T he D a!
C o m m u n ity
Fore#
\
F i r s t
VO LU M E 51
P rice Five C e n ts
By N E L L C H U R C H W E L L
/
Student
V o ic e
C o l l e g e D a l l y I n T h e S o u t h
AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1950
Chancellor to Become Part
O f Students Vocabulary
A fter
W ednesday,
N ovem ber
15, U n iv e r s ity s t u d e n t * a n d T e x
a n s alik e will be u s i n g t h e w ord
I hancellor
w ith i n c r e a s i n g f r e
quency.
T h a t ’s i n s t a l l a t i o n day
f o r J a m e s P, H a r t a s t h e U niv e r s i t y ’a c e n t r a l c o - o r d i n a t o r o f
its sc h o o ls, b r a n c h e s , a g e n c i e s an d
h o s p ita ls .
C reatio n of th e po st was m ade
n e c e s s a r y by t h e r a p i d e x p a n s i o n
of
e d u catio n al
and
research
p l a n t s . C . R e a d C r a n b e r r y , a s s is
t a n t t o t h e p r e s i d e n t , e x p la in e d
t h a t th e n e e d f o r a c h a n c e l l o r s h i p
e m erg ed fro m th e problem o f a
g ro w in g U n iv ersity fam ily.
“ A t f i r s t c a m e t h e M ain U n i
v e r s i t y , l a t e r th e a d d i t i o n o f th e
M e d ic a l
B ranch
at
G a lv e s t o n ,
t h e n T e x a s W e s t e r n a n d all th e
o th e r b ran ch es dow n to th e most
r e c e n t P o s t G r a d u a t e S ch oo l of
M e d ic in e in H o u s t o n a n d S a n A n
t o n i o , ” M r. C r a n b e r r y said.
“ Its no lo n g er a problem o f ju s t
t h e M a in U n i v e r s i t y , b u t r a t h e r
a n e e d t o c o - o r d i n a t e a n d help
so lv e t h e p r o b l e m s o f all th e
u n i t s , ” he said.
A s C h a n c e ll o r , Mr. H a r t w ill be
t h e to p a d m i n i s t r a t i v e o f f i c e r of
th e far-flu n g U n iv e rs ity w ith sa
T exan
s e t s o f m o r e t h a n $ 1 7 7 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 .
W it h in th is j u r i s d i c t i o n
is i n
c lu d e d the Main U n i v e r s i t y , 40
organized
research
bureaus, a
s t a t e - w i d e e x t e n s i o n d iv isio n , p u b
lic s e r v ic e a g e n c i e s , t h r e e needl
‘ a1 sc h o o ls a n d a C o lle g e o f N u n i
ing.
O t h e r b r a n c h e s in c lu d e s e v e r a l
a ffiliated
h o s p i ta l s ,
a
d en tal
school, a n d th e M cD o n a ld O b s e r-
Deadline Nears
For Spring Term
Pre-Registration
Six Pages T o d a y
No. 68
A m e rica n W a y .Is Subject
O f G reat Issues Tonight
v a t e r y a t F o r t D avis,
M i. H a r t , w h o g a v e up a s e a t
on t h e T e x a s S u p r e m e C o u r t t o !
a c c e p t t h e first c h a n c e l l o r s h i p o f
to e U n i v e r s i t y , will be p a i d $ 20 ,- Last D a y f o r
Bv A N N E C H A M B E R S
, An author, publisher a n d public administrator. Dean Ap*
OOO a n n u a l l y . H e will s e r v e a s I
Anteri can democracy and how the people relate to the pleby has had extensive experience with government acti
T
u
r
n
in
g
in
F
o
rm
s
liaison b e t w e e n t h e s t u d e n t s a n d I
va te will be the fourth Great Issues topic as presented by vities. His two books. “Big Democracy” and “Policy in Adth e R e g e n t s a n d will be c o - o r d i n a - j
Is W e d n e s d a y
t o r b e t w e e n th e U n i v e r s i t y a n d
L’ean *
Appleby Tuesday night in the Main Lounge ministration,'' reflect his knowledge of federal affairs.
th P u b li c , T o t h e B o ard o f R e -!
B o o k s t o r e s on
th e d r a g re of the Texas Union. The meeting will begin promptly at
He was assistant to the secretary of agriculture, and heg e n t s t h e C h a n c e l l o r will be c h i e f p 0 ! t e d a sa le o f a p p r o x i m a t e l y
‘
.
tween
1940 and 1941 he served as under-secretary of agriseD
of
pre-registratio n
a d v is o r a n d p r i n c i p a l a g e n t , a n d LOOP
Registrants
in
the
course
will
pick
up
the
p
rep
aratoryj
culture.
f
o
r
m
s
M
o
n
d
a
y
.
T
h
e
r
e
h
a
s
b
e
e
n
the h e a d s o f all u n i t s will r e p o r t
no c o u n t as to h o w m a n y h a v e
to him .
jthamp!et at the door of the lounge. Discussion groups wi ll
He has served the public as as si stant director of the corn
In
h is
in s tallatio n
sp e e c h b e e n t u r n e d in.
aUt
W e d n e s d a y a t IO o ’clock in G r e
g ory Gym be fo r e stu d en ts, f a c
ulty. a n d s ta ff, Mr. H a r t will d e a l
w ith his c o n c e p t i o n s o f t h e f u n c
ti o n s a n d d u t i e s o f t h e U n iv e r s ity
a n d th e p r o p e r r e l a t i o n s h i p b e
tw e e n iU c o m p o n e n t p a r t s .
H is a p p o i n t m e n t r e t u r n s him
to t h e c a m p u s w h e r e he w a s a n
h o n o r stu d e n t, a m e m b e r o f t h e
varsity fo o tb all sq u ad , Phi B eta
K appa, th e d e b a te squad, F ria rs,
a n d K a p p a S ig m a f r a t e r n i t y .
M r. H a r t h a s e n g a g e d in t h e
p r i v a t e p r a c t i c e o f law , w as a
f o r m e r T r a v is < o u n t y d i s tr i c t a t
torney,
f o i m e r sp e c ia l
d istrict
ju d g e , a n d f o r m e r T e x a s a ss is
ta n t a tto rn e y general.
D eadline
for
o b tain in g
and
t u r n i n g in p r e - r e g i s t r a t i o n f o r m s
is W e d n e s d a y a t 5 p .m .
Four
s t a t i o n s h a v e b e e n s e t u p on t h e
c a m p u s w h e r e s t u d e n t s m a y s ig n
l o y a l t y o a t h s a n d t u r n in c o m
p le t e d f o r m s . L o y a l t y o a t h s m u s t
be s i g n e d b e f o r e t h e f o r m s a r e
t u r n e d in, s i n c e t h e e n v e lo p e s a r e
s t a m p e d to sh o w t h a t o a t h s h a v e
b e e n sig n e d .
mittee on the
in! low The lecture as usual.
budget, me mb ers hi p on the contribution*
’♦’committee o f the United
Nations, and chairman of the
I International Wheat Council.
Dean Appleby was also
chief of the food missions to
Cireat Britain during World
Russian Motives to Provide
Controversy for Coffeorum
O pinions
rep resen tin g
tv a r II, and has b e e n sp ecia l as- M an t to th e S e c r e t a r y o f S t a t e
a n d th e L e n d - L e a s e A d m i n i s t r a
ti o n .
five
S p e a k i n g o f R u ssia n m e t h o d s .
Mr. T a y l o r w a s a l i e u t e n a n t
8l'h o o ls " { t h o u e h t * « • *>' » ' r e d Mr. T a y l o r s a i d : “ T h e y d o n ’t c a r e ! co lo n e l w ith th e a r m y field a r t i l a t t h e C o ffe o r u m on “ H o w C lose how
th e y
d estroy th e
U n i t e d le r y in E u r o p e d u r i n g W o r l d W a r
H e is v ic e - p r e s i d e n t o f th *
A r e W e to T o ta l W a r ? ” W e d n e s S t a t e s ’ w a y o f life. T h e y ’d j u s t l l .
He n o w hold s t h e r a n k o f
d a y a t 4 p .m . in th e M ain L o u n g e as soon n i b b l e us to d e a t h lik e a ■r e s e r v i s t co lo n el. H e is a f o r m e r A m e r i c a n P o litic a l S c ie n c e A ssoc ta ti on. B e f o r e 192® h e w a s a
T h e m a t e r i a l s , w hich co st IO of T e x a s U n io n .
d u ck , w ith a cold w a r, a s to u se s t a t e s e n a t o r f r o m K e rn s .
n e w s p a p e r p u b l i s h e r a n d e d it o r i a l
c e n t s , to c o v e r t h e co st o f m a i l
a
ll
-o
u
t
w
a
r
,
”
he
c
o
n
t
i
n
u
e
d
.
O t h e r s p e a k e r s on th* coffeO p p o s it e
v ie w p o in ts
on
th e
ing, in c l u d e a s e t o f i n s t r u c t i o n s q u e s t io n h a v e b e e n e x p r e s s e d by
If w a r c o m e s , Mr. T a y l o r s a y s , o r u m will be Dr. C. E. A y e r s , pro- w r i t e r in t h e M id w e s t.
J A M E S P. H A R T
a n d five c a r d s to be filled o u t.
A t p r e s e n t, D e a n A p p le b y is
tw o o f t h e
five s p e a k e r s , D r. a to m ic w a r f a r e will be u se d . H e f e s s o r o f e c o n o m i c s ; D r. D. L.
O
. ■n e f o f th e c a r d s is ana p p u c a j G eorge W,
H o ffm a n ,
a s s i s t a n t p o in t e d o u t t h a t it is no d i f f e r e n t M iller, p i o f e s s o r of p h ilo s o p h y ; d i r e c t i n g t h e so cia l s c i e n c e d iv i
li o n f o r a c o u r s e c a r d — y o u r a d professor
of
geography,
a n d D o m a n y o t h e r ty p e o f b o m b i n g a n d S t u a r t L o n g , n ew s c o m m o n - sion of S y r a c u s e U n iv e r s ity , th e
m i t t a n c e t i c k e t t o t h e r e m a i n d e r J a m e s FT T a y l o r , A u s tin b u s i n e s s e x c e p t in d e g r e e .
I M ax w ell G r a d u a t e S cho ol o f C iti
tator.
of t h e p r e - r e g i s t r a t i o n p ro ces s.
ze n sh ip a n d P u b lic A f f a i r s . I t is
man
and
com m ander
of
th e
P r e - r e g i s t r a t i o n a d v i s i n g will b e T h i r t y - s i x t h division of t h e T e x a s
; c o n s id e re d one o f th e o u t s t a n d done
W e d n e s d a y , D e c e m b e r 6, N a t i o n a l G u a r d .
; in g g r a d u a t e c e n t e r s in t h e c o u n
c d c la s s e s will b e d is m is s e d t h a t
tr y f o r p e o p le w a n t i n g to e n t e r
Dr.
H o ffm a n
b e lie v e s
th e
da y .
E ng in eering and p h arm acy
j g o v e r n m e n t se rv ic e . In c l u d e d in
U
n
i
t
e
d
S
t
a
t
e
s
is
fig
h
tin
g
a
w
a
r
m a j o r s will b e s e c tio n i z e d as w ell
; i t s curriculum a re u n d e rg r a d u a te
t h a t b e g a n in 1 93 9, a n d , e x c e p t
as a d v is e d D e c e m b e r 6.
c o u r s e s in c it iz e n s h ip .
f
o
r
b
r
i
e
f
A
r
m
i
s
ti
c
e
s
,
h
a
s
n
e
v
e
r
;
S t u d e n t s
who have
p re Bv C L A U D E V I L L A R R E A L
as
a c t s o f God,
s u c h a 1 inF o u r q u e s t i o n s m u s t be a s k e d
D ean A p p le b y will b e g u e s t a t
ceased.
A n d he i n t e r p r e t s R u s
“ T h e sin o f p u b li c o p in io n c l e m e n t
w e a t h e r , w h ic h
m i g h t in t a k i n g a p o litic a l poll, he said, r e g i s t e r e d w ill r e c e i v e n o ti c e s o f
a
conference of leading sta te
sia's
m
o
t
iv
e
s
n
o
t
a
s
an
a
t
t
e
m
p
t
t
o
J
S t u d e n t o r g a n i z a t i o n s m a y e x t h e D e an o f M e n ’s o ff ic e , B H a ll
p o lls h a s b e e n m o r e j o u r n a l i s t i c ' p r e v *n t
p eo p le fr o m
f i r s t , is t h e p e r s o n b e in g i n t e r - f e e s in J a n u a r y a n d a r e e x p e c t e d p r o p o g a t e t h e C o m m u n i s t d o c t r i n e ; press p e n t u p d e s i r e s t o m a n g l e
m u n i c ip a l a n d f e d e r a l o f f ic ia ls in
18, b e f o r e 5 p.m . N o v e m b e r 28 ,
t
P olls; a n d “ a c t s o f m a n , ” view ed e lig ib le to v o t e ?
I f n o t, to p a y t h e m by M o n d a y J a n u a r y b u t a s t h a t o f a n i m p e r i a l i s t i c !
t h a n t e c h n i c a l, ' J o e B e ld e n d i - 1
th e A g g ie s a n d bo o st t h e L o n g C h a r l e s D e lp h e n is , S ilv e r S p u r d o w n t o w n A u s ti n T u e s d a y m o r n
22 in th e B u r s a r ’s office. F a i l u r e
n,i \
8u ch a s b a ll o t- b o x s t u f f i n g o r he c a n n o t be c o u n t e d .
ing Fie will m e e t w ith m e m b e r a
r e c t o r o f th e T e x a s Poll, to ld o t h e r fin a g lin g s t h a t c o u ld c h a n g e
to p a y f e e s b y th is d a t e will c a n a g g r e s s o r o u t t o c o n q u e r t h e h o r n s by e n t e r i n g the “ B e a t th e co lo r c o m m i t t e e c h a , r m . n , a n - of t h e d e p a r t m e n t o f ( t o v e m m e n t
S e c o n d , i f t h e p e r s o n is elig ib le
w o rld w ith force.
A g g ie s ” s ig n c o n t e s t o r th e b o n b o u n c e d . Miss M a r g ie Bell, i n , , „ d a d m i n i s t r a t i o n
m e m b e r s a n d g u e s t s o f S ig m a D e l - ; a v o te .
will he v o t e ?
I f he sa y s he will cel a s t u d e n t ’s p r e - r e g i s t r a t i o n .
a t a lu n c h e o n
“ Th.-s is an i m p e r i a l i s t i c w a r , fire c o n t e s t .
D e a n H o l l a n d ’s o f f i c e , will be in ' i r e Q u e e n A n n e Room of th *
ta
Chi, p r o f e s s i o n a l j o u r n a l i s m
*^r* B e ld e n
p ointed
o u t t h a t n o t Vote, he, to o, m u s t be disB oth c o n t e s t s a r e s p o n s o re d a n c h a r g e o f r e g i s t r a t i o n s .
w ith R u ssia t h e a g g r e s s o r , if e v e r
f r a te r n ity , a t a d in n e r m eetin g
o p in io n polis do n o t p r e d i c t win- c o u n t e d .
U n io n .
t h e r e w a s o n e , ” Dr. H o ffm a n said. n u a lly b e f o r e th e A & M g a m e . T h o
J u d g i n g o f t h e sig ns wil b e
S u nd ay n ig h t a t La T ap atia.
j n e r s in an e le c tio n , h u t m e r e l y
T h ir d , h a s he d e c id e d h o w to
J o h n O liv e r N e ls o n is th e n e x t
j ‘‘C o m m u n i s m is u s e d as a c le v e r ! sign c o n t e s t is s p o n s o re d b y t h e f r o m 1 :3 0 to 5 p m . on N o v e m b e r !
N e w s p a p e r s h a v e p l a y e d u p re- r e c o r d t h e p e r c e n t a g e o f v o te s v o te ?
I f he h a s n o t d e c id e d , h e !
sch e d u le d s p e a k e r f o r t h e G r e a t
S
ilv
e
r
S
p
u
r
s
a
n
d
t
h
e
b
o
n
f
i
r
e
c
o
n
:
2
9
.
p
r
o
p
a
g
a
n
d
a
d
evice
to
c
lo
a
k
t
h
e
su its
o f o p in io n polls o n o u t c o m e t n a t e *ch c a n d i d a t e w ill re c e iv e ,
is a s k e d th e f o u r t h q u e s t i o n , h ow
s s u e sstuc do pu rs e . A n o t e d th e o l o g ia n
I r e a l is su e — w o rld c o n q u e s t . ”
test by t h e C o w b o y s .
G r o u p s p l a n n i n g to e n t e r th e Ianrt
o f e l e c t i o n s w hile s u b d u i n g t e c h - j on i f * b asis o f a s a m p l i n g of
is he l e a n i n g ?
a n.,,d ssnt u! T
d e n t w o r k e r , Mr. N elson
B
o
th
c
o
n
t
e
s
t
s
m
a
y
be
e
n
t
e
r
e
d
b
o
n
f
i
r
e
c
o
n
t
e
s
t
s
h
o
u
l
d
a
ls
o
n
o
t
i
f
y
’
O n th e o t h e r h a n d , Mr. T a y l o r
m eal
q u a li f i c a ti o n s t h a t p o llin g P u b lic o p in io n .
The
p o llster
considers
tw o
by
a
n
y
c
a
m
p
u
s
o
r
g
a
n
i
z
a
t
i
o
n
.
T
h
e
M
a
r
j
o
r
i
e
Bell.
T
h
e
c
u
p
w
hich
is
I
.
J
th
\ N o v e m b e r 27 o n E thic*
sees
t
h
e
w
o
r
l
d
s
t
r
u
g
g
l
e
as
a
b
a
t
t
l
e
a g en cies m u s t m ak e to ju s tify I
P o lls t h a t t r y to p r e d i c t th e ty p e s o f e l e c t i o n s ; th e s t a t i c ty p e ,
a n d the S t a t u s Quo.
sig
n
s
w
h
ic
h
will
be
j
u
d
g
e
d
o
n
aw arded
to
th e
o rg an izatio n
‘ B e f o r e g o i n g to w o rk f o r a n y of i d e o l o g ie s — d e m o c r a c y vs.
t h e i r fin din gs, M r . B e ld e n s a id .
