On Her Birthday T he D a UT Russian Student Faces Deportation By R O N N IE Teran D UG G ER F i r s t VOLUME 51 E d ito r ( T h e firs t in • se ries o f A r­ tic le s on the U n i v e r s i t y ’s o n ly R u s s ia n s tu d e n t— w h o fled V l a ­ d iv o s to k to C h in a in 1930, s t u ­ d ie d a t six A m e r ic a n u n iv e r s i­ ties, a n d is n o w th r e a te n d w ith d e p o r ta tio n . C o p y r ig h t , The D a ily T e x a n , 1 9 5 0 .) Price Five Cents C o l l e g e T exan D a i l y I n T h e S o u t h AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1950 Ten Pages Today Student Assembly M ayCall For Referendum on NSA H er straight blonde hair flashed in the Texas sunlight. High-strung Tam arra Nicholas V a n n , who is 37 today, furrowed the worried lines of her fore­ head— lines deeper than the years alone can carve. By C H A R L E Y T R IM B L E T e x a n A t$ oc io t« Edit or Campus Chest received promise of a new lease H e r glowing blue eyes were solftly fram ed with tears as she walked past the M ain Building, gesturing distractedly. on life; a bill to call a student referendum on University entrance in N S A was introduced; and the “ Plural X ” voting system was introduced; and “ They w ant everything made in secret. I don’t w ant secrets any more. It has been going on now fo r six years, but not by any decisive vote. W ith six members, for, three against, and ten abstaining, Vice-Presi­ dent Sterling Steves, presiding over the first half of the meeting, declared the resolution passed. Main discussion revolved around the point of members David Bennett. A&S, and Don Guinn, the Student Assembly meeting Thursday night in Law, that international considerations were not Texas Union. In a spirited meeting, the Assembly members j a function of the Student Assembly, passed a resolution endorsing the Atlantic Union, ; Bennett told the Assembly that such a resolu- " I kept m> moutn shut, as they say. I have not been able to get good work. I have been fired from —Photo b y S o la n Borden TAMARRA NICHOLAS VARM jobs fo r no reason. Now they want . . . No Place to Go to deport me. •■J have no atagomsm toward pine trees and com fort, oblivious B u t she took to the Russ mn the Am erican people. B u t I have j to the unrest and plottings that language w ell— a kev facility that 1,V“ | J ', J t a t s ’ 1 hav * M‘‘) e l° 1 ifi,! lo {i!0 1 ~ Revolution. B u t led her to a present command of much, I have been through m any in her f „ th„ died >nd hei. fl„ e , Hiaton- w a , very, limns. I d o n t c a ic much what mother married the first of two very defective in the schools, happens to me any more. lf tins husbands. ainee the gover -nl had i liv e The idyll shattered but life still “ .witched political sides" and 'ne the end of mc, then K but I w ant them to know. hopeful, she went to high schools new doctrines w eren’t vet in i curShe was summoned W ednesday jn Moscow and Vladivostok. H er rency. to appear at a deportation hear- fam ily moved to the coast town H er secondstep-father set up aInternational W eek is half gone ,Miss Koasaczky made the amaz-i U niversity on a GoodNeighbor mg in . San W ere i she inVladivostok I hUt tlu‘ bi* ^ s t of the festive, mg rise from freshman one day Scholarship. , Antonio. ... i a, f t e r ’ her mother remarried again, small shoe-store ---........... ’ladivostok, faculty the next. She came to j Elab orate plans have been made deported, she would have no place and occasionally Tam arra would saving some money which he ties are yet to come. F rid a y a t f to the the U niversity from H ungary as for decoration of the Union fo r to go. Im m igration officials said return to Moscow to live with her stashed away in Chinese and 8 p.m. in the Texas Union, privately they do not w ant to grandparents. For two years, Am erican currency. That nest International Council w ill spon- a displaced person. She had at- tho dance. Many of the foreign the I M el national B a il and tended colSegi in Europe, but students w ill be dressed in their deport her but rather to clear up when with her fam ily in the egg was to be the difference be­ lier jumbled citizenship status. Ukraine, she didn’t go to school tween life and death in 1029. then Satu rd ay at 6 p.m. in the when she entered the U n iversity Inative costumes, and » the backB ap tist Student Union, the In- she was not im mediately given ground w ill be depicted a scene The story that led Tam arra to at all. (Continued Sun day.) ------------ ------------------------ -------------------- U l n a ConaI Banquet will be held, credit for this work. W hen she irom their country. the Spanish Departm ent of The I Diversity of Texas carries her I he ball is not form al and stu- did receive credit, she gained grad-j The Turkish and Arab Clubs through Rus>ia, M anchuria, ( hina. cents may wear either suits o r, uate status and became a teaching art erecting a large pyramid w ith their native costumes. ; fellow in the Germanic Languages I one side cut out so that they and Ja p a n ; it finds her in the U S One of four U niversity girls Department. j show life as it is in the Near since 1931>, studying at the U n i­ will receive the title of InternaMiss Orrego is a freshman stu-1East. versities of C alifo rnia, San F ra n ­ tional Queen at the ball. The girls, dent from Chile, attending the cisco, Oregon, Chicago, Columbia, Chinese students have a garden Jean W illiams, Turkish Club can-1-------------------------------and finally Texas. I t is a winding, didate, Josefina Varias, Southeast hi a!!-rending history. Asia Club candidate, M aria KosBy E S T E S JO N E S saczky, W o r ld R e la t e d n e s s Com ­ It began exactly 37 years ago- Te xan A tn „ 9 e » .t n t» E d ito r m is s io n c a n d id a t e , a n d I s a b e l G r ­ December 15, 1913— in a country •, , There are no lewd joke* no in the xtorv in g o , L a t in A m e r ic a n C lu b w ill home ten miles outside of Moscow. *v,:rt»_. _j ■. . ’ ................... .................................... ,tniniy-clad co-eds pictured, ann tion was “ not in keeping with the function of the Student Assembly, and that it will make the Assembly the laughing stock of the campus.0 Sam Brewer, graduate Assemblyman, dis­ agreed that the Assembly should not concern it­ self with matters off the campus, but said the group should not pass the bill. “ To establish an Atlantic Union would admit failure of the United Nations,” he said. Both Newton Schwartz and Gordon Llewellyn, ♦ BBA Assemblymen, objected to Brewer’s “ flat statements’* against the Atlantic Union. Banquet and Ball W ill Top International Week Activities New Ranger Clean But Worth Reading A b ab y g irl, T a m a rra , w as born to a well-to-do businessm an who ran an im ported m .c h m e r y n ess in the Ruaaian cap ital. .a He NO. 89 ,.T R fYrtmn In' th ' n ’ !*" V ! ' * i lJsual fnp ‘B a n g e r is sprink- I bk voted on at the door of the ,, ' i,nhi! **'*1 nm-rally w ith photos o f the ■U n io n as the tic k e ts are preRoes on: sta ff, and most o f the o rig m a l « nted. “ • d,*n* * r a™ much fu n n ier than 100,000 Chinese Imperil UN Forces Ticket* are $ 1 .3 0 and can be lie a b o u t th e h o u s e d u r in g tim “ HpS W ’ in ta e .ii,, I . ,. , ,, 7, . ... . T O K Y O , llecem ber 14— (J P)— except rn terms of divisions, units, the holidav ii I t thT d unn& | th ®, H ® :’ Shp: J ° kes i r e f u l l y I bought a t th* Union. A il Usaiver ended I A swelling force of 100,000 Chi-! or separate forces, and then only and the lazy country refuge. I w i„ S T J * T U I' 11 *" leading ' gity students have been ext, nese Reds imperiled the shrink-j when the foices are in contact F o r tho first five and a half ,w dl think it p orn o g ra p h y but mat humor magazines. J I L ....... ...... _ year* of her life, she lived among _ ! ? . h i t C° m r ®r ® lt to earher And the ‘ Ranger” lensman has Mjsft W illiam s is a senior P la n ! beakhead in n o rth w e st with the out m>. L M T * blt mm< ’•“ " • - " l u l - .«■ very carefully copied the imajruia- j j m ajor. H e r father „ Dan w i| . j Ko rea Thursday. General M acArthur-, he.dqu.rtive 3harp Patrol action | reference to evacuations There is an interesting and un- a is0 wants me to say that the was reported from the W estern Headquarters spokesmen deI closest neighbor. Gilbert cover is a comparison of an oldSome IOO volunteer staff work- i Pa tionizing story on ground front. d ined to make publishable state­ Miss V a ria s is a graduate stund guests w ill gather at the: M cA llister of the Department of Erne Christm as to a modern YuleI ** X " A fie,d dispatch said the A l l i « 8 ments on the ground that explanjam Lake Club F rid a y night Anthropology, and a cleverly illua- tide celebration. e l' ‘ , ’ abandoned the tow n o f Oro on sto ry detail15 would in thetmelves gr«e rn education. S h , w a . born the p fn m eter of the H .m hun*at 6:30 for a combined Texan, teated feature on Kern Tips. Tom jeopardize security. »nng i t UT Publications To Hold Barbecue ( S « e R e la t e d S t o r y on P a g e 5 ) In defeating the “ Plural X ” voting system, whereby a voter would mark an “ X ” by the names of as m any candidates as there are places to be filled, the Assembly refuted Assembly with pagoda, pond, and Chinese member David Bennett's contengirl. A large tapestry will hang lion that the system would: in the background with two of the out a 1! element o f S« Cut ever-present Chinese dragons dis-j chance, •>.Take the misunderstanding played on it. Latin Am erican students planout of the voting procedure, and, either a romantic balcony scene 3 . Institute a system that was j completewith Senorita, balcony, in genera! ti,*. :Mid the serenading Senor or «U ge Only Bennett and Sam B re w e r a pinata. The pinata is an age-old j voted rn favor of the bill ceremonial custom in Latin-Am eri-1 * can 1can countries in which a huge Sterling Steves bill endorsing vase is filled with presents, then the A A U P resolution passed w ith hung up for someone to break, only Pharm acy Assemblyman Bob When the vase is broken the par- Gude dissenting. The resolution tic [pants scramble fo r the pre- calls for salary increases, health gents and much fun ensue*. service facilities, and other faThe W estern European students c**lty benefits. w ill display a large backdrop of Newton Schwartz was appointed the Swi** Alps \a th a European chairman of a committee to study girl in the foreground. and report to the Assembly on On the stage will be a huge the Campu* C hest when a m o vt fo r Christmas c a r d with -M erry suspension of the rules to allow Christmas” inscribed in all of the j Immediate consideration failed. j languages *epr*’* * ted on the carr- O ther* ca the committee are L le ­ wellyn, Gerald Brands, Don pus. Guinn, and Fred Kessler. A ll new foreign students, 115 Schwartz also introduced a bill of them, w ill be guests. calling for a student referendum on U niversity entrance in the N a­ tional Stu d en t’s Association fo r Dean Parlin Reported Ja n u a ry 15, 1951. In Very Poor Condition T h e c o n d itio n o f dean e m e r i­ tus H . T . P a r lin , fo r m e r D e an o f the C o lle g e o f A r t s and S c i ­ e n ces, is v e r y po o r, B r a c k e n ­ rid g e o f f ic ia ls re p o rte d T h u r s ­ d a y n ig h t. D e a n P a r lin e n te re d B r a c k e n r id g e N o v e m b e r 6 w ith a c a rd ia c c o n d itio n . Assemblyman B re w e r’s move f-»r suspension of rules failed. Schwartz was appointed chairm an of a committee to report to the Assembly at its next meeting J a n ­ uary l l . Members of the com mit­ tee are Charles Robinson, Tom m y Rodman, Sa lly See. and Lee AlSee V O T IN G , Page IO est coast of Korea Thurspuiled back toward HamD riskill Hotel. This year, a more inform al at-1 JnK D raS moaphere w ill prevail. A fte r a barbecue supper, staffers plan skits burlesqueing various aspects of journalistic life at the I niversitv. There is a possibility represen ta tives of the journalism facu lty w ill also participate in th, acts ! i a ip,. ;n tht> Avenin* there w ill te dancing to records j into involuntary son Typographers, Austin, w i l l , uated magna cum laude and at loanagencies. 