$1 Increase Defeated K£y 590-Vote Margin B y J O ANN' D IC K E R S O N Students threw a by the stumbling 1 307 for. 1.897 against. co m m issio n ): floor Union counting rooms w ere negative. And that was the story The first sixteen votes counted n e a rly the whole w ay through tile e je c tio n A P O ’* in the humid third- 3,216 votes, block in the w a y of expanding the Texas Union by voting down a $1 bv increase to I 307. fee— 1.897 Union the in S The bill s biggest defeat cam e la w around Townes Hail, w here students voted 4 to I against an increase. Their actual count w as 54 for, 205 against. Voters at only two boxes w ere in favor of the in­ crease—at Sutton H all (128 for, 121 ag a in st' and at Hogg Auditorium (180 for, 155 against'. B u t apparently the stumbling _ tem porary Ixigan Wilson, p re s id e n t! block w ill be only a one Dr. of the U n ive rsity, said the Union Building appointed committee. Thursday, w ill be asked to see if there is any other course of action to be pursued meaning that per­ found else­ haps money can be where to finance an expanded U n­ ion. ★ Jit t e r Nolen, Union director, said the Union building com m it­ tee w ill have to study the prob­ lem v e ry care fu lly and come forth the with a plan that w ill meet needs of every' segment of the student body. “ W e wish more people had voted ’ he said “ And I would like to know w hy the students voted ’no.’ If they tv.ill come to talk to us at the Union, or send us a post card, or give us a ring on the tele­ phone. perhaps we can come to a better understanding.” Building The vote by box stations: east of M ain Building 236 for. 264 against; west of M ain Building - 261 for 414 against; W aggener H a ll—112 for, 176 against; E n g in ­ eering 177 against; A rchitecture 138 for, 159 against; L a w —54 for. 205 against; Sutton Hall- 128 for. 121 against; Batts H a l l —129 for, 226 against; and Hogg Auditorium —180 for. 155 against. Total vote of the 3,216 votes cast (12 were declared void -69 for. Inaugural Rites Set October 29 X W ilson To Become President Formally M ore than 1.100 junior colleges, senior colleges and universities in­ throughout the U S have been vited to send representatives Octo­ ber 29 to the form al inauguration of D r Iy>gan Wilson as U n iv e rsity president. Tn addition, universities in M ex ­ ico. P uerto Rico. and Cuba w ere asked representatives. More than IOO or ganizations of edu­ cators w ere invited to take part in the cerem ony. send to The official delegates w ill join U n iv e rsity faculty members In the academ ic procession which w ill precede the exercises. Dr. H arlan Hatcher, U n iv e rsity of .Michigan president w ill d eliver the inaugural address. Representative Party Ends N om inations Today Nominations for assem bly and justice posts w ill be associate made Sunday at l l p m at the Sigma Nu fraternity house by the R ep resentative P a rty . Ja c k T id-veil, party chairm an, said th,s w ill be the last chance for m em bers to nonxinata can d i­ d a s , F in a l voting w ill be Tues­ day T id w e ll also said nam es of can­ didates, qualifications, and name of the organization nominating, snould be turned into him or the p e erin g comm ittee by l l p m . Sunday. Outside organizations that wish to Cockrell T I >oc hen M Nett K nloy Frost VV F O R I M S P E A K E R S S. W a rre n L. Speaker vi. M inton B Goldsm ith VV. Hicks B ro w n in g I ( ’of fee (• VV. Green ; F Sto va ll I I. G ilb ert Anderson Rogovv ski Kd H a rre ll • K Phelps R. W h e e le r J o P a ll y J. Ed Shaddock I IL Morrisson H O S P IT A L IT Y * ( OM M IT T E R ( H A R M C O M M IT T E E D. Drum mond Jo hnson B. M iller 'n llln s L. A. M Luedem ann 8 C h ristian Kirsh V. W a lk e r M o rris N. M ill* ll Riddick M. Sm olensky J . Cook i ‘. J racy S P o w ell j .lanu- .'. W hitt D Ann Bi rod VI V Steele N Roberts I J- B u rk e I G. ! J. VV el lor Ea ste rlin g NI Robichau ('tai k I J. ‘ B. M elle nolds F ra n cis I tv . A rnold L. W est I B. Rota J. H ardw irk ; B. I M K I >eRese B arto n Grav J. Ann S ta rk e y D. R a y n ie r I. B ro w n V'. Zn ba I A. P it! ir k ' s. K le in Zant Dorntan I she-r B a lla rd H arb a rh Sch in u h Ba EKHley ; J. Baird I B 5. B arghout ii. Bust in B. .loan I P. Foot** A. I ret i,ail 1 I. I let bens I J. • .1 in ;u I J M . ( ireer lia r per v W a i ker ii. Ave Diamond J. i Riel VV MUI inan B. B a rk e r VV Hiker r s. M cG arrah a n R. H arriso n Jo n es 1 G . vt. K l rn a d I J W end ei N ( l a r k S i c k l e * B . R. Roverdeau B. Bettis R , ’ Me v cr f aleon Fipste ri M I S IC ( OM M IT T E L I.. Voet > B a y less D A N C E A R T C O M M IT T E E T A L E N T ( OM M IT T E E i opeland \ H eir J Lin d *ev * Ann Nelson J Peeples K P h illip s D Roberson Stephens t Sutherland W . W h ite R. Etpro K Allen I j. W ilson A Rial k D Reinters B. VV ale risky J S*. Greer I. VV n u ney A Britt I Rogers H. ('ra ft R o s e P R flood win * K u s in P B a rb er Vt ('of)uat B Sm ith XI W e rb n e r IN D IC A T IV E O F W H A T M I C A for beaut rul freshman is Sheryl ’ Beautiful Freshman of 1952. Five finalists veil be announced soon, and a q Cup of judges w I have the p le a s e r! task of looking fo*r a freshman g rl to take M ss M c K e lv y s p'ace. M icas Annual Quest For Beautiful Freshman Will End Monday at 2 “ M ica 's annual quest for most beautiful freshm an girl Schrank. said R ic h a rd begun.” president of the organization, “ and w e ’re doing it som ewhat different­ ly this year. Instead of announcing the winner at the F o rty Acres F o l­ lies as has been done in the past. we w ill present the beauty at. the next Union dance with a w ell­ known orchestra The date has not yet been deter m ined.” En tries must register their nom­ ination* in the M ic a office, Texas Union 307, before 2 p m. Monday. The girls a re asked cocktail dresses for the first judg- mg Monday afternoon the selected Monday, fi\ e w ill he ^as chosen on October 12 for tile final judging, w hich w ill be held Octo­ ber 19. The only requirem ents are that the applicants must not have more than 30 hours of college credit and must not now be. or e ve r have been, on scholastic probation. Any qualified girl m ay enter, regard­ less of affiliations. She m ay be nominated by an organization, an individual, or herself. Ju d g in g w ill he based on facial to w ear features, figure, posture, and o ver­ im pression. S h eryl M c K e lv y was last y e a r s Out of the 25 somi-fmalists w inner. Politicos Must File Within Five Days The last day for filing for posi­ tions as representatives to the Stu­ dent Assem bly and as associate justices w ill be Thursday. the Constitution of Association within “ The candidates w ill be given a the quiz on 18 Student* hours of that deadline Elwood P reitf,* Election Com m ision ch a ir­ man, said. fide student of the I 'niv easily and must he of af least sophomore standing He must tie registered for at least twelve sem ester horn - in his re'-pecfjve sc hool or college anc! must have a scholastic a v e r­ age of at. least C. He shall rem ain in office only as Icing as he re­ m ains in the school or college he represents. The genera! eie< tion is to be held October 28 All candidates for office in the Students’ Association must file the following papers w ith the associa­ tion se cretary: A c andidate for associate justle, e must be a liona fido student of at least junior- standing and must have been enrolled in t h e Cm v e r­ lei sify at filing. He must be registerer! for I. A s a'en.en* announcing the at least tw elve semester hours anc! the preceding seme.d e r must in lime hours least have passed at w ith at (An ( average. le a d a exception is that a candidate from the School of Law m ay be register­ ed for only ten houi s i the R eg istrar and tile C h airm an of the Far dry Com m ittee on O fficial E x ­ tra cu rric u la r Non-Athletic A c tiv i­ ties approving the student s quali­ fications intention of the student to run for a particular office. 2. A statement signed by least one ye a r prior A candidate foi Student Assem ­ bly representative must be a bona T h e D ai T e x a n 'The First C o liege Daily in the South' V O L 53 Price 5 Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1953 Eight Pages T o d ay No. 36 Torrid Longhorn Comeback Blasts Spirited Cougars,28-7 149 Appointed To Union Posts Poised, well-coached U n iv e rs ity of Houston, a young school w hich its big-time football has lessons quickly, received an im­ portant lesson from Texas S a tu r­ day. B y S A M B L A I R learned ‘TIL THE C L O U D S roll by, the Longhorns, lilt© their fans, ta le to raincoats. How ever, the liquid to dampen their spirits, as atmosphere failed J they ch a rg ed ba I urday after the I S in ff Photo C r lc r h io V to score four touchdowns Sat- r.nower was over. Saturated Horns Okay After Ole Sol Returns . B y W I L L I A M ( H I U . I F . ) M O R R IS yesterd ay as he was hated a week had chosen to sink or sw im 'there 20 on bad passes from center which , , , , , , R a in reared its %v\et, ugly head e arlier, sm eared the overcast skies w a s a blending of both' w ith our ~o _t them „ total of 49 yards and for forty despairing moments here with a hue that corresponded pre- Longhorns, Saturd ay afternoon, dampening re.- cisely to Texas-orange, and before agreed solute aspirations of everybody save a bant! of overam bitious fe- lines called Cougars. generally first-half cloud- the ball gam e w as ovef hy goHee burst was as devastating as the those Cougars had all but floated worst of tornadoes. deluge, w hich drove a bevy Tile portion of that 30.000 w hich Gf spectators to shelter, w as a c ­ Then Ole M an Sun. as welcomed how ever. the aw ay. that put the Orange in scoring business. And the mud put a halter on Hous­ ton s racehorse halfbacks who excel on w ide pitchout plays. Houston had to knock hard be­ finally touchdown door the fore Borden to Award Three $300 Grants companied by dam p shoes. Sat- o p e n e d Jn the second quarter! urated raincoats, scattered sneezes and Cougar Longhorn despair, glory. Our Houston visitors, in true Bayou-like fashion, seemed to thrive on the m usty sogginess while we Texas backers could only t helplessly and w ish fu lly w ait for Stalled by' T exas’ No. 2 unit with 2:30 gone. Houston punted from its 3A C harles B re w e r took Paul C a r r s kick on the Texas 25 but fumbled and Houston’s V erle C ra y covered the ball on the 31. brighter moments. Three $300 scholarships from the feeing the scholarships cherk the t nusual incidents at the S ’ v will grades of their senior students, d ia m : for his grade a ve ra g e aw ard the one with the highest Our Bevo, on his custom ary p. e- a certificate, and game trip around th*** field, stop- in college from add his nam e <>n a bronze ['late* ping in front of the cage of Shasta. P h a rm a c y , the to their Borden plaque. Company Founda- zledly. as Houston mascot and sniffing puz- little if to say. The Borden tion gives each division $1,500 to squirt, what in the devil are you be contr ibuted in scholarships o v e r doing h e re ?” a five y e a r period Therefore, cat h annual scholarship is $300. “ You * senior student the tile highest grades Borden Company Foundation tie presenter] w ith first three years (ho College of School of Jo u rn a lism , and the De- partment of Horne Econom ics. s e e r o t a r y , Tile awards w ill tie made by the Foundation s \V. A. Wentworth of New Yo rk , at a re­ ception Thursday, O ctober 8 from in the patio of 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. the H o m e Eronom u s Building. The Borden scholarships h a v e for research usually been given and study in d a iryin g ; thus, the Borden Home Econom ics Scholar­ ship and the Borden Scholarship A w ard in P h a rm a c y. an editor during Journalism has another relation to the Bolden concern. G a il Bor­ the early den days of tile Texas republic, was tile first to establish a stable news­ paper in Texas. In mem ory' of Mr. Bolden s join nalistic achievem ent*, the foundation has granted the (ia ,l Borden Scholarship A " a d in Jo u rn a lism to the U n iv e rsity. The t h r e e academ ie divisions rif­ ( a r r Speaks Mnmla\ Dr. W illiam ( > . C a rr, executive of the N ational Educa- ciation, w ill speak to edu- groups M onday at 8 p m. Hall Auditorium on inter­ in the field of relations “ Tile Election Com mi.-'.'ion w ill be glad to help aru pro.-pcct.ive candidate who might have ques­ for posi­ tions concerning tions, Peggy R ow ­ land and P h il Nelson are also on the com m ittee. P re is s said filing to one representative E a c h school or college is entitl­ ed for an enrollm ent of 500 students and two representatives for LOCK) stu­ dents. F’or eac h additional I JKK) students the v pool or college w ill have one additional price. Texan Subscribers Num ber 10,043 Mrs. P e a r l G horm kw . c irc u la ­ tion m anager of The D a ily Texan, icports that total circulation stands at 10,043. T his total is reached by adding thp out-of-deiiv c ry zone pickups 3.131: deliveries, 6,358; and copies m ailed, 551. “ Some fa cu lty m em bers have signed and sent to the circulation secret m anager the address < aid s that tion A should have gone to the President s o f f i c e They a^ e not subscriber* to said M rs, T e x a n ,' The D aily ( ih o rm le v. cat Iona in Batt na t Iona ed irati Texan Rated All-American In College Newspaper Field The nam es of the recipients w ill third period not be announced until the recep- unheeded by die hectic tion T h u rsd a y night. The adm in istra tive the U n iv e rs ity have special invitations to Hie receptioi but all students are welcom e. officials of beat b x snap bern sent le a Refreshm ents w ill be served. A ndrew s’ pica for silence in the 'fo r th*> most part le v is ro o ters1 so that the p layers could signals, m e ren The rem ark of the m ale half of bed their hvc- a couple that tile just a fter line sr y a rd downpour beg T h e re ’s a pud­ dle s w e e t die on this *• l i t t l e “ Sit dow n,’ thing protested he said “ You drew >m S h a s t a , t h e cougar, evidently te a m s pelf ted w i t h his falling asleep in the Law School to Pick Officers Oct. 7 I aw v bool elections fo < la s o f­ ficers vv .ll be field Wednesday w ith a f o f f , slate of nominees for cvcrv N om inated f< JIH* E M c C a i named dent a re lens. J im C is VV C l e dent s ra M orris \ senior i lass pi est .ins and Jim Vol . cr and Lyn n Shiv for the v ice-presi I Hat hi Conti ant ♦ dietary. The h fives w ii Boling, ( rout pick. i Ha Mac irto d frorr n, E v e re tt Mc* ami Don Un, Bot) gi am e, half deed* B o y place pert rn Scouts Low Draft Calls Exempt Students quo! den Rum president of the I* J a' cs C C.i law ay, and Jim Webb \\ m- and ( . i s Zgourides vice-president s post. ro tary w ill be chosen 1 s Bob Carpenter and H a ir ..Ie Norman B la c k Ja m e s O Smith, and rr la vv* (la s s a r Lee Duggan stem Adkins flied for the Mid-Iaw sec from nom inee Vernon Robert Wright on fronts ti in/ 'P liv e Service duce Current month in Texas men groups will run month, but the ne to double by Ju i 1954. On the na present monthly age s expo. August •ted in The D a ily Texan bas achieved a goal, and w ith it, a standard to m aintain. The Associated C ollegian' Press s N ew spaper Score book has given The Texan U mg sem ester the highest possible A m erican rating on the ti..sis OI su periority in e very facet of news­ paper making, th On coverage balance v d a lit treatm ent of creativeness, the sources, news values Texan ranging from excellent to superior with a and and r e i n e d points I rcnhman Coffee Tuesday final t..ting of superior. On con­ lead* tent Je a tu ie s the Texan and editing, was not found lacking. organization, style, S im ila r s. ores w ere attained in headlines, tip departm ental pages, and special features. typography, make judge eov e comment* w ere Sample “ O', era ii extra ;e rates lot of je has a I credit. new s ; ” ” Edi- leads. “ Ex ce lle n t tonal indicating ca re­ ;ful planning, re sc a n h, and good “ Y o u r sports cover- reasoning;” w ell-done, purpos of the ratings bools and the igntf, Hie s in th it ion, ded U )n and ii ooh HU A I midei Otho i o w I in ti in©' lr osh the Da' I Robert Katz filed f, law four candidates jinns Itoard students w an nm f. ideo' Nominees are P>e, rn Hammond Chaum < ; I z)\ c m , and V dham tm* en* rodmen I ll MOV i c at 12:45 Don B e rn a rd . Bob Ha it.son and Boh L a u re v filed for v ice-president. The secreta rv s race has been en* Movies of the U n iv e rs ity of Hous- tered by B ill Cohn. Arnold Sweet, ton game will in the and A rth u r Zohel. John Estes. P a u l M a in lounge of the Union Tues- K urten, and Ed Stockley entered 15 p m Fre s h m a n coach the election for honor council rep- tx* shown w ill n a rra te {]re films resentative. and answer questions dial the s l y dents a sa aoout tne p lays, F ra n k J M a lo rey is unopposed * for Pereg rine!