N o Faculty Raises Now, Says Painter
in d ic a te d th a t his te n d e n c y w as
n o t r e c e p tiv e to w a r d use of th e
H e a lth Service by f a c u lty m em
bers.
A
B u t Dr. P a i n t e r e n d o rse d a
F a c u l ty Club as a p r o je c t t h a t
“ q u ite possibly could be a p a r t
of th e e x p a n d e d T e x a s U n io n ”
a n d r e f e r r e d th e T e x a n to C o m p
tr o lle r C. D. S im m ons on th e
A A U ? r e q u e s t f o r a h ig h e r s a la r y
life in s u r a n c e ceiling,
Mr. S im m ons said a r e - e x a m i
BY RONNIE DUGGER
Texan E ditor
^ P re sid e n t T. S. P a i n t e r T uesdav
i
tn* e f f e c t turned down f o u r of
s ix w elfare r e c o m m e n d a tio n s o f
t h e local A m e r ic a n A ssociation
o f U n iv e r s it y P r o f e s s o r s as un
fea sib le at p r e s e n t.
He said t h a t b u d g e t c o n s id e r a
tion s
p r o h ib it
f a c u lty
s a la r y
raises now an d t h a t r e t i r e m e n t
and r e s e a r c h subsi dization p r o
po s a ls p f th e A A V P w-’ould be ille
g a l u n d e r p r e s e n t law. H e also
S
n a t io n o f the U n i v e r s i t y ’* life in
s u r a n c e provisions is r e g u la r l y in
o r d e r a lth o u g h the sp ecific plan
p roposed by th e A A I ’I’ w ould cost
m o r e in p r a c tic e th a n th e p r e s e n t
policy.
“ We have lo n g re c o g n iz e d the
d e s ira b ility of a s a la r y scale on
eq u a l foozling w ith c h e r s ta te
in s t i t u t i o n s , ” Dr. P a i n t e r said.
“ W h e n o u r s t a t e a p p r o p r ia t io n s
p erm it. I am in f a v o r o f g r a n ti n g
som e in c re ase s t o o f f s e t th e in
c re a se d cost o f liv in g .”
The A A U P in its M o n d a y nigTit! living s t a n d a r d s a r e s u f f e r i n g
m e e tin g u n a n i m o u s ly a d o p te d a d e g r a d a tio n a n d t h a t s t a f f q u a lity
s ix -p o in t r e s o lu tio n . T he f i r s t r e has fa lle n , w ith th e p r o p o rtio n of
q u e s t w as f o r r e s to r a tio n o f f u l l 5 PhD. h o ld e rs low er a n d local r e
1939 p r e - w a r p a r it y w ith th e cost c r u i t m e n t c a u s in g “ i n b r e e d i n g ”
o f living in d e x an d a IO p e r c e n t d an g e rs.
Dr. F’a i n t e r had no c o m m e n t
in r c a s e above t h a t cost-of-living
on t he A A U P r e q u e s t t h a t the
adjustm en t.
Dr. J . C. Dolley, U n iv e r s it y ; f a c u lty be given p e r mi ss i o n to
H e a l t h S e n d e e o th e r
v ic e-p re sid e n t, said T u e s d a y that, use t h e
n e w a c tiv itie s an d a la r g e r p a y t h a n :
“ If we w er e ahle to raise the
roll co upled w ith lo w er m o n e y
sa la r y scale, t he need for some
value h av e p r e v e n t e d raises.
The A A P P c h a r g e d t h a t s t a f f o f t hese o t h e r t hi ngs w o u ld be
HPlJI?
I H lE j
Student
Price Five Cents
~
sible.”
|
Mr. S im m ons ex plain ed th a t th e |
g ro u p te r m life in s u r a n c e now;
av a ilable costs less w hen discounts
a r e co n s id ered th a n does the sys
te m su g g e sted by th e A A UP.
♦
Dr. P a i n t e r also d o u b te d the
le gality of th e sixth A A U P r e
c o m m e n d a tio n — subsidizing
fac
u lty m e m b ers seekin g d o c to rs ’ d e
g r e e s a t o th e r in stitu tio n s up t o '
$1, 000 p e r year,
He gave two r ea so ns ;
T exan
Voice
V O L U M E 5!
Hiss p r e s s in g .”
T h e A A U P r e q u e s te d t h a t staff
m e m b e r s be allow ed to c o n t r i b u te
up to 7 a n d o n e - h a lf p e r c e n t o f
th e ir fu ll s a la r y to w a r d r e t i r e
ment. Dr. P a i n t e r said p r e s e n t
s t a t e law s e ts a lim it o f 5 p e r
c e n t on a m a x im u m of 13,600
of sa lary .
T he n ee d f o r a F a c u l ty Club
w h ere “ e a t i n g fac ilities, ac co m o
d a tio n s f o r U n iv e r s it y g u e s ts, and
m e e tin g ro o m s f o r f a c u l t y g r o u p s ”
could be p ro v id e d , is “ q u ite pos
AUSTIN, TEXAS, W E D N E S D A Y , N O V E M B E R I, 1950
'
i n * u n iv e r s i ty ta
jim uc t a m
to em ploy a f a c u lty m e m b e r w ho
has n o t c o m p leted g r a d u a t e t r a i n
in g and it “ w ould p r o b a b ly ba
illegal ’ to e x te n d such aid.
Dr. P a i n t e r said t h a t he thin k *
it is ‘val uable f o r me mb e r * o f
t he f a c u l t y to co ns i d e r th e se p r o b
lems an d call t h e m to th e a t t e n
tion of t he A d mi n i s t r a t i o n , al
t h o u gh in ge ne r a l t h e A dm inist r at i on is t h o r o u g h l y a w a r e o f
t h e m a n d is t r y in g to solve them."*
Community
Force
Six Pages Today
No. 53
S
T
,!
I*Lilienthal
to
Speak
Education Topic
,
.
*
ofCoffeorum T o n igh t in G regory
Dr. A r r o w w o o d
Sees Relationship
Between Subjects
T h e r e is no opposition b e tw e e n
specializati on and liberal e d u c a
tion as Dr. C. F. Ar r o w w o o d , p r o
fesso r of h isto ry , sees it.
This is th e th e o ry he will e x
pan d d u r in g th e first coffeoru m
discussion to be held W e d n e s d a y I
a t 4 p.m. in th e Main Lounge, o f ,
t he T ex as Union.
“ A n y civilization r e s ts upo n '
sp e cia liz atio n , b u t also on b ein g
,
-W.vvi*...
—P h o t o b y N o la n B ord e n
able to c o m m u n ic a te ,” he believes, j
M I C A M O S T B E A U T IF U L F R E S H M A N fina
★
cianne
Knight.
From
these
five, judges w ’il
lists pose prettily and display some o f that
Dr. A rrow w ood believes t h a t
select one Thursday to be M o s* Beautiful
UT feminine charm and beauty. Left to right
j th e h ig h e r the level of sp e c ia liz a
Freshman. She will be presented at the FoU y
the smiles read Louise Randall, Elite Lucketi,
A cre s Follies Novem ber 9 and IO.
N ina Lee Jo^es, Kathryn Grandstaff, and Lutio n you a t t a i n , th e m o re th e n eed |
D A V ID E. LILIENTHAL
f o r g en e ra! e d u c a t io n in e v e r y d a y
co n tac t*. “ A la rg e r a n g e o f in
te r e s t is n ee d ed f o r e v e r y o n e ,” he
says.
Nay, Mustangs, N a y
“ The questio n is how m uc h
g e n e r a l e d u c atio n is n e e d e d ,” Dr.
A rrow w ood co n te n d s.
He says t h a t specialized p e r
sons do n o t alw a y s re a liz e th e
n e e d f o r an e d u c a tio n in o t h e r
th a n t h e i r one field, and co m m o n ly
n e g le c t th in g s th e y should have
T he U n iv e r s it y ’s c o n tro v e rs ia l I p o rtio n a l a re n o t fo llow ed to t h e
In the fall e lec tio n s t h e r e
was an in t e r e s t in f ro m the viewpoint
H a r e P r o p o r t i o n a l election system , 1 le tte r , and th a t th e w r o n g n a m e more, th a n one position open in o f ev e ry d a y life.
w id ely accused of d isc re p an c ie s in of th e system of b allo t c o u n t in g
all «ascs.
j )r A rro w w o o d is one of f o u r
t h e r e c e n t election s, g o e s b e f o r e . is in use.
I he c o m m itte e includes
le a n spe ak e r* on th e
p r o g ra m . The
A s p o n ta n e o u s pep rally beg a n
s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t in v e stig a tio n
Y a r b o r o u g h said th e E le c tio n D alby, A n n T ay lor, Bob W heeler, other* are Dr. H a r r y R an som ,
T
u
e s d a y n ig h t a t l l o ’clock in
W e d n e sd a y .
Com m ission h a d called th e sy stem w
t
i~,
rn
' p r o fe s s o r o f E n g lis h ; Dr. L. L.
c l
n j.
C onnor, L ee O ilm an , T o m m y
,
• ,
7
, .«
r
. t_
* Click, a s so cia te dean o f th e Col- f r o n t of th e Phi D elta T h e t a f ra Lloyd H a n d , s t u d e n t p r e s id e n t, o f b a llo t c o u n t in g now’ in use t h e
e s b ' L d g e b a b , .loan Ragsdale, je g e 0 p A rts and S cie nce s; a n d i t e r n i t y house in a d e m o n s tr a ti o n
h a s a p p o i n te d th e n in e -m e m b e r H a r e P r e f e r e n t i a l . He ad ded t h a t
b o d y , w hich m e e ts fo r th e f i r s t th e C o n s titu tio n of the S t u d e n t s ’ a n d Dr. 0 . D. W eeks, f ac u l t y A lfred L ee B e d y e , asso cia te p ro- of U T s t u d e n t s ’ s u p p o r t of the
tim e W e d n e s d a y a f t e r n o o n to he- A ssociation calls for t h e use o f sponsor .
fessor o f m a r k e t i n g .
• ’H o rn s and desire to sec the is moos
g in a th o r o u g h s tu d y of th e elec- th e p r o p o r ti o n a l
sy stem
w here
ti o n sy stem . T he c o m m itte e is a I m o re th a n o n e position is open
*
*
■- ’
A
r e s u l t of a r e c e n t S t u d e n t As- j f o r a n y school o r college,
f e m b l y bill.
W h e n th e s tu d y is c o m p lete,
t h e c o m m itte e w ill t u r n in to the
a s s e m b l y its f in d in g s w ith rec o m m e n d a ti o n s f o r ch a n g e .
T h u r s d a y s th e day a f t e r fall
election s, s t u d e n t a t t o r n e y s Bill
W h i te a n d D o n Y a r b o r o u g h s ta te d
I
T he C r u sa d e f o r F r e e d o m petic o m p la in ts, based on r e s e a r c h in
th e L aw L ib r a r y , t h a t t h e r e i s ' n o tio n s signed by U n iv e r s it y stu w r i t t e n se t o f r u le s g o v e r n i n g d e n ts wilj he p r e s e n te d W ednes- j
elec tion p r o c e d u r e , t h a t r u l e . o f L
o fterno0n
to
E rn est
CU
b a l lo t c o u n t in g u n d e r H a r e P ro‘
„
T h o m p so n , T e x a s R a ilro a d Cornm issioner a n d s ta te w id e c h a ir m a n
of th e C r u s a d e .
Lloyd H a n d ,
c h a ir m a n o f th e c a m p u s C r u s a d e ,
will m a k e th e p r e s e n t a t i o n in Mr.
T h o m p s o n ’s office.
T h ese f r e e d o m scrolls will be
a m o n g th o se placed a t th e base
W e d n e s d a y a t o p. rn. is trio
p ree
Som e th o u g h t it was th e
p la in e d Miss O sburn. “ T h ey w'ili a n ti- lo y a lty o a th o r th e a n t i
a e s e le c te d by a c o m m itte e of C o m m u n ist p e titio n to be s e n t to
f iv e f a c u l t y a n d s t u d e n t o fficials. I C a lif o r n ia , ” H a n d s ta te d .
T h e C a c tu s e d i to r m e re ly ca sts on e
A sso c iate c h a i r m e n a t th e U’nio f th e fiv e v o te s .”
v e r s it y w e re S t e r lin g S toves a n d
To b ec o m e an o u t s t a n d i n g stu - J a c k
K enney.
A re a
c h a ir m e n
d e n t , th e n o m in e e m u s t be chosen w ere J o h n P r a t e r , in d e p e n d e n t
u n a n im o u s ly . If a n y one p e r s o n m e n ; D iana S m allw ood, in d e p en w e r e n o m in a te d by m o r e th a n o n e d e n t
w o m e n ; C h a rle s S a n d e rs,
o r g a n iz a ti o n th e n his ch a n c e s f o r f r a t e r n i t i e s ; a n d C an d y L u c k e tt,
n o m in a tio n wmuld n a t u r a l l y he so ro ritie s.
greater.
T h ose
stu d en ts
w ho ------------------------------------------------ “ — "
receive a m a jo r ity , b u t not a D a lla . N e w sm a n to T alk
u n a n i m o u s vote, w ill b e d e s ig n a t e d
Dawson D u n c a n , lo ng-tim e r e
a s go odfellow s.
porter for the Dallas Morning
T h r e e S t u d e n t s in Col lis io n
N ew s and now ch ie f o f the N e w s ’s
Three U n iv e r s it y s t u d e n ts w e r e I A u s tin bureau, will speak to two
involved
in a car-motorcycle col- journalism classes at I o ’clock
in
Tdon
at
the
in te r s e c tio n
o f W ednesday in Journalism Building
—Ph o to b y N o la n B ord en
Twenty-third
and
G u a d a lu p e : 212.
"H A L L O W E E N IS H " FUN A N D FRIVO L
of water, and teeth. Jennilu seems to have
S tr ee ts T u e s d a y night. Jim N ew Mr. Duncan will talk on governfu dged a little, but M aster To re y (with the
ITY which has pervaded the cam pus is d is
man and Gene Genevera w e r e ; m ental and political reporting to
Veronica Lake hair-do that is leaking onto his
played by Jennilu Kelly and Tom Toney, shown
both riding on the m otorcycle Harrell E. L e e ’s class on N e w l
face) must have really thrown himself into his
pushing apples beneath +he water with their
and the c a r w as d riv en b y Tom- paper Reporting o f P u b lic A ffairs
work. From our own experiences, we Ii wager
teeth.
The
gam
e—
called
b
o
b
b
in
g
for
apm y C a r r in g t o n .
a n d Olin E. H in k le ’s class on th e
pin'
har
f
o
ou
’p
p
o
o
u
!ar
*it
h
the
the apple will fall bac* into the water lust
N either N e w m a n nor U e e e v e r a Small-City N ew spaper. Other in---- -.. —
A— l a u u t i .
UAVilf
—
Deter* Tem ten get nu hand* en rf.
younger set, es all ens nee«i * a pp tee, e tub
Students to Study
UT Election System
rn
'Freedom' Scroll
Goes to Thompson
/F
'Outstanding' List
Due Today by 5
f
ft
I
BJTA
JIM
COCKRUM
The speech, " T h e Atom in W a r an d
P e a c e , ” is open to the public an d will b a
br oadcast over K N O W , from 8 to 9 o’clock.
Head of the AEC since it was f o r m e d
in 1946, Mr. Lilienthal criticized " t h e idea
of go ver nm en t monopoly of information,
experi men ta tio n, an d de v el o pm en t of t h e
industrial at o m ,” in a rece nt article f o r th e
Ju ly edition of Collier’s M agazine.
Ile believes t h a t go v e r n m e n t mo no pl y
is an a p p r o p r i a t e w ay to provide atomic
we ap on s a n d o th e r military devices, b u t
t h a t it is not th e w ay to put t h e atom to
w or k industrially.
Nati on al anxi ety a bo ut th e atomic bo mb
could become a g r e a t e r m e n a c e t h a n a n
actu al a tt ac k, Mr. Lilienthal told tm in
t e rv i e w e r in Dallas Tu es day . Acording to
an Associated Pres s r e p o r t
he said " W e could r e a c h
such a d eg re e of anxiety a n d
develop a f e a r so g r e a t t h e r e
is n o th i n g we can do an d eo
v t would do n o th i n g . ”
Open Letter to UT
Blasts Texas Spirit
r
/
By
David E. Lilienthal, t h r e e year s head of
t h e Atomic E n e r g y Commission, s p e a k s at
8 o'clock t o n i g h t in G r e g o r y Gym.
C o- au th o r of th e Aeheson-Lilienthal Re
port, a f o rm u l a for the na t io n to follow in
i n t er na ti on al atomic en erg y control, he r e
signed as ho ad of t h e AEC earl y this y e a r
w h e n Rep u bl ica n S e n a t o r Bourk e Hickenlooper s t a r t e d an investigation into the
AEC an d la t e r the S tate D e p a r t m e n t .
In ac c e p ti n g his res ignation P res ide nt
T r u m a n no ted Mr. I J I i e n t h a l ’s r e w a r d for
long public service in " t o u g h pioneering
j o b s ” would be "in t h e consciousness of
yo u r c o u n t r y ’s confidence in w h a t you have
done an d th e w a y in w hic h you have done
it."
In public service f o r n e a r ly tw o
decades, he was c h a ir m a n o f th e
T en n e sse e V alley A u th o r ity f o r
th i r t e e n year*. T he T V A artier*!
is th e la rg e s t i n t e g r a t e d e le c tric a l
pow’er system
in
the U n ite d
States. His book a b o u t th* project,
“TVA— D e m o c r a c y o n t h e
M a rc h ,” b as b ee n t r a n s l a t e d into
C hinese, F re n c h , G e rm a n , Italian*
S panish, A rabic, an d H ebrew .
In 1949 he w ro t e “ This I Do Be
liev e,” r e a f f i r m i n g his f a i t h in a
div e rsity o f co n tro l a n d a p r im a r y
r e g a r d f o r h u m a n being* as in d i
viduals.
Mr. L ilienthal took his BA a t Do
Pauw U n iv e rsity in 1920. T h r e e
years l a t e r he rec eive d hi* law
d eg re e f r o m H a r v a r d . H e p r a c
ticed law in C hicago u ntil 1981
w h en G o v e rn o r P hilip La F o lle tte
ask ed him to become a m em ber o f
th e Public Service Com m ission o f
Wisconsin. His w o rk w ith the com
mission cam e to th e a t t e n t i o n o f
P r e s id e n t Roosevelt, and in 1938
he was a p p o in te d as one o f t h e
th r e e d ir e c to r s of th e n e w l y fo rm e d TV A.
An in fo rm a l public r e c e p tio n
will be held a f t ^ r th e le c tu r e in
the I n te r n a t io n a l Room of the
T e x a s Union.
g e t th o r o u g h ly w allo p ed S a tu r d a y . secu tiv e ones com ing the last th r e e
A p p ro x i m a t e ly 50 m e n , m arched years, a n d n u m b e r 15 com ing up
a r o u n d th e c a m p u s — b r a v in g H alt S a tu r d a y . A n o r a n g e T o w er come
low een s p r ite s — arid r a ise d a co n S a t u r d a y night, eh? We su g g e st
you g e t som e candles to p u t on
sid e ra b le a m o u n t o f noise.
y o u r T o w e r f o r y o u r S a tu r d a y
T he rally en d e d in f r o n t o f Hill
nig h t m o u rn in g .
H all tw e n t y m in u te s la te r , w ith a
How r i g h t those F lo rid a scribes
to n sil-tick lin g r o a r of e n c o u r a g e w ere in d e s c rib in g you t h ir d - r a te
m e n t to th e athlete"*.
two y ea rs a g o ; how ever, th e y d id n t
This d isplay o f th e old T ex a s go f a r en o u g h ! T h ey described
f i g h t m ig h t possibly se rv e as a y o u r te a m b u t f o r g o t a b o u t y o u r
f itti n g a n s w e r to a l e tte r , type sp o rts m a n s h ip , w hich is the w o rs t
w rite r - sig n e d by “ f ifty -s e v e n rabid in th e c o n f e re n c e , an d also f o r g o t
M u sta n g
r o o t e r s , ” calling the a b o u t y o u r lousy s tu d e n t s u p p o r t
Texas
L o n g h o rn s
“ t h ir d - r a te of th e team . W e ’re su r e y o u ’ll
S t e e r s , ” w hich w as rec eiv e d T u e s s u p p o r t y o u r te a m S a t u r d a y —
d ay by Mac B in tliff, head yell s u p p o r t th e m off th e field, t h a t is,
leader.
a f t e r Rote an d g a n g g e t th r o u g h
with ’dm.