'Pea k to Olin H in kles (Jraphic * e Pafcthe U n h ^ rsitv by t h e ! r . Joseph H ays has a unique Yule- A rts rn Journalism class, Satur- sov 1 dt; 1 * y i lde sb o it story that is trankly day a i 12 noon in Journalism E. ________ _____________________ _ to shock— Hot to cheer. Building 212 Arm illustrating his “ (.ood W ill I he Miner-Wilson company pro- A q u a R e v i e w O n P a g e I O lovvard M en’ is afull-page picture j vides htypographic service for 0 nienengaged in heai’iy' printers, stationers, and advertisP ic t u r « « o f tw o o f the ten fisticuffs, which is admittedly in- inc agencies, A q u a C a r n i v a l Q u e e n contest‘ -t 'ng, but sOBibwhat awkA ll students in journalism are an ts a n d a r e v ie w o f th e c o m i­ there is no such fight invited to attend M r. M iner's t a lk . ; va l are on p. IO . T h js withdrawal in good order N r n° rt1h" n °* tl?e Nati-°ns last toehold rn northwest Korea had dwindled from about fourteen miles in ' depth to about *ix, The U.S. A rm y snapped a se­ curity blackout on news of the U S . Tenth Corps on the north-, east, and generally tightened up : on a m ilitary inform ation else­ where in Korea. The three-publtcation p a rty : The blackout applied to troop : this year is largely paid for by locations and plans for future the students themselves, tickets movements. Its purpose was to costing 50 cents fo r staff mem­ keep from the enemy any inforbers and $ 1.00 for their guests. _ mation which might further jeo­ i l l ■ A s a # r" • I « • r- \ ' Tickets will be on sale at the I t pardize the position of Allied Lake Club fo r late comers who forces in Korea. are eligible to attend but have There still is no form al censor-! not yet purchased ticket.*. snip rn the war, which has gone VV hat are we fighting for? with the W est,” one of the stu- will he open to questions or re- uncensored from its start. I he im plications and perhaps dont participants said T h u rs d a y , mal k - from tike floor. I be Arm y, however, has given answers to this question w ill com- night. “ W eTI take a1! coiners on— parespondents a new list of “ sugpi'ise the last G reat Issue in the They hope to seek the real is.f . . s )i t t ... I fest ion s. These cautioned that I ^ Jo r h f M y ,e r e J U n iversity’s first G re a t Issues sues and to reduce what the Uni1 eomrnum- * even ixie no inform ation be given on a cti- ! course. The meeting w ill be Mon- ted Nations are fighting for to ripts, tho spokesman said. vities planned or in progress, and day in Hogg Auditorium at 7:80 practical values. Tim meeting will close with a that no reports of activities or B y C H A R L IE L E W IS p.m. E a c h student w ill make a short ful1 criticism of the G reat Issues locations of Allied forces be m a d e 1 F ive U n iv e rsity students w ill presentation of his ideas. A fte r course trom the panel and from Sign of the tim es? A student (who shall rem ain I? J5 ? ent the.is8ue* Thay are K \ebei th e y have criticized or commented audience. Texas D r a f t Q u o t a A student ( iM iller, senior year law student; j upon each other-g ulkg j the panei [ The G reat Issues committee reanonymous) was ambling down Bvuce Meador> R e v erdy G lid d o n ,, _________________________ ported that there would be no Increased 8 0 Per C e nt the Guadalupe Wednesday when and Ronnie Dugger, graduate stucourse next semester. The commit­ Eig hty per cent more Texans he was passed ny a couple ot | dents. One student remains to T * / * r * L n (a v tee is making recommendations to will he drafted into m ilitary ser­ buses, loaded with males in their be selected. Dugger w ill preside. I 1 0 0 1 1 V l O l L / E U C H t the Adm inistration for one next vice in the next two months than late teens and early twenties. | O riginally entitled the So W h a t? I ■ * fall. original quotas called for. They had a captured look in their issue, the subject w ill integrate the ^ « f\ L * C* The panel discussion Monday State Selective Service Head‘' ' escore of all previous issues and l l O P ^ I O r i l l I IQ S night w ill bring to a clo*e a seven- quarters announced the adjusted Ju s t as the second bus passed, appIy them to thf) present world V / V V J 1 1,1 series presentation of current Jariuary-February quotas Thursa head popped out of a window, j crjsjs. From thirty-four prelim inary Great Issues. day at 8,279, an increase of the eyes scanned the nonchalant “ W e w ill attempt to get aw ay teams in the Intram u ral Debate Dr. Robert M illikan launched 3,683. student, and a voice jeered: from propaganda and seek what j Contest, the two fin al team? “ D ra ft dodger!” Ho-i* oil norm na finer Hiff p ro n ™ * ' r,,. ■ xr ' o* . -i the program with Science and 1 he adjusted call for Texas ★ h ^ e hiTrled the ^ a s f into conflict i D O T r ^ 8 i Religion. He was followed by Dr. came from Washington by wire have hurled the E .x t mto conf I. et A R O T C — met leat night vnth vie-; G Sanchez of the University. after the Departm ent of Defense W h e r e it th e re a sig n th a t tory for Phi Kappa Sigma. Buster ki on m inorities tacreaaed the national call for the c a u tio n * : “ 25 cent fin e fo r Dickerson and Ja c k Hubby of Phi , ,, two months from 90,000 to 160,N e w Pencil Sharpeners ru n n in g in th e h a l l * ? ” N o t A*Kappa Sigma asserted that we d and the Atom was the next tin H ig h , K i r b y H a ll. should maintain peace at any t(^ nc ar,d wag interpreted by Da- ------------------- ----- ------Installed in Buildings ★ price as the next w ar might be Eib^fMhal, former chairman of a * * %a # •, Thanks for all F O U R of the George Stephens, U niversity the destruction of mankind. The ,be Atomic Energy Commission. 5 0 H Antonio W riter notes about the geology 302 field-assistant com ptroller and purchasA R O T C , led by Bill W right and He was A llo w e d by Dean Paul j c ^ F e a tu re s trippers running across the Blue \nfr agent, said Thursday that E d U n d ry , asserted that we Appleby of Syracuse University r Buick R iv ie ra parked in mi dafter- fjve campus buildings have been should fight now before Russia who Presented Man and the State. Miss Ju n e Kilstofte, fe a tu re ' n>>on on M ount Bonnell. equipped with new pencil sharpen- possibly has time to equal and A p iofessor of theology at Y ale, j w riter for the San Antonio ExD r. John O liver Nelson, spoke on J press Magazine, w ill speak to a * j ers. I excel our industrialization. Aqua Queen C herry F la il says They are the Architecture BuildJudges for the contest wrere Ethics and the Status Quo, and the j feature w riting class Satu rd ay at a .m. in Journalism Building she has a solution to themomen-; ing, Sutton H all, M ain Building, Mr. Todaro and Miss Amis, in-, last out-of-town speaker was Dr. : n Y O U ’D BE SURPRISED T O O if you, like Ha! tous question of the day,“ W h a U Garrison H all, and W aggener H all. I structors in the Departm ent of Tovohiko Kagaw a on economics, j 2*12. Hanes, found G loria Foifik under your Christmas is the T H IN G ? ” ! “ W e w ill install more of them j Speech; and Bobby Blum enthal, The topics were outlined by a Miss Kolstofte was in charge of free on +*'■6 morning after Santa * yearly visit. C herry says the song should as soon as they a rrive ,” he said, president of the Oratorical Assovolunteer stu don t-f acuity com m it-j the production of the 24-page W h ile you may no+ consider G Ona s costume go: ; They have been placed at each end elation. The annual debate tro- tee last summer. Speakers were Magazine Section on The Univerapropos for the holiday morning, wise old “ Get out of here with that j of hallways in the buildings men- phy was presented to the victorselected by an Adm inistration sity of Texas in the November 1 n,t.ed Great Issues W ill Discuss W h a t Are W e Fighting For? BLAMED OLE BEAL!” tinned. iou# Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity, j committee. issue of the San Antonio Express, j Sa,nr N ick kne* just wnat wou.d open a man I Photo Hr Seton Borden eyes on any morning, lf there ar© any skeptics, they might try just what H al d id . The address is in care of the N orth Pole, but just keep it in mind sir, th at not even Santa has assembly line production on this kind o f shopping tor the Y ule­ tide season. R rfa y , C e c€ ,'Y*Her 15 I9 5 0 T M P P A rL v TEXAN ! Paqe 2 Maroons, Cards Vie Saturday at 2:30 Bv K E N T O O L E Y I r-nn co v»fl<, forward James Dow cs Thursday mig t at Buffe o * -«-• *ue Longhorns cst to Canis-u59-45. Dow'es scored * " c e field goe r ft-*d four * 'ae -o fc -ow G e o rg e See *o in ’’•r‘ Texas scoring. SECO N D W IT H TEN TV May Doom College Football N E W Y O R K , Dec. 14.— OW— I? television a menace or a Noon to en]]eg-c football? Does it offer a greater threat to the «mal!. ivy clad inst it ut lo -5 than it doc* to the big, wallop vc universities with 140-piece bands? The \ssoclated Pies* has at­ tempted to answer both questions through a poll of the nation's foot­ man writers and sportscasters, as a public service to the hundreds of athletic directors who are awak­ ing nightly in a cold sweat. The ballots are ■n— a bushel basket of them— and it must be admitted at the outset that the results are discouraging. The ex­ perts don t know. That is, they are split up so many way- it is Impossible to place a finger ort what they do think. The a*' Iet ic directors will have to handle their own hot potato. A count shows there are a* least 184 writers and radiomen who feel that television, if left unbridled, will spell the doom of college football. Only trout e is, gimme of them think it will de­ stroy only the little fellows; others that the big schools are in the g rrtiter danger. A whopping 168 declared their opinion that football T Y isn't go­ ing to hurt anybody at the gate. Many of the number, in fact, see in the new art a sales force which will in turn create thousands of new fans and force schools to build bigger stadiums. The remainder of the I allotters decline to take a finn stand one way or the other, either stating frankly that they don’t have th**; foggiest idea what television will do to football, or saying it de­ pends upon which section of the country’ you mean, One says he believes T Y is jeopardizing foot-, ball “ slightly.” S r>ort» S Ut f f The Austin Maroons will enter­ tain the Harlingen Cardinals here Saturday afternoon as ( lass AA football moves into the stat? quar­ ter-finals. The starve will he played at House Park at 2:30 p.m. The Maroons (District 14-A A) edged out Temple ( District 13\ A ) for bi-distriet honors here last week while Harlingen over­ powered Alice for a bi-riistrict championship. Coach Johnny Kitchens* Ma­ roon- are Highly favored over their southern opponents. The Car­ dinals took their most dishearten­ ing defeat this season by a onepoint margin at the hands of John Reagan of Houston. M hen the final gun sounded. Harlingen was on the Reagan one with plenty of steam up to break th*' one-po;nt difference. The Austin eleven w ill be led Round Quarterfinal* (Dee. 16) (Dec. 9) by backs Rodney W illiam s, Delano W om ack, and O liver Bradshaw, Leading the ( arditi a I ballcarriers w ll he Leonard Levine, brother Pampa W. Fall* S erni 11 na I * (Dec. 23) F in a l* (I tee. 30) I 44-7) In West Texas, defending state champion W ic h ita Falls, will host the Lubbock Westerners before 10,000 fans Saturday afternoon. The Wichita Falls Coyotes are tied with H ghland Park for the most appearances in the state play­ offs with fifteen each. Coyotes have emerged ax state champion'* twice, the second being last sea-on when they edged Austin, I I-13, for the crown. The Westerner* have tasted -tate championship glory once and have won six district, titles. L u b b o c k (3 3 - 7 rho Coyotes trampled Pampa, 44-7, la*! week for one of the Austin ( E P ) mo-* unexpected upsets of the season. Earlier in the