* representative. sh bi udont determ ents, vvnen a high rank in his class w ill allow most of the young men chances to finish school. “ The student who is n e arly 20.” said Colonel Schw artz, “ m ay be in the enlarged J u ly and August quotas if he is unable to get an ex­ tension of his student deferm ent by then to have to dip into the below-20 age I group lor draftee*. is not expected Texas 7:30 — F re e m ovie, “ Lifeboat,” A second coffee for new stu- age is su perior.” M ain lounge. Texas Union. 7:30—Delta Sigm a P i mass meet­ ing Texas Union 309 8 Ut led W eem s and ms oldies* dents, transfers, and freshmen w ill be held Tuesday from 2 to 3 30 p rn. rn Texas Union 309. Hosts w ill F>e the Slive r Spuis and O r­ i ira, C ity C obs*am. a n g e Ja c k e ts . The A C P seorebook m akes pos­ sible the analy sis and evaluation of d ay at a school publication in the same E d K< *en*e that a tea. lier analyzes and evacuates me w o ik c l a student. WU Q o e S o n ^ J 'l e r e IO ■ Student mass, St. Austin s 2 and 8 — G rand Ole Opry, C ity Church ds rjon 10 boun' ii breakfast, Hiilel Fo u n ­ 11 H a rt Stilw ell to speak to U n i­ tarian Fellow«h:p on “ Life O ut­ side the C hurch,” T F W C B u ild ­ ing l l - N ew m an Club. Texas Theater. 12 45— W orld Series on T V , Texas Union. house 2 Alpha Ph i Omega open m eet­ ing, Texas Union 309. 2-4 —- F a c u lty coffee, Alpha Phi Nu house K N O W . Coliseum. 3-5 E l usa bet Nev M .- e ir o open 5 IO W esley stew ardship supper. Method/st Educ ation Center 6 Canterbury C lub to leave Gregg House on pie nu 6 Texas D a ily N ew spaper Asso­ ciation supper, I^a Fiesta. ft Buffet s ipper, N ew m an Annex. l l — Representative P a rty , Sigma 11 — “ Ju s t Listening, T hanks,” M O M * tv 8-12 Freshm an Be a u ty nomina­ tions Texas U nion 307, 9 -1 2 ariel 1-4 3 0 - I n a • m g O U g a m e tickets, G reg ory G ym . 12 45— World Series on T V , Main lounge. Texas Union 2— Excerpts from plav.x dram a students X H all for new I 15 spooks, Alpha Chi Omega house 7 T D N A dinner, D n s k ill Hotel 7:15—Sem inar on to Get Along With P e o p le ,” Hilled Foun­ dation. “ How 2-4 C a m p project discussion by M iss M arg aret F'iory, U n ive rsity P re sb yte rian Church. 2 - A ra b Student Association to elect officers. Texas Union. Osborne, W ilson N am e d To Silver Spur Offices Tw o new officers for the 1953-54 long session were elected M onday night at the first meeting of S liv e r Spurs, men s honorary service o r­ ganization. Jo e Osborne w as named v ic e ­ president and J e r r y Wilson secre­ tary. O ther officers elected last spring are C. A Blinded presi­ dent and Ja c k Greenwood, tre a ­ surer. \ Don't sell the Longhorns short. T h at's w hat the Cougars prob­ ably w ill rem em ber best about their first battle w ith the Orange. Lik e the h eavy rains which soaked 30,000 fans in the first quarter, am ­ bitious Houston started e a rly and hit m ighty hard. B u t the sun made a second-half comeback and so did Texas. In eleven torrid minutes of the third quarter the Longhorns ripped Hous­ ton for four touchdowns and earn­ ed a convincing 28-7 victory'. Texas has played so seldom in tho rain that it treated the foot­ ball like a total stranger during the first-half flood. Fum bles w ere a millstone about the Longhorns' necks as they slosh­ ed and stumbled through the first 30 minutes of action. Texas bobbled six times during that dark period, and I he a le rt Cougars recovered fiv e. After several n e ar m isses the Cougars converted one fum ble into a score to take a 7-0 lead m id w a y of the second quarter. Texas m anaged to scratch the scoring column shortly a fte rw a rd w hen a Cougar pitchout w as knock­ ed out of the Houston end zone b y Longhorn H erb ert G ra y . But, as mentioned e arlier, the story qu ickly changed in the sunny third qu arter as the Orange roared hack and the mud took its toll of Houston's first-half good fortune. As if T exas’ te rrific counter- punching w asn't enough, the Cou- gars lost the ball twice inside th e ir C a rr a brilliant workhorse a ll day, ripped the middle for a first down on the 18. Sa m m y M c W h irte r got two. then Newton Shows fum­ bled and was dropped on the 20 by Langford Sneed. But C a rr can * up th* m iddle again, this tim e for nine to the ll. thrust M cW h irte r s into Texas left side was stopped ,rv c s short bv G r a y and C harles Petrovich on the 9 fourth-down Ti; it gallant stand delayed the C o ;gars only slightly. W ith B ill Long faking a punt, B re w e r ftirn- b cd on a sneak through the middle and Houston’s Bud dy Gillioz re­ covered on the IO. M cW h irte r got nothing at right ' i i kle. then slam med off left end to the 8 Texas' defense was pulled ' See S T F!FIR S page 2» in 1,000 Exoected For Dads' Day tile “ B ;gest ever ’ is the prediction for the sixth annual Dads' D ay ac­ tivities N ovem ber 7, the day of the UT-B a y lo r game. Dean W. IL Blunk, secretary of the A - socia fun. said he expect* more than I OOO parents this ye ar. T!;e program starts Friday Nov­ em ber 6 with registration in or- : ni/ed living units and in the Tex­ as Union. O u z e d living houses this ye a r a r e h. ng encouraged to sponsor * . is m n for m em bers’ parent* it their own houses rather than the Union holding all registra­ tion. The I rtds' D a y meeting w ill an­ nounce the Best All-round Boy and G irl, who w ill be picked by a five- m em ber faculty committee. Prizes w ill also he given to the father who cam e the longest distance, the f a t h e r with most i n children S' , rn father, and t h e O l d e - I ( ‘apt IL Y. NL Cow n. registrar, w :i held the Best All-round B o y and G irl committee tee y out jest f a t h e r . i h e bu n e s s meeting on Novem ­ i n ber 7 w ill elect new officers place of H a rry C. Webb of Hous­ ton. pics. lent; Bob Arm strong, \ustm, treasurer; and Dean \V. D. Blunk, secretary. D raw OU T icket* Monday * D rawing for student tickets for the O U gam e w ill start M onday at 9 a rn. to run through 4 p m. Wednc day Student tickets sell for st go vs tth the Blan ket Tax. Regu­ l a r price is $4. U * . t >- I W C " * '* ’ Coach Lee, Too Sunday. October 4 I9S3 THE DAILY TEXAN. Page ’Horn* Reody for Sooners Rain Helps Crops But Not UT — Price i v VVC;]. M a s s e y s re tu rn h elped a I vas v e r y proud of our lot too. sp irit . . . Nobody let up " C a rlto n M a ss e y, one of the lo n g ­ tri-captains peeled off his horn mud streak ed orang e je r s e y and spoke “ W e w orked p re tty h ard for this one T h e y w e re p re tty fired up but th ey seemed to tire a lot to w a rd the end O k lah o m a next S a tu rd a y . . . Y e a , we ll he r e a d y ." T h e dressing room rea cted in no u n ce rta in t r im s as som eone v e il­ ed “ let s get those Sooners n e x t." p ortals T h r as the for last he co n crete could be heard jut prom ised revenge IT-20 drubbing. ‘v s con sp irato r it ton, G ilm e r Sf e con versatio n , kn ew how* m uch in this one. W e r the ball enough to score m g w ho caught mi end l/)nghorn tow ai d his right lr .ref! e a r ly in a t the ng. added guess w e e needed illy didn t the first a pass for score, nod­ al m w h ich third the som etim es hut it % end pc to the inst k h a lf Spi the ded q> i f nothin the crow d T h re igh of w e ll­ w is h e r* stepped a big n u m b e r 70 a g en tlem an nam ed B u c k L a n s ­ ford w ho spent about as m uch in the Houston b ack fie ld as tim e “ It tile C o u g ar backs. som e of w as an aw fu l good ball gam e. T h e y lot of good b rea k s hilt so got a did w e . . . I think w e can still im p ro ve a lot m ore. looked like o u rs e lve s “ W e second B r e w e r L u b b o ck ta k e* up fen O klah om a the C h a rle y added h a lf,'' re s e rve q u a rte rb a c k from “ E v e ry o n e m a d e m is­ I know I did W e ll be H a ir ie r * Trip O K i n g * B y G A R ) C V K T W U U . H T “ I guess svc ic* just going to turn into a second-half ball club. These w ords by E d P r ic e , con­ genial head coach of the victorio u s Texas Longhorns, seem ed to sum up the idea form ing in the heads of te- porters ’hat flowed into the Texas dressing the Steers m ore than con vincing victo ry o et* the game b it outm anned Houston ro a ch e s and room a fte r the p layer, Cougars. P r ic e continued “ The I in versu s of Texas n e v e r has been a mud team . Ram m a y be good for the is added it neve farm ers but the fu s t much to football. I ti half rain pro b ab ly h in t tv a tie m ore than Houston . , . W e fast-xtriking bull club and tha* to ll gave us a lot of trouble IJT list! atef! act thai The Longhorn m en to r ii his point by stress rig the the Lon gh orn s gained a id s in less than eleven m inutes of the second half as com pa ted to orc-, in the entire first bai? 45 yard # T he C ou gars In the sam e period of tim e \«scre credited w ith a minus 20 yard s " T h e y had a P r e e relaxed fir. the a rm of a c h a ir in the lounge outside his of­ fine. well- fice coached bal) club W e got a lot of good breaks. I thought B re w e r and A nd rew s both p layed especial Irish Crumble Purdue In Easy 37-7 Victory L A F A Y E T T E . In d Or* 3 r Notre D am e s neat arid n ifty foot­ ball team scored a 37-7 v ic to ry o ver big but befuddled P u rd u e Sa t­ Iris h scored as they u rday. The fu llb a ck N eb W o r­ pleased w ith den's powe h alfb a ck .Johnny L a it n e r’s speed, and q u a re rb a c k R alp h G u g h e lm i’s la te ra l passes o v e r­ w helm ing Pu rd u e Notre D am e started its y *omt production w ith a 23-yard field goal by guard M e n d M a v r a id e s less than seven m inutes into the fu st q u a rte r and Pu rd u e n ever caught A P M E N A M S C H R I E W E R p ow er', H v «*. / -o th 9 C o u q a r * * o , a ' 'I V '* - M f r n a r e M e in im p per', t-e 4 'r d pm od from C b * ' e " O ' * B 'e ^ e r . T e p a/ ga en ’ 2 y a rd s a " d the Steers ed / .w u..^O a cd tee H yr es. ' c ' *- ct *r c o d k Staff Photo — Cr tech lo 'T o o w ' c ' ' — e ' * t e * e . J o e - a r e. p n b e r - d ’ ce f e ’ e r e e G o u g e ' b e '* tia o e p e / e r IS S ; s G e o ge Steers Score 26 in Third ’ Continued from P a r,? I* The Cougar- a fte r those two, o Shows p layed it cool q u a rte rb a c k faked a s im ila r p la y into the line, d rifted ba»K to the grit ai d p itch ­ ed an ca-' pa ss to Ben W ilson , all alone in the end /one. D onnie D ie tric h con verted and Houston led, 7-0, w ith 7.30 gone in the second .Jai k P a tte rs o n dropped b a c k to the high punt but co u ld n ’t hold .snapback the g ie a t T e x a s end, nailed him on the 19. C arlto n M a ss e y , It. w as easy for T e x a s from th ere, loougal C a m ­ left ta c k le scoring in four p lays eron sm ashed through for the last 5 to score. T e x a s s 'a I led soon after the k ic k ­ I x>ng punted to D ie tric h , off and T ex a s w as w ith I 35 gone in the third P h il B la n c h s k ir k m issed but to sta y, 8-7 front in | w ho retu rn ed to the l l . T w o Mr W h it tpi attem pts c a rrie d to the 22 but Houston d re w a pen­ a lty to the 2 for illegal use of the hands F ro m there Shows pitchout W a s fouled up by the .Steers and fin a lly hatted out of the end zone by G r a y . S T I L L W A T E R . O k la O ct L f A big, tough T ex a s l ei h football tea m bow led o ve r listless O k la ­ hom a A A M 27-13 S a tu r d a y for th eir th ird s tra ig h t v ic to r y this season. in a the ball the p la y e rs m uddy. ra in s to rm w h ich m ade s lip p e ry and T he firs t h alf w a s played T h a t m ad e it Houston 7. T e x a s 2. w ith 3 IO left and no serious th reat follow cfi until that c ra z y third q u a r­ ter. It all started q u ie tly enough K e n ­ ny Steg all returned to the H ous­ ton 25 anti Hie C ou gars m oved out to the to before stalling after- Then toe Kickoff, the C hange am azed a ll by sco rin g th eir second T D w ith in 15 seconds of the first B ill y Polson fum bled a fte r B u r k L a n sfo rd slam m ed him and if w a s ’53 a p ­ M assey, m akin g his first p earan ce a great one in this g a m e, who reco vered on the 33. B u n n y A n d rew s passed to G ilm e r Sp rin g , all alone behind Hie H orn ton seco n d ary on the left sid elin e, and the T e x a s end scored e a s ily . B r a n c h 's kick w a s good this tim e. led, 15-7, and c o u ld n 't be T ex a s touched th ereafter Texas' Manpower Impresses Cougars B ud d y G illio z , heid a sm all p a p e r c >p and d ra n x w a te r and ta lk e d .n a low. v o ic e . A t the m om en t he didn t h a . e m u ch to sm ile abo u t. G ill.’oz did m ention the ou’ s ta n d ­ ing p la y of “ ’h at No. 79 1 H e r e ­ ferred to C liffo rd Folk. “ H e w a s in on p r a c t ic a lly e v e r y ’ a rk ie on th at side of the lin e .'’ GilJioz said. “ T h e y h a v e a much li e f e r all- around c lu b than Texas A A M ' G ii- hoz. c o m m e n te d . Houston tied A A M last w eek. S a m m y H opson, an a ll- M isso u ri V a h e y c o n fe re n c e defensive h a lf­ back la st season, praised M a s s e y and ( d im e r Spring. “ S p rin g is h a rd to c o ver on p a s s ­ es " the s c ra p p y Hopson said “ Too m an y m en and too m a n y e r r o r s ’’ w a * his o v e r a ll com m ent. Ken R e e s e ste lla r Houston co n ­ te picked out Spring and L a n s ­ ford as h a v in g stood out fo r the lo n g h o rn * “ T h e y h ad a good cle a n b a ll I club.' R e e s e stated. “ They just got the b re a k s . . or m ade the breaks, R e e s e c o m ­ m ented. . Scores >.-n 27. Oklahoma AAM t i 2" Hardm-Simmon* 21 Tech a SMC 4 ria 7 P itt 7 f Ie > Stv»> 27. Nebraska 0 lox- a .Stat* 0 25 a villa nova lz X 39 Washington A 47 Waynesburg It? >s ppi 0 B y M L R H A Y F O K S \ t i l texan S p o rt KC "(T o t too m uch powe . too . . m a n p o w e r boys . . . and . .any good the T h a t * how C oach C lyd e L e e r1 the va n q u ish ed C ongai * explain ed the situation. The C o u g a r' • aged on Im r.cho ns the w e re locked up again a f ’c: Hie g am e. C o ach L e e closed H e dre-s- ing room door for so - <■ ter,- m .riu ’e w h ile he talked to h r team field ny T h en he g e n ia lly a d m itted m e m ­ b er* of the p re - '. “ f thought w e we e ir p retty w e t -.ad a fro m good shape rn tha* f C o u g a r ro a ch said. * I hen n pass qu ick T h a t w a s the br eak th at ga . c the S te e r* then first st Ot e re n te r ga e touchdown ’ L e e ’ hr- r> .md L e e pointed out. that Hie fu n 'me on the subsequent k, K off ■ , ■? ar iou’ ended the hopes of his am b itio u s H ouston r pw. “ T o m e that w a s the I at' g a m e L e e com m en ted. “ That, 'L a n g f o r d Sneed Of trou ble right defen- e ga e ’ Coa- b Lee r>p r d t is a k!e int T h e C o u g a r mentor a Do p « md ' f p la ­ the Coup C a rlto n M assey for his it w a s the first tim e the m er all- A m e r ic a n can d id ate ad p - d th - season and s ag-end that he w as off to a fly in g start. ’ C o u g ar C o - - a t­ tain P a u l C a r r just shook his head and d id n 't com m ent b a th e on the su bject hut it w as c den* ’ hat he had gam ed a great d eal of respect for ’ he big end s play “ T h a t M assey “ T h e y had a good o ffen sive hne C a r r stated ' A good hail < Lib " T he C ou gars sat around q u ie tly in v a rio u s stages of (I ens and n- dress sipping orange t , e o r just p lain w a te r. T h e co n versatio n v*as in undertones when th e ie w a any a ’ all T h e other Houston co-'--ipta;n h g Tennis Entries Close Tuesday Team Can Place 12 in Competition E n t iie s close T u e s d a y for In tra ­ m u ra l tennis sin g les B e r r y Whit- ake. D ire c to r of In t r a m u r a l Ath- letif s for ’den announced. A il org anizations a r e lim ite d to eight entries .n the C la ss A tour­ nam ent and four rn C la ss B com­ petition. H o w ever, if a n y o re org an ization 'h o u ri h ave m ore en tries d esirin g to compete th ey m a y be entered as Independent. L a s t y e a r 367 m en en ’ered th# tennis singles to u rn e y . N e a l B la n ­ don . inner of the F r a t e r n it y d iv i­ sion copped the In t r a m u r a l crow n w ith a w d o r y O ver S ta n le y W ar- the A m y. W a rb u rto n burton of w as the w in n e r of the C lub D iv i­ sion th# title. C • roll W ilso n of Mf-Cra>ken M a ile ’ a copped the In ­ dependent cro w n . In C ia 'N B c o m p etitio n la st y e a r R oss E r r .