It reads.
W e'd like to o f f e r s f rie n d ly
“ An O pen L e t te r to th e T exas
L o n g h o rn s a n d te a -sip p in g su p s u g g e s tio n ; since you a r e b e g in
ning to so u n d Uke y o u r Aggie
p o rters;
You t h i r d - r a t e S te e rs ! ! Y o u ’r e f rie n d s with a “ W a it till n e x t
killing us w ith y o u r hum or. You y e a r ” c h a n t, why d o n 't you t r a n s
h e a t Rice 35-7 a n d now you think fer to th e L o n e S t a r C o n fere n ce.
y o u ’ll se t th e w’orld on fire. W hy M aybe you can w in t h a t one!
d o n ’t you g e t th e “ fa c ts e f l i f e ”
A n d y o u ’re going to a Bowl
an d r e a liz e th a t y o u r v ic to ry wa* this y e a r ! T a k e y o u r slippers with
m a d e possible a f t e r o u r te am you, 'cause you m ig ht catch cold! Absentee Voting Forms
so f te n e d th e Owls f o r you.
W e ’ll see you f r u s t r a t e d tea-sip- Due Friday, Clerk Says
O u r M u s ta n g s a r e th e only c o n pers S a tu r d a y . Look us up on the
S t u d e n t s d ef il in g to p a r ti c ip a te
f e r e n c e te a m to h a v e an edge o ver f ifty -y a rd line.
In a bs en t e e vot i n g have u n til
you in all-tim e c o n f e r e n c e play, 14
vic to ries to 12 d e f e a ts , t h r e e c o n Fifty-seven rab id M u sta n g ro o te rs f r i d a y to fill o u t voting f or ms ,
Miss E mille L im b e rs , c o u n t y clerk ,
said.
V oter* who a r e not r e sid in g
the i r home c o u n ty a n d w ish to
p a rtic ip a te in th e N o v e m b e r 7
elections ma y o b ta in an official
ballot f r o m the c o u n ty clerk o f the
c o u n ty in which th e y paid th e ir
poll tax. This fo rm m u s t he filled
A p p r o x i m at e l y 10,000 s t u d e n t n ight. “ The r u m o r t h a t s tu d e n t ou t b e f o r e a n o ta r y public. R eg
tic
k
ets
have
b
e
i
n
sold
o
u
t
is
not
tic k e t s to the S MU- Te xa s f o o t
u la tio n s a re the sam e f o r persona
ball ti l t have been issued, r e p o r t tru e. All o th e r tic k e ts to th e gam e living o u tside th e sta te .
ed Miss Alice Archer, i nt e r co l l e a re go n e, h u t all b la n k e t ta x h o ld
g ia te a t hl e t ic s ticket m a n a g e r , ers have tic k ets if they c a r e to
d r a w th e m .”
T u e sd a y .
T h e possibility o f a n y ticket*
“ T h e r e is a t ic ket f o r each
r
e
m
a in in g a f t e r s t u d e n t sal** are
b la n k e t ta x h o l d e r, ” Miss Ruth
Gold, one of the Athletic D e p a r t closed is v e ry slim, Miss A rc h e r
By CHARLIE LEWIS
m en t staff,
d ecl ared T u e s d a y said.
S tu d e n ts m a y d r a w tic k e ts f ro m
8 :3 0 a.m. to 12 noon anti fro m I
A m e m b e r of Crow s Nest Co-op
to 5 p.m. th r o u g h F r id a y by p r e has to s ta y up till m idn ig h t so
s e n tin g th e ir b la n k e t ta x e s at ho ca n s e t his a la r m f o r noon o f
the tic k e t w indow. One s t u d e n t th e n e x t day. His envious fn e n d *
m ay d raw as m a n y as six tic k ets, d e c l a r e he sleep* twelve hour*
p ro v id ed t h a t he p r e s e n ts a sim e v e ry n igh t. S om etim es he over
ilar n u m b e r of b la n k e t taxes.
s le e ps a n d misses his “ e a r l y ” class,
As f o r t h e d e m a n d f o r n o n a I o ’clock.
A C h r is tm a s th e m e will be c a r
Sounds as though he’s ju s t
ried o ut in th e A qua C a rn iv al s t u d e n t tic k e ts, th e A ssociated
D e c em b e r 13-16, ac co rd in g to t h e ; P re s s r ela y ed tw o A u stin A m eri plain saekreligious, but maybe he'*
sw im m in g sh o w ’s d ir e c to r , H an k can classified ads over the s t a t e a sackology major.
★
T u e s d a y n igh t.
Chapman.
Found in the F o d d e r B o x :
O n e said “ W a n t e d ; Tw o tic k ets
T h e A q u a C a rn iv a l d a te has
“ We have no contributions for
b e e n se t up se v eral w eeks fro m to SMU t r a c k m e e t S a t u r d a y . ”
far
t h a t of p re v io u s y e a r s to allow The o t h e r w as selling “ Tw o SMU* ‘Fodder,* but h ere’* one
m e m b e r s o f th e sw im m in g te a m T ex a s box s e a t tickets on 40-yard ‘Mudder’.”
W e need the p«any worse t h a i
in th e cast m ore tim e to g e t rea d y line, plus 3 0 -c a lib e r c a rb in e. Like
■ u ita la a j*
J AAA
new. All for $78.
for the swimming season.
10,0 0 0 Blanket Tax
Tickets Already Gone
im
o r IIU
it f r e r e s
Aqua Carnival
Dates Set Up
Wednesday N ov.I , 1950
THE DAILY TEXAN Pag# 7
•
t i
By B O B S E A M A N
r«MR >Spo*I* 8tm$
Prom the w a y Houston n e w s p a p er s *re Ruin* beserk
over the coming show b e t w e e n Rusty Ru ss e l l ’* aerialists
ami Blair Cherry’s strongmen, you'd think the game w a s
Longhorn Defensive Unit
Gives Ground to Ponies'
tosses to J i m m y H a w n as G e or ge
JAMES
RECH
Ttrnn Sport* Klictor
G e n t r y a n d Bob Ri ckma n .
The
T ex as
defenders
were
T h e f ir s t - s t r i ng T ex a s def ence
got its first look at S MI ? single hacks Bobby Dillon, *1 J o ne s , a n d '
—
wing
of fe nsi ve
T u es d a y,
and
Bv
to be played in that metropolis on the bayou.
In fact, you have to look very closely to find out that
Texa* Tech's punch-drunk Red Raiders. losers t o four Kyle Rote, Fred Barman, Johnny
I exas
%
... ,
Champion, and Rusty Russet} dr.
C o n f e r e n c e te a m s , a n d R i c e s w e a r y O w ls will p la \
there
this w e e k.
But we reckon t h a t ’s only natural since .less Neely, his
__________
boys, and Houston f a n d o m 4’
ha ve had am pl e opportunity
the last t w o w e e k ends to
size up the potentialities of
Sa tu rd ay ’s foes, who will
fight it* out to the end at
Aust in’s Memorial Stadium.
m a r v ~ ; rn
thfi i ^ n ^ h o r n s “ m u t t e r i n g in
the i r b e a r d s . ”
Wi th Bill Chan slot- i m p e r s o n a t
ing Killer k y i r , D a n P a g e p a s s
ing a la B e n n er s , Carl Mayes r u n
ni ng like Russell, and Glen P r i c e
a c t i ng o u t Ch a mpi on ' s role, t h e
S t e e r d e f e n d e r s w er e f or c ed t o
give g ro u nd s t eadi ly to the h ar dc h a r g i n g sub s t i t u t e s .
Fl i cke r plays, double r everses,
and
sc re en
pas ses— t h e
whole
works w a s t h r o w n a t Coach E d
P r i c e ’s eleven a n d n e a r l y e ve r ythi ng gai ned.
A screen pass wa- good f o r a
score, a double r eve r s e n e t t e d
t we n t y , an d a flicker s e eme d a l
ways good f o r a t least five.
N u m b e r 4 4 Cha ns l or sidled un
to t h e line a n d selected holes w i t h
the piecisio of
« mighty L< ti
M u c r sma.i ei (nan his c omu n t e r p a r t ,.
Ch&nseloj roMed up considerable
yar dage.
is r us he d h a r d on his
Paste
passes bu he was still c om pl e t i ng
( h a r k Nelson, spor t s edi tor of
t n e Pres?!, r e p o r t s t h a t H o u s t o n
i a ns in ge n e ra l lean t o w a r d the
M u s t a n g s r a t e d the best f ootbal l
t e am in c ollege footbal l this week
by both t he Associated Press and
U n i t e d Pre ss polls
H ow e v e r , he goes on to q u ot e
t h r e e T ex a s exes who have ver y
definite opinions on the outcome.
Holly
Brock, well -known in
b o th
Houston
and
Un i v er si t y
s p o r t circles, has p red i c t ed a 35-7
vic t o r y f o r t he L o n g h o r n s “ J u s t
b ec aus e I like t h a t s c o r e . ”
T h e n t he j oll y B l o c k w en t on
t o say, “ Yes, I'm old e no ugh to
JESS NEELY
r e m e m b e r t h a t Chria Cot if mc * I
glia said he' d walk ho me if S M I ;
tbp team Witb ^
di dn ' t bo at f ex a a in iP26, and I ^
guv, ' which would he (Kyle )
r e m e mb e r , with s or row t h a t he Rf l p
c i d n ’t h ave to. B u t if Texa s don t
( j 0 with the t e am with t h e
b e a t SMI . I d w al k h ome f r o m
line. which would be a b o u t
A u s ti n . ”
a L a t i n - A m e r i c a n standoff with
Bill Sansing,
former
I e s a u y exaa tops on d e f e n s e ; SMC. off
By BR UC E R O CH E
snor ts e di tor a n d U ni ve r s it y aport*
r ;cc game, the best on of7*f jr<\ n
I n t t a tttti t 't t l (j)*©r d m a t o r
Pern Club took a n o t h t ? s t r id e
publ i c i t y d i r e c t o r w h o is now as
as- fenge
t owar d a Vias? A Club Division
a related with Kern Tip* in the
“ This t ime, we choose Rote.
a d v e r t i s i n g busi ne ss, told Ne e '
Geor ge Wr i g ht , also of t he cha mpi ons hi p Tuesday night by
Association, 27-13,
Press, was one o f the f ew n ot d um p i n g
Ion:
‘In 1940 I went to see Bice n a b v to m a k e a < hoice. p o i n t i n g on i n t r a m u r a l
last
fired P e n
U M an
vou re- o. .u. .t t h a t ea ch t*_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
play.. Te xa s AAM
an dd you
e_a___m
“__g___o___t_____m
a__n___y__________E d B u r r o ws
touchdown
passes,
and
m e m b e r t h a t t h e Aggies b ea t Ri ce p r e s e n t s f r o m t he Owds in a d d i t hr ee
( ' ha li t e Gori n passed f o r the first
badl y
' ' hen
Billy
H e n d e rs o n tion t o w h a t t h e y e a r n e d . ”
Marvin
G u st a fs o n c au ght two oj
c a u g h t all those passes. I ' vent
He expl ai ne d thusl y, “ F or in.
. l.
the scoring a e n a t
b a c k t o Austin a n d sa i d ; ‘Maybe stance, a ga i ns t PMI
.he B ds
T . . ....... „
refi lay
The t ussle wfas a virtu
Te xa s can b e a t ’em. h u t I don t twice s topp e d t h e ms e l ve s a f t e r
n at i on
of t he first P em - ” T A
k n o w how. ’ Texa s b e a t em. T h a t s jo n jjr drives close to the P o n y
game.
The Assoc tat n bounced
t h e way I feel a ‘o u t this one. I
goal, also g ave up two touch- into a 13-7 b a d on he p as si ng
take Texas.”
d ow n s on i nt e r cept ions.
P e t e Solito, t h e t hi r d T ex as
“ Ag ai ns t T ex a s early t he y set
suppor t*}, c o m m e n t e d , “ I ’ll t a k e ne U[1 f nr
St eers, took it I n A P P o l l
Texa s, 21-20. I look f o r a v e r y rwaVt then i mm e d i a t e l y h a n d e d
l a w- sc or i ng ga m e . I f Texa s plays t | , m tbe first t o u c h d o wn , t h e n
the s a m e w ay as it did a ga ins t
an i n t e r c e p t i o n score anRicc, the L o n g h o r n s will win
f ; he r quick one. The last one
S t r a d d l i n g t he f en c e was t he t ^ m e on a b l o c ke d punt a f t e r t h e
p .an wh o m i g h t k no w t he h e s t
Owls had hel d f o r d owns on t h e i r
N ee ly , who ha* seen his boys goal line.
c h a f e d ail over the field by both
“ All of t h e se d o n ’t come c o m
p l et el-y u n d e r the head o f gifts,
clubs.
, ,
, «------N E W YORK, Oct. 31— ( A P ) —
The wise J e s s said, “ i t s har d
t he y c er ta i nl y came t h e easy
SMU and A r m v a r e one- two ag ai n
to say. Bot h team* have fine lines way.
this week in the Associated P r e s s
SMITS r u n n i n g a p p e a r s a little
Now, while f a n s a r e g oi ng
f ootbal l poll— a n d “ X ’ m a r k s the
h ot t e r, T e x a s a p p e a r e d t o h ave an slightly b a t t y t r y i n g to m a k e a
big. round* spot t h e y ' r e on.
e ige in de f en s e . T ex a s is t he t y p e (it eision, t h e L o n g h o rn s a n d MusTh es e t wo .u n b e a, t e ,n , u nt i e d
of t e a m t h a t m i g h t b e a t S M U . ” t a n g s c o n t i nu e m a k i n g p r e p a r a F r o g g y Wi lliams
an d Bobby t h n 8 for t h e pame> w h e r c
t h e le ad e rs f or nat ional Honors go
V, ii son, a l l - Ame r ic a ns f r o m Rice p n a j ri^cjgjon will be made. a ga i ns t t h e i r t o u gh es t a s s i g n m e n t s
Her e
and SMU, w er e a m o n g t hose goN e i t h e r is u n d e r e s t i m a t i n g t he S a t u r d a y .
i n t abrng with t he
Mustang*. other, and r i g h tl y so. Because t h e
s ^ 5 ‘ " vwift-*! i ik rig M u s t a n g s
Nea l on, himself,
s u mm e d up on)y mr% thinK a b o u t t h a K>me w ho have rolled up 184 points on
big. f a s t
t he H o u s t o n a t t i t u d e t he bes t in | a
both t e a m s will go to all ;ive foes* w, ^! me et a
on|v
W h e n you g e t con- pndg to win. It,'* liable t o be t he
t eam at Austin. Ti-xa?’
bis col umn.
Don Bar t on } l ine bac ker s J u n e ! f o r d an d Bill M i l b u r n ; and g u a r d
Davis, Don Menasco, and J a c k H ar l ey Sewell
B a r t o n ; ends P a u l Williams a n d ;
T h e ‘‘M u s t a n g a t t a c k ” w a s niarBill Wi lson ; t ackl e s Jim b an s - r e d by n u m e r o u s f u m b le s b u t
|^
Wa s n ’t t a k e n into a c c o u n t as
Coach Bully Gi l s l ra p was obv i o us
ly pl e as e d with his “ P oni es . ”
The o ff e ns i ve uni t , meanwhile,
took on the f r e s h m e n in a long
s c ri mma g e .
Ben
To mp k i ns , of
course, was a t q u a r t e r b a c k . His
passing w a s o f f and on, b u t ends
Ben P r o c t e r a n d T om St o lh an d ske w e r e
making
some
fine
D A L L A S , O c t . 3 1 — ( A P ) — S M U s t u d e n t s a r e k e e p i n g catches.
Gib Dawson had t he l e f t hal f
a fearf ul eye on the turf in the Cotton Bowl,
O a t-p la n tin g Aggies
Plan Pony-napping
M o nd a y t he re wer e reports that six students from T e x a s
“
A & M , w h i c h p l a y s S M I in t h e C o t t o n B o w l N o v e m b e r l l ,
p l a n t e d IB© p o u n d s o f o a t s in t h e s t a d i u m t u r f . T h e
. . ,
, ,
,
, *P , ,
.
, i,«
r e p o r t s a d d e d th a t : w h e n , a n d i i . t h e o a t s s p r o u t , t h e
eleven. The G i bb er r i pp ed of f
s ever al nice gai ns.
Bubb a S h a n d s a n d Lew Levi ne
p l a y i n g field w ill s p o r t t h o l e t t e r s “ A & M
while Bob Raley was a l t e r n a t i n g
with Byr on T o w n s e n d a t f ull
back.
Both the o f f e n s e and d ef e n s e
c a n e x p ec t t he sa me t y pe of workt ut V> edncsdav
T r a i n e r F r a n k Medina r e p o r t e d
t h e s q u a d w a s in good physical
cond i ti on w i t h the excep t ion o f
Bdl
Ge or ge s ,
s o p ho m o r e
end.}
G e o r g e s s u f f e r e d a br o ken hand
in the A r k a n s a s g a m e and missed
t he Rice game. Its not y et c e r
t a in w h e t h e r his de f en s i ve abi b- ‘
t ies c a n be use d a g a i n s t SMC.
T h e r e was some talk T u e s d a y
t o the e f f e c t that the Mu st a n g s
ma y h ave c ooke d up a special
f ootbal l dish f or t he L o ng h o r n s
d u r i n g t h e i r e x t r a week of p r e
p a r a t i o n for S a t u r d a y ' s game.
SMU had an open d at e la-t week
end a f t e r w h i p p in g Rice, 42-21;
and Coach R u s t y Russell is well
known for his o f fe n si ve tricks.
and
Cig
em
Aggies.”
Also th e re
was
a
report th at
A ggies
are
planning
to
kidnap Peruna V, the little Mustan g mascot* and s m e a r
^ j m ^v i t h M a r o o n a n d W h i t e p a i n t , t h e A g g i e c o l o r s .
(T he oats o r w h eat on M em o rial S tad iu m tu rf w ere
“
st i ll t h r i v i n g l a t e T u e s d a y a f t e r n o o n .
The l e t t e r s " A & M
are appr oxi mat elv fifty yards wide
and
, ,
fifty yards in
d t ' P t h « m i v e r >' noticeable.
Pern Club Stops T M en;
Oak Grove Defeats W h itis
were
running
from
right
half,
Coughl in passed to Bill
for
N e w ma n ' s
second
A i rn
sco ti
T om G r e en i nt e r c ep t e d a
nn f nr t v \ ards
T o la r pass a nirt
d ri an
f o r N e w m a n ’s first tally.
A n o t h e r Class A b at t l e e n d e d as
BS I w o n on p e n e t r a t i o n s over
Wesley F o u n d at i o n .
Final score
w a s 6-6, BSI w i n n i n g 3-1 on p e n c
il a t ions.
Cliff Co u rt s served Pern Club
notice t h a t the
a t e to he conC I N C I N N A T I , O n . 31. — n
t< tided i1- ith as compet i t i on for Baseball' s co n t r o ve rs i a l b o
-ion
title. The r ule, a p p e a r e d hea ded f o r the
irtf
edged a s t r o n g
Little ash b e a n T u e s d ay ,
r< a . 20-1 5.
lupus Dorm
El iminati on of t he rule, ado pt ed
J a c k Hai bn put 11 ahead *> «» F e b r u a r y 15, I '.'ST, won appr ova l
on a ca-- to Dick San cr, but. I , R,
the m a j o r - mi n o r e xe cu t ive comT a y l o r fired t o C h ar l es Henalee to m ittee T u e s d a y f ol l owi ng a p r o tie the g.-ime, 6-t»,
pi.sa! by the J e r s e y 1 -tv clad.
The
s. ore was k n ot t e d once The c o m m i t t e e will r e c o m m e n d
again a t 13-13 on the pas si ng of that the m a j o r and mi no r leagues,
H au g h n and T a y l o r be f or e J o h n a t t h e i r D e c e mb e r me et i ngs , er ase
D a l r y mp i e took one o f H a u g h n ' s inc e n t i re bonu s s t r u ct u r e ,
aecia s
f o r t h e 1 airts' w i nn i ng A n o t h e r proposal to r emove t he
t ouc hdo wn.
high school r u l e was re ected by
Lee Dittert m a r o o n e d Dorm I! the c o m mi t t e e at a closed session
last week
w ith a blizzard of passes as the called and pr esided o ver by Cotn’ hi
The S M l ' - T e x a s gamp
Ma ri n e r* won, 18-0.