season the San \ngclo Harvesters heat th* Coyotes, 14-7, B r e c k . I 7*0) and were highly favored in last Breckenridge week’s game. Lubbock stopped Austin of E l Sherman Pa-o for the bi-district crown, (Hi. Par It (20-6) 33-7, in an unexpected high scor­ Highland Park ing game. The Coyotes are holding a slight T ex. ak a na edge over the Westerners, C o n ro e (7 -7 ) Highland Park of Dallas and Conroe (5-1 p n trtn *) Breckenridge, who have both tied fog i.o-champ;on honors in the Port Arthur state finals, w ll meet in Brecken­ B u y t w n (1 3 - 1 3 ) Baytown ridge. ( 3-2 pntrtn*) Highland Park has made fifteen appearances in the state playoffs, Temple while Breckenridge is close be­ A u s tin I 1 3 -1 2 A istin hind with thirteen. In bi-district games last week, Alice Highland Park, who was a two H a r l ' g e n (2 5 *0 touchdown favorite over Sherman, Harlingen won by that margin, 20-6. Breckenridge had a close one with San Angelo, but emerged the victor, 7-0. Highland Park is rated a slight favorite. Baytown and Conroe, two teams that tied their opponents in last week’s games but won on penetrations, will battle out the quar­ Rand oi th* A*mt%ai*d Pre** Arlington, which has gone ter-finals in Rice Stadium in Hous­ Class A moves into the semi- through 25 games without a de­ ton, final «tage Friday with Arling- feat, lo-* out in Baytown Had Port Arthur last week, but won the bi-district on ton clashing with Kermit at Abl- la>t 'year because penetrations, 3 2. lent and New Braunfels facing non rule. Conroe won over Texarkana on Wharton at E l Campo. Cla-^ B ha- db All four of the Class A teams cion a titles with penetrations, 5-1 . after the game ended with the score tied, 7-7. are undefeated, but Wharton and j the line this week New Braunfels each have been j Pearland clash at Baytown won it? district fh c times ami Conroe has won its dis­ tied. That occurred when they i and Lyfo rd batt Ii trict three times. Baytown is the met each other in a nonconfei en* e j and Palacios and favorite to down Conroe. game. I Brr\ die. wool gabardine tailored by M c G re g o r in his favorite color . , . hand stitched collar and pockets and maker! cuffi. GABARDINE SPORT SHIRTS A sport shut that's sure* to please. Tailored by M anhattan in seven beautiful colors. Stitched collar and pockets. S-M -L-XL 'J . CORDUROY M c G re g o r’s corduroy shades. W ashab le and shirt in tailored dark or pastel to fit. Small, medium, large, and extra large. 7.95 CORDUROY JAC KETS M cG reg o r's fine corduroy coat tailored with plaid Campus "Cruisers7.. or rayon lining. Sm art colors to go with all hi* blacks. Regulars and longs. in Pliable, Rugged Bootikin A F R ID A Y BA.SK t i B A L L w it h E e trw * cioce Monday. V O L L !: VB A L L 7 o’clock L it t le C a n e -* '»• A . ii* C lu b , P h i D eli* T h e ta v* D elta 7» D elta. CAMPIS favorite designed for rugged service . . , sturdy cobble-sew n b o o t-se a rn and boot-ioop raw hide lacing. T h ick est m ulti-soled bottom s w e've seen. Broun Antiqued Calf • • • • ................................................ Caaipu* Guild. 7:45 o’clock I > m CtnH cs. C iec h Club. M * * ia Alpha W , %*, That a Xi. M arinara v*. Le tin A m a n ta a C lu b . Open a Convenient Charge Account s 1 3 95 other Freem an's $9,95 and up or • ;30 o'clock va. s h ir t SHIRTS intramural Schedule C lu b This is a sure gift to warm his haart. 4 f SN S kS Coach C o m p lim e n t e d A N N A P O L IS , Md., Dec. 14.— j (JPi — The N a vy complimented ; football eoa< h Lddie Frdelatz on I a good job Thursday and pre­ sented him a brand new five-} ear contract, long* -t ever for an Academy grid mentor. “ We tore up the old four-year contract and prepared a new one to rap lace it, j effective immediately,” said Cap­ tain Howard Caldweel, director of athletics. > *•» man JACKETS Kermit, New Braunfels Favored In Class A Playoffs C L E V E L A N D , Dec. 14.— UP)— With one- exception, the Cleve­ land Brown* have never lost to the same team twice in any one of their five seasons of profes­ sional football. The puzzlers are the New York Giants. This is the team the Browns will play for the cham­ pionship of the Amel lean •«*< * *> ,, t ., tho in tra m u r a l Office ob cr b efo re IS trin e * , clit ■. ‘f&f--f/-’&4s mom <2 \o C u x e (jift r a p p in g G r a tis ]/ Friday, December 'IS, 1950 TH E DA ILY Ti Cage Scores Kappa Sigs Edge Phi pelts en* For D,v,s,on Soccer T,tle Canisius 6-9 Center LeaV J G r if f in s Q v e r UT< 5 9 . 4 ^ George, with two field goals led the Oak G rove team. Louis Hempel and Robert B ig ­ gies turned in a well-played game for T L O K , each scoring one point. Frank Horak and Keith W ebster tallied the other two Oak Grove goals. U n iversity Christian Church had previously captured the church di­ vision title. W E L D IN G & R A D IA T O R WORKS Tel, 6-3733 600 W 5th S t Former T C U Gridman ICI], Arkansas, Baylor, A&M Lose Die* F O R T W O R T H , Dec. 14.— <>P) Ph il Roach, S ilv a n all-Southwest Conference football player at Texas Christian in 1942, died Thursday in a Beterans Hospital. * a t thrifty PENNEY^ Christmas Store! YOU GET Roach, brother of W a lte r Roach, form er T C U star who now coaches the freshman team, was wounded while a M arine on lwo Jim a in W orld W a r II. •* BOTH 1. A TERRIFIC B R O A D C L O T H SHIRT! / 2. A LUXU RIO U S RAYON TIE! I e \J man on Both beautifully gift boxed! Both for only ^ T E X A S (4 5 ) f* Pa*< .I on thr \»tor>attd Fret* It was a bleak night for Southwest Conference basketball teams Thursday as Texas, Texas A & M , T C I', Arkansas, and B ay io r all met defeat. H a rris , f ______ Dowies, f _____ K lein, c ..... .... Morgan, g ___ Cobb, g Scarb o ro u g h , f In Columbia, Mo., the Missouri Tigers finished strong to defeat F A N C Y M A N for the Longhorns Thursday night as H ey lost TCC, 50-45, for their third to Canisius was Jim m y Viramon+es. He scored only three points, straight victory. T h e Frogs, who trailed, 24-21, but his flashy passing fooled the Griffins. Playing the pivot por.;at halftime, rallied for three tie* tion he passed behind his back to setup Longhorn goals. in the last half before fading out. L ittle Bud Heinem an, Missouri Totals „ 16 13 22 45 forward, led the scoring w ith 15 C A N IS IU S (5 9 ) points. fg ft pf tp H artnett, f ____ 5 6 4 16 Southwest Texas State scored Hedderick, f _________ 4 0 2 8 the night’s most surprising v ic­ Pleto, f ____________ 0 0 1 0 tory by beating Texas A & M , 55Stoetzel, f ___ .....____ 0 0 0 0 50 at College Station. The Bob­ D A L L A S , Dec. 14.— ( ^ — B ig ­ peeled tu be waived yet, but other Krochm al, f _____ 0 0 1 0 cats jumped into an early lead wigs of the Southwest Confluence rules governing eligibility sin h as O’Connor, f 0 0 0 0 and held it all the way. came here F rid a y for their annual used during the second world w ar Kenny, f ________ 0 020 two-day w inter session during are due to be returned to the ►Sharp, c ......... 76 3 20 Previously unbeaten Baylo r fell which war-time rules will he in­ books. Stockman, c ___ .._____ 0 0 1 0 to the North Texas State Eagles augurated for athletics. The coaches, athletic directors Foreman, g ......... 2 1 5 5 in Denton, 54-50, as the E ag le*’ The freshman rule is not ex- and business managers of athletics M iller, g ______________ 1 2 5 4 E d K elly dropped in six point* w ill meet at IO a.m. Friday. They Deluca, g ____________ 2 I 0 5 in the last five minutes of play. Z o m l e f e r o r L y n ch have a busy slate, including a G regory, g ______ 0 O O O North Texas went ahead in the M any an argum ent was held pre-conference basketball tourna-; W ojcinski, g ____ 0 1 0 1 last minute of the first half and a few years ago by Conference ment that may be arranged for Illig , g J___________ 0 0 1 0 held a 26-24 margin at intermis­ baseball fans as to who was the next year, new point rules in track i M cGuire, g _____ 0 O O O sion. The lead changed twice in better shortstop— Texas’ Chick and field, ways to determine the I the last half, and the teams were Zom lefer or S M U ’s Danny Lynch. C onference’s representative in the ____ .,.,.21 17 25 59 even three times. Totals These arguments just might be N C A A regional basketball tourna­ H alftim e score: Canisius 29, renewed by Texas League fans ment and questions of television Texas 19. In a F a y e t t e v i l l e meeting, O kla­ Free throws missed: Scaling 4, homa A&M rolled over the U n i­ this next season. Zom lefer is due in football. A nything done by this group, W om ack 4, Falk 3, Viramontes, versity of Arkansas, 44-33. to play at Dallas— now a farm of It the Cleveland Indians, Lynch, h o w e v e r , w ill only be a recom-j Klein, Morgan 2, Price. H artn eU was the second victory in two meanwhile, has been drafted by mendation and must be passed 3, Sharp 4, Foreman 2, M iller 2, weeks for the Aggies over the upon by the faculty committee. W ojcinski. Razorbacks, the Houston Buffs. Black, g ______ F alk, f _______ Price, c .... Scaling, g Yiram ontes, g Womack, g ___ S W C Fathers M eet Today in Dallas Handsome corduroy sports coats in extra fine quality, fu lly lined, customed tailored styling, in gold, maize, green, maroon. 18.95 service Hurn no more! Regardless of how many pairs your man has, slacks are always a welcome gift! W e have the finest array of quality slacks you've seen In many a Now give two gifts for one low price. G ive a fine Sanfo riz e d t white broadcloth shirt, with a co llar so strong it will outwear the body. And give an eye-catching printed rayon tie. Newest colors, designs. Sizes 14-17. tSbrinkage will not exceed 1% season . . . tweeds, gabardines, sheens, SPO R T S JA C K E T S . . . Sheen gabardines with that special C alifo rnia styling and fit to give you that wellgroomed appearance. Beige, blue, and aqua . . . 13.95. Other* in w ater repellant ga­ bardine w in d b re a k s* from 7.95 FREE GIFT W R A PPIN G m ud SHOP TONIGHT ’TIL 9 AT S ta te 2426 Guadalupe worsted, every one of them skillfully tailored to fit right. Choose tans, browns, blues, greys, sizes 28 to 42 in regulars, shorts and longs, 10.95 to 25.00. Men's Clothing, Second Floor. iii® t ■ - December 15, 1950 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4 Little Man on Campus — 'nyiieJ THE SPIR IT of democracy includes a lot of things— truism s that often fail to make contact with practical attitudes. So it was very telling Thursday when a Latin-American student reminded the students that 54 nations are watching Texas as it responds to the challenge of tolerance imposed by the presence o f a 800-student international community at the University, This student and his friend were de­ nied service by a cafe which “does not serve Eat in-Am ericans.” Such cafes are few in Central Texas. Their negative influence is out of pro­ portion to their numbers. But here on the University front, too, such violations of the practical spirit of J I S h a rp J o ss MAX R EITER ’S future lay before him. He would have established him self as one of the great conductors of Am eri­ ca. This season he w as to have made four recordings for Doce a. N ext year he was to have taken the San Antonio Orchestra on an eight-week nation-wide tour. His annual grand opera festival in San Antonio has been one of the most successful in the nation. Last January's campus concert is still being discussed by those who attended. He gave part of him self with the music. The incessant hard work that brought on his death was but a part of the pre­ paration for the future that would have been so brilliant. riI 5 / , ie WW PR E SID E N T TRUMAN is expected to declare a national emergency when he reports to the American people to­ night at 9:30 o'clock. He will be speaking on the day follow ­ ing the announcement that American casualties in Korea had risen to 33,878 by Thursday, an increase of 1,436 in a week. This includes 5,870 deaths. They are A merican men. A ny formal declaration of national emergency will but confirm the fact. It is conceded by most correspondents that the United N ations have lost the figh t in Korea— General M acA rthur to th e con­ trary. Texas is a long way from Vic­ toria, P e te r chose it because he decided to stud y u n d e r Dr. W. P. Webb, professor o f his­ tory. Dr. W ebb ’s ’‘G reat Plain,” is prescribed re a d ­ ing m aterial “ down u n d e r” and P e te r could think of no one more able to help him study a f r o n tie r in te rp re ta ­ tion of history. P e te r arrived here in Sep­ te m b e r a f te r a long liner voy­ age to Panam a. Then he flew to Florida and fro m there took the Greyhound to Aus­ tin. As he passed through Florida, A labam a, Louisiana and Texas, P e te r saw much of the “ deep so uth.” He foun d the Florida land­ scape r a th e r desolate and barren . “ I bad always ima­ gined H o n d a to be a state of orderly citru s orchards and n e a t countryside. But betw een gas stations and motels and neon signs, th e landscape was ra th e r hideous.’’ P e te r was impressed with the imposing white southern mansions. But more impres­ sive, he said, w'ere the shabby, dirty shanties usually stand ­ e I)a < |$ T exan By CHARLEY TRIMBLE ing a half block from their gleaming neighbor. “ Yet every shack seemed to have a re f rig e r a to r or washing machine on the fro n t porch. It seemed ra th e r in­ co ngruous.” He has a b o found the seg­ regation laws o f the South r a th e r strange. New Zealand, he explained, has about 100,000 M a o r i natives. Both whites and natives live side by side, however, and Maori representatives have been known to represent the E u­ ro pean electorate in the gov­ ernm en t, he said. A f te r he has received his PhD here, P e te r would like to teach history in his home­ land. As there a r e very few openings f o r teaching history — especially A merican history — in the colleges, P eter will probably tr y high schools or a d u lt education. One of the g r e a te s t differ­ ences in the attitu d e s o f the two peoples, said Peter, was with regard to the Korean war. Comparatively little new ma­ ever. th e r e would still be comp* chinery would have to be created, tit ion for a tu d e r ts and funds. since the State Board of E duca­ ( T h i s ia t he t h i r t e e n t h in a tion already exists and has a con­ aeries o f ar t ic le s on t he Staff Single Integrated System siderable staff. Research Report on Higher I he S tate might decide to esE d u c a t i o n in T e x a s to t h e T e x a s Combined control of the higher ti blish a single in tegrated system Legislative Council.) educational and th e public school ot higher education with a single system would make possible b et­ board and one chief executive. THERE AKL N E A R LY as te r co-operation between the two. I here would be no individual rn;.ny p a tte rn s of co-ordination of A possible disadvantage to the boards fo r each institution. A higher education a* th e re are plan would be th at the State system of this kind is simple and M ates, although the various sys­ board would be so concerned with easy to u n d e rsta n d ; confusion ia tem s may be placed into fairly the problems of lower level ed u­ reduced to a minimum. There are cist!net groupings, e a re intim i­ dated— not persuaded by fre e in­ quiry or equal emphasis on both ideologies in the world. If we have, as some liberals tell us, a gun in front of us, and a gun a t o ur backs, we m ust rem em ber there is a bomb in our pocket. lf this be pacifism, make the most of it! DAVID HANIG T E X A S V S . UN To the Ed itor: H y in g the UN fla g is fine I F it flies along with the Texas flag and n ot in place of it! I t was o ur u nd e rsta nd in g th a t when the S t u ­ dent Assembly voted to fly the UN flag, th ey also voted fo r a pole to put it on. The I niversity survived for five years w ith ou t a UN flag, and it surely w on’t go to pot in th* length of tune it takes to p u t up a pole. i! this costs too much money (th e poor University only has 160 million bucks in the P e rm a n e n t F u n d ) then take down the Yan­ kee flag the bums are try in g to rob us anyway. We're all Texans and mighty proud o f it. and, by darn, W E WANT OUR FLAG BACK! BILL POLVOGT Seven o th e r signatures P EA C E POLICY To the E d ito r: B. G.’s sta te m en ts in S un d a y ’s Texan very closely follow those of Andrei Yishinsky and General Wu Haui-Chiian . . . . . . The best policy to follow in establishing peace with China is to blockade their coast and atom bomb th e ir cities, th us de­ stro ying their war-making p o te n ­ tial . . . ALAN CARSON Daily Texan Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 5. Rubbish I. An obelisk 6. Close to 6. A catkin 7. Witty ll. Dash of saying spirits in a 8. Retinue beverage 9. Knobs 12. Close-fitting IO. Abound cap 14. Nobleman 13. Fanciful 18. Spin 15. A hollow 20. Bondsman cylinder 21. Rewards 16. Piece out 22. Public 17. Weep notices 19. Doctrine 23. Chief deity 20. Edible ( Baby I.) crustacean 24. Rubber 22. Son of Adam bands 25. Fantasies 26. Equip with 28, Postpone men 30. Lawful 31. Of the Slavs I 2 I? 33. Contradict 34. Leaves of ll the calyx 36. Likely Ii 3*. Mineral spring 16 89 Fuel 42. A lure 44. In music: at once r n 22 25 24 46. Bring upon oneself 28 48. Russian novelist SI 49. Outmatches 50. Lock-like devices 54 rzA . r n DOWN 16 37 1. Turn about an axis 42 2. Quantity of yarn 4t> 3. Measure of land 49 4. Charge for services I 27. Cunning 29. Barks, as a dog 32. Crowns 35. Express hilarity 36. Same as Nisan, a Hebrew month 37. P art of a window' 39. Twowheeled carts 40. On top 41. Roman sun-god (poss.) 4 Today's Answer Is in the Classified Ads 43. Expression 45. Crushing snake 47. Right side (abbr.) 7 ZZ AA Y r/ 5 . 7 8 9 IO 12 (4 TTT? 17 r n 18 rn 20 CL 19 YZd ZI AA 25 Ka 29 I 32 26 43 i ll 77%; r n 38 I A ' 27 30 35 % I 39 I 4o rn 4( Ka 45 44 47 48 I 50 U-7 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE—Here’s how to work it: A X Y D L B A A X R Is L O N G F E L L O W One letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used tor the three L s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apos­ trophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints.! Each day the code letters are different. A Cryptogram Quotation RS CE RGM LGM BUYS UN ERS JD CA S EU LRUA G B O G Y E G F S — MSYSJG. Yesterday's Cryptoquote: RETROSPECTIVE—LAW. THE LAW IS PROSPECTIVE NOT DUtrlbuteJ ty King f e a t u r e Syndi& tt v friday, December 15, 1950 THE DAILY TEXAN Page S Farmers Object Trum ans UN Approves Resolution To Seek Korean Cease Fire To New Controls N E W Y O R K , Dec. 14.— (A5)— The U N A ssem b ly approved over. . . . „ whelmingly T h u rsd a y an Asian, , A rab resolution settin g up a threeman com mittee to seek a cease fire in K o rea. The Soviet bloc bluntly w arned the move would not succeed. The A ssem b ly voted 52 to 5 (S o v ie t bloc) f o r the resolution put up by thirteen countries of A sia and the Middle E a st. Nationalist China abstain ed and Peru and N i c a r a g u a were absent, The United S ta te s, which voted fo r the resolution, w as reported to have ag re e d in advance to ac c e p t a cease fire order if the Chinese R ed s would a g re e also. The flat opposition o f the Russian bloc indicated Peiping would not accede to the UN idea but the U N will try an y w ay. A m b a ssa d o r N asrollah E n tezam , Iran, president o f the Assembly, was named specifically in the resotution as a m em ber of the com- Speech Expected To Launch Mobilization C on d e m n Price mittee. He pleaded with the dele- in K o re a and s ta r t the wheels g a t e s to give him all their sup po rt rolling on a settlem ent, an inA n d W a g e Fixing 'in his trem endous task. He lm- form ed source said. , . . T, XT W A S H IN G T O N , Dec. 14— (TF) m ediately consulted with UN D A L L A S , Dec. 14.— (ZP)— 'The j l a d e r s on nam ing the other two — A dm inistration o ffic ia ls said nation ’s biggest fa r m e r organiza-j m embers. T h u rsd a y P resid en t T r u m a n ’s exti on acted quickly T h u rsd a y to ; UN circles said that L e ste r B. Ie' President T ru m an know n | I ^ t e d p roclam ation o f a nation al P earson , C anadian Foreign Minis­ em ergen cy m a y be quickly foldoesn t w an t price and wage con- lowed by oalls f o r a 4,0 0 0 ,000-man ter, and S ir Ben egal N. Rau, Introis or c onsum er rationing. arm y and an eventual expendidia, the only d elegate who has The A m erican F a r m Bureau tu re of $ 1 0 0 ,00 0,0 00,0 00 a year had any prolonged contact with L O N D O N , Dec. 14. — (JP) — Federation reshuffled its conven- ^or dflf ensethe Chinese Reds arid a leading Winston Churchill w _______ arned the i lion schedule when «*. it learned #.**., M r.; T h t s '' o ffi c U ls m , d e c,ea r force in the fra m in g o f the w . « ... . , , j th at the P resid en t s b ro a d c a st to : thirteen-nation resolution, were W estern A llies Thursday a g a in st j T ru m an w as c o n fe rrin g this morn- the nation F rid a y n -g U w iu be likely to he the other members. the arg u m e n t “ that we m ust never jug with C on gression al le ad e rs on backed up by a tripham m er series The com m ittee is expected to ust' the atomic bomb until and tho need fo r im posing such con- o f jo lts fo r the home fro n t, s t a r t work im mediately— perhaps unless it is used a g a in st us first.” trois. They said the p rojected boost F rid a y . If there sh a chance of He said such a resolve would inning A resolution condem condemnin g the IJJ ?,e,fe n * * , 8p* nd,ng will “ take quick su c c ess or a t least a quick the lid o f f all previous estim ates crease the d anger o f war. controls, originally scheduled I answer, E n tezam plans to carry ! and com pare with W’ orld W’ a r II The 76-year-old conservative , be voted on T h u rsday a f t e r n o o n , ; spending, on the A ssem b ly next week. If it ap p e a rs to be slow, he plans to b ailer hinted in the H ouse of was p assed unan im ously in the Much higher tax es, sw eeping inrecess the A ssem bly until a f t e r Commons that Prime Minister m orninl? session in stead. Word dustrial mobilization and a rigid the Christm as holidays while the A ttl§ f broufrht hack f t o m W a s h - ’ was sp eed il>’ passed to b a s h in g - war-time economy with a t least com m ittee works in secret. . . , . t on’ partial wage-price controls were In an y case, the A ssembly will ‘ _ ^ " " 'A ‘ ‘ “ Inflation cannot be stopped by reg ard ed as in evitable p a r ts o f the not go home until it has tried agreem ent with President Truman price, w ag e and ration controls,” I developing world crisis, every effort to stop the fighting on atomic weapons. said the policy statem en t. j As an im mediate step, the gov­ Churchill Criticizes A-bomb Resolve / ernm ent called in C harles E. WiiIn another move, w age stabile- m om ent” — there are ab o u t 48 son, p resid ent o f General Electric ! 