(O u tco m e o f a n e le c tio n a r e n o t in w h ic h t h e r e is li tt le q u e s t io n
T o y o h ik e
R a g a w a,
Japanese
the basis o f o r g m a l i t y , c l e v e r n e s s , g a t h e r i n g t h e m o s t w ood f o r t h e
d eterm in e
w h e t h e r c o m m u n is m
Po llsters
m ust
ju stify
t h e i r P u b lic o p in i o n p o lls ,” he s a i d .
as to w h o will be
e le c te d a n d p u b l i c a t i o n ,
a u t h o r a- J th e o l o g ia n , will sp e a k
and
h
u
m
o
r
,
m
u
s
t
be
e
n
t
e
r
e
d
a
t
b o n f i r e , will be a w a r d e d a g a in
th e p u b l i s h e r has t h e t r u e i n t e r
fin d in g s b y a d m i t t i n g t h e i r po ssi^
naore !S in v o lv e d in th e t h e r e a r e fe w t r e n d s o r c h a n g e s
“ I t is a s t r u g g l e b e t w e e n tw o
on th e P h il o s o p h y o f E conom ic*
th is y ear.
;
hie m a r g i n o f e r r o r a n d o t h e r
i
* p o litic a l poi! t h a n an t h a t m i g h t in f lu e n c e v o t e r s ; a n d ests o f th e p e o p le a t h e a r t r a t h e r | w a y s o f l i f e , ” he say s.
on D e c e m b e r l l .
A s th is is t h e f # t h y e a r t h a t
factors
th at
c o u ld
affect
th e
oP>n ’0n P°d» Mr. B e ld e n com - th e d y n a m i c t y p e , in w hich t h e r e th a n p r o f t in a m o n e y - m a k i n g
W h a t h a p p e n s w ith in t h e n e x t ;
th e c u p h a s b e e n a w a r d e d to w ood
o p in i o n s r e g i s t e r e d .
T h e s e fac- m e a te d .
To
b eg in
w ith ,
a is c o n s i d e r a b l e u n c e r t a i n t y as to v e n t u r e . ” T h is w as th e r e c e n t a d JO d a y s w ill d e c id e how close w e
p liers, t h e o r g a n i z a t i o n t h a t h a s I
t o r s ha v e b e e n p la y e d d o w n , L f; p o litic a l
poi Ic a n n o t in c l u d e
all th e o u tc o m e ,
characterized
by vice M iss S a llie Hill, H o m e F lditor ; a r e t o t o t a l w a r , Mr. T a y l o r b e - !
w on th e c u p t h e m o s t t i m e s will
n o t o m i t t e d a l t o g e t h e r , b y n e w s - Pe o Pi*»
every one does not tren d s
and
changes
He p o in t e d o u t t h a t th e
in p u b lic o f t h e P r o g r e s s i v e F a r m e r , g a v e lie v e s.
v o te .
be a llo w e d to k e e p t h e tr o p h y , j
m e m b e r s a n d v is it o r s o f a j o u r A m e r i c a n
opinion.
p a p e r s , M r. B eld en said .
attitu d e
to w a rd
the
T h e c o n t e s t b e g in s
Monday,
n a lis m class in W r i t i n g f o r W o m s i t u a t i o n will influen ce t h e o u t
M r. B e ld e n s p o k e on “ C an P o lls
en,
N
o
v
e
m
b
e
r
27.
W
o
o
d
will
be
p lace d I
P r e d i c t E l e c t i o n s ? ” , w h ic h he a n
co m e o f a t t e m p t e d p e a c e n e g o t i a
Dr. R alph J. C a m p b e ll, a v o l u n on F r e s h m a n F i e l d in s e p a r a t e
M iss Hill is an a r d e n t s u p p o r t e r tio n s w ith i n t h a t tim e .
s w e r e d by s a y i n g , “ yes a n d n o . ”
t a r y ex ile f r o m G r e a t B r i t a i n ’s s o piles. E ach p a r t i c i p a t i n g g r o u p ’ A p p lic a t io n s
o f t h e e p i t h e t “ T h e r e a d e r is
S o m a n y f a c t o r s c o u ld a f f e c t
f an d w i u bp a
W . R. Wo o l r i c h , d e a n o f the , a c a d e m i c e x p e r i e n c e a n d d u r i n g E d i t o r . She a d d e d t h a t if sh e
d o e sn t k n o w th e a n s w e r , she
T h e s e f a c t o r s c a n be classified
th
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rd
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la
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N
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m
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27.
ly s u c c e s s f u l p r a c t ic e f o r t w o
C o lle g e o f E n g i n e e r i n g , w ill be | t h e la s t w a r w a s r e g i o n a l advisor,! w a y s t r i e s to fin d t h e a n s w e r a s
p laces
will
also
be
a Y
i, \
y e a r s in a n i n d u s tr i a l a r e a in m e n t i o n
aw arded.
A p p lic a t io n b la n k s ma y
be o bh o n o r e d T u e s d a y n i g h t as t h e i a m ’ *a ^e r r e g i o n a l r e p r e s e n t a t i v e
a m a g a z i n e is s u p p o s e d t o have
T
r
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C
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, ^ t a m e d f r om Dean H o l l a n d ’s of j f o r th e g o v e r n m e n t ’s e n g i n e e r i n g a s t o r e h o u se o f i n f o r m a t i o n . ”
s t a t e ’s “ e n g i n e e r of t h e y e a r .
T
e
n
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j
u
d
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s
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e
c a u se o f his o b je c t io n s to “ p o litiits
trad itio n al
t h i r t y - '- e v e n t h
^ “ flee, Dan Go ul d, c h a i r m a n
o f t he
n
•
a.
,
‘ s c ie n c e
and
m anagem ent
w ar
S w itch in g to th e s u b je c t o f
cal m e d i c i n e . ”
H e c am e to t h e c o n ^e8t
be M iss D o r o t h y C e - j c o u ’n c jj
P ro m in e n t en g in ee rs fro m a l l ; t ra in in g p ro g ram .
a n n u a l W a l n u t C re e k p o ss u m
s scholarship committee,
w
o
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e
n
in
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,
h u n t S a tu rx lay.
U n ite d S t a t e s in A p ril, 1 9 4 9 , a n d b a u e r ’ d e a a of w 0 ™e »U J a c k H o - j said
o v e r t h e s t a t e will be p r e s e n t a t 1
In 1 9 18 -49 h e to o k a le a v e o f Miss H ill q u o t e d t h e w e ll- k n o w n
has j u s t c o m p l e t e d an i n t e r n s h i p ’a n d » ^ e an of m e n ; a n d B ro ck
H erm an K ruger, p resid en t of
a d in n e r and cerem o n y fo r D ean
p pPlinccautioo nn m
m uu ss tt ne
be ac
a d v e r t i s i n g s lo g a n o f the L a d ie s
a t St. J o s e p h ’s H o s p ita l in S a n I P e a r c e ’ T e x a s Unk>" d ir e c to r .
j Flach -aB
th e W a l n u t
Creek
Possum
W o o lr ic h in t h e b a ll r o o m o f th e a b s e n c e fr o m th e U n i v e r s i t y to
J
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S t e p h e n FN A u s t i n Fiotel a t 7 p.m. b e c o m e t h e firs t p r i n c ip a l s c i e n
te l evi s i on t h e m e s^a t ®m « nt whi ch
the
a p p lican t
I e s t i m a t e th e p o w e r o f a w o m a n . ”
T w o stu d e n ts an d tw o facu lty
f
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lic
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w
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p
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.
I t is t h e firs t r e c o g n i t i o n d i n t i s t a n d a t t a c h e to th e U S E m j S h e s a i d t h a t b e t w e e n 20 a n d
t h i n k s m a y be h e l p f u l to t h e
m e m b e r s w ill p a r t i c i p a t e in a f o
All
r e s i d e n t s o f th e W a l n u t
He h as e x p l a i n e d t h a t p r a c t i c e f o r t h e i r si&n n e r h eld b y t h e T r a v i s C h a p t e r , b assy in L o n d o n .
L a t e r he w as 25 y e a r s a g o a w o m a n w o u ld fin d
______________ c o m m i t t e e
ofaw ard. O th er
qua
r u m s p o n s o r e d b v th e R e lig io u s
.u ‘v.
C reek area and th e c o u n ty are
u n d e r th e B r i t i s h N a tio n a l H e a l t h :
E m p h a s i s c o m m i t t e e in th e Ii nn . T e x a s S o c ie t y o f P r o f e s s i o n a l E n - m a d e c h i e f sc ie n tific officer o f th e j a b o u t o n e c o lu m n o f p r a c t i c a l
nti! a t i on s a r e t h a t ea c h a p p l i c a n t
in
v
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te
d
to
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d
.
S erv ice w a s so o b j e c t i o n a b l e he
g i n e e r s , s i n c e t h e c u s t o m w a s in e m b a s s y .
mu s t be in need of financial a s
h in t s a b o u t c o o k in g a n d s e w in g
t e r n a t i o n a l Room o f th e U n io n a t
K r u g e r p r o m is e d th e r e w o u ld
f e lt c o m p e l le d “ to b r e a k all m y I
t e r r u p t e d by W o r l d W a r II.
s i st a n c e , h a v e a d e s i r e f or a col
| in a m a g a z i n e , b u t t h a t to d a y
4 o ’clock T u e s d a y .
The group
b e p l e n t y o f c o f f e e a n d said
ties . . . a n d s t a r t a f r e s h , f r o m
lege e d u c a t i o n , a n d h ave s chol as
T.
C.
Forrest
of
D a lla s , R a i n c o a t . Will Be in S ty l e T o d a y 5 0 p e r c e n t o f all f a r m m a g a z i n e s
will d is c u ss “ C an Y ou A ffo rd N o t
the g r o u p cou ld c h a se t h e p o s
the b o t t o m , in a n ew country.”
The
A
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tic a bi l i t y a n d c h a r a c t e r .
d
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t
to C h e a t ? ”
c o n ta in s read in g f o r women.
sum
or g a t h e r f o r f i r e s i d e
He will te ll t h e R o t a r y C lu b
A p p l i c a t i o n s sh o u ld be m ailed
S p e a k e r s will b e R o n n ie D u g of t h e N a t i o n a l S o c ie t y o f P r o f e s p r e d i c t e d c l o u d y w e a t h e r w ith
Miss Hill, a n a ti v e T e x a n , m ac h a ts .
of his e x p e r i e n c e s in h a n d li n g 20
to
t h e C h a ir m a n o f S ch o la r sh ip
g e r , m o d e r a t o r ; W . R. W o o lr ic h , s io n a l E n g i n e e r s ; M a r v i n N ic h o ls i n t e r m i t t e n t r a i n s . I he t e m p e r - ; j o r e d
in h o m e e c o n o m i c s an d
T h e h u n t is a s t a n d i n g t r a p a t i e n t s a n h o u r a n d will d e s c r i b e
d e a n o f t h e c o lle g e o f e n g i n e e r o f F o r t W o r t h , p r e s i d e n t - e l e c t o f a f u r e w dl r a n g e f r o m 60 t o 72 j m i n o r e d in j o u r n a l i s m a t G e o r g e
T h e S t u d e n t Book E x c h a n g e I n f o r m a t i o n , Box 2 1 1 4 , U n iv e r
d
itio
n
a
m
o
n
g
W
a
l
n
u
t
C
r
e
e
k
hi* e n c o u n t e r s w ith “ b afflin g b u sal ! h as a f e w books a n d s ome s ^ - ’ S t a t i o n , A u st i n, T e x a s, o r
in g ; D r. C. FU A y r e s , p r o f e s s o r o f th e T e x a s S o c ie ty , a n d E. c , | a g r e e s .
: P e a b o d y C o lle g e in N a s h v ille .
re s id e n ts .
reau cratic red ta p e .”
e c o n o m i c s ; a n d s t u d e n t B ob C o n ; N o b le , p r o m i n e n t H o u s t o n en g im o n e y on h a n d w h ic h b e lo n g to *a ^ en to B. H all 15.
I
n
e
e
r
,
will
be
a
m
o
n
g
t
h
e
h
o
n
o
r
n o r.
s tu d en ts.
T hey will be r e t u r n e d
S c h o l a r s h i p a p p o i n t m e n t s will
T h e f o r u m is b e i n g h e ld as p a r t £ u e s , s T u e s d a y , T o m m y R o d m a n , c h a ir- be m a d e in M ay, u p o n t h e re co in o f t h e c o m m i t t e e ’s p la n s to h a v e
M r. F o r r e s t will p r e s e n t a cerrrmn o f th e Rook E x c h a n g e com- m e n d a t i o n s o f a c o m m it te e o f
th e r e l i g i o u s e m p h a s is p e r i o d ex- ti fic a te o f r e c o g n i t i o n to D e a n
j m i tt e n , a n n o u n c e d .
a w a r d c o m p ose d o f t h e p r e s i d e n t
te n d o v e r t h e n i n e m o n t h s o f : W o o lr ic h a n d c ite his c o n t r i ’o u|
B ooks or cas h c a n h e p i c k e d u p ar*d t he s e c r e t a r y - t i e a s u r e r of th e
s c h o o l i n s te a d o f t h e o r i g i n a l t w o , t i o n s to e n g i n e e r i n g .
T u e s d a y f r o m IO t o I o ’clock in I n t e r - F r a t e r n i t y
C o u n c il,
th r e e
said P a u l M. D e a ts , a s s i s t a n t d i
T e x a s U n io n 208. R o d m a n u r g e s m e m b e r s a p p o in t e d by t h e p resiJ . N eils T h o m p s o n , d i r e c t o r of
r e c to r of W esley F o u n d a tio n .
thftt s t u d e n t * w ho c o m e by f o r de nt o f th e c o u n cil, a n d th e D ean
t h e U n i v e r s i t y ’s Off C a m p u s Ree i t h e r m o n e y o r b o o k s biflng
th e o f M en.
A f te r th e m e e tin g R ay P eeler, search C e n te r and p re s id e n t of
one o f th e s tu d e n t ch a irm e n o f ' t h e
T rav is C h ap ter
and
viceyellow r e c e i p t g iv e n t h e m a t t h e
t h e c o m m i t t e e , will d is c u s s p o s s i p r e s i d e n t - e l e c t
t im e t h e b o o k s w e r e l e f t a t th e
of
t h e
I exas
b il it ie s o f h a v i n g s p e a k e r s ta l k in S o c ie t y , wfill d e l i v e r t h e a d d r e s s
Exchange,
living u n it s a n d s t u d e n t o r g a n i z a o f w e lc o m e . M a s t e r o f c e r e m o n i e s
j
M e m b e rs o f th e B ook E x c h a n g e
tio n s .
I C o m m it te e
are
C la u d e
G o ld
will be T r i g g T w iche ll.
By M A R Y A N N B E A U M I E R
T h e f o r u m is a f o l l o w - u p o f th e
s
m
ith
,
Bob
J
ol
ly,
Bill
S
a
n
d
s,
John I
m g to see w o m en like this. I n a m e d w as t h a t th e R u s s i a n s t a n D e a n W o o l r i c h , a n a t i v e o f Minr e c e n t speech o f th e sam e title
The C o m m u n i s t s in R ussia gav e th i n k t h a t th i s is n o t r e a l e q u a l- ! b a r d h a s b e e n so low t h a t b o th m o re p o p u l a t i o n l a t h e r t h a n f o r Ellis,
and
B ob bie
P riest,
coeral
P o in t,
W is„
taught
at
By R U S S K E R S T E N
eth ic a l
reasons.
B eca u se
t h e y j c h a i r m a n w o r k i n g -tm d i s o r g a n i z a
b> M rs. G r a c e S lo a n
O v e r t o n D e p a u w U n i v e r s i t v a n d th e U n i w o m e n e q u a l r i g h t s b e c a u s e th e y , t y r
; p a r t n e r s in a fa m i l y hav e t o w o rk
w
a
n
te
d
to
d
is
c
ip
lin
e
this.
th
e
y
m ade
d u r i n g t h e a c t i v it ie s o f 1
tio
n
.
Dr. l a b o r s k y q u o t e d L e n i n a.* to b u y s o m e t h i n g e x t r a ,
v e r s i t y o f T e n n e s s e e b e f o r e c o m w a n te d to a p p e a l to all u n d e r “ F o c u s on F a i t h . ”
m a d e d iv o r c e m o r e d if fic u lt.”
O v e r h e a r d in R e s e rv e R ead ing
in g t o A u s t i n , w h e r e h e has b e e n j p r i v il e g e d , H o n a n ! T a b o r s k y , as- s a y i n g , “ It is the d u t y t o pull
By 1939, 43 p e r c e n t o f all
Room . , .
;
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the
U n i v e r s i t y ’s
w o m e n o u t o f d o m e s ti c s l a v e r y , to { m a n u a l w o r k e r s w e r e w o m e n , he
Dr. Riker Improving
N o v e m b e r 16 D e a d lin e
to ld t h e C a m p u s L e a g u e o f W o- ii o e r a t e h e r f r o m s u b m is s io n — s t a t e d .
O n e co-ed w h i s p e r in g to a n o t h e r
in te g ra tin g u n d e r th e C o m m u n ist
e n g i n e e r i n g c o lle g e s i n c e 1 9 3 6 .
I men v o ters M onday.
a
b
o
u t still a n o t h e r : “ T h a t girl h as
After
Heart
Attack
| d e g r a d i n g a n d s t u l t i f y i n g — t o th e I
“ W h e n a w o m a n has t o w o r k i
D r * T a b o r s k y b elieves,
For ‘Ten M o st’ Pics
D ean
W o o lr ic h h a s
a
lo n g
th e In vlie st hair. IM j u s t love to
t
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S
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Presst?fi
t
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T h e 25 fin a lists in t h e “ T e n r e c o r d o f i n d u s t r i a l a s w ell as
Dr. T. W . R ik e r, p r o f e s s o r
o f s n a t c h it r i g h t o f f h e r h e a d . ”
t u s o f W o m e n B e h in d th e Iron o f th e k i t c h e n a n d n u r s e r y , ”
o l h e r c h i l d r e n , ” he said. “ T h e y ’ '* a te ’8 f | r s D D uce a child is in*
M o st B e a u t i f u l G ir l s o f T h e U n i I
m odern E uropean
h is to r y ,
is
B rrrr.
Curtain.”
