in braid. Candidates in the beauty con­ in Recital Hall. F arrar. King Dendu and gained special faj “ Flame in the Ju n g le” is the j Enroll NOW at Arthur Murray's; test must have less th an 30 hours vors from him to take his unusual college credit and be in good scho­ name of the film to be presented lastic standing. The m ost beautiful by P eter Koch, explorer, n a tu ra l-j pictures. • Are you having as m uch fun as This i n t r e p i d photographer freshman last year wa* Richardine ist, and photographer. you should? Don t let good times worked fifteen years as chief of This color film shows Queen 14Beanie” Windsor Newby of Ama­ pass you by. Come in to Arthur Wilhelmina’s birthday celebration, a m etropolitan news-photograrillo. M urray’s now and learn all the latest pher staff. He is a form er mem­ Any club,, fra te rn ity , or indivi­ exotic m arket places, the Dutch ber of the University of Cincin­ steps. Then you’ll agree that Governor with his jungle fighters dual may sponsor a cocntestant and good dancers have the m ost fun. ^ nati faculty and a regular contrib­ and bush police, the Kromanti j entry blanks may be obtained at Bv TOM TONEY I nearly 30 team ed to make a show j Learning to dance the Arthur utor of adventure, photo arts, and dance fo r the dead never before the Mica office in the T txas Union. . replete w ith comedy, innuendo, j nature articles to national maga­ Murray Way is so easy, too, thanks. * v jjir photographed, and the equatorial Except fo r occasionally throw- I P # interest> Lenell G re e n 1 The ten judges will be selected zines. At present he is Director of to his tested methods. So come in a Robinson, “a singer who from the dean’s officers, campus or­ jungle with its primitive peoples. Visual Education fo r Cincinnati ing peanut shells at the villain and ^ or phone now before the winter appropriately ch eerily »PP“ « " '• ha„ Been b , tte r days,’' d e l i g h t e d ganizations, and the office of the The central theme of the picture Museum of N atural History. season gets under way. is “ Are they happy in the jungle?” ces of the hero, an in audience with her barrel-house student president. audience of about 250 settled back old-time favorite and enjoyed the show I riday rt nuiuon night a t Saengerrunde Hall. ! son* s, . T • fnv tbf. The intermissions were noticeIt was opening night for the lacking the specialty acts C ontrary to 13 revions announce­ ments, only th & prelim inary ju d g ­ ing of the “ T^ui Must B eautiful Girls” of the U niversity will be held Tuesday. The selection of th e “ Ten Most B eautiful” is an annual contest conducted by T heta Sigma Phi, national honorary journalism fra. ternity for women. The beauty winners will be presented in “ Time Staggers On,” m usical comedy sponsored by the fratern ity . Approxim ately "200 more girls ; than had tween exp ected registered 'la s t week, m aking it impossible s~ chwwnont/ D A IL Y TEXAN TME 805 CONG RESS C L A S S IF IC ! AOS HRlvr; R E SU L T S A LW A YS H A Y E FUN 'G o ld in Hills Delights O pening Night Audience twtatf * Ca n MONDAY OCTOBER 23 J Y Is The Deadline for M aking Your Iii! Class Picture Appointm ent HI ffi For The rn 1951 CACTUS U o o * t..r - iC T k S £ » value.” The plot of “ Gold in the B ills,” directed with evident skill by Mel Pape, carries on the tradition of “ The D runkard” and “D irty Work at the Crossroads,” produced by the Civic Theater last season. The story naturally involves a villain who inveigles the helpless farm er’s m ortgage and threatens to take the property fo r the oil which lies under it. But Jack Dal­ ton, “ a heroic son of the soil,” with the help of Hawkshaw the Detective foils the vehement vil­ lain and saves the day, the oil, the farm er’s daughter Nellie, and the re st of “defenseless woman­ hood.” Jack W esenberg as the hero and Jam es Kippenbrock as the villain, Richard M urgatroyd, eas­ ily toted o ff the laurels for a c t­ ing. W esenberg evoked shouts of audience approval with his belltone voice singing of such songs as “ When You W ere Sweet Six­ teen” and by warning villain Kip­ penbrock th a t “ beneath his ging­ ham shirt there beats an honest heart.” Kippenbrock and Bill Gay­ ness, who played “ Sam Slade,” the villain’s shadow, pantomimed their cloak-and-dagger scenes mas­ terfully. To single out any two or th ree perform ers serves only as comDarison. however, fo r the cast of DANCING *«<•■* b r i g h t e n e d p p l a s t s e a s o n 's Gold in the Hills” Friday M , . ^will play blay every eve and Saturday night a t 8:15 until fu rth e r notice. CARELESS LOVE ' Austin. 7 os as HIGH SOCIETY BASIN STREET BLUES Oscar “Papa” Celestin and his Original Tuxedo Dixeland Jazz Band Playing the New Orleans Jazz Classics He Helped M ake Famous PRESENTED BY THE U N IV E R S IT Y OF T E X A S Cultural Entertainment Committee Oct. 26-8:15 P.M.-Gregory Gym-$1.20 inch tax Ticket, at Reed Mu.ic Co.-Wllliam Cherie. Marie Co— Univ.r.ity Co-Op Music Building Box Office j The University of Texas C U LT U R A L EN TERTA IN M EN T C O M M IT T E E offers A LIM ITED N U M B E R OF BLAN K ET T A X SU P P L E M E N T S* iuiiifll I ffNL rn ill 1 Make your appointment and pay $19.20 worth of Entertainment for # # S fee in J O U R N A L IS M B U ILD IN G 108 RESERVE YOUR COPY OF THE C A C T U S N O W IF Y O U FAILED TO DO SO AT REGISTRATION U O . I inc!, tax Houston Symphony Orchestra Don Cossack Chorus Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo Austin Symphony Orchestra Gerald and Mildred Beal, Twin Violinists The Four Piano Ensemble Westminster Choir Irene Hawthorne Ballet Company J. Mason Brewer, Folklorist University Glee Clubs Henry Scott, Pianist San Antonio Symphony and reduced admission to Oscar "P a p a " C e le sta s Dixieland Jazz Band San Antonio Symphony with Oscar Levant, Pianist O n sale at The Music Building Box Office ♦For W iv e s of Blanket Tax H o ld ers, F aculty a n d N o n - t e a c h m g staff m e m b e r s Sunday. OctoKe' 22, 1950 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 8 C ir l of the Week Peggy Is Campus Whee After 30 Days at UT Campo* w heels are usually not kiuds. Peggy is a new member of '. , •:•',(•■> : ■ ; * ' '•’. tar L a st year she appeared rn a series of six student talent shows produced over the F o rt W o rth lei.-vision channel. She said performlu g fo r the cam era was otilv slightly d ifferen t from dancing on a stag®, but was an interesting experience. A sophomore education m ajor, Peggy plans to counsel or direct a children’s recreational program in a school or camp. La st summer she was a counselor at F o r t W o rth Park. Peggy is not a member of a lorority, bul is interested in jo in ­ ing one. She is eager to get ac­ quainted. and is so friend ly *he has been teased about k politician. Taking fifteen hours and work-sg twenty hours a week at the Capitol National Ban k, Pegg y has tile tim e fo r activities outside f cheer leading and dancing. A t N T S C she was a member f Club Nightm are, a talent group rhich made annual tours to Texas JI * 3 ^ 4 ? ^' Dress in Style Keynotes Charm School Co-Ed Assembly Is Campus Jaycee B y M A RY A N N B E A U M I E R Prob ab ly one of the most ex­ clusive clubs on the campus is . Co-Ed Assembly in which you The Home Econom ics_Club will haye tQ b* i * ’d pus Association, w ill see a large business and commerce fratern ity, py* v ' ry o r g s m z i t i a n by Novem display of w inter wear a t a style w ill hold its second smoker at 7 show sponsored by Chenards, on p.m. Monday in the International F o r the P ast two years the Asthe Drag, at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, Room of the Texas Union. sembly has helped send delegates October 23. Approxim ately 80 candidates to intercollegiate conventions. In A fte r the style show, cokes w i l l , were entertained a t the firs t snick- A p ril, A n t H ill and Miss Jessie be served and the girls are invited pt last week when Dr. J . C. Dolley, E a r l Anderson, sponsor o f the A s ­ ta closely examine the new fa ll line vice-president of the U n iversity sembly, w ent to the Southern Inof clothes. j spoke. The movies of the 1941 tercollegiate Association of StuThe models w ill be W ic a women Texaa-OU game were shown. dent Government at Alabam a C ol­ and are Sue Henslee, Sh irle y Law* lege, Montevallo, Alabama, rence, T e rry Holtz, J e r r y Bates, The Alba Club w ill meet MonThe preceding year S a lly See, Tudy Lauders, Midge Ba ll, Connie day at 7:30 p.m. in Union S IB to then treasurer, and Lin d a B artels Castanedo, and Nelda Million. discuss plans for a picnic-party to attended the N ational Conference The style show w ill be preceded h* after the U T - S M U foot- of Intercollegiate Association * f by a W ic a business meeting, a t ba game W om en Students a t the U n iversity which the M ica sweetheart nomi­ of New Mexico in Albuquerque. nee w ill be discussed, in Texas The Assembly hopes to send a Union 316, at 7 p.m. delegate to this convention, which The meeting and the style show A A A - . K A I___ w ill be held again this year, so M e m b e r s w ill be attended in inform al w ear.! A u Q S th at ideas from other campuses Everyone interested in W ic a is can be brought back. invited. N ew members fo r Athenaeum In the years past, the Assembly ★ . . . L ite ra ry Society, senior debating was quite active in politics on the A program of semi-classical organization for men, w ere tapped song. w ill b. presented by M r. a r f We(, nesdsy a, th„ „ actiTated cIub Mrs. R. P a u l F u lw id er at the first monthly meeting of the Music be^an a drive fo r 50 members. Group of the U n iv e rsity Ladies Students tapped were Norm an Club Interm ediates Tuesday at Black, E a r l Burridge, Jo h n D avid ­ 7:45 p.m. The group w ill meet in son, Bern ard Dow, and E d Landry. the home of Mrs. G. H. Sanderson, Athenaeum was re-organized on 1410 Alam eda Drive. Mrs. Raphael L e v y is in charge October l l when installation cere­ of the program. monies were held fo r Jo e Colwell, A workshop meeting of the A rts V a n HAI Culp, Leo Donovan, Ted and ( rafts Group w ill be held M iller, Newton Schw artz, and J . K . Monday at 9:30 a.m. rn the home j T a y lo r/ M artin Todaro was chosen A f« « 17 JO A A of M rs. 1W . 1W1 7 Patterson, 4300 fa cu lty sponsor. Caswell Avenue. Theodore M ille r was voted tem ­ Members of the Sew ing Group p o rary chairm an for the next w ill meet Thursday at 2:30 p.m. meeting to he held W ednesday, in the home of the chairm an, M rs. October 25, in L a w Build ing 105. A lfred L. Seelve, 3401 C learview , An inform al debate w ill be held Co-hostess w ill be Mrs. G ilbert o nthe subject, “ Resolved: T h a t Ayres. the W e lfa re State Should Be E x ­ A n evening of duplicate bridge tended in O ur Econo m y.” has been planned for Bridge Group Six, meeting Thursday a t 7:45 Dr, Go o dm a n G o e s to D u P o n t p.m. in the home of co-chairman Dr. H e n ry H. Goodman J r . , Mrs. Kenneth Jeh n , 611 E a s t PhD. in organic chem istry ’50, has Forty-seventh Street. Bridg e Group F o u r is scheduled joined the research s ta ff of the ta meet in the home of Mrs. C. L . ; Du Pdht Com pany’s polychem ical Prath e r, 2200 Park w ay. F rid a y at departm ent, experimental station, 9:80 a.m. I in W ilm ington, Delaware. Debating Society GIRL of the WEEK Peggy Web b is our new girl o f the w e e k . Peggy is a sophomore from Fort Worth, Texas, m a ­ joring in education. She is a Texanne, and is YELL LEADER. An Ottis Stahl Portrait O ith SFjdhJ Studio Photography for The University of Texas M E T A ’S HATS are little Fashion Gems style . . . always in taste Home Economics Tea House LUN C H EO N D IN N ER school-going separates ... The very newest in tailored casual*— the suede cloth jacket! it loots like suede, feels lite suede, and yet sports such a low price tag. Belted beck, big patch pockets, convertible sleeve line. Rust, with beads and sequins 5:30-7:30, Monday through Friday S U N D A Y D IN N ER 12:00-2:00 others reach high 11:30-1 *45 when Texas plays at home Special reservations for clubs, parises, sororities 26th and San Jacinto . . . and accessories. and fraternities .. . some dip low . .. colored to blend