2er Gyrus W\ Ching sum m oned the now— and dem anded th at the Navy Com pany, to become chief of a I nation’s big ten auto m akers and ! ^ “ taken out o f m othballs and new% central ag en cy to direct in­ com m issioned w ithout d e la y .” union leaders to m eet here next d u stria l m obilization. In N e w , , , , , , . . . , York, Wilson announced hi, 1 Wednesday to d isc o s, possible ceptance o f the post. w age stabilization in the automo- Chinese Threaten Allied Withdrawal Twin step s were taken , m e a n -M ’de industry, time, to m ake any enemy air atIn still another action, the govtack on the United S t a t e s as inef-j em inent served notice Thursday fectual a s possible. night that a cut will be m ade The A ir F o rc e, it was disclosed, shortly in the use o f copper and ! ( S e e R e l a te d S t o r y on I) has asked C o n g r e ss fo r fu n d s so brass. the A ir D efense Com m and can In advance o f P resid en t T m A fte r the security black ou t, m aintain a 24-hour alert, with m an’s talk to the A merican peo A P correspondent S tan Swinton planes av ailab le f o r im m ediate ac- pie Frid a y Governor T hom as E. lion a g a in s t a n y invader. j Dewey spoke ou t in emphatic wa$ at)le to rep ort f rom A uniform code o f w arn in g s f o r terms tonight of the need for the H a m h u n g - H ungnam beachhead cities to u se in case of air raids greatest mobilization in American that the United S ta te s Third Diw as announced by Civil D efen se history. vision gave up Oro, six m iles north ad m inistrato r Millard Caldwell. Dewey, the titular head o f the o f Hamhung, and pulled back A ‘ ‘Red a l e r t ,” m ean in g that Republican Party, told the New tow ard the big in dustrial cen ter attack is believed im minent, will York County Law yers Assoria- which is itself six miles inland. consist of a three-minute flue- tion in New York that the United ; Puerto Rican tro op s with the tu atin g blast from sirens, or a S ta te s m ust have an arm y o f IOO Third Division blew up a highw ay three-minute series o f short blasts divisions, each almost twice the bridge and a railroad bridge south from whistles. The “ all c le a r ” w ill size o f a Russian Red arm y divi- o f Oro a s they pulled back. be a series o f three stead y, one- sion, A P p hotographer Max Desfor, minute bights by horns, sirens, or I The New York governor called with the Puerto Ricans, said the whistles, with two-minute inter- fo r an Air F o rc e o f at least 80 town w'as s e t ablaze in pre-dawn vals or silence in between. g rou p s a t the “ earliest possible fighting. — ------------ ----- ------------------ -- ------------------— -------------------- I Allied tan k s and planes b a ttere d m m the atta c k in g Chinese in the e arly * ( i i i i t aj ii M - I morning, D esfo r said. A bout 200 LOU rf w Jr I i t * t m , m rn ms I Cl tx Cl I I \ / Cl I Cl V / I \ V I I I ^ M f ureters encl gns*r cpor 9 m C T -J- mji rn C li I I KC* General M a c A rth u r^ w ar sum m ary issued T hursday, covering Wednesday, *a ld Tenth I Chirp* units “ continued active p a ­ trolling and improvement o f positions.” A Tenth Corps spokesm an estim ated Thursday th at a t least ten Red divisions— about 100,000 men — were p ressing down on the AIlied beachhead in tho N o rth east. action of CH IC AG O , Dec. 14.— (TP)— j Brotherhood o f Railroad TrainThe g ov ernm en t T h u rsd a y ob- men to end their “ wildcat” strike tair.ed a second end-strike court in the Washington terminal and order in a renewed effort to halt on “ tile railroad system s o f tramsa crippling walkout o f railroad pnrtation o f the United S t a t e s ” yard w orkers that has sp read from which are under A rm y control. Chicago to other key cities. The strike h as slow ed Christm as mail d istrib u tio n , m eat supply m ovem ents, steel production and Shucks — Everybody k n o w s war shipments. F ed eral J u d g e A lexander Holtzoff signed the order in W ashing­ that you can get HATS, ton less than 24 hours a fte r F ed eral J u d g e William J . C am p­ BOOTS, BELTS, an d BUCKLES bell issued a sim ilar order a t a special night session in Chicago. I for that Western X m a s at J u d g e H oltzoff’s tem po rary r e ­ strain in g ord er directed the * THE Post Office Sloshes Christmas Parcel Post C A P IT O L SADDLERY 1614 Lavaca C H ICA G O , Dec. 14.— (ZP)— The P o s t Office Departm ent T h u rsd a y o rd ered a far-reaching em barg o on Christm as parcel post m ailings bec au se of the sp read in g railroad strike th at now affects nearly two thirds o f the nation. The partial em bargo, effective I im m ediately, includes all parcel post. B u t it will fall most heavily j on C hristm as p ac k ag e s. The order m eans that hundreds o f p ost o f ­ fices in every p a rt o f the c o u n t r y , will be sharply limited on what p arcels they can accep t from the public. The o rd er comes at the p eak o f the Christm as m ailin g rush. Convenient to the University satisfiedSantaI N e w s B r ie fs W h y ? Because al! Batted o n Christmas Von Boeckmann-Jones Christmas, for most people, starts long before December. For most people, Christmas starts with printing . . . either the buying of printed matter or the receiving of printed matter. The newspapers, the magazines, the mails all bring us printing that helps us with our Christmas planning. Christmas cards. Then there are printed Christmas wrappings and Without colorful printing Christmas would not be so cheery. A n d here in Austin, when most people think of printing — of all kinds — they just naturally think of that big printing firm in their new, modern building at E A ST lith ST. with ample parking space reserved for your convenience. Von Boeckmann-Jones Co. tho A » » o r la t * d / ’ re *# Th# State Department said T h u rsd a y Moscow m ay be “ build­ ing up ano ther big lie” ab ou t J a p a n e s e re arm am en t a s an ex­ cuse fo r m ilitary aid to Com mun­ ist China. ★ T h e o w n e r o f a barb er college chain which accep ts GI students said T h u rsd a y in D allas p r e s e n t , j and fo r m e r V etera n s A dm in istra­ tion officials owe him $4,000 and a c ar to rep ay loans he made to them to g e t his schools approved by the GI Bill. ★ Elizabeth Taylor announced T h u rsd a y she will sue hotel heir Nick Hilton fo r her freedom early n e x t y e a r. * T h u cl a ss i f i ed ad ap p eared in a G rand Rapids, Michigan, news­ p a p e r: “ Rex Davis, auctioneering is my business. If not a t home when you call, m ake a date with my w ife .” the students are helping him out by getting their Christm as gifts at the Texas Book Store. TEXAS BOOK STORE Transportation Students To M a k e Houston Trip A trip to the Port of Houston has been arra n g e d f o r 20 tran s­ portation stud ents by the D e p art­ ment o f Marketing and T ra n sp o r­ tation. The group left by bu s this m orning a t 6 o ’clock. While in H ouston, the group will use the Port Authorities launch, in which they will tour the port and channel. The stu d en ts will then go ab oard two ships to stu d y loading procedure and cargo handling me­ thods. The trip will end with a to u r o f the Atlantic Warehouse where a study will be made o f the term inal handling o f cargo. H. K. Reeder, m an ag er o f the Houston Port T raffic B u rea u , will be in charge o f the tour through the port. H a r p e r t o Di r ec t Oil P a p e r Ken H arper, veteran A ustin public relations man, has an­ nounced that he will close his Aus-1 tin o ffic e D ecem ber 31 to accept a position a s director o f p u blica­ tions fo r the T ran scon tin en tal Pipeline C orp oratio n in H ouston. Drive Out For A n Order Of Leslie’s Fried Chicken “/T S A TREAT THAT C A N ’T BE BEAT” THE C H IC K E N SH A C K 5242 N. Lam ar Phone 5-5401 SPECIALIZING IN # Steaks # Salads • Sea Food Open l l a.m.-9 p.m.— Closed M onday TARRY TOW N RESTAURANT 2425 Exposition frtcfoy, December TS, 1950 THI: DAILY TEXANS Page £ Over the T-Cup 'Santa At Party for Holy Infancy Tots Ten children, between the ages urday at 3:30 p.m. and not 5:30 of 3 and 5 from the Home of the p.m. I H o ly THESE SIX BEAUTIES, (from left to light) Jan Scurlock, Corltfta . . H L j | . L a I2 «T a .» i/ ^ 0-. kl * i ft .ti, W oo berth, Ann Patnck. Betty Kagay, Bitsy Neal, and Shelley The sweetheart will be chosen and given a loving cup Saturday night at the Drtslciff Hotel. Van Kirkpatrick's Orchestra will play . T , , , ,, , t , r o , ,*» ^ 7 1 1 Furr, are nominees ’ cr sweetheart ct A ’cha Tau O m e g a fraternity. for the forma dance, which lasts from 9 to 12 p.m. 'Boy— are we penna have a pop quiz today." Greek Gambits PA/ Al/i to Present Dream Girt In fa n c y will be given as stated in <: j o pun. Thursday’s a Texan. Christmas p arty by the girls of j ★ W h iteh a ll C o-op Saturday afterMss. Alm a Thomas w ill giv< noon. The p arty w ill be held at'"her impressions of European the W h iteh all house, 1811 Colo-1countries she visited last summer rado, from 4 to 5:30 p.m. to the International Relations On the Christm as tree will be a G roup of the Austin Am erican stocking o f candy with a stuffed I Association of U n iversity Wom en anim al and balloon for each child. F rid a y. The m eeting w ill be at In addition to hearing a Christm as the T a rryto w n Restaurant ait story and playing games, the 12:15 p.m., and reservations can children w ill have ice cream and be made with Mrs. Elean or Pace cookies. at 6-4960. ★ * The Inter-Co-op Christmas for-; Dr. George W . Hoffman, assis* mal w ill be held at Campus Guild tant professor of ge- graphy, will F rid a y from 9 to 12 p.m. for give tile second half of his talk, co-op members, their dates aud '‘The Industrialization of Russia,” guests* to the 9814th Volunteer A ir ReW oody Pa rk e r and his band w ill serve T r a in in g Squadron, in play. A program w ill be p re- ; Chem istry Building 15, F rid a y , at -emcd by members of the d iffer- 1 cut co-ops. Decorations w ill he on the general Christmas theme including misth toe. Punch and snacks w ill be served. ★ The U n ive rsity C lub’* children’s Christm as •party w ill be held S a t- 1 ‘ .... ---------- ' is president of the Association, and is the author of many articles * Oak G r o v e ’s annual Christmas on socialized medicine. ( pat t y w ill be given at Hudson’s ★ (S a tu rd a y night from 8 to 12 o’clock. Members, boarders, and ex| members are invited. There w ill be a tree, and the members w ill 1exchange gifts. Richard Gonzales is social chairman. ★ I hi A ra b S t u d e n t » A s s o c ia t io n w ill meet at 4:00 Saturday a fte r­ noon at the International Center. ★ Dr, W illiam A. Gambrel! will talk on the Texas Medical Asso­ ria* mn views on socialized medi­ cine at a meeting of the G r a d u a t e Club F rid a y at 7 p.m. at Old Sec tile. Dr. Gam brel!, a local physician. Tile holiday spirit w ill prevail at the Andrews Dorm itory formal F rid a y night, which w ill be held at the dorm itory from 8:30 to 1*2 pun. A large silver Christmas tree decorated wdth gold balls in the living room carries out the yuletide theme in the decorations. ★ Three honorary members have been added to the Redhead Club. The three new members, all red­ headed, are B ill Bates, Jim m y F u ller, and Po rter Johnson. No meetings w ill be held until Ja n u a ry , Barb ara Thurm an, presi­ dent, announced. Dates for meet­ ings w ill be announced later, she added. Beta Beta Alpha The Phi Mu Dream G irl w ill be pi re n te d Satu rd ay flight at the P hi Mu sorority dance. This honor is given the girl who the chapter* feels has done most for the sorority. leading carols, the group in Tau Delta Phi will have a house tv Saturday night from 9 to 12 clo- k. The house w ill be decorad with cu rn ic books and other in ga along the comic theme. The event is inform al. The pled■? w ill give a sk;t, Christi * Z eta Tau Alpha n ill have Christmas party-openhouse the Sigma C h i’s F The theme w ill be a “ W in te r W onderland” . A ll decorations w ill be silver and blue, and winter scenes w ill decorate the walls. B ill H orne's orchestra w ill play. The D elta G a m m a ’* will an Old-fashioned Christmas tv at Cedar Crest F rid a y 12 p.m. The apjprop vv, I, be blue jeans The Texas chapter of Delta and cowboy shirt A midi Chi fra te rn ity w ill form ally open snack w ill be served, it- nevi chapter house. 