< of Pr.i G a m m a D e lta .vas Jo h n In tra m u ra l <■ .-rampion, Knaggs of O ak G r o v e v on the C lu b D ivisio n and M ilto n W e in fold took the Independent d r The Club and 'io n crow n In d ep en d en t d iv i­ foot Ort I tourney sta rt* tap. , e scheduled in sion to y u M ond ay w ith six g am es on A im three g am es ’he F r a t e r n it y d ivisio n . * Mural Schedule .MONO * V* I- ontball I >«« K 4 p m 2 i la v • Ph I < tass A 7 p m S p [when av’ k i • rn House­ sit1 »d*v Sophomore Sparks Pit! In 7-7 Tie With Sooners P I T T S B U R G H . O rt 5 ,fi Q u a r­ te r b a c k Pete Nett spum ed an un­ tm derdog P itt eleven ,w ifh m ig h ty O k la h o r \ S a tu rd a y in io n a 48-va rd touchdown d riv e to a 7-7 Ne f t , a 19-y PU; •old sophom ore A A1 h u rtled n\P! the one or fro rn 13 fo u n t) down after a stubborn Ok thw rtcd an c t i I ip f h e s -♦ TTI thru ? *4 A q u a r te r a half-ya d from the gnu! fir* line A P itt scoring ila ; mg his lshom ^ R u d d y I.e-ike, in AA season in the q .U te: O k lah o m a pitched L a r r y G rig g rn the to quai in Red * Barat ie* v* Paso Hou'.* I ,liv e s 33 S ta n fo rd I North oatrrn l l Arm Notre Dam* 37 Pard P r in c e t o n 21 Col urn bi Penn l l Pen n State * Idaho 2" M o n ta ra 12 irado IS M a r o o n * T r i p E a g l e * 21 A S T A T E C O L L E G E - M iss O rt. % R M iss ,'S ip p i S ta te used its daz­ Jack zling q u a rte rb a c k P a r k e r sparing' to waltz, p ast S a i l : 'd a y North T ex a s S ta te 21-6. AUSTIN'S SUPER SERVICE 3200 G U A D A L U P E O f h e r S+ ation i af • 409 E. 7th, 541 I Burnet R o a d 2002 S. L am ar Regular 22’ Ethyl 23’ Premium Brand Oils 35c The Time of Your Life K R U G E R S On The Drag Let T. Jones or Bob Raley help you with your selection stalled the C ougars R u ’ T e x a * w a s n 't content Th*1 2 unit. entered so ph om ore!) No aga r then w ent 16 to score w ith Jo e Young- bfork I m ak in g the la st two. Young­ the ex tra point and blood added T e x a s hr id a 22-7 lead with 3 30 left. th at fourth an other Izvngborn team S till m ade sro re within eleven m inutes. P a u l Pa rk in so n hit re n te r from the I on fourth down to finish the sco rin g T h a t one w a s se’ up w hen a very high fourth-down snap sailed ov r Ja c k ie s How ton s head and wound up on the C o u g a r 6 In defeat, H ouston showed some in C a n Mc- rle^ W in n e r , Shows G illio z and Ruddy Chuoke. an o th er fine tar kie. e s p e e ia lly T e x a s’ line re le b ra te d M a s s e y ’s g re a t le t u in to actio n ro y a lly w ith Sp, mg B ra n t h, an d L an sfo rd im ­ pi essirig most. It w as an o th er v ic t o r y for Coach Erl P r ic e '* team substitution plan T e x a s used 55 p la y e rs o v e ra ll and the resu lt speak them selves for HiM tnn D e l u g e I P A M AT A H ST M A nwn« ................... ardage arriage attempted completed ssc* intercepted Tests I! .......... 142 ............ 4 > 7 I n A ............ 41 O * .............. vt .......... .......... . average ie. st enabled ................... r**#t Passe Passe Pun*< Pun* I M il V 11* t VI S T A T I S T I C* Hush inc tea rn I r u t p i n i e r a me run. a r r H o u s to n T P I ? IO 7 l.o n g . T m * 4 l l r e i i r r . Tex at VfcVVhirter, H V I A Voting blood T e m * Pa tte rso n H o u s to n 3 A if ii i i i ti. Texas A Polson, H o us to n Mog ul! Ho us to n 2 J Bu r to n H ous ton Pa r k l n s o n , 3 2 H a r g r o v e H o us to n L u t r l n g e r H I •iimrik. l e v a * I I i i r r , Te xa s I W e i r , Te sa* I I Until ii«nii, Hello* , A nil reu • T o l a r , R o n d , Sho ws , H o u s t o n l e v a * I r n * I 4 I I 4 T e sa* l eva* I e t at t m * L'. 11 a i n At 47 TA 77 23 1# 17 !« ! A 0 A A X 3 I I I 2 * A A • 2 a a a 3 a I,«* s Net >4 47 H A • OO i» 17 1« ! I A A A 4 2 I I I -I A -4 -7 .7 U) # 2 n n # I r» a • A I A I A 7 l l For** a rd Pa ss in g Att C a m p team I ' l a i e r An d re !* * Texas S h o w s I (ous*on B u r t o n Ho us to n B r e n er. T n t * l t * e r , Texas 4 A I I l I 5 2 I a # Int TA* T O A.? I M 1* l l A * ft I * 0 A A Tass R e e e l t m g team P l a i e r . M i ri ng , Texas VV |son H o u s to n Ha r gr o ve Arh riel* er, Texas C o e Ho .st on f’sttprsor: H o u s to n C arr, Houston H o u s to n ( ate bes TH. I SA 72 3 13 I I I t A I 5 J 3 I T O I I o A n n 0 Rn ntlng Punter ittrrson H o u r I m i Inn * ( a me mn I n u Carr Houlton T rt« is, I n n ■ irks A rf I I I t I 47 «« } J 33 5* h o i 5 rn** Left Fed* H ne* Cola. Mrflrov, .Johnson Left I V K es—Chuoke Brown Geddes L e ft G u a rd s -Cra v . B la c k s to n e W ille y ("enters VVIIIhelm Reese R ant ti urds S h o e m a k e r, C a rp e n te r 1 -'lex C R X'-’ R gut f nils Durrenberger Wilson Qu.-trterba-'ks S h o w * H orton. Hosston Isb e ll : in; V* h H a lfb a c k s Polson unman Hopson Meeks R!*ht Halfback! (jrme Pallet na as * arr Mi W H urter, » P at'erso n . I. .trirtger Met- Har- I.eft T I \ A * S p r r g Moon, Tucker D e l* ne* r P ie rs o n , W h it e tis 'b a k s Q u in n , ' m i l I., nil Sex*on i a rrie ro n R t * Yu L o n g , P a rk in s o n R o b in so n aru en elqin ou'ovs /engines hamilton C a ll a Y E L L O W C A B Dial 2-1111 A watch styled just for you. You'll be surprised how little you have to pay at Kruger’s. And easy terms too - charge it - no money down - a year to pay. YOUR COPY OF THE DAILY TEXAN W IL L BE D ELIV ER ED BY C A R R IE R : IF you live within the area from 27th Street to 19th Street — and San Jacinto to Rio Grande. W IL L BE D ELIV ER ED BY T R U C K : lf you live outside the above zone and 20 or more people (who bought a Blanket Tax or subscribed to the Daily Texan) live at the same place A list of these names, with the Blanket Tax numbers, must be brought to the Circulation Office, Room 5, J. B. ALL OTHER TEXAN SUBSCRIBERS, by Blanket Tax or Individual Subscription, must come by Journalism Building, Room 107, or the Texas Union to pick up a copy of the Daily Texan. Law and Engineering students may pick up their Texans at Townes Hall and Engineering Building. Anyone liking information concerning the possibility of delivery service to other schools and departments should see the Circulation M anager in Room 5, Journalism Building. • rn Texas Student Publications, Inc. Journalism Building, 107 Tel. 2-2473 Dodgers Bop Yanks Tech Edges SMU 7-3 to Even Series M: Defense Tops W a y , October 4, '1953, THE DAILY TEXAN, Pag* Scarbrough & Sans A T LA N T A , Oct. 3 (fV—A fast,! grounded the ball in the end zone, S M U * hard-charging line— spear- tough Southern Methodist line stop-1 ped Georgia Tech’s heralded run-I headed by Gunlock, Fox, Je r r y ning game cold Saturday but a 1 Clem and E d Bernet—startled a couple of breaks and a magnifi- near-capacity crowd of Tech parti­ cent goal line stand enabled Tech sans by continually outplaying the to win a 6-4 intersectional thriller. Tech line, except for Tech's v a l­ iant stand on the one. The inspired defensive play of the SM U Mustangs kept the Y e l­ low in their own half of the field except the one time Tech scored. Jackets bottled up S M U Tackle Ja c k Gunlock block­ ed a D ave Davis punt and the ball went out of the end zone for a safe­ ty. and Tech intentionally gave the Mustangs another two pointer. The statistics prove Tech was lucky to get by this beautiful day its with a squeaky victory and string of unbeaten games extended to 29. S M U got 12 first downs to Tech’s 3. Norton, his halfback sidekick Frank Eidom , and fullback Blake Tucker led the Mustangs to 124 juggling The only touchdown came in the yards on the ground. Tech's stars third quarter when Davis made a ! Leon Hardeman. B illy Teas and spectacular, leaping, in- Glenn Turner, and other Tech run- terception of a Duane Nutt pass ners—were able to get only 33. on Tech's 25. A roughing penalty! S M U 'completed 5 of 13 passes against the Mustangs helped put i for 72 yards. Tech tried 4 but com- the ball on the 5. Three plays pleted none, later, quarterback Pepper Rodgers I A backfield sneaked into the end zone. in motion penalty cost the Mustangs a touchdown A few minutes later, a punt into; early in the first quarter, Eidom the end zone by Je r r y Norton and recovered a Teas fumble on Tech’s a penalty pushed Teek back to its 38 and six running plays moved the 9. D avis went hack to kick and hall to the 24. From there, Nutt fumbled, with SM U 's B ill Fox re-! fired a pass to fullback Dale Moore covering one foot shy of the goal and Moore stepped jnto the end line. zone. Tech’s line was like granite and the Mustangs were repelled. The took over and Rodgers Jackets After the penalty, a Norton-to- Bernet pass put the hall on the lit where Tech took over on downs. wool plus orlon clothes th at g o to the g a m e and keep their press1 Be smartly SU jite d llie stadium ’n 6 0 % wool and 4 0 % orlon, for stain and crease-re* seance, uxurious look, year-after-year wear. S e le c t one o f our three patch pocket, two button bodels, in silver g ray or tan flan- ne Regular, short or long. 50.00 M e n ’s C lothing, Second Floor J U S T F O U R o f thousands o f fans that are enjoying the world ser es over te'evision are shown in this picture. This p articular group Is w atching the classic on the set a t the Journalism Building. Arkansas Beats TCU In S W C Opener, 13-6 F A Y E T T E V IL L E , Oct. 3 (ft — .playing 53 minutes in 90-degree Multi-talented I^amar McHan herd- heat and still going strong at the ed the Arkansas Razorbacks to a end, set up the Razorbacks’ first 13-6 decision over favored Texas quarter touchdown with a 55-yard Christian in a bitterly fought South-1 run and passed to end Floyd Sage- west Conference football opener he- ly for the clincher in the second fore a slender 13,500 crowd Satur- j period. day. The senior Arkansas tailback, Scarb rou gh & S o d s A c c e n t your suit w ’th a handsome tie. Choose f r o m d *'■ e neat-woven in und er patterns designs. 2.50 ■ or a 0-en a c c e s s o r i e s k e y e d t o f o o t b a l l t e m p o tressy ny. exce! ’n com* r bbed .75 to 1.50 e 3.95 B R O O K L Y N . Oct. J - 4 m - Th® com eback Brooklyn Dodgers pull­ ed even with the New York Yan­ k ees in the 1953 World Series by winning the fourth game Saturday 7-3 with a 12-hit assault on four N ew York pitchers. Duke Snider hit a home run and two doubles, driving in four of the Brooklyn runs in the most one­ sided Dodger triumph in seven W orld Series. Snider’s homer was his fifth in W orld Series play, more than any other National League player ever has hit. Brooklyn wrapped it up early with three runs rn the first inning and never trailed. The closest the Yankees came was in the fifth in­ ning when G il McDougald followed B illy M artin's triple with a home run the Dodger margin to 4-2. that narrowed B illy Loes struck out eight men and gave up only six hits through the first eight innings. But when Gene Woodling and M artin singled and McDougald walked to load the bases in the ninth, Clem Labine replaced Loes. The Yankee threat netted one run. After Labine had gotten two out M ickey Mantle sin­ gled, scoring Woodling, but M artin was thrown out at the plate. The series continues in Brooklyn Sunday w i t h Jim McDonald p it c h in g for New' York and R u s k Meyer. Bob Milliken or Johnny Podres for Brooklyn. Saturday s c r o w d of 36,775, a Brooklyn series’ record, .brought the four-game attendance total to 208,205. it T A MLP-KR <*> lf M a n ’ > r f Collin*., I to B a u e r , rf B ^ r r a c W o o d lin g M a rtin , -to M cD oug ald 3b Rizzuto, s i F o rd , p G o r m a n p a B o llw c g S a s n p b-Noren Sc ha Hock, p e-Mize Totals lf lf G illia m . IS R o b im o n Thom pson H o d g e * . lh C am p anella S n i d e r , cf F u r l Un, rf 7ox, 3b V ibm #, p Total* C a w Y or k r o o k i y n (Mi (A ) 5 4 4 4 3 4 3 4 Cl I I 0 I 0 I AR 5 5 4 4 2 4 4 4 8 0 85 AK K H o A F o I 0 0 o I o 0 0 0 I I 9 o 4 0 4 0 0 I 4 2 0 5 O' 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 n 0 n 0 0 n I o 0 0 n I 0 0 0 0 0 I 2 I I 0 0 o 0 n 0 n I I I 0 0 n n 0 0 0 0 3 35 9 24 l l 0 IT O 3 2 0 a i 1 0 0 o 5 0 IO 3 5 1 2 2 0 2 0 0 0 7 12 27 « non 020 oru- 300 102 lOx- a-Stru rk o u t for G orm an In 5th b-Popped out for Sam In 7th c-Fllea out for Srhallock in 9th B R O O K E Y * (7) M lchlgan Halts Wave Attack ANN ARBOR, Mich , Oct. 3 tm— Tony Branoff, a rugged sophomore halfback with the hitting power of • tank, struck for two early touch­ downs Saturday to help Michigan shake off a surprisingly stubborn Tulane team 26 to 7. Schroeder's TIP-TOP CAFE 3202 San A n to n io H w y , featuring B tif Steaks I lb. T-Bon« Steak..$1.25 Lowest Prices Sunday Dinners Pit Bar-B-Que 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. D aily except Tues. A m p le Parking S p a e a Rice Owls Topple Cornell Red 28-7 ITH AC A, N. Y., Oct. 3 — Powerful Rice Institute rolled to a 28-7 victory over Cornell Satur­ day before 22.000 shirt-sleeved fans in Schrxdlkopf Stadium. Quarterback Leroy Fenstemaker put the Owls ahead when he went over for a touchdown in 9:37 of I the first quarter. Morris Stone o bucked over from the two in the Johnson 0 second period. Kosse o scored from the one in 5:36 of the little Horton 0 fourth period, and left end o Nesrsta scored around 0 for the IO minutes o later. Fenstemaker kicked ail four fourth tally conversions. 0 I Cornell, held at bay during the 3 J j first quarter by the hard-charging I Rice in the second period with Guy Bedrossian bulling line, scored ~ across from the two. F iv e fumbles In the first quarter kept the crowd on edge. Rice re­ covered three and Cornell two. first R ic e s touchdown came when Stone recovered a Cornell fumble on the Big Red 18. After two ground plays and a five-yard penalty, Dick Moegle went to the two and Fenstemaker scored The Owls went 30 yards for their second score. After six ground plays, Stone scored from two yards out. Don Wilson Intercepted a Cornell pass on the 49 early in the fourth period. Kosse Johnson ran 29 yards to the Cornell 20. Two passes, and G arbrerht’s nine-yard run set the stage for Johnson to score from the one. A little later, Horton Nesrsta tal­ lied from l l yards away. A 35-yard pa«s. Fpnstemaker to Marshall Crawford, set it up. Cornell drove 42 yards for Its only touchdown. Dick Jackson ran 20 yards to the Rice 18. Rill De- graf passed to Bruce Brenner to the three. Bedrossian then went over. IT'S AS SIMPLE AS A B C T O B E C O M E T H E O W N E R O F A B R A N D - N E W S M IT H - C O R O N A P O R T A B L E O R O T H E R S T A N D A R D p o r t a b l e Ty p e w r i t e r RENT-PURCHASE Plan HERE’S ALL YOU DO: 1. Select the make and model you with 2. Sign rent-purchese agreem ent and p a y first month* X rent. YOU RECEIVE CERTIFICATE OF TITLE: I, W h e n your rental paid, plut im all service fee, equal* the purchaie price ALL YOUR ADVANTAGE: 1. N o O b lig a tio n to buy 2. You can now own a n e w typ ew riter of your choice, without »eriou*ly effecting your budget. F u ll M a n u fa ctu re rs U ' arranty a n d o u r service TCU was held to two first downs in the first half and didn t get its offense cranked up until the final heat, when the Frogs stormed 80 yards for their score. The seven- minute drive was capped by a ten- yard pass from R a y McKovvn to Marshall Robinson. It was Arkansas’ first victory under new coach Bowden Wyatt, following a 7-6 season-opening loss to Oklahoma A&M , and richly re­ warded fathers the Razorbacks’ who sat by their sons on the bench for Dad s D ay event. rough censure It also was the Razorbacks’ first conquest of the Frogs since the 1949 g ap e which resulted in con­ ference of Arkansas’ “ rough tactics.’’ Saturday's scrap the opening from was whistle, with several personal fouls being called and TC U 's Malcom W allace and Claude Roach being ejected from the game for rough- j ing. tcu .................. no n ? - 61 Arkansas .................. 