This
w
a
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t h e C o m m u n is t s .
sor ed b y T h e t a S ig m a P h i, m u s t |
s t u d e n t B e tte r
w e l l m t o t h e sy , t e m o i , „ d o c t r i n a . ; i ' , ; / nt^ “ ^
D r ‘ n b * * h e a r t a t t a c k o f N o v e m b e r 5, h i .
lish es c o m p l e t e e q u a l i t y o f m en
i n s t r u c t o r Dick Payn«* dro p p ed
The R u ssian s con sid er
m a r .ion.
t u r n t h e i r p i c t u r e s in t o J o a n After Skull Fracture
‘r e n t s lose i n f l u e n c e a t
‘
d o c to r r e p o r t e d M o n d a y .
a
n
d
w
o
m
e
n
,
D
r.
T
a
b
o
r
s
k
y
p
o
in
t
e
d
* l ig h t e d m a tc h nea r a s t u d e n t in
t lage, n o n - m a r r i a g e ,
love, au d t h i s e a r l y a g e w h en t h e c h i l d r e n
G r o s s m a n a t IOO W e s t T w e n t y C o m m u n is m
im p ro v e d th e
g e n - i ) r . R i k e r ’s c o n d it io n is
still
o n e o f hit G o v e r n m m e n t 6 1 0 ciaas i x th S t r e e t b y T h u r s d a y .
S h e r r y R o y s t e r , S M U s t u d e n t j o u t, b u t in p r a c t i c e t h i s e q u a l i t y f r e e - l o v e as a p a r t o f l i b e r t y , Dr. e r e p r e a c h e d t o a b o u t S t a l i n a n d ; #ra! ■ f a n t a l o f l i te r a c y , he re- s e r io u s , a n d he is u n a b le to
is
li
m
ite
d
.
888 sea in B Hall.
T a b o r s k y said.
N a m e , a d d r e s s , a n d t e l e p h o n e w ho w as i n j u r e d on h e r w a y back
th e C o m m u n i s t d o c t r i n e in th e
‘n a n s w e r to a q u e s tio n ,
v is it o r s , th e d o c to r s a id .
W o m e n w e r e a ll o w e d to r e p l a c e
“ Y ou b e t t e r put th a t o u t , ” he
n u m b e r o f t h e c o n t e s t a n t s h o u l d , to D a lla s a f t e r th e T e x a s - S M L
T h e r e a re t r o u p s o f c h il d r e n n u r s e r i e s . ”
“ T o d a y n e a r l y all th e p eo p le
M alcolm R ik e r, his s o n , a r
b e w r i t t e n o n th e e n v e lo p e .
told the n e a r t e s t so p h , then ad d ed
g a m e , is im p r o v i n g , h e r s p e c ia l j u u n
*ri *o m e fields. H e said r o a m i n g the s t r e e t s w ith n o one
Dr. l a b o r s k y w a s in R ussia have a basic k n o w le d g e b u t th e riv e d
from
C alifornia
F’r i d a y
as an a f t e r t h o u g h t , “ M a y b e it’s
n ur se at B r a c k e n r i d g e H o s p it a l t h a t *n t h e m 0 8 t i m p o r t a n t posi- to s u p p o r t th e m , he said. T h e s e s e v e r a l ti m e s a n d s a i d o f S t a l i n , i e d u c a t i o n t h e a v e r a g e R u s s ia n a f t e r n o o n to see hts f a t h e r .
F r e e D a n c e Clash ee C a n c e l e d
reported M o n d a y .
! D ons, t h e r e a r e fe w w o m e n t o be c h i l d r e n a r e s u p p o r t e d
a g o o d c h a n c e to b u r n this p la c e
by
the “ Ag I m e t S t a l i n I co u ld s e e t h a t I g e t s is t h a t w h ich p le a s e s C om T h e f r e e d a n c e classes usual l y
down, thou gh.”
R i i h w o r t h to S p e a k o n U N
H e r s k u l l w a s f r a c t u r e d w h e n *o u n d *
c a n o n Iy t h i n k o f o n e , ” s t a t e o r n o t a t all.
this w a s a m a n t h a t d o e s n ’t t r e a t ! m u n i s m . ”
held
Tuesday
and
W e d n e s d a y she fell b e t w e e n tw o c o a c h e s of i18 s t a t e d . “ A n n a P a l k a , f o r e i g n
T h o m a s D. R i s h w o r t h , d i r e c t o r
it
W h a t a c t u a l l y b r o u g h t w o m e n w o m a n a - a n e q u a l .”
n i g h t s in T e x a s U n i o n h a v e be e n the train t h a t u n c o u p l e d .
Dr. T a b o r s k y c o n c lu d e d * b a t | o f R a d io H o u s e , w ill s p e a k on
m in ister o f R o m a n ia .”
in t o i n d u s t r y w as n e c e s s ity , Dr.
A t la s t w e ’v e d is c o v e re d a m a n
“
I
c
o
u
ld
s
e
e
in
R
u
ssia
a
n
i
n
c a n c e l e d th i s w eek d u e t o th e f e
the R u s s i a n s hav e f o r m a l l y im- * U n ite d N a t i o n s ’ a c c o m p lis h m e n t s w ho s a w one o f th o s e h u g e 1.000B e c a u s e o f t h e n a t u r e o f th e
“ Q u ite a f e w w o m e n w o rk in T a b o r s k y
c o n tin u ed .
In
1930 t e r e s t i n g
d ev elo p m en t— the
re
d e c o r a t i o n o f th e I n t e r n a t i o n a l J i n j u r i e s , i t is d ifficu lt t o s a y w h e n coal m i n e s , a s p o l i c e m e n , a n d in
p
ro
v e d th e s i t u a t i o n of e q u a l i t y . ; a t a n i n f o r m a l d i n n e r of Pi L am b- g a ll o n - c a p a c i ty g a s o lin e w agon*
t h e r e w a s an im m e n s e s h o r t a g e t u r n o f som e o r d e r l y m a r i t a l r e
b u t h a v e f a r to go a n d will n e v e r d a T h e t a , n a t i o n a l h o n o r a n d pro s ta lled .
_
‘
^“
F o r ma n an- J Miss R o y s t e r will be r e l e a s e d , th e s u b o r d i n a t e p r o f e s s i o n s . B u t in o f m a n p o w e r .
la t io n s , ” Dr. T a b o r s k y c o n t i n u e d . reach, u n d e r t h a t s y s te m , w h at f e s s i o n a l a s s o c ia ti o n o f w o m e n in
my o p i n i on , ” he sa.d, “ it d e g i a d
nurse said.
nu/
It W4e, y o u g u e s s e d it, e a t e l
A n o th e r reaso n D r. T a h o rik y “ T h u
J
wa* bacao ** th ay needed we know a* real equality.”
education, fPL
Thursday
a t 7 p.
g a s.
T h e pla
mr
w
t'8 “ 1' * 5 t , U , W,»Buii iiner
106, W a g e n e r H a ll 1 19 , F.n„in e e r i n g B u il d in g 167, a n d M ain
B u il d in g r o t u n d a , g r o u n d floor.
Papers Fail to Cover Polls
Accurately, Says Director
B e a t A g g ie s
O pen
C o n te s t
to U T S tu d e n ts
Miss Hill Speaks
lo Women Writers
Englishman to Tell
IFC Scholarship
'Evils' of Socialism
Applications Open
D e a n W o o lr ic h N a m e d
E n g in e e r o f t h e Y e a r
Possum Shooters
To Rally Saturday
For Annual Hunt
Cheating Topic
Of Religious Meet
Money and Books
Refunded Today
Toborsky Tells Campus League
Russian Equality of Sexes
Below Am erican Standards
cred
rn. \
Tuesday Nove-'-b'f' M 1950 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 2
UT Can Cinch Tie
ByStopping Bartosh
'Mural Football
Grove, Phi Gams
Advance to Finals
By
? r - in
B R IC E
ROCHE
In tnt fun r d
£ (i-oee I <*8tor
(*iik (J rove and Phi Gamma
U n iv e rs ity
C h ristian
roared
Delta will meet fen the intra m u ra l back as Roger Tolar passed to
onship W ednesday, Bob T a n n e r fo r a touchdown. B u t
teams in Class A P h i G am m a tallie d five more tim es
he se
to take an easy victo ry,
R IM I Kappa Sterna and Oak G rove
B
»uneed Mend*
ight
Ja m e s
B ryso n
pushed
C liff
en
gain tile finals in C ourts o ff to a good s ta rt in its
irn I pui yo ff *
in t r a
game w ith K a p p a Sig m a by passwatched O ak
mg to B illy Goad fo r the first
Rain-soaked fs
Grove boun e Fem Club. 2(1-0, and score o f the gam e.
P m Gam m a D elta crush U n ivvere r
B u t thai was a il f o r C C . The
K a p p a Sig s w ith
passer
Pat
sity C h ristia n , 39-7, in Classi A
B e a ird leading the w a y — roared
I ah.
In Class B they saw K ap p a S ig nach fo r 46 points, B r a ir d threw
ma inundate C liff Courts, 46-fi, five scoring tosses, R ich a rd W o lff
and O ak G ro ve breeze past W e s t took tbs first one- .th e one that
m inster,
-1 .
p u t th * Kappa Sigs back in the
O ak G rove had surprising ly L i gamin
th' tro uble sn bouncing Pent C lub,
W ith only a few in nut es to
but tile S q u irre ls " ere scored on play, O ak G rove claim ed a 14-13
U t the firs t tim e this season. As .tad ovei W e stm in ster, but the
usual, it w as Cuss H *ne;Cs a c
M ica D ivision champs hit fo r two
c u ra te passing that won fo r the
q u ic k scores to sew up their triGrove.
H r noir's fa v o rite target. K e ith
M a x S m ith led O a k G r o v e s
W e b s te r, caught two touchdown
show w ith th re e to u c h d o w n heaves
a e ria ls— one a 35-yard e ffo rt—
so his c re d it. R ic h a r d Gonzales
am i tw o extra tosses.
p ro v id e d th e fir e w o r k s th a t k ept
Charles G orin heaved to M a r
vin G ustavson fo r Pent C lub 's W e s tm in s te r in th e gam e.
So ccci
m ade
its
a p p e a ra n c e
on ly touchdow n.
M
o
n
d
a
y
.
S
ig
m
a
A
lp
h
a
E
p s ilo n (ic
Ja m e s B a rn es threw six scorin g pusses as P h i Gam m a D e lta teated T au D elta P h i,
-0, and
’Beat
U n iv e rs ity
C h ristian . H it P h i D elta Theta edged Sigm a P h i
i psilon, I-0.
•first was to Thom as Thompson.
P ro te c t*
ag ain st
Bierman Resigns
As Minnesota Coach
M I N N E A P O L I S , N ov.
j
L ig h t
p ound *,
Ma ie O’ h eat s f a n * *
viny'- p la s tic — w ill ro t
E la s t i c
co ver
b o tto m
sri c ly
car.
TRU-VUE
w e ig h t.
5 ’*
e a s ily w h is k e d
man M onday asked to be re lieved
of his football coach duties at the
U n iv e rs ity
of
M innesota,
thus
ending an 18-year ca re er th a t in
eluded the b rig h te s t era o f G o
pher g r id iro n h is to ry .
H e w ill
sta y u n t il the end o f th e y e a r ,
P L A S T IC S
Campti* tie
N Y.
I a,
N Y
Nov
B r a n c h R ic k e y .
T h e t a lk s — w h ic h
p ro b a b ly
w ill
last
R ic k e y said
tw o
m ore
P ir a t e s w il l keep M e y e r fo r the
re m a in in g y e a r of his c o n tr a c t oi
han d g e n ia l B i l l y $4O,000 to te a r
up his p act.
4
4
f H
ffft*
♦ f& T
'
SO
" A im e r
G O L F S IN G L E S
S e e d I (ta
fo r «♦ onnth
and e ig h th 9 uh*M a y he
played T u e sd ay a- i W ed n esd ay
S co res
must he in bv ‘ :M a m. day follow -ny
;k .«: day of ploy.
SO C C ER
S o'clock
Reluctant D ragons vs Thfirm s Co-Op.
Little C am pus Dorm vs. L s O n A m e ric an .
7 o'clock
Y -D »rn i vs. T L O K
na J* tailored to w- ,r
own ind r. I dual meas .re of y o u r own Belection of
fab ric by S . V . No-wood and Son custom tailors
I*
conform # to y o u r own personal p hysique.
It is no t
m ade to ft' an a ve ra g e m an— it is made to fit Y O U ,
A w e a lth of fa e rie * arri a ty le s from which to choose,
ta .ow aa
South Central
‘leva-
vs.
Albs
*"
o.
8 o’clock
Biometrist Swede* vs. No-Names.
A ra b stu d e n ts va. Te.aa Club,
$5950
A U S T IN
Topcoats, Form als
*“*"■
Women s Intramural
Calendar
T U ESD A Y
TOUCH FO O T BA LL
4 o'clock
Field I— W ic* v" KK D [
5 e’c !o< k
* + jm S lA a A -Af 'rh 4
S. V. Norwood
Cr Son
2548 G u a d a lu p e
V-
NOV.
-
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DOD.
fifth rotund of tennis
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*
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Lipp m an , A A M
3 77 3.9
L E A D IN G P U N T R E T U R N E R S
95
B a rto sh . T C U
63
6.7
het yard# a v *
360
P a rk s , A rk a n s a s
Lo ry. A A M
*
198 2 4 I
L E A D IN G P A S S E R S
D illo n , T can* _____
ll
247 22.4
no.
#
166 2 0 .*
a t t compt, int td yard * <'ur?i#. {ta y lo r .................
16
293 I * . J
84
7
9
Renner#, S M U
144
1126 Cole, A rk a n s a * ____
8 .2
__ IO
1*1 I * . I
U h ,Si. B a y lo r
I 4 7 7!
5»4# P r y o r . A rk a n x a s
47
6 6
____
7
J I 3 16.!
88
727 R ich ard# , S M U
Tompkins, 7 ex*#
7
4 4 18
16
S J I 13. 2
66.1 P ro c to r , R ice
__ 82
G I*# *, R ic e
3
5ft 14
*
96 11.9
63 I M o tt, B a y lo r
K oehart, A ' k. _
I 23
603
4I
5 6
79
O FFEN SE LEA D ERS
B a rto sh , T C I
■
t
play# ru#h pa*# to ta l a v *
6
428
4 4 22
j R o te, S M U
ft
15! 1104
0 11 2 4 7 4
33 2
42
3 ?»6 S m ith . A A M
M ardi mal, ^ A M
Benner#. * M U
155 - IO * 1125 u * j ; 6.5
L E A D IN G P A S S R E C E I V E R S
147
5*9
423 1012 6 #
cau g h t td'# yds R o le . S M U
174
377
603
9*0 5 I
3 4 5* B a rto s h . T C O
___
29
R
inile
icy , B a y lo r .....
4 381 I*b ell, B a y lo r
16*
16 948
06* 6.1
„ _______ I t
W h ite , S M U
L E A D IN G S C O R E R S
______ 23
I
362
C ham pion, S M U —
Hosston, R il e
— WWWW,_______ ! 7 ft 3 51
td pat. tp
S
... . .
14
0
ti
_____
IS
299 S m ith , A A M
lf inhouse, A A M
IS
ll
« 66
4 260 R o te, S M I
P ro c te r, T e x **
„
3 26* T o w n send . Taxa#
... -.... i n 0 80
n
18
Jo u r n e y , Arkanaa# *—
2 2*6 P a rk e r,
B a y lo r
....
9
ft 5 4
..... ___ J 4
; George. T C U
14
......
6
0 36
I
206 J .ar y. A A M
S to lh a n d *k r. T ex as
____
ft
33
33
Hooper,
A
A
M
.
2
202
I
I
’ H aw n , S M U
D a r n e r , {tire
__
6
ft 3ft
L E A D IN G P U N T E R S
P u n ta Y a rd * A v * . H ilih ou # e. A A M
..
5
ft 30
5
ft 8ft
4 7 1 9 3 1 4 1.1 H o r t o n , Rice
Isbell. B a y lo r
AAM
5 0 30
43
17 I 9 4 I.0 T id w e ll
S ch a u fe le A rk# o«#»
■
L o a B o u d r e a u , deposed m a n a
g e r o f th e C le v e la n d In d ia n s , is
g o in g to be g ive n his u n c o n d i
tio n a l release-— at bis o w n re q u e s t.
P r e s id e n t E l l i s R y a n m ade his
a n n o u n c e m e n t M o n d a y n ig h t
It
m eans, he sa id , th a t B o u d re a ti
w ill be a fr e e a g e n t “ In a litt le
o v e r a w e e k fro m n o w .”
T h e I d ia n s m a y U s e an o p p o r
t u n ity to m ak e a b e n e fic ia l trad*
f o r B o u d re a u in the e v e n t th a t a
n ew m a n a g e r ia l post fa ils to mate r ia liz t
le i. 6-3733
600 W S ib S t
Ladies’ Suits and Coats.
I ti,
S W C Statistics
and w h e th e r B ie r m a n w o u ld re- o *p .°
m ain ar M in n e s o ta in som e o th e r RL#
c a p a c ity .
A
fo o tb a ll co ach be Vm i ■
has
been
te c e iv in g
$ 13 ,50 0 f>m».
•
• iKr cif
WORKS
and
„ ,W , r n
W O K
Texas
O
p
International Harvester
the end o f th e y e a r ”
a AV
lie ad d ed th a t the poor
I', ad
in g
of
th is
y e a r ’s
team
n o th in g to do w ith his deck
an d th a t he had
off<. s to oi
jo b s u n d e r co sider a*.on.
S p e c u la tio n s ta rte d im m e d i
ly c o n c e r n in g a p ossib le su cce sso r
R A D IA T O R
Also Slacks, Sport Coats,
U'CiO'T
r lit- , I
Sat u rd sy :
a game this y e a r, losing six and of the w a r y e a r of 1943, a Texas this open date business,
p layin g a 7-7 tie w ith M ich ig an , team has ne ve r gone through C o n - ,
Coach Dutch M e y e r's H orned
T hey h ave loft to W a sh in g to n , j ference p la y w ith ou t a d efeat F ro g s still w ill not be in peak
N eb raska,
N o rth w e ste rn ,
a n d * since a round-robin schedule was physical condition here S a tu rd a y
Ohio St
oi iginated in 1924.
fo r th e ir hom ecom ing game.
L in e b a c k e r Don M enasco was
Q u a rte rb a c k
G ilb e rt
Bartosh ,
A th le t ic D ir e c t o r D . X . B ib le
the only S te e r in ju re d in the Bay- fu llb a ck Bobbj. Ja c k F lo y d , Jo h n
aa id M o n d a y t h a t th e U n i ve rioi game— re ceivin g a gash on his M edanich and Jo h n n y D un n, h a lf
a it y i t s t ill p u t t in g f i r s t th in g s
head a fte r pro te ctive cushioning j backs and end B ill M oorm an, are
f ir s t , w h ic h c o n s is t s o f p la y in g
ii. hi." helm et broke— and he w ill ailing.
one
f o o t b a ll
gam e
a fte r
an
be re a d y fo r T C I .