2606 * W hi tis, with a Christmas party A lp h a Chi O m ega Satu rd ay night at 8 o'clock. entertain members and date- with Decorations w ill be pine cones, a ranch party Satu rd ay night at mistletoe, yaupon berries, a w K * o’clock at the Phi Gam Lakeother things Christm asy, house. Local alumni of the chapter * who w ill attend the opening are D e lt a Tau D e l t a will hold a Ju stice E . H ickm an, Clint C. Christm as p arty Saturday nigl t, •Small >r., atto rn ey; and FI A t ar December 16, from 8:30 to 12 F Benn ett instructor in English, o’clock at the Delta house. Music Alan Dabney chapter secret iv, w ill be by W in K irkpatrick ar. I w ill conclude the program by his orchestra. it A suppressed desire p a rty will Ll .e n a t the S ig m a A lp h a E p ­ Satu rd ay night begin- silon A lp h a Phi O m eg a w ill have a I angelet at the H itch in ’ Post and a form al a- the Texas Union S a t­ urday night. The banquet begins at 6:30, and the form al lasts from 9 o'clock to 12 o'clock. ★ P h i K appa P*i w ill hold its an­ nual closed Christm as form al F r i ­ day, December 15, in the M ural Room of the Stephen I-'. Austin Hott i. A buffet supper* w ill be served at T p.m. at the fra te rn ity house. Dancing w ill begin at 9 pun. in the M ural Room, which w ill be decorated w ith a blue and silver Christm as them *. Music w ill be provided by B illy H o rn ’s orchestra, SCARF Tw enty-five new members w ere I iiiftiated into Beta B eta Alpha, business adm n Stratton fra te rn ity • for ju n io r ami senior women, | Phi D elta T h eta ft ite m !tv w ill W ednesday night at a formal dtnhave a t bristn,as party fo r m em ­ r.ci in T a rry Tow ti Restaurant, bers. alums, pledges, and th eir Dr, Edm und Heinsohn, m inister dates, from 7 to 12 p rn., Satu rd ay, of the U n iversity Methodist December 16, at the fra te rn ity Church, addressed the group after j house. the dinner on the standards and j ★ obligations of the women in the j Lam bda C h i A lp h a frat* u n ity business world today. New members are W I Meta Al- ! w ill have a Christmas- pit *ty for members, pledges, and dates, S a t­ der, E v a Bayn e, Sh irley Beard, B lit »eh, M ary Ann urday evening, a d later all w ill M a r j o r i e Butch, Barbara Butchers, M ary go Christmas caroling. Helen Bratton, P a tricia Bax th , A C h r o m a s * nee and p arty Sara Ann Berlw itz, Jo y c e C lark, Sa lly i bosn lek, Ann Kosky, Alpha will be held at ti B e ta T h e ta P i Husky, Je a n e tte F erris, D oralie house Satu rd ay Leathewood, G raciela V a 11 v e, to 12 p.m. fo r n M a ry Mayes, Alm a Rice, M arie and dates. Nutter, Hie Stam enhurg, V irg in ia ! Maloney, R a y La Baw ve, Jo h n n y D elta Chi f rat em it Harrison, B e tty Thomas, and Bec-I a Christm as party fo e :!v Webber. their dat* s, arid pledge Saturday nigh*, from I at the fra te rn ity hous our ores/ of I ho pump Initiates 25 Girls At Formal Dinner The scarf of the year by G ay for Glentex! illustration! each month, printed in brilliant color on a pure silk square. An up-to- Canterbury House Shows Film Today the minute Christ­ Phi G am m a D elta fra te rn ity w ill have a Christmas party fo r members, pledges, and their dates A 'no- on Knllriv, mc ancient Satu rd ay night from 8 to 12 p.m. capitol of Ceylon, w ill be showm A hand w ill furnish music f>>r at C anterbury House coffee hour the dance. F rid a y afternoon at 4 o’clock. I One of the few films released b y ; the Ceylon embassy in W ashing­ ton, it shows the temples, fe s ti- J val.-, hill and lake country, and Buddhist shrine of the royal c ity ,) one of the oldest in the world. I This is the first time it has been ' shown at the U niversity. mas gift! accessories, street flow 4 2 G ra d u a te O il G eo lo g ist Gayle P. C raw ford , ’42, has I been named assistant district geolI ogist of the W est Texas-New M ex­ ico district of Stanolind Oil and I Gas Company by John R. Evans, I division manager. Dip your -foot into the most bewitching little dream-shoe e v e r . . . tor day, tor dinner, S p a r e n b u r g ’s H a v e Girl tor dancing, it s the pertect- Mr. and Mrs. CL IL Sparenburg announce the birth of a girl, De­ cember 8. Mr. Sparenburg is the auditor of the M ain U n iversity system. titting, quietly beaufitul shoe you’ll wear hours on end, with everything. SPECIAL 14.95 EnjoyYour mademoiselle G IFT PURCHASE! HOLIDAY TRIP HOME rn The TEXAS EAGLE WAY Roll homeward swiftly, safely, comfortably aboard Austin's only Diesel-powered streamliner. Take your choice of luxurious accommo­ • W h ite Satin • G re y Suede • Blue C alt • Black Suede • Brown Suede • Red Calt dations—reclining seats in modem coaches or Pullman rooms. Two other fine Missouri Pacific trains northbound and southbound daily, be tinted (at no charge) e r e S a m p le R ound T rip C o a c h F a re s " Between Austin and .. . . . T h e ^ h ite satin can C a s h m Jacksonville Longview ........ ............ 9.35 . . . . . . . ............ 11.80 .......... 12.85 Marshall T exarkana Little $ 8 IG ........ ............ Rock 15.85 .............22.40 to match or contrast 24 60 St. Louis Chicago S w • Indianapolis Pittsburgh .................... ............ . 77.95 Baltimore Washington, D. C . . . . . . . . 71 55 New York Cleveland ...................... . 84 OI .............. ......... . 65 40 38 IO B u ffo s .......................... .. . 73.20 .............. ............. 51 45 Boston ..................... .. ............ ............ e a t e r $52 85 ...................... N. Philadelphia . 97.69 • F l u , 1 5 % Federal Tax Tickrts-I nj or motion Imported cashmere sweaters . . . specially pur­ M IS S O U R I P A C I FI C chased for Christmas giving . . . in the favorite pullover style. Choose from Oxford grey, green, melon, rust, blue, saddle and olive. Sizes 32 to 36 sportswear, second floor * 4r.lh w illia m / friday, Decayer 15. 1950 THE DAIEY TEXAN Pan* purse with gadgets Put a w o-'d c ' fashion at her hands! Imported-from. France and Am erican gloves in smooth glace kid or suede a-e exquisitely detailed in wrist length styles, classic s'ipons and novelty slip o n s. . . all the cloves she loves and wants and hopes she ll get for Christmas! Pique stitch and hand sewn in black, b own, navy, white, beige, 4.98 to 11.95 . C oves, Street Floor, fill her Christmas The filing system takes to your lad y's purse, with one of a whole series of gift ga d g e ts and cases for her purse-onal paraphenalia! A. Lipstick case with jewel trim, 1.98*. B. Petite leather books, complete with matches, 4 for 2.00. C . Leather M a d M o n e y " holders, ! .50. D. Fabergette perfume in A C T IV, W oodhue, Straw Hat, A p h ro d e sia or T igress fragrances. 2.50*. E. A.S.R. lighters with gold finish, leather case, 10.00. O thers 5.95 to LOO. F. Buford in calf, cowhide, pigskin or morocco leather, 5.00*. G . Miniature pencils with gold or stives finish, LOO to 1.50. H. Leather stamp boxes, gold finish, 1.98*. J. H a n d b a g caddle to hook on ta b !es, LOO. K. M iniature silent butlers, 1.95 to 3.50. H andbags, Jewelry, Stationery, Cosm etics, Street Floor. ^Plus Tax hfiJi MmtAj r 1 i I K fabulous! I Christmas sparklers that start at only 1.00* 5.00 buys: a handsome bag in fabric and leather J/ / Low prices, high fashion In our new Christm as b a g of tricks! New est shapes share the spotlight with smart fabrics, and every bag is handsomely styled, richly lined and fitted with inner pockets. Genuine leather, plastic patent, corde and rayon faille in black, brown, navy, red and green. Bags, Street Floor. *Plus Tax organdy takes a holiday whirl in evening separates Christm as . . . holiday parties . . . and you, beautifully rapt in a cloud of sheer organd y separates, new winter-wonderfuls for evenings! They re permanently finished and washable . . . prophetic, too, of resort things to come! The skirts, 12.95 each, are com plete circles, printed in swirls of navy and white or a bright multi-plaid. The blouse, 4 .9 8 , sleeveless, smartlytucked and f’gure-reveallng in black or white. The raycn taffeta underskirt in black or navy, 5.95 and boned camisole 4 .98 , can be worn un­ derneath or double os another evening outfit. All in sizes 9 to 15. Sports Shop, Second Floor, \ frfefay, December T* TW? P A T Y TEXAN PagB 8 Louis Wellman At the Churches Weds W SF ufherans O D S G T V 6 nird Sunday in Adven Marian Schwtff Dec. 31 Gasses Are Second to 'Eleventh Hour'Shopping By B IT T Y BUTTREY “ Only eight more shopping days ’till Christm as,H is the cry that rings in all ears. And for college students, the thought “ W hat to get . . J** is mingled with hour Quizzes, long lectures, and chemistry labs. In spite of the many warnings about mailing Christmas cards and packages early, the traditional rush on the week end before Christm as w ill , . j . n x. be increased by a horde of college students tryin g to eram th e ir s h o p p in g in to tw o d a y s . The most im portant present to most co-eds is “ som ething fo r H I M . " W ith an A rm y bugle calling m any students at mid-semester, the biggest problem is how to give him someth ing he can use. ftp. M em ber, o f W e .tm in .te r Btu-1 A choral worship service la; shepherd boy; Damon W eber. dent fello w sh ip w ill present Dick-j planned by the morning and ves- tenor, an old shepherd; Malcolm ens’ “ A Christm as C aro l” S u n d a y : l'er choirs^ of the U niversity G r e g o r y , baritone, Balth asar; night at 7 p.m. in the old church Mretj!odist Church fo r the evening | T ravel Stevens, bass, C aspar; M r*. ot December 17 in the church Rodney Kid-!, soprano, M elchior; building o f the U niversity Pres sanctuary a t <:30. Mrs, Gibson Randle, contralto, the byte i ian Church. ihe approxim ately 50-voice cho- mother. Incidental solos will Im The play, an adaptation by Mar- rus an(* soloists, all of whom are by Chester Ollison and W o rth tha King, deals with the life o f the regular members of the group, Brown. The chorus will sing the present “ Bethlehem ," a parts of the angels, other shopthe old miser, Scrooge, and how w ill he has a sudden change of heart Christmas cantata composed by J . herds, caravan, humble worshipwhen confronted with three ghosts H. Maunder. This work is divided ; pent. The cantata, which has not been and a picture of his life, as it into three parts: the shepherds*) gifts, the kings’ gifts, and our ! presented in Austin m any times, was, and as it could he. It. depicts in song the vis it) w ill be conducted by Dr. a B ill Odum plays the p art of gift. of the angels to the shepherds, N. Jones, director of the regular jEbenezer Scrooge, Bob Brow n plays Bob > ratchit, 'he happy poor the coming of the W ise Men, and morning choir of the chun h, Dr. man; M argaret Undress plays hb the presentation of both the hum- Ben M. Bakkegard is a G ian t di­ hie and the costly gifts to t h e ; rector. Eldon S u it ll is aeeomwife, Mr*. C ra b hit; and the child­ K ing of Kings. The final part papist. He has been church or­ ren are Ja n e Dowell,who plays s emphasizes the giving of one’s ganist, for a number of years. T in y T im ; Bob Donahey, wh ° self. Invocation at the service w ill plays Pe te r; M arilyn Greenwood, Soloists and the characters they who is B elin d a; Ja c k ie Culbert- w ill sing are as follows: Mrs. Mal- be given by Rev, Robert Ledbetter of the W esley Bib le C h air; th** Klaus 'V IIvc P .ayP i r ,ar L r iFrecl colm G regory, soprano, a little Christmas story as given by Luke Klans, h pa . tor, the Rev. J . E r b e r n 'Moore Jr . Sunday at 7.is p.m. the annual Christmas program will be given under the direction cf Mi L. T. Gaddy. ★ j “ The W ord Becam e Flesh” will be the subject of the sermon by I'". John B a rc la y at the morning warship service at Central C hris­ tian Church at 10:55 Sunday morning. Special music will be a duet by . Mrs. W eldon B School and Mrs. Ja m e s Ii. M c Kl ii. “ The V irg in _ f| Th* y w ill sing by the Manger” by ff j Francs.. I I The C hristian Youth Fellowship ■w ill have a supper m eeting Sun- j day evening at six o’c lo c k .. I 'I I LEWIS P. SPEAKER * I the t" by Jennings. Eldon “ The Prince of P e ace " w ill he Sui at the console w ill play Dr. Edm und H cinsohn’s sermon “ X Basque” by Benoit, “ Adby Hokanson and “ T Us topic at the 11 o'clock worship vet ; Is B o r n " by Bach. service a t the U n ive rsity Method- a ( ★ ist Church. The choir, under the direction J •ft af the Panof Dr. A rch ie N . Jones, w ill pre-j A ir sr, 300 Comal sent the anthem “ H a il (Handing b S ttlr eel, \vi tponsored by the L ig h t” b y Kastalsky. L o sn i a Am erican Friend* Service Cont­ Slaug hter w ill sing “ Springs in mittee Sa isrd av afternoon at 2 o’clock. Paintin g and repair work, a co-operative supper, and carol singing are planned for the a fte r­ noon. Students without transpor­ tation to the center will meet at the “ Y ” at 1 :30 p.m. In the evening George P. W h ite will discuss racial and cultu ral icing patterns and movements in A list in. --------------------------- Socia Friday 6-12 — Student Publications in ­ form al party, Ph i Gamma Delta Lake House. 