perfectly with your new fall suits, coats SATURDAY FOOTBALL' BUFFET W id in e r y beige, b r o w n , navy. Sizes IO to 16, 12.95. The straight, textured woo! skirt with clever crisscross button design In fall colors, sizes 9 to 15, 7.95. Little felts and velours that shimmer and shine 12:00-1:45, Monday through Friday Phone 8-443 J 1404 Lavaca S u n d a y , O c t o b e r 22, 1950 T H E D A IL Y Paqa 0 TEXAN Engerrand W ill Discuss Human Relations atHillel Agent's Barbs Didn't Stop Texas Writer, Louia Erdman that her ideas of Texas were didn’t take time to soothe her feelings. Instead, she submitted wrong. fro n tier intrigued Loula G race Her publishers, who didn't even the first three revised chapters in Erdm an so much that she wrote know w'hat “ cow chips” were, ten days, went to N ew Y ork, and j her third novel, “ The Edge o f proved wrong. To furth er her revised the whole book in six Tim e,” about a struggling Pan- point she went to the main lib rary weeks. Miss Erdm an has had many ; in New Y o rk C ity and found only handle farm er. scrapes with agents and publish-1 two books on Texas, one of them “ The Edge of Tim e” depicts written by Dr. W , P. Webb of the ers. In 1947 she wrote “ The the pioneering stage that divided Years of the Lo cust,” and her U niversity. the ranch and the farm frontier, agent told her it wasn’t fit to “ The Edge of Tim e” was sched­ she explained to friends F rid a y at print. On her own, she submitted an autograph p arty at the Texas uled for publication in September, the novel to Redbook and won but her publishers reset publica­ Book Store. the magazine’s first-place $10,000 Miss Erdm an believes each pio­ tion for 1952. They gave her six contest prize for that year. She neering stage was different, and months to soothe her feelings, six now has a new agent. she tried to depict the last pio­ months to do some thinking, and In w riting “ The Edg e of Tim e,” neering transition. But when her one y* ar to revise the story. Miss Erdm an drew m any charac­ Miss Erdm an, flaming angry, publishers saw the work, they said ters from true life. The farm er who traded a horse for a piece of land now harvests 50 bushels of , wheat from each acre. The “ little ” people of the Texas New Dr. George Engerrand, profes­ sor of anthropology, w ill speak on human relations at the Mille! Forum at 4 p.m. Tuesday at the H illel Foundation. Dr. Engerrand is a natl'-* of France and was educated in E u r ­ ope. He holds a bachelor of sci­ ence degree from the U niversity of Bordeaux and received his doc­ tors degree from The U niversity of Texas. He has been a member of the U n iversity itaff since 1920. Be­ fore that time he taught in the U n iversity of Brussels, Belgium, the U n iversity of Mexico, and the U n iversity of Mississippi. ★ Rocks Added Miss Erdm an feels that the rea­ son she first wrote her newest book so poorly was that she feared the Panhandle people might be offended. Now these people are "m t * I m h f*m ve ry satisfied with the book, and >aid to have revolutionized the Cold, bleak Labrador may put TH E E N G A G E M E N T of Miss M ary A ' n I b r in e r yn and p are trying to pick pages that might “ Are stones” in milady's jewel box jew elry world within the past 15 Gordon A n d erso n, both of Houston, ha been announced years. Costume jewelers— ever be a page from thir lives. this winter. w e d d in g will toke d a c e the early par* of D e c e m b e r in the C She spoke Thursday night to seeking raw stuffs for the tinseled lab rad o rite, known as the “ pea­ i bangles that catch the feminine Theta Sigma Phi alumnae at of St. John the Divine in Houston. utilized everything T F W C Building. cock” or “ fire” rock of C anada’s eye — have northeastern coast and named fo r from buttons and nuts to sheet. it, is one of the newest substances m etals and colored glass. In labradorite they w ill have a A v a ila b le to the merchants of g lit­ ter for the production of costume semi-precious stone that looks Its b ril­ jew elry, notes the National G eo­ somewhat like marble. lia n t sheen and sp a rk lin g shades graphic Society. The b eautifully iridescent mem­ of blue, p u rp le , green, bronze, and ber of th e fe ld s p a r family w ill red are an optical illusion, howjoin a wide a s s o r t m e n t of m a­ lever, since the mineral has no terials used by a trade that is color of its own. Six easy lessons in “ Personality P lu s” w ill be given to members i of the Charm School during the fall semester, M adeline Karchm er, chairman of the charm committee, announced Saturday. Instructions in how to sit and walk g racefully in high-heel shoes w ill be the first in the series of lectures which begin T h u rs d a y 1 from 7 to 8:15 p.m. M yrtle W a t ­ kins, who modeled w ith K aye Pardiman in Houl ton during the Rum­ mer. w ill direct the class. Another Kaye Pardim an model is Bonnie Bland, U n iversity sweetheart in 1948. “ A fte r a ll," says Miss W atkins, “ to be successful is to look suc­ cessful.” A $1 fee w ill entitle members to participation in all six lessons. Registration fo r the Charm School is in the mam office of the Texas Union. Problem? in conversation, man­ ner*, make-up. hair styles, fashions, and dating will be dis­ THE E N G A G E M E N T of A m a Jean W ied e rfcld c* Ke- v « cussed at the meeting* by mem­ bers of the charm committee with *o George G . M acD onald of G alveston has been announced. G a specialists invited to lecture in wedding will be December 2.1 in Kerrville, Miss Wiedenfeld a*their p articular fields. 'c-ded Schreiner Institute and North Te.w to use spe­ cial effect?, worship centers, and audio-visual aids. ★ The Rev. Edm und Heinsohn, ; minister of the University Metho! dist Church, w ill base his l l a.m. : sermon Sunday on the hook by Loula Grace Erdm an, author and i assistant professor of English at W est Texas State College. Miss Erdm an was a guest of Theta Sigma Phi, profeshional is initiating a study supper g r o u p to help individual s tu d e n ts w ith journalistic fra tern ity fo r women. She wrote “ Edge of Tim e.” His subject for the 7 ;30 p.m. service will be "C h ristian M oral­ ity.” ★ “ Ye Are the Light of the W o rld ” w ill be the. subject of the sermon by the R e v . John Barclay at the 10:55 a.m. service at Cen­ tral Christian Church Sunday. their immediate problems. The group will meet each Wednesday night from 6 to 7 :30 p.m. and su p ­ per w ill He served. A* representative from Alco­ holics Anonymous will address the group this Wednesday night on the facta of drinking. Anyone interested may attend. The Christian Youth Fellowship A 25 cent charge is made fo r the w ill have a supper meeting Sun­ meal. * day at 6 p.m. The D S F will have an I rr ta nation service for the T he Rev. K e r b Bard in, chaplain to Episcopal student , w ill be in newly elected officers. The speaker for the junior and c h a r g e of l l a.rn. services at St. Church. His senior high groups w ill be G u il­ D avid’s Episcopal lermo It. Padolina, Filipino stu­ s e rm o n will concern the college w ork of the. church. dent in the University. * * The Rev. G ra y Blan d y, director W estm inster Student Fellowship of the C anterbury Episcopal Bible C h a ir, will preach at A ll Saints Episcopal Church following morn­ ing prayer at l l a.rn, Sunday. T he Episcopal Student Center at 2623 U niversity Avenue will SUNDAY have open house under auspices of 2-7 — S o u th w e s te rn Geological the Canterbury Club Monday from Society picnic, V e a l’s Ranch. 7 to IO p.m. 3-5 — > Alpha G am m a Delta open All S a in ts ' C h u rc h w ill observe house, chapter house. the fiftee n th a n n i v e r s a r y of its 3-5 — Pi Beta Phi tea for all f o u n d in g N o v em b e r 2 with open house. sororities, chapter house. ★ 3-5 — L a m b d a Chi Alpha op en Boh G e rm a n , U n iv e rsity g r a d u house fo r m em bers, pledges, ate s tu d e n t, will -.peak to th e an d d ates, c h a p te r hou.-e. 4-6 — Open house. T L O K house. Disciple Student Fellowship supper 7-8:30 — Alpha Epsilon Phi des­ meeting at the U niversity Christ­ sert party for Sigma \lpha Mu, ian Church Sunday at 6 p.m. G erm a n ha? -pent t w o an d onechapter house. 5-11 — K appa K a p p a G am m a h alf y ea rs with th e A m e ric a n E m bas?'/ staff in Moscow. bout party, Green Shores. Social Calendar everybody** ordering.... Fine Portraits from their Cactus negatives shades of the twenties! iiffled sheath, < ’5.1111 in modern two-piece ... Theta L ig h t s tu d e n ts will be pledged be Mi ll ay M e m b e r of T S P Phone 8-7067 2346 Guadalupe Sigs Pledge Edn a St. V in c e n t M illay, famous novelist and poetess, who died Thursday sn her home in Massa­ chusetts, was initiated as an hon­ orary member of the campus Theta Sigma Phi chapter in Octo­ ber, 1929. Miss M illay was in Austin a t that time on a lecture tour spon­ sored by the Am erican Associa­ tion of U n iversity Women. Miss V era Gillespie, national advisor, and Miss honorary fra te rn ity for women alumnae advisor. ★ jo u rn a lists, this morning at a by T h ru breakfast Sigma at the Phi, home of presid e n t. J e a n Lipscom b, Ridge Oak Drive. Mr*. Helen 8 A fton ScKroeter faculty M ary M iF e i 3 5 a -e-v loo’* 4o sleeveless sheath c ; the roaring 20’s with ruffle" from h rs to hem! Ifs young t becoming, its exclusively ours rn Austin, W yn n, Mustard yellow Seller* coral, ’'i v y t.ssue rn 0, sizes 7 to 15. College Shop, Second Floor, the 4604 And Raym ond W im ple Sundstrom were married September 29 in They are Ann Courter, Anne the Presbyterian Church of H ere­ Chambers, M ary Ann Beautifier, ford. jJo h n n ic Human, Ruth Ann HerbThe bride is a graduate of the sleb, Myra W heeler, Am y J o Long, U niversity with a master of arts and Frances Lim b ic. Guests w ill degree in social sciences. She was a member of Phi Sigma A l­ pha, Phi Mu, and the Present Day Club. She was also secretary for the Departm ent of Economics. M r. Sundstrom was graduated in civil engineering from South Dakota State College and is a member of the Texas Society of Professional Engineers and the National Society of Professional F.nginee* s. Scarbrough & Sous sweater favorites.... All wool ribbed knit top­ p er!" to go everywhere with your casual skirts. mademoiselle ihoes Sleeveless gold 32-36. Cardigan, buttons Gold, and twin pockets, emblem W h ite, Red, trim. Kelly. Turtle neck Torso sweater, short sleeves, ribbed waist band. 32*36. Gold-White, Red-White, KellyW hite, Short sleeved cardigan, ribbed cuff and neck band. Gold buttons and emblem trim. 32-36. Gold, W hite, Red, Kelly. OO Dressy lows in Pocket Toes by M ADEM OISELLE These fam ous petite pockets reveal, conceal your toes so enticingly . . . and airy strips add enchanting new delicacy to vour beloved fl^Ls* ■■M M M A a §een in G L A M O U R # Sunday, October 22. 