R ig h t h a lf M alvin F o w le r was
o th e r ,
w hen
asked
if
Texas
Tuesday, the Longhorns w ill be- lost fo r tho season to d ay when
w o u ld e o n a n d e r B e r n i e B i e r m a n
gin w orking on defense and w ill M e y e r announced the lad would
as
a
r e p la c e m e n t
fo r
B la ir
continue to polish th e ir offense, I undergo a knee operation.
W E L D I N G St
C T F tV
Reported Ailing
J
^
Drink, dessert
T e x * * 27, B a v l o r 20.
A A M 25. S M U 20.
R ic e 9. A rk a n s a s 45.
T H IS W E E K S
|
/ \
L U N C H E S — 3 Vegetable.
Coach B la ir Cherry, the retir_.<)P wcek; ®8ylor“)
B ie r mart-coat had a UG C o n fe re n ce record, also re- i njr head coach at Texas and tx- 7TTH r **fp^nryinr>~{n*
The Gophers h aven ’t won member, that w ith the exception j TH U gridman, can forget about
Batt ii on th* 4ie. ta1to Pre j#
T U ESD A Y
O UR
F IL E T S
I*
Lou Boudreau to Have
Unconditional Release
Intramural Schedule
HERE
N o, air, th * ani* yeti get fro m
d u rn !
5TCU Gridders
D L —
passes art iv tgood,
and th ey run to the lig h t and pass
more than e ver before. You re pull an upset, ju s t like 1949. “ The A ggies at College Sta tio n .
l f Ie x a s and A A M foil
m em ber last ft ear I indy It ct i y Horned Fro g s have had a nother
tid e d -un Us it back a lot frong bad season, and w ould like no
thing be tte r than beating T ex as,”
assistant coach B u lly G ils tra p said.
man line T C C used last y e a r in
d efeatin g Texas. 14-13,
M ond ay night, they listened to
assistant coach Lek C u rtis ’ scout
repos is
on
tnt-, y e a r ’s
D u tch
Will Pittsburgh Fire
Manager Billy Meyer?
snow. dir-, dust, drip-
pins’ tree- , e lf.
T R Y
The football
fortunes of the patterns designed by their Con
Texas Aggies are definitely on the ference rank and heat their op
upswing— check their victory over ponents Saturday, then the stage
j S M U last week end.
w ill be set for the most im- j
By BO B SEA M A N
j Me vt Horne i Frog#.
this on hispasses,” Curtis
conThe Aggies, whose motto for port ant November 30 Turkey Day
Tri-am sport* start
I
As fa r a*# the TC L 7 offense is tinned.
thia season is,
“ F if t y — fifty to r clash in years.
In top physical condition Mon- concerned, the Longhorns know
“ This Bartosh is a
fine foot- better) .in
’50,” have pointed I
A Lo n g h o rn loss to T C I: would
lay afte r their victory over Bay* fairly well how the Horned Frogs nail player. He can run and pass their Bob Smith-led football ma- still leave the Steers on even
i0J-t the Texas Longhorns began I w ill operate
w ell. H e ll fake a run and pass chine toward the Cotton Bowl. terms with the Aggies in their
making
read}
for
Sa tu rd a y ’s
A fte t try in g the “ Vt sngi d T ’ oi fake a pass and run. You can’t
Already, the Cadets have won annual grudge battle.
game with TO U at F o r t W orth, a
a lly in the season w ith o u t much rush him like we did S M U ’* Fred six Barnes this year.
The Aggies hard-charging fullThey have
contest w hich could c in c h a South- meccas, FC C has gone back to B e n n e l- ” was C u rtis ’ estimate of lost one
Conference gam e— to back, Bob Sm ith, scored tw ice
remain
west C on feren ce cham pions! ip tie its old
(‘liable fo rm atio n s o f ve I C l '« key man w ho is high among B a y lo r— and
the
o n ly against the Mustangs to increase
fo r the Steers.
te n t yei rs— the double w ing and total ground g ainers in the Con team in the Texas Lo n g h o rn s’ j his scoring total to 84 points, 18
title path.
points better than K y le Rote.
A f t e r seeing pictures o f the th e ir fam e
spread, C u rtis in d i- ; £crenc-e.
Texas is undefeated in C o n
B a y lo r game, the Steers, w e a rin g
rated.
T he general
opinion of the ference play.
S E A S O N S T A N D IN G S
The Steers can
sw eatsuits, concentrated on of-j
“ T h e ir ‘B re a d and B u t t e r ’ forW
L- Fe t.
P t* .
OP
coaches is th at M ayer will “ have ’ cinch a tie for the title but not
Te>#«
____ .
.6
1 ,857
17 9
rift
lense in a light w orkout a t C la rk n a tio n is s till th e ir w ide sp read—
a defense” for Texas with two a Cotton Bowl bid by beating A A M ____ ...... ...... 6
2 ,750
I 4#
29 I
bield. T h e y ran plays a g a in st an
w ith B a r t o s h <<■ I • in th e ta il .SM U ____ ________5
2 .714
22 1 104
fu ll weeks to dream up some- T C I
in
F
o
rt
W
orth
Saturday.
Rice
___
_______
ft
2
11
I
2
6
124
3-1-2 defense, the v irtu a l nineback po sition.” C u rtis said.
.............ft
thing new fo r this game.
They
3 .625
B a v lur
I 3I
I 47
of
T h is
p o r ta b le
g ara g e
it
th e p e - fe c t a n s w e r to the
c a r s t o r a g e p ro b le m :
SAN JA C IN T O
S m it h - le d A g g i e T e a m
2316GUADALUPE
Y,
Tuesday, November K , 1950 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 3
C h icago C o lle g e of
OPTOMETRY
N atio n ally A ccredited
An O u t s t a n d in g College in a
Splendid Profession
t ii t r » in e r e q u i r e m e n t
t h i r t y h o u r s of L ib e ral
A rts
credits*
Advanced
sta n d in g g ranted for ad
ditio n al
L.
A.
c r e d its.
N ex t C lass S t a r t s Feb. 12
L x e e lle n t clin ical
liscilttft-s.
R e c re a tio n a l
and
a th le tic
a c tiv itie s .
D or
m ito rie s o n ca m p u s. A p
p ro v ed for v e te ra n s ,
2 3 1 3 N o . C la r k S t.,
C hicago 14, HI.
FREE . . .
N IG H T
DELIVERY
M O M 'S CAFE
Guadalupe
Phone
4117
539064
Venezuela Ruler: A llie d
31aminCaracas
e i
■
■
m
1948 Victor Dies
O f Pistol W o u n d s
V
T ro o p s
I
In U. S. Air Force pilot’s language, th at means; “Get
a irb o rn e
get up there with everything you’ve got! ’
S tart your scramble with a year of training that pro
duces lenders . . . Aviation Cadet training with the U. S.
Air Force. I t’s training th at wins your wings and com
mission . . . and a starting salary close to $5,000 a year
; • . if yon qualify.
Check Your Compass . . . And Climb on Course/
Air Force talk for "waste no tim e - s e t your course while
you’re gaining altitude.” I f s good advice.
Talk it over with the U. S. Air Force Aviation Cadet
Selection Team soon to visit your campus.
Get on T o p . . . S t a y on Top . . . W ith The U. S. A ir Force
ti 5 Air Force Aviation
C?det Selection Team will b e on
w
M e m b e r ll( A r u H
R o o m 30V
U.S. M R FORCE
AT DU PONT THEY FIGURE IMPORTANTLY IN
Advance
In Two Korean Sectors
^
,
-ti
rn
4
CARACAS, Venezuela, Nov. 13
SEO I L, Nov. 14— (ZP)— Affeer— (TP)— the Acting P resid en t of lean in fa n try advanced up to two
Venezuela,
L ieu tenant
Colonel! miles in northw est Korea while
Carlos Delgado Chalbaud, was as— U.S. Marines plodded five and
sassinated Monday. Delgado died one-half miles fo rw a rd in the
of gunsho t wounds. He headed a n o r th e a s t in sub-freezing w e a the r
three-m an m ilitary j u n ta which! Monday.
has ruled this c ountry since 1948.
Will-o-the-wisp Chinese Corn
i n W ashington the Venezue- j m u n ist forces, estimated a t nine
Ian am bassador. Jose Rafael Poe- j divisions, put up sporadic resista to rra , said Delgado was slain ance, ra n g in g from tough in
in f r o n t of his home and d i e d ; spots to none at all. The Reds
la te r in a hospital. His assassin w ere pounded by air.
has n o t been cap tu red , Poc a te rra
In the northeast, 90 miles from
was informed in a long distance the Siberian border. U.S. w ar
call to the V enezuelan Foreign ships and planes supported a
Minister. A cu rfew imposed im South Korean Republican regi
m ediately a f te r the assassination m e n t th re a te n e d with envelop
blocked reception of full details m en t by a suddenly-resurgent
fro m Caracas, the capital.)
N orth K orean Red force.
A g ov e rn m e nt b ro ad cast by
U.S. Marines of th e first divi
Defense Minister Marcos Perez sion, clad in w in te r parkas, th ru st
Jim enez, a surviving m em ber of; n o rth w a rd within sight of the
the thre e -m a n j u n t a which seized j Changjin reservoir, four miles
power in a bloodless coup in 1948,; away.
gave the a n n o u n c e m e n t b ut f u r
The seventh Marine regim ent,
nished no details.
ScrambleIJZ
T e x a s O n io n
i l l v
leading the advance, expected to;
I reach the southern end of the re -;
ser voir by Tuesday.
The Chines® Communist 124th
Division, rushed down from Manchuria to save the reservoir, van-,
c h e d a f te r a bloody three-day
fight last week. Only small groups
of Reds rem ained and these of
fered no organized resistance.
The Marines threatened th rough
an ice-coated gorge a f t e r jum ping
o ff Monday from Koto, nine and
one-half miles south of the re se r
voir. By m id-afternoon they were
n e a r H ag aru .
The Marines w ere w ary for
flank in g attacks, P atrols flushed
through the icy hills on either
side of the road.
f a n k s were le ft behind because
Big Three' Reject
Red Talks on Germany
LONDON, Nov. 13— (ZP)— For-i VVestern zones on a Constitutional
CUMJ E rn e s t Bevin told Council. The Soviet plan sugeign wvti
S ecretary
of b a d road conditions. Instead, the House of
Commons Monday vested th a t the Big Fo ur agree
M a rin e Corsairs flew close e s c o r t 't h e th re e W ester# Pow ers had re - 1
overhead, b u t found few t a r g e t., heeled a n y talk, on C e r n , , n y o"n I * * ?
“
"k **
O t h e r planes smached a t a Red the basis o f conditions imposed. „ p ‘
Diplomatic ^ fo r m a nta
contvoy on the northw est, s tru n g by th e Soviet Union.
B an s said the B ig Three Westo u t in little groups along a 20D . .
, ,
,
,
o n Powers were preparing- Ben
mile- stretch of road n e a r Yu won. i ..
Btft*f1m e " t C®m ? ®8 dev' U rate but identical notes to Rus'The American line on th e no rthes C! ,
Atlantlc 1 a c t Gounci!;
“ accenting
f R
we fit sector wa* fnrmeH hv »
' €Pened discussions on how West’ “ i. cep ling the idea o f Rusf r o n t of th e U.S. F irst ‘ Cavalry crn G c rm a ny
tied into :" ’a s , a v ‘tation to a four-power
and! U. S. 24th Divisions.
‘ the defense of W estern Europe. conference,” b ut demanding th a t
r,'£he F ir s t Cavalry Division adRussia proposed talks to be held some conditions be agreed to be
varjced one and one-half miles and
th e basis of re solutio ns adopted fore the actual meeting. These
s e n t patrols to the an cie n t walls ^ast month at the P ra g u e con- conditions are being worked out,
of i ongbyon, 15 miles n o rth w e s t ference o f Soviet a n d Russian th e y said.
of iVhe Allied base of A n ju on the satellite leaders.
Chrmgchon River.
One point included withdrawal
IThe cavalry patrols made no; of all occupation forces from Gerc o n ta c t w ith the Reds o u t s id e ' m any and the u nification of the
Yo ngbyon, b u t heavy resistance cou ntry w ith th e Soviet zone
developed on the right flank.
equally re p re se n te d with the three
SEIBERLING
Factory M ethod
Tire R e c a p p in g
Seat Covers— Car Heater®
SPIRES TIRE CO.
Ph. ->3-1221
3510 G u a d a l u p e
N e w s Briefs
Cox Appointed Director
Tibet Asks UN Aid
to Stop Red Drive O f State Hospital Board
Bu i« on the A ssociated Press
uippK es for war planes a n d o t h e r w e r e “ l o c k e d o u t ” o f t h e i r j o b s
Larry 0 . Cox was elected exe m u nations.
a c r o s s the n a t i o n
M onday.
rtiv e
director o f the Texas
★
T hey e n t e r e d b u i l d i n g s a f t e r
State Hospital Board Monday to
P W r e ta r y o f the I n t e r i o r C h a p
ueeeed acting director Howard m a n said Monday th a t c i v i l i a n p i c k e t lines had l e f t , b u t r e m a i n e d
E Smith. Smith resigned Monday e c o n o m y and m i l i t a r y n e e d s a r e t h e r e o n l y a s h o r t t i m e . W h e n
morning, effective December 15. ILr*Mtened by a lagging -Tee! p ro
they
entered
they
charged
that
Cox is also business m a n a g e r; g r a m . Chapman said t h e g o v e r n
th e y w ere to ld to leave a f te r s a y
of the Austin S tate School. His m e n t m a y b e f o r c e d t o r e g u l a t e
-■alary will be $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 a year, the u s e o f steel i n t h e o i l i n d u s t r y ing they would co ntin ue to re
maximum allowed by state law.
be c a u se a shortage of some steel spect picket lines. The operators
p ro d u c ts “appears to he re a c h in g s o i d t h e y were t o l d t h e c o m p a n y
The govern m ent Monday o rd e r {damning propel Dons.”
h a d other w orkers for t h e i r j o b s . !
ed a 35 per e d c u t i n the n o n ★
m ilitary use of aluminum effecT ho usa nd s of long distance t e l e
five J a n u a r y 1 , i n o r d e r t o s a v e p h o n e
operators c h a r g e d t h e y
LAKE SUCCESS, Nov. 13 — (/p)
— Tibet appealed to the U nited
N ations Monday tc rescue
from tho Chinese ( irn rn u n i
i ader.
A 1,4OO-word cable, coming
days a f t e r the Chinese Red; rn
el feet defied ti e Security Ch unoil even to qui btion them a* out
th e ir presence in N orth ern Kolea, seemed doomed to art unheeded.
The Tibetan message, s e n t by
Finance Minister Tsepon Shakabpa to UN Secretary General T ry
gve Lie, posed kn otty complica
tions, since some delegations do
n o t consider T ib e t a nation.
N ationalist
( lu n a ,
bitterest
enemy of the Chinese Reds, sees
eye to eye with them on the
sta tu s of Tibet as Chinese t e r r i 8:30-1 and 2-5 —
T<’U tickets, ; 2 —- S teer H ere Committee, Texas
tory.
Gregory Gym.
U n io n 208.
8:30-5 — Students m a y p i c k u p 2;3l)-5 — A u to gra ph p a rty fo r
p re -re g istra tio n f urns, all book
L ois Lenski, Texas Book Store.
OO
stores.
3 — L eonard Lerner to lead f o
9 . 4 — A ir Force recruiting, Texas
r u m , Hillel Foundation.
Union foyer.
4 — Forum on “ You C annot A f
W S M S OUT
IO — Ezra iiachlin to discuss next I f o r d to C heat,” Intern atio nal
concert by A ustin Symphony;
u c u iT r ie d a n d S i d e w a l l s
R oom , T exas Union,
O rchestra, dow ntown YWCA.
4 — W orship .Training Workshop,
Steam
* *1 t i f f
A V " "
10-1 — Book Exchange to close ; Speech Building 204.
4 Clean
business, T ex as Union 208.
IO — Tt xas Legislative Council, 7 _ _ Texas Society of Pro fessio n
a l E nginei rs to honor Dean W.
Governor’s Office, State Capi
I L Woolrich, A ustin Hotel.
tol.
12 — The Rev. Theodore Jac k m a n 7 — Kappa Epsilon, Garrison Hall
C a r W a sh C o .
I.,
to address A ustin Ministerial
221 S. Lamar
7 — The Rev, Theodore Jackson
Alliance, Campus C afeteria.
t/i speak, Austin P re sby te rian
{Seminary.
7 — Arab Student Association,
'Texas Union 316.
R. f . S ugg, B S . In Af .E ., George W a sh in g
7 ■
— Texas I n te r-Varsity Chris
ton U n iv ersity , I *IS’, d‘>ing m echanical re
t i a n Fellowship, Sutton Hall
search to im prove m a ckm e design. H is
(OI.
optical-siit microscofH' measures surface
7 i— Inter-Co-Op Council, Texas
scratches as fine as 20 millionths o f an inch.
U n io n S I I .
7
Girls’ Glee Club, T exas Unjon 401.
7:1 JO — World Relatedness Com
mission, YMCA.
7 2 IO — In te rd e p a rtm e n ta l Sym
posium Group to hear J. R. Kirk
on
“ Sem antics,” U niversity
-J
C om m unity Church.
7: BO — Inte rm e d ia te Ladies Club
d ra m a
group,
1900
Scenic
Drive.
7: BO — Dean Paul H. Appleby in
G re a t Issues talk on the relation
of the people to the state, Main
Lounge, Texas Union.
8 — “ The Winslow Boy,” X Hall.
8 — Mica F lying T, Hirsh No. 2.
8 :1 5 — A ustin C om m unity Con
c e r t s Association presents G re
MANY FIELDS
gor Piatigorsky, cellist, Texas
U n io n 309.
8 :3 0 — Closing address by the
Rev. Theodore Jackson, Agudas
Achira Center.
WU c
on
j i ere
$ CW $1
AUTO.