7-12 — The Christm as Band H all. Longhorn Band party. Longhorn 7:15-8:15 — Alpha D elta P i open house fo r Phi Gamma Delta. 8-11 — Zeta Tau Alpha C hrist­ mas p arty, chapter house. 8-12 — D elta Gamma Christmas party, Cedar Crest Lodge, 8-12 — Inter-Co-op Christm as form al, Campus Guild Co-op. 8-12 — Newman C lub form al dance, T F W G building. 8-12 — International B all, Alain Lounge, Texas Union. 8-12 — Sigm a Delta Tau pledge party, C lif f House. 8:30-12 — Andrews Dorm itory form al dance, Dorm. 9-12 — Delta Delta D elta fo r­ mal dance, N ew Country Club. 9-12 — Ph i Kappa Psi Christmas party, Austin Hotel. L u c i a n n e is w e a r i n g a g r e e n p l a i d d r e s s o f c o t t o n g i n g h a m . T h e t w o - p i e c e d r e s s is o f s a n f o r i z e d , p e r m a n e n t - f i n i s h g i n g h a m . S t i t c h e d p l e a t s h i g h l i g h t t h e skirt., a n d t h e t u c k e d b l o u s e h a * b a t w i n g s l e e v e s and r h in esto n e trim. The fa sh io n -rig h t dress, by Hollis of C a l i f o r ­ n i a is a t B u t t r e s s , t h e s t o r e f o r t h e w e l l - d r e s s e d g i r l . A “ m u st" present, if you have add a special touch, Ac ct sonics, not already given him one, is your such a- small, b rig h tly-colored picture. I t ’s one of the few things scarfs, are a “ must” for fa-hionhe can take w ith him in the A rm y, bright girls. Thin leap * belts and it ’s o?:e way to make -ure he add a trim touch to Swea cr am w on’t forget you. I skirt ensembles. A useful and dif★ i ferent g ift is a hose box or a In order to help you out, jew e lry case. Hose in the new several boys have volunteered w inter shades are a necessary part their Christm as lists. Their of every wardrobe. Shop for these “ want.-” may give you a clue to Christmas gifts at B u ttre y 's — the solve the m ystery of “ what in store for the well-dressed girl, the world can I give h im ?" V yin g with discussions of B ill Faulk, Lambda Chi Alpha from Brow nsville, says a new p*•r. Christmas shopping are questions table radio heads his list. Then about rides home and .-arca •*.<• ro­ be ados a ca.-ting rod or a new marks about A u stin ’s chances fo r p a s of boot-, B illy is a senior a white Christmas. law student. A t long last, U n ive rsity stu­ Estes Jones. Texan Amusement dents have a legitimate excuc to Editor, declares he wants, “ an • v,Pr a sweater (not olive followed hi* estranged wife, who drab.) had le ft him in Corpus Christi, Most co-eds w ill have a pre- and in a f it of anger had killed Christm as p arty in the dormitory* her. Bobby Jones quipped, “ the if you’re wondering about what high cost of leaving.” to give your roommate or friends you might try a warm wool robe or a lovely quilted satin one. Sweaters alw ays rate high on the popularity list, and matching Bocks I ♦ God's a Plan Choral Worship Sunday Night of the L o rd ,” by Handel. A t the close of the service children will be presented fo r baptism. On Sunday afternoon at three o'clock the annual “ sunshine sis­ te r” party w ill be held st the church for all women o f the parish. * Students and facu lty members have been invited to the opening services Sunday of the newr First church f the Nazarene at W est Thirtieth and Un ive? ty Avenue. Services begin at 10:45 a.m. W!tl R* !’- Ftamnita leading the is in 3ing!?L'* -*rs\ . ean' Mann .. charge o f special music, the mes- c V|i! be i!roueht b University Methodists Christmas Play M «n«n S ch w iff of P a lle t and ior of Lonjrvlevc Lout* W eltm an, U niversity crad ­ M a r i l y n Ca m p e r , ju n io r psychOii a te$> from F o rt W orth, w ill bo married December S i. The bride logy m ajor, from Pallas, was pe­ ts a student at S M U , and W ellm an oently engaged to M a u ry Rolnick, was a member of SA M fra te rn ity a form er Texas A A M student from “ Oh (Jetting Into th* Fight Pallas. The wedding date has not w ill be the topic of D r. Lew is P. at the U niversity. * been announced Speaker's morning sermon in the Miss Casper is a member of Queener and H arriet Ja n e F i r s t E n g l i s h L u t h e r a n C h u r c h . HH Charles “ C onnie" Armstrong w ill Sigma Delta Tau sorority of which be married December 24 at the she is recording: secretary and *ne thiaro Sunday in Advent is F irs t Presbyterian Church in Kil-Jrush captain. Mr. Rolnick is in celebrated. gore. H arriet is r.n education jim- the M arine Corps, now stationed The senior choir, under the diior from Kilgore and Arm strong at Camp Pendleton Oceanside, ruction of Miss Gladys D ay, w ill is a Business Adm inistration sen C alif. _______ : sing the anthem, "A n d The G lory There Goes a Well-Dressed Girl Presents Ca enc ar The Ghost of Christmas P it eat is enacted by Bruce Wilson. Others are Don Beekman, as I Scrooge as a boy; Sue F ran klin , as I an. the sweet sister of j Scrooge; Roland Caldwell and Raymond Sm ith as schoolboys; Phil Bell as M r, Fezziweg; M ary Hart Ham lett as Mrs. Fezziweg; Don V an Sickle as young Scrooge; Yan Sh a iv as D ick; Ja n e Ruch ester as C h arlo tte; and NY Hoard W ells as the fiddler. Jn an a G entry, B ill M ed ial!, Eddie W alker, and M aria Coni. nado are dancers; Egbert Sm ith plays the Ghost o f the Christm as i Alure; M a ry Ann Muley plays a charwoman; H elene Bartels plays a laundress; and E d d ie %W alk er plays an u n dertaker’s man. Members of the crew arc Jo h n Eckhasdt, Jim Cunningham, Leo Lee, and H a rr y Neal. A dmision is tree, and everyone 'is invited. Hyde Park Christian Church **>11, present a Christmas Cantata Sunday night at 7:30 o’clock. The Hyde Park with the choir F ir t w ill Street combine Christian Ii e n io : choir to present “ The H eavenly C hild," directed \ mraon I he by Interm ediate Mrs. D. H. Department H a v e Portraits M a d e at of the Sunday School, under the direction of Mrs. A. K. Stevenson, will, present "L iv in g P ic tu re s " de­ picting the scenes described sn M mic. I he Rev. A rchie K. Stevenson w ill preach on “ Keeping Christ­ mas at Home during the morning worship service starting at 10:50 1 a.m. Mrs. A. T. M eFadden w ill* sing the special music. A ll visitors are welcome, F or C hristm as U R W A Workshop Registrations Due [ 1 The Inter-Recreational Workhop, sponsored by the U niversity Religious YY orkers Association, is Saturday 8-12 — Delta Chi closed bouse. P h i Delta Theta Christmas 8-12 — Alba Club Christmas a program to promote frien d ­ ship and union among students nance, Newman Annex. * d ifferen t faiths through cul­ — U n ive rsity B a p t i s t 8-12 — Phi Sigma Delta open ch International Banquet, house, International Room of tural and social activities. Students may register for the Texas Union. workshop at their — Delta Epsilon closed inter-faith Lam bd* 8- Aqua Carnival, Gregory Gym Dr. George W . Hoffman at pool. V A R T m e e t i n g , Chem istry In addition to her own plays 8:15— Last performance of “ Gold Build ing 15. Miss Heilman wrote the H o lly ­ in the H ills,” Saengerrunde bridge games, wood versions o f “ Dead E n d " and 7:15— Duplicate Hall. Texas Union 315. “ Dark Angel.” 7:30— C hart and Compass Class 8 :30- -Christmas party, U niversity Club. party, U n iversity Club. 7:30— N A U D to elect officers, 8:30— Am erican and Texas Pbarmat eutical Associations, Milam Texas Union 401. 7 :3 0 — Rabbi Hym an Solomon to Cafeteria. speak on “ Has Religion a "Place for W orld P e a ce ?” H illel £eUcJic iJv ic# i’t Foundation. R IV E IN T r t t A T R f S 8 — Band party, Band Hall, g— Aqua C arnival, Gregory Gym T W O S H O W S N IG H T L Y pool. F e a t u r e S t a r t * a t 7 p. m. hull the applications are refused g International Ball, Main “ BUCK I ecause of ability to pay, lack of j Lounge, Texas Union, P R IV A T E S ” merit, or being “ spite cases.” 8:15— “ Gold in the H ills,” SaenAbbott and Costello (a s e * are referred tothe clinic gerrunde Hall. by courts, business firms, relit nous; “ SU M M ER STO CK” Ju d y Garland * Gene K elly groups, w elfare agencies, and law ­ yer*. • H EA D IN G FO R Laundry Portraits made JLRP M io tic wu a intended it to last a long time.’ “ Those years devoted to the composition were among the richest and happiest in H avdn’s life. “ . . . W hen he worked on this I oratory, Haydn felt uplifted and in close communion with his C re­ ator. ‘Never was I so devout,’ he said, ‘as w hen composing ‘The Creation,' I knelt and prayed to God to strengthen me for my w ork.' ” One of the three soloists for the Cobego of Fine A rts Produc­ tion, Miss Townsley has been studying for the past three years in New York. She hus sung in concerts and oratorios in the East. She wa? a former voice student with Floyd Townsley and Chase Ba romeo at the College of Fine Arts. An associate professor of voice, Floyd Townsley toured Europe for three years as first tenor with the de Reske Quartet. Concerts were given in England, France, and Sw itzcrland. Archie N. J o n e s, profeasor of music education and director of the U niversity A Cappella Choir, received a diploma in music from The U niversity of Nebraska, a bachelor of science and master of arts from the University of M inne­ sota, and a doctorate in music from M acPhaii College of Music. Alexander von Kreisler, distin­ guished conductor and composer, Legal Clinic Trains Lawyers Through Service to People and ELECTRICAL CO. Fo rd Sam uel D ANILO VA A comedy by Shakespeare f u r ­ hi New Orleans in 1905, and grew nished the title for “ Another P a rt up in New York City. Educated of the Forest." contemporary tra ­ in the public schools and New gedy crusading against greed and York U niversity, she later enrolled tyranny, which will be presented in Columbia U niversity fo r a by the Austin t ivi< Theater D e­ >pecial course in Dante. cember 19-24 at Hancock R ecrea­ Her ex-husband. A rth u r Kober, tion te n te r. is the author of “ H aving a W on­ The play, by Lillian Heilm an, derful Tim e,” and “ Thunder v 'ill be given in-the-round, Title Over the B ro n x .” Before their tor the play was taken from a divorce, Miss Heilm an assisted stage direction in “ As You Lik e I lim with publicity work, read It Hollywood plays and scenarios, Tile story reflects a hatred of and reviewed books for the New persecution which Miss Heilman \ork Herald-Tribune. developed during a month's visit When she discovered Niki to Spain. Franco and his troops Baum's ‘b ila n d H otel,” she narwere bombarding the country at lowed hor work to reading plays. the time, and she became a m ili­ Miss Heilman's first successful tant anti-Fa cist and an a rd e n t, play, “ The C hildren’s H our,” was supporter of Loyalist Spam, H e r produced in New York in 1933. lamous “ W atch on the R hine” Subsequent works include “ The was taken indirectly from these L ittle Foxes” in 1939; “ W atch on E u ropca n e \ pe r ie nee*. the Rhine,” w inner of the 1941 Only I niversity student appear­ New York Drama C ritic ’s A w a rd ; ing in the local production is J a n "T h e Searching W ind,” 1944; and Edgerton, wiio plays L a vma, the “ M ontserrat,” IU 49, mother of the Hubbard fam ily, Two of these have become more hx-rtudents in the play include Eave Loyd, form er Texan ed i­ well known in movie versions. t o r ; Jo y Barnes, eN speech and 'The Children’s Hour,” w'huh ran drama student: Douglas R in ser; for 691 performances on Broad ­ and Jo e B ill Hogan, form er drama way and won Pu litzer Prize men­ tion, was adapted into “ These major. Tallulah All seat* will be reserved, and T hree” by Hollywood. ticket- are 9 Swanhilda in “ Coppclia” is impish * ^ ^ 8 ^ and gay, her Glove Seller in <■', “ Gaite Parisien ne” sophisticated ‘ ' * * and vivacious as is her Street *- — Dancer in “ Le Beau Danube.” ALEXA N D RA Kreisler to Conduct Haydn's Creation in Gregory Sunday Gold In The Hills” or “T he D ead Slater’* S ecret’* H