6 7 0 0 — 13 1 Aggies Win 14-12 In Last Quarter D A LLA S, Oct. 3 tm- The Texas Aggies scored with less than two minutes to go to beat. Georgia 14-12 Saturday night in a penalty rid­ den, intersectional football game. All the scoring was last half as a jammed slender crowd of 22,342 looked on in the Cotton Bowl. hreak-fiJled Into the Ellwood Sophomore Kettler’s toe was the difference as the Ag­ gie hack booted two extra points while Sam Mrvos and Joe Graff each missed for Georgia. Zeke Bratkowski, heralded Geor­ gia passer, was good but it was a pass by I>on Ellis, the Aggie quarterback, that told the story. The teams struggled through the first half in 85-degree heat with ac­ cent on the defense Only once could Georgia get past midfield. But things atarfed popping in the third period. Georgia cashed in on an Aggie fumble to drive 48 yards for a touchdown which Boh Clem­ en* mad# on a three-vard blast a* right guard. M rvos’ conversion try was low. in which The Aggies promptly got a touch­ their own, surging 49 down of the running of yard* sophomore B illy Huddleston stood out. The score was made on * 2'a-yard plunge over left tarkle by Ellis Kettler then kicked the extra point to put AA M ahead It wasn’t long, however, before Georgia had another touchdown. Bobby Garrard ran a punt hack from the Georgia 14 to the Aggie 7 and in three tries the Bulldogs got the six-pointer. Charlie Mad) it with a one-yard son making climb over tackle. Graff right missed the point Then the Aggies went back to work. E llis ’ passes rolling to the Georgia 23, but Georgia held and took over. Then Howard Kelly fumbled and R a y Barrett recover­ ed for A&M on the Georgia 28 for Huddleston hit right eight and rode through talkie for a first down on the Georgia 15 to Salver in the end /one and Kettle! again converted. Johnny Salver Ellis pa«*#»d tackle O I A R A N T K i l t T Y P E W R I T E R R E P A I R S I. *t n* r l * a n > n o r m a c h i n a t o d a y ! R E N T M i t t ; . T Y P E W R IT E R S A D D E R S — C A L C U L A T O R S D r i l l e r ? a n d K i c k u p I i I - J K X JKL. 773* 4.1 AD A ! I PF. I0«« ( ON Ti R F NS A *5 2 A tv sate for easy walking wear W A L L S T R E E T E R S 3.95 2234 G u a d a l u p e 1008 C o n g r e e ............................................... ............................ Phone 6-3525 Phone 6-3526 2.95 ee* Floor Sunday, October 4, 1953, THE DAILY TEXAN, Page 4 Little Man on the Campus By Bibler flat 2>eaJ Vet The University of Texas voted Friday not to add $1 to its compulsory Union fee. It was of course a bitter blow’ to the sup­ porters of a bigger and b etter Union, but not the end to all hopes. There may be to ap­ another chance sometime proach the same problem from a different angle. later Now it should be revealing to do some inquiring into just w hat the negative vote meant. Our on-the-spot survey is interest­ ing but not conclusive. Are the students of this University opposed to the idea of an expanded Union? Or do they want a bigger Union but want to bear no part of the expense themselves? Would they approve Union expansion if a different method were found to finance all of it9 Or do they simply not care about the Texas Union at all? Do the fraternities object to allowing an expanded Union rival themselves as centers for social ac­ tivity7 Or was the bill defeated by people who felt they just could not pay an extra dollar a semester to go to school? We believe that the answ er was prob­ ably in the details of the proposal, in the fact th a t just w hat would happen if the proposal passed was widely m isinterpret­ ed. Many people m ust have been confused as to just w hat arrangem ents for paying for the new building would be made, and what the future wot J Id bring in the form of fees. A nother m ajor factor was prob­ ably th a t m any persons who do not use the Union now did not have the im agina­ tion to see w hat could have been. We think a bigger Union would be just more of the same th a t’s already here, and th a t doesn’t interest us. We do not believe that the student body of the U niversity would not w ant an ex­ panded Union program , if they saw w hat th a t program might. be. N either do we believe th a t the student body would balk at paying some or all of the operating ex­ penses of the Union if they were reassured that their share would not increase. So there is still a future for Union expansion. We are still looking forw ard to the day, perhaps m any years away, when the Un­ ion will become the m ajor recreational center and social center of the campus, even a bigger and more diversified cam ­ pus. Union expansion is not dead. Onter 'd in C^ourt Although the main business of the Re­ presentative and Student Parties in this election is to nominate candidates for as­ sembly posts in all the schools and col­ leges, they still have four other positions to remember. Two male and two female Associate Justices will be chosen in the election. They will serve under Chief Jus­ tice Bill Marschall on the student court. The Texan, Thursday, urged the parties to nominate boys who are more than “nice kids” for the assembly. This time, we urge them to go even fu rth er with the justice posts. The student court has tried only two cases in the past two years. However, membership on it has proved ra th e r suc­ cessful as a stepping stone for the past tw'o elected student body presidents. Cer­ tainly being a justice is a good recommen­ dation for higher office. In nom inating candidates for this of­ fice, the word integrity should be upmost in our minds. Integrity—scholastic and otherw ise— is the essence of good student government. It is essential th a t someone who has the position of deciding cases of among other integrity, things, be above reproach in all m atters. Even if there is little to do in the job, any justice w ith am bitions future should- have an unblemished record. scholastic the for We m ight suggest th a t the qualifica­ tions of the candidates be strengthened for this job to include a know ledge of law, experience in student government, and perhaps, a high scholastic average. — RAFSHOON Failure of Fee Raise Vote Blamed on 'Unused Union in­ pan sion, By KIWAK W ATKINS The question of an increase in the Student t'nion fee failed to pass a vote of the .student body the campus elections Friday, but the reasons for ie- failing vary with almost every person at the University. in Only one reason was repeated by several of the students in­ felt terviewed. These persons in that there was raising the Union since "no one uses it." the fee on little point Supporters of this argum ent also tender! to feel that an in­ crease now would indicate the students were willing to sup­ port* more expensive increases iater. Opposition the proposal to was not limited to any section the Univer­ of student life at students sity. Both graduate and fraternity and freshmen, sorority members, and m em ­ bers of the cam pus’ co-ops were rather evenly split on the crease. the that to fif­ Through phone calls it was teen fraternity houses, discovered fraternity vote was not solidly against the increase. Both one of the largest and one of the sm allest of the 30 fraternities in Austin were for the increase. if the Other fraternities either took interest at all or voted no against increase because they had not heard enough argu­ ment supporting It. They felt that there had been more campaigning "pro-expansion" done, the question might have passed. A felt law student said he he could speak for the law seg­ ment of the University bv say­ ing that since they were so far from the Union that they would never have an opportunity to use it. therefore they could see its ex- no reason to support T he DaS V T exan T h e D a l l y T e x a n , s t u d e n t Eu b l l i h e d In A u s t i n d a l l y e x c e p t y T e x a s S t u d e n t P u b l i c a t i o n s , In n e w s p a p e r o f The U n i v e r s i t y o f T e x a s , Is S a t u r d a y , M o n d a y a n d h o l i d a y p e r i o d s N e w s c o n t r i b u t i o n s will he a- o p t e d bv t e l e p h o n e < 2 '.’ITS* o r a t e d i t o r ii off ice'. c o n c e r n i n g d e l i v e r y s h o u l d bu m a d e in J (2-2476). ll Sud, o r J th* n e w * l a b o r a t o r y , J. II 102. ii, 3 a n a a d v e r t i s i n g . J . t h e i n q u i r i e s ll. I i i O p i n i o n s o f t h e T e 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 o f t h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n o r o t h e r I n i c e r , I t y o f f ic i a ls . E n t e r e d a s s e c o n d - c l a s s m a t t e r O c t o b e r 18, 1943, A u s t i n , T e x a s u n d e r t h e Act o f M a r c h 3. 1879 at the Post Office at A>M )( IA T I I* P U E S * W I It K M K V U K T h - A s s o c i a t e d P r e s s is e x c l u s i v e l y e n t i t l ' d t o t h e us<* f o r r e p u b l i c a t i o n o f in t h i s n e w s ­ i t e m s of s p o n t a n 'Otis o r i g i n p u b l i s h e d h e r e i n . R i g h t s o f all n e w s d i s p a t c h e s p a p e r , a n d p u b l i c a t i o n o f a l l o t h e r m a t t e r h e r e i n a l s o r e s e r v e d . r e d li e d to It o r n o t o t h e r w i s e c r e d i t e d local R e p r e s e n t e d f o r N a t i o n a l A d v e r t i s i n g by N a t i o n a l A d v e r t i s i n g S e rv ic e . I n c , C o l l e g e P u b l i s h e r s R e p r e s e n t a t i v e 420 M a d i s o n Ave, N e w Y o rk , N . Y. C h i c a g o — B o s t o n — L oa A n g e l e s — S a n F r a n c i s c o Associated Collegiate Press All American Pacemaker MKMBEH PERMANENT STAFF ............................................................... BOH KENNY Editor In Chief Managing Editor ............................................. BIM. MeREYNOUMJ Editorial Assistants ....... ,........... Joe Sanders, Ruth Pendergrass Sports Editor ........... ................................................... Murray Forsvall Society Editor ......... ........................................ . Gitta Lockonvitz .................................................... Doug Johnson Amusements Editor Day Editors .................... Jim Clark. Shin e Daniel, Pat Dilworth, Shirley Strum, Tommy Thompson .................. Jo Ann Dickerson, Norris Loeffler, Je rry Rafshoon. J met Rodgers Jack Walker Ait Editor ............................................................................... Jim Clark .............................. Frank Cricchio, Jack nankins Photographeis Intram urals Co-ordinator ............................................... Nick Johnson Photographer .......................... Tom Stutzenhurg Wire Editor ........................................................................... Don M elter Book Editor ............... Luke L. Patrenelia Night Editors living A girl in one of the co-ops said she felt the Union was adequate for those people who use it. She said there were so many other things in Austin that many students did not feel the need for a modernized Un­ ion. A sim ilar idea was expressed by a transfer student from Tex­ as A&M. Commenting on the $1.5 million union at. AAM. he said fabulous it was a place, but that it was necessary there since the students had no place else to go. that take advantage of A few persons supported the Union theory that if there were a better Union, more people would It. However, they either felt that this was not the correct way to accomplish it, or that even after the Union had been im­ proved only a few of the stu­ dents would take advantage of its facilities. for any The last student interviewed said that he did not believe the University students should have improvement to pay in the Union. As he understood It, other state supported schools, for example AAM and Texas Tech, had recently gotten new student unions without having to pay for them themselves Ciliola I) Ic Cenotes Common sense is in spite of, not the result of, education VICTOR HUGO * earnings. willing, Idler or bungler, or both, he is To fork out his copper and pocket your shilling. -E B E N E Z E R ELLIOTT Tell me the company and I will tell thee what thou art. —CERVANTES, —Don Quixote ’Ti* alw ass p orning some­ where in the world. -R IC H A R D HENGEST HORN E -O rio n * * ★ SUBSCRIPTION HATES (Minimum Subscription — three months) Delivered In Austin .................. .............................................$ .75 month Mailed In Austin ........................................................................ S I .oo month Mailed out of town ..................................... ..................................................... j .7 5 m o n t h What Is a Communist** One who hath yearnings For equal division of unequal STAI Y FOR THIS ISSUE Oat Editor ................................... TOMMY THOMPSON Night Editor ..................................................... JO ANN DICKERSON Assistant Night Editor ............................... Copyreaders ...................................... Arthur Berwick. Jim Keahey. Thorn Hansard Night Sports Editor ............................................................ Joe Sander* Assistants ................. Murray Forsvall, Sam Blair, Gary Cartwright Night Amusements Editor ................................................. Lida Litvin Assistant ........................................... .......................... Mike Wigodsky Night Society Editor ............................................................ Rue Wills Assistants ........................... Jeanne Cunningham, Luke Patrenelia To confess a fault freely is the next thing to being innocent of i t . Nee Guifierrez —SYRUS it vs a bankrupt theif turns thief­ taker in despair, so an unsuc­ cessful author turns critic. —SHELLE—Fragm ent* of Adonai* «7. .inna. J ,me terrace, or in the Chuck Wagon— all those friends whom maybe, I m et just once or twice, but who gave me th a t very definite im pres­ sion of the spirit that rules on the cam pus. You will not even notice it; but to foreigners it is the smile, the friendly hello, and addressing by the first nam e that makes him feel a t home—and not in a m useum where the others admire your fore­ ign accent. It is to all those known and un­ known friends that I would like to thank for everything. I had a won­ derful year under the scorching sun of Texas! for With best wishes fu rther carefree months and years on the (carefree, for one, does cam pus not characterize the atm osphere a t a G erm an University as much as it does, yes it does, an Ameri­ can school) and for many orang* floodlights on the Tower, sincerely *‘you-all s." K A R L S . G U T U K E To the Editor: Dean Manton the first "Is­ in sues" series is quoted as stating " . . . McCarthy is a Godsend." If this quotation is correct then the Dean certainly proved one point during his visit; nam ely, we do not all worship the sam e God. His phrase from Alexander Ham­ ilton was appropriate for the ag re ­ m ents he apparently developed, but one might also rem ark that history is also filled with accounts of tyrants who ruled in the nam e of God, democracy, and other hu­ m an ideals. OTTO H. HILL TEXAN CROSSWORD ACROSS I. Resort* 5. Agreem ent 9. Specter IO. Suffered dull pain 12. Unconflrm- ed gossip 13. Tiny (var ) 14. Ahead 1 5 . L a r g “ roofing slate 17. Man's name 38. Guido’s low est note 19. Bent in and out 22. Stitch 24. Doctor’* assistant 23. Prepare for publication 27. Portions of curved line* 30. Sayings of religious teacher 34. Perched 35. Soft, starchy dessert* 33. Southern ■tate (abbr ) 39. Lubricate 40. Short sleep 41. Iridium (*ym.) 42. To snuff a candle 45. Thin. delicate fabric 47. Spirit lamp* 48. Blundered 49. Moslem titles 50. Plant ovule DOWN I. Shifted 23. Wild flower or plant 26. Old weight for wool 26. Found fault unneces- saniy 29. Gazed s t . 31. Gill (abbr.) 32. Tavern 33. Century plants 35. Attitudi­ nize 36. Mountain* in Utah 2. Short for ‘‘Pom eran­ ian" 3. Hebrew musical Instrument* 4. Stress 5. Caress 6. One-spot card 7. Defrauder* 8. Taut 9. Complain (slang) l l . A group of t w o 16. Antelope (Afr.) 20. Biblical city 21. Man s nam e % “ X 5 S / / / ? «> 7 IO IS <6 w, r 7 0 A I / / / ‘■ar i i % I S z4 L u 1 % %% rn- / I L 31 S I %34- 37 37. Prim itive' reproduc­ tive body 43. Chines* pagoda 44 Large worn? 46. Anger ■j— % ii % n 7 a j6 rn-ii A * %9-24/ Lo 4 *5AX i %4 %46 'X .4. 