1950 THE DAILY TEXAN Page IO Investigation to Begin Personnel Meet M onday on Blanket Taxes To Be Nov. 2-3 Sing-Song Is Set For December 3 Pre-Registration s t u d e n t c o n s titu tio n . I believe t h a t ! A th o r o u g h in v e s tig a tio n of p ic tu r e s had been re p la c e d o r all s e v en c a se s ca n be h e a r d and To Begin M o n d a y T he f i f t e e n t h a n n u a l Sing-S ong and w o m e n ’s divisions. E a c h g r o u p B la n k e t T a x v io la tio n s f o u n d a t p a s te d over t h e originals. Som e 50 o t h e r B la n k e t T a x e s fairly disposed of in o n e a f t e r ­ hi* beer, scheduled fo r D e c em b e r | is allowed to sing tw o songs, a n d th e O U -T ex a s g a m e in D allas will no o n ,” he said. M onday and Tuesday are pre­ 3 in G re g o ry Gym. Lot* A g n o r ; the title s o f th e se songs m u s t ac begin M on day, K leber C. M iller, w ere ta k e n a t th e g a m e also. If th e s t u d e n t s believe t h a t ac- j r e g i s t r a t i o n d a te s f o r stu d e n t* and H a n k P e r r y , S ing-S ong co - 1 c o m p an y t h e $15 f ilin g ean J a c k H o lla n d 's o f f.c e by sam e song. H an k P e r r y aatd. hee ded w a r n in g s of m is u se o f th e i r F a c u lty D iscipline C o m m itte e , th e 3. B l a n k e t T a x e s. Mr. Ed Olle, gam e, all f r a t e r n i t i e s and so ro ritie s who “ Besides the c o m p e titiv e sp irit This ac tion will be Dean N o w o tn y said he h ad c o n ­ Dean said. A n y s t u d e n t m ay p r e - re g is te r, bu sin e ss m a n a g e r o f I n te r c o l­ m a n to p a r ti c ip a te rn this, p ro - of S in g -S o n g , t h e r e ’s alw a ys a spefidence t h a t the S t u d e n t C o u rt final, how ever. a n d th u s avoid th e r e g u l a r $5 le g ia te A th le tic s, r e p o r te d t h a t n o t g r a m S p o n so re d by I n t e r - f r a t e r - ! elal u n ity b u ilt u p a m o n g people D e a n N o w o tn y said he dido t will h a n d le t h e p r e s e n t s it u a ti o n a single B la n k e t T ax w as t a k e n nitv an d P an h ellen ic Councils, who come t o g e t h e r to sin g . ’ P e r think the v io la tio n s w e r e se rio u s f e e , K eith Davis, c h a ir m a n o f r e ­ in i* m a t u r e m a n n e r . g is t r a tio n , said. u p a t t h e A r k a n s a s g am e S a t u r ­ Sin g-S ong has become a highly j r y said, in u r g in g g r o u p s to p a r “ I hope th e y d o n ’t g e t ta n g le d enough to w a r r a n t su sp e n sio n or day. F a c u l ty m e m b e r s a r e also u r g e d skilled a n d c o m p etitiv e e ve nt. ticipate. up in legal te c h n ic a litie s o f th e dism issal f ro m th e I n iv e rsity . to r e g i s t e r b e f o r e O c to b e r 25 fo r T he in v e stig a tio n will d e t e r m in e Thi* y e a r six tro phie s will be L a s t y e a r K ap p a A lpha T h e ta if e v id en c e w a r r a n t s a h e a r in g a r e d u c e d fee o f $3. awarded* th r e e each in t h e m en s and B e ta T h e t a Pi won f i r s t p la ce aa a r a c a , ------------ --------------- hon ors, w ith Chi O m eg a a n d D e lta b y the S t u d e n t C o u r t of th e seven F re e adm ission f o r s t u d e n t s is s t u d e n t s whose B la n k e t I axes ft, K ap pa Epsilon second, a n d A lp h a a w ay o f e n c o u r a g in g a tte n d a n c e . w e r e fo u n d a l te r e d a n d u se d by T he c o n f e r e n c e will e n a b le th e m n o n - s tu d e n ts . third. This y e a r a n u m b e r o f orto a s so c ia te w ith b u sin e ssm e n , see i g a n i s a t io n s have a l r e a d y s t a r t e d “ T his is a c h a n c e f o r s t u d e n t how th e y w ork, an d h e a r so m e of g o v e r n m e n t t o prove t h a t it is t h e i r %ideas, M r. Davis said. ca p a b le o f h a n d lin g s t u d e n t a f ­ le n itiv e p . sin g so n g Som e o f th e sp e a k e rs f o r th e T E N - G A L L O N H A T and a western welcome we**e given m issie s* , t h -s y e a r a r e a s f o u 0WS: f a ir s ,” A m o N ow otn y, d e a n of c o n f e r e n c e will be E r n e s t H. Reed, O tis Douglas, coach of the Arkansas team by University C ow boys I n d ia n d an c e s will be given a t I . E a c h g r o u p shall sin g o n e s t u d e n t life, s ta te d . A r c h ite c ts fail to i n t e g r a t e b u ild ­ iod o f ra p id ch a n g e , w h e r e no m o ­ m a n a g e r of e d u c a tio n a n d t r a i n ­ when he arrived in Austin Friday for the A rk a n sa s-!ex^s g a m e . th e f ir s t m e e tin g o f th e A ustin f r a t e r n i t y o r s o r o r i ty s o n g a n d “ So f a r n o t m uch h a s been ings to im m e d ia te s u r r o u n d i n g s d e r n city r e m a in s the sa m e fo r ing f o r th e I n te r n a t io n a l H a r v e s ­ Traditionally, Cow boys present ten-gallon hats to a visiting c o a c h C e re b r a l P alsy T r e a t m e n t C e n - l o n e song o f th e ir ow n choice, ; d o ne by th e a t t o r n e y g e n e r a l ’s m o r <' th a n t w e n t y m in u te s, Mr. ts*! C o m p an y o f C hica g o ; A lfre d playing UT in Austin for the first time. Fifteen C o w b o y s met the t e r ’s P a r e n t S tu d y G roup. T h e 2 T h e r e will be no d u p lic a tio n s I office ainee w e will w o rk closely toda y, said C a r l F e iss of th e F e d ­ J M o rro w , p re s iu e n t, H a rw o o d Fiess said. Arkansas players at the airport and escorted them downtown. w ith Mr. Olle,” Miller said. “ H o w ­ eral H o u s in g A u th o r ity , W B illing­ dance* will be p re se n te d by th e of songs. M a n u f a c t u r i n g C o r p o r a tio n , New Mr. F eiss is r esp o n sib le f o r th e B oy S co u ts of th e O rd e r of th e 3 . T h e r e will be no m edleys. ev er, th is w e e k we will s t a r t th e ton, I). C. Mr. Feiss sp o k e at a _____________ __ Presentation was made by Wai©s M ad d e n . Y o rk C i t y ; a n d J o h n Ben Shepre -d ev e lo p m e n t o f t h e H o u sin g m e e ti n g o f U n iv e r s ity a r c h i t e c t s A rrow M onday a t 8 p.m. on t h e 4 . No solos w ill be p e r m i t t e d in v e stig a tio n in f u ll.” A ct o f 1941. It is a billion an d p erd , S e c r e t a r y of t h e S t a t e of F rid a y a f t e r n o o n . lawn of th e C e n te r. w ith the e x c e p t io n of a few b a r s j T h e r e has b e e n no d a te s e t fo r half d o lla r p r o je c t to clea r up T exas. T he m o d e rn a r c h i t e c t m u s t T h e c r o u p has been acclaim ed ; with b ac k g ro u n d singing. th e h e a r in g y e t, he said. That E ach p r e - r e g is te r e d s t u d e n t will som e of th e e x istin g slum s m d t h r ? u g h o u t th e U n ite d S ta te s 5. T h e r e . will be d e te r m in e d when t h e in­ w ork w ith o t h e r te c h n ic ia n s — so c­ receive a c o n f e re n c e badge w’hlch badly co n g e ste d a r e a s in the c o u n ­ iologists, ec o n o m is ts, a n d e n g i n ­ one o f th e best te a m s t o a t t e m p t m e in e x c e p t f o r a s tr ik e o f a v e s tig a tio n is com plete. will a d m it him to t h e m eetin g s. try. T h e r e a r e 2 3 “ cities on th e e e r s — to solve th e p ro b lem s o f r e c o n s tr u c tio n of th e orig io n a l pitch. | In p re v io u s y e a r s s t u d e n t s who This b a d g e m a y he picked up r e c o n , era e n 6 p a r ti c ip a n ts m u s t be p r e s e n t p r o g ra m . w e r e c a u g h t v io la tin g B l a n k e t T ax city p l a n n in g and desigi in a p e r ­ th e s t u d e n t desk in th e Main I n d ian m e m b e rs o r ple d g es of t h e o r g a n ru le s w e r e h a n d le d b y th e D ean L o u n g e o f t h e T exas U nion fro m T he A ustin O rd e r o f t h e A n e w ; a n d s tu d e n U a t t h e UrnS tudent Life. The usual Dr. Alves w a s nam ed d ire c to r o f is com posed o f s tu d e n ts f r o m A as. Incom petence o r lack o f ability 8 :3 0 a, rn. to noon on t h e firs t tin H igh School and the In n er-, ? T he m a x im u m n u m b e r in am o n g public school officials in th e of the p r o g r a m by U n iv e r s it y p u n is h m e n t w a s a t e m p o r a r y s u s ­ d ay o f th e c o n f e re n c e , N o v em b e r P re s id e n t T. S. P a i n t e r S e p te m ­ pension o f th e Tax a n d a fine, th e sity. Jo e G au lt, h e a d c h ie f . is i e - ^ wjl, be 60 2 S o u th w e st is d e fin itely not the b e r 30. He will join th e f a c u lty as m o n e y b ein g d o n a t e d to th e C a m ­ c civ m g t r e a t m e n t a t th e te n ter ■ m in im u m n u m b e r o f S t u d e n t s w ishing to a t t e n d th e s p a rk w hich ig n ite d th e fiv e-y ea r a p ro fe s s o r of e d u c a tio n a l a d m in i­ p u s C hest, D ea n N o w o tn y said. f o r a sp a stic inv olvem ent, one o f ^ c i p a n t s will be 18. lu n c h e o n o r receive th e c o n f e r ­ T his is th e first tim e it h a s been the m ain types of ce re b ra ! p a t . . ^ P a r tic ip a n ts m a r dress a s Co-operative P r o g r a m in School str a t io n . SUNDAY 9 :30 — I n te r m e d ia t e C lu b 's a r t s en c e p ro c e e d in g s m a y do so by h a n d le d by th e s t u d e n t g o v e r n ­ Dr. H a sk e w said th e c u r r e n t E ac h m e m b e r of th e g r o u p • choosc A d m in is tra tio n , D ean L. D. H a s ­ a n d c r a f t s g ro u p , 43 0 0 Caswell. pay in g $2 a n d $1.75 r e sp e ctiv ely 1 — A R O T C cru ise , L ake A u stin .! makes his ow n c o s tu m e s w ic Ali e n t r ies m ust be in by kew of th e College of E d u c a tio n move f o r im p ro v e m e n t in public m e n t. “ W e a r e goin g a t the th in g 1 . 4 5 — S o u th w e s te r n G eological j 9 :30 — S o u th w e s te r n C o n f e r e n c e to the r e g is t r a tio n a t t e n d a n t when school a d m in is t ra tio n began about are th e last w o rd in Monday, N o v e m b e r 27. asserte d T h u r s d a y . slowly a n d e a s ily ,” Rollie K oppel, P hysica l E d u c a tio n M eeting, b ad g e s a r e picked u p . th r e e y e a r s ag o a n d is being S ocie ty m e e ts a t G eology B uild­ The te a m won f i r s t p i ^ cage w ith d r a w a l a f t e r “ I t (school a d m in is t r a tio n ) at reflec te d in r eg io n a l p r o g r a m s ju s t ic e o f t h e s tu d e n t S u p r e m e T r o p h y Room, G re g o ry G y m ; ing to go on picnic. y e a r at th e N ovem b er 27, th e e n t r y fe e will p rese n t, is not a t ail lacking. C o u r t said, “ so t h a t t h e r e w o n ’t lunch a t the C o m m o n s; m e e tin g Freshman Engineers th r o u g h o u t the c o u n try . of th e O rd e r of th e A rro w , l h e y Spited 2 — L en scrafters meet a t dow n­ hav e p e rf o rm e d th r o u g h o u t T e x - | be f o r f e i t e . _______________ ______ D ean H a sk e w said. He explained T he d esire fo r b e tte r t r a i n i n g be a n y u n f a v o r a b le p u b lic ity to a t 2 in T ro p h y Room. to w n Y W C A to go on picnic. To Meet M o n d a y N ight t h a t the p r o g r a m , aimed a t h elping of a d m in is t r a to r s does not mean a n y o f t h e s t u d e n t s who a r e n o t — V e t e r a n s to h e a r e x p l a n a tio n as a n d m a n y o th e r states. public school a d m in is t r a to r s im ­ school su p e rin te n d e n ts , p rin cip als, g u ilty n o r to th e s t u d e n t g o v e r n ­ 3_5 — T ea f o r all sororitie s, Pi 0 Preceding the dances, a color G r a d u a t e E n ro lls o f e x p e n se s on th e s e s a n d dis­ The fifth in a s e rie s o f eig h t B e ta Phi house. prove t h e i r m ethods f o r r u n n in g or tr u s te e s a r e lacking , Dean H a s ­ m ent. s e r t a t i o n s , S u tto n H all IOU freshm an e n g i n e e r in g co n v o c a ­ “ We also w a n t to show t h e a d ­ schools, g r o w s o u t of a w id e s p re a d , kew pointed out. He added t h a t In F o re ig n T ra d e S c h o o l 5 — J o h n V o g t t o discuss e x p e r ­ — Physical e d u c a tio n d e le g a te s, tio n s will be held M onday n ig h t a n d “ sincere d esire to get b e tte r th e co-operative p r o g r a m s is not m in i s tr a ti o n t h a t th e s t u d e n t s can ie n ce s in E u r o p e to L u t h e r a n h f ro m 7 to 8 o ’clock in G eolog y H i t c h i n ’ P ost. S t u d e n t A ssoc iation, F i r s t E n ­ associate p r o f e s s o r T f e d u c a t io n a l T h o m a s C. H e r n d o n , BBA 50 ed u c a tio n a l le a d e rsh ip .” pla n n ed to rep la ce p r e s e n t a d m in i­ h a n d le th e ir ow n affair*.” B u ild in g 14, F. K. P en ce , proK oppel said he h a d n o th in g to — D e lta S ig m a Pi sm o k e r, In ­ D r. H e n r y F . Alves, MA ’28 an d s t r a t o r s w ith b e tte r ones, but psychology a n d d ir e c to r of th e has e n ro lle d as a m e m b e r of th e glish L u t h e r a n C h u rch . 7 t e r n a t i o n a l Room, T e x a s U nion. fe.