ilarious 1890 “ M ellerdramer** With Variety Acts Call A U ST IN CIVIC T H E A T E R 6-0541 for R eservation* Friday, D ~ * m S * r TF TF50 T H F 'D T ^ V T E X W J F a y TO Diving, and Leg Art' Makes Delayed Aqua Carnival a H it W a y s From Space Ex-f b i Agent Swimming, Tells Experiences a r Detective Is Now Syndicate Poet _ Jam es J . M etcalfe, form er F B I agent and now poet for a national syndicate, told of hi? experiences with the Germ an-American Bund and related the raid in which the gangster, Dillinger, wa« killed in a talk to members of a News G a­ thering Reporting class Thursday. He told how’ for almost a year he had followed D illinger over the country, and finn Iv on duly 22, 1934, the F B I , with the aid of Anna Sage — “ the Woman in Red ' — trapped D illinger as he w as leav­ ing a Chicago suburban theater. M etcalfe applied for a job with the Chicago Times, but he was turned down for lack of experi­ ence. He fin a lly proposed to the pa­ per that he be given a job on pro­ bation and was assigned to in­ vestigate the activities of the German-American Bund, which was then growing powerful. Mr. M etcalfe worked himself into the organization and gained the confidence of the leaders. Sho rtly afterwards he was given the position of training the Bund spies in techniques of infiltration. He learned their secrets by v a ri­ ous methods, one of which was teaching one of the ringleaders how to speak fluent English. When he had learned their plans and se­ crets. he broke the story in a se­ ries in the Times. Six months after he was given his first job as a reporter he was given the National Headliners Aw ard for distinguished service to journalism . A twelve-second ?pe-*ch with the notorious “ Bab y F a c e " Nelson is considered by M r. M etcalfe as his closest call to death. Mr. M et­ calfe and another F B I agent were aw aiting the arriva l of Nelson at a hideout, only Mr. M etcalfe did not recognize Nelson until he had driven away. Nelson was killed the same day by the F B I. M r. Metcalfe, often referred to as the G-man who turned poet, has w ritten several books of poetry. _ By O L A N B R E W E R A flock of beautiful women, some fancy diving and swimming, ample jokes, and a shot of Hadacol combined to give the Aqua C arnival the needed spirit to send 750 spectators aw ay feeling that they had their money's worth. The show dragged in spots, one act fell flat on its face, and the spectators were occasionally splashed with water. B u t as a whole even F lip p er the seal— w ho was caught at 11:80 W ednesday night and taken back to San M a r­ cos— would have been pleased with the performance. She should have been, because J ■ .1 .. i J authorities dedicated T h u r s d a y night’s performance to her because s h e had so faith fu lly performed the night before. M aster of ceremonies W a lly P ry o r got the show underway at C arnival 8: 10 by pies- Mig ^resent Aqu a C arn ival Queen C herry B la ir. Dressed in a 'hort Santa Claus suit, C herry came down the chim­ ney in true St. Nick style. She t h e n presented the m e m ­ b e r of the Longhorn swimming team, who gave one of many dis­ p lay.- o f fancy diving. Al l - Amer i­ cans J ack Tolar, S hippy Brow ning, and Aqua Queen candidate Clare Mast mon w» t the f e a t u r e d ii IV­ ________________________________________________ ers A few good jokes then set the r rh l r .rn r • rf - -r • ^ stage fo r the first o f two perform ­ ances by the twelve Aqua Belles, precision swimming team. More humor (an apparently sex-starved man chased a girl clad in a grass skirt with a lawn m ower) preceded a breast stroke race between four team swimmers. Johnny Crawford, Southwest Con­ ference champion, was the w inner, and received a smack from Queen C herry for his efforts. One joker then came tum bling from the top of the tow er in his so-called parachute act. He used a woman's brassiere for the para­ S O M E EYES may n&ver get past Anne W h ite to discover that chute, but it was obviously not the^e are really n-ne more like this in Hank Chapman's Aqua Carni­ large enough to keep him from plunging into the water. val. It's no wonder judges are sometimes eas y confused. The sororities then presented entries in the Christm as Card pletely. A man known as Superfish drank some Hadacol and grabbed race (a ll of them featuring beau­ said he had come to pull the seal a wire which was to pull him across the pool. His intentions tifu l g irls) and Phi Psi and Phi j out of the pool. Since th at was already accom- failed, and the master of cereSigma Kappa fraternities staged the canoe tilting contest. P h i S ig ­ plished, he challenged a Univer- monies was left at a loss for ma Kappa won tw-o out o f three I sity swimmer to a race. He fell words when the wire broke and fa r behind at first, w ith inten- Superfish did not w in a? schedfalls. Sandwiched in between these tions of catching up whenever he uled. two was a “ stroke show” by “ Gus Sa ss a fra s^ " He managed to get o ff the night’s best joke (about w h ales). It w ill possibly be cen-sored out by F rid a y night. La te r “ F lip p e r" got into the act. It wasn’t a real 250-pound seal, but a boy dressed as one. L ik e Flipper, he refused to come j Texas A & M cadets suffered irresponsible members who have out of the pool. But one beauti­ fu l girl had only to stroll by, how­ close to $1,000 property loss on “ relegated sportsmanship in fa ­ ever, and this Flip p er dashed out their corps trip to Austin, a let­ vor of vandalism .” “ W e do not ask for or desire ter from the president of the of the pool after her.# retribution.” the letter continues. Santa Claus then made a be­ A & M Student Senate said. The letter stated that such loss­ “ Reimbursement we leave to your lated appearance, and pleased the crowd wdth his gifts. He pulled j es occurred before, but this year judgm ent. Restoration of proper­ each o f the ten Aqua C arn ival they reached such a proportion ty lost is urgently requested since candidates from the chimney— that it was felt the U n iversity most of it was federal government Ja n e t Lee, Pola E llis , M arge H a r­ student body should know about property fo r which the cadets are financially responsible.” grove, J o Ann H yltin , Ju n e Tolar, it. A cost list included in the let­ The letter acknowledges the K a th ry n G ran dstaff, C lare Masterson, Nancy Couvillion, Ann j possibility that some of the loss ter gave these prices, garrison W hite, and Shalm ir Duerson in was occasioned by “ irresponsible cap $7.50; blouse, $29.42 govern­ juveniles or hoodlums,” not mem­ m ent issue; trousers $11.54 gov­ that order. They were each carried across bers of the student body, b reak­ ernment issue; and boots, $69.50. C arl V. Bredt, assistant dean the pool in a sled to the spot where ing into locked, parked cars. “ H ow ever,” the letter continues, of men, reports several items have they modeled before judges W il­ bur Evans, George M cC all, John “ in many cases, the fa c t that the been given to him for return to M cCurdy, Bobby Coy Lee, and loss was occasioned by members owners at A & M . U n ive rsity students who have Dana X . Bible. Some of the spec­ of the Texas U n iversity student tators attempted to judge Mr. B i­ body is thoroughly substantiated.” property belonging to A & M stu­ The letter states that its purpose dents that they wish to return ble's reaction to the girls by the degree to which his face and head was to bring to the attention of may leave it in Dean B re d t’s o f­ turned red when each co-ed was the U n iversity student body facts fice, M am Building 101M, or in which would allow it to take its the office of the D aily Texan, presented. The next act fizzled out com- own action against ill-advised and Journalism Building I. In Property at Austin O N E G O O D R E A S O N why a University '-a'es will want to attend the Aqua Carnival is M argaret H a rgrove one c* ten lovelies contending for the Queen’s crown. W h Ie there w be no Aqua King crowned, some of the r’"est mascu ne re i en the campus Bring Results qgrs. •-v « ■ip %,* * ■ ■ ■ m ! rn By By B OB rn rn Tm -w - - —— S MSI M TH ITH , Mysterious radio waves coming dio stars.” They are thought to from outer space suppotr Ein- be suns which are too cool to stein’s theory of a fin ite universe, give off visible light, and so, in a visiting lecturer .said Thursday accordance with astronom ical obr.ight. servations, give off radiation of Addressing a group of radio longer wave lengths, engineers in Geology Building None of these radio stars can 14, Dr. Charles R. Burrow s, D i- 1be seen, except the Crab Nebula, rector of the School of Electri- which is a freak an yw ay. M any cal Engineering at Cornell Uni- of them are too fa r aw ay for obversity, pointed out results of serval ion with optical telescopes, wmrk in radio astronomy which D r. Burrow s said the new' give credence to E in s te in ’s theory, science of radio astronomy could B y this theory, light from any be expected to prove Einstein's source would follow a curve theory rn the future. “ A ll we through space and eventually re- reed is time fo r more w ork,” he turn to its point of departure, said. E v eryth in g that “ is” w ill be found He speculated on the idea that w ithin this finite universe. light, in its long flight around the Radio signals from outer spacey universe, gets “ tired,” and slowly Dt. Burrow s said, do not arrive form s longer wave lengths, inc Iud* with the frequency they should H1g radio waves. if there is no lim it to the uniRadio w'aves also are sent by verse. Rather, the radio waves the sun, in a steady hiss, occur in such a w ay as to indiRadio astronomy began with an cate a lim it to the universe. j experiment in 1931. A scientist These discoveries are possible attem pting to measure the angle because of the existence of “ ra- 0f arriva l of radio static, found that the strongest radiations came (rom space. Later investigations showed the radiations originated in the center of our galaxy, the M ilk y W ay. Apparent “ hot spots” in space waves were discovered, indicating closer or stronger radio stars. (Continued from Page I ) Dr. Burrows acts as consultant derdice. Law School Assemblyman Rob- to the U n ivesity’a E le c trica l Eninson introduced a bill calling for S n e e rin g Research Laboratory* amendment of the voting proce- located at the Off < ampus Redure to incorporate the “ Dalby search t enter, system” within the H are Prefer"‘“ t ; t 7 ' “ ™ ential system. The method retains the main points of the H are system, except that all first place votes, all se­ cond place votes, etc. would be counted. This would eliminate, ac­ cording to its supporters, the chance element in drawing votes at random for counting. D avid Benn ett’s resolution of appreciation to the administration for installing additional pencil sharpeners in campus buildings passed unanimously. Rodman, Barb ara Strielg er, and L lew ellyn were elected to the Cam ­ pus Solicitations Committee. The committee passes on requests to make solicitation of funds on the campus. Lloyd Hand, student pre­ sident, and Ray Peeler, chairman of seasonal activities, are ex-offico members of the committee. Voting Procedure Amendment Asked 7/ju n to : f o r C hristm as hav e portraits m a d e at < hell treasure long after Christmas A L L IG A T O R BILL FO LD S a very luxurious gift that hell use and enjoy CO UN TESS M ARA TIES from our C U FF LIN K S in a very design featuring the classical masks very handsome design# done up in of comedy and tragedy in contrast fine-tying pure silks that say M erry on each link, 7.50 pius tax and witty collection for a long, long time, $10. to 22,50. unusual of these wide , T e x a n Scie nce E d i t o r Aggies Lose $ 1,000 Classifieds Finite Universe Shown by Radio ■ w Christmas in a very distinctive way, A L L IG A T O R BELTS which add a 7.50 up. note of distinction to his dress in addition to being one of the hard­ iest belts you could give him, 7.50 and $10. • ON CONGRESS NEXT TO AUSTIN HOTEL