16 i i w 37 4 J. a 1 I D A IL Y CR YPTOQUGTE— Her*’* how lo froth Ut A X T D I B A A U I s L O N O F I L L O W -'* * * One letter simply stands for m o ther. In this example A t i for th* three L’s, X for th* tw o O’*, etc. 8ingl« letters, spot* trophies, the length and form ation of th* word* or* aft hint*' Each day the code letters ar* different, A Cryptogram Qoetattoo S O If C V N Q J B M O P l l B Y W B B X I, N X S T U X O S D J U K F C tg L S I N T B X I K I A P V P Q M J U L S I i N I S T O Q - A J U L L — J B L U . i Ctyptoqoote: FO R L U X ITSELF W A B "# * * * AND THE HEART PROMISED WHAT THE FANCY DREW. —ROGERS. t Itm a n n * i i i m im a m frames* To the E dito r: Having been unable to gay good­ bye to all m y friends that I met during m y y e a r's stay at the Uni­ versity of Texas, I avail myself of this opportunity to send them my last farew ell. My studies at UT were profitable the extrem e; but what im pressed me even more was spontaneous friendship and com radeship that I enjoyed on the cam pus. sp irit the of in freedom I have been asked by hundreds the usual question, of students "How do you like it " and I gave them the usual answer. "Sure, I like it." In fact, however, there are a few things that I still don't like in spite of m y long stay in the shadows of the Main Building Tower. I m issed a great deal of the academ ic that has become a sine quo non a t Ger­ man universities; I felt that the average student is—a s far as his academ ic capability is concerned ~ somewhat below the standard of his European colleague; and final­ ly, I could not ignore the fact that the whole system of supervision and assignm ents tends *0 stifle the spirit of independent inquiry, at least on the lower levels of the un­ dergraduate school. And there are the other detrim ental effects of mass education which will not. fail to come to the sui face under a sys­ tem which is in danger of evaluat­ ing a college education in term s of course credits. in is concerned and These w ere aspects that I did not like at all the beginning; but the critical period then gave way to a period of understanding. T see that. E urope and the US have a somewhat different background so far as the purpose of an educa­ tion that both systems a re able to fulfill their tasks. But it is the tasks that dif­ fer: a G erm an university custo­ marily tries to lim it the number of students and endeavors to turn out a few excellent scholars, who frequently look into the stars and stumble on the street. America fa­ vors a possibly good education of a possibly larg e num ber. Our universities are in danger of creating a gap between the very few exquisitely educated men of the elite and the broad m asses; American universities are in dan­ ger of leveling everything dow'n to a good a v e ra g e ; Am erican life in its various aspects has shown me is a tendency to too, strive a fte r the average- rather than the outstanding. that th e re the the least unfavorable education of The A m erican system —and that is a big advantage -s e ts itself the goal of* m aking real personalities out of the college freshmen who, at first, to tte r into the universities with uncertain steps as thougn en­ tering a m useum . They don't breed scholars only, but are of course to­ not in wards highly qualified w orkers of the mind. It Is this middle way that creates the spirit of friendship that Europeans will alw ays enjoy as something quite new and inviting on the cam ­ pus of UT. that for each I felt student th e re was something be­ tha the stacks and dates: sides spontaneous "contacting" that we miss at our universities, I am afraid I am not thinking of any­ body in p a rtic u la r; but the general body of students, in the clubs, in the sem inar, in class, on the sunny D A ILY T E X A N CLASSIFIED A D S W estern W ear Furnished Apartment G O O D S made C O W B O Y B O O T S B E L T S L E A T H E R o r d e r . Western t o W e a r H a t s M o c c a s i n * B o o t s a n d Sil o# R. P a i r s C A P I T A L S A D D L E R Y . 1614 LA V A C A . FURNISHED gar aa- apartment, r o o m * a n d b a t h JJS OO. F u r n i s h e d *40 r o o m s a n d a r t m e n t , 3 P h o n e 6-3419 a f t e r 5 p. rn. 1800 N . C o n - . n s s b a t h 8 Typing A M . K I N D S O F P h o n e 5-UB78 E X P E R I E N C E D home. 53-3548 T Y P I N G . T h e s i s etc . t y p i n g d o n e In m y E D I T I N G r e p o r t s , - t y p i n g — t h e s i s , d i s s e r t a t i o n s , t e r m p a p e r * , T H E S I S e t c n e i g h b o r h o o d . • E l e c t r i c ) M r s Flit hie. 2-1945. U n i v e r s i t y Special Services D R E S S M A K I N G C o l e m a n S t u d e n t w If#. HOSA B r a c k e n ­ r i d g e A p t* . 2-6305. - A l t e r a t i o n * . M r s . I L A R G E G A R A G E a p t f o r c o u p l # o n l y B l o c k f r o m U n i v e r s i t y r a g e P r i c e *45 OO. F o r 6-3831 o r 2-2596. ' a m p u l G a ­ i n s p e c t i o n c a l l U N I V E R S I T Y M E N 4 r o o m a p a r t m e n t s s t u d e n t * paid Ph. 6-8476 4 f u r n i s h e d f o r 8 o r 565 OO a n d *80.00. B i l l s M E N q u i e t a v a i l a b l e O c t e f f i c i e n c y g a r a g e 7 — a t t r a c t i v e B u n k b e d * — p i n # v a i l * — i n s u l a t e d —• u t i l ­ i t i e s P a i d . 160 00. 2303 P h . 8-0991. L e o n . a p t B O Y S — F a c i n g c a m p u * $33 00 C l e a n r o o m a p a r t m e n t R e d e c o r a t e d , b e d s — S e p a r a t e s t u d y t h r e e p r i v a t e b a t h — ( t u b q u i e t f o r F r i g i d a i r e s h o w e r t T h 6-9444 For Sale A P A R T - f o u r t a b l e m o d e l T V ' r o o m * — n e w l y d e c o r a t e d k i t c h e n — f a n — w a t e r W F D — C o z y — Q u i e t — t h a n new S e r v e I — w i n d o w N E W L Y ■ M E N T G A R A G E IO F A R N S W O R T H $65 00 w i t h a n t e n n a B e t t e r l a r g e r s e t f o r d o r m i t o r y o r s m a l l B v - ; p a i d . *55 00, 2-4021. I n g t u b e g u a r a n t e e d P h r o o m . 5-5597. P i c t u r e E A S Y S P I N D R H R. g o o d ________I Coaching c o n d i t i o n . I --------------------------------------------- $45 0 0 . C o m b i n a t i o n r a d i o r e c o r d C O A C H I N G In p l a y e r $10.00. C a l l 53-2716 t e a c h e r . E x p e r i e n c e d N e a r U n i v e r s i t y . P h . 2-8652. S p a n i s h . Lost and Found b e t w e e n L O S T — M a d a l i a n a n d p e r k i n g c h e m it U n iv e r s ity l o t B l d g A e.. B r l o t a f t e r n o o n H a s s e n t l m e n t a i v a l u e R E W A R D . C o n t a c t P e r r l d e s A r g g i s P O B S t a t i o n o r J o u r n a l i s m B l d g 7597 U n lu7. L O S T In R E W A R D v i c i n i t y o f $5 OO f o r r e t u r n o f c o l o r e d b i ­ J . A l d e r s o n . s t a d i u m fo c a l g r o u n d g l a s s * C, S u t t o n H a l l 107B E x t . 238 L O S T — B il l In I n t r a m u r a l f i e l d O c t. 1 s t R E W A R D . P h . 7-8369 a f t e r fo ld 6 o ’c l o c k . I-R E N C H e x p e c t T U T O R I N G : T r a n s l a t i o n s , t e a c h e r , e x c e l l e n t r e f e r e n c e s P h o n e 6-2296. A T T E N T I O N — S t u d e n t s o f G e r m a n . F r e n c h . P i a n o . N e e d c o a c h i n g ? C o m ­ p e t e n t l i n g u i s t a n d m u s i c i a n . E u r o p e a n r e a s o n a Ole t r a i n i n g w i l l c o a c h P r o ­ r a t e s A ls o c o a c h voice s t u d e n t s n u n c i a t i o n o f a n d G e r m a n F r e n c h l y r i c . W o r k e d w i t h C o l u m b i a a n d T u - l a n e U n i v e r s i t y s t u d e n t s . A ls o t v p t n g t e r m p a p e r s C a l l 7-8469 o f b e f o r e 8 a rn ., S a t . a f t e r n o o n a n d S u n d a y s . rn. o r a f t e r 6 p l a n g u a g e a t Use Texan Classifieds M O N E T M A K E R t i m # w o r k a p a r # or e v e n i n g s S e l l l o w u n i t c o i t l o g i l y a d v e r t i s e d I te m m a k e SI 50 p e r s a le C o n t r a c t M rs . S t a m p e r S t u d e n t E m ­ p l o y m e n t o r T e x - M a x - I n c . 8-1053. a f t e r n o o n * Male Help W anted E X T R A M O N E Y In y o u r spare tim #. M u s t h a v e c a r . C a l l 6-0833. Room For Rent Q U I E T c o m f o r t a b l e b e d r o o m g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t o r b u s i n e s s wom an lin e . Ph. to c a m p u s — o n bu* Clo*# 2-5617 3004 S p e e d w a y . fog F O R G E N T L E M A N r o o m p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e h o m e m a i d s e r v i c e !in » n s — w i n ­ fa n — c a r p o r t W a l k i n g d i s t a n c e q u i e t n e i g h b o r h o o d — dow U n i v e r s i t y . P h . 7-4968 f u r n i s h e d Instruction D U N A W A Y S C H O O L O F A U L O I S T I N G DA Y A N D E A E M X ; C O U R S E R T h e o n l y s c h o o l t h e A u s t i n In to e x c l u s i v e l y a n d A C C O U N T ­ t e r r i t o r y B O O K K E E P I N G IN G d e v o t e d In B E G IN' ? E R S A D V A N C E D a n d C O U R S E S . A p p r o v e d t r a i n i n g f o r u n d e r G I B ill a n d K o r e a n V e t e r a n a bill. lu<)5 G u a d a l u p e T e l. 8 - l f5 1 t h e D u n a w a y S c h o o l o f Ac­ c o u n t i n g e a c h s t u d e n t Is g iv e n I N ­ j e u D I V I D U A L a r e I n t e r e s t e d In a t h o r o u g h u p - t o - In B o o k k e e p i n g a n d l a t e t r a i n i n g A c c o u n t i n g y o u a r e t o a t ­ i n v i t e d t e n d o u r d a y o r e v e n i n g c l a s s f o r o n e w e ek , t e x t m a t e r i a l , a n d o b s e r v e o u r m e t h o d o f I n s t r u c . B o n w . t h o u t o b l i g a t i n g y o u r s e l f In m y w a y I N S T R U C T I O N s e e o u r If Ae WI QU'STLY TAX* poeo's I v' I A M Y P tO fd H O M U K E THE 'a ft eetsP O N S iB iip h o tic LANDLORD H i si) won BY- I w o e e y about a woglp mm AN W0ME5T MAN NSvSfc) KNOW* ARMPIT IS O ff 7Q Bt ASAI MST. OHLY TESTO?. PAV I tru s te d The 1 .v t* Mum TUTTLE— m V T uesep t o Hie SCB — rn PACT, JO /HM D •E M / I WB knew of Hie e n u x ifttp sru p tD iftA ...we weft sure ; mete M S OYE TVE COULT SE AGA INST h/ th /M P O H fm c fE C a e rr/tM . WHAT H A PPE N S? He ftV fA iA Hie TZuB PACB P O w e e C U L P E /E H o s . ' W H O M g M IG TRU STED ? Vt AM. YEAH. V S S W e - 'f Z M By W a lt Kelly STOP , IOO*'N AT MS **ft THAT, I always write my term paper criticisms Teg'bly so th stu d e n t won t be able to ta te issue w +h w hat I sa /. Chemist Considers C-Bomb Improbable By RI TH PENDERGRASS E d i t o r i a l A s s i s t a n t Unnecessary fear is being creat­ ed by speculations on hydrogen and cobalt* bombs, Dr. George Watt, professor of chemistry and consultant on chemical process problems with the Savanah River Project, said Saturday. Dr. Watt was commenting on As­ sociated P ress reports of Septem­ ber 24 quoting nuclear scientists as saying they are on the track of methods for making and explod­ ing hydrogen weapons so simpli­ fied and so relatively cheap that any nation would he able to manu­ facture them well within the next decade. from He said that, he had recently re­ the Savanah River turned Plant and that he could see no prospect of m aking "cheap" hy­ drogen weapons in the near future. The chem istry professor rem ark­ ed that there is certainly a pos­ s i b l y hydrogen weapons would be m anufactured far more today, but it that than cheaply would not be immediate the in future, and that even they would not he inexpensive as compared with other explosives. that The possibility of a cobalt, bomb, considered by some to be a wea- I>on which could destroy a country at one fell sweep, w'ould be based on the principle that non-radioac­ tive cobalt metal can be activated by putting it in a pile. The inac­ tive cobalt might be incorporated into an atom ic bomb and m ade radioactive when the bomb ex­ plodes. the A s' a powder, activated metal could be scattered over tre ­ mendous areas, killing all life it cam e near by its radioactivity, provided the level of activity w as high enough. Although he adm its there are few' things which are Impos­ sible, Dr. Watt jointed to the im ­ practicality of activating and ex­ that the means which ploding t h e "u n b * I i e v a b I e” am ount of cobalt, which would be required to bring about m ass de­ af runt ion One of the AP reported American scientists are working on to m ake hydrogen for l>ombs cheaply "I. iggering" fusion bomb without using t h e heat of a standard atomic bomb to set off the hydrogen bomb. the m ighty is a d e v i c e Until recently, the popular sup­ position was that unless a nation already possessed fission bombs there would be no way to explode the hydrogen fusion to m b with the million or more degree heat sup­ posedly required for creating the explosion. Townes Hall N e w Site O f Legal Clinic Offices Offices of the U niversity-Travis County Bar Association Legal Clin­ ic have been moved from the main cam pus to the new Law School building, Townes Hall, located near the intersection of Red River Street and Pflrk Place. Site of the new clim e o f/ice is Townes Hall, 114. The room is on the ground floor in the northeast section of building. Office hours are frorrv8:30 a. rn. to 5:30 p rn. Mondays through Fridays. the The clinic, operated jointly by the University and the T ravis Coun­ ty Bar Association, renders free legal aid for those unable to pay law yers’ fees. It bcffcan ifs opera­ tion on December 4, 1940, and to date has received over 4,000 ap­ plications for aid Two Austin attorneys supervise ♦he clinic s operation and work of senior University law students who act as student attorneys The clinic has handled adoption, support of minor children, divorce, landlord and tenant questions, and change of name cases in the past thirteen years. Official t o list few T h # f a i l e d f o l l o w i n g w o m e n s t u d e n t s t h e i r a d d r e s s e e h a v e t h e D e a n o f W o m e n s O f f i c e . in t o s t u d e n t s a r e r e q u e s t e d T h e s e in t h e i r A u s t i n le a v e a d d r e s s e s t h e M a i n B u i l d i n g B tl M w i t h i n D o n n i e B u r t o n d a y s n e x t A r c h e r S a b r a B o y c e J u l l a n n e C a r ­ r o ll , M a r i a n # C a r r o l l , M a r y C h i l d ­ re s s , C a t h e r i n e J o n e s C l a r d y . F r a n c e ' . G i b s o n C o l e m a n K a t h r x n K o k e r n o t . K l n c h e l a r R o s e m a r y C a t h y M r s E. C o u r t n e y O ' D o n n e l l . B i e r c e K il a M a y S a n d e r s , L o t t i e H u n t e r E s t e l l a S n o d g r a s s . M rs C r o w S t e a g a l f . M a r y L e a S t i l e s . N a n c y L. l in e r, a n d M a r y B o y d Y o u n g L e e M o rris . G l a d y s I . n i l e l l D O R O T H Y G E B A U E R . D e a n of W o m e n s it fees m u s t he T h e D e n t a l A p t i t u d e T o - tx w i l l h a a d m i n i s t e r e d in B at t* A u d i t o r i u m on S a t u r d a y . O c t o b e r 31, 11)53, b e ­ > a rn. A p p l i c a t i o n * g i n n i n g a n d e x a m i n a t i o n r e ­ t h e D iv is io n of E d u c a ­ c eiv ed tis t i o n a l M e a s u r e m e n t s , C o u n c i l o n D e n t a l E d u c a t i o n , A m e r i c a n D e n t a l 222 S u p e r i o r . A s s o c i a t i o n , on o r b e f o r e I ll in o is C h i c a g o l l , I n ­ O c t o b e r 16, I TYP B u l l e t i n s o f f o r m a t i o n m a y he o b t a i n e d a t t h a A p p l i c a t i o n R e g i s t r a r s t h a b l a n k s s h o u l d be r e q u e s t e d by a p p l i c a n t s c h o o l to w h i c h h e la a p p l y i n g . t h e d e n t a l O ff ice . f r o m E a s t G O R D O N V A N D E R S O N , A s s i s t a n t D i r e c t o r J e s t i n g a n d G u i d a n c e B u r e a u ♦ T h # M e d i c a l C o lle g e A d m i s s i o n l o s t w i l l b e a d m i n i s t e r e d In B a t t s A u d i t o r i u m o n M o n d a y , N o v e m b e r 2, 1953. b e g i n n i n g a t 8 45 a rn. A p p l i c a ­ t i o n s a n d e x a m i n a t i o n fe es m u s t b « r e c e i v e d bv t h e E d u c a t i o n a l T e s t i n g S e r v i c e . P r i n c e t o n . N e w J e r s e y , o n o r b e f o r e O c to be r 19. 1953. ’ B u l ­ l e t i n s o f I n f o r m a t i o n a n d a p p l i c a ­ t i o n b l a n k s m a y be o b t a i n e d a t t h e a n d G u i d a n c e B u r e a u , V T e s t i n g Crossword Answer n t i t i n n o u n H a l l 1 0 1 o r t h e R e g i s t r a r s O f f i c e . G O R D O N V. A N D E R S O N . A s s i s t a n t Director- T e s t i n g a n d G u t d a m rn B u r e a u ANT T h e G r a d u a t e R e c o r d E x a m i n a ­ t i o n w i l l he g iv e n in V H a l l , R o o m 2d 14, o n S a t u r d a y , N o v e m b e r 1953 T h e s c h e d u l e b e l o w w i l l h e fo l­ l o w e d ; 8 4.1 a in. C a n d i d a t e s r e p o r t . ( A p t i t u d e T e a t * ) 1 J IS p in. Close o f s e s s i o n . 1 . 