Steve Al- mi s si oner A. B. Cha ndl e r,
on<, ma t c hi ng two m e mb e r s
brecht
c a u g h t two of D i t t e r t ’a Ch a nd l e r said “ a b r o g a t i o n
of
college f o o t b a l l ’s first ten, chosen snowflakes anti Hardy' Mizell took the high school rn e would be one
o f the bi g ge st mi s tak e s o r g a n i z e d
f o r the f i f t h w ee k T u e s d a y by the t he thi r d.
In Glass R co mp e t i ti o n , T he l eme baseball could m a k e . ” The r egun at ion ? s p or t s w r i t e r s and b r o a d
Co-op Winged t h e Haw'kes on Ben lation p r e v e n t s t e a m s f r o m signer?. Ti eexas
x a s isis nnuumb
ca ters,
m b e r sever
is the n e w r an k i ng , h a r d l y W a g n e r s aerials. W a g n e r fired to ! ing high school pl a ye r s unt i l a l t e r
We e m s Hail o nce an d to Calvin t h e y have g r a d u a t e d , o r t h ei r
disturb**! a 1 the top b u t given s
S t o n e n twice f o r T h e l e m e ’s nine- original class has g r a d u a t e d ,
pood s ha ki ng dour* bel ow;
t e en points.
Billy S a r t a n ’s pass
W a l t e r Mu l br y , s e c r e t a r y
of
SMI , A rm y ,
Oklahoma,
(»hio rode an a i r l an e into Philip Sum- baseball,
said
the g a m e was
; St at e , K e n t uc k y , ( al ifornia, Texas, m y ’s a r m s f o r the H a w k e s only “ n e a r e r t ha n e ve r b e f o r e t o doing
Miami ( F l a ), P r i n c e t o n , and 111- score.
s o m e t hi ng f o r t he Pacific Coast
*
• ■C e a *
wa*
n
, !3
inoi,*. In t hi r t y- one p a c e was
Phi G a m m a Delt a t h u n d e r e d L e a g u e . ”
Oklahoma.
Ar mv.w w ill riskh a 25. gam* uni- - ^ a .VIor w i t h 6 vol. .
. re Texas o ver
S i gma 1 h , 2fi-0, on Ross * •
Ar
of Ed Rn I-after onlv to have Pern
r o a r f rom behi nd f or t h e victory.
A n o t h e r i m p o r t a n t g a m e end ed
in a c on vi nc i ng 38-0 d e f e a t of
Whi tis Wi ldc a ts a dm i ni st e r ed by
O a k Grove in ( lass A compet i ti on.
Guss H m e r u n l e a s h e d a passing
a ck tha t n e t t e d five scores for
Oe h Grove. W illiam H tide scan'
per e d fifteen y a r d s f or the f
Grove score.
In a < ac- A C h ur ch ga ne,
Roger T ol a r a n d Bill But -my
t eame d up f or I niversi ty Cb
tian to r ru*h N ew m a n Club, 26
Bonus Rule Headed
For Ash Heap
Sti 1-2;
SMU, Arm y
Texas Holds Seventh
fused
about
this
football,
the
best
tv, o t hi ng s to do a r e ;
},e «*t
<’, , n f e r e n c e
game
e v «
played.
Nation's Top 7 Seem Set
I t ’s i nt e r es t i n g to note t h a t t he
Associ at ed P re ss poll is g e t t i n g
f ai r ly well set as f a r as t he first
seven t e a ms a r e c onc er ne d.
T h ou g h t h e y c ha n g e d places
f r e q u e n t l y , SMU, Ar my, Oklal ima, K e n t u c k y , Ca l i f or ni a, an d
T e x a s have been in t he t op f p ' c n
in the l ast f o u r polls.
Ohio St at e , which has r isen
D o m n ow h e r e a f t e r its loss to
S d U to f o u r t h this week, kn ocke d
S t a n f o r d out of the top seven
last week.
And i nd i c a t i ng t h a t the nat i o n ’s s po r t s writers ar e now even
mo r e satisfied with their t op seven
is this week s poll which shows
t h a t each of those t e a ms g a i ne d
points.
Ohio S t a t e g ai n e d 701
points
to j u m p to f o ur t h. SMU, idle last
w-eek. got 57 mor e first-place
votes and an i nc re as e (J 503
points. T h e L on gh or ns ,
though
still sevent h, a dde d 454 m a r k e r s
to t he i r total.
I nci de nt al ly , t h e Steers a r e now'
only P-tfht points behind sixt h
i place Ca l i f o r ni a, which showed
t he least gai n this week, picking
up only 21 points.
P e n n . y ! v . „ U , b » t « n o nl y bv C l i f o r n i a and 30-7 c o n q u e r o r of N a v y
Palmer 65 Leads
North-South Open
P I N E H U R S T , R C . , Oct. 3 1 —
Wi th
a
r ec o rd - eq u a l li n g
se v en - u n d e r - p a r 65 b y J o h n n y
P al me r t h e p a y o f f punch, Pineh u r s t ’s f e a r s o m e
number
two
c b a m pjons }1, n cou r se r ee l ed T ue s da y u n d e r a b i r di e b ar r ag e n e v e r
b e f o r e s e en in the 48- year- old
N o r t h a n d Sout h Open golf t o u r nament.
Pa l me r, t he c h u n k y Badin, R C . ,
pr ofe ssi ona l , s t r u n g t o g e t h e r seven birdies an d eleven p a r s to
equal the e ve n t r ec or d set f i f t e e n
year* ago by P a u l Run ya n.
j
Despi te this, P a l m e r had plenand Rice is given a 14-point buigr* ty o f c o m p a n y jn the p a r q u i v e r
ov e r Tech.
izing d e p a r t m e n t as this 72-hole*.
$7,
500 e ve n t g o t u n d e r way.
1aKf> > ° !’ f n, , ” p’
odds"
m a k e r s said a b o ut Texas Chr i st ian
Five 67 .shooters w'ere only t wo
Bavlor
st r ok es o f f his s cor c hi ng pace. In
- ...........— all, 35 w e r e u n d e r par 72 f or the
* * r t o n £ r * ' i . . r -Aggie C . p c m .
6, 95 2- ya r d layout.
C O L L E G E S T A T I O N , Ort . 31.
Ba r t o n , se ni or
Pn(j t an(j Max Gr e i n e r, senior
g u a r d , will he c o- ca pt a i n s of t he
Te x a s A&M football t e am f or the
S a t u r d a y ni g h t g a m e wdth A rk an Lyons.
sis.
1/p*—
DALLAS,
Ock 31.- .yIP)—
S o u t h e r n Me th
t ho
o di sstt is a sevenpoint f a v o r i t e t o win the S ou t h ,
,
west ( o n f e r e n c e s big g a m e over
T ex a s a t A u s t i n S a t u r d ay .
Odds establ ished her e T u e s d a y
. , , _
. . Xl 4 , " I
aJfto picked Tex a s A&M to beat
.Arkansas and Rice to whip T ex a s
Tech. Bu t it was even mo ne y on
the T ex as Christian-Ba.vlor Kame
a t F o r t Wor th .
A&M is a sev en - p oi nt f av or it e
.
Odds Makers Give SMU
7-Point Bulge over Texas
Under entirely new management
SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER
A ll d a y Thuraday, Nov. 2, w e will serve horn*
baked pie and c h e e se with each p urchase
of a cup of c o ffe e .
F E A T U R IN G H OM E CO O K E D MEALS
I
B reakfast
•
Short Orders
•
F am ily Style M eals
S a n d w ic h e s
•
Soft Drinks
BOOTS ’N SADDLE
A c m e * t m n i I v fra mn m is F i e l d
111 E. l l k h St.
by riel
Snead.
f n t only f o u r '
Ohio S t a t e l e ape d f r o m sixth to
f o u r t h on its a w e s om e 83-21 r ou t
of Iowa, d r o p p i n g K e n t u c k y and
C a li f or ni a down a notch.
Texas held f i r m a t t h e s eventh
slot and t h r ee n e w t e a m s moved
in below, r e pl a c i ng Tennessee,
N o r t h w e s t e r n , a n d Uornell.
T enne s s e e w-asn’t. impressive in
s ha di ng Wa sh in g t o n a n d Lee. 27
20. N o r t h w e s t e r n and Cornell fell
f r o m u n b e a t e n rank?..
Oklahoma should br eeze t o a
new mo de rn wanning record of
tw e n tv -s e ve n game* a ga i ns t Colo
l e i ’o.
Thia St at e can e x pe ct a hug"
a f t e r n o o n ag ai ns t N o r t h w e s t e r n
'. nile Ca l i f or ni a meets once - benf oo
W a sh i n g t o n in t he g a m e t h a t may
decide t he Rose Rowl h o st.
I.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
IO.
ll.
12
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18,
19.
20.
>**
r.
/-
'
Steer Harriers Host
Three Teams Today
T h e T ex a s h a r r i e r s will t r y
aga i n f o r t h e i r f i r s t cross c o u n
tr y vic t or y o f t he y e a r W e d n e s
day w i t h o u t t he services o f t h e i r
n um b e r- t wo r u n n e r , Don Spar ks,
as Abilene Chr is t ian, N o r t h T ex as
S tat e , and H o w a r d P a y n e duel the
S t ee r s a t 3 o ’clock on the Zilker
Pa> k cour se ,
N o r t h T e x a s led by Don E d
w a r d s will be f av or ed on the bas s o f their r e c e n t victor y over
SMU.
T e x a s d r o p p e d its ope n i n g m e et
a few weeks ago to t h e Te x a s
Aggies, the d e f e n d i n g S o u t h w es t
Conf er once champs.
S p a r k s w i t h d r e w f r o m school
Mo n da y becaus e of illness in his
f amily. P a t Odell move d up to t a k e
T e x a s s t a r t i n g sevb a •POI ll!
en.
I a' ad im ( ' ach F oa cie Im vv n m ' s r u n n e r i is C. \ Rundell,
who holds rn* record on t h e 2 .6 mile Austin t m r se w th a 12:48.
T h e o t he r menihi rs of the Texas
team in o r d e r of best time a r e
Odell, Bobby Re,*s Roy Wiggen.-,
[es Whi tes ides,
John Mariola, < h rle
and W a r d Mart ur t ai n.
N o t a single m e m b e r of the
T ex as t e a m had ever r u n cross
c o u n t r y b ef o r e t h e A&M meet.
O t h e r m e m b e r s of toe L on gho r n
squa d who will p ar t i c i p a t e u n o f
ficially in the meet We d ne s da y
a r e U. I). . l ea r n s, ( b es te r B r i d
i e. , ’I nn T a n G a r c i a, Ed Sailing,
a n d A l l a n R e l ia n t .
In t h e i r last of fi ci al t i m i n g —
ma de o v e r a two-mile d is t anc e—
Rundell t u r n e d in a 9:36. T h r e e
o t h e r m e n also r an the dist ance
n u n d e r IO mi nu t es , whi ch is good
t i me f o r the two mile.
Odell t u r n e d in a 9 : 3 9 p e r f o r m
ance, Re ss had a 9:41 showing,
an d Wt gg en s st op pe d t h e w a t c h
at t h e 9 : 57 m a r k . Ri ght behi nd
was Mariola who had a IO f l at .
The A bi l e n e Ch r i st i an T e a m ii
led by Bob Sikes, a v e t e r a n eros*
c o u n t r y p e r f o r m e r . T he y have
sever al good mil ers a n d t wo- milers
.•iud s t a nd a good cha nc e to cop
e d n e s d a y ’s meet.
L i t t l e i* knov n about H o w a r d
P a yn e , but the learn is not e x p e ct
ed to he ver y s t r ong.
FNC H U . LADAS,
TORTILLAS
TACOS TOO . . .
YE A LONG
H O R N S . W E R E F OR Y O U .
BF SEV1LLIZED
OLD SE V IL L E
ISO!
C. ui da l ur i e
P h . f i*m s o o r m * p . s M . a n d P r e , - D e l l
n U y C t.n d illU b
ton r , m ; i nt e rc e pt ed a Si gma Chi
aer ial ef f ort a n d r a m b l e d over the
£ oal f o r the Fi j i ' s f o u rt h tally.
I 0 a k G r o v e d B t e a m laid it on
t hl c k * Wlth. M a x S mi t h Le a d !n * the
C H I CA GO , G e t . 3 1 . —
— Ben
JZT* V
“ » ° * '!>*
o
,™
s
NHo g a n , 195(1*8 g a l l a n t c o m eb ac k e r,
24-13. W a l t e r T a y l o r s t a r r e d f or T u es
* d a y was * voted the P G A ’s
t h e n amel e ss crew.
“ G o l f er of t h e Y e w . ”
• Ho g a n wras n a m e d 112 times in
o ve r wh el mi ng s u p p o r t
by
173
In tram u ral Schedule
spor ts w ri te r s an d radio s p o r t s
c ast ers v o t i ng in t he thir d a n n u a l
WEDNESDAY
Prof ess i onal Gol f er s Associati on
TOUCH FOOTBALL
Cla ss B Club
poll. Sam S ne a d , t h e 1949 a w a r d
S o ’clock
w in ner , was second, 43 votes b e
M b s C l u b v*. F e m Cl ub.
Cliff C o u r t * vs, B r a c k e n r i d g e Us!!,
hind t h e tittle T e x a n.
Class B Church
H o ga n a n d S n e a d w'ore f a r
5 o ’cl ock
Yt c s l m i n j O e r v*. N e w m a n Club.
ahead of a n y o t h e r c a ndi da t es .
Class B F r a t e r n i t y
Ballots also w e r e e a s t f o r Lloyd
7 o' c l oc k
P h i D<»lt.a Theist vs . De l t a Ka p p a Eps i l on. M a n g r u m, J i m Berr i er, J i m m y Dea o' c l o c k
iifia r et , J a ck Bur ke J r . , Dick Metz,
De l t a T a u De l t a vs . B e t a T h e t a Pl.
GOLF SINGLES
Henry
Ransom,
an d
Chandler
F i r s t r o u n d o f t h i r d , f o u r t h , a n d fifth
SMU ( 1 5 3) . ______ . 2,571 Higfht s t a r t * . M a y be p l a y e d We r l n e s d s v H ar pe r .
T h u r s d a y , and Fr i day .
Sc o r e # d u e n o t
H og a n ' s c o me ba c k f ro m a nea r A r m y ( 34)
_______
2,184 l a t e r t h a n * 30 a m . o f t h e d a y f o l l o wi n g
fatal a ut o a c c i d e n t c a p t u r e d t he
t
h
e
l
a
vt
d
a
y
o
n
wh
i
c
h
Oklahoma ( 2 f»I ... ....... .. 2,137 s c h e d u l e d t o h e t>l a v e d , t h e c o n f e s t is
golfing public f a n c y as n o t h i n g
Ohio S t a t e (30) __ _
1,822
T E N N IS S I N G L E S
had done since Bobby J o n e s ’
Class A
K e n t u c k y ( 17)
1,632
4 o' c l oc k
g l a n d slam.
I Ast J a n u a r y , less
Ca l i f or ni a ( 2) ....
,„ 1,241 W i n n e r o f W i l l i a m A r - h e r - G e o r a e F r a n
t han a y e a r a f t e r his mishap,
cisco v s . P a l m e r C u m m i n * .
Texa s
_ 1,236
5 o ’clock
Hogan picked t he Los An g e l e s
Miami ( Fl a .) (12) „ ... . 462 W i t m e r o f R i c h a r d A u s t i n - W i l l i a m J e n Open t o begi n his c a m p a i g n . A f t e r
ki ns vs . P e t e r j wiU)(n
j
„
o f i B ritish Commonwealth 27th Briism graduate, w ill receive a ser continuing their programs through Vance.
border was h « IU d
g,de.
The Rev. Edw ard Brubaker, I on ‘’Lessons from O ur H eritag e.” - -The man charged w ith keeping Manchurian
vice award and W ard C. Mayborn, the last week
The
U n iversity
Community pastor of the Central Presbyterian
a
follow-up discussion of the t h e economy on an even keel ad- Tuaaday night by a savage Red
>
*
On the right flank of the U .S.
newspaper owner, w ill speak at the
• 1 monu *
, nis.
A rm y : 2 4 th Division, where one South
initiation banquet of Alpha Delta Church will continue a series of Church at Fayetteville, A rk., w ill G reat Issues talk by David Lilien- v ised Am ericans Tuesday to steel 'counterattack.
,Thc Kenal Press Club, he asked fo r;
For the second night in a row,
schools, was manager of three
talk at the W esley Foundation | co -operation by all Am ericans
1enemy planes appeared over an
Texas newspapers and has in ter
“ One thing is clear,” he said.
area to the immediate rear of
Paul Danner, chairman o f the i at the discussion panel to be held Sunday at 9:30 a.m. A t 6:30 he
est? in Chicago and Sherman pa
will speak in Fellowship H a ll of ‘“ To halt inflation is everyone’s
S A N J U A N , Pu erto Rico, Oct. I Monday
night
after
bombing fighting in the northwest.
(student employment committee, W ednesday at 11:80 a.m. at the
pers.
ic b.”
the Educational Building.
131.— (ZP)— N ational Guard^ troops police stations, killing some poA luncheon for M r. Mayborn and Lloyd Scott, engineering stu Commodore P e rry Hotel.
V alen tin e’s idea that the job smaahed Tuesday a t anti-U.S. Na- jlcamen an(j netting m any fires,
w ill be given by the facu lty of the dent, w ill represent the U niversity
is a long one was echoed almost tionalist rebels and drove them out
The panel is part of the second
School of Journalism Wednesday
sim ultaneously in a Chicago lunch- of tw o o f th e ir strongholds w ith
conference
of
the
Southwest
A P oll«
of casu .ttle.
at I p.m. in the Home Economics
e< rn speech by Claude A. Putnam , planes and tanks.
said 81 persons ha^ been killed!
Placem ent O fficers Association
Tea House.
pi esident of the National Assowhich ends Wednesday evening
G overnor Luis Munoz M arin , and 35 wounded in the rebellion, j
Initiation ceremonies fo r new
cia tio n of M anufacturers. Putnam describing the rebellion which
with a banquet and address by
The dead included 21 National-'
A D S pledges w ill precede the ban
sa id “ the danger is that we w ill spread fire and deal! through ten jstg^ nj,ne p0 ijcemen and one >^a.
Dr. W , W , Kemmerer, acting pres
quet Wednesday at 6 p.m. in the
____ 1
nu >t— or w ill not be allowed to” Puerto Rican centers as „a •con
ident of the U n iversity of Hous
International Ballroom of the U n
E n tries for the Freshm an Read- op erate e fficien tly at in du stry’s ^piracy against democracy, helped ^ ona* Guardsman.
ton.
ion.
S A N F R A N C IS C O , Oct. 31 —
The topic yfo r discussion w ill be in# Contest sponsored by Hempsk of production, economic ex-1
the Communists,” said the inGuardsmen today were patrol
A n instrum ent capable o f mea
(ZP)—
The Peiping Peoples D aily,
l
e
r
s
Book
Stores
w
ill
be
ac
p
i
n
i
o
n
and
prevention
of
ilgftft\
aurrection
would
be
quelled
in
a
ing
the
two
towns,
with
the
last
“ The Student Appraises Place
suring distances as tin y as one ment.” W endell Horsley, director I cepted until noon Novem ber f>, to >n.
day or two.
pockets of resistance apparently ;
( h*neSt- Communist party
63,000,000th of an an inch was
V alentine told newswomen:
,
.
.
newspaper, declared Tuesday that
Troops armed with machine
of placement at Texas A & M , will announced Mrs. M arjo rie Parker,
wiped
out.
Ja
y
u
k
a
was
in
ruins
^rg
described for visiting engineers
of tile Speech Departm ent.
“ W e must form ulate programs guns, bazookas and tanks, recap-i
" 1 “ uv*
111 1UU ' U S “ aggression” rn K o rea “ has di
' be moderator.
and students Tuesday afternoon
The prelim inary contest will be a n d controls which can, if neces- tuned Ja y u y a , 50 miles southwest vv‘t}l several blocks destroyed and rectly threatened C hina’s secur“ Students are invited to attend I
at the concluding session of the
held Novem ber 6 at 7:30 p .m ., sa *T, endure more years and yet of San Ju a n , and the neighboring most buildings in the town of ity .”