-,sor o f c e ram ic e n g in e e rin g , C e n t e r , will give a b r ie f r e p o r t of J u n e , 1 9 o l , class «n t e A m el,- fo r 15 y e a r s d irec to r of the D ivi­ r a t h e r t r a i n o fficials now w o rk ­ do w ith th e m a t t e r a t p r e s e n t a n d 5 : 3 0 — J o h n C o f e r to s p e a k a t w o u ld n ’t have u n til th e a t t o r n e y — P r o f e s s o r F. K. P e n c e to will spe ak to f r e s h m a n ce ra m ic th e C e n t e r s activities. T h e child- can I n s t i t u t e f o r F o re ig n T r a d e sion of School A d m in is tra tio n for ing. W esley F o u n d a tio n . g e n e r a l d ecided a h e a r in g is w a rdiscuss c e r ami c s a t f r e s h m a n ma j o r s. E it h e r W. R. H udson, e x e­ r a n will hav e o p p o r tu n ity f o r pla y at T h u n d e r b ir d Field. I h o e r . x, the US O ffice of E ducation, will g — Disciple S tu d e n t F ellow ship t n te d . e n g i n e e r convocation. Geology cu tiv e a s s is ta n t to t h e d e a n of open a tw o -d ay discussion o f the S o c i e t y W i l l H e a r U N T o p i c to h e a r B ob G e rm a n discuss e x ­ ac tiv itie s a n d r e f r e s h m e n t s d u r- A rizona. T h e seven vio la tio n s w e r e B la n ­ How to s t r e n g t h e n th e U n ite d th e College of E n g in e e r in g , o r K. B u ild in g 14. ing th e film a n d talk. Specializin g rn L atin A m e ric a n u r o g ra m when he a r r iv e s on the p e r ie n c e s in Moscow. U n iv e r s ity ket T a x e s t a k e n a t the O U gam e N a tio n s w ill be the topic f o r th e .30 — F r e e movie, “ O nce Upon IL J e h n , a s s is ta n t p r o f e s s o r o f F u t u r e p r o g r a m s in c lu d e ta lk s t r a d e , Mr. Herndon is ta k in g th e c a m p u s M onday. Dean H ask e w C h r is tia n C hurch . f o ru m p e rio d o f th e S o cie ty o f b ec au se of a l te r e d a n d r e p la c e d e n g in e e rin g , will a h o n e y m o o n , ” M ain L o u n g e , a e r o n a u tic a l by e x p e r t s in c e r e b r a l palsy, ch ild sc hool’s in te n s iv e tr a i n in g c o u rse said Dr. Alves w ill m e et im m edi­ S e v e ra l non - s t u d e n t s ; 7 — D elta Z eta F o u n d e r ’s D ay F r ie n d s S u n d a y a f t e r th e l l a.m. p ic tu re s. speak to th e o th e r f r e s h m a n e n g in ­ T e x a s Union, p sy c h o lo g y , e d u c a to n a l psychol- to p r e p a r e fo r a c a r e e r in A m eri- a te ly w ith a b o u t 35 m e m b ers of b a n q u e t, H itc h !n ’ Post. w o rship service in t h e U n iv e r s ity w ere f o u n d possessing B l a n k e t ogy, p h y sic al th e r a p y , a n d m ed i- c a n bu sin e ss or g o v e r n m e n t j th e f a c u lty to lay o u t specific MONDAY If ;30 — A lb a Club, T e x a s Union. eers. T a x e s b e lo n g in g to s t u d e n t s whose YMCA. projec ts. f»ir,p abroad. Boy Scouts to Give Indian Dances ‘ Architects Hear Housing Authority ruu Education Program To Aid Administration J ta t (jo e s on JIcrc I O N CONGRESS NEXT TO AUSTIN HOTEL % Reynolds Fenland Presents One of the Season's Handsomest Sport Shirts % Glove-Suede Cotton with hand-picked stitching H e re 's a very unusual shirt that you'll take great pride in wearing. Tailored shirt-jacket style with hip-hugging knitted waistband, the butter-smooth fabric feels as g o o d next to you as it looks go o d on you. Finished with hand-picked stitching in sm ooth tones o f luggage, cream, grey. Sizes S-M-ML-L 1 /ijo ! i th lit ^SI T e x a n October 22, 1950 The Chancellor and His Son % S w ic .iy O c t o b e r 22 THE t95Q DAI Li TEXAN Page 2 * • trA SAN JACINTO INN m I. VI IM Mio San Dear Girls, Jacinto {. a h u * o rn a te showings Try our Filet M ig n o n ri n j o y o u r h u r l i n g S t e a k s C henar^ is mtroduc \g a I * * And Fried Jum bo Shrim p w I I U e s These shows are for your group of our beautiful clothes. T h e B e s t F r i e d C h i c k e n in T own alone, QUICK SER VICE w’,l| be no one else win in our store. T hey will t^ e have reserved through place , t C h a r d s on the evening you THE HOMESTEAD c e n s iv e M iss L o w ,it ( 50288). I I YO J our re p re s e n te e t , GOOD FOOD 1” ■ . ^...LrtivY-susa b uxx. a special showing, |u- f in B. B u ild in g w e’en eve to haunt and th e ir H a ll H a llo w e ’en started as a and the erns e ve ry supposedly H a llo ­ D ru id s Aggies, house ye a rs Don t Walk which th is death, tu rn out to be a fresh m a n who hasn't wicked quite i w aive forgotten of rotten his high eggs and school s<>aj>ed-. bodies w indow s. tro lle r, L e w is , said the assista n t witches, comp spooks/ and such h ave a c tu a lly done little dam age to the cam pus rn the past FAST SERVICE Vacuumed inside, Sidewalls Steam cleaned W HITE. $1 OO Mon. t hr u T h u r s . CT! Fri. thru Su n. $ 1 .25 “ G r i m e to S h i n e ” Auto Car W a sh Co. 221 L a m a r 2-5390 SERVICE for You D e l i v e r i e s to y o u r d o o r , p r o m p t a n d e f f ic ie n t , a ls o 15 i o f f c a s h - c a r r y Home Steam Ldry Ph. 6-3702 102 E . 10th F e b ru a ry 13 a* se*ven F e b ru a ry 20 a t se yen p. rn. F e b ru a ry 2> a t se ven p rn. Phi T'i t r c H I 3 a* se•yen p. rn. 7.» * 3 u A lp h i M a rc h 20 at se •en p. rn, Si Del La Ta rg Stilt Jr e t to ( h p. rn. ta Phi Bet i K sr K Si a n g e cl { . ’ IX (iu a d a ln p o ll Ty h a lf c en tu ry. H is only com plaint w as that e v e ry moveable object on the cam pus a lw a y s turn- up in a d iffe re n t place the next day. The souls who had to Sa n ta n , ta iled as a the that the to g eth er a1! fo r A festivals believed fe stiv a l m onths of autum n D ru id s the. thousand T h a n k s g iv in g d u rin g lik e ly w ith tw o fires w ere lighted of god of George CARS held w as up OWL TAXI ago began some gods. days CALL 7-6133 who ball week ends. l f one o f the fiendish c re a tu re s he'd Ga e<*rie D a y or H a llo w Day. T he idea of I w itches, goblins, and jack-o-lant- give w alk s on the out-of-town foot­ symbol ca p tu re d , n ^f a t se ven p. rn. m usty mothers, and professors who don’t a t 'W e M ay B a se B u t N ever C lo se’ a* se I e b ru a ry 6 c l It's Hallowe'en UT Style CMh Ja n u a ry I 6 A l l dot Tis Evil in the Air at ie’VC*n p. - . J Ja n u a r y F \ m o u s fo r Crispy T a c o s R A D IO C O N T R O L L E D 19 the lived in DON T DELAY past : the* anim als. E v e n to d ay in j our age o f enlightenm e n t, I ma ny s tu d e n ts ! w ill cast an an- ' xtous glance be- j hind them as they w alk past the new S c ie n c e ! B u ild in g . A few b ra ve souls m ay v e n tu re to a h aunted house, but i f s d o u b tfu l it an yo n e w ill bt* seen aroun d a g ra v e y a rd at 12 m idnight except vam pires and ghosts. C am pus tra d itio n s, w hich in r e ­ cent y e a rs have been m othballed, and p ra n k s which a u th o ritie s hope n e ve r* be­ come tra d itio n s E v e r y H a llo w e'e n some students c h a ra c te ris e U n i ­ v e r s ity H a llo ­ go to the lib r a r y e ith e r seeking w e ’ens. refuge fro m goblins and p ra n k D u r i n g the tors or fo r studious purposes. Bu t 1900’s H a llo - j even the Ii b ra y isn’t a spook -proof | w e ’en nig ht “ m a ­ tu r e ’' s e ni o r s place. In 1913 p ra n k ste rs locked g ave a costum e a long c h a in to the new gr ill work p a r ty w h ile the ro udy underclassa t the fo o l of the s ta irs in the i men satisfied them selves w ith mov) ing benches, soaping up classroom old L ib r a r y B u ild in g . L ib ra ria n - , W in d o w s, and frig h te n in g co-eds. students, book.-, and w orm s seemed doomed to spend the n ig h t to­ H a llo w e ’en o f 1912 found three g e th e r; but a ja n ito r showed up co-eds doing a little spooking on and cut the ch ain wt h a hatchet. I th e ir own. D ressed in the t r a d i­ A w o rd to the U N W I S E Go| tio n a l w h ite sheets, they hid be­ hin d the bushes at 2 4th and G u a d ­ on out H a llo w e ’en n ig ht and see alupe S tre e ts to moan and groan w h a t happens to you. H e re ’s Ijet-! t ;ng on the hobgoblins. I and sh rieked at passersby. A f t e r se v e ra l hours o f g hostly actions, th e y heard thud din g, Throat Feel Different? d ra g g in g sounds s l o w l y com ing to w a rd them through the d a r k ­ Try This Antiseptic ness. W it h real moans, g roans, and sh rieks, th e y fled into the A n S R I> fresh m an the oth e r University M e th o d ist C h u rch , a d ­ m o rn in g , in the usual g ro g g y rush d ing th e ir voices to th a t o f the to an 8 o’clo ck class, grabb ed i ch o ir re h e arsa l. the w ro n g b o ttle fro m the w in ­ U pon in v e stig a tio n of the “ th u d ­ ding, d ra g g in g sound" the ch o ir dow sill and g arg led , n ot w ith d ire c to r discovered -not a goblin L is te r in e , hut w ith C lo ro x . She now boasts the pu rest, if the raw- i — not a w itc h — but a donkey. W a y back ia the e a r ly C h ris tia n est th ro a t in th e dorm . TURN IN YOUR NOMINATION FOR THE BLUEBONNET BELLE SECTION OF THE 1951 CACTUS NOW! AM Nom inations must be turned in on t h e official blanks wj n c h may be obtained in Journalism Building 108. A n y U niversity O rganisation may nominate one girl. DEADLINE FOR NOMINATIONS IS OCTOBER 20 approved I Sunday, O ctober 22, 1950 It's Only A Chemlin TH E D A ILY T E X A N Pane I Backword Clock, Yet English Prof Creoted UniqueTimepiece By D O R O T H Y A SC H H e had just finished a clock that runs backwards and has been drying wood since before W orld W a r l l fo r a clock with wooden works. In college he built a 56by-57-ineh automobile. He is A r ­ thur M. Cory, instructor in E n g ­ lish. ‘ I got tired of the monotony of clocks th at all run in the same direction,” Mr. C ory said. “ So I took the works out o f an old clock, readjusted them a bit, made a face to fit, and a new case out of solid w alnut.” “ F ir s t people tell me it's wrong,” chuckled M r. Cory. “ Then they try to stand on their heads to read it. Most of them end up by resenting it, possibly lecause it ’s against the established order of things.” * People all h a te m e" is th e c ry o f th e C hem lin. W h a t is a C h e m lin ? W h y , it is a little g r e m l in The tw o -in c h h ig h C hem lin m esse s t h in g s up in th e C h e m is ­ t r y B u ild in g w h e n e v e r t h e c h a n c e a ris e s. Did you e v e r w o n d e r w h o p u t t h a t g r e a s e in a b u r e t tip o r w ho m a d e y o u r h a n d on th e stopcock s lip ? Well, t h a t is o u r Impend th e C h e m lin . S u b s t i t u t i n g w e ig h ts on th e b a la n c e p a n r t u r n i n g th e h e a t w a y up h ig h so t h a t t h i n g s on t h e s a n d b a th e v a p o r a te a r e th e p a s tim e s of th is little be a st. M r. C ory teaches report w ritin g IT R U N S B A C K W A R D S ? ? Puzzles Carolun Bu sh of Baytown for engineers and believes that as she looks at one of Mr. C o ry ’s crazy clocks. Mr. C ory ex­ this ties his profession in with his plains that he got tired of the monotny of clocks all running in hobby. the same direction; so he did a little exp erim e ntin g and came H e started teaching at the U n i­ up with the clock pictured. versity in 1935. In 1941, his R e­ serve unit was called for one y e a r’s “ A ll of the firs t clocks had service. “ T h a t year lasted five,” he floorboard, but it took him where wooden movements,” he -aid, “ and remarked. He returned to the he wanted to go. W h ile he was in the Arm y, Mr. I thought I ’d like to have one.” U n iversity in 1948. He attended Denison U n ive rsity C ory increased his knowledge of M r. Cory builds much of his in G ra n v ille and received his mas­ mechanics. In A rm y Ordinance, he ter’s degree at Ohio State. W hile was on the s ta ff of a motor school fu rn itu re and has made most o f still an undergraduate, he bought I and collected photographs of en­ office ornaments. I f some of these an old B u ick fram e, cut a chunk I gines. are a little out of the ordinary, : out of the mid-section, added a Before the w a r started, M r. Cory he explains it this way: Model T engine and one seat, and planned an all-wood clock move­ “ I ’m net at all unconventional. I became, to his knowledge, the ment, paterned after an E li T e rry owner of the only square auto- clock of 1815. He w ill use maple just bring into being some of the i mobile in existence. I t had no and ch erry and do all the work odd notions that other people only •hood, no l>ody, no fenders, and no on the lathe. think about.” the erie little bolero ensemble so definitely influenced by the spanish bull fighter’s costume, velvet bolero In orange or gold, touched with black silk braid; the black slightly draped wool crepe skirt, as narrow as a bullfighter’s escape, in junior sizes, 29.95. the small, flat velvet envelope bag, with three compartments, the perfect compliment for this ensemble, $5.00, plus tax. 2338 G uadalupe Sunday, October 22, 1950 THE D A ILY TEXAN Page 4 s A ll in Being a W h e e l By J O AN GROS SMAN Though ninny would deny it,! there are some of u s on this c a m ­ pus who don’t know our “ wheels’'; — an u n forg ivab le com mitment, to; be sure. B u t , like I say, there are some of us \\ho don’t know them, and i f s to those " f e w ” th a t we ded i­ cate this corner F o r this fir s t ‘ who’s who” we’ve picked some of the better-know n contenders, t h a t ii-, (to d eflate any resu ltin g e g o ) , we’ve picked some people on this campus who fill positions one would expect to find represented on such a p a g e ; as this. T o be coy, le t’s see i f you can guess, or may he I should say, l e t ’s see if you know these seven chosen where you have seen the l o n g ­ horns you have seen this n ext few. B e g in n in g at the left, we first young man in action. You football come to a young lady who is a J fans especially should know him. bi-sorority president, a young lady W h erev er beauty and charm a r e who is top executive o f two wo­ found, there you will find this m en’s organizations namely, a n ext T e x a s miss. F o r example, social sorority and an honorary and professional f r a t e r n i t y for she has progressed from freshm an women in jo urn alism . beauty to one of the la t y e a r ’s T h e next is a leader in more ‘T m Most.” ways than one. You see him often And in the last picture in the during football game*, and he’s a row should need no explanations. f a n of the Longhorns from way back . . . .ju st ask him come next It’s ju st of a guy who spends all his “ e x t r a ” time doing other F riday night. Roses and white evening dresses things but student government. a re the trad e m ark of the next Need I say m o re ? T h e re they are. Seven cam pus young miss, although her smile and personality have won her the v heels. Cart you nam e them? rf not turn to ja p e 5 and sta r t your highest honor she holds. Our next “ wheel” has been i animis odin at ion. around turn*, the cam pus quite o n e na." t'tcu use a long c u o jw i quite a lot of c o n t r o l rsy, to say nothing of pranks, painting s, arui UT tradition. In .Memorial Sta d iu m , the Cot ton Bowl, Rice S tad iu m , and almosl i n v w h c e el © ’n tho Southwest requirements for college At LEONS You (An Choose FROM TH REE GREAT NAMES IN LOAFERS Loafers! The pride o f cam pus and casual time assem bled in a fall collection including such fam ous names as: O ld M aine Trotters S A N D L E R of Boston and Saddle Master. A l l — in grey, black, brown, navy and t o a s t genuine bucko. $895 618 CONGRESS Sunday, O ctober 22, 19S0 THE D A ILY T E X A N Page The Homespun Harts An Afternoon Spent at the Chancellor's By MARY ANN B E A U M IE R T ravis C ounty d istrict attorney sity policy, then recommend a A down-to-earth man with a from 1933 to 1937. H e was elected course of action to the Regents, wn-to-earth fam ily w ill take special judge of the F if t y third who have the final authority. over as C hancellor of the U n iv e r­ District C ourt in Austin in 1938. M r. H a rt plans to keep legis­ sity on Novem ber 15, H e served as Texas assistant at­ lators informed of m atters p er­ Jam es P. H art, who w ill give up torney general in charge of oil and taining to the U n iversity, he says, his seat on the Texas Suprem e gas cases from 1939 to 1941 and and to let them know his opinions Court to become the first U n iv e r­ j then returned to private practice. I concerning them. However, he sity Chancellor, is the kind o f a I He was appointed to the Suprem e j ha made no defin ie plans to visit man who likes to come home from I Court bench in 1947 by the late ;hem as y cf. his office in the Capitol building, I G overnor Je s te r and the follow ing j The 45-year-old ju ris t was put on a p a ir of khakis, an old year was elected to the Court, I unanimously recommended by the shirt, a pair of beat-up si o* , and rs. H a rt also a Phi B eta [ad visory com mittee, the members go to work in bis vegetable garden ; Kappa, rn at present working on of which were selected by all the or in the yard until dark, a doctorate in French at the U n i­ [faculties, ex-students, and the Developm ent Board. Mrs. H a rt and the three boys, versity. She has completed all I nivcrsity Jam es Jr., IC , Dick, Id, ami Jo e , examination s and courses, but •Mr. H a rt was elected C hancellor 9, like yardxvork as much as their lacks her dissertation. Mrs. H art, by til*- Board of Regents the la t­ father, Dick is earning spending wlio is from Austin, was th* te r part of Ju ly , 11*50. M r. H art is the second mail the money w orking by the hour, and form er Miss K a th e rin e Drake. She !.*• keeps accurate records of his got her bachelor of arts degree I niversity has called w ithin re ­ “ tim e,” B y themselves the H arts lim n W e lle ley and her mast to cent years from a state office to a position of educational leader­ take care o f their spacious lawn, of arts degree from Columbia. ship. Gil th G ilchrist who is the flo w e r garden, and vegetable g ar­ Parents Ex-Students ehaccellor o f A & M was named den. president o f the College while he In the Hat M r. H a rt's na rent*, wl » im. ♦ was serving a - state highway engispirit of f:U'ii;\ X S practice the b I t a t it ‘'im m uts o ‘Sides t work togt I her m u r k e r at boys, who are at home, there art f r o m I Hit? two daughters. Sh* noun, 20, am preside ut < The e K itty , IK, w -'n are at W elleslo j Uou). < allege in Massachusetts, w h en captain o f th« Mrs. H art did her undergraduate editor c f the C; si in or work. year, 1899. H i secreSherm an is a senior history ma- tare o ( the U n iv e rsity of Ti xas jor. She plans to attend the U n i- i A th letic Association and was a versify next year to do graduate member o f Kappa Sigma, work. K itty is a sophomore, ma-J .1* ie new Chancellor’s office will ming in English. The three b o y s ; be u> M ain Build ing 210. The i iala ! “ scattered all over town” at suite of rooms was orig inally deA Austin High S h o d where J -me • as special reading rooms. is a junior, at Austin Ju n io r High ^ ‘e Regents w ill meet in the School where Dick is an eighth- ‘V a<^’ !.n c M r. H art's ofgrader, and at Wooldridge, where j *H' ac^jacent to theirs on Jo e D a fourth-grader. [the oast, and C. Read C ranb erry, assis tnt ti» the Chancellor, will have his office adjacent on the White Colonial House WI st . Chanctdlor while I the ChanceilorSounds confus; his selection as U n iv e rsity , M r. I first honorary Chancellors, a soV u iv e rs ity Law Sch ool. The Chancellors comprise the L a w School’s tojKranking seniors and members of the .stuff of the Texas I aw Review . Although M r. H art attended the U niversity L a w School for one year, he trans­ ferred to H arva rd where he was graduated with honors. This is the first honorary mem­ bership the Chancellors have given since the society was founded in 1912. DRESSED IN K H A K IS and with hoe in hand, U T ’s chan r prepares to enjoy his o ff hours gardening. The yard 's ap p e aran ce well testifies th a t it s had attention. The H arts l i ve in a w hite c o M r, H a rt was one of nine men lonial-style house with green shut-j from a list of 122 unanim ously tors at 1800 Forest T ra il. The approvt d by a fa c u lty advisory two-story house and large yard are committee for the chancellorship. surrounded by a white picket Dr-. P a in te r has been serving as fence, tin the front porchthere iacting chancellor since Septem ber is usually a croipiet set; in a side j I. After Novem ber 15, he will ard, a volley ball net; and in be responsible only for the adaVioth. r section of th yard, a bas- [m ini {.ration of two U n iv e rsity ketball court. j units— the M ain U n ive rsity at The two younger boys are Austin and the Institute of Mag A ting a ‘home o f their ow n” Urie Science at P o rt Aransas. behind the H a rt house. A dorm!-1 O ther U n iv e rsity units include tory where each w ill h ive his own the Galveston Medical B ranch ( inroom is being built. A t the same c .iding a our ing college and the Dental time the H arts are extending their .several hosp itals), living room and adding a bay w in ­ ( oliege and the M. lh Anderson Hospital for Cancer Research at do w. Southwestern M edical E v e ry on< e in a while M r. H a rt R u s t o n , likes to take that gun down and School at Dallas, Texas W estern go hunting. H e hunts dove around College at E l Pa <>, and Mi Donald Austin, but, goes t > the coast for Observatory at F o rt Davis (owned ducks. D uring deer season he by the U n iv e rsity and operated does most o f his hunting in the with the U n iv e rsity o f Chicago). hills of South Texas. Takes Over in 3 W eeks Aside from his regular work as Ju s tic e of the Suprem e Court, M r. A ft e r M r, H a rt becomes ChanH art has been interested in th o jc e llo r in Novem ber, D r. Pa in ter history of the Court. He has writ- and the executive heads of all ten several articles on e a rly his- other individual units w ill report tory o f the Supreme C ourt in directly to him. Texas and has had one published j The Chancellor, the chief busiin the Texas La w R eview and one ness office, and the executive in the Southwestern L a w J o u r n a l , j heads of all U n iv e rs ity compo­ e r . H art has been in the Uni- nents w ill compose an advisory versify or its immediate shadow j council which w ill meet on call of all his life. H e entered the Uni- Abe C hancellor or any three mem­ eers ity as a student in 1920 and I bers- This council w ill co-ordinate in fo u r years made a name fo r the education and research pro*him self on the campus. grams of the several institutions. He was an active member of I The C hancellor w ill make Tee­ the college debate team, and a i ommendations to the Regents as member of the State C h a m p io n - ';0 general policy. He w ill ship Debate Team in Austin High I ,nvcsUgate the facts, make up his School. He also played v arsity j uWn num* about the best I, niverfootball for two years. In 1924 M r. H a rt was one of ive juniors elected to P h i Beta J Kappa. In his Senior year he was j Here Are A nsw ers one of the three co-chairmen o f ; To P age 4 Contest V a rs ity Circus, social event of the year and forerun ner of Round- : How m any could you guess? Up, and one of the tw elve out- < Did you know th at number standing students in the Alcalde. I is Je a n Lipscomb, president He ran fo r student body presiof “ T S O ” Theta Sigm a P h i; dent against Otis Rogers, now a Number 2 is Mac B in t lif f ; F o rt W o rth law yer, in 1924, and head cheer leader; number 3 lost a close race. He was a member I is Ja c k ie F a rris , sweetheart o f F ria rs and Kappa Sigm a f r a ­ of the U n iv e rs ity ; number 4 is ternity. the Aggies favorite, alias the He enrolled in law school landy rm the foun tain; number fo r one year, and transferred to 5 is Ben Procter, left end; num­ H arva rd La w School in 1925. In ! ber 6 is Beth Ann W ilson, cam­ 1928 he was admitted to the Texas pus beauty; and number 7 is bar and joined the Austin law i Lloyd Hand, student president. firm of his father, Jam es I L H art. The new Chancellor-elect was / W ITH H UN TING IN THE AIR, M r. H a rt looks forw ard to a week end in the country enjoying one o f his favorite hobbies. H e likes to hunt in the hills of South Texas best, but in the duck season he does go to the coast, lf chancellor duties aren t too heavy when he takes office on November 15, he would like to go out for the deer season 5 Sunday. O c to b e r 22, 1950 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 6 Sunday, O c to b e r 22, 1950 rn in T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Page 7 theHouse! But ft's All in a Day s Work By MARJORIE CLAPP N Th -•;’• "V. ■ the fa c t that m a n j U n i­ v e r s ity sw ain s w ould like to take a g an d er behind the doors of the U n iv e r s it y ’s th r iv in g s o ro rity abodes, the te r r it o r y is .slightly out o f ran g e for most of them . A n d th e y m ust be co n ten t m erely to be cu rio u s ab o u t w hat a c tu a lly goes on w h en th e y ’ve le f t th e ir dates a t the so ro rity house steps. B u t th ere a re 42 men on the cam pus who can p ro b a b ly te ll yo u ju s t as m uch ab o u t life in a so ro rity house as a n y o f the 1500 social club m em bers. H ow do th* y do it ? And w h a t’s th*- catch? W e ll, th e y ’re know n a- “ the nu n in w h ite ” — these boys vin- nmn the m eal tables a t sor­ o rity homes in ex bange* fo r be­ ing 15 d th ric e a day. F ro m these fellow >’ points of vie w , i heir positions a re both en­ viab le and a d van tag eo u s a lth o u g h th ere a re drawbacks-—and em ­ b a rra ssin g situ a tio n s— at tim es. B u t you can be sure as one bus­ boy puts it, “ it ’s w o n d e rfu l tra in ­ in g for p o te n tia l husbands.” F o r instance, le t’s take B e r n y S m ith w ho feeds th a t h r ’s a n old hand a t th** business since he is w o r k i n g in the D e lta G am m a house fo r bis third consecutive Se mes t er. It w as q u ite a shock, .