4 5 p.m . C a n d i d a t e s r e p o r t . ( A d v a n c e d T e s t s ) 5 15 p.m . A p p r o x i m a t e c l o e o f s es si on. I n f o r m a t i o n c o n c e r n i n g t h e G r a d ­ u a t e R e c o r d E x a m i n a t . o n m a y h e o b t a i n e d b y c a l l i n g at t h e o f f i c e o f t h e T e s t i n g a n d G u i d a n c e B u r e a u , V H a l l . R o o m > g l s t r a t i o n C lo se s O e to t < r 30, 1953 G O R D O N V A N D E R S O N , A s s i s t a n t D i r e c t o r T e s t i n g a n d G u i d a n c e B u r e a u ~Siclt rjCist W a l t e r J: A lfo r d . C l a u d e t ; Al­ l e n . E d w a r d o A m a d o r . O t t <■ L A n ­ d r e s s P h i l i p E. B a k e r , VV. H a r r y B u r k e D a v is . C . C a r t o n , N o r m a n G. C o r n u t u s , R o b e r t T . G «>gow , A n n a P h y l b i L. H a il, L o u a n n e H a t t e r A a n d J a c k C. Kelly. H o ff, W i l m a E. H o d g e , S a m u e l M e r r ill, R o n n i e D. M os- k o w l t z , N o r m a n A M u e l l e r M u r ­ r a y S B a t to n , M e l v i n C P e e p l e s , A l i e n K P r e s t o n . G e o r g e ll. R e a , J o h n Ross, J o h n N . S m i t h , P a t r i ­ c ia M S t o n e P a n a g o l t l s V a s i l a r a s . P a t r i c i a A l b e r t W o r c h e l , M a r i e A. W is e , G o l d e n D . Y o u n g ­ b l o o d . Vale, Marionettes and Dance Mime To Be at Gregory Wednesday Hollywood’s Turnabout Theater, the first Cultural Entertainment Committee program for the year, will appear at 8:15 p.m. Wednes­ day in Gregory Gym. The event wiil be free to Blanket Tax hold­ ers. The Turnabout Theater features the Yale Puppeteers, Lotte Gos- lar, the international dance mime, and their own troupe of talented performers. The Turnabout Thea­ ter promises to provide some of the most unusual entertainment of the year. The Puppeteers will present a miniature musical comedy entitl- Weems to P la y at Coliseum Ted Weems, with his orchestra and entertainers, will perform Monday at 8:15 p m. in the City Coliseum. an active ed "Gullible'!! T ravels.1' Complete with lighting effects, scenery, cos- I tumes, songs, and story, they are a small Broadway show. .Founded in New Haven in 1927, by H arry Burnett, Form an Brown, , and Richard Brandon, the troupe has had theatrical career. They have toured the coun­ try extensively and have operated their own theaters on the W e s t' Coast, the White Mountains, and New York, and they have also appeared in feature films, as well as on Broadway. The group has been at the Turnabout Theater in Hollywood twelve years. the past for in The marionettes were created by H a rry Burnett. Forman Brown t wrote the show and accompanies the songs and the piano. routines at Tickets are now on sale in the lobby of the D riskill Hotel. Prices range JI.30 to $3.90. The Downtown Optimist Club is spon­ soring the show. from An hour-long revue featuring Lot­ te Goslar and the regular Turn­ about Troupe of entertainers is set for the latter half of the pro­ in the cast are gram. Included Larry's Root Beer 45th and LAMAR -CHILI D O G 20* With Chili and Onions on a Steamed Bun 6 for $1.00 OPEN 11 A . M . T O l l P. M. Giant! ,i was on It Im! >• Mtfteo *e« prm*t«< fey WMNf R IWS, cop tmm Ruth roman Anthony Quinn P a n o r a m i c S c r e e n ! S t e r e o p h o n i c S o u n d ! Pitts! Mickey .Moose A P l u t o C a rt o o n - Jie w* - S port* NOW! First Show 2 p.m. On Giant WIDE SCREEN w ith STEREOPHONIC SOUND Dorothy Neumann, Frances Os­ born, Brown and Burnett. Miss Goslar is well-known in Europe and Am erica as a dance mime. Born in Dresden, as a child she wanted to be either a dancer or a clown. As she studied danc­ ing, however, her genius for mim­ ing became apparent, and she be­ came a dancing pantomimist. Before the last w ar Miss Gos­ lar appeared briefly at the Berlin State Opera. Finding clowning to her taste, she joined a troupe of toured Europe performers, who for several years as "The Pepper M ill Revue." Miss Goslar joined the Turnabout Theater in 1943. Her dances range from the completely zany to the deeply moving. When the Turnabout Theater was started in Hollywood in 1941, the Yale Puppeteers asked M iss Neu­ mann to join them in the venture. A graduate of Carnegie Tech and j the Yale Drama School, she has had an active career in the thea- j ter as an actress, director in sum- j mer theaters, and costume design- j er. F o r the past 12 years she has directed and costumed the produc­ tion and has appeared as a come­ dienne. Miss Neumann played in the motion pictures "S o rry . Wrong N um ber" and “ The Snake P it ." Miss Osborne joined the Turn­ about Theater at the same time as Miss Neumann. H er specialty has been satiring types of serious singers. Famous Artists Highlight Community Concert Series Austin's Community Concerts this year w ill feature three nation­ ally famous artists. The first is pianist Nicole Hennot on Novem­ ber 18. Miss Henriot will he followed by Jan u ary ll , and Licia Albanese, Tossy Spivakov sky, March 22. Sea­ son tickets w ill go on sale Mon­ day and w ill be on sale until F r i­ day'. No Individual sold for the concerts. tickets will be Miss Henriot, the French pian­ ist, who has been dubbed "the frail thunderer" by Time maga­ zine, made her American debut in 1948 with the New York Philharm ­ onic' Symphony. She made her concert debut at fifteen as soloist with the Pasde- loup Orchestra. The concert was such a success that she was Im- ( mediately asked to perform with! (other orchestras of Pa ris, j The next concert artist, Alba- > nese, needs introduction. I little Since her American debut in 1940 I she has been hailed continuously: as a star of tile first caliber. Miss Albanese re-proved herself at the Metropolitan last y ear in the revival of Madame Butterfly. She is also well known for her roles " L a T raviata ,” (as Violetta "Don G iovanni,” and Zelina (Marguerite In "F a u s t.” in in The final attraction planned is file Russian violinist, Tossy Spiva- kovsky. M arjory Fisher, West Coast critic, has said that modern violin playing reaches its peak I with him. SMORGASBORD SUPPER TONIGHT 7-9 p. rn. Drive out Lamar or Burnet to Anderson Lane 34th & Guadalupe Phone 5-1001 X VAN JULIA HEFLIN'ADAMS "'CK' WF ^ C o t o f by TECHNICOLOR — SPECIAL — Notre Dame - Oklahoma Football Pictures Starts Today! 2 p. rn. WIDE SCREEN r UU CAR PER L O N G H O R N per cat D R I V E IN T H E A T R E CAR UU R e ga r d le ss Nu m b e r O ccupants O N D A L L A S H W Y . A T A N D E R S O N L A N E Equipped with New W id e G ian t Panoramic Screen 5 * a r y b e a u t i e s ftawing Sew/ / * I Ie- film Is ur> the «ut — in HttW ’ and deft rt for not c h i l d r e n Ne childrens tickets will b* sold. The Management ACADEMY AWARD WINNER EHs (Sammies) Bar & Lounge Beverages 807 W . 6th Enjoy the World Series at the CLIFF HOUSE T e l e v i s i o n T i m e 11:45 QUEEN Features at I ;05 3:15 5:25 7:35 9:45 AMAZING [LOVES! No Cover Charge { f r e C t ^ S ^ r FoHey -i Pier ANGELI • Ethel BARRYMORE, Leslie CARON • Kirk DOUGLAS Agnes MOOREHEAD • Moira SHEARER *km% MAS0M 1 D A N C E th e JA N E Sunday, October 4, 1953, THE D A IL Y T EX A N , Page 5 Drama Students To Give Scenes IO Plays Furnish 2 Performances Two groups of students in th# Department of Drama will each (present scenes from each of five plays M onday and Tuesday e t 2 p.m. in X Hall. ^ s tr a ta By ALLAN TACKABERRY Symphony. Waltzes tied Forest, Classical music is like spinach. ! Tchaikovsky, Students in Dr. F. R. Hodge** in advanced directing w ill class direct students in J. W. Moll’s in­ study of the theater troductory from class M onday in scenes "Detective Story," " I Rem em ber rn. " T ile Children's Hour," Mama,” Concerto No. I in B flat Minor by | "The Little Foxes,” and "Having the 1st M ovem ent'.Wonderful T im e.” Tuesday others There are some of us who dislike from Beethoven’s 5th Sym phony,! groups from the same classes w ill it immensly and others who like Tile 1st Movement from Schubert's present scenes from “ The Petri- * Au- it a great deal. The same situa- ^ nfinishcd "Gaslight, * “ Three Men on a tion prevails with fo r "Springtime types of m usic such as operas and : a.n<^ M °vement from the Horse," symphonies. Most persons shud- J ^ evv ^orld Symphony b y Dvorak. (Henry.’ der at the thought of having to listen to an opera or a symphony j in its entirety. The reason is sim­ ple. The m usic has no meaning It merely whatsoever sounds jumble of meaningless noises produced by a hundred or more long-haired musi­ cians. the classical j " om Closen Kavaliei by Strauss, tumn G ard en .” Fine Charcoaled S T E A K S Complete DINNERS — Reasonable PRICES HARRIS' WAYSIDE INN 1502 Barton Springs Road them. like a weird and to CLOSED MONDAYS I Sometimes the best thing that a person can do is to expose himself to a composition he does not partic­ ularly like. A new world is opened to many people the world over every day when they discover how relaxing and engrossing classical music can be to the tired mind. Modern popular tunes are relaxing to the mind for the first few times j they are played, but after the two hundredth tim e cease to be enjoy- J able and become a hindrance to | relaxation instead of a help. Good classical music, old or new, pre­ sents something new to the listener every time he hears it whether it is a new note or a new type of mood. There is a t the present time an album out titled, "Classical Music for People Who Hate Classical Music.” As funny as the title may seem, It is perfect for the begin­ ner who would like to start some­ where with this type of music but doesn't know exactly where to be­ gin. famous opera, If you h ave ever loon or heard the "A id a" you ' know that there is a march played | to which the Egyptian soldiers make their triumphant return from I war. Other pieces available on this record are excerpts from Piano Merman, OU Main Events At State Fair the Besides Texas-Okiahoma game, visitors to the State F a il on October IO and l l will be able I to see m any unusual exhibits and j events. is One of the highlights the j Ethel M erm an Show, to be pre- sented in the State Fair Audito- includes George ] rium. The cast Murphy, Russell Nype, and Ethel ; Merman. The show will be based on a review of M iss Merman’s hits. Other events include the Ice C y­ cles of 1954 and the Aut Swenson Thrillcade. The Texas Fashion Round-Up w ill lie presented daily at 2 and 4 p m. Some of the exhibits to be pro­ moted include the Agricuiturama, the Regulus-guidrd missile, and ( some antique autos. Those attending the first week to ran hear a "B a ttle of Songs, be presented by some of the best gospel singer groups in the nation in the Cotton Bowl, Sunday, O ct o ­ ber ll . The opening Saturday, O c ­ tober IO w ill be Prcss-Radio-TY L>ay. New exhibits w ill be featured .■ State, Aquarium, the Hall of Health, Fine Arts, and Natural History Museums, A o B O P ' M f T U C H WPL m in < ^ GREG fir s c o t t K- FRONTIER DRIVE-IN and Ll' Air conditioned Restaurant 5412 N. Lamar (Dallas Hy.) Catering to Students and Personnel of the University Your favorite food and drinks SHAKES and MALTS 14 inches High Piled W ith Whipped Cream FRIENDLY ~ COURTEOUS SERVICE C U LT U R A L EN TERTAIN M EN T MMII THE C O M M IT T EE announces the 1st Event of the 1953-54 Series I The Famous HOLLYWOOD TURNABOUT THEATRE I I4 I Am erica's Smartest C o m ed y Theatre w ith and the with The YALE PUPPETEERS A Riotously Funny C o m ed y TURNABOUT REVUE LOTTE GOSLAR Internationally known C o m ic Dancer FRANCIS OSBORNE The Anna R u s s e ll of the Turnabout Theatre DOROTHY NEUMANN and HARRY BURNETT STARDUSTERS playing on Sunday nights for your dancing enjoyment • Atmosphere • Dancing • Favorite Beverages • Open Air $1.00 C o v e r C h a rg e Per C ouple THE NEW ORLEANS 12th and R ed River 8-0292 2 day service. Comedy Team ion land WATCH JEWELRY REPAIRS O n e Y e a r Unconditional G u a r a n te e on W a tc h R epairt KRUGER'S O n the Drag 2236 G U A D A L U P E WEDNESDAY, OCT. 7 at 8:15 p. rn, GREGORY GYMNASIUM Free to $16.50 Blanket Tax and Season Ticket Holders Single Admission— $1.50 CAPITOL W e Don’t Care W h at Dr. Kinsey Says- I •*>& LAN A TI RN ER Start* Tnd*v! l p m I.ani* turner Ricardo Montxllian LATIN LOVERS' P r ic e * : Adult* SOI < hildren Hr Sunday. October 4, 1953, THE DAILY TEXAN, Paqa A Five University Faculty Members Listed Among Foremost U S Scientists Departm ent of chem istry. A ll hold Dr. VV. R. Lloyd, associate pro­ distinguished professor rank at the fessor and assistant dean of the U niversity. College of Pharm acy, w as elected Two other Texans are included , second vice-chairman at a recent in th** Academ y m em bership; Dr. j m eeting of the Section of P r a c tic a l F iv e U n ive rsity faculty m em bers are included on the current m em ­ bership list of The N ational A c a - 1 demy of Sciences, composed of 511 of tire foremost scientists in the nation. U n iversity scientists included in the mem bership of the organisa­ tion a re : Dr. R . L. Moore, D r. H. S. V andiver, Departm ent of m athem atics; Dr. T. H. P a in te r, Dr. J . T. Patterson, D epartm ent of zoology; and Dr, R. J . W illia m s. W illiam V. Houston, President of R ice Institute, and E . L. DeGol- yer, Dallas consulting geologist and oil producer Of the 22 scientists th** South­ ern states have contributed to the roster, Texas leads w ith seven. tion. Bur man Brings to Life A Roving M ountaineer O L P u r p le D ree by W atherine Parr Hamilton Illustrated by Bubi Jessen Published by Carl Hertzog A bock of d e1*ghi'fuT whimsical versa for ch ’1- dren a id grown-ups told through the e/es o f the animals and birds th a t inhabit The Purple Tree in Mrs. Ham ilton's G a rd e n . The book is illustrated by Bub! Jessen who, with his deft sure strokes catches w ’*h ease the spirit and humor o f the Au tographed by the Author and Illustrator........................................ $5.00 P h a rm a c y and Dispensing, of the A m e ric a n Pharm aceu tic!! A sso cia ­ ★ ★ D r. VV. Gordon W haley, d ire cto r and geneticist of the P la n t r e ­ search Institute, will describ e the U n iv e r s ity ’s grass re se a rch pro­ gram and the part it can p la y in im p ro vin g range conditions at the K in g R a n c h ’s centennial confer­ ence O ctober 18 to 20. Scientists from the U S , B ra z il, G re a t B rita in , and South A fric a w ill g ive reports to the conference on the contributions s c i e n c e can m ake to the ranch's progress, Dr. W a lte r L . Moore associate professor of civil engineering, is new president of the Austin branch of the Am erican Soc iety of C iv il Eng in eers. O th er officer elected for I TG-51 are O bie Etheridge, vice-president; Dean R am ey, secre ta ry- !re a su re r; and Ja m e s It. Piper, Austin-branch representative to the A S C L Tex­ as section. TMK F O U R M V F * O F M I N D Y T O I.M V E K , by Ben Burien Bur- man. J u lia n M e a n e r, Inc., N ew York. 2.17 pages; $3.75. Ben B u rie n Barm an, author of “ Steam boat Round the Be n d ,” has created an oth er living story in his tale of M u n d y Tolliver, a restless young K e n tu c k ia n mountaineer. Mundy with a returns the w a r from few ex tra dollars and a W esleyans Plan Supper Tonight W esley Foundation will have its stewardship supper Sunday at 5 30 p m . in the Fellow ship Hall of the Methodist Ed ucation Center. Bel F r o s t . assistant director of student a c tiv itie s , will speak on “ The M e a n in g of Stew ardship,’* Jioh Breihan, d ire cto r and the R e v of student activities. w ill explain the budget set up for the school year. Ceram ic* S o c ie ty to Meet The student branch of the A m e ri­ can C e ra m ic s Society will m eet Wednesday ar 7 p m . in C. P Hall 212. A film . “ Out of E a r t h .’’ will he shown with public invited. From today's "Best Seller" list. • • • BATTLE CRY by Leon Uris it does for the M a rin es w hat Caine M u tin y did $3 95 for the N avy. DARK ANGEL by Mica Waltar A N o v e l of the fall o f Constantinople Bing C ro sb y’s O w n S to ry C A L L ME LUCKY $ 3 7 5 S 3 50 HEMPHILLS w three locations s e n rn g all your college needs 109 E. 21st. 2501 Guadalupe 2244 G uad alup e poems. It is published b y C a rl Hertzog, the em i­ Fulton Ouster's Last Book — $3 95 nent book designer. GREATEST FAITH EVER KN O W N Use Texan Classified Ads finds his U n cle to Coal Creek. K entucky, where he I>ace with “ m oney sickness.” The bank is go­ ing to take the farm . Unable to p ay t h e mortgage by honest m eans, Mundy starts moonshining. He makes a lot of money, but moonshining has its effect on him. “ H is face began to show signs of a m a ik ed change in his character. H is thoughtful q u a lity .” their eyes lost His unlawful a ctivities gain him nothing but two ye a rs in the pen­ ite n tia ry and em pty pockets. R e ­ leased from prison, he returns to Coal Creek and is shocked into a dazed condition by the chang** of friend circum stances. An it by telling brings him out of him , “ There a in ’t but o n e thing you got to know* about living; you got to find out for yourself ” old ‘ How. . .do you. . do the find- m g’’ ” asks M undy. The old man replies. “ A in ’t no w a y of telling, I guess. You k**ep on thinking and thinking and try ­ ing and trying and then some day it comes to you natural. Ju s t the sam e as being born.” A fte r an interlude of disillusion­ m ent with a fickle mail-order bride, Mundy catches a shrimp boat for Grand P ra ir ie . He spends the days pacing the streets until j he is reminded of Bxs ie It is then that M undy finds his destination. Besides telling a moving story , of a simple m an ’s quest tor hap­ piness, M r. B a rm a n also creates a v iv id picture of southern cus-1 toms and superstitions. The rich humor of the book is enlivened by quaint sketches by the author’s wife — C A R O L Y N C U L B E R T Cronin Book Is Best Seller "B e y o n d This P la c e * by A. J C ronin, and “ D esiree * by Anne-j m a rie Selinko. w ere reported as top fiction best sellers of the week by Publishers’ W eek ly. N orm an Vincent P e a le ’s “ Tile P o w e r of Positive T hink in g ” and P o lly A d le r’s “ A House Is Not A Home* led non-fiction titles. Candidates for the list in fiction a re Ben A m e s W illia m s ’ “ The U n ­ conquered” and P e a rl S B u ck 's “ Come, M y B e lo v e d .” M any of M iss B u c k ’s books hav e been in-I eluded surveys. in the annual best seller Non-fiction titles w hich m ay be­ come best sellers are Elean o r Roosevelt a “ India and the A w ak ­ ening E a s t” and R o b ert C. R u a rk s “ Horn of the H u n ter.” taboo on his a rm to look for a home and poop.