I the conference.” said Jo e D. F a r - 1
U n ive rsity of Texas two-day symin Speech Building 201.
W h ich w ill leave our economy at town of U tuado.
Fig h ter planes 1,500 charred by fire.
Another
A Peiping radio broadcast of
I rar, director of the Student E m - !
the article added that “ the Chi
A tour of the Texas Union to I posiuin on experimental stress anF irst prize in both the boys t i b end of that time stable, pro- stiafed the rebels. The rebels had £Uar
r
e
_o
p
e
n
t
h
e
T
i
d
e
l
a
n
d
,
c
a
t
e
in
groups on the facilities available
The symposium, sponsored by ities” at IO p.m.
nary contest.
out
of
Ja
y
u
y
a
and
Utuado.
An
cisco*
day
to extend U N Secretary- the 0 g Supreme Court. AttorAnother panel representing inti them at the Union.
the U n iv e rsity ’s College of EngiSelections should be prose and I
A P correspondent, flying over the!
A second broadcast quoted the
Representatives of the House neering, was attended by engineers dustry w ill try
to “ bust” any of literary value. No characterial G e n e ra l T ryg ve L ie ’s term for ney General Price Daniels as- area, saw
moving weekly publication W o rld Culture
ambulances
rom m ittee w ill also be available of several of the nation’s corpora- placement problems at 1:30 p.m. zations or impersonations w ill be t;b rec years as a sign of U N unity ic rted in his second petition that i about the streets,
as saying Am erican forces in Kopermitted, and a minimum of dia- | a g a in s t aggression. Andrei Vishin- 1the Annexation Agreement, and-Ij
« ---- — ^ ^
at the Union all day to help stu- j tions and educators from univers- There w ill be abusiness session
Tuesday that the rea are “ now eating the bitter
d nts study, Miss K l ass said.
sties in the South and Southwest, at 3 p.m.
revolt was definitely connected fru its of ‘victory,’ having pushed
s k y denounced Lie as an Am erican
logue should be used.
not the “ equal footing” provision
with and probably sparked by, the fa r enough inland to make Com
“ s tooge” and declared the Soviet
of a later act should be the basis ■
, inland's worst prison break, Sat- munist guerrilla w arfare particu
U j lion would neither recognize nor
of the cou rt’s decision.
urday.
la rly effective.
sir pport Lie if he is maintained.
Students Hold Pane!
A t Placement M eet
Guardsmen Drive Out
Puerto Rican Rebels
U.S. Threatens
Security--Says
Chinese Paper
Deadline Monday
In Reading Contest
Tolbert Invention
Is Demonstrated
Union Committee
Plans inspection
Fight to Extend Lie's Term
Rages in General Assembly
v
The fight took place in the 60-
The
na lio n G eneral Assembly; L ie le ft
his seat on the rostrum when the
de hate began. Austin finally an
no unced that the U .S. would use
ev try means at its power— includinj f the veto— to back Lie fo r the
po st.
Daily
Texan
Year Laws!
iii
Im
MONDAY
NOVEMBER 6
Is The Deadline for Making Your
Class Picture Appointment
For The
1951 CACTUS
Make your appointment and pay
fee in
JOURNALISM BUILDING 108
/
RESERVE YOUR COPY OF THE
C A C T U S N O W IF Y O U
FAILED TO DO SO AT
REGISTRATION
su re of United Nations member
sh ip Tuesday by the U N Special
P o lit ic a l
Committee.
A
L a tin
A rn e r i c a n resolution allowing
S{ ain to belong to special
UN
ag encies was approved despite
R i issian charges of U .S. m ilitary
dt signs on Spain.
★
A f l a m i n g c r o u lit the Univer: sit y of Mississippi campus M onday
j ni ght as a group of students pro| te »ted a school newspaper edito rial calling fo, admission of
N tgroes to state colleges.
F'oliticking Goes
/ill-out This Week
Ba ted ow fA * Associated Press
CLASSIFIED ADS
Board
*
F r a n c o S p a i n w a . v o t e d a mea-
U N IV E R S IT Y M E N I
Me.!.4 fa m ily s ty le . Hom e m ade r o il*
nad p i* . » s p e c ia lty .
M RS. H O W A R D F A IN E
2402 S e to n 2 blockx w est o f cam pus.
P h o n e 8-9171
M A T H . R.
8-1168.
M.
Mw,
n im
in t r t
in to
V „
n
sr
K e n tu c k y .
Bach side was making the
us aal
victo ry
claim.
Contests
loc Jced so close in a number of
Ste .tea that a slight swing of Benti
ng mt either w ay could be decisive.
D Dstitute Reservists
M a y N ow W ire for Cash
W A S H IN G T O N , Oct. 31.— (ZP)
—A r my
Reservists
who
are
I cai ught short of money when they
are ordered to report for duty can
the aik two Texas women now that
I the dr problem is solved.
’ The A rm y
notified
Senator
Ly adon B . Johnson
(D-Texas)
Tu esday it is instructing all headqu irters issuing duty orders to
inf orm Reservists they may wire
col lect if they don’t have the cash
to pay fo r their transportation
ant t meals.
r The action was taken as a resui ) of a letter Mrs. B a ile y Badget t and Miss M ary E . Keyes of
Ma rsh&ll, Texas, had w ritten the
j Se’ la te r. They told him some men
; in their area are receiving orders
wh p don’t have the money for
j tra vel expenses. Johnson took
j the complaint up with the A rm y.
| ’ Travel expenses norm ally are
m e t by the reservists out of their
j ow n pockets and they are later
rei Dibursed
N u rse ry
For Sale
THE
—
..
.
the stores^ than
Dancing
L E A R N TO DANCE
U n iv e r s it y B a llro o m classes. M o n d ay and
T h u rs d a y 8 — 9 p m. I hour class le s
sons. 60c U n iv e r s it y g irl* free.
A N N E T T E D U V A L D A N C E S T U D IO
10th and Congress
P h o n e 8-3961 or 2-0OH8
SAFETY' PEN .
In d iv id u a l c a re fo r
your children. M onthly, hourly ra te ..
Special -ervice
for football gam e..
Pickup—-delivery. 5 - 0 4 8 8 — 6 - 0 6 9 5 .
Rooms for Rent
"
~
194 7 C H E V R ,,
O L E,T , F. ie e tlin e . ,, ! * * 00<1
condition, rad io, heater,
sp o tlig h t, sun
viso r, fog lig h ts .
$1050.00.
Call Bo b
M a u c k , 7-2158.
2422 S A N A N T O N I O : L a r g e bedroom fo r
tw o men. In n e rs p rin g m a ttre sse s. Carpated
floors.
^
block fro m
cam pus,
E le c t r ic
r e fr ig e r a t o r fu rn ish ed .
S o rv V tH U tilitie s 'p a Y d . S s ' f e O f ^ r e r Jo m
In s p e c t room or telephone 6-3 720.
B E N D IX
W ASH ER,
8 m onths
used,
standard model. S m a ll F rig id a ire , new
u n it and g ua ran te e . P h o n e 8-3587.
Special Services
41 P O N T I A C
c o n v e rtib le in excellent
m ech an ical shape
S o n th w in d heater,
new scat co ve rs, etc. A b arg ain $325.
71 S B P a rk Place . 8-52 85.
"W H E R E
L
fol lowed Satu rd ay night by P re s !- 1fo w N A N Fco U N T R Y Apartmenu7vTde nt T rum an’s campaign broad-; ca n c y fo r 2 or 3 bove. M rs . P ic k e t t ,
ca' i t from St. Louis.
: M a n a g e r, SOI E a s t 54th, P h o n e 1-7156.
wHH* ♦ flL .
> id t a k e
Roommate Wanted
8109 G ra n d v ie w . Y O U ' L L p a y m ore e t
I ’m a sk in g fo r m y U t e m odel S m ith
______________
! C orona p o rtab le ty p e w rite r. W ill co n sid e r
r- „ -v ! tra d in g fo r a stan d a rd m achine in good
C O A C H I N G ,
tra n sla tio n s.
rr e n c n - shape. cSee
__ m____
,
C ____
T o m __a t 1706
N uecea o r phone
G e rm an .
S ilto n 2809 7-2711.
7-9127.
B ills
/~iu :
„
paid.
L iv in g room , k itch e n , bedroom ,
( hair man j fo r tw o m en. S h a r e bath tw o o th e r m en.
W Uiiam M. Boyle Jr ., led Off for E le c t r ic re fr ig e r a t o r . P r iv a t e e n tra n c e ,
L l*
See M r. In m a n , s u p e rv is o r in 1982 R
p A lt jr With a broadcast speech j g an Antonio, Apartment n u m b er 3, o r
l r B S , 9 p.m., C S T ). This w ill be telephone 6-3720.
tVir f
vh f it
Music
R E C O R D E D M U S I C and P . A. ty«t«stfe
2011 R E D
R I V E R : N u m b e r 6. L a r g e
fo r a ll o cc a sio n ..
C am pus M u .ie S e r
a t t r a c t iv e a p a rtm e n t fo r th re e bov«. vice . 8-5418.
L iv in g
room
w ith
stu dio
couch,
d i
nette, kitch e n w ith e le c tric re frig e ra to r,
bedroom w ith th re e beds and bath w ith
75.00. B il l .
_______
show er, P r i v a t e e n tra n c e .
paid. O w n e r 8-8720.
! S H A R E R O O M w ith G ra d u a te atu dcnt.
F I R E S T O N E
R E F R IG E R A T O R .
9 I , N ic e p riv a te . In n e r.p rin g ^ M aid s e rv ic e
m o n th . old. 8 ft. w ith double i i i .
420.00. C ass R u c k e r 811 W . 17th, phone
fr v e tin g co m p a rtm e n t. 1325.00 bo* w ill 8-2884.
■ell for 1285.00. S e e a t 1967 Red R i v e r ------------------- —................ -..................
R a n d le .
a:
i
N a t io n a l
('or th e Republicans, who say
jy haven’t the money to match
: Democrats’ radio time, Nanal
Chairman
Guy
George
b rick e n speaks W ednesday a t
r h n r la s t n n
W
Va
JU iston, V\ , \ a,, and continues
Th ursday a border state swing
Results
Furnished Apartment
Coaching
vt
the
th*
tio
Ce
Quick
after 5 o’clock.
Politicians opened the throttle
Tn jeftday in a final week drive to
Furnished Apartments
sw ay voters in next Tuesday’s
ele ctio n of a new Congress and 3 2 _____________________________
go rernors.
1932 A S A N
A N T O N I O : *50.00.
r,
.•
D e m o c r a tic
Produce
Help Wanted
b o y to w ork in k itc h e n and run Autom atie D is h w a s h e r. Noon meal o n ly .
se ve n d ays p er week. W il l pay 75 cents
per hour and noon m eal. P h o n e C h arles
Eld rid g e s t 7-9413.
—---- ----—
— --Q U IC K
T O F IN D IT ’
W e s tm o rla n d S t e r lin g
C u tco C u tle ry
W tia r- e ve r A lu m in u m
Phone Bud W a re h a m a t 7-1381
2703 B o n n ie
A u s tin , Texas
Typing
E L E C T R I C T Y P E W R I T E R . E x p e rt ty p
ing. T heses, re p o rts. P h o n e 2-5646.
C A SH !
Salesm en
T Y ’ P I N G : theses, them es, notebooks, o u t
lin es. etc. Ph o ne 5-8359.
1915 NUECES. L i v in g room , bedroom,
k itch e n , sh n re bath 2 o ther men.
For
tw o men.
S a r v e l re frig e ra to r, p riv a te
e n tra n ce. $45.00, b ills paid.
S u p e r v is o r.
M r. G a s p e r in a p a rtm e n t no. I o r te le
phone 6-3720.
you nothing. Y o u keep 40 per cent o f
all sales.
T Y P IN G .
AU
kinds.
8-1191
w eekd ays.
Mrs- W it t .
TW O
REA SO N A BLY
P R IC E D
ap artm e n ts near U n iv e r s it y . S e p a ra te fad u t ie s . A t t r a c t iv e p rop osition to couple
co m p eten t to assu m e some re sp o n sib ility .
S tu d e n t E m p lo y m e n t B u re a u .
Leather Goods
$4 5.00. O n * b lo ck w e s t o f G uad alup e
and bus to cam pus.
l i v i n g room ,
bedroom ,
co m b in ation .
S e p a ra te
k itch e n . F iu o re a c e n t lig h tin g .
N ew
a sp h a lt til# floor*. R ills paid. A p t. 6.
3313 K in g * S t.
$60.00: l i v i n g room,
bedroom, k itc h e n and p riv a te b ath.
C le an and nice. B ills paid. A pt. no. I .
3313 K in g S t,
C a ll 2-0967,
wanted fo r b e a u tifu lly d e
signed
Christm as
card
p ic tu rin g
TEXAS U N IV ER SITY T O W E R . Costs
Ph o ne 7-2449
A IR - C O N D I T IO N E D
E n fie ld T e r r ace— 1600 P e a s e R o a d .
N ew and u ltram o d ern , d ra w drapes.
w all to w a ll carpet, oak fu rn itu re . 8
ft. S e r v e l, H a rd w a ie k ranges. T h e r
m o s ta tic a lly co ntrolled heating and
a ir co n d itio n in g . E v e r y co n ve n ie n ce
and lu x u ry .
W e still h a ve a p a r t
m ents fo r 2 o r 4 adults, C all M r * .
R ib s r. 2-0967.
E N F IE L D A RM S
a d u lts — 2 bedrooms spacious and
lu x u rio u s.
W a ll to w all carp e t, m o
d ern fu rn itu re , 14x24 liv in g room ,
a il tile fe a tu re s, garb ag e disposal!
un it.
T r u ly
A u s t in ’s finest.
C a ll
2-0967.
1409 E n fie ld R o ad, A p a r t
m e n t 7.
4
For Rent
N I C E L A R G E R O O M , for g rad u ate atud en t or b u sin e ss g irl in p riv a te bom *.
3004 S p e e d w a y . P b o n a 2-6661 o r 2*5647
a fte r 5,
C ine,
c am era, w ith 3.5
Kodak,
M o v ie
cam
I — W e s to n L ig h t M e te r
I —- P o rtra it Le n a
I — S k y F ilte r
I — S p e cial lens a tta c h m e n t
L e f t u n d e r firs t row o f seats in
M e m o rial S ta d iu m , E a s t side of field,
b etw een n o rth SO and 40 yard lines
in L o n g h o rn Ban d Sectio n .
F in d e r
please ca ll M o to n H . C ro ck e tt J r . at
8-4262.
A genero us rew ard w ill be
paid, w ith no q u estion s asked.
L O S T : O ne co m p ositio n
notebook
on
in tra m u ra l
field.
W il l find er please
e el! Ken N ic h o ls. Ph o n e 6-4 2 42.
L O S T . B ro w n Cord# p urse lost a t g irls
in tra m u ra l
field.
F in d e r m ay keep
m oney. P h o n e J o P ro s s e r, 6-5881.
R
O
8
8
W
o
R
D
a s s a y ; ik -jh
Q L Ju iia u c ia n
U LU SU
O liftn iQ I
ra w s r a n n u m s
(9 0 1 8 (1 (1 0 0 ( 1 0 0
□ s o
a a c u i
A
N
8
IJLU-Ju'ki ti'O U ! IC I
(ir o r x j y a y
i& O ffl C H K ia o u
W
HOUHO
(JU D O
U SU Q U O qU H
W S B U £ » 3 lifc J
R
un ayne* D p
T Y P I N G , theses
repo rts, te rm
notebooks. T elep h o n e 7-7787.
papers,
W I L L DO T Y P I N G a t m y home.
P a lo D u ro Road. Ph one 6-1248.
T Y P IN G :
2108
phone 7-3205.
S w is h e r S tre e t.
M iss W e lc h .
120S
T ela*
T Y P IN G
N e a t w ork. W ill ca ll f o r and
d e live r. Ph o ne 2-4353 o r 2-9506.
L O S T : 2 cam e ras in on# larg e tan
c a rry in g
case,
approx.
2” x l0 ” x8” ,
w ith sh ou lder stra p .
c
2018 C R E D R I V E R . N ew m odern a p a r t
m ent fo r bove. 8 blocks fro m cam pue.
K am es fu rn itu re . H o llyw o o d bad. S e c
tio n a l sofa. *110.00 fo r 8, $120 fo r 4.
O w n e r 6-8720.
I
Lost and Found
I — 16mm,
e ra
I
S C IE N T IF IC
M A N U S C R IP T
T Y P IS T .
E x p e rie n c ed .
M rs .
M o o re.
Phone
: 7-1088.
C O W B O Y B O O T S , hats, belts, holsters,
saddles,
bridles.
A ll
leather
goods
m ade
to o rder.
E v e r y t h in g
W e s te rn .
C ap ito l S a d d le ry . 1614 L a va ca .
I — G rafle x , 314*3*4
lens.
a ft e r
E
A C C E P T E D M O R N IN G S . T heses, papers,
d iss e rta tio n s . 909 W . S la t . 2-9444.
T H E S E S , repo rts, d ic ta tio n . E le c tro m a tia
ty p e w r ite r. M rs , P e tm e c k y 53-2212.
G O O D A C C U R A T E ty p in g
home. C a ll 53-3546.
LET
ME TY PE
Ph o n e 5-9163.
your
don#
th e ais,
in
my
them ea.
Typewriter Rentals
R E N T A L T Y P E W R IT E R S
THAT PLEA SE
L a t e m odels of all m akes. N o d e liv e ry
o r pick up ch arg es.
SM V K A L S
215 W e s t 6th
8-8090
Unfurnished Apartment
L a r g e 12-room house v e ry near cam
pus. Cai peted livin g-ro om , d ining room,
la rg e kitch en , nine bedroom s, four bathe
and I garage. N e w ly redecorated insid e
and
out.
W o u ld
co n sid er
leasing
to
group, on in d iv id u a l, or m o n th ly
or
y e a rly basis. $165.00. Im m e d ia te pos
session. O w n e r 6-3720.
Wanted
W AN TED
2
non-student
ticekta
S M U - T U game. Ph o n e 8-1865.
for
W A N T E D 2 or 4 ticke t# fo r S M U g am *.
C a ll F ld y Jo h n s o n ak 7-6139 o r 7-8897.
Wednesday, Nev'. T, I 9$0
THE DAILY TEXAN page
4
Little M e n o n C a m p u s —
:7, ft,I J.
d e w
a r u
THE FACULTY is entitled to Health
Service privileges, a first-rate Fac ult y
Club, and higher salaries.
The healthy signs of faculty initia
tive th a t turned up Monday ni ght at
the A AUF meeting focused attention
on these glaring shortcomings in pro
visions for our profs.
Texas law forbids the requests con
cerning old age retirement and subsi
dization of research of full-time nondoctor faculty members.
A proposal to shift life insurance
policy companies was partially based
O ne
oZ
decibel
STEP-LADDER of progress:
1. Texas Western refused to play
Loyola in a football game because a
Negro was on the Loyola roster.
2. The Texas Board of Regents
backed up Texas Western as r e p r e
senting the University Regents’ “ longestablished policy."
3. Howls w e n t up from El Paso civic
leaders, from the Daily Texan ( “ It is
hoped that the Regents will reconsi
d e r ” ), the El Paso Touchdown Club,
and even the Detroit Collegian, which
wrote:
“It seems th a t segregation is p ra c
ticed on the playing fields of state uni
versities in Texas. Maybe the Board of
Regents hasn t he ar d of tho Fr eedom
Crusade yet."
4. The Regents officially reversed
th e anti-Negro policy last week end
with re gard to El Paso on grounds t h a t
the city of El Paso owns part of the
stadium (and the refore jurisdiction).
5. Is the next step— as the Texa n
hopes it will be— elimination of s eg re
gation in all state-sponsored athletic
contests? W h a t if Texas is in a Bowl
with a team with a Negro on th e ros
ter?
Perha ps this is the process of pro
gress.
n
sio
W e lt
N O W TH A T I T ’S OVER, the com
parison can be m a d e :
The freedom petition: 2,020 names.
The Texan petition in s ym pat hy with
the California profs who were loyal but
still fired for n o t kowtowing to the
Regents’ loyalty oath de m an ds : 1,537
names.
Fr ee do m — both for Eisenhower and
for a 10-out-of-22 minority of the Cali
fornia Regents— marc hes on, to Berlin
AND to California.