BlXBy DOES BETTER WITH FIGURES
SINCE HE STARTED USING V I T A L I S /
You'll cut q u ite a f i g u r e , too — if you use your head — and
“ ! ive Actio? Vitals* ca e, Give th at m op on top she turnout
* ' 0-second w orkout
50 seconds se a ’n m assage (fee! the differ
ence?) . . . IO seconds to com b (and will the s i m ia n see the d if
ference!). \ ou ll look neat n natural. B :-bye loose, flaky dandruff
and dryness, too. So latch on to V stabs—see the man at the drug
store or barber shop pronto.
D i n i n g O u t ? Try
Fish & Chips
Con veniently Located
2706 G u a d a lu p e
• SEAFOOD
-jg f r
Shrim p a specialty
• G O LDEN
BROW N
Fried Chicken
a
n
"60-Second Workout
A PRODUCT CP
BPVfSTOL- MYERS
$ti
WK
THEM
P h i l i p M o r r i s challenges
a n y other leading brand /
to suggest this test
H U N D R E D S O F T H O U S A N D S OF
S M O K E R S , w h o tried t h ^ test,
report in s i g n e d statements that
P H IL IP M O R R I S IS D E FI N IT EL Y
LESS I R R I T A T I N G , D E F IN IT E L Y M IL DEF
Cold Weather
Coming . . .
C o m p le te Service on
S outhw ind Heater®
Studying product develop ment in a rotary dryer
Checking compone nt fo r m achine used to fin ish
R. L. Steam*, B S . in C h .E ., Yale, 1949; and I i .
are: H . J . K a m a c k , R .S . in C h .E ., Georgia
In s titu te o f Technology, 1941; a n d F . A .
G luckert, B S . in C h .E ., P enn S ta te , 1940.
rolls to high degree o f precision: D onald F .
M iller, B S . in M .E .. L ehigh, 1950; a n d A lbert
W .G . E rv in e , M S . in M .E ., M ichigan, 1950.
Peterson, B S . in C h .E ., N ortheastern U niver
s ity , 1942, checking a m ulti-stage carbon-m on
oxid e compressor used for m aking m ethanol .
b e c a u s e D u P ont is a chemical
J com pany, you m ight expect m ost
of its technical men to be chemists.
Actually, there are more engineers
th an chem ists a t Du Pont. In each of
th e ten m anufacturing departm ents
there is im portant work for m en
tra in e d in c h e m ica l, m ec h a n ic a l,
electrical, m etallurgical and other
branches of engineering.
These departm ents operate much
as independent units w ith their own
research, developm ent, production
and sales staffs. In their respective
fields, they do fundam ental and a p
plied research on both processes and
products. Som etimes engineers p ar
ticipate in th e early stages of a proj
ect. M ore often, however, they enter
tile picture when the project has
moved to the point where com m er
cial production is considered. They
see it through the pilot plant and
semi-works stages and assemble d a ta
I
necessary for the full-scale plant.
Even after m anufacturing has be
gun, developm ent work is continued
to standardize and improve the proc
ess. Norm ally, engineers whose main
interest is production and plant o p
eration take over when th e works
stage is reached.
Engineers on the technical sales
staffs help m aintain contact between
D u F o n t and its custom ers. They
present data on new' products and
guide custom ers in process develop
m ent and sim ilar problems. T hey
also use their technical knowledge in
m aking surveys of possible m arkets
for the Com pany’s products.
In addition to the m anufacturing
groups, the D u P out Engineering
D e p a rtm en t—a central staff organi
zation—requires engineers with many
types of training. T his D epartm ent
carries on its own program of funda
m ental and applied research. I t also
makes site investigations, lays o u t
and designs new plants and labora
tories for the m anufacturing d ep art
ments. I t serves them in research on
process developm ent, on m aterials
o f construction and on m ethods of
m easurem ent and control.
Yes, engineers figure im portantly
a t Du F ont. Tlirough their team w ork
w ith chemists, physicists and other
trained personnel, the D u P e n t Com
pany produces its "B etter Things for
B etter Living...through C hem istry.”
W OE)
•
Hood Tire®
•
Exide Batteries
I.
. . Light up a PHILIP M O R R IS
2 . .. Light up your present brand
•
C om plete Motor
tune-up
Just take a p u ff— DON’T in h a l e — and
s-l-o-w-l-y let the sm oke com e through
your nose. Easy, isn t it? A n d NOW ...
D o e x a c t ly the s a m e t h i n g — D O N ’T
Notice that bite, that s tin g ?
Q uite a difference from PHILIP MORRIS!
•
Battery R e c h a r g e
and Rental S ervice
•
Prom pt Service
a n y w h e r e in city
A U S T I N BATTERY
a n d ELECTRICAL CO.
3 0 0 W . 5th
Ph. 9 -9 3 3 5
Ford Sam uel
Jim Olle
O th er b ran d s m erely m ak e claim s—b u t P h i l i p M o r r i s invites you
to com pare, to judge, to decide fo r yourself.
T ry this sim p le test. W e believe th a t you, too, w ill agree . . .
P h il ip M orris is, indeed, America's F IN E S T Cigarette!
Id C iG A R itfE
HANGOVER
means MORE S M O K IN G PLEASURE!
**4 J 5 RAT0'r
BETTER
THINGS
FOR
BETTER
U V IN O
. . . T HROUGH CHEMI STRY
Entertaining, Informative — Listen to "C avalcad e of
America,” Tuesday Nights, N B C Coast to Coast
in h a l e .
CAU
FOR
hupIM S
Tuesday, NdvemEer 14 1950 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 4
Little Man on Campus
i^acL to S cron n ayincj
ma
A PIE C E of M iddle-A ges legislation
is dangling around in the Student A s
sem bly.
The plan is to abolish the Campus
Chest and replace it w ith separate, in
dividual charity drives num erous tim es
a year. Special Assem bly approval w ould
be required before each o f these piddling
little drives.
Such a fan tastic throwback to the
painful days when a student poor as a
churchm ouse had to fend o ff seven
solicitors a m inute for everything from
a cup of coffee to aid for the Society to
Protect Poodle-Dog.< actually has a
chance o f passing the Assem bly,
The Campus Chest is A SO U N D
ID E A ; one drive, one giving, one intelli
gent distribution by the Student A s
sem bly.
Proponents of the new hit-and-m iss
system argue that;
a) some o f the money doesn’t help
U niversity students directly;
b) some o f the Campus Chest chari
ties wouldn’t get as much money if they
solicited it them selves, (It is insinuated
that the students therefore don’t w an t
the money to go to these groups.)
c) Every dog
(that is, charity)
aam
should have his day.
Th these interesting1 contentions the
Texan replies:
a) There is no reason why UT charity
should h< !p only U T stu d en ts; there is
a national and international elem ent of
starvin g and underprivileged people who
need more help than any single univer
sity group.
b) T h a t some ch arities get more than
they could raise otherw ise is true. But
to imply th e r e f r o m t h a t the Student A s
sembl)' is n ot m ore capable of adjusting
its allocation of the funds according to
the needs of each w orthy charity than
the “ a u to m a tic a d j u s t m e n t ” of indis
crim inate charity drives is folly.
c l M ore th a n $20,000,000 in hoax
c h a ritie s w a s collected in New York City
last year. It takes a responsible group
like the Assem bly to discrim inate.
As a m a t te r of fact, th e Texan is not
at all satisfied w ith the cursory w ay in
which the Assem bly in the past has
quickly agreed on w hich charities to sup
port w ithout adequate investigation into
oth er possible sources.
W h a t is needed is a K ETTER Campus
Chest not a score of h e lte r-sk elter soli
citations.
Do JJefp Cadi (Jilll e t
ORCHIDS to Phi Sigma.
The campus honorary biological socie
ty took the lead th is week in follow ing
up the Texan's proposal that student
scholars provide stu d en ts on scho pro
w ith tutorial help.
“ The m em bers of Phi Sigm a feel that
both the students w ho ask for help and
those that tutor w ill b en efit,” said the
honorary. There w ill be no charge.
And th e Phi Sigs urged other cam pus
honoraries to follow suit.
So a campus honorary has proved that
it is possible for m em bers of honoraries
to set aside perhaps an hour a week and
to help pull fellow students out of the
hole.
T here’s good in the old world yet.
How about the rest of the honoraries?
Will the Phi Sigs show them up for
w atch-chain w i l l i e s , or will they, too,
prove they love to learn— by helping
others to learn, as well as by im bibing
them selves.
Sampling Can Be Accurate,
But Sometimes Disastrous
By CLAUDE VILLARREAL
( T h u is t h e s e c o n d in •
series o f three articles ex
p l a i n i n g the o p e r a t i o n s of
Student
Opinion Surveys.
E d.)
T he principle upon which
ail polls a r e based is th a t of
sam pling, a process of ta k in g
a sm all r e p r e s e n ta t iv e cross
section o f the public to be
polled a n d b a s in g r e su lts on
th a t cross-section.
S a m p lin g can be m o st easi
ly explained a n d und ersto od
u sing the simile em ployed by
J o e S eld e n, d ire c to r o f the
T e x a s Poll, when he spoke to
S igm a De ta Chi, professional
jo u r n a lis m f r a te r n ity , S u n d a y
n ight.
Mr, Belden co m p ared the
sam pling o f public opinion to
blood te stin g , in which a small
a m o u n t of blood is e x tra c te d
fro m an individual an d tests
made on t h a t small am ount.
Results of these blood te sts
show conclusive resu lts, be
cause th a t sample an d the
over-all blood c o n te n t are
hom ogeneous. This is a m a t
te r, th e n , of p r o je c tin g re
sults of th e se te sts to apply
to th e whole system.
T h e sam p lin g of public
opinion is exactly th a t.
A
small
cross-section of the
public is used as a sample.
THE D
T exan
Tfee Daily l e x a n , a s t u d e n t n e w . p a p e r of lh*- U n i v e r s i t y of I e x e s .
*•
Wig hoc to A u s t i n e v e r y m o r a i n e e x c e p t M o n d a y a n d S a t u r d a y ,
Septem ber
to J u n e , a n d e x c e p t d u r i n g
holi da y a n d e x a m i n a t i o n
p e r i o d s , a n d bi-w t-e^l y d u r i n g t h e m m n r t s e s s i o n s fin der t h e t i t l e of
I n c S u m m e r T e x a n on T u e s d a y a n d F r i d a y by T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b l i c a
t i o n s , Inc.
N ow * c o n t r i b u t i o n * m i l be a c c e p t e d by t e l e p h o n e ( 2 - 2 4 ? i ) or a t
t h e e d i t o r i a l office J . B 1. o r a t th e N ew* L a b o r a t o r y , J .B . J 02. I n q u i r i e s
c o n c e r n i n g d e l i v e r y and a d v e r t i s i n g s h o u l d be m a d e in J .B . IO*
( 2 - 2 4 .Iii.
Student* are invited
tb< mer nog hours
Us
v isit the editor and associate editor during
O p in io n s of t h e I t x a n a r e n o t n e c e s s a r i l y t h o s e of t h e A d m i n i s t r a
t i o n o r lith e r U n i v e r s i t y off ic,ai*.
Entered a s s e c o n d - c l a s s m a t t e r October 18, 104 3 at the P ost Office at
A ustin, T e x a s , u n d e r the Act of March 8, l b : Ii.
A SSO C IA T ED P R E S S W IR E S E R V IC E
lbs A s s o c i a t e d P r e s * rn e x c l u s iv e ly e n t i t l e d to t h e use t o r r e p u b l i c a Mon of ail new* d i s p a t c h e s c r e d i t e d to it o r n o t otherwise c r e d i t e d in
t h i s n e w s p a p e r a n d local i t e m s of s p o n t a n e o u s o r i g i n p u b lis h e d h e r e in .
R i g h t s of p u b l i c a t i o n of a il o t h e r m a t t e r h e re in a l s o re s e r v e d .
Represented for National Advertising by National Advertising
*>r
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4
u j
f* |f *• *DC- C o lle g e P u b i i s n e r a R e p r e s e n t a t i v e
M ad is o n Ave.
^ew y ork
C h ic a g o — B o s t o n —- L os A n g e le s — S a n F r a n c i s c o
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A ll-A m erican P acem aker
SU BSCRIPT IO N R A TES
'M in im u m S u b sc rip tio n — th re e m o n th s )
| _____
rrr m o n th
.. ___
P e r’ m o n t h , mail ed in town..IX*VV«*■------------■
P e r month, ma il ed out of town.
By Bibler
.*
.
.VO
. .60
.f.(l
_ .
PERM A NEN T STA FF
td ito r-in -C h ie f
-------------------_
R O N N IE D U G G ER
A ssociate E d ito r — -------------C H A R L E S T R IM B L E
N f i t 0r p ! » > sSi8tantrM - d d B o b S adler, J im B o b ‘ c i l i a w i y
N ew s E d ito i s — ( l a u d e V illarreal, J e a n Lipscomb, Oian
v ; v* r.
B re w e r, J u n e F itz g e ra ld , C harlie Lewis
N ig h t Editor* — lorn Toney, B e tty Cardw ell, M a ry A n n
a
.
B eau frier, Billy J e n k in s , Jim C oc hrum
A m u se m ent* E d i t o r -------------- --- --------------------- t i t e s J o n e s
w ill
p ' B r ----------------------------------------------J a m e s Reeh
S om ety E d .t o r
----------------------------------------------F a i r f a x Smith
STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE
News E d ito r
CLAUDE VILLARREAL
N igh t E d ito r ...
--------------- • - .................
W ATTS D A V IS
N i g h t R e p o rters —-------- ------ M ary A n n e B e au m ier, A nn e
(.'ham bel *
Copyreader
— ....... — - Ray A lfo rd
Nig tit S p o rts E d ito r
- .....Gene E h r lith
Assistant* .
. B ru ce Roche, Bob S eam an,
J im Rech
Night Society Editor ......
.......
— F lo Cox
A ssistants
----------- F ra n c is A tkins
Night A m u se m en ts E d ito r
---------- -------Estes Jones
A ssistants
--------------------- C harles Richey
N ight T eleg rap h E d ito r _
—— —
Anne Chamber*
A ssistant ______
----------------- E v e iy n liheub uah
The resu lts of an opinion poll
on this sam ple can be p r o
je c te d to a p p ly to th e over-all
public, as th e small n u m b e r
of people t h a t m akes up th e
sample is r e p r e s e n ta t iv e of
the w’hole.
The first step in arriv in g
at the p r o p e r cross-section is,
- f course, d e te rm in in g th e
public. The public th a t S t u
d e n t Opinion S urveys is a t
te m p tin g to reach is th e
group of s tu d e n ts w orking
tow ards an u n d e r g r a d u a t e d e
gree, including bachelor o f
laws.
I he second step is d e t e r
mining the fac tio n s th a t m ake
up this public, in this case
the different schools and col
leges, sex, a n d classification
of stu d e n ts.
H hen the above fa c to rs a re
determ in e d , it is n ecessary to
decide upon th e size of th e
sample
desired.
S tu d e n t
Opinion Survey* uses a s a m
ple of 3 p e r ce n t o f the to ta l
s t u d e n t po pulation , o r 422 f o r
the c u r r e n t se m ester.
This p e r c e n ta g e was a r
rived a t a r b it r a r il y , alth o u g h
th a t h as no b e a rin g on th e
final size of the sample, as
long as it is large enou gh to
be r e p r e s e n ta tiv e .
Mr. Bidden told S tu d e n t
Oj in ion S u rv e ys t h a t a n y
n u m b e r b e tw e e n 250 and 500
was a d e q u a t e
to
r e g iste r
public opinion ac curately, r e
gardless of th e size of th e
public, because v e ry little
change in “ o p in io n ” will be
r e g is te r e d no
m a t t e r how
many people over 250 a r e
interview ed.
The la rg e r t h e
num be r, how’ever, th e s a fe r a
m arg in o f e r r o r th e poll ie
likely to have.
Mr.
Belden
pointed o u t
t h a t Gallup uses a sam ple o f
3,500, o r an a v e r a g e o f a b o u t
-me person p e r c o u n ty over
ail of th e U n ite d S tate s. A nd
G allup p r e s e n ts the resu lts o f
his poll as re p r e s e n ta tiv e o f
public opinion over th e c o u n
try.
The 3 p e r cent sample
m u st be ap plied to each f a c
tion, o r c a te g o ry , of th e p u b
lic.
Therefore,
SOS m ust
poll 3 per c e n t of all m a le
e n g i n e e r in g s tu d e n ts and 3
p e r c e n t of all fem a le e n g i
n e s ;ng s tu d e n ts . This leads
to such problem s as h aving
to find one fem ale e n g i n e e r
ing s tu d e n t to interview.
It is h ard to say j u s t w h a t
m inim um m a ig in of e r r o r an
opinion poll ca n g u a r a n t e e ,
but S tu d e n t Opinion Survey*
believes it is w ithin 3 per c e n t
o f accuracy.
'No Free W ill’ Belief
Is Desirable, Prof Says
fib*
Texan asked aro u n d
the D e p a r t m e n t of Philosophy
f o r a p r o f e s s o r w h o s h o u l d be
a p p ro a c h e d to write down w h a t
h a t h i n k s a b o u t f r e e wi l l — h o w
m u c h if a n y t h i n g m e n c a n decied f o r t h em se l v es . W e w e r e
r e f e r r e d t o D a n i e l K a d i n g , ass i s t a n t p r o f e s s o r of Ph i l o so p h y ,
who has written, especially for
the t e x a n ,
A re Y ou a F r e e
M a n ? ” — Ed.)
By D A N IE L K A D IN G
A s s i s t a n t P r o f . a so r of P h i l o s o p h y
ll. as you w ere w alking along
th e ca m p u s m e d ita tin g up o n the
ad visab ility o f c u ttin g th a t eleven
0 clock, I ta p p e d you on the .shoul
d e r anti said, “ Say, do you have
C e e w ill? ” I suspect you w ould
t j e me r a t h e r peculiarly. F o r this
1 .should n o t blame you.
'Hated' to Dredge
5 PledgesThursday
By
RONNIE
DUGGER
T*ara* Editor
B rass knucks and m u tu a l ti a
suits will flash gaily T h u r s d a y
nig h t when th e free le fto v e r m e m
bers of T en Most H ate d ( T M H )
ta p this s e m e s t e r ’* five “ p l e d g e s ”
at 7 o'clock a t C e d a r C r e s t Lodg>e.