** he can call his own. firs t He roams to Mississippi, where he gets a job as a tow boat­ man and falls in love with Essie, who lives by the riv e r with her righteous, e cc e n tric mother and twin sisters. When Essie w iii not leave her mother to m a rry him , Mundy goes to Vicksburg, sayin g , “ I d like to go where there a in t a woman in the world.” However, he finds solace in re­ newing an old friendship with Pee Wee, another v e te ra n he met on the road. T hey purchase a tra v e l­ ing store for $500 from a desperate in need of quick cash. gam bler Their partnership dissolves wheel Pee W e e m a rrie s a pretty nurse. On his next. jaunt. Mundy returns 'Purple Tree' Work of Art The Purple T re e . B y Katharine P a rr Ham ilton. T exas: Hertzog. HO pages. $5. The emotional and psychological life of children is beautifully em ­ pathized in K a th a rin e P a r r H a m il­ ton s recently-published book of verse for children and grown-ups. “ The Purp le T r e e ’’ contains an unusual pattern of ly ric a l verse — at times becom ing w i s e and psy­ chological, at o ther times light and personal. Assisted by B u d i Jessen s pic­ tures and C a rl H e rtz o g * printing, M rs Ham ilton has produced a beautiful book. G a y ly , cleverly, and subtly, a rch itect Jesse n s sketches t catch the w o rld of beasts, chil­ dren, and birds around the Purple Tree The bark co ver design o ri­ ginal and unusual, is a blowup of a shapshot w ith, a silhouette of vi- tex leaves superimposed. Roman and Weiss c a p ita ls were used with letters, a great v a r i e t y of initial achieving trem endous typ o g ra p h i­ cal effect. 'Vigilantes' Roll O ff O U Press is the “ The V ig ilan tes of Montana.” re ­ cently publisher! Fry the U niversity first of Oklahoma P re ss , volume in its new Western F ro n t­ ier Lib rary. W ritte n by Thomas J . first, published Dimsdale and in 1866, the l>ook is considered one of the classic accounts of the set­ tlement of the W est. The introduction was written b y E. B. D e G o lye r, form er professor of geology at the U niversity of Texas. One of the best-known col­ lectors of W e ste rn Am ericana, M r. I DeGolyer w ill se rv e as general edi­ tor of the s e r ie s . He has given j many rare volum es to the R a re liookx Collection at the U niversity and is g en e rally inedited w ith in­ into this eoun- troducing p h ysics 1 try. Plans Se t For Bridge M eets Plans nights for bridge and monthly dinner parties are discus- , sion topics on the agenda of the j University O o h now that prelimi- j nary com m ittee appointments have I been set. The first b r i d g e night w as I .Saturday, w h ile th** dinner parties, I if enough m em b ers show interest, w ill be held re g u la rly at the Uni- to IVmald Named Ja m e s . the council for the ! year are P a g e Keeton, president; vice-president; | Glynn M cD o nald, secretary; and Garland B a rc u s , E r v in J . Prouse. Robert L. Stone, Thurlow Weed, and R ichard W . T yler. Program com m ittee members are G ra y Thoron, Malcolm G re g ­ ory, Prouse B a rc u s , and Stone. Clyde C. C o h e rt. Franklin L . Cox, j C. Albers, W illia m A. Cunningham, Archie N. Jo n e s . T. R M cN ee ly, ( Jesse V illa re a l are on the ; and I membership com m ittee. and Charles H the Rarcus, G e o rg e H. Newlove. Sparenberg form H a rris j Brush and R a n k s M cLaurin a re j the house com m ittee comm ittee finance On the sh illelag h committee are Richard W . T y le r and Ed leen Regg ‘ 'Y' Retreat Held 'To Plan Projects retreated ship j Camp The Y M C A Upperclass Fe llo w ­ the Lutheran to in Round Rock S a tu rd ay afternoon for a session to continue through S u n d a y e\emng. A p proxim ately 3") students ere attending this regu lar fall retreat to study p ro g ra m m aterials DAVtO PRIVATE SCHOOL K i n d e r g a r t e n a n d F l r * t Ti r ade Q u a l i f i e d a n d E x p e r i e n c e d T e a r l i e r * to Convenient *l*o U n iv e r s it y School an d W in n the U n iv e rs ity : > Ju n io r H ig h S I Elem en tary J i K c a » i i n a h l e Ka l e * A fte rn o o n N u rsery Care Available S S - tM S T-SSIS i ” 1 varsity Tea House. ad d ^ d a delightful combination— scoop neck, black velvet blouse with skirt of all wool felt. The skirt Is accenfed by two keys, one of black felt, the other of rhinestones— and we've rhinestone dangle earrings! Blouse, sizes 32 to 36— 7.95 Skirt In royal blue and white, sizes IO to 16— 12,95 Earrings— 2.00 p lu l tax aport shop, afreet floor b n a v wr apper } » fool: c f the ' O r ' s iHo & * * * -« ♦* ,e* r*- driff three quarter sleeves . . . fu < flair of skirt . . . in Bla^k Pearl w ool flannel . . . 29.95 &7tni 'Tcxjafity black . . . 39.95 ^ O riental s mp c ity e* Ir e leeds its influence to a fir* a d e e p V in back a ^ d a skirt gored fo r w.de flair . . . a M e rrim a c velveteen ooo, mikado blue a n d ^ ^ ^ unexpected expect it f r o m t Boy of the Week LeRoys Been a Politico 'n Since High School Days Sunday, O ctober 4, 1953, THE DAILY TEXAN, Pag# J 1908 Chapel Yields in '53 To Progress Alpha Phi Omega Meets in Union Today; Phi Mu Alpha Sponsors Smoker October 6 I '-ii O ld St. A u s t i n ' s C h a p e ! o n t h e c o r n e r o f G u a d a l u p e a n d T w e n t y - f i r s t S t r e e t w i l l b e no m o r e t h a n a h a r e p a t c h o f g r o u n d , s o m e b r o k e n g l a s s , a n d a few' c r u m b s of s t u c c o w i t h i n a n o t h e r t w o w e e k s . | T h e o ld b u i l d i n g is no l o n g e r b e - I ing u s e d now- t h a t t h e n e w c h u r c h A lph a Phi O m e g a , s e r v i c e o r g a n i - J z a t i o n w ill h o l d a n o p e n m e e t i n g j S u n d a y a t 2 p . m . in T e x a s U n i o n ] 309. Q u a l i f i c a t i o n s f o r m e m b e r s h i p in ; i n c l u d e p r e v i o u s t h e o r g a n i z a t i o n t r a i n i n g to ] r e n d e r s e r v i c e , a n d a s a t i s f a c t o r y ! s c h o l a s t i c r e c o r d . in s c o u t i n g , a d e s i r e P hi M u A lp h a, h o n o r a r y m u s i c f r a t e r n i t y , w ill s p o n s o r a s m o k e r f o r a ll f r e s h m a n m u s i c s t u d e n t s in t h e l o g g i a o f t h e M u s i c B u i l d i n g , T u e s d a y , 8 30 p m . M e m b e r s o f t h e C a n t e r b u r y C h i h , s o c i a l o r g a n i z a t i o n o f All S a i n t s E p i s c o p a l , w ill h a v e a p i c n i c a t i m m e d i a t e l y a f t e r B a r t o n S p r i n g s e v e n i n g p r a y e r S u n d a y . S t u d e n t s , w e a r i n g p i c n i c c lo t h e s , w i l l m e e t f o r e v e n i n g p r a y e r a t A ll S a i n t s C h a p e l a t 6 p m . T w in P i n e s C o - o p , l o c a t e d at 2800 W i n o s A v e . w i l l h o l d a n o p e n h o u s e S u n d a y a f t e r n o o n f r o m 2 to 5. I is c o m p l e t e d . | B u i l t in 1908, St, A u s t i n ’s h a s I b e c o m e a f a m i l i a r l a n d m a r k t o U n i v e r s i t y s t u d e n t s . D r . C. E . C a s ­ t a n e d a , p r o f e s s o r of h i s t o r y , r e ­ m e m b e r s l i v i n g in o n e of t h e u p ­ s t a i r s r o o m s o f t h e c h u r c h w h e n he w a s a t t e n d i n g th e U n i v e r s i t y . O t h e r u p s t a i r s r o o m s in t h e c h u r c h w e r e u s e d f o r N e w m a n C l u b m e e t ­ in g s a n d d r a m a t i c p r o d u c t i o n s u n ­ til a n d u p p e r f l o o r. f i r e d e s t r o y e d r o o f t h e T h e s t a t u e s a n d p e w s of t h e o l d c h u r c h h a v e b e e n g iv e n to F a t h e r W e l k e r ’s M e x i c a n M iss io n a t L a m ­ p a s a s . Talk on Europe, Seminar O n Hillels Program This W eek T h e H ille i F o u n d a t i o n w ill hold a b r e a k f a s t a n d c o u n c i l m e e t i n g S u n d a y m o r n i n g a t IO o ’clock . At s u p p e r . Wii- t h e r e g u l a r S u n d a y h a m R o s e n i h a l w ill t a l k a n d sh o w to o k w h i t e s e r v ­ s l i d e s w h i c h h e in ing w i t h E u r o p e d u r i n g t h e p a s t t w o N e a r s , a n d J e w i s h m e m b e r s o f t h e f a c ­ u l t y w ill b e r e c o g n i z e d . a r m e d f o r c e s t h e to IO F r o m l l a m . M o n d a y t h r o u g h F r i d a y , c o f fe e a n d d o u g h ­ n u t s w i l l b e s e r v e d . M o n d a y n i g h t a t 7:15 M r s . S a m u e l A m s t e r , a p s y c h i a t r i c s o c i a l w o r k e r , w ill he t h e g u e s t s p e a k e r a t a s e m i n a r on “ H o w to G e t A lo n g W ith P e o p l e . ’’ T w o of t h e p e o p l e p r e s e n t f o r in the d e d i c a t i o n of St. A u s t i n ' s th e d e d i c a t i o n 1908, w e r e a l s o a t of t h e new' c h u r c h l a s t m o n t h . T h e y a r e M a r g a r e t M c N e l li s , a n u r s e a t S e t o n H o s p i t a l , a n d C h r i s t i n e I n g , a f o r 96 r e s i d e n t of A u s tin y e a r s . A r a b S t u d e n t s M e e t S u n d a y T h e A r a b S t u d e n t A s s o c i a t i o n w ill m e e t S u n d a y ( O c t o b e r 4> a t 2 in t h e T e x a s U n i o n B u i ld i n g . P rn. t h e A s s o c i a t i o n will M e m b e r s o f t h e y e a r . All e le ct o f f i c e r s f o r A r a b s t u d e n t s a r e t o a t ­ in v it e d te n d t h is i m p o r t a n t m e e t i n g . S ig m a N u w i l l t h r o w th e doors of t h e i r n e w h o u s e o p e n to U n i v e r ­ s i t y a d m i n i s t r a t i v e of fic ia ls, f a c ­ u lty , a l u m n i , a n d f r a t e r n i t y a n d s o - ! r o r i t y r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s S u n d a y a f t e r ­ noon f r o m 2 to 4. M rs . V e r n a Y o u n g , h o u s e m o t h e r , will p r e s i d e a t t h e s e r v i n g (a b le . She w ill be a s s i s t e d by o f f i c e r s of t h e S i g m a N u M o t h e r s a n d W iv e s C lub. Spooks w ill m e e t M o n d a y at t h e A lp h a C hi O m e g a h o u s e to d i s c u s s p l a n s f o r t h e y e a r . O n e p r o j e c t a l ­ r e a d y u n d e r w a y is t h a t of h e lp i n g w i t h A u s t i n ' s U n i t e d F u n d c a m ­ p a ig n , S i d n e y H o w e l l , p r e s i d e n t , said . D er E u le n s p ie g c lx e r e in , U n i v e r ­ s i t y G e r m a n c lu b , will hold its f i r s t m e e t i n g of t h e s e m e s t e r T u e s d a y , 7:30 p m . , in B a t t s H a l l 201. P i, D e lta S ig m a p r o f e s s i o n a l b u s i n e s s f r a t e r n i t y , a n n o u n c e d t h e e le c tio n of t h e f o l lo w in g c o m m i t ­ t e e s a n d c h a i r m e n : E a r l F c k h o f f , c h a p t e r e f f i c i e n c y c o n t e s t c o m m i t ­ t e e : R u s s e l l T e a g u e , p l e d g i n g a n d s c h o l a r s h i p w i t h W a l t e r H olly a n d G e n e S m i t h a s m e m b e r s ; J i m B u s ­ se y , c h a i r m a n , a n d S c o t t G a r r i s o n , soc ial c o m m i t t e e . B u fo rd M cK in n ey w a s a p p o in te d D a ily T e x a n c o r r e s p o n d e n t a n d B ill B a r n e s w a s n a m e d c h a p t e r bit­ t o r lam T h e n e x t m e e tin g o f D e lt a S ig m a Pi w i l l be M onday a t 7 :30 p m . ut th e U n ion , 309. ★ F a l l o f f i c e r s f o r V a lh a lla C o-op c o -o r d in a to r ; a r e H a n n a S p r i n g c h a ir m a n ; W a n d a F r a n k , h o u s e r e c o r d i n g s e c r e ­ S u e D r u m m o n d , t a r y ; F J in o r W a r r e n , h isto r ia n ; M a r y J a n e A n d e r s o n , c o r r e s p o n d ­ in g s e c r e t a r y ; G i n g e r B i r d , in te r- r e p r e s e n t a t i v e ; R o s ie K le- c o o p s o c i a l c h a i r m a n ; an d L u b a k a r . S e n k p v i t c h . and S a r a G u l l e d g e , J o y c e C a s k e y , h o u s e r e l a t i o n s c o m ­ m i t t e e . f o r C o l l e g e of P h a r m a c y h a v e b e e n C o l l e g e of P h a r m a c y h a v e b een e l e c t e d a r # 1953-54. J a m e s R. K i d w e l l, p r e s i d e n t ; M a r ­ tin E . Both well, v i c e - p r e s i d e n t ; a n d L u t h e r R. P a r k e r , s e c r e t a r y - t r e a s u r e r . T h e y C l u b I n t e r n h a s e l e c t e d W a n d a T u r n l e y , p r e s i d e n t ; J a m e s R j l e - l a t t , v i c e - p r e s i d e n t ; M e r l e T e a c h - n e e s e c r e t a r y ; a n d B e v e r l y W h it e , r e p o r t e r . "PLACING THE RIGHT PERSON in the r i g h t c o m m i t t e e w a s t h e s h o w n interviewing one o f the 350 B -clwe a p p lie d fo r w or* on s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t c o m m it t e e s . fc q c stLoe.' S taff P hoto n a n k in s Storg House; 9:30 to 5:30 cL Jss Cocktail fashions buffed to a new brillance c o m i n g *®.* * V j § sh n e t o t h e s e r o w g s t e n e d ^esh o n i t-jj* *$ t th® , rn g - * na • o e e n G ip p ed n b ’ a - ’ - • S ee ‘■’■sse e®d m e-# o f l h # p c s h e d HoV '* p / w - d p w * *h'< w e e ic. lu s t r o u s g l e a m i n g r ' ® ' r o r **d I*®'*®® vt> ver-s ates r . Our ow® Joe nra-it. Th® a w e ' c d a ' « e * i n ♦ n ! h 1 7 .9 5 T he sir rf 0 ‘ o 16, 1 3 TS. * c o r * S®®r> £'(•*+ P C e - * # s •ti’ t r e e - ma* • c o d ' # w-^n e fab *>_s *1 U e* q > t b f# d * * J Vt ' l l •* c r f I " * ® 4 , a v , y 5 ^ i a R g ' • ® -q - s- e • • - ® p * i ’ * * tv ■ rn « - r rn ■ : e g in fc' e n r ®' e , i t b e in B v .JE R R Y R A F S H O O N L e R o y B e d w e l l s h o u l d g o a lo n g w a y in t h e b u s i n e s s w o r l d . At l e a s t w h e n it c o m e s to h i r i n g t h e r i g h t p e o p l e . H e c e r t a i n l y h a d a lot of e x p e r i e n c e d o i n g t h a t t h i s w e e k a s i n t e r v i e w i n g of t h e h e s u p e r v i s e d 350 p e o p le s t u d e n t i n t e r e s t e d g o v e r n m e n t c o m m i t t e e s . tile c o m ­ L e R o y , c h a i r m a n of m i t t e e o n th e c o m m i t t e e s s t a g g e r i n g j o b of i n t e r v i e w i n g , r e ­ a n d p la i m g p e o p le c o m m e n d i n g o n t h e v a r i o u s c o m m i t t e e s w h i c h m a k e u p t h e S t u d e n t s A s s o c i a t i o n . ‘‘I t w a s e n c o u r a g i n g to fin d t h e in s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t so to m e e t s t u ­ t o w o r k , ” t h e s e n i o r p r e - l a w s t u d e n t I n t e r e s t h i g h d e n t s w h o r e a l l y w a r n s t a t e d f r o m S a n A n to n io . t h i s y e a r a n d h a d “ D e c i d i n g w ho s h o u l d b e o n w h a t so t h e m a i n p r o b l e m w i t h w a s I t ' s n o t a l w a y s m a n y a p p l i c a n t s . e a s t to te I in a t e n m i n u t e int* re­ v i e w j u s t how w e ll a p e r s o n w o u l d w o r k . a n d is s i n c e r e if h e o r s h e i t . ” H o w e v e r . L e R o y d i d a b o u t n o t i c e t h e f r e s h m e n t h a t m o s t o f c o m i n g t h r o u g h h a d I m p r e s s i v e r e ­ c o r d s of h i g h s c h o o l s e r v i c e . L e R o y s h o u ld b e a n e x p e l t on h i g h s c h o o l s e r v i c e , f o r h i s fellow J e f f e r s o n of T h o m a s g r a d u a t e s H i g h S c ho ol in S a n A n t o n i o a g r e e t h a t t h e i r f o r m e r S t u d e n t C o u n c il p r e s i d e n t w a s o n e o f t h e i r b i g g e s t w h e e l s . L e R o y s t i l l p o i n t s w i t h p r i d e w h e n h e t e l l s y o u t h a t fo u r o f t h e m a j o r s t u d e n t b o d y o f f i c e s h e r e a r e h e ld b y J e f f e r s o n g r a d ­ u a t e s . T h e p r e s i d e n t , v i c e - p r e s i ­ d e n t , a n d s e c r e t a r y , o f t h e S t u ­ d e n t s ’ A s s o c i a t i o n a n d U T ’* h e a d £ . l e a d e r a ll a t t e n d e d h i g h s< bool A w i t h B e d w e l l . In a d d i t i o n to m a i n t a i n i n g a 2 35 a v e r a g e In h i s B B A c o u r s e s , L e ­ th e R o y h a s fo u n d t i m e S t u d e n t A s s e m b l y , w o r k o n n u m ­ a n d b e v ice - e r o u s p r e s i d e n t of h i s f r a t e r n i t y , B e t a T h e t a P i. c o m m i t t e e s , to b e o n W h e n a s k e d w h a t h e t h o u g h t w a s t h e m a i n p i e c e of l e g i s l a t i o n of t h e p a s t a s s e m b l y , L e R o y n a m e d t h e S t u d e n t W a g e bill f o r w h i c h o n e o f h i s c o l l e a g u e s w a s r e s p o n ­ s i b l e . j o b t h ’* f o r g o t I t w a s h i H a m o d e stly t o m e n t i o n t h e n e w ly g r a n t e d R o u n d - C p h o l i ­ d a y . t h a t h e l p e d s a t i s f y b o ‘ h s t u d e n t s a n d f a c u l t y L e R o y t o u c h y p r o b l e m fo r i r a n s o r e d R m m d - C p ” m o v e m e n t a r d t h o u g h t o f h a v in g a t o ra se C a m p u s C h e s t fu n d s. A m e m b e r o f C o w b o y s P h i Bt a “ Mo W e t e r n t a l e n t s h o w t h e ^ I n W S F to Hear Noted Worker th e w o rld An In ter p r eta tio n o f m n s i o n of the ch ,r - n " . ne p r e ­ s e n t e d by M iss M a rg a te * F i o r y , o f the • e r r e t a r v for s* .de- * u B o a r d o f F o re gn M s * o p s o f the P r e s b y t e r s n Cr a* th e W e stm in ste r S t u d e n t F e l l o w ­ sh ip . i • At 9 45 a m M s s t ,o: • will - . n u a y e c e n t worl d in • a n t h e C e n t u r y ’ to r e p o c ■ ''bool c l a s s on he tour and will exp lain a p.,in e f f e c t bv w u p e n d h i s r o p e s n un t o y e a r . h snpr e . r ;> o r tv e the U n ited i*es h i s n a e A p la n n in g rn k A m e r ic a n h e ld a* 2 p rn 4 p m a ’ u rie n ts wit ■ e I. f a m e et n in ] l e n r e ^ _ , y ^ n t e r e s ‘cd I O u r n g c a mp n e x t v o; the M i s s F i e r y v t i a n s t u d e n t s | A m e e t i n g of A m e r a n f o r 8 'iii p F o r t y T r .n if ac co n p d e r . ’ M a u l d i n p aM r o f t ne \V - F to Ail s e s s i o n s , Social Calendar ii S D A Y 2-4 A l p h a FT 2-4 S i g m a N ; S-S— T w i n P i n e K a p p a D e lta I Mexican Co-ed G iven Award An e x t p p ’ ic w o m a n h a s e s i t y o n t h e fi a w a r d e d by t c a n R o u n d I C o n s u e l o C M e x i c o C tv J t o r y of M ux y e a r s , th e S h e will stUf F i n e A r t s , b E n g l i s h a n d is C o m i n g fro m u s i c a l h a r k o n e o f ti s o p r a n o s a n d S h e h a s m a d e c o n c e r t toui ' u*» \ * the -poi n •R im e of i m e A r t s of TU i , ■ P j o b s t h e A r m y R O T C , h is S i g m a , a n d t h e m a n y c o m m i t t e e E v a l u a t i o n C o m m i t t e e , F a c u l t y R a l l y C o m m i t t e e , a n d t h e T e x a s I n t e r c o l l e g i a t e S t u d e n t s ’ A s s o c i a ­ tio n. i n c l u d e t h i s W ith i m p r e s s i v e r e c o r d of s e r v i c e , o n e c o u l d n o t d i s p u t e t h a t L e R o y B i r d w e l l is s o m e w h a t o f a n e v p e r t o n a n d w e ll c o m m i t t e e s t o p l a c e n e w m e m b e r s e q u i p p e d on t h e m . 5th AEPi Home To Be Erected G r o u n d - b r e a k i n g c e r e m o n i e s S u n ­ d a y a t 12:30 p . m . a t T w e n t y - s i x t h S t ! ee: a n d S a n P e d r o w ill m a r k the b e g i n n i n g o f c o n s t r u c t i o n on A l p h a U p s i l o n P l f r a t e r n i t y s n e w h o m e . IT,9. t h e f r a t e r n i t y ’s f i f t h j o in e d n a t i o n a l A f , P i Ii w i l l c o s t $150,000 a n d T h is will h e h o m e sirn e it in will h a v e a l i v i n g c a p a c i t y o f 51 T h e d e d i c a t i o n c l i m a x e s a f i v e - m o n t h b o n d s a l e f o r the n e w p r o p ­ e r t y . T h e b o n d driv e b e g a n a f t e r a visit b y < lent ge T ell A f Pi n a - t i o n a I e x e c u t i v e s e c r e t a r y , o n A p i l i 21. T h e I S a n A n t o n i o a r c h i t e c t u r a l p l a n s w e r e d r a w n b y M a r v i n L i k e n r n h t , of a n d B e r n a r d H a r r i s g r a d u a t e d A f Pi a l u m n u s w h o f r o m t h e U n i v e r s i t y las t y e a r . A c t u a l c o n s t r u c t i o n , d e l a y e d for s e v e r a l m o n t h s , w ill b e g in e a r l y t h , - w e e k a n d to be c o m p l e t e d w i t h i n six m o n t h s . is e x p el ted a n d 212 T h e n e w s i ’ e h o m e s h a v e h e e n is t w o b l o c k s w e s t of the p i e e n t A E P i h o m e at. 2600 Rio G i a n d e S t r e e t P r e v i o u s c h a p - te l o c a t e d a t 1909 R i o ( b a t ie S t r e e t . 710 W e s t T w e n t y - f i r s t S t r e e t I n ­ w o o d S t r e e t T h e pi e v e n t h o m e w a s p u r c h a s e d in 1946. M e m b e r s of t h e h o u s e - p l a n n i n g c o m m “ ce G o l d s t e i n a r e Mi D a v i d K a p l a n , a U n i v e r s i t y g r a d - ua ® a n d m e m b e i of A f . P i s n a ­ tio n a l Sup! e r n e B o a r d of G o v e r n ­ or- a n d H a r o l d B e r m a n , a l s o a Univ e r s d v g: a d n a t e . cd If re a c a m p u s hea it) to both r o v i e ap p r.T s a n d M o-' Bra it J .1 c o n te st for v o I to e n f p - ‘■’a r ’; fr e sh m e n then \> ho b o y s the Ten is the one f r a ' e m i t v Ti a d u io n a ; T h e ta Mgrna P in for w o m e n p : o f c s s .o n a l iou n a l i s m . sp o n s o r s an ann ua l n c o n te ’ the m o s t b e a u t i f u l c o - e d s a* the U n iv e r sity . ju d ges to c h o o s e the “ t y p i c a l to to d e t e r m i n e One o f the the o n e 25 m o s t b e a u t i f u l f r e s h m a n bor c h o o s e m o v i e a c t o r . t h e w i n n e r s f a m o u s is a Is a and Hie “ Ten M ost ' a r e p r e se n t e d ’I b e t a S ig m a P h i s production at of T i m e S t a g g e r s On. R e g i s t r a t i o n f o r th e c o n t e s t will th rough T h u rs- he h e l d T u e s d a y f i o m 3 30 t o 5 30 p rn. In J o u r - da i B u ild in g 212. G ir ls m a y re­ t . 1 g i o n - list* in d iv id u a lly or bring of n a m e s of c o n t e s t a n t s , E a c h eon - '<• ' m f w ill h e a l i g n e d a n u m b e r , m d w, I a p p e a r b efore the j u d g e s by t h a t n u m b e r . T r y o u t s w ill be h eld W e d n e sd a y , O ctober 14, in T e x a s Unio n fr o m 2 *o 5 p . m . C o n t e s t a n t s will w e a r the p r e li m i n a r y b a th in g a u its in c o n t e - b e te in ie n i g h l l s w ill be c h o s e n ie s r r n i - f .r i a ls h e ld t o m 7 to 8 p m . in -finalists will w e a r 5 f i n a l , s i s w ill Mar. w h o will the T e n M o s t th e T e n M o -t B e a u ­ m e p e t t y J o T a y l o r H uff. l l c l t a K a p p a M e e t i n g P o s t p o n e d D e l i a K a p p a G a m m a w iii m e e t IO p m . a t t h e F e d ­ T h u r s d a y at 7 e r a t e d W o m a n s C lu b i n s t e a d of r u e s d a v a s p r e v i o u s l y a n n o u n c e d . The n u r u n g w a s p o stp o n ed b e ­ t h e a d d r e s s of D r Wtl- c a u s e o f the ULA, on T uesdaj night. i ,a * e r , at >e h e l d f o r I t a m p e x - Co-eds Register Tuesday For Ten Cutest Sunday. Octopi- 4, 1953. THE DAILY TEXAN. Paga 8 Acme Photographer Brandt Speaks to TDN A Monday W A LT ER H U M P H R E Y H O U STO N HARTE JO H N T. JO N E S Harte publisher of the San Angelo the Standard-Times, w ill attend sem inar ag observers H a rry Blanding, editor will rep­ resent the Tem ple D aily Telegram and teiepraph editor, the Shreveport Tim es Lazarus Allan A committee headed by W alter floral arrangem ents have been R Hum phrey, editor of the F o rt made by Louis N. Goldberg, as- W orth Press, has planned the semi- soria,p publisher of the Austin nar series sem inars concerned the work of city editors news editors, and women s page editors I hompson director of the School of Journalism . Am erican-Statesman, and P a u l J . Previous Parking Creating Hazard depart- Austin police and hspiayed ment officials ha. ity park- alarm about the I nn Chief ing problem, and I'm sa id of Police Luther Stromq at present there seems no clear w a y to combat the dilemma. •any Austin F ire Marshal W. L Hea ton and P olice Caph George Rug ers said W ednesday that cars park cd rn allo;, s surrounding the Urn- versify w ere creating a definite fire hazard. M arsh a l Heaton said blocked a1 from fire leys prevent, reaching re ar of houses and apart rnents where fires fir ~t start, lr m any instances. trucks The reason for parking in alleys to capacity by usually jam m ed 9 a n each day was clear, both officials said. just for students is n t enough parking There cars M any space students, finding parking lots and street parking places jammed. are resorting to alleys, they add­ ed. ♦ Chief Strornquist said 85 per cent of a ll U m .e rs ity students are us.ng ears for transportation this year. W hile the number of park­ ing spaces ha* in n eased only slightly, there seems to be a con­ siderable1 increa se in the nuns bet of cars, he pointed out. Chief St rom guts’ estim ated there are some 25 per cent more cars than parking spaces ava ila b le for them. Fo u r parking lots for the use of U n iversity students are pres­ ently in operation They hold a to­ tal of about 1.0e toll. Longhorn, Dillinger- It's Still a Picture E a c h year the Blanket-Tax photographers ar** belated from one corner of the campus to the other. The results it seems, of their talents are not appreciated by students. Longhorn comes out This is because the average .John looking Q I® re like John Q D illinger, and girls get no better treatment. Blank expressions w arped smiles and distorted features make t»tu- dents wonder how the photos can possibly be used for identification purposes. Tile subject enters the cubicle, hair combed and teeth sparkling. The photographer m arks a number and the student s name on a slate, a la Huntsville lights W hile still flinching blindly from the glaring the student. Is told to move on. for the next per­ son is ready for the photographer. A s i d e from standing in line to get the picture taken and then repeat­ ing the m aneuver to pick up the Blanket Tax the 10,000 students already photographed will attest to the efficiency of the ‘‘system .1’ And tile picture can alw ays be The process is simple enough. used a* a “ before ’’ A TEM PO RARY S H O R T A G E of boors m ’ c s sem tv’e-. o o o » Doors am rn me rn % *ua*ion. ean Sm snown ii tb s h e r r . Drag Commons Cook Leon Also Square Dances He is also a member of Swing and Turn, the U T square dancers. “ I hope some day to combine m y dancing knowledge with my teach­ ing profession if I can get a school that doesnt forbid if.'' Ucon sa vs Asked if he was known on the campus for anything hut cooking and dancing, Leon laughed, " I ’m probably' famous for tie.ne on the campus .sui Ii a long tim e.” College students have alw ays been known for the unique w ays they devise to finance their w ay through four years of higher edu­ cation. B U T no student can claim a mote unusual method of meeting collegiate expenses than Leon Mc- Guffin, secondary education major from Austin F o r two years Leon has worked as a cook in the Commons Annex He is in charge of evening meals and works a 4t)-hour week in spite of carrying six horns of advanced mathematics. joined Leon blames the A rm y for start­ ing him down the “ cooking road ” It all started hac k in 19-11 when he the service arid was placed with an anti-aircraft divi­ sion He didn t fate tor* well with shells and guns, sn shortly after enlistment he found himself stuck with “ K P . ” He found the new duty pleasant. When discharged from the A rm y in 1946 he immediately entered the I m veisity and has been bete on and off ever since E a r ly in 1952 when his G I B ill ran out and funds got low, he de­ cided to cash in on his m ilita ry training. He got his fu-d civilian cooking the Commons Annex, job in But Leon doesn t alw ays want to "w o rk over a hot stove.'' After graduating next year he each school. “ I would IX)K ci s x hobby r bi her says Leon. profession, rs cooking job as a hood while Urn going to plans 1 prefer than at He con "good I school.' s there is little sirmlari- I^eon tv bens cafeteria and for an outfit in the Arm y. “ We have better food heie and have a much more varied fare than the A rm y, he say s. is A favorite past-time of the i5- year-old bachelor instil,(ling dancing with ihe International Ko i< Dance Group at Leon alw) attends apy other folk dance activities he has time for and considers it as another hobby. the University U nio n TV Set to S h o w W o rl d Series S u n d a y L E O N M C G U F F IN Blames the Arm y Friday s Dance Moved From Union to Gym The Texas Union w ill be open a ? 12:45 p m. Sunday for students who wish to see the W orld Series on TV. Out-of-town U n iv e rs ity football games to be te lev used w ill be seen a r Union listening pattie* The first of ’he.-,® w iii be me O U gam e S a t­ urday. Miss P a t M c C a m e y , Te mon social director, Because of rain, the President $ reception was moved th? women's residence gard Union B a ll Room where was originally sc hedul dance w as moved to the , Gym . dam II Proctor Appointed Assistant Dean Ja c k Proctor, executive assistant to the Dean, has been appointed by Dean Page Keeton as assistant dean of L a w School. Dean Proctor w ill replace K en ­ neth Woodward, professor of law, who has assumed a full teaching load. Dean including Proctor had complete charge of moving the L a w School the Tarlton operation, L ib ra ry of over 85,000 volumes, and getting the entire operation set up within a few days in order to meet the registration require­ ments of an expected 650 to 675 students who entered L a w School this semester. Among his duf lex Dean Proctor w ill supervise the Oil and G a s Con­ ference. the Taxation Conference. and the dedication of Townes H all on Decem ber 3-4-5. Dean Proctor entered the Um- versity' and received a bachelor of bu-mess administration degree in 1948 and a bachelor of law degree in 1949. H p then practiced in a law firm in W ichita Fa lls. He returned to the Law School in September, 1956, as A d m in istra­ tive Assistant to the Dean and wa- later advanced to E x e c u tiv e A v sistant to the Dean. M arcus Whiffer!, v - ting a rch i­ tecture professor from E n g (and. is an architectural journalist by v o ­ cation Here on a Smifh-Mundt F e l­ lowship he is teaching two courses in the history of architecture. He was supposed to teach a new rour-e Appreciation of Architec­ ture but not enough people r e g i s ­ tered ire offered aga n next, semester It vvill for it. Mr. Whiffen believes that stu­ dents taking such a course, would gam an understanding of buildings and feel a responsibility for their surroundings He received his m aster of arts in English from C am ­ literature pi vdge U niversity in 1938 and be­ gan working as an architectural “ I have a lw a ys been journalist in the a rts .” he said. interested “ T h ai is w hy I am teaching arohi- te> tine with a dogie? in English After graduation M r. Whiffen worked on the Architecture Wee ly. In 1946 he became assistant editor of the A rcitectural R evie w and worked there until 1952 when he came to this country to teach at M . I. T. D ic ke rs o n To Preside For 'Roots Press C l u b New officers of the Grassroots Press C u b . elected at their Mon­ day' night meeting, are Jo Ann Dickerson, president; Bob Milburn, Jim L a c e r, secre­ vice-president; tary-treasurer; and Ja n e t Rodgers, reporter. The club. whose purpose is to visit small-toun w eekly and d a ily n e w sp a p e r, is open to anyone in­ terested for a sm all­ town paper. It is not necessary to be a journalism student. in w riting Besides these trips, the G rass­ roots Press Club is planning to be­ come more of a service organiza­ tion. AUSTIN TOP SHOP 1213 W . 5th Ph. 6-4681 • Seat Covers . . . 12.95 • Door Panels ea. . . 3.00 • Headliners ........ 18.95 • Furniture Upholstery • Foam Rubber— any size RADIO & TELEVISION SALES & SERVICE Mi. 7-3846 T w t A w O rn! O r * t « n ■ ll— I I it • Convertible Tops $35.89 isper Striripes t a i l o r e d b y I (ammonion H a m m o n t o n - P a r k ’s n e w . v e r s i o n of the time -h o no re d p in-stripe— a pattern that h a s a l w a y s e n j o y e d the esteem of w e l l -d re s s e d men. Ne a t, ma ture a n d d ig ni f ie d , its quiet a p p r o a c h invites respect— its A n i m a t e d Style in­ vites a d m ir a t io n . 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