Teman A.OMIriot* Editor
on an erroneous A A U ? idea tha t th#
net cost of the present policy was less
tha n the proposed alternative, but th#
A A U ? problem nevertheless bears f u r
t h e r checking.
♦
*
Dr. Painter, it seems to the Texan,
is unduly hesitant about extending
He alth Service privileges to the fac
ulty.
W e are reminded of a conversation
a prof ha d with a Health Service of
ficial, Asked why the faculty could
not enjoy the Health Service right on
the campus, the official said :
“ Why, t h a t would be socialisticP*
But, said the prof. students a lr ead y
have the service.
“ Yes," said the official, “ but t h a t ’s
a lr e ad y done and i f s too late to
c h a n g e .”
W e hope tha t s just an isolated a t
titude.
It is tr u e t h a t the staff of the He alth
Service m igh t have to be ex p an ded
to acc ommoda te faculty people, and it
is also true t h a t local practitioners
would probably complain loud and
long; b u t neither of these are valid
reasons (although they both might be
causes) fo r refusing to extend Health
Service privileges.
The Administration has expressed a
desire to raise faculty salaries, and it
is certainly true th a t the University
has been short on app ropria tions — to
the tune of $1,600,000 overspent b e
yond cu rrent revenue during the last
biennium. The Legislature should tak e
this into consideration when voting on
the Main and e xt ra m ura l University’#
request fo r a $14,500,000 in 1951-53
ap prop riation .
The Fac ult y Club everyone is agreed
on; the Regents are backing Union
Expansion legislatively, and it should
be a reality within two years.
★
★
BUT TH E BEST th ing t h a t the
A A U P resolutions show is t h a t at least
a segment of th* faculty— and a large
segment at t h a t — is willing to speak
up in united voice on beh alf of legiti
mate self-interest.
As long as cries prevail fo r “ UT
unity,” such resolutions as the one
passed M on day night must be honored
by the Administration.
Pr act ic al problems preclude imme
diate action on all but the Health Ser
vice req uest— which, it should be r e
me mbered, was adopted unanimously
— and th e Administration and Dr.
Painter should seriously reconsider the
existing, nebulous an tip at hy to w a rd
this proposal.
S E V E R A L STU D EN T S
have complained t h a t music
poured out by “ Papa Celestin and his “ o rig na! Dixieland
b a n d ” was m ore bop th an
dixie.
But w hat most didn't r e a
lize was th*: “ Papa was about
th e only mem ber of his crew
in Austin. O ur source on this,
f o rm er Loyola stu d e n t Rimy
C anarela, says th a t the m a in
stay-; of the band were d e fi
nitely not in Gregory' Gym
last Wednesday. R um or had it
t h a t his regular band is still
holding forth in New Orleans.
Which brings to mind sev
eral o th e r such incidents th a t
happened to the stu d e n ts in
o u r stay on the Campus.
The f ir s t time we saw' T om
m y Dorsey he was forced to
retire to more level q u a r te r s
about the time the p a r t y got
good. I t "was too good f o r
Dorsey.
And then, too, d ru m m e r
Gene K rupa about l l o'clock
rolled o f f to p a rts unknow n.
And th en there was poor
Kila F itzgerald. ’T w a sn ’t h e r
fault, b u t she was pu t on the
radio unexpectedly— and had
to re-do every song. T h a t in
itself was good— b u t someone
fo rg o t to plug in th e Gym
mike. Background accom pam -
T he Dally Texan, a s tu d e n t n ew spaper of T h e U n iv e rsity of T e x a s.
ta p u b lished in A u stin ev e ry m orning ex cep t M onday and S a tu r d a y .
S ept em h er to Ju n e . an d e x c e p t d u rin g holiday an d e x a m in a tio n
p erio d s, an d bi-we*»,iy d u rin g th e su m m e r te e a ions u n d e r 'h e ’ it ie o f
The S u m m er Ter-an on T u esd ay and F rid a y by T ex as S tu d e n t P u b lic a
tio n s. Inc.
New* c o n trib u rto n * will be accepted by te lep h o n e (2 -2 4 7 8 ) or a t
th e e d ito ria l office J.B I, or a t th e N * * i L a b o ra to ry , J.B . 102. In q u irie s
ao n cern in g d eliv er? an d a d v e r t i n g should be m ade in J .B . IO*
<2-2478>.
S tu d e n t* are in v ited to v iait th e e d ito r and a s so c ia te e d ito r d u rin g
th* n o r u n # bour*.
O pinion* of th e le x a n are n ot n eceaaarily th o s e of th e A d m i n s t r a
tio n o r o th e r U n iv e rsity officials
E n te re d aa seco n d -rlaa* m a tte r O ctober 18. I S48 a t th e P o st O ffice a t
A u s tin , T exas, u n d er th e A ct of M arch 8. I fc7v.
AS SOCIATED PRE S S W IR E S E R V IC E
T h * A sso ciated Pre*a is exclusively entitled t o the use for r e p u b l i c a
tion of a : news disp atch** credited to it or n o t o therw ise cr e d ite d in
this newspaper, and local item* of apor.taneoua origin published herein.
B i g h t s of pu bl ication of all o t h e r m a t t e r herein also reserv ed .
R e p re s e n te d for N atio n al A d v e r tisin g by N a tio n a l A d v e r tisin g
J
Service, mc.. Coil**# Publish er* Representative
42 0 Madison Ave.
New York, N. T .
Ch ica go
Boa ton
Loa A rg * .e s — S a n F ra n cisco
A ssociated Colleg iate P r e s s
M E M B ER
AU-American Pacemaker
S U B S C R IPT IO N RATES
{M in im u m Subscription— th ree months)
Per m onth
.
___
________________
~
P e r m o n th , mailed in to w n
P e r m o n t h , mailed o u t of t o w n ________
I .40
. .1*0
.
.60
m ent fo r a singer doesn't
m ake very good dance music.
★
dr
MOST OF T H E groups and
e n te rta in e rs b ro u g h t to the
campus are go^d and pull no
punches. But other* are not
so kind. W hen students pay
good hard dollars to see and
h e a r—and co m m ittees pour
out ducats (m eaning dollars,
Dr n a r k ) bo im port these
e n te rta in e rs , it would seem
th a t we should get the gen
uine article.
W e ’re w a iting for Cugat.
★
it
NOT ALL colleges think
barb ers are ju stifie d in a l l
clip.
Student# a t the University
o f W yoming form ed a “ long
h a ir ” club— and received sup
p o r t fro m stu d e n t govern
ment. W e h a v e n ’t heard how
th e boycott tu rn e d oat, but a t
la s t re p o rt th e re was some
pain on both sides.
The stu d e n t union a t Wyo
ming has a b a r b e r shop. The
harpers a re union men. As th#
s tu d e n t p a p er p u t it: “ There
(is) confusion between the
Union b arbersh op a n d the
barbershop u n io n.” The b a r
bers arc ju s t as unhappy aa
th e students.
We ju s t paid a “ ju s tif ie d "
dollar. O u r colleague, th e edi
tor, paid 75 cents.
★
★
H A LLO W EEN COMES
H U S H I N G IN
She: Ssh— I am tired and
sleepy.
He: Rest in m y arms.
She: It s cold and frosty.
He: The wings of au tu m n
stretch
Over us.
She: The trees are m u rm u r
ing.
He: Goblins hide in th#
bashes
Over yonder.
She: The sky is dim, and
N e w s E d i t o r ___
---------------J EAN LIPSCOMB
stars
Night E ditor ___
------ B E T T Y CA RDW ELL
R etire behind th e clouds.
N ight R eporters
Billy Jenkins, J u n e Fitzgerald, Bruce
H e : Spooks a r e moving in
Roche
the far-aw ay
C opyreader
___________ ------------------Mildred Riesel
Corner, in vanishing shadows.
N ight Sports E ditor _____ -------------------------------------J j m Rech
She: fo lk s have re tu rn e d
A ssistant ............................
—------------------------— Bob Seaman
a f te r midnight shows. T h e re ’s
Night Society E d i t o r ____
-------------------------Betty W illett
A ssistant . . ..........
L
the lonely cop u n d e r the
-------------------- F a irfa x Smith
Night Amusements Editor
sr l ect iight, vague and
----------------------Carolyn Busch
N ight Telegraph Editor
ghostly.
------------_ W atts Davis
A ssistant ______
— — ---------------- Bobby Jo n e s
— PIAO TSO
S T A F F FOR THIS ISSUE
Literary Quarterly
Scheduled for 1951
i n g
'Papa' Is Absent-minded—
Left O riginal’ Band at Home
By C H A R L IE T R IM B L E
By Bibier
By RONNIE
DUGGER
T e rn * E d ito r
By G e o r g e , you d o have a IIH Ie rash. Well,
t o stop mashing p o ta to e s until th ij clears u p . ”
3inn
STU DENT TUTORS
To the E d ito r:
The idea of using honor s tu
dents as tu to rs to help th e ir fel
low stu d e n ts is an excellent one.
. . . As those who have ever tried
tu to rin g someone else know, the
best way to learn som ething y o u r
self is to teach someone else . . .
However, w»e should not let the
tu to rin g system be limited to ju s t
the honor students. Even an aver
age stu d e n t can help others to
learn and a t the same time learn
himself.
DANAHEY RYAN
Ed * n o t e : S t r a n g e , is it n o t ,
h o w s i l e n t s t u d e n t s c a n be---e x c e p t f o r Danahejr— w h en a
c i v i c p r o j e c t r e q u i r i n g e f f o r t is
mentioned . . .
THOUGHT CONTROL
To the E d ito r:
. . . it is fashionable to profess
. . . th a t “ dem ocracy” is synony
mous with sweetness and light
and “ communism ” represents all
th a t is evil.
Daily . . . appeals
are made on a strictly emotional,
and not very subtle basis to resist
r f ob
you H just Havi
r£ime
1 he evil of communism, wave the
. flag , . .
These exhortations to blind p a
t r io ti s m certainly don’t influence
w hatever communists m ay be
;among us, though they . . . influ
ence segm ents of our true-blue
.•population into charging blindly
. , . . into approval . . . of fascistic
m easures ostensibly designed “ to
pu rge the reds in ou r m idst.”
. . . They have made the first
step tow ard a r b itr a ry thought con
trol, and at the same time failed
to r e a l i z e
their originallyprofessed intention. The loyalty
oa th s . . . a t certain state univer
sitie s . . . have deprived those insti
tu t io n s of the services of able
•educators who have the moral
■stamina to resist inroads upon
th e ir personal integrity . . .
. . . the means by which the
A m erican public can p ro te c t it
s e lf from the dangers of an ac
tiv e ly subversive e l e m e n t . . . is . . .
th e FBI, the courts, and an a le r t
ness on the p a r t of every citizen
JA M E S K. B U T L E R
Opportunities
TH E TF.XAN’S founding com
m ittee on a stu d e n t literary m ag
azine is preparing a report to the
students on th e need for an
o u te t University creative ta le n t
and ways to g e t it.
As now proposed, the magazine
frill come out fo u r times a year
with literary and artistic c o n tri
butions.
Both stu d e n ts and faculty mem
ber* “ and perhaps other individ
uals” will be eligible to c o n tri
bute, b u t we f e e t th a t a specified
minimum of th e stories should be
by students.
High quality will be p re fe rre d
above “ considerations of appeal to
large number* of bu yers” ; in
o th e r words, th e appeal will be
intellectual.
F o u r reasons fo r the magazine
are listed:
1. U niversity prestige.
2. Inspiration for young u n
knowns, with a g uaranteed r e a d
ership in nation al lite ra ry centers;
3. An o u tle t fo r established
w rite rs in the a re a ——a reason
which we personally question as a
valid function of a stud ent m a g a
zine;
4. Similar values for S tu d e n t
artists.
The com m ittee o f which Roy
Upshaw, stu d e n t in drama and
a w rite r of several published sh o rt
stories and plays, is chairman
believes the magazine could be
published by th e spring or fall
of 1951.
Any exes who w ant to help fi
nancially— and help is needed—•
are asked to let the committee
know through the Texan. O ther
financing schemes are being con
sidered.
Lee Gilman, David Hanig, Don
Snell, and Estes Jones round ou t
the committee. Gilman is on the
Board o f Publications; Hanig is
fo rm e r lite ra ry editor of the C aro
lina Magazine of the University of
N orth C arolina; Snell is vice
president of th e Art S tu d e n ts’
Association; and Jones is Texan
A m usem ents editor.
So fa r , endorsem ents of the
magazine plan have come from
Dr. P a in te r, Dr. Conklin rn dram a,
Dr. Reddick in journalism , P r o
fessors W atson, L angford, Crow,
Cline, Ballinger, G ardner, B o a t
w right, Ransom, and Irving of
English; Mr. Alan Maxwell, editor,
the Southw est Review; and several
member* of the a r t faculty.
A m a naging e ditor would direct
the magazine if it were u n d e r
Applications are being accepted
pending on the grade of position.
fo r civil service employment with
A pp ro priate education m ay be
the Sou th w estern Pow er Adminis
su bstitute d fo r all of the required
tra tion , in the capacity of rate
experience up to positions pay
exam iners and commercial spe
ing $2,875, and fo r p a rt of the
cialists.
e xp erience on the higher level
Application*; are to be filed with
positions.
the Director, Ninth US Civil Ser
A pplicants f o r the examination
( T h i s is t h* t h i r d in a s e r i e s o f
vice Region, New' Federal Build
f o r filling dental in te rn positions
t*n e nce rpt * fro m
lh* Uni
ing, St. Louis I, Missouri. Sal
in St. Elizabeths Hospital m ust
versity o f Chicago handbook,
aries range from $4,600 to $6,400
be fo urth-ye a r students in an a p
“ If Y o u W a n t A n E d u c a t i o n . ”
per year. F u r th e r inform ation may
proved school. The tra in in g will
-— E d ) .
be obtained from the post office.
begin on J u ly I, 1951, and th e
★
pay is $2,200 a year. Stu d en ts who
You d o n ’t have to be “ s m a r t”
The U nited S tates Civil Service
a tta in eligibility may have th e ir
to p ro fit by a general liberal edu
Commission has announced exam
nam es certified for appointm ent,
cation. If everyone i* to be free,
inations fo r the following posi
b u t they ca n n o t enter on duty u n
education for freedom ha* go t
tions: carto graph ic aid; engineer
til they furnish proof of comple
to he education fo r everyone. But
ing, cartographic, and statistical
tion of a full course in sn a p
you have to w a n t to be “ s m a rt.”
d ra f ts m a n ; and dental officer (in
proved dental school.
You have to be willing to w ork,
tern).
W’ritte n tests are not required
and work hard, for the m ost
The cartog rap hic aid e x a m in a
f o r any of these examinations. The
durable of all this world’* prizes,
tion Is for filling p o r tio n s paying
maximum age limit fo r dental in
a ready, s te a d fa st i n t e l l i g e n c e . . .
from $2,450 to $3,825, in and
te rn s is 35 y ears; fo r the oth er
You have heard of “ technologi
around W ashington, D.C. Appli
positions, 62 years. Age limit# cal unem p lo ym ent.” You have seen
cants m ust have from one to five
are waived persons entitled to vet
men who, having learned and
years experience, depending on
eran preference.
practiced a single skill or set
the g rade of position of ap p ro p ri
Full inform ation and applica
of skills, have been throw n on the
ate experience. A p propriate edutions may he secured from A. E.
job m a rk e t when th e ir skills have
eation may be sub stituted fo r all
Davis a t the Austin post office.
been eliminated by scientific or
of the requ ired experience f o r po
social change*. You are likely to
The United States Air Force
sitions paying up to $3,100, and
be “ f r e e ” vocationally, w hether
ha* instituted an extensive drive
fo r p a rt of the experience r e
or not you w a n t to be.
to enlist technically-skilled veterans
quired fo r the higher level posi
in the Air Force Reserve,
Your only insurance in a world
tions.
t h a t ie always changing is general
Special emphasis is being placed
Salaries fo r engineering, c a rto
intelligence. I n d u stry and the pro
on those veteran s who were a ir
graphic, and statistical d ra f ts
plane power mechanics, engine
fessions hire specialist#, but they
man positions range from $2,450
mechanics, radio repairm en, c ry p
look fo r all-around men and
to $3,825 a year. The jobs are lo
tographic technicians, r a d a r mech
women.
cated in various fe d e ra l agencies
anics, r a d a r observers, a rm a m e n t
Your ambition, w hatever your
in and a ro u n d W ashington, D.C
repairmen,
cam era
technicians,
chosen vocation, is not to h ang
Applicants m u st subm it a sample
wire repairm en, airplane electrion to the fir s t job you get b u t
of their work, and have from one
. tai instrum ent mechanics, and cost
to take increasingly
responsible
to five years o f experience, de ; m d analysis technicians.
jobs. General intelligence mean*
adaptability. You will be a b e tte r
businessman, a b e tte r doctor, a
b e tte r housewife if you are an in
telligent businessman, an intelli
g e n t doctor, an intelligent house
wife.
“ I wa* a m a n .” said John S tu a r t
Mill, “ before I wa* an English
m a n .” You are a man before you
T h o m a s H. P a r k s
L isted below *r# t h e s t u d e n t s fo r
are a workingman. However, you
K e n n e t h Gene P a tto n
w hom we h a v e no a d d r e ss . T h e s e s t u
are engaged from 9 to 6 in la te r
Eddie F r a n c i s P elletien
d e n t s a r e r e q u e s t e d to come by t h e
J o h n P h ip p s
pean of S t u d e n t Life Office. Main
life, yo ur problems from 6 to 9
Edwin C h e a t e r Rehfeld
B u ildin g 101-M, as sooo as possible.
(and even from 9 to 5) will be
Rufus R a v b o rn Hush
David E u g e n e A nderso n
Ben G erald S callorn
the
ftame as every o th e r m a n ’*.
R o be rt N ew to n A n d rew s
R o b e r t R ay Achier
N'asir Mauid Asdi
You may or may not enjoy the
Ch a rles Claude S haw
William Dan iel Bonis
Charlet; Rav S t u r m a n
Job in which you find yourself;
Ja c o b H u d s o n C a r r u t h e r s
J o h n A. Toline
Ba rk Ho Chu
you will still w an t to lead an
William Lee Toroblin
C e ne N e s b i t t Daniels
J e r r y Ollie Vik torn
enjoyable life.
E dw in Dona hoc
Rich a rd W a t a n a b e
W ade F r a n k l in D o r s e t t
You ask. “ Is it preparation f o r
C. A. W a t e r m a n
J u l i u s Alfre d E h l e r t
C h a rles E a rly W h itesid es
lif e ? ” Y our elders answer, “ Tell
George E a rl G r a n t
G
r
u
n
d
y
W
illiam
s
M a rv in M o rriso n Hoffm an
us what y o u r life will be like, and
CAR L V. B R ED T ,
J a m e s Reed Holcom b
A s s i s t a n t D ean of S t u d e n t L ife
we will be able to answer you r
Jams*) P au l J a c o b s
Modolpho J o r d o n
question.”
T h e N a v e l Collen® A p t i t u d e T e a t will
J o h n Ro bert Kelly
» adm inistered
in t h e
A rchitecture
W a l t e r E- Kiegka
If one thing is certain about
a d d i n g 105, S a t u r d a y , Dece m b e r t*.
J o e L ee K leg ka
your
gen eration, it is th a t the
SGO.
Ap
plicatio
n#
m
u
s
t
be
r
eceiv
ed
J o s e p h L a w re n c e L e h n e r
* t h e E d u c a t i o n a l T e s t i n g S er vice,
Neil Irw in L ev a
world you will live in will not be
r in c e to o , New Jurist*,
bv N o v e m b e r
C h a rles Reyn old Lundeliu *
th e world you were bom in.
K. 1V50. Ail c a n d id a te s fo r e n r o l l m e n t
E d w ard A n t h o n y Mack
I R e g u la r S t u d e n t s in t h e NROTC vAli
Philip H e n r y M a g m o t
Your g r a n d f a th e r was able to
► r e q u ire d to ap ply f o r and to k e th#
B e rn a r d A lex an d er Marlow
make
a p r e tty good guess ab ou t
a
r
y
College
A
p
t
i
t
u
d
e
T
est.
An
ap
p
liH u g h B u r t M a u lers
c k t i o n to t a k e t h i s t e s t is con sid ered to
J o h n H u n t e r Mile*
the world he would live in. Even
b k an ap plicatio n fo r th e NROTC.