T h e process has been sp e e d e d
up because one o f th e prer-ent
“ most hated men on the campus.,”
Tom ( G i ve-m e-a-gun-and-ITl-clef ino u t- W a sh in g to n ) A ffleck, will Se
called to ac tive d u t y on Novo m il e r
24.
| **
“ I see w h ere E ise n h o w e r and! I
are being called to se rv ic e,” A ,ffleck said brav e ly M onday. “ Else nh ow er is to defe n d E u ro p e a nd
I m to d efend A rkan sas. W h e n
th e y g e t into a tig h t, th e y rya ily
call o u t th e m e n .”
Bob ( 1 -r u n -th e -e h q tie -a n y w a y 1-pick) W h e e le r a n n o u n c e d t h e
Rush P a r ty , a t which m o re t h a n
IOO a r e expected .
O ffic ia l
notices
S t u d e n t s I n t e r e s t e d in b e i n g i n t e r
v ie w ed f o r t e a c h i n g p o s i t i o n s in Mu nt e r r e y . Mexico, fu r t h e 15*51-52 s c h o o l
y e a r , s h o u ld c o n t a c t t h e l e a c h e r P l a c e
m e n t S e r v i c e offices. S u t t o n H a ll 20 7.
T h e D i r e c t o r o f th e A m e r i c a n S c h o o l
F oundation of
M o n t e r r e y w il l he
in
t h e s e offices eft M u nday a n d T u e s d a r,
N o v e m b e r 20 a n d 2G
He will i n t e r v i e w
people i n t e r e s t e d in t e a c h i n g
in t i r e
second or sixth grades, or h ig h sch o o l
E n g l i s h o r s o c ia l s t u d i e s .
H O H GRAY'. D i r e c t o r
T e a c h e r Plat: e m e n t S e r v i n g
W h e eler noted th a t m em b ers
of UMH le f t from last se m e ste r
include A ffle ck, “ th e s o u th a r n
gennulm an” ;
Pa ii
R o therm el,
“ the
c a m p u s d>»e M c C a r th y ” ;
“ T o e-D an g lin g ” Tom West, the
m issing a t t o r n e y g e n e r a l: and
“ C r e e p y " Don Y arb orough, th e
king-m a ker.
T h ere will be speeches by the
five m e m b ers exposing and in
s u ltin g tile audience.
W h e e le r explained t h a t in v ita
tions w ere late in b e in g mailed
because of the Ten Most H a te d
cre d it r a tin g .
“ TMH r e g r e ts the ; osignat ion
o f Blair ( b erry, since re will now
have to find a rn w int r a m u ra l
m an ag er,’
W h e e le r
obsei ved
kindly.
“ While deploring th e spineless
charac to r of th e Univ* rsity body
as
Ie, several individuals
have d istin g u ish e d them selves to
a d eg re e su ffic ie n t t a becam e
m e m b e r s ,” W h e eler opined. (T h e
five have a lre a d y bee n chosen.)
T en Most H ated was org an iz ed
in 1948. To be elected r e q u ir e s a
blackball from all le fto v e r m e m
bers, A w h ite hall in dic ates f r i e n d
ship— which is too m uc h a sign
of jollv-fellow-hale-Yvell-met s o r t
of th in g to m e rit m em bership.
P e rh a p s the crisis in th e o r g a n
i z a tio n ’s h isto ry was w h en T M H
had to decide w h e th e r to ta k e a
w ell-know n com m unist. F o r kicks,
all the m e m b ers a r o u n d a ta b le
blackballed
this
gent,
leaving
the final v ote to one of the c a m
p u s ’ all-time c onservatives. Bob
Doss. Doss gav<> him a frie n d ly
w hite bail an d is j u s t r e c u p e r a tin g
f r o m the s tra in this is said to
have caused.
The ten original m em bers have
all left th e cam pus The u n h a p p y
f o u n d e r , th e n a radio n ew sc aster,
is still on the cam pus, q u a k in g in
his moccasins.
I h a v e nev e r in m y ex periences
o f c a m p u s observations, o v erh e ard
o n t t h a t concerned fre e will. In
I let. I d o n ’t think I w ould be
ta k in g m u c h o f a chance in p r e
d ic tin g th a t th e ratio of ca m p u s
c o n v e r s a tio n s
concerning
t he
S M I -Texas F oo tb all Follies to
those c o n c e r n in g f r e e will d u r in g
th e c u r r e n t w eek w ould be 100,000 to 0.
N ev e rth ele ss, in spite o f my
s u b je c t 's lack of p o p u la r in te r e s t
— or. p erh a p s, because of it -—I
a m a c tu a lly g o in g to discuss the
q u e s tio n :
does m an have fre e
will? I hope you will b ea r with
m e long enoug h to discover th a t
th e s u b je c t is both in te re stin g
a n d im p o r ta n t.
( an V-. e, f o r exam} Ie, b la m e a
m u r d e r e r for having taken a life,
o r m u s t we sim ply s a y : he could
not have dom* « the ru s s e ; his en' r o n m e n t and h e r e d ity w ere such
a • to m a k e his becom ing a m u r
d e r e r in e v ita b le — what sense is
lu c r e in blaming* him fo r w h a t he
could n o t help? A fam o u s F re n c h
m a x im say* in effect: To u n d e r
s ta n d a mar A m isdeeds is to f o r
give th em . O ur th e o ry of m o rality,
of law, o f crim e and pun ish m en t
v ill (I* rend up on our a n s w e r to
t h e qui Aion o f man's free will.
L et u s make clear the n a t u r e
o f the problem . I? is not the
problem of w hat we m ay call
“ p r a c tic a l f r e e d o m .” P ractically ,
a man is fre e if he is n o t re-
strain ed fro m doing w hat he w an ts
to do. If I w a n t to open the door
and th e r e is no obstacle— no r e
s t r a i n t - p r e v e n t i n g me from do
ing so, then I am practically fre e
in this respect.
But fre e d o m o f the will is quite
d if fe r e n t. The definition of fre e
will th a t I shall give is a com m on
( ne, th o u g h it would be re m e m
bered t h a t t h e r e a r e o ther possible
in te rp re ta tio n s. Man has a f re e
will if it is trui that a t le ast
some of his decisions a r e not a l
to g e th e r e x p la in a b le in te rm s of
the e n v iro n m e n ta l a n d h e r e d ita r y
f a c to rs which m a ke the individual
w hat he is f ro m th e scientific point
of view.
exo rable f< refs over which he bsf*
no co n tro l? T h e re fo re , the a d v o
cate* of free will argues, w'e m u s t
as su m e f re e will if m en are to b t
held ac co u n ta b le for th e ir acts.
To th is the d e te r m in is t replies
by t u r n in g the ^ d e t e r m i n i s t ’*
q u e s tio n brack to him : w hat se nse
would th e re bn to praise a n d
blame, to p u n ish m e n t a n d r e w a r d ,
if man did have fre e w ill? If o u r
decisions w ere not the r e su lt o f
e n v iro n m e n ta l a n d h e re d ita ry f a c
tors, w h a t would th e y be the r e
sult of? If blind chance produced
o ur decisions th e n t h e r e w’ould
surely be no rea so n f o r punish
m ent and rew ard .
On th e o t h e r hand, if o u r
cimices a r e d eterm ine d, it m a kes
sense to hold out the t h r e a t of
p u n is h m e n t and the promise of
rew ard . F o r one o f th e fa c to rs
in flu e n c in g a m a n ’s decision will
be his th o u g h t of the c o n s e q u e n
ces of his act, To th r e a te n imi r is o n m e n t for ste aling will be a
way to p re v e n t stealing But if
m
a n ’s decisions were fre e , th e
The first po in t to notice is t h a t
t h r e a t of im p riso n m en t will h a v e
no one know’a d efinitely w h e th e r
no in flu e n c e on him a t all, lf
science could give such a com
th e re w ere fre ed o m of the will
plete ex p la n a tio n o f m a n ’s b e h a
to a n y s ig n ific a n t d eg re e,
we
vior. We know only that science
could not hope to i n f l u e n c y
is m aking ad v a n ce s in this’ direc
i i guid e men s actions, fo r those
tion; vee do no t know’ w h e th e r it
actions would
be a r m e d
at
can go all o f th e way. T h u s we
U I i<
iP.drp.-rideni^^y
can n o t say w ith a s su ra n ce eith er
if i a isal conditions,
that fre e will is or is not a fact.
The d eterm in is t would have
But science persists in the a s su m p
one o t h e r i mp o r t a n t tiling to say.
tion th a t if it looks long enough
I o absume iii t e rm iism is to give
and h ard en o u g h it can f in d th e
up the n otion of u nishm em f o r
laws which will enable us to p r e
pu ni s hme nt A sake. The cone* pt
dict f u t u r e e .e n t s . And th e re is
o f c o r r e c t i o n repine)es the c on c ept
to date no rea so n f o r a b a n d o n in g
oi p u n i s h m e n t . It s senseless to
this as su m p tio n in the a r e a of hu
punish a man f or what he h as
man behavior. From the scientific
d on e; what. is dont is irre triev point of view, th e n , it is desirable
ably finished—- we
I" assum e d e term in is m (i.e., a b
a n ’t m odify
the pa t. B u t we can t a k e m e a
sence of f r e e w ill).
sur es t o sh a pe t he f u t u r e in a
Our n e x t q uestio n is obviosly
desirab le way. We should n o t
this: is it desirable also to assum e
punish a m a n f o r c ommi t t ing a
d eterm inism f r o m the m oral point
c rim e; we should r at h e r t ake t h o / '
of view?
m e as u r es which will m a k e him
( ritics of determ in ism arg ue
into the kind of per son who will
t h a t m o rality us impossible if de
not in the t u t u r e commit a crime.
term inism is a fact. H ow can
★
we possibly p raise or blame or
But does this m a tte r v e r y
punish or hold responsible any o n e
m u c h ! A f t e r all, it m ig h t be
if he could n o t help doing w hat
said, we shall still imprison p e r
he a c tua lly did do? Ju s tic e r e
sons fo r th e ir crim es since this
quires th a t a man be m ade to
is a good wa y of p r e ve nt i ng f u
atone f o r his crim es. How, then,
t u r e cr imes; so, in the end, b o th
can th e re be a n y sense to justice
theories) have t he s a me coneeif the individual is driven by in
quences,
I t m a t t e r s a g r e a t deal. In soma
cast s, we w ould n ot impose p e n
alties upon violators of the law
a t all, f o r in some cases w hat is
n eeded is kindness, s y m p a th y *
an d art o p p o r tu n ity to m ake a n
h o n e s t living, We would no t i n
d isc rim ina tely th ro w all kinds, d e
grees an d age* o f crim inals into
human o r ga n i sm ; and, above all,
toe -am e prisons. In sh o rt, we
he c ompr e he nds an d distinguishes
w ould seek m odification* of th*
the me t ho ds and tools of the
law which g a v e it t h e inflexibility
various sciences so that he, thus
necessary to deal w ith the c o r
eouipped, can cont inue his own
rection of unique h um an being*
education in a w orld co ntinually
in u n iq u e situ atio n s.
changed by science.
W e have n o t b< en able to con
Finally, the ed u c ated m an has
sider all of the problem s c o n c e r n
an u n d e r s ta n d in g o f the in te rre la ing f r e e will, b u t those which we
t.on o f ail knowledge. He sees
t h a t few of m a n k i n d ’s basic pro
have co n s id ered a re am ong th e
most im p o rta n t. A n d on th e basi*
blems t a n be solved by the political
scien tist alone o r th e psychologist
of th e points which we have con
alone o r the sociologist alone or
sidered, it seem s rea son able to
the biologist alone. In addition, he
conclude t h a t th e assum ption o f
u n d e r sta n d s w h ere m odern m a n ’s
f r e e will is less desirable th a n
scientific, sociological, and artistic
th*1 assu m p tio n of d e te rm in is m
accom plish m ents fit into the whole
I eth from th e view point o f sr te n e t
history o f W e ste rn civilization.
and o f m o rality .
It- o th e r w ords, if the laws o f
pl j etiology, physiology, sociology,
physics, etc. could n ot possibly—no m a t t e r how p erfec tly they w e re
developed— give an a d e q u a te e x
p a t i a t i o n of m a n ’s behavior, then
we should conclude th a t he pos
sesses f r e e will.
Educated Man Uses
The Things He Knows
( T h i s is th e f i na l in a s e r i e s
o f ten e x c e r p t s f r o m The U n i
v e r s i t y o f C h i c a g o , “ If Y o u
VV a nt A n E d u c a t i o n . ” — E d . )
F irs t o f all, the e du c at ed man
has m o re th a n a passing c o m p e t
ence in t he two specifically h u m a n
f o r ms of expression a n d c o m m u n
ication. la n g u a g e and mathemat i cs.
He not only reads, writes, and
fig u re s intelli gentl y; he m a ste rs
the idea o f language an d the idea
A re y o u a g r a d u a t i n g s e n i o r in n e e d
of mathemat i cs, the two discip
of a j o b ’
If sn, t h e YM< A n u i ' t t
h a v e j u s t t h e t h i n g you » r <- l o o k i n g
lines w hich u n d er g i r d th e h u m a n
for.
ities, t he social sciences, and the
G ra d u a tin g seniors w ho have had e x
p e r i e n c e in s u m m e r c a m p , p l a y g r o u n d
n a t u r a l sciences.
The ed uc at e d
o r o t h e r recreatio n al w ork a re n e e d e d
for c u r r e n t vacan cies
in Y M C A * i a
m a n is n o t a ma t h emat i ci a n, in a
v a r i o u s s e c t i o n s of t h e c o u n t r y . Dr*.
specialized sense, nor is he a p r o f
H ob G r a y , d i r e c t o r o f T e a c h e r P l a c e
m e n t S e rv ic e , r e p o r t s .
essional w rite r. H e is a t home w ith
S t u d e n t s i n t e r e s t e d in t h e s e p o s itio n t
T h u rs d a y
night,
t h e y ’ll
all
t he symbols with which man thinks.
s h o u ld c o n t a c t t h e T e a c h e r P l a c e m e n t
know . . . . . .
S e r v ic e , S u t t o n H a ll 205,
T he m a n educat ed in the h u m a n
ities u n d e r s ta n d s the principles
o f l it er at u r e, art, a n d m u s i c ;
h istory, philosophy, a n d religion.
He possesses th e train ed ca p ac ity
f o r dist inguishing the good f r o m
tire bad a n d th e trivial from the
i m p o r ta n t. His tastes have b e e n
s h a rp e n e d and s tim u la ted , and he
h a s h a b itu a te d himself to th in k
( T h e f o l l o w i n g a r e e x c e r p t s I was p e r f e c tly w illing to give adin inte lle ctu ally responsible te rm s .
f r om “ A U n i v e r s i t y in J e o p a r
dition al positive as su ra n c e s of m y
T he m a n ed uc ated in th e social
d y , ’’ a n a r t i c l e by J o h n C a u g h loyalty to the U nited S tate s, m y
sciences knows w hat h istory is
m y w h i c h a p p e a r e d in t h e N o
p re f e r e n c e for its basic in>tituand how read it and ju d g e it,
v e m b e r e d i t i o n o f “ H a r p e r ’s
tions, my devotion to its historic
a n d he know s th e h isto ry of his
M a g a x i n e . ” Mr. C a u g h e y , w h o
ideals, and m y willingness to serve
c o u n try a n d its in stitutions a n d
r e c e i v e d hi s b a c h e l o r o f arts
it w ith o u t stint in time o f peace
the history of his world. But it is
deg ree from The Un ive rsi ty of
an d w ith o u t q u estion in time o f
n ot so m uch th e “ f a c ts ” o f h isto ry
T e x a s in 1 9 2 3 , ha d b e e n a f ul l
war.
t
h a t the s t u d e n t comes to u n d e r
p r o f e s s o r in A m e r i c a n hi st or y
“ My co ncern, how ever, is n o t
s ta n d in th is co urse as it is th e
f or 2 0 y e a r s a t U C L A b e f o r e he
ju s t personal, I am d is tra u g h t a t
conscious action of in te llig e n t
w a s d i s c h a r g e d i n t he l o y a l t y
the d am ag e th a t th is action of the
m e n and w omen “ m aking h is to ry ”
oa t h d i s p u t e . )
r e g e n ts does to th e univ e rsity a n d
—
fa c in g p ro b lem s a n d f in d in g
Speaking on the lo y a lty o a th a t
its stu d e n ts. T h ro u g h th e course
w ays to sol vt- them.
th e U n iv ersity of C a lifo rn ia, Mr.
of this co n tro v e rs y the u n iv e rs ity
U n d e r s ta n d in g the social n a t u r e
C a u g h e y said, “ N o t disloyalty
has s u f fe re d incalculable loss in
of m an, he u n d e rsta n d s the g o o d
b u t discipline— these f o u r w o rd s
d istu rb e d te ac h in g , i n te r r u p te d
society a n d the bad one, the c u r
d efine the r e a l issue. The tragic
research, em otio nal exhaustion o f
r e n ts and cr ite r ia of civilization
f e a t u r e is t h a t th e se men have
m a n y p e rso n s involved, a n d indeli
and of p ro g re ss, the ch a n g in g
been disciplined out of th e ir jo b s
ble d is t ru s t w ithin and betw een
conditions
of social o r g a n iz a tio n
f o r follow ing a co u rse supposedly
the fac u lty a n d th e r e g e n ts.
fro
m
prim
itive
to advanced stages,
s e t up in good f a it h by th e re
“ I f the con c ern of the reg e n ts
a
n
d
the
bases
of his own a n d
gents.
is o ver an invasion of th e un iv e r
competing,
form
s
of economy a n d
“ Academic fre ed o m has been
sity by c h a r la ta n s and p r o p a g a n
g o v e rn m e n t.
p u t in grevious je o p ard y . Rights
dists, we su b m it t h a t no o a th o r
T h e m a n educated in n a t u r a l
a n d g u a r a n t e e s th a t the f a c u lty
d e c la ra tio n can be as su re a p ro
science k now s his universe, f r o m
t h o u g h t s e c u r e have b e i n
te ctio n as th e f a c u lty 's ow n m e th
th e e le m e n ta ry su b sta n c e s to t h e
w hisked aw ay. A tr a d itio n o f f a
od of se lec tin g an d screening its
c o nstellations, fro m th e living
culty s e lf- g o v e rn m e n t has been
m e m b ersh ip .
cell to t h e com plexities of th e
u n d e r m in e d , and f a c u lty m orale
“ Since t h e early tw en ties th e
h as b ee n s h a tte re d .
U n iv ersity o f C a lifornia has had a
“ We
(the f a c u lty ) h ad all
w ell-developed system of fa c u lty
lig n e d and we all p r e f e r r e d the
self-g o v e rn m e n t.