-aid B e r n y , w hen he w en t to w o rk fo r firs t tine- at b re a k fa st, ex­ p e llin g to be surrounded by a be\y o f beauties, and w as con­ fro n te d b y sleepy-eyed, untalkat n e women. “ T a ke S u n d a y m ornings fo r in ­ stance. T h e g irls have 45 m inutes to eat. Do th e y com e dow n a t d iffe re n t tim* s? N o — they w a it u n til the last five m inutes. Then i t ‘s a battle o f w its w hen I tr y I T H O U G H T h< d g o re to s, ’ C h arlo tte C a ' 'isle, of Mission, lower right, fa te washing dishes as a m atter o f count while Berny Sm dh carefully sets the habit with the Delta G am m a best china. Although Berny has had three years experience, he ti breaks an occasional cup. I rn"fillip j0 V - '•■• MEI 99 ■ ISF; ,. * •■ rn * r n * w \ * '- W h a t ’s D o w n There? University Underworld By T OM . '-'A Z. 0&Z,•' . . '.'3 *<*• ■» J.* ■ ■ ■r n ■ ■ . 'W , - V:i •• ' - - ****■*' CARTER A freshman co-ed confidently sits down to dinner at Little­ field Dormitory, A professor steps calmly into a Main Build* in# elevator. A w histling student flips up the collar of his jacket and leans through the sharp wind toward the w arm th of G arrison Hall. The co ed s dinner will be cooked, probably still hot. The professor’s elevator will whisk him to the desired floor, and Garrison Hall will sufficiently squelch the cold, T hey don’t worry about it. But someone has to. And th at someone twisted a gas valve or turned a switch a remote live hundivd yards away that made all three possible— possible through a vast network of underground structure that tunnels under your most fre­ quent classroom, your main thoroughfare to classes, or maybe even your bedroom. W o u ld You Care to Enter? “If everything underground were suddenly brought to sui face, says ( aid J. Eckhardt, superintendent of utilities, “we would have an amazed student body and faculty,” These tunnels, undermining the entire University campus, originate at the University power plant, immediately east of Engineering Building, stretch to Brackenridge Hall and along Tw enty-First S treet on the south, to Sutton Hall and M odern la n g u a g e s Building on the west, and extend north o Littlefield Dormitory and the recently-completed Student Health (krnter. A t present they house steam lines which accomodate all the heating and cooking facilities of the University p r o p e l . Steam is furnished by natural gas-fed boilers in the power plant. With two new boilers- a total of fo ur—the plant is capable of generating 335,000 pounds of steam per hour, considerably more than the immediate needs of the Uni­ versity. A program is now underway to install in these tunnels, along with the heating facilities, a cooling system for cam­ pus buildings. The cooling-water pipes will run directly be­ neath the steam pipes. Sufficient insulation of the pipes will keep the contrasting tem peratures from affecting one another. Five-hundred feet of the cooling system already has bc^n partially installed. Mr. E ckhardt reports. The 1,800-ton refrigeration plant is estimated to cost $592,000. Suddenly coming into the knowledge th a t the University was situated over a web of tunnels, a student asked inno­ cently, “Why a re n ’t entrances Into all the buildings made from the tunnels so students could walk to classes in them on rainy days?” The question probably never has been placed before the tunnel supervisors, but circumstances o ffer their own an­ swer. Wi t h no artificial ventilation, tem perature in the tunnels varies from around IOO degrees to more than ITO degrees. When the refrigeration lines a re installed, the tunnels will be partially ventilated to hold the tem perature around a constant IOO degrees, Mr. Eckhardt says. A long 100-degree walk in a tight corridor would be preferred to wet feet by only a minority of students. D uring ra in j weather, tile tunnels themselves take in a nominal amount of water. Small drainage' canals run the length of the tunnels to prevent w ater standing, Although most of the tunnels are six and one-half feet high and six feet wide, providing ample walking space, they are reduced to only four and o u t'h a lf feet in height when leading to an isolated building. I his would result in much back-bending and bum ping of heads for even the smallest of students. B ut the foremost obstacle to stu d en t travel via the under­ w o u n d is th** possibility of accidents. Although no mishaps have occurred in the tunnels, they are not implausible. Es­ cape hatches, like the one Ruth Hancock of Plainview arn* Dick Waterman- are peer ing down in the picture to the left, ' dot the roofs of the tunnels as a safety precaution should a line burst. If the line parted, says Mr. Eckhardt, it could be heard fo r four or five miles. “The principal danger is having unauthorized people in the tunnels,” he points out. “ Persons unfam iliar with the tunnel machinery and escape methods would increase the likelihood of serious accidents.” No one except authorities are allowed unattended in the tunnels. Chances are, you can’t go. So to satisfy the curious and help acquaint students with the unseen providers of comfort on the campus, a reporter and photographer ac­ companied M r . E ckhardt on a to u r of the underground sys­ tem. Now you can see w hat you’re missing. r n * * / * / \ I Y O U C A N SEE (he originating point of the funnels without go in g underground. A com plicated system of steam pipes mark the first leg of the network at the p o w e r plant, which has furnished the University w'th 200,000,000 pounds o f steam during the last twelve months. This steam, furnished by natural gas-fed boilers in the power plant, east of the engineering buildings, : is conducted through the maze o f tunnels which stretch from Brackenridge Hall and Twenty first Street on the south to Littlefield Dorm and the new Student Health Center on the north. / T H E T O U R L E A D S from the twisting corri;>rs into a spacious underground room, where­ t o pipes make numerous sharp bends to low for expansion. The expansion system, M r. Eckhardt, superintendent of utilities, ex­ plains to the reporter, is accordian-like, the p pes varying two and one-half to three feet with the temperature. T O F O L L O W T H IS L E G of the , tem would lead y >u nowhere. It runs under University Avenue north of the Cam pus, and probably will som e d ay serve a building yet to be constructed Junefey, October 22L 1950 THE D A ILY TE X A N Pace IO The Good Dean Retires Plan ll Founder Ends 4 2-Y e ar UT Career I By F LO C O X a n d J A M E S HOLLEY Dr. P a r lin h as m e t a n d c o m e to k n o w e v e r y P l a n II s t u d e n t a n d A b u ild e r ha- r e t i r e d from th e his fam ily. A lth o u g h the p r e s e n t sy s te m o f a d m in is t r a tiv e s c e n e a t th e U n i ­ v e r s ity , b u t he will n e v e r be f a r se le c tin g s t u d e n t s on th e s t r i c t b a ­ f r o m t h e h e a r t s o f his " b e lo v e d sis o f t h e i r high school rec o rd m a y b u s t e e s , ” P la n II m a jo r s , an d o t h ­ m iss e x c e lle n t c a n d i d a t e s f o r P l a n e r s t u d e n t s w hom he g u id e d a n d II, Dr. P a r lin th in k s it is th e b e s t c o u n s ele d d u r in g his 42 y e a r s o f possible m e th o d . service. | “ S t u d e n t s w ho h a l e good high D r. H. T. P u rlin has p robably s» hool r e c o rd s will a lm o s t a l w a y s mf t a n d bec om e p e rso n a lly a c ­ do w ell h e re . A good high school q u a i n te d w ith m o r e s tu d e n ts th a n r e c o r d is a - a f e r j u d g e o f a b i lity a n y o th e r m a n in the h is t o r y o f to g e t a lo n g a t t h e U n iv e rsity t h a n th*- U n iv e r s ity . F o r 27 y e a r s he a r e th e t e s t s w e ’re g iv in g ,” he b e ­ w a s a s s o c ia te d w ith th e o f fic e o f lieves. the D ean o f th e C ollege o f A s t ­ ! A lth o u g h P lan ll w as p u t into a n d Sciences*, 21 y e a r s a s D ean. o p e r a tio n 27 y e a r s a f t e r Dr. P a r ­ In S e p te m b e r , 1949, Dr. P a d i n tin cam e to th e U n iv ersity , th e m ov ed up f r o m position o f D e a n n u c le u s o f th e id e a was p r o b a b ly o f th e College of A r t s a n d S c ie n ­ b o r n sh o r tly a t t e r he a r r iv e d rn ces to C o n s u lta n t Dean. Dr. C. P. 1908. C o m in g f r o m th e U n iv e r ­ B o n e r w as a p p o i n te d to fill th e sity of P e n n s y lv a n ia , he soon m e t v a c a n c y . Dr. P a ri in is now D e a n th o se m e n w ho m he believes w e r e E m e r i t u s o f the College, th e big m e n in a c u l t u r a l - en se . H e h as l e f t his im p a c t on t h e l h tv w ere Dr. J a m e s W . B a ttle , C ollege o f A rts a n d S ciences, o n l a t e r U n iv e rsity p r e s id e n t; J u d g e t h e U n iv e r s ity , a n d on t h e stat*'. C h a rle s E . T o w n e s o f th e L aw Dr a n Pat b n is a b u ild e r — a b u ild ­ S ch o o l; a n d T. U. T a y lo r, d e a n o f e r o f e d u c a t io n a l princip les, a th e School o f E n g in e e r in g . A b o u t I .-TOO s t u d e n t s w ere e n ­ b u ild e r of c h a r a c t e r end in te lle c t rolled rn th e U n iv e r s ity a t t h a t in y o u n g people. T h e c a m p u s con siste d o f D u r i n g hi** y e a r s on th e F o r t y tim e. RELAXING AT HIS DESK, Dean Par!m re Aer*.-, D e a n P a r lin o r ig in a te d an old im ild in g s a n d no la n d sc a p in g , j o f the C ollege of Arts and Sciences. A g r e a t calls incidents marking hr, 42 years a t the a c a d e m ic p r o g r a m the in f lu e n c e As th e y e a r s pa s se d , sp e c ia liz a tio n i believer In liberal educatio n, Dr. Parlin has of w hich is fe lt in all the colleges in c re ase d , n o t only in th e e d u c a University. Perhaps he is b est known for his long a d v o c a te d cultural training a n d en igh?* nan d u n iv e rs itie s in th e s t a t e — P la n tio n a l field b u t in th e charact* i beloved b u s te e :” of Plan ll. but he has also ment rather than professional specialization I I . A s his g r a d u a t e s p e rio d ic a lly o f th e te a c h e r s them selves. served the students as a professor, as d e a n of to w ard which hr, believes th e modern cc Leg© T h e n c a m e Dr. P a r l i n ’s c h a n c e ; g e t th e i r d iplo m as a n d go o u t t o f freshmen and sophom ore: and finally as dean is progressing. m a k e t h e i r p isc e s in society, th e f o r a d v a n c e m e n t. In 191(1 Dr. H. I \. B e n e d ic t, a l a t e r p r e s id e n t, b e j c u lt u r a l in f lu e n c e o f his libe ral j Dr, P a rlin m a d e close f r ie n d s : < n^. T h e o nly good citizen des­ w e s t e r n m in i n g c a m p , his p a t e n t s c a m e D ean o f th e College of A r t s a r t s c u r r i c u l a is b e in g fe lt. a n d S ciences, a n d in t h e fall of of both f a c u l t y a n d s t u d e n t s ; he tined by tr a i n i n g a t th e s t a t e ’s w e re fro m Maine. H e r e c eiv e d his T h is “ mall co lleg e w ithin a 1913, he o ffe re d Dr. P a r lin th e took th e m on hikes, e n t e r t a i n e d ex p e n se for service a n d le a d e r ­ b a c h e lo r of a r t s a n d his mast* o f g r e a t u n iv e r s i ty , ” a s “ th e g o o d They in tu r n ship in society is t h e e n l ig h te n e d a s s i s t a n t d e a n s h ip o f th e < alleg e. th e m at his hom e. D e a n " is fo n d o f r e f e r r i n g to th e a r ts d e g r e e s f ro m the U n iv e r s it y T h e first in n o v a tio n which Dr. in vited him to t h e i r m e e tin g s , and a n d go o d m a n . IOO - i n d e n t s e n r o lle d in th e p r o ­ o f C o lo ra d o a n d his d o c t o r a t e f r o m he b e c a m e one of the m o st p e n n ­ Dr, p a r l i n does not think the th* U n iv e r s it y o f Penn - \ Iva ilia. g r a m , is a t r e n d to w a r d t h e th e o ry P a r lin h e a d e d w a - the carne d ea n a n d b ec am e re sp o n sib le for s t u ­ of the College. A t this tim e, the d e n t s on sc h o la s tic p r o b a tio n , c<*untry w as at th e h e ig h t o f tho M a ny o f his “ beloved bustee.