IoR a y m o n d H o w a r d M oore
y our f a th e r and mother were able
►rmaiion arid f o rm a for application m ac
J o h n W a r r e n M o r io n
b it se cure d a t t h e T e s t i n g an d G uidance
Leslie Field M unson
to plan a life that to some degree
V Hall 204.
A n d r e w H. O erk*
matemalioed.
But scientific social
ferdeJ O s H le n
m. T. MAN (IKL. Directer
J a e R e la te *
hi the midst# o f tty
I — Isa# MMI 6 « 1 4 t t M B a re a d .
Board of S tu d e n t Publications
auspices, which would require
election of an
editor-in-chief.
(This is a Gilman twist to keep
the editor appointive— a good
idea.)
O ther details are pending— but
if you write poetry, fiction, es
says, book reviews, or draw, o r if
you like to indulge in reception of
same, let Upshaw know.
★
★
BILL DUNAGAN, senior adver
tising m ajor, is hopping m ad— and
with cause.
Down in Galveston, he says
he was jailed fo r th re e and a half
hours w ithout being allowed a
telephone call a f te r he had visited
a n ight club, where he saw
We y4re Not LovedJust Temperamental
By CH ARLIE LEW IS
Texan. E dito ria l Aeeietan t
W. IX Bedell i* the kind of ex
Texas could use more of.
He, like a lot of o th e r ex-stu
dents, is disappointed with the
f a te of r e c e n t Texas football
teams. B ut Mr. Bedell thinks be
fore he speaks— or writes. And
when he makes “ helpful sugges
tions,” his words have m ore be
hind them th a n emotionalism.
Mr. Bedell is a columnist for
the Houston Post. In a column
w ritte n right a f t e r U T ’* grand
showing a gainst Rice, Mr. Bedell
wondered why the Longhorn*
do n ’t alway* play like that.
“ I couldn’t tu rn loose and be
e ntirely glad,” Mr. Bedell r e
flected. “ I rem em bered last S a t
u rd a y and a scratch victory over
outclassed Arkansas.
I rem em
bered two weeks ago and the sor
rowful things t h a t happened a t
Dallas against O klahom a.”
Then the Texas ex asked: “ Why
on any given day o f any given
y e a r are the Owls, o th e r things
being equal, likely to do th e ir best
and win?
Why, in similar circumstances,
I re the Longhorns prone to do
their w orst and lose?”
★
dr
A few paragraph s later, Mr.
Bedell linked Texas gridiron mis
fo rtu n e s with the U niversity’#
very atm osphere, an atmosphere
which Mr. Bedell fe a rs is filled
The Intelligent Man
Is Successful Citizen
O ffic ia l
Notices
dice and card gam es and mtxed
drink* passing over the co un ter.
He had talked to a ©op who
asked his buddy to q uiet down
a f t e r they had le ft th# club.
Dunagan told the local yokel he
had no rig h t to ask f o r quiet when
dice and card games flourished
within 20 yards.
He says he was fined $17.85
w ithout being notified definitely
of the charge or being offere d
a trial.
And he f u r th e r contend* t h a t
$5 he p u t in his coat pocket rn
few m inutes before being searched
by the cops was missing,
He intends to sue if he ha* a
case. That could s tir a little d u st
down in Galveston.
Tw entieth C entury is of revo
lutionary’ proportions. The h a r
nessing of atomic energy alone
will change the world in your
lifetime, and change it radically,
in ways which cannot be fo re
seen.
(T o b e continued )
with un ce rta in ty , distrust, and un
friendliness.
“ Living men can rem em ber,"
the Texas ex wrote, “ when th e
University o f Texas was a b a ttle
ground o f hum an emotions. Livmg men can rem em ber beyond
th a t when th e University, n o t un< t i direct a tta c k from th e big
guns, u nderw en t a long cold w ar
in which professors watched th e ir
words and the Legislature and the
Regent* sw eated.”
Students a t th e U niversity to
day don t have to be reminded
th a t professors still have to w atch
their words and t h a t the Legis
lature and the Regents still sweat.
I hey need only to recall th e last
re g u la r session o f th e Legislature
when ira te solons spoke of th
campus and it* stud en ts as thougL
they were som ething bewitched__
something a p a r t fro m oth er Texaa
colleges and th e ir students.
Mr. Bedell c ontrasts Rice Insti
tute with w h at he sees as a spraw
ling, impersonal, unloved lnstR#t.on. “ The whole o f Rice Insti
tu te , . . has a loving, a loved
look. The people a t Rice tend to
tak e on t h a t patina.
. . The student# and football
team a t the U niversity of Texas
aire ‘children’ of the U niversity.
l f th eir ‘p a r e n ts ’ a r e worried, innoculated with * f e a r th a t no
longer m ay be valid hut whieh
still hang;; on, the ‘children’ will
be no different.
“ And the football team ‘chil
dren are likely to g et th e jitt e r s
and fluff off a game. And th e
s tu d e n t and alum ni ‘children’ a r e
likely to display a n g e r instead of
sympathy,
“ T h at la why, on any given a f
ternoon, o th e r things being equal,
th a t Rice is likely to win, and
Texas is likely to lose.”
★
de
When, and if, th e U niversity
acquires this nebulous warmness,
we can take 35-7 wins over Rice
in our stride. And the spirit ex
hibited S a tu rd a y by the stu d e n t
body will be th e rule, not the ex
ception.
Doily Texan Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
3 Strang*
19 Those who
I. Deer-like
4 . River
speak many
animal
(Chin.)
languages
6 Former
5. Half an em 21 . Goddess of
name of Nlo 8. Intrude
dawn
9 An order
wrongfully 24. Liberate#
JI. Dry
T So. Am.
25 Ransack
12. Country
tuber
thoroughly
(S. Eur )
8 Edge of
26. Undivided
14. Employ
woven fabric 27. P a stry des
15. Low-lying IO. Trouble
serts
tract of land l l . Flightless
29. Greek letter
IT. Norse god
bird
32, Italian poet
IS. Famo.us
13. Independent 33. American
American
kingdom
Indians
writer and
(Arab.)
34. Dip slightly
lecturer
15. Small
Into w'ater
20. Quantity
opening
37. Exclamation
of paper
16. Noah * boat
of disgust
21. Writing fluid
23. Theater seat
24. Building
elevation
27. City in
Poland
28. Ladder
crossbar
29. Apple seed
30. Ostrich*lik#
lard
31. Paid atte**
tion
35. Girl s nick
name
56. Wading bird
38. Macaw’
39. Sarsaparilla
41. Small cut
42 Native of
New York
,45. Man s nickname (poss.)
48. Foundation#
Today’i
Answer Is
in the
Classified
Ads
40 Polo
41. Little girl
43. Hebrew
month
44. Masurium
(sym.)
DOWN
1. American
inventor
2. Bay window
DAILY CBYPTOQUOTE—Here's how to work Kl
A X Y D L B A A X R
^ L O N G F E L L O W
One le tte r simply stand* for another. In th is eewwnple A ic Meed
for the three L 'l, X for the tw o O s. etc. Single letters, apos
tro p h es. the length and form ation of the word# are all hint#.
S ta b
th# code letter# a re different.
Wednesday, Nov. I, 1950
C ree k Gambits
House Chairmen Push
Parties to Honor
ks From S M U Y ^ r i Q p T ^ j - . Q p |
Greeks
T u n c h e o n s , b r uintii-hfic
L
c h e s , an nnrdl ro\pr \eonn
houses have been planned by three
sororities and three fraternities
in h o n o r o f t h e i r SMI c h a p t e r s ,
A l p h a D e l t a Pi will e n t e r t a i n
m o r e t h a n IOO m e m b e r s f r o m b o t h
s c hool s w i t h a b r u n c h S u n d a y
m o r n in g f r o m 9:30 to 11:30.
Pi B e t a P h i will a l s o h a v e r
b ru n c h th a t morning.
Delta Delta Delta ex pec ts ab out
35 S M U m e m b e r s f o r a b u f f e t
lu n ch eo n S a t u r d a y noon.
B e t a T h e t a Pi a n d D e l t a K a p p a
Epsilon
fraternities
will
have
b u f f e t d in n e r s a f t e r the g a m e S a t
urday for dates, families, and
alumni.
Alpha T a u O m e g a has planned
an open house Saturday evening,
f r o m 4:30 t o 6:30.
★
hppn
Seven
students
have
p l e d g e d b y I au K a p p a Ep » i l o n .
They a re Don W a rd , F r a n k Van
Delden Jr., Ted Van Delden, Rog
e r H a r r i s , C a r l Mi ll er, J a m e s K e n t ,
and Lynwood Sanders.
Mrs. M a t h e w H. S c o t t , n a t i o n a l
p r e s i d e n t o f A l p h a Chi O m e g a ,
! wi
l l hi*
n A
Au
ii saft ti n
ti V
will
he iin
N no vv pe m
m hb ^e rr 22 a n *dr \ A
3, S h e is in T e x a s on a t o u r t h a t
has included O k la h om a City, T u l
sa, N o r m a n b e s i d e s t h e U n i v e r s i t y .
She will r e t u r n t o h e r h o m e i n
Berkely, California, a f t e r h er vis
it h e r e .
She -will lip h o n o r e d a t a d i n n e r
ai t h e A l p h a Chi O m e g a h o u s e
T h u r s d a y . S h e will t h e n a t t e n d
Chapter and alum nae meetings.
I
l
By A N N C O U R T E R
ties.
T h e c o n s t i t u t i o n of t h e a s s o r i a t i o n , w r i t t e n in 1 9 4 9 , speci fies t h e
o r g a n i z a t i o n as c o - o r d i n a t o r o f
“ W h e r e a s t u d e n t l i v es d e t e r - U n i v e r s i t y r e s i d e n c e s a n d t h e c o n m i n e s t o a l a r g e e x t e n t his a t t ! - J r e d i n g l i nk b e t w e e n t h e h o u s e s
t u d e t o w a r d t h e w h o l e I n i v e r - a n d t h e office o f t h e D e a n o f
sity,”
believes
Miss
Dorothy Women.
Gebauer, dean of women.
T hree new projects were added
W i t h t h i s i d e a in m i n d , m e m ti m li st of a c t i v i t i e s l a s t y e a r .
h e r s o f t h e d e a n ’s s t a f f m e t s e v e r a l A w o r k s h o p f o r h o u s e m o t h e r s a n d
y e a r s a g o w i t h a s ma l l g r o u p 0 f ‘c h a i r m e n w a s b e * u n so t h a t c o m i n t e r e s t e d w o m e n s t u d e n t s to o r mo n p r o b l e m s c o ul d be d i s c u ss e d
ganize
the
House
C h a i r m e n ’s a n d sol ved. A d i n n e r t o be g i v e n
Association.
Texan O rg an iza tio n s E d ito r
( T h i s is t h e f i r s t in * b i - m o n t h l y set tee
of f e a t u r e s o n o u t s t a n d i n g c a m p u s o r
gan izatio n s. Ed.)
N e w o f f i c e r s of S i g m a N u a r e
Bob A n d r e w s , l i e u t e n a n t - c o m m a n der; T o m m y
Chapman,
pledge
m a r s h a l ; Gene Bonce, se nt ine l an d
song leader; N a t Jo nes Jr., r e
Growing and accum ulating new
p o r t e r ; a n d S h e l b y H. C a r t e r J r . ,
i de a s e a c h y e a r , t h e a s s o c i a t i o n
assistant reporter.
now includes the chair m an of
★
University-approved
resiAlpha Phi sor ori ty a n n o u n c e s e v e r y
the p l e d g i n g o f P e g g y W e b b , F o r t Hence f o r
w o m e n , e x c e p t riormiVVorth. a n d
M a r th a S c hr o ed e r , t o n e s and so ro rit y houses, which
(I h a v e i n d i v i d u a l h o u s e a s s o c i a t i o n
oc;ui LO„ii,
systems.
of the departm ent, Jaroslav
Z i v n e y , J o e Mal ik J r . , M. I. S m i t h ,
a n d B i a h a Ba l c a r .
The students and the faculty
will h o n o r in t h e i r a n n i v e r s a r y
p r o g r a m t h e six f o u n d e r s o f t h e
club f o r th ei r w ork in ini tia ti ng a
cu r r i c u l u m o f Slavonic lang uag es .
The
r e t u r n
of
federallya d m i n i s t e r e d ci t y a n d s t a t e d u t i e s
to t h e l o c a f level w a s d i s c u ss e d
by Dr. S t u a r t A. M a c C o r k l e , p r o
fessor of governm ent, Tuesday at
t h e Hi l l e l F o u n d a t i o n f o r u m .
S p e a k i n g on “ T h e C i t y in O u r
i Changing W orld,” Dr, MacCorkle
; p o i n t e d o u t t h a t o n l y o n e -f i f t h o f
t h e 71 d a y s o f p a y t h e a v e r a g e
Icitizen gives the g o v e r n m e n t goes
f o r l oc a l a n d s t a t e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n .
“ I t s e e m s t o m e t h a t i t ’s t i m e
St. S t e p h e n ’s E p i s c o p a l S c h o o l
M f m e e t local p r o b l e m s a t h o m e , ”
will be d e d i c a t e d W e d n e s d a y , All
he sai d.
“ It c a n lie d o n e b e t t e r
S a i n t s D a y , a* 3 o ’c l ock a t t h e a n d c h e a p e r on the. local l e v e l . ”
sc hool s i t e, n i n e mi l e s w e s t o f
In cr ea se d u rb a n i z a ti o n that has
Dustin
created g reater need for expanded
facilities d u r i n g
the last
T h e Rt. Re v , N o r m a n B u r d e t t c i t y
N a s h , DD, b i s h o p o f M a s s a c h u s e t t s d e c a d e w a s g iv e n a s a s e c o n d r e a
son f o r t h e r e t u r n o f f e d e r a l l y will g i v e t h e d e d i c a t o r y a d d r e s s ,
a d m i n i s t e r e d d u t i e s to t h e l ocal
a n d t h e Rt. Rev. C l i n t o n S. Q u i n , level.
b i s h o p o f t h e Di o c e s e o f T e x a s ,
“ F o r y e a r s W'e, h a v e h e a r d so
will f o r m a l l y d e d i c a t e t h e school .
much about federal centralization
A t t e n d i n g t h e c e r e m o n y will be a n d t h e d e c l i n e o f l o c a l s e l f
G o v e r n o r A l l a n S h i v e r s ; t h e R e v . g o v e r n m e n t , ” Dr. M a c C o r k l e s a i d .
W i l l i a m B r e w s t e r , h e a d m a s t e r ; t h e “ If we a c t u a l l y b e li e v e in t h e
Rt R e v . J o h n E. H i n e s o f A u s t i n ; l a t t e r , we m u s t m e e t a n d sol ve
a n d c l e r g y m e n a n d l a y m e n f r o m o u r l ocal p r o b l e m s a t t h e local
all p a r t s o f t h e Di oce se .
lev c l , ” he c o n c l u d e d .
Episcopal School
Will Be Dedicated
comes to
TEXAS
Alice Clements
October through May the Coty
Campus Beauty Consultant will be on call
to help you discover the simple
and effective way to make the most of your looks
throughout your busy Campus career.
Frances Albin
Personally selected and trained by Coty experts,
she will pass on to you all she has l e a r n e d a b o u t
good grooming, skin care and make-up, give you the
latest tips from Coly’* Paris
and New York salons, and help you
with your individual beauty-care problems.
She will conduct Coty Campus Clinics,
on appointment, at your sorority, club or dorm,
to show you how to select the most flattering
make-up shades for your complexion and costume
colors, and how to apply them . .. how to use
Coty products to keep you looking fresh
and well groomed at all times.
Iv.:.: <•
••v ,*•
•
.
W" —1
at
7 : 3 0 o ’c l ock .
Cheating, Honesty
Are Discussed
In Lecture Group
“ Is t h e r e a n y t h i n g t o t h e i n t e
g r a t i v e p r o c e s s o r is g e t t i n g t h e r e
and m akin g our grades o u r g o a l? ”
T h i s q u e s t i o n was p o s e d by
Mr s . G r a c e S l o a n O v e r t o n , l e c
turer, author, and educator, a t a
l ect ure-discu.-.sion m e e t i n g in t he
T exas Union Tuesday.
A n e x a m p l e w a ? g i v e n in w h i c h
CU o u t o f IOO s t u d e n t s h a d g o t t e n
c o p i e s o f a t e s t b e f o r e it w a s
given. Q ue sti ons w ere b r o u g h t o u t
to s h o w t h e d i f f i cul t i es o f r n a i nte m in g in tegrity under our p r e
s e n t sy st em of tenting and g r a d
ing.
O th e r qu e st io n s re l a te d to the
s u b j e c t w e r e “ < a n vou t r u s t a
p e r s o n w h o c h e a t s ’” ,
and
“ Is
t h e r e e ver a condition w he re a
p e r s o n c a n c h e a t a n d still h a v e
complete integrity? ”
“ Is i t t h e c o n t e n t o f t h e l es s o n s
o r is it t h e g r o w i n g u p p r o c e s s
t h a t c o u n t s ? Is t h e r e a n y t h i n g to
t h e i n t e g r a t i v e p r o c e s s nr is g e t ti n g t h e r e the goal? And have
w , o v e r p l a y e d in e d u c a t i o n t he
jd e a 0f g e t t i n g t h e r e ? ” a s k e d Mr s.
Overton,
Shp a n d a n u m b e r o f s t u d e n t s
p r e 8 e n t m a i n t a i n e d th at s t u d e n ts
W i n n e r s were, p i c k e d b y f a c u l t y
J u d g e s f r o m si x fi nali sts,
Elsi e
Dvo rak , voice m a j o r a n d r e s id e n t
o f S h a n g r i - L a , r e c e i v e d t h e first
p l a ce c u p w h i c h wa s d o n a t e d by
t h e U n i v e r s i t y C o -O p ,
I f resid e n t s o f one h o u s e a r e a w a r d e d
J f i r s t p l a c e f o r t h r e e s u c ce s s i v e
y e a r s , t h e c u p goes p e r m a n e n t l y
to t h a t h o u s e .
I n o r d e r t o k e e p u p - t o - d a t e on
n a t i o n a l a c t i v i t i e s in t h e field of
r e s i d e n c e s u p e r v i s i o n , m e m b e r s of
the association re g u la rl y c o n ta c t
o t h e r s c h o ol s a n d e x c h a n g e i deas
on h o w t o h e l p new' s t u d e n t s b e
come a v alua ble p a rt of the g ro u p
a n d its a c t i v i t i e s .
Each s u m m e r , individual house
c h a i r m e n w r i t e p e r s o n a l l e t t e r s to
new’ s t u d e n t s w’ho will be l i v i n g
in t h e i r h o u s e s .
This ac q u a i n ts
t h e n e w c o m e r s wi t h o n e p e r s o n
on w h o m t h e y can d e p e n d t h e
f i rst f e w
hew’i l d c r i n g d a y s of
school .
Besides p r o j e c ts di r ec tl y con
nected w ith super vision of resi
d e n c e s , t h e a s s o c i a t i o n also s p o n
s o r s a n a n n u a l c l o t h i n g dr i ve .
Donatio ns are se n t to the n e e d y
people of E u r o p e and to the N av
a j o I n d i a n s in t h i s c o u n t r y .
T h e a s s o c i a t i o n is s p o n s o r e d by
Mi ss J e s s e Flail A n d e r s o n , a s s i s
ta n t to
the
dean
o f women.
Off i cer s f o r t h i s y e a r a r e Neil
Owens, p re s id e n t; M ine rv a J o h n
son, vic e -p re si de nt ; V a le ri e T h u r
man, secretary;
Frau
Warren,
treasurer;
H a r r i e t De W i t t ,
rc
pt" t e r ; B a r b a r a B u t c h e r s , M a r j o
rie
Wise, an d
Mollie Mof f e t t ,
members-at-large.
Alba Club Holds
Classes at 7:30
A t Center
S t u d e n t m e m b e r s o f A l b a Cl u b
a n d the
Upperclass
F e l l ow s h i p
S e r v i c e C o m m i t t e e a r e a s s i s t i n g in
i n f o r m a l c l a s s e s in E n g l i s h a n d
c i t i z e n s h i p he l d e v e r y W e d n e s d a y
n i g h t a t 7 : 3 0 o ’clock i n t h e P a n A m e r i c a n C e n t e r at 3 0 0 C o m a l
Street.