The
p r e se n t
s t r a i g h tf o r w a r d pledge of loyalty
m e m b ers o f th e fa c u lty a r e where
w r itte n into th e sta te (C alifo rn ia )
they a re b ecause o f a p ro c e d u re
co n s titu tio n :
St. D avid’s
of selection by th e ir pee rs on the
‘I do, s o l e m n l y s w e a r ( o r a f
# A n n a R uth Dahl, Bobby W .
basis of c h a r a c t e r , com petence,
f i r m ) t hat I will s u p p o r t the
Hodges.
an d p e rfo rm a n c e . This selective
Constitution
of
t he
United
process is not infallible; e r r o r s o f
Seton
S t a t e s and t h e C o n s t i t u t i o n o f
T om m y FT B arber, B e tty C a rd ju d g m e n t and o f c h a rity have
t he S t a t e o f C a l i f o r n i a , a n d
been made. B u t w e do m a in ta in
well, G ilb e rt FT F rie dson , Donald
t hat I will f a i t h f u l l y d i s c h a r g e
th a t the only t r u s tw o r th y and
A. Gilley, F lore nce Mozelle J o n e s ,
t he d u t i e s o f m y o f f i c e a c c o r d
effec tiv e mi ans o f building and
L e o n a rd C. Shipman, Elmo M.
i ng to t he b e s t of m y a b i l i t y . ’
m a in ta in in g a p ro p e r f a c u lty is by
Sledge, J a m e s B. T aylor Jr.
Mr. C a u g h ey said, “ Along with
relian ce on the e x p e r t ju d g m e n t o f
Brackenridge
• v e r y o th e r m e m b e r o f the f a c u lty
sc h o lars.”
Jam es A. Gist, Ralph G. Kies.
’Discipline Real Issuer
Says Fired UC Prof
D i c t rJmist
Daily Texan Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
3 goddes of
19. deception
I. music
healing
20. bracing
c h a r a c te r
( Norse)
22. rough
5. political
4. delicately
lava
Today’s
group
constituted 23 arrowrnaki
A
nsw er is
9. aptitude
5. bachelor of 24. trouble
IO. principal god
divinity
26. roll of
in the
I abbr.)
money
( Philistine)
C la s s if ie d
12. posterior
6. loiter
i slang)
14.factor
7. S-shaped
28. pack
Ads
30. jackdaw
35 to be in d ebt
molding
16. electrified
8. persuade by 32. god of lov*
particle
(Gr.)
a rgum e nt
15. evening
9 back*
34. affected
41. splicing
(poet,)
l l . require
m anners
pins
39. mock
13 see
36. bury
42. digit
21. fish
17. women
38. weird (varA
44. m ature
22 at a
under
40. prepare
46. Eskimo tool
distance
for
religious
48. east by soul!
vows
25. recognized
publication
( abbr.)
27. assumed
Alipin
name
fa 7
I
2
I
4
8
5
29. a small,
*V/A
//
*7 /f j
hurried meal
II
9
CT/ IO
31. to wash out
s/vi
//S
33. notion
IS
ii
14
W
34. close to
/ss/
35. type of
IS
17
16
architecture
yyy4
• '/y/
(Cr.)
lo
’ii
37, frozen
y / / . 19
//S
i
/
/
A
//A
w ate r
777?
26
u 25 24
ii
39 gained
SSs s
40. lizard
rn
27
28 ' / / . 29
5°
43. ostrich-like
bird
V /A
52
ii
ii
45. artist's
workroom
__
47. kind of cloth
it
56
V /A err?
54
49. leave off. as
/Z /j
w< rn
40 41 Al
ii syllable
58 f / / y 39
57
50. cereal
grasses
44 777/ AS
46
45
Bl. wagon-wheel
TAA
grooves
49
47
48
A
IW
I
I
DOWN
I hint
2. tardy
I
SO
i
i
P
I
Si
I
to - 14
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE— Here’s how to work it:
A X Y D L B A A X R
is L O N G F E L L O W
One letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used
for the three L s, X for the two O s. etc. Single letters, apos
trophied, the length and formation of the word* *r« all hint*.
Each day the cod* i*tter* are different
XI
Tuesday, N overrSer 14, 1950 TH E D A IL Y T E X A N 0eqe 5
Supper and Film to Precede
\Aiss Cross's Talk Thursday
at the “ Y ” .
Miss Cross w ill show a film,
“ Children of the Harvest,*' be
fore she begins her discussion
Kappa Epsilon will hold its re“ M ig rant La b o r Problem s/’ W a l
ter
Ligon,
chairman
of
the I’ nlar meeting tu e s d a y night at
Thursday night planning b oard ,17 o'clock rn Garrison H all I. An
educational movie w ill he shown.
annonnecd.
★
Miss ( toss worked for two
Texas
In t e r - V a r s it y
C h r is tia n
summers fo r the Home Missions
Council in M ichigan before she F e llo w s h ip w ill meet in Sutton
H all Tuesday at 7 p.m.
came to hot present position at
*
the M igrant La b o r Camp in H a r
Interdepartm ental
Symposium
lingen in I IMP.
Group w ill meet at U niversity
She is a graduate of Phillips C o m m u n i t y
( ongregat.ional
U n iversity in En id , Okla., receiv
Church Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
ing her degree in religious educa
J . R. K irk , instructor tn philoso
tion.
Follow in g her graduation
phy will speak on “ Se m an tics,";
she taught school fo r one year
J
Stan ley M artindale, teaching
and now is teaching adult English
fellow in sociology, w ill act as,
classes.
moderator,
Miss Cross's visit is past of the
*
US-2 plan for recruiting Home
A ra b S tu d e n t
A s s o c ia t io n
w i ll
Mission workers through the De
meet Tuesday at 7 p. rn, rn Texas,
lta! tmc: t of W o rk in Home Fields Union ,'ilfi to discuss plans for
of the Woman'- Division of the an Arab dinner.
Christian Service.
♦
The churches that are aiding in
An lnter-f aith auppc fo r all
the program are the Methodist, icligious foundations; on the cam
Presbyterian, Baptist, Episcopa pus will be held at H lie! Fo u n
lian, Lutheran, and Christian,
dation Tuesday, Novem ber 21 a t:
Don't Forget
Tuesday is your style show
night at
"ta
I
rv o n c k
233R Guadalupe
COFFEE COM LAUDE
rfoahi
this minute...roaster fresh!
-""
Bonin#! u p ' Yo u ll tram more
study into each night session
by taking time out (lust sec
oads!) for die quick " lif t '” of
Nescafe*
N o coffee pot
N o grounds
N o b re w in g
Yet N e s c a fe
I teaspoonful in a cup. add
piping hot water and stir.
Irtffflavor, price, convenience,
you Ii find it s a real eyeopener. The d-oz. tar makes
as many cups as a pound of
ordinary coffee, jet costs at
least 20c less. Get some today
makes roaster-fresh coffee ..
right this m inute' Sim p ly put
. . . f o r p u r e c o ffe e e n jo y m e n t,'
Af ore people d rin k
rn
NESCAFE
Ik
than a ll other Instant Coffees!
w
¥ *omt
»■
IMIWtt fit et'HfiWt '9f
tofew#
¥pmm»*to ***** rn******
i m
ft
ll*#*# ?tfCfffffftASf. tff'L 1$t§Uf*ff| HSSin#*1
! rtyHffJUWMH!
-#ft rnmwMttoifmtl
Iffif*osO'*(Af
B e tty
Po tte r,
junior
radioamo g the top ten for Aqua Carbroad^asting m ajor from College m v;,‘ queen in 1941-49.
Th}*
to See
at /
low the supper before the speech
Six U n iv e rsity churches are co-1 meeting Thursday at 7 p.m.
The supper w ill be held at 5:45
P a l i n g with the
‘ in u:vu
n ^nter- d en on iin atio n al
supper p.m. at the U n iversity Presby
or Miss D ella Cross, home min terian Church Fellowship Hall.
A
ions council worker, who w ill He The charge w ill be 25 cents.
he guest speaker at the “ V ” si.ort recreational period will fol-
CUpka 5l'a m in a (J)ulta
Miss Poller Deila Sig Rose'
O ver the T-Cup
Station, was presented as the Rose y car
heen
* Blue# r>
0.
,,, .
,
bonnet Belle nominee.
of Dofta
Sigma
Phi at the
„ ..
• tv
,*
Dttis Stahl served as toasting*I (ju n io r a D ay dinner e v e n re- t(„ f„
{j nr t„.
A tth „ r
e e r ily
fa r
m em
a
and
L it t e l,
„ „ r „ at.n t e d
th „
You’ll find Judy Bond blouses star m aterial...alw ays
ready to p la y a leading sole in your wardrobe. Made up
Faculty W ill Attenc
W e lfare C onference
|
beautifully, they give a sterling performance every time!
<\
Ju d y
\
(T )
\
\\xY \\ \ )« \ \ fv
B L O U S E S
V
BETTER
AT
B o n d . In t.,
D e p t.
G,
1375
STO RES
B ro a d w a y ,
EVERYWHERE
Now
Y o rk
18,
invest in Q u a l it y a n d Sa v e '
For the holidays.
Jacket dresses.
CRESTED JEW ELRY
s Interviews oil Cigarette Test
CHRISTMAS GIFT
Number 6...THE TURTLE
p:ace your orders before December
I ay
I ap
and
Gow n
D ues
Now
1st
to insure de a s p e c ia lty .
M K S. H O W A R D P A I N P
2102 S e to n 2 blocks « r * t o f cam pus.
Ph o n e 8-9171
Typing
Y O U ' L L cay m ore »i th e sto re s than
I ’m ask in g fo r m y late model S m ith C o ro na p o rtab le t y p e w r ite r , w iii co n sid e r
tra d in g fo r a sta n d a rd m ach in e in good
»h&pe. S e e Tom u t 1706 N u e ce s or phone
7-9127.
K E L V I N A T O R r e frig e r a to r . 7 cubi<
T Y P I N G , th ese*
re p o rts, term
notebooks. T elep ho ne 7-7787.
paper#,
E X D E B IE N ! E li
ty p is t
m a n u sc rip t* ,
theses, d is s e rta tio n * . P h o n e 2-7198,
fe et,
tw o Near* old.
E x c e lle n t co n ditio n .
P ric e S IS O .Oft. W a # $280, te rm s.
C a ll
58-0888. 1808 B e n tw o o d Road
W I L L D O T Y P I N G e t m y hom e.
P a lo D u ro R o ad . P h o n e 6-124e.
T U X E D O ai i e 36, $16.00. Phone 8-5278.
Wf A N T E D
p a r t - S in e ty p in g ,
p re fe rre d . P h o n e 2-49T0.
T A IL O R
MADE
black tuxedo, perfect.
co n d itio n . S ir e 38 long. W il l sell fo r
, $50.00. C all 2-5223.
Coaching
1206
S a tu rd a y s
T Y P I N G : N e a t w o rk . W ill c a ll fo r and
d e liv e r. P h o n e 2-4358 or 2-9606.
A C C E P T E D M O R N IN G S . T iw c a T p a p o r # ,
BOXER P U P P IE S . Sire.
d is s e rta tio n s . 900 W . 31st. 2-9444.
C h am pio n C e fty o n a ir’a L ig h tn in * . Dam ;
D ouble
C ham pion
C h ria#
o f T re e e d e r
g ran d-dau g hter.
F la s h y .
show
q u a lity T H E S LA , re p o rts, d ic ta tio n . E lee fro m » t ic
t y p e w r it e r . M rs . P e tm e c k y 63-2212.
puppies, 9 w eeks old. I SOO I i B r a c k e n
ridge A p a rtm en t#
G O O D A C C U R A T E ty p in g dona to m y
home. C a ll 63-3646.
4 4 ft. G E N E R A L E L E C T R H
re fn g e r• to r in Bood co n d itio n , $50.00. L y n n
K irtla n d . Soon C h e r r y L e n a , Telephone L E I
ME TYPE
y o u r th e sis, them es.
5-5654.
P h o n e 6-9163.
REG ISTERED
( J O A C H I N G,
tra n s la tio n s .
G e rm a n .
S iito n
2309
Yan
7-2711.
Fren ch A n to n io ,
C O A C H IN G I t t A ! ‘ I expel m eed.
phone 2-2160, 6— *.
T e le
Dancing
T
Ahey
L E A R N TO D A N C E
I D iv e rs ity B a llro o m classes. M onday and
T h u r s d a y 8 — 9 p.m. I hour cla s s le s
sons. 60c U n iv e r s it y g irls 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 Cong ree*
P h o n e 8-3951 o r 2-9086
hail our slow-moving brother moving at too fast
a pacr w itll those quick-trick cigarette tests! A fast puff
. . .
a swift sniff
Furnished Apartments
. . .
a quick inhale . . . a rapid exhale. Terrapin's head was '•pinning*—
T O W ’N A N D C O U N T R Y A p a rtm e n t* . V a
ca n c y fo r 2 o r 3 boys. M rs . P ic k e tt,
M a n a g e r, 301 E a s t 34th. P h o n e 2-7166.
didn’t know if he was coming or going! But he slowed down to his own
•peed
I S blo cks W e** on 12th a t E lm
F u rn is h e d , s ls o u t ilit ie s .
I h e se n sib le te st
, ..
the 30-I)ay Camel Mildness Test, which
simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke —
on a park after park, day after day basis. No snap
judgments needed. After you've enjoyed Camel- — and only
Camels — for 30 days in your “ T-Zone” ( T for Ihroat,
T for Taste I we believe you’ll knou why , . .
/ ,
More People Sm oke Camels
than an y other cigarette!
R E * O R D E D M U S I C end P . A . a ste m s
fo r a ll occasion#
------1
Cern
pus "M u s ic beryipe. 8-8418.
I M P I N G : then?#, th em e*, notebooks
lin e s, e tc. Ph o n e 6-8359.
T Y P IN G .
AU
kind*.
8-1191
w e e k d a y s.
M rs. W it t ,
Nursery
©ut-
a fte r
$
S C IE N T IF IC
M A N U S C R IP T
T Y P IS T ,
T H E S A I E L Y P F N . In d iv id u a l ca re for
E x p e rie n c e d .
M rs .
M oore.
Ph o ne
y o u r ch ild re n . M o n th !.’, h o u rly r a t e s ., 7-508 8.
S p e n t)
se rv ic e
fo r
fo o tb all
gam es.
— —
—
P ic k u p —-d elivery. 6-0468— 5-0695.
- T Y P I N G S E R V I C E . $10* S w is h e r. Ph o n e
* ;
"-82*1,5.
M l* * W e lc h
DOW NTOWN
K IN D E R G A R T E N ,
N u r------------------ ------e e ry .
1st g rad e baby s ittin g .
50c
hour.
C e rtific a te d te ach e r, d a y $6.50.
half, $5.00, w e e k ly . 400 L a s t 2nd. 2-8568.
For Rent
how could anyone possibly prove cigarette mildness so fast?
And he was right, too: I hat's why we suggest:
E L E C T R I C T Y P E W R I T E R . E x p e r t typink- T h e se s, repo rts. Ph o n e 2-5640.
Music
O N E A N D T W O BED RO O M
D IL L E N F I E L D A P A R T M E N T S
decided thetr wa' no need to rush. After all, he figured,
y.m#
r
P h o n e 6-4163
Perf bolero over «i sophisticated afternoon dress
Roommate W anted
U N I V E R S I T Y G I R L w ill ch are beautifu lly fu rn ish ed upper 5 room duplex
w ith one g irl, I WOO m o nth . 2 g ir ls
*50.00. P h o n e 7-2065.
<
1932-8 S A N A N T O N IO , fo r tw o boys.
L iv in g - h e d ro o m ,
s tu d y .
bath
and
kitch en.
$60.00.
B ilL
paid.
Sec
M r.
In m an in A p a rtm e n t 3 o r ca ll 6-3.20.
I 201 :i-C R E D R I V E R . M o d ern a p artm e n t
a d jo in in g
cam pu s,
Kam es
fu r n itu r e ,
lox 4*Iv door*, sec tio n s! d iva n , b e a u tifu l
d rap e rie s for 3 boy* a t I H O . Oft o r 4 a t
$120.00. 6-37 20.
Professional
H A I R C U T S 76s
Good w o rk m e n — 3 B a rb e ra
S t a c y ’s B a r b e r Shop
2502 G u ad alu p e
Leather Goods
C O W B O Y B O O T S , h a t*
belts, b olsters,
saddles,
b rid les
A l!
leath er
goods
I m ad *
to
order.
E v e r y t h in g
W e s te r n .
C ap ito l s a d d le ry . 1614 L a v a c a .
D>IUw
6 p.m.
The supper ha1
, been gula: reh©arsa|| Jo sie ( hampwdn,
changed
from
Wednesday
to pi evident, announced.
Tuesday because some students
a
Dr. B e rn ard J . Lcrn e r, assitfcwill leave for the holidays W ednes
an professor of chem ical engineer
day,
Dr. W aite! I. F ir r y , associate ing, w ill speak at the T u « d ay y a f
professor of sociology, will dis ternoon forum at •"» p.m. at H illel
cuss “ Fam ily Relations.*’ A gt'oup F o u n d a t io n ,
His topic wall be “ Uke rn ic al e n
discussion will follow. Reserva
gineering
un
This
('hanging
tions are necessary.
V o rb !," The public is invited.
A
*
S. Thomas Friedm an w ill ad
T h e V io le t Crown G a r d e n Club
dress a seminar on Je w is h uch as
worship centers, utilization
of
Six U n ive rsity faculty mem at a luncheon of the Board of during the evening.
★
audio-visual-aids in worship, ami bers will participate in the Texas Texas State Hospitals and Special
combining music with worship, Social
A 'linnet m e ltin g of the G ra d u
W e lfa re
Association's Schools,
are the topics to be discussed.
fortieth annual conference in San
Dr. Robert Sutherland, director ate C lub w ill be held F rid a y at
Antonio, W ednesday through F r i
6 p.m. at Old Seville, announced
of Hogg Foundation for Mental Bob A lb e rt, president.
day.
E f f e c t i v e S p e e c h In *Y* T o p ic
Hygiene, will be co-ordinator of
*
Miss Lo ra Lee Pederson, di
Edw ard Guillion, student from
a discussion group Saturday.
Tin ' Aahbel Lite ra ry Society has
Lebanon, Ind., will speak to the rector of the School of Sociai
Participating in a panel dis initialled seventeen new members.