-" g l o a t boom. a r d a r g u m e n t p r e | — s t u d e n t s who had failed to I v ailed o v e r th e e n c r o a c h m e n t of m a ke an a c a d e m ic r e c o r d t h a t w ould ke ep th e m in school— mad** p ro fe ssio n a l a n d v o catio nal s t i n k Som e e d u ­ a f r e s h s t a r t u n d e r Dr. P a r ! in ’s on lib e ral e d u c a tio n . s y m p a th e tic g u id a n c e . M a n y w e n t c a to r s said th a t even tin* College of A r t s a n d Sciences was d is a p ­ on to d istin g u ish them selv es p ea rin g . th e ir r e s p e c t! ' e fields. O n e o f his first m o l e s as D e a n was to w rite in to th e c a ta lo g u e m o r e r u le s a n d r e g u l a t i o n s to ra is e school s t a n d a r d s a n d a t t e n ­ d a n c e a t classes. T h e n he co n c eiv ed t h e idea of s a v in g th e B.A. d e g r e e f o r th e p u r p o s e of p u re a n d sim p le lib e ral e d u c a tio n , with s t r o n g em p h asis on w hat w e call c u ltu r e . T h e r e ­ s u lt w as P la n II. In this p e riod, the G r e a t De­ p ressio n bro k e, w ith t h e r e s u l t of a f r e e z e o f th e U n iv e r s it y b u d g t f o r s e v e r a l y ea rs. P r o g r e s s w aa lm o s t im p o ssib le a n d even p ay raise s f o r d e s e r v in g p r o f e s s o r s w e re held back. D e sp ite t h e s e o bsta cles. P lan l l was a d o p t e d a n d p r o g r e s s w a s m a d e. No s o o n e r h a d the c o u n t r y r e -! c o v e r e d e c o n o m ic ally th a n the U n iv e r s ity u n d e r t o o k a new b u ild ­ ing p r o g r a m . Dr. B e n e d ic t died in 1937 a n d an ad in te rim a d m i n ­ is t r a tio n b eg a n t h a t la ste d f o r tw o y e a r s . Dr. R a in e y had j u s t a b o u t b e e n c o m f o r t a b l y s e a te d w h ee w a r w as d e c la r e d in 1941. S h o r t ­ ly a f t e r t h e conflict bet we n th* p re s id e n t a n d th e R e g e n ts s t a r t e d . By this tim e P la n ll h a d b e e n in o p e r a tio n f o r som e tim e , a n d w r i tin g on th e s u b je c t , Dr. P a r lin said, “ l f th e U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s > W IT H A JOV IAL SMILE, U e G ; D- rn r< ■‘ or a n y o t h e r t a x - s u p p o r te d in s t i­ first cam e lo Texas and t h o u g h t ‘just po'-.ib’y*1 a ye' on could tu ti o n o f h ig h e r le a r n in g is f o u n d ­ vo te Republican, Dr. Porlin is known a m o n g Plan ll stu d e n ts to r ed for one t h i n g m o re t h a n an-1 his friendliness a n d r ea di ness t o know th e m all. o t h e r it is to p r o d u c e goo d c i t U said re* ep in th* a I v a n d stint o n e gr< to c ul t i v at e the rn iud. ” He c a m e to T e x a s w th t l u n a t e b a c k g r o u n d , Dr. tell you. A lt h o u g h bo use point? t i in has jean shot For Fall F u n P ool e v e n in g s a r e th* tim e for p a r ti e s a n d f o rm a ls. Give you r p a r ty p la n s th a t o ri­ g in a l to u c h with a t ­ tr a c tiv e in v ita tio n s f r o m S T E I KUS. INVITATIONS ANNOUNCEMENTS PROGRAMS PERSONAL STATIONERY Social Stationery 206 W est 9 th Dial 7-4411 Sunday, October 22, 1950 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 11 Lindsey Finds: Noose Is Necessary For Week-enr Date Phone Your Classified A d to the D a ily Texan 2-2475 By Did before 4 P.M. BERT you ever MILLER hunt mountai n boomers? Al mos t a n y we e k end you can a n d it w ill be in You can come in a n d p a y for it the next d a y , I this w a j Li ndsey learn deal a b o u t thei r habits, a gi eat Lindsey is also doi ng a st ud y ov er the l i z a r d’s head, ti ghteni ng a r o u n d his neck. T h e n In*" de- I in var i ati on— that is, he stud posits t he cat ch i nt " the sack flit* details of each C r o t ap hy t ua I collario (mountain boomer) to dedent in h e r pe t ol og y , set, out in ha ng i ng f r om h i t belt, L i n d s e y has no t r oubl e wi th •' fH U V U ft rn m in A ■r iii! you want in our big and interesting bosk S i ii I /s Convenient tor1Dei ween Supplies y co op S T U D E N T ’ 5 OWN S T O R E n Sunday, O c to b e r 22, 1950 I Y - >. Saucers No Wilder Than Scully's Story . T H E D A IL Y T E X A N IE Page tI X I -rtf .■** ■ IP B history which, once in a while, Saucer has disproved, is that of aehave connection with " f ly in g sau- j tu ally finding a "fly in g saucer’ cers." H e also includes a chapter and its occupants east ol Aztec, on scientific terms that are related ; N ew Mexico. H ere is a sample of to flyin g saucers. These includej this report: From the fascinating pages of terms associated with "s a u c e r" j “ The outside surface showed no “ flying saucer" history comes a sources of power which he de- m arking of any sort, except fo r a fantastic and unbelievable tale of scribes as originating from "mag- broken porthole . . . we looked into what F ra n k Scu lly believes lies be­ the interior. There we were able net ie lines of fo rc e ." hind the entire matter. O f the several tales which come to count sixteen bodies, that B u t rather than taking an un­ from idiots and scientists and men ranged from about 30 to 42 inches biased view of the various ac­ and women in almost all walks of . . . T hey were p erfectly normal counts that have been told the life, the one most incredulous, and in their development. The only country over, as did E d w ard Ii. <»ne whose valid ity the U S P ro ject trouble was that their skin seemed M orrow over radio’s equivalent of to be charred a ve ry dark choco­ “ Behind the F ix in g Sau cers," late colo r." Scu lly continences with the prem ­ 105 Authors1 W orks F o r all these descriptions of ia* that there are really such ma­ bodies and ships, the only physi­ rl o h s as " fly in g saucers." IIo in ‘The W o rld ’s Best* cal evidence that Scu lly claims therefore concludes that every I ‘ook-oj -the Month Club’s b k- he is able to produce is some %J tale proves his premise true, a naps ol metal and some strange premise which could have been dividend for November will Im ear cogs And upon this he bases “ The W o rld ’s B I e s t," a collect im fallacious in the beginning. * is whole book. I of ion living of the best writ V. t th* s b o o k is m o s t delightful Also, in an attempt to prove that there are really "fly in g sau­ an! hors. fading, It is w ritten in a light Published by D ial, the 1200-word cers," Scu lly reviews some second­ :vie. Us fantastic tales are cal-1 er third-hand accounts, some of volume contains stories, humor, cl tinted to keep you in suspense, \ v>. which have absolutely nothing to drama, biography, history, essays, and even its strictly "s c ie n tific " back them up. He says that they and poetry. The book was edited explanations and terms w ritten \ W; are true because ( I ) A fte r all, by W h it Bu rn ett, editor of “ This for the layman lead you# in a I MOSES AND THE TABLETS w riggly line to the conviction who is tu doubt the words of Is M y Best.” those who say they saw " f ly in g In compiling the volume, Mr. (hat there re a lly are " f ly in g sau­ saucers" and actually examined B u rn e tt sent over 3,000 ballots cers." From ‘In Our Im a g e ’ l f you Avant to be led on an j tim contents of th<* crashed ma­ to • authorities throughout the chines; and (2 ) the U S G o vern ­ world, a?-king then? to name "the earth-bound Bu ck Rogers trip, come w ith F ra n k Sc u lly into the j m ent’s investigation, “ P ro je c t w o rld ’s greatest living w riters.’’ S a u c e r," failed to prove all stories, As a result of this balloting, the realm of “ flyin g saucers.’’ B u t all more than 300, false. 105 w riters whose works appear that he says should be taken with S c u lly ’s book-length “ science- in the volume were chosen. Each a grain of salt. Fly in g saucers or fic tio n " story interweaves hearsay author was in turn asked to name no flying saucers, it makes a good accounts, some of which he says bis most representative work. In bedtime story for the whole fnoi­ he has actu a lly seen proof, w ith some cases the author’s reason ily. Guy R ow e’s thirty two portraits, | unbound prints for fram ing, interesting episodes of persons) for his selection are given. * K E N N E T H G O M P E R T Z painted originally to illu s tr a te ! The book was the idea of M r. twenty-six Old Testam ent narra- H arte, a W e s t Texas newspaper tive selected and edited by Hou- publisher and ardent Bible student, ston H arte, were published to- who thought the Old Testam ent gether as " I n Our Im ag e" in 1949. might be made more readable to vt CW*,.-.I TTnivni-ei+v Prpa« modern Am ericans if it w ere careNow Oxford U n ive rsity Presa has released the four-color por- fu ll>r edited and presented rn an traits alone rn a p o r t f o l i o in re-| a ttn ,c t,ve book w ith color lllussponse to thousanos of requests for , lo t io n s anti large type. _____ ____________________ — J The result was a modem classic read by thousands and ideal as a a m g ift book fo r religious persons and art lovers alike. The original ediREAD * I tion presented the text of the narratives in the K in g Jam es v e r­ sion of the H oly Bible. La ter, a second edition with the text in the L IV IN G J O Y O U S L Y . By Kirby I>ouay (Rom an Catholic) version P a * * New York. Rinehart A was published. by Leroy H. Appleton C o m p an y . 3 8 0 P* g « . $1-50. j Mr. Rowe, who brought a new and robust style of painting into Full representation of the Am erican No person searching fo r the re][g}ous portraiture, spent n e a rly Indians’ contribution to world art. j o y of life should fail to read f our y ears on the thirty-two charA v a ilab le for first time in one volume. " Joyous Living, whose e v e I>' arter studies. He would call it Result of twenty years’ study and page contains a helpful central | persiorial emotion reporting— the observation. Designs drawn and col­ thought to he carried out iii ev- pictorial recordings of an a rtist ored after finest examples of Indian eryday living. j laym an’s reactions on studying the This book is an anthology of Bib le thoroughly, work. M ore than a hundred tribes devotional readings w ritten by j W hen A rtis t Rowe began to represented. Book itself is a work distinguished clergym en or the au- , work on the portraits, he was of art. thor. There is one for every day j guilty of w hat M r. H arte had set of the y ear; and to be fu lly appro- lo ut to correct— ignorance of the j elated, each page should be read j Bible. B y the time he had finished and the words g i v e n m u c h the drawings he had fam iliarized ; thought, , himself with his characters a fte r The theme of the book is that painstaking research, consisting man is happy when he is rightly m ainly of reading and recording related to God and to the people : the Old Testament, with whom he lives and works. J Mr. Row e’s paintings are a symConcentration upon this right re- : phony in color and symbolism. ; lationshlp w ith God and man will J They are the artist’s ideas of how ; lead a person to a radiant jo y Biblical characters must have and a happier life. ! looked, modeled afte r people of toH e re is everyth in g— ship's figu re ­ ; "Je s u s did not teach brotherly ; day. Most of the characters he heads, m erry-go-round horses, ci; love: H e taught fa th e rly lo ve," j painted are people he met on subgar-store Indians, Shaker furniture one devotional by E . M. Ligon ways and in restaurants who and C o n e s to g a w a go n s and on and proclaims. He explains that a1- i seemed to him to be a modern-day though it has been thought hard , version of some Biblical characters. Filled with beautiful