Hel p in E n g l i s h r e a d i n g a n d
c o n v e r s a t i o n a n d s t u d i e s of local,
--tate, a n d n a t i o n a l g o v e r n m e n t s
a r e o f f e r e d in t h e c l a s s e s whi ch
o f t e n r e s u l t i n c i t i ze n s h i p h e a r
ings.
S p o n s o r e d b y t he A u s t i n P a n A m e r i c a n R o u n d T a b l e w i t h the
co -o per ati on o f Roy G u e r r e r o , the
classes a r e t a u g h t by more th an a
d o z e n t e a c h e r s w ho di vi de s t u
d e n t s i n t o s ma l l g r o u p s a c c o r d i n g
t o i n t e r e s t a n d abi l it y.
M o v i e s , mu s i c , a n d
l i ght r e
f r e s h m e n t s a r e o f f e r e d in a so
should
prepare
themselves
by cial h o u r f o l l o w i n g t h e s t u d y s es
s t u d y i n g f o r t e s t s , a n d t h e n if si ons, S t u d e n t s w i s h i n g t o enrol !
t h e y f a i l e d , t h e y s h o u l d fai l w i t h in t h e c l a s s e s m a y r a i l Mr s. D a n
S t a n i s l a w a k i a t 2 - 9 08 8.
dignity.
THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5
.W esley to Hear
inois Minister
Re l i gi ous E m p h a s i s F oe u s - o n f ai th p e r i o d will be. o b s e r v e d a t
Wesley F ou nd at ion with a series
o f l e c t u r e s h y t h e R e v . G l e n n A.
Olds, p r o f e s s o r of t h e p h i l o s o p h y
o f r e l i g i o n a n d e t h i cs a t G a r r e t t
Bibl ical I n s t i t u t e , E v a n s t o n , 111.
T h e g e n e r a l t h e m e of D r . O l d s ’
a d d r e s s e s will b e “ T h e C o n t e n t o f
Our Faith,”
A f o r m e r di re cto r o f the Wesley
F o u n d a t i o n a t Y al e U n i v e r s i t y ,
Dr. Ol ds will b e g i n his s e r i e s S u n
d a y m o r n i n g a t 9 : 3 0 in t h e F e l l o w
shi p
Ha l l
of
the
University
Methodist E ducati on Building with
THE REV, G L E N N A. O LD S
Mica-Wice Plans
Dance to Honor
Sadie Hawkins
L o o k o u t a ll you L i t t l e A b n e r s ,
it's S ad ie Ha wki ns Day a n d here
c »me t h e D a i s y M a es ! T h e t i m e
is S a t u r d a y n i g h t f r o m 8 t o 12
o ’clock, a n d t h e pl a c e is t h e Mai n
B all ro om of th e T e x a s Union.
All Mi cas a n d W i c a s a n d t h e i r
d a t e s a r e i n v i te d. P r i z e s wi l l be
g i v e n f o r t h e best D o g p a t c h c o s
t u m e a n d M a r r y i n ’ S a m w i l l al s o
h • on h a n d t o do t h e h o n o r s f o r
t h e u n f o r t u n a t e (? ) males.
As a c l i m a x to t h e f e s t i v i t i e s ,
th* W i e n S w e e t h e a r t will h e p r e
sented.
v i n d o n ”* h a v e a d a t e
y e t n e e d n ’t w o r r y . S u e H e n s l e y ,
11
ij the date bureau can
i
y o u up. J u s t p h o n e h e r at.
8 4 2 4 1 o r d r o p b y t h e Mi c a O f
fice in t h e U n i o n a n d l e a v e y o u r
name.
Mi ss H e n s l e y a n d h e r a s s i s
t a n t s s a y t h e y a r e e a g e r t o help
b o t h Mi ens ani l M i c as find a d a t e
f o r th e dance.
Nominees fo r sw eetheart are
.U.ke Betti®. J ot B o b B e t t i s , J o e
F a r r i s , Mel vi n F o e h e e , M a r t i n Le
B eeht, Ray Mo rg an , E d u a r d o O r
t e g a , Di c k P a l m e r , J a c k T o l a r , a n d
Zeke Zb ra n ek .
a di s c u s s i on o f “ T h e C h a l l e n g e o f
t h e C a m p u s . ” A f t e r w a r d s he will
deliver the se r m o n a t t h e U n i v e r
sity M et hod ist C hu rch , p r e a c h i n g
on “ G o d ’s D a n g e r o u s F r i e n d s h i p , ”
A gai n rn t h e F e l l o w s h i p Hal l , h a
will s p e a k on “ O u r R a c e W i t h
Disaster” Sund ay evening at 6:30.
M o n d a y e v e n i n g a t 8 o ’c l ock, h a
will s p e a k o n “ O u r F a i t h i n G o d , ”
a n d T u e s d a y e v e n i n g a t 7 o ’c l o c k
his s u b j e c t is “ O u r F a i t h i n M a n . ”
A n ati v e of Ore gon , Dr. Olds
graduated from Willamette Uni
versity, m a g n a c u m la ud e , a n d
t oo k h i g h e r d e g r e e s f r o m G a r
r e t t , N o r t h w e s t e r n a n d Yale.
He attended an international
s e m i n a r on “ T h e L i f e o f J e s u s ”
t w o y e a r s in O n t a r i o a s a f e l l o w
o f t h e A l p h a Psi Z e t a F o u n d a t i o n ,
a n d ha-i r e c e n t l y r e t u r n e d f r o m
s t u d y in E u r o p e w i t h t h e S h e r
w oo d E d d y A m e r i c a n S e m i n a r .
An ordained Methodist minis te r
and m e m b e r o f the Ore gon A n n u a l
C o n f e r e n c e , Dr. O l d s h a s b e e n a
f r e q u e n t s p e a k e r in c o l l e ge c o n
f e r e n c e s a n d h a s p r e a c h e d in
O r e g o n , C o n n e c t i c u t , a n d Illinois.
He t a u g h t in t he s u m m e r sc h o o l
a t \ a l e a n d in t h e D e p a r t m e n t o f
P h i l o s o p h y a n d Re l i gi on a t P e P a u w University.
1950 Sweetheart
Of Sigma Chi
To Be Presented
I he S i g m a Chi S w e e t h e a r t o f
! 950 wiii be p r e s e n t e d N o v e m b e r
18 a t t h e f r a t e r n i t y ’s f o r m a l .
T h e d a n c e will b e hel d in T e x a s
U n i o n f r o m 8 : 3 0 t o 12 m i d n i g h t ,
wi t h mu s i c by Y a n K i r k p a t r i c k
a n d hi s o r c h e s t r a .
T h e 19 49 s w e e t h e a r t , P a t r i c i a
F o r b e s , will p r e s e n t t h e
new
s w e e t h e a r t with t h e t r a d i t i o n a l
b o u q u e t o f w h i t e ros ea. S h e w il l
al s o r e c e i v e a t r o p h y f r o m J o e
H a n n o n , soci al c h a i r m a n , a n d a
sweetheart
p in
from
Jimmy
Miles, c ons ul .
T h e S w e e t h e a r t will b e c h o s e n
by t h e f r a t e r n i t y f r o m f i f t e e n
so r o ri t y nomi nees, who a re Luc i a n n e K n i g h t , A l p h a Chi O m e g a ;
Alicemarie Meyer,
A lp h a Omicrc-n P i ; G e i y a A n d e r s o n , A l p h a
Ph i :
Barbara
Sunman,
Alpha
Delta Pi; B etty P a rs o n s , Alpha
Gamma
D elta;
Sunny
Guest,
De l t a D e l t a D e l t a ; a n d S h a r o n
Ma tthew s, Delta Zeta.
Also
Davie H a rtk o p f, Delta
Gamma; Laura
Wnod>,
Kappa
K a p p a G a m m a ; P a t Cavin, K a p p a
Alpha T heta; Marjorie Angwin,
Phi M u ; B a r b a r a E s g e n , Pi B e t a
P h i ; H i l d e n e S e a t e r , Chi O m e g a ;
M argaret Sue Sommers, G am m a
Phi B e t a ; a n d M a r y C a r r o l G r o c e ,
Z e t a T a u Al p h a .
The national sw eetheart, Doro
thy A n n G r o v e r f r o m S y r a c u s e
University, has been invi ted to
t h e f o r m a l , H a n n o n said.
Little Campus Dormitory A sso
c i a t i o n c o u n c i l will h e a r a l e c t u r e
on s e x e d u c a t i o n b y Dr. M. E.
F a t t e r on N o v e m b e r 9. I t will be
a c c o m p a n i e d bv t h e mo v i e , “ H u
man Reproduction.”
★
T h e w o n d e rs of science an d
e l e c t r i c i t y will b e i l l u s t r a t e d to
m e m b e r s of Radio Guild N o v e m b e r
15. A t t h e i r m e e t i n g G u il d m e m
b e r s will l i st en t o t h * voice of
Paul Russum, radio major, who
will be t a l k i n g f r o m his c a r whi l e
tr a v e li n g in do w n to w n Austin.
C onnected with Texas Union
3 1 5 by a b r o a d c a s t i n g s e t a n d
Director to Talk
To Hillel Seminar
A l b e r t G o l d s t e i n , e x e c u t i v e di
re c to r of the Jewish Com m unity
Council
o f H ou st on a n d second
speaker
in t h e Hi l l el s e m i n s r s e
r i es on J e w i s h C o m m u n i t y O r
g a n i z a t i o n s , will s p e a k W e d n e s
d a y a f t e r n o o n a t 8 o ' cl o c k . Hi s
t o p i c will b e “ O p e r a t i o n s of W e l
f a r e F e d e r a t i o n s arid t h e O r g a n i
z a t i o n s to W h i c h F e d e r a t i o n s A l l o
cate Money.”
T h e p u b l i c is c o r d i a l l y i n v i te d ,
sai d E.
H. Sauls on, d ir e c to r of
Hill el F o u n d a t i o n .
M r . G o l d s t e i n , B A ’3 1 , LIB ’84
fr o m the U n iv ers ity of M ar yland,
r e c e i v e r h i s m a s t e r s d e g r e e in
soc i al s e r v i c e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n f r o m
the U n iv e rs it y of Chicago. A f t e r
six y e a r s a s s u p e r i n t e n d e n t o f th*1
M ar yla nd Stat* D e p a r t m e n t of
Public W e lf a re , he b ec am e a s s is t
a n t d i r e c t o r of t h e Jewish C h a r i
ties o f B a l t i m o r e .
H e s e r v e d 26 m o n t h s o v e r s e a s
in t h e s e r v i c e b e f o r e h e c a m e t o
H o u s t o n in 1946.
S oft, N a t u r a l Permanent*
YOU’LL B I M A RING f l O U YOU* COTT CAMPUS BEAUTY CONSULTANT SOON
B E A U T Y SHOP
M A
GUADA LUPE
«-©*#*
holiday whirl—satin cord
and rhinestones
on full-blown net, 39.95
Forecast for the coming party season— clouds
of rayon net with moonbeams catching every
glint of the rhinestones and silver-bound satin
cord
that
Carolyn
swirls over
airy
formal.
fashion, in moonstone white,
blue, sites 9 to
Floor.
this
A
mist
15. College Shop, Second
Wedneuky, Nov. T, 1950
THE DAILY TEXAN Page 6
'Winslow Boy'
Sing-Song Rules Rumba
_
To Open Festival Are Announced .
Ring Will Perform
/—
ai
i
In Gregory Gym November
8
Civic Theater
Tryouts Tonight
Parts to Be Cast
Committee Adopts
in
a c c e p te d
s t a t u t e the
In N ew Production
Ju d ging Scale Plan
K in g H e u r y
X a v ie r C u ga t, th e m an w h o m o st e v e r y im p o r ta n t h o tel in the his C h ih u a h u a s w ith him. H e s a y s .
A lso to h an d le v o ca ls is J o s e
U n iv e r s i t y s t u d e n t s in t e r e s te d
sto ry o f how
The
S in g - S n g
c o m m itt e e
th a t th e d o g s h a v e a s t r o n g ; M on ero. M on e ro, a P u e r ta R ica n in tr y i n g o u t f o r a p a r t in th e
in n o c e n t ha? a d o p te d c o n te s t r u le s and dis- p op u la rized L a tin - A m e r ie a n music c o u n tr y .
ju d g i n g sc a le for th is
in th e U n ited S t a t e s , w ill a p p e a r
N o t satisfied with his s u c c e s s
j ch a r a c te r , r o b u s t c o n s t it u t io n , a n d j b y birth, has b een p la y in g th e | A u s t i n CTivic
E n g la n d and c u s s e d ~the
h e a t e r ’s produce
tr u m p e t an d s i n g in g in t h e U n ite d j tion o f Lillian H e i lm a n ’s “ An*
th e_ h
otel
e n te r t a in m e n t , c o s t lit t l e t o k eep.
-----y e a r 's c o n t e s t at a m e e t in g Mon- ' *b e f*o r e A‘ u s tin a u d**ie n c e s N o v e m - j ‘in
1™",’“ CV
,.,,
U U c o u n tr y , alike.
Jkrcher-bnee c s ^ .
The play w i n run f r o m N o v e m - d a y in T e x a s U n io n .
In clu d ed in the c u r r e n t tr o u p e S t a t e s sin ce 1 9 42 .
ber 8 in G reg o r y Gym . T h is e on - “ U o o g i e ” m o v e d on to n e w fields,
! o th e r P art o f t h e F o r e s t ” sh ou ld
T ic k e U m ay be o b ta in e d a t th e ^
^
\ c o m m it t e e c o n s is tin g OI six
_:Y c e r t is o n e o f a s e r ie s o f n a tio n - this tim e to the m ov ies,
H e and are R aou l a n d E va R e y e s , p op u lar
T o fu r t h e r a u g m e n t th e s in g in g , J a t t e n d t h e g e n e r a l m e m b e r sh ip
A
,
,
,
,
,
...
,
M u sic B u ild in g box o f f i c e , ex
In C u g a t p r e se n t s
. ,
..
.
o^no- wade c o n c e r t s w in ch b e g a n in th e his band have a p p eared w ith such I/iitin -A m e r ic a n d a n c e te a m .
the B a r r a n c o s , ! m e e t i n g in the C ry sta l B allroom
fraterm tv
an d
so r o r ity
so n g
. , .
. ii
n.
u
.
»i
te n s i o n 4 44 . S t u d e n t s m ay see
i jUis an(j D ian e.
.
,
^
H o lly w o o d B o w l b e f o r e 1 a , . 4b en- n o ta b le s as Rita H a y w o r t h , v a n c o n t e s t s held the p a st. th r e e -y e a r s I---------T h e B a r r a n c o s, I o f th e Driskill H o t e l a t 7 : 3 0 n. rn.
l e a d e r s w ill be a p p o in ted to draw
i
ti
Jam es,
L ana
t h e produ ction f o r 35 c e n ts and f o c u / f y Arts Sh OW
1
a*.
th u s ia s t ic fa n s .
Johnson,
Harry
uy M a n h a t t a n s S p an ish la n g u a g e
a c o n v e r te d d an c e te a m , do t h e ir : W e d n e s d a y , C a s t i n g w ill b e g in
up a g r a d in g s h e e t for c o n t e s t
,
. , . ,r
_ ,
W illia m s,
and paper, LaP r e n s a , th e R e y e s
• j *
mu
. ii
„
E v e r sin c e C u g a t o r g a n iz e d his T u rn e r,
E sth er
a d u lt s f o r >o c e n ts , A s
, , j q Start M o n d a y
h a v e n u m b e rs in tw o -p a r t h a rm o n y .
im m e d ia t e ly a f t e r th e m e e t in g
j u d g i n g . T h e y w ill m e e t w it h
. . . .
,
.«
h o ld s only 2 0 0 , r e s e r v a t io n s should I ° * f a n ™Onaay
men m ore p o p u la r than m a n y o f
T h e C u g a t t r o u p e is c o m p le te d
ig
a . •
7
t
o r c h e st r a s i x t e e n y e a r s a g o , he m a n y oth ers.
a
Dr.
A
r
ch
ie
J
o
n
e
s
,
p
r
o
fe
s
so
r
o
f
T h e p la y deals w ith re c o n str u e he m ad e w e ll in a d v a n c e .
T he f a c u l t y art e x h ib itio n ,
th e m o r e - p u b lic iz e d L a tm - A m e r i- with th e a d d itio n o f th e band.
k e th e s e ^as k e e n w o r^*n B to w a r d the g o a l
W ith
his
beak nos
I tio n in th e S o u th a f‘t e r th e Civil
p a rt o f the F in e A r t s F e s t i v a l , ; m u sic e d u c a tio n , to
ih
u
a
h
u
a
can
p
e
r
fo
r
m
e
r
s
.
s y m b o liz e d b y th e s e c o n c e r ts . F or F r e n c h b eret, and t i n y (
F u n d s ra is ed fr o m t h e N o v e m - w #r Th*>r
B yr le Cass,
rtQ °do
w ill be in M usic B u ild in g lo g g ia d ec ision s,
To add v o ca t a l e n t to th e per- ber C u g a t c o n c e r t w ill g o to w a r d s
th e first tim e he w ill b rin g to d og u n d e r his arm , C u ga t is r
- a is a c a s t o f th ir te e n
frlujr, h M b « n
It
8 c h (. N o v e m b e r 6 2 4 . It w ill be open
T he ru les f o r th is yea Ce S in g - A u s tin his c o n c e r t v e r s io n s o f j nixed b y m o s t m o v i e f a n s .
n u a n c e s , C u g a t has b ro u g h t a the m a i n t e n a n c e o f th e C erebra l I p e o p l e , five w o m e n , a nd e ig h t
{ m e n . T he a c tio n is c e n te r e d
S ite d * have been .lone Iwt V « r. Monday through Friday fro,.. 8 I Spnen correspond
----- .-x---------w ith
- last yye a r s . L a tin - A m e r ic a n p o p u la r a n d f o l k S p a n ish -b o rn o r c h e st r a e a d e r h as te n or,
V icto r
B r e n e s. A lr e a d y P a lsy C e n t e r in A u s tin .
n u i r u vu nit c
t a & n m ii nr! o n S a t i n 2 a r s nri— .
*
ar o u n d th e H u b b a rd f a m ily a n d
®
j
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m
w
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e
rot
to
5
B
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and
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s
T
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y
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r
e
:
so
n
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s
.
T
his
idea
is
n
o
t
a
n
e
w
risen
to
f
a
m
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as
th
e
R
u
m
b
a
K
in
g
b u t p rod u ction r ig h t s w e r e no
^ ^
th e i r home.
^ E ach g r o u p shall
s in g o n e on e. B rah m s and l i s z t b o t h trieci w ith th e s e three tr a d e m ark s.
A m eric a n tt ee nn oorrs, aa ss Jan
J an P e e r c e Ref,d „
j C o m p , ny> U n i v . r a i t y
fu L l. T
’ W,t.h ‘ ht
r e le a s e d b e c a u s e th e show wai
__ ..........•m * to Ip m.
:
r\
v i - » t>
j ou
n
i : ®’r u g g ie to o b ta in p o ssessio n o f
kUIl^runn i n e on B r o a d w a y and a
^ E x h ib i t in g f a c u l t y a r t i s t s are f raterr;ltv or so r o r ity s o n g and it w ith m u ch su c c e s s , b u t it is th e
H is n o s e and b eret are promi- and J a m e s M elton.
j C o-O p, K i n g s R ecord S h o p , B ook
^ *
1 .
a* it r n i i r *
’
t h e f a m ily f o r t u n e , f a t h e r a n d
ro m n a n v w a s to u r i n g with
C o n s ta n c e F o rsy th , H a y e s L yo n. o n € g o n g # £ th eir
c h o ic e . first tim e that th o s o n g s fr o m n e n t l y d isp lay ed in th e carienS ta ll, W u h a m -C h a rles M usic C o m - 1
uu
d a u g h te r a g a in s t sons. N e a r ly all
♦v. nl«v s t t h a t tim e.
E ugene
Frentham , P a u l N in e s , J. T h er e w ill be
n o d u p lic a tio n s so u th o f the b ord er hav e b ee n t a r e s t h a t C u fO t d r a w s o f h im s e lf .
p a n y, M usic H all a t th e U n iv e r s i t y
o f th e p a rts fu r n ish e x c e l le n t o p
. i
I unon a n in- C h a rles I m l a u f, W illiam L e s te r ,
so ng s,
t r e a t e d rn such a w ay.