W orld Relatedness ( omnrussion of W ork, w ill give the introductory
cussion
on “ Health
ResourceTh e y are Shelley F u rr, Mary
talk
un
W
ednesday.
She
w
ill
speak,
the " Y " on “ How to Say W hat
Sarah
Link,
L a th ie r n
You W an t to S a y ” at 7:30 p.m. (F r id a y to a ‘-•tudent group on A vailable to Local Com m unities" G unter,
w ill be T. A. Rousse, professor of Sparks. Rosem ary Dillinger, H el
“
Social
W
o
rk
as
a
Vocation,”
and
j
Tuesday at the U niversity Y M C A .
speech, and Dr. C arl A. Natl, pro en G raves. Eloise Moore, C ather
fessor of public health and pre ine Roberts, Elizabeth Fie ld , and
D IS T IN C T IV E & F A S H IO N A B L !
ventative medicine at the G alves Anne Peat.
FO UR-W AY
H A IR C U T S
ton Medical Branch,
Also, G loria Ratchford , M arilyn
Miss Anne W liken s professor Sadler, Lin d a Rowe, Bettie Smith,
A ) W G - W A *
of social agencies, and Dr. W illiam M argaret Tate, Ray T ut!, and F’at
Goldurn Goldsmith, professor G. W olfe, associate professor of Moore.
B E A U I V SH O P
of architecture and planning, -nae educational psychology, w ill lead
The next meeting w ill be at the
*534 G U A D A L U P E
b-OBbb
; speaker and guest of honor at the an institute on “ The Exceptional
Kappa Alpha Theta house on No
thirtieth reunion of the Kansas : Child.’’
vember 17.
chapter of Delta Upsilon Friday,
Saturday, and Sunday.
He spoke at a banquet Saturday
night, recalling his experiences in
the chapter as one of its founders.
Mr. Goldsmith also spoke to
makes a perfect
CD
the school of architecture students
of the U n iversity of Kansas.
He
was head of that school in I S I S
before he came to the U niversity
in 1928.
Goldsmith Guest
Of Kansas DU
a lu m n i
prospective members at the Dris- A lu m n i
Club.
The
Beta
Phi
, Ail H >toi.
chapter for the Southern MethodMiss [ otter, a member of Del-1 ist I Diversity campus were guests
ta D e lta
D e lt a
s o r o r it y , w a s o f th e local chapter.
W is h to sh are m y lo v e ly hom e in
T a r r y to w n w ith you ng em plo yed w o
m an, U t ilit ie s paid. E v e r y t h in g f u r
nished, P r i 'a t e bedroom , l f no ca r
ma-,
ride to and from
U n iv e r s it y
w ith
me. $55.00. C a ll a ft e r 6:30.
7-3257.
c
R
O
S
B IS U i i
H W f c iH
ll M W J
tiU H & U l
D llliu n u
aesw
j 6-R O O M
u n fu rn ish e d
hou«e
fa rin g
H e m p h ill P a r k in A ld ric h place.
Two
bedroom * pius g lassed in heated porch,
j A v a ila b le sh o u t D ecem ber 1st. $90,60.
Ph o n e 1-968$.
H U IS H
ubui
how
O U G U IU O ld
O S E JO 02)01213
Miff l l M U
w
F M P JU L 4 0 1 3 1 4 0
U U
B B Ut l l HI
R
D
of
Crisp Allure
taffeta, piped and trimmed with
flattering pink cotton p.que. Plan your holiday in
the
ever
increasing
popularity
H tSQ O H
D M H CS0U) U U U
U iliU Q H U B B U B
.’Site iqG
E L 1 PE
m um s*
N
W anted
VV
P O U R T O S IX
non-student tic k e t* to
th e T e v a s - A A M gam e. C a ll J a c k H o i ’ Un;., w o rth a t 2-9896 a ft e r 12 noon.
W A N T se t rt i (if * -hand g o lf clu b s, also
w ant to b i v used g n*. P h o n e 4-813 =
after 5 p.m.
of
the
Ja c k e t
Dress. Sizes 9 to 15.
2 4 .SO
S r con ti flo o r
s
o
2-S T O R 5
w h ile
b rick in b e a u tifu l
lo catio n in En fie ld . C o m b in a tio n hall
and bookr>>oro, Jiv in g room w ith fire
place. d in in g room , kitch e n , s to re
room , g arag e on first floor.
Two
b edroom *.
one
w ith
fireplace
on
Second floor. A t t ic fan, ga# fu rn a c e
w ith
th e rm o s ia t
co n tro l,
window
blind# on o p e rato r*. L iv in g room and
lin in g room open on ch a rm in g g a r
den in re a r w ith flood lig h t.
A v a il
able D e ce m b er 1st fo r a fa m ily o f
th re e o r couple. 8125.00 m onth C a ll
6-3596 fo r ap pointm ent. A f t e r five
r a il 2-5175.
at
N. Y.
Tuesday, November *14, 1950 THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5
Lenski Autographs
I omDoy
I
Lo t.
% m
I
■ ■
Mm
mm. rn
Piatigorsky P la y s
rn
m ^X
J
Houston Sym phony to Play
£f
Efrem
b
' ■ ^ ° Ust n Eym'
!
a u^tia dnector, belongs
to a group of musical artists
whose
recordings consistently
ai
U bt st se lea in the field of
classical recordings.
Mr. Kurtz, who will conduct the
Houston orchestra F rid a y night at
8:15 in Gregory Gym in a concert
sponsored by tho Cultural E n te r
tainment Committee, has a repu
tation for discovering classical seI lections which later lead the hit
•parade of botte! music disks.
An outstanding example of his
musical intuition is his discovery
j of
tho
now
famous
“ Saber
* Dance,
which held the number
Ione spot in classical record sales
j fo seven mon!bs.
M itt Loi« Lenski, author and ii- J
Born in Ohio, tho author grad*
lustrator of children s books, will Bated from Ohio State U niversity
be in the Texas Book Store Tues- j in 1915 and studied in New York
G r e g o r Piatigorsky, h o i Idday afternoon from 3 to 5 to meet J at the Art Students League, and
students and autograph copies of in London
t the Westm inster famous cellist, currently on his
k
.«
lot/iri k
T Vrte T
AftlKill’ ' School
C
twentieth tour of the United
her
latest book *“1Texas
Tomboy.
o f Art,
States and Canada, w ill open the
A narrative of Hie on a small
She began writing children’s
Texas ranch, the L ook i> illustra books in 1927, and included in her Austin Community Concert Asso
ted xx th 39 pencil drawings by works is a series depicting Am er ciation series at 8:3 5 p.m. Tues
the author, and gives a picture of ican child life of the past. In day in Hogg Auditorium.
Except fo r the great Spanish
the colorful traditioi - and habits 1946 she began a series of region
cellist, Casals, who is no longer
of the state’s people.
al books, one of which, “ S t anv
. ,„
, available for concert appearances,
Although it is a children’s book. berry G irl, was awarded the New- no one can challenge Piatigorskv’g
“ Texas Tom boy" w ill be of inter fiery Medal as the outstanding leadership
il his field. His great
est to adult readers for the local children’s hook of the year, First virtuosity,
Ms deep musicianship,
idiom and fam iliar descriptions it in this series was “ Bayou Suzette,’’ ann his appearance on stage have
includes. All Texas residents will fo r which Miss Lenski received the delighted audiences all over the
recognize the summer droughts, M artha Kinney Cooper Ohioans world fo r more than a decade.
the northers, and the ever-present
L im a iy Medal,
Mr. Piatigorsky will give his
dust of the plains of which Miss
In the foreword of her latest concert in two parts which will
Lenski writes.
book, Miss Lenski explains her include eight cello musical numc ho ice o f subject a- follows: “ In hers.
In the first part, he will
Texas, tomboy is a
mmon
and
play
“
Sonata
in (, M inor,” by
TUXEDOS
highly respected wet
M any girls Henri Eccles; "So n ata in F M ajor,
f o r r e n t— a ll sizes
w ho are not tom bt
wish t h a t , Opus 99,” by Johannes Brahm s;
they wert and are et
us of g
and “ Theme and V ariation s,” by
LO N G H O RN C LEA N ER S
who are ”
( ar! Maria von W ei er.
In the
2 5 3 8 G u a d a lu p e , P h . 6 3 8 4 7
M aterial for the b »k was gath- second part he w ill play Fantasy
N o . 2 a t 7 1 0 B r a z o s 28277
ered first-hand and
ketches Pieces,
Opus 73,”
bv Robert
we
m de in Texas,
Schumann
Piece en forme de
Habanera,” by M aurice R avel;
R i s h w o r t h to S p e a k in Io w a
“ Farruea, ’ by Manuel de F a lla ;
"Adagio, Allegretto Grazioso and
“ Radio in Health Education,’’
Presto.”
by Igor Stravinsky; and
is the subject of a talk to be given
by Thomas D. Rishw »rth, Radio “ W altz and Celebration,“ from
; House director, befur* the Iowa " B illy the K id ,” In Aaron * Ore
! Congress of Parents ai ti Teachers land.
: at Des Moines, No vein >er IS . Mr,
Rishworth is chairma i of radio
land television for 41 e national
I p.r
THROW AWRY
NICOTINE
PHONE
2-529i
IHONJ
T P P J W J , 'A
‘I T ’S A
7*1527
SM A LL W O RLD ”
Paul D a l*
L o rrain e M ille r
BUNCO
SQ UAD
R o b e rt S te rlin g
Joan D ic k so n
9* O n I
C A P I T O L
2-8789
“ A W OM AN OF
D IS T IN C T IO N ”
R o s a lin d R u s s e ll
R a y M id la n d
‘L O V E T H A T
P a u l D o u g la s
Je a n P e te rs
PIPES
PHOM S
U 'A P S / r y
GUN
FILTER
7-1786
C RA ZY”
Jo h n D a d
D P U ! ‘IN* I H i A T R I S
P e g g y C u m m in s
T C X A
PHONS
S
7-1964
T W O S H O W S N IG H T L Y
F e a t u r e S ta r ts at 7 p. rn.
S ta rts T o d ay
“ TH E H A PPY
Y EA R S”
D e a n S t o c k w e ll
A s c r e e n e x p e r ie n c e yo u
c a n ’t a f f o r d to m is s
T A R I N G C A B A L L E R O ’’
n R e n a id o as C is c o K i d
V IV 1 A N E R O M A N C E
S
ll
“ TH E
G U N F IG H T E R
CARMEN
.G r e g o r y P e c k
W i t h E n g l is h T i t l e s
“ M A R IN E
R A ID E R S
P a t O ’B r ie n
R u th H u ssey
B i z e t ’s M u s ic U s e d in
B a c k g ro u n d T h ro u g h o u t
VA
“ M is s R o m a n c e e m b o d ie s
p a s s io n — a r e l i e f f r o m
p o lly a n n a is m in A m e r ic a n
F e a tu re s S ta r t
A d u lts
C h ild r e n
A I/S T //V
B R IG H T
9c
7-29 OO
LE A F ”
Sandwiches — Sodas
Khatchaturian, a contemporary
I Russian compose} who fled Russi In cause of his democratic ten
dencies, who unknown in the
I tilted Stales when he submitted
his “ Saber Dance" music to Mr.
Kurtz.
1005 Barton Springs Road
“ khan hat ii lan s in u s i c appealed to im ■ because it had the
drive and ti mpo of our Twentiy ay of living,” Mr.
SAVE CASH & CARRY
PICK UP & DELIVERY
SERVICE
is recorded exten1 New York Philphony
Orchestra,
the first artists
gs were produced
>
’i n y* records*
wordings made by
with the Houston
*■
GREGOR PIATIGORSKY
perform
two
orchestra— th*
I the Chau ss on
L.
ie
¥
Uj
•bets may
night cGu
ava liable
.et office.
Saturi
“TARZAN
AND
PILLOWS
•
RUGS
411 E .
19 th
DRISKILL
i n
• On Congress N e x t
H o ld s
to Austin
Hotel
(Milo nd
CARPENTER
During the early part of the sum
mer, he again headed the Cham
ber Music Department of the
Berkshire Music Center at Tangle
wood.
Mr. Piatigorsky uses a cello by
Domtnico Montagnana, made in
the year 1739 and ranked as one
of the w o rld s most valuable
cellos.
He acquired his Montag
nana in 1934 in London. It was
given to him by the late Ernest
B. Dane, then President of the
Trustees of the Boston Symphony.
The instrument at the time sold
for $ IO,OOO. The cellist calls the
cello “ The Sleeping Princess” be
cause when he acquired it, it had
not been played rn more than a
century.
{W d tch m a k e I
T IL .2 - 4 3 1 9
I
260*1
UA DALUPE
SILLY PUTTY
Now
at
the
B O O K
S T A L L
V
2025 G uadalupe
TH E
“ 711 O C E A N
D R I V E ’’
E d m o n d O 'B r ie n
Jo a n n e D ru
‘T H E P A L O M I N O ’
in t e c h n i c o l o r
J e r o m e C o u r t la n d
B e v e r ly T y le r
B o x O f f ic e O p en s
at 6 o ’c lo c k
De It Quickly— Easily— Economically
lh # koefttor m ethod n ta o r 04,90 . , . scie n tific . , .
t n e c t i s t s l. la lo s t one d a y your hair looks aud
fu els b e t t e r end b ea m ster. Mo g r e a s y o letm en t? or
sa lv e s . H air to ll e a t i 0 ° o la 3 tr e a tm e n ts . Then,
it yon sets ti. contin ue tre a tm e n ts au d r e g ro w 50 %
to f 0 % e t alt th e no ir you Hove lo s t, Thy Ko eater
System has p ro b a b ly re g ro w n m ore hair i n ca se s
o f sim ple baldness I crow n cmd tem p les I th an ell
o th er s c a lp s p e c ia lis ts in th e w o rld co m bined.
FREE EXAMINATION
P r iv a te and c o n f id e n t ia l. N o o b lig a tio n .
Tre a tm en ts a t low a t $3.50. Home treat
ments even less. S t r ic t m oney-back g u a r
a n te e . O f f ic e s for M E N a n d W O M E N .
CARI
325 Littlefield Bldg.
in, lei
PH O N E
86631
/ ’
/
4 *
V *'
A M IG O S ”
SAYE The Hair You Now Have
DRAPES
WHEN YOU THINK LAUNDRY OR CLEANING
THINK
TONIGHT B U R N E
5-1710
“ BLA C K RO SE”
T yro n e Po w er
O r s o n W e ll e s
“CO W BO Y AND
TH E
P R IZ E F IG H T E R ”
Jim B a n n o n
D o n K a y R e y n o ld s
B o x O f f ic e O p ens
a t 6 o 'c lo c k
•
FUR AND WOOLEN STORAGE
A M AZO N S”
‘S A L U D O S
/
EVENING GOWNS
'i ehudi Menuhin, cell brateii viowith
tphony and
Mi
Reiter a 1
Mo icipal audi-
me iiv,
DRESSES
TUXEDOS
Menuhin Plays Saturday
In San Antonio Program
Austin High to Give
H eavy Mellerdram er
Mrs. D
SUITS -
BO RD ER BAD M EN ”
B u s te r C ra b b e
IRIS
F
Fountain — Steaks
D e n n is O ’K e e f e
Ju n e H a v o c
G a ry Cooper
L a u r e n B a c a ll
Piatigorsky, who has been heard
v more peoj Ie than any other
ring cellist, >egan his career at
ie age of 8, playing in the orchest a of a sr .a 11 theater in Dnepropet ovsk,
Russia,
ids home"
W hen he arrived in the
I "nit cd States in 1929, his reputalion %v »s already international.
In t ie two decades since his
Ann dc in debut, he has performed
in the United States and Canada
more than 1,000 times including
Thc
some 250 appearances as soloist
with every major orchestra in tin Hi
America.
Curse
On loan to the Austin Com “ Trap
munity
( oncert Association is Thu a
Wav man Adams' portrait of the 8 pJYl
Th ii
celebrated cellist.
It is
ex
’n ihit this week in E . M
tarPlot I
brough
and
Sons
department I
store.
Although
the
portrait, I
f u]
considered by many critics to be j
of
Adams’ finest work, was exhibited
last year at the W itte Museum in
San Antonio, it has not beer;
shown in Austin.
S E R V IC E
“ S E N S A T IO N S ”
50c
IhOKf
C URB
“ T H E B A C H E L O R ’S
D A U G H TERS”
G a il R u s s e ll ★ C l a i r e T r e v o r
f ilm s ” — N . Y . P o s t
6 :0 0 - 7 :4 5 - 9 :4 8
HOLIDAY HOUSE
K u rtz ’s recording of the
secant* a hit, with sylit
re idlest ms featuring ii and
bands making popular ar-
A fter performing for nineteen
consecutive seasons in the United F i t z g e r a l d in C h a r g e o f M e e t
States,
the
cellist
declared
R. B e r
M ID IC O V . F, Q. (VERY F I N I QUALITY) 1949-50 a holiday to devote his of Un ive
time to w riting a novel, which he charge of
d D
Pipes of spatially selected iniponed b riar J r t
has finished.
tors’ Natl
W id e variety of shapes. W ith IO filters... L
18-1!
His last appearance befoie his Lion in C
A lt o Frank Medico *Standard* . . .
holiday took place in the summer He is ass
America's Outstanding Dollar ( S h Pipe
of 1949 at Ravinia Park in Chi
F ra n k M e d ico Cigarette Holders Sl 4
cago when, together with Jascha
Heifetz and A rtu r Rubinstein, hi
C O T )
-f c / c iAMZJ&eSt - *
appeared in four trio recitals.
MEDICO
BR U T E’
Symphony.
Arrangements of
Tickets to F rid a y ’s concert ate
; ‘‘South Pacific,” and “ Kiss Me $1.80 for adults and 60 cents for
!u , „
, • , , ..
I ,
,
j
K a t®
are hlSbest' selIer8 cur- children. They may be purchased
" " Uy'
at thr M u*Ic Building box off i c y
Two other albums, “ Parade” } There will be no i d d i t i m f
{tnd “ Les Matelots”
w ill be re-I charge for Blanket Tax and^sea
leased later this year.
sol. ticket holders.'
— ------------ ,
— . ---— —— — — — --------
Reynolds Fenland
gives
em acuiately - tailored
the
rayon
college
sheen
man
som ething
special
gabardine sports jacket.
in
this
Pleated
bael and waist - h u g g in g band make this jacket the most p o p ular jacket
on the campus.
In five fall c o lo r s .............. only
$15
/