pictures to love one’s enemies, it is easy i K e n t Cooper, executive director — m any in full rich color. A tribute to think o f a father loving an of the Associated Press, in the to our ancestors and a book you'll enemy’s son. I foreword of the book wrote of M r. treasure always. Asking men to im itate Christ | Row e’s portraits, "T h e y are tois asking a very high and d iffic u lt day’s faces, but they are also yes­ s in g . He makes uncompromising terd ay’s and tom orrow’s. There is f demands for sacrifice of self. Men about them a universality that is w ill not heed those demands un- found only in great a rt." i less they develop an enormous afF irs t recognition came to him fection fo r C hrist so that all else as a commercial artist employed seems triv ia l when compared to by advertising agencies. La te r he His friend ship ." These are the did portraits of public figures fo r words of F . C. Laubach. private collectors andTim e cover Such are examples of the de- pictures, votional thoughts found in" L iv - j M r. Rowe iscredited with redis­ ing Jo y o u s ly ." The book may be covering the ancient method of J used as daily readings followed in painting in wax. The portraits in fam ily devotions or in private this book, done in grease on pro­ prayers; or illustrations and quo- | tectoid, are painted on the back, tations may be used by ministers, or reverse side— a technique probteachers, and other leaders of de- ably the oldest in the history o f votional meetings. painting. JO H N N IE H U M A N 1 C L A U D E V IL L A R R E A L BEHIND T H E FLYING S A U ­ C E R S . By F ra n k Sexily. N*‘w York. Henry Holt and Company, Inc. 230 pages. $2, 75 I Bible Portraits N o w in Portfolio Indian Art of the Americas TEXAS BOOK STORE Daily Devotional Devotional In 'Joyous Living' Sunday, O c to b er 2 2, 1950 T H E D A FLY TEX A N Page 14 IS TRULY THE SPOT U. T. STUDENTS S L IG H T L Y F R A N T IC becom e the activities c f the Cultural Entertainment C om m itte e a tew days before the appearance of one of their season artists, such as Papa C e'estin and his O rigin al Tuxedo Jazz Band which will be here Thursday. C ro w d e d into the d im inutive M u sic Building box office are left to right, Phil Ransopher, stage m anager; Dr. A rchie Jones, faculty advisor; Charlotte Tonroy, chairman; Estes Jones, publicity director; Paul Hickfang, display m anager; Evelyn Blackener, m anager; and Jim Buzbee, A P O tive. business BUILT & SUPPORT representa­ Cultural Committee Says m Campus Is Off-limits To Boa Constrictors By F A I R F A X S M I T H o u t of a thre e -co rnere d a r r a n g e ­ scribed by Dean Moore a i reasons Cu ltural E n te r ta in m e n t Com­ m e n t betw een the S tu d e n ts ’ Asso­ m ittee meetings a re often sparked ciation, th e Athletic Council, and fo r the co m m itte e ’s success. Committee m em bers a re Char­ with unusual o f f e r s fro m enter- j the division o f W om en’s I n tr a ­ twiners, n o t the least of which m ural Athletics. lotte T onroy, chairm an; Phil was the re c e n t publicity release R ansopher, voting m e m b er; Jim D oubt was voiced in stu d e n t fro m a Hollywood celebrity. He | Busby, ushers chairm an, Evelyn was planning a to u r with a variety g ov e rn m e nt a b o u t benefits a c c ru ­ ing to the tic k e t holder from Blackmer, business m a n a g e r; Paul show which fe a tu re d a girl d a n c ­ bla n k e t ta x allo tm ent to W om en’s H ickfang, display m a n a g e r; Estes ing with fo u r boa co nstricto r I n tr a m u r a ls . Negotiations re ­ p a rtn e rs. sulted in the A thletic Council’s Jones, publicity d irector; and T. Dr. Archie Jon es, faculty a d ­ a greeing to su p p o rt W o m e n ’s In ­ Odon Leshikar, cashier. visor, gasped when he re a d this. tra m u ra ls. The S tu d e n ts’ Asso­ O utstanding pro gram s this year The committee ag re e d it sounded ciation se t a b o u t to launch a in teresting, but, on second tho ught C u ltu ra l E n te r ta in m e n t Com m it­ will be a con cert by “ P a p a ” O l e s decided th ey d id n’t know where to tee which would use the money t i n ’s Dixieland Jazz Band in Oc­ tober and a p p e a ra n c e by Oscar keep to boa constrictors! previously alloted to W om en’s In­ T he committee o f e ight s ta rts tra m u ra ls to bring cu ltu ra l pro­ L ev an t with the San Antonio Sym phony in F e b r u a r y . deciding in F e b ru a ry whom they gram s to the campus. will sponsor the n e x t y e a r on the Tickets for these shows will be F o r y e a rs W alter Rolfe, p ro fe s ­ b lank et tax series. They receive a t reduced prices fo r b lank et tax sor of a rc h ite c tu re guided the notices o f which e n te rta in e rs will small, sm oothly-functioning com ­ holders. The C u ltu ra l E n te r ta in ­ be available, they w rite others, m itte e as fa c u lty advisor. Dr. m en t Com m ittee in th e p ast has le t the blan ket tax completely and then th e y begin to choose and J o n e s succeeded him. set dates. cover th e costs of th e shows, but The efficiency of th e faculty higher prices and a reduced s tu ­ A no th e r perp etu al problem is advisor a n d the f a c t th a t c h a ir ­ d e n t body, has made it necessary th a t of seating space. Hogg A udi­ toriu m , where m ost of the p ro­ manship of the com m ittee was J to charge fo r these two shows g ra m s are presented, accom mo­ ne v e r a “ political p lu m ” were de­ only. dates only abo ut 1350, a n d while G regory Gym seats betw een 7,000 and 8,000, the acoustics are n o t good enough for artistic p e r f o r m ­ ances. W hen Toscanini played A special crew of Texan workers produced this section, th ere last spring, several th o u ­ which us the first monthly supplement feature section of the sand dollars was spent improving sound devices. Daily Texan history. If a pro gram is popular, th e re i is th u s the possibility t h a t b l a n - 1 Ruth Anne “Herby” Herbsleb, Texan feature editor who ket ta x holders m ay have to be worked on the San Antonio Express feature staff all last tu r n e d away. summer, directed the Texan crew. The e n te r ta in m e n t com m ittee of Joan Grossman was Herby’s associate feature editor, with > the S tu d e n ts ’ Association got its s t a r t in the fall o f 1931, a f t e r I Fairfax Smith serving as assistant. school officials realized th a t of-; Nolan Borden and Bill Hamilton took the pictures in ficial e n te r ta in m e n ts of a high this issue. * class were necessary fo r a n ever Let us know if yon like it, as its continuance may depend g row ing s tu d e n t body. A c tually the c o m m itte e grew I on your reactions. DAN CIN G NIGHTLY Spacious Floor • BETTER FOOD For less money • BEST IN BOW LING 12 Lanes— Latest Bannswick Flooring • FACILITIES FOR BANQUETS or Large Parties • FAM O U S TOWER Jam Sessions Every Sunday Afternoon • REASONABLE PRICES rn FOR RESERVATIONS Special Staff Call 2-6382 DLie ^Ds oolv e r 407 SO. CONGRESS Sands, October 22, 1950 THE DAILY TEXAN age J 5 W ebster Would Say: Jan, Session Too Jazzy to Define An in s ti tution , Daniel W e b s t e r o n c e q u i p p e d it. hi- l i g h t e r m u m e n t s , is a n a s s o c i a t i o n , c u s t o m , or relationship consciously upp r o v e d by a s o c i e t y a n d o r g a n i z e d a n d m ain tain ed through prescribed r u l e s a n d a g e n c i e s t o til! a c e r t a i n need. t h e l a s t t w o w e n a c c o r d e d o u t a n d fine t r o m b o n e w o r k . N o w T cm a t t h e l o w e r , it s e e m s t h a t t h e y b r e e — n o t e d f o r his b o p t a l k ami P h i B e t a K a p p a key 4s s t u d y ini ' Wlii c o n t i n u e f o r s o m e t i me . r o c k s u p in I n d i a n a a n d L a b n a n T h e y ar.- a l i tt le l es s f r a n t i c sp o i ls a neat ch eck ed cr a v a t , b u t new t h a n t h e y we* \ s a y , t h r e e t h e m u s h is st il l w o r t h r i d i n g o u t y e a r s a g o w h e n Mal L o h r c e , for. l ocal e q u i v a l e n t of j a z z a p t N o r m a n G r a n a , c o n e e n , i tho ' MONE '- 1 5 2 7 “ALCATRAZ ISLAND” A nn Sheridan T ir e H vm ii>zvm fs ‘SA N Q U E N T I N ” P a t O 'B rien H um phrey Bogart H z z E z a r^ “ TH E BROKEN ARROW” PRESENTS THE ORIGINAL Jarne* S te w a r t tZZZZEH P HONG 7-l7© 6 “ TEA FOR T W O ’ Doria D ay Gordon MacRae dixie land it .'-tPM" w z sssa n i phone iae4 F irtt Show 12:45 Adult* 60c There never has been a motion pcfure life* vsE ’.'pc By Public Demand >i(/sr//v PHON* 7 -2900 in C o lo r the Rendezvous features “TREASURE ISL A N D ” R obert N ew ton the Dixieland Jamboree « £ V W « : t M d K ftfL - : - C : A Don't Miss It! DRIVE IN I H I A T R I S T W O S H O W S NIG HTLY F e a tu r e Starts at 7 p. rn. “ T he O u tr id e r s’ starting at 8 p.m. Joel M cCrea A rlene Dahl rn*. • Never a cover charge • Never a minimum charge rn * ll • § Open ll a.m. daily refrigerated . . . air conditioned Tho Rendezvous “T reasure I cfi- O Island” B obby Driic»ll R obert N ew ton p l u •---- “ R oughsho d” I R o b e rt Sterling Gloria G rah am e r s o O U ^ “ MY F R I E N D NY 3 IRMA G O E S W EST” M arie W ilton John Lund “ T h e O u t la w ’ 2910 Guadalupe Jane Rutted IRIS ‘A n g e l i t o * N e g r o * ’ P ed ro Isante For M o r e Furl START YOUR PICNIC or PARTY AT YOUR C O N V E N IE N T 7 - E L E V E N DAIRY ST O R E 29th Cr F R U T H You'll get going morn quickly with a "one-stop start" of your Drink Y o' Drink picnic at 7-Eleven , . . where you get everything you need for a Fry Yo' C hi ck en s: successful affair. Stars A r e N e a r You see, when you've made up your mind, and when you've sold your picnicking partners on the idea, you Friendship Thickens wantto G O ! Then,and C old drinks and tried chicken is the "o ut of this world quick. You don't want to be running all over town, looking for some­ picnic combination. G et everything at 7-Eleven, the place thing one place, and something else at another . . . wasting precious where you get beverages packed in C R U S H E D IC E in a waterproof paper bag . . . keeps icy-cold for hours. picnicking time. You want to G O ! Y O U N G B L O O D S Frosted Fryers are ideal for pie nicking . . . cut-up and ready for the skillet. You can fry S-o-o-o-o-o, start your picnic at 7-Eleven where you can get them immediately . . . or delay the frying several hours if that suits your plans. every item you want . . . all at one stop, all at one time. The 7-Eleven men really know about outfitting parties for picnics. They will see that you remember al! the right thlnqs, andthey serve you so promptly you'll be gone before you know it. T H E B IG G E S T TIME, A T T H E L O W E S T C O S T ! That’s a drink ’n chicken' picnic with all the trimming’s from 7-Eleven. W hether it’s platonic or romantic, Its more fun and less cost. Start your picnic at 7-Eleven, picnic head­ quarters. G e t your date, grab your skillet, roll your blanket and Check These Picnic Items collect your wits. Drive in at 7-Eleven, the Picnic Pantry for UT Students for y a rs and yars, and get A L L your picnic supplies at O N E STOP. Drinks, chicken, crushed Ice C o ld Beverages Frankfurters Crushed Ice W ie n e r s Sandwich H a m b u rg e r Patties ice, charcoal . . . E V E R Y T H IN G . . . at one time and one place Meats Sandw ich Sp rea ds Cheese, sliced or packaged Vienna Sausage Pickles 'n Olives W o o d e n Forks cmd S p o o n s C o ld M e a t s Sliced to O r d e r Pa p e r Plates and C u p s M u sta rd ’n Dressing . . . the 7-Eleven Store. The Picnic P an try For UT Stu d e n ts :mmma S O M E T H I N G NEV /! I I i H am burger Patties are just the thing for your Ice C o l d Beverages Paper Napkins Ice C c ‘d S o d a Pop picnics. Frozen to keep the flavor in, you can cook them in two minutes— -no need to let them thaw. M ad e from pure beef and beef suet— no filler added. They’re really By the case;* to go "o ut cf this world." 7-11 H A M B U R G E R PATTIES O p e n 7 — C lose l l — 7 D a y s a W e ek l t-ur the Convenience E9EN D U R Y No. 901 Red River N o. 2 — 1017 Barton Springs Road of Students 29th Cr F R U T H No. 3 — 29th and Fruth No. 5 — 51 st and Burnet Road No. 7 — 3406 Jefferson No. 4 — 43rd and Duval No. 6 — N o. 8 — 915 Lam ar 1912 South C o n g r e s s