T h ese n o v e l s k e t c h e s h a v e apand R e n fr o D ru g.
p o r tu n ity fo r t h e p la y er s.
T h e play is as
, .
oase E v e r e t t S p ru c e, and R e e s e B ran d t.
^ T h ere w ill be no m e d le y s.
C u g a t b e g a n his c a r e e r as a p e e r e d
in
sev era l
of
<’n g a t's
aiders! fro m an ac
E n g la n d . Alo© K e lly F e a r in g , P a ul
K elp * ,
4 \ 0 solos will be
p erm itte d c la s sica l vio lin ist. A t o n e tim e he m o v ie s a n d a r e used o n h is C olum T h e p la y will b e p r e se n t e d D ec.
th a t w a s con uc e
• Q a y le n H a n s e n , D an W
m g r en, w jt h t h e e x c e p tio n o f a f e w b a r t t r a v e le d w ith th e im m o rta l En- bm record a lbu m s.
1 8 -2 2 in t h e a r e n a s t y le at H a n
I t show s now a x a l ner
J u liu s W o e t z , S e y m o u r F o g e l, w ith b ac k gro u n d s in g in g .
I rico C aru so as a n a s s is t in g art ist. J A l w a y s an a r d e n t C h ih u a h u a
co ck R e c r e a tio n C en ter.
w a s tru th fu l ar.d^ s ru
h o n or C ecil R ich ard s, L oren M o z le y , and
g
T h ere w ill be no a c c o m p a n y
F in a lly a f t e r d ec id in g he w a s fa n c ie r , C u g a t first b e c a m e publito help him r e g a m
J- ••
^ B o y e r G o n z a le s Jr.
m e n t ex ce p t for a strike o f a not g o i n g to be a v io lin is t, he cal Iv a ss o c ia te d w ith th e s e tin y
W a t e r c o lo r s b y Mrs. E li z a
T h e p lo t c o n c e r n s th e
boy, j
A m o n g the p ic t u r e s s h o w n will nit u
b eca m e a c a r to_o nI i s t on
. the
. L os_____
lorg s w h e n , u n n e r v e d by_ m o vie b eth K e e f e r B o a t r ig h t a r e on e x
R o n n ie W in s lo w , w ho has been be E v e r e t t S p r u c e 's “ P i e g o n s On A
p a r tic ip a n ts m u s t be A n g e l e s T im es. A l t h o u g h h e w a s c a m e r a s w h ile h e w a s a n o v ic e hibit in the E liz a b e t N e y M u seum .
e x p e ll e d from th e R o y a l N a v a l R 0 0 f t” s h o w n by p er m issio r o f the nH,m b er- or p le d g e s o f th e o r g a n - s o m e w h a t s u c c e s s f u l in th is capa- in m o tio n p ic t u r e s, he ca r r ie d his
W i f e o f Mody C. B o a tr ig h t , a sW illiam
Hor ace
Harwood,
C o lle g e f o r b e in g a c c u se d c t st e a l-; M etro p o lita n
M u se u m
of
Art. ization and stu d e n t* .
c it y , he soon tired o f it and or- p e t C h ih u a h u a to ke ep h is h a n d s so c ia te p
fe s s o r o f E n g lish„, t h e_ juiujru
xjovd
r_r o--------------Foster
H o w e r to n ,
and
fu g a fi v e - s h i ll in g p ie c e . T h e boy •‘jrort D av is T w o - S t o r y ” by Wil7. T h e m a x i urn n u m b e r in e a c h S e i z e d his band. .Since th en the o ccu p ie d .
a rtist bas had sev er a l e x h ib its ppg-gj. Ir e n e M ayfield, U n iv e r s i t y
d e c la r e s. “ I s w e a r b y A l m i gTh ht yg i jia m j e s t e r a ls o wall be sh ow n g r o u p w ill he 50.
R u m b a K in g has a p p e a r e d in a1E v e n w h ile on tou r, C u g a t tak es in Au
;*in d u r in g the past t e n st u d e n ts , h a v e b e e n a w a rd ed s c h o
G od th a t I am in n o c e n t
me
p e r m issio n o f th e P a s s e d o lt
J ea rs.
D oor to d o or d e liv e r ie s
at
8 . T he m in im u m
number o f
l a r s h i p s f o r 1 9 5 0 -5 1 .
c a s e is ta k e n b y a l a w y e r o f con- G a llery , N e w Y o rk C ity.
„
, 0 . .. . T . ..
.. ..
In I 138 s h e w a s t h e o n ly T e x a s
p a r tic ip a n ts in each g ro u p w ill be
B r a c k e n r id g e
a nd
D eep
Eddy
«• «
I.
I_—B a a
♦VtCL
, •
R e se a r c h S c ie n t is t I is the title
sid e r a b le fame,* w ho b e li e v e d the
.
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art ist r e p r e se n te d rn th e in terA p a r t m e n t s and Oak G rove a n d
: 18*
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, -v , . , . g iv e n H a r w o o d u n d e r th e H um b le
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n a tio n a I w a t e r c o lo r e x h ib i t h e ld 7
I
9. P a r tic u la r s m a y d ress a s th e y
L itt le C am p u s C o u r ts will no
Oil
T-,. , ,
- ,
, , iV
/11 and
s n u R e fin in g C o m p a n y R e
E i g h t e e n o f h e r etc h .
c h o o se.
in Chic
l o n g e r be p ossib le sin c e the c u t
l
j.
.v
sea rch re llo w ’ship rn sp e c t r o s c o p y
IO. A ll e n t r i e s m u s t be in by
een pu r ch ased b y t h e
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in its ha
in T e x a n d e liv ery zon es.
ne w ill rrpppivp
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M o n d a y , N o v e m b e r 27 .
nim sn Los A n g o , .
In s tea d , s ta c k s o f p a p e r w ill b s
,
,
.
the f e l lo w s h ip m u s t be g r a d u a te
j
l l . In case o f w ith d r a w a l a f t e r
a rtly d oes n o t a c - I st u d e n ts.
r
B
l e f t a t c e n tr a l pla ces. A t Oak
b u t w h ich c h o se
H a v e you been w o n d e r in g JI N o v e m b e*r 2 7 , th e e n t r y f e a will
H o w e r t o n , s e n i o r m e c h a n i c a l G ro v e C ou rts, th e pa p ers will b s
PHONE
h is to r is a l signifiw h a t th e co lo r in g a n d bu b b les i be fo r fe ite d .
ar ou m e t I ti
en g in eerin g
st u d e n t,
r ece iv ed
' n H i exan b o x , w h ile a t Litj
M
em
b
ers
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S
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Indian
2*5411
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in
L itt le fie ld
M em orial
tin re sid en t.
$ 3 6 0 fro m the A m e r ic a n F o u n - ’ ip 1 a m p u s < o u rts, D eep E d d y ,
L ois A g n o r , H a n k P e r r y , Dick
F o u n t a in ? A c c o r d in g to T h o m
m mmmm
. .
*d a ym en 's A s s o c i a tio n S c h o la rs h ip
B rack n ridg * A p a r tm e n ts , t h e
K e l l y H. S t e v e n s , o f 5 0 7
Johnson, H om er Jackson, A rtyce
as F. A t t e b u r y Jr., lan d sca p e
t b e c a m e in terp a p e r s w ill be l e f t in se v e r a l o f
T
e
n
th
S
tr
e
e
t
,
w
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te
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le
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A r o n s o n , V irg in ia D a vis, J a m ie ism d ir e c te d a g a in s t ti
g a r d e n e r , it is soap suds and
in p a in tin g s c e n e r y and li f e A * U n iv e r s i t y
F e llo w sh ip o f | the Ph on «
booths.
ed ito r o f th e A istin A m e
i C le m e n t s, A d d ie M ae F u n k , A g- st a tu e in f r o n t o f the
dye.
• S ' u t ..a c w ii e ear in g
w a 8 r e c e iv e d by Miss M a y- — —
c
o
m
p
l
a
i
n
i
n
g
o
f
t
h
e
“
d
a
r
k
fc
n e s T ip to n , an d T a y lo r N ic h ols,
m orial M u se u m p a r t i
in A lpin e, T e x a s. Also inC a m p u s g a r d e n e r s , w-ho ta k e
goo” which was p ut
*, ,!
,, ^
field, g r a d u a te c h e m is tr y s t u d e n t.
•d in I n d ia n p o t t e r y , s h e
m
. ,
.
.
_ .
ca re o f the f o u n t a i n , said t h e y
t a mrs t o c o v e r t h e
. . .
* ,
T his aw ard is g i v e n t o p ro m o te
\ erat o f th e p ie c e s o f h e r . . .
, .
5.
,
,
w e r e su r e o f t h e brand of soap.
p o u r e d o v e r t h e m by
* TALIAN
,
C i h ig h e r sch olarsh ip and resea rch
S e v e r a l e m p t y soap b o x e s w e r e
7
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on
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t
,
and
“ T h e w a r m n a t u r a Colo
f o u n d n e ar t h e b u b b lin g f o u n
C o lle g e a t A lp in e .
p r o m isin g a d v a n c e d
undergrad
FORREST
b r o n z e , ” w r o t e Mr.
t e ve
o
n
I
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l
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tain.
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“ T h e co lo r in g lo o k e d like
t hi Winchell Column Lauds
a cold, d a r k t o n e w h i c h h
s e a m ark e r d y e , ” Mr. A tte b u r y
b e a u t y o f P r o c t o r ’s m a s t e r p i e c e . ’’
P e p rally, H ill H all
8-1 and 2-5 — S M U t ic k e t draw j
said. T h is t y p e o f d y e is u se d
Former Teaching Fellow
*W* May Dose But Never Go*e*
FAST SERVICE
- Radio Guild, T ex a s U n io n
In q u iry in to th e s itu a t i o n r e
in g, G r e g o r y Gym .
as a r e s c u e sig n a l by p e r s o n s
Vacuumed
inud
velled th a t the red p a in t was
lo s t at sea. It m a k e s a b rig h t
g :3 0 — S o u t h w e s t e r n P la c e m e n t !
M iss
Joan
W a lk er ,
fo rm er
Sidewall* Stea m
Don t Walk
g r e e n c o lo r w hich c a n e a s ily be
O f f ic e r s A s s o c i a t io n , C o m m o 7 — B e g i n n e r s ’ tap d a n c in g cla ss, c l e a n e d o f f a n d a p r o t e c t i v e c o a t te a c h i n g f e l l o w in E n glish , w a s
in g o -f lin s e e d oil w a—
s a p p lie d- t.. r e c e n tl y
T e x a s U n io n ,
m e n t io n e d
in
W a lter
c l e e wed
s p o t te d fr om th e air.
dore P e r r y H o tel.
N o o n e see m * to k n o w who
WHITE.
10 -12 and 3-5 — P ic t u r e b y Eliza- j 7 — A lp ha D e lta S ig m a b a n q u e t the st a tu e . N o t p r o d u c in g a “ cold, Win eh el ’n w e e k ly co lu m n .
CALL 7-6J33
wdth W ard C, M ay b orn Sr. dark t o n e ” b u t in stea d g iv i n g a
W a lk er,
d a u g h te r
of
is d o in g the m i s c h ie v o u s d eed s,
beth K e e f e r B o a tr ig h t , N e y Mu- j
“ Juan
$ 1.0 0
s p e a k in g , H o m e E c o n o m ic s T e a g lo s s to th e b ro n ze, th e lin s e e d oil >tars
W alker, te r m e r c it y edib u t c a m p u s g a r d e n e r s b e lie v e
seu m .
Mon.
*
House.
is ap plied regularly to th e m a s- ^or n f th e H e r a ld T r ib u n e , is d o g
th a t U n iv e r s i t y s t u d e n t s ars
1 2 : 1 0 ___ The R ev. L a w r e n c e B ash j
t hr u Tku r * .
g in g her f a m o u s f a t h e r ’s f o o t
re sp o n s ib le ra th er than o u t
will ad d ress U n iv e r s i t y A re Ki- 1 7 — F r e sh m a n F e llo w s h ip , Y M C A , ta n g s.
Fri . t hr u S u n . $ 1 . 2 3
7 :1 5 -— S w in g a nd T u r n , Main
T h e id eal a p p e a r a n c e o f b ro n ze sie; s.
S ta r t in g o n ly a y e a r ago
sid ers or A g g ie s.
w a n is C lub, T W FC B u ild in g.
“Grime
to S h in e ”
B a llr o o m , T e x a s U n io n .
art w ork is a rich g lo w w h ich g iv es a s a filer in N e w s w e e k '* library,
“ If th e w a te r is c o n t a m in a t e d I — L u n c h e o n fo r Mr. an d Mrs.
7
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0
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rule
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p
p
ed
to
a
seco
n
d
m uch m ore it is liable to kill
D avid E. L ilie n th a l, H o m e E co
Auto Cor W ash Co.
“THE A VEN G ER S”
rie s o f le s so n s, E n g i n e e r i n g ; tu ra l w o o d , sa ys C. C. R ichards, s t r in g m o v i e - t h e a t e r critic t h e r e , ”
RADK) CONTROLLED CARS
the p la in ts in the f o u n t a i n , ”
n o m ic s T ea H ou se.
2-3300
211 Lamar
John C arroll
B u il d in g 1 37 .
' i n s t r u c t o r in art.
W in c h e d *aid.
Mr. A t t e b u r y said.
I — L u n c h e o n fo r W ard C. MayA d d a M ara
“ In the p a st, th e fo u n t a in
born Sr. an d J r , H o m e E co- j
“ BO D Y H O L D ”
has
re q u ire d
c le a n in g
on ly
n o m ic s T e a H ouse.
W illa r d P a rk er
th ree o r f o u r tim es a y ea r. It
I — D a w s o n D u n c a n will discu ss
L o la A l b r i g h t
w as c le a n e d o u t o n ly a b o u t a
“ G o v e r n m e n ta l
and
P o litic a l
m o n th a g o, and w o r k e r s say
R e p o r t in g ,” J o u r n a lism B u ild
2**6789
it a lr e a d y n e e d s a n o th e r c l e a n
ing 2 1 2 .
In C o l o r
3 _ _ D e d ic a tio n o f St. S t e p h e n ’s
ing.
“SUMMER STOCK”
S ch o o l.
3 — A lb e r t G o ld ste in w ill dis
J a d y G arlan d
cu ss “ J e w is h C o m m u n ity Or
£eJcfic tJc
G en e Kelly
g a n iz a t io n , H illel F o u n d a tio n .
DRIVE IN T H E A T R E S
P HONE
4 — W o m e n ’s D e b a te W orkshop,
TW O SHOWS NIGHTLY
I____________
S /J & S /T V 7*1786
S p e e c h B u ild in g 2 0 4 .
Feature Starts at 7 p. m.
‘711 OCEAN DRIVE”
4 — C offeorum ,
M ain L o u n g e ,
E d m o n d O B r ie n
“Gunga Din”
T e x a s U n io n .
4 — U n i v e r s i t y L a d ie s ’ Club tea ,
J o a n n e Dru
vfjS'O’M
Cary Gr* nt
4
V icto r M cL aglen
PHONS
U n iv e r s i t y Club.
7-1964
4 — U n i v e r s i t y G y m n a s t i c s Club,
“ Rock Island Trail”
a p p a r a tu s ro om , G r e g o r y Gym.
F o r e s t T u c k e r — A d e le M ara
5 — D e a d lin e fo r n o m i n a tio n o f
O u t s ta n d i n g S t u d e n t s , C a c tu s
“Ticket to
O f f i c e , J o u r n a lism B u ild in g.
6 — In te r -F a ith su p p er w ith talk
T om ah aw k ”
by Dr, G. I. S a n c h e z , H illel
D an D a iley — A n n e B a xter
F o u n d a tio n .
<5 — A lp h a D elta S ig m a in itia
-.rspOlA^ “Treasure
tion. I n t e r n a t io n a l R o o m , T e x
SAO*1'
Island”
as U n io n .
TtCHWICOinn
7 — C z ech Club a n n iv e r s a r y pro
“Sleepy Time Gal”
FEATUR ES START;
g ra m , T e x a s U n io n 3 0 9 .
Judy Canova
7 „ 9 — R e h e a r sa l fo r “ F o r ty A c r e s
5 :1 5 — 7 :3 0 — 9:45
“ Mighty Joe
F o ll ie s ,'’ N e w m a n Club.
P HO N 6
Y oung”
7 — F o r e n s ic a , T e x a s U n io n 3 0 1 .
7*2900
Th
T'D iversity o f T e x a s F in e
val will g e t u n d e r w ay
a r W i t h th e D e p a r t m e n t o f
C l*
’
o d u ti o n o f “ The W inP l a m a a p ^ T(>rrene R a t t i g a n ’s
g lo w tsyy,
c e le b r a ted
*
b o y in n o c e n t. It is
c o u r t u n d e r an old
la w y e r d u g up th a t
V I I had w r itten . The
th e b oy is p ro v e d
th rille d a u d ie n c e s in
-
Professor's Wife
Opens Arf Exhibit Three Students
Get Scholarships New Delivery Cuts
For Texan Told
Red Paint and Bronze
Stir Austinite s Fury
— Double, Double
Toil and Trouble,
Fountain Bubble
OWL TAXI
E 2S 52E E I
HELD OVER!
TA’MJMA
Ben J o h n so n
In T e c h n i c o l o r
“Stromboli”
“TEA FOR T W O ’
Gordon
In g r i d
McRae
Doris Day
,R,S
B ergm an
“Amores de Una
V iuda”
George Jewell W in s
Harris Mem orial Prize
G e o r g e H. J e w e ll Jr. o f H o u s to n
h a s b e e n a w a r d e d t h e D avid H a r
ris M em oria l P r iz e f o r 1 9 5 0 , P a g e
f
K eeton,
T O N IG H T
L aw ,
u p in i/ia o te s
Room”
‘Happy Y ears”
d ea n
of
th e
has announced.
Dennis O 'K eefe
Marjorie Reynolds
‘Golden Glove
Story”
“ C aged ”
T h is
of
prize
is a w a r d e d t o a g r a d u a t e o f the
School o f Law who
Dean Stockwell
Darryl Hickman
School
holds a b a
c h e lo r ’s d e g r e e f r o m the U n iv e r
sity an d w h o h a s e a r n e d a t le a s t
o n e - h a l f o f h is e x p e n s e s w h ile at
James Dunne
Eleanor Parker
Agnes Moorehead
Color Carto on
^ o lo r Ca*io'-'n
t e n d i n g the U n i v e r s i t y .
Mr. J e w e ll a ls o r e c e i v e d
prize
6 4 0 0 BURNET ROAD
the
o u t s t a n d in g sen io r
la w s t u d e n t in 1 9 5 0 . He r e c e i v e d
h is
SUN., N O V. 5, 3:30 p.m.
for the
b a c h e lo r
of
law s
w ith
degree
in
A u gu st,
1950,
average
in t h e g r a d u a t i n g class.
H e is a m e m b e r o f
the
h ig h e s t
C h a n cello rs,
■Order o f th e C o if, P h i D e lta Phi,
H ogg A u ditorium
and h a s s e r v e d
on
the
staff
of
th e L a w R e v ie w .
Walter Coleman, flute
H«re’a A N ew Treat . • •
M ary Mylecraine, harp
Fish & Chips
P la y i n g th e M o zart C o n certo
Conveniently Located
1 7 0 6 Guadalu pe
Ticket* $1.20; 2.40, unreserved
#
SEAFOOD
Shrimp a apecialty
#
GOLDEN BROWN
FRIED CHICKEN
on sale
Wiiliam-Charies
Co-Op
Music Bldg. UT
Reed'*
CHESTERFIELB
WITH ANY OTHER CIGARETTE!
BE FO RE Y O U S M O K E T H E M
. . . y o u can tell Chesterfields will sm oke milder,
because tobaccos that smell milder smoke milder.
AFTER YO U SM OKE TH EM
. . .y o u have no unpleasant after-taste.
W H I L E Y O U S M O K E T H E M you get m ore pleasure than
any other cigarette can give you —that's why millions o f
smokers say: T H E Y S A T I S F Y .
PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN
SN CAMPUS
- -
■ M M M
'■ l l l l l H f
J
TV■'■■■MU
LEADING SELLER IN
' AMERICA’S COLLEGES
(-ae. 11fbi UU), jjoa.ri
it Mttu TobauUj Cst